Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-17 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaArmy · Indicts 13 ·officers L on ee • es ans Ill a Dr. Leary Gets Term Of I to 10 TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAR.CH t7, 1970 '9'0L. 61. 1'10. 6ol. S l•CTK>NS, • PAe•s By TOM BARLEY ot tilt Dill¥ Pl• Steff Beach Sla9ing Police Seeking Mesa Suspects Dr. Timothy Leary is in Orange County Jail today, compiling• summation of his drug-centered philosophies and religious belief$ that may be used by bis attorneys as the basis of their appeals against the state prison term he drew Monday. The LSD cullist's plea -delivercC through defense attorney George Chula - that the ''controlled use" of LSD an<l related mind-expanding drugs amounted lo a religious practice and should not be condemned "by a society that is only jusl beginning to understand" had little effect on Superior Court J udge Byron K. ~1cMillan. He listened for three hours to that argument and a series or related argum ents from Chula and then sen- tenced Leary, SO, to one to 10 years in state prison. By TERRY COVILLE OI 1~1 O•llY f'llel Sl•ll Bulletins went out to all western states loday as Huntington Beach detectives launched a manhunt for two Costa 1'1esans sough t in the slaying last Thurs· day of a $year-old Anaheim man. A third suspect. also of CosLa Mesa, \\'as arrested Monday rtight after a round- lhe-clQCk investigation into the shooting nf Thomas C. Aslorina, found in a 1narshy area near Sunset Aquatic Park \l.'ilb a bull et hole in his chest. One of the two men police are looking for is Robert \V. Llt>erty. the famed "Candlelight killer" in volved in the slrangling death of a Westminster mother in 1966. Liberty gained widespread notoriety· during a trial which revealed a weird ritualistic service performed over the body of the woman he had allegedly kill· ed. Poli ce had found him near the body, playi ng a guitar by candlelight. Liberty was ruled "insane" and con· fined to a state hospital. He was given his frt(!dom in early September by Judge Robert Gardner of Newport Beach, who declared him once again sane. Three months before Judge Gardner declared him legally free, Liberty caused a furor by walking out of the r..1etropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk , freed by a ;'clerical error." The declaration of sanity made it im- possible for Liberty to be tried again on the Westminster murder charges. Police are also hunting Robert Patrick Connolly . 39, of 350 Avocado, Apl. IO, Costa Mesa. Both Connolly and Liberty are considered armed and dangerous, police said. No address was given for Liberty but it ls believed he may have been staying with Connolly at the Costa Mesa address. The pair are be11eved to be driving a 1965 A-tustang convertible with a black top and yellow body. The licen se number is PKL 936., Police said today they have no idea ""here the suspects y,•ent. Detect ives made a thorough search of bars in Santa Ana P.1onday night and early this morning in hopes of rinding the suspects. The men are known to palronize these bars. That prison term followed the former liarvard psychologist's conviction on charges of possession of marijuana - charges backed by the Orange County Grand Jury after Leary, his wife, Rosemary, 34, and son John Bush Leary, 20. "·ere an-ested in Laguna Beach. Mrs. Leary had already been sentenced by Judge McMillan to six months in Orange County Jail and three yea rs probation. Young Leary drew a 91Hiay pre-"Sentencing diagnostic study at lhe state's Chino facility and he is scheduled to report there Wednesday. He became the central figure Monday of the bitterly opposed sentencing or his colorful father and a couple of comments made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright during the proseculor':i: vigorous opposition to a plea for bail made him -for the first time that morn· ing -put dO\lln the flowers he had been toying with. Ju11e Cuts Barber "We have a true picture of Dr. Leary from the probation report on his .son John -the young man sitting right here," the bluff, burly Enright snapped. "John doesn't want his father and Rosemary to have children because of what happened to him and I think that we should all take note of what he has to tell us. Actress E1ids Ma.rriage in Newport "In other words," Enright said, "we should look at the evidence of whnl hap- pens to people who are the victims of other people's advocacy or the free use of drugs and \VC should assess their rights to freedom on the basis or what we have to see. Dr. Leary's O\\'n son has given us Actress June Allyson today clipped Ne\\•port Beach society barber ·Glenn A-laxwell out o{ lier life for the second lime 'with the dillsolulion by Superior Court Judge-Byron K. fltcl\1illan of the marriage they celebrated in Las Vegas almOit exactly three years ago. Miu Allyson. 47, dressed In a purplt, knce-lenglh dress and calf-length. patent lcalher boots. flew In from New York i\la.1day night for the court aclion. She heard attorney \Villiam Wenke teslify that ~ia:it\\'ell was withdrawing most o( his financial cl aims stemm ing from lhc niarriagc. Then she took the stand he.rselr to tcsUfy in ht't husky voice. that th ere were "irreeonci lable differences'' be tween the couple. ~taxwcll. 43. surrendered lo Miss Allyson the propetly rights he had prev~~ly claimed 1n their home at 101 Vi a Genoa, Lido Isle, and all interests in • Los A11gelcs apartment building. He \\as not present for the JO-minute hear· Ing. ... •• Judge Mc?-.1illan restored to Miss Allyson the name of June Allyson P°"•ell. And he approved the couple's plans ror payment or debls totaling more U1an S3,000, most of which will be settled by the actress. P.1iss Allyson first married "Iaxwell In 1963. shortly the death ol her first hus- band, actor-director Dick Powell A stormy marriage in which at least two domestic spats were broken up by New· port Beach police, ended two years later. (Ste LEARY, Page I) Cleaner Gets Cleaned Out But she remarried the society barber in A $30 cleaning bill was subtracted from 1966 in a sumptuou s J..as Vegas the cash register of a \Vestmlnster dry ceremony. cleaning bosines$ P.1onday eve.ning by a The blonde actress commented today man wlt.b a pistol in a cloth sack. that she was "very happy now/' and I hat Police said the bandit eritered Hooper's she has no immediate plan!I beyond Cleaners, 6933 Westminster Blvd., about 7 "making a suceess of my NeW" York p.m .. as the place was ck>.!lng, slapped play.~She described Iha~ play ·~ror.ty-his hand on the counter with th! bag and Carats," as "a brilliant comedy Jn which told the clerk. "stay cool, don 't look at J play the lead" and indicated that she me, 11 then demanded the money rrom lhe may go with the cast to London on con-register. plt?tion of the Broadway run. • He cot eway with $30, police said. , •• One to Grow On DAILY l'ILOT l'hll .. •t Rk:ll1NI IClfllllr Percy, a two-month-old pup owned by Jon Evans of Costa Mesa , met this fire plug Monday afternoon during a walk with his master near the Newport Pier. Percy obviously \Vas awestruck and had to sit down to tJii.Rk things oVer. VCI Students Ask Vote, ~ejected by Faculty A plan proposed by UC-Irvine faculty · members which would give students voting memberships in the university's Academic Senate was turned down Mon· day In a meeting or the state.wide Academic Assembly. The Academic Senate is a faculty organlzallon comprised or all teachers at all branches ol the university, with each campus represe.ntJng a division of the unlversitywlde group, The Academic Assembly consists of delegates lrom eacb ·dlv1$1on of the Senate. In the Monday meeting at UC Santa Cruz, Assetnbly members refused to en· dorse the plan whlch would give atudent.t one-fifth voting membership ln the body. In denying the proposal, the Aasembly noted the"plan ls In violation or a standln order of the UC Regents which stales on· Jy f9culty members may have voting rncmber8hlps In the organization. members urged Irvine delegates to carry their proposal directly lo the Rt?gents, wt:ile seeking support from other cam· puses. Dr. Bernard Gelbaum, chairman ot UCJ 's Senate told the body their denlal of · the plan was out o! step with the times. Tbe Irvine plan was proposed last June by 8 faculty committee appointed by UCJ Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich to study student participation In campus affairs. Committee chairman Julian Palley, associate professor of Spanish aald, "we believe the university 11houkl be more democraUc and give some decision mak· ing power to the community. We k>ok on this a!I a healthy step In the. evoluUon of the administration of the unlver111ty.11 West Point Chief Faces My Lai RaP, WASHINGTON (AP) -The Anny ""' nounced today that Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, West Poiat superintendent, and 13 other officers have been charged with dereliction or duly and other charges in a field investigation of the alleged Son My- My Lai massacre two years ago In South Vietnam. Koster was commanCling general of the America! Division, parent or the task force which swept through the hardcore Communist area on March 16, 1968. Ten Army officers and enlisted men nave been charged with murder and other alleged crimes ln the deaths of as many as 102 Vietnamese civilians in Son My village and My Lai hamlet. Lt. Gen. William R. Peers, who headed a 3~-month· investigation of the w1y reports of a mas.sacre originally were handled, told a news conference "there was testimony and evidence to indicate that certain persons; wittingly or unwit- tingly, suppressed certain information about the lncldent from passing up the chain of command." However, Peers said he did not lhink there was a coverup. He also sald he was satisfied that in- formation on the incident did not go beyond lhe America! Division to higher command and Washington at the time of ' the field probe immediately after tile reported massacre. At West Point, Koster informed ttie 3,700 cadets assembled in the academy's mess ball he has asked to be relieved ol his post as head of the academy. An informatlon otncer at West Point. said the general told the cadet:i: "I want yoo to be among the first to know that I will soon leave West Point." He saJd be' wants another assignment "in order to separate the military academy and you of the corps from the (Ste CHARGES, P1ge t ) eraage , Coast Weather Residents or tile Orange Const can expect more night and mom· ing 1ow clouds and fog with par- Ual clearing Wedne9day morning. Wednesday afternoon should be suMy but slightly cooler with some gusty winds. Temperatures wW reach the H>w 70'1. INSIDE TODA l' Oto.nQe Coast tee1wgeT1 and odul~ ore working on a pro- OratzLduign.ed.-to -t10rrow... the 1o-colled "generatian gap'' toith o meeting oJ ilie mfnd.s on 1oe> iol<>Oical probt.ms. Page 9. C1llt.n111 ''*""" v. ... <lff•lllolill C.t1t1k• ·-0•1111 Nelle:" «•1~ ,. ... .............. , ,1~-· -K-AllR l.-'""9rt Mllllu _.,, ' ~~-tt ,,........,,.,....,. ""' frl•t:..wit "'"' .... n °'.,... ,_.,, ' 2t •YllM l"ertllr 11 . ._... ,~,. • llKll Mfftttt. 1•11 tt -T11t"bllll If 1 .. 11 1'1111..,._ 1' U W111111r 4 14 .,.,_., """ ,,..,. ' Wwlll New• f.J I In dcnylns the pl:in, As s cm bl t 11nnrv111>"111Vtllb ap]lm<d Ufe~plan in October, bul in December was told It would have lo 11eek approval of the Acadcmtc Assembly ond the Reacnts Jn order to lmplt?ment th~ propos:al. · '-------------' ' ) I • . ---· :Z DAILY PILOT T11tsiay, March 17, 1970 Pilot Logbool~ Mesa Newsn1en-to Miss Good Pal 01arlie Priest By ARTHUR R. VINSEi. 01 lh• O•lly l"lltl $1111 NOBODY ON the 1ocal police and city hall beat over the years has ac- cepl.ed any certainty beyond death, taxes and Charlie Priesl being Costa ~1esa City Clerk forever. W~ lost a lriend and one of thGSe certainties Thursday. One. cf my competitors is a girl and l 'm glad, because J let her step ·ahead into his office Friday on our morning rounds. She asked if Charlie was in, the way we do every day. Or did. Eileen, -Grace and Linda were red-eyed. "Didn 't you know ?" asked Eileen. And then -of course -we knew. because the American way of death has instilled in us a circumspect method of referring to it3 ugly fact, especially where those we care about are concerned. • • • • HE LED A LONG, full life of 73 years and \9hen his Ume came il was quick. He was a reporter many years before he became a cily clerk. _He knew how tough it is to write an obituary for a friend. Charlie was a reporter in Boston when my mother, a former newspaperwom_an, was just Jewning her ABCs in school. He was a talented writer, a genUe \Yi!, a dedicated pipe·smoker and a grower of roses. He was a r-8ther modest man. He never told us -the local newspaper people -that he had been nominated as America's City Clerk of tile Year. ., . . . "COl\fE IN, sit ·down. Rest yourself,'' he would say on Taesday morn· ings. after a long and perhaps stormy city council meeting that ended only a few hours before. · "How about a cup of colfee? Here, try some of this," he ~ould say, of· fering a new brand of pipe tobacco. . . ' No maller what typographical error or factual contradiction you be· moaned alter discovering it crept in during frantic deadline-pressure produc· Uon of the prior day's paper, he could top il. He said it.wouldn~t matter anyhow, 50 years from now. Charlie's favorite -he told it on himself -was his obituary for a high- ly regarded citizen, fatally stricken while pushi ng a raft across the river. The word "raft" was scrambled in typesetting and printed as another embarfass- ing and totally absurd word, using the same four letters. "Whal a way to send the poor old fellow oU,'' he would say \Vith a chuckle. • • • SOMEHOW. writing Charlie's obit Friday morning, t kept thinking or that, as thoiigb .someone were looking over my shoulder. T was very, very careful, although I left out the fact he was pasl president of the Costa Mesa Historical Society. Charlie loved the color, drama and subtle interworkings of history. Now, he is part of it. Officials Lead Mourners At Charlie Priest Rites By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 "'• 0.111 l"l•t 51111 Sorrowing city ofdcials led by an honor guard of police and firemen paid their last respects Monda!' to Costa Mesa City Clerk C.K. "Charlie" Priest. Mi. Priest, who died last Thursday at 73, was eulogized in simple rites at Com· munity Congregational Church, Corona Mesan Must Face Drunken Charge A Costa Mesa man was arreSted Mon- day night on charges of felony drunken driving after his car allegedly struck and seriously injured a California High\vay Patrol officer on the San Diego Freeway. Charles R. Akers, 32. of 15n Baker SL, was jailed after police said his car struck office r J. L. Roden of Anaheim who was investigating an accident at the freeway and Brook.hurst Street in Fountain V:.lley. Roden , who was off the pavemen~ when struck, is in Anahe im ?t·lemorial Hospital suffering major injuries. DAILY PILOT . Newport leach L•9••• lffc.h Cot'• Mn • H1n1ti"9f'ff lffcll Fa11fttal• Velky s"" er_. •• ,. OMNQE c;:OAST PlJllLl5HING COMPANY Rob1rt N. Wetd PrnKr•nl 1r.;i P11Dll111t• J1(~ R. Cvrlty Vitt Prll!!oldenl and Gtntrll Min.get Thorri•1 Kttvil Editor Thom•• A. Murphln• M1,..glnf Editor Rld11rd P. N1!1 ' Sol/ttl O••nG• Coun!y [diltlr °"''" Olsl1 Maa: 3lO Wt1l Bal' !Trffl N,wp0r1 Beadl: 2'11 Wnl llelbOe llovlev•nl Leo ....... llN(ll: m F-1 AYfl'IW H11nllflO l(lft lleed'>: 11t1S Beadl Bl>UlfYltd $an c;:ltmt!'lhl: JI'» Norlh El C..rrilna Retl OAtLY PILOT, wUh WfUdt II wmt>mtd "'' NtW1-Prc•'• b pullli•Md 11111y u cep! 5'"'" lho1 Ir! 1tJ>1t1t1 "'IUont tot LlllQVnl 11 .. d'I. N--1 8HCl'I. Cos•• M... Hunl\no!On ., .. '""...,. '"°"""""' ..... ...,, .... wlffl , .... rwolontr 11111111ns. Ot•nt• c;: .. ,, P~lllhll<lt ConlPfny prlr\llilt pl ... 11 lf't If t211 'Wnl &al~ 11..ii., Nl'#pOl1 lltlCll. 11WS '30 Wttt lltv ,......,, Colnt Mew. Tel.,i.o .. (714J •42 ... 111 ClflNlfl-4 Act.,.rtbl•t 642·5671 S.. CIHMflfe AH Deportmefl'h! ,...,11 ... 492--4410 ~•'9f>I, ltlO. Or.,,g1 Co1,1 1&11t1r!\n1.,. ComfMn,. No nevit t!Otl"' 1n,,.rr111or1t. .inor111 .NII~ CH' .-..,.,.,1,e"''"'' """"" ""'r 11t ~.-,..1111N Wlftll• ...,. mla.•ICM Of '°°""IOllt -·· SkOlld dlu l!Otfl9f Niii •I ~"*"°'1 &tldl atlCI COtltl M_, C•l!lomll, ~llt!ierl "°' urrltf' 1t.oe '"°"lt!trrb~ m.« u.so ITIOl'llnl'fi 1111111.,-., Jl•llM!lonl, $1,00 rrlOl'ltnl\<. -. • I de! M!r, as truly a Renaissance Man. His talents and abilities spanned a wide range of personal interests, from mathematics to philosophy, writing, and floriculture to his dedicated duties in city government. .. This persisted until last week," said Dr. Philip G. A1urray, enumerating Mr. Priest's many activities before friend s who packed th~ sanctuary. h-1r. Priest was educaled at Columbia University, New '\"Jrk, as a mathematics major, then went into newspaper re.porting and editing in his native New England. An avid reader and writer, he sold his first short story at age 21 and consumed at least one book nightly th roughout his life, reading fluently in five languages. His daughter, Mrs. Charlotte Meck(', said in a written eulogy that he also y,1rote poetry, kept a dai ly journal for 30 y~ars and was a brilliant inspiration. And yet he kept a measure of himself for himself, Dr. Murray noted, since the family was unaware of the daily log or life that ended March 11 with his final en· try. He was also once a feature writer for the Christian Science Monitor and upon temporary retlrem ent as Newport Beach city clerk, wrote a manual on municipal government. The book is the foundation for governmental operations in m a n y Soutllland communities that incorporated following World \Var II, including Costa Mesa. He was also past presidenl of the Costa T\1esa Historical Society and was in- struniental in restoring and establlshing the old Diego Sepulveda Adobe as a historical monument. The Costa Mesa Clly Council passed :.1 resolution Monday night calling for a bronze plaque in his memory to be in· stalled at the Estancia. Girl, 8, Injured In Mesa Accident A small girl riding with a relaU\'e escaped serious injury Monday night in a Costa f\tesa accident similar lo one in which the driver died early today. Wi Harclerode, 8, of 2054 Republlc Ave., suffered a cut knee when the car in which she was a passenger skidded inlo a polver pole ... She was treated at Hoag ll-lemor\Al lklspit.a1 and released after the 5: 15 p.111. crash on Estancia Drive, 164 fee t soulh of Oriole Drive. The driver, Donald L. Lloyd. 38. af Z(lj4 Republic Ave ., tind p1153ens:cr Keith Jt. MityDeld, 26. of Sant.a Ana, escaprd in· jury, poll et said. LIO)'d said a car ln fron t of him $lopped suddenly 4nd he lost cont rol \\'hl!e lrylng to avoid the vcl'Jcle, who1;e occupants aped av.·ay. I • Wilcoxen Hits Strife In America By BARBARA KREIB!CH 01 th1 O.IN l"llOt Siii! u\Ve're ln a civil war and "'e'd better win Jt. \Vhether It comes from the ex- treme right or the extreme left, this pal· len1 of agitation and destruclion has got to slefp." Laguna Beach attorney William \Vilcoxen told members of the Laguna Beach Republican Women's Club ~iOD• day. Appearing as a candidate for the 35lh Congressional District seat. formerly held by the late James Utt, Wilcoxen said he \vould suggest government action to extract damages from persons and groups destroying public and private prcr c perty. "The milversity kids 'have got to learn lo abide by the basic rules of society," said Wilcoxen. In other remarks, the altomey cited his Jong experience in the field of lo•v en· force1nent and in representing the people in a variety of areas, from the fight to save Salt Creek to a former position all deputy district attorney, among his qualifications for office. Referri ng to his five years 'On the Laguna Beach school board and the re- cent unsuccessful tax override election, \Vilcoxen said, "I understand the problem of raising taxes and i'finnly believe that the use of property tax for school funding mu st go." Also addressing the Republican group \\'as John D. Ratterree, Santa Ana businessmen, who has filed for the 35ti1 Congressional District seat. Ratterree, 30, said he is part Indian and has taken an active interest in Indian pro blems. After serving four years in the Navy. he went into business and eon· tinued his education at night school, he explained. "I am convinced many of our problems are the result of electing people to publlc office because they tell us \Yhat we \\'anl to hear," said Ratterree. "Like promising to ]ower taxes and clean up situations y,•hich thev have no intention of doing anything aboUt." To a question on Laguna's hippie pro- blem. he commented, "it's easy to talk abouL hippies and not do anything about it. We have not given these people any kind of morality. This is a sick nation. What about the owners of the buildings lvhere they live and hang out, the people who are making money oft hippies?" City Council candidate Edward Lorr joined the roster of speakers to seek sup- port of the Republican group, accusing the present council of ignoring Chamber of Commerce advice on Main Beach development and fail ing, for four years, to do anything abodt the hippie .problem. "Dick Goldberg has tried.blit failed to find support," said Lorr. "You need men on your council who can take the heat from the small group of bleeding hearts who support the hippies. This does not mean the creative, productive artist who happens to wear Jong hair, but the transient population of dirty, drug-ad· dieted members of the L e a r y brotherhood." The community must give full support to the council and the police, sai d Lorr, and landlords also must cooperate by drawing up and enforcing strict lease agreements. Prqmising ••a strong voice on the Ciiy Council" if elected, Lorr noted that he is the owner of a local business and can promi~e "24·hour-a-day service to tht community." F1•01n Page 1 CHARGES ... continuing flow of public announcements or any ot~er connection with the alleged events which took place in Vietnam in- volving elements of my former com- mand." Col. ratrick Dionne, the academy in· formallon officer, said Koster gave his remarks wiihout apparent emotion - "1\'lth a firm chin" -and after his state- ment the cadets gave him a standing ovation. The Army statement announcing the findings of the inquiry said : "The report alleges that there were serious <leficiencies in the aclions of a number of officers holding command and staff positions in the America! Division, I he , 11th Infantry Brigade, Task Force Bariter, alld the U.S. adviS-Ory organiza- tion. "The defit'iencies cited in the report relate primarily to alleged failures lo r<'nder required reports. conduct ade- qu3tc investigations. and Qther\\·ise to sa tisfactorily dischar~e <luties in the ·Jight of informat ion receil,ed concerning an alleged atrocity." The Ar iny made public a censored YCr:<:iOll of the report. deleting the bulk of it on grounds it contained material \vhich might prejudice legal proceedings. A tea m ot Army legal officers re\·iewed th~ 20,000 pages of testimony and 500 docu1nents given before the inquiry. "As a result charges hove been prefer- red aR3inst 14 officers." the Army sald. "hlost of Lhc officers are fharged with derelietion of dulv and/or failure to com· ply with applicable regulations and direc-. tions. Oth!"r charges include false s"·ear- inJ? and misprision of a felony.'' ~fisprislon. as defined in the Code or ~Hillary Justice, i1; leveled at persons who llll\ c knnwtedg<' or lhe rommisslon of a felony "and who conceal} and does not ns l'OOn ns possi hle make known" this to ch•ll and military authorities. The 14 oUlcer.\!: accusl'd Include Capt. f.rncs.t .L._hlcdina._commandct..oLonc of th(' comp.:1 rucs !hat awept ~1y Lttl. and C::ipt, Thomas K. \Villlngham , who was ~rrving wllh another eompany in "Task Fnrce nnrker'' during the ~fy Lal-Song Jlly operation. • OAIL Y ,!LOT Sllll P~ott Message fm• ltloto1•ists Ne'v sign being installed over humpbacked Pacific Coast liigbway bridge over Back Bay is designed ~o aid westbound motorists \Vho can't see Dover Drive stop light from east side of bridge. More than 30 rear·end collisions ~in westbound lanes of heavily traveled bridge during 1969 caused cit}' Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe to seek help from the state Division of FlighwaYs, which is now install- ing the lighted warning device. f'rom Page 1 LEARY ••• Yorty E11ters Ca1npaig11 a very valuable pointer to, wnat oor answer (to the bail application) should be.·· For Governor NomiI1ation Enrighrs angry words shoc ked you ng Leary into an erect posture for the first time during the hearing. ~le dropped his llower5, swung parLly around to watch the prosecutor and bo\\'ed his head as Enright concluded. ~t was _so~e moments before the long- hatred, h1pp1e·garbed Leary resumed his study of the purple orchid delivered to him by an ·admirer shortly before the sentencing hearing opened. .. His role in the inciden t of Dec. 26, 1968 that sparked the arrest of the trio was also brol1ght into focus by Chula through the statement by the veteran trial lawyer that ·•_n?bodY knew who gave that bag (containing drugs) lo Dr. Leary just before the police officer searched the family car." Chula made it clear that Dr. Leary did not have .the bag just before lhe arrest and he pointed out that it did not rome from Mrs. Leary: He made no reference to John Bush Leary as be pressed his argument that there had never been any real basis for prosecution of his client. Dr. Leary has learned since his sen. tencing that feder al authorities will not claim the precedence to which they are entitled and that he will serve his first sentence in a Californ ia state prison. It is expected that the arrangement \viii help - both sides in the dispute in the tong ap. pellate court hassle that seems certain to follow hi s conviction on the Laguna Beach charges. Much of Chula's appeal will be based on the argument thal failed to impress Judge McMillan -that Dr. Leary is being prosecuted as much for bis pre-ar· rest comments on the use of LSD and other drugs as he has been convicted under archaic laws relating to drug use. Chula was unable to convince Judge :l\·lcMillan throughout his long delivery that Dr. Leary has never advocated 10 young people that they only take LSD under rigidly controlled circumstances and under responsible supervision. Judge McMillan lef t the bench •Yith a JO-second summation: -"Dr. Leary is a pleasure.seeking, ir- responsible, Madison Avenue-oriented ad· vocate of the free use of LSD and mari- juana." LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles announced today he •vould run for the Democratic nomination for governor of California. Yorty \\•ill oppose Jesse Unruh. leader or the state Assembly's minor It y . Democrats, in bidding for the chance lo oppose Republican Gov. Ronl!lld Reagan, who announced a week ago he is seeking a second term. The primary election is June 2. Yorty, 60, is regarded as a "maverick'' Democrat because he has crossed party lines, such as supporting Republican Richard M. Nixon for president in 1960 instead of Democrat John F, Kennedy. In his announcement, Yorty hi t out at Reagan and certain unamed fellow Democrats. "I believe Gov. Reagan has made a sincere effort to play an unaccustomed role as adininistrator of the largest state in the unio~. but his stewardship has betn cha racterized by too much show and too little accomplishment." Yorty said. "I am a lifelong Democrat and \Viii run on the Democratic ticket," Yorty sa id. "I would like to see the Democratic party of our state divorce itself from the ex· treme leftists, the power seekers, the 1nerceni1rics, and th'! arrogant \YOuld·be dictators who trv to teH registered Democrats who can or cannot run, and how \\'e are lo vote." It is Yorty's second bid for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. In 1966 he lost a primary election effort by a 3·2 margin to incumbent Edmund G. ''Pat" Brown. Reagan defeated Brown that November. Mayor Sam, as he is orten called, woo a third four.year term last May 27 in what was regarded as an uphill victory over City Councilman Thomas Bradley, a Negro. "The people of California have paid a high price for Reagan's lack of ex- perience and judgment," Yorty's state- ment said. "He has switched his position lately and now supports income tax Y.'ilhholding. But will he do so after the ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW FOLLOW THIS CHECK LIST TO INSURE COMPLETE SATISFACTION IEl BRAND NAME DEPENDABILITY 1E1 DEALER INTEGRITY IEl WIDEST SELECTION IEl COMPETITIVE PRICES IEl EXPERT INSTALLATION IEl FINANCING AVAILABLE THEN COME TO ALDENS-OWNED & OPERATED IY 3rd GENERATION CARPETING E)(PERllNCE- OVIR 11 YIARS IN THE HARBOR AREA. WE ·FEATURE THESE FAMOUS - NATIONALLY ADVERTISED NAMES : * BEATTIE * MONARCH . ' OAIL'I' PILOT Sl1H PhlM SPREADING HIS WINGS Gubernatorial Candidate Yorty ele ction if he •vins again?'' Yorty's slateme11t <lid not even ment ion Unruh, 47. Unruh form ally liled as a candidate !\1onday and announced that he y,•as resigning as the party's leader in_ the Assembly as of March 31. His Assembly tenn runs through next January but he said Monday his campaign "'OUld require all his 't!nergies. , Yorty rose from a young man selling neckties and shirts in a men's wear st-Ore in his home town of Lincoln. Neb., to the chief executive of one of the nation's largest cities. Jn between \\'ere two tern1s In the California Assen1bly and two terms in Congress. ·• • ' * CROWN * ROXBURY * IMPERIAL * WALTERS _,, Don't Miss Our Drapery Dept. * SWEETWATER * BIGELOW * BERVEN * FIRTH '* COLUMBUS * MONTICEL\O * DAN RIVER * SEQUOYAH We f1atur• 1 compl1ta atlectlon of fabric• and color• to enhanc• ind compllm1nt yovr carpetln9, -VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM Hun~reds of Small -to -Room Size Remnants A T DEN' 1663 PLACENTIA. COSTA MESA D _, -'='----'e40-4e3a·----+-. " ] Gtntr•tjo"' of C1rp1tl"t Ewp11i111'' CARPETS e DRAPERIES 1J YEARS Sl•VtNG THI ORANGE COAST ; I -.._..., - Huntington Beaeh VOL 63 , NO. 6'1, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCl:f 17, 197G enera 0 Mesa Duo Hunted Beach Police Seek Slaying Suspects By TERRY COVILL E 01 lh• 01111 ~1191 51111 Bulletins went out to all v.·estern states today as Huntington Beach detectives launched a manhunt for two Costa Mesans sought in the slaying last Thurs- day of a U-year-old Anaheim man. A thi rd suspect. also of Costa i\1e.sa, v.·as arrested Monday night after a round- the-clock investigation into the shooting of Thomas C. Astorina. found in a ma rshy area near Sunset Aquatic Park \\'ilh a bullet hole in his chest. One of tbe two men police are looking for is Robert \V. Liberty, the famed "Candlelight killer" involved in the strangling death of a \Vest minsler mother in 1966. Libe rty gained widespread notoriety <luring a trial which revealed a weird rituali stic service performed over the body of the· woman he had allegedly kill- ed. Police had found him near the body •. playing a guitar by candlelight. Liberty was ruled "insane" and con- Ataytlii•ay Goes fin ed to a state hospital. He was given his freedom in early Septen1ber by Judge Robe.rt Gardner of Newport Beach, \V ho declared him once again sane. · Three months be[ore Judge Gardner declared him legally free, Liberty ca:.ised a furor by ~·alking out of the ~1etropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk. freed by a "clerical error." The declaration of sanity made it i1n- possib!e for Liberty to be tried again 011 the Westminster murder charges. Police are also hunting Robert Patrick Connolly. 39, of 350 Avocado, Apt. 10. Costa Mesa. Both Connolly and Liberty are considered armed and dangerous, police said. No address was given for Liberty bu t it is believed he may have bein staying with Connolly at the Cos ta l\fesa address. The pair are believed to be driving a l965 J\1ustang convertible with a black top and ye!Jow body. The license nun1bt'r is PKL 936. Huntington High Drop s -Dress Code for a Month By RUDI.. NIEDZIELSKI 01 the D.tll't ~1191 llllf 1ilinls, midis and maxJs are now com- monplace on the Huntington Beach High School ca1npus. And among the boys, the race for beards, mustaches, sideburns and hair is 00. l\faking both possible \.•;as a decision to suspend all dress regulations, except 1hosc required by the health code. for one month. •·1rs oula sight ," sai d some students, ecs tatic about bein~ the first in the 52- square mile Huntington Beach Union High School District to wear the fashions they like. St uden ts at the other campuses - \Vestminster, Fountain Vall ey. i\tarina and Edison -ha ve not yet been given such liberties. Will iam Rollins. llunlingtcrn High's vice-principal. said a survey taken last Friday from among 80 teachers has not disclosed one instance of the feared dress bugaboo -disruptio n of the educational process. "The girls are wearing a lot of capri slacks," said Rollins. "This has been about the biggest change. Among the boys it's not been so noticeable. Some may be wearing sandals without socks. Actually, the decorum has been as Usual." The unprecedenled action was taken as the result of recommendations by the student congress and executive board following a schoolwide survey of sudent.5 and faculty members. Students, however, will have to bow to the adminlstratiCM in disputes over the "no code'' dress code sinct It has the final authority in all matters pertaining to the appearance of the students. Freeway Topic ·At Beach Meet Freeway locaton proble1ns v.•111 be under discussion in Huntington Beach aga in Wednesday night as the city's Orange Freeway Advisory Committee takes a look at the proposed route for the north-south freeway near the Santai Ana Rl ver. . Comm!Ueemcn will meel in the ad· mlnis t;ath·e annet oC City Hall, 5th and l\.1ain Street. at a p.m. to discuss the Orange Freeway, Route 57. The group. led by Cri9 C. Cris of the 'HOME Council. is charged wilh making a recommendation on freew ay location in a corridOr on either 9lde of the rh1er rrom the Garden Grove Freeway south to the 1.dopted route of Paclrlc Coast High"·ay. Mt!ml>ers of the commitlee are Mrs. R. u of women voters· Bill Wrtn, chamQ!:r of ~mmc-r.e: wrerrce -J. Sa11mann. Junior Chamber of com- merce ; Larry L .. Curran, Concerned Citizenship Commlttet; William Ben Lon· derte, ltO~fE Counctl ; and Joo Carrow, HOME Council. HAILS CODE SUSPENSION HB High's Mark Polak Y outli Co1nes Out Of Hiding With New Dress Code For months 17-year old l\1ark Polak has been a mystery to Huntington Beach School adminlstra lors. They hardly ever saw him . Every time he spotted one. ?i.1arli would duck behind a wall, tree or a partitlon. And he never set foot in the office. He is a good boy and his mother says he never gels into trouble. but schoolmen saw red wheneve r they spoiled his yellow shoulder length hair. Since last Wednesday, when U)e: dress eode forbidding long hair waa ldSpended for one month at lhe llunUngton campus, 1'1ark and a lot of others breathed sighs of relier and came out ol hldfug. "l was always getting hassled about gell ing my hair cut,'' said Mitrk. whn hasn't talked to a barber since last September. "They would have kicked me out of i;chool if they hadn 't done 111nything like lhls," he explained . ~ '1l!PilS. leellng is one of general h3P- piness about suspension of the codt., ac- cording to f\1ark , but he warned that II it were to be enforced egaln, "They're net going to be happy at a11. l wouldn't be t ither." Police said today they ha\'e no idea wtl(:re the suspects v.'ent. Detectives ntade a thorough search of bars in Santa Ana 1'.1onday night ancl early this morning in hopes of finding the suspects. The men are known to patronize these bars. Police made the first arrest in the 4 't:· day-old case ~fonday night. Randall Greg Allen, 2i, also of 350 Avocado. Apt. 18, Costa ~1esa, was arrested after ques- tioning at the Huntlnglon Beach police staUon and held on murder charges. He wa s one of nearly 75 suspects quizz· ed by detectives since the Thursday night slayirlg. He is being held at the · Huntington Beach city Jail without bail and is ex - pected to come up for arraignmen t \\!ednesday or Thursday. Police questioned persons ranging from narcotics users to yachtsmen in their probe. Bars between Sixth Street and First Street, Santa Ana. were the main locus of the search. Monty 1'.tcJ(cnnon. cleleclive in charge <1f the case, said today a team effort by 18 detectives \.\'orking around the clock brought the arrests. He estimated 700 hours \.\'ere logged in the probe. Mc.Kennon said they had been unable to establish a moli\'e for the murder. Drugs v.·ere ~ing looked into but nothing had been determined. He also \.\·ould not reveal whelher a weapon had been romv:J _ Connolly ls described as being 5 feet 8 Inches, weighs 170 poundJ, having brown hair and brown eyes. A t1ttoo "Pat" i1 on hls right !ofearm and "USMC'' on his left for earm. Libfrty is 5 feet 10 inches. weighs 140 pounds and has brciwn hair and hazel eyes. "We don't know where lhey went," J\.'lcKennon sa id. ~urt Rejects Bribe Suspect's Privilege Plea An Arizona land developer's plea that lapes of his conversations with J\.1ayor Jack Green of Huntington Beach were privileged and should be suppressed from court evidence was rejected today in Superior Court. Judge James F. Judge threw out the argument of \Villiam D. New, 66, of Phoenix after hearlog Green testily tha t those tapes represented the substance o( a conversa tion he had "'ilh New in a Hun- tington Beach restaurant and phone calls 1nade to the mayor by the defendant. The judge set May 6 as the dale on \.\1hich New must fa ce trial on bribery charges. The land developer is free on $12,500 ba il. The prosecution is expected to use. the tapes debated today as part of its argu- ment that New offered Mayor Green $4,000 in return for the mayor's favorabl e. vote in a ioning transaction. Green advised police or New's alleged overtures after he was first contacted by the real estate man and New was ar· rested as he allegedly repeated bis offe r to the city official. Green today testified that he carried a transmitter during later conversations with New and the comments of both men were directly relayed to listen ing police officers. ' DllL '( ,ILOT rNtt W •kNnll ......... One to Grow On Percy, a t\vo-month·old pup owned by Jan Evans of Costa Mesa, met this fl re plug Monday afternoon during a walk with bis mistress near th.e _Newport Pier. Percy obviously was awestruck and had to sit down to th' ink things over. Grand Jury Harbor Action Assailed by Beach Mayor Mayor Jack Green of Huntington Beach assalled the Orange County Grana Jury Monday for "a biased and erroneous report" on its iqvestigation of the Orange County Harbor District. The jury favors retention of the district. The mayor-said al a press e<inference that the jury's probe was not made by the jury il?lelf but by a five-man agricultural committee. ilA,. "They intei'vlewed me, but it was dolfe strictly for show," said. "Jt•was ob- vio1.r.1 they had al dy• made up their minds. They \Vere sed to be in· v~stigating but instea argued with me on the merits of the · "lt was not a pu~lic hear :g and was very unprofessional conduct on their part. I don't care which way they go but I do think they could have handled it bel.-- ter." The jury report · last week recom- mended that the Harbor District be re- tained . Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market turned upv.•arit late this afternoon on mod· erate trading. (See quotaUons. Pages 10- 11 ). Tbe League of Cities, which Mayor Green heads, favors dis!IOlution of the district or that the district's future be put lo a countywide vote. Green, City Administrator Doyle Miller and Development Director Tom Severns week which may resolve the district's future. Two bills will come up for hearing T'nutsdey, one by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) Which urges a public vote on the issue and another by Assemblyman Ken Cory (D-AnaheimJ simply asks the state legislature to ex. tend the duties of the Harbor District without a vote of the people. Green hinted that a compromise may result, that the ty.·o assemblymen may get together and propose that the district be d1ssolved and made an expanded department of the county government. "IC this is the compromise, we'll go along,'' Green said. "We think this business has gone on too long." The maror voi~ concern, however ' at · the haggling over the district "I'm concerne<I at the ·tremendous amount of pressure Ming brought by groups and Individuals as to why they are opposed to having it become a counly department," ·he added. ' Sewage Solution Foundll U~City . . Hu1itington's 'Honey Pot' May· ' ' Pipes ' . The solution to that problem Hun· lington Harbour residents have raised such a slink about apparently is burled 16.Tihan 200-feet-from-1he: Sunset Beach Sanitation District's sewage plant al Pacifi c Coe s t Highway and Warner Avenue. But It may lake several days lo travel that short distance if the sanitaUon dldrict and the City ol Huntington Beach can'L come-to tetnl$, -lnv0lved-1rtbe closing of the r;ewage plant , sometimes re rt r r e d to liarcastlcally 11 the 1'Honey Pot ." Plans call for the Sunset Beach district to hook 119 lines into city sewtr lines just 1 few feet from Its plant, wdere.d cloJed 1 wed ·~ l ago by the Santa Ana River .Duin Water the county., therefore it will ~ a matter Quality Control Board. Among Gthtr .o( monUM beion torin11 coo.tfaets can be things, HunUnglon Harbours resident approVed by the 11 saiittahon districts in-complained ttµlt the plant smelled bad. The new hookup would-be a-breeie" volVed. and would cost only about $2,500, a,c-A temporary solution 11 pos!lble, wllh cording to HunUngton Beach Fire Chief lhi approval of Fred llarper, dlrtttor of Ray Picard, who has hce.1 Involved In the Orange County Sanitation District, by negotia tions ~h¥een the city and the hooking onto the Huntington Beach lineS. sanitation district. Sunsel aulhoriUes have no choice but to One ot the dlffi cullie!i Pica.rd tXP.l~lned, _do 11.--the. quesUon ii-simply a maUerrof is that long temrcosts ofClrrYing·Suruet ' Ume. They ere now working out• con- Beach 1ewage to treatment plants in tr&ct with Huntington Beach o!ficlals HunUngton Beach and Fountain Valley which may Include the purchast ol the will cosl conslt1era b1y more. old s11nltat.ion plant by the city for use as The Sunset Beach Sanitation District 111 'nothtr nre stallon. The bulldlrtg would 'hot a member of the Orange County be torn down and 1 new ouc placed on Sanitation District which serves most of the Janet J . JEN CENTS West Point Boss Among 14 Charged WASHINGTON (AP) -The Anny In· nounced today that Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, West Point superintendentl and 13 other officers have been charged with dereliction of duty and other cilarges in a field investigaUon of the alleged Son My- My Lai massacre two years ago in South Vietnam. Koster was commanding general of the America! Division, parent of the tad<: force whk'h swept through the hardcore Communist area oo March 16, ltea. Ten Army offi«rs and en!Lsted men have been charged with murder flld other alleged crimes in the deaths of as many as 102 Vietnamese civilians in Son Afy village and My Lai hamlet. Lt. Gen. Willlam R. Piers, who headed a 31h-month investigaUon of the way reports of a massacre originally were handled, told a ne'N! conference '"there was testimony and evidence to lndicata that certain persons; wittingly or unwil· tingly, suppressed certain infonnation about the incident froin passing up the chain of command." However, Peers said he did not tbink there was a coverup. He also said he was satisfied that in- formation on the Incident did not go beyond the Amerieal Division to higher £Ol'OIDIDd and Wasbington. at lbe tirne. of the field probe Immediately after tne reJ)Orted massacre. At Wett Point, Koster Wormt.d the 2,700 cadtt! assembled Jn the academy 's mtsl hall he has asked to be relieved ol his post a. head of the academy. An information officer at West Point said the general told the cadets "I want you to be among the first to know that I will soon leave We;st Point." He said he wants another assignment 1'ln order •to separate lhe miUtary ac&demy and you of the corps from the conUnuing flow of public announcements .Jr af\Y other connection with the alleged event.5 which took place in Vietnam in- volvhig elements of my fonner com- mand." CoL Patrick Dionne. the academy in- !ormaUon of!lcer, said Koster gave bis remarks without apparent emotion - "with a finn chin" -and after his state- ment-the cadet.5 gave him a standing ovation . The Army statement announcina the findings of the inquiry said : "'The report . alleges that there were serious deficiencies in the actions of a number ()f officers holding e<>mmand and staff po5llions in the Americal Division, the 11th Infantry Brigade, T11sk Force !See CHARGES, P•1• I) Planners lo Consider Industrial Project City planning commissioners wll1 ~n­ sider plariJ for one of the largest in- dust{lal areas proposed for Hun tington Beach during their 7·:30 session in city council chambers tonight. T'ne proposed dtv!lopmenl is Jocated on 352 acres south of Bolsa Avenue and we'l of Springdale Street. Orange Coast Weat•er Re&ldents of the Orange Coast can expect more night and morn- ing low clouds and fog with par· lial clearing Wednesday morning. ·Wednesday afternoon &hould be ·sunny but slightly cooler with some guaty winds. Temperatures will rtacb the low 70's. INSIDE TOD~ Y Orange Coa1t tecnagerr and adwlt.t art working on a prr> gram dt1ig11ed to narrow tht so-colltd "ge1iiratton gap" with o meeting of tht minds on toe· iplogicol probltm.r. Page 9. , • -• • OAILV PILOT H ' Beat!hAideeaughiinMiddle CofC-Council Tiff Nearly Costs Man's Job By ALAN DllUUN Of l"9 Dtl!Y 'I!" • ..., Bill Back, HunUngton Be a 'c h ' 1 economlc development coordinator. found hJmaell tn the middle of a city council· Chamber ol Commerce dispute today. He almoat found himself out of a job as a result of !time comic vote juggling at 1-<londay night's council meeting. Even though his wife had the motor running outside. as Back put it, the coun· cil voted to continue his position for a while. The conflict ar06e after C i t y Ad miru$1.rator Doyle Pi-filler presented a report, nquested by coul)cilmen earlier, on whether the city's contract with lhe: cha mber of commerce should be renew- ed. The contract in question is one in which the city pays the cha mber $19,600 a year for an economic development c<iordlnator to promott: the city. Some councilmen made it clear f\lon- day night that they would like to see the contract terminated and Back'$ position re-created within the clty'.s pubUc in- formation office. OA1L Y ,ll OT !1111 ,~,, bad favored kcepina Back with the cbam· ber, Is on th• chamber board. ll• promptly apologized and stepped down'. City Attorney Don Bonfa saJd this ·was a conOicl that he would recognJze. but he also saw membership in the chamber as a conflict or interest. At this, Dr. Kaufman, an optometrist , and Councilman Ted Bartlett, who owns a gas station, abstained, causing Mayor .1ack Green to ask if the cou ncil still had a quorum. A-tcCracken, from the audience. quipped "Can I say anything under oral c;am- municaUon?11 11'te voting went on with Don Shipley. Green and Al Coen voling for continuing the contract until June 30. Bonfa wa~ not finished and gave another ruling. ''All tho&e who sanctimoniously .ab- st ained from volin,ir should re1um and repeat the dishonor" referring lo the fact that they all voled on the issue when the chamber contract was established over a year ago. In debate earlier, Kaufman said, "Tt'ii; time the chamber stood on its own feet and did Its own work in its own way and not rely on a city subsidy." . JEFF, 9, (LEFT) AND CRAIG KING, 10, PREPARE FOR THE GREAT GRA·Y FLY-IN On Wednesd•y, the Fountairi Valley Hlg"h Gym Wiii h Turntd Ovtr to Boy& ind Peper Alrpl1ne1 Mill er made this recomm endation, arguing that the chamber, wit h its special interest lobbying. can become a political organization when it influences ltgislation before the council. BACK ON THE JOB CofC's -er, ah -HB'' Beck Shipley commented, "We voted this sit uation ourselves. r don't ll'll nk we should be taking a line on the good guys versus the bad guys." Beach to Tighten Terms For New Central Library The Huntington Beach city council has decided to sUffen lls stand on negotia· lions wjth the arehltect for the planned $2 million library in the city's Central Park. On a mo1ion by Dr. Henry Kaufman, the council voted unanim'Ously to offer a contract to Ri chard & Dion Neutra & •'Associates at a fee of 7~? percent and Beach Needs Aid . . To Buy Sand Land Near Cit y Pier Huntiilgton Beach ls ?loping to get boom from both the state and federal govunmenU tn Its plan to acqui re about 2.5-miles ol beach north or the ~1wnicipal Pier. The hmd is owned by the Huntington Beach Company. The .company h~ npt been·1pproached ofiicialJ,y'iiy U!8 city on the question. · · Mayor: J ack Green said Monday the ci- ty was preparing the application it wo~ld make In 1971 for federal funds to acquire the beach. Between ·$11 and $14 million ·is being sought from the federal govern.. ment. Jn. addition, the mayor revealed tha t a request was being madt from Lt. Governor Ed Reinecke 's office for all cities and counties to pass resolutions af- firming that they will do all they can to pre.serw: t~e coastline unlit the state can draw up a master plan. "This v.i ll put the st ate on record as 5upportlng moves to prevent irreversible development of beaches,'' Green said. •·it v.·ould be in line with actions '-~ our Park- ing Aulhority." The Parking Authority is the vehicle the city has us.eel to improve parking faclllties along th e municipal beach and acquire beach land. The ma yor also hoped the city would go on record asking that lt be put in the drilling sanctuary which currently ends at the Santa Ana River. Such a sanctuary Y.'ould prevent furth er drilling platforms being set up off Huntington Beach. The two platforms off Hunti ngton Beach are 0Y.11ed by Union on Co. and Signal Oil &:: Gas Co. Signal declined to corp.ment on the mayor's remarks today. that the contract be similar to one agreed to with the architect for the civic center, Kurt Mey~. The motion als... stipulated lharno re· tainer be pald Neutra until the conll'act Is exe(uted. In Previous actlcin, the council had voted a $7 ,500 retainer fee. City Administrator Doyle Miller, asked ir the resolution would help · him, answered, "l think this is the action we should have had ·three months ago ." Neutra, a Los Angeles architect with a world-wide reputatlon, has been holding out for a fee of 8th percent. · City Attome:Y Don Bonfa told tht coun- cil that the architect had Indicated that he would do the job !or 7~~ percent;. but he would not give the same wvlct as be would for an 8th percent fee. Kaufman· replied, ''l don't anticipate a lessening of .service. It will be substan-- tially·the same as Meyer's contract and I imagine he will give us full servk:e." · Earlier, in pushing for the signing of Neutra, Councilman Don 'Shipley pointed out that the library board bad recom· mended him, and lhat continued nej:oti- ations made the city look cheap. Miller said, "You told lilm we \\'ere goi ng to hire him before \Ve ha d n con- tract. That was the flaw. It ma de it dif· ficult for us to negotiate." The adminis trator said there had been "extreme animosity" directed toward the clly starr by the library board and a cou ncil sub-committee over delay in sign· ing the architect. "lt was the feeling of the entire com· mittet that we were being a lltUe bll obstinate," 1'.fil\tr added. Cleaner Gets Cleaned Out A $.10 cleaning bill was subtracted from the cash register of a Westminster dry cleaning business Monday evening by a man with a pistol in a cloth sack. Pollce said the bandit entered Hooper's Cleaners, 6933 Westminster Blvd., about 7 p.m .• aii the place y,·as clos ing, slapped · hJ s hand on the counter with the bag and told the clerk, "stay cool. don't look at me,'' th en demanded the money from the register. He got away with $30, police said. 30 Valley Pilots To Test Skills Thirty young Fountaih Valley pilots will pit their skills agaln.st eacii other in a test of endurance, speed and aeronauUcal design as their private planes take over tbe airways Wednesday night. Flight time is 7 p.m. in the Fountain Valley High School gym. The young pilots are tin ·members of the Fountain Valley GRA·Y, a boys' organization in the YM- CA. ft's the serond anru.Jal paper airplane conte st ·sponsore d by the GRA-Y for mem~ers -0nly. The public Is invited to watch the aeronautical show at no charge. Boys will match their skills as airl>lane designers and test pilots for about two hours. They have been limited to three sheets of 8th by 11 Inch bond paper for construdion materials. 'Chicano' tQ Talk Ahout Education Chicano iii a name applied ~ Muican- Amerlcan citizens, some of whom think it js derogatory while others have adopted it as a vibrant syml>ol of their culture. At 11 a.m., Thursday in the free speech area at Golden west Coli~ge, one of the leading "Chicanos" from Los Angeles, Sal Castro, wtll explore the changing worlQ of the Chicano in educatio n. Castro was a key figure during the . walko?Jt at Lincoln High School in Los Ange les in 1968. He is still fighting a legal ba~tle to return to teaching U>e.re. Changes in the college and university systems for r.Jexican-American students is the point of Castro's speech Thursday, on the grassy area ne1t to the Forum. "With our present contract in fo rce. is lhis not some form or a conflict of in- ter!st?" Miller asked. The administrator claimed that if Back's position wa s moved to the city there would be no additional cost. After much haggling the council voted to continue B•ck's contract on a montb- to-month basla until June 30 when it will be reviewed by the new city council after lhe April 14 electtoa. A proposal to Jungle Journey re -create aBck's job in the city failed on a 3-3 tie. The voling \'i'en t on comic, rather than orderly, lines, however. Councilman Henry Kaufman said that since conflict of interest was being con- sidered he felt it right to point out that membershi p on the cham ber's board or directors might be a confllct. Cow:icilman Geor ge 1'.lcCrac ken, \thO Borneo Adventure Told By Beach Explorer "It was an incredible dream and an im· and a witc hdoctor vied for the lives of pew Ible joorney." people. That is how Huntington Beach explorer "It was a ceremony for all the sic k Wyn Sargent explained her recent lrip in-child ren. The witchdoctor \\'as conducting to the jungles of Borneo to Harbour View it from a S\tdng in the middl e of the room elementary school children Monday. I all of the children were lying on the And they agreed with stunned silence. floor, smelling, dying, Ill," she explained. 1-fouths were agape as she recounted her .. It was a rather uneasy position for me experiences of bizarre funeral ri tes. since he.was my fiercest com petitor." But wtt.hchdoctors and headhunters among peace was arranged with the witchdoctor the· native Dyaks. givin g her ~it prized ifonwood drlll11: as a Last October Miss SargerJt lau(l;C~ an sign of truce. expedition to B'orneo to bring med ical In one ot he r instance she nearly louch- a!d, rood and education to some 3,000 ed off a v.•ar bc!y,•een tribesmen over her tribesman. compelitloo with a witchdoctor and had Harbour View's children themselves to flee through the jungle with her in- helped out with '500 which were used lo terpreter and guide. purchase 5,000 books for River View On the way, a 14-foot snake fell on her School, their sister school In the dark from a tree, knocking her down. Htr "We stand a very good chance tif mak· guide manage4 to dispatch the 25()..pound ing the ugly America a respected again," serpent with a quick knife stroke, she she told the children. said. Whal is Back's view of his job? "I'm an employe of the city no matter where they put me ." he said. Pele Horton, Chamber of Commeru president, \\'BS out of town today and could not be reached for comment. The chamber is known to be an xious nol to Jose Back. Jts executive committee will meet later this week and may take a Jsition on the matter. Frotn Page 1 CHARGES ... Barker, and the U.S. advisory organiza· lion . "TIJ.e deficiencies cited in ti)e repo rt relate primarily to alleged failures to render required reports, conduct ade- quate investigations, and otherwise to satisfacloril:-r discharge duties in the light of information received concerning ail alleged atrocity." The Army made public a censored ,·ersion of the report, deleting tlre bulk -0f it on grounds it contained material which might prejudice legal proceedings. A team of Anny legal officers reviewed the 20,000 pages of tes1imony and 500 documents given before the inquiry. "As a resu lt charges have been prefer- red against 14 officers," the Anny said. "l\iost of the offi cers are charged wi th dereliction of duty and/or failure to com- ply with applicable regulations and direc- tions. Other charges include ralse s:wea~ init and misprision of a felony." ritisprision, as defined in the Code tif i\·lili!ary Justice, is leveled at persons .,..•ho have knowledge or the commission of a felony "and "·ho conce als and does nol as soon as possible make known'' this to civil and mil itary authorities. Price of Pooch Rises in Beach . One of her major goal! was to supply 1-.ilss Sargent plans to return to her medical help to lhe Dyaks which she said ba.se of operations in Kuala Kuajan in The price of a dog in Ilunlington Stach are dying rrom a variety or diseases. abou t nine weeks to replace her \Yi!! jump S3 arter April 1 if the dog She establi&hed a slx-bed jungle American staff with local help. doem'l ha\·e a new license attached to hiS Town Called St. Pat hospital with an American doctor and an flfeanwh ile she ii in the U.S. soliciting collar. American nurse, backed up by near ly funds for their salaries and return fares. Dog tags etist S5 at the Huntington B l Onl f H I'd eight tons of equipmenL Beacn Humane Society, 21632 Nowland U Y 01• 0 1 ay Periodic forays took htr to remote St. A $3 fine will be im posed on owners parts of Borneo in search of human Young GOP to l\'.(eel who don't buy a license for the family pet ·. ST. PATRICK, Calif. (AP) -This beings who most needed attention. J\1ore before April 1. Northern California town is •city for the than once ghe ran into witchdoctors, Residents of Huntington Beach and A rabies cllnic for dogs will be held lrish today -bu t for St. Patrick's Day v.·hich she described as her closest rivals Founta in Valley ' are invited to join the from 7.9 p.m .. Thursday at the main fire only. in the healing profession. HunUngton-Vallty Young Republlcaqs for station, Lake Street and Palm Avenue. St. Pa trick, about 25 miles south or "We \\'ere· actually · beginning to dL1ner al 8'p.m. Wednesday, at the Four Cost of the shots is $2. Sacramento, is normally known as Galt. recognize the amell of death,'' she re-Winds Reslaurant, 18431 Bolsa Chica A rabies certificate is necessary to bu y But after a local dairyman named counted of one advenlure In which she Ave., Hun tington Beach. a dog license . Tommie Farrell reproached the City lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;m;;;;;m;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Council for lack of proper spirit on the hollday, the ctty fathers changed the city's name to St. Patrick for today. . . . DAILY PILOT • OllANGl COAST l>U8Lt•HING COM,AHY RoDert N. Weed ,.rn idenl •1111 Publ~r J.,. It C11,fev "''"° PrtllClllll Ind o.nt r1I M1t11gtr Timothy Leary Sent to Jail ~As Lawyers Po11der Appeal ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW CARPETl.NG? FOLLOW THIS CHECK LIST TO INSURE COMPLETE SATISFACTION llil BRAND NAME DEl'ENDABIUTY IEi DEAL!R INTEGRITY llil WIDEST SELECTION ·~ Thom11 Kievit ECl!tor Thom•• A., Murphl"e MIMQlllQ Ed!tOt Albert W. l et11 AHOcll !I EllllOf Alt" Di,ki" Huntl"l!!On Be•c" Clty £Cl'lln• H•lttf .. tH IHc• Offlc.• 17115 111,h l o11l tv1rd M1lli119 Addre111 r.O. loa 1t0, t2648 OtMt Offlc" C.11111& a11d'I : m l'ffn t Averi11t Cot!I .to\tijil SJ0 Wl!ol 81y $1'"1 HtWllO'I Swell; 2211 Wn l 811-10\l!tve"' h n Clf!Mtllel SJ Hori~ l l C:1mlrt0 l'IMt ·- DAILY ,11.01 , wlltl wflldl II°"""~ Ille Nt-'rN' k pV!!ll11'1td .. lly l l<C .. I s.,,.. N 'I' Iii 1•r1!1 M11111111 flo' Lit-lffdl, N"""*" 8"9C11, C:..le ~I. HV111in91on lhKll 9ftd "-••Ill .... ,...,. '""' "''"" ""' ......... , Mii-. Otlf'lllll CNll ,~lthlllt ~"' ~lflllfto .i.t!IJ eno ti 2111 Wlll 8,lbol 81W., N..,.rf I MCl'I. l fllll JJI Wt:ll a11 '""'· Cini• M-. ,...,~ (714 1 642o4J21 ,,_ WemfWMMNf' Coll 140·12H et•flMl AdMttlN19 64 2·S 671 (tpy~lflll, 1t1.. Or•f!Ot CNtl "Wll1"IM CtfnPtflr, Ne MWl 110r!... llllntrtlloJM. ... , ...... , fflfti.t .. ..,¥t•ll•-" "9•t lll !NY bt ftlWM\ll'f'd Wl!hovf "'9(1-1 fltH• mlu!Oll ot Cff'l'•ita"' ,......, . lecMf 'Ill' ,.,.,.,_ Otld t i Nt '"llOl'I •N<ll -C-ft lMfM, Ct!llernle. koOKtlpt~ tv (lrtltf' U ... -l!llY• .-, l'MH I J.lf monl!ll'l'i mtlllour -.S11!!elloN. SJ 00 "'°""'IV· I> I Dr. Timothy Leary ls in Oran ge County Jail today, compiling a summation ol his drug-centered pbUosophlet and rellgious bellefs that may bt wed by his attorneys as the ~asis of their appealii ag3l~t the sl3te prison term he drew Monday. The l,.'50 cultist's plea -dellvered through defon.~e attorney Geo rge Chula - that the "controlled use" of LSD and related mind-expanding drup am ounted to a reli gious practice and should not be . conden1ned ~'by a society that ls only Just beginning to understand" had little effect on Superior Court Judge Byron K. Mc~1iUan. He listened for threUours to thnt argumenJ and a se~ of related arguments from Chula and thtn sen.. tenet<! Lea ry, )(I, to one to IO years in state prJson. That prison term fol10Y.1td the formtr Harvard psycholo1 \11's conviction on chargt.s or p0asesslon of marijuana - chargea backed by the Orange County CraOd Jwy alte r Leary, his wife, Ro&tmary, 34, and son John Bush Leary, 20. Were arrtst.t:d In l..:iguna Beach. ~lrs. Leary had already been ttnlencM by J udge r.1c,\1lllan to 11J x m o n I h ... s Jn Orange County Jell and three years probntlon. Young Leary draw a 90-day pre.osentenclnit dl1?gno~tle study at the 11atc's: Chino facility and he is scheduled to report there Wednesday. He became the central fl,ure ritonday of lhe bitterly opposed sententlng of his colorful father and a couple of comment s made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright during the prosecutor 's vigorous opposition to a plea for ball made hlm -for the first time that morn· ing -put down the flowers he had been toying wllh. 11We ha ve a true picture of Dr. Leary from the probation report on his son John -the young man sltling right here," the bluff, burly Enright snapped. ''John doesn't want his fa ther and Rosemary lo have children because of whal happened to him an d I think that we should all tak e note or 'A'hat he has to tell us. ··1n otht r words." Enriaht said, "we should look at the evidence of what hip. pens to P'Qple who are the vlttlrn s of other people's ad\·ocacy of the free u1e of drugs and we shou ld asseM their rights to freedom on the basis ol "·hat .,..e have to see . Dr. Leary's own son ha s ah•en us 1 very valusble pointe r lo what our An$vter (lo the bail application) ahould be." Enrlght's: angry words 1hocked young 'l..C:try into an erect posture to r the first t1me during the hearing. He dropped hls flo\l·er$, S'A'Ung parlly arnund to WAtch the prosecutor and bo\l•ed hls head "' Enright concluded. llil COMl'EnnVE l'RICES li<l EXl'ERT INSTALLATION llil FINANCING AVAILABLE THIN COMI TO ALDIN5-0WNID & OPl•ATID IY Jrll GINIRATION CAll:PITING IXPl.llNCl- OVIR 13 YIARS IN THI HAll*tllt ARIA. WE FEATURE THESE FAMOUS - NATIONALLY AOVERTIS!D NAMES , *BEATTIE *CROWN ·*IMPERIAL *SWEETWATER * BERVEN *COLUMBUS *DAN RIVER * MONARCH *ROXBURY *WALTERS *BIGELOW *FIRTH * MONTICliLLD *SEQUOYAH Don't Miss Our Dr•pery Dept. W• fe1tur• 1 compl•t• Mltc:tlon •f t1•rlc1 ind colon to •nh•"c' i nd c.mplllMflt y.ur c1rp1tl"t- -VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM Hundreds of Smell -to ·Room Site Remnants ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPERIES 1663 PLACENTIA-COSTA MESA 646-4838 13 YIAll l SlllVINO THI OltANOl COA.IT n- l• n. as he as st, • or ad 'l'. ng '" ob. nd oct he •• t's '" nd riis we ~s 'm ~re ·ce nd ~. t• rill a za. ort to rlo- to j:h~ •• ·.J J)k ial gs. •ed 500 ·Uh rn- '" ar· of JnS 'of not to •ch lo~ his ton md ers pet " eld 'ire UC. DAILY ,!LOT Sllff PM!t Shooti1tg tlie So11p Surfers, each doing his o"'n thing on the same wave, brave cold \Vat- er temperatures for the sake of a slide. Board sportsmen are begin· ning to reappear in force along Orange Coast beaches as spring ap- proaches. Can Easter vacation be far behind 7 U.S. Troops Find Bodies Of Reels l\illed in · Raid s SAfGON !AP! -U.S. 25th Tnlanlry Division 1roops swe-eping around Black Virgin Mountain today found the bodies of 25 North Vietnamese killed by earlier etr strikes and artillery. It was lhe third day the American in· fantrymen had been operating in the .!!hadow or 1he n1ountain SS miles northwest of Saigon Iha! has been the scene of numerous battles v.dth North Vielnamese troops during the Y.'ar. The day's s~·eep raised to 53 the number of enemy troops reporled killed in the area i;ince Sunda y. Sources said the American troops received only light sniper fire today. Jet fighter-bombers and artillery batteries continued to pound the bomb-scarred mountainside. In earlier co1nmuniques, the U.S. Com· mand reported three Americans killed and 24 wounded in three skirmishes Sun· day and Monday. The 3.23(}.foot mountain was the scene of four days of bard fighting last January in which 123 North Vietnamese and five Americans were killed. This time, sources said, the Americans are not sweeping the cave·pocked slopes of the North Vietnamese stronghold but are restricting their operations to the fields around the base of the mountain. No major ground fighting v.•as reported across Vietnam Tuesday. Helicopter gunships from lb~ ~t Air Cavalry Division reported k1lhng 22 Jobless Rolls Set Record UnemplQyment reached an all time record high in Orange County in February. the State Department of J.luman Resources office in Santa Ana reports. There were more than 2~,800 persons wilhout Jobs in February. compared lo 22,100 in January and 22,000 in February of 1969. The number of employed Te· mained at 463,(Q), the same figure as for January. The employment was S. I percent. a four-yea r rect1rd. January had a 4.6 percent rate and in February of 1969 the rate v.•as 4.3 percent The aerospa~ Industry reported the largest decrease in job&, 7,100 during the past year, but this wu reduced to a net lo.ss of 5,300 in ma nufa cturing as a whole. IncrcaM?s were shown in firms constructing boats trailers _and other transportation equipn:ient. They hired 800 more during the year. enemy troops in two strikes along the Cambodian border north of Saigon. The America! Division reported killing five enemy with artillery fire, and South Viet- namese forces sa id they killed 49 enemy troops and captured 26 in f iv e engagement!. Diplomat Urges Cambodia Free Ship, Crewmen WASHINGTON (AP) -An Americm1 diplomat has appealed to Cambodian au thorities for release of the U.S. am· munition carrier Columbia Eagle and Its 13 crewmen. A Stale Department spokesman said American Charge d'Affaires Lloyd 1-f. Rives met with Cambodian officials Mon· day and also altempted to learn the fate of two men who sought political asylum after seizing control of the ship with a bomb scare. There was no early indication aclioo would be taken by cambodian authori· lies. an embassy spokesman said. The two men who allegedly seized C<ln- trol of the ship with a phony bomb scare were identified by Sen. Mark O. Hatfield {R-Ore.), as Clyde McKay of Escondido and Alvin Glalkowski o! Long Beach. G\atkowski was a • utility stewud aboard the vessel. McKay was a fireman. Both sought political asylum Jn Cam· bodia, authorities said. A spokesman for Hatfield said "they threatened the ship as a v.'ar protest." State Department press officer Robert J. McCloskey said Monday that 1•we're not charging anyone v.•ith mutiny. I want to be clear on that ." The freighter with Its cargo of 34,000 tons of bombs was bound for Thailand when it was diverted to Cambodia over the ?.'eekend. The vessel is currently anchored about six miles o ff Sihanoukville in the Gulf of Siam In the South China Sea. All but thrtt: members of 'the crew have been taken ashore and appeared in good condition, authorities said. The three remaining on board we.re acting as caretakers. An embassy spokesman said those permitted to leave the ship included the captain, Donald A. Swann. 51, of PortJand , Ort. The Pentagon. meanwhile, dispatched the destroyer USS Turntr Joy and eight olher American ships into the area. This \Vas described as a contingency move. According to infonnation released by the Pentagon, the t~·o mer. apparently took control of the ship by seizing soim senior cre~rrnen. A phony bom b M:are was used to put U crewmen to sea in lifeboat.s . . Voters Drop Off County Signup Deadline April 9 Voter registration In Oranee County is down and Counfy Clerk \\1illiam E. SI .John has Issued a call £or persons to tign up btfore the deadline April 9. St John said there Is a total of Ui,954 re.glstered voters In-the county today. This compares wllh 580.886 for the gtn- eral elecllon In 1968. In December or 1008, 77 .000 voters v.·e.re dropped (rom the rolls for not hav· in~ votM {n the general election. Since that date the Republlcaas have Moved up to 287 ,640 from a low d 270,790. The Demoaats bave 220.861 compared to 1 trimmed 207,790 In 1968. j Other party tot.1h1 today 1 b o w American Independent, S,7161 Pe111ce and Freedon\ 879, mlscellaneow; t4. and tltcltned to sta te, 21 ,1G4. Sl John no!M that there are more than 100 <feputy registrars localed in shof ping center1, city halls, libraries, polillca par• ty Offices and the Votera RqlatrJtJon Of· flee, 1119 E. Ol<1tnut 8~, Santi ..,._ Carpenwr: Youth Drugs Main Issue "If we lose a whole generation of young An1erlcans to drugs, it may not matter so much what is happening in Laos or Viet· nam. or on the University campuses, or in school integration," state Republi can Chairman Dennis Carpenter told a group of Laguna Beach Republican women Monday afternoon. ''To my mind the drug problem transcendJ all other Issues facing us to- day," oald Carpenter, candidate for lhe State Senate seat being vacated by John Schmitt to run for Congress. "[ believe we are on the threshold or losing a whole generatkln unless we can control it -and l don't believe the widespread availability of drugs is without plan ," he told members of the Laguna Beach Republican Womtn's.Club. Citing his experience as an FBI agent, Carpenter said the primary thrust must be to uncover and prosecute those v.·h<> are making the drugs avallitble. "These children who take these things don't have any evil intent," he continued. ''J don't call them young people, or young aduils, but children, because any\lne who would expose himself lo this terrible danger must be lerribly immature." As a parent, Ca.rpe:nler said, he had had many conversations on the 1ubject with his own children and had come to realize, not only that drugs of all kinds are readily available, but that "there is a tre mendous pressure on the kids from their peer group to try these things - even tht brightest. mmt attractive youngsters from good. loving homes are subject to these pressures." The use of drugs, he c.oncluded "takes a chikl a"·ay from ii! parents as finally as death v.·ould lake it. Thousands of part!nls have Jost their children through this terrible thing. We all hope we will not be among them. because I know if r lost a child this way, part of my life would be gone too." lie urged that top priority be given lm· mediately lo legislation aimed at con. trolling drug traffic. "Evtrylhing else can come later," he co1r-luded. "because if we can't control this. nothing else will matter." Mother Enters Plea of Innocent Linda White, accused of abandoning her two infant children in a Fullerton motel March 4, pleaded hinocent to the charges Monday when arraigned in Anaheim Municipal Court. . Judge Lloyd S. Verry set preliminary hearing for April 2 and appointed a public defender to represent her. She was released on her own recognizance. Mrs. White, 21, was arrested SabJrday in an apartment ln Long Beach. She had been sought in the aban· donrnent or her children David, I and Shire!, 2, in the Country Place Motel. Police said 1'1rs. White was located after she applied for a job in a L<lng Beach pool ball. The operator, who had read about the case 1n a newspaper , recognized her name . He notiHed of· ficers. T--17, 1970 Demo Nomination Yorty to Run . Against Unruh OA.ILY r 1LOT IMtf ,. ..... SPP.~AOING HIS WINGS Gu~,1111·rwitorl•I Candidate Yorty 25 Instructors At Cal State Warn of Boycott A group of 25 instructors at the tense Cal State Fullerton campus will boycott classes il police are called onto the grounds again, they declared Monday. Roland J. Derenne, a spoke&man for the CSF fcculty objectors, charged that many more" leathers and students will joln them in the tactic if it reaches that point again. Petitions have been circulated soliciting support for the general walkout if lawmen are summoned to any new con· frontalions on the CSF grounds. Trouble originating with arrests of tv.·o student activists charged with obicene heckling of Gov. Ronald Reagan at a speech flvt weeks ago has ·vk>lently flared several times. A confrontation March 3 brought more lhan 100 lawmen surging into the campus quadrangle and ended only after 19 peraon9 h&d been arrested and five hurl Still more arrests have been made since and police were called onto the campus Saturday night to disperse a mob of students. LA Okays Pay Ra iJes LOS ANGELES (AP) -The city coun- cil has tentatively approved an .ac:ross· the·board pay hike for 16,000 city workers retroactive to Jan. J. ' LOS ANGELES fAP) -Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles announc:ed today be v.·ould run for the Democratic noinlnation for governor of Cillfornla. Yorty will oppose Jesse Unruh, leader of the state Assembly's m 1 nor It y Democrats, ln bidding for the chance to oppose Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan, who announced a v.·eek ago he ls .sttking a second term. The primary election is June 2. Yorty , 60. is regarded u a "mave.rid'' Democrat because ht bas crossed party lines, such as supporting Republican Richard 1-1. Nixon for pre.sldent in 1960 instead ol Democraf John F. Kennedy. In his announcement, Yorty hit out at Reagan and c:ertaln unamed fellow Democrata. "I believe Gov. 'Reagan has made a sincere effort lo play an unaccustomed role as admlnl.slrator of the largest 11tate in the union, but his stewardship has bee.n characterized by too much show and too little acct1mpllshment," Yorty said. "J am a lifelong btmocrat and will run on the Democratic ticket," Yoriy said. "I would like to see the Democratic party of our 15tate divorce itseU Crom the ex· treme leftists, the power seekers, tbe mercenaries, and the arrogant would-be dictators who try to tell registered Democrats who can or cannot run, aad how we are to vote." It is Yorty's second bid for lbe Democratic gube.matorlal nominalJon. Jn 1966 he lost a primary election effort by a 3·2 margin to Incumbent Edmund G. "Pat" Brown. Reagan defeated Brown that November. Mayor Sam. a15 be Is often called, won a third four-year term last 1.1ay 27 in what was regarded as an uphlll victory over t'ity Councilman Thomas Bradley, a Negro. "'n!e people of California have paid a high price for Reagan's lack of ex· pe.rlence and judgment,'" Yorty's slate· menl said. "He bas switcbcJ his position lately and now supports Income tax withholding. But will ~ do so alter the election?" Yorty's statement did not even mentien ... Unruh, 47. Unruh formally riled a.s 1 candidate l\londay and announced that be was resigning as the party's leader in the Assembly as of r.farch 31. His Assembly term runs through next January but he sald Monday his campaign would require all his energi es. Yorty rose from a ycxmg man selling neckties and shirll ln a men's wear store in bis home to"'" or Lincoln, Neb .• to the chief executive of one of !he nation's largest cities. Jane Fonda, Vadim To End Marriage? PARIS CAP) -Jane Fonda ar.d Roger Vadlm, the French film director, have separated and are planning to divorce, the newspaper Paris-Presse reported Tuesday. Vadlm, whose first wife was Brigitte Bardot, niarrled Miss Fonda, Aug. 14, .J965 in Las Vegas. They had a daughter. -Vadlm was said to be. living in· California at the ranch of bis wife's fatbu, Henry Fonda. H DAJl.Y PILOT !J UCI Senaw Plan Nix,ed By UC Board A plan propoMJd by UC Jrvtne laeulty membert which would give 1tudenta voting membershlps In the untventty'1 AcademJc Senate was turned down Mon- day in a meeting or the 1tatewlde Academic Asaembly. The Academic Senate Is a faculty organ1iation comprbe<f of all teachers at all branches of the university, w1t.h each campus representing a division of the untversltywlde group. The Academic: Assembly consh!ita of delegates from each division of the Senate. In the 1-fonday meeting at UC Santa Cruz, Assembly members refused to en· dorse the plan which woukl givt: 1tude11."t1 one-fifth voting memberahlp in the body. In dtnying the P'YJIO'll~ 1he .W.mbly noted the plan is In violation of a standing order of the UC Regenll which states On. ly faculty memben may have voting memberships in the organization. Ill denytng the plan, A a I e m b 1 y members urged If.'.Yine delegates to clrry their propoeal dlnctly i. tho Regenia, wt-Jle seeklng aupport from other cam· puses. Dr. Bernard Gelbawn, chairman of UCl's Senate told the body their denial of the plan was out of step with the times. The Irvine plan was proposed last June by a larulty commlU.. appointed by UC! Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich t. lludy student. DUUcipaUon in campus affairs. Committee. chalrman Julian Palley, associate professor of Spanhh llkl, "v.·e believe the university 5hol1ld be more democratic and give some declston mak • ing power to the communlty. We loot on tll.ia as a healthy step in the evolution or the administration of the unJversity." The Irvine division .approved the plan in October, but in December wu told it would have to seei: approval of the Academic Assembly and tbe Repnts ·in order to implement the propout In the December ruling, rules can· mlttee chairman Lewis Walton of. UC Santa Barbara told UCI profesaon they could jeop&rdize their authority to confer degrees if they gave students voting memberst1lp without I.he approval of the statewide t.enate and the Regents. Chancellor A!<Jrlch said tho !acuity will have to explore other means or provldlng students with a voice in campua activities since Regents' approvaJ of the plan is not considered likely. Cory Bill Asks For Ombudsman SACRAMENTO (APT -As .. mblyman Krnneth Cory (0.Carden Grove) bas called for establishment o! a atate om· budsman. Cory Aid Alonclay the state needs an official who can look Into complalnt.9 from the citizens and , aCt aa a troubleshooter for people snarled in red tape. Cory said the only help now for such peraons I! to go to theJr leglslator1, a process he termed inefficient and in- effective. Legislators, uld Cory, don't have the stalfa to handle complaints and partisan politiC'S also interfere. Under a bill proposed by Cory Monday, the ombudsman would bave. authority to investigate the courts, the st.ate bar and the legislature. ~ -·-you going to go through another year thinking you can't afford an Oldsmobile? I .. • • lc-llMI ""' .... DlolW Pli.I u.ftl R .... 1c1o PU11h got four writ .. in votes and has been named asses· sor llf Armanda, Michigan, a town of 1,300 persons. His name wasn't on the ballot, but then, nobody 's was. Pugh doesn't know who voted for him and doesn't really want the jbb but village lresident Rob- ert Hollwa9 541-id, " \Yas afraid I \vas goin~ to have to do the job myseU.'' · • Italian actress Sophia Loren ii shown introducing her ion Carle Pontj, Jr., 15 month.I, during a pres• conference at htr villa recentlv. TM actrus was ce~brating completion of her lattst movU, "The Sunflcwers" tn which Carle aUo had a pare. 8 The Paiute Indians of Schun, Nev., have rejected an offer of $250 ,000 from a Hollywood promot- er to rent their reservation for a rock music festival Melvin Thom, tribal council chairman admitted the offer was tempting but that the potential size of the festival - a half million people -would be more than all of the state's law of- ficers and national guard could handle. Nevada bad a population of just 3.50,000. Bobby. a parrot who sat in the office of Dr. Kennet.Ii Chris· tenberry of Knoxville, Tenn., and sang songs such as "'I Am a Pilgrim'', "It Ain't Gonna Rain No More", has died of a 1t1'oke at the age of 15. The parrot uw a gift to the doctor's father in 1919. 9 Lynn Hopper, 17. has taken on a partwtime job as a babysitter. That may seem a rather common occupation for a teenage girl, but the "baby" in this case is a twir ton \\'bale et the Cleetborpes, Eng- land zoo. Lynn is paid 84 cents an hour to sing end chat to the mam· ma! between the time the keeper leaves and nightfall. • Bl adimer Rajchlo set his small plane down on a hig:h,vay just out· side Jacksonvill e, Fla., \Vhen his fu el tanks ran low. He taxied the plane up to a service station which was closed. Finally, police helped him hand-carry cans of gasoline to refuel and then cleared the highway so he could take off again, WASIDNCTON tUPO -Secretal)' of St.1te \VUUam P. Rogers said today he could not foreclolie tbe poaalbUlty that American ct1mbat troops might be used in Laos. But he said there are "no present plans" to do So. r Al the same Ume, Rogers indicated the possibility that there still mlsht be a con- siderable U.S. milltary rorce In Vietnam by the time of the 1972 presldenUal elec· tlon. He wa.s asked about Sen. J. William • I ll Fulbright's statement ~1ooday quoting hJm u saying at a secret Senate bearing Uiat adv&J>Ce approval would be sought from Congress before any U.S. ground forces were moved into Laos. Rogers indicated he was not too happy about Fulbright's disclosure and said he would "like to talk to him" about it. But he said he did not rule out completely the possible use of ground forces there. He said he told Fulbrigbt's foreJ&n rela· Uons committee that 0 there are no Carswell Issue Sparks Outburst W ASIDNCTON (UPI) -A S..ale sup- po<1er Of C. Harrold Carswell oays Ille Supreme Court needs "a B student or a C student" like C&nwell rathe.r than another of those "great legal minds" whose decisions have e n c o u r a g e d murderers and rapists. Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La.}, brought Lebanon, Israel Exchange Fire Across Border TEL A VIV (AP) -Jsraeli troops shell- '!d Lebanon's aouthcrn bordtt ~1 alter Arab guerrillu fired bazooka shells at an lsraell outpost in upper Galllee, the miUtary command said. A apokesman W d there was no t1amage to the l!raell position!, but be reported one soldier killed by Egyptian mortar fire Monday night on the Suez Canal front. Lebanon said Israeli mortars hit three villages, killed two civilians including a 2· year"'°ld child, and injured flve peraons. Lebanese artillery returned the fire and the exchange lasted for 30 minutes, said a Lebanese communique. Lebanese military officials ln Beirut said tl1ert was another arUJlery duel across the border Monday afternoon. They uld the Jara ells 6larted · Jt and damaged one house. Palestinian guerrillas claimed several IsraeU helicopters attempted to land troops in three Lebanese villages Sunday night but ''Falah guerrillas and an· tiairaaft gun& foiled the attempt" Into tbe Senate debate Monday what out- numbered liberals consider a chief issue over Carswell'I nomlnatfon to the court -his ability. Sen. B~ch Bayb (0.lnd.), called Canwell's record "indescribably un- dlstingul!hed" and quoted law school pro- fessors who said ao. Carswell, 50, during the last 17 years. has served as U.S. at. torney, U.S. district judge and U.S. circuit judge. Long leaped to his feet. ''Didn 't these same ... greal legal minds ... recommend Judge (Abe) Fortas and endorse the J\.1irand3 decision which a majority of Uie Senate con· sldere<I respon sible for a 100 percent ill- crease in murder and rape?" Long asked. "We have enough of these upside-down kind of thinkers," Long said. "Wouldn't it be better to have a B student or a C stu- dent inst-ead of another A student? .•• What we need ••. is &Ome conformists on the court, who'll stick to the law as it's always been rather than upset it." Jn an interview off the Senate floor, <l:en. Roman L. Hruska CR-Neb.), ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary ..:ommittee, made a similar polnt. "He is a good judge, has been, and has great potential," he said. "But suppose he isn't a good man or mediocre? ••• Even if he were medicore, there are a lol of mediocre jud,ges and people and llwyers. Aren'l tJiey entitled to a little representation and a little chance? \\'e f'an't have all Brandeises and Cardozos and Frankfurters ... " Sen. Ph.ilip A. Hart CO.Mich}, a leader in the fight against Carswell's con- firmation, scoffed at Hruska 's argument. "It's the first time I've heard that argument made and I hope it's the last - that we should look for mediocrity when we staff the Supreme Court of the Urllted States," Hart said. Army, Air Force Ban Movie ~i NEW YORK (UPI) -The Army and Air Fore< have banned Ille film ,, "M-A-S-H" from base showings because It might undermine the morale of 1"l Amerlcan soldiers, the newspaper Anny Times reported Monday. 1 The producer of th ehit film said he would appeal '"right up to the Su· preme Court" if the ban is official. He said the film was "constru<'tive." "l\-1-A-S-H," a critical and popular success in New York, is about the 11 wild antics of Army combat surgeons which enab led them to deal with hor· rible conditions during the. Korean war. A military source said the picture ti "reflected unfavorably" on the military and v.·ou\d undermine the confidence ~· or soldiers who may need medical treatment in combat, Army Tim es said. li The verdict on the film reportedly was delivered unanimously by 20 to 25 r.r office rs -no enlisted men -from information, personnel, medica l and chap-~ Jain branches of lhe two servcles who viewed "A1·A..S.H." The film was the I first banned from Army and Air Force theaters since 1963, when "War Is Hell" and "Man ln the Middle" were turned down . lngo Preminger, the brother of producer-director Otto Preminger who produced the 20th Century Fox film, said: ' 1 1'Many reviews have classified my film as eminently patriotic. Ameri· ':.. can and construcUve. I don't understand how anyone could see it otherwise. Aa far a.a: the picture being anUwar, I think even tbe Army ls antiwar." The military censors were maltla( their decl&lon under regulations which prohibit cuts from a film, Army Thnes said. Shows mwt be approved wholly or turned down. Winter Pushes Out Spring Trans portation, Paralyzed Tliroug1iout Midwest (•1111no tu1fy norllitrlY wl....,._ ltn1• Hr1tur11 .....,.lntd cooler wl!ll Tiit ClyJc («11tr 111911 1>r9'lll;ttd 11 1J. \Weft d8tttl btlOw MondtY"I 11\t•• IMVM, TM pr9Cllclt'd low IOfllOhl w11 " Thi Air (9(11hJllon Control Dl1trk l t.ald l'-f'f WIJ 111111 -Ill m<»I OI tri. LOI .l.l'ltlfH lt1ln, lleadlel w1r• clol.NIY IP'ld '°""' In ""°""'"' llOU'l (lfffl"9 to ll10lllY WfH\Y .iii.. In tilt .,.,.,_, Hi911J wirre -r fl wllfl Wtllt' -It'd II JJ IM- lfft'lo Mount1lnt ... ,. ,,_,,,. tul!ll'I' t lld l'tlftdY 11'1 ltM ollt•-· HltM wt•t -· •• , '"°'' ••IOfl llvtll. Dtttrt1 wort 111111'1¥ wllll t uatv wlMI In fllll l lllt'-. Hltll ltm.Hft!Urt1 r1"""" ,.., 19 "' '"' 1119MP -"· ,, nttf' • 11'1 "" lvwtf ... u ...... S01M l'l lfhol. MoNl•r olld 1>•Rk19'I "'~' lodtY M(llldtd~ Lont 8ttcl'I ~. ""'' Monlu 10-65, 8urk nl 11· 7J. Ml, WNton fl·SJ. Ptl""'61t n 61, ltl'Ylr11drt 11-IJ, (91fm S1>rll'\fl 17.U, .. ~tf1flel0 '"'°' S..n Dll90 .,,.., """ 11 11mr1 IHI. IOUfHlltN CAllFOltNl.l -Nlthl IM ....mn. low Clolllll Of lot ~ ( ... 111 l tMf o!MNI~ _,... ltlr wlttl vtrleolt ctoud1 ll'lrwlll'I w..on-flv. O\tflCot of.,.,..,,,.,,,..,, "*1ft'ltlnl ltte W~r. C90l1r. dtYt.. J'.ilnl'r 1-....,...,..._ f....,-·""""-" WfCI...,, :I(• ~ "·~~lff9WIH--'° • COLD •••It 'o c~ <:0111t al "'""" w"""· Li.tit v•rl4'41 .,.1lldl "1 ... 1 11\11 mtfl'llnf l'louA btcoifllflt llOrtf!wto~I lo W911 • lo 14 kJ'0011 In 1l!t fl'!Oe!l.I IOCllV llld WtdntMlly. Hltfl 10,IY t,S, Coe1t11 '"""''"'rt\ ''"" ll'flfll JJ It "· 1111...,., , .... "''"''" •lfllt '""" JJ IO 'n. W111t' 1-tl\rrt llO, Srm, lltn··n. Tide• T'\Jl!SDAY Seuncl 111911 7:~ 1.m. JI WIDl'llllDAY Flrti l'lltl'I U .lOt.m. 1) Firs! low •-11 I .I'll. ~I s~ "It" 1 :~~ •m. tJ s.c.... low ••.••• , .......... "' lull Allt1 4:01 t .m. l th 6 07 ,,..,_ MtM •u .. 11"'""'· k>tl,:11 1.rn. V.S. Summarg M11<1'1 « 1111 1111111'1 tevlod bt Cllltd ....... wllfl tflY'I' IOOI Y II colt -'"''· .,.... or A ln wev1lllCI ouo,t In (•I., fottli. •!'Id ""' ...,,1'1,..,.1 •..rt ... llfl. A l"KOl'f•brettllnt -.111m1 1191 wlr> 1\lllly "r1tyrld lrll*Orl•llM Ill i.ovt~ •• ., 1(.,,.... norhl" Olll111o1N. ,_,,_.., .l.fkll\111 '"" '°""""' ..... , .. -r•. $,_ "''"' riN<lfH JO lnC!'ltl. H .. 'l'f' t'IOW Wtml~ -· POt!R from 'IO<'fl'lfftt Art.1"'11 It IC1M1t1Kllr •lld Ml'lfl-lt t ... M»ei Wiii\ 01!\tf wlll!tf' M•IMr ""•r11lnt1 or w1tclltl :'~NV~~"':! :,~~.:;::u lllt Tl\9 Wftllnl wll 1t1r .. wr1 ~ l tlll"I IM•llf tiff... WIGW'tf• l lld lllul!M••ltt ..... AlllVWfnlw Al'(llortt1 A11t"lt .. w.11111 1 1-l rdc .. M lot!Oll •-ni· a.ra .. CIM1nn•t1 ....... "'' M"',,.1 Dtlroll l'•lrtlen1!1 Fon Worlll ·~-Htlen• H-Jut11 K'"''' Cltv l•I Vrt11 l ot """le' Ml1ml Mfn.ne1P01lt N-Orll1P1t N"' y,._ Nenll Pr1111 O~~!IP'ld OIOtl'IOrnt Clft' Om•l'I• Pt'lt lo.bin -·· Pllhbvr911 Por111no lt~Pld Cl!V Red 811111 ·-, .. (tl "ltf'lO $1!1 lt'<t CllY Stn OIHo $fl!'! Fri/IC llCO k.tlll!t -M l"tnf11I W1~1111 Hit~ Low (9rK. -56 JO .. ,. ~, Jl " " JJ ,, jl SJ .U • n 11 12 A1 u " J4 ,, •1 '' " " ,. " '' es IJ )I IJ1 n " II '' .N u " . " 11 ,, m u M " " " ~ K JI 21 n 11 .ot " ~ ,, ,, ... •l It " n 71 ., ~ " " ~ ... " " . .. " " ~ JI J.t .11 .. . M $1 ~ Jf ,OJ SI 1' .GI .. ~ ~ N • ' Lao·s Not .Ruled Out present plans to Ul!ie ground troop!." He said ''I also told the committee that I was not foreclosing" completely that po:slb1lity, Rogers said he did not believe that the Communist Pathet Lao mlUtary and polllical offensive In Laos wu a prelude to a mor~ serious offer by Hanoi and Viet Cong negotiators at the Paris peace talka. When asked what he believed the Palhet Lao and its Hanoi supporters were trytnt to do In Laos, Rogers uJd, "we hope they are trying to make their negotiating po&ltlon stronger. We hope they are not trying to overrun tht coun-try." . Asked to comment on speculation that there might be 100,000 to 150,000 U.S. troops sWI ln Vietnam two to three years from now, Rogers 1aid: "l don't want to make any predic- tions." He asserted that the program of replacing U.S. combat forces with South * * * Vietnamese had "worked pretty well so far" but be would not make any forecast aJ to the future. Fulbright's committee ls considering a variety of resoluUons aimed at putUng the Senate on record for U.S. wltbdr•wal from Southeast Asia. But the ad· mlnlsb"allon1 says the While HoUM will not bn under any legal obligation to pull out of Vietnam under a,ny ltglslaUon that might be passed by Congress, * * * Big Parades Hono r Iri sh U.S. Unit Quits 'G reen Day' Threatened Base By The Associated Prw The Irish and lhe Irish-for.a-day don the green today. Ifs St. Patrick 's Day and New York City's big Filth Aven ue parade highlights observances around the naUon. The New York parade is the 208th an- nual in that city. St. Lou.is is havlng its "fi rst annual." And in Santa Ana, Calif., resident will enjoy their first St. Patrick"s Do.y parade ln al least 20 years. The New York event features 35 con· tingenl!i with 120,000 marchers and martial airs from 137 bands from eight states. Terence Cardinal Cooke, archbishop of New York, is an honorary grand marshal of the parade. lie and other <'lergymen rev:ew the spectacle from the steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral. Further up at 64lh Street the marchers pass the formal reviewing stand fUled with politicians and other dignilaries. In SL Louis, ?o.1ayor A. J. Cerv ante has renamed the Spanish International Pavilion the "Irish Pavilion" for the day. A six-inch green line had been pain· led along the parade route together wl th assorted sprayed-on shamrocks. In the traditional spirit of the day, the fl.li chJgan Legislature Monday passed a resolu tion declaring all residents to be "honorary Irishmen." The Irish in Boston planned their an· nua t parade through South Boston. but this yea r t~ey have compelition from some disgruntled Orangemen. Over 65? VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) -U.S. of- ficials tonight evacuated most Americans from the refugee and logistical support base for sam Thong in the face of ad· vanclng North Vietnamese troops who seized two key posts six and eight miles away, boht within easy artille.ry range. Sam Thong is about 75 miles north of Vientiane and 30 miles south of east.west llighway 7 leading westward from the Plain of Jars. Long Cheng, six miles lo the southeast of Sam Thong, is main Na tional Protest To Oppose Draft Protests in Milwaukee and San Antonio, Tex., and di.strlbuUod in schools of "We \Von't Go" peUUons have marked the beginning of a v.·eek of nationwide an- lidraft demonstrations. A man dressed to represent the "Spec- tre of Death" carried out a solitary vigil 11onday at the San Antonio draft board offices and the protesters in Milwaukee man:hed on a courthouse. In Norfolk, Va., the draft board was evacuated following a telephoned bomb sca re. No bomb was found. The nationwide protest campaign, sponsored by the New Mobilization Com- mittee To End the War in Vietna m. is planned to extend to more than 100 cities by the end of the v.·eek. Were you left out the last time Blue Shield offered Major Medicare·· Plus! IT HELPS PAY THE BILLS FEDERAL MEDICARE MISSES. For a limited time only, Blue Shield is offering Californians 65 or older a ""'°nd chance to enroD in Major Medicare-Plus! If you were left out last ye.or, hero ill your opportanity to join the <mr 70,000 California oeniar citi zens protected by Major Medicare-Plus! And now, more than ever, you need Blue Shield's supplement to Federal Medicare. Recent changes in the government program have increased the amount you must p.1y for medical and hospital eerviccs. Blue ShieJcra Major J\!edicare-Plusl steps in to help take..,. of the bills only parUy covered-or ignored-by Federal Medicare programs. And Major Medicare-P11111l provides OOlltinued coverage regardless of your oge, your physical eonditiori or how often you receive benefits. ACT NOW BEFORE APRIL 30. MA11 THIS COUPON TODAY! If you aot now-before April 30-yua can enroll in Major Medicare-Plus! without submitd!lg a health .-t. Don't miss'thiJI chance. Mail this coupon to Blue Shield today. r -~~·~~~~~..-~~~~~~~~ I 'CALfF.ORNIA I B L U E SHIELD I • c:AUl'OllNI" ~ llll\llCI I "20 C.lifllmill StrMt !W07 Wfllll !hUI Mr'Mt Sao FranciBco. Calif<mlia 90111 . LM A11,m., Callfomta tOOOI l'holM: (416) 989--32•0 .Pbooe: (211) IBO-OS6l Plta-'11! tlMld me without CJbUptkm. eompllk~ Uoat mm Shicld'o Major ltedi.,.,.._pJua! for b DIJ'W.)f 0 p&l'di 0 oU. Cl1t•---------"-'"'------- ~.., ... _______ _ • headquarter! for Gen. Vang P1o's American-llalned clandestine anny. The U.S.-adrnlnlstered ljospltal at Sam T11ong was evacuated during the da.y and civilian refugees In the area began streaming to the &OUth and west ahead of an attack force estimated at 2,000 .Com· muni sts. Most U.S. personnel were flown out to safe ty. Conflicting reports at the end of the day indicated that government forces under Van Pao, leader of the Meo hill tribe warriors, may have succeeded in r~taking one of lhe two captured po~i· tions. The U.S. has acknovlledged at least 20 Americans are at Sam Thong. Four who \Ve re left included Edgar "Pop·• Buell. 56, a former Indiana farmer who gained fame of sorts a.; the individualistic U.S. administrator or American aid to refugees in North Laos for the past Dine years. Wit h hlm were the second in command of refugee affairs, a U.S. Anny officer from the military attache's office, and a U.S. Agency for International Develop- ment (USADI) employe under civilian status, who is responsible for military supplies and ammunition fur the Laotians the re. Earlier today officials evacuated 56 seriously wounded Lao troops !ram tile military hospital at Sam Thong lQ Vie- tiane. Others from the 200 bed hospilal \\'ere taken to Long C.'heng or sent home. thrusts in recent years by the Com· I , l • I ,1 I· II II ,t 's n d n >f l• n !O >O 6, 'd s. to " 1d " a p- in ry 1S 56 ,. •· al n· ' • FoJintain Valley ,• .( .. • • VOL 63 , NO. 64, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNlt< TEN CENTS r--. . • • Ill e • 0 a1 . - Mesa Duo Hunte,d Beach Police Seek Slaying Suspects By TERRY CO\'lLLE 01 lh• DaUW l"lktl 51111 Bulletins •,\'ent out to all western states today as Huntington Beach detectives launched a manhunt for two Costa Mesans sought in the slaying last Thurs· day of a 25-year-old Anaheim man. A third suspect, also of Costa h1esa, was arrested Monday night after a round· the-clock investigation into the shooting of Thomas C. Astorina, found in ;1 1narshy area near Sunset Aquatic Parli \\'ilh a bullet hole in his chest. One of the two men police are lookini! for is Robert \V. Liberty , the famed "Candlelight killer'' involved in the strangling death of a \Vestminster ·mother in 1966. Liberty gained widespread notoriet y during a trial which revealed a weird ritualislic service performed over the body of the woman he had allegedly kill- ed. Police had found him near the body, playing a guitar by candlelight. Liberty was ruled "insane" and con- Ataytlaitag Goes fined to a slate Aospital. He \Vas given his frccdon1 in early Sept.ember by Judge Robert Gardner of Newpol'\ Beach, who declared hhn ooce again sane. Three months before Judge Gardner declared him legally free, Liberty ca~sed a furor by walking out o( the Metropolitan Slate Hospital in Noron'al k. freed by a "clerical error." The declaration of sanity n1ade it im- possible for Liberty to be tried again 011 the Westtnins ter murder charges. Police are also hunting Robert Patrit:k Connolly, 39, of 350 Avocado, Apt. 10, Costa Mesa. Both Connolly and Liber1y :ire considered armed an.d dangerous, police said. No address was given for Liberty bul it is believed he may have been staying 1vith Connolly at the Costa Mesa address. The pair arc belicved1 lo be driving a 1965 Mustang convertible with .a black top and yellow body. The license number is PKL 936. Hunti11gton Hig-h Drop s Dress Code for ,a Mo11th By RUDL.NIEDZIELSKI Of .... DtllY l'llol 51111 ?i-tinis, midis and maxis are now co1n- monplace on the Huntington Beach High School campus. And among the boys. the race for beards, mustaches. sideburns and hair is on. !\taking both possible was a decision lo suspend all dress regulations, e:<cept those required by the health code, for one month. "It's outa sight," said some students, ecstatic about being the first in the 52· square mile Huntington Beach Union High School District to "'ear the fashions they like,--- Students al the other campuses - \Vest.minster, Fountain Valley, Marina and Edison -have not yet been given Such liberties. \Villiam Rollins, Hunlingto.1 High 's vice-principal. said a survey taken last Friday from among 80 teachers has not disclosed one instance of the feared dress bugaboo -disruption or the educational process. "The girls are wearing a lot of caprl slacks," said Rollins. "This ha.s ~en about the biggest change. Among the boys it's not betn so noticeable. Some may be wearing sandals without socks. Actually, the decorum has been as usual.'' The unprecedented action was ta.ken as the result of recommendations by the student congress and executive board follo\ving a schoolwide survey of suden1.S and faculty members. Students, however, will have to bow lo the administration in disputes over the "no code" dress code sinct: ii has the final authority in all matters pertaining io the appearance of the students. Freeway Topic At Beach Meet DAil Y ,.ILOT S1111 ""°ti HAILS CODE SUSPENSION HB High's Mark Polak Youth Cornes Out Of Hiding With New Dress Code For months 17-year old ~lark Polak has been a mystery to _Huntington Beach School administrators. Thry hardly ever saw him. Every time he spotted one, !\-lark wnuld tl ~1ck behind a wall, tree Qr a partition, And he never set fool in the office.· Police said today they have no idea where the suspec~s v.•ent. Detectives 1nade a thorough search of bars in Santa Ana f\londay night and early this .morning in hopes of finding the suspects. The men are known to patronize these bars. Police made the flrst arrest In the 4~­ day~ld case Monday night. Randall Greg Allen, 27, also of 350 Avocado, Apt. 18, Cos!a lilesa, was arrested after ques- tioning at the Huntington ·eeach police :i:tation and held on murder charges. He \vas one of nearly 75 suspects qulz z- cd by detectives since Uie Thursday night slaying. He is being held at -!lie Huntington Beach city Jail without bail and Is ex- nected to come up for arraignment \Vednesday or Thursday. Police que stioned persons ranging from narcotics users to yachtsmen in their llrobe. Bars between Sixth Street and First Street. Santa Ana , were the main focus of the search. r-.1onty !\lcKcnnon. detective in charge of the case, said today a team effort by 18 detecti ves working around the clock brought the arrests. He estimated 700 hours were logged in the probe. NtcKennon said they had been unable to esta blish a motive for the murder. Drugs were being kloked into but nothing had been determined. He also \\'OUld not reveal whether a weapc?n had been found. · Connolly is describ!iif-a11beinr·s tefif t Inches. weighs 170 pounds, having ~n hair and brown eyes. A tattoo "Pat" 1s on his right rorearm and "USMC" on his Jelt forearm . Liberty is 5 feet 10 inches, weighs 140 pounds and has brown hair and hazel eyes. "\Ve don't know where they went," ~lcKennon said, Court Rejects Bribe Suspect's Privilege Plea -An Arizona land ·developer 's plea that tapes of his conversations with Mayor Jack Green of Hunllngton Beach were privileged and should be suppressed from court evidence was rejected today in Superior Court. Judge James F. Judge threw out the argument of \Villiam D. New, tit), of Phoenix after hearing Green test!TY that those tapes represented the substance or a conversation he had wilh New in a llun· tington Beach restaurant and phone calls 1nade to the mayor by the defendant. The judge set May 6 as the date on which New must fa ce trial on bribery charges. The land developer is free on $12,SOO bail. The prosecution is expected lo use the tapes debated today as part of its argu- ment that New offered Mayor Green $4,000 in return for the mayor's favorable vote in a zoning transaction. Green advised police of New's alleged overtures after he was first contacted by the real estate man and New was ar· rested as he allegedly repeated hls offer to the city official. Green today testified that he carried a transmitter during later conversations with New and the comments of both men \vere directly relayed to listening police officer1. Sewage ·" • ·• One to Grow 01a Percy, a tWo-monlh~d p\Jp owned by Jait Evans of Costa Mesa, i:net this fi're plug Monday afternoon· during a walk with his mistress near the N~lvpoi't Pier. PerCy obvlo4sly W8s a\vestruck and had to sit down to think things over. Grand Jury Harbor Action Assailed by Beach Mayor Mayor Jack Green of Huntington Beach assailed the Orange _County Grand Jury ~1onday for "a biased ' and erroneous report" ontits h:rvestigation ofthe Orange C.Ounty Harbor District. The jury favors retention of the disirict. The mayor said at a press conference that the jury's probe was not made by the jury itself but by a five-man agricultural cOmmittee. "They interviewed me, but it was done strictly for show," he said. "It was ob- vious they had already made up their minds. They were supposed to be in- vestigating bul instead they argued with me on the merits or the district. "It was not a pu':llic hearing and was very unprofessional conduct on their parl. 1 don't care which way they go but l do think they could have handled it bet· ter'.'' T~c jury reporl last week re.com- mended that the Harbor Dittrict be re- tained. Stock' /tlorkets NEW YORK (AP) :_The stock market turned upward late this afternoon on mod· erate Lrading . .{See quotations, Pages 10- 11 ). The League of Cities, which Mayor Green heads. favors dissolution of the district or that the dl~trlct's future be pul to a countywide vote~ · Green, City Administrator Doyle Miller and Development Director Tom Severns week which may resolve the district's future . Two bills will come up for hearing: Thursday, one by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) which urges a public vote on the issue and another by Assemblyman Ken Cory (D--Anaheim) simr)ly asks the state legislature to ex- tend the duties of the Harbor District without a vole of the people. Green hinted that a compromise may result, that the two assemblymen may gel together and propose that the district be dissolved and made an expanded department of !he county government. "If this Is the compromise, we'll go along:," Green said. "We think this business has gone on too long." The mayor voiced concern, how.ever, at the haggling over the dlStrict. .. I'm concerned at tbe tremendl)Us amount of pressure being brought by groups and indi viduals as to why they are Opposed to having it become a county department," he added. S~lntio11: Found? WestPoint Boss Am~pg • l4 ·Charged WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army 111· nounced today that Maj.·Gen. Saniuel'W, Koster, We!lt Point superintendent, and 13 other officers have been charged with dereliction of duty and other cilarges in a field investigation of the alleged Son iMy- My Lai massacre two years ago in Sooth Vietnam. . Koster was commandin' general of ·the Americal Divisioq, parent of ·the· task force which swept through the hardcore CommWlist area on March· 16. 1968. Ten Army officers ind enlisted men have been charged with murder and other alleged crimes in the deaths of as many as 102 Vieblamese civilians in Son My village and My Lal hamlet. Lt. Gen. William R. Peers, who headed a . 3\~·monlh investigation of the way reports of a massacre originally were handled, told a news conference "there was testimony and evidence to ipdicate that certain persons; wittingly or unwil- tlngly, suppressed certain ,information a~t the incident from . passing up the chain of command." . However. Peers said he did not think there was a coverup. He also said he was satisfied that ln· formation on the incident did not go beyond the America! Division to higher command and waslllqgton ar ttfe--ttmror tbe f~eld probe immediately Jfitr ·W reported massacre. ·" •• At Wost Point, -xo!!H"hlriimM tht 3',7@ Cidets auembled in the academ)''s mess hall he ~s asked to be relieved of his pos,t as head of the academy. An information officer at West Point said the general told the cadets "I want ~u to be among the first lo know that I wlll soon leave West Point." He said he wants another assignment "In -order to separate the military ·~-~my and you of the corps from .the .qin.~tUng flow ot public announcements .;>r .~nt other connection with the alleged e'<en~·w'Jiieh togk place in Vietnam in- vol ving elements ot my former com- mand:" 'Coli. Patrick Dionne. the academy in- ·fo,:rqation Offlter; said Koster gave his retnafks without apparent emotion - "v.1th a firm chin" -and after his state- ment' the cadets gave him· a standing ovation. The Anny statement announcing the findings of the inquiry said: "The report alleges that there were serious deficiencies in the. actions of a_ number of officers holding command and staff poSitions in the America! Division. I.ht 11th Infantry Brigade, Task Force . (See CHARGES, Pap I) Planners to Consider Jndustrial Project City planning commissioners will con· sider plans for one of the largest in- dustrial areas propased for .Huntington Beach dur.lng their 7:30 session in city council chatnbers tonight. The proposed development is located on 352 acres south of Bolsa Avenue and wes~ of Springdale Street. Orange Coast _ WeatJter Freell'ay locaton problems will be under discussion in Huntiog1on Beach again Wednesday night as the city's Orange Freeway Advisory Committee takes a look at the proposed route for the north-south freeway near lhe Santa Ana River. He is a good boy and bis mother :says he never gets into trouble. but schoolmen i;:aw red 'A'hencver they spotted his yellow shoulder lengU1 hair. Huntington's 'Hoi.iey Pot' May: Vs.e. City · Pipe~ Residents of the Orange Coast can expect more nlght and-morn- ing low clouds and'-fog with par- tial clearing We<Jnelday morning. \Vednesday afternoon should be sunny but· slightly cooler with some gusty Win'ils, Temperatures wUJ reach lbe low 70's. Commiu·eemcn will mee t in the ad- ministrative ann.ex of City Hall . Slh and Main Street, at 8 p,m. to discuss the Orange Freeway, Route 57. The group, led by Cris C. Cris of the 11or.1E Council. is charged with nu1king a recommefi:i:fallOlf'Cl'I freev;>ay-location·m corridor on either side of the river from the Garden Grove Fretway south to the adopted rouie of Pacific Coast Highway. Members of the committee art Mrs. R. L. Wiese, league of women voters; Bill \Vren, chamber of comm~ 't'C: Lswrence J . Snllmann. Junior Chamber of cum- meret; Larr)' L. Curran, Concerned <;ltiicnshlp Committee : Wiiiiam B,'n L.on- deree, HOME Council: and Joe CatTow, HOME Council. Since last \Vcdnesclay. when lhe dres.~ code forbidding long hair was suspended for' one month at the Huntington campus. Mark and a !Gt of others breathed sighs of relief and came out of hiding. "I was always getting hassled about cuing )'-hair cut," said Mar.k. v;•hn hlllin't talked to a harber since last Stplembcr. "They would have kicked me out ur school ' if tlley hadn"l done anything like this." he explained. · Cnmpus reeling Is one of general hap- piness about, suspen,ion of tho codt. llC."' rording lo f\1ark , but he warned that if it 1vere 1(1 be enforced again. "111ey're not Jf()lng t!t' be happy at all. I wouldn't be either." The solution to that problem tlun- tington Harbour residents have raiaed such a stink about apparenlly ls-burled less lhan 200 feet from the Sunset Beach Sanitation District's se\\•age _plant al Pacific Co as l Highway and W~rncr Avenue. But it may lake several days to trQ.vel thal short distance If the sanitation district and the-City or ltuntington Belch can't come to terms. Involve d is th·e closing of the sewage . plant, son1eUmes referred to sarcastleatly as the "Honey Pot." Pl11ns call for the Su.nsct Beach distric~ to hook Its lines Into c1ty sewtr line. just a few fe~t from Its plm.1t, ordered closed 1 wttl • INSmE.-TODAY -·· aso by Uie s4nta Ana River Basin Wa~ lhe county, qiererore il will be a mailer Qu&Hly 1 Control ~d. Among other 1 of moqths before forfll&l conlractt can be things, f-\unUng19n ijp.r!Joura. resh:t~nt approved by the 11 sanitation disb'icll~i:n~ Ora11ge Coa.tt ttntaoers and cotnplained that .Ope plant smelled bad. . volved· . -, · • , tldulu ort wOTking on o pro- The .new hook;up would .be "a bree~" gro:m dtsiantd to Mrrow tht and would cost only ~~t tt.~. ac-~ : A, ~mporf,r.y s9}uJion Is ~Siple._w_(th so-calted "otnerotiO'n ~.,,,,iEith cording: to H_unWJitoP Beac:~ Fire Chief • lht.approvaJ1of Fred ·aarper,\jdlrector )of a meeting oJ tht. f!!1'1d~ on 1. , i Ray Plwd, who 4"1• beeo -Involved in the Orange.C,ounly '$ai>lialioo , fslrl!l\;•Y· ?"l•p,~ Jl'Ob ,l/''1!.lloo<,,:'f; ;:1~i. ~ ,'. negollallon~ belwcen . !ht clJy . a'nd tile : hooktng:on\o lhelti~nO~on ,B'eaCh 1m,s. c .. ...];~, , =-..-~ .,. l' sanltation district. Suoset euthod~,have ~ cl'loice but to c"'°"" u11 1 "'""'' '"""" 11 One of the dfrtli:uJtieS Picard l.xplained. 1 do if, "• quesUon fs stmplv a mautt ·or c"""""' 11·• ,..,.._, .....,.. ... , ~ ' CMolt• It 0,.. C-IJ ' is that long ·term coata of carrylqg-Sunset llme. They are oQW worktng, out a con-<,......, ,. · ·a:I• hrfw 1t Betich .fi:iwage to trtatnient plants in tract wHh H,untington Beach oWctals tT~ .. ~ : , ... :' M1or•1t" ~tl~ Huntington Beach and Founlaln Valley v.·htch "iAY Include tht n11rch3se or the ·~..,,·""""' ,. TIMl .... lttl , • Il l Id. bl ,.~ . ,.~ , ... , TI!ff"" It w co.<1t cons era y more. .,..old..wlltalion..pla.ot..b.}ll;lhe.city.Jor u~+-~.,_"'! 11 ••ttt1er • The Sunset Belich Sanitatloi'.1". "-1s"'1r"1c"1"T1s::-" !U'IOthcr fire sfa'tion. ''l'he · buJldisig would =:.'":"""' 1! ::r~' "'~ not a\ member Or' tht Orange County ~ .. t1o1r0nd,doY(n~f1~ •,. f?t~. one1 .• Pl•.~~ !'fl ......,. ' ~ •' SanltaUon District whtch serves most of 1..1"-' ·\· -"'~ "'- • I • • • .. DAILV l'ILDI --H JEFF, 9, (L-EFTl ANI) CRAIG KING, 10, PlllPARE.POllt THE GRIAT GRA·Y PLY-IN On Wedne1do,y, tho Fountoln Volloy Hl9h 'Gym Will lo Turnod Ovor to loya ond Popor Alrpl•nu Beach . tQJight,en .Terms 30 Valle y Pilots To Test Skills For New Central Library Thirty young Fountaln Valley pilot.s ~·ill pit their 5kills against eacii other in a test of endurance, speed and aeronautical design as their private planes take over the airways Wednesday night. The-HunUngton Beach city council has decided to 11W!en Ila: stand on negotl•· tions with the architect for lhe plaMed $2 mllllon library in the city's Central Pirk. . Orr 1 motion by .Dr. Henry Ktutman. the ~ou,pclf voted unanimously to olfer a contract to Richard & Dion Neutra & AssoCiates at a fee of 7\\ percent and Beach Need s Aid To Bu y Sand Land Near City Pier Huntington Beach ii ?loptna to get boaN from both the state and federal gowrnmentl !n ll! plan to acquire about 2,5 mJles of beach ,north of the l!tunlcipal Pier. The 'hr.1d Is owned by the HunUngton Stach Company. The company has not been approached olflcially by the city on the quesUon. · Mayor Jack Gretn said ~tonday the cl· ty was preparing the application it would make ln 1971 for federal funds to acquire the beach. Between $11 and $14 million is being sought from the federal govern- ment. In addlUon, the mayor revealed that a request was being madt from Lt. Governor Ed Reinecke '• office for all cities and counties to pass resolutions af- firming that they will do all they can to preserve the coastline unt.11 the state ean draw up a master plan. "This will put the stale on record as 1\rpporUng moves· lo prevent lrreversible development of beBches." Green said. "It would be ln Une with actions .. : our Park- ing Authority." 'The Parking Authority ls the vehicle the city has used to improve parking fac!Utlea along the n1unl cipal beach and acquire beach land. The mayor also hoped the city would go ()0 rerord asking that it be put In the drilling sanctuary which currently ends at the Santa Ana River. Such a sanctuary would prevent further drllltng platforms being set up of( HunUngton Beach. The \\\'O platforms off Hu ntingto n Reach 1Ke ov.·ncd by linion Oil Co. and Signal Oii & Gas Co. Signal declined to comment on the mayor's remarks today. DAILY PILOT OAANGt COAST PUllllHINO COMPANY llob•rt N. W••' Prttil•nt Incl PllOH•~•• J1cli It. Cu•'•r vice PrttlCl~nl •!Ml GtMrl Mll'ltQtr Tl!o,..1 1 K•tvil Edi Kit Thom •• A. M11rphl11• MIMQkllt Edl"'r Ali er! W. l•I•• .\l)O(lele f dl!Of Al•n Dlrkin N....,ll'ltlltll ... ~ (fly lllKtt H•l'tl., ......... Office I 7t75 l•tcl! loul1v1rd .M 1lll119 A•irt tu P.O. l o• 1•0, •l~~I o"" om, .. lftVlll lilH(fll In ,.,.I Avtnut Clift• M-1 UO Wfll ltY lltOtl H•w"'1 1 .. cnt U11 w.11 lt1DM l oultvtrll Sin Cltfl'ltt1tti JU Norlll t i ~""'°" 11. .. 1 ·- l).tillY PILOT, will\ Wl'llcfl It comolnell , ... N-·Plll.t. h ...,0111 .... 1811'1' ll'lfPI ,.,.._ .. ., h'I .,...,.,. OllltlOn.t ror lttUM 1 .. c11. H"""'1 .. (II, C.0.lt Mat, Hllfll~ IMCll 1!'1111 ,_tt ln Vt!lfV, •lent •1!11 ,.,... ,..,....,., ""lonl. 0••"9• "'" f'Wlltllh't9 COINlllr!Y ll'lnl~ 011111i ,,.. 11 nu """'' l t lbllt 11¥11 .. 1o1 .... .,.. ....... ,,.,. .. W•I l•Y lt .... I, Ct111 M ... . ,...,h_ 171.4) 64l·4l21 ,,.._ W....i"'" Coll 140•101 C._._ A4"9rtllhlt 642·1171 C9Wrlfltl, 1'1'1, O'"tJ!tt CH tl M tltlllrlt '°"""""· ,.. -1tofi... l!lllltt11lltrlh •llOrM! ""''"' or N vft'littlMl'ltt IM••ln """ ... ~fd •;,MVt lPftlel ,..... 1111~1• ti CW"ITl9nl ...,...., ltcond cl111 .... ..,, ... II Ntwlll'rt IMdl ,,.. C••• M111, c.n1or11lt. l1111Krlooon ov ''"rtlf ..... INftll'olfl It\' IO\ttl ,,,,, IMl\tllly; m1n111rr l10111'1!1'tt .. u.oo '"'°""ur. • • that the contract be aimllar to one aireed to with the ·architect for the civic center. Kurt Meyer. The motion ahh .. stlpul1led that no re- tainer be Jlald ~eutra until the contract is ex~cuted. In previous action, the council had voted a $7 ,500 ret.alner fee. City Admlnlstrator Doyle Miiier, asked ir the resolution would help him, answered,. ''l think thl1 11 the action we should have had Lhree months ago." Neutra, a Los Angele• architect with a \\'Orld-:wlde reputation, has 9f:en holding out for a fee of a~> percent. City Attorney Don Bonfa told the Ci>Un- cll Lhat the architect had Indicated that he would do tbe job for ?lh percent, but he would not glve the same service aa he would for an 81,;i percent fee . Kaufman replied,' "I don 't anticipate a Jes,,enlng of service. It will be 1ubltan- tlalfy the 1ame as Meyer's contract and I imagine he wW give us full service." Earlier, In pushi ng for the slgnln( or Neutre, Councilman Don Shipley pointed out that the library board had recom- mended him, and thal continued nrgoU- ations made the city look chea p. 1'-1iller Said, "You told hlm Y.·e were going to hire him before we had a con- tract. That was Uie flaw. It made it dif- ficult for us to negotiate." The administra tor said there had been "extreme ani 1nositv " directed toward the city start by the ·library board and a council sub-committee over delay in sign- ing the architect. "It was the feeling of the enUre com- mittee that we were belng a lilUe bit obstinate," r.1illcr added. Cleaner Gets Clean ed Out A $l0 cleaning bill was subtracted from the cash re gister of a Westminster dry cleaning business Monda y evenina: by a man with a pistol In a cloth 5ack. Pollet said the bandit entered Hooper's Cleaners, 6933 \llestminslcr Blvd., about 7 p.m., as the place was closing, slapped bis tiand on the counter with the bag and told the clerk , "stay cool, don't look at me ,'f then demanded the money from the regl!te r. He got 1way w1th $30, police sald. Flight time is 7 p.m. Jn the Fountain Valley High School gym. The young pUots are all members of the Fountain Valley GRA-Y, a boys' or1anlzatlon tn the Y1'1- CA. lt's the second annual paper airplane contest sponsored by the GRA·Y for members only. The public Is invited lo witch the aeronautical show at no charge. Boys will match their skill• as airplane designers and test .pilots for about lll'O hours. They have been limited to three sheets of 8~1 by II Inch bond paper for construction materials. 'Chicano' to Talk About Education Chicano Is a name applied to Mexlca.n- American citizens, aome of whom think it ls derogatory wltlle Others have adopted it as a vibranl symbol of their culture. At II a.m., Thuraday in lbe free speech area al Golden west College, one of the leading "Chicanos" from Los Ana:eles, Sa l Castro, will explore tfle chanalng world nf the Chicano In education. Castro was a key figure tluring the \\'alkoul at Lincoln High School in Los Angeles in 1968. He Is still fighling a lea:al ba;tle to return to teachlna lhere. Changes ln the college and university systems for ri.1exican-American students is the point of Castro's speech Thursday, on the grassy area next to the Forum. Town Called St. P a t But Onl y for Holiday ST. PATRICK, Callr. CAP) -This Northern Cali fornia lown is a city for the Irish today -but for St. Patrick's Day only. St. Patrick. about 25 mile1 south or Sacramento, is nonnally known as Galt. But after a local dairyman named Tomn,ie Farrell reproached the City Council (or lctck of proper spirit on the hoUday. the city fathen changed lhe clty'5 name lo St. PaLrlck for today. Timothy Lea1·y Sent to Jail AsLawyersP011der Appeal Dr. Thnothy Lea ry Is In Orange County Jail loday, con1plling a sumn1atlon of his drua~ent.ered philosophies and religious bel!ef1 that may b~ used by hli attorneys as ~ basi& of lhelr appeals a1alnst the stJte prison term he drew Mondty. The L.50 cultist's plea -delivered through defense attorney George Chula - 1hat the "controlled use" of LSD and related 1nind-expandln1 drug• amounted to a ret11ious pracUce and should not be condemned "by a society !hot ls only just beginning lo understand., had lillle effect on Superior Coun Judae Byron K. J\1c~fil lan. He listened for three hou rs to thal argument and a ... S!!ries of related argumenll from Chul1 and then sen- t,n(.'fd Leary, 50, to one lo 10 years in state prison. That prison term follo.,,·ed the formrr llar\'ard ps)'Choloalsrs convicllon on c;harge1 or possession or marlJuan• - ch1:rgcs backed by the Orange County Grand Jury after Leory, his wife, Rottmary, 34, and son John Bush Letry, 20, were arrtsled In L11£una Btach. J\frs. Leary !Uld alrt11dy Men sentel'\Ced by Jud5t J\1c~11llan to 11.J mo n I h !i In Or ange County Jail and lhrtt yws prob.1tlon. You ns l..r11ry drtw a 91).(tAy prM~ntencing dl8gno3llc study at ilic state'• Chino facility 11nd he ls scheduled to rtjicrt tbtre Wcdn<ldoy, I He became the central flaure J\looday of the bitterly opposed sentencing of his colorful father and a couple of comments made by Chief Deputy Dlslrlcl Attorney James Enright during the prosecutor's \'igorous opposition to a plea for bail made him -for the first time that morn- ing -put down the flowers he had been toying with. "We: have 1 true" picture of Dr. Leary from the probation report on his son J ohn -the young man sitting right here," the bluff, burly Enri1ht snapped. • "John doesn 't want his father and Rosemary to have children because of what happened to hln1 and I think that we 6hould all take note or what he has to tell us. "In ol.her words," Enright 11ld, "\\'t should look at the evidence (lf what hip. pens to peoP.le who are the vlctlm1 of othrr people s advocacy (lf the frte uae or drurs and we should 111es1 their rights lo freedom on the basla of what we heve to see. Or. Leary'• own aon h11 given us a \'try valuable pointer t.o what' our nns wer tto tht bail application ) ii:hould be." Enrlghl's angry word& •hocked young Le3ry Into an creel posture for the firs~ llme during the hea ring. He dropptd his fl owers, swung partly around to watch tlie pro1ecutor and bo\l•ed hls head ir~ . Enrl&bl eonclude<j. • Beat!h Aide Caugl1t in Middle CofC-Coun cil Tiff Nearl y Cos u Man's Job By ALAN DIRK IN ., .... II, Plitt 1*11# ' Bill Back, HwiUntton Be a e b ' 1 IC<ldbmte dtvtlopmut coordinaJ.or, found hhntelf 1n the mldcUe of a city council· Chamber ol Conunerce d;spute today. He almost found himself out of a job as 1 result of some comic vote juggling at ri.londay night's council meeting. Even though his "'lfe had the motor running ouUJde, as Back put Jt, the couo.. . cil \•oted to continue his position for a \\'hilt. The· confiict arose after Ci ty Administrator Doyle Miller presented a report, requested by councllm~n earlier, on \\'hether the city's contract with the Chamber of comn\erce should be renew· ed. The contract in queslion is one in \l'hich the city pays the chamber '19,600 a year for an economic development coordinator 10 promotE: the cll.y. · Some counciln1en made it clear Mon- day night that they would like to see the contract terminated and Bi.ck's position. re-crea ted within the city's public in- formation office. ~f!ller made this recommendation, arguing that the chamber, with it.s special interest lobbying, can become a polltlcal organization when it innuences legislation before the council. "\Ylth our present contract in force, Is this not some fonn of a conflict of in- terest?" Miller asked. The administrator claimed that if Back's position v.·u mo ved t.o the city there would be no additional cost. Aftt!' much haggling the council voted to continue Back's contract on a month-- to-month basis until June 30 wtien It will be reviewed by the new city council aft.er the April 11 election. A proposal lo Jungle Journey · ' OAIL Y PILOT Sltll P""* BACK ON THE JOB CofC'1 -er, •h -H8'1 l•ck re~reatc aBck 's job in U1e city failed on a J.3 tie. The voting went on comic, rather than orderly, lines, however . Councilman Henry Kaufman said that since conflic t of Interest was beln,11 con- sidered he felt it right to point out that membershlp on the chamber's board of directors might be a conflict. Councilman George ~feCracken, who Borneo Adventure Told ·By Beach Explore1· "It was an incredible: dream and an im· possible journey ." That Is hov;r Huntington Beach explorer Wyn Sargent explained her re cent lrlp in- to the jungles of Borneo to Harbour View el@mentary school chlkiren 1'.fonday. And they agreed with stunned silence. ?.touths were 1gape as she recounted her experiences of bl!arre funeral rites, wlthchdoctors and headhunt ers ainong the native Dyaks. Last October Mla:s Sargent launched an eq>edltion to Borneo to bring medical aid, food and education to some 3,000 trlbe!man. Harbour View's children themselves helped out with $500 which were used to purchase 5,000 books for River View School, their sister school in the dark "We stand a very good chance of mak· ing the ugly American respected again ," she told the children. . One of her major ao.als was to supply medical help to the Dyaks which she said are dying from a \•ariety of diseases. She e:stabllshed a six-bed Jun1le hospital llrilh an American doctor and 11n American nurse, ba cked up by nearly eight tons of equlprnent. • Periodic foraya took he:r to remote parts ol Borneo In search of human beings who most needed attention. More than once she ran into wltchdoctor1, \\·hlch she described as her closest Mvals In the healing profession. "We were actually beginning to recornJte the smell of death," she re- counted of one adventure in which .11he and a ?r'itchdoetor \ied for the lh·es of people. "It \Vas a ceremooy for all the sick children. The witchdoctor was conducting jt from a sv.•ing in the middle of the room 1 all of the children were lyirlg on the floor, smelling, dying, ill," she explained. "It was a rather uneasy position for me since he wa s my fiercest competitor." But peace }l'BS arranged with the witchdoc tor gh·ing her his prized ironv.·ood drwn as a sign or truce. Jn one o.ther thstanc.e she nearly touch- ed off a war between tribesmen over her competition with a wltchdoetor and had to nee through the jungle with her in- terpreter and guide. On the way, a 14-foot snake fell on her from a tree, knocklng her down. lier guide mana1ed to dl1p&tcll the 250-pound serpent with a quick knife stroke, she said. ~tl&3 Saraent plans to return to her base ol operation! in Ku1la Kuajan In about nine weeks to replace her American staff with local help. Pt1eanwhlle zhe ii ln the U.S. aollcJUng funds for their 1alarles and return fares . Yom1g GOP to l\'leet Residents of HunUngton Beach and Founta.ln Valley are invited to join the Huntington-Valley Youna Rtpubllcan1 for dinner at I p.m. Wedneaday, at the Four Winds Restaur111t, 16'31 Bolsa Chica Ave., Huntington Beach. h•d lavorc<l keepiJli Back ;wlill lhe cham· bar, la on the chal!iber bolid. H• prompily apolotlte4 and 1i.ppoc1 down. City Attorney Don Bania s·aid this was 1 conflict that he wQUld rec<ignlze. but he al.so saw n1en,bershlp in the chamber as a conflict of interest. At this, Dr, 'Kaufman, an optometrist. aod Counciln1an Ted Bartlett. who owns a gas slatlon. abstained, causing ltfayor Jack Green lo ask if the council sUU bad a quorum. J\fcCracken, from the audience, qufpped 11Can I say anything'""under oral com· munication?" The ''ollng went on wllh Don Shipley, Green and Al Coen voting for continuing the eontracl until June 30 .. Bonfa was not finished and gave another ruling. "All those who sanctimoniously ab. !tained from voting should return and repeat the dishonor" referring to the fact that they all voted on the i'sue when the chamber contract \\'as established over a year ago. , Jn debate earlier, Kaufman sald, ''Jt's time the ch'a1nber Slood on its own feet alld did IU own work in Its own way and not rely on a city subsidy." Shipley commented, H\Ve voted this situation oursclveS. I don 't lhfnk we should be taking a llne on the &ood guys versus the bad guys ." \\'hat is Back's view of hi s job? "I'm an employe of the city no matter \\'here they put me," be said. Pete Horton, Chamber of Commerce president, was out of town today and could not be reached for comment. The chamber Is known to be anxious not to los e Baclt. ft 3 executive comm1ttee will meet later this week and may take a , ;;s;;iUon on the matter. From Page 1 CHARGES •.• Barker, and the U.S. advi:iory orsaniza- Uon. "T11e deficiencies cited in the report relate prjmarily to alleged failures to render required reports, conduct ade· quate in\'estlgations. and otherwise t9 satisfactorily discharge duties in the light of infonnallon received concerning an alleged alroclty." The Army made public a censored \•ersion of the repo rt, deleting the bulk or it on grounds it contained material v.'hich might prejudice legal proceedings: A team of Army legal officers revle\vtd the 20,000 pages or testimony and 500 documents given before the inquiry. ''As a result charges have been prefer:· red against 14 officers," the Anny said. "~losl of the officers are charged 'vill'i derelirtion or duty and /or failure to con1- p\y with applicable regulalions and direc- tions . Other charges include false swear- ing and misprtsion of a felony." ~tisprision. as defined in the Code or 11ilitary Justice, is leveled at persons \\·ho have knowledge of the commission of a felony "and who conceals and does not as soon as po.'lslble make known" this to civil and m111tary authorlti1!8. Price of Poocl1 Rises iI1 Beacl1 The prict of a dog in Huntington Beacb \\'Ill jump 43 after April I Jf the dog doe!n 't have a new license 1ttached t.o b~ collar. Dog ta1s cost $5 at the Huntington Beacil l{umane Society, 21632 Newland St. A $3 fine wll! be imposed on nwners who don't buy a license for the family pet before April I. A rabies clinic for doss will be held from 7-9 p.m., Thursday at the main fire station, Lake Street and Palm Avenue. Cost of the shots Is $2. A r~bles certificate is necessary to buy • dog li cense. ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW CARPETl.NG? fOLLOW THI$ CHECK LIST TO INSURI COMPLETI SATISFACTION llSl BRAND NAME DEl'ENDABIUTY l8l DEALU INTEGRITY I&! WIDEST SELECTION l8l COMPmTIVE PRICES l8l EXPERT INSTALLATION llll FINANCING AVAILABLE THIN COMI TO .ALDINS-OWNID I OPt•ATID IY Jr4 OI NlllATION CAll:,ITINO IXPlll:llNCl- OVllt 11 YlAltS IN THI HAJtft>Jt AlttA, WE FEATURE THESE FAMOUS - NATIONALLY ADVERTIS!D NAMES: l i * BEATTIE *CROWN *IMPERIAL *MONARCH * ROXBURY * WALTIRS * llGILOW * FIRTH Don't Mt11 Our Drapery Dtpt. * SWllTWATER * BERVEN *COLUMBUS *DAN RIVER * MONTICILLO * SIOUOYAH We '"'",.. • cempl1t1 •lectlett ef holtrlu •114 cel.,1 t• ~h•t1te •"41 cempll me11t yeur c•rpetlnt. -VISIT OUR R6MNANT ROOM - Hundroda of Small -to ·Room Sl10 Romn•nh ALDEN 'S 1663 l'LACENTIA· COSTA MeSA 646·4131 CARPETS DRAP!RIES ., • IJ YIAltl SlltVl"O THI OltANOI COAIT ! • 1 ! I ' l s t l • y " ' 1 • • ... Newport Beaeh • VOL 63, NO. 64, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA C\iamber Drops Sex Report Int.o S.chool.-.Lap.s ' By THOMAS FORTUNE Of ..... 01111 ,.,.,, Stiff A report on sex education was too hot for Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce directors to handle Pt1onday so they turned it over lo the school board. No approval or dlsapi)roval of recom- mendations in the report was voted by chamber directors. Instead . the sex educaUon...package simply was forwarded to Newport-Mesa Unified School District board, members. The report was prepared over JO months by the Chamber of Commerce's education committee. It recommends sex education instruction but "facts of life" not be taught unUI high school and students have the option of leamlng them in coed or in separated boy and girl cl asses. Chamber President Charles Currey ex- plained why he thought Chamber. direc- tors were reluctant. ·"Because we are in a controversial area people are hesitant to ·put an endorsement on it," he said . '·We're especially careful because it's getting out of the area of business a~d commerce." en·era Newport Council Lackluster Race Shown in Forum The Newport Beach City Council cam - paign got off to a slow start today. One ca ndidate didn't show up and four had surprisingly little to say. City spending, the Pacific Coast Free- way and Upper Newport Bay swap were the principal issues discussed as two lackluster forums provided the £irst ~ t~face confrontation ol the candJdales. In the ·only lively race of four, Roy Woolsey leveled a conflict ot interest charge against his opponent, Carl Kymla Jr., for having Jrvine Company affiliate John Macnab lead his campaign. The two forums this morning were sponsored ·by the Corona del Mar Cham· ber of Commerce and. the Woman's Civic League of Newport Harbor. About 40 Jl'r· sons heard the candidates at each forum. Candidate Al Forgit, opponent to in- cumbent Howard Rogers. did not show up. He was not ill. his wile said. Milan Dostal and Walter "Wally" Koch. candidates for District Four, and Jim Aynes Jr. and ruchard Croul, cand~date5 for District Six, semed to be cautiously feeling their way. None of the four offered much in the way or a platform. \Voolsey said he confronted Jrvine Com- pany President William .R. Pl.faso:n a~d asked him why one of his executives is campaign manager for a l~al can_didale. J..fason told him he didn't think be should tell his emp\oyes what to do about political matters, Woolsey said. He an- swered J..fason. he said, that a corporation speaks through its ex~cutive~. . Kymla said Macnab 1s not his campaign manager but chairman of his executive committee. f\.1acnab served in that capa· city prior to becoming head of Macnab- lrvine Realty Company, a wholly-owned trvine Company subsidiary. Macnab of- fered to resign. Kymla said, but he told Macnab he did not want him to resign and he considers him "a man of integ- rity." Macnab is president of Newport Tomor· row and former president or the. Cham- ber of Commerce and board of realtors. Kymla told one audience, and he would like to have ~O more like him on his team. On the question of the: Upper Bay trade . all candidates said they favored an ttolo- gical preserve and generally took refu1e in noUng the matter is before the courts ·and for the present out or the city hands. The land is within the city limill and no matter what happens to the trade Newport Beach will have basic control over development. candidate Croul point- ed out. fncumbent Councilman Rogers said he originally ravored the. trade as a way to 'J'm not Irish!' ' get development but now he ls opposed to it. The city has to plan for either even- tuality, be sajd. Dostal agreed that either way the cily has to know what 1he impact will be and he commended I.he City Council for its initiation of a study. Simpl e Rites Honor Mesa's Citv Clerk • By ARTHUR R, VINSEi.. Of tM D1I,,. l"lltl Slltf Sorrowing city olucials led by an honor guard of police and firemen paid the ir last respects Monda!' to Costa Mesa City Clerk C.K. "Charlie" Priest. Mr. Priest, who died last Thursday at 73, was eulogized in simple riles at Com· munity Congregational Church. Corona del Mar. as truly a Renaissance Man. H'.s talents and abilities spanned a wide range of personal inte rests, from mathematics to philosophy, writing, and floricuJture to his dedicated duties in' city government. "This persisted until Jast week," said Dr. Philip G. ~1urray, enumerating Mr. Priest's many activities before friends who packed the sanctuary. Mr. Priest was educated at Columbia University, New \ .. rk, as a mathematics major. then went into newspaper reporting and editing in his natlvt New England. An avid reader and writer, he sold his first short story at age 21 and consumed at lea!t one book nightly throughout his life, reading fluently in five languages. His daughter, Mrs. Charlotte Mecke, said In a written eulogy that he also wrote poet ry, kept a daily journal for JO years and was a brilliant inspiration. And yet he kept a measure of himseH for himself, Or. Murray noted, since the family was unaware of the daily Jog nf life that ended March 11 with his final en- try. • He was also once a feature writer (nr the Chrlsllan Science ~fonitor and upon (Ste PRIEST. Page 2l Bm·glary Charge Faced by Trio Three l..os Angeles suspects today fae- e:d arraignment on charges that they burglarized the lndone.sia Restaurant in Corona del Mar of about $100 in small change Monday In pre-<tawn hours. Newport Beach police identified thr. suspects a.1 Robert Larry Tate, 2~. Don Lee BenJOn, 25 and John Byrd, 31, all of Los Angeles. Byrd wa,1 taken inlo tustody on the burglary charges about 3:25 a.m. on East Coa!t Highway near Jamboree Road . Tht restaurant l.1 located at 2:$15 E. Coast IUgbway. orncen allege Iha\ Byrd was driving a stolen car. lie was slopped because jt hl\d no tall lights. Benson and Tate WP.Te arrested about an hour and a half later. Ttttir cur had no brake lighlJ, resultiJ:lg ill the traffic stop; r Dr. Nolan Friuelle, Chainnan of the education committee that prepared the report, sald he 1•nclerstood and didn't feel the committee was ~g rebuffed. School district officials, in their only public men~ of sex education during !he last 10 months, said' they we.re awaiting the Chamber of Commerce's fin· dings. Asked il the school district might no1v move ahead with a sex education pr~ gram, Superintendent William CUnning· barn said, "I don't see any reason not to now. J think we will start by looking at our own report, the draft we have." He said he expects the school board will w~nt him · to have school g{aff members confer with Frinelle a.pd his committee. Iri lb report, the Chamber commlUee recOmmends )>asic anatomy ' .. flnt be taught id sixlh grade and carry through j~lor high in classes segregated"by sex. Venereal disease instruction it is -recom- mended begin In junior high school. although not In elaborate ,detail. Sexual behayior should not, however, be taught before high schbol; says the commtttee. • • The commiU~ calls for ev~ioc classes· for parents. It recommends an 1,,electlve class in marriage pr'tpiia!Jon for nigh. school seniors. _ Drug, healt.Q a'nd Per~onal bya:iene in- struct.ion . should begin in e.lemeJ\lary school, the committee suggests. • During jts long irivestlga.tion the Chamip. education commillee ,hefrd testimony from 15 different pefsons with varied .viewpoint.s plus stud~nts frQm tour high school!. ft .also conducted ,_ ,COIT)· munily survey that resulfed In 2,019 returns out or 8.250 questionnaires sent to parents .• e to Beach Seeks Mesa Pair In Murd ers By TERRY COVILLE ot tM O.llY 1"1 ... lll+f Bulletins went out to all we!tl!rn states today as Huntington Beach detectives launched a manhunt for two Costa Mesans sought in the slaying last Thurs· day of a·ZS:yea.Hld Anaheim man. A third suspect, also .of Costa Mesa, was arrested Monday night after 1 round- the-elock Investigation into the shooting of Thomu C. Astorina, found in a maraby area near Sunset Aquallc Park with a bullet hole in his chest. One or the two men police are looking for is Robert W. Liberty, the famed ·'Candlelight killer" invo lved in the strangling death of .a Westminster mother in 1966, Liberty gained wldespread notoriety during a trial which revealed a weird ritualistic service performed over the _body of the woman he had all egedly kill- ed. Police had found him near the body, playing a guitar by candlelight. Liberty v.'as ruied "insane:" and con- fined to a state hospital. He was given his freedom in early September by Judge Robert Gardner or Newport Beach, who declared him once again sane. Three months before Judge Gardner declared him legally free, Liberty caused a furor by walking out or the Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk, freed by a "clerical error.'' The declaration of sanity made It im· possible for Liberty to be tried again on the Westminster murder charges. Police are also hun ting Robert Patrick Connolly, 39, oC 350 Avocado, Apt. 10, Costa Mesa. Botb Connolly and Liberty are considered armed and dangerous, police said. No address was given for Liberty but it is believed he may have been staying with Connolly at the Costa Mesa address. The pair are believed to be driving I 1965 Mustang convertible wilh 1 black top and yellow body. The license number is PKL 936. Police said today they have no idea \\'here the suspect!! went. Detectives made a thorough search of bars in Santa Ana ~londay night and early this morning in hopes of Unding the suspects. The men are known to patrOllize these bars. Police made the first arrest In the 4Y.i- rlay-old Ca.!e Monday night. Randall Greg Allen, 27. also of 350 Avocado, Apt. 18, Costa P.1esa. was arrested after ques- tioning at the Huntington Beach police station and held on murder charges. OA llY l"ILOT""'lt 111 llldllrf KMllll!" One t o Grow On Percy, a tw~month-old pup owned by Jan Evans of Costa Me&a , met this fire plug Monday afternoon during, a walk wilh his mistress near the Newport Pier. Percy obviously was awestruck and had to sit down to think things over. Ne wport Council Tables Stand on Free wa y Route Strong and differing opinions held by Newport Harbor Chamber of Comme.rce directors resulted Monday in a non-vote on the Newport Beach City Council:s freeway stand. Because of the splil In feeling a pro- posal to support the clly in working t~ ward a design solution along the adopt. ed Pacific Coast Freeway route was tabled. Opposition to giving up the seven-year city fight f0r a reroullng was e~pre:ssed by Mrs. Isabel Pease and Dr. Nolan FriT.Zelle. Jn11e Cuts Barber ~Ir~. Pease claimed a freeway along , lhe . West Newport and Mariners Mile bluffs would "brutalize the integrity and environment of this.clty.",She admonish· ed chamber directors not to jotn city of- f iclals "In lying down like little puppies." Dr. Frizzelle said .he doesn't want to see t r a f f I c clog~ln.g the city but he doesn't reel evuy. roct has been unturn- ed. ''I couldn'.t support the re30Juuon for a minute." he .said. Actress Ends Marriage -in Newport Actress June Allyson toda) clipped Newport Beach society barber Glenn Maxwell out of her life for the second time \Vith the dissolution by Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan of tht marriage they celebrated In l..as Vegas almo!feiactl)' three year1 ago. Miss Allyson, 47, dres.seo In a purple. kne&-lenglh dress and calf-length, paten! leather boots. Oew in rrom New York Mo.lday nlghl for the cat.rt action. She heard attorney William Wenke testily that Maxwell was wlthdr1wlng most or his flnanclal claims stemmina from the marriage. Then she-t.ook the stand herself lo teslify In her husky voice lh1t there we:rc "irTtcOl'lcllable differenct111'' bclwtcn the couple. Maxwell, 43. 1w-rendered to Ml&s Allyson the property rights ht had previously claimed In their 'home at ·101 Via Genoa, Lldo Isle, and 111 interests In a Los Augoles apartment1 building. Ht wu not 'present for thi JO-mlnu·te hear- ing~ · JUdge Mcl4111an restored· t-0 ~tiss AllyJOn the name ol June Ahyson Po\\(ell. And h~ approved the coupk.'s' plMli ·for paymenl of debts totaling more: th11n $3,0IXI, most of which will be settled by the actress. MllB All'yton tint married M1:nrell In l963. shortly the death of her first hus- band, actor-director Dick Powell. A stormy_ rn_arrlt1.ge.1 tn WhJeh al leut . two domestic spats ·were' broktn up by New· porlllw:b.polke, ended tw• 1-'lllef. • I' Hugh M;yn8tt responded to Mn. PtJUlt by !'~Ying. "Izzy. it seem! to me we have been ll!tten1ng to your apprn•ch for the last 10 year,s. A freew~ Is long" overdue In this ,tO'wp~" ' Mayor Mrs. Doreto'Me.rshltll~ 1!.Uett of lhe ch'ariiber-dir«tors, '1111d, t'J 'fhlr1k all of us 9-l"Tet: It ls a vezy ,ppor ·choide or route bot Ole •lti!m&tive•of ho r~ee­ way ls distasteful. J know that yes"ttt· dav (Sunday) It took nl< foft••f to f•t to Shorecllffs and thls ill only Mirth.' Stoel< M11rl<et1 NEW YORK (AP,) -Tbe.st.ock market turned upward lite this ariemoOn on mod· 1 orate tfadillc. ($4 lquotaUons, Pans r~ . 11}. • • . • • ... 1 l FriUe:lle said the commltlee, iflit.iilad a bias. Probably was wei&hted ·toward per-sons who wanted sex education °1ock, stock and barrel." But ._JI had coocu:rred, he sa1!f; that tho, school boaid to teop In step with public opinion should inc.lud.e the .. ft.strictiOO!, confines ~ fa. clusions" recommended in lbt r~. Schools Supqintendent • Qmoinghain said if Chamber directors had ~ottd to throw the: report In the waste , basket tt still would 'have been of 1 value· to ~ scllool district. 1'W,e have .already re.ad It and s.tudied it," he slid. • I West Point Boss Among 14Charged WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army 111· nounced today that Maj . Gen. Samuel W. Koster, West Point s1.1perintendent, and 13 oth'er officers' have been charged with dereliction of duty and other charges In a field invesUgallon or the alleged Son My- ~ Lai mm~acre two years aao in South Vietnam, Kofler was commandil\I general of the Aroe_rtCal ~ Divfston, pattnt' of tbe task force "Wfdch swept through the hardcore ~tat!• on Matti! 16, !IA, T~ .~ offJcers and enlisted men have ~ charged wiUt murder' and oth'er alleged crimes in ~ d.eaths of i s many as· 102 Vietnamese civlllaru In Son My vnlige• and My Lal hamlet. Lt~ Geil. Wlll i1m R. Peers, who headed a 3¥.r-month investigation ·of the way re~rls of a massacre originally were haridled, told a news conference "tllere was rte:stlmony' and evidenet ·ta indicate that certain persons; rwlttlngly or umrit- tlngly, auppressed · .ctrt.ain information about the l!JCident , from pauing up the chain of command." Howeve[, Peets said he d'1' oot think th.ere was a coverup. He also said he w.u s~Usfled that ln- fofn\atlon on the · inc.icfeµt di.d not go beyond the America! Division to htiber command and Washington at the time of the field probe immediately after tM reported massacre. At West. Point., Koster informed the 3,700 cadets assembled in the academy's mess hall be has asked to be relieved Of his post as head of the academy. An information officer al West Point saJd the general told the cadets "I want you to be among the first to know that l will soon leave West Point." He said he wants another asslgnmept "in order to separate the military academy and you of the corps from the continuing flow ot pubUc announcements .Jr any other coaoecUon with the ~leged events which toot place in Vietnam in- volvln~ elements of my former com- mand.' . Col. Patrick Dionne, the academy in- form41ion of(icer, said Koster gave hi! remarks wi~hout apparent emotion !See OIARGES, Pa1• I) Orange Coast Weatlaer Residents of the Orange Coast can expect more night af'ld morn- ing low ctoucb and fog with par- Ual' cleartng Wednesday mbrrung. Wednadoy afternoon should • be Blmny Jbut 111ightly ·cooler with some gusty winds. Temperatures will reach the low 70's- INSIDE TODAY Orange Coast tee11agers , at1d ad1dts are working on a pro- gram dtslgned to narrOto1 the · 1o-called "oeneratta11 gap"-wilh a mtettno of th• minds on soc- ' lofbgic:ol J!"'bi...,,. Pau• 9, I , • • ,,. pAh. Y ~LOT Jy~. MM<h 17, lj10 ' • PUet "°'~ , ' -· MeSa'N eWsm.--en to-Miss .~ ." • • -' ' ' I .t I -I Good Pal Charlie Priest By AR'l'.fflJR R. VINSEL Of ~ OallY r 1111 lt1lt . -~ NOBODY ON the local police and city ball beat over Lhe years has ac- <tp4ecl .., certainty beyond death, taus and Charlie Priest btlng Costa M.,. Qty Clerk forever. We lolt a friend and one of those certaintie$ Thursday •. 9ne of my compeUtor:i is a girl and l 'Ji) glad, because 1 lel her step ahead into his office Friday on our mominc rounds. She asked II Charlie wu in,.tlie. way we do every day. Or did. Eileen. Grace and Linda were red~yed. "Didn't you know?" asked Eileen. And ~ -of course -We knew, because the American way ot death h11 lnstiUed in us a clrcumspeci, method of reterring to tts ugly fact. espe.dally wbeTe those we care about are concerned. • • • • HE I.ED A LONG;-full life of 73 yean and when h.il time came if was ·quiet~ · · 1 He' was a reporter min.Y years before he became" city clerk. Ht knew 1how 'touih ll ls to 'ATlte an obitlilry for ·a. frlend:. Charlie w11 a reporter In Bt:dton when my mother, a fonner news~man, wu just learning her ABC. in school. . · He was 'I talented writer. a gentle wit, a dedicated pipe-smoker and a grower of roses. He was a rather· modest man. He never told us -the local newspaper people -that he had been nominated as America's City Clerk of the Year. · .---' • • • •'COME IN, sit down. Rest yourulf,'• he would llY on Tuesday morn· Jngs, after a long and perhaps stormy d ty· COW>Cll meeting that ended only a few hours bdore. · "HoW lbout a cup of coffee? Here, try some of thiJ," he would say, of· ftrhll a new brand of pipe tobacco. . · • • • No .maUer what typographiCal error or factual contradiction YQU he- m~ after discovering lt crept in during frantic dead!J.ne..presaure produc· tion ot the prior day's paper. be coold top it. He said it wouldn't matter anyhow, 50 years from now. Charlie'111vorite -he told it on himself -waa his obituary for a high- ly regarded citizen, .fatally rtric~ while pushing a raft across the river. The word "raft" was scrambled in typesetting and printed as another embaJTass- iJll and totaDy abSurd word,. using the same four Jett.era. ·"What a way to send the poor· old feltow. all," he would 1ay with 1 Chuckle . · · . · • • • • S01''1EHOW, wriUng Charlie's obit Friday momJng, I kept thlnklng of that, as ttiough some.one were looking over my abouldtr. I waa very, very ~I, although I left out the fact he wu put pri&ldenl of the Coat& Mesa lli110rical SQclety. O\arlle loved the color, drama and subtle lnterworkinga of hl1tory. Now, bf Is part of it. Careening Car Kills Mesa Man, Hur.ts Passenger Skiddiii1 out of conb'ot for nearly 500 rfft, an old sedan careened into a traffic alp al control bol. in Costa Mesa early to- day~ fatally Inj uring the driver. RJchard ll. Hashman, 32, of 141 Mesa Drive, Costa Mesa, was hurled partially out by the impact. . HIJ dued companion walked away. Police · said HaShman died in the emergency room al Cosla M e s a Memorial Hospital, wbert he was taken with head and chest injuries. Roy L. C<impton, 31, ol the same ad- dress, was driven to the ilospital by poUct, trealed for minor lace cuts and released to go home. Officer Don Casey said the two men were headed south on Harbor Boulevard near the San Diego Frteway at 12 :10 a.m., when the 1954 sedan 'A'ent out of control. Compton, told investigators his friend had ju.st started to pass another verucle "'1111e traveling about 50 miles per hour when the fatal skid began. Sliding at an angle across all four lanes, the car struck three objects before smashing into the solidly-rooted traffic control box at Gisler Avenue's boulevard lnterstction. DAILY PILOT OllANGE COAST PU&llSHIHG COMPANY ll:ob.-rl N. W1e4 Prnidtfrt ll'HI l"ubll~r J1c~ ~-Curl1y \Ike .. ,_Iden! 1/111 t;lnf,..I M-tlf Tho111•• K11.,il Edi lot Thom1t A. Murpl.i111 Manatlns IEdlhlr Thom•• Fortu111 N...--t 8N(ll C!h' Edlhlr Erom PGBe l PRIEST .•. temporary retirement as Newport Beach city_cltrt. wrote a manual on mwiicipal government. · 'llle book is the foundation for governmental operations in rn an y Southland COl\)rnurUties that incorporated followlrC. World War II, includlq1 Costa Mesa. He wu also past president of the Costa Mesa Historical Society and was in· atrume.Qtal in restoring and establishing the ofd' Diego Sepulveda Adobe as a histoncal monument. . The ~a Mesa City Council pa!std a resolution Monday night calling for a bronze ~laque In hla memory to be in· stajled at the Estancia. Chamber Okays Budget Increase An Increase In the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce budget from S45,000 in 1961 to $56,000 this year was approved Monday by chamber directors. The increase is due to inflation plus salary raises for members of the cham- ber of conunerce staff. directors "'ere to.Id. A pay raise from $13,700 to $18,200 per year for Chamber Manager Jack Barnett was approved . About 95 percent of the chamber bud- get comes from dues paid by the 850 member businesses. Dues are $48 per year for the individual businessman, $75 and up far partnerships or corporations. Grove Realtor Seeks 34th District Post Dwight W. Mize. Garden Grove real esta~ developer. announced ?i.fonday his candidacy for tne Democratic nomination for state senator in the 34th District. He seeks the post being vacated by Sen. John G. Schmlti (R-Tustln) who is run- ning for the 35lh congressional se•t. ?i.111e Is a member of the Democratic State Central Committee. ., l>AILY PILOT Slllf Phm Jtlessage tor Jtf otorists New sign being installed ove'r humpbacked Pacific ~Coast Highway bridge over Back.Bay is designed to aid westbound motorists who can't see Dover Drive stop light from east side of bridge. More than 30 rear-end collisions in lvestbound lanes of heavily traveled bridge during 1969 caused 'City Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe to seek help from the state Division of J~igh,vays, which is now install- ing the lighted lvarning device. Timothy Leary Sent to Jail As Lawyers Ponder Appeal County Jur y Hit By Beaclt Ma yor In Harbor Probe • Dr. Timothy Leary is in Orange County Jail today, compiling a swrunation of his d~g..Cenfered phllosophies and religious beliefs that may be used by his attorneys u the basis of their appeals against the state prison term he drew Monday: The LSD culllst's plea ·-delivered through defense attorney George Chula - that the "controlled use" of L.5D and related mind-expanding dnlgs amounted to a religious practice and should not be condemned "by a society that is only just J>egituilng_ to understand" had little effect . on Superior Court J udge B)Ton K. McMillan. . He listened for three hours to that argument and a series of related arguments from Chula and then sen· . tenced Leary, 50, to one to 10 years in stale prison. That prison term followed the former Harvar~d psy~lgglst's Q>nviction on charges of poss1!5sion of marijuana - char~es -bacied bY, the Orange (founty Grand Jury after ·teary, his wlte, Rosemary, 34, and};on John Bush Leary, 20, were arrested lri Laguila Beach. Ptfrs. Leary had already been sentenced by Judge McMillan to alx m o n t h ~ in Orange County Jail and three years ·probation. Young Leary drew a 90-day pre-sentencing diagnostic study at the state's ChinO facilitfand he ls icheduled to report there Wednesday. · He became the central figure Monday or the bitterly opposed sentencing of his colorful father and a couple of comments made by Chief Deputy District AUomey James Enright during the prosecutor's vlgo·rous opposition to a plea for bail made him -for the first time that morn· jng -put down the flowers_ h~ ~act _!>een. toying with. "We have a true picture of Dr. Leary from the probaUon report on his son John -the young man sitting right he rt," the bluff, burly Enright snapped. "John doesn't want his father and Rosemary to have children because of what happened to him and I think that we should au take note of what he has to tell us. "In other words," Enright said. "we should look at the evidence of what hap- pens to people who .are the victims of other people's advocacy of the free use of drugs and we should assess their rights to freedom on the basis of what we ha\'C to see. Dr. Leary's own son has given us a very valuable pointer to what our answer (to the ball application) should be." . Enright 's angry words shocktd young Leary into an erect posture for the first time during the hearing. He dropped his flowers, swung partly around to watch the prosecutor and bowed his head as Enrigbt concluded . tt was some moments before the long· haired, hippie-garbed Leary resumed hi~ study of the purple orchid delivered lo him by an admirer shortly before the sentencing hearing opened. His role in the incinent of nee. 26, 1!168 that sparked the arrest of the trio wa s also brought Into focus by Chula through the· statement by the veteran trial lawyer that "nobody knew who gave that bag <cootaining dn1gs) to Or , Leary jUst before the police officer searched the family car." Chula made it clear that Dr. Leary did not have the bag just before the arrest and he poinled out that . it did not come from r..1rs. Leary. He made no reference to John Bush 4ary as he pressed his argument that there had never been any real basis for prosecution of his client. Or. Learv ha" learned since his se:n· tencing tha't federaf authorities ~·Ill not claim the precedence to which they are enlilled and that he will serve his first senlence in a California state prison. It is expected that the arrangement will help bolh sides in the dispuU! in the long ap- pellate court hassle that seems certain to . follow bis conviction on the Laguna Beach Charges. · Emett Serviee8 , Set in Newport Funeral services v.•ill be held Wednes· day lor Edward L. Emett. retired insur- ance ~roker who died Sat~rday in his Newport Beach home. A graduate of UC Berkeley and veteran ot Wor'ld War I. he formed lhe insurance brokerage of Emelt and Cl1andler in 1929 v>'ieh Norman Chandler, now chair- man or the executh'e committee of Times fi1irror, Inc. An eight-year resident of Newport. he wlis a trustee of Claremont lt1en's College and a director of lhc Southern California Symphony Association. Dr. Charles Dierenneld will officiate at the 2:80 p.m. services in the Grace Chapel of St. Andrews Presbyterian Church . Internment will be al Pacific View Mortuary. l{e leaves his '1.'ife, Katharine. of lhc home, a son Robert L. Emett of Los An- geles. a sister Agnes Hutton of Santa ?11onica, and five grandchildren. r..Iayor Jack Green of fluntinglon Beach assailed the Orange County Grand Jury f\1onday for "a biased an d erroneous report" on its investigation of the Orange C\l unty Harbor District. The · jury favors retention of the district. The mayor said at a press conference !fla t the jury's probe was nol 1nade by the jury itself but by a five-rrian agricultural committee. "They interviewed me, but it v.'as done strictly for show." he said. ''It \vas ob· vious they had alr eady made up their minds. They were supposed to be in- vestigating but instead they argued "'ith me on the merits of the· district. "It was not a public hearing and was ''cry .unprofessional conduct on their part. I rlon't care which way they go but t do think they could have handled it bel· ler." The jury repurt last 'A'eek recom· mended that the Harbor Disli-ic( be ·re· ta ined. ' The League of CilieS, which h-tayor Green heads, favors dissolution of the: district or tha'.t the district's' future be put to a countywide vole. Green. City Administ rator Doyle Miller and Development Director Tom Severns ~·eek wh.ich may resolve the di strict's future . T"·o bills will come up for hearing Thursday, one by Assemblyman J ohn V. Briggs (R·Fullerton) which urges a public vote on the issue and another by Assemblyman Ken Cory CD-Anaheim ) simply asks the state legislature to ex· tend the duties of the Harbor District ""ithout a vote of the people. Green. hinted that a compromise may result, that the t~·o assemblymen may get together and propose that the district be dissolved and made an expanded department of the county government. ''.If this is the compromise. we 'll go along." Green said. "\Ve think this business has gone on too long." The mayor voiced' concern, however, at the haggling over the dlstrlct. .4RE YOU THINKING · OF BUYING NEW FOLLOW THIS CHECK LIST TO INSURE COMPLETE SATISFACTION li?l BRAND NAME DEPENDABILITY li?l DEALER INTEGRITY li?l . WIDEST SELECTION li?l COMPETITIVE PRICES li?l EXPERT INSTALLATION li?l FINANCING AVAILABLE THI N COME TO ALDIENl-OWNED & OPEIATi d I Y l rd OlNIRATION CARPETING EX PIRl l NCE- OYER IJ YEARS IN THE HARtoll ARI A. Wilcoxen Hits Strife n A merica By BARBARA KRE IBICll "\Ve 're Iii a clvll i,i:ar and we'd better win it. \Vhetryer it comes from the ex- ti:eme right or the extreme letl,,this pal· tern ot agitation and destruction has got to stop,'' Laguna Beach attorney \V llliam \\1ilcoxen told members of ihe Laguna Beach Republican \Vomcn's Club 1i-1on· day, Appearing as a candidate for the 35th Congressional Dlslrict seat, former ly held by the late JJmes Utt, Wilcoxen said he would suggest government action to extract damages from persons and groups destroying public and private pro. perty. "The university kids have gol to lea rn to abide by the basic rules of society,,. said \Vilcoxen. In other remarks, the attorney cl~cd his long experience in the fie ld of law en- forcement and in representing the peoplr in a variety of areas, lrom the fight lo save Salt Creek to a former position as depuly distri ct auorney, among his qualifications for office. Referring to his five years on the Laguna Beaeh school board and the re-. cent unsuccessful tax override election, \V ilcoxen said, "I understand the problem of raising ta:ces and I firmly believe that the use ol property tax for school. funding must go." Also addressing the Republican group was John 0 . Ratterree. Santa Ana businessmen. who has filed for the 35Li1 Congressional District seat. Ratterree, JO, said he is part Indian and has taken an active interest in Indian problem s. After serving four years in the Navy, he went into business and con- tinued his education at night school, he explained. "J am convinced many of our problems are the result of electing people to public office because they tell us what \Ve want to hear," sa id Ratterree. "Like promising to lower taxes and clean up situations which they have no intention of doing anything about." To a question on Laguna's hippie pr<>- blem. he commented, ''It's easy to talk about hipp ies and not do anything about it. \Ye have not given these people any kind of morality. This is a sick nation. \Vhat about the owners of the building~ \lo'here they live and hang out . the people "'ho are making money off hippies?" City Council candidate Edward Lorr joined the roster of speakers to seek sup- port of lhe Republican group, accusing the present council of ignoring Chamber of Commerce advice on Main Beach deve lopment and falling, for four years, to do anything about the hippie problem. Marian Bergeson On County Group fllarian Bergeson. president of the Ne•.vport·~1esa Unified School District board. has been named to a four-year term on the Orange Cou nty Committee on School Dis trict Reorganization. ~1rs. Bergeson is also vice president of tile Orange County School Boards Association and a member of the Delegate Assembly of the California School Boards Association. Also named to the Committee on School District Reorgan izalion is David Brandt of Santa Ana, a businessman. Ron Bishop of Garden Grove lit chainnan of the committee and Conrad Schultz of Santa Ana, vice chairman. ' Newl*f leecti Offlt• 2211 Wt1t l1lbo1 8oul1v1rd From Po9e 1 WE FEAT URE THESE FAMOU S - NATIONALLY ADVERTISED NAMES , ' M1ll1119 Aitl r111: ,.0 . 101 1175, 92663 OtW Offllftl Cot!I Ml": nt WHI an Sttftl l ltVM hotfl: m Fonol! .AWflVI Hlll!lllllMn IHdlt 11'15 lffdl ho<lrllr• hn CltnW\tt: Jr» ~ l!I Clmll'IO bll DAILY PILOT. wltll 'lllllldl II Cllfl'IMMd ''" ,......,.,...., .. llllM ..... Miff "~ ~ '" lfl ...,..i. eflllilllt for l.MlllM, l fftl'I. ~ .. tcft. "''' Mt*.. Hl.l!ltlrlt!Oft ~ n 11-11111 v11..,,, •111111 w1111 two rttletltl •r11w4. Ot.,,,_ C..11 hblllohl11t C......-..-1nt1tiw """'' -11 ttll Wfll lllllOe .,.,.., N..-f &..m. ...... »0 WW.I ..., l!nif1, Cotti """· T.a•p•111 f714) 642-4J21 C._.... A•"""'91 64Z.U71 "'11l'flfM, 1911. 0<H19t C0a$1 PilOlltl'llllt CMtHM. Nt 111.,.1 1'°'1t.. n111ort1i..1. .,.,..,,,.. l'fltMr "" 1111wrflMfl"Mltl lltrtlfl m41r M ,_...\ICM wllflolll WKMI HI'• '"~ el _.,MM o....,... JeQiN tttltt •1111 Niii 1t H~ IMCll .,... c..11 ,..,..., c.n~11. ~.i1e11 w """' u .• '""""'It' " 11'1111 ., .. "'9l'llMl'1 M""""' ... 11nM1.n1. n.oo fnfl'tlfl"'-. . CHARGES ... "will;l ·a firm chin" -and after his state:· ment the cadets gave him a standing ovation. · The Army st&te.ment announcing the flJ!dingJ ol the inquiry said : "'Tbe -report alltgea Ulat there "'ere iel'ious defkiencle:s in the actions of a number ot offlCf.rl holding command and st.au poslUons ln the Amerlcat Dlvi8ion, the 111.h lnfanll')' Brigade, Task Foree Barker, and the U.S. advl&Ory organlza. ti on. "The deficiencies cited In the report re late pritnarlly to alleged failures to render required rtpOrts.-cooduct ade- quate lnvtsUgaUons, and otherwise to s11tlsfactorily discharge duties in the light of lnJormaUon recelvtd concerning an alleged .atrocity ." The Anny made public a censored version of the. repurt, dele.Ung lhe. bulk of It on grounds It contained mater1al .. hlch might pr•Jualci' legal pr-.lllli~ A team of Anny legal officers reviewed the 20.000 pages of teitimony and 500 documents gtoen before the Inquiry. "As a result charges have been prefer· red against 14 oft leers,'' tht Army said. "?i.lost al the off)Cers are charged w:ith dereliction ot duty and/or failure to com· ply wtth appltcable regulations and dire<:· tions. -OthtT charges tntlude"felse swtar- inl{ and misprision of a felony." Misprision,' as defined in the Code of 1'filltary Ju.stice , is leveled at persons who have knowledge of the commlsskm or a felony "and who· conceals and d~s not a.s soon as pOSSlble make known" this to civil and military authorities. The 14 officers accused include Capt. Ernest L.. Medina, commander of one of the. companiea that swept My La l, and CApt. Thomas K. Willingham, who wa s !'ierving with another company In "Task Forte llflrktr" during the My Lal-Song My operation. * BEATTIE *CROWN * IMPE_R~IAL * SWEETWATER * BERVEN *COLU MBUS *DAN RIVER *MONARCH *ROXBURY *WALTERS *BIGE LOW *FIRTH * MONTICELLO *SEQUOYAH Don't Mi11-Our Drapery D•pt. W• h1ture • compl1t1 Hltctlon of f1Drlc1 i nd color• to *fth1nc1 1M compllrnent y.ur c1rjMtln1- -VISf>..-OUR REMNANT ROOM~ Hundrods of Smell -to ·Room Si11 Rtm~enls ALDEN 'S 1663 PLACENTIA· COSTA MESA 646-4138 CARPETS • DRAPERIES 1S YIAR.I SERVINO THI ORA NGE COAST I I ) " ct " " of ls ,. ;, ol dt ,, id ' ' . .. ~ ---,. --.. --... ----~-~~~~-~--·----...-·----~.~~~ .. --,.,._--~ ... ·~~--,....,, .. -.-...... --··------ ' Costa Mesa -' voe 63, NO. 64, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1970 TEN CENTS Siinple Rites Marl{ Passing of Mesa Cieri{ By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lh• o.uw "'°' 51•" Sorrowing city ofucials led by an honor guard of police and firemen paid their last respects Monda!' to Costa Mesa City Clerk C.K. "Charlie" Priest. Mr. Priest, wbo died last ~ursday at 73, was eulogized in simple riteS at Com- munity Congregational Churcl1, Corona del Mar, as truly a Renaissance Man. H1~ talents and abil!Ues spanned a wide. range of personal ; interests. from n1athemati cs lo philosophy. writing, and floric ulture to his dedicated duties in city gove rnment. • "Thi!> persisted unlil last week,". said Dr. Philip G. Murray, enumerating Mr. Priest's many activities before friends \\'ho paCked the sanctuary. Mr. Priest was educat~ al Columbia enera Pilot Logbook Mesa Newsmen to Mis s Good Pal Charlie Priest By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 t'1e 01lrr l'llol Sllll NOBODY ON the local police and city hall beat over the years has ac· cepted any certainty beyond death, taxes and Charlie Priest being Costa Mesa City Clerk forever. We lost a friend and one of those certainties Thursday. One of my competitors is a girl and I'm glad, because I let her step ahead into his oHice Friday on.our morning rounds. She asked if Charlie was in, the way we do every day. Or did. Eileen, Grace and Linda were red.eyed. "Didn't you know1" asked Eileen. And then -or course -we knew, because the American way of death has instilled in us a circumspect method or referring to its ugly fact, especially where those we care about are concerned. • • • HE LED A LONG, full life of 73 years and when his time came it was quick. He was a reporter many years before he became a. city clerk. He kne_w how tough it is to write an obituary for .a friend. Char he was a reporler tn Boston when my mother, a former newspaperwoman, was just learning her ABCs in school. He was a talented writer, a gentle wit, a dedicated pipe-smoker and a grower of roses. He was a rather modest man. He never told us -the local ne,vspaper people -that he had been nominated as America's City Clerk or the Year. • • • "COME IN, sit down. Rest yourself."' he would say on Tuesday morn· lngs, after a long and perhaps stormy city council meeting that ended only a few hours before. "How about a cup of coffee? Here, try so'me of this," he would say, of· fering a new brand of pipe tobaccn. • • • Nn matter what typographical error or factual contradiction you be· moaned after discovering it crept in during frantic deadline-pressure produc· tlon of the prior day's paper, he could top it . He said it wouldn't matter anyhow, 50 years from nov.·, Charlie's favorite -he told it on himself -was hl s obituary for a high· Jy regarded citizen, fatally stricken while pushing a raft across the river. The word "raft" was scrambled in typesetting and printed as another embarrass· ing and totally absurd word , using the same four letters. "What a way to send the poor old fell ow off," he would say with a chuc kle. • • • SO~IEHO\V, writing Charlie's obit Friday morning, J kept thinking .or thal. as though someone were looking over my shoulder. I wa s very, very careful. although 1 left out the fact he was past president of the Costa Mesa Historical Society. Charlie loved the color, drama and subtle lnterworkings o( history. Now. he is part of it. Trio Nabbed in Mesa Held in ·Colorado· Court A trio of murder suspects who had left their guns In the car when police sur· rounded their rented house in Costa ~fesa JO days ago a-ppeared in a Colorado Springs courtroom Monda y. Coinplaints charging first d e g r e e 1nurder were read to them -one being Funeral Slated For Mesa Baby -1''uneral ser-vlces for a.year-old l\lichael f"rederick'" Richardson will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Church of Jesus Olrist of Latter·Day Saints, Newport Beach. advised of his righ ts Jn sign language - and they were returned to maximum security jail cells. , James ·E. Jackson. 25, Howard R. Tschirharl,.32, and Jack C. Matney, 31, were flown to Colorado over jhc week end from Orange County. The three men were arrested March 6 at 514lii Bernard St., Costa Mesa, along wilh a pregnant v.·oman companion, Patricia Phipps, 2~. who faces local burglary charges. Police said they cleared up a number of armed robberies along -the Orangt Coast, but murder proceedings aglinst the three me';l took precedence. Evidence found in the r ern11rd Street house -assorted guns and jewelry - linked then1 ·to the Feb. 19 bludgwu murder and robbery of a Colorado Sptings pawnbroker. ' The Costa Mesa toddler drowned S;uur~ dai evening in a neighbor's play swim· ming pool. Stock lllnrkcts He is survived by parents. Mr. and ... ~·trs. Guy Ricllerdson and a sister Karen tynn of the family residence, 3274 California St.. Coma Mesa. and ia gr.am!motllet.Jlrs. DorolllY 1. Krumlum, NEW YORK {AP ) -The stock market turned upward late !his aflemoon on mod· crate trading. (See quotatJons,-Pa-gcs 10· 11 1. o( Okllihomt. City. . , ' University. Ne'v \~rk, as a mathematics major, then went into ne~paper reporting and editing in his native New England. An avid reader and writer, he sold his fi rst short story at age 21 and consumed at least one book nightly throughout his lire, reading fluently in five languages. Ais daughter, Mrs. Charlolte Meckc, • said In a wrltteR ·eulogy that he also 'vrote poetry, kept a dally jOurnal for 30 years and was a brilliant Inspiration. And yet he kept a measure of'himself for himself, Dr. Murray noted, since the family was unaware or the daily log of life µiat ended'Mareh 11 with his final en· try. He was also once a feature writer tor .the Christian Science Monitor-and upon temporary retiremerit as Newport Beach city clerk, wrote a manual on municipal government. • The book is the found~Uon for governmental operations in m an y SouUlland communities tbatrjqcorporated following World War 11, inclw:Ung Costa Mesa. Ill e 0 Beach Seeks Mesa Pair In Murders ~y TERRY .COVILLE Of tttt O..llr Pllol Siii! Bulletins went out to all western states today as Huntington Beach detectives launched a manhunt for twn Costa Mesans sought in the slaying last Thurs- day of a 25-year-old Anaheim man . A third suspect, also of Costa Mesa, was arrested Monday night after a round· the-clock investigation into the shooting of Thomas C. AstorinJ, found in a marshy area near Sunset Aquatic Park with a bullet hole in his-chest. On~ of the two men pgliee are looking for is Robert W. Liberty, the famed "Candlelight killer" involved in the strangling death of a Westminster mother ln 1966. Liberty gained widespread notoriety during a trial which revealed a weird ritualistic service performed over the body of the woman he had allegedly kill- ed. Police had found him near the body, playing a guitar by candlelight. Liberty was ruied "insane" and con· fined to a state hospital. He was given hi s freed om in early September by Judge Robert Gardner of Newport Beach, who declared him once again sane. Three months before Judge Gardner declared him legally free, Liberty ca:.ised a furor by walking out ol the l\fetropolilan State Hospital in Norwalk, (reed by a "clerical error," The declaration of sanity made Jt im· possi ble for Liberty lo be tried again on the Westminster murder charges. Police are also hunting Robert Patrick Coitnolly, 39, of 350 Avocado, Apt. 10, Costa Mesa. Both Connolly and Liberty arc considered armed and dangerous, rolice said. No address was given for Liberty but it is believed he may bave _been slaying with Connolly at the Costa Mesa address. The pair are believed to be driving a 1965 Milstang convertible with a black top and yellow body. The license number is PKL 93'l, Police said today they have no idea where the suspects went. Detective! mad e a thorough search of bars in Santa (Ste MURDER. Page %) Mesa Appoints Eileen Phinney As Acting Clerk The Costa 1t1esa City Council Monday night designated Mrs. Eileen Phinney as acting city clerk untll after the April municipal election. She served as deputy city clerk under thC""late C. K. "Charlie" Priest, who died last Thursday. Mayor Alvin L. Pinkl!'!y also issued a formal proclamation of sorrow at the denU1 or the longUme· friend and city employe, who wrote a basic handbook for city government sever11l years ago. The proclamation cite<l Mr. Priest's devotion lo duty during a 29·year career in municipal government that included time as city clerk in Newport Beach. He said Mr. Prieii t will be sorely miss· ed by his city hall colleagues and countless friends in Orange County and the entire Southland area. The Southern California City Clerks' Association recently nominated him for honors as America's City Clerk or the Year . Mayo r Pinkley also caUed ror a brnn:i:e plaque to be cast in his memory and In· !ita lled al the Estancia Adobe, which i.1: a histnrieal landmark ~1r. Priest-helped re.!ltorc. One to Grow On Percy. a two-month-old pup owned by Jan Evans or Costa J\.1esa, met this fire plug Monday afternoon during a walk with his mistress near the Newport Pier. Percy obvtously was awestruck an d had to sit down to think things over. Poster, Billboard Issues Split Costa Mesa Council Signs of ·the times -the weeks before election -appeared In Costa Mesa City Council chambers Monday night, just like handwriting on the wall. Political campaign posters and bill· boarsd came under discussion, with Jn· cumbents, challengers and councilmen in mid-term all taking part. _ Votes on all carried a 3 to 2 split, with Incumbent Councilman George A. Tucker and mid·lerm Councilman William L. St. Clair in the minorily. - Coulicilman Tucker opened It up with a motion to pennit campaign posters in public rights-of·way, but only with strict controls. I-le ~aid he was doing It in behalf or all candidates, but not all candidates wanted Tucker acting in their behalf, based on their response to the measure. Some grumbling has been heard in re· cent days Over 'tucker~ campaign workers ptftl.ing posters on Edisori Com· pany power poles, among other things. He urged -pet:miU.ing such postings with a 30-day limit before the April 14 election, and a lo.dey grace period to puU them· down . · Sunset Beach telephone.pole. Diiiiwall, however, can't be found on the 'board. Tucker's molton for· allowing such signs In public was seconded· by St. Cl.lit; but defeated 3 to 2, with twfa,ycir Alvbi L. Pinkley, Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson and Councilman Willard T. Jordan op--~ posed . • Challengers .'leeking the two chairs up ror a refill less than 30 days hence voiced their own oppasition to the Tucker measure during the debate . Billboards also came under fire. wlth the same three.councilman majority back'.ing PacUic Outdoor Adverlising Company in two matters, over Vigorous objections. . Councilma'n Tucki!r , a longtlme roe of (See SIGNS, Page l) Meet Thursday, Not Wednesday The motion Included a stipulation that Due to an abund ance of m~ings, candldales must post a performance-bond Rpea k-lns, speak-outs and other less to pay the city 's cost ol removing any formal solrees In Costa Mesa, it was tn. suc.h sigs overlooked by volunteer evltable that the dales would get garbled. helper.s. Something Is happening every day this Jo'lushed wilh victory or depressed by week. defeat, 'campaign workers have been What's happening Thur5day momln& is known to become forgelful alter-the se-a Citizens' -flarbor Area Research Tetm cond Tuesdf!y In certain crucial months. . .. (CHART) J>?nel interview cf clty council One plaoard proclaiming the merits cf candidates,' iit 7:30 J .m. in the Colla R. E. "'Bob" Dingwall ror a Huntington Mesa GoU..COunlry Club. B~aCti school-board in the 1969 race, for It Isn't hapP-_ening \Vedntsdl"ly, as )'Oll instance, can stlll be seen ln1 talters on a may h~ve read Mondt:y. He was alsn past president of the Costa t!tesa Historical Society anrl was In· strumental in restoring and establishing the · old Diego Sepul veda Adobe u 1 historical monument. The Costa Mesa' City Council passed a resolution Monday night calling tor a bronze plaque In his memory to be in· stalled at the Estancia. • l al I West Point Boss Among ' ·14 Charged WASHJNGTOl'l (AP) -The Army an- nOWlced today that Maj. Gen. ~Samuel W. Koster, West Point superintendent, and 13 other officers have beEn charged with dereliction of duty and other ci1arges in a fitld investigation of the alleged "Son My· My Lai massacre two yea rs ago in South Vietnam. Koster was commanding general of the Amerjcal Division, parent of the task f.o!'Fe wpich swept through tpe tiard.core COmmuajst area on March 16, 1988. Ten At-my orficers and enlisled men ti~ve··-~ ~charged with murder and other Alleged Crimes In the deaths of as many as 102 Vlelnamese civilians in Son My village and My Lai hamlet. Lt. Gen.. William R. Peers, who headed a 3\~·month investigation or the way reports of a ma11sacre origlnaUy were handled, told a news conference "there was testimony and evidence to· indicate that certain persons; wittingly or unwit· tingly, suppressed certain information about the incident from passing up the chain of cnmmand." However, Pe ers said he did not think then! was a coverup. He also said he was satisfied that In- formation on the incident did not go beyond lhe America! Division to higher command and Washington at the time of the fltld probe immediately alter tile reported massacre. At West Point, Koster Informed the !1,700 cadets assembled in the academy's mess hall he has asked to be relieved ot his post as head of the academy. An infonnation office r at West Point said the general told the cadets "I want y-ou tq be among the first .to know that I will soon leave West Point." He said he wants annther assignment "in order to separate the military academy and you of the corps from the continuing flow of public announcement.! -:ir any other' connection with the alleged events whlch took place in Vietnam in· v,olving elements or my former com· mand.11 Col. Patrick Dionne, the academy Iii· formation c£flcer, said Koster gave his remarks without apparent emotion - "with a firm chin'' -and after his st.ate· ment the cadets gave him a standing ovation. The Army statement announcing the (See CHARGE.5, Page Z) Orange Coast Weatber j ' Residents of the Oringe Ccast. can expect more night. and morn· ipg low clouds and fog with par .. tlal clearing Wednesday morning. Wednesday , afternoon should be suiinY but slightly cooler with some gusty winds. Temperatures Wiii reach the low 70's. INSIDE TODi\ Y Oro11ge· Coost teeuauers at1d qdull.t ~ working oit a. pro- gram designed to n1trro1u tbe- so-calltd "ge1uiraticm oap'' ii;iUi a n1eeting of Ille mhid.s: 011 soc· ioloaical problcn1s. Pooe 9. et!l+.fRll (llHltlflt u, Ci.Hin.Ii Ctflllk• CrtflWtff Di•lfl 1'f911(•' ldl,.,111 P• .. 111•tt'ltlllMtM ·-· --"" "'"~ M•llllli9~ Mltlfflll ' ' fl•H " n • • n "·:t " • • } .. 1 I • 2 DAILY PILOT c Wilcox en Hits ~Sirif e . - ·1n ltmerica B)' BARBARA KREffilCH "We're In a civil "'ar and we'd better win iL Whether it comes from the ex- treme right or lhc extreme left, this pat- ient of agitaUan and destru cUon· has got to stop," Laguna Beach altomey William WilC91tD told tnembers of the LagtJOa Beach Republican \\'omen's Club 1if00· day. App;eatiQi a.s a ca.ndldale for the JSth Cor.icreselona.1 District seat. formerly held by ~lat~ James Utt; Wilcoxen said he would suggest government actioo to ·ei:tr~t damages from persons . and .-roups destroying public and private pro- perty •. unie university kids have got to team to abide by tfie basic rules of society,•• sal~ ~ilcoxen. Tn other remar~. the attorney cited his: long experience in the fle\d of Jaw en- forcement and in representing the people In a variety of areas, lrom th~ fight lo save Salt Creek to a foriner position as deputy district attorney, among his qualifications for office. Refl!!rring to his livl!! years on the Laallr!a ~ach sch9ol board and the r.e· cent unsuccesstul tax override election, Wilcoxen said, "I understand the problem of r~sing taxes and I firmly beUeve that the tise ·or property tax for school funding mu!I. go." ' Also addressing the Republican gtoup was John D. Ratterree, Santa Ana buslnessuieb, who has filed for the 35th Congresai!>f\al Olstric~ seat. Rafterrel!!, ·30, said he is part ·Jodian and has taken an actitt interest in Indian problem!. Alter serving four yeara in the Navy, hi!! went fnto ·business and con- tinued his edUeation at night schOol, he explained. "J am convinced many of our pro~lems are the result of ele~tin,g people to public office bec<1:use they tell us wha t we want to hear,•'-said Ratterree:'~ike promisRlg to lower taxes and clean µp sit uations which they have no intention of doing anfthln_g about." · , To a question on· Laguna's hippie pri> blern, he commented, ''It's easy to talk abou~ 'hippies and-not do anything about il. Wt have not ·given· these people any kind or morality. This is a sick nation. What about the owners of the buUdings whtre they live and hang out, the people wllo an making money oU hippies?" City -COuncll carfdldate Edward Lorr joined the roster of speakers to seek sup- port ,o( the Republican aroup, accusing the ,....,."'"11Cll..t-1Jnoring Qierober or Commerce advice on Main Beach development and falllna, for.four years, to do aliYlhln&r'bfUl \he hipple prq!ilein. From Pqe 1 SIGNS. •• billboards, wu supported by Coupcilman St. Clatr. and council candidates present agreed substantially. Th1f finn wan its appeal of .an earlier council refusal to pennlt contJnued operation of a large billboard af 1534 Newpart Blvd., almost atop the city limits. Tucker insisted no action at all ·1h0uld be taken, unUI the city completes a Com· prehensive billboard ordinance now in the works. lie also moved to deny permission for Pacific Outdoor Advertising lo switch five poster panel-type .signs, on Bristol Slreet south of Baker Slreet, with two regular boards. Seconded by Councilman St. Clair, the motion wa; defeated 3 to 2 with the same sides taken: Councllman J ordan pointed out that two signs are better than five and his motion to approve the change was passed by another 3 to 2 margin. The existing signs are In a manufac- turing zone and are 12 by 25 feet in siie. while the replacements will be the same dimensions as olhe.r billboards. DAILY PILOT OllANGI! COAST PUIL1SH1NG-COMPAMV Robtrl N, W 11d Pr1110tn1 111d l"ubllohtr J1c.~ R. Curley Vk l Prt11d.,,1 •no Genttll Mlfll''' Tho,.,11 K11 .. i1 Ectltor Thomtt A, Mur~hifll ~·~••no ECIHo• Arthur R. Vi1111I C&lll MIU City Ectllor Cost• Ma. Offlc• 310 wun,.., stt,.1 M11lit1t Adclr111: P.O. loir 1560, •2626 Otller OHlut Nl'WPOrt 1 .. t11: nn W.lt 91!~ eoi;11v1rlf Lfflln9 llMC.ft: 2n l"ernl Avt"""' H1111tln910n Bt«ll: 17111$ ltKll 6ow~v1rct kn CltfM!ltw: JQJ Her"' El C1"'lf'ICI 1.ttl MILV PILOT, -1111 '°"'ltll It ('llllM~ !flt N ..... Prn s. ti. .....,llsl!td d111y 111c1111 $i;n. .. , Ill' _.,.,,,, ld!lloM tiir LlfVl'll lttctl. NIWlll" '-di, C.1• Mtlol. HVllllrltlOll IMdl •net ,_,.If! v111tr. ·~ wllfl ,,.. rtt19rw11 tdl!llM. Otantt CO..i PWli.J'tlftol (~'t' .,,-11111111 f!lffll\ lfl ,, 2111 Wttt 111_, llvll~ NtW11911 ltt<ll, 111111 ). Wiii a1y ltr..t, C.11 MIH. Ttt.,..... (7141 •42..4321 Clmalftffl A'"'9i1l11t 642·5671 COpyr'9111. tt10, O!'t llff (0611 Puoll\.11~ Comfi'*llY. No fltWI '*''-'• ltllill"tlloM, .,,..,. .. ! fllttt•r I• *l'-il1 tfllfl'lti. Pltrtln IMY II ,_,.!;CM! Wl!l'IOlil IMC.Ill ..,., "''"io., OI fO!t¥flflil OWlltf. ._.., dtM ........ Jlllld 11 ,.,_, 111(11 •NII Qlll ~-· C1literl'!M, S..otcrtorltfo OY C-tlT~ SUI "*'lll!Yi !Ir Mt!! 11 Sf ......,,11'11~1 "'Hlltr., ctnl11>11-.. 11-• -ll'lly, • . ' • • lUf~. MW<O l/, 1910 DAILY PILOT Sti ll PMt. Message for Jtloto1•ists Behl,.d Bars Leary Compiling -Drug Phitosopiiy Dr. Tilnothy Leary Is In Orange County Jail today, compiling a summation of his drug-centered philosophies ar'ld religious beliefs that may ht used by his attorneys as the basis of their appeals against the slate prison term he drtw Monday. The LSD cultist's plea -delivered through defense attorney George Chula - that the "controlled use" of LSD and n:lated .mind.expanding dhJgs amounted • From Page 1 MURDER ... Ana Monday night and early this morning in hopes of finding the suspects. The men are known to patronize these bars. to a religious practlct and should -not bt condemned .. by a socit.ly that is only just beginning to understand " had liltle effect un Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan. He listened for lhree hours to that argument and a series of related argumenlS from Chula and then sen· le.need Leary, ~' to one lo JO years ifl staie prison. That prison term followed the formrr Harvard psychologist's conviction on charges of possession of marijuana - charges backed by the Orange County Grand Jury after Leary, his wife, Rosemary·, 34, and son John Bush Leary, 20, were arrested in Laguna Beach. Ne\v Sign being in stalled over humpbacked Pacific Coast High,vay bridge over Back Bay is designed 10 aid westbound motori sts \vho can't see Dover Drive stop light from east side of bridge. More than 30 rea r-end collisions in westbound lanes of heavily tra"."'elcd bridge d1:1ring 1069 caus~d city Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe to seek help from tJ1e state Division ol l{ighways, \Yhic h is now install- in0g the lighted \varning deY~ Police made the first orrest in the 41 ~· day-old case fl.1onday night. Randall Greg Allen, 27, also of 350 Avocado, Apt. 18, Costa Mesa. was arrested after ques· Honing at the Huntington Beach police station and held on murder charges. 1-!e was one of nearly 1.; suspects quizz- rd by detectives since the Thursday night slaying. f\1rs. Leary had already been sentenced by Judge l\icMlllan to six n1 on th it; Jn Orange County Jail and three years probation. Young Leary drew a 9Cktay p~e-sentencing diagnostic study al the .state·s Chino facility and he is scheduled to report there Wedn~sday. He became the central figure !\1onday of the bitterly opposed sentencing of his colorful father and a couple of comment s made by Chief Deputy Dist rict Altorncy James Enright during the prosecutor's Yigorous opposition to a plea for bail made him -for the rirsl time that morn· ing -put dOY.'n the flowers he had been toying with. Car eening Cur Kills Mes a Mun, Hurts Passenger Skidding' out of control fo r_ nearly SCIO feet, an old :i:edi.n careened into a trafrlc signat control box m Costa Mesa ·early to· day, fatally inj!Jring the driver. Richard L. Ha.shman, 32, of 141 Mesa Drive, Costa Mesa, was hurled partially out by the impact. His daze"d companion walked away. Pqlice said llashman diet! · in lhe cmer&ency room at COsta fl.I e s a ~iemorial Hospital, where he was taken 1vith head and chest injuries. Roy L. Compton, 31, of the same ad- dress, was driven to the hospitaJ by police, treated for minor fa ce cuts 'Ind . released lo go home. Officer Don Casey said the two men were headed south on Harbor Boulevard near the San ~Diego Freeway at 12:10 a.m .• when the 1954 sedfln went out of canlroL Compton told investigators his friend had just started to pass another vehiCle v.-·hiie traveling about 50 miles per hour when the fatal skid begaft. Sliding at an angle across an four lanes, the car struck three objects before smashing into the solidly-rooted iraffic control box at Gisler Avenue's boulevard intersection. Hashtnan's passenger told police he was knocked out for a few seconds but remembered .getting out and going around to fiild the victim ·darigllng with his head on the pavement . A wibiess, .salklr Lloyd Turnbull. sla· tioned aboard the USS Alamo at Long Beach Naval Station, said Hashman's car skidded into oncoming traffic lanes at one jlolnl Hasbman's body was taken to Baltz f\fortuary, Costa Mesa, pending transfer to a funera1 home in Norco and setting or services. · Mesa Happening Data Evaluation Slated Toni ght A post·morten1 evaluation using ,·arious data accumulated before, during and after the Costa: Mesa Happening • .1 unique antidote to drug abuse, ill sched· u!Cfl tonight. The brainstorm session I~ set for 7 p.m. at the Costa .i\lesa Police Facility auditorium. Lt. Austin \\'. Smith, community re\a. lions officer. said much inforriiallon was compiled about the Feb. 28 production and may be useful In guiding other cities. More than 10,000 adults and young peo- ple turned out for the day-long eYent st the Orange Coonty Fairgrounds despite a drenching rain . Scores of written comments and other views expressed ~·ill be included with the statistics gathen:d in the \vake of U1e show. Girl, 8, Inj ured In Mes a Accide nt A .smalf girl riding with a relaliYc escaped serious injury Monday night in a Costa Afesa accident similar to one in Yo'hich the. driver died early tod ay. Lori Harclerode, 8, of 2054 Republic Ave., sufftred a cut knee v.·hen the car in "''hich she was a passenger skidded Into a power pale. She "'as treated at Jfoag ~1emori1\ Hospital aod releaM!d arter the 5: IS p.m. cral;h on Estancia Drive , 164 fett south of Oriole Drive. The driver, Donald L Llofd. 38. or 20~4 Republic Ave., and rassenger Keith R. Mayfield. 21i, of Santa Ana, escaped In· jury, police said. Lloyd 11ald a car in tron l of him stop~d i;uddl!!nly and he lost tontrol while lryin~ to 3void lhe vel"lclt:, Y.hose ~c-upants sped away. I Newport Council Tables Stand 011 Freeway Route lie is heing held at the Huntington Beach city Jail 1vithout bail and is ex- pected lo come up for arraignment \Vednesday or Thursday. Police questioned persons ranging from narcotics users to yachtsmen in their probe. Bars bety,·een Sixth Street and First Street, Santa Ana , were jhe main focus of the search. ~Ionty ~tcKennon. detective in charge of the case, said today a team effort by 18 detectives y,·c;irking around the .clock brought the arrests. He estimated 700 hours were logged in the probe. ,;\\'e have a true picture of Dr. Leary from the probation repon on bis son John -the young man sitting right he.re," the bluff, burly Enright snapped. "John doesn't want his father and Rosemary t1> have children because of wha t happened to him and I think that we should all take note of what he has to tell us. Slrong and differing oplnlom held by Newport Harbor Chamber of Conunerce directors resulted Monday in a non-vote on the Newpart Beath City Council's freeway stand. . -Because of the split in feeling a pro- posal to support the city Jn working to· ward a design solution along the adopt •. ed Pacific Coast Freeway route Was tabled. Oppasition lo giving up the seven-year city fight fOr a rerooting was expressed by 1'1rs. Isabel Pease and Dr. Nolan Fril.zelle. fl.trs. Pease·claimed a free:y,·ay along 1he West Newport and 1'1ariners ~tile bluffs would "brutalite the integrity and environment of this city." She admonish- ed chamber directors not to join city of- ficials ''in lying down 11ke 11tt11!! poppies.'' Dr. Frigelle said he doesn't want to ·see l r a f f i c clogging Ute. city but he doesn't feel every rock· b,as Mt:n unturn- ed. "l couldn't support the re.solution for a minute," he said. Hugh Mynatt responded to Mrs. Pease by saying. "Izzy, it seems to me we have been listening to your approach for th e last IO years. A freeway is_ long overdue in this town." Mayor Mrs. Doreen Marshall, a guest or the chamber directors, ·said, "I think all of us agree it is a very ·poor choice of route tiut the alternative of no ,free- way Is distasteful. I know that yester· rlav (Sunday) it took me forever to get to Shorecliffs and this is only March." She said the city has gone back ta tht' State Highway Commission five or six times. she has lost count, without getting the 1963 route adoption changed. With lhc freeway a priority matter Curing the last seven years the city has spent consider- able money in staff time and on outside consultants. she noted. She said the coun- t:il fell "it was time to sit do\vn and rind oot what we are faced with on the adopt· ed route." The proposal to commend the city coun- cil for its move was offered by the cham. ber of commerce's freeway committee of_ Hancock "Bill" Banning !If, chairman. nick Stevens, John ~lacnab and George Woodford. The resolution \\'ent on to urge prompt l'ro11i Page 1 CHARGES ... fiodings of the inquiry said : "The report aUeges that there wer~ serious deficiencies in the actions of a number or officers holding command and Slaff posilions in the America! Division, !he 11th . Infantry Brigade. Task Force Barker, and the U.S. advisory organlza· lion. "The deficiencies cited Jr1 the report relate primarily to a!leged fa ilures lo render required reports, conduct ade- quate Investigations,· and othel"'.l'isc to satisfactorily discharge duties in the light of infom1ation received concerning an allll!@:ed atrGcily.'' The Army made public a censored veri;ion or the report. deleting the bulk of it on grounds it ccntained material whlch might prejudice leJ1:al proceedings. A team af Army legal officers reviewed the 20,000 pages of testimony itnd ~ documents given before the inquiry. "As a result charges have been prerer· red aga inst 14 officers." thl!! Anny .said. "Mort of the officers are charged wllh dereliC'tkln of duty and/or failure to com· ply with applicable regulalions and dire~ lions. Other charges inclUdt tal!"e sv;·~ • in.I? and misprision of a felony.'' !\fisprislon. as defined i"n the Code of 1\11\il.:lry Justict. Is leveled at ptrM'.lns who ha ve knowledge of th' commi1;sion or a felony "and ~1ho conceal~ and does not as ~oon as po5~1ble make known" lhls to ch·il and mllitary authorities. Thr 14 ofrlcers acc used Include Capt. ~~rne:it .L. !\ledina, commander o( one of lhe: companies that swept My Lal, and Capt. Thomas K. Willingham, who was gcrving with another comp11ny in .. Task · f'orce Barker·• during the !\1y Lai.SOnG ?tly opcr1Uon. design solution "lo insure our city's fu. ture priority position lor freewa y funds." But after the debate it was tabled. Car Ca1·eens ltato Lake Someti1nes a n auto mechanic can use a bit of skin diving experience as Chu ck Evans of t.he El Toro Garage discove red this morning 'vhen dispatched. to a pond on Irvine Company property near Laguna OAIL Y PILOT 11111 Jllllht Canyon Road. Car was discovered in pond early this morning \Vhen fog lifled. Un.identified driver called garage to say he would be in latet today to retrieve his soggy vehicle. -r' .4RE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW CARPETING? FOLLOW THIS CHEC K LIST TO INSURE COMPLE TE SATISFACTION !8J BRAND NAME DEPENDABILITY l8J DEALER INTEGRITY 18 WIDEST SELECTION l8J COMPETITIVE PRICES !8l EXPERT INSTALLATION l8J FINANCING AVAILABLE ' THEN COME TO ALDENS-OWNED & OPER ATE D I T 3rd GE NERATION CARPET ING EXPf.RIENCE- OVER IJ YEARS IN THE HARf'oR AR !A. WE FEATUR E TH ESE FAMOUS -• NAT IONALLY AOVERTISED NAMES : *BEATTIE *CROWN *IMPERIAL * SW EETWATE R * BERVEN *COLUMB US * MONARCH *ROXBURY *WALTE RS *BIGELOW *FIRTH * MONTIC!LLO ·i,,) We fM tvr• • cempl1t1 "'"'"'" er fat.ric1 and colen ta .enhlinc1 •nd * OAN RIVE R *SEQU~O:Y~AH'.'.._~~~~~~~~:'."'°~~~~...J ~ VISIT OUR RtMNANT ROOM Hundreds of Smill. to ·Room Si11 Remnants ALDEN 'S CARPETS • DRAPERIES -· '. 1663 PLACENTIA · COSTA MESA 646-4838 11 YIAR#S Sl•VtNO THI ORANGI COAST ~ ,. . . -. Saddleha~k VOL 63, NO. 64 , 3 SECTION S, 38 PAGES en era UCI Students Ask Vote, • Rejected by Faculty A plan proposed by UC Irvine faculty members which would give students voting memberships in the university's • Academic Senate was turned down Mon- day in a meeting of the statewide Academic Assembly. '!'he Academi c Senate is a faculty Qrganization comprised of all teachers at all branches of the university. with each campus representing a division of the -universitywide group. The Academic Assembly consists of delegates from each di~·ision of the Senate. In tbe li.t,ondaY meeting at UC Santa Cruz, Assembly members refused to en- dorse the plan ~hich would givt students one-fifth voting membership in the body. Relig.on Study In denying the proposal, the Assembly noted the plan is in violation of a standing ofder of the UC Regents which states on- ly fac ulty members may have voting 1nemberships in the organization. In denying the plan. Ass e m b I y members urged Irvine delegates to carry their proposal directly to lhe RegenLs, \Vl:ile seeking support from other cam- puses. Dr. Bernard Gelbaum, chairman of UCl's Senate told the body their denial of the plan was out of ste p with the times. The Irvine plan was proposed lasl June by a faculty corrunittee appointed by UC! Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich to stud~· student participation in campus affairs. -Laguna Trustees to Get Released-time Report Laguna Beach school trus tees "'ill receive-a report on released-time religion classes as conducted in Orange when they meet in the district board room at 7:30 o'clock tonight. A proposal to add religion claMes, on a released time basis, to tbe curriculum in Laguna Beach has been under study by the school board, assisted by ministers and Sunday school superintendents in the district. The board tonight will receive details of a study session at which Mrs. Elizabeth ('.ammon, Director of Released Time Education in Orange, described th at city's program. These include: -At the outset, limit the program to a few schools and one grade level. -The fcurth and fifth grade levels are most receplive to released-time education and attendance from these grades in Orange has been 80 to 94 pupils. -Every teacher in the program should have California teaching credentials. -The program io Orange includes 18 specia l classes, with spec ial teachers for handicapped and retarded students. -Of lhe 2,000 students now participating, one half are not invol ve d 'vith a regular church. -The present budget of $30,000 is ac- quired through the Community Chest, se rvice clubs. gifts etc. Sea Scouts Take Case to Council On Finance Plans Up from the sea without ships, San Clemente's landlocked Sea Scouts -who have al ready written President Nixon and billionaire l~oward Hughes -Wednesda y lake their case to the City Council. S~ip 110 -which consists of some enterprising youngsters and an old cabin <:rui ser on su pports -has written the ci- ty aski'llg for a one year business license to rinance a boat. Tbe license would be: used for the .~couts 10 paint house numbers on curbs or consenting property owners. -Separate programs, In separate trailers, are n1aintained for Protestant and Catholics ill the Orange Program, though at a Laguna meeting a represen- tative of the Catbolic church indicated preference for a single program for Catholics <i:nd Protestants. Each Laguna area church interested in !he program has been asked to study and report on the feasibility or participation. In other action tonight the board will : -Study revisions to a proposed training program for intermediate school faculty and staff to be conducted by Thurston Intermediate School for the U.S. Office of Education. -Authorize closing of escrow for the purchase af 6. 7 acres al-Top af the \Vorld with payment of $135,040 from the building fund . -Act on re c ommendation of Superintendent Dr. William Ullom to :e- employ for !he 1970-71 scbool year 28- third-year teachers, 19 teachers who will :ittain tenure in September and 49 tenure teachers. Laguna Expects Quiet Period For Easter Week If the pattern of the last couple or -Years is repealed, Easter Week will bring no great upheavals tci La guna Beach , but discreet preparations are being made, just in case. The large-scale invasion of students that used to bring havoc to the Art Colony during the spri ng recess seems to have scattered in other directions in re- cent yea rs, but a goodly number of youthful visito rs, \vith · and without chgperones, is expected to begin arriving this weekend. • Police Chief Kenneth Huck has can- celled days off and put his force on 12- hour days beginning Saturday. "We'll adjust according to what tra nspires," Huck said. "We're not hiring additional help yet and we \Viii do so only lf it is needed." f\-1otel operator Loren Haneline. who ac- cepts only chaperoned g1·oups of high Ste EASTER, Page: 2) • ---- - -------- -- - - ---~~ ~ . .,.....~ -• • ORANGE C.OUNTY, CALIFORNIA . TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1970 Clemente Oil Fight Aid Asked A San Pedro citizens group has asked San Clemente City Council support in fighting tideland oil drilling by Standard Oil Company of California. ,, Councilmen are scheduled to consider the matter with their regular agenda \Vednesday night. ·The group writing to councilmen calls itself Get Oil Out-Two (GOO-Two). The origina l GOO group was formed in the Santa Barbara area after the di sastrous oil pollution more than a year ago. GOO-Two stales Ulal Standard Oil has begun drilling operation an a 9500-acre parcel in San Pedro Bay, tidelands con- trolled by the City of Los Angeles. The company maintains that the area is geologically stable. GOO-Two says not so. "The drilling rig lies extremely close to this very active fissure. It is called the Cabrillo Fault and continues through the Palos Verdes Peninsula. This establishes a potential Santa Barbara-like ail spill si t11alion," GOO-Two maintains. The letter also states that the drilling rig is near the San Pedro breakwater en- trance presenting the possibility of a ship colliding with the rig and causing a spill. Such a spill could be carried to beaches south of San Pedro by ~O;Utherly currents and prevailing winds. the graup slates. They ask a letter of support for 'their stand against oil destruction of the coast· line. Coastal cities officials, including Carl Kegley, San Clemente city attorney, an<t Roy Holm, Laguna councilman, testifi.ed recently in support of a bill to ban drill- ing in federa l waters adjacent to State sanctuaries. LA's Mayor Sa1n Joins Demo Race For Governor LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles anoounced today he \vould run for the Democratic nomination for governor of California. Yorty will·oppose Jesse Unruh, leader or the state Assembly's m in or it y Democrats, in bidding for the chance to oppose Republican Gov. Ronal~ Reag~n. who announced a week ago he 1s seeking a seeond tenn. 'T'he primary election is June 2. Yorty, 60. is regarded as a "maverick" Democrat because he has crossed party lines. such as supporting Republican Richard M. Nixon for president in 1960 instead of Democrat John R. Kennedy. Jn his announ cement, Yorty hit out at Reaga n and certain unamed fellow Democr~ts. "I believe Gov. Reagan has made a sincere effort to play an unaccustomed role as administrator or the largest state in the union, but hi s stewardship has been characterized by too much show and too little accomplishment." Yorty said. "Jam a lifelong Democrat and will run on the Democral.ic ticket," Yorty said. "l wou ld like to see the Democratic party ol our state divorce itself from the ex- treme leftists, the power seekers. the mercenaries. and th'! arrogant would-be dictators who trv to tell registered Democrats who can or cannot run . and how we are to vote." lt is Yorty 's second bid tor the (Set YORTY, Pagt Z) to One to Grow .Oti P ercy, a twirmonth-old .pup owned by Jon Evans of Costa' Mesa, m.et this fire plug Monday alternoon during a waJk with his master near the Newport P,ier. Percy obviously was awestruck and had to sit down to think things over. Neighbors Opposing Plan For Mexican Restaurant By BARBARA DUARTE 01 Tiit 0.llY Plltl Sl1H A request tOr a Mexican restaurant al 9Jll Glenneyre St. met opposilion from neighbors before the Laguna Beach Plan- ning C.Jmmission Monday nighl. A cond itional use permit (CUP) filed by Robert C. Anderson r e q u e s t s permission to conduct on-sale beer and wine sales in conjunction with the restaurant business . Contractor William Landreth, speaking for the owner , said operators of the delicatessen adjacent. to Reef Liquors in· tend lo reduce its seating capacity and enlarge lhe food service. The restaurant, located lo the south or the Ree( parkibg lot, would utilize park- ing spaces gained from lhe reduced sr.ating in the delicatessen, Lan~relh pointed out. He termed the operation a "simple Mexican food" eatery and · agreed to conform to hours from II a.m. until IJ p.m. "I'm v.:.ry opposed to on,sale beer and wine," wrote Mrs. Iva J. Nlcolett or 93.9 Glenneyre St. She declared resideqts in the area have "all the commercial business they cal'.t handle." A terse message from Signe Fischer declared, "Too much liquor in Laguna Brach already." Also in opposition to the CUP wts Mrs. Neal Gammell of 929 Catalina St. Planners will confer with applicants in a study session to look .at bolh parking and sealing .layouts. In other busi ness, the conimlssion: -Granted a six-month extension of the present CUP held by St. Paul 's Luther an Church, 1190 Morningside Drive, and ask· ed applicants to wilhdraw a request for a variance to exceed allowable height with a roof topped by a spire and to revise the CUP. Planners indicated they felt the height request wasn't in the best interest of a residential area. -Set April 6 and 20 as dalei; for public hearings on modifi ca tions to the sign ordinance. -Approved plans for a lawn bowling clubhouse at 455 Cliff Drive subject.~to nine moditications proposed by the building and planning department. Com· missioners also asked removal of a block pilaster, to be replaced by wood, and ad- dlUon of French doors to improve the building, -Grant e d "budding" businessm an Chris Bowman, a Laguna Beach High School student, a temporary use permit to conduct flower sales in the city. GOP Women Ask High Standards Boatswain Neyle G. Hunter assured the c..'ity by letter -he ha s writlen many let- ters in his young life -that the number~ \vould be at least three incher, tall and pai'llted "'it h a good quality exterior white paint with a sprinkling or silicone sand ror reflection. t-!Unter. who doesn't give up. ha~ already "'TittCl'I to the President ·and Jl ughes. in hope s of hurdling a labyrinth t'lf red tape and landing a boat. Unrortunately, neither Hughe s nor the President apparently saw Hunter's let- exs .. i.\ides re~P.Qnded . S~ll n2-_~at. 'We're Now • ID Civil War' By unanimou s vote Mgnday afternoon, members of the Laguna Beach Women's Republican Club endorsed a resolutio'n iidopted by the Masters of the Chambei: of Commerce urging ··city atflcials to In- crease their efforts to 11enforce city ol-dlrranCes-and-state aws-to·maiTitiii11>ie-- hlgh standards of the community , sa they will not be diminished by lhe unlawful The scouts of Ship 110 have \\'Orkerf on ;i cabin cruiser for four years. Ifs ready ror leunch 1>111 they're not sure that it will noat In fact they have somc*hat pessimistically named the craft Pueblo 11. ~ scoots 1nos1 viable hope may bt the City Council and their own elbow 11rcase used on residential cu rbs, But sin k u wim \V-ed,'lffdey--nl ght, it's-a good ~t • 1h11I Boatswain Hunter and his Intrepid ·band will keep on trying untiJ thty get 11 real boat. \ \ Wilcoxen Cites Strife cts Main Campaign Issue By BARBARA KREIBICH Of"'' Cltl.,.·PUtl Sltff · ''\Ve're in a ctvll "'ar and we'd better \\'in 11. Whether it comes from the ex- treme right or the extreme left, this pa1- lem of ag ltaUon and dest ruction has got to stop," Laguna Beach attorney William \VUcoxen told members of the: Laguna Beach Republican Womtn"s Club Mon· dal'_._ M Appearing as a camHdatc for tht 3Sth Congressional District seat formerly held by the late James UU . \'Vhcoxen said he \\'Ould suggest goverrunent acUon to • extract damages from persons aod groups destroying public and private pro- perty. "The 1miverslty kids have got to learn to abide by the basic rules or society," said Wilcoxen . In other remarks, the attorney cited his ll)ng experience in the field or law en· forcement and in represcnUng the people in a variety of areas. from lhe fight lo save Salt Creek to a former pos!llon as deputy dist rict attorney, among hls qualifications for nfficc. fiefcrrlng 10 ilis five years on the Laguna Beach school boa.rd and the re- cent unsuccessfu l tax override election. \Vilcoxen said. "I understand the problem of rt1ising laxes and I firmly believe th<lt the use or property tax for school ftmd lng must go." • Also addressing. the Republican group "''s John D. Rat1erree. Santa-1..Ana businessmen, who has filed for the 35til Congtessioual District seat. Ratte:rrce, 30, said he is part Indian and has taken ~A active interest in lndla n problems, After serving four years in tho. !Set WU.COXEN, Pa10 I) conduct or a few. 1• • Tbe resolution. Inspired by mounting concern . over na rcotics traUlc amo11g La.guna's transient and se1nl-rcsident hip- pie population , probably will be presented lo the City Council officially or uoor- JiclaUy at some fu ture date lo indicate cammunlty support, a member of the r-.1asters group sRld. NEW YORK tAP) -:r'he stock mnr~el turned upward late th is afternoon on rnod· crate trading. {Sec quotations, Pages 10- JI). -------~~------.. TEN CENTS West PoiI1t Boss Among 14 Cl1argecl WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army an- nounced today that Maj. Gen.,Samuel W. Koster, West Point superintendent, and - 13 other officers have been charged with dereliction of duty and other charges in a field investigation of the alleged Son My· My Lai massacre two years ago in South Vietnam. Koster was commanding general o( the America! Division, pareot of the tas.k force which swept through the hardcore Communist area on P.1nrch 16, 1968. Ten Army officers and enlisted men 'have been charged with murder and othet alleged crimes in the deaths of as niany as 102 Vietnamese civilians in Son My village and My Lai hamlet. Lt. Gen. Willia""! R. Peers, who headed a 31,~·month inv estigation of the way reports of a massacre ·originally were handled. told a news C<1nference "there wa s testimony and evidence to indicate that certain persons: wittingly or unwit- tingly, suppressed certain information about the" incident from pas~iDg up the chain of command." . However, Peers sciid he did not think there was a coverup. He also said he was satisfied that In- formation on the incident did not go beyond the America! Division to higher command 3.!ld Washington at the time of the field probe immedlately ,.after Lie reported massacre, At West· Point, •Koster informed the 3,700 cadeLs assembled in the academy's mess•hall he has a.sked to be relieved cf his post· as head of the academy, An information officer at West Point said the general told the cadets "I want yon to be amopg the first lo know that l \viii soon leave West Point." He' said he Wants -another assignment ''in order to separate the military Rcademy and you of the corps from the continuing flow of public annall1!cements or any other connection _with •the alleged events which took place. in Vietnam in- volving ,elements of .my fonner com- mand." Col. Patrick Dionne, the academy ln- formalion officer, said Koste r gave his remarks without apparent emotion - "with a finn chin" -and after his statc- (See CHARGES, Page t) Frank R. Moore Rites Wednesday Services will be held Wednesday. t p.m., at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel for Frank R. Moore who died Sunday in his Laguna Beach home. Mr. Moore was a grandchild of Col. James A, Coffey , a pioneer who worked on treatiei, with Western lndians. A leader in the development of San Pedro, Mr. Moore recently published a book entitled , "Tbe Coffey Clan From 1690." A fifteen -year resident of Laguna, he I!! survived by his wife Blanche, of the family .home at 432 Holly St., and a sister Catherine M. Richter, also cf Laguna Beach. Orange Coast l\'eather Jtesidents of the Orange Coast can expect more night and morn- ing low clouds and fog with par~ tlal clearing Wednesday morning. \Ycdnesday afternoon should be sunny but slightly cooler with some gusty winds. Temperatures \\'iJl reac h the low 'N.'.__s.~ INSll»E TODAY Orange Coast teenaoers and adults nre working 01~ n prcr gram designed to 11arrou1 the so·r.nlled "ge11eratim1 g<rp" w)th a moetb1g of Ute ~1¢,t 011 soc· 'iologt<'Al probler11s~ P.rwttM9, Ctlllwfllt Cto.t<t'"' U• ci.uw..i ''"'k' c .. ,.....,, Ot•l.f Nelltt'I (di.ti•! '"'" ""'..,.,''""'"'' ... "lfl(' Her•)(OM •rn t.tnftn Mlll!ltJ Mffllr111 ) , ' -"""'-' ,. 1 Miii"" '1111111 II J\.,, N1t:tftll NI'" t•I ,. °"'"" '~"" ' 1t fy1¥!1 Ptrltl' It f S,,.•11 • l l•ll I ~1"dl: Mt rlth It.II tfl T1l~Mltfl -If 1•11 TW I.... l't -)J •'ti'!'•• -• 11 w-."" ,,......., 1~15 I Wet1o111N-td ' • • • 2 DAILY PILOT SC Tltfld.U, March 17, 1970 lns.,..tace Rise Capo School Cost Listed for .Board By PM1ELA HALLAN Of th t l><llt., ~llol S!tll San Clemente's volunteer fire depart- ment and an lnadequate water supply have been cited as reasons adding to the rise in insurance costs for the Capistrano Unified School District. Roy MJ!ler, represe11ting the Professional Insurance Agents Associa- tion whlc,h writes all district policies. told trustees Monday that Insurance rates Beacli Mayor Cites Capo Over Harbor Mayor Jack Green of }luntington Beach assailed the Orange County Grand Jury ~1onday for "a blased and erroneous report" on its investigation of the Orange County Harbor District. The jury favors retention or the district. The mayor said at a press conference that the jury's probe was not made by the jury itself but by a five-man agricultural committee. "They interviewed me, but it was done strictly for show," he said. ''It was ob- "ious they had already made up their minds. They wJre supposed to be in- vestigating but instead they argued with me on the merlts of the district. "It was not a public hearing and was very unprofessional conduct on their part. I don't care which way they go bUt I do think they could have handled it bet- ter.'' The jury report last week recom- mended that the Harbor District be re- tained. The Leaaue of Cities, which Mayor Gre,gn heads, favors dissolution of the district or that the district's future be put lo a countywide vote. Green, City Administrator Doyle Aflller and Development Director Tom Severns \vill attend ·hearings in Sacramento this week which may resolve the district's future. Two bills will come up for hearing Thursday, one by Assem blyman John V. Briggs CR-Fullerton) which urges a public vote on the issue and another by Assemblyman Ken Cory (D-Anahelm) simply asks the state legislature to ex- tend the duties of the Harbor District without a vote· of the people. Green hinted that a compromise may result. that the two assemblymen may get together and propose that the district be dissolved and made an expanded dcparlment of the county government. "If this is the compromise, we'll go along," Green said. "We think this business has gone on too long." The mayor voiced concern, however, at the haggling over the district. "I'm concerned at the tremendous amount of pressure being brought by groups and individuals as to why they are opposed to having ll become a county department,'' he adde.d. As evidence of shifting .stands on the Issue, Green pointed out that \\1cstminster and La Habra now back the League of Cities on the issue and San Juan Capistrano which suppoted dissolu· t1on originally has since decided to take no stand. "\Ve think that's anotht'r reason for U tv go to a vote," Green concluded. LA Okays Pay Raises LOS ANGELES (AP) -The city coun· ell has tentatively appro""d an across· the-board pay hike for 16,000 city \\'orkers retroactive to Jan. 1. DAILY PILOT Ne-wport leach L0911110 h0t.h Ce1ro Mno Hunth1gto11 leach Fe11nteh1 Volley Sn Cl•-'- Olil:ANGE COAST PUBLISHING COMPANY Robt•t N . Weed P•ft•de111 •no Publisl\tr J1clt It Cuil~v Vite Pftlldtnl •nd Gene•AI M8111111' Thom •1 Ke1vil Ed(lllr Thom11 A. Murphi111 MIMlllM Rich1rd P, N . !>o~lll Or•r.ee Offlen C01t1 Mfl.I: »Cl Wttl !11y !lrHI Hewpo!'t B~ 11!1 W~• !l•lboll aou11v1rd Lt;-eucn: m For"' Av.,..,. Hun11ng1 ... !IHCh: 111/jo,JtlCll llOuH!ve'11 St" C1tmenl11 :1Di Nortfl Et Camino Ill.HI OAfLY PILOT. wtlll '°"'ld'I IS t"Omlllft~ !ht ,., ..... Pren. II publl•ht4 dt l!Y Ill(.,, i U"• ~V Ill .. P9fl!t ta/!lom for L90Ufll !IHCll. Nf#OOrt !IHCl'I, (a$11 Mn1. H1111li119Jllll s .. e11 •rid F_,Nln V1fity, tloflg wllll - rl!Qionol t!Oltlllnt-Ort~t ~ll l'vlllltl'llnf C1t.._11Y Drifllk'Q p1.,t11 lrt ti Z211 Wftl Ba!aa. lllVO., NtwPOrl 8Nd\. '"" Pl Y/tsf e1v Strittt, Cqt1e Me.w. Tos.ph ... 11141 641-4121 Chmlfled Ad• .. rtlsl119 642·5611 S•t1 Clet11nte All l>eportMHtt: 1 .. .,h_ 492o4420 probably will be up nearly '00 percent v;hen the new policies authorized by the board are rewritten July I. The original policies were \\'rillen [j\·e years ago at the time of unification. A comprehensive policy covering fire, van- dalism, theft and acts of God, it was written at 9 cent.s per $100 of real value. The new rate will probably be some- y,•here In the nelghborhood of 40 cents per $100, aceording to MJller. I-le sald various factors have brought the cost up. One is San Clemente's rating by the national fire board. .. San Clemente is rated number seven on a scale of one to ten," said Miller, •·this is because it has inadequate water supplies and a volunteer fire depart- Jnent." San Clemente Flre Chief Merton Hackett told the DAILY PILOT that a volunteer lire department does bring the fire rating down. He said that San Juan Ca pistrano another city in the school district probably has the 5ame rating since it too bas a volunteer department. Other factors contributing to Insurance hikes are location of schools, their ages, how they are used, proximity of fire facilities, value of buildings and what they contain. "We have to consider how much it \vould cost to replace buildings and their contents today," said MUler. He said archlte<:tural designs have also added to insurance rates in some cases. 1-le cited the new Viejo Elementary School as being costly to insure for trus and other reasons. "The new Viejo school will probably cost 60 cents per $100," sald Miller. "It's an $800,000 school all in one building. It would only take one torch to destroy it." He said the faCt that It takes six minutes for a fire truck to reach the fa cility also makes it more costly. When the fire tlme is decreased, the rate can be recomputated for that school. From Page 1 WILCOXEN. • • Navy, he wenl into business and con- tinued his education at night school, he explained. "I am convinced many of our problems are the result or electing people to public office because they tell us what we want to hear," said Ratterree. "Like promising to lower taies and clean up ,;itualions which they have no intention of doing anything about." To a question on Laguna's hippie pro- blem, he commented, "It's easy to talk about hippies and not do anything about it. We have .. not given these people any kind of morality. This is a sick nation. \Vhat about the owners o( the buildings '~·here they Jive and hang out, the people who are making money off hippies?" CHY Council candidate Edward Lorr joined the roster of speakers lo seek sup- port of the Republican group, accusing the present council of ignoring Chamber of Commerce advice on Main Beach develo pment and failing , for four years, to do anything about the hippie problem. "Dick Goldberg has tried but fail ed to find ·support," said Lorr. "You need men on you r council who can take the heat from the small group of bleeding hearts \1•ho support the hippie s. This does not mean the creative, productive artis t who happens to wear long hair, but the transient population of dirty, drug.ad- dicted members of the Le a r y brotherhood,'' The community must give full support· ta the council and the police, said Lorr, <1nd land lords also must cooperate by drav,.ing up and enforcing strict lease agreements. Promising "a strong voice on the City Council'' if elected, Lorr noted that he is the 01vner of a local business and can promise "24·hour-a-day service to the community.'' Lag1magrins • ~ --.. . . DAILY PILOT 51111 Ph'1• D1·. Leary Gets Term • Of I to 10 Uy T0:\1 BA.RLEV 01 lht o.u., 1"1191 ll•lf Dr. Thnothy Leary Is in Orange County Jail today, c.-ompilihg a summation of his drug-centered philosophies and rellgiou1 beliefs thnl may b.: used by his attorneys as the basis of their appeals against the state prison term he drtw A1onday. ,The LSD cultist's plea _!delivered through defense attorney George Chula - thal the "controlled use" of LSD and related min d-expanding drugs amounted to a religious practice and should not be condeinned .. by a society that is only just beginning to understand'' had little ef(ec~ on Superior Court Judge Byron K. A1cMlllan. He listened for three hours to that argu1nent and a series of related argu1nents from .Chula and !hen sen· · tenced Leary, 50, 1.0 one to 10 years in state prison. Car Careens Into Ltrke That prison term followed the rormer llarvard psychologist's conviction on charges of possession of mari]uana - charges backed by the Orange County Grand Jury after Leary, his wife, Iiosemary, 34, and son John Bush Leary, 20, were arrested in Laguna Beach. Sometimes an auto mechanic can use a bit of skin diving experience as Chuck Evans of the El 1·oru Garage di scovered this morning \vhen dispatched to a pond on Irvine Company property near Laguna Canyon Road. Car \Vas discovered in pond early this 1nornin g: \Vhen fog lifted. Unidentified driver called garage to say he \\'ould be in later today to retrieve his soggy vehicle. ~1rs .. Leary had already been sentenced by Judge A1cMi.llan to six months in Orange County Jail and three vears probalion. Young Leary drew a 96.day pre-sentencing diagnostic study at the state's Chino facility and he is scheduled to report there \Vednesday . I No Problems Expected YORTY ... In Clemente 'Invasion' Democratic gubernatori<il nomination . In 1966 he lost a primary election effort by a 3·2 margin to incumbent Edmund G. •·rat" Bro\\'n. Reagan defe<ited Brown !hat :-Jovember. t.layor Sam, as he is often called, won a third four-yea r term last !\lay 27 In what \\'<IS regarded as arl uphill victory over City Councilman Thomas Bradley. a Negro. He became lhe central figure Monday or the bilter!y opposed sentencing of his colorful father and a couple of comments made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright during the prosecutor's vigorous opposition to a plea for bail 1nade him -for the first time that morn· ing -put down the flowers he had been toying with. • San Clemente's dose of young Easter \Veek students will begin arriving this coming weekend, but police heer are ex· pecting no more than the usual amount of about 2,000 one-week residents. "\Ve never have had the problems here whic_h used to give Newport Beach and Balboa a national reputation, and I think lhat the trends showing klds going to the desert and mountains more than the beach will keep the problems down," Police Chief CU!ford !\1urray forecast to- day. Drinking and peace disturbance viola- tions will be lhe most common problems Frorn Page 1 CHARGES ... ment the cadets gave him a standing ovation. The Anny statement announcing the findings of the inquiry said: "The report alleges that there \lo•erc serious deficiencies in the actions of a number of officers holding command anti staff positions in the America! Division. the 11th Infantry Brigade, Task r~orce Barker, and the U.S. advisory organiz.a· tion. ''The deficiencies cited in the report relate primarily to alleged failures lo render required reports, conduct ade· quate investigations, and othen:ise to satisfactorily discharge dut ies in Uie light of infonnation received concerning an alleged atrocity." The Army m:ide public a censored version of the report, deleting the bulk of it on grounds it contained material \\'hich might prejudice legal proceed ings. A team of Army legal flfficers reviewed the 20,000 pages of lestimony and 500 documents given before the inquiry. "As a result charges have been prefer· red against 14 officers," the Army said. "Mosl of the officers are charged with d~rcliction of duty and/or failure to com- ply with applicable regulations and direc- tions. Other charges include false swear- ing and misprision of a felony." i ~ ' . ' j/ \\'hich the department will face through the 1veek, he added, but most are rand!cd by a call to the parents. In recent years the pace of r:aster \\leek at the beach has tapered off regularly, perhaps because of lhe un- certainty of the spring weather . 1'he students' taste for lhe-0pen spaces and wann sun of !he desert areas ha ve caused problems for police there, ho"'e\'er. But in San Clemente, police expect fewer problems. "One recllrring one seems to be one or vandalism by tenants in rentals where the pri~ has been jacked up so hlgh that the kids think lhey have to get their rnoney's worth by causing damage," l\1urray said. Circulars detailing the city's codes regulating occupancy limits and other factors already have been mailed to resort landlords in the city. Police sugge.st that rental owners only Jet their premises to younp; persons who \\•ill have a responsible adult in residence \\'ith them. Fro11a 1'11ge 1 EASTER ... school students at his Seas-Vacation Village said he \\'ill folkl\v his usual pro- cedure of hiring a Sheriff's deputy, "to see the girls are protected." llaneline, like many other local hotel and motel proprietors, is choosy about his Easter \Veek guest.s and Jays down strict behavior rules. 'J'hcse include no drinking in the rooms ;ind a curfew designed 1.0 remove visitors from the property by a reasona ble hour. lfis procedure is to have incnming i::roups sign the list of rules and to rent on a day-t~ay basis so violators can be required lo leave. ''The peop le of California ha\•e paid a high price for Reagan 's lack of ex- perience and judgment,'' Yorty's slatc- n1cnt said. "He has switchcJ his position lately and no1v supports income tax withholding. Bul \\'iii h'! do so after the Yorty's statement did not even mention Unruh. 47. Unruh formally filed as a candidate J.londay and announced that he was resigning as the party's leader in the Assembly as or March 31. His Assembly term runs through next January but he said l\1onday his campaign would require all his energies. Yorty rose from a yourig man selling neckties and shirts In a men's \\"ear sklre in his home town of Lincoln, Neb .. to the chief executive of one of the nation·s largest cities. In bet\lo·ecn \lo'ere two terms In the Califomia Assembly and two terms in Congress. Jane Fonda, Vadiu1 To End 1\fatTiage·! PARIS (AP) -Jane Fonda ar.d Roger Vadim. the French film dire<:tor. have separated and are planning to di\'orce. the nev1sp11per Paris-Presse feported Tuesday. Vadim, \Vhose first \\'ife was Brigitte Bardot, n1arried A1iss Fonda. Aug. 14, 1965 in Las Vegas. They had a daughter. Vadim \v as said lo be living in California al the ranch or his 1vife's father, Henry Fonda. ''We have a true pictute..oL.lk. .Leary from the probation report on his son John -the young man sitting right here," the bluff, burly Enright snapped. '·John doesn't want his father and Rosemary to ha\·e children because of what happened to him and I think that we should all take note of what he has to tell us. "In other words," Enright said, "we should look at the evidence of what hap- pens to people \\•ho are the victims of other people's ad vocacy of the free use of drugs and \\'e should assess their rights to freedom on the basis of what we have to see. Dr. Leary 's own son has given us a very valuable pointer to what our answer (to the bail application) should be.'' Enright's angry \VOrds shocked young Leary into an erect posture for the first time durin g the hea ring. He dropped his flo\\.'er'!, swung partly around to watch the prosecut\lf and bowed his head as Enright concluded. It was some moments before the long· haired, hippie-garbed Leary resumed his study or the purple orchid delivered to him by an admirer shortly before the sentencing hearing opened. 11is role in the incident of Dec. 26, 1968 that sparked the arrest of the trio \\'a! also brought into focus by Chula through the statement by the veteran trial lawyer that "nobody knew who gave that bag lcontaining drugs} to Dr. Leary just before the police officer searched the familv car." ChUla made it clear that Dr. Leary did not have the bag just before the arrest ancl he pointed out that it did not come from i'o1rs. Leary. He made no reference to John Bush Leary as he pressed his argument that there had never been any real basis for prosecution of his cllent. ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW CARP ,ETl.NG? FOLLOW THIS CHECK LIST TO INSURE COMPLETE SATISFACTION [J BRAND NAME DEPENDABILITY [J DEALER INTEGRITY [] WIDEST SELECTION l>'I COMPETITIVE PRICES 0 EXPERT INSTALLATION Bl FINANCING AVAILABLE TH!N COME TO ALDtNS-OWNED & OPE.RATED llY 3rd G!NERATION CARPETING l!XPERl ENCE- OVE.R 13 YEARS IN THE HAltll't>R AREA, WE FEATURE THESE FAMOUS NATIONALLY ADVERTISED NAMES : * BEATTIE *MONARCH -it CROWN * ROXBURY t: IMPERIAL *WALTERS +. SWEETWATER * BIGELOW * SERVEN * FIRTH * COLUMBUS * MONTICELLO * DAN RIVER *SEQUOYAH Don't Miss Our Drapery Dept. W• f111tvrs • Cll1"pl•t• ••IKtien or f1brlc1 and colers to enh1nce af'MI compllment your c11rpetln9. -VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM Hun dreds of Smell· to • Room Size Remnants ALDEN'S 1663 'PLACENTIA· COSTA MESA 646·4838 COllY""''· ,.,.. O••nee C-M.i Puttrr1111,.,. ~y. N• MW1 •!Of*-nJ1,11.tr1tlOnl. "'ll'OO'lil "8111• "' """"~'· hlrilol ,.,., be •t'Proout.tcl WI~ i.peC:MI Plr- "'!UIOrl OI mpvrlllflt .......... ~ C .... llOll•ll •IO 111 N...,.,I 6Mdl ,.,a eo,,,. '""'8. C..U!on\11 •• Ub>(,.tlloll °' UN)tf U,tll MOllll'llYI tlly l!llH 12 )0 ll'IOl'ltll1VI rnlt"'1? dlflilfMtkn. u.ao ._111rr. 'l'vt Always Apprtc latt:d the Fact, Marthe, Thot Even Though You Paint, You Never Ftlt the Need !o go 'Artsy-Cr.11ft1y' •• : CARPETS • DRAPERIES 12 YlARS SERVING THI ORANGl COAST ' ' • I • • ! i 7 ' -. -------------·--=·~---- • San Clemenie Capistrano EDITION VOL 63, NO. 64, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES en era INSIDE TODAY FEATURED NEWS ALONG THE SOUTHERN ORANGE COAST e Stirfing by S11tnt1aer? Questions or opening a public surfing beach along one of the fine st strands along the Orange Coast re- main an open question today. Story Page 3. • Vote Tally Ebbs Orange County's voter reiistration totals are sho\v- ing a decrease despi'le stepped up political activity for the June Primary. Story Page 3. • An Opti11aistic Sta1•t San Clemente's Optimist Club is living up to its name today with a boost for youth and scholarship. Story Page 3. Religion Study Laguna Trustees to Get ·Released-time Report Laguna Beach school tr~stecs . ~ill receive a report. On reJeased-time rehg1on clai;.ses as conducted in Orange when they meet in the district board room at 7:30 o'clock tonigtit. A proposal to add religion classes, on a released time basis. to the curriculum in Laguna Beach has been under st~~y by the school board, assisted by m1n1sters and Sunday school superintendents in the district. 'The board tonight will receive details of a study session at which Mrs. Elizabeth Gammon, Director of Released Time Education in Orange. described that city's program. These include: -At the outset, limit the program to a (ew schools and one grade level. -The fourth and fifth grade levels are most receptive to released-time education and attendance from these grades in Orange has been 80 to 94 pupils. ' -Every teacher in the program should have California teaching credentials. -The program in Orange includes 18 special classes, with special teachers for handicapped and retarded studenls. -Of the 2,000 students n ow participating, one half are not involved \vith a regular church. -The present budget of $30,000 is ac- quired through the Community Chest, service clubs, gifts etc. Sea Scouts Take -.· Case to Council On Finance Plans . Up from the sea without ships, San Clemente's landlocked Sea Scouts -who have already written President Nixon and billionaire Howard Hughes -~ednesday take their case to the City Council. Ship 110 -which consists of some enterprising youngsters and an old cabin cruiser on supports -has written the ci· 1y ask:Mg for a one year business license to finance a boat. The license would be used for the scouts to paint house numbers on curbs or consenting property owners. -Separate programs, in separate trailers, are maintain~ fQr Protestant and Catholics in the Orange Program, though at a Laguna meeting a represen· tative of the Catholic church indicated preference for a single program for Catholics ~nd Protestants. -Each Laguna area church inlerested in the program has been asked to study and report on the feasibility of participation. In olher action tonight the board will : -Study revisions to a proposed training program for intermediate school faculty and staff to be conducted by Thurston lntermedi&te School for lhe U.S. Office of Education. -Authoriie closing of escrow for the purchase of 6.7 acres at Top of the World with payment of $135,040 from the building fund. -Act on recommendation of Superintendent Dr. William Ullom to re- employ for the 1970-71 school year 28· third-year teachers, 19 teachers who will ::t.ttain tenure in September and 49 tenure teachers. Laguna Expects Quiet Period For Easter Week If the pattern of the last couple or years is repeated, Easter Week will bring no great upheavals to Laguna Beach, but discreet preparations are being made, just in case. The large-scale invasion of students th at used to bring havoc to the Art Colony during tile spring recess seems to have scattered in other directions in re- cent years, but a goodly number of -youthful visitors, with and \vithout chaperones, is expected to begin arriving this weekend. Police Cltief Kenneth Huck has can. celled days off and put his force on 12· hour days beginning Saturday. "We'll adjust according to what transpires," Huck said. 1l\Ye're not hiring additional help yet and we will do so only if it is· needed." Motel operator Loren Haneline, who ac- cepts only chaperoned groups o( high See EASTEn. Pagc•z1 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1970 • Ill e 0 Cle1nente Oil Fight Aid Asked A San Pedro citizens group has asked San Clemente City Council support in fighting tideland oil drilling by Standard Oil Companv of California. Councilmen are scheduled to consider the matter with their regular agenda \\lednesday night. The group writing to councilmen calls itself Get Oil Out-Two (GOO-Two). n-,e original GOO group was formed in the Santa Barbara area alter the disastrous oil pollution more than a year ago. GOO·Two states that Standard Oil has begun drilling operation on a 9500-acre parcel in San Pedro Bay, tidelands con- trolled by the City of Los Angeles. The company maintains that lhe area ls geologically stable. GOO-Two says not so. "The drilling rig lies extremely close to this very active fissure. It is called the Cabrillo Fault and cootinues through the Palos Verdes Peninsula. This establishes a potential Santa Barbara-like oil spill situation," GOO-Two maintains. The letter also states that the drilling rig is near the San Pedro breakwater en- trance presenting the possibility of a shi p colliding with the rig and causing a spill. Such a Spill cout<! be Carried to beaches south of San Pedro by southerly current! and prevailing winds. the group states. They ask a Jetter of support for their stand against oil destruction or the coast· line. Coastal cities officials, including Carl Kegley, San Clemente city atforney, and Roy Holm, Laguna councilman. testified recently in support of a bill to ban drill· ing in federal waters adjacent to State sanctuaries. · LA_'s Mayor Sam Joins Demo Race For Governor LOS ANGELES CAP) -Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles announced t.oday he \vou!d run for the Democratic nomination for governor or California. Yorty will oppose Jesse Unruh, leader of the state Assembly's minor It y Democrats, in bidding for the chance to oppose Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan. who announced a week ago he is seeking a second tenn. The primary election is June 2. Yorty, 60. is regarded as a "maverick" Democrat because he has crossed party lines, such as supporting Republicon Richard M. Nixon for president in 1960 instead of Democrat John F. Kennedy. ln his anM@cement, Yorty hit out at Reagan and "b!rtain unamed fellow Democrats. "I believe Gov. Reagan hes made a sincere effort to play an unaccustomed role as administrator of the largest state in the union. but his stewardship has been characterized by too much show and too little accomplishment," Yorty said. "I am a lifelong Democrat and wlll run on the Democratic licket," Yorty said. "J would like to see the Democratic party ~f our state divorce itselr from the ex· treme leftists, the power seekers, the mercenaries. and th~ arrogant would-be dictators who try to tell registered Democrats wtio can or cannot run, and how "'e arc lo vote.'' It is Yort y'!! second bid for the (Set YORTY, Page Zl . ' . One to Grow 011 Percy, a tw~month-old pup owned by Jon Evans of Costa Mesa, met this fire plug Monday afternoon during a walk wi th his master near the Newport Pier. Percy obviously was awestruck and bad to sit down to think things over. Neighbors Opposing Plan For Mexican Restaurant By· JtARBARA DUARTE 01 fll• 0.11' Pii.t st1H A request for a Mexican restaurant at 910 Glenneyre St. met opposition from neighbors before the Laguna Beach Plan· ning Commission Monday night. A conditional use permit (CUP) filed by Robert C. Anderson r e q u· e s t s prol!Dission to ·conduct on-sale beer and wine sales in conjunction with the· restaurant. business. Contractor William Landreth, speaking for the owner; said operators of the delicatessen' adjacent· to• Reef Liquors in· tend to reduce its seating capacity and enlarge the food service. The restaurant, located to the south of the Reef parkihg lot, would utilize park- ing spaces gained from the redu~d seating in the delic3fellsen, Landreth pointed out. lJe termed the operation a "simple Mexican food" eatery and agreed to conform to hours from 11 a.m. until 11 p.m. "l'm very opposed to on-sale beer and wine," wrote Mrs. Jva J. Nicolett of 939 Glenneyre St. She declared residents in the area have "all the commercial business they can·haeydle." A terse message from Signe Fischer declared. 1'Too much liquor in Lagun.a Beach already." A'lso in opposilion to the CUP was Mrs. Neal Gammell ·of 929 . Catalina St. Planners will confer with apfllicants in a study session to look at bolh parking and sealing layouts. In other· business, the commission : -Granted a six-month ei:tension of the present CUP held by St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1190 Morningside Drive, and ask- ed applicants to withdraw a request for a variance to exceed allowable height with a roof topped by a spire and to revise the CUP. PlaMers indicated they felt the hfilght request wasn't in the bfst interest of a residential area. -Set April 6 and 20 as dates for public hearings on modifications to the sign ordinance. -Approved plans for 1 lawn bowllng clubhouse at 455 Cliff Drive subject to nine modifications · proposed by the building and planning department. Com· missioners also asked removal of a block pilaster, to be replaced by wood . and ad- dition of French doors to improve the building. -Granted "budding" businessman Chris Bowman, a Laguna Beach High School student, a. temporary use permlt to conduct flower sales in the city. GOP Women Ask High Standards BoatsY:ain Neyle G. Hunter assured the city by Jetter -he has Y.Titlen many let· 1crs in his young liJe -th at the numbers '\'ould be at least three inches taJJ and pai'i11ed with a good quality. ~xterior white pai nt "''ith·a sprinkling of s11tcone sand ror reflection. Hunter. \\'ho doesn·t gjve up. has already written to th e .President ~nd Jlughes, in hope:s of hurdhng a labynnth of red tape and l a nd i ng a boat. Unfortunately, neither Hughes nor the Presidenw pparently saw Jlunter"s let· ters. Aides responded. Still no bot1t. 'We're Now • Ill Civil War' By unariimous vote P.1onday afternoon, members. of the Laguna Beach Women's Republican Club endorsed a resolution adopted. by the Master& of the Chamber of C()mmerct urg1ng city offlClals to in- crease----their efforts to "enforce city ordinanc.es and state laws to maintain the blgh standards o! the community, 30 they will not. be: diminished. by the unlawful conduct of .a few." / ' The scouts of Ship I 10 have worked on 3 cabin cruiser for four years. It's ready for launch but they're not sure that it will floal In fact they have somewhat 1,essimistlcally namer! ihe era(! Pueblo l I. • The scouts 1nost viable hope may be lhe City council and their own elbow grease used on residenllal curbs. But sink fir !i)'•iln \VednesdAy night. it's a good bet that Boatswain llunter and his intrepkl band will keep on trying unll l they act • real boat. \ Wilcoxen Cites Strife as Main Campaign Issue By BAltBARA IU\EIBICH 01 1119 Dtll't P!i.t $tttf ~·\Ve're in a civil war and we'd better win it. Whelber it comes from the e:t· trcmc r ight or the extreme lcfl, this pal- lern or agitation and destn1ction has got lO stop," Laguna &ach attorney Willh1m Wilcoxen to.Id members or the Laguna Beach Republican \Vomen's Club Mon· day. ; Appearing as a candid~tc for the 35th Congressional District seat, formerly held by the late J ames Utt, Wilcoxen said he would Juggest govuwnent .act.Ion to ' . •• extract damages from persons aqd groups destroying publlc 11nd private pro- perty. "The university kids have got tp learn to abide by the basic rules of society," said Wil coxen. In other remark&, the attorney cit ed his ~ng experience in the field of law en· rorcen1cnt and ln representing the people In a variety of areas, from the fight to s~vt Salt Creek lo a former position a.s depu ty di.strict attortley, among his qualifications for of(ice. Jteferrlng to bis five years on the .. ' LajUlla Btach 'o<hool boar.a ••? the ,... cent unsuccessful 1u override election, Wllcoxen said, "I understand the problem of raising taxes and I firmly be.lleve that • lhe use of propttly Ulx for school funding mus~ go.·• Also add rtssing lhe Republican group \Vas John D. Ratterree, Santa Ana businessn\en. who has filed for the 35til Congressional District seat. Ratterree, 30, 1:ild be is part Indian and has taken aa ac;llve lnterttit ln lnd\l.n probltms. Afte.r servln9-four year& ln the (Ste WILCOXEN, r,.. I) :s 11\e reso1uUon, inspiced by mounting concern over n11rcotici traffic among Laguna's translcnt and sen\l·resideilt hi~ pie papulatlon, probably will be presented lo the. Clly Council offi cially or unof· tlcially at some future date to Indicate community supporl, a member of the l\:laste,., group s11ld. Stocl<_itlnrket• . NEW YORK (AP) -11>< stock moriet turned upward lale this afternoon on mod· crate trading. (See quotations, Pa.aes 10- 11). TEN CENTS • a1 West Point Boss Among 14 Charge4 WASHINGTON (API -The Anny an· nounced today that r.1aj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, West Point superintendent. and 13 olher officers have been charged with dereliction -0f duty and other charges in a field investigation of the alleged Son My. · My Lai massacre two years ago in South Vietnam. Koster was commanding general of the America! Division. parent of the task force which swept through the hardcore Communist area on March 16, 1968. Ten Army officers and enlisted men have been charged with murder and other alleged crimes Jn the deaths of as many as 102 Vietnamese civilians in Son My village and My Lai hamlet. Lt. Gen. William R. Peers, who headed a 3~ii·month investigation of the way reports of a massacre originally were handled, told a neW1 conference "there was testimony and lvidence to indicate that certain persons; wittingly or unwit· tingly, suppressed certain information about the inciderlt from passing up the chain of command." However, Peers said he did not think tliere was a coverup. He also said he was satisfied that In· fo~ation on the incidenL did not go beyond lhe America! Division tO higher command and Washington at the time of the field probe immediately afltr the reported massacre. At We.st Point, Koster informed the 3,700 cadets assembled in the acade!TIY 'S _ mess hall he has asked to be relieved of his post as head of the academy. An information officer at West Point said the general told the cadets "l want you to be among the first to know that ( "'ill soon leave West Point." He said he wants' another assignment ''in order to separate the military academy and you of the corps from the continuing flow of public announcements or any other connection with the alleged events which took place in Vietnam in· volving elements of my former com- mand." Col. Patrick Dionne, the academy in- formation officer, said Koster gave his remarks Yi'ithout apparent emotion - "with a firm chin" -and after his 1tate· (See CHARGF.S, Page I) Frank R. Moore Rites Wednesday Services will be held Wednesday, 1 p.m., at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel for Frank R. Moore who died Sunday in his Laguna Beach home. Mr. Moore was a grandchild of Col. James A_ Coffey, a pioneer who worked on treatie1ri with · Western Indians. A leader in the development of San Pedro, f\.1r. Moore recently published a book entitled, "The Coffey Clan From 1690." A fifteen-year resident of L.aguna. be is survived by his wife Blanche, ot the family home at 432 Holly SL, and a sister Catherine M. Rich~r, also of Laguna Beach. Orange Coast Weather Residents of the Orange Coast can expect more night and morfl· ing low clouds and fog with par- tial clearing \Vednesday morning. \Vednesday afternoon should be sunny but slightly cooler with some gusty winds. Temperatures ·wlnr each the tow ?O's. INSIDE TOD~l' Orange Coa1t teenager.t and adult$ ore wo,rKitl.ll oii . 4 .pro-,· .gram ~eJiqntd to 11arrpw: (~ so-called "'tneraticn gop" with a meeting of the fltinds on soc· iological proble'111. Page 9. C1111t111!1 C:~Hl!I'" Uf Clat,11.fd C:1ml<t (f'll"WitN Ottlll Nfllctt ••tl9rf1J "''' ""'"'llflmlfll ''~•II« H-HO,.. ""~ ~"""" M11M a ~!!~•• '" ' ' Jl•14 " " ' • " "'!~ " ; Mtw"" Jt MVIWtl tl'Vflllt 1• ""'fllaf "'"' 4·~ Or111" CllW!llw; • i t lltlt """' 1• '"''* ...... llKll M•rtlttt !t>tl. Tt!WIO•ll • 1• Tll. .. ltn )t Wet·~., ~ w..,,.,.., f<t-f)-11 'W'lf'lll """" .. 11 t __ _.._ _______ ............. _ --·---------------.J.. -=----~ -._...:..._ --------'----------~~----------...£.-------- • • -·----· - Ji DAil Y PILOT SC "ln.ftlhlaace Rise ---------• T11~. Mardi 17, l<i70 Capo Scnool Cost Listed for Board Dy PAMELA HALLAN OI ltlt 0111'1' Pllol Still San Clemente's volunteer fire depart· menl and an inadequate water supply have been cited as reasons adding to the rise in insurance costs for I.he Capistrano Unified Sc.hoal District. Roy ~1111er, representing the Profesaional Insurance Agents Associa- tion which writes all district policies, tokl trustees Monday that insurance rates Beach Mayor Cites Capo • Over Harbor ?-.1ayor Jack Green of flunlingt.on Beach assailed lhe Orange County Grand Jury A1ouday for "a biased and erroneous report " on its Investigation of the Orange County l:larbor Dislticl. The jury favors retention of the district. The mayor said at a press conference that the jury's probe wa s not made by the jury ilself but by a five-man agricultural committee. "They interviewed me, but it was done strictly (or show," he said. "It was ob- \'ious they had already made up their minds. They were supposed to be in· vestigating but instead they argued with me on the merits of the district. '"lt v.·as not a public hearing and was very unprofessiona l conduct on their part. I don 't care which way they go but I do think they could have handled it bet· ter." The jury report ·1ast week reoom: mended that the llarbor Distri ct be re· taintd. The League of Cities, which :P.,fayor Green heads. favors dissolution of the district or that the district's future be put to a countywide vote. Green, City Administrator Doyle 1.flller and Development Director Tom Severns will attend hearing s in Sacramento this week which may resolve the district's future. Two bills will come up for hearing Thursday, one by A!iemblyman John V. Briggs ( R-Fullerton) which urges a public vote on the issue and another by Assemblym an Ken Cory (!>-Anaheim) simply asks the state legislature to tx· tend the duties of the Harbor District y:ithout a vote of the people. Green hinted that a compromise may result, that the two assemblymen may ,get together and propose that the district be dissolved and made an expanded department or the coun ty government. "lf this is the compromise, we'll go along," Green said, "\Ve think this business has gone on loo long." The mayor voiced concern, however, at the flaggling over the district. "I'm concerned at the tremendous amount of pressure being brought by groups and individuals as to why they are opposed to having it become a county department," he added. As evidence of shifting stands on the tssue. Green pointed out t hat \Vestminster and La Habra now back the League of Cities on the issue and San Juan Capist rano which suppoled dissolu· tion originally has since decided to take no stand. "\Ve think thal's another reason for it to go to a vote," Green concluded. LA Oka ys Pay Ra ises LOS ANGELES (AP) -The city coun· cil has tentatively approved an across. the-board pay hike for 16,000 city workers retroactive t-0 Jan. 1. DAILY PILOT H~port leach Lot••a hoc:ll Colla MHa H•11th19tCH1 hocll fo•11t.i11 Yatlty Sn ClttM11te O"AHGE COAST PUllL!SHIHG COMPANY Robe1I N. Weed PrtolOtfll •NI Pllbllsller J1d1 R. Curl1y V1(I PrtI'Girnl 11'111 V.111r1I M1Mg" Tho"''' Kt1vll Eorror lhom11 A. Mur phin1 M1f1fgl119 Editor Rich •rd P. Nill S.Ou!ft Or1111gt Covnly ealto• Offlcff Colli Mat' 1)(1 W•I Illy srr~~I Nl#PO•I BH<"' V il Welt llll!IO& llouJt~tnf L•VUlll 8tKl'I: m Fort,, Avirnvt ).luMlflll!On lltad" llllJ Bllt~ 80\IK:Vltcl S•n Clt m111l11 Sl North El C1'"lna R•tl DAILY PILOT,""'"' .... !di 11 C'Omblned Thi N-Prth. b pUlll•ii..d 6111¥ t~CtOI S ..... 6''( "' MPtr1l1 ldlllolll. -Ltgune IMcl\, H._I 8Hcll, tor.11 Mff.t, Hlll!llnflon 9Mdl 91111 '"-!II~ Vllltv, l lOflt With ,...., rt111a1wil ldltlw!t, ~ CM1I Puel~lno c-ttJ' prWIM pl'"'' 1•1 11 1111 ~I .. lllM IMI.. 1'1,.,,.,.1 IHCI\. 11'111 :uo Wiii 81y ilrfff. C.tt Mn-. r...,._ .. 1114) M2 .. J21 c 1 .. u1ed Aitv.rt1.i119 , .. z.1•11 S.. Cl.-M All 01,Mt11M11h: T.s.,11 ... ctz .... zq probabl y will be up nea rly 400 percent \vhen the new policies aulhorizcd by the board are rewritten July I. The original policies were written five years ago at the time of unification. A comprehensive policy covering fire, van- dalism. theft and acts of God. it v.·as written at 9 cents per $100 of real value.p The· new rate wlil probably be some- v.·here in lhe neighborhood of 40 cents per $100. according to t>.1iller. He said various factors have brought the cost up. One is S;in Clemente's rating by the national fire board. "San Clemente is ra1ed number seven on a scale of one to ten." said J\11lh.•r, •·:his is because it has inadequate "'ater supplies and a volunteer fire depart· men!." ' San Clemente Fire Chief Merton Hackett told the DAILY PILOT that a volunteer fire department does l'Jrlng the fire rating down. He said that San Juan CapistranG another city in the school district probably has the same rating sfnce it too has a volunteer department. Other factors contributing to Insurance hikes are location of schools, their ages, how they are used, proximity or fire facilities, value or buildings and what they contain. ··we have to consider how much it would· cost to replace buildings and their contents today," said Miller. He said architectural designs have also added to insurance rates in some cases. He cited the new Viejo Elementary School as being costly to insure for lhls and other reasons. ,;The new Viejo school will probably cost 60 cents per $100," said ~1il!er. "It's an $800,000 scbool all in one building. It would only take one torch to de stroy it." He said the fact that it takes six minutes for a fire truck to reac h the facility also makes it more costly. When the fi re time is decreased, the rate can be recomputated for that school. From Page I WILCOXEN. • • Navy, he went inlo busine ss and con· tinued hls education at night school, he explained. "I am convinced many of our problems are the result of electing people to public office because liley tell us what \ve want lo hear," said Ratterree. "Like promising to lower taxes and clean up situations \Vhich they hav e no inten tion or doing anything about." To a question on Laguna's hippie pro- blem, he commented, "ll's easy to talk about hippies and not do anything aboul it \V~ have not given these people <iny kind of morality. This is a sick nation. \Vhat about the Owners of the bu ildings where they live and hang out. !he people who are making money orf hippies ?" City Council candidate Ed\\•ard Lorr joined the roster of speakers to see k sup· port of the Republican group, accusing the present council or ignoring Cham ber of Commerce advice on tifain Beach development and failing. for four years, to do anything about the hippie problem. "Dick Goldberg has tried but failed to find support." said Lorr. "You nee d men on your council who can take the heat from the small group of bleeding hearts v.'ho support the hippies. This docs not mean thi; crea tive, productive artist who happens lo wea r long htiir. but the transient populalion {If dirty, drug-ad· dieted members of the L e a r y brotherhood.·· The community 1nusl give ful l support ta the council and the police, said Lorr. and Jandlords also must cooperate by drawing up and enforcing strict lease agreements. Promising "a slrong voice on the City Council'' if elected, Lorr noted thal he is the owner of a local business and can promise "24-hour·a-day service to the community." Ln91t11ngri11.s --. D1·. Leary ' Gets Term l Of I to 10 -1 By TOl't1 BARl ... EY 0 1 111• 0•11~ Pllcll S11H Dr. Tlmottiy Leary ls in Orange County Jail today, compiling a summation of hi5 drug-centered philosophies and religiou5 beliefs that may ht used by his attorneys as the basis of their appc11ls against the state prison term he drew 1.Ionday. The LSD cultist's plea -delivered through defense attorney George Chula - thal the "oonlroUed use" -0f LSD and related mind-expanding drugs amounted to a rellgious practlce and shou ld not pc condemned "by a society that is only just beginning to understand" had little effect -0n Superior Court Judge Byron K. ~fcMHlan . He listened for three hours lo that argument and a series of related arguments from Chula and then sen· tenced Leary, 50, to one to 10 years in state prison. Car Careens liato Lake That prison term followed the former Harvard psychologist's conviction on charges of possession of marijuana - charges backed by the Orange County Grand Jury after Leary, his 'vife, Rosemary, 34, and son John Bush Leary, Sometimes an auto mechanic can use a bit or skin diving experience as Chuck Evans of the El Toro Garage discovered this morning \\'hen dispatched . to a pond on Irvine Company property near Laguna Cany1Jn Road. Ca r \Vas discovered. in pond early titis morning \vhen fog lifted. Unidentified driver called garage to say he \11ould be in later today to retrieve hi s soggy vehicle . 20. \\'ere arrested in Laguna Beach. t>.Irs. Leary bad already been sentenced by J udge McMillan to six mont hs in Orange County Jail and three years probation. Young Leary drew a 90-day pre-sentencing diagnostic study at the state's Chino facility and he is scheduled to report there Wednesday. No Problerris Expected Fro111 l'uge J YORTY ... In Clemente 'Invasion' Democ ratic gubernatorial nomination. In 1966 he lost a pr imary elecllon effort by a 3-2 margin to incumbent Edmund G. "Pat" Bro"'Jl. Reagan defeated Bro,vn !hat November. Mayor Sam, as he is -Often called, \VorJ a third four-year term last t>.1ay 27 in \l'hat v.·as regarded as an uph ill victory over City Councilman Thomas Bradley,. a Negro. H~ became the central figure r.tonday of lhe bitterly opposed sentencing of his colorful father and a s:ouple of comments made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright during the prosecutor's vigorous opposition to a plea (or bail made him -fo r the first time that morn· ing ..... put down the flowers he had been toying with. San Clemente's dose of young Easter \Veek students will begin arriving this coming "1eekend. but police heer are ex- pecting n-0 more than the usua l amount of abou l 2,000 one-week residents. '"We never have bad the problems here which used to give Newport Beach and Ba lboa a national reputation, and I think that the trends showing kids going to the desert and mountains more than the beach will keep the problems down,'' Police Chief Clifford 1.1urray forecast to- day. Drinking and peace disturbance viola· lions_ will be tl'le most common problems Fro1n Pnge 1 CH ARGES ... nient the cadets gave him a standing -Ovation. The Army statement announcing the findings -0f the inquiry said: "The report alleges that there \Vere scrieus deficiencies in the actions of a nurnbcr of officers holding command and staff positions in the America! Di vision, the 11th Infantry Brigade, Task Force Barker, and the U.S. advisory organiza· tlon. "The deficiencies r iled in the report relate primarily to alleged fallurcs to r('nde r required reports. conduct ade· quate in,•estigations, and otherwise to satisfactorily discharge duties 1n the ligh~ -0f information rece ived concerning an alleged atrocity.'' 'fhe Army made public a censored version -Of the report. deleting the bulk of U on grounds it contained material 1vhich might prejudice legal proceeding!:. A team of Army legal officers reviewed the 20.000 pages of testimony and 500 documents given before the inquiry. ··As a result charges have be en prefer· red against 14 officers," the Army said . "Most of the officers arc charged 1vit h 1lcrc!iC'tion nf duty and/or failure to coni· 11!y with appli cable regulations and direc· 11ons. Other charges include false swear· 1ng and misprision of a felony.'' Phil lnterl andi jJ "'hich the department will fa ce through the week, he added, but most are handled by a call lo U1e parents. In recent yea rs the pace of Easter \Veek at the beach has tapered off regularly, perhaps because of the un· certa inty of the spring weather. The students' taste for the -0pcn spaces and warm sun of the desert areas have caused problems for police there, however. But in San Clemente. police expect fewer problems. .. One recurring one seems to be one of vandalism by tenants in rentals where the price has been jacked up so high that the kids think they have to ge t thei r money's worth by causing damage,'' l\luriay said. Circulars delaili ng the city·s codes regulating occu pancy limits aod other facto rs already have been mailed to resort landlords in the city. Police suggest that rental O\\'ne rs only let their premises lo young persons who \viii have a responsible adult ln residence \\•ilh them. l'Hge 1 EASTER ... i;chool student:'! at hls Scas·Vacalio n Village said he v.•ill follo\v his usual pro· ccdure of hiring a Sheriff's deputy, "lo sec the girls are prolected." Haneline, Ilk~ many other local hotel and motel proprielo rs. is choosy about his !::aster \Veek guests and lays down strict beha vior rules. These include no drinking in the rooms nnd a curfew designed lo remove visitors from the property by a reasonable hour. Mis procedure is to have incoming grou ps sign the li st of rules and to rent nn a day-to-day basi~ so violators can be rcciui rcd 1o leave. "The people of California have paid a high price for Reagan's lack or ex· pcricnce and judgment," Yorty's state· menl said. "'He has sv.·itcheJ his position lately and now supports income tax withholding. But v.·ill he do so after the \'orty's statement ciid not even mention Unruh, 47. Unruh formally filed a5 a candidate t>.londay and announced that he v.·as resi gning as the party's leader in the Assembly as of March 31 . His Assembly term runs through next January but he said ?>.1onday his campaign would require all his energies. Yorty rose from a yOU\1g man selling nec kti es and shirts in a men's wear sto re in his home town of Lincoln, Neb .. to the chief executive or one of the nation's largest cities. In between were lwo terms in the California Asse mbly and tv.·o terms in Congress. Jane Fonda, Vadin1 To Encl l\farriage'! PARIS (AP) -Jane Fonda ar.d Roger Vadim, !he Frenc h film director, have separated and are planning to divorce. the newspaper Paris·Presse reported Tuesday. Vadim, whose first v.·ifc \Vas Brigitte Bardot. n1arried tiliss Fonda, Aug. 14. 1965 in La;; Vegas. They had a daughter. Vadi1n was said to be \jving in California at the ranch of his wire ·s father, Henry Fonda. "We have a true picture of Dr. Lea ry from the probation report 011 his son J ohn -the young man sitting right here," the bluff, burly Enright snapped . "John doesn't want his father and Rosemary to ha ve children because of what happened to him and J think that we should all take note of what he has to tell us. "In other words," Enright said, ''we should look at the evidence of what hap- pens to people who are the victims of other people 's advocacy of the fret use or drugs and we should assess their rights to [reedom on the Dasls of what we have to see. Dr. Uary's 01vn son ha.9 given us a very valuable pointer to what our answer (to the bail application) should be." Enright's angry words shocked young Leary into an erect postu re for the first time dur ing the hearing. He dropped his flowers, swung partly around to watch the prosecutti.r and bowed his head as Enright concluded. It "'as some moments before the long· haired. hippie-garbed Leary resumed his study of the purple orchid delivered to him by an admirer shortly before the sentencing hearing opened. Hls role in the incident of Dec. 26, 1968 that sparked the arrest of the trio wa s also brought into focus by Chula through !he statement by the veteran trial lawyer that "nobody knew who gave that bag (containing drugs) lo Or. Leary just before the police officer searched the family car." Chula made it clear that Dr. Leary did not have the bag just before the arrest and he poinled out that il did nol come from Mrs. Lea ry. He made no reference to John Bush Leary as he pressed hi :. argument that there had never been any real basis for prosecution of his client. ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW CARP,ETl.NG? FOLLOW THIS CHECK LIST TO INS URE COMPLETE SATISFACTION 18 BRAND NAME DEPENDABILITY 0 DEALER INTEGRITY 0 V/IDEST SELECTION 0 COMPETITIVE PRICES 18 EXPERT INSTALLATION Bl FINANCING AVAILABLE THEN COME fo ALDENS-OWNED & OP!RATID BY l rd GENER ATION CARPETING IXPERllNCE- OVER 13 YEARS IN THE HARtoR AREA. WE FEATURE THESE FAMOUS - NATIONALLY ADVERTISED NAMES : * BEATTIE * CROWN * IMP ERIAL *SWEETWATER *SE RVEN 1; COL UMBUS *DAN RIVER *MONARCH * ROXBURY *WALTERS *BIGELOW *FIRTH * MONTICELLO *SEQUOYAH 'j .: Dcn't Mitt Our Drapery Dept, We ftatura • complete Hltctltft .r fabrict ind color1 to enhenc1 alMI complim1nt yeur car,.th11. -VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM Hundreds of Smell· to ·Room Si11 Remnants ALDEN'S 1663 PLACENTIA-COSTA MESA 646-4838 (OPWIOfll, lt1G, Or111111 Co.111 ~ul!Hiftl"' '°'"°'"'· NI -. 1101111.. n111nrl!IWll. ldl!Orlel ·'""" ... ... ..... 1111 ...... 11 llt•tlft '"'' "' ~ wjfflOvl ~Iii! -mlMIOn OI COCl"tr'lttll _,.,., ~ cltu lllHI' ... 1Mlill 11 Nl!"WllOrt flffcll •l'IO (iMll1 MIN, C.11,.,..,11, •uW,ICI01•1 bV u.rrler u.• manft'll'fl • ., 1'1'1111" iO ~•l'llrl ml!li.ry d•llMI.._ U,00 ll'IOlllllly, 'I've Always Appreci&ted tht F'acf, Mbrtha, Th at Even Though You Paint, You Naver Felt the Nted to go 'Artsy·Craftsy' , , .' CAR PETS 8 DRAPERIES 13 YIARJ l!RVIHG THI ORANOI COAST I ' ' l ' ' ' I ' ' I • I 1 I ' , ' J ' • ,f [ ' • • T d g ,, s h ' ·-' ' 0 • 3 ' h r g ;t e d ;t • •• " y I '-· FOR.THE RECORD Meetings Death Notires Hl!llllLING f dYlll I . H•rrllnto. 3IU32 B1n1el• Ave .• Le11un1 Nl1u.1. Atl 41; <Ml1 of dNll'I, M1rU. 13. Survived bv Two d1u1httn, Mrs. llodtrlck .Sml!h, lloc:klO!'d, 11111111111 Mrs. John Mtnt.i" lttUnt Nl-'1 .ot\, ""'" E. H«rllne. Auror1, 1111nol11 1nd 1!1111t 11r1ndchlld...,. Gr1vttldt 11,...k 1.1 wll1 bl' htld Friday, M1rcll 20, 2 PM, WllCldl1wn C-!trv. Plyrnollftl, WIS<0111l1'. Loc;1I t rrlnll-11 by 51\tlfff L19<1M B11c11 Morlu1rv. LUI HEll Dorothy Lulh11'. AOt n, Of 311 Po!n"llll , Co1'Ql'lt ci.l Mtr. Forrne<' re1kl1n1 of Vtn Nuy1, Otlt 61 clttlh, Merell It. S11rvfved b'f" SClft, Hitnrv, of l'tKO. W1llll ... I0111 Ihm dttJ9hT1r1, Mrw. Erneslln. !ltrrv, ~ ckl M1TJ Mr1. Ctrot Thornqu111, Tu1!ln1 Mrs. JHnM C1nient1r. Vtn Nwii brotrier, Wt!!ICI Alftxi 1llll1r1. .S•r•ll J1111ua •nd 91rthe Scotti lD trtlld- cl'!Udret>. Servlcn, Wednel<11y, 2 PM, Pr .. liWl ler MOf1uary Ch111e!, $1.'9 Vi n Nuy• 8 1vd., V1n NUYt. MOORE: F r111t Raymond M00<1. 432 Ho11Y $!., LalilU ... 811cll. 0.11 ol Ma!ll, M1rtll n. $11ryl\led b" wll1, Bl11!d',., of ttw "-°'''' abler. c1rt1er!,.,. M. ll:ldlttr. L1tu,.,. !Suell. Services, Wrdllfld1y, Marci! II, 1 PM. P1cllk View Cllaotl. lnl1rm1nt, P1c!llc View M1morl1I P1rll:. Dlr9d rd bY P•<lrlc View Mortu•rY. MORAIS Hert>1rt Morals. 11·8 C1!1e Afn on, LI· 1111n1 HUit. Aft "; 11111 ol death, Marti! ll. Survlv9d by wllt, Anne, u1un1 NI· •uel itltler, Mrt. Lll!lt Lurlt, New Yc111: rnc1t1er1 two trandc:lllldren, Mlc""I 1nod Jullr. P rlvlll NTVKiM w.,.e held $un- ll&Y, 2 PM, ~!tr L11ul\I 8N<l'I M¥· tvarY 0111111. lrrl errnent Mt. H.or1111 Cernettn1, NIW Y"'11. Cit'/'. SMfflr U · tUl'll 811cn Mortuary, OJrKtors. RICHAROSON Mlclliel Fredtrlct Rlc11.trd1ori, Att 2, o!cf?I' C1llfornl1 SI., Cct!I MtM. 01!1 of d11!ll, M1rcn U. Survived bY 11ere11lt, Mr. tnd Mr1. GUY Rkh1rdM1nl 1l1!1r, "nn LY""/ granctmotller, Mtt. DorolhY I Kn1mtum1 O~f1hcm1 City, Senilct • wm hi' Mid Wed,,.141-Y. 2 PM. Cllurcll cf JHUI Chrlll Uller 0.tY S.lntl. CM/fell Vltlttlion Wedne""'-Y• from 1 of 2 l"M. Bli""'° T"-'1t R. Sma!lcomb. oftlt!ant. Bolt llTO.dWI Y Morlul r'Y, OlrKlflrt. ST,t,Va Marlon IC. St1ul). 611 Lido P1r1( Dr!v., N...,.Pll'1 aeach. 0111 of dffl~, Mirth IJ, s urvived bv llu•b•lld• L1on1rd M, s1111b1 ....,, John I", Bovd: 1nc1 two t rtndchll· Gren. Pr!v111 1UMr1t 11rvlctl. WIG,,... 111v. n AM. P1clflc VI"* cnapel. F1m1l'f su1gn1t fl!GH wli.11111111 to mlkt """"'°"''' Cl)l'llrlbullon•. oltlH C011lrlbul1 ID HHI M..nor!tl HOlPl!tl. Ptdfl~ View MO!'lll- 1ry, Dlr•ttOTI. ARBUCKLE & SON \\le1tcllff Mortuary U7 E. 17th St .. Costa l\fesa &<MW • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dtl Mar OR S.HSG Costa l\1csa l\U f.%Uf • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Ill BroodWIJ, Cotta M ... LI W4l3 • DILDAY BR0111ERS lluntln(t-011 Valley l\fortuary 1'1911 Btacb Blvd. JluaUn&f.on BUch IU.1771 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortu1ry Chapel ssee Ptclnc View Drive Newport Btoch. Calllonta '4f.ml • PEEK F AMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '71ft Bolsa Ave. We1tmlamr m-31%5 • SHEFFER MORTUARY t..arun• lkfftl 4ff.IAS S.n Oeme'fitt 4ft..olet • SMITHS' MORTUARY U7 Mira· Sll> ' Jlunt1"Kton Bea<• l3M5lt T11tsday, Marth 17, 1970 DAILY PILot 9 'Rap Sessions' Narrow Generation-Gap Rar~_Stawp, On Display By TOM BARLEY ot ni. O.llY Plltt Stett 11Now take the thlrtie1, for eiample: My dad wu a police officer as I am and he brought borne $40 a week. \Ve -all lived cn beans the same a s everyone else in th e Depression but we all stuck together and we all pulled through together. "Unlike today, "'e found our solutions 1n the family. And I often wonder why you young people can1t find your anawers· in the aame places that we found ours." That comment from a veteran police sergeant pro- duced -for the cne and only lime iri an active discussion group -a stony silence. Group leader Randy Newton put his swnmation cf the remark in teenage language - "You've just turned us all off. "You had a cause," com· mented the Corona del Mar High School student. "Back in those days you had something to right for as cpposed to today's society in which many young pecple have no goals, no aim!: really worth 1truggling for, noUtlng but boredom which far frcm turning them to family life turns them to drugs. "Maybe you can break the drug users down that way," added Randy. "The on and ofr user is impelled by boredom -the chronic user is impelled by an unsatisfactory and unsympathetic -to him - fam ily life." Randy 's "Law Enforce- ment" workshop \\'as just one of nine discussion groups tak· ing up the Orange County Courthouse last weekend for a cn«tay discussion forum host- ed by the District Attorney's Youth Council. He is one cf the criginal six: studenls of high school level "'hc launched the program which now has the active cooperation cf Dis trict At- torney Cecil Hicks through his Deputy District A t t o r n e y Alicemarie H u b e r . The youngsters' first tentative in- quiries and cautious responses to appeals for adult-juvenile ccmmunication have blossom· ed out to a workshop in which more than 100 persons of both age groups alred their prob- lems and fears. Policemen, civic cfficlals, service club mem bers , juvenile court cfficlals, pro- bation cfficers and school of· ficials were among those who thrashed cut their views on today's thorny problems with high school youngsters. Subject matter included Jaw enforcement, family educa- tion, the role of religion, free clinics and centers, recreation, education of community, and teacher education. All subjects were keenly debated. Hammered home by the young people in many of those sessions was their sincere belief that too many adults are content to foist the blame fo r today 's mounti ng drug use and lawlessness by juveniles cn the juveniles and smugly gloss over their cwn share cf the bad bargain. Family life, said many youngsters, isn 't what It was because the factcrs that made it what it was no longer exist. And many of those fact.ors, tile y claimed, have been Phone Firm Expansion Wins Qka y destroyed by the parents centered around tbe very It brought from Sgt. Bab-are, we must admit, rare con· regional basis lo a 11 o \V ANAHEIM -West Coast Ulemselvts. special problems that face us cock the comment that "one fron tatlons. discussion of the debated stamp collef;tors will be abld They got a lot of sympathy today and U both sldes cL-i of the most encouraging things "There's a lot of taJki ng topics at a ccmmuniy level. to see the world's most from Sgt. Ncnn Babcock of recognlu that and d 0 I've seen Is the determination about a lot cf problems," he And s e v er a I ad u 1 t valuable airm•il stamp, the the Laguna Be.ch police something to produee goals of many i·oungslers -to the said, "but havtn't you noticed parUcipants urged expansion ' I I I 1 h' h h I $40,000 '' BI Ii ck Jfonduras" which will preclude drug use c on s tern a t Ion or some lhal it's usual y youngsters o t 1e program o 1g sc oo s department. beeause the youngsters don't policemen -to sludy criminal latking to youngsters and and colleges throughoul the ft1arch 20 to March 22 at the "Going 'back to the old days have time for them then we'll Jaw and the methods by Yt'hich adulls to adults? If all of us county wllh an increased Crand Hote l here. we hear so much about," he get somewhere.'' It ls applied to their oYt'n in-today take bac k to our pqers representation on the part of The . rare stamp. never commented. "our families And so it went for the best £ractions of thnt Inv•." the ideas that have been educators and ministers. before publicly ex h i b I t e d were light because everything part or sil hours-youngsters And ii brought from Randy debated here ifs a big step One teacher was present al outside of New York Cily, will debating with concerned Newton the ccmmenl that towards solution or our many Saturday's discussion. There be one of the hundreds c( was tight. Social and economic adults and officlals from many "programs of the kind we've problems." Yt'ere no minis ters despite the 11.1usuat stamp!, covers and standards were set by a phases (lf civic activity the joined in today can do nothing l\fany participants In the appeals of org_ani zers for their co\lecUons at the show. desperate situatlcn. Today we problems that beset both age but good since they bring both Youth Council program urged participation in the "Role or sponsored by the lnlernaUonal have JS-year-<1lds owning cars; 1 ._g_rou_p•_· _________ •_g_e_g_r_o_ups __ to_g_elll_er_in_w_h_at __ •_•P_•_n_si_on_o_r _th_•_•_•_ss_lo_n_o_n_a_R_•_l-'ig_io_n_"_d_isc_us_s_io_n-'g-ro_u_p_. -~Soc-le_l_y_o_r _sta_m_p_C_o_n_ec_t_or_•_:_ and being th beneficiaries of economic conditions which we in our time would have thooght were as likely as going to the moon. .ione cf cur biggest 11tumb- 1ing blocks in adult-juvenile relationships is hair," B11bcock said. "So many adults see long hair on a youngster and ii stops them right there -they just don't want to go any further." The cfficer recalled that 'jjust last week I had a mother whose first reacUon to the news that her son was in our custody and as high as a klte cn drugs and wine was th11t she was going to give him a butch haircut. "It 90unds fantastic," be said, 1'but it's true. He was high to the point that If he'd been a little higher he wouldn't be around now bu t that wasn't her ccncem. She blamed everything cn his Jong hair and she actually felt that removing it would remove his problem. "She wasn't prepared to look al hers," the officer add- ed. "We bad to pull her out of a bar to tell her about her son and she fr.ank.ly admitted that she's an alcoholic. !he w a s cnce a pillhead but now she's just an alcdlolic, she"ll proud· ly tell you ." · Drugs were discussed by the group wltb authority and from both sides cf the issue. Public concern Is high and mounting, noted Los Alamitos High School student Bob Flanders, but even today's wave of publicity isn't project· ing the awfuJ truth of drug use among juveniles -"many of us -more than you realize - are gone and can't be reached by anyone." &th Flanders and Mike Robb oC Corona del Mar High School agreed that drugs were finding their way in increaslng quantities to the elementary school levels. "They say that they have more hope of correcting it there but both adult! and youngsters should be spending more Ume cn examination cf the circumstances that pro- mote drug use at any level," Flanders said. "A lot of It is Entries Due For Library Awards IRVINE -The nomination deadline ror the filth annual Book and Author Awards, sponsored by the UCJ Friends of. the Libarry, has betn ei:- tended to March 30 In crde r to enccurage additional entries. Dr. Giles Brown, chairman of the event. said 21 entries have been m:eived to date. To be eligible, entries mutt have been published com- men:ially during 1969 and tht .. author must be a resident of Orange County. Nominations are judged on the basis of originality, eicellenct of presentat.ion and on the con· tribution to literature and Senor Menoca l lost his sh irt .... JUST WHAT TODAY'S STUDENT RADICALS HAVE IN MIND FOR YOU! Serafin G. Menocal was educated as an electri cal engineer · in Havana University. After graduation he went to work as a student engineer with the Electric Power Company In Cu ba and in the course of the years, rose to be chief executive of the company. He was president of the National Council of Boy Scouts of Cuba, Vice President of the National Electrical Engineers Ass ociation, Director of the Cuban Society of Engineers, President of the Lions Club of Camaguey and a member of the Rotary Club. Th is membership in both Lions and Rotary was a special honor paid him because of his private fund· raising campaigns for civic Improvements. Sr. Menocal bu ilt for himself a happy and successfJl l life, and took out Insurance to protect it. Here is what he has to say about that insurance : " In Cuba we had the same typ~s of insurance that you have in this country, underwritten by the very same companies. t had my newly bu ilt house insured aga inst all ri sks, and t lost it. I had life insurance so that in case anything happened to me, my wile coul d take care of our five children, and I lost that loo. I had contributed for many, many years lo th e company retirement fund, so that I could count on a reasonable income in my old age. I lost that also. "You see, I had every kind of insurance except o ne. I had no insurance agai ns t Com· mun ism." Do you have this kind of insurance? Do you know of any ins ura nce company which sells it? Isn 't this one risk against which only YOU can provide the necessary coverage? "' 111 Sr. Msnocars country, the revo/u- :lon which destroyed everything· he had built, was Jed by men who were. 1sdicsllzed a.s Students in Cuban uni· versltles. Could a similar situation de- velop Jn the United States? Are you insured against such a development? Are you doing anything to prevent it? ~---------------------------, For Info rm ation about how you can help in. a proven program to Immunize students agefnst revolullon, clfp this coupon and send to : CAMPUS STUDIES INSTITUTE P. 0. BOX 9355 SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA 92109 In tha N•wport l•ach •rM d lr•ct ttt•phona lnqulrl•1 to 67J..123S' SANTA ANA -Expansion knowledge. cf the Pacific Telephone Entry forms may be ob· building at Irvine Boulevard talned irom the Friends of t.he and Browning Streel in the Library in the ucl Library north Tustin area ba.s been ap-and inquiritll may be made by CITY & STATE, _________ _;:ip, ____ _ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~---------------------------~ proved by the Board of calling 133-5300 between the Supervisors. hours of t a.m. and noon, 'The decision was held up forl"~M;ond~a~y~t~brou~~gh~Frlc!~~·~Y=· ==========================~=======================::::= six: days so that homeowners in the area and represen- tatives cf the telephone com· pany could meet on plans and landscaping. At the session held with Ray Reed, county z on In I ad· minlstrator. the comp In y agreed to certain architectural changes in the bullding and the changing of a block wall Crom six feet to eigh t feet in height. Although the supervisors ap- proved the tentative plans the homeowners and the company are to get t.ogether to finallze them. Last week about 5 O homeowners appeared before the supervbors to protest the expan!lon . Don Burns Say.: "VOTE FOR RICHARO D. CROUL N.11. CITY COUNCIL" T'°" (lt•Y, tl'ltft, "67 Ktw•""' Of,. CIM Huntington Beach Office : Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Diego Freeway, in Huntington Beach . ....,,_ t111 a. Hin, Let ....-.. • w.1ist --WUllllll MICll: -WlllHt9 tlwtl. •-.int ......... _ .............. 1. ·- ,........., Wit Yentlll'I IML • ..,...,, llMTA MiOlltCA: 711 wt"""" ........ -.or .. ...-tOll & '"'"" ...... , --.............. 09'.•"1~1 IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, where your account is SAFE • CONYINllllT9 AYAllJlBLE . ASK ABOUT ntE INSIDERS CLUB - A NEW WAY TO SAVE MONEY-A ~ l!.ALAHCE IN YOUR A0C0UHT MAKE08 YOU ELJO!ll.E. ,MtO!tMlA ctn'! Mii VM """'llvd. • IU·l IT1 LOfM IMCM: ~&Loewt•otR·f .. 1 l.AllfAMA LOM ll.llYtCI AllWCT1 1DH9.. _...a• (1'14) 141<Q1 HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES S.00%-a.13%-.No-. 5.25%-S.39% l!lrw Monlh Certrn-: No Mini'"""'" 5.75"'5.92% o ... v11reertrncato:t1,110D MlnhMrm. 6.00%-8.18% Two-YearCertllloalo;'5,llODMln!rnvrn. , ,_ I I I /i • J 0 DAIL V PllOT r Jf 1 ,., ,,. '" ' LEGAL NOTICE Yo11r 1'fo1tey's Wortli tlOT1Ca 011' •Uut 1'l;A,,.$1<Ea Cl..:1 •ltl-4101 UCCI •«••• »t/JI - It's Lots Cheape1· OVER THE COUNTER NOl!tt It !'It eb\I t1V'I\ '9 1h9 CrM 10!'• ol DONMA LAllll!IN 1' 1ntl•fOI' wl'i01 b<it,l ... u "111,.H II 111 A,flll II l:N"~ ·~""' c-'• o1 0t•11tt s11 t ' I Ct! kl"lll "'91 1 bulk tr1111ltr II •boll be "'* "' OOLOl.E' WOOOS •~t! 1;,t.MOMJr. WOOO$ T•1l't'1'•tt1 """' • IMIS!'lt" ~ ... ,, !1 161<1 WI\ !!It •~""u' Cotlt MtM tu:N (Oll"IV OI Ot1"11• Sitt. o1 Ctlllorn 1 ,.,,. .,_, ... ~ ,,,,,,,,,.. !1 *~'"' 11 l'H Alth-ltlbol 1111"'11 Co1mtv ol 0<111M $l1lt o1 C1tllo!'l'lt $tkl or,,...rtv 1, llflt• MCI 111 o~~· ti •• AU 11«.ll. In I felt t •.Iii ti 141,1 t"'fnl ~net QOl;>d w of ti.. tniomlnp Of "~·~"' ffll bu"1l'l'IH1 ,_,, •• ll.\l ISLE PQOOLE "011f tl\CI !(let t!I t lll Alttf $1rMf a.~ 11i...O COUftlV ol C>'lllft,, Slflt OI (11! .... 111.I Tht b<Jlll; lrll'\"'1' W II bf C!!lnlU"'"'""" "" Of ill tf lll~ '6111 dt'f' ri/ Ml Cll 1'111 • Ntw..0'1 Nt o""I l!l•nk 1501 Wt•IC I D Vt ~twPO t l'e~d1 t2WO County ot O .,,.., Sr.It of Ct tor,.11 kl !tr •• ~-11 10 l~t 1r1r\fl ,..., ~! busl•••·n '""'n • ..,. •ea '""' U<!!'d "" 'Tr•tlll• or Nlr ..,.. 111 ft ••If• l•1t ,,., •r• HO<'\f 0•1'4 M• cl\ 11 t/O OolnrK I' <MKI• RA""°"I \I oodJ "hlMlf tfl l'ul> "td fl '""" Co•1t 0• • " .. Ml cl\ 11 011 •IJ 10 LEGAL ~OTJCE I F.G \I ~OTJCF. I EGA! !\OTICF. ------;,. l•S11_------ CEl!T ft r•T" t>F R ~ H!;SS ft!CTIT OUS NIIMI! 'T.,.. und• \ '"""' dnt'! ce 1 !• I\• • con du.: ·~ 1 bJ •lnrn •' ?••t R~rnlo oil ~ ••I Ce 1 M .. I C• fr "o un1' hr t c "'''" fl "' """'" nl JTUD 0 5 PRO-DUCTS ... ~ t"• I~ '1 I rn • ccm~•M T>f fl'tf' f<l l(Jwl .. G Pf' "'" Wl! ... t nf~ 1n lu I 1nd o ..c:• OI fl ~fn(f 11 •> loo;:iob•,. Jo~ 'f w 61\ .ll p E "·-~• e•-c~ r on a Dt fd •I• <~ 16 t~ lfl'IW' I .II Jc st~ CoH~n O• .. o ,.,.. ... v l"ln ~~r I! 6 191" I» """•I ~• V Pu~ ( n '"'" lo •& ~ ~ ~ f r>e.,,,,.t t• ,,._ o•a f'<! ~cb " Jn ~"""" le mr bo "' "" on wl>O"• "~"' • t ~•< h•n n -"' ~ n 1!'1 "'" 1nd 1c• ow r!!~~d to• .... l•d ~. .,,. IOFFIC 1.t S(Atl •• I{ "'·~ .., Hr ~rv P 1>r.r ·~ o•n I I' n<;.o~ Oft" n o •n•f Ca~~~ ~ C.C'"'"''"E~~U N~Yf"'W ?I 1•71 t> bl ~~II D ~"0~ C~ !)~! t 1. ~"~ 1 a ;i •n~ 1-~ T "10 LEGAT NOTICE MOT C.1" OF D SSOtUTIOH OF l'AllTHERS!i I' " •• , 10 , NASO L11tlngs far Monday, March 16 1970 To Use Telephone rt-.M11.!lv1 Wl1t,..•1ltl' •1i11t•l1•111 '1 IJJ'f~l!llflt f ' • m l'fm NASO Jrkt1 ..... lllclUGt nllll IN" l!ltrll\¥ fMFl,.•n •• ttfllmlMltR H(W YOllK !"')I' H"t -Tilt tojio...JM bill ~I~:~ •'Id 1d.l'CI -' .. E C Sn By SYL l1A PORTEil Are )ou aware that s1mplv by d1ahng )OU can no1v telrphonr from New York to 1 os Angeles after 5 pm for onlv 8:i rents \is $1 JO if you use the operator to put tne can through" Or that !his s.ime (';311 \\Ill <:osl you a mere 35 cents -if you ca!l a Her 1 t pm dial the number and talk only one minute' Do you knol'O that the cost of d1ahng a sta tion to-station ca!\ anywhere 111 the continental U S bet1\een the business hoursol8am ~nd5pm has dropped to onlv $1 35 for a three minute talk \S ~170 1f )Oil use the operJ\or" A !\IONTll ago on f cb I a ne1v set of out-of state phone rates \lent into effect ol \\ h1ch these are ex amples (All figures are. before taxes ) The rates nre dram atic enough by themseh es but what underlines them e\:CO more 1s the fact that Utese cuts are so obviously going counter to our soaring eosl of living And February s $87 m1lhon rate cut came on top of a January reducUon of $150 m1lhan and will be followed by another $26 million cut 1n overseas telephone rates Mar JI You \\On t find details on the new rates 1n your phone bQok so here are your key rcduc lions -The maximum charge for an} thret nunute daytime call )OU dial any\\here in the c:in tinental US from 8 am to 5 pm 1s as J \.\rote abo'e $1 35 and 1he maximum afte1 5 p n1 t~ 85 cents Bel\\een N ~1v York and Chicago Inc after a ra!e 1s 65 cents bel11ecn f\c\v York and r..1i;im1 n cents bel\1ccn Nc1v '01 k and \\ a"h1ng1on ;iJ (L'OIS -The maximum ch:irge for ;\fl\' three 1n1nute dayhn1c can bct11cen 8 am and 11 pm on Nei.porl i\lan Cet. Pr 011101 ion Dai 1d Kelly of i'1ewport Beach hs been pron1oted to ass1stanl 'ice president 111 charge of the real estate Joan dejl3rtmrnt of Union Banks Orange County off1ce rn Santa Ana 1,env currenllv ser1e, on the board of duectors of the Building Industry Assoc1al1on a id 1s a member of its mo1 !gage and finance com m1ttee He is also ach\e 1n the Southern Cahforn1a l\lortgage Bankers Assoc1al1Qn Salu1da~s anrl Rand 5 on Suo days Is 70 cents -A nelY rate of 35 tents ha ~ been set for d1al 1t )Ourself (lne n11nutc ca 11 s nn\ \vhere on thE" conl1nen1 Dclv.een 11 p 111 and B a in \::'-IJ.t11'~""11'tuoctir.l)1 fil.a' g11°"' r,tcut llfll te s'ip ...cit".~lu111~ 1ru.~t' :P ~I C on1 l>u• • t •P. nt ~ 111 tUft I !Vt lntt ftft I • Otl ff P<l(HI 1 ol En will om 11 wltl£~ !f>1st Ion C<l'P uc11r11 '\ co.ikl 111.' O. ftlvr ffft Cllr Et t T« "''~ 11Y;t0~ or E1 I n 10 d U1 0 !nr1 Fl! Ct<:O Otl • mt ktll FID T~k (~1~11 ••CIYlh Fo ! d T -Beg1nn1ng Mar 31 a 0\11 !~t flf P•ICtl F1 ~~ 25 Oc no tKlu<lt FtOH M) 1111! ml•~uP f Ntlo• percent reduct.Ion IS slated Jn :;:· .. ~" or torn t:lG'°RE the cost of overseas calls -MA E~1 1 • 1~ ,F111.1, '"' AAI Corp ' 7 II ft>U "Ith !he cost of slahon..lo sta AFtfr s 1 n Yi ~11~ WF" lion calls between the US and :./M ~;c 1~~• i~ • Foe11"l-• l E l d Acm1 El ' 9,.. F0<ir.1 OJ mos urepea n coun ries ue Aunt v• JS'~~" Form!g d I I• I "7' F All HC1U1 ni 211'1 Fou G "' to r-0p rom 11 0 'ii" .i or 41• 1nc11.1t , , , Foiac~ II b lh US d 'I brn F !l,,. l• ~ Fo"'"1 <:a s et\.\een e an "titt i; 1 , ·~ Fovr St• Ireland and the Un 1 t e d ! ~o 1t..., 11 ~ 1,t~ ~~~ n C Kini;ldorn the slat1-0n rate drop :w,: ~:~ ! , ;.., F~,;.•,w 1l 1s slated to be from $7 SO to .1."1"" E-' , 10 ·~""•'· ~ "-"" Gto l' ' 1~-$5 40 and on evenings and Ame<k ~ ' ••41s",' Sunda)s from $570 to only i'"e11r~~ 15~ 1~8,K1~,~lc Am Ei<P n» n•• •1 $~ 0~ Am F11 • Jh 11 f"ll • "Gtt !1 » ~nen Am tni.d 11 1t •"'I AND THERE are many A Mt0Jc11 11 11v. 1 .. ,,,, w A St GC1t1 " 5\• lab 11b other specific reductions in •sr i "' ~ 1 gold C.•c Sa!urday Sunday rates ni ght ~11•' ~ ~01" Vi~ c;grwyL~ II Ar>ken ( j'• 9111 C;,aflfl Cn rates person to.-pt rson ca s A cs Ind ,,, 2••a~ S<1 etc elc. :~~ ~ lt1\ lG\} i~~r re !J'he odds arc these new Ark """" 11 R" "'""' " ,,,,.,_ ft I 4 FWlft ft allunng out of stale rates will i.~2•101 ~f' ~li-t ~~ 111,,~ft lead to a big expansion In your i~::.O~ f\ ::,~ H~,,:~ j phone calls -so how do you 1.1,., .111 1, ·~Ha 1n11 1 B~kt 7' } Ii.. H1....,11 n not only hold down buJ. also £111 P11"' , ,,~ HMrt<I F I h •--bUI llilll•I• c !1' t ""111 Ca s as your p11V11e s at a a~rw.do 1 lo 1 u , MlcloC Int f ., IU1nP '·•~Hhvn lime o 1ncreas1ng usage Bau"' 1 .., J) 1 Heim El' 111 \vl lh hi f I Bay~., 1 1 13 Haovtr ien e W o e amt y Bnc~m :u "1 Ho~rd L-1 makes a lall lo a distant 1:1~ \~ t~ i:t ~~ p~1 relative or fnend especially B~k "• 11 1 '3 ~ Hu• Ges ~ Bfll LMI 4 #f I, H-1r1t P one hv1ng O\ erse3'3 avoid the 1111 up,. v1 , ., ' Hv11t C:• l [tll $ori J2 ;IS '"fY•tl 1111 \\aStefu! cosily t 1 me con Mc.hr 6 ti~ 1n<1 Ga• I ack HI 11 , 3' ~ Ind NU( su1n1ns and 1rntatlng repel! lh>siue E1 1 s'IO '""' •c 6011 e1 10 l)l nt 1 d llon of H'J\V arc }OU" Im llaotT>t c n•, 21 • nt Cont H , 1-AH 7~ 11'111 lnct !iv1 fine and ow are you" Im os C111 IJll Ult lntrm tn f ' 'U hf 1 I"" Sy1 " 52 1n• 11ws11 1ne oo rge eac am1 y ~w' G .. .,. 61 " 1n1 Mui" b l d l Brtu Set JO.ii 21\) Int H' r men1 er ins ea o organize B wn ,.., 1 vt 12 I"' f'' his own 1nd1v1dual message :v~i~Y Be 'ill 'f"' .~: V • .: before yo" pla""' the call Bu•n~ 5 2C 21 rn1e111 ""'-( C le11 I I ~ OlllC> 12) Take advantage of the Ct w s. u ~ 1n. • smu11 (t'T\to t9 l 111 l JKobJ F alter 11 p m 35 cents rate for C•f'Oll M 1. n J1<111 • c C.onnM 8 IO n J11m Wit short messages 1l1e three c1nr10 '. 6 Jtm~, " Cap ~ow 17 U\, .r~mJbV lv.o <1nd one hour time d1f c.~ "'A 5'1.o 5. J11 ~ F~ k C10Tct• 1 ,,.. 1C11•t $ ferences can \1or in vour C• , Bl , 5 1Ca1.s DI I S I I I I C• GD u ,1p.1(11v1r a\Of 1m1 ar v ry to pace c~•c 11G 11 , u, 1Ca • G" I d C•n f~ •I .. 1(1.,,,. as many persona a n ce~ vps " :i!r K•• r b 1<:1ness c<i!ls as possible be '~:·1 ~A ~: t!: :: :..S fore 8 a 1n or on v.eekends ~~~ ~;;,; 1s • 'j" ~~.1 "£b ~l) If 1ou are a bus1ncssmnn C"•• u JJ\, u 1Cev, c~. Ch B•&I 6 • es IC,•11 PC 111th access to a d al a c" Jt s •• 11 icl"' 1n (" st llf lOG IDS IC "91 El tra11htn1ss1on telephone nookup c 11.ir ' 6. rc1 -co Cl 1 UA 1S 2~~1(n90 Vo 111 ) our office you II find the c r ~ u B is 1sl<. LMC o~ "-(IV llY ISi 16 l~n(I n one minute l'i 1 enls late rate c, ~ M1 u ,, L•n" llrs lf h C•1on 11 Jlolin•WO 1dea or s or! spurt messages c "' M• 11\~ 17 L•r1.,,, t::i distant points ~i;;cn, .. o J ' ,t'• t:. ""RC: !4) Also as a businessman ~°'~~ g0 7~¥i n1h t:ri"'Co';.0 lllake a few JlO!es in advan ce s:f•m E" t •I Le u G ~~ .., F 1' :oc L~vn Tn on things ) ou \\ Clnl to say on a c.~~1s ' ,U ~ ~ t'~ • £~F long distance call -so the COM l'.!r •• il• Loblaw Com Int l•t ?'lo loll Cay con1ersat1on and cost do not torn G•1 11 11>.; LOIJ E: •n c,,... T•I 1l '' ~ L~ncn c drag out at the end 1°"" H 1n t, 10 1 M~ G£• um Psy 1• "~M'I '' <lmDA l&il,,Mall 151 DOUB LE CHECK your ~mo cm Jl) Jl M•m ,i,~ I CmP n11 I•' "'~nn M phone bills f-Or posstb e errors Cm11 Ttt. 5 , y, M""" c h h Camu t>JfMMI, and for e\ 1dence t at ot ers con Roe~ JJ JS ...,, "' Gr are chargmg calls lo your l c~ 5'1/11 ~ ' ~ t ~.v~ 0"'0 n 11nber If )OU hnd such g;"'•" L ,f ,, • ~~~1 G d ' l I 'h orp S 'H 14 Me.le .. r11encC' rP por 1 o e ru..,Yr 1 ,n M"""'~ lelcpnone bu siness off 1 c e E~~. 0 ,.,, ~ 1! • :~'°:ld"c. BEFORE ) o" pay '-'Oltr bill c ''' Fo ! • 5, Md t~ J Ct1>'5 Co• '-/ M~GT anrl ask the phone company 5 c uicn P •~• t M• • G~ CJD <I C 1• ! Ml• VIG ;:1ss1stance O•nrv M I? 1 , Mo J>scn 1111 01• • IOI Mod St !6J Call station to-statHm if ••• n P •, 6 , 11'*"'"• q .,, I Fd 6 6 MOl!m P-ih£ odd" are fai rly good thal o •• M 1• 1<1 "'°". ,, h O•<or n i , ' , Moor• s the p{'rson you \.\ant to reac D•ltol AP ,~, ,, Mrv1 r " II be lh E f Deu~ (~ 1• .50 Moel\ 111 ere ven 1 you miss 8" C•nT , 1., Met c 111> now and then )Ou 11 probably oi~ f.., H 13~ ~~·11•rE ~ .. , r o"r person to-person 0.1¥1v E ' 10 Mvrr LE -"" 011m C.t :o!r 2 HCC Le• Phoning o"" 1,,, 5 . s>• N• ••'J c DI~ CM I o •>o H•I 6 l'ld 1 ) Finally DIAL as many gg-:1~1'~ 'sh 1~ ~C.:i: c~ calls as you can to achieve per Dow J0<> Ao! 1 •1 ~ Hai Ew• Ocvt OB n 23 N~ Gf.O call sa\ 1ngs of as much as 25-o ew NL J, '~ H•t L 1> h b 011..iinOl19oll•Mrd 3() percent Wl\h l e Jggest Ourfr0<> II /J.. Ht! Pe I h El Paint 10 ~ '1 Hat 5f(P ~avrngs on cal s 01er t c l':191c wt 1J ,, Htt 51>ow 1 l E11I !ill 11. I H~ SJ/\o MUTUAL FUNDS on.iiest f 1~tances Eccn L•I> ,. '30) HE" GE IC•PY lhl 1'10 l'[tlll ""''Pr'" l•c, ~dll~a~~l lj. 1~ ~J<h:: ~ I EG \ t 1\0TJCE 'U• .. CEil? F C.ATf OF 'al.IS "IESS FICT!TIOIJS N•ME T~ ~nd• ~.,.do • l•I' en l'u n•t tun••• 11SV\'ll"!"" '"""U D>• /•f (•en• nd• 1 I IC cul ~Im~ 0 A P !>![ Pl.115 T CS end ~• ~'1 .., I •~~~fa 'l' t~r te'""9 po...,n ~~a me lu •"" P•<• o ~"'•c• 1 • IOlloW> W•ld>-m• Blrlou1 1 I W•~,.. n •r ,t,ve~..-co ~ ~· • C• o "• •l~ll W•C•n• I!•~ S e o Cl fo n• Or~n• ('rt On ~•c~5 •1• boQ•""• • O•• &1Pubc """° 0 •llS•• D• ...., •• ~'""' "" WofO•,..~ 9 •IO<: I "r"'~ ~ ,.,. lo DI 1~, "" ...,... "'"~ • ""..,.., i11tttr ~ •d .., ~· "' ~. ~' ""''"t ""° ~cknoW~otd h• ••tcu Id •~• 1om !OFF C Al 5C •l o. rv P 1o1 1910 .q lfl D1~n 1 A J~ " No'"' t>1t1 t C.1 l'r"'"' 0t t• O•o~''"' "" LEGAT, NOTlCE / v C .,,.,, \I Ii"' C ~ NOT CE 01' IULll( TllAMll'Ert ~•b11••UIO IS•c1 1 t1101uc.c1 "11b ,ned 0 1nt• (.t;111 D~ IY I' E~CllOW H1 II 11'4 l\\1U! c 17 '4 ,, 19111 •11c No • ·~••vfnt t~o(•d!c~ ---------------1rt ~01'>£~ 8 JOLI Y 1no ~lOllf:N(( I 'EGA! ~1011rE JI"' L v t •• • ~ "'~" • b n•n •d ..., n. " •••• " l'OO ., • ., &.~ .,.,......_ N-t -------::-:::::------IP•tc~ ,.,. r • c o •119f SI• e el ",...,, C•l f<l n 1 1•vt ~bu • I •"'1'"' ls 1boll' lo <Elllll'ICATE OF IUSIHESI bo ..,•d• o !!OW.I.PO GllOSVEND• •lld l'ICTITIOUI NAM£ MIDY GDOSVEHOI! t 1111 •ren wh09-' T~· 11nd•" ·~"' 00... c• ' •• flt I (~" bu "'I' •OO UI I )11! G brall1 ..... II. t111dll'9 I ..... , """ I 7111 I! ll ~ S Ce• 1 o.ltU (OYnlv 171 Drift!!~ Sf11o DI ,.,,...,_, lffCll C.tNll.lfftle \Incl! \h I I (11IMn1 1l1iw1 ,,.,., ... ~ el DALES NAI.. l~r. 0Ptf"I¥ "M' •~1l•tt'd " loc•"'d Tl!NANCE SEllVICE tfltf 11\tl •tld 1 n\ 1 1'00 ~''' !11¥ ,i,_..nu1 Ht""11ofl lrtd! k c-N !71 ~ !ctl0w1flt 'i'WI' Cwnty ot Oran .. '" t of C. lie 1111 w!lott ftl<nfl lfl lull lfllf llMt of ffl ~f \Cf Sfld ~ OPPtl't !J 0•1~· b"IJ l!'I ftft.,.I t• 15 frollows 41 A 1 ock I~ I ~d• 1!•111 ~' ..,ulpm•"' "'""' D l'rbl>le 2110 E 11111 ~i ... """' """ "'111 ol lhl.I a .. , •nll W)f'I!. N.-.._, ht<ll ,, ... ," tout ... u •-n .. J•'"' TH Dtlecl Mfl'(lo ' ltN llocrn •I'd "'<• •ll ,, 700 ta•• l•Y a.trlt\ D f'rllbll """""' N,._.., "'°at" c ... ~,., ol I 1+. ot tfJ.lftwttll 0•1 .... Cllll!ltt °''""'" S ~·•(II (o Ito 111 Ol'I Ml•dl 6, ltlll tlfto~ !"'If, t Ho• Y l n, ti<.~ I ""• t lo> I 'Of tCllW..,,,,11 <I l'yto' t 111 1n11 for 111d Sftlf llPf'IOn• • fl". c • • I~• 77111 ~·~ "' M•'th U~ .ti •l!ll>tll"9 (~•It.I D '' 1bl1 knawn lo"'' I•• [ e ~"" Cc n< 11t) M• be •tvd lo Oil tfll ~ W.i'l(IM ..(l.rnt ft •llOtU I> (o\ ~ "'"II (OU"I" lltf 0 lflf .. 5 I t ol r.e 10 1!1t "" lftl" lflfl ~tftl f1ld CAI''"• ad;llC'f'IMt;ell ~ "''°"" ""~ kl ,, ., ~-" ~ '"" ,, ... ,It"' • ! l~FICl.\I. S.CALI ...,,1,.,0 ".-nn """ •fftf1.'" 1n•d ho """' M C.-111 •~• ''tft Of lftf tnr~ """' llll II.I.II r«lllT1 """1Jc.C1!!fmllt ''' t1ont l'rtrw:f•1f om.c. !11 Dt •G l'r~lr1 tl n 11!'0 °"'"" ~tt e11w•rf Gr111v-M'JI (Mmlu"" 1!111lrn ""•,.... G•q1v-lff.....,. 14 1m lr1Mtu"' l'yt !,,.... 0r•ft91t COMI DI l't "1'-' l'uMI.,_ Ctlfllt Cc.ut CU Y l'll!!!t _,.••di 10. tt t4. .U "7t '11 10 M1rdl 17 1'1't "•••• • Wersbow REAL ESTATE AUCTION PRIME LAND1BLDGS 22,000 sq ft LAND 20,000 sq. ft. BLDGS. (1'1111112 Slery) INCL 6375 sq ft LOT ZONED FOR UGH! MFG tUDdt V1tllll(I) lllllHnaton Belch. C.111 .. •tt C/4 THE snl 201 FRANKFORT ST WI. Ca '""'ltlt & N.._ .... HUNTINGTON BEACH, C•llrortwlll WED., MARCH 25 ttlt:NA• Edtlle19N•i A El N e ' I Hf I 8 A.TIENTION TO LITTLE COURTESIES SUCH AS AN ,t,NSWIRED ,HONE IUILDS IUSINESS 835. 7777 r'9t A.••-11 SI 000 two , .. , '"" ,ow '""'"""'"' Thrfft Cerlltk_,.., wi-ltel4 t. 1119'1,tty 11h "ro ,.14 H PaQ.e.ok Atce1111IJ 1f eny ho"rH l111lflttll.,.ty •• 4t "''"' '""'" by .... 20th ""' ,,._ tit• , ,, I Complete-New Yorti Stock List .... ... .. flla.J t1i111 ~°"'(Ill ilffu•J,et Syt1tbols • 'tutsday, Match 17 1970 I Tues day's Closing Prices-Complete Ne \¥ Yo1·k Stocli Exchange List • .... -... ------------·----t•ln -H .. \ (11111 ) Hll~ LfW (M1f t ng Stuck Leade rs I llllilfOlt' II.Wiit' IYI IMlt I Hlfll l.ltW (IHt (~I 1! ts 1v1 , • ., I! •• -h.O 31\o :u lo -\~ -5-•n II" ll~ u • •, : 1'1' 1• 1f•1 , ... ,ti~··1 1 'H u~ t1'~ ~.: •• :'._, ~ I•~ i~ ! }2~ i! Jn 1'~ J··~ < ; I'' fi11 -lo 10 il~~·1 ,,. ,f 1 ,1 \-,.,,., ;;: u. ' !tr• lt i.. ,,~ ......... 111 J•o ~ !4 • • .... ,~•i t-"' 77371"'71'' ••!1>1l•1~­.. ,, .. ' . ?O • • 13 1• + 7l lt o Tt; 11 1 1 11• l '> 1t j l m-. t?VJ no ~, 11 1r · 1J . 1~. 'l1 1 ~JnM. ,,\\~oil\'J U .. ti 7 Jll\oU Ul -1 ,. 11 .. llvt 11\o .I-... ~ ....... IS 1'\ re lo ~. ~~ i':\"O t::. -; ~ 17 ,,... ' •• , '' ", 40\lo 4t ~) \ + ... 6'\0 U .. +11 oil . 111,~~·+. , ,, 20~. ,~ ... -~. 10 •• ,, ''"" ,, t i ?l'k 11 t-.-I Sto cks End Mixed Af te1· Setback s NEW \ORK (UPI) -Stocks fin ished mix ed Tuesday after four co nsccut1ve setbacks Turn ovc1 remai ned light \Vall Slreet analysts regarded the improv ed tone as r artly a technical correction and partly the resul t o the opt1m1st1c statements from \Vash1ng ton on the state of the economy rhe UPI market1Y1de indicator showed a gain or 0 09-percent""" 1 567 issues on the tape or these 667 ad\ a need and 598 dec lined The Do1v Jones 1ndustnal averaJ?:e of 30 selected blue clups \\as up 2 Si at 767 42 near the bell llll •t .,,. .c • -•• A tu rnov er of around nine m1Jhoa shares IJJ )lll-lo \VBS ' • 111• 1r • -• sh crh tl) ah ead of Monday s 1111 .,,. '° 1• I 19'\ • -... t>'I T1lco N 1 o t: 2? ~ T11,,-"" 1• •11, •J • ~ -Analvsts said sotne demand stemmed fro m ~!~ ~:.,.;• ! 31, 31~ •. 1 ... ,, Pres1denl Nixon s dec1s1on to relea se more than a t,aP111nco "" J ,~~ i~~f ~~-;a: ti1Jhon dollars 1n federal fund s to fielp revive th e r~~ 1{~ 1 u d looH +.< I t t d t TKtronl• l 11 ~ 11.,. 11 .. a1 ing cons rue ion 1n us ry +:!:~ ,J'! ,J '~ ~ 3~ Ji':_ Paul \V r.1cCracken chairman of the Pres1 r, ..... ,.,, '1 •1'11 ~ •!O l. d I C ( ""·In .l~ 30 1 \• n'4 iv. + en s ouncil o Econorruc Advi sors said current i=" .hl'Jo 11 79 1'h ,,.~ -economic statistics do not add up to \Vhat many j•:o•co 110 O 'l I m. 111.1 -t•1Tr11 t 40 2~ l 17., ~l .... ~J,-; • economists would ca\J o:1: recession He noted that f!: 1 1"1111,:) 10 :u"" lM. l4 • ... the basic economy i.s still strong r,. 11 .., 11 JI'-30 lit 'o _.. !fKh Ind l b •• 50"' ~'~ ""' ... "" House Repubh can leader Gerald R Ford added •••11"'' 10 ,1... ll.._ ,ll;o T I.. TPJIO tl1 0\ 1 u;. 1 "~ u • that the problem of 1nnat1on has been defeated 1•" u 11 1 10 , :JO » 30 Tp~lron t(I 11 u ~ 11 ' -., and the dan"er of any recess ion so !ar as th e !uture Te•''" "" 111 51 ,-'• 11 ~ 1•~-1 c;, T~ll n 11 1 41) 17 il, ~ l~ .!.1~ 1s concerned 1s ni l t~~\'~,'°~• 11 1 1ru,• 1r~· ,~ = ~ Prices \1 ere n11xed on the American Stock Ex t~"'r~'S'r ':': o 1 •• l • ~. ' change 1n light turno 1 er + ... ~~., 1.r~ 2i ;•: ~l\ i' 1 '1 T mH Mr '-o 1• 4' •l o 4 ti) T mliPB 1'0 11 l~ l•" J o ::'li"'•C::J;J;i..::«i>llE=mr:il':D':;,,,,Sg!OlllOIEZ> .... "1"1:>• .. Z I TISI! 111 111 •O It t ·~ 4I ~ _ Todd•~• 1 ?O u jl i 1•, l 0 "' To P<lEd 1 n • I'!\ J? to:.+ , r:; rv H111 I 11 s 1 1 SI 1 -IS0111>bll ~ IO ., u . 11~. + ~ +~"~11 ca ~ 1\1 !? • 111 vii lloo 111 31 l6' J1 0 +1o s1 eYM! 1 40 l JS lSt !~-l ftn•U" 11 ' l lJto + ~ p a11Yt 44 )0 e • I ~ ·~ ... ~ ST I I ncl l JO " l ~ 5oO , -~~ ,. ft"' w "', 1l 1l~ le : • 1~ + " l:y,n~hw ~. J id ) l~ *! t ~ i ~~ .. a,,~111 ~ ·~~ ll ' ll • ~\ ~ -"' +·~~.,:; -.,1 00\V JONES Al'ER IC.ES SC Co1nplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange Li st N.Y . 1l'i ntte1·s NPl't YORI-! !Al" -T~ IP 111"0/lnl 11! ' E•~JnG! "'llt•d"H of .-ol\lm• Ntt end 11t:-unlt11r (ft•t1tn Pr<ce •nd IOdl Y' l•H p u. "" Lt" I ,. '" "' " "" ~ .. ' fl, ~-• '" ' '" " ' "' '" " . " . • .. •• " ~ " \, H •• . " . ' "' i ~ " •I l l! I ' " iOiS ~ ' JJ , ••• II 11 " '! • I • lo ~ ' 71 ~: I l 1 JO o l• 7• l ll • '" JI , .. , '•' " '" ' ' ' ~ r, " •II I o :; !! :ii• 17 ' ~' n " . ~ ~ " ~ 1 ', • rs ~.: ... " l . ~' !' • I~~ ·~~: '" " •• H.,, " ' " n·~ ' ,,. ii ' '" • " '" • r. l and Losers ... -,,, Olt -I Oii -1· '" -1 ... Olf -. ,. -I Oii J'-"'&i! " -• 0,. ' '" '1! -l 011 -. "' 'I;_, &Ii 'l ', _, ~ \:. =: ' '.; 104~-J, !.-~s,. ,1 · =1: 8J n .=~811 I 1 t1 Oii ' ' " • ,., ~ . t o I' .. . • 1) 17 • • • ',!•f ,1~ u' ••. • • • • ~ : f :2 0:>9 o '9l' 30o1G\o J n ' n 101 ,, • 11 • • l >'o . ' ' 1 10 I 10'• ' ' ' ,, • l • '~ \~' 1~! ~ 11 1e!i l '~.7i 6 11 II•• 11 J u • 1 •• ' 1 lh ~ I I \. ~'• . ' . l J• • J> • l? 310. )0 l • 1 1 1 u " 4 • l l'o i • • l''- 1 • ' ' lJ l 7 • • • • &~1,~·~. " ' 76 • h ' ' • 1 10 • I I ' 14 J JO 31/ I~ ~' , .. 1~ ~~.: ~1 \ .. 'l • • " • s • 71 ?1 70 • !JI SI 4'/>o ' ' . ,~ 10!•. '; •• ' ti "" 11 l lJ oll•t 11 0 • 16 • J! 31 ~ I • 1\o J t 11 • 15 ~ 4l4 '' J6>,j, 'l" 15 1 I ' ,,. ,,, ' . ' 1 • 'j, 10 ... ir-.. s. ' •• t 1' .... I ' • " ~ 11 ; lj ~ t· 'th J t : t • ' ' ' ! ,, l• .. j "• JS t • U l lD'lo 10 o 0 ' • ,, 10 I I I ; i z ~\• ~ 17\o 11 1 "" "'-• n ' n '~ ,: 1~ JI 3'1\ :JI ~ 1 7 ' 1 • 10 Jl 7i' I 76'4 76 • • JJ • ll~ ll,SO JS JJ IJ It l 1"'6 "' 1,. ' $~. 1 '''° in. n .,,. "" " ',!\"' ,1 1 11 • U ll I l l I I I I ll U 'o II• I! 11 0'1 n~ 1i ; •i, l ' ~ ,,, ,. 1 0 ~ 10 . ' . 76 '" I 'I' II 111 '2 ,, ' • t loo l 11\o . "" 11fl ll ' " " . 1J II 1l 'l~ " " " • " " " .~ :? • " '" • .. ''1 '· ~· .. 'l II • DAILY PILOT l l lllH "" lftfl I Mltft Lew C:lftt <f'lt ' - l I I J:l DAILY PILOT Tuelday, March 17, 1970 - Kro e hler . ' Vectro 'Sofa & Love Seat Reg. 4]9.95 a Pi ece Sectional .. - Reg , 289.00 Lone Cocktail o r End Tables Reg. 89.95 Headboards Headboards Slorting at Gre en Velvet Choirs Reg. 139.9.S Dinette 9-Piece Ranch Set Reg. 229.95 Mo a ern Chino- By "Bassett'' Re g. $209 Bunk Beds Reg. 69.9.S ' Early American W i n g Back solo end moiching love S!'c! •n dvroble and cleon;.ible vecJro. Only 3 ,?e:s le!t. D1omo1Jc styling -omoz. ing vc\ue - a sectional with corner loblo. 01'11y I left. $pants), oo~ flni~h in dis· !inct1ve Mediterranean s!yling. All s1yles-All si;:es. From dlsconlinved b e d r o o m sets. Comforroble and priced r19h!. Reversible T-cu~h- 1cn end Shepherd .ca st- ers. Only 4 le!t. King size table 42" X 84" includ es 2 leaves and 8 choirs for a large lomily. This 40·· walnut linim Chino hos no gloss doors and is being sold cs ii. Only l left For est products Spanim oak finish. You get the two l)eodboords and lwo loo1boords. Only 2 felt. co.ts·r ·ro co10 r MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY -10am to 1Qpm BECAUSE ... We insist that our customers re- ceive only "first quality" famous brand merchandise in top condi- tion. We accumulate [over a pe- riod of time ) a vast assortment of suites ond odd pieces tha t hove received various knicks , ma!'S and scratches. BECAUSE ... Our shop is too busy to re store this furniture fo its fa ctory fresh condition. We ore closing it out during this special event of pennies on lhe dollor. Mony of these items hove flows so slight you hove to search for lhem. BECAUSE ... These suites ond odds ond ends ore taking up v01uoble warehouse space we need for incoming ship· ments. It must be moved out imme· diolely. We've come up w ith hun- dreds ond hundreds of lremendous volues. Gel your shore of the sav- ings. 0 -.. 3-Position R'Ollowoy Bed Re g. 39.95 s_26 SAVE-1/J-1/2 AND MOR E Deep tufled innerspring mol!re~s ocij1J$1S to 3 positions. Walnut Fin ished 30" Bookcase Reg. 29.95 s15 A slur dt boo~co~e lor \lour office or den. Ba r Stools Reg. 29.95 s13 30" high in nu!meg or walnut finish. 7-Dr. Kneehole Desk Reg. 139.95 165 Famous Bari-er qualitv w11\1 ·lrd<>. ~05e drawers. Only 4 !e!t. . Complete Hom e Study Cen te r Reg. 49.95 s25 Gro1Jp includes 40" Desk, 24" ·Bool-.cose plus Pedestal Base Choir. Dining Room Tobie Tops Your Choice s15 AU SiZ(IS end f,n .~hes. Rovnd, octagon, o val. No legs. Queen Size Vectro Sleeper A sofa by day, o Q ueeo'size bed al night. Reg . .4 19 .95 Upholstered in carefree durable plaid vec- 110. Revers:ble sect and bock cushions. Assorted 5-Pc: Dinette Sets Save up 10 75°/. on your choice of 5 pc. dinetle seis. All will be sold "cs is." A v1ide sr:lcct1on of ovol ond rectangular tables Voluet all wilh corefree p!o~lic tops. Eoch To 99.95 ~t>: includes '1 washable, vin•{! choirs. Be S here when 1he doors open ... be the f•1sr 45 to choose from this assortment. Steel Bed Frames These sturdy sicel bed frames odiust !o Reg. 9.95 hnin or full siie and ore moun1ed on smoo!h·rolling co s!e1s to make cleanin[) 0 s6 snap! Hurry for the~' Block Wrought Iron Book Shelf The perlecl item !or showing oif your precious items ... will bring added diam· Reg. $19 otic srylin9 to your Spanish decor! Seout" $9 ftJI Imported wrought iron with three dork oak. wooden 5hel~es. Hurry for !his one! _Spanish Decorator Console Carefully carved door J1o n1s Hand rub· Reg. 89.95 Medite rranean Sofa Cosily cul velvet !obnlS o nd exposed Reg . 399.95 S~anish oak finished frame with <evers1ble scot ond bee~ cushions, 2-Pc. Velvet Sectional Go!d velvet with contrasting reversible Reg, ~99.95 back cushions and oak. finishE(d wood trim make this on e~ceptiono l vol1Je. 1 only. Early American Sofo Cu~10!'l'l Quilted linen weave Scotchgorded1 Reg. 399.95 solo by Bailey Schmi tz. Reversible docron $227 wrapped cu5'1iions in ilorol oallern. One left. Fox Span ish Sofa 8' solo with Spanish .oalc. arms in durable Reg. 329.95 oljve nubby fabric. Excellent consrruc!ion for your home. Bassett Contemporary Bedroom This walnut finished 5 pc. set hos ell !he Reg. 389.95 quality features of Bassett thruoul. You get the double dreSM'lr; mirror, ftJ!I or queen s1 97 headboard and two drawer ni!e fables. Unogusta 4-Pc . Bedroom Spanish styling in pecan finish. This includes Reg, 599.95 the door, dr~sser, pla!e gloss framed mir- ror, the king size headboard end two !21 s397 door commode. Rural Spanish Bedroom by "Bassett" Consider this ... oil VvOOd (no plost1cl w11h 01Jlhentic brass pulls. Hand dis!ressed, hand WO)(ed ond hond rubbed Amber fin- i~h. A truly beou!iful suite which incl1Jdes, Re g. 669.95 T1 iple Dresser, landscaped M irror, 'Tv10 N ore Stands, full or queen s;ze headboard s337 plus large Five Drewer Chest. Bassett Tables Square commodes or hexagon shaped Reg. 79.95 wi!h inlaid slo!e lops. Dork oak finished wi!h Bassett quality. Only 8 left. 5-Drower lingerie Chests Over 1/i ~Off!, Store your delicate c!o!hing beou11fully and solely in yc1Jr choice of o white or Colon- ic! maple lingcde chest. Borh hove 5 roomy drawers 1ha1 ore dust·p1ooled end Reg. 99.95 finished to a satin smoolhness so they'll s4 8 never snag your clothing! You save over Y2 today 01 levirz! Early American Charm Virginia colony bedroom by Bassett is Reg. 369.95 authentic colonial styling. The tdple dress-$197 er; plate gloss mirror end heodboord in o Solem tinlsh is for you now. 3-Piece Bedroom Set Triple dresser. framed mirror and king Reg. 389.95 ~1ze heodboord from o famous eastern fac- tory. Pecon finished in Jhe Mediterranean s178 mood. 5 sets left . Bassett Dining Room Tobie French Provincial scalloped edge table. 3 leaves with formal styling 01 l evitz low, low price. Reg. 209.95 saa Beautiful Maste r Bedroom by "Bassett" Famous "Bassett" brings onc:!'er ovrsronq- Only '119 bedroom ro yo11 in worm 5pon·~h styl-Reg. 899.95 1n9. Includes: Massive 72" Triple Dresser, $467 Twin [2) Frarr.ed Mirrors. King S•ze Heod- boord plus lwo roomy Nile Stands. Vinyl Sofa Si mmon s & Love Seat Hide-o-bed SINC{ l!JIO FURNITURE WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM luxurious Pillow Bock Velvet Sofa Reg. 519.95 Reg . .<1 09.00 5297 5227 Early Americon w•ris bocl rola Gold 1111'1 rl hode·O·bed with wi1h mctching !eve sao1. Rt" lnne1sp111"19 mattr ess. Thh ts o verslb!e cushions in avocado famous S i m mo n s lo11e sc_0:1 Wny1. Hlde.a :I,ed. Only 3 le ft. 68" Hig h Basse tt Cur io Cabinet Reco rd Cabinets Reg. 199.9-5 Reg. 8.9-9.S 597 ~4 Elcgol'll Meo1tl!fronool'I r.o\!Qr'I Sov, C'il;r I' 111 rovr d c•t '· corvcd 1n pecon with $110.s of !<::mQ~; bc1~e11 reco1d cc\ frOm · dlld 1.de w11h m11 re1r 'bccl tl'l~ls Eo1)1 ho5 ~ cJco1~ -' CDASrfacoAST ... '1llllllllli111m111t••""r;P,.. Easy to Reach from -- Al Levitz oll the "tetoil frills" ore Anywhere token out of the Warehouse Sole Price. The price you pay is in the Corton-on-our Dock. foke ·it-hom,e----E.~ yourself or hove ii delivered by Levitz :. •• There will be o small delivery charge due lo these 11)- credlbly low Wa rehouse Sole Prices! --· San Diego Freeway At Beach Blvd. . iT Z WAREHOUSE AND·SHOWROOM •BEACH BLVD ., Eding er Ave .. ..Next to the ~un tingt o n Shopping Center! Reg. 369.00 Mo9ni11cent luxcdo solo 110 • ho!s~ered in gold velvet. Re· ve1s1ble sec! end boclt cush· ions. Only 2 lefl. :T--lt---J-~D-.e.e.p Tu £t.e.d Ve ctro So fci Reg, 299.9~ Lt.•i,.;r:ot.~ 8' ~(' <l m c ,~ ~. ~· free l,/(;[lrr· ~' 11 ,~~{ pvre teem C\\h,cn~ Bedroom Ch est Reg. 119.95 Scssell ook finis>i ches1. Dustproof & center guid- ed. Only 1 lef]- Odd Nile Table s Reg. S9.95 2 drov1er commodes from d;~conl!nued bed r o o m sels. Hutch es Hutches Sterling a t ~3 maple, moder n. Spanish. Spanish Style Woll Unit Reg. 99,00 Cover~ 6 jce' r;J .,.,ell ~pace. B\)okcas e l ibrary Units Reg. 59.95 Spanish eek finish liOrory unlls to Jit your budge!. Bassett Double Dresser Reg. $249 Famous Bessel! quality. Onl1 1 lo::IL 6 dra\',f"r .Span :h col· fin i'• dress- "· Sp a nish Vinyl love Seat Reg. 2<19.00 Coretree vin·rl upholstery 1n block. ond exposed ock frame. High back /or com· fort. Only 9 left. Windsor Bo x Spring & Ma ttress Reg. 89.00 Deep l~irc J s!el"' s•"s, f,,11 :F;e on!~. Hand Jufted So fa lt~g. 129".00 I ' ·I . ' _,, f.,,..S! C. LJ li<,_ i on co:1ly r; ~~-t .. t:.r 01'11y 3 tell. I ' • ' 1 ' I • ' ' T ' . l ' I ' I I ' J '-~~~~~~~~-1..~~~~~~~~_J ! . -- • ' 7 --__,,..,.-----~ -----·-------~--~ ---- -- ------- -. -• Laguna-Beaeh • EDITION VOL 63, NO. 64, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES en era VCI Stud~nts Ask Vote, Rejet;ted by Faculty A plan proposed by UC Irvine faculty members which would give students voling memberships in the university's Academic Senate was turned down Mon- day in a meeting of the statewide Academic Assembly . The Acodemic Senate is a faculty organlzalion C-Omprised ot all teachers at all branches of the university, with each campus representing a division of the universilywide group. The Academic Assembly rons.ists of delegates from each division of the Senate. In the Monday meeting at UC Santa Cruz, Assembly members refused to en- dorse the plan which would give students one-fifth vo ting membership in the body. Religion Study • In denying the proposal, the Assembly noled ~he plan is in violation of a standing order of the UC Regents which states on- ly faculty members may have voting memberships in the organization. In denying the plan, A s s e m b I y • members urged Irvine delegates to carry their proposal directly to the Regents. wr.ile seeklng support from other cam- puses. Dr. Bernard Celbaum, chairman of UCJ's Senate told the.body their denial of lhe plan was out or step with the times. The Irvine plan was proposed last June by a racul\y committee appoin ted by UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich to study student perticip<ition in campus affairs. Laguna Trustees to Get Released-time Report Laguna Beach school trustees will receive a report on released-time religion classes as conducted in Orange when they meet in the district board room at 1:30 o'clock tonight, A proposal to add religion classe!I, on a released time basis, to the curriculum in Laguna Beach has been under study by the school board, assisted by ministers and Sunday school superintendents in the district. The board tonight Will receive details or a study session at which Mrs. Elizabeth Gammon. Director of Released Time EducaHon in Orange, described that city's program. These include; -At the outset, limit the program to a few schools and one grade level. -The fourth and fifth grade levels are most receptive to released·time education and attendance from these grades in Orange has been 80 to 94 pupils. -Every teacher in the program should have California teaching credentials. -The program in Orange includes 18 special classes, with special teachers tor handicapped and retarded stqdents. -Of the 2,000 students n o w particip'3ting, one half are not involved with a regular church. -The present budget of $30.000 ls ac- quired through the Community Chest, .service clubs, gifts etc. Sea Scouts Take Ca se to Council 611 Finance Plans Up from the sea without ships, San Clemente's landlocked Sea Scouts -who have already written Presidenl Nixon and billionai re Howard Hughes -Wednesday take their case to the City Council. Ship 110 -which consists or some enterprising you ngsters and an old cabin cruiser on supports -has written the ci- 1y askirig for a one year business license to finance a boat. The license would be used for the scouts to paint house numbers on cu rbs of consenling property owners. -S!'!parate programs, in separate trailers, are maintained for Protest.ant and Catholics in the Orange Program, tbougb at a Laguna meeting a represen- tative of the Catholic church indicated pre£erence for a single program for Catholics Hnd Protestants, Each Laguna area church interested in the program has been asked to study and report on the feasibility or participation. In other action tonight the board will : -Study revisions to a proposed training program for intermediate school faculty and stair to be conducted by Thurston lntermedio.te School for the U.S. Ofli~ of Education. -Authorize closing of escrow for the purchase of 6.7 acres at Top of the World with payment of $135,040 from the building fund . -Act on recommendation or Superintendent Dr. William Ullom to :-e- employ for the 1970-71 school year 28- third-year teachers, 19 teachers who wi ll ~tt.ain tenure in September and 49 tenure teachers. Laguna Expects Quiet Period For Easter Week tr the pattern of the last couple of years is repeated, Easter Week will bring no great upheav als to Laguna Beach , but discreet preparations are being made, just in case. The largt-sca!e invasion of studen ts that used to bring havoc to the Art Colony during the spring recess seems to have scattered in other directions in re- cent years, but a goodly number or youthful visitors. with and without ' chaperones, is expected to begin arriving this weekend. Police Chief Kenneth Huck has can- celled days oU and put his force on 12- hour days beginning Saturd ay. "We'll adjust according to what transpires," Huck said. "We 're not hiring additional help yet and we will do so only if it is needed ." Motel operator Loren Haneline, who ac· cepts only Chaperoned groups of high See EASTER. Page %) ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESpAY, MARCH 17, 1970 e 0 • Clemente Oil Fight Aid Asked A San Pedro cit.irens group has asked San Clemente CHy Council support in fighting tideland ()i\ drilling by Standard Oil Company or California. Councilmen are scheduled to cons.ider Lhe matter with their regular agenda Wednesday night. The group writing to councilmen calls itself Get Oil Out -Two (GQO-T\VO). The original GOO group was formed in the Santa Barbara area after the disastrous oil pollution more than a year ago. GOO·Two states thal Standard Oi: has begun drilling operation on a 950()..acre narcel in San Pedro Bay, tidelands con- trolled by the City of Los Angeles. The company maintains that the area Is geologically stable. GQC>.Two says not so. "The dr illin.g rig~~es extrer_nely close to this very achve fissure. It 1s called the Cabriilo Fa.ult and continues through the Palos Verdes Peflinsula . This establishes a potential Santa Barbara·like oil spill situation ," COO.Two maintains. '- The letter also states that the dr illing rig is near the San Pedro breakwater en- trance presenting the possibility or a ship colliding with the rig and causing a spill. Su ch a spijJ could be carried to beacbe!I south of San Pedro by southerly currents and prevailing winds, the group states. They ask a letter of support far their stand against oil destruction of the coast~ line. Coastal cities officials, including Carl Kegley, San Clemente city attorney. and Roy Holm , Laguna counc!lman. testifi.ed recentlv in support of a bill to ban dr11l- ing in ·federal waters adjacent to State sanctuaries. LA 's Mayor Sam Joins Demo Race For Governor LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam Yortv of Los Angeles announced today he '1•ouli:I run for the Democratic nomina tion for gQvemor of California. Yorty \\'ill oppose Jesse Unnih, leader o( the state Assembly's minor i t Y Democrats. in bidding for the chance to oppose Republican Gov. Rona!~ Reag~n. who announced a week ago he 1s seeking a second term. The primary election is June 2. Yorty. 60. is rega rded as a "maverick" Democrat because he has crossed party lines. such as supportihg Republican Richard M. Nixon for president in 1960 instead of Democrat John F. Kennedy. Jn his announcement, YC'~ hit out at Reagan and certaifl >;.~ed fellow Democrats. "I believe Gov. ~ · , ,. has made a sincere effort . tf.I 'fl.. ... n unaccustomed role as adminitCftll!i;i of the largest state in the unior, 'JIClfs ste wardship has been cha ractertdf ~ too mu ch show and too little acc..m1'f'shmenl ," Yorty said. "I am a tife!ong Democrat and will n1n on the Democratic ticket," Yorty said . "I would !Ike to see the Democratic party of our state diVOrce itself from the ex- treme leftists. the pov•er seekers. the mercenacies. and the arrogant would-b e dictators who trv to tell registered Democrats who can or cannot run, and ho1v v.'e are to vote." It is Yorty's second bid for the (See YORTY, Page Z) One to . Grow On Percy, a two-month-old.pup owned by Jon Evans of Costa Mesa, met this fire plug Monday afternoon during a walk with his master near tbe Ne\v,port Pier. Percy obviously was awe:Struck and had to sit · down to tl1ink things over. NeighhQrs Opposing Plan • For Mexican Restaurant By BARBARA DUARTE 01 lllt D•llY ,llel .lttH A request for a· Mexican restaurant at 910 Glenneyre St. met opposition from neighbors before the Laguna Beach Plan- ning C.;immission Monday night. A conditional , use pennit {CUP) filed by Robert C. Anderson re q u e s t s permission to conduct on-sale beer and wine sales in conjuoction with the restaurant business. Contractor William Landreth , speaking for the owner, said operators of the deli catesse n adjacent to Reef Liquors in· tend to reduce its seating capacity and enlarge the food service. - The restaurant, located to the south ot the Reef parking lot, woUld utilize park· ing spaces gained from the reduced seating in the delicatessen, Landreth pointed out. He termed the operation a "11imple Mexican food" eatery and agreed to confonn lo hours from 11 a.m. until 11 p.m. "I'm very opposed to on-sale beer and wine," wrote Mrs. Iva J, Nicoletl of 939 Clenneyre St.~ decl11red residents in the area have 'all the commercial business thef can hapd\e." A terse message from Signe Fischer decla red, "Too much liquor in Laguna Beach already." Also in opposition to the CUP was Mrs. Neal Gammell of 929 Catalina St. Planners will confer with applicants in a study SCSiion to look at both parking and seating .Jayouts. In other business, the commission: -Granted a si x-month " extension of the present CUP held by St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1190 Morningside Drive, and ask· ed applicants to withdraw a request for a variance· to ex~ed allowable height with a roof topped by a spire and to revise the CUP. Planners indicated thi!y felt the height request wasn't in the best interest of a residential area. ' -Set April 6 and 20 as dates for public hearings on modifications to the 1lgn ordinance. -Approved plans for a lawn bowling clubhouse at 45.5 Cliff Drive subject to nine modifications proposed by the building and planning department. Com· missioners also asked removal of a block pilaster, lo be replaced by wood, and ad· dltion of French doors to improve the bulldin4. . -Gr a n t e d "budding" bpsinessman Chris Bowman, a Laguna Beach High Scfiool student, a temporary tise. permit to conduct flower sales in the city. GOP Women Ask High Standards Boatswain Neyle G. Hunter ~ssurcd the city by letter -he has written many Jet· ters in his young life - that the numbers would be at least three inches tall and pah1ted with a good qu ality eJtle rior white paint with a sprinkling of silicone sand for reflection. Hunter, who doesn't give up. has ,qJready written to the President and li'ughes, in hopes ol hurdling a labyrinth of red tape and landi n g a boat. Unfortunately. neither Hughes nor the 'We're Now • Ill Civil ---~iden1--<1ppar · Hunter's let- Wilcoxen Cites St rife as Main Campaign Issue By unanimous vote Monday afternoon, members of lbe Laguna Beach Womtn 's Republican Club endorsed a m:o1uUOn adopted by .the Masters of the Chamber of Commerce urgthg 'city ot'ficlalr to ill' . crease their efforts to "e11force city ordinances a.nd state laws to malnt11-in the high standards of the community, ao they will not be diminished by the W)lawful conduct of a few." resolution ins ired b mou I concern over narco cs ra 1c among La"1na's transient and scmi·residcnt hip- pie population, probably "-'ill be presented to the City Council officia lly or unof· ricially at some future dale lo i ndicate ters. Aides responded. Still no at. The scouts or Ship l 10 have worked on a cabip..crui.ser for four years. It's ready rOr faun cl1 but 1.hey're ncK Sure [hat it will float. Jn fact they have somewhat pessimistically named the crafl Pueblo II. The scouts most viable hope may be the City Couocil and thek' own elbow grease used on residenllal curbs. But sink or swim Wednesday nlght, it'~ a good bet that Boatswain Hunter and his intrepid band will keep on trying until they get 3 real boat. y 01 1'11t 0.ll'f 'lt•l St•tf "\Ve're in a civil war and we'd bcltcr Win iC Whefher ll comeS"from ex- // treme right or the extreme left. this pat- tern of agitation and de!l1ruction has got ~s~'' Laguna Beach aUomey WilUam· Wifcoxen told mcmberS of the Laguna Beach Republican Women 's Club Mon- day. Appearing as a candidate for the 35th Congreuional Dislrlct aeat, formerly held by the late. James Utt, Wilcoxen said be \\'ould suggest government .ictlon to e nttt!nmagcs rt OJTl fse a-roups destroying public and private pro- J>C(ty. "The university kid s have got lo learn to abide by the basic rules of 1oclety,'' s11id Wilcoxen . In other r-emarlui , the Attorney cited hi s long experience Jn the field of law en- forcement and in represenling .tbe peoplt' in a ~ariety or areas. from the fight to save Salt Creek to a ronncr position as depu1y district attorney, among bis qualltrcatlon.s for office. Referring to ili.s fi ve years on the I aguna eac s r an e re- cent unsuccessful tax override election, \\!ilcaxen.nld,.;:J.lJn®rsland the problem of raising taxes and I flrmly btlieve that the use of property tax for school fund ing must go." Al.!O addressing the RetiUbllCan group was John D. Ratterree, Santa Ana busines-smen, who has flied for the 3Stl1 Congressional District seat. . Ra!lerree, 30. said he l.s part lndl:in and has ta.ken.an active \nterest tn'Jndh1n problems. After serving four years in lbe (Ste WILCOXEN, Pate 1) --·----------------- community support, a mem of the ~faSten-group rala. ~ Stock ~lnrkets NtW YORK (AP) -The 1tock markoi turned up~ard late thft allenf~n on mod- erate trading. (Set quotations, Pages JO. 11 ). t . . TEN CENTS West Point Boss Among 14 .Charged WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Army an- nounced today that Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, W~t Point-superintendent, and 13 other of(icers have been charged with dereliction of duty and other cilarges in a field investigation or the alleged Son P.1y· My Lai massacre two years a8o in South Vietnam. ·Koster was rommanding general of· the America! Division, parent of the task force which swept through the hardcore Communist area on March 16, 1968. Ten Army officers and enlisted men have been .charged with murder and other alleged crimes In the deaths of as many as 102 Vietnamese civilians in Son My village and My Lai hamlet. Lt. Gen. William R. Peers, who headed a 3Yl.·monfh_jnvestigatioil of the .way reports of a massacre ·originally \\'ere handled, told a news conference "there was testimony and evidence to indicate that certain persons; wittingly or unwit- th:,igly, suppressed certain information aQout the incident from passing up the chain ot command." However, Peers said he did aot think there was a c:Overup. He also said he was satisfied that in- formation on the incident did not go beyond the Amttit:al Division to higher command and Washingtoo at the time of the Odd probe immediately alter tile reported massacre. At West Point, Koster Jnfonned the 3,700 cadets assembled in the academy's mess halJ he has asked to be relieved of his post as head of the academy. An in!onn ation officer at West Point said the ge~ral told the cadets "I want you to be among the first to know that l will soon leave West Point." He said he wants another assignment "in order to separate the military academy and you of the corps from the continuing flow ot public announcements or any other connection with the alleged events which took place in Vietnam in- volving elements of my fonner com· marid." Col. Patrick Dionne, the academy. tn- fonnaJ..ion officer, said Koster gave his r.einaikS without apparent emotion . - 1'with a firm chin" -and after his state. (Ste CHARGES, Page l) Frank R. Moore Rites Wednesday Services will be held Wednesday, 1 p.m., at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel for Frank R. Moore who died Sunday in his Laguna Beach home. P.1r. Moore was a grandchild • of Cot. James A. Coffey, a pioneer who worked on treatiflt with Western Indians. A leade r in the development of San Pedro, Mrl Moore recently published a book entitled, "The Coffey1 Clan From 1690." A fifteen-year resident of Laguna, he Is survi•ed by his wife Blanche, o( the family.borne at~ ffplly St., and a sister Catherine M. Richter, also of Laguna Beach. • ~range Coast Weather Residenls of the Orange Coast can expect more night and morn- ing low clouds and fog with par- tial clearing Wednesday morning. \Vednesda y a!ternoon should be -sunny but slightly cooler -with some: gusty winds. Telt)peratures will reach the low 70's. INSIDt; TODAY Orange Coast tet11Gger.s and . . gran1 dtsig11ed to norrott! l1te so-wiled ''gentrati0'1i gap'' with a n1eeting oj the n1i11d.t 011 soc· iotooicol proble1ru. Page 9. --- ) l % DAILY PILOT SC TUHday, Mmh 17, 1970 •• Jns•r•nce Rise Capo School Cost Listed for Board By PAMELA HALLAN Of lttt 01lfi P'llel S!ttf San Clement.e's volunteer fire depart- ment and an inadequate water supply havt 1been cited as reasons adding to the rise in insurance COst5 for the Capistrano Unllled Scliool Dislrlcl Roy Miller, represent ing the Professional Insurance Agents Assocla· lion which writ.es all district policies, told trustees Monday that insurance rales Beac!t May:or Cites Capo Over Harbor ).1ayor Jack Green of Huntinglon Beach assailed the Orange County Grand Jury f\Ionday for "a biased and erroneous report" on ii.'5 lnvesUgalion of the Orange County Harbor District~ The jury favors retention of the district. The mayor said at a press conference lilat the jury's probe was not made by the jury itself but by a five-man .agricultural commitlet. "They interviewed me, but It was done strictly for show," he said, "It was ob- vious they had already made up their minds. They were supposed to be in- vestigating but instead they argued with me on the merilJ of the district. "It was not a public hearing and was very unprofessional conduct on !heir part. I don't care which way they go but I do think they could have handled 11 bet. ter." The jury report last week recom- mended that the Harbor District be re- tained. The League of Cities, which Mayor Gretn heads, favors dissolution of the district or that the district's future be JXJl to a Countywide vote. Green, City Administrator Doyle Miiier .and Development Director Tom Severns will' attend hearings in Sacramento this week wtUch may resolve the district's fu ture. Two bllls will come up for hearlng Thursday, one by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) which urges a public vote on the issue and another by Assemblyman Ken Cory (D-Anaheim) simply· asks the state legislature to ex- tend the duties of the Harbor District without a vote of the people. Gree.n hinted that a compromise may result, that the two assemblymen may get together and propose that the district be dissolved and made an . expanded department of the county government. "If this is the compromise, we'll go along," Green said. "We think this business has gonl!: on too long." The mayor voiced concern, however, at the haggling over the dislrict. "I'm concerned at the tremendous amount of pressure being brought by groups and individuals as to why they are opposed to having it become a. county department," he added. As evidence of shilling stands on the Issue. Green pointed out that Westminster and La Habra now bac.k the League or Cities on the issue and San Juan Capistrano which suppoted dissolu- tion originally has since decided to take no stand. ··we think that's another rea!Ol'I for it to go to a vote," Green concluded. LA Okays Pay Raises LOS ANGELES (AP) -The city coun- cil has tentatively approved an across- the-board pay hike for 16,000 city workers retroactive to Jan. J. DAILY PILOT Nirwport leocll 1.ot11•• '-.II C•t. Mao H11•ti9'fOR lffc.• F•llltel• Y•tey .__ OAAHGE COAST PUBLISHING COM.,.AHY Rob•rt N. W11d P1n1<1e~1 1/ld Pub!l~Mr J.c\: R. Curl•y \lief Prnldt ll! .... Getle<'•I MI Mttl Tho!'l'l11 K11~;1 Ellltor Thom11 A. Murphin1 M1n1a'"9 Ellllllt Rich1rd P. Nell SGU!h Ort1>9I Coun11 Edl!Clr Offlc" COi.if Mlil: UO wnt llly srrttt Ntwpor1 llNl;ll: 2211 Wftl ll•lbol llO!llnltd UotlUnl 8NClll m FOl"ISI ... ...,...,,.. 1-iUf'llllllli'°" BN<ft: 11111 end\ &oulf\19•111 Sin ci-i.: II» Nortfl El Cimino R .. 1 EMILY "ILOT, wtt11 •lctl la~ tirlt N~P11:U. k publlf""" <llllY Ott~ s ...... H..,.-f hid\, C0.!1 MIU, H ~ 1flld f-t.lft \11llty, llOrll Wltft t'ft rt0lonlil tdllleN. Orll'lfl '°'" PlllllhJ'ol"° COITIP9fll' prlftlll!D t111nh ,,. 11 2211 Wt1I e11bOI 81Yd,. N.wpe.rt a..ai. 1no111 a. Willi Ill' f;ll'elt, (Mi. MtM. ,.,.,.... (714} 6-42-4121 c•-1fle4 • ...,...., .. •42·S67t S. C~ Alt Dtpert"'"Plt ,,.,, •••• 4!1-4420 probably will be up nearly 400 percent when the new policies authorized by the board are rewritten J~ly I. The original policies were written five years ago at the time of unification. A comprchenlive policy covering fire, van- dalism, the.ft and acts o[. <;od, it was wriUen at 9 cents ver $100 of real value. The new rate will probably be some- wliue In the nelghborbood of 40 cents per $100 aCCGrding to Miiier. He said various factors have brought the cost up. One is San Clemente 's rating by the national fire board. "San Clemente is rated number seven on a scale of one to ten." said Miller, "'this Is because it has inadequate water supplies and a volunteer fire depart· ment.." san Clemente Fire Chief Merton Jiackett told the DAILY PILOT that a volunteer fire department does bring the fire raUng down. He said tha t San Juan Capistrano another city in the school diStrlct probably has the same rating since it too has a volunteer department. other factors contributing to insurance hikes are location of schools, their ages, how they are used, proximity of fire racililies. value of buildings and what they contain. . "We have to consider how much it would cost to replace buildings and their contents today," said Miller. He said architectural designs have also added to insurance rates in some cases. He cited the new Viejo Elementary School as being cosUy to insure for this and other reasons. ''The new Viejo school will probably cost 60 cents per $100," said Miller. "It's an $800,000 school all in one building. It would only take one torch to destroy Jt." fie said the fact that it takes six minutes for a fire truck to reach the facility also makes it more costly. Whe.n the lire lime is decreased, the rate can be recomputated for that school. From Page 1 WILCOXEN. • • Navy, he went into business and con· tinued hls education at night school, he explained. "I am convinced many of our problems are the ttsult of electing people to public office because tiley tell us what ,Ve want to hear," said Ratterree. ''Like promising to lower ta1es and clean up situations whlch they have no lntentJon of doing anythlng about." To a question on Laguna's hippie pro- blem, he commented, "It's easj to talk about hippies and not do anything about it. We have not given these people any kind of morality. This is a sick nation. Wha t about the owners or the buildings where they live and hang out, the people who are making money off hippies?" City Council candidate Edward Lorr joined the roster of speakers lo seek sup- port of the Republican group, accusing the present council or ignoring Chamber of Commerce advice on Main Beach development and failing, for four years, to 00 anything about the hippie problem. "Dick Goldberg has tried but failed to find support," said Lorr. "You need men on your council who can take the heat from the small group of bleeding hearts who support the hippies. This does not mean the creative, productive artist who happens to wear long hair, but the transient population of dirty, drug-ad· dieted members or the L e a r y brotherhood." The community must give full support lo the council and the police, said Lorr, and landlords also must cooperate by drawing up and enforcing strict lease agreements. Promising "a strong voice on the City Council " if elected, Lorr noted lhat he is the owner of a local business and can promise "24-hour-a-day service to the community.'' I Lagu11agri1u .. . , • 041\.Y P ll.OT 51111 Phlt. Di·. LearY, Gets Term Of I to 10 By TOM BARLEY 01 Ille Deity Pllal 1111! Dr. Timothy Leary Is in Orange County Jail today, compiling a summation of his drug-centered philosophies and religious beliefs that may b~ used by hi s attorneys as the basis of their appeals agalnst the state prison term he drew l\1onday. The LSD cultist's plea -delivered through defense attorney George Chula - that the "controlled use" of LSD and related mind-expanding drugs amounted to a religious practice and should not be condemned "by a society that is only just begini1ing to understand" had little effect on Superior Court Judge Byron K. ~1cMillan. He listened for three hours to that argument and ~ series of related argumenls from Chula and then sen- tenced Le_ey, 50, to one to 10 years in stale pris<tlf. Car Careens ltato Luke That prison term followed the former 1-larvard psychologisl's conviction on charges of possession of marijuana - charges bac~ed tty the Orange County Grand J ury after Leary, his wife, Rosemary, 34, and son John Bush Leary, 20, were arrested in Laguna Beach. Sometimes an auto mechanic can use a bit of skin diving experience as Chuck Evans of the El Toro Garage discovered this morning \\•hen dispatched to a pond on Irvine Company property near Laguna Canyon Road. Car Was di scovered in pond early this morning when fog lifted. Unidentified driver caUed garage to say he woul d be in later today to retrieve his soggy vehicle. ~1rs. Leary had already been sentenced by Judge Mcl.1illan to sil' months in Orange County Jail and three years probation. Young Leary drew a 90-day pre.-sentencing diagnostic study at the state's Chino facility and he is scheduled to report there \Vednesday. " No Problems Expected Fro11a Page 1 YORTY •.. In Clemente 'Invasion' Democratic gubernatorial nomination. In 1966 he Jost a priJllary election effort by a 3·2 margin to in5!lJmbent Edmund G. ''Pat"' Bro\vn. Reagan defeated Bro\\'n that November. a!ayor Sam, as he is often called , won a third four·year term last l\1ay 27 in v.·hat was regarded as an uphill victory over City Councilman Thomas Bradley. a Negro. He became the central:figure 1t1onday of the bitterly opposed sentencing of hi! colorful father and a couple of commenl5 made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright during the prosecutor 's vigorous opposition to a plea for bail made him -for the first time that morn- ing -put down the flowers he had betn toying with. San Clemen~e·s dose of young Easter Week students will begin arriving this coming weekend, but police heer are ex· peeling no more than the usual amount of about 2,000 one-week residenl!. "We never have had the problems here which used to give Newport Beach and Balboa a national reputation, and I think· that the trends showing kids going to the desert and mountains more than the beach will keep the problems do\m," Police Oller Clilford Murray forecast to- day. Drinking and peace disturbance viola- tions will be the most common problems F1•01n Page 1 CHARGES ... ment the cadets gave him a standing ovation. The Anny statement announcing the findings of the inquiry said: "The report alleges that there were serious deficiencies in the actions of a number of officers holding command and staff positions in the America! Division, the !Ith Infantry Brigade, Task Force Barker, and the U.S. advisory organiza- tion. "The deficiencies cited in the report rela te primarily to alleged failures to render required reports. conduct ade- quate investigations, and otherwise to satisfactorily discharge duties in the light of information recei ved concerning an alleged atrocity." The Army made public a censored version of the report, deleting the bulk of it on grounds it contained material v.•hich might prejudice legal proceedings. A team of Army lega l oUicers reviewt'd the 20,000 pages of testimony and 500 documents given before the inquiry. "As a result charges have been prefer· red against 14 officers," the Army said. "Most or .the office rs are charged with dereliction of duty and/or failure to com- ply with applicable regulations and direc· lions. Other charges include false swear- ing and misprision of a felony." Phil lnterl1ndi V.'hich the department will face through the v.·cek, he added, but most are handled by a call to ~ parents. In recent yeaif the pace or Easter Wet>k at the beach has tapered off regularly, perhaps beeause of the un- certainty of the spring weather. The students' taste for the open spaces and warm sun of the desert areas have caused problems for police there, ho14.·ever. But in San Clemente, police expect fewer problems. "One recurring one seems to be one of ''andalisl"!) by tenants in rentals v.•here the price has been jacked up so high that the kids think they }\ave to get their money's worth by causing dan1age," f\1urray said . · Circula'l's detailing the city's codes regulating occupancy limits and other factors already have been mailed to resort landlords in the city. Police suggest that rental ov.'llers only let their premises to young persons who will have a reSpon.sible adult in residence with them. f 'ro1n 1•11ge 1 EASTER ... school students at llls Seas-Vacation Vi llage said he "'ill folk>w his usual pro· ceclure of hiring a Sheriff"s deputy, "to see the girls are protected." llaneline. like many other local hotel and motel proprietors, is choosy about his Easter Week guests and lays down strict behavior rules. These include no drinking in the rooms and a curfew designed to remove visitors from the property by a reasonable hour. !Us procedure ls to have incoming groups sign the list of rules and to rent on a day-to-day basis so violators can be required to leave. "The people of California have paid a high price fo r Reagan 's lack of ex- perience and judgment," Yorty's state· ment said. ''lie has switcheJ hls position lately and now supports income tax withholding. But y,;ill h!. do so after th'e Yorty's statement did not even mention Unruh, 47. Unruh formally filed as a candidate f\1ahday and announced that he was resigning as the party's leader in the Assembly as or 1'-farch 31. flis Assembly term runs through next January but he said 1'.londay his campaign ·would require all his energies. Yorty rose from a young man selling neckties and shlrts in a. men's \Vear store in his home town of Lincoln, Neb., to the chief executive of one of the nation's largest cities. In between v.·ere two terms in the California Assembly and tl\·o terms in Congress. J an e Fonda, Vadhu To End l\'larriage? PARIS (AP) -Jane Fonda ar.d Roger Vadim, the French film director. have separated and are planning to divorce, the newspaper Paris-Pr"esse reported Tuesday. Vadim, whose first wife \\·as Brigitte Bardot, n1arrled l\1iss Fonda , Aug. 14, 1965 in Las Vegas. They had a daughter. Vadim was said to be living in California at the ranch of his wife's father, Henry Fonda . ARE YOU THINKING OF BUYING NEW FOLLOW THIS CHECK LJST TO INSURE COMPLETE SATISFACTION li!l BRAND NAME DEPENDABILITY li!l DEALElt INTEGRITY li!l WIDEST SELECTION li!l COMPETITIVE PRICES li!l EXPERT INSTALLATION li!l FINANCING AVAILABLE THEN COME TO ALDENS-OWNED & OPERATID BY 3rd GENERATION CARPETING IXPERIENCE- OVER 11 Yl!ARS IN THE HARltoR AREA. WE FEATURE THESE FAMOUS - NATIONALLY ADVERT!SED NAMES : '* BEATTIE * MONARCH "\Ve ha ve a true picture of Dr. Leary (rom the probation report on his son John -the young man sitting right here," the bluff, burly Enright snapped. "John doesn 't want his father and Rosemary to have children because of what happened to him and r think that we should all take note of what he has to tell us . "In other words,'' Enright said, ":we should look at the evidence of what hap- pens to people who are the victims of other people's advocacy of the free use of drugs and we should assess their righ~ to freedom on the basis of what v"e have to see. Dr. Leary's own son has given us a very valuable pointer to what our answer (to the bail application) should ~-" Enright 's angry words shocked young Leary into an erect posture for the first time during the hearing. He dropped his flower.<;, swung partly around to watch the prosecutor and bowed his head a1 Enright concluded. It was some moments before the long# haired. hippie-garbed Leary resumed his study of the purple orchid deli vered to him by an admirer shortly before the sentencing hearing opened. His role in the incident of Dec. 26, 1968 that sparked the arrest of the trio v.·as also brought into focus by Chula lhrougb the statement by the veteran trial lawyer 1hat "nobcxly kne\V who gave that bag (containing drugs) to Dr. Leary just before the police officer searched the family car.'' Chula made it clear that Dr. Leary did not have the bag just before the arrest and he pointt'd out that it did not come from Mrs. Leary. He made no reference to John Bush Leary as he pressed his argument that there had never been any rea l basis for prosecution of his client. * CROWN * ROXBURY Don't Miss Our Drapery Dept. *IMPERIAL *WALTERS * SWEETWATER '* BIGELOW * BERVEN * FIRTH * COLUMBUS * MONTICELLO * OAN RIYER * SEQUOYAH We fMtUN • complete Mltdlon er f1brlc.1 .,, .. colon to enh1nce •IMI (.ompltmen"t your c1rpetlng. -VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM - Hundreds of SmaD ·to ~Room Si1.e Remnants I 1663 PLACENTIA • COSTA MESA 646-4838 ALDEN'S Coi:iyr!oftl, !t10,. ~llltt C..JI Piltlltstllflll ce.ttolny. He -••I& lll\ltlfll..,..., tilfnon.r .TM1ttr ., .,,._,,~" t1tt1111 mar 1111 ,~ wlfl!WI ._ .. , ,..,. ml$tlOll of ~111'11 -• ~ , .. ,, C*i.tif Niii •t H""""' tMCfl M C-11 MIU. t.lllfor11l1. ~lot\1111 W urrlef"U.00 ,,_lltfYI llY INll U,JiO -ltllYI ,,.111i.ry ••1111111oNr. UM montt'IJ'r. 'l'v• Always A.pprtclattd the Fact, Marthe, Th1t Even Though You Paint, You Ne ver Felt the Need to go 'Artsy#Craftsy' ••• ' CARPETS e DRAPERIES 13 'l'IAltS SERVING THE. O~ANGI COAST l ' -· J • r ,. -----~ ... .....,.--- - ------- -------------------------------------------~---c----• DAILY PILOT lltH htlt DANA DESCENDANT SHOWS STATUE TO FRIENDS Teresa Camacho, Eddie Bravo Admire Work Richard Henry Dana l(in Awaiting Harbor Statue By PAMELA HALLAN or th• o.uy P11tt si.tt \Vhen the statue of Richard Henry Dana is placed in Dana Point Harbor one year from May one Laguna resident will be exceptionally proud. "We always reter lo Richard as The Ancestor," said Mrs. Mary Dana Tognazzini, bead nurse or Medical West, South Coast Community Hospital. Mary is the great-granddaughter flf ruchard Henry's cousin Captain William Dana. William. who was born in 1797 in Jobless Rolls Set Record Unemployment reached an all time record high in Orange County in February, the State Department of Human Resources office in Santa Ana reports. There were more than 24,800 persons without jobs in February, compared to 22,100 in January and 22,000 in February of 1969. The number of employed re- mained at 463,000, the same figure as for January. The employment was 5.1 percent, a four-year record. January had a 4.6 percent rate and in February of 1969 the rate was 4.3 percent. The aerospace industry reported the largest decrease in jobs, 7,100 during the past year, but this was reduced to a net loss of 5,300 in manufacturing as a whole. Increases were shown in firm s constructing boats trailers and other transportation equipment. They hired 800 more during the year. Boston established I.he California branch of the Dana family when be gave up sail· ing in 1825. "William was involved in the hides ti'ade between the West Coast and New England,'' said Mary. "He also made the run between China and Hawaii aboard his ship The Waverly." But he suddenly stopped in 1825 and moved to Santa Barbara where three years later he married Maria Josefa Car· rillo, the governor's daughter. "Jn 1833, he was given a land grant 'vhich encompassed most <lf San Luis Qbispo County," said Mary. "He built an ad<lbe ranch house and raised cattle, vegetables and 26 children." The family home is still in Nipomo, near Santa Maria which Mary 1iays is populated mostly by Dana dei;cendants. The large rancho has been broken into several small parcels through the years most ()f which are i;:till farmed by Danas. Marry is proud of her Calil<lrnia heritage but she still speaks reverently about her illustrious ancestor for whom Dana Point is nam ed. She is particularly pleased that 1ome day she will be able to walk oul to the marina and see a larger than life bronze statue <lf young Richard Henry book in hand smiling down at her. The statue will be done by sculptor John Terken ()f New York who was selected by a special screening com· mittee. Total cost <lf the 10-foot high structure, which will be financed entirely by c.ontributions is estimated to be !211,000. The idea for the statue orglnated with the San Juan Capistrano Historical Socie· ty which is now hoping to continue the "history through art" concept thr<lugh archite·ctural designs of the new harbor buildings. The society is pushing tor relie r sculpture, using techn iques such as in· tagli<l t<l enhance the buildings' facades. They wouJd like the intaglios to tell the story of early maritime trade or marine life of the Pacific. Laguna Council to Study Buried Utilities Plnns The Laguna Beach City Council will hold an official public hearing Wednesday night on a proposal to underground utilities on Cliff Drive in the Heisler Park area. but !here are only four property owners entitled to protest the plan, ac- cording lo city manager James Wheaton: The ,project \Ylll be funded with $68,000 set aside for undergrounding work by the utilities companies uDder a Public Utilities Commisslon ruling. Property owners however, will be obliged to foot lbe bill for putting their house service wires underground, but the Edison company will provide t h e necessary wire, \Vheaton said. Other items on the Wednesday agenda are recelp' or the general plan goals statement approved by the Planning Commission. which probably will initiate cotmcil studies of the goals, and receipt ()f bids for resurfacing Forest Avenue, • project to be undertaken tn April or May. Voters Drop Off Courity Deadline April 9 Voler registration In orange County is do\\'ll and County Clerk William E. St John has issued a call for persons to sign up before the deadline April 9, ~ St John said I.hue iNl· total of S3!t1954 registered voters in the county today. Thls compares with 580,886 for the gen- eral elecU<ln in 1968. ln December of 1968, 77 ,000 voters were dropped from the ro111 for not hav, Ing voted in the general election. Sinct that date the Republicans have I fl'loved up to 287,MO from a low of %70,790. The Democrats have 220,661 compared lo a trimmed 207.790 in 1968. Other party totals today 1 h o w American Independent, 5;'716, Pence and Freedom. 679, miscellaneous 94, and dl?Clined to stale, 21,164. SL John noted that there m mort than 700 deputy registrars located In shopping «ntm, city hall11 libraries, poliUcaJ par~ ty Orliw and th• Volm RegistraUon 01· flee, 1119 E. Chestnut St., Santa Ana. Carpe:f!ter: YouthDrugs Main Iss ue ''lf we lose a !'hole generation of young Americans to drugs, it may not matter so much what is happening in Laos or Viet- niin, or on the University campuses, or in school integration,'' state Rtpublk;an Chairman Dennis Carpenter told a group ()f Laguna Bea~h Republican women Monday ·afternoon. "TG my mind the drug pr<lblem transcends all other Issues facing us to- day," said Carpenter, candidate for the State Senate seat being vacated by John Schmitil.P run f()f Congress. "[ belliile we are on the threshold <lf losing a whole generation wiless we can control It -and I don't believe the "•idespread availability of drugs is without plan," he told members of the Laguna Beach Republican Women's Ciub. Citing his experience as an FBI agent, Carpenter said the primary thrust mu st be to UDCQver and prosecute those who are making the drugs available. "These children whl) take these things don't have any evil Intent,'' he continued. "I don't call them y<lung people, or young adults, but children, because anyone who would expose himself to this terrible danger must be terribly immature." As a parent, Carpenter said. he h?.d had many conversations ()n the subject with his own children and had come to realize, not only that drugs <ll all kinds are readily available, but thaL "there is a tremendous pressure <ln the kids from their peer group l<l try these thiags - even the. brightest, most attractive y<lungst~s from good, loving homes ate subject to these pressures." The use of drugs, he concluded "takes a child away from its parents as finally as death would take it. Thousands or parenls have lost their children through this terrible thing. We all hope we will not be among them, because I know if I lost a child this way, part of my life would be gone too." He urged that top priority be given im· mediately to legislation aimed at con- trolling drug traffic. "Everything else can come later." he concluded, "because ir we can't control this, nothing else will matter." Mother Enters Plea of Innocent Linda White, accused <lf abandoning her two infant children in a Fullerton motel March 4, pleaded innocent to the charges Monday when arraigned in Anaheim Municipal Court. Judge Lloyd S. Verry Set preliminary hearing for AprJI 2 and appointed a public defender t<> represent her. She was released on her own recognizance. 1\-1rs. Wlllle, 21, was arrested Saturday in an apartment in Long Beach. She had been sought in the aban· donment of her children David, l and Shire!, 2, in th~ Country Place Motel. P<llice aaid Mrs. White was located after she applied for a job in a Long Beach pool hall. The operator, who had read aOOut the case in a newspaper. recognized her name. He notified of· ficers. ~1 l ,. Tuesday, Match 17, 1970 L DAIL V PllOT !J Talent Tunes lJp Laguna students Cathy Brunner, ~Iary Ann Breen. Dana Kinsel, Leslie Coonrad and Pam George (from left) rehearse for Aliso School's talent show scheduled for three separate perfonnances \Vlid- nesday. More tllan 40 Aliso students are expected to perform during ·the show, entitled "Lost in the Zodiac," or "The Thirteenth Sign." Show times at the school are JO a.m., l p.m. and 7:30 p.m. All performances are open to the public without charge. Surf Beach Big Question ' Camp Pendleton Strand to Open This 5umm~r? By JOHN VALTERZA Of th O•lly PllM Steff Whether the propcised 1 lh·mile Carrip Pendleton public surfing beach will be opened to the public by this summer-as promised by federal and state officials earlier this year-is still a tossup today. Intricate lease specifications for the iiew beach are still being drafted. by the Marine Corps, a spokesman said, and he gave "the near future" as the time when the lease document is presented. to state parks and recreati<m executives for con- sideration. The new public strand near San Onofre bec:ame a replacement choice after federal security officials dee.med the Trestles beach loo close lo the Preslderr tial residence. The second choice lies downcoast from the San Onofre nuclear JX>Wer plant. It would be California's Hrs~ formal surfing beach. Original plans by lhe Stale Departmen t of Parks and Recreation contained hopes that the beach could be open in its raw state by this !Ummer, followed by the standard beach improvements of parking sanitation and concession fa cilities. But required documents and govern· ment action could easily make for a later open ing. The new beach, v.·hich ls near the U.S. Immigration check point south of San Onofre, is a replacement for <lne of the coast's best surfing beach known as Trestles for the railway crossing near the sand. But that area, originally planned to be <lpened by the state, was deemed too close to C.Otton's P<lint where the Western \Vhite House and grounds lie. The Secret Service opined that it would be too difficult to maintain necessary~ Cory Bil.I Asks For Ombudsman SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assemblyman Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grove) has called for establishment of a state om. budsman. Cory said Monday the state needs an of!1cial who can look into complaints from the citizens and act as a troubleshooter for people snarled In red tape. Cory said !he only help now for such persons Is lo go to the.tr legislators, a process he termed inefficient and in· effective. Legislators, said Cory, don't have the staffs to handle coiTtplaints and parUsan politics also Interfere. Under a bill proposed by Cory Monday, the ombudsman would have authority lo Investigate the courts, the. state bar and the legislature. security of the President's estate because of the thousands 0£ beach Visitors. • The alternative suggestion for the other beach arose last January. The changeover caused shelving o( already prepared plans for 180 acres of beach, camping sites, areas restricted to !'Wimming and others f<lr surfing-even the creation of an artificial surfing reef. \Vhether the new beach will have the same facilities has not yet been specified. The new beach. State Parks Director William Penn Mott Jr. said, was expected to be open by June with access provided by hvo lanes of the old Pacific Coast Highway. Portable rest rooms. camp sitts and day-use areas ~·ould be provided on a jury.rigged basis until the state can build the permanent structures. The beach acquisition is an Initial step under a new, strong policy in Sacramento to begin <lpening up more Southern California shoreline for public recrea· lional use. Moll said long.range plans call for opening up even more tilnlches of shoreline along the Camp Pendleton strands in years to come. Many of the base's beaches are used for combal exercises. During negotiations for the Trestles lease, Corps officers maintained that it needed the beach for "post..Vietnam. period amphibious exercises." you going to go through another year thinking you can't afford an Oldsmobile? ., 'M- CflDaMOMU 4+1 IHDV 'AC:I CAI\ 1e70 f ' • • • . " •• Lao·s Nof Ruled.-Out • Ill ·~ .................... WASHINGTON (UPI) ...:.Seotttary of Sta,. William P. Rogera said IOday he could not I-the poulblllty that Amtr!Can combat troopa mleht be used In LIOI. But be 1aJd there are "no present . plana" to do so. . At the awne time, Roger• Indicated the possibility that there llllll might be' con. ajderable U.S. millt.ry !°""' Jn Vldlwn by the ttmo of the 1972 prtaldenttal elec- tton. He wu asked 1bout Sen. J. Wllllam Fulbrtgbt'1 fi4tement Monday quollnl him u aaylng at a stcret Sen:ite bearing that advance approval would be sought from Congress before any U.S. grOWld forces were moved tnto Lao.!. Rogers Indicated he was not too happy about Fulbright's disc!Osure anlj. said he would "like to talk to him" about it. But he Aid he did not rule out completely the possible use of ground forces there. He said he told Fulbright's foreign rela· Uooa committee that "there are no present plans to use ground troops." 1-le said "I also told the committee thol I was oot foreclosing" completely that pozsib1llty. Rogers said he did not believe that the Communist Pathet Lao military and polllical offensive in Laos was a prelude to a more serious ofter by Hanoi and Viet Cong negotiators at the Paris peace Jall<s. Whe.n asked what he believed the Pathet Lao and its Hanoi 11upparters were tryina to do ln La01, Roger1 IAld, "wo hope they are trylnr to make their neg0Uottn1 poalUon llronger. We hope they are not trying to ovtrrun the coun- try." Aaked to comment on speculaUon that there might be 100,000 to Ui0 ,000 U.S. troo)>I atiU in Vietnam two to three years !rom now, Rogen said: "I don't want to make any prtdlc- Uons." He •""'ed that the pn>gram o~ replaclDg U.S. combat lorcta wlqt South ' Vietnamese bad 11worked pretty well so far" but he would not make any forecast as to the future. Fulbrisht's committee ls consldering a variety of resolutions aimed at putting the Senate on record for U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia. But the ad· ministration says the White House will not ho under any legal oblia:atloo to pull out of Vielllam under any JegislJ.Uoa that might be paased by CongreM. Ronoklo Pugh got four write.In ''otes and has been named essea. sor Iii Armanda, Mlchlgan, a town of 1,300 persons. His Dame wasn't. on the ballot, but then, nobody's was. Pugh doesn't know who voted for him and doesn't ieally want the lob but village rresldent Rbbo •rt Jiolfw .. said, u was afraid I was going to have to do the job myseµ." • • * * * * * * Carswell I ssue Big Parades Honor Irish U.S. Unit Quits • Threatened Base ' Sparks Outburst 'Green Day' Italian actreJr Sophia Loren is shown introducing her son Carf<! Ponti, Jr,. 15 months, during a P"'eJs conftrence at Mr villa rectnUJI. The actreu 1D(l$ celebrating completion of Mr lattst movie, ''The Sunflowers" tn which Carlo aUo had a part. e 'The Paiute Indians of Schurz, Nev., have rejected an offer of $250,000 from a Hollywood promol· , er to rent their reservation for a rock music festival. Melvin Thom, tribal council chairman admitted the offer was tempting but that the potential size of the fe stival - a bal!" million people -would b• more than all of the state's law of· ficers and national guard could handle. Nevada had a population of just 350,000. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Senate IUf>' porter of G. ffFrold Canwell iay1 tho Supreme Court needs "a B atudent or a C student" like Carswell rather than another of those ''geat legal minds" wholie decisions have e•n c o u r a g e d murderers and rapists. Sen. Russell B. Long (0.La.), brought Lebanon, Israel Exchange Fire Across Border TEL AVIV {AP) -Israeli troops shell- ed Leban on's southern border today after Arab guerrillas fired bal.Ooka shells at an Jsraell outpost in upper Galilee, the military command said. A spakesman said there waa no damage to the Israeli positions, but he reparted one soldier killed by Egyptian mortar fire Monday night on the Suez Canal front Lebanon said Israeli mortars bit three villages, klJled two civilians includinJ a 2- year-oJd child, and injured five persons, Lebanese artillery returned the fire and the exchange lasted for 30 minutes, said a Lebanese com munique. Lebanese military officials in Beirut said theri. was another artillery duel across the border Monday afternoon. They said the l!raelis started lt and dainaged one house. Palestinian guerrillal claimed several Israeli helicopters attempted to land troops In three Lebanese villager Sunday night but °Fatah guerrilla& and an-- tialrcraft guns foiled the attempt." Into the Senate debate Monday what ou~ manbered liberals CONJ!der a chief l.ssue over Carswell'& nomination to the court -hil ablUty, Sen. Birch Bayh (0.lnd.), calltd Carswell'! record "indescribably un· distinguished" and quoted law school pro- fessora who said 80. Carswell, 50, during th e last 17 years, has served as U.S. at· tomey, U.S. district judge and -U.S. circuit judge. Long leaped lo his feet. "Didn't these same ... great legal minds ... recommend Judge I Abe) Fort.as aod 'endorse the Miranda decision which a majority of the Senate con· sidered responsible for a 100 percent in- crease In murder and rape ?" Loog asked. "We have enough of these upside-down kind of thinkers," Long said. "Wouldn't it be better to have a B student or a C stu- dent ini:tead of another A student? ... What we need ... is some conformists on the court, who'll stick to the law as it's always been rather than upset ii." Jn an interview off the Senate floor, Sen. Roman L. Hruska (R-Neb.), ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made a similar point . "He ls a good judge, has been, and has great potential," he aald. "But suppose he Isn't a good man or mediocre? ..• Even if he were medlcore, there are a lot of mediocre judges and people and lawyers. Aren't they entiUed to a little representation and a little chan«? We can't have all Brandeises and Cardozos and Frankfurters ... " Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mlch), a leader in the fight againsf Carswell's con- firmation, scoffed at Hruska's argument. . "It's the first time I've heard that argument made and I hope lt's the last - that we should look for mediocrity when we staff the Supreme Court of the United States," Hart said. 'M·A·S-B'Mashed By 1\e Auoclaltd Presa The Irish and the Irish-for.a-day don the green today. It's St. Patrick's Day and New York City's big Fifth Avenue parade hlghlights observances around the nation. The New York parade Is the 20ltth an- nual in that city. St. Louls is having lts "first annual." And in Santa Ana, Ca.llf., resident will enjoy their first SI. Patrick's Doy parade in at least 20 years. The New York event features 35 con- tingents wilh 120,000 marchers and martial airs from 137 bands from eight states. Terence Cardinal Cooke , archbishop of New York, is an honorary grand marshal or the parade. He and other clergymen re\ :ew the spectacle from the steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral. Further up at 64th Street the marchers pan the fonnal reviewing stand filled with politicians and other dignitaries. In St. Louis, Mayor A. J. Cervante has renamed the Spanish International Pavilion the ••trish Pavilion" for the day. A slx·lnch greeo line had betn pain- ted along the parade route together with assorted sprayed-on shamrocks. In the traditional spirit of the day, the Michigan Legislature Monday passed a resolution declaring all residents to be "honorary Irishmen." The Irish in Boston planned their an· nual parade through South Boston. but this year they have competition fron1 some disgruntled Orangemen. ..-~:'"'i! _, Over 65? VIENTIANE, !Aos (UPI) -U.S. of. flcials tonight evacuated most Americans from the refugee and Io11:Istical support hue far Sam Thong In the ISC< of ad· vanctng North Vietnamese · troops who seized two key posts m and eight miles away, boht wlthln easy artillery range. Sam Thong is about 75 mlJes north of Vientiane and 30 mlles south of eas t.west Highway 7 leading westward from the Plain oI Jars. Long Cheng, six miles to the southeast of Sam Thong, is main National Protest To Oppose Draft Prolests In Milwaukee and San Antonio, Tex., and distribution in schools or "We \Von 't Go" petitions have marked the beginning of a week of nationwide an- tidraft demonstrations. A man dressed to represent the "Spec. tre of Death" carried out a solitary vigil l\1onday at the San Antonio draft board offices and the protesters in Milv,.aukee marched on a courthouse. ln Norfolk, Va., the draft board was evacuated following a telephoned bomb scare. No bomb was found. The nationwide protest campaign, sponsored by the New Mobititation Com· mittee To End the \Var in Vietnam, is planned to extend to more than 100 cities by the end of the week . Were you left out the Bobby, a parrot who sat in tM office of Dr. Ke11neth Chris· tenbe"tl of Knoxville, Tenn:, and Jang songs such Cl$ "I Am a Pilarim", "It Ain't Gonna Rain No More", ha.t died of a stroke at the cge of 75 . The parrot was a gift to the doctor'• fath<r in 1919. 9 Lynn Hopper, 17, has taken on a part-time job as a babysitter. That may seem a rather common occupation for a teenage girl, but the "baby" in this case is a two- ton whale at the Cleethorpes, Eni;!;- land zoo. Lynn is paid 84 cents an hour to sing and chat to the mam- mal between the time the keeper leaves and nightf<}.11. Army, Air Force Ban Movie NE1'1 YORK (UPI) -The Army and Air Force have banned the film "M·A-S.H" from base showings because It might undermine the morale of American soldiers, the 1ewspaper Anny Times reported Monday. The producer of lb ehit film said he would appeal "right up to the Su· preme Court" if the ban is official. He said the film was "constructive." "M·A.S.H," a critical and popular success in New York is about the '!ild anti~ .of Arm~ combat surgeons which enabled them to deal with }\or. r1ble conditions during the Korean war. A military source said the picture I "renectcd unfavorably" on the military and would undermine the confidence i of soldiers who may need medical treatment in combat, Army Times said. last time I Blue Shield offered Major ~ Medicare ·· • Bladimer Ra jchlo set his small plane down on a hij!:hway just out· side Jacksonville, Fla., \Vhen hi s fuel tanks ran low. He taxied the plane up to a service station which was closed. Finally, police helped him hand-carry cans of gasoline to refuel and then cleared the highway so be could take off again. The verdict on the Ulm reportedly was delivered unanimously by 20 to 25 office.rs -no enlisted men -from information, personnel, medical and chair lain branches of the two servcies who viewed ''M·A.S..H." The film was the first banned from Anny and Air Force theaters since 1963 when ''War Is Hell" and "Man in the Middle" were turned down. ' Ingo Preminger, the brother of producer-director Otto Preminger who produced the 20th Century Fox film, said: ' ~ Plu s! IT HELPS PAY THE BILLS FEDERAL MEDICARE MISSF.S. "Many reviews have classlried my film as eminenUy patriotic, Ameri· b can and constructJve. I don't understand how anyone could see it otherwise. ,i, Al far aa the. picture. being antiwar, J think even the Anny Is antiwar." The military censors were making their decision under regu1atlons whlch prohibit cuts rrom a film, Army Times said. Shows must be approved wholly or turned down. Winter P ushes Out Sp r ing Transportation Paralyzed Tliroughout -Midwes t CaHfoMtla $oull'le111 C1ltlGr11!1 Wit ll'IOlllY ftlr tod•Y will! -cl!NGI Ind 111( ... tllllt llrvtlf ..,•h' nortl!t<IJ' wlndt. Ttf!I.,.,• 11urn -· cookr. SGml Hld!Y low dM' tllCI hlo C9'nrM l.ot """"'• lllCI vlCl11Uy b.,il clHt"ld to "'°''ty ,,,, Hitt WIT~ 1 ... erM1l11V ..... ,.., ,,.,.,.tllffly Wlf>dl. TM'!· ,,.,.lturH rM'ltlMCI (OOlrr wit~ "" Civic" Cftlttr 111911 Prt'dlttld 11 JJ, -1191,.._I bl!-MOl'>CtY'I ""'l• lmllm. TM Jll"edlcled lo'W fonl1111 w11 JJ. TM Air hlh.lllOt'I Control Dl1t<!ct Mid thtte Wll 119N •ITI09 In ll'IOI! Of tM U. AltMIU 811111, ... ~ _. ciowv trld foot!JI' ,.., J!!tl'!'lflt lloUra dMrl'"' ft mot.tlT tl"lll'I' JtUi Ill ..... t f'i9rMOll. HllN "°"'' -r &f wtlri ,,.,,.,. ,_,.., 11 S1 "" ...... Mwrll•""" -"""11 "1fl"Y •llCI _,....,,. 111 !'Ill tf1•n~«>. Hlllls -· ,..... JD •I "'°'' ,.._. 19,...11, CllMt'I ",,_,}llMY Wiii! fVll'y Wln41 I" tM 1tt...-. Hl911 ltM-tlUres r1,,..ci _,. 10 In 1M t.ltlltr ,,...,,, " ....,. • Ill "" loww n!ln1. a.M f>lttlt NorRn 1!td lf'ftllc!M lftlllimll"" !OdtY lrlduOMI; l .... tlffcf> ....... 511111 MO!lk1 ftl-4J. '""""'* '1· n, (Ill. Wllwl .1...,, P'llmdllle n .... ftl¥9nldt 1~n. P1lm ll!rfttet, 11 .. S. a.Unfleld ,,.,., "" DIHll 61-61, 1111- 11 11ro.r1 1MI, tollTHl•N CA.LIFOllHIA -Hltllt I M "*1'\1119 IOw CIMI II' fol _. (Miiii .,., oll'lffWIM fllOlltY 1111' wflfl 'ftt\1&11 c-..0. """""" w..,._ MY.~ fl -........... lflCIUftllN ......... WfdMMIY, Qoeler llln. G!rtf\I' WIM"I itte TWtldeY ~ WldftUlito '" Wlmltl FlnOtAST® t:o .. tal ll'trt!Y -_y. lllfll "*•1tblt w!fld\ 1111111 •1111 ll"IOr'lllt,_ ""'1ra bitewf!IM llOrlll .... 11 lo Wtll f fo 16 ,,,.,,. fl\ t !lt <llOOnt todtY llld W111Ml(l1y. Miff! 10"3•~ "" Cot1111 lefll.u1turn ''"" '""'1 U lo •1. l11t•11Ct l.....,....1turn rtnM f1'1)111 i.J ro n. Witt• 1""'"'""'• '°' Smr, ~lo-·rr. Tide• TUlilDAY $fCOllll Mtl\ 7;M '""'· a .. W•OM~SOAY ,lnl M911 . .... . . lt.)01"". 2.2 ,IP11 1t>o ., ....... , I .Ill.I'll. •t SoMollCI Mtll .... ,... • I :J' t .n'I. o J l«Ollll low f:M 1111. 4..t $yfl lllttt 1101 ,,..,, hit 6:02 l.fl'I. MoOll •I• l!U I.II\, 5ifl 1:111.~ • ll .S. Srcmmar11 l!Wtll flf 11-r.11!111 Cllllfd bt u !lld '""" Wll1' lnVI' IOClt Y I~ COIO -lfltr, 111\0W W ,..111 """'1111911 ute9f ltl (II~ !omll lllCI tl'll IOlll!l-1 dtterl ,.,. A t«OrdoO<ff'I'"' ,,_..,°"" 11111 .,.,.. ,.....11, N rt lYtH l•an~lllC>ll Ir> """" llt l kt-. l'IM!lllltl Clcl11'11m1, 110tl'"'1'1f Artl~llt IM *"""' Miio 1ovrl. ,,_ dtltlfl rMd'lld a lllcllft, ttffV'I' IFIOW Wll'lll-_. -tld from llOrlllflf! """''llMt ft ICll'll\ICllY tllCI l!Otlllwnt Tt!IM-wlltl o"'tt Wlll!tr -ll!tr Wlt"lllll fl' Wlltlltt _,Id fol' "'°'' 91 Ml1t0Vri ~ IM Ol>.t Vtlll'I lo WH111fll Vlrtlnlm, fl'lt Wflhlnt Wll 1t1IM -· t-1" Miii,.. IGVllY llte'f'I' 11tto<wtr1 11141 ...,.11....,.,0l'lnS. l'etnperatrcr e • Albu_,...,, ·--... ,. .... ,. a.1r.1raflfif llllmll'dC "'" OM ... lrvw""'1lll1 Chk:tl'O C!ncl111111t .. ,,~ Oii Mol11e1 °"'"'' P'tlrbl!ll!I ,Drl Worl!I ,,_ Ht!tt11 H-lvh.I Ktl'llttCllY' L11 v.,.11 ,M_,. Mlt1111 M"""'"ll!Olb H-Of1HM N-YOl"t Nor111 Plttlt Ot kltM Ollltllo!!M C!IY """" f1190 lllo01-·-PltltWrvll ll'Ol'Jltlld ll1111d CllY ltld 81\ltt OMO Sact tl'll!'llO S.11 Ltkl C!I~ 5111 Dlffto Sin '•tMlt<O ... ,. -OM Tlltf"'~I w...,._ Hiii! L.1w Pru, " . .. ~ SJ l l " ~ S1 '' 51 3) .11 ~ " ,, 11 .01 ll ,, ~ " •7 ,, 31 11 " " ,. " u • \.'1 7) ., "' ll M " " ~ " ti ., • ll M .. " " .. » J1 11 J ) " At .. ~ •: ,. ·" ' 4 " " . '' ., . " n ~ ., " ,. " .. " n ~ " ~ ·" " • .. " ff H ... " " .. .. • Q ~ For a linlited time only, Blue Shield is offering Californians 65 or older a eecond chanoe to enroll in Major Medicare-Plus! If ynu were left out la.t year, here is ;pour opportunity to join the over 70,000 California oenior citizens protected by l\1ajor Medicare-Plasl And now, more than ever, you need Blue Shield's supplement tD Fedcrnl Medicare. Recent changes In the government program have increased the amount JOU mu8t p:iy for medical and boopital SCTVices. Blue Shield's Major Mcdicare-Plus l .teps in to help take """' of the bills only partly covered-er ignored-by Federal Medicare programs. And Major Medicare-Plus! )ll'<lridea mntirmed coverage regardless ol ynur "I!'. your ph)'llicll mnditioli or how often you receive benefits. ACT NOW BEFORE APRIL 30. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY ! Jr you act now-before April ao-,.,.. can enroll in Major Medicarc--Plus! without l!t1bmitting a health slaloment. Don't miss this cllancc.. Mail this coupon to Blue Shield tDday. r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-i I 'CA LIFORNIA -··111 I BLUE SHIELD I • c...~OllM .. ""....,.. •11"112 I I I I I I I I I 720 Califonda Stniet MOT Wflll Sinll !!tN1t &11 Fnncill'IO, C•llfonaia 9tlU . U. Allpla, Callfonda toOOI l'hone: {U6) 989-IUO Ph00&: (U.I} ISO-Ol6l ~ llf'!ld. me, wltbovt Mllptkll'.I, eompWia Man. abwt m. Sllldd'1 Major lledlcue-Pl111! for a .a1)'90lf O ,.,_t C RNr N' .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ headquarters for Gen. Vang Pao's American-trained clandestine army. 1be U.S.'"8dmlnistered hospital at Sam Thong was evacuated during the day and civilian refugees in the area began streaming to the south and we1t ahead of an attack force estimated at 2,000 Com· munists. Most U.S. personnel were Down out to safety. Conflicting reparts at the end or the day indicated that government forces under Van Pao, leader o! the l\feo hill trite warriors, may have succeeded in retaking one of the two captured po~i­ tions. The U.S. has ackno\vledged at least 20 Americans are al Sam Thong. Four. who \\'ere left included Edgar ';Pop" Buell, 56, a former Indiana fanner who gained fame of sorts a3 the indi vidualistic U.S. administrator of American aid to refugees in North Laos for the past nine years. With him were the second in comm·and of refugee affairs, a U.S. Anny offit-er from the military attache's office, and a U.S. Agency for Internati6nal Develop- ment (USADI) employe Wlder civilian status, who is responsible for miiltary supplies and ammunition for the Laotians ---·.- there. Earlier today officials evacuated 56 seriously wounded Lao troops from tile military hospital at Sam Thong to Vie· tiane. Olhers from the ~200 bed hospital were taken to Long Cheng or sent home. thrusts in recent years by the Com· --------------------------------------------------------------------- Mission rl~rail Carole Hanson Guest Speaker L .. \GUNA HILLS -i\lrs. Carolt J{anson, \\'ho recenlly returned rrom a 'd lour on behalr or American prisoners of war, will be the gue~t speaker al a meeting of lhe Con.s'lructi\•e Action Council of Laguna 0 Hills Wed· nesday, ti.1arch 18. f\trs. Hanson, a Saddleback Valley resident, accompanied. several other wives of prisoners of men missing in ac- Hon In an attempt lo seek infonnation on their behalf whil e al the same time focusing attention on their plight. She, v.•ill speak at 7:30 p.m. in Royal Savi ngs and Loan, El Toro. Guests are welcome. F ree 1lluvle S laled f\1ISSION VIEJO - A free family movle, "The Ugly Dachshund," will be shown at the ·Recreation Center for members and guests on Friday, r-.1arch 20. Cartoons begin at 7 p.m. for the children. Another free event. especially for .the kids. will be a craft session on Saturday, li1arch 21 from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. al the Recreation Cenler. Cartoons will be shown at 1 :30 p.m. after lhe crafts are made. \!alle11 ~ltip• Offer,ed SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Maps of the Saddleback Valley in living color will be available as a spring fund raising pro. ject of the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce. Pre·purchasc orders are no\v being ta.ken. aCC<>rdlng to Al Blais, chamber director, by calling him at 837-4753 or by going to the chamber office Room 303-G in the Taj in Leisure \Vorld. Purchases can be made in laJge or small quantities. The maps will contain schools. shopping centers, historic points and other informational data. \!ulle11hnU An11une? LAKE FOREST -A new activity for those \.\'ho'd like some exercise after din- ner on \Vednesdays is being scheduled. Signups are being taken (or an adult \'olleyball night to be played t a ch Wednesday from 7:30 to 10 p.m. at the Beach and Tennis Club. Register at the club or call 837.0161 for more information. Bur ied Utilities Hearing Slated The Laguna Beach City Council will hold an official public hearing Wednesday night on a proposal to underground utilities on Cliff Drive in the Heisler Park area, but there are only four property owners entitled to prote:it the plan, ac· cording to city manager James Wheaton. The project will be funded with $68,000 set aside for undergrounding work by the utilities companies under a PubUc Utilities Commission ruling. Property owners however. will be obliged to foot 1Jie: bill for putting their house service wires underground , but the Edison company will provide the necessary wire, Wheaton said. Other Items on the \Vednesday agenda are. recelp~. of the general plan goals statement approved by the Planning Commission. which probably will iniliate council studies of the goals, and receipt of bids for resurfacing Forest. Avenue, a project to be unde rtaken in April or May. P eace Veterans Planning Forum UC Irvine's Vele ran s foc Peace arganliatlon will sponsor a forum on J/ietna m fro1n April 6 lo April 10 at the College's Fine Arts Building. The principal speakers wUI be people rtirecUy involved \vilh the Vietnam con· flict ; ex.Cl's. Green Berel"i and Marines for peace. The forum will consist of dally open· tnd discussions with veterans. complete ith a photo gallery or war pictures. Discussion wl\J be from 8 a.m. to JO b.m. in Room 230 of the Fine Arts huilding. Speakers will give talks each hight al 7 p.m. / • l!IAlL Y PILOT Sl1tr l'Mh Shootiiig the So11p Surfers, each doing his own thing on the same wave, brave cold wat· er temperatures for the sake of a slide. Board sportsmen are begin- ning to reappear in force along Orange Coast beaches as spring ap- proaches. Can Easter vacation be far behind? Clemente 'Greek Week' Celebrated on Campus San Clemente-High School's annual week-Jong celebration of its Greek nickname began f\.ionday with a "Lreasure hunt'' or sorts and will vdnd up with a student chariot race. pep rally and dance Friday: The "Greek Week " ~lebralion by the Tritons (the Greek demigod, son of Poseidon) kicked off 1'1onday with the search of the gree:k Od yssey marked by clues announced to students over the public address system. Today, the l'iludenls will conduct a Baby Heartbeat Chec ks Vit£Ll, Doctor Decl£Lr es LOS ANGELES (AP) -f\.1any of the 15,000 to 2tl,OOO babies who die in labor each year in the United Stales l'OU!d be saved iJ doctors checked the baby"s heartbeat more often during childbirth, a medical professor .says. Most doctors chec k the babies' heart rates two to four times d u r i n g labor-"something like taking a few frames oul of a molion picture and ex· pecting to come out with 1 ~emp\ele story"-said Dr. Richard H. Paul. Greek profile contest Lo select the sludcnt whose features most resemble the classical Greek ones. The winner wlll be honored at Friday's pep assembly. \\lednesday's Hellenic activities will in· elude the school's version of the Olympic Games. wilh eighth·periocl contest which will include a rriilk carton construction contest. i::~·irn fin relays, ping-pong.ball blowing contests and a three-legged relay. On Thursday the Greek celebrations ~-ill lake to the home or the gods-the sky, where studenl.--made kites will be flown in compet.ition. Prizes w i I I be awarded on attributes such as ~peed of aSCfllt, originality in construction and alUtude. On Friday the chariot races will be the prime activity during the pep rally on the school athletic field . Each class will build its own chariot, wh.ich will be pulled by four burly young men with one driver manning the reins. Preliminaries will pit frosh against lhe sophomores and juniors against seniors. \Vinners of those hvo events will compete in the final race. A school dance at 8 p.m. in the cafetorium will top of£ the week"s celebralioos. Tut.Mill, March 17, 1970 s OAILY PILOT 3 Surf Beach a Question Pendleto1i Strand to Open 'fhis Summer? By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ille !'Illy "l"I 511ff \Vhether the proposed l 'il·mile Camp Pend leton public surfing beach will be opened to the public by this summer-as promised by federal and slate officials earlier this year-is still a tossup today. Jntricate lease speclflcatlons for the n::!w beaclt are still being drafted by the ~farlne Corps, a spokesman said, and, he gave "the near future" as the time Y.iben the lease docwnent Is presented to st.ate parks and recrealion executives for con- sideration. The new public strand near San Onofre became a replacement choice after federal security officials dee.med the Trestles beach too close to the Presiden- tial residence. The second choice lies downco.ast from the San Onofre nuclear power plant. ll would be California's first formal surfing beach. Original plans by the State Department of Parks and Recreation contained hopes that the beach could be open in its raw 6tate by this summer, followed by the st'andard beach improvements of parking sanitation and conc..'t'ss ion facilities. But required documents and govern· ment action could easily make for a later opening. The new beach, which is near the U.S. Immigration check point south of Sa n Onofre, is a replacement for one of the coast's best surfing beach known as Trestles for the railway crossing near the sand. But thal area, originally planned to be opened by the state, was deemed too close lo Cotton's Point where the Western White House and grounds lie. The Secrel 5ervi~ opined that it would be too difllcult to maintain necessary security of Lhe President's estate because of lhe thousands or beach visitors. The alternative suggestion for the other beach arose last January. The changoover caused shelving of already prepared plans for 180 acres of beach, camping sit.es, areas restricled to swimming and others for surfing~ven the creation of an artificial surfing reef. Whelhe.r Lhe new beactl will have the same facililies has not yet been specified. The new beach, State Parks Director William Penn Motl Jr. said, was e.xpecled lo be open by June with access provided by two lanes of Ille old Pacific Coast Hi~hway . Portable rest rooms, camp sites and Disney $1,000 Boos.ts Camp Camp Titan, a summer camp for underprlvlledged children in Orange County. received a boost rceently when Disneyland awarded $1,000 cash for the Cal State Fullerton sponsored projeel. The school ls still $3,000 short of sen- ding 135 chlldren to camp this summer. The campus has provided $4,000 through the student body and several fraternity and sorority organizations on the cam· pus. The l!k:lay camp. located at Baron F'lats in the San Bernardino Mountain.~. will be supported by students from Cal State FulleTton "·ho will act as coordinators and counselors. day·use areas would be provided on a jury-rigged basls unUI the state can bulld the permanent structures. Tile beach acquisiUon Is an initial atep under a new, strong policy In Sacramento to begin opening up more Southern California shoreline for public recrea· tional use. Mott said long·range plans call for $50 D0t1atio11 opening up even more stretches ol shoreline along lhe Camp Pendleton strands in years to come. Many of the base's beaches are UJtd for combat e.xerclieB. During negotiations for the Trestles lease, Corps o(Ucers maintained that it needed the lieach for "pos~Vletnam. period amph1b!ous e.1erclsfs." Optimists Fi1·st ·to Help Scholarship Fund Group The San Clemente Optimist Club is the first ogranlzatlon donor to be logged by the recently formed Scholarship Fund Association serving promising graduate& of San Cle mente High School. The club's check for $50 was presented recently by Optimist Prtsldent O. L. "Mac" ~1achmlller. ' The donated club money will go into the Nixon Creates G1·oup to Study f opulace Growth \VASHlNGTON (AP) -Prnident Nix· on has signed a b 111 creating a com· mission to study what he called "this highly explosive problem" of population growth and its relation lo the future or the nation. The President anoounced that John D. Rockefeller Ill of New York wUI be chairman of the 24·member body, which will look al world population problems as well a,., those in this country. Nixon said of Rockefeller thal: "Perhaps no man in the world has bee n more closely or longer Identified with this problem." T'ne commission •,•,rill be made up of tVl·o men1bers each from the Senate and llouse and 2.U persons to be appointed later by the President. Jt is to report on the probable coorse of population growth, public resources need· td to deal with the population problem and the irnpact of population increases on the government and on activities of government at all levels. A final report is due in two years, with a report of prelhninary findi ngs at the end of one year. Rockefeller v.•as chairman of a presidential co1nmlltee on population and family planning in 1968. He also received an award of the Planned Parenthood Association in 1961. Various member& of Congress were on hand for the bill signing at the Whlte House, including Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana and Sen. John L. McClellan ([).Ark.), who sponsored the bill with Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R-S.D.), who was unable to be present since be Is a hospital patient. associaUon's unspecified fund which wOJ help provide a &eholarShlp to a &elected June graduate. Donations under $100 are placed In that fund, and amounta exceeding lbat figure are placed In a specified fund , Instead. from which scholarships are liven in t.he name of specific donors. The sex. field of study or other specific qualities or the recipient can be included in specified fund donaUons. The assoclaUon Is governed by a coun· cil of 36 civic, business and school leaders. Ila founding committee last year was headed by past OptimJst Club PrelS.i· dent Howard Massie. The group's appeal for don.Wons ls spanning the entire San Clemente and Capistrano area. Every organization has already been contacted for donations to the scholarship effort. The first awards will bt made et this year's high school commencement a · ercises. Forster School Will Receive Freedom Shrine Marco Forster Junior High Sc.hoot In , San Juan Capistrano will be the first to rtteive one of 30 Exchange Club Freedom Shrines to be established in California in April. The school will accept the shriM at a public dedication ceremony on the cam- pus quadrangle April I. Principal Walter:.__J. Spencer &aid the event will feature Gen. Donald Hughes, military aide to President Nixon. lnvita· lions also have bee'n sent to the President and Gov. Reagan . Spencer said the site selection is "an hri"or for our school and community." The shrine is a collection of replicas of 28 documents pertaining to the heritage or the county. Ther, will be mounted on the •valls of the en ranee to history depart· ment classrooms. The shrine is one of three t.o be In· stalled by the San Clemente Exchange r:lub th.is year. Club president Herbert Hivel and committee chalnnan Georgit Conrad were instrumental In t b e purchase. -·- Paul, a University of S o u t h e r n California medical professor. sa id Wednesday ~t USC had put into prac- tice a technique for constant monitoring of the heartbeat at Los Angeles County· Medical Center. But the method is limited, relatively expensive and involves inserting an electrode internally. "\Ve envision development of an ex· ternal device which could provide con· slant heart rate monitoring data on the baby from outside the mother's ab- dominal wall ," he said. Are· you going to "Babies don't die.'' he said, "without changes in their heart rate." Football Managers To Meet 'fonight Adults interesting in becoming coaches, assistant coachet or managers of Junior All-American football teams in the San Clemente, Capistrano Bay area are welcome to a meeting of the organization tonigbt at 8 p.m. The gathering, at a resdlcnce at 211 E. San Pablo, San Clemente, will be an organizational meeting for the chapter, \\'hlch offers football activities for boys from 9 through 13 years old. More in· '~rmation Is available by calling Bob Bourg at 4!n-8275. go through another year thinking you can't afford an Oldsrnobile? Voters Drop Off County Deadlin e April 9 Vottr reglstraUon In Orange County Is down and County Cltrk William E. St ~ohn has issued a call ror persons to sign up ~ore the deaJlllne Apf'il 9, . St Jotin 1ltfd there Is a total of $35.954 registered volers In the county today. This compares w\Lh 58.886 for the general election in 1008. , In Decen1btr of 1968. n.000 \'Oters t.·ere dropped fron1 the rolls for not hav· lhg voted In the general election. "Smet U!al date the Rc1)1JbUcans have moved up to 287,640 from a k>w of 270,790. The Democrats have 220,661 ctmpared to a lrimmed 207,790 In 1968. Qther ~pant tot.els today-s h o w Amerlcln lndependent. S,716, Peace. and Freedom, 679t mlsccllaneous 94J and doclined to ofal<: 21:n1. Sl John noted !hat ll'lere are more than 700 df!puty regl.rtrars located In shofping centers, city halls. libraries, polltica par~ g Offices and lhe Voter• Registration Qf. hce, 1119 E. Chestnut. St., S&nta An11. I ----------------------~--~-~-~---..__~~~--'--- --M- OlDIMOl!LI 441 fNDY ;ACI CAfll 11]0 L • 1c ........ bw IM 0.11¥ Pllltf ltllltl Renaldo Pugh got four write-in votes and has been named asses· sor of· Armanda, Michigan, a town of 1,300 persons. His name wasn't on the ballot, but then, nobody's was. Pugh doesn't know who voted for him and doesn't really wsnt the jbb but village president Rob- •rt Hollwag said, "1 was afraid I was going to have to do the job myseU." • lt.alian actress Sophia Loren is 1hown introducing her son CarLo Ponti, Jr., 15 months, during a press conference at her villa recently. The actress was celebrating completion of her lateJt movie, "The Sunflower&" tn which CarLo also had a part. e The Paiute l ndjans of Schurz, Nev., have rejected an oUer of $250,000 from a Hollywood promot- er to rent their reservation for a rock music festival. Melvin Thom, tribal council chairman admitted the offer was tempting but that the potential size of the festival - a hall million people -would be more than all of the state's law of· ficers and national guard · could handle. Nevada Had a population Qt just 350,000. • Bobby, a parrot who sat in the office of Dr. Kenneth Chris· tenberry of Knoxville, Tenn., and song 101lgs such as "I Am a Pilgrim", "It Ain't Gonna l Rain No More", has died of a ltroke at the age of· 75. The parrot was a gift to the doctor'1 father in 1919. 9 Lynn Hopper, 17, has taken on a part-time job as a babysitter. That n1ay seem a rather common occupation for a teenage girl, but the "baby'' in this case is a twcr ton \\•hale at the Cleethorpes. Eng- land zoo. Lynn is pai d 84 cents an hour to sing and chat to the mam- mal between the lime the keeper leaves and nightfall. • Bladimer Rajc:hlo set his small plane d0\\'11 on a hij'..!hway just out- side .Jacksonville, Fla., when his fuel tanks ran Jo,v. He taxied the plane up to a service station which was closed. Finally, police helped him hand-carry cans of gasoline to refuel and the11 cleared the high,vay so he could take off again. ~y, March 17, J•,. .. U.S. Troops • Ill WASHINGTON (UPI) -Secretory of State William · P. Ro gers said today he could not foreclose the possibility that American combat troops might be used in Lao.s. But be said there are "no present plans" to do so. At the sam e time, Rogers indicated the possibW\y lhat there still might be a con· &lderable U.S. military roree in Vietnam by the time of the .1972 presklential elec· lion. He was asked about Sen. J. William Fulbright's statement Monday quot ing him as saying at a secret Senate hearing tha t advance approval would be sought from Congress before any U.S. ground forces were moved into Laos. Rogers indicated he WjlS not too happy about F'ulbright's disclosure and said he would "like to ta1k to him" about lt. But he said be dld not rule out completely lhe posslb le use of ground forces there. He said he told Fulbright's foreign rela- tions committee thaL "lhere are no Carswell Issue • Sparks Outburst WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senate sup- porter of G. Harrold Carswell says the Supreme Court needs "a B student or a C student'' like Carswell ratlier than another of those "great legal minds" whose decisions have e n c o u r a g e d murderers and rapists. Sen. Russell B. Long (0-La.), brought Lebanon, Israel Exchange Fire Across Border TEL AVIV (AP) -Israeli troops shell· ed Lebanon's southern border today after Arab guerrillas fired bazooka shells at an Israeli outpost in upper Galilee, the military command said. A spokesman said there was no damage to the Israeli positions, but he reported one soldier kllled by Egyptian mortar fire Monday rrlght on the Suez: Canal front. Lebanon said Israeli mortars hit three villages, killed two civilians Including a 2- year-old child, and injured fi ve persons. Lebanese artillery returned the lire and the exchange lasted for 30 minutes, said a Lebanese commurrlque. Lebanese military officials In Beirut said Uiert: was another artillery duel across the border Monday afternoon. They ·sald the Jsraelia started it and damaged one house. Palestinian guerrillas claimed several Israeli helicopters attempted to land troops Jn three Lebanese villages Sunday nlght but "Fatah guerrillas and an- tiaircraft guns f~ed !he at.tempt." ,• into the Senate debate Monday what out· numbered liberals consider a chief issue over Car!:well 's nomination to the court -his ability. Sen. Birch Bayh ({}.Ind.), called Carswell's record "indescribably un- distinguished" and quoted law school pro- fessors who said so. Carswell, 50, during the last 17 years, has served as U.S. at· tomey, U.S. district judge and U.S. circuit judge. Long leaped to his feet. "Didn't these same ... great legal mlnds . . . recommend Judge (Abe) Fortas and endorse the Miranda decision wh.ich a majority o{ the Senate con· sidered responsible for a 100 percent in- crease in murder and rape?" Long asked. "We have enough of these upside-<l:own kind of thinkers," Long said. "Wouldn't it be better to have a B student or a C stu· dent in.<;tead of another A student? ••. What we need , •. is some conformists on the courl, who'll stick to the law as it 's always been rather than upset it." Jn an Interview off the Senate floor, Sen. Roman L. llruska (R-Neb.), ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made a similar point. · "He is a good judge, has been, and has great potential," he said. "But suppose he isn't a good man or mediocre? •.• Even if he were medicore, there are a lot of mediocre judges and people and 1-:wyers. Aren't they entitled to a li:tle representation and a little chance? We f','.l'l't have all Brandeises and Cardozos and Frankfurters ... " Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-1\f ich), a leader in the fight against Carswell's con· firmation , scoffed at Hruska's argument. "It's the first time I've heard that argument made and I hope it's the last - that we should look for mediocrity when we sWf Uie Supreme Court of the United States," Hart said. 'M·A·S-H'Mashed Army, Air Force Ba1i Mo vie NEW YORK (UPI) -The Army and Air Force Jave banned the film "M·A·S.H" from base showings because it might undermine the morale of American soldiers, the news.pa~r An:nY Times reported Monday. The producer of th ehit film said he would appeal "right up to the Su· preme Court" if the ban is official. He said the ftlm was "conslructive." "M·A-S-H," a critical and popular success in New York is about the , wlld antics of Anny combat surgeons which enabled them to deal with hor· rible conditions during lhe Korean war. A military source said the picture 1'reflected unfavorably" on the military and would unde rmine the confidence o( soldiers wh~ may need medical lreatm enl in combat, Army Times said. . The verdict. on the film reporl~dly was delivered unanimously by 20 lo 25 officers -no enlisted men -from 1nformatlon, personnel. medical and chap. 1 J~in branches of the two servci~s who viey.•ed "l\1-A-S-H." The film was the ~· first banned Crom Army and Air Force theaters since 1963 when "War ls ' H~" and "Man In the Middle" were turned down. ' Ingo Preminger, the brother of producer-director Otto Preminger who produced the 20th Century Fox film , said: ' 1 "Many revie.ws have classified my film as em inently patriotic. Ameri- can and constructive. I don't understand how anyone could see it otherwise Ali. far as the picturt being anUwar, I think even the Army is antiwar." · ~ The. military censors were mak1ng their decision under regulations which prohibit cuts from a film, Army Times sajd. Shows must be approved wholly or turned down. - Winter Pushes Out Spring Transpo rtation Paralyzed Throughout Mid·west le..cl'lfll ..... <louclY lllCI '°"" 111 "'°'"'lrtt l'loun c:lt•rlnt IO ,,,.,.l!W .... ...,. -""" Ill the 111.,~. Hlt tu "'''" llfff f.$ Wiii! Wlltr POl!t>d •I J1 ,,._ ...... . MOl>ftl1t111 woirt "'°'llT WM'I' tnd wl""" 111 ll'M 1f!fmoot1. H!tlll "'' ......, "° •• fl'IOll ,....,,, le .... 1$. CitMrfl Wft"e M.11111Y Wfll! "''"' Wllldt '" thl •"••llOOll. 111t'll ttrn ... ,.111,.., re11Hd ,,.., lQ Ill ~ Plllll.,. dOlrtl f• -to lft 111• ICWtt' Wllln i, '°"" lli.tTt Moftdff .,,, ... ..01c1..:1 tNJ1Jrnllft\I IO!Yr lftc:ludMI; L-llt'M:ll ....,, l•111t ~· 11"5, 811r1Nl'll II· n. Mt, WlttOfl •1..U. 1"1111Ml11t' 1J .... lllW>rllet J;f.1J. P•lm 5orl11t1 11'41. lill;ott1fltld , ... Ill. $al'! 01'" ., .... s .... ti •• ,.,. •• ,..,, SOUTHEIU~ CALll'OlltHIA -Hltlll l'lld "'°'"'"' .... cfOUoClt fl' 1(111 _, eottltl .,.., ~IM rnolll'I' t1lr wffJI .y.,.M'!N. dOlfOt tllrwtl'I Wtdfln- 611'. Cl'lllllC• _, lltlOo' tllOWWI "'°"""IM 11+. w..,_.ir. c.eiet °'"" Oj11rv -w~lifi. Tli*'diY ~ WM11«.J'f. Coastal "•rttY "'""'¥· L!tlll v1rl1bl• wllldt 11'9hl Ind ....,,,,lilt tleun Mc:etl'llM _,.,..,,.., lo wt1I I lo1 1' kMh Ill 1111.._1 todlW 111C1 Wfltlti'tf , Hllfl IOlllY IJ. C0t1r11 lt1'1111tr1111r" r1nH 1r11m ).I 1$ 6f, lllltlld IH'nptrf lWfi'I rt ... I ~ J,J IO n. Wtltr """"'"'"'' •• S;·"· ~Ir ·a . Tidf'S lUli,OAY Ste:Cl\CI 111111 1:>' t.m, J,t WIOtrttSOAY 'rnt lllgll 11·J01111, 11 ""' !off , 61 !I• m. '·' U<OllO 111111 ............. I 1'•.111.0.l l.Koncl low 7•M • 111. U IWll 11Mtt:Ol t 11't, ltlt t'll2 t.IT>. M-. a /ttt f;U tJ'll. $tll l :l1 •·"'· IJ.S. Summarv Muell M tM. "''""' owld lllf ce11fd • .._ wlllt...,., ION'I' •a.Id -!tier, .._ .,. r thl "t 'MllM IUCff! lfl Ctll- ll:wfllt •"" ,,,. '°"llllowett ClfMrt '"'°"· A ~-brffkl11t"-itON11 flt• vlr• ll,lt ll'( Wottvt.d tr1n1•t1ll011 In toiilll> t•1' I('""'· nortltu1t Olil11!ofM, nor"""9:11 Arll.•1111• eftd tollfrwMI Ml•· Mlllf1. $now dfp!ll ,.nfted • lfldla. "'~•11'1 ·-Wl"'l~• .. , ..... ,Id fr(lm 1101'1111111 Artl111h1 tot K1nlw<kw •ncl 11Wtlln11 ltlll'lftttt wl!ll •""-' W!!'lflf' ~Tr>tr WllPl~t • wtlCNI\ _, ... tor "'°'' 111 Mtuowrl "'""' ,,,. Olli. Vtl'"' I• Wtll...,. ¥1'11111141. n.. wttl1tnl "'It 1t1ln wtfi' -1N , .. 11r119 kltt lt'I' ,..,,,., Nlowtrt •Ad ·-- '.l'emperat"r~• Alllucrw"'ut Ancllor•H Al!11111 takt,..lleld llltlMrck .. , .. ...... llrow111vlll1 Clllc.10 Clncl1>r11H -~ .... _ O.trolt F•!""-ni1;1 Fort Wof111 f~M Htltn.1 "'-!Ylll k111,•a CllV lUVl'tn Loi Afflln Ml•ml Ml11n.1.ollJ Nirw Orl .. 111 NW' Vort Norf1'I .. ,.lt9 011t11MI Oli1tllOIN CllY ..,,.,,. I P1111 Ror>rr .. 1'1<191111f PttfUo,or~ P0111e..., lt••hl Cit• It.cl IHv" ·~' Ser·1-10 S•ll Lt~t Clf't JMI OIHo S..11 F••~<ltc0 '-•"'• -·~ T/lt'rl'Pl.lt w,111....,.n Hll~ lff' I'm. ~ . " .. JJ 31 " ~ JI 1• $1 )l ,11 .. " 7' 'J .01 " " )t ,. ,, ,, " " .. " ,, 05 u • 1.n n " '' 21 M u " . " " .. . " .. " " " .... )1 ,, tt u .D2 .. " ,, 71 ·" •l '' " n ,. ,, "' " 11 J6 .Cl " ,. "' .. " n " ' .H '° .ll " .. .. " ft 1' OJ JI ,. .oa .. "' n u Lao ·s Not· Ruled Out present plans to use ground troops." He said "I also told the committee that I was not foreclosing" completely lhat posslb1llty. Rogers said he did not believe lhat the Communist Pathet Lao military and political offensive in Laos was a prelude to a more serious offer by Hanoi and Viet Cong negotiators at the Parl.s peace Wb. When asked what he believed the Palhet Lao and its Hanoi supporters were trying to do ln Laos, Rogers aald, "we hope they are trying to make thelr negotiating position stronger, We hope · they are not trying to overrua lhe coun-- try.'' Asked to conunent on 11pecul1tJon that there mlght be 100,000 to 150,000 U.S. troops :still in Vietnam two to three years from now, Rogen said: "I don't want to make any predic- tions." He as:sertid that the pro111m of replacing U.S. combat forces wllh South * * * Vietnamese had uworked pretty well so far" bul he would not make any forecast as to the futW'e. Fulbrighl's committee is considering a \'ariety or resolutions aimed at puttin& the Senate on' retard for U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia. But the ad· ministration says the White House will nol br under any legal obligation to pull out or Vietnam under any legislation that might be passed by Congress. Big Parades Honor Irish U.S. Unit Quits · 'Green Day' Threatened Base By The A1soctated Press The Irish and the Irish-for-a-day don the green. today. lt's St. Patrick's Day and New York City 's big Fifth Avenue parade hlghlight.s observances around the nation. The New York parade is the 20Mh an· nu~J in. that city. St. Louis ls having its "first annual." And in Santa Ana, Calif., resident will enjoy their first St. Patrick's Osy parade in at least 20 years. The New York event features 35 con· tingents wittl 120,000 marchers and ma rtial airs from 137 bands from eight states. Terence Cardinal Cooke, archbishop of New York, is an honorary grand marshal of the parade. He and other clergymen re' :ew the spectacle from the steps of St. Patric k's Cathedral. Further up at &Ith Street the marchers pass the formal reviewing stand filled with politicians and other dignitaries. In St. Louis, Mayor A. J, Cervante has renamed the Spanish International Pavilion the "Irish Pavilion" for the day. A six-inch green line had been pain- ted along the parade route together with assorted sprayed-on shamrocks. In the traditional spirit of the day, the Michigan Legislature Monday passed a resolution declaring all residents to be ''honorary Irishmen." The Irish in Boston planned their an· nual parade through South Boston, but this year they have competition from some disgruntled Orangemen. Over 65? VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) -U.S. of. flcials tonight evacuated most Americans from the refugee and logistical Sllpport base for Sam Thong in the face of ad· v,:i:.iclng North Vietnamese troops who seized two key pasta six and eight miles away, boht within easy artillery range. Sam Thong is about 75 miles north of Vientiane and 30 mil es sou th of east-west Highway 7 leading westward from the Plain of Jars. Long Cheng, six miles to the southeast of Sam Thong, is main National Protest To Oppose Draft Protests in Milwaukee and San Antonio, Te:r., and distribution ln schools of "We \Von't Go" petitions have marked the beginning of a y.·ee~ o( nationy.·ide an- lidraft demonstrations. A man dressed to represen~ the "Spec- tre of Death" carried out a solitary vigil Monday at the San Antonio draft board offices And the protesters in Milwaukee marched on a courthouse. In Norfolk, Va., the draft board was evacuated following a telephoned bomb scare. No bomb was found. The nationwide protest campaign. sponsored by the New P.1obili2ation Com· m.itlee To End the War in Vietnam, is planned to extend to more than 100 cities by the end of the week. Were you left out the last time Blue Shield offered Major Medicare·· Plus! IT HELPS PAY THE BILL<; FEDERAL MEDICARE MISSES. For a Iimitro time only, Blue Shield is offering Colifornians 65 ar older a 1JeOOnd chance to enrt>D in Major Medicare-Pins! U you were left oat last year, here is your opportunity w join the om-70,000 c...tifornia oenicr citizens protected by Major Medicare-Pins! And now, more than~, you need Blae Shield's supplement w Federal Medicare. Recent changes ill the government program have increased the amount you ma5t pay !or medical and hospi~"ll eervioes. Blue Shield'o Major Medicare-Plus! st.ops in whelp take care of the bills only partly rovored-or ignored-by Federal Medicare progr.mis. And Major Medicare-Plus! pnrridm conW!uod coverage r.gardles; of your age, your physical mnditiori or how often you receive benefits. ACT NOW BEFORE APRIL 30. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY! tr you act now-before April 30-you can enroll in Jvfajor Medicare-Plus! without submitting a beaJth stat.ement. Don't miss this chance. Mail this coupon w Blue Shield today. r- I f I l ,,,_____,,_.,..,, .... ..__ ______ ---- L---------------------1 headquarters for Gen. Vang Pao's American-trained clandestine army. The U.S.-admin istered hospital at Sam Tl'KJng \Vas evacuated during the day and civilian refugees in the area began st reaming to the south and west ahead of an attack force estimated at %,000 Com. muni sts. Most U.S. personnel were flown out to safety. Connicting reports at the end of the day indicated that government forces under Van Pao, leader of the Meo hill lrit.e 'varriors, may have succeeded in retaking one of the two captured ~i· tions. The U.S. ha s ackno\vledged at least 20 Americans are at Sam Thong. Four who were lefl inc luded Edgar "Pop" Buell, 56, a former Indiana farmer who gained fame of sorts a3 the individualistic U.S. administrator of American aid to refugees in North Laos for the past nine years. \Vith hirn \11ere the second in command of refugee affairs, a U.S. Anny o!flcer from th e military alt.ache 's office, and a U.S. Agency for International Develop- ment (USADI) employe under clvillan status, who is responsible for military supplies and ammunition for the Laotians there . Earlier today officials evacuated 55 seriously wounded Lao troops from tile military hospital at Sam Thong to Vie- tiane. Others from. the 200 bed hospital were taken to Long Cheng or sent bome. thrusts in recen l years by the 'Com. • . . : l I [ 1 ' ' J n .· 0 0 ' " ;, 0 • d ,, • ,. n y • 1• ' .. Heil, ll'allace George Wallace, campaigning for a return to the Alabama governor's chair, makes a point over the shout& of hecklers like the one below during an ad· drei;s at the University of Alabama. South Hoping· Courts Taking A 1wther Look By Unlted Pre11 lnteraational Some southern of fic i a Is beJleve the Supreme Court'5 refusal to reinstate a busing t>rder in Norlh Carolina in- dicates the tribunal is taking a RCOnd look at public IChool '¥segregation. The high court Monday re- jected an appe.!11 from the legal dme""' fund of the Sena te Seat At Stake In IJiinois CHICAGO !UP[) -5en. Ralph T. Smith, endorsed by Vice President Spiro T • Agnew, faces William H. Rentschler, Richard M. Nix· ot1's 1968 Illinois campaign mallager, in today·~ Repobl ican 1enatorial primary. On the Democratic ticket, State Treasurer A d 1 a i E. Stevenson Ill ran unopposed for t.he senatorial nomination. He will face the wjnner of the Smith-Rentschler contest in November's general election. About l.6 million voters - :10 percent of 1he electorate - were ezpected to go to vote in both primaries today. The weather bureau p r e d i ct e d generally clear skies and wahning temperalure~. Although Nixon had made nn public comment about the GOP primary. in Illinois. Agnew's endorsement o f Smith obviously spoke for the administration. Thls and Gov. Richard B. Ogllvie's strong •Upport made Smith the heary favorite. Otilvie named Smith to the Senate arler minority leader Everett M. Dirksen died SepL 7. Illinois law requires such appointees to run in a general iel.ect.lon to fill the re'llainder of_ the tenr.. Dirks.en's term had five ysars to nm when he cfitd. NAACP that It revoke the suspension of a federal dl!trid court order that wouki have bused from 14.000 to 2il,OOO ~ludents to achieve a racial balance in Charlotte, N.C., schools. The order had been suspended by the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeale, which scheduled a Wring April 9 on the matter. William Poe. chairman of t h e Charlotte-Mtcklenburg School Board. 1aid t he Supreme Court ruling "in· dicates that maybe they've decided to slow down and take a look at the urban school pro- blem. lt's a different 1itaation from the rural achoo ls.'' Rep. Albert Watson CR· S.C.), said "no doubt th.ii decision indicates that the Supreme Court will n ow determine the applicability of the anti-busing provision of the 1964 Civil RJghts AcL" Watson :iiaid the court's decision would have no Immediate effect upon South Carolina. Cover Story Comes True NEW YORK [AP) - ''\Vo men in Revolt," prf>. claims the current cover of Newsweek. And at Newsweek they did -48 of them charg. ing their employer with job discrimination in a (ederal complaint. To the liberated ladies of Newsweek, the fact that only one of them was on a wrtUng r;t11ff of 50 men showed eviden- ce or "a blantant policy of di scr imina ti on against women." With Urning coinciding with the Ne..-'sweek article on grow. Ing militant , feminism, they filed a complaint with the Equal Emplo ym ent Op- portunity Commission, their lawyer said ~tonday, in which they charged that the news weekly bypassed women for lop wriUng pooiliona became of their sex. San Francisco Ret1wns To Normal Mter Strike SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Cable cars· ~langed, t h e trolleyg hummed and foot.sore San Francl9C1?1t rode to work 1oda,y as the city servtct~ resumed after four da)>!I of a crippling strike by ? ,000 ctly employea. City nuree:s were back at their statkw and janitors cleaM!d up ntgle<=ted public buildings as the strikers and another 7 .cm workers who supported thtm 11-·1nt back to their jobi:. The l'iettlement ~I o n d a y gave the strikers an estimattd $6 million in annu1l wage irt- mases. mendation. The s t r i kl n 1 unions approved It later by more than 3-1 margins. The pack1ge alao reimtated a sy11,m, knotked out earlier by the board, of automatic pay increases for new employes of 5 percent annually for the first lour years, which city worktt1 ha ve had since l~J. Jn rttmnmendlng t b e " package t.o the board, Mayor JoM:ph Alioto said lt was ''fair, Justified and dese rved ..• and rtflects the inflation lhat a!fecll our en- Ure economy." Leaders d strl'llng un!ons werf: Jiying pJans to shut down the waterfront and po~ibly curtail operations al the - T_".c".cd'.:'•:...'";;.;"'""'-TT"", '-!""'-'--------DAILY PILOT I Nixon Aids Housing ' Releases .$1.5 Bill ion in Funds WASHINGT6N (AP) - President Nil:on acted today lo frtt: $1.~ billion in federal and state funds to help revive the slwnping construction in· dustry. At the same time. he &en\ member1 'of Congress a state- ment ouUinlng his ideas on how to reverse the cutbf,ck In homing start& by making more mortgaae mo n e y avaJl1ble and prO,mot,,,g an in· creased labor force in the con· stnK:tlon 'trade. • ~lost. important. however, Ni.>ton announced h~ was terminating a directive he issued last September for curbing fede rally a s 5 i s I e d state and local construcUon projects. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scotl of Penru;ylvania !old new$men at the \Vhite }louse this move would ha\e the effect of releasing $1 .% billion of federal money and about $.100 mllllon of state funds. House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford, of ~fichigan , Never Too Late who had just participated in a conference with Niion and other G 0 P congressional chiefs. said relaxation of the •. 'Onstructlon curb! was possl· h!e and "!he danger of any recession •.. is nil." ford. pictured I.he con· li truction industry a.s perhaps hardest bit as a re5ult of the adminl!LraUon's antl-inflation efforts and said that the op- timistic adminlstrat!ort assess· ment of the economy made tt sensible now to help' that in- dustry out of !ls slump. By l'ftn lnterlcmcll Te xa1i Marr ies at 106 Nixon called for new efforts to inC'rease the supply of con· struction labor and put new stress on the search for lower interest rates. In a detailed statement, Nix· ~g~~;~~~=~~~:;~~g~:;:;J on .simultaneously announctd ~ that he: was terminating bis HOUSTON, Tex. (API - The .Rev. James A. Adams. \vho says he is 106 and \\'as chap lain lo Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders in the Spanish. American \Var, has been mar: ritd for the fourth time. The retired fo.1ethodlst mJnlster and P.1rs. Barbara Holder, 66, his nurse for the last five year!;, had the knot tied Monday in County Clerk R. E. Turrentine's office. Criminal Dlst. Court Judge Sam Divis interrupted a murder !rial to ronduct the ceremony. .. !'rn 30 years young when 11 con1es to being act.ive," rhucklcd the spry bridegroom v..t10 has oullived t h r e e previous wives and three children. Turrentine paid for th~ $5 marrl:ige license, served as bl':st man and commented : ''I just hope if J should live lo be 106 that I would be as alert and frisky as the brideiroom." request of la&t September for a sharp curtailment In federally assisted state and local construction proj~cts. The chief executive justified lifting this curb by stating that his administration is "now moving the economy· to the path of stable economic growth." He called for almost doubl· ing the rate of housing start!, saying starts must reach a r11te of 2.5 million a year by 1975 compared to the current low rate of LJ milUon . West Pointer Wants-Out NEIV YORK (AP) - A young \Ve~t Point graduate serving as a first lieutenant in the Anny has applied for discharge as a conscientious objecter based on his con· vlction "til11t the Vietnam war is immoral and unjust." Lt. Louis P. Font., l3, of Kansas City, Kan., quoted sec- tu>ns frori1 the \Vest Point Cadets Prayer ln his 47-page application for di.scharg~ sub- mitted feb.·27. f"Ont placed 31st in his class of 706 cadets at the academy. After graduation he enrolled at the John F. Kennedy SChool of_ Public Affa irs at Harvard University in a program for "distinguished m 111 tar y graduates.'' Snow Hits Wide Area Of Midwest By Tloo -'-111ed Prus A record tnoWfall, worth milUons. to farmtn, put a 1tranglehold on business, schools and traffic In a n~.r· row band from 1outbwestm Kansas into southern 1itlssourt. The atorm was expected lo move into western Kentucky and &OUthem Ohio today. Up to twG feet of snow fetl on the area across southern Kansas and northern Okla• homa into Missouri and north• ern Arkansas. Some schools were closed today and some of thtm may not open Wednesday. Many large Industrial plants were !hut. Seven deaths in the Wk:hlta, Kan., aru were attribtrtf.d to overexeruon Jn 1boveling snow and pushing ca.rs. Three persons died ln two accidents on allck pavement OOllth of Fort Scot~ Kan. '!be tv.·o driven and three school . children were injured In a collision of a car and a school bus DOrtbta..tt of Osceola, Mo. !n IOUth,..11 Mla!ourl, 24 inches of snow was reported al Neosho and Dillmond. Car- thage had 23, Mount Vernon 12, Joplln :a, Moaelt 20 and Gal<na It. Security Pacific Bank has rava ant checks for fruga people. You can cash a flock of tliem free. Look. of our graduated fee plan, If you keep a minimum so your service. charge balance of $300 in your will never be unreasonable. regular chec:k:ing accoun t, That's what's known as you can wnte as many being fairly frugaL But the checks as you want with-beautiful thing is ... we out paying any service offer inexpensive, chaige at all That's what's L_-expensive-look:ing known as ~ing fruf?af. ~ . checks, as And ••• if your balance ~ · ~ slips below $300,you can ~ take advantage well as service-free check· ing accounts. They come in dramatic scenes, as below. Bold mosaics. Elegant pat- terns. Handsome ones. Pretty ones. Twenty in all So at Security .Pacific Bank you can look extni v- agant and be frugal at the same time. What could be better than that? SECURITY PACIFIC BANK • 'The Boord of Supervbon voted un.nlmou1 ·approval of the ta mUlion wlje 1>3cbge, wblcl'J compared wl!il the $4.8 mllllon they had offered ana the $9.5 million asked by the uniw on the basis of a Civil ai1110rt wl~tt lines, w'Mn .___ __ lhesetllemtnl--clffi!-;--"J'l'\l chiefs of non11trtklng unlom had ta-lktd of a scncrtl work --~MMce Commia&on rec.om· aloJllllS~ ·~-~~-----~~~~-~~~-~---~~~~~~~-~~~~~....:.'~---~~-----t,~~~~~~~~- - ~ ......... -------------------=--=------------------------~--- -- • DAD.V PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Th• faceless but appannUy allluent backers of the campalBJl to tteall Fifth District Supervisor Alton Allen tound 500 phony aignatures on their petitions last Thursday. So their ''volunteers" {at least so1ne at,20 cewts a signature) are icurrying for valid names of regtst.ered voters to replace _those invalidated by coun- ty clerk!s office checkel'I. ' Despite ·protests from --thoss who beli~ve politics should be-open and aboveboal'd, the campaign backers have continued to be less than forlhrigbt in r evealing who is putting up tile money and \Vhat or who the real target may be. Costa 'Mese Councilman Robert M. Wilson and sav· lngs· and·;Joan executive Ron Caspers have a~unced. their candidacies for Allen's seat in the June 2 pruna.ry. Neither man bas been identified with the recall n1ovemenl \Vilson, in fact, describes A.lien.as a •'very fine gentleman" and says he is not tn favor of recall. He ha$ concluded that someone other th.an Allen is the real target. Because of repeated anonymous attacks on John Killefer Allen's administrative assistant an,d potential future ~uccessor, many believe he is the object of the mud-sllngers. Two men have been o~~y identified with the recall effort. One is Paul Carpenter, who lives in Cypress and therefore is not even a voter in Allen:s .district. The other is Anthonv Tarantino of San Clemente, who is said to be the probable "stand-in" candidlrte at the re- call campaigners, · The key question is who would be willing to spend $40,000 or $50,000 to gain control of the Filth District superv1sorial seot. Questionablt motives have surrounded the recaU movement from the start. Even Allen's detractors have voiced dismay at tactics of the recall movement. These include failure to reveal the names of the big nioney ·backers of the campaign and slurs on Allen's Campaigners reputation by anonymoll5 broadsides. Any legftiniate present or 1uture entry in the dis· trict race must, as \Vilsoa ha~ dQne, repudiate the re. call movement, Then tHe que-stioa becomes whether the public \vill believe the di:iclaimers. " Secrecy ill Government Citizens wbO believe the public business should be conducted in public -and that should liiclude every- one - ought to be disturbed by the continuing efforts of government officials to promote secrecy. The Ralph M. Brown Act was passed some years ago by the California Legislature to establish public policy in this area. Except for personnel and certain legal matters, the act requires public officials to do their work and keep their records in public view. But the act lacks teeth and should be strengthen- ed -and the trend is in the other direction. Not Only are local, county and state councils and conuniSsions circumventing the Brown Act, there are bill' proposed in the Legislature whictJ. would further promote 5&'recy. One would permit a local official having cuS't.ody of public records to destroy them after five instead of sev· en years, without prior approval of the legislative body or the city attorney, \., Another would permit the sealing of arrest records of acquitted persons without any basis other than the person's request. Still another would eliminate public notice in a variety of government proposals, purchases and in some actions l!iuch as probate. The basic ·right of the public lo know the public's business will be seriously eroded if these and other sim· ilar bills become Jaw. And that could open the door to official hanky·panky and serious breach of public trust. There's enough of that now \\•ithout making it easier. .Crime in ,Stree·t: Reader Says Term 'Occult' Wrongly Used Gift Proposal Is a Scandal Facts, Fallacies FllCb ""'1 F•n.cla about "Cl1me ta the Streets": Fallacy: Most robberiel! «CW' .. In the stree~"; Fact: The majority of ro~ beries occur b1 the hallways, lobbies and elevators of apartment buildings. F~: Most people who are robbed the:Se days are also physically att.ackeC ; Fact: Fewer than 10 percent of robbery \'ictlms indicate to the police tbat they bad been Injured during lbe attack. Fallacy: Physical assaults, Including rapes and murders, are m o 1 t l y perpetrated upon whites by blacks; Fid: About SO percent of all murder, rape and 3"8.ult victims a:e attacked br pei:sons of the game. race. T:.e overwhelming ma· jority of white rape ar.d mu:d'!'!' victlrnr are assaulted by ••bites, and lhe 6ame majority of black rape and murder \'ic- tims by blacks. Fallacy: The prosperous are more like. ly to be robbed than the poor; Fart: The poor are far more likely to be robl>ed than the well -to-do, and a penon making Jess than $3,000 a year is five times more likely to be robbed than someone making more than $10,000 a year. Fallacy: Almost all robbers are arm- ed ; Fact: only one-lhird to one-hall of robbers are armed. THESE FIGURES are taken fnlm an Intensive 10-week study made by the New York Police Department in three dlf· ferent neighborhoods in the Bronx, which make up a typical cross-section of urban society. They include a black precinct, a changing neighborhood, and a whi~, mid· dle-class area. And they are aubsJantiated by the r&o cent study made by the National Corn· mlssio:i on the Ca,pses a!!d Prevention of Violence. These studies confirm lbal the "muggings" on the street, of which 60 many cltiu-ns are frightened these days, are committeJ largely by nafC(ltict ad· die ls desperate for funds to get a "fix,'' 2.nd are a matter of econon1ics, not of race. . ACTUALLY, VIOLENT crimes cut across race lines mucl! less frequently ~~t no~violent b'.ll'glaries and robberies: whil e rr.urders, as every cri.mi'lologist has lone known, are in 75 Pf!" ce!'lt or more of cases committed b~· relatives, friends or acquain1,a~ces in the same milieu, and uot by strangers. The poor, the black, the unemployed, the alienated, the alcoholic and the addicted are t.ie chief murder victims. Certainly crime has risen in the U.S. in the last decade, and we must be con. cerned about il But the best ~·ay tG take effective action is to begin with the !act! and to reject hysterical fallacies. Lawyers' Phony Protest This column was inoperative when the e ---:- 1Ubject mattu was in the news, but the ; · gubject '"'u" remains. I' ... Royce Brier When United States Dislrict Judge 1~ Julius Hoffman sentenced the Chicago "6...t----""---'""---- defendants for contempt of court, a group situation, a jostle of defendants determin- of young attorneys erupted on the porcn ed on a daily course of bawling and of the Federal building in San Francisco obscene. contempt (or the American for noisy hubbub. Sometimes you have to judicial process. i1ost or the time they agree, il brie(ly, with. Vice President more resembled a caucus ot jays in a Agnew, for this dem~ation was pine tree than a human collective. It is strictly phony for the te.evtston cnmeraa. possible the late Ju d g e Learned Hand Seems there is no ecstasy like putting on could have·cut tbrougb this childish com· a harangue in the morning, then settling znotion, but you can 't be sure. down witb a beer at the six o'clock neWs Anyway, Hoffmao ·snapped his way , to admire your stuttering cratory. through It, awaiUng hii day of vengeance. To the Editor: This i~ a troubled response to your_ editorial page column (Editor J a I Research) headed ''Churches are Losing While Occult Gains", (DAILY PILOT, March 11), Whoever wrote the article simply demomtraled his own confusion and ig· norance of what is termed the occult The writer at~pted to link together a number or largely unrelated activitif:!I, taking care to gtress the most unbalanced and· unsavory ones, within~ the scope or the occuJL Random House DicUonary defines the OC<Ull as "beyond the range of ordinary ~ilbox knowlecft:e ; secret; disclosed only to the init ialed." TO AS.50ClA TE the occult primarily wttn "Satanists" Md "cults of evil," as the article does, is similar to writing about medical quacks, and then referring to them as if they ·were the entire medici! profession. Why Lhe need to lump t~ethtr all palmlsts, grapbologists, numerologists, and astrologists witn "Satanists" and "cuks of evil"? This is not objective, not 6CienUflc, and not very good journalism. lt shook my confidence in the integrity of the Pilot. Persona who have studied the occult in 1ts genu!ne Eense of "eq>erience beyond the range of, ordinary knowledge'' recognize ~hat there are tremendous powers available to the human personali· t" 'Nhleh have nothing to do witb the neurotic or psychotic efforts c f .. Satanists" and "evil cults". THE WRITER EVEN treated us to a Bible -euolation from Exodus : "Thou shalt not suffer o witch to Uve". Why did he not, more perlinenlly, quote from I .,1.an 12: "Now the matter of th e gifts from, the spiril •. One ind the same spirit gives faith to one man, while to .another man he gives the power to heal. The spirit gi\·es one man the, power to work miracles; to another, the gift of srieaking GOO's messages." This latter ):taS.SSge is infinitely nearer the genuine intent' of those wbo consider themselves involved In occult study and activity, than ~ Exodus quote. · Anyway, these guys huddled and J:>um. Some.of hia work has already ~en un. · ed certificates saying they could practice done in the ~et of appeals 'Chambers, . AS A PSYCHOLOGIST I obServe that a In the United States ~rts. This ~as ~ ."1r!bre n\&y be undone.. <Hoffman srat mapy of ~ young pecpl~ a.re deep. phony because the paper!; were ~st depled 'bail.._ uying. tbe defepdants are fy;interested in the occ;µlt. And their In- paper, and can be replaced for a dollar or · ''dangerous,•11 and the appeals cour1" saJd tertst has, for the 'most' part, nothing i;o. • .. 'they aren't • ., They probtbly are'n,.'t, bu! wltatever ii\ common wun "Satanism" or One of th~ orators then sounded a gibil, ri'lefe .nu.W:'nce81 like Fatber William who A. the "'daemonic'~ To llnk ~ occult, In doom : "This Is the end of the felt~ , stobd on hb head in "Alioe " 'Renual ·wtth t1)c Sharon Tate murders Ls judi~iary In Am~ica.". There w.ia·'tncit'e' •·.. , • . • ' . U lrre'sJ,oMible as It would be to luik all but 1t was hyst~r1cally JWllbled and hard SJNCE 1~ ABOVT 1900 Dlstrlcl fathers, In gOOal, Wtth the fatbtr who to remember, like a Buddy Hack~~t Joke. J,udgcs 11ave,he.ld O(Oce, and a few'hun-beat! hia child~to a pulp! • · dred appeals judges. They we 1ppol9ted • 'Mlei'e is aJ.rOady .JbQR tl1an aderiuate IT WOULD BE hard to uncovu ln the ror life, hence aerie Jong tenn•· They are ammutliuon on both aides of the "battle ~r of United States .DialrJci (ltia.1) ~nservaUve or..Jibtral, -acCortiing to our nr the ger>eraUon gap>: ,\11.t~t 'tddlng to ' judges in the land, one wi~h Iii morl'fl~n:.-Jne."act labels. ,Many have been (he:. stockpile wttJtl th!J type cf obvlot1s.ly ed aocial and Judicial oqtlook than Judge, distinguished ""!~ and liwyers. Some . thougtlttw rej>orUng. . Hoffman, or one further 'temo.ved from. were mere! J1tllticl8Ds, and a remarkable 'lfoun ror more· prb(essioJJ and / the realm or the · cool, objecUve proportion of these. rose to the level re. resPonslble ,tourrtaUm. ,, ; magiSU'ICY whib ~!w be<n ·our eipec. quired i>)I 4heir off>Ce. Nol a handful oC C. II: RJCHkllDSON t1tioo since t da)'I" of anel~t Grttce. the 1900 ha9e .ttnntd out-to be rascals. · Tbt feaS«ID 9~course m\l!il cohccdc 'J'hcst men have many functions Jn ' · Edi1on4i ReieGrch 'R~rLs is · 4 the judge faced • near·im1'9S'i)lle judldal · equity belwetl\ citluns, bu! ·lhcir mMt natlonau11-....,.<Uc<it<cl s<rolu a/fillat- . • :'. ' . Jmportent rundlon 1s to rstand between ed with C9 ngrt11iO)lal Quartnly ·fn • B" :~· ~.rg-___ • _, you, the innocent or only"venio l clUtt'.n. ~VC1hinOton, D.C1 It& bdtttng overage -"'f" ~ and tM tyranny d thC gOvenun.cnt <1nd /or accuraey ~has be~ rat.ed crccp- ~~IDE ..... ' TO. WO.RLD , It& a,gents. Tens ol thousandJ of lime• In «ooollv high. Th e Richardson criliqut w i,r ITJ-uu.. our ,J:ilrtory they ha\>'fl, thJ¥• rted ha1 been /on.oardld to tht a~th.or. ALMANAC: ¥tab, l'JJ tell you ove'ttealous,,; malev_dtent publk offieers, -Edito1' ' ' Lockheed's Money Troubles WASHING TON -Th! spectacle of Undersecretary of Defense David Pack· ant agonizing over bow W. give Lockheed Aircraft f650 million of the taxpayers• 'money in order to keep It in~busineSs-ls i. scandal -made more 60 because it is !lO revealing of the mllltary·industrial com· pl ex. Dani'!! Pat.rick Moy nlhan 's recent definition of the military-industrial as a figment of the imagination (as Stone Age men imagined evil god$ t.o explain a poor rainfall) is a better description of a tendency in hign places to Jnte~tuallze than it Is or economic facL ' · The economic fact is that the govern- ment already owns nearly all or Lockheed -except the IMck and·the pro- fits. We own the Marietta, Ga.1 planl at whJch the CSA was built, and we own the plant at Sunnyvale, Calif., wlie.re tne Poseidon-Polaris missiles are fashioned . NOW 1T IS BALDLY propcX1ed by Lockheed management that it be reward- ed for stunning mismanagement by a gift of cash in order, we are told , to "keep the team together" and avoid the risk that several other weapons systems will go by the boards. And the government treats the event as a commonplace. Alas, for what remains of free enterprise Jn really big business, it is. What is unstated, in the Lockheed pro- posaJ. is that the company's cash Oow is tied up-not in Pentagon contracts alone, but in construction of the commercial J... 1011 Ju mbo Jet. Lockheed bas been out of _ commercial aircraft construction tor some time, existing almost entirely on government work. of which former Penl.lgon official A. Ernest Fitzgerald has said, "The more you spend the more you earn." · A Pentagon weapon is originally priced not on the basis of what it should .cost but on the basis of what it cost last time, and any overages are prortipUy made up in the reorder, since the. inflated cost is now the historical cost. But the new plane is at least a year away !rom the runway, costs are high and commercial alrliries 'do not have the coz:y arrangements with their st.ipplicrs which the taxpayers do. The result ls a hard-pressed company, .and the proposed solution is a bail-out.. whicn would be de- nounced as a "failure ot socialism" if it JN THE CASE OF the C·SA"s. famous •·golden handstlake" contract. this pro- cedure was put to the absurd length of "folding back''. into the first order the now-inflated "historic" cost of the reorder, so as to make even the first • blunder a pr.ofitable orie. _ Fltz.gerald and. others think ~.re Is . another ~lution. For once, Jet capitalism work; Jet the inefficient producer be driven from the market. A Lockheed bankruptcy, after all, would mean the government c:.ould look for-another ·~nant for its factorieranother manufacturer who woul~ hire the 'present work force and fini sh the job., Perhaps a score of Lockheed executives would Jose their jobs-fGr they would have gambled, as American businessmen used to do, and lost. I _ ~appened, say, in England .. LOCKHEED IS IN trouble on the C- l!A-a giant plane whose cost overruns, concealed in the PentagOn 13st year to protect the company's stock position, were finally revealed to be enormous. A1J a result of congressional outcry, the reorde r was reduced and the game "'aa up. TAe game, In this case, Is Pentagon procurament practices which would cause the instant dismissal of anyone in business. It is a world of-"will cost" con- tracts, rathe r than "should cost," of "contract nourishment" rather than cori· tract policing, of "get-well money" under the guise of change _orders. Jt is a gapie: InsteaCI, inefficiency will have been rewarded, the club will not be required to post the names cf delinquent members and we will have moV·ed a "Step closer to the interesting prospeet ef fiOCialism for the rieh and free enterprise for the'JX)Or. By Frank Mankiewta 1'11~ Tom Braden ~eagan Alter·s His 'Tactics LOS ANGELES -The image builders have decided that in election year 1970 Gov. Ronald Reagan must soften his im- age if he is to w1n. And Reagan, 59, who has made a national name Jor himseU as an outspoken right.of-the-roader. has l'ihown that he Is most adaptable tf it means a second four.year · term .as governor. The new Reagan, some of whose lines have been written by Spencer-Roberts and Associates and researched by Decision 1'1aking lnfonnation, fir s t surprised political reporters last January in his State-of-the.Slate message. Toni Goff, the Los Angeles Times Sacramento bureau chief, noted that the bardline at- tacks on such pet Reagan targets as higher education, welfare spending, and gtudent dissent were absent. Instead, the governor hit hardest on the problems cf environment. Russ Walton, chief • of Reagan's pro- gram development section, said the governor was attempting to portray "a different attitude toward the young peo- ple of california," because "we feel that tbe turbulence or the Jast few years has abated." Even more astonishing, perhaps, was the complete about.fate Rtagan made on the proposals for man- Dear Gloomy Gus: It" looks like It'• going to be a Laos-y war. -R. c. R. . -· ....... -. '• I ' Editoriill ' - Re8ea~h : · persons since he took office, the governor 1 says Ule number of state eqiployes has dropped and "the work load i:t up as much as 30 percent in some depart,. ments.'' • .. What .makes all this so fascinating I!! " that even reporters ~vering the governor cannot tell whether the changes in tone may not, in fact, be manifestations of a genuine political transl<rmation. In a state with such a strong tradition o! bipartisanship and civil service as California, Reagan may he\'e concluded .... datory payroll withboldiog. of state in· come taxes. In 1967 the gov.ernor had openly stated he would veto any such measure. Now he seems to accept it as necessary. WHEN REAGAN 1tAN against Gov,/ Pat Brown (0) four years ago, he had no record to 5tand on. After careful research, Spencer-Roberts advised him to present the image of a l!ioUd, reasonable candidate who leaned to the right. Reagan had bttn leaning in that direction anyway. Looking back, the governor said that he once had been a 1'hemopttilic liberal." He voted for Presidents Roosevelt and Trwnan, Jnd made radio spot announcements for Helen Gahag&n Douglas in 1950 when 6he ·w¥s ruMirg for the Senate against Richard fl.1 . Nixon. 'In 1952 the movie star became a Democrat for Eisenhower. Ten years later he In- explicably Joined the doP. Reagan's carefully drawn campaign 11ent him to th e governor's office wun clo&? to a million votes to spare. But whil e the curtailment or &overnmentel costs was central to Reaga n's philosophy during his first mon'bs in c~fice, he found it easjer lo ad vocale cutbacks ,th•n to carry them out. In preselittng an in- creased budget and a tax increase ,pro- posal in 1967, Reagan could only say, "''f do not like It Rnd I regret the circumstan· ces that make it necessary." !hat it is difficult -if 'not lmpossiblt! - for one 'man to change the general scopt and direction of the governme nt JESS 1\f, UNRUH, 47, is I.he Democrat who th is fall will test I.he thesis lhat Reagan is lnv.incible in Ca!U'ornia. Despite the conservative tide 6ald to be ..running deep and sw:lfl" ill' the state. Unruh is atle:cking-the Rel'lgan lid· ministration as "a government of the elite, by the elite, and for tbe eltW." Reagen's new loward·the-middle ·tac!\ i!! one answer kl such criticism. Jn any <:f;se ~ it's a reasonable gamble for 11 man who already has his conservative credentlifs:i • ' ---W. whlcll way , to.-~~ .clock when tne or'tnstnsltJve or ctreJess publlc bodies. ----1-tlme·dle-buqM>...,bol>Wl<lpln11--Jrmiu1d be • ·bad-dny ror ·all of as:' ~ • -• ' me out for ,.1 cbange!~ls a J)t'.t:or:il ,vcre their powers ewr ondcnnJned o; ::::'u"'=',::,:.~*""°::J~ :1=. "1 DON'T ~flND bt.ing No. I in spe:n- ding," ho-4iald last fall, "if r can come before you as No. I in gett!na: the job Clone. "~On I.he other hand, Rea gan cl11lms the tflxpayP.rs are getting more for their money under him than PJey di~ under Gov. Brown. Allhou:gh , the CallJomla population bas increased by one million Tuesday, March 17, 1970 The t ditorlol P.Oge of iht Dailg Pilot 1t tk1 to Inform and stimr ulote rtBdt r.s bu prtstnting this newspaper's oplnio'!ll and cam.. ·menui r11 on topic.s of i11tert1M and slgnlfftance, bu providing~ forum f or l ht t xpre.ssicm 'i( our rtader1' opinions. ond. ~­ presentihg th..t dive r.!t Glet.0- -pcint,, of i»formed obserwn ond 1poke1mt1J on topics of cit; I the lltUe Amuorf Rlvcr one thet at· their cou rage i nd Jndeprndence el at '"' rltM ,., CON!..,,. 1t11tr• 1o 111 IHCI .,, , evmi. tacks people? fl8UghL But It won't happen soon, and ~-.:.." ~~i'~-:1..;i,!,~.'tt~ ":'A.:~ •t you won't see It on the six o'clock news. ·~~w Ji.':"': ~~ '"-" • ..,,,.,,., • • ,,,,. '"'''" """'" ...... ,.. ~..... ""' _"...,,."' ""'• .. "" ~·-· ''" "" HI """ .. OIMlllY °"" OtllY .. lltf. dov .. ~ • -! ~ Robert 1'. Weed, PubUshl!l" . ·--• Tuesday, March 17, 1970 DAfl V PILOT 7 CHECl(INt ··up. ~ea gan Taunte d l'ampaigner Co)ifro1ited Skin of Blondes Do Wrinkle Early By L. M. BOYD REDDING (UPI\ -Gov. Ronald R e a g a n culUvaled votes in the farm-rich Sacramento Valley today , frustraled by young militants who have taunted him with obscenities and raised havoc with his campaign tour. .. There's a certain vulgarity to them and certain ·1act of in- te!Hgence," the governor said LA of the milltanl.5. Doc tor Reagan's basic message lo CUSTOMER SERVICE voters -sandwiched between HER l\tEASUREMENTS Q.'~Was Martha Washington angry demonstrations -"'as known as 'The First Lady'?" T s th t I \\ d th ARE 91-60-91. . So says a A. No, sir, Lucy Webb H~es, t a .agr eu ure an e en- youlh about hi! ladyfriend. ' wife of Presi.ient Rutherford , 0, a rt vironment are rompatible. Y But the governor's cam- \\'blther doth he lead me? Hayes, was the first to be so paign efforts in this lush Nevermlnd, I get it. That's characterized. Just 92 )'ears A bortl•On S valley, now green witn spring metric. She tapes 36-24-36. A asd. . grass and rimmed by snow· i;uddenly stopped on a 'Cntco· sidewalk, rai.$ed his hands in rrustralion and •sked security ·aides: "\¥.bat "'call you do.1 Why do I haVe lo take that?'' A small clean-shaven youth, slandlng just six feet away", had been yelling at the governor: "you rotten son or a bitch." * * * Unrnl1 Files; 1'ells : Status Of Finances European girl maybe BLONDES -A chen~ asks , <"apped . mountains. w e r e OPEN QUisTION ·-Is it II th~ skin of blondes does in· LOS ANGELES (AP) _ A over shadow n d b·y LOS ANGELES (AP) -l t's still the <"ustom in China lo deed tend to. wrinkle at an disturbances. o[fiClal now; J<>.ss Unruh ls a serve the men first at meals? earUer 't&e than the skin of young docto r says he expects The governor shouted back candidate for the DemocratJc AM TOLD &IANY is the brunettes. Evidently so. One to be arrtSted for challenging at one jeering group ~tonday nomination for governor Of Qie mother who worries about the Dr. John Knox, who looked in-California's abortion laws ~·ith night and in(errcd they were nation's most populous state. fact that her infant has big to the matter. so avers. Has to his free abortion clinic. pigs. Unruh tiled the appropriate fee t. A needless concern say do \'l'ith pigment and pro-"\Vomen now are forced to ''You lalk about getting pigs papers Monda $', a\oog \flth a the medle<>es. A baby·' with tection against ~he sunshi~e. off campus -you're off couple of personal financial' an. especially big feet is expected At any rate, its almost Jn-go to too many persons other now?" Reagan snapped Jn a nouncements. to walk at about 12 months. A variablr more difficult to than ~tors for abortions." face-lo-ftce confrontation with The assemblyman r r om baby with particularly small determme the age of a bru-Dr. John G~'Ynne t 0 Id demonstrators outside a Chico lngle~ood disclosed he is etUit· feet is expected to walk at nette th~ -~f a blonde, that's newsmen Monday as he open-tel evision studio. ting his post as mlnoi'ily about 21 months. widely kriown. ed the Community Service• __ An_oth_er_ll_m_e_lhe_go"---v_em_or __ te_a_d_er_•.:..r_th_e_tow_.•_r_h_o_us_e.:.._ LOVE AND WAR -Now SPEAKING o( <"Omplexions: -.- those gentlemen who take Never met such a citizen Center and Abortion Clinic ln ~ - polls about matri monial myself, but .occasionally a ~two-story medical building _..,.---7""" • ..11 'stQ\l\f'[~ matters say the odds run ex. per~n turns up whose skin is in \Vest Los Angeles. -~t.1\1\\1~-.) actly 70 to one that a sing le so sensitive that a photograph "I believe in abortion. The -~w~'i\(\\ll 1 ~ - girl won't marry one ol the can be printed on it just by J to ch th I · 1l1 \U\i'\. P v men at the oUice wherein she pressing· a negative against on y way ange e aw is U ,_ ~ 1 ~,.. works , .. ALONG TIUS 58id skin under sunligbl -to co~e oot and .<!'"11~~ge ii." -"'i '{0\l E\JER i\;EO iO· VEIN, ii has been determined DANDELIONS con\ain rub-Gwynne, 23, said .t~ clinic ••ft\.\. G<' ;,, E~i\ ~ fnal the single girl who b e r { a n d o u r C h l e f may perform 10 to 15 abor-'"' ~~~~~'{~Q~\)~R!<'~~~=~:~· ; engages in some so rt or out-Prognosticator has nof given tiona a day. 00\.t." door sport is twice as apt to up the noUon that some in· Some of the operations may marry as the little lady wbo genious soul will devise a way viola~ California 's three-year- only loob on. ' · · to tulttva.Le dandelions for pro.. old abortion Ja w, tonsklered ~ fit therefor. liberal. TO GET PERSONAL again, Under the law a ~·oman Joung fellow~ do you owe as may have a legal abortion if con1e for one-year? That's b b w!U h he h;, 1 1 t~ •· 1~ st-:--'•·H'1 '" Merl, 1•1 w. L~111-112-11i11 • average for the married man a Y arm t p .. ,s ca Mt w. tf111 st~•·t111 nu w:u ,..,m,.....,,..... · d 'h r 3S 't' .d health or if two psychiatrists ,,.,. N""'1 •1W.-•O•mt 2DU W, LllK•trl '4Yt .-U .. 11H un er e age o • I s sa1 -declare that cbildbiz:tb v.·ould . . . 1r1e cu~omer convellllace ... •·I• AO·OtN6 MACHllES W• re>littd ftal "'"'""''"""Josi lime •h"' adding figures, ~owe installed adding machines right in the counters tor ourcustomer3 to use. They have bf:e1 pleased at lbe time and effort they save. So. if you h~w: trouble bllanci11ryour thecii:llook. Of' ad~ing your m'onthtr liwint !lpenses. become 1 depositor ~t Newport Nation al Bani and enjoy some of the time·saYinf tooveniences that hm 111ade us '1be. JDO.$f. vnique bank in. the world: 9 CONVINtlNf 'OfftCfS SUYtNG OIANGI COUKTY Afrport Otfic:t M!th1l10ll rt M1c.Attltur 133.3111 • hysldt. Offkl !lyfd• •I J1111bot'H giz.11•1 C.U11• '•rt Office Nutwood •t Commonwe1Jth 111·2900 • Sa1111, Hills atnC. H11bor rt B,.1171·72'0 Superior Olflc• Supecior at PJactnti1 6'2·'511 • U111Ytrslty otlk1 &st Clt1P1111n rt Stat• Collttt 11'-4l&O • . WntdiH Olfi" Weslclllf at Oovtr 642-3111 Sul k 1cll Oflica laisurc World,Sc1I Buctl596·271 I • lqu111 Hiiia ot!Ke Leisure World, lap1111 KilfilJo.JZOI Tate Mu rder Case Lawyer Mus t A ppeal much as 81 percent of your in· doctors attest th at having a COSTA MISA I ANA HllM I IF THE BULLET hits him Of/let "-"'' ' •.111. .. t ,.ftll. Miii .ftlni Prl. t 1.lll. ,. s ,.m. 111. & 11111. , · directly on the torso, a•.-h~a'.'.nn~h~e:r:_m~e:n~\aU~y::_. ___ _!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------------------------- gunshot man will fall forward , LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney who coolenC!s that tile judge assigned to preside at the Sharon Tate • LaBianca murder case Is prejudiced must go to the California Court of Appeal -if he wishes tt> pursue it. no matter from which direc- tion the bul let <"Omes •. , APPROXIMATE- LY EVERY 5eVen years the candymakers renew Lhejr sn- c-ient campaign to convince fishermen that.-earamels make better fish bait than worms. This was the advice given ~fonday to Deputy Public. Defen"der Paul J. Fltz.gerald by Superior Court J udge George M. Dtll, presiding jurist or the Superior Court's master calendar. Your questions and com- m.ents are wtlcomed o nd will be use.d whenever pos· siblc in "Checkino Up.1' Plea.se address your mail to L. M. Boyd, cari of Daily Pilot, Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. 92660. Dell denied Fitzgerald's mo- tion to disqualiry Superior Court Judge William B . Keene, who has been assigned tile case involving seven kill· ing:s last summer in which six members of the Charles M. 1.-lanson nomadic clan are under indictment. Fitzgerald's molion of pre- judice was Jn behalf of Patricia Krenvt'inkel, 20. l\'lurder Victiin Skeleton Found In Desert Grave • I • I I· • I P ALMllALE (UPI) Sheriffs deputies have Iden- . Ufied "the skeletal remains of a body round buried in a shallow desert grave as those of Carlyn Sue Nelson, 26, who was apparently murdered a year ago. •• I Deputies said the discovery of the woman's remains Sun- :. day has caused a reopening of the investigation into her ' deat.h. The Whittler woman c had not ~n seen since her bullet-riddled car was found -March 15. 1969 in Lancaster. l about 10 miles from the grave. The r emains were discovered by two hikers. PAID ·MONTHLY NO LONG ~TERM REOUIREMENTS 'l'OlllltS IAal & IYD'I' lltOHTtf.• .... CHfClt on ••ch $$000 Cartlll· c•t•. It fl•td und•r I month•. plfnclp&l re• auced by ch1ck1 1ent. lou. Fund• II) late •• 5th 111m ff'Olll 1 tl WI~ dra,,,..l•hlwelW&ylbffn paid on demand. r:lili'lll! PAID C.41VMTHLY· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I Counsel OK'd • SACRAMENTO (AP) -'The Asstmbly J udl c i a r yCom· mitt« has approved a bill to encourage <"ounsellng f o r Persons planning to marry before they reach age 18. •• ~••••ooK• any 11 moun1. Fund• 11'1 11111••11th any montn ••rn lnt11r111t rrom 11t. u.i. ... -............. • • • • • • Bible Thought& • Cltfl1t'1 "Jern.S.m" ltip i1 NOT t11119ht i11 tll1 l ibltl H1 .111i4, "My •1119dom i1 11ot of•thi1 world -IJ11. 11:161. Ae .. 1111° fit11 lO contei111 SYMBOLIC 11119111911 With God, 0111 tley 11 "111 a th01111111d y111n" '''· •0:4, J Pit. 3:11. Tha D1vll b11i"t "bound -• lho1u1nd Y•••t" I It••· 101 1y111boli11i • LONG p1riod of t1i• lll'l'lph of 9ood o"'' ... ,a. Hii b11i111f "!~011cl" for11c!ih • pe~iocl ef 1irc1ni•• 11•il fi9hf1"9 9oocl. Th11 Ar"'1911dclo11 b1Hl1 11 • flP.11, "''Hive 1plrih11I 1tru99l11 betw11n tha forc11 of 9oocl 1111cl ••ii poulblv 9oi"t 011 NOW. · Ch1i11 ,1,1111cl.d from 11rfl\ Into ' "cloud" 111d want +o H11v11·11 e ntl it lo co1111 191i11 "in 11~e 1111111111r" IAch l 1f ·l l). At th11 ••cond coll'l lllt of Chritt, ll"i119 Chrit!111111 1h1ll be "-c1u9ht up t_q:9ether with t~em IN THE CLOUDS TO MEET THE LORD IN Tf1E AIR 1MI to 1h11l ""'EVER ba with ti.• lord." 11 Than. 4:15· •171 . Je1111 1h•ll 111f 1et fo•d 111 tl.11 111tth 191i11, ll11t th1 111 .... d 1hell rh e I• """' him "in th11 alt." Thi EARTH thall "m•lt wltl. f.n.1111 he1t" 111 th• "il•y of lh• Lotti," I.e. '' Chl'itf'• 111e1111t1 ,.1111119 IJ '•'· J il0-121. A11 YOU RfADY7 Do yo11 IELIEVE fta it divlne7 H'"' 'fOll RE· PENTEO 111d '1t•ll IAl'TIZED 111!1 Chtltt1 (JJ!. l:I,, Ach 2:11, G .. I. )1271. Vl1ll ut 111d l•t 111 ftelp yo1t r.••p•rt for th11 J11t1t· rnelll D1yl Ch1i1rclt of Ch1ltl, 217 W, Wi 1111 SI., Cotti M1t1, c~ •2•17. - \ Teach him:his ·,phone .number. He could .A··· -····. • · •thout· it. Youngsters have a .. \ 'way of wandering off. . I If they know t heir t · phone num ber, t hey · / can t ell an adult.·That way they're never further away than a telepho ne call. Make sure they know the number before they wander off, though. Were here to help. @ Pacific Telephone , ~--·----- • " ,1 '. ' I I '• - L ' f DAil Y PllOT Tundq, Mll'dl 17, 1970 Nixon, Agne"tv ,.f eant Poses Se:rious Threat to Demos By !'llERRL\IAN S;\1lTH curtains beilllld them parted After dcnylne ''ehemeutly. tempted a series of piano Deal . . Tbty flnally reached a point its feet, sln'1ttl k>udly . The All of which wis what the WASHINGTON <UPI) -It to disclose two upri&ht pianos. a~ one of the Gridiron skits duels v.•ith AAnew, choosing a \\'ilh each 50ng, however, to of mualca1 agreement · ind Nixon-Agnew team closed out DemocraUc pros were talkin; wa5 early Sunday morning. Nixon "'anted to $how tha! an had n1alntalned. tliet his ad· medley o[ tunes which h&d the Pre!ldtnt's feigned shock, played a thumping veralon of the evening with the gridi ron's about. How do you lick a piano and tv.·o old-hand \Vashington 'administration that p I a y :1 ministration had a Sout11ern bttn presldenlial favorites Agne\v ended up playing "Oil· ''God Ble.ss Amerie1" whietl traditional goodnighL song, ad playing "God 8 J • 11 ~mocara1s were. I ea n in g together stays together. stralel)·. Nixon I hen at-over lhe years fiince the New-ie." brouiht the staid audience to "Old Lang Syne.'' America?" arainst a '"'all outside an ..:C~::..::::O:...::'.!'.::=--~::.:.::::.::._::.__::._ _____ _: ________________ =.:::::...::::..::::;~::;::::::_:::__=..:::~::::::._ ____ ~'.:'.'.'.':'.:.. _____ _ after-dinner party roonr'ln lhf Statler l~olel. 'Ille annual white Ue dinner flf the Gridiron Club had finlstied about an hour before. VIP guesls were scattered around various s u i I e 1 • rehashing :he !lhow a n d speeches by maj or political figures. One of the DemocraUc pro• In the hallway (there was no room inside the suite) said to his colleague. "God knows \\'"hat sort of image Nixon could take into 1972 -11 might be murdr rous." \Vhat produced this left· handed compliment 1o1•zs this: At the rnd of the dinner . after the traditional Gridiron toast to the chief executive. President Nixon did not ma ke the customary rci-flOn~e from his place at the head table. lnslead, he walked in semi· darknei;s a.round the bsnquet roon1 to center ~tagc \Vh1 t's more, he took Vice Pres!denl Spiro T. Agnew along. The lights came up again and Nixon \vas standing, beaming in I.he spotlights. of· fering lo prove that Agnev.· \1·11s. Jndeed, a man of hi! own spirit and direction. These Gridiron a f f a l r s ()rdin<trily are enti rely off-the· record . 'J"'ne Gridiron . a din ing club ~'hose !IO active members are among the leading newspapennen in the capital, has a saying , that reporters never are present al its af· fairs. · But !he ensuing Nixon· Agne\'/ act was too good to keep. even under the weight of fraternal edlcl By daylight Sunday. many newspaper subscribers around the capital knew \\•h11t had happened at thP Gridiron. i he cla~sir shQ\\'S l'll 3 Gridiron dinner are · inildTy satirical charadei;, s I aged largely as fillr r between sumptuous dinner courses a.nd witty remarks by ranking politicians. The 1970 Gridiron show end· ed. however, with a vaudeville turn that, according to one ast.onished network official presenl, could tiave com· manded several b u n d red thousand dollars for I 2 minutes on any major TV variety show. First the President and Agnew did what nightclub and TV aficionados would call a standup routine. The President propounded questions d~igned to show Agncw"s u t t e r freedom of expression and ac· Hon. And the viC"c presid~nt answered \Vilh meek positive <'xpre ~s ions. the pe~ihcation of a yes man. City Appoints Leasini; <.:hi ef J ames L. :-itinncll Jr. has betn n:imrd managr r ol office leasing tor the C1ly l\lanage- menl Corp, the organization responsihle for Uir m11nage· mrnt of The Cil y. $200-million •·cHy ol 1he fu ture" develop- ment i11 Or:insc . Stinnett \\'as a realt or In lhe · South Bay arra or Los Angeles before his (lppotntmcnl . GIRLS ••. AGES ~ • 11 WIN EASTER W.t.RDROBE PLUS M.t.NY OTHER V.t.LU.t.ILE PRliES IH HARBOR CENTER'S Jrd ANNUAL TWEEN · AGE 4 to 11 PRINCESS CONTEST Pll!l·JUDGIN6 • MOH. MA'lCH IS 4 f'.M. at GWEN'S STUDIO CROWNING S.t.T., MARCH Zht-1 ,00 p.m. NAMI •. PHONI .. _ ... A001tll$ ............................ .. AO I .... ··-~-·-~·· ,_,_ ............. - Pm lllUf lfffllf tttvnl fe °""""°' SM!Jo el Dfllc1 tM Modt!*"I I~ Mtttoor ("'kt. 2JOO HA:a10-.·1LVO. COITA MltA 5%0/o <tn our Investors Passbook account. No other California bank or savings and loan pays 5%% on passbook deposits. That's the high- est rate anywhere on passbooks. What's more, at Bank of America you have three ways to earn high passbook interest. It all depends on ··how 'long you want to keep your funds invested. Let's take it from the toll· 53A% Investors Passbook. Leave your 1noney with us for two years and it will earn 5%% annual interest. Compounded and paid quarterly; $500 minimum deposit. And you can add to it any time in amoun~s of $100 or more. SY2% Investors Passbook. If a one-year maturity is about right for you, we'll pay you 5~% interest. The sa1ne $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in amounts of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passbook. 'fhis is our short term offer. 90 day maturity. And you earn 5% annual interest. Again, a $500 minimum J opens an account. Add to it m amounts of $1 00 or more. That's our new rate story. But you haven't heard the end of it. The security of the world's largest bank. It's always been the clincher for saving at Bank of America. We tP,ink you should make money minus worry. The business of living can have its enjoyable moments. Save with us. BANKoFAMERICA m for the business ci living Sweet deal. FOR THE RECORD auc *M,. •rw ·•¥ Meetings Death Notices HEltlll.lHC Edvtll S. Herrllnt . )U.&32 1~1• Aw .. l.•1111M N!t11tl. All 61; d1tt of dfffh, M1rdl 13. SurvJvld lll' ""° d1119h11r1, Mrs, ltocNrlck Smith, Rocklord, Ull,....111 Mn.. JDM Mani~, lt11vn1 Nf-Fi son, RoH E. Herrl(l>!I, Auror1, l!llnols; •nd 1l11ht 11rendchHdrl!ll. Gru1nfd9 wrwk n will .,_ htld FrldlJ, MtrC'll l!J, 2 PM, WOOC!ltwn Cemttirrv, Plymouffl, Wlico1uln. Loc•I '''""lllmirt1!1 llY ShdlH' LltUM e11eh Mort111rv. LV!HEll 00r'tlthv L11t11tr. Allt 71, of 311 Poln1t1tl1, Cor0111 dtl Mar. FIM'mtr rtJldenl of \ltn Nuys, Dall of deeth, Mtrdl U. Survlwd .,.,. Mii!. Htnrv. of l"IKO. Wtlhlnt!Olll lhrn d1u11h!trs. Mr•. Ernftll11t terr·'" Corone Cltl Mer; Mn. Ctral Tflornqubt, Tu1tln1 Mrl. Jnnnt Carpnil1r, V11J Huyt: ~-Will.et Anl•; •!II•"· S1r1h J1<1ue end kr111<1 Scotti 10 trt lld- cMl<lrtn. $11!!"111cn, Wld11e"'Y· 2 PM, Pr1lsw1ter MortutlY ChlPl'I, SMt Vtn N11Y$ l lvd •• V•n Nuv•. MOOllll' ,.rink R•vl'Mnd Moore . .Uf Holl1' St., L1•un1 Be•cll. 0.11 of deatti. M•rdl 15. Survlv9d" by w!l1, llllnchf, of ttll llomtl sll!er, C•lhtrln1 M. lllchltr. l••11n1 flMcll. S.rvlc11, Wt'dllttdllY. M•n:h It, 1 PM, Ptcirlc Vl1w Cll11>1I. lnlttmtnt, Paclllc VI-Mt1T10rl1l P1rk. Olatltd llV P1clllc Vl1w Mori111rY. MORAIS Herbert Mor1!s. 11·8 C1!11 Ariton, L .. 1un1 Hiiis. A11t 6'1 d1le of dfftti, M1rcll l ]. S11rvlvt'd bV wife, Annt, latun1 N\. 91111 11!1t..-, Mr1. Ll!!lt Lur!t, Ntw Yorlt: molheri two gr1nclch!ldren, Mlch1tl tuod JulTt. Prlv1te ... rvte1M Wi ni htl4 SI/ft• 111v, 2 PM, Sllirtfer L11un1 flffcil Mor· futrY Cll1_...1. lnterynlff1t M!. Htllfftl C1tmlftf'V, New Yor11: City. Sh~r LI· tu,.. 811c11 Monua,.y, Dlrtcior1. ltlCMAflDSQM Michael Frederick fl lc111rd1on. Ate t. or »1• Callfor11l1 SI .. Co1!1 Mffe, Diii of 111111'1, MJP'l:I! U . Survived bY ""'""'' Mr. 1nd Mrs. Guv lllch1rd'lol<; 1!1ter, K1re11 Lvnn1 11r1ndmol1'ltr, Mr1. Clofolh1' I. Krumlum; Oklthomt City. Strvlc.t1 w\11 bl Mid Wl'dneMlfv, 2 PM, Church of Jttus Chrltt Lit!..-oav Stinlt. Church Vltll1!1011 Wed~v. from 1 ot 2 PM. ~r111op Thom11 R. Sm&llcomb, onkl1n1. Btll 8rDtdwtY MorT111rY, OlrKlori. STAU• M•rion K. Sl111b. 611 Lido Parlt Drlvf, NtwllCrf Btlth. Dtlt of dff!I\, Mtrd115. s~rvlved bY 1w11'.lrld, Leonard M. St111tu i on, Jo1111 P. Bovd1 i nd two tr1rwlc~ll· <lr~n. Private 111n.,1I wrvlc11,. Wedn1 .. d1y, 11 AM. P1cmc View Ch1Dtl. F1ml1Y w11e1t1 lhOlt wbhlnt lo,m1~1 memorltl c:on1rlf)Utlont, plt1Jt contrlbult lo HOit M"1"IOl'lll HOl~lltl. P1cl!lc Vltw Morl11- 1ry, OlrKlor1. ARBUCKLE & SON Weatcliff Mortuary 427 E. lith St., Costa Me11 MMl!S • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del t.far OR 3-HSO Costa Mesa r.u t-%414 • ,,,.-___ ,,..L,L BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadw1y, Costa. Me•• LI~ • Dll.DAY BROTllEIUI Huntington Valley Mortuary 1i911 Beach Blvd. HuaUngton Bea.ch 141-1111 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C<melery e M-.,, . Chapel 3500 Peclflc v1 ... Drive Newport Beach, ColHonla Mf.!MI • PEEK FUllLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bois• Ave. W01tmlasltt ~ • SHEFFER MORnJARY Llgv111 Bed •M-...USS... SU Clemea&e 41%-1100 • S~IJTHS' MORTUARY U7 Miio SI. lluntlnlf(ln 1kadl 13Hl3t • - -------------------------------------------------- -·-·-------.. - -·-----------.. r , . ·~ T11t1day1 Marth 17, 1970 DAILY PIL01' It. 'Rap Sessions·' Narrow Generation Gap Rare StamP, On Display By TOM BARLEY ot tflt Dtlb' r tl9t lltff "Now take: the thirtles. for example. My dad wu a police officer as I am and he brought home $40 a week. We all Uved on beans the aame a s everyone elu in th e Depression but wt all stuck together and we all pulled through together. "Unlike today, we found our solutions in the family. And I often wonder why you you.ng people can't find your answers in the same places that we found ours." 'That comment from 1 veteran police sergeant pro- "duced -for the one and only time in an active discussion group -·a stony silence. Group leader Randy Newton put his summaUon of the remark in teenage language - "You've just turned us all oH. .. You had a cause" com- mented the Corona del Mar High School student. "Back in those days you had something to fight for as opposed to today's society in which many young people have no go1ls, no aims really 'WOrth 1truggling for, nothing but boredom which far from turning them ta family life turns them tD drugs. "t.faybe you can break the drug users down that way," added Randy. "The on and off user is impelled by boredom -the chronic user is impelled by an unsatisfactory and unsympathetic -to him - family life." , Randy's "Law Enforce- ment" workshop was just one of nine discussion groups tak· Ing up the Orange County Courthoul!le last weekend for a one-day di.scu.sslon forum host- ed by the District Attorney's Youth Council. He Is one of tht original aix students of high school level v.·ho launched the program which now has the active cooperation of District At.. tomey Cecil Hicks ·through his Deputy District A t t o r n e y Alicemarle H u b e r .. The youngsters' first tentative. in- quiries and cautiou1 response1 to appeals for · adult-juvenile communication have blossom- ed out to a workshop in which more than 100 per900s of both age group& llr<d tb<lr prob- Jems and fears. Policemen, civic officials, service club m e mbers, juvenUe court officials, pro- bation officers and school of· ficials were among those who thrashed out their views on today's thorny problems with high school youngsters. Subject matter included Jaw enforcement, family educa- tion, the role of religion, free clinics and centers, recreation. education of community, and teacher education. All zubjects were keenly debated. Hammered home by the young people in many of those sessions was their sincere.- belief that too many adults are content to foist the blame for today's mounting drug use and lawlessness by juveniles on the juveniles and smugly gloss over their own share of the bad bargain. Family life, said many youngsters, isn't what It was because the factors that made it what it was no lon ger exist. And many or those factors, tiley claimed, have betn Phone Firm Expansion Wins Okay destroyed by Ute parents centered around the. _very It brought from Sgt, Bab-ore, we must admit. rare con-regional basis to a 11 ow ANAHEl?if -Wtst Coast themselves. special problems that fa ce U! cock the comment th al "one frontations. discus$ion or ttie debnled stamp collectors wlU be able They aot a lot of sympathy todJy and It both sides can of the most encouraging th..ings "There's a lot o( talking topics et 1 communiy level. 10 see the world's most from Sgt. Nonn Babcock of recognize that and d o I've seen is the detenninaUon about a lot of problems," he A n d s e v e r a I a d u I t. valuable alnnaU stamp, the the Laguna Beach police 10melhl.ng to produce goals of many youngsters -to the said, ''but haven't you noticed participants urged expansion $40,000 , , B 11 ck Honduru" which will p~lude drug use cons tern at ton of some that it's usually youngsters of the program to high schools department. because the youngsters don't policemen_ to study criminal talking to youngsters and and colleges throughout the fl:larcb 20 to March 2Z at the 1'Goin& back to the old days have time for them tben we 'll law and the methods by which adults to adulls? If all of us oounty with an increased Grand Hotel here. we hear 80 much •bout,., he get somewhere." It ls applied to· their own in-today lake back to our peers representation on the part or The rare stamp, nevu commented, "our families And to tt went for the best fractions of that law.'' the Ideas that have been educatDrs and mini st era. before publlcly e x h t b I t e d were tight because eve-·n•tng part of si1. hours -youngs(ers And it brought from Randy debated here it 's a .big step One teacher was present at outside of New York City, wtll •1~ debating with concerned Newton the comment that towards solution of our many Saturday's discussion. There be one of the hundreds of was tigll.t. Social and economic adults and olficiab from many ''programs of the kind we've problems." were no ministers despite the u11usual stamps, covers and standards were set by a phases of civic activity the joined in today can do nothing t.1any participants in the appeals of organizers for their collections at the sh ow , desperate sJtuation. Today \Ile problema that be.set both age but good since they bring both Youth Council program urged participation in the "Role of sponsored by the lntetn1Uonal bave l~year~lds owning ClrSl...;gro:.._u_;po_. ---------•g:;.e...::.g_rou__;_po_to_;gc.e_th_e_r_In_w_h_a_l_e_x'-pans __ io_n_o_l_th_•_se_ss_io_n_on_• __ R_el_;igc.i<>_n_"_d_lsc_us_s_io_n_;gr_o_uc_p_. __ Soc_Ie_I_y_of_sia_mc.p_CoU«tor ___ .. _ and being th beneficiaries of economic conditions which we in our Ume wou1d hive , thought were as likely 11 golng to the moon. "0ne of our biggest stt.anb- llng blocks in adult-juvenile relationships is hair," Babcock said. "So many adults see long hair on a youngster and it stops them ngllt there -they just don't want to go any further." The officer recalled that "just last week I had a mother whose firlt reaction to the news that her son was Jn our custody and as high as a kite on drugs and wine was that she was going to give him a butch haircut. "It sound! fantastic," he _" said, "but It's true. He was high to the point that if he'd been a little hi&her he wouldn't be around now but that wasn't her concern. She blamed everything on his long hair and she actually felt that removing it would remove bis problem. "She wasn't prepartd to look at hers," the officer add- ed. "We had to pull her out of a bar to teU her about her son and she frankly admitted that she's an alcoholic. She w 1 s once a pillbead but now the'• just an alcoholic, she'll proud- ly tell you." Drugs were discussed by tht group with authority and from both sides of the Issue. Public concern is high Ind mounting, noted Los Alamitos High School student Bob Flanders, but even today'g wave of publicity isn't project- ing the awful truth of drug .,. among juveniles -''many of us -more than you realize - an gone and can't be reached by anyone," Both Flanders and Mike RdJb of Corona de! Mar Hip School agreed that drugs were finding their way in Increasing quantities to the elementary school levels. "They say that they h•ve more hope of correcting it there but both adults and younirters should be spending · more Ume on examination of the drcumstances that pro- mote drug use at any level," Flan ders said. "A lot of it is Entries Due For Library Awards IRVINE -Tbe nomination deadline for the fifth annual Book and Author Awards, sponsored by the UCI Friends of the Libarry, has bttn ex· tended to March 30 in order to encourage additional entries. Dr. Giles Brown, chairman ol the event, said 21 entries have been received to date. Seiior Menocal lost his shirt ... JU.ST WHAT TODAY'S STUDENT RADICALS HAVE IN MIND FOR YOU! Serafin G. Menoca1 was educated es a·n eleelrical engineer • in Havana University. After graduation he went to work as a student engineer with the Electric Power Company In Cuba and in the course of the years, rose to be chief executive or the company. He was president of the National Council of Boy Scout: of Cubs, Vice President of the Nstlonal Electrical Engineers AssoCistlon, Director of the Cuban Society of Engineers. _ President of the Uons Club of Camaguey and a member of the Rotary Club. This membership In both Lions and Rotary was a special honor paid him because of his private fund .. raising campaigns for civic Improvement~ Sr. Menocal built for himself a happy and successful life, and took out Insurance to protect it. Here is what he has to say about that insurance : " In Cuba we had the same types of insurance that you. have in this country, underwritten by the very same companies. I had my newly built house insured against all risks, and I lost it. I had life insurance so that in case anything happened to me. my wife could take care of our five children, and I lost that too. I had contributed for many, many years to the company retirement fund, so that I could count on a reasonable income in my old age. I lost that also. "You see, I had every kind of ivsurance except one. I had no insurance against Com· mun ism.'' Do you have this kind of insurance? Do you know of any insurance company which sells it? Isn't this one risk against which only YOU can provide the necessary coverage? In Sr. Menocel's country, the revolu- tion which deslroyed everything· he hsd built, was led by l'flen who were. radical/zed as students In Cuban unl- vsrsltles. Could a slmllar situation de- velop Jn the United States? Are you Insured· against such a developm ent? Are you doing snyth/ng to prevent fl? r---------------------------, I I J For informauon about how you can help in.• proven ptooram to immunize students egain~t revolution, clip tf1ia coupon and send to : CAMPUS STUDIES INSTITUTE P. 0. BOX 9355 SAN DIEGO. CALIFORNIA 92109 In th1 Newport INch •rM .Jlrtct telephon• ln4ufri•1 to 472·123!· STREET--------------- To be eligible, entriet must have been pUblished com. mercially during 1969 and the author must be a resident of Orange County. Nominations are judged on the basis of originality, excellence of presentation and on the con- tribution to literature ·and SANTA ANA -Erpansion knowledge. of the Pacific Telephone Entry forms may be ob- building at Irvine Boulevard talned from the Friends of the I I I I I I t I I I CITY & STATE ________ _,.;p ___ _ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I and Browning Street in the L b In the UC! Lib north Tustin area has been·~ i rary rary Proved by the Board ot and lnquirits may be made by ..nfng l33-6300 between the ~---------------------------~ S~deJ!ion wu held up for hours of t a.m. and noon, •~ r:M;ood~~~fhrou~~gh~Frtdl~~~========================================================================================::::=-six days so that homeowners in the area and reprtaen- tatives of the telephone com- pany could meet on plans and landscaping. At the session held with Ray Reed, county z on i n g ad- m1nistrator, the co m p an y agreed to certain 1rCbitectura1 changes lo the buildfn( and the changing of a block wall from six feet to eight feet in height. Although the supervisors •P. proved the tentative plans the homeoviners and the company m to get together to finlUJe them. Last week about IO homeowners appeared before the: supervisors to protest the erpansion. Don Bum• Sap: "VOTE FOR RICHARD D. CROUL N.I . CITY COUNCIL• • 't-Ct11y, ~""· 1001 l(tw11!M1 Dr .. <.dlA - Huntington Beach Off ice: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Diego Freeway, in Huntington Beach . --•••&..-....... •aMllt ....... ---............ ...,.. ~r~ ... .. -1'111 YlllMll""' I f4Ml1f --,,. ................. --, .. ' ,...... """41 --............... Clr.•art4%01 IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, where your account is • IAFE • CONVENIENT • AVAILABLE Market ftuctuatlons don't worry COllt & Southtm uvers, their capital II always rt1lng In value. Highest Mining• conaialent with llfety when y04j uve at Coat & Southern. llSUl.llCE TO $211,0IO f IISDUIC!S PIEi $100 MILLION ASK ABOUT lHE INSIDERS CLUB A NEW WAY TO $4VE MONIY,-A S2,SOO BMANCE IN YOUR ACCOUNT MAKES YOU EUGtBLE. PMIOA••• tn'f~ .. , • ._,..,. ""'-• Wl·1fTI .__, ""&..Looulc • c.r•t -·-LOAft lbYtcl MllllCY1 lM "-'Mein It.• '11~) '4707 HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES 5.IJOM.13% -NoMmlmllm. 5.25%-5.39% 711'" Monlll ~:No Mlftfmu... 5.75o/..S.92% Onl-YarCettl-:•t.OOOlllnlmum. 11.00%..fl.18% T'M>Y11rCt-: 1$,DOOMlnlmum. • . -----------------'----------''--''--='-"--....;;;;.....; L JO DAILY PILO! s LEGAL NOTICE Your Money's Wor•th It's Lots Cl1eape1· To Use Telepl1011e LEGAL NOTlCE " li!1l (Ellfll'!C.llTF. 01' lllJS HESS F CT!T OIJS N.IM£ Tl\t' 11MI! s 9n"" OM• ct V II! ~ <II <ILX: ~ , ""' nPU • 70l-4 1!1><1110 nn s ... <t cca•M"• C& o n1> v~dt "" l e l t>Vt I m namt pf STtJOO I "110- DUCT S 1r>d "• ~· d l m to"'""'"" ri! h• l(l (IW /19 ~'<)(' W!>(l f l\l>m< n end o •er 11 e dtntt s M In Ao E ... IO l<lw WI cj.oll"• II • 0111. 'l S Wt1 rf n • Avt<ll/t Costa Mt • (11 o n I o 611 W1>d•m~ B•o < • 1!1 OI (1> o n e 0 1t1vt Ctuntv O...M/Jcl\J 1'10 ~otm• • OI• et Pvb c 11 '"" o t•d ! •• P i.rn• ll>IM'I l!d WI d~ml II '!w' kMWn O "'I to bl I~ pt -whOH IWl"lf • Wb!.C b 'd to ~ w "" n ""'•~ 1110 11c~-~e<1 ti. t•.CY ed the l1m1 IOl'FIC llt SE.Ill Dinn ~ I< John1on NOl&Y P\ll'llc.(.1 o n • ,., nc DI oh Cf In () l l!Ot (!)loll V Mv Comm lsiO [_~" t f •l>rvl> v 1' 1• "Vb •llt'<! 0 1nt1' CO.ti DI I>' Ml ti\ G 11 ll 31 0111 •• ... By SYLVIA PORTEii Are you alvare lh11 t simply by dialing you can no"' leJephone from New York to Los Angeles after 5 p ni for only 85 cents vs $1 IO 1f ~o use the operator to put toe call through' Or that this samr call will cost )OU :l me1e 35 cents -1f you call after J 1 p n1 dial the number and talk only one minute' Do you kno11 that the cost ol d1ahng a station to-stat on Ci.Ill ant v.here 1n the conllr1ental U S bet1\een the business hours of 8 am :inl5pn1 has dropped to only $1 :J5 f::ir a three-n unute talk 1 s $1 70 1f vou use the operator ' Newport Mau Gets P101nolion David Kelly of Newport Beach hs been promoted to assistant vice president 111 charge of the real estate loan department of Union Bank s Orange County office m Sanla AO' Kelly cu rrently :serves on the board of directors ol th e Building Industry Assoc1aho11 and 1s a member of its n1ort gage and f nance com m111ee He 1s also acll' e 1n the Southern Cahforn1a 1Ytortgage Banke rs Assoc1at1on 1\fa1 keling Heacl Joseph 1\1' Ludka has Joined 111 S tltanufactu nng Co of \1 1hein1 as director 0 r rn;i.rkct1ng The hrm produces lB:\I comp atible disc packs retno\ able memory devices lnr computers and mollon pie I 1re pro1cctors He holds full marketing rcspons1b1hty for all four HFS d 1s1ons LEG IL NOTICE ""' LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE 0 , •ULIC "1'11ANSl'Ell !Stt.i 6 D lflUCCI ESCllOW Nt ll-11'« ~ c• It 1>e ttrf o """ le IM C:rl'C! to 1 01 R05ER B JOll Y t~1' Ft OR ENC.£ /.. LEGAL NOTICI' JOLLY T 1m!•N> ~ wp,o,, but l>t,, '" • ~-----::-:::::::-"------Id r ~ 1 M E11t 111\' Av...,ve Ntwl'.IOI" Bt~ell ~~" ~ Ol'"tnot ~'''' f/f ,.~ltf (I torn a llltl 1 bl<lt t tnli~ It l bollt to CEllT!fll(ATE 0¥ IUllNlll ~ mtt)f re EOWAltO GROSVENOR •ncl l'ICTITtOUS Nit.Ml! MAR.Y GRO$VEN0Jt T u •Ut "' wl\Oft n.r 11..otrt IMO ~I (•rl IV Ill' It (Cl,.. bvJ ntn &dd ...,1 1 ,1'5 G b 1 t.r Av1'nu• ofuetl119 t l>ut '°'"' II ' It I! IS It SI Col It MrU (ouMV f/f 0 t nt t I t t ol He-1 ll11c11 C4 !UOI'" t uno:ter 11\t 1k> Ct fforn 1 II!"'' flt"' N IM ., OA LE 5 MA " Tiit P'f.\flt rlv to be. ' llll!t td 1i locAlrd TlfNAHCE SERVICE Incl 1111! 111d fl 'II 1 100 1!1~1 81¥ A~1'nut, H•wiiort Btf CI\ 11 CO<"ll'OV'G ol 111~ l<l l!rw "' "'rttOll (OU'lt"f' o1 Q e~o• 11111 of C• orn ~ ~ Mll'lf fl IV I ncl fl tCt ot rtl~ntll Jtl(! ll1lll'f y 1 d~rlbfd n l ft"tl' I h tt ft; kl'NI 11 A!! 1toel II tOt f X Vf1'1 e<!U P"'t" ,,,.," 0 ,., Ill t '1JO E 1$tn SI tM o\70d WI of "''' lltt Incl w ,.,, Htwllll"l l!•Kl'I Tt~rll but "'U 11.tl!IWn 11 Ja Iv I T., Otltfl Mt ch 6 lfl'O ll~ 11'111 le(t t4 ti 7CIO 1!11 11.v (llt•k>l 0 Frltn, Avt'flllf HtwPMI !J~I(~ Counfv ()f 11•• el Ct! twn t Or•fltf Countv Ort"'' S!tlt of Ctt ~ r1 I °" ""''" ' 100 bir!Grt """ • tll)t&,.,. ,~. bu It I '"''" Wlll "' COl'!Wm mt ltd Pl/tlllc In •ncl for Mid lltt. •t<"Ml"lf IY on or ..,,.,. "" 11111 dtf '°" M1rc11 1910 ti ·-·"" (II••,, 0 "' iblt known ~ 11'11 •• , £.vow CCI tf'oC 1"1 H• l)Or 'vd "' bt f!lt -IOI! wl\Cllt "'"'' Ito IYll!W'lbo (.,. .. Mtw Countv "' O•t<wt "' ' el ,. 1111 lf'le Wlll\ln lnt •'1lmtl'lt •~ c1nfornlt ~lld'ofd IN ~lid !!It Ml'M.. So It f l lt-11 0 fl\t 1"rt"lft eM II I ... (OJl"l'l(IAI. Sl::AL) tr.II nKt n-Ind ""'""1 <Md bv •n. H C-tt! i"r1nl;tl'O J IOI ltlr ~r~ YH' !n! Plfil HOl•f"'/ f'll61ft>O!l""""i. 1r~ ....,.., "''MINI Ollla 111 Ot lfd Frbrut rt )ttl\ lt;IO 011"ff C..t; (d'Wtrd c-Nf ~lMloil fJ,lrr\ f. Ir\' 0f01"9n(IP )Ni-lltt '" ltn Tr1J11tf..-,.. •ll&l!tlltd Or11'1t1! CDatt Ot U' l"!ld Jl"illll thef: Or•MI t o.ul 01 1, !" lr\I tu'(ll 1 .. 1-, , ... i1 1•10 •41 JG f!' ... ICll 17 1f10 "' 70 Wershow REAL ESTATE AUCTION PRIME LANDIBLDGS 22,000 sq. ft. LAND 20,000 sq ft BLDGS. (~• 1111 2 S~) INCL 6375 sq fl lOT ZONED FDR LIGHT MFG iUMt1 Va l1M11) HlllliDllll Beach. C1lff SAl.t. Oii TME SITt 201 FRANKFORT ST ti L Ctr fliMl:hlt & A11W.. li\'1 HUNTINGTON BEACH, CAUrotff A WED , MARCH 25 .t)Off1'111 t1el 1t1, lo~111• In 11 .... ~t11r11 11\l!Otl"Cltll ... Ch 8UI /IOtlJ 0 1\rkt Ont 0 OC-ffOlll 1:11)1 HI • lut0tieMIW111httrM tlQ-'l"tlM. klliss ll!f °"'11tld OO«I M SIDI .. , ...... • 1161 tnllf u...i IM" U111t Mrt Ct111 I l\t 1 t•• WholfUft • l UMllM:-Ptllfl"r Jlt<l~Ollt !'Ollq • 1~ 2 RM'" All t i l~fd "l Aoo"' ·~"C•"' .. ~ "'t a! ~" t. D l\ttT10KS)O M.lalOll $Ill F'11111 S•~ ll 110 fWt 1t !1"~ ''" t...,.i Sill/~ "' ~ I ll!\! ~it 111Ha to !Ml1111POl!J II cM. !Wfttl n I/Id •~ 1111111 7 •th , ffi A!1bi• Aw l ift (Soo:llJll •~ At1twi'"' A-.. I ~ b 1• Pl ( (flfllt of ,,.~ $l 11!11 Allltlno A11t~n ·~liitR PARTICIPATION llltOLl~.uao M111onJ Wershow c. AUeTIONttJtS l'tA.LTOJtS 11l J WllROSf. • .,r tos •Nattu to0•6 (ZIJJ Ill t~ll I OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listings for Mondoy, Morch 16 1970 ll••r1 .. n1ll¥1 lnllr ... llH •\14'11llollt •I IPP~timl!tlY f 11 I'll 1~111 NASO ,.,11;,. M no• h1c:lllcl• 't!lll ., mlrllUP m•rk~ow" ., Ul'llmluien ATIENTION TO LITILl COURTESIES SUCH AS AN ANSWERED PHONE IUILDS IUSINESS 835 . 7777 EARN ·~ Fl~ ,,_. . P•r AMlllll •• $5 000 twe , .. , f•tl P•lll hnil'ttlllnt Tirff't C.""1eam "'"'°" liet4 t• 11111t1rlty l l/1% pold 9fl Po ..... lt Ac:<o•h of 0111 eMONf'f Ynr •ith1Towol1 hoffre4 l1111Mdletflf Oii dt 1110111 l11Y1st ~ ""' 20tfl ""' ffff' ,.,, , .. lilllMIElltl MfClltlCAH H'IDUITlltlAI. IAHKSRI .ASSOCIATION CALlfl'OJtMIA ASSOC tATIQH 0~ IHDUITitlAI. LOA N COMPANIU IX)N T JUST \VlSH for "n l!'lhl11i; 10 rurnl¥h your ho U(! find gl't~I buys In todlt,)I 1 ClusUled Ads MUTUAL FUNDS Complete-New York Stock List " • " " " '" • ' ' n « ' •• " • ' " . n " • " . • " • 1311 "' '" ... " . " " • , " • " .. . "" " ,,, .. " • ' • " m .. " j;l• ' " '" • .. '" • " "' • " ' ' 1~\t " ·~ " ,,. " ,,, ,, " " '"' " '"• '" "' " ' • ' '" " , ' " • "' ,, " •• "' ' • " " "' .. " • "' • ~ fl•bc~ w 116 " " " " Be~ 0 T .. " ' " •• " " " ' . ' ' BaG p Bt.50 ... .. ~]~ B1n111>unt .. " ' 8~ -O!Coil " ' ... ... e~nk o! NV ? ,. .. , • Bank r .. .. .. '" " "' .. • ,, Bao c ~ " '" " e~i ~ • .. ' " B.tt~s Mt ' " "' M " ' ' " . Bl ~ Ind " ... Be M n '" ' • • e~u1c~Lb • ' "" fle•t Lab • " " Ba)'VkC ? • • •• " Ilea n q • . " !!~~ F<15 • rn lie~ Fdl cl 4 fleo~man sn llK 0 r.k lO Be.c~.I. " fl~ to P't • II~ dn~H ... • • • " . ., .. "' " ' • ' .. " " " " .. '" ' "" ' ' . '" '" "' ~Ho ' • ' ,. . " '" ' '" ... .. " " ' '" " • " '" " ... ' .. ' " . • ... • " . • '" ' '"' '" " • " "" 10!-,. " " ' " " " ' " ' " ... " • " "' ,m ,. '" • " ,,. ' •• •• •• ••• .. ' . • • • Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List s... N1t/111111111111111ml .... lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .. 11110f IM• I tt tfl L"" (MIN Cll• S Mo • t>o +\.1 1i ll~ ti\ n Jlll ,li 1 \7 102 JI ltl W~­ f ll 1'• :161. J 1e . 10 101 -. n 111.o 1Tlo 111, -, l .u ....... -t • " " "' lt .:. ,: =1~ )f , ., 3"1 -ll.I -S- "~ -27 o -I \$. + ... .... • + \A " 2••-~· " 21 -... 2 .... -•• I ~+ '-' 1. -• l?~-i. .~ _, . 11 ...... " " _, .. 11\.o .. n -11 1 . -, 1.1 -• 'l • " + • I • -1 -•• ll ' I • ,,_ " ,....,_ . 6\o • 1 ' -\• " + " -, •.. - •O > .._ u if ,•;:,I Ma1·t D1·op s Again; Trade1·s Cautious NEii 'ORK (UPI) -Stooks dechned today for the fourth day 111 a ro\1 but trading was hgh'I. su1ce znany investors adopted a cautious sideline stand 111 lhe absence of constructive nev. s I he UJ>l market wide 1nd1cator shov,red a loss of I 12 percent on 1 568 issues traded There were 1 016 declines and 312 advances The Do\v Jones industrial average was off 7 06 at 765 05 near the close Turnover or around 9 mdhon sh.a.res compared with 9 560 000 shares Friday A nun1ber of 01! shares \\ere down a point or 1nore Texaco closed off 1/4 at 26-7/8 and Standard lost 1/8 closing at 54-1/2 Jersey ~los t big 1no' ers 1n the electron1cs also pointed loY.e1 \1h!lc soflness al so cropped up 1n che1n1cals and cunglo111erates Steels 1notors and rads traded narrow!), as did a irlines and a1rc1afts A.rnong th e day s most active stocks \\ e1 e Santa Fe lndustries Ryder Svstem Sterling rug Jersey Standa1 d Detroit Steel Corp Occtdental Petroleunt Teledvne and Gui! Oil Prices ret1 eated on the A1ner1can Stock Ex change 1n light turno\ er "' .. ' ' .. " ' ' " ' . " " .. '" • ' .. " ~ " . ll i . ' . ' • ' . ' . •• ?1 11 • " ~ " . " • ~ ... "• "" '" " " .. "' lJ ' !j}, " " . ~ "" u . 1~70 Complete Closi!Jg Prices -Ainerican Stock Exchange List N.l'. lt'in1te1·s attd Lose1·s ' ' • ,, 14 • • ' " . " ~ 1~ ~ ? l'. XI f I ' ' " " ' ,, ~ l . ' J " • ' : '; ~ 11 l' ~ 5 1'11\ " • • . " ' ' . ' " ... ~ . . J "'• 1'0 OS 11 11 1 I 0 t )~I J 1C , •• •l •• 11 ' , , ' , l'Q • 9 ~ I • I ----------------------------------------- ' " • ' ' " ' ' ' " • "" ' .~ • ' ' " • .. ' ' ,1 l ' . ' ' .. ' ". ,. ... ... • ~ . I : '" ' r, " . " " " ' ' ,1 ,, ' ' • ,! " " ' n •o " ~ lS IQ o " ' ' ' ~· ' . "' ,. ,, . .. 0 .... ' ~ " ' . , ' ,, ' 1~ • 61 1 ... ' .. ... 41 1 ~. ,.~ ~· "'" 1~ l~ • 1 lJ ... ' " ' JJ • ' .. ' " ~ ' 6l 2! I ' ' . " Jj I I ' •l· l? ill ~ " . ' " '" " • " , • • .. ' •u • ,f ' .. ' " " • " ' - DAILY PILOt • . ' J 2 DAILY PILOT Tur~ay, March 17, 1970 • . ·~ ·•' t "• (Kroehle ~. ' Vectro Sofa & Love Seat • Dinette J ~ Piece Headboards Bunk Lone Green Velvet 9-Piece Modern Chino Sectional Headboards Beds Cocktail or Cho irs Ranch Set By ·"Bossett" Reg. 289.00 End Tabl es Startin g al Reg. 69.95 Reg. 139.9.5 Reg. 229.95 Reg, $209 · .s100 Reg. 89.9.S s35 s127 s20 $67 s97 Reg. 619.9~ s397 Eor l y A111e!lcon Wing Sod: 50!0 ond UlOIChing love Sect 1n duroble end cleonoble vect10. Only 3 sels let!. Oromotic Slv!,nQ -orr.c:· 1ng .,.ulue -a ~ctiionol s37 All sl\ter--All s•::-~s. fro m Comfortable and priced King size fable -42" x 84" This <O" wolnu! lini~h forest products Spanish oak linl&h. You 9e1 lhe w11h cornnr +cblc Only I Sµon:~h oo~ /jn,~:, in di•-01~conl1nued bedroom 11ghr. Re'.'ers1ble l-cush-Includes 2 !eaves and 8 Chino has no gloss doors two heodboords and two loit. hntl•ve Med1 terru11e on -se.ls. ion end Shepherd co~t-choirs for a large !amity. and is being sold as It, .tootboords. Only 2 left, MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY ' 1Qam to 1Qpm BECAUSE ... ,11!in9. BECAUSE ... We insist that our customers re-Our shop is too busy to restore ceive onL'first qu_glity" fomou ? -~thi s ___b,rniture to its fa ctoet fresh brand merchandise in top condi-condition. We ore closing it out ti on. We occumulo1e ! over a pe-during this special event at penn ies riod of time J a vast assort ment of on the dollar. Many of these items suites and odd pieces that hove nave flows so slight you hove lo received va rious knicks, mars and search for 1hem. scratches. ets. Onlv 4 1c!t. BECAUSE . . . These suites and od.Ps onCI enCls ore laking u~ valuable warehouse space we need for incoming Shi p· ments. It must be moved ou t imme- diately. We've come up with hun- dreds and hundreds of tremendous volues. Get your share of the sav- ings. Only I leH. 0 3-Position Rollowoy Bed Reg. 39.95 s26 SAVE-1/J-1/2 AID MORE Deep luf1ed inn~·~pr1ng mo11r~S~ oJivs•s lo 3 posi11ons. Walnut Finished 30" Bookcase Reg . 29.9.5 s15 A slurdy bookco~e for your office or oc.n. Bar Stools Re g. 29.9.S s13 :::O" higl1 in nu1mc9 01 walnu1 i,n }, 7-Dr. Kneehole Desk Reg. 139.95 s6s ramo1,1s Barl o;-r quol 't "' ,,, ild·. f'i.;:(' drov1c1~. Only 4 lefr. Complete Home Study Center Reg. 49.95 s25 Group 1ncluC:es 40 · Dc~k. ~·A" Boo~co~c plus Pedes!ol Bose Cho>r. , Dining Room Tobie Tops Your Choitl! s15 All SiZPS c:nd l nosl c:1. RounJ. C'Clogon, ovol. No legs. Queen Size Vectro Sleeper A ~olo by day, a 0 1,1een size bed cl night. Reg. i 19. 9 5 Upholsrered in co1elrce duroble plaid vec- l 'o Reversible sec! and boc~ cushions Assorted 5-Pc. Dinette Sets Scve up !o 75'}'. o~ your choice of 5 pc. dtne!te sels. All will be sold "os is,·· A wide selection of oval end rectongulor tobles Values _ .. ell with corclree plos!ic tops. Each To 99.9.5 •f't includes 4 washable, vinyl choirs. Be $45. hct e When rhe doors open ... be the fi1~1 tn choc~e fr om !his ossoriment. Steel Bed Frames Th<>sc sruia:1 steel bed frames cci1vs! to h•,.n or full :.•ZP and are mounted an srnooth·roN1n'} cos1ers !o mo~e tleon1n9 a ~ncpl Hurry for 1he~c1 Reg. 9.95 Block Wrought Iron Book Shelf The pedect irem for showing olf your precious 1!en1~ .•• will bring added dram· Reg , S 19 ·Otic tf)'l1ng la your Spanish decor! Beouti-s9 fv! ,jmportcd wrought iron with tP\ree dork • C'ok wooden ~hr.Ives. H111ry for this an al Spanish Decorator Console Core!uliy carved dao1 fronts. !;ant.I 1ub- bed Spanish ook !inosb. Mediterranean Sofa Reg . 89.95 Cosily cul velve1 lobr1c1 end CJCposed Reg. 399.95 Soarush ool finished ffome w11h 1eversib!e u..01 end bocl cushion:. 2-Pc. Velvet Sectional Cold velvet wilh controsring reversible Reg. 499.9.S bocl:. cu5hions end aok lin1$hed wood trim make lhis on cxcept1onol valve. I only. Early American Sofa Cusram quilted linen weave Sco!chgorded• sofa by Beiley Schmitz. Reversible dacron 1.,ropped cu$/iions in 1lorol pot1ern. One lel!. Fox Spanish Sofa ' 8' sofa with Spanish coli. arms in durable olive nubby fabric. [xcc!lent construction for your home. Reg. 399.95 Reg. 329.95 Bassett Contemporary Bedroom This wo!nut finished 5 pc. ~I hos all 1he Reg. 389,95 q1,1oli1y fea1ures of Bassett thrvour. You get S197 the double· dresser; mirror, lull or queen heodboord ond two drawer nite /ables. Unogusto 4-Pc. Bedroom Spanish styling in pecan finish. This includes Reg. 599.95 lhe dao1, dresser, plo!e glass lromed mir- i er. the king size headboard end two (2) s3 97 Joor commoPe. Rural Spanish Bedroom by "Bassett" Conside1 !his . . . oil wood lno plas11c I with authentic bioss pull~ Hand distressed, hand wo~ed und hond rubbed Amber !,n. ish. A tiuly beouiilu1 su1re which includes: Reg, 669.95 T r•ple Dresser. lend.scoped Mirror, T·110 N1te S1onds. full or queen size heodboard S 3 3 7 plus lorge Five Drowor Chest. Bassett Tables Square commodes o; hexagon w1rh inlaid slate lops. Dork oak wirh Bossetl qualify. Only 8 !eh. shope'L_ Re:g. 79. 9 5 finished 5-Drower Lingerie Chests Over V2 Off! Store your delicate clothing beouti[L.iliy ond solely in your choi~ of o white or Colon· ial maple lingerie chest. Bo!h have 5 roomy drawers that ore dust-proofed end Reg. 99.95 finished IQ O sa!in smoothness SO lhey'll s4 8 . never snag your clothing! You save over 1/2 1adoy ot tevttz! Early American Charm Virginia colony bedroom by B.ossel! is Reg. 369.95 ourhentic colonial styling. Tht: triple dress-S1 97 er; plate gloss mirror and headboard in o Salem finish is for you now. 3-Piece Bedroom Set Triple dresser, fromed mirror and king Reg. 389.95 s1;:e heodboord from o lomous eastern foe· 1ory. Pecan finished in the Mediterraneon s178 mood. 5 sets lef!. Bassett Dining Room Tobie Reg. 209.95 f ,enc.h Provincial scalloped edgo 1able. 3 leave~ wi1h formol styling at l~vitz low. low price . Beautiful Moster Bedroom by "Bassett" Fomous "Bossen" br,ngs onorher ou\·,1ancl. Only u1g bedroom to you in worm Spon;\h styl-Reg. 899.95 1ng. Includes, Massive n·· Triple Dres;er, S467 Twin {2) Framed Mirrors, King Size Heod- boord pNs two roomy Nite Stanch •. Vinyl Sofa & Love Seat Simmons .Hide-a -bed FURNITURE WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM Luxurious Pillow Bock Velvet Sofa Reg. 529.95 £orly Amer!con W•ng bac~ sn!a wi!h mo1ching love sec!. Re· versible c1,1shions 1n c~ocodo vinyl. 68" High Curio Cabin et Rt g. 199.95 Reg. 409 .00 Gold vir.vl I ide-o·bed w1lh inner~pring mottre~ Th.s is o tamovs Si m mo n s love seal Hide·o·bed. Only 3 1cfl. Bassett Record Cabin ets Reg. 89.95 Elsgont .V.edi!erronrton do~i<jn So~c: C.Ytt 1 , '" yO\Jr r;hoice carved In pecan with pla~ of forr:o ... ~ So~sctl 1oco1d cob· Iron! and ~de wllh m1r•or bock. tnl!f~ Each hos 2 door~ t'.MSTTOCOA!>T ... ______ ,.,,,,,. Easy to Reach from At Levitz all the "retail fr ills" ore loken ovt of the Worehou$e Sole Price. The price yoo pay is in 1he Carton on our Dock. 1oke it home yourself or hove it delive~ by Levitz ••. There will be o small del ivery diorge due to these ifl- credibly low Warehouse Sole Prices ! Anywhere San Diego Freeway At Beach Blvd. 'EV ITZ AREHOUSE ANO SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD ., Edinger Ave ., Next to the Huntington Shopping Center! \ Reg. 369.00 s187 Magnllicent tuxedo solo "P· hols1ered in gold velvet. Re- verslble sect end bock cush· ions. Only 2 left. Deep Tufted Vectro Sofa Reg. 299.95 s177 luxu1iou& 8' sofo In Olive care. free Vec1rc with itversible pure loom cu~hions ;'\ Bedroom Chest Reg. 119.95 s6s 6o$SeH oo\ flf')IY, chcsl. Dusl?fOOf & cen!er guid· ed. Only 1 left, Odd Nile Tables Reg. 59.95 2 010 .... er commode~ tram c.•scor.r.nucd bedroon1 sets. Hutches Hutches Slarting ot From discon!inued sets in maple, modern, Sponish, Spanish Style Woll Unit' Reg. 99.00 Cove1s 6 feet of v10ll ~pace. Bookcase Library Units Reg. 59.95 Spanish oak f1ni~h librory vnils to fit your budget. Bassett Double Dresser Reg. $2-49 Famous Ba~~cit quality, Only I left 6 d1ower Span:sh oc~ l.nrsh dress- "· Spanish Vinyl Love Seat Reg. 249.00 s127 Carefree v1n•1I upho1s1erv in block one expo~ed oak frome. High back for com- fort. Only 9 leh. Windsor Box Spring & Mattress Reg. 89.00 s44 Deep luhcd ! ecp 5"'S. F11!1 size onlv. Hand Tuft ed Sofa Reg . 229.oo s137 hal1on prov1nciol C'!! irs finest. Deep 1uf!ed bocls 1n co1lly Domotk fobroc. Only 3 loll . • I • • ' ' I I I • I • • ' I I ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' t I I I I I I I I I I t I I I I -----------------------------------------------~-·--.~-----~~- PIZZAZ JOINS POLKA DOTS Cobra look (above) and new primitives make big splash on f a bric scene. It used to be U1at prlnts were something that bloomed suddenly on Easter Sunday, stayed around for the sum1ner and went back into hibernatio11 on Labor Day, In between these two days, one could choo.se between a limited variety of florals and polka dots. Some seasons the !loral prints were described by the fashion proponents as dainty and ot11er ·seasons they were nam· boyant. Polka dots also suffered the same fate or waxing between pin dots and dots the size of coins, evidence that the manufac- turer who asked his textile designer to ••make something different" was never granted his request. Tho'ugh these days are within memory of a significant portion-of today's fashion- . consci~s women, a ~hole new era o( prints .has dawned for today and 'tomor· rO\V. Prints have jwnped off the calendar ·and are "in" year round , .. prints have blossomed far beyond the floral s and polka dots ... prints wilJ be exciting for home dressmakers to work with. Prints will know no season. making the scene in December equally as well as in f.1ay. . Prints and polka dots still will be around but not as prominently so. They will be joined by colorful peasant print s reminiscent of Balkan folk dancer8, paisleys both small and oversized that get th'eir nod from the Oriental rug, and a new generation of ethnic or primitive prints that return to the tribal designs or Africa for source material. By looking lo lop name designers, home seamstresses can get inspiration for prints for evening wear as well as for casual daytime attire. A luxurious sum- mer formal can be made of a vibrant print accented with be'ading or sequins at the neck and hemline. A lot of work, perhaps, but definitely worth the cosfly- looking ensemble. Also in the yardage department the seamstress will find monochromatic prints that could very well just have been resurrected from grandma's attic trunk . Called attic or vintage prints , they are also described as "murky, fungy, mungy and diLsie." Day~me coordinates are well·suiled for these fabrics. Another smart fabri c is the cobra pal· tern in natural colorations of grey to brown. \Vorn with mi-lny gold chains or a fashionable slim leather belt in a neutral shade , they are the smartest of prints. Self-covered buttons also are passc. Though they may make a come-back in the future, they should be avoided. Just the right buttons can give the home·sewn ouUit a designer's flair. Another trick in turning an outfit into a designer's masterpiece is to make a wide band of matching fabri c to wrap around the head or a generous triangle shawl to wear Spanish-fashion over one shoulder. These can be fringed to help the effect. All fabrics may be found at Sears. South Coasl Plaia in the fashion fabrics department. New Fabrics Span Seasons • '· PAI SLEYS INSPIRED BY RUGS Knits S-t-r-e-t-c-h Sew Easily ' n TMUcl1y, ,,llrch 11, Ult f'111 11 Fashionable Magazines Vie for Skating Star By TttARIAN CHRISTY Skating star Peggy Fleming is fa shion 's blithe spirit. The magazines would like to reach {)ttt, clutch her and set the promotional wheels · racing to create the image of A1neri ca's n1osl chic young elegante. But. ac- cidentally on purpose, she's as difficult to catch as that proverbial moonbeam. Executive editors of snob magazines twitter about her stunning personality, magnetism and photogenic beauty. At 21, she Is world-famous and a distinct pro- totype of the non-hippie . Both Vogue and Harper's Bazaar have trickled word down to Fleming managers \\'ho mastennlndcd her $1.5 million con- tract -including those NBC-TV specials. Peggy. who has become lncreaslngly rashion-orientcd . agreed to a trial photographic session \\1ith Harper's Bazaar. All day she strutted her sluff in the tiny space as photographers fired away. Then the clincher. \Vhen the magazine came oot, only one photograph of Peggy appeared to\vard the end o~ the publlc11tion . The "Ice Follies" skating star. who simply doesn 't have a day to waste, considertd the ex- perience a colossal waslt' of tlme, Al the moment the only clothes Peggy is in terested in are her bridal dress and trousseau. On J une 13 she'll become Mrs. Gregg Jenkins, wife of a thlrd-year medical stu- dent at Southwestern University, Dallas. The wedding gown, by William Cahill, Is venetian lace with high neck and short sleeves. Five bridesmaids will wear chartreuse. It's the color of the costumes Peggy's mother made for her to wear in the 1968 \Vinter Olympics when she won the gold medal. "Green is lucky for me," • stie feels. During a recent lhree-weelt rest period Peggy haunted the bridal departments at 1. ~tagnin and Bullock's, Los Angeles - making 57 visits before settling on ,the gown, Peggy discovered the fashion magic of Donald Brooks -and his sky- high prices. One fluid silk dress was $950, and, although It fit likP. a dreain, Peggy, who now has the means. said it was out o( the question because of the astronomica l price. Comparing the price of her mother's homesewing made her even more nervous. The buyer qulck1y got Brook& on the telephone. Peggy had her say and Brooks knocked down the price. Giorgkl di Sant' Angelo, the de!igner who makes off·beat native costume fashinnil for best-dressed types like Jackie Onassis, recenUy made Peggy a gypsy formal gown for her trousseau. And, instead or a fur coat, she bought herstU a maroon Porsche hopin g that her Hance will think fur as a wedding gift. MRS. MARGARET PE RRI N DEMONSTRATES NEW TECHNIQUE Gaining momentum as the most popular hobby of homemakers Is sewing. The growing intere st seems lo stem from many reasons ..• a sense of creativity and originality •.• a sure way to have fashions which no longer are available in stores ... stretching the family budget. So endless yards of bright silk and col· ton prints, soft wools, lavish brocades and sturdy sail cloth and corduroy have found their way to milady's cutting board and sewing machine. But. knit, the fabric most in demand because of its wrinkle·resistant quality, has found seamstresses shying away. To conquer the technique of smooth seams, a new method has been developed. Called Stretch and Sew, the method is simple to learn, even for beginners as this technique eliminates darts and tucks. The seamstress never bastes,· and the most pins she will use at any one time are eight. ' Another bless ing is that any sewing machine will work -there ts no need to buy a new one wilh the stretch and sew stitch. However, special patterns 1 r e necessary. They can be considered a sav· ings because each pattern includes three sizes and about three to six variaUomi can be made from each. Polyesler knit requires a dual duty threat, but cotton and wool knits taJce regular thread. In a minimum of 2Q lo 30 minutes 1 mock turtle neck .shirt can be whipped up, which Mrs. Margaret Perrin. an in:. structor, demonstrated for H a p p 1 Homemakers. M she sews a seam, she stretches th• one piece to fil the other and stretches where there la a curve, such as. around the neck and armholes. After the seam is compleled, she goes over It once more with a zigzag stitch, then with a steam iron and the seam ls finished. Mrs. PerriA atttsta that dresses can be! made In about t1n hour. and caprls take about the same length of Ume. 'tbe knit! in cotton, wool and Polyester come ln solid colors. stripes and plaids. For something very special, alpaca now Is sold _by the yard and 1dapla perled!J for tweater1. • J4 DAILY PILOT ·Tutsday, March 17, 1970 Mountain Made Into Molehill DEAR ANN LANDERS' I wQildet lJ_ your rtadert -millions of them rea1lze how . lucky lhey ace? I a1n referring to those. \!ast mulUludes \l'ho go about their daily business \\'ilh nothlng more than lhe ordinary, everyday problems -a nosy mother-ill-law, a demand ing boss, a twc>- 'faef!d girlfriend, an unrailhful 5'1'tethean, a free-loading relative, li bad investment, a kid who won't get a haircut .:_ vou '!mow tha{ 1 mean, Ann. "l.1·any-peoPJC believe· ·they Know v.·hal happiness is. But how many know v.·hat happiness ISN'T? I hope the folks who read thls will take a good look at the ir li ves. It rnight help them realize how fortunate !hey are. Happiness Is not getting that telegram: "\Ye regret to inform you that your son \1'8S killed in action." Happiness is nol getting a laboratory report which reads: "malignant." Happiness is not heAring the words in the delivery room -"Your baby didn't live.'' l~appiness is not receiving a phone call after midnight saying, "This is Doctor J al the emergency hospital. Your daughter was in a serious accident." I hope you won't consider this letter" too depressing to print. -In fact , it might make some o( your readers view their small sorrows in a different light. - AUSTIN. MINN. ANN LANDERS ting life's problems in perspeclh•t. DEAR ANN LANDERS : A bo1rib was riropjled on our home several months ago. o·ur 16-year'"--Old daughter told us she was pregnant and didn't ltnow who the father was. ~1y husband and 1 were shocked. F~y didn·t date much. She led us to believe she didn't care for boys. We sent her to Florence Crittenton. She put the b"iiby op !or adoption. That same month she came hOme and reentered high school. Fay has been back two months and I hate the sight of her. My hU!band has been able to Corgive het, but I can't. Whenever 1 look at that gir~ I see a lying, two-faced slut. I can 't belleve a word she says. She has gained about 15 pounds and still looks prcgnaM, which I find revolting. My husband takes Fay's slcle in every argument. It ia the two of th em against me. I feel persecuted and left out. Thal girl Ls ruining my life. What can I do ? - TEXAS HEAllTACHE DEAR READERS: Have you had a good laugh today ? lf not -this might be it. Recently I printed this Conridenlial lo Too Long the Night: "Send" a self-ad- dressed stamped envelope and I will tell you why you h;;id trouble and what to do about It.'' To dale, I have received 17 self-ad- dressed st.umped envelopes fro 1n people who want to know why they had trouble and what to do about it! Only one pcr!Oll will get a reply. That person lives in Omaha, Neb. and he must send me a let- ter repealing the facts as they appeared in the original letter. (My, but there are lots of nosy folks in this world!) "The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers' hooldet, ans'1·ers some of the mOlit fre- quenUy asked" questions about ~'~dinJ'· To receive your copy of t h l s com· prehenlive guide, write lo Ann Landers, lo core of Ibis newspaper, enclosing a long, self-add ressed, stamped envelope and 35 cents in coin. Ann Land ers will be glad to help you ·------·~ ~-·~-- Mormon Repeated Rites • LA In The Los Angeles Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Ylas tile set- ting !or the marriage of MRS. H. L. FOU TZ New Brldt Carolyn Cannon Leslie Foutz. and llal Parents of the bridal couple are fl.tr . and Mrs. Clyde Can· non of Costa ttlesa and fl.1r . and ~1rs. Hal B. Foutz of Las Vegas. The new Mrs. F'oulz was attended by her mother as ma ti on ol hono r; Christlrie WrighL. maid of honor: Debbie Bell, Sheri Benvenuti, Janet Cannon. and Holly and Ellen Foutz the bride gro om 's sisters, bridesmaids. Lisa Foutz, another sister was !lower girl and Terry North was best man. LAURI E PIKE The former Miss Cannon is Engaged a gradua~ of Costa f\1esa -----'-''------ High School where she was a member of fl.1adrigal and con- cert. choir. She attended Dixie Co!lege in SL George, Ulah, \\'here she was a member of the Springfield Fare, a folk- singing group. Newcomers Admitted Mesa Pair Betrothe d Laurie Pike, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. C. ll. Pike wUI become the brlde of Claude W. Schonert, son of 1t1r. and Mrs. Claude C. Schonert, all of Costa Mesa. The betrothed arc both graduates or Costa Mesa H~lgh School. Miss Pike Is 1 freshman studying biologi science at UC I and her fiance is ·a sophomore at Orange Coast College majoring in business. No dale has been set for their wedding which will take place in St. James Episcopal Church, Newport Beach. Treasures Examined DEAR AUSTIN: \\le all tend lo become myopic. A letter like yours can help us maintain a good balance. Thanks for put- DEAR TEXAS: Your hostility toward your daughte r is pathological. Get pro- fessional help and rid yourself of lbe bate in your heart. It Is deltrllying )'OU. wilt• your problems. Send them lo her in ----------- care of the DAILY PILOT. enclosing a The benedict Is majoring in Jaw at Dixie College. The bridal couple v.•i\I be residing in Las Vegas. l\tcsa Rebekah Lodge 402 \YllJ welcon1e 1'1rs. Bertha Hylton of Westmi nst e r, district deputy president to the meeting tonight. Treasures of the Huntington Library v.·ill be viewed by Friends of the UC! Lib rary tomorrow during an outing ar- ranged by l\rlrs. Duane De Kalb. sell-addressed, stamped envelope. Wedding Revealed A special bus will be board· ed at 11 a.m, at Fashio n Island and a gourmet box lunch will be served to the members en route. Art Demonstration Potter's Wheel Spins Ceramist -"'eaver• Jack Taylor will In I rod u c e members of Niguel A r l Association to he field of creative c eramics on Thursday, l\1arch 19, in Cro\11n Valley Elementary School, Laguna Niguel. A demonstration including potter's wheel techniques will begin at 8 p.m. Founder and past president of the Laguna Beach Craft Guild and a regular exhibitor at the Festival of Arts, Taylor is a graduate of t h e Philadelphia f\1useum School of Art. He did graduate \\'Ork at Pennsylvania and J\1ichigan uni versities. The artist teaches cla sses for children and adults In the field or creative ceramics, weaving and wood sculpture under .auspices of the Newport Beach Service League. Youths to Sing C11MO Hou-. Pllolt BARBARA HILL To .Marry Music Programed LYNN HEGEWALD August Bride Pair Pick Rite Date Lynn l\1ichelle Hegewald and Jon Killion, both students at Pasadena College, "'ill marry Corona del l\1ar H i g h School's Madrigal s under the direction of Donald Haneke will present a program Thurs· day, March 19, for the Alta Bahia Work.ing Committe~ of the O r ange Counl y Phllharmonic Society . P,,Jrs. lle rman Johnson of Newport Beach will host the JO a.m. meeting and the program wi ll be presented by Mrs. Richard Franklin , program chairman. The madrigal g r o u p , Officers Installed organized only three years. has received the higbesl ratings possible at music festivals and plans a tour of Europe next summer. Mrs. David Chambers \Viii be luncheon hostess, assisted by the Mmes. J. Donald Ferguson, Kenneth Smith and Richard Bradburne. Guests ;ire invited to a\tc,id meetings of the con1millee the third Thursday of each month. Those v•ish ing information may call the chairman. fl.1rs. William fl.1. Laing, 675-5033. Sweet Buy s Arranged September Plans Told Barbara Louise Hill will become the bride of Richard Glen Kimball during nuplials Sept. 5 in St Andrew's Presbyterian Church. News of the forthcoming event has been announced by her parents, ~tr, and Mrs. Edgar Kimball Hill o f Granada Hills and former residents of Costa Mesa . Miss Hi ll is a graduate of Estancia High School and at- tended Orange Coast College. Her fianet. son of Mr. and Mrs. Richa rd C. Kimball of Corona de! Mar, is a graduate of Tustin High School and at· tends OCC. May Date Disclosed The ma rriage of Peggy Jean Richard and Lawrence J. Carmona has been announced by P..1r. and Mrs. 1.larlin E. Richard of Costa M e s a , parents of !he bride. Tile new Mrs. Carmona is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and currently is at- tending Golden West College. The benedict. son or Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carmona of Costa Mesa, attended Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College before entering the , U.S. Coast Gua rd. lie is sta- tioned at the CG Training Center, Governor's I s 1 a nd , N.Y., taklng advanced training as an electronics technician. Alums Meet Pahellenic Takes Stock In Meeting The stock market will be under discussion during the meeting tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. when New port Harbor Panhellenic gathers in the Ltn- da Isle Clubtiouse. David Utter, stockbroker, will present the talk. Past p r esidents and assembly officers will be on J1and during her official visit. Earlier in the month the lodge admitted new members into the group. f\1rs. Ranie Zuidema was in charge, with htrs. Henry Wedesweiler serv- ing as warden and Mrs. Malcolm Overton as con- du ctor. Admitted lnto the lodge's ranks were Roy Cook and the Mmes. Harold Linder. Ray Barton and Carlene Gibbs. Reports G iven Robert 0 . Dougan, librarian, will greet the travelers and start them on their tour of the Ilbrary. Among those atlending will be Dr, Adolph Kroch, guest of honor, and the P.1 m e s • Laurence Reynolds of Laguna Beach, Carl Wiley of Newport Beach, Herman R o m m , Corona de! Mar, Eric Strut!, Newport Beach, and Patricia Davis, lrvine. Meetings Wrapped Up Also co\'ered during the gathering v.•ill be plans for the Athena Luncheon in April and the annual mother-daughte r tea in May, Members wi ll ·elect officers for the coming year. \vi th installation slated for May. A buffet luncheon will be The final v.Tap-up of board Results from the nominating served following the business meetings for Orange District, committee will be offered and session. AssisUns: with ar-California Federation or the slate of officers will be rangements will be the P.1mes. Women's Clubs, Junior Jack ti.1. Bibb. Raymond Membership will take place presented. Candidates \\rill be Stephens College of Today Harvey, Graham Gibb 0 n s. tomorro\V, 111arch 18, at 7.30 voted on at the district con- will be the topic or a talk l\felvin Schinkel, Lawrence p.m. In LaPalma Junior \'enlion in April. tonight \\1hen Stephens College-Kiltie. Dudley Miller and \Vomen's Club. A $100 cash award will be Alu1nnae meet. Elizabeth Longrid g'e. A report will be given bestowed during lhe confab. Serving as co-hostesses will regarding the two-year com-The Kraft Foods Community The Costa Mesa home of be Mrs. John Packard, fl.1rs. bined efforts of the 20 clubs in Service award will be given to "f\lr. and ~1rs. Charles S. Lease William Mitchel and Mrs. Se a Sirens the district. \Vilh 100 percent the club with the most ~·as the setting when they an-Liilian Duggan. Further in-TOPS Sea Sirens meel In of the clubs reporting, more outstanding comm u n I t Y nounced the engagement of formati.on regarding location KiUybrooke School, Co s t a yian $61 ,000 was spent on service project reported In the their daughter. Sandra Lease may be obtained by calling Mesa. Programs begin at 7 community and international Build a Better Community to Charles A. Crifasi. Mrs. \VyM Chapman, 637-0680. p.m. every Wednesday. affairs projects. report. Present al the family dinner ---'----C-------'-----'------'--------'-_;, _______ _:_ ________ _ party were Mr. and Mrs. Steve H. Crifasi of Duarte, the bcnedict-elect's parents. The betrothed revealed they 1 \viii be married May 2 in SL Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa Mesa. The future bride is a graduale of Corona del 11ar High School and her fiance is an alumnus or Duarte lligh School. He has completed two years of service with the Arm y. Call CArnEO todolj- Saw money while you lwe weight! • in August. . Their engagemenl was an- nounced by the Larry K. llegewalds or Balboa. parents or the prospective bride. 11\Stallation or officers or the Orange: Coastal Re<:ipiocily Bureau, PEO, will begin at 10 a.m. in the C-OmniUJlity Con- grrgaUonal Church, Corona deJ Mar. on Friday, Mlll'fh 20. Fresh cookies, cakes, pirs Lag una Grou p and other del ectables will Fat isn't w here it's at Nei ther are high prices. So take advantage of our special limited time otter right away. l\1iss Hegewald is a graduate or Newport flarbor High School and is a SOphomorc majoring in e I em en tar y education. come out of the oven and be American Legion Auxiliary rushed to a bake sale sponsor-of Laguna Beach gathers t.~e ed by Delta lota Chapter , Epsi· second and fourth Thursday Ion Si~ma Alpha International, evenings in the Legion Hall. for a bake sale Saturday,l;:======''====;I fl.'farch 21. Her Ciance, son of the llcv. and Mrs. Clai'eitce· .Killion of Dinuba, is a junior studying psychology. ' filltM l'tll••"' UftllMUH , ,,..__ Chapter members are in- vited to bring interested 111omen who are not affiliated to the installatian. Reservations ffiay be made with fl.1rs. F. E. Dische, 548- ·6495. The sale will begin at 10 a.m. in front of Gemco, Wa r ne r Ave nu e and Brookhurst Street. and will continue until the merchandise Js sold. JUST 4 DAYS!! Patterns Un limited , In c. is back again in ANAHEIM with the .!ORIGINAL EUROPEAN"GOLDEN RULE' METHOD OF PATIERN DRAFTINC Acclaimed by Millions throu ghout the World II ! A PaUeiut CuHUcg Slwut An 011101ing ~!1-od whoc h loun1h u"belltYOb!t, )'ti r1,,.,1nolr\ )'tO•S ol 1t11dy -j .. 11 1tod o 11u"'bt' e nd .,,o.,o dot. No 11ttd 101 )'t:O•I o l ltorni119. Gi•t v1 ONE HOUR ,. .. J -~ .,.,fj •l>O .. ~(h• l'>ow d""'OI""'' onil "'IO!l<t r ,., '" •Ofl\ )oo•t C•t o•ed o lwll•m lo r noble 1011 to d•o!I pollt"'I ... th 11n!r TWO ontotuttrMnh. Jo, )<>II .,,,,J o~, -mbt• ol l'°'"" to..,;1,;.. o"T 1•1e! lo,,, 'Y'""' ;, o pto""" 1<1Clf'\\ ft>t wo•ld o"'' ond o AN OPPORTUNITY YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MI SS! "SEEING IS BELIEVING" ! ! ! AU [quipmf'nl'Available at Class l)l MON<;TR.ATION'i THP(£ TIM[S DAil Y W"' "•It••"~ u~1-•'· •:t-....,;gr-..;_ IOAM 2PM 7:30PM Tuesday, March I 0th thru Friday , March 13th HOWARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE 1380 S. H1rbor •I S1nt1 "'Ana Fre1w1y Directly acro•s from Oisntyl1 nd (NO l(l(PHON[ C.Al.L!io-Pl.LASCJ GIRLS • • . AGES 4 ·12 WIN EASTER WARDROIE ~LUS MANY OTHER YALUAILE PRIZES IN llARBOR CENTER'S 3rd ANNUAL TWEEN · AGE 4 ,. 12 PRINCESS CONTEST PJtlaJUDGING MON, MARC H 15 4 ll'.M. at GWEN 'S STUDIO CROWNING SAT., MARCH 2ht-1 :00 p.m. NAM[ -...... . PHONE ·- ADDRISS Mu AGf ,In Olll •fld r•!Uf'I 1't Gwt~'l $•11!:1~ ol Dfl'IC t •fld Mocllllflt In Htrtlor C.t11lfr, 2:100 HARIOR II.VD. COSTA MESA Resul ts guaranteed in writing! We welcome BankAmericard and Master Charg e. •• $100 Now only for regular $2.00 treatment! We are not a gym. No disrobing. No pills. No back-breaking exercises. No crash diets. Call now for a complim entary first visit and free figure analysis at no obligation. .f3ut call while this special offer lasts! Ca~eo Salo1ts COMPLETE Fl0 URE. CONTROt. .. Huntington Btach 18582 Beach Blvd. • (714) 962-5500 I Corona Del Ma r 3800 E. Coa st Highway (ii 4) 675-6350 ·--------------------------------.....,--,..., .... -~-~~-------·-... ·-·--·-------· ... -··~ -. --·--·· -... -.. ----r Tutsdly, Mirth 17 1970 DAIL V PILOT Jlf .... You r Horoscope Tomorrow Sagittarius:· Obtain Meaningful Hint From Gemini M€Pcige WEDNESDAY wallnower today. Assert feel · hmt from Gemini Wssage . Be en horizons. lndiVidual who had been el..ist In partnerstup deal or PISCES tFeb. 19-~1.trch 20); you don't fla ve to force thtm. ings. You know what you can aware of one who might be: CAPRICORN <Dec. 22.Jan. regarded l('I friend could contract. Intelligent reaction Apply light touch. ~fany get .\!1' .;.":, ~:0:i'ty2=' i:~~ •= MARCH 18 do_ now do il creating communications gap. 19): Emotions fly high: you become something more \\'ould see you double-checking backs up U you are too In-:~" ~~!'..!d ~1..::.,i.'~ • ~ By SYDNEY O~tARR SAGrrTARIUS lNov. 22-Trust your hunch. Look have fun because you gain AQUARIUS (Jan. 2tl·Feb. details, fine print. If you do, sistent. Be a willing listentr. :0.' • ~: li::-11o1'-'c~,.Y";,~ri.!•v.!; ~Dec~. ::;21:!.;)'_;0b=laln~· '"m~un:::!:ln:!gf:::ul~be::!y::'.!on::'.d.!'.lll:;.•_:::imm::::::;ed:::i•:::te-b::::::::..::"':::'d-::_g!!:.r::ea:::le:.;r d::::e!!:.gm=o:.;f ";::l:.;f.i::::d•::.:•ti:::IY!;.·...,::18:.:;l'c.So=rn<;:_;;dl::::''::::"""~"';;c·'..:c:::•u:::ld'-'y.:.:•u:..;em:;:::;•r_,,_ge:;..tr;..;i::::um;;,;p..;h•.;;.nl"-. ---=':..;';;;.h"'..;8::.;•::::• w_l.,;.ll_be_m_•..:d• __ v,:.:'"'"'-"'"'·'·.;:."""'"'-· ___ _ Leo loves tu111ry ud the 1 ~ 1poWgbt. Flattery will gel you eVerywbere wltb naUves of this sign. ARJES (lt1arch 21-April 19)· You may hit pay dirt but odds art fa vorable if you wait. Numerous details have yet to be finalized. Know this and refuse to be pushed, cajoled or rushed. Depend on your own creative resources. TAURUS (April 20-ltlay 2{)): Avoid overexpansion. Obtain hint from Aries message. Time is on your side. Trust judgment of those with ex~ perience. Radical a c t i o n s could upset chances for sue· cess. GE!\UNI (May 21.June 2tl): Avoid unnecessary tr ave I . There is flurry of activity which could lead to confusion. Separate fact fro m ficUon. Be knowledgeable-do some ad- ditinnal research. CANCER (Ju n e 21.Ju\y 22): Money matters may seem pressing. But with cooperation from family member, you come out with a profit. Takes two to tango. Applies especially to financial selup today . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You may run into obstacles ii you Insist on instant action -or reaction. You need added cooperation from those who occupy stable positions. Avoid fooling yourself. Be factual . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You get answers to some puzzles. But whether this makes you happy is a debatabl e point. To know or not to know -that is the question. Maintain self-esteem. LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): ''ou may have to get used lo the idea !hel some request.s are subject to revision. Don't get stuck with one tune.One phase of aclivity is being com- pleted. Make way for the new . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You have a right lo be rewarded for efforts. Don't permit anyone to make you a Offices Assumed lt1r.s. Hovtard Pease will assume leadership of the Ex - presso Club of N ew p o r t Harbor during an inslaUatloq meeting aod lunchenn Thurs· day, March 19. The aMual affair will begin in the home of Mrs. Homer E. Howard at 10 a.m. v.•ben new officers will be seated and continue "·ith lunch i TI Berkshire's at the Orange County Airport . Mrs. Stewart Peters t n, founder and retiring president, "i ll present monies t.o Mrs. Ileen Ready, cxeculive direc- tor of the Orange-Riverside County Kidney f oundation to be used towards purchase of a test incubator. Taking office with ~trs. Pease will be the ltfmes. Stanley LeLievre. Haro Id Boyvey. Frank Gaines. Frank Marshall, Virginia Bollman, Homer Howard, J am e ! Graham and Peterson. Roa d Maps Come in Handy For NH Club Several trips arc C1n the agenda for members of Newport Ha rb or Grandmothers Club 419. Jn the coming weeks the group will visit the Hnfbrau In Uis Angeles, the Deer Park and \Yax J\tuseum. Anaheim. according lo J\.frs. George Shaw, president. ~1rs. Keith Rima is special e v e n I s chairman. A SL Patrick1s Day luncheon ;ind business meeling look place in the Costa Mesa Coun- rry Club. In memory of a pasl naUonal president and national t!irector the club Is joining nlher clubs and dedicating a nM>fl in the City of Hope. LET'S BE FRIENDLY U ou ha.11e nt'w netghbon or...know of ·anyone movtn1 to our a.rt'&. pleas.r t"ll UJ so that -~ extend • trlUldl.y welcome and help them to bccon;ie acciualntcd ln thdr ntw lurt'OUnd!np. So. Coast Visitor ,494-057' 494-J :161 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 California Federal guara11lees $236 a year on a $4,000 inveslanent with absolute safety. 5.75% guaranteed interest is what we're talking abou t . A guaranteed annual yield of 5.92°/o, That means $236 a year on a $4,000 investment. And not only is interest guar- anteed, but your principal is fully insured by an agency of the federal government. It's one of the world's safest investments. Naturally, there are some conditions. First of all, to qual ify for California Federal's guaranteed 5.75% plan, the minimum de- posit is $1,000. Second, you leave your money with us for a period of one year or n1ore . ,, Withdrawals are permitted at any time; however, with so me loss of interest, if withdrawn prior to maturity. Whatif you want to invest a larger amount ? Ca liforni a Fed eral has a guaranteed 6°Ai interest plan with 1ninimum deposit of $5,000 and n1inimum term of two years. Th e annual yie ld on $5,000 is $3 09. As a matter of fact, Cali fornia Federal has a wide variety of plans, with interest ranging from 5% to 7.5°/o, One of them is ideally suited to yo ur particular needs and circumstances. Califomia Federal 1 " How much can you invest and still have the principal amount folly insured? Accounts are insured up to $20,000. By openi ng three separate accounts, a man and wife can have up t o $60,000 fully insured . Does any Savings and Loan Association in California, under any circumstances, pay a higher interest rate than California Federal? No. Any other questions? Call any office in Los Ange- les, Ventura or Orange Counties. Or stop in. We'll have the an- swers. Helping savers make more on their savings made us the nation's largest federal. • ngs. Nation~ Largest Federal. ~ . ' For the moneY you can, afford to risk. ••• " •• ' Cc hfomla Fed&!'OI ScMngs and loan Assoelotton •Assets CNer $1 .6 Eillion •Head ~5610Wilshlrt Bouls.ard, losAl\feJts Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave.· 776-2222 Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300 ~ ' . Orange Office: 3a1ow.chapmanAve~· 639-3033 Other conv•nlen'-offlces througho1.1t l.Os Ang ale" Oronge ond Ventura Counti1s. • ' ------ Jf OlllYPllOr We'll Cause "em Problem-s·· Wooden LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -John Wooden. WbO .Qrtel.Ncw qk:o S~le w!U "t\!ye trt.mendbua incentive against us." but iiddJ, ''we'll cause thc.m some problr:ms, too.'' took UCLA'.:; basketbllllera t.o Miff~ today for their big clash with the Aggies. '"'lbey"ve been one of the top lhree or rour ttams in the country au year Jong," WoOOen said of lhe Aggles at Monday's Soutbem California basketball \Vritcrs meeling. Angel Battery Chief Concern ' For Phillips PAL\l SPRINGS (AP) -California Angels Manager Lefty Phillips says he's primarily concerned with the shape of the battery that will drive the American League team. Phillips offered his comments on the Angels' pitching and catching corps Mon. nay as California boosted its Cactus League record to 4-5 with a 4·2 victory over the Cleveland Indians. Rick: Reichardt l:elebraled his 27th birthday Monday with a tw~run homer that powered the California Angels to lhat exhibition triumph over I.he Cleveland Indians. Reichardt, who was hitting only .125 J1t j!ame time, also collected a single in thret trips aS U1e Angels snapped a three· game losing streak. Andy Messersmith pilched the first five Innings for t:ie Angels, allov,..ing two hlts ~·hile striking out six "Catching is the thing that I'm spen. ding a lot of hours thinking about and it '1 a headache, 0 big one," Phillips sal d. ··1 would like to put U1e best of the lwo guys (Joe Azcue and Tom Egan) we got notJ together. One bothers me with his bat and the other bothers me with his glove. "J, don't thlnk there's a chance any more of dealing with the Dodgers for Jeff Torborg," he sald. "I'm not sure they want to trade him lo us. But the man I'd like to get now is Duane Josephson of the (Chicago) White Sox and I'm hoping we can work M>mething out." Phillips said he's nol concerned about filling out the Angels' mound rotation. "Tile pitching of the candidates for !he npenings on our staff has bothered so1ne people but not me. "I think that Clyde \Vrlght is still !ht man in front in the ra ce for the No. 4 starter's job and one bad inning Sunday against. Cleveland when the Indians v.·on fi-3 doesn't change my mind," he said. "He has winning stuff." Thirteen pitchers are fighting for posl· tions on the IO·man mound staff. Nine of them are virtually assured berths. They are ~fessersmith. Rudy ~fay, Tom ~furphy, Wright, Ken Tatum, Paul Doyle, ?ifel Queen and Jack and Eddie Fisher. Wally \Volf. Greg Garrett. Dennls Ben- nett and Clark are seeking the final spot, the last two having the inside track. Sports 111 Brief 1 ' •·They have excellent personnel, they're e.xpcrJenc.e.QJ!.nd I.Gu llenson is one of the better roache1 In the nation,•· he said, ~ assessing the Rruins' foe in Thursday night's NCAA semifinal round al College Park, Md,. where UCLA goes after an unprecedented fourth straight national championship. "They've gol to be t.'OncCrned with our iuard:; -and with our front line." said \\'oodcn, covering the entire starting tearr ••over-all, we match up about tho same where siie is concerned." He said the team woukl work out Wednesday, practicing plays to handle Ne w Mexico State's moderate-temp of· fense. .. The lut two years we have played lhem in the Far \Vest Regionals and they haVe used an exaggerated 1ilowd1>wn beteuse ~e had Lew Alcindor. This yeaf' v.·e expecl them lo play their normal Ballet on the Baseball Field game and they'll be more difficult 1.4 defeMe." Bruin backcourt sl.ar Henr.y Bibby, whose defensive play keyed UCLA '1 vie· tories Last week againgt Cal Stale (Long Beach). wnd Ut.ab Slate In the regionals, was named unlverslly player-0f·lhe-week .. Wooden sa.ld his Bruins made it to the semifinals partially because of the hard work of Bibby. "One thing that I think has gone un- noticed was lbe fact that both nights • Henrj'°1 man dldn't score at all," Wooden &aid. "On Thursday night, Ray Gritton of Long Beach hardly even got a-shot and Bibby played him very well. Then on Saturday, he abut off \Jlab State'• Jeff Tebbe. "That's very difficult -to hold both of your men score less in games back·to- back. Henry hu worked vtry ~d pn his defense and has improved tremen· dously." Montreal Expos' Bobby \Vine (right) slide s into third base safely dur· Senators an 11-10 defeat with both teams scoring four times in the ing ac tion in West Palm Beach, Fla. Monday. Washington' Senators' ninth inning. Bob Schroder applies the lag too late. Montreal handed the visiting Transfer Stopped Until Legal Hassle Settled Judge Puts Halt to Pilots' Move TA1\1PA . Fla. CAP) -The American League was I.Old by a Florida state judge today not to Lake any action to transfer the Seattle Pilots' baseball franchise lo fl1ilwaukee or any other city . Circuit Court Judge James Bruton Jr. of Hillsborogh County signed a temporary injunction restraining the league and ba seball club owners frorn any action "until all legal questions are settled." His action c1me only a. few hours before the 11tart of a special league 1neeting ' on the financially troubled franchi se. Two sheriff's deputies served Judge. Bruton's injunction ()n AL President Joe Cronin al the International Inn he.re. Lcag1ie owners v.'ent Into a closed door huddle immediately aflrrv.·ards. ~1ilton Gaston, e ~heriff's deputy and . Former n1ajor league pitcher who played "'ilh Cronin at \Vashington in 1928, said he personally served the court paper& on the league chief. '"He was ve ry pleasant," said Caston. accompanied by deputy Roderick Van Trump. "They all "'ere." League owners apparently were just about ready to approve the transfer of the Pilol'! to Milwaukee. where they would become lhr Brewers. • Alfred Schweppe, a Seattle attorney and former dean of the University o( \Vashington Law School, filed a petition ln Circuit Court here asking Judge Bruton for tht temporary injunction. Bruton said : ··1 have ordered them lo take no action until all legal.questions are settled." No hearing date was set on the petition by Schweppe, who had filed a suit last Friday in Seattle lo block any transfer. T1vo restraining orders have been issued by Washington state court.. to prohibit the shill Redn1en, Armv ABA Will Sign lssel , Scott Inks Huge P.act , . l . f~· . 1l " " Make NIT Semifinals NEW YORK (UPI) -John Devasto's long pass set up Greg Cluess's layup v.·ilh 21 seconds remaining 1'\1onday nig:hl to give St. John's a 56·55 '1ictory over Georgia Te.ch and move the Redmen into semifinals of the 33rd National Invitation Tournament against Anny. Thl young American B a s k e t b 1 11 Association will make It four in a rov• with tile signing of Kentucky All· American Dan ls&cl He is reportedly near terms with the Kentucky C(>lonels. To date. the ABA has inked three of thr lop si1 senior baskelball players la the country. Charlie Scoti became, the lhlrd lo sign Monday v.'hen he inked a three-year con- tract with the Washington Caps. Scott. reportedl y, will make more money than Frank Jloward, the Washington Senators' home-run hiller. who earns a reported $125,000 per year. PrevK>usly s.igned by the ABA were Purdue's Rick /11ounl and Davidson 's Aiike li1aloy, who inked multi·y~ar con- tracts with the ABA ·~ Indiana and Pittsburgh clubs. Issel averaged 33.7 points per gamf' t.ith Kentucky this past season. The other college seniors considered t~ make up the top six arr Pete i\faravlch of LSU and Bob Lanier of SI. Bonaventure. • HONOLULU -Pro lootball'-s 26 clubs Monday adopted the one_..point conversion ru1e when the NaUonal and American football leagues pl1y under one b&Mer this fall . The clubs, in their first joint meeting tdnct the two leagues merged in ' setting whtch was described as "smooth and tiannonioos." also adopted the \Vilson football as the official ball -sticking 10 the same shape ol the old NFL ba!J, The ball used by the old AFL was sharper. The. clubs also adopted !ht former Afl., procedure of having players' la&I names on the back of the jerseys. • OAKLAND -Tht Oakland Colistum features an expkldlng scoreboard, a ball- ho4dlng bunny that pops up behiOO homP plate, Charlie 0 . the mule. and a bll!leball ~am th1t runs around in g.rctn and aold t111lf'ormt and White shoe.~. • 11ti1 ieison, If Oakland Athletlrs' owner Charlie Finley ha s his wa y, ii will also ha\'e colored bases. "F'irsl base will be red," Finley sahl ~ionday in an interview. "Second bast! 11·ill be yellow and third base will be blur. "Under the lights, it will b , beautiful ... Simply beautlfu!!" Home plate will remain v.·hl te. • \VlNTER llAVEN . Fla . -To1n Conigliaro, a hardened veteran ol physical misfortune since he joined lhr Boston Red Sox as a 19·year-old kicl ir1 1964. quietly accepted another se tback ~londay when X·rays disclosed a broken rib. "Oh well, It could~ worse," Conigliaro sai d alter learning he will be sidelined for a wee k to 10 days. "'l'his will hurl my liming, bul I shOtJld .be ready for lhe star! of lhe regular season." Conigliaro, v.'ho v.·as bothererl by shoulder and neck sliffne.ss early in spring training, \\•as injured In at· tempting a dJvlng catch against tM New York ~1ets Saturday. O'Malley Reti1•es Peter O'~lalley (left) ,\viii take over as president of the Los Angeles Dodgers after fa~her. \Valter O'l\lalley. announced. his retirement l\londay. The eldi!r O'l\1alley ended a 20-year reign as Dodger presi· dent. The youngel'\ 0'~1all~y is 32. Wilt -to Play Wednesday Laker GU:ui t to Go Against Ce ltics LOS ANGELES !APl -\\'Ill Cham· bcrlaln, aid ehncd v.·ith a severe knee in· jury sinet: No\·. 7. v.•ill return to the Los Angf!les lineup \Vcdncsday night ag1lns~ Boston, t aker coach Joe ~1ullane.y an· nOUnctd tdondny. ~fullaney said ht would start the 7-foot- I center al the beginning o( each half and ltl him play as long as he can. "His wind w111 be !he determining far- lor ;is Jo how long hr ~tay s in Ule·aarnt."" ~lull11nf'y salrt. "W' heve lt1 ·IQ('(' how much ht r3n do and hi.li rrmu\'al nilght not ha\·r anything to do "'1th the knee." ll ~·as a ttndon just below his rii::ht knte that Ch;unbtrhlin ruptured in tht ninth game or lhe !iet1Wn against Phoenix. lie underwent surgery the next day !Mn spent eighl weeks Jn a t:isl. Chambtrtain began an ex tens Ive rehebllitation program on Pee. JG and rin31!y resumed pr11clic1ng 11 1th \h(' \quarl on ~larch 5. 1olu11Anry. who hHd to allcr 'lhc L,1kc:ts' tilylt of play v.•ben Chamberlain was droppt<I from the picturt. said that Wilt ''intends to come back with more em· phas1s. on dt'!ense and just let U1e other encl of !he court lake Clle of llseU." During the seaMm'1 first nine j!'ames. Chamberlain &\'traged 32.2 points per game. and 20.S rebounds. The takers are now In 5eC'Ond place In in.. Nalion11t Baskethal1 Associ111ion's \\'c~lt'rn D1\ J, .. ion. one Rn1nr behind Atl;int;1 with three aamcs lo pl11y. Anny's defensive-n1inded Cadets built a 20-polnt haUtime lead and hung on to down ~1anhattan. 77·72. in !he other quarterfinal game. to set up Thursday night's match. The other semifinal game will pit !hr winners of tonight's J\-1ar· quette·Utah and LSU-Oklahoma games. The SL John's-Georgia Tech game \\'a'!I close most of the s~nd half after Rich Yunkus, held to four points In the first half, scored Ge<irgia 's Tech's first 17 poinls to put the losers ahead. 40-Ji, 1vilh 10: 11 remaining. Georgia Tech gambled on a deliberate £oul by 'Tommy Taylor and it 16oked like good strategy when DeVasto missed the second free thro\\· with fl! sceonds left and Yunkus scored with 30 sccoods remaining lo put Tech ahead, 5> ;<. But DeVaslo then fired a pass almost the le ngth of the c.ourt to setup by Cluess to decide the game and keep alive St. .John 's bid for a record fifth NIT title. The Re<lmen arc trying to give departing coach Lou CameSet:a a championship Iarev.·etl. Yunius led all scorers with 27 poinll. Anny made the semifinals tor the flfth lime In the last seven years with ils tenacious defense. tilanhattan. which rallied from a 16·3 deficit lo beat North Carolina In a firsl round came. trailed Army 38·18. ill halftime before rallying in the second hair behind Henry Seawright. Seav.Tight scored 21 ol hi1 27 points In the second half before fouling out in the last minute as he brought Manhattan to within one point of Army on three dlf· fttenl occasions. The final tbne was at 61-«I Y.'ith 4:07 remaining ln lhe. game, but Anny. thl'I nauon·s no. 1 defensive! team, never lost Its poi!( and stR"ed ah!t1d of ~tanhattan 1\'lth gl'.lf)(j fret lhrow !i~OO!ing. lt\·enger !,.cl Arniv 1,J!h 22 pnints and 111112 of his points in the !t t ond holf we.ra on free lhro~·a. NBA Sets Alignment;. Ma y Merge ClDCAGO (AP) -The National Baskeibau Association realigned Monday into four divisions, moved up its college drift one week but failed Lo lake concrete acUon on a possible early merger with the rival American Basketball A.ssocla· lion. The league 's four new teams ol Buf. falo, Cleveland, Houston and Portland, Ore., wert spaced ipto the four new divisions of the league which will go from the present 14 teams lo 18 next season. Buffflo will join New York, Boston and Philadelphia lo make up the Atlantic Division. Cleveland moves in with Chicago , Milwaukee, Detroit and Cincinnati in th e Central Division. The Southern Division will consist or Baltimore, AUanta, Phoenix and newcomer Houston. Portland moves in with San Diego. San FranclS<."O. Los Angeles and Seattle lo make up the Pacific Division. NBA Con1missi1>ner \Valier Kennedv granted that discussion of a merger with the ABA took up much of the 12 hours of Monday's meeting but added "I don't Jook for any early reso/vement of the present talks.'' Kennedy said the NBA ()Wner:s directed their merger committee to continue meeting with the ABA merger com- mittee. Kennedy made It clear that the NBA merger committee had been given in· structions that certain conditions have to be met by the ABA to continue further explorations of a merger. How closc are the two leagues to a merger? "The fact that we've met for nearly 12 hours today and as a result of instruclin~ the merger committee to continue \YOUld be indicative of a possibility of a merger in the future ," said Kennedy. Kennedy added there was no possibillly or a common draft between the two leagues before any merger. ' l Bloom Eyes Coaching Return " By GLENN \\'HITE Of file Diii-/ I'll•! S!IU Bill Bloom has had his whirl In the S\v lrling world of private en-' terprise. And no111 he 's ready to return to the coaching ranks. following a <>ne, year 's absence . The J1.year--0ld fonner basketb111l st ar al the University ol Southern: I California told the DAILY PILOT,, "I don 't feel I made a mistake, when I gave up coaching because if I hadn't tried privat e busin('SS l· 11•ould have ahvays v.·ondered if I shou ldn 'l have given It a whirl. · ' "But I began to miss coaching basketball when last season rolled- around. By Christmas I knew J wanted to return to coaching. Thct v.·inning was nice but the rela- tionship wJlh the kids is what .t missed most." ; ~ Bloom says he'd like lo work on-• most any coaching level -high school, junior college or college. There are some vacancies might be in line for. Including lJf freshman job at USC, Santa Alf, ' College and Grru1smont JC h~ jobs. Also, Estancia High an~ ~ new Tustin District school are ~ ing for varsity tutors. t Bloom. a tw~time captain use. coached three years •· Corona dcl J\tar. His best seaM. \Vas 1967-68 when his Sea Kllllf1 were ranked th ird in the CIF Mil ""Ound up with a 28~ record . fall»c: in overUme lo Marina in U. quarter finals of the playoffs.. -~ ~le v.•as named Orange Co.~ coach of the year that campa· His teams finished second once bagged a pair of frvlne Lta crov.·ns. One of hls players, J r Yul<. Is playing In the Nallctllil In1•1!aUori Tournament at Mad Square o,.rden, a 10 p b 0 m 0 e· ante.r ~I lhe University '1' Oklahoma. "."' ............................................................................................................................. ~~~ .... ~-·~~~~·~~~~~-,~~-r~~~--.-------------•-•~•---r --~·-··-·· ---- " Martin to Pace Anteaters In NCAA Swim Showdown UCI Send s 11 Splashers To Mee t By HOWARD L. l:IANDV OI tllt D1llY ,Hiii SllH ~tike P.lartin, nationa l record holder in I h r e e freestyle distance races and v.•inner of five gold medals in 1969, will lead the UC Irvine swimming team in defense of its NCAA College Divislon champiCJJ1ship al 0 a k 1 a n d University in Roe he st er , f.1ich., this weekend. Martin will be joined by five other place WiMers from last year's team in defense of the crown. A total of 11 swimmers Ylill represent Irvine in the three-day m e e l be.giMing Thursday. fo.lartin, a junior f r o m Corona de! P.1ar High School, set national college division reC{)rds in winning the 200. yard freestyle {I :44.83 ), 500- yard freestyle (4 :41.36) and the 1,650-yard frees tyle (16,37,33). Jn addition to the three in· dividual vlctorie.s, he also won first place medals as a member or ucrs victorious 400-yard (3: 14.0l ) and 800-yard (7: 13.56) freestyle re I a y teams. He will compete in the ~me fi ve events this year and will be seeking his third straight gold medal in the SOO·yard freestyle. He started domina· lion of this event as a freshman witb a 4:46.5 clock- ing. Chief competilion for the An teater star is expeeted to con1e from Tom Liotti or Ad el phi University in New Jersey. "He was just gelling over a case of pneumonia last year when we met," !\ilartin says. Liotti finished second t n fo.tartin in both the 500 and 1,650 events. All four members of the winning relay teams Y:ill be competing again this year. Tn addition to ~1artin, they in· elude Rlch EaEon, Steve Fanner and Duane Olson. Seniors Bob Dake , Farmer and Olson join junior Eason and sophomore Jim Cooper as the point scorers re turnin g from last season. Easan finished second in the 200-yard freestyl e and the 200- yard individua l medley along with a third in the 100-yard freestyle in the nationals last year. Farmer "·as se\'cnth in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle races with Olson 12th in the 500- freestyle and Dake filth in the !00-yard backstroke and seventh in the I 00 ya rd backs troke. Three freshmen, a sophomore and a ju,1ior round out the squad as first·lime performers in the national.~. Wade Ar ens in the breaststroke. Mike Carnahan in t.he butterny and individual medley and Jack Dick1nann in the freestyle sprints are the freshmen. Jim l\1c0onald in I h c distance freestyle is th c sophomore competing in his first NCAA competition while tl;fark Nelson in the backstroke and individual medley is the junior. Nelson was an All· American swimme r 1 a s I season at Santa Ana College. Ant.eater conch Ed Ne\vl<lnd figures UC Davis and ~;in Fernando Valley State as the top challengers to UCl's bid fbr a second straight ch am· pionship. Davis finished third last year "ith Jn points and San Fernando was 15th with 30 points. • SPLASHDOWN TIME NEARS -l\1ike Martin. outstanding UC Irvine free- style distance swimming star, '''Ill defend his NCAA College Division national records in Rochester. l\·Iich. this weekend. l\Jartin \vo n five gold medaJs in NCAA meet last year to lead Irvine to the team championship. ~~~~~~~~- Steve Fa1•11aer Bane Leads He's One of Those Lions Over Ti1·ed VCI Stars Footh ill Did you know that UC Irvine has been swimming tired all 11eason? Take the word of senior Steve Farmer. ''We have been physically tired all year. Th is also· has a mental effect on you in dual meet competition," he says. Why are the An teater.s tired? Coach Ed Newland stages !l\·o-a·day \\·orkouts lor a great in ajorily of the team plus ~essions in the 'velght rootn. \\:ilh classroom "·ork and siudy sessions, it makes a long da v The swi1nmers aren 'l com· plaining despite an 8-7 dual meet record for a learn that is defending NCAA co 11 e g e division champion. "\Vhen "·e swim !ired during the regula r season, we are doing one thing. Pointing to"·ard the NCAA ineet and I kn ow it helps us. "Right now we arc working oul once a day am! getting psychologically ready for the big one. Irs mostly speed "ork and getting some rest. "\Vitil only 11 swirn· mers working out. ii al so gives us an espri t de corps. We. hope its a culmination or the goa l "'e se t before practil-e began, another NCAA tit!e. ·• This "'Ill be Farmer's fourth NCAA meet and after \Vinning the consolation 50 and 100 freestyle races last year. he plans a different approach in f!Uchigan lhis week. "I !'tad trouble h1 the prelims in both races lasi year," he ~ys. "I ~·asn·t mentally prepared and my times in the consolation finals were much better than the prelim races.'' Steve holds the UCJ school record for the SO-yard frees tyl e (21 .81 and shares in lour relay marks. Ste\'t' began . his aqua tic career as a diver. "~1y mom started me in swimming. I wanted lo play footb all but she talked me into swimming. "\VhC'll I \\'as l2 years old. I did a 21~ fl ip and landed on my lace. I blacked out and s"•Hchcd to swimming on the spot." In the t'.'CAA meet he will s"•im the 50 and JOO -freestyle, along with two relay races. His other event wi!I be either lhe 200 free or anchor man on the medley relay tean1 . Competitors are limited to fi ve events in the nationals. A lifeguard al Ne\vport dur· ing the summer months, SlcYe recalls e<>mpeti·ng in a tw4>' man dory race lo Catalina : ""7c tell al 5 In the mcirning and it took seven hours to row 111 the island . \\'hen \\·e go! there. ou r boat s11nk. •·on the "·ay over "·e ran directly over a ~hark but I didn't tell my partner until we \V ere a mile or more away. He turned pale but we continued in rough seas." Steve is also Rn ac· complished musician. He i;;tartcd \Vilh the clnrlnrt and taught himself to play the s<i'I· aphonf', trumpet. and 1nore reccnll y the guitar. He took his physical ex- aminati on for possible in· cluctlon into the armed forces last week. Ed Bane returned to the baseball wars at Westminster }ligh School wit.h a flourish bul it \Vasn't his pilching effort he was talking aboul after the Lions had reversed an earlier defeat by lopping Foothlll, 6-1 , on the winnef's field ~1onday. Bane hurled three perfect innings for the Lions , striking out four batters and fa cing on· ly nine men witil no walks or base hits. But his chief topic of con· versation was a line drive single in h i s only plate ap- pearance. Richard Reid started on the mound for the Lions and work· eel two innings, gaining credit for the victory . He was follow- ed by Doug Milne for the next two frames with B an e finishing up. ,OOTHILL Ill J~t-i.Gn. u ,V,l!ltn. cf C•riienior, H V•nDord•t'Qll, 3b So!~•'• rl *~· :lb l-lohn•" "' T••V•ll. lb Adem,, c !!'•~welt, c Wft•I• o lll10l.-d9e. o Tot,11 •ltr~rbl l 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 ' 0 l 0 ' I 1 0 • 0 I 0 I I J 0 0 0 } 0 o-0 I 0 0 0 1 0 " 0 I 0 0 0 75 I l I l'lut~ltnd. rl Tt~lor. d W!STMIHSTElt IU fbr~•bl ] I 1 0 ~ 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 I I 0 0 J 0 0 0 n o o o J ' , 0 I 0 0 0 R•ld, n N I!~, a-<.•>\ OQd~. rt P!n!!, rl Cltlldennin~. lll llle~•·e,, Jtl Of'drk:k, 7t1 !~et.fr. tn S. Mt •!ln•r. " M S1nc~ti, 11 Pritt, u Gr1n1m, t J. $•,.CM I, II! v~" Ev..-~. 11> P u"90. c D~n•. ~ Tc!tlt l ' l ' n D 0 0 1 I t 1 l 0 0 0 1 0 1 t 0 0 0 0 ' 0 1 ' 0 0 0 0 1 a o o I 0 1 I 16 5 1 I 6 . ' . 11001to•n uo 100 ~' 3 I Wntm!IUll' (QI 100 ''"" It , Magnolia . 7th Victi111 Of Vikes ?l.tarina Hlgh's v a rs it 'I bai;eball team swept to its se\'enth slraight non-league victory t.1onday afttmoon. blanking its second Irvine League foe in a row. The Vikings nailed invading Magnolia, 5-0, behind the neat three·hit pllching of Ed Anderson in their la st tw1eup before action next week in the Rancho Alamitos tournament. Coach Ray Allen's Sunset League crew seemed to ha\•e UtUe trouble wllh ~1agnolia, jumping on Sentinel pitching for a pair of markers in the lhird inning and then iced the issue with three more tallies in the fourth frame. Pat Curran's single to left field was the key hit in the third inning. scoring Wally Kuzma and Tony Cre sci. The fourth frame was open- ~ up by Brock Pemberton's steaming double down the right field line on the first pitch. Anderson follo~·ed that with a single to right and Ken fl..1ur- illo loaded the bases with an infield single. Kuzma walked on rour pitches to force in the first or three tall ies. Then Steve Milier capped the inning with 11 base hit to SCQre Anderson and Murillo, That \Yas all she wrote for ~l agno!id as Anderson con· tained the Sentinels, striking out rive while walking three. Magnolia's only s co r i n g threat was nipped at the plate in the second irining on Miller's strong throw to the plat£ from his shorLstop post. Kurmt, )II C•m•u. 21> Mll~r. U (91,.. rt C•~id. 3b Curr•"· cl )ttm•"• rl"5• Pemberfon. tb "<tdffWf!, " Wiit. < Towl~. If MurHla, II Tol•!t ... ,~1111 1 l • 1 I 0 0 • 3 a I 1 I o 0 0 l l I 0 J 0 ' ' l 0 0 0 1 I I 0 ' l 1 0 l 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ' l ' • 25 ) I 5 Ml tlMlll Ill W1l~tr, M Grttn. ?tt To11r, 21> Klflslllfn, H S.,,1111, rt .. ci.nr. lb P1r1sfl, C llo/141 .... "· ef Kt,.tener. Jb G. Smlrto. )b lt11neY. p Wiii"''"' .~ Tot1l1 •b, ~ 1111 ' 0 0 • , 0 0 • I 0 0 O l • 0 • ' 0 • • I 0 1 0 l I I 0 l 0 1 • 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ' 0 0 • 1 0 0 • 21 0 J • 11 .. 1 '°f lnl'li11t• . ' . 000 000 0-0 3 I CICIQ' 300 >!-5 • • Prep, College Net Scores UC: lrwliw UI 111 Or•llllt C:1nl 111111111 J1bla<'llkl rlJCIJ lllf. Cunn!n"""m !CCCJ, '-'· 64. N~il••' 1ucn def. Otte tOCCl, f.4 , •;:t11 (UC;ll dtf. Goc!tlllll IOCC:J, '"'' ·~1v1n (UCll def. lrw!U !CCC:) ... J, .. , lr!oo !UC:ll dtf. 8lH 1r111H (OCCJ, .. , ... 3. Nf9P~r (0CC:l dtl. Cronlrl IUCll, .. ,, u .•... Ne dol.lbfu. Yentl' Mer1111 !Ul CJI ,,._. .... ~, ""'"' MCOowr!I CM1rl won .. o. •1. "· M . Nl•09 (,,._.rl klll IM; Mn .. I ... ,, .... llftne CM••l lltoi '"61 IMI U : WDll" l , ''°· ,_ R~dd /Marl kll• 1-4 1 lfl<I 641 "''' 7· 61 wan M. ....... K1;1•• ~nd ltD1llf5 CM1r) WOtl ... ,, f. ,, .. J, .. ,. • MOor!Jot~ '"" Htmbur1 (Mtrl wen · l. •.C; .. ,, .. I. Leavey to Coach All-stars Don Leavey By ROGER CARLSON Of ll'lt tl•llJ '11-' Sitt! Don LtaveY of Westminster I-llgh Schoo l has been selected to guide the South in the fourth edition or lhe COS'la Mesa Kiwanis Ormige County All·Star baskelball game. the DAILY PIL01' learned ex· elusively today. The till ls scheduled for Orange Coast College June 20. Last year's game v.• a s cnnceled because of sencllon difficult ies. • L..ca vey told the DAILY PILOT. ·•1 was really flaltered when I \\'as approa ched c:ibout the matter. 11'1i kind of unusuttl ... J expttted one oJ the more \'Cteran coaches would be con· sldcred. ·'Time is the acid test 11nd 1•,,e only had one year of varsity coaching. I'd say I'm traveling In pretty fast eom· pany considering the past coaches Lhat have been in this game.·• Lea,ey's only year or varsi· ty co&ching produced lhe first· ever varsily basketball league championship for \Vestmlnster as his Lions fashioned ii 2l·9 record en routa to g11ining & l)c.rth in the ClF' AAAA quart ('rfinals, Prior, the 33-yrar-ohl Lion mentcr spent two ye3rs in Junior \·ar~lty 11nd two seaS(7(15 as Cee coach at \Vcstmlnster following !!tlnls at Santiago, Paramoun t and Bellflower high schools in the junior var sity and weighl I eve I basketball programs. Lea vey played at Compton College for two yeors as a guard and was named All· Western Slates Conference In hls senior year. lie rmished his graduate work at C11\ State (Long Beach) following two years at UC Santa Barbara, A! for hi& Southern ag· RregaUon, l..eavey Indicated he'll pick his team after the aponsoring body lays down the ground rules in regards to what 1chools be can pick from and how many from each school. "I don't expect to run an of· fense &imilar to what we did al Westminster this year because. the personnel will be quite dirferent. "I expect to design something that will alve eve ryone a chance to score. \Ve'IJ need something to give everyone a maximum of shooting rather than con- cen trating on an Inside game. "Ewn H the patlem should brtak down M>mewhat It won't matter too much bt!catlse with players or that caliber, they can slmply go free lance In lheir shooting," 1wnmed up the. South boss. T11tsdar. March 17, 19i0 DAJL V PILOT J 7 Jlodge Quits Grid Post; Brohamer Moves to AAA They are looking lor a new coach to guide ?i-lisslon Vlejo l:Ugh's fortunes lhis September in varsity football. Ray Dodge is ateppln& down as football mentor to assume the dual·role of athletJc dirtctor and head of the physical education department. Tustin School District officials are check· ing out appllcant.11 from within the dtatrlct in search of a replacement and tr they can't find satisfaction they'll look outside. Mission Viejo's four·year history reveals five wlns, 31 losses. • • • Ex-Huatlnfioa Beach H1gb wbls Jaek Brobamer Is movlna up to tbe AAA Wlehlta club ibis year (Al las t year. • -------ROGER CARLSON ~ ------ atitr batUn1 .llO al Reno • • A major tel!huffling in the Westminster~ ~farina basketball tournament is currently in progress. Additions to the 16-leam field include Rubidoux, St. J ohn Bosco and Katella with four openings still to be accounted for, Huntington Beach hu dropped out of the affair ••. and coincidentally t.1arina has dropped out of the annual Huntington Beach tournament. • • • The Tustin Sebool Olslrlc t'1 No. 4 sthoti -probably to be know• as Universlly Park High -Is due lo open In Septt'mber. And while ground ltu sUll to be bro•en at the Turtle Rock 1lte, there are plans for a fifth school to open In September of 197! or 11;. It wtU be located at El Toro Road across f~m Leisure World. • • • A youngster by the name of Peter Spur- zem bas clocked 52.5 in the 100 freestyle ••• as a IS-year-old. He entered community age group swimming two years ago for the· p.1r.. pose of losing weight. I-le's due to perform at Foothill High . • • • Food for lbouJtht on brotber com blnatioas: La Habra HJgb's varsity football liar. coach 11 Jolla Dowler, brolbtr or Boyd Dowler of tbe Grttn Bay Packen. And Steve P1Uer1on'1 (UCLA) broUter is Bob Patterson. who'4 the Bee ba.Ue$btll c:oach at Btt• Jll1b:'. ' • • • Fonner major-leaguer Earl ,o\verill has • son playing for Loara High's varsity. He'11 ?I.like Averill. • • • \Vatehing l\1onrovla lllgb 1h1mble aromtd In the CIF basketball llnal1 to Long Stach. tl;tllllkan (11-37) wasn't partJcularly surprl .. Ing, conslde:rtng tbe history of Atainrovl1'1 efforts In fin als compellllon. J\lon rovla bas been lo the football finals three Umes Jn lbe past and lo1t lt-1! to Sanla Barbara (19!5), tJ.13 to Pomona {Lt51) and 53-1 to San Diego (1'591 • The only CIF Utle eame in IH7 wbe11 th e Wiidcats: upset the 1upposedly Invincible El Sepndo basketball quintet, 111 overtime. 01te of the refertts at the rtttnt deNc:le wltb MJlllkan was Bruce Pickford, Fountain Valley High football coacb. • • • Ex·Fountain Valley wrestler Glenn Ander· son has qualified for the NCAA university dh•ision wrestling championships Mar. 28 at Northwestern in the 126-pound classification • Anderson gained a third in the college division nationals. losing to eventual champ- ion Larry Wagne r of Colorado State, Z..I. He pinned his othu three rivals and has compiled a 26-5 mark. including IO pins. Anderson is a freshman 4l Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo). White ht Oil Citv Spil{ef est By PHIL ROSS Of ttw ~.,, , .... l lltf • \Yhite, fourth place finisher in par-excellence performances. Agaill!t the Tritons last week, \Voolley clocked a career best 4:22.6 mile. The top time he managed in 19fi9 was 4:28.5. .. If pasl perfonnances are any indication, El Modena''.'! classy Dave White should be one of the brightest stars shin· ing at Saturday's 49th renewal of the Southern· Counties Track Meet al H;mtinglon Beach High. White, a wiry , $-9 senior, finished third in the Slate Meet two mile in 1969 at 8:58.9, behind Excelsior'• Rube~. Chappins and Ron Johnson of West Torrance. Chapplns, also winner of last year's Southern C o u n t I e s eight-lap crown, has graduated end Johnson will not compete in the Huntington festivities this time around. the Southern Counliea two- mile last season, is most likely to come fron1 La Habra'• Greg Huber (9 :36 .2), Westminster'• Don Di st on <9:38) and Jim Chaffin or Long Beach Poly. The marks by Huber and Dist.on are good for prep tw4>' milers at this early juncture of the season, but White 's credentials are even more lm- pressive. Jn El P.1odena 's first dual meet or the year (a victory over San Clemente last week ), he raced to a 9: 18.6 against b e t t e r·than-average com- petition. The other major m i I e threats Saturday appear to be We s tminster 's Wayne Akiyama. under 4:30 a couple or times already in 1970, and Dick Greer o( Lakewood, who· ran in lhe shadow o f graduated ClF runnerup and teammate Bob SomC!an last year. So the chief competition for White's teammate In the mile. ~iickey Woolley, is no slouch either when it comes lo El fl1odena's imposing Southem Counties array does not stop al the two longer distance races. flatf-mller Scott Nelson ran 1:57 last year. A drink is a drink is not necessarily so.· Tht people who know Seagram's 1 Crown think their whiskey i' quite different from the resl Smoo!her. Lishler. Better lo serve friend~ Quality, through ind through. Their findi"S' have made 7 Crown !he best·liked braQd of whiskey In !he whole world. That's got lo be superior. Say Seagram's and Be Sure. • '&" ,,, tt. . , a • 4 ""'*:qqq;-0 •~4t'<:'.'<"t~ ,,.., .... ..;'t j , ,,,.,."'f, ....... -.·--·~ ..... -------·-----~-___..--·-------··-------·----------~-· -~·--....... ' • J& DAILY PILOT Tutsd~, M.vclt 17, 1970 OAll'I' PILOT,..,.,. H' Ht.-N .......,,_ Gage Receives Hotwr Newport Harbor High School athletic director Jules Cage (right) receives a medallion and cerlificate in recognition of his cont1ibutions to prep basketball in ceremonies Saturday at the Clf<' ba sketball finals in Los Angeles. Making the presentation is Lou Joseph. CIF officiaJ. Area B1•iefs Corvettes Dons Seek Coach; On OCIR Race Menu Gals' Classes Slated At Costa Mesa CC Golf classes ror women and juniors are starting at Costa ~1esa Golf and Country Club under head pro Mike Evinger snd assistant Jack Saenz. Cals' cla~ are scheduled for Tuesday mornlags at 9 and on Saturdays at 2. The tfues-- day sessions get under· way on March 31 with the Saturday classes starling April 4. A junior class will also start April 4 at 10 in the morning. For further details on any of the sessions, call the course at $46-7200. In a women's match vs. par tournament, A1ary Imler was the A flight winner with Vi }losk.ins and Nadine Maze bai- tling to a second place tie. Bev Batti$toni won the B flight with Fran Lewis second and A1errilee Dungan and Trudy Ordon tied for third. Ann Pappas won C flight with Elise Slipes second. Bob Darnell fired a 73 to win low gross honors in a men's sweepstakes tournament. A. Colonna won low net honors with a 67 followed by Gil Retteu (70), Jack Valasek (70), George Dernbach (70), Bill Wallace (71), Garland Privitt (71), Lyle Graham (72), J ack Towle (72) and Hammid Bey (72). El Niguel and Airs. Rick Gouin, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Llljestrom ahd fl.fr. and Mrs. Eugene Parker, Tars, Lions In Tourney NOW ~t'S-L .. -· 111111 llAl.22 EVERYlltlNG FROM DINGHIES TO LUXURY SAILBOATS I. OCW CRUISERS! ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 1nl A#IUAL "'THEOUfENM-HB Duo Shine • WESTEI# #ATIOIAL •~m CorveUes hold forth in up- coming competition at Orange • • County Internati onal • e COWllllNA ~ Bob Gaughran, a I h I t t i c director at Santa Ana College confirmed t~ fact he had been deluged wilh a rash of telephone calls concerning the basketball coaching vacancy at the Don institution that came about with resignatian Or George (Bud) Presley. "It seems like there are a thousand basketball coaches looking for a job. Right now we are taking applications throogh the school di.strict and hope to have a new coach named within three weeks." ' Presley, after a di smal 5-20 season, resigned by stating family responsibilities had become pressing. His family resides in the San Francisco bay area. for the national championships <it Rockville, Maryland. The trio finished 4-5-6 in the race with Carlon leading the team with a 1:47.38 in the 18.6 mile race. Second place at Westlake was captured by San I a Barbara Athlet ic Club follo\\'· ed by the Southern California Stridcrs. • Huntington Racing A.ssocia· lion opens Jts motocross rac· jng :season Sunday at Hun· tington Beach Cycle Park, it was announced by Donald England, owner of the park. Sigtlups begin al 8 a.m. and !he first race starts at 10:45 a.m. The course is located a quarter mile west of Beach Bh·d. on Talbert Ave. in Hun- Raceway. The Corvel\e Funny Car Championships and the third annual Corvette Drags, both events rained out Jan. 11, are on OCIR's slate for Saturday night. Trials begin at 2 p.m. followed by racing from 8 to 10:30. The funny c a r cham· picmship, the first eight-ear, one-make funny car contest ever held, will feature a COU· pie of.hot locals -Hunt ington Beach's Don Cbok and Vic J\.lorse of Costa 1.1esa -who will try to fend off All-Pro points leader Gene Conway of Inglewood. Five categories of races in the Corvette Drags \\'ill com- plete Saturday's 0 CI R schedule. • He was named head basket· ball coach at San ta Ana just prior to the last school year. Prior to his coaching and teaching duties at Santa Ana, he served three years as freshman basketball coach at Gonzaga University in Spokane, "'ash. He was head coach al Cubberly High School in Palo Alto prior to that time. tington Beach. --- • Two Huntington 8 ea ch distance runners Jed the Seniors Track Club to a fits! place in Sunday's Los Angeles District A AU JO.kilometer championships at Westlake Village. Tm:! pair, Phil Carlon and Nlck Duarte, along with John Paliano of Pasadena, qualified Admission for the affair, which \\'ill showcase a top field or Southland riders, is $1.50 for adu!Ls, while children under 12 are admitted fret. • Professional foothall litars ll'ill take to the hardwoods at Ne\\·port Harbor High School Thursday night lo contest the Tar faculty in a benefit basketball game. Tipoff is set St 8 o'clock.. Jtod Sherman of the Oakland Raiders, Fred }!ill of lhc Philadelphia Eagles and half a dozen other Orange C01JT1ty resident pro grid slars "'ill play in the game. l\low! PSA jets ~hoiir on die hour to San Francisco! 7 am to I pm. Bolh w1ya. 7·1-.. 10-111rn.12 noort-1·2·3-C·S-6-7-1·9 pm. More on WMkends, Plus flights 00ur on the If hour to San Diego! ' 1:15 am to 10:10 pm. Both,,.,._ I : 15-1:30·1:30·10:3G-11 :30 om-12 :!ID-1 :3"'2:30·3 :30· 4:3G-5 :3G-8:1M:3G-7:31M:3o.1D~D pm, More on. Wftktndl. Why worry obOVt • merwaflon when PSA tlat over 160 lllQhta 1 clly? Such &l'I 1111sy-t~remember $Chedule you c1n tlrry 11 around In )'Out head. Why remtmber krweit la~1? Or aH job? Or gteat Nrriee 10 Oakland, Sln Jote. tnd Sac- rtm1nto? Or th1t ~kl• uno.r 12 lly PSA (with hfr ptrfftll) tor hall tare? Stlll w1n1 1 IWMtYl.tlon? Ju1t call your tntvel 1g1nt or whltaltanetnt alrllntt. PSA ~ )OU a lift. I FEATURING TllE NEW COOL BRAKE REGULAR * POWER * OR DISC! RELINED ON ANY CAR! Foreign or Domestic !h!Big . Bra~e '"' DISCOUNT ON COOL BRAKES Valid with this coupon only. THE NEW COOL BRAKt., EXCLUSIVE AT lllC BiltAKtl ~ COOL BRAKE lll•"11 t11w lining AND NEW METAL BRAKE SHOES ~ , •• (IM>I: 1'9bLliltl). N1w Cool Bnk11 .,., 11peclllty dttfgntd to • .. ,.~ you cold," and 11c..d llldOfl' etandwd• for new un. ' W1 gu1r.1nt11 COO{ Brake fof 38 1Mftth1 Of :ti.DOD Milt., wtilch•Ytr come• flrtt. (Thi• t. Mt• pn>-nitad f~IJ At BIQ IRAKE w. •d/u.tywr br.kff fREE tor lht lff• -..._ of your cir. Don't 119 W...r.. IM •114af• whh ' COOL BRAK!. COSTA MISA 1111 Horlter 11"4. C71 4) S4f-402J f J11,t Sent th ef 5•11 Di190 Frwy.l Op•ll £.,,,, I Surtd •y HUNTINGTON llACH 160tl IHch llY4. 1714) 147·0011 IOtu 11oc.lr South ol Se" Di190 Frwy. I GAtD•N •lOVI 11111 1,.~hrtrtt St. f7141 6Jl·Of11 I Ont llock North of G•1de11 Grove ftwy.I SANTA ANA 62• Wnt 17th S•. 171 41 IJl-5117 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N011CE LOCAL ,_ _____________________ .., ____________________ ..,... _____ ·-~---------------·-----~,~. " .- '. ,. TUMBLEWEEDS TU E ~DAY MARCH 17 0 011t>M1n ao. (C) (3D) Rip T1)'1of ll1rs. O tnCIJl!I"' -~ "' WH~: (C) "TM fMlfll Co11tl'f 1 &:00 IJ 111 Nm (tl (601 Jerey Dunphy D m H1111t1t,.1rlnkltJ (C) (30) I 0 Ct!'! 1'11 11141 Ab? (Cl (30)1 Didi 01W30". L1ur1nct Htrvtr. 1 MDr~ Amst11d1m IUISL Q "DESIREE"-Part 11 (comtclJ wut1111) '7D-W1lttr l rtn· nil). Jr.1n H1ckttt, W1ll1 to., P1!1 Ou1I, Ro1u D1vls. Story •bout t!lt 1d~1ntur1s vi 1 foollOMe )'!l~n1 11mb!tr t nd his 1e1rch tot" !ht owntr of 1 mysttrio"" lor1un1. m 01ri~ fr.M Show (C) (90) Oi· r1<:tor-prod1KAr ha Hunt•, Jiln· ist Artur Rubfnstein, 1uthor Gtorp M1ret. ind compottr Huol~ 1101111. m Tht •Ir YttJtt (C) (60) * MARLON BRANDO-Color 0 Sil: O'tloc' Movit: (Cl "Dt· I &iftt" P1rt It (rom1nce) '!>4-Mu I Ion Brallllo. Je&n Simmons. Merit m cmmu erutt¥t Ptnt1I t30> (R) "Atln1 P1vkw1." Oberon. M!th1el ll:ennie. N1POleon s 9·00 0 -m ~ JllC 1111111• MM· tnttNnlef with Ille yaun1 dfUlllttr ' . 1Y ~ t.w I °' • M&rlllilln li lk mtrchan! 11: (C) "Old T•• HNr lllt Oftt th1n1ts the cour:1e of history. CDn About ttl• lravtlln1 S.llllldJ?'° cluslon of ynt1rd1r's f:i PM show. (tomtdy) '63-Phy!!ls Dllltr, Bob 1iJ Did Yin Drke {JO) DeMI. Jot flynn. A tr1welln1 sties· lady lttins forces '111'1111 1 youni. inventor to win Pfiz t n!CrteY 't • m T~• 'llnbto~11 (C) (JO) • PERKINS ~ u= ly Tom K. Ryan NO ... THE SLIPPERY fl RASCA~ GOT AWAY SALLY BANANAS A5AIN1 DEAR ' I I -~ •• ,,, Jort''" J ••t lt>h .. 1;1.tk.0> '9'],fM J-n II By John Miles ~ itJ ,..,,. -~" ~ -, ~ (!) St'r Trc' (Cl (fll) @CI.I ABC "'°"' lC> (301 counly f11r. 0 ,,.,,,., '"" ,.,, iCl 160, ,,, JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux VDung. John Hartrcird, MtCall ' •----.... ~.,-=7"'C-Ce7=c-o=-.""c:-c===• 17:=:--c~"c:o=c,c;_~,.C""C:-'1) ED New,/Sl~k Mt~ll (3n) Jim Newman. 6rlll. Sleppinwolf ind Doloris Hill I WOijT TA.ICE !llT A ~E\'I 't'E5,MI? Pl?lVER'. rr; . '" LA! MINllTE6 OF YOUR. TIME, tlOCTOJ~ SME CALLED TO TESTS o\NP Eil) Wh1t'1 Htw? fC) (301 "Stt1el~ of the Desert .;1." TIW brl'lt boys explore the world's 1111est open fie. pit mine ill Ch1lt. I iuist. t Clll.E TO TlL!C WITM VOLi So\V VOU 'CI SE OrMER STUPH:S l.l!J 'illli!.ID=~ /'10 rutiY•I (C) (901 o\&OUT Cltl WINTEltS! !'M o\N 5oTOPPINC. I V! o\lE E5SEN l'lo\L- "My He1rl'1 •n Iha Hi1hl1nd'-" ATTOfWEY A.NCI ~ltS. WINTER:S LV NE<':IA.TIVE ! Tht •orld prtmitrt al Jae.It Btt- • ' s CIJ cas """ 1c1 (lOJ m Alutd• clo1 aJ P'11n Ill Ille Jttund (C) (30) scn's n11111 opera b1~d on !ht Wil-.i <;Ut;GESTEO THAT I SEE YOI! 111111 5'my1n pity. fetluted 11n1en •r• ll·yt1r-«d Ger1rd H•rrin(lon as JGhnny. contr1lta Ltli ChOD~1sun, lerior A11n CrDfoot. b':sso Spiro M1l1s, •nd b1$1·b•riton1 K1n Smittt. &:JD 0 Kf'IBC "...,...,,, (C) (6<l) I em Cllucl!ti Awtll111tf (C) (30) 0 stwt A!!t!I Sltaw (ti (90) GeDrce llnd1ey, P•t Henry. Pltchiltl 9:30 IJ S Cf) lht '"'•"tr 111d JJ. tnd T1rsu, Bob r11nc1s &nd Sue I~ {30) J,J. r1luch11tl1 llfl:ES ICI Gos:siell IUtS!. • b1lnd d•lt 1rnn1id ~J het frltlld I ArLe111 Ind htr d&ll IS • Ptr$Cln-o Tiit ltlM: C•Mt IC) (301 1blt youn1 w!Mln1n1n. Ar~1ns1s m Mr ft'llfllt Mt rtilll It) (30) I Gov. Win!hrap lloc~del11r 1u1sl1 IS h•m~~ll. G1ry Co!rins i nd Bubar1 Min~us also guest. (iJ) CIJ ,lfl}' Mt Min (60) Ei) Stvtk Nuttt 5um111,I)': Jury Quinn, : ~ l1) H~n11.,.11intley IC) {30) I ED Yop tor [myont 130) A rt Vl!W of !1st week's t.1ercrst$. p!u! 10:00 0 News (C) (30) 811111 Wud. ID 1rn 1011111 Men <Cl <lO'J al M111lt1 J Clirtlln (CJ (30) 1 ~11nonstr1tion of • llD"'Y 1nd fJ TIM CONWAY SPECIAL lruit fult• dlln-. *·Top comedy with Tim Qfl ([)nit Mu111ttrs (30) and guests C3rol Im Mottti-J4 cci !60l Burnett, Danny Thomas. fD KNIR "''" (C) (JO) CD I SJlt1lL I tltk Cusldl's SI. 1'1tria's 0.J Slln (C) (SO) &:AS fl) Tl!ia Is lt'1Nrt {Iii) 1:00 o cas E•1111111 " ... (C) (30) O ~(I) I IJICIA ITM TR Cot-••1 Hoirr (C) (60) A uwn1d1 111d music sliow st1rrinr Tim Conw11, wit~ specill ru~r C11DI Burnett, Dinny Thoml&. Joe flyftn, Hll"'llJ Kai man. um ..., 1•> 1601 • " CJ Wl!1Y1 MJ l int? (C) (30) 0 lf~ CJ) Q') M1rar1 WllllJ, M.D, (C) (6oJ "tlte D1redrvtl Gututt." Lury Bellon • htll'!Oflhllltt tnn· ID I Lowe Laq (30) m INI tl'lt (IKt (C) (30) 11er, ril~I his life to rueut 'l'iJillll•i:lllllliii§=:Z:~i:ii(iQ;;j6"t;~:;i fl)C.nunodtt)'/Mutuil rund (30) comp1nion who 1111 1111111 down • I! GOOOMl6UT, :STEVE! 11v1n~, M111h& Hunt IUt sh. 11: 'IOtJ 60T THE 'M!OfrrlG IOE,A., 'TMfS WAS CtJE ID 00 lr1ndtd ft) 130) I 0 1 Spy (Cl (!O) r <~... 1 ' 1.1 ~ T, .ALEXAMO~A . oi:: TM H.APPIESr fn A~trt! CJD) Cl) Mt!nr Ad11J1t 161'!) .. ·I OtrJt. V WAIJTED TO iJf fVENJJr.L&5 l'VE HAO Qt. (fj Trirth 0t ton,.quenw. (Cl l £D El P'ldre Cir1tlet (30l SURE WE OIDfrrlT lOSE /'I ·~i:'QR A LONG TIME/ Ull llllndt in 11\t Sun {C) {30) YALUASLE ..__r •«' J._,-,, .r-• 10:30 m s,..1m.11 tc1 c601 MA eon-£0t1°"' .' 7:)0 1J 9 (]) L111u. {C) fbO) ,1."I veri11!lan With Hunt1ni1on Hirt- -oulbw'1 lu!ou1J Pllll Stott Lane!/ IDrd."' In 1 dtnrerous posil•Clll whe11 ~• 1~ mistaken tor 1b1tnl brother .lohnny l?i) DEBUT A1rtht (30) Dr1rn1tie dnd is held ha1t1gt W1r1en Datt~, '.rri1I st1r.rinr P~rici1 Morin, (n. Brend• Swlt ire 1t1tu1ed r1~ue Agm!t r. P1!uk1 d1 For1nd1, S~•tlci 8ustam!MI tnd M1nu1t • · Q ~, (iJ fD I D1t•m ol Junn1t llz1ld1. (C) (30) "E\1rn1llJ Youu, kann•r ··1 l~t .visit of on1 of lonf.s lorrner 11:00 I) 0 0 fl) m GD lttn {C) 11rt1riends stirs up Je1n1111'5 Jell ouiy. I e Hi111wtr hhl D @ CI) m Mtd Sq11td (t) (60J 0 li!O'fi•: "Cri"'I 111 lht Slf•ll"' MUTI AND JEFF B Al s 'th ' ' •'fsturn lo 01rl1nw. Return lo {d11m&) '56--Sll Mineo, JClhn ~S· Y ml •• L11t11 ." Glorit fo ster IM", Cl1renv. 51Vtlles. 1 .. -------~...----~ r::::=:;::-7:;;::;-;-;:;;;;;::lr;;;:;;w;:~;:;[LYf:===-::r--:-~-=-::-:-\1 W1lllarns Ill) 11u1sls 11 • bllnd tirt plt~nini !D marry 1 man v.tlti m "'rte" 1'1•« MY LITTLE CA~ I "THINK yOU NEED SOUNDS SILLY .HOW's T+-llS --~-11 not thf: pt.rson ~• !'J! ~~ 1\ CD Ht S4W, Sht S11d !Cl MAK!6 AN AWFUL I KNOW WHAT A NEW &UT I'LL 00 0 """" S "'"" <CJ .. ,,,.., -~ ~ ~ Q .~ N ICI N015o WHC'.N ! YOU R IS fT? MUf"FLER' ANY1141NG ONE, MUTT? blind'' (1-v1~!ure) 'OZ -Jtmt> lWIJLJ ~ i.. c.1..1.J 1"1 ORIVE IT.' IROl.lBL: !llason, Jrl!V•llt Br.nd, Rio lcirn ln _ . 10 S"TOP 1118. 1 former 11r11. liv1ni w11~ t 11:15 UL :L.,c1n1111• 5evr"'''"~ li1'l'J -r+1E NOISE familJ on '" 1!11nd olt lht C~1n· I •I s~• linas, 1nlbh !ht aid al 011a lt~ tci I l1Jtlt off two brothefA who 'ljant ll:lO IJ IS([JMtl"I Crlllin !Cl !ht lsl1nd tor 11111! own 0 0 00 m 1~~""' C111~~ (C) I m Trill! ff Cal'IMl!~tflttS (C) (30) Al1n lli~R is sub ~'l~t .•. m ,..,,, M''°" 1601 e n. CM•t•• m r.ui111ai c.111t 13oi o m Diet emit ,ci 1 ED Cltr WtkMrl (C) 1•~1 SI Cnii •• A11111 (301 --I •a:IOD 0 rJ)~ OeMl1t •~1neld1 (CJI (30) "Dllbblt• Retu1a '-In ar~11 ~,. • to m1l11t1ln ptaG• In tilt hm1!y, Oebblt must rt1rlsv1 • oart ol the Thonll1onr lt1C01111 tit tteGrda tram !lob Sinden. m Mttit: "Tt11i&llt Wt ll111f C.l1ll" (ti:fvtntur1) ''3-lte I. Collb, All111bt!lt. QJ Mtwll: "5111 fnntisct Stol)'" (ld\itntura) '52 ....:. J1ul Mctr11, VYGMI OICarlo. m •• ,.. """ ""''!MU ... • Tiie ...... "'" (C') (30) lt:llO . C..1111111tr l 1llltl11 Mi (C) • ' ., I m Te Tiii tlll TM' (C) (30) ' ...... ~, -·•. 'fl f(e111Ht •"' llMI M•mt • : ,; Cl Obcothtllvt ~ ,.... (t) (Ml) ., . .. ,, ,. • • • ' .... .. ··- Wf0tl£~DAI DAYTIME MOVIES GORDO ST. PAT HAD .( 1#/NG AIJOUT S)J..A.K~S, ~UT TJIANI<. FOllfl:.Jft;IO ' HIVVIN ..,. . //I FCRGOr LIKE.D .S()M~ .. A IR Tll-THIA/3 IVORM.S r Gllll Hf • MISS PEACH "''O c;.l{.r 'IE~ ~ll~ST, A Wi/AT A .&.flOTll TOA.sr, MiV 1"E COLO~ "",A Rd.J.ICNtrOr lfOAt> Cf1 YE 1\. ~i;:u-Ee,v, AitE t.Ac ! '""' 1t> C'1L L THAT P,:CF/~10/ A1)1V THE lf'l~#r DARL IN' SING W!AlO ~E YER ,, OL I VE UKE ALIVA\'S Fol!Er. !IV '14/:l ,.t..IMTOA/f AT Ve 1~ NJO ··· MA/lT/NJ, f DOWNeV. IA~Ct<f GOS~ •r :1 " If If n rt By Gui Arriola .. ~v,,. .A;~YS M"' 7HE MEJ.h """"' ot't.L W/ISN 11/E Cll#CK CRIAJK COM~Sf "It> TllAr.' ly Mell 1 WANTIP TM~F~fl l'Ol A WMll.E' ... T,.!dv, 11 .... 17, 1970 DAILY 'JLOT J9 ly Chari•• Barsotti y O<L •""""-)-. i.i<tl.a.~ PEANU;..;.TS-'-----'1:.£,y Char... M. Schulz '1:5, AA"A.11-. l HAO A 600> NIGHT'S StEtP LAST Nl614T .• !ITT 5l.£iflll615 Ul<E EATING. Tl-'15 WAS lltl PE55E:RT ! TELEVISION ,.lli"'S CBS to 'l'alk To Burto1is By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Notes to watch televi- sion by· The headliners: Elizabeth Taylor and Richard T1urton appear on CBS·TV's "60 Minutes" next TuesM day with reporter Charles Collingy.·ood ••• tha Burtons and Co\lingv.'ood have homes near each other in the 1't1exican lo\vn of Puerto Vallarta. J OHN WAYNE joins Bob tlope and Tom Jone ~ on CBS·TV's variety special starrinst Raquel \Velch April 2() , •• f\1a1nie Eisenho\1•er '''iii be seen in a t\\•crpart interview on NBC·TV"s "Today" series l\tarch 26 and 27 .•. filmed at the Aueusta , Ga ., home of the widow of the late President, the inter· view will n1ark the first anniversary or Gen. Eisen· bower's death. Lawrence Durrell , author or the classic "Alex· andria Quartet," is scl1 eduled to discuss his book "Nunquam " on the Friday's "Today" outing ••• "Cartier-Bresso n's CaliJornia," a hall·hour special in \\'hich the famous French photographer offers his filmed in1 pressions (If a portion of American lire will be broadcast an CBS·TV l\'lay 5. DORIS DAY 'S CBS-TV series zoom ed to third place in the 70-n1arket Nielsen ratings for the week ending ~·t nrc h 8 ... tops in the rankings again \vas Robert ''oung's freshn1an ABC·TV series. "!\1arcus \Velb y, 1\1.0 ." ... a re run or the Humphrey Bogert· Katharine llepbu rn n1ovie "The African Queen" came in second •.. and a rerun of the Burton-Tay· lor film "The Sandpiper'' finished 16th. Patty McCormack, Gale Sonder1aard .and Ger· aldine Fitzgerald will star in a half·hour soap opera, "The Best of Everything," be1innlng on ABC·TV March 30 ••• the dail y serial is based on the book and moYie about a group of young girls tryinc to make lives for themselves in Ne\Y York Ci ty. lrna Phillips, the writer \Yho is the aCknowledg· ed queen of the soa p opera market, \Vlll be story editor ol another ne'v ABC·TV daytime serial start- ing ~·larch 30. "A \Vorld Apart." created and wrltten by her daughter Katherine Phill ips ... the story will focus on th e lives of two families. "one of which revol ves around a successful female tele vision writ· er.'' ABC .TV 111 .. o ht1s ::innnunced that a orie·hour April 7 special '\'ill he titled ··The Bob Gou let Show Starrini: Robert Goule t." \r h1ch som ehow seems cnlirely i'l pproprlfltc in thi:is p11rti<:ular case •.. the SRlne nel\rork's docu1nentary of this pe st Sunday night, "The Ballad of the Iron J-Jorse,'' was a fine and nostal1ic a1Jute to American railroads by the diotingulshed producing-directing team of Johll Secondari and Helen Jean Rogers. Dc111als i l ae ltfetaaee t I i -- • I l I t· I t ' I ) • • • ( I • l ' ' I . I •• ·-~-----.-----·--· --------·-----·---------·------·-----·-------. ------··-------·-·---.... - ENDS TUESDAY lOlllT ltlDfOlD IN ....... ..,, ...... ,,, .... .,)~ WOH/lLRA~ ---~· l*"'IGWTM• l!j9i -AL50- ~Httt. W\ftt.n "VIVA MAX." STARTS WIDNISDAY "The freshest · film of ,, the yearl rrr lfLt•HOl<ll s•1-1s J JOI INJOIMAllON '-eNDS TONfGHT '91il H--"BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" _,.,_ Mottl• Smith "THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" ----STARTS WEDNESDAY ·-·----... -.. --_.,_ "THE HORSE WITH THE GREY FLANNEL SUIT" Alice A nAHteOYICH l"RODUCT ION Bargain Matinee ·roRco1.uM•1A RCLCASt · Wednesday 1 P.M. l!JmO,., O ~ Ii~~~~=~~:-:=~ IU.-"' !0",111, CORirl#IRo, -StW101 -----------ENDS TUESDAY 'il'@~i' Wiifl11 . 1-X1lslhl-&feeti.;'" , .... ~~ ...... ' \\llnor loorio I 1 M811Hatl 00f611liln Xtdo llfW•O•T •r•cM •••••••• ,.. ..... ..-loM••" u~. hi• ·· o•. wno EN~ TONIGHT anthony qulnn "ad-ona oflldng•" AU NEW! ,IOM 5WIDiN "FANNY Hill" MC,~~.v· AC..-lilf'ant>~~.,,,...I David Hemmings Joanna Pettet THE BEST HOUSE IN LONDON ·(i)-Eastmancoll)r• - NO ONE UNDll 11 ADMlnED 1'H;M 1',~.,...111,. ''n ~1 ll>u1'11, J • .,.~,. i"••IU.ttun Peter O'Toole Petula Clark "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" " ''"'"'· Sit Michael P Redgrave -ln-IYltlC)n> r;:i •n<I ~1e1r<XQ1or ~~ TONIGHT AT 1:00 Ctilhlre11 S 1.00 •11yrliM OPl!H 6;45 '"r. a.n... l•lltH ll'mlntuf• 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS I 1'11CIUS . ' . I . RO\\er A man wenlk>ok.ing for America. And couldn't find 1l anywhere ..•. .._, OOW<J 1m11n .. ·~ Phn M099I• S1111th h1 "THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" STARTS WEDNESDAY Annrthquakt of Entertainment! 3rd AND LAST WEEK Steve McQueeri 'The Rei~r~· FIRST AREA SHOWING ~the ame-·---eiiakazan- STARTS WED . Charlton Heston AHO AN All STAR CAST IN "BEN HUR" ~,,.,.;f ~ 673·6260 2905 East Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar ,....OIHOllJ'ONf ..... ~ .... - ~11-.Cltilll'll - 1!85!1 RldeR ., • ACADEMY NOMINEE SHOllT "PEOPLE'S SOUP" EXCLUSIVE AREA PERFORMANCE FOR ADULTS 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS ltST ACTORS -Dwstl11 Haff'""· Jo11 Yo l9ht IEST PICTUllE IEST SUl'POllTING ACTRl!SS -5yl,ia MllH IEST DIRECTOR -Joh11 Scklui1191r If.ST SCllEENPLAY IEST FILM EDIT ING Showi119t ot 7:00 o•d t:JO -MotiFlffl Su11dcry YOU ARE THERE Al T1tl lflllllll STAWl!tl MOST fl-OOOUI ANIMAL! OK UllH TAKE YOUR PARENTS TO SEE THIS FILM Wf\l CM•I '•~ IW11I Cft.10 "'•11 111111 ... ~t ~·l,11 (.._,t Mt:\t U..110 Wffllftn 4·Jt.l: ... t; 11 )¥11, 1iU .. :llW:.O.t :ll 141. ,., .. ,,, ... ,,. litf.-t u Ad•lh $2.50 ,., ........ ,,. ""'"' . I I I • Theater Notes 4 New Shows Open Alo .ng Coast By TOM TITUS 01 llM Dellr "lltl SIJll Llke bursts fro1n a Gatling gUn, Orange Coast theater" groups are &hooting holes in ttils week's schedule with epenlng nlghls on tap for tonight, Wednesday, Thursday and Fl" I day. Firsl on the boards 19 the :spring production of the LldO Jsle Players. the 40-year-.old comedy "Ladies or the Jury." opening a five -performance run tonight. Wed nesday Orange Coast College follows wilh another one-week~nly of- fering . Ionesco's "Exll the King." Thu rsday night I.he 1ipo~light shifts to the San Clemente • Community Theater and its .,. revival q_( "Night l\fust Fall ." -' ~·Jl'f A special ex~jmental show I " , . entitled "Peridot" bows in . :f ""'\'~ Friday at Newport Beach's -~ '. · \: Open ·End Theater. . · ;~ · The LidQ lste comedy, bat-,r\ lling the rigors of Lhe nu s~son with. a 22-character ., , cast, is probably the mos{ am: f~~;t~· ' · bilious production yet oUered j}'i,: ~ ·~ by the Newport Beach group. ~·/.-~ Resident director Ru th i\~~ A1cCulley is staging the • courtroom comic drama. ~·, _____ _ weekf/ld run with performan- «1 niunday thr.ough Slllldly is South Coast Repertory'• production of "Spoon River AnthOlogy," ·a poetic evcnint of mu:sie and nostalgia under the.d.iri!ction of.Jlon Thr9n10o. James ·Bas:e~. Ma rt ha McFarland. Toni S h e.a r e r 1 Charles Hutchins, To n I Douglass and l::.arry Harbi11Cn comprise the versatile cut, with Thronson doubling on guitar. Performances are given at the cdmpany's Thi-rd Step Theater, 1827 Newport B)vd .• Costa life-,a. The bo1 office number.ls "6-1363, . * Continuing tonight thr,ou1ti Saturday'in its third weelt at the Laguna MOultOo Playhouse iJ t~ musical ~'LliU~ ~ary Sui'lsh}ne" under' the diriction of Kent Johnson. Doris.Shields b n'JU~ical dl,l'eclor with Joan \'1ulfs0h'n ln charge, o t dlo.r..graplly. The ·i:n'usical spoof of· old time operettas stars Mary Sullivan in the title role, with Don Miller, Ken Komwelbel, Blanche Atlckelson and Alan Hart In reatured assignments. Constance Crane, Sunny Budd, Steve.Schwaer and Jim.Paskel round out the speaking cast. ' The ladies. and gentlemen: or the jury are r1at f.1oran, F.lsie Painter. l\favls Sul.ton, Nancy \Veils. Blylhe Sherman, Nat ~1 ichaud. Don Rhoades. Jim Hitchman. Dave Wf'lls, Randy Keene , Jay 1\fcCormick and \Villiam Gautschi. DYING KING Ed. LitUe a.5 King Berenger contemplates · the end or · bis life as Queen r.larie, played by J;inic·e Gaydon, attempts to comfort him ·in The musical is b.e t n g presented at the playhow;e, fi06 Laguna Canyon. fload, Laguna Beach, with rtse:rva- Uons available by calling the new box office ·nwnber, 494- 0743. Orange Coast College's "Exit the King," opening \Vednesday. · Other principals arc Cl'lucK \Vinfield as the )rniJ!e, P.hilip de Barros and Gino Gaudio as the rival attorneys and Norma Gaulschi as the defendant. Completing the Lido cast are DIJI Willlams, John Rooney. ?\large \Vahler , Cleome Dovey, Howard MeagJe . -Fran Richley and Dotty Hewit t. "Ladies of the Jury'" will be staged tonight through Satur- day al the Lido Isle Clubhouse. 7tll Via Lido Soud. tJewport Beach. Reservation.s arr being taken at 673~4. * •·Exit the King" makrs its ST. PADDY'S DAY Tuesd•y. March 17th 0 11r l i99•1• c.1.1:o1.tlo1t lri1h M111ic Alf D•"i 515 So. M•in,. S•nte An• entrance on the Otange Coasl College stage \\'ednesday night for the first of fdur con· sec u l i v e performances, Drama instructor W i 11 i a m Purkiss is directing . Ed Little plays the title role in the OCC drama of a sym- bolic death. others in the cast are Shirley Barrus, Janice- Gaydon , Steven Scott. Richard Ro111·land and Toni Shultz. Tbe play wilf be presented at 7:45 p.m. \\'ednesday to allow time for a post-play rli scussion and at 8: lS p.m. Thursday through Saturday; Admissic;in is rr~c. * Hoberl f\otoe ls directing and starring in Eml yn \Yilliam s' "Night ?\111st Fall." ·which opens Thursday for three ·weekends al the Sa~ Clemente Community Theater. Moe plays the key role or Dan. the psychopathic killer. while Phyllis Stroud portrays the invalid ·Mrs. Bramson, OOth in repeat performances. BIG ST. PAT'S PARTY HATS -HORNS -FAVORS 3344 EAST COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR LUNCHEON e DINNER e COCKTAILS Cross,vord Puzzle ACROSS l Ea t l)f drink ,,01 silv -' frmal e anima l 10 Mta\ t ut 14 Exorctanl orrsl)n JS USSR t t!y l h Pr,se11I 17 Ovtrh,~d 18 Htao uo )'J "I canno! trtl · .•. "· 2 words 20 "····· 1ri11111''' 22 M1l1tar1 uni! 14 T 1dr l b C onli1 1nrr~ 27 f ish J I Bind 3Z Faslrttrr JJ Sh1001roC1 t ontairit1s JS lrgum• lt.iturt J! Amefi tan. Abbr. ~ H11i1SSrd 40 Ch lnrsr. Comb. ro1m 41 PitCh 42 R~lus r 43 lotltr)' 44 NiwOl"I s party· l11for111 11 4S S.c:allt r ' l • 47 Made s1!1! 51 fr111 i11111! name 52 Caused ' roll alo•1!l 54 Juai1 .1ruJ '" SB Mtt1t S'l Gi ve off 61 COlllDOSet's group: Abbr. &2 S. A fri c~ri '" ~:i .... oop 64 Same &5 C.t1ib0u':; re lati ve bh Social t limber h7 ~ost: Sli1119 OOIH I lr 1n1 1n VIP ZC.1a1 woll 3 Prrpo-sfliOll ..I Moonshirirr's '" "" ~lttndante 6 Housthold itC:t ssory 7 "" 3 Survfwi"g lfJCe 9 IC ind ol rallload 10 Vlttuous • • " " " ll , ... " .. " .. 11 Sart· P1ef1r l~ Tht H 11~\P.r ll Hammer head~ 21 Th,odore's nic~natne 21 Flower ZS N1J! 27 Colle9r oroup s: lnlor..-.al 28 S. A111tr ic111 c ll'f . 2'J Acro ss 3G Tore down 34 S1111H finch )5 Nr• York or H;illl.Jr s!ruc;tu•t , 3!. Units 37 LSD ... "'' • ' r lJ " ... ' .. " )I .. " .. " :;, 17170 31 lmpo~s1blt ol being solvt.d 41l Admits .. olllt t fo1ma lly: 2 words •1: Titre 43 Raf1chrs: Informal 4( Ar lillery111111 •b Soa~ 47 P l~cr •B Rub out "4'J U al~d itliOfl 50 Cruel pets• 5} Caprr 5S Humerlcll prelllt 5h Geo. lf'flllUt• l f'I 's Coirrn ;nt- ,l bbr. 57 Espy 60 flap IJ .. J) 36 l7 " " Karen ~1oe. will play the shy Olivia, with David Cox. June \Vhilney, JoAnn Applegett, A1ary Dunning and Gene Ap· pl egett round ing out the San Clemente cast. The drama will be staged at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 A venida Cabrillo in S a n Clemente:--Tickets-may be ordered by ca lling the playhouse at 494-0465. * At lhe Open End , y,•here something "different" i s usually happening, "Peridot: In passing•• opens a four- weekend run Friday night. The show inspired by the theater's earlier production or "Joy: A Sensory Celebration," was created and directed by Stanley Fried, who promises no such hindrances-a s dialogue, plot er characters. "Pe,ridot" wl!I play Fridays lhrough Sundays· at the Open End, 2815 Villa \Yay, t;ewport Beach, w i th rt!senratioris available by calling 67~1120. * Wrapping up its three.- * Ready for a foorth ·wetkend is the drama "A Far Coun· trr.," Ole current production at the Long Beach Community Playhouse. D i r t c t e d by Bertram Tanswel11 the show is presented ~Friday and Satur· day nights. · · Ralph Bowman and Kathy Ladd head the cast of the Freudian drama at t h' • spacious playhouse. 5021 E. Anaheim St., ·Long Beach. Tickets may be ordered by caijil!g (113) 4~. Marilyn Monroe Roasted In Billy Wilder Biography By BOB THOMAS Charl~s Brackett, then turned HOLLYWOOD (AP) -One to directing as well. He of the film world's most ac· developed an acute eye for complisJ1ed director-writers. Amrrican foibles, as he and Holly\\'OOd's most noted demonstrated with "Double Yt•ll gets c/oeup treatment in a Indemnity," "The Lo at new boo k. "The Bright Side of Weekend ,'' ''Sunset Billy \Vilder, Primarily." Boulevard," "Ace ifl the J{ole." "Stalag 17," "Seven There must be a dark side to Billy \Vilder. but you \von'l Year Itch," "Some Like It Hot" and "The Apartment." find it in this biography by Tom \Vood, an accomplished \Vilder, normally,,.a patient wriler \Vho has been publicist director, was 5orely . tried on on six \Vilder movies. the two /ilms ~e rilade with Nevertheless, ''The Bright Marilyn l\f on roe . Her Side of Billy \Vi Id er , tardine'Ss and inability to Primarily" makes stimulating remember linrs helped put reading for all those in terested ''Some Like It H11t" three in film art and lore. And what weeks and $800,000 over the a j'Ob it does en lhe Marilyn budget. l\fonroe legend! Afler the picture was com· Au strian-born. 'Vilder was pleted , Wilder told a reporter making his name in the his health had greatly im- German ·cinema until •Titler proved -"and I can look at caused a mass flight of Jev•ish my wife without wanting to hit intellectua ls. \Vilder came to her because she's a woman." Holly\\·ood without runds and Asked if he would do another lived part of the time in the film with Marilyn. he replied unused ladies' room of the that his doctor, psychiatrist Chateau Marmont -"just me and accountant told him "I'm and :six small toilets." l too old and too rich to go •le learned the American through this again.'' Idiom by listening lo the radio His comments brought an ;uid soon found work writing angry t e I e gr a m from scripts. He became a top l\1arilyn"s husband, Arthur "Tiler in collaboration with ?itiller. \Vilder replied to him Cole Po11er Revue Set .Thw·sday "The Coeducated Co 1 e Porter," a new musical review containing over fifty of the late songw r l ler's com- po:sitions. will be presented Thursday, March 26, al the Saddlcback Inn. Santa Ana • The performance t~ sponsored by the Yale Club of Orange Coonty and given by members of the Yale Musical Theater Association who are prcscnUy on tour on the West Coast. Cole Porter's remarkable career as a songwriter began while be was pursuing un- dergraduate studies al YaJe University . Upon his dealh in JOO~. that ''the company pampered her. coddled her and acceded to all her whims. The only one who showed any lack of eon- sideration wa9 Marilyn, in her treatment of her co-stars and co-workers." Another movie legend, Hum- phrey Bogart. gave Wilder trouble on "Sabrina." Says the director : ''Bogart was a ter.· rible trouble rriaker, a needler. Somehow he got the idea that Bill Holden, Audrey Hepburn alKI r·were tn c;ahooU against him. Bill at one point was rtady ·to kill him. But we smoothed it out ind eve.rylhing worked out .well." The book includes 1 rich harvest or Wilder's witticisms. When Tony · Curtis com· plained about his billing in "Some Like lt Hot," Wilder replied: "The trouble with you, Tony, is thal you're in· terested only in tight pants and wide billing." Charles Lindbergh offered Wilder flying lessons during the preparation of ·~The Spirit of St. Lou is." Wilder declined: "I can just see the headlines -Lone Eagle and Unknown Student Killed in Crash." To an actor trying to ainc in "Kiss Me, Stupid": "You have Van Gogh'& ear for music." And, "France is a ?Hice where the money'falls apitt. in your hand but you can't Jear the toilet piper." ' Porter willed his papers and manullCripta to Yale's: rare book library where a student discovered with them many songs ne\lcr before perfonned until the creallon or this show. Yale graduates. and Cole Porter enthuslasl.5 are invited ,,, attt.nd the pcrfonnance. Rt 3Crvatioos may be obtained by calling Stanley CQChran at 647.(1701 for dinner and/or 1how reservaUons. Sharing, a M~t Gloria Fosler. • blind heiress ooce helped ' Clarente \Vllliams, shares a moment with him invites hlm·IO meet the man sh• Is planning to m • ry in toni ght's "Mod Squad" episode on · Chan I 7 at 7:30. In real life Ibo two are Mr. and Wllllama. I - ' t I r , ' • ' • ,, d 1· ·r • ,. ,_ 1t n 1t " ,. 1d 'h '· ,. in " th n· ts "' ,, ·it l: " In In ,. :e ;. " • '" E.,.....,HM ... ~.,n..t }~ ...... \t ..... .. ~ ,,f -- '°""'t r . •!-' • •' . HOUSES FOR SALE . HD.U$ES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE 'HOUSES FOR ,SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! I HOUSES FOR SALE GeMral 1000 GtlMr•I 1000 General 1000 Genff•I 1000 General 1000 Gefteral 1000 . - 00.NfiE COU!IT.Y'.5 LARGEST 2629.HARBOR BOULEVARD 546-8640 Open henhUJS If& s:ao VILLA'.BY. THE SEA 1'hil be_autifulty ·appointed uttutfve home teaturea 3 · mute~ized bedroom!!, quttlkil:ed 'flte baths, profes&lona11y landscaped y l td -and 20-f oo t cathedral ceiling en!r)' way. 1n better than nrw condition. only 14 mos. old -owper~says ·se.ll, asking $32,l5Q. : WHY RENT? NO .DOWN TO VETS OPPORTUNITY If you are in the market for a NEW home see these out- standing customized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres & Sons; located jn a prilne area very close to Huntington State Beach. These homes are priced from $30,290 to '39,540 and vary in size from 3 to 6 Bedrooms, 1500 to 3000 sq. It., 2 & 3 car gar .. ages and 2 to 4 Balhs. These hon1es have SHAKE or MISSION TILE roofs, fireplace, underground utilities, concrete driv~s. 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 \\'ith occupancy by A·Jay due to credit rejection. Rancho La Cuesta Homes Hu.ntington Beach (on Brookhurat at Atlanta l 968-2'29, 968-1338 ofinJa PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES ~MOWN BY APPOINTMENT 16 Llnda Isl• Drive Ne\v 5 bedroo1n . 5 balh home \\1ith upstairs view of Corona del 1'·1ar hills'!f-3 Fireplaces & BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panelling. Land- scaped. \Vilh dock ................ S145,000. 45 l.lnda Isl• Orlvt Nearing completion. 5 BR, 4 ba home . 80 l<'t. on 'veter. 3 fireplaces, atrium w/fountain. Bil-in TV system. With dock ....... $225,000. 8~ Lind• Isle Drive 5 Bedroom & maid's, -5 baths wllli famlly room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip ..... $159,300 90 Lind• Isle Drive Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath hcime with ex- tra large living room & master Bedroom. Carpets & drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip. Near tennis court & club ... , .. DO\Y $120,000 Waterfront Lotl Can l.'W sa\'I' $700.00 !or cl011ing rosts .fr1 3 moS! 11 II ~~~~~~~~~~ you can. you r-an o\.\·n this II liome -TODAY? lt"s a sharp 3 bedtoom in a No. 4: Excellc..1t 51 ft. Linda Isle leasehold lot. Consider trade ................... $35 ,000 Gtf'lfi'"a l 1000 Genera l 1000 gre11t area •. rrs 1 n 11----------Daisy Fresh move-In condition NO\Y. Included in p1iee are· washe r &-dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, lirealarn1 and an O\"er.i;lt- ed lot for only $23,800 - aee 1/1 1.!! o~ .. f B'EDllOOMS $111.00 PER MO. . $22~900 .- Anyont' can assume. ex- isting niA loan, annual pen:::enlage raft!' x 5\l'A· - no qualifying • n e w c11rpets throughoul -big kitchen With d re a n1 buill-in.r -just painted througt.:lul.-this i1 your doll house -s~ it. * * * BASEBALL STAR TRADED ** Ile n1ust sell hill 3 bedroom, '.!..~~ bath beauty in !\-lesa Verde. 1980 sq. Jt .• 2 fire· pla~!. eating area in large kitchen + dining erea. ser- \"ICl' porch for lhe lady, \.l"a· 1er M>flener landscaping \\"iUl sprink!l.'rs. You must see this onl' ... it"s shaJ']l and only S::>,9ao. 546-23!3 Corona de! Mar south ol the highw11y. Absolutely chann- ing 2 bt?rlrooin Ranch style home. Used brick. open beam reiling-and Jots ol glass. No parhing problems here and just a shorl walk to the beach. R·2 zoning and plenty ol room 10 de1Jrlop an incon1e unit, nus woo"t last at $37,500. 1000 No. 41 : Long water view facing Harbor Is- land \Y/76.2 ft. of frontage. Plans avail. No. 88 : Point lot \vith 118 ft. of frontage. Long water view. HOLY BANANASll ttsed b1ick lirepl&Ct!'. Plus \\Iha! a buy!! Gorgeous 3 bed- roo;nll, 2 baths. Polished Bili. GRUNDY, REALTOR Hard\l'ood floors. 400 sq. It. (Our New Address) paneled family room with 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 used brick fireplaCf?. Plwi I L~~~!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!~'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!~~~~!!!!~ '"Separate" Play room orl~ ,,·orkshop, ham ope.rat.or or General 1000 ) General 1000 St!'wing room. l\1.&11y more ex-J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: tra.~! ONLY $24.~ with NO DO\VN GJ.s and midget dq1vn rnA. HURRY! HUR- nY! WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2791 llarbor Blvd, al Adams 5<1S.0.16a Opt'n 'til !) Pl\I LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NORD 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility room, with 85 ft. fronting on excellent swim- ming beach. Units are newly furnished. Now $240,000. J!;xcellent terms available. SEC.LU OED COtllflRY BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Best Buy In Town FIVE BEDROOMS (Our New Addr111) ---·-~-------·~- HOUSES FOR SALE General 1000 ~~ULOUS HOME If you have caviar Ill.lite • call now Oll this 4 BR, 2000 sq. It. jc"·cl. Low Int. assumable loan with .$3000 do\\11. Paul-\Vh\le-Carnahan Really 1093 Baker. c.~I. 5-16-54!0 HOUSES FOR SALE Mesa Verde 1110 MESA VERDE 5 BR Fomlal Dinlni: room, 15:<24' fam. rm, 2 h11lc'•, 2~i ba, lrg Joi, $!6,50'.>. Principals Only. Ca.II alt 6 PP.t ID78Z3. BY O\VNER: SIA assumable loan 3 hr, 2 ba, healed pool. Call S.10-186.1. Costa Mtsa 1100 Newport Be•ch 1200 BAYSHORES CUTIE Just llsl~ on 8.a,yllhore Drl\'e A holl('ymoon co(tage \\ill! 2 be<lrooms, 1 bath Rancho ~tylins Clean &. neat Look at the pr!<:(! $49,J(XI SPECTACULAR VIEW of HARBOR & LIDO ISLE 3 Bedroom +' extra room. Hardwood floors. Existi"'° loan 7%. bl TD. Vacant. 231 Sant.a Ana Ave, (S. of Cliff Drlve) Immediate Possession BY OWNER 6""982 Dover Shores Area You O\vn Tb4!' Land Beautiful pool size ynt 3 BR home w/ elegant fealllres, lrg lam rm, breakla:it area, HOUSES FOR SALi Coron• dtl M..r 1250 2 Dandy Units Owner Will Finance-Save $ $ $ Loan ·Cast 2 • 2 Bedroom units plus guest apartmt!'nl ;) blocJc, to ocean on beautiful Marguer- ite. 3 Bedroom, 1% bath plus spacious I bed garage apt · Owner will finance these at. tractive units on very desir- able terms. CALL US, WE HAVE i\iANY OTHER FINE PROPERTIES. 67'8$0 PANORAMIC VIEW 2001 Ba.yslde Dr. Beaut. shake root 1-.sty. 3 Br. 4 ba. "•aterfront hon1c, xlnt !i11Jlm- ming beach. Newly ttdcor. Sl7S,ln'.I SHO\VN BY APPT. Bill Grundy, Realtor &33 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620 lormal dln'g rm. 3 car !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ J i:arage. $82,500. BY O\\'N- ER. 642--5583 This COl}' 3 BR Mme call be ycun; -NO 00\VN V,\ OR VERY l.()\V 00\\"N FHA. Great in e\"t"ry 11ay, 011·nrr movin& north. l'lllfST BE SOLD. CALL ~G-llSl FIXER-UPPER Excellent polential in I.his 3 &odroom on R-2 lot that could bl!' C-1 In near fulure. Big double detached garage. -Asking $22,500. 646-7171 1-oTHEREAL '""'-ESTATERS ' • , •• ' ~ 1' ... DUPLEX One lot from Ocean &: with Vle1v 2 BR. &: 3 BR. wllh lam rm. Plus exlras sepa.r. ate guelil BR. & Ba. Ask- ing .. . • . . . . . . . . . . . . $51.500 Graham Realty 646.2414 Near Ne\'lpOrl Post Oilk:e BLUFFS -3 Br, 2 BA, 1 J evr\, corne r green belt/vie w, Cov. \Va I led· patio, cus. drps & shullers -I e:<lras. \\laJk to shops, Cd!\f H1. Owner $13.500. &14-4265 BAYSIDE VILLAGE 2 Br, 2 Ba , pool, pvl. beach, clubhou~. boat slip avail. AduUs only, no pets. Owner 673-6427. Dover Shorts 1227 GLASS & WOOD Rustic 2 Bdrm. + family rm . Beam ceilings, 2 ltplcs. High & dry 45 ft. view lot. Add your own view apt. for In· come. $.'l9,!m. Uni\'ersity Realty 673-6510 3001 E. Coa.11.t Hwy., CdM CORONA Highlands view home. Ideal for couple \\"/possible guest qtn;. or more bdrms.: overlooking the town. SEE THIS! Open Daily 2.-5 412 l'lit!'ndoza Terrace Stan Smith, Rltr. 673-7D10 • NEAR OCEAN' * Allractive 5Tnllll house on large 45' lot plus gut!'sl quarters over the g~ South of Highway. Full price $40,000. Vogel Co. Reallon, 2667 East c.oast H'ol.y. CdM. 673-~20 Balboa Peninsula 1300 FIXER UPPER Localed in the bar k hay area of Nl'\\'JIOrl Bcarh on ~'of an a~. Featuring 2 horse corrals.' cnrlosed !anal overl ook i ng beautiful swimming pool. The 2200 sq. ft. 3 bedroom res:kttnce .nerdis paint arvl d bo\v grease, but what a Pt;ice, O\Yf\C.r ~:HI _ll~ance . at 1\J%_ '."'.qn tOday. , 521 ,500 Full Pdce Colesworthy & Ca. DtN1Nc "o o M. r'"'"' 1.33 Dover or., Sult• 3, Newport B .. ch 642-4620 REGAL * SPACIOUS Gorgeous 3 bedroom in . .lo\'e-room home. Built-in kitchenl"!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!'7'~~'!!!!'!!!!~'!!!!~~~ COMPLETE VIEW ly counlry sly le area v.-ith REAL TOR inclurling Nu tone Blender I" iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"" I Bay & l\111115. 4 Br, 4~ Ba I .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I JOls or lall trees. Glistening Newport Beach Office and_ brefl.krast bar. All ?n Gentr•I 1000 Gtntral 1000 OFFICE BUILDING + maidli. 1-ligh ceilings. 504 W. BAY AVE. "Hardwood" Floor,;. U..rge 101.8 Bayside Drive choice hard\vood floors, Ill· 5000 sq ft built around cou11 .. Charming new 3 bdrm. 2 ba. r«imy kitchen with lols of 67>4930 642-7777 cltKling carpels and drapes. 4 car gar, E·Z mail'!t. Jm-l\1edlterranean style: build- Wlndows. Coraer location. FOREST E. \Veil built, ishake roof home. Let's c·e·t f11 Wake Up To An Center of Costa Mesa med occp. $178,lm furnish-er'• home. top quality lhru- ,[)ouble detached carage. Ov.ner will sell under 1-"HA· W O Vi DKI Sq. fl .• troJ lt!'ased, JOOO eel. Assume 6~~% loan. Own. out Top loc, (occupied). Fencccl yard. NO 1.10NEY 0 L s 0 N VA TERlt1$. A scarce Item-cean ••w avail for lease. $35,000. Very er 5'3-7249. Bill Grundy~ Realtor lJ9\VN G.I.s, .l'"tl.A. l\Uni-Full prlet!' only S32,950. the Point And by night a million twink. best or ll'rms. Chl'ner will ========= 833 Dover Dr •• NB 6424SO l'lu·m Down . eling llghla. 3!QJ sq ft ot llv-carry ltd TO. University Park 1237 $7o0 .DOWN EASTSIDE tBEDROOM WE SEL.L A HOME ing elegance. 3 bedrooms Wtlls-McCardl•, Rltrs. , ----------Balboa ~ninsula"a ""int. that 1 • E VERY 31 MINUTES Inc f{t!'altors ..., 3~ baU11>, fonnal dining IBlO Newport Blvd c i\r . · i!i. An easy wtak to the jet-room. family room with flre-548_7729 6#-068'.i f:\·~s. TERRIFIC VALUE Lido Isle Walker 0. Lee 4 BEDROOM + ty from 1his outslandlng 2 place and \\'Cl bar. Large1 ---------This is the LOWE:m' PRJC. To Vet&. This: Mnie is JJ\ Cl FAM. WHATI $21 ,500 story ProvlnclAI Style beau-lot \\"Ith ac:c!'!SS ror boat or ED 4 Bdrm. &; family nn. hf'8.utiful move--ln· con· 2TIIO Harbor Blvd. a.I Adams ly. 3 Bedrms plus 27':<29' fam-camper va.n. The \.iew from $700 total FHA on the mnrket in this area! ORI ENT AL• 1351 d'.Uon. • -w, IOl" down to Scarce 11s hens lt>eth! 4 large i1y mom. r-mplol• with 2' Baths bll 1·n, 2 1~1 CONTEMP ...., • -S45-9491 0""n 'HI ::i Ptit ._....., 3 '·lh F·• ·1 ....., I.he goormet kitchen makes fo· th.I• •··ge 3 BR. 1,,,. BA. )~ . • · ·· ···Cl'!. • •-·• -,.,,·.,.. i, •-.1~··· 11.-.............. ~ .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO I """uroom. ""' s. ....11 Y firepta-. .,_, •··, ,,.. n-, , = to•-''' ,_ bd ) 'B ··e1~· ...... "" .... ~ Evening• Call 531-5570 .... -.. "'"' ""' just wa6hlng dillhe! a pure 1-,1~ in~-·· ,•f·sa c'··· so"' ntsu. rm.· '' · 1"6 Via Undine (by App'!. •-. <·II•• '--•ng 1, .••• 1,,. room. Deluxe kitchen \\i l.h l iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;;;;iiiiio.iio;;O.. ... I beamed -lling l '"I""""" "" ~ ........,..,. ",_ ov;,a LUTELY <POTLESS lh "Of; """ • """"'' 0 '"" Best Buys on Lido u I 1 1 bu'ft · , C• 1 "" ' uo. '-V"J pleasure. Assumable 6';~ fin-ho • I'll· only). 4 BR. & den or 5 BR. red out gf statt>, e:<· a a es L -1n . rpe. \.li lh an Ocean View. Wha.fs a.ricing. Asking $79,500, to s pping & schools. LRrge out. Only '31.950 &: may be ·a11 tr.emely anX lous. Asking Outstanding· Family ing. I-lard to b<'at ar $21,500 College Park rn<ltT, you can auume lhc palio. fr~ yen.!, garage purchased ror as I o w as Par11 Y furn. Din. rm., blt-$23.8~ •make offer. home, -4 Bedrm, 3 bath '\\"ith and only ;, years young. 526 ,SOO 5~i% lnsurance loan. \Vhat all this for $21,000. Payment& IO% down! ~!k·carpfisdrapes. 2car1ar. sep dining rm. Lots or pan· HUJTy to Y!C. DIAL 645-3000. are you wa.itlng on? Call less than ttnl! Call Dan Lee, PETTIT REALTY CO. !I ing .<XXI. 38EDROOM2BATH eling,.OCRmed r.eilings lhn1-*EXTRA NICE* NO\V!! Herira~e Real Esta le, Bill Grundy, Realtor $119. PER MO. out Really priced to sell 645-0303 Tulane Rd., 3 Bedrm home. ~().llSI <open evei;. l "The Ho8u311 Of Homes" 83.1 Dover Or., NB 642-4620 INCl.UDES TAXES ' 163:soo. . Oocup;ed by mollout'"' • CO&ATS 3-0lOl DECORATOR'S at Harbor Center MUST SELL \VantCoata Mesa~ Meri It . . adults & i!'!i spoUesa! Call HOME is -11pacious: a bed1'00f'll • OPEN OAIL.Y 2-S 2199 flarlxw Blvd .. C.l\f. now to ~e. WALLACE TO DIVIDE ESTATE ASSUMABLE Beautifutly dooe ." 5 BdnmL. home wtl111m!LSsivc stone . 626, Via Lido Nord WILL SELL REAL TORS l\lother's lovely homr, o•ir Low interest loan. 4 Bdl'm8 ·• Family rm. Xlnt street to . , fireplace-, built-in kitchen ti!)' Bayfront. 5 Bedrooms. 4 Newport -546-4141-loss, your gain. Excellent in-Ail f'll!C. kltch. Nl.'ar pa,l"k, street 45 n. Joi. ~"-designed for convrnience, Baths, pier & slip. $200.ln'.I. VA or FHA (0 vestment. Selling at appra~~ &ehools & i;hopping. $98500 ,1 fC!orttd air ~ailng .. big 3 nice 3izc bedrooms . over. •f pen Evenl"tl•) Colesworthy & CO. ed value. Finn S18.500. 187 Jusl Listed • S36.500 LIDO REAL TY INC. --r back)·ai:d for children -Pete Barrett \ sized Jivlni;-room _ llniiihed Victoria Magnolia St., C.M. ~lu!ll ICl' u:v.R:a!.kH~!~t~~~~nc 3117 Via Lido 673.7DI ,::•{'. close lo shonriing :ind REALTY and heated J11:arage -unique UNIVERSITY PARK flEALTOR 1o Appreciate. S<il-3751 • 3 BR n . •-1 d C th 0 11 ••• -1s Call Anytin1t! 0"'"'"""" • ....,n, 2\, Sa. Con-scuvv s an a c back Y. nrd \\'i!h raised deck-1.A1. 181 I ....,..,1. · ...........,..u I h h A -Near u c f & hnnnlng For Newport Beach Office ~~!!!!~~~~~~I temporary, A r ch It e ct ~. schoo_ ~ c .urc . ssun1e 1605 \Vestclilf Dr., NB lng • c.xccllen1 eas1 :i.idc lo-· · · ir; vr •· · SPARKLING 4 BEDROO~·r .: exl11ing 411<'0 an n ua I I.Al 5200 .,. 1· hort lk t W t (anytime) $.1,490 Dn .• buy 3 BR. 2 BA. 1028 Bayside Olive 2 BA ho C d I designed &: bit. Lo Int. r.., '.' '" • '(;"'!" ca ion · s \VB o es· home. A.~,ume 6.s% loan. 6T>493ll 642-7777 nH! -exceptlonal orona e Mar 1250 transferable I o 11 n. By percentap rate VA loa11 -11 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" cliff Shopping and back bay I "iiiijjjiiii'lj: "'iiijiiji residPnli11I a re a . lin· owner. Phone • 673-2854 for • Try ,25,500 -start pack-OVERLOOK -J ust listed. \.\'On't lasl wilhJ-10.1 Try lease/opt .• Sl.OOJ opt. Owner Must Sell m11.cul11tl" condilion _ Mm-For Sal• By Owner appt. ~ lni-. this financing. J,34,900. 1'i'tTTW311· monies. S325 per mon~ por-4102 BRISBANE \VAY plcte wirh cov. Tl at; 0 . House & g11.ra.ge apt on 1 lot. • , EXPANDING THE BACK BAY 546-2313 646-7171 ~o~~kapply. In lovely University Park-,Assume 5~% -S180 mo. Ea.ch 2 br, 2 ba. Rear unit B:A~":Ei~i 4;Rb~-i~~n, t FAMILY? B. "·" 2 •·ti 1 • ho 1 he 3 P.I.T.I. -b11.1nnce "23.''"" . current Income S215 mo. .-1 •• 4 IJ:" 0<..~.1rooms. .,.. is ........,.. ll!re. 1 a u I neatest "' UVI' furnishings, luvt:ly patio. 3 BEDROOMS pl11s huge family room. - 2 FINEST ltO~!E J\.ff!sa. Verde BR +either ram or din rm. term! 2.'i year~. Askin~ ChArmini;: front unit. Frplc, S 7 5, 000 , -c a.11 d a Y': -POOL fi1'f'pl111?1?. .J6 fl. covered landmark. OV1!rlookini;: Jakes as it is nmv fumillhed. Up-$31.500. Call 541>-3424 South hay \1·\ndow. pi~ paneling. 543-3861-nlghtll: 67~~ Enjoyed your rhUdrcn palio. fOm pletely rWrrorat-a.nd greens of country club. graded crptll, dl1l$ & situat· Coast Real U1are. Vacant & ready lo move In. ··,, lately? ·This honie is ,ed inskle & ou!. 2700 Sq. It. 1 .,...,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiii ... • I 3 Bdrm~. plus maid·• qlTII, Coldwell, Banker· & Co. ed on tha! beautiful "green For Sale By Owner. Price $:l:J,500 with $16,ln'.I desig1ll.'.d to bring a ta011ly of hoauly. $.\1,750 -O\\'ner I' p1u..~ den, huge game TU?m 550 Newport Center Dr. bl.'lt". S161 Mo. Pays All. doi\1l, Call 673-SZl8· Balboa Island 1355 .~ closer together. Beautiful \\"ill help linnnce. -UPPER BAY and plcluresque pool, Asking Newport Be•ch, Calif. Au ume. 6':0 FHA loan on BEAMS & BRICK A'lll lo wall c11rpl'ling · . 6-16-7171 E.'Cceptionally lovely harm! $155,000. 833--0700 644-2430 ~ 5C6·5!10 lovely 2 br ·I-conv. den. 2 So. or lilV)'. 2 BR. on R-2 lot, BEACH hoU!t!', older but per· -throughout, .11..p a ci o·us \llith ma.ster bedtwm. J~ fllllrcinMalhllW ha, dbl g1tr home on quiet at la.st year's price! Add feet for beach living. 2 Br + built-In. tiled dream living room. beautiful family $25 950 LLEGE REALTY street. Call MS-7594 unil &. lh-e "payment trtt". enclosed porch. Huge brick • r kitchen. wilh breakfa st -roon1 &. dining room. all • JSOOAdllMltMl!tw,('Jl 3 BR HSE. lg f.am rm + <2l $29,50'.>. fireplace, close to atorell. bar, coye~d paUo for out-opening to i\O IL pool & Assume 5 ~~. Loan 63xl00 Joi&. E. 20th St. CM. Hal P lnchln & Assoc. MORGAN REAL TY door gamrs; .ts' your rami-ll•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiii• lanai. Thi1; customh:ed, im· 1--~=~=~~-Beautiful home. Enlry hllll , WESTCLIFF $37,500 Si Slavin R J tr REALTORS 67'.Hi642 875-6459 ly 11Jorth '3(.950~ Sec it, Le HI maculafe 4 bedroom home ONLY $29,950 huge famUy room, oyel'llllt!'d Big 4 bdrm home on quiet -"=2-'222;;°'=======.1;3900;::,;;E". ;;Coas:;;l~l;;l"";'.;·;;6;;75-;<;;"";:i~";t~IO:E;::··,;eoa.t:;:;;,:H~wy~,:;;CdM~~I COSTA\~SA a pril'l!d a1 $67.500. Extra sharfl split-lev(!i N'pl. muter bPdrm, din1ng .rm, sf. Cor. loc1tlon amires • •.a&1>'Dj ·MS Lo\rely .derorator·, honw. MACNAB-IRVINE Beach Condo. N(''v cp~ .. Unest built-ln11. 5%3 apr. maximum privacy. Set> tltis Gener1I .. "'.! Mrsa Vr:,rde, 4 + family & 540-1720 1 od ~ 900 ~Realty Company dishwasher: sep. lndry. rm. e.."ce lent holnt!' t ay. S.'i0,000 1000 l General 1000 I General 1000 ••1 dining rooms. UXllmnth. Op. 1714 ) ,.2_8235 Low mainl. incl. exler. paint· TARBELL 2955 H•rbor ''Our 15th Year" (..'l)·down"40 •Vt!ts -lmv tion 4t $36.900. <Prine. only) .,.. down lo ~. wHh 001 DO\'et Drlve. Suite: 120 ing, i;:arclener. JIOOI privlleg-A Touch of Spanish WESLEY N. block ,.,-au f6(1Cft big, big ~ $C6·~&10 (714) 67S-l210 f'~. J\loUvatcd OWTll'r w/con-Walled pallo; 3 BR. + din. TAYLOR CO yard, lo\\'1 lo\1,;~·mcnts! ...-dnmsltl.tll) ltlID BaysKle Drive sider lease I ~Uon. Vacant + family+ lg!. room O\'tt You 'd bfttter ace this one. OLLEGE REALTY Newport Beach • slx>\.l'n Mytune. Take a ial'ai'!-Reductd to • Realtors , now!"").:. 11.:..::::-:~·:"':-:~1 :::::::;:::~~~~:;:::~:1 look~ (E:Vl!S, a@.7962) $47,900 Nt\VPORT CEf\'"'TER IJ Walker Rlty. 675-5200 2lU San .Joi1nuin 1-lills Rd. 3 BEDROOMS 'TRY ioo;. DOWN 2007 Santiago Drive 3366 Via Lido, NB OJ>!n Sun. 644--4910 -SH 1 ARP I ~ BR..·$2.'i.\QO. s~less! l\ew * Jt,\VE '! HOi\JES:: eBEACH BARGAIN• $11 .DO ...,.. ~1us1 Sell ONE!!?! EKept tht Ordinary TOTAL MO. PMT. rpu:., drll()PS, hltlns. lid. :; Bcdrnis, HUGE LTVf~C ()tlly $2S,900 _terms. for this Brand new . Ivan \Veils View llr1. 2 Baths. (Wner Int . 3 BR 2 •-'-··ly ~--w/ ho Do --< BR ou ha\'e 10 8Cf! Uils to ROO,\I, POOL \V/Jacuztl. · ...... IUVC'. '1l11'""· ITlt', ver ~..,res, , llflv~ it. All new Pi1v. swim club. \\'alk \o Jull t redct.'Ora led. SEE-built-inll. carpeUi & drapes. 3 BA. powder rm. family t•·· d hi all tchool1. 1 1100 000 h Eastside Bea11tv Steps to ocean. nn w/trple, walk in wet ~arpe .. ,. au e gor11;t, 11.C?ou l'Oni · omcs •• J CAYWOOD REALTY . d a.Ir heating, large lllbl.. TC,. on le&9'hold. Only 176,!QO! ! : Beaut. dt!'corated. 3 full aite .,~,.... H "B bar • .Eating area in kit + utlt·J• kitchen . eo.... ~nns.2BA.llv +tamlly. -w,eout. wy .• ,. lormaJdinrm.Many curt ullhlDY Jppoi.nted • 11 -===~N~·~M~A~Jm§N:!:l:'l ~ S.Cl·SllO 1""22 Patio, bl!aulitull)' land· e 548-1290 • kahm1. Roy J. Ward ReaJ-17l•lll' JI --' D to 11"' G·' Or ••• "-' I price $i2,i0tl. S.ll<r l""'""'"'-l ocaped Y~· hie ........ $30,800 r, .., ~""" . ~- n'Y· $21 LLEGE REALTY O,,.n Dally. .. -COUllTT'5 LARGUT ,500 '"""""'~"''''""" Auume 5'1•% SWIM POOL , ..,~~~~!':':I!~!! Loan apr. Enuy holl. family Caretr.e Living Park like )wd, 3 bdnn, 21' LARGE FAMILY? room. plu1 xtra t"e(ft8.tion Awa.tu yoo ln this lmmac. 2 baths. ~nfl')' hall, drtam room, JU the m v. home cus. bedrm A: family tm 1''1-ench Thia 2 story, 5 Bedrm, 3 Ba I ~·•-kllche'I. JlOPllar Door plan. 189) Newport Blvd .. CM tom catures, xtra ... u.... Quarter Condo. Re r r I 1. !)f(l.1721) home with farm.al dining rm CALL 646-3928 EVes. 548-6769 s.tQ.tTZI wtistiet'/tlryer Incl. Owner TARBELL 2955 H•rbor &: family rm Is the. best c:lof· TARBELL 2955 Harbor• movln"" out o( st.ate, make lar value in I.he atta. $36,8XI 1001 R t • SEASHORE DRIVE n!A-VA l•nnHvoUablo. 10 e urn HAPPINESS oUor! OCEAN VIEW Fuller Rlty. 546-4114 3 51.,. commercial. °""" . $23,500 FWn. Dupleic. Dbl. ga~ NEWPORT DUPLEX IJIO\.'t~ out of arta. _ wlU Is havtnc: a room ror ~ PERRON 642-1771 fmmo.cullltf!! $4_.r930 12) S BR. Apts. fully lellM:d. can:v lln1 1'0 al et~ vtl')' own. See this 5 bdrm Hom• & Duplex $27,500 i itL 0 ... lltgs George Williamson $.\5.950, Low dOwn. Ownt!'r Uona.J lntr:re1l rate. Good lo-2 bath home al $32,950, E-sktt 3 Br, priv 6% loan, trd Joi • ":. •i:O ll&ALTOR wllt comider TD'& u ""'" "''~"· Coll 5G-8424 souu. CAUDELL REALTY tor c1'u Iw<. Le"fnr atta. 2629 HARBOR , . BDULEYARD 546-8640 ""-------'1671-4350 673-1564 E.vt1, ~ wlcdays. Coast"''" Eoi>Je. -Eves, fll5.3310 o ..... lbkl'. ....nlO. S.©\\~lA--L£'B~s· The Puule wiflr tire Builf./n Chuc!le O R.eormnga Jettm cf "the ,-,---..... --. four scromhled wotdt h. law to form fOllf slm le word&. BET.ROD ~r T.._U_.M_0.._~-'--'1 1 ~ Lll'11.1 r e "\rl.\s~~!Ws l!TTE.IS IN I' I' ,. I' I' r I &. '!1~~~.~~E IITTDS . I J I I I I I SCRAM·UTS ANSWER IN CLASSIRCATION 9000 • 1 , l ----·------~----~-·-------------·---------- 22 DAil Y PILOf HOUSES FOR SALi T11esd11, M11th 17, 1970 HOUSES FOR SALE RENTAU , RINTALS -------16-20·1 _Houses Unlurnlohed Apt._ Fumishecl 2 P!!· Unlurnl..,od_ ~I._ Unfurnltliod Apto. Unlurn1"1od Aplo._ U_nlurnl"1od _ REAL ESTATE Gener11I ------1 Rl!NTALS I RENTALS RENTALS I RENTALS ~-~· 5·100 Costi Mit• 5100 Cost• Mes• 5100 Cost• M_!!..•_ 5100 _R_oo_m_•_l_or_R_•_ni __ st_ts Huntington IMch 1400 Soni• ~· -----Newport 811ch 3200 Cost1 Mtu 4100 lmmtcfl1t1 Potusslon BEST BUY I Walk To Beech ONLY $23,500 1 ** N'E\V J BR. f.amlly, din- You can auume lhil 5" '°"" LARGE 4. BEDROO!'of in;:, 2 Ba!h Mme. Com· ernment loan ~~lh ONLY 1'4 Ba. hd~'d firs, IAthe I: m~nlty pool &: clubhouU:. $5.0Cll and paymtnts under pla.slt'r, l."OV patio, doae to $350 per mo. tsrt Pon $200 for e\-ery1hlng. Squffky 5C'hoo1s. Immac:'. Charles IHa.rbor VI e w dean 3 ~room. 2 bath with HAFFDAL REAL TY Homes) 12lll 673-4601 * * SUNNY * ACRES * ankle dttp stiq carpet, sep.-&42-4405 FRJ::SHLY painted 3 Br. 2 arate family room, modem ========"" Ba Duple:< nr bc:h. Nu cpl.5. 1 •linal So. Gt o.c. built in kltC'hen, d!.shwuher Laguna Beach 1705 Bltns ... $2:£1 mo lea1e . F.tlr&rounds , * Motel-Apts * and fireplace .. ,\Vhat t>.lse 5.f0-7'513 Shuflo' 1 ledrooms could you want '! BLUE LAGOON JUsr Built. Harbor View $l 2 WK & UP Orange County'J Mort Beautiful WE SELL A HOME CONDOMINIUM Home. Lge 2 sly, 4 BR .. for. "-W •• M t" Apart1neut Community EVERY 31 MINUTES Beau!lful 2 BR, 2 BA. just maJ dlnini rm & family rm. ~Y· •••·. on " Featuring a club almosphere tor your co1n- walker & Lee att'ps to beach. 2 s1Yimm.lns gardner. $450. 546-5891. •Kitchens ·· TVs incl. fort and pleasure -just completed I or 2 pools and tennis courts. Pric.. :; BR. 1 BA. Crp!i, di'ps, encl : ~':ii s:~~ h:~a'a1 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Furnished or Unfurnished. 1682 EdtJtier l!!d to 6C11 at S49.500. e.au yard. vie 3 gchools. $200 2376 NF.WPORT ILVD. Air-Con d., soundproofed , self cleaning o\'ens, ~r A'50clates 494-U77. mo. 333 Pirate Road. hernn ceilings, d1Sh \vasher1 Ju .sh landscaping S42·~45.l 54 0- 5 i 4o 1.:========/ &1s.-u:i~9 543-9755 with streams & waterfalls, elevators. BBQ 's, FOREST E. Apertments for LOVELY TWNHSE v.·f,·il!!wol SUS CASITAS clubhouse lvilh social activities, saunas, Ja-, 0 L S 0 N Sa l• f980 pool 2 Bdrm 2 Ba lrplc, Ira: Furn. 1 BR Apts. Adults cuui & swim pool:r;, private garage w/stor· ----------\ . .,~ """'" only, no pets.. 2UO Newport F $14" •210 patio S27:'>. A1ent ........... Blvd, c.r.1_ 00.9286 age. rom v-.., . ** 14 Delu:xe Apts. For enjoyable Mrroundlnigs cattrh•t to dis· Principals Only. Call Newport Heights 3210 MERRIMAC WOODS ccrninig adults, come to MERRIMAC WOODS ••• Inc. JUalton 6#-0315 l'-'"-"'-""-'-C""---. --FUrn utiits avail. Sde ad un. Jutt ••tt of 2600 Harbor llvd., nr. Nabers Cadlllac AUTO FIXERSll --------10LXE. 3 BR. 2 Ba. D"'. rm., dor clus '100. 42S Mur; 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COSTA MESA e 545-6300 SECLUDED RENTALS lpl, cpts., drapei. $350 mac \Vay. 545-6300 EVERYTH ING NEW-MOVE IN NOW! * GRAND OPENING * New and Dramatic as a Spanish CasUe EL CORDOVA APTS Think you've seen great apartment5? We have all th e nice features as follows : * HEAT!D POOL * REC HALL * OISHWASHERS * BAR·B-QUES * SHAG CARPET'G * GARAGES MANY OTHERS! I & 2 BR's-FROM $145 For Adults Only 2077 Cherie SI. * 545-0376 (Just 400 fl. W. of Harbor Blvd. off Hamilton) Coste Me111 5100 Huntington Beach S400 -------MARTINIQUE Spacious grounds w/ park· like SU1TOUndin1s. wt pri. vacy, Patios &: pooJa. Nr. r>hopplng. Adults only. Quiet. 1, 2 & 3 BR. Deluxe Apts. Al.SO fURN, BACH. 1m Santa Ana Ave, c.~t. ftlgr, Apt 113 &J6.~2 ON BEACH! e SINGLES FROM $140 Just l\'hat you've been look· Houses Furnished t.lo/leaM.. Agent 6Th--1662 ,.. QUIET 2 Bdrm Duplex. 'i'i~f':\"::""'""'""'""'""''j"~"'!!~~~~~~~ in~ for! No complaining ---------Bltn!. gaNi" -tio E llide RENTALS - netchbors! C.Orner lot 140' Rentals to Share 2005 Univ•rsl;; Park 3237 Adult~. nc:p'.ea:-· · · Apts. F urnished ~M __ •_•_• ____ 5~ 2 BR Unfurn. Ne\vly dee. 1;P~:C:::~~~sN::1~ Roor.rr.1ATE \Vanted. Girl ---361.8 Ogle. &12-1298 -c-.-,~ •• -.·-d-,-l-M-.-,--4-2sO LUXURIOUS-NEW ~n~;~d1;, !~ts~~%0 e 2 BR 1 ~~ BA FRO\f $..?25 e 2 BR 2 BA FROM $260 e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 Carpets-drapes-Oi1hv.-asher heated. p:iol-sauna.tennis ttc room-ocean vM!:w&- patlos.ample parkin;;. Secul'ity guards. f'URN. also Avail. painted in and out. 3 bed· v.'llflts to move to C.M., S.A., 3 BR. 2 hathi; .••.•.•. $325 * F'URN.1 Br. Quiet & nice, ----------mo. 2283 Fountain \Vay E. room home ps with It. Tw;tln, or N.6. to be close 3 BR. 2\.1 bathg ........ $340 $120-$130. FURN. Studio, SllD NE\V Pain! & crpt. t br. up· $ 50 $ IHarbor, turn \Y. of l.olv, low down takes over to \\'Ork. Gas proh.ib!tlve 4 BR. 2 bath! ......... , SllS per nio. Adults, no pets. per apl !or adult . Patio, 1 & 170 \Vilsonl. \Vilson Garc!ens existing FllA loan. l\'o qua!. no"" Reply to Box J\125, e Rid Hill Rialty 213;) Elden Ave .. Apt 6, Cl\f garden. 642-1216 All Utilities Paid Apts. ifv;n&. Inquire 962·5585. Dsily Pilot tJnlv. Pa.i·k Center, Irvine 1 BR. Sitting rm combo. 2 BR. J\fargucri!e. So. of l & Z BR. 2 ~w:r.i pools HUNTINGTON PACIFIC Til OCEAN AVE .. H.B. (714) 536-1487 SHARE beaut bomt', film rm prlv ba &: patio w/ktt. priv. ~leaa. Vt'rde a.rea . Rer;p. v.·orkinc v.-oman lw/1 child OKI MG-ClJ7 e LANDLORDS e FREE RENTAL SERVICE Broker 534-6982 rtJRNISJIED room for lady only. Kitchen privlle1es. 1998 Oraflit, C.l\f, $15 per wk up w/ kitchen. $30 wk up •(Its. 1376 Ne\vport Blvd, Cl\-t. 543-~m ROO:O.I to Rent. Student pref. Kitchen priviJ. $60 per mo. Isl &: last mo in advanc:t. &IS.-7886 alt 6. Guest HomH Sitt NIKOLSKY Rest HcrM tor ambulatory lactlts. ~732 SAYB ~ASII J-· Adul n1 ts JUST Con1pleted 2 BR. 2 Sina:le \Vorking Girls wish call Anytime 833-0820 Ptlv. ba & ~ntr. Kitehen. HI\)'. S200 mo. No children. Is 0 Y, '>O pe • Crpl:s, drps. bit-ins. $155 962·5585 19131 Brookhurst Huntina:ton Beach to she.re their apt & ex· All ut11 paid. Business 1'1an 612-7898 307 Avocado st., C.t.t. nio. 2~;,1 Elden Av c. penses. 2 house5 from 3 BR. 2 baths .......... .$295 pn!f. Call 548-6355 See J\fgr on preml.61!s 642_309'1 Ocean. Ca.JI 67~929 alt. 3 BR. 2 baths .......... $340 S83 & UP. Very nice I & 2 l ido Isle 4351 <Behind K·Mart oft Harbor 5:30. 4 BR. 2 baths .......... $315 BR Trlrs . 132 \\'. \V i\son, --------· --atcorne!'Rutgen&Avocadol l BR S130, 2 Br v.·/fenctd *LARGE new 1 Br. 'vithl ~ loads of stora.ge, dre5sing room, Pullman b al h, • . .- Dishwar;her. Bit-Ins, Shag carpeting, Pvt Palio. 1 blk COUNTRY LIVING Jl>eat as a pin l bedroom, 2 bath beauty. Huge yard !or th! kids with a"ing M!t in- clu~. Home has huge, eorgtoUB living room "'ilh brick fireplace. New dttp pile carpets. r.lodem eJec. tric kitchen. Great covered patio. Beautiful btt . lined street. F U L L PRJCE is $21,950. with small dov.-n, t~ tal payment of $182 includes all. CALL WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2700 Harbor Blvd. al Adams M5-0465 Open 'tll 9 P?>I BUSINEs.5 Couple will r;hare 3 BR. Z baths .......... $325 :'HS-S5TI. l:t: E. l7th, c;i.1, LARGE l room apt., kit.. Da) 642-3.»5, e''e 645-0283 patio iwo. Crpts, drps & ftf.is.sion Viejo view bomr e RED HILL REALTY 6U-\.2G5 gar. ut il incl. On Bay. $200. blt-inr; 642--7219 ever; &: U . Puk "Ant,.r Irvine AIM> laking gum mer HARBOR wknd~. v.·/t1ldt'r person or pe~n!. niv. .""" ' $150 • DELUXE 2 BR. resenoatlons. 838-0228 1100 mo. ~1525. • Oill Anytime 833-0Sal S""cious. Ideal for 2 men, --===-====== •DELUXE I & 2 BR Garden r · -Apls. Bit-ins. piiv patio, Female roommate "'anted to El T 3244 Pool. 1993 ChurC"h. 5-1&-!Mill Balboa Isla nd 4355 TOWNHOUSE heated pool. trplc. Adults share 4 br apt., N.B. oro TRAILER 2 BR. ldtal for $14.5 mo. 546-5163 $62.50 mo. Call 67fHi374. SUB-Lea!e April 1. Aui. I. 4 rollc;i:e sludenl, $100 mo. GARAGE Apt. l bdrms.,l I=--;;=:----=---;;:=-;= "'"!800 bath. \V1th boat sli p. $350 2217 Harbor fll!ar '\'Uson 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath, l.al'l:e \VOr.IAN will r;ha~ Cd~f hr, 2 ba , many xtras. Call 612-337.5 or 01<>"' rooms. Xlnt area. children home with re s Pon r; i b I e Sacrifice S200 mo. 830-5829 2 BR. Dclu.xe modern. beam· Bill Grund)'. Rea.H"r 6·12-1620 • 2T!:n~u!8·s:dio o.k. v•orking girl. 675-19n ed c:eUings, pool. $169 ~i..fil:ll C d I M 3250 Huntington Beach ~00 •·Heated pool • Adults only GIRL 21 or o\·er to share orona e ar $155. .. 6·IZ..T508 • No pets. Adj lo shopping SPLIT Level 2 BR. Crpt.s, turn. 3 BR. ap~. Nll·pt CUTE J Br home: unurrual e NASSAU PALMS • NE\\' 2 Br. 2 BA apl. Crpts, drps, bltns. No pet!, 2885 Beach. Call 6"i'5-6885 alt S. frpl.; din.· area: built-in 1 I: 2 BR. pOO;,,, .,.,.,, drps, liv rm & din rm turn., Mendm:a. M>.>:121 YOUNG man lo share 2 BR kitchen: nice pat.lo. Sc:enic 177 E. 22nd St. .....__.... dshv.·hr, patio. Beacb Blvd. HARBOR GREENS ~,~B~R~ll~J;;~m-0-.-C.~rpo.....,1'~& apt, Santa Ana area. $43.50. Properties 675-5726 1 BR apt. Gas & water pd. & Edlnser. $l!Jj mo . APARTMENTS dJ'afl"S. Close. to freeway & AU 4 pm. 543-4307 DELUX'E 3 BR. 2 Ba., crpfll, $120 mo. No child~n, no ~"='"~l06='-,.,-"7'=== Bachelor, 1.2 &-3 BR. Furn/ So. Coa i;t Plaza. 8:~\}..2132 --di·apes, trpl. $290 fl1ontli pets. 54~59'.11 C.t.I. 1 BLK to ocean. 1303 \\'alnut. unf.. From SllO &: up. Gar· QUIE~'l"fREA • Bcaul. Ir~ 2 Costa Mesa 2100 Ago"! 6.,,l662 2 BR. Achil tr., See ,,!gr. 219 den patios e Beam ceilgs l==~~ .. ~~,;;~=ol;:;:=::-;;:=:;:---;;;;;;I BR,ap. 998 El Camino Dr., 1 1 Ca ell" ti L 4200 15th SL 11.B. frplcs • Rec Rms e 2 Pools CJ\!. S4&--04Jl, 637•9~5 3 BR; poo: year Y· m ta --· B h 3400 N•wport Be11Cn -========='I Salmas e Nurse"' School ~=""'~~=="""'"°"" to shoppin& & \\·alkin; dlistance to beach. Adult1 only. 8$2 r'Uanta. H.B. 536-2'00 SPACIOUS 2 BR. Upr;tal1·s. Carpets. drape:s, bltns. Ne1v tile & paint. 2 kids OK. All util. pa.ilf. $150. Nr. Beach Bl\·d. & Adams 2110 t'LORUJA 5.J6..0091 ROOill\' 2 &-3 br's. Ctptd & drpd. Nt.\\'IY decor. 3 br .. dbl attach gar &:: frplc . 3 blks from bch. 536-lnl 2 BR. crpll, drps. bltru;. Patio. $1.30. mo. 1.)01 B Alabama. 53&-7210 NE\V 1 BR. CARPETS, DRAPES. Lo. Al Klng, Jonell. Realty. Huntlnglon1 _i:~•:!o~c~~~I;:;:::'.:"::-;;::::;:-----., "LARG" 2 B t•• "· 1 ,. Ph, 673-6210, Eves. 61~. 0 •oo 3 -, 1,, b Nowport Bi1ich Laguna Beach 4705 Fain & Adult sections, Im-~ r, ,, °"' s .u 10 SELLING C N . r. ;::i a, GRAND med, oecup, l700 Peterson ~pt. No pet!.. $150. 726 Joann 2 Bdrm gar patio Quiet fro-v.·ashcr. dJYer, pool, clbhse. LOWEST RENT \\'ay, C~J Nr Hrbr & Adams. SL S.t&-l5&4 YOUR HOME plcarsening for adults 1 Blk Adl1~ $190 mo. 67~ aft VILLAGE INN-WKLY. t.fO. 546-{)370 $103 l BR, Rar. drpg, ref, stv, The Lindboi'i Co. 536--25'9 LARGE. clean 2 Br . .tpt. Adults. Closed gar a i e i . 2608 Ene:land St.. 5.16-1205 AITRAC. 2 Br. nu r:pts: drps, all extras. pool. $149. ~7310. 8-17-l:i:l~ i;hop5 $185. 541-04.52 4::W OPENING 1-2 J'll!!l'!Oni; or t<nl fn nu!y, 'Q"u"1cg·'<'r°"'&"L"ux""UR'°"10'-u"-s' rpl or elder person, no ') ---\VALK lo btach from this '* '1:>4·91:6 ' ADULT LJVING AT... child, pets. ;,.is-72:i7 e Mesa Verde 2110 delightful 3 Bednn home. IMMEDIATE PAKORAJ\'llC view o\'erJook· HAC IENDA HARBOR 2 BR clm;e·in. G&ritl&:t'. No O ~ Years E."pe.nence J\IESA VER.DE HO\JE $235 mo. A\•allable April 1st. ing Ali50 Beach, 2 Br !urn.. Brand New 1 a: 2 BR. peti •. No childrtn. Older cpl e FREE APPRA!SAL.S Beautiful 4 br. pool, formal Agl!nt 546--4141 all i>lPt·. fllaturc aclulti;. no SW(l & $'170 per mo w/ pref. $125. 5'18--0401 :! &. J BR. 2 BA, pl1. pa~o. heated pool, '~'Uhtr & dl)'er hook up. 962-8994 0 NO OBLIGATION din. rm. $400. 54&-0031 OCCUPANCY children. no pets $195 n10. all utilities incl LARGE 2 BR. Cpti. drpi., BRASHEAR REAL TY ;;'~°:=7'.;~~=~~J!:F~ou~n~t~•~ln~.~V~o~lli_.111~.;34~10 Eves, 199.3155. Bltns, shag crpts. drps, aar. hit-ins. Garage. Adults, no 1 ;;s';;";;t;;e;;A.;;n;,;o;;;;;:;;;;~56~2~0 M7~ Eves. 968-1178 B11lboa laland 2355 3 BR 2 SA. Bltn~. crpt~. Luxury carden apartments beaJJI. la.ndscpg. Sorry no prt5. $12.), 6~6-5.."09 eves. --·-·- LAST ONE LEFT! I FURN. 'tod, i Bl', 2 Ba. drps: fncd , encl patio. S23.l C1fferini' complete prlvscy, RENTALS pets. tnq at Ofc. by pool or NE\V Dix 1 &: 2 Br. Sha: crpt, VILLA MARSEILLES $17,900 FULL PRICE " ~S-2286 kd beautiful landscapina:: & Apts. Unfurnished apt No. 9· 241 Avoca.do. t1rp1. bltn5, immed. oc:ep. I BRAND NEW Dock. ~o pet&. Ava.ii to !.11°·_ w ys, f'\"t"S unparallded nicreaUonal --···--642-29'l;), Eves. 646-0979 Fmm S150. 540-1973, 54~2321 SPACIOUS Low, low payments, $113 per June 20. $300 mo. 67>7880 ;..10--5844 facilities In a country General 5000 month tor this 3 bedroom, 2 club atmospbet'I!!. No'" _ STUDIO APTS. 3 BR .studio. Frpli·, lae patio, 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. bath beauty v.ith rich, thick Duplexes Furn. 2975 Condominium 3950 leasinc in Nelvport Beach. 2 Bedrooms • 2 Baths pool. ~aun11. $200. Adult Living carpeting, Last one in this VEN DOME Carpets&: dra)'le5. Garage 546-0370 Furn. & Unfurn. pri~ taJ1ie. HURRY! tnl-$110 • Duplex for bachelot 3 BR. 2 bi. crpt, 1 car. gar, ~itodels open l O 11.~ tf> 8 pm 3.19 & 3.13 Cabi'illo • Dishwasher . c:olo1· coordinat. Jl.fEDIATE POSSESSION. All utilities, yard. ' 1100! & clbh~e ava.il. $225 Renti from $lla.S..1lO Sl7:J Per r.1onth ''. Cll' eel appliances . plU!ih shag WE SELL A HGME Bkr 534-6980 mo. M0--6339. Furnli;hed or unfurnished UlMACULATE APTSt $165 On LeaFc Newport Beach 5200 c<at.,....t _ choice of 2 CtJlor 3 B t ADULT & FAMlLY ------.-EVERY 31 MINUTES 'RENTALS I DELUXE .r .. crri i;, Oakwood SECTIONS AVAILABLE •· &7!·&050 0 DELUXE 2 hr. 2 ba , condo. schemes • 2 baths -stall W lk & L H U f • h d drpii d~bwhr, poO). Avail • k --. showen; • 1nirrol'ed ward· a er ee ous•s n ur111s e Ap~ii 1_ !162-7170 Clo'• to ghopp1ng1 Par IWll"'•W!Ja.-. F'rplc. \Y/w crpt, drps. robe doors • .indirect light . • Sp.Clo"' 3 Br., • Ba bll-ins. SWlmming pool. 7682 Edln&er 842--4455 540-~lfrl $33,900 3 Bedroom, 3 Baths. former model. Good locntion. 68 x 103' Block "'ailed lol Ex· e!llent land!caping w i I h sprinklers front &: rear. u~ rnded top of the line, cat- peta, dnpes A. applianceg_ $20,500 Full Price Huntington Beach Area Sharp 4 bedroom. 2 bath home-. Large country style kitchen wlth electric built ins. Great play area Ior th~ kids. Assume f .H.A. loan with total payments o[ ~1l3. Submit yoW' do\vn payrrient to WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MI N UTES Walker & Lee 2TOO Harbor B\\'d. at Adami; 5-15-9491 C¥n 'lil ~ Pt.I BY ~ner. 3 BR., 'Z\~ baths, lge. f1m. rm . wltrpl. Din . rm. Liv. rm ''"/C'a lht<lra.l cell. Ouutanding: la.ndscr g. $8,900 !':.'!{· to a!riUlm 6':1. V.A. Prin ci pal s only !ltii-om ~ GI No Down 3 BR. 21; BA. elec ~11, y.•f lots ol cabl~a. Nt"1v vinyl tilt', t'rpts, drps, llll'£f; pa- tio, 70' lo•. BRASHE4R R EAL TY 147.S::.Oi E"e.s: 411-3769 1MERIDITH GARDENS ant value in Ulb t"lc:tllent neighborhood! HUG E, ep- ante f1mi.ly room v.· 11 h G I 3000 S G d ' • i""' in kltchen • b~akfast enera RENTAL ar en * 2 Bedrooms putting~en, Iuxu r iou s ,,. Apts Furnished c: lm Pool p l/'1'ffn THE NEWPORT landscaping, pool niainl. bar • huge pl'i11ate tcnl-ed **RENTALS** • A t t ! F-~1. Indiv'nn~ry fac'ls Ltr.\'URlOUS Adults pref. No pe:ts. Nei>.1· p;itio. plush JiTl\J.scapin; Furn, Bachelor Apt •••• $11.l General 4000 par men 5 1845 Anahilm Ave. f;AROEN APTS. Ne\\JKlrl Bay. $170 illonthly brick Bar·B·Q's. la11:e heat- ful'n. 2 BR Apt·····•·• $1001------ 1 ---1 COSTA JllESA 642-:?82~ Pvt. Patios, I-teated Lanai Lease. 548-6li9 ed pooli & lanai. Uni. 2 BR Duplex •·•• Sl45 s·ing e 1700 16th St reet pool. 360' Private Bearh -3101 So. Bristol St. Uni. 2 BR HoUf.~ •••• .$140 .., J Betlr'm !17.)..$275 BAYFRONT (~!i ~ti. N. of So. Coa t Plual Uni. 1 BR Cottage ••·· $150 714: b4l·S I l0 • RENT • • 2 Bedr'n1 $325-S::OO z BR. 2 BA Lu."<UTY Apts. Santa An11 Unf. 2 BR + Oen "· • $165 3 Room s Furniture .. 2 Bedr'm & dtn S®.l Priv. terrac:e, elevators. sub-PHONE : 557·8200 R.~.'1Al>NIAYTEO,l~RRSv1c.E Adults "OT $19.95 & UP !119 Ba ysirle Dr, 6i3-84l4 ttrranean pk'g. All elec.1 ~=======":!' " ~n.r.. BAYCLIFF M EL Pool. llOft v.·Ater. docks. 3121 - • Free to Landlords • LO\V \VEEKLY RATES ..., :'.Qnth-To-1\li~lh Rentals ORLEANS APTS. \V, Coast 1-hyY, Newport. Laguna B1ach 5705 Slue Be:acon Rental Findeni Kitchen, T\7's. maid service. \VIDE SELECTION &12·2202 43.l W. 19th St. CM 645-0lll ~n~:~n~.·f;rn~~ Heated P~J6.I. 7..,""'~ NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. DELUXE 2 BR. \Vestclifl 100 CLIFF DRIVE HERE'S ANonIER ed and ~uifumi.shl!!d, ,v!th l----"---'-:::~-::c-,.,,-llP"RC Furnllure Rentals 2 &: 3 BR a\'aLI. Adults only. Loe. Pool & bu I It-l n 5 $l71J..l BR. 11; BA. $1S.5-2 Br, 3 bedroom, 2 bath for rent. RENT 517 W. 19th, Ct.I 548.J181 Adull!i. 1195 nio . 110 lease. 11i 6.\. Cr;it~. d1-p~. bl tins. complete Pl'ivacy al'ld land· LOWEST 1741 Tushn. CJsla ~Te!a View of Ol't'll!l, \\"alki11• dis.-Owner traruofelTl!!d says ttnl o•aped '°''"''"" club Alrra~· SSl'l-1 BR . ove:rlookini; bay, 1 12 642-6774 h Do bl .... J VILLAGE INN-WKLY, i\10. · 1 · ii gr. l\Irs. Carson, & -4&ll tanc:e to 1011·n. Al'° !urn. 11,t Sl!IO per mont . u e •"'"' Including ST;i0,000 utihtiC!~ Jl<l.ld . g10'''• re rig. C OUS 3 8 • "· Garage. Nice kitchen. Slop 1-2 perso~ or sm family, erator. Bkr 534.fi980 SPA I r. ~ ..... crpt!I, Bach,.lor, l·c1;> lar1e SliO b" at wot1h of reC"reauonal facll-La,guna . 494-7201 I========= .,.-...,-,..--...--0.,.---· 1 drps. lrplc, bit-ins, 1 blk to 494·2-IA:J or 4!H-5303. J it.esde5i"ne~andoperat.ed 2 BR, l',i BA. \\·Jw beach$2T:l.G46-4391 \VALKER & LEE juat for single 1ieopl... 1 ~ blk to ocean. 3 BR. 2 BA, Costa Mesa 5100 c1rpeling, forced air heat, :=====::-:-:::=::=::. I-BR. Apt, Unfurn. 2790 Harbor Blvd at Adam:s, RENTS FROM ~27:i yrly lse, Avail April 5. blt-ing. $1~5. mo. 984 E. do\vnto1vn. ~ase .... $1 73 Co!la !11eu Sl.f5 10 S:.:00 J\lr. Gunder:son owr/bla· Harbor Heigh ts Apts. C11mlnn, C.;\l. B rok r. r N __ •_w~po-rt_H_e_ig~h_t_• __ 52_1_0 1 ',·",~onA~t.'. -~~~~~~::. ~3~ S16.l-for gracious living 2 673-6210 fi.oomy-Delux~ ~ & 3 BR. ~2~~2:? TRT-PLEX Sl60 mo. 3 BR . BR. :se:parate dining room, NEWPORT BEACH 2 BR furn &: ~•nfurn Jlome atmosphere incl gar'°. Sl50 +sec, deposit. Clean 2 frplr. crps, drps, bltni, encl l·BR turni:shed duplex, frpl .. redeCtJrated. Bkr. 534-6980 ll!O IRVINE AVE. Sl50-$1ii Cpts, rlrps. bltn5. I5rc0d 1a.ir htg1• bllns.1,1C1' k10 Bdtlll Ouplr..-... Crpts/drp.o. palso. rar. 675-3708 t\•r.s. f\~;~0~e~EALTY'''.,(M.~~~ --lRVlN" AND !6lh rool. pa!K>. 1.i25 Placentia. · · · rwy, siopg, 1iC ·par · s!v-rel, encl patio. Jnlant 3 00 ° !B Ba'-GI I IV I S~IALL 1 BR npprr. l'l1turc Co5ta ~e_s_• ____ l_ I (714) 645-0550 f URN. "'' u1 il. _E•cllelor J~a'i~i:r) ";;n~~l • ~~~: 3~1 0 1\ 22~4-A State. &12-7472 ::irlult:i; r>nty. $100 '"/t1lil. ii p!. Al'aJI 1\prll t~t. $137.50. Cinnanion Ave. 5<l6-lOJ4 \\'ANTED: l nice family. 2 :>1400-I 3 BR. 2 BA dble car. Bll·tns. Floor to ceiling stone fire- place. 8' Block v.11.11 fenced yard. C.Or lot v.ith side gate for boat. etc. Tract POOL I: REAL ESTATE · Gen•ral CLUB. Being ttflO\•ated.. $215 l('J 245 mo. M.2·2221 any- GARDEN GROVE 13100 Olapman Ave. (4 blkJ \V. Santa Ana. f\\iy.) (714) 636-3000 ANAHEIM time, 640-9666. NO\V LE.\SING FOR $100 VERY plt>asa:nt I BR illARCH OCCUPANCY \\"/\\' C<ll'!>"lf, older couple, :.r.7 So Brookhurst maybE retired rarpenltr, II blk, So of Lincoln) t'abintt or tile man. ahle to ln4) 'rn-4500 remodel Box ~-1sg1, Daily South Bey Club Pilot. 01 3 BR home. garage, tenced.l -~=A=~="'=t"m"e"n""t-:s =-I yard. No pe!!(. $175 mcnth. The GORGEOU5 New Avall "°""· 5'8-2003 Bla. VAL D'ISERE SPAOOUS Del Ct'rro Home, Single·l br·7 M" Furn.-unl. near So. Coa1t Plat11. $285 Sauna, Act'y R111 , Billiards mo. 347-0933. 545--0333 Therapy &. 4r pool. BBQs ==~-"-'""-"'""====51 200'! P11:"Mns Rd. 6424!670 Me1a Dtl M a r l lO ==-"'""-"'""-'----$i.S.81'che.l or quart e r •, l BR 2 Ba.. l& tnd yd. bllnS. utilllle.~. IL!ll!!ns, wt t k 1 Y w/w r.ptt. drp&. nr au maid &en•ict Bk'r M4-63SO r;chls . Chldm/pell ok. $2aQ, 847~TI$6 Coste Mesa 4100 !32J Placentia. NB Bi', l1 : BA. New crpls & ... OCEANFRONT . Roollt.5 • drp~. \\"/D hook-up. G11r. "'""'Y ""hi •ummu. Fairway VIiia Apts Allor 3 & wk-<ods ,.._"" Call 642-1265 2 Br $140. Separate unit, at· OCEANFRONT 3 Br, yrly. Near Oranae C<>. Airport 1.. !ached i&rage, carpels & (""ill If'\ Se unfurn.l UCJ A:lul!J. C1nly 2Ql%2 dr:i pes, gar d' n r r No Agtn' 642-JSSO Santa Ana Al'~. 545-.~:J.J rhl]dren or pets. 6-IS.-:!llS THE Sl'N' NEVER .SETS on J BR 011pl'x $105. Quitl Cla!!llied's action po1\·e.r DELtr.\L Z BR Bltns. v."/1\• f or an •d to ~ell around the · crpts, pr1v patio, $135 mo. r.lock, dial 6~2-56iE. Eves &. 1vknds 6.J6.-6112 .;aMtn <1!n1o~phtN'. La11ntl _g11 rdener. "" pets or c:hildl't'n "-1&-7118. Unlv1rslty Park 5237 R1nt11ls Wanted 59'0 VIE\V Cond. 3 Hdnn 2~1 Bath &, fam room, Adj to park. Close to 1chls, pool &: rte area. $7i5 me. 6-16-7?86 E ast Bluff 5!42 ------ COUPLE w/1 C. year old boy "'"' to rent 3 bf'dmom hotllie ,v/yard & gara8". BC11h "-Wking. Child in school. Hnsb<lnd same job i yeat'I. ace J9. "·ile 77. NO more than $135 per mo. \\111 takt '.! BR Studio. 2 Bath ro1~1ler Jeue option w f rent a 1 rn1. trplc, plu&h crpl':. !'tll· payments applying to down ins, small patio. 2 car ,arg payment. call 6U-3M4 eves ~~j{l mo. 644-249l & v.·kend1. TO\VNHOUSE--r-;t"w lrg. '2 '2""1"vo=r"kID"1=--=g"ir'°l•°"loo-::;:kID;:. =a•ro-=r 2 BR. 21; Baths. lrp!c. Pncl Bdtm rurnishtd apt. 1n gar. S300 mo. 675-5033 NE'\vPORT BEACH or LEASE. 2 BR. 2 BA spilt Costa J\lesa ytarly. (Have lt:i\"l!!I 1ownho115e. Bar k Bay qu iet. clean. e bed t en c e · VI"'\\'. S250. mo. 6-l.J..4U~ train~ do1:J . To $160. Corona def Mir ~¥ 5150 Rtsponil ble, have reJe~ncl!!s. Pl~ call after 6 Pl\I. 540-8308 Fl REPLACE. large FOR• Newport Bl•c.h 3200 1'1 0 N TIC E LL 0 con- MAL DINING ROOM, t -...:.--:-::----domlnlum. l RR . Cpl&, s pael11u1 ti.droom.<1, 2'-' B/B Orps. Sto\'e. Relr 11. ~!;,._ ON TEN ACUS 1 A 2 BR. Fw-n .Ir Unf'llrn nrepl•t'ft / pr1v. patlos / f"oQJi.. Tennll • Contnt"l Bkfst.. ~ Sea L&M, COS' M~611 ll\facArthlU' nr, eo.11 Hwyl blitha. elepnt kl!chM. Sh<'N'6 Adults o ,,ly DI h ~Ir. \\'i.!.herldryer, better than • modtl! \'OU J BR 2 ba.tN ~plil iev.t S)S.S Atrium. 2-car ;arq:e. Pool will Ulce OU. I.up borne at prtv, nr OCC & C M. a vlc • ., ~•. 2 ...... Center Al·11il Illar. 22, -~ sr. 2s .. u1s ......... su.i WE SELL A HOME AVAtl..A!tLE NO\V L.r:a~e 646-56~1 ~ft 6 pm IVIRY 21 MINUTES Pay & Beach RN.lty, Jnr I • 7 BR &JI!. lum & uni. Walker & Lee otll Qo,.,. Dr. Sulto 1211 NB from 1123 "' '••ly d•r<><., . fiotS.2000 Evei. 5#-fl.Yi& poo\.rtck rm. bt11u 1orden. ieG F.d1 .. -WESTCLttl' ~ J..ara:e 2l'JOO AdulU., no Jl"'I~ 19Jl l\Isple. ....... fCJ• 'ft. 3 bedroon'I. l b41h, C~1. Apt. 5 f.tGn ~tto '41-4~M lovtly )'lrd -?.fllMt)(n DELUXE. 1 Br ~pee f11rn. 1.. 1Chool d\ri. Sl90 ptr mo. All t leC'., ll'Oll·fr« rt<fr\a. JT'S 8N,Cb hGitial tlmt. a,.. ytarly. 1901 Ktlltla.~. open 11·/w cpl. full G1r. w/1tor. r::i..~ W,;krSeeAD~ daily from 3:30 p.m. or can Quiet. A'1ult.1 only. Mo/mo • O'Wnl!:f &12-ms 1 s1so ~rris z, .. s. 2 BR. l\fa.riutritc. So. of R ooms fo r Re11t 5995 HI\')'. $110 mo. N6 cbUdnin. --------- *\ 642-7398 * h.1TCH I: lndy priv. S60 mo, l·BOR}.I .. cpts, drapes. Jtl & 1.ut n:ici1 in adv~""'· . rum. or onf. $140-$150 \Vorklni girl or 1tu ent. set.nte Propertle& 673-~776 •3l=7·.,,784,.-;7,,_.,.,,...,,..=-. PLAl\'NIN6 to' nta\'ef You'll R06;\.I For lady in private tincf an amiilna: number of home In rount&ln VaJl•Y· home• ln today'• Claultled I !M-9616 Ad&. C'hl!ck them now. Dial 642'5678 tot REStn.TS c L ' A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ISEST 111111! . .. ~_,~I "'"'----------------------------~----·---------------------.. TMtsd.111 Marth 17, l.9JO DAILY PILOT 23 R~AL ESTATE REAL ESTATE G•ntral Gtntr•I ~--'-~~-1-=-'.::="-~~-* * * * *I ------= !!JB_S !-EMPLOYMEl'i 1 1 ,u~~PLOYMINl --.;,;;;;;;;;;,;~~;:;:;;;::::::::::::: Job W•ntod, Men 7000 J_!b'="'°", Wom . 7100 Mot1l1, Trlr. Crts. 5991 Commercial 6085 \VEEKLY rates ~a Lark lm11nn'td Comm kits Brbtol ~!ott:I. 2301 NcWJX>rt Blvd.. Baker area.. S2 per aq ft, Co!ita rt1esa ilania ltrnlty Mi te. R._•'-nl_•..cl• __ .;..S999 &42-8560 GARAGES. Extra Jong. 10 )( ro=R,..--.. .,-1.-.-.,-,,'-,-.-"1-ld-1,,.-. 30 $2:1 mo. Nr O.C. Airport, 686-698 \V. 19th St. Bethel Palisades kd. 548-5044 To11·ers area. !148-1768 Agl. t-side, lot1 DOUBLE 1arage on CJ\I . S35 mo. 6100 642-3645 * -··------__ _;c:..;=-----INEWPORT OCEAN VIE\\I, lncom• P roperty 6000 Zoned 30 Unils. 01\'ner. Call 543-8106 c.t BARGAIN 132·"300· &side, tlke 26 ,.,., Whaddy• Wint? Whaddy• Got? SPECIAL CLASSIPICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Special bto SERVICE OIRECTORY When You Want it done right ... Call one of the experts li sted below!! SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY Duplex on bli C·l Bus. l?t., units. sub. As.kin& S44. 750. 63 x 770 Central ioca.llon AgPnt 646-3750 5 Li--5 lhM& -5 bucks •ULll -..0 .WIT IHClUOI! lloby1lttl111 6550 Floa" =----6665 Painting, P•perh1ngln1 S32.500 t e r 1 s 541-6661, ==·=======- 547-2331. 1-Wlltt ._ Mw " ""'9. t-Wlltf Y9t1 ...... fll lrt-. RESPONSIBLE, mature col· lege st\Went who liVfs in Cdt.f & loves children \\'ill babysit eves &. wk-ends, SI per hr. Ov.·n tran&. biJ...1491 Ranches 6150 .,_YOUlll ....... t fl./W ..,._.. •-6 Intl « M•.,,..IM. 9 l·BR. Apts. S-NOTHIHG FOlt SAl• .-flAOIS ONLYI Ne11r shops. $10,100 inc. 20 ACRE avocado r anch Ui $81,IXKJ. SJ'l,000 do w n . f'allbrook, iood produet>r. To Plec• Your Trff•r'1 P•radlN A4 PHONE 642·5671 OWJ'ltr. 642-8579 Localed on ·hi I h knoll GOOD E-!lde 4 Plex. SSS,000 '''/panoramic view~ Ai 1' 'II d Pri 'pal cond. hon'lf! has man) xtras. or "'I Ira. e up, nci ' Guest homie. (7141 728-2146 Trade 3000 llf ft San Fer- nando Valley home, 5 br, 3 ba + cabana, pool. (North- ridge area\. For Beach only. 833-~0 6200 property. 846-4614 Business Rental 6060 Acreage Beautiful 43' Yacht S-14.000 ........,_. -----10 Acres near l11rge Juke. ch~ar for · smaller boat, 20c SQUARE FT. t.Iust sell! $100 dn. take house, 1mall units, build· 600-1200-2400 sq. ft. OUicc or o\'er S25 per mo. &!w-47~3 able lo!s, T.D. or stock:, Retail sl!lres. 211-213 62nd l==~-======= Ca.II 89M094. St, Newport Beach. Key Resort Property 6205 Brand l'lt'w 90cc moto-·cl· avail at Travel Lodge M~ "-'.o.;.-'-'-'-==-'--=" "' liave $12,000 Invested in V\V BAB y s I TT J N G: Clean ear. &m parts house A: ma-ho c, chine shop on Newoo' rt, CM. me. ·• 1. area. Fenced yd, \Vkda.ys, \~'lends, f!\'CS:, Trade lor mt acres. 911 \VellarP rate1• Call. 545-6215 Porsche-. 548-1814 Bill Acker RELIABLE t.fother of 1 l11t RE TD J\'lortgages in11ur. \\"&nl's baby &itting in my able local signt'r Ea. TD hon1c, Pref. infant tc 2 yl's. PO...VS SZ!OO. Total $42,000 H.B. area 842-3691 F'\nal pmt f/71 Trt'!: car, boat! 675-1o.t7. Bro.: 1433 NB BABYSl'ITlNG wanted by CAR.PET VINYL TILE free cstlrn11.tc Lie, Contr. 540. T.IB2 M6·4~78 G1rdtnin9 6680 NE\V lawns, r e-seeding . Complete la\\'n care. Cliea.n up by job or month. F~ estimates. For Info c:all 8!l7-2.H7 or S.IB-0932 GAROENI NG T1ees, shrubs, i\'y retnO\"Hl.. New lawns. Rototillilig. freie ff!. 543-8918 6850 PAINTING • "'THE EXTERIOR SPECJAWST'' $28.'i 1 slot)', 11tucco &: h·im, 2 COAts, labor & paint. All \\'Ork guaranteed. Lie. bond, Ins. \Von't be underbid~ 64<h1679 P rofess Ion a I P ainters Ltd. BRUSH, ROLL. SPRAY .FREE ESTli\fATF.S * 548.fo002 * ARTtsT. Exper. (,11ie-n1an art dept -layout l.o flnia:h 4\C• cural& & fut n1echanicall. Tierman Silnms, 232 La Jlrea St., LAguna Beach. 4g1.-0~T or 49-1-65"1. PLU~lBJNC work wanted. 10 ycnn experle11Ct, no job 100 small, eve, S3&-66D8 'VATCllt.IAKER. 30 yrs exp., all phaM:a. Good reluences. 531-oo28 Job W.1nttd, Women 7U20 SECRE:J'ARY 'Va.nts morn• Ing "l\Wk -&ach area * 8-1% am -5 days -$3.00 Pf'r hour. * Background: ReiUltrs.r - Chouln11.rd Art IMI. Facu!ly &?c. -Claren1ont t.t en'1 Col. &-crelary -Clly of Lquna Beach. *Good CWTtnt loc 1I relel't'nce&. Check Here with the Job Kings! MALE Commercial Unit Recard1 Supv. To $750. * Call betv.·een 494-3961 9-12 al)i -r.t u:>I be exp. \11 /data pr~sslni. GAL rnIOA'i, General ff\Surance agency manage . mcn1 experience. • 67J..{i891 ... AID&'i • 1vr oonvalHCence, elderly care ot family care, J-lomen1akers, 547-$381. Sr B:uy1t/Purcha1• Agt. From $600. Previous mfg. bk~·d. Job ahop, f11.mlliar w/ma• chine parts, all ty(JtS. tel. Owner. "213) 244-3101 CANYON LAKE: v,v lot by es. Trade for auns, jeeps or •: or eves (213) 246--0700 ownr. $600 dn_. bal Sl02 mo. "! Value $3511 each. Stamp BALBOA ISLAND tncl ln!er 6'1~. 962-3803 eves. oollcctjon, value $2500 for the \\>ttk, mature ~"Oman, A·Crame cabin, 3 Brs, 2 Ba, refs, no trans. 54S-4503. C:\1. carpeted, bit-ins. Equity DAY l NJTE care, or day $15,000. Trade for sallboat or units in ~ach area. cart for )'Our C'hlld in my GEN 'L yd. Clean-up, tree 11erv. roto-till. Sprn k lr l't'pairs. H aul-Reason. 646-!i!i~S HIGH Cost of Painting Turn You Off? College student will do your painting at reasonable price. Sieve 548-4549 Jobi-Mon. Y'/om. 7100 Multl-Lith Opr. 1600 Exp. on addres:1-0°giaph. Able to 111n color. " guns or "! 962-49Sl. Least sto~ or oUi~. RP. =-~-"'-""~--proprlate for beauty salon. Real ~state \Vaterfront lot • Garlsbad, 307 Marine Ave. 6if>.-O.t86 or Service 6215 room lor 9 units $36,000 .PP Set' broker. 1----------1radt $20i\1 e-qulty for units P R 0 PERT Y Orange 01· San Diego C.0. S:\1ALL 1hops nr. Nt\\'fXlrt i\-IANAGEMENT Perron Really 642-1771 Pier. Various sizes. Inquire for apt. or incon1e unit1 Ba)'Vlew Propet•ties 644--0214 evenings 2 Homes on R-3 lot. \Vilh 2309 \V. Balboa, NB 673-74201========"'== vie\v of area. ~2 t.11\e lo R E W ed 6240 beach. \\'ant boat, T.D.'s, Office Rental 6070 · ' ant or more units. ----------1 FA:\llLY needs 3-4 Bedroom Fortin, Reallor 612-5001 LAGUNA BEACH ranrh Corona. del t.1ar HEDGE/INFl..ATIO:-t Air Conditioned Tuslln Jul)' 1 S50,000-$10,000. Trd lor inC". or boat. s R-1 ON FOREST AVENUE Wiii be In area "·eek i\larch viie1v Jots. Hearl of Orn_g Desk space available tn 22nd \\'rile \\'EB Box 1615 Cnty. Eq. $5!\I ra. Be quisk! ne,vest office bulldinq: at _:'~"~"~·~·~"~';..,,.-~---830-60-10, 495-06'26 prlmie location ln downlown BUSINESS and 3 BR. 21! BA Toll'nhouSf', ~a Beach. Ait condl· FINANCIAL N.B. Pr!. patio, pool, elec. honed, carpeted, beautitull -'-'-'-"=;:.;.;.;.:e-___ kitchen. $32.000. Take \ow entrances: Frontage on Business down, late model car. T.D. Forest Ave., rear leads to Opportuniti•s 6300 or ?"! Q\\·ner 646-6654. f.Junc:ipat parking. Iota. $511•1 --''-'--="'-:..: ·--- per month for space. Desk * FAMOUS BRAND I 41' CUstom bull! T~'in and C'hairs available for $5. NAME * Diesel Houseboat. FOR ln- Bu.siness hours answering CANDY & SNACK ROUTE come or aC"reage. service available for SlO. !PART OR FULl:. Tli\JE) 673-3114 or All uUlltl,. ..,.;d except 673-3835 .-YERY .HlGH INCQr.lE felephone. .. t ·-\Ve need a distributor in th ls \\<1LL TR.ADE 10 iJTigated 6#-0559 lovely home. 645-5537 'c~n"'I ~:J6""'w~.~,-'-.,-'-d:=Tinc.,."~-d"'o~lo-r I BABYSITTING, clean home, mother of 2, hot lunch, pre-n1y f'qUlly in 2 brdroom, 2 sc::hool. 6~2-79S8 story Big Bear cabin on '4 acre + ??7 Bo.1t Malnten.1nce 6555 ,,--,.:.*.,..:.968-'::.:u~"'-c*'== I -· . O'\'ner moving-Trade $20,000 Enjoy your Boat cq. in 7 centra.llJ loc older Complcle J\.f11rine Service unit1, \VhitHcr.~ Val 6 lim· !\'Iechanlcal-Eleclrlcal f':I income. '''ant: property Bottoms·ln or out water Ne"·port area. 1-213-693-5188 Jo1be.rgla51i Bul~jng, Ha\"I! 250i\>I shares (in\'.) f"..bcrglass Re.finishing. 1-·k ~-I ho t Call Jim, 5-18--7021 & .....: -. '""'"'re g. me, ap 'I========== boat. Other assels avail. Brkers & bldn: attenHon, \llkda.y1, 9-6 only, 673-5287 Brick, M .1sonry, tic 6560 JAPANESE G 11 rd en Ing Service . Neat \'IOl'k, Clean-up &-yan:I ma.int. 96S-2303 AL'S GaroenJng &: Lawn f.lninten!lllee. Commercial, Industrial I re~ldential. .. 64&-3629 • JAPANESE Ganlenc1', exp"d. Compl. yd . scrv. Jo'rce est. RC"liable. 642..-4389 A VERA GE l 11!01')' !!Xlcrlor $259. 2 stOl'Y e.'<ltl'lor W . Bonus 5000 Rlue Chlps. Interior prices av a i I . 6.J7...fil19 * PainUng-Papcrha.nglni Interior-Exterior Speeial Prices on Paper Call La1Ty &12-4~ INT & Ext Pa.lntlnr. 1''re~ elitS, Loe refs. 30 yn exp. Lie. il lnsrd. Call Chuck 64.>-0809 or Jim 54&--0.JOa Jli\l'S Gardenint & 10\1·11 APTS & l\IOTELS Painted - ma1ntenanct'. Rrll. & com-$1 0. avl.'rg. r1n. Ca I I n1ercial * 5404837 anytime Pal the Painter, 5.')7-8638 2-1 ' 1-lllchell FilX'.'rglas Cabin Cruiser. steeps 6. ex. cond. Valu 15500. Net $3000. Trade eq. for ? Call EXP. Japanese maintenance. I":_-:,,.:.::::._ _____ _ BRICK 1.: CARPENTERY H.B.&. F'.V. Area EiXT. 1 slory honie, 2 caati1 work, plantr1'1), fireplaces, I ~===*~""-'--8~'~"-*~--labor &: matcrinl, $245. block \\'alls, ct:menl palJOS. JAPANESE Gar d enl'r , Rooms, labor only $7.00. patio rools & all types of e"p'd. C.01npl. yard servlcc.1 ~-:.-:,~'.:.'s.;~·=·~·~"-":..:"~1~6---~9 3 Br, 2 Ba, Beach Home. SlJ:'lt solid eq. Leasehold a! Jl.·loku!eia, Oahu. For T.D., stock. resort prop, boat etc. Frank, 642-9206. repaits. 492-7928 coUect. Jo~rec estimate. S•IS-825,j SURBURBAN Paint" ts I BUILD, Remodel, repair JOHNSON'S GARDENING Drear. \\'p toke lhe pain Brick, block, con c r c t e , Yard care, Clc::an-ups, Prun· ou t of painting. Eitpe:rt 'vork. carpentry, no Job too small. lng, planling. 962-203a Jo~ree es!. 494-3190 Lie. C.Ontr 962-6945 EXP J Co I I PA I N TING--INT/Ext. . apanesf' mp etc f"REE E&t. Brick, blor:k, Yard Servire. Reas. NB &: Jack can do that palnllnt stone, planters & entry CM area. 540-U73 job-fa.st, c::le11n &. very reas! AGGRESSIVE J\lAN to C"all bJ appointment only for membership. Days, 642-5293/645-0112 or 141-6413 e\'es. * AMSITIOUS WOMEN* ARE YOU PJ>~ENTLY DEt.tONSTRATING TO)'li Real Estate Cosmetics Pla11tlc1 Clolhh,. Att )'OU Interested In more monel' with no collecting. parties or deliveries. Car needed. Some experience pl't'fton-ed. 5'l4-S550, 1fr. Jamies:. Salesman To $600 2 yrs c::o\lege, Local sales background. Field Service Rep. Fr om $3.50 hr • Prl'v. exp in field. t.1us:t know au phases ot boat bldg. Tech I Skilled Rtse.1rch HelfMr $575 1-T.S. C"hem., &:ood math, AU T 0 111 0 T JV E Se r v draft exempt. 1table, ro• ~lechaniC', tune-up, align. taL shlfL ment, brakes. Hi vol Skell D Station. Top pay for right ye Penetr.1nt ln1p11ct. m11.n. 2801 E. Cst H1vy. To $3.80 hr. Cdi\1. 675-0533 Dick r.1 in 4 yr!!. exp, w/metal \V\Ulams. parts & fittings. ASSEli1BLY Trainees, da,y shift, female age 18--28, no exp nee., but mu.st ha\ltl Heliarc Welders Fram $2.35 hr. DAILY PILC1f area for our C'&ndy INeslles, acres in Hemet w/3 rentals 222 FOREST AVENUE Planters, Toot.Bite Rolb, t.lilk lot Orange Co. income UGUNA BEACH '"" d I ) N u· . pro~-· . ..,,1 s, e c. . o ge 1ng in-,.. •• '" Mtat do .YOU have to trade"! Litt II hett .,... In Orange Count}''• Larnst read trad· lrli poat -ar1 make • deal. 6580 ways. 531-a913. State l.iC''d. CLE.AN-UP SPECIALIST Est. 894-3895, 847-1358 Jl.lo\\·ing. edging, odd jobs. PAINTING, e:o.:pcr, int. I.: good eye1ight & linger dex-Ccrtiilc::Ation not ntt. tcrlt)'. Apply in perton SAE o!S.1--9466 volved. \Ve furnish all ac-Call ~111) 962-1561 Cabinetmaking Reasonabll!. ~8-6953 ext. Insured. rree e~timat­ cs, Ralph. 49'1-3950 Advanced Packaging, mT Short Arc/ Arc Weidert 1:0.L\IEDIATE Occupancy, J counts. You n11u;t havC' 2 to fully ca r peted , air-can· 8 111-s. pt>r \Vf'f'k spa.re Umc .. * * * * * RESIDENTIAL &. Comm. E. Edinger, S.A. From $2.75 h r . Genera l Services 6682 PAPER HANGING 20 yrs e"P· Jo'ree estimate. Asst. Bkkpr. Tr.1lnee fAblr t.o read ta~ mea· Sl.90 +, future oppty. surr! dllionert office a r e a s (dccy!I or eves). I !i!i!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!li!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!lliiillllll•!!!!!it Custom Cabinet &. Furn. avatl a.blr no1'-' a t 2BN E. $1950 TOTAL CASH BUSINESS end ANNOUNCEMENTS Furn Re-Finishing. 645--0991 t--------- Pac. Coast H'-"Y· in Co~na REQUIRED FINANC:.l::A;.:L;_ ___ .and NOTICES 6590 dt>I i\lar. ol.410 SQ . ft-ranging For mof'l' information 11T1\e from 1000 lo 1710 sq. II. "Oistribulor Division No. From S<f:.0 lo STI4 per mo. 23"', P.O. Box 58, Pomona, Area can be sub-divided .to Calli. 91789 . l nclude phone 6401 Money to Lo.1n 6320 Lost ~-~-~~-~;.;;;.. ___ ~_;_:::.: Carpentering 1st TD Loan suit tenant. 644-6161 for in-no. EARRING At Fash ion CARPENTRY formation. ========== CORONA OEL MAR Oe5k space for lease X\nl location: parkin; Atflliate Island, N.8. Gold screw on MINOR REPAIRS. No Job lype w/reddi1h s 1 one. TCIC' Smlll. Cabinet in 181'- lo\\"est Jntereirt Available Cherished gift from deceu· ares I o t be r cabine1.1. 2nd TD Loan ed husband. Call collect 545-8175, U no 81\lwer leave (7141 629-6188. msi at 6f6.23'n. H. O. CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE J\tacArth11r at Coast Hwy. {No selling involvedl Tenn1 based on equity. Richardson Realty ExceUenl income for few 642·2171 S4s..o611 2443 E. Coast H"'Y--Cdl\I hours "·ceklJ w·ork. (Days Sf>rvlng Harhor area 21 yrs. 675-4-031 673..0145 and Evenings). Relllling and Sattler Mort91ge Co. Modern Offices collecting money from coin 336 E. 17th Street operated dispcnsen in Or--WE t.fAKE OR BUY S"N slnile. 5173 2 rm suite. an11:e Co. and surrounding TRUST DEEDS Air cond. 5ect'y scivice, area. \Ve establish route. 5"13-8381 anytime Bkr. parking, centrally located. fHnndles name brand candy So. Calif 1st Nat. Bk. Bldg. and snaC"ksl. 5I625.00 cash ANNOUNCEMENTS Costa r.1e1111 642-1485 required. Foi· personal Inter. _•_n_d_N_O_T_lc_E_s ___ _ •DELX. EXEC. OFFICE view In Orange Co. area, Found (Free Ads) 6400 suites !or lease. Xlnt location send name, addt't'SS and on Ca1npus Dr. across from phone number to J\.1ULTI. ---------- Orange C.O. Airport. SUitcs SiATE DIITT' .. J'IC., 1681 \V, BIG DOG, mostly Collie, avail. from 540 sq ft. to tcJ:lO Broadway, Anaheim, C&JL blaC'k & ~·hile, rec e n t sq. fl. A/C, carpeJed, fornia 9281l2 (114) 778-50)(). molli!r, found \\'ed. nile, l~~i,;=7-==:;:,.---~ Anderaon BLACK &: gold part cocker spaniel, Vic Harbor &: QUALITY Any &!ze rep:urs Adam~ on r.rar 4, hai been or new construction. Res. or hit by car. JUST HAD Com. BJ hour or contract. PUPSJ Reward. 642-2515 Lie. & Bonded. 64&-3442 TAN Sam,0 n c 111 ~ GEN. repair, add., cab. "'/persona.I items. med. Formica, paneling, marllte. A""o.;"~! Di-", ~ "~ Need p re~c. drUiL ·~~~ ~ u•~ R~'ARD. 642-3313 REPAIR-remodeling-patios lt1ALE Tiger striped kitty, 9 LET THE S\VEDE 00 IT! mo old. vie Harbor Vltw * * 49-1-7853 * * Hms:. Ans '"Harold"', RE\V! 'R=E=P~A~1=RS~.-.~L~T~E=R~A=T=1=o~NS 644-4779 * CABINETS. !in}' sir.e jOb TABBY Female, 1payed cat 25 yrs expe1-. 5"18-6713 lost Sat. HB &N'a. ~1946 QUALITY \Voodcraf1 . Gen. Person1l1 6405 draped. Call 546-8801 MANAGER Diina Pt. 492--0257 before 10 HUNTINGTON BEACH •.m. ---------OWNER ' 'OUND J * PlJLLY LICENSED * Air Conditioned • : Chl d's hike. eral carpentry, Small Gen. Comtr. Call Ken s.@.-423.3 CARPENTRY, Repairs , Remodeling. t."ahlnets. No job too 1mall. Call 646-42i4. Cement, Concre te 6600 ON BEACH BLVD. Hi-Rise handle bars. Vic. Renowned H i ndu Spiril· Gold -• b · Co ualilt Advice on all De:k spaL-e ava~la~le In National corporation, TICl\'1 in-en1uu ridge, rona ncv.·est offlee bu1ld1ng at tei·\'ie\vi"""· for owner man· del J\,Jar. 67l-3696 mat1era: Ulve, t.lsrrlage, pr1 I II I H ""' .... Business, Courbhlp, Health, me OCB on n _un · &°"r ol complete famlly riec-FOUND: 2 'Vttks Ago. Gt'ey 1----------ton BeaC'h. Air conditioned, o· . Happincs1 le. Success. No AL'S Wood Finish Removing and \Voorl Bleaching Service. \Ve remove all types of \\'ood finishes from furniture and ln!erior and exterior homf'B. busineio& buildings, marine \1e11els, etc. U Paint 11nd Rt'finish. Licensed and ln- sul'Cd. 19 years experience. 714-689-2000. Ext 48. CARETAKING \\'hilc You Are A11·a)' fBonde<l l Reliable' Care for your yard iind ho1nr · No .lob Too Small -Charles Chnn1bcr· lain 642.fltDl allcr 5 Pt.I. Ha uling 6730 CARL"S r.tov111g, llauling I.: Cleanup. ~• Ton P.U. Re11.1. Free Est. 5-1~18 BEFORE YOU HAUL 'fO THE DU~tP -CALL 6,16-Gm .. Save SS YARD/ G11r. Cleanu p, Jkmove trees, ivy, trash. Grade, b11c::khoc, 962-8745 HAULING $10 LOAD It Tree Service. 646-2528 6735 !xonutlful entrance. Front· reallona.I ~port center. ~K· & \Vhite Jemale cal, v•ear-problems too large or too CONCRETE ~'Ork all type,.. iip;e on Beach Blvd., rear tremely high return on 1n-ing flea collar. Huntington small . I CAN HELP YOU . Sawini, breaking, l\aulirig, I !ecids lo private parking "f!S!ment of $12.500. Secur. Bch VIC'. 968-3440 Readings (lven 1 d1t)'S a. Sldploading~ Lir.. Service & Hou1ec ean ing Ciill K.1-1. 612-2509 PAPERJIANGING Years of experience. Call Fred, 548--4903 ""PAPERHANGING Call i\lac 549-0-14!"1 548-1444 JASON BEST Eniploymenl Agenc:y 9264 Vt'. Katella, Ana.helm 821-1220 BABYSITTER. mature \\·01nan for boy loddleni, 5 day 'vk., my home vie. Rl:.llRED Painter: 26 yn Coast J-h\'Y & 9th SL, H.B. 5.".6-7939 or 962-6631 exper. Neal k honest. Non 1 ..::::.:._;;;,,:,,:~0:-='-~­ drinker. Call 536-0801. BABYSITTING, my home, PAINTING I.:. Repairs . yard, meals:, references, Re 1 s onable. Sa rill,fn.ction companlonzhip, SIS wk., Gunranteed. Call $17-1411 SJ&....8977 * PAJr>.'TJNG, lnl-Ext Local BABYSITTER I J-lousekeep- t't'lt<:rcnces. lmmcd iervice. er, 2 children 5 Ir 4, o~11 646-5242 transp. Call 968-1620 alter 6. PAINTING • Ext-Int. 18 yn. BABYSITTER v.-anled. full time, my home near Harbor ex per. ms. Lie. Free est. S A ,..2,10 Accousl. Ceilings. 518-5325 & Kent, ' ' '"£"" * PAPERHANGING BABYSl'ITER / Hollllckeci>- 1..· PAINTfNG. * 968-2'12.'i er. Spanish i;pcaking prefer. Plastering, Rep.1 ir P atch, 6180 * PATClt PLASTERING All typ<is. free estimates Call 540-6825 Plumbing 6890 -"----'-'--' PLUMBING REPAIR N<1 job Ion small • 642-3128 • PLUMBING. Rt'p11lra &: Al· tcrations at economy prices. * &111-1286 red. Call 546-3869. Eank!n~ Tellers AppliC'al\ons are now be· lnJ:' taken !or Tellers, for our new Irvine Comple" Rranch. located near the Orange County Airport. Teller expertenre pre- ferred. but will train qullllfied applicants. lot. $50 per month for ity brackets. Rigid inves:tl· ~S~M~A=L~L~B~l,-c~k~m""a1~,-,h-,-.-gy week. 9AM-9PM 312 N. E l Quality. 842-1010 I---------- space. Desk ana cna1rs gation invited . Must hove poodle vie. 151h &: Irvine. c am In 0 Re a I, g1 n CEMENT \VORK, no job ton \VANT A Sunn}' &: brlght available for $5. Bt1slnl!!!s n1anagement &. PR 1tbUity. 673-8062 c I em" n t e. 4 9 2_ 9135, Small, reasonable. Jo'ree home~ Call lhl! DUTCH" Remodelinn & hours anSll>·mng service R I to Bo 0~ Jhe Dail H S t.1AINTENANCE ~1AN for • Please apply In person to our NC\vport Ce n t e r Branch, 550 Newport Cen- ter Drive, Newpo rt Beach. available for $10. All utill· ~PY x _, Y BLACK &: white male Scot· 4.92-0076. Estlm. · tufllck S48-fl61S Repair 6940 Pdot your 1vlndows, floors & l --'--------lies paid e"cept telephone.,~==·------~ tie. l\1ar. 14 vie. Jleil & Spr-S\•"•le/Divo~ .. /\Vl-ied * CONCRETE Joors, A Y LOT r~ "6 '"-~ carpet cleanini. No crew. D IL Pl fOR 1he 1111tutt' cosmetologist ingdalt. 842--6209 DPI patiOs, masonry. Any sz job. 17175 BEACH BLVD. 11·h0 desi res to lse booth in Reas. Don, &1~14 aft 4. ~7-1508 aft. 3· HUNTINGTON IEACH prlnie N.B. Joe, aci-oss froni LARGE Youni male Ger. is Data Process Introduction BAY &: Beach Janltnrlal '42-4l21 800 nu single S"'lngers & 400 Shep. betwetn SA & CM for Single Adults, and other * CON CR ET E \\'ork, Carpet11, .\\'indo1v~. flool'lJ, CORONA DEL MAR Oakwood married a pl ll . t.Ion af!ernoon 546-7231 u&e.ful application of science. Licensed. PaUos / drv~'Y5• e1c. Re11 & Co nl m c ' I . u7 "'7 etc, Phillips Cement. S48-S380 [mmaculate 2 roon1. Private Shoukl have above ave.nae PRESCR.IPTION Sun gla.!ise1 ~ -vvv 646-1401. oUice. Ground floor . Prlvatt' cllentele, relined &: be a round at ?.1ain &. Balboa. 24 hour recording ri:IORE concrete patio for co 1\1 p L E T E q u a I I 1 y bath. St3.'i mo. UtU pd, Park-very good stylist. If you feel Call 673-5370 ZIPO DATE less money, Artbtic settinz nouseclt<:aning. E"perienced. ing. 673-6'i'57 Chvnf':r. you have the req. please POODLE, Owner p 1 ease ADULTS ONLY & linishini. 644--0687 JW:u1onable. ~Zlr>l . THE REMODELERS Quallly Homie Improvement Contractors * ADO.A-ROOM * COi\1PI.. REf.10DELING rnEE EST . 100~, FLNC. * 6'12-3660 * * Verne, The Tlle ~111.n * Cu11t. work. IMtall &: repairs. Security Pacific Bank No job too small, Plaster patio. U!nklng shov.-er repair. 847-1957/846-DWS 6740 1======= Best location in CdM _,_,_11~54~8-<37S~-'-'-----identify C.Olleie Park area You Know the Facts of Life Mesa Cleaning Sorn" OLES E 54~ A~.... Child C1re, 800to1400 S<J. f,, Dl:!luxe Off. WH ALE BUSIN SS ,,....,,... Learn the Facts or Dating Licina.d Carpets, windows, !loors. etc. ice Spaces. Ava;'. ImmC'd. Color humerous & scenic FOUND Llltlt! Sch .. vlnn bike. 24 Hr. Record. . . 6'lO Res. & Commc'I. 548-41J1 Pbolll'! Qwnl!r. 642-9!"!50 poslcards. $2850 will pur-vie::; Gibraller. C.r.t . Owner C2131 862-8519 Orange Co. ~lARINER's CENTER C'hll.Se an unusu~ly prorit-please Identity 56-1318 (7141 83>2220 NURSERY Scbool, C.f\I. 7 days wk. -6:30 Al\J.!);30PM. JoUll, p/llme, alt ~hi . Rates for 2 ot mo~. Transp. turn. So Oranit Co. 646-3706 or !>.14-129'1. Income T.1x ~!T-9.__ ___ ...o.''~so; F.qual opportunity employer BAR r.taict Expcrlenoed. Pl\ot shlfl, A11ply ln per80n. Vegu Room 686 W. 19th, Ci\-1 Offi~ or Store Bldg. P.ent or lse 149 Riverside Ave. NB. 646.2~14 able & P~"'1vt part S:-0.1AU., Apricot Poodle, SHERRYL llml' CMh business. Nothing male. Found '.-iC'. lith I: OON'T DESTROY US A.LL. for You to sell, very littlt: to Orange, C.l\1. &IZ.TI41 PLEASE JUST CALL do. For further ~!alls, \\'rite --"-'--"-"'==--NEAR C.l\'I. City Hall. J Rm. Dn lly Pilot Cox M-924 (please SlAl\fESE Choe:. point cat, EU.EN COU.ECT ' Oflic::ell. Paneled. c11.rpcts, give yoiir phOne no.I fem . deC'la,ved. F.dlni;er I: I-~=~'~"~'=' ~3_7"-_5_1_93 __ _ dr11.rie'· $150. Call &12-6560 :;,,,,,;:.._-'="-,,C..~--Pl1ntatlon Ln. 84fMM5l ALCOHOLICS Anonymoy!I COrN laund.ries-F'ri;,:-ldaire Sz\1AU.0UiceonhuS)'COf'-~-·~~ I I '' 500 BASSET IIOUND, vie . Phol'lt' 542-nI.7 or write lo ner Coala 11.iesa $55/month c ,\:iliei;'.iN\I ~ta "M, es a : Harbor ' Adams. ~2685 P.O. Box 1223. Costa Mesa. uUU!Jes Included. MU560 Buena Parle, r u 11 e r ton , before f pm. 400 SQ FT OFC. Garden G r ove, MALE Siamese cat about 1 Announcements 6410 C.1rptt Cle1ning 6625 PROFESSIONAL Carpel &: window cleaning. Any llv. rm-hall $11. WIMows $1!). 811~182 Centntl Business Service11 e T HE TAX AOVISORS Pf!nn, offlce·Reas RAles 328 No. Newport Blvd. (}pJ)Ollitc Hoag Hoi;pital for AppL Call &15-0IDJ H.K. Clark TAX SERVICE 23 yn, In area !lil8-S285 Appl. NE"' Roof5. R.cpain I.: Co8ting of all Types. Boss \\'Orks on thr job. rrtt cslhnJtes. 6~16~1. 645--25;]0 24 hr. ALL ~ rock, wood & uphalt shingle&. LEAKS REPAIRED. Work par. Sjl-tt.16 S90 ~lo. C.?-1. 616-2130 Westminster, Huntington wk 11go, Sell Lark Motel, CARPET SI'EAi\J CLEAN· • Your home or ollice • 300 Free Blue Chip stamps ED No so;tp, no bru!h'3'. TAX SERVICE in your Sewing 6960 BEAUTY SALON Jn Costa l\fcsa oUers &ecUtt: position to well trained op. er1ttnr with 50!Tle following . Pennatrt:~s .St!11uty Salon Pen!Onnt:I (714) M0-8582 Call for Interview LAPIN GRAD PREFERRED Digiti•I Design Engr. To $1000 mo. Thorough knowll!dgc or core memory, lntergrnl· rd clrc:ults, logic design & genl. circuit design. Cl•ss A M.1chlnf1t F rom $350 ( Profllel Unskilled Chem. Pl1nt Tr1lnH $2.00 h .. Genl. Shop Htlpt1r1 To $2.25 Wet Sult Cutt•r $2.00 hr. (6 mo. exp) fEMALE Sa lts Girl From $2.35 h r. Recent sales exp., bt drug slore. Will train In cosmetics. F /C Bkkpr/G lrl Fri. To $600 Thru T.B .. sales tax, pay· roll tax. Good w/custom· ers A purcha.!ilng • etc. Steno To $450 SH 80, type 65 accurate- ly. Genl. Office Girl From $2.25 hr. Type 55 Wpm accuretely, 10 key add. Some billing exp. Clerk Typlot To $450. Fast, accurate typlat. F1ctory Tralnen $1.75 hr. 2nd ol 3rd shifts. - APEX COSTA l\te1a OfflC(!s. A/C, Beeoh, 5anta Ana, Tustin, C.r.t. M6-7445 ~l crpt~. drps. Parking. 15.iS La J\.1\M1da. \VAi'cif"v ic:: 19th ll PlaC(!n- • Baker. $90 ea. 13 x 20' I Cal:;:;,1 ,:Ch;•~•,:,1~"====='!125-"='1133;: lia. Call to ktenUfy, 34()..1530 ror the privilege ot demo~ For es1 . &IS.S971 bome. F11111 & efficient! 1 ;~:;:.;.._ ____ ..:;.:.:;; 1tr11tlng the Rainbow Clean. I============== * S31--0502 * • Dreumo.klng • Alterations NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT Employment Agency " , 646-<IS.13 or ~757 p ••~ET ." .;;=-:;:<=:;:::::'===I Investment A...,..n.,, ~ 19th & H&rbor, .-• CM 646-$414 Industrial Opportunities 6,.10 I-='--''="'='===== I P roperty 6080 UNIQUE ---(,BUlLDER OFFERS NEW INVESTMENT ft.500 IQ. fl de!uio:t bldg. OPPORTUNITY Leased. chalet Or a n l: e Ce• in on Antelope Valley Count)' are.1 , Property Land Boom w/na inwst. clear. ()wn(>r w/cUTY ht men!! Call 54i-3196. 'to Jl)~. Prtpd Int. ok. ~ am, 82S--Ml> p!'l'I. BUSIEST mtmtplaeot tn NEW Bid&:.. ll.000 Ml fl for tO'lli'n. The DAILY PILOT 11tlP rr lease. t or deta.ll• C'Jaul!led RCtio", S 1 • e: ,,.!Jn1tin fttnlty """"'• llme. eUorl. L<tok , Oll'l . ....- ,-- Lost 6401 ------~------$100 REWARD. Cat. calico, female, no lront clawt. Bhtek, while, or an I I! • 6'H265 TII\'Y ~flnl·t1n O !h1.11hua "Miuy'' fem!. vk T.tilll ~lotel, 01, RE\V! 54&-5221 BLACK Doxie Ir Brown mix. U1U11.1ly run 1oaethtr . Reward . Call s.Jj..1384 iflll: System. No obllgntion. Dryw•ll '63l l-===::::':i:=i:::i:::==::; I De!igncd to 1ult JOU. Guaranteed by Good HoWlt'--Ironing 6755 Call Jo * 64&-&1-46 ketpina, Betltr Hotne1 & • DUDDY Dl')'l:'•all Co . Gardens, Parenti Map:dne Llc'd C.Ontnetot. Large or • Unduwritera' Ll.boratocy Small Jobs. Ph. 841.9.)81 IRONING In my ho~. SI sea.I ol Approv•I. llr. ~1m•kfnr .l altera· _ _:*~*,....;49~~;96\1;;;,I~•~*---,._F_en_'c_l"l~----6-660_ l •='~="='=·";,.~:764=1======= LAGUNA ' TrH S.rvlce 6980 TR.EU Hedgt>s, lrlm, c:ul, 11twnps, removed, ha.u.led. 30 yn exp, FUiiy Int. 642-4030 COIN CLUB REPAffi Wind dom•a•d MAIO SERVICE 6825 F1tEE fen...."ta. Ftee tstlmatts. No 1---------Upholstery ~letll 4th \\led.L Of the month 1,,!job;;.;;.,UIO""'o"-molli'-'-' ~=®=~-CL.AO-HAND Ma.Id Servlct; 1--------- at Lquna feden.1 S.vtnca PLANNING to move! Yoo'n Bonded, Licensfd I Exp,, CZYKOSKI'S Custm, UphOI. bldg. Start 7 pm. V1slton find an a.maitng numbeT or Hourly -'. by spec. ar-1.11ropean CraflUnlUlllhlp w•lcome. hornet In tocb.y'• Clualfkd ra.niernent. Tn.ruip furn. 100~ tln! SU.1454 Adi. Check them now, 494-157~ 1831 ·Nt\Vl)Ort Blv, CM J\tARAntON Group Encou.nltt Call Evu., 673-- --------------------------- I I WANT AD 642-5878 ' •ntE EASY WAY {Uk Ill Wl\y) 1873 HARIOR ILVD. (II block So-of llhlll COSTA MES~ 548-3426 • I I • ------------·-------·---··· ------------------·--------------- f4 OAU •• V 'ILOT littsdu, fl11rc!! l.l. l 970 j'!)l5 & EMPLO'i'MElilT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR Jobs-Men, Worn. 7100 Job>-Men. Wom . 7100 ~AND T RADE MERCHANDISE FOR SALE A NO TRAD E M ERCHANDISE FOR SA LE AND TRADE P ETS ind LIVESTOCK Joil>-Men. Wom. 7100 Job~. Wom. 7100 Job>-Mon, Wom. 7100 ln1.ClerkTralnee -pOSITIONS SE:CRE T7Rr, Ltft' Furniture 8000 BOB'S Experienced We ld1r Sheel Metal Worke r Dogs U25 P ianos & O rg a ns 8130 Miscellaneous 8600 1-~-------- -------S!Lh'Y Tt.rrifor p1.1ppy. 4 mos. $31j. mo. Meuai1t 11llm>Und· AVAILABLE ln.surAnt'i' A;;f'ncy. Esp. f'URNl'IlJR.E rcturnW from "HO!i.IE or THE BIC BO\"" lfli11. FOR WOMEN preferred. TY!W' 60. Siii display studios, n~tl born· JASON 'BEST 100. Call 54S-1:>12. Sal&cy t' • O<!QonHors ~llaf\on. DISH MACHINE Fabrication For ema n Employm<nl ~llCY E.\'.Ptrlenced in micro-open R D FURNITURE OPERATOR 2207 So. r.taln. Santa Ana PlecO.'Onic asscn1bly and SECURITY GUAnO in 1144 Newport Bl., C.M . Sa.la!')' o~n on 11-~!!t )Obs. 5'16-5110 lab. voork. LA:una. 6 or 1 h<Ju1·~ on Spanish & Me<Utertanean Neat. alcady, n'llablt. tn-e mtal.11 Ii unlfornis lnd*ptndent INSPECTRESS \\'nnted tor i:-ravcyan:I llhift, 01\·n equip· every nitr 'Iii 9 Inll'l'\'\t\\"I 2 10 <I 1 7'°' dB1ily. Personnel Agency li;t rla!S hotel. Ex~rlcnce XLNT. \\fOltKJNG rnent. 633-3677 \\'ed., Sitt. & Sun. 'rtl 6 151 E. l7lh, Co!ta ~teM 171ti Orangt Ave, Suit~ C ~·-"~'~··~· ~'4~4-=17~00'="~'-5~1~5--I CONDITIONS AND \~'AGES. SECURITY GUARDS-8' Sofa, newr U:;t"d , quiltrd BOOKKEEPER C.r.t. IHZ-00:'6, S.1~091!'.I J. C. PENNEY CO. * Call 637-3070 • floral. S{'(llt-h guarded Sl20. l:tECT.RONIC · ~'ull Charge, ~l"nti.factul'int EXPERIENCED ?.told llhofl FASHION ISL.AND ri_1JCH.O SYSTEf\IS Service Stalion _ SE'tviL'C Dcril l\1~tc~. lovescat $75. (U boOkkeepi~ background. !· \Vood shop. Ar 1h 11 r 1672 Kaiser Avl'nue (8 N~f'd) 7?o.--OJ92 Call t..oralnc, \\'cii lcllll Pl"r· l\larine. l565 Babcock, Co:ilil has inllllf'di&tf Santa Ana, Calif. * $135 PER WE EK + -,~1~o=v=1N~'G~.-TO=-H~A-1-1•-A~ll- l\Ol\ncl ,\::r lll"y, 20-13 \\'eiit-Me11a t!fl<'lllni& in ow· <714) :)..f9.229:; ~'or New !\1ark C. f;loornc ThQma~1,il!e 5 11ie1:c bedrootn cli_tf Dr., N.B. 6~';>-2770 EXP'D. Ct'n11"nt F'lni~h"r !· Cofftt Shop ("',i\I. Slorl' 11nri GPntcn :;rl, ldng-silr 3500. P ia110, -~~~-'-"-'-'~-'---1 I • • PART Tll\ll': -BOY• lO. 14 laborrr, for t·cn1ent \~orlc or Grovr & A11hh1·ln1 ~ltwt .. ~. Story & Clark Console 3·100: ~ DE~TAL ASSISTAN'r • Bl Piii 893-4987 afl '4P)1 Chana1 l1rcl! £ shocks. 9 fl , fl'. \H' V('l\'f'l rouch CLt'rier Routes O""'D UTILITY M•N NEEDED. * .,.. 9G'!·2·!1JJ . .,. s·~ •I "-· d h r~ f<'rnaJe ,.., P.r(cl'. \\'Ill 1J•1tin. \led. ix'n-:W... :r t. U<"lgc tufte r'OUC tor POWER MACHINE WAITRESSES REAL ESTATE clit11 & 1n;.u1·. PeMio11 &. Pl'of $200. OtllC'r furn. 673-l(Y.)7 LA.,'"1WD~:P~0Ttarl1t'lll OPERATOR COOK SALESPERSONS ShaJ' P lan. Apply J\la1·k c. SELLrNG beautiful Spanish .,.,., .-. Unusual opportun1ly h.> join Bloome Co.. .1005 l!al'bor fun11rurr almost new. l\lusl ....,.......,,,, Sails By S~k. 6T:>l82l APPLY IN PERSON sa!Ps force o( dynamic real 81\•d., Costa i\lffi!. ~JJ. li7;)...706:i CABINET t.tAKERS k Fib erg la ss Molder Jlio. :Z.I Fashwn !~land, NB l"Slale C'On1'°any. lf you arc SERVICE Station Attci\1.111.nl, N"=E\~V~i~' ~,~:;oo°"'"-,7"~;,..~,~.,~,~,. BOAT CARPENTERS. 1::.~· :tlale Ol' ll"l't'Lalr Equal opporltln11y employrr hcensed & "'ould like to join full timC'. rvt>iun; i;hift Sa.rnllt~ $300. Grt'('n 3150 p!'rlenl't: lll'CC~ry :'till l'Ull or p/time, any shl" JONES TIRE SERVICE tlX' rapidly groii in; staff of El<p'd. i')cR1 111 &PIX'arance. area rul? $7:i. &!4-1650 Placentia, C.:.1. ~i Prod I I ndl Farro11· Realty, caU: 546-~:!'Jl ~·--J ,-~ N C M CHALLENGE -R--.-C'l"I ucf11 Co .. nc-. s expa ni: and rtquircs _,-,,.-.; un, ~-C'"'·por1 · · QUALIT\' ft1rn: Sofa-IK'd, 1,-E p E'"PERJNC f'or l'onficle11tial i11tc1vlC'Y.'. ~ ~" . 0111ona. Santa Ana "' .-...~ ED SERVICE Slu110n Allcndant. gtrcn 11au~. $100. CoflC'f' tbl. Exyp~CNHDTING ~5750 e Retail Salesmen "' RECEPTIONIST • dn).~. ~11•1ng k g1-a\'cyard. ~ll'dll. $7:1. SOfa !l·. gl'f'('n ,.. FR'\:. COOK •Tire Ser ... icemcn Apply 111 ""r..<ll1, co r. t1•1w•s on Bf'l;;mn linen $::00. •· d · · J e >~ I End and Good look.~.~ typing skills, r "ee s f1n1sh c:arpt!nters. ;e rull nr port tune. Dirk · ivn ''OOCI personality _ great co~ ;\lacArthur & Cnn1pus D1'., H1•ckn1an coffee lbl & lamp c.'Oal touch up, bondcn, lead· Church's, 2698 Nel'.'JIOl"t, Cl\!. e Brakt t.lechank"l N.B. lbl, gla~~ top $200. Table men. Bill F'um. (213) Salary plus bonuB and Terrifii.: li:i~ bents. 34oo. la.inn oil =int' 1 l'R\-' COOK -Swill"' or Call Joan f\'larlin. 540-60.::..=. SERVICE St11.11on Sale~man ~" _ .,_ ing, r c. :i2I-8323 . Compton. " c."On1pany paid benefits. 614 93-Gravt>yud shift. Apply 1n o COASTAL AGENCY "'Pl'r. Fulli1n1r. ov<'1·t11nc -J c"~------CLEANING l'.'Onlt'n, oeat •P-11po11unlly for advancen1cnt + C . "h ll 10 h 'I \PL>' Bd ~k prrson. .'ipply; 2049 Harbor BI..-d . 2790 1-larbor Bl\'d, Cl\! '01111niss1on. S c , l " ' • rm set, vvv ea::;c, pt>arancr, vacant 11pt .. luU ODIES RESTAURANT Costa i\lesa 1: Plllccnria. C.:\l s!<-'rco, din. i;rt. flrsk, il[>- or pl/time. Xlnt pay. 1400 \\'. Coasl Hwy To 1600 SE\\'ING i\laclunr Oll"l'ilh•r. fl 1_ 1_ ". rn..,,;1. ~~l'yc.·IOpt'dia's. :;.1s.-m1 N LADY O\'CI' 10. l'tfined 11·itti ~r c I ~1~7768 ~~-----·ewport Beach. Rl'c:cpl ionisl _ "-... <y 1 N'o .s11·1 81n::lr ncrrllr cxpcr. 82ii \\'. _:_isc. a ,., CLERIC L E persona.Illy, no smoking. ..,.,~ A • x P I" r · i:or· • 1-,0UNTAIN BOY BUSBOY Knoii·ledgc of bookkeeping Expcrienl."<'d stati.sl it'al typ. \Slh SI., C .• \1. LJKt: l\('IV avocado/anti11ur poratc bank re{'(lnc1\ianon, DlSH\VASHER. No !'Xfl. & typing. SlcatJy position ing. Call Lorain<', \ff'l'\cltH I .li:iiltf'1 for boy~ 6 &· 9-gold. r1uillrd davcnporl, 8' ~roup i11:1ura.nce and gl"rtf'ral nee. Age 16-20. THE ZOO, 11·ith one of the hnt>st Person!){'! Agency, 20-13 \Vrst· :.!:::.0-:1, larcr :t1oiiday. Joni:. n.CA rolor 21" coruolc ""''' P"paralion. 837-2020, 'I ·-h e.. H I TV. :>IS-J674 e\'CS. :• ae .... , ur al LAN11.SI "-'Y· decorator studios 111 N.B. 1·] ff Drive. K.B. 613-2770. Eve5 ~'/:?-11386 I . _ Be<Jlnners Organ Class *AUCTION* U YoU ~ill sell or buy give \Vindy a try Auctions f'riday 7:3() p.m. $16 for g Weeki Course plus 1nalt'ri&ls. Rqistrat10n· '!\MwJay, f\larth 17th al i Wind y's Auctio n Barn fl.tu. Also ~ndary & In-2075~~ NC\.\'po11, Cl\I 6l6-86:<6 termedlate stuckil)ts n>Rllih.•1· Behind Tony'.s Bid; Mal 'I then also. Call & lnquuoe tor 1''ANTASTIC SAV~GS . details: . -· ITAri.taIOND a llfl\V df'~1gT\('r Clj)thes. lo CORON , rcguJw·ly $00. to S200. now ., -A Df~L ~lA'lt less than !j price. Sizes 9 .. S54 F.. Coa!lt J-ill'Y: 673·8!130 thru 16. Thurs lhru Sun. 10-4 Open ~1011 & f 1·1 f:\IC:I, P al. Call 636-0921 __ Sundu.y 12·4 P IANOS & ORGANS NE\V & USED • Yan1aha Pianos Or1;:a11s • 11101na11 Organ,, CARPl!.'1' lrH fron1 Comm'I. contract!. $1.98, S2.88, 1hac $3.99 sq yd, Di'akcs Ca!'pCI 1 i20G Bea.ch Bivd, H.B. 842.:jl11. • K1n1ball Pi.1110s e Kohler & Campbell 39" x 80" }"OAi\I mallf"f'.s~. COAST MUSIC box sp1·ing & stei:·I lramr, NE:\\'PORT & HAHBOP. l"llcelll'nt condition. Pait Costa l\o1e.Q * &12-'Z851 FN'nch Pl'ov. hcadboards Open 10-6 Fri 10-9 Sun U-51~'=1""""=-========- Misc. W a n ted 8610 If. )Olr ar'I" shopping for a \VANTED: 1 Good Used 10·· piano ot• ol'gan, tK'1v or ll!!('d, OC'lta u n is a,.., . Call and are lntt•1'f'sted In a truly 8 A:'II-4:30 Pal, &12-8782 ;.:rear dell.I, pll'ase shop \VARD'S BALO\\flN STUDTO WAl\'TEO To b11y canopy for 1819 Nr1\'f>Ort, C.l\1. 642-848-I long._\vtde bed pickup, PJ1; Open Evcl'y Nile 673-7569 t... Sunday Afternoon C"A"SH'""!-"-,;;.,~,=-,,=;,~,,,..cc--,~v~.-,.~,7d. .,...,....,..,...,...,.,,.,..,,,.,..,.1 Need appliancf>S. antiques. \\IALNUT Baby Gran cl c h·. No jllnk! 968-6833, 24 ~- Piano, Br<H1n1bach, 5'6'0 , • 1'0ntc~pora1-y 1 f Y 11 n g, Machinery, Etc. 1700 bcoaut1flll rond. Sncrifit.'f', · -'-"----'--::..:C n1ak<' offer. 494-4390 or 9" Dr\Valt radial arm !a1v. 8:l7-Z970 t.!r!al cabinet w·herls, 1 hp motor 31SO. M8--03;)5 AJ\C rt'g. Re'-lfOna blt ! hlon1'.s cxpec1111g ag:a1n • I ha. \'e to n1'tke r o o m ! ~716.i J>:ASTER PUPPY! Poodle $J1 .JO. 4 nX>nths, Al\C'. 612-0::26. li'Ta-21~5 ADORABLE Toy po o d I e pups, 14 wks, 1 hot s, \Vortned. Loving ho m e prtme requisite. 5'15-4522 TERRJFIC Easter Gift; Mi~. Poodles, 7 wks, blacks &: chamJ>a&:ncs $50. Champion bkgrnd. Call 968.!;i27 aft 3. OLD English Sheep Dog, fcniale. Beautiful. C •I l 530-2'1!11 DOBIE male I yr, no papers. Good pet for family. $50. &12-7312 (Keep tryirll[). GREAT PYRENEES Puppy. AKC. Xlnt dispo!ition. 13 \\'C('ks, 67;)..7632 AFGllA.i"J PUPS. AKC Ready for F.aster. CDtpoail) Call 846-5-152 -Bassett ?.tale, 9 wks., AKC, trl·color S45. •. 557..fi7fr6 * SILKY Terrier Pups. Cham· pion stock. $2'i0. e1LCh. •&1&-~l • -----------Al{C re:;lstered toy poodles, 5 ll't'Cks old. 962-7532 YORKSJ-llRE TERRIER pups. 8 1vks AKC. 673-7756 Ext 46 for appl. N 6 --~ . . Good Mlary & fullll'r. Give Restauranl TELI::~llONI:. rtt>L"ept1on1s1 Offic e Furniture 8010 GALS. For pl'Ol.'luetwn sl'!1\·· rels. \Y1·ite Daily PLiot Bo>. Ancient M . for ::iC.'1"1·1cr Co. 1r1 C .. \l. ---------- J-JA,,IJ\10ND Steinway, Yam-$ aha. New & usal pianos of wa ps 8790 Horses 1110s! makes. Best buys in ---'-.----. ---- So. Calif. a• Schmidt i\lusic TRADE: 011:an1c i:;arde~r Co. 1907 N. i\frln Sanlll Ana 1111.nt.s 1o s11·ap for fruit 1830 -* COOK * (day s and nights) Srollt'r e.~~rience p~f<-'lTcd APPLY L"J PERSOi\'. REUBEN'S COCO'S 1555 W. Ad•ms, C .M . · COOKS**** E.XPERIENCEO li'ull time or part lime suru· & SIRLOIN !>:130 l'8cific Coast H1\'y, Ne'>'•port Beach COOK Exc.'t'llent position for e.~pe1i. encf'd person. Apply. i\lan.. a:;•r. El Adobe, San Juan Capistrano. *••COOK •• ing. ?-lust ht-e-\p'd. y,j!)i i\1·922 Griner arr.t. A.t:r 'Jj.\i Apply in AEROSPACE RELEASES flillllern~. f as I. l LADIES Nerd <'Xlra money':" no11• laking 11.ppl1cat1on.~ foi· 111'rH1n :C7 tE• N. Euclid, ran PUBLIC SA LE 11·/.st\\'O\'erlock rxp. Bch Stilll'I O"-'ll bui1illC'ss in holnc Full & part lln)e, ri;iy !!!h1fr, Anahr1n1 e ;.oo slcel transfer ca.st'~ e lll't'lt. Bo.~ t.l-7b6 Diltl)' Pilol p/lin1t or lull If )'OU dl?Sll'C', • K ITCHEN HELP -Tl::LEPllON .. ~ SOLJ('[ ro1:.S 'l'i:! Slffl & "ood desks . 8j, GENERAL OFFICE Not doo1· to door. No ~rt e DISHWASHER 1:'\Jaturr, n1·cr :;o. 5-Dr:iwl"r lc;:al file cabinet" Good typing and Fl'Ont orfitt hr:<., fr('(' 1ra1n1ni:. 11 n llpply in pen;o11 Ptr11sau1, pr.ru1 . part t1n1r ,. :'Ilise chairs. tables & cab- appeara~. Call Loraine. obll;:arion. Call 968-1319 or M7 "" COii.st H11). rrlrphorw l\Oi'k. Day I.· nio:ht 111r1,, \\'estcliU Pert!Onnf'I Age~)'. -;-:"~'--'~',"----~-.,;..· ~ • Nf'1i·po11 Reaeh ~t11ft". 8!.il·S::OO i\le:\lahan 61'0s Df':~k Inc:. 2043 \\'cstclilf Dr., N.B. Lady Companion to elderly R ~ST,\ U f{ AN 1'. :\!, t·~ TRAINE:f': for \\'r.l Sun c..\ii. 1800 Nc1vport Bl~·~ • 1l'C'C'~. lhrVl' Loqual U'E'eS £: ----------1 grttnis. Nttd double rahbit \\'UP.Lll'ZEP. 4600 Arnphlird hUll'h. \\"iU lt'arlr 2 n1r!al Rerrl Ot'1;1.1n. 2.1 f)C'dal, ltu·gc ne.~nng lx1~e~. f'.?l P.abb\\11 Lf''<lll" Included. As L~ SG9:•. for ~11lr: Shmv r<1bbit, nlale GOUiD MUSIC !:; ;'m"" '" 12· ,.,_,"" :'i-17-06811"'='======== 20-IZI N. l\.li1 in, S.A. '°1;).2770 lady. Livi' 1n . Salary. Lite 11 :30-2 P)I, days. i\IALE, I lin;. t"ull tinl!' g, P<-'l'm. t:.~· Cosla t.tcsa•642-8450 hseu"Ork !.·cook 6-1~1972 01·rr 15-r\cs. Apply al pr!'. Pl'Cf('JTI.'d. lntt'.'J"l'lt'.'l"S FOR Sale· Thrrl" bood o!li(-c * G.IRL FRIDAY * •:\IAKE your spai·t tinie 1'.aslt'e t·~rz 2966 B1·istol I 11A:\1-12P\I. 612-1911. g!!j \V. l'ha1r>.. E.xcellcn\ Condition. PIANO, Baldwin Acrosonic. Sharp :i;al lo be tht: onr k tC'al!y pay o£f. Learn 10 C.:.1. af~cr '.! P:'I!. lSrh St., C.:"11. ~.1(}..7.11:; a11t1qur 11hi!I" &: :::old, A-1 llECTOR ;5 a pup, blal'k FREE Td> YOU only for a very pleasant~. become ~ f'a..;hion Sa!e.:i ----=======-==:o Nlnd. Sj.j(). &IG-1121 lil'cly m11 lc 3 mos. old nt'C'd~ Sec. duti<>s k bkkp~. Xlnt Consulll'lnt. Call :.Ii:;~ Poteet Sec Bctly B1·uc.'(' ill CLERK TYPIST Store -E quipm ent 8012 ONf. Only. New cable pern1ancn! hon1r \l'i!h good loc. Good co. btnfs. Start 540-:>.311 m 6 MACCO CORP., nat'I. I----Kelson !'ipinet $:>9~. chow t:_ cornpatiy. 497-1838, S32J. Fe~ paid. Hurry!! Call M•NAGEMENT • la nd developers, loca· --.-----Goulds :-i.11-00RT ~l.1~1 :'llonterey A1'c. Lai::. B~·h .Jean 61'01vn. &10-~. Other ,.. tjj Xe C ID Key Adding r-.tachU"IC. ire!" & fe!' job~ a\'ait. TRAINEE f Ct t ed in Ne wport Beach, dn·rcr sublrat·rion & rolli11g \VURLITZ£R Spinet pntcllcr F'REi'.: Puppies, 7 \\'ks ol rl, COASTAL AGENCY SGOO 10 i'lt1111. r.1us1 !).-. 1118,.. Agt'ncy or · recr Girls is Io o k in g for a !Uh f1lr. Call li7J-7076. piano. good t'Ond. ra1·1 Pool.II,..., Collir, Cocker Z'i90 Harbor Bl\'d., C.1\1. 1·1ed, so1nc colle;:r. Call Anri, s!lOa~:,i~~l l·h~:y., :ui~939 CLERK TYPIST . STOI~~ f'IXIUl't':>: \Vall hx· &i4-1176 ~pani<'I, Ir intere.strd rlrase • * GIBL FRIDA\' Sharp. Apply: !\lac Gl't';::Or Yacht Corp. 1631 PlaL't!ntia, Costa :'lcl'="'=-------G UAR D \\"cstchff Pe1·sonnPI :\gt'ncy, We r equire g ood t y p-1u1t"s--0utl'ig:;cr l)'pt'. gon-,£ L !:'.'.CT r.. O N IC (Jrga11, ~~t ~7-~~ ;vr£ or ivkZ1:.; 20~3 \\'ei;lcllfl Di·.. N.B. ing & lite shorthand , dnlns. glass .~helve$. ('l!lfOP}' .fad1 ... a. Co111bo Cornpacl. S!<IOn IC " 64.).2'170 SALES REP. TRA!Ni::E Must be s harp, youth· w/fac1a l 1~hting. recc!'t.Cd Br~! Oflrr. Ca11 51&-4:?18 TO Qualifi{'{f hon1r, lovable ~IANAGER 1·r.i l1X'C', 01.,..r :ii. E1w~t11-. Pf'l'!<Orlablr, ~o ful & att ract ive fo r r·rihng li~hls, fornuca chrck f1•n1ale Colli<'. 3 yrars, all Nrat. Apply in ptrson ;\le&. :;rlli'I' lo rrprr.~rnl TH I·; front off ice. out ~rand & 11·at1 f1xtu1cs. Television 8205 shots, lo\'rs chit<lrrn. nct>ds Ed 410 111h c 'I r1r ld lra'1cr " iln A·l ri1"0-i\'.r;irly ne" fi.1-1-2:'..JZ I ~ r l!" f r n c t d ya r d . s, · .. · Conta ct MRS. LIND-•-. ,._,-,, J/11 ~ram . Con1n1. $7:'00. f'N' -.>;?-., !\lust be ~xptrienctd. Apply: &<.11r1iy OUiCf'r to fill po~i­ F1ytn:i: BuUrr, 3101 N~111>0rt tion locally. !\lust bt bond- i\IECHANTCAL E:'\GINl-.En. 1 C I 1 p SAY. ( a I I (714 ) S I 8022 ZF.Nl111 Lii t., ~1odr1 Color CrR l\N SI I . d FORE:"llAN l< LEAD r.IF.N, pc , a af O'Br1rn, 642-4910, e xt. 289 or Garage a e TV ?I ", 11·alnul. Perf Cond. ' . ;\,' . JOrl lair a\1~1'C' :it 0 I. 0 "~Rs l< GEL ·,1Q.6{J;1.i Oth<'r frcr !· Ire write: _ ---------~z.:io c,,11 X.S-.IOOO nH1lr 11·a1ch do1:. J1k1•s CO,\'J'ER!i. All 3 shift~ Top JObll avail. MAC CO CORP P.EFRIG 14 ru f!, clran. --children. frisky, rl('cds roon1 Bl\·d., N.8 . 673-0977 11btr. ablt to pa11s physical CORPORATE V.P . agility rest & clearance a11 Dunn Pro~rty i\lgnil. required. Salary to $3jO mo. Exptr. !'equired in ad\•anccd lo 11a.11 depending on cxpcr. Real Estate app11li!;in1'. R. E. }-or further info. &. interview Financing and Co1nm & Ind. 1·a.H 642-71169. prop. Salary f)C'r applic:ant11 • llAIR :-i'TYLIST quallflcation~. 541-6627 E!l:cillng opportunity for al- COUPLE, man & \\'ife. bhi·n lractivr. persontibll" slyh~I 4;>.5j a& as~istant 111anagcr11 \l'llh i>U-ong foUowinc. l\la.lc tor luge 1.pt. complrx. Liv· or Fen1a!e. ing quarler11 Bind ulililie~ + Play Soy I-lair Slyh.~I salary. t.lan mull! be Coocl 1L'.>Q ltvifl(' St. Neu'J)Orl Beach painter. Sul>mit re.~umt to Interview by appt. only Daily Pilot Box J\,.26, Call 47141 :)-1~8;)32 LAPIN GRADUATE Data Processing PREFERRED Ability rn cperalt' 403 instal· job ltiJI Pl l c ll COASTAL AGENCY wot·k•. fn"'. l ·IJ. Laii·nmol'.cr to run. 1\1 L.1gona. SPCA or s. at'C'n ia, ... . ,-11 ... _ "' H i-F i & Ste reo 1210 ··all •I"' ~·~ 3/!1 4"" ;ir,,.,r Blvd. C\I E I t M J•"' R J h I d ' ~• :z !'.!EN to run m p oym en anager SC'ar~ " ec O\'t>r au" , ==o=--------gt'nc ral n1aclnnc P .O. Box 2175, SliO. \\'1.'d. & Thur! l!H P:\1 . )IUNTZ 4 trai·k slt't'N> tape 2 Cal~. l 1nalr & 1 frn1. Bolh •hop -"'pnlt'nr: Sale• C N•wport Beach 260-1 Redlands. C.;\1. dC'l'k iv/? i,r ~pcaker<.. E~· altered. :: yn;. old . ~·rec lo ~.., DIRE ·T ~airs 1w;:an1z:.r1on i;:oocl hon1r !ogrth t' r l\lilling ~lachnl!'.~. 11,,.t'ds youn;:: 111.,n 119.~.i) .\: Calif, 92663 ,\IOV ING , i\'lu.st srll! 1•rl o•ond. si;·, 1-on1plclt. _ · e 0 Punch Press, U.rhr!. --------~·urn1turc. household itrn1s 6·16--01!31i a/1cr 6p111 or ~rr.1araicly 1'12-7'.?IG. 3119 11·on1cn. )l<ti'l'itd or 1ungl". • \\0 AITf:.f.SSBS .t· '-\"!"''' DOESN'T\\' I G 2 fl1EN for aluminum E;;>rn $100-$:.IOO rirr 1110. CAr.JIOPS 1 .. ,rt tinir. \\'ill 2112 Highland 01', NB. ,,.,,_. ;.., 1lay1'. amcr; crman fab1ic:illon. 111u·t1imr. Call tor 11ppl. 1r11.in. l.unfil t.-11 k rnd~. ~tl)\...9-l:l6 '69 i\la;;:a111·ox consolr S!e1·co. Shl'phl'rd. nia!c. Good E:-;p'd only need apply .':.12-7388 l\1u ~I I'll· l'hPt1iu\. dron & PU f1·uc·k . sr11111,1.; n1ach.. Ai\1-f1'.f radio Prcan-n1cclit iiah·hdog t Joi·ri; childrrn. 8 to 4: ~ P.:\1. SALl:S G!f:.L 1·ovr1r(}t1• THE 7, O O, 101nvr. relni:. l\'BIS)H>\'. dryrr, style. Bcs1 offr1·. 67:1--i70!l fi·1l)-~l967 311'1 770 \V. 171h 81., C.1\1 t:~pel'. Sal<':< girl /or J\1n~·Arthui .;I Con~I lh1•y . (•olor TV, n1isc. household. 2 ADULT spayeri lcn1ale l\lOTEL i\lanagcn1rnt couplr, \adic~ sportSl\'rai·. Call N.R. .'il0-4.')74 M iscellaneous 8600 cats, need qua!Hicd adul1 $5,;0 mn up + Apt + bonu~. .)lti--2.\G:l -1· •1------1-=====-====== ho m r. 0 1v n c r d Ir d . \',\I 1 ~E~~ r;o;prr food & 8100 ~8-081~ 3/17 or lrainer $•\00 1no up. 2Ji6 S:ilrl! h:u . Nral. plt'a~a111, ill('r\. Appliances '\V ,\ NT E O· EXTREJ\IELYI _c="=~"------"- 1"r1vport Blvd .. CJ\!. '.'J.;8-97J.J NEED 1\IONEY:' Choosr Sni , rtuin••r hou~c. Cd)l.1----------Rea~nahle 'u...cd L"arpelini;. FE:\1ALE dog. rrrr 10 good :'llOTEL J\IA ID Par! 11n1c. your 0\\'11 11n1c. Srt"l'lr" Ca11 li7:'.-77t2 \\'ASTEKING riishwasher,bll· Prefer d;1rke1· i·olor. Please home, E.x('('l 11·atchcl~. loi• Hall Registered Arabian ~la.re Jn Foal. •Call 644-USB • T RANSPORTATION Boats & Yachts 9000 ' 18' INBOARD, genuine Cen- tury Lllpslrake bay & ocean boar. Nored for safety l comrorL Top condition, 11ey,• paint in & out. corrvt. top. C'an\'as cover, bait tank, etc. 60 hp, gray mnrlne eni:;. Sacri!1c:e Sl:?S~1. S<'e at Bol Boat Docks next to Balboa Pt1vilio11. 675-6953 or 673-·1070 for lest ride. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Dl"b111r -~lount -Poked - Tropir -TOUPEF. A b1-; hend: "Iii~ head ls i::t"ltin;.: too big for hi$ rou. PEE." l-1-11-Lnnc Siar aluminum hu;d \1 i1h tile I railer & 10 hrs n1o•IOr. S~.00. 510-3803 alt 4.::0 l':.1. ·i:;IO\VENS lS' S.S. 225 HP. shipl~liore. Nl'r1ls .some \VOl'k $ lj()(I, !lfi:!-5113 l!VCS. ---l!M:iJ CRF~~i1'LINER':J8·. 115 lfP. J1 200. Exel. 25' 1lip ll\'trll. 612-4644 11-;-CABI~(:ru-;-.,-,.-_ ~H~,-,~,.-,­ bunk~. f!bcrgla.~~ed. Good con1J. S21.i0. 51S-i!J32. ~rfonn C,c,,~1-o ~C~ru~;~,.-,, drp!h lindJ'r !-olhrr xtr11.s. A Cun1pl1·!c Co11t. 812-3028 Sai lboats 9010 lation t:_ 11·irc board. t'unc· * * Hairdrtsse~. Xlnl op. non as drpl. supv. To Si;,ct. portunity. ne11• a a Ion. SERVICE CENTER . _•_1_2-_t_11_;_.,_k_l_oo_ca_1_. -- EmployfTlent Agency H,\VE a tun JOb In your ~pare JOO Nr'>''PQI1 Ccntt'r Dr., NB !Im•. Goorl t'arni~., & pen1n:sul11 11.rra . t'Uslon11;>rs 111 your area. Call \\'A ITRl::SS, E~rl"riC'nccd, in 1\lodel 950-200. sta~nle~s call &12-172~ aflcr (j P)I or ?Ider ~~pl. Gd dlsposil~on . • 67:>-1841 • b<'lor" i\'oon 968-2'118. i\lr:..il·;u1 f'lOll. ovrr 21 stl'CI Brand nr11·. s.t1Jl rn l'.cekcnds. .rJG-34•.i. .,.19 ----------- 1\10TEL 1\IATDS. Exp·d s2 l·--------iiiiio * 612-Sti~ * ctn. Retail S?.42 Sell S21:1. f\fOVING : i\lu:-t Sell. Singl(' KEESCHO~'D-:' pup~ j y,·ks 1969 BAL.BOA 2D w/tratler . Suil!' 200 By appt. &!~!ISi prizes ii )'OU like (>C'Ople. No in1'f'lltmen!. 1\il/ n·ain. F'or DELIVERIES. ~!air \\lth 1ntrrviP11· appt. rall 8.17..()~46 car. t"ull timr. Call .11 Jl('r:wn. :;(Ill !"e11·port Bhd .• llospit;J !\'pl. Brh • r.ELIEF' Olf~llTIAN DENTAL A1~ls1snl, e PH\'S.TCA.L rha1r-~\d1", expanded dune~. THERAPtsr four handtd d I" n tis Irv. • l/\1-IALATION prc\'ent11•t prac!1a. E:>.· THERAPIST ptr1l'nce a mu1t! i o p sillai-:-·. 9-.l l\lou-f'ri Call Apply Penionnel D1rcr1or ... -2s r 6 30 So. Coast Commun11y llospi· u-•y-"' a 1 : p.n1 .. 968-.'}782 \-j pin. ta\. :1187:! Coa!t H11y .. South Laguna, Cali!. Ph: '199·1J!l DENTAL As1is tan 1, £'\· Ext. :\:xi. prncrlC'C'ri . eha1r-s1de. El Toro, LllKUna Hill~ arra. "10-ll.IO Dental /\s.~i1lan1 . Chair1id!'. Exprr. Onl~'. • Call 348-884~ - Dept. Slore 1-101..iSEKEEPER: l\laturt'. l.ile twking r., hou~r11ork for elderly "·idow on Balboa l~ll!ll1d. Room & boartl + $25 J)t'r ll'k. Call 673-510:: HOUSEKEEPER ll'llnted for hrclic, happy, hous<-'hold wlcherrful teenagcrs. 11rtd J. W. R 0 BIN SON ..:m:::':::"c:".:.· .:.c" ·:::•:..· .,:.:. ~=--· ='":.:' _ I !AS OPE.1\ ING FOr. AZ'1 EXPERJENCED MAINTENANCE MECHANIC Full t ime position Xln1 c1>mra11y bcnrJ1~ ilopply 1n J)l'r!011 t'a.shion lslllnd, N.B. f~quAI opport1Jnity cmployrr *DRIVERS* No Experience Necessary! INDEPENDENT Order of forest<'rs is look\nc for 3 1aks tra1rlC'es. Carerr opp, grne-rous advanct!. S.l:>--0591 !l an1-1 :30 pm ITT JABSCO he• a n immedi•t• opening for an ENGINEERING -CLERK- t11 '>''Otk in Product Srrnon. l\fU!ll be ~ \l,'llh f~l'f'!I ~nd dl!tatl. l\lust have inter· "'' and unch•n,tandina of ro. lallf\lt machine1y. hr. Non-<'xp·n. Sl.65 hr. 2316 SALES \\'.\i\'TED Hrliahlr liv•·-in 8?.0-::J:14~l ~~-----1\leinbership 111 Nrwpoi·t old, look l1kr lovable !t•ddy Sips 4. Dillt'tte. head, 'ink, Ncii1>0rt Bh•d, C)t j lS-97.V i\1a 11 or \\'0111an 1\•/salr~ ,.,,. ~ill rr In i·iirr !or 1 ~cllOfll & FRIGIDAIRF: rlrcl dryer, Bch Trnnis f'lull s:i:..o or ht>ar.;. n1alr l< fcn1alr running liles, cabin IUr, NEED Llvc In Babys;ttcr. ricr. to illct al!vut~idr t'OtJ· t l-1rolrl for:!11'Pck~.\\'11h :.l11t cond. 220V. \\lhirlpool bcsc offer. s11 )r-jP;\1 , :ttMSi:t 3/19 an1:hor Hie, spee do . No ;,alary. Juiil l'OO!ll k tar·t !o sell lhr ri"sii:-n Rrl~rrni·r~. Call tii:>-tili::I 1vashcr xlnt n:rnd. Stl f'ill. S.12-SjOO, i\10V ING! ~1usl find hon1c! bo\\'-plllpll & life line. Im· sl'rvit'Cofa lo11.1:rstabl1shcd 84•811 . :;.tfi-86~" -----\\lh SI hrd 6 n1;1c. $3295. Pvt p l y. board I.· all )'Ou can ral. I I --*-W-QMEN * 1-"or _7 '_·_,_ I NE\rl'OHT C1•urh 'l'l"nnis 1· icp c pup, nio 6-1·i_n~11n doy•·. ,., ~2 , .. ,, qua 11y UllCl'IOI' {t'(._'Qfltl 111!! ~-;o 1-1 b k T I ho -:J.J<N ""'""""" ¥ \\"il1 con~idcr n'IOthcr 111/l Jinn. Refer. \\'l'\\e Bo.\ :f.!)I. TrlC'phonr \\'Ork llOTPOTNT Elcclrit· doublt Clul) l,11111ly n1rn1bcr:<t1111. ouse ro Pn. 0 !,'OOC ~ nlt' & i\•knds t·hild, boy approx. 6 rn. ovrn & ranJ:!r top 1\·1th hood 3·1j(I, Days ~1·19-:!286. f'\'CS only. 6n-6060. 12-6 P :\1 " 18 C Daily P ilol , N.B. hun1 .horn<" • ---1S' SLOOP 21' Ovt-rall, on1pany for our .son. Our ,NQ "· ''LLltN•~ $120. ~S-9,j()9 ;,.Jl)...",S I~ t"l.UFJ-"Y l\!ini Cat, pal<' h·' . ..._, .~... v darron s.iil!<, Acrylon cover, <: ud ill 111 !1.uvv• most or SALES HELP needed, full \\'rile USED Applianct"s & TV's. ,,Jl 3 GREEN bars!ools $'.?:1 cnch. 6rt'~· [l'nHi.lP, ~ mo·~ old . !<!u1 nlc~.~ r11::gin;, co m !' J tht d~y. VeiC-yl lilUt night lime. ri.-Iu st hav" rxp in la· P.O. Box 5.j6j gunrantel!d. Dunlap's. 1111~ Table Jainp~. purnpkin pu1r Very !r.ivtn1::. Kt>eds gnod 1·u;.h1ons, sll'Cp~ 2. folding care, If any. ose quartet!! dies rt'illdy·\().\\'car. Apply 1n Los An&t'.'les, Cai1f NP1\'fl01'1. C.i\1. :l4S-n1ill S-10 ('!!.th. Gold $JO & 320. hoinr. 71-16-5.:i\9 ~\~ rna~l. StiOO. R1ch·s Tor Sl'IOp, in 1m1all house. i\-tus! be con-..... rson, Jac:kies F'ashlon Ccn· &H-16j(I 2 S1na tl 3 mo old ft'n1alc mLx-7 l &::enial. &IZ-3844 Ei·es. &., '"' e \VO:\IAN for twku1~. 1968 HOTPOJN"r refrig. A1·0. . ~·I \V lli1h St., C.M. call 1'.'el"kends. tcr. No. 7;"i Httnllno;ton Ccn-housrkrrpin;: durir~. so111r t·ado 1-'TI.'Cn. 17 cu. ft Frflst Nl::\\'PORT Be<1ch T<'nnii; rd ht·erd p11pp1r«. Nier ti-l!M.J~.SS rl"r. Hunt. Bch. nursing dc!<i!'\'d. Penn. pos. frre Call &12-30;.G Club Chartrr f ;11111 I y Ea~ler Gills._ ~'-'C~! honit'I> !'l;i ~Tl'rUtl NURSES l t~gtslcred -ci·l'n-s,\LES \.arl1rs :.'Q4~i. 1··u11 Thur~ \Pi\l·Sun 4P:'ll Sfi(l. G.E. auto l''llshel' & r!rt·!ru• ~lr1111>rrs11i. Sell •1r !rd. dr~p,..ratrly. "1·,_t(;,,~. ~./l!l S I e ing & n1i;h1 shifts. Ex. tin1r, nr('ril'fi for Tu~1111 "-I ti~ft ~-:bl iil·l-Ol:i!J S :'llu-olrl n1i\f'l/ 1,1·1•r1! tl(1t:. O ing Te mpe st bcnchl~. Apply Personnel _il\'~1·-~ -lh".\'f'L' S•10 r,i . ..;ti\I \'(JtHJ 1 I I I ·1 ! 1 r PT\10 Cius~ of l~llOO! Directo1·. So. Coasr Coin· Cos I ii :'II t:' sa , /\fl PI~ --S<fi--,.~1\;i or :116-St.li:.> l·:UROPJ:/\:-.' J1u111a11 llu1r, ovnl1 r. i.:r•11 i1 chi r rrn. I H , 18 ., C Bcrgs1ron1~ ~aby N r ws Schools·lns_truction 7600 AUTO't-A'ric,,-,,~_-1,,,-:--1"-J>~~---'o hHnd 1·1rd, ltghl klonrfr 11 11::. loatl 1>h•1l~!1 s.-~,s1_:__--2'._1:1 i\l!1i11. jih, s11in, P.ll'. 31374 mun ly osp .. ,, •~ oas\ "I , .. ,, "D" " 1. ""' --P:io·11i1• YRrht S:ilc11 673-1570 '' ...,_ , _ ""'I'll .,orr .. .., ,,.1, usun. s.-.-1 C;i!! 614-01::!1 af1 6;::0 7 BL,\CK 11/11h11c. puppir!I wy ... ,, ...... ~una. ''"J'-.i r l c r ! r 1 <' fl r Y 1· 1· S ~ 0. ::·116 Via Opnr:o. NclVJll Bch. csl. J..;& SARAll COVE~TRY ha~ * AIRLINE * r.i•ft•ii;:t>i·a-tor ~ll. &12-11\6~• P\! arr lookin:; for a nit·r ho111r. _ - O PERATOR"""· 'd G opclllZ'lg~ for lull OI' p.1r1 TRAVEL CAREERS ,l,\GIC ''l••I ''ombo >:lrr· CARPET Layer ha.~ carprt. ~&-:).1.Sj ::/19 LIDO -tl&"Trlr. Sailed 6 l ' P ..-.-...•p :. Bir-timr ialr~. Ko 1n\'r~t1"1'1('11t, "'1". c k .-~".. N)lon. KOOcl, Shag &. 7 -2 n10. old long ha11"t'd linn•i; In 4 yrs. Rt~I ol lime men mgr. r. 11or,;-. up to M dch1·crie~. for in1rrvir1v, range. re r1:: .. sin . V'"'" in Snu:: Jl arhor or gara,L!e. $3.00 hr. Steady. S.1:!~1i2 • :,I0-0014 * Opr1•1111on., Agrntt i-ond . ;\Tak<' olrcr. 6~ Ii i-loll'~. \V1ll sell at cost for _gulrll"a pigs. \\.hL re malr. Yule shnllf'. Jlio. lli3. $1100. N.B. Til!krt SR.le~ l111>Qr. :i23-IJSS brown nialc 8•12-3141 :l/19 Al! 6 817_7631 OUTSIDE VERIFIER SC\,\ISTf!ESS · 11·i!h uldus-lteSf'rva1JDn1 Antiques 8110 LOCALEi;gs \Vholr!lalc fron1 FREE \VOOD. l'llodel glass ---------- !rial se11·1ng: marlunP. r!l:pcr. .\ir freight . Can;o Ranch 10 Restaurants & Co.. 164-4 superior. C.:'11. LtOO 14 Sailboat. N'n. 231t!), Call by Appoinlm .. n1. Ko r x· •rll<'t'. Pho!lf' 4934;,.sg or ;ip. Cl'lmmun1r1111on~ ORI ENT AL RUGS Con\' RI rs c r n t Honies 616-::231 il"ith ll'llilcr. Call 83T-7039 prr. ner. t.1u5l lul\·e depend· ply in prr:<011 al Co;t~! Cttlil· T1'1\\fcl AJ;rn1 1'Prmnn~ 12:.:2'1, 10x14, ~12 5-1&-::i..,i;; aft 6 P)J ===--~=c~-~ ;ift 6 P.\I bl ~-" ":::01' C II I I F'REE Ba:>sCL~. AK ftro~ .. 1 p C \T GS T -" a e car. vuuu !<larhn;: 1131-n1ar:1n.. -a c ~c1· ccto. I.: lh.10. 6iJ.19n ()f 67~jg'!.?. c 1 I h ll , • 1 1 1 I 2 · · ' · + i ...... er arflt' ayer 11~ 1 UI rna (', cn111. !'. :-· r .~. al)' & oppo11un1ty tor ad-San Ju<tn C.:11pi~lrar10. AIRLINE nylon~ $1 99 yd. Shai:;~ o1!r1--j\6.l 3/17 S~4!15. Sharp! Call &t2·1~~ -SeC"·Le g al Trai-;;;;-Sewing M1chines 1 1'20 from Sl.:JO up + 111, labor, J\1r. f\lorsc 673-1570 ~-:c===--c---' SCHOOLS HAPPY has so111r 111orc lol'e-••PAINTERS ll<'l"dcd In. To 1500 90r ""r ,\'ani. 817-lJt!I 1.1' i\lclcaU, Hlway trailer, J :-i!1'>GER au10 1i:·ZR1t. 6 n10~. ,,.. Jy klllen~! Call 67.'i-3558 J/19 locAI nianu(acturrr. l\'rl'd r:.al'r "!JPl.1. lo ~1art 111 \rry PACIFIC nltl. No 11.rta.·h ncr.dC'd for SURFBOARD /.· guita r, FREE Turtle To Go scrs ofsa~s.$·IOO. O\an familiar 11ilh p1-o-plc·.•~an! law 111~'. Congrn1ul nay ~· Nii;ht Clll~SC~ tit:·t.:11!.. hurton h n 1 r ~, never u~d. ir.i1kr offer. :''"•••• 3117 * Th-Til4 • duchon on rlt>ctro-si atic 1·1·>-11urkl'1-s. Top llrnfs. ca.II ~..i3.l)j.'lf; dc.,1gn~ t>lc. Gllnr. S37 ra~h 6i3-J09i """ "" 12' Tiki C; t, fibC'fl(laa painting. 111 ask in l. o\hg~ l-:h1.11.0C1h. ,\b1ga1l Ab-lilt' E. 17lh St ,. Santa i\na 01. sniall payments. ~16 ------. ---.-Bl::ACLE & pondlc puppies, 3 wlrngine & frailer. $350. Call; :J.l:>-71:i~ bot !'C'r~nurl 1\1:r11cv. no llAND Piilnlrrl 011 porlrltl1 of monlh., old. frl'l-6206 3/li Call &l:l-1Z19. · ynu nr ;.our ch1l.-t1-..n (ro1n a -~--~ PllRT Th11c l\lodcl J\lakrl'. \\'. \\'arnrr. Suire 711. S11111a The Newport M usica l pholci~rarh. &16-362!1 t'RC:E RATS. SN0\\0BTRD Sailboat wltrtr. ~klllrd, to 11:11111 " •~r1nhlc ,\n.t . School of Busines1 Instrument s 11 25 cPOO==L-T-,-h-1,-.-,.-,-8 531-20!1.l \\'alt.~ ~ail. :-.ln't ~haPf!. ·sllJ. plastic ;.;u·ht n1od1"ls , SECRETARY ~117 Call ~0-7768 aft 6. .... ,.,,, ,,.,.1,,.,.,,1." 110,,__ CONTELLO S1·1u1swlck S7j{) ..,.. • " \\'01•k fol' lop nia11•. Get fnb· r,--.n11wrs \1rrkly l'rh·c!hcr POODLE P•>ppt·e< 6 ,,.,, I" fll'xiblr. \\'rit,. Sox ti(l.\I. j19..()~l'l ~· • " u!ou~ bl"nf!<, "' Jhis r11p1dly rou1~r~ rn •h,... ~kills ;.ou ACCORDION •ood homf'S 89~ 93~7 ~/19 Dail)' Pilol, N.B. II '-'' k 1~" ·" B"AUT\" '-"IOP ... ,,-" . r \jltl!ll ni: 111·111. A sta1·t to nrrd in gr1 1!w ;ob ~011 -~ ry, ~ va!5, l\'lu• Ca,;(', ,.. ~. PART Tl)1£ SALES\,10;\f:\N Sj.'!l'l, in llu~ ff'r paid joh is 111tnl $600 v•lur + "rasy to f'flU1p 11'1{'1 7 dryrr'l' & chairs FREE ~awdusi . l\lr. Llnlt'y · , for 18·20 hour 1\·ttk, tn-Jll~t 11 hrg1nn11ig. ~lan,v othrr lca.111" bool.."5 .t sh~et music 812-111,, a~ for C11I 83.>-'lJJl 3-l9 1·Judin; f'ri & Sal, In CAt<UJI 11'N" I.· lcr )Obs 111·ail. Call ~:,-; Do\rl' Ot ;\ S. caw. NF:\\'PQRT Brach Trnnis PET S and LIV-ESTOCK Powe r Cruisers 9020 --""",,.;...-= f AS'r 2S' UnifHte <:ruistr. f'nlly l"11uipc1. F.xccl end. SSUI. ~17~1 ofc. 61l-19Jl ~fust ha\·1 dean Calirorrua drivtn: record, .. {)ply YELLOW CAB CO. 116 E. 11th St. f1111ti~hln~~ k Gill ~hop. Aurl1·ry ~1u;1rt ~i.roitl ti12-31nO ' Pt:Rr~ECT CONDITION! Cluh ~lt'n11'1rr.ohip Joi· AAlc. Thb. I~ •n entry-\evrl JJ(I.~\. lntcf"l•it11 ' hy 1ppointn1.•n1. :O:llS 11\'TF.R:-IATIONhl. -PJ,\NOL~:S.~:>.;!'-. S."00 or Best Ollr1• _ran CArtr11n \lark. <ill2-:TJ~1 P e ts, Gene~·~•~l ___ 8~8~00~ fion, ltadin£ lnto en~r· Phone. &t'.1-221~ At.>t~(.'Y OF $Ai\'TA Al\,\ S.lo-s308 Alter l P:.T ZC:' Fl\IRLTNER F1y Brl<'at Sport SC'dnn, SGlJOO. ~ Colta Mesa DTSHW i\SHER. day s 3-C. S7 ht. Apl)!y Che!, 01lhn11n'• Reataunnl, 501 t:. Balboa BJvd •• Balbofli EXCEPTIONAL OPPOR. TO EARN Narkmal mt.tr. or homl" apph· MlCtt hu openlna for d11tr~ bU tor • mllla~r posll!on. St.a.rt part Un~. If drtin'd convtrt to ·ruu 1tme IA!tr. i f300-$600 p!f mo. p1.rt Um<'. MW •pp!. lot lntl'!rv1ew M2-™8. l"f:. )..'.Int. chance for ad-f ,0=.~,:c:...::;::~.~---, ___ Bri;innr1•,;, \nrerm~la!r• -i\IORll.~: 111rlio pho1W", 4. F'OR SALL· So, Amrrican \'an<"'mtnl. Salary rornmen-P/Tl:t,C:. Sn1u:k :-hop 11ork, Ii EC R ET ARY F: ... rcut11·r ~II a::r~ TllEORY . I\\. Fl·:NOER )'fustan:z Gu11ar <'hl!lnn1·I lraf\!1~1nn1cd, Xlt1t Amn7.0n PAJTOI. La ri: r mMfuf'f' v.om1on. Sa! l Sin. Top ~"I.Ill)' ~ )lon-fl'I. Pr.QVIZ1\1'ION. Rc11.11t1nablc , Sl :?l'I ftnri"r ~tr11I01"1!.slrr ,,ind. Sl .1(1. ~~m-9032 \'OCa.bulary. Cage incl. SJj(I llUDI!' ""~th abUtl)' ,. l">,pl"n-~2--2019 ·-... _ h I J cnct. Libera.I trin:t" benthts. ho0kkrf'p1ng, .11Alr~. l111111n<'t~ Call ;1 l1rr ~ pm. :l4l).1~'4S -~ .....,1 )( nJ °" :"'1$--~ POTTER'S WHEEL 5.36-8196. H.B. 67:',...(j;zs_ • 16' r.Ja•par bo.'11. motor I: ll1;1ilrr Lots ol extra~. S&J.1 ~9543 P ROPERTY m11n11::emen1 kkno11·ledc;t & LEARN To t1y IFR'68 LUO\\'Jl; rlruni ....,.!. 7.1l1l11in t:q13.I opport\Jnlly emplo~er M ANAGER r :1.pe1·i ent·e • rn~t : Ct'~r\11, i'.:iO prr hr. 11rt. ryn1bafi; 12". IS" I..·!\:!". t:xf'l('r 10 Rell! Eslalt'. Gd rrr-Career-minded \\'llh a knack Llct•ii.t'd pilol~ i·hcckcG ou! "11h r11i:r~ $.lTh. ~,\S-~~12 1155 Dall' \rtiy ;:.tn11al10n 11b~IJ1y, \VUI m11.n-for public l'f'latK>n5. Cf\ll tree. Call 8'1'1-3576. i11'1 Bass Liaoma A!'COl°dion Crn1r1lul!:'ll. P\tttnr d1,,-e, ~&.7729 "" fi Speed-Ski Boal• 9030 GR,\CO A11'1c~ pa.int ng. i\olnkc offer. Dog_•;;::;-;:~-:;--::88::;25;1 ~~~~~~!...~~I spray ~llNI dox1e11, lo~ &.. ~nlM1h C0t.1& l\leM. Ca.JU. ~ •llt • property n~n1t. 1;>0. &l6-'l'i'28: a.tr 6:3-0 Pm · MERCHANDISE FOR 3100. •n<l ~._., -~1 ~tart . ..1.-11-n-. !'!6S-.li82 l..Jpn1 I • • oT~ ... _, '" SALE AND T RADE • Cal ; ... l i..biEli •_ ~11"6:?7 SF.CRf.:T,\RV • Recepno111st rr·s \l.'O!\'DtRt'11L 1 ,, e many buys In appli11nres you find in ~ Cti2sifiod Adi. Cht!ck !hem rl'l1\ ' • rr=·g~E;,~,-,-h-ho_"_"_tt_m_o_. ~8-,.-.1 Con ~1ruc1ion b:u;k;rounri s;e~t Jl'\t'r\f"n ~\'tr! ~ the hl'lptul, .lil'lcirt1uH'ld, iypl n~ I: DAILY l'ILOT Cliwltied dict.."1.phonr . S·l,'iO ~lo. Tht' ~dlon ~0\\1! Bucrola. Co., Z..IO-SSJ3 t.lr. Oavil. • 8000 P i1 nos & O rgans 1130 -L!Gllr Bc1;r r ;i r fl~ I 1 n;: Ffl EL P1an'l lr«~nn•L (.10 ~11s:htly u~l"l'j ,\flpr'fll>;, ·10 .~c·~. C11!1 frw r"~r1 \"i\!1oni. Ynf,, Xlnt Mnd. M6-29fi2 Cl\11!1~ M7..(l()JU It &IG-6200 • f'Ofll~. aiui.I rtd11{T JIOCk. 1:,il· lJvt"'tl, 5(1 hp , SJ:>.$i:1 . .\.'ll··lU2'1. 3.11~011 E\•innide, hie: \\Jl<'rl tnUer, fully f'(fU1p S600. 6i3-SQ43. fOR Si.Ir : Thn!c ;wo1l (l!hcc tL\RE long coat Chihu~hua~. "h111ri<. r.xecllenl condttlon, tiJui;t reduc.-c s1ock. $:1(1. & ~W0-1~\j $1l .. i11..Sl'.!1 n1 :.;il-107:! Nf\\' 10 ~T>P"d c:1rb .;;c111\1nn ST. Brt'lltird pup,. 1\1\C. Jl:lO nw~cl('. cn~t $1 00.00. i\lakc up. l'hri1v potcn!ial. Shot,, nffpr. 67l-I~ 4C~~-"5l~ti~; ______ _ Boe t T r~llers 9032 \\'1\N 1' f:('lflt trnllrr for 1.1' \\'li;1ler. l1Jl'1.t: "'hcel1, tood cond. Cnll 612~:WOO. ·------------;-~ --· ---• ~ . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO N TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Tue.sd•Y, Matcll 17, 1970 OAIL'r' ,ILOT !li TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORT~TION TWANSPORfATtON TRANSPORTATION Boat Slip f,\oorlng 9036 Trucks 9500 Imported Cars 9600 lmDorlM Auto, ~ ~ --..;:;.;;.;.;.;;;;..c.:;;.;.;c~~-"' 9600 Imported A_ut:"37oo ,A"u;;.••:c•;....;.W;.;•;;.•;;.•id:;:;.._-'mo.;.;; U1ecr-car•.-____ ~ Uaed CArt~ l90ll .!!.!.'!!~.,,. ~--=-~ WANT Mooring Balboa ld. '67 Su... v n DATSUN Prefur Southside at East .... r a . i'Ol?SCHE VOLKSWAGEN WE PAY TOP COMET MERCUl:V i)U ~TON ~ORD •nd. -· ~··u. = -·• ,,._.. Ford. Big UO six, auto, dlr, ._ '' -v ............. ,... "" 8 ply tires. Xlal. cond. in '66 Dallllll 1600 '65 PORSCHE C. aoocl cond, vw BUGS .CASH 1--- COMET . ' '6 7 Montclcir .IQ' SLIP For Ren!, Newport Beach. Call li4W221 days <lr 543-3684 eves. --Mobile Homes 9200 and out. Take foreign car or Roudstl'r. Xln't cond. A~t-f'M, S2950 f j rm. 4 dr Statiun \Y111,11n, FU-. en. smnll dn. No. V4W. call -===*="=·'--00=1='=*=== \\'C!'Ckdays 546-2942, eves gtne red. R/H, Auto trans, 2 Dr. H.T. 'Fact air, pwr Ken aft 10 run 49-l·ST1l or w !'>-IG-1954 rnoM for UJe(.I Cltll .\ truckl just Luggage rack. New \\'hite. ateerbw, dlr. lAndau lop, FERRARI $399 call ua for lree esUm.ate. h>ney Cold ext, phl&b cream M>OOM. 1004 Poncl>e C Coupe. "'""" GROTH CHEVROLET wall tires. $395. &lz.oo22 al· Int. (V00019) Cull Jay all New lnternotlonol "'"· •~w paint • """· ter ~ 10 am ">OOM "'494-9773. BAY HARBOR Pick Up Tnick FERRAR I Many '""" !3<50, cau GOOD SELECTION ' 2240 s. Main N~ lmpo•'-Ltd °" "'"7768aft•r""'I •-•·for Sal "··--CONTINENTAL '67 MERCURY Vill1tg" Mo~~AHR°';~~·los LIQUIDATION ~~'i:',~·;::ni,, .~Jhor· .;~'ORSCHE ~. S<mrooL ~~u::.b~i--·------=~=:!r=·=.~=:580=pwr=·=;.'=~=2S9:o· .=xt=·n=··ll SA5~T6A70A76NA CLEARANCE SALE SALES·SERV1C£-PARTS JW.bll ell&' A tram axle.. Kl 9-3331 19&1 CONT., full po~·l'r, !../ • NOW ON·DlSPL.AY 3in':01~~1.:,0m at factory 3100 W. Coaat J!wy. 1'1u~t lil.'.ll! t-take otter. cle1n &: mec.h. good, Lo MUSTANG '68 TOYOTA 12. 16, ~. 24 & 30 Wides . Newport Beach 53-1-2169 after 6 P?.f. WE PAY CASH miles. $1200. 642-3443 or --------- Up To 6o Feet Long Kustom Motors 6<12·M05 M0..1764 '60 Porsche>, $2050 ~1148 ·oo P.1\l•(ang deluxe v.s, tood· Cu!tom Crown \V!gon . ... Bak c M Authorized Ferrari Dealer s 90 tored r t-~1 1"25 Baker St., Costa Mey ......, er, · . 540-5915 upcr re,i; • any FOR YOUR CAR 19G6 OON'TINENTAL ~ dr. ~. yellow/black top, dt?luxe 4 apoo:I, radio, h!!alt'r, 1,~ block Eut of Harbor Blv·:!. '68 1''0RD " ton VS 11o•!1h 4 ~xi~ :elge w/blk int. $1950. Full pwr, sterro taipe interior, qew ti.res. lrnmacu· WT! ~Sl 343 Costa P.fesa (n4) 540-9470 speed, many :.;tras. MUii l;;E;;N;;G;;;;U;;SH;;;;;;;;F;;O;;.;R;;D;;; 834· ays. S4S.l022 eves. M!L 3031 EXt. 66 or 61 deek. Sf6..9624. late. 11200, Private party, NEW 20 56 .. u. 612-7751 atwr 5 --19'6 912, 42,000 MI'" ·-HARBOR BLVD. CONNELL -... 4M-7U39 X AMffM, radiah, clu'ome ~•• CORVETT 2 BR, 2 BA, den, carpeting '59 Ford ~ T. P. U. 6 cyl. TllF.OENOINGGUSll rin1s. Xlnt l"Ond. •"111:t1. COSI'A P.IE..'\A CHEVROLET E P.IUSTANG '67 390 V-8, Lan· '66 "ERCURY Asking S650~Mlnney's Nv.•pl, .....,.,.,. dau top, p/s, lact al.r, 8 trk1 Iii thru-out, 2'l' raised porc!1, MS-41!12. M&-0039 l':Yes. Tf"IING! S.18-7tii3 9AM..OP~t. lARGE 2828 Harbor Blvd. tupt>, ne11o· paint &. tires. .r.tontclalr 4 Ori J-lanl· carport & patio awnings. AT •63 Porsche. Re-bH eni;. New SELECTION Costa Mesa 546-1200 '63 CORVETI'E Stingray Spec. Inter, 3 spd auto. top. V-8, auto. trans., ?o.lany ex-tras, Sll,600. On µie , JHp 9510 ORANGE COUNTY'C: radials, am/lm, lug. rk. Rd,tr. 4 spd, fu el Injection, G7S-4265 focl.ory air condltioninK, be a c h at DRIFT\VOOD ... 5 VOLUhiE "" $2'1~. Call 548--0ro2 of VW l ;;A;;u;;to;;;L;•~•;•l;n;g;;;;;;;;;;;;98;;1~0 ; an xtra sharp car $1425. \VIII ===~~~~~~ br"'er ateerinir JX>Wt'r BEACH CLUB, H.B. Green-JEEP '46, CMlJan. 283 ENGLISH FORD SPEEDSTER '56 M l ll CAMPERS --consider trade>. P>.·t pty. ll~STANG, '68 im:stback, Li akes, (r.:.t"C· 1~8.tu. leaf l\fobile IIomc Sales, n4-engifll', posi-rcar end, Gates DEALER ' us Ill!. FORD AUTHORlZED 642.9500 days; 645.ro52 nits any extru, eulate. cense$. 1289 ' 536-7513,ojomicra_~'"-'-· --llrcs. 11 inc h brakes, roll OV'Elt 60 ~1: best Oller! 525-8571, Harbour ~ v.w. LEASING ·SYS'I'filt _•_w_k_nd_•·______ ~~I~ Sacrllice! -&U-0353 WNER bar, 2 tops, spare rack and NO~V AT America's largest leaalng '66 CORVETTE Con\·. Im· TRANSFERRED cam;, back seat, etc. $1500. CLEARANCE SPRITE AUTI10RIZED system tor fin::u'lte or net mac. Con d. F' u 11 y '66 Mwitang 6 eyl sUc.k, new '67 MUSTANG l\1ust &acr!ficc 10x5.5 545-208.l ' PRICf,S! SALES &: SERVICE leaslfli of all t)'pe can and blueprinted L8S By Spd. palnt A tin!!. Super cond. Skirts, a11o'llings, coolers '59 Po"·cr 'Vag. 1 Of a Klnd! Theodore 18711 BEACH BL., 842Ml5 truck1. Kanuika. $3.100, Days 1213) m\~ 3Sth St., N.B. 673-4039J ConvcrtiOlc. V-8, auto. Pet ok. Adult park Sho11cned cbas:1U-. brllJld nOBINS FORD ~1UST SEU. '61 Sprite, Runs HUNTINGTON BEAClt • Immediate delivery from 3.54-6496 or da,y/c>ves. {714) '67 1'~astbnc.k, blue "'/blue trans .. factory air ron· s & r.: ritoblle Ilome Brokers new eng:. clutch etc. lluge 24 good. Roll bar 13:\0 or bes! over 300 can and tn:iclai &t~Z959 . inter. Xln'l oond. SlliiO. Call dilioning. power steer· Ply ai,.,.lane u ..... ,, Vc'"'-'e 2060 Harbor Blvd. oUer. &12·2540 i-* * • •Com · · 54s.6t5l or MS-9328 ing, radio, he!lter. U· 12362 Beach Blvrl ., G.G. .,. ·~ •uw ,. _ _._ M ... -o -====.,-,==== 1969 SQUARE BACK .peli!ive rates P.1UST Sell. 1968 Corvette ==========II C<'nse CUFK 020) e 636-09Z1 e will go absolutely anyv.·here. ~«S' esa l;l'lVW• ---Sed, betce. Auto trans. A'Jit/ • New car dealerabip service Conv (.."ry..JOO cu In r.o S1388 1963 SKYLINE 20 x 60 '" "'"'"• l900. Will '°"'Ider I ':!::~'!!~~~~~ SUBARU FM. au.mo · whtJ, Kont • "'11 "tradoln" vaJua for m1 ·,.' Xtra cl""· <....<so OLDSMOBILE Adult Park. 2 min. from o. trade up + cash on Jetp JAGUAR ---------shocks. 1.lany moro xtru. Your preRDl ca.&' Co! airport, a \v n 'in gs, c'~tn~·~•c.•..,_g.-'C-'-a-'-11 :::"'::."",="-'-' ~ '70 Subaru Star Still on WRl'I'. $2495. Pvt. pty. • ~~. popWir makea avail· COUGAR '66 Olds 442, 4 spd, Pl•. New '65 MUSTANG skirling, porch & carport. 2 '6~ \Vugonecr Sl09:i, '56 Jeep JAGUAR . h 90 h 3S JAMES LIMITED, 9-5:30, F Co ,., poly Urea, Monroe shock!, C 6 1 to large storage sh c d s , v.•gn, VR. $99:), '46 Dodge 18 c>rt'. + mp • mP(. 642-0040. W' m.,..ete DetaUt Call valve job. 548-2716 oupl':. dlcy ·• h a~_M. landscaped. TI4 : 434-2775 pwr "''" $650. Pvt pty. HEAD,9UA!tTERS Plush interior, lov.>esl price • * • * Malcom Reid * 1968 Coupr. Beige. Nttdt tc"'11E"'E"~,r,a o, eaua. 646-4G4l of any oomparablc' auto. I----''--"'---"-Leasing ?.fanager tune up le: t:iru. snoo '64 01.JlS.Xlnl cond., good v.r. LEAVING For England.~======== Tbconlyauthdriz:ed JAGUAR FreeradlotJ,ls:\\"eekonly. '60 VW Bug Theodore 5-45-6403 ~17711• &aerifice $650. Ph. $1193 ~tust sell qukkly 20x43 -dealer in the entire Harbor K t M t ROBINS OR "r Lancer. Furnished bargain. Ca mpers 9520 Area. us om 0 ors Chrome whls, radial tires, F D '67 COUGAR' XR7 390 GT, I========= S & K ~lobile Home .• ~ICE By Pr l "ate Complcl1.: s..1;, Baker. ,..~I ""\ 540-5915 ~~'.e~1~t:d J~!:,~~ .. 4 c~.· Co•'-~''"Harbor Blvd•.t• ~, p/s, air, sterw, disc, load-PONnAC 69 MUSTANG Brokers, 12362 Beach Blvd., t 1970 G'IC :v .... SALES --_ ''ft ... ,. £-VV• ed. Sacrlfice. ~2:166 eves -----'-'-----II · • G G 636-0921 par y , ~ uca\'f TOYO..-.. \viii [inan. pri. pty. (VTH030) __ Grande 2 Door. V-o, · · duty Pick Up. Jlo\\'t?r stee1·· SERVICE IA Call Lee alt 10 am 545-0634 '65 Catalina, 2 dr hnltop, auto. trans .. faclory air OWNER Deceased: 1'1ust ing, automatic, V-tl, ,,., PARTS or 494-9773. Y" LEASE Y" DODGE 27,000 actual ml. R&H. pis, conditioning, 110\ver Sacrifice '62 Skyline 5th new 9' cab ovpr camper. Poole lTIT QIYIO ITIAI '67 '"VB A ..... I lo '67 Cadillac E1 Dorado, full'---------p/b, a real,y fi~ car. '$995. stcr1·ing, power (disc) A 1"'~· 30· A1 BUICK .. ug. "'~ "'"· ,. mu b"""· radio, h""'· venue. "". um. lnlcresled parties l"Ontacl _. .. _ ml Be!i pwr, air, black wired lt':ath· '68 POL.ARA 440 Mag air \~, conslde:r trade. Pvt pty. h 11 · 1 I awning, 001npl furn. 499-2892, 21671 '\'eslcy Dr, g. car. e. blk Int, .er lnL 1139 -·mo. d'--~--. Bad ---.' ......:.' 642..9500 dnys; G-45-0962 nlles \v i1te\va _,. tlrt'91 " ·.~. TN radio, heater. $1195. \Vill ~ u.o.: .,,"" .. ..,.., ,. .. .,,. roo , tinh: ... g nss, w """ ~8-0378 or ~8-5975. Apt 3, South Laguna. COSTA MESA Mark II Wagons consider trade. Pvt ply, ~Ford LTD, 2 dr hrdtop, '65 Polara, air, s soo.1.,,•""w"k""'=;;;' ;-:::-.,-..,----,.-.,,.. CO\'C'M!, stereo . low FAf.1ILY Park, 1968, 2Qx57, 2 a FT CAMPER H i Lux Pickups 642-9500 days; Gt~ niles vinyl roof, air, Brougham ~ '67 GTO 400 eu in, 4 spd, disc mllcngc • ll bcnuty. BR. 2 Ba, skirt.., awnings. $100 or Best <lller! 2M E. 17th Street Land Cruislrs & wknds · Int, AMIF~f stereo, 6 wny ""O.,::.=-------brakes, pos l -tra c tlon, CZDU 839'). Owner mllliil u il. S &. K 540-3803 aft 4:30PM 548-TIG5 Wa gons P\\>T. seat, pwr wiJ1do"'l'I, 69 SUPER Bee, 4 s:xf, ram, hrdtop $1700. 54~ 82973 f.lob ite Jtorn11 Brokers, 12362 ====:::=:::=:=::== PLUS OTHER '64 V\V Camper w/tent. Full w/s/w pwr disc btnkes air, 383 mag. R/W blk lnt.1,,=-=~~-,...:==-- BI d G G "'"' """'" n1eeh record. New 1600 eng $99.SO ~r m<l, • Rally whJs. T.O.P. 53&-35211 l!J69 Flrebird, fully eqp·d Beaoh v .. . . ~,.. Dune BugglH 9525 MERCEDES BENZ HARO TO GE:l' MODELs w/Bunch .xba"'t. N~, ~ air o>nd .. """'" o>nd. Pvl '68 CHEVROLET 1962 SKYllNE ALFLAKE 6\; -----'-----NO'V IN STOCK trans. v.'Ork. P.1ake CJf· SO COAST LEASING FORD pty. $31'.m. 61~. 675-1800 I o,ss, 2 BEDROOM MET V\V • DEAN LEWIS fer. • MS-149' 300 w. C>t Hwy., NB 645-nll2 lmpola Cour><. V-8, au· A REAL IUY AT $1995 bugay, New wide tires, RAMBLER to-. trans., firetory air brakes, rebuilt ear b . 196f J-ln.rbor, C.to.f. 646-9303 '69 VW Sqback. Auto trans,U ,:.;•:.:od:::..C::•::•:.:•:_ __ _:99~00 •65 FALCON 2 dr, 6 ,_1 stick conditioning, po wer SA NTA ANA AREA chrome acceJS<lriet, etc. lile blue w/blk lnt., ex--~J steCrlng, rii.dlo, hratl'r, 545-824 1 American 8G-3939 R'l"ilJ:lertd. Btst ()ff e r BILL 1\fAXEY ccplionally clean car. has BUICK i;hifl. R!li. has had recent 'li2 RA1\1:BLER Classic 400, tinted i:Jni;s. r\VIll 656} NEW 24 60 . over $750. 234 Al~rt Pl., 22,000 mi. s2us, Pvt ply. eng, trans work. Xlnt i;hape fully eqp'd, aulo 'trans, ai r, $1659 X Colt& Mesa fTIT QIYIQITIAI 642·9500 days; 5'48·2981 e"es 1968 BUICK \Vild t 2 D lhruout $575. Pvt pty. stereo tiipc, 1 cwner, Xlnt 2 BR ' BA d "-I;========~ ca .r. 642-9500 days,· 645-0962 eves nd •195 s.11-•-., · en. carpe...,. 1 · & y,•Jcr.ds. AJC, p/b, pis, p/w, radio. &: ·knds co • .,, · ~. thiu .OU!, patio & carport Imported Autos 9600 18881 BEACH BtVD. FOR Sale: 1968 VW ~us, Xlntcond. Priv. prty, ;2700.1--"--·------'6.1 Rambler American I'll\. '67 LTD a1vnings 28' ral""'cREpo;~ 1---------Hunt. Beach 147-855$ stereo tare. Porsche. whls. fi«.1210 ·~Gaiaxie.,~. J:'ullybaoqultt ~ wen 221, $350. Call &flu 5, 2 Door Hard;o; V-8, P.1any extras! n • S N RIC radial tires, to mi's, xlnt '68 Bul•k RI 1 A' .,..u, new un::s, new ez;,'. ,""':==235~7======11 ""t t-·· LEAF PARK in c.M., only, AU Tl AME A 1006 MERCEDES 3 ml N. or ())est Hwy, on Sch ... v era. 1r, R __ __, gt •-·-~-o. • ...... ,,., power 230 Sedan. Pcrrect cond. cond. Call aft 5 PM, P/B-P/S El · d eUJU.J. en ne °' .,.,.,,,, 1tN1:rln", flO\\'Cr (disc) $15,500. jomlcra Inc. '681~ Toyola Corona 2 dr. <I 61·1-2·106. 13~ "R' og• .:c t wss'"1 ,•,w33s. New brakea. Only $695. PLYMOUTH • • 642-1350 • i\·lust sell ' ,,...., 5G20 f" . ml .IUU. r a -, 49, .,18 aft 1 PM brake~. radio, heater, · · · · .,,"'" on .,., uir, a fm, custom ....... 1---------11 vtnl'l r ti t·• •·--AUSTIN AMERICA '59 VW Van w/camper unit, 64&-t303 roo · n L'U g...,,.,,, VIKING Scandia, 2!lx60'. 2 br., 2 ba. Awnings. Xlnt Adult Pk. 548-4142 a.fl 6. CUSI'Ol\UZED 20·,v. '61. New crpt. All xtras. Beau. ne\v Adlt Pk, C.t>.t. 642..6495 '68-2-1.'>:60'. 2 BR, 2 BA, romp!. adlt pk. Pets OK. 5-31-7887 Motorcycles 9300 '66 Bultaco 250 Brand ne11o• $40 carburctot;'. complete tune-up, ne\v front tire, new seals. Grea Bike! """"" '66 Yamaha 250 Big Bear Scrambler. Evl':rylhing works. Great rubber. $350. &-18-4757 or 646-4833 Tune ups & "lcpairs Cycle -VW's. Reasonable Reliable 548-2885 Honda Trail 00, 1967 $150 * 54~31 . FOR Sale: Kawasaki 175ec "i\tod". A1n't rond. $425 flrm. 646-;,,qj() art 5. TRIUMPH '65 SOOCC TIOO. 1.fakc oUer. 494·'7368 1969 750 NORTON COMMAN. DO. Excellent et lition. Call 546-1548 alter G p.m. 1966 Honda Scrambler 305 Custon1. $350 or best offer. 5"-16-57il uto Service • & Parts 9400 BUGGY & Jeep Parl5: Shortenttd VW pan. con1p. -w/enginc, trans & !rans a.'<· le. on ~·h~lt. Plus misc -f)arts $150 for all. 4-1100 :< 16 grooved slicks on 14" v.•jde \Vh<'C[!i, ror jeep $175. See at ri1e11a Union, corner Newport &:. Fairview, dayB or 54g...()072 niles. , TRIUt>.1Pll 'fR.-3, good ~nglnc. Tran! & radiator gone. $45. 2281 CanJIOft Dr .. c.~1. Trailer, Travel 9425 • ALPINE VACATION TRAVEL CENTER .• ~xcel .• Golden F~lcon · Olympl• -Alp•nt Apocho • Wheel Camper \\'otldt taqnt l molrt c»m• plcte RV, vebJcle ihopplJw .witer ~ Gard<!n Grove Blvd, CC ,.. 534-6686 'Coted Sal. 0Jll'-n Sunday MiTASTJC Buys In 4 Star. ·w~tways Irr: Funtlme CiJl,pen1. Scolta, 914 N. , S.A. KENSKJLL & Kfl. Special prlces on tot models. Scotti, • WAN. l.f.arbar, S.A. Sales, Service, Pnrt! Immediate Delivery All ?>.1odels lJ1rtuport Jl111ports 3100 W. Coast HWf .. N.B. M2·9405 5-40-1764 Authorized MG Dealer BMW BMW'S #1 DEALER IN CALIFORNIA AND ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 1970's Immcd. Dcli\'l!ry 25 Ne1v & Used In Slack T&M MOTORS 8081 Garden Grove Bl, G.G. 534-2'l84 Open Sunday~ 64&.S055 BAYSIDE MOTORS 1200 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. DATSUN stereo, 18.000 ml. $1650. ==='°=======11965 FAIRLANE OTA 390 U165 Pl.YMOUTH Belvedere (l] 093) MG 526-7779 or ati 5:30 8'12-7136. 'M eng. reb1t trons & , s1·a1s brakes, good l"Ond! $800 CADILLAC eng., auto tranr p/1, xlnt 461000 mi's, l1lce new colld. '69 Toyo\11. Corona hardtop, BEFORE S: 540-8308, aft S: corn!, $1200. £1$8..7958 alter 5 T.O.P. $52 mo. $780 valanct. MG Sales, Servic.~. Parts Immediate Delivel')', ·, All Models aulo trans, radio & heater. 530-1708 '68 CAD Cpc de Ville, like pm l =Call'=='"=11="''"6.1=====11 '65 FORD 6'5-T.>9.'l a" al I Cl b '60 V'IV Bus. New re·bll eng. new, air cond, AM/FM, full 'w; F con DI. uxe u '69 TOYOTA Corona, 2 door, & trans axl.e, tape dk, &d PWF• dlx access, Ute areen, 'Vagon, 8 pau. Good tires&: T·BIRD Fllllron. 6 cyt., 11tlck 4 :>1pce1I, xlnt condition $1500. tires, cust. inter. Xlnt $825. Landau top, whlte tthr int. Int $6.10. 5'18-1253 aft 5 1---'~-----· II sh!(t, radio, h ea ter. _51='4=7=55=o=r=S4$.=::"=261=7=== 644-1456 eves. SacrUlcel Private party TEN 1970 Mavericks, loaded, SACRITTCE By private par-(NBE 13881719 -5CU013 or GtM983J ·~= h ty 1966 Thunderbird Lnndou, --'68 V\Y Engine complete -,,_. .....,,,, eac . TRIUMPH $375. Pvt ply. Trades OK. '69 CAOILI.AC Conv. 7400 6JS..M80 fully equipped, a lr-cond., ---------ti 'naJ il like new $2!XXI. ln!Crt!sled 1969 TRIUriJPH GT&+, 7500 64Z.9500 days: 64s.o962 nites o g1 m es. Xlnt cond. 1965 FORD Fairlane. Gd. parties conlact 4~2892• '64 fORO • \00 'V Cout H NB & wknds. $5895 financing avaUale. cond. Air cond. '$500, Call 21621 Wesley Dr., Apt 3, 3 · wy • · · mi, must sell! Below blue Call Mun-ay 638-7380 or "A5-ll96 aft 6 op,1 , c.a.Jrucie 4 dr. Sedan. t .11rtuport·: ... J it) . O,(f~~' 612·9~(6 540-17".A book t ·1 s••s·ns '65 V\V Bus, Corvair eng., 5,,. ..,, ""' "" South LaguM, p t J t rC' al ' ,,...., I ..-.-1 .... 7 65 FAIRLA NE •• ,,,,, Good ()"'Ct s cer ng, au ~ Authorized f.lfG Oealcr -========= new paint, many xtras. ""' -'-* MUST SELL ** ma.Uc tra11smlsslon, ra· MGB-GT l96T. good cond! VOLKSWAGEN $1550. 549-4131 or 549-0038 '67 Ca1 ~Iliac 1Scdan de1 Vhlllc, cond. Best reaso,nab!e orfer, .~ T·Oird, Gold &: Beige. dio, heater. Uc. OLT 278 Iv;,, '"h-1• • .,,~ mil--'Gl '"V Bug. New en". tires pwr a r. s ereo, eat er. 546-8229 S789 ... "....... vvu "~ •• .... 32,000 ml . Per f ect,;;;,:;~====== :Full pwr, air, cruise con-S2150. 675-3593 aft 6 pm. 1---------& Ile. $590 Priv. Ply. Sec at nd $3295 g. ltol, lo mi's. $1750 or offer. 1953 MG-TD. good condition. 'GJ V\V BUG. Xlnt Cond. Bay&:. Newport Enoo ~7.i!no · 4 M390 or MERCURY Owner 644·1006 or S33-0173. ,66 PLYMOUTH ne1v lop, rebuilt engine. \Viii Guaranteed only 45.ooo 1\11· ..=:::..,,,i;:;:::_-'V\-'l~'..c>:,:'·"'"":::-m"i-.,-. -'IllUNDERBIRD 1968 4-dr, tradtt. 642<l.S2Ci. l-Owner. $S9.i 833-0063 Good condition. 11000. ,67 ,.~EP~SVSillESGoSEdD 1966 t>.1ercu"" Colony Park g all power S2550, l!n> 4-dr Fury I Wagon. V-8, au- '67 V\V, Sunroof, Radio , New Call 642-3848. -..vupe'""' e 1 Conv. "" Comet $175. can atter 4 to. trans., power 11tcer4 tires & brakes. $1.1 9 S. =-=--~-'---~ Lood!!d! Will :ic sold for bftJ. pus. Wagon. Air, full pwr, in ,i:, radio, h e ater. 548-42•19 or 6·12--0890 '68 V\V bug. Clean, auto, ance outstanding. $2958.40.l,:PY:;t.~'=~=':"="='="='4-.;52=:74=~=P=M;;.;"io5-0=:ll:5=====11 (VHC359) MGB dark b'TCCn, cn1pl cxhnusl. Call 642·9360 or 546·0417. Sl 083 * 196·1 V\V. Sedan. Needs Sl600. or bci;t ofter. 540.5661 ,,.,_c;.,:.::.=:..::.:.::.::::.::._ Used Cars 9900 I Used Cars 9900 '67 MGB GT O\>t:>rdrive, point & br.ikc lining, S100. 1959 CADILLAC Convert!ble.1;;;;;.;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pirelli!!:. excellent condition S.la..&103 '£i6 VW' sunroof. Red ' ~ ,,!o,_'u'98"'°. nd car. $225. '65 PLYMOUTH $7100. '\11.'Ckcnds. or eves """'-'='~-~---w/s/w, xtra .sharp car. \\'ell ~ '" 6i3-3489 '61 V\V Van. Xlnt, cond. earcdforS1095.548-298lalt6. z:==:=::=====,11 BILL SAYS L OPEL '69 OPEJ~ KADETTE ~·agon. 102 hp Auto, radio, rack, prl ply ~eel cond. $1995 833-0987 aft 5 pn1 '68 OPEL wagon Rallye engine lo mllcn~c. cl('an, new tires. $1385. 962-1579 PORSCHE reblt. t':""'·• ne\v pa.int, VaJiant 2 Door. 6 ey , .... '61 VW. Good condition. CHEVROLET aulo. trans., mdio, heat· clutch. Clean. 675-1632 I Light green. Cood tires. --er, \vhltt'wall t re 1. l9G9 Vol kswagen. 7,000 ml. $!"100. Call: &12-9612 '67 Chevy lmpal;1. Statkln ff E L p f {NCA 9611 Asklng $1900. Private prty. i\IUSI'. SELL! '65 vw.,Ex· wagon, 9-passcnger, a.Ir • $769 Call 642-1791 cellent Condition. Will. Call cond. Bcsl oUer over $1475. vw nu G. xttn eond. &l&-<632 ......,.. '67 J-BIRO ' Guaranteed only 45,000 ri1i. ..:.:c...cc,6::.3~vw=~B~u=G--1969 Malibu Concoul'M' wag. Get the boss off my l~er. $695. 8l3--0063 Xln't cond. S4f>.I4l8. on, Deluxe throughout. 673-back I He can 1 t Landau 2 Door Hardtop. '68 V'IV 9 pass. bus. Xlnt l:::::i==:::;::::;:=:;:=::::::=o 0916 days, ()l' 546-1375 att V..S. auto. trans .. fac. cond. 1 o\vner. 24,000 ml. VOLVO 5 p.n1. stand cars around ~~f po~r. ~a"~~.lo~:f: S26.'i0. 548-400l '56 CllEVY V-8 3 speed. er, \Vhlte\vall tires, vinyl '64 V\V Bug, Sunroof, KOCMl ---------m1'g11, chrome rims. s.,V. lllL TAYlOll over 30 days. root. UntOO gla11s. wheel tires, clean. $685. C"ll 145 _WAGONS Gnuges. $350 OR BEST OF· UMd C• Mgr. covers. 1 owner low S.16-337;) 164 _SEDANS FER. 646-9076 after 5 n.1 mileage. lUOP 2t2) We have several nice cars but they've been $2645 l961 Chevy Impala, 4-dr. around too long & Mr. Johnson soys --'62 PORSCHE S coupe. '67 V\Y Bus. New pis!Dns & AU other models now in ,\ril/FJ'.I. !llcch. perfect, valve1. mufn11r & exhaust. stock. 4 gpecM & automatics. NEW '70 l\IU!il sacrifice! 64.2-1260 s1;,oo. c ... n 492-1J66 cve11, Your Best DeaJ!I Are Still At p.s.. p.b.. so,ooo actual "S II & II , h " miles, orig. owner. Jm. e se em c eap. '67 BUICK DATSUN PICKUP DEAN LEWIS Imported Autos 9600 ! Imported Autos 9600 C 61.,,~ =CIJ~l~a::,. s::csml's, ~!1. ~~~~~.~~A11t1, 1r•11,,, u~iory $1050 Rlvl~ra lfardtop. V-8, r elt ~1t10111119. oowtt •IHrlflSJ, iiower auto. trans., factory air stick i;hilt, libergla1 cap. br1tts. iio--.r wmclOW\, r..iio, "'''''• t1c. ucw111 <:onditl<ln!ng, p 0 we r Bargain! Call alt 6 , ,66 MF.RCURY $12 50 steering, power win· w /('am per. 96 hp overhead ~iiii~~~~--;o;i;;m;:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiijj 1966 1-larhor. .P.1 ·"" "'" crun, 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply tires, • '64 VOLVO 5'1·1 Sport, new back up lights. You name p.-Unt, top l"Ondition. $800. 67!)..27U. cotot1y p1111,, 1111,. sit. wg11. ""'°· 1r1111 , dowt, power seatll, ra-'" S"btl No. 21<""1. l'uJI 1968 Call &15-2039. prlre $:.D99. Take small dn. _62_V_O-LV_O_l22_S_.-4-dr-.--196.5 CHEVY El Camino, teeTOty 111t eoMlllofllf!V, "°""" i1nrJng, ,.i--.r dio. hC'atcr, ~·hltewall Sleeper/camper w/cu!l'IOm br•...., ''°" • !IUl1t. SMm Urea. Untc<i ~~sJ~wbeel ~; :'~c~,:.";~ ::'773 MERCEDES 280 SL Ncw~nii:~7'o11300' pads. New tires, xlnt cond. ''I T·lllD • 11' 5 t coveri.,s(T2Q~..,,l = ,.i;; •• ' •• llr.:r"''"' ••• poM,, $1395. 5J6..801S alter 4: 30. ""' ( D;N ) ••a "Ll-nder tn The J,.c11rh Ci11e1" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 DATSUN LATE '67 1600 Roadster, 4 SJVI, dlr, Sharp, hdtp. sun ml, pluah black Int. xlnt t.ond. 1'1u•t sacrifice! $1499. Talct!!i oldtr American car or small down. URE643. Call f\rr 404·9713 Ot 545.(1634. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 P.en .. h Bl\·11. J funtlngtan Beach 842·778l or Y.0-0442 '':'O DATSUN Sl:DAN Bl~ 4 door 96 hp ovt:rhcail cim. d!AC brake3, 4 spd. db', WS\\'I baek up liahls. Sacrl· Iler. Tiki-trade, will flnante 11rivate parcy. Call Phill, 4!H·9m an 10 am. ' Thi1 1buil1ttely imm1c.ul•!• Me rc •de1 81111 Roed1fer 11'1~11 b• '''" to re1lly b• eppre<i•led. II i1 fully lo•ded will! •quiprnt"l ill• c.ludi11g 4 1potd l••nu"i1· 1io11, 1horlwe¥• AM ·FM redio, h•eler, power 1teer• l"t• ,,c.lh1l11. b~t~tl 1eeh plu1 11111th 111ore. A loc11I e11• • w 11 'r euttrnobi!e thow1 th• fln11t tf ~•••• Rtilu••' tt t111ly s11•1 • POOLE BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Street 548-7765 --Sport Cars • #1 FIATS ,Mt '/t!c.OI • .• , Chevy Sia. wag. Air, '64 T·lllD '175 R.H .. VS, outo 1499 IJQJ400l '""'· '""" I'' ~I"''''"' 10 OLDSMOBILE Cl'lll Sid alt 11 AM 545-0634 fl.Ill ,,...,, tie, IWI Delta f Door Hardtop. '65 i\tALIBU SS, auto trans, '69 FORD '2025 Auto. trans., factory air clean, new palnl. $795. Call co...wrttbl•. G.T. Atllo, tr•nt<. 110wtr 1tnr1111. · oondltlonlng. p 0 \Ver 9610 • r.cllO. Mt!ft'. Xlll:l11 • Now 1970 MndelJ In Stock 675-3285. steering, radio. htaler, Sales e Scntlce e PIU1s CllEV ,65 1 · SS ....., '67 IUICK .:. # '1550 whitewall tJl'l"!, vinyl · · mp. • """ I.• S111ni 01rw1tllblt. A1110. tr1n1 .. 1ec1ory -....f, tint·• •I•'''• wbct,I Ove.~as Delivery Specialists auto tr p/h I 1 , , '-' '~ . ., , p !I, owner. air ('O(>llllllll!lftO, paw.r llre~-. r111 o, .-ru. covers. tED 6511) C. Bob Autrey Motors xlra 11harp. fl#..271' eve TMHdt $3189 1860 1;°~ ~::h Blvd. ,65 Chevy Sports ep. 4 spd, ,'',..' .. '-!IU~ICIC ....... '"._. 11, $1375 ~~ '1r rond. 327 eng, lmmao. • -· -• _ Phcrne 213 • 591-87'21 $1500. flti2..Ql0 aft 6. ""'4'11 ""' t llOlllWr ttc. ypu..-'I cuEYROLEJ ==,;0;,,PEN~=SIJN:=D;•;Y:S=o I TEN 19611 Chevy lmpalu. 'H 00"1'!NIN'IAL '3325 ~rvalr 2''0oor. 6 cyl., ~.~!.'':' ~'r.:"i:.'."..::Q.. Race Cars, Rods 9620 prlcedh ir!~r,,JU801c.k Allle S1450 ..... 1. VT~.J:*' elC '"lrt. ·Heater. '40 lo~ord Coupe, new enJ:inc, VB. new 8&.'f hydro. $350. M&-680:; Autos Wanted 9700 IMPORTS WANTED Ornr\11'.e CounU's TOPS IlU\'ER BILL MAXEY 71lYO'l'A l8881 Beach Blvd. .. , . -~ '67 coliTlillNTAi. Ill CVGV 111' '55 Chevy, rtbullt '64 283 , tlf>, ltd111: '"""' •lranilllft.tl...,, hi"' '2et00 with 4 speed $175. P0°4'W• AM·flM re.11111, MnH1r1 roof. TAICJM 8U-I051 '67 MERCURY $1375 '&4 MallbU. Gd. COl'ld. Take 'Of'. H.T • .t.vt.. lrllf',.. !KIO,., fir (J Pvt "•"'u «lflllltfor\11!9, rlflo. Milt', llHldtlv O\.'llr pyrn • · .~ .... rwt. u~ 67!>."39 '64 CONTININTAL $ti 0·50 '67 O~ELLE P.1 a 11 b U • ' nr. Stlltn, 'KHN'r elr C9ftdlllonlr19, 11111 I 2--dr. -Vinyl root, V 8, Powtr, ltlllller 111i.rlir, QYl)U Arif-FM $1550* 847-4686 * DUNTON FORD· H. Beacb. Ph. 847-355a CHRYSLER '63 FALCON f'Uturn Rll, Dtrl--...:_;;.;..._;;;~_;­ ilohnson & Son LINCOLN MERCURY 2240 s. Main AUlo. good runntr <PYSl13l l!Ol WI fnl <!H-9713 aft IO Al\! 1961 OIRYSLER, ' dr Now 2626 H ........ d .. C.M. SANTA ANA Yorkoc, voiy good rondltlon S40·5U.O _ 546·7076 im.1<G-1m 1""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!1!!!!!!!!!!!! ... .,.,,;,,,,!!!!!l!!!!!!!!l!!!~'L-..;...;...~~.-JI • -------------~---- • TffSday, March 17, 1910 --------- · ,:ooo AT DISCOUNT PRICES ElffCTM WEDNESDAY THRO.UGH TUESDAY M~trch 18,19,20,21,22,23, & 24 ....__.. -...... ••P£CWS '1Rf EXTRA SAYINGS MADI )t0$SIBL'E BY SP£Cl1Al PUlt- ~ fRqM THE MANUFJf:TURER · Of>ITOYQUI ' ,_ IOOJW)IJl~ilf aiJf(@) ~(@)(@)fW>!ll~~ iscounl • ... I rices • a fEATf!RING ·'ONLY ~. '~, USDA CHOJCE BEEf AT LOW:::; -"l VERYDAY DISCOUN.T PRICES I II •. B-OUN CE PACKAGE . ·; 1 ' :1 •. • -" • HOF·FMAN SKINLESS FARMER JOHN . EASTERN QUAllTY . . c LINK PORK~ROASt ••CNICSm• 49 lb. s--a -u·s-AGE ---e~. USDA CHOICE • LEAN AND MEATY " USDA CHOICE STEAKS TAILS REMOVED 29 BEEF SHORT RIBS 45 lb. T-BONE or CLUB FAMILY PACK CHOPS • EASTERN QUALITY, WESTERN FLAVO~ lb. SLICED PORK LOIN 89 lb. USDA (HOICE •FIRST CUT CHUCK STEAK 58 lb. USDA CHOICE • LARGE EYE Standing Rib Roast READY TO EAT Hot Cooked Chicken LENTEN SEA FOOD SPECIAL 99 ,b. 68 1t. w l'ilH4.r0&s'Ellvl FILLETS 69 ib. 22-0Z.JAR •SAVE6c 63C .!...~ 1-LB.CAN •ELECTRIC PERK or REGUtAR •SAVE Sc WILSHIRE WHOLE SWEET PICKLES 'Qlli'-' MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE . .,_ 17-0Z.CAN •SAYE3c 22c ,. .. 3-LB. CAf:l • REGULAR OR ELECTRIC PERK •SAVE le ~GREEN GIANT PEAS gJ MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE ; ~~~;~;~;; sK;;~~~;;~~~~CED WA X 22' -~~;;~ ~~,F~;~LAR OR ELEC~ MATC . SAVE Sc 73c 232 ,itlif N0 .303CAN eSAVE 4c •WHOLE KERNEtORCR.EAM STYLE 19 ~· 2-LB. CAN • REGUtAR or ELEC MATIC •SAVE 10c Vi/P' GREEN GIANT KITCHEN CORN c Q;lll' YUBAN COFFEE b.~ N0.2V2.cAN •SAVElc 27c l -PlNT •SAV£4c •. HUNT'S NEW POTATOES IMO DRESSING FOR FOOD fl H'ut;TC:s T~~,\~~s~ucE 17c ;c;;5,(~iv~~RIETY PACK ~ 8-0Z.CAN •SAV£4c 12c -~) 9-0Z.REUSABLEMEASUR.INGCU P •SAV£4c 91: HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE with tomato bits ~-BIRDSEYE COOL WHIP -li0u3N1~sN s~~~~5PACK TOMATOES 20c f1PoLARQuE:~v~10TAT0Es .. ~9-0Z.JAR •SAVE l e 1sc '~ 10-0Z.PACKAGE •FROZEN •SAVE7c 'QP FRENCH'S MUSTARD .. }GREEN GIANT RICE ENTREES ~ 1-0UART •SAVE l e 36c ~ 12V2-0Z.•fROZEN •SAVE16c ~ REGAL GREEN LIQUID DETERGENT 'ifllJ:SARA LEE Pecan Coffee Cake f.#c'AsE sw~~NEYAMs . 27c eRl~61:oR'o 'Rlto'N:~v~liEAT BREAD ~ 6-PACK. NO DEPOSIT NO RETURN BOTilES 69c 1 V2-lB, LOAF• SAVE 3c 9i';DIET RITE J~.or ROYAL CROWN COLA~~-FAD GIANT BREAD "GREENAGl~~~~HOLE GREEN BEANS 25c ~~~5BROWN & SERVE ROLLS 82' 163 37c 52c 57c 32c 32c 73c 8-0Z. BOTTLE e SAVE 2c BOB'S BLUE CHEESE SALAD DRESSING 8-0Z.BOTILE •SAVE2c BOB'S ROQUEFORT SALAD DRESSING 12-0Z. PACKAGE •SAVE le MANHATTAN TASTE TENDERWEINERS ..a.) 3.oz. PACKAGE • SAVE 17c 9°' BUDDIG'S Sliced Luncheon Meats 8-0UNCE e BUTTERMILK OR: SWEET PILLSBURY REFRIGERATED BISCUITS 47' 57c 47c 3 E 100 9c •EP, llPf. AND LUCIOltS STRAWBERRIES BOXES 00 FOR PACKAGE OF 4 •SAY£ 4c 45c 33c 35c 25c REO, RIPE ASPARAGUS NO. 7'11..C.vf • HAlvtSOltSUClD • SAYJ4c HUNT'S YELLOW ' RING PEACHES FAD DESSERT CUPS IT'S SM A T TO S OP AND SAVE AT FAD ' ..__ --.....___ WATERMElON l'llllTDAY lOW PltKf ~· STEAK SI ZE BROWN MUSHROOMS ~lb . .. •