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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-04-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7 I \ • arswe n DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * . MONDAY AFTERNOOJ~. APRIL_~ •• 19l 0 \l(IL a, NO. ... I S•CTIOllfl, 4l PANS :· • • Coast Medic Files Suit In Dr~g· Death Charge , Special to the·nAn.v·PIL!IT INDIO .:.-Asserting he was, falsely ac· Cused o( mnrderjng his wife by drug in:- jection, an Orange Coast physician has filed a $200,000-plus damage suit against 70 individuals and agencies. · Dr. Merrill C. O'Donnell, 53, who prac- 1lceSIDNewpoftBeach and HUri£iiigfQJ) Beach, filed the suit in Riverside Coutity Superior Court,. since many .Pat!;ie's live there. He himself was named in a 1969 }!'!Oogful de.a.Ul..suJt {iledJn Orange Coun- ty Superior C<lurt by the ,mother and stepfather or the late Mary Jane O'Don- nell.· 'f:he suit alleges he poisoned his 38- yei r-old wjfe with a highly toxic barbiturate in Marcil, 1968, while -the cou-, ' Senate Panel Okays Nixon Train Measure . WASHINGTON (AP) -'The Senate Labor Committee appro'l'.Eit ·~h~sly today a bill proposed by President Nixon to avert a nationwide railroad strike now threatened .for-Saturday. ·· The measure would impose on the four shopcraft unions involved in tJte dispute and the industry a settlement reached by negotiators last December. Or ange Coast Those sunny skies are here tG stay, at least !or a while, but high clouds will be forming over the Orange Coast Tuesday. Tempera· • tures should stick close to the eevenUes locally and up to 80 in-- land. --JNSm E-TODAY - pie was vacatiOning a.i.·OUintana Roo, On Meglco's Yucatan .Peninsula. He respond~ by filing • $1 million countersuit ' in Orange County Superior Court an·d dropped his legal o:nmsel, Arthµr · Strock, Newport Beach, Dr. O'Donnell said he would act as his Own attorney and is doing so in the~case· filed at the Indio court branch. The physician notes in the. action that Mexican authorities ceased criminal pr~ ceedings against him last month for lack of eyi~ence, he_nce the original action was allegedly instigated witnout prObable cause. , Named in the court acfion are at- torneys, phfsicians, three newspapers in- cluding Orange Coast Publishing Com· pany, which publishes the DAILY PILOT, an airfine, a ti,ospital and Dumerous persons. . The list iocludes: Attorneys Hurwitz and Remer, Max Hurwitz, Ben· Haggott, Reese Haggott, Orange Coast Publishing Company, tlie Santa Ana Register, the Long Beach Independeni,. Press-Telegram, Am~.~ Airlines, Mar1lta Amescmnle Be<:kliArt, Ben Beckhart and Hoag Memorial Hospital. others are Newport National Bank, Frederick Zigmond, Gumbiner, Savelt and Associates, Dr. Melvin Sommer, Jean L~ O'Donnell, George Wiseman, Grace M. Laux and Mercedes Russell. The action also includes 50 John Does. The physician seeks $$100,000 i n general damages and $100,000 in · U· emplary damages, plus-lj)eclal damages ~s proved for cost.s,in defending.himsell against the original charges. Mrs. Gertrude Barnett, bis late wile's mother, and her stepfather, .. wealthy Tor· ranee busintaman Ben H a 11 o t t , originally accuaed bim of_ injecting the victim with a heavy doese of lumlnal. His offices are at '¥f1 Placentia Ave., and 2011 West.cliff Drive, Newport Beach, plus 17822 Beach Boulevard, Huntingtoo. Beach, according to oourt records. c 1--1--<1· Pl'Olili<m-lo-thc-propos•d meroef: of Ai r CaltfO'l'nia witlt Pacific Southwest Airlines it e;pected ·from some Air Cat &tockliolders and employes. See PQJlt 26. -Rifle Slug HitS , Clemente Window A slug from a high-pawere~ tine ~am. ed through the glasa aoo< ol • San Clemente man 's home Sunday afternoon. •ff'tM -1t """ \.-"" n '"''"" » "'"'4"'' ' c111t1n11it 1 Ml\tfft 24 Cll«ltlllt UI 1 H•tl-1 H....,., ... Cl9t•ltl.. ~i Or-C11111tr t C:_,a 11 1"'11 lt42 C"'stw.r'_ ,. SIOt k Ms1•111 JJ.U Dell~ NOflclt t T11tvltlel! )t Oh•ffCl1 It TllMi.n M Edl!ffl1t ""' A Wfllf!MP t lll ..... llftfMtll 1' W~Mell't ........ tl·M "ln•nct H-11 Wwlf NI.., •.S Hl"*KI" tt ' William ft. Enqulst, 817 Calle De Soto1 phoned pcllce to report someone shooting al his house. ornccrs atTived a( the home and'found a hole mp.de by a high-power rine slug. The shot, patrolmen said, appeamtly came from the dlrecUoo of Ole Hanson Elementaey Sfhool. .. .. . .. . •• ver I ur e •-' Doctor Sam Four Offi~ers Killed Here Found Dead By 3rd.Wife COLUMBUS, Ollio (IJ,Pl) -Dr. Sam Sheppard, main figure .in. one of the n• Uoo'I mo.t <OfttroNrllal !Qurdef trials, died' tq!!Of at his home bore after he hid been ill !Gr three d~ 1Jith wlW WU believed to be lnfl...,.. ~'iii tned 1r1J111 Ohio Peoll•• tiary after ...,mi, 10 years following Ilia conviction for the murder of bis tint wife, Marilyn, waa _fowKI dead in bil borne by his wile. His body wag taken to University Hospital where an autopsy may be performed to determine the cause of death. Mrs. Colleen Strickland Sheppard, hi! third wife, said the oAeopath had bee• ill with what she believed was flu. Shtp- pard, woo was in the midst of a prD- ressional wrestling caretr whea be died, married Colleen laSt Oct. 21. Mrs. George Strickland said, "We all thought he had the Ou." Du!i!!g his years !_n _pr~, '!hen Shep- pardliad volunteered with a number of other prisoners to participate jn a cancei: research program with other participants, a live caricer virus had been lnjectl!d. into his body. Dr. Stephen Sheppard, his brother, had claime<I duriag-Sam's imprisonment-that the injections might have caused cancer to develop. Vl'l-T ........ OFFICERS, BYSTANDERS STAND ·av ONE OF CHP DEATH CARS' IN VAl:ENCIA GUNFIGHT· Four Hlghw1y-Patrol......-Klllod; One Su1po<1-c 1pturad; AMlh....-CKlll..-Sil ~----~-~~~~ Mrs. Strickland said Sam had "told us he had cancer because of that." "He told us at one time be would not Jive another year when we first got together a year ago," she said. 4 CHP Officers Slain; Sheppard bad one son, SamueJ Jr., by his first marriage. The son, lmowa as "Chip," Js now in his 20's. Sheppard's second wife was the tanner Ari"I' Tebbeljohanns of West Germany. They were married in July, 1964, sborUy after he was released· from prison. One Suspect Kill,s Self Sheppard was convicted in December, 1954, of bea.ting his · pregnant wile to death July 4 at their Bay Village home near Clevelud. IM-Ing his trial, Sheppard said a "one- armed bushy-haired Jntruder" killed his wife and attacked him in their home on the sl>ore ol Lake·.Erle. Mrs. Sheppard had been.beaten aroud the bead with an estimated 25 blows. SAUGUS, Colli. (AP) -One ol two men sccused of killing four highway patrolmen in a gun batUe COJY111l)lted suicide today, autboriUes reported. His body wa s found by a force of officers in gas masks and wearing flak jackets who stormed a house where he had been besieged for six hours. AuthoriUes first had said he was cap- tured alive . For five hours he had held a Sheppard waa released from pri8on Ju. ly 16, 11164, lnslltin( "I am Innocent, I am .irutocent." He WU freed by order of the K. g Fl:ps Car u.s. Dilllrict Court at Deyton, whicb rul· in ~ ' ed. he: had not received a fair trial. Sheppard'• reJeaae wu appealed to the E I • Sixth Citcutt Court o1 Appeall at Cln· SCapeS U JUr y cinnati, which on May 5, JHS reversed the earlier ruJin( ud ordered him COPENHAGEN; Denmark (AP) - returned to prison. With 71-year-old King ~derik at the The U.S. Supreme Court, in a wheel, the royal BeAUey convertible precedenl«lting decision on June 6, skii:lded on a slippery street Sunday, 19651 said Sheppard had been de11;ied a hit the curb and landed on Its side. fair trial because . of the ''Roman , Witnesses, notj~ing the r o y a I carnival" atmosphere in the court.room license plate, called for ambulances and a,Jlftjudlced'irtal--ju,.d~fe"·-----~and..hurrieiLto..tbe..w.reck£d c11r fw· Tr 8118por t Walkout Spreads in Manila MANILA (AP) -A general transportation strike spread throu gh A-tanila t~ay, and labor lead~s _!.O..!'._ed ti would be followed Tue!day .tiy a one-day nationwide work stoppage. The strllttng drivers demanded that oil and gasoline. price increues by largely Am<rlcu oil COlllpllliel be withdra•11. •' ing the.<W<>rst. But King Frederik, wearing spec- tacles .and with a pipe between hi& · teeth, climbed out and asked for a t.axi. When the first ambulance arrived at the scene, ho;wever, the: king agreed to ride iJi it to Amalienborg -Palace. As the ambulance approached the palaCe, the king-asked the driver to stop and he cot {lllt to walk the rest ol the way, apparenUy W'J'.Y. thal his anival by am~lance might cause alarm. householder host.age berore releasiM him unharmed. '!be other gunman. wounded by officers, was captured earlier in a canyon. The four Nghway patrolmen were t1JJ. ·ed after they stopped a car whose oc- upants were reported to have brandished guns at motorists on a freeway. After the shootout, the two fled separately on foot. Jack Wright Twinning, 35, took refuge in the isolated house atop a hill in 'brushy country 35 miles north of Los Angeled about 4:15 a.m. and sporadically ex• changed shots with a force of several score officers until his capture about JO:tS a.m. Mrs. Glenn s. Hoag and her son, Jef. tery 17, escaped but Hoag was held cap. tive 'until released unbanned 1 litUe lfter 9 a.m. When Hoag came out he said Twinning had a quantity oC weapOn.S but seemed running low on ammo!Ullon. During the ensolng siege Helicopters hovered over the three--bedrOOm home , atop a hill overlooking the freeway, Ind a sheriff's· sniper speclallst took up position a~p.utauoo ·unw bulleta'drove hiin away. Officers stormed the houae wtth pistols end shotguns after warning Twinning \o llll'render. During much of the aitge they had negotiated with him by telephone, •nd he said at one point he was thinking of tak· ing his lift. Twinning conlinued to fire sPoradkally after releasing Hoag. ~ At one time Twinning shouted when told to surrender: "I'll be dead U I walk out.." While investigaUng reports that the two (S.. SllOOTO~T, Pqe I) Carsw.ell Clean ' Major Hmdle; -. Rehearing Nixe4 WASHINGTON (AP)-Judge,G, """' rold Carswell's norniMtion. to th t Supreme Coutt won Ma Qnt; CTUcia1 teat. Monday as the Senate reJ<d<d a - to return the noiniila.tion to the J:t!' ' Committee. 1 The recommittal motion by Sm •. · Bayh CO.Ind.), a leader o( the opposlUOf!> was designed to klll the nomination of tb't 50-year-old Tallahassee, Fla., j\lt'ia, ~ The Senate .now will vote WednaciaJ on confirmation of carswell, the second s0utherner nominated bf Presldtot Nixob for the Supreme COOrt v&:ancy created nearly a year' ago by p>e resignation dr Justice Abe Fortas. Nixon's first choice, Judge Clement.,, Haynsworth Jr., of Greenv.:llle, S.C., was rejec ted by the Senate last Novtmber by a 55-45 vote. Senate leaders ol both ~., said thq expected defeat of Bayh's recommtttaI motion to be followed by conflnna~ of Carswell, allhouslti>e~ i>.Jl • rower margin.' 1 Some senators who voted ~ recommittal Uid they w.ould vote ....._ Carswell'S1corifirmaUon. ~y ~ that returning it to commit~e would just be ducking the issue. On Ihe other hand, '°'"" -who announced they favored retum(ng the nomination to committee for fUrther hearings t11id they woold di><I• lalOr how ihey would vote on~ )I the. recommit\al motion failed. t One ol thcise who predlded ...,. firmation was Senate DemocraUc 1.-clet 14lk• Manslleld. ;· - -- - --------------------~~-------------- DAILY PILOl SI.rt,..... ' FLAG ,LOWING, PUNTING AND SCULLING SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD.DEFEAT Down to Sea • ID Gulps Bal, l~le Tugboat Puts Up Game But Losing Fight liy AJITll\1ll I\. VINIEL Of ... ...., "'"' ,..., 'nley went down to tht sea in ships S.turday -the Balboa Island Punting and Sculling Socltty and the San Diego .Rest and AspiraUon Society -without a 10ll!acy ltar to ateer them by. The whole Milky Way wouldn't have helped. Competing lor the lradllloa-ateeped ~·a gil<kd bent elbow wltll a glass cf~ed in band, the two organizations 1taged 1be GrNt Tqboat Race. Ob, Twu a mevllll slCJ!t to see marlnen ao moved by the challenge cf the day, the ·majesty of 8an Dlegc Bay ind tile wind .. tllelr fices. One couJd aee arown men 1Wallowing hard. Tqboata ...,. In short supply, IO tile San lllefo '""'P pltt.d tile old 16-loot fer· .,._ )loalerey-«jU!pped wltll two ban -= tile BISAPSOC'1 plucky lltUe l5S Ill, equipped with ..... and • lug. 'nll Jlld>liin, ll1lnk and 1alv11ed five -·to' tile blot ol 1 Ila """"'j imqwlldfe, HI Ail f0< San Diep Friday oboVd ., ,Advnce llarlne Transport liucli. _. Diet Shaw ol Ccnna del Mar, wtio doubles u oommoc1an of t11e Scullbll and P1lllllnl Society'• O.phlp, 111porWod tile )lld!lpn '1 remeval from N...p.rl Harbor Walen. He -the lnlck trip ... <Un· ni11f -to conceal the true merit and spood ol lbe Mld>ICan, wldch II about • N.ixon,'8 Family To Attend Game WA8111NGTON (AP) -Except lor the Prelldent, the -Nixon fllllily ar-,...,.. to be on _band for tile opealng of the tm ~leap bueball 1euon * day. __ . l'nlldent Nixon lllyed al the White Houle to await resulta ot a crucial Senate vote alfedlng the Supreme · Co u r t nornlnaUon ol Juda~ G, BUTOlcl Carswell, and aon-ln-law David Eilenhower was usJgned to throw out the ceremonial first ball. Tbe White Houle announced that Mrs. Nlxm and daught.en · Julie Et.enhower and Trlcla·~.KOllll along wltll David. A rigbt-hander, D-ye.ar-olcl David uys be'• thrllled al the h<n« ol launching the game between the Washington Senators and tile Dttorl\ TICen at Robert F. Ken- nedy Sladlwn. DAILY PILOT " ............. .......... _,....., .. c ....... Olt.utOl COAST l"UILllf'llNG (QMPAHY l•\•rt toi. w • .4 Pftalftfll .,. """n.- J,,• l . C111lty ""''' f'fulotftl .... OcMfll ,..,,..u th·.,,,,, K11•il t•r"" . 'hi'"''' A. ,..,,ptii~• MIMlll"I 1.i11t IU•ll•~ P. Ntlf 11tt11 °''* C-'Y l•l11t ........ c .. 11 Mtt•r m Wt11..., ll'ttWt H .... I ff'K111 :1fll w.tl 11 .. l ~Jill 1. .......... do: m ,_, "'""'"' 11 ... 11nt1tA 1 .. t11: 11111 It.ell •~•• *"' ( ....... : JOS """"' 1!1 (tmlnt .... twice the ab1I! of one of the Monterey's propellers. Multitudes greeted the 1 p.m. rac;e with high spirits as the Michigan chugged away from the San Diego Yacbt Club for the starting line off the southwest tip of Shelter Island . Chetrs wtnt up, along with a huge American Flag. Oki Glory dwarfed the Michigan like a spinnaker broken loose from its lines, while the square-hulled Monterey groan- ed along in her wake. A phalanx of some 20 other watercraft followed the two venerable vessels, in· cludlng a Harbor Police boat which shadowed the entire race. Dubbed the S. S. Aspiraticn for the con-test. the Mcntt.rey wu crowded with rac-tna: entt1111!aet.1 who upired to ligbtin her load by about 20 gallons of ballast. An arUIJery piece at tile tip of Shelter Island boomed to signal the run for the money down a course of cne nautical mile and the Michigan bubbled into the lead. Orange smoke erupted from a distress flare on the colorful Utile boat -held together by paint and good faith -ap- parently signalling a drought aboard. Despite skill and nautical knowhow, Commodore Shaw blew his lead because everytime he attempted to change: coane, all handJ aboard the Michigan had to change seats. Sbe faltered just short of the finish line: and the S. S . .Aspiration chugged across the: victor, followed by a celebration which lingered on into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy was awarded to cuatody of the San Diego lint and AaplratJon Society, wblle a return match -perhaJll in Newport Harbor -WU ld>eduled for September. Light Plane Sale Foiled I By Capo ~ eekend Crash The cub reamer flaahed a "no ale" sign during a potential alrptaoe purcbaae th!a weekend, when the trial run of the: ...U plane at San Juan Caplllrano Airport turned Into a crash landing. No one wu injured in the Friday evea-inl belly landing of tile plane in San Juan er.et, Orange County lberi11'1 depllUas laid . The pilot, Charle& H. Dennll, 31, of tM Avenkta Redonde:I, San Clemente, and hi• pusenger, El Toro Marine reservist Graham H. Krelche:r, 33, e: t caped unharmtd. The pair told oflken they were trylni out the sJng!Hnglne aircraft which waa for sale w~o_Sbc,.glft'!.brlkqjailed on landing. Dennis told lnvetllgators as he tried to Ult the pW!e back-off tile field, the engine could not pick up enough power. The plane lben pancaktd into San Juan Postal Pay Hike Facing. Congress WASHINGTO~ (UPI) -The negotiated postal Pay increase' we:nt before Congress today wbilfl government and union officials met to draft legisla- tion implementing the second slage of the package . Congrf:SSional leaders predicted qu ick passage of a six percent PaY raise for all Federal civilian and military emplo~s. but defeat for Prnldent Nixon'• proposal to raise the six ce11t ,stamp to ·a dlme. At AFL-CIO naUonaJ headquarters, two post 9fflce: department clfklals and three postal unJon presidenta began discuulng legblaUon to turn the depertment into a gcve:mment corpont.ion and to give postal workera an addiUcml eight per • cent pay raise when the reorganilation goes into effect. Nixon's propo.1al lo ralse'postal rates is intended to finance the second part of the postal setUement wor~ out last week. Body Discovered · Creek, which paralleli the small landing atrlp at the airport. Damage to the alrcl'aft included a bent propeller, a damaged riCJ!t wheel and a crumpled wq Up. The plane wu removed from the chan- nel by mwa during the weekend. Harbor Patrol Aids Deck Man On Fish Boat · A deck hand aboard the San Clmiente sportflsher Sum Fun waa taken off the vessel during a fishirig trip Sunday morn- ing after he: became ill near the nuclear gene:raUng ltation at San Onofre. Harbor patrolmen from the Dana Harbor patrol base: responded to the call and removed George Clough, 161 Avenida Mariposa, from ·the boaL · The deckhand, suff~g from what was termed a minor illness, was taken to the San Clemente pier where he then sought medical lreatmeot. In another first-aid response in the South Coast area patrolmen rendered t:ielp to a Yucca Valley fishennan at the harbor's launching ramp Sunday af. ternoon. Bob ROOertson told patrolmen he suf· fered·a 1everely cut finger a half mile out at sea during fllhlng trip. Cambodia Troops Move Against VC PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - Large numbers of Cambodian airborne troops, artillery and armored cars moved towird the South Vietnamese border 90 miles southeast of Phnom Penh today. t.tllltary sources said the movement was aimed at pushing baek Viet Cong troops who have mov~ passed the Cam· ·welfare Limits Ol('d High Court Favors State Maximum Payment \V Am!N<ITON '(UPI) -Th6 Sapr.,.. Court ruled today that states may stt maximums on their welfare payments to poor families with dependent chlldren. Justice Potier Stewart wrote-the ma- jority oplnioo for the cOurt, wtucb divided ~ .. s In "'""' ... lllryland ..... • .> · In a sepanle ~ oplnloo JUJUCe John M. Harlan naled lot a six-man ma- jority that Kew Yirk State, in vlcilaUon or 1967 am.-to the Fe\lml Social Security Act, impermllalbly eut wellar< payments to the Aid to Familltl: witb Dtpendenl Children (APllC) _.-am. The cuts heve decreased benefits to New York Clly reciplenll by almost $IO millioo. From Page J SHOOTOUT. •• men in an automobile had been pointing guns at motorists alcag the Golden State Freeway, tro of the slain patrclmen spotted a car, answering the de:scription, parked In front of J 's Coffee Shop just off the freeway. They radioed for help and a second patrol car arrived within minutes. It was shortly before midnight. · One witness, among four young persons in a car towing a boat, said he was "starr din¥ in the parking lot and aaw a California Highway Patrol car approach a car with two men in it. "The two officers 1ot out and one ap- proached," the witness said. "The fellow on the passeoger side got oul and im- mediately shot one cop, picked up the cop's shotgun and went around to the: front of the car and shot the other cop. "Another highway patrol car pulled up behind. Then the patrol car's driver got out and shot. He was gunned down. The remaining cop held off these two guys for about five minutes by himself. "Finally one fellow went around to the front of the highway patrol c'ir and shot this youcg cop in the fact." A highway patrol spokesman said he could not explain how two men were able to shoot down !ou,r officers. The asaailanta abandoned their bullet· riddJed automobile and fled on foot. The fugitive arrested in a canyon was identilied by police as Russell Lowell Talbert, 28. WOUNDED TWICE. Talbert was wounded twice after he ex· changed shots and scuffled with camper Dan Schwan:, 40, Chicago, who was sleeping in his cam per truck whe'Ll Talbert fired into it, a spokesman said. Polict said Talbert, apparently out of ammun!Uon, plsto~whlpped Schwan and fled in the camper truck. He was apprehended without resislance later in a canyon nearby. The slain patrclmen we.re identified as Walter C. Frago, 23; Roger D. Gore, 22; JaJJlf:fl Edward Pence Jr., 25, and George M. Alleyn, 24. All we:re married and lived in nearby communities. Mrs. Hoag, wife of the man held hostage, said she fled the house alt.er calling the highway patrol. "f was fixing breakfast for my husband when I saw a man outside carrying a shotgun and a pistol," she told newsmen. ''l went and called the highway patrol. "My husband came in and said this man want.a to talk with us. There was a tap at the front door. The man said it's probably your son. "The tap at the door was the highway patrol. I ducked out the front door and in· to .the· bushes. The·man-insidf: looked ex- hausted. It looke:d like he had a bullet wound in the head," Mrs. Hoag said. The couple's 17-year-old son, Jeffrey, sleeps in an adjolnirlg cottage and didn't wake until 5:3G a.m., about 1 hour and 15 minutes after Twinning entered bUs par- ents' house:. Hoag, about 42, is employed by a Van Nuys truck firm. Urban U.S. Indians Demand Federal Aid W ASIIlNGTON (AP) -Urban Indians. protesling what they say Is a deaf federal ear to their problems, are demanding the govunment help them as much as tribes on the reservations. They are asking more government al· tention to housing, employment, educa· tion, health and weUare problem! of In- dians who Jive away from reservations - about half of the Indian population . Harlan sent the New Yorksnt back to the 2nd U.S. Cirt'uit Court of Appeals !or furtller action. Thal court lµld ruled tile s!Sk aCU<ll vslld. Q>ief Jllltlce Wamn E. Burier and Jlllllce~L.81a<kdbMntodonthe l1llUlld that the matt« should bave been ruled ... ftnt by . Ille Depar1mtlll of Health. EducaUon and W~are. Jn -actlona lodly, the court: -Refused to review a cue protettlng Tf;u,toua JDtlllps to earth from astrenaut.s in space, le:avtnc atand a lower c:owt nlllng aplnal MrL Madalyn Murray O'Halr, who JUC<ellfully at· tacked adiool prayers tome years ago. -Rultd in a Flor1da cau that a person may not be tried by both a cltY and a stite for the same alleged crime. L RtftJsed to review an Illinois libel cue, leaving 1tand a ruling in favor oC lhe. Edwardsville lnteJllgencer which wrote of now.cteoeased City Attomey Robert W. Tunnel that he "was workinc to break the law0 ln makln& ·~ pointmen~. 'Ibe: opinion in the Maryland cue reversed a judgment or a special three- judge federal court In Ballimore which tnvalidate<l that state's welfare celling on Dec. 13, 1988. !4ar)'land Attorney ~ Francia B. Burch appealed 1o tbe Supreme Court. Case Log Bits Eight Tattooed Topless Dancer Latest Firehouse Arrest They busted Costa Mesa's tople!s tavern again Stmday, this timf: citing a young. lady clad only in a G-string, a filmy veil and a tattoo apparenUy com- memorating an old romance. The Sunday afternoon visit brought to eight the number of cases logged at The Firehouse, 177 E. 17th St., with the first defendants due In court this morning. Citations we:re: issued Sunday charging Karyn M. Raslawski, 23, of El Monte, with entertaining without a permit, and charging owner Ray Rohm, 25, of Costa Mesa , for allowing it. Manager Dennis D. Vaughan, 23, and topless dancer Diane E. Brawley, 25, of Anaheim, we.re scheduled to appear today at 8:30 a.m. in Harbor Judicial District Court. They were arre:sted a week ago and are free on $125 bail, while planning to plead innocent today through attorney Berrien Moore and request jury trials. Sgt. Jac k Calnon, of the police vice Ind intelligence detail, said Miu Raslawski was danCing to a slow, seductive number when he dropped in Sunday. She was cited for violation of the municipal ordinance on pub 1 i c e:n· tertalnment after two additional tunes: proVided additional evidence. Poli~ sai d Miss Raslawski wore a black G-string beneath a filmy, waistline veil and had a tattoo sayjng : Sonny 1-!f. 68 emblazoned on her left s;boulder. Several similar citations have: been issued charging dancers and manage- ment in the past we:ek, as The Firehowe begins a test of the constitutionality of the city ordinance. 1 Police drop in at regular intervals, but were called off schedule early Sunday morning by owner Ray Rohm, who re- quested aid in ejecting six 1 o a d customers. Anaheim Man Selected 1970 President of CRA From Wire St:rvicn SACRAMENTO -Setting a con- servative trend for 1970, the California Republican AMl!:mbly e:lected an Orange County aerospace engineer pre:sident Sun- day during the group's annual convention. Dave Galer, 37, of Anaheim, will head the 10.~member GOP v o I u n t e e r organization, assisted by 11 v I ce presidents, including another Orange County man. He is Scott Morrison, of 9190 Larkspur Drive, Westminster. Ma1ine Recruit Shot to Death . At Pendleton A young Marine recruit was shot to death by an M·l& r[le, allegedly fired by a fellow serviceman at a barracks on Cam p Pendle ton Sund ay nlghL Mar~e spokesmen today gave few details of the fatal shooting and released no names of those involved. The incident octurred in the 2nd Infan- try Training Regiment shortly before 7:30 p.m. Sunda y. The victim was taken to the Naval Hospital on the base with a bu1let wound in the chest. He died there about one hour later. Another Marine from •the same regi· ment was taken into custody immediately after the shooting, spokesmen said. He was being questioned in the death today. Neither the alleged assailant's name, nor the vicUm'• was re1e·ased. Bob Eichenberg, of Santa Ana, wa~ alM elected CRA assistant treasurer, while Ted Wehe, of Placentia, was chosen as secretary. The CRA, oldest Republican organlza· lion in the state, united behind. the can- "idacies of six conservatives in the June primary election and relectantly backed Controller Houston I. Flournoy, which it considers too liberal. The 391 delegates overruled their of- ficial endorsing committee and backed Flournoy-on-a-s plil vole. "I think we've made our point and 1 think it was a point we needed to make," the delegatf:s were told by Richard Darl- ing of Riverside, chairman of a "fact fin- ding" committee which Friday night bad found Flournoy too liberal to endorse. Darli ng -a longtime CRA Jeadet -:.. tcld .newsmen, "the: point was we weren't too happy to be backing Flournoy~ The California Republican Assembly !JI a con· :servative organiiation and we would rather back conserve.live candidates but we did not have one." The incumbcnt's only Rep u b 11 ca n primary opponent, James War~ of Los Angeles. was judged "unqualified" by Darling's committee. Flournoy supporters lobbied delegates with the argwnent his official Ct\Mpaign sponsors included, 'among other people, Gt>v. Ronald Reagan . \Vith the volunteer group's en- d0rse.ment normally comes grassroots campaign help and financial support. The organization claims more than 10,000 members. • " In choo.s.lng · ~ endell: Kandy, the d:mven· tion passed oVer two candidates generally regarded as the frontrunners for tht GOP nomination -Mn. Alberta Jordan, widow of the late Secrf:tary of State Frank M. Jordan, and Assemblyman Geqe W. MlUas of GilrO)'. · I M • D bodlan border town of Bavet near the end n Q Jave esert or what n called tile "Parrot's Beak." · J Cambodian territory that juts Into South MOJAVE (yPl)-=-A.l!!!!b' tenl1Uvely---¥ietnami------------rcfettUlled a~ that of .a Los Angela man · bu been found in the deRrt northwest of 'Ibe Cambodia forces were aeen moving ~ojave. _ from the provincial capital of Svay The Kem County Sheriff's Office said Rieng, 25 miles west of Bavet and 65 the: man's name was belnc wlthbeld Pf:n· miles southeast of Phnom Penh. Both dJna notiflcatklo oC kin. s R' d B High 1 1bt body w11 discovered Sund•Y by vay ieng an avet art on way Donald Perter Jr., Hawthorne, who "·blch runs between Phnom Penh and reported ll to I.ht sheriff'& cl flee. Saigon, Ssiuth Vietnam 's capital. Offktrs said the mati had bitn dead The Cambodian buildup began alter a for several weeks and was clcthed cnly In Viet-Cong mortar attack on a military a pair of blue denim trcuaers and one post near Chlphou over . the we:tktnd boot. which killed two C•mbodtan toldiers. Six An autopsy has been scheduled to civilians also •ere klllttl. military scurces dttmntDe the cause of death. Jn Pbnom Ptnh reported. • Co11ae Blow Your Dorta- Bob Issacson of Salina, Kan ., blows a big horn but still can't compete wilh airborne traffic noise. Isaacson is a member of the drwn and bugle corps -' I U•I,_.... which bolds it s prt,tices near U>• Salina municipal airport. t r -. " I' •I \ .. " I ! ' ,,.,,, ........ ..,..c•:r• : Duntingion ~;ueaeh T.U -,.--Phial ___ y . ~OIJ.ION VOL. 63, NO. 80, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES .. ~RANsE:CQIJNT:'I': CACIFORNIA 0 ' MONDAlf,. APRIC 6,.'1970 • JEN GENTS " West County :Anti-Orug Group Starts Growth By ALAN DIRXIN Of 1M O"'»' l'lllt Sttff J:felp Line is getting more help. The network that disconnects many West County youths from the drug world is on an apansion program. The organization started August 1, 1969, with· four counselors ready 1" answer calls for help from those 1n distress and now has nearly 50 advisors willing to man the phones. The phone nwnbers 894-4242 and 894- Okay Probable 4343 offer a line o( hope to dna&: cijalers in Huntington Beach, Seal :Buch, \Vesbninster, · MidWay City aod . Los Ala)lljtos. "They know· they can talk to us 1viithoul being afraid," Dr. Rali)h Sher, one of the founders, said. "'Fhey all 1uspectedi the . police •Were behind~it at first, but -now they realize we have nothinl' to do with the poli~. "'There's no m~nitoi-ing · and no Carswell Over Senate Hurdle \VASHINGTON (AP) -Judge G. Har-SO-year.old Tallahassee, Fla., jurist. rold Carswell's nomination t o t h e The Senatt now will vote Wednesday Supreme Coort won its first crucial tesl • on confirmation of Carswell, the second Monday as t.he Senate rejected a motion Southerner nominated by President NiJ:on to return the nomination to the Judiciary for the Supreme Court vacancy created Committee. nearly a )'ear ago by the resignation of The recommiUal motion by Sen. Birch Justice Abe Fortas. Bayb (~Ind.), a leader ot: the opposition, Ni:J:oo's first choice', Jud$e Clement F. was desi&ned to kill the nominatioll of the Haynsworth Jr., el Greenville. -S.C., wu rejectod by the Sena1e last November by 'Candlelif:{ht' <-- Case Figure Faces Charge A man who earned the nJckname "Candlelight Killer" for a bizarre ritual death today was accused by Huntington Beach police as the triggerman in a local kidna~murder three weeks ago. Robert W. Liberty, 24, of. 350 Avocado SL, Costa Mesa, is listed as a murder and kidnap suspect in buUetins sent out to all western law enforcement agencies. A second man accused or kidnaping on- ly. Robert P. Connolly, 49, is believed to be traveling with Liberty and is also wanted in connection with the March 12 homicide. Police Detective Gil Veioe made the disclosures today. although Liberty and Connolly have been sought for ques· tioning since Thomas C. Astorina. 25, was killed. A third suspect, Randall G. Allen, 25. of the same Costa Mesa traller park where Liberty and Conoolly lived, ts in custody and was scheduled for preliminary hearing today in Orange County Superior Court. He was captured shortly after Astorina was found dumped near Sl.Jmet Aquatic Park, fata1ly shot in the abdomen with a (See LIBERTY, Pace %) a $$-4.5 vote. -leaden al both pu1les aald they expected defeat ot Bayh'1 recommittal motion w be f.U...ed by eonflrmitloo of Carswell, although perhapi by a nar- rower margin. Some senators who vottd against recommittal said they would vote against Carswell's confll'Dlation .• They contended that returning it to Committee would just be ducking the issue. On the other hand,.aome senators who announced they favortd returning the nomination to committee for . further hearings said they would disclose later how they would vole on confmnation if the recommittal motion failed. · One d. those who predicted con- finnation was Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield. The Montana .Democrat, still declining to say how be will vote, bad prtviously rated the outcome of the hard-fought bat· tie over the Tallahassee, Fla., jurist's nomination a tossup. "[ imagine the vote on returning it lo committee will be the precursor to the vote on Wednesday," Mansfield said prior to the voting. Newsmen asked him if he meant he ex- pects Carswell to be confirmed. "Yes, that's the .way it looks at the moment," Mansfield replied. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scoll of PeMsylvania reiterated he is conlidenl that Carswell will be confirmed. Scott said he BeeJ enough vot.e.!I to aS!Ul'e Carswell's confirm at lo non "there may be some small or modest Wednesday, although he told reporters slippage" from the vote on recommittal. recording. We just give them direct com- munication." The orpnization has embarked on a new phase of · operation, called .a com- munlly awareness program. 1b1s activity involves conciµcting ·~ abuse panels at schools· and for parents gn>ups. The liJles,get about 1,000 cajls a month, though these are not all drug related. ,;We get·a'Jot of hahgup callS," said the coonlinator Mrs. ~Hannah· A~ekoumbides, '·Somel.lines people jlist·want ·someone to , • h<lp talk tllelr problem out .• The COUllldon go tllrouJl)t sev.n seosillvlty training ...,ions bd.,. they are ready to take calls. 'lbe volunteers, who lnclude psyc:hologilts, 1eacben, houlewJves, mini.ten and . 1 o c J a.l workers, aver11e about U hours t week on .. u atandby, ''We don't want anyone who will ~ sancUmonioos or moralistic. with the kids," Dr. Sher ezplained. ' ' S o m • volunteers become hysterical when they • re.Id the cue histories and ~liminate themselves from being counselors." The counaelors' main job is hi take the panic out of crbis. "We talk to these people, and let them !Mow someone b willlll8 IA> listen IA> their problem," Mrs. Alekoumbldts said. "Usually we .can show them · that· their problem ·Is not so serious." , 'For cases which are serious, such as someone undergoing heroin withdrawal, Help Line stands rudy IA> act swiftly. 1cers ' • . r ·UJ can call any one of our counlelort1t 4' 15 In the mornh!& and say 'Meet me at the service station on the comer, we hl.ve to pick up a kid on heroin' and the7'll come," Mrs. Alekoumbides said. ·In these cues the youth Is ·umany taken to tlie crisis center at Orarce County Medical Center. Not all the calls are tragic. . "One youngster called and said II< was in a'frigllllul panic about takl"C' a sJr1 be (Sot HELP LINE, Pare II • a1n One Suspect Kills Self; Other Held SAUGUS, Callr. (AP) -One of two men accused of killing four highway patrohneo In a aun · batUe committed suicide today, authorities reported. His body was fourid by a forte of officers in gas masks and wearing flak jackets who stprmed a house where he hid been besieged f« six hours. AutbortCles tint had said he was ca~ lured alive. rlr five hdll!I hi W ~ • householder boota&• bdore releasing him ~ 'J'lie ou..r pnmu, wounded bf . Ofti:en, wu captured earlier in a T.1our ~;,· patcobMn ..-kli~ td ~ they ~ a car whoee OC· Uparitl w~ TtpoiteQ' tO have brandished guns at mcitorlsts on a freeway. After the shootout, the two fled separately on foot. ' ""'"'~ Jaclt Wright Twinning, 35, took reluge Jn the isolated house atop a hill in brulfly coo.ntry 35 miles north ot Los Angelell about 4:15 a.m. and sporadically ex· changed shots with a force of •veral 1eor.e offJcers unUJ hi1 captw-& about 10:15 a.m. OFFICERS; ·B'YSTANDERS ·STAND B'Y ONE OF Cl:IP DEATH CARS IN VA~ENCIA GUNFIGHT" • Fovr'Hi~way P•lrolmon KlllOcl; .oM :SVoP0<t Cj pfurod; Anolh•r Kills S.H . . •' 125,000 Flock BeachCo.uncilmenReady To Two Bea·ches To Help ProtectCoas.tline : In Hnntington Mrs. Glenn S; Hoag 1111<1 her ..., Jef. fery, 17, escaped but'Hoag was held caf)"" five unW releued·unharmed a little after 9 a.m. Huntington Beach city couciimen·were expected to take steps today to · insure the carefully controlled development of the city's coastline. Councilmen, not waiting for an.expected state moratorium on ·coasUine ·develop· ment, may set up their own .rules-for guarding the ocean front as·they consid· er a proposed resolution on the ·matter. If aflgpted, the policy statement would prohibit: -Destruction of 1n estuary, salt 'Water manh, sloqh. river mouth, lagoon, bay or coastllfte, any pert·of which lies with- bl Ille aiaslal ..... INl.ILY '"''"" .... ....;.. -Reduction in ·the area of lands.avail: able for public beach or shoreline recrea- lion actlviUes within, the coastal zone. -Reduction in or limitation on legal public access to the water fro,m the land within the coastal :z,one. -Substantial interference · w J th the line of sight from the nearest ·existing public street or•highway Within the coet- al zone to the water's edge or the sea- ward hori1.0n, or both. -Filling or dred&ing for purposes. which are not consistent With the uses ' which are necessary to and dependent u pOrr the coastal zone envtromnent. ' . The Power o[ the sun tent 125,0QO peoo- ple nocking to~clty and· state beaches In Huntington Beach over lhe weekend. Biggest crowd total was 6 o, o o o, _ regt~tettd Sullday at the city beach. Ar.other 30,000 had soaked up the sun ·on the1clty beach Saturday. . Lifeguards at HunUn1ton State Beach and ·Bolsa Chica State l\each repocted nearly 15,000 sun worshipers gathered on·thelr aand 'Saturday and· anothetr 19,000 paraded IA> the l'•ler'o edge Sunday, City lifeguards pulled six swimmers from 'the surf Saturday and only three Sw>day. State lifepards s a·i d . no du'gerous rescues were made. Water temperature Saturday was· 61 de~ ... but dipped IA> 59 on Swlday .. Valley ~Mini-city' Grows · In Junior High Classes ... When Hoag-came out he sakl. Twinning had a quantity oi. w~pons bul seemed runninl low oo ammuniUoo. During the ensuing siege helicopters hovered over the ~ home, atop a hill overlootfn& the freeway, ind a sheriff's miper specialist took up porsJUon atop a gu staUoo unW bu11ets drove him away. Officers .tormed lhe house with ptotols and shotguna: after warning Twtnn.lng to surrender. During much of the siege they had negotiated with him by telephone, and ht said at one point he was thinking of tak- ing his ·life. Twinning continued to fire sporadically (Sot SHOOTOUT, Psp II War Veterans Meet Members oF"the HunUngtOll Beach Bar· rack!: No. 2380, Veterans of World War I. will meet at 12 :~ p.m.1 'l'Unday, at the Masonic Temple, 7~ Palm Ave .. HunUngton Beach. All veter1m of World War I are invited to attend. Orange Coast By TERRY COVILLE clu1,, This allows teachers time to-con. °'!flt oat" '"'' ••" concentrate on teaching. But we always 1''eatlaer Mini-city, U.S.A., Js sprouting boun-watn them that just as cltr government darles in the middle· of Gisler .School at answer.s to state and federa law, there is Those sunny skies are here to I t higher law in lbe class -ua," Sauter stay, at least for a while, but high Fountain Valley. It's rued •by 1 lady Id clouds 'Will be forming over the mayor who ls probably the 'tougbest bou 11 ' Qranae Coast Tuesday. Tempe.ra-Besides a city council and city --o In Orange County. ,. manager, there is a plaMlni commi!:'!ion iures should stick close to the And there is a city manager who can-which oversees planning items lmlde ·the seventies locally and up to 80 in- dkUy admits he knows more about run-class. land . Qint the city than any councilman. "T'ht!y rule on the ..,..,uio" ·.or desks, INSIDE TOD a" · .. r uioughC abou' cunning for council, ,.._ ,. ,. • "'"Y-i1111J11•J!el....,~-~la~cem:;;en~t ~of"='oo~ll~d~in;,,.:)>o<cdJ~~-:c~•~~~h!>1'~·~~,..,;, bot1hm1\t!ttd81'1he City manager w1s w e s 6 1 ou a be'. An)'i>iie who • , · ppo-sttton-to-th!" pi,ojf01cd _.._ so . much. more J_tnp(:rlant I'd try for 'it, '' wants to move his desk has to submlt 'hi~ 'mtrg11 oJ Air Califonrip lllith JC-year.old Bralllass explained. ' propmal to the planning e,ommJsslon and •Pacific South.west Ai1"1iru:1 b Tire mini-city· project 11 the brainchild appear · btfore the cbmm~s," expecttd from 1ome Afr Cal of '1UF.ath level te.cher Donald Saullr. It S11uter e1plalned. · 1toclcholders and tmp!Ol/fl. Stt Includes a compl;tte fabrication of .a city The chief f 1,_ k •-1 p0,.,, 26. structure Within the class room. o po ""~ etps tu.:: t 1ss " '11le class 11 "'1ed by a nve member Cl· quiet. CurrenUy. the _city council ls, con-- tJ council whlcfl paasts ind aforces slderlng expindfhc the onHnan Police force. ' laws, "destgned lo ta~e some ptt11ure· off Je>cherl" s.;; J1111e · · · . .\_oanilailon d~rtm<nl ci. .. , oll ,"" • PvTpose iii the pl'Ojecl 11 IA> .Oiigtlttn chalk, 1w .. p• tj1e noor Ind a. ... tl>f 11"""111 Ip the .workl111' bolh public •M oinkJ. .. .. • , ... ., .. .. • .. • .. """ '--*" ft -... . _.. .. HlllllMI """' ... °''"' ("""' ... ·-..... '*" .......... IJ ,l~ .. -.. ::-.::r • ....... 11 ... w.r•,.... .. MINI-GOVERNMENT GOES INTO SESSION "l,T FOUNTAIN VAL~EY'S GIStER SCHOOL Jim Bal1ter11 O.bblt 8'1bt, Joyct H•rw ell, Howard HolmM, lretl M11 ' (from ltft) pihofe: of r ril!""Cify. :j,;;; Gisler' design • On lhc private side of lire one boy hao ts based on Fountain Valley's structure. established him.self n the city'•' ltock "Students 1ctually control ·pm of lh• (Sot MINl.cJTY,.P11• II ""' " ( ---~---- • I I • " J • . ( • I DAILY rtLOT H R~~Talls State Court Top ~stice SA~Ji:NTO (AP) -Gov. lltacan appointed Appeal Court J111U.. Dould R. Wright or Loi Angeles today IS chief justice of .the Californi1 Supreme Court. Wrlgh~. 13, a RepublJcsn, ii a Harvant Law School IJTldu.&te who began pl'IC· Uclng law in Paudena tn 1933 and first became 1 judge in the Loi Angeles area 20 years later. Subject to conllrmatkm, WriJht will suceeed retired Cb1ef Justice Roa:er B. Traynor. Wrlghl'a appoinlmtn~ flrit to the Supreme Court by Reqan, put. the political split on the SUJWeme Court at four Dt.mocr1ts and three Republicans. The other Republicans are Marshall ~fcComb and Louis IL Burkt. There had been speculation th a t Reagan would elevate Burke to the ctuet. justictship and then make his appointee an associate justice. There was tentative plan by the three· member Commission on Judicial Ap- pointments to meet April 17 in San Fran- cisco to consider the appointment. Confirmation probabJy would come that day, unless there wu anytbitlg con- iroveralal about it. The commlaaloa ~ Cll!Dpoeed' o1 Adlnc Qlief Justice Stuley Mook, cbalnnan; Ally. Gen. Thomu C. Lyndl and J ustice Parker Wood of Los Angeles, aenior preskiing justice of the State Qourt of Ap. p<aJ. Apartment Fight In Seal Beach Resumes Tonight The battle of tlle <plltmenta will be Tesumed at 8 01ctock tonight before the Sea1 Beach City Counc il which has scheduled an appeal hearing for the Apollo 'lleveiopmalt CorporaUoo. Representives of the corporation were tamed don by the. city's planning commiaion, Mardi II, in a requeat to esta.bli&h a zonlng which wou1d pa'e the way for eoDlrtrucUon of 20 duplexea a.t a six-unit apartme:nt building on the boUy- contested Pacific Electric right.of-way. Members of the C o uncil for Enviriiomeotal Concenl, wbo ficure<I lllnlogly in tlle planning c:ommilsioo'• d«:llloa to deny the application, aay they will q aln be (lftlOl!I to prevent a :ronlng ..,,., which ia eUec~ would place high density unit.I 1n one of the city's few r• m&WncoPOO-· Altllciugh tllo .,-nt lsaue wu a hotly-<lebaled IUbject Jn the 1"COlll Sul Beach city C<JllllCll eJec:Uon. the -ly· elected councilmen WW. _blye no voi~ in tonicbt'• meetiq. New Councilmen Tbomu Hogard and Harold K. Holden will not be able to take their 1eata until July 1. Prlor to that. o• June 21 a run-off election between Morton Baum and John Hamilton w!U deCI.k the third" vacant apot on the cowtell. The ecology-oriented Council f o r Environmental Conceni bas favored establlabment ol a park or a geen belt on the nanow, 3,000.fl 1trip of land in· atead of the apartment.a. OV Trustees Plan • Meeting on Tuesday Truai<es of the Ocean View School Diltrlct have scheduled a r e I u I a r businf.6s meeting for 7:30 p.m. Tumday at district headquarters. 7971 Warner Ave., HunUnrton Belch. At the senion they will coilsidtr ap- i--oving the following. -5elecUon of a IChool budttt auditor. -District philoaophy, goals and ob- jectives. -Schematic drawinss for a new school site. ' . " DAILY PILOT oit.\NGf COAST PU•Ll$MING COMP•NV •• .,,,. N. W•-4 Pruldlrit _.,. ,_....., ·J··· R. C.11•1 -Th•111•1 K,,.,a Eillli.t' Th'"''' A. Mur!Jhift• M-t'"' l•llw Alkrt W. '•'•• ,__ .... , .. H.rt ......... Offl•• 17175 ••••h l 11i1l•••1• M1:lh1t A4ir•111 P.O ..... 190, t2641 °""' .,,,,_ L"tWM llJdU m ,_,.., ·-~'-Mt••• .di WOI 11• 111•1 "-' ••Kiit nn WUI ..... , .... '"' .. )ti Ck -It; ;IO$ ,..,tll II Ct lftlllt 'Itel ' I Trestle ,Ploti I ' • ~conversion Idea • . . . !Ft)r Beach Told • • A Jlshlocipler, dotted with shnps and restauramt .lS J.ht idea. behind Newport BeaCh rfil estate broker Denis L. LynCh's bld to convert I ,700-foot trestle of t~an~ Ana River into a permanent f \Y· : "We hope to do with private capital whaf the state and county are dolng with Aliso Pier at Laguna Beach,·• Lynch said today. Lynch said he has enough backers in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach to fund the $6 million venture. "The critical issue is getUng con&enl of the public -agencies.'' Another •state alency, the State Laftds Division. will also have to approve the project. The division owns lhe st.ate beach from which the pier would stretch and the tidelands. The diviSl9n ·.would ;~~~ to approve a long-term le~ tor the Lynch said. "It's all speeulative.•l ~ moment, but if the agencies do i'lldicate that it's all right we would make a $50,900 study to determine whether J t • 1 economically feasible.'' Lynch said tentative plans include building SO sbops on the pier and tour restaurants. The pier could have lhrtt separate designs, with stretches in Polynesian style, Cape Cod and Spaniab decor. "There would be no charges for fishing," Lynch said. FLAG FLOWING, PUNTING AND SCULLING SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DEFEAT The Army Corps of Engineers ls at present studying Lynch 's application to convert the trestle, built to carry pipes out to sea for a sewer outfall. The corps sent notices of the applicstian to 250 public agencies with a deadline of April 10 set as the time for replies. "We have had no rep lies yet,'' corps · engineer Joe Benson said today. "I ex· pect they'll comt: in al the last minute.·• There would also be boat Jaunch1ng facilities with a crane setup ·and an area for boats to be rolled orr trailers. Down to Sea • ID Gulps ''It could cut a lot of miles o£f golng ln Catalina for some of the smaller boats in Newport Harbor," Lynch added. Bal Isle Tugboat Puts Up Game But Losing Fight The cO(ps will evaluate the comments, make an 'engineering study of the project -whetbtr it will a!!ect beach erosion, navigatioo or cause flooding problems - and then role on the application. From P,.,,e 1 SHOOTOUT. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL They went down to the sea in shi ps Saturday -the Balboa lsland Punting and Sculling Society and the San Diego Rest and AsptraUon Society -without a aol.ltaey star to steer them by. 'Ibe whole Milky Way wouldn't have helped, Competing ior the tradltion·slttped trophy. a gilded bent elbow with a glass clenched in hand, the two or1anlzations stqed 'The Great Tugboat Race. Oh, 'Tlfu a movillJ sight to se< llllriM:n so moved by the challenge o the day, the majesty of San Diego Ba. and the wind on the.tr facts. One could see srown men swallowin: hard. 'l'Ulboats were in short supply, so the San Ditto group pitted the old IS-fool fer· ryboot Monterey~ulpped with l1ro bars -ag~ the BISAPSOC's plucky 1itUe SS Michigan, equipped with gluaes and a lug. 'Ibe Michigan, 1unk and salvaged-five times 10 the best of Its ...,,...., LWV' to Provide Fun for Tuesday Candidate Fair 'Mlere'll be singing, dancing a n d balloonl at a festive candidates' fair Fri- day designed to put fu n into the Hun- tiniton Beach council elect.ion. 'Ibe action, arranged by the League of Women Voters, will be at the Huntington Center Mall, Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard, from 1 to 10 p.m. All 18 csn- didltes have been invited. LWV offici sl Mrs. Cornelia Johnson said the eltctiooeering will be in· te~ with music. About J ,000 balloons will be ilropped oh the mall and colored bunting will be put up. Candidates will be in booths from 1 p.m. to t p.m. to answer questions of voters. 'The final hour will be a:tven to three-minute presentations at a podium by the office seekers. Copies of a questionnaire giving the candidates' responses to Issues listed by the LWV will be available to residents. The league rsn off 3,500 copies of the questionnaire on a mimeograph machine. and delivered many door-to-door to· homeowners. 1be candidates are vying for four coon ... cil seats in the election, scheduled for. Tuesday, April 14. Entertainment during tllf: early houn or the ''grass roots" gathering will be provided by "Guns and Garten," a folk· dance aroup under the leadership or Tommy Morris. the . "F.em Four Folk. Singers," and the "Madrigal Consor1." a grwp or students from Edison lligh School. . Front Page J HELP LINE. • • liked out to a dance," s.aid Dr. Sher. "tl seemed he was nervoos and this made him scratch hi s face. When ht: did this it made his pimples sbc7w" and he didn't know what to do. "We listened and explained to him that Jt wasn't so serious and told them that lOme medication woo Id take care of it." Dr. Sher went on: ''Another time somt· 1>ne called at 2:30 in the morning and wanted to know if he should co ba ck to bi.s vt'lfe or hls girl friend." The doctor added. "'The thing to ttmember about all these calls is th11t they were very serious problems to !ht: callus. There wa.s nothing funn y about lhtm7' - Senate P anel Okays Nixon Rail l\feasu1·e WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sina le Labor Committee approved unantmously today 1 bill proPolfd by Prea!dent Nixon to avert 1 nallonwtdt railroad strike now thrtstened for Saturday. · The measure would impoR on U1t lour lhopcrafL unions involved In the dispute and the industry 1 settlement reached by ,,.,otiltor• last December. knowledge, set sail for San Diego Friday aboard an Advance Marine Transport truck. Cartoonist Dick Shaw of Corona del !.1ar, who doubles as commodore of the Sculling and Punting Society's flagship, supervised the Michigan's removal from Newport Harbor waters. He described the truck trip as a oun- nlng maneuver to conceal the true merit and speed of the Michigan, which is about twice the sl.ze of one of the Monterey's propellers. MuJUtudes greeted the 1 p.m. rae.e with :ligh spirits as the Michigan chugged away from the San Diego Yacht Club for the starting line off the southwest tip of Shelter Island. Cheers went up, along with a huge American Flag. Old Glory dwarfed the Michigan like a spinnaker broken loose from Jts lines, while the square-hulled Monterey groan· ed along in her wake. A phalanx of some 20 other watercraft followed the two venerable vessels, in· eluding: a Harbor Police boat which shadowed the entire race. Dubbed the S. s. Aspiration for the con- test, I.he Monterey was crowdetl with rac- ing enthusiasts who aspired to ligh ten her load by about 20 gallons of ballast. An artillery piece at the tip of Slielter Island boomed to signal the run for the money down a course of one nautical mile and the Michigan bubbled into the lead. Orange smoke erupted from a distress fiare on the colorful little boat -held together by paint and good faith -ap- parently signalling a drought aboard. Despite skill and nauUcal knowflow, Commodore Shaw blew his lead because everytime he attempted to change coarse, all hands aboard the Michigan had to change seats. She faltered just short of the finish line and the S. :,. Aspiration chugged across the victor, followed by a celebration which lingered on into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy was awarded to cwtody of the San Diego Rest and Aspiration Society, while a return match -perhaps in Newport Harbor -Was sch~uh!d for September. F,,_ Pflfle J MINI-CITY CREATED • • • broker complete with ticker tape and charts. "Seventeen youngsters are involved in buying and -selling stocks (with paper money). We are using the stock market as a math project," SAuter said. The city government Idea was intended for the clvlcs portloo of study, but as it has expanded, all of the basic skills have come into use. Math is used in the stock market, language arts developed as each student wrote a paper requesting a certain position in the city, and speech ski lls grow on the campaign trail or at a city council meeting. .. We're really teach.ing lbem life," Sauter commented. Soon there wW be bankers, gas station attendants and city e m p I o y e e s , ''Everything you can find in Fountain Valley we will try to recreate here." said Sauter. And each with a purpose to develop certain education skills. Yet to come ~ea parks and recreation commission, a model school board and perhaps a newspaper. Some 98 7tlr and 8th grade students in the classes of Sauter, Robert \Velch and· ho1iss Mafcia Volpe are involved in the mini-city development. So far a marked improvement in learning and class room behaviour bas been demonstrated, say.s Sauter. HAVE AUTHORITY "I really tUce it. You feel like you have some authority and I think the class is sha ping up now,'' Joyce Harwell, 13, the mayo'r, says. Joyce and city councilmat1 Howard Holmes 14, both .admit they weren't get- ting m~ch oUt of school be£ore Sauter struck on the Jnini~ity idea. "It sho,vs us what we can do to help the room and help ourselves for educa- Uon. I'm working harder than ever now," Howard said. One city councilmBJ1, Jim Balsters, 13. almost quit the day he was elected. ''l never knew there was so much pressure. Too many kids wlUlted things done, and they tried to influence my vote." ·•Now that I've stayed with it I like it. T U1ink l might really like to be a city councilman," he added. The key to making the project click and getting students involved is authori- ty. according to Joyce. "If you have it, you try harder to k.eep It.'' moaey to buy • complete stock market encyclopedia for the class. He blushed when the CJty council prais· ed him for it. "I just care that they are interested enought to use them." he said. This is the first time Sauter has applied the idea of a cily structure for a classroom to such a young level. "We did it once in a high school, that wa s all," he said. The firsl parl of the project was voter registration -75 percent of the class registered, then 71 percent of the cla.53 voted in city council elections. Wouldn't city officials in Fountain Valley or Huntington. Beach be surprised if that happened April 14? EDUCATION RELEVANT Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. feels thl'! project is "making education relevant." "We have a lot of constraints on kids now living in these walled cities," Brick says. "They are curious and this gives them an outlet, t.xposure to real lift." "These youngsters are rebuilding 1 World, in this case a city. The teacher helps provide them with accuracy and .ivoids the fantasy," Brick explained. Beach Property Owi1ers Display Plan Interest Downtown property ownen planned to attend tonight's meeting of the Hun· tington Beach City Council and produce for councilmen enough signatures to prove their interest in redeveloping the beachfront district. The properly owners, who claim privat'! enterprise is wllllng to redevelop the area, were given until April I by the council to come up with signatures of owners of 20 percent of the property favoring redevelopment. Today one of the signature collectors, Martha Holt, said : "We ha ve done very well. We have more than the required amount of names." She said she and Tim Talbert, who also has been collecting signatures, will give a report to the council tonight. The property owners are looking for a11 altemaUve to the city's redevelopment proposal, called the Top of the Pier Plan. The city's originaJ propo&al calls for con- demRaUon of five blocks, covering 2.8 acres and lhe construction of a parking lot. Forty-eight people own property in the district stretching a block deep from Sixth Street east to Lake Avenue plus a two-block area on the east side of Lake • Slreet. At present the land is being appraised for condemnation purp:ises. The bjggesl battle in the long-running dispute iS ex- pected when the appraisals are com· pleted. :3 Public Hearings Before Valley Council Three public hearings lop the list ot agenda items for the last meeting of the Foont..ain Valley City Council before the April 14 election. Councilmen will meet at a p.m., Tues- day, to hear the public on : a zone change reducing property on the south side of Slater Avenue west of Euclid Street, from high density apartments to single family homes; a change to the city master plan, reducing potential apartment construe· tion; and an appeal on planning commis· sion denial of II lots /or apartment ton- ing in the city center area . •• after releasing Hoag. At one time T"·inning shouted when told to surrender : "I'll be dead if I wa lk out." While investigating reports that I.he two men in an automobile had been pointing guns at motorists along the Golden St.at• Freeway, h\·o of the slain patrolmt:n spot led a car, answering the description, parked in front of J's Coffee Shop just off the freeway. They radioed for help and 1 second patrol car arrived within minutes. It was shortly before midnight. One witness, among four young persons in a car towing a boat, said he was "stan· ding in the parking lot and saw 1 Calirornia Highway Patrol car approach a car with two men in )it. "The two officers got out and one ap- proached," the ~'itness said. "The fellow on the passenger side got out and im- mediately shot one cop , picked up the cop's shotgun and went around to the front of the car and shot the other cop. "Another highway patrol ear Pulled up behind. Then the patrol car's driver got oul and shot. He was gunned down. The remaining cop held off these two guys for about five minutes by himself. "Finally one fellow went around to the front of the highway palrol car and shot this young cop in the face." A highway patrol spokesman said he could not explain how two men were able , to shoot down four oUJcers. The assailants abandoned their bullet. riddled automobile and fled on foot. The fugitive arrested in a canyon wu identified by police as Russell Lowell Talbert, 28. WOUNDED TWICE Talbert was wounded twice after he ex· changed shots and scuffled with camper Dan Schwarz, -40, Chicago, who was sleeping in his camper truck when Talbert fired into it, a spokesman said. Police said Talbert, apparently out of ammunition, pistol-whipped Schwarz and fled in the camper truck. He was apprehended without resistance later in a canyon· nearby. The slain patrolmen were identified as \Valter C. Frago, 23; Roger D. Gore, 22; James Edward Pence Jr., 25, and Georae M. Alleyn , 24. All were married and lived in nearby communilies. Mrs. Hoag, wife of the man held hostage, said she fled the house after calling the highway patrol. "J was fixing breakfast for my husband \vhen I saw a man outside carrying a shotgun abd ·a pistol," she told newsmen. "f went and Called the highway patrol. "My husband came in and said this man Wants to talk with us. There was a tap at the front door. The man said it's probably your son. "The fap al 'the door was Uie hiahway palrol. I.ducked out the front door and i~ to the bushes. The man -inside looked ex· hausted. Jt looked like ht: had a bullet Y•ound in the head," 1-lrs. Hoag said. .Frona Page J LIBERTY ... •Ingle .22 caliber bullet. "We're continuing a concerted search or the Oran&e County area and bllieve U'.s possible that someone may be hkling Liberty and Connolly," Ve.lne said. "Whoever might be hiding them J~ making him&el£ part of a murder and cou1d face a stiff prison sentence." ' Both men are believed to be driving t1 yellow '65 Ford Mustang convertible with a black top and Calilomia license number PKL 1.16. Reaarding Connolly, who is now wanted onJy for the lesser kidnap charge, Veine sakl, "ll's unlikely that even if he were proven guilty be would have to faee lhl ''Yes, if you reel you have more responsibility you do things you nevtr would have thought of," chipped in Coun· cllwoman Debbie Beebe . J3. LEARN RESPONSllillJTV~ .,_,-:--·-,.;;,~~~~u_cb.ambet.ot.aJile.-pri£on ~tetteet'' :t Liberty rt<:eived his nickname In con- "We are learning the responslblllty of a city government. Now when we read about ll we can understand,'' Joyce said. They are learning tbe responsibilities of ¥Ovemmen •• even to the most minute rletail. Aaendas for a council meeting must be published prior to the meeting. Oc!adllnt:s are set up ahead of Ume for plachia Items on an qenda. And patlltme.nf.lry -procedure must be follow· ed. Tht project will continue to the end or lhe year. 1ay1 Sautu, who took such an inteml in it Iha! ht sptlldi ~ ol biJ own Slaot in tlae Arni Bobby Cox. first 11rader at: Ocean View school J;ll1U1ct's College View School, reacts to DPT (diptherla, pertu.ss11, tetanus) booster shot adrntntstered by Dr. Ru1sell Morgan and school nurse Harriet · Kelley. Free boo~ter shot program is currently under 'vay jn all 22 Ocean View schools. Physictaos are volunteering teir lime. . -· nection with the strangling death c( 1 Westminster mother in 1968 during which he was found near tht: body, pl1ytni 1 guitar by candlelight. He 11.'IS ruled insane and conlined to a state hospital but was nleased after belrti rultcl "sartt." Capt. Grovtr Payne, commander or Huntington Qtach detectJvu, said 11everal of hi.I men are now workin1 on the case full-Ume In cooperation with detecUves In othtr police departments. "We Intend to nail both of llluc guy•,"' he said. I ' " This Little Piggy • • • Frenchy Frydman's little pig went to market recently. The Long Beach police officer and his partner, Officer Robert A. Fowks, are selling T-shirts and tie tacks throughout Southern California as a reverse· psychology spoof of the derisive, modern-day tenn some· times applied to law enforcement officers. Jewelry and sporlw:ear aren't the only applications. Police say term stands for Perserver- ance, Integrity, Guts and Service. SA Officer's Last Words Monday, Aprll 61 1970 Welfare Limits Ol('d High Court Favors State Maximum Payment WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Sup1<me coun ruled today that atates may aet mulmuma on 1he9: welfare payments to poor families with dependent children. JusUce Potter Stewart wrote the ina· jorlty opinion fiw the court, which divided 6 ~ 3 in ruling ona Maryland cue. In a separate 24-page opinion Justice John M'. Harlan ruled for a 51x-man ma. jorlty tblt New York State. ln violation of Ul67 mendmenb to the Federal Social Security A<~ imperml.ssibly cut wellare payment. to the Aid to Fomlll6 wllb Dependent Children (AFDC) proaram. The cuts beve" decreued benefit.I to New York City recipienta by almost $40 million. Countian Picked As CRA Leader At StateMeet , From Wire Services SACRAMENTO -• S.ttlng a ...,.. servatlve trend fOf' mo, the· Callfoml1 Republlcan Assembly elected an Orange County aerospace engineer president Sun· day during the group's annual convention. Dave Gal.er, 37, <l Anaheim, will head the 10,000-member GOP v o I u n t e e r organization, assisted bY 11 v i c • presidents, including another Orange County man. He is Scott Morrison, cf 9190 Lark!pUr Drive, Westminster. • Bob Eichenberg, of Santa Ana, was also elected CRA .a§ist.ant treasurer, while Ted Wehe, ol Placentia; WU chosen as seCretary. The CRA , oldest Republican organ.lza.- tion in the :rtate, united behind the can- didacies of six const.rvatives in the June primary election and releclantly backl!d Controller Houston I. Flournoy, which Jt considers too liberal. The 391 delegates ovemded their of- ficial endorsing committee and backed Flournoy on a split vote. . - Harlan aent the New York ca.se baCt to tlw. 2nd U.S. Clreult Court of Appeals for further action. That court had ruled the atate acllon valid. :. ' Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Jutlce Hugo L. Black dissented on the 1round that the matter should i;ave been' ruled on firot by the pep&!lmeni of Health, Education and Welfare. In other actions today, the Court: -Refused to• review a case protesting rellitot11 messages to earth fro m aslronauts in space, leaving stand a lower court rullns again.st ~· Madalyn Murray O'Halr, who su~sfully a.Lo tacked IChool prayera some years· ago. Seeks S208,000 • ...!RuJed In a Florida cue that a person may not be tried by both a city and a atate for the same. aneged crime. -Refu'.atd to review an Illinois libel case, Jea,vJng stind •· ruling in favor of the Edwardwllle Intelligencer which wrOte .of, f\OW-decti\sed City Attorney ~ W. Tunnel jhat he "waa working to break .. ~ law" bt maktnc a~ pointmel)lS. The opinion Jn the Maryland case reversed a judgment of a special three.. judge federal cOurt In Baltimore which invalidated that state's welfare celling on Dec. 13, 1968. Marylaqd Attorney General Francis B. JlLirch appealed to the Supreme eoun. Coast Medic Files Suit In Drug Death Charge Spe<lat to the DAIL llJLOT INDIO -Asserting he Was Ut*Jy ac- cused of murdering his wife by drug in- jecUon, an Orange Coast physician has filed a $200,00()..plus damage suit against 70 indivlduab and agencies. Dr. Merrill C. O'Donnell, 5.l, who prac. lices in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach, flied the suit in Riverside County Superior Court, since many parties live there. He hlmself was named in a 1969 wrongful death suit fil*I in Orange Coun- ty Superior Court by the mother and stepfather of the late Mary Jane O'Don- nell. The suit alleges he poisoned his 3a.. year-old wife with a highly toxic barbiturate in March, 1968, .while the C0\1-o pie Wit! vacationing at Quintana Roo, on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. He responded by filing a $1 -million countersult in Orange County Superior Court and dropped his legal counsel, Arthur Strock, Newport Beach. Orange Coast Publishing Company. the Santa Ana Register, the Long Beach Independent, Pre~Telegram, American Airlines, Martha Amescoa de Beckbart, Ben Beckhart and Hoag Memorial llospilal: others are Newport National Bank, Frederick Zigmond, Gumblner, Savett and Associates, Dr. Melvin Sommer, Jean L. O'Donnell, George Wiseman, Grace 1.f. Laux and Mercedes Russell. • The acUon also includes 50 John Does. The physician seeks $$100,000 in general damages and $100,000 in ex- emplary damages, plus special damages as proved for costs in defending himsel! against the original charges. Mrs. Gertrude Barnett, his late wife's mother, and her stepfather, wealthy Tor- rance businessman Ben H a g g o t t , originally accused him of injecting the victim with a heavy doese of lumlnal. His offices are at 307 Placentia Ave., and 2011 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach, plus 17822 Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach, according to court records. ----- Ul'IT ......... WRESTLING DOCTOR DIES Dr. Sam Shappard, 46 Dr.Sheppard,46, Found Dead After Round With Flu COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) -Dr. Sam Sheppard, main figure In one of the n .. tion's most controven:lal murder trlall, died today at his borne here alter he bad been ill for three days with what wu belieVed to be influenza. Sheppard, 46, freed Crom Ohio Penltfto tiary after serving 10 years following bil conviction for lhe murder of his fitat wife, Marilyn, wis found dead in bill home by his wife. llli body was taken to Unlvenlty Hospital where an autopsy may be performed to determine the cauae ot death. Mrs. Colleen Strickland Sheppard, hlJ . third wife, said the osteopath had beea ill with what 1he .believed was flu. Shep- pard, who WM in the midst of a pro. fessional wrestling career when',he died. married Colleen last Oct. 21. Mrs. George Strickland said, "We all thought he had the nu." . .. ,I After Fatal Shooting Told "I think we've made our point and I think lt was a point we needed to make," the delegates were told by Richard Dari· ing of Riverside, cliairman.o£ a "fact fin. ding" cunmittee which Friday night had found Flournoy too liberal to endorse. Dr. O'Donnell said he would act as his own attorney and Is doing so in the case filed at the Indio court branch. The physician notes in the action that 1.feilcan authorities.ceased criminal pre>- ceed\ngs against him last month for lack of evidence, hence the original action was allegedly instigated without probable cause. King Flips Car, Escapes Injury During his years in prison, when Shep. pa.rd had volunteered with a number ol other prisoners to participate in a cancer research program with other parUcipant.s, a live canCer virus had been injected into bis body. Office r Nelson Sasscer'.1 dying moments were recreated today for a Superior Court jury by the man who ran from his home to find the young patrolman bleeding in the gutter. Louis Martfnez, Jr.1 testified at the murder trial of Ariliur DeWitte League that he was asltep in bed shortly before midnight last June f when he heard a shot fired directly outside his home. As he left the house, he said, he heard a voice· calling, "Help me, somebody please help me." Martinez said he found the 24-year-old oflicer sprawled in the roadway in front of his car, bleeding profusely from a chest wound and "too far gone to talk anymore. I asked him to blink if he knew what I was saying and that's all he was able to do," the Santa Ana resident said. The prosecution witness said be called in to police headquarters on Sasscer's car radio and summoned help for the stricken officer. But Sassctr died Jess than 30 minutes later in a nearby hospital. League, 21, of Santa Ana, is accused of firing the shot tha! killed Sasscer. The prosecution alleges'that he was ooe o{ two Negroes halted by the officer that night and that the Black Panther officer's response to a demand for identification was to product a gun stolen four days earlier and shoot Sasscer in the chesl Tbe prosecution expects to put Stevie Tice, 16, League's companion in that lrt- cident, into the witness bo:ii: later today, Tice has already testified in earlier hear· ings that he was with League when Sasscer was shot but his testimony has been clouded by subsequent retraction and repetitions of that story. His brother, Rick Tice, 18, Is also ex- pected to testify that League's gun was hidden in the Tice home from shortly after the shooting until its recovery by Santa Ana police investigators. The League trial is in the second week of what is expected to J>e a siJ: week pre>- ceeding. Darling -a longtime CRA leader - told newsmen, "the point was we weren't too happy to be backing Flournoy. The California Republican Assembly is a con· servative organization and we would rather back coruervative candidates but we did not have ooe." The incumbent's only Rep u bl t can primary opponent, James Ware cf Loo Angeles, was judged "unqualified0 by Darling's committee. Flournoy supporter! lobbied delegates with the argument his official campaign sponsors included, among other people, Gov. Ronald Reagan. . Wlth the volunteer group's en- dorsement normally comes grassrootl campaign help and financial support. The organization claims more than 10,000 members. In choosing Wendell Handy, the conven- tion passed over two candidates generally regarded as the frontrunners for the GOP nomination -Mrs. Alberta Jordan, widow of the latt Secretary of State Frank M. Jordan, and Assemblyman G.orge W. Miliaa cf Gilroy. Named lo the court act.lon are at- torneys, physicians, three newspapers in- cluding Orange Coaat Publishing Com- pany, which publishes !he DAILY PILOT, an airline, a hospital and numerous persons. The list includes: Attorneys Hurwitz and Remer, Max Hurwitz:, Ben Haggott; Reese HaggoU, Transport Walkout Spreads in Manila MANILA (AP) -A general transportation strike spread throu1h Mani.la today, and labor Jeadi!rs vowed it would be followed Tuesday by a one-day naUonwide work stoppage. 1be striking drivers demanded that oil · and 1asoline price increases by largely American oil companies be withdrawn. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! MORTON'S 26 OZ. CTN. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No salt .salts like lforton"s salt salts •• , and who but El Rancho \vould offer it for a nickel? Welch's Fruit Drinks ............. 3 "' '1 Instant Potatoes ........................ 49' Grape or Appl~Grape ••• big 46 o·z. cans. Ml!hed potatoes in minute..! Ore-Ida • , • 13 oz. Beef Stew ................................... 79' Chicken and Noodles ................ 79' Stouffer's.,, simply heat and serve! JO oz. Stouffer'• •• , frozen ••• heat and eat! llVt oi. Beat nlenu.-mom>tony ••• shop El Ra:ndho earlu in the toeek! Stuffed Cabbage Rolls ..... ~~~· ..... 39~ .. Crisp fresh cabbage leaves, wrapped around ground beef and pork.,. deliciowly seasoned ••• ready to cook! Breakfast Steaks ..................... $1 69,~ COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) - With 71.year-<>ld King Frederik at the wheel, the royal Bentley convertible skidded on a slippery street Sundayi hJt the ctui> and llinded on Ua side. Witnesses, noticing the r o y a 1 license plate, called for ambulances and hurried to the wrecked car fear- ing the worst. But King Frederlk, wearing spec· tacles and with a pipe betweeri his teeth, climbed out and asked for a taxi. When the first ambulance arrived at the scene, howe.ver, the king agreed to ride i• it to Amalienboi-g Palace. As the ambulance approached the palace, the king asked the driver to stop Md he got out to walk the rest of the way, apparently wary that his arrival by ambulance might cause alarm. Dr. Stephen Sheppard, his brother, had claimed during Sam's imprisonment that the injections might have caused canoer to develop. t Mrs. Strickland said Sam had "told us he had cancer because of that." "He told us at one time he wou~ not live another yta.r whtn wt first cot together a· year ago," she said. Sheppard had one son, Samuel Jr., by his first marriage. The son, knon u "Chip," is now in his 20's. Sheppard's second wife was the former Ariane Tebbenjohann.s of West Germany. They were married i~ly, Ul64, shortly after he was released from prison. Sheppard was convicted in December, 1954, of beating his pregnant wife to death July 4 at their Bay Village home near Cleveiand. During his trial, Sheppard said a "one-- anned bushy·haired intruder" killed his wife.and ·nttacked him tn their home on the shore of Lake Erle. Mrs. Sheppard had been beaten aroWKi the head with a estimated 25 blows. • Stroganoff Slices .................... ~1.69 Ground Round.··························· 89~ Alw010 lean, fresh! Patti.., too, al thla price! 1 --PriCU in effect Mon.., Tu~a., Wed., April 6, 7, a. No aa.le1 to dla.lcr1. ARCADIA: SuMlt and Hantiniton Dr. (ti Rlnc!o l'Anler) PASAMNA: Top sirloin beef .,, rwlf to braise. Add the fixin'•· . . S1tptr frc11i '/}T'oducc. Banana Squash Sweet golden meat for A delicious baked vegetable treat! I At tl<t DeliMttnen Biscuits Pillsbury or Ballard'• .•• 8--0z. tube. Hot biscuits are alwaye enjoyed! 3i25< 320 West Colondo Bll'd. .SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont 1nlf·Huntinrtan Or. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Warner.and Al1onquin (Boird.,lk C<nler) NEWPOKT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. and 2SS5"E••lblull Dr. (Eastblull Vill111 Cenler) lilOOd>J,Aprfl 6, 1'17C 10-cent Lette·r · ·Prop~sal Dead? The UlllV9l'11ty ol Colorado will hold iti lhird ant1ual trivia bowl beginning nut Monday to learn ;uat bow much trivial Information 1ti llluclenti possess. Categories will Include such choice items as pop cultUre, pop music and sports or ••any information not considered needed for the content .•• of other- wise essential information. • Housewife Judith Butler of Carl- isle, England, Is going !nto cold storage for two years on a dare. Slie answered an ad 1ooking for someone to sit In a deep freeze for &~veral hours a day clad only in a nigbtgown and a special new type of quilt. She said "My fri ends dared me to apply for the job." • S'"1/..,,.-old Lauro Smiltv tok<1 ''" mind off th< big aut on h<r l<g by pl4nUng &amt flower aeed& °' part of a catch-up science lea.Son at Los /\tt0tlt1 Orthopaedic Hospital. Al· though 1M wiU be 1'elea.sed long be- fore the flowers bloom, 1he and her ·hospital cl.a.astnatea keep up with :t heir ttudies. • A proposal to move the U.S. Mint ''out of Denver, Colo.1 is getting no ·•upport froin the mayor, Wllllam MeNlchols. 111 sort of like to hear tile clinking of the money," he said after learning of the 1ugge<tlon. • A man who osktd th< U.S. ceftlUI bureau for hil c ·"" tiol fontl.I to be retu d to him wai rtfiutd palittl rtctntly. Ht aakt his wift had ft d it in and mailtd lt without lttt him ''' it. Ht acid all he wanted to do toe1 to ''' j1"« tzactlt1 how okl hb wife ii. • . After lhieves bad robbed flie home of John B1t11 in BredbllfY, England, tlµ"ee time s, police "ad- viJed hilJl to trim a tree outside his home which gave the thieves cov· er. He· did as he was told, but now must appear in court to face a charge o! damaging a tree pro- tected under an 80-year-old mini!· try of bouling order. • Edward Basil• of Kalamazoo, Mich., and a student at 'Vestern Michigan University, will have to 1 find a . way of telling bis insurance company that his car was damag .. ed by a runaway snowball. The car was hit by a monster snowball rolled by studenis, which got away from them at the top of a hill and rolled Into a parking lot bitting the car and causing ~ In damages. W .ISHINGTON (AP) -Pruldent Nix· «1'1 propoeal to raise the price ol malling a letter to a dbne to help pay for the wage boost of mallme'n. and other govern- ment workers 11 doomed, according to Senate DemocraUc L e a d e r Mike Mllll!leld. The lO«nt atamp doesn't stand a chance, Mansfield 1aid in an interview. "They just won't go for a four<ent raise, especially in the one ma which ls returning a profit" Th.at area is first class mail, whicb is payjng its OWTl way under the curre11t six· cent rate structure • Sen. Gale McGeee (0.Wyo.}, chairman llf the Senate Post Office and Civil Service committee, alreA"Y had rit:jected the Nixon proposal. Reds Attack Beret Camp, Down Planes SAIGON (AP) -North Vietnam.,,. troops from Laos have laid siege to a !rmtler Special Fm:es cainp and shot ·down tliree American tranlp<lrls trying to drop emergency ~Ues, killing all nine American. crewmen, military tpOkmnen reported today. The heaVi11t action of the enemy'1 slt;- day-oJd offen1Jve continued along the t..oUan and Cambodian borders and the demilitarized sone. But fighting also was r_.ied in the c.ntraJ Jnghlands and the contra! coastal plaln. Allied communiques reported 21112 mere North V}etnamete and Viet Cong soldiers killed in a dozen fight!, three of them just out•ide the besieRed Dak Seang Special Forcu camp el«ht miles from the Laotian border and 277 mUes northeest of Saigon. . Eleven Americans were reported killed and 20 wounded in the ground flgh~ing and in 41 rocket and mortar attacks dur· ing the night. Several American helicapten were blown up by enemy sappers who penetrated the perimeter of Camp Radcliff, a U.S. hue near An Khe, In the Central Hi~hlands. ReporU !rom the field said at least 11 South Vletnameee soldiers were killed and 107 wounded in the ground fighting. Government casualUes from rocket and mortar attackl which were deteribed as Ug!\t. Vietnam Troops Fall by 9,200 SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command announced today that American trGOp sirength jn Vietnam dropped another 9,200 men last week, to 4!19,400. lt Is the Jowest level in three years and results from contiouance of Prtsldent Nixon's third-pbase -withdrawal nm\' nearing its final week. The U.S. Command also anOOUnced that a detachment reprnentlng the 1st Infantry Di,·ialen will fly Tuesday from Bien Hoa Air Bue to the UnHed States, completing the division's departure from Vietnam. Three mort Army units were in· activated in Vietnam today, rewlilng In a total reduction of 17! men. The unit! are ·the 337th Radio Research Company, the ~rd Signal Detadunenlt and the 1st Military Intelligence Detachmrnt. all based arouncf Saigon. The th~d-pbue redeployment w 111 reduce authorized U.S. troop strength in Vietnam to 434,000, but American of· ficials say actual atnngth will drop from one to two percent below that. Ha said a check with members of hla panel, showed the to-cent .tamp doesn't stand a chance. McGee said he would consider a one-cent increase, two at the outside. . McGee's commltl<e !Cheduled btarlqs late today on lhe pre1idenUal proposal based on a setuement rtac;bed last week between government negoUators and of· ficlala of the seven major postal unlons. The tentative agreement. reached after a first.time ever poatal strike, provided a two-step, tf percent boolt that break• down this way: -A six percent boost for nearly all federal worker11 including p o s t a 1 employes and nputary · p e r 1 o n n e I , retroactive to Dec. 27. -Another eight pertent jump for mail workers if and when a Post Office reorganization bill becomes law. The cost of the package is esUmated at $3 billion and Nixon's tG-eent stamp pr<r posal 1s designett to bring in $2.3 billion. McGee said Congreu will work withi• the terms aet by the negotiated agree- ment, and promised to act quickly. Mansfield said he will schedule floor action on the measure as IOOft as it ls ready, pooslbly by mid-week. Mansfield saJd the overall pay packlge may have an inDaUonary effect. But he . said it represents an overdue federal commitment to government workers. To offset it, he said, the budget wilt have t? be cut elstwhere. "I think the administration will have to cut expenditures more and we'll have to reduce appropriations more," Man!fleld said. "I think we ought to look again at the de!ense budget BJld our commltments overseas." Conservatives Have Their Day In Washington WASHINGTON (AP) -Mlatever other purpose it may have served, the March for Victory gave thousands of middle--ag. ed and conservaUvely drtutd Americans a chance to be heard. "This is our day,'' said the Rev. carJ Mcintire, the fundamentalist preacher and chief organizer of the event, who led the March Saturday down PeMsylvanla Avenue to the Wa.shiniton Monument. 'There, a loud speaker blared "at Ja~t< Americans have had their day ur- W &lhington." Crowd estimates varied. Wa!Nngton Police Chief Jerry V. Wilton set the num· ber at 10,000 to 15,000. Federal Park Police estimated about 40,000, while Mcintire aa.ld 50,000 persons marched. About 250,000 persons were estimated to have walked the same route in the November Morat.orium Day p r o t e 1 t against the Vietnam war. Unlike last Cali's youthful demonstrators with their long hair and unorthodox clothes, the weekend crowd was mostly over 30, had above.th«!ar hair cut.a, and wore their Sun4ay-best outfits. Some he1d Bibles, American end Confederate fliJ•· '1bey aang hymns, · "America," 11DL1le" and "God Bless America." 'nle event was billed by Mcintire as a . demonstration for military victory tn Vietnam -an answer to Jut fall'a an- tiwar marches. However, a number ·of conservative themes shared the spotlight, w i t h speakers and baruien calling for prayer and Bible reading in school, an end to desegregation, sax education, legalized aborUon and "Godless comrrn.misrn." "No BU9lng Of Our Children:" said a huge banner carried above the heads of a North Carolina delegation. To some tt wu a religious revival as they tnqui"d about the souls of those they met in the throng. The devout who e n countered unbelievers proclaimed, "you got to bit 'em with the word." Severe Weather Eases Off Sprin~ CaHfonlla • ui the Air For Most Parts of Nation l:.utal ,,.,_.IY IUftll'f llMlev, \.ltM v1rl1b!• wlnclt n19'1t .,.. morn!neo P!o\lri •-Int _l.,.lr I to II k.writ lft ltltf'• .-. '"''r Ind fwlld1y, H'-'t MIY ~. c;o.,1,1 t..-r1Mr11,111" .. ''"'" "'...,, to .. 71, '"''""' '-"'""'" ''"'" "'°"' Joi to u. W"" ,.,.,,.,,Nr• «J, MOMOAY 9«W Plltfl , ............. t 10 1.111. S.t ltetnd ltw .............. t 1U 11.111. 0.0 Sun, Moon. Tide• TUISl>.t,Y l'lrJt hll!t • ., ........... t ru '""· 4.t l'lrll ltlW ....... , • ., • • • S:°' 1.111. 0., Secot141 llltll .............. t :lt 1.111. 0.0 ~ .................. 1:001.111.0.t Sun ·-f:U I.ti\, Ith 0:1' 11.111. .... ... jiat '""' ""11ltNt1. • "1•11 \.tw '""· .. " .)(I 20 ,l)f ff M " " u " " " .. " 1J ~· n a .oi " .. " " .. » .. , " " 16 lt .ot .. " u .. " " M 7) M .. " n " .... ll 14 .. ,. ... n " _ .... .. ,. .. " .. Q .. " u " .. .. .. " " " .... n " " " n • .. " " .. " .. SS 4' ,10 .. .. .... • • BREAKING TIES Wftt Oerm1ny!1 Br•ndt Israelis Reject Zionist's Off er To Meet Nasser JERUSALEM (AP) -The Israeli government has rejected an o!fer by a prominent Zionist lo represent it at a meeting with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. A government spokesman said Dr. Nahim Goldman11, who heads the World Jewish Congress, informed P re mi er Golda Meir two weeks ago that "ma11y sides" -Including Nasser himself -~ad asked him to discuss the worserung Israel·Arab dispute in Cairo. In Cairo, however, an Egyptiaa gove!"J'· ment spokesman denied that Nasser had agreed to meet with Goldman and called the claim "a mere fabrication." Aceording to the Israeli spokesman, Goldmann said he was willing to go but wanted to be approved by the Israeli government. "The government decided that it would, respond favorably to any manifestation of willingness on the part of the president of Egypt for a meeting to investigate pro- blems crucial to Israel and EID'Pt. where each side was free to appcint its own representative," the government state- ment said. But to GoldmaM's request, "the government decided to r e p 1 y tn the 11egaUve." In other word!. the govern· ment would appaint Its own represen· tative· for any such talks. 'The spokesman said that all but one of the cabinet's 24 members voted to tum down the 74-year-old Jewish leader, who was one of the most active and influential lobbyiats for Israel before it became a state. Goldmann, who bolds both Israeli and Swiss citizenship and Uves in Geneva, has written that Israel should act fiei.lbly'llnd moderately toward Its Arab neighbors - a position that has not made him popular in Israel. , Last month he called for the neuti:aliu· tlon of Israel. with its status as a Jewish stlte guaranteed by "the whole of mankllld, '' including the Arab nations. Egypt Raider~ Hit Israel Base CAIRO (AP! -EfYptlan comrnandoo thrust 37 miles into Sinai, attacked an lsraeli military concentration w It b rockets, and returned safely, the Egyp- tian military command claimed today . The announcement quoted by C&lro radio, said the operation was carried out at dawn Sunday. Jt said Arab commandos made the attack on an army en· campmtnt near the village of Rabeaa, about 37 miles from Qantara along the norlhel'ft Sinai road. It said the encampmmt included a regional anny headquarters, t an k 1 , trucks and antiaircraft guns. The announcement, made more than 30 hours after the operation, also claimed that a large number of Israelis in the e.fl-" campment were killed when rockets "hit the target with preclsicn." ' Germans Fuming • -. _ Af Envoy's n ·eath .... .. BONN, ~ny (AP) -Foreign MIQlltor 1'1Hor Sc!>eei said todly West ~ wW recall Its embassy staff ll'imr Guftemala. u lndlpation mouoted heft "''-the -killing of Counl c.i:t '°"Sprtll, lddoaped amba.slador. la Guatemala, security forces stepped up 'lbeir'lnmt for m•mben of the leftist lleJi<t Armed Forces during the nigh! .alter the body ol Vcm SpreU wu found in a roofless mud but near Guatemala City. He had been shot once In the head. Police patrols were seen on almost every other block of the captial. Some hom" were eean:ted. But there wu no immediate report of any anub. 10~ .::~:=e~m: tht!!~~~ "the gevernment of Guatemala ap- .~Y. ii. not in I pasiUon • . • to guarantee the safety of the represen- tatives of the West Germ.an Federal Republic." ~ Sc:beel 1aid other me~1 may follow u a result of von Spretl's murder. He •aid the govemment would study reports from Gerhanl Mlkercb, 11.s cbarce d'lf· faires In' Guatemala, and Wilbebn Hoppe, chlef ol personnel ol the ForellD Ministry who was aellt to Guatemala Saturday to t:ry to ammce for vcm SprtU's release. Scheel also Indicated that Guatemala's ambassador tO Bonn, Antonio Gandara, will be asked to leave WeaitGennany. "We have decided to withdraw our charge d'affairea and 1 expect that the Guatemalan govermnent will draw the consequences/' Scheel said. He added that he planned to tell the ambassador public opinion · in West Germany would not tolerate the presence Kirk Commands Florida Schools To Halt Busing BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI) -, Gov. Claude Kirk, who once bragged "Flori- dians have barred no school doors,'~ took command of the Manatee County school syttem today and ordered students and teachers to ignore federal 1 c h o o I desegregation orders. Kirk, accompanied by aide D i c k Warner, showtd up at the two-story brick school board office at ?:35 a.m. and bud· died immediately with as.sistant school superintendent! Philip Doyle and William Bashaw. "I can't alk now, I'm busy running the schools," Kirk told newsmen gathered at the building. Kirk suspended the county's five· member school board and the school supfrlntendent Sunday and took com· mand of the school system hlmself to block a school desegregation plan that hid been lcheduled to go into effect to- day. Kirk met briefly with the school bus driven at the motor pool early today and told them "take your old routes -not the new ones."- 'Mle school board's switchboard was flooded with calls from parents asking where to send their children to school. "Send them to their old schools ... the school where they have been going," the parents were told. Meanwhile, police say there was no sign of trouble at the county's 28 achools early today. Greek General Denies Resistance Key Role ATIIENS, Greece (AP) - A retired Greek army general accused of sedition in the mass trial of 34 persons denied t<r day that he was the ringleader of the resistance Democratic Defense organiza- tion. Gen. George Iordanides, &8, told the five-member · military tribunal that although he met with key members of tht or atlon they hid never discussed born in bis prtsence. hen of 1 ....,.-ve of th e Guatemalan government. Sd>eel ·said, honver, the Ila-I WIS dlroctod at the Gua-alan -ment and not again.st G 1 n d a r a personally, adding: "! belltve that Gan- dara penonaUy Is wee! thought ct by the Weat German public becau• he ottertd imself as a hostage for the ambauldor." Interior Mtnl.ster H an a· D 1e tr1 ch Genscher had urged earlier that the members of the embwy be btou&ht back from Guatemala beeaUJe: the government there hid failed to ~ rorelgn diplomats. * * * Consul Flees Kidnapers In Brazil PORTO ALEGRE, Brull (AP) -'!be U.S. cOll!ul In P<lrlo Al .. wu ,_,,.. ing today from a sUght wound -tn thwarting 1 kidnap at!Gpl. He -)lls car to run down one of his would-be kid- napers, and they let loooe a hail of bullets u he escaped. Curtis C. Cutter, a 4:1·yur-old Ktnan War veteran, became the first d.ipkxnat in Latin America to pertOnally· defy a kidnap attempt since the wave of political aocfuctions started last September. 'Ibere have been eight previous kidnapinga or attempted kidnapings in Latin American countrie1. Cutter was driving home late l!elmday night with bis wife, Catherine, and a former State Dtparf:meiit dftcial, Hovey Clark, when a gang in a car tntettepted them. Several men wearing dart glasse1 and carrying machine guns jumped out and headed toward euuer•a ltltion wagon. I 'Ille consul stepped on the gas and pull· ed around the car block ing his path, hit. tJng one of the men and dragging bhn on the bumper for several yards. The other kidnapers opened fire, wounding the COi'!'" sul slightly in the back, but he was able to drive to hJs home a few blocks awty. Police aaid the assailants we r e members of the leftist Armed Revolu.. tionary Vanguanl. They picked up their injured comrade and escaped. Guards were put on Cutter'1 hoepital room, his home and the homes d other diplomat!. ~ Appeals were broadc.ut over radio st.a.. tions in the area for all doctors to report any cases of auto Injuries they traal Police, said they found the car Uled by the attacker•. They said II hid beei stolen last month. "'Ibis latest act of. terrorism belghtn our concern. for the safety d our diplomatic personnel," U.S. Ambulldor c. Burke Elbrick said in Rio de Janeln>. Elbrick bimself was kidnaped WI s.pt. 4 and was released after the government !reed 15 paliUcal prlsooen. New Kopechne Jury Convenes EDGARTOWN, Ma51. (AP) - A 3pecial session of. the Dukes Ccunty Grand Jury convenes today amid doubt over its procedure in its independent In- vestigation Into the death last July 11 of Mary Jo Kopeclm•. 11iss Kopechne, 28, a form'!r campaign !iecretary of the Jate Sen. Robert F. Ken- 'lledy, died in '& car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.). 'Ibe car plunged off a narrow bridge into a tidal pool on Chappaquiddick Island, which lies across a narrow atrait from Edgartown, one of the towns on the island of Martha's Vineyard. Kennedy, the youngest and o Tl I y 1Urvivor of the four Kennedy brothers, escaped, but delayed for 10 hours hii report of the accident to island poUce. Wome1a Back Panthers . Members of the \Vomen's Liberation League march down Sctond Avenue tn New York in a demonstra .. lion supporting 21 Black Panthen charged with bomb pJoWDg, The &rollP WU ... route to Ibo Qu~ House of Detention where 11 o( the 21 are being held. 'The demonstration at the House of Detention culminated the march which began in Central Park • The 11 Panlbers being held could not raise l>aiL ' I . . . . ., . . • ' I .. .. • JODl!AN H:QrlNGS, -I ...,. AMI.;~ I M ,_ • Mrs.· Jaycees Benefit ' App~ropri ,ate · Melan~e - a mixture, a medieyr . • • , • • And with the current confusiOn raging on tb'e F-u1hion scene, an a'p- propriate theme for a ben•.(it sponsored by the HUDtington Beach Mrs. Jaycees. Melange de Couture, the group's annual luncheoi and fashion show, will take place at noo~ Saturday, April 11, in the New!J9fter Inn. Coordinating the shOW is Mrs. James Shepard.,.,.and-comprising her committee are the Mmes .. Oavid:,Atkinaon,.co-cl;mirman; Lawrence Sall· man, tickets; James Ziething, programs, and Peter Holden, Michael Orist and Jerry Lihou. . A special guest model will be Rhonda A1artyn, California's Junior A1iss . Miss A1artyn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken Martyn of Huntington Harbour and Marina High School ~enior, will go to MobUe, Ala. to compete for the national title in May. '. · ·commenting on the latest styles from are& r~ialty shops will ~ Mrs. Florence Smales, and"''tllll()ng 1many f~yors WltiCh will be given to members and guests attending11rlll IJ!' <;q111pl~tary wiglets for'eac)I per• \ " . l • son from Cameo Salons, Hunting~iclii: , ~ . Tickets, at $6 each, may be obtained. from Mrs. Jaycees or by call· Ing Mrs. Shepard, 84&-0294, or Mrs, Sallman. 84U751 afler 6 p.m. PrQCeeds from the ·show will benefit the many communityi-ariented philanthropies and activities sponsored by the Mrs. Jaycees. MAXI AND Mll\fl OF 'IT--·Members and 11Uests,will be· able to seleci tbeir,own thing when the lfu~ting­ . ton Beach Mrs. Jaycees sponsor a benefit fashion show Saturday, April 11 . Modeli~g round·the-clock fashions to take milady from sunup to sunset are (maxi to mini) MrS.i .. James Shepard, Mrs. Jack Tat· ham and Mrs. lldbert Walker. ' Ceremonies, Party Ships Salute • Flag Officers It's official! Members of the Huntington Harbour Yacht Club now may take to the high seas following formal Opening Day ceremonies conducted last weekend. Celebrating the launching of the new boating season were blazer-attired skippers and feminine guests in colorful semiformal gowns who assembled in the Newporter .Inn for cocktails, dinner and dancing Saturday night. Glittering canopies topped with a multi· tude of pastel balloons floating ceilinl(· ward covered animal-cracker carousels whicb centered each table. Making arrangements for the preopening Party were Dr. and Mrs. Chester Haug and ti.tr. and Mrs. Michael Fink, cCKhairmen; .Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Feldman, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burford. In charge of yesterday's opening day fes. ti vi ties was Bill Hartge, fleet captain, who with Mrs. Hartge hosted Commodore and Mrs. Al Fitzpatrick, other flag officers and their wives on their dockside reviewing stand. Frank Buckner led the paride of "'dress- ed ships" as they passed in review and ser- pentined through the channels to the applause of waterfront residents and guests who watch· ed the fleet pass. Following revie\v, the fleet ~assembled to begin the mystery cruise annuilly arrang- ed by sta(f Commodore William R. Hard· castle. .. Surf Sounds Leader ·Honored By JODBAN HASTINGS Of "" DallY ,1 .. 1 ll•ff RECEIVING THE HIGHEST honor awarded by the Girl Scout Council of Orange County was Mrs. J'Jhn Borgerson or Huntington Beac.h. Presentation of the award, given to volunteers who make outstanding con- trlbuUon.s, took place at a neighborhood meeting in the Redeemer Lutheran Church. Mother of five, M r s . Borgerson has been a leader for three years and a council cookie manager for U:ie past four years. Presenting the award was Mrs. William Erdmann, also of Huntington Beach. A SPECIAL Easter vacation to be long remembered was enjoyed by Kimberly Crouse. Eader School second grader and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Crouse of Huntingt:>n Beach. Kimberly wa s surprised with an ll·day lrip to Hawaii accomp'a n ied by her grandmother, Mrs. H a i e I Winters. .~ name." Mrs. •Robert 'Knauf will serve eye-openers before lunch, and any f o r m e r stewardesses residing In the harbour are invited to join. For additionBI information, contact Mrs. Ekberg. IT MUST HAVE been because of Easter! Not a single adult fem1nlne member ol the Huntington Harbour Fishing Club parUcipated in the all·Harbour fish ing derby recenlly. Sonja and Karina Petersen captured the two largest flsh in the girls' junior divla.ion (12 and under) but no prizes were awarded in the teen and adult categories. Male-type winners included. Randy Clark aod Jim Searles, juniors; . Barry Dod and BUI Searles, teens. and Dr. C, E. DeCola, Arnold Mendoza and Barry Sasseen, seniors. Concluding the day's ac- tivity was a dinner for members in lhe Sheraton Beach Inn arranged by Betty (Mrs. JOM) Silver. PROCEEDS from a Reno Night sponsored by the South Coast Woman's Club resuJted in $500 which will be presented this monTh to the Fountain Valley Boys Club by Mrs, Jon lt1cKibben, president. The sea·going treasure hunt led partici· pants through the channels and ultimately con- cluded at LonR Beach Yacht Club for a lale aflernoon buffet. Rear Commodore and Mrs. Harry Palmer hosled the flag o!!icers aboard the Cresl for the lrip to Long Beach. OPENING DAY -Members ol the Hunting· ton Harl>our Yacht Club marked lhe official opeping of the ·season during 1~ipboard cere- monies yeslerday and at a pre Opening Day party Saturday night. Committee members Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fink (standing) and Mrs. Chester Haug anticipate another opening as Joe Martin uncorks the champagne. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR • ex·stewardesses who h a v e betn grounded by marriage', families, PTA, dancing lessons, trips to the dentist;- ad infinitum, are invi ted to recall their high.nying days when a group gets together ror lunch \Yednesday, April a, in lhe Beach Club. "It's strictly for f u n , '' claims perky Sue ( M r s • William) Ekberg -' 't be 1roup doesn't ~ven have a T h e Americanism C{)m· mittee of the Juniors also is donating two · flags to the James Cox School -the U.S. and California state nags will be presented-durlna: t b e school's dedication. ' Mi~night Minnie of B.room Brigade Mops Up on Fa .ux Pas DEAR ANN LANDERS : You ha ve come to the defense of waitresses, alrllne atewardesses. plumbers, postmen and -~'"'l!Me,,r~reod<..,, n.. How about a ood word, for" \he S I Anrry Brigade -those who clean offices at Dllbl? Our day begins when moot people finllh, For some of us lt'a a second job. We've juat come from putting In iigbt Jto¥r1 somewher-e else. 1t1y message ii for 9eCl'etaries and. even executives. Hett ll fO: ' You can make our lives easter by lock· lnJ up the stamps and petty cash. When things turn up mlsslna. we are first on the list of suspecl.S. • Please don't throw food and hall-Oiied cups of coffee and soda pop into tho waste bukct. Jt makes a terrible mess. mainly me. ~fy earliest memories are the messy diapers, runny noses and crying brats. ln1. You 'll probably late llle man either way U you doa't arow up and 1top being self.centered. ~"' All I've ever wanted was to be free of it. l ~-.....;'""'"-'>"'1w'"°'"'"'e.-. J.td ne• er have-aey•-.:ID!Otmi:'--;c;::::;-;;---;; Never: ·· • ' • ' · 'DEAR ANN L'ANDERS : f •am '-23; ANN Ll'f'.JDERS ~ Then I met and manied a wonderlol divorcOO and have two small boys. I work and most people wouklo't believe It: man who said he didn't care about in a pastry shop from 1:30 a.m. to ~:30 If you will just leave It on the de1k we'll •take care ol IL ' Water your own IMant.s, feed and your fish, etc. We artn't gardeners or zoo keepers. Please return the soft drink botUes the vending machine. It's a long walk for a pe'rson who must make several trips an evening. I'm not even .menUoning what sup. posedly refined and educated people do 111 office wuhtooms. You couldn't print tt .._1111_ children elthei'. All he wanted WU me. p.m. I live with my widowed mother and 'Ibanta a nUlU\IU. , •e were v-hannv for several yeers, et MlDNfG~ MlNNlE -1 '71 an Wtmarrled brother who ii 20. , • •• .-,, "1 • • lea.st I thought IO. Now he tells me his DEAR MIN: 1f eobody .... q .t1111 eof.. idea• have changed . He want! a family. The only fun I 1et out of life is dancing. amn oa dte bulleUa ~ ef dte tlflce _ Every time he mention• the subject I Four evening• a week my brother drives where you ltavi lWe most lroabe, I a.ope have an attack of nerves. me to a roadside tavern where the music you wUI. \ Shall I have a child (at aJ_e 30) and is out of sight. I dance with the guys, DEAR ANN LANDERS :. I was the eldest tn a large family. ~cause there were so many of us, Mother had to de-- pend on help from the older children - despise It, or 1Uck to my pos10on and have a few drinks and go home by taxi. take a chance on losing the man t love? The women al work say 1 shouldn't go -BETRAYED to this place because it doesn 't look nice. DEAR B.t Your feelln11 aboat cblldrea I've tried to explain that all I do with .. .,...., 1mm•1un.1-1-. lbeK mco Is daoct. I am a d,...l &Jrl and plan ,to stay that way. Do you agree with the women ai.work? 1 hope noL Please answer. -BOISE DANCER DEAR BOISE : It may bt lhat all yoa are looking for 11 a dancln1 ,,-noer but mott roea wbo frequenc roHslde taven1 art illttrttted In someUiJng a bit more hortzoa&al. I agree wltb dtt wome1 at work. If you have trouble getting along with your parenLs ... If you can 't get them to Jet you live your <U"_n life, send for Ann 'Lande rs' book let, "Bugged by Parents? How to Get More Freedom." Send lo cents In coin with your request and a tong, stamped, self.addressed envelope ln care ol the Dally Pllol. . _\ I l I • . . .. . JJ DAil. Y PILDT Bargain Hunters Aftraded by Sale ' • Bargains in assorted shapes and si:zes wilJ be offer- ed by the Women's Society of Christian Sel'vice dur- ing a rummage Sale from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomor- row. Setting will be Thornpsoo Hall at the First United Methodist Church, Costa Mesa . Sorting mer- . chan\lise. for the mission benefit are (lei! to right) the Mmes. W. D. Sneathen, Vance. Hunter, chair· man and Wilfrid Wilkinson. Plans Told At Dinner A family dinner in the Richard Assmar home in San Jose was the setting ror the engagement announcement of Bonnie Jean Brown of Santa Ana Heights and Theodore Allan Kellogg or Lag u·n a Beach. The bride-elect, daughter of 1.tr. and Mrs. Howard R. Brown of A:Iorgan Hill is a graduate of San Jose State College. ! The bridegroom-elect is the son of Mr. and Mr!!. Robert Kellogg Jr. of Emerald Bay. He was graduated f r o m Laguna Beach High School and San Jose SLate. The couple will be wed May 24 in St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Laguna Beach. . TOPS Merma ids 'n)PS Merlini Mermaida meet al l.:Jt -p.m. every 'Jbundaf in Woodland Schoo l, f Colt& Mesa. • I i ' i Blue Ster Moms ' • • RunUngton Beach Bl"' Star Mothtra, Chapter 2 st&&e · i JDettlnas every Monday •t I :Ill p.m. in ,Lake P 1 r k Clubl!ou&e. • i Travel. Expert Maps Mesa Talk Tips on travel, including everything .from how to pack. cook outdoors and set up a campsite, will be offered for members of lhe Mesa·Harbor Club Thursday, April 9. by MJss Carol Lane. The meeting will take place in the Mesa Verde Country Club with a social hour set for 10 :30 a.m. Lunch and the business session will follow . Jn her P.OSiUOn of women's travel dirictor for Shell Oil Co., fifiss Lane travels more than 70,000 miles herself each year lecturlng for women's clubs. outdoor groups and men's organizatiorls, as wtll as fulfilling televisi-0n and radio engagement!. Mrs. Gene Skawin, 546-7109, and Mrs. Ronald Taylor, ~5- 1898 are accepting' reserva- tions. To gather new information for her camping and touring The Pill Discussed booklets she makes a yearly Th.e B!rth Control Pill will research trip to such places be discussed by Jack Hovick, as the Sierra Nevada moon-Hu~~n B e a c h obstetrt· tains. <:Ian, when the Orange Coast She also has written a Mothen of Twins Club meets brochure for women on how Wednesday, April a, in the to properly maintain a car, King's T ab 1 e restaurant; drawing on a course in auto ,\Vestminster. mechanics she .~k last year. The meeUng will begin with Ji.1iss Lane also design s a 7 p.m. social hour followed dress pattern,, for t r a v e I by dinner at. I. All mothe:ra which are distributed at no of twins are invited to attend cost. She has written a the diruier meeting a n d brochure illustrating 11 dif· reservations may be made by ferent ways to wear a scarf <:ailing Mrs. Nicholas BarUett, wilich. she says, + .. packs flat ;:.;:MHl=;:l;:5.=======.I and can convert any basic dress many different ways." She is listed in • • T w o Thousand W-0men of Achlevement" and "Foremost Women in Communications." Mako 1 Sharp .. Tredo: u .. Dimo-A·Unes ... your clolhts don't fit ... You're self conscious; sliy, emborrosstd, frvstruted oll tho! ond mort . : Slimmin' Women is here to CHEER-Y.OU UP and ·SLIM YOU Z3 VE\\~ ~ DOWN and in time EPRtlli ..... :~~~::::. I OPENING SPECIAL I · I ·Fo~ )'o.w A#tl A Fri111d ... ' I 14 FREETREATMENTS1 I 12 r,..til.,nts toch>I I A fHfflGUll ANALYSIS AND A I 1 FREE Facial Tre~tment 1 -Pe?fTVR.11\bTffFWQRW PAi\11.ffir Wit• Thh c •• , •• ••••liltly N• c ••• STAt'•'FER SYSTE.tl 11c,IAiMtti for I •r o•litlliH , I JO J''"'1 by o1Jfr l ni ill/o,, ""'"''" I MUST BE USED WITHIN 1 DAYS I "'=~~~~~~~...;·:.:•::•:.;•:,;•:.········. ~ SL.IMMIN' · WDMEN ~ F:1:,~~Es~~:N ~i~~:~~;o A 1 .M. ·;~;;~~;,;;,~~;:'' l •DDI A.M;;;;,~;,;~~ 642•6$ 13 Po1tOffloYlllo,.ol2•17M 1 .... ;, .. ...,,,,,.4111 ' • Your Horoscope Tomorrow Aquarius: Ddn 't Lose Humor . ' TUESPAY APRIL 7 .. By SYDNEY' OMARR Gemfal II re1tlc1 1, ln- lrtpllr, ....... •se GI mull fo pttletbt.t, love1 to move •lllat, i.iet1oe1 best wben u.er. b prtMare _..d eon· fulla. Oelebrltle1 utler this .alp ilcllde .J• Colllu, Nan- tff 8'a1b'I ud Joe Namath. AlllJ:S (March 2l·April 19): Yotir financial picture may be llightly contused. Take it easy. Others are filled with 31.1ggesU-Ons. But most of them are not applicable to your situation. Wait. TAURUS (April 20-May 20):. Cycle is high, but moneY situation requires much cau- tion. Don't trap yourself. Be versatile. Be a w a r e of alternatives. One who appears to appose may actually be on your side. GEMlNI (May 21-June 20): Be caut:ioos. Check details. Accent moderation: avoid ex· tremes. S o m e co-workers, associates ct>uld make ouUan- dish claims. Stick to the facts. Leave the fancy to others. CANCER (June 21-July 12): Problems of friends could become your own. Don't be indWerent. But also know tllat you would be unwise to · Heels Lowered become involved. Key·ifa sense will have to . move alowly. may not be necessary. of ,b!olanctlJ. uly ··~'g, ~1 •. ~~:"yiseou, lomlnotm·a,_~errroelrracociluiond IF TODAY 1S Y O U R ..-_. -""...,., ILC ' BIRTHDAY C ttert Wit ad-Make no snap i;Seclsions. . you are • areer ma tflCI ·• . AQUARIUS •<Jin. 29;-Feb. spiritual person. You often justing. Don't pe~i ~Obe 11): Dome1tiC1 rDllUJ>e is'~sub-! sacrifice your ()WO ~eeds f-Or ~tri!:b to Y:ii:~ ~=: ject to quick change. You1rnay good of others. Thts Is not relaUonshlps. Diplomacy Is want to get· away n-oM it to imply you are an angel. your ally. Sland till-stick to all. But facing is1ues' would But you do have a consc~ence · cl l · · be more tntelllgent ·coune •• which ref~s to be st1Ued. pnn P es. r Maintaln•senae of humor. New ~tart 1s favored -and VIRGO (Aug., 23-Sept. 22): PISCES (Feb. l~'March 20): affection from o~e who m~s Avoid reaching too far, too C1leck calls, 0 th er com-mu~h to you will add spice soon. May be wise to stick munlcaUons. Disgrunted in· to life. to famili ar ground. Messages be bldp f d dividual may be a T11nnc1eii1wrio·1 111t•w 1Gr~ouM lend to gar e · roo rea troublemaker. Be sure -Of :.·°"'~~ 0~t~, svi:,ntv~rm~:,;r Your letters. Some could get ~ valldjty of message. Some ~0~~-;~ lt1•,<11~r,•~hd.!.1"~1:.""r.,,~p,1V,~ wrong impressions. "' .,.... -.... changes are due. But travel fi1L0k, ~ r..,· r•nd C•n... 1 .. UBRA. (Sept. 23-0et. 22):;::;===========;;;:;;:'";;;';:":;;;:«:;·:;':;· ;;;· ;;;'";;;";;;· ==;1 Money value is ·accented. Price tag is placed on your product. Get advice! aid from one wlth experience: You can a:ain' fr false pride is not ~nnitted to stand in way. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Aid due from surprise sources. A third person intei:venes in your behalf. Finish ~at you start. De~nstrate int~ntioos -and unique iibilities. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): ·Work 111tthods require modernization. Se n t i me n t couJd cause IOss. Be human wlth<iut being foolish. One behiqd the sCenes is envious. Protect your rtputaUon. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Some recent changes add up lo more responJibility. You What can our Bridal Consultant . do for a bride-to-be? . Leh of tlii.,,,, Anf4 •II of th•m ''' h•lpfwl. HOW DO I REGISTER? Shoes Break Rules J•t CtM I• .U Nil t9 ollt' e4Yt ..... We'tt r .. lstw .,._. .._, ..w,.., olMI wlNlt you ..,..194 .... will .._ I• OW" lrld9'1 htittor. n.. wo•H ..._ JM 011 tr11l'( T111preulw c1llectlu' of.fl .. c.Woo, ur..r ...r ,1-.w1r1. fffll 111olt1 "' ..,_1 ....... Nttll'fl ti' ..... ,.. Ofttt'( hi• cllfflrollt ,....... .111.r.1: ~ ...... HOW DOES IT WORK? By JOAN DEPPA PARIS (UPI) -The old rule that when hemlines come d~, heels go up definitively was broken by the Puls spring-summer fashion col· lections. . With skirts often falling right down to the ankle, heels were lower·'than ever. '11te reason was the casualness of the new longer hemlines -and those that stayed short as well. Many shoes were absolutely flat. Roger Vivier, one of the belt known sboGnakers in ~arls, made .striking sandals of 11\tlce work thll ,,,.. high on the vamp and .. buckled in back around·the bate liffl. HQl>ert 01¥~,, with a new -strtamllbed coUecUOn of 11J'diwn 4nd lOO(I cir..,.. that had American buyers lining up to place orders, showed flat Spanisbe a pad ri l le s with daytime clothes and low san- dals with thongs wrapping around the ankle dyed or printed to match e v e n i n g clotbes. Christian Dior has similar sandaJs, often with a closed toe, however. Instead of the gay Givenchy prints, Dior made them in colored reptile skins for day and satin for evening. Boots, now designed almost exclusively to wear w i t h trouser suits, generally stop- ped jqat above the ankle. There "Were ,plenty -0f sports ~lhoel with hilh vamp for troURl'I u well, the general rule -being that trouser bol· tom.1 ahould at least touch the lop of the ~P· BUU.OCK'S SANTA ANA AND TOVAR TRESSES .. INVITE YOU TO SEE BEWITCHING WIGGERY ••• Wllolt Jllf '-Uy .... frJltMk ceMe I• t9 choose yo11r •• 41-f ,........, w1'H M ..... te 1Mw t1tn1 tll1 JOtterM y11W ........... lrlde't ... 1 .... Alld ............ ay .. ... ................ ,. WHEN SHOULD t REGISTER? A.1 1ff• OI y111r ..... ._., 11 u111111ced. A11cl If yt11 &••'t COllll ii, i1>11t kolW whor JIHent Jll .... , jldt "" Ill • rl19. Lilt tit help 11181 y11111 • H.11tlt11I weddhMJ. l1tilter -· SLAVICK'S Jeweler1Slnce 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-13 80 Opow M111doy .. 11 ffld•y 11atll f :JO • Haven't you always wondered how you would look as a blond or a ravishing redhead ' • , • Dr whether you are the typetoweara.flippy fall, a Jackie look or a short shaggy Ofwer, •• perhaps you've wondered how you would look with a.smooth chignon, a braid wrappl!d coif, or soft curls in the romantic mood ••• We invite you to experiment with Bewitching Wiggery in the privacy of our Wiggery Room ••• try on every new fashion or color you've ever wanted to see on yourself ••• learn by acbt81 demonstration how to care for your wig ••• shampoo it, set it, tease it into a great new fashion ••• four expert stylists will be here to show you how ••• ThaiJday, l\pril 9, Friday, April 10 and Saturday, April 11. •• Make your resemlion now for.one DI the Sessions fisted below ••• fnroHmentis limilld to 20 per class ••• NO ADMISSION CHARGE ... RESERVATIONS ONLY 547·7211,Elt.393 o Thursday, April 9, 2:00 p.m. D Thursday, Ap ril 9, 6:30 p.m. D Fdday, April 10, 10:30 a.m. D Friday, Ap rill0,.2:30 p.m. D Saturday, Aprll ll, 10:30 a:m. ' D Saturday, April·ll, 2:30 p.m. ,. .. Wigs lrom 18.95 to 30.00 ••• petional cutting and styllna Included with purchase. Cosmetic Aisle. First Floor ' A N A 1 FASH IO N SQUARE I l • -t •,..:__e c:.• •*t!* w:;:eey • a • ,_ • • • • Fou.11iain .. y_all~T , -'--"-·--·--E11)11(f.l!OfM * -* VOL 63, NO. 80, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' . • ,Ii.., ' -.. "' ·' ~ • ' • •• ... ,,. ...... - ·-N.Y,,~ , ,]'.EN· Cl!NTS . West CouniY Anii~~rlig~ ·Cr~~p ''Siafts'. ,, By ALAN DDllUN •Ml offer•a·lin<.of ~ to'drugdialers'ln ~.·W.~:~i5... ~..:.. . ...;;lalk .... pralill11Mot.• ' • .·~ • f • • • ., ' ' • r '1 ' Growth · ' ' . : • 1 Of•ci.itr,.,...,. Huntington BU.ch, Seal · Beach, murticatkn" _: . ' ---_,.. 'n. CtllllfRa IO • ttl'ouih: ltftn Help tine ill setting more help. ·w!:smunster, MidW8y City and Los Tbe orianlutioo1•laut1ttm.blr1ed.:on .. a MalitlvttJ lrdlbc aeuk>nr befctt fbq ' The network that disconnects many Alantitos. ¥ • new. pbae ... ol ..,..._ •• called a com~ .. nedJ' ~'Yb calla. 1"' ,valuateen, WesU:OUnty youths from the drug world munlty aware..., P11!1P ..... ·Tliis actMty, """ -piJ&olopb, teadlen. isOlfannpansionprogram. '"Jbeyknowlhey1cantalktous.wilhout involftl~·dlvc·~panellat br:llliaw&w. ·~t!r1 Ind 1ociat 'llle'<rpnization slitted August·!, 1919, being alrald," Dr. Ralph Sber, one ol tbe -·and'far pareabl-Jll. ,.,.-,.a.-....Ociul lJ bours a w.lt '"itb four counstlon ready to answer fouhders,• said . '"Ibey all auspeded the . Thetlina,pC.l:tiout_J'. calls a month, &on Giii-...,~ ·· ... calls for help from those in 4i$'e.!I and police were behind It at first, but. now though.tbeR are not-a!Ldrlc relikd. "fie doa'I •ant. _-;who will be' now bas.ne:arly 50 advi.9on willi.rig to man lhef realiu we have no~ to do , with ••we get a lol of~p calls,".Said the saoctimQnioWI or morlUsUc with the the pbonea. the police. · · coorillnatOr· Mrs.1 Hi'rio'ah, Alekoumbidea, kids," ..Dr. Sher eiplained. ''~om e Tbe phone numbers lff-4242 and 194-·~··· no monitoring a~d· no · ··~ea~Pfl'QP1e'just.W10,t 1tom~1 to1 • ~,bfP,>me.~,wbea1 thty our Okag Probabl.e Carswell Over Senate Hurdle W~HINGTON (AP) -Judge G. Har· raid Carswell's nomination to ~ th e Supreme C.OUr:t won its first crucial test Monday as the Senate rejected a motion to return the oomination to the Judiciary Co!llmitlee. 'Ille recominlttll motion by Sen. Bircll Balfl (!).Ind.), a l<adlr ol the oppooition, ,.....desipod Ip kill the nomination ol the 'Candlelight' Case Figure Faces Charge A ·man who ea med the nickname "Candlelight Killer" for a bizarre ritual death today was accuaed by Huntington 'Beach police as the triggennan in a local kidnap-murder three weeks ago. Robert W. Liberty, 21, ol 350 Avocado Sl, COsta Mesa, is listed as a murder and kidnap suaped in bulletina sent out to all western law enforcement agencies. A second man accu.wd of kidnaping oo- 1y, Robert P. Connolly, 49, is believed to be traveling with liberty and ia also wanted in connect.loo with the March 12 homicide. Police Detective Gil Veine made the disclosures today, although Liberty and Connolly have been sought for ques-- tioning since 11lomas C. Astorina, 25, was killed. A third suspect, Randall G. Allen, 25, of 'the same Costa Meu. trailer park wtiere IJberty and Connolly lived, is jn cuS\ody and was s c heduled for prtliminary hearing today in Orange Coi.tnty Superior Court. He was captured shortly after Astorina was found dumped near Sunset AquJtic Paik, fatally shot in the abdomen with a (See LIBERTY, Page Z) 50-year-old Tallah ...... Fla., jurist. The Senate now will vote Wednesday on confirmation of Canwell, the· second Southerner nominated by Pres.ident NiJ:on for the Supreme Court vacancy created nearly a year ago by the resignation of JllstK:t Abe Fortas. Nixoo'1 first· choice, Judie Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., of Greenville, S.C., wu rejected by the Senate last Novetnbe!' by .a ~vote. , ·~ ~ol·~·,.rtiel ailid tbq e1J""01111' ~ ol lllyll'i rteommillll motion to be followed by conlinnat\!ft•ol cuMH, although perlllpo bJ a.<lW"· ........ pi. -aejlotor1 1Jllo ·..ted aplnlt recomlnittal Mid Ibey -Id -apinst Camrell's confirmation, They conteac:led that returning· it W'committee would.just be ducking tbe mu.. . on the otber hand, some aenatora ·wbo· announced they favored returning the nominatioo to committee for further hearing• saJd they would diaclose later how they would vote on confinnation if the recommittal motion failed. One .« those who predicted con- firmatiop wu Senate.Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield. The Montana Democrat, still declining to say how ,be will vote, bad previotdly raled tbe oukome of the·bard·fought bit· tie over the Tallaha.Yee1 Fla., jurist's nomination a tossup. "I imagioe the vote on returning lt to commtttee wiH be the precurlOl' to . the vote on Wed~sday ," Mansfield said prior to the voting. , Newsmen aaked him if he meant he es· peels Carswell to be confirmed. "Yes, that'• the way it looks at the moment," Mansfield replied. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Penru;ylvania re.iterated he is confklent that Carswell will be confirmed. Scott aaid he seea enough votes to assure Carswell' a confirm at Ion on e may be some !1llafl or modest y, although. he told reporters slippqe" from the vote on recommittal -. -...... • ' • • ' t t . ' , . ' . ! ' I . I . • . . I . •· . ' • . I • . ' ' ·' ', ' ' • , • ' ,(.I ' ' • ' • ' • . • ' ' ' ' • ' • , • • ' • I , f 8~'1lf;.ouncil,OO.nReady . 12·s,ooo .FJ~k . , : •' · · ; .·' ' .. · . To Two Beaches T 6ll~lp:PtotRct'Comtline In H~tington • ~ Beat•,.:ilYH:oocilma ,.,..., upe<ledrto;~ ll"!P8 ·todaY' to . inoure; ihe catelUJty>contr'ollid 'deve!Opment OI the citY'a .~ •. " · . · · CouncibDen;. iiot.waiting:for an .expecled. state moratoriUm: on .cou'tline Jtevelop- ment,.may set~up :t1Rir•,own1 rules, for · guatding the·~tf~(e·~y«:onsid-· er a·proposed' JjsDlution·on·Uie"matter. · If id.pied, lhe Polley· a\atement would prohibit; ~tof 111•eltuny, aalt water manb.,aloqli; nv.;,-,11goon, boY at-· arlf'Plrl•!'f\!il*b lies with· in the comt.111Gnt. • -Reduction .in•the.ar.ea.of, llndl.·&vaiJ.. . able for pobliC'beacll'or shoreline""""'" lion activltles~withln the ·coaatafiz.One .. ~ ' . -ReduCUOnt i~ or. 'uhutaUon oo legal public acce&s to•Uie .water frcm theJand 1 within the ·coa::stat. zone. • , -Substarlttll• ~--w ( llh the line• of, sight frOm ·the nearest uisUag . pUblic street.or highway,wiUtin•the coUt· al zoiie to the"wiiU'a edgt ·or the aea. wanf horizon, or both: · .. : -Filling or dredging for J111fPOie1 which are not .consistent. With the · usea · "1uch 'are ~-.to apd'1dependent .. i...: -"-''al i ~ ' upon we ... ._.~ zone' ~virorimtat. , . . . ' ' ' ' -' ' . The power of•the sun. aent lJS;OOOt ~ pie"jlocldng· to >dty·and ~ -·· • ~~Beach over the·.weekend, Bligat crowd total · wu · 1 o ,.o.e;o ·, . regiitere(l'.Swtday at the cfty ·beach . AnOUieri":t:l,000 bad aoaked up the, !\ID on the:clty.beacb Saturday. ·Life~ at Huntlhgton .state -Beach ' and .Bolla Cbica .State .Beach. np6rtod • nearly 15,000 sun 1wanhlpier1 gathertd on their aand Saturday and another 19;900 , ~ to·the·water's edge 'Sunday. ·City. lifeguard~ pulled six sWtmmen from the 1urf Saturday arid only thret · Sanday •. State Ufejuard.s l ia',l d DO dqgtrous·reacuea were made .. :Water 'temperature SIWrday , WM' .tl d....,., but dipped 1to·5t.., Sunday., V aBer"~ini-eity' Gr6ws · ... ·· I . • , • . I I ' . ' ln ·J:unib~, ~~g}i: qas~es ..... ' , , · ... .... ' • I, • • • 1' • '.' ' ' ' J By ~:YJCOVttl.E · claa1.1Tbla 1fllowa .teachetr.tlnie to·,cor,. • . 0t"" °""!Plwt11ifl ' ··· ·: ' concentrate on .teactiln1. But.lfe:alY(iya ..Minl-cltf,,.u.s:A.: ·ill ~i\ir boim-· warn them that just as city ,government . dari~a .ln. the 'flllddle oI-G)altt SdiooJ.~ , answ~s 1o ltate and federal law, Uiere;ia FOuntain Valley. \t'•·, ruled I by.'a 1 ·lady ' a .hllhfr la.w in the class -.ua.,"~Sauter ' said. ; • • • ni8yor who is•probably .the1 teughat boM . • . . ·Bealdes a city CounCil •and City In Orange County. · ; · • Qia,naiger; there Is 1 pl~nnliig Co"1tp1sSIM ' •And' thefe is 1, 'city mana'gi!-· wbo cart-1 wtiich overiees·planrtlng Items 1lrialde tM , d~dly ~b. ~ kpo~s.~re--about ·rurt ' CIBM. ' n1ng U)e .cl1y thin an)' ~~man. • :·~y ru.l e op . tire posJUon qf 'deSks,. "I thou~t abou~ runnln1 for council, ptacem~nt of bulletin bQards,'. and b(lw biJt then I ·decided the city manaaer wa's ' l " so much more important I'd try fo:r'i•" , w de ~ aisles Jtiould bel· Anyone 'who .°'))~~::-:;::::";:--jWanll~~to move "111 desk ha to au~t bis ' ~-Bii£;--· tOJM ·plannlna commllllOfi ·aiid ' The~mJnl;Qty project· is the brainchild appear before the commluionen," of 7Ut-8th level tead>er Dooa1d Sauter.·lt , Sauter ez plained. '• ·• • lncludea a camplete fabrication of a city • atruclCu'e withlD' the. ciao room,.""' Tbe chief of. pollct • keepe the clau ~Theda• iltn.i\ACI by a Ovf IJll!Ob!r cl-. quiet <Xrteritly, ~ cay 'council 11 cOn-_ 1J -ilt>whlcb ,.._..,, and,. flllqr.. . "1!1,orln( 9l>•ndl_n&. ~ '!",.... J>Oil<t Jawa,f 11dtaipa'to~tale ·JQC:Pe~pnalll'.e fqrce.. . . , .. . · .off te.cblri,l'lsayt:S~r.~ ~. -:,.. • . ,A sanii.ation Wartment cleana o the iPUfpoie" oJ 1the ·P'Oi«l' ~11 ·to eti1~~ £ha~~·· ,weeps the tloor and cieaJ!i tbe~ 1llldenl.I Mt 'U.;Working. lloth public and ainU. ·-. , MINI-GOVERNMENT GOES INTO SESSION AT Jim l1l1t1r1, Debbie ... ._, Joyce .H1rwtll, ........ ,.~ .... - FO.UNTAIN VALL.Ell"I GISLllt liCl~ ; How1r4 Holmes, Ired., 14111 (fnMn"119"1i " .. -~"-,::ft ~ .) private, o!·a re-1 city. Tbf Gisler dfflp ~ on tM·priv~e alde1of Ille. OM boy l)t11 Ii ba!ed °"tFoufttaih V:al)ey's 1tr'Udure. eatabllstted himself aa the clty'1 stock · "'Stud.ml .aclllallx _,,,, part· ti lbO>, \See ~.QTY, Pop I) v.i " ! .~ . • • I ' ' ' ~ • . . •• • , • -. r • • 1 "I·can call any me"-our countelon ·at 4'15 In the morning and 11y 'Meet'Jne al the ·serJice' dlon orr1&e mritr,' we'blv• to pick up a. kid on heroin' and tbq'D come," Mn. Alekoumbidea.sald. .... In -cues the you<h Lt lliull1 taken to . the ·crisis center 11 On1>tO Coonty Medical Center. Not all-the calla are•tragic. "One youngster calltG and H16'he wu In a lrlghllul panic ahoul•takini•a pr! bo . (See HELP LINE, Pip I) • -a1n O~e Suspect ~sSelf;: Other.Held ~utu~. Calil; (APJ -'onO d two men ~ of killing· fotm blgliwiy J>lltro!m<n in a . sun· batUe, committed suicide today. autborlUu reported. Hil body WU found by a force of offlcin in gaa mub and wearing Oak jackets who af«inec( a .' hOOI\< where be bad · been bet\'i"1' for sif boors., . .Aulllllfitlel firs) bad '!lid he W11 cap- baf!d-:alivt. 1 ' .... , • •, I \ -·-• ·Per. ,flv.. hDlrs ".be bad1 ~ hilit I , ..._,~.1 ·= . ' -Tbefti-pmne•', l by .-..... .capbaW<'-·111 • canyon. .. : ' ''''1!;.lllr11illl<w11.polrainm ..... klll- .. """' tbeJ ...,,..i • car -oo-ui.nta """' l'.'Patlecf to ba .. 1brmflahed ~at'mM!itapp a·freewoY. Aiter tho ahootout, the two fied aeparately on foot. Jaclo Wrltiht Twinning, 35, took.rafup h\ the ioollled bouae atop .a hill In bru!b, country 35 miles nortb ·!If LT!I Angljel about 4: II a.m. and -adlcally• .,_. c!ianged lhotl wtth a force ql teftl'8I .core · officers until hia capture about 10:1511.m.' Mrs. Glerm s. Hoag and hor ICli, Jjf. fery0 I7, escaped, but Hoag wu beld cap: Hh lllllil releaaed mNrmecl,a llUle after t a.m. · · · When Hoag came ... 1 he llld 'l'winnlnr had a qoantity of weapons but Memed ru~1.~ .~:IJlllD'll!l.liol>. . _ • Durlnc the ensuing siege beUcopten hovered over the thfee.bedroom home. atop a hill orerlooting the freeway, and a •herilra llllper speclalllt toot up poo1t1on a kip I gaa atatio,i unW bulleta drove hbn away. Officers llormed tbe bouae with pialoll and shoC{(ulul alter warning 'l'wlllninl 1o aurrendelr. During much ol the siege U.., bad negotiated wiih him by lelephone, ancl .bo said at one· point.be was thlnklni d .lol<· ifig his life. TWirmlng continUed to fire spOradlcally · (See SllOOTOIJT, Pap I) . War Veterans Meet Members of lhe Hunlinl(lon Beoch Bar· racks No. 2*. Veterans of )Vorld War '.-1will meet at 12:!0 p.m., Tueoda7, II thi Masohle Temple, 705 Palm Ave., ·Huntlniton Bellch~ All veterans orwiirld War 1 are ln\'Hed to attend. Oruge Cout 11'~•tJier Those sunny sklea ·are here to stiy, 1l ·leist fOr a .While, but tilp: clouds will be fornUng over tht Orange Cout Tuftday. Temper .. tWlel af.ou1d atlck cloee to the · aeventlf!S locally and up to IO t. land. lNSmE TOD~\' Opposition to tht proposed l mtrotr of Air California wi£1a \l(j/iC'SiiiithWDrAtrfmer-ta- e~citd from 1ome Air Cal 1tockholder1 and tmplo~e1. Ser Page U .. -" I ...,... . it ,_ . le:--.-"" . ' C......... »U _, , n il• L....,...-tt -. =.. ..... ,, I 0r ..... c..tJ I. • '""' . ~-. t!Mll ... .,. .... ,_ ~ --. -" ........... _ . lllftl'MllMIM M ,._ ™' -n .. -- ·-" -" -. w--. ..... ,11.M --.. • • J. OAJLY Pll.OT .. • Reagan T®s State Court Top Justice ' MOllAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan appointed A-1 Court Julllco Dooald R. Wright of Lot Angelu tnday u dlltl justice ol the Ca!Homla Suprtme Court. Wrtaht. '1, a Republicaa, ii a Harvar4 Law School graduate who bepn Jll'IO• tlclng Jaw in Puadtna in 1931 and f\rat became • judge in the Los Angeles area 20 years later. Subjtct to amfinnaUon, Wrisht win sUCCftd re~ QUef Just.ice Ro&:er B. Troynor. Wri&bl'& appolntmen~ fint to the Supreme Court by Reagan, putl the political split oa the Sui:reme Court at four Democrai. and three RepubllclM. The other .Republicans are Marahall McComb and Louis H. Burke. There had been apeculaticn th at Reagan would elevate Burke to lbe chief jusUceshlp and then mike hlls appointee .n associate j111tlce. There was tentative plan by the three-- member Commission on Judicial Ap- pointments to meet April 17 In San Fran- cisco to consider the appointmenL Coofirmation probably woukl come that day, unless there WIS anything con. trovenial aboUt it. 1be ool1U11il&lon II compooed ol Acllnc 01iol JUlllce Stanley Mook, chairman; Att7. Gen. 'lbomu C. Lynch and Justioe Parker Wood of Los Angeles, seNor presiding justice o! the state Court o! A p- peaL Apartment Fight In Seal Beach Resumes Tonight The baltle of the apartments wtn be resumed at I o'clock tonl&ht before the Seal Beach City Council "Which has scheduled an appeal hearinf for the Apollo Development CorporalloO. Repraenttves of the corporation were turned dowa by the clty'1 planning comm1asion, March JI, in a request to est.ablllh a JOning which would pave the way for carwtructlon of 20 duplexet ud a •ix""'llt aportment building on lbe botly- conlelted Plclflc Electric rlght..i·way. ,Members of the Co u n c: 11 for En•bc:fUtlitntal Conceni, who figured .troaW in the planning commlali .. '1 -to deny the aPl>llcaUoo, aay they will qaln be pmenl 'to prevent a -g move, which ta effect, would place bigh density unlta in ooe ol the city'1 few r .. matain& open """""· Although the apartment INue WM a hotly-debated aubject in the racent Seal Beach city councll elecilon, the newly· elected councilmen wW have no voice in tonight'• meellq. New Councllmen Thomu Hogard and Harokl K. Hold~ will not be able to take their aeata WIW July I. Prior to tha~ oa June 2, a nm-Off election between Morton Baum and John Hamllton will decide the third vacant spot on the coUJ1Cll. The ecology-oriented Council f or ~tal CoDCerl hu favored establlahment of a parlr: m-a green belt on the narrow. 3,000.ft. strip of land in- stead ol the apartments. OV T rustees Plan Meeting on Tuesday Trulteel ot the Ocuin View School District have scheduled a r e g u 1 a r bu!J.ness meet.ln& for 7:30 p.m. 'I\iesd1y at dbtrlct headquarters, 797% Warner Ave., Huntiniton Beach. At the seulon they will consider ap- proving the following. --8electlon o! a achool budget auditor. -District philOIOphy 1 goals and ob- jectives. -Schematic drawings for a new achool lite. . I DAILY PILOT CNlAHGI COAIT l'UaLllHING COMPANY l •t..ff N; Wt.4 PnlldlM ffAI l"IAllW. ·J•clt R. C•rl1y ~ ~:Wnt -S GtMr•I M-oe< Th11111t1 kerAI ••Hor lh111111•• A. Mur11hi~• "'""""" •1111w AIMrt W. l tf•t ..._ .. ,. 14111M' """"""" .._. Office 11•15 ••• .,. k lll•··r4 M•l1'Af .Y.lrtH: P.O. I•• 7t0, t2•~• ...... _ U..0-S t Klll m .._, ·-c.Jlt 11\ ... 1 UI WI~! t1y S ..... ! .,.....,.. .. tdl: nu WHI .... , S.Ulr¥1rf ... ~tel JU JtWlll II.I c.mlnt lilMl .._ ~~ . --........ --.. - • • ·Convers·ion Idea ' For Beach' Told A flahln( pier, dlXted with ahops and rtl&auranta la Ule Idea behind Newport Beach real estate broker Denis L. L)rnch'1 bid to convert 1,100-root trestle or die, Sant.a Ana River into a permanent ftldllty. "We hope to do with private capital what the state and county are doing wilh Ali&o Pier at Laguna Beach," Lynch sald today. Lynch aald he hu enough backers in Newport Beach and Hunlinftoo Beach to fund the '6 mlllioo venture. "The criUcal issue is gettinJ coment of the public agencies." Anolher stale agency, the S~te Lands Division will also have to approv. the project. The division owpa the ftate beach from which the pier would stretch and the tidelands. The divialon would have to approve a Jong·tenn IMM for the pier. • Lynch said, "It's all speculaUve ll the moment, but if the agencies do h1dica~ that it's all right we v.·ould make a $50,000 sludy to determine whether i 1 • 1 economically feasible." Lynch said tertative plam include building 50 shops on the pier and fOur restaurants. The pier could have three separate designs, with stretches: In Polynesian style, Cape Cod and Spanish decor. ,;There would be no char1e_a for fishing," Lynch said. FLAG FLOWING, PUNTING AND SCULLING IOCllTY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DE FEAT The Anny Corps or Engineers i.s at p~ studyinf Lynch's applkatio~ to convert the trestle, built to carry pipes oot to aea for a sewer outfall. The corp.s stnt noUcea Of the application to %50 public agencies with a deadline ol April 10 set as the time for replle.s . "We have had no replies yet,'' corps engineer Joe Benson said today. "I ex· pec:t they'll come in at the last minute." There would also be boat launching facilities with a crane set.up and an arta for beats to be rolled off trailers. Gulps -1 Down to Se.a • ID Bal. Isle Tugboat Puts Vp Game But Losing Fight By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI 1111 DtllY l'llft lletf They went clown to tbe ,., In ohipe Sallltdlf. -the Balboa Island Punting .and SCUJllng Soclety and the San Diego Rett and A.JplraUon Soc:lety -without a aout&ry It.Ir to steer them by. 'lbe Whole Milky Way wouldn't have helped. Compeling for the tradltiorHteeped tropi>y, a gilded bent elbow with a 1la5' clmched in band, the two orcaniaatlon' stqed ''Ibo Great Tuib<>•t Race. Oh. "!WU • movln& •llht to I C marinen '° moved by the challenge c !he day, the majeat7 o! San Diego Ba. and the wind on their face1. One could aee ll'O'l'll men nallowin: hard. ' Tuiboall were In ahoR aupply. .. the San Diego ....,P pitted the old A-foot fer· ryboat Monterey-«1uiP!led wtlh two bars -q ainlt the BISAPSOC'a plucky little SS Mlc:hlpn, equipped wttll p.. ond a lug. The Mlcblpn, IUllk and aalv11ed five times to the bell ol It& ........ LWV to Provide Fun for Tuesday Candidate Fair There'll be singing, dancing 1 n d balloons at a fetUve candidates' fair Fri· day designed to put fun into the HWl- tingten Beach councll election. Jbe action, arranged by the League of Women Voters, will be at the Huntington Center Mall, Edinger Avenue and Bach Boulevard, from 7 to 10 p.m. All 11 can- didates have been invited. LWV olficial ,I.In. Cornelia Johmon ~ the electioneering w!U be in- terspersed witb music. About 1,000 balloOns will be dropped on the: mall and colored bunting will be put up. Candidates will be jn booths from 7 p.m. to t p.m. 1o answer questions or voters. The final hour will be given to three-minute presentatiom at a podium by the office seekers. Copies of a quesUormaire &iving the caodidates' responaes to b!ues ll.ated by the LWV will be avaHable 1o realdenl!J. The league ran off 3,MIO oopiea of the quesUoonaire on a mimeograph machine, aod delivered many door-to-door to homeowners. The candidates are vyln& for four ClOUD- cil 3eats in the election, scheduled for Tuesday, April II: Entertainment dwing the early .hours of the "grass rootl" gatherinC will be provided by "Guns and Gartera:," a folk dance group under the Jeade:ratllp of Tommy Morris, the "Fem Four Folk Singers," and the "~1adrigal Consort," a group oI .students frolli Edl90n Hl,gb School. F rom Pagel HELP LINE. •• liked out to a dance," sald Dr. Sher. ••Jt seemed he was ne1"XIUs and this made him scratch his race. When he dl<t thJa it made hi> pimple& "'-and he clldo1 know what to do. "We listened and explained to him that il wasn't· so serious and told them thlt some medication would take care of lt," Dr. Sber went on: "Another Ume aom&- one caUed at 2:• ln the momtn& and wonted to know If he should 10 back to his wife or his girl friend." knowledge, set sail for San Diego Friday aboard an Advance Marine Transport tnH:k. 4 Cartoonllt Di<t Sbaw ol c..oea del Mar, who doubles ii --ol the Sculling and Punting Society's Daphlp, supervl.Jed tbe Miclllgan',. removal from Newport Harbor waters. He dacrlbed the truck trip U a CUD· nin1 maneuver to cooceal the true merit and lpeed ol the Michigan, which ii about 1.wlce the size of one of the Monterey's ;iropellen . Multitudes greeted the 1 p.m. race with :ti&h 1plrli. aa the Mlchi(ae clwQed away from the San Diep Yacht Club for the atsrtlnf line oil the ooutbwest tip ol Shelter llland. Cheers went up, along with a hu1e American Fla1. Old Gl<ry dwarfed ~ Mlchl&m like a spiMaku brolr:en looet from Jta llnea, while lbe aquare-bulled Monteioy _. ed alone in herwue. A phalanx of. IOIDt l'.t other-wat.erc:raft followed the two ~ .-.. in· <lucllnr • Harbor Police boal wlllch shadowed the entire race . Dubbed the S. S. Aspiration for the con· test, the Monterey was crowded with rac--inl enthusiasts who upired to lighten her load by about 20 gallons of ballast. An artillery piece at the Up of Shelter blond boomed to sl(llll the run for the money down a course of one nautical mUe and the MlchJ&an bubbled into the lead. · Ora.nee smoke erupted from a diatress nare on the calorful litUe boat -held together by paint and rood faith -ap- parently ucnalling a drought aboard. De1plte skill and nautical knowhow, Commodore Shaw blew his Jud because everytJme be attempted to change coane, ab bands aboard the Miclli&an had tO cbana:e Hats. Siie faltered J!l'I abort of the finish line and the S • .S. Aspiration chugged across the victor, followed by a Celebration which lingered on Into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy was awarded to eu1todj of the San Diego Rest and Aapiratlon Socltty, while a return match -perbape in Newport Harbor -was acheduled for Seplember. JI.--P_,e l MINI-CITY CREATED ••• broker complete wtlh ticker tape and charl&. "Seventeen younpter1 are involved in buying and !elling Jtocks (with paper money). We are u':sing tbe stock market a.s a math project," Sauter 1aid. The city government Idea wu intended for the civics porlloo o! study, but u tt ha.a expanded, all of the basic skills have come into use. Math is used in th'- stock market. lansuage arts develo)>ed as each student wrote a paper requesting a c.rlain position to the city, and 1peech skills grow on the campaign trail or at a city council meeting. ''We 're rtally teaching them life," Sauter commented. Soon there will be bankers, g.as station altendants and city ~em p 1 o ye es. ''Everything you can find in Fountain Valley we will try to recreate here," •aid Saul.er. And e.ach with a purpoH to develop certain education skills. Yet to come art a parks and recreation commission, a model school board and perhap1 a newspaper. Some 91 7th and 8th grade students ln the classes of Sauter, Robert Welch and Miss Marcia Volpe are involved In the mini-city development. So far a marlr:ed improvement in learning and class room , behaviou? has been demonstrated, says Sauter. HA VE AUTHORITY 0 1 really like-it. You reel like you have 10me authority and 1 thiak the clus ii shaping up now," Joyce Harwell, 13, the mayor, says. Joyce and city councilmu Howard Hobnes, 14, both admit they weren't get- ting muc:h oul of .school before sauter atruclr: on the mini-city idea. "It shows us what we can do to help the room and help ourselves for .educa- tion. I'm worlr:ing harder than ever now," Howard sald. One city councilmu, Jim Balsters, 13, almMt quit the day he was ~lected. "I never knew there was ao much pressure. Too many kids wuted things done, and they tried tu influence my vote." "Now ·Utat I've stayed with it I lJke It. T think I might really like to be a c:lty councilman," be added • The key to malting the project click and getting students i1volved ts aulhorl· ly, according to Joyce. "If you have It, you try harder to keep it." "Yes, U you feel you have more- ttl)>OllllblUty you do thlnp you never would have thought of," chipped in Coun· cilwoman Debbie Stebe, 13. moaey to buy a · complete stock marlr:et encyclopedia ror the class. He biushed when the City council prais- ed hlm for it. 0 1 just care that flley are interested enought to use them," he said. 'lb.la ls the flrat time Sauter baa applied the Idea of a city structure for a cla.sa:room to such a young level. "We did it once in ~ high school, that was all," he said. The first part of the project wu voter registration -75 pen:ent of the class registered, then 71 percent or the class voted in city council elections. Wouldn't city officials in Fountain Valley or HWltington Beach be surpriJed U that happeoed April It! EDUCATION REIEVANT Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fountain V1lley School District, feels the project i• "making education relevant." "We have a lot of connraints on kids now living in these walled clUes," Brick says . "They are curious and this gives them an outlet, exposure to real life." · "These youngsters are rebuilding a world, in thla case a city. The teacher helPI provide them with accuracy and avoidtl the fantasy/' Brick explained. The corps will evaluate the commenl'l, make an engineering study of the project -whether it will at:ect beach erosion, navigation or cause flooding problems· - and lben rule on the application. Beach Property Owners Display Plan Inter est Downtown properly owners planned to attend to11ight'1 meeting of the Hun· tington Beach City Council and produce for councilmen enough signatures to prove their interest in redeveloping the beachfront district. The property owners, who claim privat~ enterprise is willing to redevelop the area, were given until April I by the COU.11cil to come up with signatures <>f owners of 20 percent or the property favoring redevelopment. Tod11y oae of the signature collectors, Martha Holt, said : "We have done very well. We have more Utan the required amount of names." She saki she and Tim Talbert, who also has beeri collecting signatures, will atve a report to the council tonight. 'lbe property ownua are looking for .an alternative to the city's redevelopment proposal, ca11ed the Top of the Pier Plan. The city's orlglnal proposal calll!I for con- demaa.Uon of five blocks, covering 28 ACIU and the COllstruction of a parking lot Forty .. ight people own property In the district stretching a block deep from Sixth Street east to Lake Avenue plus a two-block area OI the east aide of Lake Street. At present the land is being appraised for condemnation purposes. The biggest battle in the long·rWU1lng dispute ls ex- pected when the appraisals are com. pleted. 3 Public Hearings Before Valley Council Thrte public hearings top the list or agenda items for the last meeting of the Fountain Valley City Council before the April 14 election. Cow)cilmen will meet at II p.m., Tues- day, to hear the pubUc on : a zone change reducing property on the south side or Slater Avenue west or Euclid Street, from high density apartments to sln1le family homes ; a change to the city muter plan, reducing potential apartment construe· tlon; and an appea l on planning cOmmi s- sion denial of 11 Jots for apartment ion· ing in the city center area. "ll could cut a lot of miles off going to Catalina for some of the smaller boall in Newport Harbor," Lynch added. , From Page 1 SHOOTO U1' ... after rtleasing Hoag. At <>ne tim'-Twinning shoul!d when told to surrender : "I'll be dead if I walk out." While investigating reports that the two men in an aatomobilc had been pointlnc guru at motor:isls along th'-G<>Jden State Freeway, two of the slain patrolmen spotted a car, answering the description, parked in front ol J's Coffee Shop just orr lhe freewa y. They radioed for help and a second patrol car arrived withi n minutes. Jt was shortly before midnight. One witness, among four young person.~ Jn a car towing a boat, said he was "stan- ding M the parking lot and saw a California Highway Patrol car approach a car with two men in it. "The two officers got <>Ul and one ap- proached," the witness said. "The fellow on the passenger side got out and im- mediately shot one cop, picked up the cop's shotgun and went around to the front of the car and shot the other cop. "Another highway patrol car pulled up behind. Then the patrol car's driver got out and shot. He was gunned down. The remaining cop held off these tv.·o guys for about five minutes by hirrlself. "Finally one fellow went around to tht front of the highway patrol car and 1hot this young cop in the face." A highway patrol spokesman said he could oot explain how two men were able to shoot down four officers. The assailants abandoned their bullet.- riddled automobile and fled on foot. The fugitive arrested in a canyon wu Identified by police as Russell Lowelt' Talbert, 28. WOUNDED TWICE Talbert was wounded twice after he ex- changed shots and scuffled with camper Dan Schwan:, 40, Chicago, who wu sleeping in hls camper truck when Talbert fired into it, a spokesman said. Police said Talbert, apparently out o/ ammunition, pistol-whipped Schwarz and fled in the camper truck. He was apprehended without resistanct later in a canyon nearby. The s\~in patrolmen were identified as Walter C. Frago, 23; Roger D. Gore, 22; James Edward Pertee Jr .. 25, and George M. Alleyn, 24. All were married and Jlved in nearby communities. Mrs. Hoag, wife of the ·mari held hostage. said she fled the house after calling the highway patrol. "J was. fixing breakf ast for my husband when I saw a man outside carrying a shotgun and a pistol, .. she told newsmen. "l went and called the highway patrol. "My husband came in and s8id thl11 man wants to talk with us. There was a ~p 'at the front door .. The man :said it'1 probably your son. "The tap at \Pe door wa.s the highway patrol. I ducked out the front door and in- to the bushes. The man inside IOoked eJ:· hausted. It looked lik'-he had a bullet 4 wound in the head," Mrs . Hoag said. F rom Page 1 LIBERTY •.. llncle .n caliber buUet. "We•re continuing a concerted March of the Orange COunty area and beUeve lt'a possible that someone may be hiding Liberty and Connolly," Velne said. "Whoever might be hiding them Is making himself part ol a murder and could face a 1ttU prlaon sentenCe." Both men are believed to be driving 111 yellow '15 Ford Mustang convertible with a blaclr: top and Callfomia license: number PKL 936. The doctor added, "The thlng to remember about all lliese calls ii that they were very serious problems to the callsn. '.!l>ere ...., nothlof-llmoy-*'11 LEARN RESPONSIBILITY Regarding Connolly, who Is now wanted only for the lesser kidnap charge, Ve.lqe sakf, "It's unlikely that even if he were proven guilty he would have to face tht au chamber or a life prison 1ent!l1Fe." =~~--4'-'°t.t1>erty'Tt<dved-1t1rlll<1'llliiiFlf <oo· Senate Panel Okays Nixon Rail Measure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Labor Committee 1pproved unanimously today a bill proposed by Prtrtdent Nixon LO avert " nationwide railroad 1trlke now threattned for So.turday. The measure would Impose on the four Jhopcrall unJon a lnvolved in the dispute and the Industry 1 IC!ttl'-ment reached by negodatora last December. t .. •1we are teaming the ruponalblUty of a city covemment. Now 1'hen we read about It we CID UJlderltand," Joyce said. !hey ano leamlnf the no-lblllUea o! govtnunent, evtn. to the moat minute det.all. A(endu for a councU meettag mu&t be publl.lhed )lflor to the me<tln1. OeMillnes art set up ·lheld ol timl for placing Items on an qtnda. And parltame•tary,,rocedure -• be fol1- ed. The project will continue to the end ol Utt year, uys Sluter, who toot such an lnterut In It lhal he spends l40 ol bla own Sllot in tlae Arm Bobby Cox, !lrat 1rader at Ocean Yi•w School Distr1ct'a Coll!g• View School, reacts to DPT (diptheria, pertussis, tetanus) booster shot administered by Dr. Russell Morgan and school nurse Harriet Kelley. "Free booster shot program is currently under way in all 22 Ocean View schools. Physicians are volunteering teir time. nection with the strangling dea~ o( a Westminster mother In 19M during which he was found near lhe bollY. plij!na a (Ullar by candleUghl. He WU ruled lnsan• and conll~ to a state hospital but wu relea!tf.d' afttr beinc ruled "48ne." --li Capt. Grover Payne, commancler or HunUniton B.tach detectJvta, 1aJd ieveral or hi• men are )IOW worldna on ~ c.i;e fuJl.tJme in cooperation with detecOves ln other JXilicc depanmenll. i:_ "We Int.end to nail both of these1auys,• hc said. VOL 63, ~. J SECTIO~~ PAGES . ' --;: . -:-. • --=--· . -!: ~ Reagan May Suppqr t CO_a.st Oil Drilling . . Protest By TllOMil FORTUNE Of .. __, .......... Efforts cl 11\J'<e. Orlllll!t Coall! cltita to pu1h a bill banning local offshore oil drill4 jng•through Congress were lh1pin1 up as promiaill( today. -"™ a:ood word for Newport Beacfi. Laguna ~ch and San Clemente wa.s that hiring a lobbyist may not be u ex- pensive as earlier thought and that Gov. Reagan is willing to aid thelr cause.< · nit bill the three dty governments wish to Rt passed would prever)t: oil drill- ing in federal waler, beginning thret milq offshore, adjlCtDt to areas where the near·Jbort state Udal WMI .are desi&nated marine preterves .. In short, the U.S. 1ov,.enunent couldn't collect revenue by putt.fq in oil drillinc plaUorms IOl,llh ot ·the Santa Ana River l boundary line between H u n t 1 n I t o n Beach and Newport Beach),· which ·ia a sanctuary unde r the state's Cunniftlbam· SheH Act. Two local representatives. were in Washington., D.C., last wttk -Hans J . Loreni of the Coastal Area Protect.Ive League and Newport Beach Mayor Dore:en Marshall. Lortru: early in the week interviewed several professional lobbyists (called Je1islative · advoettel) --· '. 1nd Mr~· MmhaJ1 Jiad a ' follow up' .... ' Ttil loblij>IM'l Iii -id ba determJntd I~ "!ifll tli; !!!!'!. ~ tlloliht wu al a iillJ nto ·iu -· best, . . ""'"""' tbll, Laswio ~ ll!JOI' Cll)"councila of tilt. tint cilia -c;.i.. • V_. talc(. at City Ooundl will be uked In apptoV<! ~·!O olllllDI i..t.--i:, "~ thl8 council hire tlll ptt/intid lollbyll( -name· , 11oou1t1·-.--up WUb S!,1111. County balll't 'ytt bOiio dlaclol..i.'. . • ..... _,, llld' flllp wotlld malda It K Lottnz. wbn Wu 'in ll'Uhin&f-OO·hia' ~~ ud San 0.-C<ml· way to a ~acaUon trip in Euratit, t ~ CID ClllM:.UP with $5,000." ,. ltltpboned Mn. T. ~ Stewert cl the ' (The ~I Area ProltetlYe Lta111e Coas41 1 Area·~ ProtecUve Le1gue. Mrs. has pledled to contribute '5.;000.) Stewart said it bad beto though! a, lob-Laguna, Counc:lbnan.J01tph, Q'Sulliv.an byi.st's 'fee to puah the bill ""6uld be Wd, "Wt are oriented toward the beach anywhere from 450,000 to $100,000. and muJl,do anytblna: posalble to protect Instead it looks like $10,000 to, flZ.000, our bMeh." possibly 115,0llO at tbt moot." • Nt,.j,clrt MiYor l'n· llanball ~· ·- • tiw. ·AN Hftn aanctuarits CO'f'.nn, a1-t onNourlh of the Callfomla COllllinl !bat would be proltcled by_ !!le bllL Jiu! aht noted In colltcllng montY from communities in other areas it· ii a ~ cl bow worried they are. "Take Humboldt ind Mendoclno caun- U... I don't know bow Worried they ire;'' "" .,i.i. The bill has been introduced into the U.S. Senate by Alan Cranston (~.) and C01.uthor:ed by ,thrJe· otheer,xnatora Including Gtorge ·Murphy (ft-Calif.). Lorenz ukl Richard Hann a (D- Westminster) has agreed tO introduce a companion bill jnto Ibo Houat o f Representatives Ii.net ~ area cmftntly is uprepreaented with the. duili' of'iames Utt. . . Mrs. Martl!all nkl ill< talked t0 Bop. Craig HOimer (R-Lorig Bta•h), Ibo anly 'Orange County con.,..._. . oa ·the lnterio. Commttlft, while lbe will in Washincloo. Relgan agreeing to su~-the ~ 11 "tremendously important,'' she' · nid. "His office could gi•e help to our representative.'' Sht aaid the city of San Di• hu a legislative advocate on a pennlhenl basis who also would wort with the munty cttiea' lobbyist. . .. our 1cers Carswell Gets Past 1st Hurdle WASHINGTON {AP) -Judge G. Har· rold Carswell's nomination t o t b • Supreme Court won its flrst crucial test Monday u tht Senile rejected a ~ lo ..-. the nomlnatloa to Ille Judiciary Comfnitttt. Tba re<ommltlal -~ Se!!· lllrcii Bayh (D-lnd.), a ltadtr <I lhe ...,..rtjoa, Wa> llotipod to kiJI tile llOlllbllUae ol lhl 60-ytar-old TallahasHt, Fla., Jilriil, The Senate now will vote Wednetday on cooflrmaUon of Carswell, the HCODd Southerner nominated by President Nixon for the Suprtmt Court vacancy created nearly 1 year ago by tM nsip ation of Jqiice Abe Fort.as. "Nl1'q1 firs! choice, Judge Cltmenl F. Haynsworth Jr., of. Greenville, S.C., was rejected by the Senate last November by a~ vote. seqato -. cl both partlta Nld tbty erpected defeat of Bayh11 recommittal motion to be followed by conflrmatloo of Carswell, alt.bough perhaps by 1 nar· rower mar&ln. ~ 1 ~ Some senators who voted against reconpnlttal aakt they would vote again.st Carn'.ell's l'OnfinnaUoo. 'Ibey contended Iha! re<urnlng ~ to c:oounillft W<lllld just be ducking tbt issue. On the otbu band, aome senators who tbty favored returning the to committee for further said they would discloee later tiow they would vote on confirmation if the ~ttal motion failed. One of those who predicted con· finnailon wu Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mamfield. Tba Montana Democrat. Billi declining to say bow he will vote, had previously ratta tile -of the hard-fought bat· Ile over tbe T1Uahauree, Fla., jurist's nomination a tossup. "I imagine the vote on retumina it to commltlet will be the precur11r to tile vote on Wednesday/' Mansfield aaid prior to the votiiie. Ntwsmen asked fiim -il ht meant he tx· pecll Carswell to be confirmed. "Yes, that's the WIJ it loob at lht moment," Mansfield replied. Senate Republican Lt-Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania reiterated he la confident thal Camrtll will be confirmed. Scott. said be aee.s enough votes lo assure Carswell'• eon firm at Ion on "U-may be ..... ama11 oc .-st Wednelday, although he told reporter• 1llppeae" from .the vote on recomnUttal. Tuesday Deadline For Absentees JAMIS E. PENCE JR •• 24 Newport ·Beaches D_raw C.ar Crowds, 3 Major Wrecks By JOANNE REYNOLDtl An tllll!llfe!l llO,llOO -~moot tl them riding Jn autos -visited the ahortl of Newport Beach this weekend. There wen three major traffic accidents, but lifeguards recorded no rescues during the two days of warm weather and calm surf. A Newport man was listed in rm·~ WUon and his unidentified passenaer wu in guarded conditiOn today at HOI( Hot. pital following an early ,Monday monun, crash at Riverside Drjve and Coast BiP.-way. · 1 • Hoepital ·officials sa1d1hty were with- holding tbt identity of U.. woman ptodlll( notification of next of kin. - According to prellmillary rtporla, the woman wu a paa.micer in a srnal1 fw-~ ar driven by P'rank Robert Buct, rr, ol 11.111 Paliaadts Road which cruhed into a brict ltcre frOnt near· the" tnt.n,.. lion. Police aald clrcumstancea of the accf. dent ·are under inveatigaiiOQ. Costa· Mesa resident John Howatd Scrugp Jr., 20, of J821il Cecil Place was free on $1,250 bail today following hit ar· rest Friday night on chargea of felony hit and run. According to police, 8cru&P was alltf· edly ~bound on Or11111e Street. turnlDI . -· GIORO(.ILALLEYN,.24 ' . --· llOOIR D. 00111!. U . ' , • , UPI Tt......,. • OFFICERS, BYSTANDERS ST.AND JIY:ONE·OP CHPcDEATH CAJtS IN'VAL!NCIA GUNPfGHT -· f.ovr Hlghw~Y. P1t_r.t,,,.., Kfllod; 0... Suapoct C.pfilrod; Another Kiiis Sell · One .Suspect Kills S~lf; Othet Held SAUGUS, Cal~. (APJ -One ii 'lw m~ accu~ of killing rour bftla•UJ · patrolmen. m a gun blWe cot"" "I f su'lcldi today, authorities reported. llW ~ WIS foupd by I force of officen. ift gas masks and wearing na~ ~.eta: .WhO stormed a houae wflerel he W been ~Upl,for lli>t'~a · ·'' · ~~" tltll w ' •" lie "• cap-luted """" F.-ftve houra bl it.I' ;)iotor~a · ::=i: holla .. balon,ftltailnr him Tlli--.~ by Glltcerr, . wu tapllnd fuller lo a canyon. Tlit loar hilftw,ay patrolmtn were kiR· ed afler tbty ttopped a car w1-oc· upants were reported to bave brandished guns at motorilta on a freeway. After .the ahootout. the two fled separately on foot. Jack Wright Twinning, 35; took rtfup In the iaOlaled hoole atop a hill in bru1h7 country 35 mlltl north of Los Ang<ltt about 4:15 a.m. IOd sporadically a· changed shots whh a force ot. several ICOl'e oftieer1 unW his capture about J0 :15 a.Jl\. I Mn. Glenn S. Hoq ud btr """ Jtf. fety, 17, escaped but HOlg WU· held, cap- tive until reteued unhlnntd a· Uttle after t a.rri. · .. When Hoag ctme out he said r,nut1n1: had a quantity of. weapons but· ieemed running low on ammuniUon. During the ensuing aiq:e helicopters hovered over the thr!e-bedroom Mme. llop a hDJ OYtrlooklng tilt -ay. aiid a sheriff's 111lptr apeciall.t took '%J:Uon atop a a:as AIUon unUI bullets him away. -Officers lllomted the "°""' will! plslnll and ahotiuM afl<r warning Twilllt1ng to llJl'J'ender. During much of the alege .thq.J>ad negotiated with him by telephone, ·iind he aaid at one point he was lhinklne"Of'tu:. ing hiJ lilt. Twinning cootlnutd to fi,. oporadicall1 · after releasinJ Hoag. At .one time Twinning ahouted when lnld to turrendlr: "I'll be dead If I walk out!' · ll'hile lnvesllilllDI r<pnr1a ll1at Ult two men In an automobile had been pointing gun1 at motorists along the ~Iden State Fref:way, two of the slain patrolmen (Ste SllOOl'OfJT, Pa .. %) or.age C:out ltlt -Coast Highway ·When be atruclc N · 'F SI t d' r:s~~tri:~?.;i: .. ewport orums ' . a e 1''e•••er TM Newport Beach youth was admitted Those aunny skies are here to to HOii Hoepital for Qbservation and wa1 · stay, at least for a while, but hi&h re~~~t~~~ccld<ntnoledScruu•' Counc:l Cam __ paign_ers to. Give Bigg· est Race Wind.up cOrlouda wColll ~Tufor~lng TOVtr lht license number and he was sto...._. by ,..., ange a.,~ tll\lay. empera-~ tures should atlck cloee to the patrolmen about 15 minutes liter oo COut aevenUa' locally ud up lo 80 }n. HJgbway. · Thrtt meet the candidate forums are Steffenseri Will bt master of ~a. responses in a booklet that. will ht hand· In •not!itr Suilday evtnlng -~ scheduled tllla flnal l"ttk of Newporl Wednuday •llht. Newport Height< Im-ed out. Candidates '!Ill be uk..l •d\fl· land. rour penons ..ciptd ~injury In a 8tadl City Coundl campaigning. provement "-lltion wlll host the C.n-tional · q..,Uons on the topics of, lht INSIDE TODi\Y Newport Beach City Clerk Laur• head on cruh atMarcua A\'taue and Jlth Only two f«Uml ba:ve t>etn held pre--dldates. Tbal lorwn will be at 7:• p.m. · NeWport Tomorrow studr .. Upper Newport , • ..._ toe! Street. 1 ....... 1.. .. .... --·-' Int I N-H ,_.,. Eitm·~· School •· · Or t r.... · -•""-'-.. -...11 • Oppositio'n to the propo1td ·r-~--~~=.ra:;y,,remo:;;c:inded"";..;N;o':;."P"i;::.rlc;,vo,,.ter:o-;•-~P.;;;oltce. 11id the driven: Rlchatd L. Jtil-~v~......,~~··i.~~h::..,~-~~~o~-~~ma~rn-~~·~~--!!1...,.i'd,'~'i,,..!,";;'~;.;;~~gil':'~T,;;-I~-;;-~~~~~~;,r;;~~'~~:;i;;-~-~-i-mnurrot"1':treatffonda10rt--'1----< 1' tnat ~Y LS Uie Int day to take out ~!:Di;.ktJ:;....~Chr;~ g,. wee a1b. TN race.ti~.~ corner 15th Streel and Santa An. Ave-ecdnomJC balance In the commmrlty, pul>-Paclfic Southwtsi Airlines it abeentee balloY ror the April 14 city elec-T nd , , "'!i'",.... -.i, qu .. a1noe that ttme except for• lndivl· nue. ForreJK Fullmer wit.!) moderate and llc'transPortatlon, youth recrettton•I ap. cxp;ected from some Air Cal ex., 1 two unidentified JlUHftlel'I re-du1l Clndldale c:offees and talks.' ' ' each candldltt will be allottec: 11 mm. po~tunltle.s, aod clty-J:OUnty relatt.ooatµps. 1tockholder1 and emplo~e1. Set lion. ceived minor In~ in the a11h. This week'.,• however; wtll provide' the le Two catldldat.ea are ,runnlhg tor fach Pa"'t 26. The clerk 'said absenlt< ballots will not Mtanwhlle, llfepaNI hod ao unU1Ually big windup bel0tt votJnc on Tueaday· u ~ r 'f Cl " .... ~. ·., .. ' .... • be Issued alter 5 p.m. Tue.day, when htr easy weekend in spite ol 15,n beach Yis-week. AJlil l4 The 11 n at rorum will bt. "Mlursday 0 our tr '-'VloUll,;U seat&, ~a.,c.- office closes. itors Saturday and 95,000 Sunday. ~ nm· forum wfil ht at 1 breakfast _night, apcnsored by the Oranae Goat dll&!~nctal j ~~=.;bent ~wird N. ...... "Wt had no rttcutJ all wtelitnd " a Wtdnt-'--rtd by the Nt~I • • m~ o1 W-V·•·-••· Harbor R • Al F · "There arr prov Wons o issue baUots Ufesi•ard ...n.kesman ... id. "Wt did h. ave _, ..__ "...,.. ~~!.,-1•1 of PT-A·.~,· __ ..1 "':'.:_·1Ha~-, -a ogers versus orgit, a~ "'I"' _, Harbor Cblmber of Ccr'Dmeree, called """"'"" WN u-:: ruw ~ District 3 -Carl J. Kymla versus a .... for etrtain circum1tancu arising after 30 fint aids on Saturd1y and 45 on sun-a "Sunrile Bull session." Breakfut will CoorcflnaUne Couhcl.J. Candidatea will B w ls • ..,3 tht dOldlint, bu< people who find day, mortly du• to i•Uyfish. • 111eaa there ba 11·7:• •·"'· 11 Illa Blfboo 1111 Club hold ·rorth bellnnlnl<at 7:30 p.m. In lho 1>i.lric1'1i _ Mnan M. llootal venu; themselves in such a sltuatJon· must con-weren't ID.Y rescues because there waan't anO ..U.con SS.SO. Ptl'lln need not buy council Chambtn It city hall Walter J, "Wally" Koch. tact this office," &be iald. any surf and the watu'11till rather cold." brtat:fast and an1one ii inviW!d to comt 1be .i..e.gue of Women Voters lent e1ch DI.strict 6 -James Aynes Jr. vtraut ht commenltd. at, I ~.m. and 'ht'!' lhl ~~ljlaleO, !-<• c~to a ci-tionnaltl and• aM11piltci Richard B. croul • • ) • ' 'I ' \ . • ' • • • • • ::.:. c..__,.,. u, ·-....... ,_ .... _ -t•lf'HtM • .,. ... _ . ..... -- " ~· • .-J u • ' " • • ,.., u '' ' ,. , J DAll.Y PILOT N Reagan Tabs State Court .. -. t- Top Justice SACllAM.ENTO (AP) -Gov, 11 .. 11111 appointed Appeal Coor! JUJllC. Daoald R. Wright of Los Angeles lodar u chltl justice of the Caillomla ~upr'l"' Court. ~ihl, 63, 1 RePal?llc1n, ii\& Hanarfl Law School graduate 'trlio 1>111111 prac. tic;illr lrW ta Paaadena In 193S end first beeune a judge in the Loi Angelu area 20 Y._tars lattr. Sub}ect to confumatlon, Wright will succeed reljred Cllitl Justice Rnctr B. Traynor. Wright's appointment, fint to I.ht Supreme Court by Rug1111, puts the poUUcal spUt on the Supreme c.ourt at four Democrats lllld three Republlcaru. '1'1e olher Republicans are Marshall McComb and Louis H. Burke. There hid been speculation t ha t Reagan would elevate Burke to the dliel jusUcabip and then. make his appointee an agoclate jmtice. There wu tentative plan by the three· member Commlllion. on JudJclal Ap. pointments lo meet April 17 ta Sen rr ... cisco to consider the appolntmenL Confinnatioo probably would come that day, unless thert wu anything con· trove.rsial about it. The commission ii composed of ActJn& Olief Justice Sleqkr M.,.k, chainMn; Alty. Gen. 'll>ornaa C •• Lynch and Jllllioe Parker Wood of Loi Aq:elea, senior presiding jultlce DI the State Court ol Ap- peal, The chief justice ol the Stale Supreme Court earns '43,269 a year. The court was bearing cues In Los Angeles when the appointment was an· nounced. Harbor Officials Declare Deposit 'Hazardous Area' , Orange County Harbor Department to- day put up signs declaring off limits 20 acres of soupy material dreged from Upper Newport Bay and dePolited in Big Canyon. A spokesman In the Harbor Depart- ment's engineering dlvislon said the de. poelt aru Is a huerd lllld that II will JrObably tab two monlhl for the dredge material lo dry out •llOlllh lo be ulely wilked on. "~ ....... llldl .clown there yeoW• day s\nilng ln up lo lhelr kneel and di&· £11'1 tunnels end alld!ng up and down the bank." said nearby resident Haven Burke. "We noUced that P!'rl of tlll·blnk on Ille far 11da hu COiiapsed." ' BurU, rt M.1 Vista Bonita St., 1 Blufft condomJnium, looks directly down co the ~e deJ)O!lt area where 1Jlt WP pumpod In behind dikes, aioog with eight neighbon:. He ii worried that •• the water at.art.a evaporating the muck Is golng to smell. "There; hasn't been any smell. 't'ht vast majority ol the material ls a fine grain sand,'• said the Harbor District spokesman, who asked not to hive his name wed. He did not say If It would begin to smell or if there js decayed vegetable matter mlJ:ed with the sand. The derdging was to clear the Upper Bay water ski a r e a, inoperable since floods a year ago washed tons or 1Ut down San Juan Creek channel. Dredging was completed lllt we e k '"ith 241.500 cubic yard1 of material ~ moved at a cost of $180,000 paid by the county and fully refUnclable by the U.S. ~ovemment Office ol Emergency Pre- paredness. The Big Canyon area, slated ror a regional park under the llwer Newport Bay land exchange now before the courts. is owned by the Irvine C-Ompany. Use of it "'as deeded to the county of Orange subject to the trade being coruummated. l:io: was used as a dredge dePQait area once befcre in 1982. "At that Ume there wenn't any homes up here," noted Burke. I DAILY PILOT OllAHGI COAIT l"UILISHING CDMIAtf't ••~•rt N. WM4 ..... """ .... ,..\Wr Jock ... C1rlt'I Vlee ,.,._, .... C0-11 M_,., ..... Til0'"11 A. Mur,lii~• MMqNhltet n ...... forhlftl H1WWI aitadl Clly E.i .... "...,.... IH&lll Ofllt• 22f1 W•tl l•ll••• l1wl1Ye14' M1m111..U4r"11 r.0 .111 1171, t1llJ °""' ....... C1lf0 Mtlll m W•t llY SlrMI L..-. • ....,, m ,_, •- ~ hlol: UIJS lloldl l :ivl..,,_. .... c-....: -Nln'I fl~ k .. , --_ ..... ,~---· ~- DAILY 'ILO'f lfeft 1'11119 ,LAG ,LOWING, 'UNTING AND SCULLING SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DEFEAT . Gulps Down to Sea • ID Bed Isle Tugboat Puts Up Game .But Losing Fight By AR'IBUR R. VINSEL Of .. 0.llY '"'' lftft Tbey went down to the sea in ahipi!! Saturday ...,. the Balboa Island Punting and Sculling Society and the San Diego Rest and Aspiration Society -without a 10litary star to steer them by. The wbole Milky Way wouldn't have helped. Comptltn( for the trad!liooHleepod lropby, a &flded bent elbow w!lll a glaaa clenched ta hand, the two or1enlzalionl staged 'Ille Groat Tlzlboet Race. Oh, 'Twu a moving afibt lo eee marinen '° moved by the challenae of the dey, the majesty ol Sen DlelO Bay end tile wind on their laces. One could aee amm men swallowina: herd. Tugboats we~ in short supply, ao the Sao Diego lfOUP pitted the old SS.fool fer· ryboat Mooterey-equipped with two bars -qai!llt the BJSAPSOC'a plucky little SS Michlgan, equlppod wllll iJ.uaa end a jug. 'Ille Midlipn, sunk and salvapd five timee lo Iha beat ol Ill owner's knowledge, 5et aail for San Diego Friday aboard an Ad•ance · Marine Transport truck. Cartoonist Dick Shaw of Cll'ona del Mar, who doubles as commodore of the Sculling and PunUn1 Society's flagship, supervised the Mlchlgan'1 nmoval from Newport Harbor waters. He deecrlbed the truck trip u a cun· nina; maneuver to oonoeaJ the true merit and speed of lbe Mich!pn, wil!ch Is about twice tbe aile of one of the Monterey's propellen:.~ Mult!tudQ FHled the t p.m. raoe with high ap!r!Js u the M\ch!can cJwaed away from~ San Dieco Yacht Club !or the $11r1!111 line off the IOl!thweal tip of Shelter Island.-· Cheers went up, alone with a huge American Flaa. Old Glory dwarfed the Michigan like a spinnaker broken looae from Its lines, while the 1quare-bulled Monterey grom- ed alooc ta her wake. A phalanx of aome 20 other watercraft followed the two vtoertble vaae)J, in- cludtnc a Harbor Police boat wil!ch shadowed the entire race. Dubbed the S. S. Aspiration for the con- test, the Monterey was crowded with rac-· ing enthwiasts who aspired to lighten her load by about 20 gallons o( ballast. · An artillery piece at the tip of Shelter Island boomed to signal the run for the money down a course of one nautical mile and Ille Michigan bubbled inle the lead. °""I• smoke erupted lronu• diatrw Dore .., Iha colorful Utile boat -held t<>idber by paint and pd faith -ap-' p11H11Uy aignaillna I droogbt aholrd. Deapile akllI end llllJllcal knowhow, Commodore Shew blew his lead because everytlme he allempled lo change coarte, all hands aboard the Michigan had to change seats. She falterod just abort of the finish line and the S. :S. AaplratiOn chuued across the victor, followed by a celebration which llna:ettd on into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy wu awarded to cwtody of the San Diego Rest and Alpiratioo Society, while a return match -perllapo ta Newport Harbor -was •cheduled '"' September. .,,.,.._ Pqe l ,. l. ' ,, • Cue L!tJ Blu Eltiltt " SHOOTOUT. •• • • • •Polled acer, enewerlnf the cleKr!ptloo, parked In !root ol J '• CoUee Shop just of[ the freeway. They radioed for help and a StCOlld patrol car arrived within minutes. It WU sboctly before mid!Ugbt. Tait00ed Topless Dancer Latest Firehouse Arrest One witne111 among four Youn& perlOM In a car towm, a boat, 1aid he wu "stan- ding in the par.kine Jot and saw a California Highway Patrol car appn>Kb a car with two men in it "The tn offlcm got out end one ap- proached." the lritness l&id. "'nle renow on the _.. aide got out and Im- mediately abot ooe cop, picked up the cop '1 shotgun end went around lo the fronl ol lbe car end shot the other cop. •Another highway patrol car pulled up behind. 'Iben the patrol car'1 driver 1ot out and 5bot. He wu sunned down. -'l'he remaining cop held off these two su;ys for about five minute.s by himself. "Finally one fellow went around to the front of the hiaJtway patrol car and shot this young cop in the face." A highway patr01 spokesmen 11114 ht could not explain bow tWo mm were able to shoot down four oftlcen. The asaailanll ablndoned lbelr bulle~ riddled automobile end fled oa lool The fug!Uve aJTellad ta a canyon wu idenWied by police as Ruaall Lowell Talbert, 21. WOUNDED TllJCE They busted Colta Meu'.1 topless tavern q:ain Sunday, this time citin8 a YO\lllf lady clad only In a G-llrinl. a filmy veil and a tattoo appwently com- memorating an old romance. The Sunday afternoon visit brought lo eight the number of CUM Joued at The Firthouae, 1T1 E. 17th St., with the firtt defendant.I due in court thia morning. CltaUOlll weft lsauod _Sundiy charg!111 Karyn M. Ra.slaw1ti, 13, of El Monte, with entertaining without a Permit, and c:harcina:. owner Ray Rohm, 25, of Costa Meta, for allowing It. Manqer nemu. D. Vauahan, 23, and topleu dancer Diane E. Brawley, 25, of Anabtlm, were scheduled to appe11 today at 1:30 1.m. in Harbor Judicial Diltrict Court. 'lbe1 were arruted a week ago and ire fret oo fW tiafl~ plennlng lo plead tnnocenl .lodey gb attorney Berrien Moore and requeot jury tr!w. Si!-Jack CaJnon, ol the poUce vice end lntellllleoca delail, aaid Mias Raslawald Protest March Held in Newport Talbert WU wounded hrioe after he G • changed 1hots and acuffled with campe r Dan . Schwan, 40, Chicaao, who wu A protest march from the Balboa pier sleeping in his cM:rper truct Wblri to· the Newport pier Sunday afternoon T lbert f ed dru -t ~ people end proceed<d a tr into it, a spokeRnan laid.. wl.......... lnclden• accor"~ .... to Newport Police said Talbert, appare:ntJy out of Be~cl;°·police. .., .... ,. ammunition, pistol-whl pped Schwan and SnN'l!Vired by 1 grou~ know'n as "Free fled in the camper truck. l""'"-H Us," the rally was ca ed to protest al-e was apprehended without rnlstance leled. p 0 l l c e harassment of "youths. later in a ClnYon nearby. bt.cb, Chk:anol and other minorities." The slain patrolmen were ldentlfled as The nlly ltlrted at about 2 p.m. at the ~1alter C. Frago, 13; Roger D. GOre, 22 ; Balboa pier and picked up supporters a mes Ed~1ard Pence Jr., 25, and George as the group 1111rched to the Newport M. Alleyn, 24. AU were married and lived pier. The meeUng broke up at about -4 wu dancin& to a slow, Mductive number when be dropped In Sunday. She ...... cited for 'Violation or the: mtm.lclpal ordinance on p u b 11 c en· terLalnmtnt alter two addJUonal tunes provided addll!onal evidence. Polloe nid Mia Rulanld wore a bl1ck G-ltrln& beneath a fUmy, walrtllne veU end bad a tattoo eaYlnl: Sooey I .J4. II embWoned on her left thoulder. Several similar cltatiaol haft been isaued charging dencm and m11111 .. ment in the put week, u The Fireboust! .begins a teal of the consUtut!OO.UIY of the city ordinance. Police drop ta al regular JntervaiJ, but were called off achedule early Sunday momin& by ownu Illy Rohm, who re· quelted aid in ejecting 1ix Io u d Customlrl. The breitfut '!ill bea:tn at 7:30 a.m. and end at Jl 1.m. p Chef to Aid Y Pancake Feed Mike !Illy the KNX chef, bu bttn added to the list of television and r1dio per10naUUe1 who will coot breltfast at the Orange Coast YMCA P a n c a t e Breakfast slated for 7:30 a.m. April 18 at Richard'• Lido Market. in Newport Beach. Other peraonal1Ue1 ICheduled for the breakfast include Jack Zaremba, Dick Lane, Bruce Mcintyre, A1 Jarvi!, Harry Babbitt, and Alan Young. ·The pancakes, 11wqe1 and orange juice are being provided by Richard's Market In the fund railinl breakfaM designed to reduce the debt on the YM· CA 's Olympic 1ize pools. in nearby conununitlta. p.m. 1 ft er speaken from "Frte Us" ~irs. Hoag, wtfe of the man he.kt spoke oa a number of subjects. Co EJ • hostage, said she fled lh• house after un. ty eclion calling the highway pitrol. "Iwasfix!ngbreakfaslformyhusband Clifford Argue B O "'hen 1 saw a man outside carryin1 a ureau pens Ngun and a pistol," she told.~!_~en. D!•a--'I' .. sd "Iwentendcail ~u~e __ av "' on1<r 1o uatat 1n lut m1nu1e Y UJl>and came ta and said this 11:;.::·.UIA:l.7-l'-·--~r-,'!!lllhi'-."'::Uon"'---!ol~vo!Biliirtlii UM man wants to lalk with w. 'lbere w11 a primary elecUon, the Oraqe County tap ai the froal door The llWI said II'• Funeral aervlctl will be beld 111°'day Elect!oa Servicea ollJce will ftmafn opea pcobably your son • al Fonot Lawn. Glendale. fer J. Clifford unlll I p.m. WedntOdey ud unW mfd. "The tap at the ·door wu the ., ... ., ArJll< ol NewporlJl•ach -died Satur· 1 ht --~ Co ~ Cler" _,,, __ st patrol. 1 due•·•-• ... f 1 door....,end, ~ day al Hcil( ""'1>!tal after en ute1111ed n I "-~•y, un~ • "~" ~ ..,.., u,.; ron 1u· lllneu He wu A. John bu announced. to lht bushes. The man ll\Sldc looked ex-A M_uvi of auefteme he lilntd fame Tht deldllne IJ Thund1y fc." thole: who hausted. lt looked like he had • bullet 15 Occident.I CoUege'• .'11ron man" atllle-must rt&later or reregtster for the June ~1ound In lhe ~1d," Mr1. Hoa1 aald. leli and u • penUlthalon competitor for vote. 11le election ltl'Vlces f1cJllty lt The couple 1 17-year-old aon, Jeffrt.y, the United states tn the 1t24 Olympic located at 1111 E. Chtstnut Ave., Suta sl~ps In .•n adjoini ng cotta1e and .didn't Games In Patil. Ana, phone U4-2244. wake Unti.15 :30 a.m., about I hour ~ 15 He IJ SW'Vlvtd b)' h1I wile Catherine Deputy reglltrar1 will be on duty a\ tbe minutes after Twinning entered his par· of the family home at IOI ~tis Plact; Oranae County courthouse and tl city ents' house. ' a daughter Mn. EmUy Moffett of Glen. halls, shopping centen and polltlca1 party N Hoag, a~t 42, I.a: employed by a Vt.n dale . a ton, John C, Arcue of La Canad.I, headqu1rter• ttiroulhout the county, St uys truck fi rm. and al.1 grandchildren. ' Jobn aald. • I Tratle Plcti • . - For· ri4g~_ T~l.d I "' , ' , A fllldnr pier, dolled wl shops and ' " rest.auranta is the. fde_a beh nd Newport Beach : 'tnJ estate broke~ Denis L. Lynch'a..bld to convert 1,700-fOot tre.rtle of , the Sant.a Ana River into a permanent facility. "We hope to do ··with pr ivate capital what the state and county are doing with Aliso Pier at Laguna Beach," Lynch said today. Lynch said he has enough backers in Newport Beach and HunUngton Beach to fund the M million venture. ''The critical issue ls gett'.ing consent bf the public agencies." The Army Corps of Enginurs ls at present studying Lynch's appllcation to convert the trestle, built to carry pipes out to sea for a sewer outfall. Th<t corps aent . notices or the application to 250 public agencies with a deadline of April 10 set as the time for replies. .. We have had no replies yet," corps engineer Joe Benson said today. "l ex- pect they'll come in at the last minute." The corps wiU evalu ate the com ments. make an engineerin& study of the project -whet.her it will af~~ beach erosion navigaUon or cause floodin11 woblems ....'. and theri rule on the applicatiOn . Anotbtr state agency, the State Lands Division will also have to appr ove tfle project. The division owns the s:ate beach from which the pier would stretch and the tidelands. The division y,·ould have to approve a Jong-term lease for the pier. Lynch said, "It'a aJI speculative at the Newport Police Slate Auction This Saturday Nearly 190 items ranging from a nower vase deeorated with purple flowers to two motorcycles will go 011 the auction block Saturday during the Newport BeaCh police auction. S~ Do~Jd Picker , who is handl ing the auction , satd there are about 50 bicycles among the items for sale. 0 Most of the stuff is property that has aot be<z\ claimed," be said. Proceeda1.Sr the sale will 10 to the city's general fund. Sgt. Picker took special note of the motorcycles. They are 1967 models that are department surplus. "The mlnb'tlum bid we'll, start with ii MOO," he 1aid . A1ao Included for sale are S(veral car stereo radios and tape players, IB small boats and about ·thrfe dozen men's and women's watches. Some of the more unusual items ac- cumulated for sale by the department are a drive-in movie speaker, a Volkswagen camper type jack, a pink clock and a vase with purple flowers. The auction will be held at the city cor- poration yard al 592 Superior at 10 a.m, ~ ' Felled bfl Cot• moment. but 1! the agenrles do tnC!icate that it's all rikbt we would make a SSQ,000 study to determine whether;-i & • 1 economically feasible." Lynch said tentative plana lnctudt building 50 shops on the pier 'and four restaU:rants. The pier could have ··three separate designs. with stretches in Polynesian style, Cape Cod and Spanish decor. f • "There would be no charges ror fishing,'' Lynch said. There 1vould also be boat launching facilities with a crane setup and an area for boats lo be rolled off trailers. '•it could cut a lot of iniles off goin1 to Catalina for some of the smaller boats. Mi Ne11rport Harbor," Lynch added. . 'Candlelight' Case Figure Faces Charge A man who eamed the nickname "Candlel ight K!ller•· for 1 bizarre ritual death today was accused by Huntinlton Beach police as the lriggerman in a loci\ kidnap-murde r three \\'eeks ago. Robert \\'. Liberty, 24, of 350 Avocado St ., Colita Mesa, is listed as a murder and kidnap suspect in bulietins sent out to all y,·estern Jaw en(orcement agencies. A second man accused of kidnaping on- ly, Robert P. Connolly, 49, is belleYed to be traveling with Liberty and is also wanted in connection with the March 12 homicide. Police Detective Gil Veine made the di sclosures today, alt hough Liberty and Connolly have been sought for ques- 1ioning since Thomas C. Astorina, 25, was killed . . A third suspect. Handall G. Allen. 2!1. of the same Costa ~lesa trailer park 1vhere Liberty and Connolly lived. is in custody and wa s sc h e du I ed for prelitninary hearing today in Orange County Superior Court. He was captured shortly after Aslorin111 was found dumped near Sunset Aquatic Park, fatally shot in the abdomen with a· single .22 caliber bullet. "'\\'e're continuing a concerted search·· of the Orange County area and believe it's possible that someone may be hidln&: Liberty and CoMolly." Veine said. "Whoever might be hiding them ht mak ing himself part of a murder and could face a stiff prison senlence." ' 8oth men are believed to be driving 11 ' yellow '65 Ford Mustang convertible wit h a black top and California license number PKL 936. Regarding Connolly, who Is now wanted only for the lesser kidnap charge, Vein• said, "It's unlikely that even if he were proven guilty he would have to face the gas chamber or a life prison sentence." DAl\.l' PH.OT 11..tf !'Mi. •• • Wii iiam Wallace. 13. Newport Beaeh. Is comforted after he was struck by an auto ot Orange Str"et and Paciiic Coo st lfighw ay In \Vest Newport. T~e accident occurred l'~ridny ni/lht ; the boy was hospitalized overnight and sent ho1nc Saturday. river of the car, John 1-1. Scruggs Jr.; 20, Costa Mesa, ,,,as arrested on suspic ion o! felon y hll and run driving . I .1; ' ' In Li b:rari Art exhibits - puppet sho\vs -J>ook sales -s~cial events -all are cra1nmed on the calend ar for the week .~ng Saturday, April 11, which is Na tional Library Week. " 1 • ,,,, Li.brary \Veek \Viii be kicked .off at the Mesa V8rde1 ~ibrary \Yith a puppet shov• Saturd.ay , April 11 , ·at 9:30 a .m. in the child1?n\ section of the library. P resented by the Costa Mesa Rotary Club, the]hOW wiIJ fea· t urc the puppets of Philip l\forrison. \ , "' 1\lorrison's puppets will traVel to the Costa Mesa Lib11ary Saturday at 11 30 a.n1. tn kick off the Wt:~'s actix;i!ies there. . • .... 1 t Friends of the Library will·sponso.rra1book .sale Sata'tda. , April 11 , in the parking lot of the California Federal Savings and Loan building, Costa 1.1esa. Highlighting the \\"eek's activities will be the annual installation luncheon or the Friends or the Library Thursday, April 16,~ the Mesa Verde Country Club. All past president will be honored 11JJd ~ue program \Viii include a talk by Bert Snow, KCET-TV (Channel j.8) commentator, \vho will present a short history of:tJ!e .children's sho;+: :~esam'e Street." , I ~erving as president will be the~-~·: AJ\(~1~.~ey·, and assisti!lg her will be the Mines. Robert Fisher, Kermit Cbrf.stman and W. H. Statn- forth. vice presi dents; \V. J . Collum and Robert Askins, socretaries, and J . J. Kincaid, s9cial chairman. . . · ' Chris Creeley will serve as third vice president and Ronald Hardy '''ill be seated as trea surer. READING IS FOR EVERYONE-Old or young, everyone can find ple~ure in reading .. Ulustrating the theme of N~tion;il L~brary Week, April 11-18, Reading Is for Everyone are (left to right) Cheri Howey, 3, Mrs. Tinta B. Small, 84, an Orange Countian for more than 80 years, and Steve Miller, 6. Special activities are planned in the Costa Mesa and Mesa Verde libraries throughout I.he week, hig hlighted by the annual installation luncheon of the Friends of the Library . UP, UP AND AWAY -Up from learning problems and away to success go children enrolled at the Mar- dan School ol EducationaJ Therapy, to be the recip- ient of funds from a fashion show and luncheon sponsored by the Balboa Harbor Alumnae Chapter of Gamma Phi Beta. Demonstrating his skill on the trampoline, one of the learning devices, is Pat Mc- Lane while George Whitney director of sensory- motor training, and Mri. Robert Santore watch. A·lums Pl µnge In Style Members or the Balboa Harbor Alumnae Chapter of Gamma Phi ·Bela will take a'·dip Wednesday, April 15, but it won't be in lbe ocean or bay. Instead, they will be jum- ping into spring fashions dur- ing a luncheon in the Balboa Bay Club which will be a benefit for the Mardan School of Educational Therapy. From 11 :30· a.m. to 2:30 - p.m., members and guests will view fashions coordinated and described by Mrs. Florence Smales to the music of the Bernie Perry Trio. Mrs. Robert Santore is serv- ing as chairman of the event, and reservations are being ac- cepted by Mrs. Fred Page of Huntington Beach. f\,1ardan School is a non- profit, nonsectarian school for children of normal or abo\'e· average intelllgence who ha ve learning problems. Proceeds from the fash ion showing will be used l o purchase additional teachlng aids for the tebool. · • Formally Presented Miss Victoria Lou ise Sork is presented by her father, La\vrence J. Sork of Newport Beach, to Archb ishop Timothy Manning during the 13th .annual P re- senation Ball sponsored by the Social Service Auxiliary of Los Angeles. The formal affair took place in the Beverly . Hills Hotel with a pink and white theme. Miss Sork was escorted by John Dudley Wisda of Santa Monica. M idn ight Minnie of Broom Bri'gad.e Mops Up ori Faux Pas mainly me. DEAR ANN LANDE RS: .You have come to the defen se of waitresses. airline i tewardesses. plumber!!. postmen and fueler readers. How abou t a good word -11---IM.--tlle-SilMl.--Army ol.-1'.he....Jltoom----- Brigade--those who clean offices al tV-ihl? ANN ~ANDERS . ril fl,fy earliest memories are the messy diapers, ruMY _noses and cr)'ing brat.5 •. All I've ever wanted was to be Cree of it. I ~'--~·-;ffl..ore 1 , hav • 1n · children. Never. Then I met aod married a wonderful man who said he didn 't care about children eit.btr. All he wanted was me. We were very happy for several years, at lea st I thought so. Now he ·tells me his Ideas have chan1ed. he wants a family. Every Um~ he mentions Vie subject I have an attack ol nerves. ,0ur day beglns when most people ffn ish. For some or us it's a sctond job. We·ve just come fr om ptlttlng in eight JIOu rs somev,.here else. 11y message is .. secretaries and even c~ecutlves. Here ~Is: You ct1n make our lives easier by lock· Ing up the stan11)8 nnc;I pelly cash. \\'hen things turn up missing, we arc first on the list of suspects. Please don't throw food an<! haJr.filled r.ups of C!Olfep and soda pop into the waste bas ket. lt nlakes a terrible mess. ------- tr you will just leave it on the d~k we'll take care of ii. \Valer you r own plants, feed and yoor fish, elc. We aren't gardeners or zoo k«?Cpers. Please return the soft drink bottles to lhe vending machine. It's a long walk for a person who must make several trips an eve ning. I'm not even mentioning what sup- Posedly refined and educated people do In office Y(asbrooms. You couldn't print it and most people wookin'l believe It. Thanks a million. -MIDNIGIIT MINNIE DEAR rt11N : If •obodY mounts this col- umn on the bulleHn board of the office where you bave the most troube, I hope you will. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was the eldest in a lar1e family. Elecause there were 10 manf of us, Mother had to de- peod oo help from Ille older children - Shall I have a chlld (at age 30 ) and despise tt, or stick to my position and lake a chance on I01irtg lhe man f love? -BETRAYED DEAR 8.: Your fetlln11 about chlldren ""......, bn_, I _1 _J. ing. You'll probably lose the man either way if you don't gl'Gw up and 1top being Self-centered. and plan to stay that way. Do you agree 1A1it h the wornen al work? I hope not. Please answer.· -BOISE DANCER ~AR ........ ffN-1."ANDERS~: "111-.''"'.,.r---,,.."TV,,....,,., ay a a )'OI& divorced and have two small boys. I work in a pastry shop rrom 8:30 a.m. to ~:30 p.m. J live with my widowed mother and ,an unmarried brother who ls 20. 'l'fle only fun I gel out of lire is dancing. Four evenings a wee k my brother drives me to a roadside tavern where the music is -out of si11ht. I dance with the guys, have a fe w drinks and go home by taxi. The women at wor k say 1 shouldn't go to this place because it doesn't look nice. I've trled to explain that all I do with tbeH men is danct. I am a decent 1irl are looking for ls • danclag partner brt most men who frequent roadside la\'ern1 art' intemted in somelbing 1 bll more borlr.ontal. I agrte wilb the women at work. II you .have trouble getting aloog with your parents ... if you ca n't get UM!m to let yoo live your own life, se nd for Ann Landers' booklet. "Bugged by Parents? How to Get r-.tore Freedom." Send SO cents in coin with your request and a Jong, !lamped , self-addressed envelope Jn care of. the Daily Piiot. I U 0.\ILY PILOT Mondll, A,.U 6, 1970 Bargain . Hunters Attracted by Sale Bargains in assorted shapes and sizes will be offer- ed by the Women's Society of Christian Service dur- ing a rummage sa1e from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomor-row. Setting will be Thompson Hall al the First United Methodist Church, Costa Mesa. Sorting mer- chandise for Cl!e mission benefit are (left to right) the Mmes. W. D. Sneathen, Vance Hunter, chair- man and Wilfrid Wilkinson. Plans Told At Dinner A family dinner in the Richard Assmar home in San : Jose was the setting for the · engagement announcement of Boonie Jean Brown of Santa Ana Heights and Theodore Allan Kellogg of Laguna Beach. The bride-elect, daughter or hlr. and Mrs . Howard R. Brown of 1i1organ Hill is a graduate of San Jose State College. The bridegroom-elect is the son of Mr. and 1t1rs. Robert Kellogg Jr. of Emerald Bav. Ht was graduated f r o m Laguna Beach High School and San Jose St.ate. The couple will be wed 1i1ay 24 Jn St. Mary1s Epixopal Church, Laguna Beach. TOPS Mermaid• TOPS Merging Mermaids hleet al 7:30 p.m. '(Very tbursday In Woodland Sc"hool, Colla Mesa. Blue Ster Moms llunUniton Beach Blue Siar Mothers, tbapter 2 st.age meetings t\leey Mond•Y at 1:'9 p.m. in I.aka P • r k Clubhouse. Travel E;pert Maps Mesa Talk Tips on travel, Including everything from how ta pack, cook outdoors and set up a campsite, will be offered for members of the Mesa·Harbor Club Thursday, April 9, by lifiss Carol Lane. In her position of women's travel director for Shell Oil Co., Miss Lane travels more than 70,000 miles henelf each year lecturing for women's clubs, outdoor groups and men's organizatlom, as well as fulfilling television and radio engagements. The meeUng will take place in the Mesa Verde Country Club with a social hour set for 10:30 a.m. Lunch and the business session will follow. Mrs. Geoe Skawin, 541-7109, and Mrs. Rooald T111Ylor, 545- 1898 are aoceptingVireserva~· lions. The Pill Discussed To gather new information for her camping and touring booklets she makes a yearly The Birth Control Pill will research trip .to such places be discussed by Jack Hovic k, as the Sierra Nevada moun-Huntington B e a c h obstetri- tains. cian, when the Orange Coast She also has written a Mothers of Twins Club meets brochure for women on how Wednesday, April a, in the to properly maintain a car, King 's Tab I e restaurant, drawing on a course in auto Westminster. mechanics she toot last year. The meeting will begin with Miss Lane also d e s i g n s a 7 p.m. social hour followed dress pattUM for t r a v e I by dinner at a. All mothers which are distributed at no of twins are invited to attend cost. She has written a the dinner meeUng a n d brochure illustrating 11 dif-reservations may be made by ferent ways to wear a scarf calling Mrs. Nicholas BarUett. which, she says, "packs flat -::;54s.&;;;;;;;;:t;;:5;;:. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;! and can convert any basic r- dress many different waya." She b listed in ''Two Thousan d Women o f Achievement" and "Foremost Women in Conununications." Make e Sharp Tradei Use Dime-A-Lines ... yoor clo1hes don"! Iii ... You 're self conscious, shy, emborrossed, fruslroled, oll lhot and ._. . . Slimmin' Women is here to CHEER YOU UP and SLIM YOU ;t ~ VEft~:ic'1~ DOWN and in time W ~~>''°' for SUMMER £PRtl ..•..• .' •.••••• FUTURISG THE WORW FMfOUS -sTAVFf'Elt Sl 'STE',tf •«-i•i•tl/for )0 Yt•N by 01"tr I mi//~o" 11-om'" : OPENING SPECIAL I I For YoM A111/ A Fritnd... ; 14 FREETREATMENTS1 I (2 y,..,,. .. ,. Eochll : A fRll flGUll ANALYSIS ANO A I 1 FREE Facial Treatment : I ·w11~ 1\11 '"' .. A•1tl1tt1J.Jtt..Cm I I ., Ollll11tl1a. ' , I MUST BE USED WITHIN 7 DAYS I tf":~~"::~!"!"~'!'!"""'.:•:.•::;•::•:;•:· • ••••••• ~ SL_IMMIN' WMN fQ F:1:1~~Es:~:N II'" D11lr 1:00 A.M. tt 10:00 P.M .. Soturdoy11:00 A.M. t1 Sito P.M. Now Open I BEACH AREA FULLERTON SALON 1101 Newport Blvd. 1111 l•1t <ll••M•• '''· 642·6513 ........... ,,,., ..... ,,.. TUSTIN SALON $41 le•t flrri ltrfft l.,.lt ~ • UMJ11 Your Ho!oscope Tomorrow Aquarius: ·Don't Lose Humor l,lJESOAY APRIL 7 I!)' SYDNEY OMAllR GemW 11 rt1tle11 1 ht- ~ maku •te ti kutd• ,. ptltalaSe, loves to move ablut, fueUon bait wben ....................... --CelellrlU.. uder Ilda alp lodllde Jou Collm, Naa- ey -ui Jee Namatll. ARDIS (Mardi 21-Aprll II): Your· flnanclal picture may be llil]lltly """"""1. Take il ea.I)'. Others are filled with ~-Bu\ IMllt of them are not applicable to )'OW' situaUon. Wait. TAUJUJB (April :JO.May 20): Cycle II high, but mooey situation requires much ~u­ Uon. Don't trap yourself. Be versaWe. Be a w a re of alternatives. One who appears to oppose may ·actually be on your sJde. Gl!MINI (May 21-June 20): Be e1utious. Check details. Acce~t moderaUon; avoid ex· treme1. Som e co-workers, aSIOClate• oou1d make ouUan- dl.ah claims. Stick to the facts. Leave the fancy to others. · CANCER (June 21-July 22): Problems of friends could become ~our own. Don't be indiUerent. But also know that you would be unwise t o Heels Lowered become involved. Key is selllie will have to move slowly. of bala~. Otherwise, minor error could LEO (July U.Aua. %2:): cause you to make retraction. Career matters require ad-Make no snap decisions. justing. Don't permit anyone AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. to rob you of sell-esteem. JI): DomestiC rouUne is sub- Strive to achieve harmonious ject to quick change. You may relationshi ps; Diplomacy is want to get away from it you r ally. Stand tall-sUck to all. But facing issues would principles. be more Intelligent course. VIRGO (Aug. 23.-Sept. 22): Maintain sense of humor. Avoid reaching too far, too PISCES (Feb. JD-March 20): may not bt necessary. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are a spiritual person. You often sacrifice your ()wn needs for good of others. Thls is not to imply you are an angel. But you do have a con.science which refuses to be sUlled • New start is favored -and af!eetion fronl one who means \ much to you will add spice to life. soon. May be wise to stick Olecktill o t h e r com- to familiar ground. Messages munic Dlsgrunted in- d '· be bld.P 1 d dlv ld ua may be a Tof1nd0111 w11tts 1vlk~fllf'YOU !ft ten w gar e roo rea t-ublema•er. Be sure of "*""' •net lclv•. orcilr """ em.rr•1 IJI So Id I •v • -~t, "~rel ttlntl fllf' M.., •1'111 your .:\ ers. me cou ge alldlt ol So wonwn:• k>olll blrtM111 11<'111 • cf"" wroag impressions. v Y message, me to onworr ~1ro1oay ~n, tM OA 1,.v changes are due. But travel P11..ok; ~ ».o·. Y.'100 C•ntr11 11 .. UBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22):;:::.=:i:;========'=""":;w~=~=•·::;';;· :;;· :;::":;;· ==;1 Money value is accented. Price tag is placed on your product. Get advice, aid from one with experience. You can gain if false pride is not permitted to stand in, "ay. SCORPIO (Oct. 21-Nov. 21): Aid due from surprise sources. A third person intervene& in your behalf. Finish what you start. Demonrtrate intentions -and unique abilities. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Work melhodJ require modernization. S e n t i m e n t could cause loss. Be human without being foolish . One behind the scenes Is envious. Protect your reputaUon. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Some recent changes add up to more responsibility. You What can our Bridal Consultant do for a bride-to-be? Lott of thi"91, AM i ll of th•rn •r• h•lpfvl. HOW DO I REG'ISTER? .l•t ••-le eH Ntk t• e11r -''''''· We'll Nitlttef y111r .. .., .w,..., MMI wt.et yo11r Merrled •OIM wlll be I• Hf Shoes Break Rules 1r1;.•, ... ....,. nee we'll all•• Y•• •• tr11ly '"'''"'' .. cellectie1 ef fl11e clliM, 11fTer ettd tleu-re. 1 ... IMllte '' M't'«al ...... MftietS te lhew ye1 eIKtty ttew di,,.,_, ,_.,. wtU 111IJ1 md fHtc.11, HOW DOES IT WO~? BJ JOAN DEPPA PARIS (UPI) -Tbe old rule that when hemlines come down, htela go up definitively was broken by the Paris spring-summer fashion col- lections. With skirts often falling right down to the ankle, heels were lower than ever. The r eason was the casualness of the new longer hemlines -and those that stayed short as well. Many shoes were absolutely flat. Roger Vivier, one of the best known ahoemaiers in Paris, made striking sandaIS or lattice work that rose hlgh on the vamp and buckled in back around the bare beel. Hubert Glvencby, with a new streamlined. collection of medium and long ~ues that had American buyers. lining up to place orders, showed Oat Spanish e s p·a dr l 1 le s wlth dayUnie clothes and 'low san· d_aJs with thongs wrapping around the ankle dyed or printed to match e v e n i n g clothes. Christian Dior has similar sandals, often with a closed toe, however. Instead of the gay Givenchy prints, Dior made them in colored reptile skins for day and satin for evening. Boots, now designed almost exclusively to wear w i th "tn>user suill, generally atop- ped just above the ankle. There were plenty ol sporll shoes with higb. vamp for trouJers as well, the general rule being that troUJer Jtot. tom.s should at leut touch the top of 'the vamp. BULLOCK'S"SANTA ANA AND TOVAR TRESSES INVITE YOU TO SEE BEWITCHING WIGGERY ••• W... '"' fcanlly .U h'-'s c•flll' 111 te cho ... ye11r -.. 41 .. pNNlltl, we'll IM .itle te Mew thta the ,...... .. ye11'M clleMll 111 the l~IH'1 htb...-. A11d ..-.. llew -tty ef ... hin• ...... , .. , ... ff ,., • WHEN SHOULD I REGISTER? A1 MOii! OI yo11r Ht•t•ment 11 1111111eu11c1d. A11d If you c:11111't c:erne fir, but ll11ew what pett~11 yo 11 w111t, ju1t t lY• 111 • rh•f· Lat 111 llelp ..ae ye1111 • belil1tlf1I weddl ... l .. is,., M ... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 o,.. M.-.,. .H frlHy 1111tll f :JI Haven't you always wondererl how you would lllClk as a blond or a ravishing redhead ••• or whether you are the type to weara.flippyfall, a Jackie look ora short shaw Oliver-••• pelhaps you've wondered how you would look with a .smooth chignon, a braid wrapperl coif, or soft curls in the romantic mood ••• We invite you to experiment with Bewitching Wiggeiy in the privacy of our Wiggeiy Room _ •• tiy on every new fashion or color you've ever wanted to see on yourself ••• learn by actual demonstration how to care for your wig ••. shampoo it, set it, tease It into a great new fashion ••• four expert stylists will be here to show you how ••• Thursday, April 9, Friday, April 10 and Saturday, Apnl 11. •• Make your reseMlion now for.one of the Sessions listed below._ • Enrollment is limited to 20 per class ••• NO ADMISSION CHARGE ... llfSEllVATKllS ONLY 547·7211. £xt. 393 D Thursday, April 9, 2:00 p.m. D Thursday, April 9, 6:30 p.m. O-Friday, April 10, 10:30 a.m. D Friday, April!O, 2:30 p.m. D Saturday, April 11, 10:30 am. ilttnliiY.'ADfilll~~·-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Wigs from 18.95 to 30.00 ••• personal cutting and styTin1 included with purchase. Cosmetic Aisle. First Floor S ANTA l FASHION SQ UAR E ... .- . " ~osia .. Mesa * VOL 63, NO. 10, l ~1ECT\ONS, 42 PAGES \ I • our Carswell Gets Past 1st Hurdle \\'.ASHINGTON (AP ) -Judge G. Har· rotd Carswell's nomination t o the supreme Court won it& first crucial test Moo.day as the Senate rejected a motion to return the nomination to the Ju!liciary Committee. The recommiual motion by Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), a l<ader of the opposition, was designed to kill the nominaUon of the 60-year4d Ta1lahassee, Fla.; jurist. The Senate now will vote Wednesday on confirmation of Carswell, the second Southerner nominated by President Nixon for the Supreme Court vacancy created neirly a year ago by the resignation of Justice Abe Fortas. -.... Nixon's first choice, Judge Clement F. Haynswortii Jr., of Greenville, S.C., was rejected by the Senate last November by a 55-45 vote. Senate le8dm; ~ both parties said they expected defeat of Bayh's recommittal motion to be followed by confinnation of Carswell, although perhaps by a . nar- i:-margin .. Sacoe ...,..... whe voted .qainst ........ 11 uld they Would-~ Caml'oll'• --'l'lieJ -that-g It to CliiliiDlllot-jult be dUCking the i§Ue. On the other band, .............. who announced Ibey favored ?etUminc the nominOlion to commlllei fer !Ur1ll<r hearings said they would clllclole later bow they would vote on conflimltion if the recommittal motion failtd. One of those who predicted con- firmation was Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mamfl<ld. The Montana Democrat, lltill decliltinc to say how he will vote, bad previously rated the -of Ille h~<Alibl bat· tie over the Tallahassee, F11., jurist's nomination a tossup. "I imagine the vote on retui'ning it to commiUee will be the precursor to the vi>te on Wednesday," Mansfield said prior to the voting. JAMES E. PENCE JR., 24 Topless Bust Hits Mesa Bar For 8th Time Tb<y busted Costa · li!eaa's topless tavern again Sunday, this time citing a J-lady <Jad ooJy m a G-alriill, • rwn, ..u ..,.i ' 11110o ~tJy ...;. • memorating an olCI romance. 1be Sunday afternoon vii.it brought te qlil jllie numlier of cases lo(ged al Thi 1'tnlliiUae, 117 E. ll'th 81,. Wttll lho lint defendanll due in court thla /nomlng. Citationa were issued Sunday charging Karyn M, Rulanki, 23, of El Monie, with entertaining without a permit, aOd chargin1 owner Ray ROOm, 25, o{ Costa Mesa, for allowing it. . Manager Dennis D. Vaughan, SI, and topless dancer Diane E. Brawley, 25, of Anaheim, were scheduled to appear today at 1:30 a.m. in Harbor Judicial District Court. They were arrested a week ago and are free on $125 bail, while planning to plead innocent today through attorney 9eni<!n Moore and request jury trials. ORANGE COUNTY, ·CALIFORNIA ' . ' . . . -· GEORGE M. ALLEYN, 24 ROGl!'R D. GOllE, 21 WALTER C. FRAGE, '23 -" • • • . ' . . • 'TEN CINT'S • . ... r ' ' . '~- \· One ·Susped Kills SeJfli ·_ · . • ' . J . . . . ·Other 8eld. . ~ • r •. SAUGUS, Cal~. (AP) -.OiiO el'lwo men •ccused of ldlllr1I ·f-, biPIJ patrolqien _in a IUD bat~e' canmltted suicld~ today, authoriu,es· re~. RJs bod1 was found by a .Ioi'ce of of!lcert 'in Pl maili •hd .,~ llali jacllolli :Who ............. ·---ho ""' -bealeged for 1ix ·bour1. ..._ A~thoritica flrit had said he was :!'I.,. tured aliv,e.. ~-· -· For live houri he had lillll a hoottholcler'hootage•hel .... rallliiliil'ldnt unharmed. 'The other -· -by officers, was captured earlier, in a canyon, · • The four highway potrolmen. ""' lr!U• ed after they stopped • car whole oc-upanta were reported to have·brandilbtd guns at motorists on a freftay. After the shootout. tht two fled separately an foot. Jack Wright Twinning, ·.s5, toot refuge In the isolated hooac atop a hill in hrusli1 country 35 miles north Of Loa: Ancelet 1bout 4:15 a.m .. and aporadicllly: ei• changed· shota with -a force of ~ ICCl'e officers unUl bis · eapture ,aboeil 10:15 •. m. ·Mrs., GI ... S. Hoag and her oon, Jil' fery, 17,. escaped but Hoa1. was beld t~ ~v:~ uptll ~\unharmed~ • ..,..,. 9a.m.' .... t~I ··, -When,Hoog....,.oullie'llld.TobjnOI& ~'r~=,:.rc ·~,~ JluJlnC ~ fu<11ni ... ~· ,. g~=-.. • • lim .. the lreew113';.ond ·· . lillip& ~'inllal..1':.~ lw:t)' 1' . ' . •• • . OO~·ltor!ried thl ,_ With i*tois and lf!ollum· ilter warm., tWfnolng to surrender. · Dw;nc ll)udi of the .... they had ne1otJated with him. by telOj>OOM, and he said at one pbtnt he war thlnkinl'·al·tak· inl his· life. . Twinning continued to fire oporadk:ally after releasing Hoag. · At one Ume Twinning shouted when told ID !llrrendcr: "I'll he dcadU !:Walt out." I . Newsmen asked him if he meant he ex- pects Canwell to be confirmed. "Yes, that's the way it lOOks at the moment," Mamfield replied. Sgt. Jack Calnon, of the police vice and intelligence detail, said Miss Raslawski was dancing to a slow, seductive number when he-dropped in Sunday. . ' . . •• ' t ' • • ~ ' • . ' • Wblle investigating ,..,...11 that thl lw<> men in an automobile had been.: pointing guns al motorists ..... the Golden State Freeway, two of the alain palrolm<n apotted •car, answering the~. parked in·~ of J's Coffee Shop·jultoff the freeway. 1,'hey radloel!! for.. JftlpG a .. · -.. · ' ·, . ' Ul'IT•~ OFFICERS, IYSTAHOl!RS STAND· BY<ONE· OI' CHP·'DEATM •cARS ·IN' .YA~ENCIA GUNFIGHT" " Four Highway Patrolman Killocl; Ono Su1poct Capturocl; Another Kiili Self Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott oC Pennsylvania reiterattd be is confident that Carswell will be confirmed. She was cited for violation or the municipal ordinance on p u b 1 i c en· tertainment after two additional tunes provided additional evidence. Scott said fie sees enough votes · to assure Carswell's con ft rm at l on on ''there may be aome small or modest Wednesday although he told reporters slippage" irom the vote on recommittal. Police said Miss Raslawski wore a black G«ri.ng beneath a filmy. waisUine veil and had a tattoo saying: Sonny 1·24- 61 emblazoned on her left shoulder. Reagan Picks W right,63, Last Mesa Council Agenda As State Chief Justice • Before Election Light SACRAMENTO (AP.) -Go•. Re,/gan appointed Appeal Court Justice Donald R. Wright of Lc>s Angeles today as chief justice of the California Supreme Court. , .. Wrlgh:t11U..a Republican, is a Harvan1 A relative!)' light agenda , plus a stern Low bidder ior the project, With 1 Law'.sCbool ' traduate ·Wbo ·began prac· Warniiig-aboot·any-over-enthu!iastic-c«n· $21.9,57• offer,.--was Steiny-k---MitcheJ~Inc., ticing·Jaw in Pasadena in 1933 and first paigning aw.ail! the C.OSta Men City • higbwaf engineering company. becanie a jtidge in tM Los Angeles-area 'l1le prOll'am calls for improved signal · · Council tonight for its final meeting aod ltreet lighting facilities 00 Harbor 20 years later. before qte municipal electjon. BoUlevard from Bay Street north to What Subject to confirmation. Wright will Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley said his final will eventually be MacArthur Boulevard. , succeed retired Chief Justice Roger B. 11:cl as mayor may very well be to rap his Tbe tOOrougbfare wtll run.from c.orona Traynor· gavel and abruptly adjomn the meeting if del Mar and bend around to tie into what Wright's appointment, first to the electioneering gets out of hand . is now Talbert Avenue. Supreme Court by Reagan, puts the "I'm Ced up to the eyeballs," be said in . Sev~ oth~ matters up for con· poliUcal split on the Supreme Court at reference to recent turmoil and tactics s1deratK>11 -originated with last week's four Democrats and three Republicans. regarding political campaign posters on Costa Meu Planning c 0 m m i 1 5 i 0 0 Tht other Republicans are Marshall public and private property. meetinc, one that was brier and to the McComb and Louis H. Burke. Challengers against iDcumbent can-p»nt. Tbert had been speculation th a t didates George A. Tucker and Willard T. Councilman William t .. st. Clair, ~·would ,elevate Burke to' the chief ~ Jordan, both of whom seek new tenns, however, plans to bring up the issue of · juSticeship and then make his appointee have been increasingly vocal at reeent poliUcal ~paign 1lps and their .rela-an a.saociate..juaticeo-· meetings. tioo to tb1e dty'1 eliltinc:·aip ordinance. l'here'. wls "tentati\re plan by th~ Ulree· Voters go to the polls a week from Conflicta arose taa~ over •Mt js member Commililoa on ·Judicial Ap- Tueaday to determine whether Tucker and -wbat Iii not-!<gal ,....,_Ole !Ow pqlntmenp to'.niffl.Aprll !7 in San,Fran· and Jordan wtll return to their seats on leading him to requelt a ~al meetmi cist9 to .consider the ,appointment. . presiding justice of the State COurt·of Ap- peal. 'Ttle chief justice of the Slate Supreme Court earns $43,269 a year.' . · · The court was · ~in/ qse•· tn , Los Angeles When the appointme~t wa1 i.n· nouncecl. . r Reaian-lauded Wright·as "l rnan·com-- mitted to . the princlj>le' ',of '•j udicial restraint, who can provide·tht leadenhip necessary to restore public t'Ol'lfidence tn our court system and retutn h to the · highest position of lntegrlW. · disnity . and respect." · Post Office Gets <;:uiof f s . in Mesa Service cutbacks expected to ·save SS,000 per year wiU bqin at the Qqsta Mesa Post Office's two primary•facilllies beginning ~prH 18,. for an ~ indefinite period . ' . • ' Wreck Changes Mesa Market Into 'Drive-in' Henry Anderson dropped by a con~ venience market Jn Costa Mesa Sunday night for a half·iallon of millt, then. went back jnSide. That wouldn't be so newswortby, e1~ cept he was' in his car. · · "l 0 thought ·1 bad it Jn rever~.~· .~d Anderm, 60, of 11$5 Dorset Lane,.Cosia Mesa. ,. · .,I heard this engine revving ind ihen I s~w it coming," said Miles H.,Moore: 36, of 515 Traverse Olive, Costa Mesa" Moore said he jumped -out 1of'the path or And(rson's cai:eening car aS lih1ttierin.g g1aas .and merchandise Oew 'ln all dlrec· (See 8HOO'l'OUT, hfe·ll-' I-Ost His Head,. Says Attendant Police were Jent ·to a COltl. MtN' service station Saturday night i n re1u><mse to a medical aid request , only ,to find it slightly"llnfounded. --. The JO.year-old man involved said hbi head.. WU lost. • Questioning at the scene, 5IO W. ttth st .. led to his alleptlon that be had been forced to take hSD, but ha coukln't·t<n Offlc11 Dennis Hoosleld who did It « where. · He was arrested ·on chargea of being µnder the influenct of drugs and taken in~ to protective custody. Grange Ilona . . . Neither1 Moore,' AnderJOn,/nor srien ,1\re_a .. er Eleven Market clerk John Purvis, of 10'743EtPasoAve.1 Fountain .Valley, was Those 1t1nny Hie. are here t,o injured: , ' . • · stay, at least for a·whJle, but blP "He just turned off the ignilion·ahd got cloud• will be ·forming over the out," said Moore. . , • Or8nge Coast-Tueldly. Temper1t.. Police · said no ' Initial • .eatlm&te• of tures should stick . close to the damage to·the: mark'et an097 Baker st.. ' aeventies loCall7 ud up to 80 ifto was ma<le.af\er,it waa newt, ini~tattd land. 11 a drive-in store.· ' . · · · I A ·120 with new four-year ~s. to tbruh'out the ~acts lait Fridly niaht. C-Onfimtation P!'?ba.bly woul~ '~me that 'tbe cliaUengers lnc'~Plunng:~was-he:ld~air said he w;t1-day~u....ao~1ng con- missioner Jack Hammelt, industrial bring up the topic tonight under coun· traveralal about it. . . Saturday· window ·eervict . will • be dlacoiitJ.nued at U.., main and Mtl• · C!liter'~ra1!¢h(s1 'it\t.llie facillU~'Wlll re- m8in , ol)\!n foe letter -' cfrj)p:s'abd stamp •eMing lllllchint use.· . ' : · They said the car l'ai lowed bicl< out INSmE-TODA.Y aMhH~H«!-·--'-''---1--,,-n, ppol! h~1-t---l ~gtJ: of Air California wltla machinist Theodore C. ''Ted" MOlh. cibnen's comments. The comm!saion 'is composed of Acting operating engineer David J. Yamat, plus He wit issued a citation ·tast Tuesday Chief J'ualice staqley ,MIMlk, chairman ; · cpllegians Thomas Manus Jr. and B. Eli by council aspirant Manus, for alle1edly Atty.'GtJ\. 'Jborn,aa-0.•Lyncll.and Justite A 9'll·..,Ylee un~ at Ille lflorlior Sliop- pihg Center a'nd a small contract station at, 19th Street.•l"f Harl>\" l!olil'fard are Kaser. posting sign• for Oouncilman Tucker's le-Parter.· Wood: « ... ~ Angelta,. senior Manus is employed at Hoag Memorial election in the Newport Boulevard right· ttsopital a~ Kaser works as a carpen!_er. of-way illegally. SOth are Vietnam veterans and both at-Councilman st. Clair has pleaded· ln- ltnd college under the GI blll. nQCent to the charge brought by Manus , One of the ~ indiViduaJ 1tems of through signing the citation for illegal business coming before the coltncll at Its sign placemenL 7130 p.m. is awarding Of 1 contract for He was ordered to appear Mays before Harbor Boulevard signal a y 1 t e m • • Harbor Judicial District Cota't Judge «mounUna kt nearly 1 quarter ot a Donald Dungan, former Costa Mesa city 1nllllon dollars. attorney. for • jury trlel. ' ' ' ' Facing Nerco Rap tuj,ffectcd b)fthe cutbict. 1 • Workers wUI be on dUty~Silurdlys for will<•ll package pickup •• · 1 con· PHILADELPHIA .,(0Pt} -Alfr'® J. vehience, according to P01tln.ier ,JOiin Giler, the Ecuod«tln C0111UI In l'liilidel· B. Kluci.w;ci. phia, remained iii'; h :cowty derentfoo D~Ltpuatlon of Saturday IUVice Is 1 cent~ todll)' a(ter Hlf'!IJlll1111y lililked at ~n,optlon left vp, to local ~ by , poslina •100,000. ~ 'iJf!t hfl .11fnt-on 11 .. Poltmuttr Genqal Wbiton M. .Blount u 1 narcoUcs dilr1e.. • • • a method of cuu!n1 operatlonal C\l!llL ~es~'s .~nte~ Ballots · Available . Cotta Mesa,vot•rs haYe unlll April I to apptf by man .for abltntee ballots lor the April t4 city electJon, l<COl)lin •. lo Atlllil City Clerk Ell .. n'Phlnney. Yotera who do not apply by mall >ean wait until 1a1 late aa: April ts rto get their aboeol<e· bal)ot •lo per.son frlilli ·the ctly clert·•a office, .the said. :i --~.-...--_ ..... ~-- , Pacific Southwtsi· AtrlinU 'is ei'pected" from some Air' Cal ' 1.(~c~~old~r~ and emplo~Jf, Sn Page 26. , , ••rtM .. ...... " C•U"'111• I ClltcllMI Ulll , '""'"" ..... Ctlllk1 # -,. D6lflt '"""' -' ii(--II --ft -.. -... ................... __ ,....., ,-,_ ..... , .. ...,.... .. -.. n.....•·• " •f"M:llf ,... ' ................ M ·-. ....... ,..... ...... ,.._. U-11 --D --.. •• • -~ -.... ";-:: -'.!4 • t. .... 'll' ' " I DAILY PILOT c • • Beagan May~~support Coa~t Oii Drilling ~r~tes .t· 1 .~ I . l ') • f.. ' ' .. , ' . . . ! a, THOi\tA.S FOl\TlJNI ~ mlriDt prtl9'Vtl. and Mn. ;tifanhall ~ • lolllnr up In--The Jobbyllt'• ftt would be determined tbiri: 1arc seven sanctuartcs covering .... - - -In -· .... U.S. p..-1 ......,, ~ w!lll Ille .. 1-UlluPI WU II I dlllJ rote J>lul espwa. IJiroll ooe'lourt~ ol the Cllllomla J!*orll ti lllrte Orup Coal dU. II· -... -~•-18 ~· ""''"-.._ • , • ._.. lllll, ~ leldl ,._ ..utllne 11111 would be pi:otecttd by the 11111l11b1Dblnnlngtocalol!lhoreolldrll1· 1111 •., ,....,. .,.,..,,_ ,illlt._. el tllt llnl dU. -GJ.a Vlddor Ille[ II City Council bill But she noted In cotlecUng money inc through Congress were sbapina ap u plltlipnl llUdl ti the Santa Ml'. It"' wm''-Uliii' ti llfl'."'I • te --..tklc Jut wttk. "Ptrhai>t lhi1 eouncl1 from communlU~ ln other areas it is a prunlalng tad1y. I ( ....... ., 1111 llllw-H Pa II a 1 le a 1111'1 tltt pnlemd ~ --.J C... 11f with 12,000. County quesUon ot how worried they are. The aood word for Newport ..Btic&, Beach ud Newport Bt1ch), whkh ls 1 hun't yet been dlscloeed. supeniton Aid tbiy would match it if "Take Humboldt and Mendocino coun· ~ <Belch · and San Clemente was sanctu11y under~ 1&1.te11 CUnnln&bam--Loreru:, who was in Washington o bl.I Newport, 4(lml and San Clemeote com· ties. I don'1 know how Wl)J'ried they are," thit hlrlfte' a JObt>yist may not be u e1· Sbe11 Act. way to 1 vacation trip in E ope, bined can cOme up with ~.000." she said. penllve u earlier tbougbt and that Gov. Two locaJ ~pretentaUves were Jn telephoned Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart the (1be Coastal Area Protective Leacue The bitf'llas l;ieen introduced Into the Reagan Is willing to aid their came. Wubington, D.C., Wt week -Kans J. COutal Area Protective Leap. Mn. has pledged to contribute '5,000.) U.S. Sen.1te by Alan Cranston CD-Calif.) The bill the thr« city govmaeals LoNnt of the COastal Area Protective Stewart said It had betn tbouaht • lob-Lacuna Councilman J0111pb O'&lllivaa and ~red by three otheer senators "'IBb to see passed~ould prtven\ oil drill· i.a,ut and Newport Beach Mayor byist's fte to push the bill '1would be uid, 11We are oriented toward the beach tnctuclliir George Murphy (R..callt. }. tng in federal water, t>tain!ui)f three Doreen Marshall. Lorenz early in the anywhere from $50,000 to $100,000. and mult do anythlng poulble to protect Lorens said Richard Hann a (0· mllll otflbrn't, adjacent to ..Us where ..U interviewed ~eral prolesaional lnllead It looks Utt $10,000 to SU;JIOO, our beadL" Weitmlnster} has agreed to introduce a the oeaNbore rtate tidll waten are lobbyi.lta (called Jectalativt advocates) poutbly '15,000 at tbe !DOit." Newport Mayor Mrs. Mara.hall said companion bill into the House o f Killing Trial Representatives sinct lhe aref curranO, is unrepresented with tht. dealh of Jame.t ut\, Mrs. ri.tarshaU said she. talked to Ref>. Craig Hosmer (R·Lon& Beach), the only Orange Countr cqng~ssman on the Iillerjor Committee, while she was in washtngrqQ.' ~· : ' ~ . ·' · · · Reagan agreeing lo support the bllt Is "tremendously' importan t," she Sa.id. "His office could give help to our representative.'' She said the city o! San Diego hu a legi.slatlve advocate on a permanent basil who a]so would work with the county cities' lobbyist. 'Candlelight' Case Figure Faces Charge A man who earned the nkll:name ''Candlelight Killer" for a bizarre ritual death today was accused by Huntington Beach pollce..u the triuerman m a local kidnap.murder thret weeks ago. SA Officer Jury Being Selected Robert W. Liberty, 24, ol 350 Avocado St., Costa Mesa. is listed as a murder and kidnap suspect in bulletins !ent 01Jt to all western law eniorcemmt 11tncles. A second man acrused of tld.napin1 on- ly, Robert P. COnnolly, 49, II believed to be traveling with Liberty and ts also wanted in COMection With the March 12 homicide. folice Detective Gil Veine made the diac10SUtts today, although l.Jberty ind Connolly have been ""lhl for ques. tioolng lince Tbomn C • .utorina, ZS, WU killed. • A third suspect, Randall G. Allen, 25. of the same Costa Mesa trailer park where Libtrty and C<rmolly lived, 11 in custody and was scheduled for preliminary hearing today in Oran1e County Superior Court. He was captured sbortly after Astcrina WU found dumped near Sunset Aquatic Park, fatally shot b1 the abdomen with I single .z2 caliber bullet. "We're cootlnuing a concerted IW'ch ol the Orange Q)unty area and believe it's possible that someone may be hid.Ing Liberty and COnnolly," Veine lllid. "Wboev.,. mJPI be hiding them Is mUJni llimteJI port of a murder and coukl flee a ltiff prilon aentence." Both nieii are believed to be driving a yeli91J '15 Ford Mllllul convertible with a bl><k toil and C&lllwnla llceole number PKL 931. llepnling Col1nolly, who Is -wanted oo1y t.. the i-r kidnap cbarl<,,ye1ne Aid, "lt'• ~111 thlt ewn U hi .,.... prov .. pill)" lie would ,ha,. to f-Ille 1u chamber or a lite pr:llOll M!ltel\ct." Llbtrty received his nklm111ne In coo· ned1Cl1 -the <lr&nglJnl death ti I Westminster moOK!:r in 1911S durh11 which he wu found near the body, playlns a plier by cendleligbl. He WU ruled Insane and confined lo I st.ate bolpital but wu releallld after being rul~ "sane." TV Chef to Aid Y Pancake Feed Mike Roy the KNX chef. has been added to the Ust of television and rldlo penonaUUes who will cook tn1kfut at the Orange Coast YMCA P a n c a k e Breakfast slated for 7:30 a.m. April ti at RJchard'• Lklo Market in Newport Beach. Other per110nalities scheduled for the breakran include Jack Zar!mba, Dick Lane. Bruce: Mcintyre, Al Jarvis, Harry Babhilt, and Alan Young. The pancakes, sausages and oran1e Juice are bein1 provided by Richard'! Market in the fund r1i.!ling bre1kfast d!Slgnod to reduoe the debt on the YM· CA 's Olympic Siu peols. I DAILY PILOT 011.\HOE COAST l'UILllHING COMl'.\lt'I' Jloltort N. Woo' "'"lill"'t •NI l"uMl1 ..... J•c\ It. c.r1 • ., Vlort "'"-' ..... G-el Mtilltt• )JO W11t lty Str11t Maili~t Mlr9t1! r.o .••• IS60, •1•1• --,......,, htdl: nn w..1 ••""9 '"""""',.. · 1...,,,. ,_,,, m ,...,11 •-"""'._* ••di: uv• ...,,~ •~IW••• .... (.._lw: JU Nt11t1 II °"'11111 11 .. 1 l A . -. I DAIL 1 PILOT Slefl PMM FLAG FLOWING, PUNTING ANO SCULLING SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DE~EAT Down to Sea Gulps • ID I' Bal Isle Tugboat Puts Vp Game But Losing Fight 17 AllTlllJJt II. VINSEL °' ... ....,,. ........ They went down to lbt -In ahipg SllmUf -' the llolboo l•land PunUng and 1C111tJni Society ond the San Diego Rat and Asplr1Uon Society -wttltolll 1 aoJita17 star to 1teer them by. p,. 'trllole lllJq Woy wllllldll' have he!Jiod. ' Compe!inf for the tr14111oHteqed tropby, a rtJded bent elbow with a llall dsndted to band, the two orpolutllllll •tqed 'l'be Grut Tqbo1I Raoe. Oh, 'Twu a movlna •ICIU to "' marlnen ., movod by the challange of th< d1y, Ibo maJlll)" ol San Di'IO Bly and the wtnd on their foca. Ofte could tee arown mtll nallowiq hanf. Tucboat.s wn in short tupply, so the Su Dlqo lfOllP plllod the old •foot fer· rybolt M011teny-<qllippod with two blro -qlinll the lllSAPSOC'1 ptueky JilUe SS Mldllg111, equipped with gl1 .... and a jug. The: Michiaan, sunk and salva&td five times to the best of tta · ·owner's· tmowlodle, .. t aail for S111 Diego Friday ·aboard an Advance Marine Transport truck. C1itOooJ11 Dick S!Jaw: of Coron' del Mar, who doublea aa commodcn of the SculU.g and Punllng Society'• fl111hlp, auperYlled tbe Mklllaan's rtmovll from Ne1JJ)Ort Harbor waten. · He deooibod the lnidc trip u a am-niJll maneuver to cooONJ 1111 true merit ud apoed ol the Mlchlpa, which ii 1bout twice tbe·llll ti one of tile Monterey'• propelllrs. MuHJtucle1 greeted the 1 p.m. race with hllh 1ptrll1 u the Mlchll111 ch111gtd away from the San Dieco Yacht Club for the 11artl111 line of/ the oouthweat tip of Shelter taJand, Cbeen went up, aJon& with a bute American rtq. Oki Glory dwtrfed the Michigan like 1 spinnaker broken k>oR from Ila lines, while the tqUare-bulltd Monterey iroan- ed aloni Jn her wake. A phalanx of some 20 other watercraft followed the two venerable vesHll, in· du4!1!1 a· Harbor Police· boil "•!>icll shadowed the entire nee. Dubbed the S. S. Alplrolion for the con- test, the Monterey w11 ~ded with rac· ine entbuaiuta wbo ~ to llchtm her toad ti/ abool :11111110m 'of blllut. ' An artJIJery piece 11 the tip of Sheller llllllld boomed to lilJl&I the run for the IDOlll1 down ........ " ... DIUlicll milll and 1111 llk'f!ICM llUblad Into the Jud. Orll!lt arnoke eruptod !mn a - flare m the colorful liWe boll -held toplblr by pllnt and rood fatlb -ap- pmntly .i,..uinr a clrooPt •board. Doplle •kill ind nauttcll tmowhow, Commodore Shaw blew hi• lead becauoe everytime 11< 1ltempted to ch1D1e coar., all bandJ aboard the MichJ&an had to chanae 1e1ts. She f1llerod j111t 1borl of the flnilb line and the S. o. Asplr1tlon ch111Jtd •cross the victor, followed by a ctltbratlon which linaered on into Sunday. 'lbe Bent Elbow Trophy wu awarded to c:ustody ol the Sin Die10 lletl and Aspiration Society, while a return match -perhaps in Newport Harbor -was •ched~ f«-S<plem~. Huge Newport Crowds Cause Traffic, W reeks From Page 1 SHOOTOUT. • • second patrol car arrivtd withln minutes. It wa1 abortly before mldnl1ht. One wttne11, among four younc persons in a car towing 1 boat, 1ald he wu "•lift. By JOANNE REYNOU>S IH Ille .. I" Plltt Ir." An e~limated t•,ooo peraoa1 -moat of them rldinc in autos -vilited the shorts of Newport Beach this weekend. There ~·ere three major traffic accldenll, but lifeguards' recorded no rtlC\les durlna: the two days or warm weather and calm autr. A Newport man Was listed in fair CM· dition and his unidentified pauenger was In guarded condition tocfay at Hoag Hot- pital following an early Monday motnq,1 crash at Riverside DriYe and Cout Hip. way. Hospital officials: said they wtre with·· holding the identitJ of the woman pencllnl noUficalion of nt1t of kin. Accordin& to preliminary reports, tht woman was a pa11enier in a 1m11! for. elm car driven by Frank Rttbtrt Buck, 3T, of 1330 P1Ji11de1 Road which er:a1hed lntn 1 brick store front near the lnt~mc. ding in the parking lot. and saw a tlon. California Highway Patrol car approach Pollet Aid clmlmltancea of the accl· a car with ·two mtn in tt. dent art under investigatlon. "The two ofUcva aot out and one ap--.Cotta Mesa resident John Howard proached," the witneu aaid. "11>e fellow Scru.ga Jr., 20. of 182',; Cecil Place w1s on the pusenger side 1ot out and lm- frte Oh .SI.DO ball today followln1 his •r· mediately shot one cop, picked up the rnt P'rida:1 nt&ht on char1es of fektny 'cop'• shotiun and went around to tht hit and run. front of 1he ca.t and ahot the other cop. Accordlng to pclice, Scrugcs wu alle1· "Another hfghway peirol e&r pulled up edly IOUijlbound on· Orange Street, turnln& behind. n.en the patr&l car'a driver 1ot left oato Coast ·Hlthway when he struc k out and shot. He was sunned down. 'Ille ii.rear-old WUUain Wallace who was remaining· cop held off these two .n•v1 for cniSllnl: Cout Hiahway in the crou walk • ..,, at the Oranae street inttrieClion. about five minutes by hlnutU. The Ne.wJ>Qrt Beach youth wa1 admitted "Finally one fellow went iround to the to H'oa1 Hospital for observatlon and was front ol the hi&hway patrol cu and shot relened SJturday. this young cop ln the face ." Witnesses of the accident not~ Scrug:gs' A hlshway patrol apoke1man slid ht license numbtr and he was stopped by could not e1pl1in how two mern were able patrolmm'aboul 1$ minut• later on Coast to shoot down four off~ers. Highway. The assallants abandQJted their Millet. In another Sunday evenin1 acicdent, riddled automobile and fltd on foot. Co El four ptnon• tte1ped serious Injury In a The fuittlve arrttttd in a canyon wu Ullty ootion h•ld en cr11b 11 MarCll& Avenue and 11th idenllOed by pollc1 11 RUJMll Lowtll s1r .. 1. Talbert, :ta. Talbert was wounded twice after ht U• Bureau Opens c11 • ., ... •ho" and acuffled w1th ·-Clif• ford Araue Din Scllwm. 40, Chic••·· who .... I nf , " alotplng In h~ complr truck -n o tr to usl1t In Jilt minute r•lbert fired ln\e It, 1 sflOblman aakl. Jury. selection be1an today In the Superior Court trial of a Santa Ana police offk:er accueed of using unn~ssary force to subd11e a youth being transported to Oranae C.ounty Juvenile Hall. Officer Richard E. Faust, 27. faces charges of usault with a deadly weapon. It ia allepd that he used his nighl!tick witb euaalve force to prevent the escape last ' July a of 17·ytar~ld Jesse GilmOle or Santa Ana. Witnesse! have testified In earlier heariqs that the officer clubbed the Negro youth into submWion after the boy bolted from bis patrOI car and then beat him while be was helpless on the ground, Their testimony led the 1969 Orange County Grand Jury to indict Faust. That Indictment has been continuously condemned by Santa Ana Police Chief Edward J. Allen. Several members or the grand jury have been subpoened by defense attorney Ron Owen to appear as witnesse.s. Owen's earlier attempts to have the ill· dlctmenl dismissed on the grounds that lhe 1969 grand jury wu prejudired towards law enforcement ~·ere. rejected in Superior Court. Also throWn out were his demands that the panel produce conr plett transcripts of all closed door prn- ceedings relating to the. indictment of Fausl War Veterans Meet ~femben of the• Huntington Beach Bar· racb No. 23e0, Veterans oI World War I. wlll meet at 12:30 p.m., Tuesday. at the Muonlc Temple, 705 Palm Ave .• Huntington Beach. AU veterans of World War I are Invited to attend. Two prosecutors from . the state at~ ·torncy getJeral's offict today took over the Faust trial chores from the ,district attorney's office after District Attorney Cecil Hicks poinled out thal hi.s close relalionShip v.·ith the Santa Ana Pollet Department might ltad to charges ol conflict of inter~t. Taking over from Hicks' pro&eeutors were deputy attorneys general Bradley A. Stoutt and Russell Jungerich. Lagunan Charged 011 Drug Count By Mesa Police A Laguna Beach man whose car was ~topped for a traffic cita tion faces felony drug charges today, after Costa Meu police clajm they uncovered a hoard of f110re than 1,500 pills in the vehicle.. Charles S. Dreyer, 32, ol 1645 Suniet Ridge Drive, was booked Friday on charges of possession of dangerous drugs for sale and possession of marijuana. Police said Officer Gary Barwig stop. ped OJ-eyer's car in the 1900 block of " Newport Boulevard and subsequent in- \•estigation led to discovery of the piµs. A small quantity of marijuana was also ' found in the car, detectives said today, Addin& tha& charge to Dreyer's bookinl record : Besides the l,500 suspected barbiturate ,,. pills, so-called reds, 36 other a550tted • • drug tablets ol uncertain nature were confiscated as evidence.. c' . .; reailtratltn or voters for lhe June 1 Rit T ' esda Pellce Mid Tllbtrt, app&NnUy out of dmary el<clioll,-li><--Or'"P C:O..OtY-==;=es=~~""-"~=.!----"''mmm.,u.,,ni"'tlailm..' •I Ji!Jtokwhlpr Schwan.ana. __ ::;::~ Election Services office will remain open Funeral Mrvicu 1tl.ll be hild 'I\Jis•ay fled ln the' camper true . until 9 p.m. Wednuday and until mid· at Forest Lawn , Glendale, for J. CUUerd Ht"'' apprehended without n1l1ta1'¢t · h "·"-· ••-• s later ln a can)'MI nearby. n1g t Thursday, i..ounty Cle.rk Wllllam ISt ArP.-et Newpott Belch who -atur-'11\t.alaln patretmen wtre ldtntllttd 11 John has announced. dQ 1t ltoaa Hellrit.11 1fttt an t1\endtd Wiit c Fr •• •• D 0 " nir-u. Ht w•• ... tr . ap, ..... : '"'pr . ore, .. : The deadline ls 111W'lday for thole who A native of Jf\ltntme, ht l•lnttl fame James Edward Pence Jr .. ts. and George must reaisltr or rmalster for the June 1~ Octldlntal Colle1t'• "lnm man" athle-M. Alleyn, 2t. All were mlrrltd ind lived vote. The election se?Ytcu fldUty ta lelt: and 15 a pent.atl'l•lon tomJ)ttlter tor in nearby communiUu. located at 1111 !:. Chtltnl.rt Ave., Saita 1.he United Stata tn the tn4 Olytnp!c l'ttrs. Hoag, wife of the min held Ant, pllone 811.Ul4. Gtme& In Puts. hosta,., olld &ho fled lho houJo Iller" ' Deputy registrar• will be Cl1 duty al the Ile 11 survived by h~ wife Cath<rlnc cilllnc lhi hlsJl•ll' potrol. Oran1e County courthoult ud at cll)' ot tht femllr home at toe Celtll Place : "J wu tllln& bredfut for my husban• h1l11, ahopptna ctnttr1 and poUt1c1l party a dlulhter Mn. Emily Moffitt Of Glen· When l 1aw a min tutaldt carryln1 • hudqutr!sra lhrouchout tho county, St <Jalo ; 1 ,.., John C. Arrua II I.I Cana .. , sholiUn ond • plttol," the 1e14 niw•mon. Jolin .. id. ind m gudcllllcJren, "I wei>t llld ctll!d llll hlgllw1y potrol. ' ' Co11apoig11's Just Darcl.;y Coate Mesa City Council candidate l)a ve \·arnal puts brolher's train· ed duck, Penny. through paces in city park Sunday, for molltly undero votln1 age audience. Unique ~lcet the Candidate show !eatured Varna! himself on the talking harn1onica, ''l\1ama Blues," was this number, one of Penny's favorites. ''arn1l ·cleims 1970 campaign i• bccomlng carnlv~l and says he didn 't \Vant to be left out. • -~-----------·~. -------""·~,.,.-~~~~~~~~_,.....,,.........,,_.~~~~--·*~-,......,..,-~~~~~~~~~-rc-----;~-c---cc-:--•~- Saddlehaek ED Il l ON VOL. 63, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE ·COUNTY, b.LlfoRNIA , •' MONDAY., APRlt: ·6,, 1970 • N.Y.·~sat m• TEN ·CENTS I Reagan May Suppo·rt Coast Oil Drilling · Protest By THOMAS FORTUNE Of .. OellY ~ ... 119" Efforts of three Orange Coast cities to push a bill banning local offshore oil drill· ing through Congress were shaping up as promising today. The good word for Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente was that hiri~g a lobbyist may not be as e.1· pensive as earlier thought and that Gov. Reagan is willing to akl their cause. The bill the three city governments wish to see passed would prevent oil drill- 1 ing. in federal water~ beginning three miles offshore, adjacent to areas where lbe near-shore state tidal waters are designated marine preserve.s. In short, tM U.S. government CCIJl)dn't collect revenue by putting in oil drilling plaUorms south of the Santa Ana River {boundary lint between H u n t in gt o n Beach and Newport Beach), wtllch is a sanctuary under the state's Cunningham· Shell Act. Two local representatives were in .Washington, O.C., last week -Hans J. Lorenz of the Coastal Area Protective League and Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Lorenz early in the week interviewed several profwional lobbyists (called legislaUve advocates) our Oka11 Probable Carswell Over Senate Hurdle· la return the nomination to the Judiciary Committee. and Mrs. Marshall had a follow up l.n- terview with the one Lorenz thought wu host. City councils cf the three cities now will be asked to appnlve expenditures lo hire the preferred lobbyist, whose name hasn't yet been disclosed. Lorenz, who ·was in Washington on his way to a vacation trip in Europe, telephoned Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart of the Coastal Area Protective • Lu,gue. Mrs. Stewart 11ald it had been thought a lob- byist's fee to push the bill "would be anyw1lere from $50,000 to $100,000. Instead Jt looks like $10,000 to $12,000, possi bly· $15,000 at the most." The lobbylll'• '" would 'be dolermlnod at a daily rate pill!! expeues. Loaming thll, Laguna Bw:h Mayor Glenn Vedder-lllld 11 City Council mfflinl last Week, "Perbaps tblt council should come up wilh IS.GOO. County suporvtoora llld Ibey wooJd malch-It il Newport, Laguna and San Clomoale·com- blned can come up with $5,000." ('n!e Coastal ..,..,J>rot<dive Lea"" has plodJled to c.nlribule 15,000.) Laguna Councilman Josepb1 O'Sullivan said, "We are oriented toward the beach and must do anything pmsible to protect our beach." , Newport M1yor Mrs. Atarshall . uid • lhet< are aeven llJICluarltl "°'....inc aimoot ....iourth of the Clall!omia coutline lbal would• be ~ b7 the bill Bui Ibo -In collecUnc moooy 'from cxnnumlties•in otber areu lt11ra question of bow 1"11'rlod they are. "Take Hu.mlloldt and Mendocino coun- ties. I don't knew how worried they ·art," she sald. • The bill has been introduced into the U.S. Senate by _Alan Cranston (D-Call{.) and co-authored by three· otlieer senators including George Murphy (Jl.Calif.). Lorenz said Richard H 1 n n a ( 0- Westmlnster) haa agreed to hltroduce a companioi;i blU into the ~ouse. o t 1cers Representatives since the ai... curreUy is llllltpmtnted with the death ol J..,.. Utt. Mn. Manha!! sald she lalk..r to ll<p. Crate 11oamer (II-Loo( -ch), the only Orange County congressman on the Interior Committee, while abe wu ·in Washingto~ . Reagan agreeing to support the blD Is Htremendously important," she said. "His office could give help to OW' representative." She said the city or San Diego hu a legislative advocate on a permanent basis who also would work with the county cltiea' lobbyl.Tl. • a1n One Suspect Kills Self; Other Held SAUGUS, Calij, (AP) -One rt two men aCCUJed of . killing four highway pa~ in a gun battle conunltteit suicide today, autboriUes: reported. His body WIS fow1'j by I forte rt ofllcer& fn WASHINGTON (AP) -Judge G. Har- rold Carswell'• nomination t o the Supreme Court won. its !irst crucial test Moodlj'-U lhc -~ I motion 'lbe recommittal motion by Sen. Birch B~yh (0-lnd.), I leader rt the oppoeiUon, was deaigned 1'> kill iho nomination rt tho 50-yeai:-old TaJ!ahassee, Fla., jurllt. • gaa ........ and :wudJ1ff llak.jacna:w11o stormed a house where be hid been I Beachgoers Get Stung By Jellyfish Despite the appearance of a new type jelly fi sh with a painful Jting, Southern Orange Coast beaches pliyed to capacity crowds during the warm weekmd in· eluding some nude sun bathers arrested in South Laguna. Laguna lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis reported a recent rash of stings from an unfamiliar species of jeUyflsh that hangs beneath the ocean surface and is nearly invisible. Himself a victim while skindiving, OePaulis said, "It's a new species that has come in. They"re long and stringy and sting the Jiving daylights out of you. It lasts four or five hours ." DePaulis, who was slung on the face, said "it feels like thousands of little bee slings. They hang anywhere from the bottom to five feet beneath the surface." DePaulls said guards treated a rash or stings with spirits of ammonia or rubbing alcohol. He said lhe infestation seemed worse ill the Crescent Bay and Victoria Beach areas. OePaulis reported that Lifeguard Lt. Dean Westgaard was also a jellyfish vic-- tim while diving. '"Ibey really wiped him out. He got stung all over the body," said De Paulis. He reported huge crowds for early April enjoY._ing lhe 75 degree air tem- perature and 61 degree nat surf. Crowds were estimated at 16,000 Sunday and J 1,000 Saturday. "That's unusual for this time of the year," said DePaulis. orange County Sheriffs d e p u t i r s descended on a nude sunbathing group Friday afternoon in South Laguna at a secluded cove area known as "1bousand Steps." Alerted by a citizen's phone call, deputies nabbed two males for indecent exposure but others fied before deputies could reach the beach. Coolmenting on the j e 11 y r i s h in- festation, a sheriff's deputy said, "I hope they have good aim . It might discourage some of that nude awimming." San Clemente lifeguards r e p o r t e d record crowds for an April weekend. They estimated there were 1 4 • O O O beachgoers on city beaches Sunday and 11no0ler 10,000 on unincorporated beaches s~y estimates were 6,600 for city beaches and 4,200 on the rt9t. "I'm !Ure it'11 a record for this time of yr.ar," said Lifeguard Capt. Phil Stubbs. "We haven~t had this kind of weather In April for about sii: years." He said there were 42 weekend rescues dei;pite the flat surf conditions and reported that jellyfish bad not yet In- fested the San Clemente waters. "They may be drifting down this way,'' he Aaid. Stubbs said there were the umial rnsh of first aids for cut feet and·other Injuries but oothln& major. 'lht &nab! now will vote Wednesday on conf'ltmation of Carswell, the second Southerner ncminated by President Nilon for the Supreme Court vacancy created nearly a year ago by the mignation of Justice Abe Fort.as. Nixon's first choice, Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., or Greenville, S.C., was rejected by the Senate last November by a 55-t5 vote. . Senate leaders of both parties said they expected defeat of Bayb 's recommittal motion to be followed by confirmation of Carswell, although perhaps by a nar- rower margin. , , U .. IT ......... OFFICERS, BYSTANDERS STAND BY DNE DI' CHP DEATH CARS IN VALENCIA ~Nl'IGH.T Four Hlghw•y P•trolmen Klllo41· OM SulflR!-C•ptvred~ Another'· Klll1 .Self • Some senat.ors who voted qainst recommittal said they would vote again.st Carswell's confirmation. 'Ibey contended that returning it to committee would just be ducking the is.rue. On the other hand, some senators who announced they favored returning the nomination to committee for further hearings said they would disc.IOBe J11ter how they would vote on confirmation if the recommittal motion failed. Deadline Slated For Absentee Ballot .Filing Dr. ~am Sheppard Dies After Battle With Flu One ol those who predicted con- firmation was Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield. The Montana Democrat, 1till declining to say how he will voU:, bad previously rated the outcome of the hard-fought bat- tle over the Tallahas91ee, Fla., jurist's nomination a tossup. "I imagine the vote on returning it to committee will tse the precursor to the vote on Wednesday," Mansfield 1aid prior to the voting. Newsmen asked him il be meant he e1· pects Carswell to be confirmed. "Yes, that's the way it l0oks at the moment," Mansfield replied. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of PeMSylvania reiterated he is confident that Carswell will be confirmed. Scott said he sees eoougb votes to assure Carswell's co n f I r m a t I o n on "there may be aome small or modest Wodne!llay, although ho told roporter1 slippage" from the vote on recommittal. Deadline for taking out.absentee ballots ror the April 14 municipal elections Is Tuesday at 5 p.m. -In Laguna Beach, where the campaign of five candidates · for three seats has been hot and heavy and 1101T1eti1T1es personal, there has been 1 run on the city clerk's absentee ballot department. Velma Barr, deputy city clerk, said normally there are between 50 and 65 absentee baUots taken out in Laguna. The figure was expected to go over 100 today with 91 taken out by this morning. Max Berg, San Clemente city clerk, reported that despite 1$ candidates for three Rals on the Sa:n Clemente council, absentee'ballol.activity .is running about normal with 50 Liken out by thi1 morn- ing. City Administrator Ernest Thompson cl San Juan Capistrano also reported a normal a1tuation with about a dozen absentee ballot! taken out thus far. There are nine candidates ' and a write-in can· didate seekin'g three seaU. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Dr. Sam Sheppard, main figure in Ont of the na· tioa's most controversial •murder trials:, died today at his home here a'fter he bad been ill far three days with what . was believed to be influenza. Sheppard, 46, freed ·from Ohio Penile• t\ary after· serving 10 years following his conviction for the · murder of his first wife, Marilyn, was found dead in hill home by bis wife. · His body was· taken · to University Hospital where an autopsy nlay be perfcirmed to1 determine the ca'* of death. Mrs. Colleen Strickland Sheppard, his third wife, said the osteopath had beeR ill with what she believed wu flu. Shep- pard, who was in the mldst of a ~ (See SHEPPARD, Pap I I Officer's Last Words 'Eold Witness Tells of Finding SA Shooting Victim Officer Nelson Sasscer's d J I n g cheat wound tnd "too far gone . to tali eariir:r and shoot Saucer in Ule cheat. moments were recreated today for a anymore. I asked him to blink if he knew The prosecutio,n e1pecta . to put Ste!ie Superior (!o!1rt jucy..by the maa-who..ran-:wbaLLwu...say.ing.ancl...tbafi_a.llhe...wu T~ce, 16, League • comparuon in that 1n- r b. h to f'nd ~-bl lo d ., ••• 1 .d· ---cl<l'iil;liilo tho illlilesa boi. later today. rom is om~ • 1 .. ,.. young a e o, lhe .:)411~ ~a.re~ dent sai •.. nee has already ~edln tar~r bear- patrohnan bl~ m the gutter. The pro5eCUUon ,ntness said he1Clllled • in's that he wu with Le~e when Louis Martinez, Jr., testifitd at the in io· police.headquarters on Saasctr's car , . Sas.seer was shot but his.~ .has murder trial of Arthur De Witte League rad.lo and·summoned.help for the Jtric;tten been Clouded by su~uentr re~ctiGTI and that he was asleep in bed shortly before officer. But Sasscer died less than 30 , rtpeUUons of that ltoJ'Y, • midnight last June 4 when be heard a minutes lat'r in a niarby hospital. His brother, Rick Tice, l8, Js alto e1· shot fired directly outsJde his home . As League, %1, of Santa Ana, is accused of pteled to teiUty that Uic\M:'t &Wl wu ht left the house, he said, he heard 11 riring the shot tbal killed Sas!lCtr. The hidden in the Tlce home .from shortly voice calling, "Help me, som~body please prosecution alleges ..that~be was one or · after the sbociUne UJllll Jts·recovr.ry by_ help me." two Negroes halted by lhe officer lh•t , Santa Ana police lnveauaatori. · fl.farlinez said he found the 24-year-old night and that the Black fanUH!r ofJlcer'• The League trial Is Jn lbe eecond week cfficer sprawled tn the roadway In front response to • demafid for itlentificatioli • of 1what ls expected to bt a'Jij week pro- of his car, bleeding profusely from • was to produce a .CUD atol,ea ~our ~· .,..ceediril. • • ' · ' . ' ' I u,.,y......_ WR ESTLING DOCTOR DI.ES . Dr. S•m ShepP•rd, 46 Urban U.S. Indians . . De.nuµ1d~F.~d.er,I Aid : W ~HINGTON (AP)~ ii°ri,.,, Indian~ ' f'l'Oleilllll Wl>a'\.lhc)I .. , 1 ... ·<1oif ,.,,..,al ea~ lo ~ir prpblerrui, ~r~ ~emandln1 U)e, government help them as mu8i 11 trJ~s On the reservations. • They are as!dnl more goumment~at· tentlon to hou11n·g,. employment, 'educa•' tioh, health and welf1l-e prolilenu of; 1"" dl~ns who live away from ~1Uoq1 - aboul hail of"lho, lndlan tioP,ila~'!'; i •• ' ' beiJeged for sl.i: hours. · ·. Alltborities fint had said he was ·ca~ · tult!CL alive. Fer , five hours he bat , held a hoooeholdtr boetage belcn t<leallng him unhann«l. The other gunman, wound«I by olficers, was . captured earUer in a canyon. . The four bigbway patrolmen were kill- ed after they stopped a car whole oc.- upants were reported to have brandished guns at motorists on a freeway. After the shootout, the two fled separately on fool Jack Wright .twinning, 3S, took refa&• In the isolated liouse atop a hill in brulfry country 3:5 miles north or Loa Angtles about 4: 15 a.m. and sporadle1Uy ti· changed shots with a • force ol several &eore officers until bis capture, about JO :l.S 1.m. Mrs. Glenn S. Hoag and her 90ft, Jtf. fery, 17, neaped but Hoa1 w11 held cap- tive until releued uhhaQDed a little lfter 9 a.m. When Hoag came out he said Twinning had 1 quantity of weapona but' Reined running low on ammunition. · During the ensuing alege helicopters hovered over the three-bedroom home. at.op a bill overlooking the freeway, and a sheriff's sniper specialist took up position atop a gas station until bullets drove h1m away. Officers stormed the house With pistol& and shotgun• after warning Twinning to tur.render. During much of the siege they · had negotiated with him by telephone, and he said at one point he wai thinking of tak· ing his Ille. Twinning continued to fire sporadically after releasing Hoag. At one time Twinning abouted when told to '"""oder: "I'll be dead 11 I walk out." While invesUgating reports that the two men in an automobile had bffn pointln1 (See SHOOTOUT, Pap l) Or 11nge Weatller Those sunny skies are here to stay, at least tor a while, but hl&h cl~ds will be forming over the, Orange "Coast Tuesday. Temper• tures should stick close to the seventies locally and up to 80 iq-. land. . ( INSWE TODAY OppositWn to tl1e propoaed meToer of Air California wiih Pacific Southwest Airliru1 ii ez-P.«ted from som1 ~tr Cal 1tol:kh.okter1 and 1mplou11. Sec Pagr26;··~ ~ 1,;',) 1.:.1···,-· •1'1111• -CtH,.,. CllKl!i.. U• CltWllM ._, ·-DHllt Melle• ··~ ••lttritl ..... 1""'1• ..... ··-- " " • ' .... » .. ' " • .. .... " ·~ ....... ,. -. ' -.. Hat ..... Mt'jlrt +I ~,...., . _, ..... IJMll Mertlttt Mon ·-.. ........ .. ·-. w ...... ,, .......... ........... .. ' • ' I I• I I ~-~------~~~ ----.... ~--~--------·---~----~---• ~---~-"''-----'LI l ' J DAILY PILOT SC OAll.'I' Pll.01 SI'" P11e19 Welfare . Limits OK'd High Court Favors St.ate Maxi1num Payment WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ni1od lodoy that slates may HI mulnwma oa tblJt welfare payments to poor famllles wUll depeodent childten. Justice Potter Stewart wrote the ma· jorlty opinloo for tha ""11"1, which divide4 5 to 3 ln ruling ona Maryland case. In a aeparate 24-p:age opinion Jnstice John M. Harlan ruled for a siz-man ma- jority tillt New Yort State lo violation of 1967 amendments to the Ftder1I Sodal Security Act,' lmperml1Sibly cut welfare paymenU to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program. The cutl heve decreased benefiU to New York City rttlplenta by almost !40 million. SHOOTOUT. • • Harlan sent the New York case back to the 2nd U.S. Cireuit COurt of Appeals for . further action. That eourt hid ruled the stale action valid. Chief. JuSUce Warren E. Burier and Justice Hugo L. Black diasented on the ground that the matter should have been ruled ori fll'lt by the Department~ of Health, Education and Welfare . 1n other acUon11 today, the court : -Refused to review a case protesting religious messages to earth r r o m astronauts in space, leaving stand a lower cw.rt ruling against Mrs. ~fadaJyn Murray O'Halr, who succe•sfully at- tacked IChool prayer1·some years qo. -Ruled In a F1or1da Calle lhat a perton may not be tried by both a city and a slate for the same alleged crime. -Refwed to review an Ullnols libel case, leaving stand a ruling In favw of the Edwardsville Intelligencer which wrote ot now-deceased City Attorney Robert W. Tunnel that he "was workini to break the law" in makina: ap- polntmentl. The opinion in the ~1aryland cut reversed a judgment of a special three- judge federal court in Baltimore which invalidated that state's welfare ceiling on Dec. 13, 1988. Maryland AU.Omey General Francis B. Burch appealed to the Supreme coun. FLAG FLOWING, PUNTING AND SCULLING SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DEFEAT cwu at motDrtsta along the Golden State Freeway, two of the alain patrolmen _,potted a car, answeri ng the description, parked in front of J's Coffee Shop just off the freeway. They radioed for help and a second patrol car arrived within minutes. It was shortly before midnight. Planning, Parks Units Meet in Joint Session Down to Sea Gulps • ID Bal Isle Tugboat Puts Up Game But Losing Figlit One witness, among four young persons In a car towing a boat, said he was "stan. ding in the parking lot and saw .a Ca1ifornla ffighway Patrol car approach a car with two men in it. San Clemente's pl a n n l n I com- missioners will meet in a special joint study session with the city's parks com- mission Tuesday for a final examination of the proposed parks section of the five- )'ear cap1tal Improvements list. The planners and parts commissioners will examine each of the items specifying improvement of neighborhood parks, beath improvements and rebuilding of the fire-damaged community clubhouse. Both grouP6 have -at the cooncU's wishes -not considered expen.ae in Ml· ting the priorities, but insteadhave used community need as the criterion. The projected cost breakdown for tht parks and recreation segment la ~.aoo !or parks development ; $194,000 for municipal pier improvemenU and $311,000 for work on public beaches. B1 ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot tN DlllY l"li.t Stflt They went down to the sea in ships Saturday -the Balboa !•land Punting and Sculling Society and the San Diego Rest and Aspiration Society -without a 60lilary star lo steer them by. The whole Milky Way wouldn't have helpe<l. Compdlng for the tradiiloJHteeped trophy, a gilded bent elbow with a glass clenched in hand, the two organizations gtaged The Great Tugboat Race. Oh. '1\vas a moving sight to see marinel'f! 80 moved by the challenge of the day, the majesty or San Diego Bay and the wind on their face s. One could see grown men swallowing bard. ,Tugboats were In short supp]y, IO the Sail Diego group pitted the old ~foot fer· ryboat Monterey-equipped with two bars -against the BISAPSOC's plucky little SS Michigan, equipped with glassa and a Jug. The Michigan, sunk and salvaged five Wne:1 ·to the best of its owner's knowledge, aet sail for San Ditgo Friday aboard an Advance Marine Transport lruck •. Cartoonist Dick Shaw of <:orona del 111ar, who doubles as commodore of the &uiUllg and Puntin( Society's Jla1shlp, supervlled IM M.lcht&an'a removaJ from .Newport Harbor waters. . He described the truck trip as a Cl.In- ning maneuver to conceal the true merit and speed or the Michigan, which Js about twice the size of one of the Monterey'a propellers. Multitudes greeted the 1 p.m. race with biP spititl as the llllchlgan chugged away from the San Diego Yacht Club for th6 ituting liDe off the southwest tlp of Sbclier Island. Cheers went up, along with a huge American Flag. Ok! Glory dwarfed the M!chigan like a 1pinn&ker broken loose from it.a lines, Rifle Slug Hits Oemente Window A slug from a high-powered rifle crash- ed through the glass door of a $aµ Clemente man's home Sunday alternoon. ' William R. Enqui.st, 817 Calle De SotD, phoned police to report someone shooting at his house. Officel"S arrived at the home and found a hole made by a high-power rifle slug. The shot, patrolmen said, appeamUy came from the direcUon of Ole Hanson Element.ary School. DAILY PILOT N_,Mt I••• Hntl ..... Inc• UipM IMU ,. ...... ,..,. C.. ..... S-Ck lwtw 1')111.AN!il COAST l"UILISH1NG COMPANY Re\,ett N, We•4 P•uldt nr •"" P\11>111,_. J,,~ k. C11•l1y Vke l"ttl!otM tfllll co-r1I M-ttr 1ho"''' Keevil IEOllOr Tho111 •t A. M.r,hl~• M-.lnl ~liter ki,htr4 P. 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UM -•l~lrl ~ """ l7.llll ,_ftll\'1 fftllh.,., '"~'"'-''""· Jl.ot _, .. ,,. I • • while the square-hulled Monterey croan· ed along in her wake. A phalam of some 2:0 other watercraft followed the two venerable vessels, in- cluding a Harbor Pollet boat which shadowed the entire race. Dubbed the S. S. Aspiration for the con- test, the Monterey wu crowded with rac· ing enthusiasts who aspired to lighten her load by abool IO p11ona of ballast. An arti11ery piece al lhe ilp ol Shelter Island boom<d to lifnal lhe run for the money down a coune of one nautical mile and tbe Mkhigan bubbled into the lead. Orange smote erupted from a dlltnu flare m the cclarful Utile boal -held together by paint and good faith -ap- pareaUy signalling a drought aboard. Despite skill and nautical koowbow, Commodore Shaw blew hill lead· because everytime he atte.upted to change coarse, all hands aboard the Michigan had to change seau. She faltered just abort ol lhe lin1sh line and lhe S. S. Aspiration chllil!ed ACl'Oll the victor, followed by a celebration whlch llngeeed on Into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy wu awarded to custody ol the San Diego lint and Aspiration Society, wbile a return match -perhapa In Newport Harbor -waa ochedulec! for September. "The two officers got out and one ap- proached;' the witness said. "The fellow on the passenger side got out and im· mediately shot one cop, picked up the cop's shotgun and went around to the front of the car and ahot the other cop. "Another highway patrol car pulled up behind. Then the patrol car'1 driver got out and shot He was ,wmed down. The remainin( cop held olf these lwo guys for about five minutes by hlmself. °Flnally one fellow went around to the front ol the highway patrol car and •hol this youn, cop In the face." After the 4 p.m. study session Tuesday. the planning commission ·will draft its formal recommendation of priorities at its meeting Wednesday night. Both the parks and plann ing com- missioners have been ei:amlning the list of projects for the past several weeks. After their recommendations a r e received by the city council they will be included in the council's budget prepara- tions later this spring. The projects as detailed are spread over a five-year period. A1nong the pier improvements sug- gested by the staff is the eventual ex- pansion of the end of the pier to ac· commodate a large, formal restaurant, which, staff membe.rs have said, could result in more revenue to the city. The parks section includes suggestiom for $250,000 to be spent to build a new building In place of the ruined c:ommonity clubhouse. Light Plane Sale Foiled ,, A highway patrol 1pokuman said he <11' could not explain how two men wert able to shoot down four ollicers. The assailants abandoned their bullet- riddled automobUe and fled on foot. Capistrano Trustees Study Bus Transportation Issue By Capo Weekend Crash The cash rePster fl.ubed a 1'no Ille" sign during a potential airplane purchaae this weekend, when the tr1&l MJ of the small plane at San Juan Capistrano Airport tµrned Into a oruh iandin(. No -waa lnjurod In tha FrldaJ ...,.. Ing belly landing ol the plane in San Juan c,...t, Orange Coonty lberill'• deputies a aid. The pilot, Charier H. DenniJ, 32, of 114 Avenlda Redondel, San Clemente, and hls passenger, El Toro Marine r~rvist Harbor Patrol Aids Deck Man On Fish Boat A deck band aboard the San Clemente sportfisher Sum Fun was taken off the vessel during a Ushing trip SW'lday morn- ing after he became ill near the nuclear generating station at San Onofre. Harbor patrolmen from the Dana Harbor patrol base responded to the call and removed George Clough, 161 Avenida Mariposa, from the boat. The deckhand, ruffering from what was termed a minor illness, was taken to the San Clemet!te pier where he then sought medical treatment. In another first-aid response in the South Coast area patrolmen rendered help to a Yucca Volley fishennan at the harbor's launching ramp Sunday af. ternoon . Bob Robertson told patrolmen he suf. fered a severely cut fin4er a half mile out al sea durin& fishing trip. "are Laguna Dog lost; Search On Laguna Beach police are altemplin( to tract down a rare Japanese bear dog, vaJued at $850, which disappeared late Saturday from the 100 block of Laguna Avenue. Owner Roxanne Brooke, 24911 Monte Verde, Laguna Niguel, told police she left the dog, known as an Aklte, tied to a fence at approximately 10:50 p.m. When she returned after a short period the dog has vanished. Tht animal. according to police, weigh! 110 pounds. ls off...,.,hite in color with a \'ery curly tail, small eyes and black hair around the rnoulh. B~use of rece:nt surgery, he has a bald spot on top of his head, ·~lrs. Brooks added. Senate Panel Okays Nixon Rail Measure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senile Labor-Committee 3pprovtd unanimously today a bill proposed by President Nixon to avert a nationwide railroid •trtke now threatened for Saturday. The n1easurt would impose on the four shopcratt unJons Involved In the dlsputa and lhe induMry a settlement reached by negotiators last Pctembcr. Graham R Jtrelcbtr, J1. e I c I pe d unllarmed. • The pair told olllctn u.., ..... t1)'lng OUI the a1ngle-englno aircnft wll1ch WU far aale when the craffs brUel f&1lecl on landlni-DemlJ told hmollptoi"a u he tried to lift the plane back off Ille field , the enc!z>e cculd nol pick up enough power. The plane then pancaked into San Juan Creek, which parallels the small landing strip al the airport. Damage to the aircraft included a bent propeller, a damaged right wheel and a crumpled wing tlp. . The plane was removed from the chan- nel by crews during tbe weekend. Burgla1·s Collect Petty Cash Haul At Teen Facility Laguna's new Revival Teen 'Club has been hlt by burglars who removed a cash box containing an undetermined number of quarters, police report. The thief kickeci:'in 'a screen to gain en- try to the teen center, in the old Barefoot Bar building on the boerdwalk at Ocean Av·enue, and removed the box which was attached to a pool table. In a seeond weekend burglary, an assortment of clothing a n d household C!Qµipment valued at $671 were taken from the home of John Stan l ey Thompson, 586 Through Street, at some time between 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Sun. day. Missing items included a portable typewriter, two wat.ches, a piggy bank with cash, eight bath towels, two pairs of slacks, a bedspread, two a'tl!!nowcases and sheets and a half a g of vodka, Thompson told police. A window was smashed to ga.in enlry to the b<me. Red Cross Seeks Help iJ.1 Lagtma The American Red Cross is seeking more volunteers in I.he Laguna area to help with its annual fund-raising cam· paign. This year's goal is $16,000. To date, $7,223 has been received as the result of a residential mail campaign conducted by Mrs. r.tarvin T. Brown and her volunteer assistanU: in Uie Laguna Beach Red Cross office, 362 Park Ave. Mort volunteer! are needed to call on local business firms to solicit eon- tribuUons. Penons who can spare a few hours are Invited to contact the Red Crou of(lce In person, or call 49f.65.57. During the past year, the Red Cr<>.111 furnJshCd 11764 pints of blood to perllOM in the community, acnt Its bloodmobile on regular vlslU to collect the ~lood which Q; fumlshed fret when needed, handled • variety of services to military families, conducted cl ,.,..;et in Ont aid, small craft and water safety. provided volunteer nurses and eonducted a coontywidt disaster st.rvice program. 1' The fugitive arrested in a canyon was ldenllf1ed by poll« as Russell Lowell Talbert, 28. WOUNDED TWICE Talbert WU wounded twi<o after he tI• changed Bhola and llCuffled with camper Dan ,Schwarz, 40, Oiicago, who was 1leepfng in his camper truck when Talbert OJ'td lnt.o ft, a apokllma!D: 18id. Police a&Jd Talbert, a~ently out of ammunition, pistol-whipped Schwarz and fled in the camper truck. He was apprehended without resistance later in a canyon nearby. The slain patrolmen were identified as Walter C. Frago, 23; Roger D. Gore, 22; James Edward Pence Jr., 25, and George M. Alleyn, 24. All were married and lived in nearby communities. Mrs. Hoag, wife of the man held hostage, said she fled the house alter calling the highwa y patrol. "I was fixing breakfast for my husband when I saw a man outside carrying a shotgun and a pistol," she told newsmen. "I went and called the hJghway patrol. "My husband came in and said this man wants to taJk with us. There was a tap at the front door. The man said it's probably your son .. "The tap at the door was the highway patrol. I ducked out~ front door and in- to the bu shes. The 1'\an inside looked ex· hausted. It looked like he had a bullet wound In the head," ~lrs. Hoag said. The couplels 17-year-old son, Jeffrey, sleeps In an adjoining cottage and didn't wake until' 5:30 a.m., a'botlt 1 hour and 15 minutes arter Twinning entered his par- ents' house. Hoag, about 42, is employed by a Van N~~ truck finn. Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School Distric t will act on transportation. curriculum and recreation requests at tonight 's a o'clock meeting in Serra School at Capiistrano Beach. A request has been made by a paren t or a Pt:ivate school student for bus tr&Mportation frQm Dana Point tO Old Mission School, a parochial school which is a block from the dfstrlct's Capislrano School. Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent for business se rvices, will recommend denying the request even though a bus does proceed from the area near the ch.ild 's home to the nearby Capistrano School. Laguna Sailor Gets Dunking A Laguna Beach saiklr survived wiUt no more than a dunking when his 14-foot catamaran capsized one-half m 11 e offshore in the Cult· Drive irea it 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Summoned to the sce ne, an Orange County Harbor Department boat arrived after Jeffery Stevens, 20, of 1565 Regatta Drive, had righted his craft, climbed back aboard and been taken in tow by his father. · A large crowd of Sunday visitors watched the operation from the cliffs, along with a Laguna Beach pc)iice Wtlt called to stand by in case, of further emergency. Laguna High' s M urphine PickedforPanamaStudy Preparing for a year-long stay 1n Puama Clty,·Laguna Beach High SChool junlor Tom Murphlne , 16, is trying t.o assemble an all-year summer wardrobe by April 14. f\.1urphine learned, exactly 10 days before his depart ure date, that he. had been named &11 American Field Service · Ameri can Abroad student for the comi ng school year. Because of different school scheduling In the tropical zone, that meant hurrylng to Panama without delay, and in- cidenlally foregoing summer vacation. Now completing his junior year at LBHS, Murphine wlll stay with the Vicente Cornea Valladafes family in Panama ctty and will attend the Colgio Janler with his AFS "brother," Orlando Gomei Valladarts, 17. Both will be .senior& at the college. Tom Is tht son of Mr. and f\.1rs. Tom A. r.turphlne of 462 St. Ann's Drive. An cnlhwlasUc sportsman. he plsys baseball and football, partlcip•tes in track and en- joys 1urflng. He h&d been cl'IOlen LBHS reprtsen- tatl ve to Boys' State bi Sacramento and was president-elect of the high Khoo! Key Club but will have to pas!' up both honors In fa'or of the fore1gn atty. DAIL T ,l\.Ot 11th '"" HEADED FOR PANAMA AFS Student Murphino r In a memo tD trustees, Chicas b'· plained that there is room on this bus and the action is legally permissible bat it would not be fair to other private ICbool students who might make similar re- quests who live in areas where buses would be 'too full lo accommodate them. Trustees also will be asked to conskfer planning for single session kindergartens !or next year. Thia was cowidered the administration's top priority Item when the tax override was pasaed. The single session kindergarten would provide for Jooger classroom time with one teacher for each class. The schedule would be set up so that there would be periods or time when two kindergarten teachers would be ia both morning and afternoon classes. l The board also will consider a budget for a diStrict recreation pro I r a m primarily for the summer months. Th• activities to be scheduled at most district schools will include adult softball, a play ground program, itcluding .am and crafts, tennis instructJon, physical fitneal and swimming les.wns at the Su Clemente municipal pool. Frotn Page l SHEPPARD. • • fessional wresUing career whe a he died, married Colleen last Oct. 21. f\trs. George Strlcklahd said, "We all thought he had the flu ." Dw1.n1 his years in prison, when Shep- pard had volun~eered with a number of other prisoners te participate in a cancer research program with .other particlpanu. . a live cancer virus had been injected • infb his body. Dr. Stephen Sheppard, his brother, had claimed durh1g Sam's im prisonment that the inJeCtiOw might have caused cancer lo develop. Mrs. Strickland said Sam had "told us he had cancer because of that." "He told us at one time he would not live another year when we first 1ot together a year ago," she said. Sheppard had one son, Samuel Jr., by his first marriage. The son, tnowa as "Chip," is now in his 20's. · Sheppard's second wife was the former Ariane Tebbenjohanns of West Gemlany. They were married in July, 1964, shorUy after he was released from prison. • Sheppard was convicted in December, 1954, of beaUng his pregnant wife to death July 4 al their Bay Village home near Cleveiand. During his trial, Sheppard said a "one- armed bushy-haired intruder" killed hJs lvife and auacked hlm in their home on the shore of Lake Erle. fl1ra. Sheppard had been beaten arOUlld ihe head with In estimated 2S blows. Sheppard was re.leased trom pri.9on Ju· Jy 16, 1964, insisting "I am Innocen t, I am Innocent." He was frted by order of the U.S. District Court at Dayton, which ruJ. ed he had not recttved a fair trial. Sheppard's rel ease was appealed to tM Sixth Circuit Court of Appe1\s at C,.. cinnati, ll'hich on ~lay 5, IMS reversed the earlier ruling and ordered hlfn returned to prison. The V .S. Supreme Court, In a precedent-stlUng declslon on June f, 1965, said Sheppard had been denied 1 ft1 lr trl8l because of t.ht "RDm1n c11.rnlval'' atmosphere In the courtroom ond a prejudiced trial Jud(<. -------------------------------'---------------------- • Lag1111a .. Beaeh EDIJ:ION VOL 63, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, 'CALIF,ORNIA . . MONDAY, APRlt: I>, 1970 . . . • ) :TEN CENTS • • Reagan May Support Coast Oil Drilling PrOtest By 1110MAS FORTUNE Of .... DellY Pillt lfelf Ellorls ol three Orange Coast cities to J>Ulh a bill banning local oll-e oil drill· in& through Congress wen shaping up as promising bxlay. . The good word lat Newport Beac&. Laguna Beach and San Clemente was that hiring a lobbyist may not be as ex- pensive as earlier thought and that Gov. Reagan is willin1 to aid their cause. The bill the three city governments wiab to see passed would prevent oil drill- ing ln federal water, beginning three miles offshore, adjacent to areas where the ntar...sbore state tidal waters are desi&nated marine preserves. In sb<rt, the U.S. government cou1dn't collect revenue by putting in oil drilling platforms &OUth of the Santa Ana River (boundary line between H u n t 1 n I· to n Beach and Newport Beach), which is a sanctuary under the state's CUnningbam- Shell Act. Two local representatives were in Washington, D.C., lat week -Hans J. Lorenz or the Coastaj Area Protective League and Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. LOrenz early in the week interviewed several profeasional lobbyists (called legislative advocates) our Okag Probable • Carswell Over Senate Hurdle ·WtlSlllNG'l'ON (AP) -Judie G. Har· .,W ~· -t• tho ~ Coarf -Ill -enicia1 lest Monday .. lbe -rejectod I IDllion Beachgoers Get Stung By Jellyfish Despite the appearance of a new type Jelly fish with a painful sting, SoulMrn Orange Cout beaches played to capacity crowds during the warm weekend m.. eluding aome nude sun bathers arrested in South Laguna. Laguna lileguard U. Eugene DePaulis reported a recent rash of stings from an _unfamiliar species of jellyfish that baiigs beneath the ocean surface and is nearly invisible. Himself a victim while skindiving, DePaulis said, "It's a new species that has come in. They're long and stringy and sting the living daylights out of you. It lasts four or five hours.•• DePaulis, who was stung on the face, said "it feels like thousand.1 of little bee stings. They hang anywhere from the bottom to five feet beneath the surface." DePaulis said guards treated a rash of stings with spirits of ammonia or rubbing alcohol. He said the infestation seemed worse in the Crescent Bay and Victoria Beach areas. De.Paulis reported that Lifeguard U. Dean Westgaard was also a jellyfish vie· tim while diving. 1"'Ibey really wiped him out. He got stung all over the body," said DePaulis. He reported huge crowds for early April enjoying the 75 degree air tem- perature and 61 degree flat surf. Crowds were estimated at 16,000 Sunday and 11,000 Saturday. ''That's unusual for this time or the year," said DePaulis. Orange County She.riff's d e p u t I e s descended on a nude sunbathing group Friday afternoon in South Laguna at a secluded cove area known as "Thousand Steps." lo.....,. the llOlllination lo U>e Judiclory Comaiilloe. no -1i.i . ..,...., aa Bir~ 9ayb (D-Jnd.), a lelclelf.., « . ..._. -·dosiped lo kill the nomlnalion of the to-year-old Tallabas!ee, Fla., jurist. The Seoat. "°" will -Wednesday on conflrmatlon ·of Carswell, tht second Southerner nominated by President Nixon for the Supreme Court vacancy created nearly a year ago by the resignation of Justice Abe Forta.s. Nixon's rirst choice, Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., of Greenville, S.C., was rejected by the Senate last November by a 55-45 vote. Senate leaders of both parties Said they expected defeat of Bayh's recommittal motion lo be followed by coalinnaUon of Carswell. altbougb perhaps by a nar· rower margin. Some senators who voted against recommittal said they would vole against Carswell's confirmation. 1bey contended that returning it to committee would just be ducking the issue. On the other hand, so~ senators who announced they favored returning the nomination to committee for further hearings said they woold diaclose later how they would vote on confirmation if the recommittal motion failed . One of those who predicted con· firmation was Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield. 1be Montana Democrat, still declining to say how he will vote, had previously rated the outcome of the hard-fought bat- tle over the Tallahassee, Fla.; jurist's nomination a tossup. "I hnagine the vote on returning it to committee will be the precursor to the vote on Wednaday," Mansflel~ said prior to the voting. Newsmen asked him if he meant he ex· pects Carswell to be confirmed. "Yes, that's the way it looks at the moment," Mansfield replied. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania reiterated he is confident that Carswell will be confirmed. Scott. said he aees enough votes to assure Carswell's con fl rm at ion on "there may be 80me small or modest Wednesday_. a1though. he told reporters slippage" trom the vote on recommittal. and Mrs. Marshall hid a follow up m. terview with the ooe Lorenz thought was best. City councils of the three cities now will be asked to approve !expenditures to hire the preferred-lobbyist, whose name hasn't yet been di<closed. Lorenz, who WU in Washington Olt his way to a vacation, trip in Europe, telephoned Mrs. T. Duncan stewart of tl>e Coastal Area , Protect.Ive Ua.gue. Mrs. Stewart said it had been Ur.>ugl)t a lob- byist's fee to push the bill ·"would be anywhere from $50,000 to $100,000. Instead lt looks like SI0,000 to SU,000, possibly $15,000 at the most." Tbe lobbyltl't lee -1d be determined at a daily rate plus u:pemea. Leamln& lhll, Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder Aid at City Council meetinf last week, "Perbapl this council should come up with '3,000. c.ounty oupervlton uJd they -1d match it ii Newport, Lacuna and San Clemente com-- bined can come up wJth.fS,000.11 (Tbe Coastal Aru Proloctlve League h85 pledled lo contribute.1$,000.) Laguna Councilman Joseph ' O'Sullivan said, "We are oriented towafd the beach and tnust do anything possible to protect our beach." . · , Newport Mayor Mrs. Marshall said • there are aeven .-Ulries ....nni llmoll one.lourtb of ~ California coutlino that -be pro\eded II)' lbe blJl. But lbe noted lo col~ money '1rom communlllea In other .,.. tt.Jo a queotlooolMwworriedtbey ..... "Take Humboldt m:I Mendocino cauo-- Ues.'I doa~ koow Mw worrled Ibey m." she said. '11le blll'has been introduced Into the U.S. Senate by Alan Cranston (D:Catlf,) and co-authored )ly three otheer senators including George Murphy (R-CIUf.). Lorenz said Richard Hann a ([). Westminster) has agreed to Introduce a companion bijl into U>e Hoose o I 1cers . . • • ' UPIT ........ OFF IC ERS, BYSTANDERS STAND BY ONE OF CHP DEATH. CARS IN ·VALENCIA G.UNFIGltT ' • . F-· Hlthway PotrolmM.Kllled; One Suspect c.p1ur.i1 Another KIDa ·S.lf ' ' ~Deadline Slated F·or Absentee Ballot Filing Deadline for taking out absentee ballots for the April 14 municipal elections is Tuesday at 5 p.m. In Laguna Beach, where the campaign of five candidates for three seats has been hot and heavy and sometimes J>«sonal, there has been a run on the city clerk's absentee ballot department. Velma Barr, deputy city clerk, said nonnaHy tnere are between 50 and 65 absentee ballots taken out in IAguna. The figtW was expected to go over 100 today with 98 taken out by this morning. Max Berg, San Clemente city elerk, 'reported that despite lS candidates fur three seats on the San Clemente council, absentee ballot acttvity is running about ;:n•~I with 50 taken out by this morn· City dministrator Ernest Thompson of San Ju CapJstrano also reported a normal uation with about a dozen absentee ballots taken out thus far. There are nine candidates and a write-Jn can· didate .seeking three seats. ' .. . ' • .. • . ' • A.. Dr~-Sam Sheppard ·Dres After Battle Wiih Flu COLUMBUS. Ohio .(UPI) -Dr. sam Sheppard, main figure in one of the na· ti011's most controversial murder trials, died today at bis home here after be had been Ill for three days with what was believed to be h1fluenu. Sheppard, 46, freed from Ohio Penite• Uary after IOrV!ng ·10 years following hil conviction for the .murder . of ·his first wife, ?tfarilyn, was: found dead in bis home by his Wife. · · His body was taken to University Hospital where an autopsy may be perfonned to determine the ca111e · of death. Mrs. Colleen Strickland Sheppard, bis third wife, said the osteopath had beea ill with what she believed was flu. Shep- pard, who was in the midst of a pro- (See SHEPPARD, P•ae II ~tlves since tl>e .,.. cumatly ts unre~nted with the death ot Jame& Utt. . Mn. Manball llid lbe,tllked 10 llep. Crllf Homier (l\;1-Beacb), lbe oo1Y Orll1(e County ..._..... Oil tllo Interior Committee, while she WU In ,Wublngloa. . ' Reagan tgreeing to support tl>e bill !I "lrtfnendously important," she aaid. "His office could , give help lo • our representative." · She said the city of San DiegO hu a legislative advocate 911 a ~nt basis who abo would wort with the county cities' lobbyist. • a1n .. One Suspect Kills Self; Other Held SAUGUS, Cdl."(AP) -floe. ol two men ICCUled col 'IDima !GiD1 b!PwlY Pl!'olmon Jn •. 1'!11 · ""'"' ClllllDllq.d arlclde today, a~~· His bod)' .... lowod ,by·•-"-·· ... -and -ilnl·fllt J.dm .. rtormed • house where he bed -beileged for m hours. · Aatboritlea llrlt had llid be ,... ""I" '""" alive. · Fir' five houri he hed held a ho<Jrtbolder hoatq• hef ... relelrlng ldm unlilnned. The other ......... -by· olfiten:, wai capWred earlitr Jn a Clll)'On. . • 'll10 lour highway paltolmee ""° kiP. ed after they stopped a car n.e oc- upanu were reported to have lnodilbed guns at motmlltt on• lreewq. Allor.loo sboolout, the two fled oeparale!y,oo locit. Jack Wright Twlmlng, 35, toot ,..,,... In tl>e bolaled -•lop • bill In ~ country 35 miles north of Los Anpl" about 4:15 a.m. and apcndicllly a· chanced shots with I . forte ol oevera1 acore olllcen until hil capture lboul 10 :15 .a.m. Mn. Glerm S. Hoag and ber aon, Jfl. fery, 17, escaped but Hoag was held cap. live until released unharmed a UUle after 9 a.m. When Hoa1 came out he Aki TwinnloC had a quantity of weapons but aeemed · running-low on-ammunition. During the ensuing siege helic~r1 hovered over the 1hree-bedroom ftome. atop a hDl overlooking the freeway, and a sheriff's lltolper opeclalilt took up pooltlon atop a gas ltaUon until bullets drove him away. Officer• stormed the houee with plslola and shotguna after warnln( TwlnnJng to IWTellder •. Durjng much ol th•· siege Ibey had negotiated with liim by telephone, and ht said at one point he wu thh1tm, ol tat· Ing hil !lie. Twinning continued lo fire -ldlcall1 after relea'1n( Hoq. At one time Twinnln( lhouted when told to IUl'l'!nder: "I'll be dead if I walk out." While inveatig1Ung reports lhlt Ille two men in an automobile ha4 been polnUnc (See SllOOl'Otrr, P ... I) Orange • Wea~er Alerted by a citizen's phone call, depuUes nabbed two males for indecent exposure but others fled before deputies could read) the beach. Commenting on the j e 11 y { i s b in· festaUon, a sheriff's deputy said. "I hope they have good aim. It ni.ight discourage aome of that nude swimming." Officer's Last Words Told ' ThoR sunny skies are here to .atay, at-ieast for a while, but hiah clouds will be forming· over the Orange Coast Tuesday, Temper• torts should sUck close to the seventies locally aod up to IO In-San Clemente lifeguards r.e po rte d record crowds for an April weekend. ·They estimated there were 1 4 , 0 0 0 beachgoers on city beaches Sund.17 and another 10,000 on unincorporated beaches U>ey guard. Saturday eslimatea were 6,600 for city beaches and 4,200 on the rest. "I'm sure il's a record for this Ume of year," said Ufeguard Capt. Phil Stubbs. "We haven 't had this kind of weather in April for about s1x years." He said there wert 4z·weekend rtscuu despite the nat surf <.'Oflditkm& and reported that jellyfish had not yet In· rested the San Clemente waters. "Tbey moy be drifting down this way." ht. aald. Stubbs said there we.re the usual rash of flnt aids for cut feet and other Injuries but·nothlna major. • \ ·--'WRESTLING DOCTOR'D(ES' Dr. $•m Shappa,.., "' Wjmess Tells of Finding SA S1woting Victim land. • INSWE TODAY OUioer Nlllo'n. Saucer's d y I n g moments were recreated ·today for a Superior Court jury by the man who ran from his home to llod tl>e youn1 patrolman bleed!~ in the gutter. Louis Martinel, Jr., testiDed al the murder trial of Arthur DtWJtte League that he was asleep in bed shortly before mldnlgflt last June 4 when he heard a shol fired direcUy outside his home. A., · he left the house, he aaid, he heard a voice calling, "Help me, aomtbody please help me." Martinez said ht found Ult 24-year-old officer sprawled In the roadway in front of his car, bletdin& profute.ly from . a • chm wound and. ~'too fai-gone to talk anymore.1 asked him to bllrlk ii he l<neW • what I was saying and that's all he was able to &l' <U>e ~ta Ana ruident said. The prosecution. tfitneSI ·aaid he called in to police headquarters oa Sasscer's car . radio and summoned help for the stricken otflctr. But Sasscer died lest than •30 minutes later in a nepby ltolpit.al. League, 21, of Santa Ana, Is accused or firing the shot that killed Sasscer. The prosecution alleges that ·~ wt.3 one of • two Negroes halted by the ~~ 1thal 1 night and that the Black Paother·ofilce~'• responae to a demand fol' ljien~tlon · wu ti> produce • 11111 ololen four datr • earlier. and shoot Snsscer In the chest. Urban U.S .. lttdi.ans • .i • Demand Federal' Aid · The ~ elPects to jN( ·Stevie TJce, 16, LeaaH'• cpm~onJn Uiat in-· cldenl, into tfle •Witness box laru today. Tk:e has already testified in-earlier bear· i'Ji1 that be ,Oas .'!Ith LeaiUe when • WASIUNGTON>(AP~-\Jl'bln Indian .. s._r was shot but hil testll!ioqy bu prot'8tlnX what they siy la a doaf federal ' Opposition to the propoaed merger of Air California 1Dit1' Pacific Soutluueit Airline• ' ia 1%pe,Cttd from 1omt Air' Col stockh~ldtr.r and emplaves. Sn l Page 26. been clouded by subsequeet retnclJon and · repetitlo~ of that story. • • ear to ijleir p;oblems1 are .demandin1 the • 11rtt1t 11 His brbt:her, Rick TLct, lt, is alto-ei· 10,VV"nment he, Ip ~m u ~h as \ribts ' r.r..=.. -1: ' -~-. peeled to testify that League's p wu on the re9et'Vat1~j . cl9Hlfl.. ....., hidden In the Tice hom.e trum thar,!IY )'hey~are 1~~ IOftn\ment at-1 ~=:.,. : after tl>e shooUng UDUI its, recovery by .tenlion 'lo ·hotiiTns.• employmeati educo-""" """" ' sinll. Ana police 1nvesu,a1or1. u·.. ••'Ith ~1l:,.. ....,..1~, l r:=~ •-'l .TheJ.ea«iuetrlat'lstntlltH<:ond,wetk · l'!"·'mi11 .-• 1tt . .,.""11rn1'clf•l"".. ""'"._"" ,. ·~~hat ,Ii ~led toJoe.1-'!x·W..k:~ : d(ans wbo'llve' • •Y ~ t"'°'1111lip-. I::=:.. "'ll Inf. · · " . ·1~· hlll ol lh~"llodl6i·~~'l\on. : '-----------"" . • ·~ • " .. ~---------·- lt IWl.Y Pll~I SC , DA.11.'I 'II.OT Stiff ..,.... FLAG PLOWING, PUNTING ANO SCULLING SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DEFEAT Down to Sea • ID Gulps Bal lsl.e Tugboat Puts Up Game But Losing Figlit They wenl down to the ,.. In ships Saturdn -the IWboa ll1and Punting and Sculling SOciety and the San Diego Rest and Aspiration Society -without a &olitary star to steer them by. The whole Milky Way wouldn't have belped. Compelinf for the tradiUon .. t .. ped trophy, a gildei:l bent elbow wlth a glass clenched in hand, the two organizations at.aged The Great Tugboat Race. Oh, 'Twas a movinc si&ht to see mariners so moved by the challen1e of the day, the majesty of San Diego Bay and the wind on their laces. One could see grown men swallowing hard: Tugboat.I wife in 1hort iupply, ., the San Diego group pitted the old ~loot fer- ryboat Monterey-equipped with two bars -lfllmt the BISAPSOC'1 plucky Utile SS Mldllffll, equipped witb sJ-and I 1u,. 'lbil !ol)clllgan, sunk and salvliod u .. times ·to the • best of its owner' a lmowledp, tel sall for San Dl .. o Friday aboard u Advance Marine TrantpOrt truck. Cartoonist Dick Shaw of Corona del Mar, who doublel as commodore of ti. Sculling •ll'I Pi!t1Un( Society's fla11hip, wperviMd the 1'1lchte&n'I rmnoval from Newport Harbor w1ten. - Ht delerlbld the truck trip as • cun-nint maneuver to eonoeal the true mtrit an4 opeed qf the ~ichigan, which is about twice tlle alM of one of tlle Montmy'o propellers. Multltud .. greetad the I p.m. rece with bi&fi oplrltl u t11e Mlchtcan chunad •WJ.Y fron1 the 8111 Di ... Yacht Club for the ~S Unt off the IOlltbwnt tip of ~lttr bland. Cheers went up, along with a hu1e Ariierlc .. Flog. · Old Glory dwarfed the Mlcli!Jan like a apbmaktr broken loose from its line11 Rifle Slug Hits Clemente Witido\V A 1lua: from a hi&h-1M>wertd rlfit; crash- ed throulh the 11111 door of 1 San Clemente man'• hOmt Sund•)' afternoon. William R. Enqulol, 117 Calle De Seto, phoned police to report someone shootlnc at hi• house:. Offtms urivad 11 the home and found a hole made by·a hlgbilowtr rlOe alu1. The aho4 P11lolrntn ifid, 1pposmtly came frorn Iha dlroctlao al Ole 11•- Etemenlliy School. DAILY PILOT "'""-"'" .... ........ ......, ._, ... OllANM COAST "UILl$MINCI C0M'AHY ••~•rt N. w,,; l"fl1jdtt1! •r.d Publi1"'1" J1ck l. Cwt!ty Vie• l"re~'.o.,,t Miii Gwntr•I M•~fftt' lho..,•1 Ktt•il lfflttr Tho"''' A. M,,,,.iftt MMll ..... attl!W ~r,t.1r4 '· Nin $0Vlh Or•• c-1v t:.i~ °""" C..-M .. : m wttt ti? ltr"1 H,,..,1 lft(llo: •11 W"I ltlllt• hultW ... .............. I nt '°'"t A""'"" t41iM1t=:i.,~1 u11• .. WI 11tv1 .... ~ "" : W irlttfll iii ~ ltMI • wbllt vie square·hulled Monterey groan- ed along in her wake. A phalanx of some 20 other watercraft followed the two venerable ve ssels, ln· eluding a Harbor Police boat which shadowed the entire race. Dubbed the s:-s. ASP:iration for the con- test, the Monterey was crowded with rac- ' ing entbullalll who uplred to ll1h1at her load by about IO 111J0111 ol ballast. An artlllery piece at the tlp of Shelter Jsland boomed to 1Ja:naJ the run for the money down a course of one nautical mile ind the Mlchlfan )>ubblod Into the lead. Oranse moke erupted from a dJstreu liar• m the colorful UtU' bolt -held to1ether by paint and gooCI faith -1p- parently signalling a drought aboard, Despite skill and nautical knowhow. Commodore Shaw blew ·his lead because everytime he , attempted to change coarse, all han'ds aboard the Michigan had to change -seats. She falftrod jull 1horl of the flnlah llnt and the S. S. AtplraUon chu11od 1crou the victor, followed by a celebratJon which lingered on into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy wu awarded fo custody of the San Dleao Rest and Alplratlon Society, while a return match -perhapo in Newport Harber -wu 1chodulod for September. Light Plane Sale Foiled By Capo W eeken~ .Crash The cuh rtfltlli1 flubed: a "no Ille j' sisn during a potontlal altplana purchioe this wttkend, when the trial run of the small plane at San Juan Caplltrano Airport l!JAod Into a cruh ~. 1 No '*1i Wh lnJiuocfln tbl Frldly lfen- ing bellf landlnJ of Iha plane In San JU1n Creek, Onnp County oheriff'1 dipllU .. said. The pllo4 Chui .. ff. Dennl•,·12, o!,13' AvenJda Rtdondel, San Clemente, and hl1 pasHnttr, Et Toro Marine teHrVl1t Harbor Patrol AUls Deck Man On Fish Boat A deck hand aboard the 5an Clemente sportfisher Sum Fun was taken off the vessel during a fishing trip Sunday morn- ing after he became ill near the nµcleir generating station at San Onofre, Harbor patrolmen frQm the Dana Har bor patrol base responded to the call and removed George Clough, 161 Avenida Mariposa, from the boat. The deckhand, autferinJ from what was termed a minor UlnlN, was taken to lhe San Clemente pier . where he: then 10U1ht medical treatment. In 1nolher first-aid nsponse tn the South Cool! 1raa J>llrolmtn rendered help to a Yucca Valley fllhennan 1t the harbor'• launching ramp Sundly 11· ternoon. Bob --told potrnlmen he 1uf· fered a MverelJ ~ fln1t11 half mile out at ... durtns flll1lftl trip. Rare Laguna Dog Lost; Search On Laauna Beach polJce lrtl' attemptlna to track down a ral'fl Japanne b91r doa. valued at '8&0, Which dl•lpptartd lite Saturday from the 100 ~lock of L1aun1 Avenue. Owner Ro1anne Brooh. 24911 Monie Verde, Llguna Nlpl, told polite ahe loft the doc, known u an Aldte, tltd ta a fence at approximately 10!IO p.m. When she returned afler a short period the dog has vanished. The animal, accordlria tQ police, weighs J 10 pounds, is ofC.-whlte tn color with a very curly tall, small eyes arid black hair around the mouth. Because or recent surgery, he ha1 a bald 1pol on top of his head, Mrs. Brooks added, Senate Panel Okays Nixon Rail l\leasure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sanlle Labor Commluee approved unanlmoualy today a bill proposed by Pregldent Nixon lo 1vert a nationwide rallroad strike now threatened for S1turd1y. · The mtuur• •oukt impo&e oa Ult tout """1crafl unions Involved lo the dispute and' the Industry a oatlement ruchod by negotiators laat Detember. " " Gtaliun R. Krt!dilr, IS, .. ~a pl d1 unllanned. . The P1ir !Old Qfflcaro they wert trylnr out lhe llngle..,..ine lircrsfl which w11 for lala >i!lln !J1e "'"''' ~!NII I~ on Iandlnf. Dotlnli told ln~lorl u he trtod to lift the plan1 back olf tbl fl11d, the en11ne could nol pick up enoqh power. The pl1ne then p1ncalced into San Ju1n Creek, .. hlch parlllell the 11111111 landln1 atrlp II the airport. Damqt to the aircraft lndudod a bent propeller, I dlm11ed rtpt -· Ind I crumpled wfn1 tip. The plane was removed from the chan· nel by crews during the weekend. Burglars Collect Petty Cash Haul At Teen Facili~y Laauna's new Revival Teen Club has been hJrey burglar. who removed a c1ah. box containing an undelennined number of quarters, police report. The thief kicked Jn a 1ereen to aain en· try to the teen center. in the old Barefoot Bar bl.ijldinl on the boardwalk at Ocean AVenue, •nd removed the box which was attached to 1 Poot table. In ·a· leCond ·weekend burglary, an assortn1ent of clothtnl a n d houlehold eqWpment va~~ at '671 were taken from . the home of Jcitn St an I e Y. T&lmpeof!, NI 'nlroulh Street, at Qne li"lt betWeen111 1.m. and 3:30 p.m. Sun- day. Missing items includtd a portable typewriter, two watches, a piagy bank with cash, tigbt bith towels, two J)Jir1 of slacks; a bedlprtld, two pillowcase• and· shte1-and a hall a 111Jon ot vodka, Thompson told police. A willdpw wu smashed lo a:ain entry to the home. Red Cross Seeks Help in Laguna The ~meriean Red Cross h "'llinl more vohu\ltlrs in the Laguna area to helj) with Its aMUal fund·ralslng cam- palgn. Thl~ year's goal Is $16,000. To date, $7,323 ha1 betn received 11 the result of a residential mail camp1lp conducted by Mrs. Marvin T. Brown and her voluntetr 111lstant1 In the Llsuna Be1ch Red Crou office, IQ Park Ave. More volunteer• are needtd to c1ll on local busine&s firm& to aollcit con· 1rJbut.ions. Perton1 who can 1p1re 1 few houri are Invi ted to contact the Red Cross olflce In perwn1 or call 4H-6M7. During the past year, I.he Red Cross furnish«! 1,761 plnil of blood to perion1 in the tommunll,y, sent !ta bloodrnoblle on regular •!1!11 to collect the b!OOd whlcli ii furnished free when needed, handled a vonety of 1<tvtee1 le mlllilr1 famtu11, c:cnducted clUffl In flnl 1ld. 1tn11! cr1ft and water 1afely, provided voluntetr nursu md conducttd a eountywldt disaster 1ervice program. • Ol('d • . High Court Favors . Slate Maxin,..um Payment . . ~' WASIDNGTON (uPI) -The Supreme Court rulad todly lllat alates may set maximums on their welfare payment! to poor larnUte1 with dependent children. JusUce Potter Stewart wrote the ma- jority opinion for the court, which cjivjded 5 to 3 in ruling ona MarylanQ case. . In a separate 2+-page opinion Justice John M.·Hartan ruled for a six-man ma- jority that New "(ort Stfte, in vlolltlon of 1967 amendments to the Feder1l Social Security Act, impennl1slbly cut wel!are payments to !he Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program . The cuts heve decreased benefits to New York City recipients by aJmogt $40 million. From Pagel SHOOTOUT. • • guns at motoriJLI along the Golden State :Freeway, two of the 1lain patrolmen spatted a car, answering the deacription. parked in front of J'.s Coffee Shop just off the freeway. They radioed for help and a second patrol car arrived within minutes. lt was shortly before midnight. One wiLness, among four young persons in a car towing a boat, said he was "stan-- dlng in the parking lot and saw a California Highway Patrol car approach 1 car with two men in it. "The two officers got out and one aJ> proached," the witness said. "The fellow on the passenger side got '<lut and im· mediately shot one cop, picked up the cop's shotgun and went around to the front of the car and ahot the other cop. "Another highway patrol car pulled up beh_ind. Then the patrol car'• driver got out and lhot. He was eunned down. The remaining cop held off these two guys for about five minutes by hlm1tlC. "Finally one fellow went around to the front of the highway P1!rol car 1nd •hot tbil young cop ln the face." A hlpway patrol •Pokeaman 11td he could not explain how two men were 1ble to •hoot down four olfleen. The •lllllanll ahudoned their bullet· riddled automoblla and fled on foot. The f1111Uve ll'l'-In 1 canyon .,., ldenUflad by pqllco 11 R1111tll Lowell Talbert, 11. WOllNDID TlllCB Tl!btrt wu wounded twice after lie ex· ch1n1ed aholl and ocufflad with camper Din Sch,..an:, .0, Chlcqo,. ,Yfho was 1loeptng· In hi• campor 1!'"!1k when Talboti fired Into ff, a lf'Olulli!iln 11ld. Police said Talblrt, 1ppa/ently oul ot ammunition, ptsto~whipi*! 8chwm ind fJtd Jn tht CamJl!tt truck, ' -":': He wu apprelieaded without J'Hl1tance later In a can)'On nearby. The slain patrolmen were ldentlfied as Walter C. Frqo, 13; Roi'!' D. G«e, 112; James Edward Pmce Jr., 25, Ind Gtorae M. Alleyn, :U. All were mll'l'led and llvod in nearby communities, Mrs. Hoag, wife or the man held hootqe, aafd n flod the houJe after calllng Iba hipay P1!rol. "l wm fixing breakfast for my hu11band when I saw a man outside carrying a shotgun and a pistol," she told newsmen. "I went and cailnd the hi1hway pilrol. "My husband came in and said thls man wants to talk with us. There was a tap at the froqt door. The rnan said it'1 probably your son. "The tap at the door was the highway patrol. I ducked out the front door and in· to the bushes. The man Jnsidt looked ex· hausted. It looked like he had a bullet wound in the head,'' Mr•. Hoaa said. The couple's 17-year-old son, Jeffrey, sleeps in an adjoining c«taa:e and didn't waki unUI 6:30 a.m., about 1 hour and 16 mlnUto after Twinning entered his par- enll' houJe. ·Ho ... lboUI u. ii emplO)'ld by I Vin Nuys truck firm, Harlan sent. lhe.N.W York case back t~ • lhe Znd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for further aetion. rut cdurt had ruled the sta~ action valid. GIJjef.JulU~ Warren E. Burier and Justice Hugo L. Black dlisented on the ground that the matter should ~ave been ruled or{ n~ by the Department ·or Healt.h,.£ducalion· and WeUare. In other actions today, the court: -Refused to review a ca.e protesting religious messages to earth f r o m astronauts in space, leaving stand a lower court ruling against Mrs. Madalyn Murray O'Hair, who successfully at. tacked school prayers some years ago. , -Ruled iii a Flofid4 c4se that a perJOn may not ~ tried by boU! a city add a state for the same aUe.lf(I crime. .,-Refuled to r~vif"( 111 .Uliqo\I lil)el case, .leavlns .tanc1 a ruftnc .1n t1vor or the Edwardsvllle lolellllencot.. w!Jich wrote of now-deceased City Attorney Robert w. Tunnel that be "was work!~ to break the law" in makin( i.~ pointments. The apinlon in the Maryland ca~ revetied • judgment of a tpodai ~ judge federal court in Baltimore which invalidated that state's welfare ceiling on Dec. 13, 1968. Maryland Attorney General Francis B. Burch appelled to the Supreme Court. Planning ,.Parks Units Meet in Joint Session San Clemente's p I an n Ing com· mls.sioners wlll meet in a apecial joint study seSsion with the city's parkS com- mission Tuesday for a final examination of the proposed parks section of the five- year ·capital improvements list. 'nle plaMers and parks commissioners will examine each of the items specifying lmprov!'l!Jent of nellhborbood parka, beach •improvements and rebuilding of the fir..a,maged community clubhouse, After the 4 p.m. study session Tuesday, the plaMing commission will draft its formal recommendation of priorities at its meeting Wednesday night. Both the parks and planning com- missioners have been examJnlng the list of projects for 1he past several weeks. After thei r recommendations a r e received by the city council they· will be i·11cluded in the council's budget prepara- tions later this spring. BoUt croup1 have -a~ tlie ~·1 wWies -not conaidered expenae in ~t­ ting the priorities, but insteadhave used community need as the criterion. The projected cost breakdown for tbe parks and recreation segment Is ~ for parks development ; $194,000 ·tor municlPfl 'pitr.iinprovements and $18,000 for work on public beaches. , The projecll a1 detailed are spread over a five-year perli)d. Among the pier improvement.! IUI· gested by the stair is the eventual ex- pansion or the end ol the pier to 8C· commodate a large, formal restaurant. which, staff members have said, could result in more revenue to the city. The parks section includes iugge!tiolu for $250,000 to be spent to build a new building in place of the ruined community clubhouse. Capistrano Trustees Study Bus Transportationlssue Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District will act on transpartation, curriculum and recreation requtsts at to11lght's I o'clock meet1n1 ln Serra School at Capistrano Beach. A request hll been made by a parent of a private tchool 1tudent for bu3 trwportation from Dana Point to Old Mission School, a parochial school which is a block from the district's Capl:strl'1c School. Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent for bu:slne1s !!lervlces, will recommend denying the request evel'I though a bua does proceed from the area near the child's home to the nearby Capl1trano School. Laguna Sailor Gets Dunking A Laauna Beach sailor survived with no more than a dunking when his t•root catamaran capsized one·halt m i I e offshore in the Cliff Drive area at ~:30 p.m. Sunday. Summoned to the scene, an Oran1e County Harbor Department boat arrived after Jeffery Stevens, 20, or 1565 Rel11tta Drive, had righted his craft, climbed back aboard and been taken Jn tow by his father. A large crowd of Sunday vi1ltors watchtcl~~ operation. 'from the _ cllff1, along with a Laguna· Beach police unit called to 1tand by in CIH of further emergency. In a memo to trustea, Chlcu 11:- plained that there ii room on UliJ bus And the action is le;:11ly perml11ible but it would not be fair to other private achoo! students who might make similar re- quests who live in areas where buse1 would be too full to accommodate Q1em. Trustee1 at.lo will be Bike<! to co111ldu planning for single session kindergartens for nex t year. This W3!!1 considered tb.e administration's top priority item whe11 the tax override was puled. ' 'fhe single seulon kindergarten would provide for lon&er classroom time with one teacher for each clu•. The schedule would be set up so that there would be periods o{ time when two kindergarten teacher• would be ia both mominc and afternoon cl111es. The board a1'o will consider a buditl for a diltrict recreation pr o I r a m. primarily for the summer months. The activities to be scheduled at most dlltrkt schooll will include aduli softball, a play ground program, J11cludlng art.a and crafts, tennl1 Instruction, physical ftlnel1 and swimming tenons at the 6111 Clemente municipal pool. From Parle 1 SHEPPARD. • • resslonal wrestling career whe.1 he died, married Colfeen Ja1t Oct. 21. Mr1. Georae Strickland said, 11We all lhOIJlht he· hil.d the flu ." Laguna High' s Murphine PickedforPanamaStudy During hl11 yettl Jn prl1cn, whtn Shep. parcf h1d volurdetred with a number of other prisoners·to partJclpate In a cancer research proaram with other 1>1rticlpants. a Uve e1ncer virus bad been injected into hit body. Dr. Bilphen 8tlapp11d;hit brother, had claJmed durb11 Sam'• imprltcmmtnt that the injections might have caused cancer to develop, Mrs. Strickland sald Sam had "told u1 h1 had cancer becaUH of that." "He told UI at one Ume he would not live another year when we flr1t 1ot together a ye1r ago," 1he 1aid. Preparinl for a year.Joni 1t1y tn Pu1ma City, Lqun1 Beach Hllh School junior Tom ?i.1urphlne, JI, Is tryln& to assemble an all-year aumrner wardrobe by April 14. !\1urphine learned, exactly 10 days be!ore hi1 departure date, that he had bten named P American Filld Service American Abroad stud.int for tbt comltl& school year. Because of different school scheduling In lb• tropical zone. t!Jat meant hurl')'ln& to Panama without delay. and IP. cidentally foregoing summer vacation. Now compleUn1 his ji.mlor ye1r at LBHS, Murphlnt will 1tay with the Vlctnte Gomez V1lladare1 ramily In Panama City and will attend the Cola;lo Janler with his AP'S "brothtt," Orlando Gomei Valladare1, 17. Both will be .seniors at tht colleae. Tom t1 I.he son of Mr. and M". Tom A. ~furphlne of 482 St. Ann'• Drive. An enthualutl~ 1port1m1n, he pl1y1 baNball and foctbllll, part!clP1l<• In trick and en- joyJ 1urflng. Ke had bttn ~n LBH~ nprtNn- ta!lv• to eo,1• Si.le I• Sacramento and wu prtOldent-eleel of lhe hllh a<hocl Key Club but wtlt hav• lo pm up both hooor• In favor of Ille foralgn ttay. OAll.l 11'1...0f Sl1lf , ... ,. HIADID l'Olt PANAMA A'S SIU<lenl Mu'llh!no I 1 • _____ __,, ________ -·-------- Sheppard had one son, Samuel Jr., by his first mmtare. The son, know• 11 "Chip," Is now In JU.a 20'1. Sheppard's sec6fid wife wa1 the former Ariane Tebbenjohanns of West Germany. They were married In July , 1964, shortly after he wu r~lea11;d from prl10n. Sheppard w• convicted In Ile(ember. 1964. of beating hll pregnant wife le d•ith July 4 ·it their B1y Vlllare home neat Cleveiud. Durtn1 his trial, Sheppard 11id 1 uone- armed bushy.hatred intruder" ltlllod hl1 wile and attacklld him In thelr 'hom1 en the ahort of Like Jt:rlt. Mrs. Sheppard hid been be1ttn arould the ha1d with an . e•tlmated as blow•. Sheppard was rele1aed from prl.lon Ju· ly 16, !~4, insisting "tam innocent, J am innocent." He wa1 freed by order of the U.S. D11trltt Court at Dayton , which rul· cd he had not recei ved a fair trial, Shlppard 's release was appealed to tht Sixth Circuit Court of Appe1l1 at C• cinnall, which on Afay S, 1186 nvtrsetf the earlier rulln1 and ordered him returned to prllon. Tha U.S. Suprtme Court, In a precedent-aettln1 decl1fon on June Ii, 19", 1ald Sheppard hid been denied a 1 r1Jr trl11 btc:auae of the "Romart camlval'' atmo1phlr1 In the courtroom and a yreiudiotd lrili Judft. I Mondor, April &, 1970 L DAILY rllDT 3 Laguna Cons Facing Camera? ' ' ' Police Chief Cites Econo ·~i of Internal TV System Jy RICHARD P. NALL OI "-o.irr '"tll•t ti.ff Future prnoners of Laguna Be1ch ctty jaiJ may find themselves on candid camera. At least Police Chief Kenneth Huck would Jike to install an internal 'iideo system to provide a higher level of security and save man hours lost by police making personal checks 01 the cells. county if we are nol now," said Wheaton. "We bave some very good olfice:rs on our force and they know whttt other citJes are paylJ18.1' He Pointed out that Jt costs $7,000 to traiJI an officer and it is not good economics to then lose blm to anoihtr department. Huck 18.l.d he has been operative with a shortage of five men for the put six or seven months while ajtempting ' to rm the pos!Uons. • The police chief also uid he would Pletare Tangled ' Ilke to establish a full·time juvenile unit and send additiohiri' personnel to the Delinquency Control lnsUtute at USC, I>O!•ibly by grants to the city. He hopes to develop adQlUonal counsel-, Ing service for both y~lh and their paref'!.ts and to work with community jroups'in dellnquency prevention. Huct spoke of need . for increased ef· fectiveneJS in traffic control. He saJd there should be a better data system y d , personnel should be tralr.ed in ac· cldent reconls ma,,.,.ment. ff~ also spoke al. the possihllily·ol using radar m areas where ~ is Impossible. He said bom>wed radar had been tesl<d on 'lllalla and Mont.my and said. "there are an amazing amount of violators traveling thole areas.,. Wheaton saJd also that additional apace for police 11 needed and would increase eftecliveness l>ut fie added that this is a problem shared by all tht crammed city departments. The study session of councilmen was a prelude to budget declaions1ot the Coming fiscal year. The system described by Huck to cou1- cilmen in a recent study session with department heads was one of several methods ouUined by the police chief to add to his department's effectiveness. The video system could also be used for police training films or screening ()f local situations by use of video tape. "It would also be tremendous for crime-scene utilization," said Huck, men· tioning narcotics crimes and unruly crowd situations where it is dif£ieult for police later to prove who did what. Two More Firms Seek Laguna Trash Contract LSD Worth $5,000 Seiz~d In Laguna Raid T1-is Little Piggy ••• Frencqy Frydman's little pig went to market recently. The Long Beach police officer and his partner, Officer Robert A. Fowks, are selling · T-shirts and tie tacks throughout Southern California as a reverse psychology spoof of the derisive, modern-day term some- t.imes ·applied to law enforcement officers. Jewelry and sport wear aren 't fhe only applica tions. Police say term stands for Perserver- ance, In tegrity; Guts and Service. Edison Co. Selects Builder For Two Nuclear Reactors Southeni. California Edison Company has chosen the builder of two new turbines which will be linked to its two new nuclear reactors · in the pair of nc;w ~enerating plants to be built at S"an Onofre. A letter of intent to . purchase one steam t4rbine has been sent to English .f;lectric Corporation for the turbine generator unit. The utility holds an option ~~ll~ sec:ond unit from the firm as The turbine generat!)rs will be part of Edison's $450 million complex of two nuclear gfne rating stations even large r- than thr exist_ing one on 84 acres ()f land along the coast four miles south of Sa11 Clemente. San Diego Gas and Electric Company Is a 20-percent partner in the massive generating plant project. It holds the same interest in the 450,000 kilowatt nuclear plant already in operation on seaside bluffs leased from C a m p Pendleton. The new twill get1erating plants should be completed by the mid 1970s· Edison spokesmen said. Each unit will be almost exactly double the size of the present nuclear plant. Each new generating system will pro- duce I.I million kilowatt units -en- ough power lo serve a city of ~.S.million persons. The combination or the three plants would be the largest nuclear generating complex Jn the nation. Engineering and design work already is under way on the first of the twin plants. Construction will start as soon as the necessary government permits are granted. The plant plans already have received a clean bill of health from the San Diego Area Regional Water Quality Con- trol Board. The first generating unit is master planned to begin sending electrical power in 1976. ..d He said Judge Richard Hamilton or the Municipal Court had particularly recommended such equipment as a means of effectively pre v ~ n ti n g courtroom evidence. The system, alreaCly in use In San Clemente, changed one drunk driver's mind on the Spot," said Huck. He said the man had to be physically restrained by police at the time of arrest. The 11ext morning the prisoner com· plained of police brutality,. said Huck, 1.1ntil he viewed his own acUorus on the video device. Huck said the man's at- titude changed to remorse. "He said 'I'm guilty' and it saved a jury trial,,, the police chJef said. Huck said he hoped also to increase departmental effectiveness in crime prevention and C011trol. He spoke of needs for better community lnvolveme11t and willingness by citizens to bolh report incidents and serve as witnesses when necessary. The police chief said there is a Med for seminars for the public on topics ranging from drug abuse to how to burglarproof a home. "' He said " hopes to institute for police a comprehensive and continuing training program from the command. level to the patrol level. Topics would include e x e cutive development, management, middle management, aarcotlcs and ad· vanced law. To maintain. the current level of police service, the police chief said, he feels It will be necessary to add an additional patrolman, a detective and a com· municatlons worker. Recruitment and retention of' officers has become a .serious problem, Huck said. The recruJtment.of u officer takes thn!e mQnlhs; Police acadeiny takes another thrff and three more are eon. sumed by the new officer working under close supervision. The police chief sald during recent recruitment 79 men applied but onJy 29 sho•-ed up for the written examinatlon ·and only six passed that. AdditionaJly, Huck said, only one out of four men making the psychology test are found suited for police work. City manager James D. Wheaton said another problem at the patrol level has ·become salary. Wheaton said the Laguna top pay of $811 monthly has become less than starting aala,ries in many police .departments in Or811ge County. He said the city of Newport Beacli has i lected tG advance police aalaries indepeltdent or other employes. "We're going to be the lowest tn the El Rancho has the hottest price in town! MORTON'S 26 Ol CTN. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No salt salts like Morton's salt salts ••• and who but El Rancho \voUlil offer it for a nickel? Applications from two more firms seeking a chance to bid on Laguna's new trash and garbage collection contract, along with a letter !roto a law firm representing the present contractor, John Lindley, have further complicated the city's tangled trash picture. CJty Manager James D: Wheaton hand- ed the council a rough draft· o{ revised specifications for the new contract last week, but it was decided .that furtlier Fire Damages Two $50,000 Irvine Homes . Fire of undetermined origin did an estimated $12,700 damage Sunday night to two $50,000 homes in the Turtle .Rock area of Irvine, the ·county Fire Depart- ment reported. The blaze broke out in the garage of the home or Mr. and ~trs. Robert Horn, 18712 Saginaw Drive, about 10 p.m. Destroyed wu the garage, a dune buggy and part of the attic of the one story residence. Flames also did about' $500 damage to the adjoining two.story home ()f George A. Snodgrass, 18722 Saginaw. Firemen said the Harns were en- teraining guests when they smelled smoke and found the gar:sge enveloped. in flames. Tiley lllOd 1arden "'-to flg!lt the blaze until firemen ·arrived. Twenty firemen under command of Battalion Chief -Day C<llltrolled Ille flrt In •bout ID mlnui.s. One pumper iaill from the uhiverstty lt.atloii;two from the airport and a snorkte truck from Laguna Hills were called to batUe tbe names. Four Soviet Leaders Stricken by Illness Moscow· CAP) -A SOviet Foreign Ministry llpOke&man confirmed today ~t at least four top Kremlin leaders are sick in bed. He said rrerruer Alexei ~· Kosygin . is hospitalized in Jl special Kremlin r:nedical center while President' Nikolai · V • Podgorny and Polltboro J11embers Mik~ hall A. Suslov and Alexander N. Shelepin are at home suffering from ·1:4:!lds. Welch's Fruit Drinks ............. 3"' '1 Instant Potatoes ........................ 49' Grape or Apple-Grape ... big 46 oz. cans. J.lashed potatoes in minutes! Ore-Ida ..• 13 o:z:. Beef Stew .. . .......................... 79¢ Chicken and Noodles ................ 79' Stouffer's ••• simply heat and serve I 10 oz. Stouffer's ••• frozen •• , heat and eat! 11 ~ oz. Beat nien1t-11ionoton.11 • , • shop El Rancho earlv in the week! Stuffed Cabbage Rolls ..... ~~~ ..... 39! Crisp fresh cabbage leaves, wrapped ·around gro1;bd beef and pork . , , delicio11JJly 1 ... oned ,., ready to cook! • Breakfast Steaks ...................... $1 69,. details remained to be ironed out and the matter was put ahead to the April 15 council meeting. On this date the city attorney also will present a proposal for a new ordinance making trash pickup obligatory for all householders. A precise method for en- forcing payment of trash collection charges has not yet been decided upon. It had been hoped that the water district would agree to cooperate In bill· ing, using as a lever its power to shut off water for failure to pay, but water district offtcials were unwilling to do this. A letter from the law firm of Rutan & Tucker, representing Lindley, also sought a two-week continuation in o rd e r to prepare a presentation in behalf of his Laguna Disposal Corilpany, which has held the city contract for the past 10 years. The city Council, on motion of Mayor Glenn Vedder, recently voted to give Lindley the new contract when his present agreement expires Sept 30, but reversed itself when Torn Trulis of Solag Disposal Company, requested an op- portuhity to bid on the contract. Siplilar requests have since been received from Toro Disposal Inc. of El Toro and General Disposal Service of Long· Beach. ~ Since it is not required that a city seek open bids ·on trash collection contracts, it had been intended to present the contract to Lindley and Trulis, compare the services the two could offer and award the contract to the one that appeared able to aerve the community best, not necessarily the low bidder. County Facility Hit by Pickets Oppo.sing groups peacefully picketed the Orange County Medical Center Saturday and Sunday in a dispute over the moratorium on therapeutic abort.ions -an- n<>unced at the center last Tuesday. Women of the National AMoclation for the Re:peal of Abortion Laws. had been on the scene since Thursday and were jpined by 'women representing the Right to Life League, a group whl~h op'pOSes abort.ions. The moratorium was declared on abor- tion at the center effective March 20 when resident physicians objected to an overload of cases running about 20 a week. l...i~d Five thousand dollars worth of LSD, along with a quantity of heroin and hashish~ five kilos of marijuana and a pound of suspected opium were seited b:f state agents and Laguna Beach Police in two raids early Saturday, aulborilies reported. Three women and three men were IJ'o rested on charges oi ~ of mari- juana and dangero.is d r u g 1 and possession with intent to sell. The arrests climaxed a two • week In- vestigation by the State Bureau of Narcotics and the Laguna Beach Police Department. Officers went ftr&t to ~1872 Meadow: Lane, South Laguna, at 5:30 1.m. Satur- day. There they arrested Dennis Envall, 20, Jean Ellen Reese, 11, and Deborah Lee Wulikuhl, 19, all of the Meadow Lane address. Within the hour, they moved on to 3111 Alt.a Laguna Boulevard in Laguna's Top of the World area, where they arrested Joseph Gregory Gaines, 19, and Andrew Grant Thomas, 19, both of the Alta Laguna address. The six were scheduled far arraignment In municipal court today. Furnace Controls Issue in Laguna 1 'll\e Laguna Boach Fire Dewbnent' will ask the gas company and the cltJ Building Department to cooperate Jn a drive to solve what ii becoming' 1 larioua1 lln hazard In the Art Colony. "We are having too many fires cau!ed1 1 by older floor furnaces not equipped with an upper heat limit control,'' and Fire Department spokesman said to day, "They may work fine for 20 years or 90, but then a maUwiction can easily start a fire.'' · New installations are equipped with such a control, he said. The latest floor furnace blaze occured Sunday at 371 Poplar St., where Warren Watkins and his wife were awaked at 4:40 a.m. by tbe smell of smoke. They' found the floor area around the furnae9 outlet burning. Two Fire Department unlts ~ to their call and extinguished the blawf which caused damage estimated at $300., Thin cut. from U.S.D.A. Choice top sirloin. Grill each aide about 2 minuteol Love thnt breakfast! Stroganoff Slices ........... , ........ ~1.69 Ground Round ......................... , .. 89~ Pri,ctB in effect Mon., Tm.a., Wtd., April 6, r; 8. No 1ale8 to deakri. Allf.ADIA: Sv111et rnd Huntinllon Dr. (El Rancho Ccn!I~ Top sirloin beef ••• ready to braise. Add the fixin's. Super f re1h produce. Banana Squash Sweet golden meat for A. · delicious baked vegetable treat! Always lean, fresh I Pattfe1, too, at this price I At tilt Delicaten1m Biscuits Pillsbu ry or Ballard'• •.. S.Oz. tube. Hot bi8"uits are always enjoyed I 3i25( - I I PASADENA: 320 Wost Colorldo Blvd. .SOUTH PASADENA: f11mont and·Hunllnitcn Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Wtrnor 8lld Al1onoaln (89'fd•clk Conler) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. tnd 2SSS ·£J$tblvff Dt. (Ealblvll Vil~p Ctntll) • Ma,u#leld Sa1• • • 10-cent Letter Proposal Dead? The Unlvenity ol Colorado will hold Ill lblrd llUIWll trivia bowl bellnnlnl nut Monday to learn IUJI bow much trivial Information II 1tudenll poa1111. Categories wUI Include such choice llenu u pop culture, pap music and sporll or ••any informatloh not considered needed for the content. •• of other· 1vise esaenUal lnfonnation. • HOUJewtfe Judith llutlor of Carl· Isle, EqJ!land, IJ going tnw cold storage for two years on a dare. !!J>e JIDSwered an ad Jodkjng, for aomeone w sit in a deep freeze for aeveral hours a day clad only in a ntgbtgown and a special new type of qllllt: She said "My friends dared me to apply for the job." • , Sb:-t/eaN>ld lAura Smfltt1 take1 Mr , mind off Ill<! big coat on her leg by ) planting 1omt flower 1eedl as part of o catch-up 1citnce le11on at Los .-Angell• Or&hopaedic Hospital. AZ. l though 1hi will be reltaatd long bt· foft the /lower1 bloom, sht and her hospital clalimate1 keep up with · their 1tudits. • A proE:al to move the U.S. Mint ~out of ver, Colo., is gettinff no support from the mayor, Wll l•m I McNlchol1. "I sort of like to hear the cllnkinrnfn of the money," be said after lea g of the suggestion. " • I A man who asked the U.S. c"'"1 burnu for hi1 confkkn- tial forf'n.3 to be returned to him I uw reftutd polittl11 r1ctntly, Ht said hit wift had filled lt in and maittd it without lttttng him • &tt it. Ht said aJL ht wanted to t do wa to att 1wtt czaeti11 how ' old his wife ta. ' ·' • After thieves had robbed the home of John B•lot In Bred bury, England, three times, police ad- vised him to trim a Ire& outside his home which gave the thieves cov· er. He did as he was told, but now mutt appear in court to face a charge o! damaging a tree pro. tected under an 80-year-old minis- try of housing order. • Edwtrd Btsll• of Kalamazoo, Mich., and a student at Western Michigan University, will have to find a way of. telling his insurance company that his car was damag. ed by a runaway snowball. The ' car was hit by a monster snowball rolled by students, which got away from them at the top of a hill and ri>lled Into a parking lot hitting the car and cau!IDI '500 In damages. " WASHINGTON (AP) -Prealdenl Nlr· on'a propoul to ralae the price of maUlng • Jetter to • dime to help pay for lhe waae boolt of mailmen and other govcrn- menl workers II doomed, occordlnl lo senate DemocraUc Le ad er Mike Mlllllleld. The ll><tnt 1llmp doesn't stand a chance, Mansfield said in an lntervtew. '"Ibey just won't 10 for a four-cent raise, especially in the one area which is retuntlng a profit." That area la flrtt class mail, which ll paying Ill own WIY under the curmrt Ill· cent rate atructure. Sen. Gale McGeee (0-Wyo.), chairman of the Senate Post Office and Civil Senlce Committee, alrea"y had rejected the Nlloo propoa1. Reds Attack Beret Camp, Down Planes SAIGON (AP) -North Vlebwn<ac troops from Laoe have Wd alege to a fn>ntier Special Fcrces camp Ind llhol down tlree American lr1lllpOrls trying lo drop emergency OJppU.., k!Wng an nine American cmnnen, mllitlry spokesmen reported today. 'l'tle heaviest action of the enemy'• 111- day-old oflen!.lve conUnued along the Laotian and Cambodian borders and the demilitarized zone. But fighting also was reported In the Central Hlghlanda Ind the central coastal plain.. Allied communiques reported 262 more North Vletnamete and Viet Cong 90JdJers killed in a dozen ltpii., three of !hem just 6utslde the besle11:ed Dak Seang Special Forces camp eigtit miles from the Laotian border and m miles nor1heut of Salgon. Eleven Americans were reported killed and 20 -.nded In the ground fighfuig and.in 41 rocket and mortar attack! dur- ing the night. Several American hellcoptera were blown up by enemy aapptra who penetrated the perimeter of Camp Radcliff, a U.S. base near An Khe, in the Central Hlj!hlanda. Reports from the field said at least 14 South Vietnamese 110ldiers wert killed and 107 wounded In the ground fighting. Government casualUea from rocket and mortar attacka which were described as light. Vietnam Troops Fall by 9,200 SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Commllld -cod lodoY that American troop stre.n'.gtb in Vlell'lam dropped another 9,200 men lut week, to 439,toO. It ls the lowest level In lhne yean Ind results from continuance of President Nixon's thlnl-phue withdrawal now neulng Ill final week. 'The U.S. Command also announced that a detachment repreaenUng the 1st Infantry Division will fly Tue!day from Bien Hoa Air Base to the United States, completing the division's departure from Vietnam. .. Three more Anny units were in- acti.vated In Vietnam today, resulting In a total reduction of 173 men. The units are the 337th Radio &>earch Company, the 53rd Signal Detachment, and the 1st Military Intelligence Detachrnen~ all based around Saigon. The third-phase redeplo)'l11«11 w 1 I I reduce authorized U.S., tioop strength In Vietnam to 4'41000, ·but American of- ficHds say actual strength will drop from one to two percent below thlt. He aald a cbeci wJtlt members or hl1 panel, ahowed the lkent ttamp dotrn't atand a chanct. McGee said he would consider a ODM:ent Locrease, two at th• outsldf. McGee's eommllloe acbeduled hearlq1 late loday on the prelldenUal propola1 based on a settlement reached lut week between government negoUatcn and or- flclah or the ll!Vtn major postal unloru. The tentative agreement, reached after a flrat.-Ume ever poetal strike, provided a 1wo.mp, 14 pmtnt booll lhll b re 1k1 down this way : -A six percent boost for nearly all federal workers, including p o 1 t a 1 employea and m1lltary per I o n n e I , retroactive to Dec. 27. -Another eight percent jump for mail workers If and when a Post Office reorganization bill becomes law. The cost of the package 15 e.stimeted at $3 billion 8nd Nixon's lG-cent stamp pro- posal is designed to bring in $2.3 billion. McGee said Congress will work withh1 the terms set by the negotiated asree- ment, and prombed to act quickly. Mansfield said he wlll schedule floor action on the measure as soon as it is ready, pos11ibly by mid-week. ManSfleld Aid the overall pay package may have an infiaUonary effect. But he Yid it represents an overdue federal commitment to government workers. ·To offaet it, he said, the bud~t will have to be cut elsewhere. "I think the administration. will have to cut expenditures more and we'll have to redlia! appropriations more," Mansfield said. "l tblnk wt ought to look again at the defense budgd and our commltmenls overseas." C.Onservatives Have Their Day In Washington WASHING TON (AP) -Wbatever other purpose lt may have aerved, the March for Victory gave thousands of mlddlw.g- ed and come.rvaUvely dreaaed Americans a chance to be beard. "'Ibis is our day," said the Rev. Carl Mcintire, the fundamentalist preacher and dlief organizer of the event, who led the March Saturday down Pemsylvania Avenue to the Washington Monument. There, a loud speaker blared "at last, Amer1cans have bad their day in w ashington. '' Crowd estimates varied. Washington Pollce Oiief Jerry V. Wi!JOn set the num- ber at J0,000 to 15,000. Federal Park Police estJmated about 40,000, while Mcintire Wd 50,000 persons marched. About 250,000 persons were estimated to have walked the same route in the November Moratorium Day p r o t e s t against the Vietnam war. Unlike last fall's youthful demonstrators with their Jong hair and unortbodox clothes, the weekend crowd was mosUy over l'.I, had above-the-ear hair alts, and wore their Sun<lay-be!t outfits. Some held Bibles, American and ·Conlederate flags. 'Ibey aang bymns, "America," "Dixie" and "God Bless America." Tiie event wu billed by MclnUrt as a demonstratJon for military victory in Vietnam -an answer to lut fall's an- tiwar marches. However, a number or conservative themea shared the spotlight, w i t h speakers and banners calling for prayer and Bible reading in school, an end to desegregation, aex education, legalized abortion and "Godless communism." "No Busing Of Our Children," said a h1.1ge banner carried above t.he heads of a North Carolioa delegation. To some Jt was a religious revival as they inquired about the !DUIS of lhooe they met in the throng. The devout who e n co mitered unbelievers proclaimed, "yru sot to bit 'em with the word." Severe Weather Eases Off .. ' ' I ' • • • f Spring Ctlllforala 1 the Air For Most Parts of Natwn Coutal Mlltll't' .........., '8d9J. l i.lrt 111rl1~lt Wlrlft Rltl'il ...... l'llll'flhtlit llW!'11 -- ""' wtli.rtY t te IS kllOb Ill ll!t•-'°°'•' ll'ld Tvttcltt'. """' tod.., •• CM•ltl ..,,....1111•• ,_ """" .. "' 11. ll'llt!ld ,.....,.."" .. ·-fl'INl'I .. ti IS. Wltto" ttm"'1Tvre '°' MDNO.t.T llcoMI """ .............. 1:0 lf.lft. ••• $«"lfld low .••••••••••••• !:1• lf.nl. ... Su1t, Moon. Tides TUltDAV "w.t Iii.ti .............. fl11 I.Ill. 4.t "lnl low .............. J:N '·"'· 0,7 ~ l\.hrft ............. , t :U111Jl'l,f.• lfito!lllll )Ow • • • • • • • • • •• • •• •:• Ill.Ill .... lllft .................... 117•""" ~ ..... u ........ ,,,, ...... • . A-1191"1\ll Aneflot111 All1n11 l•k.,.sli.ld 11 ....... l'tk ""' BO.Ion 1..-r.sv1IJ1 Chltl'° C!nd-n Oeilvrr ...... _ Del!'Oll l<1lrtM1nll• FOl'T WOrtll ·-Hrltft• ....... Kll'IM• (ltf l11 Vftll Los Anteltt M"'"' M!MtrPOIK N• or ..... _, ... ...... ·-... , ... OlllllMmt tlf)' ..... ,_ flltMft. ·-'"''~ ,..,,t.fPd f111111kf ClfV Jttd '""' ·-M(;r•"""" "" ltlll ""' ... . ... ..... '•lndeet ktllt. -OM --·•1• I " .. " " .. .. " " " " " " ,. .. M " M .. • M " .. ,. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. " " ,. " ,. .. n " " " " • " .. " ,, .. .. .. 4 " " " " " .. .. .. " .. " .. " .. .. .. ,. " 4 " .. .. " " " .. " • " .. " .. .. .. • ' ·" .. .. ... ... ... ... BREAKING TIES Weit Germany'a Brandt Israelis Reject Zionist's Off er To Meet Nasser JERUSALEM (AP) -The Israel! government has rejected an offer by a prominent Zionist to represent it at • mffUng with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. A government spokesman said Dr. N&him Goldmann, who heads the World Jewish Congress, informed Prem le r Golda Meir two wee.ks ago that "muy sides" -Including Nasser himself -had asked him to discuss the worsening Israel-Arab dispute in Cairo. In Cairo, however, an EgypUart govern- ment spokesman denied that Nasser had agreed to meet with Goldman and called the claim "a mere fabrication ." According to the Israeli spokesman, Goldmann said he was willing to go but wanted to be approved by the Israeli government. ''The government decided that it would respand favorably to any manifestation of willingness on the part of the president of Egypt for a meeting to investigate pro- blems crucial to Israel and Egypt, where each side was free to appoint its own representative," the government state- ment said. But to Goldmann's ~uest, "the government decided to r e p I y In the JtegaUve." In other words, the govern- ment would appoint its own represen- taUve for any such talks. The spokesman said that all but one of the cabinet's 24 melnbers vottd to tum down the 74-yeer-old Jewish leader, who was one of the mooit active and influential lobbyists for Israel before it became a state: _ Goldroann, who bolds both Israeli and Swlss citlzenship and lives in Geneva, has written that Israel should act flexibly and moderately toward its Arab neighbors - a position that has not made him popular In Israel. Last month he called for the neutraliza· tion of Israel, with Its status as a Jewish state guaranteed by "the whole of mankind," Including the Arab nations. Egypt Raiders Hit Israel Base CAIRO (AP) -Egyptian commandos thrust rt miles into Sinai, attacked an Israeli military concentration with rockets. and returned safely, the Egyp- tian military command claimed today . The . announcement quoted by Cairo radio, said the operation was carried out at dawn Sunday. It said Arab commandos made the attack on an army en- campment near the village of Rabeaa, about 37 miles from Qantara along the northel'Jl Sinai road. It said the encampment included a regional army headquarters, ta n k 1 , trucks and antiaircraft guns. 'I1le announcement, made more than 30 hours after the operation, also claimed that a large number of Israelis in the en- campment were killed when rockets "lllt the target with precision." RecaUltafl St.off . , I Germans Fuming . .. At Envoy's Death BONN,'. Germa!IY (AP) -Foreign Mlnllttr Walter Scheel lald IOday Wes! Gtnnany will ncall 111 embu1y stiff !tom Gult.mlla, u lndlanlllon mounled hn OVlf the i.rrodlt \tlHnt of Count CG'l voo SpteU, ildnlped ambuaador, IA Gultemall, security forces ltePlled up lhelr !>ml for mem~ra of the 1<ltiit Rebel Armed Forc.s dilrlnc tile night after the body of Von SproU WU f«lnd In a roo11 ... mud lwl near GU1temala City. He had been lhol ooce In lhe bead. Police patrols were 1te11 oa almolt every o t h • r block ol lhe captlal. Somt homes were teardJ,ed. But then: wu no tnunedllte report ol any IJttlll, &::heel told a news oonfermce the Boon iovernment 'lfl.I forced to act because "the govenunent of Guatemala ap- parently b not in a poaitloo .. , IO guarantee the safety of the ttpreaen- taUves of the Wtst G6man Federal Republic." Scheel said other me11urt1 may follow as a result of von SprtU'1 murder. He said the government would study reports from Gerhard Mlkeach, its charge iraf. fairts ln Guatemala, and WUhelm Hoppe, chief of per90nnel of the Fortl.gn Mlnistry Who WU &tot to Guatemala Saturday to try to artallle for von SpreU's releue. Scheel al90 indicated fhat Guatemala's ambassador to Bonn, Anton.lo Gandara, wtll be asked to leave Welt Germany. "We have dedded ·lo withdraw our dlargt d'.Ualn!s IDd I upect that lhe Guatemalan government will draw the consequences," Scheel said. He added that h< plsnned to t.11 lhe amba!udor public opinion in West Germany would nol tolerate the presence Kirk Commands Florida Schools To Halt Busing BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI) -Gov. Claude Kirk, who once .bra1ged "Flori· dians have barred no school doors," took command of the Manatee County school system today and ordered students and teachers to ignore federal s c ho o l desegregation orde.ra. Kirk , accompanied by aide D i c le Warner, showed up at the two-.story brick school board office at 7:35 a.m. and hud- dled immediately with assistant school -superintendent! Philip Doyle and William Bashaw. "I can't aJk now, I'm buay running the · schools," Kirk told newsmen gathered ~t th< building. Kirk sutpeoded the county's five- member school boa.rd and the school superintendent Sunday and took com- mand of the school system himself to block a school desegregation plan that had been scheduled to go into effect to- day. Kirk met brieny with the school bus drivers at the motor pool early today and told them "take your old routes -not the new ones ." The school board'• switchboard ..... flooded with calls from parents asking where to send their childmi to achool. "Send them to the.ir old schools ••• the school where they have been goln1," the parents were told. ' Meanwhile, police say there wu M sign of trouble at tht county'• 28 schoola early today. Greek General Denies Resistance Key Role ATHENS, Greece (AP) -A retired • Greek army general accused of sedition in the mass trial of 34 persons denied to- day that he was the rlngltader of the resistance Democratic Defense organiza- tion. Gen. George lordanides, M, told the fi ve-member special military tribunal that although he hid met with key members of the organization they had never discussed ~binc attacks in bit presence. here of 1 reprHentaUvt of I h o Guatemalan govemrnsrt. Scheel said, ho-er. the llatomont wu directed II the GUltemalan _... ment and . not qalnat Gandara person.ally, addln1: "I bellett that Gan· dUI pellGOllly b Wee! lbouPI of 1>J tbe West Gorman pW>lk: becaUM ho o!l....i imaeU as a hostage for tbe amba·ador." Interior Minla:ttr H a n I · D l e t r l c: b C.nscber bad urled earner 11111 lie members of lht tmbusy ho broaaht back from Guatemala becaUlt Ebe FV<!nlllteDI there bad falltd t. ,.-i foreign dlplomlll. * * * Consul Fkes Kidnapers In Brazil PORTO ALEGRE, Bru11 (AP) -Tho U.S. consul In Porto AJecre WU -- in( today'ftom a allibt wound llllftnd In thwarting a kidnap alttmpl. lie -hi! Cl< to nm down one of hll ~ kid- napor1, Ind they Jet -a 11111 of hubeta aa !>e eacaped. _ Curlis C. CUtter, I 11-yelM!d Korun War veteran, became the ftl'lt cUpkmat in Lalin America to penDnllly dtly a kidnap attanpt since the wave of polltieaJ abductions alarted Jut September. 'lllere have Deen eight previous Jddnapfn&a or attemptod kldn1pmp In Lalin -.. cOWltries. CUiier was drivin( home Jalo Saturday night with his wife, Calherlne, Ind • former Slate Department official, Hovey Clark, when a gang in a car lntercepted them. Several men wearing darlc ,tUIU and carrying machine guns jumped out and headed toward Cutter's station wagon. The «ll!Sul stepped on the gu and pul~ ed 8l'OOJ1d lhe car blocking hb p1th, hil- ting one of the men and dragglrig ~ on the bumper for several yards. 1be other kldnapers opened fire, wounding lhe ...,. sul slightly in tbe back, but he wu able to drive to his: borne 1 few blocks away. Police said the assailants w er e members of the lefUst Armed Revolu. tionary Vanguanl. They picked op th<ir injUl'f.d comrade and t.aeaped. Guards were put Cl'I Cutter's boeptat rocrn, his borne and the boma; ol. «her diplomats; Appeals were broadcast over radio Ila· lions in the area for all doctors to rtport any cases of auto injuries they treat. Police said they found the car uaed by the altackers. They lald 1t had been stolen la.st month. "'lllis latest act of temrism heigbtftll' our concern for the safety of ciur diplomatic penonnel," U.S. Am-e. Burke Elbrlck said In Rio de J-o. Elbrick bimseH WU iidnaped 1111 Sept. I and Wal releued after the gvvemmlnt freed Ii poliUcil pri1coer1. New Kopechne Jury Convenes EDGARTOWN, Mau. (AP) - A specia1 session of the Dukes County Grand Jury convenes today amid doubt over its procedure in its Independent in- vestigation into the death last July 11 oC Mary Je Kopechne. Miss Kopechne, 13, a former campaign secretary of tht late Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy, died in a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (l).Ma11.). The car plunged off a narrow bridge Into a tidal paol on Chappaquiddick Island, which lies across a narrow strait from Edgartown. one of the towns on the island el. Msrtha'I Vlneyanl. Kennedy, the youngest and oft I y aurvivor of the four Kennedy brothers. escaped, but delayed for 10 houri his nport of the accident lo lsllDd police. Wonien Back Panthers Members of the \Vomen's Liberation League march down Second Avenue in N'ew York in a demonstra. Uon su~porting 21 Black Panthers charged with bomb p1ott111&. The croup wu., rout& to Iha Qu_, House of Detention where 11 of the 21 are being held. The demonstration at the House of Detention culminated the march which began In Cenlrll J'ark. The 11 Panlllm bein& held could not ra!Jt bill. '" • San (;lemente (;apistrano ' VOL 63, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS , 42 PAGES • • ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA --St•$• • • MONDAY, APRIC 6, '1970 • TEN CENTS • Reagan May Support Coast Oil Drilling Protest By THOMAS FORTUNE Of .... O.ltr ""' lltfl' Efforts of three Orange Coast cities to push a bill banning local offshore oil drill· ing through Congress were shaping up as promising today. The good word for Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and San Clemente was that hiring a lobbyist may not be as ex· pensive as ea.clier thought and that Gov. Reagan is willint to aid their cause. Th~ bUl the three city governments wisbrto see passed would prevent oil drill· ing in federal water, begiMi ng three miles offshore, adjacent to areas where tht near-shore state tidal waters are designjted marine preserves. In short, the U.S. government couldn't collect revenue by putting in oil drilling platforms south oC the Santa Ana River (boundary line between H u n t I n g t o n Beach and Newport Beach), which is a sanctuary under the state's Cunningham· Shell Act. Two local representatives were in Washington, O.C., last week -Hans J . Lorenz of the Coastal Are.a Pr¢.~ve League and Newport Beach Mlyor Doreen Marshall. Lorenz early in the week interviewed several professional lobbyists (called legislative advocates) our Ohafl Probable Carswell Over Senate H-ttrdle WASlllNGTON (AP) -Judge G. Har- rold Canwell's nomination t o t be Sapl-. C4art -... lint c:rucial Ifft ~ 11 Ille Semle rejecUd a motion Beachgoers Get Stung By Jellyfish Despite the appearance of a new type jelly fish with a painful sting, Southern Orange Coast beaches played to capacity crowds during the wann weekend ln· eluding some nude sun bathers amsted in South Laguna. Laguna lifeguard Ll Eugene DePauli! reported a recent rash of stings from an unfamiliar species or jellyfish that hangs beneath the ocean surface and is nearly invisible. Himsell a victim while skindiving, DePaulis said, "It's a new species that has come in. They're Jong and stringy and sung the living daylights out of you. Jt lasts four or five hours." OePaulls, who was stung on the face, &aid "it feels like thousands of little bee atings. 'llley hang anywhere from the bottom to five feet beneath the surface." DePaulis said guards treated a rash o{ atings with spirits of tmmonia or rubbing alcOOoL He said the infestation seemed worse in the Crescent Bay and Victoria Beach areas. OePaulis reported that Lifeguard Lt. Dean Westgaard was also a jellyfish vic- tim while diving. "They really wiped him out He _got stung all over the body," said DePaulis. He reported huge cro\\·ds for early April enjoying the 7$ degree air tem- perature and 61 degree flat surf. Crowds were estimated at 16,0DO Sunday and Jl,000 Saturday. "That's unusual for thia time of the year," said DePaulis. Orange County Sheriff's deputie s descended on a nude sunbathing group Friday afternoon in South Laguna at a secluded cove area known as "Thousand Steps." · to return the nominaUon to the Judiduy Committee. Tbt .1""""'lillol, molim by Sm. Birch Bayb (D-illd.), a leader of Ille "IJl)Ollitlon, was deoiioed to kill the nomiDallon of the 50-)'0l'-old Talllhassee, Fla., jurill. The Seoabe now will volt Wedneoday oo cooflnnation of C&rswell, the 1eeond Southerner nomina ted by President NiJ:on for the Supreme Court vacancy created nearly a year ago by the resignation of Justice Abe Fortas. Nixon's first choice, Judge Clement F. liaynsworUl Jr., of Greenville, S.c .• wu rejected by the Senate last November by a SS-45 vote. Senate leaders o! both parties said they e1peded defeat of Bayh'a recommittal motion to be followed by -of Carswell, although perhaps by a nar· rower margin. Some senators who voted against recommittal said they would vote against Carswell's confinnation. They contended that returning it to committee would just be ducking the issue. On the other hand, some senators who announced they favored returning the nomination to committee for further hearings said they would discl06e later how they would vote on confirmation if the recommittal motion failed. One of those who predicted eon- finnation was Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield. The Montana Democrat, still declining to say how he will vote, had p~viously rated the outcome of the hard.fought bat- tle over the Tallahassee, Fla., jurist's nomination a tossup. "I imagine the vote on returning it to committee will be the preeursor to the vote on Wednetday," Mansfield said prior to the voting. Newsmen asked him' if he m'tant he ex· pects Carswell to be coolirmed. "Yes, that's the way it looQ at the moment," Mansfield replied. Smale Republican Leader Hagh Scott of PeMSylvania re.iterated he is confident that Carswell will be confirmed. Scott said he sees enough voter to assure Carswell's confirm at Ion on "there may be some small or modest Wednesday, although he told reporters slippage" from the vote on recommittal. and Mrs. Marshall had ·• follow up in· terview with the one Lorenz tbouf't wu best. City councils of the three cities now will be asked to approve ezpenditures to hire the preferred lobbyist, whose name hasn't yet been disclosed. ' Lorenz, who was in Washington on his way to a vacation trip in Europe, telephoned Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart of the Cbastal Area Protective League. Mrs. Stewart said it had been lhooght a Joi> byist's fee to push the bill ")V<Uld be ao,ywhere !Nm $50,000 to 1100,000. Instead it looU like $1~,000 to $U,OOO, possibly 115,000 at the most." Tbe lobbyist's fee~ be determined at a daily ra~ plus upeMeS. Leamln& thlJ, Laguna Beacll Mayor G~n Vedder -said at City Council meeting last week, "Perhaps thiJ COUricil should come up with '2,000. County supervison said they would match it if Newport, Laguna and San Clemente com· bined can come up with $5,000." (The Coastal Area Protective League has pledged to cootribute 15,000.) Lagun·a Councilman Joseph O'SUllivan said , "We are oriented toward the beach and must do anything pouible to protect our beach." Newport M1yor Mrs. •ManbalJ l&i<I • , there are teven aanctuariel covering almolt onHourlh of the Clllfornia COISWne that woold be proltded by the bl1l BUI llbe DOCed in coli.ctlng money trom communities 1D other areas tt ii a question Gt bow wwrled the)''"" "Take Humboldt and Mendocino coun- tln. I don't know 00. worried they are," she said. The bill ha~ been introduced into the U.S. Senatt· by Alan Cranaton. (0-CaUf.) and 'co-authored by three otheer senators including George ,Murphy (R-Calif.). Lorenz said Richard Hann a (0-. West.minster) has agr«d to\Jntroduee a compaolon blJl Into the !louse o I 1cers ) '.' ' . ' • · lfPIT~. OFFICERS, 8Y$TANDERS STAND BY ONE OF CHP DEATH CARS ·IN 'VALENCIA OUNFIGM.T FOUf'l.llghwq P1tro1,,_, Killed; Ona Sutpocl' Coptv•••h Anotfior Klll1 Self Deadline Slated For Absentee Ballot Filing Deadline !0< taking aut absentee ballots ror the April 14 mwticipal elections is Tuesday at 5 p.m. In Laguna Beach, where the campaign of five candidates for three seats has been hot and heavy, and sometimes penonal,. there ha.s'been a run on the city cler k's absentee ballot department. Velma Barr, deputy city clerk, sakl normally there are between 50 and 65 aMentee ballots taken out in Laguna. The figure was apttted to go over 100 tod1y wiUi 98 taken oulby this morning: Max Berg, San Clemente city clerk, rep<rted that despite 15 carxlid.ates for three seats on the San Clemente counell, abserteie ~ ~ity is nmning about normal with 50tlken out 'by thiJ znorn.. ing. City Administrator F.rnest Thompson ol San Juan Capistrano also rtparled a normal 11ituatlon with aboat a dozen absentee ballots taken out thus far. 'Ibere are nine candidates and a wrile·in ca~ didate seeking three seats. Dr. Sam Sheppard Dies · After Battle With Flu COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Dr. Sam Sheppard, main figure in one of the na· Uoa's most controversial murder trii.ls, died today at lUs home here after he had been ill for three days with what was believed to be influenza. Sheppard, 46, freed fr.Om Ohio Penile•· tiary after.serving 10 years follQWing his convk:tion for the murder. of his fir1t wife, Marilyn, was found dead in his · home by his wife. -" -- His body was taken to University Hospital when an 11utopsy may be performed to d<termlne tho ca""' aL death. Mrs. Colleen Strickland Sheppard, his third wife, aaid the osteopath bad beell W with what she believed was 1lu. Sh'P' pard, who was In the. mkiat f)f a ~ (See SHEPPARD, Pate 2) ~uvea since the .... curnally is mftJll'etented with the death ol James Utt. Mrs. Marshall said sbe talUd to Rep. Craig Hamner (R,IAN1g Beacll), the anly Orange County cmgressman on tM Interior Committee, while she w11 in Washington. Reagan agreeing to support the bill ii "tremendously importlnt," she said. "His office could &ive bel to our representative'." • She aaid the city of sin Dle,o bit a legislative advocate on a permanent bull who also woold ·work with tbe county cities' labbyirl. ' • a1n One S~spe~t ·- Kills Sell; ' Other Held -- SAUGUS, cam. (APJ -One a( two men accused of killing four hi&h1'•Y palralmen in a gun battle ctrlllllllled auicide todly, autliorw. '~ !II< body --·!If I """ cl ''"""" in (II -and WOltinc -~ wllo --• -. _.. ho ......... • ~ f<lr m:»ua. -· , .. .AutlioriUei" !Int li!d uid he w11 eap- bril allft. .... flft I.oar. ~' 1'1111' • h-hoota,. • reteUtiir· lllm W\bann·eif. · Tbt ·other .. , wounded by omctn, waa' ca tfi'lier ia 'a canfOD. '.. Tho !oar highway patrolmen ...,. ki!l- ed after they stopped a car whallfo0- upants were repci'ted to .have brllilllbcl guns at m-..,-•·freeway. All«'lbo ahootout, the two fled separ1tely on foot. Jack Wrtibt Twlllling,, 35, taot refuae In the ilolated boule alap'a hill in~ country · 35 mllea north of l.oo· Milla aboul 4:15 Ln. and ' •P'!l'llCHcally .., changed ahota with a fc:ree of MV81'al ICOl"e officera until hUi capture about 10:15 a.m. Mrs. Glenn S. Hoq l!ICI ber .... Jef. fery, 17, escaped but Hoag wu held cap. tive until released Unbanned a tittle aftcir 9 a.m. When Hoeg came ool he said Twinnlna had a quantity at weapans 1"11 -running low on ammuruUon. During the ensuing olege helicopter• hovered over the thrff.bedroom home, atop a hlll overlooking the freeway,.and a sheriff'• sniper specialist 100k up poeltion atop a gas stalloo unlll bulleti drove him away. Ol!lc<r1 atormed the house with pillola ,r>n<t shotguns alter wamlng Twinnlnll to surrender. OuriDI much of the liege 'they had negotiated w!Ut him by telephone, and he said at one point he wis thinking of tlk· Ing bis !He. - Twinning continued to fire sporadically after releasing Hoag. Af ooe time Twinning -when tald to surrender' "I'll be dead H I walk out." While investlptlng reports lhat Ille two men 'in an automobile had been ~-__ -TSii SllOO'l'OUT,. PijO I) Wea_c•er Alerted by 1 citizen's phone call. deputies nabbed two males for indecent exposure but others fled before deputits could reach the beach. Commenting on the J e 11 y f 1 s h in- festaUon, a sheriff's deputy said, "I hope they have good aim . It might discourage 30ITle of that nude swinuning." Officer's Last Words Told· UPIT~ Those sunny Ules are here to stay, at least for a while, but hlgb clouds will be formine over the Orange Coast Tuellday. Temper• tures should sUck ·close: to the seventies locally and up to IO in--San Cle~ lifeguards r e po rte d record crowds for an April weekend. They estiniated the.re were l 4 , 0 0 0 beachgoers on city beaches Sunday and aootber l.0,000 on unincorporated beaches I.bey guard. Saturday estimates were 1,600 for city beaches and 4,200 on the rest, ""I'm sure H's a record for thiJ time o( year," said Lifeguard Capt. Phil Stubbs. "We haven 't had this kind of weather in April for about six years." He said there were 42 weekend rescues despite the flat surf conditions and reported that jellyfish had not yet in- fested the San Clemente waten:. "They may be drifting down this way,'' tie said. Stubbs said there were the usual Tish of first 1ids for cut feet and other injuries but nothln& m1jor. • Witness Tells of Fint!ing SA Shooting Victim WRl!STLINO DOCTOR DIES .. · . -Dr. Sam Sho~rd, 4' Offi\:er Nelton Saacer'1 d y I n g morbelltl wert runated todQ' for a Superior Courl l\UY by the man who l'U1 lram bis home to fmd the young patrolman bleeding in the gutter. Louis Martinez, Jr., testified at the murder trial of Arthur OeWltte League that he was asleep ln bed shortly before midnight last June 4 when he heard a shot ftred clltt<:Uy outside his home. As he left the house , he sald, he heard a voice ca:Jllng, 11Help me, somebody please help me." Martinez said he found the 24·year-old officer sprawled in the roadway in front or his car, bleedln& profuoely from a che9t ... und and "loo lrib 1"' IOl1\" .,,_,., I asked !Dm'to bUntltt k inew. whal i.,,u sayq aod1hal'• ail ~'wis , able to c1or .111e Sanla,Ana mldent said : The prosecalloll wllnels aid he coiled In to police headquarters on, Saucer's car radio and sum.mooed help for the. llrickfn officer. But Sauctr dled leu q.an 30 mlnutu lattr In a nearby holpltal. League, 21, ol Santa ~' ~ lt:CUJed or ririri{i the oho\ that t\Jled SaJseer. Tbe prosecution alleges OW he ·was ooe of two Nea-ba1tod ,)y tbe Glllcer •that I night 1nd that the BllCI< Panlhm'oflkor'1 · reaponse lo a dunnd fol'-lllenMflcOt!on wu in produce a 11\111 atolen four cla7• arllet and .hoot ·Saucer ~in ttie •cbftt. · ' -~ . ·Urllrui ' ·u.s. tnal'aris' .. l • • ·-• ~-' '!'be l>l'QleOUtioD erpecls to 'pul',Sie¥1e . ·~;ll,Jleqiie'1 companl<11 in'll>lt I., -~ ~ thei w1tne .. bo• later-todly. · Demand Federal Aid · · nez bas. already ·testified in earlier bur· • • , Ulgs that 11< Wll . With League wh<n ' WASHINGTON (AP.) -IJtban l"!f11'!'.i Sasscer was 1hot bl,lt bls testimony h11 protestine 1'hai they ~ ts a -deaf fedtrlI - been cJoudt.d by sublequent retJ'acUon and ear to thelr problems", re demandini .••, re peUtK>n1,of th1t story. . "'' Mlt brother, Rlck-Tice, It, it~ ex-government help' them~· mu~ aa J.dbtS • ~led to tfsUfy \b•t Wague:s ip was on tht rese.rvaticnl, . 1 l\ldden In the -hoine lrOll) lbortly -l'l!ley-are. uk14.moro,·10vernmenf'll· • alter Ille' shealll!ll, unlil It> recomJ: bJ ; leot""' to hauling emp........._, _,.. . santa An• ~ inv.estigatora.i . \ •• • 'l'"' • l r ..,,, ......... ,. • Tiie League Idiot fa In the .._ ,,,.k , tfoo, ht•l,ih ,•'!fl •••~IV~ JirOble~ al Jn-,: of what ts expected to be a slJ: week PfO'·• dlans who Jive .. .,. trom rtlel'V1tloos - ceedln(. 1bo1Jt hsU of lb• lndlan populotlaa. land. \ INSmE TOD.4'Y Opporitiun to the .~· I merger><>/. Air .CallJO(llla ·~ PGci/k' SouthWest1 ·'..tt.rlifn" 't.~ 1 e;pected from 10"1t' ")t<fr Cal• siockh.o'lde ri and empfo11u. Ste Page 28. .. J DAILY P'IL~l SC DAILY PILOT S!art l'Mt9 FLAG !'LOWING, PUNTING AND SCULUNG SOCIETY'S MICHIGAN CHUGS TOWARD DEFEAT Down to Sea Gulps • ID Bal ls'le Tugboat Puts Vp Game But Losing Fight By ARTHUR II. VINSEL They went down to the 1e.a in sh!~ Satunlu -the Balboa llland Punting and Sculling Society and the San Olego Rest and Aspiration Society -without a solitary star to steer them by. The whole Milky Way ' wouldn't have be1ped. Compethoc for lbe. tradiUon.ot.eped trophy, a gilded bent elbow with a glass clenched in hand, the two organizatlom 11taged The Great Tugboat Race. Oh, 'Twas a mo~ sight to see mariners so moved l)y the chaDenge of the day. the majesty of San Diego Bay and the wind on their faces . One collld see grown men swaUowin1 hard. Tugboi.ts were in short supply, ao the San Diego group pitted the old &$-foot fer- ryboat Monterey:-eqUipped wilh two bars -againsl. the BJSAPSOC'1 plucky li!Ue SS MJddlan, equipped with g1wes and a lug. 'l1MI Micbla:ant' IUnk and salvaged five tlmet1. · to the l}elt of Ill owner's lmowleclp, eel All !or San Diego· FrldlJ' aboard u-... Advance Marioe Transport truck.· . • Cutooniat Dick Shaw ot Corona del Mar, who doubles as commodore of the 6cullng and Puntil!I Society's flqlblp, -lied ll1e Mid!Jpn'1 rcnoval from l&iq>ort -wltm. He dellCl'ibed tht truck trfp 8!1 I I eun- nina m~ ti> conctal the true merit and speed f)f.tbe Michigan, which i1 about twice tbl aiJ.e of one of the, Monterey's prope!liln. Maltiludes greeted the I p.m. race with Mel> lplrtts u the Midllgan chugged ••11 from the San Diego Yacht Club for the otartlng line oil the aouthweat Up of Shelter llland. Cbeen went up, along with • huae :AmerJCan Flag. Old Glory dwarfed the Michigan like a 1pinnak1r broken loose from ita lines, Rifle Slug Hits Clemente Window A slug from a hlgb-po'l'r'ef'ed rifle crash- ed through the glau door' of a San Clemente man's home Sunday afternoon. William R. Enqulst, 617 Calle De Soto, phoned police to report someone shooting at his house. Officers aITived at the home and found a hole made by a high-power rlne slug. The shot, patrolmen said, appeamtly came from tht direction ol Ole Hanson Elementary School. DAILY PILOT N_,.,. I••• Hllllfflltt" .._. ....... """' ,....... v .. ..., C:.... M.. S.. Cha11tw Oll:AHOI cobT l'VILISHIKC5 COMllANV a,.i,,,_ N, Wt.4 "'''"'"'' '"411 PuOlllhW J•t\o l . c.,.,,., Vin "''!Mn! ...S °"""•I ~ lhoMtt k.t "il ldllor 1\01111•• A. Mut,hift• M-.lilf E'dllor lich•nl r. Nt ll SOU11t O••"P• c-•r EdlHI!" OHie." while the sq-uare-hulled Monterey groan- ed along in her wake . A phalanx of some 20 other v.·atercraft followed the two venerable vessels, in- cluding a Harbor Police boat which shadowed the entire race. Dubbed the S. S. Asplration for the con- . test, the Monterey was crowded with rac- ing_mthusiuts who upired to lighten her load by about JO gallom of ballut. An artillery piece at the Up of Shelter Island boomed to aignal the run for the money down a eoune of one nautical mile and the Michigan bubbled into the lead. Orange smolte erupted from· a distress flare on the colorful little boat -held together by paint and good faith -ap- parently slgnaJllng a drought aboard. DeJpite skill and nautical knowhow, Commodore Shaw blew hls lead becauR everytime he attempted to change coarse, all hands aboard the Michigan had to change seats. She !altered jU!t short of the linish line and the s. S. Aaplratloo drugged across the victor, followed by a celebration which lingettd on Into Sunday. The Bent Elbow Trophy wu awarded to custody of the San Diego Rest and Aspiration Society, while a return match -perhaps in Newport Harbor -was 1cheduled for September. Ligh~ Plane Sale Foiled By Capo Weekend Crash The cash regiater fluhed a 0 no ule .. sign during a potenUal airplane purchase this weekend, when the trial run of the small plane at San Juan Cspistrano Airport turned lnln a cruh landin(. No ..,. wu lojured In the Friday ev.n- lng belly !anding of the plaoe In San Juan Creek, Orange County sherlll's depuUes said. The pllo~ Charles H. Dtnnis, 3%, of 131 Avenida RellondeJ, San Clemente, and his passengtr, El Toro Marine reservist Harbor Patrol · Aids Deck Man On Fish Boat A deck ha.nd aboard the San Clemente sportfisber Sum Fun was taken off the vessel during a fj shlng trip Sunday morn- ing after he became ill near the nuclear generating station at San Onofre. Harbor patrolmen from the Dana Ha rbor patrol base responded to the call and removed George Clough, 161 Avenida ?ifariposa, from the boat. The deckhand, suffering from what was termed a minor illness, was taken to the San Clemente pier where he then sought medical treatment. In another first-aid re1ponse in the South Coast area patrolmen rendered help to a Yucea Valley fisherman at the harbor's launching ramp Sunday af. ternoon. Bob Roberboo told patrolmen be suf. fered a severely cut finger • bait mile out at sea during fishing trip. Rare Laguna Dog --- Lost; Search On Laguna Beach police are attempt.ing to track down a rare Japanese bear dog , valued at $850, which disappeared late Seturday from the 100 block of Laguna Avenue. Owner R.oxanne Brooke, 24911 Monte Verde, Laguna Niguel, told police she left the dog , known as an Akite, Ued to a fence at approximately 10:50 p.m. When she return:?d after a short period the dog has vanished. The animal, according to police, weighs 110 pcunds, is off-white in color with a very curly tail, small eyes and black hair around the mouth. Bttause of recent surgery, he has a bald 1pot on top of his head, Mrs. Brooks added. . Senate Panel Okays Nixon Rail l\feasure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Labor Committee approved unftnimoosly today a bill prOJ>Med by Presklel'lt Nixon to 1vt.rt a nationwide railroad strike now threatened for Satµrday. The measure would Impose on the four shopcrafl unions involved in the dispute and the industry 1 1etttement nached by n<gotlalnr1 last Dectmber. ) Graham H. Jtreidler, SJ, e 1c1 pe d unharmed. The pair told officers they were trying out the single-engine airCflft which was for sale when the craft's bratea failed on landing~ Dennis told invettlgatora a1 he tried In lilt the .plane )>a<k off the field, tbe , engine could not pick up enough power. The plane then pancaked into San Juan Creek, which parallel.5 the miall landlng strip at the airport. pamage tq the aircraft included a bent propeller, a ~amaged right wheel and a crumpled wing tip. The plane was removed from the chan· nel by crews during the weekend. Burglars Collect Petty Cash Haul At Teen Facility Laguna's new Revival Teen Club has been hit by burglars wbo removed a cash box contairUng an undetermined number of quarters, police report. The thief kicked in a screen to gain en- try to the teen center, in the old Barefoot Bar buildlng on the boardwalk at Ocean Avenue, and removed the bo:r which was attached to a pool table. In • second weekend burglary, an assort.nient of clQthing a n d household equipment valued at $671 were taken from the home of John Stanley Thompson, 586 Through Street, at some time between 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Sun- day. " Missing items included a portable typewriter, two watches , a piggy bank with cash, eigtll baUl towels, two pain of slacks, a bedspread, two e~lowcases and sht:e!:a iPd a:..~ ~ .gtllon of vpdka, Thomp!OO told police. A window wq smashed to gain entry to the borne. Red Cross Seeks Help in Laguna The American Red Cross ls seeking more volunteers in the Laguna area to help with its aMual fund.raising cam· paign. This year's goal is $1&,000. To date, $7,223 has been re:eived .as the result or a resldenUal mall campaign conducted by Mn. Marvin T. Brown and her volunteer u:sistant.I in the Lasuna Beach Red Crosa olflce, 362 Part Ave. Mon!: volunteers are needed to call on 1ocal business fk'ms to solicit con- tributions. Persons who can spa.re a few hours are invited to contact lhe Red cross of flee In person, or call 494~7. Ourln1 the past year, the Red Crms furnished 11754 pint& of blood to ptrlOM in the community, sent lts bloodmobile on r@CUl•r vlslu to collect the blood which ts furnished frte when needed, handled a variety of aervlct1 to l!lilltary famil ies, conducled classes in tint aid, small craft and water safety, provided volunteer nurses ,,,4 conducted a c:ountywldt cilSllter aervlce program. . ~ \ Welfare · Limits Ol('d . High Coutt Favors State Maximum Payment . • WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Suprme Court ruled today that states ma)' set maximums on their ;welfare payments to poor _famllie, wit.A j:lependeni chl1dren. JU!tice Potter Stewart wrote the ma- jority opinion for the court, which divided 5 l.o 3 ln ruling ona Maryland case. 1n a separate 24.-page opinion Justice John ?lot Harlan ruled for a six.man ma- jority that New York State, in violation of 1967 amendmenU to the Federal Sodal Securlty Act, impcrmlsslbly cut welfare payments to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program. The cuts heve decreased benefits to New York City recipients by almost $40 miJlion. Frona Pqe 1 SHOOTOUT . • • guns at motorists along lhe Golden state Freeway, two of the slain patrolmen spotted a car, answering the description, parked in front of J's Coffee Shop just of[ the freeway. They radioed for help and a second patrol car arrived within minutes. It was shortly before midnight. One witness, among four young persons In a car towing a boat, said he was "stan- ding Li the parking lot and saw ii California Highway Patrol car approach a car with two men in it. "The two officers got out and one ap- proached," the witness sa id. "The fellow on the passenger side got out aod im· media tely shot one cop, picked up the cop's shotgun and went around to ,the front or the car and sbot the other cop. "Another highway patrol car pulled up behind. 'lben the patrol car's driver got out and shot. He was gunned down. 'Ibe remaining cop held oU these two guys !or about five minutes by himself. "Flna11y one fellow went around to the front Qf_the highway patr.ol car and shot this young cop in the face." A highway patrol spokesman said he could not explain how two men were able to shoot down four officers: The a.suiiant.s ibandoned their bullet· riddled automobile and fled on foot. The fugitive arresttd in a canyon wu Identified by police u Russell Lowell Talbert, 23. WOUNDED TWICE Talbert wu wounded twice after he ex- changed ih6t.a and scuffled with camper Dan Schwan. 40, Cllcago, who was sleeping in hll camper truck when Talbert fired illto u, a ·a~•id. PoliC<! iald '81Jioit. mlj;out or ammun!Uon, plslnl·whlpfled Scbwon and fled in the camper truck. He wu apprehended without resistance later in a canyon nearby. The slain patrolmen were identified as Walter C. Frago, 23 ; Roger D. Gore, 22; James Edward Pence Jr., 25, and George M. Alleyn, 24. All were married and lived in nearby commurUties. Mrs. Hoag, wife o[ the man held hostage, said she fled the house after calling the highway patrol. "l w.u fixing brealdut for my husband when I saw a man outside carrying a shotgun and a pistol," she told newsmen. "l went and called the highway patrol. "My husb8Tld came in and said this man wants to talk with us. There was a tap at the front door. The man said it's probably your son. "The tap at the door was the highway patrol. I ducked out the [ront door and in- to the bushes. The man inside looked ex- hausted. It looked like he had a bullet wound in the head," Mrs. Hoag said. The couple's 17-year-old son, Jeffrey, sleeps in an adjoining cottage and didn't wake until 5:30 a.m., about 1 hour and 15 minutes after TwiMing entered his par- ents' house. Hoag, about 4.2., is employed by ii Van Nuys truck finn. Harlan.sent the New York case back to the 2nd U.S. CircU!t CoU:rt of Appe als for further action. That court had ruled the state action valid. Chief Justice Warren ·E. Burger and JusUce Hugo L. Blick dissented on the ground lbat the matter shoold have been TUled on flTst by the Dep8rtmen;' of liealth. Education and Welfare. In other aelions today, the court: -Refused to review a cue protesUng re)Jgious me~ges to earth fro m astronauts in space, leaving stand a lower court ruling against Mrs. Madalyn Murra y O'ijair, who ·succesdu!ly at- tacked school prayer$ SOfl\e years ago. -Ruled in a Florida case that a person may not be tried "by both a cUy and a state for the same alleged crime. -Re.fused lo review an Illinois libel case. leaving stand a ruling in favor of the Edwardsville Intelligencer which wrote or now-deceased City Attorney Robert \V, Tunnel that he "wa s working to break the law" in makiq ap- pointments. The opinion in the Maryland ca. reversed a judgment of • special lhree- judge federal court in Baltimore which invalidated that state's welfare ceiling on Dec. 13, 1968. Maryland Attorney General Francis B. Burch appealed to the Supreme Court. Planning , Parks Units Meet in Joint Session San Clemente's p I an n Ing com- missioners will meet in a special joint study session with the city's parks com- mission Tuesday for a final examination of the proposed parks section of lhe five- yea,r capital improvements list. The planners and park.s commissione rs \li'iil examine each of the items specifying improvement or neighborhood parks, beach improvements and rebuilding of the fire-damaged community clubhouse. After the 4 p.m. study session Tuesday, the planning commission will draft its formal recommendation or priorities at its meeting Wednesday night. Both the parks and planning com- mtssloners have been uamining the list of projects for the past several weeks. After their recommendations a r e received by the city council they will be included in 't he council's budget prepara- tions later this spring. Both IJ'OUl'S have -at the oouncll's wishes -not considered ezpense in set- ting the priorities, but insteadhave used community need as the criterion. The projected cost breakdown for tbe pa rks and recreation segment is $565,000 for parks development ; $194,000 for muni.clpal pier improvements and S3Si000 ror work on public beaches. The projects as detailed are spread over a five-year period. Among the pier improvements sug- gested by the staff is the eventual ex· pansion of the end or the pier to ac- commodate a large, formal restaurant, which, staff members have aa.id, could result in more revenue to the city. The parks section includes suggestions for $250,000 to be spent to build a new building in place of the ruined eommunity clubhouse. Capistrano Trustees Study . ,. Bus Transportationlssue Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District will act on transportation. curriculum and recreation requests at toNght's I o'clock meeUng in Serra School at Capistrano Beach. A request has been made by a pirent of a private school student for bus traasportaUon from Dana Point lo Old Mission sc'hool. a parochlal school which is a block from the district's Capistrano School. Sam Chica!, assistant superintendent for business services, will recommend denying the request even though a bus doe s proceed from the area near the child's home to the nearby Capistrano School. Laguna Sailor Gets Dunking A Laguna Beach sailor survi ved with no more than a dunking when his 14-foot catamaran capsized one-half m i 1 e offshore in the CJlff Drive area at 5:30 p.m . Sunday. Summoned to the scene, an Orange County Harbor Department boat arrived after Jeffery Stevens, 20, of 1565 Regatta Drive, had righted his craft, climbed bac k aboard and been taken in tow by his father. A large crowd of Sunday visitors watched the operation from the dlffs, along with a Laguna Beach police unit called to stand by in case of further emergency. In a memo to trust.tta, Chicas n- plained that there is room on this bus and the action is legally permissible but it would not be fair to other private school students who mi~t make similar re- quests who Jive 1n areas where buses would be too full to accommodate them. Trustees also will be asked to co"nsider planning for single session kindergartens for next year. This was considered the administration's top priority item wheo the tax override wu pan ed. The single session kindergarten would provide for longer classroom time with one teacher for each class. The schedule would be set up so that there would be periods of time when two kindergarten teachers would be ii both morning and afternoon classes. · The board also will consider a budget for a district recreation pro gr a m primarily for the summer months. '1'11.e activities to be scheduled at most district sch<>Ol.5 will include adult softball, a play ground program, including arts and crafts, tennis fnstruction, physical fitness and swimming lessons at the Su Clemente municipal pool. From Page l , SHEPPARD. .. . fessional wrestling career whea he died, married eoneen last Qct. 21. Mrs. Geo'rge Strickland said, "We Jtll thl).Jght he hid the ·nu." LagunaHigh'sMurphine Picked for PanamaStudy During his years .in prison, when Shep- pard had volunteered with a number or other prisoneri .to participate in a cancer research program with other participants, a. Jive can«r virils had been injected into his body. · Dr'. Sttj)hen Sheppard; hit brother, bad claimed durlftg Sam's imprisonment ·that the injections might have caused ca:ncer to develop. Mrs. ·Strickland said Sam had "tolc1 us he had.caneer. becauae of ihat.!' "He told us at one tlme be would·not live another year when we first eot tagether a year aro,'' she said. Preparing for a ytar-long slay in Paftama City, La(una Beach High School junior Tom ~furphine, 16, Is trying to assemble an all-year summer wardrobe by April 14. Murphinc learned, exactly 10 days before his departure dale , thot he had been named a11 American Field Service American Abroad student for the comlng school year. Because of different school scheduling In the tropical zone, that mesnt hurrying to Panama without delay, and fn. cidenlally foregoing summer vacation. Now CompkUn1 his junior year 1t LBHS, Murphine wlll stay with the Vicente Gomez Valladares family in Panama City ind will 1ttend the Colgio Janl•r ')'1th his AFS "brother,"' Orlando Gomez V1lladares, 17. Both will be se niors at the college. Tom Is the aon of Mr. and Mrs. Tom A. ~iurphloe of 462 St. Ann 's Orl\'t . An enlhu1i1stic sportsman, he plays bastball and football, parttdpates tn trick and en- joys surfin1. He had been chosen LBHS npreaen- taUve lo Boys' State la S1cramento and w1s presiden t-elect of the high school Key Club but will have to pass up both h<mon 'Jn fa .... of the lotttp atay. Cl.ILY l'ILOl Sflll Pllfff HEADED FOR PANAMA APS Student Murjohlno Sheppard had one son, Samuel Jr., by hl1 first marriage. The 10n, lmon as "Chip," is now in his 20'.s. Sheppard's 8eC(lnd wife was the former Ariane Tebbenjohanns of West Gertnany. They were married in July, 1964, shortly after he l\'as released from prison. Sheppard wai convicted In Deeember, 195.f, of beating his pregnant wife to death Jul y 4 at lheir Bay Vlllage~ome near Cleveialtd. During his trial, Sheppard said a "one. •rmed busby-haired intruder" killed hia wUe and attacked him bt tbe.ir home on tbe 1hore of Lake· Erie. Mrs. SbePDerd had been beaten· lnlUJld the he1d with in uttmated 2$ blows. Sheppard wu rel•llSed from prison Ju· 1y 18, 1964, insisting "I am Innocent, I am innocent. 11 He wu freed by order of the U.S: District Court at D1yton, which ru~ td he had not rectlved • fair trial. Sheppard's relealt was appealed to the Sixth Circuit Court o! Appeals at Cil>o clnnall. "'hlch on flfay s. 1965 reversed the earlier ruling and ordered him rel1,1roed 1o _prtaon. The U.S. Supreme Court. ln t prtcede·nt..settlng decision on June 6, 1965, said Sheppard had been deftltd a (air trial because of the "Rom1t11 carnlvAI" atmosphere in the courtroom and a prejudiced lrlal ludl'· 1 - , . Monday, April 6, 1910 DA!l Y P!LOT f§ Air Cal, PSA Merger Foes to he Heard-~;R:~~~~~;·~~ :~::~~~:~i~ ' °'"'""""' .. ,,.. Clry "' Coll• M•M Tttl 'cou:.T~ MAN•• By'ltlOMAS FORTUNE Of tlle CMlll'r PllM It.if .nd t"'I, and l loan with ' ed b '•'•• ' ' Iy ( bl " nd I "••'> du huo ~ .. -" :.,.,! MtlM Ill U( .. IJf t1IMlf Ito) NOTICI 0111 SALi 01' 111"1. ••°'• " 1mprov argau ... 16 poliUon unpro ill e routes . u ercap ta1&MU ~ ... ~11 oM ,,..... Mcyc1t, ,.... .,""' ~'"'' ••TY "' .. u1LK 1iUCT10N Bankers for ,1,150,000 due in since the state;nent for lbe During the year Air Cal -...th but ..... 1 .. t.1 to the rwut. tw. blcrc;r.. c:oior 11N1,l'IOW!I. '9wll"1 111 JN. N.otlff ., ""' tt11i. " LOLA Op dded fll'"hi • to th .. """''• ......,, ,._ ltll ttld ll'llktlltflMvi ""°"" -""' GOOOA•D, Dtc:oned. , poaJtion to the propoaed 1979. "I doubt very much they month of Mareh shows ; pro-a · ..,... . no r e r n uon of profit the local alrllne .,..., --"· .,. "'' ••t1•111Mr. NOT1c1 '' HE•E•Y G•Vtl!f'.t 1 ,,., merg~r oJ AJr California wlth would let that kind of money l,l~ sa e Jn onna on ha.I' brou&ht ltltlf into dttrlN: " "' .wri., ~ ..,.. """'" 1111 1t1t "''"' or 1.011 .v.. Goc11Mrf, ff«ttH. "' He Id lh · f 11 ~Wornla c 1 t I e s out of NOTICI: 11 ,u11tHE11 01v1tt t1111 ""' 111M11.,11entd, ••· Adt'lll111trr.""111 " P "I So lh A 1 11 sent to sharebolden showed... tario, Burbank and Palm . _,,,.., « "" ,,_...., wlfMfl HWfl w111 ••II ., PUbllc •IK'ion It "" flltll•' ac ... c u west r n e s go down the tubes," Botzum only the loss du.rina 1969, 1! .... $ ring&. the last )0 days as evidence 111 ....._ 1roi1ow1n1 .,. 1111.fl>ncttlol'I ,, •"4 "" bidder "'"" ·tllt' .. ,_ •M . (PS}..) ,is expected to be beard uys. period he called "o':.e of ex; Botzum said there is little thin1s are pkklilg up. . ::i. .:"'ri;..,.'-' :l'"' ,.!~''':. "'~. W:: ~11:' c::i:::::r.: ":"'':: ~~ Tueaday from employes and He said Air Cal ls In an panslon into new and original-quest.Ion that Air CII was 111 tM Cttv " (•1• M .... 111 ~tdi court on SllllClt~. ""'" "'~"/°·, '' t kbolde f ... ca1 ••••••••••••l~e ....... ,..' .. "", "',',' " ..... , ~! ':; J::r ,~~·,,::,'::. :oM. Stllt:!: IOmt S OC rs 0 nu· • -• • • l'l'lt • •·~ Cell~ni., •ll lh• rlftit, "'"' .nd _.:::~' E lo It bt I~. o1 .. lid Loll M Gocldttd . mp yes may picket th e 011e11 .....,.n " 1t10 ,, ,,.. 11111, o1 · ._ .,..iii. " ,,j meeting at the Newporter IM For Flowers Witla Beadaelaes? Tax Off .ice , .... -..~~~·,.N::H,OLICI! ::'·.:!i,~nc1e-;n':'.,t::' .11d11:.1·: at which Air Cal stockholders lllll_,... ..... ,., C01rt 0•11r '11•1• otl'lff'WlM, olfltf' ~ or tn tddltton ~fil '-lt,. '"-10 1o 11\411 of !fie dtc.Oent 11 fM lll'l'lt will vote on the planned ac-Od hall u f A Add H " ,., Ottth, 1n •nd to t11t1 etrt11n d • • " QUTo LEGAL NOTICE '"' '""'"' ioctt.11 1n . ,,.. c...ntt quisltlon of Air Cal by PSA. • 1 ses or sp_ irm o a 1-=::-:=-===-==-I ~ '" ""'""· '"" ~ """m'• HOTI(9 ,. TltUITl:l1 SALi dltctlblcl .. follows: • At least one shareholder, ..._ NSa tiw """' 11011 .t flit *'lhH" Chari.' A. •-•-um, 1·ntends As a convenience to t&l· On M9niN'" Mtlt 11. 1m 11 10100 ,.,,.,.,, o1 1111 tDUftlwnt -"" ., uvu. t 'clocll AM. tt 1111 lltd E11lr1J1M:I of ""9 to11111We:JI ctutrllf' of SKlloll IS. t tlon lh ·sc1 f '"~ payers, the Orance County ,,... c1"' "''*· •1 s.i1t1 ''"· in th• t°""""'' s North. It•"" 14 w.,i, 0 ques e WI om 0 ...,,,. In the time it takes to read enthusiasts have eiperimented 4. Many houseowners have c1"'-,, ,,.. sttte of e,11,.,,.1, ttn ,.,ntrdl"o Mtr111rtn. In ""' c1111n1v merger. Uti.s article, close to 200,000 Asses.so.r's ofOce will be Dt<1TA11:10 11tLI! sl!11:v1c1 COMPANY oc':or~':, :O~i:lt J.':~1 o;1,f·~~d So with aspirin in putting up used aspirin as tbe triggering f 8 to 5 1Nc,. •• 1""1 .. llflltW nw °"" o1 Tt1,11r . . Offk me Air Cal employes fear at this Ume, but would be aspirin tablets will be con-beans and tomatoes, coln and mechanism in a home-made open rom a.m. p.m., ~~t'~~i:ofOMi:U::;:Not •l'ICI l"ANNIE !"'!.~:"'n.1n,Jo"'.' o111rict L-' , • the merger will mean loss sumed in the United States piccaUIU. Home economists Saturday April 11 to 1octpt • 1nc1 w1i.. ,,_.,. i:xcEl'T 1111 1ntwtJt 111 ,,.., ;.r11on 01 their l'obs. PSA off1'cials prepared to answer his ques· alone -most of them to alarm system to warn a,gainst I • Hovflrl111r s. 1"2 In look ..w.. ,... or s•ld llnct Inell.Hiid w11111n i " -warn against this ·practice, c alms for homeowner and "° 01 Orllc1a1 ·~ 111 111t -6Hlce o1 1oo1 11r111 •• w11 •t•nlH 10 "" say lhey will absorb as many tions Tuesday, relieve pain, reduce fever o< lh h f lh · cellar flooding. This highly~f· "" It«•,.,. o1 O•"" C-0\lllty, cau. cou111y ., LM "*'" tor ro1c1 •nd even oug one o e ur veteran e1emptlons. torni.. •net iw rtt-01 t1tt•ul1 1n 11>t hltllwiY """6Hs l>'t' cSeH r.con1ec1 Air Cal employes as possible, Botzum, a salesman in a alleviate inflammation . gredients in the manufacture fective and very inexpensive The homeowners, division NYIMnt or P«forll'llnc• o1 o1>1tt111on1 1n &oo11: •:m. p1191 m of Dllff,, but some -peU'n• fl1'gbls I · t I MC'lll'ld 111tr11tw 1nc111o:1r111 tho ttuch or 111 the onlc• of tf'l8 CMir!!Y 1tff:ner ......... ~ Los Ange es 1 n v e s men However, human im-of aspirin, salicylic acid, has device is madt from a buner, is toeated in Room A-158, dtl•ul!, notle• 01 Wfllch .... rtcotdld ., ••ld countv. . will be eliminated. securities Ilrm, said he owns aff'lnatlon, knowing no bounds antiseptic properties and 'A'.8' dry cell batteries and several 700 w Ith st Sant Ana Olctl't'lbci• n, .,., In 1oo1r; '110. "'1 •n• tti•t c!fl't11n •e•• P,_rt., toaiH Air Cal ~-arde••• pilots ""' "I • ·,, 1 • m or Mid omcl•• RffOnll. w111 .-11 11 In "" c..,,.,., ot 1-01 Anoeln. St••• i:l"l'W --..s, • and advises clients who own -has conjured up some ex· once used to preserve milk lengths of copper wire, Wires and ~ v~am dlvlalori in "*'le tVCtlon ft!' c1Jti. wll!IM w•,.. .ot c111torn11, dllCl'lbid 11 follow•: mechanics and other employes Air Cal stock. Together, Utey otic uses for the familiar little and meat. "nlat was a loag are attached to the inner side , Room n -at '"~ ··-· ''""' •• to tlt1t. ---• lllcwft. Thf • Norlh"¥ttt <iu•rt•r • '' t "' bel to . -f -~· .. n;: ~ ~MM, .,,. lllllf'MI ~ ,. Mid Northwett -tier of SIC!Jon 32. ong uruons. 'uey ear hold about eight to 10 percent white tablets. ti m e a g o , a n d b e t t e r or the jaws ol. a pinch-type address. Trutttt bv .. ,. Dfllll ., Tl'llJt 1n ,,.. TOWM11111 .s North, R1-1~ w111. !his Will 00-r• aga1'ost lh•-000 h he 'd ff • h rt I' f odd t · I th · th t .-. will l'rlY 1!11.1'!1 ln 11'11 Cit• or N-t Sin hrNtdl110 Mttldltn, ln tl'lf County S'-e PSA •hasv•an "open sbo_p,," of the 408, s ares, sai . ere !I a s o ist o · p r e s e r v a 1 v e s are now c o esp1n so a 1.1K:y County A s s e s 1 0 r An-e .. c11. county ., or.,,.., St•t• ., c.•i.. « LM. A111t1u. Stitt ., e.i11or11h,, , ...... hlch 1 , ha A statement in the proxy ball aspirin used compiled by available, touch when the jaws are phdre!' dJ. lhl!ti nth• b fa 1 w 1 1 em-'°"'~ ci;:c~~t!:t.: )f;, River St<non K=~~led • 111 1";,. O::l~~~t ':::""oi ~~ m w emp oyes don t ve vote notice says if the merger the Bayer Company, which 3. Many Ne vada fishermen closed. as1ze a e n g "' t11t c1,., or .,...,."°" lffdl. 51,1, en .....,.11 tt, 1• to belong 10 unions. t r a n s a c t ion fails "Air recommends none of them : angling for crappies -a kind An aspirin tablet is placed deadline f 0 r homeowners '' e.u1orn11, u 111r "''' rKMSOd 1n ,::~ur 1t11 Wt1t --'!•" M ·""' Botzum, of La Mirada, is California will be in im· 1. One of the most enduring of calico bass or a related between the jaws and the and veterans e1emptlona is :!n1! '::~,!; r::.'.·-· 1111111' ALsci O:CE,T ""' Wllon of 141d tr Y 1 n g t 0 i n r l u e n c e mediate default on certain of bits of noral folklore bas it sunfish -say that an aspirin clothespin ls hung just above s p.m., April 15 and that for tM 1111r-ot "''"' o11111•11ont :,i::·r1~"rl11t~•1ttrlv 0' ""' '°1b!".-~~kholders Hto v~11e agains1 t Jts long-tenn debt.'' that~ couple of aspirin tablets or two in their balt buckets the lowest part of the cellar the law does not provide =~ ... %.::1~nc1o..11...!.!.rv~, ,\:':'.:.": nn!"~11111:111•• S:Cii°o:i"' ~7.,Z no_!~~~ 1.1n:; merger. e WI quest on Botzum argues that strong addeH to the water in a vase keeps the minnows in a lively floor. As long as the aspirin for late filing. 111, 1um1 u111nc1111 '"'"' 1111 ttrm1 ttttrHll, ,.,00 ,_,, t'roin tttt nor111wtst whether the financiallnpedicturt efforts should be made to of cut nowers will make the state for longer th an usual. stays dry, the circuit remains He said that as of Friday, '~':.:.; ~":rc:ini;;~·:;:••""· ~:ir.lof -=~~ ~10:~1::~ ~·~ is as black as out! in refinance with Allstate and blooms last much longer. A spokesman for the Nevada open. Any substantial amount ~larch 27 taxpayers had !CORPORATE sEALI u1• Sl!cllon. 2>0.00 tt111 th1nc1 •MttrlY a notice asking for Proxy ' d h d G Co · " f · ho · ' ONTARIO TlTLE SE~VlC£ Plr111ltl w!lll.,. tlll ~rlf 11111 . et Bankers Life insurance com· Botanists an other experts Fis an ame mm1ssuon o moisture. wever, will returned about 80 percent COMPANY INC. nld Section l)).oo '"'· """" « i.s. (absentee) votes, and whether panies. believe that the aspirins will suggested that if asp1r1n cause lhe aspirin to disin-or 190 ooo claims out of '' Sldntv w. Jot1t1. 111 tht .. "erh' nine of tt.t' • ...,., new loans C 0 U Id n ' t be k h f h ' . AUbl1nt SecAl•rv h1lf If 11!d Northwe1t -'11r. · ol Air Cal's capitalization chart help, but only if the flowers wor s, a s ot o rum mig t tegrate, the circuit will close 240,000 mailed. Publl'l>ed Nft'POrl Mirbor Ntwi·Pr1u 1he N111thwe$t ou•rt~ri lhtn« ~riv negotiated with the major air rt-~ ... ~ hvo loans with Allstate hive a headache. be better. Local fishermen say and the alarm goes off. Start c()fnblnect with Olin~ P1101. N1WPO•t •'-11ld 1111 n1.n11-• 111tert1 C 11 de ... ch. C1!1tornlt Mtrch 23. » 11111 ll11e, to tto. ioulhtrt>r' tlnt of 11111 a en rs. fo~rr__!l~liOO~OOO~~·~a~ch=:~d~u~e'._"in~l~9~78~-~2~._::So~m~e~ho~m~e~c~a~n~n~i n~g:._~t~he:y~h~a~"~o~ih~e~r~u~s~e~s~fo~r~r~u~m~. -~b~a~il~ing~·-________ __!•~~·~·~,~·~-!!!~·~-~~.,.~-~-~~""'1!j~""~"'c'~·~'~'n:'.-,~--==-~"~·:•~I Nort11wn1 1u1rttr of 1111 NOffllweit Mark G a t e s , corporation _ ' ' ""~r,.,.. ta d ·d LEGAL NOTICE frlOTI: s1ld 1•rc111 ••• t1 1t11 seld secre ry an attorney, sa1 I .... raterv. , he would not reply to Botzum h id 111e wlll "' ,..,.. -·""' C•RTIPlCAT• Ojt SUSINIUS follow!,.. 1er!'t'11; • PtCTITIOUS .. AMI Tem11 of ult: Ctlh tl'I l1wfl.ol moNV Store Set Miss Fountain Valley Rosemarie Kelly; helps Jerry Marks, president of Lin-Brook Hardware ; and Mayor E. E. Just ; break ground for the new Lin-Brook Hard- ware store in Fountain Valley. Car Wash De~ f£xf}.d_._ For Free Car washing ls a far more seasonal business than sum- mer..and-winter, according to a Newport Beach entrepreneur who owns facilities in Costa Mesa and elsewhere. Jack Shea, presidenl of Beacon Bay Enterprises, of· fers spedal deals for special days. , Business boomed on April Fool's Day,' at Lido Car Wash, 481 E. 17th St., when such discontinued anctstor1 of today's automotive family as E d s el 1, Corvairs, Packards and DeSotos are laundered !rte. Dozens of CorVairs rolled in Wtdnetday. "And a few Edsels too," ssid Shea. "no Packards though. t wonder whAt hap- ptnd to 'em1" "We wash grten cars frtt on St. Patrick's Day. orange can free on HalJOwten -a conUnentlls on LI tic o 1 n 's Birthday," he explained. Shea said he Is sUJI dream- ing up new idea• for frte car waab occa11lons. Get the ·BIG 6% at the BIG M Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings, In offering the most In earnings to savers. 8% 2 v-1r term account, wHh $5,000 minimum 5"' % 1 yur term eccount, with $1 ;ciao minimum 514 % $.month• bonut 1ccount, with $500 minimum 7~% oerllllcat• of depolll ll'lllllble, with $100,000 minimum u you ""' a MUIU•l Smr, now Is Ille time to Inwot addlllon al !undo In thou new high-rate aocounl& (lnaurance has been Inc"'ued to $20,000.) If you aro not o Mutuol Sawor, now Ia the II mo lo open your account at The Big M-Mutual 5avlngs. ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001 COVINA GL•NDALll MUTUAL SAVINGS and IDa ••••ci•lin CORONA DEL MAR ·2191 Elat eo.t Hlghwsy T11tphonel7S.S010 Wl8T ARCADIA eeo w .. 1 e>u.rt1 Rotd Tt11ptl0fll"4..01tl .200 No..V. Cllru1 Avenu T1ttphont-339-541'I 336 Nortl\ a rand 9o1.1t1v1rd Tl11phOM 24M1•6 1'•8AD•NA (HudOffict) S15 Ent Cotorac!o 8ou11¥1rd Ttleptlont 449-2345 ' ~~-~--~---~~-~~~-~~-------~--------~--~~----~-~----~----- The Vr.dtrtltntd dOtl Ctrllty M It of t111 Unlled St1ltl on conl~Milll ,, cMdu<llnt • MlneM •t ,,1, Wlllo, Ml•· ,,,. Ht! CMh •ncl ••• , eredli1 ;~ Co.ti Mft•, C1tlltrnl1, uncl9t the twll'IS 1r '""' credlf to bl kU.ft611i fldllloul nrm n1me at SICYCRAFT .. t11t ~mln"""bc 1nll thl ttlwtt- ENGINl!l!RLNG c;o. •nd tfltl Mid flrm "'lllled COUtll ,, "9tanl "1tlt •"""""' ,, COl'fl-.d of "" followlflf Ntton. bid "' be WPGl1Md ... ,,. bid. • wi-n1me ln full 1M PllW ol ,.1c1111e1 Thi undetiltllld reHN• the r4jtil II •• foliow.: to r1Ject •nv tnd •l1 bids. • Robert H1rrl10I'" 1'1t Willi L.tne, Dlt.11 Mt•ch 31, 1mi Ca.It M ... C111fornlt 1/ Mt ..... •f A. Chtltftl'lllen 01lej A•tll J, lJJID Affrl!nl1trttl'lll of tM Robtrt Htrrlton £11111 GI uld Oeced111t. Sl•I• ol C1llforn11, Ot11111 C1111n1Y: HAI.I.'!' I , _.,. ... , 011 Jr.P•ll s. ltl'O. bffort m1. • NO!trv ,mt N. 1111 ,_.. lltllll Pul>Hc In tnd for Mid Sl1N, iotttonllhl NIWll•ll, Ct fl"""I 91'21 •ltllffrld Aobt•I Htrrlton known It "" T.i..""'1 <Ml _.., It be '"' ••rton whDM nll'l'll II •ubtctlb-""'' .... tw A*itlfll•ll'•trtr Id tit the Wllllln llllltlll'ltnl I ncl Pu~Utlltd Or-C:-1 OlllY •1w. t i;know1ec111 h1 1xtcUltd tM nme. A1rn '· 6,·13, 1ne f'lf·10 t01'1'1CIAL SEAL) 1---~,..·--------Ml tV IC. Henrv LEGAL NOTICE Not1rv Puhllc.C1llfe.tn!1 -Ptlnt;lpM-Ofllct lfl ----------Or1r1111 County t lCflOW MO. 11IMI l'I My Commlnlon Eulrts NOTICI! TO CfllDITOlll ~Y. 14, lt'2 0 1' SULI( TflANIF,.R ,ubll,hld Or•nt• (NII o.u ... ,llol. U•. 'lt1"1'1 u.e.C.I .lf,rll '-1), :IG. ~7. 1'71 &20-10 Nolle, b ht••bv 1l~tn to Crtlt1tor1 1 ~---':'::-:':-'.:"":':'.:=::::::--°"" of RENE5 PETERS ENTERPRISES. LEGAL N001CE INC •• • corPO•ellon FED. TAX Ho.,,,. 2'21152 l111tnded Trt111l1ror, w II.• 11 I--ccc1o,o.,c,c"c'c'-'-0c,-,u"•-,-,.-1-,,---tiu1rnt11 lddr11s '' ''' a1ttr S"~· l"ICTITIOUI NIIMI Ca.ft Milt. Ctllfornlt . 11111 t .tiu~ -lr1ntfff of PNIPftfV MM lotlfed · al • "' underalentd d0t1 Ctl'lllY the 11 Hl .. k!r Street, Coal• fMM, C1l1101111t, conducl1111 • llu1l11111 •I tt21 S. M•l11 ,,,., ducrlbld In ""41r•I 11: M1 .. rl1I•, Sttttt. S111•• Ant. CtUfornl1. Unclff '"' IJU~1111. me•d\1ncllM MU\pll'\llll futnl· tktttlow tltm ,,_ or ,ACEIETTER • • • ' ••·OYMENT 'OE"CV --... t ···-"'''· 11•1'11~. !ride n•mt, .... lollll, ' •, • " ,_,.,,.. mt _.., 1ftd to\'ftltnl not lo (11"""'' ol th1t !rm ' comPOMd ol Ille "' lowlnt ll@l'IOn, Bttuty Sllon bt.l•lneu k-M "HOUSE ::-,~=~_In f\111 Ind f,llct el rt1ldlnc1 OF LOVELINESS" •nd lociltd ti ,,, Al"f Ph0llUPW. lW Al'lllle!in, Coilt llek1r Sl .... t, Cas" Me•I, C11!rornf1 IS Mn1, C1llhlml1, lnltndlcl to be m1d9 f9 Roblf1 A. MMI· D1lld .. tll 3, 1'10 111 tnd Shi"'" Mllll•I lnllndtd T..,.,_ Aini PhllllPI ltrMI, wllo,.. butfntSI ldd~ll la 2lOIM $11!1 of C•llfotnl1, Or1n11 Courr!Y: Alhllrtl1, L1k.weoit, Ctllfornl1, •l\Cf lhll Dn AP•U l. n10, btfor• ,.,., 1 Nol1rv 11ld 1t1nsf•• will bl conllll')'lm•ted on Of' Publlc In tM fir 1tld sr.fl, Hl'IDllllt>r' •tttr A11rll U. 1'10, 11 !hf! Ofl!Ct If I U11- IPPl••ed All'll ,hFUI.. llt'!Own to l'l'lt n111 Title COtJl(lrlllon, 1r Jl1! Wllsh lr11 lo be lh1 "'-WhGlt "''"' ,, sublc•I&. 8l~d .. LOI A"9tlll. C•Ufornl•. td to tl!t within Wfrvl'!Mi"t Incl $0 fl• 11 11 k-to u ld lntt!ICled t ck-ltdltd thl 1ncvtH tllt 11rr111, T•1nsfet"" 1•ld lnlftlded Tr1n1feror ~•Id (0FPICIAl. SEAL) tho tollowt111 t#llltnll ht!1lne11 n1mts Mll"I' IC. l:ltnrv •nd 1ddr1nn within lht "'''' """ Not1,., P\llllle.Cttllt!"ll11 111111111: !If "n-", '° 1t11t.) PrlMIHI Offlc1 In NONE Orltl81 COUlll'I" D•llCI .... rl.lll"I' 26. 1'11 My COl't'lmlHIOll E~11trt1 RDbtrl A. ~ills No.,, ti. 1'7! Sf\tnn M1nl11 flubll.,,111 Dr1n1t CNll D11lv Pllot, lnttnlltf Tr~1111~ren APtll '-IS. 20. 27. ltXI •n·1G UU.OC Publ!l~~d Or111111 Co11f DlllY PllOI, A11t11 '· 1910 "'2·10 CI RTIPICAT• 0, I USIMl lt LEGAL NOTICE ,ICTITIOUI MAMI Tht llnlltrtllned dell certJf'I lie It NOTICE OP SALE OP' l lAL PRO· conducllnt t butll\HI ti 1fllt Otll\d, PIJIT'I' AT ,JllYATE SALE Huntlntlon le•~· Ctlllornlt, under tht HI. A...,IJ llclll111111 • ttrm "'!'!'le of AMERICAN IN TH• SUl"IRIOR COUJIT ,OSTAGE STAMP CO. 111d lh1t u ld OP TNI STATE Of' c•LIPOJINIA lltm l1 comPOltd of !flt lollowlnr Plttan. POR TNI! COUNTY 01" OIAHO• • '#1\oM n.,M In lull 11\d Pllct or "1ld1nct In th• Mltt'r OI Ille £11111 ot MART"Vo II tt follow!: JANE SHAR P, lkt MATIIE J. SHARP. 0 . Fted Jollnson. Sr.. flU Gt1nd. 0Aet1wd. Hul'lll111kln e .. c11, C11ffo1"11l1. Nollet II h•t•bv elvtn thtt fht un. D1fld A,..!! ). lfl'll dtnltntd wit! 1ell 1t Pr!vl'h! 1'1le. D. It. Johnson, SI'. . to th1_ ~llhtst t nd fllU blddlr, wbl"'' llllt or Ctllforilll, Dr1n1e Cou"IY: II conflrm1tlon o1 Mid Suptr'lof COUrl, ()II Artll l. 1f10, ""'"* l'l'lt, • NO!tl"I' on ,,,. 1ft1t Ille l&!h d•V rA APl'll ,ub!lc In •f1411 ,., Mid llttt, •11111•11'1 ttl'll. II "" off1ct of LIPPOid, Mind.,...,, ••HU'ld D. Fr11d Jollnlon, Sr. k-Ind DtlllmOlr, 350 E11t lnh Slrttt, II mt to t11 !ht ..,.,..,, wMtt 1111'1'\t (ltr Of CO.•• Mew, COl.lftf'I" or Ori "" IJ 1ublttfbtd 111 1111 wlthl" lntl,wnont 11111 of ettllornl1, '2127, •ft th• rltM: IM ldlnowlldttd ht IXKultd '"' ........ !ltll •nd ll'lllt11t of uld ...... ., (Ol"PICIAL SEALI ll'lf Hfl'le or Cl-.lh Ind 1ll t11t fl9ht, Jt~n L. Jtbll !!lie •1111 l11ttrt1I th1! 1111 •llllt ti Nol•rv Pullllc-Ct 1llofnl1 ••Id ftc••tld h•• iettulrtd br _,~ Prll\CIPtl Ofllcr In of ltw or othvwli.e, •lhtr t11111. ,, o''"' Cou,,,., In 1ddlllon tt lfl•t o1 ,.kt -... Mr (INl'W'lll1tlon E.11Jlt" II 1111 lll'l'lt .,, d•1th, In Incl " )ff. Mt•dl '· nn 111t '""'"' ,.11 llt'tPlrl'r •l~IW Jn ,ubll,"9111 Drtnll Ce11t 01llW P!IDt, tht Cl!Y of Colli Mtu, Cou11ty tlf APrlt I, U, to. 27, 1'10 12'-IO Or1111e, Sltl>I of Ctllforn11, Ptr'llcullt'I'/ dtlc•lblcl •• followt, to-wit: LEGAL NOTICE lot I of Tr1cl Jll7 11 "' m.1 ~tded In 8ooll; tC, ,11&1 20 Ind I U,I RIOJI COURT OP TMI 21 ol Mll(lllllnM1111 "'-"-r11Ccwd1 I TATI 01' CAl.tl"OflNIA .... " ••td counlv. -· COfl'l-l'tt llntWn THI COUNTY 01' OJIA ... I •1: lB Linwood Drive, Coslt MIMI, HI. A'411U Cttltornll NOTICI 01" MIAJllNO 0, PITITION Tffmt flt Ult Clltll In lilWlul 11\0f\t~ •o• PJto•AT• 0 1' WILL AND or, lilt U"llld Sltltl Oii Ctl'll'lrmtl!On CODICIL ANO ,Ofl L ITT I JI$ ~ t1ll. or Plrl c.ttll Ind btltnct Tll TAMIMTAJl'I' tvldlnc;ld llv Miii tKUrld ..., ~t E•"" or DIMA VERN! ltOl"Ol.O. .. Trutl Dffd on "' ''°""' lfl Doc .. Md. .W. Tin "rcent of tlMUllt 1>111 " NOTICE IS Mf!Rl!l'I' CIV!M Thi! tit ~lttd with bid, link ol Al't'lfrlc1 Hlllot\11 Ttutl & 11111 Gr 11111•111 lo lie In wrltt119 Mill S.~1119• Attotl1tlon htl fllld lllr•ln 1 wlll Ill r.(tl'ftd 11 ltte 1lil•eutd af'lk• Hltrltrl ,., '"°"" ol wilt •nd <"lei! •t '"Y time tl'ltr tl'tr flr.1 ..,bltc"i.n 1nd fa<' l11u•nct ol Lf!t"' Ttll1m.,,11,.., htrtof tnd t1trort d1tt ol 111t. to '•1111-t, ttftrenc1 to Whlcll 11 Otttd this Xl!h dev at M1rch. 1'10. mldt fot IUrflllt NrtlCUlll't. •nf 11'111 Jemts F. PtllnlY the time 1M' Pltc. tf 11t1r1nt t111 Admln111r1tor wltt. the ~· h•• bf.en ,., for AprU U. 1m, w!ll t11nexed of mt etl•I• tt f1at • 1.l't'I,, r.. lllt eourttOOITI of · of 11ld D«"ent. D1111rtmtflt No. 1· or tlld C.Ur'I. ,, LI P,DLO, MIHDJJISOlt IH DINSMOOI TOO Cl~le (tnltl' Dl'!Yoi w"'· 1-,,,. ~ •• ., 1,.. st ...... S¥ltl Ill Cll'I' " sin•• 11111, Ctllforn11. C•• ~. C1"""1111 mn Otttd Mire~ :Jt, lt7e Tel1 17141 t ... 7751 W. (. ST JOHN, AlllnltY. tw A""'fftlslr1tv Coul!lv (llrll. wllll tfl• w111 111i.t•td MUltWITt. NURWITt & llMl'fl Publlll>td Or11111 Cct11I D11l\I "!IOI. QI • atlld thW!, Mtw•I klCll, ~rll 1, 2, '-1110 ,,..,. CtllflrtU Tth 1"•1 ,,,_,.. ,,...,...,. "' ,etltllMf, LEGAL NOTICE Pu•ll111td Otlflll Cot•I D1llY Pflolil--------------APtll 1, t. 6, lnt J'll-1t T·JUU LEGAL NOTICE. NOTl(I! TD CRIOITO!ll tU•IJtlOll COUJIT OP TNll! ITAT• OP CALIPO!lNIA P01t , WU TMI COUNTY 0" ORANOI Cl l Tlfll(ATI 01' I USINISS M•. A.-uu Jll(TITtoUI NAMI Etlt!t of CHARMlON I A I( l fl Thi undtnlltflld ... etrllf't 111t 11 NANCl!Y, OtcNIH. tond11tllnt I buslntt.1 tf S41t Stltl'IOA NOTICE IS Hllttl'r' 01\IEN to It!. Drlvt; H...-t llMcll, Ctllforlll1,·undlr ~ ·tt 1M lflove "'111" dttld"" "" flctl!IOUI fltrn lllmt " OlHN ..... •ll ""°" ......... cltlnlt •t•lntt DOt.•NIN Al'AITMINTS Ind thll t1ld l'flt llld dlcfdlnl -'"~lrld to flll flttll Is ~-tt IMI .. llilWlftl •Mii, llltfl'I, With 11\t nte:HJtt)' VIUCJ'llt... fl! ~ "'""' lfl fUH 11111 PIHi flf l'ltldl!lal !hi tlflc• tf flll clerk ol the •lllwt II ti fllloWI: t!'lt!tled c111rt, or lo __ , flltm, wltll l•l'Nt• W•llonl '11 W. WlJttrlt, !!It llKllM"" Yllldltl"t. to lltt vn- A'*I•, Ct!tfofllt1, ' """lll'led II t1!t Offlct If lltr llltfl'll\'• 0111111Mtl'Cll11, ltl'll ltel:lftl L MfMt ll. 1111 $0Ulh HUI Str"', B•rblre Wti-Suitt ~7. lo' Anteltl. Ct1ll01'1'11• fOOlS. Sl•lt ot C11lior"I', I.a. Alltltltl C11111t't1 whlc~ 11 th1 plf(tt ol butl"'t:I• ol lftl On Mtrch IL H11. ""°"' mt. 1 unOl'll,nl>d 111 111 mtt!.,. Hfl~l'f\1111 NO!trr "*11( I 1M1 W Miii Sl1!t, It thl 11tttt t1' t11d dttfd411I, w!ttilfl ""°"'''" ••H•tld ltfll11t Wtlton tour "''"!ht tlltf' tht f!ral P1.11111<11ton ~ to "" to be "" """' ""° .. " 1111• ~lt(t, ~ lllmt 11 ti1111<riblK ft tllt Wltlll11 In. Ollioll -A•'l'll '-1110. '"Ultltnl tnd «1:-ltftH lllt tlltcufH Afiwlt T1lom tllt t•"'°i Ad"llnt1tt1l•lll (01'PICI,.\;. llALl wtt11 -tM '"°''f""t1ff CtmtUI• M· S'-nr the tboYI n•mtd dt<ttffnl NOltN ,ilbllc<tj!ltrnl• RO•ll!RT L. MEMNElL PrlMtt•I Ottlte n 1\11 Stut11 "'! Str .. t, Svllt N1 Lot AntiNt CWfll'I" llS A~ .. lt1, tHltt11ll *II Mv t.rl'lm!nlon lu!rn T•h 0111 ttNm . • Af,rU '· .,,, '"""'~ "' A*"111llrrotrb WIJlll )flit -y MIU WUI........ ,•,• •rnlltl'IM °'""'· c ... 1 011w 1"11«, l"ll•llll!Ml or1111tl , .. .i 061" .,...; ~· t. It. t&. 11. im .. .,,. Alrll t. ,,, ,., 11. l 10 $.)ti " - • JI IWlV PllOT 'Oil-Firms ,. Go Slow .... , ! • . ' .... .,_ .11.-. .... ....... .. .... ..... .. . .,,..,,__ __ . . -~.1¥2%,... _ ,,_.,,. AM ua11 ef _, ....... , .......... .. , ........ I I SIJ .... "-.... ..._.., .... JM1 ~ ....... , •. ' . e CfM.D'Ollll'IJl ~ 171 L 17tti Sr., C... ,. .. '4~5041 s M0114l1, Aptil 6, l97t COMMODITY FUTURES TRADERS SEND IN THIS COUHJN FOl INFOAMATION AND OUI WllkL'f NrwSLmll ·-.................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. .................. . R. J. O'BRIEN AND ASSOC .. INC. 1649 WettclHt Dr. Newpon leecll 1714) 642·100. .;UI 3 @~ o/r:J?arna ~ 9'-"'r i-Ue r lo join in _. " " ·. .. '. 35tb ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION WITH REFRESHMENTS served daily from I to 3,30 p.m. through Friday, Aprll IOlh. WITH JADE and CORAL EXHIBITS Birthstone jewelry and art objects on dlsplay, courtesy Warren Imports, laa:una Beach. WIJH A 16-PAGE SOUVENIR BROCHURE Pk:torial look at Laguna and coastal Orange County. WITH FREE GIFT OF A PICTURE Bi& 16" x 20' tun color Utho of 111e ori1ina1 oil paintina, lllown above. AND WITH TIIE HIGHEST INTEREST RATES IN OUR 35-YEAR HmoRYI llilcolw llolrJOU cu tsn 5.25% 1117.5% GUAIWITTID llITTREST, cainpouoded daily, on Ctr1ificatt Aa:owits, insured to $20.lm WtGDT-mm-mK>llGEST lndeplnchnl Fldlnl .. Onnp Cllmtlrl ~ Lll6DNll FEDERllb SllVIN6S ·-I ' W ASHffiGTON (UPI) For the first time we're going to investigate on a national scale the use of computers to investigate us. The big question: Is the computer. and its associated "data bank." a threat to personal privacy and the due process of law? Most of us, if we pay taxes, apply for jobs or bank loan,, or imluraoce policies, or merely want to get into a colJege or a labor union, have to divulge information about our private selves which may wlnd up in the amuingly capacious memory stom>ouses of elec- tronic computers. Is there danger that this in- ronnation mav be traded and exchanged c--mong d a t a centers for oi: against us wilhout our oonM!nt? The National Academy of Sciences and the Russell Sage Foundation think the question deserves an answer. They an· nouoced the beginning of a 21h-year study to grt it. The study is being sponsored by the academy'' computer science and engineering board. Tbe foundation, w h i c h opedallm in appUtd social sclen<es, is putting up 11!9,SOO to 111pporl ll Among consultant. who wilt ass1st in an advisory capacity Is Ralph Nadtr, Washington research law.yer and champion of the consumer. The Issue or COl'!lputeriz d data banks and Jndlvldu1d privacy became a matter of national conctm In Ute late 1960s over proposab to create a national data ~nter for statlsltcal infonnalimi. Olttctor or th• new study . Complete-Ne_w York Stock List Market S9mbob 'I -·· ' ' Monday's tlosing OOllrtll : L~~ ="I& -~ .., _ --'I" - rn : ::1tt ' -1 ... " -1'& • -h '11! -':I 1f\: -i• !JI~ -I )ol\'I -1· ~ .... = • • = ~ ' • =l~ .¥! = .~ 1, ... -,a ~. "-'1 .. 1'70 rices-Gomplete New Y-ork . Stock Exchange List ... -·i-.............................. .~~--~~-,.~. ...... '----.' -· .· .. · Finance Briefs ,::~~!iU filed 1 civil antllrult wit Iii <'Ompol Healthclro C«p, ot. Bol10n lo divest Ii.ell o( loqit deal.II supply coptpanles lit the New York metiopolltlit lltL HlllU.W. ii -K the """'1fy'1 I or d«llll llUJIPIY prod...,• aolt marketen. 'lbl 1ult aaya :I\:. his 18' paroent ol the ~ rupply buolnea In the ~ York metropolllan 1m:<11il4 that 1111111 loo mud! lo i*rmll adequato -1111Uoo. ' • • H OAllV PILOT Monda1, Aprll 6, 1970 ·Prices Effective .Beginning Today · Thru Saturday 4/11 ' ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE • Sears NEW TREAOS· e Built only wilh carefully in· r;pected r;ound tire bodies! •Long weari ng Dynatuf tread robber 'Retreads on' ooand lire bodieo SIZE Your Choice T UBELESS BLACll.'1VALLS 6.50xl3 5.60xl5 8.lSxlS 2r!l 7.35xl4 7.75xl4 g.2Sxl4 f.E.1'. ..... 32e 35e Slo 41• 44e 4S. 4-Ply Nylon ID-WAY SPECIAL Whitowalle Only '2 More Per~ . 24 Months Guarantee . SIZE Tr..r~ I• f'.E.T • •Built with four fllll plies of l'•lr l'ric>e .... rugged nylon cord for super T UBELESS BLACKWALL$ ' 6.50xl3 2 for29.00 1.78 •trength • 6.95xl4 2for31 .00 1'94 • •Long wearing Dynatuf tread 7.35xl4 . 12 for33.00 2.04 rubber. Contour •afety 7.7Sxl4 2for35.00 2.17 shoulders mean ea•ier steer-8.2Sx14 2 for38.00 2.3S ing and 1afer cornering 5.60~15 2 fo-r-31";00 lo'7S 7.75xlS 2for33.00 2.19 T UBELESS WDITEW ALLS 6.95~1 4 2for37.0 0 l.94 7,;15xl 11-2 for39.00 2.04 7.75x l4 2 for41 .0 0 2.17 8.25xl4 2 for 44.00 2.33 5.60x)5 .2for 37.00 . l .75 Dynaglass WIDE GUARD 2 Fiberglass Belts Plus 2 Nylon Plies · 36 Month Guarantee , . .. ' ' ·rnde-111 f.E.T. . ' ...... Guaranteed Apimt: All titt failuttt from aormal rOld huank or ddtro in IDll:cri.I or workmanship. SIZE P1ir l'rit>t £.._It Tir. ~, 1-'or How Lo·ng: fgr the life of the ori&itl&I trHd. Wba1 Sean Will Do: In cuban,ge for tht: tire. rep I.cc it chart in& fur 1hc proponion of curreot x llins price plUJ Frderal EJtcisc Tu that rcprcicnts trnd used. Jlcpair.nail punct\l.ttS 11 no c:huie. Guar1nt~d A,;ain!t: Tread weu-out. i:or How l.i1111~: The numbn" of mon1ha tp«ifit:d. Wh11 Sei n Will Do: In exch•iw for the tirf', ttp\.cc itc:har1i11A the current aelli111pricc plus Federal .Ercisc Tu Mn 1ht fol111Wina: allow- anct: Monthly G11anintcc 18 to 24 27 to :\9 "" IUCHA 'AIK TA 14400, Jtlo41H A lllONft OI ,i.Jfll LONli llACH HI J-0121 CANOO.l PAIK MO.GUI ... AU al 1•1004, a 4o4611 • OLYMPtC & IOTO AN 1·1211 , COMPTON NI .. 2111, NI 1·1761 NOU.YWOOO MO f..JMI OIANOI t.)T·ttOO ..-.,WM>CK.ANDCO. COVtNA t~11 eNM1WOOD 01. 1.JJJ1 PAIADINA 6114111, 111 .. 111 .. llaP. -. lllnl ht, fiaOAA le t~O ..... I• tJ 12 ....... IP.& .. .....,_ ... O••••n• •f-1111111 a.k" f • ttoMONA NA t •lltl '1CO WI l"":ltl IAN1A ANA lt1 74l71 SANTA R IN.INN "44011 IMft'A MOMICA IX W71 I • TUBELESS BLACKW ALLS 6.50xl11 2 for39.00 2.00 7.7'.Sx~ ~2 for 4.6 .00 2.55 8 .25x14 2 for52.00 2.67 TUBELESS WHlTEW ALLS 6.50xl3 2 for45.00 6.95xl4 2 ror48.00 7.35xl4 2for50.00 7.75xl4 2for52.00 8.2Sx14 . 2for5a.oo 8.5Srl4 2 for64.00 8.li5xl4 2for70.00 8.15xl5 2 for56.00 8.45xl 5 2 for 60.00 IOUTM COAST PlA.lA. 140..JJll TOllANCI 542-1111 UPlAND tlS·lf27 VAi.LiT PO 1-Mtt, 914..U. VIUIOlll' ..... ,,,, 2.00 2.12 2.35 2.s5 2.67 2.93 2.88 2.77 2.98 , • ' ' - 2 Turbines Announced By Edison Southera CaJlfornia Edison Company has chosen the builder of two new turbines which will be llnked· to Its two MW nuclear reaclors In the pair of new generating plants to be built at ~n Onofr<. A letter ol intent to purchase one steam turbine has been sent to En-lish Electric Corporation for the turbine generator unit. The utility holds an option °" a second unit from the firm as well. The turbine generators will be part cf Edison's $450 million complex of two nuclear generating stations even larger- than the existing one on 84 acres of land along the coast four miles south of San Cli:mente. • Mond'1, Apo11 6, 1970 • s Candidates Set Forums In 2 Cities " The poltttcal ,.,,.. I• the Coplltrlm and San Clemente 1re11 will pkt up this week when sep1rate fonunl .,. sdteduted for nine city _..ti _.. Jn San Juan Capistrano and a record IS in San CJemente. The first of the '°"" hall meollnp wbe,. the public wilt have their eolf chance to meet all the candldltel at once wUI be Tuesday night at 7'311 - the San Juan Capistrano bopefUll appmt at San Juan Elementary Sc boo I' t audiWrium. The council aspirants will eedl "'" •. (ive11 time to praent their b1eqtaancl 8.Dd other comments. That ~. will be followed by answers by 'emBltet to written questions submitted from the audience. San Diego Gas and Electric Company Is a 20-pereent partner in ~ massive generating plarit project. It holds the same lnterest in the 450,000 kilowatt nuclear plant already in operation on seaside bluffs leased from Ca m p Pendleton. ~ .. o-.1L '( ... LOT ......... , r.,.,., C•vlUt t The event Is sponsored by the Ml Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce. AN ACUTE CASE OF SPRING FEVER AS THIS YOU NG FISHERMAN OECIDES TO lAKE THINGS EASY The new twiJt generating plants should be completed by the mid 1970s Edison 1pokesmen said. Each unit will be almost exactly double the size of the present nuclear plant Clemente Example Cited Each new Reneratlng system will pro- duce 1.l million kilowatt unils -en4 ough power lo serve a city of Z.S..mlllion persons. The combination or the three plant! would be the largest 11uclear generating complex in the nation. 'Candid Camera' for Laguna Cons? The other candidate'• night will be at 7~30 p.m: Wedne8dl7 Wben the San Clemente Jaycees sponsor their town hall meeting at the lJ.tUe Theater of San CJemente High School. The 15 aspiruts for tine Natl • tbe dty cooncll will foUow tho - basic format as the San Ju.u Caplstnno meeting. Engineering and desi.(n work already is under way on the first of the twin planU:. Construction will start as soon as the necessary government permits are granted. The plant plans already have received I clean bill or health from the San Diego Area Regional Water Quality Con4 trol Board. The first ge111erating unit is master planned lo begin 1endlng electrical power In 1976. ·students Seek Enviroillllental Protection Sign A contest to seek a symbol for a movement to protect man's environment was launched b1 the Capistrano Unified Sc~~~~c~~~I;'~~· said all district J y RICHARD P . NAU. Of "" Deify ... ltf ltetf Future prisoners of Laguna Beach city jail may fmd themselves on candid camera. At least Police Chief Kenneth Huck would like lo install an Internal video system to provide a higher level of security and save man hours lost by police making personal checks 011 the cells. The system described by Huck to couri- cilme11 in a recent study session with department heads was one of several methods outlined by the police chief to add to his department's effectiveness. The l-'ideo system could also be used for police training films or screening of local situations by use of video tape. ."Jt .would also be tremendous for crime-scene utilizaUon." said Huck, men- tiooing narcotics crimes and unruly crowd situations where It is difficult for police later to prove who did what. He said Judge Richard Hamilton of the Municipal Court had particularly recommended such equipment as a means of effectively pre v ,e n t i n g cour&oom evidence. ranging from drug abuse to how to burglarproof a home. He said he hopes to Institute for police a comprehensive and continuing training program from the command level to the patrol level. Topics would include e x e cutive development, management, middle management, 11.arcotics and ad· vanced law. To maintain the current level of police service, the police chief said, he reels it will be necessary to add an additional patrolman, .a detective and a com4 munications worker. Recruitment and retention of officers has become a serious problem, Huck said. The recruitment of an officer takes three months ; police academy takes another three and three more are con· sumed by the new officer working under close supervision. The police chlef said during recent recruitment 79 men applied but only 29 showed up for the written examination and only six passed that. Additionally, Huck said. on1y one out of rour men making the psychology test are found · suited for pol.ice work. City manager .James D. Wheaton said another problem at the patrol level has become salary. Wheaton said the Laguna top pay of $811 monthly has become less tba11 starting salaries in many police departments in Orange County. He said the city of Newport Beach has elected to advance police salaries indepeftdent or other employes. "We're going to be the lowest in the county if we are not now," said Wheaton. "We have some very good officefs on our force and they know what of.her cities are paying." He pointed out that it cosl.!J $7,000 lo trai111 an officer and it is not good economics to then Jose him to another department. Huck said he has been operative with a shortage of rive men for the past six or seven months while attempting to fill the positions. The police chief also said he would like to establish a full-time juvenile unit and send addiUonal personnel to the Delinquency Control Institute at t'SC, possi bly by grants to the city. He hopes to develop additional eounsel- ing servl~. for both youth and their 1tude11ls are eligible to submit their desiin for the symbol. which should "be appropriate to signify involvement In a movement to improve the quality of our environment. Entries are welcome as lonl( as they !re drawn on the standard 81h-by-ll-l11ch The system, already in use Jn San Clemente. changed one drunk driver's mind on the spot," said Huck. He said the man had to be physically restrained by police at the time of arrest. The next morning the prisoner com· plained of police brutality, said Huck. until he viewed his own actions on the video device. }luck said the man 's at- titude changed to remorse. "He said 'I'm guilty' and it saved a jury trial," the Jljllice chief said. Fiesta Forn1ing sheet of white paper. · Monday April 13, will be the deadline for the entries. They should be submitted to San Clemente High School · Teacher Sam Conroy, ·room 708. They will be accepted at 3 p.m. on the deadline day. Clemente Sends 800 Parade Entries A year's subscription to National Geographic Mal{azlne wilt go to the winner. It will be awarded at an "Environme11tal Teach-In" on the cam· J>US April zz. The winning symbol will be on the cover of brochures for the annual marine symposium. Huck said he hoped also to increase departmental effectiveness in crime prevention and control. He spoke, of needs. for better community involvement and willingness by citizens to both report incidents and serve as witnesses when necessary. The police chief said there is a need for seminars for the public on topics More than 800 parade entry ap- plications are being sent out this week to persons and bu sinesses in the San Clemente area for the chamber of com- m.erce's annual Fiesta La Christianita. The annual parade commemorating the first Olristian baptism in Cailfom!a will be the highlight of the fiesta. The parade will be held this year July 13 at 10:40 a.m. Indi viduals or businesses who are not El Rancho has the hottest price in town! MORTON'S 26 OZ. CTN. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No salt salts like Morton's salt salts ••. and who but El Rancho 'vould offer ii for a. nickel ? contacted by mall can pick up par11de entry forJ11S at the offices of the San Clemente Chamber of Commer~. Don Hanaen, parade chairman, urged strong participation in the parade and said a need for folat.s and novelty displays ls great. More information is available by call- ing 492-1131. Welch's Fruit Drinks ............. 3"' $1 Instant Potatoes ............... ., ....... 49' Grape or Apple--Grape ••• big 46 ·oz. cans. li1ashed potatoes in minutes ! Ore-Ida ••• 13 oz. Beef Stew ................................... 19' Chicken and Noodles ................ 19' Stouffer's ••• simply heat and serve! 10 oz. Stouffer's ••• frozen ••• hea t and eat! 11 V2 oz. Beat mtnu-monotonv ••• shop El Rancho ed.:rly in the week! I Stuffed Cabbage Rolls ..... ~·~~· ..... 39~. Crisp fresh cabbage leaves, wrapped around ground beef and pork ••• deliciously seuo~d ••• ready to cook r Breakfast Steaks .................... $1 69 ,b parents and to work with community groups in delinquency prevention. Huck spoke of need for increased ef. lectiveness in traffic control. He said there should be a better data !).stem and personnel should be trained in ac- cident records management. ~ Huck also spoke of the possibility ol using radar in areas where clocking is impossible. He said boITOwed radar had been tested on Thalia and Monterrey and said, "there are an amazing amount or violator'! traveling those areas." Wheaton said also that additional space for police ls needed and would increase effectiveness but he added that this is a problem shared by all the crammed city departmenl.!J. . The study session of councilmen was a prelude to budget decisions for the coming fiscal year. Chamber Gets Seatsfor Game A special block or seal& for the Angef~' opening game at Anaheim Stadium, Tuesday, April 14, has been obtained by the Laguna Beach Chamber of Com· merce. The Angels are· rewarding all Orange County chambers with a contribullon 1n proportion to the number of tickets each one sells and every city has been invUed to bring its mayor, chamber president and beauty queen for the pre-game parade. Tickets on the third base line are available for Lagunans at the Chamber office, 280 Park Ave. and more will be obtained as fast as the in.itiaJ supply is For rurther lnformauon call 494-1013. S'J!d out. No other public 1oruma I-Ins on the city candidates at once are ldMIW in either city. • Electlons !0< boCll city .......a. will be held Tuesday, April If. ~nniversary Of Hospitality Center Honored A pot1uck dinner for bo8l'd membln: and guests commemoratln1 the 11th Do niversary ol the San Clemente AnMd Forces Hospitality Center will be held at the center Tue!day. The eveninj: is a special board mettlnl night for the incorporated volunteer-run center for servlcemen at 101 s. El Cimo ino Real. A new board of directors wW be nam tnfA> office at the C<Jllclualoa ct the I p.m. dinner. The event will cite the hard wort of 739 volunteers from the communitJ who worked to make the center 1 auccea this past year. · The center'• atalf, reftt11hment1 and operatitut needs are all provided by local churches and 11ervlce groups. No fund raJslng programs .,.. eon. ducted. The help is on a donaUon bu1' only, center apokemnen aaJd. In the last fbcal year • tobl of 1,350 aervk:emen 11lped the 1u•1 t register of the center -with repr11tn- taUves from all 50 stater and forelCn lands including Thailand. Germany, the Bahamas, Canada, England, Me>tco, Norway, Newfoundland, 1tvtral African nations and Cuba. Chairman of the pot Juck-IMlvtfW1 celebration la John S. Miller. Thin cutl from U.S.D.A. Choice top 1irloin. Grill each side about 2 minutes! l.<>ve that breakrastl ' Stroganoff Slices .................... $1.69 Ground Round .... _ ........... " ........... 89~ PMces i·n. effect Mon..,.Tu~a., Wtd., April 6, 7, 8. No a.Ua to dtaler1. Mr.ADii: Sanset ond Hn:too Dr. (D Rlltdll litlllll - Top 1lrloin beef ••• read1 to braiae. Add the fixin's. s.,,.,. , ... ~ l>f'Od•«· Banana Squash Sweet golden meat for A delicious baked vegetable treat! Always leanJ fresh! Patti ea, too, at tbia price ! At the Delicate11"' Biscuits Pillsbury or Ballard's •• , 8-oz. tube. HotDiscuits are .~!JVJ\11 enjoy•dl 3i25( ' .. PASADEllA: 320 Wat Colorldo lilt .SOUTH PASADEllA: f11moot 1nd·Hunli1itoo Dr. HUllTlllGTON llDCRl W-.llMI Alpqilil ~~ C<n!H) NEWPOlf BEACH: 2727 "-' B1'd. ... 2555 ·wtbluH Dr. (tastblutl Vill111 C.allr) ' The University of Colorado Vlill bold its lhird annual trivia bowl )>eglnnlng next Monday to learn lust how much trivial information ts students possess. Categories will include such choice items as pop culture, pop muaic and sports or "any information not considered needed for the content. .. of other· wise essential information. • Housewife Judith Butler of Carl· Isle, England, \s going into cold 1torage for two years on a dare. She answered an ad looking for :someone to sit in a deep freeze for several hours a day clad only in a nightgown and a special new type of quilt. She ·said "My friends dared me to apply for the job." • MondaJ, Aprtl 6, 197C Mansfield Stiffs IO-cent Letter Proposal Dead? WASHINGTON (AP) -President NI•· on'a propoeal to raise the prlct of malling a Jetter to a dime to help pay for the wage boost of mailmen and o~er govern~ mtnt worktrs ls doomed, according to Senate DemocraUc L e 1 d e r Mike Manalleld. Tbe l~t stamp doe1n'l stand a chance, Mansrield said ln an interview. "They just won't go for a four-cent raise, especially in the ooe area wNcb ls returning a profll" That arta iJ flrat cla.ss mail, which la paying Its own way under the current alx· ctnt rate structurt. Sen. Gale McGeee (D-Wyo.), chairman of the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee, alrr ... ',, toad· rio'eeted the Nixon proposal. Reds Attacli Beret Camp, Down Planes He 1sld a cheek wllb mtmben ~ hit panel, lhowed lbe llk:tnl llllmP doe111't stand a chance. McGee asJd he would conaldu a one-cent lncreue, two at thl out.aide. McGee's commllleo ocheduied hearbop lain today on lbe prealdendal propooal bued on a settlement rucbed lut week between government negotlaton and el· flciaJs of Ille IOVen mojor pooW unlool, The tenlaUve ~ nached after a flr~lime ever poatal ltrlke, provided a twe>-step, 14 percent boolt that break 1 clown thia way : · -A six percent -for neorly all federal workers, lncludinr p o • t a l f.mployes and military p e r 1 on n e I, retroactive to Dec. rt. -Another eight per«nl jump for mall workers U ind when 1 Post Offlct reorganization bill becomes law. The coat of the package is eaUmated at ."1 billion and Nixon's Ikent stamp pro-posal 11 designed In bring In 12.3 billion. McGee said Congress will work wlthl11 the terms set by the negotiated agree- ment, and promised to act quickly. Mansfield &aid he will schedule floor action on the measW'e as soon as It ls ready, possibly by mid-week. Mansf~eld said the overall pay packa1e may have an inflationary effect. But be said it represents an overdue federal commitment to govemmeot workers. To offset it, he said, the budget will ·iave to be cul elsewhere. SAIGON (AP) -North Vletname~ . troops from Laos have lald s.lege to r frontier Special Forces camp and shot down three American transports trying to mp emergency suppliea, killing all nine American crewmen, mllllary spokesmen reported today. The heaviest action of the enemy's 1i1- day-old offensive continued along the Laotian and Cambodian borders and the demilitarized zone. But flghUng also was reported in the Central lfighlands and the central coastal plain. "I thlni: the admln.lstraUon will have to. cut expenditures more and we'll have to reduce appropriaUons more," Mansfield said. "I think we ought to look •l•in at the defense budget ud our commitments overseas." Six-yeaT·old Lauro Smiley t.akes her mtnd ofj the big ca.tt on her leg bt1 planting some flower seeds as part of a. catch-up science lesson at Los ,Angeles Orthopaedic Hospital. A l· though sM wilt be Telell!ed long be· fore the flmoers bloom, she and her hospital cla.!smates keep up with their studies. • A proposal to move the U.S. Mint out of Denver, Colo., is getting no Support !rom the mayor, William McN lchols. "I sort oC like to hear the clinking of the money," he said after learning of the suggestion. e A man who asked the U.S. cemus bureau for his confiden· tiat fof'fn3 to· be returned to him was r efU!ed politely recently. fie· said his wife had filled it in and mailed it without letttng him set it. He said au he wanted to do 10<l.t to see ;ust exactly how old hil wife U. • After thieves had robbed the home of John Bates in Bred bury 1 England. three limes, j>oUce ad· vised him to trim a tree outside his home whic h gave the thieves cov· er. He did as he was told, but now must appear in court to face a charge or damaging a tree pro-- tected under an ~year-<>ld minis-- try o! housing order. • Edward Ba1ll1 of Kalamazoo, Mic h., and a student at Western Mi chigan University, \Vill have to find a way of telling his insurance company that his car was damag· ed by a runaway snowball. The car 'vas hit by a m onster snowball rolled by students, which got away from them at the top of a hill and rolled into a parking lot hitting the car and causing $500 in damages. Allied communique11 reported 262 more North Vietnamese and Viet Cong soldiers killed in 11 dozen fights, three of them just outside the be9Je~ed Oak Seang Special Forces camp eight miles from the Laotian border and 277 miles northeast of Saigon. Eleven Americans were reported killed and 20 wounded in the ground flgh'ing and ln 41 rocket and mortar attacks dur· ing the night. Several American helicopttts u•ere blown up by enemy sappers who penetrated the perimeter of Camp Radcliff, a U.S. base near An Khe, in the Central Hi~hlands. Reports from the field said at least 14 South Vietnamese soldiers were killed and 107 wounded in the ground fighting. Government casualties from rocket and mortar attacks which were described as light. Vietnam Troops Fall by 9,200 SAIGON CAP) -The U.S. Command announced today that American troop strength in Vietnam dropped another 9,200 men last week, to 439,400. lt Is the lowest level In three years and result.! from continuanet: of President Nixon's third-phase withdrawal now nearing its final week. The U.S. Command also announced that a detachment representing the 1st Infantry Dlrision will fly Tuesday from Bien Hoa Air Base to the United States, completing the division's departure from Vietnam. Three more Army units "'ere in· acUvated in Vietnam today, resulting In a total reduction ·ot 173 men . The units are the 337th Radio Research Company, the 5.1rd Signal Detachment, and the 1st Military Intelligence Detachment, all based around Saigon. The third-phase fedeployment w 111 reduce authorized U.S. troop strength ln Vietnam to 434,000, but American of- ficials say actual strength will drop from one to two percent below that. Conservatives Have Their Day In· Washington WASHINGTON (AP) -Whatever olbtr purpose it may have aerved, the March for Victory gave lhouaanda of mlddle-ag. ed and conservaUvely drtssed Americans a chance to be heard. "1bls iJ our day," said the Rev. Carl Mcintire, the fundamentalist preacher and chief organiw' of the event, who led the March Saturday down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Washington Monument. There, a loud speaker blared "at list, Americans have had their day in Washington ." Crowd estimates varied. WWngton Police Chief Jerry V. Wilson set the num· ber at 10,000 to 15,000. Federal Park Police estimated about 40 ,000, while Mcintire said 50,000 persons marched. About 250,000 persons were esUmated to have walked the same route in the November Moratoriuin Day pr o t e at against the Vietnam war. U nlike la st fall's youthful dtmonstrators with their long hair and unorthodox clothes, the weekend crowd was mosUy over 30, had above-thwar hair cuts, and wore their Sunday-best outfits. Some held Bibles, American and Confederate nags. 'Ibey sang hymns, "America," "Dixie" and "God Bless America ." The event was billed by Mcintire as a demonstration for military victory in Vietnam -an answer to last fall 's an- ti\\·ar marches. However, a number of conservative themes shared the spotlight, w i t h speakers and banners calling for prayer and Bible reading ln school, an end to desegregation, sex education, legalized abortion and "Godless communism.'' "No Busing Of Our Children," said a huge banner carried above the heads of a North Carolina .delegation. To some Jt waa a reli1ious revival 11 they Inquired about the souls of tho6e they met ln the throng. The devout who e n c o Wltered unbelievers proclaimed, "you got to hit 'em with the word." Severe Weather Eases Off Spring in the Air For Most Parts of Nation r-peNt•re• Cocstul · MosJIY "'""'"' i.o.r. Ll9111 'l1•l1a11 w!Nh 1111111 lftd ft'oOrlllne '*'" ri.c:-ll'lt wtt!ftfY I to IS ~' In 1f11tr_, !oder el1d f11UC11r. H1t11 '""' ... eo.1111 1-r1111tn r•-lf'tm JO to u. ll>ilftd ,_,.turu ,..,,. lrtll'I M to &S. WflH '-"'""""' to. MONOA'I' SKOl'ld 111•11 .............. 11.0 '""· S.t SKOftd l9w ........... 2~t• ''"'· O.t fUltOA'I' f'l'11 llttll ..... ····•·•· t :ll '·"'· '·' 1'1'11 low .. .• :1.oe 1.m. o 1 Stu!IO hllll •• .•••• , ••• , t : n '""'· 1,0 ltcellf ..,., ••• ' .......... ''°' '""· ., ~ ..... ,, .. ·-htt 1111 '""" MOlll'I 111.1 .. J;)t •.11'1. ..,. 7~1J"""' W1e111er te fW tl'lt calelleer ...... .. ,tflt K,_t "10ll ff 11'19 M ttlft lode1'. 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"''""' It-* '"" ~ .. l !uff ·~ $1('1mtfttt ktt Ukl CltV $fin Olno Sift ,rfll'l:IKI 1111111 ---.. - .. » " u • 11 • " ff • " .. " .. " .. " " " " " » • " .. " • .. u .. .. " .. • • ., .. .. " " • • • .. » • .. " • .. " ., .. " .. • N .. • " ., " .. • " • " .. " .. • " " .. 11 • " • u .. " .. .. .. .. .. .n .. ... ... ReeeUl!!f Staff .. .Germans Fuming At Envoy's Death B"EAKING TIES W11t 0.rnMny'I Brondt Israelis Reject Zionist's Off er To Meet Nasser JERUSALEM (AP) -11\e Israeli government has rejected an offer by a prominent Zionist to represent it at a meeting with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. A government spokesman said Dr. Nahlm Goldmann, who heads the World Jewish Congress, informed Prem I er Golda Meir two week.! ago that "maJ.y slde1" -including Nasser himself -had asked him to discuss the worsening Jsrael-Arab dispute in Cairo. In Cairo, however, an Egyptia• govern· ment spokesman denied lhat Nasser had agreed to meet with Goldman and called the claim 11a mere fabrication." According to the Israeli spokesman, Goldmann said he was willing to go but wanted to be approved by the Israeli government. "The government decided that it would resPond favorably to any manife1tatJon of willlngneas on the part of the prealdent of Egypt for a meeting to investigate pro- blems crucial to 'Israel and Egypt, where each side was free to appoint its own represeotative," the government state- ment said. But to Goldmann's request, "the government decided to r e p 1 y in the 11egaUve." In other word!!:, the govern- ment would appoint its own repusen- tative for any such talks. The spokesman said that all but one of the cabinet's 24 members voted to tum down the 74-year-old Jewish leader, who was one of the most active and influential lobbyists for Israel before it became a stale. Goldmann, who holds both Israeli and Swiss citizenship and lives in Geneva , has written that Israel should act flexibly and moderately toward its Arab neighbors - a J>O!ltlon that has not made him popular in Israel. Last month he called for the neutraliza· lion of Israel, with its status a1 a Jewish state guaranteed by "the whole of mankind," lncludlng the Arab nations. Egypt Raiders Hit Israel Base CAIRO (AP) -Egn>lian commandos thrust 37 miles into Slllai, attacked an Israeli mililary concentration with rockets, and returned safely, the Egyp- tian military command claimed today. The announcement quoted by Cairo radio, said the operation was carried out at daw• Sunday. It said Arab commandos made the attack on an army en- campment near the village of Rabeaa, about 37 miles from Qantara along the northern Sinai road. It said the encampment Included a regional army headquarters, t a n k s , trucks and anUalrcraft guns. The aonounctment, made more than 30 hours after the operation, also claimed that a large number of Israelis in the en· campment were killed when rockets "hit the target wlth precision." t • BONN, Gennany (AP) -Foreign Mlnilter Walter Scheel said today West Germany will' recall ita embassy staff from Guatemala, as Indignation mounted here over the turorist kllllng of Count Carl von Spretl, kldnaped ambassador. ln Guatemala, security forces stepped up tbelr hunt for members of the leftist Rebel Anned Forces during the night after the body of Von SpreU wu found in 1 roofless mud hut near Guatemala City. He hl_d beta shot oooe in the head. Police patrola were seen on almost every o t h e r block of the captial. Some homes were aearehed. But there wu no immediate report of any arrests. Scheel told a news conferenct the Bonn aovernment waa forced to act beeause .. the government of Guatemala ap- puently b not in a pos!Uon • • • to guarantee the safety of the represen· tallves of the West German Federal Republic." Scheel said other measures may follow as a result of van Spreti's murder. He !!laid the government would study reports from Gerhard Mikesch, it.s charge d'af. faire9 In Guatemala, and Wilhelm Hoppe, chief of peraonnel of the Foreign Ministry who was tent to Guatemala Saturday to try to arrange for von Spreti's release. Scheel also indicated that Guatemala's ambassador to Bonn, Antonio Gandara, will be asked to leave West Gennany. "We have decided to withdraw our charge d'affaires and I expect that the Guatemalan government will draw the consequences," Scheel said. He addtd that he planned to tell the ambaMador public opinion in West Germany would not tolerate the presence Kirk Commands Florida Schools To Halt Busing BRADENTON, Fla. CUP!) -Gov. Claude Kirk, who once bragged "Flori· dlans have barred no &ehool doors," took command of the Manalee County school system today and ordered students and tet chers to ignore federal s c h o o I desegregation orders. I Kirk, accompanied by aide 0 i c k Warner, showed up at the two-story brick school board office at 7:35 a.m. and hud· died immediately with assimnt school superintendents Philip Doyle and William Bashaw. "1 can't alk now, I'm busy running the schools," Kirk told newsmen gathered at the building. Kirk suspended the county's five- me1nber school board and the school superintendent Sunday and took com- mand of the school system himself to block a school desegregation plan that had-been scheduled to go into effect to· day. Klrk met briefly with the school bus drivers at the motor pool early today and told them "take your old routes -not the new ones." the school board's switchboard was nooc1ed with calls from parents asking where to send their children to school . "Send them to their old schools ... the school where they have been going," the parents were told. 1'1eanwhile, police say there was no sign of trouble a.t the county's 28 schools early today. Greek General Denies Resistance Key Role ATHENS, Greece (AP) -A retired Greek army general accll!ed of sedition in the mass trial or 34 pel"lons denied to- day that he was the ringleader of the resistance Democratic Defense organiza· tion. Gen. George Iordanldes, 68, told the five-member special military tribunal that although he had met with key members of the organization they had never discussed bombing attacks ht his presence. Women Baek Pantlaers here of a representative or t h e Guatemalan government. Scheel said, however 1 the statement was directed at the Gihaemalan g~om· ment and not agr(nst-G a n<tt a Ta, personally, adding : ''l'»elleVe that Gan- dara personally is weel'/hought of by the West German public be1ause he offered imseU as a hostage for the ambassador." Interior Minister Hans ·Dietrlch Genscher had urged earlier that the members of the embassy be brought back Crom Guatemala because the government there had failed to proltct fore!gn diplomats. * * * Consul Flees Kidnapers In Brazil PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil CAP) -The U.S. consul in Porto Alegre was recover· ing today from a slight wound suffered ir: thwarting a kidnap attempt. Ile used hi,; car to run dawn one of his would-be kid· napers, and they let loose a hail of bullet~ as he escaped . Curtis C. CUiler, a 41-year-old Korea:1 \Var veteran, became the fi rst dipJome1 in Latin America to personally defy a kidnap attempt since the wave of political abductions started list September. Ther e have been eight previous kidnapings or attempted kidnapings in Latin America n countries. · Cutter was driving home late Saturday night with his wife, Catherine, and a former State Department official, Hovey Clark, when a gang in a car intercepted them. Several men wearing dark glasses and carrying machine guns jumped ou~ and headed toward Cutter's station wagon. The consul stepped on the gas and pull· ed around the car blocking his path, hit· ting one of the men and dragging him on the bumper for several yards. The other kidnapers opened fire, wounding the eoo4 sul slightly in the back. but he was able to drive to his home a few blocks away. Police said the assailants w er e members of the leftist Armed Revolu- tionary Vanguard. They picked up their injured comrade and escaped. Guards were put on Cutter's hospital room, his home and the homes of other diplomats. · Appeals \\'ere broadcast over radio sta- tions in the area for all doctors to report any cases of auto injuries they treat. Police said they found the car used by the attackers. They said it had beer. stolen last 1nonth. . "This latest act of terrorism heigh tens our concern for the safety of our diplomatic personnel," U.S. Ambassador C. Burke Elbrick said in Rio de Janeiro. Elbrick himself wa s kidnaped last Sept. 4 and was released afler the government Creed 1$ political prisoners. Ne-w Kopechiie Jur y Convenes EDGARTOWN, Mass. CAP) -A special session cf the I>.lkes County Grand Jury convenes today amid doubt ever its procedure in its independent in· vestigation into the death last July 18 or Mary Jo Kopechne . Miss Kopechne, 28, a form~r campaign secretary of the late Sen. Robert F. Ken· nedy. died In a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0.Mass. ). The car plunged off a narrow bridge into a tidal pool on Chappaquiddick Island. which lies across a narrow strait from Edgartown, one> of the towns on the island of ~fartha's Vineyard. Kennedy, the youngest and on I y survivor of the lour Kennedy brothers. escaped. but delayed for 10 hours his report of the accidept lo island police. • ii • Members or the Women's Uberatlon League march down Second Avenue in New York in a demonstra- tion supporting 21 BJaclt Panthers charged with bomb ploWD&. The sroup was en route lo the Queens House of Detention where LI of the 21 are being held. The demonstration at the House of Detentio.a culminated the march wblch began in Central Park. The 11 Panthers being held could not ~alse ball. \ . ---------------------~--------• r , l • " ,. •• ,_ .. ~ " h " 11 ,. ct :r- ir. 1i~ d- 1s i:1 ,, a al re " an ay • ey ed " +U~ ., 11- .it- °" er ... 1le . e lu- '~ tal '" la- "' al. by '" '"' ~r lor ·o. .. ?nt A 1ly 1bl in- of gn ?n- !TI, " Jal ies '"· of l y rs. Jis • • I l ' I ... ~---------------~-·-~------------ Next Apollo 'GO'·· Fuel Pressure OK Mondif, Aptll 6, 1970 DAILY PILOT !j Workers Rampage Third Fl,orida Construction Site Erupts I CAPE KENNEDY, F I • ' (AP) -The $pact agency reported today H no longer had a fuel pressure problem tn Apollo 13's moon-landing Craft and the countdown moved ahead toward Saturday · s laLmChlng of man's third lunar landing mislion. the helium tank. The three astrohaut.s who are to fly the mission - James A. Lovell Jr .. 1'1tomN K. Mattingly II and Fred W. Haise Jr. -wakened early tt>- day for their flnal major physical examination. _ WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. terlng rams to teai down 'Mle scene of the rioting J1 a \ (UPl) -About S,000 con-parts of the buldllng. ., new VoJbwaa:en dealerlhlp on strucUon workers went on 1 A short time later ram-Okeechobee Ro1d west of wUd rampage at a con-paging laborers set fire IO the downtown WHt Palm Beach . ,I The bothersome h e I i u m system, which preuurizes fuel tanks In the lunar lander, recorded 'fxoe1slve pressure during a test Sund.a y . Speciallsti monitored t b e potential problem throughout the night and said today the pressure had stabilized. A NASA announcement said the operation of the system "Is satisractory and we 11 within parameters." It said thete was oo plan to replace Hijack Crew, Official Commended TOKYO (AP) -The Japanese deputy transporta- tion minister who agreed to replace 103 pe rso ns as hostages aboard a jet being hi- jacked to North Korea last week delivered a three·hour report to the Japanese parlia· ment today and received a white porcelain vase f6r his ac- Uon. The three crtw members who flew the Japan Air Lines . plane to Pyongyang Friday were given special letters or appreciation for their "coolness and composure" during the 112 hours 0 r history's longest hijack. No one knew what the North Koreans planned to do with the nine radical etudenl! who commandeered the Boeing 727 jet 1¥t Tuesday and ordered lt to Nbrth Korea, where they said they planned to set up a ctnter ror world revolution. The transportation ministry official, Shinjlro Yamamura, offered himself as a hostage after • days of negotiations between cfficials and the hi- jackers while the plane was grounded at Seoul, S o u t h Korea, where it had been flown in an atieIJ'!plecl ruse that Called. •. The ultra-leftist student hi- jackers, anned with guns, samurai swords a n d ex- plosives, finally agreed Friday to permit Yamamura to replace 99 passengers and four stewardesses. The North Koreans . I et Yamamura and the crew rttum with the plane Sunday, but denounced the hijackers' aim of setting up a rtvolu- tlonary base. A broadcast call- ed reports of the students' plan "fantastic rumors" in- tended to justify "the hostile aggressive scheme o( the Japanese militarist c Ii q u e against our country ." Yamamura said Sunday the radicals "were subdued when the plane landed. I was surprised by their reaction." Party Chips 'S piked;' 27 Go on Trip LOS ANGELES !AP \ -A hallucinogenic drug -believ· ed to be LSD or something slmllar -that was secretly sprinkled on potato and com chips at a weekend party sent 27 guests to the hospital. Deputy sheriffs went to a plush apartment c o m p I e x overlooking the city 's Marina de! Rey after receiving reports that some of 200 persons at a going.away party for a tenant were violently ill. "Some or the people were acting as though they were drugged or intoxicated," said Sheriff's Dtputy James Lyle. "Some of them were staring, some were unusually happy, ${1ffle wert sick. "Some w e r e screaming, some said the waUs were mov· lnj:, others were staring into space. One man Cried that his hands were getting blager." The lll persons, IS women and 12 men, were Laken to a hcspllll in ambulances and depuUes' can:. "One cne. rlde." said Lyle, "l was driving aboUt 25 miles an hour and the man started screaming 'Slow down, slow down' and tried to arab the steering wheel. You could tell he bad never txptrlenced 1 trip be.fore. He wu about 40, a normal·looking ' 1 tr a i I h t ' businessman." At the hospital, 10 peraons received first aid, 18 werl' Id· milted and later re.lea.std and one man, who had been In a coma brlcOy, remained h01p\taJlied J n 1atlsfacto1"7 condJUon ioday. The e xam not only detennine1 if the spa~en are healthy, but also provide• heart rate. respiration Md other baseline data for com~ parison during and after the !fl.day flight. Later in the day, the astronauts planned s e v e r a I hours in a command ship simulator, practicing launch , procedures and possible abort maneuven Jn case of rocket trouble. Launch Dirtctor W a.J t e r J(apryan had ordertd the long countdown to b e g J n on schedule at 10 p.m. Sunday while experts wresUed with the pressure problem. But he delayed installations of heavy ordnance on the rocket and spaceships until the trouble cleared. Thia W-Ork be:gan today, whlch resulted In ?ome por- tions or the countdown being seven hours behiod schedule. The launch team said it would have no trouble making up this time. Lovell and Haise are to al.- tempt a risky landing in the moon 's Fra Mauro highland s, where they hope to find an- cient rocks dating back to the creation cf the moon. They also plan to deploy a nuclea r- powered science station and dig uo soU from 10 feet beneath the surfaCi!. Controller Sick Calls Dropping By Ule A11oclated Pre11 Generally favorable weather actoss the nation eased the movement of end-of-vacation air traffic Sunday despite the continuing sick call work stop. page by some air traffic con- trollers. The Federal Aviatl ~n Administration said 82 percent of the oontrollers were back on the job nationwide in the 13th day of the job action by the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization - PATCO. Airlines remained on the curtailed schedules ordered by the FAA durlng the walkout. Passenger traffic was reported very heavy with many student! returning to college after Easter vacaUon. Controllers were reported returning to work In Detroil. Milwaukee, Los Angeles and Cleveland where a federal judge threatened to fine those who did not go back. But there was a hitch even there. An FAA spokesman said 21 of the 39 controllers scheduled to start work at midnight reported but add ed, "They don't seem to be coming back to do any work. They 'rt just fulfilling the letter of the law." strucUon site today, aettlng a building. Shortly alter the rtotlng buUfjing on fire, overturning 1.--.1 f all cars and flghUna with riot Police said several peraons erupted, police CIWIN of a "'Cl had been injured, including a roada ln the area and put w t Police. newsman, and the laborers <:alls for http to neighborblg The city police and· Wrllf'1 had overturned several can police departmmts and lhe department sent all t h e t r l'nd set flre to pieces of heavy Florida Highwa,y Patrol. available men, pita the.it riot construction equipment. "It's really bad out there aquads, to lhe construction The exact cause of the labor now,'' a city police desk site cf a new auto dealership rk>t was not immediately sergeant Hid. ''Wt'te trying and began unleashing tear gas known, ~ut police sald there to contaip them from tearing on the mob. had been picketing at lhe down tht bWldinc and settln& Police saki the construction. building site the past week. equipment on fire ." workers grabbed up huge1---.:_---'-------'-'---------- posts and used them like bat- Soviets Up Missile Tests WRITERS- N. Y. Book PubU.lter Comln1 FORMIR PRESIDENT PLAYS WITH GRANDDAUGHTER LUCINDA LBJ Vlstt1 the Robbs During Busy Weekend Jn W111hjngton W ASH!NGTON ( A P ) - Admlnlst.ration officlall say the Soviet Union has stepped up its missile testing con- siderably since the fir.st U.S.· Russian strategic arms llmlta· lion talks last fall. To Thio Area To /n(e1't1ieul Au&hora An e:secutin: of a well-known New York publl.J.er will IOOll be in thit area lo inte:rriew writen. Hia purpoee is lo unccm:r manuteripta W1>l'thy of. publication. Fiction. aoa.{ietion. poelry, juvenilet, collectuw of ahort 1toriee or article&. nligiouA, apecialized ud even co.nlm'e:nial INbjecu will he considered. Attends Services LBJ Greeted at White House The Soviets have increased their testing of b o t h in· tercontlnental b a I l l 1 t j c If you have a manullttipt ft&dT Coe almolt rudy) for pub- licatioo., ind would like lo d11CU&1 it with thil aecut.i~ please telephone lhe number be.low betwru 8:00 un. and 10:00 p.rn., and le1.ve J OW' name and acldn.. YOll will .. 0011i.c1ed later. missiles -lCBMS -and an- • WASHINGTON CAP)-"\Ve each wore an ootfit with a Eisenhower, attended the tibalUstic missiles -ABMs.-Telephone: 673-1166 have been thinking or you ln skirt at eiactly the same worship services. So did Lyn· ak>ng with continuing to If '" ,,.,..., 'Wl"fte h et. UltMel Df,..,.r, these serY!ces. \Ve want you to length, just below the knee . da Robb, the daughter of the deploy their large SS9 and Dept. CA·17, P.O. lu 211t, •.r.o .. Nft YMll , N.Y. 1fff1 -~T~he~~P~re~s~ld~e~nt~·s~d~a:u~gh~l~er~.__:J~o~h~"'°~"'~·~•n~d~h~e~r~h~u~s~ba~"=d~,_JS~S~ll:J)roc~ke~ts~a~l~an~im~p~r~e~ss:iv:•:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ know we are very hapy you Julie, and her husband , David Marine Maj. Charles Robb. rate, the U.S. officials said. have returned in good health. Youhavebeeninourthoughur.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...,~~~~., and prayers." , ~ With these words President "W C Nixon welcomed former Presi-COMMUNITY EVENTS CAUFORNIA dent Lyndon B. Johnson back NQWI FEDIRAL to the White House for Sunday Con9ratulation1 to Barbara Bur· PHOTOGRAPHY • -~!!!-worship services. 1be former President, look-gess 11nd the Forensic team from EXHIBIT 4 WA VS TO ing fit with a ruddy color, Or•nge Coaat College. I'\ I stood with Nixon after the "Photo9r1phy 70", • P••k EARN HIGHER service to receive the 300 ••• good luck in the N•tional 1t Or1n91 Co11t, i1 th1 ts fl nd Lad b. d II forenalc tournament to be held Jn p1111nt1tio n of c111to1n bl1ck gues . ea y ~ sm · "' whito, ., woll., "'"· INTE. REST .AT ed, chatted, and appeared to Ann Arbor, Mich., M11y 4 · thru prinh by ll111dy ll1r.d1 U. I'\ I be thoroughly enjoy l n g M1iy 9. M1rli: Cr1wford, i nd Rob1rl themselves Frink: fr11l1nc1 pho to9r1ph· CALIFORNIA Johnson .attended the wed· 1t1 workln9 In th1 0r•"9' Countv •r••· ding of columnist William S. USID IOOK SALE fEDERALI White's daughter Saturday lat., Apr. 11, 1f70, Calif. Federal Th1ir work incl11d1• 1111nv • and had dinner that night at lltlg., 2700 Harbor Blwd. Spontored 11nu•11•I t1'h"iq11•• not , ... the borne of his former White by Friend• flf the Library, L&Ky Pink-hibit1d, in th;, ••••· b1fo•• 111, coordinator. House assistant, Jack Valenti . "Ph1to911phy 70" • Johnson was scheduled to return to the White House this morning for breakfast with Nixon and an informal talk about naUonel affairs. In the service itself, Jotm Cardinal Krol, archbishop of Philadelphla, ·altacked crime and communism. "As we seek more and more to cure the ills or society with rrierely material remedies," Krol sald, "we run the danger of adopting, certainly not by design but by default, the false principles of the totalitarian societies whose actions we abhor ... government cannot exist without God • . . and absolute power will result in absolute corruption." Cardinal Krol said that, despite some heroic effort..s and notable progress, the na· tion is losing ground in some domestic areas. He mentioned specifically a dramatic In· crl'ase in violence and violent crime and said there are no in- stant cures, and il is in vain to look for s miracle solutlon. Mrs. Nixon and Mrs. Johnson 5 2 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual • rate · 90 Day Certificate Accounts• 5.39% Annual Ylold 1f all savings and Interest remain a year. No minimum deposit. Dally compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 6 ·3· guaranletd 0 annual rate 2tD10 Year Certificate Accounts• 9.18% Annuol Yield If all savings and Interest ramaln a year. $51000 minimum deposlL Dall y compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 5 75 3 guaranteed 0 annual • rote 1to10 Year Certificate Accounts• 5.82% Annual Ylold ff all savings and Interest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposlL 7. 5 3 guoronlffd 0 1nnu1l • rota 1 Year Certificate Accounts• (AdJuatabfo rel11 for ahortor tormo) 7.79% Annual Ylold If all savings ind.Interest remain a year. $100,000 mlnim'um deposit. Dally compounding. Earn from date of deposit. I 5% P111book AccounL Current Annual Rate. No minimum deposit. Dally compounding. Interest day·ln lo day-out. •w1tttdrawal1 be fort maturity 1>9nnlttld but subject to f(lmt 101& cf lnt1re1t. Cal!f.9.!~!!!~.'1~"4..~!!!!.hl§.@!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL -- Bomb Di1aster COSTA MESA OFFICE: Capt. N. D. Hayward or Sall Laite County sherllf's dep artmenl holds 90 m.m. tank round round live and later deactivated at scene of explosion wblch killed !ive children al home ill Crescent, Utah. The children died Saturday when a 105 m .n1 . mortar shell they were striking with a crowbar exploded in e field. Police saJd lhey were "blown to bits." '- 2700 Harbor Blvd. n941r Adams • 546·2300 CLIFFORO M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER ~vtnltnt Offices throuohout Los An;tfts. Or•ngt and Ventura Counllt• Acto1111i. art h11vf9d llP tiJ ll0,000 11nct.r prcrwl•I-ol' 1114 ,.._ .. liMnoa a L0111 ll'lliltanee ~•tlon, • ,.l'flltl'ltr'lt •ttMT er "9 LlrlllM llalll 0....,..11. " l I ' t 8 DAILY PILOT! EDITORIAL PAGE ~ More Harm ·Than . Good . "" It's almost like a dog chasing !ta own tail. And it's also like the lament of the gambler: "J can't win to~ Iosir\g." • I New reports fast week on the fight against smog prompt these observations. It seems that nitrous oxides Jn small quantities are lnstrumenta1 in prod'pcing smog, througti a photochem- ical re8ction with sunlight. But in higher concentration, they reduce smbg. • So ¥-'hat's Jo the works On that score? New devices intended (o t~uce smog f rnducUon in all 1971 auto- mobiles will etlt the amoun of o.zides of nitrogen spew· ed into the air over the Los Angeles basin, in<luding-- Orange Count~. Ironically enough, this could well mean more smog, not less. la fact, the threat is more than a lhrea·t. Auto- motiv~ ex~i:ts l1atly say it will occur. The California Health Department, cautiously ac- knowledglng the peril last ·wetik, said, "Most of the ex· perimental fY'dJngs indicate with effective hydrocarbon control, moderate reductions of oxides of nitrogen may not further reduce smog effects. ,. "In fact, some of the laboratory data indicate that moderate reduction of OJ1ides ot nitrogen emissions may negate some of ·the benefits gained from hydrocarbon control.'' Less cautious, a top scientist at General Motors said, "Oxides of nitrogen at very low concentrations are encouragers of the reaction that produces smog: at very high concenti'ations they are inhibitors of that reaction." ' It's the unburned hydrocarbons -the smelly fumes from gasoline -that are the chief villains the automobile·ind6stry rej>orts. ' All of which would J ead a non-automotive industry • onlooker lo the re/oinder that the chief vlllaln ,!sn't gaaollne -it's the nternal combu.Uon eng!Do. • The anti-cigarette slogan, "lt'a 1 matter of life or breath;' applies with equal force lo the dr!vt lo.P,nd a way out of the smog dilemma. " .. . Southern California, and especially the Loa Angelea basin, leads . tbe nation in smog problem• becauae U.. more than any otber area , was built on automollve. transportation. Perll1p1 the leadership and lililq!nallon needed to edd smog as a problem will finally aurfliCe la" . this area. " · • ·I In the mean:time, it's apparent lhlt" ~"II'', proaches as the anti·amog devices planned for 1'71 cir models will solve nothing. • · ' , t A Chance to Protest Parent& di1turbed over the inferior quality ol. cliil- dren's TV progra.plt have a cl)ance to voice their p~ tests 'where it will count, with the Federal Communica- tions Commission -if they act before April 15. .. Under pressure from ~clion for Children's Tele..· VISJOn (ACT), the FCC nublished a public notice spec;.. fying guidelines for children's television. The com.mis· sion is waiting until April 15 to hear from the ,public and the broadcasters to see U it shouJd move further in this area. ACT has won the support of outstanding TV per· formers as well as many psychiatrists, n1,1rsery scbopl educators, elementary school teachers, librarians, pediatricians, lawyers, professors and writers. Those. who want to strike a blow for better quality should write to the Federal Communications Cammi!:· sion, Washington, D.C. I ' 5;,.o-..-'!!:" • • . . ~· :· r.-.-...~.·.~ ~f'Ti¥1 UN Vl!fNAMIUrlll twl6 WAR, WllY //'JT J.NJT1l£ .J)J[I C.AM80DIZE IT?' Nuon Puts General Interest First Rudeness Now Inexorable Law Defies Special Interests WASHINGTON -President Nixon has receaUy taken a number of critical ac· tions ordinarily deemed to be unpopular or impolitic. Perhaps it would be more precise to say that these actions would have been so regarded in a DemocraUc adml.rUstralion and are now, in fact, the subject of criticism from con· ventlonaUy liberal sources. Nixon's actions range from the use of troops to take over the duties of civilian worker.! on strike to the definition of a new racial policy b8.!Jed on the freedom, and ability, to choose assocla· tions. The President has also denied or held in abeyance the plea ol a large part of the American Jewish communHy for jet planes for Israel. He hall also asked the death penalty in politically· motivated bombings causing fatalities. It would have been very hard to con- trive in advance a series of actions over 15uch a short period of time which would have the combined effect of going against the traditionally professed in· terests of Negroes, Jews, organized labor and organized liberals as these interests have been generally understood tn recent years. NOW, IT MAY EVEN be necell!l8.ry for the President to take sWI other actions, such 11 a hold back on planned withdrawals from Vietnam, which would move into still another magnitude of political diuenL Judged by the poliUcal measures of only a fe1' years ago, President Nixon could be .-ldered to be busily dlgglng hiJ own grave. It has been a very Jong time tiince any President has dared to frustrate the desirea of 1ucb powerful prtlltll'e groupe: Individually but Presi· dent Nixon doe.! not quail before taking them all on collectJvely. Taken separately each action was something less than a sweeping rejection of minority positions, and perhaps this is his salvation. U&ing troops in the postal strike to replace; federal workers forbidden by law to strike is aomething qujte dil/erent than Ulllng troop& generally u strike breaker&. ,DENYING Pt.M{Ell for Israel now, bilt not necessarily forever, could be based on rational asse11sment of the comparative military strength of Israel and the Arab countries w:itbout com· promising a commitment to the main- tenance of Iarael u an independent State. I The l,111»-word stalement defining Nix· on'a racial policy afllrmed desegregation of the public achooll!I backed by new funds ori a large scale to aid ln the desegregation or schools and itnprove the quality of education ln schools which remained ,blaclt becauae of famlly livln& pattmu. Congress can reject !he death penalty for b(Hnbers without much weakening the propc>sltion that the federal govern- ment should logically be given jurisdic- tion oyer acts of violence inlended to dlsrupt the existing 110litical and llOC!al order ol the whole naUon. In each case,, therefore , the voice of reason must temper Ute judgment of those who think their vital interut.s have been hurt or their priodples have been Ignored. Those who do not feel pressure group Commitments -and they an surely the largest of all minorities, U not a majority -need not feel, either, that minority opinion Ls being unwisely suppressed. IN EA.CH CA.SE, however, there is a margin of violent vocal dissent and in some cases the dissent goes beyond the vocal stage, so Jt cannot be prudenlly aaid that Nhon has yet poliUc1Uy auc· ~ed in bis effort to place tbe general tnterest ahead of the 1pecial interest. Future elections will be the meuure of this. Criticism or a Pres.klent mounts as time goes on because of his 1ctl and they begin to have after awh11e a cumulative weight whlch creates an often discernible political atmosphere.. Thla a~ mosphere can often be judged as favorable or unfavorable, and in the present stage perhaps the phrase "coo- dlUonally favorable." is close to the mark so far u Nixon la concerned. Nixon b in the happy poliUcal portllon, from hi• point of view, of not· havtnc received much support in the groups whose toes be Ls stepplne on, but th.ls in it.9elf Is not an adequate jualiflcaUon for denying aggrieved. at concerned groups. That kind of narrow and defiant attitude is perhaps not wholly mlsslng from his administration on the pa.rt ol. less sophjstlcated and ine.zperienced peo- ple, but the Preskient 11 far too long· sighted for that brand of politics. A Day Without Complaint What thls country. needs, along with a good {j\•e-cent dime, Is a moratorium on complaining. It might last only for a day but it would be a blessing. Imagine one whole day throughout the nation when nobody would blame his woes on somebody else. The din ol protest has now reached such a pitch that it is a kind of pollution In ltseli. And with so many groups cot& plalnlni about so much, it is becoming difficult to sort out lhe reasonable com· plaintti from the other kind. What could "'e do with a day com- pletely free of complaining' There are a - number of things. BLACK LEADERS, for instance. could remind their followers that racial. cultural antagonisms are among the toughest human problems to solve, but thal the progreS!I made in recent yelV'I is substantial. Not enough, but measurable and encouraging. R!belllous studenb might re-read their ----Monday, April 6, 1970 Tht 1d1toria! pcl'ge of th1 Daflt1 Pilot attkt to inform and 1tfm- tdau f'eodfrt b11 prtstntlng th tt ne.oipaper'• OJ)lnions e11d com· mentarw °" toptc.t ol ·'"Urc1t and lignifioaJ\~t. bw prOtJfdfng a ftn"Vm f<>r th4 tzprt1rion of mir 1'tatkr1• oplnl0nt. 'and "" pr'"1lting Uu divtr1t view- ,,...,. o/ fll/.,,.•d ®""""' oad .,,.,.._. Oft topjCI o/ t/11 NJ. .-i H, Weed, PUbUlber ~ l f i.· , Guest , Editorial • • !i.cin .. ...,,.i....,..,....:~.•-"""" college catalogs. Those catalogs, which they supposedly looked over before ap- -plying to lhe schools of their choice, con· taln the rules by which the imtitutlons are administered. The students might ask themselves why they chose the schools they did if they disapprove of their regulatlons and CUlltoms. And tr they h•· tended to be rebell!I from the oul!et, perhaps they .!hould meditate upon their own personalities, backgrounds, and motives. THE ANTIWAR peopl e who show bow gincere they are by 'WreCking draft of. flees and burning bulkilngs might spend the day con1iderin1 U>elr s t r 1 ft g e predisposition to violence. Isn't thert SC1me danger that destructi ve protesters will be fallen upon by other citizens with other views? And when civil order ill Cone· what will have been ac· complished? There may be a kind of noblllly in a bloody head, but there b 1 far greater nobility In arguing for change with a persuasive tongue iMtead Of with · a howling mob. Behind these thoughts is the: recognition that American ~lety has· serious pro- blems and that all men don't agree on how or even when they ahould be solved. But our poUUcal syru:m wu designed e1- actly lo accommodate diverse oplnJons. Because of this there ls am.all 1'etd to be too p111ient with thote or our countrymen who are so Impatient to havfl their own way that they choose to ICt'eam and destroy. IN MIERICA TODAY we protest too much. We havr among us a record number of crybablu. The din· of com- plaining may even be affecting the sta- bility of society, and when society is rocked out of joint, the first tasuallies are the protections afforded complainers. A one-day moratorium on complaining, aside from giving editorial writers 1 day off, would allow w all to get our bear· ings. And we might find that while we have a long way to go, our position is far better than the distractions of the com- plainers have permitted us to nalize. WE VALUE POU.YANNAS as llUle as we value violence, and we will blacken the eye of the man who disputes it. Of course dilsent Is part of our heritage, and ao Is dissent from dlsaent. But ll would be a kindness to our C<Kmtry if all kinds of dl58enter1 would rest their tonsils and unclench their fists, U only for a short Ume. The complainers might be surprised. They might find that their return to civility will win them allies who ap- preciate thelr ideaa but can't it.and the1r not ... After all, .,..hen one is subjected lo a cat's concert, one doesJl't throw a• fl.!h. One throws a shoe. WollSlrttlJoanaJ Dear ·Gloomy Gus: lsn' It approprlole that the Cen- sus BW'eau dirteted their form.! be moiled on April Fool 's D>JI. -B. W. J. ,,. .. ,.. ..... ~ ............. •Jtwt. .... -tM•rlly """ ff "" _...,, ,..., ft"' ,.. ,.. ........... , 9". 0.Hf ,..._ lnternation·al Problem Of Bureaucracy LONDON -After seve~ weeks in America, the•firSt reaction lo hearing "I beg your perdon" uttered .at London'.! Heathrow AirpOrt ts one of ·cultural shock. E<hoes al the ~ uominallon by U.S. customs olllclals, the gr u f I morUylblblc exclamitlona of New York cab dri'!ers, the open hostility of airport porten -·all tbe>e and many more lliU rini in ooe'1 ors. Philip G. Zlmbardo, 1 Stanford Uhlvorllty Pl)'Cholollsl, cloims thal the bad behaM stems from what he calla "deindlvld~.'' An I.B.M. nwnber dOea not ha~ to' be polite: "U no one knows wbo I am, what difference does it malce what I.do!" Is the Josic ZimbuOO claims ii now ptevalenl Such a feeling of anonymity has not yet breil' op.en hostlllly. In England. When a pedutrian usea a crouwalk in. 'London, an·tratflc s,tops -even though there are no lights. Jn Wublngton, O.C., one can tie ~ down -croaln( wilh lh< green. Situated somewhere between Parll:lnton's Law and the Peter Principle, there has lQ be a maxim about "e1· penditures rising to the level of ap- propriaUons." Bureaus and branches and departments have a buUt·in need lo spend more money (and, if possible, hire more people) every year. This is not a political, partisan matter: it is an organic appetite of all organlzaUons, both in and out of government. Last year the General Accounting Of. fice in Washington charged the Pentagon with "1Yaste and ·mismanagement" of a ma.jot weapons procurement program - in spending or committing over a billion dollars on the "Sheridan w e a po n s system," when oo acceptable ammunition was aVallable to use with il IN A HALF-HEARTED reply, the Anny admitted the factual correctness of the GAO charge, but rebutted that it rushed the Sheridan system into pro. duction because of fear.! that "the enemy" might have tanks that would outclasa e:ic.isting U.S. weapons. Ob'Yloosly, what happened was that the Anny wu granted the funds and felt it bad to spend them. even on a dubious enterprise. Anything is better than returning money that has been ap- ~1i.d . nus IS BY NO means peculiar to military organizations. Every govem-- meot behaves in euctly'lhe same way. U the funds appropriated are not used tn one year, then how can the agency ask for more money the next ? And it most ask for more money the next -it is an inexorab le law of bureaucracy. All approprlaUons go up, never down. Each agency has a vorack>us appetite lo develop and e:icpand for Its own sake, and for the sake of its administrator, whose power and iniportance are judged on the basis of the number of em ployes he has working under him, and the funds he can comm and annually. IT IS A GAME played without rela· tjonship to the general welfare, or even to the needs of the particular agency. Groups wil.hJn private enterprise engage in the same strategy, only there it must be done more tactfully, for funds are more carefully scrutinized. But· every branch manager and department chief is seeking to augment his authority over money, men and material. We are confronted here with an Inborn psychological drive that accompanies power and posillon. No one will admit that he has been given more money than he needs or knows what to do with, and every administrator will find a way to spend it -if only so that he can "prove" ·he will need more in the following year. Ll1TLE PEELING Rems to exist for one'• fellow man: 1 youlh hit.ch-hiking along an Anierican rold is viewed as a hir>Pr or 1 bum, the black man ,ap. proachtna on a' dark street is thotJaht of as a potenU.al_usallant, the w~ at the hamburpJ\. stand is regarded as a food«rving mechanism. A'nd u,ere ap- pean to be a ge:neral re.fusal to help others who may; be In trouble. 'A Beggar iii Jerusalem' At the 33rd Street Post Office In New York (the only offia! open on Sun(lays In ~tanhaUan) the postal clerk refU!ed to change a $10 bill. "If everybody tried to change their money here on Sunday,.,. be growled, "how far do yoo think I'd get!" In Looi.ville, Ky., I hotel ttfDled to honor a reaervatlon btc1use a vlsitor had arrived 45 ·minutes late. After a strong protest, the receplionllt "'IS penuaded tllat to get rid of.him he bad better find a room in a nearby hotel. There wu no at· tempt at an apology. The. pOrw who c.,... ried his luggage back to the front door received 1 SO-tent Up (no thanka)·a'.nd the taxi driver who look him aJ'OUSMI the block wu Upped 40 cenls (qaln no thanb.) What th.II visitor would call palltenesa, one waiter at Chicago'• O'Hare Alrport would obviously regard u lef'Vlllty. When it wu pointed out that the steak ordered medium ratt was overdone. lbe unez. pected reply WM : "If you don't like the food here, why don't you ao back where you came from.?" ADMl'JTEDL, Y"' RUDENESS h I I Elie Wiesel speaks of the "sorrowful exaltation" that· prevailed in ,Israel following the Six·Day War. No fiags, no parade.! or frivolous activity, the novelist retailed during a visit here 18.!Jt week. JsraeMs·mourned their own dead, and the dead on the other side. Walking ln old Jerusalem· onty hours after the firing ctued. Wiesel aaw a con· voy of jeeps pull up at the Walling Wall. A group of officers: lined up facing il At a command from General Moshe Dayan the officers briskly saluted the Wall, then disbanded. That was the end of the war. WIF.SEL'S NEW novel, "A. Btggar In Jerusalem," set against that Sil·Day War, begins at the Jerusalem Wall . Through naahbacb to tbe Nazi era and through many interwoven tales of the put, It 1eeb to show how the Jewish spirit WIS formed. Wiesel, born in Transylvania 41 years ago, 1 teen.age survivor of Auschwitz and Buchenwald, writes in French but Is a naturalized American cltlien. He w nt to Israel in 1967 u a "witnes&" Uke the beggar of his novel, he must eonstantly justily his survival, and U llrael Wl'S 10 be eradicated in that war he felt he must wttnea the eitermJnaUon. become an iatemaUonal problem. In world capitals ouch u Tokyo, people oc- fually tackle one anolher for a aubway stat. In Paris it seems that 10me tu1 drivers woukl rather collide than sJve any one ebe the right of w17. Bad man. llZ WTl'N&WED the "holocaust," 11 ner1 hav. be<lom< the rule rather than ht mm to the Nul period. He deSO"lbed the ucepllon. thal In his """"! "Nigh!," which he finds R11deneil in Mdtcow is auppoeed to be Jt read mostly by you111 people bert and "nekultuml" (or uncultured). And It ii abroad. They dilcover In him, he feels, regor.ted o! the belch! of bid miiillih to· What could u>t happdfed to them. AU, enter a restaurant wltbout checktnc J'O'lf • tn one ,,.y or another, evo!ved Crom the overco1l But to knock ,._ -_ ho]oclllll He Is prMleged to be 1 wlo while moldns 10IW woy lhroagh !he ra,W ..,., thb smalt intenat. dark.eyed, 11· at an lce-bockey match Is considered fair most mystical writ.tr admitted: to be play. Aa elsewhere, people In Jar1e ab1e to say "l wa.s thtrr. t saw It." groups behave with appalling rec:kle.sa-Wl!sel brings lo hill novel! a blend of ness. the old Hassidlc Jewl3h spirit ia which he Until 1 new form ol lnttr-rtla1lonahlp wu formed 11 a child 1JYI the. exittenl'il develoP1 In wbkh evrry humnn b Vien·· philosophy hfl later found In Camus. He ed aa btlng worttw of rrspect and eon-seeks to ghare his hope (rorged, Jn the slderallon. the bull market in boorish Camus sensti, in 1 world without much behavtor wW rtmaln at a peak. hope}, to somehow pm on not only the 1 ' . Thll Bookman -. Jewish e1perience but the total human experience as he has witnessed ll. HE FEELS CLOSE to Camus, and to Malraux , who concerned themselves with the condition of man, and to Francois Mauriac, the French·Cathollc writer who opened li teralure to him and befriended him in the bewildering post--Oolocaust years in France. How does he see hiii own work:? He at. tempts, he said, to tell stories to the child he has been, and in a rare moment to allow that child to tell the stories to him. AND HIS LATESJ' book , "Between Tu·o Suns," will appear in France in April and in this country later in the year. the 25th annivf:rsa ry of the liberation or the con· centration camps. It is "a kind of in· vcntory or what happened to our world during those years'' by a writer who ha.t been called "the new Wandering Jew." The witness. WIWam Hoa:u B11 Geol'!Je --~ Dear Georgt : If rallw~s are truly lnter-ested In Increasing their passenger service poptilarlty why don't they put airline stewardessts on tr11int'! -'IDEA MAN Dear Idea t.1an : 'J'hit's the silllest lhlng Lever heard of. You show me a railroad with an airline atewardess showing passcngm how to Inflate a Mae Wellt lire jacket and l'll show yoo a railroad out of il' tree. (Why let minor worrlrs lrou~ you when by wrlUng to George you can learn of 8 vtritable lrcn7.y ol major troubles?) In ask iast an wn. can ela- l to icy. age 1ust are ·ery f is over ~rn 1ies mil han and • to ve" r. ' < ,, • 1 nan I lo •Ith co is who d<d 1ual at- hild I to om. l'wo and lSlh :on· in· )rid has w.'' ' l I I I I -· Ap.U 6, 1970 DAILY ,ILOT - CHECKING Quentin Gives Dope :koli.· •UP• " • SAN QUENTIN "(.IP) - Behhld the thlcll, yttlow wall.! of Sin Quentln , Prtlon 10me of th& natioa11•to~uihe1t crtmlooLi .atle1Jd lo I matter many ~ In their youth acboal . ":' ' Then It's Normal -Tbelr C6mpuJ·behind.~aJ~. admin1'tered 1ly the Marin County School Dlal(ld and of. flclally called B a y v i e w 1Schoola, offers 61 courses, in- atroctloo and proctlc:e In F trades, plua cowsea through cori'tlpondence achoall. I I By L. M. BOYD ~idte Cleaver, ,lt\e~ ''MEN WITB WBlSU!l\S militant Black PantHerletder, spend too mucll Ume tblnklni. ls • srlduate, havlng'mned 1bout women," ao said Peter elementary and hlgh liebool the Grtal of R u 11 I a , dlplomaa. "It changed him from an illiterate rapist lO en : in· ternatlonaut known a u t h o r and spokesman for his cause," said as90Ciale warden James W. Park. HWe don't care who a man ls or what he is, as long as he is interested in educn· ti-0n," commented 'Keith W. Hayball, superintendent of the prison 's educaUonal system. "When a man decides to 1do apmeUtlng f.bout his ·Ille, we. don't give a damn about his backgrouq:I." Education is considered the chief maj-0r rehabilitative tool at San Quentin, where about 35 to 40 percent of Inmates are imprisoned again within two ye:;irs after their release. Some 3,500· convicts cur· rently occupy "Big Q," in- cluding 10 on Death. Row awaiting pardon, commutation Or death, and a~few others serving life ter s without chance of parole. Prison officials note that most or th e inmates, perhaps 98 perceqt, sooner or later will find lhcmselvei; free. "The possibility of getting ou t is the greatest motivation for learning," said James B. Orrell, an ordained minister who quit lhe pulpit to teach at San Quentin. 4'0ne man came to me and asked me to teach hJm to read and ..rite 10 he could prtpare a legal writ B!klng the court to overturn hJJ con· vlctlon.'' Orrell Is In charge of tutor- ing the 12 percent or inmates wbo cilJ)not read or write, and some who are unable to add two numbers. The day school and night school have 59 Instructors each, the da.y staff Including 18 vocational teachers and %2 gracfuate students from the University of California School of Criminology. . "The prison school ls BC· credited and is as good as any high school in the coun· try," said 1he school pri. .... :pa1, Daryl A. Hopld:is, who for 22 )'eara was 111 adminl!trator In Marin County schools. The school's administrators admi t that SOtlJ men who attend fight gr~~ odds, and ~llfetimeof de tru ctlve tiabi!, to succ d In their studl s. otbera don't ca.re, galn nothing, and consider chu1 s "easy time.'' Edward J . Louder, 25, a convicted car thief from San Bernardino, was, he conceded, mean and illiterate when, as an incorrigible, he was locked up at Q more than four years ago. He attended Bayview. In Wee ye~s. working up trom llteraey classts, he completed elanenJary and high adlools, and a correspondence course Jn insurance investigating. In the process lhe Negro wrot~ a book, ''Bla c k lncarceratJon", and a play, "Psychede!Jc Trip In Reality.'" He was released six monlhf ago and plans a new Ille. Louder credits San Quentin with saving hls Ille. "The way J was going l'd be on Death Row right now if I hadn't been li>eked up," he said. He added th.It the tuition for Q's school -five years of his life -wu high. But worth it. LOVE AND;WAR -That pet name most commonly us- ed by gentlemen to Uletr ladyfriends ls "Honey." Next, in no special order, come "Darling," "Sweetheart'• and "Baby," But have you ever wondtred why these en- dearments are so Popular? Suj)pose u•s obvious, what? Without Juch nomenclature, an honest.•man, ~hen intense In the clutch, ts apt to forget himself and address the object of his affection by the name of her predecessor when this occurs. It is much like missing a one-foot putt on the 17th hole. Remorse sets in. Self· doubts ensue. What arises then is the dismal compulsion to skip the eighteenth and go directly to the nineteent h, there to chatter w i t h o u t significance, to dream of pure victork!s to forget the witless moment. A doub le, please. Therefore, he put a stu.ble•---------~-------------------------------------------------- OPEN QIJESTION -Which was the better automobile - the Deusenberg or \he Bugat· ti ? More People Go Abroad WASHINGTON (AP ) Americans are traveling abroad at a far greater rate this year than In 1969. the State Department reports. Jn March alone there was a SO percent increase in passport applications over the same month a year ago, the department reported. March 1970 applications tot a I e d 255,704. Travel applications for the month jwnped 107 percent in Philadelphia, 91 percent in Chicago, 84 percent in San Francisco, 73 percent Jn New "" York and 62 percent in Boston. Passport office personnel said they could not explain the upsurge. in travel ap- plications this year. tax on whiskers. Do you set what it turned out to be? A tax on men for think1na; M O D Strous •••• surprbed lo learn the pro football team owners do not get rich lJ that business, as a rule. Clint · Murchison. Jr., owner of the Dallas Cowboy11, aaya. "Y9U can make more money in- ves~ to government bonds." CUSTOMER SERVICE - Q. "Can a dog be identified by is paw print?" A. Certainly can. Just like a fingerprint •.. Q. "Ask your language man where the name Honolulu came from?" A. He says It's from a Hawaiian word mean- ing calm ... Q. "How Ione does an eclipse of the IWl last?" A. At the most, seven and a half minutes. THE SENSES -Excuse the · disturbing thought, bul il by choice you had to give up either your eyesight or your hearing, which would it be? The grea t Helen Keller. who gave up both, said she would prefer to hear rather than see, -if such were possible. I don't Mow why. IF YOU DIAL '4Jt.U·N·A·W· A· Y" on the phone in the Los Angeles area, you'll get a private detective w h o specializes in finding errant teenagers .. .ti Cole Porblr'1 '·Begin the Beguine" Isn't the longest song on the books, what is? Eh. you say you're not familiar with it·? Son, it'• past your bedtime. RAPID REPLY -Yes, Mrs. C .. most of the dentists in Finland are women. So are most of the butchers there, m!ghl add. Your qwcmons and ~ mtnts are wtlco?Md aftd wilt be ustd in CHECKING UP wherevn poirib~. Ad· dress letttri to L. M. BOl/d, P.O. Bo:r 1875, NtWpOTt Beach, Calif., 92660, Instant glamour ••• have a complete 'Indian Summer' frosting ~t this special price! 14.88 Helene Curtis "Springtime" Wave $10 We 1peciali11 in the core of fashion wigs USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARD- NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY PULLlllfON Or1~111r C.rilfl' 111'1 llOOI'. IFl-dd "l'#f'O•l •• ,.CM "•-"\olll ltMllWI w.._,......,tt .. 61 pon! w.·,. Hght In there tfltln9 yeu the~"'°"" """h.Mlle ye11 wont of tfie IOWflt pottlble ,n. TOWEL SALE! SAVE 20% ON EVERY 2~·25 TOWEL IN STOCK! Prices effective thru Wednesday .. BATH TOWEL ••••• REG. 2.25 NOW •••••• 1.78 foe• Towel, reg. 1.25, NOW 91c Wa•h Cloth, reg. 6.5c, NOW 52c 'TERRI.SUEDE' SOLID COLORS. Sheared col• '?n t•rry with velvety texture. Olive, gold, pink, tiluo. 'RHAPSODY' SHEARED WOVEN JACQUARD, Revenible 'Mediterranean' type design ln dro· matic color comblnatloris. Cotton ten:y. 'SUNFLOWER' SHEARID PRINT. Chttry Kreen print on sheared cqtton teny. SunbeaMt blue, pink. STOCK UP ON TOWELS NOW AND SAVE ... CHAIOlm AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE • I I --~ Coacliella Rocked By Chicano Riot COACHELLA, Call!. (AP ) -Mexican·AmericaR you lhs set fire to the mayor's home . . burned a police car and smashed downtown store and 9chool windows in a melee Sunday night which left at least, 16 injured, authorilics said. About 100 ofricers -most called in from the surrounding area to aid lhe local ll·man, police force -used tear gas and cro~·d control spray to disperse about 500 youths and restore order to this town of 9,tol in the heart o( Souther11. Califo rnia '$ desert agricultural area. Coachella's population i s about 85 percent Chicanos - 1.lexican-Amerlcans. The disturbance occurred after two members of the Brown Berets, a t-.1exica11- American group, jumped on a bandstand dui-ing a dance and shouted "Chicano Power. All power to Chicanos" ()Ver a public address system, police said. Officers identified the two as Ernesto L. Calles. 21, and Carlos F. Basabe, 23, adding they were booked for In- vestigation of inciling riot, resisting an officer 1 n d d.laturbing the peace. Police Chief Les O'Neil said both said they were t-.1exican citizens attending Riverside City College in n e a r b y Riverside. Officers said Calles and Basabe were arrested at the dance. Police said C arlo s Castaneda. a 21-year-old farm workers from nearby Indio. was also arrested for iJl- vestigation of resisting arrest. O'Neil said ltfayor Nick Abdelnour, his wife and two of his children were home when youths threw lire bombs at the building and started the fire. O'Neil said damage was •·ex- tensive" evea though the fire- was quickly put out b y firemen . San Die go Bus ·Drivers Go ou St rike SAN DIEGO (UPI) -·City bus drivers went on strike ear- ly today , halting tran si t service throughout the area and also causing some pro- blems with school buses. State Welfare Svste111 Authority to strike w a s given in a secret ballot last week and the drivers early to- day backed up the vote by · voice acclamation after David Moore, president of bu s drivers union Local 1309 ex- plained why contract negotia- ti ons had been halted . Involved arc 397 city bus drivers and an undetermined number of city school bu.s drivers .. • Rapped in Reagan Talk The union's contract expired la st week and negotiators as k- ed for an 88-cent hourly pay hike over two years. Top pay now is $4.16 an hour. They also requ es ted better fringe benefits. SACRAMENTO (UP I) - Gov. Ronald Reagan says "the Age of Aquarius smells a little fishy" and so does California's "permiSsive" welfatt. system. "Programs intended to help deservh1g poor folks a r e perverted to subsidize hippie communes," Reagan charged Saturday night in a speech to 1,000 cheering Republicans. "Poverty -stricken mothers stand in line at the market to buy meager amounts of beans and dried milk and wa tch * fl * State Panel To Review Welfare Bill shaggy-haired dropouts use food stamps lo pay for steaks and butter. The Age of Aquarius smells a little fishy." The Republican governor. speaking to the wnnual con - vention of the Cal i fornia Repub lican Assembly. a I s o said "young gi rls who want to escape their parents can go on welfare by getting pregnant. They move out and set up their own homes -at the tax- payers' expense." Thomas Prior. ge nera I manager of the transit cor- poration. said basic bus fares would have to be increased from 30 to 50 cents if the union demands were met. Both sides are s e e king outside arbitration . but Prior said he wou ld like lo see all proposa ls s um bi l t e d to arbitration, not just the pro- posals made by the union. Reagan urged support for his welfare reform program now pending before t h e legislature. Amons other things, the Cave-in Victim Reagan bill requ ires all able- bodied ma1e we11are reci pients Body Found to work and makes both the father of an unborn child and SUN V /C£LEY (UPI) -The the parents of the mother body of Keith Schofield, 42. "financially responsible." It Granada Hills. one of two men also limi ts welfare aid for bur1ed last-Thursday when the newly arrived Californians to side of a quarry caved in, was SACRAMENTO (AP ) -the amount they would have recovered Sunday. With one eye on Wash ington, received in their own state s. Workers found Schofield's California's legislature will Reagan's appearance before body near the cab of a crane. undertake hearings this month the volunteer GOP group wa.s The body of Paul Miller, 62, on major re vision of a welfare delayed 45 minutes because of Su n Valley, was fclund Friday, system seldom praised by a bullet fired in to the hotel the day alter the accident at anyone. "".bere he was to speak. It nar-the Blue Diamond Cement 1be As!embly Health and rowly missed scores of patrons. Corp. Welfare Committee will begin.---------------------- the hearings April 21. It is c h a i r e d by Assemblyman Gordon Duffy CR-Hanford) who is also author of the sweeping reform bill. The hearings will be among many scheduled on major legislation as the lawmakers get aroond to disposing of the measures before them. The first three months o l the session were devoted mainly to introduction of legislation. When the deadline f o..r unrestricted bill inlroduclion passed last Friday, 3,792 bills had been introdu ced. It "'·ill take special approval in each- house from now on to allow bill introduction. • FRCE GIFT to YOU! • .... '°" lfi'DI • • ro 't"OUl I : 4:.iuT'citE'il : • KNIFESET • •• ==g--: lt' .... 11" 1111 . .... .. --"'"" . • llilllt. .... ,.... • •........ O ... lt I .,.. riwtt. l Ml 8 .... , • ....,.. I • 011tf ....... 1$. ~ • • _,, __ I ---·~· 'MllJ ..... • -E TIU I llLUH • •• NI.Liii 11 l lSETS •1 .... , ........ ,_... ..... 14o •• ft . Mother's Day is May 10 AlgS~!!~~I ORDER THIS WEEK! Af ot//er's Dt1y t:/elivery is still " Jllt1tt1hfeet:/l Mother's Day Portraits that say "We love you!" special • one 8x 10 for you to keep • lwo Sxl for Grandmothers • six wallet-size f~ the la;nily Bring both your children in now ••• ond ther•s no eirtro charge for the fomilypetl R1:memb~r you con charge: ii at P1:nney's. 99 l'l!JNTINlifON 1 1 ... tM Ml>flfll\Oleot Cton"" " !Ille<. "''"" "'W"°ltT 114tlf ''"'"" ""'"" "" ''-· ~1Jll I JC Grad Prioritv Asked . " SACRAMENTO (U PI I - The California Coordlnallng Council ror hilher education met toda)' to consider a recommendation that junior college graduates get t o p priority in admissions to the University of California and state colleges. The recommendation was part of a program for revam- ping the state's college ad· missions system submitted lo the council by a CQmmittee of 10 educators. Advisory body, the council m a k e s r e c ommendalions regarding statewide educa- tional policy !o the university, state colleges and to the legislature. • 'fill' co1nmlnee'1 r.:,port ask· ed UC aod the ~Utges to "aSsure thal ::i ll qualified up. per division (Junior and Se n i or) transfer student! •.. are provided for before allocating spaces to all other 1eneral categories of new students." II also recommended that students seeking to enter the state colleges and university as freshmen and S<lphomores be given lowest .priority, and called for more state aid to junior colleges as recognition of their ''increasi ng responsibility" for teaching lower division students. ... '. College Urge~ Education Needed, Says Ali SAN FRANC~ (Ufll - romer heavyweight r,xtng champtoq.Muhammad ~·said Sunday h'ight >t·m er can Negroes heect as much uca· tioo as possible to allow them to exercise true freedom. '\The prevailing conditiOn among blacks in America is a lnck of knowledge of seU and that 's one of the reasons wby education is so important." he told an audience of about 1,200 at the University of San Fran· cisco. Tbe audience was com· pri5ed of about 60 percent ' Negron and 4(1 percent whites. "We need an education but not the type that add! to the storehouse ol white slave masters," he added. "There are 30 milllon blacks in America that are totally dependent on the white race. After 100 years o.f the tnd of slavery, they don't have so much as even a toothpick lac. tory of their own. · • T h e r e fort, they need education to let them exercise true freedom . .'' Family room furniture with a Spanish accent! Prices effective thrv Sotvrday , ' .. SOFA ;., "fl ....,..le" style w;1h k;l n dried hotchrood fro .... In block, vinyl. So.. $201 hsJ. $2'19 NOW $229 HI-BACK CHAIR for lu•urious CO"!· fort. Tuft9CIYinyl •pholstery. Sao. $1•1 Reg. $139 NOW $125 LO-BACK CHAIR with d;•tressed do"lc. oak iini.sft on ona.J ond legs. Sow $14! Reg. $129 NOW $115 COffil TA.ILE IM.1 nch ook fin'1h en ltmdwood ,.;rit N>.it.ated pioostic table tiop. IND TAILI M tt. pert.ct...,_.. k11 lo -~h .. red pi11CM. Ook r ... iJi °" ..i.ct todwood. fl'kN,tic: 'top. COl:Nll TAM.I of Hlec:ted hord- woo0 ..+t+i dorii ook fja.;1ft.. f'kuric: k..MflOf«l liabie topl. s..,.. SO! R:-v. S6S litOW $ 5 9 OTIOMAN. ~wt ro..-1-1 "P cntd ,.kt11. Mo111r.M. tti is e•vowt flff'~· .. 9roep. I . ! ... ~ . ~ I•' '! : • f 1 r;j ..... RECLINER . Semi-attached tealortd bock cu1h ion1 of shredded polyw,.. r+ione foam for e11tra comfort. ~S 14! R•g. $159 NOW $145 LOVI llAT ha1 ~-dn.ed JriOl"d- woodfra-. Distr...d dorkook fi .. ish of high-i!JIPOCI pkntic:, IJod:; ... bt-~ 'finyl. S-$19' .... $199MOW $180 ltOCKEl4LOUNGEl.Hardwood fr o-with dork eo" finish of hfvk. impoct plottic. Oli•e greeewtt!yl 111~ hobtery • .... ... ,. ....... .aw$149 SALE! SUPERSIZE BEDDING AT SUPER SAVINGS! A-..oyol sl~ep awoitt )'O'lll o• these lu11ur io~ wiaHrnHI °"d baa 1pr!n91 •.• q1o1ilted .,,;1h polyvrethone foorn. YCK11t feel like • king {or o queen) 011 the1t "p&r co•lortoble, ••per 1poci0Uti. 1\lp-9r l ile bed Mh. Save $401 Queen size. Reg. $219 Sova $501 King size. Reg. $299 DELUXE QUILTED EXTRA FIRM Saye $401 Queen set. Reg. $1 99 SCMO $501 K;ng .... Reg . $269 DELUXE QUILTED SUPER FIRM NOW '179 NOW '249 NOW '159 NOW '219 Save $401 Queen set. Reg. S 179 NOW $1 39 Save $SOI K;ng set.11eg . $249 NOW '199 USE PENNEY$ TIME PAYMINT PLAN NOW! l H[SE 'f'ALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PEN NEY STORES! CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD DOWNEY FU LLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA I ) • • • --·--·---~ ····r ·~..-·--~--..--...------~------·-.,,,.......-·----------.....-.------.......... ·---~-. ......------~ OAILY PILOT Sl•n ,,_,. Mon4q, -"''" 4. 1970 'Middle Man~ for · Siode11t Gripes I • ' 0 b ds E la• ' D e ombudsmen tend to be faced By JOANNE REYNOLDS TVtne S m U man Xp tns UtlCS with a problem of diminishing Of "" Nff "• 11.,. effectiveness, ... IRVINE -Dr. Jack Little 0 'lbere IA teveral con-"This professor woold leave 11y11tequ and they both seem "Alter all, you can take bites the band that feedl hlm. slderationa ior us to con-hi! teaching duties for a cou· to work;" Dr. Little said. o n j u s t s o m a n y a d· HAL AEl lSCHil HEARING AIDS lempla'· u a ....... ,,IOll. such pie of yean to become om· "A:s I said, lt'a a new idea ministrators or bureaucrats, He ta the campus om· 1o11:1 .,.w... budsman. W be n his ef. and there are many, many before you make them angry. C•utei:0•~;:~."'s:'~~~1i.. buda:man at UC Irvine, a job as Job security, ethical . prob-fectiveness was more or less questions that have to be Alter th at you're not really 3409 E. COAST HWY. that has hlm serving u lema and job qualifications. dissipated at the end of a answered. It may be that om· able to serve your pur pose," CORONA DEL MAR "grievance man"foritudents. "At the moment, at least· few years, then he could go budsman will e v ent u al ly thepsychologist explained. for Appolnt11tt11t "I'm here as a aort of a for the univel'llty there are back to teaching and somoone assume a status 11imilar to UCI students obViously take 675-3933 two school.I of thought as far elu would beco m e oar that of ,a football CQach where the oppcrtunity to use thcir l'======='::;==~ slop gap for any variety of 11 wbo should 1erve a!I om· budsman. they stay with an Institution "grievance mao" frequeully.l;-- sltuaUofts," aald Dr. Little bud.sman. "On theother handyouhave for a few years, then move His office bulleUn board is ON THE TUBE who bu been UCI on1budlman "First there are those who -people like myself who are on to the next," he speculated. covered wilh per so n a I since May, 19'7. go with the tdea the om. trained in problem-solving Dr. Little admitted there messages for students who For •~• b••t 911id• to wh•t'• "The em~,,.1• in my work budsman 1hould be a fields who would be blred 'on would be large problems with often stop by to visit. Three ~f&:"1~ d~i~rlb~~;d ':~~ ,-:;-: t"'....... rttpected professor on cam· a professional basis. job securit:v under such a students interested ln "om-Situtdiv tdition of ffl• DAILY ls not on solving 1tudenta' put. Preferrably one with "Actually either is a pretty sys tem but noted that beca use boodlirig" assist hlm in his PILOT. problems, though that is a 1 _i.~-~~· oo~he~cou~l~dn~~~be~fi~r~e'.'.d·:_!good~-l~d:e•:_:-:_:1'..:'v'.:e~see~n_:bo~th:.___:o"._f ,,'.th~e:...':n~atu~re:...':of'.__'the~lr'._'.w"'o~rk~,___:w::o~r.'._k-:_ _______ :=,::========== part ol il I lrY to utUme a more innovaUVe role so tha t I am actJag rather than just reacting." The . origin of t he om· bu{1Bman dates b a c k to Sweden in 1809 when the Swedish conatltuUon created the position of a "grievance man" as someone people could tum to other than the courta if they felt the eovernment had deprived, them ol their rlghls. th 68 pot$! We're right i" there getti119 yow tM quofity mtrchondiie yo11 WOl'll cit the loweil pos1ible pric .. STOP GAP FOR ANY SITUATION Dr. Jack Little Talks With Student Ombudsmandry le: a concept that is drawing more mttre1t from laree inatltutiOfl!I - business and governmental as· well as educatlonal -COD- cerned with theit ~lallons to TENT AND SLEEPING BAG SALE! For the Death Notices ,,--~·•u• '""·' · J. CllffOl"d A1'9Ut. '°'·Cfltlt ftl-., Hew:. port '"'"'· 011 ........ E' .. s .. .... \ll\IM lw wll•. (•llMrlM"l!. '91,if; IM, John C.; d•Utlrttr, Emltr Ma· 1 brotl>- ers, Wiiiiam elld G«ll'9f Arto..,.1 1114 1lx t rtn«tilldren. &eNleft, T...W.r, I PM, In '"-Church of the Aec.sslonel, Fore1t L1wn-Glendal1. For11I Ltwn Marlut•Y. F1mUv 1119«•1• lho11 wlll!lng ta ma~t mMiorl1I ttintribulloru,. pl11M contr!blllt lo "'" Sot,1ltlern Ctllfamlt Commlttft for '"'' Olvmt>!c G1mes, 1ddrn1, Ht lm• H1ll, 1760 V~1c• Btvd., LOI AnM!tl. DOUC•TTll Wiiier Ltwls Oolleetf. 3062 C!ubllOl.I•• ROfld, COl!t Mew. Ottt of dMtl'I, A.rll '· Survlvird bv wli., Nll(kl: llCH'I, W1tl1r L. J r., or C1stro V1!T1v1 brother. Wllllem J. Douce!!. of SHtlle1 alld r....o 11randchll· dr..,. Se...-lces. Manda'f, tod1v. l PM, P&clfk; VltW Ch11peL En!ombmer1I. Paclllt View Mtmorl1I Pirie:. OlrKl«I b't' P1cl!lc View Morlv11...-. F•mllv 1<111"91'1 tllo•e wl~hln11 to mi ke memorial cor1trlbull001s, i111 .. 1e conlrlbvl9 to lhe Amwlcan C1J1<:er Sodetv. HULL Mrr• M. Hull. Aot 46, of 15311 Vtrl'TIDl\I, Wt>lmln1ter. O.le gf <lt•lll, AP!'lr 1, SUI"· 11lv«1 bv hu1bJind, Everett J. Hutt Jr.: "°"' PlllliP; mo"'er. MIWI Conw1r. Strv· left will be held lod1Y. MoN11r, 2 PM. Smll!ls CN~I. lnltrm~t, W.1lm!n1ter Mem«lal P•rk. Dlrec!fll br Sml!h1 Mor· lu1rv. MOONIY lrm1 O. M-. A11e 66. af '94 El Ctm· lno Or .. Co1!1 Mau. $ul'\llVlld bv 1!111NM, Wlill1m; ltlltn slelers, \11r1. lltssl•, T""r•, Connie, Ju1nl!1, Mlldl"t(I •NI S.u- 111>; brottuir, B. N. Oler. s.Nk 11 will be held Tund•v, 11 AM, Clluf'Cll ol Jnu1 Cllrl1f, Leiter Ollr S11nh . N1wp0rl B•dl. v 111ta!!001 In 1111 Rellel Socl•tv Room, 10 lo 11 AM, Tue5d1v. Interment wm be lleld tn $hellev, Idaho. Bell !lrot0w1r Morlu1ry, O!rec1ors. RUNYAN ll:lc ll1rd o . Runvan, Age 19, of 1«1J Rltr>- mond WIY, Co,ia M•""· 51.irvlvt<I br wilt, Oorl1; ion, Richard; two dau;hteri, COlr· ton 11'<1 0!1ne1 mo!ller. e~a Runren ; tllrn brolhers, Oe•n, O<>nald Ind J1m1s; end two 1l11tr1, Uni Zeleikl and Ev• v11~t1n1. se...,lcn . Tueid•r. 1 PM, llt!I 8 rD1dWtV Cll11>1L tnitrrnenl, HarDOI' Re1l M'°"'orltl Pt rk:. e eu 8roa11w1v Mor1u1n. OlrKIOn . ARBUCKLE & SON Westcllff Mortuary '2'7 E. J'7dl St., Cotti! Mesa 'llMSSS • BALTZ MORTUARIF.'! Corona del Mar OR 3.9450 C..lli Me.. Ml 6-%414 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cotta Ateaa LI l-Sl3S • DILDAY BROTHERS Huntington VaUty Mortuary 1'7911 Beacb Blvd. Huatlngton Beach 8't-7'11 • PA<:mC VIEW MEMOJiJAL PARK Cemelery • Mo"1Wy Chapel S$OO P1ctffc View Drtve Newport Bf'!ach. C.IUornl1 ' 64'-1100 -· -PEEK FAMILY COl.ONIAL FUNE RAL HOME '7801 Bol1a A1-e. we1tmln1ttt nwm • SHEFFER MORTU ARY Laguna Beacb 494-IW Sa• a emente 49WlOI • SMITHS' MORTU ARY 8t'7 l\1aln St. Huntington Beacb -· Record Co•t1 Mn1 K!w1nl1 Club. COiii Mep Gall I nd (ot,1nlry Club. Cotti Mt••• 12:1S P./11. N~oorl Htrbol' Ool!mlJt Club, Vlllll M11rlM, HUS B1v11d1 Orlvt, Ntwl>O'rt Betc111_ 1J:'!' o.m. Hop,1tl/!llI<>A "t!i ~w1nl1 Club, H11p,o I 1tan S.1cll nrrv Cl\ltl, 3000 P~m 1i-.1., unt l'llltan Be.ell. 12,u o.rn. Hul'lfin.to~ B.ath Aotarv ~h1b-N~rtll . Four Wind• Reo!turanl, 16(11 B!'" Clllct RDld, Hunt!nt111lf Bead!, l :U D,n\. , Coron.o de! M•r E¥thl l'IQI Cl\lb, Joft/'1 Rtt1aur1n1. 2121 E. Co&•t Hlanw111, coraM 011 Ma r, 12 noon. Hunlln111on lle•ch Norin ~Ions Clu!', Me1dow11rk Country l11b, f6111l Grthem, Hunrlno!on Beec 1l noGn. E•cllllnq~ Club of trvl"' lndin!rlal CompltK. S!Mft. Shirt R"t1ur1nt. 210 W. 1.:oa1l H11nw v, NtwDOrt Bt•cfl, - Two Copters Approved In Anaheim ANAHEIM - Anaheim city 'councilmen have approved a 1ease'.or i1'-.pe~tera from Hughes 'toof· ~Pal11 for $106,851, paya\)le m•five yearly installments of $21,370. At the end of the five year period, the aircraft w i 11 become the property of the ci· ty an payment of $1. Last month the City Council a pproved use of the helicopters by the p o l i c e department. They will be in the service in October. Anaheim will become the third Orange County city to ~ chopperS In police work. Huntington Beach has two regularly operallng units and Costa Me'sa bas pilots under 'training. Assem&ly Bill Redone FULL E R TON -A' semblyman John v .. Brigg~ (R·Fu llerton) has again in- troduced in to the Lelislature h i S resolution commendins forme r Callfornia Department of Veterans Affairs director, James E. Johnson on his outst.anding service. The resolution, introruced twice last year by t h e representative of the 3Sth District, was defeated both times. Johnson was th e f,irst Ne gro to head a state departmen t and left his post last year after an appointmen t b y President Nixon lo the U.S. 'Clv:ll Service Commission. . Briggs s a i d , "lo my knowledge. no official has ever been denied a commendatory . resolution, and I feel confident the resolution will pass th is .year." . Silton Home Expansion Due SANT A ANA -The First Assurance C o m p a n y of N.ewport Beach ha1 b e e n awarded an $81 .'133 cont ract for additions lo Orana:e Coun-- ty'1 Albert Sitton Home for De~dent Chil~. ind ividuals. IUS p?'1tence on the campus l! a reflection of the concern voiced by the administraUon that UCJ personnel work to m a i n t a i n as individually geared approach to education as is possible. · In spite of his creative ap- proach to the roJe oi om- budsman, Dr. Little frequently is called upon to funcUon as a buffer when the wheels or university bu r ea ucr acy threaten to grind up a hapless student. "A classic case is a student that came to me duril.1 registration. Ht wu broke and needed 1IJ(llle)I to repter. Now, he quallfied for a univenlty loan, but the y wouldn't give him the loan until he registered, but he couldn't repster without the money. "It's my job to more or less intervene In these 1itua· lions and break up the vk:ious circle so the atudent can 1e.t an with his education," the ombudsman explained. "The philosophy of the job puts me in the precarious position of working against the IMtituUon that employa you ·-oort of beiog hired to bite tbe hand that feeds YOU.'' Dr. L!We added. A PhD In psychology, he ha1 log&ed about 15 years in work related to ozn.. buds:mandry. A> a J>'Ychol"tlltt with the Oakland Nav1! Hospl.Uil ln the early 50'1 he helped pioneer a aystem whereby patlentl in a ward were directly responai· ble for the adminl'1r&llon of the ward. "The response waa fan· tastic," he aald. "We found that the patients took the responsibility quite well and thrived on it." ·[)r. Little and some associates from the Naval Hospital set up a conaulUng finn in the bay am wbic!l was geared to helping other large institutions I mp r o v e their production procedures by directly involving the people that worked for them or that _ 1JSed their services. "The idea of t n v olving students in the administration of their campus is innovative. Banks get burned down when people begin to get the idea they have no control ever these things regardles1 <lf how many meetings they attend or forms they fW out.'' Dr. Little observed. Because of the emergency of th e ombudsman as an In· tegral part of large organiza· tions, a fl edgling Ombudsman Association is bei ng formed , ..,,Beslde college campuses, there are ombudsmen working for the slates cf HawaU and Nebraska and t believe the state welfare department is consi~Jing hiring ooe," be stated. 1795 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD me Carmi cl LAGUNA BEA!:ll MORTUARY • 494-9415 • Sale prices effective thru Saturday! IAYI 1.111 FOREMQST S LI, ACIYUC flLllD SUIPING IAG log.t,,,,NOW 8.88 feotwn wtor1 brooddoth ovter shel1 with cotton ftorwtel tiriinig.. 100" fvll 1eparating .ipp., :n"a7T _....... finWied liu, IAYI 2, 101 FOREMOST 3 LL POL nnu flLllD SLEEPING IAG .... 17.91,NOW 15.88 Cotton driO outer 1hen, cotton flonnt!I ~n­ in;. Double air mottress poclets, roll·vp headpiece. 33• x rr opproJClnde fin- i~ size, SAVE '15! 9' x 12' LODGE TENT REG. 99.98.,.NOW i/' 84.99 f , F~atures lop ond sides of heovyweTght 6.7 4 oz. cotton drill cod nylon reinforced 11inyl floor. See-thru Yinyl reor window. To Ion• zippered in~ide slorm flops, Talon• bro~s door zipper. 6' encl woa height, ti <e nter height. SAVE7.11! 8' x l O' LODGE TENT REG. 59.99 ••• NOW 52.88 Top, sides and fl oor of 2.-40 oz. tono. ddlL Feo1ureJ 1hree, large tcreened wbt dows and Ta lon' brass dOO( zfpp«.~ side tie. down stomi fla ps. S end wol height, 7'6• cenler height. DON'T FORGET THESE NEEDED ACCESSORIES! COC.EMAH 220f LANTEIN 12.H COl!MAN SlOVE AND LAMTEIH FUH ... HOW! THESE VALUES AT AN'I' ONE OF !HUE PENNEY &TORES! CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD COLE MAH 413GS10Vf 17.99 ALUMINUM COT 7.91 DOWNEY MONTCLAIR ' COLEMAN HEATER 3,000 to !i,000 BTU 25.99 POl!fA.6LE TOILET J .91 COLEMAN 56 QT. COOlER 19.99 LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! • NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA " ' ' ' I ' w• '. ..v4 . st ~•;;; s .. ·• ~ot·A.ru '· 1•10 Vital· S~aiis'ties .,for_.•~~ ~range ~oast Area ' . : Mlrdl tt Mr. 4'>\11 Mn. Ma'I'""'"' ~. \"11 Corti~• Orl\tt, Ml11191'1 111lrl. /' 3 8*CdM I In Contest i '7111, '111!1, Th..4 Corona Del Mar High $:hool studtnta will re-- prtse:~ their 9Chool in the ~tate f.speeeb contest •l the Co~le of the Pacific in May. of the 1tudents., Arnold Clar '1 tenior, recently r• ceiv rtCOIJlition from t.ht Natijul HIJh School Hono- uy Jpeecb compeUUon •Ince the ninth 111ade. UJo brother. Konrad Clark andi Doyen Klein, will al!o attebd the ltlte contest in May. Jl the three win the stockton contest, they will ao l.o Kansas where the national eonte11, will be held in June. ~liege Sets Golf Class Evening classes in begin. fling golf will be offertd at ;.5addleback College from I to I 'p.m. on Wednesdays during : tht spring qU1rter. The coed dasa will carry • one.half credit in physical education aod will bo !Aulh\ 1 by S.ddJeback 1<>ID.nr coach Roy Steven1. tn1trvtUon will begin April 15 Ind continue through June. Regiltratlon for this and other Htended~ay claues is ocheduled April I aod I from I p.m. to 1:30 p.m. Court Taking Longer Lunch WASHINGTON IAPI -The ' l\n~~~ I " AuntWIW ., Major surgery or just an aspirin? ,. Tt\ere's !1Q guesswork at Penneys·Auto · Diagnostic Center: Either . there is or there• isn't,something wrong with your car ... · · and we'll find. out scientifically! [ " tn teu than one how, we put JOUf C ... through I Set'tes of &Ci• entlOc tests (212 of them, to be ex.ct) thlt pinpoint trrt existing problem&-and wam of potenllal onea. Sl•ring. Engine. Brakes. T1'antml11ion. Eleclrlcal Mtd cooling 9'd fuel and exhlust 1y1tems. Expert 1n1lytis of1 "erything from headltghts to ·-· . You Wllk:h the raults ClOft'le M °" lft ~ectrontc typewrittt. A skitted dl1gno1lictln goe1, °"' the report with )'OU. If you •ilh. he'I gM you "' estimate of 1ny 119CeMefl' repMni. You'H be 9b4e to t1ke Clrt of smatl pobferns f'IOW, befofe they ... -lntoblQ-~ blg-y. -·.you ....... _,.,.'"" IMke the fllpllr&-q_uk:kly, K • curttety, ec::onomicltty. •. Reptiirs that coukl pnvenl I needless h;gtlwoy -·-· tty0upnlor,you..,_1M repott _,wt•e JOtt like. .• 1llo ~ °"" 9.88 ~ N&IMlltitl tor I doctor, th-.di)'&. , ~~ Court iay1 it wlll ~tt~"~;p,:.lj" '' years. · .. '""'-" . , , enneysAuto Diagnostic Center Ollef JUJUct W•rrtn Burier amoun<td the dlln(e Moodly from the b e n c h without elaboraUnc. ..... the eourl In public -and on1J a haU-hour brU1< I« lunch, laWJ<t1, ntWnen ud 1pec:lltor1 r1ctd the -la the coort <afetcria lln<. The juaUces ate oU ltqa i• tllelr dlambm. •UUIA_I ___ ,. __ ~Scllndfk Tn:dltlllhodera Pl.UEATOH HUNTINGTON ll€AClt NE .. OllHIEACl1 .. WA .NT ED! Men And Women With A Desire To. le 011 Televi1ion . ARE YOl:l, ·qveR 2.H . ~ CAN YOU TAKE DIREcilbNS?• Teke 1 Production1, Inc., 11 Proud To Anno,unce The Opening Of Our New HOL(YWOOD TlLENl!PllDL f.ei AOOLTS ro Auo1Ticlii oil.CAMEM . CALL 714·547-6ZS1 TAKE "l" PRODUCTIONS, INC. HOL~ YWOOD, CALIF. P.I . C.llllPllllf M .... "*'11111 ... ,C••'-" ,., Hewc-.rs " .• -~ !. allowed by law! • FIBER GLASS I BEL•D Forernotr AF /X-2 with 2 belts of fiber glass on a 2 ply polyester c0rd body! I • Size G70-14 H70-15 Price 27.75 29.95 Stert1Mo1tdey13 dcrys oalyl) 1-2. 3 Lube Special H.,..'• wkt 19• .. ,, ,...,.._ ct.o.· M Jubncatiofi, COMpl ...... 1Jtot.ge (in- cl~~ 5 qtMirit of Heo.,, o.., ()ii), "l!""•il filter. Co• /fl ftOWI 5.88 Fed. tax 2.76 3.05 { · Wheel Alignment t We set colter, co.ber, ... ""' 't •oe~"'· W• adjust 11......u.g gew, ,1:iMpe<t complete front ffd. "- 1 you get o free Pit ao.1up11 · .. tlon. 7e95 THISI STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOOi i2 to S P.M. FULLERTON CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA ,i DOWNEY • HUNTINGTON BEACH :MONTCLAIR .NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA BUENA ·PARK •t..;......;...., ~ °'::fo:,":") ~..: .. r r ,. . • • ~ - I I .. • . ': ·-· .. -. .. ' . . ::-, . '.4: -. - • ·~ ) -,-... _______ _ -- -.. . ' . --- ---------:--~ . ' , •• • • · ....... '""'o..i..::• l::_flo ---...'..~: • -..,.J~· · • :!> I ~-"~"$ . , ... ~- • . • •• •· '",. ' . • ~~~~-----------------------............................ ... .. ,...- • - • . ' RONALD W. CASPERS . . An Urgent Message for · Parents and Students . . On th~ Subiect of Teenage. Drug Abuse. . After my wife, five children and ·1 watched the one hour CBS special, . "If You Turn On", we agreed that it was one of the most objective, . . ' frank, factual approaches yet to · the drug problem. The network, Jer· . ' . . ry Dunphy, the panel of experts and the young participants should be commended for their efforts in collecting " knowledge which helps ' ' us sepa.rate the truths from the myths. \ .' 1 • ,-At the conclusion of the~how,; I was pleased that among all of t~e lit· I ..... -'.-... ~.: erature available on the subJect, Mr. Dunphy offered the viewers; upon ' ' • • . . 'I'" .. t f request, a copy of the same booklet which my company has . distrib-· uted 200,00J free throughout Orange County. In addition to their . . ' - generous· offer, I would like . to add mine to all of yoo who care, and . : a copy will be mailed to you by calling (714) 543-8271 any time of the . day or night or by comingin to either office ·of Keystone Savings & Loan in. Anaheim or Westminster, The Daily Pilot offices in Costa M~ sa, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach,·. Laguna Beach, San Clemente and the Costa Mesa or Newport Beach Police . Departments. . Conllaly yo•rJ, Ronald W. c..,.,., Pn.W.llt K_,...11 s.ri1t1 lr.·""11 All1dtltl11 . . • 1 ' •. . • ' • • . • • • . I . • . • • ' I I I I I I - I I I I • , ' I I • , ' . . ~~ • • • • • ' I I • By Phll lnt.rlandl , AC..,..C' R-ll"'"""LA• "Watch oat for that oM-he dotlln't need a 'bruk· through' to run uaand kiuing everyone." AdmiralS Now Accept Carrier Force Cut WASIDNGTI>N (AP) - Navy admliitls are 1W'tlng to talk out loud about the ponlbiUty o! losing ""'"' of their alraaft carriert. U'1 doubUiil they ... yet reconclled to the idp that the hitherto magjc number of 15 carrlera may be ftduced as the Nb:on admlnktraUon ea.JtS away from fonlp in- Nolvement and c\dl th e :cterense budget. " But for the first Ulne there ls taclt acknowledlllllent in Navy testimonf belore Congress that the pr<vlously unthlnuble prosptet of a smaller carrier Fforce I 1 boc:ooUni thlnlcabl• to the ad- mirals. Vice Adm. Ralph W. Cou!lina, Nary, nee operations chief, spoke of the possibility fn making a pitch to the Senate Armed services Com- mittee recenUy for a new $810 :mifuon nuclear~ered car- rier of the Nbnitl class. '"The Nimitz dut carriers become even mDre important if the Navy 11 required to operate a mllller carrier force," Cousins said. "If a reduc::t.lcm ln force level is made, It lbould be done by retiring older canim in the fleet." The extra fate of the car- rier force is aot yet decided, alt.bough tbe;4rend of Ni.Ion ad>nlnlltrallGia thinking j s Fewer''Men To Go Around I WASHINGToN (UPI) - There are·, fewer men to go around, gl!1s. TheCen1u1Bure au, reporting Wednesday that the popu11tioa. of the United States on Jan. l was 204.4 million, sakl there· are now 95.4 males for every 100 femates-com- pared wbh r7 .a 11 the !tart of the I~ toward 1 cut Jn all of the country's conventional fighUng elements, includlng an even- tual million-man reduction in manpower. The Admiral! can be U · pected to pre•• tllelr argument! that the 15-cuiier force is essenUal, especlalb' because the United States hu Jost many overseas air bases and probably will witbdraw from even more. Backer• of the carrien con- tend they are less vulnerable than land bases and can be deployed to show the flag and meet crisis situations. The carrier, these advocates say, is not subject to denial by foreign governments for political reasons, as In the cue of the ouster of the U.S. AJr Force Wheelus · A r B , Libya, this year. Carrier cr!Ucs argue the I> carrier rorce is just not worth the esUmated '6 billion a .year it costs, including e 1 Co' r t vessels. . Aho, the Air Fortt dlJp<rtes the basic Navy clalinl, AJlDa in a study made late lut year "the capability of U.S. Air Force tactical air power has in no sense been iteminilh- ed by land base invutlgaUon." Co ngressional cori\mltltt11 and administration e x p e r t s are studying the question of carrier requimntinta. T b e results of those ltudW may be shown when t h e ad- ministration offers its next def""" budget in Janwy, 1971. The Navy tut came close to los ing carriera in 1964 under former Secretai, of Defenae Robert S. MacNaman.', He planned tO !rim the !/irce to II vessm by 1909 and I! by this year. However, the Tonkin GuU inilileat occumd In August. 1914, ·tht ati-1 ~ against North Vietnam began in earnest in eprly ISM, and plans to reUrt ,19M• ol &be carriers were ;blfll:ed. --::~ ,' tlJ . ,.ALK ABOUT fORESI,HT ' .,_,.,ltltt" ;, tft, ref1ec ll•11 •f the i119•1111ity of Cott• Mot• City C.....llma11 Wilt Jortl•11. WUI AN011 we1 th1 911li l119 1!9ht h1 t11rni119 • W••' ••¥1r1i, ....,.,..,,,,;.,, '''' Into t l • hol• c.liel'l'lplonJhip 9olf ce11ne f1. , &1'if:r•witftl11 tM fi11t11ci1I to1ch of 111. t n. C.1t1 Mo11 Ciioolf 011cl Co1111try Club ;, 1 focility open to \ ..-Mr cltiie1 .. , h1du1hi1I 9otf 10191101 end Mr, Joh11 Q, Publlc •M h pro1011tly ho1t>119 phy1!1el otl uc1tle11 clo1to1 eni venity t.•• 1cW11le1 of Ioctl hl9h 1chool1 tnd J1111lor collo9e1. M4l+lo•1Uy, thi1 e11th1tlc f tttll hilt pro¥1dod tho city wit!. o 1lt. f.t e r..:i11trH f;ro 1tetio11 oMI a hoevy oquipt11011t 1lort90 ..... '-eifr •ehlclo1. A11otltor ltif of "Will Jordt•" po1iliwo ilo1 .. 1.,"' Mo: Tli!f.,.. •. n.. wl ... ., CMt•' ..... tr..,l11tJtt ..., ,, ""' .. 11.f"lllty wat th ••t..)ect ef iwk• I• "9 ·Hew Yet\ TI.. ............ .i-. "5oK bt .. tt", 1 ••tl•••I 1M1lilic1flof1. ' ~. u1di ••M" 01 tlrit N1w Yor~ Ti11101, tho Profo11iaf11I Solf. ar A.11eciallofl, tfr.o OroJ191 Ca11J1ty loord ef S11porwl1or1 1rHI tti.-tM• ef 9olfars pratl1lfll our "for1t19h1", wo 111ull lur• I• Wiii J..-.ltfl -"' 11y, "Woll .!aflt , Will". wtltte ftlo,. It I .,WIU", fhor• It I w1r -Will Jor.!on1 of . .-..... I01I wtU. .IOIDAlt, Alltl 14......_YOTI Will JORDAN Al'lll 14ttl COSTA MDA CITY COUNCIL ' 1 _....,Cl lw f~-•'"-.,__ First Alaska.ns May Get Money Back 7 1/2 out of 10 of our customers get tax r efunds. WAS!UNG'i'ON (AP)--\.. '*# J1l!'nltl1 -qr.ement 1' Al..U's $5 000 E 1 kt m o 1 lll:tly on plymont of • Al ts and ind!ana are hold.Ui~ mil.lion for nati ve ownership eu claims covering most o I Ollt bright h o p e • of a AJaska. breakthrough In their Joni el-Bills to 1eWe the claims fort to gain payment for land were bottled up in committee t.aken from them during the last year after long and whJte man's aettle:ment. fnliUess sessJoM. The Senate Interior Com-In 1867, Ruula sold Alaska mlltee today began aortlng to the Unll<!d State1 for 17.2 through altemaUve propoaa11 million, or 2 cents an tcre. to setUe the native claims, The sale produced outcries ln with hopes of puttlng a bill Congress -and the deal wu oo the Door by nelt week. called "Seward's folly" after As much as fl bllllon federal Secretary of State WJlllam H. money CGUld be 1t stake, Seward, who engineered it. 1ltbougb committee members Several groups representing natlva are pushing !hf: plan to CODlPf.Mlte the lndlll\I for the llOO,Oile _.. lllllea ol land they inhablted before the white man came. 11le committee l 1 con· a!derlng CQmpensation bills caWnc for different com· blnaUona of cash, land grants 8nd mineral royalUea. The proposed royalties and m of ~ land grants have provoked moet of. the d!IC\llllon behind ~ eom- mltlee'• closed doon. Prnspects of a settlement brightened In February when committee members put com- ere are • 1-n I. UnlledColllornla-,._ llnhedCall!onla-76. UnitedCalllornlallnk U.-MoinOftloe South•--w---2. Uni&o:l Cllifomia Bank 39. Uni1ed CalifonM llmt Tl. UnllildCalllonilalank Sc<oodondSprin& EISenao City ot D>dustry 3. Uni&o:l Cllifomia B..t 40. Utlitod Collloroia laot 'IL Uailed Calilomiallmt Laguna Hilll LclsuR Wedd SoulhA ....... Sml&AaaMain 4. UDitcdCalifomiaBant. 41. United California Bank 79. Unitoc!CalUomiaBant llD<olo Hdahb Harbor and Baker Warner and Main 5. UmledCalllornillBaot 42. United CllitcrniaBant • 80. United California Buat lDllio ~. f" iom;1a West SeYeo.tecoth Slttd: '-UaltodCalU .... -'43; Um""' Calllornlallanl: 81. United Califomiallall. Wdlhir..c.lolina .. Ml ~ 7. UmtedCallfomiaBlllk 44. UniledCalflonk-32.UaitodCalUoniiallmt . JfoUywood . ' CaJako Outario 1.UakodCallfintla-4S.Uml<dCalilornla-13. United CalUom!allmt Seal s-h LdanWCldd , 'Wibni ...... ' Corona dd Mar '· Unltodc.Jilcniallallk -46. Umtod Colllcnla-114, Ullilod Califoniiallant Mubt,ondProduoe Atlantic-Whittier Nonnolk 10. UeltedCalll ..... -47, United Calilonia Bant IS. Umted California Blot llabn&fdMlill Sluh...So...d Marinen IL UmtedCallloniaB..t "4L UmlodCollluaa-16. United California llmt SaaDlop Mlin Dcnmer S..Clomonle • 4'9. UnitedC.alifomialant 87. UnitedCalilornlallanl: l:Z. Uolto4Calllom!aBant Wbllller omd IDdf.uia Third en6 La Cicuop EIMooto 13. United Calilonila llanl: 50. Uallod California-81. Ulliled California Bani: S-.-Ahmw!o OfympicandPmdOt __ __, 14. Ualtei!Callfania-51. United California Bank 89. UnitedCal;fomiallanl: s.. Luk Olilpo -Nonbridge IS. Umted Califania llallk $2. UnJted Calil'omia Baat 90. United Clllifornia Bank Delano Wlhhire-lldroit P.tmdale 16.~~:: .. c:::t~ SJ. United California Bank 91. UmtedCallfomlaBaol: Wllsbf..oxrord Huntington Bach 17. Unn..!Calilonilallult 54. Umlod Calflonla Bat n United.CalifomiaBW: Century City Beverly Hllll --18. UnitedCalilornlaBanl: S.S. United California Bank 93. Unlted Callfomlallanl: Wilahb-W•dab lldlnger IUld -El Segundo 19. United California Dant S6. United Califoml1 JllDI: 94. UnitedCalifomiallant Sumet.Spauldin1 Lon1BachMofa ear- 20. Ullitedc.Jilornlalluk 51. UnitedCali!omiaBant 95. Unlted Calllonlallallk Wbht ..... c..t.. 01enda1t ),{ontebelio 21. UnitedCalifomlaBmt SI. UnltedCalifomlalluk 96. UnltodCalllorniallmt Ninth IUld San Pedro Wibbire-LaJoUa c.rilot 22. Ullllod Califonila llult ' 59. UnitcdCal.iforniaBank 'J'I. United Cal1lornla Bani: SaataMhmea Wbilticr Main Burbank 23. Umted Califonila llallk 60. United Calllornla B>nt 98. United C,all.fomiaBank San Pedro Vernoo Jllwn;de 24. UmtedCalifcniallanl: 61. United California Bank "· Unftad Calllornla Bank BIJthe Bellflower San Jacinto 25. United Calllonla Bani: 62. Umted Callforoi> Bank 100. UnitedCallfomiaBank VanNuys Crcaabaw IDd 147tb Santa Barban Main 26. United Califcwnia Baat 63. United California Bank JOI. Umtecl Callfonlallaol: Seate I: LaCumbre Tornnce Santa Maria 27. UnltodCalilonilalluk 64. UllitcdCalilornlallut: 10'7. United Cal.ifomi&Bant F1orencc IUld Ccnlnl B"" Veotun. 2L Uniled.Californla llanl: 6S. United CUifornia Bink 103. United Callf omia B1Dk Laguna Bea<h Pomona Main. Buena Park 2'. UmtedCalifonU1 Bank 66. United California Bank 104. United California Bsnt FUty-lounh and er.no-Pomom MallEut San Bcmardioo Main 30. UnitedCaliforniallut: 61. UniledCllifcnialat 105. United Cali£omiaBant Bixby Knolls Holt A l'CDUe Inglewood Main 3L Unltodc.Jilornlallanl: 68. United Califomia Bank 106. United California Bank M-IUldv...-Anaheim MW. er.mhaw-lmperial 3l-UmlOd CalflorW Baok 69. Uni&o:l c.J.irornia Bat 107. Unik:d.Califomia Blftk Elc.tro Puadena Mailt. La CiCDc:p-Rodco 33. Umted Califontla-'70. United California Bank 108. United California Bank Canoga Park Moin Colondo IUld hyl1)0nd Western-Manchester 34. UnitedCalUonilallmt 71. United California Bank 109. United California Bank DoSoto--Covina Encino SS. United Call!oml1 llanl: 72. United Cafif«Dia Bank JIO. Unitedc.JiromiaBank NonhH~ West Covina On.Dada Hilla 36. UnitodCalJI ..... -73. United Califomia Bank I ff. United Calilomla Bsnlr. Alhambra Fuller1oo ShennanOab 37. Umted Califomlallaol: 74-Umted Calilomla Bank 112. United CUifomia Bant S..Oabrid. Highiond IUld Sonia Mooica Homd 75. Umted Cal~cnla llanl: 113. United OW!omia 'Bank B,...._ Palm Daert &tatr.a Under Federal Reserve regulations S'!.% is the highest rate any bank in the counby can pay. Unless you have an idle $100,000 or more, in which case we raise the ante. But If yoli )law $SOO to invest and leave the money with us for two years, UCB will pay you ~.t. interest annually, • ' II you want your money out in ODO year, weil pay you S'/at.. II you preli:r fl shorter term, 90 days, you'll get S'J> aniluil iiltcRst $500 I• the minimum deposit to earn these new high rates. You I promiJe leglsl1110o ao the table In hopes of breaking a ttalemat.e. Compenaatkm bllil Wlad bafore the com· mlttee tn long al)d !ndllm. sessions last year. Many Democratic members are reported favoring a perpetual 2 percent royalty for mineral right!, including receipts from oil on federal and state lands in Alaska. Most Re public ans are rtported against the royalty idea. Sen. Ted Stevens (R- Alaska), hu offered to go along with royalties for 10 years only, as a compromise. • 114. UnltodCalilornl1Bank ~-0 JU. UaltodCaliloroi>llallk Mlosloo Vallq 116. UmtedCalllonolalluk Garden010ft! y1. UaitodCaliloroi>l!uk 1.aJuoa N'llUOI 118. UnltedCalilomlallant Yorba Li.oda I: Ra. 119. Unitcdc.JiforniaBank Del Amo Financial Center 120. Unileljjc.tiforni•Bant 1ooh..,. Tue 12L g::;i~lf..m.llanl: 122. \Jnitcd.Ca.lifom.iaBank 'lbaasand Ow 123, UnltodCalifornlaBaot ltedlsnds 124. UnJtcd.Califor:niaBank Omard 125. UnltodCalilomlallanl: Sum«·Vmnoat 126. United California llanl: OraopCoulJly Airport 127. UoltedCalflorniallut: MU.Ion Viejo 128. United California Bat. Highiond & Slatinr 12!1. United California llallk Colondo.sJema Madre 130. Umted Califonila Bui: Ming &: Wible 131, UnltedCalilonlaBW: Portemlle 132. UmtedCalilotnlaBanlt 'J\utin 133. United California Bank Vsotonillo 134. United Caliloroia llut: Brawley 135. UnltodCaliforoi>Banlt Lotewood 136. UnltedCalllornlallallk Airport" Century 137. United California Bank M-1alt 138:'ua11eo1 California Bani: LaHabn. 13', Umted Califomia llW: <;bulaVla.a 140. United Calllornla Btnl:. Or .... 141. UnitedCalifmlia.Bank Oceanside 142 United California Bank Balboa-Oencsee 14'3. United California Ba.nk EICajoo 144. United California Bank Penimula Center 145. Ul'liledCUlfomiaBant Lomu Santa Fe 146. United California Bani: ooni ... 14'7. UnitedCalifomiaBant Simi Valley 148. United California Bank Oakland Main 14.9. UnitodCalifomiaBmk North Olic:o · 150. United California Bank F'"'P0'1ID"1. 151. United CalifonUa Bank FoonblUldllnnnan B EN EFI CIAL~ StRVI~ $5 corrA Ma.A I ANAHllM DI•. Uftl 11_..,,.1 '"" Mm. 1•1 W. ~- HI W. ltll 11:.....Wns 11., W. LI ••tnu UI - Int ......... I~ JIU W, LIM9lll A~1- 0PIN t A.M.•t P.M-7 DAYS A Wiii • 152. Umted California Bank 190. UnltodCalilorniaBant Fremont ll~WllnutOect 1.Sl. UnitedCalifomiaBaat 191. UniteclCaliforniaBank Fox.Plaza Milltx. 154. Unltod c.Jilomiallut: 192. United California Bank Marynille ChicoMain 155. United California Bank 193. U-Callforoi>Bank Hanford Alm ..... Blossom Hill 156. United California Bank 194. UoiledCaliforniaBank Hayward Sacnmento Main 157. United California Bank 195. Unita!CalifomiaBaot: San Leandro Main Fn11DOMain ·158. United California Bank 196. UnltodCalilomiaBank Mountain View BuueValley 159. United California.Bank. 197. United California Bank Oakdale Suwm!le 160. UnitedCallfomiaBaot: 198. UaitodCali!amiaBa.t. Weed StuulyYale 161. United CalilonUi Bank 199. Ualled California llanl: Berkeley .Alomedo 162. United California Bank 200. Uolted Calllomia Bank Saa R&mon Alcosta Blvd. ~ng 163. United California. Bank 201. Umled CalllonUo llant Rodoo Eureka 164. United California Bank 202. UnitedCallloroi>llallk San Francisco Main Mt. Shasta 165. United California Bank. 203. United Calirornia Bank 1-'lanches~ Mall lt.edwood Oty 166. United c.Jifomia Bank 204. United CalliornlaBant. Haight and Belvedere s..1 ... 167. United c.Jiromia Bank 20.S. United Ca1ifomia Bant. West Portal and Ulloa Son ltahd 168. United California Bank 206. United CallfomiaBant Westgate Laurel 169. United Califonlia Bank 2rn. u.uted ea1uom1a 11an1: Burlingame Crmccnt City 170. United California Bank 2()a, United Califoruia Bant. Franklin-Webster Tower 171. United Californa :f 209. United California Bank San Andreas Men:ed 172..United California 210. UnitcdCalifamiaBIDt Los Altos Weberstown 173. Uniied California Bank 211. UnitedCalifomiaBant. Napa Madera 174. Uniled CaJifornlaBank: 212. United California Bant Florin Center Stockton Main 115. United Cal.ifomiaBank 213. UnitedCalifomiaBmt. Omtino Visalia 176. United California Bank 2J '4. United CalifomiaBant livcnnore Twenty-fint&K 177. United California Bank 215. United California Bant Turlock Lodi 178. United California Bant 216. UnitedCalifomiaBant: EICami~Pap Mill Nob Hilt . ~ 179. United California Bank 217. United CalifamiaBaat c .... Modesto 180. UnitedbtifornlaBank 218. United California Baal: Oroville South Saa Francisco 111. United Calllomla Blllk 219. United California Bank ParadiJC Salinas 182. United Calilomla llaol:• 220. UnicedCalifomi&Bant VanN~ Pacific Grove 183. United ifornia Bat 221. UoittdCalifomiallant Santa. Rosa CarmelRanobo 184. UnittdClliforniaJIU 222. United California :amt: Palo Alto Marina 185. United California llDt 223. UnitedCalifomlaB&nt. Vallejo 'New Monterey 186. Unit«I California But 224. Unil<d Califoroi>llallk San l.andto Ind-Carmel 187. United California Bu.t: 225. United California Bult WalnutCreekM&ia Seaside 188. UnitedCalifomi&Blat 226. UnitedCalllornia B-* U.Banoo Mootcny Main 18'. U'nited Cali!omialak Pittsburg can add to it any time in amounts of $'100 or more. At UCB your investment is guaranteed safe up to $20,000. Not · by the bank. Or by all 226 banks. But by an agency or the United m States go'o!emmenL L!J 1 · So you've nothing to lose but your worries . [!I I UNI I ED CAUFORNIA BANK M'UlllA l•t.e. ' UPI TtltP~Dle No Risks ' This Cambodian peasant is taking no ch·ances should his primary means of transportation, the elephant, break down . He is carrying an out of the ordinary spare -a bicycle -as he rides through a rural area near Phnon1 Penh. A Dog's Life Ar111y Dogs Left in Vietna 1n \VASH INGTON I AP l -is-perfectly all right to work Hundreds of military-trained him until he drops dead or becomes too ill to function dogs are being left in Vietnam (in which case he will be as the Nixon admlnistratio'n destroyed)," Janka¥.' \Yfote. brings the boys home fron1 Janko1v lists his unit as the the war. 59th Infantry Platoon Scout Difficulties in converling lhc Dog, l Ith Brigade. America] dogs into pets plus a rare Division at Due Pho, South disease I.hey often contract in Vietnam. the tropics prevents t h c Pentagon of f i c i a Is say ani1nals from retu rning to this military dogs receive as good country, the Pentagon says. if not better treatment as Instead, the canines are Gl's serving in Vietnam . destroyed when they are crip. But officials acknowledge pied in action or grow too they have the makings of a old for conUnued use as sen· sticky public relations pro- tries. scouts sniffing o u t blem in explaining why a dog 's boobytraps or Viet Coog-seek-ticket to Vietnam is one way. ing trac~ers. According to the Pentagon, Animal lovers are starting only one U.S. military dog to co1nplain that the dogs -has ever been brought back n1ainly German Shepherds -from Vietnam -750 are cu r· are ~etting atlcycat treatment rently assigned there. The rlcsp1te faithful service in canMe "''BS returned "for Vcitnam since July 1965. med i ca I re se arch and •·under present Army policy recruiting purposes.'~ not one of our hard-working \\'hen a dog's master ls kill· ;ind much decorated canh1e cd or reassigned, aoothe r man friends will return lo lhe is rotated to Vietnam to take t,;.S.A. alive," \Vrites a dog· his place . .J'he dog is retrained handle r from V ; et n a m . to obey his new leader. Once "Instead we will reward them an animal is unable I o ror a job well done by sen-pe rfor m his duties he is sup- t e n c i n g them to mass posed to be put to sleep, bul euthanasia.'' he may wind up being a The a u tho r . identifying mascot around a military himself as PFC David D. base. Jankow. said in an "open Jel· The Air Force. wl1.ich trains ter to c<mcerned citizens'" and provides dogs for all the 1vhich reached the Denver services. turns down requests Post that the dogs could in· froin people w:lnting them for deed be made into pels. pets. Jankow also argued the "A militarily trained dog ls military is doing "little, if conditioned to operating in a anything'' to find a cure for noisy, violent and somelimes 1hc disease cited as a n con f u s i n g combat en-I obstacle to the dogs ' return . vi ronment." one Pe 11 I a go n The malady is c a 11 e d document u•arns. Jdecj)athic Hemorganic Syn-Experts say a military dog drome, or bleeder's disease. cannot be completely detrain· \l'hich ca n be fatal to a dog ed because of th ... danger that unless treated early . The a loud noise may cause hin1 Army says it fears the disease to react violently. the docu· 11·ould spread through the ment said. United States if infected dogs "To place such an animal were brought from Vietnam. in.a civilian community would "The present Army policy be most hazardous and could slates that cvC'!1 1vhcn a dog ultimately lead to se rious hiiS contracted this disease it hu1na11 inj ury or dealh." ~O;;;:;N~LY~l~O~D~A~Y~S~Liei-FT~iiiiiiiiiiiiii DON'T GIVE UP ON YOUR INCOME TAX '•u oay !hl~t• ••• •• bad !hot yov (0"'1 toll IM dlflor· or>A ... , ... .., lo~ low end vovr Molh<i•·in-low1 h the! ....... , .. ........,;,,, , ... , ...... ,, w .11, I...., ali•tl H & l tloc• <-Mlpt Wt'll p•-••• th~<k, •nd _,...,_ !M o<cu"'tY tf '"'" ,.,.,, ... s.i '""' ,;,hn .., "" H & I lloc:l olli .. and .... 1ood ,_ ,,...,i.1., on "'- BOTH FIDHAl AND STATE s fii""".'""'°"""'""'""'"' OUAlANTll 35--"51-El!!J Wt 911t11anlH ituur11tt p,.ptirotio~ of ....,., to.II; r<ltum. If wt 1110kt .,..., t rrori that cost you all)' ptf>Olty •• lnlerttt, wt ,.;11 tltt ptnohy or lr1M» .. I. Americ.a'1 large1t tax Servic• with Over 4000 Office• C"t9 Met• 1171 Harbor llYlf \'I •1tck It. If 1tt11 Co1te M ... 2710 Hotb•r llwf, "" .... , .. Ct!lfl!t c ... 11rl COl'OH 4 .. M..- 2449 I . CHlt Hwy tit Ma.cAl'ltlvr 11¥11,J WEEKDAYS,., SAT. I SUN. f ·S Ph. 642°6t40 NO A'l'OINTMINT Hl4SSSARY • D.\lLY l'ILD; -11 -----4-· -.l. -Shop Monday through S.uftlay .9:30 .AM. to 9:30 P.M.; Sunday 12' Noon to 5 P:M. Sears Savings e PERrtlA·PRES'l'* Slac:k, ... ,ee our fine 5eleclion of trim, regular or e••u· 11 s1yle& •The Dacron J)Ol )cslrr 11nd j'Ollon blend orrc rs s uper b wrinkle re· lii!ila nce • r,·~· style, bell l oop~. and culT" e Full Cut 11ylfi> are cul fuller 1h1n ivy in the hip ror the 1na1ure. figure. • <\1ailable in Jrecn, blue or b ro1oo•n e In 111rn 'i! i;i7.r§ Rrgul ar i.~I Fu II Cut Slat•l..1_2·for 11 l . . on Casual Spring Fashions • Cla,1ic·Style J•ckel ••• circle 1houl· c;ler1for 1heer comfort • f'abric i1 Blue •·C"• polye~ler 111d .-\vril• r1you ""·i1h stre(ch nylon waist • :! roomy sl1~i; p0Cket1, sippered fronl • Completely m1chine w11hable. .A.. vailable in yello""·· hluf', ~en ind ~11n • Size11m11l 10 X-lar1e R•1ul•rlll .99 • JJ•il ·LoP •. ~nit6 ••• Look 1harp for • SIX'ing ~·ith. Oar: Lon k~its of Te~·. traliied• 'n)'.lOn. ijn your choice n( • mock turtle.,,. pl1cke1 s1yle11 • Smart r.ib koi!J>ottoms and cuff11 • In vibr1nt shades of blue: grre'n, liro""·n. yellow, vani lla. Rivy. black • :-Oize1 small, n1rdium, larl!t'. X large R~1ular '"'· 99 1 '1 l ~ .:l .. f I l ' " ; I l ,. { • ' Sears~ 7 ; f • I. If I! /' - "" Yl1r-i/!( 11 :i . )/('tf' Sears • ....,. ....... '" ·-· 111 ... 111 ClMOOA ••111r ~ .... , " _,. .. ''""" •"••u OI •·-· Q •·••n (Oflll'n)H Ml 1•1111, Nf l •l'•I MOn~ MO ...... , H"'A),llOf.lut:lt .. ND(O, COYIM4 tH•ffll -'#000 Oii l ·tlll Shop Nlthh ~.,!hr•"''""""'•' •1ao """· '' e1io '·•·· h!MI., 12 fll••11 ••a P.M. • ' ............ ,,. °''""'. --""" 14111 " ...... .,,.,,. ''lll4Mll Hl•ffl l, IJl·•lll ~ INl W111 l'fCO Wt ... , .. llMfl 1111• 111 '·»r1 1111""1 n ... _ -·•II ......... _ .... ,,. . ...... _. . ...,,,. _COMf ....... ....... fCH:IAMU .... 1111 1'4U.l'fNl· ... I~ ....... .............. I.II ~--- I ' F L -,. ,, OAlLY Pl LOl Monday, April 6, l~O ~Future of Cranes Now in ·courts '!'. By KATHLEEN McCULLOUGH CORPUS CliRISTI , T e x . (AP) -The always perlious future of the whooplng Crane is taking aoother turn - into court. One of blrddom's be s t fr iencl.9, the-1udubon ~y, plans to see\'. legal 'action to block what it sees as yet another threat to the tenuous life line of the few crane s still alive in the wild. America at. one time had three. great flocks. One fell victim to a late-season bur· causes a form of pollutlon l)'atem, ·HaD declares. nus rlcane which struck Louisiana. of the water, says Richard marlnq lite apawm only In Another disappeared in Mex-Hall, a Corpus Christi lawyer ·the stullow bay water. ico without known reason. representlnl the Aud u b o D Yet no one apparently bas , Thus only 14 blrds rema1oed Society. really proven lhat damage oe- ln 1937. ThJs flock wintered ' 1 The dredging ope.ration curs, and the finaJ court case ln far South Texas at the itself results in heavy siltation may hinge on that. Aransas National W 11 d I i f e - deposits of large amounts Gordon Hanse, naturalist at Refuge. Summers found them of silt in other areas -the the refuge, said that it the at their nesting grounds ' at result of "hJch b to kill dredging scares off the marine Great Slave Lake, fir nOrth various types of marine plants tile or makes it impossible in Canada. nd ·us1 ally despoil the for spawning in the ·shall'"*' The naturalists demonstrat-a l gener v .. ed what they can do. Guard-entire area." water, lhen the whoopers' ing the tall, shy birds as if The dredging barges, which maln diet will be destroyed. they were moon dust, tbey from shore appear to be dolng Hamen said it is unkno~ built the Oock to 56 free birds nothing much even w he n if such dredging d a m a I e ' by this year. working, dJg lnto the bottom would be irreversible, but •• IN CAPTIVlTY of the bay'a waters, Hall says. "we're taking a gamble by '-.J """"-lh hell toying with this. We don't Anothe r 23 are in caplt'vity .iu111:y scoop up e s s, know, really, 1·ust what effect clean them and return the -a hedge against dlsaiter fiilt to the sea. shell dredging may have on striking the wild ones. "On a clear day you can the ecology of this area, and, The Audubon Society now see 8 stream of thts sediment in• turn, on .the wtJoope11. The has discovered what may -carried in the current lot point ls, it's just . too risky or may not -be a threat 1 th a situation to gamble on." •-the '-ee 56 and 11 has miles. It not on y causes e Fl . ed w u . 1 thi te 1 1 1 ve comparues are nam gone to court to stop all shell suspension ° 8 ma r a n In ·the suit as well as . the the water but It also results dredging in San Antonio Bay in a 35-foot hole in the bottom Parks and \Vildlife Depart.- near the Arkansas refuge. of the bay," Hall said. The ment -the latter bec;tuse Defendants are shell dr<dg-!lo --··-• 1 b lt luued the dr<dglng permlta. Ing companies which dig lnto current "' .. vcu11.1. e ' Dredging company officia1s the coastal shelf in the Gulf refuge. are reluctant to talk because of Melico off the whoopers' GEi' PERMITS the Issue is emotional with refuge. Hall said the companies are some persons and beca,ute it The shells, remains o f given permits that allow them b in litigation. crustacean! which died eons to dredge anywhere ln th~ But the birds will not be f!go. are fine for cement, bay. much concerned· for a thne. GET M SJ,* f OR YOUR :MONEY .•. • at KEYSTONE SAVJN<IS " I ~ ' • Keylfon• always J>OY1 the -on lntvrecl MVmfl oll-ed by low'.r Com• In today ... 9et the N<H ... ..iect tfle ·-1n91 pion lot' r- 5" . PASSBOOK PASSBOO.K , "· 5%" 6" / 1 ' ·• CEJ(TlFlCATE CERTIFICATE • Rll SAFI DEPOSIT IOX w._ ...._ .f IJOOO II_.......,. • th.W-.,..,, fWfUIM .,,,.~t. ........ • Dh'---"',......A~ •N•.W... ........ ~ • " ......... .,. rlfrlttM IWfM t9 ....,_. . ~ ,,.~..,.,_ ,,~_,,,,., ,.,,~ ,~.._,J..,. .'~ fwlltl,..,.. OWIMIHll-M"/Jfldl.fft • ~ _ ... lfwltl!dr11-pl"illl fo ~ ' • MittllfWm klMfOll '100.000 •Minimum twm 1 ,.,,,-. G1111r.m.,d-i/ .,r.Jd 1.1''Jo • Etlmln11111n lldju1tlld If whlrdrll~ fl(for lo mllturlty ....,..... i.. ,.., olta ..,. ty.IHJ 0-• . • • FREE MONTHLY HORC"SCOPU .,.,.,, ,,., Jtl '",,.,, A«twfJ ..... ., ,. $10,000 KElSTONE SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION a-rd W. eo.,.,.. Presidirnt ' I, binder in concrete, and to "The dredging operations It is about the season for spread as a gravel-like surface make waste of the whole area the Dock to begin its 2,500-mile on secondary roads alXI drive.. -when one Day Is stripped, journey to Great Slave Lake ways. they just move to another," where everyone hope!' it will The dredgers have no desire said the lawyer: bring forth a lol of lltile to dig Into tbe land the cranes The hole in the noor of whoopers. • lxscutln Office: WESTMINSTU • ANAHEIM Olfico .5ss N. E:ucllcl l I 1#11 a-fl ....... ._, "' Ha' p~""' "'-• 193-2~91 opp. Broodway·llobin-'• n.ont1 "2·7«0 I : ' use our money! occupy. They . co u I d n ' t , the bay destroys vital nursery U is possible that the babies anyway, for state Jaw sharply ground for a number of fish nTiving in Texas next rail reKUlates their actions. and marine organisma that may never see the great Dredgers cannot dig within are a link in the ecological barges oU their winter tpne. haUamUeofany areadefined'.1~:..:._:_.::.::._::._::::_..::::::=:::::~:::..::.::..::::.::::=-::.=:::..:;:.:=-.:._---,:';----"-'----------------------­ ,. ' " • " ' . ' eoni wait '111 Api1I 151h. 5"l Moms Plan now and appty for money 1o pay your taxes or an advance reftJld on your tax retum. On approval you can borrow from $100 to $5,000, or more, with payments scheduled to frt your Income. On tax refunds over $300, you can repay when your check comes In a few months. as a nursery ground for fish or a food-producing area for wildlife. The law also bans dredging in waler less than 4 feet deep within haH a mile of such areas. • The Parks and Wildli f e Department administrator, W. J . Cutbirth Jr., said, "To the best of my knowledge, there has never been any shell dredging within a full mile of the shore of the refuge." , Prompt servlCi!, too. You may even have your money the day you apply. That's how fast we can Sf!'/ "yes" at Morris Plan. Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport Beach-3700 Newport Boulevard Olhlr CfflceS -CalifonU He added that In rectnt months hls reports !bow there has been no shell dredging at any distance offshore from the refuge. Then why all the fuss? EAT BABY FISH First, whoopers eat baby fish, blue plale crabs, snall shrimp and other marioe life in the bays, esluaries and shallow water at the refuge. They also ~t planl!!I, and naturalists sow crops for the birds to graze. Second, shell d r e d g i n g 1Break through in color photography! I ~ GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! No t rhc old srylc rimed or painted black & whirc photos. * Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money refunded. :!: For All Ages! Babies , children , o<lults. * limited Off er! One per subjccr, two per famil y. APRIL 5th THROUGH 12th I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ; I •' BUENA PARK INGLEWOOO SANTA ANA I I CANOGA "PARK LONG BEACH SANTA FE SPRINGS I I COMPTON OLYMPIC & SOTO SANTA MONICA 1 1 COVINA Sears ORANGE SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1 fl MONTE PASADENA TORRANCE I I GLENDA~E --""'"°'PICO ot Rimpou VALLEY I HOLLYWOOD · POMONA VERMONT of Slau1on I . • . I t-Photo llour• All .~1nrt1 Sunday12 Nnon lo 5 1'.Af. I Pl10IQ llot,r.J 1 2 lo 8 Da ily I ----------------------------------------' ( . ( - Sears Pric:eo Effectne ~nning Today ·' SAVE 24o/o to 33o/o ! Cantrece ll®:i Stretch Nylons land Panty Hose • Once it didn't matter what a gal put on her legs .· •• not > •J.99 ao anymore •Now it mitten ft1r1 much whelher or not yo ur hooiery fi ll preciaely •And that alone ii .. aaon enough to be taken with Ca,.. treeo II• bote end panlJ' hooe in Cubioo ohadea. Bare Beige, Soneet, Mocha • • Panty Booe in replar knit wilh nnde heel hi petite, average, tall proportioned 1lles · • R egular knit hoee with nude heel in medium and long proponioned lengths Sears ____ ........ ·-·-· (----· --... -·-,_ .... ,tll.. ---... -· M-----II ------...,, ___ .._._... .... AA .. Nl ............ l:l ... 119 t •.& .. Panty Hose Regular 9~ Hoiie • pairs • pairs __ ........ -~ ........ . --·---" "".-.... ... _.,,...,. --......... ...," -·Mt•t.--....... " __ -·· ,, ... _,_._., ..... $ $ ' •-•-a....no -"""'" flt.UI -.---.... 11 .. ,_, ..,, .... '" __ _ ........ . • • I " llPIT ........ DYNAMITE ISN'T HARD TO PURCHASE Students Chris Mead and Carole· Eberly Prove It Where's Rap Brown? No One Really Knows NEW YORK (AP) -Where is H. Rap Brown? The militant black power leader has been missing 26 da)'!. He was last seen March 8 by his wi£e when he left here for a Bet Air, Md., court appearance, according to his attorney, William Kunstler. "We've had no word \\'hat- soever. It's incomprehensible why we haven't heard from him," declared Kunstler, who says he doesn't know wbt>re Brown is. Brown's wife could not be reached. The FBI says it does not know B r o w n ' s wbere- ebouts. Brown was to stand trial on chai:ges of aJ'!OO and incite- ment to riot stemming from a 1167 disturballC!: in Cam- bridge, Md. 'Mleiriil hi! been reset for April 30 in Ellicott City. --Dorchester County State's Atty. William B. Yates Jr., prosecutor In the case, said, "I have nothing to base any cor\jttlure on, but l Ullnk he'll awear for trial ." Yates said the adititional seve n-year penalty for not showing migtit be some incen· tlve for Brown to appear. "\\'e have an old expression down here in Cambrid~J': that ap.. plies," he added. "he'll either haul sand or cut fish '' - meaning Brown will either show or not show. ••t feel this. really. that he's not dead ," Kunstler said Thursday. "And I think hl'l wife shares that feeling . l think that somewhere. some· time he'll tum up and make a stat.eme.nt. "lf ~ h e ' ii underground." Kunstler said. "it would be hard for him fOTell anyC1ne. How do you communicate? By Jetter! By phone? Then you give yourself ;i,way." The doorman at l\1rs. F un Too Lon g TOKYO (APl -Police al· tributed the death of ~kichi Saiuragi , 32, a confectionary salesman, to cardiac paralysis resulting from exhaustion in· curred in playing mah jong nonstop ror 26 hours. Brown's apirtment house in Upper Manhattan said Thurs- day he hasn't seen Brown, "in weeks, maybe 11lOl'lths." He also had not seen Mrs. Brown recently, and no one answered the door at her apartment. Kurus:Uer said she had been staying with friends in various places since the address of the apartment was printed in newspapers. Brown left for Bel Air March 8. On fl.farch t , a car b)e\v up just south of Bel Air on the road to Baltimore. In the wreckage were the boditS of two friend.1 ol Btown -RaJph E. Featherstone and William H. "Che" Payne. "There art three possibili· ties," Kunstler said recently. "One, that he was taken out of the blown-up car before it was blown up aDd has been kept somewher&-kidnapt.d- or murdered. That's t h r: theory th a t worries ltirl. Brown the most. "Two, the t}\eory of the authorities : that the two men blew themselves up while carrying a device with some nefarious purpose -perhaps to boll'b the nearby state troopen' barracks -and that Rap was not involved. "Or three, that he's under· ground, in or out of the U.S." Kunstler 1ald he was inclined to doobt the thlnt theory. Brown "coukl have split." he said. "althou~h ifs not likely in my mind ." He noted that Brown bad al· ways shown up at every pre- vious trial. "even at a much headier time -when he was a much more hunted man th;1n now." Brown 26. is appealing a five-year Dri!IOft senteoce ror violating the federal nrearm:q act. He was convicted in 1968 in New Orleans. The terms of his ball limited his travel to New York, except for trial appearances. If he fails to appear for the Maryland trial, the jud((e mav declare hi!'I $10,000 ball forfeit. 1'he defense unsuccessfully pleaded for an inderlnlte ad- journment on groun& that Bto\"1 could not be found. "We'll be there on the 20th," said Kunstler. "If he doesn't show up, we're thinking of 1 number of things -seeking to invoke some kind of federal relief. But I can't say what." YOU HAVE A VOICE IN COSTA MESA'S FUTURE Let's Keep Councilman Wil Jordan e EXPERIENCED e DEDICATED e RELIABLE 14 YURS OF P-R-O-Y.£-11 PUBUC. SERVICE Allll CIVIC ACCOMPLISHMOOS LET'S KEEP JORDAN f8] VOTE APRi i: 14, 1970 DeM blftt, Ch"' .. 'IJI Newpett, C.... M ... I • M~, APlll fl, 1970 DAILY PILOT l:> , Dy11amite Easy to. Pnrehase in Miehigan '4 we J't'Plled. troduced in the M J c h i 11 n ~tilliken said t n hls veto 11~ Jeg\JlaUoo ts sorely By CAROLE EBULY He looked somewhat slartl· legislature in lhe past year. mea.aage. ~" to attack "an tJ· ... alJ\18 MEAD ed and asked, "how much ?" Ten' died In committee and State Police Director Col. lrtmely ter10UI probltm. It's LANSING. Mich. (UPI) -oAbout 1 dozen sticks, I Ille lllb. was vetoed by Go~ Fredrick E. Davids 1 a Id, an awful thlna: for pollUclans W• walMd into a hardware ------------- or other cltlzen1 to Mve to 10 through lUe wondlrinc whether they'll be blown up wbed tbey .Caft their car1." aior. lbe other day ud guess, thlt ahould do it." William G. Mil Uken, who sai ouuaUy bou&bt 1 b 0 m b The clerk returned with It would cause "unreasonable ......... t.. al blowin mW.l change for a PO bill and the hardship on thousan4s or law- _,_.... I up 1 bundle ol dynamite. He hand· abiding cititen's sportsmen T~u eMler than buyinl ed It over underneath a 1lgn engaged in handloeding am- ll.sti"• the r I g o r o u s re· munUon." ....... ayrup II the clnlpto<e ·~ next door. For f,1, we walked q u I re men l s for buying The bill would have brought out with ti stlcta of dynamite handguns and plstols: nitroglycerine, d y n a m I t e , in a· paper bq. No quesUcr.;11 All that was requited· from black powder, s m <i k e I e s s were asked and n 0 ex· U!J, however, was our names powder and other dangerous planations ottered. on the bill ol sale. We gave explosives under state control. Nut door, we had to prove them, &lightly modified, and It would have re quirt. d we were over 21 and slan they were accepted without purchasers to be 11 years Of our names and addresses in question. He was not required older and obtairf a police the pharmacist's drug book. by law to ask. permit. we were told that In MJchla:an Under currerit law, anyone "The permit requirement of we could be arrested for can buy as much dynamite this bill would place undue buying more ttian four ounces in 1.Uch.lgan as h e wants, burdens on sportsmen, sellers ot a syrup containing codeine without telling his age, hls and police agencies without phosphate in 14 hours. name or the reaSOll ht. 'f&Ms making a signific8bt COD- To see how easily dynamite the uploslvel. tribution to the reduction· of WANTED Local territory, will Mt lnterfer• with prtMftt IH. Driete lfN'• time, • .,. nln91 or week enclL You can m1ke up to $20.00 ,., h.ur. Ate M blrrler, but automobilt ••Mntlal. You di no Mtllnt u you takt o.,.r tccounh we have alrudy contractfd for. C11h requirement 11 $1500 • -pa rt time anti $6000 • • Full-tlmo which Is •urocf. 0..r -..,.. unique method of .. m,,. color post c1rd1 lhr'ff9h •utolnltlc rnerchandher1 ha1 prov.., a WI wlnf'IW. You r dujl .. will cot1slst of M ly ...iclnt..coflectloft1 and kooplnt ln,,..,tory In the equipment. lmmocfloto ••oh Income. Thft -rtvtllty •vali.blo only fo r • llm itH time •• thor1 1rt enly a few terrltor .. 1 open. There 11 no llmtt to th1 potential of thl1 bWlnetii For further d,itlls write la,.. lnduttrlM. 17171 · loach llvd., Suite 0 , Hvntlngton leach, C.llf, 92647. (PIHM 9lvo your tolophono number) or coll (714) 146-1152. ,, could. be bought, we called, Eleven bUls regulating sales criminal acUvities involving at random, a small hardware oI explosives have been In· dangerous exp Io s l v es,• Mon. 1jliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllliil "Do you sell dynamite?" DINERS "Oh yes," came the friendly reply. "How much do you want?" FUG"lY .. PRINCESS CRUISES ·TO MEXICO "How is It "'1d?" " "You can have a slick or TM'NEL a ca9e, whatever you want." "How much ii it?" "'l'wenty.four ..... a stick." 2075 SAN JOA9UIN HILLS Al the door of the clutt.red, ROAD musty store, a cterk in ms NEWPORT l 'EACH mld·5'1& wed if he C011ld help us. 644-4600 "We'd like some dynamite," Sears J ~ " LOS ANGELES To ACAPULCO with coils •I PU~RTO VA LLARTA, MAZATLAN & MANZANILLA. 11 , 13 , 14 Days. From $395 to $1495 DEPARTURES: April 17, May I, 15, Juno I, 15, 29, Aug. 3, 24, Sept. 14 FOR A DELUXE VACATION !SHIPS ltl!GISTElllEO IN ITALYI . ·~-.. ~·~~ ~· ... ~ -Ct'"-~ ~. , -""" r ID . ~ Soft Cotton Terry Sle~p-Play Outfits • Rib neck and C9lla .. ke a n!liekimg .ddilioll .. 1 ~ piece 1leeper • Fine qmlity cotton k'rTY with -p rlM!lelten dOWft frent .,.ct bolh lep I •Doable fahlie fed, Maehine WW1h.hle md dryable ' . • Si1ea: •••ll (6-9 ·mo;a.. 13119 lblJ JMdi•m (1%-18 mot,. 20,;!i Ibo.) SAVE 14%! Snapsiae Shirts ......_,..,. -.. • Pkg.·orJ Pkg.ofJ ' ---·-~-~-· .) Pkg, I ' £2 p • SAVE 23% on Waterpr"Oof Pants · Sl.i9 Pkg. or 3 Pk~. orl SAVE 16% to 27% ON DIAPERS •REGULA R 3.45 DUR.~­ SOFI' Prcfolded. Sanfor. izcd cotton. E:rclusiYely Sears. • REGULAR2.99GALZE Fast drying. Heavyweight cotron, but lightweight to wear • YOlJR CHOJ CI) 2 Pkp. , U•e s .. n R e•olving Charge SAVE 34%! Cri b.Size Bt.nlet SAVE 34%! Receiving Blan keu I I :;.,;tar 187 Jlib knit SuPima• co11on nc>bind short 1Jttm. Fu.11 double front. Ne•born, small, medium. R~l•r 137 .'HetYJ Jlu.tc, lll •inyl tcar resistit.n1. Ny1on covered waist•ln:elutics. Ncwborri, S·M·L '(0 to 0 mot.). Kc•p hlbY co111forrable. ....... "·" 1.97 ~;:;'~~tt 2 ,_ 91• ·Sears ·-.. ~'' ---"' Jot• ...... ti -~''"" ltO ..,.., ..... ,_u., ..... n,...,. c.......-....... , ----........ -.-1 ............... ca. ..,.._...., --"'"' .................... ......, .. MA ..... NitP~.....,,2..._ .. ,, ... 1 • -IUCll .... ,,, __ .. _. .. ....,, -Nt•t1 .. ·-..... ,11. ,., ..... ,, ktylon polyester assorted prints, ~-in •. nyJoft binding. M~hinc w"hlhlc. Buy sc:•· crtl at Sean! . . ............ ," ----,_.. -• :r..-,. ....... ._ ...... , .... t18'•M l ea a IS I • T.-..., ..... ' J Cotton md •rylic blatd. Soft ind prettJ. -.piped. bca•7Weigbt • .Mac: ti ;•e w15h1bk • .-.-.. ........ ............ ..._ --.. -" .. .._ __ -·- - I l • • • , " • .. Look A l ike Arthur L. Johnson. 77 . who has an uncanny resem- blance to Abe Lincoln, astonishes school children and tourists as he strides through the California State Capitol halls. The look-alike quality is empha- sized as he pauses before a portrait of the 16th president in the Assembly. Johnson, a San Jose lawyer. bills him self as ''America's unofficial and uncompensated ombudsman and Lincoln's chief aide in America." GOP Incumbents Told Don't Look Elsewhere WASJ-IINGTON (UPIJ - 11ouse Republica ns have come up with a set of figures calculated to discourage their members from running for Senate seats or governorships. These statistics i11dicate that the odds are more than 2 to I against them winning the other offices. The advice comes a liltle late. ~tore than a dozen Republicans in lhe House are candidate$ for 1970 .senatorial or gubernatorial nominalions and there may be one or Tlvo Colleges Plan Course F or Marines Nearly 200 Marines from local military installations will "hit the books" this month. at Orange C-Oast an d Golden \\lest culleges under lhe new govemment r in a n cc d pro- gram. ··operation Transfer,'' initiated solely for ~1arines. College officials said that the ~larines 'A'ill be released Frum service duty in the af- tc n1oons lO attend the classes at the \\10 junior colleges. Thc you n g Lcathernecks no \v h::ive no job skills \\'hich they can use upon re1urn1ng 10 civ1han life. ~!any of them <·ame into the ser\'ice right 0111 or high school or before the~· 11 rre j!radualed. The i\l;1rinl'' 11re To be discharged lr'(>tll nc111r dutv in the next few m~inth., • Fort;. of the ~oung rncn will hr [r;uned a, police patrolmen nt GWC. Tra1n1ng in ~elding "'ll bc g11en lo 6~ of the Devil J)og., :..t OCC and the two more. In a review of the national electians of 1962, 1964, 1966 and 1968, the G 0 P con- gressional c a m p a i g n com- mittee found that 38 House members -25 Republicans and 13 Democrats -quit to run for Senate seats o r governorships. Twelve were elected and 26 'ft•ere defeated. Eight Republicans won and 17 lost. Four Democrats won and nine lost. Both parties prefer to de- fend seats they bold witb in· cumbents ~'ho already have shown that they know how to campaign and win. A seat for which no incumbent is runn ing is often a seat in jeopardy. Although 38 Republican In- cumbents in the House were de(eated in the Democratic landslide of 1964, only three seeking reelection have been unhorsed since that election. But in special elections to fill vacancies in 1969, Democratic ~andidates won three House seats previously held by Republicans. Republican House members who are announced or pro- spective candidates for the Senate this year include Reps. Robert Taft Jr., Ohio; Clark McGregor, Minn.; William V. Roth, Del.: William C. Cramer. Fla.; George Bush, Tex.; Laurence J . Burton, Utah: Lowell P. Welcker, Conn.: William E. Brock, Tenn.; Thomas S. Kltppe, N.D.: Richard L. Roudebush, Inc .. and John S. Wold, Wyo. Republican candidates for governorshi~ include Reps. Thomas J . Meskill, Conn., Albert W. \Vatson, S.C., and Donald E. Lukens, Ohio. House Democrats have a much shorter list o f in- cumbents trying to move to other offices. remainder <ii the men 1,1•ill l•----------be lrainerl <1~ t e l r 1 i s 1 o n service repa1 rrnt'n and aulo mechanics. bo1h of which \\'ill be taught at Orange Coasl. The purpose of the new •ducation progr::i n1 is to help le ssen the blo"· a rcr1 iceman receives 11·hcn he is discharg- •d-from the scrl'ice \\'ith no 'rior Job skill 11r experience. POWtRFUI PLUNGEI CLfAlS CLOGGED TOILETS f!MVll AGAIN tflet tic• fMllttt _. r-r ..ilt'f .--e.w. TO.I LAFLIX• Toilet ~ Plu- um11ts ordine'l' pluac~ Thl\lollu. dol!i iiot pen'n>l romprftttd •ir M _, ..._ tO 1plMb t.c.k « CKt,pe. With 'Dllll .. llle fvU .,,_.re pl- tbr•Wlh' I.lie clo&1ln& m••• end """'~ It 60-We. , ~ SJON VUIH·•ACK e tt:Mfl"I ,....,., CAN'f •ID 11.IJOUNO • TN'IMD T11.ll 81VQ 11.llt•tlOHt ,It 01it tM OlnUIM 'tollell•' 126J ., MAltOWAll STOii$ MARY BIRD'S We lcome Nei!{hbor Now Comes To Irvine If you're 1 new resident, 1 speci1I invitation will be extended to j o I n th• Wel- come Neighbor · Newcomers Club of Irvine. C1ll 833-2517 Le t us htlp you get 1cqu1int- td In the community wi th civic org1ni11tlons ind local businesses. ___ ._ . ~---~--------· '{, ....... ' ..... Nixon K11ows ••• It's not easy to report sports, adverti se bor~o.ins, carry your favorite cartoons,. write up a wedding, record history and analyze global events ... in short, to ·make anything that happens in the world local news. q nly the newspaper . . . • can do it. We know it's not on easy job, but we accept fhe challenge. DAILY PILOT ( J f ' ' I · l • -... ----"-~ • ' . •• ' ,. I. I J j I l J I " -····----~-------------------------------------- UP1Tt l8M .. ~Tal~e Five' Tired n1embers of the 1st Air Calvalry Division in Tay Ni nh, Vietnam take a break for lunch beside the knocked·out hulk of a tank overl\1rned when Communist gunners fired more tha n 200 rounds of r oc ket and n1ortar fire at a support base near her e. 24 U.S. troops died in the action and 54 of the enemy. A B e t te1· M ouse? Four-pure1it Mic e Brecl SAN ANTONlO. Tex. (AP) - Beatrice ~1 intz has built a better mouse. Dr. ~1intz is a cancer researcher and her OC\lo' kind Of OlOUSC is a "mosaic mouse," -· one wi th four parents. So far Dr. Mintz has bred more than 1.000 mosaic mice. each one with two mothers and two fathers. And so far. she said, the multiple pa rentage has n ' t resulted in any u n u s u a I generation gap -all the offspring of the n1osaic 1nicc are norma l. Dr. Mintz. a senior men1brr of th~ Institute for Cancer Research in Philadelphia, said 1'1onday that mosaic mice arc be tter for studying genetic diseases than mice with the no rmal ~o mpl e m ent of parents. Herc's ho\v she docs it : Tu'o fertilized mouse eggs, each with its own set of parents. arc allowed to divide a fc\v tin1cs in their original mothers . Then the young embryos are ren1oved fro1n the original mothers and plac('d in a cul· ture mediu1n in the laboratory , 11•hcre they continue develop- ing. At this point a chemica1 is used to dissolve the n1cm· brane around each en1bryo and the pair of embryos is l)Ushcd together \Vilh a sn1all glass rod. The cell surfaces st ick fi rm· ly to each other and the sti ll nor1nal, but double-size em- bryo is formed. This mosaic giant is then placed b y surgery into the uterus of a ''pseudo-pregnant" f e ma I e mouse. A ··pseudo-pregnant" mouse is one that has been mated \Vith a sterile male. In her, the giant embryo soon returns to norma l size. •·\Ve've rai~d over a thousand of these to r ipe old age:· Dr. ti1intz told a seminar for science writers held by the American Ca ncer Society. The first mosaic mouse v.:as bnrn on New Year's Day In 1965 and since then t he Philaclclphla laboratory has been studying gene control of cell di!ferenta lion, ge n e t i c diseases. mechanisms of ag· ing, brain organization and behavior. U1ilictpp i1iess Buildup Causes Ca1npus Death SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The suicide of a college youth Is typically not an impulsive act by "some kid on a drug tri p·· or under c n n1 p u s pressure, but the result ur years of accumulating unhap- piness, says the co-conductor of a two-yea r study. "It's a ve ry serious thing for a human being to decide lo dispose of hiinself. and almost in variably we found that it ta!:es at leas! a fourth of a lifelhne for it lo happen to an intelligent youngster,"' Dr . ~f ichael I... Peck told th(• national 1.'0nve ntion of the A n1 ~r ican Orthopsychialric Association. The University of Southern California til cdical Schoo I psychology professor, a con- sultant with the Los Angeles Suicide Prevention C e n t e r , n1ade a preli1Tiinary report on a 1967-89 study he did with Dr. Albert Schrut on a grpnl from the Research Foundallon of the N alional Association for ~lental Hca\lh. He said they a ssesse d suicides and suicidal behavior at 52 Southern California col- leges with about 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 :studenl.s, represe nting ubout 5 pe rcent or all co I l cg c students in the United States. "Almost uni versally, ~, c learned that youthful suicide is the result or a chronic con· dilion that bullds up from an early age, wllh a strong clc· ment of parental influence in· volvcd,'' he said lat er in an Interview. ....._ '·The impression tha t a disturbed young person had been on LSD or getting bad grades just did not hold v.·ater." Early signs bui ld up in the child's pc rs on a I i t y and behavior hy about age 12 or 13. he said the study showed. "He begins not relating to anyone. becomes a loner. as a product of his growing despair," Peck said. "By the time he reaches college, he has very few con- tacts, no social sex, and in- dulges in less drug usage than the non.suicidal student." A n1ajor reason is pare ntal pres:surc, Peck said. "\Ve may legitimately ask, hoy,· did he get U1at way? Since the study revealed no major overt di sturbance in the parents. how is it that parents were stil l seen as playing a major contributing role? "The careful study revealed a pattern in the parents of much overt striving f or themselves and their children lo be successful, and a ten- dency to not accept other kinds of communication from their children." Peck said children's feelings of unhappiness, frustration or failure were either ·ignored. denied or met by s u c h defensive hostility as: "What have you got to be unha ppy about? You have eve rything." When the child failed lo live up lo parental expectations. he felt a tremendous humilla· tion. Peck said. Helps Shrink Swollen , Inflamed Hemorr hoid Tissues As It Relieves Pain And Itching MOlldq, Aprll 6, 1970 DAILY "LOT J 7 • Fresh fashions! Exci ting home : furnish ings! A sunburst of.val ues in every department, at all May Co stores accordion pleated all-occasion dress 10.99r•slularly14.99 A spring-into-summer whirl. Slinky nylon and acetate dre ss with o full circle of oc· cordion pleats. Practical as well os pretty -.it's. washable . Choose yours in yell ow or blue ~-at a 4.00 saving. Sizes 10-18. ~d.ger store. dnisSes 816 bold striped flar,e pants at a savings 4. 79 rogu lorl y S.99 Latin-flavored flares irt two greal slyles. Select four-pocket or two-pocket models- both with belt loops and zipper front. No iron polyester/cotton. Vivid stripes on white ground, lo get noliced everywhere. 6-16. budget store, sportsweor 800 print patio loungers of easy-care cotton 7.99 regul arly 9.99 A great collection of long loungers with sohly flared }'angel" bock. All of washable cotton. Perfect for lounging p round the house, patio or informal ·enterta ining all spring and sun1m er. Small, medium, large. budgel $/ore, dre~!>es 8 10 Italian sandals for spring into summer 2.99 regula rly S.99-6.99 Spe<:iolly reduced. Soft leather sandals with comforta ble podded insoles to kee:p you on you r feel. Many stro p styles, some featuring fl oral vamps. Not all sizes in. all colors. 5. I 0 in !he group. Sorry, nb size 9V2 budget 11or•. wemen's shoe1 81~ m1y co south coast pl111, son di190 fwy •I bristol, cost• m111, 546-9321 shop mond1y thru s1tu rd1y I 0 am lo 9:30 pm, sundey noon 'Iii 5 pm 1 , • basket bags with handle-interest 5.99 regula rly 7.99 Your choice of soft Viscose royon or pl astic coated rattan bogs.· Leal her handles .and trim, o r handsome bamboo handles. Wash- able pl aslic lining. Insid e zipper pocket. Many color selections for now inlo sumi:ner. budget stofe, hondbog~ 827 save on micro mesh nylon panty hosiery 99c r~g ularly 1.39 Pe rfectly fitting ponly hose wi lh nude heel., reinforced toe. Nylo n mic ro mesh that won't. bog or sag at the knee. Suntan, spice, coffee bean. off.block, off.white, mont-more. One si ze fits everybody. budget t1ore, hosiery 807 MAY CO BU DGET STORES r ; . I I 1 • • • JI DAlLV PILOT Metal Meter An anti-hijack system, consisting of two aluminum poles and a meter, is demonstrat¢ ~ere during a T\VA press· conference. Used at undisclosed loca- tions; the device measures amounts of ferrous met- als carried by passengers. lt emits no rays and is harmless. Aid to Parents Drug Problems Hit Tliem CHAPEL HlLL, N.C. (UPI) -When pollct arrest a youth on drug charges they take him to jail. But 1vhere do the p<1rents go~ ~Jome to si t behind closed curt.ains a\11ay from the ac- cusing loOks of society, in many cases. But a group of parents in Chapel Hill is seek- ing a be her answer. Since January, !hey have been ho l ding weekly discussions. boning up o n drug s and searching f o r understanding of the \\'Orld their children live in. The group is an off-shoot of the Chapel Hill Drug Action Committee, a citizens group working to combat an in- creasing drug problem in this University of North Carolina community. It includes aboul a dozen parents who either know or suspect their teen-age children are experimenting \vi th drugs or. in some cases, have crossed the line to become addicts. Chapel Hill architect J oseph Hakal, one of the founders of the committee, likens ii to Alcoholics Anonymous. "We can at leasl listen to some parent who is goh1g through it with a child." he said. Hakal. whose son was ar- rested on drug charges last May. says since researching the drug situation in Chapel Hill, he has found that "anything" is available within five minutes. "The kids are absolutely ex- perts. They know all about the organic and chemical structures of the drug s. Parents are really out of ii. Uit>v are so naive." A \\'Oma·11 \\'ho attends the discussion grouPs a gr e e ~. ''Heroin?" She said. "I have never even thought about ii. until my son \\'as arrested transporting n a r c o t i c s - heroin. "This groop helped strain," she said. "l no longer feel a stigma and 1 know It's no use to hide anymore. Everybody knows about my son -ths police do and two- thirds cf the community ha' read it m the papers." She noted that her son still is in jail. mainly because of adv ice from ex-drug users y,·ho h a v e attended the parents discussion groups. "Before, I would have been tenipted to get him out im· mediately," she said. "But through this group, I have l~arned this is the best y,•ay. The parents are behind me. e\·en though all of my son·~ rr \ ... nds think I'm 8\YfUI." Ex-1lrui? users have proved to be the group's best teachers. They sit in on the discussions, filling in th e parents on the slang and the symptoms of the drug cult. "I've learned all the terms," one mother said. "I we nt home and asked my son if he was shooting a little horse lheroin). He said. ''yes, mom, I am.'" At one meeting two young men from Synanon,a rehabilitation center for drug users based in California. spoke to the parents about what the future holds for tht youths on drugs. Hakal's son already is at Synanon and other parents now at least know the possibility r 0 r rehabilitation exists. At another meeting, Dr. Robert Senior, a Chape l Hill pediatrician who is earning a reputation as the "hippie doctor'' because of his concern with drugs. gave the group y,·hat he called a "basic course on the ups, downs , s.ideways and painkillers." The pare n ts say the discussion groups have helped them CTlmmunicate with their children. for selling it" 1------------1 The woman said the first LEGAL NOTICE shock for her camt. when her su,.t:•io• cou11T OP' TH• !'iOn \\'as picked up shortly STATE OF CALIP'OllNIA P'Olt THE COUNTT OF OllANG• after his 16th birthday on N• ...... .un charges of using marijuana NOTICE OF HEAIUNll OP' ,..TITION , .: FOR P'JI08ATI! OP' WILL ANO P'Olt 'It was a tremendous shock, LETTER$ TESTAMl!NTAl.T she said "I Y.'as a very let-Es!•t~ o1 WALTER Ill.AKE aurl.;:R, ' ,1.., ~...own as 81.AKE 8UTl.ER, De-dOY.'n parent." cNstd. The woman said she felt NOTICE IS HEREllV GIVEN Th•• IEll<llr F. 611t11trl hll tlltd ~rtln I a "stigma '' and discussed he.r ..e1111on inr 11ro1Mtr Df wlH 1nd 1ot soo's problems "'ith few peo-~;:'11:! •. "'m~..::!:;" tore:~"::~ p\e. except 011f Y,'0ffl3n at for l11rllltf" P1tllcullts, and thll tlll! 11...... -plau of 11e1rlnt tM Mme .,·ork who also had a son who hes bffn ""' 1« A1>r1I ,., 1m. ,, used drugs. "We found ii t:lll 1.m .. , Ln the coonr_,. o1 Dt!>•ft.. ,, -"' ""· 3 ol wld court, •• 100 Cl•k helped to talk to each other, c~~i.· Orivt w"'· 111 n.. City ot she said san11 """· C1!i!etn••. • 01tf'O April 3. 1t10 Through a contact with the w. E. ST JOHN Orange County Mental Hea lth H. JAci0M~tr.Lc1e<1t Clinic she became involved •it E111 Hth ''"" ' CMI• Mu•. C1t1tW'lli1 tan V.'ith the drug action com-T•h 01•1 ... 2.1..i Ano,...., for f'tllllllltt m it lee and subsequently PubtlstiPd 0ran1t '°''' 011tv •ne1. helped form !he parents A""'•.'· io, "711 ~ diSCUS!ion group. "\Ye wanted LEGAL NOTICE a place where we could come T·~WJ and talk freely ·and not be $Ul"ElllOI. COUltT o" THI: J'udged or ~..iemned for fail-STATE OF CALl,OllNIA "OJI ... vuu THIE COUNTT OF OltANGI: Jng as a parent." she said. "'· A..u.s.i "Instead or putting salt on N~1'~E ~=o:AETAElttNgF oi:_,~~TIT~~: OUr wounds we wanted to HOl.OGltAP'HtC CODICIL AND l'Olt ' LITTlllS Tl!STAMENTAllT oUt salve on our wound!! and e1111e of MARION K. arAu1. o~•·•· kind of Jet our hair down." • "NoTIC.I! IS Hl!JIEtY GIVEN Th•! l n February. the womans IANK OF AME lllC.A NATIONAL TI U5T ton was arraigned on the ~~feP.rX~N~~RAes~~A11:: ,,:,:1~ ~--ges or s e 111 n g and • pe!lhM !Of PlolWilt II wm Incl -;:u=-;i:======:=.;:==;1 holot••PMc COClo<l! """ IOI' IHU<ll!Ct of io LltllO Te.11ment1ry tv I~ Pr!llllntn., t~I lo """l(h It .....0. tor fut!Mr Far AdYertisinl Ill WEEKENDER • • Phone 642-4321 "~ • ..., ..... ""' ti.n. ·~ '"" ot ""'Int I~ '"'" ~II ~ft 11rt lot Alril ,.. 111', It l :itl '·"'·· In ftie Cillllf'"'°"' ef ~rtm•l!I N•. ~ of Mid CO.f'!. ti 1(11 CIYk C•"'tt Orhoe W#tl, In !'of: CllY "' 51ntt .t.111, Clllfllnll•. Ol'-11 Aptll ,, 1'1'. w. e. ST JOHN. Ce\1111'1' ci.n. IP'RAV, OOVLO I. IOWl!ltl •B Wlltll"'-llllllWlf• Wt Allf*ltl, C1NfttR!t .... I Teh OtSI •i.111 Attw"'" ._ f'tfllltMn ~111111.i.t<I °'"'"" CM,i Otllf '1let, 1----------................. " JI, 1,,. '1 .. 1D I -· • • .- Fresh fashions! Exciting home furnishings! A sunburst of values in every department, at all May Co Stores famous maker dresses in easy care fabrics Polyester ancl cotton dresses with front 1ipper1. Stripes, plaids, checks. Sizos P, S, M, L, XL reg. 11.00 1.99 miok walking coah Beautiful minks desigoed end crafted by mister furriers. In natural Emba• pe1rl or roy1I p1stel mink. special 555 fu r t•lon <47 •TM iml.1 ~i11k lr••·cj,,. A111ci1tio11 f~r ,.,,clue.ts l1li•IM t• 1h1w c.ou tttr., 1f 11i9i11 ,f irnf'•rtM fur1. fmnous ..... leatller handbags Genuine crinkle patent leather with shiny trim end soft styling . White, black, nevy, f1wn or nu9get. were 10.00 to 23 .00 5.99-14.99 rn•Y c• h•ndb19s 26 ....... ,_,...._. Lively double-knit acet1te1 in sprin9· time prints and contr11t dots. Missei' 12-20 end women's 14 V1- 24'/i ovoileble in collection. reguleriy 7.99 5. 99 bud9•t rtor1, I I 0 special colledjon of lightweight coats Belted and lull, single and double breasted styles, in white, bei9e, red, honey, blue, gold, navy, sizes 6-16. reg . ~0.00-50.00 2 9, 99 miss11' co•ts 27 junior wool pea jaclcets Neelly tailored pee jackets with e double row of buttons. Choose wool flannel in grey, camel, or shetlend in nevy. 5-13 . reg. 28 .00 19.99 youn9 si9 co•ts shl" Rd blone colectl1111 Your choice of long or short sleeve. Different collar stylos. White or col- ors in cotton polyester or crepe. 8-18 were 9.00-13 .00 5.99·7.99 m•y co b1thr blou••• 19 junior pastel hi!! Double-kn it polyosters in 3 fash ion - able styles. Aqua, maiit or lilac- 1lso navy blut. Juniors' sizts 5· 13, jr. petites si1ts 3-11 . regulerly i 5.99 10. 99 bud9•t 1tor., 10 I may co south' coast plaza , san iliego fwy at b'ristol, costa me sa, 546-9321' shof' mondoy thru soturdoy JO am to 9:30 pm. sundoy noon 'til 5 pm • cotton knit shirts no-iron dress shirt The cotton knits come color stripe selection. Reg. 5.00 1n a wide 3.99 Reg. 5.00 dress sh irt 3.99 h•rrton ha ll 81 , furnishin91 6 Maybrook• tropical suih Cool, comfortable suits for the warmer weather ahead or for vaca· t ionin9 now. Many colors. reg. 80.00 69.00 m1n's suits 21 sho" llffve knih Solidi and stripes in a host of col- ors. Mock turtleneck, short sleeves. Small to extra-large. reg . 7.00 2.99 m1n's sportsw1ar 84 mi ...... lni llNpers Flirty little nylon tricot short-stops, with matching bikini. Perfect sum· mtrtime sleepwear. Gold, lilac or green. Petite, small, medium sizes. regularly 4.99 3. 99 MAVCO • J ... • . :-: ... .. ·I . ... ! . • . , ·I • . • • • [ ... • . , . •. • • --------~------------------ Spri119 Clea11i119 \Vhite House gets new coat of paint.on it.he South Portico as sp;ing cleaning begins in Washington. The First Family skipped out on the hassle of clean- ing and spent Easter weekend in Key Biscayne, Fla. Servicenien Mailing Arsenal of Weapons WASHlNGTON (UPI) - U.S. servicemen in Vietnam are mailing home firearms, hand grenades, landmines and other dangerous weapons - so many, in fact that customs officials have set up sandbag- ged examination areas. C u s t om s Commissioner Myles J. Ambrose said In lestlmony released today by the House Appropriations Committee that sandbagged areas were set up in San Francisco, Seatlle and Honolulu post offices because or "the danger of explosion and Injury to both the person- nel assigned there and to the premises themselves.'' Ambrose, who -testified in a closed session March 5, noted "at rem end ou s in- crease" in the mailing of weapons and illegal drugs by servicemen stationed abroad -especially from Vietnam. ••oespite efforts of th e military, we are a gain discovering s ignificant nwnbers of weapons and othe r implemenls of war, such as guns, grenades and land· mines," Ambrose said. CAN'T ESTI!'ifATE A spokesman for the cusl-Oms bureau later told UPl that it was "impossible" lo tell how many weapon s were getting through to persons to whom the mail was addressed. The spokesman said "a very mu ch higher" percentage of mail from Vietnam is ex- amined than of mail that is checked for revenue collection purposes only. The bureau is a s king C.Ongress for an additional $443,000 in the fiscal year beginning July I lo provide for 56 more mail inspectors. 'Amhrose told the commiltee that about 12 percent of in- coming mail is ell'.amincd for revenue purposes but gave no percentage figures on military mai l. A spokesman for the customs bureau said the Army had provided the f i I .1 e d sandb ags for a small "bunker" in the San Francisco PGSt Office and for a similar sandbagged area to handle su rfa ce mail in Oakland. PUT L" BUNKER The official said that \\.'hen dangerous weaJ)ons are fou nd they are put into the bunker and the Army no t i f ie d . Demolition experts from the Presidio of San Francisco then make the weapons harmless. Ambrose offered a list show- ing that customs officials arot.ind the country had seized thousands of pounds of mari- juana, hashish and other drugs as well as about 200 dangerous weapons during the first two months of 1970. The contraband included a ••rocke t motor'' and "~'arhead" seized in Boston , about 20 machine guns, at least a half dozen live hand grenades, and numerous rifles and pistols. · At San Francisco, customs officials seized 106 pieces of mail from Vietnam containing 1,001 rounds of ammunition, 5 revolvers, 18 parcels of 44 flares, 14 pistols, 7 carbines, 3 machineguns, 3 rifles, 4 Chin es e guns, JO AK47 automatic weapons, 2 carbine barrels, 2 hand grenades and one inert rocket. The AK47 is used by the North Vietnamese and is ron- sidered an equivalent of the fi.tl6 rifle used by U.S. troops. SEIZED PISTOi~ Customs officials in San Francisco seized a loaded pisto l and a hand grenade mailed from Korea , and a pistol, parts of an AK47, and 30 rounds of ammunition sent through a Navy post office. The San Francisco seizures also included 457 pieces of mail containing more than J,283 pounds or marijuana sent from Vietnam during the two months. Lool,iiifJ for Roost Resident of th ese Schofi eld Creek lloathouses in the cenler o! Reedsport, Ore .. may not be without a home -but they are definitely without a spot to moor. Neither the city nor the State Departmerrt of Environmental QuaJity wants them dumping sewage into t11e creek. The city v.•ill no longer sup- ply '"ater to the floathouscs and also will not all~w se,ver connections because ol the cost of the requ1r· cd pumpin& stal1on. ) . ' . 7 ...... Fresh fashions!ExcitinghOl!le chair in two sizes with matching ottoman Mr. or Mr,. chair custom covered in rich plaids or others. Loose pillow- back styling. ottoman, reg . $105 chair, each reg: $175 fum itur• 141 quilted beclspNGdS with wolt corded bottom. Avocado, peecock 9old, royal, fiesta1 pink . reg. $21 twin 16.49 re9. $24 lull 18.97 reg. $35 king, queen 27.99 bedding 41 Philco 21.1 cubic ft. side by side Frost-clear, roll -out wheels. Family size, 4 9lass cantilever adjustable shelves. Available with an automatic oco makor et $549 .89. -s $539 499.89 serve! men's cardigan sweaten Find smart solid colors to empha- size your sprin9 wardrobe. Machine - wuhable and dryable acryl ics. Sm•l11 m1dium , ler91 and extra ~large sizes . regularly 9.99 7. 99 • • I ,. furnishings! A sunburst of values in every department, at all May Co Stores self-lined draperies in S no-fade colors Rich 1 handsomely textured, in avo- cado, blue, fla x, gold or oyste •. Self · lined to prevent fadin9. By Coloray<B. reg. $12-$55 8,..99~42.99 9Color•y i1 • rogiderod ftfdom•rk Q.f Corteulch No. Amork o Inc. For women, white, blue or 9reen. reg. 25 .00 train case $20 re9. 27 .50 weekender $22 re9. 32.50 24" pull man $26 reg. 40.00 26" pullman $32 luggage 36 RCA bookcase style compontt1t AM/FM /FM stereo tuner, I 00 watt amplifier. Tape input an~ output jacks, tuning me ter, AFC. 32 "x 11"x12". Speakers from 29.95. was $325 . s1 ss 'tereos 72 8 men's no .. iron pants Ivy or Continental style, cuffed or hemmed bottoms. Permanent press polyester/cotton in choice of pat- ters, solid colors. 29 -38 waist. regularly 4.99 -6.99 3.79 bud9et store 117 soft velour towels by Springmaid Luxurious towels of cotton velour in ::::· ::::n, 1 "•79ang2 ;3·:50 2.00 hand towel 80c wash doth Ma9lc Chef 36" 9as ftln9e 99' 49' with standard size oven, sr .. -'.:eless broiler, clock, t imer. Delivery, instal- lation, I-year service included. wa s $179 . s159 rang•1 7)7 RCA 23" dia9onal color TV with AFT, tone control, 6" speaker, 25 ,000 volt chassis. Walnut veneer finish, from RCA 's custom collec- tion. W ill enhance your decor. was 579 .95 s4sa television 722 men's famed B.V.D. socks Nylons, Orlon9 acrylics, cottons, more. Styl es fo r dress or sportsL colors fo r e very taste. Stretch 11ze fits everybody. Buy and sav~. regularly 1.00 pr. 3/2.25 may co south coast plaza, san diego fwy at bristol , cosla mesa , 546 -9321 1hoP. monday thru salurday I 0 em to 9: 30 pm . sundey noon 'Iii 5 pm .. .. ,, • 7 ----------------------------~~---- • • • • . • " • ' I "SO---ltlMIMRlt---,,.11/E .._I. GOP Rises Again In South WASHINGTON (UPI) Once barely visible in the Souttt, the Republican party now appears as ready as it will ever be to try 1o take a Senate seal from a Byrd of Virginia. A few years ago, that would have seemed as quixotic as a campaign to elect· a labor leader to the presJdency of the Chamber of Commerce. But Virginia's newly in- stalled Republican governor, A. Linwood Holton, wants the GOP to make a serious at- tempt this year to win the Senate seat hekl by Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr. Byrd announced last Wffk that he woold bypass the Democratic primary and nm as an independent for rwlec- tion to the seat held by him and his late father since 1933. Hotton will call the signals for the strategy to be followed by the GOP, although he presumably will get advi~ from the White House and national Republican leaders. Some Republicans w o u I d like to follow the usual prac.. tice of playing dead in com- petition against a Byrd, with the hope that Byrd would evenlually switch from the Democratic party to the GOP. 1be nominatlon of a liberal Democratic senatorial can- didate for the seat of the conservative Byrd would in- vite a Republican candidate from the center. Holton ran down the middle of the road la s t fall to win the governorship. As the GOP expands into the South, it will follow the Democrats in shaping cam- paigns to fit Individual states. Holton ran down the middle of the road last fall to win the go.vernorship. As the GOP expands into the South, it will follow the Democrats in shaping cam- -palgns to fit individual states. Holton ran well in the cities and suburbs and also picked up a lar.ge share of the Negro vote. Clarence Townes or Rich- mond, who directs political ac- tivity for minority groups at Republican n a t i o n a I head- quarters, e s t i m a t e s that Holton polled about 50 percent of the Negro vote in Virginia. Like Holton, Townes wants the GOP to make a serious cam- paign for Byrd's seat. Virginia Republicans have a problem at the beginning or any such campaign: Lack of a candidate who is well known throughout the state: Holton was given statewide exposure when he ran a creditable but losing campaign for t h e governorship in 1965. Republicans are d i v i d e d about how much attention to give Negro voters. The Ripon Society. a liberal GOP Organization, thinks the party should work for black support across the country, including the South. To Ripon spokesmen, the cutstanding Southern Republicans are called "moderates" like Holton. Gov. Winthrop Ro e k e f e I le r of Arkansas and Sen. Howard ea ke r of Tennessee, who benefit from Negro voter sup- p o r t , More conservative Republican s prefer southerners like Sens. Strom Thunnond of Soulh Carolina, John Tower of Texas and Edward J . Gurney of F)orida. The conservative thrust is aimed at winning over former Democ~ts w h o s e segrega. tionist traditions are n o t calculated to give Republicans 1 substantial share of the growing Negro vote in the ... th. Kevin Phillips, 1 Justice department official who is the theologian for the con· trove-r alal Republican "southern strategy," told a young RepubUcan gathering March J4 that GOP candidates .rarely get subllantial Negro support. He said can<lidates ~ centrate on areai where they can get more votes and that most Republican candidates would give only "lip service" to effort.I to win support in bloct _,,,,unltle1. ' 1 ' STARTS TODAY SUNDAY shop Noon 'ti I 5 PM famous make playwear, shirts, jackets, pants Fun sets. Tee shirt tops of poly- ester and cotton. Stripes-or sol- ids. Strai ght leg panls with jack- ets. Sizes 10-18. ~~30-15.00 2.99-5.99 active sport!lwear 76 nylon peiRnoir sets Short gown plus >heer robe. Ruffled or lacy yokes. Pa stels. Petite, small , medium, la rge . reg. 15.00-18.00 9 . 9 9 lingerie 10 famous contour brJ "Minimizer'' in soil, smooth ny- lon trico t for under body dresses. White, beige. 32-36 A, B,C. reg. 5.50 3 , 5 9 1ounda1ions 44 no-iron twin sheets Decorative prints in pink, blue or gold. Polyesler/collon. No 1nail or phone. v.ilue :J.99 2, 49 budget ::.lore, 803 • e.: •. men's sport ·coats two, three buttons Some all wool, some polyeste r and wool blends. Many colors to choose from. Pi ck fron1 >tripes, plaids-or solid shades. reg. 55.00-60.00 38.00 men's sport swear 45, closed toe woven sandJI With sling back and a firm mid - high heel. Choose bone, natu- ral or while kid . By Allegro . reg. 16.00 11. 99 1noy co boulevard ~hCM's 11 2 sale: Berkshire panty hose Cantrece® II panty hose. Per- fec t fig. Five sizes. Pl ease order by hip size. reg. 2.50 1. 99 3 pr. 5.95 6 pr. 11.80 ho~iery 7 -all 17 s1ore~ misses ' polyester panls Wide-leg, diagonal weave poly- ester pants in black , navy, olive or brown. Misses' 8-18. regularly 8.99 6. 9 9 budget store. 800 may co south coast plaza, san 'diego shop monday thru salurday I 0 am _ta med polyester knits are lean and pleated From our own collection of knit dresses. Lean torsos and burst pleated skirts. Many ·colors, siz· es 8to16. · reg 44.00 19. 99 town. and trave l 49 -oll 17 s1orc~ nylon shag broadloom is easy to care for, stain resi~t­ Jnt. Many colors. Pri ce in- cludes installation. reg. 10.00 sq. yd. 6. 9 9 tloor covering 3 :! -all ~tores glass top cocktail !able on elegantly curved and curli- cued base. Top measures 36"x66" Spanish style. reg. $349 $259 iurniture 144 -all store:- Calvert bath towels Soft shea red cotton terrie~. Lush :i-olid colors or hand son1e WJ·t- erlily print. A ::!Ofi savin g~. v.1lue 2.49 1 , 9 9 budget ~tore. BJ 1 ' •, • jeans for boys that never need ironing Great pa nts for play. For schoo l. Anytime. They're wash· able cotton. And come in gree n, blue or white. Sizes 4-7. reg. 4 . .0U 3. 2 9 lit:le boys 5 2 Virtue 7-pc. dinette sc·t. 4:!" ova l plastic. table ex tend~ to 53" or 64" with one leaf. 6 n1atc hin~ chairs. open stock 224.95 $14 9 houseware~ furniture Rl -all ~tore~ 45-pc. stoneware set ror 8. 8 each dinners, soup~. sa l ad~. cups, saucers; 1 ea ch plattl'r, vege talJlc , crcan1cr, sug<t,r. reg. 4~.99 29 .9 9 china 46 -.111 ~tore~ \VOmen's ai ry sandals 1\ smashing saving -50~6 ! A handso1ne choice in pastel s and combinations. 5-10. (no 9Y,) regulJrly 5.99 2, 99 fwy at bristol, cosla mesa, 546-9321 lo 9: 30 pm; sunday noon 'Iii 5 pm , ; ' MAVCC> ,, :-BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 ~y,~11 .. 1'11 I l' ... tl Spring Showing In Spring fashions will be shown with a special sparkle on Saturday, May 2, when ,the Altrusa Club pours a . champagne punch to kick off an afternoon of lunch, couture and cards. Altrusa member Miss Agnes Schank will arrange an exciting selection of spring and. summer styles for women of all ages from her Beach & Boulevard shops. Casual attire will be shown by the Deauville Shop backed by Fashions in Leather from designer Ann Chase. ' Festivities begin at 11 a.m. with serving of cham· pagne followed by a salad buffet at 12 : 30 p. m. Card buffs will step into the pictute .al 2 p.m. lVith an after· noon of bridge and canasta. l The fund.raising event \Vil! be in fhe Wonlan's Club at a cost of $5 per person. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Dora May Macdonald, 494-3773. Proceeds from the fashion luncheon, under the di~ rection of Mrs. Ron Davis, will go into a fund which . has been set aside to furnish a room in the Florence Crittenton 'Home in El Modena. Mrs. Elmer Barr is in charge of decorations; Mrs. Bea Crist will handle catering, and Mrs. Margaret Gott- achlich is responsible for publicity. ·Mermaids Tell Tale Of Beauty Laguna Beach Mermaids, with an ever-watchful eye on beauWication, invite Lagunam to attend the fourth annual Be au ti f i cat 1 on Awards celebration on lhe evening of May 25. Now under way with the selection of outstanding con- trlbutiool to the community, the Mermaid committee under the direction of Mrs. Robert Peacock also is making plan s for 'the gala affair at_th.e Festival of Arb grounds. To acknowledge the efforts of citizens, awards will be presented in the area of best resldenUal, c 0 mm er c i a I , public building, good neighbor, and a g r a n d sw~pstakes award for the most outstan· ding contribution to "Laguna Beautiful," A TOAST TO FASHION -Altrusans are getting into a sparkling mood for their fund-raising fa shion luncheon on Saturday, May 2, in the Women's Club. Caterer Mrs. Bea Cr::ist pours a toast for Mrs. The Eyes Have It for Soroptimists' Creations Norma Diehm, a model for Beach & Boulevard. Spring and sum- mer attire for both casual and formal wear will precede an after-· noon salad luncneon and car~ playing. • _The Laguna Line Review Paints 'Perfect Day' "THIS PERFECT DAY" was made more per- fect by a review of the book by Ira Levin given by Mr's. Alfred Kress for fellow Ebell Club members. Mrs. Kress recounted the tale of Jove, suspense and adventur~ in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. Jody Upham. Following the Liter~ry Section pre- sentation, Mrs. David Young and Mrs. Edmund L. Van Deusen assisted the hostess with luncheon. Those present included the Mmes. William W. Hinwood, president, W. E. Ferguson, Kevin J . Car .. roJl._Charlie Dean. Verne Daily.,_Alf[e<LR.Jlaslle, Richard Carlson, Gordon Forbes, Clarence Carson, Howard Hinrichs, Robert Peterson, Macauley Ropp, Wallace T. Scott, Jack Stewart, Robert L. Turner, Louis Zitnik and William Thomas. A FORTHCOMING spring tournament for ac· live swingers of the Laguna Beach Women's Golf Club has been announced by Miss Gracia Johnson, president. The tourney for club championship will be play- ed on Thursday, April 16, Monday, April 20 and Thursday, April 23, for 54-hole medal play. ' A threesome was welcomed to the club at the regular meeting. Th()Se honored were new mema ber Mrs. William Glass, and former members Mrs. Richard Whi~aker and Mrs. K~nnelh Whitney. Awards have been made J)OSSible by the following firm s and individuals: World Sav- ings and Loan, L a g u n a Nursery, Laguna Beach Board ofRealtors, Peacock Insur~. Pottery S h a c k , Hot.el and Motel Association, Laguna Beach Lumber, War- ren Imports, Security Pacific NaUonal Bank, Surf and Sand, an uea newsp1per, Mrs . Robert DuSoe and M r s • G-staGW. Laguna Beach Soroptirnists happily are celebrating the 22nd year of their organiz{ltion. A candle lighting session lcicked off the event at a recent breakfast highlighted by a fascinating array of topical hats. Soroptimists (left to right) Mrs. John Turk, Mrs. E. M. Bidwell, federation secretary, and Miss Lila Zall, presi- dent, mod.el hats includirig the 11eye" motif made by Mrs. Leon Mrs. Cornelius Toomey was a successful trophy winner in a recent tournament at Santiago Women's Golf Club in Orange. Those attending included the Mmes. William Casparis, Walter Davison, Donald Hurlbut. Glenn McMullen, John Poor, ldaMay Schomaker, Paul Waterman and Ike Westmoreland. Axelrod. - Midnight Minnie of Br·oom Briga d e Mops Up on Faux Pas DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have come to the defenae of waitresses, air line 1tewardeases, plumbers, posbnen and meter readers. How about a good word for the Silent Anny of The Broom .......... -thole who clean offices at ANN LANDERS nJlhtY. OW day beglna when most people lf you will just leave it on the desk we'll filllb. For tome of us It's a second job. take care of it Wt'ft jult camt from putting in eight w llia'I IODltwhert else. My message is . ater your own ~lanls, feed and your l[Wteeretaries and even execuUves. Here fish, etc. We aren t gardeners or zoo •ii' .. keepers. Y~ can mate GUr lives easier by lock-Pleue return the soft drink botlles to *I up the stamps and petty cash. When the vending machine. It's a long w~lk for th1nls tum up mlsalng, we are first on a pe~son who must make several trips an the llst of. upecta. everung. . Plea.le don't throw food and half-lilied I'm not even mentioolng what llU!>" cupl GI Coffee 1nd IOda poJI into the posedly refined and educated people do in w-buRL IL mallea a turlble mess. oCflce washrooms. You couldn't pr!nL It and most' people wouldn't believe it. Tbanks a million. -MIDNIGHT MINNIE DEAR MJN : II noboil)' moon ts this tol· umn on the bulletin board of lht! office where you have the mosl troube, I hope you will. DEAR ANN LANDERS : f was the eldest In a large family. Because thert were so many of us, Mpther had to de- pend on help from the older children - mainly me. My earliest memories are the messy diapers, runny noses and crying brata. Alt I've ever wanted was to be free of it. 1 swore I'd never have any children . ,Never, 1 • Then I met and married a wonderful' man who said he didn't care abOut children either. All he wanted was me. We were very happy for several years, at least I thought so. Now he tells me his ideas have changed. He wants a family. Every time ·he menOons the subject I have an attack of nerves. Shall 1 have a child (a t age 30 ) and despise it. or sUck to my posltlon and take a chance on I01ing the man l love? -81'."fRAVED DEAR B.: Your feelings about chlldri!n are arottl)' lmmalare. t 1u11e1t coa.n1el· Ing. You'll probably lose the man either way if you don't grow up a.ad atop being sell-centertd. DEAR ANN LANDERS' I am 23. divorced and have two small boy.s. I work in a pastry shop from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. I live with my wkiowed mother and an unmarried brother who is 20. The only fun I get oot of lite is dancing. Four evenings a week my brother drives me lo a roadside tavern where the music is out of sight. 1 dance with the guys, have a rew drinks and go home by taxJ. The women at work say 1 shouldn't go to this place because It doesn't look nice. I've tried to eXplaln that all t do with theoe men ts dance. I am a decont 1~! and plan to stay that way. Do you agree with the women al work? I hope not. Please answer. -BOISE DANCER DEAR BOISE : Jt may be lbat aU yta are loottn1 for 11 • dancD.1 putaer •t m01t mea wbe, frequeat roedalde taveru arr lnteresle4 ta Mtnedrillg a bit mtr't borizoatal. J •aree wtdi Ute ,,..... at work. It you have trouble 8:etui1g along with your parents •.. If you can't get them to let you live your own lile, seod for Ann Landen' booklet, "Bugged by Parenllt How to Get More Freedom." SeOd IO cents in coin with your request and a tong, stamped, oelf·•ddrOlled eoveJopo In care ol !he Dolly Pllol. . .,,, ' I ... :.~~~~~~~--~~;'~~......---:-:~~~::::=~-:-:-:--:::-:=:::=--:--;;= t l • r • ...... •· · · ·· ~. · "* • •· · • • • • • .. · • • .. • • · •• •• .. • ·-· .. .. --• • \ • •• . ~ • • • • •• ~ • ~ •• '·' ' '~ I~ .. •• .. ' , -· (. .. .. .. .. ~~ ... .. .. . :: . ' .. ,.. ' • ' ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ~ ':· ' ' ' ' ' ' " . ' ' . '. • " ' ' ' ' ' .. .. ' •. • . • . . ' . ... .. " . .' .. ~ .· .. .. . .. .. " . . . .. ; . . .. .. " .. ~: :· . • . . . . . . • . . . .. " " •• ~ • • .. .. .. c .. .. • ' .. • .. • .. • • • • -~ !! DAi l V PILOT Mond11, Apt!I 6. 1970 Bargain Hunters Attracted by Sale Bargains in assorted shapes and sizes will be offer- ed by the Women 's Society of Christian Service dur- ing a nunmage sale from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m. tomor- row. Setting will be Thompson Hall at the First United Methodist Church, Costa Mesa. Sorting mer- chandise for the mission benefit are (left to right) the Mmes. W. D. Sneathen, Vance Hunter, chair· man and Willrid Wilkinson. ' f~ ~ ' .. ' $ ' Plans Told At Dinner A family dinner in the Richa rd Assmar home in J\an JoS(' "'as the setting for the engagement announcen1enL of Bonnie Jean Brown of Santa Ana Heights and Theodore Allan Kellogg of L a g u n a Beach . • The bride-elerl, daug hte r of Mr. and !\1rs. Howard R. Brown of 1.lorgan I-IHI is a grad ua te of San Jose Stale College . The bridegroom-elect is lhe son of Mr. and Mrs. Robe.rt Kellogg Jr. of Emera ld Oay. lie was graduated r r om Laguna Beac h High School and San Jose Slate. The couple will be ~·cd 1'.1av 24 in SL. Mnry's Episcop.il Church, Laguna Beach . TOPS Mermaids TOPS Mtrging Mennaids meet at 7!~ p.m. every '1Jvrsday in Woodland School. Coat.a Mesa. Blue Star· Moms ,• ' • Travel Expert Maps Mesa Talk Tips ,on lravel. including everything from how to pack. cook outdoors and sel up a cam psite, will be offered for members of the Mesa-Harbor Club Thursday, April 9, by Miss Carol Lane. In her position ol women 's travel director for Shell Oil Co., Miss Lmle travels more than 70,000 miles herself each year lecturing for women's clubs, outdoor groups and men 's organizations, as well as fulfilling television and radio engagemenls. To gathe:r new information for her camping and touring The meeting will take place in the ~tesa Verde Counlry Clu b with a social hour set fo r 10:30 a.m. Lunch and the business session wW follow. Mrs. Gene Skawin, 546-7109. and Mrs. Ronald Taylor, 54S. 1898 are accepting reserva- tions. The Pill DiscuS'sed .; booklets she makes a yearly The Birth Control Pill will research trip to such places be discussed by Jack Hovick, as the Sierra Nevada m00i.1· Huntington B e a c h obste tri- talns. cian, when the Orange Coast She al so has written a Mothers of Twins Club meets brochure for women on how Wednesday, April 8, in the to properly maintain a car. King's Tab I e restaurant, drawing on a course in auto Westminster . mechanics she took last year. The meeting will begin with !\1iss Lane also de s igns a 7 p.m. social hour followed dress patterns for tr a v e I by dinner al 8. All mothers which arc distributed at no of twins are invlted to attend cost. She has written a· the dinner meeting a n d brochure illustrating ti dif· reservations may be made by ferent \vays to wear a scarf calling Mrs . Nicholas Bartlett, "'hich. she says. "packs flat ;:=54=~=!=5·======::;! and ca·,1 convert any basic dress many different ways." She is listed in ' ' T w o Th o u s and \Vom e n of Achievement '' and "Foremost Women in Communications." Make a Sharp Trade; Us• Dime-A-Lines ~~~~~~~~~- · .. your clothes don't'fil .. , You're self conscious, shy, embarrassed, frustrated all that and more . '. Slimmin ' Women is O here to CHEER YOU UP and SLIM YOU Z, o VEttl,]~1· DOWN and in time til ~.,,,1" for SUMMER ~l>fl~~ ·············· FEATURJ.\'C, T li E WORW FMIOUS ST1ll'f 'f'f:n S'\','°TE,11 11rc/n;mttl for )fl )4'<1r1 lry nvrr I 1111//10,, u'Omt" : OPENING SPECIAL I I /·(I r )'1111 A'1d A Friend.. I 14 FREf TREATMENrs: I (2 Trtotments lach)I : A FREI flGURI ANAL TSIS AND A I 1 FREE Facial Treatment : I With This Coupo11 All1ol11t1lr No Cost I or Ob ligatio11. I I MUSI BEUSEOWITHIN70AYS I &llT':S:::'L":':'IM":':'M'=.:IN~' ":':"W~DM£N:.;;;·~· ·:.;:~·'f IGuRi'AND' • -[? FACIAL SALON ' t HunUnaton Btach Blue Slllr , v.Motbers, 01apte.r 2 .slagc ·~·~11 eve.ry Monday at ~t~~:~~tf 0 A,M. l;~;;;~~;,;;.~~;~YI 1,0,0 AM~~:l~~~I;;~~~ :Jt p.m. ln Lake P 1 r k Clubhouse. \ ' 642•651 ~ rtit Olfkt Vlllttt • 126·7704 lorwl1 S.i1trt tlU·4~21 Your Horoscope Tomorrow ' Aquarius: Don't Lose Humor • TUESDAY APRIL 7 become involved. Key Is sense will have to move slow)y. may DOl be necessary. of balance. Otherwtae, minor error could lF TODAY IS y o u R By SYDNEY~ GemW ii re1 ~le11 , t. lriplq. 1-·· ... "' ...... .. aes.te, loves te meve LEO (July 2S-Aug. 22): cause you to make retraclioq. B l RT H D A y you are a Career matters require ad· Make ~ snap decisions. spiritual peraon. You often ju.sting. Don't permit anyone AQUf6RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. sacrifice your own needs for to rob you of self-esteem. 18,): ~estic routine is sub-of h Thi 1 t Strive to achieve harmonious ject to quick change. You may good 01 ers. s s no ' t •-l f ·i to imply .you are an angel • ---·-IHrell \ ........... - relationships. Dlplom•cy is wan w P away rom 1 all' B f •·· Id But you do hive a conscience ywr ally. Stand lall-etlck to • ut ac..,. illUt9 wou which refuses to be stilled. ,.... COl*itie• -w. sip_... .Jo .. eow.., N ... cy Slma&ra ..cl Joe Namatll. principles. be inore intelligent course. Ne w slart is favored -and VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22): Mamlaln iense.of·bumor. affection from one who means Avoid reaching too far, too PUCES (Feb. l~Marcb20): much to you will add spice soon. May be wise to sUck Oteck calls, o t b e r com-W ARIES (M.ucll 21·April Ii): f 'II d M munlcolloi>s. Dlsgruntod lo-lo e. to ami ar groun · essages d l v l dual inay be a T• find 11111 """°'* hic:kv fOI" "°"'lit tend to be garbled. Proofread •~·bl---•er. Be -·-of ,...,.. 111d tow. orlltr 1'1'11111'1' C>trYrn Your financial picture may be s!ill"1J confwed. Talce it easy. otben, an filled with SUQesliom. But moot of u..nt are not applicable to )'<lut situation. Wait. Jelle So Id l "vu ~IUIA ~..... bOOkltl, "Skrel Hlnll for Mtn 111111 your rs. me coo ge validity of message. Some ~~~~ lft~oi:!~~·:.1::'1'11e ~Cf.I~ wroog impressions. changes are due. But travel ~•L.OW, ~ M v.~~nd cenlr•I~~ .. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22l=.r==;,========"""==·=·;::;::«;::"~·;·,::'~::;";·==;1 Money value Ls accented. TAUJllJS (April 20-May 211): Cycle ii Jqh, but money situaUon requires much Cltt lion. Don't trap yourself, Be versatile. Be aware of alternatives. One who appears to oppose may actually be on your sJde. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Be cautious. Check details. Accent moderation; avoid f:J· tremes. So m e co-workers, associates O)U]d make outlan· dish claims. Stick lo !he facts. Leave the fancy to others . CANCER (June 21.July 22): Problems of friends could become your own. Don't be JncliUerent. But alao know that you would be unwise t o Heels Lowered Price tag is plaCf:d on your product. Get adviCf:, aid from one with e:s:perience. You can gain if false pride is not permitted to stand In way. SCOR,PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Aid due from surprtse sources. A third person intervenes in your behalf. Finish what you start. Demonstrate intentions -and unique abilities. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Work methods require modernization. S e n t i m e n t <:OUld cause Joss. Be hwnan without being foolish. One behind the scenes is envious. Protect your reputation. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Some recent changes add up to more responsibility. You Shoes Break Rules By JOAN DEPPA had American buyers lining up PARIS (UPl) _ The old , to platt orders, showed fiat rule lbat when hemlines come Spanish e s p a d r i 11 e s with daytime clothes and low san-down, heels go up deUnJtively da1s with thongs wrapping was broken by the Paris around the ankle dyed or spring-swnmer fashion col-printed to match e v e n i n g lectiollll. clothes. With skirts often falling Christian Dior has similar right down to the ankle, heel& sandals, often with a closed were lower than ever. toe, however. Instead of the The r e a s o n wa3 the gay Givenchy prints, Dior ~asualness ol tbe new longer made them in colored reptile hemlines -and those that skins for day and satin for stayed short as welf. evening. Many shoes were absolutely Boob:, now desiped almost flat. Roger Vivier, one of the exclus:lvely to wear w I t h best known shoemakers in trouser suits, generally stop- Paris, made striking sandals ped just above the ankle. of lattice. work that rose high There were plenty of sports on the vamp and bUckled in shoes with high vamp for back aroond the bare ~I. trousers 1s well, the general Hubert Glvmchy, with a rule being that lrouaer bot- new streamlined collection of toms should at leut touch the medium and long dresses that top of the Vamp .. BUlLIX:K'S SANTA ANA AND TOVAR, TRESSES IHYITE YOU TO SEE BEWITCHING WIGGERY ••• What can our Bridal Consultant do for a lride-to-ba? l1h of th i1191 . A11' 111 ef th•111 111 h•lpful, HOW DO I REGISTER? Ml15 P1triei1 M1u11r J.et u... I• •4 t.rk to 01r ochkN. We'll retls"" y11r -· ...... ..i wW,..... Mnlff .... wlll Ito 11 eur ............... n.. ......... pll -'"''' l111pteul't'O ...... of .... .w.... ., ..... -......... .,.,. ..-. 11p , ....r ,_._ Mtri• to sltow '" er•tfy Mw 41ff9fnt .................... HOW DOES IT WORK? W... yMr foimfty ..i ffMMI co• 11 to clll.-your we4• 41 .. ~we'll k .Wt to lltow tlleM tho pcrttwr1n JOll0't'O ...... ill tt.il lrWo'• lethtor. AIMI ..,.. !tow r11a11r ef nth HM Me._.,... to ftr. WHEN SHOULO I REGISTER? A1 ..... • ,_, .... wl It _.!lad. A114 If y1u c111't CllM' II, Mt Dow ... ,.ner. JM Wlllt, l111t t lM UI • rt.f, Lot a Wp _.. '"" • tlff1tlhrl woddl ... Retllf'H .. _ SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASH ION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1 l!O 0,.. ,......, -4 '"Mr •lltff f:JI Haven't you always wondered how you would l!>Ok as a blond or a ravishing redhead ..• orwhelheryou are the type to wearaflippyfall, a JaQie look or a short shaggy Oliver ••• perhaps you've wondered how you would look with a.smooth chignon, a braid wrapped coff, or soft curls in the romantic mood ••• We invite you to experiment with &witching Wiaery in the privJcy of our Wiggery Room ••• try on every new fashion or color you've ever wanted to see on yourself . •• learn by actual demonstration how to careforyourwif ••• shampoo it, set it, tease it into a great new fashion ••• four expert sty!isls will be here to show you how •.• ThuJSday, April 9, Friday, April 10 and Saturday, Apnl 11. •• Make your reservation now for.one of the Sessions listed below ••• Enrollment is limited to 20 per elm •.• NO ADMISSION CHARGE ... RESERVAlDIS ONLY 547-7211, Ext. 393 . O lhursday, April 9, 2;(JO p.m. O lhursday, April 9, 6:30 p.m • O Friday, April 10, 10:30 a.m . O Friday, April 10, 2:30 p.m. O Saturday, Aprill!, 10:30 a.m. O Salurday, April 11, 2:30 p.m. Wigs from 18.95 to 30.00 ..• personal cutting and styling intluded with purchase. Cosmetic Aisle. First Floor r .------------·-------------~---·--------------------·-----~--·---·-----~--· -·~ ·-·-...... - 13 . -. • .:. . • • • • • • • DAILY PlLOT J3 Golden Anniversary Cotton -Forehan Rites Emblem Club' .D.A.' Boones Cele·br.a:te Pledges · ·Exchan·geQ CC Single Bees The accond and fourth Fri~ day or the month Orange Co\jnly Single Bees gail>er In Piooeer Town, Santa ,Ana. Actlv!Ut.s bcgln at 8 p.m. The Elka Lodp II lbe lol- ling fo< metlblll al ... Embltm Club 311 of IAal• Beach. Memben ,.111or .,. first and lbird '1'1leldo71 Ill I p.m. Helping Mr. and Mrs . Donald Aqu il la Boone celebrate their golilen weddini • anniversary were 200 friends and relalives who gathered In Irvine Coaal Country Club • • for a fonnal dinner dance. The party was hosted by the honored couple's daughters, Mrs. Robert W. Llmacher of Corona de! Mar and Mrs. Thomas Kimble of Long Beach. • During the festivities, Mr. and Mrs. Boone repeated their weddlilg vows with the Rev. Dean Miller ot the Community ChUrch -Of Palm Desert of. ficiating , Prior to the ' ceremony, their grand- daughter, Mrs. Mlchael SmJth sang "Because" and "I Love You Truly." BARBARA MORRISON Summer Rite• Residing in San Diego where the bridegroom is stationed with the Navy are newlywed Mr. and 111rs. Robert .ft.Ucha el Cotton w)lo exehanged vow.s and rings before the Rev. David Crump in St. James Episcopal Church. The bride, formerly Leslie AM ~~orehan, ls the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard · Foreban o~ Newport Beach. • • She asked Miss Emmy LOu Duyan to be her maid or honor, and serving as bridesmaids were the Pltisses · Karen Evana, Mary Hause, · Cyndi Weber and Melinda Ann Cotton, the bridegroom's '. ~~~~P. Flower girl · was Holli AIMii l"lltfrl WEIGHT• WATCHERS. • ·Somt t1lltjng, tome. llsttnlng 1nd • 1 proortm thlt works. 1111 1flll UOCMUU-CALL U5·550S LOCAL -· -\ --::::; ,.. ... THI I KNIT WIT ~c.-,... I LOW!Jl MALL. Ac,.. '""' t.#lee~~ ~ The celebrant presented his bride of 50 years with a ring, and the couple 's daughters and families presented a gold~ on-green velvet familf picture tree to the honorees. Teacher To Wed In June The bridegroom , son of Mr. MRS. R. M. COTTON Ne oth•r 11.-•P•IN' ftH• yeu mor•, •v•rv dty, •bo11t wh•t'1 9oln 9 Oii In tti. s,..,,r Or•"9• Co11t th•1t ttl• D>JLY rtLOT. ......... and Mrs. Robert B. Cotton Recites Vows : of Costa-Mesa, was attended I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i by his brother, Philip Cotton, hi I c-....._.,,_,_ • HALF CENTURY OF MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Boon• Brid~ Claimed j By Dr. Wa·ldow Dr. Neil Harris Waldcw claimed Elaine Mary Durkin .as bis bride during double ring nuptials in the Harbor Reform Temple. Rabbi B ernard King directed the pledge exchange for the son of P..trs. Barney Lefcowitz and Dr. Warren J. Waldow ol Bullalo, N.~. ana the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J . Durkin of Newport Beach . Given in marriage by her fathe r, the bride was attended by Mrs. Dale S. Winters as matron of honor; Miss Suzan- ne Durkin. maid of honor, and r,rs. Brian Demse.x •. bridesmaid. Best man was Warren J. Waldow J.. and assuming usher duties were William Among. the guests altendlng were the Boone s' five grandchildren, Mrs. Smith, Donald Llmacher, R o be r t Limacher, Gary Kimble and Miss Linda Kimble, and their greal·grandchildren, Barbara Jean Smith, Sandra Marie Smith, Sarajane Smith and Donald Limacher. Following their marriage in Akron, Ohio, Boone served two terms as district attorney in Boone, Iowa. The n they moved to Long Beach 38 years ago, where he still is a practicing attorney. The Boones have been Newport Beach residents for the past 10 years. · Boone's civic activities in· elude t'harter president of the Lakewood Rctary Club, direc- tor of the Lakewood and Signal Hill chambers or com- .merce and teacher of naviga. tion at . the Newport Power Squadfon. JULIE HOFF To Merry Costa Mesons . ... ... . ., Revea I Troth · Durkin Jr., Benson R. Shore, Julie Hoff and Brian Dennis Winters and Demsey. Flower Schwager, both graduatet of girls were P..fardi Winters and Costa Mesa High School, have as best man. Ushers were lloly Family Catholic Church iR Orange will be the· setting for the June 20 wed· ding of Barbara ~orrison and Stephen John Piuma. , Christopher, Robert and Daniel Forehan, the bride's brothers, Keith Campbell and Ron Carlon. Miss Aforrison, daughter of the Joseph E. Morrisons of Huntington Beach, received her BA \d egre·e from Dominican College in San · Rafael. She did graduate work · at Chapman College a n d presently is teaching in Hun· tington Beach, Her Hance, SOR of Mr. and Mrs. S. Milton Pluma of Pismo Beach, is an alu mnus of St. Mary's College oC ~1oraga and presently is earn- ing his h1BA degree at the University of Santa Clara. . . . • Newlyweds Make Home In Tustin Mr. and Mrs. Peter Gregory Walker were married in San Francisco. The bride ls the former Louise Gibboos, daughter of Dr, and Mrs. Henry Gibbons Ill of San Francisco. The benedict is the son or Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Walker ol Houston and formerly of Newport Beach. The newl)'weds are making -their he1tne•ln-Tustin. • Jazz Beat ·Pervades • The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High SchOQI. Her husband ls a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and attended Orange C.Oast College. C•~ "9UM l'Mlto CHERI MENDOZA July Bride Parents T e·11 Troth Date Mr. and Mrs. Leroy J. Men- doza hosted a champagne buf· fet in their Newport Beach home to announce the engage. ment of their daughter, Cheri Mendoza to John R. Doersam. Miss A1endoza, a seventh gene;..'.ltion C..,litomian , is a graduate of gewport Harbor High School· and attended Orange Coast College. Her £iance, son of Mrs. i J ulie"Demsey.·' selected St. Andrew's Dr. Joan Rosenberg played Presbyterian Church for their Bib 'n Tuckers will danCe the organ and w a s ac- Marcella Doersam Wright of I Corona de! Mar. also is an alumnus of Newport Harbor and currently is -enrolled at ' UCLA. The couple plan to be mar- ried July 11, in St. Andre W's Presbyterian Church. companied on the guitar by wedding on June 20. ·~ to a· jazz beat when they William Durkin J r. Parenl3 of the couple are gather in Tustin Hills Racquet Following a honeymoon ln the Raymond Hoffs and the Club Saturday, April 11. N1>-host cocktail hour will Pue rt a Vallar ta , t"tl e Lester H. Schwagers, all of be · I 11 · I ed II Id . gin estvtiesat7p.m.Din-, VFW Aux1'" 1•ry newlyw s wi res e 1 n ,... __ 1 ·' . g Newpart Beach. VV{!Tha M~deia. 1 il d ner and' dahclng to the rriuslc The bride attended San , e br1 --e ect w 1 ~a uate of the Good Tyme Jazz Band Coastline Aux i I i a r y to Djego State College and eafn. fror_n ~ Un Ivers 1 t y ~f will follow at 8. Veterans or Foreign Wars, -• her d . E gl'·h l Cahforrua, Santa Barbara 1n Host couples are the Messrs. Post 3536 gathers the first and ""' egree in n '"" 8 J H r· e ho served • "-·· E "il lh. d Frid l 8 C la the University of Washington. ~ne. er 1anc: , w . ,aD1.L 1uJl~. merson ''' nor. 1r ays a p..m. os She is a member of AJpha with the Anny, ls atten&ing John Malcomson, Earl Lewis Mesa's American Legion Hall Chi Oniega and Sp 11 rs 1_San_la_An_a_Co_l_le.::g•_· __ .,... __ •_n~d.:O_ll_l •_M_orse_. _____ _:i::.s .:'h:.:e.:m::.•:.:•.:tin:.:g _s_ce_n~•·---ll "holaslic honorary. NOW SHOP EVERY SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. The bridegroom attended MRS. N. H. WALDOW Honeymoon . in Mexico Mesa League La Leche League meets the second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. H. w. P..1oore, 545-4359. will answer questions regarding location. Colgate University in New York and was graduated from dental school at the Unlve rnity at Buffalo. He took his residency at the University of Washington in periodontics, is a member of Phi Kappa Tau, ·Omicron Kappa Upsilon and Alpha Omega dent a 1 fraternity, and served in the Navy Dental Corps. LIMITED OFFER JOU. NOW SPECIAL 20 v1srrs $20 LIMITED OFPER PROGRAM INCLUDES • 20 Vltlts • Steam lath • Heottd Pool • Sauna lath • laby Slttlnt • M"""'I• e W•lrl Pool • Drnol119 - •· S1t11 loom e PlflCHMllbtd • Swlmml19 COWHI · LftSOflt GARDEN -SQUARE HEALTH CLUB 9562 GARDEN GROVE Bl VD. GARDEN GROVE 537-5410 · Half-Price Dua rt Permanent Wave Sale reg. 20.00-30.00 l 0.00-15.00 Been wantin9 to change your '-"" ha ir st.yle to something • bit more swingy? Or perhaps a bit mort tamad7 Now's your chance to try anything you w•nt ••• just pick a style and price and lat our stylists create for you . Petite Selon, reg. 20.00, 10.00 rog. 25 .00, 12.50 Me1ter Styli1ts, reg. 30.00, 15.00 For extre fun try our curly q modecryllc wig ...................... 11".99 Appolnhntnt1 not elwey1 necessary. Clo1ed Sundar.· The Beeuty Se on, 60 I. i}3FlOADWAY ANAHllM NIWPORT \ HUNTINGTON llACH 444 N. E11cli4 1]5·1121 47 f•1hio11 hltnd 644-1212 7777 Edi119•r Ave. 1•2-lJJI COTTON DENIMS •CHECKS • STRIPES • PLAID,S 0 SOLIDS •sturdy fun time cotton - · 36" wide w11hebl• . REG. tic YD. VALUES 68' ' . · guar. washable yd. widths NO-IRON SEERSUCKER PRINTS AND SOLIDS • bouquet of mi ni designs, metching REG. 79c TD. VALUU solids cotton & cotton/acetate 37" /38'' wide 67'~~ SPORTSWEAR MATCH-UPS guar. washable PRINTS AND SOLIDS mod, mod d•signs in spring colors VALUES TO $1 .1' YARD washable cotton -45" wide 78'~ HOMESPUN • r·;~ntti~l fun and sun sportswear bo ld de1i9ns en~ mini flowers in spring colors. MACHINE WASH e TUMBLE DRY REG. 51.29 TARD 100 ~{, cotton 44"/<15" wld!! IMPORTED FLAX LINENS PRINTS & SOLIDS palette prints, 1ple1hy erti1t colors, in bo ld mix and m1tch concepts. MACHINE WASHABLE CREASE RESISTANT REG. $1 .98 TD. VALUE 44"/45' w:ldth1 BONDED SPRING SDITINGS • PLAIDS • NOVELTIES • COORDINATES beautiful se lection of colors, weeves VALUES TO $4.98 YARD ecetates, ecrylics, blends acetate tricot linin~ 54"/56" wide --D OUBL E TX NITS __ . OUBLE1 \NITS DACRON POLYESTER SOLIDS the pack end go febric for the 1eventies. greet texturei & weaves MACHINE WASH • NO IRON REG. $5.'8 to $6.98 VALUES 54"/60" width $39!. • 100% POLYESTER PRINTS bold desi9n1, colors that enhence eny werdrobe · MACHINE WASH TUMBLE DRY COMPARE AT $6.tl to $7.tl ~ 45" wide $49: ORAP! t?I t .._, SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON CINTllt-HUNTINOTON llACH lrl1tol •t Sen Ditto Freew•y-S4S-ISU ldlntet et IMC:h leulne,._.,, .. 11 0p .. Mooday lllN Frlcloy 10 'tll 9 -Sat or day "111 6 -S11!1oy 12·1 , ) • • I I ~ . I \ I ••• f:t • • ... .. • ... , .. .. j -· ·~ . .. . . . . • .. '• • • •• •I ..-"' ' ' .. , ... -. ,, __ .... .. •••• •! •• .. • • ••• , • ' r: .. 1!4 DAILY Pl.lOT Western-style Vacation Women Advised At Series · Orange Coast Evening College is sponsoring a four· part 1Jecture series entitled ltoniemakers: Work Smarter, Not Harder. The series, offered by Mrs. Dorothy Wenck , home advisor for the University of C ~ Ufornta Agricultural Ex· tension Service In Orange County, will be offered from . 7:30 to 9:30 p.fll. on successive Wednesdays In Costa Mesa High School lyceufl\. Management in Homemak· ing. will air April 8; Streamlin- ed Methods for House Clean- . ing, April 15; Short Cuts in M·eal Jlreparation, April 22, and Easy Ways to Care for Clothes, April" 29. There Is no charge and registration may be made at the first meeting. Decoration Talk Topic Fluid Line Stressed ,. -,t?~ /1 ''\ ,.,, ' lg \ /, ·~ T/i .. VIV /// •• \ ri '' ' \ --) I I I 11., .. --- GAROZZO , l/ I ~ \ \' l ' \ 70010 \ \\ Jr. Pa!lte '~ c.~ c::.·' &..1 'd Riding the trails of the Flying E Ranch on the de~ert near \~ickenburg, Ariz., are Mrs. Robert W. Krone and her daughter, Keri (left to right) of Newport Beach. Tbe two have spent two prior spring holidays on the famous 21,000 acre guest ranch. Interior decorating will oc- cupy members of the Sad- dleback Valley Newcomers Club as they ·gather in the Galaxy restaurant in Santa Ana on Wednesday, April 8. > This precut, preperforated custom Spadea De- signer Pattern prOduces a better fit or money. back. Meetings, Programs Galore Lunch will be served at noon followed by a talk by a . decorator from Georgetown Manor. "F.Juid" is the word for this Jr. Petite by Garozzo, featuring a V neck buttoned front panel that ends with two kicky ·pleats. .. N.B. Ebells Occupied Women of the Saddleback Area are invited to attend. Reservations may be made with Mrs. John Tomich, 830-4216. Top-stitching emphasizes the panel and pocket. Fabric suggestions: jersey, linen, pique, synthetic blends, cotton. 70010 Jr. Petite sizes 5-13. Size 7 re- quires approximately 2\4 yards of 45" fabric. Order 70010; 'give Bize, name, address and zip. Hawaiian decorations, music and dancing has been ar- ranged for the noon luncheon : meeting of Newport Beach Ebell Club on Thursday, April 9, in the clubhouSe. Mrs. L. H. McBride wiQ conduct 'the business meeting . and Mrs. Ray Nielsen, chairman of the Garden Sec-- Uon will assist with arrange- ments. Mrs. Harry Goetz is in charge of pi'ograms. On Wednesday, April 15, Mrs. Roland Martin w l I I discuss the many sides of horoscopes and a s t r o I o g y when she speaks before the Cultural Artl Day Section. chairmanship of Mrs. Vernace Morgan. Proceeds go toward further- ing education 'in nursing for two students from Orange Coast College, a law en- forcement major at Golden We!t College, a to~ranking academic youngster at Newport Harbor High School and Orange County students planning careers in music. Adding an exotic touch to their meeting. Mrs. Nielsen's Homes and Gardens Section will visit Paul Brecht's Orchid Gardens Wednesday. April 22. at 12:30 p.m. Ebell members studying art under Mrs. D. C. Mattocks arc planning to hold an exhibit in the clubhouse Tuesday, r-.fay 19, from noon to 3 p.m. April 9, in Ben Brown's, Laguna Beach. A drive into the country to see wlldflowers is on the agenda for members of the Travelers Section. Mrs. Ray- Students Vie For Honors mond Herms, chairman has Comtetology students a t set aside Wednesday , April 8, Golden Wesl College will show for the date. off spring creations during EACH pattern $1.50 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford. N.J. 08848. Tomor· row's Look Today! Spadea's collection of Midi's and Maxi's -the Longuette Book -$1.00 postpaid. HM4 * I *WW1%W3• Peering Around Goren Counters are conven-their fifth . annual hair styling ing Friday, April IO, at noon. compeUtion Thuritday, April 9. Monthly meetings for the The contest, w i t h six t "1 .. &2i!~lll c::~tt club's six book sectio ns trophie.s at stake, will take MIKE.SKAWIN, son of Mr. weekend for Mrs. W. J. Callis feature outstanding speakers. place in the c o m ~ u n i t. Y and Mrs. Eugene Ska win of of Newport Beach and her the latest reviews or best center· Comb-oo~ ~II begin Costa: Mesa, played the Tole · son; John. They vacationed sellers and refreshments. at 6:45 P·J?l· an~ JUdg1n.g starts of Fluffy in "The Seraph" with friends at the CWt Hotel r-..1rs. Archie Brown's Corona at· 7;15. 1:he event _!S Open. al the University of RedJands. in San Francisco. del Mar home wUI be the to the pubhc and Is free. Shawin, a graduate 0 f setting for Book Section One Estancia liigh School where Thursday. April 16, at 1 p.m. he was a letterman, is ·active A dessert luncheon will be Mesa Rebekah in speech events and student served in the Laguna Hills Every first and third Tues-. government. He now is a Lettuce-B-TOPS convene at ho, me of ~rs. Harridet,Maddhux day of the month membe rs of freshman majoring in . in· 7:30 p.m. each Tuesday for a noon 1-ue same a e, w en Mes a Rebekah Lodge ternational relations. Valley TOPS EastQrn Stars Masonic Temple in Laguna Beach Is the meeting selling when Laguna Beach Chapter 52t, Eastern Star members gather the first and third Fridays at 8 p.m, " I - Silver San.di The first Tuesday of each month at 8 p.m. members of Sliver Sands 28fi, N a t i v e Daughters ()f the Golden West pather for meetings. Lake Park Clubhouse in Huntington Beach ls the meeting place. Buffum~' magic lamp cut will coax your hair to curl •• / Shuipo1, lllllP cul and R111w 1111tmenl S.SO Reg. 9.'lla. Radiant 'heat can detect even tne sligftlest tendency your hair may have to curl or wave! The skilled hands of our stylists combined with this magic curl inducer will .. shape your hair into a swirling, easy· to-care·for hair style. Call for an appointment nll'll! ·eeauty Studio, all stores except Marina Manicures·· Pedicures. Facials·· Electrolysis Buf1UmS' Ntwp01t .1 foshlon l1l1nd NtwJ>Ofl C.ntlr • 144-2200 • Mo11.,Thlll'l.,F1l. lO:OO \ill 9:l0 othlf O.yl 10:00 tlll 5:3~ • Mrs. Martin, a very busy Virgo, combines her role of hollsew1fe, mother and business woman in the Sun Sig n Sho p on Balboa Peninsula. . Mrs. H. I. Proulx, chairman will preside at the meeting from I to 2:30 p.m. in the clubhouse. A IO a.m. business meeting, conducted ~y Mrs. Charles Edwards. will begin the PM Jet-Set p r o g r a m Thursday, April 16, in the home or Mrs. L. W. Jenks or Corona del Mar. Cards and lunch will follow . Book Section Four gathers. assemble in Odd Fellows Hall, programs in Fountain Valle)' Also on April 16 Book Sec-~C~t~~~~£~~':.· ---~IT:!:._~W~AS~~·-h~a~p~~_:E~a~s~te~r_E~l~em~en~ta~ry!_.'.SclJ~oo)()I':_. ___ ~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~== lion Five will feature ~frs. 1_ os a esa, a p.m. .. :-.· ·. ·: .. :· '. ;: • Preparations are under way for the spring festival Thurs· day, April 23, in the Newport Beach American Legion Hall. Arrangements are under the BEAUTY SAVINGS! A no-host friendship lun· cheon for new members is scheduled for noon Thursday, l ook 11'1'11tt iri 1 fl1tf1tin9 f1ll1ion1ble 1prin9 1tyl1I Go 1heed -P1mper yo1ir1elf, but tlill 1lr1tch your bud9et, Mattocks speaking at noon in the home or Miss Alice Aurich of Costa Mesa. Book Section Seven will meet in the home of Mrs. Henry Vaughn of Newport Beach for a noon lunch Monday, April 27. MON •• TUIS., WID, LATER WEIK SHAMPOO·SET . _ ···-· '2.45 HAIRCUT ····-··· .... -· '1.50 HI STYLE SHAMPOO-SET ......... . HAIRCUT .............. . $2.95 $2.00 12.95 '2.00 $3.95 all wHk ::~:~:,n!d~~~h!!.1,PERM $ 5~~pl•'· '1500 WONDER CURL PERM .H~:;,, 19.95 CrownTng Glory BEAUTY SALONS :~ ' . • . ;. -· ' 0,EN EVENINGS I. SUNDAY CROWNING GLOR 267 I . 17th ST., COSTA MESA PHONE 54&-9919 OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING GLORY ,,.,.,..,,Y Cop rfu Celffflftl SOUTH COAST PLAZA l.wn Lffel-Nelt to Sfftt PHONE 546-7116 START NOW ••• LOSE 2 DRESS SIZF.S ~U:as 3 WEEKS! ......... -k .. _____ ... TODAY IS APRIL 6 Size 22? .... Be a size 20 by April 22 Size 20? .... Be a size 18 by April 23 Size 18? .... Be a size 16 by April 24 Size 16?., .. Be a size 14 ·by April 26 Size 14' .... Be a size 12 by April 27 Size 12? .... Be a size LO by April 29 Due to our highly suocessful system of weight control we are in the midst of a rapid expansion in Califomq. and th;roughout the United States; therefore we are looking for Intcllirent. Attrao. tive, mature women to become Managers of new locationa. Write ·to Gloria MaJSball peraonally at 311 E. Ocean Blvd.,~ Beacb,.Califomia 90802. . • PrMtt plctnJOm f1tflities fur smalt ehJldr'll'L •, Ccllltl ill comfortlblt usual clothes. Dhrobl,. lillllCliW)', HELD OVER 1 MORE WEEK! APRIL 6 THRU APRIL 11 1/2 PRICE ON SPOT REDUCING ••• CHOICE OF: HIPS or WAIST, THIGHS, or UPPER ARMS I,h Price ofl when used in conjunction with any regular Gloria Marshall prorram re-. p.rdles.9 of how little it costs. Don't miss this special offer. • •• the time II Wr:eo for ach individual to achie¥e lwr aoaI may vary dependinf on aae and other faatorl. How- ever, at Gloria Manhall·multa fOI' everyone are IOllUI" teod. TeJl us the dress size. you want to wear, :we will tell you how many visits it takes and '1W1rantee that yoq will reach )'<'.>Ur goal. Jn fact. a;o positive are we that you will obtain Your objective we will even ]et, you have FREB OF CHARGE any and all further visils unlil )'OU - Yllll'IOIL y' IAoe pounda and incl>es quickly, eafely with- out starvation diets or strenuous exerciae. WB ARE NOT A GYM. ,I Glorfa Marshall a1_. COl!il leos. MUCH LESS THAN O'IHBR8. That's one of the reasons why we became the ""rld's largest owned and operatod figul'e -I aystem (26 locations in.Califomia alone). ,t Call for mEE Mmple vi&il ActualJy U11-.. der supervision the Gloria MBJShall nw:hjnM including our patented ••cifo.La-Matic."' y' No d>ar1e. No obli,.tion. . ___ l!f aM, "'"""~ :FIG1JBE CONmOL SALONS tallY N. ur. N • IMIWlllltAll. AlllltcM m11m ut·.na --..- NEWPORT BEACH 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 (2 Blocks East of \lalboa Bay Club) • 1840 W. 17th STREET ~43-9457 SANTA ANA ALSO IN Aneqr..,, CoYlne, C,....how, DoWMy, Glttulote, IAli.-eM, l• fif9GJ, Lon9 .. och, Nowport teoch, N. Hollyweo4, Chltflrl•, '°'od•110, S.. 01990, S..te A110, s.t. hr!HtN, So.S90d, Tor· NII•, TonClllCO, Wltlnfer, (c ) Copyrioht 1970 Gloria Afarsholl Afgt Co. lnc. - '· .. . • '• . ' •• '• I, " . l ' .. • • -------------------------~---·-----~ ~_......--...,...,. ........ Mondiiy, Aprll 6, 1970 DAILY PILOT Z~ LleAL NOTICI HOTICI 15 HE•Et'I' OIVll!H llMll Mfl4 !ti. i.lloWlllll l'-9 9' fouroll flt .. _. SU,lltol C!OURT 0, THI ~ lie~ Ote!I "'"" br 11M ,Ollct STATI ff CALll'OllHIA ,011 Air Cal, PSA Merger F9es to he Heard LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi. NOTIO: By 1110MAS FORTUNE Cit "" l><lllf' ...... Jllff Off1rl1Nnl f/l the (lty 9' Cult Mftt TNI COUMT't , OP GIA.NO• IOI' 1 H•lll' In l~C"' tf ninety IN> H•. A-n«IJ d 1981 d I Ith I V.d b I ' "'(I I li'8bl " d it U··• d i ""Ch Nvi: • HOTICI 011 •ALI 011 11•.L PIOii'· an , an a oan w mpro arga n1ng po~ on y unpro e routes. un ercap a ~ urn& .... o,.. ,,..., blcrt1e. ,... i.ii.. tilt'ttlft, 11,., "' l'U•L1e ,t.ucTioN Bankers for 11,150,000 due in sine" the statement for the During the year Air Cal growth but Polnta to the -1. two ~n-c1tt. C'Oltr lll'«ftOW11, 1ow1w 111 '"' ~11..-°' "'-E11111 of lOl.Ai ' dded fJI h'~ to h ' ,..... •111 l,J'ld ll'llKlll-Htn>t. -I M. GOOOAllO, 0-.... o-IUon to the proposed J979. "I doubt very much they month of A-1arch &bows a pro. a g ~ Dort e r n lion of profit the local alrllne OM -•k.,, -11,. ••llflf4lltlw. NOTIC' 11 Hlltt:av 01v1M tn.11 ,.,....... fit. He sald the informnL1on California cities out or NoT1c1 11 "V1tTHl1t 01v1N 1,..1 -. ....,..,,'-"• •• Mm111i.1r11r1• .. merger of Air 0.llfornla with would let that kind ol money aent to shareholders showed Ontario, Burbank nnd Palm has brought il.Stlf Into durin& ~:""!r' ~1111 wr:' ..!'! ~1 ::~,11 ~~ ~.:.c~::"i ... lllCJ::'i PaclflcSouthwe1tAlr l lnes go down the tubes," Botzum only the loss duri'ng 1969, 0 Springs. the last 30 days as evidence 01 --~·••Howl,.. 111t ..a11cot1on .. w 111it.1 oldder u..i 111e i.rnu •nd • !Fill Ncrlk1, tlll 11111 1111,.to .r1111 ,,.., cmoMHI-Mrrl,..rttr mt~llontd ..W .Ullo (PSA) Is expected to be heard aays. period he called "one or ex· Sotrum said there is little th1ng6 are picking up. 111 ,,,. n.r, 11 t111r• ~ _ ., 1tc1 19 con11rmt11on by Mid SUMrlor d I ' ' ' t)i A' Ca In llHI CllV 1111' Cl>ltt MHI, 111 ~kli COUl"I .., killdtY, Altrll H, 1'10. ti Tuesday from employet a:n He said Air Ca 1s tn an panslon lnto new and original· question at 1r I was • .,.,Pl••••••••luiM 1111 ''°""" wu .,. 1o1111 11 IM 111ur of t:» 11.M. 11 '"'' .. ..,, SO-~---·1•·-o1 Air cal. L ~ie tw:tlM 11 1 1n .,.. ,.,, •' )4Sn 1-....i C•n.,. ... 111:Mt1, "1.otu.. nft' ., ........ uv ~ • to i_. I MllUl!tN Cl/litnil .. IH 1111 rW/11, ftlll 1M ~I Employ .. may Picket t h e 1>1ttd .... II 6, Im If .. Iii lti. M. Goddtr9, o.c.eMd. F Fl With H d h .. T Off I It f NfTlf II .. llrN ., ..... dMlt!. ll'ICI •II Un l th N rt I Or OWers ea. ac es. ax '"e cH1f, 0" l'OllCt: •Ith!. 11111 •1111 ltlltl'nl 11111 Mid.,,.~ mee g a e ewpo er M ....._ l'ubll~ °''"'• Coe•t O•ll'f l'llDt 1111 1~.ulrH D'f ••r111 .. of i.w. v at which Air Cal stockholders I ' \ A•111 '· "'° I ---•"•c•c' 1 =""::'.r, ... °' o~r O::'"r ,:" ,,:•::: will vote on the ' planned ac-Odd h II u f A . . Adds Hou rs LEGAL NOTICE ~ .... ;.:.:~· ::..:::: ~ '::: ~; quisition of Air Cal by PSA. • a . ses or snll'lll 1--.. -"~"-.. -,-""-.,,-,-.-... -,-.-l:'.w:~!:*1~~~~151•1• II Ctlllor'rli.. At least one shareholder, r-' -. o.m ""' 1111th 1111t "' ttw -lflHlt As a convenience to tax· 0n Moroc11r, .....," n. "" •• 1o:01 •111r11r 11 "" M<i'"-' '"'""' ot Charles A. Botzu.m, intends o•c1octt A.M. ,, ~ 1111 lllfr•11« cr1 111, '°"'~ ... 11 •11tr1t1r 11 5lctlorl is. payers, the Orange County ,,.. cuv Ktll, •1 Sovllt lrH. in th• Tewn1~1.. s Nott11. 111:111111 " Wt1t. to question the wisdom of the In the time it takes to read enthusiasts have experimented 4. f\.1any houseowners have c11w °' ,,..., ''"' ,, cinlor!li.. S•n 11r111rd1n11 1Mr1c11•11. •n •11t coup1v Assessor's office will be ONTARIO TITLE llllVICI COMl'AHY ot Los Anf91t•, ••• ,. of Ctllronilt. merger. lhi! article, close to 200,000 with aspirin in putting up , used aspirin as the triggering IMC •• kvtttt .,....,. llM °""' 11 Trvtt accwdlllf 10 1111 ot1k111 "'•' " .. 1d Some Air Cal employes fear at lhls ti.mt, but would be a_,pirin tablets will be con· beans and tomatoes, com and mechanism in a home.made open from 8 a.m. to S p.m., •oewtld,·• "'oJOt!H •LANDI 11111 ,...,.Nlf =.1111,.:,'r',,1",.=e D1t1r1c1 Ul"llll on1ct the merger will mean Joss sumed in the United States · Lill' H I I Saturday April JI to accept J •LAN '·""*!Id .,... ww.. ,._,.,, oc1l'T0 "" k.1""' 111 11111 .nlOll • prepared to answer his ques.. picca 1• ome econom s s alarm system to warn against H NWlmfllr s. IJU 1n ._ w.. "" of Hid 11n11 IMludld w11111n • " of their jobs. PSA offlciala alone -most of them to warn against this practice, claims for homeowner and ,,. If 0111c111 lttcwdl 1n 1111 crlfle1 11 100, 11r11 ,1 ..... ,,..,'" 19 ....., the '111 absorb u many lions Tuesday. relieve pain, reduce fever or tho h r h · cellar flooding. This high.ly.ef· 1"' .!l:KOtHr of er.,.. c:..mtv. c111. c1u111V o1 w A,..,111 ,., ro1d '"" say Y w _ . even ug one o t e in· veteran exemptions. tor1111, •nd " '"'°" of dtl•ult 111 !NI 111911w1y purooitt Dy d,.. ,tcOl'ded Air Cal employes a1 poasihle, Botzum, a salesman in a alleviate inflammaUon. gredienta in the manufacture fcctive and very inexpensive The homeowners division NYmtnt ,, Plrlorrn•nc• " o1111ti•tttn. 111 look ,m. ,._ 201 of OMc11. [I, h'• lllClll"ld llllAb¥ lnc:ludln1 tilt llrH<fl et 111 "" oltlct ot 1111 CounlV 111:-fer but some competing 1g IA> Los klgeles investment However • human im· of aspirin, salicylic: acid, has device is made from a buzzer. is located in Room A·lM. ••1w11. ,,.tic• of wt.kt! .,..,, l'lall'dld ., 1tk:I c1111n1y. · will be eliminated. · · · ·d he a•••ation, knowing no bounds anUr ..... uc properties and was dry cell batteries and several 700 w 11th St s t "-o.ntrilltr 22. 1Mt In 11111 fl111. -.,.. 11111 c11111n •••I ,,_,,., loci~ • 1 ts secun ties firm, sat owns _.. ""'""' . ., an a ~a, m " Nlf 0tt1c111 ltKOrdl. win •II •• 111 "" c ... 111y ,,, L11 A•ltl. s11i. Air Cal stewardesses, P1 o • and advises clients who own -has conjured up some ex· once used to preserve mJlk lengths of copper .wire. \Vires and the veterans division in ..u1111c IWllln -... «"'-wlltlwl ... ,. " c.i111r1111. HK.r!lled ,, 1o11ow1: mechanics and other employu k T h th ot1'c uses [or tbe familiar little and meat. That was a long, are at•ftched to the inner s1'de Room e--at the ,......... '1"1V 11 19 11''-· -11""· " lflwrll.. T1'1ot Norl""""' .c.iiner at '~ • Air Cal stoc . oget er. ey "" °"" ....... tir•-"" 1111,,..1 COllY9Vtd ,. ••Id ~th-• _m, .,, s.c11on :n. belong to ll'l1ions. They fear hold about eight to 10 percent white tablets. Ii m e ago , a n d be I t e r of the jll"'S of a pinch-type address Tru11ff iw uld o...r of Trv11 111 ,,.,. T-rtt111~ s Korth, 111:11111e u wu1, th, 'II k Inst them ' I I t · I he h h ' ertv 1llu11t In th• City of N-1 hn l1r111n:tlno ~rldl111, In ll'lt CG\11111' is WI wor aga of the 408,000 shares, he said. Here's a short ist o odd-P r e s e r v a 1 v e s arc now c ot spin so t at I cy "'ill County A s s e s s o r An· ... c11. C•intv .,, or1.,.,, 111,1 cr1 ,111• of Loi A11t1•1et. s1,1~ oi c.11,.,1111. since PSA has an "open shop" A statement in the proxy ball aspirin used compiled by available. touch wh en the jaws are drew J H i n shaw em· 1orn11, <Hacrlbld 11 •<tel'ct11111 •o 111t OHk.i.1 .,,., 11 Hl<I h, h J d 't h •j [. · ' · lll 21 ol llodl: 36. ltlver Stdlon 111111 llild II' "'-Dlttrld l11'111 Otfkr in w 1c emp oyes on 8\'t vote notice says if the merger the Bayer Company. which 3. 1• any Nevada 1shcrmen closed. phas1zed th at the I 1 I l n g 1" '"' City DI H_, ••tc11. 51111 111 A•r11 n. i• to belong to unions. tr ansactio n fails "Air recommends none of them: angling for crappies -a kind An aspirin tablet is placed deadline f 0 r homeowoers 01 c1111or1111, " "' rn•• rlCltl'dN 111 ixcE•T .,., W••1 --"•" <w "'1 B tzu r L Ml da l's d . r I' b I t d bet h . d h u . looll • Piii 2S 01 ll'll1Ctll1nnu1 IN~I. 11\trtof. o m, o a ra ' California will be in im· I. One of the most en ur1ng o ca !CO ass or a re a c ween I e Jaws an t c and veterans exemp ons 1s record• cr1 Of•nt• counlV A1.10 E);CEl"T that '°'''°" ot t•'d ' t -I I [ -• h · · h . · l•nd. tiot.,. wuterir 01 "" to110W1,.. tr Y 1 n g o 1 n u en Ce mediate default on certain of bits or noral folklore has it sun i3!1 -say t at an asp1nn clothespin is ung just above 5 p.m., April 15 and that 1or 11w ~?.011 cr1 ,..,1n1 o11111t111111 dtscri11t<1 llM· !lockholders to vote against its long·tenn debt." that a couple of aspirin tablets or two in their bait buckets the lowest part· of the cellar the law does not provide =.·-:,..~~.~1!:=.!.!:-"~' i\:-1~~ 11!"~11111,:ld•is:C:=:.n1 ~7.:~, "".;','::~: the merger. He will quest.Ion Botzum argues that strong added to the water in a vase keeps the minnows in a lively floor. As long as the aspirin for late filing . '"· 1um1 u1>111drd uf'ldlr 111e ttrma ™"""· SJO.oo ltf:r. 1;..., "" ... nllvrHt heth '" fi ' I 1'cture II k h r I h I d h · · -H 'd th r F 'd 111trtof, 1nc1 1nt1rt1t 111treon. nrner" llld soet1CH1r 111ence lllVll\llrl" w er 'tie nanc.ia P efforts should be made to of cut flowers wi ma e t c state or onger l an ' usu:i . stays ry, t e c1rcull remains e sat at as o r1 ay, 01rtc1 M•rdl n. 1t10. ,.,.1111 wllft 1111 w•~1tri., ""' 01 is as black as outlined in refinance with Allstate and blooms la st much longer. A spokesman for the Nevada open. Any substantial amount 1\1arch 27. taxpayers had (CO RPORATE SEALI Hid 5Klloll. »0.00 ,,,.11 t11tnce 1ellll•W l, ki [ G C ·· [ h ONlA"IO TITLE SERYICE 1>1r1!1'!1 wllll !tit -1Mrl'I' IJM ol a no ice as ng or proxy Bankers Life insurance com· Botanists and other experts Fish and 'ame ommiss11on o moistu re. o"•ever. will returned about 80 percent COMl'ANY 1Nc. ••kl 1«t1on 1:ri.oo '"'· 111C1A •r ,, ... (absentee) votes, and \Vhether panies. believe that the aspirins will suggested that if aspirin c3 use the aspirin to disi n· or 100 ooo claims out or 1¥ sldnev w. J1n11. ro 1h1 1u1u1y 111111 01 t11t ""'"' I I d ' l be ' . Aulst111t St<rtttri lltlf .. ••Id Nlll'lll.,...•l <1uer11r et new cans co u n AJr Cal's capitalization chart help, but only if the flowers works, a shot of rum might tcgrate, the circuit \\'ill close 240,000 marled. l'11bll1htct NtwPOrl H•r-Htw•·"ru1 11te Nor111we11 <1utrt1,, 1Mnc1 ...,11,.,.., negottated wltb the major air rl-ft .... two io·ans with Alls'·te have a headache. be better. Local fishermen say and the alarm goes off. Start tomblnect w1"" ~11~ P1111, N .... p0r1 ,,_ 111c1 ''" mt1111111H ••s•••l'f UI Btltll, C1U!ornl1 M1rdl n.. » llld II"•· "' "'" ICIUtlllrl'f nnit of llld Cal lenders. for $500,000 each, due in 197&. 2. Some home can n in g they have other uses for rum. bailing. ...,,11 " 1m U•.N p,icrfllwrlt 11:u1r1er of '"' NO!'tltwnt Mark G a t e s , corporation _'::__::::'.=..:=::..=:.::.::::_:::_ _ _::_:::::.::....::::::::_ ___ .:_::_ _ _: _____________ _::. _________ ___:::___:::____::.::..::.::c.::c.:=---=--: E .. ~~;:" ;, 1111 Hl'Ctll •r• 1 1 .,. .old secretary . and attorney, said/ LEGAL NOTIC ..,1r11t11v. Id I Bot -------------' Slid •1!e wm IMI "''de "'°" 1111 he wou not rep Y to zum ci111:T u•1cAt1 o" •U11 N1ss 101~1 ... ''""" Store Set Miss Fountain Valley Rosemarie Kelly helps Jerry Marks, president of Lin·Brook Hardware; and Mayor E. E. Just; break ground for the new Lin·Brook Hard· ware store in Fountain Valley. Car Wash Deals Eyed For Free Car washing Is a far more seasonal business than sum· mer·and--wlnte.r, according to a Newport Beach entrepreneur who owns facilities in Costa Mesa and elsewhere. Jack ·Shea, president of Beacon Bay Enterprises, of· fers special deals for special days. Business boomed on April Fool's Day. at Lido Car Wash. 481 E. 17th St., when 11uch discontinued ancestors of today's autDmotive femlly All E d s e J s. Corvairs, Packards aOO OeSotos are laundered Cree. Dozens or Corvairs rolled In \Vednesday. "And a fe,v Edsels too," said Shea, "no Pack a rd s though. I wonder what hap- p@Od to 'em?'' "We wash green cars free on St. P1Lr1ck11 Day, oran,ce cara free oa H•Uoween and conUne:ntals on LID co ID' I Bli1liday," he "J)Llined. Shea said he Is sllll drtam· ing up new Jdea1 for lree car wash occufom. - Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings, in offering the most In earnings to savers. 6% 2 191r term account, with $5,000 minimum 5¥..% 1 year term account, with $1 ,000 minimum 5'4 % 8-monlhs bonua account, with $500 minimum 7¥.% cartlflc:ate ol depo11t 1v1llable, with $100,000 minimum If you are a Mutual Saver, now Is the time to Invest addll ional funds in these new hlgh-f'ate accounts. (Insurance has been increased to $20,000.) If you ate not a Mutual Saver, now ls the time to open your account at The.Big M-Mutual Savings. ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,000! COVINA OLI ND AL• MUTUAL SAVINGS and laan assacialian CORONA DEL MAR 28157 East coast Highway Telephone67S·S010 W•ST ARCADIA MO W•t Duarte Rold TelephoM<MM18t ZOO NoM CllM Avenut T-3$9-541' 338 North Brand Souttvard Telephone.242-4146 l"ASAOINA (Head Offic1) 315 E11t Colorado Boulevard T1ltphone 449·23'45 l'ICTITtOUS NAMll Tr.nm el lilt' Ctlft In l•wl11I _.,. The 11rldlf1!1nff dDff UlrllfV lie 11 of tllt URl!tcl $111H Oft t.trlflrrflt!""' If concluclln1 1 bullMU 11 2611 Wlllll. Ille, or 111r1 "'" 1nd ,.,., (rfldll1 ll>t CO'lll Mtl1, Cllltor-1111. undtt !l\t t1rrn1 ., tlldl f;l'ld11 t1D bt -l~e fl(!!lloil!t 11tm lllfl'lt el SKYCltAFT 1t1 1111 Admllllslrtrri'l 11111 thr '""" .. ENGtNEElllMG CO. IN lflll ul<I l!rm lfl'l111td Court; 10 prrnnl of tllt 1mwnt 11 "'"1POMd ot tllt lollowlllf ,.,...,., bid to 1M1 cleoosllld will\ bid. wllosr ntll'lt 111 lull 111d "IKI of re1llfrnul n.. 11nders1,nr11 tt .. rYtl 1'ht rtwflt 11 •• lollowa: 19 rt1tcl tnY Ind Ill bid•. "otlel"t H1n11.(11'1, 2'10 Wlllo l111e. D11ed Mlrd> 31 , ltl'D C111I• M•H, C1!1lot11l1 ti Mlf'ltrlt A. Chrt1i.tt.tfl D1tld Aprlt l, HJ'll A•ml11l1lretr!• DI !ht llobwl H1rrl1M E1!1fol el 11lcl Otc:Hrnl. St•tt ol Ctlllomll. Or1"'r ClllHllw' HAlltltY I. aAllN•S On Alll'll ], lfl'O. lllfer• 111<1, I Notlr'/ t43't N. Stll P__,. lll:IM Pullllc .... ,,.. !or M itt St1l1. Hr-11., Klwlltll, <•IHtrtll• n•1 -•red llobll"t Httrlton --to mt TIMthMlt OM) ,,...,_n lo bl IM H•llGll Wllau 111mr 11 •Ubll:rli). -tllrMr "' Afmhll•lrlltlt ed 19 th• Wlltl111 lrttlrumtfll Int Pul!Ulllld °''"" COlll Olll't' l'llu'. odll!OWllclH ~I Utculld Ille Hrnl. Alrll ,, 6, 11, 197'11 ,1 .. 10 (0,.FICIAl SEAL! llo\lf'f K. H-lnrv Nlll•rY l'utHlc-Orillltl'11l1 "rlMIHI Offkt: Ill LEGAL NOTICE O••noe c-tv ••c1tow "o. 111~ Fl My C""mln!1111 Et1lr.. NOTICE TO CltlOITOlll:S NOY. ''· 1'12 0" IULK TltANlfFlt '°11btl1h1d Or1no1 C1111! Dtllv l'tlOI, IS.c. IUl.f111 U.C.C.I APrll 1, 11, 20. 2,, 1'70 •:it-7'11 Nolle~ '' llertfw qlYtn lo Crl'dl!efl :::;:_::_:::_:::,_:::_::::.:,.,,.,,,_~__::::,;; OI RENEE PETERS ENTERPll:1$ES. LBGAL NOTlCE INC., • COfllOl"llioll FEO. TAX N,. "' l-------------l'011J1 lnllllcltd Tr1111titr"Or, wll o 11 b!.ltllllN tddrn1 It 763 liker Slrfft. COlll MIM, C1!ttol'!lll, "'-1 1 1111111: Cllll:Tl,.ICAT• 0 .. •UllNISI t'tCllTIDUS NAMI lrllllltr of. """'''"" -IOt.lltd ,, Tll., 11ncl1rtlontd clots certHT t.1'1e J1 m liker Sl•Ht, C0\11 Mn1. C1ntom11, c-lldlllf • bullllf•I II J11t s. M1l11 Ind ctewlllrd In ff!\trll '" M11tr!1l1, Sfrre!. S1nl1 An1, C1llfor"!1, ullder 1ht suP111lll, mtrch1ndlH, t<>Ulomt11!, l\ir11l-llCllllou1 llrm ,._me ot "ACESl!TTEll 1111"1 fl~l\lru trldt n•1111 900d w111 EMPLOYMl!NT AGENCV 11111 tit&! llld i nd' n¥tr11ni not ro comH1r of 1111'1 llrm 11 com~ II Ille ltollOW1"9 -ll. letlfh' Sllllll bu!;l11t11 kMWfl 11 "HOUSE WllllH ntmt ill fl.Ill Md pi.tt II rHIOll\c1 OF l0\tll!l.1NIE$S" tnd lodlld 11 ,.l il II followl : A1111 l"hll!lll'I. fNll An ..... 1,.., Cost• l1k1r s1 ... 1. COii• Mita, C1Uf0ml1 " ~ C1lllomlt lf!ltlllftd to bl INN l'D ltobrl"t A. Mlft• o1ttci AirU l, ,;,, 111 11111 Sluoron MM1111 lnltndotd Trtm--Altli l'hUt1111 llrtlt. whll1t busl11e11 tdd.,,11 It 21006 St1t1 of C1lltornl•, Or1~ Count~: Albul"tlt, l1k1wooct. C11ltornl1, •nd 111•1 on April J, 1m, 1111or1 mt. 1 Nottrv 111d tr1nsl1r wltl be cllllWmll'l•llll on or l'ubllc In 111d for Hid Sl11f, HrlOlllll'I' 1lllr ,\prll IJ, lt70, II lhl o"k• of 11111• 1J>011red Aini PFllllJpt: II;-lo ml MSI Title C'"'°r1tlon, 1t :1111 W111hl .. 19 bl lflt HrlOll ....._. llHM 11 1Wtc~ alvd., L111 A...,111. C..Utorn!1. eel 19 tlwl wllh!ft lntlrvrMnl 11\d So !tr IS 11 il;now11 lo Mid In~~ Kkn&wlfdetd 11\e eirlCUIH !IM nmH, Tr•111fllr111 llld lnltndold Tr1n1fforcr 111ed (OFFICIAL SEAl) tM l0Uowl1111 IOdllkln1t bll1ineu n•IMI Miry K. Htnl"I' Ind .tdctrtllll within the ·~r« Vllfl Nol1r" l"110llc-C11!toml1 11•1 11•••: (II "none", 1e 11111.) Prlnc:IPll Ollk1 l1t NOMI! Or1ngr Counl'f' D111d Ftbt'll•ry 2'. ltl'I My c°'""'tnlon E••lrn ltobtrl A. Mlftt11 "'°"· J4 1'71 Siii .... Milt1!11 l'ullllll'lld 0••111• CNtl D•ll'I' l'llo!, lnlelldrd Tr~nsf~rtt1 Alll'll '· ll. 20. ,,, Tt70 ill·711 Im« l'ulltltllfd 0••1'11• C011I Otllv l'Hot. APrtl '· 1r10 "7·10 LEGAL NOTICE 1----!.EGAL NOTICE Cllll:TllllCAT• Cl, •UllHISI l'ICTrTIDUI NAMa The 11,.,.rtltned don certff'( flt 11 HOTICI 0" S.ll.E O" llf:AL "Ill:~ c:onducll,.. • b\lllllfll •I tJ12 Ortnd, l'llttv AT .. lt lVATt" SALi Hunllllfll!I ltlCh, C1llfor11la. VllMr Ill• ""· Ao41111J !1ctrtlou1 ft'"' ... mt rif AME"ICAN IN TNI SUl'l ltlCllt COURT POSTAGE STAMP CO. •nd th1I 1•1d Cl, T"I ITATI O'° CAll,.DlltNIA l!rm 11 CClll'IPOltd tf llHI flltlewlftl 11er1e11, "0111: TMI COU NTY O" ClllANO.I. wlw!w nlm9 !11 full 11111' PllUI ol rtsld1nct In !he Mllllr er! tllt f1t1le OI MARTHA 11 11 lollo.,..., J.-.NIE SHAil,., 11<1 MATTIE J, SHARP. D. Frid Jol!lllOl'I, Sr., '111 Gr1111i, Otctttfd . Hu~tll'llllM luct>. C1Hfwtlla. Ncrlkt 11 hlfrlW '"""' 11111 Ille .,,.. D1lld APl'll J, 1t11 ""'"""' wm Mtl ., l'rlYlll Hie. 0. t'. Jol\nlon, $1-. If !flt hlthnt Ind btlf llldcW, wfl lff"I S!tte el C111,.,..i,, 0<1119r COlllllY ~ " c1nllm11lloll ol 111ct Sil"rltr Courl. On Alrll l. nn, bttoN ""'• • Mcrt1,., Oii or llfolr t11t 10111 d1Y GI April Public 111 Ind lor Hid ll11t1, -MMllY lJJlf, 1t t11t off~ ot ll-ld, Htndel'len 1ppe1red P. Fr9d Johnson. Sr, lnown •1111 Dllltll'OOr, UO E•1I 111h Slrfft, lo mt to bl Ill" PtflOll WlloH 1111111 CllV 11 CHll Mn1, C1111n1V of Or1f1f1. II 1ublcrllled 19 Ille wlll\111 lnltn.111'111'11 S11t1 II C1lltor111., t2'17, 111 tllt rlfF!t. 1nd 1cknowlM!Gtd ht tlrtc\lfrd 11tt .. '"'. ttlll 11111 11\lt'"I of Mk:I 11ec.,Hd 11 (0,.FICIAl $EAll !flt time et dt111t Ind 111 tlle tlt'lll. J11n l. Jobtt lltlo 111d lntert1! 11191 1111 "'''• of N•l•rv Put!Hc<•H .. ,1111 Hid clectllld lln ICCIUlrtd llY .,.., .. lttl l"rlM1&111 Offk1 111 rif l1w or ollltrw!H, olllotr lllln Gt' Or1n1t cou...., In Ndllloll te th1t ot uld d~~IH. My Comn'llHlon E~'lrn at Ill• """ ot dtftlF!, ,,, •flll 19 •ti· M1rch 2. 1ri'3 11H1 ctl'f1111 rHI 11r0111rh •lfllflld In l"ullll1....i Ot•llM C,,.11 D1lly Pltot. 11\11 Cltr f/I COl!t MIH, Counl'I' ol April '• U, 20. 27, 1'10 111-1'0 or1,,,., lt1te 11 C•lllorl\11, Nrlkultrly LEGAL NOTICE dttc:rlbed 11 lollow1, ~II: UI ' ol TrKI )117 II Hr ...... rtc°"'9d Ill looll 14, Pfffl 20 l nd SUl'llttCllt COUltT 0" TMI 21 II Ml1<tll111r11111 M1ot, r«ontl STATI o" C.ll.1,.0ltlflA •Olt ot .. ,. ~IV. rntrt -"" k-TMI COUNTY O" OltANta 11' '7t lenwooct Drive, Co1lt Me .. , Nt. A"'6tt C•Hhlr11!1 NOTIC• 0" HIAltl ... 0, "ITITlON Tl".'1'11 Ill Pit (1t1h t~ t1Wfwt -"01 l'lt09ATI OP Will l NO If 1111 Unllld St1IH IHI conflf'l"llllll'I CODICIL ANO 11'01 \.•TT I It I • .. 11, IH' Nrl cl'll'I ll'ld bllltltl! TISTA.MIHTAltY "ldtncld lw IMllt IKllrrd 111'1' ~ E1llltl ot Df:MA \tEltNE LEOl'OlD, ., ff'lltl 0.... Ill tllt 1-"r 10 0tc1•1N. 1eld. Ten Nr(fftl II lll'MMll 1111 t. NOTICE IS H!llEIY GIVIN Tiii! be dl!losltld wll~ llld, 1!11nk ol Amtrlc1 N1tloll1I Tnrll & 11111 IH' crtrers IO ti!! !n wr111...,. •nd s1vr11t1 AMOcltllOll II•• lllrd lltrtln 1 wlll bl NCll~ed 11 th1 ~•ore11ld olllc~ 1>111111111 tor pt'(lllllt er! Wiii tncl cadlc:U tl 1n" llmt •lter Ill,. flr.i PVbllcltlon Ind JCH' IHUI"" ot ltrttr. Tt11trntnl••• tlfreol •nrt lll'le>re dl!e ol Ille. le "•llllonitr, rtfrren« hi '#llldl J, Oiled ... 1. XIII\ d"Y ol M.,rcFI. 10t. m.cft tor turll\tr Nrllcvi.rs:, 11111 tlwll J.t~ f . """""" lllt tlnw •lld •l•ct el flt1tll\t ll>t Admlnl1trt1CH' w1111 "" Mlllt ~ •• lllell'I Hf IW AIWll n, 1'71. will i!flflfllld II ltlf nlaltl II ,,. 1.m.. In "" COUrll"llm el • Mid ~I. QePlrl'l'lltllt No. > er! 1eld UoUl"t, ti Ll .. l'OLD, HINOllttON •!1111 OIKIMOOI. 700 Civic C•nltr Or!v, W11t, In IM l!lt IHI 11111 Slntl, Slllltl 111 CllV ot s1nt1 .,.,, C1U,.,..ll. Cttlt Mnl, c1t1l1r1ll1 n•u D•lld 'Ml'Ch XI, ltl'O Trf1 17141 Mf.77U W, I!. ST JOHN, AHll'lllYI !Ir Afmlt1lllrlllf' Counl'I Clllrtt. w/111 lllt Wiii AllHXM NtlltWITr. NUltWm ' lllMltt 1'11llllM!fd Or•-C011I O•ll'r 111199. .,_ • 2'11111 Strlll, ,,_. IHCll. AllH"ll I, t," lt10 ,.l'O C1llflnll1 Tii i 17141 •n-tftl Art-n "' "''""-" LEGAL NOTICE. l'tJIMl1hecl Ort1111 CN1t DtllY "Ho!i-----------'---.t.Prll I, 1. '-1tl'O S91·10 LEGAL N011CE I \. · I . " . ... ... · .. ' . ' " • " " . • I l I ' \ I • - ' '· " " : ' " OA)L'fllcOT Oil Firms Go Slow On Wells SANTA BARBARA (AP) - In the wake of the . catastrop~c oll wtll blowout : .. Jan. 28, t , moat leaseho ld· ; :.. en In Santa Barbara :·: Channel a pear to be taking •:i-a g~slow policy about new l . ~ drilling. ~ .> The exceptions are Union OJI ol. c8Ufornia, Humble Oil and Sun Oil. Sun has given . • ::n1ji~~~onw'!:1:sx:o ~!:~ of the flnt two or 6 weels at 'ts plaUonn. Humble , hi a survey maed public Monday, disclosed three dls<:overies among 15 com- pleted wells. The firm has the largest single investment a m o n g offsho~ Santa Barbara Coon.. ty leases. It is involved in 46 of the 71 federal tracts, either as sole owner or in partnership with Standard Oil of CaJHornia or Atlanti c Richfield. · Humble spent $217 million • • r • Bota·k Goes Mobile of the $600 million accepted . in bonbs bids by the govern-Bank of Am erica's Beach·A'llanta branch 1n l·lunt- ment '-during lease sales in ington Beach is going mobile. A public open house J968. is slated aboard !he 2&-foo t Condor coach Th urs· However. Board Chairman day from 10 a.m. to 3 p.1n. at 21022 Beach Blvd. ·=---~ ~ ... - ' . -- • The mobile·bank, designed to provide banking ser- vices untiJ plans are completed for a permanent structure, \viii be driven to and from the site each day with fuU security measures. Otto N. Miller of Standard--------------------------------------- OU of New Jersey, parent firm lta High Gear of Hwnble, said recently the concern over offshore drilling could be helped by a swap of Santa Barbara leases "in certain limited areas" for fede ral leases elsewhere. . At the same time, Miller said a complete ban o f : : ; offshore work w o u I d be Rolls-Royce Dealership Due ''nonsense." S!andard b under fire from conservationist groups for ex- ploratory drilling in the San Pedro Channel off Los . Angeles. ' .·-;;;;;:;;;'=:==============~. ";, .; ~:: EARN ... " ·~ • P• ..... " Sl,000, rw.. ,...,, ,... •• w ...... ..... Tlwtft C«tlflc.m., ..... Miii te -lty. I VJ % ,.W M P ..... k Acc"9h ef •Y ...-... T-wttll*.Weh lrtMetell ..... ~ ..... , .. ...... ...-. llt'tltlt ~ ... JM; .... tr..'" t•. By CARL CARSTENSEN Of fl'lol D•ll~ Pllol Sllfl Roy Carver. a long tinie Harbo r Area Pontiac dealer ori ginally located on the Coast highway in Newport Beach and for the past three years on Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa today becon1es the ex- clusive aulhorized nolls·Royce and Benlley dealer for both Orange and San Diego coun- ties. Carver has terminated his 15 year association with Pon· tiac division of G e n e r a I Motors to servi ce the growing and arr I u en t Rolls·l~oyce market. This is the first dealership or th.is type in the U.S. He has been a Rolls-Royce dealer for the past len years and in 1969 ranked fourth out of 50 American Roll s-Royce COMMODITY FUTURES TRADERS dealers in the number of Rolls-Royce automobiles sold U1roughou1 the United States. Ten years ago, the concept of Holts-Royce affiliat.cd with an American franchise dealer was pioneered by Roy Carver Pontiac; it was the first such <1ssociation in the United Stales. Today. over half of the Am c r i ca n Rolls-Royce dealers are so associated. The rest 1c1naln, as before, in- volved with various other im- ported cars. No"'• a decade later, Carver bce<>mcs the first exclusively RoJJs.Jioyce dealer in America possessing bolh sales and service facilities. Thc.~e are considered by Ro!Js-H.oyce. Inc.. sole im· porter . of Rolls-Royce and Bentley motor cars in the United States, to be Un· equalled ... Sl!NO IN THIS COUl'ON FOR INFORMATION AND OUR Wl!EICLY NEWSLETTER T hP Carver move dramatizes the strength and vitality of the higher priced car market. and the demand for servicing the large and gro\ving nun1ber or Rolls· R oyce an d Ben tley automobiles now being driven in Southern California. . . . 170 I. 17tll St., Cnta MeM ,4,.5045 M•Mll!:lt: AMOICAlll INDUnR:IAL IANKERI AllOCIATIOM, CALl,.Ofl:NIA No111e , . , •• , • , , •......•.• , Addrirsi Pho..,. R. J. O'BRIE N AND ASSOC., INC. 1649 Wnktlff Dr. ,• AllOCIATION 0,. INOV.,,....L Newport 1.ocll 17141 642-a006 Holls·f{oyce. Inc .. is working on a projrcted ten percent increase per year for the next ten years in production and distribution of Rolls-Royce autoinobiles in the United Stales bul Carver believes this estimate is a rnodcst one. He sets his sights on a 25 to 50 percent expansion in sales and service 11·ithin the next 12 months in Orange and San " •" ' ' ' ·" .,. ' ' • "°"'" COMP'AlllQ ..J411 3 fYjf!ia6 o/ fl'a/jttna fl7ede1.a( !hu.:ing6 inflile yo« (o ,f orii iii vrt4 35th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION WITH REFRESHMENTS smed daily from I to 3,30 p.m. through Friday, April 10th. WITH JADE and CORAL EXHIBITS Birthstone jewelry and art objects on display, courtesy Warren Imports, Laguna Beach. WITH A 16-PAGE SOUVENIR BROCHURE Pictorial look at Laguna 21nd coastal Orange County. WITH FREE GIFT OF A PICTURE Big JG• x 20" full color Ii tho of the original oil painting, shown above. AND WITH THE HIGHEST INTEREST RATES IN OUR 35-YEAR HISTORY! Discover how you can eam 5.25% lo 7.5% GUARANTEED INTEREST, compounded daily, on Certificate Accounts, insured to $20,000. LARGm-F1RST-STRONGEST independent Federal in Orange County! ~~ Lll6DNR FEDERl\L SliVINliS AND LOAN a ASSOCli TION lap111 l1ach, CaJiforn la • 260 Ocean Avenue · t elephone: 494·7541 Up111 Nl11111 lr11ch: 3 Monarch Bay Piaza ·Telephone: 499·1840 495-1201 S.. Ci.ttll1Branch:601 Ni>rth El Camino Reel· telephone: 492·1195 ' ) GETS DEALERSHIP Rolls-Royce's Carver Diego counties . For the past seven years, Rolls Royce d ea I e r shave Of.K'rated 3 s "factory-direct dealers." just as all American franchise automobile dealers do. There ;.ire no s u b • distributo rs and all business affairs are handled directly 1vith Rolls·Royce, Inc., ,1 .. hich has been newly located in a just-completed and greatly ex- pandetl facility i n c I U d i n g general offices, a pa rt s v.·arehouse and n e w • c a r terminal, in Pannus, New Jersey. Jlolls-Royce, Inc., is headed by Vice President and General Manager George W. Lewis, with the country divided into four zones. The western zone is run by Zone Manager John Pegg and John Harris, service engineer, and is located in North Hollywood. "J've never known such a company when it comes to a desire to preserve the image of a product," Carver said. "The quiet way R.oUs-Royce accomplishes this still amazes me after many years of association." Ca rver said he is making a point of referring all of his Pontiac customers and friend s to neighboring Orange County Pont i a c dealers. ''In due time I'm sure that Pontiac P.fotor Division will appoint a new dealer in the harbor area," he said. TOP SERVICE AW ARD ~O MANAGER . Lincoln Mercury Division recently selected Fred Si!· ferman, service manager for Santa Ana Lincoln Mercury, to receive the 1969 Gold P.fedallion ·Manager Award. The award signifies "out- standing ability and exception- al ac hievements during the past two years." The award also indicates an established and exceptional sales and service record among service managers in the district said 0. E. Knauff, Lincoln-1tfercury Parts and Service Manager, who made the presentaUon. Computer's Data Bani\.: A Threat to Privacy? \\IASl ll NGTON (UPll -project. the first on a nat- For lhe first time we're going ion\vide basis, is Alan F. to investigate on a nationa l \Vestin, professor of public law seal\! the use of computers to invest igate us. and government at Columbia The big question: University and author of the Is the computer. and i!s book. Privacy and Freedom. associated "data bank,'' a "Today," Dr. Westin said, threat to personal privacy and "computerized data banks are the due process of la\Y? springing up all across the na- Most of us. U we pay takes. tional organ i za t io na I apply for jobs or bank loans or landscape. They have been insurance policies. or merely adopted by government agen- \l'ant to get into a college or a cies . • and by private labor union, have to divulge organizalions such as business information al>out our private corpo rations, labor unions, selves which may \1•1nd up in religious bodies, universities. the amazingly cap a c i o us information sellers. and memory storehouses of elcC.-research projecls. tronic computers. ··~tany of these data banks Is there danger that this in· contain highly personal in. formation may be traded and formation about the citizen - exchanged an1ong d at a his health. education, financial centers for or against us and family status, employ.: \Vilhout our consent? rnent hi story, civic activities, The National Academy of police records. and so on. Sciences and the Russe ll Sage "The information is being Foundation think the question relied on heavily by private deserves an answ<.'r, ThC'y an· organizations to de c i de nounced the beginning of a \l'hcthcr individuals gel jobs, 21,.year study to get ii. credit. and insurance, an d by The study is being sponsored government agencies to by 1he academy's computer determine whether a citizen science and engineering board. should be employed, receive The foundation. w h i ch government benefits, or be !he specializes in applied social subject of regulalion or pros· ~ricnrcs. is pulling up $149.500 ccution." to support it. "The trouble is," \Yestin Am ong ronsultanl s \\ho "'ill said ... that the data banks assist in an <id\ l50ry cap»city know a great deal about us, is Ralph Nad er, Washington but we don 't know enough research lawyrr and champion about them. No one today has of the consutnt'r. systematic information on the The issue -0f romputcrizcd number, types, and functions da ta b:lnks and ind i\'idual of computerized data banks rri v:iry tx't:imr a m:iller or that have bten createtl, what 11aUonnl ('Onccrn 111 \he late measures have been installed 1960s ovrr proposals to create already ln these systems to a n.1tlon:i l da!ri center for safegua rd citizen rights. (and) 1>t:tt1~lic:il inforn1n t1on . how effective these measures Dirrctor of the nr1v 6ludy 11rc.'1 Finance Briefs WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Air l.Jne Pilots Auoc.la. lien Tuesday protested to Federal Aviation Adminlslrator John Shaffer over his reversal or • ban aJit'ainst erection of three skyscrapers near Love Field at Dallas. The pilots usocla. lion said ShaUer'a decision would expose the flying public to the bazard of alrllners col- liding wiUl the buildings. Shaf- fer bad overruled local of . ficials of the FAA at DaUa.s. The association said it feared the Shaffer ruling would set a dangerous precedent t h a t might he followed at ·other major airports. HONOLULU ( U P I ) International Utilities Carp's V. Brewer & Co. subs1d1a.ry and Swinerton & Walberg Co. have announced a joint ven- ture to engage in the con· struction industry in Hawaii. Swinlerton & Walberg has been in the building business in Hawaii since 1926 and cur- rently has $250 million worth of .work in progress, $94 million in Hawaii. The new joint venture company will be called Swinerton Hawaii ven- ture. NEW YORK (UP I) -Inter- C on tine n ta I Hotels, a subsidiary of Pan American World Airways, and R.ollins J amaica, LTDM, will build a $17 million luxury hotel with an 18-hold golf course and.rose hall plantation near Montego Bay in Jamaica. Inter-Con- tinental will operate the hotel under a lease arrangement. STAP.1FORO, Conn . - Xerox Corp. announced Tues- day it has formed a new com- panY to engage in computer time sharing service business for small companies. James M. Campbell was named to head the new subsidiary, call- Jed Xerox Computer Services. DETROIT (UPI) - Furehauf Corp. announced it is closing its Avon Lake. Ohio, factory permanently ab o u t June 1, the closing was forecast sometime ago. The plant employs 800 hourly and 200 salaried workers in the production of trailers and con·· tainers. It is old and costs there are too high, the com- pany said . NEW YORK (UPI) Transatlantic telephone rates to Spain, Portugal, Italy and Germany have been reduced by up to 25 percent with the opening of the new high capacity submarine cable to the Iberian Peninsula. The rate slas hes will save telephone cable customers in the United States at least $1.8 million yearly, Amer I can Telephone & Telegram Co. said. PARIS <UPI) -Standard Oil Co. or California and Tu.- aco, Inc., have joined two French government oil com- panies in making an offer Of about $115 million for Soclete Socantar, France's last re- maining major p r I v a t e petroleum marketing f I r m . The two American f I r m 1 would get an interest of about 20 percent in Socantar, NEW YORK (UPI) -A group led by Alfred Bloom- ingdale has bought Interna- tional Floatels, Inc., from Diners Club, Inc., of which Bloomingdale was chairman until recently. Bloomingdale aslo announced the purchase of Surfside Six, the Florida houseboat building firm , from Pacific American, Inc. International Floatels plans to franchise a floating hot e I system on a global basis. LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Tasker Industri es, inc., has obtained a mulli·mlllion dollar contract from Lo c k h e e d Missiles & Space Co. at Sun· nyvale, Calif., to make high temperature cable assemblies. WHITE PLAINS, N . Y . (UPI) -Int ern at Ion a I Business Machines Corp. an- nounced increases effecllve July 1 Jn rental and main- tenance char,g~r about 600 million types. Purchase prices will not be affected. LOS ANGELES (UPI) Astrophysics Research Corp. claimed Monday Its scientists ha,·e discovered a new non- chemical method of detecting explosives, i n c I u ding am- munition for hand guns, car- ried by aircraft passengers. The including ammuniUon for hand guns, carried by aircraft passengers. The dnnpany said the method would d e t e c t bombs and ammunltiUon con- cealed in suit cases or even In sealed mt t a 111 c conta iners from a.s far away as five feet and would entble a trained operator to search passengers ropldly. i • -~ ---.... Who Reads the Stars For the Stars? ri.. .. It's Sydney Omarr And now this erticulete writer who hes been celled the" astrologer's astrologer" reods the st ors for you. Sydney Omorr, longtime personal estrologer to meny of Hollywood's ond the literory world's most fomous stors. is o DAILY PILOT columnist. Omarr's record for eccurecy of pr.edictions based on estrologiceil enalysis is emazing. Whether you reed estrologicel forecests for fun or os e se rious student of ster-9e2in9, you'll enjoy Sydney Omorr's doily column in the DAILY PILOT • • , , ' ' ' ' ~ ' ' ' ' • . ; • • • i ; ; • I ' ' ' • • • • • ' ' ' ·. • • • • • • ' • ' ' ' .. .. .. ' .. ' ' ' •, ' ' ' All 1,000 of Us Had a Busy Day Today We created and de.livered anothe fresh edition of The DAILY TEAMWORK produces each day's all-new DAILY PILOT. Often staff~. like Thomas Fortune (left), Newpor~ Beach city editors, work with a staff photographer like Patrick O'Donnell to get the story both in words and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures last year to illustrate the varied story of Orange Coast life. Nobody knows how many local stories we wrote. Not even us . CREAnVITY helps advertisers tell their stories nnd sell their goods in _,the affluent nfarket served by the DAILY PILOT. Maury Gardner of dis- play .advertising department looks over layout with DAILY PILOT staff artists Anne Hamblin (left) and Charlotte Andresen. The ad they're dis- cussing will be ready to 'appear in the newspaper only hours after artists put final touches on the layout and it is approved by the advertiser, a lo- cal retail merchant. QUICK HANDS place lines of type, ads and cuts (the metal plates used to reproduce pictures) into page forms as the day's product begins to take shape. Compositor Arden P.1 alsbury is only one of a platoon of printers who "build " the news pages under pressure or deadlines, work- ing against the clock to bring readers the latest available inform ation in each edition during the day. DELIVERY of the newspaper is a speed evenl, too. Conveyor behl carry the papen through the mallroom where they are automatically tied lo bundles of 50 and tossed to waiting circulation district managers (like Blaine Roberts, shown here, (right) who speed them via a fG.vehlcle fleet ·to carriers for dell very . Mailr09m foreman GeQrge Araµ.z (left) and his crew can mbve 20,000 newspapers an hour. • VOLUME is the word at the Copy Desk. DAILY Pnm Copy Desk Chief Norman Anderson (right) aided by Tom Titus (background) and other copyreaders every day sifts, checks and edit.& more wire reports from worldwide news services than the average weekly news magazine pub- lishes. Editors scan enough telephotos to wallpaper a living room every 24 hours. Speed, born of experience, helps them keep it all fresh, too. THE WORDS are ready. Marjorie Jackson reeds them into a $25,000 compute?1 a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which uses a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate of 1,000 a second and punches a new tape which will activate another machine for automatically setting type at high speed. 'The machines can set type at the rate of 6,000 lines-per hour. PRESS'Ol'ffinere iS both physical and mental. Charles Haubrick, stereo- type foreman, checks impression made by page £111! of type on a mat squeezed by 1,800 pounds of pressure per square inch in the mat roller. P.1at can be curved and used · as a mold to form the curved plates which fit onto cylinders of high.speed pr in tin~ presses which print the DAILY PILOT. It's part of the quick.paced daily process of reproducing 100,000 words for DAILY PILOT subscribers to reitd. MODERN equipment helps the aCC0W1Ung department keep up with the "today" pace at the DAILY PILOT. Even as the day's newspaper ls being sped to its readers, Sunnie Chauvin begins feeding ngur~ into • desk model computer's accounUng console. It helps keep track of billings for ads and subJcrlptlons. The machine, one of several tied in to the main "computer. hdjs haDdle 5,lioo aCcounts a monlh. RAPID communciltion ii the name of the game. Supervisor "Nita" Folsom and her crew of "ad.visors" handle 1,000 transactions a week by phone, resulting in publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help people buy, sell, rent or I ease ... even find lost dogs. Many of the DAILY Pn..oT'S 150 phone lines are plugged in here, the classified advertlsl.ng deo partment, home of "Want Ads" and Dime-A-Lines. PICflJRES, too, get the benefit of sldlled, tfllclent handllri1 by master crafl8men who re-photograph them and then transfer the images to a sensIUzed metal plates which are used to reprod~ the photos as read· ers wW see them in the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan takes a really close look at a negative which will be used to et.ch the image on Che metal plate. ~. FINISHED PRODUCT Is chded by Elwood Anderson, press crew cjuer, even as high-speed presses continue to roar at 60,000 impressions per tfour completing the day's run on press units which represent an investment of $3.5 million. Eleven-man press crew will feed into these macbineS::lhe equlvalent of a roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 miles Ion' in prinUng the DAILY PILOT lhis year. ~~ •. ' ALMOST before the Ink Is dry, the prOduct of our busy day la loosed deftly on your la,.-n or porch by one of our 700 newspaperboya who.are important links In the chain of people it takes to bring you today'• news and featlll't8 today In the DAILY PILOT. And as our young independent merchants, like John Mellon here, make their deliveries, we're gearing up lor another busy day -all I,000 of us. • The •Now' Newspaper for All The Comntunilies . Of The. Growing Orange Coast ; . DAILY PILOT .. I .I l ... DAILY PILOT ' Monday, April 6, 1'170 ears Prices Effective .Beginning Today ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE Gouanttfld A&lin't: All tire falhun from normal road hazards or Jd"ecu in 1r1m:crial ot ..-orkrruinship, Hr How Lo~: for thc life ol thc original mad. Whit Sean Will Do: In eu.b&ngr for the tire. repl•cC it char,RillJt for the propon:ioo of current selliDS pril.-e phu Federal Excue T .u iliac rcpresent1 nud used. Rcplir.ot.il pu~s at no chargi:. Gu1nn1eed Ag1i1tt1: Tread wn.r-our. t'or How Lon1t:: 1be numb.:r of months 1pe<:ifirJ. Whit Sein Will Do: In t•ch1nse for 1hc tire, rcpl_.c it charg1n1t rhc cumot sellin&pricr plus fedcn.l Excise Tu le$1 tht followi1:1&&llo,,,. tntc: Monthly Go1r1ntce 18m 2~ 21 to ~9 40 • • Sears NEW TREADS-~ • Built only with carefully in· sptlcted sound tire bodies! •Long wearing Dynatuf tread rubber *Retreadt on Bound tire bodies , 4-Ply Nylon ID-WAY SPECIAL ., .$ SIZE Your Choice P.E.T. ..... 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SIZE Tnde-lo P1ir Price 1 TUBELESSBLACKWALLS 6.50x13 2for39.00 .2.00 7,75xl4 2for46.00 ~.5. 8.25xl4 2for52.00 2.67 TUBELESS WHITEWALLS . 6.SOxl3 2for45.00 2.00 6.95d4 2 for48.00 2.1z 2for50.00 2.35 7.75xl4 2 for 52.00 2.55 8.25xl4 2 for58.00 2.67 8.55x-14 2 for64.00 2.9S 8.85xi4 2 for 70.00 2.88 . ' , ' . f . " 8.15xi'5 2 for56.00 2.11 •• ' IUINA 'Alll: TA 1·•400, .t11o4J30 IL MONTI GI 3·>911 lONO MACH HI l.012t CAHOOA PAik 340·0661 OUHDALl CH S•tOOC, Cl 4 .... 11 Ol.TllWIC a SOTO AN l·f211 COMPTON NI 6·2111, HI 2•Jft1 HOUTWOOO HO f·SHt OUNGI .,,-.1100 $1AU,AODUCKANDCO. COVINA 966·0611 INOUWOOD Ol 1·2S21 PASADINA •11-3211. Jll ... 211 a. H ...... -· t!wv Sat, t130 A.M, to 9130 P.M., Svndoy 12 Noon to $ P.M. "5otllfactlon Guarante•d ot Y--7 lod<" I I I POMOMA HA 9·Slt1 PICO WI l""Jt2 . IANfA ~A Kl 7.U71 IANfA n IPllHOI M4·IOl1 IANTA MOl8CA U W711 s:•sx1s 2 for60.00 IOVTM COAlf PU1A ..... JJJJ TOll:Mta t42·1S11 Uf'UND 911·19~7 VAWT PO > .... ti, 9M•UIO VllMONT"" .. ,.,, ·2.98 -------------~ ------------·---------------·---------- Mond11, April 6, 1970 OAn y I'll.OT n Wil~ Chews 'em ·Up, Lashes Out at Sport·swriter~ . . I By GLElil! WHITE ot _. ~ f'I"' IMH JNGLEWOOD -Big WDI Cblmborlaln wu looting qulto sharp and seemed lo atanil ]lOlllcularly tall as he greeted lhe pre la lhe -., chambers or lhe Forum Sundoy night. !lo -jull l!nilhing gettlng --~ e0 hllh gloas black boots to go wW. 1111 '!<Iv'!( )>lack slacks and his black slli' ihlrt. ' Momtnls earlier he put on a dazzling exhibition d rebounding, blocking shots and scoring lo help keep lhe Loe Angeles Laken alive in their Western Division bukolball playoff ..00 with Pboenl>. Tbe latter leads the be.\t-ol·Seven .aeries, 3-2. I The former University ol. Kansas giant opilled tbrtt dozeo polnls lhrOugh lhe nets to share game scoring laurels with mate Jerry West. He added 14 rebounds to that, showed aggressive and richl)r deserved the stan· ding ovation accorded him by the 17,475 fans who witnessed lhe show, which the Lakers won, 138-121. However, Wilt waB philosophical about what many reporters considered a dramatic t u r n a b o u t in his playoff performance. "I dJdn'l do anything differently than In the olher games -except tills-time the ball was going tbroogh Ult hoop, We were all hitting tonight (SS.9 percent) and that made them (Phoeni:s:) play a more honest defense, taking some of the pressure of£ and giving me more room." Then the lnjury-bampered superstar snapped at a scribe who risked life and limb by suggesting that Wilt's other four playoff ventures against the Suns were less than spectacular. "Man, I scored 29 points in the first and fourth games, had 29 rebounds in each of Ul05e two games and bad 25 re- Beware: Little Man Is Ready Aft~r Victory at Greensboro GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -look out Masters, the little man is ready. "It's a nice thing, "lrming the week before the Masters," G8rjr Player said Sunday after charging out of a closely bunched pack with a final round 6S and taking the title in the Grater Greensboro Open golf tournament.. "I feel I have it going well. ''I'm thrilled to get this form, to win so soon after com.lo& over to this country. l'•e on1y been over four weeks. It's a n{ce surpr(Je. J usually don't play quite um well this early. "1bose fi~two rounds I played, 70 and ·ta, I ca · remember ever playing two oomecuti e rounds that well. I can't remember ever bitting so many Irons ri&tlt at the flag, anything from a two to a 'ilJ: I was right on it. .. It's a nict feeling to g<1 into the Muter'! like this." Player, who won the Masters in 1961, left for Augusta, Ga., only a couple of hours after holing out. He said he would play a practice roumfMonday in prepara· tion for the Masters, which opens Thur• day. flayer, who ha1 only been in this coon· trt for five Weeks on his currtnt tour, flDilbed with 1 271, 13 under par on the rolljng Sedgefield Counl)' Club Course. 'l'revlno, the aeucm's lwtlng money wtDntr closed with a ea, .Aaron had a 71 ana,pa'tmer, who Jed the first two days of the:'.rahklela~ tournament, allO had a 11. Palmer almply never gol tt 1oing. He Gurney Stops Andretti, Unser 'fo Bag Race By DEKE HO\JLGATE Of Mrlt O.ltr Pli.t Slaff SONOMA ~ Dan Gurney or CoEila Mesa enhanCed his reputation as the g:reateat all·Ume USAC road racing driver over the weekend as he won sabrday'a tnaugural Golden Gate 150 Jriay car ract at Sears Ptlill.L Jt was Gurney's first victory in lS years of ractng in Northern Califoniia, where he may be the most popular d~iver or all , time, as well as his eighth victory on the naUonal championship circuit. Reversing ~the order of the 1969 In- dianapolis 500 finish , Gurney was follow- ed across the line by Mario Andrettl, after nearly two hours of hard driving. Al Unltt yr'U third, another second behind Mari<. "It was a typicaJ ract for me," Gurney said afterward. "l was pushed lhe entire way by Andretti, and believe me, you havth't fel~ the pressure until you've hfd him belind you. ".S.eryU.aie I would look in the. mirror, u.lie wu tbal bright red car and ii iooked llkt it was getting bigger. I dlia1d ne.t that Mario was grinning aknit. _j "Just Grife J w o u Id like to loaf ln a race, 1et a~out a lap ahead and tben take it easy. Just about every d'river hu bad an opportunity like that J have to,go all out everytime, which ii why someUmes people th.ink I'm put- tlng my f(flt illto it a little hard." Sears ~~nt Raceway's 11 turns and i:; lhllll , per lap provided more than • UIU&l dUficult test for the ln- dlitnapOifs j;rowtt. Gurney raled lhe ilght, ---· .. the lougbeat he bu e,.r ractd)>n. He \QOlt the lead rnim Andr<tu on tie fifth lap and built up a four second ldd, then hung on and "walched Andretti chip nay at hil mark the remalaill.1 M'laps. ~'JJiat Ont' mistake waa all It would "8,ve taken," Gumey 'aaid. "I kept rilttn1 lot somelhlng lo happen, bul ie didn't." John Cannon, the British·bom Canadian dbn Uvlna In Pasadena who took ,._ C!Jl'll place from ABdffiU briefly Hd allo prtlllll<d Gurney before he fell bode with fueling problems, wu the Gilly other 1erioul threat to the winner. :00mtn1 r."; was lite chasln.g a will olthe wlap,,' Gannoe told .Gurney after I.bi race. "'All I ever got to see w•s a ,little bit of blue here and thert. ''. '1 'liepl llflng a little piece of yellow (the cokJr of CaMOO't car) and It had ri j!WllJ W'l!Tled," Guney replled. Corney, •Celebrates hit nth birth· day nexl Moodoy, took home 114,975. He'll oblerve his birth<ily either by testing hla lndlanapolla car or -he &peculated Saturday : "Maybe I'll tven take \be day off." took I 74 on the first 0£ two 18 bole rounds on the last day and dropped back to a four.way tie for the top with Aaron, Sikes and Barber. Player was another stroke back after a 73 at that time. The little South African, the subject of some threats because of his nation's apartheid policies, was guarded by a sprinkling of plainclothes policemen at the huge gallery that folowed him and his playing partners, Palmer and Aaron. Player called it the biggest gallery he has ever seen. He started his charge, when he made up five strokes on par in a stretch of six hole s, with a magnificent blast from the sand on the par $ sixth. ••J put my second shot in a bunker to the right of the green," he said . "l thought I bad to do something pretty soon so 1 told my caddy, 'I'm going for it -go get the flag.' And the ball went right in the cup. · ''That kind of got me started," he said. He birdied the eight from 1$ foot, chi~ ped to within five feet on the hen and made the putt, and ran in a IO-footer on the 11th that put him out in front to stay. And he canned and urmeccessary l>foot binlie putt on the final hole after hitting a tree limll with hi! tee shot. He said a key putt was a eight-foot par saving effort on the l$th, where he 'd missed the green. FIMI KOl'l!:I. and moMV WIM l1191 !wlday In lhe $UO.OOO GrHltlr Grftlllboro Optfl: G1ry pi.,,_,., U...000 7M).7U5-2'1 Mlllef' 81r11er, IJ0,500 IM<!-72..._273 Ill:. H, Ilka, IUA09 6U1·1ut-21l si.y, Siwtv. *'"'° 10-41·11-'1-215 LH Trevl!IO, W,tlD 11 .... 7M4--J71 "l"l'IOW P11in'ler, .._,_ ""'7·74"11-271 Tonvny 4-•llfl. '5,310 u.ff.12-n-VJ Jlllll t lttdr\;lln, IS,JIG ff.ff.7'U7-m L1rr'1' HIMoft. '5.JlO "'4'"11-',._277 •mv M1xwe11. M.500 ,,....,Ml--Vt Doug ~rs. U.541 JMl.,.71-:tn M1son Rud0191!, UMI 71*70-10-Vf Tony Jllrtlln, Q.$ll J't.1\·J'Ml-21' 81111 0.1rles, U ,S. 11·1UM1-Vt Wiii ~ulk, U.S. ... ,.71..ff-Vt J1ek McGow1n, 12,1~ -,,....n.n-:i.:i S.m Snead, U.1... ...J0.71·1'-2111 lobby Hkhols, 12,1t4 61-J0.72·70-280 8«t IE. Smith, S2,llM J'Mt.72.ff-290 •rue• Cr11mpton, 12,114 12-'f.114-2#0 Julius eoro,, Sll,114 1:1"7·7+47-2#0 J .. ry MCGH, 12,114 70.1'D-71..0t-2IO Llof>el H-rl, 12,114 70.JO.J0.71>-290 John Sc;hf'oeder, 12.IU 't47·7).71-210 Rod FUl'IH!h, 11,Jli 61-7J.41.10-281 Hertt HOOptr, •1.JM •JD.7J..10-2U Torn Wtllli(lfll, Sl,JN 61-70-ff.7~1 Lou Gral'lllm. 11..lM 11 ... n.1~211 Tommy J1cobs, ii.-61-71·1~211 UPI T11t11 ... t1 AGON Y OF A MISSED PUTT But Gary Player Wins, Anyhow Hawks Stagge r Home ATLANTA , Ga. (AP) -"If we can play that badly and win , then maybe we can do all right in the playoffs," said coach Richie Guerin of Atlanta alter his Hawks staggeT'td lo a 113·107 victory over Chicago Sunday lo advance to the Na· Uonal Basketball Association Western Divisio11 playoff finals. "I would say this is the worst playoff game we've won," he said. "We didn 't look sharp at all." The Hawks, who had hil 50 percent in winning three of the first four games in the best-of-7 series with the Bulls, hit only 33 percent from the floor in the first quarter and faced aa up.hill battle against Chlcago most ol the way. Atlanta connected on only 42.6 percent for the game and Chicago shot eve n poorer, 35.8 percent. "They were ready lo be had, but we couldn't take them," said coach Dick Motta of the Bulls. "I can give t6em the patterns, but I can't shoot the basketball for them . I am convinced we could have won the series if we had won today.'' Walt Hazzard 's 12·pont explosio11 in the third quarter sent the Hawks from a 51·51 halflime deadlock to an 85-73 lead going into the final period. Atlanta, which facts the Phoenix·Los Angeles wi11ner in the division playoff finals. has won 10 of its last 11 games and ll of its last 14. GURNEY WINS RACE -Costa Mesa resident Dan Gurney Is pictu red enterin& the tinaJ lap. of the Golden Gate l.50-mile race !or Indiana- nollJ cars at Sears Point International Raceway in Sonoma Sunday. • bounds in lhe second game. U that's p1"ylng bad ••• " he didn't finlah with anything prinllble. Fortunalely for tbe leribe, Clwn· bet'laln waa la good humor and lei the matter drop. [h>lilng ahead to Tuellday llllbl'• duel at Phoenix (where the Liken are M tb1a year), Chambet'laln said st mp I y, "They've got one to win, we've got two to win . ". that's lhe Important thing right· now." ' . Aaked bow ilia Injured knee Is pro- gressing, be Sajd he WU puticuJarJy pleased with the way it held up Sunday in view of the fad It WU bil: third pme in NEWPORT ACE POCKETS $1 0,000 BRISBANE , Aust r a II a (AP) Newport Beach's Roy Emenoo oullllted Andr .. Glmeno of Spain 9-7, 1-t, W, 1-3. 8-2 in 2'h lpirs SUnday for the '10,000 winner-take-all lint prlu in the third match of a professional tennis aenes: Emerson now bas won $30,000 11' three matches in this series, which is part of a !220,000 classic aeries. He now meets Fred Stolle of Australia in the fourth match later tbi1 year in the United States. Angels Await Opener Mter I 04 Drubbing By CRAIG SHEFF Of 1M IMllJ Pllllf Sl8" Baseball season officially begiris Tues- day for the California Angels and Halo manager Lefty Phillips is thankful for thaL The Angel! make their debut Tuesday afternoon, helping Milwaukee celebrate its retura to the major leagues. "I'm just glad spring traiaing is over. All -· "" KMP'C 11111 ~f. 7 .t.ngejJ 11 MUw1111tH 11:25 '·"'• •pr, I .f.noell 11t MllWl\lllH 11 :7, 1,m, ""'· 19 Ant.tis 11! K11nN1 Cit;' .S:U •. m. I hOpe we can start the season oR right," said Pb.illips after the Angel11 lost their final eJ:hibition game to lhe- Dodgers, 10-4, Sunday a,t A n a b e i m Sladlum before 1$,S20 spectators. The win gave the Dodgers a sweep or the three.game Freeway Series. Tues. day night they host Cincinnati. The Dodgers took advantage of four Angel errors and nine walks t~ breeze to the wi.JI. Five of the Dodger ruM were ;mearned. Although Phillips was s o me w h a t displeased with tlis club 's play on the field ("errors and omissions on some plays hurt us") he did have words ol praise for starting pitcher Greg Gar· rett. The 22-year old lefthander pitched the first 4 1-3 innings, allowing eight runs (five unearned). "Garrett had good stuff but be just got a little tired," said Phillips. The Angel manager also opined that Halo hitUng Js improved. "From · the ti.me we played in Tucso•, we've hit lhe ball much better." Ale:s: Johnsoa and Jim Spencer had the big bats for the Angels Sunday. Johnson went two for three, including a two-run homer in the fourth that went out at the 390-foot mark in left fie.Id. A ground'ilut in the eighth gave Johnson three RBI for the day. Spe11cer had a solo home run in the eighth and a siagle· in four trips. Former -Newport Harbor fUgh and Orange Coast College star Bill Voss went on~ for fc.ur, getting a single just ~fore Johnson's round-tripper. Second baseman Bill Grabarkewitz paced the Dodgers with two hits and three RBI. Grabarkewitz had a pair of doubles. Dodger first baseman Wes Parker also had a pair of hits and received the Fresco ThomplO!l Memorial Award for being named the most valuable player of the three-game set. r.ur dayt. "l'm atJU not jumping as well 11 I abould bu! It \lhe knee) Is coming along okay." Laker booa Joe Mullaney waa highly pleued with the plsy ol John ""'""~ who kept the defenmve pressure on the Suna and olso chipped la II pointa. "l m.&read Tre1 as a slow defensive man earlier but often when lllYI aren 't as quick they make up for it with other things -like body moves. John did a fine job of working on (Connls) Hawkins and keeping him irrlllled. · "Mel (Counts) came in and did a sreat job for us, too." Regarding that 0-8 record 1t PhoenJx, Mullaney simply llid. "I gueaa we ·~ lea.st have the law ol averages ~ for us." Counts was superb in relief, canninf nine of J 1 field pl t.rlt.1 f r o m everywhere. Phoenix nev<r led, allhougli the Slmf Ued it at 35 in the second quarter ud t1ien slaihed an IM7 deficit to aws wllh IOU!"" minutee remaining in the ,third stanza. • It wu otlll close, 103-1'1 with 10:3'.)o play, when Counts took over the boar~ to set up three Laker fut breaks. 1be cOunt zoomed-to 1119-lrl in ff oecoods ODC1 tho &ms were down. "'°'Te...,_. WEST ON THE MOVE -Lakers' Jerry West drives around Dick , Van Arsdale of Phoenix during NBA Western Division playoff action Sunday night at the Forum. The Lakers won, 1~121, and trail the • Suns three games to two in the best of seven series. Two Games Play ed 1970 Baseball Season Under Wa)· Today Anociated Presa Ba!eball attention shifted from the courtroom to the ball field today as the problem.plagued sport began it's second century with traditional openers at Washington and Cincinnati whil e the champion New York Mets and trans- planted In Milwaukee Brewecs waited to be trumpeted onstage, The Ameri can League began play at Washington with the Detroit Tilers, sans ftle suspended Denny McLain, sending 1 e ft-h a n d e r Mickey Lolidt against the Senators' Dick Bosman after young David Eisenhower threw out the first ball as a stand-in for President Nixon. At Cincinnati, meanwhile, the usual holiday atmosphere prevaJled as the Na- tional League got underway with the Montreal Expos aending Joe Spmna out lo pltdl againsl Jim Merritt of the Red• in the last opening day at ancient CrOlley Field. UPIT .......... Today's opening program, howtvfl", was overshadowed by the potential ·in Tuesday 's JJ..game schedule in which.the Mets will begin defense of their world championshif at Pittsb1,1rgh a n d the Brewers wil provide Milwaukee with a home team to root ror against the Califorrua Angels. Besides the Califomia. Milwaukee ' opener, Tuesday's American LeagUe schedule shows Detroit at WashingtOii~ Oakland at Kansas City, Minnesota at Chicago, Baltimore at Cleveland and Boston at New York. Jn the National League, Chicago Is at Pittsburgh, Cincinnati at Los AngeleS, Atlanta at San Diego and Houston at San Francisco in addition t o the New York-Pittsburgh curtain raiser. The SL Louis Cardinal5 move into action for the first time Wedneeday in a game at MQa· treaJ. ·: · ... Kni cks, Bulle~~ Collide Tonigij~ In Decider •• •• .·. ' '· .f ·:~; BALTIMORE (AP) -GWI JDhnl!liJ, stung by insinuatioM, has propelled'-~ Baltimore Bullets into position for(.t!l u~ over the New York Knockerboclets In the National Basketball Association Eastern semifinal playofrs. ·: • · · The All.Star forward scored 1s-p<>ih~JA the third quarter Sunday while hltting-'a1J six of his field goal attempts and raliltd the Bullet.! lo a 9"7 victo.y which e~ ed the best-of·? series 3-3. :: The series ends tonlgbt In •New Y or1'.t Madison Square Garden, where.Jobnsoiti 1-lor•lt shoollng sverage las! Thur~ prompted a whispering campaign. :·. "I kept hearing from people that I 5d\'1 out the ·Bullets in New York," :O, Baltimore team captain said after ·~! point effort Sunda.y. "It's Ute kind ·ij' thing that makes you go home and tllihk: "People ktpl saying thinp likt t •¥ laying down •.• crazy talk like that Btit I didn't do anything dlilerent this tinlC: The ball just went in the hole." •::: Seemln~ly hovering over Gurney, on the back ol lhe turn, Is Mario Andretti, 1968 Indianapolis winner, who came in second. After Johnson's three~ b"kel• at the sllrt of lhe third q~ Ignited the leJharglc Bullets, guard Eai! Monroe found the range and the two ccild-- bined for 21 of BalUm.,..'s lO poinll -111 the period and a 71-11 lead. ... :· -" I I I I, f • • , ·•• ••sw ... ,,_ .. • • ••• •• 30 DAILY PILOT Mond11, APtll 6, 1970 LIFETIME BESTS -Wayne Akiyama of West· minster barely fights oU Huntington Beach l!igh's Jack McQuown 'to ·capture the Beach Cities mile DAIL,, l'IL01' l'lloi.s Ill' l'atrldl: ·O'DMlr1tU Saturday. They turned in personal bests of 4:20.&- six-tentbs of a second off Mike Solotnon's meet record. 1970 Sehedule Set USC-Bruin Football Tilt s ·lated for National TV CHICAGO (AP) -Texas and Penn State, a pair of undefeated teams who finished one-two nationally last season, each will make two appearances on the 1970 collegiate football television schedule this fall . The 33--game schedule begins a new two-year, $12 million-per season contract between the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the American Broad- tasting Company. The schedule, which. in cludes 11 na- tional telecasts and 24 regional shows, Clpens Saturday night, Sept. 12, with the Stanford.Arkansas game at Little Rock and winds up Dec. 5 with Arkansas at Texas in a nationally televised day game with four regional telecasts sla ted that night. The program, reportedly pays $205,(1()(). Australia n Net Tea111 Trounce~ Philippines By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Australia, seeking to bounce back from ooe of its rare Davis Cup early elimina· UonS:, completed a &-0 rout of 'l'he Philip- pines Sunday in Eastern Zone play. The Australians meet the winner of the Japan-Indonesia series during the third week in April. In other matches Sunday, Colombia took an insurmountable 3-0 lead over Ecquador and Braii.l forged ahead of Chile 2·1. I ,, to each team in a nationally tele vised game and Sl52,000 to each team in a regional game. Three other national night games in· elude Alabama vs. Mississippi a t Jackson, Miss., Oct. 3; Southern Cal vs. UCLA at Los Angeles, Nov. 21, and Houston vs. Florida State at Tampa . Fla., on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26. ABC has an option to select one exlra "v•ild card" game to telecast, based on interest as the season progresses. The game will be selected late in November and a n y game or g a m e s originally scheduled also will be televised that same day. In addition to its Dec. 5 meeting with Arkansas. Texas' national and Cotton Bowl champions get national treatment Oct. 10 against Oklahoma. Penn State gets naUonal treatment Sept. 26 against Colorado and appears in a regional of· fering against Army Oct. 24. $1!pl. 11 -N•rOon1I, n\grlt, S!entord •• Ar1<1n1•• •I LIMI• Rotk· Sri:>t. 19 -RIHllG<l6! Mln.,...ol• 11 Mluourl, l'iOrkl• Sl•1r et Georola l'ech, lle1.110n Colleu• al Vlll1nov1 •nd Nori'! Car11lln1 Slelr 11 N11rlh {•ro!JM; Sr.ir. 2b -N1tk>n11, Pt~n i11~~m~! VI ~'l':.~'::(Dol<>:rJa~-t<I--;;, Jl1!!'.0""1• nlQ '• Oct. 10 -N•UOnll, OklahOm• Vl Tr~l'1 Oct. 17 -Na!l<>n1I, No1rr O.mt at Army. 0Grlmc11lh al H1rvard, l'lorlda •I Tennenrr •"" Mlnneo11!• •I Mkhlg•n· Oct. 31 -Reolonal Calltornla a! ioulhr,rn C~llOr~la, Ntbr~ll<a 11 tolor&do, Sourh "Ng!,~•.!..._ r::i:..:~ L~~,v 1i~"st.1re8llJ!111"iabama a! Birmingham, Purd""A a1 MlchlQan, W11hlnqt11n a! Slantord •<>Cl le••• &M et Si:>uthrrn Mtlt>Odl11 , Nov. I< ->-oor reulonal lillmt>. to be plc-t<I oo Iller t~n MOnclav. Nov. '· nl~r.:· ~1iltrnN'&°111J;.n1~1~~1~C~; O~~ll1~~',!.~· ~ov. 2' -ThanlnOlvlno P:• -Natl1>rial, nlQhl. 1:d~~ J1~'t.r":n=1~'$."rO:.~ .. ~"U:.;~ 11 Phll•~~loh!a. 0«. 5 -N1tlontl, Ar~llllSll 11 TUli. Rt1,1lr>0•I, 11lg~t, MISlliSIPPt •t Lo11.1l11ria $11!1, Ar111>1U1 S!11~ '' Arltone, Gaucho Nine Get s Bacl{ In De sert Circuit Race Saddleback College's baseball team jumped back into the Desert Conference title picture S a t u r d a y with a doubleheader win over College of the Canyons. 3-2. and 9-7 at UC Irvine. The pair of victories ran the Gauchos· circuit mark to 4-4, four games behind Desert leader ML San Jacinto (9-1 ). Coach Doug Fritz' club faces a must situation this Saturdoy when it hosts the conference leader in a t w i n bill. A sweep would put Saddleback just two games back. This Saturday's set of games will also be the first on the new Gaucho'diamond. Game time for the first one is noon. Saddleback got a pair of route-going performances from pitchers S t e v e Shapard ar.6 Greg Pennington. Shapard tossed a four·hiUer in the first game, striking out 16 and walking Ju.st one. Pennington fanned 15 but was jn trouble all day witb eontrol problems. He walked seven and gave up six hits. Saddleback overcame a 2-0 Canyons lead in the initlat contest scoring single runs in the flltb, seventh and eighUl frames. John Stubbs started. the winning rally for the Gauchos in the first game whc.n he got aboard on a throwing error, &oln( all Ille way lo th~d base, A ground ball hit by Rick Nelson was thrO\Vll too late to get Stubbs at the plate. In the second game, shortstop Eric Christensen paced a nine-hit attack with three for four and two RBI. Bruce Boyle and Howard Hoyt hit safely twice. Christensen went 5 for 8 for the two games. l'lllST GAME c111yont UI 5.odlHtclr ( 11 ••rllrel •••h"I R1vnor. lb ' • ' L-...e11...-, cf ' ' ' • G.l lllorl, u • ' • N.ilOll, .. ' ' ' ' K-, D • • 1 •Chrllltlll"" u f • • ' cvr111. c • • • Hayt, " • • • • B•~!tr. d • • • • Smith, ' • • • • 0.Wf!lfV, 2b ' • • • &oylt, " • • ' • Vlllt"g•I, lb ' • • • Ed~rds • .. ' • • • R•ri• I! ' ' ' • '"""· rl • ' • • 11• 11r<1, rl ' • • • Shl1Hrct. iJ ' • • • Tot1 l1 ~ ' • ' To'-ll n ' ' ' kiri 0)' 111111"'1 • ". C1n"l'Ofl1 ~· .. .. _, • ' ~ICCll-(~ ... '" Ii. -l • • SICONO OAMl (111\'tM !,) SNctltMdr ft) 10rllrlll •Or~..-. Rl'f'llD!', !MM1 3 2 I I lD119ntl;k1r, ti 3 2 I O Giiiion, ll·ll l 2 I 0 N1llOI\. ,_, • I I O k .. Wfl, d I 0 (t 0 Cl'lrltltllten,, I.I I 2 l 2 C111'111,c 11101-1o~,rr a1'1 11x1er, P-311 • l ' l sm1111, c 2 I o 1 O!lwMf, :ti l 0 0 0 BDyll, I~ ) I J 0 vm...,s,ID JOOOEd .... rcf,,Jb 1000 R1y, II • 0 0 o S!\lbt», rl l O O O a1111rcr, r1 l I I o p...,~111111on. p i o O o lDll!• 71 1 I I TOM!\ ll t t 5,,,.. ., l~lllllf\ . " . •'oc'o -1 ~• 10.S OQ.lA -Jff Beach Cities Summaries \1'1r11IY 100 -1. Joll"'°" (E.i.O 10.0 2. fl100d lNl-tl 10.0 l . M•11 (l'\IJ I. Geddes (SCI J. Tolll CCclM) (MePI record). WO -I. JO/lruon (£11) 21 .J 2. Mltl CFVI 22.1 1. Geddes (5Cl '· Rocier1 INl'IJ 5. K@VS (WML .cl -1. Chrl1t11n11 {f"Vl SO.O 1. OlSO!I !Eltl Sl.O l. RDQer1 INMJ I. Ankermbn (WMJ s. Sch111!t INHI. 680 -1. Chrl$tl1no !FV) 1:55., 7. Hustwlck tLBI 1;5$.I J. Ros. ICOM) ••• W!nron 1sc1 j. H•fdln iFV\ lM-r1 record!. Mlle -. AklYlml (WM! •:10.6. 2. McOuown {111U 1:20.6 J. OISIO!I !WM) I . 8tnllf"I lNHI 5. F11nk {FV\· I-Milt -.. \11rQ• 'r:._WMt t:"6.1 1. '111ril (WMJ ~:,,~1 iiMJ~"'d"'" ( .!/ •. · Flem!no Ot11-tl 5. 110 l'IH .-I, Bl1d<.fT (~() 1•.t 1. Waod 4Esl) 11.t l' Stllbl>lllS (HB/ •. Wist (HB) s H1nn1 (FVJ l 11$ "'"' re-cord . • · 1¥0 Ll'I ·-1. WOoct" (£1t) 19., 1. Sl•~ff (5(! /ijL1 J{M~r":tf'orJ1":"M) '· H&n,,. '(F\IJ s. WIH ur> Rtl•Y -l. F111.1nl•ln Vallev 4'1.1 2. Wftlminiter '4.~ l. Corona def Mir •. NIWPWI H•rbor. No flhn. Mlle Rtt•v -I. l'o11nt1ln Vtltcv 3•171 1 N1wp0rt 111rb0r J:7'1.1 J. Estlr>Clil 1. San C1rioenrf S. H11nll1>11lon Stach. !(HJ -I. H11ven (IOH) 6-1 1. Mtrc~lorl•llf Ho'°il1cH'ei chn8',~~':iri.1 =•11 •. k•z.""'" NH ) .s. 211-~-l.. l . 1e1.:/''1 t.r~~B 1,. 'J;..~~un1• (fi.,'f'1r 8~~~ !Ed! !Merl rl'<:ord) · PV -I. O<Ha"rt (Ml 13-0 1 Wheeler (Ml /~"ti~ H11Um•n (SC! •. l>arkln>on (i!VJ 5. illomD5on SP -l. Albrll!aro !NH) :W.•Vt 2 Srtv.,,, \""' 5+il''o l . Orrllina 0-tBJ '· BarMtt ICCIM , Coarelll !HBJ. • Oloco.n -1. 8~rneH (CdMl 112·6 2. Rimer {Q:tM) ~NH~.DIJ/rk !Es!) •. Rr!lly ICM) _5. A!brltton Final ltam •tores: Newoort Harbof' •1 Founta·n \11llty. 11, E•tanci• 38, W stml1111~ 29, Su; Clemenle n . Huntlnciton Be•t~ 11, Corona dll Mar 19, CD"ta Mes11 11. Marl"" to, L11111n• Butll , Edl!.On 1. MIHIO!I Vlt lo c. • '" 100 -I. Gl'i!'°lt IEJO 1Cl ' M•llbV !Ml :~ir l(M~'l°~~J..11,'! '· C•r""ntir !°CM) S. Ltl"lfl• 1 -I. Glr11~1e •i11l ti' 1 Ml!ltlv I"' l~H , l. HNr IM' .C. Liddle. tl"ill S. LI I~ ~ -l. C1mPblll IMJ 1,26.• ?. &r•1>n•l•ln IWM~ l:ll.7 l . Brag1M'" CSC) I C1>nnl"llhlm FV J 5. B•ron (l.Bl . li70 -1. LOCk1Nn ''!) J :IS 1 1 Atv1r11 (Ed! 3:16.6 s. M11 "IM 1Ha •• H.un. (£111 s Colemtn (WM1. IMffl Rtco ). ' ·r LM -I. '••tw IM) n .t 1 Ro111n ICdMI I•. 3~ L•"lll l"V) •. ...,;:,to 1Ea1 s Whitcomb ll'VI Meot rKllt;<I) · '40 elty -1. Coron. drl Mir o g 2 E!ttncl ~-' l. F0\11111111 \ltlllY 4. Wn!mi11Jt1.t :S. dlH'l\1 "HB -1. L•tkr, (MVJ S-9\11 2. l-hlfl$trfoid lfa'I. ~\II J. .Biil (Ml I. Ltllll• (FY) 5. Ntl- ;I) -I. Cltl'M'nt1r !CMJ lJ.t\6 2. $"'-'l•l'dt Jl''VI , .. ,\II l , ADr•hlmtDt1 (H8) •• Htr.01 (Ml , Al!dtrion IE'Tu· P\/ -1. I'/'\ IE'1l 11.a 2 TIVlor (Ml J' .. l Minix I l 4. 81!t111r !WMi S. Wllllfttlttit "p -1. Alt1~1r tWMl 4U'4 2 1'/0nevwtll l 'I ""j· W 1rclltn fWMl •· Blotlow (Edi . ··~· "". F!nt 18tm l<frt': Mtrlllll 311 E1t1tw:!1 ~ l"O\lnt11n •Vtlltv I. (DOii M~·· ~,. c.,,-_ el Mir 1,, ~llOl1111ottr l l. £dl'on O, Hll!ll!llCI 11 .. cll '· ulon Vltlo 1. N•-1 111rbllr , Un C1tmtn s. Lao~n1 Atleh 2. Newport, Christiano Nab Spi.kefest Honors By PHIL ROSS Of tM OllllY Plltt Stiff Fountain Valley's tale.filed Steve Chris· Liano took home individual honon, but the Newport Harbor Tars walked off wilh the team trophy Satur~ay in the 5th annual Beach Cities Invitational track and field meet at Newport's David.son Field. Christiano posted an outstanding double win in the varsity 440 (51).0) and 880 (1 :55.6) and carted off the DAILY PILOT trophy as the meet's outstuding in· dividual performer. His hall·mile mark edged out Laguna's Dave H~stwick by two-tenths and erased Hustwick's 1969 meet record of 1:58.6 from the books. The Fountain Valley flash glided away from Estancia's swift sophomore Eric Olson and Howie Rogers of Newport In his ff() win and anchored the Barons' victorious mile relay combo to a 3:27.8 mark. Newport was leading the varsity team scoring with 31 points going into the · day's final event -. the mile relay. FoUltain "Valley and Estancia were tied with 35 poinlll apiece. All the" Tars bad to do in the four-lap baton race to preserve their second Beach CiUes win in five years (Newport won in 196'1) was to finish second. Fountain Valley, as mentioned before, took the relay and the Newporters held on to take second in 3:29.2. Estancia managed a third ill both the relay and the rmal team scores. M meet director Bob Hailey of Newport put it upon completio• of the meet, "We knew the winner would be around 40 points but we never figured it to be this close." Turning in commendable performances ror the champions were shotputters Terry Albritton and Mark Stevens, who got their team 10 points with a 1·2 finish in their specialty. Albritton also picked up a point. with a fifth in the discus. Newport's Lee Haven set a meet stan- dard in the high jump, taking the com- pelition with a 6-4 seasonal best and mate J ohn Kazmer added a fourth. The winners' Darel Blood placed in the long jump (fourth} and toot second in the 100 to Estancia's surprising Dave Johnson, both setting a meet record of 10.0. Johnson won the 220 in 22.5. Anolher New p 0 rt sprinter, Howie Rogers, was fourth in the 220 and third in the quarter. A pair 1of sleepers came through for Hailey's crew in the distances. Miler Chris Bentley and two-miler Ric k Fleming each placed fourth in their races. In addition to the three already men- tioned, a trio of other varslly meet records were either equalled or bettered. All-round junior Garth Wise of Hufl. tington Beach won the Jong jump with a 21-8'Yc record leap. San Clemente's Bob Blacker and Rich Wood of Estancia went 1·2 in the highs in 14.9 to equal the record and Wood swept to a 19.4 record in the 180 lows. Perhaps the day's besr tmi.sh saw Westminster 's favored Wayne Aktyatna and upset-minded Jack Mc.Quown of Hun· tington reach the tape simultaaeously in 4:20.6. Judges awarded Akiyama first place. MEETS CHALLENGE -Powerful Steve Christiano of Fountain Valley Higb's Barons holds off pre- meet favorite Dave Hustwick of Laguna Beach to win the Beach Cities 880. Nick RoSe of Corona del Mar comes up in third. Christiano clocked 1:55.6 to erase Hustwick's meet record by a full second . Hustwick was timed in 1: 55.8. OUTSTANDING PE RFORMER -Fountain Val-' ley's Steve Christiano accepts the DAILY PILOT trophy for being voted the most outstanding per~ former at the Beach Cities InvitaUonaJ. Former Newport Harbor track coach Bill Straw (left) i:ives the trophy while Matt Leonard, Christiano's coach, Tooks on. The senior ace 'von the 880 in 1:55.6, the 440 in 50 Oat and anchored the winning mile relay team • \. ·s se<ootl ~Dave record .5. Howie I third gh for rRick their 'men- me<t ltered. Hun· 1 with t Rich highs Wood "· I 13\V iyaina f Hun· eously I first to 1d. •• •• iy 1, • • For Coast Area Hig1i Schoou I Checking !Out Grid Slates Varsity football schedules for" Oraage Coast area high schools are completed for the 1970 season. Here's a 11apsule look at each ol the area school's slates : Corona del !\far -The Sea Kings will enjoy seven of their nine games at Darldson Field on the Newport Harbor campus. Included in the twrr-game prac- tice ·set is Santa Ana. Costa A1esa -The Afustangs will replace their first game opponent of the past few seasons -Orange -with Katella. They'll face Los Alamitos aRd Magnolia at Western High's Ha11:del Stadium. Edison -Two road trips prior to Irvine League battle are on the agenda with St. John Bosco and Santiago pro- viding the opposition. Estancia -The Eagles r e p I a c e Pacifica with Buena Park in non-league CORONA DEL MAR Sept. 18 Newport Harbor* Sept. 25 Santa Ana• Oct. 3 Santa Ana Valley• Oct. 9 Edison at Westminster Oct.16 Fountain Valley Oct. 24 Magnolia~ Oct. 31 Costa Mesa• Nov. 6 Los Alamitos at Western High Nov. 14 Estancia• ~ at Newport Harbor Hi gh COSTA MESA Sept. 19 Katella• Sept. 26 Newport Harbor• Oct. ~ Magholla at We stern High Oct. 9 Estancia• Oct. 16 Los Alamitos at \Vestern High Oct. 24 Fountain Valley at \Vestminster Oct. 31 Corona dei Mar• Nov. 6 Edison• Nov. 13 Santa Ana Valley at OCC • at Newport Harbor High EDISON Sept. ·13 at St. John Bosco Sept. 25 Santiago at Garden Grove Oct. 2 Estancia• Oct. 9 Corona de! Mar at Westminster Oct. 15 Santa Ana Valley at SA Bowl Oct. 24 Los Alamitos• Oct. 30 Magnolia at \\'estern High Nov. 6 Costa Mesa at Newport Harbor Noy. 13 Fountain Valley• ., at Huntington Beach High ESTANCIA Sept. 18 at Tustin Sept. 25 Buena Park at OCC Oct. 2 Edison at Huntin gton Beach Oct. !I Costa Mesa• Oct. 16 ~tagnolia at La Palma Stadium Oct. 23 Santa Ana VaU ey• Oct. 30 Los Alamitos at OCC Nov. 6 Founta in Valley at Huntington Beach Nov. 14 Corona del Mar• • at Huntine:too Be<ich H,il!h FOUNTAIN VALLEY Sept. 18 Rancho Alamitos• combat. Two 11me1 are set for Orange Cout College (Bueu Park ud Los Alamitos). Fouatall VaUey -A propo1ad doubleheader at the Santa Ana Bowl against Santa Ana Valley 11 off. The Barons will meet the Falconi a t Weotmlnmr High with the Santa Ana outfit serving u host. Hantlaatoa JIQclt -The Oilers· wut get themselves ready for the ultra-tough Sunset League with a duel with SL Paul -oae of the CIF's tou£be1t •uts to crack. Laguna Beaeb -Along with entry into the Orange League, the ArUst.s are laced with Neff High at Cerrito. College in non· league play. Marina -Marina, under new coaching, will meet La Puente and South Torrance, before enterlag Swuet League hostilities. Mat.er Del -Nothing new here. Just Sept. 21 at Garden Grove Oct. 3 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Harbor Uis Alamitos• Magn~ia' Corona del Mar at Newport Oct, 4 Costa Me!I at Westminster Oct. 31 SA Valley at Westminster Nov. 6 Estancia' Nov. 13 Edison• • at Huntington Beach High HUNTJNGroN BEACH Sept. 18 at La Habra Sept. 25 St. Paul Oct. 3 at Loara Oct. 10 Western Oct. 16 at Santa Ana Oct. 23 Westminster Oct. 30 Marina Nov. 7 at Anaheim Nov. 13 at Newport Harbor LAGUNA BEACH Sept. 18 Loa Amigos at Garden Grove Sept. Z5 at San Clemente Oct. 3 Neff at Cerrito. JC Oct. 9 Colton Oct. 16 Valencia Oct. 23 Brea Oct. 31 Saddleback at SA Bowl Nov. 6 at Sonora Nov. 13 El Dorado MARINA Sept. 13 La Puente• Sept. 25 at South Torrance Oct. 2 Western'-. Oct. 10 Santa Ana' Oct. 17 at Newport Harbor Oct. 23 Anaheim' Oct. 30 at Huntington Beach Nov. 6 at Loara Nov. 13 Westminster• • at Westminster High • MATER DEi Sept. 17 Santa Ana• Sept. 26 Loyola at Inglewood High Oct. t Lakewood• Oct. !. Long Beach Wilson' the · same man-ldWng .&ehedule o r Lakewood, Santa Ana, Long Beach Wilson and Loyola before Angelw: action. Mluloo Viejo -The Dlablos are faced with their last three Crestview League games.,t&ln .the road • • , at Villa Palk, San CMnente and Foothill. Newport llarhor -The Sailors lllao njoy pleaty ol action on their home grounds. Sil games are slated for Newport -includlng Anaheim. The three away gamu involve Santa Ana, Loara Ind Westminster. Su ClemeDte -Old rivals Laguna Beach and Brea provide the opposition before the Tritons setUe -don. for Crestview League hostilities. Westmil1ter -The Lloas have replac- ed El Rocho High with Lons Beach Poly, giving them the duo of Lakewood and Poly to ready themselves for Sunset League action. The schedules : oCt. 11 Bishop Amat at Mt. SAC Oct. 22 St. Paut• Oct. 2t St. Anthony' Nov. 5 1t Pius X Nov. a Servile at Anaheim Stadium (6 ,30) • at Santa Ana Bowl MISSION VIEJO Sept. 18 Saddleback at SA Bowl Sept. 25 Pacifica Oct. 2 Orange Oct. t El Modena Oct. 16 at Tustin Oct. 23 Katella Oct. 31 Villa Park at El Modena Nov. 6 at San Clemente Nov. 13 Footjlill at Tustin NEWPORT llARBOR Sept 18 Corona de! Mar Sept. 26 Costa Mesa Oct. 2 Anaheim Oct. 8 at Westminster (7 p.m.) Oct. 17 Marina Oct. 24 at Loara Oct. 30 Western Nov. 7 at Santa Ana Nov. 13 Huntington Beach SAN CLEMENTE Sept. 18 at Brea Sept. 25 Laguna Beach Oct. J Villa Park Oct. 10 Orange at El Modena Oct. 18 Foothill at Tustin Oct. 23 Tustin Oct:29 Katella at La Palma Nov. 6 Mission Viejo Nov. 13 El Modena WESTMINSTER Sept. 18 at Lakewood Sept. 25 Long Beach Poly Oct. 2 at Santa Ana Oct. a Newport Harbor (7 p.m.) Oct. II Anaheim Oct. 23 at Huntlngtoi\ Beach Oct. 30 Loara Nov. 7 at Western Nov. 13 Marina Arizona All-state Whiz Pro Cage, Hockey Standings Bolsters Dinblo Athletics By PHIL ROSS Of 1M 0•111 Piiot Slaff For an athlete who has ex· yerienced a virtual nomadic existence throughout.. his high school career, Ri ck Wadsley has rared exceptionally well. The Seattle, Wash. native spent the first 15 years of his life (including his freshman year of high school ) In the area around t h a t northwest metropolis before his family moved to Litchfield. Ariz., about 15 miles west of Phoenix, Just last summer, I he Wadsleys made their latest move -to Mission Viejo. And the family 's settling in that community by the San Diego Freeway is already paying dividel}ds, to Ri ck and to the baseball and basketball programs at Mission Viejo High. Although, the 5-10, t 5 o. ~ounder led the Diablo cage !quad in scoring (16 ppg) and helped boost ·coach P a t Roberts' oµtfit to third place in tile rapid transit Crestview League and a CIF AAA playoff berth. the sport In which Wadsley shines most is baseball . ~ a sophomore at Agua Fria High in Litchfield, he started at third base on the varsity baseball squad and was shifted. to shortstop as a junior. In his junior year, Wadsley batted a nifty .428 and made Alt-Slate in the Class AA division. According to Mission Viejo baseball mentor Harry Hilke, •·1 would like to have a transfer like Rick move ln here every year. He has been an outstanding asset to our club and is a potential all· league player." Hilke adds, "Rick started the season w i t h us at short stop. hut I belleve he ha s found a home at second base with a good natural move he ha s coming across the bag on the double play pivot." Rick says ol Hilke, "Allhough l lea med many of my fundamentals when I was younger in the YMCA pro- eram, the one person who Prep Tennis Results Wlillm'llft (M) loll 1-4, 2-41 WOl'I •21i.t~1 /"I loll M, M. '""'· '"· Cr1lt M lolt Q.4, M, M, W. ...... NktlolJOn • lt1t1 IM) -1 ... 14, ,_. s.1. I 1Cew•thfm1.l(ordftt Ml loll '"' l.., 1-4. 1.f, hu done the most In regards to teaching me good fun· damentail is coach Hilke." While Rick's current batting average is right a.round the .200 mark, Hilke feels his se-- cond sacker can boost that above .300 as the season pro- gresses. Hilke says, "He's not a spray hitter. but he does have good power for his size and things should start going his way pretty soon." Both Hilke and Wadsley agree that the team, picked to win the loop title by the DAILY Pllm', has been playing below its potential and the time has come for the Dlablos to make their move. Wadsley opines, "On offense we haven't been scoring enough runs and have only been averaging about four hits per game. Defensively, we'll have to cut down on errors and will have to start making the routine plays all the time in order to win the league." Cage coach Roberts says of his leading scorer, "We were really happy to get Rick at our school. He moved right in and became one cl U1e most popular kJds on cam· pus." "He's an e1cellent shooter and great clutch performer who should be able to play some small oollege basket. ball." Wadsley played high post most of the season in the Diablot' high-low post ofCense because of hi.a good turn· around jumper from the top of the key, aceordlng to Roberts. In addition to being the team'• top point maker, Rick also made the AU.Crestview first team ln baiket.ball. After craduaUon, Rlck, who carries a J.f grade point aver119 In such oourses u calculus, pllys!CI an1! En1ltlh Uterature, would Ute to 10 to UC Irvine to study p,..law and maybe play be>eball • Although lie 1rrtved a I Mlssk>n Viejo too lat• to dab- ble tn campus t I tctio 111, W1d1ley asplrts to eventually go into politics. •lnd!•n1 K1t11tuck1 C11"oiln• New Yor• Pltltbllrth Ml•ml ,.,.. •••l'IMll ••• lttftnl OIYfllfit W L U H " u " " " . "u H U W"tlfft Olvltltfl f'd ••• "~ "" .... ·"' ,,,, ·'" Denvlr t7 lJ ,511 011111 '3 l6 .54 l 'h W~1Mntton 'l l6 .S:lt ' N-Orle1nl 3t ll ,.f04 •~> Len An••IH «I 3t .JOf ''·" l ... nllJ'I R..Ulb llldllM 132, l"lthb!Jrth 11' ICtnlvdcY 101. N-Yorlc '' """''''' ._,,. Denver 1n, Ken1uck1 '' New Y0<11. JO<I, lndl1111 t9 Oelllt 131, Len. AnPIH 121 Ml1ml 111. C1roll111 IOJ THIY'f Oun• C1roll"' 11 N-OrlH~I TW .... Y'• 01mu K..,llldc1 ti 011111 Ml1mt VI. La. "'"'''" II W1111tr11ton New OrlNftl ,, W11fllfltlon Chlc~oo OM- O.troll New York Montre11 Teron111 l"r. Ktdlly N1tltflll Lei .... ,11111 Sl1Mllltl lltf Dl\11'41111 W LT ,H.0,tA <5 22 • " 250 11Q «I '' '' " 277 "' .:i 21 1s 's u' ,., • n '' n 2.u ,., :1tn11n2+.1 :io1 tt ,.. 11 11 m 1'2 Wt1t 01¥1illtll St. Lavis J7 11 11 M 214 17' Plltlb!,ir911 U 37 12 ... 112 231 MlnnffQl1 It 35 tt ilO 224 217 01kltnd 22 ., '' JI Tit ,,, l"hll•d•ll>l'lll 17 J5 24 JI "' 125 Lot Antal•• u n 10 ,. UI 190 lllllNllY'I ....... Cflk•IJO '· MOl'ltrllt 1 8a1h>n '· Toronto 1 O.tro!t ,, N4W Yo~ 2 MlnntJOll 1, Pllll•~""t' O St. Loult J. f'llhburtl'I 1 Lot Aflffltt 4, 01•t11'd I ...,.....,._ Rnlllll N-Yott; '· o.trolt I Chlc1to 10. Monffwt ! BOiton J. Toron!D 1 Mtn~1110t1 f;-P!n1"r1h 1 T ... , ... _ No 11me1 1cile0t.lltd ,...,.,.. ••Mtl fl• ,.,,,., kl'ledvltd Baseball • ~111111,.... ........ l'r..I St1111ll11t1 Al'l'ltl'IUllU.- Wttl LMt f"d, N-YOl"I< 11 f .641 W1tttt111ton lJ 10 .J65 hfton ,. 11 .Jl9 811tlmlA 11 If • .fn Mllw..i!IM 12 15 _... OMl.no lt 11 A.M Cfllc•to 10 11 .'3l Ottr.11 " 1• ,ttt Cliwellfllf 11 1' .nt t 11lfofftl1 10 '' .)II! l<111Nt Cit\' 1 16 .JG~ Ml-I• 1 20 ,!-Sf 141 ....... l ...... Lot Af!Mltt '' I MO Clllc'IM lt 10 "" f'tltlltdlll'f!l9 1.f 10 JU All•nt1 1J II .$1' Hou1ron '' 12 .m f'lthbl,lrtl'I 11 • .m '"" l"'flfl(ll('.ll • 1 JtJ Mew Yei1C II 11 ,w Clneln111tl l.f It .$Jt 1111 01"° 14 It .U1 11, l.OUll 10 11 ,W Monl,..I I 14 ,SM MOftd11, Ap"I 6, 1970 DAILV PILOT :Sl Sears I STOP <llHI SHOP For All Your Automotive Needs ISAVE $7lHigh Voltage Battery SEARSBAITERY GUARANTEE Fre. rcplaumcnt within <)() d1y1 of purchai;e if ba.ttcrv proves defcctivc. After 9() days,. we replace the battery, if defective. and charge you only for the period of owncr· 5hip, bated on the regular price left trade-in 11 the time of return, prorated over num- ber of months of guarantee. 48MONTH GUARANTEE Regular '26.99 Trade·In Price Fits 90% of all American made 12-Volt System Cars. WltkTnde-In NOii. 4303-4.Sll· ,,,,..,.,...,.. f-Pc. Engine Testing Kit 999 1'imin1 Liithf, Comprrs..,.. Tater, Vacuum Fin:l Pump Tc1ier. Rcmorc Stuitr Switch. over INmliet odmodel1 ·-· UM.-lherU,lllMlfn &taaanlaet1re4 &Iliff GUARANTEE If iny '*'' fail• due to dclecl• i1t m1tui1I or worlniunilflip • , , dur· ins: the fitte 90 d1yl or -".000 mild, whichever oc:curi flrll, we wi~ ~r or replace paru frtt .of dltirce. proyidi11g requirtd wrv1i:-r h.u I.ctn ptrformtd acC1:1nlin1 ~ auarantct ctn ilicatt. Ahcr 90 dly1 °' 4,000 milr' i nd 1111 t<l, 24 montlu or 24,000 milf._ wh1d1· CYtr Ottll•t fin!, PITU and \.tbor ch•iw: w111 be pm-.rtttd bated upon th 1 pcm:ntAJ.C of 'u1r111tf"d fllOllth1 or mile" wh~hevtt it Vt"lltt ~11:111111& UNI~ tt- «ivf'd, Per1odk M:rVil't i1 ffi!ulfcd to tup l\latlnt« in efltc1, Gu1ran1ce Applies lo P1,,mlf1" C.r Appliution Onl y\ Sean Carburetor Air Filters 197 Expert lnstallalion Available __ "'..._.,_ ·-·-· ---· _ ... -. • ..ii -· .... "·---· ----· -.--ce. --11 ---· .., ........ ...,, .... fllO A.& .. "" PJI. • ......, tl ........ , .... - SAVE 34 o/o ! Regular 75¢ Qt. Sears Best Sprectrum All Weather Oil 2Qts.99~ SA.VE 525! On Purchase of any complete Remanufactured Engine Installed Mort New Parts In Every Remanufactured Complete Engine t All New Wiler ..... • All New Roder Shall• •All New Rod Bearings • AU New Hydrau· lie Liftera t ADNewTiming Chains • AU New Pbton1 • AO New nmin« Gears: • AUNewBu.Yi ings • All New Elh1111t Valves • All New Intake Valves - • AllNewValv• Sprlnp • All New Main • All New Se.al • All Ne"!f Cbrorlle-Bearinp Gaskell type Rings AU.8rATE car aad: Tr.ck Ellliaet • EJtb.angcs available!« over t&O mikes and models remanufactured to more aacUDI atlndards tblln uud in new ecgincL Compatt ALI.STATE R~maalfactattd El(.lae. ' QuKt1' Blocb 11"1 Hc•dl· Rw urlaeed Map1Du1 laapectfd aftd pressure tesled. er.Maise, Ctm1luif1, Coaatttlng Roel• • Reground c:ompltt.t {Mt r.1m~® Paa, FnMll Cover ... Roeter Cowen INlalltd on 111 OllV englnu. ---•Wltl "'""' 4 -M -II ---,......., .. , ........ u -IMNltl -M--·-·-#OftA ....... --11 ..... ..-..-11 --------uu --·-.~ .. ~-~"""'"·' . :: •! I ! I ..... ~ ... -.... ... . .. .... . . .. ... \, . .. •• ~· • .+ ......... . -' . ~ . . . . . . . ' . . .. . . . . . 32 O~ILY PILOT .. Jt . ~- ANTEATER BITES DUST -J im Greenway, fresh· man second baseman with the ·uc Irvine baseball tea1n, slides safely back to first base against South- ern California College of Cdsta Mesa Saturday. First D.iilLY P ILOT l"Ntt .... ••h1dc O'Dtllft•ll baseman is Jerry Williams. Anteaters won, 14-0, to . bring th eir season record to 19-7-1. They host Chair man College of Orange Tuesday on the Irvine diamond. OCC Crew Upends Two Faes Orange Coast Col 1 ege 's cre111, after a brilliant debut Saturday. will face Cal State fLong Beach) and UC San Diego this Saturday at Long Beach t.-rarinc Stadium at 9 a.m. The Grant Pirates of coach Dave Y.'on all three of the races they entered in Sat ur day 's competition in Newport Beach with S a n Diego State and L o y o I a University. In the junior varsity race. run over the 2. 0 00 -1n et er course, OCC had an easy tiinc of ii, winning in 6: 19. San Diego was second in 6: 44 and Loyo la trailed in 6:56. Seven seconds represen1 s approximately a boat-length lead. thus Orange Coast had over a three boat· length n1argin or victory. OCC jumped out to a boat. length lead at the end of just five strokes. ln the frc>shman race. the Bucs \von 1,1•ith a time of 6:39 while Loyola was second in 6:48 and San Diego Stale haU a clocking of 7:23. UC I-Chapman .Showdown; SoCal Bombarded, 14-0 - By JI OWARD t. HANDY Of t!wt 01111 PHct 5111! Cha pman College of Orange, a perennial entrant in the NCAA Western Regional baseball playoffs and cur· rently rated No. l college team in the nation, will visit UC Irvine Tucsd;iy afternoon . Game time is 2:30 on the Anteater diairiond. Ironically, Cha pm an' s PanthCri could draw the cur- tain on a highly successful first year performance by Irvine in the Tuesday en· counter. Chapman has participated in the NCAA \Veslern Regionals for the past seven years and boasts a 24-6 record including a 5·2 win over Irvine in the rcf'cnl Anaheim tourname nt Both teams own victories o\·{·r tJ1(• nation·s No. l rated uni\'crsity division team, USC, coach Paul Deese of Chapman says in a nal yzi n g the Anteaters. "They have four or fi ve good players and they also have obvious weak spots. They gave us a good game at 1\naheim." The Chapma_p._menlor said he would use ace southpaw hurler Randy Jones against lhe Anteaters Tuesday. Jone s went all the way in stopping Irvine last time out, giving up nine scattered hits and one earned run. He also struck out 10 batters. Gary Adams will counter with either Dennis Nicholson or Dave Wollos. Nicholson went all the "'ay agai nst Chapman at Anaheim and \vas hit harder than at any other time this season. Irvine had its easiest game of the season Saturday in sharpening up for the Chap· Should Chapman win Tues- d<iy. it would give the Pen· thers two victories over '"!'an encountei:. Ad8:ms used Jr\'ine. When selection time~ lfitc hers 1nc lud1 ng Tom rolls around for the \Vestern Do~ V..:ho has bee~ out of R('gionals, it is highly unlikely action since Fe b. ~\ 1n breez. that rnore than 0 n e in-1ng to a l ~-0 ~1clory over rt c> pen de nt team from Southern Cahforn1a . College of Sr1~ilicrn California will be Costa fl.1esa at 'feW1nkle park. chosen. He was also able to r~st "Ir vine is a good ball club Dan Hansen, Rocky Craig, but they aren't very deep," ~like Sheline and fl.like Sykora. A scheduled second game strikeout route and the five hurlers di<!,g.'t give up a walk. Irvine scored a single run in the secor¥1 and added seven in the fourth to break the game wide open. The 14 runs was the biggest single game output of the year and the 13 base hits tied the mark set against Oregon a week earlier. Extra base blows were all doubles with Jim Greenway getting two. Mark Plassard, Chuck Spanski and Nicholson all had one. Bobby Farrar, the Irvine left fielder , played an the way at short stop to rest Ha nsen and he is now the onl.v Anteater to appear in all 27 games: Uc IJl\l'INE l!~J 1br~rbl F•rrar, n 1 1 ! O Spence, lb 7 I o o PlaJS•n:I, !b-11..c ! 1 2 1 Slllca, rf l 1 O SDlnskl, !I-< i 0 1 Gretnw1v, 7b • 1 l ,t..ndl!'r10n, ' 7 1 1 6 1ktr, rl 1 O O ear~. cf • 1 7 WOllO'I, 11 1 0 0 Nichol.an, D 7 I 1 W~!llet. ~ 1 o O Ocdl!.o I 0 t O'Connor, II 0 O 0 Totai. l ' 1• 13 SO. CAL. COLLE'.:-E fl) ' ' ' • ' ' • ' • ' • • ... ~ rbl ' ' ' • • • • ' . • • • • • • Ja ycee Baseball \\'as ca n ce l ed by the Vanguards of SCC. \Vith five pitchers working the game and none of them going more than two innings , Adams gave the victory to Ben Wetzler, the man he figured did the best job. Shul!s. el Rinker, IJ·lb M!ggens, :Jtl·P Tavtor, < Murrev, p.lf l hornaJ, rl Undtm, 2b·H w11n1ms, lb SUt1'1'0, 11 Albrlllon, 7b ToltlJ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' z • Sc1rt '' lnnln11 • • . ' . ' 0 • ' ' SOUTH COAST CONFEAE'ICE t erTilot San Uoe!IO Ml. San "'nlQnio Fullerton San Olevo Mts• Sent• "'n• Or1"9t Coast S1turt11v•1 Stort~ CerrUag JJ.t, Fullerton 6·3 W L GI . ' ' ' ' 6 • J•' . . . ' ' . ' 1 1 1i, ' .. Sau Ole90 ,_., Santa "'n• J.; San Ol~o Me•a II·•, Mt. ~n "'n· lcnlo, 9.5 Or•n1111 co.nt, bvt W1ant•dlJ'1 G1mt1 Fullerton 11 Or&noe Coa11 t! Ml San .-.ntonio • :tan Ci~ al Fu!l@r1an 5•••11 AM al S&n 01~90 Mn• Cerritos, t>Ye Saturo11'1 G1<11e. Or1nqip Coa~t •' S~n•a An1 !11 Fulll'rTon at Sen 01'190 Mu• i11 San 01~ al Ctrrll<ll (1) -: Ml, San A11lonlo. 17Yt OESERT CONFEkENCE Ml. SJn J t clnlc O~s,r,rl W L GI . ' - lmi>erlal Vallfv S1c:klleb-o'~ Mini Cos11 C~nYDnl Paro Verde SllU"'IY'S Sctrt1 S~<ldl~back J·9, .,Canyon~ )·7 Mt. kn Jac1~1c 8·1, Mire t vl,tct Vlll~Y :l-1, Oestrl 1·7 llTIPt'rial Vlll'Y 6·10, Ba"I~ !'"ala Vertie, bv~ ~ l ' ' ' ' Third baseman-pitcher Bob • ~ l Higgens had the only base ' hits for sec, a single off ~ ! s Nicholson and a double off 7 1 Dodd. A total of 17 Vangu ard r 6 , batters went down via the .1-uu N. ero1dw1v !1U) s•1....,, R. N. MEAD~R Clai1ns Consultant A1p..-1..,un, s11~rd1r'1 G•m•• ~ M1. San Jacinto &t Saddl~t~·\ P1lo Verch! ~1 '"''"d1I Ville• 81rslPW 1! Vklcr V~!l•Y T~o l•J~rH tn Ac<llltnf (llH T~• 1111ur" '" l"lr't •11111 ,.,.,.l'ty LIHl'I Ml•• Cosll at Oesrn OU) 141.._, ' ' . uc lrvint 010 100 r'2 -u ll 1 So. Cal Collev-' ooo ooo 000-o 1 9 TOASTMASTERS ILUI ,I.AMI CLUI 2717 Invites you to p1rticip1t• l Mf:aTS Wft:KL Y IACH WEONESOAY, 1:00 1.m ..• l :JO 1.m. K1,11.n lll'lll1tr1n1, S.. CUii Pl11• uu s.. arlmol -ce1t1 M1w "Oil INl'OJlMATION CALL' ON. Cartfll -s.uu 11u v1 Dkll ShldllY -"''"°' tYl!I Art WalfH -M1-sn1 t •r1 Adams Builds Powerhouse UCI Cre'v Upsets Ca l With Newport Gyninasts UC Irvine opened the 1970 crew season in victorious fashion Saturd<iy with a vie· tory over the University o! California tBerkeley) and Cal State (Long Beuch) in <iction on the Oakland Estuary. The job of coaching and guid.ing . hig h school types In competitive athleucs 1s no easy task -especially if the coach is a dedicated sort who's attempting to field something a little better than the norm. One such individual is gymnastics mentor Morrie Adams of Newport Harbor High Schoo l. A~ams has been guiding Sailor gymna.sls for the five years the Tars have been acll\'e in the sport. And, since the sport is still in basic infancy -----ROGER CARLSON ------- Compared to the other established menug availa ble to the student, it's been more or less a beg, borrow and steal type of arrangement for Adams in his attempt to produce a representative team out of the Newport confines. Ne\vport's initial investment into the field of gymnastics was a mod est venture - but more than enough to accomodate the six athletes who composed ·Adams· first Newport squad. Now. ho"·ever, thiings are getting slightly out of control. Adams has 40 athletes currently on hand and the fi gure stands to jump to 60 by this time next year with the addition of about 20 more rreshmsn to the progrntn. To compensate for the influx of pa11icipanls in the Newport gymnastics scene. Adams is busily in the midst of setting up a d1·a1,1•ing in conjunction with the school's booster club !<lr lhe sport. Basically. what il is hoped to pro vide ts about $2,500 v.•orth ot E:quipment to bring the Sailors on a near-par equipment-"·ise wilh \Vestn1inster liigh. \Vestminster, ihcidentally, \Yon the 1969 CIF gymnastics championship -the fi rs l· eve r such title tor an Orange County school. Ii·vine posted a lime <lf 6:20.4 \11th Long Beach second al 6:23.2 and Berkeley finishing third at 6:31.0. In the junior varsity race, Berkeley was the winner in 6:27.6 1,1•lth Irvine second at 6:33.G and Long Beach a dis- tant third in 6:52.2. Ada ms and other interes ted Newport )!arbor parties have raised $2,600 in the past three ye.irs and the Sailor co0ch is Berkeley won the fre~an hopeful that if he can get tJ1e fi~al 21 ~ r<1ce from Long Beach. Irvine grand this yea r it'll mea r1 more lime for doesn't have a yearling crew. coaching his proteges and Jess time scroung.11;;;;-;.-.--.-------;;;;;;; Unfortunately, gymnastics, equip men t1 in<. .A.. doesn't come cheap. Costs include $500 for s El side horse and mats go at abnut $140 c1ch -and lhat's for seco nd-ha nd merchan-• dise. Another key item needed for the 'fars' progra m is pipe for outside permanent fix- tures. One has lo conclude that Ada1n s \1•Hl make It -especially if he's as succe.~sful \vith drawings as he is in getting studen ts out for his sport. Newport's current group is 5-2 in league dual meet action. liis best ever in the previ· ous four seasons was a 4-5 mark. Interested part ies should cont<icL Adams I at the high school (548-1121 ) for further details on the drawing that will take place I Aor. 23 v.1hen Newpor t hosts the Orange County League finals. SAFE CC INSURANCE 9 BUSINESS Mater Dei Ra.llies, Def eats Tritons, 7 -3 9 HOME Colts Na1ne • AUTO C BOAT McCafferty •LIFE BALTIMORE IAPl -Don Bob Paley ~fcCafferty 1,1·as nan1ed he<id Mate r Dei put together a six-run rally in the second inning Saturday to overcome San Clemente. 7-3, in non- league prep base ball action at Santa Ana 's Me mo r i al Park. 'fhe victory put the win ners' overall mark at 7-4 and drotr- ped San Clemente's season record lo 4-6. After picking up an init ial tally in the bottom of the fi rst, the host Monarchs rip- ped Triton lefty R u b e n Paramo tor fi ve hils in the productive second irming ra lly. Chuck Adams led things off for Mater Dei in the second with a single. A walk to Rick Sheldon and a single by Net Matcl1 Postponed A scheduled tennis match "'ith the U ni ve r s it y of Redlands ( N A 1 A defending champions) Saturday at UC Irvine was postponed to a later date when the Bulldogs confused the dale with another match. Coach Myron fl.1cNa mara·s Anteater team is currenlly 15- 2 for the season. losing only to USC and UCLA in dual match competition. The Redlands match will be rescheduled at a later date sometime this week, according to fl.1cNa mara. The Anteaters travel to San Diego Slate Tuesday, Pep- pcr::line Thursday and host San Diego City College Friday. PAN and Associa tes sophomore Steve Marmaud coach of the Baltirnore Colts loaded the bases. today after srrving JI seasons INSURA NCE Pa ramo lhen walke d Jay as an offensive aide or th e Phone 642-6500 Hasler to send Adams home National Football League 474 E. 17th St. with the first run of the team . COSTA MESA frame. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;)~~~~~~~~~~~ With one out and the sacks ,f still fu ll of T-.1onarchs. Ray l Salazar smashed a s harp single ·to drive across Sheldon 1 and ~fannaud . Dan ~1eyer also accounte d! for two runs batted in with a hit that scored Hasler and Salazar. He scored on Bobby Hauper!'s double and the lat - ter was thrown out at third attemi}ting to st retch his hit into a triple. San Clemente garnered two runs in the third and one in the fourth. Jack Kalota socked a leadoff double for the Triton s in the third and scored <Jn Tim Wright's· single. Paramo got on base on a fielder's choice and then moved up and scored on two passed balls. Slft Cttrnt~le (ll .. • ' ' • "' Anderson, u S!~lner, ?b f!e~c~1n. lb l(lern•n, d Tsumo, lb Ciudy, II K~IQI&, rf Wrl9M, < P1•emo, 111 LDmb•rdl, D~ To111> ' ' ' ' ' ' " • • • ' 0 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' ,. • • ' • ' ' ' ' ' • • •• ' ' ' ' rbi I MJlor Otl (J) .. s~1••8•· u ' ' Meytr, Jb·lb·U • • ' H•uDttl, < J • ' Slmp•On, 1> 1 ' ' Acpleton, cf 1 ' ' Adam>. l~·lb J ' ' Gtn1ile. lf> O ' ' SM~don, 1~ 1 ' ' con•oe. 1b o • ' M•rm1vd, d •o l ' H•1!er, s~ 1 • Bullbff, oh 1 ' ' Ktmmesa1. lb ~ • ' Wiit, rf 2 ' ' Broad, rf I • ' Totals 21 ' " S«tll! '" 1nn1n11 S•n c11mi:nte 001 !00 a -3 4 I Meler O.! 160 000 x -7 12 0 SPRINGTIME'S IGGEST EVENT ' ' .HARBOR BASEBALL REGISTRATION 5th & 6th Graders (Alu:> Lale Re<;i1lrat;oo for 7lh Gr•de & Above) Mon., April Wed., A:>ril Thurs., April Mon., April Wed., April Thurs., April 6 ...... REA SCHOOL 9 ...... KAISER SCHOOL 9 .. , ... LINCOL N SCHOOL 13 ...... DAVIS SCHOO L 15 . .ENSIGN SCHOOL 16 ..... TE WINKLE SCHOOL 5111 Grade -6 P.M. 6th Grade -7 f'.M. 7th & Abo•e -7:10 f'hone: 642-9892 2•d, 3rd, <tth Grade'I -Wotcll for a11no1,1nce111ent April 24 DELTA SUPER QUA LITY Tires Cost Les s Complete line of Fiberglass Belted Tire1 Availabl, Prices Start ot S21.9S plus f .E.T. Fibergl•u W ide Ovols -Supo• Prl'mium - Radi1I -Sp<>d1 -S .. nd Buggy - & all Si1e1 Truck Tires BERG'S DEL TA TIRE S 141 I:. 17th St.· Costa Mesa. 645 -2010 8111n~Americ 111rd IOppo1ite Bobs 119 Boyl M11ltr Char91 2001 WEST 17th, SANTA ANA -541°6904 MAJOR CREDIT CARDS OK YOU CA N TRUST YOUR TRANSM ISSION TO ANY OF A/IMCO"S 550 CENTERS. WORLD'S LARGEST rRA/fSM/~SIDN SPECIALIS7S Oronqe County's Olde\! AAMCO AAMCO TRANSMI SSIONS 9541 Garden Grove ll•d. 6Je.a200 Gorden Gro•• llwd, & Giibert stereo 103FM I the sounds of the harbor I ~d~~7 yoµve never heard it so good I qo "' ic- or :al Oil or nd 'Y :e, in at is- an "' l I I ----... -..--. ·-...-..------ • Monday, .t.prll &, 1970 . DAJLV PILOT 311 San Diego YC Successfully Defends F~med Lip ton C:u n By ALMON LOCKABEY O.J.I, Pll•I ... 11119 •llJttr making it • two.boat race. r.-... ....,..,. .... ,.._. Ayres rounded be third From a s~tator's view- point, the 1970 Lipton Cup Challenge race was one of the sloppiesL in recent years. m11rk XI aeconda be h I n d Lie bhardt, but on the f!nsu.lng weather leg the San Diego crew switched lo a smaller ~ heads '! in Lhe lncrtasing wind and increased the lead to t~·o A~tion Pretty S.loppy During Ra~e There were spinnakers In the water, splnnakers up In tight wraps and spinnakers dragging astern. The "chlnese liredrills" were typical of virtually every boat in the race except one . Fred Llebhardt's 4 7. f o o l Sparkman & Stephens sl oop Chimaera, representing the defend1ng San Diego Yachl Club, wore a flawlessly shaped heads'I and her spinnakers went up and down w I t h precision. That's the reason Sa'tl Diego Yach t Club still owns the 77- year old Llpton Challenge Trophy, a kudo she hu zea1ously guarded for the past dOZ<!O years, losing it only once since 1959 -and that by way or the protest committee. SUDDEN DEATH Chimaera had I.he sudden- dealh race her own way after the triangular lap, beating the second place, boat, Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Carerra, skippered by Don Ayres Jr. by two minutes and e i g h t lieconds. At the start Liebhardt and crew took Chimaera off the leeward end (If the line on slarboard tack, but was ef- fectively blocked from tacking by Cabrillo Beach Ya c h l Club's Freedom, skippered by Barney Flam and Seal Beach Yacht Club's Charisma, with Ed Feo at the helm. The rest of the fleet chose the right side of the cou rse on a port tack toward Polnt Loma. Liebhardt nna!ly gavt: up trying lo outfoot Freedom and Charis.ma and took both sterns on a port' tack . The other two boats were late in CQvering and when they converged with Ayre8 comh1g off the beach il quickly became a four·bOat battle to the weather mark. .rreedom rou nded first with Carerra and Chimaera follow· ing in that order, overlapped. The Newport crew had a little trouble getting lhe chute hoisted and Chimaera moved into second place on Freedom's transom. Charisma, which had rounded in fourth place appeared to be losing ground on the downwind leg. FREEDOM PASSED minutes at the mark. WiUl that kind of a lead Liebhardt WM taking n o chances of a spinnaker foul-up in the brisk 1~18 knot breeze. He ordered the chute hoisted in stops and broke It ool after squaring away on the leeward leg. MADE 5 SECONDS Ayre::i picked up aboul five seconds on the downwind leg, partly because Liebhardt, still being cautious, had the. chute down and the jib was sd well in advance of the mark. On the final weather leg Chimaera increased her lead to two minutes a 'n d eight seconds by going back to t.he larger jib as the wind decreas- ed. The spectators were treated to one hair-raising thrill at the finish, however, when Long Beach Yacht Club's Escudero rr, ski ppered by Dick Valdez, and Voyagers Yacht Club's Tempest, with r..1orrie Kirk at th e helm coverged on the finish flag on opposite tacks. Valdez, on the burdened port ta ck, sa id he was expecting Kirk lo round up and poke his bow across the line first. CONTINUED DRIVE But Kirk conUnued to drive for lhe line, apparently ex- pecting Valdez lo bear away under his stern or t.ack. Both boots had to swlng sha rply head to wind to avoid a serious collision. But in the maneuvering, Escudero over ran the flag and w a s automaUcally disqualified - not that it mattered, as the boats were finishing in eighth and ninth place. Balboa Yacht Club's Argyle Campbell, sailing J im Seals' Columbia-50 Loco Viente, were highly fa vored before the race becau9e of Campbell 's recent victory in the Congressional Cup. But the youngsters got off to a bad start -some 35 seconds late, and compounded the han- di cap by having chute trouble at the first mark as they roun- ded overlapped with three other boats. The BYC entry finished in 10th place but mov· ed up one place because o! Escudero's DSQ. START OF THE 57TH LIPTON CUP CHALLENGE Ch imaera (No. 7111) Soon Covered by Freedom (No. 7889), Vector (No. 7115 ) BYC's PLENTY ·oF ACTION ON DOWNW IND RUN Argyle Campbell (Fore9round l Overhauls Thrff Boats Chimaera passed Freedom just before the seco nd mark a\id doused her chute for the close reach to the end of the triangular leg. Freedom and Carerra were overlapped less than a boat length astern, but it was here Flam in Freedom blew his chances by jibing the spinnaker and trying to carry il to the next mark. She wa s pulled far off to leeward while Ayres moved up on Llebhardt's weather quarter. Chilnaera was touted before the race as a light-weather boat. but showed her transom to the rest of the fleet eve n in the brisk breezes th.et ranged from 10 knots at the start to-------------------------------- Mike Masino Cap_tures Race TURLOCK LAKE STATE PARK (UPI) -Mike Masino throttled "Playmate" to a world record 125.87 miles per hour Sunday d u r i n g al'I elimination run in national Drag Boat Racing Association competition Sunday and then went on to take his class. Masino. of Tujunga, finished first in the blO\\'n gas nat- bottom class with a speed of 124.13 m.p.h. in the quarter mile. 15-18 on the seC<lnd windward leg. MANY SPECTATORS A large spectator f 1 e et followed the race which \\·as sailed under brilliantly clear skies with visibility of some 50 miles. Here is the order of fin ish : 1 . Chimaera, Fred Liebhardt, San Diego Yacht Club. 2. Carerra, Don Ayres Jr .. Newport Harbor Yacht Club. 3. Charisma. Ed Feo, Seal Beach Yacht Club. 4. Vector. Hank Butler. Oceanside Yacht Club. S. Freedom, Barney Flam , CabriJlo Beach Yacht Club. 6. Gem, Charles Hathaway. California Yacht Club. 7. Querida II. Jim Feuer- strin, Del Rey Yacht Club. 8. Tempest, Morrie Kirk, Voyagers Yacht Club. 9. Loco Viente, Ar gy I e Campbell, Balboa Yacht Club. 10. Undine, Nonnan Dawley, Santa Barbara Yacht Club. II. Esudero It, Dick Valdez. Long Beach Yacht Club. CHIMAERA TIGHT ENS CUP STRANGLE HOLD With Perfect Genoa J ib, Defender Drives to Finish Somethin9 Special Almon Lockabtr on boallng, TDrn Tlt11s on thtattr, Thomas Fortune: on tdLltlllllon, Ult DAIL y PILOT on Ult Orange Co;nt. It's the aQ! of sptci1illzat1on. And our 11JKlal\y is being rea.Ur Kmethlng sl)Kl1il. ----. - Newport Man to Head Ranger Y ucht Sales Roland "Buster" Hammond ()f Newport Beach has been appointed national s a I e s manager of Ranger Yachts, a division or Bangor Pu n ta Corporation, according to an announcement made by Lewis J. 1-lecker. group vice presi- dent of the Leisure Time Group at Bangor Punta. ln his new capacity Ham- mond ~·ill be responsible for marketing and distribution of Ranger yachts throughout the U.S. Ranger yachls a r e presently produ~ed in 26 and 33 foot sizes. Their plans call ror a complete line of sailboats from 2<l feet to 40 feet. "We are very fortunate in acquiring a sales manager of Hammond's stature and ex- perience in the marine field, and he will provide t h e marketing impetu s we need for our newest boating com- pany," continued Hecker. Hammond has over 14 years experience in the marine in- duslry, having previously been assoclakd with such well- known companies as the W. D. &hock Company and Jensen Pt1arine. He is a well -known yachtsman in Southern California boating ·Circles and Is an avid qatjng sailor. He l.s a native df ' Newport Beach and resides there wltb his wife, Donna, and family. He Ls a 1raduate of the Newport Hart>or schools and is a Da n a P oint Hace Slated by BYC Ocean Racing and Midgel Ocean Racing Flett yachts will get the call Saturday in the Dana Point Race, the se- cand feature of Balboa Yacht Club's 61 Series. The sertes consists of thr best five out o[ se\'cn r:iccs over the season whicll can be seiled <lurtng 1 1IJ hour period. • ASSUMES NEW POST "Buster" Hammond member ol the Balboa Yacht Club. Bangor Punta is one or America's fastest grow i n g companies in the leisure field and is the nation's leading boat manufacturer. 0th er Bangor Punta companies in- clude The O'Day Co., Luhrs, Ulrlchsen, Starcrafl, Duo, Sea Going, Jensen Marine and Featherweight. Lido's Won By Ullma n Dave Ullman of Balboa Vaeht Club won the Class A division of the Lldo.14 Invita- tional Regatta sponsored Saturday and Sunday b y Balboa Yach t Club. Runner-up in the regalia was Bill McCord, and third WU Rowland Lohman, both Of BYC. The B division was won by Henry Wagner or Newport Harbor Yacht Club. J . O. IJallC!l of Alamllmi Bay Yach t Club wa, second and ~like Fink, lluntiJ1gton llarbour YC, was third. ..... Boat Safetv .I Plans Get New Support A spokesman for the recre<1- lional OOating indu~ry has pledged industry support for the Coast Guard proposals for a new Federal Boat Safety Act. Commenting on Coast Guard lestimony before the llouse Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, Matt J. Kaufman, acting executive director of Boating Industry Association, said the proposed act would "make boating safer by ste pping up programs that have already proven their worth. The Coast Guard testimony -presenled by Rear Adm . J . ,J . McC lelland, c h i e f of USGG's Office of Boating Sa fet y -called for fed eral standards for boating equip- ment. coordination with states on boating education and law enforcement programs. the grants to states lor upgrading their safety programs. "We don't see the proposal for manufacturer safety stan- dards as a problem," said · Kau!man. "Quite the con- trary, since the bill proposes governm ent standards ' only where the need can b e justified, and since the in- dustry's we 11 established voluntary standards pr ogram ~·ill be recognized ." "Some 75 percent of the small boats built each yea r are built in accord with our standards on such items as load capacity and flotation," Kaufman said. ' The Coast Guard testimony noted that minimum safety standards often b e c o m e norms, but added : "We are forlWlate in having b o t h government sponsored and in- dustry programs which ,,, ill assist in encouraging a general upgrading aafety. The Coast Guard Aux:lllary Courtesy Motorboat Ex· timlnatlon pt(ll!'am and lhe BIX-oBit CerUflcaUon Pro- gram are among those whJch contai n standards not to be C()Vered by mandatory oCast Guard ttandardt. LIPTON CUP DEFENDER SEEKS CLEAR AIR Chimaera Tackt Under Sterns of F rHdom and Vector Vector HOW NOT TD WIN YACHT RACES Ha s "Ch inese Firedrill" After Rounding Mark Gal Plans to Pilot Her Boat at Havasu ''Who is this guy Aromow?'' queries pretty Rebecca Kapp of PhoeniT., Ariz. as she prepares to pilot a 17-foot customized Kona ski boat in next Saturday's Long Beach to E n sen ada International offshore powerboat race. Rebecca, 23, is prepared lo take stands on t w o in- ternational controversie!I - the mini-skirt vs the midi- skirt in the world of women's fashions , and the outboard vs the inboard in offshore power boat racing. She chooses the mini over the midi and the outboard over the inboard. The S foot 3 model will de- fend both opinions when she joins 30 men and one other gal South Shore Ouh's Meet No Show The only regularly scheduled regatta for the I~meter class ca me to an ignominious end Saturday when only one boat showed up for South Shore Sailing Club's reg atta . Dick Reineman's Bran ta ot lhe host club was the only boat to show up on the starting line, as an entrant in the second an- nual international grind. Her navigator and mechanic \\'ill by Nancy E:ppa rd of Scottsdale. Their fiberglass Kona v.•ill be powered by two I 2 O - horsepower Chrysler marine outboards, placing them in the lntcrnalk>nal Class. Also entered in the sarnc class, smallest of lhe five which compete reg u I a r I y under the Pacific Offshore Power Boat Association rules, will . be Mrs. Earl (June) Palmer of Garden Grove, with Mrs. Bob (Gwen) Spratte of Anaheim as navigator. Their entry will be a 16 -foot stylecraft wilh 11: I IS hp Evinrude. A club spokesman said this J would most likely mark the end of the annual regatta for the stately sloops. In SSSC's Small Y a c h l Regatta . ::icheduled 11 lha same time, the Te m pe s t Bob Bavi ei· Appointed To Panel Robert N. ''Bob" Bnvier, ex- ecutive vice president o f Yachting Magazine, has been named director or Martini & Rossi's Yachtsman and Yachtswopian of the Year Awards program . . Bavie r. whn is also president of the Norlh American Yacht nac ing Union t NAYRU) and v:as the helmsman on the 1964 America's Cup defender , Constellati"on, will head a panel of yachting experts who will vote for the outstanding saillng man and woman tor the year 1970. The l\-1artini & Rossi winners \\•ill be selected by a point system with 10 points for first place. seven points for second and five for third. In the y a ch I s m a n coin· ·petition only, there will be four points for fourth pla.cc and three for fifth. The winners will receive an eleg an t Tiffany-designed trophy. Past recipients of the Martin & Rossi awards incll{de 1967 American Cup defender Bus Mosbacher, Sue Sinclair, June Methot and Bavier. Bavier is a past commodore of Noroton Yach t Cub, a mem- ber of the New York Yacht Club. the Storm Trys'I CIUb, the C;uis.ing Club of America, the Offsound1ngs Club, the Royal Swedish Yacht Club and the Royal Ocean Racing Club, and is on numerous com- mittees connected with the ad· ministration of the sport of yachting. He resides in Darien, Coon .. v.·ith his wife and four chi ldren who are all active sailors. ' Class , newly elevated Io Olympic 1~tus, took t h e spotlight wtth Bob Smith of ..J. the host club wiMing the class SHE DIGS OUTBOARDS -Curvaceous Rebecca Kap, 5-foot 3, 100 pound professional model \Yhose recreational passion is water sktl ng and boat rac- ing, will pilot' a 17-fool oulboard-powercd boal in Sa turday's Long Beach-Ensenada offshore power boat race. Rebecca may also be the wo rld's pret- tiest 1ncchanic judging from the way she handles a wrench. with three straight firsts. Stcond place In the 22.foot tra~ZC!·rlgged keel boab went to Jack Raub, also of SSSC. Dale RQblnson of SSSC was the winner In the syru~ han- dicap race· with his Cal-i5. I 11 -MOtldQ, Aprll-6, 1970~ ' ..... ' '.~C'r,(1 /\Y -· '" . ~\ .. ' , ~-... ... -(q (tOl Jtny °"""'· ~~-·;:••f'SMWo CC> (!O), , c. ,. ... ""' .., (~ • MM'-" hollll. hnefllti ~ ·:::..,"" .......... Crut ... ffr,.--,_.,.,.. ' iP. WZAIETH TAYLOR! * "THE GIRL WHO HAD EVERYTHING"! ,, e JOB PRINTING e PUBLltATIONS ' ' · e NEWSPAPERS r .- ' ' I I " Qu•lity 'rintin9 •rtd Dtptnclable Strvic:t fot more than • ~uarter of • c;tnfury. 1111 Wiit IALIOA an., NIWfOlf llACH -Mlo412t ..... I . -· \ • ... • t '11 ' • - ---~ Santa /lna Plagers Splendid St~ging Of 'Gold. ·cadillac' Sieve McQueen "The Reivers· ,. ,, ..... " ......... .... 'J 1 IE a'd •• ••. ,. .. Tiii 4NdC eh --~ ·-~-·--~ .... - • Stars Told Don't Sell Your Oscar -.::ie!."'ilMl'll_I __ ,_ PETERUSTINOV·PAMELATIFflN JONATHAN WINITRS • ,IOHN A.mN : ~ 1 ~ "'"" MAX? e STAITS WIDNftDAf • I. "OOWNHILL RACER" "THE REIVERS" I 11 Long Beach CLO '110 in the Sh'ade' Sizzles As Fine Musical Western . By TOM TITUS Of Jiit Cl•llY 'II" lf1tt ~·110 in the Shade" falls a long way short of bei'tlg the greatest muakal ever written, but the Long Beach Civic Light Opera Association treats is as thOugh it wer~ just that -and, for two ,ahd a half hours: at leest, you come to think that they just may be right. This musical version o( "UI IH TMI SHI.DI!" compassionate father an d with acoustics like those which Steve Miles as her more plague this show), there are realistic brother. two numbers which you may As is often the case in a well leave the theater" hum- musical of thiS type, the se· ming -the openel\'("~er cond string romantic leads Hot Day") and ' lhe • "Rain take a good deal of the show. Song," which bolsters the first Craig Gardner accomplishes act and closes the show. this with fervor as the short-11110 in the Shade" will be fused younger brother .. while staged .one .Q.~.L.'. weekend, Miss! Sinkovec as the ~tr flirtatJous Snookie joins him in with evening . performances a sharply staged song and Friday and Satui-day and a dance number. matinee Sunday at L o n g A m11J1c11 b'!' T-J-. '"° .H•rvev Whtie the musical score is Beach's Jordan High School Schmidt, N1'11 Oii N. Rlcf\ard N•Wl'1 "Tiie R•lnm•ker," di~ b'W' J&d< nol among the theater's more auditorium on Atlantic Avenue ::::t ~":~~.,~9t::,r J,~h'l:e~ i"-m:;;•m;;:;•';:":;bl;;•::(~an;;:d;;;;n•:;•;:•;' ::;w;:il;I ;:be;;;;;;ne:;•:;r::Ar:::;les:;:i•:;S;:t=reet::::=· ;:;;;;;;~ Meldler, llohllM b., klm 1u111n1nW<Jrl"- 111"-nled by ttle L.o"' Ind! Clvk Ll1/\I °""' ~~tlOll •I Jordan Mith Sdoool 1Mft«lum, A t 1 • n I I c Ave1111e 1t Aftnl(:St., L-... ad!. TllS CAJT , Llnv Currt ....... '"""'RU'lh Jotl!'.li.on Sl1l'tlu(k .................. Oldl Joh_, Flle ....................... 011t tuner J1rnm1 currv ... , ....... cr1l1·,G1rdn1r NDlh CU"l' .... .':, ....... 'Sttve MU11 H. c. CurN ............. RoMrt Conner Snookf1 Ulldl9r-'f .... ,,Mlsal $111kovK Toti, ........................ .'Jim Sh.ort .Sieve McQueen ' "The Reivers· 11:m1Ctt11nf*"' ~Ilion ••111•1 Ctntral Pinuin R.tlcnor ALSO FlltST auM GIORGI KINNIDT JIM llOWN .. "Ttck ••• Tick • , • Tick'' lft.stt.WS....7P.M. CMt. 5-. Jt.. 2 P.M, "'""' SOUTH COAST F--. GllllRll ox PLAZA THEATRE COIPllRATOI San D5tco ffHWly at Bristol • ~·2711 "BEST PICTURE OFTHEJWr ·""'''°"" Bo«d ol Rt""'"' AllO WOODY ALLEN In "TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN" ••• • •• •••••• •• ••••••••••• • • * COAST HWY. AT MACAiltHUR liLVO\ .,. NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760 Consider the Possibilities WINKEi OF -;i 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOM!NATIONS ~. lest$ #•lilcoldor-WJOTT COlllll lest s..,.,,a: liqActrta:-DYlll CANllOI lestCil:••""2•-caaen~ lestOri&iMISer1e11111J-' PAii~ llAZllllSKl, LUllYTIJCllEI w-.r __ .. ... Y .. fillQfice;I ................... , .......... _ A J~ PflOl!VCTION iilruI llOOO/IDIRT lllP I D 1 r.llQ.l l!DI llJI I fWITT 61llD/DYA11 tlNllll ~-111.mDl·•_.E..._llfm!P'illii* . ..._,LSlll . .,.lll .. 1---..... -1 ®-=="5:-=-= 1-e ,.,_ Cel-lil• l'kl~ . .. .--.. m,,_o_,. __ __. lliTWlOI IWIO~• ,_ & MN _,,, fWY .. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE hit 111,,_,.1 .. Actr. Goldi• Hewn *IS r'jffj,-lftt--. r ·-~ \\ULTl!I' · loorio M81UlllU lllll'OIJW1 I (')JMJS l I FLO\\er I '-OOWI!•·"" .. ROBERT REDFORD GENE HACKMAN CAMlL(A SPARY ' ' ' I I DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryon CONGRAlllLATIONS, Bl& FEU.A! .. :TELL Ml:i HOW VID YOU WIN 111E l ITLE? HE WAS NEVER MUCH ONE FOR VESCRIPTIVE NARRATIVE. MUTT AND JEFF JU.DGE PARKER W1o0 Le l86EV PIVERTS TME ATTEIJTIO N O~ tus, S-'M C>IZJVEIZ (,t,R'l, WAKE U" ")JD TALI( TO ~E ! I 'M S.A..I.'. 01!'.JVEf!- I'M HERE TO HELP VOU ! SE,t.RC.MES Oll:l WINTERS' MOSPITAL ROOM F02 .,_EPtCINE AW P TMEN ATTEMPTS TO W.U£ nlE PATIEWT! Ct.·oss,\lord Puzzle ACROSS l Arbore1! 11:i1111111al ' AIYf' 10 Adhfsivt 14 Flexible IS Lamb's ptnname 1• Moon goddess 17 Bu1y 11 Kind ar skirt 11 Maldln9 fdge: Var . 20 Argu1blf 21 Kn ight's hr Imel 22 Quo te 23 Monsttl' 2S Became more distant 27 Orderly ph1ct ment 31 Take into ~uslody 32 Trtt 33 Answer to alithmt tlc prob1tm 1S More doc •1! 39 H It h1rd .tl Ha ilt Selassie's !Hit .t~ Asiatic ri•1c1 44 A1re wield er 4& Fabric .ti Fatima's son •t Phimbing fixlu rr 51 His nick· 'flame u "Sparks" ' ' " ,.. ,.. ~ ~- l9 ,, " .. ,_ ' ' M - • I" " " 53 Ot1aytd 57 Paust 58 USSR Sta 59 C;1faltti;1 t quipmt nl bl Law of Mosts: Var . &S Bol1n9 niatch ltSu!\: Informal /:.!. Ve tch &7 Elec trical unit · !.B Farr.er! En!] Ii sh sch col &II Gumbo 70 Not slumbering 71 "God Bltss America" of "O Canada" 12 Bring u11 73 Phys1c1an of old OO Ylll l Slight 2 ~Jewspaper mach int: lnforral ) German ruler C "Ovt r · • • ••• 1": 2words 5 Pos sess ive WOid .IJ Drew batlf 7 ~1e tal: Abbi. 8 Saltritltr 9 Rernove tht slick 10 C;1pc Sr~ton h . \ov111: 2 word s ' • 7 ' " I •• ' ' • " ,, " " .. . -" ' " •·1~r 1 r.r . ., •~[U l !T [O .'-BE ~0 0 11 ., • '1 : • I " ,,, 70 il Ghast ly 45 Dirt road In hue I ea lure 12 M~rry 47 Evil: 13 M1dto leS$ Prtlit oneroti~ 50 Bookmaker's 21 Crime customer 24 Obla1ned 52 Riv er lo 2t. Shtew tile St. 27 Punc!ua1 1r.1 L1 w1enct m1rOI 53 Clam····· 28 land 54 Patron body saint or 29 Enterta111-~n ~rt men \ form 55 "... .., lO 8tvtra9~ ~acduH .•. ''· 34 Twt lv e lunar 2 fiords months: 56 "Golden 2 words Hind" 36 T 11Jt of command!. 1tsp~c 1: &G Irish l11fo1 mal ttclam~ll~ 37 Ftrn iniut 62 Kind or lll!ln\' surgton 38 Destruction 113 To ol .tG Wor~ wtll &•Gull !n 11 tootll1e1: ArAb14n 2 ~1ord1 Sea .tl Ttan-.s &7 E ~l11u1 t I ' '" 1 " ,, . " ,f .. ' u ' .. ,. '' '" ' .• " ,. • " " " ., •7 •• " " ,, ,. By Al Smith FOR GOOONESS SAKES, YOU COUU> COVER YolJR MOLr™ OR AT ~EAST WARN MEI PERKINS . :i· , ·. , ... .,. . J (f).J.a,, 'l ·t. MISS PEACH THE. KINDEltG.AltTEN CLAS.S DOESN'T W/'INT ro STAV, MR. ~~IMMIS ... STEVE ROPER T/flS HATCMET JOit ()J "'"1:NUSOl PROOIJ(TS -: •. ' IF 'QJ Plttlrr(T IT I'll E~ lJ P IN THE AIVf~. ZAN/ W~AAllJG CfME!llT SHOfS/ PEANUTS I' I AH· AHDD, DIDN'T l? ·----- '-: 1·r .. -·~:. •. .. -.. -• " .. •• , . ' ' , 11 ' .. . SALLY IA!1ANAS GORDO t 1Ll. G'O ONL.Y ON 01'11 ( CDtJDl'TI0.""1• MOON MULLINS .. ··A HOL~ IN ONE FROM 86tllNP 711E PIANO,MOON- I LIOFT iHE B'AL~ IN iHE Cl.IP SO I COULi> SHOW lu.Jou ... ® '' •o' ANIMAL CRACKERS ·-- • I 'M ~TllJG--1,1)) l(IJOW • .,"JE l!li'WCH a BIQ.OG\I WHICW De>J..S lilllH 1IE ~OIJS/llP Bel'WE'EIJ ~MOG Of'"1.loll5MS ~D ~fl EIN1£c.JMEIJT. >. ~PeR OIJ ECOl-O<w, Ull.~. , ly John Miies ly Mell MOW DO 'DL.I ~\I Yot-IAT Tl-E"r' ~ •v ~ICAl. P~ISOBCS 11 •·• '""""' ly Sounden and Overgarcl ..... -. rHE··OFFEllEO..; FORGEr'):;;:::;;;:::::(l TH~ ~ISOO 1 STK.L ~ Hl.-·-W l'D GET '°" 10 SI.IP A ..... FM HtS" FIRM JN'R> .fA$HICW• FIRST".' . ly Charles M. Schul&, .. M,.l'll~ID I 'M .-e:rr1AlG A 611' Sf'AUE/. • ). • DAILY rlLOT :J:S ly Al Copp ly Charles lanoili ' I Roger BOiien .. , I IHIAIK I'~~ KUOCK OFF FOR , >.FEW t>>l/5 -· • j I :--_, ~ DENNIS THE MENACE \ l • • ·I " ' SES FOR SALE· HOus1s FOR SALE l"°us1s ~OR SALi Hous1s 'ORSALI , ~sis '0R SALE IHou111 '011, SALE HOU11s FOR SALE JHous1s 'o" SALE Hous1s FOR SALi •I 1000 -•r1I 1000 o.Mrol 1. Chnerol 1111 -r•I 1000 0.ner•I ' 1100 -•I I• CJ..,.r•I 1000 Coreno ol Mor 1111 ' ' I OllANGI COUNTY 'S LARGEST 2629 WioR BDllEVARD 546-8640 f Estate Sale Ocean View J 1)11 home wu previoualy on the market at $41.~ :now reduced $6,M>O. It's a beaUtitul 3 bedroom, 2 lath home overlooking the Pacific Cout, with a ipectacu1ar unobstruc~d 'view oi Catalina, located on tht Blufi1 1,11 C.OSta Mesa, it hal a courtyard ~ntry, richly paneled and carpeted , appealing built-in kilchen in l!X· eculive nei1hborh0od. Call today and steal it! Fixer Upper ;i of an Acre· In the Ne.wport Beach t>.ck bay art!R. The 2000 aq. 11. house needs clean up and paint. Outaide, how about 2 hone corrals, a beautitul 1wlmmin1 pool with private lanai and tree• galott. See it now! 'The pr1ce Is ui; believable and owner \\'ill cany fin&nclng at '1'12%. 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Take over 4Yz% · $120 Total Pmt. oflnda PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 15 Linda Isle Drive New & beautiful 4 Bedroom, 5 bath home with large sunken liviri~ room "" lam. rm .. wet bar. Radiant electric heat. Carpeted &: landscaped. Priced ................ $155,000, 16 Linda 1111 Drive Ne\v 5 bedroom, 5 bath home wjtb upstairs view of Corona del ?i.1ar hills. 3 Fireplaces & BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panelling. Land· scaped. With dock .... , ........... $145,000. 77 L.inda Isle Drive New 5 Br .• 5 bath borne on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, h1str. Br. has beam. ceil. &· Own frplc. Large family room w/fireplace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $185,000 10 Linde Ille Drive 5 Bedroom &. maid's, 5 baths with family room & large rumpw room. 3 Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. dock & boat slip .... $169,300 · W"•terfront· l1t1 No. 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle leasehold lot. Plans avail. Consider trade ..... $~,000 No. 41: Long water vie'v facing Harbor la. land w/76.2 ft. of frontage. Plan• avail, No. 88: Point Jot with ll8 n. of frontage. Long water view. Plans ~available. BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR (Our New Addre11) 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.I. 642-4620 Now,.rt •• Vlcterfa MUlll Anytime Income Tax REFUNDERS The following propertt.s h•v• h 1 • n c•r1fully screened to 9lv1 you m•ximum t•x btneflt1 for next years ttx lie• duction. 2 UNITS 3 Bedroom home + 1 Bednn rtntal + oWenized dble 1ar. Jnoome i26S mo, lull price just $26,500 3 UNITS Sp•nish Style 1000 Gentr•I -------BLUFFS NEWPORT 1000 Separate 2 Bedroom home + another 2 Bedrm homt BEACH FOUR BEDR001'1S. 1hree bathl'l. 2'ljO squarr feet split levcl home «UJTOUnded by well kept lawns, flowe~ and shrubs. Upgraded carpets, dral)l!s and beautifully dec- orated kitcbtn g:ivu you' a CAMEO SHORES Overlooking blur Pacific New listing on Camden Jn exclustve Cameo Shores Aef'Oa5 the ttreet from Private community beach 3 Btdroow l den Pool &: poola,lde lant.I $89.500. Owner may Jlnanct Listed excluslftly with + a shtrP 1an.ge ap&rt· ment. .... rood income produetr. $UO mo. Full price $29,500 feeling of spaciousnf'~ and j elegant llY1nf. Second story Ownu apart mt n t Is patio with VlE\Y OF BACJ\ Bedroom, 2 Bath + larie BAY AND OCEAN. il.lany 20x20 sun deck. fireplaces closet.s and lots or stor;i~e in these unit!! and never a spuCt> makes this on<' of the 673•4400 \'acancy. Let th~ tenants pay most desirable homts in the BMfs. Priced at $49.500 for .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!"~~\!!ll~~·lpart 01 your \\'ay! Full prlce '"'* "'" * TAYLOR· On the blufl overlookinr Kc"·· port harbor entrllnce & ocean. 3 zpar-. bdnns., l~i ba., den & fam. rm. Mlllk>n s view. 2:i01 Ocean mvd. $44,000 New,.rt •• Victeria Anyone can qualify to take over pmts, subject to this 4~JS'o VA loan. Your lotal pmt. wlll·be $13'.l per mo. Located in excellent Costa Mesa neighborhood, All built-in kitchen designed !or your 1''ife's c on venience . Double a:arq:e, loreed air heat, Palos Vl'rde-st on~ Evcninp CAii · b/.;-&tlS ''Our 25th Ye•r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. '46-1111 {anytime) fireplace. Owner very l li0ii0iiOii0ii0ii0ii0ii0iiiio ' anxious, askin1 $25.500. 290• VIEW Make any rea!IOnable of. Home "high on a. hill" in lert lovely Eastbluff. Possible Poo~ Tennis Court Exclusive, 1>rivate-liv· ing for 87.00 per mo. total lo move in. Sub- ject to thr existing 5~ % F'HA loan. Expan· the fi.neirt buy ~ver at $42,950. Try to beat ii! 61/, FHA LOAN lmmaculate & oo 1 corner only $32.500. s:?m. mo U... cludc11 all. A "Cal-Oai;sic" home, !LB. Re•ltors NE\VPORT CENTER '2ll San J oaquin Hllli Rd. 644-1910 . 4·1'LEX LIDO ISLE ,;..,~;,, 1 ""droom .,;., ;: ~iVI! 2 Bedroon1 !linglC' &tory dclux tO\.\'n house localed 1 milP from the beach, full pri~ $26,400 or make offer -O\\'ner \•ery 11.nxious. Call nO\\'. LEASES / Big 'j Bcdrn1, :\lesa del i\11ll". '300. Option 01\ at SJ7.4:x>. Bria: ht chttry home on strata • • . , large hvinz room with sunny, IK>llth patio. 4 • , .. near Slaters market Bedrooms. family rooni, off. and close to Ne"•port Blvd. ice or se1ving room. Floating Commercial zoning. Assume 11taircase to nlaSler bedroom t~ existing 6.6 Joan! No suile. Vacant & ready ror im· . · -t•r••t' Full _,. t 176 500 U'ICI'easc in in . m...u1a e occupancy. , . . MACNAS..IRVINE price I Lovely 4 +-family, l story 1·anch. B:ick Bay \lie\\". Realty Company $46,950 $600 Moyes 13"1. '"'' opfoo" S:,O,!t:;(J (7141 642·1235 901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 OU n fnearcinemathlltltl 1080 Bayxide Dri\·e 6 UNITS Y I ~ 51&.5810 (714) 675-3210 $600 move11 )·ou ln tr OLLEG'E REAL1;.!, Newport Beach olSOOAd1mut -.-':l=::::::::l==== you'rt a Vet. 3 good sized l..llrge lot 110 x 292 located ! b e drooms. beautitully l!'l-;-;-;~:;;;~~~~ili: .' 1'"""""" !root and '"'' QUI ET EASTBLUFf VIEW '" A"ocado St. "' ''' oldor yards. Enclosed courtyard homes. Build up an equity l ., en~·ay adds pr iv ate NEIGHBORHOOD Beautiful 2 story home \\'ith in the land. ieclusion to this S23,500 2112 WINDWARD 200' vie1\', 2j()() Sq. It. of b.,rgain ih lovely Costa Step thru the rated courtyard luxurious living. $a2,()()) • ~feaa neighborhood. Call into the gracious Del Plso \o1'·est price for this size in t,oday. tiled entry, e-njoy the 11pac· Ea.!tbluH, $74,000 iout open noor plan of this Family Fun lo,.,, ''"" w,u, !lay<"'" ~ COATS home. 4 Larze Bednnr. din· &. In Tiie Sun ing rm &. fa.mlly rm. GoUI" WALLACE 2 Lots. 2 loans. Ide a I 1nct island kitchen to de!ighl REAL TORS Eutsidt I cc at i a n "·ith 8 UNITS 5 Beds -POO( any l.o~tesx. Ready for iln· -54M141-usumable loans. Present in-mcdiote occupancy. Thit beautiuO home in (Op~n Ev1nlnsi•) come· has not been ral9ed pre1tig~ area oJ Costa Pete Barrett \ ·~~~'!'!'!'!!!~~~~I ln 5 yean. tmaiine a lovely ~teaa ha.s :'> muter•ized NEW IVAN WELLS' 2 Btdrm apt rtntinr ror S105. bedrooms. 2 we<t baths. REALTY 1111 h w a I I 1 0 ~·a I I 4 BR, l BA +·powder room. Buy these units and increaze car Pe 1 i n g throughout. l&ro \\1estcliff Dr., NB Formal din rm, lam rm v.•/ the incomt by 23~0. Full l&l'Je covered pa!k> and a '41·5200 ~ 1''f!t bar ' 1rplc, LwrurlOUI-pm. eryat&l clear beautifully 11•~'!!!'~!'1'!!'!!'!1!!!'!"!!"" ly crptd. SUpel'b view. Pool landscaped pool, complete YOUNG AfliiD OLD in landscaped courtyard. $93,950 wlth lllde. Sef' It to ALIKE Roy J . \Vard Realtor 1430 belie\'f! ii. Priced low al C1.~-1 .. _ Galaxy Dr. &46-1550, Open ... ""., t• ean nuine: not loo Daily. $3(.950. HWTY! larrt or sn\811! Ealtlkle -~~~-~--- Costa l\lesa. Assu.me FHA S BR. Fixtr·Uppar 16 UNITS OllANGI COUNTT'S LARGUT 2629 HARBOR BDWYUll 546-1148 loan at S\J~j, annual Interest Na.me )'OUr lenns. 10~ "'ith payments of $110 in-FHA, V.A. Fam, home nr. Coeta ?lfe.u.'1 M st deluxe dudes all! TCYtAL PRICE all I c boo I a l •hoppi111. unlt•t 4 Separate '"'ple:c units i17,400. \VHY RENT? C&IJ T.L.C, \V\Ueueyour"hoult and 6 .6 lntert1t i1 WE SELL A HOME plnc.h" !or $37,:IOO. trUllftrable to ·tht 11ew EVERY 31 MINUTES Hol Pl=nt..:•-· ""'"· NO POINTS! PrHeot Walker & Le·e 3900 E. """'' H""'. m.4392 ;""""' '' 133•110 "" ''""· LUSK EASTBLU,F OUR BEST TAX SltELTElt 2WO lla1'bor 81Yd, a1 Ad•mz 36-9491 OJ><'n 'lil !I Pi\( LIOO SANDS 2 Bedroom• 2 S.tht, buUt·ins $28,500 George Willi•mson REDUCED $1500 FOR TH F. EXECUTIVE. Lcf' 4 Br. 2~t bi .. Owner teav. ~.000 dow'JI ·to an all \n. loo: eit.y, To view call • cluslw. trust deed of $225,000. MAL.TO" Call now lo 1ee, CoetN-N! .... nN'jl llMIH !J $22,500 N1w ... rt •• READ THIS If you are in the market tor a NEW home, see these oulrtlnd· ing cu.slomized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres and Son, local· ed in a prime area very close to lluntington S t ate Beach. The _ ho mes · are priced from $30,290 to $33,690 and-vary·tn size from 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car gar· ages, and 2 to 3 bath s, 'vilh sllake or mission We roofs, fire· places, underground utilitJes, concrete driveways, built · in~ and carpeting. There is VA and FHA financing ·available. There are 5 homes available because o( credit rejections. Occut>:ancy by r.tay 1, 1970 in this unit. As added features lhese homes in· elude such additional extras, as shag carpets, front lawn land· scaping with sprinklers. Our next unit is DO\V on sale for occupancy in ?itay ·1and June 1970 and introduces the new 3,000 sq. ft. "El Dorado" model priced from 334,490. Ranche La Cuesta Homes on Brookhurst at Atl1nt1. Hutttlntfen Beach ffl.2'29-ffl.13ll -----------· ·-- 1000 General 5·BEDROOhf WATERPRONT! $49,900 OWNER TRANSFERRED 1• PLUS ... complettJ.y separ- ·~ family room I 3 lull bath~. C.Ommunlty poo!A, tl'Mis row1s le rec ana. A short Jot to the ... BEAU· TIFUL BLUE PAClf1C! ! ' Goraeous 4 BR home in ab. solute immaculate condi- tion. 1900 Sq ft of living area • huge cowred patio • fan- tastic nlght li1hting . fully crptd • manicured residential &.1-ea. Prl~ for immediate sale at Sll,950. Call ~5-8424 Colesworthy BRE4 THING ROOM LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMOOS 320 LIDO NORD 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car gar81es & utility room, 'vith 85 ft. fronting on excellent S\Yim· -ming beach. Units are newly furnl•hed. Reduced te $200,000. Xlnt terms BILL GRUNDY, RIAL TOR (Our New Addr111) 133 D~var Dr., Suite 3, Nowport Booch 642.q21 General 1000 M••• Del Mar 1115 BAYFRONT LINDA ISLE Priv. pier & slip Jor lge. bnat. $23,900 3 BR, 3 'Ba, hd"~ tin, crpts, drps, brick patio- BBQ. ~o Quietly ~legant decor. Brick M•it V•rde 1110 entry haU, 4 BR., 4 Baths, 1--------- FOR .!ale: owner 4 Br, 3 Ba, 3 BIGGEST FISH IN THE BLUFF'S POND First t I me offered, 2200 square fttt et lu.xurlou.s liv· ina. PL1JS ,.noramle view or bay •nd. i:tt~n belt. T\1-0 bedrooms, 3 bath, lormaJ dinln&". hurt t&mlly room 1'ith f~pla.ce, C\lstom dec- orated Utroua:hout. 0 n J y $59, 150.00 for this outsland. ing home. Act tut on tbis one. , .it 1\-"0h't la1t ~n.i ... OPEN FOR lNiPr.ctlON SAT&SUNlto:i 4J4 Vitt• CJroode PHONE 6n.151o 0 T llf. l![.1~ !. "\,, I ST_l\TLF!~'. . ~ 7,--lorrnal dining nn., fain. rm., study, J Frplcs., walled pa.. tio. Great buy at $140,000, Carol Tatum car ·aar., trpl, bit·ins, in-BY OWNIR p ...... Cold ............ b AADCOAol;u;.-a tercom, e I e c 1prl1tklen, 219 Poppy Ave, Cctl\f. ~arl elect a:ar. door opener. vltw 3 br, prlv. ~tic. Ju.st l $44,9:Al. &&-1848 aboVe little Coron. ath. TRANSFERRED Owner: 4 l\Ioving to Hawaii. BR, 3 BA. Family room. MUST SELL 1 Ne\v crpt1 Ii paint. Asllu~ $52,400 I 6~%''-loan. $42,900. Call Phone 613-mT I 550 Newport Canter Dr. Newport &aach, Cellf. 133-0700 644-2430 '"""'39'J. ..... ........ ;;;;;;;;-..... 3 Bedroom .rr famUy room. PANORAMIC VllW I Fireplact, covered patio. 2t.I01 Bayside Dr. Btaut. Low down FHA. 546-7269 1hake roof 1"4!ty, 3 Br. { ba. LOOKING FOR_A_ RENTAL? Investor's di!lliht, the rtnts in this area a1·e running around S191i per month. With a sm&ll do\111 payment. your profit could be a.bout $35-0 per month. FULL PRICE is $19,9CO for shaJl) 2 ~­ room home with 1\1 baths. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTIS Coll110 Pork lllS ------4 BR. 3 BA. dlft/fam. Comp!. refw:bishtd. 1900 ~ ft. Lush cptg It: lino. Elect Kit. Patios. Ldscpd, rm for boat. $34,900. Owner. 540-3376 .. -· Newpert Beach 1200 LIDO ISLE Snuc 2 BR, 1 BA + S!p. rm &: ba. 150' mm priv. 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams beach. Acroe& Strata from ;,~ ()pen 'til 9 Pl\I t~nnis COW't, beamed ctil· Walker & Lee ina:s. stone "'IJI il frplc, All COUNTRY CLUB •"-""· Io top ""'"· 1.u,• Across The Road patio, Will S..crifice! $4.9,500. Brand new, built by build~r $5000 do1i,'n or lease untum. for his own home. 3 big ~. $450 per month. Princlpab rooms, sparldi~ electric only. By cwntr • &M-0231 kitchen and brand new Jieavy ""='""'~"'='"· ~f!46.<34;;,;;::;1.,;';,;':;"::,· =~ shag carpets, t.U plus l.ara'c BAYCJU:ST'S BEST BUY extra pool table size recrt-Charmine 1arden 1tyle 'home. ation room • $38,500 • 10% 3 BR, 2 ba, xtra nice kltch. do"'Jl, 01i,•ner \\-ill help. $46.500. O\vner will help &l&.TI71 finance. 1849 Tradewincls. waterfront home, xlnt swim. nth\&' be:ach. Ne11.•1Jr ttdeoor. $175,000 SHOWN BY APPT. 1111 Grundy, Rooltor . 13: Dover Or., NB &C-4620 1 "too WONDERFUL I 'OR WORDS'' Sh<ncllffs; exclusive -ju.,t ll1ltd. Tri·lewl, oot&n I: can· yon views. 4 Bathl!i. 3000 1q. fl. ~1ust be 1ttn, A.pp't only. 675-3000. Boy & leoch Riiy, Inc. e OPEN DAILY 2·S i 221 HAZEL l Bdnn. home abOve lJtu• Corona beach. Lowly vie1v. DON V. FRANKLIN llEALTOI! • 67J.2222 • SO. OF HIGHWAY Desirable 45 ft. Jt..Z let l\'/ Apt. over aarar~. Room t& build in front. Out fJf town 01\lll(!r anxious tc zell. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 67s.MS! 34ll E. Coazt Hwy., Cdtif Lhle Jslo 1351 ----- nrE BLUlTS 3 Bdnn, 3 bath, spilt level, on gr~enbtlt , Cusl cm deeon.ted & lmmacuJate. Larp kitchen. S JT,900. Divorce Sele ..,._.,,; a1t • pm ... ,d.,, UDO ISLE on this cute 3 Bedroom East-. BAYTRONT: i1s,ooo. 35' IA YFRONT side horn~ on large lot. FHA Cabana, frplc, n~w crpt, tenns, custom drps, coveffii patio. llt1r1 O,,Ortunity & Co. REALTOR. f\f'W'POl1 Beach Office 1028 Bayside Drive 6i:He30 "'22,950 A...J Anchorage \\'ay, Lido 4 Br. Hon.1e. Or can be U.!etJ ' 113 Acft lo! in Upptr Bay + _. Pa.rlc. Call 673-2396 u duplex. I 3 bfdrotim 'home + nice PERRON '42·1771 LEASE/ ti ..,.. Priced for quick salt FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N Inc. Realto1·~ 4 BEDROOM PLUS FAM. WHAT! $21,500 Scarr as hen~ ll'f"lh! 4 J~ bedrooms. l blltll.~. Fanlily room. Oelu:<l' kitchen \1·ith all latest built-ins. Carpel· ing. Hartl to beat al $21.500 and only ~1 )'Cal~ ycung. J-lut1')' to sec. 645-0303 ti l'larbor Center m9 Harbor Blvd., C.l\t. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA $26,950. HARDWOOD FLOORS ADDED family l'OCllTI and bar, BRlCK FIREPLACE. larie lot with detached 1ar· age. Exttllent loan \\'ith DE. CRF.ASING INTEREST! Stt ii NO\V! WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee '20ot3 ,,·~stcllf.f Dr. mm1 Optn "tll 9:00 Pl\I ' 2 HOUSES ON LOT TDUUFlC starter for )"OUn.::· ten1fic t"Omforl with income Jot' the established. Front 15x30 pool + o1i,·ner will ,.u !!!!!!!!J!!~!!!!!~!!ll!!!!!!!!I!!!' I op en ,,,a,000 VETS No DOWN B I ·--~" ~""c"'A's·H • no do\\'JI GI or IBA •••• , • arms exee. ,...,,,,..., c w.i $27,500 ..Jew Back BIY $750/mo. and t.he sell~ rwlll pay >-our Owner_ G42-4TIS CAN HANDLE D.:clusive vi'ith: closing costs! Cuslom 1800 BLUITS, 3 B,, 2 Ba, 1 levtl, Full price rtducetl tc $104,000. Newport •• Victc.ri• '4Ml11 (•nytime) sq. It 3 BR, l ~ BA home \Va.s $125.000. Hause looat•d •• I ' R 2 J t Full · choice corn. kit, walltd " a •rr • o . pnce on t:M!:zt side of island, I~ 900 patio/v!f!'I.·. l\fany cus. ex· Ml, • Call f213) 962-56:10 FULLER REAL TY tras. '32.~. 644-426a or 962-00.0 for inlo. 546-1114 BY 011.·ner, the BJuils. l\Jodel Ask for l\fr. Johnson K home, 4 BR or J t. --,=c'-i'77-.:.;::::::::__ e STEPS TO OCEAN d~n. By appt. 6'MG46 Ori•ntal Conttmp. ~ BR. modern beach home . .;;;::;;.======='I 146 Via Untlirle (by App'!,. Access to pools, tennis ct&, Newnort Helfht• 1110 only), '1 BR,&: den ors BR. & recreation area. Only • J;..;. Partially lurn. Din. nn., bit. MESA VERDE 12.1.900 · Xlnt t•nn' CLIPF OR. VIEW ""·cup., d"'"'· 2 ,,.,. ""'· $26,950 CAYWOOD REAL TY 0\\-ner tnoY1nr to .Europt. Aaklne $75,000 Xlnt lerms. 6303 \V, Coast Hwy., NB V~ry nice 2 BR. 1.: DEN, 2 8111 Grundy, R1eltor A s-.·eet lltUe old ladys says, e 548-1290 e hlths. dlninz rm. k pa.Ho, S33 bover Dr., NB 642-46M "sell."' A 1vell kept, 3 Bed· -------'--PbUS aue1t nn, Panoramic ' room, 2 B"h horn• l• what $28,950 OCEAN VIEW, $6I,OOO. DECORATOR'S she's talken 'bout, Add a 4 Bdrm., 3 B•th reh•m Rlty. 646-2414 HOME comple!e sprinkl~1· system Quality! Entry hall, family N•t.r Newport Pest Office BaautifuJly d6he. 5 Bdrms. and a covered patio and rm arta, full dinl"J' rm, l'arniiy rm. Xlnt street to you'\·e got 8 S\veet little built-ir111, park like yard, Dover Shores 1227 street 45 fl. lot. house tor $26,950. 540-1720 $9!.iOO 516-2313 TARBELL 2955 Harbor SCENIC* SPACIOUS LIDO REAL TY INC, COMPLETE Vllw 3337 Via Lido 673-7300 NEWPORT H E IGHTS ramblinr ranch style 3 Bay & l\ftnt. 4 Br, 4t~ Ba LARGE HOME &drm, shake roof, trplc. + maids. Hla'h ctilillJ:s. LAROE LOT .. 5000 sq ft built arcund court. 4 BR l. f a.. H • 1 $ .900. K ! n 1 a a rd, R.E. · · am..., nn. uti:: Iv, ~f: 2.222'1. 4 car gar. £..Z maint. Ideal rm . 3.000 Sq. tt. 45 Fl. lot. Golf • "' di f<'I' entertalni'"" $173.000 n.o .. -• t -~ er S ra-•• LAKEFRONT • Lake Forest .,. ""~ o ~'·""" •• -tumishtd. ASlume 6~-a'O Walke Riiy 67'!200 Beaut. home on 10th green New 2 br, '.' b.1. Cmpare loan. Cht.'flf!r ~T24t. r • JI'> or &nnuda Dunes • finest> \\'/cumnt mkt. price1 Iii ¥66 Via Lldo, NB Open .sun. desert course! Roomy 3 BR. sav~. Chvner: 494-3463 _Unlvenftr!ark' • 11~,7 BY O\VNER: Neo.r Club 4 3 Ba., pool, furnished home. EASTSIDE C.i\'I.; 2-Sty. pool :;; , ;;; :; br & den, btauttiul patk>. Incl. 2 golr c1rt11. Club mem· hon1~. Stone frpl, din. rm.. 5~% IOu. St5,000. Call bership avail. Asking $95,000 den, ~ark room. 50 f"t. cov. TUllt'TLI ltOCK HILLS t.:vea. 6TJ..180.) • Xlnt. ternis. patio. Fortin Co. 642--m Nettled in the 1ky, 1lttina: -:==;::="""""====! Bill Grunlly, R111tor Cottt Mesa 1161 f!;t~,;: •t.navnu::t~ :•::•:-:lboa::::.,-l•_l•_nd ___ 1il_s 1 833 Do"" th' .. NB ..,_..,. iHiilaat-i*yiiiH*a ... ppyiilH*ome--"""" ~ !hi' &!most oew • HOMEY ... , ........ 2 BR. Br. 1•:/seta. family rm. home. + 1leeping porch, Can build PRI~tE LOCATION 3 start Sdf-clea1tl"1" ovens. inlt r-another unit for income. co1n1nerclal. Ex c e 11 e n t rom, elec. door opener. poeJ. Good financinf. tenants. Out of lo\vn owner \\'IU love to pro1ec1 your larp sire lot: en a eul de sac MORGAN lltlAl TY priced fo1· immediate We at famUy in 5 ~room cilm· •trfft. Only $45,000. 673-6642 ,7.).&f59 $65,000. Jo'antutlc financinc fort. Anyont: can IS.!Umt GI e RM Hill Realty l-111 E. Coul H\1"-'., CdM a.rranc!'.n1tn1! Call 545-3424 J lot..n, no qualifyina 1\ilh Univ. Parle Cenltr, Irvine 1mall lnv~stmenl. Quiet, CaU Anytime 833.()820 Huntintton a.ach 1400 convtnient location n e a r ahopptnr. Di&covtr this ruar-BY O\\.'NtR • Prt1ti1t home tnteed winner. call 540-1151, El T.,. 1!44 ·Pacific Sandi Ji'n~aJ. 2 Hetitqe Real:Eltate (open story• BR. 1!( IA, iarden l\IODER.N JUNot kttch h 01. ew1.J. ....... .... ·• UI~ pa....,&: awnln& . ...... tom .-me INt•t Me. n-n Jd - hooile, 2 bedrm, 7 bath: rear I•..,..,,...,...., __ _ 1bffrm.1 bftth, s:><m down. Owneir will carry lit TD at 1% Int No loan fees. ms. P.J.T,J. per mo. PAUL•WMll CA RNAHA N • .... ,,., c •. 1<»3 Baker. C.l\1. 546-M 10 s2B,9So 3 Bedroom Home Hardw~ floors. dble car ca.rtac. PRlio, n-istone Bl!Q. Eut•ide, Coti. ~ft&&. $22,SOO Wellt·McCirdle, Rltrs, 1810 Nct\'lport Rll'd., C.~1. 548-7729 64t<J684 E1·CJ1. $19,750 E:.\STSIDE n-2 lot. Be!t of ftrms 2 Bt:t, I Be, 00\'Cl'M f»lOO. new Cl\l'?f!lt, painted In & out. Nr1v dlivtway. Owne r an.'dous. Atrnt 54~ EASfllDE FIXIR0 Ul'l'ER Excellent potc11Ull In this :\ Bcdroon1 on R-2 lot th it could bf' Cl in near future. Bl& doubltt detacht'd :an.at. -Anln: $22,500. . 646-7171 .:> THT: 11J:,'\1. '"-CS'! i\T I .I '; BY O\VNER. &rn W/ltalJ . ..__ .,~-IJ o;1v • S-..,..., MW Iha&" .._, •1 carpet tllruout. Cu1tem J._ • 1 drp1. $33,900. All etftni con-CerllN HI Mar 12St aldtrtd • bein( trartlk'~. 11•ED Open ho't• Sat • Suo 11,, " PM. >Jl!l Imperial Covt OF THE 1.a, .. MM931 'BLAHS? $24,750 lf ~'fMJ'\•e attn a "'hole host e l"OOL 17 X JS e of DJ\EAl\Y'S you'll lP~ 4 BR. l"-BA. frpJc. llke new clat@ our hrlif,t and crptt. !partlfn.r dta.nt Lc: OfE!:JtY 3 Bedl'Otll'IUJ -PiUo. boa! door, nr heh. walk to tilt htach. ONy $31.-BllAIHEAI! REAL TY 9JO, 117.uoi "'' . 512'0<7! °""' .... 1.,.. ~ tll l :JO REALTOR '7J.4350 '1J.1l'4 Evo1. NEWPORT DUPLEX <21 3 BR. Al'llS. fi'uli, lel!@d. ~ll:j). Low down. OY.·1>1:r 'llD considtr TD'• as rrade. •••um• SIA:%' loin Tf'nitic ipr. I01n to •uumt . Entry hall. hlla'.t ltunJly nu .. 2 baths, 3 !Jinn&,. llrie mu. fer h!-11~ 540-1720. TARBEr 2fll H•rbor Vlc .. ri• 646-llJI lonytlmo) 4 lldrm. + Don BeauUtul t nlr)' M.11, 3 bltha:, full dlnlni rm .. hut,lt llvln: rm.. flrtplace. 01'cnlsed ilVl.lnt'I!, Ml).Jn:J. TARBELL 2'Sl Harbor 1:1 .. r. 6'"16'>. GI No Do\\'n .• Br. Z Ba, frplc, trttr. dlb :-ar .. fcnc- '1t. nrf1 1hoppn:. Ca 11 M&-'73&1'· O 'i 1t I. 1, r:1\ L "\.. 1 .. ~ I''· 11 'l<'-' OWNER: Al'IUmt l tt. VA. Spaicious 3 Br. 2t• ba, fsm rm. w I fr p I c, land1cPf'd, 1Attlen kltchtn. I mm a --· DAILY Pnm WANT ADS! I w MJ.n tor R~LTS -· ------ ( l i " I .1 ~ t I ~ ' i 1 ' ' MOftday, AP'll 6, 1'70 OAILY ~ILDT 37 HOUSiS FOR SALE •.• , HOUSES "Oii SALi RINTAU llNTAU llNTALS lllNTALI lllNTALI itlNfALS l<ENTALi ., ...... \lnfllrl!!~ ........ ""'""""'"" Aplo. ,.......,,. .. ~.~ ~ """""'""" • -1---~=·...:"""'"""''"'""""'"''"""---"""='';...· ""'""'=""= ...... ;;;:..-San ClemMlo 171• Ian Clomonta 111e -- SEE US POR THI lllT 'VALUll Outstanding view homes -good tetlll4. ... "'"...... -~· ... !hf'"" ~I Cttto -41• Ceota MIH llW Coote!!!"', I!!! 5200Nowport Be0<h ~ I/I SUI).. 2 aft. l" ,Ba. kto,i:IM;';;;A:;ILL;°":l;";llR;'-;!uro=-. ::,pt.:;-All:;;j!,;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::;;;;===;;;,,;;or;;;;;::;;;;;;;,;;;t,1..,.,~~ Allulft 0,,ly W/W, JOOI, ~· ell, Udl ,.id. tit El CamJn0 s Ill. 2 1'llb .,Ui levt! lllS llllf, -l>r. c.ic. -Residential & commercial lots -!rem $7,000 Triplexes • from '39.995 4 Units • from •&2,000 Commercial property • from Q&,000. AVAIWU: NOW . •··· A Beo"1 JtW•·, 111<. lllNTALI !lit:J: 2 1111. f>qplta. Clpl'4. .., ~ .... ' •••• ~ Miii"--.• tol Dov" l>t., l!Ullt UI NI , = '°"l,_ --w lllSI 64$.2000 £\>ff ...... 1 r_.. --OCElNF'RO!it dl>plu, s !9e,rel .. i.roii1i:t ....... ~JY •• • • • .,_ ,.. • 1111 s ~ !uro. Adulll oni>· Af<U 211' BA''.'"..00 me.' m'. '1ng 1Mttt IO. -E6ll' ,...,., "*""-!fjM\tl l Bii. Pool. 1111Ulile ~. ortnff 1 otl ,..ltllCi ant J11;~t tx· Gut. Adloltl. Utll pct. uM Aptl'l!lltftl C°"'mtntllV • .......... NI vltw or 3acl< Adults MontoYIL -F11turinc a c I u b atmooplM.. for your Boy. , !!DO/mo. Owner iii. Rillii ll<h. '°"'.. comlort and pleaau,.._jusl completed I or Z 643-411.1 w111UI. pd. Firivl•w t. l!Odroom, 2 Balb. P'Umllhtd or Unlumllhd. , Br + 1>.n1. c + o. 200.I Wllten ma. ~ Alr-Cond., sound.f.fftd, •Ill cleaning ovtno, We also apecl•llie In apt rentals • starttni at $13~ month. Realtors . Wilh Pride We .. Servt You <;ol 412 N. El C1ml111 lhol 4n.20. lv11. 4'2-42tl --------·-·-.. --Port AJboM cir. H.-t.u.uiy lint!•. 1 • 2 lit«-2 U: lilt·"11, ""'· Adult.. boam cellln&•. , waaher, lulb land1eap1n1 · View HMn•• NI. < 21 l > room •pu1mtntt. fllm1lh. $lil0 mo. '°"'521 or '*-4UT with 1lttan'\i • waterfalla:, ttevators, BllQ'1, td "'4 --with Coplalr•M....., 11IO =m-=1ll0!=~'-"~'·~~~-. complett ,.....,. M.i land-Now, _. ,IOHll. 4IOI clubhouse wllb aoclil activities, 1aunu, Fl\EIHLY Jlll•l«I 3 Br. 2 ,..p14 -~ dub,,,_. . =.;. Jacuzzi k awlm pools, prlvale g1ra11 wllb Ila llolllt•"" ltd!. Nu <PU· P""'" Uldo41nr 1110.to0 1tora~itm •140-210. Huntintt•n 811ch 1400 MOVE Ul'I CAN YOU QUALIPYt MOVE ALL THE WAY For , 121.500 VA'°"'' UP I I CLOSING COSfS ONL~! \Vinding circular 1tairclllse to New 3 bedroom, 2 bath 3 master-siu bedroonis ii.nd "'~ttts PLUS 18 x "' ~1 .. ~tc1· home. Principals ~ .,.. ...,,, ...., 0v.'fitt . 492-3816 SUite. Plush thick carpet and I ========= Ocea111i4• 17IO Bltna. $2'0 mo l t & • • • v."Orth of recttatloMI faell· Ntwpert i.Hh P., • WT••••ll ........ ,. 4ft. 54l>-71T1 ;11e, du;,ntd '"'" ...,.ltd "WID ...... -,. NtRRIMAC WOODS ••• GARDEN• HOUSE, 3 8{t 2 Jut! !l>r <11111t ... flt. • Juot. ttt• .. -H-• .._._ 11< .... -c..!lllic BA. I poor.. lltck llty 1323 4U MllUtlMAC WAY, COSTA MISA e ~ mo. Ltue optltn. •ent• Fro-. ma iVllYTNI ... NlW-MOlll IN NOWI Bkr 'ls..IOt4. IO-U23 n. 0 ' A , ' $145 to $300 lllNTALI 2&,9-.£!l!C!!!£ __ 3 BR Baek 8a1 t.rt1, IJ&t. tnod., 2 ttpl'1, 2~ Ba. #JS, AjlL Purnll~ .. Caota ~,. JlGO rustom draperies highl\r;ht formal diolnr iw1n and en, try, ~!)U'&te family 1'00n1 and otllct or 5th bedtoon1. $8000 't~-take over th is 6~" i;-., aovernnlitnt loan. A J\1UST for the JUNIOR EXECU- MUST' 5tll Ltillurt World I ::"':::•=lt::o ... ='=m-=•=::o'"'='==I Lquna HUl1 nearly new, 1 • 111\l'Mdlatt 0eeu,.ney Me. to N•. 1Aue Avd. IMMEDIAT£ L.,.... ...... 4111 • MAtnN1~u1 • Qul+t l'ork·Llko Afll• bn.UXE 1·2 I. S Bk'•· Prv pattu e Htd Po6!1 ANAHEIM OCCUPANCY THI AMIGOS WAY APTS. l111blvll Arn Off J•mborH lltd • llHuUlul, new • now renting • 22 un!U of 2 bclrm1., 2 baths, with fine quality color coor- dtnat.ed carpets & drapes. Unusual kJtch"'•· fHlurlnf aelf·cleaotn1 ovens. '300 Montli. Call : IOYD RIAL TY ,,s.me ~ IMir,.rt ... ch 1200 S.nt• Ano S6ft bl:UJXE 2 BR. We1tcllfl Loe. P6DI A bullt-ifta . Adultt. $115 mo • nD ltut. MM2rf i.o\IELY TWNfiSE w /v~w ol pool 2 8dnn. 2 Ba ttple. lrs p&tlo $250 Apnt 6*-0732 J BR. 2 BA. ATJ\nJM. C/D . Bltns. encl 1ar. Adult.J. $190 lme. 548-370&. 67J.:23TO 2 BR. 1 ~ii BA. Crpt1, drps, bltns. pttio A pool. $150 mo. 15Z Plactntia Ave. NB --lock lay 5240 VILLA MAllSllLLll llltAND NIW SPACIOUS I & 2 MrM. """ Adult Llvlnt Pum. & u·llfuro. TIVE. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES 2 Br. 2 llt, tnm.s. OwMr Ntw,ert Ho!lhh ,~Ii ~Ul 514 BOW. 2 Br + dtn. Duplext• hr Sal• 1t71 $345 mo. Optn HOUM Slin-d1y. Call U...23t0 •ft' Cdi\I, 2 h0u1tt. rarden, N!WhOU11,2Br.iba.,farn, u;;,ooo. $7000 dOwn. bltnl, ftf. Grdnr .. inc. Av. m so. Brookhunt (l blk. Sb. Of lJheoln) <nf) m-4500 ~CH: apt. nr. bch. It town. Util. pd. Avtll. 'tll June 2T. • .. _,_ ---tA: ns ~fo. Refer'•. 4M-l925 -\H)' n ._...... = ' . -- •ll+rtna c«npleto ,.....,,, Saft Cle_,,le 4710 Nr ahop 'I e Adulll on!.)' l--------- 1m Santa Ana Ave., CM vrpv 2 BR. cprts, drp•. r.tir Apt ll3 e ~ bltns, pool. Sl65. me. * 6't3-3690 * Dllh~'Uher '. colet' ~t-. ltd Jpplianeel • plUlb lhal CA.l'ptt • cholct of 2 colOr lt'heme1 • 2 batha: • ...U sbow1r1 -mimnd wudo robe doors • tJtdlrect l-'lbi. lnl' Ip lcltchtn · • bl'ealdalt bar -llUCe private ltnted p&t!o • pfush J\DUICapllls • brick Bir-11.Q'•. "'*" 1111~ "' """4 • lanol. JlOI So. lrlahl JI. (~)Mt N. of So. C0..1 PlaA) Sonia Alla PHON!: 557.atO Walker & Lee Bkr 67~. CU..S223 ~fay 1. $300. gc.I099 GARDEN GROVE I ;::=:::::;:::::;=::::;;;;::;;;;:::::I U100 Chapman Ave. i$82 F.diflitr .&•arf nf L. I' (f t..11... y •• ....... , ) 84J...4455 54fl,jJ40 ...,._. tn• I 1WI' UftlWr•lty '''Ir 2121 """' ' • -.nta Ant • •1• -· bei.utiful JIPdlcaplnl •1----·----- uhparaJltlt't! rteftitlonaJ !PAR.KUNG 1 bdrm. pool tadllti" ln • countr)! llullt-lnl 2 blocka from dub atmotpherl. NO"* beach, ocean vtew, yett 1 ... m1 Sn Newport ltech. Jeue, No chll4rtn oi peta. or for Santa AM. art& COCO PALMS- S~DALWOOD APT!!. 2101 l>ondertsa, Stnta J.I\& fNr. lT~ • 1'111tin) $42. I ii Solo ,,. mil 131-lOlO G.J .. , $40, 4 Brdm., 21,, ba., 3 Br + den or • 9,r, Oln·a dble. 1araie. 11et open house **14 OILUXI A'tS rm. Fl.Jftlly rm w/wtt bar, $140 me. lrfodtlt eptft 10 tm ta I pm Call 492-454! or 49J..4311 din!ctory, 8292 Noble, E. Principals Only. cpl!, drp1, pools. l•nf'll NEWl'ORT BEACH llo lll\llNP: AVE. IJlvmE AND l&th <n•>- J\tni. from $US.$310 GORGtofis ntlV 3 bdrm 2 FAIRWAY YILlA APTS. \V, Hoke & Assoc., 89J.3541 Q..1.1 SM-0315 courts, puita. 00. to 11hop. 1'Urnllht4 .r unfumlthed blth hOmt •pl. $ISO mo. 89l-ls.41 RINTALi plnkcinttr,un iver1tty , S IR·RUMPUS RM. Housea FurnllhNi scMols Ii Stn Dkac. f\\'Y. OakwHCI 101 Dominquez, Apt A . Ov.oner 492..fi002 or 494-Ul4. \"llk I hi ho I Aft 5 pm ~:ttkdaya Or &ey • 0 IC •• pp ••. So·.... ..., Chi .. Lndscpd·ftnct'd. New FitA lttntalt t9 Sh•re 2005 tlmt wHlctnd1, 133--)127 lflft 9 ' lltlNTAkS ~s,. ~· ~~;~ GJRL ta share 2 br. Houte, 2 BR. 1 bath ····•···•···= __ A~lfl,.~·~lf~ll~te!!l~tl~- c •1 l80 _ Coll ... ,, ~· ?\'E\V S Br., 4in. rm ••••• p13 :r::: ... ., ... Lv $16,500 FULL PRICEI 'b.iore 2-PM .,'";;u fBR.•l•m.21\bo ..... IJlO ~~LY Gardtn Apartments ·1100 I 6flt Sfrfft Aptt. ·unlurnl"'" Ntar Orlntt OI. AitpOrt A: UC!. Adul~ Oftly. -·•I -Zl.22 !&nla Ana Ave. ror this Spanish hacitnda PM!'' PITTIT lllAL TY CO. IXTRAORDINAlltJLY in 0 L D HUNTINGTON I =~=----~-"Tht Hou.st el Home1" VEN DOME Mar.Mn.-- BEACH. Full so x tt:i lot FEMALE rtx>mate ftffd, lux-U).fl•l BEAUTIFUL and zoned R-3 for tutlltt de-lU')' apt $70 a me, utll V•I D'iHte GaNe11 Apt1 HAltlOlt GRllNS ~&'¥':~~' Al'AllTMINTS wlopment. Ideal inveitment Incl. l'lO 1mokin1. Cd~t. Puttinc rrttn, waterlall A: or nty,,•lyv.'ed itarter. SUB-644-4479 lrvlM JJJt itream..D°"·•n evtrywhert, _,.,.. SECTIONS AVAll.UIL!: Ba .... lo<. J.2 6 S lllt. i'urnJ 714: 642-1170 i\fJT YOUR TER.i\tS. l\IALE roomm1te v.•anttd to 1---------I '5' pool, tee. IU'.lm, bUliards. WE SELL A' HOME share 3 br in N.E. Yrly, 3 Br + dtn or 4 8r, l)tn't BBQ'1, Sa11n4. flam,-efurn. HOTIL RWMO jlOI( ci... ,. lhl!llll ... "etlt ""'-"""' WO A .,, OV-Vl~'I IX~INllVIT * llPo"""" 2it?~1 a. den patioo • Beom collp EVERY Jl MINUTES $15 mo . Call 114>1433. nn. Family nn w/-.·et bar, linf\t1, 1.2 Br. lterh Sl3l W I k & L GIRL 21 or over to il\ltt cpla, drpe, pools, tennlt Sloe it! 2000 P&rteM ltd., l••I P•r c-~IMi..., * 2 Btdroorno Frpk, • 11ac 11ma • 1 "°"' O•• "T Sa'lftn e Nldllr')' hhaol a er ee turn. 3 Bit apt, N w pt courts, ...... CIOH lo •hop. fil3'10. letwffft H&rW A Beach. Call 6t';H;833 &rt 5. Pini center, un i v tr I t·t y , Ntv.-port -2 Ilk N. Ltth. GJfti room matt iiffded. lthao1s A: San Dlfp fwy. H6LIDAY PiJ!A rrlCl·A • "llwlm Pool. ru11....., Fom, AdUlt -· tm- Plfftl.. ~.... -· * ""'" llldl•ilaei> ... 11 \Oitw, 2 Ill. '"· -.J•tol)' 1141 AMMlill AW. ;;!: C'M: = f'=. 7182 Edina-er 142-4455 541)..5140 71,J% GI re~le Franciscan F()Unta!ns. 3 BR, 3 BA, 9 mos old, totm din rm. Full price $45,900 Ke ystone Rlty 119'i-IC»4 BY Qy:ncr: 2 BR Condo. Assuml! 6%r mofC'. $SOOO dov.·n. Sm. l\tonthly pmnb. 1 CAr gar, pool, quiet. 53&-3562 CREDIT PROBLEM BUY LIKE lt!NTI Cute dttam cottt1c on lal'(e co~r lot wilh beat or cam- per acce.~. Take ov~r this 670 a:ovcriimenl loan llnd only $166 pei· month. include1 ankle dttp carpets, custom drapes, dishv.·1.11htr, modem built,ins, FlJtEPLACE and equipment. .$26,000 FULL PRICE. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUT!S Walker & Lee 7682 Ldinpr . ~0-3140 8-12-4453 :Z ?ifl. from Ocean, ~ bdrm., den, dormal dn. rm., 3 cu garage. See opc!n hou~ director')'. 10202 Stoney brook. E.\V. llokt & AllOC. 893:3541 6% G. I., :i Bdrm, fm. rm .. J't. ba. Sel! open House llirectory. lSjn \\'a.ite. E. . \\'. Hoke&: A!80C. 893'-lMl ll'ountain Valley 1CIO 12 ROOM HOUSE + garqe. Tile entry, 1unk. en living rm v.1th angular frplc, loni form.al din nn., prden kitchen, w/bltn dble view ovens + eating area. S!p family rm w/wet bar. Service pcreh, prtv master suitt \\•/sunken 1t0man tub o~nlna: lo p11v 1ard~n. As. l baby OK. $15 mo. OOt. ~ft S pm •'ffkdays or &11¥ Dl:LUXE, ~ 1 Mrm Call 673-4439 time wctktnds, 13$.-2021 Ftlrn apt $1S3 plus utn. furn. with lintftl, •If ..... O)STA. Ml:IA ..,.. l&03TO 90MJor)'*arl1n"ta1.i..v~l .. •1!119'!..,ll!l! .. •.-•l..:::=[M~Or:EillUlid""',,.....,.,,..._ Htat~ pl, arnplt p&rtdn&. lt~k ~ay J24I No cPtlldrtn • no ftll. dry 1acm11.. , ... , .i1• • 1t1!NT • UXUliuuHtri ~t" Riab:, MS-Ttn er J RMmt frurnttwr• Dan• P•int 2740 BEAtrrIFUU. Y Furn l BR. Expando l\IOBJLE HO~tE, porch & carpcirt. W&IJc t0 beach. Sal. 4~16l9 Summer llttnt1l1 2910 LIDO I s I e lt1Nrvatlon1. Home or apt. July lhnz Labor Day Wttk. cn-.3tll Dupl•x•• furn. 1 Bk, crpti, dtfl!. blt,lna, 1965 Pomona, C.M. patio. NO children. $140 ,;. W Cail ~197. . ~Hie Mo.. 41 Sit.ts & UI' CHANNEL • 39)1 Finley. \'tarly ltue. 2 fir. •1, l ba. 1ifontti.To.Monlh J«ntala Frplc . patio, aar . \VIDE SELEC1'10N -* SUNNY * Down;1a1n, 1275 "' "'"· NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. ,.,..., 491 Mer ntl AvliJ now. -Weekly JW)' Custom Furnitun JtentaJ $2io, A"l· j2ls. IU-USf 011 W. !!th, CM .... 3"1 CHAltM 61 ·Old Ntw * ACRES * IAYCLIFF MOTE[ Ill>-I Ir. ft/O, wrw, d'!'•· -E .. 11.nd. lleom ctll., 2 Br. Cltlldr<• ok Bkr -2· ta. hOme avail lmmed. • LOW wtl:kLY Jlt.AtES * __ · · ins •• Ltue. -fteoley. * Motei.Apts * Kltcllol\, tv·, mold -· '"'" Mot• llGO m.!110 H .. ltd Pool. 1---~·---- f l!llt}l. Jp!il.Lfvtl l ,,..., So ... O.C. -QUl!:'r • LUXURIOUS 2'il kths. s l>eck8 ~ ' LARGE 1 BR. I'll' ocean. ADULT LIVING AT, •• 1140-Util pd. 2 Br. ltwtr, Don v. Franklin. 11~2122 ..... •I 1"*9111111 u .. tlln. !wtdeck. 1140. HACllNOA HAlllOll child&: pet Welcomtd. •kr. LIKE New 3 8r, 2 ba, an $n WK. & UP Ytll'ly. Stulltntlek. m.ata !!rand New l 6: 2 Bil ~ blt-lNI 1.laint. peGI. Oetan ~W .... .,~ l r. 0ct•·-•t to' J Sl'° I: SlfO per mo w/ ~ ™"· -'UI" : unt au uwui.1 1nc1 RENTALS vw. Ad\IJti, P· ~. • Khc I', TV'• ind. 20th. Othtrs avallalllt r lltnl ""'Cf11tl ~ au Hov111 Uolvrt1lohttl ~ I lo "ml e Phono ""''• h!A ,..i ABBEY !\!:ALTY 8'2-.!liO bot •1 land ' Som ' G I *9 I ~,. NaM ltl\'tC. aYl!I, ""' ON , Li' nt1r Lid&, 1 Br Jllftl~ .tnq at~: by pool : oner• BtAuntuL 5 llt. 3 ~A ... 76 lllWl'OIT •••• patio ipt. SW Uld. ulil. opl No. o. :Ul A,....dO. **lt!NTALS** Mill now 6n ,,.,1y >eue. ~a, lloot dip ovau. t?Wf!O su.ms, !NH. &f8.091I 2 Br, tot/pet ok ...... 11'0 ISOO >et m•. CASA DI 0111) ll•YPllOifl' L1lililli 2 fr. ST.UD.10 •l'TI II Owncr/11~. Em, ~--·&1 ~ .. ~. :: 2 !a. Boat oltp avtll . 1315. ~ • 2 Rr, dupWx, nice •••• SI ~2 ...--.........,..._ MeKtmlt Rttlklt. M&.-OT~ 2 Btdroonu • 2 .. thl l Br, fenced )'ard •••• SI*> ==--=---,I wtnr M'tdlt. •tmolll . , • mn=xr.a • ca:,,ets 1: drapes, Ganie 2 '"" -.... -.... Sito ...... -s,., ...... -ted.,.. "'"""'''l\UlH 339 • 343 Cobrillo 1 Br, fum 1pt ••••••• , $125 t!"!",I....... tt1i;ritd &: f\lrft. 1t1r tlylf W~kly uiltll aurnmer $115 Pt"r Month • er Futn.. bach, nr beach •• $U5 3 Btdrm, '"' bathl, freshly 6: comfott. * Pvt. ,.Ho * c.J1 M?-00 SW on Laue .R()Of\,U..1ATE SERVICE palnted, new carptlt/t!hp.. BBQ • Sl)&f ~ti* Gu W/ SrN'Gfl: furti. t&t&ii apt. ft.&Ha 0 * MANY OTHEl\S * es. flool &: Clubhoule pr1v. •Un.rt * Htd P6"ll * X!tch-CPpu, clean. 11r beach a: 0 , liiiC7s , FrH to Laftcllertl• iltpa. · 5'1~"24 or NJ.IOtT, en ••/ indlrtct lishtillr * bay. 1 adult n25. 5'73-ffl.S -a.a Blue Beacon Rental l'inden uk for "Mnct". Dtlwre Ovt11 Ir r&l!rlf, t lft .. I :::::::=:;-:--=::;:;;:;;;::::= "' w. 19th St, CM M>0111 ===G =~. """ lo Si7' l"'1 u!ll. 2 Bdrm. 11t.I Ceron• .i.1 Mu._ cue. r-~A~V~A~l~L~. MA=~y~,~s"'+~ ' • I> :st"ARJU..lfll .:HUI;.,, il'lcl. utU. Adults., ne "ta. 3'51--:--"-""--...;.;;::o,~...;.;:;.;_ 3 Br + den or r, In's btach ", ihopplftl, s BR, w. WillOn St. N•ttn 2 8;1t Marruerll! So of 2 Br, l'ii IA. Flnpl1ct. Cpts, nn. FamU)' rm v.·/v.'tt bar, blt·ins. sttulc!td pe,tlo, pool , u.,.. $200 me No'chudrtft drpa, bll·ins Inc. dl•hwa.ah- cpts. drp!.. pool~, tel\ll\a 6; Ma.int. l\fitny xttu. $1t5 2 letirOOl'NI. Spacloul l'Ol!tl'l'\I. * STMsTi '* ' f!t. AU this plu1 a "COOL eoitrts, parks. C!ett to ·~ mo. SU..1'9M. Luxurious , futnlturi. 51\&I --POOL" and rtcMat:lon l'Gem. p!ngcenltr,unlv@talty, Catptl. Bntk ln&tll bat A: £6g pv{baeh. I0, 0fll hw)'. SJ.b rno. l.llt and Jut+ .11e- 1Cho0ls .ti: S&n Diep Fwy, ~ • Bit, 2 14. erpts, plant•r. •autll\&l JdtcMn. Ctpts, drpl', rMris, Mtpl&tt. a1rtko d•-•lt Mt-Gtt4 Att .; pm wukda)rs er any dtpt. bltn.11. Let ~~ yd, Jttuoflable rent. OUdtwn Sll3 JM. 87J..GO& ::' r-· ttme "ieekend1, U!-mT nr all ldtls;. US..~ " •""11 ,.u wtlmM. 351 IL CORDOVA $l~l BR dplx, pr, w/w, CLtAN J idnn ttnc.d ylld Victoria. Apt. 4 lllMt 4JIO ~rand ntw delux •Pl•, 1pac- .1tv, pool. chldrn et. Lt11 $20o. 4~aj ~"-:·.HI VIL~M,SA AJiTS. J\ENT 1'rff to fl-~1~ in =: ;~:. ~ h~v.;i.r;:!: rent it pool 1na.IJltn. Bkr. _ I I" ~ •· hid - Quiet Adult living , 1 • 2 BR. 2 1W1m ,lo.J, Adults o"1y, no pett. »1 A\.'GC:Jdo St.,C.M. see l\.tcr on prfmlM1 CBttund K-M.Ut 6ft Harbor at ~r lluflfn 4 Avocado> Ila,· w.=, ... - O!U.EANI AJ'TS 2 A: 3 Bft. avail. Adults enly. Priv1tt --.tlo. Pool. Laundry f1eillt1e1. (Nr. Oranat Co. Airport; t'ustin at lTth SI; n r, We1tclWJ. 1T41 Tu1l111. Co1t1 Men ~· M~. Clno!t. &f~ S CI US Home:M foWrlbouH 2 Bf. 2 Bl, bltnS, trpll, drps, pl!le, encl, pr. Cl"b"" l pool. 54Ml!t I DELUXE J ir. I\' Ba. Yetrly 111 ... 312 E. Jay Ave. (Ptklniitlal. 0 PI tf SAT. Ql..4949 , NEW 13 llr. 2 v 81 ap(1, famillt• only. Frem im. C.U Anita, ITMJlO, Jonei Realty. 3 5Dft}.fS, 2 bttl\s.= Ntar \V•1ttlltf mioi>~t. 0 a r . Adlt1. $17~. ;40·4431, "'"''" 2 81\. OP,.r &Jt.' iuo mo. Gas, •let. A: w1ltr l'llm. No petl. Mu1t1 •nly. I '~ Walnut, A111t I . CaJI MWtM 2 Br, l~ bl, crpf, d,i'ji, bll·U... I Child OI(. $Jlo. Call 962---~~· .-..-:: .. "ll "' · rnv ,._, Ocftntnnt apt. For Nturn ~ tht ht.st bl .the area. See ~ 1 on. OUM, yl.f'd, ttfrir. -• 2 car tncl'd -· ""Ud-t•· t ~, ~---l I 1103 Call 53-1817 -. ........ " ef ketpll\J hoult and c.«lk· ~m a 4111 ....... ..,., manai-IEP Unit J BR. Opl1, drp1, • ovt. · , rtn •'flCOft!;!, "° pttl plfllll 1nc. ta1 Oct&nt1'9nt, -.JbM er John a: Leula S.llers, d 1 1 t I I'"' 311 E Jlee 147 .. 900t StlS mo. ..._ ,,.,, .... 1• y . ar, x n oe . ....,... . .&.111Wl\St&Jr, '"""41 0• llth No. 3. MU029 sumable $30,700 VA 8% loan, 2 BR,Uhfurn hat. 'tit/w crpta, gill' 1htthed. 2 tm&ll cN&'n. ,_, ••• Valley Jt19 nt w. Willen. * 841-ml HARll61t VILl.A APTS Nl:W Db I '2 Br ..... crpl, ' ..... 1rwic .• Ii~ Lift l•lo 4111 10 Min. lo h<ach. adulU only. -. bl -ITllllWll ~~;-· Call '"' .,,. ru..w11 ( ;;l4f111J "'ro"'1t'""1.e"' .... --or-:uT ... ..,--w..,/o-.. L•guna l•ach 17H tlon. l Br houM w/lft ~t. Crpt1, drps, blt-inl. Ntwl)i ttmod. 536--20TI Private ltetteat 3 liDR!\t, 2 iilh. Cpts, ttou~ with view of oet"an drape1• built-Ina. f e n c • d . and c1nyons, v.'OOd and brick $2l5 D>'• ,.,._2* • v t 1 interior, open beams, 2 firt· 5$7..n&I. pla~s. room lo expand. A buy at $31,000, 2in. 21A. cpt1, drfls. +· + * Adults, no ptU. $170, Ocean, Tr••• & Gardan 646-61132. 413 Ferd ltd. i re the views thna class, 3 3 Bk, dbl ear aa.rs attchll. BR. 2 BA hoUff, beams. fin?. Lr& tl'ICI pt,tlo. $210 me. Pl•ct, slate entry and dln-1,;N_.•;<;,hl;I!;,":".,· :":>i.l:~=o'°:.,= : . ing r"OOm, Will lea.If: • option. t · NOWl'lrl .. "" -$37.250. Englund R@al E1tale 311 TIWla StrMt 4'Un• Belch 4!W~093 4 ' aft. 21 J BA., t.c ram Rm. Tri-Lev•!. T•rraCf's. ·For Quick S.le -J.14.XIO tl!rm~. , John80n Rtalty, $44-1.316 rOR SaJP by owner -adult Condominfum, 3 BRl. 2 ~tti1 bl!NJ. ~l~ator, Oif:I' ~ OriVf, <!!M-3126 t" 81\., J\ii BA. v!tw, So. LI.· :u"'· oldtr, co,. d cond. $39,:!M, 213: 1'91).6961 coll. -~~~~~---~ BLUFFS. 1.Aa....We ott\tn. ll!O oq. n. ~-H .... d1IWc1 mliter Bit llUW, ls spacious 1econd ot p11t BR. 21 t bathl. Drama tie .-pllt-ltwl. Uft\Jsual kltcl\Cn 4 etller luxury a,. polntmentJ, $450 Jtr mo. $49,500· ttnn1. Owner. ?ilr. Cl\rl1tophf:r, tn4> 144-4337, l2lll ITt-1100 TOWNHOUSE. 3 admu. 2 kctttklr • l BR. !lid peol OH IAY -1 h A•I. j,,;,"-. \t~. Bbllt.lnll\.I BP•r1•.•. c,""'.11~.· From siao~&.im. ~~ 'BL f'rplc .. •·uher/dryer, fl'l•ld MM~ 10t'11tni 6 " fM:1 u•r ., --=:.• ' dllhw1hr. 2 Car. l&hP· TV &Vlll. .,,· VtttOria (Nr. ~ l room apt. . iwlmrntnt pool, l•undry rm. ?>ELUXE 2 • 3 cm UntUm Pool I: rte. art&. Olllfrtn ffll"Or) <Am~. tun .• ,att. 320 Via trom $U~. 3521 Harbor aftJ;, 9M El CanUh6 Dtl\lt, 0.K. • Lido Nef,f. 83MQ Blvd. Ph t-3, SU.Ill!, ills C.lof. ~- 121! Monlh 147"°'6 Dt.x, 1 Br., bk. """-All li19* l•la~ 41H Jlil. !14&-IOll { ~ 2 BR. "N•wl¥ uptd, 3• 0BJt + Bo21\t1 K:..f . tlk., f'tolt·ftt rtfril. w/w nw Ct.ZAN, quQ'.t f Bil duplPx. drp1, eleC klt, thlldrtn ok. Ch.lb~. rwtmmlnc '"'· ql F\all Ov. W/ttor. Qtdtt AOAt in, i: a Mr,.,~ N•w cpts. Drp1, bit-ins. ct.II tlt s prn. M-11'1 !tMla 6 1\tttiftc srtf:Ni. !Nt-Adult• only, Mo/lftO, $lf0. lvt&t apt. 1 kth ~ Garbqt disposal . Yel\efd LAROE 2 Br. 1'As fiA 1tudiG II\$, nt:\11' ~ A 4"'" From D Elffn. fll.tm E!«•· •u1 .Gru'l'ldy fttaltor ~ )'ant. Watlr A: 1ardener pd. apt. Childrwn <M. No pittl. $290 mt. ~. J..OVilf 1 Br. 0 a rd t n 1 il utUltlia peQ :YI.if able Adult1. no J11t1. $16 mo. $150. '?3f Joann St. Mf.1584 Dqpltx. fl.II Incl vtil. Olkt Aptu 7 • J!Utl• ?. $175. 111 le lut ,1ua PO tt:curily l a'Ji s d~' l&1 'r;J;ti ~ S.t1t1 AM Jilt maturw ad\IJl1. fttttr, Alto. ltM33t depo1lt. Av•U M11 1 at. d ' IUpoO ,' 1 o •112 E• -am&ll lllchtlel' 111. Mt-llrJT 5tt-ao3& aft $ .,,s. · .. p • · 2 .. ~iiu':'O:..~,,r.; i Sl'ACrotls 2 llr ,;t. 11M. Hllllllftt'"" ...... 4409 Ruliit' Raljfil1 Aj!lt. • ,i; •w-1792 11 d-=, Corotu dn .. , ,..i Alie ~-· ~-.. k·1 2 a •• • "• "" • ·~· "" · sehJ•. 1·2 chUdrtn $\'I mt about ~ 41i~~· plan. IACHt:LOIU:Ttt APt fteol , ~y·IJ'P!' I.IX~ 61ncl.on. p&tlo, i~lta. $125. Ca 11 + 123 .. p. Ina. llOtl s. .,_ ••• ~ .. II ........ •• • ... lN1' • ·-· ..... •IW03TI !fMT3$ -...... .... '. ~-..... ~ ....... ll<d ilr hlf bl"11 Cll tO. ·'1• ' "' I idiift. p;;oj, \itll. C.-.n. I0-4121 S.D. rr.~. ~. ~. park. s Int ...... ...,ijiit LIP!'! ...... im 1>11d. •"?'"· :.'! .itt. lantl ...._ ,,_ tl""1 llil<tr , Cl!ltt. w. ar ~·i:;:~l1f.;1 m ~ • • · 1 , Nr = 1 Sl~ tM. --, ~ . , --: ftarbot> JUritaJ otc, lU7 r a IPll/llS. • DiN' ~ 61, ~~· "' 1140. !« -· ,,.,.,, CJMam•r A ... !'~JOM f!!!t"l'I llacll lllO ,,,.,,.,.. "" fflil!i. 1 ill Qtiiet .• .,.., turn. i M. apt (trtJi,.> GJilc1ous A4Uli-t.1v1ns . • INl!t·ln i.i.:.:"ttn. r::: llll\-s!lO. t\irn. Studlo.1110 '""'· ltrt· 1 <hlld ... Nt i Bit. "''""'~ erpo, bli·ln .... s1101 LOCATION Uy hom• ri:r mo. Adultl, ti& ,.i.. IChll. 2t1o S. Ce:l'!ttr St. 1.4. JtfO, 1plnl 1trtut. trpl, Fol ltue, d•lwce 1A81 ~· ft. Ull ilonth • Leste 10Sl l!ldtn, Avt., AP.l t~ QI. CNr. Warntf) $1MllJ 145 E. 11th l:t. MM002. 4 , BR, 2~ BA apt. Frplc, MUSION RULTY -Sui C!AllTAi ll90. drapt•, """· •t• .,,, pri Turn. 1 alt .Apta. A.4\1111 L.1P.e ...... 4111 i:J BR' Fu l U r j}b balc:o11lti. d~ l&f oU ktt~htn enly, ft6 ,.l •. 2110 Ntwpert a ' tn!l rin wi" . d9t dlhwhr, dbl ovtl\. Peol °'"" L!~N'r!f, .,37t7 llvd, CM. '42·9221 II • :O;ut. ,;:J;~.ne,..J. rf;: '°''t.~1sc$tt;:""""· IU.Q; • .... .. ... II~ ill671n • ." 6tJ<. l\foi. TIO:... m El Ad.U~. no !';"· mt Mtplt '" ....... WOY .Na In 2 111 ...,;,., 2 k. 2 C>t!lpl l\lm, hte. ~ ... Ito. l.wculy A,.. Yi-... .... A~gjJ' Apt ~ ! Mp. llllt -Iii~"'"'°· ctr •. &M.ut. YMw, c.al• n6,_tt.4~lANM••·"'' Wt.iK'* n.tf~ 11it • VQ.U~t; i . 6: .... •-. ---..;.._ ---- ... , llufl 5242 -------2 BR Stud'°, 2 Bath. Pov.Uer rm, ttptc, plush crpl'e, b!I· ins, •mall patio. 2 car cars. mo mo. &U-249'2 TOWNHOfiiE ~.New lr&. 2 •l't. 2~ lathl, trplc, encl p.r, patkl. IT5-M33 L•run• leach OCEAN Fl\ONT Mw 1~ 1ptt, 2 8R., 2 8.l. 4dulta. ao ptll. 497-1181 2 Btdr6om, 2 bath, pool ac-01na Point 1740 ct••· S2IXl a month. MM4TI 1 _______ .... _ 1 • °' M4o-st!S DELUXE NEW Carafte dol Mer 52SO 2 Ir. Apt. Nfw crpll & paint. SUO. C&ll 613-9183 ~unllp lloooh .!400 ON BEAOH! e SINGLES "ICM IUD e 2 B!t 111 ll~ FltOM U25 • 2 B!t 2 . .M FllOior !260 I 3 Bft i:MJlloM $3!0 Cupet84rapes-dlahwuher ht•tflt pool-11auna,teluua: no room-ocean vl•ws. petlot-ample pt,rldrc. Security """"· FVRN. also Avail'. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC TU OCEAN AVE .• H.B. <n4> 5.16-I'n APi'S. FUi'n!Ahtd or un· fUmls!Mc!, 2 b t d r o o m pr!vatt patio, 5 Points ApU . nn Ellis. l block v.-tst of mi.ch Blvd at C5el1ware. $14! f)r. mo. open daily. i bl\ untum dthixe apt. In tri·pltx. Cu. water, bit-In •lovt, trlglda.lre, blc encl patio. Ailult~. no f) t: Is . 347-tf.10. 1112 Ron>Jd Rd, Arit C. OCEAN View 1undeck, belth, nfw lpac. db: 2 BR, bltns, crptl, drps, lnd1)', BBQ, nr thof>s Ir pier. $175. Adults, baby ok. sas.h31 diti ot\5 Apu. 11234 AUon- ta Ntw 1·2-~ Bit. rriv. 1•races. Pool. U t I I t 'Y room1. SU-8038 or l BR, w/~ crp(s, bltns, rttrlf., n •*I y clecora.{fd. AduJli only, oo pals. $135 ~r mo. incl. utlllttta. Tradewlnda: Rt:alt)', NT...SSU l<tw 1 ..... bllc .. "''"'· Prtv patto. Nt'CE! QVJt1'1 Gar, 1nale adu!l•1 cpl. $135. 20%.,\ lflll '3&-U19, 631·1'183 A+ffilC. 2 Br. Now avlU., all extru. Pool. Kid• OK. f.!,"' mo. 17t)1-A Kttlton . HB. 11$t:lllO. 641-0llS i· Bt., l\ii .bath, trpl., w/d, rnr .. c~i!' dn.pe1, patto, pool prtv.. '5 mo. 968--UU lf"r ' p.m. 2 ~m. J~ btlh. split level. wtth all applkncet, rut~. view. $3» mo. l.lngo Real tltale 1-unt ... 499-"'7 REAL ESTATE I Genorol I 11t•nt•l• w.n,... ,,,. I e LANDLORDS e \ FllU RENTAL SDVICE !lroker 53M9t2 CAJtA.GE Needed for •tock niom. N.8 . or C.M. art•. Mr. Ide. <n4> T74--<IU1. FA.\'IILY \\i1sht1 to ..... a 4 or a Br home. -=··' I • _R_oo_m_1_1o_r _11_on1 __ ms_ i CHEEft.P'UL Room A: bltb; ovPrlooki11& ocean S20/wk., Nicely decorated quiet blU1 11undeclir I: kitchen prtv. 1289 S. Cout Hwy, Laa:una,· Beach. 494-901? • NICE comfortable furn . bdl'm, kit. prlv's optional.! Adult home nr all C.M. i m-t:ll I fN pvt. home H.B. Maturid gentleman. IM!dtm/1lttlntj rm comb., pvt batft. 1IO Jtlt., prlv's. 145 mo. 992-MM ~ ROOM I bath fer pntltmtn, ! pvt. entranet I: patio. Near I fwys...be1cM1. LineM turtl., $75 mo. 9'S--41'7S ff.I~. FURR. uW Pd. li{ per mo. Student prefema. Call tor appt.~. $15 per W1C' up wJ ldtchin. $30 wk up apta. 2376 NeY.:Pfl11 Alvd, CM. ~ ROOM For Jlent: 1 Empl lady. Prlv. ba. i: fntr. 1302 Otana:e Ave., C.M. ROOM " blih in prtva1t "°"'" Cid. Ttintlt prtt.1 CaU!WUl<O. Mof1l1, Trlr. Crtt. $9'7 HOLlnAY !SEA.CH Mont J\oom1 -k1tchenette1, 190' to Jltach. J' rt• Cofttlntnt&I brtikt&1t. 1132 N. El Ctmlno Real SC . .fn..35a I WEi:KLY ram. SEA LARK MOTEL. 2301 N1wport Blvd. om& Meaa. Ml1c. lttnt•lt "" o.r ........... lltM. $\5 etch. -.oo ~ "'!I""" flfl!I -5 SIPAltATE HOUSES 1791 \VESTCllii 2000 •Cf· ti. hOmt. 1.lany txtru. Vaelllt. O,.n dally r.r ...,.., .... Avail A(N'U lil wllln decorltlnc t'f.lmpltt•. 1"7 f\enl LaM. UIO. till twner S7i-S213 or lllvt Ill"" at hou". """' "-lllM, -""" U N•.,art. I'!!: Vilt 1. ~ Ap~. 111•1.., prlv. IA YFlONT l 4'Jt. A""d to""" ""'11· a r. llJ' •Ice 1 llil'il ¥1tb11r!L· ._,lo. hel'4<1 p;ol, ~o. 2 Blt, 2 BA ~ Aflt. ;e.J a ... , .. All· llMali, lft 'Mn. 112 I\'. WU • pfNTi!m-shidlo •, 1 , Aduha._~IU, mt. Wf.4113. l'rtv. ''"""i tloToti>k. "'!). turn. or "ti!. I Ill .,11. 111 &in&I•. 117' 2 ml 111114. ~lltl MM3n. UI £. lflh, OI. •let!)'"'"""" .,_.... fltm Eutalde 2 .... '"'"'"''" pa's; All tit<, t:rp~. drpo, b\1111, 1"1· I Air cond. r;o,.1•y -· Bt1L ~4'@ ZUO&ftt &ti 14)..UIJ _ vltw ovtdo&kir:a e ct l ft, cptl, drfl, bltns, ••hwhr. Pool , lll)ft water. dOeb. SUl child OK. Nr achl &. 223D S.· Ptrktna, ce11tri111 lecttld. I I 4 BR. 2 IA. crpll. c1tpS. dt(Orlff'd, 1 I n 1!11 s Ca JI t d , Eldorado C~ pl1n. $27,~. l 5!11\ FHA. 137-tOSl -· ad. 111611 ·~ kdt &!Id -fllil QIJ!Ckfl( '!Oti CAi;iol ulll. r.· 1115 Mt. yr-~nd. l:n<l..J. w . Prlv. , at(• W. c .. at H•71 Ntw,,ort. C:en"r St. s . A. !Nr. So. Col~ Ill NIL BL BlolC. \ \IJttn to tllt PhoM nn,1 nu:: QUICKER. YOU SELL 1219 . Cot•t M'Wy. 4&Yolf~:l42:""'::::1:::·====::'..:6'2-=2202===jl===~=w=-=·=·>:·:":S-09it====l:''~=C:.=•=t&=M=•= .. =· ===142.i== .. :.'. _ _J __ _!_;_ f 38 DAtlY PllOT Monday, April f,, l!J/0 '" • •• REAL ESTATI: REAL E STATE I BUS INESS •ncl 1_G;;.."";.;.";;;r;.;;•;;.l _____ 1 G ..,..r•I l'INANC:lc.A;;;L __ _ Offlce Rent•I 6070 Acr1•9• 6200 8 usln1.11 Opportu~!f_l•_• __ ,_300_ ROOUE: River Valle):, 9.3 Afllilate ANNOUNCEMENTS ,., --· ... [1111-•*J!lll-•_._J!lll-•.._~-· ... l!I SERV1CE DIRECTORY_ S I RV1CE DIRECTORY JOIS & E,_M_PLOYMENT •nd NOTICES • jt " >< " .,. - -, ---G•rftnlns 6'IO P alptlng, Joba-Men~ Wom. 7100 Found IFr H Ads) 6400 1. · P•per h•ntlnt "50 I-------- ------GARDENING BOAT CARPENTERS, EXP, LAGUNA BEACH Air Conditioned BROWN Puppy w/Clea col· tar, found Sunday on ~Union Viejo Golf Course. (.'lalm at 26031 Via Vlenito, MV Tret1, 1hrubl, Ivy removHI. PAINT™C: Father & Son. GJ!::LCOATERS New lawna:. RototUUna. Ji"rtt Qilullty \Vorkmanahip & f\fECliANJC ON FORESr AVENUE l>elk 1pact avall..tble Jn DtWQt ottlce bulldl11$; at prime location 1n downll)Wn La.pna BeAch. Atr eondl· Honed, carpe~. beautltcJ entrancesr f\'011lag1? on Forest Ave .• rear leads to Munelpa,J ~ lots. $50 llf't" month for space. Dt>sk and cbatrs avallabl• tor $5. Bullneu hours answerln: 11errice available for $10, All utilitie:s pald .xcept lclcphoM. actts Joinln1 c-ilY of ~led· CANDY SUPPL y ford1 Orcaon. "/iew pro-ROUTE esl, 548-8918 t\.1aterlal11 G u a ran teed . TOlJCJ-1 UP ti £EN I.: pcrty, minutel'I to ; o I f. !'.kllng, t!!hing. Great potrn· !No Kllina lnvolvtdl JAPANESE Ga r dener, Rellabl~. ?7 yn local . BONDERS exp'd. Con1pl, yard service. Reltr. Emen;on, 543-3S87 or \VAREHOUSE STOCK CU\:. F.l'Ce estimate. 54B-82S5 _s•"<-,.29,,3.,'-,.==--o= • HARBOR YACHTS • llal n 3.500. Contact Kenneth Exctllent ineome for ~ Snoke (714l 673-7226 hours weekly wprk. (Days Newport. and Evenlnp), Reflllln;: a1ld -==-'"·====== coll~tlrw money from coin MA L E P11c.'h6.hundf&agle mixture. Very fr i endly. Leathc1• {'Ollar &:. flea collar. On Bal. Penin. Cannot ket!p clog. Downey 12131 861-7910 FOUND A cute puppy, belgt> 1v/\\•hite pa11•s at National & Oak S!., C.i\1. Ca 11 LI 8·m.1 CUSTObl p · I Th 15192 Goldtn"·tsl Circ. AL'S Carn4!nln: 6' l..a\vtl a.int lli: •. ••. ~ \VestmiNter, Calli. 8944T·1T Resort P r oper ty· 6205 opel'ated dispensers in Or. an;;e Co. and surrounding area. \\'e: estabUsh route. CHand\llS nitme brand cand,y and snacks!, $1625.00 cash required. l"ol' Pf'l'!IOnal Inter. , Malnlenarlct! C-Qrornft"dal E.\tetior.Jnterlor Speciabst lndiutrlal a: · ttsldenttal. ' Re~~dtnU&I • Commercial. Bookkeeper * ~·• No )Ob too lar;e or too i;mall to !rail balance, at-e. pay. -------=~~'"""'"-"°'--.~--1 Lie. Bond. ln1. \\'on't be un. rec. postin;: payroll beach EXP. Japanese C9mplete derbld! 64~36i9 aua, call Loraine, \\1f'!llclift ~· ... """ -Wh•ddy• W•nt? Wh•ddr• Got,t Lake Arrowhead Chalet S'EC!Al CLASSIFICATION FOR Yard Set'Vlce. Reas. NB &1,,-,-,===,-o-o-'""""'~ " C:it atta 540-7373 PA J NT I N G -I nt . .l Ext. Per!IOnel Agenc:y 2043 vl est. NATURAL BORN SWAPPliftS Speci•I Rote · J-lighest Quality. LO ,\'e st cliff Dr. N.B, 645-2710 CLE~N-UP . SPECIALIST PrlC'Ci. Fully e~p. Ins. John IOYi 11. 14 2 yrs old • f1u·nished Spanish viciv in Orange Co. area, • 5 Bdrm11 -4 baths · den· 2 ~end nanic. address and lge fiM'place11. Th<?rn1ador phone ntiml>er to l\1ULTl- kitchcn . complete laundry • STATE DIST .. INC., 1681 \V. 'vorkshop • 113 ae1-e lol on Bl'oad\1'ay, AMhcin1, Cali· hllltop v.1lh gorgeous pallOI'• fornlk 9:t!J02 (71•1! 778.filGO. F'OUNO: Black Terrier-type fents.le dog w/\\·hitt! chest. Vic. Newport l{e i& h ts. 54&-5256 5 l ines -5 t lmet -S bucks ltUllt -40 Ml.IST ttlCt U0£ r.to"·mg, ed.1:1na. odd jobs. 613-1166 carrier Routes no.- Reasonable. :WM9~ !-::======== tor v~· DAILY PILO'I' %.'2 FOREST A VENUE LAGUNA BEACH .... _ l-Wll9t -l\eY• to tr••· 1-Wlltt )'CIV •t tn lfl fl.M , ~YOUll ..... _,,, '"~· ·-· ana ef _,,l•lfl•· JOHNSON'S GARDENING Plestering, Patch, Lquna Beach, So. J..,quM Yard care, Clean-up.s, Prun· Repair 6UO DAILY PltOI' "--NOTHING FOlt U.le -lll,AQES ONL Tl FEiltALE \Vhile Samoyed found U.C. Irvine campus March 30th. Almost full To Pl•c• Your Trader'• ParedlH All PHONE 642-5671 iu:;, plallling, 962-203:> 642""371 O!:LUXE OUict Sp ace: amic lll)ce view, Boat dock FAM-OUS BRAND and ~vate beaches avail· J APANESE Garden l nc * PATOI PLASTERING Ser\'k~. Neat \\'Ork. Cleanup All types. Free estimate1 • Crpted, pantled, ·etc. JO in- dividual oftioes: over 4000 sq fl. Located in N"i)t Bch. SOOO a mo incl util. i\Ir. Gallup. 6~24170 ::1::i:9i:~Y! $77'500' Own. C1\ND'l. :'~~~!< ROUTE --========I (PART OR FULL Tl~1El VERY HIGH INCO~tE -~··~•~wn=. _833-='-'~'2~''~'~'-· --13 BR. 2~1 BA TownhouSt". FOUND i\l.arch 29 . young N.B. Prl: patio, pool, elec. female . cah~ cat "'~th fiea kitchen, $32,000. Take_ Io '" rollar, For i_nformallon ca.II do1vn, latf! model car, T.D. 5 BR. 3 BA. din rm, fam rn1, pool, ete, $39.950 vat. \rin trade !or s1naller house or "t? Can finance. yd. maint. 968-2303 · Call s.to-6825 · JAPANESE Gardener. exp'd.l========.=-. 90 Compl. yd. serv. Free est. Plumblnt - BUFFUM'S NEWPORT OFFICE SPACE Rea l E sta te Ser v ice tor lease. \Vorld Savings p R 0 p E RT y Bldg, Pacific Coe.st H"'Y & i\fANAGEi\lENT Forre!it, Laguna B e a c h. M3-3180 aft :> pm or '!' "t 01vner 646-665-L PET CRO\\', one 1ving ell~· ped, 21.sl & Ne1vport Blvd. BEAUTT1''UL E:NGLISl-f 6 ;,.1;,...3488 Rm. 1-fome near Pa.o;adcna f'OUND: Bl11.ek & 1 an for N:B .. CdM, C.ilT, Oup~cx Bier. 838-6341 R•H•blo. 6'2•1389 ·-·-----PLUr.IBING REPAIR * NEW LAWNS * No job too small 17c sq ft compl. 536-1225 • 612-3128 • JIM'S C'.ardening & la'>l.'11 • 6'10 HAS Ir.t?i1EOlATE OPEl~INGS f'OR ·COOK· 494·9'181. for apt. 01· income unit!i ===~~=~~=-1 &14--0244 evenings CORONA DEL MAR BUSINE)S a nd J.mmaculate 2 room. Private 0215 1 \\'e ne~ a dislrihutor in tbis ll.l'ea for our c1uk'1y CNestlei:, Planters, Toot3ir, Rolls. t.1ilk Dud1S, etc, 1. No selling in. \1olved. \\le furnish' all ac. count~. 'l"ou n1u.,l ha ve 2 to S hrs. (X'r \\'eek spare tinie (days or t>Ve~l. Chihuahua. female. Owner cir units. Homt' v:luc $29.500 ldenlify. 67'"a-&1;)3 r lcar. Call S48-8532. BRO\VN fuzzy male puppy $10,000 r.Iotor hon)e + boot ~lode! aircraft. 4 ch. digital. prop, radio co_ntrol !>ystem £, n1i.sc hobbie 1iUpplies FOR Avon or Zodiac $1yle innat- 'J.ble diving ·boat. 837-8910 Dover Shores vil'w lot, cor. ner Gala.X"y &. l\lariner SJ:i.000 value. Trade for in. con1e property 01· hon1e. ::..18-1936 maintenance. Res. k. com· Pool S.rvtce iw.•1-cial * M0-4837 ==--~----~--1 ACID Bath Your Pool. $jj EXP. Japanese maintenance, & Up, A & l\I Pool Service. fl.B. &: F.V. Area F'rt!e Est Call 541'.1-6S31. Experienced Grill Cook S day 1vk . No Sun. • BUSBOY • office. Ground floor. Private _E_l~NCIAL_-__ _ $1250 TOTAL CASH REQUIRED Orange Ave. vie. trlr & 35 hp motor. S6500 &15--03·17 ~q. house in Pa&adena. Trd bath. $135 mo. Util pd. Parking. 673-6757 Owner. OFflCE OR sroRE 15 x 35' or :.> x 35' ott st pktne & ulll f\lrn Newpol't & Bay Center, Cl\1 2052 Newport Blvd 64~1252 3 Lrg offices: 2 rt&trooms, all util incl, air cond, $250 m~I 3. 2400 W. Coasl 11wy, No. 9, N.B. 642-2813 Best [·ocatlon In CdM 800 t.o 1400 !q, ft. Deluxe Oft. ice Spaces. Av11il Immed. Phone Owner. IH2-9!J50 Business Opportunities '300 --~-· .. ·' .... -· ATTENTION SMALL INVESTOR For niore informallon 11rite "Distributor Division No. 23", P.O. Box 58. Pon1ona, CaJlt !J1769 . Include phone ""· .fOUND: Sat. Bro"•n shaggy for Real Estate or ? female puppy, ~fesa tnl <2131 681-$12 il1ar. ~2 Eq. $21.100 2nd T.O.'s. $.."150 PRESCRIPTION glasses, '69 V\V Sq: Bek, auto, air. Pe s c 11. do r & Santiago. S<IJOO Vend. mach. on loc. 642-2150 rrd for Rea! Estate or r FOUND: Silver lrlin. Poodle. (213) 681:$42 1~~~~~~~~~­Evide11cr of achievement Vi c. 1-Teil &:. Bushard, F.V. ~ BR, 2~l BA Townhouse, by U.t.I. Dis tributors National corporation, noiv in-531~ N.B, Pri. petio, pool, elec. ''n •-'"'" fron' c.-sl· trrvie \\•ing. lor owllt'r nlan. -========="' MANAGER OWNER ,,.. .., "" -kilehen. $32.000. Take low :o·C::~~ess re\'olu1ion :;;~:~af~~l~te~~~~~~ ~~ Lost 6401 ~;1v;~ ~~n:°'i;~~~'. T.D. t.t·en1cly high rciurn on in-[ · ha~ takC'n phu:r. PJ'O\'tng vcl"tmen! of $12,500. Securer!. WST: Sat. L1-g German 10 UNIT apt in Van Nuy:s the "Little Fel101v" can M. 1 Ri,.id invt>stigation invited. Police dog type, m i1 le. cxclwnge-for imp1'0ved, un. en1r rgc: a " 1g1ty "' 52:> to 1500 Sq. It,. Furn Giant" 111 the U.J.I. J\lust have nianagen1ent & Gray/blk t'Olor, lite erean1 impl'oved, L'Ommcrcial, or unfum, crpts. drps. p11.rk-n1oncy-maldng ro11 !c s)'!'i· PR abillly. Reply !o Bo:c 580 husky rnask f;icial mark· home or apt in Orant:'e or ing. Reasonable. 64~2414 tcm. the Daily Pilot 01· c:flll l\Ir .. ini:;;s. t~lea collar & blk SD County. <192-140:> Bkr. 2630 Avon SI .. Ne1vp;i11 Sch. . l\f11.rk Ri ce (714 f 171-7050. le,al!1rr in_ eta! stud t'O_ llar. 2 Newer doplc•. "$, •"• •y The Q1t(':>t1ons: I lo rou $250 R rd 177 c J Pl ·'" ru " HUNTINGTON BEACH he.ve 11. serviceable car? COIN LAUNDRIES · el\a ; eci ·side, l Bl'. 2 ha. ea., fplcs; A ir Conditioned 6-10 hours fret" ti111" ~ Frig idair e C.l\.l. Call 64"'2762· nr. bch. Equity approx. ON llACH ILVD. \\'ttk? $1.500 In invcs1 1'"i'Oln $6300 to $37.500 LOST : Bl~ck male $27,000. Trade for land Ol' De:k space available fri \\•h!ch, accol'dln g to an 0 Buena Park 0 rullerton e Chihuahua. beige co_ I I a r, indust. Realtor. 673-<1350 t (fl b "!di at authoritative sourcl'. l l'i-312' 0 -J c newes o . « ut nc d Cyp"" 0 \\'e!ilminster • ~ •• ~. " "·'· n ap1sb·ano,. u. Ac. Pool, 3 ~. 2 ba, 18•· Prime location in JJu ntlng· pl<'s in v11lur the ay an' o-0ny R t ward •• "' • ton Beitch. Air conditioned, you start in the vf'ndln;; 1£unl ington ~11ch • Gardf'n ';;' ' ' 36' pool. horse prop or units. beautiful entrance. Front· business? CRn i;ro,1· to Grove • Tuistin • Santa S3l-I 19-20M eq. Tnl for home in NB age on Beach Blvd .. rear 3!1.000. a month incomr Ana e Costa tvles11. e Ana. PEARL Ea1Tini;::. g rape or CJ\1 or inco1ne prup, lead.I to private parking ""ith this sniall cash hP.in1 • l.a. !\lirada. rlt'sign. Vic. Heliolrtrpe & Owner 531-7636. loL $50 ~r month tor istart. Suceess isn't auto-CALL CHAR LIE J25.7S33 Gold{'nrod, Cd r.f. Re"·iu'CI Space. ~llk ano chilli'$ niatir. · · : you have to LAZY SALESMAN 64<1~7iij 9-:) View lot~ t•,f miles to Lake t1.vailabie for $5. Business \\'Ork for it! Arrowhead, $3500 vaJue • hours answering service When you do this \\'ith S1nall ln,·estment puts you in 2 Yr old ~a.ile, male, t~n clear, swap for property or "-vailable for $10. All utili· U.t.J .. you'll n'!vcr suf· youro"'·nbnsiTil"ss. \Ve train, & "'ht. S~lv. chok~ chain.? LI 8-2tiS& e\'es, day a tiea p&id ex~pt telephone. fci· rroni comnetition. No !\1ook Food, 5'14·2"..02. Sat 11ftn v1c Sun View Sehl 64z.8060 , DAILY PtLOT :-ellln~ oi·. solicit.in"" . , 118. R<'1v1u'CI. 847-.lila J---·-------17175 llACH ILVD. "' 0\VN '56 M BENZ 1~ SL r. just a scrl'lcc funrtion. BROWN & E'•ck>o''''I •h•''" · "" '-"""· HUNTINGTON IEACH A SHU·-r SI/AC!\ "' ..... "' 642-4321 To srranlf a J)('rsona1 init>r. DRESS SHOP. g,v clog. 2 collars. Mi:.:ed 3rd 011'ner · good a11 wayi. C LL L J = .. ~~"" Tf'!Tici· brecrl. Vic. Be<>nnia $8-$900 ,val).Je trade for Van, MEO, Dental sui!es avail, vie11', c:alt thc~r IOI\ . !!'CC A A OLLA (11 4.~ .. ~ p U IC 725 1215 SIT. ft. 3k a sq. numlX'rs: -Sniall Appliance Reµa lr Ave, Cd\\!. Rewa rd. 677>-2369 . . am~~~l t•· ""I I JI il A !' B Id ~JEN'S F:i!adln:;.: glasses in --------- !';,,. .,':;:,. ~ ve ' · (1001 ~7·6277 11 yrs. 0 • -'f':l-.u~• 646-3626 or 839--6().16 caS{'. Balboa !~land. S22.000 Red H.itl lof, vie11", NEAR C.i\1. City Hall. 3 Rm. (800) 5 ~--6312 -.~=-·=6,,'f>-=-5J•l7=•-,.,=,-lfC + $),000, also Cdl\T du- Oflices, Paneled, carpets, ASK FOR M ' BROOKS Butiness Wa nted 6305 LOST: Falcon, has jesse~. ple.'C $22,000 eq, 514 }'ern- drapes. $150. Call 642-6560 _ ,,.,NTED·. 8,,,,11 Jnso•'•""' Vi~ Brookhurst & Adams, leaf, for house Irvine Ter. .... .,,._ 11B. Rev.•a1'CI! Ph. 962-73&2 race or Units. Bkr 675-6044 CM OFFICE $90 Agency to buy in Coste. can 646-4833 :'-lrsa/Ne\vporl Bch area. 2 ·GER;>,tAN Shep. Pups, 2~; ..., * * BEAR \\THEEL ALIGN· \lENT 1\11\0flNE, Jlke ne1v. 2ost $4200. \\'ill trade for ~an1pcr of equal Value. 519·20·1'1 Porrl 67-Ranger F'tOO 1,s ton P.U. V.S. Auto t1·ans. Low .01v miles. 8' bee!. Need ser- 1iceable sn1a.llcr·Sta \Vagon 1r PU. 615·4224 l Br, 2 Ba, Beach Honie. Sl 3!\I .solid eq. Leasehold al J\.1okuleie.. Oahu_ For T.D., .;tock, resort prop. boat etc. l\lr. f'rank, &l:Z.9:l06 Eves. Trade Huntington Harbour 11·11.tcrfront w/dock, brand new for Lido waterfront fi.'<- er·upper. Lovely hon1e &: much closer to L.A. Owner 548-2381. • 842-8442 * JAPANESE Gardener setv· Remodelin9 & in~ f . Vallf'y, H. Bch. Co.sta ~!air 6940 :l\Iesa, Npt Sch. &1.>-0345 -------- THE 6682 REMODELERS Complet e Remodeling CURBING -Home Addre!s. * 642 3660 * Guaranteed. Call co 11 cc''===-~--~--'-.-- 1?13)43&-3463 befol't noon RUSS'S Hauling. Repairing . --fences . Painting. Cleanifl&:, ~aull~-----'-73_0 Anything. 642-4443 BEFORE YOU HAl lL TO Sewing '''° THE DUl\fP -CAlL I-'-'-=------''-" &16-62'1.J. Save $$ Alterations HAULING $10 A WAD Fast serv1tt C --o. G S.!2-4785 lean up, ·,,-.,e .xtv. en.1,,,========= Pruning 616-2528, 543.-8043 1 ~ HAULrNG Cleanup. Jots etc. ~ Ceramic 6974 Handyman anytime y ou *Verne, The Tilt ~Tan * call. 642-3398. Cust. "'ork. Install &: repairs. CARL'S t\.fovlng, Hauling & No job too 111nall. Plasler Cleanup. ~~ion P.U. Reas. patio, I.taking aho1\·er Free Est. 548-8918 rtpair. '63 Lincoln Cont . f'u ll )>O\V· YARD/ Ga.r. Cleanup f'I". air, leather int. Clean. Remove trees, ivy. h·ash. -·· - -~7-19j7/84&0206 $700 value, trade for V\V, Grade. backhoe. 962-ll74J TOPSOIL 6977 sta. '1'gn. sn1aller car or -·-6-735 TOPSOJL, Nitrogen fortif ied '.'?' 644-2951 Housecle aning rerl11-'00d added. 837-48:i2, Garden House, NB. $17,300 BAY & Beach Janitorial 830-20Ci0 or 495-4632 eq free & clear land $10,000 Carpets, 1~·indows, floors , ---"'° eq Barsto1v City limits, etc. Fl.cs & Commc 'l . TrH Service trade ho th for unils. Bkr 646-1-101. 675-6().14 ~=====----1TREES, Hedges, trim, cut, 'llOUSEKEEPER. L1ve-1n, stumps, removed, hauled. 30 82 Garden Apts, 2 br. 2 ba, :so111e English $30 a yrs exp. F'ully ins. 642-1030 11.l c. patios. Can re..isc rents \\'Cck. 6~'.!.-lU5 .~ S13. \\'ant inl"Onlt proJl.. i\lesa C\t!aning Service . Upholstery 6990 r.o.'s to 1st or ! Strieby Carpels, \l'indOll'S, flOOt'S, l'IC. . -' ~ Assoc, 5Ui-2011. Rl?s. &: Comnic'l. :>48-4111 CZYKOSKI S Custrn. Up.ho!. "°.,---,,--.,..,~-c-~-c-~ I Eu1'0pean Craftsmanship Palm Desert. Shadow J\lf. 3 \Valls-F1oors-\Vindo\\'S &: Ru;;s lllO'iO fin! 6tZ..1454 BR. 2 Ba .. pool; furnished . Clear Vu \Vindow Servi~ lS31 Ne\\..v.rt Blv Ci\f Trade tor smaller hou:sc, Rel!. _& Commc'l. MG-2698 JOBS & E;PLOYM~NT condo. apt.. T.D.'s. Equity I "'ill clean Y<JUr home . ---·~··- $30.000. 6M-nj,} THOROUGHLY from A to Job W1nted, * .:_:rugs etc. Refs. 49:Z.9775 _}!!_°!!!._e.:.•----'-7.;.U2co.O * DISTRIBUTOR WANTED mos, blk-bro1vn mrkgs. Nr 'R ·OFFICE 0.-''"" oppo,;tt . R<ply Box 63'1. O'ilY Pllol Victor!•. C.M. 6'"-2526 '"' Balboa Bay Cluh. 1610 \V. l'\.B. SILVER &i;;c .,-cn1 .. Shep.JSERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY Coast ""''Y· N.B. 6'16-4887 =====c-=-=== I -----~·- Income Tax 6740 HOUSEKPR avail. 1 or 2 days 1vk. Exp, bondtd & Smiley Tax Service :,;,~; H 0 m. m. k"'' I I t recen!ly spade. Vic. Hun!., B b , I 6 C C .,~ 3 R~t. Ofc. $8.'i Crpted. Loce.J tc1T1tol'y. 1\'ill not in.1 nves men Pac. Apts .. Rc"·arcl :J.~~7 a ys1tt ng 550 ement, onc:rete """ Ground fir .. pkng. 1 R1n. lerfere 1vi lh present job. ~-1 Opportunities 6310 rrl _ Oft', S5(). 6-16-1724, N.B. ,·ott> spa~ ti111c, evenings or , _ BLK Gern1an Shephe · JI BabysitUng in my home. "·eekends, You can makf' Uf> i\IARINE Harrhran> )If g. n10~. n1Hle "Tilo". vlc 23rd Days only. \Vl'slside C.'I FOR rent oUiCt's or t.lores to $21l P<'I' hour. Age 00 bar. 1\-'ilh n1a.n.v parented & pro-& S.A. Ave. 6-1~2$.!7 e &16-07M e 130 E . !7th St., C,\J. $&;) rier, but auton1obll~ essen. pri('ta.ry item~ necrls ex-BLACK Cut velvet bag con· \\'JLL bab"sit, my hon1e. Jn· & up. 646-8181 . ·1·' XI I t , tiel. Yo11 do no .sellln,ll' as you pansion capi "'· · 11 ax taining kni!Hng. \Vestcliff nr fant~ only, 6 days 11. week. OFFICE SPAC~ teke OV{'r acrounls we hal'C and V.'l'itc-oH possibiliti{'s Dover las! ·n1ur.s. 6~2-2·1~ * 642-7377 * on COAST HIGH\VAY ulrt>ady contracted for. Cash for hoat O\\·ner. Box l\llOI. l==========-:1;;;"'-mT;;;"";;;;;";;;;;;;;-;;;;::, *645--0SlO• D il p "J t "05 BABYSIT in n1y house, l ~V-4 requiren1ent ii" $1500-Par!-a )' ~ 0• · Pe rsonals -yrs. Fenced yd, toy.s. C.ilf. Si\.1ALL Office on busy cor· Time 11.nd $6COO -Full "Mo=""==L====63=20 _ 645-1473 ner Cosia Mesa $50fmonth To"m .. 1\.1,;,h -,, ,,-·-d. 0 ,,,. _n.ey _t_o 01n --~-.... '"""'' _ •FUU.Y LICENSED* HarbOr Vfew Homes utilities included. &l2-Gj6() nrw and uni que n1clhorl nf · TAX PROBLEM? RC'no"·ned Hindu Spirilualist. Baby•l.tting. 6'14-496.) --!'riling color fl(>I:! Ctil'rll" Neer! money for 1'Ciil estate \clvice on all niatters; I ===:::'.====== l rtdustr lal l hrou~h a.u101nati{' nicl'cha.n-or inc.'Onlc l.a.\t>s due next Love, il1arriage, BusineSJi,1~ • P roperty 6080 diStl"!i has pl'oven l'I bi;; \\'in. nionl h~ r.efinanct. your rral Cou rtship, Hr a I l h, Hap-Brick, M asonry, ---------nrr. Your d11li('~ 1vill consis! t>staic ivith a I.st or 2nd tnisl pi~ss ? Su('~ss. No pro-I etc 6560 NE\V Bldg., ll,000 sq ft for of only n1akinJ: rotlections dee<1 . blcn1~ 100 large or too ·------ !ale or lease. For details and kec-ping invcntoly in ihr Sa ttler Mor tgage Co. s1n!ll l. f CAN HELP YOU BUILD, Remodel, repair "'anla ""en(ftt "quipn1cnf. J1nmrdi11tc cash 6~2-2lil r.e11flin;:;! .1;iven 7 days a Brick, block, c o n c r e t e . SI 'IQ :J intomf'. i h i s opJXl1·lunily Sct·\·l ng lifll'bor area ~l yrs. 11·rek. 9 Al\1·9 Pi\! 312 No. E. ce.rpentry, no job too small. 642-GJ61l-11vailable only for 11 li mitrd ca n1 j no Re at, Sa n Lie. Contr 962-69'1j BLDG. 1250 sq ft + sniall tin1c as there al"f' only a fr11• \VE 1\IAKE OR BUY <:lrniente. 492-91~ 492-0076 te1Ti lo"'·s O""n. ih"l'e is no TRUST DEEDS FREE Est. Bl'ick, block, ll!one, planter.; &. enb-y wa.y!I. 531~973. State Lic'd. house. Room for :: mo1'e ·" ,..~ ~ ~ "~'"! T G J limit to lhe po!l'ntiaJ of =::::''~~=:::'="=Y=li="'='=B=k='=·= Om GWnt, r. bldg'li. Lot lOOxl~". Call s-1~ evr!I. lhi~ busin(',o;-1>. ---:'Sells !==========I For further details 1vrite Ear-I Mortga ges, New f..· used c11rs ~ h'ucks ,.85 on Tndu.~lries, 171'it Bl':ach Trust Deeds 6345 a t Connell Che v role t Carpentering 6590 Commercial _. Bl\'tl,. Suite G. Hun!ington -------1821; Har iiol'. c.~1. 5<16-1200 l---~------ 1-----------Bea.ch. Calif. 9:?G4T IPlea,q. $j(JOO Tst TD on Hun-CARPENTRY '·!ARIN A In Newport ~ach . Thi' p1'<'C'Crdin;; "'H~ a pa id ' i\'e "Our tf'lephone number) tington Reach apt 1.onrd 11'.11, J ' I d 1· •ITNOR REPAlRS N J b Prime Joe. f ee S315.000 ~ sa rsn1an SUJ'\'!Vll 11. ver 1se. , 0 o Ex I ,. . I RE or call 847-6079. $j0 a 111onth in(']udi11;:: 9'0, inrnl. T(l(' Small. Cabinet in iar-c. "1n,aa r <, · · 3 )T du r. 1.1"~ discount . Ml 2-2222. ~.~'='=1-=S=l00=·=·=·1fl=3·='="'=== I SA.UNA -MASSAGE =1: ::::::sv.:bi:~~ FOR lisle, store building.~ WHIRLPOOL GYM 686-698 \V. 19th St. Bc1hel Business Busine ss · msg at 646-2372• lL O. Toll.-ers area. MS-1168 Ag:. Opportunities 6300 Opportunities 6300 Le Sa lon d e Tra itments Andeno~"------ 2930 \V, Cst. Jh1'Y. Npt. Sch. QUALITI' Any aize repairs Daily 10 am·l am 642-3154. or new construction. Res. or \Vr aCCf'pt all crcdil cards Com, By hou r or contract. Industrial Rental 6090 2m sq. fl. r.1.1 JOM Babcock, Cosle. tile~ Ol\ner 644·2228. 646-12:>2 Lots 6100 ' - SAN CLEMENTE Amdous f:i'tll~r wfJI sen th\e 8,000 aq. ft. lot \\-'Ith Jo1v ~'n, We0 locsted for CXl'C!i- )f;nt vttw .:rr the Pacific. A!k. Ina: $13.10> \.\1th JO',\ down, For rnort infonnation, please call K.\V, 5mllll. Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. JIU \Y, Chapman Ave, CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE Man or wom1n t o re1tock ne w type coin d lspen1ers with h i 9 h quelity p1ck191 .. ndy pr oduct" NO SELLING! DEPENDABLE PERSON CAN EARN UP TD $800.00 A MONTH. Sing!e1Di\-c.1'fi'd /\\'idowed Lie. & Bonded. ~l-142 DPI CARPENTRY • CABINETS Remodeling-repairs. No job is D:Jl>I Prot~ss Tntnxl1n:lifln too ,ma.II. Cati 646-4Z..J4 for Single ~du_lts, 11rnl _other PATIO COVERS • DECKS useful apphcatton of science. ~modeling _Gen. Rf'.'pa ir ,1 .. ~47-6667 ..... Any size .job 6TJ.1166 il1ike .... ""ur IT'f'Ol 111n!! , . P..EPAIRS •ALTERATIONS Ei\101 IONA\, llea11h SP 1 ! * CABINETS. Any sizP job Help Group m.r1"1~ i\lon . 2."i yrs expel'. 548-6713 8P~1. 30 1 ~111.l!'~ha, C ~I ALC01·10LICS . Anonymous GJ-:N .. rt'p.air, l\d<l., C 11.h . Pho "'·'? -?1•7 . 11 t form1ca, panelln~. 111arhlt. nc ..... ,. 0 1 "-r e 0 ;\nythln:;! Dick, 673-41&1 P.O. Box 1223 Cost11 l\les.i:. ~ QUALITY \Voodctaf!, sml A nnouncements 6410 gen'~ constr. & ct1:rpentry, ___ ·-· ·-· Cllll l\en ~©14, 51S....23:i. CE~1ENT \\'ORK, no job too Small, rta$0nable. f'rte Estim. fl, StuDick ;).18-861J Expert cement ~·ork. Patios, 11·alks, brick & block wa lls. 35 yrs, exp. Yancey. &12-1103 Child Ca re, Licensed 6610 PRACTICAL Nurses 12) e 12th YEAR LOCALLY e available, Exp, Ref. t Live Qualified -r.easonable in, 1 live out. 893-2561 \\'. A, (Billi S~TILEY AIDES • !or convalesct'nce Cer!ified Public Account'l eldtrly care or family care'. 642-2221 anytime &16-9666 Homemakt>rs. :547-6681 Central Business Services GENERAL HOUSE\VORK eTHE TAX ADVISORS s2. hr. 01m transp. Perm. cftice·Rt>.as Rates • 642-5359 * 328 No. Ne"lJOrt Blvd. NURSES avail, a!l types • Oppoi::ite l{oitg HOl5pital private duty, San Cltmente F or App t. Call 645-tWOO Nurses Registry 492-6281 H.K. Clark TA.'\ SERVICE Pre School servin' So. Or· ange Co. 6: 30 11m to !I: 30 pm 7 days v.·k. Full-P/tin1c-22 yrs. exp. in area Aft . sch!. R11.tes for 2 & up. S.18-~ or 673·6360 appt. Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 646-3706 or ;,a.i.1292. • ~'!!Ur hon1e or office • ~~~~K~~~~~ .. ~1\' llon1c, 18 mos up, Ironing 6755 Experienced prefrrrC'd. A;e hot mrals, nap, superviSE'd 3.) or over. Apply: Laguna pl11.y. Mon-Fri. 6 4&-03;;2 1-------.-_-- 1 - 1 1 Beach Nursing Home. !TI.fl C.i\f. IRONING In my 11umf', . 194-SQi;, Hr. Drr~smaking &: a!tera· ,----~-,------ Contr•ctor·s 6620 Add itions * Remodeling 1'~red H. Gtrwick. Lie. 673-60-11 * 549-21 70 lion!. ;-,.ii>-7&ll Ar.s,1·er Telephones ="~="=====ol Part Time-All Shifts Painting, Paperhanging 68JO AND WEEKENDS Apply . ~1". Bro11·n ::·1161 Pe.cific Coast H1"Y· CARPET STEAi\f CLEANED I ----------1 * Painting-PaperhangiJ1i: DANA POINT lOc Per Sq. Ft. No soap • No bru~hes. Uphol· i;tery cleaning & floors scrub. bed & \\'axed, Guaranteed results! 646-59n EXPERT Carpet \Vork. 1/3 ('OSI steam cl('an. Comm rat· es Harbor Discount, °646-1234. Carpet Cleaning 6625 Tnlerior-Exrerior BABYSITTER: Girl livr-in SjX'ciaJ Pl'ice~ on Pa.per or out. O\,l"r 18 )TI. lite Call LruTy 6'12-4558 housckeepin.:;. Relia. Days AP1'S k ~fOTELS Palnt1>d _ k ~me C\'f'S. H.B. 1u-ea. $10. avt>rg, rm. ca J 1 !"J36.-'i!J39 or 962--6631 an)'time Pal the Painter, BABY S ITTER : OldE'r 557..,1;638 "'oman lo cart for :> &iris. SURBURBAN pa in I er s I C.i\I. area. -Rele!'. No ~r. \\'e lake the pain hse1\'l'k. Call J2S-9686. OU' of painting, Expert \l'Ol'k, BAR\\IAJD, E.'<pe~. to \\'Ork DIA:'ltOND Carpel Cleaners Free est. '19.\·31!!0 nights. Apply 1" person 1-ligh-Tide, 'i21 \V. 19th St,, e Sp1·ing Oeaning Special e PAINT NOW SAVE $$ C.1\1. 2PM-3Pi\T. ---~~-~~-- 3 a1·p1-. size rooms $20. <:all Jack NO\V!! -*BEACH AREA* 645-1317. Fret. Est. 894-389.) or 841·1358 _ RE°"''"1A'"R°'C"'"""·"-· :::-""'3>:::::::: I:;;:::::::,,,__:::,.. _ __::::_:::: Accts. Payable ••.. $5.50 " .xrv1ce~. roo1ns COL~EGt Stu<len.t. 2 yrs ex· Construction ('XJ'!. Near Air· $21.jQ, F'ull guare.n, Credit penentt. Lo1\' pncrs. port 1 .. Fee paid. ~' 01\, 8-IT-6688 St('ve :l-1s-1.il~ · • I RETIRE D Painter: 1G yrs Tl'fl.!ntt Ofc .... $300 I C.e r pet L•ying & Repair 6626 EXPERT CARPET JNST.\Lr LATTON & Repair. No job too :;.n1all. S.l&..'i01l CARPET LAYING C.A. PAGE 64:Z.2070 C.XJX'r. N('at & hon{'St. Non HS Bkkpg .. Iii!! typinz. ?\o drinker. Call 536-6801. exp. Co. ll.'UI train. * PAPERHANGING , 1. Of 1,.-&: PA INTING. * 968--2425 Sec y. r. C···· . 1'1. ·-----~-.,,---Stt!P!I to beach. Good skills, M atic:uloul P•infing f'ine bent'flll & '1-orking ('On. Col ahJdtnt Insured. 67f>.5812 diUoM. ~; r ec pajd by con\. PAPER ltANCING pany. Onhge, C.llL S41·26Z2, IM&-wknd!: ~!mt Part or full time positio ns ne•ded in this 1re1. Requires car, e xchange o f re!erentes, $1•50 to $2 990 <11h, 11<u red by inven· tory a nd equipment. TT-llEVES' !\JARl\1'71' Rum• '"a i; e 'S a It -Bene f I 1 Cam•nt, Concret e 6600 , Drywa ll 6638 I nter fa i I h ~'f\'1(-tmen's _._ ______ ..;,.;,;_; 20 "" ex p. Fl"ff estim~te, Cail Re.Ith ~lmt 642-2."'-1!9 Ass't. Bkk-pr •••. $4~ BUILDERS Attemion T.>x-1'91,S R-7 lot Will'I oldfor 2 Bdnn rental 115.IXKI, MS-0003 6200 MUltfpie torW'd aeno•re *--.Col.ta -Alesi--* Battf11 llrnlty MU,;60 Writ• for person•! phone num ber to: interview, giving Strategic Franchises Dept 89 533 South 2nd West Ct ntl'r April 21-25. No1v rol· CONCRETE work all l)'p.::c. e OUDOl' Dry1vall Co. Llc'd Jeclin: run11111i:r 19~·181 ,1 · ~.11..,.-lng. breaklna. h11ul i~. Co11tr11ctor, Li.ri:e or Sn1all I _ -------Sklploa<lln~: L,1c. Service & .lob~. Ph. 841-9Ml Ce m etery Lott 6411 QuaUty. Ml-1010 I========= --:--• -:'" \'\'ALKS. p,tHo~. drl'-'t\\'l\Y~. Floor' 6U5 OOl<&U: crr~.t 1n P1tc1.f1c 111."·ns rotol•illlng. bl'eaking, 1---------- V1e1v ;\fC'n1on11.I. &ltrlt1ct ttn1o,·Jl'lf k ha u 1 l n g 11500. --?!IW!t ~ti!! ~tS·'USG ;;.IW66i) L~af No.tices '4so • c""c:-iio°'N"c~R~E~T~E~,~.-.-,~k. '"':ao Llct11!\.l'd, P8tl06 I dtvv.')'!1, CAfU'f;f VINYL TUX ~ t''llm~le L1c:-Conlr. 5-10-i:..'b2 5-IS.C411 Advancf' lo r.c. Bkl·iP~ train. NQW'S THE i:~c~ ~~=relii:r!~ NciOll.I .1 . R. Pierce. A!l!OCia!es J\:tOC)', Int". 1$SS Ne11·port, Ci\I &12-6720 Boat i\{lg, E:itflC'rie~ • C.\RPENT&RS • BO~or.r.s 9:30 Ai\I to 4::30 Prit tiion. lhru Fri. EXCELLENT BENEFITS -Apply - PEP.SONNEL Of'FICE 2 TO 4 P ill ONLY No. 1, Fashion Island Newport Beach *BUSBOY * DISHWASHER {Experienced & NNt) APPLY COCO'S #78 Foshion Isla nd Newport Beach CAFETERIA Help \Vanted: See -Cafeteria Manager at Nt-1v Saleco Insurance Bldg on 81wkhurst, No. At San Dieb'Q ~'Y· Or call 962-26:54 bl'fore 9Ar.r or alt 5P1.f. CAR ET AK ER-Coup le Uve-in. i\1ust have refer I.: bt e.xper. 893-1880. CHAIR-side dental assistant specialty practice, btach area. 962-66TI -CASHIER - Lady, 23 or ovt'r, experi- enc«I, bondablt'. Day & night shifts available, !\Jany company lx'nefits. Apply behl'een Z.6 PM. Ask for lifike Grant. Please Apply GRANTS SURPLUS 1750 Ne1vp0rt Blvd., C.flt CLEANING, Light, model hon1~s. pati-!ime, for con· !lcientious ladies. 541-2806 Cl~rical RUTH RYAN AGENCY SPECIALIZING JN Of'FICE PEr..SONNEL .1193 Ne"'fl011 Blvd., CUf ~ 646-4854 17931 Beach Bh·d .. liB S47-9617 lOU \V. 11th St .. S.A. :>17-6481 Clerical T r ainHs $303.33. XJnt benfs, facilities & chance for advancement. JASON BEST Employment Agency 2201 So, lifa ln. Sant.a Ana 546-5410 COCKTAIL \Vaitrc!ls. Apply .i\fesa Lanes. 1703 Superior Ave, Costa i\fesa. COMPONENT ASSEMBLERS Exr,icr. in a.!!embly & solder. in' of miniature PC boal'Cls. VAL RO E LECTRONICS &tQ..9261 3100 Pullman St .. C.f\f. COOK (E xperienced Fry Cookl APPL 'l' IN PER.SON DENNY'S RESTAURANT 3170 Harbor Blvd. Costa Me11 *COOK* APPLY COCO'S # 78 Fashioo Island New p o rt Beach COOKS *"*** EXPERJE~'CE't part lime sunr , .. srr:L.01~ :mCI Pacific COl13t fl~ .• Ne1vport Be11ch 2'; Aettl by Oa7WT, U!llJlltS• nee.r rvmi"l water k Colt 1 c;o.a:rv. UiO dfl, Jll,!Q), I '\2131 ;r.-mr I DAJLY P!Wr WANT A.OS! Salt lake City, Utah 84101 J \Viii no! be t'f'!lpnn¥1hl1! etc. PhilllPll Ct' m,. n 1. Gardening 6680 for any rtl"bt., flthtr th11n 5.18-{;38C -,-~-!\-' -1-.-,~,.~,-,-.-,..-.,,-,-cd-;n"";. m.v o"n. Oon11ld R. Dickey l\fORE Concfl?t{' PAlio for l\'ii11rlt!!' 11111 11 f't-11.,. o e11 n OAJLY 111L01 11 1/'I t:;.A . Ir~ money. i\nls!lt"' ~etrln:; Lip by job or nt0n1 h. Frtt U N&<. You ten w;e ttlf'm ! flnl~hiJ'll. ~l.t-06~7 «'lil'l111•r~. t''or Info ealJ DIAL direct 642~!1. Ch!U'Jt DAIL\" PILOT \V ANf ADS! ; _!97_. _-_2'_1_1 -"'-'-'-'-"-'..:'.:.'-- TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD ______ , -+-A. f:{',IBLJ:."R.S Apply tn P~rron RANGF.R YAOlTS i.O:l(I '11.illman St .. Cogta ~ lcsl n "S \VONDERtUL ' h e m.i ny bu)~ 1n appllinct~ )'OU find tn the Ch1uitied Ads. Clw-ck lh!!!m t'l()W'. -. \ j • JOBS Ir. EMPLOYMENT Jobs-Men, Wom. 71 00 C·OASTAL AGENCY . 54.0-6055 e SECRETARIAL e OFFICE e CL ERIC AL e SALE S • ADM INISTRATI VE e TECHNICAL Secretary Plush fii·n1 need professional person w/sharp skills. Xlnt benf&. Star:t $3511. Gall Joan ~'farlin. lnve•tigative Trainee Be a super sleuth. Start $225. hr. Call Jfe!cn Haye~ Sales: Outside All you ••alesnten \I t 'on the s!rcel" exp., who p.re look- ing to mnkc a change nl'c neC'Cled NOW fol' It co. CX· p an d i ng n a t ionw i rl c \ Rcpre6e nt a product eon- sidered TH E "Cadillac" in its field. GI. op1y to gro11,· w/r::o. $7200 dra1\!. II i g h comn1. ilfany bcnfs. Call Pat O'Brien today. Bkkpr. ~J r. &lme exp. D. F:. tcds;cr, A/P, AIR, C'tc. Great firm w/unusual bents. Rapid ad- 1·ancemcnt. Start $~00. Call Joan J\tarlin. Electrician :Marine If you are a llocnsed elect. 111/wirc exp. on boa ts. A lg. co. ig holding a spot for you! $7300. Call Pat O'Bl'icn. Secy/Escrow Xlnt working concls, hi class, vivacious pl'Ople to work \vlt h. To start $600. Call Gloria Kay. Secretary Fan!astic opty for real Sharp gal to advantt rapidly. Xlnt co. & benfs. Start $400. & th<' sky"s the limit! Call Jean 8roY1n. Sa les/Nursery Exp. landsc:aee sail's man \.\'/plant kno\.\•lege for local 1rea co. Sell & sen.'. in.<;ide &. out . $6000. Call Pal O'Brien. Secretary Jr. Average skilb + pcrsonalill adds .. up JO above average )oh. Start $12.l. Call Joan ~1 arl in. l ab. Aide Assist. Do gl'n"l lab work. Start $300. Call Hele n Hayl's. Girl Friday Ex ceptional 0011.s \vould like reliable, nice person 10 \\'Ork with. Good future. Start $100. Call Gloria Kay. Girl Friday Responsible all.around gal to be the one & only for very pleasant ho.'\s. Terrif. chance f o r advancement. Start $4j(). Call Jean Bro"·n. Cook Institutional cook ror nearby hospital. Xlnl \\'Orking conds & good benfs. Start at $3960. Call Pat O'Bri<'n. Receptionist Busy doclor needs gal w/ lots of moxy lo run his rront ore. Xlnt loc. Start $400. Call Jean Brown. -Clerk Typist Nimble fingers & 11imble mlncl gl'!s this front ofc 8po\. Start now at S•lOO. Call Joan ~tarlin Collector Top notch job if you are ready 10 start on a lucra1ive career. Base S:-100 + comm. Call Helen Hayes. Escrow Ofe r. A real glanlOrous spot. :'iirril raises &: profit sharing. Res! ten ·irlc staff llf't'ds sharp person & tht'oy will pay \\"Cil for her. To $700. Call Gloria Kay. .Emergency Rm. Clerk Hosp. e)!p. req'd, Xlr11 \\'Ori<· lng cond1. Chance for sd· vancc~nl. Stan S.'80. Call Jean 8 1"0\.\'n. l egal Secy Super-intclllgrnl nHy. seeks super-shllrp righl hand. l11kc charge pcr10n. Star\ ;550. Call Joan Marlln Teachers Aide Help, ntcd 11. lady for thr '\\'ee ones. Slat1 $1,65 hr call Helen Hayea. Clerk Typist F.>i:cpetlonal co. growing fa.st &. will send 110meonc to sctfool on the payroll, be able to advalK:t' v.·/co. Starl $.17l. Call Cklr1a Kt1y. 011{£R i'R.E:E AND FEE JOBS AVAlLABLE 540-6055 2790 Horbo• Blvd. Cost• M11a Jo~n, Wom. 7100 I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~~~~LOYMENT j;; Mon, Wom, 7100 ELECTRONICS - ELECTRONIC ASSEMBURS EUCTRONIC INSPECTORS , V•ri•• D•te M11hi11•1, l•c.•ttd 111 • new 1lr·c•11diti•11t.i plent in the ln•l•e hufullriel Complex '"e' the 1lrport, "·· , ..... ,.111p111i1191 011 ih ltt tkifl. 17 :10 t .lft. ft 4:00 p.m.I t nd 2nd 1hift 14tl5 P·"'· to 12!41 1.M.I. ' ASSEMBLERS Opt11ing1 •rt for ind\ ... idu1l1 with J to 6 fllt111!h1 1l1c• honic ••P•ri111ce ind ltt;1ewl1d91 of the col11r cede i nd bt tic 1fe clronic1 cofllpo111nh. • INSPECTORS Rtq 11irtm1nll lnclud• l fo 6 111011th1 ef •l1cfro11!c II• 1111\bly or ln1pecfion ••ptrl111c1 with food •11owletl91 of compo11111h •11d 1111111bly tlr•wl1191. Good tlttflng r1!11 tnd 1 co~pl1!1 b1n1flt pr19r11n lnd11din9 12 d1y1 Y•C1tlo11 d11ri1MJ th• 11! y11r 11f ,,,.. plo ym1nt end 1 1t11clr pwrcht11 pro9r11n. Interviews O•ily from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. VARIAN DATA MACHINES A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY 2722 Michelson Drive, Irvine* C•lif. 92664 (S111 Diego Frwy, lo J1111bor11 off.r1'111p I bloc• S. of Michel 1on DrJ .. ,I AN EQUAL OPPORTUN ITY EMPLOYER M·F __ ,__ -·---- Job>--Men, Wom. 7100 Jobo--Mtn, Wom. 7100 DELIVERY BOY Canyon Auto Supply, 841 Broadway, Lag. Bch. Al5o for Laguna NigUe\ store. Dental Asst. S300. mo & up. Near.future raise, xlnt henfs. JASON BEST Employment Agency 2207 So. J\laln, Santa Ana 546-5410 DENT AL ASSIST ANT Chair 5ide, experience pre. fem!d, x.ray, !lours g.5 Mon-Fri. 4!)9.1352. DENTAL As sist an t, c h a i r -s :de. Receptionist duties. Full time, e"per. 962-1~86 DENTAL Assistant, Exper. 9AM-12PJ\I, 4 days. No Sat. Hunt Harbour. 846-0617 Dispatcher $550 No format education req'd. Xln1 chance for advance- n1cnt. JASON BEST Employmen t Agency 2207 So. Main, Santa Ana 546-5410 Dis play Trainees • h1ALE IMMEDIATE HELP WANTED DI\rtSION EXPANSION IN ORANGE COUNTY Provides immediate employ. 111ent for residern. .--01 the area. Experience isn't neces. &ary as company training is furnished. START AT $410 PER MONTH H qualified and accepted, go on payroll this week. · lllGll SCHOOL GRADU ATE AGES 20 OR OLDER l YEAR REsIDENT ?' IN .A·REA CALL SAT. or MON. 774-7253 DISH\VASHER . PART-TIME Swiss Chalet, 414 N. New. port, N.8. DMY CONTRACT GIRL MUST BE EXP'D MUST BE SHARP SALARY OPEN CALL MR. ERWIN 64&9303 Draftsman Experience required in mechanical d 1 t a 11 drafting with emphasis on rotating machinery, involving castings. PROFIT SHARING J. C. Carter Co. 671 W, 17th St•eel Costa Mesa 714/548-3421 An equal opportunity employer ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLER JR. !female l Precision PC As.c;emblcr of delicate instruments, srne.11 component work. Soldering, color codes and blueprint rending required. This Is a temporal")' pogl. tion, requiring five years previous experience. CALL OR APPLY TO BIU. OKEY (714) 546.80J) Ext. l5:j ml Harbor Blvd. C:O.ta Mesa, Calif. l\USSTLE SYSTET\tS DIVISION ATLANTIC RESEARCH Corporation A Divtston or the Susquehanna Corp. f'..qtuLI opportunity emp10)'el' ' -l * DRIVERS* No Experience Necessary! ~fust have rJean Otllromil drlvlna: record, l\pply YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St. Cosla. MeSI F/C Bkkpr Prefer acctg. bkg rd. Salary open, Independent Personnel Agency , tn6 Orange Ave, Suite C C.M. fi42.0026, 5(5.(1979 FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DISTRICT DUPLICATING MACHINE OPERATOR $414 to $581 per mo. Requirements: General col. legc aptitude, fitld know- ledge, lyping 40 wpm, 2 yrs. experience with dup\I. caUng machines, 1 yr. gen- eral clerical exper, FOR INFOJU.1ATION CALL t.IRS. WORKA1AN ITI4 J 842-6651 E:\I. 22S BET. 2 & 5 P .r.t F/C Bkkp•/Dfc. Mg•.- $5GO Newport Beach Ofcs.. ABILITIES UN Llr.1JTED AGENCY 488 E. 17th, Suite 224 Co:i;ta Jt.1esa 642-lf10 FI C BookkffPo• $650. }~ee reimbursed. Profll sharing, Beaut. new bldg. Other fee & tree jolm. JASON BEST Employrpenl Agency 2207 So. Main, Santa Ana 54&-5410 FRY COOK. Exper le: fut. Sa I ary ope n . Contact ' Manager, 497-1188 . Beach House Inn, 619 Sleepy Hollow Ln., L.B: Gen'I Ofc/ Recept Varied duties, phone work. $350. to start. Independent Personnel Agency 1n6 Orange Ave., Sulte c C.T\f. ~2-0026 54S.O'J79 General Office To $500 Xlnt oply to join vital, fut grov.:ing co. Pleasant work· ing conds. in beau!. new ores. Well estb'I co. Top benfs. Call Miss Eliza beth, 557-6122 Abigail Abb ot Personnel Agency, 230 W. Warner, Suite 211. Santa Ana. GIRL Friday • &okkeeping desired, 25-40. Call for appt, Steam rifasler Carpe t Cleane~. 645-1316. (Rear of Dyno Tune-Upl HA1R Slyllst Jor men, pref, with followtna;. * * 494-0054 •• HOSPITAl.TN HO STESS SERVICE, has openi ngs for mature v."Omen looking for interesting, part time work, welcoming newcomers to your area. &aJes exp. desirable. 1.fust have car. CAlJ..: 557-8686 HOl!lplta.1 e PHYSICAL THERAPIST Apply Personnel Director So, Coast Commun\ly Hosp\. tal. 31872 Coa11t Hwy .• South l.agnna, Calll Ph: 49'J..1311 Ext. 356. HCYT'EL CLERK/CASHER. Mall'. b per'd. only. l\f111t know NCR 4200. Newporter Inn 714: &4~1700 HOTEL Maid. Full time. Pennancnt resident prefer· red • .f.!H-1196 H 0 U SEKEEPER. Mature, for t"OOk'& Ir lite Hskpr lor elderly wklow on Bal Isle, Rm A bof,.rd A S25 wk. 613.S'IO.l H OUS EK E EPER : 3 childl"l!'n. N. B. Spanlah SJ>eoklna OK. IJllO mo. Call &li-!040 DIAL d_, 642<i61I. C1wp )'OW' ad, lhen sit back tnd Usten lo Ow phont r\rWI I Nowl ' f,1onday. Aprll &, l f,.\J DAILY PILOT 3D Jolll Mon, Wom. 7100 Jolts Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobi 'Mon, Wom. 7100 Jolll Mon, Wom. 71 00 Jobi-Mon, Wom. 71 00 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 c•k Here -·with the • Job .lings! _, 1 ' FEMALE Receptionist To $500 to Start Gal Friday To $600 Able to keep things co. ing. Clerks (6) To $450. To Start Ins. or Brokerage exp. helpful Recept Trainees $350 To Start Office skills helpful General Office To $500 Medical ex-p, nee. Front office. {Several) MALE COMMERCIAL Sr. Buyer From $700 Up. ?tiarlne experience Dept Manager From $600 Good hdwe. background necessar)' Prod. Control Mgr. From 600 Job shop' SKIUED Jig Grinders From $4.50 Hr. (Several) Electrician From $3.95 Hr. :f.larlne experience Tool & Dye Maker $800 To $900 Diesel & Gas Mech. $375. To Start Dinner Cook $28.09 per Shift Plush restaurant Exp. Welders From $4.50 per Mr. APEX EmploylMtlt Agency •rm: EASY WAY (Uk U1 why) 1B73 HARBOR BLVD. ('it block So. of 19th) COSTA MESA 548-3426 ------ * KEYPUNCH * OPERA WR 1rllnimurn one year eJ(p@J'. Must be available for Fri. thru Tues. work week and either 4:30.l AM or 8:30 AA1· 4:30 PM shift. COLLINS RADIO 19100 Jamboree Blvd. Newport Beach Equal opportunity employer APPLY JN PERSON Fashion laland, N.B. Equal opµortunlty employer Stock Room Clerk PBX RECEPTION I S T 1 yr exp. in electronics. TYPIST. Attractive glrl 21- Koow elec. components, 30, tor beautiful Baytront office, wk. ends o n I y. SECRETARIES TRUCK DRIVER Exp'd, To $679. Oa.a ! Uc. ok. JASON BEST Employment Acency 2201 So.· Ma\11, 5a.nta Ana .....,,0 TYPIST f425, Fte reimbursed. Also fee Jobs_ ABJIJTIES UNLIMITED AGENCY 488 £, 17th, Suite 224 Costa Mc:;a 642-1470 UNUSUAL opportunity for t al e n ted , pera9 nab.te hairdresser. Merrell Hair Design, Cdl\f 67>1727 " *WANT ED * • Expcric~ Saleswoman in quality bakery. Apply In penon to MR. ROBERT ANDERSON Snack Shop Bok•'Y 3444 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar \VAITRESS, exper, "full time. Refere/lCt's. Benton's Coffee Shop 133 S. Coast. Laguna Bch \VAITRESS, La.Juna Beach. No experience necessary. 25 or over. 499-1153 \VOJ\1AN To v.1ork in Donut shop, over 21. No phone calls p I ea 1 e. Winchell's Donut House, 2947 Harbor Blvd, C.M. WOMEN Accts. Payable 642-5735 LANDSCAPER Experienced. Posting & gen. ---.P"'e"x,--,o"P"'ERA'"'"TO°'"R- Exp. req'd. with m rm t. ledger, also AIR. Exper pref. Over 30. THE IRVI NE COf.fPANY ha.s openings for two sec· retaries at It's hC?ndquar. ten Jn Newport Beach. M.lnimum of three years &'c retarlal experience is ttqulred. Shorthand 90, accurate typing 70. Baek· ground in civil engineer· Ing or preparation of lease and contract docu· ments preferred. Immcd. openings for child carc/companlo1111. your area al your leisure. \Ve Sit Bet- ter, Inc. &12-327'1 potential. Neat appearing, R . , Call ~2052 * will meet pUblk. Good hrly ecept1on1st wage w/company benetlll. Primarily ans. phones. Front Public Relations $575 Apply 2221 Fairview, C.M. ofc. a p pear a n c e . Some Mr. Stevens. over!low I Y p i ng.... Etaut U YoU'l"I!' !ired ol routine &: PLEASE C ON TA CT MRS. SMOOT, 6443258 BE:l'\VEEN 9 AM AND 12 P?l-1 ONLY, School s-Instruction 7600 LIFEGUARDS • We savlna recept. area. want an exciting positk>n • certWcate. F /C Bkkpr wardrobe • travel expeMet *AIRLINE* TRAVEL CAREERS SWIM INSI'RUCI'OR .• with p I: L & finan. statements. ~· single, mature, at~c-l--S..-c:-,-.:-t•-,-y-t:-o-.$600=:­ WSJ requftd. Quarterly l mo. tax returns. t1ve girl w/exec. abillly, Top skills & exec. bkgrd. Interviews Tues .\ Tbun Work Sat. oH 2 days during please call for appt, Beach area. Operations Agentt Ticket Sa1e1 Reservations Air Freight • Cargo Communications Travel Agent before 3 PM, ORANGE wk. Independent Independent OOAST YMCA , &tl-9990, Per10nnel Agency Personnel Agency 2300 Univera!ty Dr. N.B. 410 W. Cust Hwy. 1TI6 Orange Ave., Suite C 1716 Orange Ave Suite c LIVE tn mothl'r'1 helper. 2 Newport Beach C.J\f. ~Z-0026 545-0979 C.M. 642-0026, ' 545-0979 school-agers, pvt. quarters. ~3939 PU?.tP Island Sa l es ma n. SECRETARY 675-@t.0 or"54S-n97 ..,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,, Over 20, exper. prefC?rred. T $500 AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC newport . peraonnei agency 833 Dover Drive N~rt Beach 64.2·3870 2801 E. Coast Hwy at 0 Goldenrod CdM 67~ ""~~ l\1us t be se.lf starter. ' ·~•l.>J ABILITIES Quite middle aged couple, de. UNLIMITED AGENCY sire gen.era! cleaning woman, '188 E. 17th, Suite 22'1 2 mornings week, Own trans Costa Mesa 642-1470 G73-2til8. * SEC R E TAR Y * Day & Nigl1t ClaslCI • "13Ai596 610 E. 17th St, Santa Ana RECEPTIONIST I Typ isl, Interesting work with nice "SP'=ECI""'AL""'s;=w=eo"k"R<ore="'=a°'tlo=o sharp, attractive, for IC!ading people. Shorthand required. & Eduactional program by Orange Co. advertising & 136 Rochester St., CJ\·t. accredited teachcrS, June 9 * 3-U LYN 'S * The following 11 a''partlal public relations linn. Must 548-T'Tl3 to August 7. L im ited Full or p/Ume, top sal. '-list of our present job op. have xlnt I~M Exec. typing ;SECR;o.;i;ET~A"R"Y"to""S!OO"'°"good= I classes. $20 week. To beneflll. Santa AN. Br1sto! portunitie1. lkllls &: enJOy meeting peo-akUla, beach area, young. reserve space, call 536.-1930 pie. Good starting salary Call Loraine. We s t c 11 ff Sat. or a ll 6 Monday-Friday. Convalescent Hosp., ·S:W. P•yroll Clerk with sound secure fulu_re. Personnel Agency. 204 3 SpaMOred by Glad Tidi ngs S.A .. Call Mrs, Faulhaber $600 Medical plan I: fine v.."Ork:ing Westcllff Dr .• N.B. 645-2T10 Assembly of God at 15th for appt. 1209 W. J:lem1ock. H conditions. Call Mn . Jaegerh -====-.-.-o== 546-1966. eavy pa.yroU bkgrd. E.D.P. for appt. 714: 633-SOOl s E c R ET ARY, ~ccounting & ~fonrovia, NB. JI o a-g ---------'! knowledge. 10 ke.y, Hadl ey ---.:---,-;.~.oc--i Dept Laguna Hilb area. Jfospltal area. System. Good loc. Bondable. Recept1on1st 837-2002 Exl 46 PIANO LESSONS • MACHINIST EXPERIMENTAL Eight: years experience In manufacturing parts a n d tools. WW perform highly 1killed machine work from blueprinU, 1ketchel. etc. Experience on Hydrotel and large milling machines required. CAU. OR APPLY TO BlLL OKEY (U4) 54l>8l:30 Ext. 155 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Calif. MISSILE SYSTEPl.S DMSION ATLANTIC RESEARCH Corporation , A Division ol the Suaquebanna Corp. An equal opportunlly employer ,_..chine Oper•tar Automatic, also tum?t lathe, trainee, military complete. Call Ann, Westcllff PeI'IOn- nel Agency, 2043 Westcl!U Dr., N.B. 645-2770 MANAGER, weekend. Mature woman, small faml· Jy type recreaUon club. Ap.. ply betw. 11 &: 3 pm Pi.clflc Sandi Cabt.nt Club, 11'1 Atlanta, H.B. MANAGEMENT 0~ portunlty. F\.111 or Part time. Cu nee. :r;i hn. Wk. 1l36-4J02 Medical Recon:ls Tech, Hos- pital Expel'. Good pet'IOnal· Uy. Btwn ages $35. ART good, bl.It not requil"l!'d. $500 mo. Hl'll. M : 30, Newport Per:sonel Agency 833 Dover Drive. NB, &U-3870 MEDICAL TRANSCRIBER *TRAINEE* Good typlna requlttd. Pre.fer medical 1enn1noq:y. Per. sonnel Dept., Hoq HotJMlal, Newport Beach. • **MOLDERS Fl--""'· WHRS BOATS Good typing. Sharp appear· 7.~:';;:'::';;:-;-=:-:-;;-;;"'"' n .. · 1 t _,tat F/C Bkkp•. ·--Call 1.o ... i-WC!,1,.11u SECURITY GUARDS °"ginners, n enn= es • ........ " '"'• '" all ages. TlfEORY • IM· $550 Pel'llOnnclAgency :!143 West. P/time & F/time. Avg. SlOO PROVIZATION. Reasonable. Variety of dutlet. Constr. clill Dr., N.B. 645.mo wk lo start. Paid vacation. Call after 5 p.m. 54&1.548 bkgrd helpful. Beaut ofca, hospital & lite ins. Oppor. to Resla.urant advanct1 to dectective. Con. ART Lessons tor $2. Jnstruc- Secy·Sales/Mktg. tact ~ty A~. White tor with best European Art To $550 REUBEN E. LEE lrnmt Store, 2222 So, Ha.boc, &hool'8n<I Cnll!ornta Sta to SH 00 -100, typing 65 +, STERNWHEELER Anaheim, Wed., April80nly. prices. Call &12-5212 dkl>phooe, 2 yn roll•ge or 9 AM ·JA ifM!djd) ,,. 1 MERCHANDISE FOR Bua. Sehl. LUNCH SITTER & lite Mkpg, 2 sch! SALE AND TRADE F/C Bkkpr. age children. 8:~5:30 ?.1on, -$550 WAITRESS Wod, Th""· Owo /raMp. Fu•nltu•e 8000 962--Glt7 eves. --Recent tonltr. bkgrd ., -~--BRAND NEW cOOing, gen'l ledger. Ability Apply in person Shop Foreman 3 ROOM GROUP lo aupervite. 151 E. Coait Hwy. Diesel & conslruction co. Call $297 Ann, \Veslcllff Personnel S.Cretary ·N~wpor1 Beach Agency. 2043 Westclilf Dr., Sells regular $529 T $55 \\'e carry our own contrad:!I o 0 Restaurant N.B. 54s.277o Van's Discount Fum. Work for two professional TELEPllONE Sal Fl es • re 417 \V. 4th St, S.A, 547-2412 """-SH "'-1YP "'-Good HOSTESSES O.aL PoUI daily, Call M<. Opeo OaUy 1"" * Sat N< grammar & punctuation, R ooo '367 • Girl Fridey (Doy & Night) """· ~ sun<1ay 12.5 TOP EXECUTIVE GIBSON delwc:e 2 do or To $525 APPLY IN PERSON Reuben E. Lee t.1anege Accounting, ·l\dID.jni.s. tra!ivc systems, operations for national hdquarters of SH helpful, dlctaphone, typ.. Ing. Must bl' attractive & wl'll groomed. Ability lo meet the pUblic. IS1 E. Coast Hwy. wholesale dlslributor. 10 yrs refrig.freczer on b o t tom , coppertone, like ·new $1511. 8 fool cushk>n French Prov. couch, 2 matching chain, good condition. 548-5262 MAPLE tier table, bookcase, Admiral TV. Card ta.hie, Necchi cabinet g e w I n g m.ach., misc. Xlnt cond. 646-5691 Newport Beach exper min. incl 5 yn; w/Data Desk clerk/PBX RE=s"'ro=N"s"'re'°L"'E",-:,::,:c,.::,;:1,:-,.,.::.dl Processing. To $500 salesg irl to manage and Re1etrt exp. helpful. Abillty opera!e 8wlnglng bout ique Send confidential r esume lo to work w/publlc. Gen'! ofc. fihop In Laguna Beach. (213) A. MMek, 1062 McGaw, San- exp. & PBX. Very plush 'f28..-0144 ta Ana, Calif. 92705. club. Sales Acctg. Cluk NEED EXTRA To $500 MONEY? Accurate !ypist, A/P. !\fin. S~ays Only 2 yn exp. Constr. bkgrd No cxpcnence necessary helpful. Guaranteed income + bonus Age 21 or over Purch•slng Cl erk Retirees Welcome To $500 Sell Men·a Wear Retail 8tUy job! Typing &: p~ No canvasaing, ceasing of p.o's. Handl e No door to door phone. Exp'd. Local positions available Reply alter 7 pm. S•les Secy 71419fi8..S195 To $475 SAi.ES 1 g!rl onice, SI! 80, heavy !\fan with sales exper. to typing. Prefer sales bkgnl: act as oulllde contact lo Will train sharp girl w/gf)Od sell the design aervice of skilla a Jong estabJlahed qua.i.ity A/P Cle•k To $475 2 yrs exp. A/P in mtg. Gen'I Acctg. Clerk • $400 Some bkkpg exp. depoalll, cubieri.ng, etc. Fiie Clerlc AIR , billing. To $400 Olven\fled dUt!t. make thJs an unusual Pot. EX.p, 6 M> curate typing rtq'd. Interior dccoratlng f Ir m . Refl'r. Write Box 59?.1. Daily Pilot, N.B. Sates GRANT'S SURPLUS Now Interviewing SALESMEN DAILY PlLOT WANT ADS! \Vhllc elephants! Dlme-a·llne JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Schools-Instruction 7600Scnools-lnstructlon 7600 I I I I I I .. -' Get lhe whole ;toty today , •• now l .. from Orange County's own world famous Innkeepers ln1tl!uts International. Learn the fast streamlined modern wav th at makes Triple I grads prized and well-paid ttiroug houl the giant U.S. JTIOtar lndusw. ··~ ~ An70ne of •nJ ap 1 {inchrdlnc .J ttllttment •111) llllmta coupln, •1----1i111l1 1111n ind '#OflMlrt, •r •Hlf· PHONE: IAl'PROYt:D fOR Y£TUtAN$) 776·5802 Or dro' 1 card •skill( for ,f1111k11p1rs l11for1n.1tlott !'KMlt· INNKEEPERS JNSTlTUTE JJl{TEAN"ATJONAL 10t\tll 10M 0~ loNTl40NT I C::MOCll..l t 349 W, 11th Street. C.M. For your -convenil'noe Full Time Experienced preferrtd but 11ot neCC!SSB.ry, ~tany com"*ny benefits. Apply tn pcr10n onl,y belv.un :l and 6 P.~t. Ask far Mllte Crant. 1111 Soutll l taoll!11 rsl, Anatritlfl'I, Ctlir •. 92104 MOTI L MAIDS please call for appt 'ft 646+7"5 * Nu1"Slng MOTEL MAldo, 11111 ., part REGISTERED NURSE time AJ>Pb lD61 N<Wport LC..C.C,U, PLEASE APPLY 1750 NeWp)!'t Blvd., CM Bl · Expaodlna unit, Chllllcnalna vd., C.M. opportunities, continuing «I-SALES.&rvl~ Est11.b. 1'"'!.llll!I' , Send Ma Fttt Carter lnfom11tio1' Name .•••••••••••••••••••••• Age . " Address .••.••• i ••••••••••••••••••••• ** NURSE AIDES** uoation ~m. Con.lad BruM! route. $125 11 wk, Experienced. 74 pm ahlfL pereonne.I So. CoMt Com-.iruarn.ntetd to start. Call Cl Zi * 519-alel • munlly Hotp. 318'12 Coyt 516-SllS 1Y • • • • • • " • • " • " • " • • P • • " • " • ! CHARGE rr1 Hwy, So. L&guna (TI4) 4~1'11~1=E"'su=•-N""EV=m="'sETS=,.-.., Ph • ' I DAILY PILOr WANT ADSl 1311 Exl 300 ;D::A::IL::Y:.:.P=:ILOTc:..;W:,:AN;;;,;T..;A:::D::S:!ll..--G-ftO __ •• _,_·_·_-·-.·-'.· __ .. _._._._ .. _._,_._._ .. _,_._._._ .. _· __ • ., ' .. I I I \ • I ' l . . . .. . ~ .. .. .. . . . •• . .. . . . . . ' • MERCHANDISE FOil SALE AND TRADE PITS 1nd LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION !!!A_N_~~TION I TRANSPO!!TATION . SALE AND TRADE 8600 Misc. Wanted Dosi• 8610 8825 S1llboet1 9010 Boil Slip Mooring 9036 Moblle Homes 9200 Auto Service '""''"'" 8000 Furniture 1000 Miscellaneous t Male Calm Tl!M'lt.r, 3\.1 e PUDLIC NOTICE e All Brend new Furniture r•turntd from Model Homes, decor1tor cancell1tlons and di,play studios. Complete Spanhh bedroom suite, derlc oeli 1~•9· $3 49.00 1 •.................. NOW $188.00 Gorgeous Spanish Custom Built Sofa with matchln9 love Sett-Choice of beeutiful labdcs. IRe9. $4 19.951 .... NOW $225.00 Sp11nish Din ing Sets ............................ $ 75.00 Solid Oak e,..d Tables and Coffee Tablas ................................ $ 19.50 Tall Decorator Table La mps IR09. $49.95 1 ...................• NOW $ 18.00 Spanish H11n9 ing Swag Lomps ·IR19. $4 9.951 ··-················ NOW $ 22.50 A .:lecorator dream house on display -l rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture lwa1 reg. $129S.OO J. sACRIFICf $425 No Money Down Cradit Cle1red lmmedietaly * AUCTION * -mo. old, AKC championship WANTED • "' Of l?P quail-lb~•. call ooly 4'!0 pm u )'OU wU1 Mll or buy ty, UJed, woman• Io 11 to 8.00 pm 53&-3613 rtve Wlnd)> a try clubll. Call 87"'~2101 · · · ., ___ ~• 1 "" =========I ./ WHITE Toy Poodle Stud Aue ....... ~ •iul.Y :.w p.m. ~-rvl KC Windy's Auction Barn FREE TO YOU -"'· ~,_7116 :?075JAi Newport, CM 6484688 ---------?o.flNl mules, long &: unooth Behind Tony'• Bldr. Mat'l TO . ADULTS or o Ider coats. lt1ost reduce •tock. '10 PHILCO color TV take children, lov. 1% yr Gld s,ss..f13, 5ll-8424, ~l,..4072 Oy.' Pm•· bal •~ ,69 RCA male cat, altered ahofs, dk. lLKY T U d I "' ..,....., amber ii: IOld w/wtiltc S errkn, n.y, ar • rerrlg 14 cu rt $200. Marantz ipot•, ihrt htd. 543-08!3 416 Ing, A.KC 6 4 T wkJ, $125 up. 1tereo Sony PS 2000 St··• 11 "" -·· bl L LOVABLE P··~·-• •--oet uu ava . v-nr1.>.>i.1 tumta e Allee anaing ....... -~~ ~ . spkrs cost $3000 sell l1000 , bound. 2 yrs. female, Deeds RARE long coat Chlliua.hua&. bal $12X). 2544 Newport good Jipme w/fenced yard. J\.1ost red uce. stock. $50. & Blvd Cf\t Loves children. 846&JB $75. 531-8424 or 531-4012 1 ::":~":';':~~~=:'~ l 7daya~~~~~l_a~l'!_t ~6·~-,-WELSH Corgi Pembroke le POL VESTER SHAG MarJ-lER cat & baby boy PuPI· Champ. 1tmr, AKC. Carpot ·FROM $5.49 yd. kitten both need loving Perm. shot•. (2U) ~973 e NYLON SHAG home, Beaut. cats, but .,, .. e MALTESE Puppfeft, AKC 100% continuous filament are allerilc to them . reg., 7 wk old males, 1how f'ROM 13.25 per yard. 968-t397 416 quall!y. 545--6938 Installation Avail. OUT FOR ADOPTION lov. -;--- Phone 557-7063 3 m01. Cer/Shep very af-livestock 8840 R m FURNITURE ESTATE Sal., Onontal ""'' lx:S, 3x4 &: 4d. Plnk bdnn chair, blankets, new twin ~uJd w I ch 11 d re ;.s FQRSALE: PE1' Chlcke/15, ducks (full grown & babies}. BLACH'. & while male cat. Geese, turkPyg, cages & A beauty, ~·Ith 7 toes on fei1.lle eggs. M0-2333 1844 NEWPORT SLVO. l•t Harbor Blvd .I size sheets, lace tablecloths, COSTA MESA ONLY 24x26 ottoman. 540-2330 Every Night 'Til 9-Wed, Sat, & Sun. 'Ti l 6 after 10 Al\1. l'".~~~~~~~~!""':!"~~~~~~~~[cARPET Lett from Comm'!. Furniture 8000 p · ,.. 0 an 1130 contracts. Sl.98. $2.88, shas 1anos rg s SJ.99 sq. yd. Drake• carpet NEARLY New 6 ft. bar, rat. tal), dark finish, 3 stools & hanging b:i.ck shelf $200. .Game Ible. 48", 4 chairs, $150. 2 Swivel lounge chairs, (Tahitian print), onoma.n, $100. Lamps, oil paintings, 3 bar stool!i v.•/canc back, blk. naug. seats $25 ca. 6'4-59113 PIANOS &: ORGANS N1'..\V & USED • Yamaha Pianos Organs • Thomu Organs e Kimball Pianos e Kohler & Campbell COAST MUSIC NEWPORT & HARBOR Costa Mesa * 642-2851 Open 10-6 Fri 10-9 Sun 12-5 17206 Beach Blvd., H.B. 84Ull4 R\'MMAGE Sale, April 7. 9 AM. Methodist Church. 4l> W. 19th St. C.M. Clothes, home access. toys, books, jewelry. C&rpet layer hu Hl Lo nylons Sl.99 yd, Shags from $3.50 up my labor, 90c per yard. 847-LM9 PIANO RENTALS I NEWPORT Beach Ten~is New and Used Club family membership. each paw. Needs a aoo<I TRANSPORTATION hon1e. 546---0150. 416 1 ________ _ GOLD colored, male pup, Boats & Yachts 9000 about 4 mos , old .---------- 646--0!MS 4/6 27 FT. Drake·Craft cabin COLLIE mix 6 mos hll..'I cruiser. 275 H.P. Chrysler had distem~r 11bots,' good }fem!., fast'. long cru~ng dispoa!tlon. 968-2619 4/6 rangt>, radio, etc. $3500. FEMALE Schnauzer/poodle, I ;6,1l-6~>1~;cc-==c;-..,,-= 6 moa. old, to iood home. 20' Dory Inboard, w/trlr, 675-1385 needs some work. $250 or "'===__,.,,-. c-:--"'=-:; n1ake oller. Call afl 6: LOVEABLE kittens. ~lack 675-0376 & while, grey, 1 str1ped.l;,o=-===o-;;-o:-:-= Motherless Call 838-9759 4n 1968 JOHNSON E I e c I r i I! MATIR£S.5Es _ You hauJ ~P. 17' flberglas. like away. 2205 Canyon Dr., No. new. Only 50 hrs, Xtras · c. Costa f\1esa. 416 Must r.ee to apprec. 968-7013 ' YR Id bl k '67 TROJAN ·26', fly bridge. Power Cruisers 9020 20' GULt' Stream 1/0, 160 Ji.terc. Trlr. Remov. hrdtp. Remov. lnbrd ba.it tank. Ne1v Outrigger. Z1 ch. CB radio. C.ompl spar:e part1. Like n@w. $3250. 548-80~. Speed-Ski a .. 11 9030 ·--I I. Perts 9400 tie Costa .\!cu • Ne wp o r 1 '-·~----- lllx$ DOUBLE EXPAND() f;AMILY PET PARK, 3 BEOROQ,\i OWNER HAS TO MOVE A.M.S. 54~2 IU1rbor j I Wilt T\IJ"le Up Your V\V. Grcenltnf Pa.rk • an adult Pat11 & la bor S12.50. Pointt, pvt, club hlJh oo ll bluU plup Ii. condt>nser. Call for ClJ1e mile from the Paolflc. appl • 646-2395. Modem lhdng ln Amt>rlca.'1 CORVAIR ENGINE flnt1I n1oblle hon1e1. ANO PARTS A-10DELS ON DISPLAY 540-1829 afll.'r 6 PM 1750 \Vhlttler Avt. 942S Cotta ~1t'83 &lZ·ll:IO Trailer, Travel Take Harbor Blvd 10 19th ----·I St. theo wrsl lo Wh ittier Ave. ALPINE ---Trucks 9500 ---·-------' '65 C!JEVY Van, excel run- J10NDA 305 Scran1blcr dir t ning cond. Good tires 441\1 bike. S250 or trade for Hon-n1i. l\.lust sell $1000/best of. da Trail 90. 64>-0991 days fer. 1352 \V. Balboa. (Allen) or 673-6809 eves. t.lgr apt. '66 650 cc TRlUl\.lPH TR 6 'li6 BRONCO Roadster, 6 cyl, must sac .. been used as a 1ow bar, R/H. $1550. Aft 7 di11. bike, $495. 842-2154. pn1 wkdys, anytime wknds, TRIUMPJ-1 200 dirt. Pen~lis 6 14~6!1 HOUSEFUL Of new model home fu rniture. Reg. $683, now $197. 894-4417 or 631-6200 HlDEABED & chair, tan naug. 2443 E. Coa.st Hwy., All monies paid apply to pur. ~..89ss Dys 549-2286, eves o a c Dual controh1, ~ll!eps 6. Lab I We l m araner ml'°. Lood-•• S6500 "'6-~ 64~2083 4/6 _ .. -~-. . ""' """"· ]4 IT. Bri3tol ski boat. 40 ~~~~~~~~~ motor cross, knoby. S185. '62 Chc \'y ·~ 1011 , rebuiU 6, hi •-BUDGER 17x50', unJurn. I 962-0933 ne\v I t h b k HP elec.; lie. \\' , tru, 1 cu c , new ra cs, ~x· 4 Black & ..,,.hite killens 6 Sailboats 9010 Xlra sharp. S595. 962-2938 rg bdrm, crpt, drps, bit-ins, '56 MATCllLESS 500 single ct"i!cnt Nnnings. $350. Call wk!!, hou.sebroken, '\\' e 11 ·-------awnings, !llany i.;tra.s, Nr, dirt bike. Runs, 1ti'ds v.·ork, 616-1286 chase. ~==·---~--GOULD MUSIC CARPET IMtaller hu one CdM 67'>4422 or 675-4031 2045 N. Main, S.A. I ·B~K~CAS,;c;'°E~H~dc-brd'-.-,.-,", ".-.,,,7,, roll avocado carpet, double 547.()681 jute back, will r.ell aU or part.$3 per yd. 540-7245 manneted. 536-Tl79 4n VENTURE 17 Xlnt Cond. Boat Maintenance 9033 bch. Full price $78,j(J, Call S75 * 544-0508 •611 .. c ~G~M~c~v~,-,,~,~"'-w- FREE To good home, cocker Fully £!<!Uip. Incl motor & SJ6...0668, '67 YAMAHA 305-CC rndinl tires. $159j, drawer storage. King Beau· ty Rest. All A·l 548-8878, MAPLE BED RM SE1'. HAMMOND Ste:nway, Yam· MATCHING hide abed & pups. 494-1357 4/7 trlr. $2250. 962-4~. BOAT main t ... Varnishlng, 20x60' VIKING SCANDIA. 2 VERY CLEAN * 5-!S·2S85 * aha. New .Ii used pianos oJ Silvertone ~lt!IOle AM / F~1 •s.q vw BODY, tiberglau SCHOCK Snipe No. 14679, painting, ieneral cleaning.. BR, 2 BA. 5 Star Adult 646-~45 WANT: .68. ,69 01, •70 F'ord Alao, lite chest & mirror. 642-5931 most makes:. Best buys in player .. Pictures, art ob-84J.8363 4/6 com. w/trlr. i.;lnt cond, must -~it:'.. work done. 67:>-8133 Park. Owner 548-4142 aft '68 HONDA 160 Scrambler or Chevy Van, lo mlg. Ca.sh. So. Calif. at Schmidt Music jects, misc. items. 646-8031 NICE female Cock.a·poo, 6 sc.U. s795. S46-037C, 96Z-0460. 9035 6· Xlnt cond. ?.lake oUC'r. ?.lust &12-3490 any!ime c.o. 1907 N. Mrln Santa Ana LOCAL Eg1 Wholesale from mos. old. 645-0729 25' CORONADO, like new. Marine Equip. ELECTRO-~echanical work sell. 536-2156. PLANNING 10 n .. .Ne! You·u ' Rauch to Restauranta &. FREE small load of gravel. Sleeps 5, head, deluxe inter. * F'or sale • 10 H.P. v.·anled for produetion in 69 NORTON CQ;'o.1~1ANDO find an amazing number of HIDE·A·BED $50 546-4569 p--1AN-0-TUN--1·-N-0 -.-R--lr Con v a I e scent llomes 549--0567 4n Comp!. Many xtrllll. &!.2-7628 l\1ercury outboe.rd engine. sm. &:ara&e. ~8-:8283 I 750• Super condition! Ca.II 1 homes in today's QassWed Expert, reasonable! e~ar ·1"°54"8-°'3"°75=8"1c:l,-:6-:;P-:'7'M-::'.=T.-:: FP'._!E~T~S~e!!;n~d!_!:L;!:IV'.'.'.!:E~S~TO~C'._!K:1:D~ial=64>"'77='='=•'==RE·=SUL:T:S:':-~l200;:;:·:548-~.;"="~·==~=~:P::l"""UYr;:=W=ANT=:A:D:!:!:M°".~:56:1;;8~~54:;'6-=1=54· ':S;''="="=6=p=m. ==~:"i:l'=·=C~h<e=k=th=•=m="'=w=.=:::: Aarness 61~ or 673-8930 IJAND Painted oil portrait of _ Office Furniture 8010 PRACTICE Plano Wanted M1161 be1reasonable Please call 64&-0040 you or your children from a Cets 98GG New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 9800 photograph. ~3629 USED atttl dealui $39.50 ct Posture chairs 112.50 & up • Used 2 It 4 drawer filing cabinet.I e Used wood. desks McMahan Bros Desk Inc. GEIGER COUNTER $ 3 5, BLACK Smoke Persian Kit- 546-4569 tens, Registered $75. PIANO, Baldwin Acroson\c '-'.:..:,C~=~==~-Call 540-ll44 Sp inet, xlnt condition $850. AM/FM RADIO 5 SIAl\.lESE kittens, 2 sesl· After 5, 833-0590 540.7413 paint, 3 fro stpaint, S.10. 18072 i\tann St, Irvine. 833--0158 1800 Newport Blvd. Pool Table Costa Mesa * 64.2-8450 Radio 8200 4'x8' Bruruiwlck. $240. G S I 8022 ---------549--0449 o-s . ~· •• AM/FM RADIO -• ·----------SOFA $20, rehi&. $65, gas GREAT Dane male brindle BARGAINS! Antiq. bdrm 54().7413 range $35. bdrm set $35, f '"'--droplea.f tbt $35. 548-1021 5 Wttk.!i old. Shots 1100. uni. ....., .. .,mor W 11 li'r op ---------or ollcr 646-6942 desk, claw fool dresser, Television 8205 CARPET 25 sq. yrds, used. i..ti GERMAN Shepherd • t,~ sewing mach. cab, Ieng sz. green $30 hdbrd. $150 complete or will CE TV needs v.tirk $20. . 6.16-0034 Lab puppies, both parents 2 Kl AKC, $5 each. 645-0873 sep. ng spreads S5 ea. Console w/remote control. BATHROOM space saver $8. 2 Maple milk glass lamps PHILCO console TV needs Early American imall &0fa AFGHAN PUPS.-AKC &. shade• SS ea. White swag v.'Ork $5. 54&-4569 $40. 497-ll53, 494-8246 $15()..$200. 846-5452 lamp $10. Oval 5x7 green 8210 Dial 642-5678 tor RESULTS THE SUN NEVER SEI'S on hooked rug $25. Mens valet HI-Fl & Stereo SOCK rr TO 'EM! OAlLY PILOT WAtVI' ADS! $5, black lamp lb! ss; like new elec. guitar & amp GE Stereo w/A.1\1-Fr.1 radio, TltANSf'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION $100. 847-6660 GE 23'' TV, both walnut SOL.o Home .• 61 F'ord can consoles -perfect. 963-5349 Imported Cars 9600 Imported Cars be used u camper, Powtr ___ \U i [p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, edger, roto!Uler, ca.fe Radar Camwa• range Mark JV, frosty EqulpmM'lt 8300 ttteier, tv.-o barrel, other household Items. Oll Yorktown between Bushard and Brookhurst. GARAGE sa.li!, Everet I Piano $'150, Davenport, & ml>c. * 675-7203 * Moving -Selling ALL Furniture & Appliances • 642-4785 • LIDO Garage Sale; Sat 4.9 PM. Sun. Mon & Tues (1 PM·On) 211 Via Kornn. N.B. 3 APTS Of Furn, Marble lop Ibis & Lots of Junk. 207 Hanovt!r Dr .. C.i\1. ~pliances ·1100 Pl-lILCO auto waaht"r, late model, xlnt rond. 1'~rigidaire elect dryer, xlnt cond. $55 ea. 84.7.fllli or 546-8672 RfiJiGERATOR $-15. Near ne~" Kil. rangt?. l!.ta.ytag ~·ashl!r 2114 Continental, C.M. KENMORE washer, xlnt condition. Can Deliver. $65. 592-1764 Sewing M1chlnn SINGER Auto ilg-zag. 6 mos. old. No attach needed for zig-zag, button holes, designs etc. Guar. $37 cash or small payment.I. 526-6616 Musical Instruments 8125 VOX Euex Bus amp, 1 1nonth old. Excellent con- J.10VIE Camera SS. !>16-4569 Sporting Goods 8500 HART Camaro's Mark' r Rntomats, excellent condl. lion $110. * 673-8680 * Miscellaneou1 8600 COME & visit an unusual roekshop 1hat wlll interest ever y one fron1 the rockbound to the je\.\'elcy Jover. Handcrafted onyx carvings, custom rings, aq. uwnartne set w/diamonds . ruby5, blue star w/dia- monds. Jadl! carringi;, brace· lets, f'ul l llnc of casting sup. pl!es, machines, gold, silver, investment, waxes. Rough & cut stone & lapidary rqulp, FIVE M GEMS & LAPIDARY SUPPLY • d.itian $250. Bu.a guitar aod I '°u70"1"ES"'°'"D'°1Amo~°"nd,-.,D°'i,-,-,-., 1 CA&e, &ood ~lion $75. Rlng, 1et with 1% karat t $300 takes all! MO-S59S A&k cenler dia mond, 2 diamonds ' l.::'= .. =Cllrl=='====== • 1i karat on l'ach side. t Brllllanl cut. Sa.c r l f \ce l t Pianos & Organ1 1130 Reply to Box P360, Dally f PilQt Organ Shopp•rs! FISH Poloo. oamp '"'· Old YoU knOw tt'.at •'e are: p ilar & Amp. sllotl \\"R\~ having FREE ORGAN ndlo. cop~r coach lilV\t. ~ES and that )'OU can air condlliont:r, & many rent a Baldwin Orran It gtt hou&ehold i 1 t m B, Call in on the fun! It'a true· but 5.1&-ll25, RIO Dela\vart, Jl.B. only •1 1 WARD'S BALDWIN SJ'UOIO REM 100 12 ga. au to. 3" .!'tag 30." r~un pad, like nev." 1819 Newport, C.l!.t. 64U4S4 1ells for t lM, rnke t llj, Open Every Nllt' Savage ?.!ode.I 311, 12 ga It Sunday Aftiumon dooblt 33" & mod. pad. HAA.tMONO EIN:trlc Ori:an, New $70 962--21)9.t HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN '69 WESTFALIA CAMPER $3499 '61 WESTFALIA CAMPER $249& P•"91J, i.w mf. 12'1 uo '64 VW BUG ..... ""'~· O~MI' 7lll $99& '66 VW FASTBACK :::.~ •. • $1295 (Yllll 71t) '61 DATSUN ' •• , '"" ........ $109& W/W tlrQ, ('IWJ 1011 '66 VW BUG ;;::· .~;;"'· -'"~ $1195 '63 VW BUG '&& VW BUS '6lVWBUG ••tl9, "'''''· IYl'M QU llMlle, lleeter, L9M .. , Wllllt Wltlt, (lll'A il11 $89& $169& $149& '68 VW B11G "'"" '"· .... • $169& \; Mttllt". CYCL 1U) '68 OPEL KADETIE :.:::.: :::.··· $129& ml. tWIL H7) '68 MGB ..... '"'''° Wini wll"lt (Wl'Tl11) $189& '61 SQUARE BACK :.:••· "'""· $139& crf: oau '69 ·vw BUG ..... ....... $119& lkl, w•rr, l lUL .... , HARBOUR V. W • AUTHORIZED SALES l SERVICE 18711 8 e1ch Blvd., Huntington Beach 142-44» Spinet M-2, WJ.lnut, good :R'-O~Y~AL'--'-iiF.ii'e-'-e.--,;'l)"l"=w'°n=tl'r, cond. $4:.4. 64).;9860 llft 6. U n d t' r "'' o o d Pr I n I I n gl TRE QUJCKF.:R YOU CALL. O.lculalor. Gd conc1. Ct~11p! n1E QUICKER. YOU SELL 3-40 8ro11.d1vay Aw, C.r.1, ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ml!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!""'!!!!!!I • JOHN CONNlU .. NO GIVE>. WAYS NO GIMMICKS" •.• Ju•t 21 Y11rs of Hon11t D11lin9, S1ll!ng Ch ... rol1t1. Fully equipped with tinted 9las11 evap. emission control, AM r•· dio, vinyl in terior, buc:ket seats. 1509194 1 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LARGEST SEL~CTION OF MONTE CARLOS & CHEYELLES IN ORANGE COUNTY I I 15 MONTE CARLOS TO CHOOSE FROM I ·-~;;w~~ s~::o 1970 MONTE CARLO 40 CHEYELLES TO CHOOSE FROM a~:~0 1970 CHEVELLE NOT STRIPPED VI en1lne. turbo hydr•m•tlc tr•n1mlulon, tinted glau, etc. $2693 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Brand N•w 1970 CHEVY 112 TON $2299 NOT STRIPPED s3417 s1ri1I I 11J111 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY * SERVICE DEPARTMENT * ALL GENERAL MOTORS CARS WELCOME Factory trained ser'lice personnel qualified Chevrolet1, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles, Buicks. LARGE SELECTION OF USED CARS 'H TOYOTA $1195 Station \\'agon. 4 speed. radio, hf'atl'r. IXEY9l01 •64 OLDSMOBILE $695 1-1.T, Automnli~. factol'y a ir. P.S .. radio, heater. !OYF814) - •6S CHEVROLET Impala SS. Aulo., P.S., RIJ-l, fa«:tory air. <PCAiS<J $109'5 •61 V.W. IUG $1595 Aulomal\c, radio, hcat~r. l VIE656) I '68 INTERNATIONAL $1995 \VB.lk·in van. {39555Cl •65 CHEVY '12 TON $1195 Picku p. Fleel5ide. V8. auto .. radio, heater. (T26M621 •64 CORVmE 32iV8. ll a.rd lop-Conver ti· ble. 4 speed, Al'vl-Fl\1 radio, hcat<'r. (UPZ076) •u CHEVY II Nova. Aulomatlc, l'l'l.dio. hratl!r, power !11.ffring. (YCN67S). $2195 $1395 '67 IUICK $1995 C\l!!I. Electra 225. Auto., R&ll, Al\1-Fl\1 ~tcrro, fac- to!')' nir. fNC9825l '64 -MERCURY Comet COUIX'. V8, UU\O- mafi('. (RVT169l '64 CHEVROLET $895 ln111ala 2 Or. H.T. A11t on1ali1:, IJO""'Cr :\lec.rlng, R.t:l I. <OSG7S.1' •61 PONTIAC $1295 2 Door. Au lon1ahr, pn1\·cr stttrln(t, radio, heatt·r. IUJD236 1 • -~----...----~-----....----.-,,-,-~ ..---~ ------~ ,. . .. . . ...... .. .. .. -. ~ .......... . . . TRANSPORTATION · Now Cora 9800 Mondlr, April 6, 1970 D.IJLV rlLOT 41 TRANSPORTATION I T~.!!~~~TATION -I TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION / TRANSPORrATION /!.~SPORTATION /~NSPtRTPTION / tRANSPORTAT1oli PMw Can 9800 New C•r• MOO New C•r• flOO New Cart 9800 New Cert 9800 New Cars 9800 New C1n 9800 New Cars 9IOO • I'll STAND OI MY HEAD TO MAKE YOU A BITTER DEAL IEW '70 DODIE CHALLEIBER S9J 64 Dlscoual NIW 170 DODOI A·IOO Spa ..... •• Wa .. 11 3U ..,.r,., -•:r.i11" l'Wdlo a hHler, llnltd wllldlllleld, r.r tut, al Wnl Coe1t mlmirJ. wMt4 ~itrl rw. -Jiii l'lf, rll-lltW ...... IUlon CC>n-lrol JYlllft'I, J oNed loedflll• trlfumlulon.. l lt. (lf:I04U4), $546 DISCOUNT fROM FACTORY STICKaR ,IUC• FLASH! DODIE FAOTORY CUTS PRICES ON ALL .1970 DODGE DARTS FACTORY REDUCED STICKER PRICE BY $378 BUT LOOK! WE HAVE CUT FACTOP~~JTICKIR s542 PildM rWUcld Jiit fildorY ttkklr prk:t 1111 lllt Ood99 Swllltlr 1111 ffld wti.11 "tOU WI' IM SWl"911' Tilll H I llM '"'°'""lie ll"l ntmlUlon lrM Of' Jltl. Tllll II I tolal r~llon llf $311 vtf !hi FKtol'Y arider prk1. WE WILL DISCOUNT THIS CAil UG from the IKiOfY 1lkk1r. Serlt/ Ho. LMZJHOll: UClllJ. NOTICE! We DO llOT r1111ulre 1 Mi1i1111111 Don P1J11111~ like SIO don, S2& don, $99 down, ale. Wa lry lo 1rn11ga down P•Jlllllll 11d monthly payments lo suit e • c h individual customer. Present this ad for these special prices * TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS * '69 CHEV. NOVA '68 DODGE DART ~~.,/~:.1.t-.n .. ~ = '61 PONTIAC WAGON '59 DODGE WAGON A11lo. trtn1., rldlo, ,...,.,, ""11.wtll tlrn. !lnr• 11111, WJH IKI. $295 '63 FALCON 2 DOOR $295 '64 RAMBLER CLASSIC $195 '63 DODGE DART G.T. ~~!~ tr~~ .. :~~~ ~J.,m~1 ...... 11 $395 '64 T-llRD fKtorf 1lr ~ondrttenlfte, f\111 POW91', Wfl!l9W1ll 11'"' lll!Md 11-OSI" f#, '68 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 Door H1rdtoll. Alllo. tr1n1 .. fldorv 1!r CDllCIJtlonl"ll -llNrl11t. r1dl1, /lal11'1 ...till-II 1'S. llnll'd l lllL VDF #3. $1295 '67 FORD Aulo. lr1~1, -''"'11'11, rKlo, .... let, 11111'1lltw1U nre1, tltlllcl 1l11i.. UGH '11, '68 CHEV. NOMAD WAGON $1295 '68 PLYMOUTH FURY A~. tr1nL. _.., 1t"rf"', rldlo, Miii!", wt1il..,..1U llrn. llntllll 1J111, VWL 21f, '66 CHEV. BEL AIR 2 DOOR .-.uio, 1ra111., r;tdlo, h11ltf', wt1U1w111 11••• tlnled gla». 11.ZE lll. $795 '67 FORD 4 DOOR Aut .. tnm,. rtdlo. llt9tw....._wt1n9W1ll trrn , tint~ , ..... XTJ hi.. $1895 '67 cAD. SDN. DE VILLE f"ltlort t lr CO!\dltlonl"" f\1111 fll1fttft -In~! root. TVK di, $2995 '66 DODGE CORONET 500 Auto. lr1n1., fKtery 1lr cond!tlollo !:1r .. T.1r:'1fn~ .'~s~'f;': VHS ..u. $1795 '69 VOLKSWAGEN I INtd, llMW.1....Whll.w.ll !Ir ... I'""° Id 1!1p, XQIC M, $1595 '66 FORD PICKUP ' llldlo, l'IMIW", i..,. Ml. VM11'- • Trucks 9500 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 96011 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Auto Lttslnt 9810 '6 7 Chevy Pickup AUSTIN AMERICA BMW~~-l--'--DA-TS~U-N~-JAGUAR -------VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 8 foot bed, 4 :..pd, dlr, V-8. Custom Cab. Only 32,00) mi. Xlnt cond. thruout. Small dn. Will finance pvt. pty. CXW4634) Call Ira aft 10 am. 494-9773 or 545-0634. 1966 FORD ECONOLJNE VAN 1966 FORD EC ONO LI NE 1966 F 0 R D ECONOLINE VAN 170 cu in. S spd. $975. 499-2106 J11ps 9510 SACH.IFICE 166 Inter. Scout Equipt to tow trailer $1600 642-2841 AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, Parts Immediate Delivery All Models J1rluport 31111ports 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 6'12-9405 541).1764 Authorized MG Dealer AUSTIN HEALEY BMW'S #l DOT DATSUN JAGUAR ·~,~'.G ~d.GTCO~· .. ::: DEALER IN OPEN DAILY HEADtf)UARTERS .. cnrkc • goiog '"""" AND The only autborlzed JAG UAR 496-3989 after 6 P.M. CALIFORNIA AND SUNDAYS d"'1cr 1n the'"°"' Harbo• ="'====== ORANGE COUNTY'S ~':i:t~ a1!~c~ Arca. LARGEST 842-1181 " "''""' OPEL Complch.: 1970's Jmm<!Ci •. Dclivery • 25 New & Used in Stock T&M MOTORS ,... DATIUM - 8081 Garden Grov• Bl, G.G. 534-2284 Open Sunday 892-5551 "Leader In The Lear.b Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. -10 . SALES SERVICE PARTS Poole BUICK !N COSTA MESA RED '68 Opel Kadett LS. Xlnt cond. Sacrifice! Best olfer takes. 644-5289 PEUGEOT '62 Peugeot 4 dr. Light 234 E. 17th Street green, fairly new clutch. 548-1165 Very clearl. Economlcal sec- VW BUGS FROM $399 GOOD SELECTION o,, FORD AUTHORIZED '66 VW Camper, new trans, LEASING SYSIEM 1tereo tape, chrome riml, America's larzest leuln& Gates tin.>a. ~lust see to ap. l)'ll:em for tl.na.nce or net prec, $1850. 642-7259 aft 5. leasing of all type cal'I and Can be seen at 1740 Newport tnK:U. Blvd., C.M. e Immediate delive.ry tram 64 VW Bug . Brakes over300can and ttucb overhauled. Paint, body, • C.OmpeUtiv& rates tires up ho 11 t er y A-1. • New car dealenhlp tervkie Engi~e out. Make offer. •Full "tradein" YalUI fJW 548-1883 aft 4 YOW' pre.ent car '&.I Volkswagen. AM·FM re.· dlo. C&rtridge oil filler, Im- maculate condition! $1750, Call aft 4 pm., 548-3221. VOLVO • All populat makes avail- able For Complete Details caD Malcom Reid Lea.sing Manager Theodore ROBINS FORD Campers 9520 '57 AUSTIN HEALEY Rebuilt Engine. $350. After 6 P~I 64&-6781 s.1:1-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1910 HARBOR BLVD. 145 -WAGONS •"'7'°'0,_,D,_a_t_S_U_n__,Sed~,-a-n-I J =A~Go-.~X~KE=-R,..d7s~1,~•65,-• ...,,'"'.2 ond car $375, ~C -0674 B. 4 d 96 h h d 27,000 act. ml. Xlnt. New -2000 ""'""' 81"11. Costa Mesa 6f2.<UlO 1i . .00r i> over ca tap. ~1wrt sec to believe! PORSCHE COSTA MF-'A 164 -SEDANS --------1 All other modela oow In """~~~~~""l'""i cam, du;c brakes, 4 spd, dlr, £44-4lS2 8 FT CAMPER $100 or Best ollcr! 5'10-3803 aft 4:30PM TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WSW, back UP lights. Sacrl-J ,,,,.--..,~..--;;--;=--== fice Take trade will finance 65 Jag 3·8 s lux. Sedan. '62 PORSCHE 646-S055 pri~ate party.' Full price Pwrlair/lthr/chrm w/w_. Excellent condition. $2800. 1 to n Chevy Van Camper RKXJ, 646-1257 823 Towne St. Collta Mesa BAYSIDE MOTORS $1796 1601AVEJ. call Pat Lo mL ~fake offer. 644-4265. 1Jl0 W Coast H NB See at 2089 :Iarbor Blvd., . wy., . . 494-9773 or 545-0034 aft!O am. MERCEDES BENZ C.M. altu 3:30 PM. Dune Bugglu 9525 1968 BMW 16011 '68 Datsun, 4 ''· •&h, rnotoc $1795. * 894-7&28 like new, xlnt oond. $1!i7s.1-------- Small Dune Buggy $150 646-12.57 DIAL direct 6'2-5678, Charge 968-2393 or M?-8820 WANT AD your ad, then sit back and '66 Datsun Sta. Wag. Reas. 823 Towne St. Collta Mesa listen to the phone ring! Gd tramp. PvL Ply. S@~Jtl1A-~t-~ss The Puzzle with the Built-In Chucl/e O Roorro"ga letters of Iha four scrambled words be-- low to form fovr slrnple words. rEFWET 1 . I I ' I . rH E .... R_B T.,.........,--,..-11 ij t. IKAP RA I J '""-;;P J....-..1~,-.1Tj ~I ~-t 3 A dumbbell, He had a pa;, . . . _ of bloomers tattooed on his Call 615-3045 ENGLISH FORD All New .English Fords In Our Big Stock Now At FACTORY INVOICE! Positively No Added Dealer Charges! Choose From Sedans, Sta Wgns, GT's At Our Cost While Overstocks Last. Thtodort ROBINS FORD 2060 HArbot Blvd. Costa Mesa 6U0010 FERRARI '66 4 Dr. Mercede1, Air and auto-trans . $21,000, b I u e bool<. 9'U928 ----·· MG MG Sale•. Servk.:, Pan. Immediate Dellw:r)', All Models J1rtuport jlJ 11 p Q.l:t ~; . chest because he a lways rlD_E_l_S E-T----~I wanted a chtst wllh -. i;;.. "'l,_.,IT'~l _,.,l'~I -I· 0 ~'"" "'" .i...,11, 1~.d ~ lllllng In th• mi..rng word -you dev•lop ftOlll step No. 3 below. , __ _ FERRARI a100 w. Coast Hwy. N.B. Newport lmpotll Ud. ()r. 642-9.t«i ~0-17G4 SUBARU · * '70 SUBARU Here Now. rmmediate Delivery e 90 MPH Capability G 35 Miles Per Gallon e Beautiful Styling ~st Drive Today At Kustom Motors 845 Baker, C?i1 540-5915 TOYOTA· !TIOIY(OIT@ M1rk II Wagons HI Lux Pickups L•nd CrulHr• W19on1 PLUS OTHER HARD TO GE"I' MODELS NOW m STOCK DEAN LEWIS 19fl' Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 BILL MAXEY LARGE SELECTION of VW CAMPERS · Harbour V.W. Aunt ORI ZED SALES &: SERVICE 18711 BEACH BL., &U-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '62 VW sunroof, Nu paint Lo mllcage, Clean $650 Call after 5: 30. ~&--0104 '65 VW. Very Good cond. Must gee to apprcc. $750. Call 548-3148 VW VAN '60. '63 Super 75 Ponche eng. zero ml'•· Real !!ileeper. (714) 176-2406 63 vw. Sunroof l.st °"'Tier $'1!15 642-0J:D or 646-7670 '69 VW sunroof, stereo radio, many xtru, sparkling cond. 11195. 968-U9> • '67 vw Good condition $UOO 67S-7169 'tl6 BUG. IMMAC. owner, $1000. * 61$--7524 .. °"•· 1009 V\V "BUG"-Xlnt cond~ tlon extru $.159!i. 830-0556. • PRINT NUMUl!fD lfTTERS 1 IN~THESE SQUARES- 6 UNSCRAM!lf lETTEIS TO I GET ANSWfl ange eount~"• onl1 author-Authorlz<'d ?liG De:aler [ ~ ... -• ..i... ..,-.,G-m. '"" cl>nd. JTIOIYIOIT1AI 0:!:,".'8'Th• ~:;i;r~· pn,o; SALES-SERVICE-PARTS thruoul, Brit. ncln1 green, '! ~ ~ ·-. !Q I I I I I I I 3100 W. Coast I-Iwy. Best otr over $UOO. 646-0398 1U81 BEACH Bl VO. Oaultted eecuon. Sa v' -· · - - - -Newport Beach l-==.r-==....,,== Hunt. Btach ••7 •555 money, time" eUort. Look 642-9405 540.1764 DAILt PlLOT 0•1slfled .,. .. oowt 1 l SCRAM-Lib ANSWER IN CLAS$1FICATION 960(1 Aulhodled l'mori DMltr oectiob NOWI lmlN.olOlull!wr.1111Bdl ----------------'--------•-::::::::::::::...::~:::..::::::;::..·.,:;;:;:;;;.;;;.;;.;;.;...~~~· ·-~~~~~~ \ I ' . r •-- •tock. 4 ,-. • automatics. 1"' LEASE 111' Your Best Deals Are Still At '68 Cad Coupe de Ville, fuD DEAN LEWIS ,.,,., ""· ws ,., mo. 1966 Hari>o•, C.M. 646-91"3 SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING • 300 W. Cst Hwy, NB. 645-2J.82 Antiques, Classics 9615 1935 PLYMOUTH, 4 dr sed. UMCI Cars 9900 new eng, xlnt . oond. call ---------· 646-<888. Autos Wanted 9700 ---·'------WE PAY TOP CASH tor used can & trucks just call us for free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET TRANSPORTATION CARS k TRUCKS $99 AND UP $5.00 DEUVERS (oac): \VE CARRY OUR OWN CONTRACTS EVEN !F OUT OF STATE BANKRUPTCY • DIVORCED, ETC, BLUE CHIP AUTO SALES 2145 HARBOR BLVD, Aak tor Sales Manager fat Victoria) 18211 Beach Bh·'d. COSTA MF.SA Huntington Beach 50-092 64U700 -=~Kl=0-333~!==--1968 LeMANS .f Dr. Hrdtp. WE PAY CASH $2.145. 1966 lmpm.I .f Dr. H11tlp. 12145. Both haw FOR YOUR CAR ~,;,,.· ;;:;~ °"-· CONNELL CHEVROLET 2823 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 5f6.13X> BUICK 66 BtnCK SPORTS WAGON, 9 ..... Fully oqulpped Ind. Factory atr power 1teertnr A brakes, etc, tow oaa owner mlltt. Prt. p t 7 . 646--4212 'IMPORTS WANTED Cmu;iflts TOP I BUYER BIU. MA.XEY TOYOTA 1 .63 Riviera, full pwr a Iii, 188S1 Beach Blvd. stereo tape, mlnt coad, Call II. Beach. Ph. 847-1555 646--1941 ------- , I { r : I I I , ·--------------------.. ' . . .. . . . ' . . . . . . . '... . j ! • • •• • .. ... .. '.. ···--·-·· . . . .... . . ...... • . . . . ... WE ARE CELEBRATING OUR 17th ANNIVERSARY DURING TlfE MONTH OF APRIL MUSSLE CARS! We 'have a good selec· tion of Cougar Elimina· tors, Montego Cyclones & Marauders, all equipped for the Cat that likes to Scat! OVER FACTORY INVOICE Pl111 111 a lie1111• DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY LINCOLNS A Large Selection to Cho.,.• f ,om '69 LINCOLNS Low Al $4575 XSR 580 '68 LINCOLNS Low ,.,.$332$ VTP 736 '67 LINCOLNS Low A1 $2500 TRK 296 .. '66 LINCOLNS Low As $1900 SUN 059 '65 LINCOLNS Low As $1475 TFC 969 '64 LINCOLNS Low A1 $1050 NYT 910 Pl111 T•• a. lie. on AboY1 LOOK over our line selection of quality Lin· coins! Many sold & serviced by us! MARK Ill • Look over lection of well our · nice se· Mark Ill's as as several slightly used ones-the finest car made in America. DRIVE ONE TODAY! BARGAINS IN EYEllY CORNER COUGARS We have a lar<Je oelect~ of Coug1rs 91 models, XR 7's & convertible. with prices you'I like. "The good olo days ere beck again! NEW 1970 COUGAR with white· side well tires, p9wer 1teerln9, Pow- er disc brakes, deluxe wheel covers, etc. No. OF91H517834 DURING DUR ANNIVERSARY 53066 SPECIAL PURCHASE FROM FOID MITOR COMPANY A large selection of neer new 1969 Meres, Cougars, Continent•~. W19ons & Con· vorts -All ere of tho highest quanty · & represent a fantastic wvings for • Gke new car -As low as • • • USED CARS We have over 75 used .. cars From Cads, Lincolns, Cougars, lhilcks, Olds, Pon· tiacs, etc. Prices ·are all reduced ·for our ANNIVERSARY SALE 1 MONTEGOS NEW 1970 MONTEGO 2 dr. hardtop. Equip. with deluxe wheel covers, white 1ide · well tires, carpeting, automatic +r•nsmission, power steering, AM redio, t inted gloss. No. OHOIL563954 DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY 52841 We have coupes, aedens, & lots of gorgeous W•CJOM •t the "good okl days0 prices. Come in & -why Mont.go is the best intormed· iete buy in America. DEMO SALE We move our Demos & Executive cars 3 times a year -We have some gorgeous Meres, Cougars & Lincolns at HUGE SAVINGS! SERVICE SPECIAL!, Free diagnosis for your car during our open house on April 18th (8 to 4 pm only>. Have our "doc· tors" c h e c k your car (FREE) before you start on that summer vacation! NOW IS THE BEST TIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT .Johnson-son COSTA MESA 2626-tcarbor Blvd. NEW 'CARS 540-5630 642-0981 USED CARS 540-5635 l'HREE GENERATIONS IN THE Af/TOMOBILE B f/SI NESS • . -• I . . • • . . -···--"·• ................... .._ .... 1966 FORD 9 pau. Country Squire. 1 owner, xlnt cond, $1550. 673-3503 STA. Wq. Ford '68 Country Squire, 10 pus, air ccnd, r/h. 6t6-8394 aft 5. LINCOLN 2240 s ...... SANTA ANA 546-7l76 ..;.. . '61 FlLCi:lK STATION WA.ON'\ 6 cyl., .,1110. troM., ,...._ ·1tMri11t, rodlo, hooter, I whlfew•ll tire•, lutt°'o uni.,., IZSK lll) $1766 '64 LINCOLN 4 0001 HAIDTOP. v.1, 01110. tr1n1., feet. ,;,, full pow1r, r1d io, he1t1r, wftitew•ll tJr11. A• i1 lpo· ciel, ISLW 4J7} $1233 '69 OLDSMOBILE DELTA II ,. I • --------\1 4 Door H1rdtop. V-1, 1~te. ,I LINCOLN Cont. 62 Full power A/C Top Shape. Priv Pty must sell this wknd. Owner tmsfrd Mr. Worrell 644-1700 MERCURY '67 C.Olony Park, 10 pus \\'ag, all xtru. Priv. pcy, $1950 (213) 592-2344 MUSTANG '65 Muslanit, orig. owner, lovl1J81y maintained 2nd car. VB w/all pwr goodies & auto trans, r&h, Worth a lot mon than $~095 but I need the garage 1 p a c e . 546--0238 '66 Mustang delwr.e V-8, load· ed, yellow /black top. deluXe interior, new tires. Immacu- late. $13)(1. Private party. 494-1039 FOR sale: 1969 Mach I Mustang'. Xlnt cond. Priv. Owner. Call ~1959. 1968 Mustang, green, V-8, auto, air cond, full pwr. Phone 962-8100 eves-wknds. OLDSMOBILE '62 Olda.-F BS, V 8 , ex;. ceptionally dean, mecbani· cl.Uy xlnt., weU cared for, low mlleq:e, ecooomical. 496-1349 '68 OLDS 442, PIS. P !B, air. 4 apd, posltr., lach, zlnt cond. f1S95. 962--3627 1962 OLDS F -85 f dr, r/h, auto. $Ul5 Call 968-ru! '65 01.DS Cullus, 2 dr, air, radio, power, xlnt cond. fr1n1,. foe . elr, power 1toor· ln9, r1dio, h11tor, whitt· woll lir11, vinyl roof, ti11t0 1d 91•••· wheol Covtn. I ED 61111 $2999 '61 TOYOTA .• CUSTOM CIOWN ftM, 4 1pe1d, r1dio, Meter. 1 IWTF 5041 $1313 '67 FORD SHILl't GT 2 DOOi V-1, 4 •peed, r1d io, hoeter. Thi• won't l11t. ITWS tl41 $2793 . :64 RAMBLER 4 DOOi llDAll R1dio, h.111,, •tick sllift, 0•1rdrive. I PIW ll 11. $7B9 '66 MUST.AN~ 2 DOOi. v.1. 1wlo. tr...... ,. •• , 1t.erln9, r1dio, heotor, vinyl roof, ISVG 105) , $1369 '65 MUSTANG COUPI Y·I, e11fo, tren1,, oir CCIII• ditionint, rfflo, heeter, whitewell tire•, whMI COY• '"· .t UPY 6211 $1299 '61 YOLKS 2 IOOI Auto. tr1ns. 1116 IEV) $1583 '66 MERCURY PAllU.NI 53,008 ml. $1295. tU2-4.722 2 Door H1Ntop. v.1, ••fo· 1963 OLDS Cutlass, Io w tr1111., f•c:. eir, pow1r mil lo ... ._._.. "°"" 1t1erin91 pow1r windewa, eaa:e, au , ,JUUi.. -· &42-t305 pow1r 111h, ,1dio, hoet.r, ;:;;.,=.;;;,,-.=,..,,,,,,-~~II whitew1U tir11, til!tff *'64 Old1 F-85 Wag. Auto. 11111, whe1I c:o•1r1. ISLU P/S, R/H, X1n't Cond. 15 21 $81JO. Call 61'-5304 PONTIAC '61 FIREBIRD 400 V8, pwr. steering, air cond., R/H, dlr, all delwr.e equip. Xlnt shape in and out. a1ue Book $2400 .• Make oHer • Take foreign car in trade. Will finance pvt. pty. <WGL. 212) Call Lloyd aft 10 am 545-003l..or C9UTil. - '68 Pontiac Convert G'I'O, air cond, p/s, p/b, stereo, am/fm, new tires, Io w mi's, X1n't concl. 6/a-38l2 '68 GTO Conv. Orange w/blk lop. P.S. P.B. Air 1800 ml. Good cone!. Must s e 11 ! ! 464-5739 aft 5 '62 Pontiac, p/1, p/b, ate, $1293 '66 FAIRLANE 100 2 0001 HAIDTOP , V-1, 111to. tr1n1.1 f1c:tory eir eon.ditionin9, power· 1leerlng , r1d io, h11ter, whitew11! tir11, tintH 91111, wh1el covert. ISIV 5021 $1449 '67 BUICK llVlllA F1cfory 1lr, full pow.,, ti• dio, h11l1r, white side .woll•, tlnt1d gl111, vth1el c:ow1 r, !TQW 1'41) $2497 '67 YOLKS 2 DOOi new tires. $500 or beat oHer. 4 1p11d, r1dio, hiet•r. _.;,Pv,:,l:.!p:;,l)'=-. .,._""'"330=;.7~-=--11 IUOK 2961 1966 GT. Loaded. Cbeny $999 rood. $1395. A>k for G"'l' 531--0607 or 536-7335 '68 GTO Beautiful condition. Red, HUNt 4 apd, p/s, J!/b, radio. Quick Sale! &1f>.-0307 1967 Flreblrd . Immac. everywicy! $1650. 3457 Santa Clara Cir , CM. 545-6604. '63 Pontiac Grand Prix , radio, healer, air, $700 * 962--1691 * '61 CHEVROLET - IMPALA 2 Door H1rdtop. v .1, •!!le. lr1n1., fee. eir, power 1t11rln9, r1dio, h11l1r, tinted 91111, !WIH 656), $1666 '61 PL YMOUTH PUIY Ill T BIRD 4 door. v.1, 1ufo"'•tic , _____ •----II tr1n1., power 1teerint, lie:· I"" tory ,;., rodio, heifer. ~IC 1957 Thunderbird. Sec to appreclale. ••494-5464•* CLEAN '62 T·BIRD Ca.II aft 6 PM 541).6"7}3, VALIANT IVZY 1101 $1698 '66 BUICK llYlllA 2 Door Herdtop, v.1, elth. tr1n1., fo1e, o1ir, full ·pewor, --------II r1dio1 he•t.r, whitow11! 1966 Valiant 100 Auto. Mmt Sacrifice. Good cond. $79;j • 545-0617. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS fe\\o°t'Sl -Berth -Parka - tlde&t -DRAWERS A dumbbell: He hlld a pair or boomt'.n lallooed on hill chest btt1.use he always wanted a chest with DRAW- ERS. 'l'lIB SUN NEVER SETS on Cla.sslfied'a action power. Fa1· 1.11 ad to sell around lbe clock, dial 642-5678. I • tir11, ¥i11yl roof, tilrlff gl111, whe1I c:ov1r1. f RQ" 6031 $1997 DUNTON FORD 2240 S. M.ln SANTA ANA 546-7076