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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-03-18 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa~ ··-·~~:--;::-::--:=-"';l-;<;r--~~~~~~ .... --.................................. ~ .... 19'! ..... '!ml ................................... .. • • • • er ourns atn on MET DEATH IN AN ALLEY Stephen Stubblefield '· • DAILY PILOT n.M.., Attllw v-.. , A MOTHER MOURNS ' Mra. H•f•n E Ills DAILY PILOT TUESDAY AFTERNOON, M.A:RCH 18, 1969 \"OL Q. NO, .,_ l llCTIOHI, U P'AGll - To See Swallows Nixon to Visit Presid"!I and Mrs:· Richard M. Niz1>n will vjsll San Juan Capistrano Seturday, source&, in ~an Diego Slfid today. The Pres¥Jent is expected to view the a~ ce~ratlon wetco,ming the swallows back to Mission San Juan Capistrano, acco~lng to reports from the San Diego Chamber of Commerce this morning. The weekend visit, announced today by ?'es! secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, will include a stop at San Diego, where Nixon will view a Mexican Folk Art display presented by-,the Museum• .of :f.fan in Ba1boa Park as part of San Diego's 200th anniversary celebration. 'Ill< President and-Ftrzic Lady may spend Frlilay and Saturday night at the Hotel del Coronado in Coronado. The presiden~al party will leave W ashingtOn on Friday, stopping in Independence, Mo., where the chief ex- ecutive will visit fonner President Harry S. ·Truman before flying on to Southern CalifornJa. Press Secretary Ziegler said that Nixon Initiated the mettiog with Truman, who recenUy ipent a few days in a hospital. ' The President and ·Mrs. Nixon are etpecll!d to return to Washington late Suoday. Mesa W orker ·Arrest~d ln Attack on Barmaid Two suspecll!I -one a Costa h1esa ...,·orker -today are charged with rape, burglary and kidnap for ransom after police alleged they attacked a barmaid at a Stanton beer bar ~af at elosiog time. " ., Arrested on~ the. thai-~ ai\ Joe,..F. Veraatepi, 24, of · Santa Ana; _."'boo was . - Si.Sters Rol,bed, K.idnaped by . Man at Gtmpoint Tw.Jl young Seal Beach sisters were kidnaped and robbed at gunpoint then released Monday altemoon by a man looking for the bus depot, police reported today. The sisten, II and t years old, told police that Ir stranger forced them to drive lo HunUngton Beach then look an unspecified amount of money frOib. them. The girls said they were loading drirty.iood into their: can on the beach about one-half mile east ot warner Avenue w~ the man approached them. police laid. First be asked the girls for JocaUon \ ()f the nearut bus depot. Then, with a 1m1ll pistol in his hand; he told them to g« in lhe. car and c:kive him to Huntlngtoo Bfaclt· accortlinr to.police reporta. In I.he car. the man told tht 4!r1s he wouldn't hurt them U they did what he said and that he was alr<ady wanled by the polke. old loveollgaton. He le.ft the. car •t the comer of Alain and Wtlaut streell tn llunll~gton Beach. -· -.... ---- picked up at his place of employment in Costa Mesa, and Jesse G. Perez. 20, of Stanton. Officers said the 27·year-ol<t bannald toJd them 'ihe was closing the Cul)ah liar.I b.'!tO> )l(ul! . Rl•d.,' wheii.' .two ""'toc!iet' <\rllo· had ~··~. . . .. aild 's£iirli(pool asked ' if .:U.el~ help cleaniup. . , • She cllared the cuh reglste and tocl the money to the office . As sh~ lfai le;;tving, she said, one of them ·grabbed her: aticf;bicked her" Inside? ~ » ' · 'He till .Jitt fu the ~aw-JOit · the semnd 1 man came in and they! Wresl.Jed her to the flOor, ahe related. • Each rrlan, w· told police, assaulted her and then left the office'. She closed th<!",of!lce door, locked It· and began calllpg police. \ The men broke the door open, tore t~e teleiihone line from the. wall and left alter ·taking the $72 from the desk,, 'f 'He Was My Only Child ... I Had flim Alone ••• I Knew He W. as Peddling Pot. •.• But to Be Shot?' • • Patton's Son L,eads Drive; Losses Light ' . . ' . SAIGoll' (Ul'l! ~ A u:~. armored coluinp five mites long led a force of tthu1ands qf AUJed lnfaptrymen today against Communist troops threatening Saigon. Communlst I~ were de!crib- ed as ''considerable" In a day of heavy fighting. The offensive, labeled operation Atlas Wedge, wu thought to be the largest of the War, eclipsing the 40,000 man Allied force whJch battled Communists in the iame junglu 30 miles northwest of Saigon In OperaUon Junction City in February 1967. Col. George S. Patton Ill, comm11-nder of the tanks and son of the famous Rendal, s8Jd the count of Communist bodies in today's fighUng was expected to be "CQMlderable." Allied gunships reported klll:tng 50 today and another · 28 Communists died Monday in lhe preliminary stages of the operation. Allied kmelJ were "light." Far to the north, weary Leathernecks of the 9th U.S. Marine Regiment, ended their bl~rly fought campaign Jn the jungled mountains near Laos and were flown out under fire by heUcopters today from their A Shau Valley positions. UPI· correspondent David t.amb said the Communists fired nearly 300 rounds of mortar fire at the fleet of 50 helicop~ whioh. flew out the last Marines loday but lhat most of the shell8 ·exploded harmle11lY in the dense undergrowth. MOlllOOn rains and fog had prevented lhelr departure until today. The Marines killed 1,MI North Viet- namese and lost 125 dead and 700 wound- ed in ihe operation which also captured 500 tons of ammunition and blocked a CommUnlst. attack on the northern coastal clilu. Today the Maripes were rewarded with ,1 ,200 worth of1beer and soft drinks by rear area men who su~ ported them. Exact •lie ol today's operation was a military secret but Allied spokesman esUmat~ 20.000 CommunJsts were ln (See VIETNAM, Pop l) ' Word Drupt It's a scare v.·ord for most partnU. But if they real ly want to help their children quash the crisis they've got to keep their cool. That'• the advice of Alton Blakes- lee in today'a seventh lnltalbnent of. a IO.part aeries, "Orup, 19'9, '' ln whk:h the nationally noted sd~ wrl~r· cautlona parent.I to lbten to theli younpten. Olten th• tMnagen of today know more about drup thin their parents. St.art catching up by readln& t~ tla1'1-ll)!ltaliln<l!Nlr P1gt !. • ' • " The Mouse That Roared Bci~ish ·Troops Ready to Crush Rebels on Tiny Angfiilla ST. JOHNS , Anligua (AP) -Britain made a show -of military muscle toc:lay in Us Jong dispute with rebellious ,Anguilla. A company of Rtd Devil paratroopers, about 150 strong, boarded three British frigates at lhls island, 70 mlles from Anguilla. - The paratroopers flew In this morning from English rain and fog to a landing under a sunny sky in 90-degree tem- perature on Anligua, where the frigates Rothesay, Rhyl and Minerva were wa iling. The: little fl otilla made no immediate move to sail. In London, British Foreign Secretary W.ichael Stewart said the military buildup -reported also · to include 40 Scotland Yard policemen -was only precau- tionary. Without naming either Ronald Webster, Anguilla's chief execuUve, or Prime Minister Robert L. Bradshaw of the St. Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla federation !rom which the Isl.and declafed its in- dependence in 1967, Stewart indicated Britain wants change111 made. "It's no wish of ours for the Anguilla people to live under a regime they do not want," Stewart told the House of Commons. Facing a barrage of questio ns, he described movements of paratroopers and police as "preparatory moves" lo cope with any emergency. J{e did not specify what emergency he had in mind. The 6,000 Anguillans are an in- dependent group de scended from pirates, escaped slaves and Irish convicts. The islanders from the start bitterly resisted being incorporated Into lhe associated federal slate of St. Kitls·Nevis-Anguilla in 1967. They have lways resented the role of being a 11ort of "piggyback col· 'I /(new He Was Peddling' Slain Boy's Mom _Admits By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 lftt 01U1 J"ll•I flell How do you explain things to a woman who ,kissed her only son Good Night, just before he wa s killed by pollce, running down a dark· alley, l+years-<>ld and dressed in burglar's black? You don't lry. Awit Pauline, "l don't think 1 could stand to go into his room. J '\'e promised hi s dru1n sel ... " Five days before the Stubblefield boy was wheeleii into the Costa Mesa N.:emorlal Hospital emergency room ear- ly Sund ay, dead of a .38 calh bullet in the chest. A1rs. Ellis took him there to be treated for an LSD overdose. You just listen and P.1rs. Helen Ellis, of 10112 Kline Drive, Santa Ana Height11, talked Monday aboot a sometlmes·troubl· ed boy who will always live to his AFTER DISCUSSION mother in a personal sense. She sakt he took the fl.50·per-capsu\e Stephen Stubblefield was a complex, drug, described as b e I n g of CQntradlctot;i child of the tin1es, .AtC· Czechoslovakian origin, blue In color and cording to those who knew him .. with cut with Kool-Aid, after an upseUlng an IQ of 135 and a conflict-between discussion or hJ.s tnvolvement. tendencies loward right and wrong. "I trled to g61. him to glve me · a ?lfrs. Ellis sat and tal ked. list of ~names." she said , urging him "He was my only child. J had him to cooperate with police detectives. alone. I palCI. for him alone. I know · "Mama, if } do -or 'they' even be was peddllng pot." _think I do -they'll get you or me EIGHTH GRADER The Heinz Kaiser Intermediate School eighth grader had jwl built a clever 1elence (air project, she said, and asked for permission to '°In a volunteer service program at Falr\rtew State Hoapttal. One of his fatal offenses, perhapt, was too much curiosity about drugs in a Ume when It la criminally profitable for some to make 1 variety ol ruearcb materials cheaply available. "Evldent.ly someone got him 1Larted using, then peddling, but he was too brilliant and healU1y to bt hooked. JUs room ii full of books about drugs," Mrs. Eln1 said. Friend&· and · ri!Jalivea moved about the expensive, well-to-do Country Club ·Estala home shared by Mrs. Ellis and Steve, who did extensive landscape work of good quaUty. "1 want you to pack lip hll lhing!I. Hooey,'' ahe aald, turnina to the boy'! or both of us." she quoted him as sayin11. after which she told hlm such a thoulht was ridiculous. . "They have ways of doing It $0 It ''ill look like an accident," Mr.t. Ellis continued, recalling her son's words then and wondering now aboyl his violent death. She 1ald Steve watched \.elevislon with her Satuh:lay night, then went to bed about 10 p.m., to &et up early and accompany her to a professional coo- ventlon In Los Angeles on Sund;iy. - By n10mln& he wu gone end P..tra. Ellis thought a!Ulough It WI$ ralhcr unu!'uaJ , behavior that he might IJ.a9C gone (6' R frlend'A ' home l~tead and ch"Ose not to aV.'Jken her. Detectives arrived at the Clyde Neill home ne1.l door at 20102 Kline Drive h1ter Sunday morning carrying an Iden- tification cant which confirmed tbat their (See MOTHER, Pare l) ony" of St. KiUs and have vowed never to bow to the domlnation of Prime Minister Robert. Bradshaw of St. Kitts. It was Bradihaw who has pressed Britain hardest to end A n g u I I l a ' s hreakaway bid first laWlChed in N.:ay 1967. -Stewart stressed that the object of British government policy now is "to instnll Her Majesty's commissioner in Anguilla with the task of working out a long-term solution." This commissioner in effect would become the ruler of the island in the name ol Queen Elizabeth II. Opposition Conserva!ive leaders, refer· ring to widespread press reports that a British invasion of Anguilla Is Im. minent, asked Stewart bluntly whether the government intends to use force against the AnguiUans. The foreign secre4.ary advised them lo awa it a full statement he Intends making later in the week. But he insisted the military buildup was only precau- ti onar)'. British correspondents on Anguilla said Webster, island's self-proclaimed presi- dent, has assembled a 250-maµ arniy armed with ancient carbines and cannons left over from the Napoleonic wars. The cris1s with London began la.st week \Yhen a Foreign Office under secre tary, William· Whitlock. visited the island and tried to talk the islanders back Into the fed"eralion. They chased him of! at gunpoint. \Vhitlock on his return lo London told a new11 conference , the islanders were •·coropletely dominated by a gangster- type element" 'from outside an d "generally the feellng Is throughout the Carjbbean -I don't know if anyone has any proof -that lhey are somehow like "the l.tafla." Orange Co as& Weather 1.1ore of the same is the word fron1 the weatherman for Wed- nesday, with clear skies foltow- . ing ·the morning clouds and teml,M!ratures back in the mid· die 60's. INlilD,F. TODAY A ntw platf in Santa Ana and a concer' at ONnge Coast Col· lcgc are rtvieWtct by DAILY PILOT critic1 todat1. See /!'fltr· tainmene, Page J9. ,.,..,.. " c,w...... -1 ,,........... ,. ... t-1et lS , .... ~: It g ,.1111 ~tlkff • 0"¥trc" t lt '-flfl ,... • 1.11m h Mllltllt t• ,..,._. ... u ""'"'. l.•!1 0 .. llllf II -.. Mlll.Dlfiln IJ J 1 I .1 I . ' • J OAllY PILOT s Bl-ack Students Appeal for UCI Assi ·stance BJ THOMAS FORTUNE Of .. o.tlf ,, •• '"'" Varylng from polite to maUtr-of-fact to impolite, three black students aaked ror the help of adult, white women P.tOllday at UC Irvine. Each uling his own approach, they appealed to 1$0 membtra of UCI Town and Gown to prove their purported con· cern by gi\•ing of tbtir time and money to help the black community. John King, U.year .. ld 1<>phomore !roin Psychologist Admits Sirhan Case 'Copied' LOS ANGELES (UFJ ) -'!be pro-. secution put a ddeoae psychok>&ist at the Sirhan B. Slthan murder trial through an embarrassing grilling today and forced him to admit his summary of the defendant's psychological condition was dra"'" largely from a book about New York City's "mad bomber." Dr. Martin M. Schon, a clinical psychologist who had testified that Sirhan's paranoid penonallty ablolved him of deliberation in the shooting of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, conceded thlit he had uaed almo5t verbatim l•nfUll! from the book in his summation of the mentality of the 2.f.-ye.v<1ld Anb immigrant. The book, "Casebook of a Cririie Psydliatrist" by Dr. James A. Brus.el of New York, was published last (all at the same time Schorr ~'as making tests ol Sirhan in bis jail cell. Dep. Dist. Atty. Jotm Howard handed the Jury an exhibit showing excepts from Schorr's report in a Jeff. hand column and verbaUm quotes from Drussel't book in tilt right hand column. Then he instructed Schon-to read a paragraph from ooe column and then a pe.ragraph from an«her. The aimllar1ty of the language was not on1y striking but in many cases verbatim. "You copied right out ol this book, didn't you?" Howard asked. "I used matttial out of this book•• Schorr sa1d. ' "I often go to a book like that to V.Tlte my formal report. II it upres.ws 11 paranolc situation better, I me it. J'm not the best writ.er in the world." The mad . bomber case in the J950s concerned a man who left explosives iri locken in railroad stations, bus terminals and other public places. In one chapter, Brussel wrote the mad bomber's hatred ol his father chang- ed to a hatred of all the people of New York City. In his report on Sirhan, Schorr wrote that the boy's hatred of his father changed to .a hatred of all the Jewish people in Israel. From Page l VIETNAM. • • the immediate area. Elements of four U.S. divisions and a nwnber of South Vietnamese divisions were involVed. Some U.S. and South Vielnamese officials have said a1.Jn1U1y at 40,000..Cornmunials were in posiUon to attack Saigon. Mi"tary observer• thouaht far more than 40.000 A11ied troops were Involved slnct. Allied strategy has always been to outnumber the enemy whenever po!isl- ble. Military offlcia!J said earlier only that "more than 10,000" troop11 were in,·olved. American and South Vietnamese or- ficiala have warned ror weekt of a threatened Communist attack on Saigon and said 40,000 North Vietname1e and \'let Cong troops have maued for a direct usault on the capital city. Other thousand• ol Communists were nearer the Cambodian border. Today'• massive operation followed heavy slrlkea by 852s which crate.red the jungle area l''here lnt.elli1ence reports located Communist bunker syat.emt. I DAILY PILOT ....,... ..... " ............... ------CAUPOINIA OllANGI CO.Ut l'UILIUllNt) (OMl'ANY l'• .. •rt N. w,,4 l't"*lll"""l'""ll- Ylt• l',.'-4 -(MMt .. IMNM< r1i ..... , w •• ,u .... Tl11111•1 A. M,,,11111• Mtir.ttllll I dliitr p,,1 Nl11111 ._. .... ---C•t9 Mnol: »I W..1 lt'I' llf'ftt .. ...,,.,, ~: 2211 ~I l t "'9• llwlrt-L_.,. loeld'I: nt ,_, .. _ Hwl ....... ~: ........... San Francisco, c• to be polite and emphasize the positive thlngs black studt.nts are doing, like tutoring in the black community. ·. More matt.tr-of.fact was Jim Winder, 25-year-old chairman of the Irvine Black Student Union. He told why he believes the educational structure needs to be changed and why he feels the chief demands of slriking studenls at SF State are ju.slified. Tom WaUord, 26-year-old junior from Santa Ana, wu dirtct In aaybtg whit l\e felt. lie suggested it ls comedy for him to appeal for tbe help ol while people who are sure to pass the buck. King spoke about the new mQOd among black 1ludenls. He s.ld their slogan -black power -has been taken to mean violence. He said that ls a mistake that has been made by the mass news media. Kini uld black pow•r ia not raclam in reverse but a way for blacks to think positively of themaetves after 300 years of being taught lo hate t.bemaelves. Black sludent.1 of ~ this day are not going to be selfish and use their educa- llon to become u close to the middle ctus white as they can, he said. 1'hat l! the new mood . E\'ery Black Student Union in the country . he sald, ha:i a program for spreading \he weallh by tutortn&. those In tbe black commUSlitlea not able to attend college. He said ~t is I.be · DAILY l'ILOT Plllte ,, Jll'lllM P. ·cotlla1 VIEW FROM BEACH SHOWS FIRE DESTRUCTION, DAMAGE AT THREE PENINSULA HOMES Two Died in Pre-Dawn Bla1e at 414 E. Ocean Front (Center); Cause Still Souglit Hu11tington to Liee11se Cats? '• . . City Treasurer Suggests Move· to ;:Pay for Shelter • • ticense cats in Huntington Be4ch? At lhe ri.sk of incurring the wrath of hundreds of cat owners, lluntington Beach Cily Treasurer 'Varren Hall Mon- day night suggested to the City Council that a cat licen.se might -.be a good revenue producer for city coffers. "If we need more funds for the animal shelter, why not issue licenses for cat.s! I just shelled out money for two dogs and I don ·1 understand the discrimina- tion." Hall's suggestion came as the council \\'BS hearing an attack on the animal shelter operation. Robert S h a r k e y operates the clly pound under a contract with the city. TOOK NO ACTION Although the council look no action on Hall's suggestion, Councilmen Jerry Matney and Donald D. Shipley said they wanted to make a vl1lt to the pound ~1onday night to see the "deplorable conditions" outlined by Diana Stuart or 212311 Chesterbrook Lane. Mrs. Stuart, who clilimed she was speaking for "muty cllenlt" who were not named, said conditions at the ahlmal shelter are "hardly humane". She claimed the dogs sit on "cold cement, shivering in the dampness of the evenings near the beach." She particularly objected to use of "a metal box" and a truck backed up to the box and the exhaust 111ed to dispose· . of sick and unwanted animals. "This is unacceptable and inhumane. The animals die in agony." City Administrator Doyle M i 11 e r presented a video lape of the animal shelter conditions showing that the animals have wooden floors In part of thelr cages and that conditions appeared in good order. DOGS COT WET Sharkey invited anyone who wanls to drop in and look it over to do so. He expla ined that during the recent heavy rains some dogs did get wet from the rain despite a partial roof over the carea. He said, too, that a truck had been used ror disposal when the usual means ol putting the animals l'rona Page 1 MOTHER MOURNS SON • • • young John Doe was Steve Stubblerteld. A Los Angeles Police Department dettctlve finally made contact with Mrs. Elli.s at the convention she was attending as sales representative for a large medical supply flnn In Missouri. "I'd like to talk to you about your son Stephen," he said. "Is he hurt?" . "I looked into his eyes." Mrs. Ellis said Monday "and. I said : He's dead." "How! l thought maybe drugs ... " ''He "·as shot.'' "I fell to the floor myse~f. lf .the boy \\'as running, he v.•as obviously JUSt scared. He was not shooting back .. ~ he \Vas nol armed. This is just logic, she said. . There are answers thal will be given to these inevitable questions, but they will conllnue to &naw at her con· sclousness for weeks ahead , even after invea:Ugators finish the case. NOT OWN CLOTHES "He wasn't even wearing his own clothes. How could he act down there with all those tools? He alway.s ~d fl'IOUgh money available. \Vho was 1n the car that drove away?" she asked. "The poUce told me It was the "·ork of someone who had been burglar~ng ror years. He couldn't have had time to break 1n like that If he was home at 10 and was lrtlot at 11 :'5," she said . '"l'ht only thing he ever st.alt was a roll or tape from Stater Bros. Market and that M:ared the life out of him. ~'hy did they ha ve to shoot?" Answers exist, but t.hry must come from author ities. "My friends all tell me : 'Helen, you're so lucky to hl\•e a IOl"I like Steve '," she continued. "He was the onlv penon I e\·er knew u·ho loved me. That's wby 1 can't stand to go 1ee him," she said . "To me, he'll ne\·cr be de&d." "Thal dog is look.Ing all O\'tr the house for his ma.ster. ·• she said ln- l.tn'Upting, then colling to the pup named 'Hipple' becauM.': ht. had a $1.000 molber and 1 hippie mutt dog for a father. ''Honey," she said, ''he Isn't hut." FINAL CHOICE Before lht ltafig--fUl.al cbolc• l.Mt ended his life , young Stubblefield v.·as known to be lnvolvtd only In boyish pranks and h.is photo wu In the DAILY rnm three )'enr1 1go. l{e l'lnd a young Bny View Ele1nrntary School buddy encountered and killed a 71,ir!nol snake in the nelghborhoOd. "Whal would you do? .•.• Run? ••• not ... Steve Stubblefield," read the ironically prophetic memento his mother found among scrapbooks Monday. ''He never ran from anything in his life," 11he said. 'M'le boy who apparently experimented too widely and grew up too fa.st into an adull world of crime -\\•here life is included Jn the stakes-finall y round a time \\•hen he had to run. One must assume a kind of melancholy forgiveness toward him. how ever, whatever his trespasses against socie1y, because he has paid the full. extreme price. "He is not under indictment," District Altorney Cttil Hicks said 1'1onday, "he is deceased." He may hive been a burglar, but he w36 human too. Action Deferred In Peru Seizure Of U.S. Vessel \VASHINGTON (AP) -The United States apparently has decided. for diplomatic rea!lOllS, to delay taking action against Peru in last moDlh's lhip sci:i.urc ' of: the Peruvian coast. S1ste Department .90Urces say the Un!ted States doea not want to preu the isrue now at the ri.sk oI further irritating the already scrained rrlaUons between the two countries. A law which went into effect last November calll for suspenslon or U.S. m!lltary 11\d to any country illejally seizing a U.S. sh.Ip. Peru seb:ed the Mariner. a U.S. tuna vessel, ll mllt!ll off tht Peruvian coa1t last Feb. 14. 11lf: United State.s consldtrs waters 12 miles beyond the coastline of maritime nations to be. Intern ational territory: Peru claims jurl.tdictlon over "'alefl eitendlng 200 miles from lta coast. A s1m llar Incident last Dec. JO, In u•hlch Ecuador sti:i.ed tht tuna vcs1tl Day lal1nd , resulted Jn An almost Jm- mtdlate suipe.nslon of U.S. mllltary aid to that country. away !1ad failed due to heavy rain. Mrs. Stuart admitted to the council that she had never discussed the matter \Vith Sharkey. Mayor Alvin llf. Coen sug/estcd that she do so. Sharkey said that ll appears that hfrs. Stuart might be interested in opening a humane society of her own and if that were lrue, "I'd be glad lo help her all I can.'' He added that cats are one or the biggest problems fqr his officers. backbone of lbe Blaqk Student Unio111, not vlolcnct. HI.a own main interest, he said, is to "share my mind among the masses of black people." Wlhder also accused the preu of &ensa- tlonaliam. lit 1.ut black 1tudenta want changer in tf¥! ecJ,ucai.ional ath.lcture, but people don't stop to think demanda might be ~e for gond reason. Ualng Sa1i •Francisco Stal<! u illus· traUon, be u.Jd he rlees two princlpil demands. .•· ...... Property Loss -'In ·Balboa Fire Set at $26~000 . ' one ls unlimited enrollment for third world (minority) students. SF St.ate In 1960 was 10 peretnt black. but Jn 1988 only enrolled four percent blacks, be said. He suggested the college could just have bi~er classes without great financial strain. The second key demand, he said, ls autonomy for the bl1ck stu·dies depart· ment. He said the promlSe ot a black studies department has beeh made iioce 1965, but black llU~'1\IS 'were told there wtren't funds avalllble. But when the student itrike began, out of the clear blue sky there were 11 faculty PoJltlona: and funds suddenly avaUablt, he noted. If it only was given under duress, not wllllngly, studentJ felt it alto wpuld. be taken away at the sllghtut provocation, he said. Winder also defended tactics of dis• ruption and takeover as strategically necessary. "If a guy ls willing to be arrested you've got to believe that cat is smre," he said. "You have to admire, I would think, thls type of guts commitment." Watford said be woodirtd how many "'4 · times his or the other bla4 ttudents' . The total prope~.amage In the fatal mothers had an apportunlty to have tea fire that hit thrfe' Balboa Peninsula at 11 o'clock in the morning and how IKl!"e1 Mon~ay and killed two persons many of them are ar Oie whit.e women's has Deen set at $26,000, fire investigators houses scrubbing the floor ., said today. He. said he looks on the women as "9M The pre-dawn blaze caused the asphyX"-of the first line of enemJes we reach. lation deaths of Mrs. Patricia Ruby, "I look out on your smlllng faces ~ 4{1, and Richard Slanley Hadden, 38, I see You are Very proud to h1~ve a f~ \vho were to u n d in a smouldering black students to talk to you, he said. bedroom at 414 E. Ocean Front. Houses "'I'wen_ty-siX" b.l~ck student.s out of 3,500 <it 4.16 and 412 were heavily damaged . at .. Irv1ne. So ~ts. a .real big deal. " Fire prevention investigators for the \Ve kno~ 1!, IS. Just anoth~ token, Newport Fire Department ~londay were Wa.tford said. ll 1s very typical of the · · ed b r h ~'h1te man. Everyone passes the buck. Join y experts rom. ot er county You say 'I'm not that way. ~faybe my departments to try to find the cause net hbor' is.' " of Iii• blue ti\•\ d!Jlroyed .9oe Iiouoe . ;f. llld, "II' you an really COllOtJll'd llnd badli ~'"'·two. other1 •. ; , ab"'t 1etlinf tho''°" rtll>t, counlitad The e~ilte'o0he"t'lre, which apflarent)1:~\ the lnftrlor education blaCk 1i'ude!ltl '8 etarted m th• front portion ol the two-gettlnr"Jn Stnta Ana. We need -~ 1tory frame dwelling hai not yet been · bodies, your money and material1., · .. , d,termllied. . "You 11y you're 1ood hearte~ whtfe The .three-alarm fire started at '4 a.tn. , folks. We'd Ukt to find out where-.very- Monday and was reported I<> ~ fire ' cine'• heart b really located. We want I<> dePiftrntnt b¥ N8wport Poli~ ii(Hcer flvt. you 1 chance to P';"OVt Y.our 100<1· Kellh'.-OOUtnt, ltibo 1poMed the flaroea ·natured Hlvu. '· ~ ·.:· whae ori'TouUne patrol. "U we~~ make It tJe:rt at Jrvlne,.~ Collins won commendation from his can make ll anywhere in the . country. department for alerting nearby residents All three black students .received ~bo~t and helping them out of their homes the same ap,plause for saying, each 1n his threatened by fire. own way, understan.d u.5, .~nd help our Funeral services for the two victims black brothers and sisters. . . . One woman asked what spec1!1cally are pending at Baltz Corona del Mar they plan to do v•ilh donations and 11or\uary. assistance they receive. Cos111os 272 Orbited fl.10SCO\V (UPit -The Soviet Union orbited Cosmos-272. an u nm a n n e d satellite, f.fonday, the Tass News Agency announced today. Y.'estern experts said the vehicle probably was a 1o11eather satellite. • • King answered, "What you're saying is you don't want 10 give us money to buy guns. Set up a scholarship for a black student in your name . \Ve need books for the black community. And money for materials to use in our tutoring." Winder said, "Our main goal is to get more black students on campus. \Ve need scholarships and housing." FINAL 2 DAYS PHASE I FOR CHARTER MEMBERSijl ? AT llU~TINGTON BEACll 50% OFF • I. • Huntington .Bea~h · EDITI O N Today's Final N.Y. Stoen TEN CENTS Second Huntington Ho·spital, Survives Scare By WILLIAM REED Of Ille O•llY P'Jllf Slllf A plan to build a "second hOspital in Huntington Beach survived a major challenge Monday night before the City C'.ouncil, but the ti-oubles facing' owners of the proposed specialized hospita1 may not be over. Robert Zinngrabe and a group of doc- tors and inVestors known as the llB~I Corp. has proposed conversion of the Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital at ?.fain and Delaware streets lo an 80-bed specialized hospital. The necessary U6t permits were ob- tained from the city Board ct Zoning Adjustment and the project apparent.Jy was cleared through the city when owners of the Huntington Intercom· munity Hospital and the city Planning Comm1ssion joined lhe council in wonder- ing hoW the permits for the second hospital happened to be granted without fanfare or public notice. Monday nJci)t the ooundl, with Mayor Alvin ¥. Coen absllfnlnc, voted to ahtlve an appeal ~ t,be attorney for the Hu~ Uniton lnten:ommunlty •Hospital owners and to ... tum a I'll fl1ln& lee the attorney had paid. 'lbaf apparesitly ends t h e ad- mlnlatrative proqedure and furthe.r action to · blocl( -on -of the Paclllca Hoapltal ·apparently will have to be in c:ow1. HOwever, the matter goes before the • Regional llolpltal Planning Alsoc:laUon next Monday and that group coWd refuse 'sanction lo the HBH Corp. Two matters will be presented : The request by the 118.H Corp f0< aanction tor the 80-bed hospital and a convalescent hospital to replace the pr<Oent lacllity, and the request hy HWlllnglOJl lnten:om- munlty H.ospita!, .for approval of con~ st.ructJon of a &tCood tower at the Beach Boulevard faclllty. The llBH proposition la !or a 116-bed tower with openlcg ol laclllUes for about 80 beds now, aCCOJ'.ding to William Power, spokesman for the hospital group. Monday n!ghi Mayor Coen opened lbe discussion of an 11ppeal filed by his law associate Jerome M. Bame on beli&U of HunUngton lnteroommunity Hospital. H• pointed out that he relt there would J>e a conru.ct pf interest lf he. were discu.ssing and voting on lhe me"L! of the iss.le, but-argued that the council wu di!cuSsing proo<dure only and that ht could legally do IO. City Attorney Don Bonfa did not airee with Mayor t..:tien, stating that he felt ~fayor Coen bad ,a conOlct ln the hospital issue no matter what the topic. ~1ayor Coen, also a lawytr, said he was concerned "about the lnterventiotl of the city attorney in not letting tho appeal come to the council." , "You have put this city in a pl6ition of vulnerability," he charged, biued on (S .. HOSPITAL, Paae Z) Drugs ' " rt/;:'J:' Word Drugs! It's a scare word for most perents. But if they really want to help their children quash the crish they've got to keep their cool. U.S. La unches Big Dfive . ' That's the advice of Alton Blakes- lee in today's seventh installment of a 10-part series, 11Drugs, 1969," in which the nationally noted science writer cautions parents to listen to their youngsters. Often the teenagers Of today know more about drugs lhan their parenis. War's Largest Offens.ive Takes Hea vy, Casualties , . .,:::::;;;;;;:A,,.:..~:;:;;::i.,_J.i. Start catching up by reading to-~.. .-=n;::;.1 day's installmeni on Page 3. SAIGON. (UPI) -A U.S. annared column five miles long led a force of thousands of. Allied infantrymen today against Communist ' troops lhrealenlng SaJgon. Communist' losses were describ- ed as "considerable" in a day of heavy fighting. The offens.ive, labeled operation Atlas Wedge, was thought to be tile largest or the -war, eclipsing the 40,000 man AUied force which battled Communists in lhe same jungles 30 miles northwest No Water for Firemen Nixon to . Visit Capo Saturday For Swallows $10,000 Fire Destroys Westminster Fish Farm Fl'1*5 -ilrtl<d the, Pacific Goldfish Fann in Weslinlnsler Maoiday alien-, destroying .... thlid of Jbe brftdlng stock. ml causing an ..tlmal<d ll0,000 , damage in Dwldinp. '11lree ·pumper tnicks from t h e 'Vestmlnstu Fire Department and a unit from Hun,tington Buch arrived at the fire shorUy al~ 12:14: p.m. and f~ ~ater eve.rjwbere but not a drop with \Vhicb to douse lhe flames. Unable to use the water from the fish breeding tanks which. were sur· rounded by high fences, firemen had to drag 900 feet of hose acrosg a wide clralnage ditch to reach the burning buildings. Bill Knowles, assistant Westminster fire chief and Chief Mel Ingram directed a crew of 27 men around the smoke-filled hatchery for about 30 minutes until they had C<JntroUed the blaze. Fireman Ross Johnston suffered an injured leg when he fell through a burned floor. He was treated and released by the Westminster Hospital. Cause of the blaze was traced down to an overheated electric mo to r • \Vestminster Fire Department officials said. Brazil Flood Kills 283 RECIFE. Brazil (AP) -The death toll from floods in northeastern Brazil has ~ to 283 and 40,000 persons are reported homeless, officlals said to- day. H..,Y Akiyoma, owner ol the utohory, looted at 1--~·St., Aid be Will ftmaln open: let bililnOis evm though his breeding otock IU!fered an additional $10,000 Jn damag.,, Services Slated In Double Death ~I all\l lln. Richard ll. Ni•on wlll •\lll,Slp JQID Caplllnno Salur •• -,,. ia SID Diego Nill toda)'; ... Tut President la ~ to view the innuaJ· eelebratlon welcoming the swallows bM:t to 'Mission San Juan Cap~aoo. according to reports from the San oteco Chamber of Commerce this momlng. The weekend visit, announced today by preu secretary Ronald ' L. Ziegler, will include a stop at San Diego, where Nixon wW v:iew 1 Mexican Folk Art display prtHnted by the Museum of Funeral servlct..! begin with a roury Man 1n BaJboa Park 11 part of San at 8'30 o'clock tonight for Mr. and Diego's JOOth anniversary celebraUon. The President and First Lady maY Mrs. James Gambrell, vicllma of a spend Friday and Salurday nJgbi at weekend murder.su.lclde 1n Sea.1 Beach. the Hotel del Coronado in Coronado. '!be service wiU be held at the Balley The pftlldenU.l party will leave and Bartell Funeral home in Anahelm. Washington on Friday, stopping in A 10 a.m. masa will be celebrated Il\df:~ Moo; where the chief ex- Wednesday at St. Hedwig's Church Jn ecutive will visit former President Harry Loi Alamitos, with burial scheduled , S. Truman before flying on in Southern afterward at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery CaJifomJa. in Orange. • Pi'Ull &!Crelary Ziegler said that Nixon Police said Mn. Darlene Gambrell, JniU1ted the meeUng with Truman, who 38, shot her 46-year-old husband wtth recenUy spent a few days In a hospital. a .38 caliber revolver, then turned the 'Ibe Pruident and Mrs. Nixon are weapon against herself and committed expecttd to return to Washington late suicide. Sunday. The couple lived in the Seal Beach area for the past three and one.half years. GambreJI was a computer systems administrator for the U.S. Army, his wife a houseWife. They are survived· by four ehUdren, TonJ, 18, Kevin, 13, Teri, I, and Lori, $. Stork Mark eta NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market elmed with a moduate gain today. Trading was acUve. (See qootaUons, Pages Ill<!!). of Saigon In OperaUon Junction City lll February 1961. Col. George S. Patton III, commander of the tanks and son of the famous general, said the count of Communist bodies in today's fighting was expected to be "considerable." Allied gunships reported killing 50 .today and another 28 Communists died Monday in the preliminary stages of the operation. Allied losses were "light." Far to Ute north, weary Leathernecks ot the 9th U.S. Marine Regiment, ended their bitterly fought campaign in the jungled mountains near Laos and were flown out under fire by helicopters today from their A Shau VaJley positions. UPl correspondent David Lamb said the Communists fired nearly 300 rounds of mortar fire at the fleet of SO helicopters which flew out the last Marines today but that most of the shells exploded harmlessly in the dewe Girls Ahdu~ted Kidnaped , Robbed at Gunpoint Two young Seal Beach sisters were );idnaped and robbed at gunpoint then released Monday 11.ftemoon by a man. 1ook!n& fos the tMll 4epot_, pollce riported today, The 1lster1, 18 and 9 yeitn old, told poUce that a stranger forced them to drive to Huntington Beach then took an unspecified amount o! money from them. The girls said they were loading driftwood into their can on the beach about one-haU mile east of Warner Avenue when the man approached them. police said. First h~ . a~.ked the Jir1s for locatlort of the .._ b\il d1j!OL• ~· Will\ a aman pistol t~ ~~ ~aria. Ile loll ' lhem to ·set in the car and drlff.hltn • lo Hunting\()• Beach. according to polllle rtports. ' In the car, the man told tpe girls be wouldn 't hurt them IC lhey did what be sald and that he was already wanted by the pollce, said investigators. He left the car at the corner of Main and \Valnut streets in Huntington Beach. Cat Licenses Suggested By, Huntington Treasurer License cats in Huntington Beach! At the risk of Incurring the wrath ol hundreds of cat owners, Huntington Beach City Treasurer Warren Hall Mon- day night suggested to the City Counc il that a cat license might be a good revenue producer for city coffers. "If we need more funds for the animnl shelter, why not issue licenses for cats? I just shelled out money for two dogs and I don't understand the di.scrimina-· tion. '' Hall's suggestion came as the council WB.!'I hearing an attack on the animal shelter operation. Reibert S h a r k e y operates the city pound under a contract with the city. Although the council took no action on Hall's suggestion, Councilmen Jerry Matney and Donald D. Shipley said th ey wanted to m.ake a visit to the pound Monday night to see the ''deplorable conditions" outlined by Diana Stuart of 21286 Chesterbrook Lane. Mrs. Stuart, who claimed she \Vas speaking for "mnny clients" who were not named, said conditions at the animal shelter are "hardly humane". She claimed the dogs sit on ''cold cement, shivering in the dampness of the evenin~s near the beach." She (See CAT LICENSE, Page %) Mother Knew Slain .Son Was Peddling Pot MET DEATH IN AN ALLEY Stephen Stvbbloflekl Tells of Compl.ex, Troubl.ed Boy With Hi g h IQ By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... Dllfr , .... ,..., How do you explain thing• to a woman who kissed her only son Good Night, just before be was killed by pollce, running down a dark alley, lf years old and drened in burglar's black? Yot don't try. You just listen and Mrs. Heltn EUts, of IOllZ Kline Drive, Santa Ana Helptl, talked Monday about 1 IOmellme&-traob~ eel boy who wJU always live to h11 mother ln a pe:rwonal 1tMt. . , Stephen Stubblelleld wu a -plex, contradictory chlld o( the Umt.at ac- cording to lhose who knew him, wllh an IQ of 13S and a confllct bttween ltntlencle1 towarl rlshl and wron1. Mrt. Ellis 111 ml lalked. "He WU my only child. J had him alone. I paid fot him alone. I know be WQ peddling pol. n . The He.lnz Kaistr lntennedlate School elgllth grader had jull bultt a <lever adence falr project, ahe Wd, and laked for pennbfloo to join a volut1tetr service program at Fairview State. Hoapltal. One of hb falal •U.....,, ptthaJll, wu too mu<h ourioelll' about drup Jn a thne when tt LI atmlnally ptOfileble for some to make • variety ol restarCll· materials cheaply available. 'Eviden:Uy-.omeone 1~ him atarted w:lng, then peddling, but he wu too brllllanl ml healthy to be hooked. His room'·ls full of boou aboot drugs," Mrs. Ellls aald. Friends and relaUvee moved about the er.pe:nalve, well-to-do COuntry, Club Estates home shared by Mrs. EW1 and Steve, who dld extt.nalve lanclscape work .ol good quality. ••1 want you to pack up his things, HOiley/' lhe 1ald, tumtna to the boy's Aunt P1uUne, "I don't think: I could stand to (0 Into his niom. I've pn>mised hLs drum set ... " Flv1 day1 before the Stubblefield boy was whetted lnto the Costa Mesa N.emorlal Hocplt.al emergency room ear· ly Sundoy, dead of I .31 cal. bullet In the ~ Mn. Ellil toolc ilim there to be ~eel for an UIO'ovenlooe. She said he toot the lf.16-per-<apsul• drug, described u b e J n 1 of Cz.ecl>oalo•atian orl&ln. blue .ln color and cut wltb Xool·Atd, alter an uptettlng d1lcu.Won ot bll lnvolvemenL "I tried &o cet blm to give meei Ust of 'lames." &be said. ur1ln1 bim to cooperate with police detectives. "Mama, U J do -or 'they' t/VeA ; 'I think I do -they'll g~ Y.QU. or~ me or both of us," 1he quoted . him as saying, after which she told him such a thought was ridiculous. "They have ways of doing it so lt will look like an accident," Mrs. Ellis continued, recalling her son's words lhen and wondering now about bis vlolenl death. She said Steve watched televlalon with htr Saturday night, then went to bed about JO p.m., to get up early and accompany her to a profe.JSional con- ventlon in Los Angeles on Sunday. By morning he wu gone and Mra. Ellis thought although It was rath'r unu~~bebavior lhat he might have p,ye to a friend'• home instead ,and ~ not to awaken her. tl)ttedhrel ,arrived 1t the. Clyde Ntill ho1M neld. door at 20102 Kline Drive later-. ~nd~y m4rnlng carrying an Iden· tiflca~ citd which confirmed t.hat their ynuna lohn Doe was Steve Stubblefield. Angei<I Police Dopartm<llt de ~lly made contact wll.h Mrs. c:onventl<in she wa• attending rrprtsentative tot a large ~ life' ~1011IER, Page !) ( lf.&.h,T Pll.Of t'hM 1W A~\'.... ( A MOTH!R:MOURNS Mrs. Helm Ellla I • ' undergrowth. Monsoon rains and fog had prevented their departure W'lUl today. The Marines killed 1,541 North Viet. namese and lost 125 dead and 700 wound- ed in the operation which also captured 500 tons of ammunition and blocked a Communist attack on the northern coastal cities. Today the Marines were rewarded with $1,200 worth of beer and soft drinks by rear area men who sup- ported them. Ocean View Won't Teach Sex Education No ser. edu.caUon ct.uses will be In. duded in ihe regular ins1nlctional pro- gram it Ocean ' View School!, dl!trict .superintendent Clarence Hall told trus· tees Monday HJs statement waa d.lrecled at Trustee R. James Shaffer who said he had heard from a group of concerned ciU1en1 that "a sex educatlon courst similar to one taught in Anahe.lm schools would be lo~ on the district." "There ls no substance in fact to that," 5Uid Hall. "In fact, the trtnd seems to be going in the opposite d.lrec· lion." He added, however, that aome parents and staff members are Jn• vestigating ·an after-school course for parents which would include children at a later date. "We'd like to have some of the dust settle first on the matter,'' the superintendent concluded, referring f.Q the troubles caused by family life and 'sex education courses in other school districts. Tnistees also acted on the following agenda Items: -Approved modlficaUon of existing student classtime requirements on a pilot basis to comply with Se.nate Bill I. -Agreed to apply ~or funds under the National Defense Education Act to supply the schools With television Hts and film projectors. -Decided t.o tentatively approve a summer school program for the district. -Approved preliminary pla115 for lhe construction of Eastview School as presented by arcbltect Lee B. Kline. -Hired James Caravelle, fonner superintendent of the McKinleyvllle Elementary School District in Arcadia, as assi.stanl superintendent for personnel al the Ocean View SchoOl District. . . Or ange Coast Weather ?tlore or the P(De is the word (ron1 :the weatherman for Wed· nesdsy, with clear akles follow· ing the morning clouds and temperatures hick Jn the mid· die 60's. IN~IDE TODA\' A 11ew plav fn Santa Ana ond a concert ai Oro:noe Coast Col· ltge are reviewed bv DAILY PCLOT trlttci todav. S11 Entcr- tmnmnt, Pape 111. _.,.. .. _.,. • ClllfW>.la ' -.. " Cltt1trl .. •.:1 IMtwl , .... .. • C-la " ,..,,...., ..... .. ,,.. .... ,.. .. .,... ..... c..,, • Df.11111 lllttlc• • ·--" ' .. ,..... • ..... ·-t1·11 ltlltfrlll:..:r • .... ..,. ·-.. '*" "~ .... =~ ... 1•1t ,_ .. " • ·-• .. ,. """'., " ·--M ~~-r.."-.. ·--.. " • I • • • 2 DAllY Pl\.OT H l .....,, liwcit l .. l"t \ Black Sfudent~ ·.Appeal for UCI Assi·stance By THOMAS FORTUNE ot ,.. o.n, •iw , .. " Vlfl'inl ln>ID 'JIOll(e IO llllllir-of~llCl to tmpollt•, thrte blaot sfudents asl:td for the help of 'adult, white women A!onday al UC Irvine. Each uaina his own approach, 1.bey appealed to 150 1nember& ol UCt Town and Gown to prove their purported con· cern by giving o( their lime and money to htlp the black communJty. John Kini, 2.l-year-old sophomore lrom BY WILLIAM REED Reeds ••• In the Wind 'fbis is Boys' Club \Veek honoring the youth group dedicated to ~ro­ inotion or juvenile decency. Ounng the \veek the Boys' Club is holding open> house at 319 Yorktown Ave. so all residents can see what goes on inside the two-story buildin. Juvenile decency is promoted by taking good boys and giving them a place where they c_an be boys 'vithout too much mterierence from mothers, sisters, aunts, etc. Here men like Pat Downey, ex· ~cutive director, provide many ac· tivities for the lads and most o( all give the moral support needed to help the boys learn how to be strong enough to avoid the pitfalls in the path of youth today. * The Huntington Beach Boys' Club is an active one and well backed by the community. A bo8:rd of directors, composed of men 'vlth strong beliefs in the emphasis of juvenile decency, organized and guide the club. Boys participate in activities ranging from judo. to flying kites to snowball fights. Even the candy machine is an instructional ac· tivity. The club still needs many things before it can offer the best possible climate for the promotion ot juvenile decency and residents con· erned about today's youth prob- lems should drop into tlle c I u b to see what they can do to stem the tide of juvenile delinquency. *· Guidance and character develop- ment are the stock in trade at Pat's club over on Yorktown. P at has done much to make the local club a success.\·It's been in opera· lion only a year or so and already it serves several hundred boys. Tonight there will be a mother and son event beginning at 7 o'clock. ~1onday there was a Shamrock Hunt. Planned are a father and son night, a judo show and exhibition of other activities of the club. In the planning stage is the se- cond annual Huntington Seacliff Sweepstakes Goll Tournament. It starts h-1arch 29 and runs through April 6 and is open lo all golfers and Boys' Club supporters. * The Boys' Club has been a most 'velcome addition to the area and one which we hope will continue to prosper for the benefit of our children. fl/\111 l'litll QIUN8a CO.Ul ,.VI LllHIH• <OIUAlllT 'l•ffrt N 'Wtt4 "'""'"' •"" l>\l~l!Wr J1c• JI. c.,1:r Viet .. IMldtftl •M OeMI ,,_.,,. ... Tho1111t K•••ll ·-11i ...... -A. hfwr,hh10 ,..,.,... ... llllH Alt.ert W, l1t•t• 'Wllll•M Jt,,4 A11tc"l11t H\lfl!l,,.!011 l H<fl l.tltor City atlMI M11•"-1M• ........ OM. JOt 1111 StrMt M•lll111 .A44nuu r.o. 1 .. no. •?•41 --.....,..,, ... di: '111 ""' ............ ... CNll ~~ DI Witt l1y llf'MI Ltl!IM '*": ltl ,.,_.., •- ' SU f!uollco, = lo be ,Ule llld emphui• llil ve. lbWp blocll st"'"*' 1119 dallli. U-. ~ ID l!ii black......... ' • """"......,~!!Ill 11111 ,,_, :N-year-old chalrmu oC tbe ilYlni lllick Student Union. He IOld why he believes the .edueaUona.l alructure needs to be changed and why he feels the chief demands or striking students at SF State ar< juslified. · Tom Walford, ZS..year-old junior lrom Santa Aoa, wu dlnct ID· aayi,ie wlaj ii.' ft!!: tJl,,~,,!111 CO!llfCf1 I ·llllll lil'-.i flt.~ fiilll"iil ;,_;; ~ wboalJ !!'!'IO~~ bu& • ~ oPoM·abioit u.-mooc1 blut studenll. 11;, said tbelr •!ciiiln -black power -has been ta.ken to mean violence. He said that la a mistake that has been made by the mm newa media. King said black power iJ ool racisn:i tn revene but a way for blackl to Books from the Past ·= :::~=~·~.::!y: ·Blkk .,.. ol lll!a day ... not • l'"Mllllli and use their.~­ clote· -to tbe ~ wft' J:r can, hli said. t ls the new mood. Every Black Student Union in the country, he said, has a program for spreading the wealth by tutorin& those in the black aimsnunitiea not abM: to aUend college. He eakf. !bit · is _'lhe DAILY .. ILOT lltff l'lltto Mrs. Michael D. Nivens (left) discusses new Hunt- ington Beach Library exhibit to Mrs. Rosalee Mar· tin, 5071 Sparrow Drive, and Mrs. Martin's daugh· ter. Laura ~ 5. Exhibit, prepared by Mrs. Nevins, a Westminster kindergarten teacher, features chil· dren's books from the 1800's. Twenty~three volume exhibit includes several rare vol umes. It will be on display for a month. backbone o( the Black Student Un1om, oot vio lmce. 1111 on malo loteral, be qld, ll to "lhare ·my ifitod--among tbt maues of black people. 11 Winder al6o accused the preSI o( ..... tionalism. He said blatjl students wafit chanps in the educa.Uona.l 1tructu.ra, but people don 't sLop to think demands might be made for gond reason. Usln1 San Franci.!co SLat• · aa illus-tralion, he ..id ,,. ...._ lwo principal dtmands. ,.. I· Parking Meters To Stay Along Coast Highwa y The familiar parking meters along Pacific Coa1t JUghwa)' southeast . or the municipal pier will slay there desplte urging o( the Chamber of Commerce and others to remove lhe meters and prohibit parking. Councilmen Monday agreed that ~he meters must stay along the highway despite the plal).n00 opening o( a 2,f<io.ca r municipal parklng lot on the ocean side ol the hlghway. The meters must stay, councilm('n were told, mainly because the city cannot prohibit parking on the highway edges, according to James Wheeler, Director of the Public Works Department. "\Vhen the accident record justifies It the Division of IUghways will tell us to take the meters away and paint the curbs," Wheeler sald. Prohibition of parking had been sug· gested as a means to clear some of the congestion on the highway during weekends and Jn the summer. In ad· dition, safety aspects were pointed out. Director o( flarbors, Beaches and Development Vince lifoorhouse also ex- plained that the meters will bring in about $80,000 annually to the city, money which is pled ged to repayment or bonds sold t.o finance the parking lot. From Page l Funeral Slated For Slain Youth MOTHER MOURNS SON • • • medical supply finn in Missouri. "I'd like to talk to you about your son Stephen," he said. "Is he hurt?" "I looked into his eyes,·• Mrs. Ellis :said Monday, ''and I tald : He's dead." "How? I thought maybe drugs ... " "He was shol" "I fell to the floor myBelf. 1( the boy was ruMing, he was obviously just scared. He was not shootlng back. so he was not armed. This is juat logic," she said. There are antwers that will be given to these inevitable qu estions, but they will continue to gnaw at her con· sciousness for weeks ahead, even after investigators finish the case. NOT OWN CWfHES "He wasn't even wearing hia own clothes. How could he get down there with all those tools? lie always had enough money available. Who ~·as in the car that drove away?" she asked. "The police told me it was the work o( someone who had been burglarizing for years. He couldn't have had time to break in like that if he was home at 10 and was shot al 11:45," she said. "The only thing he ever stole was .a roll of tape from Staler Brog. Market and that scared the life out or him. Why did they have to shoot?" Answers exist, but they must come from authorities. "lo1y friends all tell me; 'Helen, you're so lucky to have a &On like Steve'." she continued, "He was the onlv penon l ever knew who loved me. That's why 1 can't stand to go see him," she ~id. "To me, he'll never be dtiad." "That dog is looking all over the house for his master," she said in- terrupting, then calling to the pup named 'Hipple' because he had a $1.000 molher and a hippie mutt dog for a father . "Honey,·• she said, "he isn't here." FINAL CHOICE Before the tragic final choice that ended his life, young Stubblefield was known to be involved only in boyish pranka ind hiJ photo was in the DAILY PILOT three ytar1 a,o. He and a youna: Bay View Elementary School bud~ ~ered and killtd a 7"14oot snake Jn tbe n<l&hborbood. "Whit wOUld you do! .... RUn"." .•. not ••. St.eve Stubblefield," read the iroolcally JX'Ol)heUc memento his mother found among scrapbook• Monday. ''He nevtt ran from ~thing in his life." abe aaid. ~ The boy who appartntty e:xperimenttd too wideb' and grtw up too fut into an adult workl of. crime -where life it incl uded in t.be ltlkes-fin&lly found a Ume wbln he bad to tun. l'rolll P .. e l HOSPITAL .•• Bonfa'a rullna: that there ,,,... no legal way for Bame to appeal tM decision of lht plannin& oomml.uion that planners could not reopen the: ho1pJlal case oooe Ule permlll had been lll\ltd. "l have no comment on that," said Bonfa rtlerrlng to Mayor Coen '• char1e1. "A declalon of the city attorney Is not g0&pel," retorted Coen, but his arguments ftlltd to sway fellow coun· cllmtn and the 1ppeal was ordf!rl'<I filed and the money returned on a 6-0-1 vote. I One must uswne a kind of melancholy forgiveness toward him, h o w e v e r, whatever his trespasses against society, because be ba.s paid the ful~ extreme price. "He ls not under indictment," District Attorney Cecil Hicks said Monday, "he is deceased." He may have been a burglar, but he was human too. From Pqe l CAT LICENSE • • particularly objected to use of "a metal box:" and a truck b'cked up to the box and the exhaust used to dla:pose of sick and unwanted animals. "This is unacceptable and inhumane. The animals die in agony ." City Administrator Doyle f\1 i I I e r presented a video tape of .the animal sheller condiUons abowlng that the animals have wooden floors Jn part of their cagts and that conditions appeared in good order. Sharkey invited anyorie who wanb to drop in and look It over to do so. He explained that during tl)e rtcent heavy ralns some dogs did 1et wet from the rain despite a partial roof over the cages. He said, too, that a truck had been used for dltposal when the usual means or putting the animals away had failed due to heavy rain. Mrs. Stuart admitted tG the council that she had never discussed lhe matter with Sharkey. Mayor Alvin M. Coen i;uggested that she do so. Sharkey said that it appears that Mrs. Stuart might be intere!lted tn opening a humane aoclely of her own and 'if that were true, "l'd be glad to help her all I can." He added that cals are one of the blagut problems for his office.rt. Action Deferred In Peru Seizure Of U.S~Vessel WASHINGTON (AP) -The United Stales apparently bas decided, for diplomatic reasons, to delay ta.king action against Peru In last month's ship seizure ot: t.he Peruvian coast. State Department sources say the Uniteod State:s does not want to press the issue now at the risk of further irrltaUng the already strained relations between the two countries. A law which went inio effect last. November calls for IUlpen»on ol U.S. m!lltary 1Jd to any country Ulq:a.Jly se.lrlng a U.S. ship. Peru seized the Mariner, a U.S. tuna vessel, 25 milea C'Af the Peruvian cout last Feb. 14. The United States considers v"1ters ·12 miles beyond the coastline of marlUme naUoM to be lntemallonal territory; Peru claims jurlsdkltlon over \\'lltrs extending IOO milts ltom Its coa>t. A similar incident !111t Dec. 10, in ,,..hlch Ecu11:dor telted the tuna ve1sel Dey Island, resulttd Jn llin almost Im· mediate ausptnglon of U.S. mlllllry aid to that country. ) A funeral service for young Stephen Stubblefield will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. in WestdlH Chapel, Cosla Mesa, with visitation today. Visitors may call at the chapel from 2 to 9 p.m., .according to mortuary spokesmen .. Interment will follow the \Vednesday service at Pacific View Memorla l Park, Corona de! Mar. Survivors include his mother, Mrs. llelen Ellis, of 20112 Kline Drive Santa Ana Heights , his father, Albert Stub- bltfitld, and his maternal grandparents. I' One ls unlimited enrollment for third -world {mlnority) students. SF Sl!le m lllllO wu 10 perctnt blltt. but· Iii 1961 only tnroUtd (our percent bltcb, ha said. He su~ted the college could juit have biQ~ claues witboot great (lnanclal strain. The aecond key demand, he said, l.! autonomy for the black studies depart· ment. He said the promise or a black studies department has been inade sin« 1965, bu( black students were told there weren't funds available; Bui wben O)e student strike began, out of 'the clear blue sky there'were 11 faculty positions and funds suddenly available, he noted. If it only was given under duress, not ·willingly, students felt it also would. be taken away at the slightest provocation, he said. \Yinder also defended tactics of dis- ruption and takeover as strategically necessary. "If a guy is willing to be arrested you"ve got to believe that cat is sincere.'' he said. "You have to admire, I would think. this type of guts commitment." Watford said he llo'ondered how many times his or the other black students' mothers had an opportunity to have tea at 11 o'clock ln the morning and how many of them are at the white women"s houses scrubbing the floor. He said he looks on the \\.'ome n as "one of the fi rst line of enemles: we reach. "I look out on your smiling facer and T see you are very proud to have a few black students to talk lo you." he said. •·Twenty-six black student.s out of 3,500 at Irvine. So it's a real big deal. "We know it is just another token," Watford said. "It is very typical or the white man. Everyone passes the buck. You say, 'I 'm not that way. f.faybe my neighbor is.' " . He said, "if you are really concerned about setting the score right, counteract the inferior education black students are getting in Santa Ana. We need your bodies, your mo~y and materials. . "You say you're good hearted wh1t11 folks. We'd like to find out "''here every- one's heart is really located. We want to give you a chance to prove your good· natured selves. "If we can make It here at Irvine, we can make it anywhere in the country." All three black students received about the same applause for saying, eac h in his own ~·ay. "understand us, and help our black brothers and sisters." One> woman asked what specifically they plan to do with donations and assistance they receive. King answered, "\\'hat you're saying is you don't want to give us money to buy guns. Set up a scholarship for a black student in ·your name. We need books for the black community, And money !or materials to use in our tutoring." Winder said, "Our main goal is to get more black students on campus. We need scholarships and hrusing." FINAL 2 DAYS PHASE I FOR CHARTER MEMlnSHIP AT HUNTINGTON BEACH 50%0FF ' " • For The Record • Divorces .• '™ ~ Wl.,:~~·:ou °" Wli-i }! 4f-J, """"ff YI !'-ob.rt E, Melll'ff s;: °"""9 ti,. AndtrM!I .,. ..... w. !". ,.,._ ~ ltl'IN c . wr11M Y• wm11m F••11tke • ' Wrllhl, Jt. (,I; •11'1119 N. G1""""1 VI lllYl'Wlllll (. · G1""'"1' Jt, ,1 l!ll11beth AM •111'!1 VI 11.odt!•Y I!!,,_. f l•m JMn Mary Mulm w John SttMtwl t.)••lm l1 V-Mff Norrlt "Wt Allftl 0.11 Nor11t. .'fr GkH11 J, Sht•• YI H""1•d C. SIU,. •• ,.tm411 N, Nleol YI Alt.ol l . H~ ~ Niia Naomi Kline YI Gllft L• VtrM .. M • lHTRllLOCUTOll.Y OaC1t••1 AMI• M•• NIJll/'nOflS VI wnn1m " Jud-Him..,_ • I GlldY'I M. Wl,_tr YI ~I W. ' • Wtlll:tr a l!!tll1'111!t D. D1lllr 'W1 Mld1rdo '°· D1111r ~ ~ J1,11nlhl M. Portillo YI Eddlt M. '"•-"•• ,.. tuncv Giimore YI Jtimlt D1hl GlllNft .., Ml1"~1 l ucklt' vs Delmtl 11., ' l llckln'. Jt, •...i ,,...nhl Wtbl< YI l !llY J111...rt Wlbtt " JNn M11lt Lllbll&rcl "' G•rv W•Yllt Ll1bll1rd l t!h Loli PonHn Yt C11h1rlnvs M. ·~-• Judllh Dllhl l'-011tr1 'W1 Alvin lttrbert "°'''' NlllC'J' Chl YtJ vt Jutn ll. Ch1~1 H•ql Ftlluttr YI kenMlll GIO ... Ft Ikner P1trlcl1 Mn A•l't'f' v1 ll:obt:rt 11.tubtft ,..,,., Slndr1 L DtGlov1nnl .,. Mlth11I A. D.Olov1nnl Jove• 5, Htn1en YI Herbert Hint H•-M1r11,.t I!, Ce! Cello 'n Jel'ln Dtl '"" ) lllllen It. Glllleu er vs Anton!• G. G11ll..,r11 Gtr1NC1t A. 1911" vs J os•ll f" . ..... \/tn Norm1n Frtktr YI L11ren1 J1111 Frtkllr C•111tY ltwr YI HtroTd A. ,_, Wlllltm Arthur Ccffe'f', Jr. "' Jt A1111 Caflt"I' ltrbtr1 ltat Ctft'IP"ll 'W1 lttvtfl l .. Clftlllblll 11.oMn Jt'l'l'll Jlll'lt YI ltOlllld DtrYf NM D11nnl1 ll:utll II••-\II Wlllltm v- fl.ulh H. ff'f'lor \II Jolln C. TtYlor Do•I• Mlumtr 'n ~ £. Mls1..,., ktlhtrl"" El•IM Sltwlrt YI Jtlft" Hus'°1'1 lff'Wtrt Mtlv1 Jtrw l_,..bery 'n Wltlltlft Hor1c1 ~nsbli'v co,..,.111 H•l'!'••• "' F•rm1ri 1tOMl1 Ht'"''' 00.Vtll'f' H. ,,..rill YI H<M'trtl N. Manll v 1,.1n11 C, Procfor v1 Slt'Yim w. PrOCIOI' Wlllltm D. lrtMtfl'lfn 'n NtricY IC, lr1111n1m1ri f"•lt(Ull Joltllt Mor11n Ill l1rrv IJ.. Mortin ltob61'T A. Dtl ll:lo 'W1 ktlt'li.tft lltls Ott lt\o Ctrolt I!'. ICellf"I' YI Dantld M. kt l.., Frlnc:l1 A. l•"G YI JtMt l , lt"" l"fggy L W-\II Tllomtl W. Woo4 AlllOf! 8. Lovtltnd YI R.lcllt rd w. Lowl1nd T~rtH 1(111!on YI Htrbert Cil1 I(..,. •M Do•olt!v Antt!I lrl!t "' Mltthew It-rt 8ttlt Cner!t ltlftt F•t'f' "' Robert ltrrv Frey MtrJhl Col• SltmPlkl YI Nell 11111111! Stemp1~1 Moulll F. D1vld1on YI D1n1er L. Ctvldson M••IOtlt kt'f Mlnlrt YI J~Ph Mt ntro Mini L1Y111Slln Htmltten YI Wlllllm llldltrd H•mllfon MIN EllJtbdh ••ndtll Y$ Cht$ltr H. ll:tndtll cnr1111n1 ltO:tr v1 Anlhonv l11<ker $./Mn Mtrlt Folk•rl YS •11"""' Alt/I f"olktrt J11111 M. 0..n vs ktnnettl G. D•n Ctrol NL LM YI L-D•tn LM M.tr!Ol'lt Evt l'l'n Dltlrldl ¥1 Jll'lri Cllflon Dlttrldl Lindi Ctrol M«AdWft YI John Allin "''""'• kt'I' StrttV. YI 0111 Cltrk S.rttV. ltull'I H. Grtl"" vs ktlth I!'. Ortlntr \/fvt H. MQ!ltok-"' G1-J . ...... _ lllTY J, Moslolv YI Jtmts E. MOlltY LIPICI• LoulH i..llclltt0n YI l"rtd wu1i. ll:lld>tton Tllorntl G. PeTTln ... Mtrv teu ,...,,In Wlllltm k1111t Com11ton 'W1 L1u1- AYl1 Compton M1vl1 LOlllll NOlln YI Centld Jtni11 "~ CO!'I M. Thttlh vs 1 !11'1' G ..... Thrt1h p..,.,., Helttl Slmtrd vs W1yn1 Noel Simard Vlolt Mn &tnbovr vi WIJlltrr'I Jelwl 1 ... bow Mlnnlt L. Glbsefl vt Arnold D. Gl~ E11rilc1 G. Gunltr YI Elmer f . G11n!er \/irtlnlt Ctndtt vs John Ctnd!• JttMI Merit Wood11r YI Tlmoth\I Ttplln W-ttt' Jul"'' a. Cot v1 John 1. Cot 0<>1·011w v, Dlirllt t v1 lllcbert N. C11rli1t M1,.1rtl V, Mtlltftll le \II A!t•t llder T. MllSl!>ltlti lllDl'tkl l'-O'f Wiii YI Jtu111le Allfrlt"~' Wiii l YnM A!Yorcl YI D1v!cl A. Alvord G!orle Ju" Mlrtlltll YI Jail" H. ,,...rth111. J,, Jl"'" Mlltlt Hiii~" YS H1rold ll:Olll!d "~"" Dtbtt E. l-r YI Dl vld Htnrv LOl>tl GIRLS • • • AGES 4 • 12 WIN Many Valuable PRIZES IN HARBOR CENTER'S 2nd ANNUAL lWEEN ·AG£ PRINCESS CONlllT CROWNING SAT., MARCH 22-1:00 p.m. NA.Ml ..• , ............••.• ADD•US • , ..•.••••• , ••• , • PHONI , , ••••• , ••.•..•••.• ••• . ................... . Fiii out 1M """1n 19 G_ .. lt\111111 If o..w. .,.. MDll•!IJW In HttM!' C"'1'tr. JJOt HAllOI II.YI. COSTA MISA ' . -~-· .. I 1 ___ IA_I __ COME SEE AND ENJOY JHE BROADWAY-NEWPORT'S FESJIVAL OF ARJ feolur ing the wo , ks of Le gune Beech Artists in oils, mosa ics , ceromics, sculpture end tapesfries Thursde y. Fridey ond Sot urd ey Morch 20, 21 end 22 ANAHEIM 444 N. Evclid Sls.1121 Mon. fhrv Stt. 10 e.m. to 9:)0 p.m. NEWPORJ NEW DIMENSIONS INCHES ADIEU Prett ier proportions -instontly yo urs with Worner'~ new Inches TM ••• control minded skimmer thot hold with determ ined stretch fo r st reemlined comfort con trol. You'll love the ee se of l it thet comes from specially des ig ned comfort zo.nes ..• no more girdle bind. In white . Choose the long log pentie, s·m-1-xl, 15.00; contour bro , 32-36 B-C. S.00; G:rdle, s-m-1-xl , 13.50, Moil ond telephone orders invited. Foundations, I~ MEET WARNER STYLISTS Ju st for yeti we offer ex pert consulation on figure flattery tomorrow and Thursday in our Hunting ton Beach foundat ions deportment . 47 F•1hion l1l'"d 6'4·1211 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1111 Edln9ff Ave. '92·llll Mon. thrv Set. Mon. thru Fri. 10 •.m. to t :JO p.m. S..t. 10 e.m. to • p.rn . 10 a.m. to ':JO f·"'· DAl~Y PILOT • • ' I 1 \ I ---·--ti • • • - ' .. ~ .. • • ff D.\ILY-;ii.l!T H TIHdlf, M.vd! 11, lM Far Out lnvestnaetau -2 Coins Can Turn a P1·ofit By SYLVIA PORTER How ~·oold you like to buy an ordinary J964 50 cent piece Jor twice 1LI face value? Or a 1940 quarter for ft.SO -30 times it.s face value? Or a li50 nickel for $14.50 -290 times Its face value? . Or a 1909 penny for $3.SO - 350 time! its face value! TUE REASON why tht SO ctnt piece costs $1 is that U's a Kennedy hall-dollar and at today's free market price or silver, more than 70 cents worth of silver is in this coin (the last run or silver coins 1ninted in Otis country). The reason why the quart.er sells for $7.50 is that ii is &ll silver, has never been ASSISTANT VP Hugh Dunnion Dunnion Moves Up Hugh R. Dunnion of El Toro has been promoted to assis- lant vice president ~·ith the Laguna Beach branch of Security Pacific N a t i o n a I Bank. He succeMs assist.ant vice president John R • .lenkins, who has been given a divisional assignment. Dunni~ a former assistant manag~ or the Newport Beach branch, bas been with Security Pacilic Bank since 1961, when be moved tG California from his native New Jersey. He has been a bank officer 6ince 196.1. He is a former accountant for the Newark Hou s ing Authority. He has been active In Chamber of Commerce and Kiwanis Club work. circulated and ls ln e.1cellent condiUon. The explanation for the $14.50 nickel is that thla batch of nickels was minttd in Denver in very limited quan· tltJes and most of lbem wuc •upposed to have been boosltt up yew ago by a mW.I group of coin speculators. AND THE ezplanaUon for the hiJllt-priced penny ls that 1909 was the fll'St year the Lincoln penny was issued and thus it carried the intials or its designer, Victor D. Bren- ner. Just in the pul llalf-dccade there has been a phenomenal upsurge in the values of many types of coins -and some astute collect.on among: the natioq'1 estimated 10 million have seen the \lalut of tbetr holdings double or triple. To Wustrate : Only two years ago, the retail price of an ordinary, uncirculated $20 U.S. gold piece was $46. At the end of 1968, it was $75 -and large numbers of double eagles are rumored being smuggled into this country to meet the demand, even at that premium price. One reason fo1· the pri~ rise is that during the Arab-Israeli war many Arab potentates turned their "Joose change" into gold piece!, thereby creaUng 1 e v e r e worldwide shortages and leading to sharp price rises. IN 1158 an 190l silver dollar -one of the coin collector'• b;g prizes -oold for 110,000. By 19&1, the price was up to $29,000 and by 1967, the 1ast time one of these ultra· rare coins came onto the market, the J)fice reached $45,000. The going rate for an ordinary used, recently· minted silver dollar today is $2.50. In 1963, one gold Roman coin daling to 69 A.D. had a book va1ue or $280. Three years later, in 1966, this coin sold for $2,900. Other "choice" Creek and Roman coins have risen 100 times or more in value since the early 1960s . What are the chances that the cigar box full of collected coins left by one of your anctstors is worth milliOM ? ''TIIE TYPICAL amateur's coin collection," says Joseph Rose, manager of the coin department oC M a n fr a. , Tordella and Brookes, JDC'~.· a top New York coin dealer. "is an accumulation, not a collection. It's 90 percent junk." . However, it you have reason to beJieve you may own I See by Today's Want Ads • Wedding Belles: June is coming. and so a.re the brides: here are time and money u.ving, and rtW beautiful outfit. to Wt'al' •••• , "-"Orld fa. mouJ.detigner, Kahill, de- a:ianed this go\\'n and 1nat. chlng head dress. ln size 10, for only s;,o. , •. Anoth. .ir gown, size.' 5, cost S250 o~nally, v.-ill now saczi. flee for $6.)! ! e HlllE-A-WAY \Vll'll ME: Tn th.is plush apartment. en tlw' oct"an side of highway in Corona dd btar. Pel'IOn• 111ity plUs includes avocado ~haft carpets., avoc:u)o bulltln!I, beam reillnjts, breakfast bar, 23" color TV, patio and tmAtl a:•r· den. Two bedrooms, all n~·ly dtton.ttd. Yearly lease $J.!(). Will Publle Endorse It? Check Pinn Splits Markets By JANICE BER~1AN °' JM o.1tr l'llff s11n A new check-cashing service for supermarket customers is being met with mixed reac- tions among area food store operators. Called Welcome Check. the computerized service will be operational by the end of April in local branches of Thr1f· timart, Safeway, Alpna Beta and Vons. Among the food cHains ab· staining from the new pro- gram is Albertson's, which has put a sign in the ~·lndow of each store to tell the public that it is not going along with the system, which it has dub· bed "Big Brother .•• Albertson's, says each si gn, ~ill continue to gi Vt' It~ customers personal c h e c k cashing service. Area supermarket managt'rs who are instituting the plan are hoping it will spell the end of the waves of bad checks -500,000 in Southern California last year -that deluge and drain supermarkets, often forcing them to raise pnces to cover their lo5ses. The business of checks cash- e<l -and bounced -by customer:i ts shrouded in secrecy, as an: p)am for the changeover to a centralized service. One store manager, who did not wish to be jden· tJftd. said market oCficials are confident that \VelC<lme: Check will cut bad-check losseti in their J51M:tore chain. v.·hich OO\V amount to roughly 42.000 checks nnlfned marked "un- paid" each year. for a ;inan· FAVORITES N1tio111! """ loc1I t••"••· 1hip poll• •rovo tl>o DAil Y ,ILOT c1nlt .,.. HP!lo •f tho "'01t pop111ltr coh1111111 t nd fo•'hlrt1 evtiltLlo to t 11y 110"'1,1por It tht Unittd, St•te1, cial loss or about $1 ,350,000. \Ve lcome check is a service o{ Telecredit. Jnc , v-rh1ch keeps check cashing records on more than ten million Cali- fornians stored In the memory banks of its two IB~1 360 computers in Century City. The program will replace existing check cashing systems of all subscribing supermarkets. The one-time charge to each supermarkel has been estimated b y Thomas A. Clark of Telecred1t at between $400 and $900 per store. depending upon the number of outlets installed. Each customer will pay ten cents per check, and may cash personal checks up to $25, or pay for giueries by cheek. or both. Telecredit Presiden t Lee A. Ault Ill says that \\'elcome Check customers win now be able lo cash checks in nearly 900 stores. and will find the new service speedy. Ault claims the system "will help supermarkets hold the line in an era of spiraling prices." He adds I h a t Telecredit ass umes complete responsibility £or all checks cashed under Welcome Check. 0 n e and one-half million- check-cashing credentials, 1n the form of plastic cards, will be mailed to Southern Califor· nian.s v-;ho have applied for them by supplying such data as name. address, birlhdate, driver's license number. social security number and types of checks to be cashed personal, payroll or govtrn· melil agency. \Vh en a custon1er applies for a card, the data is fed into the computers. compared with existing records, and stored. The existing records, ac- cocding to Tek<redlt'• Clark ~obtained th1J way: ''Say a woman ti u y 1 '°mt4.hin1 at Saks on Wl!Ahire. She writes a cheti for 1l, f ~UTU ASSETS OVER S-425,000,000.00 HEAD OFFICE 315 &Ill Colorlldo Bouf9v• Pe..-dlna. C.llfoml• 91109 INGS ' .. NOMlf!llMUM TIME REQUIRED INl!a(ST 1'()M 6ATE Of llKEIPJ OTHER BRANCH Ol'FICES TO OA.""Qf Wll!fO~ W Al. ' Welt ""8d'8 •OMtw Q-le -..... ) Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete • I New _,_ 4 a•P1tSZ .. p;zl"t"_, • York -Stock Exchange List ., , .... , "'• u.c• c-. .... --,., ,_,_ f!i. ~YI ··I' 1 ~NII NOl'fl 111 ~ m· ~ 't l! !It " J '•'"° •v • (Of• • ~ I~ + •1 11~ .. l~ ,,.. ., + i. ~· 1.tll "' i.11 t tJ\• 1"-' 1.ol • -'• u•n h•4 Jt 1JO ~---•~Vt .. ,•_-4S .. 'n .U\'I 411\4 +1\lo rltl'ltM Dv Thol --• American Stock List ... Exchange ' • • • • • ' • L ;J! DAILY PILOT Tut!d11, Marcll 18, 1'16' • ., . . • • • - -' 'J l't .• 'l · DISCOUN.T • SUPERMARKETS , . . SEVEN. BIG SALE . DAYS March .19 ·1hru 25 • ~ • . . . . EVERYDAY LOW· 0·1s(OUNT PRICES . .. ••• . ' • • • (~ • •• Whole Body ' cur.up ••. 35c· lb . CHICKEN 'PARTS '. BREASTS U.S.D.A. Choice ' PORK1 . . CHOPS U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless G.ROUND BEEF · Fresh RO,U,ND 7 : S. LICE D ST EA K ':~~.~.~T STE·AK c · -BO.NE .&AC.ON U.S.D.A. Choice U.S.D.A. Choice RA e CORN TOTAL DISCOUNT on all HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS . ' . ;: DISCOUNT FROZEN FOODS BANOUH DINNERS ;::;;; 31 ¢ . ES ,,.."""11111 18" MEAT Pl :.':'.· ;:~·M· .. ~., ,. AS Vlft It l(amlt'I 36" EIKHILAD ~.;:; '~"· <><OM ,. jpu PIES ~:;:-; ''" 69¢ POTATOES ~;:..~·.,., 99¢ S·I-. ~•t • . DISCOUNT FLOUR & SALT FlOUR Gl lll Mt•UI E"tldled l-1~. NI fl. .. OUR 'w'"""" F1mlly .... Ht S"""All ::;-w•I•, ""'•-· ....... LT ........... TABlf SA :!~~ :;,'."11• C&H SUGAR ~:..";:: w ·-.. c DISCOUNT slUCE TOMA TO SAUCE ::;~~~ 9~ SJEAK SAUCE ~;:;:•,.=.·.:::="'" 44¢ KAT SAUCl ~;~.. ..... 6~¢ SPAGHETTI SAUCE ,\::c·:... 24¢ CA TSUP ~:-:.~:. ..... 24¢ " . DISCOUNT IAIY FOOD mAINED BABY FOOD ·-.... 9¢ 5141LAC .·~:· 26¢ 5ftll.lC :~· • '"" 59¢ ~ BABY FOOD ._.., 10¢ gtOPPED BABY FOOD -· 15¢ .. S.TE.AK LB. STEA.I .·· LB CABBAGE •• '~. • ' " ~ ... '<C • • . . 100WW~WWIW King Si.ze CIGARETTES · Sweet, Tender, Fresh .. . CARROTS PAPER BACK BOO.KS $294 Plus Tax .BAftANA 100/oOFF REG. RETAIL PRICE Van de Kamp's HOLLAND DUTCH BAKERY 100WJWWWWWI' .___P•_r Cart-on .-..-a SQUASH F-IESH DELICIOUS DISCOUNT DELI. I. DAIRY DISCOUNT HOUSEHOLD DISCOUNT PArilR BJS(UJJS :::::~11rkflM •Mtt.rml~ 8~ II !NCt -... L LUNCH MEATS ,-:;;~·.::;.. 25¢ DISINFECTANT ;,:: -:; .... CHEESE :~.M'""" '""' 89¢ STEEL WOOL PADS :;•;:;..., 33¢ PAPER NAPKINS ~:~-:.. 9¢ . ... """' 58¢ TOllH TISSUE ::::. ':."i'... 21¢ 29¢ TOILET TISSUE £.S:~.. 25¢ BLEACH ....... .._._ ... '""" 111111• ., ... 16" FABRIC sonf.NER ~.·:.· '"'" MARGARINE •. :.• ... ~ -.. COTTAGE CHEESE :.::·;,.. 31 ¢ 79¢ WAX PAPER :=.:".t::.. 26¢ 66¢ ALUMINUM FOIL ,\'.;."::'.:.:~ ... 24¢ CLE UltR ., .. _. ••• AftL Gl1111 Siu DISCOUNT COFFEE & tlllMERS ---..,,,Dl""'sc""ou=Nr ..... ,r ... t .... F6,.,..,oo..--DISCOUNT cEIEXls CAT FOOD Lt .. l lHll Ll~~-AM TVOll H1. lift CAT CHOW :=.·· SKIPPY ,,.,. ·-"" DOG CHOW ;:~".:. 14¢ 89¢ 1¢ 16¢ 1.29 DISCOUNT OILS .. SHORTENINGS WHEATIES ......... ''™' 48" L•ttt 1t-9l. ..... ,, CORN FlAKES ~~":'.~.. ... 38¢ OATS · ~:~~: .. · •r Gwk• 29~ WHEAT'GERM :\'...":'::::: ,.. 42¢ CREAM ol WHEAT :::-.:. ":.~ 46¢ DISCOUNT FISH i ClNNED Mllts FIRESIDE SALTl.NE CRACKERS 1~!~ --~-----· ---·-" GERBER'S STRAINED BABY FOOD ----------· . -· --.. - DUNCAN HINES CAKE MIX Reg. Pkg. BLUE GINGHAM LI ID-Qt. 5;,. DETERGENT Dl~~:s DICARLO REFRIED BEANS ~::::·:-. '""" 21 ¢ MENUDO t!:"2~ ,~ 45~ WESSON OIL ..... •••· ..... SALAD OIL ::;:·•.:.~. ~ 89" TUNA <•••• • .. '" ,, C~""* llt~I lftffl 38J! BREAD 1 lb. Loaf FLOUR ~'...''_..... l 19 CORN OIL :::~" .... 31¢ 69p 55~ 81¢ R~D SPANISH SAUCE ~:~:;:~:· .. 32p PANOCHA i::~ "' 29p SHORTENING ~~~:. G;7:.~~. OUYE OIL ...... -........ 16 .. 1. II~ 61scoONT YEGETAIUS TOMATO£S .......... Llrt• II'! Clft CUT BEETS ~-:-:. EAS Ott ,,.,.,,,, P ...... _ . JU u• PDRK 11nd BEANS . 1~-::::f~ CHILI BEANS ~::;·"' ... DISCOUNT PlcRLEs ' DRESSING 21 ¢ SALAD DRESSING .:::.:.:;:~·· •• 55¢ 18¢ MAYONNAISE ::~ j::'' 58¢ 23¢ SALADDRESSlllG :::.. ... ~,-43¢ 16¢ . KfBERG Dill STICKS ~,:"~· 53¢ 29~ RAUAN DRESS·ING :.~ 38¢ CORNED BEEF ,•::-;:. CORNED BEEF HASH ,o.;::•;-.. VIENNA SAUSAGE i.~·: .. 53¢. - 45¢ SPRINGFIELD 25¢ DETERGENT •o :;.·;t .. 38¢ -~ ------------ DISCOUNT HUits i JUlcH VAN BRODE . ,,,,....;.W APPLESAUCE , .. ,. '" u• 26¢ FRUR COCKTAIL ~'" •• 38¢ CORN FLAKES ::;: ---- GRAPEFRUn JUICE ~=.. 46~ ..... ------. CHEESE SPREAD TANG i~':' .:::.i:, 93" -~·•·.t l!WIM' ,, VEGETABIE COCKTAIL ::_ ~ .. 36¢ VELVEETA 2 lb. Carton STORE HOURS: .c ib c lb ~ lb ' ' c lb DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS 19th & HARBOR COSTA MESA Mon . lhrv Sal. 1 O a.m •• 9 p.m. I • • (, • • • • " I • I ""--~-~-~~---------------------------- Sun. 10 a.m. • 1 p.m. • ----- • ' I • ' ' I • I , ' I , -... , -• \ " -t -•. ' Foaiitain . . Valley EDITI O N Today's l'la•I N.Y. Stoen • • YOl. 62, NO. 66, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, M RCH ·19, "1969 TEN CENTS Second Huntington Hospital .Survives Scare ))y WILLIAM REED ' • • Of t\iO.iir Pllit llttl A . plan to build a second ho.spital in ItunUP.gton Beach . survived a m a j o r challe~ .Monday night before the City Council; but the troubles facing owners of .the proposed specialized hospital may not be over .• Robert Zinngrabe and a group of doc· tors aqd investors known as the IIBtl Corp.· ~· proposed conversion of the Huntiniton Beach Convalescent HOlpital at Main and Delaware streets to an 80-bed IJ>eciaJhed hospital. 'I1le ~ssary use permlta were ob- tained from the dty Boan! of 7.onlnl Adjustment and the project apparenUy was cleared through the city when owners of lbe Huntlngtoo Intereom- munily Hospital and the city Plannliig Commission .jolned'the COl\flcll In wonder- ing how the permits for the second hospital happened to bt granted wilhout fanfare or pubUc notice. s~are Word Drugs! It's a scare word for most parents. But if they rtally want to help their children quash the crisis they've got to iet:p their cool. That's the advice of Allon Blakes- lee in today's seventh Installment of a JG-part series, .. Drugs, 1969," in which the nationally noted sc~ .Writer cautloos parents to listen to tbelr youngsten. Often· the teenagers of today knoW rnore · about druis than tbeU: parents. Start catching up by ttading t~ day's installinent on Page 3. No Water for Firemen $10,000 Fire Destroys Westminster Fish Farm • ' 1'1ames IU)l<d the ~· Goldfish Faniiln, We./minster Monday ilt«nOon, destroying one third of tht breed.in( stock and causing an esllmated tl0,000 damage to buildings.· Thfee pumper trucks from t h e Westminster Fire Department and a unit rrom Huntington Beach arrived at the fire sborUy after lZ:lf p.m. and found water fverywhire but not a drop with ••hicll to douse the flames. Unable to use the water from the fish breeding tanks which were sur· rou nded by high fences, firemen had to drag 900 feet of hose across a wide drainage ditch to reach th,..e burning buildings. Bill Knowles, assistant Westminster fire clUti and Chief Mel Ingi4m directed a crew Of 27 men around the smoke-filled hatchery for about 30 minutes until they had controlled the blaze. Fireman Ross Johnston suffered an tnjured leg when he fell through a burned floor. He was treated and released by the Westminster Hospital. Ca~e ol the blaze was traced down trl an overheated electric mo lo r, V..'estmlnster Fire Department offlcial:i said. Brazil 'Flood Kills 233 RECIFE Brar.ii (AP) -The death toll from hoods In northeastern Brazil has risen to 283 and 40,000 persons are reported homeless. officials said to- day. llOlll'l ~· . ...,,.._of Ill"~. loated It Illa !:chranll lit., oaJd ht will remain · open for bustnell; even lhougb hJJ brtedl!ll sloct' tulfered ·an addllJonal 110,000 Iii damages. Services Slated In Double Death . Funeral service! • ,with a ronry al 1':10 o'clock tonight for Mr. and ?.irs. James Gambrell, vJctima .of a weekend mW'der-1uiclde Jn Seal Beach, The service will bt btld •l the Bailey and-Bartell Funeral home ' ln Anahelni. A 10 a.m. nw:a will be ctlebrat!d \Vednesday at St. Hedwig'• church ln Loo Alamlloa, with burial llChedu!ed afterward at Holy Sepulcbre Cemetery in Orange. \ Police said Mrs. Darlene G1n!brell, 38, shot her fO.yeaM!d husband with a .38 caliber revolver, then turned the \\'eapon against herself and committed suicide. The couple lived in the Seal Beach area for the past three and one.half yeart. Gambrell was a oomputer systm\.9 administrator for the U.S. Army, hls wife a housewife. ' They are survived by four children, Toni, 18, Kevin, lS, · Teri, t, and Lori. 5. Monday ni.i>t IJle COW!dl, with Mayor Alv!Q,)!. l;oell abitalninr; voted to sbelve an ll(ipOal by the attorney for the Hun- tliilloo IDlercommunily ljoepllal ownen and lo relunl • 175 nu,, fee the attorney ba4 pa!A!. '1!111 apport..0, ends t he ·ac1- rnliustnUve procediire and fuitber ·action to block construction of the. Pacifica Hospital apparenUy wlll have tQ "be in · court. • However, the matter goes before the Regional HOlpllal · Planning ApoclaUon nei:t Mond1y and that group coWd nfuse sanctloo to the HBH Corp._ . Two matt.rs will . bt p<es<nted : The request by the HBH Corp for aanctJon for the 8Q..bed hospital and a convalescent hospital to replace the present facility, and the request by Hunllpgton lntel'Cl>m· m'unlty Hospital for aWovaJ of cOn- struction of a second tower at the Beacli Boulevard fadllty, The HBH ..-pooiuon Is for a 150-bed tower wllh openlrof ol fadlltlea ror obout 80 beds now, according.to WiWam Power, spokesman le< the boopllal group. Monday nigh! Mayor Coen ~ the dllcuulon of ·an appeal ·filed by hi• law associate Jerome M. Bame on behalf ol Hunllnglon ln1'rcommunlly HoapltaL He poinled ool thel he fell tbere l\'OUld • be a conflict. of interest if be -wer'e dlscus.Pn8 and voting on the metill of the issue, but argued that the , councli w .. dl!CUSalng procedure only and that he could legally do sn. City Aitomey Don Bonfa did not airee with Mayor Coen, stating lhat be felt Mayor Coen had a conflict. in,the hospital issue no ,matter what Ute topic. / Mayor Coen, also a lawyer, said ht was concerned "about the intervention of the city attorney in not lettlng the appeal come to the CQuncil." "You have put th.ls city in a position or vulnerability," he charged, based .. (See HOSPITAL. Pa&e l) U.S. Launches Big Drive , War's Largest Offensive Takes Heavy Casualties SAIGON (UPI) -A U.S. annored Column five mile:s long led a force of lbouaands of Allied infantrymen today against Communist troops threatening Saigon. Communist losses were describ- ed as "con!lderable" in a day ol heavy fighUng. Tht offensive, labeled operation Atlas Wedge, was thought to be the largest of the war, eclipsing the f0,000 man Allied force which battled Communists in the same jungle:s 30 mlle:s northwest Nixon to Visit Capo Saturday For Swallows J hea1dent and ·Mn. L Miron wlll ·Yllll·llD.~uai-CiPioti-·~. """"" In r.n:ni.,. Bald loday1 The Ptioldlsit Is apected to view lbe annUll Cllebrollon welcoinlna the awallon beck to M!Mion Sm Juan Caplstrano, according to repbN Crom the San Die(o. Chamber of Commerce tlli1 mornlpg. The wetkend visit. announced today by ~ lf!Cttt&r J1oollld L. Ziegler, will~Joctude 1 ·1top at San Diego, where ~ls~y~abyM~can~~ ~ark u part of San aanl.enarycelebntlon. imd First Lady may spend and' Saturday night at the Hotel del-C<>ronldo In Coronado. The Jlmldeo!W pu))' will luve Wesblnglfn on Friday', atopplng in Iode!>encleo<e( !>lo., wh<re the chief ex· ecirtl-..e will Vllit former Pre.sJdent ~ S. Trumao before flying on to Southern California. Prea Secretary Ziegler Jald that·Nti:on -l!UUaled the. meeting with Truman, who recenUy spent a few days Iii a hospital. The President and Mra. Nb:on are erpectod to return lo Wubington la1' Slinday. Stedc Jtlarlce t. NEW YORI( (AP) -The otock markel cl~ with a moderate gain , today. Tradiftl was acUve. (5ee quotatlona, P.au 10-ll). of Saigon In oPeratlon JuncUon City Jn February 1987. Col. George S. Patton Ill, commander of the tanks and son of the famous general, said the _count of Communist bodies In today's fighting was expected. to be "considerable." Allied gunships reported killing SO today and another za Communists died Monday. in the preliminary stages of the operation. Allied losses were "light." Far to the north, weary Lealhemecks of the 9th U.S. Marine Regiment, ended the.Ir bitterly fought campaign in the jungled mounlalns near Laos and were flown out under fire by helicopters today from thelr A Shau Valley poslUoM. UPI correspondent David Lamb said the Communists fired nearly 300 rounds of mortar fire at the fleet of 50 helicopters which flew out the last Marines today but that mo:it of the shell:i exploded harihlessly in the dense Girls Ahdn~ted Kidnaped, Robbed at Gunpoint Two young Seal Beach sisters were kidnaped and .robbed at gunpoint ·then , r.·~ il!>!ldlr• afi<~ !>J' ,._ m~ oiiiliic filr ilie liilf'<leJibt, pollce teporied laday. : Tiie llmrs, fl And 9 years ol6, told police that a 1tranger forced them to drive to Huntington Beach then took an unspecified amount of money from them. The girls said they were loading driftwood lnto their can on the beach abou't one-half mile 'east of Warner Avenue when the man approached them, ~lice. said. . , ti{'!\ ·he aa.ked the gir11 .for .JocaUon "' 1111\ l ~. dioiil.,tii jlh . a smill11f:~1 In il!S~Yiid~ll'~~o\~ ~ lo get In the car and drive hln) to H111111nf°" Beach, accon!lni to poUce reporU. · · Jn the car. the man told the girls he ·wouldn't hurt them if they did what he saJd and that he was already wanted by tht police, said inve1'tlgators. He Jelt the car at the corner of Main and Walnut streets in HunUdgton Beach. • Cat Licenses Suggested .. By Huntington Treasurer License cats In Huntington Beach? At the risk ,of incurring the wrath of hundreds of cat owners, HuntlnKtoo Beach City Treasurer Warren Hall Mon- day night. suggested to the City Council that a cat license ml1ht be a good revenue producer -for city coffers. "If we need more funds for the animal shelter, why not issue licenses for cats? I just shelled out money for two dogs and I don't understand the di.scrimlaa- tion." Hall's suggestion came as the council was hearing an attack on the animal shelter opetatlon. Robert ~ h a t k e y operates the city pound under a contract with the city. Although the council took no action on llall's suggestion, Councilmen Jerry Matney and Donald D. Shipley n.ld they wanted to make a visit to the pound Monday night to see the "deplorable conditions" outlined by Diana Stuart of 21288 Chesterbrook Lane. Mrs. Stuart, who claimed she was speaking for "many cll enL!I" who were not named, said conditions al the animal shelter are "hardly humane''. She claimed the dogs sit on "cold cement, shivering in the dampness of the evenin~s near the beach." She (See CAT UCENSE, Pase II undergrowth. Monsoon rains and fog had prevented their departure until tod1y. 'The Marines killed 1,Sfl North Viet- namese and lost 125 dead and 700 wound· ed in the operation whJch also captured 500 tons of ammunitlon and bSock:ed a Communist attack on the northtnl coastal cities. Today the Marlnea were rewarded with $1,200 worth of beer and so!~ drinks by rear area men who sup- ported them. Ocean View Won't Teach Sex Education No Rx educatlon el!sse,s will· be In- cluded in the regular instructional pro- grain , al Ocean View , Schooll, <llJbict s~perlhtendeat Clarence Hall told trus- tee. MondBy Ula statement was directed at TiU.ttte} R. J,ames SbaUer who said he had heard from a group of concerned citizens that "a sex education course almilar to one taught in Anaheim schoob WOUid be fore~ on the district." . "There Js no substance in fact to th.al," said Hall. "In fact, the trend seems lo be going in the opposite direc- tion." He added , however, that some parents and staff members are in- vestl1aUng an afler·school colD'se for parenLs which would include children at a later date. ''We'd like to' have some of the dual settle first on the matter," the superintendent concluded, referring to the troubles caused by family life and sex education courses in other school districts. Trustees also acted on the rollowing agenda items: -Approved mod.Jflcation of existing student classtime requirements on a pilot basis to comply with Senate Bill I. -Agreed to apply for funds under the National Defense Education Aet to supply the schools with tele vision sets and film projecton. M9ther Knew Slai~ Son Was Peddling Pot -Deeided to tent.aUvely approve a summer school progrsm for the district. -Approved preliminary plans for the construction of E1Stview School as presented by archJtect Lee B. Kline. -Hired James Caravelle, former superjat~nd~nt of the Mcf1!'1eyville Elem~ntary ·~ool Dl~t'ritt iri Arcadia, as assistant spperJntendent for personnel at the Ocean View School Dlstiict. T ells of Compl,ex, Troubl,ed Boy W ith High 1Q By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... DellY ,,,., ..... How do you explain th.mg• to 1 woman whd' kissed her only son Good Night, Juot btfore he was killed by pollce1 J'llMing down • dork afley, 14 years ol• ' and dreaed in birglar'• bi.<kl Yoo don't try. You just listen and Mn:. Helen Ellis, or IOU2 Kline Drive, Santa Ana Helghls, talked Monday about 1 sometlmel-trOub~ ed bo)' who will alway1 live lo hJJ mother ln a personal MDM. Stephen Stubblefield wu a comple1, contradJctory child of the times:, ac- cording lo those who -him, with an IQ of 13S and 1 conf1k:( between tendencies toward right and ......,. ~trs. Ellia sat and talked. materials ehelpty available. think I do -they'll get you or me. "Evldently aomeone got h1m started or both of us, '1 she Quoted hJm as using, thtn peddling, but he was too saying,· after \\'hich she 1old him such brilliant and healthy to be hooked. His a thought was ridiCulous. l<lpl1l II 1.u· of booa about drugs," lr.ta . Billi .laid. "They have ways of doing It 10 It · Frlendl and relatives moved. about wtll look like an accident," Mrs. Ellis the e~nsJve, well-lo-do Country Club continued, recalling her son's words then Estaltt home Shared by Mn. Ellis and and wonderln& now aboul his violent Stevc, 1_wbo d.14 eitenslve landacape work death. of IOOlf quality. •11 want you to pack up b1I thing!, She saJd Steve watched television with Jtoney," she: Wd, tu.ming. to the boy's her Saturday nlgllt, then went to bed Aunt Ptulloe "l don't think I could about 10 p.m., to get up early and sland to Co in'to-hb room. I've promised accompany her to a professional con-. hla drum let ••• " ventlon b:I Los Angeles on Sunday. Flvt da1I before the Slo~ld ,bof ,By momlng he WU. gone , and Mrs. , Orange Weatlaer •tore of the same is the word rront the weatbennan fo r Wed· ne9day, with cle1r 1kles follow·' Ing the morning clouds and temperatures back in the mid- dle 60'1. IN~IDE TODA\' A new plcu ln Santa Ana and , . ti bone1rt a' Orange Coa1t Cot· -'· ·zegc arc 1'evitwtd bll' DAILY • \ f'ILOT mtl.,.\IQCl<w. '$(i l.'~111' .. , l 1 I ''He wa1 my CHJ;ly ehlld. I bad him'· alone. I pold for him 1\one. I know he WU peddling pol" WU ~ Into Ibo Cifl& (>J«sl I EIUt JJ!oUkht ;allhoo:g\) ' II'. ~· -ra~ Me~ial. ..,...11111<1 'room•ar' : uausoali i.havlor thaJ; ~e 'fill&N ,ha•e, -If , Cl '•;.II>~ lllillel-' ·1"· 'to. 1. frlellll'f holrit In.~ and In · ebOot, Mi'I: E!llf'lbol;'I\lm 'tier• 1cliotl: noUo a'Wokin her. ~ ' tafnmntt' Pa~ 19 · • ' .. ' . ~ . "• ' MET D!ATH IN AN ALLEY Sttphtn Stubbltfitld The Heinz Kaber Jntennedlala School eighth grader hid juat built 1 clever seltnce fair projec~ Ille l.lld, and uked for pttm1.alon to Join a voluntet.r leJ'Vice Jll'Oll'lln 11 Fairview .Stale HoopllaL One of hi< f11al olf-, perh1po, -•• too much Cl:U'bUJ about druD In 1 Ume when tt Is crtrnlnaDy Pl"Ofltable for some Ml make a variety of reaearch i ___ ..,_,_._' -__ ....... ...__~----· ·----~---- to be·lraated for•• LSD ov~. Detedl•" a11ived at t~,£!fd• Ntjll, She uld ht took the fl .~le 1 home1 next dOOf al 1 to1oz,,~t ~V~ ~ drq, deact:ibed u b"t11Lf.j or •lat<( Sunday ~lq,careyh\i an~ CrodloelovUlall orllln, blue bl~ 'Uficallon card which confirmed lh4l thOV, > cut with Kool-Aid, lflor ~ · . . yoonf)ohn llot'wu 41cve ~lubbkll•ld. h dJacuuion of hJa involVemtnl•, , ' J.os ,J.o&elf,a ;1Jlo~ ,Dept~•· "I tried to lei him lo ""•me~ 41tt<tjV~ Oil,lly~ "'1'111¢1 1fi/) 1bi-, • llst of names,!' she said, trilU iblm ~1l,U...conveii •jljt·wo1•~~~ 1 , to coopttlte with po1fce ~·'· ,, u -aa1a , rep< "'• lbt & :wti·. ' "Marni, ff i do -e< 'they' t ven ISM MO'l'HER, Pip I) ' t • " .. .. • " ..... ••• ••n " • " .. I ' Z DAILY PILIT H Black Dy THOMAS FORTUNE 01 Ille o.11~ f'lltf SllH Vll')'lac 1t1m pollll to matteMI~~ to tmpollte, three bl•ck students asked for the help of adult, while women Alo!ldoy at U~ Irvine. . Ea<:h uslng his own approach, they appealed to 150 menibers of UCI ToWn apd Gown to prove their purported con· cern by giving of their time and money to help the black community. Joho King, 2S-y~-<>.ld aopt!omore from BY WILLIAM REED Reeds ••• In the Wind This ls Boys' Club \Veek honoring the youth group dedicated to ~ro­ inotion of juvenile decency. During tbe \veek the Boys' Club is holding open hou se al 319 Yorkto,vn Ave. so all residents can see \vhat goes on inside the two-sto ry buildin. Juvenile decency is promoted by taking good boys and giving them a place \vhere they can be boys '''ithout too much interference from mothers, sisters, aunts, etc. Here men like Pat Downey, ex· ccutive director, provide many ac· tivities for the lads and most of all give the moral support needed to help the boys learn how to be ~trong enough to avoid the pitfaUs in the path of youth today. * The fluntington Beach Boy5' Club is an active one and well backed by the community. A board or directors, composed of men with strong beliefs in the emphasis of juvenile decency, organized and guide the club. Boys participate in activities ranging from judo to flying kites to snowball fights. Even the candy machine is an instructional ac· tivity. The club still needs many things before it can oiler the best possible climate for the promotion of juvenile decency and residents con· erned about today's youth prob- lems should drop into the c I u b to see what they can do to stem the tide of juvenile delinquency. * Guidance and character develop-- ment are the stock in trade at Pat's club over on Yorktown. Pat has done much to make the local clu b a swccess. It's been in opera· tion only a year or so and already it serves several hundred boys. Tonight there will be a mother and son event beginning at 7 o'clock. Mo nday there was a Shamrock Hunt . Planned are a fa ther and son night. a judo sho\v and ex hihitlon of other activities of the club. In the planning stage is the se-- cond annual Huntington Seacliff S\veepstakes Golf Tournament. It starts ~farcb 29 and nfns through April 6 and is open to all golfers and Boys' Club supporters. * The Boys' Club has been a most \\•elcome addition to the area and one which we hope will continue to prosper for the benefil of our children. 111\llY l'lllll OllANOl CO.Ul l'UILIUONO <Ollll'AH'r ll•IJert N Wt•4 l'mJMnt •Ml l'llMIMer J•t~ 11. c .. ri:r Vic• l't•ldt!lt 1M 0.-t ,.,..,,._ Th'"''' Ktetll •••IVf Th•m•1 A. Mwr,,.ll ine M111111ns l!f11tr Al•e•t W. ''''' Wllll1111 R1•d ..,,,_,... """""'"" l.ec.ft U llOr (tty 1'-'IW H111tl9tf911 ... dr-Offlw Jr>t Ith Str••I M•lli111 A4dr1u 1 P.O. 111 7'0, tJMI o.w-. ' ,......,, ... di: tt11 .... , .. ,.,.,. t;ov ..... ,. CM11 .¥.t .. • QI W"I 11~ l!rMI ue-nt Inc~; m ,_,, •- ' .·.f· --· --• .. . . ,,_#-....... ~--~- IUUllfo fi~ft ll,. 1969 Students:. Apneal f ()r UCI Assi ·stance . . San Franc!ICO, c~ to ~ !'lllll1-.ud empl>uile Ibo 1!"!1Uv1 ~ blldi lludtnll .,. ~ ' Ill<• tat«!ol 111 ' It' black communlcy. · •• More m1tter-of~ld WU Jim 'II'*· 29-year .. td chairman ~r Ille I/vine Bl4ck Student Union. He told why be bellevu the educaUonal structure needs to be changed and why he feels the chief demands of striking student! at SF Sta~ are justified. Tom Wallord, 26.year-old junl_or troin Spla "¥. WU' dl¥ i!> llYIJ\f Wbll l>O loll. llo ~ ii. .. ...,..i,, I.it 11!~~~ black =::~-H• Jr/ their = -black power -has been taken 'to mean ~iqlfn!:e. II• said tl>at Is a in!Jla~• thlt baa been made by the mass news m<dia. K1qg A id black power is nol racism in revene but a way for bl;\c.ka to Books fro111 the Past ~nk pc>1IU'!17 cl themielves aftor 300 1'n GI ~ lllllhl to bile tl!t~vu. lllck illldlait cl lbll day m DOI """' to be aolllljl and use their eduoa· tloo lo -If ct... to lhe middle class white as they c~. he said. That 1s the new riiooct. Every Bl,c~ Stu.dtQt Union Jn the counCrY, he said, has a program for spreadiitg the wealth by tutoring those in the bl1ck .icommwUUts not .able to attend college. He sal~ that ls the OAIL Y l'ILO? Slttt PM" Mrs. Michael D. Nivens (left) discu5Ses new Hunt- ington Beach Library exhibit to Mrs. RosaJee Mar· tin, 5071 Sparrow Drive1 and Mrs. Martin's daugh- ter. Laura, 5. Exhibit, prepared by ~rs. Nevins, a Westminster kindergarten teacher, features chi!· dren's books from the 1800's. Twenty.three volume exhibit includes several rare volwnes. lt will be on display for a month. blckbone ol the Blee~ Student Uolo.,, not vlokoce. :· 1111 own mllll talenll, he 8'(d, ti tO "lllulro my mind among the m111e1 of black peoplt.11 Winder also aea.tSed the press of lttlll· Uonalism. He said black studenll w111L changes in the educational structure, but people don't 'top to lh1nk demands rn1ght be made for gond reason. Using San Francisco State as illus- tration, he &aid he sees two priac.Jpal demanda. Parking Meters To Stay Along Coast Highwa y 'The familiar parklng meters along Pacific Coast Highway southeast of the municlpal pier will stay there desplte urging of the Chamber of Commerce and others to remove the meters and prohibit parking. Councilmen Monday agreed that lhe meters must stay along the hlgh.,.:ay despite the planned opening of a 1,400-car municipal parking Jot on the OCi!an side· of lhe highway. The meters must stay, cooncilmen \\'ere told, mainly because the city cannot prohibit parking on the highway edges. according to James Wheeler, Director ol the Public Works Department. "\Vhen the accident ret0rd justilies it the Division of H.lghways \Viii tell u.s to take the meters away and Mint the curbs," Wheeler said. Prohibition of parking had been sug- gested es a means to clear some of the congestion on the highway during weekends and in the summer. In ad· dition, safety aspects we-re painted out. Dlffi:tor 0£ Harbors, BeacheS and Development Vince Moorhouse also ex· plained that the meters will bring in about $80,000 annually to the city, money whi <;h is pledged to repayment of bonds sold to finance the parking lot. f'ro1n Page 1 Funeral Slated For Slain Youth MOTHER MOURNS SON ••• medical supply firm in 1'.ilssourl. "I'd lJke to talk to you about your son Stephen," he said. "Is he hurt?" "I looked into his eyes," Mrs. Ellis said Monday, "and 1 sald : He's dead." "How? I thought maybe dru11 •.. ·• "He was shol" "I fell to the floor myself. If the boy was running, he was obviously ju.st scared. He was not shooting back, .so he was not armed. Thi.s is ju.st logic," she said. There are answers that will be given to these inevitable questions, but they will continue to gnaw at her con· sclousnw !or week.OJ ahead, even after investigators finish the case.a NOT OWN CLOTHES One must assume a kind of melanc holy forgiveness toward him, h o w e v e r. whatever hls tre&passes a1alnSl society, because he bas paid the full, extreme i-ice. "He is not under Indictment," Di&trict Alt<>mey C•cil Hlcka said Monday, "he is deceased." He may have been a bur11at, but he wu human too. F rom Page 1 CAT LICENSE • • particularly objected to use of "a metal box" and a truck backed up to the box and the exhaust used to dispoae "He wasn't even v.·earing his own of sick and unwanted animals. clothes . How could he get down thtrt "This iJ unacceptable and inhumane. with all those tools? He always had The anlma1s dle in agony." enough mQ11ey available. Who was in City Administrator Doyle Mi 11 er the car that drove away?" she asked. presented a video tape of the animal "The police told me it was the work shelter condiUOnJ showln1 that the or someone who had betn burglarizing animals have wooden Doors In part of for years. He couldn't have had lime their cages and that ainditions appeared to break in like that If he was home in good order. at 10 and was shot al 11 : 4~." she said. Sharkey invited anyone who wants to "The only thing he ever stole was drop in and look it over to do so. a roll of tape from Stater Bros. Market He explalned that during the recent and that scared the llfe out of him. heavy rains some dogs did get wet Why did they have to shoot?" Jrom the rain despite a partial roof Answers exlst, but they must comt;. ........ over the cages. He saJd, too, that a from authorilles. J truck had betn ustd for dlaposal when "?o.ly friends all tell me : 'Helen, you're the usual means of putting the animals 80 lucky to have a son like Steve','' away had failed due to heavy rain. she continued, "He was the only person Mrs. Stuart admitted to the council · J ever knew who Jo\·ed me. That's why that she had never discussed the matter 1 can't stand to go see him," she said. ~1th Sharkey. Mayor Alvin ti.I. Coen "To me he'll never be dted." suggested that ghe do so. "That dog is looking all over the Sharkey aaid that it appear~ that M:s. house for his master," she said in· Stuart might 1:>t lntereated in open1n_g terrupting then calling to the pup named a humane society of her own and 1( 'Hippie' ~ause he had a $1,000 mother that were ~e, "I'd be glad to help and a hippie mutt dog for a father. her all I can. "'Honey " she said "he isn't here." •le added that cats are one or the ' ' bigest problems for h1s officers. FINAL CHOICE Before the tragic final choice that ended his life, youni Stubblerttld was known to be involved only In boyish pranks and his photo was in the DAILY PILOT three years ago. He and a youn1 Bay View Elementary School buddy encountered and killed a 71h·!oot snake In the neI1hbor1'ood.. "What would you do! ..•. R11n~ ••• not ••• Steve Stubblefield ," read lhe ironically propheUc memento his mother found amoni scrapbooks Monday. "He never ran from anythin1 in his llle," ahe s&.ld. The boy who appannUy experim~ted too widtly and grew up too fast into an adult world of crime -where life is Included in the stllts-fin&lly found a. time wben he bad to run. From P •1e 1 HOSPITAL ... Bonfa's ruling that thtre w" no legal way for Bame to •r,peal lM dtclaion of the plannlnt comm ulon that planners could not reopen the hoapltat case once the ptrmlll had been Issued. "I Nlve no commtnl on lhat," said Bonfa rtferrln1 to Mayor Coen's char1e1. "A d<d!ton GI the ell)' oltorn.y 11 not gotptl," rtt.orted Coen. bu\ his arguments f•lled to sway felfow roun· cllmen a~ the appe:•I was ordered filed anti the money relurned on a ~l vole. Ac tion Deferred In Peru Seizure Of U.S. Vessel WASHINGTON {AP) -The United States apparently has decided, for diplomaUc rt1sona, to delay takin1 action against Ptru In last mouth's ship seizure or: the Peruvian coast. State Department IOUrcts say the Unlted States d0ie1 not want to prtll the issue now at the risk Of fut'thtr irritatin1 the already strained relations between the two countries. A law which wtnt into effect last November calla for au~ ol U.S. m!litary aid to any countly 1Ue1ally :!!lcizln1 a U.S. ship. Peru 1eiitd the M1rlner, a U.S. tuna \"e&stl. 25 miles off the Peruvian cout last Feb. 14. The UNltd St.ates considers waters 12 miles beyond the coutllne of maritime natl.ons to be lntemation1I territory : Peru ell.Im• jurltdlcUon over waters extend.Ing ZOO milu: from Ill coast. A similar Incident last Dtc. to, In ·which Ecuador le.lied tM tuna vtAe.I Dey Tsland, ruulted In an •lmost lm- medllll '"'i>Wl•n ol U.S. military lid 10 that COWlll'J. A funeral service for young Stephen Stubblefield will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Westcliff Chapel, Colla Mesa, with visitation today. Visitors may call at the chapel from 2 lo 9 p.m., according to mortuary spokesmen. • lnterment will follow the Wednesday service at Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona de! Mar. Survivors include his mother, ~frs. Helen Ellis, of 20112 Kline Drive Santa Ana Heights, his father, Albert Stu~ blefield, 3nd his maternal grandparents. One ls unlimited enrollment for third Wllfld (mill:t::) 1t11den11. SF S!fll • lllO WU JO bl bllCk. bu( Iii Jll6S only enroll four percent blackl, he said. fie .suqeated the college could jwit have bigger classes without great financta.I ilrain. The second key demand, be said, Is autonomy for the black gtudles depart-- ment. He said the promise of a black studies department has been made alnct 1965, bu( black students were told there weren 't funds available. But when the student strike began, out of the clear blue sky there were 11 faculty pm:ltlOl'IS and funds suddenly available, he noted. If it only was given under duress, not willingly, students felt it also \\·ould be taken a\liiY at the slightest provocation, be said. Winder also defended tactlcs of dis· ruption and takeover as strategically ne<:essary. "If a guy is willing to be . arrested you've got to believe that cat is sincere," he sald. "You have to admire, I would think. this type, of guts commitment." Watford sald ·he wondered bow many • ti~s his or the other black students' mothers had an oppprt.unity to have tea ai II o'clock in the morning and how many of them are a( the white women·s houses scrubbing the fioor. He sald he looks on the women as "one of the first line of enemies we rtach. "I look out on your smiling faces and T see you are very proud to have a few black students to talk to you," he said. •·Tu·enty-six black gtudenlJ out of 3,500 at Irv ine. So it's a real big deal. "\Ve know it is just another token," \Yatford said. ''It is very typica l of the white man. Everyone passes the buck. You say, 'I'm not that way. Maybe my nei~hbor is.' " He said, '"if you are really concerned about setting the score right., counteract the inferior education black students are getting in Santa Ana. We need your bodies, your money and materials. "You say you're good hearted whit& folk.5. We'd like to find out when: ever}"" one's heart is really located. We want to give you a chance to prove your good-- natured selves. "If we can make it here at Irvine, we can make i( anywhere in the country." All three black students received about the same applause for saying, each In his own way, "understand us, and help our black brothers and sisters." One woman asked what specifically they plan to do with donations and assistance they receive. King answered. •'\Vhat you·re sa.ying Is you don't want lo give us money to buy guns. Set up a scholarship for a black student in your name. We need books for the black community. And monet for ma terials to use in our tutoring." Winder said, "Our main goal is to get more black students on campus. We need scholarships and housing." • FINAL 2 DAYS P HASE I fOR CHARTER MEMB!lSHIP AT HUNTINGTON BEACH 50%0FF ' I I' In! • 161 be Jld oat is ri- ck ce ... be ar "' !d. oot be "'· ls· '.ly ed " iy ~· •• ... ... " ,. k. •Y •d :t ·e " • .. >t is r s I < • I , Laguna n.eaeh EblTION . I " .t I Today's FIDal N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS Nixon Planning to Vislt . Capistrano on • Saturday Clancy Wants Part Clancy, a friendly quail with a yen for a role in Laguna's Pageant of l\1'asters, implores Producer Don \Villiamson to sign him up. Clan· ·cy answei:ed recent casting call arid the sympathetic Williamson dutifully noted partic ulars. Pageant will. run from July 1 to Aug. 24 this year. Decisio11 on Canyon Annex By J ACK CHAPPELL Of"'-Dllll' 1'1111 st1H After 11early a month of st udy on r: proposed qnnexalion of Laguna CanyOn property, the only thing the Laguna Beach planning commissioners coold decide Monday was that they couldn°t reach i decision. The planning commission "had been asked to review and recommend a course of ac tioo to the city council regarding the annexation or what started out to be an area of 446 acres shaped something like a boot. Since the area has less than 12 registered volers, a short form annex could be made without a vote by the people being annexed. All lhe city has to do is ask the Local Agency Format.ion Commission (LAFC) for permission. It remains to Stock Market s NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market closed with a. moderale gain today. Trading was active. {See quotations, Pages 10..11). • be seen whether the city·will get around to asking. Three votes on the measure were at· lempled by lhe commission. ·111e lint motion, which called naliy for approval of the anneni.ioo died for lack ol a second. -· The second motion caned for approva1 of the annexati<>n, with tl)e stipulatiOn that property owners opposed to joining the city· could exclude:' their p2"0perty. City Planner Al Autry told com· missioners that Clcti-On would resuJt in an extremely irregular bouodary and probably !be denial of the annualloo by ·the LAFC. The second effort failed when three commissioners voted against it. The third time, commissioners decided to pass the annezation to the city council without a recommendaU<>n one way or the other. It passed, bUt barely, by a 3-2 vote. Commissioners were lauded for the at'tion by annexatk>n foe Dr. G. R. Ekeberg, a Laguna Canyon veterinarian. "ThJ.s shows fOll're not a bunch of IS.. ANNEX, Pip I) City Facing Actions for Flood Loss ' Two flood damage claims and an ad· rnonltion to stop shaving off hills for building sit.es are part of the Laguna Beach City Council's Wednesday agenda. The greater of the claims. $4,063, is filed by Ronald K. and Elizabeth V. Armstrong, for damage to their property at 1223 Starlit Road. It alleges damage "''as caused by city failure to keep the Starlit storm drain open . The claim ilemi~ the damage as landscaping and cleanup, $2,546; restoration of carpeting In house, $1,203; and painting and incidentals, $313. An earlier claim was filed by Jon S. Brand, 681 St. Ann's Drive, for $508. l( slates that damage was caused by the Lomar Construct.ion Jeaving a plyWood covering . over the storm drain at Fl!Q Way and St. Ann's. 11le claim includes repairs to Tefrigtrator, wuher and dryer, $100; toW cn.tges.fbr car, $8.&o; car rentals, $50; dJn!age to lt.ored materials, $50; d~bria ~l\d l!lhtr ~ ~~ .• ~-~F~~ Qty~. lamet D. -said councl!min 1ioold refer the claims to the city luutmd·Carrier. A. separate agenda Jtem Is a letter from. Marge Cha.leuJ)ka, 26!7 Victoria Drlve. "You must stop the shaving off of all the beautlful hills in Laguna and !be canyon fer building," it stales. The letter states that flood proved that geological atudy and tue and plant &rowth would have helped prevent destruct.loo. Crltlclfe Council Planners Chide Study On Convention Center City council action auth<>iJlng a $10,000 oludy for a Laguna !leacjl hotel and convention center on a portion of the Main Beach aroused city planners Morl- day. Milfed commis9.oners questioned the rouncll acUon made wltbput con- sideration by the plaMing commiS&ion, the city planner, or the hir~ general plan consultant Dani.el Mann, JoM.wn ar.d Mendenhall (DMJM). Comm1S$1oner Joseph Tomehak said tlie state planning code required cities to consult with their p~annlng cOmmisslon on actions involving city properly. "No one on the planning coaunisslon or the planning staff or the pr.ie,.ionai planner DMJM kru!w about lhi!," Tomehak said. "I wi..&h to go on record asking the council ror a clarification of I.he ez. peoditure of funcb for the Holacbe.r sludy," he said. His motion was passed unan1mously. Just what is meant by "clarlficatloo.'' was unclear. City P.ianager James Wheaton, who will have to bring the planning com· mission quesUon before city council, said he would have to ,talk to City Planner AJ Autry to find wbat was wanted. Wheaton disagreed with the planners' contention that they should have been consulted. He said that the Ume for their involvement would be when the feasibility report w.is returned to lhe council. The state code requires plarming com- mission acUon on all matters involving the use of public property, Wheaton said. "We're not talking about lhe UJe of public property, we're talking about the feasibUlty of the use o( oobllc property,!' (S.. CENTER, Pq e 11 :? 'Other' Festivals Given .. Laguna Planners Approval Both ot Laguna Beach's "other" art festivals received city planning com· mission approval Monday lo bold lhel r summer outdoor art sales and ex- hibitions. The Laguna Artist and Gallery Owners Association's Sawdust Festival r~ived the commisslon's stamp of approval alter arrangeme_!1t3: for sanitary faclliUes were made. The Sawdusters also agreed to a smaller sign as a condition of approval. Fesitval grounds are at 935 Laguna Canyon Road. HourS are from ll a.tn. to midnight, July 1 l through Aug. 24, the same dates as the Festival or Arts. •notileground~ Group Asks Okay w Dig Cit y Land The Laguna Beach· Fine Art.s As:Jocia· tion won commission approval for ils festival to be held the same time as the other two. Called "Art-a-Fair." formerly the ••splinte r Festival,'' the display will be at 346 N. Coast Highway, same as last yenr. ln other action, the Planning Com- mission : Laguna Beaclf may add a new dimension to its cultural legend If the Antique BotUe Club of Orange County has Its way. Councilmen WedneSd1y will con&ider the club's request, to use city property for an old bottle dig. "The City of Laguna Beach has, or will acqtdre, many parcels of land that are very promising as bottle digging sites," states a letter from Mrs. Nancy Mansur, club secretary. • The letter asks that club members be aUowecl to dig for old botUu and gla:srware as: a met.bod of tracing the history or the county. "It ls agreed in advance that upon completion of such digging the site will be returned to as near it.s original con- dition as possible,'' the letter states. City Manager James D. Wheaton said he didn't know where the most promising bottle site1 are located. The letter refers to old forgotten dumps and building sites. If e<>uncilmen dig lhe Idea. Wheaton Indicated, procedures will need to be set up to keep track of .the diggers and see that necessary Insurance is proviJed. -Approved a conditional use permit allowing beer and wine to be sold al the Ship A 'hoy restaurant, 480 S. Coast llighway. -Approved the construction of a Stan· dard Oil Service Station, to replace one now existing. at 604 S. Coast Highway. -Approved a request by Sam Nitta, of the ' Seacliff Motel, 1661 S. Coast llighway to construct an enroachln~ wall . -Authorized the city attorney to draw up a resolution making city designs for off.street parking standards official. ' Mother l(ne.w Slain Son Was Peddling Pot ' MET DEAT!i IN AH ALL EY Sttphtn Siubbltfiola • . . Tells of Complex, Troubled -Bo y Witli High IQ By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of· .... Dally """ lfltfl How do you explain things to a woman who kissed her only 1on Good Night, just, before he was killed by iiplice running down a dark alley, lt yean old and dresaed Jn L-11!glar'1 black? Yot; don't try. . • You just Ualen and Mrs. Helen Ellis, of !O!U Kline .Drive, Santa Ana~t., talked Monday about I IOmetiJnel..ltGUbl· ed. boy who will always ll'{e •:to b1a mother In a personal sense. -Stephen Stubblefield was a .comple1, contradictory child of the limes, .ae· cording to those who knew him, with an IQ of 13$ and a conflict between tendencies toward right and wrong. J\frs. Elli• sat and talked. ,iHe was my onW chlk:I .• I bad him •100.. 1 paid !or.;ltim • ai900. f koOw be WU peddlinl pot"• . The Hew !Wier Intmnedia\e School eighth grader bad just boUt 1 Clever science fatr projtrl, she sald, and a.sttd frw permlalon to Joln a votunt.etr service • program at Fairview Stat. Hospital. Ooe of bis latai offenJeS, perhaps, wu too mucll curlosl!Y aboui drugs In a lime wherl It ii cr)mlnallY profitable far some lo make a •arlety of research • material.I cheaply avail.able. "EvidebUy IOO'leone got hlm started using, . then , peddling, but be wu 100 brilUan=beallhy to be )looked. His room full of books about drugs,'' Mn. EUii d. Friends and relatives moved about the ezpemfve, well-to-do Country Club Eotalel home shared by Mn. Eilis and Steve, who did extenatve landscape work ol good quallly. "l want you to J>AC.k up hla things, Honey," she 18.id, turning to the boy's Aunt ,Paullne, "I don't think I could lland to ro into hil room. 1• .. promised his drum Id • , .'1 Five d.Y, befcre the Stubblefield J>oy \\'AS whetted into the Colla Mesa 11'.emortal Holpito! omerrency room•- ly Sundaf.' dtM 'of ~' ;as .. cal 1btlllet In tl1e chest,~ EIU1 ,·loolr'hlm 'Uiere 'to be treat¢d ror'a:n;LSD overdoee. 1 Siie 1ald.be tool< the f!.~~I• dru(, ~ u beln( ot Czecboolo~ldan orllfn, blue Jn <;olor and eul with l!o9l·Aid, alt<r 111 upseUing dilculsloo qi Ills invoh>emenl · "I tried 'to &et him: 11o1 sive me· a tbt of ~mei.'" lhe • slld, )tC!nt /ti"' lo°COCIPO\'I~ Wiiii oolfc{ c!et1'!1vd , "Mama, Jf l do -ot 1they' !ven • think 1 do -they11 get you or me or both of us." she quoted him as saying, after which she told him such a thought was ridlculous. "They hnve ways of doing It so it will look like an accident," Mrs. Ellis continued, recalling her son's words then and wondering now about his violent death. She ta.id Steve watched television with her Saturday night, then went to bed about JO p.m., to get up early and accompany her to a professional con-- vention In Los Angeles on Sunday. By morning he was gone and Mrs. Ellis thought although IL was rather unuSual behavior tbat h~ might bave gone Jo. .a. friend'' home instead and~ 1 chose not to ,.waktrl ,w.·1 .c. - , ··, · Detectives arrived at 1 the Clyd~ ;r;'dI1 ~ ' home nest door al 20102 Kline' briff.I tater Sunday motnfl\tl "Cfl'li'in& ab ldln-' • ttficatlon card which conDJined\hlt IBeir )..ung John One was SJeye Stubblef~d. A Los Angeles ·6 Poldj Departmtnt , dct,cilve fin.ally !Mde conlact· wllh Mrs. EllJ1 at the con venUIAI t\e. was attending ¥. · laJq rrneser\l'i~i"A for " Jarge • l"M<JYllE.R,J'••t•l·l ... , . , .. • • President, Wife to See Swallows President and Mrs. Rlchard ~t. Ni.Ion will visit San J uan caplstrano Saturday; sourcea in San Diego &aid today. The President ii expected ta view the annual celebration welcoming the swallows back to Mission San J uan Capistrano, according to reports from the San Diego Chamber of Commerce lhis morning. The weekend vii.it, announced today by press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, will include a stop at San Diea:o, where Nixon will view a Mel.Jean Folk Art display presented by the Museum of Man in Balboa Park u part of. San Diego's 200th anniversary celebraUon. The President and first Lady may spend Friday and Saturday night at the Hotel del Coronado in Coronado. Th4' presldenUal party will leave W ashlngton on Friday, stopping, in Independence, Mo., where the chief ex· ecut1ve will visit former President Harry S. Truman berore flying on to Southern California. Press Secretary Ziegler said that Nixon · ll\iUalefl the -lilll with ~. who recenUy spent a few days in a hospital. The Prtaimrt and Mn. 'Nlxon .~ npectoc! to return to Wuhfttatoo late Sunday. Dystrophy Drive In Laguna Aided By Beer Openers Despite twist top cans, CoaM Inn LI· quor Store, Laguna Beach, bas sold enough beer can openers to collect about 38 pounds of co[ns for the Muscular Dystrophy Foundatioo. Coins have been collected as donatfons foe openers to ald the fight against a dread disease which two years ago claimed the life of a local boy. Store owner Dick Smilb started ihc campaign in· 1M3 when the son of bis employe, James SkiMer, waa first stricken with the crippling disease. Since then, hundreds of patrons have dropped their colna lnto a IJ)eei.i.I col· lectlon canister and yearly the coins are weighed and turned into the Laguna Federal Savings tor counting. . "Last year we had 35 pound! and It came to $.15 dollars," said Skinner. Sklnner said H and L Distributors donated a case of J,000 openers to the cause. Smith added two case.s dW'ing the year. Wall Plaques Taken Artist Hnrlen Terwilliger. 22361 Third St., South Laguna, told police Monday that three w a 11 plaques with flower designs had been stolen from the Hotel Laguna. The loss was $$5. Weather More of the same ii the word from the weathennan for Wed- nesday, with clear aides follow· ing the morning clouds and telnperaturea back in the mid- dle 80'a. INSmtr TODAY A new plau in Santa Ana and a COtlCert ot Oranoe Coast Col· 1€(}e ore rtuitwtd bu DAILY PILOT critic• today. Sec Enur- tainmtnt. Page 19. ....... ,. ........ . C•tifotff.le · I ........ a Cit.11tt1W f . _,. -,.... 1, C-.tn ' ' V""ii t ·~ ..._. +6 Cl'MI~ 19• ....... ......, I .DM1JI ...... • '""' ...,,., .. Di-c. • ~ ..... 11-11 ·~ ..... ' . ......,.. .. " .............. '' ,,... Mffll• ..... ,. ___ , lt.11 "'"""· It ll'ft C•llf t ........ I ........ ., ,, ........ ..... " ...,_.... ,, ..... ..... .. ... .._ " ' .. ' . • .. J • • ~ Dl1LV PllOT L T111Jd.,, Mlt'Cft 18, 1"'9 I ---~· .. • .. ___ . '·. .. --.. ->r .. ·------- Black Stu<fents · ·Appeal for UCl Assistance . . - JJy THOMAS FORTUN& Of ftl4 Dtllr l'lllM S11H Vieyiof· lrain. poUlo, lo 0m&llll'OIJICI il lmpoUte. thm 61ack sludenl.! u ked for the help of adult, white "'omen Monday at UC Jrvlnc. · Eich win& his own approach, they apj)ealed lo 150 members of UCI Tov.·n and Gown to prove their purported con- cern by giving of their Ume and money to help the black community. John JtiDe, 23-year-old sophomore from U.S. Launches Bigges t War Drive in Viet SAIGON (UPll -A U.S. armored ~olu'mn five n1ilcs long led a force of thousands of Allied inlanlrymen today against Communist troops threatening Saigon . Communist losses ll<ere descrlb· cd as "considerable'' in a day of heavy Lighting. The offensive. labeled operation Atlas \\'edge, was thought to be the largest of the war, eclipsing the 40,000 man Allied force which battled Communists in the same jungles 30 miles northwest of Saigon in Operation Junction City in February 1967. Col. George S. Patton III. cnmmander of the tanks and son of the famous general, said the count of Communist bodies in today's fighting was expected lo be "considerable." Allied gunship.!! reported killing 50 today and another 28 Communists died J\.fonday in the preliminary stages of the operation. Allied losses were "light." Far to the north, weary J..cathernecks Cl! the 9th U.S. Marine Regiment, ended their bitterly foughl c:impalgn in the jungled mountains near Laos and wrre flown out under fire by helicopters todey from their A Shau Valley positions. UPI correspondent David Lamb said the Communists fired near}y 300 rounds flf mortar fire at the fleet of 50 he licopter11 which flew out the last Marines today but that most ,of the 5hells exploded harmle&sly in the dense undergrowth. Monsoon rains and fog had prevented their departure until todey. Frotn Page 1 ANNEX ... bungle-beads after all." the outspoktn woman said. Now. it appears the city councll will have to venture inlo the tempestous waLers or the annexation ~·ithout a recommended course. The proposed annexation, which hid bem reque.!lted by property owners within the area, ran into trouble when several canyon residents outside the bounds decided to oppose ii, the most voe.al of \\'horn "'as Dr. Ekeberg. \Vhal may be the death rattle or lhe ;innexation came with the rustle of water assessment bills for the canyon residents. Charges for bringing water to the canyon had turned out to be significantly higher than first expected. Smaller property owners. like William \\'est, whose eight acres lies at the north end or the area proposed for annexation , told the city they v.•anted out because of higher city taxes. PlaMer Autry said \Vest's land could he excluded because it lay at the end of the annex and would not break the cootlguous formation required by lhe LAFC. Other property Oll'ners' lands could nol. so rasily be excluded wilhout serious· ly lhreatening to distort the annexation Uoundaries. Planners agreed that, from a planning t:'.andpoint plus future city and canyon <1evelopment, it would be best for the <irea to be joined to the city. However, they said they could not force people lo link "'ith the city Jf lhc residents did not v.·ant to join. ll f\ll V 1'1101 Cll &NGE CCIAIT •UILISMINO COMl" .. 'IY k1i..r1 H. W114 l't"ldtt1t t nd 1'1111,llW• Ja,. k. c ... 1., 'loct ''"+""' .,,.1 G,,,.,., "'',."' Ti111111, KH ¥il Edlltr Tlrltrflt t A. MM<p~i"' MM.t1!111 l•1t11 kicl11r4 '· Nt ll '•wl Hh1111 ltt11111 lf1cll &d"'"lllfle. CllY Eflltf 011,.;• ~ ..... °"'" 111 '····· ""' W1!ll11t Alldr111: P.O. 111 66•, t t•l2 o ..... Offk• <•t• Mtu· lJI Wnt 1•1' """' 1'1-•I ltK~. 1111 ""fll ltlt;IM -....-.. H""1 ........ Itta! »f Jlfl I'""' DAILY 'llOT, wllll """ldl Is RIM'"" ~ "'''"'"''" II .... 1111 ...... dt~1' t_.<•I ...... ..., .,. _..... "'""'-... l."""' .. di. Nn-1 l ttc:JI, (Mlt ""'"' H1111tlrit- M ldl -""'"''~ Vtllh ". tlttlt wllll t ~ ""'..., °'',... c.... •u111111r1ir.1 c-"" ti'Wltt"' •""'' '" ,, nu *'"' .. -.. "'"'~ """" ,_,., ,,,. ,. .. " 111' Slrttf. c .. 11 MIM • T•ltp•a• (7141 4t4·t446 ~ ..... MJ ... Jtl C9fn.>tl, ,,.,, Or-(MU l'i*i"""' ( ....... "' ... -t•IH, lftUllA I ...... .-i ... tt l IN"'' " _..,.!ll•t-lt -Ill -· .. ·•:•'ail """*" _ ... -· .......... -·-· .... ( .... -1 ......... ~ htdt t#lf Ct1lt Mfw, Ctllftnll&. a-rlttttol ~ Of'rlfr 11.11 ''''""""' .,. ,....11 n .Jtl -•IYr fl'lillttY ••'IN"""-11.n l!Wlll\l"t. . ' ' Sall f\''¥(1co, choM lo bt pollto .AJld Sllllf, •• WM .dlr1et In H)'IDI '11111 r-: . CT.,,'"".~. •-· ""' "' . ., w••.· '.tmphu[oi ' Ille """'Uve lhlnp :tr.: .. ... .,., It ~ 1tt lllldo!lll an ~ IJke llilorl!W IA . ..,.. ,. -• .... blldl ....-i11. . • llfolllo wM "' .... lo ..... -· • •111,.. m1llar-<ll.flc\ wu Jlm WINler. lllq~ abaul0tbe -mood._ 29-year-old chairman of the Irvlne Black black students. H" said their •Wsan Student Union. He told wby he believes -black power -has been_ Liken to the educational struclure needs to be mean violence. He said that Is a ml.Jtak.e changed and why he feels the chief that has been made by Ute l\\8il news demands of striking students at SF St.ate medla. are ju.stifled. King said black ponr la nM r1cism Tum Watford, 26-year-old junior from -In reverie but' a wq (Ol' blackJ to , DAILY 1'1\.0T Steff ..i..tt NEED TD WIPE AWAY CHALK MARKS ENDED? Judg.t Giv11 P•rklng Meter L•w Low M•rk Meters Fatten Up Judge Deflat es Feeding Ban I! the parking meters along Laguna's hi ghways and byY1°ays start looking plum- per to you , it may jbst be that they're being fed by the office workers and shoppers of the city. The city ordinance againsl "feeding'' mete rs, that is stuffing one v.•ilh coins whenever time runs out wi!hout moving your car, has been given a judicial kick in the pants. Laguna Beach J\1unicipal Court Judge J . Parley Smith recently ruled that if the city \Vanis lo continue enforcement of the feeding ban, it will have to post signs in all areas subject lO the ordinance to advise patrons of the law. •·Rather than put up signs all O\·er the plact. we're going to wait until the parking committee brings Jn a recommendation," said City Manager James D. Wheaton. \\fheaton said some recommendation fron1 the committee to the city council is about a month or so away. The meter feeding Jaw, enacted to keep the parklng spaces turning over, came under heavy fire by downtown office v.·orkers who ~·ere called from busy desks every two hours to move their cars to new !pS«s, or be ticketed even thougb meterJ had "Ume" on them. Frequenlly, however, Ult intent of the la\v was circumvent.eel when the meter officers' chalk marks were mertly erased lrom the: car Urea. Easter :Week Street Dance Studied by Laguna Council Laguna Beach councilmen \Vcdnesday \rill consider a request rron1 the South Orange County Youth Conucil to stage an Easter \Veek street dance on Forest Avenue. A letter of request for the April 1 dance states it \\·ou\d pro\'ide recre11.lion for vacationers and 1,500 local resident teenagers. The group agree1 to provide security, chaperones and cleanup. The council will also corulder a request for an Easler Sunrise Service for St. Paul's Luthtraa Church on its building site on Momln&ilde Drive. The service would begin at 6:30 or 7 a.m. and would Include the use of a public addrut systrm. In other business., the council: -Will consider bids for construction o[ a public restroom at Crescent Bay. -Will bold a publk bwlng on Laguna Santa Ana Man Wreck Victim A S.nta Ana min suffered minor In-- juries Monday wken a pothole beside: 1..#· guna C&nyon Road e:1plode:d a Ure on h\I van causing the vthlcle lo rtp out 100 feet of b1rbed wln froce and ovtrrurn. RJahard O. Mather, 52. was t..aken 10 South Coul community Horpllal by a friend. Offklll• there Ald he "'IS treated and rtltued . Police 5l1d the westbound van left the road east ti. El Toro Road at 8:45 a.m. Canyon Annexation Number Three. in· \'olving 2.46 acres in six parcels of property. -Is to consider the request of JOl!eph C. Burns, 185 S. Coast Highway, lo renew 1he lease on the property used as a ~ barber shop until Sept. JO, 1973 at a rent not to exceed $200 monthly. -\VIII rtcri\'e a recommendation that a police dispatcher clerk be added to police personnel and that Police dfrt~er .lames Lansford become a special services officer. -\VIII likely approve a Laguna Beach Lions Club application lo conduct. a rum- mage sale for men on ~larch 21 and 29. -Will likely authorize an agreement wllh l.C. Abel to provide architectural design or 1 restroom at lhe beach end or Anita Strret. -\Viii consider bids on resurafcing or portions of Bluebird Canyon Drlve and D\11mond Street. -'\\'Ill consider a deferred resolution Siiggested by Air California which re- quests the Civil Aeronautics Boa rd to provide airline routes between Oran&e County and Seattle and Portland. -Will COT'!Slder amrndment to 7.oninc Ordinance 209 which include a propo.sed Commerclal·Hote.I Zone. Biafra Flights On G~N!VA IAP) -Red Croll m1hta lo Blarra from tht Equ•torlal Oulntan Island of Fernando Po •'tre rt.!lllmed r.~onday night after h11vlng been au&pr.nd· ed for more thin three wttks because of unrest In Guinu. . llllnk po1!Uvtb' ef themaelves aflcr 300 ,.... """"WI,. il!to -... -aludill1I al tll1I day ... .. '°""' lo lie aa1lla1I ahd "'° lhelr -lW lo ~ " close lo the mlddlt cllU whlte U tMy can, be 11id; That la the new mood. Every Black Student Unlon In the country, he said, has a program for spreading the wealth by tu&orlnl thole in the black communlUe4 not able \o atlond college. Hi -Hid tllal la the beckbone of lbe Black Student Un.Ions, One Is unlimited enrollment for third DOl vloltooa. _ world (minorll1) 1l11dlnll. SF Stale In Illa .... --. ... Aid, II lllO WU 10 portenl black, bu( ID IHI to '41hare my mlnd among the muses only enrolled. lour percent blacks, he of black people." said. He sugested the college could Winder also ICCUSed the preu of ltllll· just hive bigger classes without great tionallsm. He said black ftudentl want fmancl.aJ strain. changei in the educational ltnlcture., The second key demand, he said, Is but people doo 'l stop to think demands autonomy for the black studies depart· might be made !or good reason. ment. lie said the pron1ise of a b!ack Ulinc San P'ranclacd state aa illus-studies department has been made since tratton. he aald be MU two principal 1965 but black students were told there demands. werfn•t fu.nd,, available. But when the ----·-student strike began. out of the clear blue sky there were 11 faculty p<>Sitions F r om P .. e J and funds suddenly available, he noted. lf it only was given under duress. nol wUllngly, students felt it also would. be taken away at the slightest provocation, be said. MOTHER MOURNS SON • • • medical supply firm in Missouri. "I'd Jlke to talk to you about your lHlll Sle,,heQ;" he sa1d. "ls he hurt?" "I looked into. his . eyes," Mrs. Ellis said Monday, "and I laid : He's dead." "Ho°"T I thought maybe dru&a: •.. " "He .was shot.'' "I fell to the floor myself. lf the boy v.•as running, he was obviously just scared. He was not shooting back, so he wa! not armed. This is just logic," she said . There are answers that will be given to these inevitable questions, but ttiey will ' continue to gnaw at her con- sciousness for weeks ahead, even after investigators finish lhe case. NOT OWN CLOTllF.'l "He wasn't even wearing his own clothes. How could he get down there with all those tools? He always had enough money available. Who was in the car that drove away?" she asked. "The police told me it was the work of aomeone who had been burglarbing for years. He couldn't have J1ad time to break in like that if he was home at 10 and was shot at 11 : 4S," &he said. "The only Uting he ever stole was Fron• Page 1 CENTER ... the city manager said. The city council action taken at a f.tarch 6 meeting authorized the firm of Bud Holscher & As.10elatts of Cen- tury City to study the main beach for the possibility of building a hotel and convenUon center. The $10,000 report would include design criteria, site conditions, objecUves. preliminary architecture and projected economic beneflts. I a n>ll al tape from Slattr Bros. Markel and lhat scared the 111• out of bim. Why did lbey have lo llhOOI!" • Answers exist, but they must come from authorlUes. "My friends all tell me : 'Helen, yop're so lucky to have a son like Steve'," she continued, "He was the onlv -person I ever knew who loved me. That's why I can't stand to see him." "To me, he'll never be dud.·• "That dog is looking all over the hoUlt for his master," she said in· terrupting, lhen calling to the pup named 'Hi pple' because he had a $1,000 molher and a hippie mutt for a father. "Honey,'' she said, "he isn't h~re." FINAL CHOICE Before the tragic final choice that ended his life, young Stubblefield was known to be involved only in boyish pranks and bis photo WU in the DAIL y PILOT three years ago. He and a young Bay View Elementary School buddy encountered and killed a 7'A-loot snake In lhe neighborhood. "What would you do! •... Run? . , • not .•• Steve Stubblrfle\d," read the ironically prophetic memento his mother found among scrapbooks Monday. "He never ran from anything in his life," she &aid. The boy who apparently experimented too widely and grew up too fast into an adult world of crime -where life is included in the stakes-finally found a Ume when he had to run. One must assume a kind of melancholy forgiveness t<iward him, however, whatever his trcspa~es against society. because he has paid the full, extreme price. "He Is not under indictment," District Atlorney Cecil Hicks said Mol'.lday, "he is deceased." Winder also defended tactics of di!{· ruptlon and takeover as strategicall y necessary. "If a guy Is willing to ~ ~rres~ you've got to believe that cat 1s sincere. he said. "You have to admire, I wou ld think, this type ol guts commitment" Watford said he wondered how m1ny times hls or the other black students' mothers had an opportunity to have tea at II o'clock in the morning and how many of them are a( the white women·s houses scrubbing the floor, He said he looks on the women as "one of the first line of enemies we reach. "I look out on your smiling faces and T see you are very proud to have a fe1v black students to talk to you," he said. "Twenty-six black students out of 3,500 at Irvine. So it's a real big deal. "We know it is just another token," \Vatford said. "It is very lyplcal of the white man. Everyohe passes the buck. You say, 'I'm not !hat way. Maybe my neighbor ls.' " . He said, "if you are ~ally concerned about setting the score nght, counteract the Inferior education black st'udents are getting in Santa Ana. We need your bodies your money and materials. "Yo~ say you're good hearted white folks. We'd like to find out where every· one's heart is really located. \Ve want to give · you a chance to prove your good· natured selves. "lf we can make it here at Irvine. Wf!. can make if anywhere in the country.'' All three black students received a!xiut the s11me applause for saying, each in hi.~ own way, "understand us, and help our black brothers and sisters." One woman asked what specifically they plan to do v.·ith donations and 8!Sistance: they receive. King an.s"•ered. "\\'hat you 're saying IS you don't want to give us money to buy guns. Sel up a scholarship for a black student in your nam.e. We need books for the bla ck C001munity. And money for materials to use in our tutoring." Winder said, "Our niain goal is to gtt He may have been he v.•as human too. a buralar, but more black students on campus. We need scholarships and housing .. , FINAL 2 DAYS PHASE I FOR CHARnR MEMBERSHIP AT HUNTINGTON BEACH 50% OFF ·~ =--.i·-------------• Crae?kdown on Violence Mll.Y-a • ' ' . Parents: .Keep Your. Coot· ·Senate Okays Campus Bills tlrd Jn 1168 h• uld "' is 1rl- >ek '" tre the ur '" ed. not be on, li5· Uy :ed '· lid ' n• ti• "" ow ,., nc nd '" id. ;oo " '· he ,k, ny ed "' re ur "" " ut ti.~ Jr ly 1d ,, d By ALTON Bl.AD:m.EE ~,._l<MuWrlllr In offering !pecllle advice and Upt to parents concerned wllh drug use and abuse, specialists in a variety of fie1dl ltreSS live principal appraocbes:. Keep your cool Listen to what your childr<n or young people are really saying. Get facts about drugs, and share them ith youngsters. . Jn iscipline, be firm but fair. good parental examples. ' oo many parents are rar more rmed about drugs thRn they need o be," says Dr. Kenneth Keniston, YaJe psychologist. Society's reaction to student drug use Is "a little hysterical," adds Dr. Richard H. Moy, directcir of the Health Service at the University of Chlcago. Outraged or panicked, a few parents have even had their own teen-age youngsters arrested for using marijuana cnce or a few limes, says John Finlator, eS50Clate director of the Bureau of Narc<>tics and Dangerous Drugs. Knowing how parents may react, youngsters somethnes "like to put them with them, build bridges of understanding on. as by writing 'Marijuana' on a school and respect between children and book cover, or by saying they plan to smoke pot," he adds. parents. h Youths have reasons for \\'hat they Some, per aps many, parents are con--think and feel, and their reasons arc vinccd that one experiment with mari· juana is a sure step into deep trouble. not always wrong -they are frequently valid. But the idea that "jf you try marijuana Parents must set standards and exert flnce, you a're sure to go on to ht:roin, controls over children. or become an acid-head or a pot·head, is simply not true." says Dr. Malcolm Dr. Keniston remarks: "Too many B. Bowers, Jr., Yale u 0 Ivers It y parents, when flne talks about the im· hi lrist ho h I studied dru porta.nce flf standards, interpret th.is as psyc a w as ong g an excuse not to have to listen to problems. Nor is It true that a single what their children are trying to tell shot of heroin neces.sariJy lead& to a them. They are 80 ........ se™"'" standard• lite on narcotics. .,..,,:r ~"""6 Youngsters err, hcwever, u they argut ll11d dellnlng llmlts that they never hear that marijuana never leads anyone to .what their cblldren are saying.'' "I _._-.... FJrm. and ~' rules are stronger drugs. went 00 a •-ic.uu needed, but on speda1 occasions It's that lasted foot years," """ yoong man poalhle they lhould be mndified lhroogh remarks. · 1 ~ am mutual agreemenL Nn Time for Spying uwe· must rear children ln · an at· Some worried parents are monitoring tnospbere. flf Jove and understanding. or bugging their teen-agers' telephone talk with them, communicate with conversations, spying to learn tf drug!!I them," Finlator says. "Listen to and are being mentioned or used. They nm encourage them. '1 enormous risk that the youngsters will Parents In The Dark hate their parents i£ they ever Jearn fie tells of a young $lar athlete from they are being spied upon, Finlator says. a very comfortable hoine who was con· Numerous parents are convinced the best way of steering children away from vinced "my father doesn't like me - drugs is ••to scare the hell out o{ them ," he's never once said he loved me, or as one father puts it. that I did something well." ~1ost authorities do not agree with "As I see the problem," he elaborates. 1 "it is not enough to say to children: 1~are techniques "are even detrbnental •1 Jove you.' We must Jet them know to conveying needed WormaUan about that DO matter what happens, they can the hazards of drug abuse," says Dr. ca.11 OD us when they get Into any: Stanley F. Yolles, director of the National trouble. Institute of Mental Health. ••But 1n loo many ainuent families, "With the present incidence or marJ.. the last people that yo1mpters In trouble juana U!le, many students have e.ither tum to are the parents. They've had ~xperienced <>r flbsened first-hand the some e1perience already, flr rear the effects of this. drug,"" be •adds. •"They reaction, that tf they do have trouble. know ·111a1 p11_,."0r oilier in!v* !fo. I'"' ... ""1 -~q.,n. 'YOU cons-.'°" ..... are not an lnreVttable cOn. are nilntng Mt.' l.tany,.~,,.-hQ R~ ...... .,. ......... ~ l:j, care aboul theii' ~o , are not com it.ant of Smoking one marijuana trammittlng the fact that •"-· do care." cigarette." wro;r Jn the listening and dist'USSfng, don't Scnre Approach focus upon drugs as the big issue with The scare approach with parental thun-children and · youths, most ~specialists derboll_, tell; only flne. l'iide of the story, advise. Children and young peciple are and youths flbject to being given biased quick to recognize v.•hen parents are in formation, or half-truths. over.anxious. "Many parents are horrified at the "If we approach the solution or the word 'drug,' '" one phyaicii\ns says. drug problem with s in g I e -m l n d e d "They don 't stop to think that alcoMl detennlnation to eliminate the drugs. and aspirin are drugs also. The use or prevent their use by young people of a drug is Jess Important than how we run the risk of adding ta oor dif· and why it ls used." ficulUes ralber than mlnimh:ing tbem," Listening to what chlldren and youtb!!I says Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth of11arvard, have to say, and discussing matters unrugs should be vfewed as one factor. ····--------·--····· I To: Drug lookltl I I I I P. 0 . lor 5 TeaoKk, N. J. 07666 I I I I I I ,... Send me ...... copies of ''Wbat You Shou!d Know About Drugs I I and Narcotics" at $! Mch. Enclosed is $ .......... (Make check s I I payable to Associated Press). I I I I NAMI -----... --...... --·-----------·---·--I . I ADDllSS -·---·---···-·-·----CITY ..... -.......... , __ I I I I STAll -·---.. ---·····-"·-------.. -----ZIP. ---I ·---·--------------· Sabotage Discount,ed In Worst Plnne Crash MARACAIBO, Venezuela '(UP!I - v.......iaa bmstlgllan aald today an ...m..ted mafne may haft aused a V1ua llh1ln<r . to crub and lo!U 1U penoaa In b!Jtoey'1 wwat llr d!Jasttt. A~lorflgbl~ comm!-problnJ the .....,kogo aald the prime U-, wu that the plane's kit Mctno caqhl lire llnder tho strain of tak.ort. A high government official dlscountM rcPorts the Mlarnl·bound llC9 with 411 Americans among the 13 perlONI aboard was sabotaged. "We may" lnv!!sUgate those rumors.,. Mid lnt.ertor Ministry Director Pedro Perez Pcmo. But "the tec:hn k:a l reporu: \\e are receiving lndJcate that the ac- cident wu simply an accident.'' Tcmperaturt m•Y have played a major role. It wu abouL IOI degrees on the ifOund at takeoff and Clll!y 1 light brew: was blow1ng mer tht rumny, Normal b.km'fa nqulre that the aJr have a eortlln ml•lmnm density to lnotn filch~ HIP lanplnlurrs an lower that demlq llrlatleally • Tllo '\1.._.,Jm -Jet eraft IJlmn- melod Into I avwded ftlldentloJ .... ti Ibo rmnll1'• end !ml two - -.taking oil. All tboanl ...... tfll<d. .. ...... ti -Q """""' ... the ground. Another 120 Wtt& Injured tnd 17 ttrnalned fn critical condltlon with burnt and olhtr injuri~. .The plane's flight reeorder. dug from the blocks of wreckage Sunday night, was flown to the United States for analysis. "'hile American expert.' searched I.he rubble for further clues, Venezuela griev· ed. President Rarael Caldera proclaimed three days of mourntng, Rap Oew 1t half 1taff arid radio ttaUons conflned their broldcuL!I to clisslcal musJc and muled IO!!oun«tn<Dls. Bartal ol '1ctlml J>tran. con!ldered in-the same class as other forms of 'acting out' behavior - disrespect for property, acting on Im· pulse, accident proneness, delinquency -and not as the central problem. "If drug taking w-.:re not ~lated to current social conditions and individuals' reactions to them, it would be much easier to deal with," Dr. Farnsworth says. "But the issues are complei:; that is, drug taking means something." Sellf SI 19 "Of'vll 9Mtlft, Dnllft CNlll D11" Plltt. P.O .... S. T-11. N.J. 17"4. .. Mel!t dlkll1 NJffle 19 A~ Prtu. ... ..,. wlll .... 11 ... lflndlY "' ,....,.. .... ,,_ """' ~ ..,.. tll/'f '"" .... wlll .. .....mW. • 111111• •vt""'--(Tomorrow 1 Telling ehlldna aboat ilrap.) SAC!IAl4ENTO ~APf -'!be Senato today puoed I ""1fl of bOJs lltin!t campua tloleDce, tnc!pdjnl meuure1 allow~ the flrlnl ol faculty and ... pulalon al ttui!tl!ll wbo dlsru;t campw1 acUvlUes. . The tctlon aller •• boClr and a half of dehata hro!lght to ..,,.., Ille pieces of leatsfaUon oenl to the Assembly. from the Sennte In the flrot two and one.ball moothl of a session dominated by youthful turmoil at at.ale colleges and univeraltle3. Two of Ille bllb by Sen. John Harmer (R-Glendale), require firing teachera and expelling aludents who disruJit, or try to d.1srUJ>!. normal acUvltfes of 1tale coDeges. The student, faculty member or ~ employe could not be re- employed or fHm'OUed at any state college for·• minimum ol three years. A . Ulird bill --that I .Jtate college jftlldtnl may declare a atste ol "em.ergency ·on his campus if he feell its normal operatlon ls being disrupted, or mlfht be, The fourth mate,, It a crime punhhable by up to five years In jail and a $5,000 fine to use force or threats to prevent a student from attending class. Debate ranged from the revolutionary history of America to family background! ot Individual Senate members. Harmer told hls colleagues, "I'm sick and tired of having to apologize to my constituents and friends about what's happening" on campuses. "Can we re.ruse to take action after enduring all this for five yean? .. be asked. A foe, Sen. Mervyn M. DymaDy (!).Loo Angeles), prnteated thal ''whal we need now Is not repressive legialatSon but new JlnllralTll of depth llld dlmeMlon'' to meot the needs of ltludenll. A propooent, Repuhllcan Sen. Jolin licltmltz of Tuatln, aald tbe atste - be •head u the bills do nothln& but get dlWdents ott campua. uu the revoJu. tlonaries are driven off campus af kut It means the tnpayen won't be aubsld.lz.. Ing them,'1 be r emarked. Ho aald turmoil by -peoplo -from ''the whale 'God·i•·d•ad-' pbllooopby." Democratic Sen. lildJolu C. Pltrlo of Oal!Wtd told !ht SeMle "we ....... W<e frl&htened men" In crackloa ...._ on ltltldait.s wilhoul dellfntl wtlll a. proble!lll which haVt IJ)O-lht tllnll/ ,, Pilot Lands Crippwd Bomber for Air 'First' . I • WllRTSMJTH A1R FORCE BASE. Mich. (UPI) -Robert Winn, a Vlotnom- llO<md Air Force major and father ol tine boys, ba.s made history. It was the kind ol history he'd care not to ropeat. Winn, 38, and his giant Jl5% bomber and crew of sil were the obJecl.1 of a rescue mission "Mooday that stretched from this base in northwestern lower Michigan to Strateg1c Air Command headquarters in Omaha, Neb., to the B52 manufacturers In Kansas. The bomber, loaded with "unarmed" training mission . bombs, had just taken of! and climbed to the altitude o{ 8,000 feet when a right aide engine "kinda' blew up, caught on fire and took another engine with it right out of the plane," Winn said. ''It felt like we hit a brlct waD," the IS.year veteran pilot added. The -ber normally haa eight englltes enclosed in fool' "pods." With the right pod <lomt to ti,. c:ockpll -ll'_l!ul said be had no control over the Not 7 and No. I engines at the far rlgbt. Alier communicating wllh olfldlll al the base below and with Ult Kamal test pilots who had llown tht flan! jet, Winn decided to atsrve out the ps in his far right engines. . J.'or six hours, while hundreds of persons clustered on the shartlioe beknt. "and the commanding general of SAC was listening in," Winn circled Lak• Huron wailing for the 200,000 pow1tfll of fuel be had :started with to bum away. "We could see the crowd, but I didn't. have much time to loot down,'' th9 Clarksville, Tenn., native said. 0 But my · wlle tells me she spent plenty of tim• looking up." The crew might have balled out ancl ditched the $8 mlllkln, 157..foot loaf aircraft, ''but after we lltmted drclinl things got lll\der c:onllol," he aald. • A finer bunch of troopctS you11 never meet. But right here ·in Ccnrral and Southern ~. California the Cub Scouts could be threatened, A penny. buys enough electricity to wash and dry one Cub Scout uniform. That's based on Less than 1¢ an hour. In fact, dectridty in Ed"ISClll atQS costs the average family less per kilowatt-hour today than It did 10 .•• 20 ... even 30 years ago. Pra ctically everyone today By dirt! And a Cub Scout deserv es a clean u!,l.ironn, right? At any price. Well, what is the price ? A penny. both washing and drying a load of uniforms fo r a den of eight. Quite a bargain, isn't it! Or take your TV se t. Electricity runs it fo r less th an !¢an hour. Or your automatic dishwasher. Less than 1J a load. • is using much more electridty- more kilowatt-hours-than ever before, and it's still one of your biggest bal')!airu;. E - I • llAll.Y Pll.Of Schook was burt and Hurt was shook, but nol hurt. It happened in a truck-car accident in "Pasco, \Vash., the truck driver was David L. Hurt, 29, of Tigard, Ore. Driv· ing the car was Francis P. Schook, 61, of Warden, Wash. Schook was reported in fair condition at a Pasco hospital with facial cuts and chest pains. Officers said Hurt was unhurt. • An emtrgeney poUct car had to go io tht rtscut io 1a~ Miss Muriel Scortr's uw:h at tht Lin- coln Automatic Laundtrtttt in E'nglcmd. Mias scortr, 83, put htr toa1h in and watched it 68 it ltldatd and spun for 20 min- ute1. But then tlie process atort- td again and again-and again. Sht calltd police. An emngt• C1J 1quad car raced to the scene ' and ~ pat1(1lman monagtd to It.Ott.eh the 17l0Wrick machine ' off. "My clothes totrt a little thimitr. but otherwise all right," Miss Scortf' said. Last month, 7-yeaN>ld Gary Wdowicki of Kalamazoo, Mich., wrote a letter about a butterfly he made in his second grade art class. This week, the man to whom he sent the letter surprised Gary at Greenwood Elementary School by walking into his tlassroom. "It Is a fine thing to have a friend in the seCond grade," Gov. William G. Milliken said. • This coupll II fmx>lt>ed In a loflg distanu romance. Miki Newman. on airline eucuttw fTom Hounslow, Engla!UI, II baled at Krnmdv Airport but flies from Ntto York fOt1l' wttJc.. <11<1 to It< hi1 lO.y<a!'<>Jd girl fri<nd, Ma rill17' Hon.iv. The round trip ii ?,OOIJ ma.. and 11¥1 made It 11 lime• 30 tar thit 11ear for o total of 71,000 miles. But, working for an airUM, ht makes the jOUt"MJll 'free. The cox.- pl.e's ;etatt romance will end May 24 when th.el/ man'¥ and aettlt in the U.S. • Barrow-Upon&are, England- Town Council hoUJing officials oaid Ibey were giving close study to a recent letter which said, "We are desperately In need of a home . . • I have cohablliated with your offices, so far without result • • • unless you send me a rebate, l shall be forced 19 lead an !mmor· ta! life." Ex·fatlaer Wants Child Giovanni Mwan~. the former monsignor of the papal household in the Vatican, happily hugs the woman he plllllJ to many, Giovanna Carlevaro. Mwante left the priesthood recently to wed the 38-yeer· old widow! saying he wanted to be a father. Hijackers Send American, Peruvian Planes to Cuba MIAMI (AP) -Two airliners, one American and one Peruvian, have been hijacked to Cuba in the same day - the third sky piracy doubleheader of 1969. A short, heavy set man about 25 showed a shoe boi: to a Delta Airlines 1tewardess on a flight between Atlanta lild Augusta, Ga., Tuesday, said "It's a bomb" and "I want to go to Cuba." The plane and the 64 aboard, including IJO passengers and a crew cf four, went on to Havana's Jose Marti airport. Alrtady there was a hijacked Faucett Airlines plane from Peru which had Lindsay Declares He'll Run Again For Mayor of NY NEW YORK (AP) -Republican John v. L!Ddsay, ba~ ,bul unbowed by an ooslaughi ot urban disa.!ten, an-!IOllJl~ today be will seek .,- four-year term aa mayor of the" naUon'.& largest clty. r· "Too much 1s at s1alte to abandon the effort Jll1 admlnJstratlon has begun." said the ·tan. handsome Lindsay, whose national stature hu proopered wbile bJs lroobles In the J>l'Clncts dttpeotd. Lindaay, first RepubUC8Jl mayor of thia S.l DemocraUc atrong:bold alnce Fiorello La Guard.la, announctd his can- didacy at a crowded newa conference In Gracie Manalon, the ma)'W'• stately re!ldtnct. "Much bu been done and more ls under way," said Lindsay, "both in IJ)lrit and in 1pecific achlevement.? "It hu not btOii easy. Pini• is never easy. But I believe t'be Ude of phf'ical and spiritual decay has been turned." arrived le.ss than three hours earlier . These were the 19th and 20th aerial hijackings to Cuba this year, sending 1,042 persons on unscheduled flights to Fidel Castro's Communist island. The plane was diverted on a flight from Lima to Arequippa by four young men who allowed &9 other passengers to leave the aircraft during a refueling stop at Guayaquil, Ecuador. The four then forced the crew of eight lo fly them on to Havana. Crew member• aboard the Delta airliner said their hijacker blocked a afmllar attempt to Und. Stewardess Carolyn Wooley of Dallu, Tei:., aaJd the pilot, Capt. Ron Wessenberg, told the hijacker he didn't have enough fuel to fly to ·Havana but the man said, "No. We're not goln1 to stop." Miss Wooley aajd the hijacker, a white man about 5 feet 5, revealed little about himself en route to Havana. "He spoke ll:ood English. His eyes were wild looking, but he was very polite," she said. "He said be was 1urprised that we we r e as calm u we were," said stewardess DadJe Wheaton, also cf Dallas. "He aaJd be wu a Communist." Grad Enrollment _. Rises Only I% WASHINGTON (UPf) -The U.S. Of. fice of EducaUon says tullUme enroll- ment in graduate and professional schools rose leas than 1 percent last year, compared with gains of I percent or more 1n recent years. The office said that baaed on staUstical information, 20,000 prospective graduate atudents were mlssfng from collep cam- puses. Med!~ was the only field to show a sub!tantla1 l~ase in first year male students. High System Warms Nation 4.7 Inches of Florida Rain Drench, Pensacoln Calllornia Mesi ot ~ C•llfar11i. 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" " . , Ocean Pact Pro.posed U.S., Russ Submit Joint Nuclear Plan GENEVA (UPI) -Pwldenl Nuon Ind Soviet Premior Alextl A. Kosyafn tod17 Jointly propooed • -Jn. lematlonal am11 coolrol truly to pro. blbit the lnatallaUon of nuclear ·weapans on tbe floor of the octan. 1bt Join! propouls w • r • lllblnlllod u tbe 17-oatfon Diaarmament Contertnee mumtcl negoUallonJ oiler ·en · elihl- month ....., todl)'. Nuon, In a letter delivered by Gtru<I C. Smith, the new. chlol of the U.S. delegation, aloo expreaed lnlertit In 1everal other pouible new agreements with the Ruaaiana. They Included H· lending the parlla1 nuclear lest ban to Wells Leaking Oil ·off Coast Of Louisiana NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Two offshore rigs spewed crude oil and gas into the Gul( of Mexico off the Louisiana coast today. Bad weather and rough seas hampered efforts to halt the water- polluting runaways. The U.S. Cout Guard in New Orleans said oil slicks 21 miles long by two miles wide were seen in the gulf nur one of the wells, with tnO!t slicb about one half mlle by two miles·w:lde. Red Adair and his crew of oil well firefighters were to make another at- tempt to reach the wells today. The famed Houston crew was unable to ldd at the rigs Monday because of bad weather and rough seas. The two wells owned by the Mobil Oil Co. are ln Caillou Bay off Terrebonne Parish (county) and Vennlllion Bay in Block 16. "All pollution appurs to be ,·ery light and moving away from land areas," the Coast Guard spokesman said. "It's not as bad as the Santa Barbara leak from the informaUon we can get." State Conservation Director J . M. Menefee said. "But regardless of the physical dif~ ferences, the results are the aame ." Menefee said leakage from the· wells appeared to be about hall the leakage in the Santa Barbara area. Bµt he said stopping the leaks off the Louisiana coast 11hould not be u difficult as stop- ping the !em oil Santa Barbara. "My personal opinion i!: that the wells could be brought under control in 24-36 hours whm weather conditions permit," Menefee said. 12 Soviets Dead In Border Clash With Red Chinese MOSCOW (AP) -Al !wt 12 Soviet soldiers were killed In Saturday's border cJ..,h with Chinese troops, reports In the press revealed today. A comprehensive report on casualUes sUU baa not been ffieased, but various .attlcles have named 12 dead. In addition, Pravda, the Communist party newspaper, said s1x others "bloc k· ed tbe path of the Maol.!t provocateurs with their chests and hearts." This was taken to me.an they were wounded and Jl03Sibly killed. Soviet newspapers continued an anti· Chin ... campaign. publishing reports of worken' protest meetings throughout the country. One of Pravda's chief correspondents. Sergei Borzenko, said "a watchful 1llence" now dominates the border scene. Peering across the bleak fron ti er at night, Borzenko said he could see headlights of Chinese vehicles "far, far away." "This ls not the first Ume the defeated Chinese are not resting peacefully," he added. "But tht Soviet border guards are vlgllantly carrying out their duty. They will decisively halt any new pro.- ,·ocative violation of our sacred boun- daries." The scale of Saturday's border battle, in which the RUMlans reported a Chinese regiment. or an estimated 2,500 men, had attacked, suggested that the final ·death count will be coo'1derably higher. Attorney General Says More Men Needed in Crime WASHINGTON (UPI) -Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said today more men. rather than more laws, are needed to fight President Nixon's war on crime. ~titchell told Senate investigators e.x· isting criminal Jaws appear to be ade- Quate, The need, he said. is for "the manpower for more effective e~ forceme.nt rather than more la"·s.'' The nation'• top law enforcement of- ficer appeared before the S e n a t e Clminal Laws Subcommittee headed by Sen. John L. Pl>fcClellan (0-Ark.) 1'.1itchell told the subcommittee that U1e Justice Department is nlaking a "top priority study" of all existing criminal statules and may request some new legislation In the field of organized crime. Jte said the study would be com- pleted soon and that he planned to make recommendations to the President. cover Wlderaround lt1Ung Ind a cutoU In the production of filllonable material 10< nUclear weapons. W..tern ottlclals btlltvod the oewt 11nor ~ btldlhe belt cbance for an early -I with lllOICOW. The fact Molcow Introduced a aimllar plan todl)' enbancocl lhll belle!. . Tile pucklr-lroe ,.abed truly would .,..pltmeol ..i.tlng truUes balTlng the placemeot of nuctear·weapons in apace Ind In Ani.rcttca. Kosygin -1 a Soviet draft ten of a proposed truly Along with a letter to the conference. "The cooclusloa of the Nonproliferation Treaty opens up prospecls for lhe achievement of further lnttrnaUonal agreements,?' the Sovitt premier aald. "The peoples are concerned ovtr the conUnued nuclear arms race. We deem it impOrtan~ to find without delay ••YI of reaching agreement primarily on the non-use of nucleat weapons aa well 11 other measures of nucltar dlsanna· ment." Kosygin expressed hope the committee also would "bring about concrete results In the lield of sjopplng the arms race and moving forward on the road of disarmament" Cut Rebels' Funds Nixon to Quell Student Unre~t? WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon has decided lo enforce more strictly existing laws authori#ng the cutoff of federal funds to students who create campus disorders, Republican congressional leaders said today. Emerging from a meeting with the President at the White House, House GOP leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan and Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen said they expected Nixon to take firm action. Both Ford and Dirksen said they did not think additional legislaUon would be needed. "The previous administration did not implement the laws Congress passed Jasl year," Ford said. Under a law passed by the 90th Congress, college& and universities may wilhhold federal funds from students involved in campus violence. But the la\V has not been widely enfarctd. Ford asserted: "Our general im- pression is that lbe&e mllitants. amall in number, are really using fascist tacticl to deprive most students of their o~ portunity to get an education." I\1ixon arranged to meet late thil af- ternoon with Secretary Robert It Finch of Health, Education and Welfare and Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell to dlscusl the problem. He is ei:pected to laue a statement on student unrest Wednetday or Thursday. Teachers at Carver Vote To Return to Classroom LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Teachers who refused lo cross picket lines set up by Negro militant.. at Carver Junior High School voted to niturn to classrooms today. · But the 100 instructors who supported a black boycott of predominantly black junior and senior city high schools Wd their remaining on the job was contingent on four coo.ditions. These included a "complete change in the curriculum" at Carver to focus on reading Instruction, an overhaul of counseling procedures and more com· munlty involvement in operation of the school. It was alleged police brutality at Carver in breaking up a sit-in demonstra- tion March 7 that triggered a call for a student strike to support militant demands for exclusion oC police from campuses. All city schools opened Monday without major incidents in contrast to last week when windows were smashed, classes disrupted and fires started at a score of schools in the South Central area . Leaders of the Black Students Alliance vowed to continue the boycott, claiming widespread commUnity support, but at- tendance Monday at mostly Negro schools was near normal. The ei:ception was Carver, where only 625 of the school's 2,100 students cro.ssed a 20-,man picket Une to attend claues. The teachers who refused to crou the line met at school district headquarter• and voted to return to work today under the conditions set forth. Michael Fay, a spokesman for the teachers, said they were in full sympathy with the aims cf the boycctt but felt they now could be most ugeful by nturn- ing to clasarooms. Nixon Names New IRS Commissioner WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon announced today his selection of Randolph Thrower, an Atlanta lawyer and former FBI agent, lo be new com· missioner of the Internal Revenue Service. Thrower's nomination will be sent to th e Senate shortly, t he White Home said. Thrower, 55. has been fn bi: law practice in Atlanta since 1936 with time out during World War II for service as a special agent for the FBI, followed by a stint in the Marines. Thrower ·will be nominated to succeed Sheldori Cohen a! the nation's chief tu <'Ollector. Paul With Fauaily ll<!atle Paul McCartney, his new bride, the fonner Linda Eastman of the Eastman Kodak forlune, a nd the bride's daughter by a for- mer marriage, 6-year-old Heather. arrive in New York from Eng- land for a visit with the brid•'• father. '!be three will stay for a three-day visit, but location for the holiday \\'BS not kno\rn. I 1 I r ,• •• I " • 1"' . ' ;. , , • r- " ' .• . 6Ct /." ' I ' 11 ~ .\ • ·":\. t '. .. L JEAN COX, 4'4-MU ,.__,.The Lagu na . Line ·~··~~.,...~~---~~~ ' :.·, (:o~ple W·alR M~mory Lane LARRY TAYLOR reports San _Pedro wilh .... "'"~ that he . and his .wire. and a ~ rliql ,iJ .. ~ \o Mlrgaret, celebrated their his Lacwi. boJDe· with ·stories ' , . 28th wedding anniversary by -·-about: hls ~-... returning "to the &<:tile . of '· the crime," which happens to 11\e long-tlme~ ~t ·of. Laguna traveled'l_.,by Ai,:, l:hiP1 be Tuscon, 4fii. The Taylors were married and honeymooned in Tuscon during the 16th annual Fiesta de las Vaqueros. plage, blls,. ri.v>t ,pi and even in a bicycle eait dlirlng bis tour of 14 OOU)ltrie#. , He '\\'as ·e~ally taken by JaF,n where be, spent me mooih si.ei!llia 0n f1oo< mals, eafujg ,W)th ,C 'b·o P.S t j ck I f bathing in deep ti.lbs of boilll:if water and ·in. ge~raJ doin~; what the'"llatives do. Blindfolded Francis Pieri of Laguna Niguel attempts to prove he can always detect his wife's cooking.· Mrs. Pieri stands by while Mrs. William Crapo, president of Les Petite F1eurs Auxili3rY, ~ildren'.s ·Home Society, gives him a taste of her specialty. The women are preparing for a potluck dinner' honoring husbands of auxiliary members tomorrow night at 7 'in the Laguna Niguel home of Mrs. David Adams. Foods from around the world will be sampled, and a movie, depicting the role of Children's Home Society, will be shown, according to Mrs, James Holtel, social On their first return to the city since, the Lagunans saw the 44th (ies~, and al.so visit¢ with their soo and daughter-in· la\,; ·Mr. and · htrs. ·Kent Taylor. Kent, a graduate of Laguna ~ach High . Sc~I , ls -a pharmacy: student al, the Un!Versity· of Arizona. ~1RS. SIDNEY Hobbs of Laguna and' Mrs;· ·Tbomas ~fauro of" Thrff ·Arch Bayt directors of the preschool pr~, gram now -in. its second year' al St. catherine's c'aihonc· Church, co-hosted a luncheon j ,; ' •• ' ! 'A' Earnecd·~ey Club Judging · by Reports March may not g9 out uke a· lamb, 1btit it .is a time for reflective thought on past accomplishments· for El Cainino Real Junior Woman's Club members. · Currently the \vorhen, who will host a meeting of the California Federation -or Women 's Clubs, Oragge District, tomorrow in Doheny Park Clubhouse, are preparing reports Of yearly activities which are due al the di'strict level. This gives them the opportunity to check the progress of their ven· tures, including Dental Assistance Fund !or Youth, their principal philan· thopy. I The project, according to Mrs. Robert Cmelak, health chairman, re- ceived a huge boost via the Dollars !or DAFFY program which won sup.- port from people in the Capistrano Valley area. A November fashion shO\V· also brought dol1ars to the DAFFY coffers.. · Through DAFFY, children· in the area are ottered free dental care which their _family might otherwise not be able to provide. The club is the main so•U'ce of DAFFY's revenue, liut assistance from other areas is need· ed and welcomed. Mrs. Cmelak also is pleased about member participation in the Mothers' March of Dimes which l\1rs. David Robbins, club president, served as south coast reptesentative. Mrs: Charles Hayden was chairman for the Dana Foint area. ¥.ea captains included the· Mmes. Patrick Hayes, Albert Roper and Hugh Scallon. · · As part of their Americanism pr9gram, members offered transporta- tion to voters in November and sent .fruitcakes to serVicen'.len in Vietnam and dolls and· clothing to Indiin children ln•New Mexico during Christmas. In addition the.club, honored a mother: !or whom they had arranged traMportahOlt {., tJie pren~fakciil!ic with a baby ·shower and made $25 dortations to families in San Juan Capis~no w~o lost their homes and posSessions during the recent floods. Juniors also don\i(ed tti-at~rnity clothes and layette items to be dis· "' tributed by Orange County Medical Center to needy families. Future health· profectS "'d.ndiude a Smile Contest \Vhich the club will sponsor next month in San Clemente High School. Under consideration is . the establishment of a loan closet for sick room suppli'es . ' chainnan. .., · Bll.L REED, who began his tour around the world last September· when, he boarded a Chinese freight ship leaving . ' for its tea~bers. ' Social events !or husbands and wives )ncluded a ·lJrogressive dinner and a Christmas party featuring a midnight buffet. , J,uniors ·also , are planning an orientation. dinner next Tuesday in the home 'of Mrs. Robbins to introduce new members to the structure of Federated Women's Clubs and duties which accompany offices and chair· mansbips. Thea ter Lovers Nou ri shed by PT A Hamburg ers ¥ Cindy Carter, a leading player in Laguna Be8Cb High.School's spring play, ''Bridgadoon," reCeives nourishalCJit Crom the school's PTA ~embers (left) Mrs. Mark L. Smith Jr., ~resident, and Airs. C. Y. Newman, ways and means chairman. The PTA will serve hamburier dinners· from 5:30 to 8 p.m . ne:xt Friday and Saturday in the cafeteria, prior to performances. · Girl's · Gri.pe. Could Be ,Uplifti,ng With R·ight Support . .\ ... ~ . . . . ' ' ' I_ DEAR ANN LANDERS : Evecy time -' • I pick up a m.,vzige ".! read an ail- vertlsement that 11y11 "Incruse your bustllne in two weeks'' or "How to add from two to fCMY inchei of feminint charm. n I could cry. Why don't they advertise something th1t will decrease "Ule measurements I of the girt who bas too much up there? I am 11 years old and ha\.e· a 44 t bust. can you imagine wbat 1'11 k>ok I like in It yeai'I if 1 continue to grow! I tried e.ercl>e and It didn't help. I' · Please don't su~est' an operation. The. thoQgbt ol. a knife scares me. ls there I anything else I can do? -BOWLING GREEN, KY. DEAR 8.C.: A 44 bwt isn't nttes!lar;. • ly ) a lludlcap U~ It's °" tile propef ftalllt. fa fact, a cfrl OD Wall S&rte& mw·fQlll< a crowd'willl ilen. v,. 4tl'& HJ bew tall yo. are er how mdelli )'OU w,elg1L 1f )'OI •re overwtlglit, • dJet riald of Cftl'H redace your buUlne •loll i.1111 the rat tf )'Oii. Try It. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recent\)' I read that suJclde is the Number SiJ: c•_use_of death in U"ie U.S. Why is this sot Can you uplain why ao many people • Woukl wal\l to de s tr o y tht!rDJelves? And what about lhe close rel•tives ol. sotck!e yictilru? How can they go on living normal lives feeling that perhaps thc!y ·could have prevented the suicide'! -. F'AITHFUL READER '•. r ' -ANN LANDERS. < " . ' DEAR READER: T1te lnltlnct for Tbt guilt as well 11 U1t srle:f of self ;rtsen'IUon Is Uie mo1t tompdttag the 11uicftle'1 close relallvts tan be an · drive of ali .,-mat utmalt, inclluUng enarmoui burden. All ·•utltoritle1 with the lluman 11lmal. T1tc deslrt nM .to whom I lliave consulted agree • thal • UVe Is cU•I')' to l111niu na&ure. !\Iott •.uicidal paltern is developed early ib people wlM kill Utemselves do to d•ring life. SomeOme1 lherapy tafl dbslpete a pe:.rtoct tf deep de'preuMi·Thete people thlt drtte. Generally 1pe1ting, tbt tet- are not nllcluL 8-k'6 victims wMff· , dl\',idual "1bO 11 bent·on ieU..destrucUon meatal\Pf'tCUMt Uve been derailed by will find' •·way to eDd lils Ufe. and atcolaol er dn111 Ukewlle cau.t. be con~ no rritnd or relallve can prevent It. sldertd r1tlon1!. • ' OEAR ANN LANDERS: My molher·ln· ' Jaw is an attractive divorcee and could modesty. Simple tea\eace ta cue '9 pass for 30, althoulh she is 10 yelfs caa't ri.nd tlle w0nl1: ·"Ma; i.·ia iet older. !·yurs-old. Pltase ,.ion. .ome dtdie.." Please ·don't tell me to P.f Y 0 B UnconsciouJ tedoctloft by puatt cu because my l&-year-old brother-in-law is ertate •rlou• pro•temt, ~ fot involved and 1 am vecy fond of him. My mother•in-Llw calls the boy from ttenagen.. \ ' aoother room to hanct· htr a towel What is French kissing.? 11 it Wrona! when she is in the ahower. She walks Who should set tbe neckfu&: UniJta - around the apartment in a bra and the boy at the girl? Can a abot .. panties. She s~eps nude ... f tblnk you weddinl .~u~? Read ,Ann t.ansters' get the idea. 'nle lad Is uncom.{ortabkl .. bOoklet. T,~&e, ~ -Ten Way1 about his 'molher's behavior and bas · lo COOi It. S<nd io ce~ls ~' ~In and mentioned It to my husband: wbO doesn't a lonq, ~elf4'~tes.~. stam~ envelope.. wanl " 10 "gel Involved." Wlu\l should Ann . Landen wQ! he tilid to helJ be done ! -J:~.H. YoU with your ~lerns.' Send tlMml llf;AI\ J., ·'ne lid m,.U..ed It le to her In care of I the DAILY PlLO'I the ""'"' penoo. lit Mid t<R hi• enclosl;)g 1 slainped, ,......_.. m<tther 1tnw lie •~els alMnd htr Im-envcln!'lt. - l I , ' -.. • , ....... _;_ .. __ .. -.... ----...... ... If DAILY ,l~OT Horoscope Flowers Arranged for New League Members Selecting flowers for the Women's Architectural League of Orange County's membe rship luncheon on March 20 are (lelt to right) M<s,.James Sink, Mrs . Gared Smith and Mrs. Dell Williams , whose Corona del Mar home will be th e setting. Mrs. Perry Bab- cock and Mrs. Williams are co-chainnen. New members to be honored are the itmes. Michael Gesler and John Hamilton of Orange and Mrs. Arthur Danielian of Newport Beach. The league sponsors high school awards competition, scholar- ships and a fund-raising home tour. Luncheon rn- formation may be received by calling Mrs. Bab- cock at 543-8945. """"'"'"'""'-""-" .... ,,, '""'"""'''h"'""""gl;1'JCZW=i'll<,.,..,.,.,..,,...,..., .. ., .. ,"''l'.r7m~~·-"~"""'"· -= .. -•"'""'-""'':I Restauranteur-author Honored by NB Friends ' Robert Lawrence Balzer will be honored by Newport Beach Friends of the Library during a collee next Thursday. Balzer, who bas many d.ivenllid interests, has been awarded a fl0,000 first prize for Kaiser 's Men's Cook-out in Honolulu and the Holiday magul.ne11 disUnctive Dining Restaurant award for hls Tirol restaurant in ldyllwtid. M1na1er of Villa F.oatana, Sant« Ana and consultan't CO the Paul Masson vlneyardJ, Balier abo bu authored many books on the pleasures ol dinina:· In 1 completely dil· • • ' ferent vein, his book called I "Beyond Conflicl" i.s an ~ a u t obiographical narrative , · and exposition of Buddhist philosophy. A teacher, photorrapher and painter, the honored gueat also rteelved a decoraUon ()f "ccmmander'' of the Royal Order of Sahametrel In Cam· bodia which wu bestowed by Prince Norodom Sihanouk, chief of state. 1 The coffee will take place Iii the ShorecUff home of Mrs. Richard Bertea. Ct>hoatesses are the Mmes. R. A. Pang, Stanley LeLlevre, Peter Dobbs and Fred E.lli.s. South Coast Juniors Light Three Candles South Cout Junior Woman 's Club will ·celebrate Its third birthday and Federation Night during 1 m~ting Tuesday, f\.farch 25, in the Peek Family Colonlal Terrace R o o m , \\1estminlter. coordinator of La ~1irada Ebell!, Juniors spomoring ctub. The theme to be carried out will be that of Juniors president Mrs. Bond Thompson : Reflections o f Loveliness From a Fountain • Volunteers Urged To Give Services Do you enjoy directing plays or leading group d.iscusaiom? Is bridge your game or does art draw you ? Would you like to tune in on a musical group? If any of these activ!Ues interest you and you have a few hours to spare, the Mental Health Association needs your help. Volunteers are needed for the three Orange County Community Activity Centers providing· on-going therapy for persons released from mental hospllals In need ol continuing aid and companionship during their rehabilitation. Beginning Monday, March 24, there will be a week-long tralnlng class for individuals interested in working in th is new and vital program. Applications may be obtained by vislllng the Mental Health A!loclatlon of Orange County, 2215 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, or phoning 547-7559, A new seven-day training class , developed to help the volunteer bea come more• self.-confident in preparation to working with people with emo- tional disturbances, alao has been developed. In addition to the activity center, volunteers are needed to aid in occupational therapy rooms and recreation programs and outings for patients in the psychiatric unit of Orange County Medical Center. Since grooming is another vi tal facet to social rehabilitation of the mentally ill, hairdressers and barbers 'vho \Viii donate their time are vital· Jy needed. Individuals wishing to serve in the Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention Center or the Parent-Child Clinic in the Medical Center are giv- en a special two-w eek training program. .,.. , Mrs. Hal Lehman, chairman of volunteer services. also has stressed a need for Spanish-speaking persons in all phases of the programs and typing and clerical assistants in the MHA office. Invited to .jOin the Fountain Valley J~. club are all disttlct officer• and chairmen, club preaidentl and members Irom Loi Cerritol OIJtrlct. ~Under~anding. 1 .. .,., .. .., ........ ,. .... ""'""'.,.'"",....,,.., .. .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,'11 Committee member• Include Gueltl atteodini; wlll lilclude the Mmta. Jack Thomas, general d 1 1 t r 1 c t prtsldent; William Haye1, dlstr:lct presl· dent and charter member of South COalt Junlor1 ; .Rcnald Ha11e, president of La Mirada Ebella, and Joho Mignot, the Mmes. L I o y d Sat· t er t hwaite, refreshments; James Stalcup, name t&&s ; Dick Trodlck, invltaUoru, Paul Johnson. Thompson, Maurice Donahue, Andrew Edwards, Jon McK.ibben, Robert Som· ma, Larry Long, George O'Hare, Frank Fleek, Ronald Dolfon1 llld Robert Ch&pm111. Florist, Artist Chosen Gallery Exhibit For Betrothal Revealed Sculptor Shows Art W• ekci do Sleeping Blg1 Bedspreads Blankets and Rugs Graduates Invited To Reunion Plans for a IO-year reunion and dinner dance are being formulated by members of the 1959 graduating class o f Montebello Senior High School. Area residents who attended the school and are not presently on the mailing list are invited to send their ad- dreSJ to Mrs. Gary Eytchison, 10760 S. Virginia Ave., \Vhit- tier. Deadline tor ruervation.t wi ll be May 23 for the reunion taking place in the Disneyland Hotel on June 21. The evening wlll begin at 6 p.m . with a social hour followed by a prime rib dinner at 7:3tl p.m. Tickets tor the affair, at $9 each, may be obtained by mailing a check to Mrs. C. L. (!\IcClellen) Klutts, 10803 LaCima Or., Whittier. A con· flrmatlon will be mailed those planning to attend. and the tickets will be held at the door. .Limelight On Bosses Boa.ses and civic leader• will again be treated like kings when Busln11s and Profe16lonal Women'• Club of Laguna Beach hosts Its annual diMer nest Thursday in the Tower• restaurant. Mrs. Florin 1'-1artln, vice president. ia m a k i n I ar· tangements for. the aMual event, and Mrs. E d n a Carmichael, 494-28'5, is 1n charge ol reservations. Committee women inclu!le the Mmea. Albert Cornelius, Betty Myers, Delbert Trout- man, W.D. Trotter, Gladya McA!ee, Harold Dally, Vetata Warde, Albert True1 and Miss Dorolhy Roetter. ~{rs. Emily Stricker, club president, will preside at the meeting and "''elcorne guests. ( Afvtrtllltn'lt"'' Grandmother's advice can gel yoq ia a lqt of trouble A mild little hand lotion worked wond•r• for grandmother-but If you expect it to cope with today's killer cl~anertj you 're 111klng lhe llfc o your akin in your h1nd1. ,.edra is the hand lo.- lion up to today'• clean- er•. Aloe, the dt•erl'I molaturi1i ng plan!, hrJps reatore what cle1ner1 atrip away. Vedra Lot.ion , 1.00, c .. am l.50. Ruth ·Virginia To Marry Hogan Newport • 1n t ' Sew Fabrics from Singer and SAVE. $122 yd. Onduloy bySf•11r. Couturier look for after-5 drosHs. 74% rayon,26% acatato.44/45"wlde. Res. $1.98 Ball• Gl;tde Dab by Sinpr. Easy-care, wrinkle re- sistant. Solids to coordinate. 55% cotton, 45% Cupioni rayon. 45• wide. R11, $1.59 to $1.79 yd, Counb7 Clolb by Sinpr, Textured cotton 1nd poly. utar blend-""'! for c!tlldron'• clothes and sport.. wear. 60% polyester, 50% cotton. 45• wide. Rec. $1.79 yd. "7wt~-p1-1w lulll NGlll ,..,1' SINGER I •111 A•IC IJlO Oil T"' fll\11/ TA l·TS4 ·-,,Mc '"""" IANTA Atl,\ ,..,.,_ .. w. 4lfl If • . , . ..,, ... for ttlepi.orie number or store ltlfitl tollr stt wllll• JllPJ llftC!er SIMW COIUAN't' ., """ .. " efnl( ...... O.• ' I ' I I ' I I I I I 1. ,. ___ .... I • Newport .B"rhor EDITION '* VOL. 62, NO. 66, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . . . ' • ' . . "\ .. , . 'A·· ft Mother's • Story. .. 'My Only ' ' Me$a :Mom .Knew .Slain Son Was Peddling Pot Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL • ot • ., Dtill P'ltt ltttt · HDw .do you explain thingi.to.a woman. who , kissed her ~y son Good Nlgl)t; 1, just before he was: killed by· police, runninJ down a dark.alley, ·14 )'M1S o1d m:J ~ in l:ar&lat;'s black? YOG don't Icy. l , · You. just 'liSten and Mrs._ Jielen Ellis, ol lOJ 12 Kline Drive, Santa Ana Heights, talked Monday about ii sometimes-troubl· ed boy who will atWayS' llve •1o his p!Other In a Personal sense . . stephen Stubblefield wu a complex, cpntradictory child of the times, ac- cording to those -who knew rum, wilh an IQ 'Of lM · and a conflict betweeo tendeocles toward i'ight and wroog. 1.trs . .Ellis sat and talked. ''He WU my only child. I had him alone. I paid for hlm alone. 1 know he was peddling pot." " The Heinz Kaiser. IoieM1)edlate ·School. eighth grader had just built a~ clever science fair project,, she 1a.ld, and a~ked for pumission to join a volunteer service program at Falrview State Hospital. One of his fatal offeMes, perhaps, was too mucl'I curiosity abou( drugs Jn a time whell it iJ criminf.lly profitable for some to make 1 variety ol research materials cheaply available. "Evidently someone got him started ••Ing, "'"n peddllnll, but he '1'.U .too brilliant aod healthy to b;t' .bOoked.~H\s room is tun of books about drugs," Mrs. Ell is said. FrleDda aod relaUves moved lbout the eJ~, well-to-do Country Club Estate! e shared by Mn. EUls and Steve, w did extensive laridscape work' of good quality. "l want you to pack up his thlnp, (S<e MOTHER, Pa1e I) Newport, Mesa AgT.ee U.S. Starts Longer Runways Assailed Big Offensive Against Reds MET DEATH IN AN ALLEY Stephen Stubblefield Hurlburt Miffed, Denies Orange's Harbor Oaims By JEROME F. COWNS Of ""° D1llY l"lllt Sl•ff The cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach today a re solidly aligned against any shifUng of the adopted rouUng of the Corona de! ~far Freeway near Orange Coonty Airport. . County Aviation Director Robert J. Bresnahan wants the re-routing in order to make room for extended runw;iys. But Monday night, the councils of the two Harbor Area cities unaoimous1Y. assailed the plan. Costa M e s a Councilmen adopted a resolution declaring their "unalterable oppo.sition" to any extension of nmways or r~lignment of the freeway. Newport Beach City Manager Harvey At the same Ume, Newport councibnen, L Hurlburt today testily objected to meeting in an informal study session, ~serlions by officials of the c i t Y of directed their staff to prepare a similar Orange that beach cities can't be trusted resolution. It will be officially adopted to maintain public tidelands as recrea· next Monday. ti~ areas. Newport officials called the freeway 1¥.: mi~ city manager fired off_ a re-routing proposal "p-eposterous." JettifSIO ·Ills oounter,par! iii Orang~ Gil· . ford WIJer, Hurlburl specifif.'J]y pro-. -l;;W'lllE JIUILDER ..-irnaolullon· i<cel!!IY idot>t<4 'by '\'.)ce,Ml)'Gr Llndsl<y'Paraoos observed coonci!iRen iii Orange. acidly: Ttle Orange resolution opposed dl.ssolu--"I med to· call Jtenny Sampson an tion of the County Harbor District ~pirt buildtr. Ncnt I think we've gol because or fears that public acceas to a °"' ooe in Bmnaba.n." tidelands would be reduced by citi~ SamP8911 ia Orange County Harbor assumlng Harbor District responsibilities. District inanager. The resolution also declared tha~ beach Bresnahan· came up with the proposal cities Qlould not receive ·any po!Jce and last week He explaJ.ned that jetliners !ire patrol subsidies from ~he ~~~ lifting off 0 County Airport could pancake ~the eve~t of Harbor District dlsso • onto the future freeway, whose route n. , . 1 ded these oow lies just mrth of Palisades Road, Hurlburt s resporu inc u unf111 the runways are extended over the poln·~~he city of Newport Beach has freeway or it ts moved 1,000 yards more than fuUilled its obl!gatlon for souUl. . . providing regional ncreation a n d , ~a 1.1esa councd~ and their furthermore il has met this obllgaUon Newport colleagqes ,nade 1t clear Mon. more dillg~Uy than bas the county day night they're not interested in either with 113 tidelands in Newport Harbor.'' or both changes. Bresnahan's recom- Hulburt attached a statistical summary mendalion Js mw under study by lbe of tidelands open to the public to back County koad Department. / up the claim. . .But without agreement from Costa -"Concerning the implication that beach cities may impose excessive tideland user fees on non-residents, the records do not Support this roncem." -"The. city of Newport Beach already has full responsibility for policing and other land related controls . . . with the e1ceplion or regulation of boat.ing safety laws which are enforced by the district. -"The fact that the city tidelands are operated at a substantial net cost to the clUi.ens of Newport Beach more than justifies the City Council's stated policy of seeking some element of county financial support for providing regional water recreation services." Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -Ti'!' stock Illlll'i«t closed with a moderate gaJn today. Trading was active. (See quotations, Pages 10-11 ). I Jeweh·y Stolen At Coast Home Burglars stole nearly $&,000 in custotn· made and heirloom jewelry from the home of a cameo Highlands resident in Corona del Mac, police reported today. 1be burglars entered the home or John K. Malcolm.son, 61, sometime Sun- day night, pried open a sliding window and ramacked the bedroom. Malcolmsoo, whose house Is at 7C11 Rockford Road, told poU«! he returned home Sunday night to discover scores of pieces of .expemive jewelry gone. Most of it, he said, wu either custom· made or had been in &he family for generaUOM. I Mesa and Newport, the propo.wd freeway shift appears doomed. And it is con- sidered unlikely county supervisors wlll buck lhe clt.ies' opposition to any runway longer than the present $,700.foot main span. The Cost.a Mesa resolution on the iS!ue places that city in a rather bizarre situation. Two weeks ago Costa Mesa councilmen voted 3 to 2 to urge federal approval of Pacific Northwest jetliner .service out of County Airport. The aircraft that would be used for the flights, according to plarui: of airline applicants for the route awards, would require longer runwiys than now exist at Uie county facility. Newport City Attorney Tully Seymour look note of this conflict after Newport councilmen were advised of the Costa Mesa action. "If Costa Mesa is willin~ to go a1ong with the presen( runway,' he said, "I think we can find th is cause for encooragement." The Newport council has long been on record unanimously opposed to the Pacific Northwest flights . The Costa Mesa resolution on the runway issue was presented by Vice (See RUNWAYS, Page 1) Mesa Backs Red Route ' One woman "fept and a few i1"0PJ1! were -. Moi>tay nflht at \t;e Colla Mesa City Council voted 3 to S In ask the .uite·far the Je0.7 mlllion 11..tltoute Newp«t Freeway; ali-ent tlrouih the west side of town. Rolling out the Red Carpet of progress on the west side -in effect the result of the vote ' -was a bitter jllll for Vice Ma)'(lf Robert M. Wilson to swallow. Mayer Alvin L. Pinkley, a piwmaclst. looked lot a time u though be too had a dose of the wrong medicine when a new route proposal advanced ·by the vice mayor fail~ to get consideraUon. He wa.s not a Red RoUte fan either. Surprisingly a<ceptJng an Intended jeot by Councilman George >.. Tucker, the five·man panel re-voted uaanlmously afterward · to lihow the otale Div1'ion or Highways a solid front. Wilson's suggested route wu a mild S-shape varlallon.origlnatlng around Bay street ind running down the east side oC Newport Boulevard to swing back to Su~ Avenue at 17th Street. :1-MON'nl DELAY lnltlal guesses about Wiloon's propooed freeway route would be a route decision delay oL up to three moat..M, but the state spelled out a harsher schedule il asked to re-evaluate a mth cho&ce. CU;y Manager Arthur R. McK,erule said he spoke to state DlvlJion of Highways officlall lite Mooday afternoon and they estimated a one.year delay for study at best. Dlscussion was sometimes heated du- ring the one-hour hearing Monday, but thO lmpeoding Red Route Choke became qulckly apparent after Wllam's motlon t:(> call for study of an easterly route died without a oecond. "I wasn't exactly happy with the Red ROii.la oi; ~ ~n," .ho up)ainod, oult- nliWng • roueh aerW map of hla - pooed aWb 1lternatt route, prepared with E~g Department help. "One thlni that we gentlemen kno'lf for cerWn Ja that not in of you people out there are going to be pleaaeCI, '' said Wilson. "We have taken ahnost lwo years contemplating these rout.e!. The st.ate has studied the east side and I think it was discarded on that basis,'' said Councilman Willard T. Jordan. FINAL MOTION "I wish I could go along with Bob, but I just can't," J~an continued, mak~ ing 'the · fln&I mOtion lilmsielf for the westerly Red Route, after Wilson couldn't generate any additional support. Councilman WJ!llam L. St. Clair then took his turn. "I can see no advantage whatsoever,'' he said, speaking of Wilson's proposed Newport Freeway route, a.s the v:lce mayor's glance wandered ceili.ngward and he tapped hia fingers lightly. St. Clalr then criticized published remarks by Wilson about a surprise freeway amouncement, comments the vice mayor later said were newspaper quotes and not precisely his own. "It's an okt political axiom," St. Clair continued, "when you're beaten - delay." The freshman council member then started to otter Wilson a pamphlet designed as a murder mystery, whose format tells how a carelessly' placed freeway strang~ a city to death. "I don't think that has any bearing here," snapped the mayor. SAIGON (UPI) -A U.S. annor<d column five miles JOng led a force of thousands of Allied Infantrymen today against Communist troops threatening Saigon. Communist losses v.-ere describ- ed. as "consider1ble" in a day cf .heavy lighting. The offen!lve, labeled operation Atlas Wedge, was thought to be the lar1est of the. war, eclipsing the 40,000 man Allied force which batUed Communllts in the same jungles 30 miles northwest of Saigon in Operation Junction. City in Febru_ary 1967. Col. George S. Patton III; commander . of ,the tanks and scn o{ I.be "famous 1eneral, said the count of Communist bodies in today's flghUng was u:pected to be "cons.Ider able." Allied gunships repo~ ldlllog 60 ·today ,and ..,.ioo- M.:Qs''rt·1.j1st1 , tu.t Mliiillr ·M~ . ' \ . . ~ prellnilnuy •tagea of • the operaUOI!. Mlkd. lollel were "~" Far to the norlt., ~ LeaUmnecu of the Ith U.S. Marme·Rqimen~.ended their blUUIJ fought campaign ht the jungled mountaJn.s' near Laot and were flown cut under fire by bellcopti n today tronrlhelr A Shau VaUey poollloriJ. UPI· coh-espondent David Lamb aa\d the Communists fired nearly 300 rounds of mortar fire at the neet of so helicopters which flew out the last Marines today but that mo.st of the shells exploded harmJess11 in the dense undergrowth. Monsoon rai111 and fOg had prevented their departure unW today. 2,000 LSD Cubes Seized in Raid Newport Btach detective! and state narcotics agents arrested a 24-year-old Corona de! JI.far man and seiied %,000 tablets alleged to be ~o. olficers an- nCl'Jrlted today. Christopher Wllllam Morgenroth, 24, of 2721 5Ut Aw., Corona del Mar, faces charges Ol possession ol narcotics for sale. Officers termed the haul as an "ex· ceptionally J a r g e one for Newport .Beach..'' Morgenroth was arrested at his home Friday. The LSD tablets, 'Newport detec- tive Al Epstein said, would be worth from $4,000 to fl0,000 on the Illicit Inarket. The investigation Luted for several Wetks, he added. Another man was arrested along with Morgenroth, but was releued later without charge. He was not Jdentifled. Bal Death Blaze Loss Estimated at $26,000 ..... The total property damage Jn tbe fatal fire that hit three Balboa Peninsula homes Monday and killed twc ,persons has been set at $26,000, fire invesUgators aald today. The pre-dawn blaze caused the asphyi- laUon deaths: of fl,frs. Patricia Ruby, ~. and Richard Stanley Hadden, 38, who were f o u n d In a smouldering bedroom at 414 E. Ocean trolll. Housca al Ill 'and en,..,.. heavuy tiamaged. .l Fire Weve:iUon, lllVC$lj&\ltor1 [or , the l'<ewport r~e ~Par\lllMl )iooday Wtre .Joln<d, by "pem !'°!)I ,other counly ,itepai:tments lo lry 1o,llod the cau;e or t11t blato ,tJlat dea.. ' . lfouio . ,and lijldly ~icd f"!. . : 1 e1 ~'.ca~fdihe fl 1 ( 1lPPllrtntJy, ,, •1arllid. In -.ill( front th tw .. : 1J.1orf.• ~ ~wJI~ yet ~ w . ::\. • ., -irr~ ; . -· • • J 1(J ... /'" ., ""· fl,~t.~-..:·\.:.1 "!( . ..., 1 • J .. J ..,, ~ f'\ . ~1-t lJ 'f 1>: .¥: ' de termined. The three-alann fire slatted at 4 a.m. Monday and was reported to the fire department by Newport Police officer Keith Colllna, who spotted the Dames while on routine patrol. Coffins won commtndaUon from his department for alerting nearby ruldenta and helping them out of thtir homes threatened by fl.re. Funeral services for the two victims are pending a.I Baltz Coron~ ~ Mar Mortuary, • · ' ... . \ . . ' • • Today's Fl••I ' N.Y. Stoeks. -' TEN ClNTS ' ' ·' Chil.d' DAILY l"lLOT ...... l'I Mt1W v.-,1 A MOTHER MOURNS Mrs. Helen Ellis Nixon to Visit Capistrano for Swallow~', ·F ete President and Mrs. Richard M. Nl1on will ,visit San Juan Capistrano Saturday, &OUrCes in San Diego said today. The President is expected to view the annual celebration wttcomlng the swallowa back' ·to .Mission san Juan Capl'slrano,:a~nlll!i' lei etii>fta from the . San DlegO' Cb~ cf Commerce thla lilOmlng. The weekend visit, announced tcday by. Pftf11 ~larY Ronald L. Ziegler, ~UJ lli.clude a stQp at San Diego, where Nixon will view a Me:a:ican Folk Art display presented by the Mu.5eum cf Man in Balboa Park as part of San Diego'• 2ooth anniversary celebration. The President and First Udy may spend' Friday and Saturday night at the Hot.el del Coronado in Coronado\ The presidential party will leave Washington on Friday, stopping in lodepe.ndence, Mo., where the chief ex- ecutive will visit former President Harry S. Truman before flying on to Southern California. Pren Secretary Ziegler said that Ni1on Initiated the meeting with Truman, who recently spent a few days in a ho!pital. The President and Mrs. NI.ton are expect'!d to return to Washington late SU!lda¥ Santa Ana Man Wreck Victim A Santa Ana m;m suffered minor ln- jurlei Monday when a pothole beside La· guna canyon Road exploded a Ure on hi.s van causing the vehicle to rip .out 160 feet of b.a.r..bed wire fence and overturn. Richard O. Mather, 52, was taken In South Cout Communlty Hospital by a friend. Officials there said he 'vas treated and reJe!sect: Pclice said the westbound van left the road tast of El Toro .Road at 1:45 a.m. o ..... ge Coase Weather Alore of the same Is the word from the weatherma:n t or Wed· hesday, with clear skies follow· Ing the morning clouds and lemperature1 back in the. mid· die 60's. • IN'iiIDE TODAY· A 11ew plov ~n Santa Ana end a conct>rt "' Orange C0tq:t Col· ~ge ore retritwed by DAILY PICOT crtlic.t todaJi. See Entef.. talnment .. Page 19, ... 11.. ,. Mtellllft. ' C.llf•l'!I" , ...... ,, Clnt#1-,._. Mvtwl ,....,. It C-lr.• IS N•.....i N..,. M c,_~ • ,If OtMtt C..., 1 "1'~ • .... •. -" D 't ' iMlll ..._:. lt>lJ ......... , ... • '""" M-11 l•!ttffill!MM It tMll ......... ""'I •MllK• "°" T"""""" tt ,. ... Cllllt • ......... ' •• ,, ..... .., ,, ..... Wtin. .. ........ ,. ........ " NII L....,. II ' I 5 • • lfr t DAILY PILOT H T11ado7, Moo 111, 1969 ..... ' . .. . Black St\ldents Appeal :for UCI ~~· .,,_ .... ~ . Assistance By THOl\IAS FORTUNE Of .. ~, ....... ·V~bJc ~ pollto to malt-¥ to lmpollte, thrff black · student. ..-m for lhe help cl adul~ white womt. AlondQ' al UC JrV\ne. Each u&l.na: hlJ own app~cb, they 11ppeated 'to 150 mtmbers ot UCI Town and Gown to prove lhelr purported con- cern by giving or their Ume aod monty to htlp tM: bl1ck community. · John Klq, IS-yUN>ld aopbomore froni Incumbents Scored S~hool Board Hopefuls Stir Sex Course Furor Candldales for the Newport-Mesa U!lilled.School D!Jtrlcl board aot In llltlr firat llckJ th!a momln1 1t 1 forum in which Je:r. educaUon waa the dominant them-of quesUoning. ·Four Incumbent board membera !OWl<I tbemaelvea on the dtlemive with three of four cballenaera wtio apoie flndlng fault. Pastor Henry Jonn, Coat& MeJa op-- ponent of Incumbent Mn. Ellzlbeth Lilly, elicited the ereateat rtJPOnH by c!w'sln1 school sex education prOlt'ams drive a wedge between student. and their parents and church. Incwnbenta R o d e r l c k MacMllUan, Lloyd Blanpled Jr. and lloflald Strauu all polnte4 out they have not liken a et.and on sex education and won't do so until they fee.I they know what the community wants. ~1rs. Ully saJd sex education is prcr perly a cur ric ulum matter and should nol be a school board candldaLes' issue. ONLY ZO ATTEND The candidatea: forum, sponsored by the \Vomen's Civic League of Newport Harbor. was attend ed by only about 2Q persons. rour candldales ~·ere absent -Alvin Bender, Or. John Chessell, Terry Hay and Paul Massey. Challenger Mary ?tiartln of Balboa criticized school Superintendent wµuam Cunniniham for his educational philosophy and her opponent, Donald Strauss, for his part in hiring Cun· ningham. She said Cu.M.ingham'1 philosophy "more or lw stressea chanilng values In a changing world and teachlng children lo cope with tflem. "l have a little bit dlfftrenl belief:• 1 she said. "I am of the philosophy thlt v"t should cool It. We're givlnl our chlldttn too much too fast. We're robbing tllem or their childhood." In answer, Strauss said, "I'm a Ian of his (Dr. Cunningham). I think it ~·as a good decision to hJre him." AnoU1er challenger to St.raU!s, 27·year· old Orange Coa1t College student John Vaughn, did his own lhlni. YOUTH DISSATISFIED • Put<>r Jann 11ld be IJlf'<I the home and church have fllled to do an adtquaUi Job cl ,., educatlon. But he a&ld he tak.. ezeeptlon :. saying the achOoll are Ult: only ones that can do tht job. "Let's make it a communJty pro.)tct," he said. "If we let u,e schools do it all and make the parent appear to be an ignoramus \li'e have drlven a w'edge." Board members Blanpjed and Mrs. Lilly made pleas for reelect.ion on the basis that they hlv! invested a areat deel of time and effort to· become knowl~geable board members, a background new board members wouldn't have. Blanpied, who waa appointed three yean ago tp complete an unexpired term, llld, "I reel I owe you 1 com· mitment for another four year1. We are over the hwnp and truna:a are aoing pretty amoothly. Secondly, I fttl you have an Jnve1tment in me. I have btto to aemiDar1 and educational cla11ses." Mrs. L1Jly sa.Jd, "[ was IOmewhat reluctant to run 'again, but you do feel alter all the t.ime and effort and com· mitment you do have an obllgaUon to COOUnue. It is a problem for boird members to have the backarowtd to make objective, well t.houaht o u t decisions." Sweden OKs Asylum To Four l\'lore Gls S'f<XXHOLM (UPl ) -Four more U.S. military dtseten have bten granted asylum on "humanJtarlan crounds" in S we d e n, increuing the number or American Gla given refuge in &wtden ~ 189, an Allens Comm.iuion 11pokesman said today. The fo\lf, ldenUaed u Ronald CUtto:d, Gerard Berrer, Ronald Crtw and Ray- mond Kneminakl, were the •tcortd aroup of American Vietnan1 prot.e1ter1 to have appllcaUona approved a.Ince Sweden list monUt announced that U.S. dt1erter1 wlll be glv~ additional government benetita tO help Uiem relocate here. ._. ~ WU "'"' la a&yq -ii-~ Iii -. ' '11 Olllllfl!Y lit ~~wot ·~ ' J!lioplt . "' ' tJ!o bojt .. ~ . aN aboitl U., mooclalltOllf blacl nip. lio Wd lf>elr slopil -~lie wer -~ 'be<n token to mtaii vlolebce. He 1a1a that II a m~take that hf.I been nWle by tbe maas news mtdla. Kini 1aid black potter it not racl!m 1n rcvene but a way for blacb to Lawsuit Tests lrvine-Countv " Bay Exchange 117 JACK IKOIACI!: . If ...... llJ' Plllf"f .... Tilt (lrll 1\ep Ill a JawlU!t lo determine -uwU""'1lty o1 the propooed Upper Newport Bay land swap behveen Uie C6Unty and trvtne Company wu taken Monday when a »pap brlef was flied in Superior Court. The brier by attorney Jack J. Rimel contends that the land ei:change is u~ constitutional and would iive the Irvine Company some of the most valuable resldenUal and commi!rcial property on the West Coast while the county receives ooly a waterway. Rimel U repre1enting county Auditor- Controller Viet.Or A. Helm. The 1Ult is the first step In Jltlgat!on which will eventually go to the state Supreme Court and take about two years . Earlitr, the suit was called "friendly" by the auperviJon and lrvlne Company but Robut. Nuttman, deputy CQU?\ty cowuel, aaya it wW not be conaldertd. ... ~. The proposed trade would swap 450 acre• of 1rvine company property for 150 acres of county tldeland1. Proponenls have contendtd that the county would · be able to develop two bayalde parks on land received rronl the company in exchange for wele11s mudnats. The brief filed lllonday wa1 in awwer to the county and Irvine Company peti- llbn aimed at forclni Helm to pay a $13,917 warrant the coUnt}''s 50 percent share of Upper Ne~rt Bay's studies and Soil tesls. Heun refused to pay the warrant to bring the ca1e to a Court teal Supr:rvisors rectntly approved an agreement that two separate dredging projects in the Upper Bay will be com- bined at an estimated aavln& of $1 million. They alJo approved ta\:ing the 450 acres the Irvine C.Ompany will trade to the county off lbe tu roU. pending outcome of the 1uit. Jn lhe suJt, Rlmel contends that the 0 County ia abcUcatint ill rtaht to control the way in wtueh the ire.at majority of the waler frontage in Uie -upper Newport Bay will be deve!Optd." He ~sues that the contract signed by the 11uperviaon and the company .,. invalid, unenforcable and inequitable to the county. "I feel I am cloaer lo the stud en ta,'' he said. "They are very dissatiafied \\•Ith the school system and are just staying in there because they have to. f'rona l'age l "I reelly would like to see a restruc- turing of the schools -'lilt l1rcer decision making for student.s l>tfore they go off into the world without h1vin& learned rtspon.!ibUity at age IS." Vaughn. a petiUoner for a SOS chapter at OCC, ailao Is running for the Orar11e Coast Juni~ College Dlslrlct board. Of the challengtrs, Gordon Morrow. a Newport busineuman who oppoaes Blanpied, seemed most satisfied.. with lhe school sysltm. He formerly taught at Corona del Mar and Estancia high :;chools. He said he agrtta v•ilh Dr. Cun· ningham that the school district is one of the most forward looking. The major problem right now, he said, is lack of communication except at the time school distrlct need~ a vote. "\Ve oua:ht to hear more about the healthy. &ood work going on year around," he said. DAil V PllOI OltANOll COAtT PV•l.llMINO C'OM,_N'r ••h•rt N. W•1I ,, .. .,..., •nf '°""111114r J•c• It Curley "'IU •tt1kk<ll 1rw1 c;-rll Mll'ltftf The1111' JC1•Yil E•ll9r Th1111et A. M11rphin• MtllltlM l•Uw J 1r1M1 P. C1IU"1 P1ul Niu•" ,.""""'" ••ldl . """•lltl"' Cit, ll!!tl"' 0 11.c'-1' ... .,... .... ~ Offtc• 2211 w,,, 1.1~ •• 1 • .,1.,,.,, M•lll"f MM-t•n P.O. l11-tl71, tZ66J --Cltlt MtMr Ill w .. 1..., lh1olrf LttuM hwll~ m 1'.,.tt A....,_ _,frrtt1"1 ..... .. Ifft llrlft I RUNWAYS. • • ?o.tayor Robert Wilson. "It's time 'lte make our position known on airj)brt expansion," he said. "We should hold the line u much as possible until we can get a regional airport elstwheH:." The resolution cited thue reasons for opposin& longer runwa1•: -"The e1plo1ive development of operaUOl'ls at Orange County Airport has (resulted In) ei:ceulve noise and pollu· tlon dangerously detrimental to sur- rounding: re11ldentlal and lnduat.rial areas. -"Extension of the runways would enable the alrpott to handle larger planes and thereby provide Increased 1ervlce at the expense or creat1n1 a permanent, unnecessary and detrimental hazard tD this city and the Harbor Area generally. -"Rtlocatlon of the propose<.! Corona del Mar Freeway to permit this tX· panslon of runwaya has betn sugguted without rtcard to Ult IO!ses, dlngtr1 and dlscornlarts imposed thtrtby upon Harbor Area tesidcn\1." The resolution concluded: "This council hereby stat.es 11 s unalterable oppmltion to any extension ol the runways at Orange COunty Airport ••• and any dtvl1Uon from the Uiltlng adopted agrttmenl for the Corona dtl J\tar Freeway Is hereby opposed • . . and every effort should be made Im· mediately to proceed with the location, de\'elopment and operation of a regional airport to relieve County Airport of the existing and pottntial overuse of heavy Housing Council Plans Meeting The Harbor Area Fair Houslnj: Council metLI at a o'clock tonJtht al 2313 Santa Ana Ave., Ca.la M11a. Thi• ytar'• 1oal for the C®ncll, rtprtsentlna: Newport Bt1ch, Cotta P.ftsa. Lacuna Btach and Irvine. 11 to double Jta pa.kt membtrlhlp, accordl.n& to cou.ncU Qia.irman Bob Vircslk. The council strives to place minority ciUitns In housln& o( their own cbOk.-t and to change atUtude.s that rulrlct fair housing in the H11rbor Area. The council provides special r,rogram.11 and speakers to civic and soc al groups upoo rTtire Invited to autnc; toni1ht 's mtttina. and those -.•!shine addklonal Information m1ty contJict the Orange c.owrty Fair ltouslna Council ac 1405 West Fourth St, Slllla Ana, phone ISJ.. OJSO, or Mrs. Joan Petty, $48-9661. ( plsnes and au the C'On.Stqutnt haz1rd1." Costa. Me1a 11.ayor Alvin Pioklty said he will Jl':rlllOally take the resoluUon to Wa1hinfton, D.C. Pinkley nut week will head for Wathinlf,on w1th Newport Mayor Doreen 1tfarshall and other local officiall to talk ovtr airport problenu: wlth the coun· ty's consrtsl.lonal delegaUon, including: Senators George Murphy and Alan cranaton. During NeWJ)Ott council dlacusaion of the Bresnahan proposal, City Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe reported that the corona del Mar Freeway route is virtually locked up. He pointed out that airet:ment.s for the present alignment have been alrned by both Harbor Ar6a clt!ea and the county. He said any revision would require new llearlng.11 over a period of. severlll yean. "Thi• . is something: that wu adoptsd In 1962. I think we could HY tillt any chanae now would b ~ prepoiterout ud make it •suet." City Man1eer Harvey L. Hurlburt ad- Clid that tbe Irvine Company, throuch wMse land mllth of the freeway wlll pa.51, 11 "vtry Much opipOled to any •lowing down In the de•elopmtnt ol lbe frteway. '' Team Inspecting OCC Campus for Accreditation A thrt!-<Jay inspection of the Orange Coa1t Colleie campu1 by an accredltaUon te1m becan today. Seven educators who Thate up the aecredJtaUon team wUI determine U lhe campus 11 kteplna up to 1nult In cur· riculum, lnstruction, facu lty, adminiltra· tlon, ind almt and goa.11. rr lhe colltge puses with tht s1me hl1h m•rks It hu In the past It wlll be accredited for another five yean by the Wbtun AlsoclaUOI\ of Schooli and eon., ... Accredltallon ratln& ot tbe colleae 11 lmponant to lranafer rtudmll Who QO on to four-ytar colleae1. Full ae- credll1tlon means course , work ii 1utom1tlc•lly transferable. The 1evtn-m1n team, headed by "'illlam Harwood, prnldrnt of Hartntll Colltat, wa1 to have d!Mer tonl1ht with cone .. trustees and admlnlllr•tor•. t lhlok pM!Uft!y ol lhtm.,lvis alltr 300 itara ol btloi latlftt to bate tbt!?'Vta· Black ~ 'ol thll dly m . !IOI aolttJ lo bO llll1lh and "'" the~ educi- tlon to btcorqi 11 cJOse to the middle Cll.lJ while u thly can, be Hid. That ls the new mood, Every Black Student Union in the country, ht said, has a program for spread.Jng the wealth by tutoring those in the black communJtlea not able to attend colleie. He • 1.id U11t is the backbone of the Black Studt t Unio not Yioltoet, r ~ own mala lciterell, be 11ld, to 'share my mlncl amon; the ma:uq of black people." Winder also accu~ the preq or at.nu· Uooalism. He said black 1tudent1 want changes in the educational 1tructure, but people don't stop to think demand.a might be made for gond reason. Using San Francisco State as Ulus· tration, he said he &ees two principal de man&. J'rona l'age l MOTHER MOURNS SON • • • honty," she said, turning to the boy's Aunt Pauline, "I don't think J could stand to go into his room. I've promised hi1 drum set ... " Five daya before the Stubblelield boy wu wheeled into the Costa Mua W.emorlal Ho11pltal e1T1er1ency room ear· ly Sunday, dead of a .38 cal. bullet In the chest, Mrs. Elli• took him there to be treated for an LSD overd01e. She said he took the $1.50-per-(ap:iule drug, described as b e i n g of Czechoslovakian origin, blue in color and cut with Kool·Aid, after an upsetting discussion of his involvement. "l tried to get him to give me a llst of names," she said, urging him to cooperate with police deteelives. "lo.lama, il J do -or 'lhey ' even thlnk I do -they'll get you or me or both or ua," she quoted hlm as saying, after which she told him such a thought was ridiculous. "They have ways of doing lt so it will look like an accident," Mrs. Ellis continued, rttallinJ her son's words then and wondering now about hi! violent death. .. .. She aaid Steve walched television with her S&turd1y night, then wenl to bed about 10 p.m.. to gr:t up early and accompany her to a professional con- vention In Loa Angeles on Sunday. By morning: he was gone and Mrs. Ellis thought although It was rather unusual behavior that he might have gone to a fri end's home inltead and choae not to awaken her. Detectives arrived at the Clyde Neill home next door at 20102 Kline Drive later Sunday morning carrying an iden· tilJcaUon card whJch-confirmed that their young John Doe was Steve Stubblefield. A 'Los Angeles Police Department detective finally ma.de contact \\1ih l\lrs. Ellis at the convention she v.·as attendlng u sale! representaUve for a large medical supply finn In P.llssourt. · "I'd like to talk to you about your son Stephen," he said. "Is he hurt?" ''I looked into his ~yes," Mrs. Ellis said Monday, "and J said : He'• dtad ." 1 "How? I thought maybe drugs • , • '' j~ ) ''He was shot." -... "I fell to the floor myself. If the boy was running, he was obviously just scared. l-fe was not shooting back, so he was not armed. This Is just logic,'' s!le said. There are answers that will be given to these inevitable quesUon1, but they will c.:ontlnuc to gnaw at her con· sciousness tor v•eeks ahead, even after investigators finish the case. ';lie wasn't even \\'earing his O\\'n clothes. Hew could he get dow n the1·e with all those tools? He al ways had enough money available. Who v.·as in the car that drove away?" she asked. "The police told me it was the work of someone who had httn burglarizing for years. He couldn't have bad time to break in like that if he was home at 10 and was shot at 11 :~5," she said. ' "The only Lh!ng he ever stoic was a ro!I of tape from Stater Bros. J\tarket and that sce ned the 'life out or him. Why did they have to shoot7" Answers exist, but they must come Iroin authorities. "My friends all tell me . 'Heltn, you're ao lucky to have a son Uke Ste\'e',·' :;he continued, "Uc y,·as the only pr:rson 1 ever knew who loved me. 'J'hat's why I can't stand to sec him." "To me, he1l never be dead." "That dog is looking all over the house for his master," she said in· terrupti ng, then calllilg to the pup named 'Hipple' because he had a Sl ,000 mother and a hippie mutt for a lather. "Honey," she said. "he isn't here." ' One ts unlimited enrollment ror third world (mlltorilJl atUdenta. sr Siila 1n JllO WU 10 ytrctot blacll, but lo 1168 only enrCUeq four percent blacks, he said. He sugmted the college could jiat have blUer cJasses without great financial strain. The second key demand, he said. ~ autonomy !or the black studies depart· ment. J-{e &aid the promise of a black st udiea department has been made since 1965, but black 1tudents were told there weren't funds available. But when the student 'strikt began, out or lhe clear blue sky ~re were 11 faculty positions and !unds suddenly available, he noted. Ir it only was given under dur'", not willingly, students felt it also would be taken away at I.be 1lightest provocation. he 1ald. Wlndar also defended tlcllcl of di> ruptloo and takeover u 11rateg)call~ nectSaary. "ff 1 guy II wllllnz to be 1rrelled YCN.'ve got to believe that cat ii slocve," he aald. "You have to admire, I would think. this type ol gull commltment." Watford sa.J.d he wonder9d how many tlmei hts or the other black student&' mothers had an oppartunlty to have tea at JI o'clock in the morning and how many of them are at the white women's houses scrubbing the floor. He sald he looks on the women a, .,one of the llrst line of enemies we rejch. "I look out on your smiling faces and 1 see you are very proud to have a few black students to talk to you," be 1ald. "Twenty-sli: black students out of 3,500 at rrvine. So it's a real big deal. "We know i~ is just another token,'' Watford said. "It is very typical of the white man. Everyone panes the buck. You say, 'I'm not llllt way. Maybe my neighbor is.' " He said, "if you are really concemed about setting the SC()re right, counterM:t the inferior educ1tion black st'Udents: are gettlnt: in Santa Ana. We nttd your bodies, your money' and materials. "You say you're good hearted white folks. We'd like to find out where evtry- one's heart is really located. We want to give you a chance to prove your good· natured selves. "If we can make il here at Irvine, we can make it' anywhere in the country." All three black students received about the 1ame applause for saying, each in his own 11.•ay, "understand us, and help our black brolhers and sisters." One woman asked what sptcilically they plan to do with donations and assistance they receive. King BnS\.\'ered, "What you're saying is you don 't want to givt us money to buy guns. Set up a scholarship for a black student in your namt. \Ve need book.II for the black community. And money foc materials to use in our tutoring." Winder said, "Our main goal ill to get mote black student.son campus. We need scholarships and housing." FINAL 2 DAYS PHASE I FOR CHARTiR MIMIERSHIP AT HUNTINGTON BEACH 50% OFF I ' I I i • ' • . .. ' , • ·• ' • ,v ., ' l l!'A ANDltltSON~ ldl,.r • • ~ .,....,, M1A11 t&, Ifft • I'• U < Ne w RegJmlf . . - Si9.ht.s Set Ori Service . . ,., - Taking time to reflect on accomplishments of this past.year before setting sights on a continuing goal of service were members of Newport Beach Chapter of Assistance League who ,gatbered today · in the Balboa Bay Club for the annual luncheon meeting. • ' Highlighting the event was the relinquishing of th~ gavel by Mrs. Wilbur Reyoolds to Mrs. Colin Reyrlolds', new leader. ' Introduced as members of her executive board·were the Mmes. Robert Crowner, Joseph Foster and Joe Earhart, vice presidents; Jesse W. Curtis and James B. Taylor, secretaries; Joseph F~rguson, treasurer, a~ Nicholas Frank, regional council representativ~. Others spotlighted were new Chairmen of league a~es - the Mmes. Nelson Neice, sustaining; Robert Short, Las, Rem..,:; Joe ~·I. Brock.mah, Juniors, and Eugene Charles, Assisteen coo~tor. . . AC a special. table were graduating seniors of· .. Ass.\Steen,; the l\1isses Becky CarVer, chainnan, Sue Wachter, Deanna' Payton, Jane Fletcher, Diane Plumb a'nd Sae Che,pman,. incoming chairman. . ' ' After hearing ann~al r~ports; the reti'ring president praised members for; their combined ' commun:lty service efforts . During the past year, lbe league ~mbarked oq a new piojec.t called Go-Forth which relates to neurologicslly di~urbed children. • SW INGING INTO NEW SEASON -Mrs. Colin Reynolds (in swing}, president of Newport Beach Chapter, Assistance League njH!ds no push. when it comes to organizing projects. Offering a1sistance· in launching a swinging year are Mrs. Joseph Foster (left), second vice president and Mrs. Robert Crowner, first vice president. They with other board n1embers took over leadership today during the annual luncheon'. · A cO~nuing project Is the Childrep's Dental ijealth Center 'vhich has' been completely upgraded with the' latest eqµipment. This year it took c:are of 350 children. ~ofJI sources of revenu" whicp support the league endeavors ere the Tltrtft Shop and co..spon.sorship of the Orange County Aut.Q. mobile Show. • ' ' I ·' •• " i.' r l : 1· I I I '" I i I i . i ... ,, I . • . . l t . . " Assistanc·e League Exe1J1.P~j~i.e ~ .M~-tto ,, . .. ·"" /' • • • h' ; .. . ; "· ~ ~ ~·· ExemplUying their motto, All for Service and Service for All, have been members ~of Newport Beach Chapter, Assistance League. And today, after bearing annual reports the volunteers might have reason to rest on their laurels. Instead, pledges to continue were made. The list of charitable o~anizations receiving assistance from the league is itnpressiv'e. ' ." Fi.nanciaJ help was given to families in difficulty at Hoag ~fem­ orial l;lripital, Presbyterian; the Burn Unit al Orange County Medical Auxiliary received aid for special equipment, and the American Fiel4 Service program has been furthered thanks to league contributions . The Dental Health Center,-lheJeague's major philanthropy, has been supported throughout the year by Thrift Shop proceeds, plus added futlds ·which have Deen given to further treatment for needy children. Also, social service has been available lo needy families throughout the year; the league helps with youth employment, and it launched a new project, Go-Forth for neurologically disturbed children. In addition, auxiliaries 8Iso gave special services. Las Relnas, under the Ieiidersliip of Mrs. Jerry Y. Bell, raised funds through the. French Room rack in the Thrift Shop and their annual bridge luncheon. Money was used to undertake and finish two exceptional ort.Hod9ntic ·cases ~ now are alMe to take two more in "the future. · · Juniors, uqdet. the chairmanship of Mrs. Theodore Robins Jr., aided the Mardan School.of Educational Thera~y, Hoag Hospital, Orange County Clilldten's Hospltsl. AmerieaQ Field Service, youth employm011t *'1<1. cqolri}!uted to the league's Children's Dental Health Center . .Funds were retiized from their annual Candy Gane Ball and Thrift Shop Red Carpet days. Assisteens, who man the boutique in the· thrift shop, presented checks for the center and social service. Their coordinator has been Mrs., William Pennington . 'MAK ING MON EY' -With the help of Bill Brown, DAILY PILOT commercial printing foreman, members of Newport Beach Assistance League seem to find it a snap to make money for their charities. Actually, this is only play money, but it represents the real thing .which was · raised .: , .. over a year of hard work. Treasurers of the 'chapter arfd auxiUaries ere (left to right) the Ahnes. Joseph Ferguson, league; William Pennington,' Assisteen coocdinator; '1Contad Sch"•eitzer', Juniors, and Kenneth Kingsley, Las Reinas. L . • l t G'irl' s Gr.ipe Could Be Uplifting Wit-h Right Su,p:port • ; DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every time ~-I pick up a. mag~ I read an ad-, ~· vert.lsement that says, "lncrebe your l bustlllle jn two weeb'' or "How ta ) add from two to Coor lnches•ol femlnioe ; charm." I could CT1· Why don't they advertise aomething -that will decruae lhe meuurementa ly a ~p U ftt1 01 tJte proper frame. la fact, a pt .. Wall Screet dttw qalle i crowd 91111 llut. Y11 dll't 11y lltw tall yoa art " * ••tl 1oa wetab. Jf 1" are tfet'Wt:faW. a diet woald ti tom'le redace >""' bulUae aloo( •wllll Ille .... ., ya. Try I~ . . ANN LANDERS ' ' law ls an attractive divorcee and could pass for 30, although she h 10 yean older. ' modeltJ. Sample aeaW:ltCe' la cue h cu•t fbtd tff worda: uMa, I'm ... !-7ell'Hld. Please pat .. .-e cltUttl. ~ VOCOllsdtu teduelloo by po...W cd ...... ""''" ,.... .... porUeoilatly ltr &eeil•1en. What la French kissllll!' Is It '"""If. or the girl who has too much up there? l"'" I am II yean old and have a 44 • bll!I. Can you Imagine what I'll look I f like.In 10 yean if I conUnue to grow? ' t tried ei:ercbe and it didn't help. l Pltase don't 11.tJ«st an optratloo. The thou1ht of a knife scares me. Is there I anything ell' I can do? -BOWLING DEAR ANN LANDERS ' Recenlly I read that suickJe is the Number Six cause of death in the lJ.S. Why la Ulis so! Can yoo explain why llO many people wooJd · want to d e st r o y lhemselve1? And what about the close relatives of suicide victims? How can lbey go on living nonnal lives 4~11ng that perhaps they C®ld l\lve prevented the auiclde?. -F ArriiFtl'CltEADER DEAR READER' fte 'ill.Unct for seU preaervaUofl It Cite most mnpe1Ua1 drive el al aormal u.lmal1, lncludlnc ~ bu.mu anlmaL Tie dttirt not t.e live ls eoatrlrJ '° humaa aatua,. Most people wbo tUI dlem1el\re1 do H 4urtng • period ol dttp depru1lon. Thete people art Ht ntlonat. Suicide. \lfctlm1 whose menlll prottlltt ba•e-been der1lled by alcohol or druga UkeW"lle cannot be tfln· 1ldertd raUonal. The pill 11 well 11 the crlef of the 1ulclde11 dost relaUvu cu be 1n enOrmou1 burdta. All 1utborlUes with whom I have consulted •P"t thlt a JOlcldal paUen It dieveloped eady la.. lire. SomeU"'ea tht>npy cu dl1'1fp3te Ollt drive. Generally tptakla1, ilMe ln- ,4ivldual wtlo It be11t Oii 1t:U-destr11c&i0ft will find • w1y lo en~ ltlt life 1ad no friend or relative can prevent II. ' P.lease don't tell me to M Y O S. because my lf.year~ld brothtt-bHaw ii involved arxl I · ~m very fond ot him. My mothu·ln-law calls the boy f'"'I' another room to hand her • t~ ¥-'hen she is in the show'er. She walks around the apartment ln a bra and pantle:i. She Bleeps nude. J lhlnk 100 get lhe Idea. Thf lad la uneom(0<1Able . about his mother's behavhr and hAs menUoned It to f!lY hu11baOO , who doesn't want to ••set involved." What ahoWd be done? -J.P.H.' ' Who should sel lhe neeklnl llinlts ~ the boy er the girl! Can a thot&"D wedding IUCC<!d! Read Ann Landd booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways W Cool Jt." Send rio' ctnll in co1n and a long, M!lf·addrc.,sed, !tamped anv~ Ann ·Lander~ will be llad to ~I~ you wllb you; prol)lem1. Sthd the!1( to her In cart of lhe DAU.Y PILM' enclosing 1 stainped, lldf-addr- envclope. I GREEN. XY. DKA.R l.G.: A·« bu.at laa 't MCUllJ'J. ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother·in· ' DEAR J,: n, JH mentioned It to the wronr per1on. He do.I( kll hit m~r lttw IMI feel• abcMlt kier Im· • • .. I I I ' --......... '. •' ' . IAILV rJLOT Horoscope Capricorn : Acce 'nt on Home WEDNESDAY MARCH 19 81 SYDNEY OMAJ\R "'Ibe wile m1n controls his deotlny . • . Aalrolo1Y points the way." AR~ (March 2t·Aprll 11)' Cycle at pe1i. You eocltlize, receive accolade . Circwnstances turn in your favor. Tlmlng improves. Give attenUon to apparel. You may be called upon to make peraoflll appearance. TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20), A1uch occurs behind t h e scenes. Be careful in what you say, write. Key ls discre- tion. Some secret fura come to fore. Analyze them. Accent maturity. Problems are due to dissolve. GEMINI (May It.June 20), Stress on how to pleue friends wbO hold divergent vlews .. Be flexible -maintain sense of humor. Your desires can become realities. Key is to know how much to request. CANCER (June 21-July 22), Accept responsibility. You can gain admJratlon, promotion if you follow through on obliga· lions. Means don't skip basic duties. Ambition can be fulfill· ed; gain family backing. Flowers Arranged for New League Members LEO (July 23-Aug. 22), Favorable lunar aspect today coincides wilh g r e a t e r recognition of e f f o r ts . Perceive meanings -some are very subtle. Obtain hint from TAURUS message. A me1rage arrives and solves dilemma. Selecting flowers for the Women's Architectural League of Orange County's membership luncheon on March 20 are (left to right) Mrs. J ames Sink, Mrs . Gared Smith and Mrs. Dell Williams, whose Corona de! Mar.home wm be the setting. Mrs. Perry Bab- cock and Mrs. Williams are co-chainnen. New members to be honored are the Mmes. Michael Restauranteur-author Honored by NB Friends Robert Lawrence Balztr will be honored by Newport Beach J"riends of the Library during a coffee neit Thursday. Balzer, who has many diversifid lnteresU, has been awarded a $10,000 first prize fur Kaiser's Men's Cook-out in Honolulu and the Holiday magazine's dlatinctive Dining Restaurant award for bis Tirol· restaurant in ldyllwUd. Manager of Villa Fontana, Santa Ana and consultant to the Paul Muaon vineyards, Balzer also bar authored many books oo the p1ea!W't3 or dinina. In a completely dif~ fereat vein, his book called "Beyond bonflicl" is .an 1 a u t obiographical narrative and ei:posltion or Buddhist pbilos-Opbjr. A l<acher, photographer and painter, the honored guut allo received .a decoraUon of "commander., of the Royal Order of Sabametrei in Cam- bodia Wblcb ,... 'bestowed by Prince Norodom Sihanouk, chief of atate. The colfee will tau place In the SborecliU home of Mrt. Richard Bertea, Co-hOltea:HI are· the Mmes. R. A. P1n1, Stanley LeLievre, Pettr Dobba and Fred El&. South Coast Juniors Light Three Candles South C.oatt. Junior Woman's Club will celebrate its third birthday and Federation Night during a meet1n1 Tuesday, ~farch 15, in the Peek Family Colonial Terrace Room , Westminster. coordinator of La ~iirada Ebells, Juniors spc;llllOrinf club. The theme to be carried out will be thil of Junior• pre11ident Mrs. Bond Thompson: Reflections of Lcvellneu From a Fountain Gesler and John 1-Iamilton of Orange and Mrs. Arthur Danielian of Newport Beach. The league sponsors high school awards competition, scholar· ships and a fund-raising home tour. Luncheon in- formation may be received by calling Mrs. Bab- cock at 543-81145. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 )' Straighten accounU. Check in- ventory. Balance bud&et. Talk over (inances with mate, partner. ?i-foney matter 1 dominate. You get chance tD prove worth. Realize one in Graduates Invited Volunteers Urged To Give Services · Do you enjoy directing plays or leading group diacussions ? Is bridge your game or does art draw you? Would you like to tune in on a musical group? · Jf any of these a~vitles-interest you and you have a few hours to spare, the 'Mental .ffealth Association needs your help. Volunteers are needed for the three Orange County Community Activity Centers providiil&" on-going therapy for persons released frOm mental hospitals in need ol continuing aid and companionship during their rehabilltatlon. "t. Beginning MQ.J)day1 March 24, there wiU be a week-Jong training class for individuals interested in working in this new and vital program. Applications may be obtained by visiting the Mental Health Association of Orange County, 2215 N. Broadway, Santa Ana , or phoning 547-7559. A new severMlay trairiing class, developed to help the volunteer be- come more self-confident in preparation to working with people with emcr tional dl1turbances, also has been developed. In addition to the activity center, volunteers are needed to aid in occupational therapy rooms and recreation programs and outings lor patJeots in the psychiatric unit of Orange CoWlty Medical Center. Since grooming is another vital facet to socl'al rehabiJltation of the mentally ill, hairdressers and barbers who will donate their time are vital· ly needed. Individuals wishing to serve in the Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention Center or the Parenl·Child Clinic in the Medical Center are giv· en a special tw<>-week training program. Mrs. Hal Lehman , chairman of volunteer services. also has stressed a need for Spanish-speaking persons in all phases ol the programs and typing and clerical assistants in the MHA office. To Reunion Plans for a H~year reunion and dinner dance are being formul ated by members of the ii 1959 graduating class of l:i ?i.fontebello Senior High School. 1 Area residents ~'ho attended the school .and are not presently on the mailing Jilt are invited to send their ad- dress to /l,f.rs. Gary Eytchison, 10700 S. Virginia Ave., Whit- tier. Deadline !or reservations I will be May 23 for the reunion taking place in Ute Disneyland .. Hotel on June 21. The evening will begin at 6 p.m. with a social hour followed by 1 prime rib dinner at 7:30 p.m. Tickets tor Ole affair, at $9 each, may be obtained by mailing a check to :fi.frs. C. L. (McClellen) Klutts, 10803 LaCima Dr .• \Vhittier. A con· firmaticn will be mailed those planning to attend, and the tickets will be held at the I d~imelight On Bosses Invited to join the Fountain Valley Junior club are all di1trid officers and chairmen, club presidents and members ftom Los Cerrito& District. of Understanding. 11 _____ ..,,_.., _____________________ ~ Committee members include Bosses and civic leaders will again be treated like klngs when Bu siness and Professional Women's Club of Laguna Beach hosts its annual dinner next Thursday in the Towers restaurant. Guests attending will include the Mmes. Jack Thomas, general di 1 tr i ct president ; William Hayes, dlatrlct preai· dent and chart.er member of South Coast Junlon; Ronald Haase, president of La Mlrada Ebells, and Jolin Mlp>t, the Mmes. L I o y d Sal- t e r t hwaite, refruhmenta; James Stalcup, name taaa; Dick Trodick, invlta tJons, Paul Johnaoo, Thompson, Maurice Donahue, Andrew Edwards, Jon McKibben, Robert Som· ma, Larry Long, Georf• . O'Hare, Frank Fleck, Ronald Dollorn and Robert Chapman. Florist , Artist Chosen Gallery Exhibit Fo r Meaa Rebekah Evtf7 flr1l and third Tue. day rl Ute month members PAST-FAST 1 ·Day Service .. Draperies CLIAN a 85C PAN fOlD Betrothal Revealed nflfl t oniet''f . f f f Ofl. 'I C.LEANERS ANO LAUNDERERS In Westcllff Plaza 17tti & Irvine Newport Beach al Mea !Ub<kah Lo d I e Opto Dolly: I o.m •• t P·'!'•; Sat.: I. 6 Sculptor Shows Art W••ltotle Sleeping Bigs Bedspreads Blankets and Rugs Mrs. Florin Martin, vice pres ident, is m a k i n c ar- rangements fOf' the annual event, and Mrs. E d n a Carmichael. 494--2005. is in charge of reservations. Committee women include the MmeJ. Albert Cornelius, Betty Myers, Delbert Trout· man, W.D. Trotter, Gladys McAfte, Harold Daily, Velala \Varde, Albert Truex and ltfl.u Dorothy Roetter. Mrs. Emily Stricker, club president, will r.res.ide 1t the meeting, and we come guests. (Ad'o'rn l1t"menll I Grandmother's ' advice can • get yo~ ia a lot of troable A mild little hind lotion worked wonder• for gr•ndmother-but if you expect it to cope with today 'a killer cle1nen, you're taking the life Qf your akin in your h1nd1, \'edra is the hand lo. tion up ~ tttday'1 clean. era . Aloe, the de1ert'1 moisturiiing pl1nt, helps re1tore whit cleaners 1ttip aw1y, Vedra Lotion, 1.00, Cream I .50. wemble In Odd Fellowa Hall, ~~:::._....:.-.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!_~~~~~~=---Costa Mesa, at I p.m. .:..:._____ _ '"--------- ·-------- Your 1tyJe b your own: you an an innovator. Project recently begun begins to grow. , • .,.... ''*"" °""'" ..... """*""• tllD Trvtll AloMlt ..... ,..'-'~• IW 50 Ctlltt "' CMwf ... lft, )119 DAILY l'ILOT, .... n-. frtlllll C.~ tr11 llllloft, Ht'# Ytrt. H.Y, .0011. Virg inia ·Ruth Hogan To Ma rry in Newpor t Sew Fabrics from Singer and SAVE. $122 yd. Ondufay b7 Singer. Couturier look foratter·5 dresses. 74% rayon, 26% acetate. 44/45"wide. Reg. $1.98 Belle Glade Dots by Sinpr. Easy-care, wrinkle , .. sistant. Solids to coord inate. 55% cotton, 45% Cupionl rayon. 45• wide. Reg, $1.59 to $1.79 yd. Country Clofh by Singer. Textured cotton and poly. ester blend-great for children's clothes a"nd sports- """'· 50% polyester, 50% cotton. 45• wide. Re1- $1.79 yd. ll'Aolawp-lutSINGl lll ,.,,,,/' SINGER llil A A•1t .,,. Ott 1'1'1t "'4111 TA, l-1J.4 •-1'1rti; Ct11ttt U.Nf,4 ANA -·~ auw."" ''· I litlJ~ •AIOIN OltOYI COSTA M•IA ttJI Oit....,.11 tlOO H1"'9f 11\1111. S»-«11t Ill t-llH or11-.. Ce.Ir!,., ,llta Hlrllllr CMllV COIT" MISA l rlt!OI 4. Slll'l!!Dwtr ... ,.,, Sot.rtl'I '°''' , .... . - I ' I 1, .. -... ' -' • • • ,. ' .~sta . ~· --· Mesa Eb IT ION- A M:ot·her's . ; ' Story ... 'My Only .. - T~y's Flaal -N.Y.· Stoelfs . - • • • TEN CJit.ITS ' ' • Mes(J, Mom Knew Slain Son Was Peddling P!jt MET DEATH IN AN ALLEY Stephen Stubblollold Shooting Probe: Did Dead Youth Have Partner? Investigation continues today into the shooting death ol a 14-year~ld boy burglary suspect by C<Jsta Mesa polite la.le Saturday, after be ignored five orders to halt while fleeing. Or~e County District Attorney Cecil A. !llclii"latd -~..,.nports on the .... woold Jlt')bably 1IOt ~ his office until late udi.rteraoon. • · The vk:tlni, Stephen Stubblefield, of 201 lZ Kline Drive; &anta Ana Heights, "'as hit in the chest and leg as be fled a rooftop burglary at Conlgin's Cameras, 530 W. 19th SL, about mldnight. A central key ·lo the case is the apparent escape of someone else· in a car, which left the blitck~garb·ed youngster 1traOOed a( the scene as police arrived. Shop owner Robert Corrigan and the first investigators to reach the downtown area burglary scene saw a shadowy figure, which vanished up a rope and ran over adjacent stores. He leaped to the ground some distance away and was fin\lly hit when three uniformed of!lcers shot from a range of about 150 to 200 feet. Various_: tests are being conducted lo determine whether the fatal slug was fired by Sgt. Robert Ballinger, or piltrolmen. George \Vilson and Richard Johnson. Costa Mesa PoUce Chief Roger Nelb ::;aid MOnday that lhe killing was definite- ly tragic, but hb ofricers were acting in the line of duty at the scene of a felony crime. Clothing and black gloves worn by young Stubblefield -never seen by his mother. -are being anaJyzed in an attempt to determine their origin. Police believe a second person may have been involved due to the ~ fessional degree of the rooftop burglary, the number of tools involv~ aad YQWI& Stubbldield's age. He Wu shot only about 1 hwr and 4a minutes after he was last ·sten·by his motber· at home, more than two miles from the cam~a shop bur&lary scene .. \V hoever gained entry drilled a aeries nf holei ' with a brace and bit, then sawed A square loose and lowered two ropes in; one for cllmbirJ& and one· lor lifting out loot. ' lly A1ITmn\ R. VJNSEL I . .ot tl!t Ol#f '*' .,_,. . ' How do·yoU t~ 'ijiinp, to· a ·~ · who ki.o.,d -her ooly soa Good· ~l1bt, juJt. belorJ . he w" ldlled . by pollco. '1ll'!llnl down a dark alle~;i !"'""' old and dr<SM>d ·Jn Wrglar~I ~!. 1 You don't lrf.. J :·· , • . ' You just llaten and Mrs. ileten Ellil, of ~11! Kline. llrive;•Santa. Alla llilpll!, talked.Monday-about a someth;ne&-tr<>;ubt: ed boy who ·will llw11s live to hi.a m<ither1n a penooal RMt. . Stephen Stubblefield wu a complex, c,ontradictory child of the limes, ae-conllnc . to tb<oe who knew him, wilh an IQ ot t35 and a' conllict between tendenctes toward right and wrong. . !,!rt. Ellis sat and tallced. ' ".tit was my Ollly chUd. I had him alone. l} pakf for him alone. , J know he was peddJlnl pot." · 'Ille Heinz K>iut fntennediale School •liblh grader bad jllll. -built 1 clever . aclence fair project. she said, and· 8.sked for permluion ~Join a.. volunteer service prbgram at Fiirv~w State f\ospital. Ooe of , his fatal of{enses, perhaps, was too much curiosity abou! drugs jn a Ume when it is criminally profitable for aome ,to make a variety of research materJa ls cheaply available. "Evidently someone i9'. him started Newport, Mesa Agree Longer Runways Assailed By Jll!ROME·F. Jums Of 1111 Dal,, Pl191 ,._,. Tile cities of -co.ta Meal "and Ntwparl Beach today a r e .0Udly aligned against any shifting of the adopted routlitg of the· Corona de:l Mar Freeway near Orange County Airport. County Aviation Director Robert J. Bre!nahan wi.nta the re-routine in order to make roorn for extended runways. But Monday night, the councils · of the two Harbor Area cities unanimously assailed the plan. Costa 111 e s a Councilmen adopted a resolution declaring thelr "unalierable opposition" to any ei:tens:ion of runways or realignment of. the freeway . At the same time, Newport cooncibnen. rnttting in ·an informal study aes&on , directed ~ st.aH to prepare A similar resolution. It will he offictally adopted next Monday. NeWport officials called Jhe fr..way tefliiilBCpraJrna''~, .. _ . D01JIB,ami.DB1i • . , v~·i.!-!Jna.iq.l,'irocilo ~ IC!dly: •. "I Uled to can '"""II' Sampeon an empire builder. Now I tblnl< .we've lot ,Ane~cnejnJl~n." · Sampeon. Ii oran,e ~ Harbor Dl.irtct llWl8&'er. · .Bre.mahan c110e up with the ~I Wt -:eek. He up1'Jnecf that jetliners lilllng off County Airport could pancake onto the future freeway, ,..boee NIU.le now n.. Just norlh of Paliladt1 . Rood, unless the rwnvay1 art exttnded over tbe fre'eway or it 11 moved 1,000 Jarels south.' .. go.ta M... ClOUllCilm<n and lheit NeWport colleques made it elear Mon- day niibt they 're not lnj<rtsJed In elihF or . bolh changes. Brtinaban'a recom- mendatloc Is 'now uDcler study by the Coonty Road~ But without agreement 'from Costa ?llesa and Newport, the propo.led freeway shift appears doomed . And jt is con-- sidered. unlikely county supervisors wJJI buck the titles' oppc.Ction to any nmway longer than the present 5,700-foot main span. The Costa Mesa resohitlon on the·isaue places that city in a rather blurre situation. Two web· ago Costa Mesa councilmen voted s to 2 to· urge federal approval of Pacific .Northwest jeWner service out of County Airport. Tiie ain:ralt ihot Wllllid he used for Jhe fllibl.I, •c:cor<llnc to plana of airline · appllcants-.for the route awards, wO!J)d require · longtr runwayt than now exist at the county lactnty. Newport City ~ttomey Tuliy· Seyroour took note of 'UU. conlllct after ~ councllmai were ai!vtsed. of lhe ~ . M~ action. •u Oooto, Mesa Ls w1lll9g to eo a.Jong wiCh Abe present · ~ay, •: Steele .Jtlarlceu NEW YORK (AP) -Tile stock marl<tt dOS!'i wiih I . moderalAI loin today, Tram.Ill wu acuv~ . (See q~Uoos, Pages 10.11).' he aald, "I think we ean find this cause for encouragement." 1be . Newport council has Jong been on record unanirnowly opposed to the Pacific Northwest flights. ·The Costa Mesa resolution on the runway issue was presented by Vice Mayor Robert Wilson. "It's lime we make . our position known on airport e.xpansion,'' he said. "We shOuld hold the line as much as possible until we can get a regional airport el!ewhere." The resolution cited these reasons for opposing longer runways: -''The explosive development o l operations at Orange County Airport has (resulted ln) excessive noise and pollu- tion dangerously detrimental to sur· rounding residential and indusb'ial af'6as. -"Extension. of the runways would enable the airport to handh!.larger planes and thereby provide increased service at the expense of creating a perinanent, unnetessary and detrimental hazard to this city and the Harbor Area generally. -"Relocation of the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway to permit this ex· pansion of. runways has been suggested wfthout regard to the losses, dangers (See RUNWAYS, Page Z) Incumbents Scored School Board Hopefuls • 1 S.ti-;: ·Sex · Course .. Furor ·. ·~·i . ~: .. Clndldllu for the Newpart,M.,. Unllled Schi>ol DI.strict board gol fn Jheir fir.st•. ncu this morning at • forum ln which aex education wu the dominant theme of. questioning. ' Four inc:umbent board. members fowid )helllJl!lves on the deren.sive .,mi"t.hree ol four clllllfn&ers who ·A'{lle fl.nd.ing fault. ~ Putor Jkpry Jones", Costa Mesa op- pootnt <I Incumbent Mrs. Ellzahelh UUy, •llcfted the ., .. 1u1 -by charJllng ac:boOI. aes educaUoa programs drive a wedge J>etw~ s~b and lbeir paren~ and church. Incumbtrrti Roder ic t Maclitillian, LloJd Blanpied Jr. and Donald StraUJS all pointed out they have not taken a atand on sex education and wm't do so until they feel they trlow what the community wants. Mrs. Lilly said au edi.icatlon ls Jl'O- perly a curriculum matter and should not be a school board candidates' issue. 'nle candidates forum, sponsored by the Womm'1 Civic League of Newport. U.S. Launches Drive Against Reds Near Saigon Harbor, was attended by only about 21 persons. Pou; candidatea were absent -Alvin Bender, ·Dr. John Cbe.ssell, Terry Hay and Paul Masaey. Challenger Mary Martin of Balboa criticized school SUperlntendent William CurinJngham for his e d u c a t I on a I phllosophy and her opponent, . Donald Strauss, for his part in hiring Cun· nlngham. -· She said Cunningham's phUosophy "more or less stresses changing values Jn a changing world and teaching children to cope with then\. ' "I have a little bit different belief," she said. "I am of the philosophy that 11·e should cool it. We're giving our children too much too fast. We're robbing them of their childhood ." In answer, Strauss said, "l'm a fan of his (Dr. Cunningham). J think it ·":as a good decision lo hire him." Another challenger to Strauss, 27-year· old Orange C.oast College student John Vaughn, did his own thing. YOUTH DlSSATlSFIED "l feel I am closer to the student11," he 11a1d. "They are very dissatisfied with lhe school system and are just staying in there because they have to. "I really would like to see a reslruc· turing 0£ the schools -with larger declsion makln1 for &tudents before they go o(f Into the world w1thout havinJ learned responsibility at ·age 18." Vaughn, a peUUontr for a SOS chapter ,.i· OCC, also is running for the Orange Coast Juruor College District board. ~·-~ ('"'I) A U.S __, or the challengers, ~on Morrow, ~~" yr • -· · onnor~ 1 Newport buJlnessman· who opposes =.:~~id loiiJ:'~:: atanpjed, ;...,..i. most sallsfled with }_,_... the school lfsttm. He formerly tau1ht -Salflll•' Communist troops threatening at Corona 'del Mar and Estancia hJgb silgbo. Communbt' I...., ,..... deler!J>. ed u "coodderab)e" in a day ol heavy 4:'ls~ld he agree11 with Dr. CUn· flg'l'hehtlngolf. • label·• 1 U ningl)am that the school distr\ct is one · ens1v~ """ operat on A as of the moat forward looking:. The major Wedge, was thought to be the lareest problem right now, he said, is Jack of the war, ecll~ the 40,000 n:ian · t t ••-ti Allied force which batUed Communbts of communication ei:cep a uR: . me m &he same jw:lglea: 30 miles northWest. school district needs a vote. of Sa!goo Jn Operation Junction Cl\y · "We oua:ht . lo hear more about the In F • ....,,._ lll7. healthy, good. work going on year Drugs S~a.-e Word --~ around," he said. Col. Gtorce s .. Patton JlJ, commtnder P.utor Jones said he agrees the home of. the tankl and ~ of the fimous and church have failed to do an adequate general, uJd the count of Communist jOb . Gt .sex . education. But be Wei he' I , Dnipf lt'a a """ #on! for . moat po'nnu. But U they i'elll1 ' . . • want to help their cblldttil qualll lhe crisJ.s they' .. Cot to Rep ll1'ir cool. - Tbat'1 the advice <I Alton BIU... i.. .Jn today'• M\<l!nih Jnslallment of a JO.put Hriet, "Drugi, 1161," lo • which • Ibo natlollolly· ;noled -wriler mullom -Is to listen to their 7ounpten. Often the teenoceri <I today know more obout drup thin lhelr partm.1. statl ~ by nodinl to-417'• ., Pip I. .. I ::i: !l'=i:/f..',t1u:' ~ t&kes uceplloo to aaylng .Jhe 1e""°ls · ·~"::tc. are the only '""' Jhat can do the job . ,.ported ldlllllf 60 tod11 and ..... = "L<I'• make II a commwdty pro'-' " 21 C<mmualltl died Monday In the '""" preliminary 111ges of lhe operaUoo. ht!· said. "ll we lei U.e llCbools do It Allled loiill were ''lichl" •II and make the parent appear to Far to tbe north, WUl'1 LeatbemeckJ be u lgnoramUJ we have driven a of Jhe IClt U.S. Marino llelimm4 onded wedge." !heir blllerty f""'11 campalp bl Jho Boon! membm Blanpied aod Mrs. jungled inounJalilo llW! 1-· and ....,. UUy .~e pieu for re<~ion on the !\<>WP oul under f1n by ~n today balls that they have Jnvesl<d a .gre&\ trom their A SblliValley1'C)llllonL , dMI of llrll& aod dlorl to beoomo UPI corrapciDdent David l.amb 'u.ld tnowledguble board· members, • lhe Communlltl flrell neor.11• aoo N>Unds background new board members wouldn~ of Jl)Ortar Jin at the fkel of ' !Ill have. . . heUcopters whl<h · flew out Jhe )ast Blanpled, who was appointed .three Morlnel today but tlfot l!IOll of lhe y .. 11 ago to complete an unexp<red lhelll exploded harmleaal)' In the dense • t<rm, said, "l feel I owt you 1 COITI' under~. MonlOOft.rilU llld foS bid ' mitment for another four )'t!ara. We P'ma\ed Jhelt,departun.Ulllll lndoy'. , • . .ISie CANDIDATF.8, Pate I) . • ... . . .. . ·-. t Using, then peddl~g. but he was too brilliant and -bftllhy 1n 1>e· booked. His room ll full of boots about drugs," Mrs. Ellis sald. FriendJ and rilaUves · mo~ about the expensive, well-to.do Countn' Club Estates home shared by M!'I. Ellis and Steve, whO did exttn&lve landscape work of good quaUly. "J want you to pack up his things, (See MOTIIER, P1ge !) Mesa Votes 3-2 for Red Fr~eway Line One woman wept and a few groans were heard Monday night as the Costa ?o.fesa City Council voted '3 to 2 to ask the state for the $00.7 million Red Route Newport Freeway alignment. through the west slde ol town. Rolling out the Red Carpet of progren on the west side -in effect the result of the vo~e -was a bitter pill for Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson to swallow. Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, a pharmacist, looked for a time as though be too . DAll.Y PK.OT....._"' Af111W 'f .. A MDTHER MOURNS Mro. Holen Elll1 Funeral Slated For Slain Youth had a dose ol lhe wrong medicine when A funeral service for young Stephen a new route proJX1S8I advanced by UHi Stubblefield will be held Wednesday at vice mayor failed to get cmsideration. 2 p.m. in Westclllf Chapel, Costa Mesa, He wu not a Red Route fan either. with visitation today. Surprisla:11 accepting an intended jest Visitors may call at the chapel from by Councilman George A. TUcter, the 2 to 9 p.m., according to mortuary five-man panel re-voted unanilnously spokesmen. afterward to show the state Division , Interment will follow the Wedne!day of High lid front servke at Paeifle View. Memorial Park, ~ays a so . Corona del Mar. WUaoo 1 wggested route wu a mdd survivors include his mother Mn ~ aM~ ~ ":t! ~ Hele!· Ellis, Iii •w lWlle Drt~ San~ llC. .. Ana ~lghll, his fat.her,. Albtrt • Stub- of Newport ~r 10 ·nrin& back ~ bldilld, and bis maternal grandparent&. to &!parlor Annue;ap71h stn;t. · • . , , · Jnltlal gu..,.s aliout Wll!ion'1 proposed freeway route would be a rout, decision ~~'.f d up to Jhree monlhS, but .lh• state ·~Deel 'oot • ba11her schedule it a.sti:ed to ~valuate a &ixth cbo.lce. City ldaniger Arthur R. McKenzie &aid he spoke to state DivJsion of. Highways officials late Monday afternoon and they esUmated a one-year delay for study at best. Discussion was sometimes heated du- ring the one.hour hearing lt!onday, but tilt impeodlrig Red Route eho.lce became quickly apparent after Wilson's. motioo to call for study of an easterly route died wlthout a second. "I wasn 't exactly happy with ~ Red Route or the Green," he explained, sub. mJWng a rough aerial map Of his pro. posed shi:th alternate route, prepared with Enginetrlng Department help. "Orie thing that we gentlemen know for certain ls that no,t all of you people ~ut there are going to be pleued," said Wilson. "We have taken almost tv .. o years contemplating 1heae routes.' The state has studied the east side and I think it was discarded on that basis," aaJd Councilman Willard T. Jordan. "I wish I could go along with Bob, but I just can 't," Jordan conUnued, mak~ ing the final motion hims« for the westerly Red Route, after Wibon couldn't (See RED ROUTE, Pase !) Nixon to Visit ' ' Capisb·ano for Swallows' F ete President and Afrs. Richard if. Nixon · will visit San Juan Capistrano Saturday, sources in San Dier, said today. 2,000 LSD Cubes Seized in Raid Newport Beach detectives and atale narcotla: agents arrested a 24-year--0ld Corona del Mar man aod setzeil 2,000 tablets alleg~ to be LSD, officen an· noonced today, · Christopher William Morgenroth, 24, ot 272l 5th Ave.,1 Corona del Mar, faces charges of possession of narcoUcs for sale. Officers termed the ~aul as an "ex- ceptioilally I a r g e one lot Newport Beach." Morgenroth wa.s arrested at his home Friday. The LSD tablets, Newport detec· Uve Al Epstein said, would be worth from $4,000 to $10,000 on the ilDcit market. The invesUgation lasted tor sever.al weeks, he added. Another mail . was arrested alpng wit~ Morgenroth, but was relea sed later without charge. He wu not ldentUled. Retired Store Chief Grover Magnin Dies SAN FRANCISCO (liPt) -Grover A. Magnln, retired president of 1: Magnin & Co., the e:rpenslve women's specialty chain, died ~ondly at the qe· of 13. An amateur paJnter and collector «If lrhpression.ist art, he is IUl'Vlved by many nteees . and• nephews 1 lnclucling Cyril lliagnin of S8l) , Francisco, and Rabbl Edgar Magnin of Los Aniiolu, ·Orange Weafliier The President s upected to view the annual celebration welcoming the swallows back to Mission San Juan Caplstra.M, according to reports from the .san Diego Chamber of Commerce this morning. 'The weekend visit. announced today by prw &ehretary Ronald L. Zief:o' will include a stop at San Diego, w Nllon wilt view a MuJcan Folk Art d1'play pruent<d by lht Muaeum ·of Mon 'In Bolboo Park u part ·of S1n ' Diego'• ZOOJh 1l111lver11ry cclebrolloo. · l\1ore of the 11m.e is the word from the weatherman for Wtd· nesd1y, iwitb clear akJes follow<. •' ' ing the mofnln& clouds and ttm.peraturea hick in-tbe mid· Tile Prelldent mt Flnt Lady moy !pend lrrldoy and Saturday JllPI at the Hotel .tlel Coronado in <:oronado. · The : prulden~al party wJU lave Washington on Friday, stopptn,: Jn Independence, Mo., where the dUef ex· ecuUVe ·wUI Ylsl(, former President Hlt'J"Y S. Tnim1n before flyln1 on to SOU!bem . California. · Prw Secretory Zle&ler 11ld lhat Nixon Initiated the meeUIJI wll.h Truman., who rectnll,y spent 1 few d1y1 In a ~lll. The Prt:&ldent and Mn. NllOR are tJq>ect'!d to return ~ WuhiDl!oo late Sundsy • d.Je 60'L . IN~IDE TODAY A ntto ploy in Scmto Ana and 11 concert a:t. Orongc Coo.st Col- lege arc rctne10td b11 DAILY PILOT critici todau. Stt Enter- tainment, Page J9i -.. _.,. . <•::;r: ' = ''! -· .... ,..,.....~! """'' " ·-:i: " 0• ..... c-r, ' Dll\llll ttlcft ' Syrrte ~ .. ·-" • -·-'"II ="ltfW.:.!!1' • s,.n. 1•1t ..... " Sltct ._It.. "'" ··-. .. T-.. .. .,. (1111 • WM ... • . .,. ..... ., .. • ... wtll(lt .. ......... .. ...... " ... .. _,_ " . . . . • " • • -~------ ' I ---·-· J 2 DAILY rflOT c ~ •• .,.,, tt, 1M Black Students Appeal for UCI Assistance ' ' II)' THOMAS FORTUNE ot t11t 0.llY Pl• t:•• ·v.,,.. 1r1111> jlollli to iilauc-ol.fid to lmpollle. lhi<o black ltlid•Oto wed for the help ol adult, while WO!llM Alonclay at UC Irvine. Each usin& his own approach, the7 appealed to 1:.0 members of UCl Town and Gown ~ ~ve their pp-~ con· cern by glvina of tbelr Ume and money to help the blad< co111munitf. John IUDi,•13i'UN>ld aopbOmore from 5"' ~. ~ to be pohla ad """" waa dliect lo IVl!li "l'"'I . , .. u. . ti " iii-·=!"-~ w:; = -.r.i ·~~ ~~intlo llfact -• ' . • """'~ ..;·~;:nr. ~ Man ~ -ltll. ... .,Ota lboul lhi mood ..... it-year-olcf ~ ol lllo ln1M ~~ hlaelc Jludtnta. II<> \belr .i .... Sludtnl Union. Ho told wbj< be ballevta -black power -baa bean Iatan lo the edu<aUonat 1lructure needJ lo ~ """' violence. Ht said th1t ts a mistake changed and why he feela the <hie! that bu been Jl1&11• Ill' lbe mus ntws demands of striklac atudtntJ at SP' State mtdll. .,. juSllfled. Killl 11id black powar ts not r1cl!m Tom WaUord, II-year-old jun1or from in rtvtne bllt a w11 for blacts lo From Page l Lawsuit Tests lrvin~Countv RED ROUTE PICKED • • • _.1e any addJUontl suppott. Coondlrnon Willian> L. SL Clair then look hla tum. "I can eee no 1dvant.1ce whataoever ," he aid, speaking of Wllaon'1 propoaed Newport Frffway J'OQle, u the vice mayer'•· &lance wandered ctlllnpard and be lapped hll fingen lighll7. SL Clair then crltlclud publlahed romarkJ by WllJon 1boul a surprise freeway &MOW1Ctntent, comment• the ytce mayor later aaid were newspaper ~uot,. and nol precll<ly hll own. "lt'1 an old poUUcal axiom," St. Clair Continued, 0 wben you're beaten - delly." The freshman council member then started to offer Wllaon a pamphlet designed a1 a murder mystery, w~ format tel11 how a caretwly placed lreeway strangled a cily to death. "I don't lhlnk thal bu any boerinJ here," snapped Ult mayor. WrsOF MERIT "I iJllnk this plan hal I Joi ol merit. I am on the !•nee thoup, and I would like to back away becaUlle of having two pieces of property on the east Bide,'' Pinkley continued. '"l don't Udnk that is Vf!r'Y Important,•• he com mented , "but f also feel it is asking too much to wait so long for a decision." Downtown bWJineumen · have been located along the Green Route chosen 25 year! ago -aware of their possible fate -and the mayor said lt wouldn't be keeping the faith to force out nC\\'er. Red Rout. landowners. Councilman Jordan moved for Red Route adoption tmmed.lately, citing lU compaUbility wlth Newport Beach's preferred Blue Roote along Superior Avenue, plus il!I basic flexib ility and built-in ad vantages. Tbe roule can be a.hilted to mi&s lhe big J .C. Carter Co., a pump and compontnt manufacturer with a $2.5 mil~on annual payroll and oU~a 12 oo-oLf Housing_ Council Plans Meeting The Harbor Area Fair Housing Council meets at 8 o'clock tonight at 2383 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa. TtUs year's goal for the council , representin1 New.port Beach, Cpsta 1ifesa . Laguna-Beach and Irvine, Is le> double its paid membership, accC>rding to council Chairman Bob Vlre1lk. The council strive! to place minority citizen! in housing or their own choice and to change attitudes that restrict fair housing in the Harbor Area. From~ CANDitiATES ... are over the hump and thing! are going pretty amoolhly. Seeondly; I feel you have an investm ent in me. I have been to seminars and educatiooal cla:sses." ~lrs. Lilly said, "I was som~·luit rrluct.ant to run again, but you do fee l after all the lime and effort and com. mitment you do have an obligation 1o continue. It is a problem for board members to have lhe background to make objeclivt:, well thought o u t decisions." llf\llY 111101 Oii.i.Mi COAST PUILISHfNO-COMPANY ReMrt N. w,,J .... lffrll ,,... 1'\11111.,.., J1ct R. C1t•l•y VICI' 'tt1ldtt>! •r.d Gt.,.rl l oY.t,..,., n.e11111 l(,,.,;1 .... Tiit"''' A. Uw1,lli11• Mlillffll\9 l!tli.t '•wl Nin•~ •tv..-1111111 CIW.(ltl c ......... Offk• JJO W11t l1y Str11t M•Tli111 Alll~re1u ,.0 . 111 1160, fl416 --........, .._,., nu "'•' .. ..,.. ""iw.M LI _. .. tdo: 711 ~.it.r _..,..,... M111111"11en .. IQ!; lOt Jlh llnot\ • accesses, compered to live for the Green . Roule. Councilmen worried aomewhat over the Umetable f« workini out both llrl• and 1mall deta.JIJ, but were Ulured by Assistant Qty E!lli*r Norm Spielman that this cXime3 in d1lt time. TAX SAVING Councilman 'n>cker then I t a n • d against hi• bankini bac&iround, notlnc that a City Engtneer'1 report lhowl a '1.2$_ million Red Route local·tu saving on surface street strengthening and re- pair over the Green Route. He cited statistics recorded durlnJ last Tuesday's public hu.rtn& on the ultin'late 4.S-mile Newport Frttway route, ached· uled lo be built by the middle of the nt:><t decade. "All these thinp in my mind are criteria," Tucker said after uploring economic and human aspects of stated route choices by individuala, "If I voted lot ll!)'thin( bllt the Red Route I wouldn't fetl I wu doing an hone!( job." "I think we have all searched our souls and just because we don't airee doesn 't mean one i1 right and the other is wrong," said Jordan, who called the d\oJce his toushest in 11 yur1 or city govemment decisions. · "[ UJed to be a nieaman and the sales ntan1ger aald when you've inade a. sale-abut up!" declared St. Clair, brin1- ing a roar oI good humor from all but the Red Routt audience contin1ent. FIVE GREENS The tlna1 S to 2 vot&-thrte green lights and two red-was eventually changed to five green ones in honor of St. P1trick'1 Day. Councilmen agreed that many dttaila need to be ironed out before the freeway -which will also act u solution to a serious wat :ilde drainage problem-ii acceptable OIJ: ptper. Federal law, however, requires even 11 p.ibllc hearing br. the state Highway Commission on des gn details and eoun-- clhMn augcest lettln1 the higher authof'. ity know more euideUne1 are com~. Sil: monthl to one ytu wu the tune elemen( utlmlttd by the assistut cltY: eng!ne<r. Despite tha tarlltr w>Btrlying division on a rot.1te choice, the council was unan- imous in voting to probe tha poatblllly of a federal Joan to Private lnteresll to help redevelop the downtown arai. Enthuslutlc businesamen 11ay MW that the freeway qut1tlon iJ virtually aettled, the are.a will enjoy a dramaUc boom in economy. Mayor Pinkley warned, however, that this is no simple process. ~ Bay Exchange 17 JACK BllOIACJ[ .. "" 111111' ,.... ..... - Tiit flut ottp In 1 Jawsull la dllmnint con.IUtuUonallty of Iha pr~ Upper Newport Bay land nap between lb& coun~y. and Irvine Company wa1 taken Monday when a 30-pafe brief was filed in Superior Court. The brief by attorney Jack J. Rimel contends that the land exchange is un· constitutional and would a1ve the Irvine Company some or the most valuable residential and commercial property on the Weat Coast while the county rectlves only a waterway. Rlmel 11 rtprteenUni county Auditor· Controller Victor A. Helm. The Juit is the first atep in litigation which will eve.ntually to to the 1tate SUpMmt C<JUrt an4 tab about two year1. Earlier, the suit wu called "friendly'" by the aupervlson and lrvlnt Company but Rebert Nuttman. deputy county coun1tl, 1111 it will not be conaidered u such. The propo&td tradi would swap 4!0 aeru ot trvlne company proptrty for 1$0 acres cf county t1deland1. Proponents have contended that the county would be able to develop twll bayslde parka on land rtcelved from the company in e1cbanae for uuteu mudflalt. The brief filed ?.fonday was in answer to the county and Irvine Company peti· tion aimed at forcing Heim to pay a $13,917 ~·arrant the county's 50 percent share of Upper Newport Bay'1 studies and 1011 tests. Heim refwed to pay the warrant to brin& tbe cue to a court teat. Supervisors recenUy approved an agreement 1hat two separate dredging projects in the Upper Bay will be com· bined at an e5tim11.ed aavlnc Qf U million. They also approved t,kin( tile 4$() acres the Irvine Company will trade tc the county off the tu rolls pendinc outcome of the auJt. In the aWt, Rimel contends that the ••county is abdicating it.a ri1ht to control tht way in which the irut m•Jority of the water frontqe ln the Upper Newport Bay will be developed." He argues that the contract 1lped by the aupervilOtl and tht company are Invalid, unenlorcablt ond lnequit.hle to the .county. From Page l MOTHER MOURNS SON • • • hooey," she iald, tumln1 to the boy's Aunt Pauline, "I don't think I couJd stand to 10 into his l'CIOm. I've promiled his drum Ht ... " Five days before the Stubblefield boy wu wheeled into the Costa Meta ~:emorlal Hospital emer1ency room ear· ly Sunday, dead of a .38 cal. bullet in the chest, Mrs. El lis took him there to be treated for an LSD overd01e. She said he took the tl.&O·per<spaule drug, described u b e I n I of Czechoslovakltn orlatn, blue Jn color and ait with Kool·Ald, after an upeettlng dllCUlsion of hls Involvement. "I tried to get hlm to ctve me a list of names.'' ahe nld, ur1ln1 him t.o cooperate wHh pollct detec:tlva. •·t.tarna, U I do -or 'thl!y' even think 1 do -they'll get you or me or both ol us ," she quoted hiO'l .u saying, after which she toJd him such a thought was ridiculous. ''They have weys of doin1 it so It will look like an accident.'' ~fn. Ellil continued, recalling her son's word• then and wondering now about hill violent death. She said Steve watched television with her Saturday niitit, then went to btd about JO p.m., to 1et up early and accompany her to a proftulonal con· venUon In Los An1elet on Sunday. By mornln1 he wu cone and ~!rs. Elli! thought although it was rather unusu1l behavior tUt he mlaht have gone to a frlend'alhome instead and chose not to •waken her. DetecUvu arrtved at the Clyde Ntlll homt next door at 20102 XUne Drive liter Sunday momin( carrying on ldon· uncatietl card which conflnned that their. young Jolin Dot ,.., Stevo Stubblelleld. A Los Angelu Pollet DtJ>f,rttnent detecilvt finally mede contact wt~ Mrs. Ellil at th• convention sht wa1 •tt.tndln& 11 ults npraentaUvt for a lat&• medlcsl aupply firm in MJsaourl. "I'd llkt to talk 10 you aboUl ywr son Stephen," he •aid. "ls he hurtf" . "f looked Into hi• eyes.'' ~fra. !Ills said Monday, 0 1nd I said: Ht'& dt•d;;' "1:tQw? I thou&ht maybe drup .•. "He wat 1hol" . .. 1 fell to tht noor mystU. If the boy wu runntn1. he. wa1 obviously just scattid. He wa1 not 1hootin1 btck, '::! he wu not armed. Thl1 ii jUlt lo1lc.. 1ht slid. Tbtre arc an1wers that will be glvto to these inevitable quesUon1, but they will continue to gnaw at her con· scioumess for wffkl ahead, eve.n afttt invesU11tors finbh the cue. "He wam't even wearing his own clothes. How could he pt down Ultl-e with all those tools? He always had enou1h money available. Who was in the car that drove away?" she a1ktd . "The police told me it was the work or someone who had been bur1larliing for year1. He couldn't have had tiri'le to bruk in like that if he was home at 10 t,nd was shot at 11 :'5," the aald. "The only th1.n1 he ever stole wu a roll of !apt from Staler B..,, Markel and that 1eared tho life out of him. '\\!by did they have to shoot?" Answers uist, but they mim come from authorlU ... "My friends all td1 me : 'Helen, you're fiC lucky to have a sen like 5\tvt', ·~ l'lbe cont.lnued, "H• wu the onlv penon I ever knew who loved me. That'a why I can'\ stand tO ne him." "To me, he'll never be dead." "That ijo1 ts !ookini all nver tile house for hla master.'' she said in· tertupUnt . then calling to lhe pup namtd 'Hippie' bl!cauae he had a $1,000 mother ud a hippie m1.1tt for a lather. •1Honey," abe Aid, "he isn't hert.'1 Before the traflc final choice th.at ended hl1 life, YOWll Stubblefield. wu known to be involved cnly In boyish pranks and bl.I photo waa in~ DAILY PILOT three years •So· He and a Yount:: Bay View Elementary School buddy encountered and killed a 71>-fool IMk• In the ne11hbotbood. "What would you do? •••• RWl! • • • not .•. St.ve Stubblelleld," rwl the irolllcolly prophttlc memento hla moe.htr loW1d amoc1 tcrapbooU Monday. "Ha nevtr ran from an,vthlna: la hil lift," lht 111d. Tht boy who apparently cl'J)lrimtnltd too widtly •nd rrew up tOl fatt into II\ adult world of crime -where life ia tneludad In the llak-!inally f!llUld a t.lrne wl\tn he: had to run. Ont m1.11t JJ1Ume a kind of mel•nchotr forJiv1neu toward htm, ho" ever, "'hattver h1a trt1pauea a1aJn1t aoclety, bfcause ht has Plld the full, extreme price. "Jte J1 not undtr lndletlntnt.'' District A .... nty C.Cll Hlili aid Monday, "bo is deetaaed. 1' lie may have been a bur1lar, but he wu human too. llllM ~l~vaty '! tjlemselves aller 300 ~ af <btlnc lauiJit lo bale lbanutlvtL 'B~k ot\ldedti ol 11111 day aro not aolD( to be oelfllh Ind use their educa· llGll .lo 1-oAil :11 cloae lo Iha middle •w. white u tliOy can, ho llid. That ii th• new mood. Every Black student Union in the country, he said, hu a prQgram for 1pre1dlng the wealth by .tutoring UwEe in the black comm.unlUea not able tG attend collep. lie Hid that ls the backbone of the Bllick Student Unions, notv~ ~· . 1111 .ir.u 'illtla ill -Is to "shire tn7 mtnd am the m8llts of black people." Winder also 1ccuaed the press of ..... lionalism. He sa1d black students wint change• in the edueadon1I ltntct~, but people don't stop to thlnk demand! might be m14e for good rea90n. Using Sao Francisco State 1:1 Illus- tration. he u.id be sea twQ prlnclpal demands. Frotn Page 1 RUNWAYS •.. and dlsccmfortJ Imposed thtteby upon HarOOr Area residents.•• The resolution concluded: 11Th.l1 coun.cil hereby &tales I t s unalterable oppoeiUon to any e:a:tenslon of the runways at Ora.n&e CtJunty Airport ••. and any deviation from the eliating adbpted agreement for I.be Corona del 1tfar F'ree?t•ay is hereby oppoged ••• and every effort ahould be tnade im· mediately to proceed with the location, development and operation of a regional airport to relieve County Airport of the e:icisting and potential overuse of hea\')' planes and all the consequent hazards." Cos1a Mesa W.ayor Alvin Pinkley said he will personally Lake the resolution to 'Yashington, O.C. , Pinkley next week wlll head for Washington with Newport Mayor Doreen Marshall and other local officials to talk ovu airport problems with the coun- ty's ccnireWanal delegation, including Senatora George Y.urphy and Alan Cranston. During Newport council discussion of the Bresnahan proposal, City Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe reported that the Corona del Mar Freeway route ls School Act Extension Backed; GOP Protests WASHINGTON (AP) -The · Hou.e Educ11Uon and Labor Committee ap- proved over Republican objections Tues- day a five-year extension of the Elemen- tary and Secondary School Act. The GOP member• takl the five-yl!ar extension, carrying t1' 1i I e 1 i s I a t i o n through President Nixon's current tenn, would prevent the Nixon adminiatration from presenting a school aid program of its ov.·n. •1rtually locked Ill'· He pointed out that agreements for Q>e preatnt alitnment ha\·e been signed by boUi Harbor Area. cities and the county. He said any revialon would require new hearings over a period Of several years. "Thia Ji.. something that was adopted in 1962. I think we could say that any change now would b e preposterous and make it stick." Clty Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt ad· ded that the frvi ne Company, through whose land much of the freeway will pass, Is "very much opposed to any slowing down in the development of the freeway." T earn Inspecting OCC Campus for Accreditation A three-day Jnspectlon of the Orange Coast College campus by an accredltaUon team began today. Seven educators who make up the accreditation team wiU detennine ll the campus is keeping up to snuff in cur· riculum. instruction, faculty, adminbtra· t1011, and alms and goals. ff the college passes with the same hi&h marks it has In the past it \V iii be at·credlted for another fi ve years by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. Accreditation ratin& of the college ls Important to transfer students who go on to four-year colleges. Full .ac- creditation means course work is automatically transferable. The seven-man team, headed by William Harwood , president of Hartnell College, was to have dinner tonight with college trustees and administrators. Qne ls unllnilttd enrollment for l.hlrd world (~) ·•lilclanll. ii' Slalo In 1• '"" It _-.at blaclr, 1111( I• 1961 ' 6nly enronea, r.ur. percenl blicb. h• said. He ·Fc 1be college could jutt have b r cluses wilhout gnat financial str . The second key demand, he said, i11 autonomy ror the black studie s depart· ment. He eald I.be promise of a black studies department has been made 1ince INS. bu( black students were told there Wtren!t fund.a: available. But wbtn the 1tudent strike began, out of the clear blue sky there were 11 faculty positions and funds suddenly available, he noted. If it only was given under duress. not "·illingly, studen1s felt it also would be taken.away at the 1lighteat provocation, he sald. 1 Winder · alJo defended tactlcs ol di>- ruptlon and takaovu u strale&i<allY necenary • "If a guy Is wlutng to be arrulad you've cot to believe that cat is 1incere," he 1ald. "You have to adrniM, I would lhlnk1.this type cf guts commitment." Wauord said he wondered how m•n1 tiJ?!ts bis or the other black stu(llnU:' mothers had an oPPortuntty to haye tea at 11' o'clock in · the morn.lna and how many of them are at the whlft women's houses scrubbing the noor. He said be looks on the women as "one of the first line of enemlet we reach. "I look out on your smiJlng'faces and 1 see you are very proud to llave a few black students to talk to you," he a a kt. "Twenty.six black atudents ou.t of ),500 at Irvine. So It's ii real big deal. "We know it' i,s just another token," Watford said. "lt Ji vuy typical of the while man. Everyone pasaes the book. You say, 'l'm not that way. Maybe my neighbor ia.' " He said, "If you are really conctrned about setting Ute score right, counteract the inferior educaUon black studenfl are getting ln Santa Ana. We Dfed your bodies, your money and materials. 0 You s7 you're good hearted white folks. We' like to find out where every~ one·s heart is really located. We want io give you a ct\ance to prove your good- natured selves. "lf \\'e can make it htre at Irvine, we can make it: anywhere in the country." All three black students received about the same applause for .flaying, each in hi!! own way, "understand us, and help our black brothers and ~isters." One woman asked what specifica lly they plan to do \vlth donations and asslstance they receive. King answered, "What you're saying Is you don't want to give us money to buy gu11s. Set up a scholarship for a black student in your name. We need books for the bla ck community. And money for materials to use in our tutoring." \Vinder said, "Our main goal is to get more black students on campus. We need scholarships and housing.'' FINAL 2 DAYS PHASE I FOR CHARTiR MEMBERSHIP AT HUNTINGTON BEACH 50% OFF • '1 I I . . • •• . . ::Ji . • CHECKING -hungry i Shut 1Tou gh Laws No An$wer? • ' • • UP • Owner Oives $23,000 Tax SACR~ (AP> -"'"(lain l'fhlt d<talh the bllbr.:;:~======;! Calilornli cannot rid Its cam-will contalj>. • puses of liou~e a n d The 1peaief wu asked 'to SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) -ran into auch probltms u troublemakers merely by comment aft.er the Senate Owner Enrico Banducci toooy "flu, the weaijler, the porkJn&, puatng toogh new laws. passed lwr mare bllllMoaday bllmed oll-<01or movies and the lack ol lighting and : lots Aaaemlliy s~ater •~ T. wblch crack<d down Oft cain· bJCh price ol "'t.erlaln<ra ol other lhlnga." r• ,...,.., )>wl traul>lemlW. -both or tbe closlna of his famed He pointed out that there Monqan aald today. . itudeotll . .and f.culty me.D!- hvngry I ~t club. were ooJy three ptaees where 'l1le Tracy Republican said ben. "San FranClllCO bu become major talent could play lo acbool admlniatrators ahovld Republican C.v. Reagan la • town where they-won't pay San Franci8co a decade ago. run their lnsUtutions .. witb the Jeeklng • program of four $3 to see to\>·· live en-Banducci's aucces,, led to the least amount of lDterference measure.. desi,ne(I to keep tertainment, but they'll hap-founding of a half-dozen more from the le&Lslat~.·· dissident$ off campus and to . A~er~e Woman Kisses 79 Fellows ' plly shell out '5 to aee a and 0 the talent is playing one But Monagan noted the peo-permlt campu1 officers to ban By L. M. BOYD lhe drive at tbe valley'• upper dirty movie," be noted. against the other. They're kill-3 Expl • ple are demanding action from use of IOudspeakers. ciJsroMER s g RV I c E 1 •IMI. working !lie nbblts Tbe beret-wearing -vccl in& the busln<ss." OSI ODS Jawmakera in tbs year of Monagan hu establisbed a toward the fence. Well. 'Sir, adrt\itted he wu '!all&htly bit· He lam.entel! that stars unrest and strikes on campus. series of subcomrrUttee! in the Q.-UWllAT d~ it mun Otis one year they wound up ter'' over the 1 n fern a I "want ilS,000 a week and if Bl Sh }} The more than 70 bills in-AMembly to investigate the when the muter, <il a yacht ~· SS,000 rabbita in tbe c0r-Revenue Serv\ct's padlocking you make $2,000 when they 8 Sl C troduced so lar which deal campus revolution and to ruea a blue nag. with. a white raL By then, most all ' me of h i s new $400,000 hungry appear they g et aggravated ~th campus trouble probably screen all bills dealing with square In it!" A. _ That'& , JOQD& fellows were drunk. A~ i at Gbirardelll Square for that they didn'' charge you F } Lin will be screened and con-it. the blue peter Meana he's· when they-went iii for the failure to pay $231000 in fl7,000 -they want It all." lie C solidated inlo about five In a speeda last 11.·eek. about ~..it 'Only otber kill, so"me~ grabbed a llltt wiQlholding ta1.es. Banducci also runs a measures in the Assembly, he f\1of18gan 11\4, "l don't look ·ahlp'• p...,.mi I -bow rabblhrid tosaed U at a·bone. e.u.fucci lounded I he popular coll~ house · CANYON, Calif. CAP> said. r~.-ward lo le&\llaUng in ·this to read la that qpei-~ Somebody. eJae got.mid... Tbe original hungiry l in the North restaurant unaffected by the Four Contra Costa County Such a package shoul.d gi ve field, buf., we can't stand by ble and ..Fitch put out.. A bones bucked ~ kictecf .,t · Beadi .area. which launched IRS action. college and university ad-and let our tampuses be over· I ' y~ asked them to ; the men· CUiied. PrettJ IOOft, talmta such · u · Mort Sahl, "I'm going to try to rai.$e sheriff's depuUes and several roioislrators clear authority to run." design a· ~ be cciUJd .hoist au...buill w~ tbrowlna"'i'lb-Lennie Bruce, Bill Co!by, and the p.3,000 and open up q:ain, other persons were " injured handle future incidents, the He IJDpJified today by to advile lnierelted anloOkets bits ... playing app1e-core-bow'a.-tbe·Kinptm Trio. but I'm not sure J believe Mond.3.y night when three e1.· spe•r said In an office in· sarin& .. Peojlle lhlnt that )'OU LET'S IE HllBIDLY u 1'IMI ..... ~ nel&t>bon or know el u;yone D>O¥tna to our llreL ~ tell U1 10 that we may fxtentl • trlmdly weloom• and belp them to become acquainted In their new CWTQVndinO. • Huntington Be1ch Visitor '61-414t Costa Mesi Visitor '61-414t So. Coast Visilor- 494-0s19 Harbor Visitor 494-9361 his wife was ~. They JOUMrlend lfith r.abblt.s, hit-He • ...mcrved to new quarters that San Francisco wants a I · b'·st--' · Li terview. • can leglslate. y ~ u r way out made 'him a dandy. Now y°'1 tiugoneanotber overtbeliead la.st Oct. 22~and immediately hungry i now." postons '"' oeu an avta 00',j~M~o~nag:an~sa~i~d~he~ls~no~t~ye~l~of~lhis~'~prob~l~em.~Y~ou~cinoot~·:·~"~~~~~~~~~~ aee lt in pdtnear.every port. with rah~. Went oo for a .. fuel line. - It's a, red battle-axe on a long time, everybody 1etting A California highway patrol r ¥1* field ol bJue .••. Q.-.. WHAT spattered and bat\ered with s ldi si•ll w •i• member said quantities of m IS TllE-1AVERA.GE AGE of rabbits. Craziest c ru e 1 est 0 er I 31 mg the widows iii this country?" brawl I ever saw, that great type B explosive, used In IAll'Ume'" A.-M. . east Oregon rabbit bunt." deplh charges, were found I THOSE .COMPUTEll.BOYS, HA VE RECENT WORD of B N £ D • h near the line which runs from I who are rvnoint everything a pair ol sisters named th• ut ow or ISC are;e a Shell Oil Co. plant in I through their machines, came M i s s e s C r ~ n k w h o m '-, Martinez to Oakland. Ii up with a peculiar find· when matr.imony turned i 11 to FORT ORD, CJlif. {UPI) There were still 00 order!, Tv;o patrol cars from the they shuffled data on several ~frs. Crout and Mrs. Krock. sheriff's department w e r e thousand women hurt in The pofut. is in the poetry -Pfc. Richard Beaty, who so Beaty just kept waiting burned in a fire lhal followed kitchen accidents. Almost all of it all. •• • • ISN'T NOW left on 3G-day leave 15 months • • • and waiting · · · • and one of the eiplosioru!. of the injured girls in their as good a time as any to ago, returned to the Army waiting. The first explosion was itudy, it. turned out, were . report the word "and" ap-Monday for .what he . bope.s ........ ~~ll~~-~~]:ormarge....1d~~~ _hir~1ported. at 10:30 p,m. on a teetotalers. Industrious, but peara 46,227 ~times In the t-<>=\l• av ~:T Qj.1 ....... UIC lside above Canyon, a dry, 'M»ey cooclude women Bl b I e? ••• GE 0 R G E will be a prompt discharge. Army he was ready to return village tn the hill! 12 m.lles who drink daily are more WASBI NG T 0 N addressed Beaty,a 21-year-old soldier to civilian life a' its coo-east of Oakland. relued, therefore 'less ac-his wife Martha u Patsy, lrom Porterville, calif., was venience. 'Ibe Anny said it COunty officials m o ved cident prone. Can't buy that, and I don't know why • • granted a Uay leave on Nov. couldn't ta.~e acUOO on hiS recently to condemn the entire eiactly. Whars more likely AND WIWAM KARVONEN 27, 1967':'ud w&& told to wait request until he reported for community because of its pro-I Ill is the women who drink daily makes passing menli.on of a for orden shipping him to duty. . . ximity to watershed I a n ds. AID SlllSMY loll around a lot. They just fellow :Who. er~ his honey Vietnam. So Bealy checked 1n at For! Canyon has no municipal sew· don't get into enough action bees with lightnif!g bugs. so he The soldier said his orders O]'d Monday, and a spokesman er facilities. _ . . .. . . in the kitchen to even the could put 00 a rught shift ho. foiled to arrive, so he checked at the po6t said he would · The second explosion oc: 1912 HARBOR ILVD. (at 19th) COSTA MESA odd11. If you have a differen~ ho · · · AM STllL GETIING Ph 642-3177 D 11 1"7 F opinion, please send it in STATIC over ~at thoroughly with the Pentagon and called be treated "the same as any curred about 11 p.m. and a Iii . one a y v--ri. 10.9 Sat. 9-6 quickly. My mind may snap resea~ched ~laJR1; the average1_:a'.__:r'..:ec:'.ru~l~ter~~io'-..'.P:'.:orte~r:::vi'.'.'.lle":.-'"'"'w~am'::':'.·v:"'al'..." _____ _.."lhi~·r~d'._!f~o!J<Jl•w~e~d'._!m~i~nu~te'=s~la~te~r::_. ~f'"'r;!"'r;!_!@_~~!!!!-!ril!!-~'"~"'~*~•~•""*r;!-~~·~•!!•!!-!!!!-!!_!!!!,.!!-~-~~~!@!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I :, shut on the matter at any American girl ~sses 7~ men r-------------------------------------------------------"i moment. before she ?marnes. Isn t that HAVE YOU EVER hunted reasonable· , j kr bb.,_, S h I b t RAPID REPLY. Yes, s1r, ac a 114• 0 ave . · u the women who go to foot not the way the m~ m E~st dodon outnumber the men Oregon hunted ~ackrabb1ts who do 50 by 10 to I. years ago. Karl Kirk r~alls: y ur qutstion.s and com· "The hunters came m on ° horseback from miles around. m~U are welcomed and J Each bad a jug, I guess. The ~ll be. us~? tohe~Wl'-r 'PO~; pounded down cedar posts to s1ble in C~eck1ng Up . make a chicken-wire fence Addre~s mad to L. J.f. like a V across the lower Boyd, 11n care of the DAILY end of the valley. It funneled PILOT, Bo: 1875. Newport into a corral. They started Beach, Calif., 92663 Dipht1ieria Cases Reported LOS ANGELES (UPI> -Gaitan ol Pacoima and the A mother aod five <l( her five children ranging in age 10 children were stricken with from 4 to 9 either had the diphtheria Monday and the en· dl.sease or displayed 1 t s tire family was rushed to symptoms. 'I1le cases were the County-USC Medical Center. first in the county this year. County health off i c i a I s Two cases were reported in reported that Mrs. Celina 1968 with ... d<atll. Trade all thoae billa I or one ea/fy payment 'L' \J use our money! That's what Morri1 Plan money is for. You rnay bomJw from $100 to $5,000, or more, for bill consolidation, taxes, medical expe nses, any &cod ruson. Payments scheduled to fit your income. You may have your money the d1y you apply-with no repayment for 45 days. SAMPLE LOAN SCHEOUL.ES YOU!I Montlily No.of CASH """"""' -s 45193 $24 24 lf»t&S7 151 24 11~1139 $'6 ll 12.t.12.31 17& ll Crtdlt lift •nd ~11bil~ Insurance IYlf'lable. lf~you ;• ould ever r.eceme .an obscene ·or malicious Phpne call, hang • · -.. If 'the calls continue, benis what to1do: Call our.Business Office.\We have employees who are ~pecially train·ed to assist and advise you and who can frequent ly h elp in lo cating the origin of unwelcome and troublesome calls. Anyone making an obscen e or thr eat ening· call is violating a California state law, and con- viction can r esult in fines and/or imprisonment of up to six months." With modern methods of detection, many of. these caller s h ave bee n ' identified . And many cases have resulted in arrests and convictionsJ We want to do all we can to . @· '· tect . ht to . .._ P1etfic: Telephone 4i'\ pro your ng , pnvacy.~ ·· We're here .to help~ MorrisPlan Newport B11ch • 3700 Newport Blvd., • 673-3700 I L-~==.......;;;__;;;;;;_..;__....;::::;::. _________________________ .======:;;;;;~ • ' • • • • • • ·. I I I .. . DAlLV l'lLOT lrVJwe Pre•erve l•sue Heiress S~es County By JACK BROBMX ., .. Deltt .......... ~A ANA -Orana• Cowrty'1 Board of Supervisors hu be<n added to the list at defendantJ in Joan Irvine Smith'• federal court action wti,ich--i61U .t& prevent tbe- L'OD'lPID,J rrom plactnc about 411000 acres of its 14,000-acre Oran&e County properties in an agricultural preserve. real property owned by lhe and that lhe court Wua a company. mandatory 11\juncllon dlret. .. ifn. Smith contends the ting the Board of Supervisors acreaae placed in the preserve lo vacate and annul tbe agree-- has a present val ue of mcnt. upwards of $300 million and The amended complaint was that the major portion is not filed in the U.S. District Court no\f and will not be used in Los Angeles by Lundol L. for 11griculture and-compatib~ · 'Young, attorney ·1or 'Mrs uses during the !().year period Smith. provided In the agreement. She ~mplains that the The heiress declares "the supervisors rejected a plea establishment of the preserve by Young to poatpone fina l Is not in the public interest, approval of the atrlcultural that the granting of this preserve for one week to special p r i v i I e g e and permit her to personally pro- discriminatory tax benefit to test l!JJecutlon or the proposed the Irvine Company imposes agreement. ... A Utility Pole lly Any Other Name .•. : LOS ANGELES -Southern Californians. rejoice! You 11e blessed wltll lhe n1 o st estheUcally pleasing utili ty poles in the country. At least, the American lron and Steel Institute thinks so. The inJUtute presented Southern California Ediion with the "Design in steel" award, for a~hlevin1 "the best design In public works con- struction." stalled at Hunlln.1ton Buch visible to the public a:i: Urn " may become ''Ode to and the rea(.'tlon of local pole-btauUful u poaslble.J' an Edison Pole.•• Afttr aU, watchers was measured and Thua, the twenUelb centurv btauty Ls trutb and truth beau. found to be favttable. ver1k>n of "Ode to a Grecian Other Dreyfuu des I 1 n s ··-==========='=Y·======::::=. which lnclude aimethin, cau-1- td ''Sunburst," •are beina tested IOI' eye appeal at various sites in southern California. Said Edison Vice President Robert N. Cot: ··we are doina all we can lo make electric lacilities which must remaln Widening Slated On El Toro Road Mn. Smith claims lhal the •irtcWWral preserve agree- ment will result in great linan- cial Joss and damage to her through the. de:valua~ of the llO acres of Irvine stock sht OV.'llS. on her a.s a taxpayer in She states 1he was unable Orange County and other tu· lo appear before th e ART AWARD WINNER payers the burdtJn or paying supervisors on Feb. ti because 'Pole' by Edison Co. Industrial designers H.enry Dreyfuss and Associates, who conceived the design, did 110 at the biddJng al Edison , which is seeking to moll ify those who object to unsithlly, above-ground utUity poles dot- ting the landscape. The new poles are thouibt to be more interesting than the old ones, even though they are still strung with the same old I wires. EL TORO -A $09,30! con- tract has been awarded by county supervisors for the widening of a portion Qf El Taro Road betv.·een Rockfield and Muirlands Boulevards. increased taxes on their pro-sbe was scheduled to, and -----'-------Low bidder was the Mark Construction Co. of Garden Grove. There were !even bids. Whil< the '1111 amount of the dam11e to her Irvine in- vestment b unknown to her, the heirua ''" abe believes It will exceed $10 miJUon. Mn. Smith further declares the preaeTVe agreement signed Ji'eb. 11 was not made in good faith and wu not intended to serve any purpose con· netted. with agriculture and Its compatible uses. perty in order to cover the did, testify in Washlngton at deficit of $1.5 million a year the Howe \Vays and ?i-1e1ns in total real property ta x committee h e a r i n g s on receipts in Oran1e County. Treasury Department pro- She asks that the court ad · posal11 concerning changes in judge and dectte that the the la"'' governing private, agreement is null and void lax-exempt foundati ons. Drug· Running Tric1 l Set for Newport Man Tern1 Given In Burglary SAN TA ANA An1 Anaheint man who pleaded I 11:uilty to \ht bur~lary or a ~1idv•ay City market has been 1 sentenced lo 60 days in Orange Counly Jail and pieced on1 three years probation. -Two or the tubular steel poles were experiment.ally in-bids. YOUR OWN RUSINESS Earning Pofeniial Unlimiled We offer financial auislance To the contrary, her action contends, the creation of tbc agricultural preserve was fic- titious and a guise, scheme, ll.l'tifice and device by the Irvine Company under the control of the Irvine Foun- dation to avoid tuu on the Superior Court Judge Robert r •i~• 911111• oclorl•11 C hinchill•t in Y•ur "''"''· s,,..11 rn~11I· LOS ANGELES -Trial has a lifht aircraft. Gardner passed tllat sentence · •·I. Co,,.p•I• tt1inin9 p•o9r1m. W1n'1 inf1rf1r1 wi•li pr111nt been set for April J in the A-nts claim the three men on Simon Correa, 20, ond ·p•tlon. r W 1 G rd Pll k •¥ SEND lHIS AD fOI Piii llOCHUll-caae o es ey o on n e, operated a system whereby ordered Correa to mak e full 20, ol Newport Beach, accused Plinke and Wehrle flew the restitution or an estimated ioo Universal Chinc:hilla Brffdtrs DEATH NOTICES ol smuggling marijuana into plane from ~1ei:ico to the taken last Feb~ 4 from the 1111 l•tt AP SfrHt, '''~"• c.IH. the U.S. from Mexico. airport where accomplices MldY:ay 1.farket, 8lZI Bolsa C1ll1 17141170·106J er C•llMt: 1714J IJt-2161 FULLER 111...-i It. lf'ul .. r. Aff n, r1111dlnl of lltllt I S, Ctf9<1ry, Alll•trft , C•-· °'"' ol ..,Ill, "'-rcft 14. luntwlll 'r wir., Mn. Annie lf'vlltr, C.111411 ,.. '°"'• Sll11ley •ncl Lorww1 ••llfh"'r, Mrs. "'" Wtlr~1 tll fll Cll\IU1 11fler. H11el Flkh, Ntw Hun .. hlrti Noo ~l'I· John S.. Mln-ot1, tnd Ht"'ld H. Fuller. Aftlhtlrn. se,,,lc• .,,d lllfetmttlt wl!t bl Mid lft C1~. loal •rr1-l1 by 11111 Mer- Qry, .3m E. C11ff Hltl'lwtY, (O<OIU Mt Mir. ne o eg ac-met them with a rented van . Ave. 0 t hb all ed .-~~~~~~~~~~-'ii:~::_:::::.:::~::::::_:::::=-:~~~~~~~~~M~A~IL~TH~l~S~A~D~~~~~:::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ compllces was found guilty FLINN .I.for• F llM. '4~ 14th Plt tf. c ... 1. Mt ... D1i. or ff.It~. M1rch 1'. Sur- ..;wc1 by....,. dtuthleu. Mn . Ch1rkoll• M. "citfer, COlll MM.I, Mrs. Nell•t 11. W•rl"ln. De-er Lid~, M""l•n1; 1'1d tlvt '"'rld(hlldnin. Fun,rat •trvlt~ and !nle,,ntnl will be htld In ~' Lidge, M""t1n1. 8tlh Morlutrv. JUI luNrlor, Cost1 Me.1, 1orw1n:llnt •1- ff!Cl.,1. BEARRUP Ethel let"'"' 13' L1 burnt1rn. FM"" !tin V•llev. Sffvltos Dtndl.... ltll llrllldw1y Mol'Tu•"'· 110 l r11<1w1v, C•lt Mesi. MYERS GiirfrWe H. M .... n. n s 1tedl1"4h .......... ... rt le.ch. Soirv!Yfd "" Ila, lltobor1; rnothtr. Mn. Llllll Ht'11W. l• N- ... iesr sltler, Mr11. L..,_ Wll\4Vl:I, l~ .\ftftlt1. ~rvletl, WMMtiiltYi 11 AM. lell 1....0-v Cl\#el. ,_,,,_,.i, lntl-.od MM10rl1I ,.,rll. DlrMW W lelf lfOl ...... Y Mor'l\ltN, 110 lrNf.. -y. Colft ......... . SULLIVAN Jerry Sulllvtn. t'.U W. l!!h S!., Nt,... •rf leteh. D-1~ of llHlh, Mtrdl 1'. SUr'Ylwd by wlfl, Ktlherlne, llf Ille ..... ; 1llfotr. Lucille Ford, Mor1!1 Mtl- 1........od. s.r.ic11 win be 1111!4 We4rifl.. CfY, J ,.M. Ptclflc 11;.w c~. I• tom~. P•clfk \llew '-"1!10r1 .. Ptrll'. Oineltcl bV ,.,clflc VIWI JMr. Wtry. DE GUELLE Goldle IC. ~ Guel~. Aflllt ''· el tl7 6-lt. St., AP!. I, tfunlintton le1c~­ rMle ol deal!!, Mlirttl 11. 5urv1YNI b~ l'lultllncl, J1mtll .on, J•mes J. De Giiellt; 61\lllller, J1c1111etlne lled<er; lhrM .i11er1. l'lorenct C11td, Mln!t C-. 11\11 ttttt Pfftln11 t nd 1i~ 1r1ncldllldte11. Service,. wllt b<J I'll'!~ WednetdlY 11 AM, Smllhl Chaoe!. •n~.' Good Sheoh••d ce,.,.1t,., Directed bY Sm\!hl Mo .. u~r.. STUHBl.EF1F.l.O Sl"""'1 Stubll~1'1d. 201\7 Kiin-. S1n!1 A .... Dile GI de11n. Mt •cn 10 Survlwcl bv rnolfl~r, """· M·i~n Ell11; l•IMr. Mr. Allr!d Stu1>t1le1"'10: 1r•ndPtrenl1. Mr. encl M,.., C. C••· ,...n Services, W.......,•Y· ' ~M. wnicllff ChlMl· tmer..--1, •1c11;c View MemMltl Ptrll'. Olrl'Cled bY WtllcFff ChNl6! Mt11utrr. 44'-dll. FIELDS llt1<!11rd I . l'lelcH. not Al"".f• Hunt1M· ton lllldl. v 1.it111..,, at Wll•'' 1'1d 01v ~ry. M1f\ht111n ae1dl. from • 10 t ,.M focMr. 1'-'"dtY. ln1erme~t w lll be l>tld '" H1mllton, ()hlo. w ... 1. ~lff Clwopel Mertu1rv. "'6,•111, ltt· wtrdl"' dtrecten. BALTZ MORTUARrES Cortaa del !\Jar OR 3-9450 Cetta l\fesa ~fJ C..Wf BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Costa l\1esa LI 1-lW DILDAY BROTHERS Ra.ntlngton \1a0iy l\1ortuary last Wednesday In Los Angeles Federal Court, but another was ruled innocent. Judge Albert Stephen s agreed to a separate lrial for Plinke, 2114 W. Ocean Front. He then tried Paul William Wehrle, 45, Anaheim, and Cllbert Zamora, 18, Garden Grove, on the same charges. Zamora was ruled innocent. \Vchrle wa s found guilty and musl return to court for sentencing April 14 . U.S. Customs agen ts ar .. rested the trio at Chino Airport last Dec. t. They aaid thtJy found 512 pounds of un- processed marijuana -valued at $25,000 -stowed 11way in Meeting• TuasDAY Vl!lert11$ of World W1r I & Ntw M- ll1rr1d:1 lUf. Arnerk 1" Lttfon H111, 5'5 W. llln Sire«. Co$1• Mel•. 4:0ll ,.m., POI luck. lloUry Club GI M•W'ffrl l1IC.O.. It· vit. CO.it C.,ntry Club, 1'4IO I!. C11'1 Ml9hw1r, COi'-*I Mi r, ,,,. '""· Col" ~N_.,. Htrbot' lleM CllllJ, ,,,,.... VenM COUn1rf Clu" Co1l1 M•t, l ;IO 11.rn. ll1IC.O. ltr Lions Club, VII!• M1rln1. 10.S lllYSM:le Dtl\'lr, NfWPOr'I letcll, 1 o.m. Seil B~ch T11stm111<e" Club, 101 11:1"'" House. UOD P1ciflc C11st Hitl!WIY, 1:00 p,rn. Huntln91on Beath Elks lod1e, Elk1 Lodte. IOof Ocetn A~enue, Hun1ln1ton Oe1c11. 7:Jll o.rn. Society fe r 1M Preserv1ll011 & Encour- t tem'i!<ll of l1•t>r• Sr.DP 0111riet Sintillt Jn Amerltt , Ne..-POrl H1 rllo• Cll101er. Collf!!t P1rlr. Stno;ol, ll.IO Notre DI"''· Co'1• Meu. 7:•5 o.rn. Odd FellOW1 Lcdtf 1 1•;, Odd FttlllWi Terno le, 1111 Mtln STreet, HunfillflOll ON(/\, 1'00 '·"'· l O.D.M. Mocm 111511. •JS E. 11th Street, (0111 Miit. l ;IS o m. l1lbc1 Sltl Club, Ntwocner Mn, New- ""1 lftch, I •.rn. Stt Incl SIN Auaubon soci.tv, S-ur- ••on litom. 51nt1 Ant Llbrorv, It'll Incl RN S!•ftll. s.n11 Ant . 1:l0 1.m. OrtnM COllntv Clltl\er cl lht Dlt- be'l'i Astoclt llon of Soulnem CtlllD"· nil , Or1n1e CounTv He111n 0101 .. 1•11 "'" ll:ou str"'°11, S1nt1 Ant, I o.m. Wl:ONIESDAY (0111 .l.\ttt·Ort»De (N S! t 1on1 Club, Odie's. '12 E. 11111 sr., Cotti Mt ... 1 ...... 11~ Flt,... 1'111t"W11ff"I: Club, Mtu vercle Country Club, Cosi. Mtr.1, 1 1.m. (Giii Meu 0!111m1$l Club, C,,_11 Mtll Gell incl Country Club, l~l Golf Course Orlv1, Cot!1 Mts1, 11 noon. Hunllnw!an llHCll E•Chtrtte Club. Sntttlon ll11cll lnn. Munllnw1on llN<h, lf -· AOVEll1'1SEMENT Why Do ou Read :So Slowly? • 17911 Beach Bl\·d. HuntJntton Beach M!-7171 A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple tech- ' nique of rapid reading • which ;should enable you to increase your reading spe~ and yet re-l lain much more. l-1ost ~pie 1 do not realize how mucli they PEE& FAmLV COLONIAL FUNERAL eom; 7811 BNsa .\ l't. We1tmln1ler p:t-33~-l SHEFFER MORTIJARV Lapu Beac~ •N-IW Su Otme.nlt ~n.tlOO SMJTR'S MORTUARV m Mahl SI. Rutlnt101 Beach tE M539 WESTU.l•'r MORTUARY L."1 E. ITt• SL, C.11• Afesa , lff-41111 / could increase their pleasure, success and inco1ne by reading faster and more accurately. According to this publisher, 1many people, regardless ot their lprese.n( reading skill, can use I this simple technique to improve their reading ability to a rr- 1narkable degree. Whethu read- 1 ing stories, books, lechnleal matter. it becomes possible to read sentences at a 1lanct and 'entire pages in second.1 with lhis method. fo acquaint the readers of lhis ne~'spapcr with the cas)-. t().follow rules f veloplng rapid reading aklll. the com - pany has pr inted full details of ils interesting selftralnlng method in a new booklet, "HQw to Rend Fall ter llnd Retain ,\lort." mailed frff. No obllga· lion. Send your namt. 1ddrts.'!I. end ti p code: to; Reading. '35 Divenc-y, Dept. 30!»-913, Chica• 10. M>RJ4 A pcll'!l('ard "'Ill do • • Pay d ividends At Newport Balboa Savings. begin ning Apni""1. your eo m1ngs d of 5.00% start the day your fund s are received and continue to every ay earn EVERY da y they are with us until the da y of withdrawal. YOU r mO ney In add ition, if funds are received by us?" or before the 10th _of an y month and remain until quarter s end , they earn daily i S With US dividend s from the first of that mont h. ( 11 · h ) Our 5.00% passbook accounts are compounded da ily and a n I g t t 00 have a yield of 5. t 3% when maintained for one year. Our 5.25% Bonus Accounts earn Y,,% bonus each year above regular passb_ook rate when held for 3 years. So ... BRING MONEY to either of our convenient offices. •e&NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ~"" Ottic. 33f56 Vi1 ltdo. NewDOf1 9-ch. C.~lorrio 92'503. l"honl: 71 •1&73·3130 Cor!)rll dlll Mor Offiet Fm11'1C•1! Pl1z1. 550 N~t Ce"ttr Or, 92625. P...,,..: 711{&14-1461 ,., -'.Palmer Ch••l'l'IM of tl'le 9otf'(f •AO'* 8k>mcpMt. P~ /' I I I I 0 I, I• ... ,. ... ". Parents:. Keep Your, f;o@J · • Senate Okays Ca mpus Bills By ALTON BLAKESLEE ~tel ,.,..... kltll« Wrlltr In offering apecific advice and lips to parenb concerned wllh drug use and abuse, speclatlsts In a variety of fie.Ids stress rJve principal appraoche3: Keep your cool. Usten to what your <:hildrtn or young people are really saying. Get the facta about drugs, and share them with youngsters. Jn discipline, be firm but fair. Set good parental examples. 0 Too many ' parents are far mort! alanned about drugs than they need to be," says Dr. Kenneth Keniston, Yale psychologist. Society's reaction to student drug use ts ••a little hysterical,'' adds Dr. Richard H. Moy. director of the Health Service at the University of Chicago. Outraged or panicked, a few parents have even had their own teen·age youngsters arrested for using marijuana once or a few times, says John F11.nlator. associate director of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. Knowing how parents may react, youngsters sometimes "like to put the1n on, as by writing 'Marijuana' on 11 school book cover, or by saying they plan to smoke pot," he adds. Some, perhaps many, parents are con· vinced that one experiment with mari· juana Is a sure step into deep trouble. But the idea that "ii you try marijuana once, you are sure to go on lo heroin, or become an acid-head or a pot-head, is simply not true." says Dr. ~falcolm B. nowers, Jr., Ya'le University psychiatrist who has long studied drug problem!. Nor is it true that a single shot of heroin necessarily leads to a life on narcotJcs. Youngsters err, however, ff they argue that marijuana never leads anyone to stronger drugs. ••r went on a weekend that lasted four years," one young man remarks. No Time for Spying Some worried parents are monitoring or bugging their teen-agers' telephone conversations, spying to learn if drugs are being mentioned or used. They run enormous risk that the youngster! will hate their parents if they ever learn they are being spied upon, Finlator says. Numerous parents are convinced the best way of steering children away from drugs is "to scare the hell out of them," as (lne father puts It. r.1ost authorities do not agree v.•ith him. Scare techniques "are even detrimental to conveying needed infonnatlon about the hazards af drug abuse," says Dr. Stanley F. Voiles, director of the National Institute of Mental Health. "With the present incidence o( mari· juana use, many students have either experienced or abserved first-hand the effects of this drug," lte ·~(I!:. "They know that psychoses or other grave conseque~ are not an ineVitabl~ con. camitant «. smoking one marijuana cigarette." with them, build bridges ol understanding and respeCt between children and parents. Youths have reasons for what they think and feel, and their reasons are not always wrong -they are frequently valid. Parents must set standards and es:ert controls over children. Dr. Keniston remarks: "Too many parents, when one talks about the im· portance of standards, interpret this as an excuse not to have to listen lo what thelr children afe trying to tell them. They are so busy setting standards and defining limits that they never hear what t~eir children are saying." Firm, and well-understood, rules are needed, but on special occasions it's poosible they should be modUied through discussion and mutual agreement. "\\'e must rear children In an at· mosphere or love and understanding, talk with them. communicate with them." Finlator says. ''Listen to and encourage them." Parents in The Dark He tells of a young star athlete from a very comfortable home who lvas con· \'inced Hmy father doesn 't like me - he's never once said he loved me, or that T did something v.•ell." "As I see the problem," he elaborates, "it is not enough to say to children : 'I love you.' \Ve n1ust let them kno111 that no matter what happens, they can call on us when they get into any trouble. · "But in too many affluent ramilies, the last people that youngstef'!I in trouble turn to are the parents. They 've had some experience already, or fear the reaction, that i£ they do have trpuble, the parents will sCream at them, '¥OU are ruining ME.' ~1any parents who real· ly care . about their children ate not t;ransmHting the fact that they do care." In the listening and discussing, don't Scare Approach focus upon drugs as the big lssue with The scare approach with parental thun-children and youth s, most specialists iferbolts tells only one side oE the story, advise. Children and young people are and youths object to being given biased quick to recognize When parents are information, or half.truths. over-anxious, "Many parents are horrified at the "If we· approach the solution ()f the word 'drug,' " one physicians says. drug problem wiµi s i n g I e • m l n d e d ''They don't stop to think that alcohol determination lo eliminate the drugs, and aspirin are drugs also. The use or prevent their use by young people ()f a drug is less important than OOw we run the risk of adding to our dif· and why it is used." ficulties rather than minimWng them." Listening to what children and youths :1111ys Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth of Harvard. have to say, and discussing matters "Drugs should be viewed as one·factor, ······-···········-· I T ., Drut look lot I I o ... ,. c-1 Dally Piiot I I ~~~s I I r .. nock, N. J. 010' I I I I 11'" Send me ...... copies of '"What You Should Know About Drugs I I and Narcotics" at $1 eaeh.-Enclosed is $ .......... (Make checks I I payable to Associated Press). I I ~ I I NAMI ---·····--·--·--·-·--··-·-··-···---··---···-···-I I ADDllW -·-··-··-···-····-·-·--···-·--·-CITY -·-···-······· ··········-I I I I STATI -···--·-----····-···-··----···--ZIP -··---I •••••••••••••••••••• Sabot.age Discounted In Worst Plane Crash ?wlARACAtBO, Venezuela (UPI) - Veoeiuelan lnvestlgatars uld today an overheated tn,ine. may have caused a Vlasa alrlln<r to crull l1ld kill 151 per""' In hlatoey's wont air dioamr. A spokesman for eight govemment commissions probing the ~kaie aaid the prime U--, ,... that the plane's left enpe cauabt fin under the atrain ol talteoll. A high pernmont alfid•I di8COUnl<d nporll the MIAml-bound DC9 with 41 Americans among the IS penons aboard WAI libOtqed. ••we may 1nvetUgate thole rumon ... said I-"MlnlJtry Director Pedro Peru Perno. But "the teclutkaJ report, wt are rectivlng llldic&te that the ac- cident tr>as limply an accident '' Ttmpt:l'ature mRy have played a major rolt. It wu 1bout 11'.W degrees on the 1rOlllld at taleoff and only a light breeze was blowing ovtr Che MnAY. Normal t1keoffa require thlt the air hive 1 Cfrtaln mlnfmum density lo Insure flight. ffilh tenp<raturts can lower that density drutlcalty. '!'be Venemelln t11<>jet craft p!Um- mettd -into a crowded ttlSdentlal aru at tllo.rumny'o end just two m1nutU after taJdng oil. AU aboud were killed, as Wtre at le.st 19 -Oii the ground. Another 120 were injured and 17 reml.lned in ctiUcal condition wllh burm l1ld o!ber lnjuriea. The pl1ne'1 flight recorder, duf from the block> ol "'ecnge Sund.,-nigh~ sru fioim lo the United Stats for ... tym.. While Amorksi •xperll aearched the rubble ror further clues, Vtntn1da griev· ed. Prealdent RafMl Caldera proclaimed three d1y1 of mourning. flap new 1t hall 1talf l1ld radio staUonJ confined their bmtdc111t.s to duslcal music ind muted 1nnounctnMIJll. Burial ot vietiml began. •. considered in the same class as othet forms of 'acting oul • behavior - disrespect for property, actlng .' on · im· pulse, accident proneness, delinquency -and not as the ~ntral problem. "If drug taking were not related to current social conditions and Individuals' reactions to them, it wbuld be · much easier to deal with,'' Dr. Farnsworth says. "But the isslles are complet; that ls, drug taking means something.'' """" 11 .. "On11 ... "'· OrHM c .. tt DallY PlllH, P.O. lel( J, T-k. "·'· ,fJU4,'" Mele• cMc:U NYIMe .. A~ Pma. llMkll'ls wfft .. 111•11 ... •IN(llY ... ...,.,_. .,_ •lllri fl!elt .,.. _,, 11111 ..,. ... will .. """""" .. • .... -ft-(Tomomiw: Tellhi1 chlldttn about drug1.). I. , I' ' ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tbe Stnate today pwe<I a oertes al blU. against campus violenct, lncludin& measures a11ow1ng the flrlnr o1 1acu1ty and ... )iuWon of studema ·w~ wnpu.< acUvlUes. Tile adlon alter an bouT and a hall of dehate brou&ht to ..... the piece• of 1egJsJaJJon ient to the Asaembly fn>rn the Senate In tbe first two and one-hall months of a 1esslon dominated by youthful turmoil at state colleges and unlVtt!ltJes. Two of the bills by Sen. John Harmer ·(R-Olenclale), nqulre firing teachers and eipelllng students who disrupt. or try to disrupt. normal acUvities of state colleges. The student, faculty member or other employe could not be re- employed or re-eprolled at any slate college for a minimimt of three years. A third bill specifies that a ·state college president may declare a st.ate of emergency on his campus if he feels lts normal operaUon ls being disrupted. or might be. The fourth makes It a crime punishable by up to five years in jaJI and a $5,000 fine to use force or threats to prevent a student from attending class. Debate ranged from the revolutionary history of America to family backgrounds of individual Senate members. Hanner told bis colleagues, ''I'm sicJr: and tired of having to apologize to my constituents and friends about what's happening" on campuses. "Can we refuse to take action after enduring all this for five years?" he asked. A foe, Sen. ~1ervyn M. Dymally (D-Los Angeles), protested that .. what we need now is not repressive legislation but new programs of depth and dimension'' to meet the needl ol 11udenti. A propontJJI, R<publican S... Jolin Sclunltz of Tustin, oald the 1tate would be aliead If tbe blU. do nothing but ~et diS!idenll off CllllRWI· "If the revolu- honaries are driven off campus at 1eut It means: the taxpayers won"t be 1ubsidlz. ing them," he remarked. He oald turmoil !I>' young peopJa atens from .. the whole 'God·l1·dead' ... _ ......... p.............,. DemocraUc S... Nlcbolaa C. Petri• of Oakland. told tbe Senate "'we Hl]>Cllld. • Ute trlght.ened men" in cr1ckfn1 don on ltudentl without dealing wfUa the problema whldl have spawned the uareal; Pilo t Lands Crippled Bo mber -for Air 'First' WURTSMITl.I AIR FORCE BASE, Mich. (UPI) -Robert Winn, a Vlelnam- bound Air Force major and father ~ three boys, has made history. It was the kind of history he'd care not to repeat. Winn, 38, and hls giant BS2 bomber and crew af six were the objects of a rescue mission Monday that st.retcbed from this base tn northwestern lower ~fichlgan to Strategic Air Command headquarters in Omaha, Neb., to the .852 manufacturers in Kansas. The bomber, loaded with "unarmed" training mission bombs, had just taken off and climbed to the altitude of 8,000 feet when a r ighl side engine "k.lnda' blew up, caught on rire and took another engine with it right aut of the plane," Vi'inn said. "It felt like we hit ! brick wall ," the 16-year veteran pilot added. The bomber normally has eight engines enclosed ~n four "pods." With the right pod closest to the cockpit gone, Winn saJd he had no cantrol aver the ND. 7 and No. 8 engines at the far right. After communicating with officfals 1t the base. below and witb the Kans11 test piJotS who had flan the gtant jet. Winn decided 1'o starve out lhe gas in his far right engines. For six hours, while hundreds ot. persons clustered on the shoreline below "and the cammandlng general of SAC was listening in," Winn circled Lai:• Huron waiting for the 100,000 ~ ol fuel he had started with to bum away. "We could see the crowd, but I didn't have much time to look down," tho Clarksville, Tenn., native said. ''But my wife tells me she spent plenty of Ume looking up." The crew might have bailed out and ditched the $8 million, tS7·foot long aircraft. "but after we started clrcllna: things got under cantrol," he said. • A finer bunch of troopers you 'II never meet. But right here in Central and Southern ' California the Cub Scouts could be threatened. A penny buys enough electricity to wash and dry one Cub Scout uniform. That's based on Less than U an hour. In fact, electricity in Edison areas costs the average family less per lcilowatt-hour today than it did 10 ... 20 ... even 30 years ago. Practically everyone today By dirt! · At;ld -a 'Cub Scout deserves a clcan·unifonn, right? At any" price. w.n, what Is the price l A penny. \ both washing and dryin_g a load of uniforms for a den of eight. Quite a bargain, isn't it! Or take your TV set. Electricity runs it for less than It an hour. Or your automatic dishwasher. Less than 1J a load. Or an dectric hair dryer'. • is using much more dectridty- more kilowatt-hours-than ever before, and it's still ollt! of your biggest ba'l!ains. Scout's hon.or. E • L . 4 Ull.Y I'll.OT Schook was hurt and Hurt was shook, but not hurt. It happened in a truck-car accident in Pasco, \Vash., the truck driver was David L. Hurt, 29, of Tigard. Ore. Oriv· ing the car was Fr,ancl1 P. Schook, 61, of Warden, Wash. Schook was reported in fair condition at a Pasco hospital with facial cuts and chest pains. Officers said Hurt was unhurt • • An emtrgency pol\ct car had to go to t1te re1cuc to 1avt Alisa Muriel Scorer'• IOGlh at th.t Lin- coln Automatic Laundtrette in England. Mi.ss 1cortr, 83, put Mr towh in and watched it cu: it 1udud and .spun for 20 min. ides. Bvt then the process start- ed again and again-and again. Sha called police. An emergen- ctl &quad car rocid to the 1cene and o patrolman managed to 1iqitch the maverick machine off. "M11 clolhes were a little thinner but otherwise all right," Mils Soorer said. • Last month, 7-year-old G•rv Ex-father Wants Child Giovanni J\1usante, the fonner monsignor of the papal household in the Vatican, happily bugs the woman he plans to many, Giovanna Carlevaro. Musante 1eft the priesthood recently to wed the 38-year· old widow, saying he wanted to be a father. Wdow ick l of Kalamazoo, Mich ., wrote a letter about a butterfly he made in his second grade art class. This week, the man to whom be sent the letter surprised Gary at Greenwood Elementary School by walking into his classn;>om. "It is a fine thing to have a friend In the second grade," Gov. Wiiiiam G. Milliken said. Hijacke1·s ·se11d A1nerican, • Peruvian Planes to Ci1ba MIDfI (AP) -TwG airliners, cne American and cne Peruvian, have been hijacked to Cuba in the same day the third sky piracy doubleheader of 196t. A short, heavy set man about 25 showed a shoe bo:r to a Delta Airlines stewardess oo a flight between Atlanta and Augusta, Ga.. Tuesday, said "It's a bomb" and .. I want to gG to Cuba.'' The plane and the M aboard, Including ISO passengers and a crew of four, went on to Havana'• Jose Marti airport. Already there was a hijacked Faucett Airlines plane from Peru which had arrived less than lhree hours earlier . These were the 19th and 20th aerial hijackings to CUba this year, sending 1,042 persons on unscheduled flights to Fidel Cas tro's Communist island. The plane was diverted on a flight from Lima to Arequlppa by fou l' young men \\'00 allowed 69 other passengers to leave the aircraft during a refueling stop at Guayaquil, Ecuador. The four then forced the crew of eight to fly them on to Havana. Crew members aboard the Delta airliner said their hijacker blocked a 11lmilar allempt to land. Stewanleu Carolyn Wooley of Dallas, Tex., said the pilot, Capt. R o n Wessenberg, told the hijacker he didn't have enough fuel to fly to Havana but the man said, "No. We're not goin1 to stop." Miss Wooley saJd the hijacker, a "',.hlte man about 5 feet 5, revealed Uttle about himself en route to Havana. This couple ii inoolved tn a. long dist.ance romance, Mike Newman, an Lindsay Declares He'll Run Again For Mayor of NY "He spoke ·good English. His eyes were wild looking, but be "1'as very pc>llte," she said. airline ei:ecutive from Hounslow, NEW YORK (AP) -Republican John England, ii baled a.t KetrMd11 .Airport V. Lindsay, battered but unbowed by but fl~i from New York every week-au ooslaugh( cl. urban disasters an- end to iee his 20-11ear-old girl Jmnd.-JJOUDceEl. today he will leek a Hcond lifarilyn Honey. The Tound trip ii I our-yeai tenn u rraayor of the nation's "He said be wu rurprised that we were as calm u v.·e were," said stewardess Dad.ie Wheaton, also of Dallas. "He said he was a Communist." 7,000 milei and he'i modi it ll times largest city. so far thU 11ear for u total of 71,000 "Too much Ls at stake to abandon miles. Bu.t, working for an airline:. M the effort my admlnistraUon bas begun " mokes the ;ourne11s free. The cou.-said the tall, handsome Lindsay wh~ pie's ;etset romance toiU end May ~4 natlonal llature bas prospued w'hile his whe1~ they marru and 1ettle in the troubles in the precincts deepened. U.S. Lindsay, first Republican mayor of Grad Enrollment Rises Only 1 % e thls S-1 DemocraUc stronghold since Bam>w·Upon-Soo.re, England -Fiorello La Guardia, announced his can- Town Council housing officials didacy at a crowded news conference said they were giving close study in Gracie Mans.ion, the mayor's stately WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Of. fice of F.ducation aays fullUme enroll· mmt in graduate and profession.al schools rose Jess than l percent Jast year, compared with gains ol a percent or more ln recent years. reside.nee. to a recent letter which said, "We "Much has been done and more is are desperately in need of a home under way," said Lindsay, "both in spirit • • , 1 have cohabitated with your and tn apeciflc achievement. offices, so far without result • • • "It hu not been easy. Change ls '111e office said that based on statistical Information, 20,000 prospective graduate students were missing from college cam- puses. Medicine was the only field to show a 1ubst.anUal Increase in first year male students. unless you send me a rebate, I never euy. Bat J believe the tide of 5hall be forced to lead an immor~ physlcat and spirltuat decay has been tal liie. '' turned.'' High System Warms Nation 4.7 lnc1ies of Florida Rain Drench Pensacola Callfol'tlia Hat at .SOU........ tallfor11i. ..,.. ...n!"I' lodeY exc:ell't tw momllle '"' cloucls end _,. -""' fmll. l lJtMIY .,...rrner ~-ww• f0r't(1s1 !or C11M'-I wcticnl WtdNMllYo LOii ... ,,.._ and ¥1dnll'Y hid ..,.,. c\oulft 111C1 t. unlll mlddlY. Tiie ~ltf'I ,..,......1vn W9• 61, dciwn two ""'"" """" MondeY. n. 11redl~ low 10- nl!lht ..,., 4. Tiie Air ~ollutlon Cor.!rol D>11tlcl Mid """'9 -hflll l mot 111 ~ l• ... ,....... a11!11. ~ _.. 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H'f'Nd ciwt mud'I 111 ""' .... 116" to<l•Y• I~ -"'"' -11"'\fW 10 ti. ~··· ,KlflC Horn .... , •"II $ouft'ltt11. ..... ...., rt1" •!'ffd ,_ ..,_" '"'°'kll 19 T--11111 "" C•,... ll,,,_1 '°""" l'"'-MOli., FM., ""'tl•lftt ' 'II '"Cl'ltl ... ""' .. ,, ,~ "°""' $00,0-fl ,.-lor'.dl 1"1 tt. ,,,_lioll'I ••rme11 •IOI ~.. .,1,.. NH•!n , 1<11 .. ~r,,. '" "· ,.,,. ,_, Tef!'INr•IUt'll todtY "''' -0..ret II Hl!IJllOI\, Mt lttl11 ~" 11'11 W1~ifl9!oll. 0,.._ '"" _,.. ... (111"°"'11 "'"" .,,,, 1Pntd It "'-Mf1Mnl !hid\~, Tiit ,..,'°"I olf>or IOl'Ki.llttloll c•""'r _, "°""'" tr• N..,. 1!,,.T•llCI $°"""''" C•lifo<fllt (Mio~~ WI!,,... t•(tet fol' ,._,,,,.. ~ CIO!ldl ,..,, tot ,..., """' c•1•. Tt "t'WMirt rirrtt -"'•II\• ""'"' I" 111t ~. TeMtperctura f!•ll;tnl"!!d llllmtn;ll; f!o:,. f!Dll~ C~luoo c ............ , Clfo;eltlld D•n,,.r c .. Maines 011roil ·-· FD!1 WDl"lll ·~~ ..... H-..i1v "~'"' ic._,, CllY l 11 \teo.1 lo. """'" Ml""'-irlo•e Mln,...P0!'1 N-Dl'IM"ll N...,. Yori! Nortl! "1111'1 0.~11"'11 ....... .... ,. ... ~~l'-lt~l1 ,,_,. l'lltlblirtfl ......... lltPld (11y Pl'tl IM'f ·-Ster•-"'-SI. Ll!IJ~ s..u ..... 51!1 Lt~• (llY St~ Olf-96 s,.,, i<rt"clJCO s .... 1, B1rt1tr~ a.Oii( , .. _ , ......... , W11hltoe'ell. Miii! l1111' Prt< • " " ~I It M S1 .~, 74 " •S 15 ., " ll JJ .... &S ;2 ~ " " ~ ., " " " !f l J ,'1 M 41 .14 n n " H ,, 10 .01 " " .. ~ " 0 . " U H ~ " ~· 5.l ' !? " " ~ u to Jl .OJ " " n " " " n " ~ ~ 5' d ,32 . " .it ., .GI " ~ •1 '1 .01 70 •1 ~ ~ " " .... $1 •• .1J •• d ... ., ..11 " ~ " " " ~ Ocean Pact Proposed U.S., Russ Submit Joint Nuclear Plan GENEVA (UPI) -President Nixon , . and Soviet """1la' Aiesel A. Kooyl!n tod.IJ' jolnUy propelled a new In· t<rnatlooal arms control trea!J to pro- hibit the inltlllaUon Ii ouclear w .. pom .. the Door Of the ...... '!be joint propooa!s w ere >UbmltlOd a.s the 17il8Uoa biaarmament Confertnee reaurned n<gotlatloca after Ill e!&li~ month ....,... -,.. Nlzon, In a letter dellvmd by Gtranl C. Smith, the new chit! of the U.S. delegaUoo, alJo e<prUSed Interest In several other poutble new qrttmtnts with the Russians. They included ~x- tendlng the partial nuclear test ban to -· cover uncler.....,.i tesUnr and a eutoll In the pm!uctJoo "' -111.1terlal for nuclear weapons. Wtllern.. offld•l1 beUewid the .... ocun Ooor propoul held the best cbaoce for an early qreement with Moecow. The fact M_,. Introduced a almllar plan lOdoY -thlt belief. The nuclear-tr.e 1e1bed ti.aty would complement ex1atmi lrtallea barrinl the placement of nuclear weapons tn !pact and In Antarctica. Kooygln -a Soviet draft text of a proposed treaty akmj with • leUer to the conference. .. The coocluslon of the Nonproliferation " Treaty Optnl up proepectl fot the achievement of further lnternltlollal agreements." the Soviet premier n.ld. "The peoples are coocerned over the continued nuclear anns race. We deem it important to find without delay ways of reaching a~ment primarily on the non-use of nuclear weapona as wtD u other measures of nuclear dlaarma- ment." Kosygin expressed hope the committee also would "bring about concrete raults in the field of stopping lhe arms race and moving forward on tl\e road of dl.sarmament." . Wells Leaking Cut Rebels' Funds ,Oil Off Coast Of Louisiana NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Two offshore rigs spewed crude oil and gas into the Gulf of Mexico off the Louisiana coast today. Bad weather and rough seas hampered ef[orts to halt the water· polluting runaways. The U.S. Coast Guard in New Orleans said oil alicks 21 miles Jong by two miles wide were !ten in the gulf near one of the wells, with most slicks about one half mile by two miles wtde . Red Adair and his crew of oil well firefighters were to make another at· tempt to reach the \\'ells today. The famed Houston crew was unable to land at the rigs Monday because cf bad weather and rough seas. The t\\'O wells owned by the r.1obil Oil Co. are in Caillou Bay off Terrebonne Parish (county) and Vermillion Bay in Block~. "All pollution appears to be very light and moving away from land areas,'' the Coast Guard spokesman said . "It's not as bad as the Santa Barbara l~ak from the Information we can get." State Conservation Director J . fif • Menefee said. "But regardless of the .physical dif- ferences, the results are lhe same." Menefee said l~age from the Ytells appeared to be about hall the leakage in the Santa Barbara area. But he said stopping the leaks off the Louisiana coast should not be as difficult as sto~ ping the leaks off Santa Barbara. "My personal opinion Is that the wells could be brought under control In 24-36 hours when weather condlUons permit,'' ?i.lenefee said. 12 ~ets Dead In Border Oash With Red Chinese MOSCOW (AP) -At least 12 Soviet soldiers were trned in Saturday's border clash with Chlnese troops, reports in the press revealed today. A comprehensive report on casualties sUU has not been releued, but various articles have named 12 dead. In addition, Pravda, the Communist party newspaper, said six others "block- ed the path of the Maoist provocateurs with their chests and hearts." This was taken to mean they were wounded and possibly killed. Soviet newspapen ccntinued an anti - Chinese campaign, publisbin& reports of workers' protest meetings throughout the country. One of Pravda's chief corresp<>ndents. Sergei Bont:nko, said "a watchful . 51lence" DGW dominates the border scene. Peerfiir--ACJ'OSI the bleak (ronlier at night, Borzenko said he could see headlights of Chlnese vehicles "far, far away." "This Is not the first Ume lhe dereated Chinese are not resting peacefully," he added. "But the Soviet border guards are vigilantly carrying out their duty. They will decisively halt any new pro- Yocative violation of our sacred boun· daries." The acale of Saturday's border battlt, tn which the Russians repGrted a Chinese regiment, or an estimated 2,SOO men. had attacked, suggested th.at the final death count "1'111 be c«Wderably higher. Attorney General Says More Men Needed in Crin1e WASHh'lGTON (UPI) -Atty. Cen . John N. MJlchell 1ald today more men, rather than more laws, are needed to fight President Nllou'1 war on crime . Ptlitchell told Senate investigators ex· isting criminal laws appear to be ade- quate. The need, he said, Is for "the manpciwtr for more effective en· f0rctment rather than more laws." The nation's top l•w enforcement of • fleer apptartd before the S e n a t e Clmina1 Laws Subcommittee headed by Sen. John l.. McCleOan CO.Ark.) Mitchell told the subcommiUee that the Justice Department Is making a "top priority study" of all e1lstlng criminal stalulH and may rtquest some new legislaUon In the field of orgsnlzed crlnte. Jle said the study "'ould be com• pleted IOOD and that he planned to make recommendations to tht President. Nixon ·to Quell Student Unrest? \VASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nii:on bas decided to enforce more atricUy existing Jaws authorit.ing the cutoff of federal funds to students who create campus disorders, Republican congressional leaders said today. Emerging Crom a meeting with the President at the White House, House GOP leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan and Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen said they expected Nix on' to lake firm action. Both Ford and Dirksen said they did not think additional legislation would be needed. "The previous administration did not implement the laws Congress passed last year," Ford sald. Under a law passed by the 90th Congress, colleges and universities may withhold federal funds from &tudenls involved in campus violence. But tbt law has not been widely enforced. Ford asserted: l•Qur general im- pression is that these militants, small in number, are really ming fascist tactics to deprive most students of their op- portunily to get an education." Nixon arranged to meet late this af- ternoon with Secretary Robert H. Finch of Health, Education and Welfare and Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell to dlscull the problem. He is expected tG issue a statement on student unrest Wednesday or Thursday. Teachers at Carver Vote To Return to Classroom LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Teachers who refused tG cross picket lines se t up by ·Negro militants at Carver Junior High School voted to return to classrooms today. But the 100 instructors who supported a black boycott of predominantly black junior and senior city higb schools said their remaining on the job V.'as contingent on four conditions. These included a "con1plete change Jn the curriculum" at Carver to focus on reading instruction, an cverhaul (){ counseling procedures and more com· munlty involvement in operation of the school. It \li'as alleged police brutality at Carver in breaking up a sit-in demonstra· tion March 7 that triggered a call for a stud ent strike to support n1ililant dt'mands for exclusion of pcilice from campuses. All city schools opened Monday v.•ithout major incidents in contrast to last week \\'hen v.·indows \\·ere smashed, classes disrupted and fires started at a score of schools in the South Central area. Leaders of the Black Students Alliance ,·01.l'ed to continue the boycott. claiming "''idespread community support, but at· lendance ~londay at niostly Negro schools was near normal. The exception was Carver. where only 615 of the school's 2,100 students crossed Pa11I With Fa1nily a 20-man picket line to attend classes. The teachers who refused to Cl'OSI the line met at school district headquarters ·and voted to return to work today under the conditions set forth. Michael Fay, a spokesman for the teachers, said they \\·ere in full sympathy ·with the aims of the boycott but felt they now could be most useful by return- ing to classrooms. Nixon Names New lRS Commissioner WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon announced today his selection of Randolph Thro\li·er, an Atlanta lawyer and former FBI agent, to be new coin-' missioner of the Jnternal Revenue Service. Thro\\·er's nomination v.·ill be sent to U1e Senate shortly, the '\\'hite House said. Thro\\'er, 55. has been In tax Jaw practice in Atlanta since 1936 "''ith time out during World 'Var JI for service as a special agent for the FBI, rolloVt·ed by a stint in the t.iarines. Thrower \\'ill be nominated tG succeed Sheldon Cohen as the nation's chief tax collector . U,I Ttlt!>!lttt Bealle Paul l\fcCartney, his new bride. the fonner Linda EaSlman of the Eastman Kodak fortune, and lhe bride's daughter by a for- 1ner marriage, 6-year-old Heather. arrive in Ne\v York from Eng- land for a visit ""·ith the bride's father. The three "'ill stay for a thr~e-da:· visit, but location for the .ho llda.v \1n s 11 ·' l·'"'\1·1• QUEENll By Phll lnterlandl "Did it ever occur to you that you miibt be • overdoing the· tranqu.ilbers?" Mother Turns in So11 In Sniper Slaying NEW YORK (UPI) -Jo.Jrs. Gloria Berkley listened to her teen-age son blurt out the traeic story then, fighting back tears, she made the toughest decision of her life. Mrs. Berkley lifted the telephone, called a policeman friend and told him her son Richard, 16, had admitted fir- ing the shot which killed a Penn Central brakeman stan- ding in the doorway of a train passing through H a r I e m Saturday night. The friend, Pa t rolman Rudolph T. Christian advised ~frs. Berkley the best thing for Richard to do \ras to report the facts to the police. He then came over and escorted the youth to the East 126th Street Station where the hig h school student was charg- ed with homJcide in the death of the brakeman George Burns, -49. of Bard-Onia, N.Y. 1'1rs. Berkley told reporters Richard had come into her room about 2 a.m. Monday morning and said: ··1'fa, I'm in trouble." "Wh at kind or trouble? .. l\1rs. Berkley asked . The youth replied : ''The man that was shot Saturday night, I did it.., l\frs. Berkley said the boy claimed he was fooling around on a rooftop overlooking the Penn Central tracks with another boy v.·hen the .22 caliber rifle v•ent off "ac· cidentally." Ron1ania l11depe11de11ce Enhanced by Pact Veto BUDAPEST (UPI ) .Romania's veto at the Wars.aw Pact summit conferen ce preventing <1fficial pact sup- port for the Soviet Union's coodemnallon of Red China has enhanced its independent stand in the Communist a\lian· ce, delegation sources said to- day. The conference, the shortest on .record, lasted only two hours Monday and produced J1(I spectacular aMouncements excep~ two mildly y,·orded communiques. One source close to a military delegation called the aummit's closing communique ''mild, written as much by the Romanians as by the Soviets and a victory of brain over passion.'' Tt was a compromise in wh.ich the Romanians won a demand for more equa Lity in the military alliance and lhe Soviets gained m o r e in- tegrated pact armies, the sources said. The gathering of Communist party heads, government and military leaders in t h e Hungarian parliament buiJdlng by the Danube River, .~as a record of brevity for the pact's irregularly scheduled ' ' po I it i c a I consultative" meetings. The \\'arsaw Pact members are the Soviet Unlon, P<1land, Czechoslovakia, Ro m a n i 1 • Bulgaria. Hungary and East Germany. The pact is lhc Communist counterpart or NATO. Stay Granted SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Convicted murderer William Albert Tahl, who had been scheduled to die in the gas chamber al San Quentin Prison Wednesday, has been granted a star ol ueeution by U.S. Dist. Judge Alionso ZirpoLi. By JOAN Along with our own little bal· the fringe . areas that are no\ Ile here in Newport Beach over yet awakened each night and the jet invasion!'! of our beaul iful each morning by the big noise hart>oJ: ar.ea. The World Health and are not yet in the fight. Orgaruzalion now warns w that These are the people that we "mental pollution" threatens to need to join our battle. become more injurious than * * * either air or ·water pollution, N.:rs. Cecil Lunch writes: and points out that noise is "Th.is area is the most a significant factor in the un-outstanding natural harbor In dermining or mental well be.ing. California . The harbor contains In A. star~ call~ "The Grow-eight depsely populated islands IM Dlh Around Us" in t~e "Elks with Umited accesslbllity . Peo-1 Magu.io~." a score of experlli pie come from all over the warn that excessive noise can Western UnJted Stale!'! to use becqrne an unsuspecting trigger th.is harbor for recreation and agtpt !or such . ·ailments as relaxation. and this resort area ulcers and allerg1e.s as well as was u.isting as a resort Jons mental ailments. before the airport . . . Why One Columbia University pr~ should we ptnnlt thls perfect (es.sot suggests that e1cessive harbor, with upward1 of a 000 noiie. c~. "disturb every bodily boab anchored in the bay,' to function. Another ex pert from be spoiled by continual jet take. Nell( York's Medical Center offs. We as a na tion murt be teslirled that "dreams are very concerned about out historical ntee&&arJ to mental health. If land marks; ... 1f you will dreanu are c o n s t a n t I y in-consider the need or pe<1ple for terrupted by Intruding sounds." peaceful vacation areas, in these the professor said. "a person times. I am sure you will agr~ may suffer 81\Y of several men-with us that the Orange County ta t coMequences ranging from airport should be limited to Its nightmarish dreams to suicidal present we." or homicidal lmpulte1." * * • This may sound very ex: Let the FAA know how you qgerated, but u the jet flight.I feel about It. Wrlle : Federal i&re actele:rat~ 11 Orange Coun· AvlaUon Agency ly airport and all indlc1tlons Regional Headquarter• ire that efforts are belng made P.O. Bol 90007, Airport Station lo do this , we will all be fa~ Lo9 Angeles, CalUornia 90009 wit h a re1li.'ltlc noise problem. Slop by, write or call ~ at \Ve know that people under 481 E11st lllh SL in Costa Mwi lhr: n1aht paU.un riaht now are • up&talrs. Phone 642-4404. We're ~t:rned . . • our probltm, open daily 1t 10:00. Sei! you .>f course. I~ those people on here ~t.It T!Je.sday. TUtJdaJ, Mmft 18, 1969 IIAll y I'll.OT s . " New Reports Show Inflation Worsens . ' Marine Hero, 18, ~u~ Guns Duel Again Group Sa ys I.ink in JFK, King Deaths SPAGHETTI & MEAT BALLS ALL YOU CAN EAT! TUESDAY NIGHT ONLY• 5 to 9 i ncludes salad with choice of dressing, roll and bvtrer, beverage. s12s • • Uncle Sam wants a check that won't bounce. Like ;i.No-bounce chcckfromYll'!t ' Western Bank. \Vhen you have a No-bounce account, First Western Bank become$ yQlll' auto- matic lending agency. So if you write a check for more money than you have in your account, our computer knows it and immediately makes •·deposit to cover that check. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A private committee which says it wu fonned to "investigate assa5'inalions'.' contends II WEDNESDAY NIGHT ONL Y-5 TO 9 " ~~~s~f·Pri:de~~w;:,~ II-Sh 'n Chi-1 S That deposit is really a Joan, and naturally we expect you to pay it back; But there's no i bigrwh. We'll even skip the monthly service J charge if you pay us back before the next · billing date. Kennedy and Dr. Martm Luther King Jr. Bernard Fensterv.•ald Jr., one of two staff members ~;~k~g".e; !'~.~:;n~:: a favorite of Old England day the alleged link 1!'I a pic- ture taken or a man in Dallas an hour after KeMedy was This is why a No-bounce account is better than all the credit cards in the world put to- gether. It's honored inmanyplaceo a crtdit card isn't. It also p uts cash in your poclr.ct when emergencies arise. !'!hot. The photograph is a blown· up shot of a man supposedly being arr"ted in Dealey Plaza in Dallas. FensterwaJd exhibited lhe photograph and said the man pictured strongly resembled a police sketch made in Mt:mphis from ac- counts of eyewitnesses to the King assaJ.Sination. He suggested the man in the Dallas picture may be the "real" assassin of King. Mow in Our Family: Family Weekly Breaded fish pieces served wilh French fries, col& slaw, 99~ I By the way, April 15th is the most predict~ able emergency we know of. Give us a call while there's still tillle. rolf •nd butter. Includes beverage. 2267 FAIRVIEW COSTA MESA 642.0732 11,'i rst l~a11k No· bounce Account ...... ,....,..._c.,-- UNIVEISITY PAIK OJ'PICI: 18022 Culver Drive, Irvine 1be action hM been hot lllld heavy at Santa Anita. And where have you been?· In bed with the ftu. Sitting inside looking out at the rain. But it's a differen t story now. Come out . ' and ... th. finest 1:he rain is over ... the flu is through ... ~=~h~i:~:"=· come on out and see what you've been missing! ~'t;::'~in.=; oingle day. Enjoy the piatic grounds ... the fioweni ... the mariachi band. Make up for loot time. Get in on the action at Santa Anita in nearby Arcadia. I c f oAn;y. PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE J Wouldn't It. Be Great Wouldn't It be great II: -Twent.Y or more years ago a &n>UP ol prelclent Orange County leaders had foreseen and acquired enough lan4 for a county airport capable of meeting eveey need ot tile Jet age. -They had located ll where no 'UrtJan development coold ever lntrode. -Today Orange Counlians could Jet to that airport In minutes and take off on transcontinental and trans- oceanic non-atop flights tn the jumbo jets of today. Unfortunately, such prescience is a rare commo- dity. And so we don't have an airport capable ot serv- ing just intrastate needs without creating critical noise and air pollution problems for many thousands of per· """' ....uling near the airport. Now tho Civil Aeronautics Board bas before it a propooal to add flights to the Pacific Northwest to the present airport loed. Desirable as it would be to have such •ervice, it is, or should be, out of the question at !hi& particular lime. The only place in Orange County that could be utilized for these flights . is the county airport. That airport simply cannot allow MOtber major carrier to build up its routes and passenger Joed. A new airport must be found to serve Orange County. -, Ibo whole Idea ~ delllng wllh lhe Rua&lans ,and Cbla .. e Co!IUDWU.U from a pooltioo ot •tmliUL · AnY decision on Ibo ABlll l11ue muat flee a number ot reallUes, IUDOl)g them: -The Ruaslanl have hWlt an ABM '•)'llem around Moscow, In line with lbe~hi.torlc defeme>mlndedneaL It seems unlikely that the Soviets could or would con- •lder our own more modut ouch deploymen~ or a var!· atlon of it, anything but defeoolve on our part. -CommuniJt domination ol the world remains a central ideological goal, despite signs of a little more realism here and there. . -And certainly no opUmism abfiut Red. Cbineee sanity and prudeoce can be aqueezed out of the trra. tional antics and atrocities of the recent "cultural revolution." But despite the Chinese tunnoil, there is evidence that they are gaining nuclear capability and could be a threat to the United States via inter· cootinental ballistic missiles in the 1970s. Propaganda deriding the alleged "rnllitary-indus- trial complex" in the U.S. ignores these ·reallties. U such a "complex" exist!:, its aim is the defense ol the American people in a hosWe, cruel, unpredictable world. One thought seems overriding: In this imperfect world, the U.S. cannot safely abandon it.s defenses - not i1 it continues to cherish freedom. .. The ABM Debate Rages It appears, on the face of fact.a now made public, that President Nixon is steering a middle course which buys time while the scientists argue issues of technol°" gical efJdveness and officeholders debate arms. COl}o trol and' sCores of. other complexities involved in the ABM debate. 4'14tiftt-- ' ··~- Debate over .the Sentinet' anUbelllstic missile sys- Ian (ABM) and President Ni•on'• deciJlon with re- lpect to it Is raging and Is not likely to subside In the near future. ' ........... -__ _. Most important, the decision seems tO give the U.S. bolh the •trength and the flexibility to bargain for meaningful arm,, coolrol 'Just a littk bit dowli and the rest of your life to pay. Why, The multi-faceted arguments have at their ~cart Nixon's lnlaeri ted Problems Now the Going Gets Rough WASHINGTON -All ol a IUdden nothing 11 simple. The budgdary liUl'Jll"' js largely Wusory. A declsion on the multJ-billion dollar anti-ballistic missile merely puts off a go or no-go for this controversial weapon. There is no answer, either, in Vietnam ucipt perhaps a bigher rate ol spending - nothing to do but ride out the new wave of attacks and hope, as President Johnson hoped, that this would he Jhe Jast one before a negotiated peace. And IO, five montbl after his election.- Pr<sldent Nlloo has had to come to grlpo with problems that are not solved by lowering our voices lll1d llopplng shouting al ooe IDOlher, Perhaps the hmeymooo may bt Aid to have come to an end in a series of. several meetings al the While Hoose esrller this week. -One after another the ... a1 problems pruented themselves, the budget illusion, lhe ABM hmTor, lhe Vietnam quandary. Al the blinders came off the probl<ms looked like this: IT MAY AS EASILY he said that there will be a $6.1 bllllon deficit in the 1961 bDdget as to clalm there will be a $2.f billion aurpluJ. It can be as cm.vtncingly argued that there will be a $10.7 blllioa deficit to fiscal 1970 rather than the $3.1 blilloa lllW'plus claimed by J ohnscn. At a White House meeting, Sen. John J. WlWams of Delaware, rank4 tog Republican 00 the Senate Finarice c:ommittee, uked Nimn: "Why doo 't we come out and admit that the financt.I ot this country are In worse shape than we upect.ed?" The ABM horror was found not to be susceptible to a weekend decision, nor is any decision at all about it -except just dropping the whole thing -likely to hold for any length of tim~ A decision merely leada to another decision, or a rtvisiC11 of a decision, and that will be tbe case unUl there Is commoo scienUflc agreement that the weapon will perform tta umped task. A.! FOR VIETNAM, the problem Jooka even more bafiUng than before owing In large part to the public usumpllon -barely shaken by 450 killed In a week -that the war b over or about ' to be over, and that somehow er another Nixon will extricate us. How this impression got lodged 1n the public <onsclousnw is beside the polnL 1be fact that be made no promise lo get us out of VJetnam ls ignored, and in Its place la a mystical assmnption that the elecUon was a mandate to end the war. But Nixon ean no more "get out'' of Vietnam than could Johnaon. The circumstances of war teep us there. 'Ibe process of turning the war over to the South Vietnamese, 1f practical at all. would require years. The con. sequences throughout the Far East of a unllaleral pull-out .,.. so great that not even S<nalor Fulbright alb IOI'. iL SO THE GOING GE'l'I ~ In the Nixon Admlnistnn1-0D on problem1 he did not create but inherited. The ~al point at issue is whether or not he can find solutions any better than those ol the Jdmsoo Admlnbtratioo. Perhaps, as a good beginning, senator Willianu'.advlce might be followed. Wby not e:rplain to the public the new boot· keeping system that permitted the Johnson Administration to claim Us ii· IUSOI')' budget liUl'pluses! Why not go before c.onareu aoon with a realistic outline cf futur. _.,lnl polk:lesT Why nol outline the allernalha in Vlelnam and their C!OMequences? The time is npldly coming when Congrw will looe tll patience with the N I I 0 n Administration for Its delay In laying down llnes of policy. OONGRF.sS IS IN m third month of marting thne, with no program before it and no direction from the White Hoose. '!be President has not a~ helore Congren to define the anns of bls ad- mlnistralloo, nor has he submitted new budgetary estimates a n d recom- mendations on tuaUOIL The President's accomplishments have been significant. He baa won wide popular support. He has Jieen praised for acting with caution and restrainl But the conferenoea .ln the White Houae this week showed that problem-solving, on which the Nl.J:on group prides itself, will not wait much longer. Crime and1 Negro Silence WASHING TON -The widespread failure of Negro leaders to denounce. the !Oaring crime, violence, campis and other disorders by their race coold have HJ"ious adverse effect on Congress' al· titude toward the multi·blllion dollar anti· poverty and federal aid to education p-ograms. Thal II the blunt warning ol Rep. William Scberle, R-lowa, influential member of the House Education and Labor Committee, which has juriadiction over thla far-reaching lqislaUoo. Making no bones of his atern In· dlgnatioo at the: almoat urllveraal silence of Negro leaden: in the national struggle agalnat criminal lll1d ulremlst elements among their people Scherle declared theJ wlD have only u,.;;;;;lves to blame for poulble unfavorable consequences. 1111: POINTED OOT that this perplex· In& lalluR to opeak out II particularly ahoddllC a n d di.cr.dltable 11 Negroes .,_ the went victlma of Negro crime. "!Mo ii 111DPle evidence, u roportecl by • ,_ leadlns poll," Aid Scherle, "that both Negroes and whites, by a considerable margin, 1trongly favor a tougher llne against crime. The •Wtude ol most Negroes is grapblcally l!UllllDed up by a statement by one black American to • pollster, 'll II not police brula)ity that I WOITJ' about, so mucb as criminal brutality.' "Yet despite the irreftltable evidence of t h e urgent need • n d ovenrbelming dtslrt of tbeir people for law and order, w .be re are the Negro leaders! Why aren't they In the ro..rnx11 or the light to suppress the vicious and the ir· reapomible? Privately, they shat. their heads and opeak llOrTVWfully about the grievous crime problem. But 11Ubllcly they Jack the cuts and forthrightness to d4!:nounce the criminals who are· vic- timll1ng the.Ir own race." CAUSTICAU Y Wldencorlng his bl Ung denunciation ol the Ignobly mute. Negro leaders, Rep. Scherle cited a number o1 strWng lnNncu ol the bniW vie· timlulloa of Nqroes by Ntgro crlmlnals ond•-A 1>0rtlcularly JP'•phlc illustratloo noted by Scherle ii the nation's capital. Wltll • Negro population ol M -~ It ranked lint to robherlea 1a11 yur and tblnl In aD major crlmtL Alt official study for the lllcoJ year that ended June Jil, 1-, ~ that II percent ol mmdtt •lcllml, 71 pen:ent al rape vlcllml lll1d II per'Cellt cf qJP'llV•ted usault victhnl ~were non-white. to "Even tht reltt!vety new concept of bllck capllallsm," said the oollpoken low• lawmabr, "hu lalltn victim to the rlltn1 Negro crime -· A ahopplnl centtt taken ovtt by Karry Youna. a Negro IChoolltache<, WIS the first pro} oct ol thal kind owned •nd managed by a Negro in the state ol l>Plav.·are. Yet It had to he closed becawe of vandalism by Negro hoodlums, most of them under ll. "THF.SE PUNKS tmwized Young's customers, robbed parked can, amashed the store '1 windows aod stDie b.iS goods. When he wu sorrowfully compelled to quJt business, he had klist $33,000 in hard-earne<J savings. But I have yet to hear of a Negro leader who came to his support, who spob'oot In clerum- ciaUon of these Negro marauders and delinquenta." Howard University, foremost Negro educallonal institution In lhe coontry, was aingled out by Scberle u another glaring example of the failure of Negro leadeni to take a forthrt1ht stand against the extremists cl their race. The federal government provides .some st percent of the university's budget. Since 1954, it has been given around 1116 million. By Robert S. Allen ud Job A. Goldsmllll Dear Gloomy GU!i: How did the Oranp County Fish lll1d Game Commllltoo (not the state ICOllC1) p m much _... to like away the rf&hll cf the people when they aren't even listed In th• COll!lly lelephooe book? -11. II. II. fllll ,..,.,.. ,....... ........ ....... ... _,..,..,., ..._ ., ,.. ••• ••r. ._. ,... .. _ ........... Dlt ......... T_he Way The Asiatic Mind Works There was a story uound after the Sooth Vietn.m electioo that Vice Presi- dent ·KJ and President Thieu were un- fritJl!Jly. Either the story was untrue or there was a rapprochement, because Ky has been around Paris for weeks as some kind ol observer for Thieu. Ky's-position is not analogous to that of vice president of the United States. He has his own party following, with considerable political independence. He Is a peppery lltue man and bas never been very tactful in his .. public pro- nouncements. He and President Nilon bad a talk In Paris. We are not told what they said, and are not likely to be told soon. But after the meeting sour~ close to Ky said be tblnks the Nixon Administration Js more inclined to play for time in the Paris lalks than w~ its predecessor. IT SOUNDS PLAUSmLE, because the Johmon..Administration was-in a belated and bOpeless pos.ition the moment it lniUated the talks. Mr. Johnson's renu.,.. elation of the office last April made Mission Impossible look easy. There was no evidence last year Mr. JobnlOO was aware of this, though tt is bard \o see bow 'be could have been unaware. The enemy was bound to con. cede nothing until a new AdrninlJtration came to power. Moreover, it is a cardinal point with AslaUcs In their deallnp with the Wat to &It oa their bands, and let the Wed do the sweaUng. This bas been the story of years in Korea, including the Pueblo affair. But even with such an example, Johnson and l;iis men bad no manil .. t lnkl1n( cf the workings of the Asiatic mind. SO TREY SWEATED, all right, and so did the rest of us. aitting and watching our soldiers dyin& in a way which became an olficlat failure the Instant Mr. JohMon bowed out of It eleven months ago. Yet it wu never problbJe the enemy, having got what It wanted in the American electJon, would tum soft on Mr. Nixon and ask him what his pleasure might now be. That is not the way the Asiatic mind works, either. The way it works is, when you've got the antagonist on the run, particularly a W6'lern antagonist, keep up the shool.ing, interspersed with some UmeJy villficalion. IT IS TO BE HOPED Mr. Nl•on perceives this, even if it never entered Mr. Johnson's head. For Nixon Is In at >east as ngbt a corner as Johnson w a s, for somewhat dllferent reuons- he will !lad It exlnmely 'llifflcult to tscaJate the war, even to give it a semblance of equlllbriwn, because the acalation plll, once 10 Wily iwalJowed, has become poisoo to the American people. Yet there is ao far no 1ign cf • httak-throop .,.. to an agreemtnt wlllcb woold llop the leOleless killlnr- But 1here .,,, plenty ol sips abool thlit Paris c 1 n btcome another Pan· rnunjom, our second Aslan adventure to Wither 1w., to an uninlelUgtble u· change ICf'OIS a lable. If Mr. Nixon can re!ICUe us from this dreary fate, he will deserve the acclaim ol a people who love, not wlsely but. too well, as they used to II)' In lhe Vk:torlan novels cf llnolbor sad pUgllL . . friend, you can't afford not to 011111 one!' Our Cities Are Bursting Inward In all the dlacusalon and controversy aboot what has come to be known as the "population ei:plosion," we have seriously neglected an equally disturbing aspect of the problem -the population implosion. An "implosion" is a bursting inward, which is euctly what has been happening to American cities since the end of World War II. Not only has our popula· tion gron by tens of millions, but it bas also sldfted to the urban complexes at a rate we did not anUclpate and cannot handle. The U.S. is now, for the fU"St time, a predomlnanUy urban society. Some 60 pe:reent of our people live jn or around cities, and the trend shows no slackening off. Moreover, many of Urese people who came directly from rural areas with no experience or training for urban life. AN IMPLOSION of this magnitude increases social problems at a geometrical raUo. While the population goes up ariUunetically, tht need for welfare and servi~ goes up five times, Or 10 tlmes, as fast -because the cities are simply not equipped to cope with tbe masses of uneducated, un· trained, jobless families who occupy sub- standard dwellings and subsist on wellare payments or marginal employment. What we loosely refer to as "crime in the street&" is the result of this condition more than any other: a social more than a moral problem, MERE DENSITY of numbers accounts largely for the disturbances we have witnessed ln American cities. An lncreast in density, wilhoul room for expansion, builds up anxieties, tensions, frustratiom and, finally, blind revolt which l~hea out at everything around it. It is the community equivalent of getting "atir. crazy'' under crowded and oppressive prison conditions. I am not speaking here only of blacks, but of whiles as well -who feel their ••territorial borders" threatened by thil Implosion, and who are just as much the victims of unplanned urban ~ and a shockingly faulty educational system, which has failed In .lh basic task: of producing democratic citizens who are capable of engaging In lhl ~ell<arrecting democratic process. OUR POPULATION must not merelj be reduced, it must be dilpened. Small towns must be made more economically viable; suburbs must be developed on a rational basis, not as a form ol flight out of fear. The city alone cannot assume the dreadful burden of maklna a better life for its people; it js alreadJ buckling at the seams, fiscally as well as physically, politically, and morally. As all history shows us, when cltia crumble, the civilization collapses. A building cannot stand when its weigh! and density are too concentrated In one area. We need social architectr mor~ than policemen. BuiWing Ove r Freeways By JAMES E. Wlll:l'MORE SenalOr 35111 Dll1rlcl California's first large-scale use of freeway air space will span Interstate 80 In Sacramento as a result -of a lease approved recently by the Calllornia Highway Commission. EnvtsJooed are a two-atoried restaurant -standing on a stem which projects from between the two elevated roadbeds of the fi:eeway-<>verlooking and spanning the traffic lanes while on the ground there will be parking facilities for guests and an automobile service station for thelr conveyances. 'nle propoltd lease is subject to reservations, restrictions and conditions deemed necessary by the Department of Public Works. One such restriction says tllat no addltlonal use of the area y,·ill be permltted unless prior approval is requested and received from the State. !!ANY BENEFITS will derive to local communlUes as a result ol slgnl.ng air· space leuu. Returning sections of frHway land to local tu rollJ will be a mljor local he .. ril The mulliple 111e al freeway righls-ol· way Is encouraged by the C&llfornla Jllghway CommlssJon ln nrdtr to con- serve land re.sourc:ea. It Aid tt hoped that the prof«! wm he the fortnmner ol many aJmilar URs ol flotway airspoce lll1d decland !hat each one. wlll constitute 1 positive ad- dition to California's economy. AS SIJBMITl'ED the lease will nm for 21 years, st.art.Ing June I, 1959, with 111 fl\P6<year l'f:newaJs. U all term options are eitrdsed the lea5e would explrt Ma.r<b 11, :JOl5. The State wtn f'et'ei•·e 1 mlnlmum of 132,700 aMually In rental. Pa)mcnts ----- ( i \...,.,_. ~ue.~ Rep.o;t ·=~ -~"' ~IM.i-.-ilS&i: •J are due monthly starting AprD t, 197\\ or on the first day that any parl or the facility is opened for buslnessi whichever Js sooner. There is _a, provision for an lnlerirt rental, starting on the rirst day of tht lease period and continuing until thf annual mlnimum rental is in effect. ln addition to the minimum rental, the lessee will paf a percentage a the operation's gross Income to the stat& ADDmONAL RENT includes one ced per gallon for annual guaUne aale1 U ei:ctu ot 990,00> 1allons. Gross sales, exclusive of gasoline, if exceso ol $3,250,000 wtll Increase lhi State's rental income by one perctd . of the selling price of food and non alcoholic 1>everaces and five percm d the sellJni price al alcohollc bever•-and gills. ~- The two-storied restaurant operaUoc Is ei:pected to provide marlmum aervid to patrons. The low r floor will bowit a gilt shop, 5111Ck bar and coll .. ahop aC<Onllna to insent plans. ---B11 Geerwe -- , CONFIDENTIAL TO "NEEDS INVESTl,IENT MONEY", Ne wonder nobody will Invest In your ICheme. The qylng Is: "lnvent a heller MOUSE TRAP tad the world will but 1 palh tO )'.our door." Nobody la &olnK to bu7 stock in your mncem; t don"t care JI you have invented 1 better mouse. • • ,,....,._. ----',, ..... ·--·~~~..--------------------!!1!!•!!11!!!•!111!1111!!!1!1111!!1!•!!!!!!11111!1!!1!11!11!!1!!!1111!!11!111 . .... ~' ... ,~, T~J, M~ 18~ 19ftt 11,<ll Y PO.OT 1 CHECKING hungry i Shut Tough Laws No Answer? • UP • Owner Owes $23,000 Tax ' SACRAMENTO (AP) ....\ certain what deWl> the bW11~=======;. Calllomla e&m!OI rid lta ca...J wtII COlllaln. :". puses of trouble a n d Tbe speaker was asked to SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - ran into such problems as troublemakers mtllly by comment after the Senate Aver.age W ~man Kisses~79-Fefi6ws - Oyne:r Enrico Banducci today "flu, the weather, the parking, puslng tough new laws. passed four more bills Monday blamed off-eolor movies and the lack ()( lighting aod lots .1.--~'-1 .• 8 ....... i..er Robert T. wbich cracked down on cam- the high price t>f entertainers of other things." ~ ....-pus . trouhlemlken -both for ,thfl ck>Jing of his famed He pointed out that there Monagan said today. student.I and faculty mem- hurwf I ni_g_ht club, were only three places where The Tracy Republick said bers. "San Franosco has become major talent could play in echool atimin)straton should Republican !iov. Reagan 11 a town where tbey wen't pay San Francisco a decade ago. nm their insUtuUons "with the seek.Ing a program of four $3 to see top 'live en-. Banducci's success led to the least amount ol interference meB.IUttS des.lgoed to i..eep tertai.nmeot, but they'll hap.. founding of a half-dozen more from the legislature." dissidents off campus and ta lly L. M. BOYD CIJSl'OMER 8 ERV ICE 1 Q.-"WBAT doci ~it mean wht.n the muter of a yacht ruca a blue !lag with a white square in it?" A. -'lb:at's tbe blue peter. MCI#' be's I •bout to act aail. Only other I ahip"I _,i ~ know bow I to read IS lliat one Aber<rom- bie and Fticll Put ou~ it. \ yacht!man-asked' them to design a !lag be could hoiJt pil:r al'M!ll out $5 to see a and "the talent is playing one But Mooagan noted the peo-permit campus officers to ban the drlve at the valley's upper dirty movie," he noted. against the ~. They're kill-3 E } • pie are demanding &ctioo from use of lou~. end, . worttac the .. rabbits nie ,beret-wearing Banducci ing the business." xp OSIODS lawmakers in tbs year of Monagan bas established a tow-J .-. f w U. · admitted he was: "slightly bit· He lamenteC thaL stars unrest and strikes on campus. series of. subcommittees in the UV = ..... • • Slr,, ' lb this one· year .they wcund..pp ter' over the Intern a I ''want $15,000 a week and if Blast Shell The more an 70 bills in-Assembly to investigate the ·with 35,000 rabbits In the cor~ Revenue Servlce'j padlocking you make '2,000 when they troduced so far which deal campus revolution and to ral. By then, 'molt an the of b I s new $400,000 hungry appear they g e t aggravated with campus trouble probably screen all bills dealing with youngf~owsweredn.uik..And I at Ghirardelli Square for that they didn't charge you F } Lin will be screened and con-it. when they went In for the failure to pay $23,000 in $L7,000-theywamitall." Ile • e solidated into about five In a speech last week, kill.-somebody grabbed.a Uve withholding taxes. Banducci also runs · a measures in the Assembly, he Monagan said, "I 'don't look rabbit and tossed it at a bone, Banducci foonded t h e popular coffee h o u s e • CANYON C8lll (AP) said. forward to legislating in this Somebody' else got Dad. 11le original' hungry i in the North restaurant unaffected by the ' • Such a package should give field. but we can't stand by h~ bucked' and kicked and Beach area, whlch launched IRS action. Four Contra ~ COunty college and university ad-and· let our campuses be over-~ men cmsed. Pretty sOon, talents such as Mort Sahl, "L'm going to try to raise sherill's deputies and several m~trators clear authority to , run." ill bands were throwiag rab-Leonie Bruce, Bill Cosby, and the $23,000 and ~ up again, other persons were il1jured handle future incidents, the He amplified today by J>its, playing appl~'s-the Kingston Trio. but I'm not. sure J believe Mooday night when three 6 • speaker said in an Office fn. saying, "P.eople think. that you ID'S BE lllBIDLY U yoa m.ve new ndabbon or know ol anyone flMMnl: to our ana. please tell ua IO that we U1a7 extend a frlendlY...tcomeudbelp tlm:p to becune acquatnted to tbetr fleW mrroundlnp. Huntington Inch Visitor "'"""' Costa Mew Visffor HMMt So. Coast Visffor 49U579 Harbor Vbifor 494-9361 I to advise interested'onlookert his wife wa.s aboard. They f made him a dandy. Now you I see U in prltnear every port. ! Jt's a red battt.ue on a f field of blut •••. Q:.-0 WllAT yllW'"-friud with rabbits, hit· He moved to new quarters that San Francisco wants a 1 . · terview. can legislate Your way out Ung one another over the head last Oct. zz and immediately hungry i now.'' P os:ions blasted an aviation,j~M~ona:g~an~sa~ld~he~ls~not~y~e~t ~of~lhis~·~pro~b~te~m~.~Y~ou~c~an~no~t.'~' ~~~~~~~~~ wilh rabbit.I. }Vent on for a fuel line. loag time, everybody gett.il)g A California highway patrol I JS T8l!l A VEIIAGE AGI'! of the widows in this country?" I A.-54. THOSI'! COMl'IJTER BOYlI, I who arc J'Ulllllng everything I through tbe:lr machines, came 1 up with a peculiar find wbe~ I they shuffled data on seVeral J thousmt .omen hurt in r kitchen acetdents. Almost all I of the injured girl! in their study, it turned out, were teetotilei'!. -Industrious, but I dry. 'Ibey conclude women who drink daily Jre more I nlaxed, therefore less ac. cident prone. Can't buy that, I exactly. What's more likely l is the women who drink daily J loll around a lot. They just I don't get into enough action 6pattered and battmd with S I di Si· n W . . member said quantities °' r::t'i ~:~ ... ~ ~: ~: . 0 er I a1tmg type B e1ptooive, used In east (,lregoo. rabbit hunt." depth charges, were found HAVE RECENT WORD of B t N f n· h near the line whkh runs from a pair of sisters named lhe u ow or ISC are:e a Shell Oil c.. plaot in Misses Cronk whom u MartineztoOakland. matrimooy turned i D to FORT ORD, Calif. lUPI) There v.•ere still no orders, Two patrol cars from the Mrs. Crout and Mrs. Krock. sherilrs department w e r e The point is in the poetry -Pfc. Richard Beaty, v.·ho so Beaty just kept waiting burned in a fire that followed of it all. • ••• ISN'T NOW left on 30-day leave 15 month s • • • and waiting · • • and one of the explosions. as good a time as any to ago, returned to the Army waiting. The first explosion was report the word "and" ap-11.1ooday foe bat he i.,.......,. Finally, his discharge date repc.-ted at 10:30 p.m. 00 a pears ·46,m times in the " w • ...,...... -passed, so Beaty informed the hillsid bov , __ Bib I e'! •.• GE 0 R GE will be a prompt disc.barge. Army he was ready to return e a e .__,yon, a W••m NG T 0 N -•~-~ B t 2t village in lhe bills 12 miles ~ INl.ll~ ea y, a -year-old soldier to civilian life at its con-st of Oa"land his wife V.artha as. Patsy, from erville · ea • • and I don't kn-• why . • Pott · • Celli .. was venience; 1'ie Army saJd it County officials m 0 v e d v.. granted a 3-<lay leave on Nov, couldn't take action on his eceotl to nd the entl ANO WilJ.JAM KARVONEN 'l'l, 1967. and was told to Yt'ait request until he reported for r y co emn re I makes passing mention of a community because of its pro-I for orders shipping him to duty. · 't t t shed t d fellow who crossed his honey vi·etnam. xuru Y o wa er an s . So Beaty checked in at Fort Canyon has ,. 1'pal se I bees with lightning bugs so he no mun c w-could put on a night shift ho , The soldier said his orders Ord Monday, and a spokesma n er facilities. TILL G~G failed to arrive, so he checked at the J,>06t said he would The second explosion. oc-ho··· AMS .,. .. ,..,. .lb lhe P t and II be ed .-~ STATIC over that thoroughly w1 en agon ca ed treat '\ui;; same as an)f curred about 11 p.m. and a E3 AID·lt&smsm 1912 HARBOR BLVD. (at 19th) COSTA MESA . Phone 642.3177 ' Dally 10.7 -Fri. 10.9 -Sat. 9-6 1 in the kitchen to even the odds. U you have a different I opinion, please send it in I quickly. My mind may snap 1 ,;hut on the matter at any 1 moment. researched claim the average.1_•_r_ecrw_·_1er __ in_P_ort.rv __ i_lle_._ne_w_;_am--'va;,.:I_" _____ _:third:::. c:..:!o:::llow=ed::..:mm:::':::utes=.::l•::ter:.·:... American gITl ~~es 79 men r----------------------------------------..,...-------------""i before she marries. Isn't that \ HA VE YOU EVER hunted jackrabbits? So bave 1. but 1 not the way the men in East 1 Oregon hunted jackrabbits I years ago. Karl Kirk recalls: "The hunters came in on 1 horseback from miles around, Each had a jug, I guess. The l pounded down cedar po6ts to make a cb1cken-wire fence like a V aCl"OS.1 the lower end U the valley. It funneled into a corral. TheY. started reasonable~ RAPID REPLY. Yes, sir, the women who go to root doctors outnumber the men who do so by LO to 1. Your questions and com· ments are welcomed and wiU be used wherever pos- sible in "Checking Up ." Address mail to L. Af. Boyd. in care of tht DAILY PILOT, Bo:i: 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92663 I . -I[ Diphtheria Cases Reporte~ , LOO ANGELES (UPI) -Gaitan of Pacoima and the r A mother and five of her five children ranging in age f 10 children were stricken with from 4 to 9 either had the \ ' diphtheria Monday and the en-disease or displayed I t s tire family was rushed to symptoms. The cases were the County-USC Medical Center. first in the coonty this year. County health o f f i c i a l s Two cases were reported in reported that Mrs. Celina 1968 with one dEeth. Trade all those 'L' ,, a use our money! That's what Morris Plan money is for. You may borrow from $100 ll> $5.000, or more, for bill consolidation, taxes. medical expenses, any good reason. Payments scheduled to lit your income. You may have your money the day you apply-with no repayment !or 45 days. SAMPLE YOUR MOl!thly No. of CASH Pl)'mtflll -·· lOAN $ 453.93 $21 21 SCHEDUltS $1Pt&.17 $!J 21 $1,51l9' $56 J6 12.122.ll 11' • Credit lifl arwj dlS1blllty lnsurara av1!!1blt. Morris Plan Newport 8t1ch -3700 Newport Blvd., • 673-3700 lf:you should. ever mal1aous phone call, hang1, lf1the, callS~cpntinue~ here~s what~to do: " Call our Business Office.\We .~ave i employees who are specially trained to assist and advise you and who can frequently help in locating the origin of unwelcome and troublesome calls: • • Anyone making an obscene or threatening call is violating a California state law, and con- viction can result in fines and/ or imprisonment of up to six months.' \With modem methods of detection, many of these . callers have been identified. And many cases have resulted in arrests and convictions. We want to do all we can to4' p .Ii T I h @ tect . ht to . ICI I: 11 Ip ODI • pro your ng pnvacy. --- We're.here.to:help~ , l I• 111 ............................................ ----~~~~~~~~~~~~ I I I i , ' • I ' ' '' ··. ~ .. ,. ,: ";.~ .~. •' "' ,. .•. ·11 ' : ;. ,, ·-., . " " ' -' t· • ' ! ' " ·T , 7 \ • I I I l I .,. " • 8 NJL'i PILOT TiiesdQ, Mardi 18, lflt~ Irvine Preserve Issue A Utility Pole Ry ·Any Other Nam.e ... Heiress Sues County LOS ANGELES -Southc.-n Californians, rtiolct! You are blessed with the m o s t eirthetically pleuing uUlity poles in the country. ilalled 1t llUntington Buch vlslble to the public as Urn" may become "Ode lo and the reaction of local pole-btautiful as po.Silble.'' an Edison Pole." After 1.ll, v.·atchers was measured And Thw, the twentlelh century beauty ls truth a.nd truth beau· By JACK BROBACK 01 tM DliMJ' ,011 Slaff SANTA ANA -Orange County'S Board ol Supervisors has been added to ,U>e list of defendants in .Toan Irvine Smith's federal court action Y.·hich seeks to prevenl lhc t:ompany from placing about ~11.000 acres of its 84,000-ucre Orange County propertic:> in an agricultural preserve. Mrs. Smith claim~1 that the agricultural preserVe agree· 1nent will result in great finan- cial loss and damage to her through the devaluation of the 180 acres of Irvine stock she 0\\'0S. \Vhile the full amount of the damage to her Irvine in- vestment is unknown to her, the heiress says she believes it will exceed $10 million. !-.trs. Smith further declares the preserve agreernent signed · Feb. II was not made in good faith and was not intended to sene any purpose C<Jn· nected with agriculture and its compatib1e uses. To the contrary, her action contends, the creation of the agricultural preserve was fie· titious and a guise, scheme, artifice and device by the Irvine Company under the control of the Irv ine Foun-. dation to avoid taxes on the real property owned by the company. ~1rs. Smith contends the acrtage placed in the preserve has a present \•alue of upwards of $300 million and lhat the n1ajor portion is not now and will nol be-used for agriculture and compatible uses during the IO-year period provided in the agrttment. The heiress declares ··the establishment of the preserve is not in the public interest. that the granting of this special p riv i I e ge and discrin1inatory tax benefit to the Irvine Company impo11es on her as a taxpayer in Orange County and other tax· payers the burden of paying increased taxes on their pro- perty in order to cover the deficit of $1.5 million a year in total real property tax receipts in Orange County. She asks that the court ad- judge and deeree that the agreement is null and void and that the court issue a • mandatory injWlCtkm direc- ting the Board of Supervi.sors to vacate and aruwl the agree- n1ent. The amended complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles by Lundol L, Young, attorney for f.1rs. Smith. She complains that the supervisors rejected a plea by Young to postpone final approval of the agricultural preserve for one week to pennit her to personally pro- test e:recution ol the proposed agreement. ' • ART AWARD WINNER 'Pole' by Edison Co. She stales she was unable to appear before t h e supervi!ors on Feb. 18 because she was scheduled to, and ----------- did, te.!tify in Washingt,on at the House Ways and Means C<>mmittee h e a r i n g s on Treasury Department pr1>- posals concerning changes in the laws governlng private, lax-exempt foundations. Term Given 111 Burglary SANTA ANA An Anaheim man \\:ho pleaded guilty to the burglary of a f.1id\\·ay City market has been sentenced to 60 days in Orange County Jail and placed on three years probation. Al least, lbe American lron and Steel Institute thinks so. The laatilute presented Southern Calllomia &lison with the "Design in Steel" award, for achieving "lhe best design in public works con- struction." 1ndusirial designers Henr y Dreyfuss and. Associates, who conceived the design, did so at the bidding of Edison, which is seeking to mollify those who object to unsightly, above-ground utility poles dot- ting the landscape. The new poles are thought to be more interesting than the old ones, C?ven though they are 1>till strung wit h the same old wires.· Two of the tubular steel poles were experimentally. in- round to be favorable. ver'ion of "Ode to a Grecian t Other Dreyfuu des lg n • ··-=====:;=======Y=·======:::::::::::;. which Include somethlng call·I · ed ;'Sunburst," are being tested for eye appeal at various sites in soutbe.ro California. SaJd Edison Vice President Robert N. Coe : "We are doing all v.·e can to make electric faciUt.ie1 which must rt.main Widening Slated On El Toro Road EL TORO -A $69,303 con- tract has been awarded by county supervisors for the widening of a portion of El Toro Road between Rockfield and htulrlands: Boulevards. Low bidder was the Mark Construction Co. of 'Garden Grove. There were sevin bid!!. bids. YOUR OWN BUSINESS Earning Potential Unlimited We olfer financial assistance D1·ug· Running Trial Set for Newport Man Superior Court Judge Robert R1i11 91111!1 odarl111 Chi11cJ1i lJ11 i11 your I.om•. Sm1lt l11v11f· LOS ANGELES -Trial has a light aircraft Gardner passed that sentence m111+. Comp•+• +r1i11i119 pro9r1m. Won•t i11+1rf1r1 with pr11111t been set for April I in the Agents claim the three men on Simon Correa, 20, dnd upitionSEND THIS .AD FOi Fiii llOCHUll- case or Wesley Gor~on Plinke, operated a system \Vhereby ordered Correa to make full 20, of Newport Beach, accused Plinke and Wehrle new the restitution of an estimated $50 Universal Chinchilla Breeders or smuggling marijuana into plane from Mexico to the taken last Feb. 4 from the 11zo Int Adi Strfft, Fvll•rt•11, Cellf, DE,\Tll NOTICES FULLER the U.S. from Me:iico. airport where accomplices r..tid\\·ay Markel, 8l2l Bolsa Cell: 1114117D·I06J er Cellect: t71411Jf.J161 One of his 1lleged ac· -~m~e~l~th~e=m~w~;~th~a~r~en~t~ed~,.~,n~.::__'.A~•~e~.:_::::~:::..::~;;~~;;~;~;~M~A~l~l~T~H~IS~A~D~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ complices ~as found guilty ""l:>f.rt R. Fuller. Ave n. re1i<1ent or IU! •s. C1lv1ry. Al~rt.. c .... ,, •. ou~ cf Oeltlt. M1..::11 1-'. SuNIYff bv wl~, M". Annie Fuller. C1111>C1a: - ''"'"• Sl1nl" 1nd L-1 d1U91'1'er, Mri. F~ Wellf, 1\1 Of C1111>d1_; '""'" H11!'1 F!tcn, New H1m.,.l'li"; rwo bralt>e~. John S.. Mln,.1ot1, 1nd H1rvld H, Fuller, A"'l\elm. Servlctt Ind 1.mm1t!l!I wm ~ ~Id \ft CIMdl. Loc11 1rr1111R"""'1s bv llllr Mor· tw1rv, lllO f , l[Olll H!el!Wll'· COfC>nl Ht Mir. FUNN AIC'I FtlfVI. '~ '~"' Place. CMll Meu. o.i., of de11n, March 11. Sur· ¥Ive<:! bv !Wll d1u9Me_,, Mrs. Cll1rloT!e H. Po1i.r. Cati• ,,.,...., M~. Nell~ I'!. W1r .. n, Of.er lodo>e. Mon!lnll Ind rive qr1rdchllClren. Funeral ,,....,,. .. 1nd Tnlernwnl will be held !n O,,..r lod9'. Monl1.,.. ll&llI Mort1>1rv. !7•1 Su..er!ot. Co1t1 Meil, lcrw1rdl"9 o;.. rK10fl. BEARR UP E•r>el l earruo. llf L1b~•n~m. F..,,.. t1,~ V1ll,.v. l-trvlcts ""'dlno. 11e11 l!•n•dw•v Mortu1rv, 110 llroodw1v, CCK11 Mtt1. f.fYERS ~''"'"" H. Mvtn. '" llledl1f\d,, New· D11rt 11a1cn. su.,,lved bl' son. lllOllerl: .....,t+ler. Mrs. LtM H1rpff", lOI ....,. ~: 1l1!tr. Mr1. Leat1 Wln4u1!, LM """ties. SeN~t, Wednnd1v. n AM. lltll lln>MhWV Cll1P11. IMermfnt, lntltWGOd Mem&rl1I •1rll. Cll..Cteel bv lleU ll •Oldw1v Mort111rr. 110 l rc..i- w1v, c,.,, N'•~. SULLl\'AS Jtrrv Sulli van. 111 W. 151" St .• Nt,.._ ..orl lltacll. O.te cf de1111, M111c11 1'. Survll'td bv wife. l(ill>erlne, of tllt t1cr\'19; 1l1ler, LUCiiie Fard, Nortll HO I· '""""°"· Services wlH be lleld Wed""" Clfl'· ) PM. Pa(!llc Vifo1< Clll>pel. 'E,.. 1omt1m•n!, Ptclf;c Vtew Memorl1l Pt•~. Directed bv Ptc!flc Vlfw ""9•- 1u•rv. DE GUELLE Goldie K. D! Gutlle. ,..,. 69. or f l1 r .. orwl1 St .. ""'· I, H!lnlln•ttn II••~"· 01~ Ill clt~lll. Mi re" 17. Survive<! bv 1'1111.blH'lcl, Jl .... t: I Dll, JllTIH J. ()! Gut lle: d1uohrer. J1couf"llM Btck!r: tnree 111ten. Florence C•••"· Min!.> oreon. ind Z~• Pert.Ins: and th 1r1ndtlli~. Servk-e. will DI' Ir.IC! Wednt.0.V, 11 AM, Smlll!f Cll11>tl. In~~. Good S/\l1111tfd C~terv. Dir&cled bv Sml!h1 Mtirlu•"'· STIJBBLEFIF.LO S!...t>ell S!ubb1'rl'lekl. 10111 ltli""· 1-nll ,1.na. 01te of de1!h. Morell 1•. survlvtd bv molll~•. Mr1. Helon f ill!; ft!l'ler, Mr. Allred Slubb\elot ld; ar1ndo1rtnts. Mr. "'" Mri. C. Cir· -n. serv;c••• WednKdl'r. 1 •M, WtJ!clitf c11.111et. 1"1trmftll, 1>1cu1c vi.w Memori.1 P1rt;. Dll'9Clff bv We1rc11n Cnaffl Mtirtu.erv, '"'-'*'•· FIELDS last Wednesday in Los Angeles Federal Court, but another was ruled innocent. Judge 'Albert Stephen s agreed to a separate trial for Plinke, 2114 \V. Ocean Front. He the n tried Paul William Webrle, 45, Anaheim, and Gilbert Zamora, 11. Garden Grove, on the same charges. Zamora was ruled innocent. \Vehrle v:as found guilty and must return to court for sentencing April 14. U.S. Customs agent s ar- rested the trio· at Chino Airport last Dec. 9. They said they found 512 pound5 of un· processed marijuana -valued at $25.000 -sto\\•ed away in !Jleetings TU•SDAY Veter1n1 of World Wtr I & """ Min• ll1rr1t~• 12•9, Am!!rlc1n LHIOll Hill, WW. Ulh Sll'HT, Coslt MM1, t :OO p.m . POI ludc. lllalt/Y Club o1 NltWPorl llilbol, lr- vint Coa1t COllllllY Club,· lllOO t:. Coe1t Hl9hw1v: Cor~• del Mir, 6:lCI p./TI, Cost1 ~NltWPPrl H1rbor lloM Club, ~• V1f'OI Country Cli;b, (O•I• Mn1, •=• p.m. Bil~ 111, Llans Club, V1!!1 M1rlna, 10.U ll1v1;11e Ori,,., Newl>Orl Be.c:ll, I p.m. 5•~1 Be•ch lo111m,s!en Club, 101 llancll House. lliOO Pt<ifl< Cootl Hitl'IWll'. 7:00 P.m. Hunlltrv!cn lle1cn Elks LOOoe, flkt LOdve. IOI Oce1n A~enue. Hun1l1111on Beach. 7:lCI 11.rn. ~;etv for me Pr~serv1tl<>n & EMour· IOtlTl!'lll cf 111rbtr $hce> Ouerltl Slnolno In Amerlc1, NIWPo•I H1rb0!' Cll•cl~. ColleQe P1rk School, tlal Nclre Dame, Co1t1 Me11, 7:1S P.l'TI. O<!d Ft ll,,... LOCIM 'llJ, Odd FellOWS l em1>11!, ?'6 M1ln Str..et, Hunl!"91C>n !Nth. l :OU P.m. L 0.0.M. ~ ,l1Y. •3S f , 17th S!reet, Cost1 Mew. l ;lJ 1>.m. ll1lb<>e $kt Club, Ntw1>11r1&r l"n, New- oort ll•Kfl, I 1.m. Sea 1nd S..M AUcluban Sotlo"1, Spur- oaon Room, S1111, A"' Llb,.ry, tlll 1nd Ro11 Slreell, S..nt1 Ana, 7:)0 P.m. lllklii•d ~. Fi.ld1. J20I AlrN, HunH""· Ian llNCl'I. Vllo!llTloi. 1t Wllllt ""° Dav Mor1111rv, M1M1t1111 llt1cr., !•cm I lo t PM lod1V. Tuttdav. 1nfer.....,n! wlH ~ lltlCI 111 H1ml!IOI", onic. w ... 1. c'I" C""l>tl Mar1Vl•'r· '4e . .llll. lor· w1rdln1 directors. Or11>1t County ClllPler of !tit Dl ... btt.1 I H0<l11\0I" cf Swtllern C1lilor-ni1, Or1noe (0<;ntv He11!/\ Oapl., Ith •'Id Ron •t•e<>ts. S1nl1 Ant, I p.m. WEDNISD,1.Y Ca111 M•H·Or1110t Cool! l lon1 Club, Caif'I, 117 'E. lit~ $1-. COiia Mn1, 1 ..... BALTZ MORTUARIES Cortina del l\tar OR 3.9450 Cost. l\1esa f.0 g..!-424 BELL BROADIVAV MORTUARV llt Broadway, Costa l\tesa Ll 8-~33 DILDAY BROTHERS Rantincton Vallty l\fortuary 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach SU-7771 PACIFIC VIEW ft!EMO RIAL PARK Cemelery • l\fo rtuary Cba~I 350t P1ciflc View Drive Newport. Be1cb, Callforala 644-!700 PEEK .~A~llLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HO~IE 7801 80111 A\c. Weatmlastcr · Sftl·:S'!S SHEFFER MORTUARY Lapu 11<.n "'"'"' llO aemult: •tz.troo SMM'll'S AIORTUAR\' m Alall St. Q11.1tta(t11 Beacll LE U53t ll'ES'l1.'Llt"~ MO RTtJARV UT & 171b St., C..,. ~Ien 141~"3 ll lue Fl1rne Tot11mt•ltt1 Club, MIR VerOt Ccuntrv..., Clut:>, Cos11 MIH, 1 1.rn. Cc•I• Nirl's• 01>tlml11 Club. c .. 11 Ml"' Goll '"" Ccunlrv Club, llCI Golf CO<.lrl<I! Q,.v,. Costl MHI. lJ nace. Huntlnglon Bt•Ch E.cll1n9e Cluii. SMr.icn llt1cn In~. Hunt!nt1t0fl 11e1c~. 11 ""°" ADV'ER:TISEMENT lWh y Do 1¥ou Read · 1 So Slowly? A notPd publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple tech- 1 1 niq ue of rapid reading which should enable you to increase your re ading speed and yet re- tain much more . ~lost people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately. .,ccording to lhL<1 publisher. many people, regardle.s5 of lMlr presen1 reading skill, can use 1this simple technique to improve their reading ability lo a re- 11n11rkJlble degree. Whether read· ing stories. books, techni cal matter, it becomes pogslble to '!read sc.nlexes at 1 glance and entire pilges in seconds with I this method. To acqualn1 the. readers of thls newspaper with the easy· lo-follow rules for developing lrapld reading skill , the corn· pBny hu printed full detalla: or ii.'!: inttrellting self1.ralnlng method In a l'rf:W booklet. "HOYA' •IO Read Faster and Retain f.!ore," malled fttt. No obllga· 1 1 11on. Send your name, address. and tip l"Ode 10 : Rel'ldlng. I» Dlve:rsey, Dept. 30$.913. Chica · l go, £i0614 A postcard "'ill da. .I • Pay dividends At Newporl Ba lboa Savings, beginning April 1, your earnings of 5.00% start the day your funds are received and continue to every day earn EVERY day lhey are wilh us until the day of withdrawal. YOU r money In add ition. if funds are<eceived by us on or before the 10th of an y monlh and remain unl1I quarter's end. they earn daily is with us dividends from the first of thal monlh. . Our 5.00% passbook accounts are compounded daily and (a 11 n I g ht t 0 0) have a yield of 5.13% when maintained for one ye ar. Our 5.25% Bonus Accounts earn ~~o/o bonus each year above regular passbook rate when held for 3 years . So ... BRING MONEY to either of our convenient offices. e9NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION M .. n Office. 33&8 Vt. lido, NMoor1 BNc:h, C.tllf0t!'lll 92683, Phot'9: 71 4/873·3130 Coron• del Mw-O!Piot: ~..i P11i1. sso ~ Cttoter Of". 92&25, P'hoN: 71 4/6'4-1461 ,.A.1'.......,.C~oltN~d·~~,~ • • I ~- f •• de to r all, beau· For ·The Record : Dlvorces g. •11.•o l llt" ANM WILien •• A.-OM WI'- .,_\ '"'"' J. Meinr ... 111*'1 •. ~ ~ 0-• I!. Mel.,_ \Ill ••• ,, w . ..,._ '. l l"" (, W'ltlll VI Wlllltf'l'I ,ralld;t Wtltll!, Jr. • alr"dlto N, O•whttt VI Jl:IYl'M!Mf C. llU)oflh AM lle1t1 \Ill lttodllf'I' I,_, ··~ ') GtW""'' Jr. ..,. ''" Mert Mti;J"' VI Jolln """'"' t MtoK!ll'I le Vllf'l\t MM NIN'l'lt YI Al!WI 0. .. Hot ti. Olwl1 J, SM,. VI.._,,. C. S1'11 .. t l'-11 N, Nlml .... Al'-' L NlfD:4 ' Niii Niemi Kll11e YI Gitt! LI Vtrnt Klln1 • ' • IMTl•LOCUTOAY D•<l llt A/lnll ' Ma't HI~ YI Wlllll ll'I JllGMft H1m-. Ol•llY• M. W1lklr " Ttlorn11 w . "· W11k1r ·• E1tr1U!ll 0. Otha \fa Mld1rQ I'. • Dt hrr ' Ju1111!1 M. Portillo w e•11 M. I il>et1'111t HtM'I' Giimore YI J1m!1 Ott. G1'"*'9 "' Mll!l(Tflt lludl;leY \I'S Dt !m11 Ill. tualeY. Jr. # M1111'11 W.0.r VI l lllY )-'I W ...... " .JMll M¥1t L1"flt nl wa Gery WI VM LltblMir• • : ltrll Loll l'on.-. "'' Ctltl.lt ltu... M. ·-J 1Jcllltl Dlelle ltotWI VI AIYl11 Hffberl ... ~ NtllC't Cl'llover w Ju1n It, Cll1yer H1tel Ftlkn1r VI K111!\lf!I ~· ,. P1llmlr ,· J'1trlelti AM ArlT! VI ltobtrt Reu'*-'"W $1,,_•• l . O.Glov1nlll vs Mld\111 A. DIGIO\ll flftl ~ Joyu $. H1nn" vs Htr11"'1 Htm1 Hl nllffl Mlf'f•rtf E. Cd Collo 111 JIM Ct! Col lo l lll11n It. Gutl.,,._t VI Antonio G. Gutltrr11 GtrW>ldt A. l edts YI J01911ll J', "'" V111 Norm111 fr1k1r w Lurer.t Jt..,. Prt ktr Cr11._., I MJW vs H1n11d A. ••ulf' Wllll1m Artlllll' Cofft't, Jr, VI Jo ""'c-l 1rtMor1 It" CtlNlbl!I 111 Sttv111 t .. Clft'IJMll . Svslin J1Yne Ju,.. va It-lei Ctl'Yl ,_ . Cunnlt ltutll Vemon VI w11n1m Vemt11 Rull! H. Tt Ylllf' VI John c. TtYlor 0«11 Mftllnff 111 G-.i1 I!, """'"''' Kt lfltrlne Elt lnt St1w1rt vs Jt"'n Hutlon st-•rt Mt MI JI"" l°"""blrt Ill Wllll1m Hortce L-..1blf'V . Comtllt Ht rr••• YI Fi rmin 1tonnt1 H...,..,, 0.:W.ltiY H. Min.II YI ~ N. Mt~ll v 1.,1n11 c. J'rCIC!or VI Slw tri W. ··-Wlllltm C. •rt M""'t n VI Ntne'I' K. lrtt1111m1n J'rr1cl!l1 Joi-Mor11n w ••rrr A Mor11n ltob9rt A. 01t IUo 111 Kt lhlftn Ctle ..... Ctrtle I!. Ktlll'I' 111 Doritld M. Kt l"Y Frt !IClt A. Lt ... w J1rwt L. L- PR09'f L. Wood vs Tllomtt W. Wtod Alli.on e. Lov1l1n0' vs lltldle•O' w. Lovtland Tll1r111 Ktnton vs Hrrtltrt Ct!t I(.,.. ... OorothY Antltle l rl11 111 Mtt'lh1w Robert l rUt Chtrlt llllflt Prr/ VI Robert ltrrY '~ Mt~• Colt S'-mtP.1 vs NtU tlt11S111f S"""llr.I Moi•ll• F. Dtvl•b on YI Otn!tl l . 0111ld1111 Mtrlorlt KtY Mt11lro 111 J•t •ll Ma"'11 lollnt l irv-l'trl Ht mUICll'I VI Wlltltm lt1cll1n:I Ht mltlo!I AA.,.., E!IJtbtlti tltt !'ldl ll VI CMtllf' H. Rt ndtll C11r1111ne flttlr.lf' VI Allll\On'f l eek.,. Susan Mtrle Fotk1rt vs lu~ Alln Palktrl JUl'll M. °"" 1<1 IC-.th G. C." C1rol M. LN 111 LO!'MI Clu n Le. M1rlor!1 E1<tlY~ Oltlrldl v1 J•lln CUt'tCll'I Dltlrlcf'I Lindt Ct rtil MKAdlm ¥1 Jdln Alltn Mt "'-d1m Ktl' S•r•t111 VI 0111 Cl1rt ~••tut lilult! H. Grel,,... 111 Kelt!'I e. Grtlntr V/111 H. Moll«llt-¥l Gl11nn J. Mollitnltoo• ltMY J. Motlel' VI J1mes E. Mosltl' Lindi Louise IU!dlrson V'1 PTed Wllllt llttlchffOn T,,.,,,,, G. P'errln w Mirr Lou J'ffrln Wlllt1m Km! Com'fDn vs L111rtn1 A1<l1 C°"'plon M11<l1 Louise Nonn 1<1 Don11d J1m11 ,_ Cori M. Thr1Vi 111 l lltv G-Tllr11h ""'" H1lrn Slm1f111 111 Wtr~ f<Otl Sl"'t n:I Vlolt """ .. nbow YI Wllllem Jtim OM- Mlnnlt L. Glbton YI Arnold 0 . GlbMn E11111A G. GU!lltr 111 Elmer E. Gunlll' v1.,1n11 C•nd•t 111 Jolln C•ndH J11nn1 Merle Wood9tr vs Tlmelfly Tt,lln Wood9tr Julent I. COii 111 John I. Cox Oorotlw V. Ourlltl VI fl.otMrt N, .., . Dy•ll1t ~trft V. Mt lllllttle ¥1' Altlitl'llllt T. Mtlllnttlt ltontld RoY Wiii 111 JHn11Te Adrlen111 Will LYnM ANon:I .... OIYld A. AtYorO' GIOl'lt J M n Mtl"l,,,_11 VI JOl'lll H. MtrM1U, Jf'. fl.llltl M1r!1 H11tl'ln ¥1 Htreld tltont !d Huth es Otbrl E. L-I Ill Otvilf Hmrv LlllltI GIRLS • • • l AGES 4-12 WIN Many Valuable PRIZES IN HARBOR CENTER'S 2nd ANNUAL JWEEN ·AGE PRINCESS CONTUT CROWNING SAT., MARCH 22 - 1 :00 p.m. NA.Ml ••••••..•.••.••.•••• ADDWS •••••••••• ····••• ) PHONI •••••••••••• •. • • • •• ,.., .................... . "Ill Mn 11111 l"lllVl'l'I ft Gwtf'l'I Slulflti ef 01net .,_. MM•llnt '" 1'411'W' Ctri,.,.. JJM HAllOI I LYD. COSTA MU.A ~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------..... ,....,.;,...., ........... ~&±&t!lll•&•a .. 22&&&t•tt)ll ............ 1!1! .. _,z£11!1£!3131!!!1!12311£1!111!!111!!!!1!~.!!1.!1~Jll Twttda1, Mardi 18, 1969 • I ' • I c I I A ....... I __, -----~1-- COME SEE AND ENJOY THE BROADWAY-NEWPORT'S FESTIVAL OF ART featuring the wo. ks of Lag una Bea ch Artis ts in oils, mosaics, ceramics, sculpture end tapestries T~ursdoy, Fndey end Sot urdey Morch .20, 21 ond 22 ANAHEIM 44 4 N. Eucn~ US-1121 Mon. thru Sat. I 0 t .m. te 9:l0 •'"· NEWPORT NEW DIMENSIONS INCHES ADIEU Prettier proportions -inst antly yours with Warner's new Inches TM ••• control minded skimmer t hat ho ld wi th determined stretch for stroemlined comfort control. You'll love !he eeso of fit thet comes from specially designed comfort zones ... no more girdle bind. In white. Choose the long leg pontie, s-m·l-xl, 15.00: contour bro , J2.J6 B·C, 5.00: Gird le. s-m·l-xl , I J.50. Mail and telep hone orders invi ted. Found at ions, 19 MEET WARNER STYLISTS Just for you we offer expert consuletio n on figure flettery tomorrow end Thursdoy in our Huntington Beech foundations deportme nt. HUNTI NGTON BEACH 47 Fathion l•lend 644-12 12 7777 Edin9er A•.. 192-l ll I Mon. thtu Sat. Mon. thru Fri. I 0 t .m. to 9:10 p.m. S..t. I 0 a.m. to 6 ,,.m. 10 a.m. to ':10 d "'· OAIL Y 'ILOT fl ! I I ' ' J 8 DAILY "LOT ($) TotJd.,., M#dl 11, 1'169 Far Out ltavestmeiats -2 Coins Can Turn a Profit BJ SYLVIA PORTER Jfow \\'OUld you like lO buy an ordinary 196f 50 cent piece for twice ils face value? Or a 1940 quarter for $'1.50 -30 times !Ls face value? Or a 19SO nickel for $14.SO -290 times Its face value? Or a 1909 penny for $3.50 - 350 tlmes its face value? 11!E REASON why !he 50 cent piece costs $( is that it's a Kennedy hall-dollar ond at today's free market price or .silver, more than 70 cents worth of sUver is in this coin (the last run of silver coiM minted in Uti3 country). The reason why the quartet stll!I for $7.SO is that il is all silver, has never been ASSISTANT VP Hugh Ounnion Dunnion Mov es Up Hugh R. Dunnion of El Toro has been promoted to assis- tant vice president with the Laguna Beach branch of Security Pacific Na lion a I Bank. lJe succeeds assistant ... vice president John \ R • Jenkins. Y.'ho has been given a divisional assignment. Dunnion, a former assistant manager of lhe Newport Beach branch, has been with Securily Pacific Bank since 1961, when he moved to California from his native New Jme)r. He has been a bank officer since 1963. He is a former accounlant for the Newark Housing Authority. He has been active in Otamber of Commerce and Kiwanis Club work. PAN PACIFIC 9EVERLT AT FAIRFAX Wlll<llAYS ISATl/RDAYSf "'"1l•YS 2-!0!30 12·10:30 J2·9 P.M. • circulated and is In t.1~11,nl condition. 'Ille txplanation for the fl4.50 nlck.el b that this batch of nlcke.ls was minted ia Denver in very limited qua& tlties and most of them were supposed to have been bought up years ago by • small group oI coin sptculator1. AND TllE ei:planation for ~igh-prictd penny is that 1909 was the first yw the Lincoln penny was issued and thw it carried the intials of its designer, Victor D. Bren- ner. Just la the past hall-decade there has been a phenomenal upsurge in the values of many types of coim -and some astute collectors among the nation'• estimated 10 million have seen the value of their holdings double or triple. To illustrate: Only two years ago, the retail price of an ordinary, unci.rculated $20 U.S. gold piece was $46. At lhe end of 1968, it was $75 -and large numbers ol double eagles are rumored being amuggted into this country to meet the demand. even at that premium price. One reason for the price rise is that during the Arab-Israeli war many Arab potentates turned their •·Joose change" into gold pieces, thereby creating a e v e r e worldwide shortages and leading to sharp price rises. IN ltst an 1904 silver dollar -one of the coin collector's big prizes -sold for $10,000. By 1961, the price was up to $29,000 and by 1967. the last time one of these ultra· rare coins came onto the market, the price reached $45,000. The going rate for an ordinary used, recently· minted silver dollar today is 12.50, Jn 1963, one gold Roman coin dating to 69 A.I:>. had a book value af $280. Three years later, in 1966, this coin sold for $2,900. Other "choice" Greek and Roman coins have risen 100 times or more in value since the early 1960s. \Vhat are the chances that the ciga r box full of coll ected coim left by one of your ancestors is worth millions? "TUE TYPICAL amateur's coin collection," says Joseph Rose, manager of the coin department of M a n f r a , Tordella and Brookes, Inc .• a top New York coin dealer, "is an accumulation, not a C1>lleclion. It's 90 percent junk.·• Check Plan Splits Markets However, if you bave reason to believe you may own I See by Today's Want Ads e Wedding Belles: June ia: coming. and so are the brides: here are time and mo ney Moving. and still beauli1ul. oulti11 to wear , ••• ·world ta- mou.deitigner, Kahill, de- 11igned this g<>Y•n and maL dting head dress, in size 10, lor only $j(), ••• /I not~ er gown, 1>izr 5, cusl $250 originally, \Viii JlO"'' .sacri- fice for $65! ! e IUDE-A-\VAY \Vmt ME: Jn this plush apartment, on the ocean aide ot highway In Corona di!! Mar. Penon- aUty plus Includes avocado ~hag carpeta, avocado builtlrul, beam ceilings, breakfast bar, 23' • cokir TV, p&Uo and smaU gar- drn. Two ~rooms, all newly decor.led. Ytarly lease $195. By JANICE BERMAN Of ,,,. 0111r PU01 t1'tl A new check-cashing service for supermarket customers is being met with mixed reac· tioos among area food store operators. Called Welcome Check. the computerized service will be operational by the end of April ln local branches of Thrif. timart, Sare,vay, Alpna Beta and Vons. Among the food chains ab· stainin g from the new pro- gram is Albertson's, whi ch has put a sign in the window of each store to tell the public that it is not going along with the system, which lt has dub- bed ''Big Brother.'' Albert.son's, says each sign, will CQntinue lo give its customers personal c h e e k cashing service. Area supennarket managers v.·ho are instituting the plan are hoping it v.i,U spell lhe end of the v.•aves of bad checl:s -500.000 in Southern California last year -that deluge and drain in1permarkets, often forcing them to raise priees to cover their losses. ~ business or checks cash- ed -and bounced -by customers Is shrouded in secrecy, as are plans ror the changeover to a centralized service. One store manager . who did not wish to be iden~ tifed, said market officials are confident that \\1elcome Check will cut bad-check K>sses in their JOO.Store chain, which now amount to roughly 42,000 checks returned marked "un-- paid" each year, for a finan· FAVORITES Natienol end lo,al road•r· 1hip poll • pto"• tho DAILY PILOT 'ofTi •1 some ef tho '"e1t ,apulor t olu11"1111 an.I f.1tllro1 ovaltoblo te ony now1plptt in tho Unlto• St•t••· cial loss of about $1 ,350,000. Welcome check ils a servlce of Telecredit, Inc., wh.ich keeps check cashing records on more than ten million Cali- fornians stored in the memory banks of its N·o IBM 360 computers In Century City. The program will replace existing check cashing systems of all !l ub s cribing supermarkets. The one-Lime charge to each supermarket has been estimated b y Thomas A. Clark of Tel&-redit at between $400 and $900 per store, depending upon the number of outlel s installed. Each customer \viii pay ten cents per check, and may cash personal checks up to $25, or pay for groceries by check, or both. Telecredlt President Lee A. Ault 111 says that \Velcome CIJC<'k customers \\·\ll now be able to cash checks in nearly 900 stores. and v•ill find the new ~ervice speedy. Ault claims the system "wilt help supermarkets hold the line in an era of spiraling prices." lie adds th a l Telecredit assumes complete responsibility for all <'hecks cashed under Welcome Check. one and one-half million- check-cashing credentials, in the form or plastic cards. will be mailed to Southern Califo.-· nians who have applied for them by supplying such data as name. address, birthdaU, driver's liceme number, social security number and types or checks lo be cashed personal, payroll or govern· mtT!t agency. \Vhen a customer appli~ for a card, lhe data is red into the computers, compared with ex.isling m:ord.'i, aod stored. The uisUng records, ttc- cording to Telecredit's Clark are obtained this WlilY: "Say a woman buys r;omething al Saks on Wililhltt. She. writes a check for Jt, ~UTU ASSETS OVER $•25,000,000.00 HEADOFFJCE 315 Eest Co5cndo Bout.v• Paaadet .. Cafffomta·•t109 INGS • DA TE Of ecEJll!r 'l'Qlf».Tl 9f WITHDRAW Al .. • • '• • • • ' • ' ' • • • • . • i Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York 1.1"""1, Mmh 17, IW) 11 Stock Exchange Li~t "*·' llllJll ""' 0.. """' .... .. "'I"" 11~ ~I -"' "[i'I" I"' ,, tt~ 11~ I \It -\t I ' .... 144 !51 1"'.o Tl\t t C:.-t -M USJhti 1+1\tlllll -frttil'• ........ ~---------------------~~~-~~----- • List f l I I ! I i • -. t°! DAll,V PILOT • I -·-r·tj ·1sc60Nt · SUPERMARKETS ' ' ~SEVEN ••G S4LE DAYS March 19 ·,hria 25 ~ .. . . EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT . PRICES -• ~ ~ • . . ••• .. . . . . . .-... Whole Body CUT-UP , , , 35c lb . CHICKEN ' PARTS BREASTS ·U.S.D.A. Choice PORK1 ·CHOPS O.S.D.A. Choice Boneless . ' . R·o,U.ND 79 STEAK 98 :S.LICED STEAK·.u:~.~.~T ~ T-80.NE ~ BAC.ON U.S.D.A. Choice U.S.D.A. Choice c GROUND BEE·F Fresh Te111pt111g·Fre~lt •; Golden Ripe . · .· /:· "CHIQUITA" * ~-.©BANANAS RA e CORN lb STEAK· :LB. STEA.K1 $129 Solid Fresh Green . ' LB~ CABBAGE •• TOTAL PAPER BACK DISCOUNT BOOKS on all 100/oOFF HEALTH & -BEAUTY AIDS REG. RETAIL PRICE .' -• 'IOOUJJllJ§ ~ 'QYIOO'll§ Van de Karn p's HOLLAND DUTCH BAKERY WlllffllDW\YPWW King Size CIGARETTES $294 Plus Tax Per Carton Sweet, Tender, Fresh CARROTS . . BANANA SQUASH fllESH DELl~IOUS c lb c lb " ' -c I lb c Jb DISCOUNT FROZEN FOODS DISCOUNT DELI. & DAIRY BANQUET DINNERS ;: 31¢ BISCUITS ~:::':~."rkfl" • ..,.,..,1 -,. pad< -l •L MEAT PIES :~:::.-'""'' 18¢ LUNCH MEATS Ol1tll•"' $-<II. pkfl. HI. pllf. DAS V•n •• K1m,'1 36¢ CHEESE A•P ENCHILA llfff, (llff1t. Cllk Mlll l•a . C/1-SprN• 1\.1 ...... k •• APPLE PIES ~::::: ... 69¢ MARGARINE ........ 1·111. pllf. POTATOES :~~:,rm 99¢ 8¢ 26¢ 89¢ 16¢ 31¢ DISCOUNT HOUSEHOLD DISINFECTANT r::. ~ •• STEEL WOOL PADS .';•;:;,,,, FABRIC SOFTE·NER :::.;: '""" CLEANER .,,._,,,. DISCOUNT PAPER 33¢ PAPER NAPKINS ~:.;::.. . 9¢ 56¢ TOILET TISSUE ·"~, ':!~"'· 21¢ 29¢ TOILET TISSUE £.~"··· 26¢ 79¢ WAX PAPER ,',;',,'.'~,, 26¢ 66¢ ALUMINUM FOIL .-:.~·:;.·.~ ... 24¢ FIRESIDE SALTIN'E CRACKERS 1~~; . GERBE,R'S STRAINED BA·BY FOOD 22¢ 10¢e .. COTTAGE CHEESE AO P Ont plnl DISCOUNT FLOUR & SALT DISCOUNT COFFEE & CREAMERS 51 ¢ CF•lt.,_Hlltl--MJl -M•j..M H ... 1....avttitn1vll 39¢ COFFEE . ;.:-: ... •K "' "" 68c 65,. COFFEE .·~;'":.::• 59¢ 9; TEA BAGS ::;:,• 89¢ ll¢ COFfEEMATE "~""' ,., 1.09 DlscoUNf MEXltlN srECIALml!s DISCOUNT SAUCE TOMATO SAUCE :!::1'~" 9~ SilAK SAUCE ~.c;~,t:.~·~::~i•• 44¢ MUT SAUCE t;:~ . ..,,. 62¢ SPAGHEITI SAU(E ,\::7:.... 24¢ CA TSUP ~~:.=. ..... 24¢ DISCOUNT IABY AlOD REFRIED BEANS ~::::::. "'"" 21 ¢ MENUDO ~:-.;:· ... "" 45¢ FLOUR ~'.."-"'"' 1 19 RED SPANISH SAUCE t:~;;:~:'.. 32¢ PANOCHA ~~ "' 29¢ DISCOUNT VEGETABLES · Gi.nl Jilt DISCOUNT PET FOOD CAT CHOW :~: .. SKIPPY "~· , ....... DOG CHOW ~:.:.:. 14¢ 89¢ 1¢· 16¢ t.29 DISCOUNT cERElL5 WHEATIES ·~·"" '""' 48" L1r .. IHI. l'ICI· ,, CORN RAKES ~~":'.~.. ... 38¢ OATS ~~.~·~ ... •r ou;a 29~ WHEAT GERM ~::~:::: ,.. 42¢ (REAM of WHEAT ~:-:;;·.~.·;..~'. 45¢ ' DISCOUNT 01LS a. sRolftAINGs blstOUNT FISH & ClNNED MElfS WESSON OIL "~· ••• ~·" SALAD OIL ::~::·~.~. CORN OIL :-::::· .. ,,, SHORTENING ~~ ·.~.·:::. OUYE OIL ......... ,.,,,." .. ' 1' .. l . !In 89" TUNA '"'"" "· .. "' 38" ,, C~utlll lltl!I -•I ,.. 31 ¢ CORNfD BEEF ~~-:"::. 63¢ 69~ CORNED BEEF HASH ,';'!!•;:. 45¢ 56¢ VIENNA SAUSAGE ;.~·:" 25¢ 81 ¢ CHKKEN ::'.'.":::-'-38¢ blscoONT PleRus " DRESSING DlscoUNT FIUITs & JOleEs _ STRAINED BABY FOOD ""~ "" 9¢ 21 ¢ SALAD DRESSING :;;:..:;;~~.. 55¢ APPLESAUCE t::::"~~· -26¢ .. . ---------....__.. ____ _ ' 32¢ DUNCAN HIN~S CAKE MIX Reg. Pkg. ---. -----·--------------BLUE GINGHAM LIQUID-of. Si<e .. FOR DETERGENT DISHES 29¢ -. ---- . ----~----- DICARLO BREAD I lb. Loaf ---------~ 23~ 39¢ -·----.. --____ .,_ . --- SPRINGFIELD DETERGENT •o ::.';t,. -----2 -------- VAN BRODE _ SlMILAC ~~:· 26¢ TOMATOES ~:r::i , .. CUT BEETS ~~·: .. AS Del M.,.le 18¢ MAYONNAISE :::~ \::" 58¢ 23¢ SALAD DRESS!NG :::~:~~ 43¢ FRU:T COCKT'AIL ~~. '" "' a8¢ CORN FLAKES ::;: -- 18¢ 98¢ 'lf-llLAC ::." • .... 59¢ ~BABY FOOD ,_., 10¢ DICPPED BABY FOOD • ...,., 16¢ • ·- • • ~ . I • • PE l~rlf G•""91 Ml c·~ PORK and BEANS ~~":E:~ CHIU BEANS ~:;;.:_.,, '" 16¢ ICfBERG DILL STlCKS ::z ... :.~~~ ... 63¢ 29~ ITAUAN DRIDING' ~·=.:.. 36¢ DISCOUNt SUPERMARKETS I GRAPURUIT JUICE ~:;::"'-46¢ _,, ·-. ·-. -----~ CHEESE SPREAD TANG ~":::: ,.o;:.i:. 93" lrt-~!~·I Or""' ,, VEGETABLE COCKTAIL z~ ~" 36¢ VELVEETA 2 lb. Carton 19th & HARBOR STORE HOURS: Mon. lhru Sal. 10 a.m .. 9 p.m. COSTA MESA Sun 10 a.m. • 7 p.m . ., . . . .•. . ...... ' ?' • f .. I b •. ' , li • ' , I • I I I I ,. • l . ' • l 3 .. • ' .. .. r . ' JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 T11t11N1, MoWU 11. Ud J ,.,. U ·Coffee Brews. For Pros ··pects ••come and have coffee" is the invitation being issued ·by Mrs. Robert Mar.ten in Fountain Valley. '.The me1nbership chairman of South Coast Junior \Von1an '!I Club is ~rested jn entertaining womep between the ages of 18 and 3S, and 8Y hand to greet them will be members of the club and its board of directors. The iaformal coffee will take place at 8 p.m. Monday, April 7, in ?.I.rs. Marten's Fountain Valley home. During the gathering inforril.ation regarding the club's acli· vi ties, goals ··and philanthropies will be explained. All women in the area who are interested in the club are invited to call Mrs. Marten, 968-1961, for additional information. Club members wi ll attend the Los Cerritos District convention in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana, taking, place Friday and Saturday, April 18 and 19. Mrs. ·William Hayes, charter president of the area club, '\_Vill be among those represented. The club recenUy donated iwo flags to the Robert Gisler School 1n Fountain Valley. . A United States flag and a California state flag were presented by hirs. Larry Long, Am.ericanism chairman. The club also is sponsoring a block parent program in the Arcvelos Elementary School attendance boundaries. Mrs. j]eorge O'Hare and Mrs. Carlson Nippe! are coordinating the program \Vhich 'vill provide homes in each block for youngsters who might be<:ome lost or frightened. • IT'S READY -Pouring coffee for prospective members will be {left to right) Mrs. Robert Somma, Airs. Lloyd Satterhwaite and r.1rs. Robert ~1arten , membership chairman of the South Coasl ' . ' Junior Woman's Club. The group invites area women between 18 and 35 to the event taking place Monday, April 7. THIS IS THE PLACE -Children in the Arevelos School district in Fountain Valley are being in- structed to look for the Merry Sunshine lace in the hon1e of an area block parent in case oI trouble. Mrs. Carlson Nippel and Mrs. Georgf O'Hare {Jett to right) show the sign to Denise Watennan and Coleen O'l-Iare. The program is sponsored by South Coast Junior \Voman's Club. OUTSTANDING ENTRY -Arny Honda (left) receives encouragement from A-lrs. Lloyd Satterthwaite as she contemplates her essay for Los Cerritos District competition taking place Saturday, ApriJ 19. • .Girl's Gripe Could Be Uplifting With Right Support DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every lime J pick up a magaz.ine I read an ad· vertl8tment that says, "t•crease your bwtline in two weeks" or "How to add rrom two to four inches of feminine charm." I could cry. Why don't they adv~5e something that vdll decrease the mea~urements , or the girl who has too much up there? l am II years old and have "'I 44 , bust. Can you imagine what I'll look ' like in to years if I continue to grov.·? I tried exercise and it dkln 'l help. Pltase don't su11eest an op<eratlon. The thought of 1 knife scares me. Ill tttt?re anything else 1 can do? -BOWLING GREEN, KY. DEAR B.G.: A 44 bust Isn 't nece111ar~ ly 1 handicap Ir It'• on the proper frame. In racl. a girl on Wall Street drew quite a crowd wilh hen. You dOl't say how tall you are or how much ynu "elgb. If you ire overweight, 1 diet would of course reduce. your buslllnc alone with the rc1t ol you. Try It DEAR ANN LANDERS : Recently I rtad thot suicide Is the Number Six Clluse or death In lhe U.S. \Vhy is this so? can you explain why !JO many people l'.'OU ld want to des tro y themselvc!'? And \\'hat about the close relatives or sulcldc victims? ltow can they go on llvlng no rmal lives fetllng lhat perhaps they could have prevented the suicide? -FA ITllFU L READEU , ANN LANDERS DEA n READER: Tbe lnsUnct for self prucn1thtn 11 Lbe mNt·compellia1 drfve or all normal anlm1Js, lacludln1 the humaa animal. The dnlre AOt to J:ve Is C!(lnlrary lo human nalurt. J\IOIC people who )ID themscl\lfl tie to during a period ol deep depre11lon. 'l'htq ~pie aM not ratJonal. SuJckle yfetJm1 whose mental proces1et lrave bte11 der11led by alcohol or druic• llkewlle caanot be con- l!ldertd ratlOn.111. ne guilt •• well ., tltt irltf or &be 1ulclde'1 t:lott ttl1Uves cu be an enorrn0\i3 burden. All 1utboriUcs 1''1th whom I have consult.ttl 1gnc: tbat 1 suicidal patten 11 developed early bt lite. Sometimes th1::rapy can dl•sl,p11te lh l1 drive. Generally speaking, tlM ln- dlvfdual who 11 bent fl 1elf-4ie~ln1ctfftft will find 1 ~·11 to end his llfe 111d no friend or relntlve can prevent ft. Dli:All ANN LANDERS ' My molhcr·ln- law Is an attractive divorcee and cookl pass for 30, al1.hough she is JO years t.1lder . Please don't tell me to ti.f Y 0 B becnuse my 16-year-old brolhcr-ln-law la involved and J am very fond or him. fl.ly mother-in-law calls the boy from another rooin to hand her a towel when she Is in the shower. She walks around the apartment in a br1 ond panties. She sleeps nude. 1 thlnk you get the idea. The lad Is uncomfortable about his mo~'s behlvior ·and has rnentloncd it to my husband. _,ho doetn't want to "gtt Involved." \\'hat should be done! -J.r .H. D~R J.: Tbe b.d' mtnUGntd It to the wron11 penOfl. ne 1htt11d tell llla mo&her bow lie fttlt abeat '-et lru· modesty. Sample 1e•&.eKe 11 nse h caa't Hod die words: "~fit, I'm 1ot Z·yeatM>ld. Ple11e pul on IOme cletbts." Unconscloo1t ·ffductlon by partnts can creote serious problems, partlcul11ly for Utna:en. \Vhnt lJ French kissing? Is It w:ronat Who should set the necking lhnlts - the boy or the girl! Can a sholgua wedding ~uctted? Read Ann I.:anders' booklet, "TeMage Sel -Ten W1y1 to Cool Jl" Send 50 ctnts In coin and a Iona. self-n1ktreit11....t, Mamned envelope. Ann Landert wW be 1J1d lo help you with your problems. Send them to her IR' car.t ol the DATt Y P,JLOT enclosing a stamped, 1ell·addresa:ed envelope. J I I j ----------------------------------------------.,.--------------I J 4 DAil Y 'ILO'I -· Horoscope Ca t;ricorn: Accerit • on Home WEDNESDAY MARCH 19 By ~NEY OMAllR "The Wise man controla bis destlny • • . AllroloiY points the way." AJUllS (March n-April II): Cytle J1 peak. Yoo ...Wia, receive accolade . Cl!tumltances· tum In Y"" favor. TUn1ng improves. Give attenUQO to apparel. You may be called upoo to make personal appearance. TAURUS (Aprll 2C).May IO): Much occura behind \he scenes. Be careful in what ·you say, write. Key ls dilcre- Uon. Some HCrtt fears 'C<llne to fore. Analyze them. Accent maturity. Problems are due to dissolve. GEMINI (May 21.Jip>e II)' Sateas on how to pleue Crlends who hold divergent viewa. Be flnlble -maintain unae of hum.or. Your desires can become reaUUes. Key ls to know bow much to request. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Accept responsibility. You can gain admiration, promotion if you follow through on obllga- Uons. Means don't skip buic. duties. Ambition can be fulfill· ed; gain family backing. LEO (July 23-Au1. 22 ): Flowers Arranged for New League Members Selecting flowers for the Women'9 Areh).tect~al Gesler 8nd John Hamilton of Orarrge and I\1rs . Favorable lunar aspect todaf coincides with g re a t e r recognition of efforts. Perceive meaninp -some are very subtle. Obtain hint from TAURUS mesaqe. A message arrives and solves dilemma. League of Orange County's membership luncheon on Arthur Danielian of NeWport Beach. The league March 20 are (left to right) Mrs. James Sink, Mrs. sponsors high school awards compeUtion. scholar· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Straighten accounts. Check in· ventory. Balance budget. Talk over finances with mate, partner. 1'foney matters dominate. You get chance to prove worth. Realize one in Cared Smith and Mrs. Dell Williams, whose Corona shi ps and a fund-raising home tour. Luncheon in- del Mar home will be the setting. Mrs. Perry Bal>-formation may be received by calling Mrs . Bab- cock and Mrs. Williams are e<>-ebairmen. New cock at 543-8945. members to be honored are the Mmes. Michael Restauranteur-author Honored by NB. Friends ' i ( Robert Lawrence Baher will be honored by Ne\\·port Beach l''riends of the Library during a CQffee next Thursday. Balzer, who bas many ' diversifid interests, bas been awarded a $10,000 first prtz.e for Kaiser's Men's Cook4il in Honolulu and the Holiday magazine's disilnctive Dlning Restaurant award for his Tirol restaurant in Idyllwild. lltanager of Villa Fontana. feiint vein, his book called "Beyond Conflict" is a n • a u t obiograpbical narrative and exposition of Buddhist ,. pbilosophy. A teacher, photographer and painter, \be honored guest also ttceived a decoration of "commander" of the Royal Order of Sahametrei in Cam· bodla which was bestowed by Prince Norodom Sihanouk, The coUee will take pla~ Urged· Volunteers To Give Services Do you enjoy directing plays or leading group discussions? Is bridge your game or does art dra'v you? Would you like to tune in on a musical group? If any of these activities interest you and you have a few hours to spare, the Mental Health Association needs your help. Volunteers are needed for the three Orange County Community Activity Centers providing on-going therapy for persons released from mental hospitals in need of continuing aid and companionship during their rehabilitaUon. Graduates Invited To Reunion Plans for a IO-year reunion and dinner dance are being' fonnulated by mf.Jllbers of the 1969 graduating class o f ,,,lontebello Se.nior High School. Area residents who attended the school and are not presently on the mailing lbt are invited to aend thW' ad- dress to Mrs. Gary Eytchl!on, 10760 S. Vk,Wa Ave .. Wllit· tier. Deadline tor reservations will be May 23 for the reunion taking place in the Dl!neyland Hotel on June 21. 1be evening Santa Ana and consultant to the Pau1 Masson vineyards. Balter also has authortd many books on the pleasures of dining. ln a completely dif· chief of state. I In the SborecUU home of Mrs. Richard Bertea. Co-ho~tea.!les are the Mmes. R. A. Pang, Stanley LeLievre, Peter Dobbs and Fred Elli!. • Beginni!lg Monday, ~larch 24, ·there will be a week-long training class for individuals interested in v.·orking in this new and vital program. Applications .may be obtained by visiting the Mental Health Association of ,Orange County, 2215 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, or phoning 547-7559. if will beJin at 6 p.m. with a #. social hour followed by 1 prime rib dinner at 7:SO p.m. South Coast Juniors Light Three Candles Soulh Coast Junior Woman's Club will celebrate its third birthday aod Federation Night during a meeUng Tuesday, 1'1arch 25, in the Peek Family Colonial Terrace R o o m , \\'estminster. coordinator of La Mirada Ebells, Juniors sponsoring . club. The theme to be carried out will be that of Juniors 11 president Mrs. Bond Loveliness From a Fountain A new seven-day trai ning class. developed to help the volunteer be- come more self-confident in preparation to working \Vith people with emo- tional disturbances. also has been ·developed. In addition to the activity center, volunteers are needed to aid in occupational therapy rooms and recreation programs and outings for patients in the psychiatric unit of Orange County Medical Center. Since grooming is another vital facet to socia1 rehabilitation of the mentally ill, hairdressers and barbers \Vho will donate their time are vital· ly needed. Individuals \ViShing to serve in the Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention Center or the Parent-Child Clinic in the ?rtedica1 Center are giv- en a special two-'''eek training program. Mrs. Hal Lehman, chairman of volunteer services. also has stressed a need for Spanish-speaking persons in all phases of the programs and typing and clerical assistants in the l\·JHA office. Tickets tor the affair, at $9 each, may be obtained by mailing a check to Mrs. C. L. (McC!ellen) Klutts; !OCMl3 LaCima Dr .. Whittler. A con- flnnatlon. will be rilalled those planninc to attend. and the tickets wilt be held at the I dZimelight ) On Bosses Invited lo join lhe Fountain Valley Junior club are all district officers and chairmen, club presideots and members from Los Cerritos District. Thompson : Reflections o f l of Understanding. """"""" _ _... Committee members Include Bosses and civic leaders wUI again be treated like kings when Business and Professional Women's Club of Laguna Stach ho611 its aMual diMer next Thursday in 1be Towers restaurant. Guests attending will includi the Mmes. Jack Thomas, general dist r i cl president; \Villiam Hayes, di.strict preal· dent and charter member of South Coast Juniors; Ronald Haase, president of La Mirada Ebells, and John Mignot, lht Mmes. L I o y d Sat· t er t hwalte. refreshment&; James Stalcup, name tact: Dick Trodick, invitations, Paul Johnson. Thompson, !lfaurice Donahue. Andrew Edward•, Jon McKibben. Robert Som- ma. Larry Long, Oeorge O'Hart, Frank Fleck, Ronald Dotforn and Robert Chapman. Florist , Artist Chosen Gallery Exhibit For BetrotH Revealed ' Sculptor Shows Art w ........ Sleeping Blas ••dspreads Blankets a11d Rugs • ' Mrs. Florin Martin, vice presldent, is m a k J n g ar· rangements for the annual event, and Mrs. E d n 1 Cannlchael. 494-2665, ia in charge ol retervatlont. Committee women include the Mmes. Albert Cornelius, Betty Myers, Delbert Trout· man, W.D. Trotter, Gladys ~1cA!ee, Harold Daily. Vtlata Warde, Albert True1 and Miu Dorothy Roetter. 1wir:s. Emily Stricker, club presiden1. ''"Iii preside at the meeting and welcome guests. (Ad'nrliM"*IO Grandmother's ad vice can get yoa in a lot of troahle • A mild little hand lotion \\'orked wonders for grandmother-but if you expect it to cope with today's l:illcr cleaner•, you 're laking the life of rour skin in your hands. \'edra i:s the hand lo- tion up lo today'• clean- ets. Aloe, the desert's moieturi.zih& plant, helps restore what cleaners strip away. \"edra Lotion, LOO, Crum I.SO. . ' • Your style 'ls your own; you Tl oroet l'td"'°' O!Nlrr'9 ...... • bocll<I••• (Pie Tr!illl'I AMiii A.""'9t\', i """" 50 c..m t1 Oflllrr hdlltt, tfl9 DAILY ,It.OT, ... J240, Or•llll C•t"P are 1n innovator. Project ""'"""'begun begins to grow. tr .. S"llon, ff..., York. N.Y. !0017. Virginia To Marry Ruth Hogan • Newport J.n ' • Sew Fabrics .from Singer and SAVE. $122 yd. Ondulay by Sincer. Cout urier look for after~S dresses. 74 ~~ rayon, 26'0 acetate. 44/45" wide. Reg, $1.98 Bellf Glade Dots by Singer. Easy.care, wrinkle re- sistant. Solids to coordinate. 55% cotton, 45% Cupioni rayon. 45" wide. Reg. $1.59 to $1.79 yd. Country Cloth by Singer. Texlured cotton ond poly. ester blend-great for children's clothes and sports- wear. 50% polyester, 50% cotton. 45• wide. Rec. $1.79 yd. ltllori nt111_fe,1.,......, r, ot SI NCilll 1..,1• s·INGER For t11ep11on1 1111111b!r 01 store n11mt YI*. st1 wh1tt 1111e1 ~ndtr SlltW COfUAll'f , .. • IUIH A!lk auo 0n Th• Man TA, •tuo ·-...... (er,fff fAfilllTA Al'lt. -·-*W,4'l!ISI. kl 2·ttlJ ' t ' I ,, I: 7, 1:1 - I t< .,, .. lD:< II I T U E SDAY MARCH 11 ""' .. "" ... -(C) (IO) ,.,., ....,.,, B 1!11 •-·'"'"" (C) !301 0 stm All• Dow (C) (90) JKk .iJlitrtton, ~ce Jiiison. Tht Cr1l1 H11ndlt1 Trio, lrwln C. Walson sues!., fJ SJ,1( O'Otd: Mwll: "stl(IC:Ndl • Ductf'•· ltoct" (western) '62- Mlitit Lllld.l11, JodJ ltwrtnct.. 01 ... (C) (IO) m"' .... (C) c30> Q)lalltll (C) (30) @fI) Mn lriffi11 (C) mn.rs lftw! (30) "\Jnfttd ,. •. lions tnterpreten.n Two children fiM out flOw ena:lneen ind inlor· OJet8rs provide U.H. dtltcates with insl.lnt irrt&rpre!alions of spteehes. Oil Multns Sil Amw (fJ IPUI' Jhn (CJ t :lOOMIC '9twwrki' (C) ((i()l m I LM \.llq (30) ];00 IJ CIS Ewtlinf llM (C) (30) Walter Crunkilt. 0 WMt's My li111? (C) (JO) m~ (C) (30) lj)@-(C) II DAVE BRUBECK with * RAMSEY LEWIS Trio! WORLD'S finest JAZZ! PEANUTS PERKltojS !-;;~ f i' gs..... 5 (C) (60) · "Jm f.'t Showcut." DIYt Bnd>ed: and' Rim-fl· ~y Ltwil 111 fqturelll. r m .. r.r , .. u. <Cl <00>: (~ 3 fl!l Nl'f ,..... (60) ......... vlch.N A llami11t-pnxlllCld docvnten- tary • the Uf1 nd IQ\ of ... of ttle worfd'I lfl't9lt COlllPl)lln, The &4-yew-old composer b Mii irl filmed musical performu1cts. s1ins, 1rchiv1 s:enic metfrial and racent documentary foot11t. I!>"""'- t j .// fP 11r1e F..a cw <30> 11111110:1111 u am'° MimMI IC> <GD> Ch1ht prepares wddles at ltmb. Mikt Wilrtcc alld ii11ry Jl•IOllll' 9 (fJ Tiii .... ""9 (C) report. em-{Cl c60l 7;308!ifl(])U11car (C) (60) Tetr..a finds herself bllCOming romantically involml Jrith • youn1 outlaw wtio helps IMf ~ape lftl!f she has beefl kidneped tor 111ntom by 1 ian1 headed by hi1 f1tl11rr. Martin Sllr11n iuests II Andy Blake'. 0 lil'J ~ !ll ""'1 ... (t) (60) 0 ,..,...., Dllol (30) 6) DEIVT The ""' So1~d (C) (JO) Ray PeteQOll hosts. Doney Burnett iuests. lc::::r:c::::-:::==:r::JII[ '!'7(::::;~ - f]l llact ~1 (30) A 111nel .:: ®l of local blKk IWWSl!ltn question BACK 'TO RKiJ.IT, PAT·· 1 BETTl{AT (onl!'essmt11 AlpOOnzo Btll, who is 7H5 SCENE WAS ONE" sr. PArRtCK1S DAY i ~trn:-\;;::c runntnt for mtJOI'. OFTH~ MU<E,LL fJE.VeR f~ET! iD 0idlc1 hlMdl Ci<:JM!i, J..IUJ..I, 8 What is PIZZAZl? lO:lOBMoria: "Mid Dtc Coll" <II~•> MooN? * car·1 Reiner, and '61-.lotln Ollncll•. KIJ DoubliKlaJ. lt;:~si:;; Michele Lee host !hi• m-l<> (30) II Festive TIMEX Special fll--,..., •• ,._ .. (30) E o9oo mmrnm.....,. 111 -•-~ fill W«ld If l'lziW:-(C)--(60) Cari Reil'lel' Ind Miehtle lee a>PIOlt 1 ll:DD II 0 D mm EE """ (C) salui. lo indivld111I Jelf·expressicln 0 Alhl llitdadi By Cliarles M. Schub: r---..-----.,., (f;iE) · ...... -....., y ~VE?! By John Miies in f1sh i()ll 1Dd 1111.1slc. ffOiJ•m in· duties saquancn filmed in the m lill'I Chill tC> J_ _______ ..;;: ~d'1 lt3'1ion capit.111 ~rf•f int.er· Q)Mn: •spri•rti•• 11 tll•\'--"------------' ..., •Ith ••."! "' .,.,,.,,.,.., ....,... c""""1l . .,__..., ''" TUMBLEWEEDS d«Slltlen, 11 fllil to I Hew Yorlc ble Joh1' Payne. By Tom K. Ryan ot """" "" put '"" Moro. IDJ@9@Q!llJ -(t) "''IS ""'"IS =ALt"A GOOD Perftlrmen: Include comedi11t Pll •"' vvrr n~ .1 mod« l8'ftCY Ind 1 Jlamorous lock ~ VKNOW,1liE MINUTE I 5".ED YOU, I SEZ 10 MYSELF:"il/0\11, 1\IERES A FELLER Wflo\T P1ulsen. Tlit Cowiill1 ind lilrprrs ll: U MoNt "1111 .... _. (...t· BOYL. FELLA.!. . .IT'S MADE. CVTA Biza rre. ) ,40 _ Gary Cooptr, Waltw 1Ht:. ~RY i;E.STEST WOOD en. w-··· (30) ... I COULO FINDJ 1:00 o l!'!l mm•" ""' {Cl c601 o llJ OO m '";"' -cc1 "Child of SorroW, Child of Li1hl" 0 Movie: .. tt H1ppentd T1111°'""'• With Julie posin1 11 an unwed I'll· (fantuy) '44-Lind• D1meU, Jack peetant mother, the Squid invtsli-Gakie, Diel Powell. 11\es 1 ba~y 1d09tlon-rrt~ion liCkel Id• Lupil'IO 11Jesl$ 11 "Aunl D lHl rn m.., lltlleti (C) Iris" Potter, who runs I house m hfllld O'tenlllf Sllft (C) wtim 1irlt live thair nlt(itim1te b1biet out for adoption. . l:l:lS O Mowia: "face If JW' (drama} O MilflOI $ Movie: (C) •A11u ·s~mffOll Mitchell .laftlll Whrt· hue hlllel" (comedy) '59 -Bob rnor1• ' Hooe. Rllondl t1eminr. mtroll" Corlatq..., (C) (30) 12:30 ID Acfil11 n.h: "Riot in JuY111i!1 (B,.,., lnot1 (60) Prilon." ED tu1c1o!1 .. 11 1'111 (3Cl) IDB Cuu1t Mandtlllienlt '""00-{C) O ColnnnmitJ l11lletin INrd (C) m Fro• h lntldl Oil (C) U A T.V. "HAPPENING" * "WOMEN FOR YORTY" l :lS II"-* ~ MidliJ•r Kid" (wesl:tm) '47-Jon lilll, Vietor Mac· L111e11. "'"" ...... (C) (30) m .... (C) c•01 fD World hm (C) (60) ID Prt11111T OrM11 St.tt WEDN E SDA Y DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 m n ~ Strip 2:30 m AM-Ni1ht Show: "H<1llJ i nd th1 Ivy.'' "S11b1111rine" ind "Da!ljet Sip1I." (comtd)) 'S2-Junne Crtin, M'yrn1 Loy, JeffrtY H11nt1r. U:30 Q) "'l'llt M• it tilt 'Mlltt Slrit" (comtdy) 'S2-Alet G11ln111U. "OM tt1t M1111" (tomedJ) '4~11 H1r· 2:00 IE) "1111 WiMI Dalilt•• (wuttm) 9:00 D "1'-• ii Ille D.r" (drllTll) '56--inl Dlris. Colltn Crey. '41-Qrwr Gll'IClll, W•lt• Pldl:IOI\. l :JO fJ "W• 11 tw'-(dnm1) 'M - l :Jll U.,,. If Wiil Ptl..r' (drlm•) Ton)' 111...n, 8lyntt 81rT011. '31-Rldlird r.alholl, .lo111 FGll· 4..1!01J (C) -rM c.M111• (dr11111) '55 ttln•. --Rlt111r4 Wld11111rt. Uum IK1a, STAR T.V. CLIP THIS AD AND SAVI $7.50 RC:A ON YOUI Nm SDYICI CAU (Ofltr fl'irplA'f Mty JI, lH"' SALES a. SIRYICE ZENITH For E.irO&'rt .. R~l1bl1 S.rvl(t: 642-9742 275 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA "' MUTI AND JEFF GORDO MISS PEACH I CAl"'T WAIT TO 6'-0W UP AND MARRY SOME ALL-AMEJi:JCAN GtFt.L ! .. -·- KNOWS HIS BOWS'! -- By Al Smith YEH! WHAT.A RELIEF rr 15 "TO SEE A BIG MOU11\ OPEN AND CLOSE Wl'll.\OUT ~EAR.ING A SOUND! --,,_..,. ·-WE "NJ!NT lJ(JT Al<TEI< •· 7HE MOISTUR.E. i; THAT :~ :t 'TI11NK 'IOIJ'D ee 8G1;TER OFF MARR'llNG f\ FOFCEIGNE.~ WHO CAN'f UNOORSTAND li'N6USfl-· llUMA.'<S fj KEEP JN f'1 7~11< 13UILPINC:!S1 ff MD·.. !! ' e i By Gus Arriola 1'15 f"OUNO THIS DOO/l,THE EASl/.fST 10 ${J/)f!l!ZE UNDJ:R,f , . By Mell \HA,-WA'I IT WOULD BE '/!OAR~ 8EFORE SHE FOUND OUT HOW DUMB '/OU /'IRE .. Tiiesday, M1rch 181 1969 DAILY ,ILOT JS PIZZAZZ -:eat PauJsen, above, is one of the"guests on "Wonderful World of Pizzazz," tonight at 7:30 p.m.· on Channel 4. Carl Reiner and Michele Lee mterpret the wonderful wOrld of men's and wo¢en's fashions. The Cowsills and Harper's Bazaar rock group also appear. TELEVISION VIEWS Good Better Than Bad By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (lll>l)-Amid ·television's melo- dramas situation comedies and headline news, the human 'race got a little equal time l\1onday night on ABC-TV. For two hours, in a superior documentary enp titled "Three Young Americans in Search of Sur· vival '' viewers watched a trio of individual human· . . ists take the high road of existence -preservmg, rather than complaining about, the world around us. THE SUBJECTS were a Utah State graduate student dedicated to saving wilderness areas, a Philadeplhia gang worker who .turned a g~ouP: of toughs into a remarkabJe business orgarnzat1on, . and a woman rnarine-Jife conservationist. All three subjects were blended beautifully into the program's single, obvious but fine ly-woven theme, the natural interrelationship of all life -or, more specifically, the mental health of ~· . Stephen Fleischman, the producer-wr1ter-direc· tor of the broadcast, took on a monumental task which he carried off rather miraculously: the sweep- ing connections between grand philosophical con .. cepts and life-sized h,uman accomplishments. This t\vo-hour essay, which was journalism with a heart as well as a mind, showed that there ts room for good, positive news as well as bad on televi- sion's front page: prime time. THE GOOD NEWS was the reaffirmation of the sound adage that an immature person wants to die for a cause but a mature person wants to live for one. This was epitomized by the trio of commit.. ted young workers. The bad news was not glossed over, however, as their problems were spelled out. With the expla- nations of the three, and the narration of Paul New- man, who did a first-rate job, the program focused often on the diminishing of our environment -by 1nan -and its effect on our lives. Newman spoke of the "premeditated self· destruction," of "lhe secret suicide" that is no longer a secret. And with thP. illustrations of the balance of nature, easily upset, the crimes of the scavenger wheeler-dealers who bulldoze the peo- ple's beauty for their personal profit were sharply drawn. THE UTAH STATE University graduate stu- dent was Gary Smith, 26. The marine-life ecologist was 1'.·lary Margaret Goodwin, field director of the Caribbean Conservation Association. But the most engrossing segments, by far. concerned the Negro· Philadelphia gang 'vorker, Harold Haskins. 32. an associate in community planning at Temple Uni· versity. This large, gentle, kind-faced man is one of the most impressive figures ever to emerge from rela· tive obscurity to television prominence. The detail- ed study of 'how he tactfully helped a gang first turn into filmmakers, then into a business corpora· tion that not only aids the local neighborhood - but 'Community planners as 'vell -was utterly fascinating, as 'veil as obviously significant. and hopeful. Det1t1is the Menace .. • ' I I I ! ! I JI DAILY rlLOt Tut5day, Mattll 1111, 1%, ~69. :Team Differs From Other Bruin Titlists I ' • ' I "LOS ANoE!b tAl!) -ToWerlnl Lt,; ' lee.n•A(ld to'k< ·pl>yer ol the year. .Cicilldor Jew UCLA in quut ol Ill "We're changed bt<ause of the dU· .1hlnl str•lght n1tlonal baskttblll UUe ferent style ol our guards,'' Wooden tfus week. and about Ille only lhlags this year's tum bu kl common with ~·· t"" .,., \WO .Jre the . big )nail nd • me guards \Ve have now have' done ~~:recl>rd . ,t . '--as well as ~e: cQuld· ei:pect. BQt Jt's "lleading for LOl.lfsville and the NCAA not oflen y01.i have a ?i-11ke Warren and final touma.IDent, Coach John Wooden a Luci~ Allen." calls his 1969 combo '1qulte different." Warren,· the ball handler, and Allen, In three diUt:rent a.reu the BruJna tJ1e playmaier, are gone but UCLA has •rt different: stronger forwards, weak-used lhree men effectively to take their er guards and improved play by 7 foot place. Seniors IDIJ Sweek and Ken Heitz l 1,~ inch Alcindor, thre time All-Amer-and Orange Coast College transfer John The Joys of Training Vallely hOve al~aytd a~ually. ~r is p yl111 the. · bultetbafl oflits c!ar'F ~ t now, Wood says . "He's niuch er n o w and It's easier for him to do the things be has~ to dci. Hla maatuverablllty for a big man has alway& amazed me arid now he's even more mobile. And he'a not a aelllsh individual. He is dedJcated to the total effort of the team." Says AlcindOr: "When you're stronger, you dOn 't have to work as hard ind J'm roore relucd on the court now. AJso, that jump shot from the .aide Ken Harrelson of the Boston Red Sox goes through the bending, stretching, moaning and groaning that goes with llpring training and trying to unlimber dormant muscles. Harrelson was th e American League RBI champion last year with 109. He had 35 home runs. Sports In Brief Toome y Will Compete In Mt. SA C Decathlon Vt'ALNUT -Olympic Champion Bill Toomey will compete in the decathlon at the-Jlth annual ~1t. San Anton io Rel"ays April 25-27, it was announced today. Toomey beat \Vest Gennans Kurt Bendlin, the '~1orld record holder, and Hans.Joachtm \Valde in the ?-.1exico City Olympics last.summer-. Oli1'nres Srores KO INGLEWOOD -Ruben Olivares. ~lex· 1co City's aensatlonal banlam\veight, v.·as shaking his head. "Yes,'.' he sald. "l ·was hurt ,,·hen he knocked me down. He's a vrry strong liihler ... it v.·ins three of its remaining regular season games. it will have a Laker club record for the most wins in a season. Ange ls Test Padres YUMA -The Cali!ornia Angels ind the San Diego Padres, each with a .SCIO mark in exhibitions, knocked heads again today with the Padres e>ut to a1·enge a 12-S drubbing. George Brunet got the starting call ror the Angels "'hlle !\like Corkins was hsted to take the mound for San Diego. NBA to Hold ·Coin Flip For Big Lew NEW YORK (AP) -The long-awaited coin-tossing ceremony deciding which National Basltetball Association team wiU have the right to draft UCLA All- American Lew Alclndor will be held \Vednesday . The toss for the No. 1 selection in the annual NBA draft in May will take place in the office of \Valter Kennedy, the NBA commissione r at 8 a.m., PST. The toss will be between the teams finishing In last place ln the circuir• two divisions, Milwaukee in the East and Phoen!x in the West. Alcindor. the most sought after college player in many years, had been reported drafted by the New York Nets: in a secret draft by American Basketball Association teams. This was denied by both the league and the Nets. bu helped my same. If I'm hll\lni that shot, 1 can move 1n and out and open thin&• up for the rut of the team." In' 19691 Lew. wound up with an average ol 18.S rebOUn<U per g1me -31.t pucent of all-UCLA grabbed. This season, AlcJn- dor had a game average or ooly 14.4 and 28.8 percenL Curtis Rowe, at M ii,,;, and Sid Wicks, U , leap like high jumptl'I and have averaged 7.7 and 5.1 nboundl per same resJ!!eCUvely. John Wooden's teams of past cham· pionahlp )'ears have been relatively small but pJ1ytd lotothu II a weli·lmlt team a ti the Wall Hauard-Gall Goodrich .... "( • think th.is season we've had a pretty good spirit of cooperation Ind teamwork ~t even though I've jua:a:ltd pl1yu1 quite a bit," Wooden says. "I knew ll wu 101n1 to be one of the moat pressure-packed years we've had. "Not knowing bow the younaer players would react to that preuure was on my mind and I was wondcrln( lf the der pllyera would 11111 be hunl'f. "I lell the winn1n1 .U.1k probably ~ Id be btoken. I dldn 1 know Jlllt where or when, b\lt to be bone.st with you, I didn't think it would be broken at our Pauley PavWon. "Thia isn't u runnln& a team u we've had in the past, but I wculd consider it as physical a team -possibly the most physic~ l've ever hid. But 9.'e don 't have the mlM'Jverabllity ot the vision. It's definitely a dllfertnt type of team than the others I've coaclJ. ed." AFL Goes Out of Existence, • c Pros Go to One Loop in '70 PALM SPRINGS, Calir. (AP) - Professional footbaU 's most momentous problem, lo become <1ne league of 26 teams or retain the identity of the Na- tiqnal and American leagues, remained the No. 1 ite1n on the agenda of the joint meeting today. Commissioner Pete Rozelle cleared up one elemental point Monday: By l!ntl, it )Viii be officially and legally the NaUooa'! Football League for all 26 clubs. "But," said Rozelle, "that's a matter of semantics. Operationally, the National Football League will be two leaiUel• "By 1970, we win have had 10 years ()f highly publicized rivalry between the two leagues. It would be very difficult to come up with a single NaUonal League. A majority of the news media is against this." 1 Cards Shuffle Deck; Torre For Cepeda ST. LOUIS (AP) -The Atlanta Braves dickered with the New York .Pi-lets for four months trying to trade Joe Torre away. When they turned their attention to the St. Louis Cardinals, it only took four hours to make the deal. The Braves swapped Ton-e, a catcher· first baseman, to St. Louis Monday night in exchange for Orlando Cepeda, the first baseman who was the unanimous choice as the Most Valuable Player in the National League two seasons ago. Paul Richards , executive vice president ot the Braves, has carried on a running verbal feud with Torre, a holdout and one of the leaders of the recent player pension boycott. But he wasn't prepared to unload Torre without getting vllue for him and that was what turned him away from the Mets and lo the Cardinals. He said the trade for Cepeda was consummated after three or four hours of haggling. Other names were men4 tioned, Richards said, but it b611ed down to a one-for-one swap. Bing Devine, general manager of the Cardinals, said the trade would allow the National League champi<1ns to give rookie Joe Hague more of a chance at first base than he would ha\'e had l\'ith Cepeda on the club. "The deal is pan' of our belief that vre just can't sit and ride along with a winner but must look for changes that make sense," Devine said. The acquls!Uon of Torre was the second major move for the Cardinals, who have ,,.,oo tW<I straight National League pen- nants. They traded two playen to Cincinnati for right fie1d!!r Vada Pinson following last year's World Serles. Cepeda, acquired from ~an Francisco 1n 1966 in exchange for pitcher Ray Sadeckl. batted .325 with 25 homers and 111 RBI to lead the Cardinals to the 1967 pennant and win MVP honors unanimously. But his production fell off to .%48, 16 homers and 73 RBI in 1968 as the Cardinals repeated. He is 31 years old. Torre, 23, has been a Brave regular since 1961 and has a career batting average of .294. He hit .271 in 115 games for AUanta la.rt year. Troubl~ by lnjuriM, his home run production ~dipped from 36 in 1!186 to 20 in 1967 and 10 last year. Devine called Torre at his Manhasset, N.v., home and they agreed to tenns ovtr the phone. A survey of season ticket buyers 1n Houston and San Diego, AFL ciUea. said Rozelle, showed that 15 percent preferred lo keep lnllct the· image of the American League. The IUl'Vey abo showed, aa.ld the com4 m.Wioner, that much damage 1n the public imagtt would be done to the Super Bowl rame, lhe blgb point ol each league'• sea&0n, as wtll as the All-Star games of each league. RM.elle declined lo speculate on how the committees representing t b 1 i r respective leagues would recommend a solution to the problem of two issues: Total realignment of the preaent 26 teams, and addition of two more ex- pansion teams by 1970, all under the single banner <>f the NFL. Rozelle said the answer might come in more pre.seilSOll games and more rtgular season .-,rnes between team• of the two leagrfes. J In both areas, he said, "the aver.all aura of the tv.·o leagues" would be pre.served. According to Rozelle, the vote for the e<>mmitlee's recommendations to keep in la ct· the ickntltiM of two leagues must have approval of 13 of the 11 NFL clubs and eight of the 10 A.FL ownen. In another Item, the two leagues voted to fine players for indiscrlmlnately toss• Ing footballs into at.nets alter, for in· stance, scoring a touchdown. A spokseman said there was danger of a lawsuit from possible Injury to a fan In a scramble for the ball. He did not deny this was .a move to curb "sho"·boating" by a player. The C<1St of 1 football i! about $29. For Davis Cup Final Cleve la With $250, 00 Off er Without trying to make It sound Uke sour grapes, Larry Johnson of Newport Beach Tennis Club uttered the opln!on that Cleveland is going to get killed financially on its endeavor of hosting the 1961 Davis Cup fmals. And this column would certainly have te> go along w:lth that opinion after learn- ing that the Ohio city: bid '150,000 fo-j tbe privilege of putting on the world amateur tennis classic. If lt were a football game, Cleveland "·ould make a go of It. But tennis, presu mably during the hot, humid sum· till,.I NN 'llrtHTI WHITE WASH ••••••••••••••• mer, figures to draw about as well as a topless show in a nudist colony. The only time Cleveland folks turn oot is when the Browns are playing football. True, somethinj: with the magnitude o( the Davis Cup f1naLs would pull In fans from various parts of the nation to take up some of the projected aU.endance lag. But makina: a quarter <1f a million bucks takes a lot more than selling for a few hWldred box seats at 5500 per throw. The good folks from that Lake Erie city be t t 4! r hope for a handsome television contract. Or better yet, a higher bid from a more foolish city. Johnson kept Newport Beach In the running up lo $150,000 but wisely dropped out after that, realizing the danger of inflated offers. * * * Short Clrrults Bob Boyd'1 recruiting lmare m11st hl\'e suffered sreaUy u a result of that coatroverslal 1tall victory lie rained against UCLA. Wltea Boyd'• name was mendoned over the Sporll Arena.i public addre11 1y1tem Satarday aJ1b& tt WU sreeted wtlh a cbonas of boot a.ad no nodcable •pplause. And 1lace tbe occa1loa was the Southern Secdos CIF bu ketball cllam• ploa1blps yoa can a1nune tJSC lo1t f irt•t deal tf pre1U1e wbtn It scored more polnts than lhe Brolns ln that demonstration of bow not to play basket.. ball. Keep this nam~ in mind as a future lee skating great -Jim Dlmoglnes. The-12-.year-old Pacolma youth put on a dazzling show during the recent et· hlbltion <>f world skating talent at the Forum. Elmer Combs picked bis all-time Dun- ti.Jiitcn Beack mglri b&Jietball team. Included are Gre1 Snyder (IHI), Denn.ls Hamilton (IHl), Kim Stewart (19P) plUI two members of this year's squad - ?tllke Contreras and Roy MWtr. Combs 1ot tbe word ea Contreras wben the latter was playtn1 ftll srade recreadon ball. There's a Jl tt11 brother toming up, &oo -IJ..year-old Raul Con· &rera1. CIF commissioner J. Kenneth Fag ans was miffed at the low attendance at Saturday night's championship games and blamed the small coont (7,150) on the live televising of one tilt and the ta ping of the other for showln1 the next day. lt's the first time in 81\'tn years that the finals have drawn less than 9,200 and Fagans blames TV for the lag. Too, he might look at the un- derslrable area around the Sports Arena, a frightening place to walk or park your car after dark. Previously the CIF finals we.re 1t Long Beach Arena. TOP GRID BOSSES AT SA ILOR CLINIC The Newport Harbor High School Booster Club's third annual football coaches clinic is scheduled for this Frid· day and Saturday at !lie Newport Beach Elks Club. Fourteen top ClF football coaches will be on hand for the two-day session in addition to head roac~ Ben Wi~ of Wichita State and Paul Amodio of Yale. itoderator of the program will be Ne~·port C<>ach \Vade Watts. Featured speakers will Include Ernle Johnson, Et Rancho; Herb Hill, Loara; Claire Van Hoorti>eke, Anahelm; Hal Akins , Lagun1 Beach; Bob Woods, M1tu Del, and Sam C1thcart, Santa Barbl'.Ta. The program begins at J p.m. Friday with a meeting at the Balboa B1y Club. 1be No. 1 contender for Australian J.ionel Rose·s title ,,.,.as knocked dov.·n in the second ro\lnd by Ernie de . La Cn.11 of the Philippines M<1nday night but ceme back lo get a ninth round knockout before 3 F'orum t'rowd <1f 8,49S. tt wu his 46th KO. The Angels, behind the fi\'e·inning, one. lilt hurling of Rick Clark, capped their \•ictory Monday wilh ninth-inning homers by Dick Stuart ~·ith one runner on base \Ind Tom Egan wi1h the bases empty. • Big D Re ady VERO BEACil -The • Los Angeles Dodgers don't have to \\·orry ab:Nt an open.Ing day pitcher. Big 0 is ready. Padre~ Went for Youth, Will Build LIUle U'nnu Italia n LAS VEGAS -Freddie Little, the. new-junior middleweight champion, waotl Nino Ben\!enuti oi ltaly next. "l wouldn't e\•en mind OghUng hlm tn 'Rome," the 32-year-old ·Las Vegu school W~her saJd t.!onday rUgbt after iainln& the vacant. tiUe ~·Ith a unanimous 1s.rcimd decision O\'er Stanley "Kitten" llfsywan! ol Philsdelpbia. . ~ker• Face Btdls ' CHICAGO -The Loe Angeles Lakers, who wr1ipped up tile NaUonel Basketball >.uoctatlon westtm Division title Sunday, ·face lht Clilcago Bulls lolllgh~ Uos Aq:ele• has a $2..21 reL'Ord 1/ ,, ' Don Drysdale made his spring debut ~fonday. giving up four hlls and one run in four innings to the new York Yankees. The Dodgers IO!t 2·1. "It felt good," the veteran rlghthander said. "It also shows the advant1ge oC .~ couple of v.·eeks' work in c11mp. It makes me feel better than ever abou' roming down when I did." Siar• Se" Double JACKsON. ?-.fiss. -New Orleans hl!d Los Angeles seeing double l\1onday night. Six Buc~neers hit In double flgure:s a.~ New Orleans downed the Stars, 118-99, for UW! club's fifth COMecuti\.·e American Basketball Associalion triumph. I YU~t A, Ariz. (AP) -Preston Gomez, 1nanager o( the nt:w San Diego Padres, is realistic about his club's chances. He says the Padres are not likely to brtak any of the New York Mets· first year records, either. "As the year goes by, we should impro\'t," says Gomei. "We should do better th:tn the !\iets or Houston did their first year." "\Ve cHn'l be too fussy wilh what ·wr gol ," v.·arns Gomez. 1 "\Ve v.·ent for youlh and we know \l 's going to lake tlmt to build. tf s01nc of the you11gcr players come· through the ~·ay ~·e expect, we should ha v~ 3 pretty good It.am in 1 couple of " years." The one place where the Padres are reasonably aolld Is In the outfield. Gomez says, ln fact . that many other clubs have approached San l>iego about 1 trade and ldmlll that one could be m111de before the openin& of the 1eason. "Every club we talk to "'ants an outfielder from us," says Gomei. adding that what he would most like lo get is a good defensive catcht:r. The only one not available for a trade, say!! C'..omez, ill Ollie Brov.·n, the big, nioody, but potentially great outfielder obtained in the drafl from the Giants, Brown, says Gomez._ ·""Ill be the starting righUieldtt. Tony Conz.alt:z, 'l'ho hit .339 with Philadelphia In 1967 but fell on last year, Is likely to be In left with rookie Clarence Gaston. who bu bet:n Im· presslve durtna the sprln1, 1 toltd ~n­ tender for center. Other ouWelders 011 the club -111 with major-league exerience -are Lar- ry S t a h I, Al Ferrar1. J,•an ~furell 1nd Ron Davis. I In the • infield, Bill Da\·i!1, obtained from Cleveland In lhe deal that Knt Zollo Veraal\es to the Indians, will play at first "if he can hlt the way ~·c hope be can,•· 1aya Gomez. Second, base la a question mark with. Jose Attia, drafted from the Chicago C\Jbl, batt11111 ~1th rookies Jerry Davanon and Rafael Robles. Rabtrto Pena, a .260 hitter with Phll1delphla last year, la set 1t short and Ed Spa.lo. acquired from Sl. Louis, ls the libly third baseman, Rookie Danny Breeden ls the No. t catcher at thla point, thouah 2:o.-year-old Fttd Kendall may hl\'t lhe job In e )'ear or tv.·o. 1 Gomez hu three 1tartln1 pltchert Ht -Al McBean from P1ttibur1h. Dlcll Selma from the New York Afels ind Dick Kelley of Atlanta -with one or two mote expected to come from a llst lhal lncludts AJ Sant.orlnl Clay Kirby, Phil Knuckles, Frank Rtberctr, Diel< James and Mike C«klns. \ • 1 COMPET ING FOR NCAA GO LD -UCI swim forces arrived in Mass· achusetts this .afternoon for the upcoming NCAA small college charn· pionships. The Anteaters are given a good chance at annexing the na· On His Way Up tional title. (From left to right) coach Ed Newland, head coach Al Jr~ win, Mike Martin, Bob Dake, Rich Eason. ln the back are Jim Coop- er and Steve Fanner. Ante:ters Entries Open For Volleyball Tournament Aztec Cage ,Job Is Plum Ai111 at NCAA Entries are being accepted for the 2nd annual Newport Open volleyba.11 tournament, which is slated April 2·3 at the 40th Street beach. The event is ~or men's d_oubles oply and is open to all comers. rated or otherwise. Entry fee is $1.50 per person. Deadline for entries is Sunday at 5 p.m. Further information can be o.btained by calling Bill KinZie (675-6674 till 4. f..m.) or John Hanssen (673-4103 alter 3 p.m.). Trophje_s will go to the top two teams. Loveland Wins Jack Loveland defeated C h a r I e ., MacLellan, 31-11, in the Class A divi sion of Saturday's '"handball tournament at the Orange Coast YMCA. Class B winner was Bill McGehee, who beat Bob Hoffman, 31·28. Richard ·Warner defeated Fred Simpson, 31-27. in 'B' play .and Lloyd Blanpied beat ·Jim Foreaker. 31·26, in 'D' play. . The players competed in 31 ·point l!:ames. Dlahlo,s Set Ba11q11et ~1ission Viejo High School will honor 1ts first-ever "'·inning varsity team to- night al the annual \Vinter Sports Awards Banquet. Coach Pat Roberts' varsrty basketball cre1v along with the weight classes will be feted at 7 in the · school cafeteria \vith individual awards going to captains. most valuable and most improved players. Do11 key B o•l<ethall The Los Amigos Hi gh School faculty will play the Letterman's Club in a donkey basketball game tonight in the .school gym. . . . ~Starting time is 7:30. Adnuss1on is "$1.2.5 for _adults and so. cent.'I for children Players will be astride 10 donkeys. B11es Sla te Awar d s ~1embers of Orange Coast College's basketball and wrestling teams will be honored \Vednesd<iy at the college's fall sports award banquet in the campus students center . • Awards will be presented to the team cartains, most valauble ~layer and 'Pirate or the Year in each sport. , Marina Sp lasher Tops Honor Roll Davis ls Sure to Accept l t's now. becoming clear that if anyone ever sits down to write '"The Dick Davis Story," UCI will regrettably receive scant space in the v.·ork. Plafrtly, here is a coach on the \Vay \lp. The educated guess is that he will be offered the San Diego State job this week after just t'o\'O seasons as head coach at UCL Tbe Aztec opening is apparently_a ripe plum and Davis v.1ill almost certain· Jy accept the position if it's tendered. And it is a mea su re or DaviS' stature to realize that Aztec athletic director Al Olson calls the Anteater coach "definitely a leading candidate'' among at least liO applicanl.!. Detective work has produced the name~ of six others who have tatten their place in I i n e for the job; Jack Holley, Im· ****··········· EARL GUSTKEY **************• perial Valley JC: Jim Killingsworth, Cerritos JC ; Bob Kloppcnberg, Cal \Vest- ern University ; Danny Ayala, Pasadena City College ; Bob Bass, Denver Rockets (ABA), and Stan Morrison, San Jo s e State assistant. There are plenty of reasons '4·hy San Diego State now offers possibly the best basketball job in the country. First, the school offers 18 full NCAA basketball scholarships. UCI can so far offer only "achievement awards," ~1hich pay onl y for $321 in tuition fees. An NCAA scholarship takes care of tui- tion, book s, room. board. incidental fees and laundry ($15 per month ). Eventually. UCI l'.•ill be in a position to offer such gratuities. but, as Davis puts it : ,"By then [ might be too old to enjoy it." Secondly, San Diego moves into a new, major conference next season, the Pacif· le Coast Athletic Association. 1be mem4 ber school! will be San Diego. Fresno State, Cal State (Long Beach), UC&ota Barbara, cat, State (LA) and San Jose State. . The winner of the c."Ollference might wind up in the Far \Vestem NCAA reg· lonals next year. Davis emphasizes he's happy al UC[ but adds he's not entire·ly satisfied, eith· er. "There's nothing at Irvine that mak· es me unhappy, but there are features of the San Diego State job l\"hich make it very appealing." Davis' reputation is unblemished. There Is no queslion that he '\\'ould turn S a n Diego State into a power. Bill Bloom, who recently resigned from his coaching assignment at Corona de! Mar H i g h, goes even further than that "If they get Davis, the • .\ztecs will be one of the best basketball schools in the country. nrere's no doubt aboU'l it.' ' * * * QUIP DEPT. -lVben the seore Satur· day reached UCLA 49, Santa Clara 19, a guy in tbe crowd yelled: "Santa Clara -go into yolll' deadly weave!" * * * RULES DEPT. -So fa r, the only per· son l\'e know who likes the anti-dunk rule in basketball is the Kentucky coach, Adolph Rupp. He gave us his reasons last \Veek when v.·e called him for mater· ial on the Mark Soderberg story. "I like the dunk rule," he said. ''l sat here one night two seasons ago and walched some damn kid tear the basket off the backboard· in the pre-game warmups. We put it back. up but then he did it again during halftimfi'. "What happens wheii you · have that happen during a televised game? ll 's a good rule." Rupp fa vors a 30-sei-ond clock for bask· ctbalJ and predicts it will come into the game evenhlally, although not next sea~ ' son.. As for leaving a player with five per· sonal fouls Jn the game, he says: "I wa~ the rtrst to propose such a rule. Let the boy play, for cryin' out loud,"· · DRAGS DEPT. -ne days mUJt be cettln«i preUy long at Orange Comtty" lJt. temational Raceway. 1\t trttli'• la1- est ntw1 release contained tlila sem: 41 ••• the Camaro f~~ar cat'etDtd off a 1u.b-stand1rd GtMlf• track felt. JI •• ·" Swi1n Title ny EARL GUSTKEY °' tt11 o.11r r 1i.t Stitt UCI's swimming te;im, "Wit4 hiih hopes of a national cha"!lpion-~p 's.upplying the adrenalin, left !Oday.for ·sptlngfleld, Afa.ss., and the NCAft tj>Jleg~. division swlnuning cbampions'bips. Head coach Al lfWln,, assistant Ed Newland and nine . Anleatei swimmers left LA Internattonal· Airport ilt noon .and were due for _their first pre-meet workout at Springfield <;allege Wed· nesday mcirning. Heats for the meet get under \Vay Thursday. ~ction concludes Saturday for the 82 entered schools. Irwin figures his · team ·has a shot at it. · "J figure the winning team 'Viii have ta score over 290 points and I think '\\'e can score that many," he confides. "I'm sure we!ll finish in the top four -if we don't J'm going ta be awfully disappointed." Irwin says he has little information about eastern collegiate swim pi:jwt!rs, r but thinks his most severe competition will come from Eastern Kentucky, host Springfield, Southeni. Conne'cticut and UC Da vis. In two cracks at the NCAA cham- pionship, lrwin's team has .fared well. 'IV.•o years ago, at the City of Commerce, the Anteaters missed nosing out UC Santa Barbara ·tor the title by four points. , , · And last year, at Emory University In Atlanta, UCI was third. The winner \vaS Cal St&i.e (Lorig Beach). Irvine has -an-ed"ge it didn't have ln those tWo tries ln that San Diego State and Cal State (Long Beach) have dropped out of the college division in fa vor of university division competition. lrwl ne's team is 6-5 in dual meet compettition. That record by' itself won't frighten anyone but the Anteaters have compeled against the very best available. 'rhey've lost dual meets to USC, UCLA, Long Beac:1 and San Diego State. . Irwin ha s a lot of hi s hopes riding on the shoulders of his sophomore sensa· \ion, Mike; Martin of Corona de! Mar. 500-yard freestyle event. ~ftrtln Is entered in the 500. 200 and 1.600-yard freestyle events, in addition to leg duty on UCI's 400 and 800 relay entries. He won the 500 last year, Other key men in the shqrter springs are ruch Eason and Duane Otlon ( 100 and 200 free). . Bob Wilhite of CoSta. Mesa ls a sure point-winner in the one and three-meter diving events. ....... -~ -·---~--~-;---·--·~~----· ---~-----~---·-·-· .. ·' \ Tuosd17, ..... i-. 1'69, • ' ·' I DAILY, "1#1' f7 I -.- . , Pr~ ~ke s®iw .. LiO~s Edge 9 Qe.~~;, Barons RollAgain· ' Westminster High School's varsity . tract and field oquad came throu&h with a final mile retJ.y victory Monday afternoon to eke out a 61·57 victory over Invading HunUnston Beai1\)n ~J League combat to highlight track action in the Orange Coast area._ ( t'.t.' And, host Fountain vaney went. over the century mark again against non· league opponeiltJ, this ume with a con- vincing 109-9 '(erdict over Rancho Alamitos. Other Orqe Coast area teams fell by the wayside with Garden Grove swamping visiting Corona del Aiar , 86-30, in non-leB.guj! hostilities. And s.an CJemente and Laguna Beach taking it on the chln in Crestview League activity. Host San Clemente was belted by powerful El Modena, ts-2!, while Laguna Beach was falling at Villa Park by a l<M-11 margin. Westminster's rugged middle distance aggregation came through for the Lion! in their victory over Huntington. Vqs•f'V '\'u.IW • ,_, ... V1"',t!•> ~II lllMM Al""l .. 1 HJ~ -CF~·), ~lmt1 10.l. II' 2" MOO<'e (FV) 3' 00 -\' P. MIU (FVI 2, Cioot.1 CFVJ 3, HUll'rlll CFV . T!mt: 23.2. "' -1 o. Ml•• rFvl 2. Pifer tFui 3. B11rkll1ti.r ltA). Tl!ll•: ll.1. UO -l. H1rd:n CFV) 2. Sh•w (,V) 3. l urkh1ns111 '"I· Tlin.• 2:01.31 Mi. -1. Chrllf1-CFVJ 2. Fuftk CFV) 3. kltpt1rltk (RAI. 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M11...nr COUNTY TOUR.NEY PAIRI NGS LISTED Pairings hive been released for the · Orange _County basketball championship playoffs jnvolving third throu&b el&hth graders. ' First round sames begin Friday even· Ing 'fJth winners advancing t.o second round tetts Saturday· morning. Champklnshlp tests are set for Satur· day afternoon be;lnnlng at 12:30. ' ' 01'-lllN Newport lltlCh VI Coll• Mfta l"'dlm1l f'I f1t11111Jn V1 ll1Y v1 r~Bw::: tjitll ft) ,. _ _. Be~I! .,_ · s1111t1111 n H1111""''°" 111e11 f1l CNrii M ... (Qtlorle P1.t~· 31n!• All• 0) Founlllll VllllJ "'' ,lllJt~ fl) . . """ Stnll A111 b'ft f"llll•rton "1 lt1nto11 Ill N"""'1. lflldl Vt Hunllll•loll B•cll (t ) com '"""' tCOllltt "'"'' 111 fM1t1in· v111.., "' / (L!IJ. Tlrnt: J:l1.J. ' UO LH - 1. M1v1w1kl (Vj 2. l'fttf1lfl (\') ,. SWetntv (LI). Tr .... : U.l. 441> 1!:1111-1. VIU1 Pitt:. Tjrnt: .,_ HJ -, Lewlt. tV} 1 -l'llY (I.I) 3, No tt>ll'f. Htltll'll: J~. U -1. Pitt,_ \VI 2. Not1hcult (I.I) ), B..,.4. (VJ. or111nu: 17· o. ,.V -1. ICMIPl'Orl IV) 2. S......., ILll' 3. Orlfllll IVJ. Htliht: HM. Mr:.w•1 lv1.Aor.1:ncJY~~-Chtl•!Wtlt ILi) 3. Marina High School's Don Lippoldt st.cals the show in lhe first echuon of the DAILY PILOT prep swim honor roll. Desperate Lions S'eeking Grid Foe The Viking flash is listed in i;ix of the 10 entries, leading the pack jn the 200 freestyle, 200 indivldu11I medley, 100 back and is a member of the 200 medley relay team. '""""' "-.... l«I MMlfv lftl•f -1. Mtrl"" tL!#Oldl, wn111m~. E•ll'll• 0-l<IMn\ 1:0A J, Cosl1 MtJf 1: ... , J._,Xf~Ot_:. Mf.' Ll~':o'';,, ~•l 1151.2 2, Wl!llllctr cc'Mi l:'il.1 '· Sdl'll'I( (C4M 1:k.O. " F~ -1. W~ll&.," CM) 2l.O 2. OOntldWI CM,:) r~~~fk~J !: t. Ll-1dl IM•r1 tn:l L Wlic. (HH) 1111.1 ,, Plvm'" ICM !OD FIY -1, IOU""''°' CCMl $6.0 2. F"t rr tCci'A) S)',l 1. l'-ldt IMttl P.!· ' t~ fn. -.!.-...~.J!itt•ll' (;GI )t.2 l. Don1ld\Dfl 1"1~1 r_.:.i. ~"r"t1::k/. f iMtrl si.a t. s10,.,.., ICl'IMI l:W,, 1. Mftloiflt tCM) l itl. t lat ''"--I. IC"""""""°t ~ clMI •.A... 1. W~lffket ICM) •:Ot.O ), Wik01' IM l 1:11 J, 100 l rNtl -1. Wl!(I')• '""I ~·Qf.O 1. Hlllmt~ IC:O"'l l:Ql,S '· wml11m• !Mt!' l ; 1.11. QI I'm ilrl•r -l Ct"01'19 "' 1¥1•~ lk!'l.,...,J: t <•f.ll•, "Storitr. llttkl ),::t.O J, Cot!f Mtll J;)O f' ) "\ttl111 J ,t:l.O, By ROGER CARLlON ot ll!t Otll' PllOt llMf 'Vanted: One high school variity foot· baU opponent for Nov. 7, 1969. ?Wat's the sign that has been hanging al Westminster H1gb School for sever&! months since Sant.a Ana Valley High finalized its termlnatton from the Sunset League at the. end o! the current school year. The Falcons o( Valley will be in the lrvine Le{igue thls fall and it's been common knowledge that the Sunset League will be going with R 3even·team circuit for the 1969-70 school yt1tr, with hopes of picking up an eighlh team the following year. 1 \\'hat that means Is that every school is faced ~·ith a bye during , the league m!ason because of the odd number of teams involved. Football and basketball are tbe hardest hil -especially on Friday night. Alhl etle direc:ton at every ln!Utution have been in search -o1 an opponent to complt!te the normal ntnc-g1mc schedule for their varsity football teams. Fortunately. most schools have been able to salisry the acbcduJc with op- P,ne:nts for the bye, All but one. that ii;: Westm inster, Coach Bill Bo31''ell and athl etic director Ed Goddard arc sUll e.mpty·nanded. However, the balance of lhc league has come up grid foes and hete's how lhe slate stacks up: Anaheim: 'llle .Colonlll.li play Chaffey and Redlands in non-le.gue ac:Uon and meet Foothill High of Bakenlltld at the lattter's flekt in the fifth aamo of the year. flunUngton Bta~1 Coach Ken Moat.!' crew is scheduled to meet La Habra and Edison, then La QWnta In the fourth game of the season. /\farina: The Vikes hsve an lntercsling schedule. First it '1 La Puente end Sooth Torranet In the opcnlna non·l~ague tt11t •nd then they host Dao Pueblos Hish of Goleta In the Santa Barbara County I I ' I I • -· Final .;.\1\'GBLVS LEAGVE " .. .. " • .. • .. ., • «:US'l'VlliW .LEAGVE UJil CU:Mli4 fl Lt AmlM ... "" I YIU.A Pd& '" --.11111o111 = tiz~ ll ll n ~g ll n " .. .. n .. .. • ... .. " " ll n .. n .. " " u ~ \\ .. » .. " " n " .. .. .. " ~ ll ~ II .. .. .. " .. .. " .. " " .. " li I .. ~ .. .. " .. " "' .. .. .. " .. .. i ! ll H .. .. • .. " .. .. .. .. .. ~ I " " " " 4 " " " " " " .. " " ll fl ~ ~ " .. .. .. " .. .. " " .. " " ~ ll II " tt .. " II " " " .. .. .. .. " " .. " 0 " " .. " " .. " " u ! 1968-69 FUEWAY UAGVE .. I n ll " .. " .. " " .. " " " .. .. :: :: u. euUtTA Cage " " .. " " " .. . .. " .. a ll " g ll " ii " " .. " .. " .. " .. " ; ; " " ~ a II " .. " .. .. " " .. " .. ,_ ff Lo. Alfret D Lt~....W 3' C1t1r!Ho '1 VIit. 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'" " .. ~ .. llltMit " " " ' Start of Lonesome Passage American Scuffler (!), skippered by Jerry Cartwright leads the field at the start of the single-handed Transpacific race from San Francisco to Tokyo . Behlnd Scuffler is Blue Arpege (2), skippered by Jean-Ives Terlain of Fraiice. Five boats are entered in the 6,®.mile race to take from 40 to 90 days. 280 on Starting Line For Golil Cup Regatta More than 280 sailors in 28 classes were on the !tarting lines Saturday and Sunday for Newport Harbor Yacht Club's annual Spring Gold C u p Regatta. The yachtsmen w e r e greeted by light winds a n d 'o•:arm weather contributing lo a:unburn and slow races. Final results: Inside Classes FINN (13) -(I) Fred 11-flller Jr., SSSC; (2) Peter Parker. NHYC; (3) Marshall Long SMYC. KITE A ( 10) -(I) John Daigh, NHYC; (2) Sue Bame"'"• NHYC; (3) A<gyle Campbell, BYC. SNIPE (7) (I) Jeff Lenhart. MBYC; (2) Mark Shultz, DRYC. THISTLE (17) ( 1 ) Everett Ross, BYC ; (2) Skip Kempf!, SMYC ; (3) Dave ltfcKinley, PVYC. KITE B (14) -(1 ) Lincoln Winslow, BYC; (2) Bob SmalJ, BCYC; (3) Steve Ross, BYC . SABOT A (17) -(1) Ktul Wiese, BYC: (2) Nina Nielsen, NHYC; (3) Hugo Smidt, LIYC. SABOT C (13) -(I) Craig Uhl, BYC; (2) Marshall Hall, BYC ; (3) Bill Jager, NHYC . INTERNATIONAL • I( (17) -(I) Roget Welsh, VYC; (2) Peter Gaits, BYC; (3) Jolm de Castro, BYC. SABOT B (I3) -(I) Linda Milli, NHYC; (2) Ringo Wagner. NHYC; (3) Bruce Ayres, NHYC. FLIPPER 17) -(I) Cody Small, BCYC; Andrew Red- field, LTYC. L100-14B (&) -(1) Alan Oleson. BYC. FLYING JUNIOR (6) - Scott Schock, NHYC . LID0-14A -(t) James Tyler, BYC; (2) Herb Riley, LIYC; (3) Don Wiese, BYC. Outside Classes MORF (11) -(I) Aloha 11 (Santana-29) Glenn Reed, SSSC; (2) Cepheus (Cal-25) Demis Durgan, BCYC : 13) Ki Io (Ca1·21i) John Butler, BYC. TEftfPEST (7l -(lJ No . 96, Jack Raub, SSSC. PHRF (15) -(I) Gosling (5.5 meter) NHYC ; (2) Savage (5-5 meter) Al Cassell, VYC; (3 ) Libra (Gladiator) J, Kalt· enbach, CBYC. ENDEAVOR (7) 0) stormy J. Amies, VYC; (2) Deuce, Jim Owen, BYC . SHIELDS (11) -(l ),Purple Haze, Chris C.Olby, NHYC; (2) Torina, Howard Wright, NHYC; (3) Kathrine, Harry Pattison & Tom Bi s sell, Nevada SC. LUDERS-16 !81 ( 1) Preempt, L.C. Southerland, NHYC; (2) Zephyr, M . Werner, CBYC; (3) Angel, Louise Fundenbcrg. EXCALIBUR (5) (l) Escalibor, Tom Kellogg, BYC . RHODES-33 (8) (I) Maruja, Bob Ket.tenhofen, BYC; (2) Impulse, Paul Marx, BYC. SOLING (11) -·(I) All Ou!, Bob Burns, CYC; (2) No. 79, Andy Zlmbeldi, NHYC; (3) lie between Green Flash, Ben Mitchell, ABYC, and Scram- ble. Abe Adler, CYC. STAR (10) -(I) Hannah, Barton Beek, NHYC; (2) Music II, Pete Schoonmaker. BYC; (3) Zucker Kanincben, Chuck Lewsadder, NHYC. CAL-20 (8) -(1 ) Three way tie among Odin, G.L. Austin, BYC; Taco 11, Floyd Johnsoo, BYC, and Mischief, J .H. Can- non, SSSC. OCEAN RACING (16) -(I) Sparkle (40-ft sloop) Alex Irv· ing, BYC; (2) Swiss Navy (Cal-29) Buster Hammond, BYC: (3) Rascal (57-ft sloop) Bill Wilsoo, SBYC. PC (6) -(1) Patrician 11, Deve Pillsbury, NHYC. 5-0-5 151 -(I) Super Log, D. Hobson , CBYC. Windward Leads 23 h10NTEGO BAY, Jamaica (AP) -The 73-foot ketch Windward Passage, flying the burgee of I.he New York Yacht Club, Jed a fleet of 23 yachts on the 811·mile Miami to' J\~ontego Bay race today. With owner Bob Johnson at the helm, Windward Passage slipped past Kialoa, 73-foot yawl owned by John Kilrof of Newport Beach, 15 minutes after the race began Monday in JO.knot breezes swirlillg out of a light squall. Salty Tiger, 46-foot yawl from St. Petersburg, Fla., and Southern Ocean Ra c i n_g Conference champion, was close to the first two ln early stages of the race. New Yawl To Debut Ken De Meu~e's new 73-root aluminum ya"'' 8\ackfin from St. Francis Yacht Club will make her competitive debut next Friday at the start of LoS Angles Yacht Club·s Tri- Jsland Race. The 152-mile Tri-Island is the third race ot the curnnt Whitney Series. Blackfin was designed by Bill Tripp and built in the Gennan shipyard of Abeking and Rasmussen. She is a sister ship to Swnner A. (Huey) Long's Ondine IL Both are entered in the Hono- lulu race next July 4. AUTO LEASING All Makes ln•111pleJ '69 Ford Galaxie 500 2 door . hardtop coupe $102.00 tNr mo. + t•• CORT FOX LEASING 224 0. W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach, C11if • 642·8440 fqrpeople going places 5~~VELER . _ The place is anywhere! Old Crow makes it a little more special. Old Crow WllKln i 1U1C111 10Ui1011 'lrusin u ri:GOf. tistllW uo tonw '' tM: cu tw.) oisnwn "-fl~Wlllt.u. fortnl\d .. ~ ~ -. \ \ DAILY PILOT JC Musicals -· . Santa Ana Players _ _ ~ I . . . Dominate Trny Bids 'Outward Bound' Has Rough Voyage By WILIJ,Uf GLOVEll , NEW YORK (AP) -Thr,. muslcala and a drama from ' England dominate the nomlna~ tions for Broadway's aMual Tony ay,•ards for dl.stln,W.shed theater wort, announced Mon- day. ' The twie shows a r e "Promises, Promises" and "Zorba," each listed in eight prize categoriu, and "1776," With sl:r; cltaUons. The Jourth competitor for "best musical" is "Hair," which drew a single other nomination, for its direc- tor. Topping the play list is\ .,Hadrian Vil," with five nominations. 118 three rivals ror "best drama" are "Lo:vers," "The Great White Hope" and "The Man in the Glass Booth," each of which got nominations in two other categories. _ DAILY l"ILOT Sl•ll l"lltlt By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Df ._ 0111)' l"li.t Srtlf Sutton Vane's not-ao-1unny. comedy about lhe Final Ju<te- ment was temporarily rescued from obscurity last weekend by the Santa Ana Qim1nunity Players. 111e premiere performance of the eschatologlcal play "Out,vard Bound" was wit- nessed by a fairly small au. "OUTWA«IO •OUHO"" 01~1:d\4.Y l>Y wr\r:O ~bf~,11~.ui"n1:r cl!rtclllr Ltt H.,...lnelon, ortKnlr. " 1114: 11111• An• Communlt\r P11veri frld•n 1f>d S11Urffr1 thto"'h M1rc11 ~ !I tt11 Pl•veri Thfl•l.,. 1020 w 111h .. SMJll Aiw. THI CAST Tom PrlDr . ., .. .. ... I.ff Howl!\9Ton .....,rs, Cllv•ci.n-l1nk1 . . Gilr!rUdl Horn Mri. Midget . : M1roert1 Soy1r Llnolt v . . . . . . . • . . Fr1n• Rugell Rev. Wllll•m Duke ...•. Deo!\11 Griffith Scrubbr .. , .. . •• . • . • . Ernll Brown Ann ..... , .. · ... ., .lll!tv M<Clurt Htnry . . . . , .. How.Hd Gi.u.er Rtv. Fr11111. Thompion Rou Corbin Altogether 11 plays and 9 musicals were included among the 60 nominations in 15 Dinner is (lllp) Served dience gathered around the theater-tn-the-rectangle stage of the playhouse. Before them rested a set more reminiscent of a n Oklahoma dustbo\lo·l barrooin rather than the lounge of a ship "sailing for both heaven and heli'' called for by the script. categories. The eventual win-Reaction to Paul Sullivan's epiCurean deligbt ranges from cautious curiosity ners, chosen by about 400 from Anabelle Quigley (left) and RitaKisner to do•\'nright fright fro1n l\1ike representatives of the press Skinner in this scene from "Barefoot in the Park," opening F1iday at the and craft organizations, will Huntington Beach Playhouse. be announced Sunday, April ----"----------------------------- 20 on a 90-minute telecast over the NBC network. The noinlnatlons were made by a slx-man panel chosen by the league of New York Theaters which is sponsoring the 23rd annual awarda. Pittsburgh Sy1npl1011y Offers Ne'.'ertheless, the players Two D1·ama The liveliest competition for Individual honors is e:r;J)ectcd to be in the "dramatic star" category, where the nominee!! are: Art Carney, "Lovers": Bala11ced, Skillful Co11ce1·t Oasses Vie James Earl Jones, "The Great \Vhite Hope": Alec McCoo.\·en, "Hadraln VU"; and Donald Pleasence, "The Man in the Glass Booth." Other principal categories include: female dramatic st.ar -Julie Harris, •'Fo r ty Carats"; Estelle Parson s, "The Seven Descents o f W.yrtle"; Charlotte Rae, "Morning, Noon and Night"; Brenda Vaccare, "The Good· bye People." r.tusical star. male Herschel Bernardi, "Zorba ''; Jack Cassidy, ''Maggie Flynn"; Joel Grey, "George ?<.f!'': Jerry Orba ch, "Promises, Promises." Musical star, female - Maria Karnilova, "Zorba ": Angela Lansbury, 1 ' D e a r World": Dorothy Loudon, "The Fig Leaves Are Fall· ing": Jill O'Hara, "Promises, Promises." Operating under eligibility rules revised somewhat from last year when several con- troversies developed, the' 1969 nominations are for shovrs "''hich opened since March 20, 1968 and last Sunday, March 16. By T0~1 BARLEY ·Df .... 0111)' l"li.t 111.n \Villiam Sleinberg's Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra ~ one of that hard core of concert ensembles that can always be counted upon to provide a poli s hed , academic performance in an age when our ears are con- stantly being assailed by the less worthy wailings to 'vhich many orchestral dircclors seem to have become ad· dieted. This is not to say that Steinberg is not prepared to venture into relatively untrod fields of music or is unlikely to air works capable of arous- ing c~ntroversy. He will do this but only -and this is why we so admire the man -so long as it in no way interferes with the essentially classical repertoire on which his fine orchestra is built. llis program Sunday night at Orange Coast College was a typical example of Stein· berg's "Old Guard" approach to the concert hall audience: Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Disolay S A thln11 done ' American astronaut 14 Prieste ss of Aphrodllt 15 Culture _ 111ediu111 1' Prap11rti1n 17 River of crntral Eutllpt 18 Inclination lfom horiaonta1 I! SUpply satlsfllction '°' 20 Samuel's ttacher 21 Clan sftllbol 2Z o,en to corrupthll\ 23 Dldoy1I: 2 words Z5 Blblical l!laee 27 Cereal orass 21 Emanation from ttir S\afS 2t Fi'ull ptlllfuct JZ Dick--·: American comic 35 Shorr 37 Hindu spring ftstlval 31 Fake 3' Instrument .tO Wllttt Boston tnd Hallfa:r •r: 2 words I • • • 4Z Kin d of ema nation 43 Fu ssy extilem!l'lt 44 Btwlldered 45 Polynesian herb 40 --Colbornt. Onl. 47 Whtrt' Haarlem is 51 Caust of Joy 54 Stt in operation 5• Lumbf:t source 57 Rough te tht touch 7 Menu 51 Place of i!trll lodging ! Mont-----: 59 Founder or Qul!bec ski Holy Roman resor t Empire ') Most 60 Cause to s1rious adhttr 10 At anotlltr 61 Noun ending llrne 6Z Hot1etail's II Harrow's rtl atlve big rival 63 Cut Into 12 15th eubts cen tury ship ''Ont who 13 Carol accompl ishes 21 Tran~it: things Abbr. ~5 Enjoylrig 24 Viz: 2 words libtrly 2(1 lnvolvln9 _ DOWN 1 Bright condition 2 Grtttln1 3 Path -' Dlstr11s 5 Unconvtn· tional: 2 wonl' • Variety qulttz little hardsh ip 28 Push upwards 2' Bt in accord 30 Fortwllh 31 Sultabl r 32 AftiCM tfte :33 Austtalian tennis '''"' J4 Btsldt5 .. • • • J/18/b'I 35 Cau sed to be humble Jb Kind of ~oYtrnment )8 Fahly unsatis- factory 41 Dressed ~2 Sedlmtnlary maltrlll 450 . Henry 4fl Smooth Jood product •7 German stilt ~8 In 1cct11danct 11o ith •'I Gunpowder ingrrdient 50 ldltr 51 Kind of noisr 52 Ftllg: Comb. fofl'I 5) Colonizer of Greenland 5S St1an9e: Comb. for111 59 Being of inferior cauaHty a beautifully balanced, cn- ,thusiastically received airing of four y,•orks carefully chosen by this skilled director and each an impeccable ad- vertisement for this top-flight ensemble. It is difficult indeed lo put forward any one of these of- ferings for special acclaim. So please al10\\' us to nominate the ll'Ork that drew our own most sustained applause - Richard Strass' "Don Juan." Strauss' airy, drifting -nuances in this flitting, dreanl· like sketch of ll. legendary seducer ""ho is reduced to something less than heroic in this superb score were con1- pletely captured in this fine reading, The absolute decay of Don Juan was richly evi· dent in those final. moving passages so capably and clearly directed by Steinberg. It is. for us at any rate, the richest producl of a corn- poser ""ho did not al\\•ays ha ve scores of such value to offer to the concert audience. The very nature of its structure and t the great demands ii places upon today's orshestra prevent us from heariilg this fine tone poem as often a~ v.·c \\'Ould wish. And, let us quickly add, it is a complex score that is not always analyzed with the clarity and perception it en- joyed Sunday niight in this excellent Orange C o u n I y Philharmonic Society concert. And hiaurice fl a v e I ' s ''Rapsodie Espagnol." \Vith it s rich. Spanish texture and full - blooded Basque overtones v.•as similarly just so much more grist for the Steinberg mill. He completely captured the bra ve elan and fire of that breathtaking finale , a magnifi· cent movement that revealed the full depth and careful con· ruction of this g r e a t Pittsburgh orchestra. It wa!f a fine reading of Ravel <lL lhe very heig~t of his iberian period, a ro1nancc that did so much to lend color to the Dra1na students f r o 1n Newport Harbor and , \Veshninster high schools willl' participate in Souther n1 California's 13th annual high1 school drama f•tival Friday Frenchman·s life and music. at Cal State Long Beach. But we must not neglect Harbor High will present lhe solid Beethoven's Sixth "The Lesson,• 1 while "'hich brought this ha'rd-work-\Vestminster's offering will be ing orchestra what wa s , ''How the Mole Lives." perhaps, the ovation of the They will be among 16 one- cvening. It was justified ap-act productions offered during plause for a s ensitive, the all-day festival , sponsored thoughtful reading or the by the CSLB theater arts "Pastoralc," the most fitting department. The plays will be Beethoven symphony for an presented in the college's orchestra ol the construction Studio Theater and Lillie we noted Sunday evening. Theater . That is Steinberg, of course ; :,=,..=.,:-:c,.=,.=.,.=,~ .. =.,c--,.~.,=.-.,-,-,..-n~. every n1ovc is carefully plan-"'1lr ned and his displacements are carefully plotted to the last violinist and the final drum roll. He captu red for us, clearly and expressively, the carefree, rural life of this monumental work, the happy, rustic ron1ancing that seems as fresh to us today as when the then happy Beethoven penned his score. And the orchestra was al its best in the rolling , bra~llng s c en es, perfectly capturing the o r ga ni zed cacopttony of that tumultuous "1..ii,_•l f'ltMl\,.llOI< KIRK DOUGLAS -~ ••• -· 11!E BROTHERHOOD -·•l(lfo(ll""''-oetll! 8Do movement. ·'============'.JI An evening of fine muslc,lr N.t.tlON.O.l CENElt"L C°"""°""TIOfll Foxi!t".!!!! launched wilh a shimmering, polished rendition of Carl f\1a- ria von \Veber's "Overture to Oberon ," that happy. carefree ''pipe opener'' that is so San OM&o r,_,ai Jn.t.i • ~271t popular with our concert au- diences. It wasn·t, tor a change. the kind of concert that sends the audience home to argue ) about the merits or otherwise of a v.'ork or works. ft was good rnusic, faultless- ly played and enthusiastically received. The re was no room lor controversy or unhappy mulling about anything that Steinberg played. That's the way he it and plans Jt. More to him , OPIN 6145 CLIFF ROBERTSON CLAIRE BLOOM -In - ''CHARLY'' STEREO SENSATION! The colorful sound or Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM .:te From Fashion Island. Newport Beach I I ' I 1nanagcd lo do with v•hat they had, putting in performances \Vhich ranged from oc- casionally b r i 11 i ant · to an1ateurish. A remarkable performance was also turned in b 'i Margaret Boyer who was cast In the role of Mrs. Midget, a poor befuddled woman from the parts of London never shown on travel posters. Although hers was a minor role she polished it to a ·gen1 but :1on1etimes managed to get her Cockney mixed up 'vilh an unmisl<ikable American drawl. the play'a dtamatlc ·dllaloj,e was devoted to them and both consistently did a f In e' Job .lhroughout the tllree acts of the play. ' Ross Corbin. who portrayed the Reverend Frank fho1npson, lhe "examiner" ot the Fin&& Judgment, had the best lines of the entire dialogue and turned in a performance most pro- fessionals could use as a stan- dard. Despite )he surprisingly saceharine and inanely happy- e n ding, his role will ~ remembered as the outstan- ding part of the show. The Sanla Ana Community Players present "Outward Bound" again March 21, Z? . 28 and 29. Their playhouse is located at 1020 w. 8th St., Santa Ana. Lee Howington, appearing as Ton1 Prior, a professional drunkard whose mind re- n1ained remarkably I u c i d despite all the alcohol in his system. dre\v good audience response wilh his I i n e s although he did not-reach complete fluidity of performance during the first act Frank Rugell seemed to have a ,problem In .simulating a British accent as called for by his role as 'Lingley, an up-tight waxy-rac~d misan- thropic businessman . What "''ou ld have be~en ari otherwise brilliant performance w as .marred by his Jock-jawed at- tempt to produce an upper class English dialect. Dennis Griffith appeal'ed asl1;;;;~;~~;;~ the Reverend William Duke lJ and Ernie Brown was seen as Scrubby the barkeeper. Both acted their parts very ·well. Belly McClure and Howard Glasser gave a convincing representation of a young cou· II iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiJ pie v.•ho had committedll suicide. A major portion of ENDS TONIGHT The occasional hilarity was • doubled when Gertfude Horn, as Mrs. Cliveden-Banks, a street girl turned socialite, strutted on the stage and held the viewers captivated with her snobbish antics. g •••;••N• I ®'0U ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION "BEST ACTOR" CLIFFLROBERTSON NlW,O•f l fACH -•I ••• ••t,.•<• •• l•~•I••• U~• h lo -01. 3·•3)• Dean Martin .. M.ttHelm. n.e Wreclcing Crew 110M:O.or • . FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER ••••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••• • • • • • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••• * COAST lfWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. • NEWPORT BEACH • 644·0760 LAST WEEK-ENDS TUES. BEST PICTURE· DIRECTOR NOMINEE f'iuNcolnl1REUJ -· ROMEO .rJUUEl aALIOA '73-4048 O,.• 6:41 7tt I . lal._. .. , .. '"'""'" LAST TIME TONIGHT St•rt• Wdn.Mirr "The Boston Strangler" & ''P1etty Poison'' Ex.adly <11 Shown .at 2°Year L.A. Roadshow! FOR ALL YOUNG LOVERS WHEREVER YOU ARE ( "GREAT CATHERINE" ,, . I l:M SMltitt "THE SERGEANT" Al10 P•YI N--.. "HARPER" STA•TS WIDNISDAY TWO ACADEMY NOMINATIONS A Story •f J Stf••,_ A F•fllet, • M•tller, 0114 • ,.,. A110 - Gear .. ,.,,.,, In..., Steve11t Oru11 Well• "HOUSE OF CARDS': in Color BARGAIN MATINEE WEDNESDAY, 1 P.M. I- ,, ...... IM'lh Milt. AdMlul"' Sl.00 """°" • AIWol,J, CQNA loltM, ltlOM' J.ft<)llJ SUSPINSI AND ACTION [!] ----I GREGORY. EVA MARE , PECK SAINT .. ,_,.,__., THE-STALKING MOON TECHNICOlOA" • ~ SICOND THllWI -~~ I I -..... , I • •r:AC" a . AT tL'-1• • IUNTIHGTON ar:ACH • •• .,, .... POSITIYILY INDS TUllDAY 6 ACADIMY NOMINATIONS Jj@'.mDITTI® ~ " " ~ /jfoW.UI "2l:IO'I d rachel. nKrhel ... 1~ .. --1 rumar•Ww.ftln• AUO llST ACTOl _,,, .. -..... ·~-·­ltt••" u.Mlt• QaOYt .......... ..,... ; YO\! CAN'T UC¥1 [!] I - I ....... -.~ .... GREGORY · EVA MARE PECK SAINT ... ,.... ................ ~ ' ntE.Sl'ALKINO MOON ltCHIOClOft•. ~ HI WAI A lONtl., J \., I ·'1 L.t c , ' I I ::-i I II ,yo HEEUN -· ... .. I I U DAILY PILOT ---------~---~~---' ·------------~-.,_,________. ~~~~_____._ __ ' ---·-----------~- Doves Still ,_D_A_D_JY_P_R_O_T_ -Hold Off 1 On Nixon WAMT lDS WASHINGTON (UPI) -' Dospile a ~ dllqulet HOU IS POii SALi ovu Ille .,..l&led warfare Gonlrol 1000 and deodlocbd nep1au..,,\;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. anuwv ~ton ..., not II' s A C. ia1111 Pull!! nody yet to pounce .... PnoaJ. ck.i Nixoa'1 bond!.., of Ille · Vletoam war. '!be """''r a111iuc1e ...... mOlt ""'ton -bot not all -attms ·to be tbol Nixon delerves more time t o formuLtto a jlOllcy designed to acbltve ~ 0 teuonable aettlement" be seeb ln Pads. A ..U-bnpgoed montorium on the· Vietnam debala . - whlch rapd last year - '"'«an after the Paris talill were anoounctd in.a concerted effort not to upset tbe dellcato peact attempta. NEEDED TIME To this was added, late last year, 'a bipartisan acknowledgement that President~lect Nixon should have adequate time to make bit moves. Thi.fa what JOQ'D 111 wbtn )'OU 1te .-BEST ExcluRYe! It't. J.n a quiet lieClton• ot Mesa ne1 Mu, de. to an -" 50 """ porlc. Beautll"11y """""""1 JA. c!UdJDr ... fn!ry, ..... ...,,.... ""°"""""' .. -all s """"°"1a. HUGE <X>VERED PA. TI01<-1uden wttb tea boulil!! ROOM FOR BOAT OR TJtAIL.. ER.. Bat "' aD, 1bO FHA bn e 5!1% 1'>- terest e.n be iusuined by ANYONE&: )'UU'll be aJlllW.!d at what yuu see 1or ONLY •• $27,?SO. • COATS wAtuce REALTORS $464141- IOpon E....ingsl But sil. weeks after Nixon 1~~~~~~~""'::""'~ took office, some of the more Hey Veterans! militant critics of the war It's Tax Refund Time are starting to fret. One of And chances 8ll! Youn will the most articulate ones, Sen. buy this 3 BEDROOM, 2 George S. McGovern (D-S.0.), bath sparkler with HUGE this week made one of the living room with built in most critical speeches on the bar, RANCH SIZE KITCH· handling over the war by the EN, HARDWOOD FLOORS Nixon administration 1'0 far & lush carpeting. Lots of McGovern. a 1968 pe~ce yard with FRUIT TREES & ~andidate for the Democratic IDG COVERED PATIO. "d t"al . .: .d Payment! less than rent. pres1 en 1 nominawon sm TOTAL PRlCE ;n oco th~ Nb:on administr~tion has WE SE.LL A HOME failed to mount tbt strength EVERY 31 MINUTES and courage" to reverse the Vietnam policies o! President Walker & Lee Lyndon B. Johnson. Last year, at the height of 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams the debate, this wou1d have ~9491 triggered a series of speeches Open 'tll 9 P.M. by doves lining up behindl.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= McGovern. · 3 BR & POOl :nmEE DISAGREE Three of the most prominent This beautifull.y landscaped senators _ Democratic leader home on comer Jot leatures Mike :P.lansfield, M 0 n t . , -double fireplace, outdoor Democratic whip Edward M BBQ. solar heatM pool, ex-. tra large ~rooms, Hurry Kennedy, Mass., and George this ooe won't tut n, Aike_n (R-Vt.), clisagr .. d $lO 750· with their outspoken comrade. 1 Aiken, tbt highly-regarded OPEN DAILY l·S senior Republican, bluntly said 2527 Andov•r Pl, CM "I think McGovern spoke prematurely and out of tum. "It just doesn't make sense.'' Aiken said. In effect, Aiken said, McGovern was saying "Nixon's been Presi-* 642-lnl Anytlm• * dent six weeks and he hasn'tl'=~~~~:::;~:::;~=: settled all the problems ofl' tbt world yet We've got to 3 BR• Family Rm the world yet. We've got to Westc:liff give him a chance." Nixon Faces Stiff Fight On Sentinel Provincial charm on lge cor· ner lot with H/F pool & sep play yard. Immac condition &: Wtefully decorated. Xlnt value at ............ $48, 750 Joe Clarkson ....... Coltlwell, Banker & Co. '* e. c:.-"~ N.-.-t ...... C."-"9 Kl NIU CNl J.- HOUSES FOR SALE -·· WE'RE WAVING THI 'LAG FOi ••• "THE ulL ISTATUS" All our efforts are c:once~ trated in the Ntwpart Huo bor Coat.a Mesa area. We are your nelgbbon. We Uw here and must continue to IUOCttd betel MOYI IN TOMOUOW -4 Bedroom, 2 bath family home kitch- en has elec. bullt-ins.-Sliding elastt doors from LR and Den.-to a covered patio.-$23,950.. 20 Profesalonallt To Serve You! HORSE LOVERS Santa Ana Height.a 66x200 with 2 bed· room home and a 2 car g!IJ1L&e. Lot completely te~. $23,500 --Great '"""" llG IONUS 4 Bdrms. plus 20x30 playrm, plumbfti for bath or wet bar. 4 yrs. new, nr. schools · & shopping. $32,950 ,. Honesl ActiOll, Sincere Service We're Proud to Serve 5 IEDROOMS fm ?.lesa del Mar'I nlcesL Owner's uy I'm too big. But for $38,500, I may be rightforyou. Wann &: friendly and Jove kid!. S46°231J or 646-7171 HOME+ INCOMl .Npt. Hghts. Dist. 2 bedroom completely tC'modeled + l bed· room rental -2 gar .. ages. New driveways -inc:. pot $300 - $29,500 -10% dn. INDOOR POOL Separate heated nn for indoor swim· ming, 3 bcdrooms, l baths, on la~ cor- ner lot in choice at• ea. of Costa Mesa.- Room for boat or trail~ -only $29,· 950 -c:an you be· lieve it? Appraised $22,UO Immediate posses· sion. 3 bedroom, :J baths, living room with open fireplace, CArpet.5 &: Drapes.- No down to Ve.ts.- $1400 down to aJJ. Need InformaUon? \Ve are u close aa your phone. SPANISH HACIENDA Betll'r than new! 4 Bdnn., 3 bath with g arden kitchen. step .. down livtnr room. Decorator drapes and lndlrttt lighting. Low "-t $34,900. WESTCLIFF Vacant &: lonesome rt>ady for lmmedlat& occupancy. Specloua living room with lol burning 01'f:plt.M. C.rpt>ted A drapf!d.. $40,950 -10,. dn. Call or Conw-ln. \V11~~ Veterans Plan. 2 OFFICES: 2i90 HARBOR BLVD. l roo NEWPORT BLVD. 546-2313 ott 646-7171 THE :;-:, .. " · 'r.,,,1..:...~-. •. E .ST ..-"\T E P' -------------------·-- • • • ·IH"'O.._u.s"'l.._S .;;P.;;.OR"-"SA;.;;L:;,;l;.._.;;H;;;;O.;;.U;.;SE;.;S..;.F.;;O;.;Rc;;SA"'L;:,:l=--1~~s FOR SALE l'Go~-~~e~l iiiiiiiiiiiii1~C>~C>~OGo~-~-~·~I iiiiiiiiiiii~1~C>~DD~ _o_..,._r1_1 ____ 10GO_ • l'LL GIVE· You have only It DAY~ lo lake ad· vantage of our 8°" % Interest rate on the beautlflll new homes of Ran· cho La Cuesta on Brookhunt al Allanta in Huntington !Jeacb. Our lender mual increase bis inter· est rates on April 7, 1969. All thaUs necessary to assure your· self of thi3 low interest is your se- lection of one of our 3 or 4 BR, 2 or• 3 bath, 1 or 2 story homes & make your !nlllal deposit of $500. Call 988-2929 or 988-1338 any day from 10 to 6. rr TO YOU STRAIGHT U )'OU an inlertlb!d In a a:oocl loc,_Uon <Costa Mtaa, Newport Htigbll .are a), dooe to Newport Hel&h~ crad• ...... 01' bib) & """'d<Y park u l!llml. lhoP- Plnc. 5 min. to beach. a wry quiet street, bJg R2 lot (room fot boat. camper or rental unit), 3 bedrooms (or 2 A a den) 1114 bat.bl; ftreplace, aidewalb, ..... rJley, -ble garap, Wge fenced back yard, then -""' at 64M687. I am uking $25,500 but if )'OU come run- ning (I'm·in a huny) with check book in hand. ra Cive it to you 1traight, I'll 111.~ you $1000. (That's as stra.i&ht as I can aet). Exclusive HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES P:Oll SALi! Bucco/a ; Gngful U//ag• 16th & Tustin -Caste MIN< ADULTS Most homes are built with only cblldren In mind. We have five homes designed for the comforts and fUn of adulta. BeaulllUI tu look at, room for hobbles, private office, separata clining nn, guest room with bath, S car ga- rage, walking distance to churches, Westcllff shopping, and restaurants. 7% with 10% down -71'1% with 1r~ Dn, no 2nds -no points -2t yri.., balOMe PriFed from $30,950 to $33,950 Exclusln Agent p. a. palmer incorporated 3371 VIA LIDO Tract. Ph: SC0.5113 from L.A. Call-MA 5-I03C ------- 1000 Harbor View Hiiis Genorel • 1000 0o..rl1 Gener ii , 1000 Gener ii 1000 JUSI' usri:n one ot tht few I.;;;;:;;:,;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;· ~I·:.· -;-:;::-:;:::;;-:--! 1--------1--------li.u.kr...U..l!oauti!Uldrap. Corci11a' clel Mar LAND BUYS CL 1000 ................. , \/ETallllflll "and nylon shag""'"°" .. $400 pr acr.. 20% down. Parents Retreat '-~',.._.i throUghout Mlm>re<t c!ooet uuplex 6% '"""''· doors in master and front Attractive home with ~ ACRES Th• silence is goldon In th1' FREE FREE FREE bedroom, Slidil>r glass doors =all Apartment In r.ar $200 pr acre, Trade or 1mn1 24xl.9 tt. master suite, 3 Lei us check your eligibility. from master bedroom and nicely decorated 240 ACRES additional bedrooms plus 3 You may be eligible to buy family room to patio. Makes opens onto cheerlul ~tio $100 pr acre, Trade or tm'nl baths. Large sunken living again under the G.I, Bill ot this home very ligbt and with complete privacy RIDGECREST room with dramatic mimlf'o Rights, even thougb yoU airy. 3 Bedrooms, dining 3 Bedrooms &: 2 baths 30 acree. $200 pr acre. ed fireplace wall. Boat port have used )'OUf Gl. once. area, family room, p I u 1 lovely living room 80 acnos, $4<t. pr acre. anr! double detached garage. Find out w b e r e you break.tut room. Gas or 220 with brick fireplace 20% down. $29,750 with a low interest stand!?!!,NO COST. NO in Iawxtry. Beautiful land· formal dining room HARRY A. BOGGS F.H.A. loan to be assumed. OBLIGATION CALL US ~scaping with sprinklers front excellent value at $42,500 Realty 96U637 TODAY. • and rear. Priced under mar. Call Kent Kingsley Like to Entert1ln? Call to see this FREE FREE FREE k•l Call for apoptotment to Res. 540'812 * * * * * ""'· HARaOR 1'For A Wise Buy'' Colesworlhy & Co. · SU-Tm OPEN EVES. Commercial Bldg. Small S unit near 17th I: Newport mW. only 6 """' old. S400J down I:: owner will finance balance for )'OIL Ideal !or user • full price $21,500 Spacious 4 Bedroom Jean Smith Realtor 400 E. 17th St. Park Ave. finish 646-3255 FOUR BEDROOMS with vnll to wall carpets and custom made drapes. Two baths wjth ceramic tiled floors, tiled around tub with • glass shower door, ceramic tiled shower, custom built pullmans. Large kitchen, garbage dispogal, new gW:a lined hot water heater. Cor- ner lot with room for boat or trailer storage. ONLY $21.000 wmt TERMS A· VAILABLE. NEAR WflTCUff CENlfRr NEWPORT Beautiful 3 BR home with hardwood fioors. Walk to schools &: shopping. 2 bath~ spacious J i1v in g ?"?Om. fireplace. Fenced rear yard with lovely covered patio. Lowest prio- ed home in Harbor High- lands • ONLY $28,500. Call for showing. I' \I I • \\ 111 11 ~(\l!\\ll\\ k ~ A I 1 ' ' " um Baker!, c.M. CORONA DB. MAR Newport et Victoria ' 646-lill Opell Sunday 1-5 11-2 lot + "°""'· Rare avan. 9647 Lark Circle ahili<Y. hl&h tovestm••t "°' tentlal; 6th lot from Ocean mvd. & titach. 3 BR., 1%. baths; some view, AlMQ'I rented. Priced to sen. HOME AND GUESTHOUSE Great 3 bedroom, 2 bath Mme with charming 1 bed· room guest house for mother in-law, BuUt·in electric kit· chen, iilcludlng dishwasher, Wood burning fireplace. Al- ley entrance for boat or trail- er. A ni.re find, only $29,500. Submit your home' on oOr guarantee trade plan. Walker & Lee 2043 Westcliff Dr. 646-7711 Open Eves. HfW CITY PARK UVE FEAR FREE. No jet noise. East of Bushard north of Ellls, Fountain VaJ.. ley. 3 large bedrooms. 2 full baths, 15 x 20 enclosed patio. FHA or VA financing. HARRY A. BOGGS Realty 962-663'1 N. E. Costa Mesa 3 large bdrms. 1 % baths, ht.rdwood noon, large kit.th- en & service porch area. Double garage, Big yard with shade & fruit trees. 122,950. W1ll ... McCardle, Rltrs. 1310 Newport Blvd., c.M. 548-7729 Eves. 644-0084 ·That's right. A new city park New Listing , only 2 blocks from this 2 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths on cor- bedroom &: den or 3 bed-ner • room for boat. trailer room house. It baa carpets, etc. Big GI loan to take OV· drapes, fireplace, 1~ baths, er. lta a real buy at $22,650. $37,500 Newport II 5 Bedrooms Large family room, masttt suite with fire. place, 5 bag carpels throughout. Many ex- tras. Top buy $47,950, ) ~. '. '!'"11·r1 1· -• · .. ,:.. ' ., . ' 546-5990 built·ins. large R-2 Jot with ~ 5.C&-SUO _ easy alley acess, large fnarciiemau.e.tm 1--------"'°""h fur boa~ camper, or LLEGE REALTY Pele Barrett Really bulld yourself a rental, or 1500 Amins at HWar,CJL just enjoy the well land· ,.~~~~~"l"!!~~I !Caped hack yard. Onlf 11> blkL to Newp>rt Heights PRESTIGE grade ICbool. AskinJ $25,500 phone owner at 644-4681 for TWO STORYS 1.•,,;Pi;P~ ... to .. ""'iiii· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; 1 ' BR, loveJy cpls/drps. tn. r-tercom throout. Electric kit-MAGNIFICENT chen. SHOWS LIKE A MOD- EL, VA or FHA terms. BRASHEAR REAL TY 847-8531 Eves. 536-2123 Presents F1ntastJc Viewl f Bedrooms, dining, !amily 3\! hath$. l 1600 Westclill Dr. J NEWPORT BEAOI ~... 642-5200 ''A Winding Sta1rcau'' leading to an open Balcony and 3 btdrooma overlookln& a terrazo entrance. A step down living room. Formal DINING ROOM. Separatto guest room. 3 Baths, all electric kitchen. sprinkler 675-5200 3 BR, plus 3 Ba. COi)'' dlnini/ family rm. 2 frplcs + pl13 nn. Encloled pool. aepuate Play ya1'1, 152.SOO. Welker RHlty $19,450 $150 Dn/$16t p1y1 111 Rltr. 642-9730 Eves. MS-0720 e KBllEDY system front and rffr. $3,500 ======== Down and take over GI Costa Meu 1100 5\1 % loan. $31,lOO FULL ;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; PRICE. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee Treat Your family to a home with a swimmin& pool for a bot 1ummer. Nice 3 BR home with fireplace 7682 Edi~r and new carpetfn&, Located 8424455 or 541).:;.140 on the Eastlide, qulet strttt. Open Eves. Easy financing, take over Thrff Wishes 5% % loan. 126,500 It peace, ~mfort, locat;lon iJ. <iJ L ~ im.:~~~t~ H"~ Newport Helibts grade a .I ALT y school. and an shopping. 2 ' ."..,•,.",.NB!!!!!!'"Poo~t ,.o.,",.· ,. ....... w,.1, I blks to new park, Only I • ;25,500; and all ..,,. ''pla.·• Four Bedroom + Paol features. 3 bedrooms, 2 Overlooks beautiful Costa bath!, fireplace, cpts. and Mesa Country Club. Jmma- drapes, double garap, con. culate condition &-priced for c:rete drive, large fenced iriimediate &ale at only $28,· back yard on 5lbtI.30 FT. R·2 750. FHA/VA or may aaume UYT. There is not too much 5% % loan • $175 month to- available in this part ol tal. CAIL MO-ll51 Copen eastaide C.M. Hurry. 644-4681 eves). $43,500 Spanish Hacienda with 3 car garage, 4 bdrms, Master bedrooms has 27' ot closets 1 COLLEGE PARK on one wall plus adult re- treat separate bib It shower, AREA large family room with bU-ill 4 BR. 18.4 Ba, 22 ft livinl wet bar, 45' of covered patio, rm, blt·irl!, w/w crptl, drp1, ceramic tile garden kitchen fenced. Walle to all schools with indoor outdoor bar + &: shopping $26,500. 2278 Cor· pass thru window. Existing neU. 646-2309 Agt. 6% FHA loan payablo 1270 I -~Tc-op~Qu~1~l""lty~D~up-.le_x_ month including taxes, NEW ON MARKET. 2 BR., hd~ .firs, frplce11, FA heat, blt-in kltch,, garages betwn units., lg 1ncd yard, Quiet street. $28,500. This won't Eastside • $18,950 i..t. ""!!1~E .. Roomy home on large 66 X b Olso RI 546-5580 140 tt. aimer Jot. zoned to Bo "· tr. .J>uild 2 more units. Live in UNITS,. $20,900 the home while you build 2 BR house plu1 1 BR. rear income units. ~ to shop. house, lot 60 x 165. Eastslde, ping & schools, A bargain By OWMI' 546-8224. buy at $18,950, HOME .. R-2 lot. Excel WE SELL A HOME Westside. 3 BR 2% ba. room EVERY 31 MINUTES for 4 or s um~. S!S-162:1 Walker & Lee 1=""='" ===1 N<iwport Beech 1200 2043 Wtstclill Dr. 646-7711 Open Eves. PENTHOUSE Balbo1 Bey Club, NB. P1noramic view B1y & Ocean. Luxurious every details. Marble floors, deep carpet- ing, frplc. 40' Jiving rm. sep. din rm. den., 1rg custom Jdt. 3 BR. 3 BA •I gold faucets .l appointments. Avail Leue b a a t a by appointment 5fG.0066 or 521-U32 $26,900 6°/o VA LOAN LARGE FAMILY BALBOA POINT Roomy 2 BR. neWly dee, w/ frplc. Loe on lrg lndscpd lot near Bay It Ocean. Shelter- ~ paliow/ cover. By owner. $35,000 * 675-2681 HELP! Hawait bound, must sell my lovely 2 BR. 2 BA Condo. Immed. pos. $27,500 tmm:. 494-5081 H no ans tl?B-11£6 A.gt. Immaculate 3 BR. ''A"' 3 bedroom Huntington Beach 4 L-_.roolM lrame, beach home, 7 yrs Home. Near Brookhurst A UWU )'OUlli, steps to Ocean, pri-Adams. AD electric kitchen, 21/z baths vale ...... tlon "'"'"· built In .............. ,..., $26,500 FHA-VA Caywood Rily. 541-12'0 ..,....,,. patio. Garap pan- ~ W. Cout Hiway, N.S. a.iled & abelml with food Owner wants to aell. Just '!!!!!!!!!!!!"'"''"'"'"'"'"'"""'I )>lllltry oft kitchen. Complete-listed this fantastic 1800 sq ""''"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'""" STORAGE GARAGE ly carpe.ted. Mo payment ft 5 yea.rs old. HWTY on Harbor Highlands . $13(. It only ..... SUZI. this .... WW .. 11 or , .... down. By owner -priVate option. Newport Beach $20 MONTH 1.-...... ( .. Fllm .... ) ... !'2-.. ---..... 1 HARRY A. BOGGS 4 BR 2~ baths, hup lMnC 403 Newport Blvd. Gar #1 Realty 96U63T room with tittplace, an Open for your inrpection BAREFOOT DAYS you OWE IT TO YOUff,. built.iQ kitchen. hardwood Ed Riddle Realto!' -.am Close to Octan. Bey a: mar-SELF TO INVESTIGATE !loon, comploldy carpoted POOL & VIEW! k>ts. Duplox 2 BR •a ch ~~~E' IND IP)IOGF F En~!:s.N T lrl'": • •-~ dbl n..o. -Unit. Price ol'll,y $33.500. ..~ n.nm; ---~· ePJ11,1e.~·-EXCiusive I W "· --ed to sell Wt! $34,500 van effil .....,Ya: Ne«ts a painter. - JUtr. "6-3928 or ~ Shores model. 4 Br. 3 ba., ....... Roy J . W1rd Co. Bayside Village, frplc, 2 BA. blt-hvi, pool, club hse priv. Aaklng $17,000 613-1254 or m.M58 OUTSTANDING View tn the Blutta 3 JJr, 3 Ba. by owner. $00)dn • ...-* BAY VIEW Fee lot 1:5' X 195• W/ plans, $34,!Q). Owner .st8-1249, 5tS-Q)7 ~ 6 CHENMYER tam. pool, patto "' v1ew. llD L Down P t fBaycrest Of:fk:f:) E L T Y -eymen 1142 Santisgo Dr. 646-15.'ll R A 4 bed~ l"-tile bath. 2'l2S W. Balboa Blvd., N.B. .....,, for boat & trailer. DELUXE DUPLEX 67~ Auum~ bW $18,300, 5%.~ New 3 BR Units Penlnsulal "l'~~~~~~~· I loan. Nl pr1co 121.500. ""ia.,.nt to O..an A e., 4 BEDROOM . $22.500 ISS,950. 1% llnaneing. NothiJ>r to equal In thls 2 --ERNIE..__ Balbol R11I Estela Co. baths. 1..,11y room. llO!ated ,... .,.. ""LAND 100 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa ....,. ltvlnc ...,. wUh fire. NOW'S· THE TIME FOR ~~u!':.~ai~ "."°J:.: QUICK CASH Gffr .. WllllamMin UGH A m-cio Real~·-m."" THRO ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 Bumi ....... y.. m-040 plo: .. larp brick patlo with RMltor -$21,750. 4 BDRM ... BBQ buUt"'11, dlslowuh. ~ilned Jot • larRe active o·. ~l'ml 143 8rwdw1y 645-1111 faJnlly. 2 ,....,.te baU... TARBELL 2955 Herl>or Eves. 642-1453 '46-451' Se-parate dining tol'lm. Cir:· PLACE roar tr&n& ad deft TWO 2 BR HOUSES DAILY PILOT ·WANT AD .&42-5671 ZONED Cl tor baa. Good ttllt'nt are11.. f>40..17Z .... ' tM, att ~ -DAILY Jt..2 acme, 2 lotJ 100x135', an EM!llde 2 BR'-'-...... TARBELL 2955 Herbor P11Dr -ed --l>ulld2c<3moteuni.._l'r\ce redcc. ()nlf IU,9'>0 • $2000 0 CE A N F R 0 N T Lowly ea-orrt $30, T>O. dn handln. KIJvaard R.E. modern J BR. + tam. rm. Need• Gubem:1a.QC!cf Leon Vlbert, Rtaltor o~n :i.-2222 l5000 Doom. m-~ °"""' ,,.,., • wtlh • "*' "'' -M3-058S an)'tlm• -Whited~!- SAYB .-CISB! Read The DAILY '-ILOT c L A 5 5 I F I D IRIT 1111.r t{f. • TlltsdaJ, Mardi 18, 1969 DAll.Y I'll.Gt 11 HOUSE'S POR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSli fOIV iil• tJW !'!!f!~w~!J'!';rtg""~och;!;;;;;;;;~12GO~ I _L_hlo_l_sla._ ___ ia_S I ~ _,, ;; -STRIKING DOYlf Shores 1.ow1y muter Bd • u. rm off protected " tedudtd E..L I ( ff So. pa6o, plus 2 Bda + amaD n111u om or. ome Bd. Bl klt. w iot • 165.ooo R. C. GREER, llEALTY foreyer View = v1a Lido m&100 Only $63,500 White ~ courtyard entl7 ' BR. ...... 3,000 .. It HUge blt-tn kitcbtn w/'break- tast bar, ~ fom)aJ dlnin& rm, 25 ft Vliew 1Mns rm with ~ and btt·ln wet bu, Jge ...._ Bl\ suite w/- nn .l bath, Hurry and aub- mlt )'OW' terma. Merle F. Purcall, Riiy 675-4044 or tl42-.1559 Huntt,,,ion Blech 1400 SEE this one bdoio you bey. By owner. Take over my 6% VA Loan on tbla J bedroom home. $134 Pf!' snonth. This is .n you pe.y • prlnclplo. ln-.t • ..... 1-Unlla with Jlut 14,1125 --. All H1ndyman Spaclola eledrtc ldtcben with bullt·ln ·Loe. ori OceanMde oC HwJ. rd. Food W'tr)' oU kitchen 150 74• from Beadl., 4 Ip 1n completely p ane 11 e d Apt. uftlts, needs paint • prqe, 1Dx20 covered patio. god 1eneral dearlup, PO- Carpetlna: tlorouahouL S, TENTIAL INCONE·EX.1 owner .. Prlvatr: 'party CEEOING 110.000 ANNU~ 4 BR HOME (Firm) 962-7689 LY, Prl<e $69.950. BELOW MARKET M-.SSlON REALTI: -2• baths, doubl.~, prqe, M 3·BR 114 bath $150-pet month l~:::i98S::=So.::=Coa::::::::°"=· Lq1IOa IObtt 17th Strfft Shopping lncluding taxes with $19G I' area. can build 2 or DlOl'e down. Medallion home wt,th INCOME UNITS L1!n~i:rt, RNltor blt·ln electric ranp It oven, ,OufBtandiiW, best nntll t:rU. 1arbq:e disposal. 1U FA occupied year around, yiddll '-:==-==:::anydm=::;:,•=::.I heat, cpb/dpa, dble Iara&"! in exceu of 113,(X)O poes. i:· w/boat doot. Fenced, land-Owner .,ya "sell now'' and Nawport Hallfiti 1210 '""'""' oprlnldono, wfD aid In f1nano:!JW. PERSONALITY PLUS! g LOS PADRES ~ 3 Br. 2 Ba. New crpts, drpg,':IC_J lmJtl 627 So. Cout HWf,. '9f.3l.13 hims, 1400 aq 1t. Oetchd rr!!Tll3ll: dbl pr w/eltc opener; $35.000 DUPLEX, 2 and 1 alley acceu. By owner. $22,500 BR, view, juat moodl!led, ~--only ..... --pvt, wild ldtcbienal 4M-8741 ··-·~···alt(. B1lboo Cova 1215 BAYFRONT wiCh b>at slip larp • 811. 2 BA, 16(),000 $2IXIO dn. 529-8100, 318-0891 Newport Sho,_ 12211 A11ume Sl/4% GI Loan $3500 C•lh Down Total pymnts $152/mo. 3 BRs, 114 baths, built-Ina, e&rpeb:, drape1, new paint. mness forces aa.le. Dene Po'"' 1730 BY Owner f Br. J Ra. Edra a.. loL "'""' site: I 11' old. $29.000. - RENTALS Hotr111 fumlshod I 3 'BR Waterfront No. 62 Balboa Coves. 16 O, o o o. Prtfer trade 1or acreage or will consider other. 548- mt Wemllff 1230 Brasheor Realty 847-8531 Eves. 968-ll1t PRICE REDUCED 5%. % loan avail. w/some ca.sh.. 3 BR 1~ be, 18xU' sep, fam rm, frplc, cov. pa- tio. Owner transferred·VA or fllA terms. R1nt1ls to Shera 2005 l'OUNG single ..,.ldnr ... w!Jlhe• room mate bet. U & 24 female. CID I to 5. . 645-<>101, -s. us : 326-Sl95. BRASHEAR REAi. TY 847-8531 Eves. 96S-U71 ROOM rriate needed· brr medjately. Hep t er 1 on (male prd.) 673-lt8'1' BY OWNER in quiet, res. Westclitt. Well kept 3 BR, 2 BA, fam rm. All elec bltns; clean crpts. drps. Prof. lndscp'd • mainl Chldm'• play ya.rd; pet area, $U;950. Wkdayg It. eves, fG,1598 SPACIOUS 4 BR 1%. bath home just painted. $22,000 GI or FHA Definitely a must to see! GIRL Wanted to ._ 2· , BR. apt. WI pool 180 JD!). Call aft 5:30-60-M East bluff 1 ,2 CALIFORNIA RLTY, 2. 1714) 197-1005 OWNER. '3 "BR 3 bath. 2 patios a: terrace. Custom decora.ted $39.950. ~ 1087 Pool Home Costa MIN 2100 QUIEi', cute cteao -· Fumiabed 2 BR. atill..' lndry, pool $150. (Sitter tar ,I infant available)'. 110 Mar. Corone d1I Mar 1150 $165 • I BR U-. Den. l BR 2 be.th, newly redecor-pool, Jllllio. pr, Adult.. no Owner Wiii Finance Ocean Blvd. Reduced to $75,00J • $2{),000 down on this rustic channer with spectacular View. ated, Price $23,750. pets. 646-3164 R. D. SLATES, Rltr. -====·=====:'"! 847-3519 """'· 5.16-1840 N-rt -h 2200 Shake Rool Beauty '= ..::':;'" ~ ~ Larre cW-Oe-aac lot, loqm for tncl. utn. until June 11. boat or trailer, 3 hdrmoo;2% 1.,:m.-=:;:=:,=::::;==:~ baths, clean &: lbarp. Onb' I · Orange Coast Property 332 Margueritto 613-8550 BY-OWNER: 1% Iota, zoned R-2. Small house in rear. $4o,OOO. 315 Hello trope, Write B. Deane, MS W. Mid- dlefield Rd., Apt E-309, Mountain View, Cal. or call (415) 961-'1621 $25,500 no down to Vet&. =C=or..::'11::,..:.-..::•:::..I ::Ml:::.,•.....;="1 841-1266 Evo~ 141-8919 PLUSH HIDE-A-WAY * BDT THIS* REAll; Walk .. .....,.u;Jnr, $5150 Down ocean Ode of HW)'. Penon- A.uume 514 % loen allty plus, wUh a'WIC&do $211.'1/Mo TOTAL a~ -1wcodo blt-lnl, LARGE 3 & DEN. beam ceillnp, bna]duft SHORECLIFF i BR, 2 BA, in exduJlw are'.a, not leased land. U~r $50,<m. By owner. 613-3681 HAFFDAL REAL TY bar, 23" col. TV, patio At 8740 Warner, FV 8"2-44Ce small prden. :r BR. AD new.I llllboo Peninsula 1300 POOL ANYONE? ~.:=-~~ - Spanish exterior. P r J c e d I .==::::o=i:::::====: right! Best location! .Auwne Balbe• Island ms·: FHA Joan. 646-4414 Bye Bye-BUY! Doll House on pen; . .mla point; three bedroomi, one Jl11t• lint fst.t• 2 BR. beaut patio, &vall bO"' 'til Jun lfth. 115 Q)'stal.1 IJttle loland. Call -'II, p.m. (213\ 697..a615 and a hall halhl. 11ttpte"'· FOURPLEXES lge dble prage. Near Chan. 6¥2% LOAN . 2710' n.l and publlo: bcaoh. A NO VACANCIES 1"' · Jewel. Reduced to $38,250. *.. I 4_~1:--2 ... ,.._ ~ ~ BURR WHITE, Rltr. ..9,950 Conly 3 ell) "-··• • -.. _ FIRST PIONEER in 1lr,,oded ~ 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. ., ... ~•..,.. ,,_ ~--mT . 67~0 Evas 642-22531 ,,,,....,,_-~..,..=·-=..,..,,.. -·-~··"' -·· 1"!!!~~~~~~~· I BY o .... r 3 BR. 2 hath. RE TALS I• wool carpeting, cu st om H..,... UnfunaW... Lido Isle 1351 drps, frplc, covered patio, 1;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;; I 1ndscpg, near .Be a ch, ~Gt:.:"';;.:.:':.:•l:_ ___ :;:.:;:i G f f 'I Ho $29,950. 962-7995 rea aml J me 55' WATER lront w/4/l' FREE llenlal -far dock. 3 bdnn, den, fam Newport Harbor • Co I ta 4 BR, tam rm, extra Jge liv· 11 2 ha D' Mes& area. CaU din! rm, v rm, . 1vorce ing nn with ng ana. sale $74,000. 3392 Gilbert Nice b1J patio • 50' lot Drive, 847-3724 $79,500 . Xlnt terrM! LIDO REAL TY, INC. 5~~R";" ~":1 :ft~ ORANGI COUNTY'S 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 carpeting. Save money on LARGEST BY awner 2 br, 1 ba. fplc, lnteresl Coutline ~ 2fl E. 17th St. '41·ttM bttns. plyrm & ba. Best 536-1.366 $13>; 2 ~ daee to shopo Lldo ,buy $44,500. Cn4) 2 LG. Iota R-5. Nr 5 pts. ping, ~. Children OK. 6'J5..5023 nnlts-medieal. $19,900 ea. Bkr. 53'-'980 PAINTING, Papering 16 yn tmna.-Kirduneyr Box 648 $100=;~1.~Bl\~d~uptx.~-.. ~ .. -,.._I in Harbor area. Lie Ir bond-Kula Maiu Hawaii nice &rte. avail JtDW. .1 ed. Refs turn. &0-2356 White Elepbaots? S3Ml9llO 0.Mraf 20000.neral 2000 Clenonl S@M!lA--4i.tf1S• Solv< a Simpll Senmblld Word Ptmlc for c C1tstolile 0 ....... -cl tloo ,,_ ...... _--~ four scro111bW wonk b.- low .. """' ......... - IR'ATliOO I _ 1 I I I I' I IXAl'EL I '_* I 1· I INO·GAY I I I r I C<lmrnent about• blg-liaadtd blockheada "You ;:::=:=:=:=:~-Id mob a fGrtuno '""""' I G 0 LL A I lllia hood out Cll o -·- .I' I I I I' ~tt'""1!z~'S ··~~=~r-r r r r r r r ·1 •w:=.tmttsTO 1 1 .1 1 11 _I 1 SCRAM-~ ANSWER IN . CLAYIRCA'nON IOOO I ·- ·--.... -....... ----------i--------~~~---~---~~~-T--,------------~~-~--·~·-·~-----'H '"Yr .,, ''>'V.<•;;'.-,-,,-~.-••• •·,,..-,·,-,,,,,-,-,_ .-,, "'~--~'~ 11 DAILY PILOT .'1 1A L.) -unlumltl!ed -·I 3000 LRVINE TE~CE -:l BR ' dln. Fantutlc VlCIY, beaut:WI condltior -S?ro ........ Bl!:AOON BAY -41 BR &: den. at 3 BR. Comn1un1ty beach. pltr. l('tlt1i1 c.out - $00 ptt mo. Jobn Mcnab Realty Co. ....- $710; 4 BR. 2 Ba w to "'" rang9 Ir: m·en. f'rplc. Ex· bu. Chlldttn .l pel OK. Broker &J.t.4980 Costa Meu 31 00 2 BEDROOAq I:. den or 3 bed r oom home w/w carpets, drapn.. Eastsldc Costa Msa. Larp feoced back yard oovered patio, ~~ ntlihborhood close kl Newport Hei&hbl r rad e achoo!. .te 2 blka to new City Park. Available Jor im- mediate occupancy. Drive by. 234 Palmer. then write Box 612 c/o Daily Pilot """"' parllculon. 2 CEDROOM. 2 baths, '"all to wall carpets, drapes & blt·illll, laundry r o o m . Adult& only. S140. 540-462'l alter 6 P .M. 54()..8616 • JICCN rA L.~ HouM-t Unfurnlthed NTALS Apl t. Fu rnished RENTALS Apts. Unfu rnldMd !lL'L,, ESTATE G.,.ra l -UAL fSTATI SUSINI SS ind * * .....;°""=::r.:;•l'-----· l:':.:l;.;NA::N:.:.C:::;l:;A:::L ___ 'If 5991 OfRco ltenlll 6010 9u1. 0 -'unUloo ~300 Hunti ngton Buch 3400 Huntlnq to n a.ach «OO _c_ .. _1_1_M ______ 5_1..,...oo Outtt Hom. FREE RE NTAL BOOK 2 BR -2 BA Drop tn .~ Browse Span'·h' ·tyl d 1 lltl'I• II , thal robabl ... s c. l~ro ur , ere.• one P Y J $lw.;; rarpctlna. i;clf clrin. LOVEL'{ 2 Br. Drp11, crpta, PRJV Rm for tl<kriy lady· \\OUll flra, aar. Adults, no in Uc'd iuett home. Good jlt!!I. Atlddle qeo 11rtf, 2l&4 food scned fu111. style. Yi'On t last Iona. Real sharp iiw O\'ens prtvnte entrance 3 Bf!druo111, liuntlngton VII· & WJ!i\'lltd J-'undecks. Adult Jage. 2 ~u~. Flrcp!.11.1,,-e. Jh-l.111. ncu.r beiach~~-l & ~ Doubl~ Ga1q e, ~185 mo. liH 2 BA fi'Oin srm tl'I S?2J. Pliteentla Avt. 646-3100 alt -•;l<h33!!=='==1 ====== 5 ptn. .. rent Jor short panod. Te:n· · porary h'llllBfer. ~ltfu:ri\laI\. Walker & Lee ~:S:'::~,:s IJ682 Eldlngt<r 842.4453 or 541).5140 Open Eves. (JO.ISi No. o! Ad1Wl51 JlunUns:;ton Besch !TI4) 962·29SI SPARKLING, sunny, walk lo beach &. shopping: 3 BR: QUIE T & BEAUTIF UL bltns, secluded palio, pool AdulUi only; 2 81·., util. paid. &. maintenance: n1any t'X· Pool, 847·2125 tra1. SUIS Mo. 833-79.:>4 17676 Can1e1'0n, JhJlll. Bch. 4 BR, 2 ba, :! ~ t y , BLOCK TO Beach, furn. 1 d s w hr J b J t n 11 , refrl.g, BR pool , free util ities. 5125 crpts/dr,,s. 1st & last mo up 536--Jm 53&-72S2 + $75 damage dep, 673-2478 - att 6 v.·kdys. Ga rden G rove 4610 Newport Be1ch 5200 ,\I,PL!CATIONS now ac- l'Cpted, 2 bedroon1, 2 Uuth. lu~111·r ap·t Cnl·losed garage, f :1 n I a 15 t i c Oceun/llarbor vle 11 In non-congested &'ell, I ot• 2 adults, no pets, pool. Lt-·a~r r equi r ed . $263 rnuntl1ly. Call 646--35.SO NE\\ PORT Island DeltL'\e 11ppcr Duplex 3 Er. 2 Ba. Crpt~. drp.~. lrplc., elec Ultni!, rcfrlg. Pier/ slip. A1lul!s, no pets. $32:), lease. 6~b-lol2:1 3 llR Duplex ncar Beach, ne"Jy painted & cleaned. Vacant. SZJO/n10. f.t us t allo1v to be shcnvn for sale. COZY 1 BR house, Yo'alk to beach & downlO\\'n. New carpets &: paint. Small yard. Very nice. Avail, April JJ;t. 536-J!'i-07 SINGLE Young Adults LUX· AgL 5.\6-4141 * 4 BR, 2 BA. erpts, d111s. patio. Leaae $235. 6#-2277 ury garden npls \Vi1h coun.. TO\VNHOUSE 3 Br. 2~ ba. try club atn1ospberc and w/w cpla, drps, frpl. fncd, con1plrle prlvary. SOUTH patio, elf!c. bltnl!i. 2 Car BAY CLUB APTS. 13100 gar, pool $275. 642-7n9 Chapman A\'e., G •rd en COLD ll.1cdallion 2 BR, 2 Grove 1714) 636--l030 I I BA. cpt11, drps, b tru:, e!1c , RENTALS gar. '123'.I llilaria Way. S185 LGE 4 BR 21Ai ba, Cul-de-sac Aptl. Unfurnished Jsc. 1213) 981-1039 s h't'<!t. S 2 7 51 mo w/ _::;J.::.=c...:;.c;.:...c:..;'-'-,.:-: I========== gardeuer. Paul Jones Rily. General 5000 Eaot Bluff 5242 847-1266 Misc, Rentals 5999 TRIPLE Carli.gt!, $45, or sgle. lOX!IO. S~ ?tfo. Nr. OraJiee·County A Ir p ort. "18-604< WANTEO Carage lor Liottt 1tora.ge, NB or 0.1 area. 6'13-6434 Income Property 6000 Seil or Trade Outstan~ing Investment Property Large stralea:lc corner, 12a'x200' (+ 15' alleyJ, "''Ith 2 good ollice buildings on nu1Jor street. Near the heart ol I.he fabulou.s O. C. Ovic Center k booming tinancial district, GI"t!&t troUlc flow &. exposure for high rise ofl ice building, or hold for assured a ppreclallon. Price 1250.000. A1TENT10N LAGUNA BEACH Air Condhloned ON •'URF.S'i AVl!i.'llJE NATIONAL ORGANIZATION Desir !SP.•ett aYallabl-tn Hu Unusual Opportunity nawnt otftct bulldln& •t prlme local.Jon tn downtown You too can ett Into YoUt IAKW'I& RtlCb. Air condi-own b.liiW.. l'njoy prollll: Uonod. carpeted, b&f.utitul No competition (nothing llkc paneled partlt1on11\1. T w 0 I~ anywhu'e~. Amnltl&'ly entrancn: l'ronta,ae on low lnveatment. Protected Fwr11 Ave., rciv Jeadt 10 territory. No tlxed overhead . Muoclpal !>Irk.Ina Iota. $:iO Year &ro11nd protlta. Proven . ., ~·- pm' month for ipace. ~k succes1. Company will !rain. Wh•ddy a Wan t? Wh1ddy1 Got? &rid chain 1vallable tor s,;. U you can lnw st $3,000 and SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR Bustnesa bOlln aniwerin.t can spare only 10 hours per NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS aervice •Ya.&.ble for f !O. week, In lesa than 2 yean Sp1ci1I Ri tt AU utillttts p&id exec-pl )"Ou can secure an annual .5 Lines -5 ti mes -S bucks telepl.cnl!. net profit of $13,000 kl $21,• 11:ULE5 -AO MUST INCLUOE- DA!l.Y P U,()T 000. Get in on the ground 1-w1111 ~ou "''' "' 1~. i-w~1 "'"' ••M t11 '''"'· z:2 ~ AVENUE Ooot' of thia new exciting ~YOUlt P'IOlle 1nc110t-•Cl~. '-5 llne1 ef 1dvtr1/1•~ ... LA.CUNA BE.A.Of buai.ncU. Write Including ~NOTHING FOlt SALE -TRAOES ONL't'l 89'68 tl!l.ephone number: Pre•i· PHONE 642·5678 * Mod dent, Color CG-Ordinates To Pi ece Your Tr1dtr11 P1r•d lse Ad em Offices Corp.. 235 Flfth Avenue. , . N ·-~ ~ ~lt or suttn. Air COfld. New York, New York. lOOlS N~\V 69 Olds ~)8 .L.li, 2::00 llAVf~: !!\\' Span1~u ••ll-, illonlnc -sectttarial miles. LoadOO 15300 Lisi 11\c\; 41!1 3Sth St. .NB. aeivloe.' central 'tocauon. CANDY SUPPLY spx>. rar r1rsl u-ust deecJ. SJ.t,000 1'<1. cash FOR c . Robert Nattress ltea.llor ROUTE Private party. . 3-S 'fell ,loc. R-2 lots ln O. , 230 E. l?lh Strfft · (Part or l''ull Ti1ne) 6tl-:i611 Olly. 673.(1133, 675-51Gl Costa l\leu. £42.1485 Excellent lnconie for few Ranch almonds 4: walnuls f.1ammo"ih Lakes. 10 UnHs 300 Sq Ff olfl-ce--Hr1. Wee~ wot'k (Days or Paso Robleii 80 acres. f'\(• plus large hOnle on l acre. Costa M '., • ., ,,.~,. Eves. l refillln& &nd coUect· tax sheller. Want I o 1· a I Trad<' for your Oranir. esa . .,,.,....u..;,u in;: Money lrom Coln Oper-propc,ty. Eq··•ty 1"·.000. Or w w County pl'Opcrty or ':" Salis-lndu1trl1I Rent1I 6-ated Dispensers In ange Pyramid Exchangers, bury Really 673-6900 V7U County a n d 1urroundlng 646-2629 at'ea. No selling. (liantlles 1----cc.o=---San 1-·ernando Valley 3 Br, Name Brand Candy and 17 Ft, outboart.I for station Sna•k•I 11650 total ca&h re-wagon or auto of equal val· '.! ba pool home $9000 eq; ' Ph °'"687 no1v lsed $175. i;·or Orange quired, For n101-e informa-ue. one v-o..-i 4 BR. 2 Ba. S165 mo, 1 yr'11 lease. li t & last mo'1 rent + clt anb1g depo11lt. I -"L~1"-g-'u-no;;._;B:..•.;.•_•_h __ 3;..7:..0_5 541....8436 aft 7 pm. VEN DOME • NEW DELUXE • 3 Br. 2\<fi ba. apt. for 1ease Incl. spac, mstr. suite, din rin. & dbl. garage, auto. door opener avail. P ool &: rt'~-area. Nr. Catholic Chu1·<"h & school & Corona del i\1ar High. SUBr.fJT TER!\.TS OR EXCHANGES RICK ALDEREnE <n41 547~ FOR lease Laguna Niguel, oU San Diego Fwy at Cro\\'ll Valley, new oommercial ·& industrial units. Delta Elec· hie. Days -831-1400. Eve.1 --l~:l-4198. County house or Joi. tion and details, send Nan1e, 2 M.l till-u p bldgs on Pia· 536-8740 Address, 11.ud Phone Number centia, C.l'\f. Trade eqiy to: $9'5,500, tor property, plus ] BR I-\ ba, l\1onticeilo Cundo, epts /drps, 9Jt-ins, 2 pools. $~ equity. Trade tor :: or 4 BR hon1c, TDs, ear or ? ChlT./Agt. 546-5580 10 ,\e1'f!-Orange Grove ocar Laguna Beach. \\'ANT: 1\pls or Ranch. Bkr 494-1330 2 BR. view, remoclt>Jlcd, 3 BDR.lif. 2 ba, den, fenced plush cptg.. bltins. UnL l i\li\IACULATE AP'l'S! yard, privacy, Panoramic $19:i, turn. $250. 494-9748 L\lr.lED. OCCUPANCY ocean Yiew. Jl.90. lease. 714: Af)ULT & FAJ\tILY 75&--9233 Laguna Nl9uel 3707 SEC!'IDNS AVAILABLf: 2 BR, 1ar, patio, crpts. drpa, 1-'==--=-----Close to Shopping, P ark stove, retrlg. Tropical aet· MONARCH BAY AREA e Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba Una:. For adu1ta:. 1 blk. 10 3 BR, den, 2 BA Home e 2 Bedroom.. e ONLY $280 e 637-871 A1.1igos \Vay, N.B. 2000 SQ. ft:-M·l space Yo'itl, "ROUTE DEPARThtENT" ?' '! Price Slj(),COO. lront office: d1ive In rear P.O. Box 3846 5-lS-1542 door. 1308 Logan SL C.M. /\nahein1, ~ifornia 92803 ffo.ve Vac. Auto Sales & rti;-. AU :.i Bedrooms with Built-ins Sl.9:ii mo. 646-0681 l\lAKE ~UNE pair Bldg. Harbor Blvd, 4 PatiM • 4 Gai'a&:es NOW LEASING • New M·l COUNTRY SI'YLE C. i\f. Equity 153.500. \\'ant Only $63.l'.XXI. I.ncome $'700 pr IndUltrial 1350 SQUare feel. On & oU sale Uq. Lie. In Res. lncomf'. Hollywood l\fo. Will sell or exchange $155/mo. Agent 642-1485 heart of flo. Ga.Iii. Big * STa-6591 * 6 UNITS for small house, Coita J\fe:sa. -timber country. Tavern, rrunllngton Beach area. Lots 6100 Hol!.l, b11gc b a 11 room * * * * * * WALKER It LEE !\fr. Levine J .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ J '"/sep. bar. Banquet or Slk \~~!'!!!!!!!!'!!!!!i!!!'!!~!!i!!!!!!!!!!'!!~![!!!!!!!'l!Ji~!!!'!!!!!!!i! lhops, U70 mo. 544-4180 Bltiru:, frplc, heated pool "t S\\·im Pool, Put/greon _., $250 mo. 10 a.m. to 5, e Frpl, Inciiv/!ndry lac'ls Corona del Mir 5250 &-SIDE 2 Br. fpl, btam 1,....:u, 496-1.243 1845 Anaheim Ave. \ii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiii yd., patio. Adlts, no pets 2!2-I $138 Yriy 673--1629 .~ .. 1" I ALS -._ • CO~;\ ?-1ESA 642· Income & Investment Dept. C I I l Hse. Fae. loc. in cen!tr ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNC EMENTS 545-9451 ommerc a ot ot Arnall tov.·n w/majo1· ind NOTICES and NOTICES 2 BR. house, Sl30 Per mo. Apts. Furnished 1st &. La.st mo's rent rtq'd. General 4000 + $25 On. dep. 646-9295 3 BR house, children ok. Walt!' pd. $135. 2188 Canyon Dr. apt B. CM. 629-5641 Me11 Verde 3110 3 BR. Fam/Din area. fncd yd; dbl frplc. S mo Ise-S:inl. wtr pd. AvaU 4/1. 540-3955 3200 I/I TOWNHOUSE Split Level 3 bdnna, : bath! Double g a r • g e, carpel.I, drape~. Fireplace, e I cc. built-ins, ADULTS ONLY .• ................ $265/monlh. l'fri. Fay Bay le Beach Rt•lty, Inc. '°1 Dovet Dr., NB Suite 271 66.m Eves. 548.fi91i6 WALK to ocean, 4 BR, 2 BA. 6 yr old, A-frame ho1nr., "''/frplc, crpts th1'iout. Bick to Comm Oub house w/pool & tennla aiurt. S300 1no. Eves & wkns 67~7534. days ......., 8.AYVlE\V Beauty; 2,IXKI', 3 BR. wfall the amcnillt'S. Poot, £01!, (dnr, $.125 645-1111 RENT 3 Rooms Furnitu re $25 Month FULL OPTION TO BUY <Retria:erators Available} No deposit o.a.c. H.F.R.C. Fu rniture Rent1ls 511 '\'. 19th. C.M. 518-3481 1:;6! \V. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 $2'l); Deluxe 2 BR, 2 BA Condo. Pi11no, stereo avail. April 1st. Broker 534-6980 $95; Bachrlor apt. close in. Utilities paid. Broker 5.14-6980 ------------ (01t1 Mtsa 4100 $25 Wk. Up e Studio &: Bach apts. e Incl Util! & Phone !!ierv. e Maid Service • TV avail. e Nevi Cafe & Bar Z::i6 Ne\vport Blvd. 5clS-!l7S5 1-IOLJDA Y PLAZA DELUXE. spacious 1-Bclrnt. Furn. apt. $13.l Plus util. Heated pool. Ample parking No children • No pets 1005 Pomona, 01 MODERN FURN-2 BR r.tarile by \Yilson. Pool. Sharp, Bllns. No pets. $150. l'tlgr. 6l&-99i4 $120; Lovely 1 BR, l'ito1·c, l"<!{rlg, "''all to \\•all & patio BrokC'r 53•1-6980 120, 2 BR, bit-ins \\'all to \\'all. Utll paid. Broker 534-6980 ORLEANS APTS. 3 BR STUDIO POOL ADULTS ONL\' 5100 1741 T ustin Aven ue off 17th Streit Costa Me11 642..4641 --re~'!!";~_ 84xl40 '"Ith good potential on sawmill Industry. Xlnl hun-1_..;;;c;;...;c"-C..c;~ ----- *NEW FOUR-PlEX• \Vest 19th St., Cosla r,.[f'sa. ting & fishing. Pi·ice Incl. Found {free Ads) 6400 Near beach, liunlington Owner an'<ious. land, b Id g Ii. and eqml. ON TEN ACRf.S 1 &.: Z BR. ·Furn & Unfurn Fl'pl ts I pr\v. patios/Pools, Tennis • Contnt'I Bids!. put· tini; green, Beach. $65,900. 847-3957 Arnold & Freud $1~.ooo. $50.000 dn plus in-EXCEPTIONALLY G c n t I c -venl?fY· \Vlll send full Tan/\Vlc Female Puppy, Businfts Property 6050 388 E. 17th St., C.ttt. particulars upon rec. Fin. \veil fed no collar 19111 Realtors 646-7755 statement. Cor.slder trn?e &: r.tonro~ia. 5'18-8015' 9CX) Sea Lane, Cdi'f 644-2611 r ,\facArthur nr. Coast Hwy l llUCE 1 Br., £pls, drps. stove, 1"<?f. S eit arc3., ,·le1v, S17J. 673--6904 Aft ~ Professional Medical Building 330C $C1 fl, 4 Suites on choice corner in· desirabl~ 5300 area. hnmediate occupancy ,B~a~lbo::..:.•=------'--$!J.l,000 • e.-.:cellent ~rm!'I ' A :;; . u . iv.ing. 1·1IB FOX COAIPANY GR Clou . Ad It L. . I \VIII e.xchangc. 0<.'C'ttn & Bay v1eYo. Spnc101:ls .,863 E Coa t II Cdi\I 2 BJl. 2 ~·· '\'alk 1n 673.9-l!f. · sr \V)',6tl-~ clost1~. be:autilul carpets & a O draperies. Pool Boat slipa for 1enants. ~ubte1Tanean BuslneU R•nt1I parking. 673-3CXl3 6060 S351 IIDNTINGTON BEAOl for good beach p1'0p. \Vr1!e $1,<XXI 00\VN on small level Box l\.IG63, Daily Pilot. Bkr, B~STON Terrier ~ Fen1ale, Occanview lot L agu na Q\vnci· Vic YorktO\\'ll & Dela\\·are, Beach. Balance $ 4 , 9 5 O , · HB. Call idt>ntify 962-6118 payable $50 mo. including ''LITTLE BUSINESS'1 SIAl\.tESE cat . male, found Interest. Owner. ( 1 1 4 \ e Operate fi'Onl your home ln CanteG High.lands area. 497-1210 • Full or part-tlqie Call to idenlily. 673-3921 , e High earnings Vl;EW • 210 of <;>cean. & e No experience net.'ei;sary SI\lALL black female Poodlf', ctty lights. $29,500 1nclud1ng • Free training program Vir 19th 6: Pon1o1111. plans, 9,000_ sq. ft. pad. 241'1' e Earn \Vhile leanting Harbor Vtf'w Dr. Cdilt. • .,~ l tm t b &l&-202l ...,.,.,., nve.s en 1zys complete Ul\•tntory F/.i'iTASTIC Oceanvie1v Joi e For inlDrmatlon $6500. Small, but level, e Call: 546-6740 eves, 6~:.. lj lS. FOUND black Poodle \'it·. l9th 4: Pomona, Costa illesa. &16-2679 LOVABLE Siamesf' female $1.000 down, balance at $75 497_1210 COUPLE wanted. An ex· Cal. Mesa Vt>rde Area. per mo. citing part lime business S4&:492J TRIPLEX lot 18th &: opportunity. Come see &. ;;;:.~:;:,:;;.,~. --------,,.~-- LI.do Isle \Vallace, C.\t $!1,850, trms. hear \Ved. or Thur. 8 p.m. BLACK Co1~ purse w/lnchan :r.1r Fisher Box 21 Bi<> 20212 l\l r St 11, head J)f'nn1es attached & NEWLY DECORATED UPSTAIR.'i 2 Br. 2 b3. bltns. GOLD KEY SUITES P~e. Cal 93513 , " blocks So~;; ~da~1~. 8& ring inside. 673-7312 2 Br. "''/carport-Sl!Y.i Crts. drps, trpl. S:r:'...5 !IIo. E xecutive & Silt s 3 ADJ . Joto;; room tor ll 962-2828 6401 Oisr .• \l'a1cr pd .• ru· schls y!'ly. tease. 673-382-1 Offices unita. 3l3 E. 21st St .. Co~ta TE Rn I F I C opportunily,1L_0_1_1 _______ _ 219"1 "C" Placrntla Ave. -·-···.. !11csa. O\\'Jler 494-5072 Eve. "'n1all c:oin Co""l'ated c·ur LOST & -00 "' ··~ ·. :::1-ecn · ye ll o\v · e 636--4120 e Hunt ington Beach 54 "4 Alr-cond & utils -··-- \\'ash. 011·11e1· niust quit, parakeet ln Vic. 2 u u 2 BH. unfurn, tt[rig. bll•ln • * Carpel!! & drps J;A:;c;;r;H;;ge;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;:;6;;2;;00;; 1nakc oUcr. Located 11.I 18th Poinsettia, l:cL\I. Ansii·ci-s s\ol'r, carpels, d r ap cs , EXCLUSIVE *Reception Rm & Ne\vport, C.!11. !l68-l?SJ to Pele 01· i\lon11na's Pretty rcdccoratetl, no pets, Sl?.O * Cleaning & main!. NORTH OF aft 5 Pt.I. Boy. 1-le "'·ill re11eul his ad· C 'I ON THE BEACH Telephone Ana\lo·erini; k CUTE SPOT Pl hi kc 1110. ;J!}S \VU.son, ., . • • . il ESCONDIDO , iza, c c n, dress. Re11·a1'tl. 5-17-3-'31. 545-0760 2 3 "-' A I Secretarial Service ava flsh, Jl'ozen bananas. E·Z 633-4J16 & u.uroom P s. Town & Country 1 T 61" 1815 I oo E GROUND fl oor, 2 BR .,,,1th Luxury livlna to please the Approx. 44 Acres, rolling to opera e. crms. ;,. 1 R \VARD • 2 Fluily sep/yan:I, clo!!e to shoriping, tnost disc:rlminahng. J"o~ Shoppln9 Center hills: beautiful setting; can Persian ki!tens/ t-cn_•an1, 1\-lature coupl• preferred, available at ~ planted in Avocados or Real Est1te Lo•ns 6340 1-grey. No quesrjons asked. 18582 Beach Bl\'d, · · A 891 91"' -------6405 STARTING New clas.~es 1n 1nak!'-up: a li1·s1 in Orange Coun1y. Learn ho1v to look your best :n just a few sho11 hours, al a very low tost. Taught by the experta of lhc studios. 541-9-187 C-Belte Co~met!Cll Announce me nts 6-410 ATTENTION EX-NAVY MEN Ch:-a11 out 1he old sea-bag and help oul a good cause. Give your old uniforms (OU- it c1-s & Enlisted) to lhe Sea- &outs. l\'ectl blues, \\'ltites, sea-bags, etc. 642-5769 NOT Responsible for deills olher than 111.)' \Vlllian1 M. Hardin Jr. Ce metery Lots any 0 \\'11 6418 FOR SALE: 4 adjoining cen1elery lots, J-larbor Rest. Have tlr.cidecl to die and be hurietl elst'1vhe re . 5~j..:i78~ FOU!t cen1etery lots a! Harbor Rest i\olemorial Parle in Blue Spruct section. Cal! LI 8-307:1 Newport lt1T9hts 3210 -• Nassau Palms • l & 2 BR. · Pool S13:i. Q\\1lt!r/Agt 675-4392 lh H f' I hold for appr~c1at1on. n.'<· -_:;~-0""=··-=-c~~~~~~ 8 UO IOg ('0 (at Ellis) Hwitington Sch ious ael!er is asking $59,400. HOME LOANS RE \Y ARD! Aiiricot/\\"h•·to NE\V 2 BR, 1 DA, crpts. 962 6607 · •ION'·'Y AVAILABLE A pplia nce Repairs P•rts 6510. \\'ASHER & Di')·c·r Repair. Xlnt-guaranlerd sf' r vi c e Reas ralcs. 847-Bll:i CHARMING 2 bedroom &. den, 2 bath home. w/w carpeb, drapu. Ea.stsicle Costa l\lesa.Close to 11hop- ping &: puk. Nice l y landscaped yard, covettd p atio , v e ry qu ie t neighborhood. $195 pr. mo . Available for immedlr.te oc-cupancy, Write Box 612 clo Daily Pilot 177 E. 22nd Sl. 64Z-364:i l BDRM fw11, pool & rec area. $145 &: Sl53. incl ut1I. 1959 &: 1961 1'1aple Ave. l BR. Con1pl furn, .mature cpl 01 \\'Oman pref. $Ki. 131 Flo"·er St. 64&-i8.S3 DELUX.E apt. l BR. Pool. SIB. Ideal for bachrlor. 1993 Church. 518-9611 • 10':0 Oo\lo'n with interest only "' f.:>1nale poodle. Vic 17th & <lrps, all bli.n~ Incl dshwr, STORES ALSO on balance, For more intor-Cati {or details on today's Tustln Sat 3/15. Ans,\·ers sep palio, &'p gar. $155. p '(' ffi [..,,,"!"'!~~~~~~., -" \' t J J t & 'nd TO ICI (C maUon._please c ..... K. \, rac~ or s · • s. to J\1l ssey. Orange J\\'ai\ April I. 642-6257 FREE DESK SPACE • ~mall wilh Sciv1ng Orange County for rhinestDne collar. ~2 '.!BR, p;1lio. Carpet~. dr11pts, viC'inity of Baker and Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. 20 years LOST black & tan 4 n1on1hs slo\'c. Nice-quiet area. Nt'ar 'ill Ocean Av~ .. II.II Bristol (C.l\f.l in return fol' 181g w. Chapinan Ave. Sattler l\Iortgagl! Co. Inc. td -• •• _ 1 1. .1 l\lonle Vista School. 545.:i182. (714) 536-1481 taking mesaas:es and ac. 0 Calif 3:.6 E 17th St o m ... e ut:n& t'. I am1 ton 2 BDR IK'w dee & drp~. \iijiiij--· cepHng deliveries. 541•2(i21 ~~~·k.nds ·538.;xin 61?-2171 · '::;45-0511 & Bushard Vic. Ca 11 Notary • Income Tax • Ins. ' Evts. 673.7865 542.1157 968-5210 beiore 12 noon. unlurn Aclltli S14j, Lge bnch 2 BR-2 BA furn Sl 15. ~6-6n6 etc. Del Norte County • LOST: Pt. Shep/Collie, t~tl, LGE. Unfurn. bach. bit-in Spanish style, shag carpel-C11ll Bill Robinson (I,'ves.) Nt"11r fahulous Klan111.th Rl\·cr Mort91gts, T.D. I 6345 11 n10~. old, ~cmalr. V l l', rangf', cp!s, drpa, 5'15-5421 inF:. sell cleaniflf; ovens, 546-447~ In heart of lh Red1rood Na-Bal. Island. 67:r-1144 B.•k Boy 3•40 pl'iv011c enrrance & private ---For Le 1 1e Ho•·I Park.e Call G 1 ~ n *HA_ VE SG0,000, Plivale mon-LOST -Inky, large blk .t· I-·--'-----•-Newport Beach 4200 28Ki l\Trndoz.a Apt. A, C.1\1. '"' •· t t 1 b Fundu('l\S. Adult living, nE':i.r Sauna • Cyn1 • l\tassagc Thomp!!On (714:) 532·2538 Or· ey inves or wan !I o llY sea. "''ht cat. Tag Iro1n lr1di11na. Z BDR?l.t duplex, fenced )'I'd liv rm crptd &: drpd. SlSO. 2292 Orchard Dr. 8JS..1082 Corvn• d1I Mor 3250 SINGLE Young Adults Lux· SPLIT-Level J Br. 2 1 ~ hn, beaches. 1 & 2 BB . 2 BA Health Studio at 2626 Ne1v-angc, Calir. or ii·rile-llarold sonccl 1st.&: 2nd TDs. Rea-Vic F.\r. Re11•ard! !162-&li~I cpts. d rps, bltni;. No pr.I!'.. fJ'On1 Sl•IO t0 SI~. port Blvd, C.M. Ph. Hkr. Del Ponle, Box 35, Klan1ath, sonaUlc discount. ury garden apls IVith COUii· 2.88.l (llendoza, CP.1 5<1j-;,.121 673-2654 catil s~~•o Sattler 11.lortga;-o Co. ltlC, p r 0 I 6405 try culb atmosphere and @"'u;O-C>"''\. · .,.,...,, :;JI) E. 17th St. l-'-'-"-'-'------l'OIT1fllr1e pl'ivacy. SOtml 2 UR. llludio, uni. Cpl~. Drpl'i, W.UllO. ll '\lu.1. B lb I I d BA'l' CLUB APTS. J.rvine bit-ins. 984 El C11mino. $145. APARTMENTS a 0G San Resort Property 6205 6-t:Z-nn • ~ta-061 1 LONE LY unencumb<.'rcd at 16\h. Ne\\·port Beach-962-5000 l!IS:.>2 Brookhurst $150 \\'.\\'. carpet. -----'--'--"°'-°' Ews. 673-7865 6'12·1.157 '.l'idow \\i~hrs to 1orm a Q{ARJ\llNG ~ Br. 2 Ba.; t714) &t5-();)5() 3 BR. l'-f bo. Children (Just No. of Adams) Rllr. 6"2·9500 f'OR RENT Furn r..tanunoth 14S~ RETURN "'·ldow's club. Interested trpl., ne"" shag cartp'g., 1 $ISO '' 862 IV fTI4 ) 962·2981 --S"-p '" E. 17th St. Costa Moun la i n Condominium $30,000 1st TD $.1QJ mo In· parties \\'lite Daily P ilot ~ I'"' be•--II BEACH APT. Now lhru \\'C come. · gr. ' "" I 8 6""'130 ' ' "'"........., pane .... : ..... --~ '' 1 10 --1 "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!111111111111!!!! ?.lesn. sullAble for seivlce seep!'. · ,.,.. cludi"I: 8%. 3 yt'!I, Level Box P -318. patio: close to shopping &. Junr~ Sundl"ck, bltn~. gar; Ccnttr Apt. : a.ni. p.nl. "! h"ll 1---------- 3 B ,_,__ I I LRG MODERN • BR CllJ::Z OHO APART?-IENTS l=-~bu~,1~~~';:'·="'=-;:"""°:;== i top, n1agnifiet"nl Ck'ean A t tra ctiv e ExrY>rf beach. S300 !\lo., yr. lease r. cp1.M ... 1•S. ~ mo. ' ,.., Mount. & Dtsert 6210 Vl•w • --· h d •· 54n ..... A.t 6~.,t Atlanta -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; '" • ..-ar;" CM ovon, "OU,NG WQ,, IAN 673-3456 "'"""''" Crv1s, tlrps, blln,, pool. $125. Ofll ll I I 6070 U b 18'0 d. ' f.lgr. 6_16-6974 Nrw 1-:! Bedroo111s. Pay ~ Ct en I s 'Ong uyer. ·0 l!COWJt dancer \Vlll !~ach you all 2 BR. duplex: redec. \Vl\'l Bi lbo• 4 300 rlec:tric (lilly '------;) A. Nr. l·leme1. Hkleu11·ay returns 14% interest. latr!":l ateps. Call Ardrll cpll, drp1, ranp, rel .. !pl, ---------2 BR a.pl, do\\·nstairs, ('\enn .~:&-3927 or 5,)l',..2727 Exclusive :.ooo· el \Vtr, game ~-4:9.i-lllS 213: ~91--1538 l -10 P:\I t:·: ~~~~':·no pets, c7,~~l~~~e1;;rj ~1~ts. ~~~~ ~~~~,!~~~,~~~ p~:--i~~a~h~!;~;!.~1~ Q ~; Dn. &:e-rno 8-10 A.i\I. ~a~~~c:o ~;\.~iag:~:l<·~~~ . L ICE N.S ED . 2 BR home, extra \\'icle lot, :;15 E. Balboa Blvd. 2 BDR;\l, drp:-, M\\' crpts, --2 .Bdrm. '2 Bath--leisure World Area BUSINESS •nd Laguna Beach. Sold at Spirllllal Reading~. a_d\'~('C frplc, fonnal din/rm, dbl BALBOA 6i3-9')45 pvt patio ,t, garngt', Childi-en Cnrpl~-Dra.-...s, .,.,.1,.,11.. FINANCIAL •7,950, payable at $.)j mo ,.,,011 1'11 Rmal!erSaa. IOSCI S. f.l t. Ind sn· k 11-"18-7"10 •·· • S I B h ,·n·l 8" d•-3 y-4o,_1137· ...... 111 no ea],. n e1nl'111c, ~ar. pa IO, ry arTa, a. 1 BR. 1-Un1. Apt, A\·ail East-o. · JU. "" ~ Best location. l block to spti:. ea el( . , "' 1" "" '"· '" 49'1·9136. 10 J\~t-10 Pi\1 &t:nic Properties &1!N72G er v.·ttk only. nil: QUICKF..R YOU CALL, shop11ing theater. ell'. fur--Bua. Opportun1tie~ LARGE OCEANVlE\V LOT SPECIAL $2 READlNG DAILY P!Wf WANT ADS! Cali 67.~'l.5 nn: QlJICK ER YOU SELL ni~hed or untumishcrl fron1 U1tra modern, deluxe ofOce $2,IXKI do"'"· balan<.-e $7500 __ ----------Sl30. Call o""·ner 642-28~. lor suite. 1000 MJ. fl ., walnul FRANCHISE at STS n10 Jncludin&: 3r• YOU Must be scel'IC to he lnfonnation, panelling. (Ju1t off &n DI-SPECIALISTS l''ully ln1proveo • u~ selecled. W~ ~ poopl<' t'go fr.vy, al Loll Alamlto!) F1·anchisc oppa11u11ities avail· deraround utlls. 497•1210 of all. agt"S int; m exposure Laguna Beach 570S -''--------100 CLIF F DRIVE LlJXU~'i ~'URN/UN ~'UR.'l Y rarly Lc:u;e. J & 2 Bdrn1S. slrps In ShON & Shops Ocran1·1cw fro1n c1·ery ApL from $1:,0 mo up. Irate t!M-:?~.;9 REALEST-A-TE __ _ Gener ii Rent1l1 W1nted 5990 E~fPLOYED lt1dy v.·l!hcll l BR unfurn Apt, beach area 10 SllO. Cllrport or roraae nee.. 642--0086 at1/ S p.1n. • LANDLOROS • f"rtEE RENTAL SERVICE Droker 534-69.tZ at 13820 Bay Blvd. 11.ble 1oc1tUy & notionally. t ' for bit par ts 1n conunrrc., Cash lrl\'Csl1ne r1!5 requi.recl 19 ,.o YIELD! lllOYles le TV 826-3460 Also 488 sq, ft, av•ll. in mod. em office bldg. at 4105 E. Broad1\'llY, Lona Beach. Contact Dohn Trempa1a 41 ... 837-2970 NF:\\'PORT CIVIC C°''TER 0Uice11 sultable for Com- mttclal. Pitttllcal, Dental. Al:Nxwd .• c:rpt., rlevator f'RO~f S'iO MI-6032 on 6'r.>-24Vt OFF-IC E Sl~le or suu.~. parking, «n. Ira.I, cor Joe Oranet Ave. Joo.!00 aq fl. ~. J · 11 coo ' $20,000 2nd TD \\'/ dl1COUnl r1tnge 1 om 0, to brlngi 19%! Jo c;o 3 yn-$20() COUP~ES, 11!ngl:11: lor1el)•" SI00,000, Earnln&:s rommen-New in area! Jo111 U1e SYo'ing surate \\'lth price of bu1ine55 nlo pymt all due l2!30tn. to tun &: pleasure • 1r!cctcd. , 494-J964 • 635-9291 e To co111pa11le• de!lroua of S3SOO 2nd T .D. Good loc ill DON'T let aoother loi'M!l developing tranch~ pro-Cosla P!1CM, 6 .)'111 at !!':':. wtektnd go by! Succeed 1~ ll'llms, 1~·e can provide: fra. pre!. ~48 e\ea dating y,·ithout rtally t.cyl°'>. slbUtty stud~•. complete de. t..quT\a Bch 494-4419 velopment of packqe, mcl'-Money Wanted 6350 Sci 1 SI 1 chn.ndi&ln; &&1lstance Ii * ect '"' ~ es ~ tnochist ules. 1\IONEY \\I a n t,. (I . Ex· Con1panlonshlp. S11"1l'C.'nty f'or fui1her inro C'.'Onla.CI ~need. 'ti II r " a al v", lntroduetlortt Confldenti~I UNI VERSAL ho~sl, ban!' "'Orlung .an1-(2$.~) 642·9676 S.10 P i\! F RA NCHIS E bibou.1 Yi'Oman for unique REDUCE Saft>, sin1ple £: fv.t EXCHANGE beer ta\'ern in Beach •rea. ivlth CoBcte t11blets only 1617 \VestclW Dr. suite 210 ~~ Box 111 664• Dally 98c. craw tor d · s ru: Ne11'POrt Beach, Cal. 642..2ill __ Pharmacy. Costa ,_,te~ e BEAUTY SALON e ANNOUNCEMENTS l'llASSAGE by SUsir or Chrl1 SERVICE DIRECTORY Baby5itting 6550 BABYS!ITER Fenccd yard. ~Jcals included. \I/eek days only. Vicinity llu!iadny & Bishop St., S.A. Phone 83&-ri6i2 -~~--COSTA r-.1ESA PHE SCHL, ai;es 2-ti. open 6: 45-i"i: 45 pm, lic'd. plnti pro.::r am . 5-1$-9803 YOUNG n1othcr \\lll baby~it \1·e-ek.day~ In own hon1e on Balboa Pen. Cali Sandy Pangburn. 6i3-1238 CHILD car(', any age my h O tll(', $2 ~1 Wr!:'k , TC'a<·hrr/mother. 64:>-0l56 CHILO Care, vie Paularino School. C~I. Day or nl&:ht. ~l!L-19'.l'S BAHYSI TTINt: l\ly home, Paula!'lno & Fan'\·irw ..rea. Call J.IG-jj&,1 C.:'11. LlC~~RED day cure. J>ref v.•kly 2--1 yrs. Hot lunches, balancl'd acll\'it1es. J.16-153!1 BA8YSIITING ~Ty home, J:';: side C.~t Prefer Wffkly. tr 548-15.<i7 * \VILL Bablsit In my home, \~eek rluys. • ;t'IS.5298 * Bo•t Mainte nance 6 55 .5 ·----MARINE MEC HANIC Ou.y & N1Kht SeM.'lce. BAL. BOAT RE NTALS 70,l F.dge.,..·atf'r BaJhon, Calif, ~ s;hwr11 zt'r 673-.0iO Business S;;J c~62 TI'PL,<i. IB:U Extt. $3 1-tr. R>•!>Umf'~, M"porl~. phnnt• dict1tlio n. J)ickup .ci clcl 5'14-8874 ~bi nelmtkin g 6581 Rooms far Rtnt SHARE office • "'I I n c ome Tu co. mnlhly rent, 1808 Blvd. CAI. 642--7301 fl I I . Rt•s. N"''PI N. eftd IAauna Beach. a lr a nd NOTICES :~3.1 00::::~1! n7~att~~ ~,:i ~~~P~.!;1~10:~~: Found (frw AdtJ 4400 s.t--Oltl ' eJ~~~t~~ ~~~:;n Mi:iCO. Ownrr. 494-0072 • ALCOllOt.IC'i .\nonymous Cll!I MS..2j/2 HOOl\f FUR RF.NT In nk't. (!Ultt homo for 11'Qf'Jdn(? JM!rM>n, Kit. prlvl. 6"24i90 l..RG Rm. Lo\'ely !iome: kltch rniv: 11ep noiria. ()(l.tiO, i:i:l'lf'· 616-01.1~. 11th .l ORANGE, C.rtt. Tot> lor11Uon, iround fJoor: only KiO.\J7111 01•.i.nitt. ;,.1~~1 lS i '11'.lJUH AO ~ UJ.SSI· lock1nt tor It. nial 542~­ nEfl" ~l'mlfli will hf' ' l:."w.1. "94--06l9. ~IAu; Slame&e1 en.I, ?\lcu Ph11111o, '>43-7211 °'' write to ~~~ . .,---~ Ve_rde al"l?n MM!'m p 0 Bo 1223 Co t r.1 AL'S Gaf"{lcnh11t St r II I~ IF Yo11 11'n11ld l,ilft to bf! · · ' " 1 • csa. l.u1\n u111 u11enanrf', i;ardt' In buslnra& for younie:ll. in. ONE Cllrion nftW ~.rc:ttna LAD~· wanl~ ri(IC \\'.C.~l. h\lr s, clct1 n nrig. G46-J62!1 vesli&'llle !he m(l.ny op. tape. ldentlf)I. !>t6-9!H6 to f a~hlon l~lund. ~P~GA ROJ.:NER pnrtunlll!!1 with n:>US[IYn1 Solid lll"fl')' male MG-&306 Rfl ! prn, flllr1.1u:,. J~oro'I"'" Relirt.bif. C-fkol1r CM1nrlici-511-1).t~ r.t w/ l"Olt:ir. ~":iG--lft!7 \\'hi!r E!Pph11n1~"-'l"n ,11 ll"'I n~0- ----:._•-1 -, , ' • --·-----~~-·---·~-·-----------~ ~ --_...--------·--·----.....----.--.-.--~-~·~--~--·~---~---------·--~~---~---""'."-:--... ilRVICI DllllCTQllY 1-------.,-CaWnotmokl.. ~ SIRVlCI! Dll.ICTORY ltouMclunlng 673.1 CARPETS. -. lln. cite. IUs.ide.n. or Cfmc'l >ant wen RtuJ Rets. stMlll Tuesdir. Marc• 15, 1'69 SERVICE DIRECTORY JOIS .. l!Mi".LOYMINT IOIS a IM'LOYMINT I JODS a IMl'LOYl!llNT JOBS I IMl'LOYMENl _;>IS EMPL YMENT Upholllory 6990 Nil' WantOll. Mon 7200 Halp W•"ted. ·Mon noo Halp .Wllllod. Min 7200 Halp Wantacl, Mon 7200 Halp Want.d Oot • El:lp Lown Mallltenanoe, Lloe.n,ed 5'Mb/'6'lll0 "' • CZYKOS K l 'S CUo10m HOW\.ouJ.i)'OUllbtn.iwi *INTERNATIONAL~v Women upbolstuy. E"'0 •11• in ""' .. c1 ...... 1 of .,.... MFG i.01ST1111ut1 I want a -----c" It. m I n I b Ip. l(l)l'i d-and dlatrlbutln< • • The Rigger 7400 Halp Wanted w- UNIGARD Ftoaoclnr. SG-HSt. U3I dally new,..por! We bavo FIRM super salesman wh~ · Carpentwfne 6S90 ======== Newport Blvd .• C.M. an open!..nc for a bralnner, J • l> """-.....) I--------Inc-Tu +740 ======== preferobl> In his lwtnt~s EXPANDING TO still isn't Now ta.klna applicatlont In Fashion lal.a.nd tor ln1ur1r.c.e ONUp TIRED OJ' A LONC COMMUTE'!' CARPENTRY MINOR REPAIRS. Ho Job Too 8nl&U. Otb!Qd in £'81'- ~ 4 a t b e r cabln&ta. !HUl.75. 11 m ~ leave msg at 646-2312. IL O. JOBS & l!Ml'LOY['IENT who ~ .......,,., ..,'. ORANGE COUNTY '" IU:Sl'ONS!B!-E PftpanUon > bl\ .... and wWlna to •wk Salis{re' d ' '"lire of .u "-tax Job W•nlld, Mon 1000 ,,.,,1ng, anc1 '""·"'" NOW HIRING re turna: by ~ Public ...... F ' • Wallreues • Andenoo I Accountant. Available ID Satw-ull)'S. or an ex· PEru.f.ANENT POSITIONS 11erve the needs o! ecr,ion.-WRITER SEEKS planatkm of the re-AVA.JLA.BLE Wrrll tions. anWI business en-Temporary Employment q u Ire m e n t 1 and op-ORANGE COUNTY terpriaes and individuals. 642·7&13 portunltles for re a: u I a r .ASSOCIATES " I ~;.,A . nl!!ta and bfonetlta which WE _ __. men to \\-ork in all Despi te plenty of brains, energy and arnbl· lion, the man I'm looking for hasn't hit the right combination yet. I'm reedy to offer him an executive sales opportunity In the combined fleld of life in· surance/mutual funds/investment counsel- ing. To indl\'lduals and to businesses. Re.p- resenUng a $3-blllion company. With a tram· ing oalary up lo $1000 a month plus oppor- tunities for additional income. And prospects high in the five-figure bracket. EXPERIENCED ONLY FULL TIME Unlaard ll\.9U.rMC..oe Group Is now hlrln( fDC OW' new dl- vlalon ol1lce openins approx. -4/115/'69 In lluntington Beach, on Edinger at Stach Hlvd., j111t o1t the Sll.n D .. l'l."o Fw)<. The• positions "'ill require a 1hort trainlha period of approximately one month in our Los Angdr1 office, bctom the movr. Transport&tlon will be ~ vided. iour compete sa ......... ct10n Job Wanted, Lady 7020 Include the pmional use o1 •icn1 •t •~ER '"-•"-, " .,.. ls guarantred. a company automobile mo. dept., No expe1'ience nteeJ... """"•· ~r-IA: oro OORPORATE 1n' u.ry as we train. hour. Remoddinc. Rcp&lra. IMPROVEMENT PRACTICAL Nurv, $3 hr. ~ct MUa.n Ltavltt thl! TOP STARTING PAY 61!2-&109 or 5.36-3900 COUNSELORS home or hOspltal Local c1rcul&Uon department of AUTOMATIC PAY RAISES C~t, Concrete 6600 I :-:---;;-;;•,,.64,,~,,9937-;::::•;:--,= rm. 645-<1514 the DAILY PD..OT. SfART WORK H. K. CI a r '·· Acdg Serv. OomHtlc Help 7035 JANITORIAL IMMEDIATELY CEMENT Wo"'-.., job too Income tax, penional or I "-----'-'----MAINTENANCE FOR lNTERVtEW CALL APPLY IN PERSON # J6 Fuhk>n Ialand Newport Beacb Telephone receptlon work. Apply betwMn 1 P-m. I S p.m., 1626 E. M•Y"NOOd, Seota Ana. small, reasonable. f ' re e builneu, your home or olc. Georp Allen Byland Aael'IQ' MONDAY & TUESDAY cstim. H. Stu!lick. 548-8615 20 yrs. exp, 1oc firm. Employer Paya Fee Floor ~ man wanttd far n4-7253 ••• --., •-s E 16th,.,. 547-0395 1tesdy, full time work. Must 1---------* CONCRETE work. Bond· ........,<0.> or &l5-07-u. f'Ve& .LIN" • "3ft ed " L.ioensed. Coocrete e The Tax Adv laora Chinese live-ins. Cbel!rful '~perienced on-.. Tenuo CAltEE" OPPOltTUNITfl lf this sounds like you , call Messrs. H~ys or Nalle, 542-5623, or write Box M-503, Dally Pilot. I'd like to bear from you. OJiERATORS \VANT ED: Experienced. single needle, overlock and blind stitch. 863 Production PL, N.B. (rear bld1I 646-03<ll lmmedlet• OJMl"!int• in th• following areas Mwing Year round ofc, 328 No. Permanent Experienced Phillips Cement 54U3l!O Nwpt Blvd, N.B. Real! Far E.ast Agency 64Z--8'l03 Custom Landscaping Call 64>0tOO for appt BEST IN CONCRETE MACK HARRIS Tax Serv. Apencl•, Men 7100 e 64&-123C e 9th yr., ll17 Roosevelt, Prd. Tm. Controll Pr ••• $434 • CONCRETE work. all C.M. Appointmm, 54(}.2911 Sia Order Deak •••••••• $600 types. Pool decks I CUiiom. e INCOME TA.Xe Labor •••. : •••••.••• $2.SO hr. CaU 54&-1324 Done In your home Mgm't Trne. to .......... $600 • J3E.ST IN a>NCRETE $5 And up. ~2600 Merchants Personnel Walka, pool decks, Doors. INCOME Taxes prepared 200 WestcllU Drive Patios. Phone 642-8514 your home, long form com-Lobby Office e CUSTOM PATIOS e blned, $15.. 494-3422 Comer 17th & Irvine c:orx:rete sawing &: removal Walter lL Fahttnh:dz P.A. ~;fu'rt ~ Slate Llc.. • SU.1010 Income Tax Service Child Care 6610 MOM Wishes girl 3 & 6 yn:, n time days, my home' Bet. Brookhurst & Adams, H.B.~ Contractors 6620 642-6204 or 545-1391 evt! INC01.IE Tu Serv., Notary Publle. Reu. Eves. 549-1340, 2361 Zenith, S.A. His. Ironing 6755 Help Wanted, Men noo ITT JABSCO APPLY IN PERSON MARKET BASKET llsci Irvin. Ave. Newport Beach tuk for ltfel Uoy) LEAD •NIGHT COOK• Appl.y in person REUBBI E. lfE 151 E. Co.HI Highway Newport Beach Join""""' -- .... --"""' aalca No ~enc. UCUArJ'o W• tram • tuD er part time Mutual Fund AcM1t0n, Inc. . Npt B. llll3 Westclifl 60-6422 S.A. 1212 N. -.,, • &47-3!.U USED CAR LOT ATTENDANT r.tust have experie~. Excel. lent compan,y benefits and workina: oondltionl, Apply in person to Bob Ropl!kL NABERS CADILIAC Holp Wantod. Man 72DD " * CARPENTERS * ELECTRICIANS * CABINET SETTERS With mobile homl! experi- ence • .Excdlent benetltl. APPLY IN PERSON UPlORER MOTORHOME CORP. 4000 Campua Drive Newport Beach Additions * Remodeling Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. mDNING & Repajring. Pick up & delivery. * 540-0074 * MECHANICAL DRAFTSMAN GARDENER FOREMAN, 2600 Harbor m vd. Lquna Stach lJ n i fie d Co!ta Alesa *Busboys * Cook 67J...QlU * a&.2110 ~L-•_nd_ac;_•P,_l_n.::g---:-61-:-1_0 1 School Db;trlct. MUlll have,l------'--- C1rpet Cleaning • 6615 Poor Man's Friend Experienced in clo.se toJer-- cusroM LANDSCAPING ance drafting on unall 3 yn: p.rdenlng or nunery ell"JI. Salary $48US95. 8 hn/day, pakl va.c, holida)'S & '!ck lenie. Apply Mr. FIREMAN $667 to $I09 mo. PROFESSIONAL Rug . & * 646-1234 * pwnp components. and U· Uphobtery Cleaning. Top sembly. Requires working quality, guaranteed results. Masonry, Brick 6130 knowledge o1 dimensioning Allen's Maintenance PRICE & QUALITY techniques u applied to 646-4063 or eves 64.2--3526 casting a n d machining Ray 1.aWllOrt. 2003 Laguna AGE: 21..JO HEIGIIT: 5'8" Can)'On Rd, Lqu.oa Bbc. minimum WEIGHT: in pol'- 494--0110 portion to height. PHYSI· -·--·--·-- Apply In penon COCO'S REUBEN'S CUSI'OM LANDSCAPING . CARPET &: Furn. cleaning; • 646-1.234 • dr&\\'ings. Shop expenence for 1 day service le quality desired. Work, call Sterling for brightness! &U-8520 . Carpet & Upbol Cleaning Paperhangi"I Equal opportunity employer P1intint 6150 Male and Female ---=-----:-- CAL REQUIREMENTS: PART TIME rl'H High school graduate, valid WE NEED 25 MEN W Cal.it operator1 licetise, U.S. ALL TYPES OF WORK citizen. File application at BA'.CKGROUND FOR P ART City Hall, 8200 Westminster TII\fE WORK 6:30 P.M. TO A w tmlnst Ca1il 10:30 P.f.!. be"°10·,~ Ap•~. 11 1~ s m.: 1555 W. Adams Costa Mesa If ifs dene right. •.• It's "DUNN-WELL"! VlN YL .,.all c o ver i n g specialist. Kit, b a t h s • 1t1aterial & labor. Est. 1485 DU! Way, Calta hie.a Ca.IUomla. 9'l82fi en•>~ TOP STARTING PAY "' '" '~. p .. WE TRAIN'-1_11_1t_l_893-4S __ u_Ex_1'-. 205 __ _ * HOUSEMEN Free Estimates •• , 548-854<1 847-1659 C1rJMit Laying & PAINTING ext-int. Acoust Repair 6626 ceiling. Lie. In!!. 17 yra exp. Free est. 548-5325 C.'.RPETS (nylons, wools, polyesten,) Vinyls and Til-INT. & EXT. Painting. All es. Latest styles and oolon;. sea30n rate&. Free est, lic'd Commercl.al and Residential. &: ins. Call Charlie. 548--0405 Expert inatallation. INTER or" Ext. PAlNTING, BLANKINSHIP FLOORS IMMED. SERVICE. Local &12-14<73 ~7262 ref. FREE est. 543-1627 * WAITERS BUSBOYS FOR INTERVIEW CALL MR. JA.?ltES fi.10NDA Y & TUESDAY 774-7251 COLLEGE 1tuden t , permanent position, part time during &ehool, full time summer, at Chevron Station on Beach in Laguna. NO Hipplt:s or long hair. MU15t be 18, salary &: oommlWon with raises. 494-9003 DAY • BUSBOY• AP~LY JN PERSON RfUBBI E. lfE 151 E. Coa•I Highway Newport Baach lmmediate open.inga. Ex"· pandlng staff for en- btfled hotel. Call or see r.tlmi King. THE NEWPORTER INN 110'7 Jamboree Road Newport Beac.h 644-1100 Electrlcal I=========:=:==: 6640 Plestering, Repair 6810 Immedla.t@ open!np. E.~tf· ence nectsu.ry, Expandinc stall for enlarged hotel oper. atk>n. Contact J. Ravin in person. \YA NTE D : Re t ired ·----------------E L E CTRICIAN Licensed, INT. Plaster, ext. stucco, dry wall taping, acoustic &./or textured cellinp. 545-6003 e PAT'S Pluterlng. All types. Free estimate. Call gentleman or collea:e stu· FRY COOK, relief shift. DISHWASHER over J S . dent for ouf!kle sales. Flex-Start $2 Hr. 18 or Over Some exp. ln machinft bonded. Small jobs Mainl. & repair. 54S.5203 THE NEWPORTER INN iblr. hour1. Contact TAB Cottq-e Coffee Shop w11.1hing. F ull Ol. part Umc. PRINTING &. VARITY?· 562 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa 67~ Gardening 66ID &12-0027 ING. 1664 Bab<ock, Cllt. I":':':'=.:===.='.".'-!.======== Help W1nted~n 7200 -ftln Wanted, Met. 7200 1107 Jamboree Rd. Ne.,1>0rt Beach llUSKY, .Jnlelligent man. ALLEN BROS =""'""'=='5====== GARDENERS STUDENTS 6 working their way thru rol-Pkimbl.~nc::g ____ B_90..; --------- Warehouse & varied, ln- tere1tlna: work, ye&J1.round. Good benefits. happy crew. No exp. nee. Phone: nfE POTTERY SHACK i,. •. Ext>erl'"'°"· ""°"""· PLUMBING REPAIR Young Fry Cook REAS! 646-4200 No joh too 1mall TAKATA e 642-3128 e or 494-4515 For appointment. NEED 2 men to work full time Service Station. Must be exp'd and over 25. NO pl'ione calls. Richfield Sta- tion, 19th k Newport, Costa Mesa, Ca1tt. J APANESE NURSERY Kitchen Trainee 546-0724. Complete a:arrlenlng Remodel., R•palr. 6940 service. Headquarlel'!I for all your nunery needs. ARE YOU TIJJNKING ol another room? Family rm! JAPANESE Garder.er, com· B e d r 0 o m ? Den nn? plete yard service, 1tte Bathroom? Activity rm? estimates. 5¥.1-1332 Patio nn? Library rm? JAPANESE Ga rd ener Perhaps just more R00:'1f? Complete Ser v i cc • Ex-Plaru • Estimates • Advice • perlenced. Reliable. 642-4389 Gratus. e JAPANESE GARDENING Lauterbach ' Assoc. Permanent, full time job. Chance for advancemenl ~LY 1N PERSON Bob's Big Boy 154 E. 17th Street Coiita Mesa Service Cleanup. Landscap-314 E. 16th st. c t.1 646-rm --~L~O~T~~B-,O~Y=-- ing. 531-7034 aft 7 p.m. It'1 almost spring&. we know EXP. Service Statio n Salesman. New mo d e r n facilities. Overtime after 40 hn. + comm. Fu 11 time pennanent. 990 E. Coast Hv;y., N.B. • I I th'• ,., the "m•" "•w Bui-'· ~a1,,. Ex·-"'"' JOHNSON'S Gardening Serv. · 18 ... "' · · •~ u.. ......, '-"" Finest -uip, expert )'ard ROOM A DD 1 T I ON It working conditions. Bl!ach SERV. STA. SALESMEN . Young men. eves & wk end!. Must be neat in a p- pearance & · handwritin;. Sec Clyde. 2590 Newport mvd .. C.M. '" I area. See Jack Brown. Poole care! Reas! 962-2035. remodeling. A t tract v e · t Cail Buick. 234 E. 17th. St., Costa CLEAN-UP Spetjalllt! MO\V• prices. Free eltima cs. Mesa. 548-7765. ing. edging ,odd jobs. lil;ht 54fi...0846 rnovtng. Reu! 548-6955 LAWN SERVICE i1ow-edge-vacuum LI 8-5646 after 6 Pr-.1 YARD C I ea nu p. Tree service, new I a w n s , ~rinklen, rototill. 646-5848 EXP. GARDNER Mid-ep Japanese. Reliable. Mon. to Sal 832-0705 6612 GOLDENWEST Self-Service Laun d r y/Cleanen. 129 Roofing 6950 A. Roofer not a salesman. Leaks stopped, all type rooting. New or ttpalr work .,,.... S36-M4< Sewlnp 6966 • Dreuma.lting-Alterat.ionl C\lltom De1ign1 .......... Altoratlon~2-5145 Neat, accurate, :zo yn,. exp. DISHWASHER Full Time SECUR1TY GUARD • Relief JI.tan, all shills. 40 hr. wk. Apply In """"' BALBOA BAY CLUB THE RIGGER 1221 w. eo..1 u.,., "·"· 16 Fashion h1and 5eZ2ll Ext. 166 Newport Beach Cuttar, Experienced e lNSTRUl.TORS _ Full Immediate Openina or/and part tiJM. Nut ap-Beach Drapery Service pearance. Must be able lo 900 W. 17th Stftfot mtc"et and deal with the Coat.a Mesa 54().i464 public, rood ~. Apply SUPERINTENDENT lo penon. H:>liday Health for ApU A: HOWIH, N.B. area. Spa, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Give experle~ Ii: et&rtlna: C.M. , M]ary; reply Dally Pilot days 9ant to 6pm, weekday• MANAGER Of Home Box M-316. Agate. Bal Isle. Open Sun-;;T~'";;;;;;;5en;;;;;l;:c•;;=:;;;;69:8;;0 Sam to 9pm. Saturdays 8am to 6pm. R.na.11!1, Huntington Beach. AMBUI..ANCE DRIVER Eat•te Maintenance Old hli.·~ o11· Call Ji1paneq Gardtner Expu, compl yard aervicel Frte estimate. 548-7958. JAPANESE Gardener, exp, reliable. Mainttnar!C\", Rtu mo. ratn. 892-3719 H1ulin9 6730 Gentr•I . Hauling " c1 .. nup SJO per ioad. FrN! prage cleanup tor usable items. Call Tom. 531--3757 HAULING. Topping, Tr'll!e1, H~s, Profe!!Mna1, Frtt EIL B .. John&C-4030 LIGFIT Ha.ulhv 0fflHJpS Tfte RemcmL Ru.sonable. ~ CLEAN Lol,/PJ"il«ff etc., tree rmiov, durnp •kip bod<hoo. nu .....,.. 9GU7'5 J ·-- Houn<l .. nln9 6735 WJU.tAM''S CL.NG. SF.RV. estA '""" 1oe. Expcrl.enced-Mu•t be fully Trff Service Mr. Jone1 841-1266 e\li?S. Lle'd. Top pay for rtaht Tree removal A. trlmmlrvt ~. All lnqubies held man. Omtact Bob, 137--0931 rree e1ttmatH. In 1tricte1l ot contidenee. 64:2..QOO 842.-299.1 BOAT ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!ISERV. STA. SALESMEN. CARPENTER .; Full time. MU1t be neat Expeieneed In appearance & ....,...,_ CM RAINBOW 'IV-Color, blk & wht/ Ile~ nlpatr. No c~ if v..~ d on 't M!Pftlr/50SG Ins on repairs! 54o.m<I 6990 * LOOK * u yn. 11enrtnc Onl'\P Co. BIG SAVINGS CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY ANO ORAPES Our other M!f"\11~1 lncltxk: * O,rpel lNtalla.tion * O!irpet & Rui;r Cleanlrc Your Nl81hlctlnn II our most lmporta11t sqet handwrlUna. Seoe Clydl!; locu rMrocentia . . 2500 Newport Blvd., Colt& EXPER.l.ENCED Man. to Mesa wot'lt ln fUmlturt 1tott & ~---~~---1 on tnidc. full Ume. ~ Carpenter Foreman n. &a-2000 Nffiled by custom bulldfor for dlwnUled Orange Cou.n-STUDENTS, part tllm:, 18 ty ~iork. For appt. call 491. I over. Kentucky f'rled 1665 betwttn 5 &. 1 p.m. Chicken, 693 S. Coast Hwy, only. La.euna Beach. BLUEPRINT SHOP requlrts M O L DER : e x p • r . , blueline trimmer opera tot'. pl!rmantnt molder for alum. & ma.rneat\im att04pe.ce 541)....93?3 foundry. Lido Cutlnp Inc. LLOYDS NUllSIRY Ml-1333 WantN exp, nuneryman. NOW I n I er v t • w I n I ex-call for &llPl 646-1441. Pftiencrd dnipery, c p t Ji111J. tlrn•ln food to So aaletmf!n. P e r m a n e n t Dell. See Tttry or ttarold. mi.plnyment. For lll>Pl call 4'5 E. J 7th Strtt-t. C M. 494-4657 IAl\IM Beach FUU. Tlme-.dil.bwuhtr &.-: RE=A~~~=ES=T~A~TE=.~-~""ld'"nc't 1 k1tchen lll"ll. A.1k for Harold yo11 be 1elllnc the hottut or TerTY. ~ E. 17th St., •re• Hunllnttoa Beach'!' C.l\f. ATLANTIC RESEARCH CORPORATION in Costa Mesa needs FOREMAN Our Marine Assembly Activity bu Im· mediate need for a foreman. High school and 5 years supervisory expert· ence in f&bricatlo n and assembly (pre- fer marine) are absolute musts. The ex- perience mus t be in loft take-off runes and offsets); template (marine or air- craft); (light) plale layout, lilting and positioning o( sub-assem blies and assem· biles. Additional skills in planning work loads; making djrect ~ssignments; de· veloping and controllin g manpower, machines ;and equJ pment. EXPERIMENTAL MARINE WELDER Needl\d immediately. High school plus 3 to 5 years experience in welding and layout work. Mual be capab!O of Certlfi· cation requiremen ts for magnesium, al· uminum and steel. Duties idclude weld· ing i.i specifications using MIG In ert· Gas-Shielded Tu ngsten Arc on Carbon Steel and Alloy Steel, and on corrOJion resi3tant aod heat alloys; welding such thlnas 11 hul l and con1ponent parts anrl assemblles, pl us company and ground support eqwpment. Also lays out f~m blueprints own and others wo rk uamg precision measuring tools. Makes own templates an.4 COD!trucls special jigs or holding devlc.. lo set-up parts to be joined. ' GENERAL ASSEMBLER IMAltlNEI Needed Jmmedlately. Must have com- pleted high school and have one year expertence in prod uction work (marine or related field). Experience mwt in· elude hanclllng dr!U prw ... rivet 11\lM, squeasers and mllfa; tapping. coun ter· sinking and burring. Muat be capable o! continuous qutllty and quantity ou~ pul with minimum or supervision . Call, Apply or Wrl t1 Pete Helfrich 3333 Harbor Blvd .. Coala Mou 92626 (714) 546-8030, Ed. 153 ' An equal opportunity rnpl~ C.rpet.f'Urtl..cClmpl Mc. And Apt clna:. 60-816'1 OW 6C'J.5671 lot RE.WI. TS Reva's Upholltery 300 Ptlm. Balboa ~nn. 67S.7114 t 96M797 OlARGE )'O'lt •·ant ad now. VILJaae1 ~al °F.af411t' 962-4471 DA.11,.Y PD..O'I' WANT ADS 9JO< JT TO 'Bi\fl j __ ~Al~w~.,.~~a~Go-G~~iO~!_I :._ 1:~"~;;;;!i;:;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Help Wanted, Min 7200 Concrete Foreman, Working., needed by custom b u I I d e r for diverallled MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS (Temporary) We have a few openings for e:icperienced mechani- cal assemblers who are · familiar with hand and pawer tool auembly work, and lite drill pres& operations. Dw'ation of employment will be three-- six monlh1. Hours 7:30 Ail1 • ~ Pl\1. J. C. CARTER CO. 671 W. 17th St. Coate Mesa 5411-3421 An equal opportunity l!mpklyer Maintenan~• Man Six Daya a Wffk Orange Cowity wortc:. Fpr appt. .cal\ 497·1665 betwn :'I • 7 p.tn. only DISHWASHER. TRAY GIRL Full tln1c 642-8<>1< \\'ANTED: JR. BOOK· KEEPER. Typlna:, posting, payroll, general acoountinJt. Apply TRANSICO?l-t, 851 W. 18th St. Costa Mesa NEED reliable babysitter tor 2 children. Holil'I 3: 30 p.m. to ll:30 a.m. LA!ave your days free • near OCC. M~63.l0 GOOD Typ ist, ~n. oUlce du- lies: some dictaphone; penn., full time. Small mfg. co. of!ice. Hayward Filter Co. 1673 Placentia, Of RECEPTJONisr • TELEPH· ONE. afternoons. Over 30. Will train. OR 3-1166 Rea:illtered Nurse Doctor'• offlee-, New -p ort Beach. No1H11moker. Salary $600. 644-147..l BEAlITY Operator , ex· REUBEN E I ct pericnced. Guarantee le , w; romm\,.lon. Apply I n I pel'!IOn 5'5--0209 15 E . Coaat Highway J'itAID P/Ume. Jnquire in · Newport Beach person Hunttngton Shores MECHANIC Mo"I '100l O<ean """ HB Journeyman mechanic, ex. PHONE CLERK perlence Foreign or Domes-Full Lime, Call l\trs. Lee tic. One of the oldest For-____ ..,._933_1 __ _ elgn car sc!"Vice dcpartmenl! in Orange Co. Flat rate & warranty work $8.00 per hour, pa.,• based on 50/SO'Yc. Excdlcnt Yr'Orking mndi· Uons. Mu.st have own hand tool!. Call Ken. 494-9771 or 54~0034 WANTED: \'oung man to HOmSSES APPLY IN PERSON REUBEN E. LEE learn clectrica.I estimating 151 E. Coaat Highway with a potential salary of Newport Beech S800 a mo. folust be willing to work 60 hours a week --7.::;;;:=::-::7:-- at minimum wage!! while SUllfJARY tralni"i. W'll• Dally Pllol L'\11 Box P-317. E1CJ>erlenced person needed ONE, ALERT to Jn81lqe ofllce of small e UPHOLSTERER e builr'leu in Newport Beach. TRAINEE Generai Sttrttarlal & Boole.. Appl.y in pel"!IOn Johansen & Chriflensen 898 W. 16th St.. N.B. Comer o1 Monrovia &. 16th keeping experll!nce required. Salary OPl!n Send reswne to Box 537, Balboa. BABYSITTER nttded every Accountanta day or every other day for Credit Mananert a week or 2. 12 children). • 833-293.5 <Irvine) Admlniatrative Trnees '"'=:--::=::--,,....,.-,.,,.--.,. CALL BOB. 548· 7796 GOOD opportunity for live-In ARGUS AGENCIES "°""'k"'P'" 2 Adulta: s.n. 1869 c Ne..--Blvd., c.~T. ta Ana area. Salary. -....... 541-6118 STATISTICAL DATA Experienced or tnlinefl' In fire, and/or cuua!ty 1tatis- tical codifw. Prepue com· putcr In-put data tn our op.. eratlons unit. Detail figUre wo1·k involved. POLICY SERVICE Prefe1· at lrut one year or fire, casualty or multiple line rating experience. Plea. aant phone pen10rWity e&- sentlnl, Excellent opportun- ity for advancement. POLICY TYPING Experienced or trw.inee, mul· tlple line policy typiat. 60+ ac..'Curately on the electric. The idl!al position fur aome- one who likes to type. KEY PUNCH Career openlna for operatcn with at leut one year ex· perlence on Alpha £: Ntu· merk: lBM equlp'mt. DQ '1tl!L Excellent fret!: benetila'. h r- manent. slracty work. Our policy ts proinotlon from within. Your Julutt 1s deter- mined entlttly by )'OU. New modern olliee, friendly, pJeasant atmosphere.. For Detail• 1.nd App't. Call Collect PERSONNEL (2131 384-1213 UNIGARD INSURANCE GROUP EXPERIENCEO a ESCROW a SECRETARY UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 3141 E. Coast Hwy Corona del Mer 673-9240 Equal oppartwrlty employer PEDS. RN'S e BUSBOY/DISHWASl-IE~. \\.'OMAN to eare for 3 NIGHT SHIFT AT mu.st be over 18 &. expen-children ages lO, 8 &. 7. Ollldren'1 Holpltal enced. . . Uve-ln or out. Lt i' b t or Oranae C.ounty in Oranae e COOK. Full time. cxper1-hou!l~kttplng. ~2142 aft. County, Exctllent aaluy A enced. no phone calls. App. 1 PM benenta. in peraon. l;=..,..;;,,o::==:::-;:-:c. KI 7-0091. SURF· & SIRLOIN RELIABLE baby~tter in my 5930 PacUlc Coast Hwy., N.B. home for 2 children, 7 & WAITRESS, Part time 8 )'I'S; from 2-5:30 pm, 5 DAYS OVER ll CALL MATURE man needed by dayw wk. CAii Mrs. Bell ~ fumiture-deatgn store for aft 5: 30 pm. ~7:t25 delivery, installation. & PLEASE HELP MOTHER HANDYMAN', yard work. relatf!d duties. Exper1t>nce wtth Ille hskp' • babysit-odd jobs, once a week. On prelerred. Salary open. Call bou I Balboa t.Iand. 6'T.J...48M 49'2-4131, San Clemen le for ting, a t :I> hrB. pe! wk. CENT AL Front Desk, exptr. app't Tue1 thru Sat. Nr bch In CdM. 675-C05l Specialty practice. Hun. SAIL BOAT HOUSEKEEPER I babysit· Ungtx>n Beach loc. 96UJ6'T1. ter needed. 5 1ehool aa:e I' SALESMAN children, live In or out. Ref. MEDICAL RECF.PI'IONISt' Young, akrresslve. Fiberglas MS-12!19 · tor dental apeclalty oUlce, lillll boata .. Jn Newport, Huntlngtnn Stach. 962.-8671 Write Box M 4Cl:I Daily Pilot BABYSI'ITER Wan t ed : BABYSITl'ER wanttd for 3-~ · Wffk days 7:30 am.-3:30 d k. Fl \"-~.-\YANTED: l!ORN MAN. pm. My home, Reta. ays w ex -........ ., Trinnpet-NOW. Rock It Roll, 842-7048 aft 5. ov.-n ltana. 64&..a7 Soul, Rhythm le Blues, wllh TtITOR • Houlekeeper tor RABYSl'M'ER ~ £: lite working band. Age 20-25. eves., N.B. houRtle-eplnt. My home. Call (713) ilB-8247 * ~l4M * own tranlport&Uon. M>llB2 SERVICE station attendant, DAILY PD..01 &.llME .. A.· -Wa.nted: CHAIR SIDE work grave yard ll pm LINES. You cu w. them OENTA.L ASSISTANT -8 am. Mut have exp. fOf JUlt pennl• a dal· Olal ___ P_h_._,.._ ____ _ Apply at Chevron Station; M2·56'JI t'HAROE 10'll' want ad now. Har~ Blvd at San Dlego'l-'========~=========I Frwy. Holp Wanted • ...i. Holp Wanlld WAREHOUSEMAN Womon 7ow w.....,; 7400 Exper~ncenecenary. Kerm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;j 1Urna. Hardwarl!, 2 6 6 6 Harbor Blvd, C.M. ~7080 KENNEL Jlclp wanted: Part time, momlnp only 8 to 11 . Wrlte Daily Pilot M-313. Agenclea, Women 7300 b:ec SCC"y <reo pd) ••••• $600 Rtctpt (~fee relnb.) •••. 1400 Gal Frl lftt job) •••••••• S450 PayrolJ elk tr. (fet job) •• $lSO Merchants Ptrsonnel 2M.1 WntcliU Drive Lobby OfJlce c.orntr 17th A 1tvlnt Newport Beach l45.271ll -ll4S$S -~r· Stono/Sacy $4ll COSf A &.IESA MFGR. ~ •h, gd. typing. Exctl b.,nefll1 ' advancement. Wotit wtt.b 1roup or yna en-•'...,._ J. R. Plt:rce ~. AaenCl' 188S Nev.-port. Clil. 642-67'20 ,SECRETARY lnteresUng position requiring one to three years o f f l c e eipertence. Ple,.anl personallly p I u 1 accura te skills on electric typewriter and sbort- band requlred. Contact Paul Alwohl 1714) 546-8030 im Hubor Blvd., Cotta Ml&a t2'26 MIHll• Systems Dlvltlen ·"' Atlantic Research CORPORATION A Olvltlon of the Sutquohanna. Corp. ' An eQual opportunity tmplO)'et - Male or 1'1:tnale n'1Q 1PP17 ' • • • •I 2.f DAllY PILOT Tue!d17, MW 18, nM '> ~ .... ~~A<'J=,...,.t~:.o"'t"'Mli=N°'•'rrc'"'o"'~•:--:-•-;:•::;"':::"'";-;v~t;-:,.::.:;:,.;;,-JO;n;r.IS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & IM,LOYM!N'I MERCHANOJSI FOR MERCHANDISI F()lt/,"MERCHANDIS! FOR MERCHANDJS! FQW MERCHANDISE FOR . 1 ScheoliolMtrud""' 7'°°Sci...1.,1~ 7600 '"".'. .. , w-7500 S'Al.I AND TllADI! SALE AND TUD• _ _:SA:=LE~A::,: .. ::D:.._T!.!IU:=!:DI:!..·. i...:.:· S~A~L::lc.;A::;N~D::._:.T::RA:::D:::E:::.:7-5:::A::;LE::..:;:A;;N;;.D,_1';..:.RA""';D~!:;;'"~ I• -. w-. 7500 :n: = ... Fw/!lhff9 .' "-'°°° Fumitul; eooo FREE TO -YOU Mlt<0ll•--uoow-111.-·-l600' a -Ab I MEN WANTIO -" R \ eJ:-'11•t'1es TO TRAIN AS CLAIMS ADJUSTERS • ~ ~~ Wl!ITE Al ...... )nale Manx. ... hn nt Insu rance· Investigators are badly needed . l'e~J"I' ' 11 s,.._, '""'hall', wu. Inventory A UI 0 due to the tremendous increase in clalml. re. PHSO wif' Spanish eyes, letna.lc expectlne male · U l·m·1ted •Ulting from auto accidents,. fires, flood!, .... Tl•" ""°Je"· all -PUBUC WIDNISDAT HITE n I riou, storms and Industrial accidents !bat .. ~~~Tit ' MecllterranMn • with cltlldmr'• other..... . MARCH Jt-7:00 r .M. 1 occur daily. Insurance Adju~ters Schoo\s of CNt• ,..._. • , Bought M..nufacturer's 847~1 lllB AU-CTIO N A li()J N. IV. 7 Smet, Miami, Fla., can train you -1 '69 Show,...m Sampla AU s TR AL I AN s 11 k Y , gency to earn top money tn this fast moving, excJt-''" L 1~h It. A• TenHk ._..., ..._... Dtlu• .,..,.. Puttbttd.·3 yn. Far Adult ing, action·packed field. fu~l lime or part -;:,~.,,r a· \Yood carved ar1n divan, lg. m~n·s chair ~=~ti"&ined 675-<:~ Announce5 Th• openlnt of it• Prolessional end Technic;il Division sPecializing iii top Orange · Co unty firmsl NUMERICAL CONTROL ENGINEER Familiar with G.E. equipment. B S E E required. Sl6M. CUSTOMfR SERVICE N1.14ERICAL CONTROL TECHNICIANS r.1inimum 2 years ex- perience on G. E. equipment. S a I a ry open. STRUCTURAL ENGINEER California license re- quired. Fa m i I i a r with roofing systems and tiltups for indus- time. \Vork at y:our present JOb and study at f£MAll or love seat. 5 Pc Oc tagon dark oak din set ho1ne, then attend resident training for two R. T . \v/black or avocad o framed chairs: a Pc BR 5 1!0 °l!e ~ ~i;:erc1 weeks at MIAMI BEACH, Florida, or LAli •<P!/ yplst $400 . set. 9-dr l\r. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 m ' ""' Open t to t AIM> Sunday VEGAS, Nevada. _Exc_ellent employment as-~h~ 0Pl!•-ate clet"tric con1m~es. d~rative ~e·adboard i~ Spanish ~l:wi~~ts,;:.;h.ildren to for lnipectlon & convtnlence sistance. For details fill out coupon and mall Rec ti 1 t $400 oak design with matching box sprmgs, mat. GAS stove, need• cleaniJl&, * NEW _ NEAR HEW * Couches • love- today. No Obligation! Type 40 :00 ~ ~ .. 1 · tress &-frame. ' You pick up. 3 51 o seats e naugahyde couches & chairs • sec-T I t t · $4~ · ltem1 Sold Individually \\'eStnlins~r Ave. ot. 3/18 ti onals e coffee & end tables e s\vag lamps I Appr(l\'ed fnr Veter.ans undn-New G.J. Bill! I Type 4s_·Yf~ p.!ne 'votce. Shop Ar ound -Before '°".buy Mt USI CUTE 5 wk. old Puppy. Tiny, & lamps • 3 Ma.hog twin Bedrm sets (xlnt ....•.••...•..... ···: .........• -· •.•.•. ,. •••••.. -·· --Typlit, P•r•onnel $400 . VALUE $1095.95 -FULL PRICE $529 .. 95 Shiny Blk. Lab. Terrlei-cond ) & several others e Beautiful massive For prompt reply "Tite to: N •-T ~ p R Gal or termt ts low•• u..66 per week ...... ""~~ t b ·1 K' · ..... ts e 9 pc fNSURANCE ADJUSTERS ame ....................... ~ .. ···-----ype --. . . , \:J Ou S ...,. Ba . · u,............ cus u1 t new mg size .,,. .. rm se . ~~~~ A.ddr65. .. ____ .... _ ................... ~lie~' T~!!!° s~t No Fane: fr~ritCha1~~:UJ~aru~n:fqe "CH"rodci"ILD"."'REN=,."'·!"'i"'c~"'ym,-2-os."'aw""' ,-:,"~· ~==o:U dg~, rpfct~~ ~!~~.e~~:5e5~.a~;. sizes; P.0 .. Bo:< 7?2 Cily .................... Stat.e _ ........... repoi:tJi. 545-~ 3/20 Tustin, Calif. 9:2680 Zlp ............ ..Phone.................... Polley Typist to $340 . • • • • , FREE :r.t&IC Bassett Hound, I Color TV's-B &. W's::Slereos-COiiilXiS-1 <AccrOOiled Member National Home Study Counctl Type 60, \\'ill train. '-·'-b•kn. to family w/'-~ U ~ G d , be tilul ~::;::::;::=:;:::;::::;::::;::::::::;;:=:::::::;::::::;:==:=:::;::::::::;;:oj · ·-"~ * ANTIQ ES * ran piano, au Dlct•phone Typitt SlSO • yanl. 968-4514 31~ · 6 ·i t Help W1nttcl Women 7400 SECRETARY $440. lo $545. X!nt. opportunity for sharp youn&: &irl. Elect. typewrit· er. shorthand. ' Advance- ment opply. PUBLIC AGENCY FULL BENEFITS Call ?ilr. Sylvester, 540-2910 or 002-z.tll iI01t lhru Fri. onJ,y. BE THE FIRSl ~tcDONALDS is h i r I n i:: COUNTER \Vomen lo \VOl'k Monday lhru Friday 11 an1- 2 pin. Uniforms furnished, free meals. APPLY IN PERSON McDONALD'S .,..,,...., · carved legs, & many, many m re l ems . Help wanted 'TY'--50• experlen~ in in-GEIUtlAN Shepherd, female, WotMn 7400 C:~1 Sec: to $S5Q up • -• 8 mos <lld. shots. LI _:R;.:et=ri"'g"'er:.;a:;t;;;or;.;s.:.• ..:S.:;!o"v-'e"-s,'-W--'as"-b"'e"r"'s,'-D~ry~•-r_s~I ---------1 60 S44-075S 3129 We F inance With Good Credit Shorthand lOO, type • 2 ~ffiiT.i"if:~~iil]f,ijfi~~~~~!!!~~~ 12 KITTENS -1 male -l * )'ean Calif l'XPf:r. M•tter Ch•rg• &. B•nkAmtric•rd NIGHT Logel So< $400 up JOBS & EMPLOYMENT rema!• cwico, 1 wk' . HOUSEKEEPER, ~;~,/·••·1••nd. u" die· Agencies, Men & 1-F-ur_n_Jtu_•·---8000-s~':n y' mC<f ~: AOK Commission Gallery INSPECTRESS AND L .. ol'Soc T•noo •-WOMOn 7550 SPANISH Returned trom °''"°""'· 61>-0053 3120 n22 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. ~ ~lode.I Homes on sale at h Bl d U G G F MAIDS Type oo, shorthand 100; Xlnt less than ,o;•holeh.le! Group DOG House for J.fedium Sb.-1 Block West of Beac v ., o . . rw_y. JOIS & EMPLOYMENl Exec Sec $50t up newpart · quilted sofa ·&· Jove seat, GREY male rabbit, 10 y,·eeksl ~ oppty to adv&ncf. ~ includes beautiful 9 6 '' erl Dog. 962-4311 3/20l--""!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!J!!!!!J!!!!!J!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!J!!!~I Type 60~ sho~.1\)0. "'Ork personnel 3 Spanish oak decorator old. 645-1688 3/18 Miicell1neous 1600 Mlchinery, efc. 1700 lmmediate openings. Ex- panding tta1l fol' en- larged hate!. Call or see Mimi King. THE NEWPORTER INN 1107 Jamboree Road Nc\vport Beach 644-1700 for scverat men. t bl t bl •.... --------------a es, S\\'afor 8 e ua.utps, LA\\'SON Da\<enporl. Needs "FORKLIFTS": Ford ftac- Sectj/Bkkpr $475 up 3Q80CV \Vall P)acszuc, kl~. queen, llli..,,..ver. 546-6401 3/20 ATTENTIGN .. 1 9 1 Type 50. sh<n·thand 80 or full size beilroom. suite r-v TREASURE tor \\·1t l t. mast, pncu Socty to $413 Profestion•I Service com(ilet'C incl bc>A springs, \VlUTE Rat. 674-6a:jl 3118 HUNTERS llres $mio. 4,000 lb Clark. lo •h I pnel.i tire!, yard lilt. Runs Type $0, shorthand 80, sharp r ' • emp oyer mattress: linens &: boudoir Gardiner electronic transis- &: slender.' •ncl the •pplic•nt lamps. Spanish oek 6 pe Pi•nos & Organs 1130 tor ~tal detectur, model !:'iric,Sl~. ~~~ ~~ S.cret•ry to $450 .Ill Dover Dr., N. 8 . dining set· priced else\\'~1-e -----200 Max range 4 fl \Vill 89'7-243.1 Run 1-girl office. Type 70, 642·3170 549-2743 at appro:<. $119j.00 ALL HAMOND ORGAN sacilllce for S75 call 646· :l'hortha.nd 90. FOR ONLY $399. $20 down, LESSON~ 1987 niters p.m.' Sttno $419 School .. lnstruction 7600 $4.99 per neek ' out of ENROLL NOWI -===-.,,.--:-.,-7 Sbortha.nd sQ,· Type 60, A1nt i----------state crnli.l OK. \V 111 ~6 for 8 v.·eek course TIFFANY Sti!:rling, 6 place· FREEZER needed in 3 to 4 \\'eeks. (prercrably FTigi- dalre) 833-2935 (Irvine) ----------lbenefits. LIFETIME Gift, typewritln;. separate for quick sale. 20th You do not ha\'e to own an settings, 11 pieces per set- CJ k S ..,50 Olildren. -...tch:lldrcn, or Century !'urnlturc. 9 7 7 2 •""t··-•"I. F-practice Un&. plus acceuory pieces, PETS and LIVESTOCK GENERAL OFFICE Girl • er tono to .,,-. 5 ""',.. "'"" ...... " ..... · pl d 1 "G" Youne11• lndlvi.1 .... 11 •• tutor-. Garden Grove BI v d., time available. CLASSES sun e, es Rn. Telephone ~·e..i .. ~ I;: Shorthand 80, typl': 5 0, ..... ~ """''"'"" '')')"; 2'" .... '6 ed Otllcoat 10 lessons typ\n"' Garden Grove Daily 1~9. START: Beglno<n, March mo. ___ • ., ,,_.,, ai-ea .lJ r1N'I order taJdnc. ()\.-er 21. Ph: general olfiee. .... 436-1962 ::::.!I 540-9?73 c h' t "DO school. 113 Del ·Mar. CM, Sat 1().6, Sun 12-5 Come 18, Tuesday, 7 P~f. Inter- ,, •• •er 0 .,.. SfS-2859 in or call (714) 53()...5240 mediate. March 13, Thurs-S'I f J k f AKC black Labrador ' Work-Ne•r Home One year . Jlnance expcr. I "'w"'A"NT=r~.-.---.~k~F=,..,,-.~h~l°'.ik-. 20 Pc. Maple 'da)' 7 Pi\t. E.'ictllent teach-I ver ox IC e Retriever pups, bred lo e .',ccounting/Bkkpi:: type <'lj. r-hunt. 4M-515J da, 495-(582 •Secretarial Sefvice C•shitr $375 up a native! Then con1e to 3 ROOM GRO.UP er. Cost $3.50 -J\fu.st aell $50 aft 6 Auto experience saary n1y . french Conversation 642-0086 evenings ---------I 1125 tria1 bu ilding. Good 16866 Beach Bl\'d .• •.R•Typce~~ ~ 50_ nece ' Clal!Ses 64~ Includes: Living room set • REGI~"'J'ER NO\\'; .Fun, En-1==~~-~--''--~cl LABRADOR Re tr i c v er, ... .., '-'"" tables _ lamp&: • bedroom tertaining, Kno,vledgeable. EKO Guitar with case $65. f a.I 20 ood ·Superior Aiency Acctg Clerk $365 SALE AND TRADE l>Ct • quilted mattress • ma-Rent organs available dur-Kni;ht kit aulo analyzer $45. d~~~~ion. tIO.~~ooff aJt s al a r y plus profit I l--"-""-'-""'-=-"-"-"'-'-cJ_• _ sharing:..__ EstabllshN'-1946 Exper in CPA olliC!"', hand MERCHANDISE FOR · · ing term of cou111e. Sign up Mans golf clubs, bag, earl 6 pm. po.tin • pte dlllin;' roon1. All fur • . . & · 8,, .___ •= Pho CIVIL EN61NHRIN6 DRAmMAN For su bdivision 'vork . Minimum 2 years ex- perience, mu s t be capable of inking, permanent position. ·R&D Tf{HMICIAN PI a s l i c tu b e s. Specializing in mat~ erial & process work on thermosetting fi- bergla-ss fabrication. A r are opportunity for a technically ori~ ented man. To $1,000 month. SHOP TRAINEES 1'1inimum $1.85 hour STORf MANAGER TRAINEES Salary Open ~Tany other openings for other disciplines. Submit your retume in confidenctl Ev•nin9 interviewa by Appointment only. WOMEN HOSTESS Age 28 to 35, attr ac- tive. To sho\v houses for prestige builder. Saturdays & Sundays required. $ 1 5 0 per week. SECRETARY, DICTAPHONE Sales Representative experience preferred $500 month. RECPT /TYPIST To $350 month CLERK TYPIST S320 month FACTORY TRAlllE $1.65 hour Abilities Unlimited Agency UI E. 17th SI. Suite 224 Costa Mtsa '42·1470 NIGHT • HOSTESS • APPLY L'Z PERSON REUBEN E. LEE 151 E. Co•tt Highway Ntwport Be•ch ~7 1-larbor Bll.J~sta tllcsa i· now! Avoid the rush~ · site .~ sr.....,s _,. ne ~--------1 Call first'ti42·'TJ~l R~te Clerk to $400 furniture ' 8000 $449 Inquire for deta.ilil: 546-5197. POODLE.~: AKC, 1''cmalc -..,=~ -~ 3 monlhi exper rx, typint:: • -----No riown • Pmts. only $18 mn. 1-IAi\U.JOND for sale or lease. puppies DOMESTIC-HELP • · · 17 Pc. King Size ; · l-1R.£\VOOD For s a I c • for we. very reasonable. Bllhng Cl•rk $367 WElJl'S WARfHOUSE tn CORONA DEL ?IL\R. \Valnul, Eu ca 1yp1 us, 0 ,,, ,,..,.1 All kinds! Housekeepers, , .... "\\' m-•ical '"" fornUI. Bedroom ~" E r---1 H 613 '9"" 1' ................. Cooks Maids & Co ... .., ~ '"" ~ · .........,, wy., .,,..., ;,,.., Apricot, $47.50 cord, $25 ,:: --------- ' mpanions, FC Bkkpr to $500 • New P1'ano• • crd. Summer prices July OOBERi\lAN, tllalc, Red References req. Fee & Fee . L.ari:c 9 dra\11er dre•ser, mit-60C W. 4th St., Santa Ana • AKC all shots 51 ' nios pm:..1 J b Call l.fi Abb Hadley syatem. able lo v.ork ror, '.! bedside stands, Jdng Open Dally S • 9 &. August, $38.:xi cn:I. Del. 54' , ,:s • ""' o s. u y, on O\Vn. \VURLlTZER I:. BRADBURY k stack'd free. (I) 688-0846 _16'_._t>-<_J_t_s __ ==~I S.18-7796 • G I Off' $"O size headboard, Cnune. quilt-Sat. 9 -6 SUn. 11 • 6 All i;tyles &: finlsheif, all ARGUS AGENCIES en ice .J"'I ~ mat!J:ess. shcetli, blank· .._ u AL IT y ki....,. bed American made, 88 note, del GIBSON J-:50-t.IARTINCREST KE.NNEl..S ,0~ C N rt 81 .•• C , .. Type 40.'angy.·er phones. type ~ .... Miniature SclU18uzer I& "-OUi7 e\vpo vu ., . '· lln;olce~. ets, etc. \\'/quilted mattress, comp. w-bench k tuned. Price start-\\'ith Hanlshell case, \Vhippel pUppies •SUPERVISION & NCR Operator $450 Cho,,. ',•,•od~n~rty·J~ ~~~v:~,~ $98, "'Orlh.$2:50. lng at 3499. ~o ne1v. $200 or ofirr 546--0989 -"SALES \VORK e . __.....,,,., W lltz 0 E1ic, 675-5160, after 6 PM. Keypunch $400 up All Fo $249 ur ., rgans . LAB p""'· ,... by ch. RNS & LVNS Full rime. 'MUst have neat 2 yean exper. · r • NE\V • 2 ?itaple end tables, lamps, l.e\l<\.sfield Beret. See ap~··an-·"• lo d•al No-~ ... ,. Pmt•. only -. ono. Office Furnllu•o 1010 couch & chair, J ~1od"rn 1 . ..---'-"'• _.. . Keypunch $455 uu.. " ... .., ?-.faJ'ly other makes. ?ilany tab! ?-.I 1 ·al tabln pedigree to a ppr e c ate. :,',~~ people. Apply in per-l y~a~ exper in Alpha & WELK'S WAREHOUSE 6 IT. Executive desk k styles ~ 1izrishes. ·Prices &: cfla~~. ~~;~ Fri~d· &IZ-5630 PM & Night Shift on OB floor and ICU.CCU. E.'iccllcnt salary &.:. beiiclit:J. St. Joseph's Ho5pital in Orange. KI 1~1 SALESWOMEN Immediate openings In our So. Coast Plnza shop for JR. frushion·minded, mature saJ. es1vomen. salary + comm. Good future. See ?.1iss Dor- oUiy at CHRIS", So. Coast Pliua, C.~1. Sh•rp C•rter G•ls Sectya, Clerk Typists. Gal Fridays, Recpts, Bkkprs, RN11 & LVNs. Both fee & fer paid jobs. Top co"s? Call Doris, 54S-7196 ARGUS AGENCIES 1869 C Ne\\-po11 Blvd., C.~I. See Bet!)' B111ce .;at Agcney !or Career Girls 410,Y. Coast Jh\'Y., N. 8. By appoint. 646-3939 Altractivc, !harp gal, age 20-30, looki~ for an oppor- tunity lo move up fBJOI. Type 56-00. no SJI. Lite bkkJ>t:. eXper. required. Saluy $3i;). $400. Ph; 642-6382. Holld•y He•lth Spa Numenc. matching tablt', upholstered start at aire & jisc. 546-0653 Sh'YE Terriers, AKC 2300 llarbor Blvd. C.i\'1. Silk Screener $3. hr 600 \V. '1th St., Santa Ana S\\'i\~I chaiJ; $110. 67"...-'ll..'>O, $595 CARPETS, Vinyls, Tiles. lat-Champ. :l'ired. Rare, calm. R I E I S' Factory Trne• $1.65 hr Open Dally 9 • 9 673--6873 EVERYTHfNG JN 1.JUSJC ''' ,1y1,, and colo<>. Com-Ouffy: show qualltY pets. ta 1ta • ales MAI£ £at. 9 • 6 Sun. 11 _ 6 ~9-2547. Men ' wo.,,.n SCRAM-LE._T_S_ Gar•g• Sal• 1022 Beach Music Center ;:'i\~.~.::::"'"'1a1. Ex-oosER,IAN-x Pup• , Expanding ftiain. OUice # Commercial &u-1403 540-7262 Y.ttks. Fine temperament. 4 openings aMii:'ab!e for GAfu\GE-SALE : . Nc1\' &: }'actory ~es &: Service licensed men I: women. In. Sale1 TrnM $650 ANSWERS near new c Io 1 hi n g, Daily 12 noon 'til 9, Sat 9-5 :JPHOLSTERING -$79.50. 2 lst shots. $30. 540-5289 slant income I: traininl::. ?>.Ir Fee p'lid, BS degree. furniture. dist\e11 &: misc. 174().1 Bead1 Blvd .. IH\vy 39) pc. (European craJtsmen) AKC Reg. POodles. Toy's &. GaMner. S prJ n1it Realty, Credh' Mgr $650 \Ved. 19th-$at 22nd. 9 am 11,{ mi-So. San Diero Fwy. Fret est., de\, plcJ..1.1p, 215 J\!ini's. $51> up. All colors. ~0-4824 Fee paid. 2 y,ears exp \n Orator -Blaze -Agony-• l pm. Huntingtoh Beach 847-1536 ?\fain, HB "Berny" 5JG..640J 547-3851 or 547-9j9l MOTEL liflJda, Exp'd, :f.lusl credit & supervisio'l. Global -BALLOON 2257-B fon1oria Ave., C?ll. -pfANO & ORGAN RANGE $10. Rc!riierator AFGHAN •10UND PUPPIES D ft "SO Com1nent nbout a bir head,, hP.vc phone and transp. Call r• 1men ~ ed blockhead: .. You could CLOTHING • Ladies, si2e BARGAIN HUNTERS I \V/Cros11 Top Jo'reezer $2:). BIS sired. gd show pro- for appt; S'!IS-2474 · l yr11 exper in machine 12 up, Childrens. Xlnt cond! l\l\V Refri&f!rator S 1 5. .!!pe<:lll, exot colors 962-9989 --=='========-des;"n, load;,,,. &: transfer 1nake a fortune renUng his ''""" Eld C 01 Orange County's laraest Ho .. ••hold !tom,, S4a-;;.J90 -.... -.. heitd oul as a BALLOON." W.... en i\ve. Apt 8 "1 · :1lock of ne\Y & used ~-"";;:i'-o::i:--.;--;=:;:-FE?itALE Basset Hound Jobf.-Men, Wom. 7500 equDip;•ftsm•n $l.lS hr aft 1 pm. Pianos 1;: Organs PRIVATE Sale, 9' Couch, AKC, 1 year old, shots, very 20 PC. MODER"11 Spinet Pianos from , • s:sa moclem dinelle, king bed affectionate. $75. 54()..2917 * * 1 ye~ cxper Civil Engineer· 3 ROOM GROUP Applia'!_C~ 11~ Baldwin OrgRJJ ........ $388 &: sel , all 6 n1os. old. TRISH Setter Puppies inl!'. stom1 drnlns etc. 644--0104 116 J . C. Penney Co. I & R • I ·'· e SPECIAL p· URCHASE e Chickering Piano ...•.• $745 a A.KC, bc&t in silo"' sirP.. Shipp ng .c.'v n11 Include" Fl•••I sofa & ch<UL" Fashion Island • "" Rcr..i~erators, aultlmatic Coru1 Caprice Ori;:an Q u AL IT i king bed tilnles only. 540-0715 N'e\vport Beach $2 40 hr -1\·alr.ut tables -lan1ps -'"' S.'\ 1400 •• ' c.:omplete bedroom 1vith quill \\·ashcrs &. other major ap-ve · · • • • .... • ·' "' •· • ·' y,·/quilt..._. mattres5, comp. AKC TOY Poodle puppies. Some exper. kllO\\' for!;liflll. ed inalll'Css -5 pc. dinette, plial14."eS Crom rrrodcl hon1es all \Vurlitzcr & Conn floor Never Used $98, ·worth $"..,j(). \Vhite. male!I, very small. 1 las open~ for Cost Acct $900 at fantastic disco'unts! No ~pies greatly reduced! 84U536 $'75. 5-G-C40 Oec;rt'. Colting-forecastin;;, etc. All for . . . Do\\·n. \\'e ~rvicc. See at; Low bank tenns L\L\.'URIOUS off ,.., hit e --------- * COOK * top no<ch. $277 FOSTER'S Nod""' paym'"t l ~'ATCH FOR S A t • $750 · Go·"d J\tusic Company carpet, S40. ~~9t 200 'TIS OPENING SOON Recent successful experience 2 r cc s'o A t Ne. dow n. P.mts, only SID mo. 1718,; Brookhurst, Ftn Vall'Y .... Kings Road. in all phases of food lndu:s. yeani e~per I', c1·. WELK'S WAREHOUSE /So. of \Varner) 968-1234 2045 N. Main. Santa Ana REGISTERED Ad 1 "50 So. of Frec1vay · 547~1 -· ,., -··-d. Com-tit•'"• min rr:tff ~ . R E,. RIG ER AT 0 R I mEN $2 ..,,. ... .,y.... "" • 2 U d ill Open 1.fon &: Fri eves 'til 9 l{ · ~-\\'iq,tes, outstand!pg benefits ?T· CO !!KC eiree, 11· FREEZER $12. Automatic Sunday 12 to 5 Call 51G-S1Jg includin"' profit sharifli: train. 60~ \V, 4th . St., Santa Ana \\·asher $;{;. Gu dt}·tr $55. .. . Technicians Open Daily 9 • !) All guarantttd. 646-2486. EXERCYCLE, 1 speed. E."I'.· A 1 In h Sat. 9 - 6 Sun. ll · 6 ,..A_~1 El•ctrv. Sendce Dept. I ! fl"t SALE 11 cellenl mndlllon? $150. Call PP Y penion Office Equip Tee """" ..... Ill 67fr1S47. Cd~I IO A.l\I, to 5 P.i\I. $IOO wk SEU.ING complete hWR-VAST Stock Anier & Eur i\londa,y lhru FridlQI l.Techanical aptitude, de pen-hold tumishings. Estate sale. turn ~ clocks. L arry our llOI'll'.eous n cw store WEDDING go1111 size 5, Inquire after 6 Ptlf. 18'16 Pia-ito-an Antiques, 2 4 2 8 burned! The pianos I:. or-oi:lginally $250. Sa~rilice dahlc. ccntla, Apt, T. C.~I. •o; ~ 642 2487 call even1nm:i El•ctronic Test Ttch Ne\\"POT't Blvd., C.~f. 1:ans iUUertd no water dam· -... -.. ~- $500 20 PC. ''MADRID'' KEN?otORE AUTO~lATtC q:e, but !heY are smokey, KAH1LL Wedding dress, size SIA~JESE J. C. PENNEY CO. Hor .... 1830 -------QUARTER HORSES: 1-\Vhlle face wf \Vhl sockl.; Sl50. I-Buckskin marking $1:.0. Appaloosa Stallion, reg: very good stock $650. 897-7350 YR. old Gelding -\1•iU h"l'.vcl. You \v\ll get a kick out of him. 8~1260 24 F•shlon ltl•nd Test, trouble shoot, kno\v \VASHER d!Jty, dUsfy & :11ct'atchy. \Ve 10. and matching head 3 Room Group late model, excellent cond. movl!d them all baek to our dres.!. $j(). 6#-0610 ·CORRALS FOR RENT An equal opportunity tr:>nsistor.1. Jo'RC1\I MODEL HOMES $40. * 847-8115 old location & marl<M every--$20 l:. $25. S.~5911 \VANT ED DESPERATELY: employer Eltctronlc A11embly lnctud~: Quilted 11Jf1 &. -thire at FIRE SALE PRIC Mite. Wanhtd 1610 TRANSPORTATION ?ilaturr. reliable babysitter * * $3. hr chair_ 2 end tables & col· A ti l110 ES! So. it you dig that ''Old __ _.__ - 1u111.,,ed n1olhl'r acceptable) '""""'"!!!!!!"'"'"'"'"""""'""'IKnov.· 11chem11.tic~ k t>lcc-fB"ltable-llamps-d\-css-_.!' ques -Time S1nol'l'y Jo'lavor''. WE PAY MQRE Bo•ta & Y•chti Live in/out in Jo,·cly home * DRIVERS * tronlc mnuii•... el'_ mirror_ headboard_ ANTlQUE & Decorator's come Ir. gel 'cn1 and al 9000 ~:1~1u.!.:~.3:~r to~:!: No Experience 1 ,TL•~-o~:;h ~h t.: ~~1~ ~~~P~~1ii: =~ ~~mJ1~~ s7~~~e houseful &~~~~A~~~~~~Dro CASH ll.R. Good µay. ca 11 : Necessary! cht''l\is1r,·. Ui.blc 1.: 4 1,;.back chilh~ ===""'--"""==== 11so1 Ne'\'POrt. C.?il. 64~ $46-240.5 bel. 10 .am-4 pm ?.tu.st have clea.i. CalUomia Chem Ro1e•rch Tech CO~IPARE AT $7~.9:.. Mu1ic1I lntt. 1125 PART TIME Nl'Cd :! ladit'S ror special 1\·ork. 12 lfours v.'rekly. $60 JX'l" v. k. Call ~tn. Nelson at 64:!-S:i60 between 2 and 4 for pet'IOrl&I inle~w. N"E'Eo part·tlme howlekeeper k child <'&re !Hon. \\'ed, Jo'rl. 8: 30-5: 00. Emerald &y, Laguna . 494-IXO'l SlllltT Pl'rSllCt \\'anted E.'i~r. 11rtferred or \VUI train H ntt'CS!lill')'· Lido Cleanen, 17i6 Ne\\l)Ort Blv. Costa 111r ... ~14 BEAU'~T~v-- COUNIELORS COSM£TICS. Xlnt carninp.,. Dex. hn, no canvass. rr.;. 519.>, STUDENTS, pe.rt time, 1S l: O'Ve.r. Kcntuc!Qi f'l1KI Chl~k<'n, d3 S. Coul It")', t.Aauna Beach DENTAL Aul11anl, enalr aide, In Nc"'port Cea.ch •re ... X-Ray e~pcr. df>1drcd. To apply, Ph: OR 3-1161.i \\1t11" rlc:phllnU! Olmw·lin" drh·!ng record. Apply $600 $399 YELLOW CAB CO. 2 yrs cone~ lab & 2 yrs N'o do;._Pmts only $16 mo. 186 E. 161h SI. Ind"' lab""'"· WElJl'S WAREHOUSE Cost11. r.1e.sa FactorV' Molden $3.50 hr Re•I E1tet• S•le1 3 ~TS exp on aluminum Min & Women c.asti11p Expanding a;ain .. 001<"< # /!.•tho Opor $4. hr 4 operWws available lo? exr. h"'·~ O\' ., tOl'I~. u~n~ men I:. "'omen. I~-Miiiing M•ch Op.r 11tant 1fl('Ome &: training. Bill ... h Ga!IO\Y •'I· :-pr l n' Reali)', -· r 54G-4824 Expe,. ,,, ... , m•' ...... , nps. Welder $2:71 hr Top ba.imyl\sl. •Pf.ct An· \\~k\ln; e_:-,;Jr.r. l't ad a\'ailable, loll0\\in1 i111 herl'. Call 67~100 ulr BfB. for AlarUyn. Nwpt Beach. Prod~='~ooSupsr EXP. Landscape Mlcllmen n espon for production tine, or trainee. Salary ~ COfnm; 1!UpctVilfC 30. coUe~ deartt. qualllit.d le.ad•. • r I n : f! tom"· ev"' ~ bl!neftts. Call ~ Tra1;.._1 $2.40 hr OLDER Couple to ma~ Opportunlly 10 · adval'IC'f', 3 ~ adult units, HunHnglOn shlft:ll open. Be!'c..i\ No pets, ru chlldrctl. MIK. .,,...., BLUEPRINT SHOP l"l."q'Uh'fi layout Artiit to Mlh'fry Clrh'f'ts. bhicltnc $150 wk trfnunier opcontor. s.ID-9373 i:; .. Jcs. 3 \"Ml •\\f', ~~tufl. HAIR STYLIST \\'ilh ro~ Both '" by •ppllcant tn:. \\·u~ dellJ. Busy Won. and f" p.tld by com- 64,,..73tXl/Mi-mt piny posltlont. ----~- 600 \V, 4th St., Santai Ana Open Daily ~· Sat. ~ sun u-& * $29.44 * For 3 P!Ci:t' B1'1Udcd e OVAL RUG SF.T e Nylon blend, re\-e111ible, Bt'Q\11n. t.vppertooc. itrccn. 3lle.s: Sx 10. :! :oc 3. 2 x 6 Al'S UNUSUAL FURNITURE 178.il Beach Bh't.1 . 1lunt1na1on Seach S.\2..f-164 MAfiOCANY dlnil'\ir roon1 table & 6 chairs. rood con· dllion. ~ C!M-7800 LO\"ELY white •"R>\la:hl Iron httakfa11t table a ct. $7:1. 616-1:71 2 UPHOLSTERED b~lac willg elialni. Excellent con. rlltlon. $35 ea. 49-1-61~ NU nw1m· 'l\'Ull It b . ~OU i:•n tell It wtth a OAILV Plt.OT\VANTAOI! f;f..~l Pt..AO: )'flUI' •anl ad •httt Guittr Headqu1rter1 e NE\V and USED e Fender • Vox • StAndi;l e GIBSON e :f.tARTfN e \VU.SON e Y MIAHA Dr'um Heldqu•rter1 e J..'EW and USED e LUO\VIG, ROCERS, AST'RO ~ stlectlon \vith ne-.v 4 pc. !lets and cymbals 3farl· tng 11l $99.50. Pf'tlala, hi-hats and sets rcpitli'td. AU 11ma1J pa1u. llCCC!JllOrles I.: <.')'mbil.ls in i;loc-k. EVERYT.1111\G IN MUSIC HAJIMOND • Stein\\·ll)' • · l-For MY nNr new or U&Cd maha • 111!\? k used pianos tu.mi~, appl~11, color- of all nnU.-es. Be!it beys In ed TV •. attteoB, pianos, or- So. C.alif. right bere. &an&.. e1oves, 1-cfrigerators, SClillIDT ~fUSIC co., bedroo~ sets, dining rooni 1907 N. Main, aets, office furniture. I plece Santa Ana or houatlul. Da,y, ni;bt or PRIVATE PARTY \\'ants to buy piano for Cash. 2J.3..177-1035 \V M'TED: Pianos &: Dtl:an:1. C..h paid *~* ~IAHOGANY Splfl('t Plano. Xlnt cone!. Private party. • 64.>Gl08 • &.lnday. 636-3620 $WE BUYS '$ FU RNITURE $ APPLIANCES Beach Music Center Hj:',1 , s1o ... 1210 Color ""'1-Plt ft•'-Sf•r11·, I I Pi1c1 or Ho1111 full CASH IN JO MINUTES • 541 -'4531 • t'l'lctory Sale• t: Servk'C Ott.Uy 12 noon 'Ill 9, Sal t-6 17404 Belch Blvd .• Olwy 391 l \t ml. So. San Dieio Fwy. Ilu11tir:J1;tot1 Beach 84j~ ----~ GIBSON J-50 "Ith llanJs.heU casr, $520 new. S:.100 or otft'r. Elie, 61$.51&.t afll!r 6 P)T "B" rt.AT Corr.:t."·lth Cll8', $40. 61"-"637 Dm1 &e.:1678 for RISUL TS --·------~ 1969 Solid 11tatr delux~ console 1tett0, 4 *AUCTION* spd ch~r. ~ft on lay If 10U "1U M'll or1>\iy a"'a.Y· P-.y ott mnalnlna: baJ. alff \V\nd1 a try •nee of $T6.00 or t~rms. A'IJCUons f'ridQ 7: 30 .,.m. ~ll l>tpt 533--72S'9 Windy's Auction 81rn Snortine Goodi l500 Brhlnd Tony'• ll!dt . M11r1 1 ~~ -20'i!Jl,4 Ne\\'JIC)rt. 0.1 l-Ml-8686 SURFBOARD ~lanutacturu i:iU~U::.'t"l 1narRelPJ:i.\.'t u. nlOvlne, must sell all botrd3 !flWn. Thi OAU .. Y Pll.AJ'I In •Ioele:. tlacd' boardl, aJI Oal!1beio ttetian S.vt •lies ~ maximum. 815 \\'. money, tlmt f e.(fuM· Looi l~th SI, Co3ta i\leu now!!' ___ , ____ __ 11' BAY BOAT Li kP. new.......... Ii')' S 149ii COL 29 ........ $9950 Inboard ....••..••.• Loade..l ! e PACIP'IC YAOIT SAU:Se l'46 Via. Oporto, Newport 24 Hour Phone •• 613-1570 Comlni: CTJSTOM DL.\: K 41 17 FT. Pertonner. Islandet Deluxe model (all fiber. glp.s1J outboard. Custom Map down cover. Bil: wheel UJ : trailer. $700 or best off· er. Phone 644-4687 aiter 7 pm E'OR Sale • 14' ftbcrght11 hl.•ut . 3.'51fP F.vlnrudc ?ltotw 11·ith t'.l~l"'ic 1tar tf!r , Contpll'IC wllh "Ohvt!ft. t1tll· \'Ill !Op Ir tllt•yp trallf!r. ,.,_,,.. S1llbo.t1 9010 KITE No. 301 .,'/irood u.11, , boat co~·~r. mast cover Ii. tlolly. Ca.II lif3.-0588 Sat or Sun or llC'O •t NlfYC. Alu Frain . SNOWBIRD # 371 . AU \\'OOd, dacron 11111. fully ~. rcody ta ~all Jiway, $2511 ~IS-9-'87 6~ IS \'Ul !Jt AD lN CLASSJ· r1 Eo1 Somc:oo~ .. 1u tx l•'Ukln; ror it. DtaJ W-36'0: lor Q\ll~k. r.Hlr1f'i1t re.uJU T I - __ .....,.._ --·~~·· ·-~-·=·.~---------~----·---·----r---~~-·-~-....--·---.....-------· ---.. --~·-..---·-... ---·-----·~-...... -,-,=,_,,....,.~-..... .,. TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION • TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9500 HOO lmporltd Autos 9600 UltllCari · 990Q Now~'" 9100 Orange Coast Ma.rine · his a new crew which often: Compltte Marine Services by • E•eerienced • High Ouallty MARINE PERSONNEL High Ouallty Work At Reellstic Prices •HAUL OUTS, SAIL & POWIR • 24 HR !IMERGENCY SERVICE ..... 675-2460 847 Bey1ide Orive Newport Beach 675-2460 or 675-2641 ---·- Airer•~ 9100 19M CF;~A. 210. 215 HP. Re.tract. 1ear, duil mark twelve 300 chailnel, 90 Chan- 11el AOF, Other ll'R ecrpmL 950 Rn. Almaft alwa,ya hangered. Xlnt cond.. Con- tact. Paula Balley, 6'2-9900 or 548-8l20 1967 CESSNA 150. Nav-oom. ::oo. One owntr. Xlnt cond. S6100. Contact; P a u 1 a Bailey, 642-9900 or 54.8-8220 HIGH TIME PILOTS Share e~nae1. Full IFR Bffchcraltllonanza. 549-0lai Mobile Ho.,.. 920() Bay Herber Mobile Homes 16'·20'-22'.24' &. 34 wides From ;6995 12 WIDES 40' -43'-45' -M' -55' .Q)' -&4' From S3!195 Parks available In all areas. 1425 Baker Sl ~!: block East ol llatbor Blvd. on Baker ' Coata ?lteaa (714) Sf0.9470 MOB I L E Home-Cabana, Boles Aero "El Dorado," tor single 01 couple. All ft:.clllties, private cove. Lido Parle Reaaonabl@. Cash or tenns. 67s-4Ml or ~2388 LOVELY Cabana & trailer in Lido Park. 2 bedroom, l bath, patio, view &: private beach. 673-3429 Motorcyclt1 9300 * AUTHOlllZED * BMW DIALER T & M MOTORS Garden Grove Blvd. at Beach tll 892-5551 or 5.14-2284 OPEN SUNDAY '67 Riverside Sportster, 50 cc, like new. Only $100 * 842-19%.i * Jeeps f~IO '67 .IRONCO llanltop 6 cyl. C wbefl dri'lt', rear Rat, radlo, llu been on!y once to the hills!! $1905. ,.....,. ;JS JEEP Milltary VS-; totally reblt., will conaldtr trade. E\'~s. 6'l3-340S ~~~~·-"'--~~~~- '69' vw CAMPEltS S Deluxe Sundials Total down · $362. 36 mo, @ $74.3:> + final pyml for liUe. Dlr. (1) ~1 or SM-2284 OPEf'l SUNDAY * PAlif-TOPS, all It eel shells. Sa1es Ii ~nWs. $1(9 up. Buy factory direct. 1010 So. ltarbor, S.A. * F'OR sa.le-Cantprr shell 10I' 8' wide bed Pickup. $150. 5'3-.lll4 Fiber,ilau insulated S' camper shell for sale: * 646.33i5 * 10%" Ft. Starilne cab over very clean ·-· Dune lu9gle1 9525 19158 DUNE Bua:gy, chrome bumpen, bugtires, carpeta, n1etal blakc body. Top side curtains ready for tht road. \Yill trade for pick-up or w:-11. below goini:: market Phone~ MYER'S TOW'D lmmediete D:ellveryl .$349, 100% financing. Olr. (I) 192-5551 or 534-2214 OPEN SUNDAYS e VW DUNE JlUGGY, ready to to. lara"e rlins and tires, tuned exhaUlt. $8oo. 495--4&33 Imported Autos 9600 AUSTIN HEALEY MG ll!G Sales: Service, Part. Im.tfiedlate Delivery, All Models ~69 TOYOTA FRUtf $1770 VOLKSWAGEN Last Of The '68 VW's BANK FlNANCING $199 Total Down Pymt. 36 at $44.78 + 1 final ~~nt lot title AVAILABLE ONLY AT: YPLKSWAGJN 1...,.._-.-8-U1-0-K-- 'o& V\V SUflROOFt Thia one bu ~ !~trU + I.a in 1917 RIVIERA, . all po\.\·tr, exceUent cond. \Vttlwld ti ,..~ seat, AM/fM stereo, Only, l'Ull Price $1.nlr. ele(lto tndse, alr cond le OI heater. $2995. MS-M'tC HARB ·s~ BUICK Zlectra 2 dr. ftl hdtp, AJ.rl.oond., full P1'T, YOLKSWAGm llC. "'"' "'""' -· .... IBS2 1m1 Beach Plvd. CADILLAC Anllqun, Clo1111cs 9615 __ C.;.c..HEYl!LLE 1 '36 Ford a:rtJle, 2 rur doon '66 CJIEVELLE ~fallbu, ~ complete wlib &lau, 1 hood hp, 327 C apd. Posltract1on, all btlY beat, 1 bell hous1na: IntJI Flre1tone, . pert. cond. wi~ rear end.· 1 '40 Ford 642-U27 alter ~·30• hood deluxe &: 1 zrille de-- luxe. Set of ba.ek seata for V.W. Bus. Phone 536-84ll CHEYROLIT H.B. Aak '°" 8lll '65 CHIVY IMPALA ;::=:=::;::::==== Hanltop, \'.S • .fact air, dlr, Autos ·W1nfld 9700 local car. Ecellent condition. --------$51' Cuh del!1 or take foreign T & .M WE PACY ., .. SH ~~/ttx.rll'lQ~~ni .:,~·· Coast """ ~i~s. Moton · . ·~ ':::44 c;.;;,,, ..... Authorized ~fG Dealer Gal'clcn Grivt 81Vd, at ~ fat .... c;l!I' -..... just paint, y tmor, Urn. J~1 luµUl l jl1nµ111 t ~; •52 MG TO (IJ ~l or ~ call'u fot' fl'et"ftttrnate. :r:k. ~Uto _:'6 ~ Inuna,culate, gleaming green OPEN IUHPAY. GIOTH. (HIVIOlfT rne15qe. beauty! 4 Spd, dlr, radio, '62 V\Y BUG·wttfi11Jk1 + • 1-'965"-'CHEW='"=-.9-p,-.,-,-.,-0.,.-. new tonncau cover, $50 Cuh cxtl"lls, Ulr.e ""'· With this Mk fw 3'Je1 Manqer deliver&. 'I)lke payments of ad S79G. U,c. # GSlQ,10. . 1m1 Bu~. Low n\Uca&e, auto. Lur. HAR.OR rack $1.Z5. 673-e762. ?111y be $38.63. QYH 457. Call Ken, . ; ~tlllctlllft . seen at ~ E. 17th St.CM. 4,,.977J ., >45-0034 VOLKSWAGEN INC. Kl ·~ 18TII J#ach Blvd. 842443S . ---'"""--.... --1965 CHF.VY Impala C dr "69 vw· _... \WI: PAY raru 327, P /S, ale<Ond, $1450 n• .....,,.. cash. Owner 646--2939 OPEL '66 OPEL CAMPJA' . FOR vou· R w ·57 CHEVY N•W '"" V /Trans. Froien up Beff. Station "'a-o, xlnt cond, 4 5· Dfl\llqi kndlAle ,. o-=tr Olfcr over $15; afL 3 pm. spd, <llr, radio, heater. Sea Total 'Cio"!'Jl J3t8, CONNELL 796 JoAnn cr.t. blue _.exterior. AU original SS me. ® fTf,SI. HMOLIT intcrror. S75 Cash deb;. \\'W + fil\f.l pYmflor ·uu., Dtr. C '63 CHEVY II. Stick Shilt. '59 AUSTIN-Healy. ?\loving fin e prvt p.1y. LB SWG 416 (lJ ~ d ~ ml Harbor 81~. ~~~:~. 5~ N:18~1~ 'r11!:. f l Good C'nd Ask for Ken 494.9773 OPEN SVNDAY O>lta Me• $f&.UQ(l Ol'CCI S8 t'. "' 962-\52j DATSUN $295. 962-7066 before 11:30 1968 OPEL L.S. Sporl coupe. '60 V\I/ BUG, !lconorey •Jee· Wiii B 1~~==~--=- Atfl Afte1· 6:30 P?\1, Radlo, heater, 4 speed, air ia: & runs lfl?d· With tlUs IJ 1965 CHEV Impala War .• .65 AUSTIN 1-let.ley 3000?llK conditioning, Blg engine. ad only $·195. Lie. FXW486 396. R/H, full pwr, fac air. 111 Full equip, xi. Cond., Sl595. Dealer. JSS..15 Bench HA.RlqR Your Votkn: ... • ~~h• Prv prty, $l!'m. &U--Ons at book price. s 18 o o, Blvd. Hunt. Beach. 540-0442 VOLKSWA~iN INC. Ii P11 • Mi• Paid tor ·s:; CHEVY 3 ~ 6 C)'L 87 h Pl m«ll • not. Oo11 ll&li' $200. Good tranaportation 54G-5606 BRAND New Opel Station 1 11 Beac Yd. 67J• I I f0 car. 6~2-5m a.ft 5 '60 A.H., rblt eng., Wagon, 102 hp. Must sell '63 VW Campu, 1500 enc., Radki, htatcr, xlnt cond. smi. 67r>-1297 TIC\V tran.., l(lmp. e~p'd. lMJIOf\TI WANTED l~ CHl\I. Good body & $875. 642-6606 ?11ake otttr. ~ Orme ~-tires, n~1 enatne v.--onc. '09 A. HEALEY JIM Cloan.-PORSCHE '63 VW ciMPE!i with aw;;: · TOI' I BU'itlt 1200· .549<1577. $675. Call after 3 PM -ing + lll."11 txtrai, JlON, WU.. MAXEY TOYOTA '60 CH£:\'Y. Tri-power C tpd. 54""'3 '61 PORSCHE L;o_ # UKROIP · 11111 •acl! llvrl p.,;.trnclloo. 1315; v ...., clean must SI!! to ap-HARIOR H, l•uf\, Pit. f47~ 962-4193 ,,, ' VOLKSWAGEN INC --' I • .. preclatc. $1299 l8ntB<'ach Blvd. , suMi> Auto Le11lng 9810 CHltYSLER I ?lfUST Sell '64 V\V BUS. e LEASE e \\'IFE'S car. l-0\.\"l"l('r. N~\' Completely reconditioned. '69 Camaro. flbi •••• Sl9 mo. brakes,' new shock!. 19&1 ft ~ $1450 499-38!6 '64 Cad CdV, air · .. · $89 mo. Chrysler N~wport. f. A. .. ~ 0 '61 V\V Sunroof. Radio, \.\'a1-'fi7 Le ?llans cpe, ait• $75 mo. Pis. 2 Or. 11T. May be '67 DATSUN PICKUP 'f.i T, <I zpd, dlr, radio .rr. heat. er. E.xcellent condition. all original. Owned by little 'ole man in Laguna. $50 Ca.sh deli or take foreign car in tra~. \Viii line prvt prty. Trailer, Tr1vel • 9425 LB PTB 904, Call Ken, '194-~~,~r~1\!ll)C '-"~ •. ~--~~ .• ~~ !JJ39~ a ' S nut wheel, w/w tire!, extra '67 Corvair Monz cpe S52 mo. SC't'n a! Lido Shore& Hotel, ~ p ~.. CAR LEASl~O 673-8800. 1uoo ll'"'f: "wic~ ... !ullHAPllrlcciO;tll695. Lie. SOUTH COAST 6t7 Lido Park Dr., NB. 300 IV. c .... , HlghW"JI '61 CHRYSLER . VERY CWll . itOlfl N 4 hUJ'l'ltf stovti'9Wft • bt'\f, '114: Hdan. 96 hp, overhead Dbl 1lnk, llJla' Wlf, -.Ito tam .... dlr, C apdt. radio, rc[rlc • jce batr wm~. Hr hlai.r; wsw .tires. IOaded! nc\v tires -*P1f11 T • w; ao' mllh, under tactory A re~ h11y at $888.18. wadably. Bal Slm. Take 1960 Inter. Travelall. $75 cash deli or old~r car. \\"ell cxptrltticed, $3!(), L.B. YN\\lll7. Call alter 10. * 545-5694 * '194-9713. Trucks 9100 BR.AND NEW 196t 11z Ton Pickup '64'~o-.-.,-u-n-P~l~cl<~"-P- 4 Sp<l, dlr, radio, red paint praclically new tires. $50 Cash dels, or take small fort-ign car in tradr.. L.B. VEZ 521. Call Ken, 494-STIJ or 5'15-0034 FERRARI VOLKIWAGEH INC. Newport Beach MWJn ltdan, rull power, air", dlr, 549-0JOJ-67J-11tD lS71 l Beaoh ft!W. S42·4435 *AUTO !WING* one owner. $50 Df'llvt111. Will 1970 H~llOl ILYD. '6.i VW-V11rlant Station \\lag. fine. prvt, PM'l>°+ Take p1tY· -~_CO_S_TA_M!SA...__.1 VC'ry clean. New tires le I LI.. MAKES ments or tit mo. LB QUJIL 1966 PORSCHE 912 h'k" Radio .. '""' & '""'°'· I COMP~!VE PR!. ~· ~!Call Kon ... .am°' 54$. $1300 963-4168 fives, ~ ....... . .9 "'PH 3 1 Cort Fox Auto Lettlftf .iw. CHT\YSLER c . 5 to Choose Froml ':i TR!Uro. TR eean, 2'J4 w. Col.st Hij:hwq , -ro w a All in Top Sha pe!! il!':i.t niter near $450. Newport Beach ~ Jmpcrhli, '3200. ar bt1t at- S tarting et $3995 673-2637 I "'""'======·::1 ftr. Xlnt COIXI. Or UST4 534--1284 or (1) 991.5551 '6.'i TH.4A, BRG, \Vire, ~flch. Uaed Cars 99o6 Days, attn 7, MG-1'46. Pvt _D=1r.~o_Pe~ ~u~~Av :;'~';,;;",;;,~;!.,1"""· m•> TRANSPORTATION "'•=''·=c-~=o==~.-~v·-"' .. -,.-....... ~ 1968 PORS~HE 912 'ti4 V\Y convcrtlbJe, new tap, IU 5 Speed, red wilh ~lack in-paint, Interior. 55,000 ml. CAR 'ALE l£'1·ior, AM /FM radio, Sem-Sharp. 646-5278 J 111-ct radial~. Dealer. '01 CORVAlk ltalloo W"¥° 1100. Good tint. $4ffS 'Gt VW 1\lakl'.' offer ( 1) Wl-5551 or 53~-2284 • :",.\94>!1 • OP£N SUNDAY Credit problem 1 See ua fer • _.,., * Instant delivery, low ~rlce1. '63 J\.loni• tonf. AulO; rl'til easy terms, \Ve decide on bkt 11lJI, 18,IOO Ml, orl& FIRRARI 'j9 Voiles, xlnt cond. iY.i DN. plua T*I.... oac ./ '6..1 PORSCllE S, llC\V I1nmcdlate sale. $500. • . Newport Imports Ud. Qr. en~inc. Xlnt cond. ?ltu.1t * 543-7027 • 540-4392: CQltVI . your credit. Call or con1e in owner. -•7WOl1 today. • . C~ELL l"I!, • C!>lt>tf'I °"" aoll•"· "'11· $'49'. t9<-37l! BLUE CHIP · 11• CH ~""' lied dt610f. "" VW 1000. with .,.,., ,. .:.:.."-. SALES. Sl!!RVIC2. FARTS SUllAR·u ·,;,. ""· .,... i 2 2 oo . AUTO SALl!I '62 co .. v1n1 W G44 l&ll 21·15 IL11xbor, Costa Mt• Bia k be t)' M L · to 2829 H&t~~~1~0.M. 11~-i:.:Y· --,o-6-9-5UBARU ·;.a -V\V $500. Clean, new WI PAY CASH FOR ap~rccla~~ ~utc:.'l&O .... ~. • ' ia.f«ll '40-17&1 fromf $1297; 66 MPG radio & tlrei;. 6Ta-J00.1 YOUR CAR, PAID Cash dell, dlr, or Wiil taite •~e-2 ~ECO=N-&1!1-~i"''"M""'' ~py;~ Authol'fztd MG t':>ttler Complete foreign car srrvit<' For Dally Pl.lo! wani .\da. FOR OR NOTI fore ign car In · trade. C&ll up, mw tlrta.. ~ .. ·~ SOI" DilltiPUot wait Ada. Kosta l(ustom·Kars RRrNG RESULTS! CllARGE IT! Ken l\tter 10. LB QOB m. $400 .W:111D pl&! INMlli. . ..:•94'-·=977J==•=r"''4"'~~--~ lmoorttd A..;. 9600 lmROrttd Autoa ' 96oo ="='' =-isii~;·:11:~~~A~M~~=·1il~m~po~rt~..i;;A~!);·~~·ii600~~lftl~po5irtitdi.iA~·1ti"~i!.oGi·ii· .~ __ c_o_.11_.""A"'lt.;...._ :1 iJ~[jt:)iJ~ ILMORI MO'l'ORI 1530011.ACllf llVD. WISTMINSTll IM-IJZZ 4 1/2% ltnk fl11tnc~n! ••til•it'• on "•711 •1,.r••• 1f u 1cllt. 'fAi Sunbe11m Alpine Tiger (F'ord pw1•) radials, stereo, S2·IOO • oUcr. 497·1844 TOYOTA 'fi6 TOYOTA Crown \Vqnn. Radio &: healer, overdrlvt. Room plus economy, Extra nice. SI~ •. ~tk # P199. HARBOR VOLKSWAGEN INC. 18711 Beach Blvd. S.fl-44.ti CHICK IYEISON, INC. OFFERS THESE OUTSTANDING SPECIALS BUGS & GHIAS ' ·~· s399 .. 51899 e Por1cht1 ·•1 rOl'Khe c,,,. s11tt Sptdtll'f '•ictd IY Pl 600, 'II ronek 1 &0o S2Jtt Cpt. Ab1el11!t l'f likt new. !WYW 2151 '&J P'oncH s,,., SJttt l':tull•r ltocl'f. IFXZ 1811 '&& Pert1tr. t12 S429t J 1pe1d tr.t1n1ml11!11n It fo chto1t f10111l ISIA 7151 fSNWJtll 9 8u1e1 & Campers '64 'fW lit .••••• Sl 49f Su~ r1of. kt .. I•. l ICD 9191 '&I YW In •• , , .... 11" 9 r t 1t.tn9tr IN)CQ t1•1 '61 YW l •1 • ,. , •. S17tt lnti"• •••rh1!1d i" 011r shop IOSL 04 7 I 'S7 XR-l, 3IO 't "f,. CT Performance Group. •Alf cor.dlUontq. d~ brakc11 radial Urea, t l ll •a•wa.~ wt.eel, 3),&Q:I 1'1\11... !ltUI under orla:leal dl;l1.er Wlf'o ''"""·Can bt ~ $1895. '"6-0!lO • '68 . cl5U•ll Llme "1-1th hll8 ""'9ecf .. Loaded and air coedl~ $2800. r r. stotll IG.G58l. Eves. 9fO.. *6 •n COUGAA; all'<Ontl, R&it vinyl lop; lo Mi. 1'"'uH pwr. $2750. sn .. 11: 646-5'1'31 eve NoW·s THI ' TIME FOR ' HOLIDAY RAMBLER Invites You To COMPARE AND SAVE BRAND.NEW '69 RAMBl!R Fi.ill size. Seats 6, 128 ILP. $2043 Pl~1 T & l-rJer todt'f BRAND · NEW '68 JAVELIN Big E{lr\ne, B.lg Space, Small Price! $2386 Pl w1 T & L-127t'l'•t BRAND NEW '69 mn lla4i' 'J¥• t I L-1171tll BRAND NlW '69 AMBASSADOR Alr Cond ... V-8, Tinted 0111.!s, etc, etc., etc. $3286 Plu1 T t J.-5110219 Red -White & Blue SALE FREE ... Car R11.dlo, P\vr. Bl'akes, Vinyl Roof SPECIAL UllD CA.It VALUll '6' DODGE WOOjon Auto trans., pwr, steer· ini: I brakes. TRD 676 $52m •. '66 fO~D STA. WAG. Country $tju1re. 9 pa.ss· cngcr, auto. trans., iJO\.\'· et &leering. $66mo. ''6 AMIASSADOR 990 2dr. hardtop, auto. trans. power &leering A brakes. Extra clean . $12mo. .'67 OPEL 2 door Ra.Hy Sport, 4 ·-vln>l tov radio, heai.r. JtOE 11.2 l45me. 'H MPCUIY :Pif1rtuder. factory air cood!Uo~ -S49 .... ''6 IUNHAM · '11jt)', 4 IJM14, BtaulUll! rtcL . RRK" 311. 164 .... '67 fOll! Vii 11,atomatlo tran.amls· •Lon. pow tr etffrJn1 . I.Ow mu,.. yru 031. IN WARRANTY! . t6:Sme. 'H ~MILlll ' Wqon, Olullo 860. 4 door Sedan. ~1 auto. trtnJ. F~CTORr A IR ND., pow" 1to<rln,. WQG 530. $44- .~~!. ~11AL1 filly........ 9 '"II~ 11775 --· . ...... ....... 11•011.+T&I.. HOLIDAY NEE-PREE l~s Veqn Vacatin~ J DAYS A 2 NIGHTS FOR TWO N1 ,11rchtll Nt ct11t ry 11111 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. ltKh 847-8S55 l ml N. of Chu! Hwy. on~" DAILY PlLUt 01,fE•A· LINE& You CWl me UM!m to, jl11t pmnfcs a day. Dial ..,_ ••• , ...... t11 '"'' )perfol'llt lic h1n"111htitn, fecl•fl elr c•fl4lli•nlnt , FM l1411. D•1t1•. N•••r be•n f19lsl1tt4. N11. •tll '17 YW C•Mptf •• S24t9 s,111 ••••· ., •• ,,,. ,.,,1,. '''f•t, r114l•, ••tit •lt1n th1019ho111t, IUJO J•l l ~~~Kui:s: 1969 llirbor BIYd DAILY PILOT COSTA MW WANT· AD CHICK MRSON, INC. . 'Ylltll!l1, •m 11, 1M rRAN5POllTATION ' DAILY '1LOT !IS New C1 r1 9800 u,..~.. . .t'°'1 '.. RDGI !P~BUICK ~ DOOOE I ,._ Ila w,._ V.f, pl~~ auto,~ K£'"""' ..... .... . • '.II liODCi i . •. 1"11ti. • Ml!. ftblt. ••. ... • -· P~LCON ' • " • 'II .FALCON V-1, Hali1op. • lttl t'"'=' COll~illl COSTA ME SA HAND N!W 1969 . BUICK • • • • • • • ........... ,.. Oll tlllltdlna • cond. IU-6711, !OUlta .. • FORD : .-2444 : ''5 1'0110 COUNTRY SEDAN • • • IMMIDIATI dlLIYOT • Sta waa:, dlr, V-8, pwr steer-• • • ln&", Excellent eo1YUtion. $50 • • Caah deh or take email for-• OllYI IT HOMf TODAT • e1&:n car. F\nc prvt prl.)'. S39 :~' •: Month. LB UEV 484, Call ~ Keh, 545-0634 or 494.-9113. '63 l'ord XL G1faxle Hardtop • • White exterior, plush tur-· •. $2444• • qolae buCket IK'at1, fact drlr. . air. i50 Calh tlels, will fine prvt party. PymnU $29.86. • • LB ATB 798, Call Ken· 494-• • 8 9773 or M$-063<I • $ 00 FORD RANCHERO 500. : 1 99 DOWN : ~faroon with tllack interior. :ractory air condlllo?Jlng, •Plua la."'< &: liet!nse on ar-• d'· h l 4 ~· $-"· •Pl'Ovcd Cl'edit for this • ra ...,, ftl er, a~. ~. N Dealer. 18835 Beach Blvd., ·~~7:~~~:r.clal. No .• Hunt. Beach. MQ--04(2 • '64 1''0RD Cntry Sq, "'&&:on, • auto ll'anl!I, r I: h, ps, pb, air cond. $900 alt 6 PM, • all day Sal & Sun. M2-400'l • BRAND NEW '69 OPEL $1777 • • • • FORD '67 CoWllry Squire, • Or41r Your& Tod~yl • 10 pass. Alr<0nd. Lots of • I extra&! Pampered! $2,TJO. POOLE'S FINE USED CARS 5'15--0763 • I • • * XLNT Cond '6a Cntry Sc-• dan Sta. \V11g. Air, po1-1'cr, • ··~ OLDSMOBILE •. 48,0lO mt. tlMIO. MMlrlO. 11, , H T F . •O•t , , •clory "" •§7 Cl'Y Sect, P/8. P/B, .,11w1r tft•rln9 I br1l•1, • R/H,. ~pendable \.\'\'.ll'k car. a•uto, ft.ICY 14111 • Ill E. 21.oL 548-<77J • $1595 MIReURY •'~~~-~= '61 CHRYSLER • F11!1 PO"'.''• f1cfory 1ir. • 'II METlCURY Montmy. 2 • door hardtop. Private party. • $490. Good shape. 613-8678 • (Nh1 3"54l MUST' S.11 '65 Colooy Pork • $ 1895 : 9 pass \.\'agon. }~uu power, air, AM/.l''M radio. l • • owner. p1v prty. $1795. • '65 IUICK • 546-366J • Eltch1 coupe , Full power,• f1ctory •ir. MUSTANG : $1895 : DEATH In lamily fot<.'es im· • • medlale sale ol 'li6 Muatang, • '66 IUICK • 289 1V8 engine. New wide . I ti Bl k I l nor I W1ldc1t 4 cloor. F1clo,..,. ova res. ac ne , 1 1 1 . 1 •-·· _ OOO . Ex • • r, I U o., power I t i ring,. auto ""'"'· "''· rni. · R&H. !SVX 0161 cellenl condlt1on. Re!etu>e • $ 595 • 1 ~b1nit oUer. 962-7G89 • 2 , • 'll7, 6 cyl t.1UST ANG lidtp • • New glas.11, tire& & zbocks. Sl6~. Prlv party 54.5-8165 • '66 TEMPEST • OLDSMOBILE UNIVERSITY SALH A SERVICE OLDSMOBILE 'G5 OLDS, 44'.!, 4 1pd. Yellow wt blk int. Must sell • beat oiler. l OWN', SU-9:i27 aft 4. -·PLYMOUTH 1967 PLYMOUTH •Custom cpt. RlH, 1ulo.,• I ,.S., ferlory eir condition-I in9, !STDl77J : $1595 : ''6 T·BIRD • • •4 zPCed. radio, heater.• .(VTS9 12J • ll $1795 • •-.------· I ''6 PLYMOUTH • IELV&Dl!ltl! 11 •-4 door. A111to1111t!c, r1dio.• Model • C door zlatlon wag· •h••l•r. ITU fi82l • on, Equlpn1ent. power steer-• $1395 • In;, automatic tran1mlaalon, a vinyl Interior, power rear •-·------ window, whit.! 1idewal1 tirl's. I '67 CHEYIOLET • MILEAGE • 26,589 8 C•price Cp1. F1c;ftry •ir, • LICENSE . UJB 309 1•wfo., PS. !UXC 0721 a CONDITION • Ex<clt.nt I ,2295 • PRICE • i1975. See at the DAILY PILOT, 3JO I • Weat Bay St~!, C.M. or call • '66 PONTIAC • 642-4321 ext 216. 8 St1rch i1f 4 d1or. Fie. ei•, • 1966 PLYMOUTll Bar-i •wlo111etic, p1w11 1lt1•ing .• ncuda. Fast back. VB, 4 • IYTP 1471 • &peed, ndlo, healer. Sharp. A Lou lhAn· 19.000 mu.,.. • "1' 1795 I Balance of 5 yr. or 50,000 I .. _______ • nuU 'A'arr&nty. Will Mil a btlow retail or will trade • '6J OLDS for pick-up. Phone 52S-30S3 a Cwtl111, 11110. p.1. IWFH-· 'G9 Road Runner, fully equipped, like new . * J1!J.(E(C * '60 ~mouth tury, 4 dr, aiJ.'. Pl. pb, 'riood a>nd . $239. Call ....m4<1 .Ill ) • • ..95 • ---------· I Mont•rtv. Pt ir, ,•wlo .. • • 'H~ll URY • ,, ••• 19lX ., . • _.:..P..::.O;,.:.NTI.;.;;A;,.:.C;;;,.__ ~ 5 • '61 POMTIAC OTO ' .......... ~ liQI bl,. •11. whit• too. \I.a, I • ..-d~, .,.. ........... bucktt • JAOUAR • M1t1. Exetlltn~ ~nd. Own. 8 • .. It)' Uhl• 'ole lld)o In Seo llJ&nNIARTmf • Oomtntl, llO Clll! tltla~ • ·-""!" llolU • . tu. tor'IJln ear. Can •"'--1·1 5 1 's Pl"\'l pn,. l.8 HJ\O Jtt. ¥VmP e e • es • •tv·• Kin fit.rm or ~ •tc•~•nll Ptrt1 Oep•rt.1 'iii Ji6llTIX¢ W Wq,. lltrl~ij'f~ ~AGUARS. • er hr om e rtna, _.tit I ,;, ~ &cttt119 • W$6t Oft!, WO. *"11JJ 8 1119 Ji"t r t.1'1y f.&NollY •!! Ttntl'01I: I •••••••• : eyl./11tand./2 ctr. S'l'95 ~ S-17--0163 Aft. 9 Pt.f • '6.1 PONTIAC Bonll£'vllle, 4 1 23• £ 1 Jlh ST • door. alt ,.,. • •k cortd.. 1 • , • • ""'· $650. 646.s5lll ., .. , ~ : ,141·7765: IAMILIR : OltEN1 1900 RAMBLER Station w •• o ... , "'· ""''· -• .:£s tranaport.1tk'.ln cv. Mun I "" 1tll $11(1 U' best oUtr. • !m-IDl • • • • T·lllD !/)M& BUICK tSlOO ~ch Blyd, Westminster 894·3322 OPEN 7 DAYS DUN'1' JUST WISH tw t11.111~ &bins to fumlth your bom• ••.. find gnoAt bun In 10- d11y·a ClMJ:ifled Ana. ml VOLKSWAGEN l4f-OJ03 • EM 191~ H1rb11 11~• .. Coil• M•t• •1l·11 t 0 m Ul Y6vi AISf fN CL>.SSi· 642 6023 nEDt -..UI bt • '17 CLASSIC T·Blrd, 111 P•< 'fHf ll",.." rl'l~~fll l COSTA ME SA lnoklnQ: for It. CMll ~ 2 tops; l"°nvt, l-po1iholc. for CNlcli:. 1ttlt.lent rt1Ult1.1 ~~~!!!!".~~~!!!!".~\l..=l2!!:1l0~. 546-4~~1'!'10~a~r:_, 6~pm~·c.. I .. .. ff DAILY PILOT TUHday, Marcil 18. 196t . . ' • . ' " . . . . t .. J;. ., J .. FEATURING FAD'S . EVERYDAY . Low · DISCOUNT. MUT ~.PRICES! . . ' ' ( PRICES EfFECTIV E WED. t~ru TUES ., MARCH 19-25 . . U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR FA!> ·~ENDERFUl" • BLADE CUT c ib CHUCK ROAST iAUiAp NDEROASJ s~ . . iouRiiiERF STEAK 85~ LEAN •DEPENDABLE QUALJTY •GROUND FRESH DAILY 4 5 ' .. c GROUND BEEF . . lb . . . . I . FARMER JOHN • SKINLESS • a.OUNCE PACKAGE LINK SAUSAGE ! s11cii N °BACAON EASTERN QUALITY • FRESH LEG OF PORK U.S.D.A. GRADE A • WHOLE BODY FRYING CHICKENS · c :1b .................... ,...1 . ·-""""""'"";;;°sAtlOMAL NO STAll~S • NO DAMES • NO OIMMICKS--Jusl Everyday Low Prices plus 4 STAR SPE~iM.s ' , &REA 'IN Of SPRING 1 PRODUCE AT DlSCOUM~ PRlCl$ SPRINGFIELD• 9-0Z. PKG. FROZEN FRENCH FRJES SPRINGFIELD· DINNERS • 7~-0Z. PKG. MACARONI & CHEESE s~;~ KERNS • ~6-0UNCE CAN TOMATO JUICE SAVE IOc -'·fAR BAG • SAVE IOc •FROZEN PICTSWEET CORN on COB BETTY CROCKER • 18-0Z. SAVE -.Cc CAKE MIXES "6·0?. CANS I 3-FRUIT VARIETIES SHASTA SAVE DRINKS •Sc 22-0UNCE • SAVE 20< LUX LIQUID DETERGENT -~~-----.. -~~--....__~· ----_,_ __ ·- c 27c 39c 5c 5~ c STORE HOURS DAILY 10,00 A.M. TO 9,00 P.M. SAT: & SUN. 10' A.M. TO 7 PM.· Al l FLAVORS • 8-0UNCE CUP KNUDSENS . 4~.1· -.9c YOGURT . 3-0UNCE .PACKAGES BUDDIB'S ~.-.o"' 301'100 SLICED MEATS • MANHATTA,N e TASTY TENOER 39' WIENERS 12-0Z. f<O. 10 WIENERS J . 2-4'' KlGH e CUSHION&> I AVOCJJ:JO I RfG. i 16.tl ' COSCO BE.L~XE 888 METAL STEP STOOL . CHARLES ANTE\. e •l.t Y., ·OZ. I REG. f 9t EA. I X·RICM E8G SHAllP90 I . 21100 CREME RINSE ( POUSti 'nii oviil lA. 4:100 .. . Mroiiri MO'urilwasa 1·21 SANTAANA 2120 SO. llKISTOL AT WARNER COSTA MESA 2200 HARBOR ILVD. AT WILSON . -· -·-- .. I I • ''•I