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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 8
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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 8

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Los Angeles, California
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8
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BOLSACHICA LAND 14 Part Jan. 31, 1970 gnggngrltg Ctmra Advocate of Boycott Joins Berkeley Staff BY JOHN DKEYFUSS Times Education Writer only an estimate. But the danger of polluting underground water supplies with salt water almost certainly means the developer couldn't cut waterways more than half a mile inland from the highway," Ballinger said. This means that part of the development contemplated by Signal would be a combination of waterways similar to Huntington Harbour. Farther inland, the residential construction would not have direct access to waterways.

Meet and Confer Law to Be Aired Orange County municipal leaders will discuss aspects of the new "meet and confer" law during a seminar today sponsored by Cal State Fullerton at Los Coyotes Country Club in Buena Park. UNREST Continued from First Pas ation," he said. Allen was popular among the students because he knew the idiom of youth, he assumed a role in opposition to "the establishment," and he applied the study of archaeology to current social issues, Brokensha said. The Allen issue led to a protest rally Thursday at the administration building by about 1,500 persons. A.

large group of students spent Thursday night in front of the building an3 the protest resumed when the campus opened for business Friday. Man Dies in Blaze STANTON Delfino Buenrostro, 50, was killed Friday when a gas-filled room ignited as he lit a cigaret in his home at the rear of 10892 Date St. Firemen blamed a leaky oven. Tax Collector Post Sought by Deputy SANTA ANA Joe R. Greene, 48, of Tustin, a deputy county tax collector for the past six years, Friday became the second man to announce his candidacy for the job of county tax collector in the June primary election.

County Budget Director David Hitchcock announced his candidacy Thursday. The incumbent, Don Mozley, 72, who has held the post for SO years, i3 not seeking re-election. Greene is a past president of the Santa Ana Exchange Club and serves as area governor for the club'3 eastern Orange County branches. The Koebig and Koebig study explored three possible ocean accesses to the property at WTarner through inland channels from Anaheim Bay and at the southern end of the Bolsa properties. The final decision as to location of the channel depends on the outcome of studies currently under way by the U.S.

Army Corps of Engineers. James Ballinger, special projects engineer for the County Harbor District, said Friday that the Engineers would jointly finance cutting of a channel only if a portion of the Bolsa property were developed for public recreation. Ballinger said that a fault ruruiing parallel to and a half mile inland from Coast Highway would require that any waterways cut for the property be kept within a half mile of the highway. "That half-mile figure is Continued from First Page Spokesmen for the group have denied that they intended to develop the land themselves. But the owners did engage an engineering firm in 1968 to research the property and determine ixissible and uses for it.

Two of three proposals advanced in that study centered around water-oriented residential plans. Another study, commissioned jointly by public and private agencies, sought to determine the feasibility of harbor openings and marine uses from Anaheim Bay to the southeastern limit of the Bolsa properties. That study, by Koebig and Koebig, cost $47,000 and wras paid for jointly by Orange County, the County Harbor District, the cities of Huntington Beach and Seal Beach, the Bolsa Corps, and the Huntington Harbour Corp. whelmingly to hire him. The department's faculty is rated best in the nation Iy the American Council on Education, an organization highly respected in academic circles.

Harvard University's sociology department is rated second. Intensive consideration of scholarly abilities revealed him to be "a young sociologist of great promise and already substantial achievement," said Dr. Charles Y. Glock, head of Berkeley's sociology department. The 6 foot, 8-inch teacher's efforts to have black athletes Doycott the 1968 Olympics were largely unsuccessful.

In 1967 he forced cancellation of a San Jose State football game by leading a protest related ta a lack of housing opportunities for black athletes. Edwards has said his militant activities are intended to demonstrate that Anglos must stop taking the services of black people for granted. Harry Edwards, 27, who gained international recognition trying to organize a black boycott of the 1368 Olympic Games, was appointed Friday to teach sociology at UC Berkeley. Employment of the con-troversial sociologist, whose dismissal from a teaching post at San Jose State College was once unsuccessfully demanded by Gov. Reagan, will probably be opposed by some UC regents.

"I expect that the matter will be discussed at our next meeting," DeWitt A. Higgs, the regents' chairman, told The Times. "But it is a personnel matter and I can make no further comment at this time." In a highly unusual move, UC Berkeley Chancellor Roger W. Heyns issued a statement supporting Edwards' which will begin July 1. And Edwards has strong backing on the Berkeley campus, where the sociology department voted over Play Ruled Exempt From Lewdness Law SAN FRANCISCO The California Supreme Court ruled Friday that the lewd conduct law under which actors in the controversial play "The Beard" were arrested does not apply to live theatrical performances.

The 4-3 decision granted a writ restraining Los Angeles Superior Court from going ahead with the trial of cast members Alexandra Hay and Rich-ard Bright, producer Robert Barrows and director Robert Gist. Bright and Miss Hay were charged with violating two sections of the penal code while the others were charged with aiding them in committing the violations. "The Beard" depicted an imaginary meeting between Billy the Kid and screen siren Jean Harlow. Four letter words were used frequently and the play ended in a simulated sex act. The majority decision said live plays in a theater are entitled to the same protection under the First Amendment as motion pictures, magazines or newspapers.

In concludes that the basic purpose of the penal code section involved is to punish the crime of vagrancy and that nothing in the legislative history indicates it was intended to apply to a live theatrical peformance. Interviews Due Today SANTA ANA The four members of the Santa Ana Unified School District Board of Trustees will meet in closed session today to interview candidates for the fifth board seat, vacated by the resig. nation of President Charlotte Reiter. Acting President Rudy Montejano said four persons thus far have applied for the post and he expects more at the last minute. The deadline for application is 5 p.m.

today. MLOffi FLIERS' WIVES Ml WltJHtM 3BJIV 10iO announced it was opening an office to arrange and facilitate exchange of mail between prisoners of war and their families. Mrs. Mearns said upon arriving in Los Angeles that her mother had informed her a cable had come, shortly after she left, from Mrs. Cora Weiss, one of the group's leaders.

The cable, said Mrs. Mearns, explained that Mrs. Weiss had been informed by officials in Hanoi that Mrs. Mearns' husband along with five others were dead. Mrs.

Mearns explained that prior to leaving on her trip she had talked with a representative of the group who had informed her that the announcement was to be made. "But when I asked her for verification of the fact she just replied, 'The North Vietnamese have never said anything that was not true'," Mrs. Mearns said. MATA HARIS LOVE 01 SPY COAT IN THE RAIN antL.it a standout in tltesiin with double breamed dash, napoleonie contrast stitching to match the buttons; sizes 5 to 13 in gold or debwyn shop, fourth floor aso at bullock's wilshirt palm spring man ana teiepnone orders accepted Continued from First Page 1 tnamese representa-lives in Vientiane, Laos, the women attempted to make it clear that they were not asking for the release of their husbands. "We only wanted to know one thing.

Are they indeed prisoners and are they alive," explained Mrs. Hardy. Appearing tired from their long journey, the four arrived at International Airport. After tearful reunions with their children and families, they related step by step their quest for knowledge of the fate of their husbands. Mrs.

Hardy, whose husband, Air Force Capt. John Hardy was shot down in a night raid over North Vietnam two years ago, said they had received friendly and sympathetic receptions in every country they had visited excepting Russia. Since they did not have visas they were not allowed to enter Moscow nor to- talk to any Soviet officials. Instead they were forced to stay in a hotel "under lock and key" for three days, a half-mile from the airport, before being allowed to leave. Prior to going to Russia the four women had stopped in Cairo to talk with officials about Israeli-Arab prisoner-of-war policies.

"There is no greater hate nor passion between two countries at war than these two," said Mrs. Hestle, whose husband, AIR Force Lt. Col. Roosevelt Heslte, has been missing since July 6, 1966, when he was shot down north of Hanoi. "But there are no missing men in that war.

There is an exchange of bodies within 24 hours of action. If they can do it, why can't Hanoi," she asked. The most difficult and disappointing part of their journey was the weeklong stay in Vientiane, "only 60 minutes by air to the one spot in the world that had the answers for us about our husbands," recalled Mrs. Hanson. It was there that at a scheduled appointment at the North Vietnamese Embassy that Mrs.

Hanson was denied the chance to talk with embassy officials. The other women were permitted in, but officials would not talk to Mrs. Hanson, apparently because her husband was shot down on the border between North Vietnam and Laos and they refused to consider her case, she said. However, the three women who talked with embassy officials learned nothing. Now that the women are back home they intend to continue their fight for a change in Hanoi's prisoner of war policies.

However, the women struck out at the Women's Strike lor Peace, a group with similar aims which they said was a "radical leftist group that is being used by the Communists." The Strike for Peace group earlier this month jT JUL JiLldF lr4l 3tflt fc) fl Urf jL 3V it an fi I I "sT-mm- -n if fl swfej.rfk.--'-"- i- Hi ft S-' I jl CITY SOPHISTICATE: 0UR.D0UBLE WOOL KNIT BULLOCKS HAND WOVEN IN SPAIN SPECIALLY PRICED 3DAYSONLY.15.00 cool, new version of our slipper-soft sling shoe in soft, woven alone with the new vamp weavenatural, bone, white, yellow or navy will return to $19 after this event. wynshire shoes, third floor available in palm springs in while, bone, or nd-white-blua mail ani telephone orders accepted PANT COSTUME' ours to appear with aplomb on your tour of the city pr the wide, wide worId.topical tunic, eyelet-Japed with its own lariat 5 to 15 in orange fizz, aqua vita, bright navy or collegienne dresses, third floor alhO at bullock's palm springs mail and telephone orders accepted.

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