HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-03-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa1
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• 'MONDAY AFTERNOON; MARCH 24, '1969
VOL. ta,,MO. 11.1 l•CTIOfllS. :ti PUii • . "
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What Pat Nixon Says on llo111e in West.
Huntington
N~groHome
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on Coast:
... 'Fr~~·dQ.m ·Pe.rU~d~
r ·-. • ' " • • .i.. .. -.; , _ , r . . I ,
llJ·.unmlR .iJV!Nlll. Finch .sta-!om"'*"•• bu& •tllt
' l f • • •
"f li-.ebomhed ·
,.. r r t , . -. . I'
1 I •• ii . A young Negro couple's home was
llrebo...,i Saturday night In HunUn"'-" ...__,_ 6""' Beich.r1ne,wife narrowly escaped injury.
Police investigators said a mGlGtov
Coc1ttaµ tossed from a speeding truck
cParred 1he garage door Gf the Irvin
Harris home about 10 p.m.
Damage was limited to the garage
door and asphalt driveway, police said,
but the explosion had enough power
k> •erlously Injure bystander"
Harrls' wile was inside the garage
at the time, doing the laundry. &be
was not injured. ··•
Detective Sgt. Jack &inholtz said the
Incident was "obviously r a c i a 11 y
motlvated."
. About a dozen Negro families Jive
in Huntington Beach. There have been
few racial incident.! reported in the past.
Reinholtz said Harris was the victim
of a related incident in February when
unidentified Individuals s c r 1 b b I e d
obsceniUes on bis garage door.
At that time.. nelglj.bors helped erase
the four scribblings, and dropped the
tnatt·~ Uilnililg perhaps It wU just
co.iDcidence.
IliVesUgators said the two inciderits
are now app1re.nUy linked.
.A milk botlle, probably load"! with
II .... wu Ul4!d for Saturday's bom-
llllC. -Reinholtz. ~ .said a witness .saw a ligbt
cq\bred truck slreak by Harris' home,
ud that there were ooe or two persons
wltj>in the ' truck. • . .' . Hanis has been a Huntiqton Beach
rf!lident for about three years. He
ciperatea a medlcal lalloratory in a
nearby city, and previously bad one
here. ,· .
Police are condDCting s full in-
vestigation and hope to gather more
inlormaUon soon, said .Relnliolti.
• · -, • -• • DAILY .l!ILOT ........ .._.. llell
PRESIDENT AND ·MRS. NIXON BID ADIE!J ,TO 0'41NGE COUNTIANS AT. EL TORO .
'H1nC11hakes and A Thril l for a Fiv•Y1.ar..O!d S.for1 Bo.anllng Ai r Fore• One ..
• A un..;.:'0:-~ ";ci~ hf on ~!,,!"t<l.f"..,.._~/2f""_.,
clilQrdl bu' ,,_,__ -MO "°"'·""'"" by.-..-' • • • < < • ; ,,· .~· 11.wWJ'{ 1rdi.an'i.~ ~ T1¥' Jirimary concern ii. oulrlliit • .. ,.. "'·=·--'ec1 .. to ' .• -··-· <••-" forcemeilt· ol ·ledtnl lln' _. ...... " or N-~• uca ra ·-a · ~·g edai:itlc;\ )md:,tJ!e• ~~..,.
aludlld today ,. !9llowtqg 111'-,weekend sf......i· as far mor e lmJIOl'l!ml DI
re ~e a ! et by'Pre!twt Nlion ·in San the presiderillal statement, ii praery• ~l~~~ent w~ tniilally sent to ~~. ~~pendent, ~live ' Jll&b'et
college and .university ·a~aton by, "Freedom -intellectual freedom :-
. Robert H. Find!, · ~tary ' of · health is in dabger . in Ainertca. Vloleiit"t -
·F'Q '"""'c ""'"';'. ·g·· , · -ph~slc8J· vloll!fJ<.'e, .. J!liy.sll;al.lnti!!>lf!ll!.on u rllVTV \,;,Ajlvere -15 seemtng1y on its: way, to b«Oinfnl
Of Nixon Yisit P.agi 13 an accepted 'or at all events a nOrmaJ .,... ___ ,,_ ___ _.. ... ,..__ and ·not to be avoided" elem.nt In tJ;o
education and' w~, .speUtii& out the ~l~sh of Qplnion wjthfu the univtra!ty
.ABCI ·of · free, lelftfmate dlaaent vemJJ ~oriflnes," lie saJ<r. ·
anarchy and ti! devulalh\I reitili.. . VIO~ USED . •
"Qiji!JllOlll' o1·1:r1m1na1 'violation·<>!-the-· "miiiii ·silif~ ·"ie · 1><· .. lii<d iot law mu.rt be. determtDed.. by the ·courts,1 on . . VJP. nee is mg ~
th • __ .. .1--1· · •· • · unity ·the Nb:o'n-onlY, to poliUclie student bodies,. ~ not e w.;&1.1'C'1un.; comm . -• to poJiticlze the· educational im~
themSeivei;, action wliiclr haa: ln ·&be
· Past .sPelled disaster , to h9tb iK!tiilil Utt Blames Reds : and culture.
For Roe~ Music,
"It is . oot too strong ,a ~
tG declare .that this is ·1he way ctyiHaa...
t.iGns begin · to die." he ~· 1 • , "'Ille p r ocea.s ls· il~.ta
familiar· to those who would· ~, ~
Se. x Educa•!o ·n wreckage ol hlstOry. Assault 8nd....,.... U -assauU, one extreme .lucllni to ;tJie-, op.'
Pai Bfminis~es on Laguna • posite extren:)e.;' · the . volcel ot ..._....
WASHINGTON (UPI). -~J lducaUon and' cllm <!ii=dltei!·" . ·.~
and rock-and-roll mutl:c ·are par.t .of. a 0 N'OOe .ot us· bas the rlgbi Jo'~
r .......... unJst compiracy , to de a troy ft~. ~p'pen hen. .1,'~~ con~~ ~1.j ' ~.,.... . "J "" 'B Utt "·(R· ' .. . . ~ .
America,· 8'p. ames · • . CLEAN-VP iloirsE · · .. ·. " · ·:.
First . Lafly Likey Beaches But Unlikely w i~e ·1'..here =~~it' ~letter to.~ :i.i:mci:;,
, 'AD levt.11 of the. U:S., clergy uo..ve for the aC.demlc :ammuntty to
By EVELYN Sf(ERWOOD lonesome,"· she explained, "I like to . me t.··10 when ·I ·would , llke;"-ahe allobeen 'lnflltrat.eclb,Yt!>e~0 ef?emY up its own boUle flrlt when tt · °'""Dml"'""'tatt aceompanythePr~twhenhetrav'19 •addt¢·1 , .. · • ~ ·•·a basic Rr•tea ~ard conquering to~""involvtq:lbJdentS.ortacul
Chic and prilJl In the publk: sunlight, but n ilo't always P9"1ble." . Lti<e _, mother hOWever 'ibe' kee the nation · tllrougll cootrtved collapoe but'.promtses bac~p aCtioo. ·'
Amer'·ca's Firit T .. .1 .. in the dim, cool "My activities 'are tcbeduled · In-. · ·-· ,,-.N" r:; ----• ,... · ~-' ~ <f-morallty, he 1ilJJo.clmges. --.. ' Oiie piiOOPleo:to <be·~ ..11e.W4.
• ...., Washington so: they doo1 always permll I trac~ 'If bet Cbll~ 1 ~v!Ues. · "One o( the basic · ac:tMties ol the Jg that co11,.e. aDd unJveniUeJ arli
dining TOOm ol a cherllhtd cal• Is just ' · • "Julie 1and D4vid are. In Floriila," ¢ominwilsjl i1·thelr ,Pf9n10!ion ol com· " .. (lee NIX~ r.. ~ . , '
one ol'tlle 'gfrls, 'with a margarita In , slie 'llld •with a lifht',laugll, a8dJnc .....,,,...education In .-all IChool ·
her .h,&nd Cai\d "bome l.W1ffllpily on·htr H• h Co G• µtat Mr }'oung ~bi-'J,lw 1tnia:·w1\h &radei;" uttwrote. ~ · ·'
"No decbion ,,.will 'be made on the are ,advanced which, I am llOr'I')' to mind. ig . / url Ives , !he •lllljt grp.p ... i :E.Ji.r w .. k·merrr· · "Aa· u111a1, noble ·1(14 dealrable .goa11 Or ....... ···,.· ._. ·,· -. ·.·«: .. ·.-.. ~ .. J
Laguoa 'Castle'.''· aak1 tJte person Jong.:-;-r ,~· ...... •.:...; ' • '. niUen evf/fy }'eAr.'' 'say, mve fvd) draWn'the .national chUd Blood, y Weekend • .,~"to wuma1e1y ae1mn1ne the '-'unVl't ~· .. :t1.Ccess ·" 'atlaYt.uitl:RNi>ON"·: .; 1... 11NjaredlVilliln'Ol''tho.AblerlcanLe&I•• rum6ri!d ~ ·or Pyne CuUe is • · · ·IMo ~ 11' 1 •1-~ / • ! : · ..... · ~: • " •
• suinnier White Holise. ' . rn s ' t ' Fil . ;.:o1.r~ ~~ ~ ·=ai b7 Vt\ .Aid 't.aChers and embmuaed ........ -~· { 1 »acl-~, Up Six Evidently, the couple WM court.ed ' Oil .l O· ta. e s es . plua Umt Meslcan beer, the Pr.'!114'111 ~ .... 'permitting Communllt ... I •-" l.t. ·~ . · ' , ·once..cludeclO..no•.~.~scon-waa a~t lo Wici up~-; !i/ncliean aptred oiz·~catlpn of chll~ through How long~ It lle<n~slncew ._I
· .... ~ • I 'sider La'gnha'a~"t,;~~ to ·f\sit but WASHINGTON (lP) _The Supreme where ·he had lmpoeed ;-.. ;or'ltorium' uee 'fl~m.~rial provided by tbe ·Sex ·a ~ce, warin s..ia -.\DI~?
,,,ra'f'f1Jc De' a~ might not chooae Iii u.,,·tfiere. Couri today •ave ~onvicts trying. to win on ony retl newa. ~Uon al¥I Education Collncll o( Well there'•' -· .. the . way,
•• • • , •I , " "'We liY• ,r~mm•'a.~ .ud have • '"· _,._ 'tbe' United States (S!ECUS), which 'he. tle•a'.;.; · .[. ~.;;; . ..,_.,-" ~, 11 , • spe11i 'many~. ·aspeetally 1n the their freedom 1lnllt!d -to pro. of ';:n:.."."I.!~ ~wcr..::_':_.l>==~ 'aald, bad "spread Its tentad .. Into jolt ..... ,... ---, -""'~I
'l'our -· were killed SimdaY,n!Cl<I -·-'-bMch wtlidlll!.and ocean secuiMa' files.-, ,... .aboul ~ 1tate In .the union." ' • abo!lt. m!-.P a..lll.~.1·•·~· ~~·-.. ~ . --. and ·llnen with boero'Jacket and c:rilp, • ••-, J 1.L .~-· -• ~ and two others early s.-••Y nulnllng wa1<11i14" tllo llld over ,the 'hmcheon Prl!onera planning appew do not have 'bow•lle Ill ldentlcal llllterlal,· wu 'rady "~ly SlECUS l~ not' ......,.. • IN . .,~· TOD•·'"' -
fn ·ooe of the~weekends on din ·' 1 ". anabsoluterigbtt.owbattbe_proeecutort tobttomepublic~· · 1 : ·iD · ~1'! Utt uiCI "ll.Dce tt1 17...... nt• ' Qr0nce ~ • iibitJI( Four· ,\' morlachl ii!od pla...S Jlle.W -ic know about tbelr C-, 111el court .,... , The:cblcly 1llorl>lllrt wu ol matd>lq ,ire...,.., i.'.adore· ~bin,' H . ~«! · : A pair •I "f°""1r -~·!)lap ',<illltraw';"J_~,";.~' Uiat<1n ·ciUlt't •lllM la tbe soul cludedStof , .pl91d 'ploall,:-.lfrf. !l!Joo ..rtled <Jommflollt,·laedijorolthePol'DOCl''l!hlc stagtd witMn ~dill-
• •~aboutlri •, p.m • .._. •• were: J·•ce '; "'.'fii .. i~, ..... ~Ir~.':'!:--~-' However .:..i Jmtlce Abe! Fortu Jar a matchlnc boa with broWn •-·w :m...,...., '6uololJ,' " \lit .! .. 1 ~i I .0/ ~h 011/'T 0. co.ia·•'!'." !"" .....,, __, . ..,. . ......, ,... ~·~·=-' ,diltrlcl ,Court Judie rtov" !or: the m1at1or. !our'and 1UOcbeon. "'SIECUS -. Dr. !.-KIT-.. rtlM>oiif ~ :lltr N~ w..i, llj Wllllam r. !Awe, u . John .. po1e-1~.,..,_....,t1nftllnl~ ~~~~-·~·~<Clll<habeu-. "V!Y.1~.\dOl>O."udalmedPraldent and .otller .ollJclals a!IC> are J:oopect"!f I ·mfilt:l'llO•Jf. •. r •
1lil c ... 11 Tra!Hc 1• tile WlllilDCtoo -oorpa. deeldes there ii a need to sift lhO" ''liltdll,>i!lo ·i..H110,,.11t1dy , vblllit;lhe· :~jth,;l!,o.OlOo'·' '• . · , , ... • j ;-,. --;
4$ Dudl Tell l • CAMI dftEN facts relevant to tbe ~~be DlA1 obtain ti~ tnd com~mented .cbe6C&rroll "eommtinlit .~'v'~ ·~\ .. .rpi. ~ ~ .'' . .i ~-!~~ I
L ~· 11 and "·· Prock 5 all "11'• came a. the beach often when thil Information. i Looadon !"' tbe ~ne.. . . . . -.· ·.' . ~;tJ!o;Z·~ 'tf~1:lf~h_I! 1 -··"'" •.. ,,;;rn_. · :t
• rlUl.;a, \;&l'ey ' I we .... w•U.C/'1 ~ Nb:on aald The ... tulln lh\tbl9U IUCh lnform1Ui:ih ' .·-Gl~·· .. WW•n5tc"iinft0\·w'tkh ·Plii*"~~ DWI : ...... ,, t l\'Mt........ ,,
el Pomona. almOlt wlltfull a ntmr private aorl as the rel~t)' of wi~ teltifylag bad mqbUf t.rtnlformtd an earlllr of moral star!dlrdl·" For:_. thlt reuon :;::: ..._.. ~ = -:=
tnjurf:d ,,Jn tht same .~oft•!~~~ of woman na/'e«nmltted 11aln to a fGr lbe proseciitioh ProiteMon ha,. ...,..,,1ifn.·Mxon pj·eo her_. .be sa~,.the had·"long •90.fnflltntid '1""11 ,,, ,. ... 1,.,..... "''' took place at µie lnter-uon ~ ' •• ~ J:1 ~ <... ~ the ,..__ ~ 1 w. ~-ol the ......,,_ ,.,...._._ -· ,.,, -,a Drl and linpertal Highway were Vfr'/ public life. bee~ ~luctant ·Jo let.I.,.,. -·· U1R 1 or ......... .....,..... out · or a ..,.. WK: , ..-nu.i,. ~ 'lf'I c..• ,. ,........ ... ~~ •• wife Carol 27 and daughter She~ lltUe time as the naUon's prltoners have claimed Jf needM .d1Yltl 'antaet1manfo!Jt'o. . ·'faiths and therf: ~.now communl~ ·~ ~1 ~::::-...;;... •i: T~.t. ney~~ ...,,.........,_ 1.m·~.s!)<_t.J>t:•l11!lll•~1 111~~. . ion\etlmes to sustain 1 babels corpus .' No lotlger Juot ... ,,, the gJrla, lbe 1nclerlcllgarb1talll<ytlaolrellsJon,' ·-r· •· , ·--... , tiw.__~?/l'.'; ·:t~·~ · ii«f)':«,~, api.aL 1wu1!ackoolbejol>. • 1 , . (S..UIT,hpl) .
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BUSINESS AHO PLEASURE -Although hi.I week·
end vmt lo Ille Orange CoeJt had a f..Uve air
about It, President Nixon allo &pent time eonfer-
ring wtlh top aides on the Vietnam. War. Ready lo
board Air Fon:e One for return lllg)lt lo Waahlng-
ton are (lnim left) Nixon, Secretuy of State Wll-
.liam P. Rog en, U.S. Amb&ssador to South v.-
Ellsworlh llullker, f<J!1Der U.S. Deputy MlliWy
Commander in VieQwll Gen. Andrew J. G<>o\lpu-
ter and national security advlaor Henry Kissin&er.
•viva El Presidenie'
.
Nixon Gets Bell-ringing W el.come in Caputrano
lkadlinm on newwaetl akmg the
sleepy .u.et piuclaimed a major war
council, bot Camino ~ and
omp lllglnray formed the ... --SaWnlay cl a world ,,,_ nr -though
ugly -was still a distam thing.
Richard Milhous Nixon , 37th President
<i the Uoited Slates, had returned to
his native Southern Califmtia, to rest.
relax and enjoy its tl"&ditimal Spenish
..W food, but be enjoy<d Htlle ..Utude.
Only the .... proUdlDg blm bad
absioWtelr no peace· this weekend.
A crowd much larger than San Juan
Capistrano's 3,000-plus re9denb jamm<d
around the entrance to this mission
foonded by Father Junipero Semi, to
see their President. a-to touch him.
''Viva El Presideote, '' read a storefront
banner.
'1'ommy lhook. bands with him. tt safd..,
• thrilled moa.r.
Ooe n>q, Irllh-Jootl:ot rui. stood mul-
ing will! a wrinkled Lalin .wr beside
her in a dark portal, as the Quate:r
chief executive and his first Jady taJrtd
the IUIHfr<ocbed, -grown fll'OllDd$
d -Saa Juu CapillrlW.
White -flappod tlrougb lhe cJood.
spWbed blue sty above and ooe llgbted
GJ. tbe bead -and one on the band
Narco Roundup
Reveals Buildup
For Easter Week
A roundup o( 20 suapected narcotics
c(fenden by lhmtingtoa B .. di oollce
this weekend was alleged by officers
to be. involved ill • buildup or marijuana
aupplles for UM! e:spect.ed Euter vacaUoo.
flood " tema&tn. Police uid the largm. single nid
1nvol ved geven persons at a party at
310 Orange St. Other UTUtl were made
fndMdua!Jy u the ruult d car searcbea,
pollce said
About l300 w<rth of suspect<d mari-
ju~ a pound and one-ball d the lllegol
-. .... taken during the .,,..i. .
"Enough marijuana was recovered to
mate about n joints, .. sald Detective
Carl VJdaoo.
"We found a lot of cue1 where they
wert cuttlng (adding oregano and clove
leaves) and bagging the marijuana,"
said Vldano.
.. Apparently the pusbtn are prtparlng
for heavy marijuana sales during Eaater
v acaUoo," e:1plained Vldanoi .. Twenty
arrests ii a high amount for a weekmd,
but we had the same troblem last year
at this time."
I
DAllY PILOT ....,.. ..... "'., ...... --_,.., --CAI ....
OV.lfGI COMl ruM.lltl.... COM1"4fll1'
1.1-f M. Wff4 ---J.n l. c ... 1"'
¥1U ,, .......... °"""-' ......_
n.... kMvif -1li·~~i11•
P•.t NIM-.i ----c. .. -..:ne....,..,...,... ._., 11Mo1:111 m1 .,., ..... ...,.,_
.......,.._,.~m,...,.,.,_ ..... ....,., . -....
-cl a -cl SI. J...pi In the
-~ .. the oddly..ut-cl-placo
...-surg«I.
'll>e Pr-mg the brwy -bells.
Contrasting the windy. drizzly """""
day of 5fri.ng on 111·bicb the President
arrived. Saturday was the kind of morn-
ing that must have made the early
seUlen -to sellle. A motorcade carrying the Nixcm had
rolled up to the -ga<m, where James Frandl Cardinal M c I n t y r ~ ,
ArchbJsbop of Lm Angeles, waited along
with other prieata am pioneer residents
while the bells clanged.
'lbe mood was one of caRJa1 pagwitry,
u town&people aod tourista followed
President and Mtl. Nison hXo the
courtyard, l5bephenled by the Sttret
-and Oraoc• Caunty -ill'• d<pulia. n.e tinny, vUnnt music a the
Alariachil!i San Juan band followed, as
the presideotial party mov<d through
the crowd, in which aome individuals
again wore costumes from la.It Wed-
-y'a ammaJ cele!ntioo d the return
"the .... anow..
Eariier. the Pmideot'1 -
-lllmlgb ........ 1a1< al Camp
'
P-. odi-nt to the H. B. C.U.. --·tbe-~ml be -fnlormlllY widl )'<111111 Mm-who W<tt IUeD by surprloe.
Uoually, the -.Ja.dild vili1a
the fnp brass.
Mr. Nizoo told Sgt. Samuel G. Nichol,
ol Jackson, Mi!:!., a NOgro ~ mu,
lha1 be hoped be could aome day operate
a road-grader in peacdjme during a
break w h I I e ffliCbol repaired a flood.
rava.&ed rood.
The day befcn, the Presidemt told
a Navy Seabee blUalion at Point Mugu
that be hoped -and pledged his
Administration's nspoosibillty . -to
reach an bcnorabte conclusion to the
war in Vietnam and to keep their sens
home from any future wars.
One baa the time -walting around
fl>' the Praideal -to notice liUle
thinp like tbe sign palat<d Cll the adobe
•'&ll: "Jewel of the Ml'*'4;'' as well
as the tmy decal in the ci:rner of an
alcove wfndow:
Protectod by On:o Burllar Alarms.
Somehow, inside the old adobe, you
""' feel -.. apedaJ ..., _.ate ml .....,. -and ii luta to ...u.e
tbe lad -...-q, -. ii ia ~--•
Fro111 P,,.e J
NIXON IN CLEMENTE. ••
places fn whidl men are judged by
achievement and muit in their own
specific areu of knowledgt: and mnduct.
"The Independence and competence of
the faculty, tbe <0!1lmllment and equolty
the competence ol the student body, •r:e m.1tters aot to be compromised,''
Nu.on said.
SECOND PRINCIPLE
The second and only other principle
to be COlllideftd, be continued, is that
violence or the threat of 1t mwt nevtr
be pttmi.Ued to influeoce the actions
or judgment ol the acadtmk: community.
"The federal govmunent cannot,
should not -must not -enforce 5UCh
principles. That is fundamentally the
task and responsibility of the univus.ily
community," be Wd.
He added, IOCiety need not fear for
contirwed application of lhese two educa·
UonaL.principles, but every man must
dread damage to what he te:rmed the
large.st, freest educational system in
history .
Nixon then spelled out a prescription
for sickness in that particular society,
qualifying his statement witb a long-tum
program for its eventual cure.
PRIMARY INSTRUMENT
"From Ume immemorial, eipUlsion
has been the primary l.nstrwnenl of
!Wversity dtsclpllne," be 11kl.
''Thole who would not abide by the
rules of the community cl l<arnlng bave
1i.m.ply been required to ltave it, for any
other form of coercion would CIUM that
community to change itl fundamental
nature," be expla.ined.
He noted al9o that the last Congreu
enacted la"' stripping federal aid and
a.Wstance from students convicted by coun. of criminally disrupting the <duca-
Uoool system.
''The new regulations: m modtrale
and they are justified," he said.
"Gi"" the present tactics of dlsrup.
t!oo. -.. convicted may fairly be asumed to have been assaulting the
JM'OC.'eSl'I ol. free lnqulry which are the
very life of Jeamtna:,11 NiloD added.
PROTECT rl'SELF "Any ooci<ty that wilt not pM«I' tt-
..if against such aasault exhlblu pre-
cious llUle respect for tnte!led, com-Plrtd to which the iuue: of public ontu la: vf!f:Y near to (de mlnlmis,)" he a id.
• .,,,. dlfflCUity " this "'""''""' u "
----prlndples are diallmg<d, Is that many cl -
pooin( tbe dial'--and ••"' more cl
-supportioe them. are rupoodln1 to
Vf!rJ baaic problems."
n..a..ntng the twin principles cl -demlc freedom wblle lgnorinr the llluts
fcremoot 1n the milldl " stucl<m. JIOllnc
1 thrut to them, however, 11 not the
total answer, be admitted.
5LOTllFUL, DISHONEST
"It It I ... than JncloriOUI: it Is 1!oth[uJ
and diabonett., an aUront to those prtn-
d~ in the end Mlle." ~udenu today point to many """'"
which "'"" be r1Jhted. Nixon sald1 """"
luJnc on to u p!aln them fn three orotd
'
'Visitor' Liked
Painting, Gets It
Artiats must wort -the spirit and llpt are beet, npr<tlta cl the
com1np and goinga cl imporlallt men,
and I Joana: bouJtwife WU doina IO
Satunfay.
Suddenlf, PraldMt Nixon WU .. ~
dllq om the -1" Mn. Jean Cu1111, Si, u lhe recreated the C»OI
corrtdon ol Million San Juao Caplltrano
on canvas.
? Pleased at hil compliment., Mrs.
Caroll offtr<d the l>ainlfnl u a menento
of t.ht occasion and the Pmldetrt ac-
ctpt<d the graclc>ul flllfl.
Mrs. Caroll, motbtt of four cblldrtn,
said she will frame the pafnU.,. when
the oU dries and mall tt to tbl Nllooo
1t lbe While House.
r-
/
U~S. Opens New Drive ,
Sirhan in Self -induced
Trance During Shooting?i.
Body of Anaheim
Youth Discovered
'
In Ukiah'. River
,,.... r .. e J
CRASHES •..
LOS ANG~ (UPI) - A defense
psychiatrist tellifieri today that Sirhan
B. Sirhan was in a sell-induced "b~Uc
trance• when bO fatally shot Sen. Robert
F. Kem>edy.
Or. Bunard Diamond, professor cf
psyc:hlatry, criminology and law at the
Unlvenity cl Calilomia in Berteley, told
the manler trtaJ jury that he placod
Sirhan in a bypnoUc state on a number
d ocwlooa and that other times Skban
hypnotized himsell.
The. !>year-old Arab had testified that
be had no memory of writing in two
notebooks intrcdue«I. as evidence in the
trial in whlcb bf:. repeated over and
cver again that Kennedy must die.
Diamond said that fn tbe hypnotic
trance Sirhan could remember having
done so while sitting at a table before
a mirror with a candle in front of
him. Diamond said that in that slate
Sirhan again wrote such notes in his
jail c:elL
''Tbese notes were written during •a
sell-induced hypnotic trance similar to
the state fn wb!ch be conducted the
aet cf sbooting lbt: &mator," Diamond
said.
The psychiatrist said he examined
Sirhan on elgbt teparat.e occulonl and
sptal a total of 20 to 25 boura with
him in tb£ tt1L .
He sUd be WU of the opinion that
Sidlan WU .... hie to mtanlngfully and
maturely reflect cm the gravity of his
ad and -to ~nd b1' duty
to govern bisadtal>L
He sald'Slrban wu a chronic paranoid ~ witb a major poycholia
and fn " blghly abnormal dissociated
Fre• Pqe J
sta te when he shot Kennedy.
A tape recordihg of Sirhan rt-enactin&
the as,assinatlon under hypoosit may
be introduced at the trlal.
Anaheim Police
Arrest Four in
Station Robbery
' -
Three men and a girl were arrested .
by Tus tin police early this mmifnC ~
following a broadcast descripticn of. ·
suspeds who earlier held up a lll'Yicl
rtatlon attend~t in Anahelm.
Anabeim polict said two of the 1111pecta
nabbed, David E. Driggers, 19, and Cllf.
ford S. Ryono, 21, both of Santa ~ •. -
are believed to be the ones who held
up Paul Anthony Schmuck, 48, cf SlnUI
Ana, attendant at UM! Ten.cc •eoke
station at La Palma Avenue and
Brookha.rst Street about 2:30 a.m.
Schmuck gave police a descripUOQ of •
the robber• after lbey escaped with :
$85. He said they threatened him with :
a tire iron.
Driggers, Ryono and two companibns
were anuted by Tustin police about .
two hours later and turned O\'er to •
Anaheim authorities. • .
The other two are Frant R. Solia, · 1
20, of Santa Ana and Cheryl Jean Adams,
20, qf Onni;e. All four are held Cll . ·
suspicion of l(m.ed robbery, . :· ' .
Board Candidate ·
Night Scheduled
.. ··.··,.I',·._:· ... ·.,, ••• •.· ,._ ';•······'·,·.· ..
Q OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA "'
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE (i}
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
•rings sized end repaired
• diamonds end precious stones remo unted e pearls restrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE AU: TYPES OF JEWELRY
HA._ SHOPPIN6
ClllTD
noo~aYD.
.
HUNtlll6TOH CIHTD
COSTA MISA 145-Hll
lllACH I DINMI
HUNTIN•TON lllACH
ltZ.1101
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Do\ILY ptL0T ,..,_,.....
'HUNTINGTON , UN-AME: RICAN'
Golden West's Catanzaro
Unhappy Easter
In Huntington: ..
Beach Polluted .
Vacationing ~ents coming to Hun-
tington's beaat... !0< Easter Week lhla
year may" have their plans for pleasure
f o i 1 e·d ~y . thousands of microscopic
bect<tll.
~ceording to Robert ~. d~ector
of en~!' health /::r1g tlje County
HeaHh ~. prev · · ocean I""· ,.,,._....__., •-u.......,._ ~~':."' lftiJ .-p. f~-· Stat~B~g:ci ·~•t< ~ind dtiiid> uar • , ~the~ .itv itJe~' \. I ~ • • f'"".
Ttie pal!ulion b ca.....i by a oewage
line rµphire during reCent floods in
Riverside. Samples of bacteriological
conttnt ,are examined by t h e health
depi?tment aloog eight mea&Uring sla-,
t.ions daily.
Bacterla have kept the lwl>mile state
beach closed for water cootact # for
several weeks. Use -of the beach area
for sunbathing and picnicking ii: sUll
allowed.
Huntington City Beech bas been spored
so far bJ the pathogenic bacteria because
the prevailing current direcUon has kept
the refuse moving southward.
"It is possible that the city beach
could.also be quarantined since the cur-
rent swella generally change direction
about this time or the year," said Stone.
He added that current dµ'ection c~ge
has already been detected in 80rlle in-
stances, which "could cause a worsenJng
of the situation."
According to Stone, Riverside has done
everything that could humanly be dooe
to a~ellorate the problem, having
(See POUtrnON, Page Z)
• Today's -~ . . . ' .... ,
N.¥•s.eu. . . -
ORANGE , COUNTY, 1CAUFORNIA . . ' ' . . ... MONDAY; MARCH 24, :1969 JEN CENTS
. . •• 11 ..
' I• '
'Precocious Dropout' '.
, · G.WC lnstrf!-C_to-F ·Hit,s '.t~k -t>f Participation' at Congress
Conll'fli for Caminllftlty Pfocna. 8-h II ~ bee-JI hos. the
Catanzaro, 1 lOOthful' U<I Oomboyll!l wealth, blllllQ poteoUal 'Ind' Jl!Oli!nlty
speaker, ratUe<t ·the auaience J 0 ' to• tfei\ ~ iM et!Ucatlonil"cinter (\All "'*'!,.) lo ~e gigantic strides.
More 1torit1 °" Huntingtbn ·Btoch't . It it ·f.~~ bec.11111 it• ''fills c ... ,.tmltv 'Congrosa' .... ~ be ' / .. nd ~~ ... aeveral crlUcal cuinnt
toda" on P""'e 3. <RVvw f • -· "HuiiCtii>t<ii lleOclo la '4oinc Ila Job awareness with a crttJque that hardly In a ~ .. ·fabion.'' be said. "It
left any segment of the city 's educational · is no tonier vi.able. it b: not >forward,,
and cultural programs unscathed. ' ~t.:-tnllgb~ .not vl!ionary. It· is un·
According to Ca~, Huntington AmUicaJL" , . .
Before tlie dty can eeme. up wlUt "What we have to realize 11 a.t
an adequate aystem using lts tremendoua: mftny · of our people are not of 'thll
potentlal, It · m'uit · tuin tO the dlleD-afOuent group Ind' that eduea-II
frllllCblsed, to campr<beftllve: atid aclen-· nol to brine people up the ladder ·M
tiflc pl.Inning l,J>d to retuni to tbe een-to ettate Institutions which enhancw ielf-
trallty of wJW, la .llmMn. <111Mr--Ullo c0ncepts." · -• .-
what is. !ll!4\i.I by • ldo411, · ideoloa or 'Ille speaker pointed out that ·-tridttloo; tile ·pror...Gi iotd. · ; tlngton Beoch <tu..ns havt 1llooPI of
"We have dr<pped out becl111e our their commlllllty as a' ilPotlt> -Jli..,
focus la too ·n.irr.ow. lt's geared to the ptizzle which can be pieeed • t9fetMF
1950 whb collar· Uecutlve, the '6uc-according to a.· P,re-ftt pattern ~1f'b(cb
ceSB!ul shlden~' "he chided. (See CONGllE!l8, Pap J). 11(
' ...
San C:lenaente Talk
Nixon on Coast:
~Freedom Periled'
By AattvR II. ·'l'INSEL
. . OI ; .... ~tr'P"6t ·~
A three-point jlo1icy declaring war on
campus dilOl"der but uralni correction
o! basic student trrllints -a guideline
for American ' educaton ...... is belng
i•tudied today, following ill weekend
r e 1 e a a et by President Nlloll in san
Clemente.
The statmient wu lnitlaDJ tenl to
cOllege and university ad~~hitraton by
&her! ·H. Finch, -ellry of health
tions begin to die,'' he uld.
''The pro c ea s is altogether too
familiar to those who woYld lllrV1lY the
wreckage of history. Assault and counter· ·
aisauJt, one extreme leading to the op-
posite extreme; the voices of ·reuon
and calm discredited... .
"None of us has the righl to auppose
it cannot happen here,'' be continued.
The Presicjent's basic statement on
(See ,NIXON; Pore I) £
FuH Photo · Covar.go H • Wtn
Of Nixon Visit . Pig•. 13 , Untin,0 """R
iJ.iiia~ N~~~i•;"~~~ . ~· Of.' . . of tbil • . '""t'I . ~ ".''"'I': ~'!!·ibe-~~~e. Fir· ·efidi~beif'· ·. ~ ~ . t ·-~· • tiDdi ' ~liliteoi ~ 11111 the ' . . ' . .
literal -wlll.llt.~ -ooovictloo. by both oi~
The primary -la Olll!'llht ... lorcuient ol federal lsw& ·pertalnlng to
education and the Hcondary point, one
1tressed u Jar m o r e important in tJie preslde11tW mtilnen~ II praerv1-
tion of -p<nden~ creau.e higher
l<omlng. .
'"Freidom -lnlelledui! irlodom -
.. in dlJllU in AmericL --phJ!lcal ylolence, Jiij>sl<:U b!tlmldotlon
-la Hetrunlfy.M its ...,.to l>ecominc
iR 1ccepteCI or II all evilitl ·a· normal ...i · no1 to ht 1v01ded •1-.i in t11e
C?am of 0~1 Within ·the lidversib'
cdnllnes," .II< nld, ·
VIOLENCE USED
Niaon, said viol~ b belns ~ not
only to pollUclu atud<nt bodler, but
to pollUclre the educational lnaUtuUon.s ·
themselves, action which bu .fn the
P'!SI Spj!l!ed dlsls\er to , both poliUcs
and culture.
:•1t Is not too · strong a statement
to declare that thia is the way .civiliz.a·
·A· Youni ilecro eoupte'I llOiDe n. f~ebombed Saturday nlPt In H~
B<ach: The wile lliifvwly ffClpod illJQrY.
Police in•estlgaton 11114 1 mololo't
cocktall loosed from 1 speeding truck
charred the gatage doer of the Irv1n
llarrll homo about 10 p:m.
Damage WU llmHed to the prq.
door and asphalt driveway, polloe aald,
but the eJ]llosion· bad _.p powtr
to oerlously lnjure bystanders.
Harris' wile W_u inside the 1ar11e
at the Ume, · doipg the Jaundrj. She
wlu bot Injured, '
Detective Sgt. Jack JWnl¥>lia lllid tbe
lncldent w11 "obvlou!Jy r a • 1· 1117 . motivated. n , . i , I '
A"bout a dozen Negro families live
in HunUngton Beach. There have been
few racial incidenta ,.ported In the put.
Reinholtz sakl Hams wu the victim
of a related ineident In Febriiary when
unidentified individuals a c r 1 b b I e d
oltsptnhiu on his garage door.
At that time neighbors helped erase
the foul scribblings, and dropped the
matter thinking perhaps it wu just
coincidence.
lnvestigatora ~d the two incidents
are now apparenUy linked.
A milk bottle, probably loaded with
guoline, was UJed for Saturday's bom-
blnc, said Helnbolla.
Pollet l&ld a witness saw a light
colored truck atreall by Horris' home,
and that there w:er.e one or two peraou
wl~ the truck. .
Hmla bas. been a Huntington 'Beach
mldent Ice about -yem. He
-11'1 I ' medical Jabor1tory In f
nearby · city, Ind prevtOUl!y hid one
here.
Pollco ... conductlnr I full• 1n.·
vestJ.a:aUon and hope to aathtr more.
lnformotloll '°'"'• said Relnboltl.
• ' c\ratL'fPIUT,._.W ... Mll·-
JNTEN$E 'AWDIENCE LISTENS .TO 'SPEAKER AT .HUNTINGTON BEACH 'COMMUNl'fY CONGRISS
Heus City Detcrlllff 11 'Prococious DrOjlOlll Opuollllf on Dl~o!~• ol .Tr~~l!l0n: . . . . . . . . . ,
' . , • : , I ' i i , Place~· .But •. ~: •.
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· B~room City Attitude Criticiaied at . Con*ress
By TqRY, COVllLE with k In the compeUIJon fer indUJlrlal · °' ~ '?-'" ...... 11... , development. .
l!ettr Horton, djrector of pli¢., ior
McDonnell Douglas Aslnmlutlca CO., wu
~ !Or the ........, oppo<hm!U..
semlnlr . Ind al'° Wl!I deeply lnvol!td
Jn . hls .company'a move to ~
Beach.
HIJllllngtcm Beach j, 1 iil<:e· place to With 111 the rapid """"""'"' growth In Southern California, Ind eopeclally
live, but. • • Orange County, is Huntington Beach get,.. 'M&at aleepf, bedroom citr.: attitude on ting its fare share? ·
the part of residents can be qulte damag· Most people Slid no. 1.,g to. !ht . Oconomic oppcirtunlUer of !nd · they blamed stlff city ,...
Huntington 1'each arid several cltiuns q 11 i rem e n t a on c om me rcial
in Saturaay't (:pmmunilY. Congrea5 had establishments and a lack of. lnterut
tbf:lr oWn oPJhiona on how to cute it. from the general populacef
... we.11etd to •atttact imall·and medium Development .of industrial parks, with
size bu&lneu here for a 1 tax bUe," street lmprovementl wu given as one
sal<l'Ralpb Bautr, in Oceon View Sdiool mi:tliod l<ir ·..UCing small Ind -
Dlitrict•)(ruatet. ""And we have to.ftart site cornmerCia!'lnteresta tO the citf.
offering them a· reuoh 1for. ·comiRg to It was pointed out that the irn·
our city." ' · provementa required by the city (streets
Several .opinions expressed Jn the and.. other off-a.Ile improvements) are
F.conomic Opportunities porUon. · of _ too expelllive to ·aUr~ any, except
~ay's ,_.., lntllcar.d•·that to VO!Y ,~ge Interest. such u McDonnell
date HunlJnaton Beach· just im't getting llougl8'.
* * * * * * Educator Calls for Law ,.
By Consent ·of Peopl~
. . . . ,
Trying ·t. .. soJve the· vexing problems
of today'ir .raPt.i.pa~ !Oclety . is jUJt
u dilficult1 .. ' Jelming overnight how
lo Hve underwater, Dr .. Ivan Hinderaker
told I P.'f'P of lliloUngton Beech Com· murilty 1eldlrs ·s1W!diy.
The University olCaJJfornia, Riverside, c~Jtof 'made this. remark when be
/•. ' ' .
deHvered • lhe 'keynote · ltldrtu · at Iha
cit)''i> iecond ·armual' Conartsl for Com-
munity Progreu at Golden .west COU.ge.
Dr. Hind~aker rcmlnded ·tbe audience
of 275 that. thougJl the tuk· of . 11>l•lng
these ProblfD'll appean lnSurtn9lllllable,
there are .sev.er1l 11teps 1 a .CQnµnunity
(See HINDERAKER, Pqe I) •
He oplained two f~9ra. involved In
a large company'•-•arch for a 111~
First pbyalcal factors (land, cottl, etc.),
and then what he calledi peoplMel.itd
factors (bouslng, lchools, facillU,., etc:)
Horton pointed out thal even thou!lli
his plant employs 8,000 people, ooly l,llllO
li.ve In Huntingt.on Beacbl .
'.'The peopl•related factcn in ~
lingtoo Beach are someWhlt poor," .aid ·
Horton, "al)d we haven't really deve~pt(
a good labor pool hero , ... l ..,..,uer ""'!'•
merclal .lpt,rest$ to dra.'if fr:om. '· . , ,
Horton also noted that in Huntinf'on
(See ECONOMICS, Pap I) r
Huntington . Tr~"tee11 '
To Meet at McGaugh
Tru.!tees of RunUnpn Beoch . U(llon
High School Dlstrlcl will meet 11 7:ll0
p.m. Tuesday at the .J.H. McG1ugli
Intermediate School library. Ba 7
Boulevard and Bolsa Aveng,1.Seal Beach,
tot a regular bualness meeting. .. '
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock m11rket '
, cl~ loWer' tod8y •. Tiadhig ' nttr' the
finish was reli.tlvely ' slow. (See quota-. . . lions, Pages 1'4-15). , · • • . t
Consulting Administrator ·Oru11e ·
Broderick Heads llospital·
, ' "
Weadter
lfow lc>PI'• It been alnce 1"• had1:
a nice, warm Sanla Ala wind!
Well, there11 one ·on the ' wa;,
elevating the men:ury to 711 Jieloe.
aboula and up to ii further inlllld.
IN'IWE TOPA.Y
' .... y~~,... PAT AND DICK WAVE GOODIYE l'Ri:!M PLANl!i IUllllP '
A S.ntlment1l .lournoy ind A ~ .., vi.tiuim •
•
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I
I
% Dollt.V PILOT R
....... P ... J
NIXON •••
Ille hol -"' -tmmoll ealJs lot Ille acMlemlc community to clela
up it1 own boUse flnt wbto h comes •••ta·~---·--· bal _... llldolP .......
One prlnc:IJ>le to be -· be said,. b thal coll•&" and unlvtnllla aro
places In whk:b men are judgfJd by
aclllevement and meril in thelr owo
specillc mu of knowledge and conduct.
"The Independence and compeleoce or
the faculty, the commitment and equally
the competence ot the student body.
are matters not to be compromised,"
NiJon said.
SECOND PRINCIPLB
The second and ooly -princlpl•
to be considered, be continutd, b 11>11
violence or the threat of lt must never
be permitted to influence the aeUoos
or judgment or the academic community.
'"The federal penunail CWlOl,
should oot -must not -enlol<e web
principles. 'nlat \J f\lndlmentall1 ':he
laJk aod responsibility ol lbe unlvtn1ty
community.'' be Wd.
H• added, IOClety -not fear for
coaUnued application ol these two educ>
Uonal princlpla:, but IVft'J' man must
dread damlp; to 'Whit be &ermed the
lar&eat. fr<eSI educational S)'ll<m In
history. N-then opeJled out a prucrlpUoo
for 11-d In thal particular IOClely,
quaUfy!n( bis mlemenl wllh a lollg-tum
program for its eventual curt.
PRIMARY INS'IBUMENT . "From Ume immemorta:I, e1puls1on
has been the primary instrument of
univeraity discipline,"' be said.
•'Thole who would DOI abide by Ille
rules of tbe commmdtf ci lumlnl have
simply been nqulnd to 1eaft 11, for lllY
olhtr form ol -would Cllllt that ctrl\munlty to cbanp tta flmdamental
nature, .. bl upl&lned.
He -alto that tbe Jut Caop9I
enacted laW> llrlpptn& ledml ald and
-lnJm ltudenll COD'flcted bJ courtl ol crlmlntDY ~ tbe edllCl-
tional jyltem.
1
•-r1M1 new ftll!latianl are rnodera(e and tbey ... jiiolllled." be said. -
''Glven tbe -1 lldl<I ol dlanlP-tio!I, ..,..,. 00 convicted may lalrly be
assumed to haw been UllulUn( tbe
pm: IF!I of~1~!...~~~ tbt very life of _.,....,., Jl'6UU ~
PR~l'llELP "Any llOdtt)' that will not pr.t.d It-
self aaalnll IUCh .... ult exhlblla pre-
cious little respect for intelled. com-
pared to wblcb the tlaut o1 oWillc otde<
is wry neor to (de mlnlmll.)" be uld.
'"Ille clJlflculty ol thll -. u of
moot ta---.i arloclPles are cballenpl, ti 11>11 DllllY • o1 tliaoe
posing tbe cball-and .... mar< ol
tbose ... -tbem, .,. respoodlDg to bUiC problell11 "
.. ~g tbe twin prlnclplel o1 ·-demic freedom while ignoring the issues
foremost in me minds of r\Udenta posing
a threat to them. however, ii Id ~
total answer, he admitted. --sumu:m. . .!a1~-·" "It is less than lnglor\Gul: It m ~uw
and clisboneSI. an illront to those prtJ>.
clpl.......00 In Ille end futile."
Students todly point to maoy wronp
which mual be rllhled. N-Aid, c:on-
tulng on to uplafn them ln three broad sta-without mtnlloolni lj)O-
ciflcs:
"We have seen a depenona]izltion of
the educaUooal uperlenc<. OUr !nstltu·
tklltl must ""11pe themlelves, !tit tbis
turns to tota1 alienation "
"Student unrest does not mt ln I VIC•
uum, but reflects a deep and IJ'O"ln&:
oodal unnst affectln( much ol OW" world
today. Sell-rtpteoul lndlcatloa by oocl·
ety wUI 10lve none of th1a. We must
resolve the tnterna1 CGlltradk:tlom of our:
communiUes.''
UNIVERSITY REFORM
"There must be untvenlty rtform
including new uperlmtnl'.ltion In cur-
ricula. such u ethnic atudlel. student
involvement in the deciaton-mak:ln1 pro-
cess and a new emphuis on facullJ.
teaching."
Nixon said he has ord~ Finch, as
lIEW director, to explore ntw methods
of accompllshinl these needs and eas·
ing tensklns in the educational commu-
nity.
He Aid his -lstnllon w!D alwl)'I
be open (o constructive auuesttons.
"But the forces ol separaUoo and non-
reuoo must be replaced by vllOl'O'lJ,
penuasive and lawful efforts for ~
structlve chanp, '1 hll p>licy ltattment
concluded.
11/\ll\ 1'11111
........ COM1 "'*l.llH,,.. <C:IUM't
leMrt H 'WM4 ..,. ........... hlllWlw
J•t• •· c.,i., .,.. ..................... ......
n."''' ... .,n -n..:::.:;. M.:e1,.,
Alt.,rt w. ..... 'Wllll•lll "'" A...a.tt ~~ ..,. Cl,,. •flfW
II_..,,,. 1' O"'-
lot It• Stnet
Md"I A,U,..., P.O. '-"' tJMI --__ .... , .. , ..... _ ........
a.-.: ... ,..,, tlfMf .... ~ ....... ...
11,Tl'ILOT ........ -~
Project Delaued
Valley ·stymied -
• -4 • T
On Larwin Tract
-Militant opponent.a ol lhe pr-td !Ollland developmen~
home Larwin'Tract 1n Fountain Valley Jamu E. Erickson, a S1nta Ai\• •t-
are raUylng forces today to contlnDO torney represeiillnc the Lanrin COm-
ll>e IJ&bl wqkh .&tined them at le1JI pany, refuted Capplul'• clalml polnUns
a dtlay Friday ID. construclloo ol lhe to city ordlnancu and· 1111e law• to
1maJl.lot bouoes. show that tbe Lanrln Company hid
,.More than ioo reatdents crammed Ctty procteded In a campletaly lept manner.
Hall Friday as councilmen heard four Parker ruled a1Jo that J'riday'1 bearin«
and one-half hours of te11timony. then wu to be conducted OP acUon taken
reached a Z·Z deadlock on· an appeal by the Planning C.Om.mil&ion, and IOlllng
to reverse plannina commission CJpproval aeUont taken earlltr by the oouncLI were
9f the LarwiD development. not relevant to the matter.
The' Ue vote means Larwin developers BASIC OPPOSinON
cannot move until the City Council takes Realdenta who live near the propoHd
either affirmative or negative action on Larwln Tract pointed out IDOl'tl basic
the appeal The special hearing was opposition. Some of tbe.ir commenta: 1111
BUSINESS ,v!D PLEASURE -Although his week·
end visit to the Orange Coast bad a festive air
about it, President Niion a)so 1pent time confer-
ring with top aides on the Vietnam War. Ready to
board Air Force One for return flight to Wa•hlng-
ton are (Iron\ left) Niion, Secretary of state Wil·
liam P. Rogers, U.S. Amba .. ador to South Vietnam
Ellsworth Bunker, former U.S. Deputy Military
Commander In Vietnam Gen. Andrew J. Goodpas.
ter and national securlty advisor Henry Kisisinger.
continllj!d until the council's April 1 as foUowa :
regular meetln& during Friday's aession. "I'm worried about havin&' to PIY
but after the meeling, city olflclalJ decld· lor the i<lds In the Lanrln .Tract. I
ed to hold the hearing at 1 p.m. this Httled here becau.se of the city's at~
Tuesday night. mosphert of low denllty bou&lnJ."
BEGIN AGAIN "I'm tired of bumping my note on
U councilmen uphold the 1ppeal, the a block wall j111t outside the back door."
Coast Bids Nixon Farewel] Larwin Company mufi begin all over "People bought here for 7 ,7m square
again and submit new tract maps for feet. Your planning now i1 pretty poor.,.
approval of planners. If the appcaJ is "I worry about the educaUonal qual!ty
denied , the Larwin Tract will proceed of our schoola with high density housina:.''
as scheduled. "The issue is not legal, I'm 1lmp1y
build worried about the quality and ability,
350 at El Toro See President Off After Visit Larwin Company propo13es •to of this council to rt--nt the people.'' 500 homes on property located between ". -~ Talbert and Ellis Avenues and Newland ''The Edison Right of Way fi,urtd
J11 IUCllAllD P. NALL
Of .. Deir ptlllf ....
Tbe pratdeotlal seal on Air Fottt
One seemed sldly symboJlc ol the
qonles ol tbe praldency Sunday 11
Richard Nlml, htl wile and aides boanl-
ed tbe hlf"'!et at El Toro Marine Cor]Jll
Air Stallcn.
The lier<>e eogle that symho-
~ clutched its olive branch ot.
peace in one talon and the arrows of
war In the otber.
This balance ol peace and power, the
Vietnam war, had been -by
tbe Prealdtlll and htl aides lhortly before
a helicopter wb.W:ed Nixon and hiJ en-
toorage to the Marine but.
Delore hoarding Air Force One to ...turn to Wuhlngton late Sunday, the
President met with Ellsworth Bunker.
U.S. ambassador to Saigon, and Gen.
Andrew J. Goodpaster, former deputy
commander ol U.S. lon:es In Vietnam
and newly ~llDed _...ier ol
Ille North Allanllc Truty Orcanizatloo
for<ea.
Their ---lor three houri Sunday, tbeo rawned on tbe fll(bt
back to Wilhlngtoo.
A ttOWd ol aboot llO penonl WU
on hand at El Toro to apptlud. -. bid farewell. It wu Nixon's first visit
to the county of htl birth since the
piutdentlal lnauguratloa.
There was 1 special treat for 5-year-old
Timotloy Flores ol Wilmington aa tbe
Prelident and first lady veered toward
the amJUn1 crowd.
'Ille boy wu thrust by b~ father
over the crowd toward the PreaJdent.
Mr11. Nixon touched her buaband's •
shoulder. He turned back smiling and
shook the youngster's small band.
Timothy beamed. and saluted.
The President in a blue-gray suit look·
ed tanned and relaxed after his San
Clemente weekend. Mrs. NiXoo was
wearing a green and yellow plaid suit.
Asked if Nixon had purchased any
real estate Jn Orange County, a press
aide told a reporter with a grin: "l
think he's taking a look at the Queen
Mary." The joke alluded to press and
public speculation that Nixon might buy
property ror a home and library in
the area.
After about a 10-minute handshaking
round, the Pres.ident and Mrs. Nixon
hurried up the ramp, waved and left
on the shrieking thrust of four big jet
engines.
and Magnolia Streets. The tract comes in the tract 11 a developed park is
under the city's 7,200 square feet per usable only as a green belt. It'& pro-
lot planned development; ordinance. bably the biggest dog-run in the atlte.
Oppone:nts, pointing to rome-of the ''This tract ii not new and unique.''
5,000 square-foot lots proposed in the "Even rats become neurotic when
tract, claim it will be crowded, increase overcrowded. I came here for brui:hlng
the tax burden, and destroy the original space and elbow room, and I don't
large-lot coocept of the city lor wblch want to support the Larwln Tract with
they moved to Fountain Valley. my tax money."
When the final vote was tallied -Mayor Robert SchwerdUeger opened correctly _ councilmen John Harper.
Friday's session, told the packed au· and Edward Ju.st favored stoppln& the
dience he had personal interest in the Larwin development while Freeeau and
development, handed the gavel to Vice. councilman Joseph Courreges wue lD
-Mayor Donald Fregeau and spent the favor of the tract. rest of the night sitting 1n the audience
with his wife.
HEAVY APPLAUSE
Heavy applause broke out, when at
12:30 a.m. the council finally voted and
the tote board showed a surprise "yes"
by Fregeau's name and it appeared
the protest.ors had won 3-1.
* * * Councilmen Give
From P .. e I Frona Page l But before the clapping could echo
from the walls Fregeau yelled , "No!
I made an error and mlatakenly pushed
the wrong button. My vote is no!"
Reasons for
Votes on Tract
COMMUNITY CONGRESS. •• ECONOMICS. • • The boos that greeted Fregeau's 11.ate· Once the vote was taken Frlday nlsht
unfortunately remains static once It ls
completed.
"We must .rtcognlu that thO&e jipaw
puWes can DeTl!I' bt put together, that
we have to take certain risb," he added.
H• adloaated ·, cultural and educational ·
sy&tem which is developed accordlnt
to a strategically played game like chess,
one which Is flexible and adaptable.
CVLTUltE IMPOSED
Undtt the jigsaw system cullurt and
education are imposed oo the people
by )X'Om1nent citiuns, without taking
irio ccndderation broad community,
cooperat.ton at the graas TOOU level.
"Our block-walled, windowless homes
isolate one another," he conUnued. "We
muM. break down these concrete bmiers,
reall!e that we are alienlted and work
.. toetther 11 a ramUy."
Oatamaro ~ thal the lint Sep
toward progress muat come from the
outside, that the city must hlre a team
ol lndef>endent r-.rehenl to ltudy the
city and find out "who we are."
From P .. e I
·HINDERAKER ••
can take to make it viable.
He stressed the need for a rule of
law, based ori bro9d C(lnsent and not
just enforced by police. "If we have
to have a policeman every JO feet,
we can 't have a viable C<>mmunity,''
be said.
The educator also caUed on Huntington
Beach citizens to provide a community
which can adapt to change, one which
has the attibldt of the scholar who
is always &Stine questions and uamlnin&
the altematlves.
Hlnder1ker pointed out that WI lJ
one of the cardlMJ concepts of 1 living
community, saying "the world demands
a lot more than cllllem who remain
1tatic."
"We must a1so learn how to accomplish
things within our poolitical system," the
keynoter said, yet al the same time
calling for an open :;ociely in which
the~ is a free flow of Ideas.
"A high deutt: of freedom of speech
brines with it • cenaln amount of ferment
and IOUl9 of the best Ideas evolve out
of disagreement," he commented. "Wei
art an unhealthy aociety If we cannol
tolerate tba compeUtkm of these Iden."
He caD"1 on memben of the so-called
"e!Labllabment" to leave it optn for
all the e 1 e men t 1 ol the commuolty
rtmlndinl tbe (UHls that "tho!e •ho
set out to destroy the establlsment are
tbose Who feel thal they doo"t haVt aI\Ythlnl to lose ...
t1>e chancollor atlo ur(ed HanlinJ!on
Beach to aubec:ribe to a 1 y a [ t m of
urban coalition. to develop ta 1 t f«-ces
whlch would lmmfd{ately f a c e
•lhemlel\·et with the problems of employ·
.ment. law tftforctmenL, bealth1 welfare,
education and recreatlon.
Finally, Hinderaker uid, there I• a
need lot leadenh!p bNed on pem111lon
Instead ol authority. "Good leoderahlp
mu.1t 1)'11\bollu the values of the COfns
munlty rather than tell lt whit to do,"
he said.
l
men1 bad twice the volume of the on the Larwin Tract, each of the Foun·
'Illen the city could s.et itseU some Beach there are only 300 houses for previous applause. When the vice mayor tain Valley councilmen gave • short
realistic gorala, engage in concrete plan· sale and the v~y fact.or in asked the substitute city attorney, Jack summation of why be voted ln such
..,..,., --"' __._ a w.. .... (If •• -...,;ve apartments Jt -tu. nia.o percent, making Parker. U be could legally switch his a manner· -a.uu ~ r-..._.-~ ""?-* r. Here's what th.,,. .. _: ... -~•evemenL it difficult for employes of a ne 1um vote, lbe audience shouted "No!" and -, _... ...._. John H•-r, voled yes oo the appeal, ~ ;; to move into ~'"· con"-ued to boo -~ 'GROUPS SHOCKED -• loll• • to stop the Larwin Tra"' ''This Is not -"" • Rapid ........ .-. ·.a am.all town with Parker uked that a revote be taken, ., A man to-member ~ group ... ._..... the same tract mtp ~·e saw ,. ··~n I under the cbainnanshJp of Dr. Clare only land for a retOOrct, to a large and added another twist when he said, voted for the zone change in Dec ember.
Hall, reacted with shock to Cataniaro's city in need of industrial development "I'm not even sure If the voting machine It is different now and 1 am agaiMt
remarkl but .1eoerally agreed that has made a tough adjustment for the used by this council is even legal, and it."
••something must be dcine." city. I think a revote should be taken vocally.'' Edward Just, voted ye1 on the appeol, City Attorney Donald Boofa u:pressed Angry cltlzens then filed out of council 'I the At least part oI the. blame was placed . h chambers prepared to renew the battle • n put I voted for planned on the nature of the community by the view that the "city as a poor Apr1·1 I. developments, koowlng full y;ell it might
untl record in luring commercial development ·um p and b·t '·· one who said, "H ngton Bf:ach is cDo 11 Dou 1 .. Throughout the more than four b~•rs J P u 1 e me u now, ~auae i:;ince U gained M nne g as. "" I f It that 1r th l lb d" growing up too fast. 'Mle residents are o[ testimony, Michael R. Capplzzi, a e ey me e or mance
C(jming from too many different sources. It was agreed by all that the land lawyer and resident of Fountain Valley I had no grounds for opposition to make
Maybe it's 00~ quite as bad 85 it was Is here. but It has to be made attractive ed k f it Bilek. Now I feel I have a chance • l d I serv as primary spo esman or the II I r..nr-esented.'' o eve opers. to stop a sma • ot proposal.'' -r· Lar:win opposition. J Un .. ~ Another member of the dl.9cu.sslon Joe Ferm, of the Property OWners Cappl.u.i, in nearly two hours or speak4 ust con U1:U, "I also do not feel
group, Mrs. C&roie Wall, said much Protective League, said, "We've got to ing, based his opposlUon on what he t.heed!Larwint f I··• Co( hmpEdany should receive work is aJreedy in progress to rememdy ad fast. There hu been a rapid change 1 1 ., al 1 al hnl all er or llJIU t e ison Co. easement)
from farm to urban and we haven't ca mcu were sever eg tee c Ues., whlcb It does nol own W "'vln the situaUon, but she felt that the media including the foHowing : · e are .. g
waa not doing ib job in telling the adjusted." -A poulble conflict of interest con-them land, and the cost of developinc ~e about it. Ferm, however, opposed any free give-ceming the mayor, city attorney Edwln thehe par-k wlll simply be pwed on to
ObjecUon cmtered around the away by the city to lure commercial 1'1arlin , and an unnamed councilman. ~eveloper~" owners, ralhtr than the
speaker's suggestion of hiring an out!:lde investment. -Illegal zone changes made by the Donald Fregeau, voted no on the ap-
agency to do a survey. It was felt Horton emphasized the people factors council in Ordinance 515, passed Dec. peal, "My particular view is that over by ... -al .. ~,,·~n1s "·l the ..,.,,.,. for drawing commercial interest. "You 17 ~ .,... .. I"'" .. ..._ ......... • the vem we_ have gone throu"" chan•u """" -"ould be included in· ••·" a can't aU.ract business and industry witil -On f th I · ml · ' · Ii" o· muuuY iw ., .. 1;1.1 e o e p annmg com ss1oner1 on our master plan. This amall-lot j~ you can aet people to Jive here," he t t h'· · b to h d l pro~·· • was oo new o ~ JO ave a equa e development ia not something we have
Panel member Pat McGinnis said that said. background to make a decision on the just plucked out of the alr at this
the average Orange County re5klent has "We have control ol these factors,'' Larwin Tract. time."
been too heavily involved with th e he added. -The special planning commlsslon Joseph Courreges, voted no on the
aerospace industry and has not yet Most cltliens felt educating the meeting on Feb. 27 which reversed appeal, "My voting Is bised on the fact
learned how to get involved with the residents to what might h a p p e n , previous denial of the tract was too 1 personally think thls development is
community. especially in the way ol property taxes. hastily called. a good one. I remember hot charges
The 1eneral tenor of the discussion if the city develops without a commercial -Apparent inconsistency of the Larwin made during the battle for lncorporatlon,
was summed up by one panel member base, would help the probltm. Tract with the city's 1eneral plan of but look where we are today.''
v.·ho added, "We all come from such 1------'--'-----------------------------'"----
varying backgrounds that all of us iden-
tify witb pneplace elae than HunUngton
Beach. I think that if we could begin
to identify with the community we could
get aheed."
From P .. e l
POLLUTION . ••
r01'0lrtd the ruptund lines three Um.,,
only to have them brot-en again by
recurrent flooding.
Stooe said the city expects to get
it.s repair project buttoned up today
bul lhal unfortunately the pollution will
continue for about two months.
"There are nine sewage tre.almcnt
plants tn San Bernardino and Riverside
COUDUel tha' art: dumping a total of
50 million galkms of sewage into lhe
tributaries of the Sant.a Ana River each
day," he said.
"Althouch this is treated sewage, It's
sewaae nevertheless .and it contains a
hlib cmtenl ol baderia accu<JJng to
our nmpllng."
As Ione u there is water 'flowing
tn the Santi Ana River bed the polluted
subatlnct1 will be dumped into the
ocean.
"ntere are no state rtgulaUons re-
quiring that the treated sewag:e be of
a ceru.ln quality. We cannot rely on
the fact that the ttwage ls treated
and disinfected;" •lid Stone.
" ' • • ~ ' • 1. • • , • • ' ' , • ••I, • ' , ' • ' , • • , \ , I '·, • , , , • ·
(l OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA
AUTHORIZED F"1CTORY SERVICE
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
e rings sited and repaired e diamonda and pr1clou1 ston11 remounted e pearl1 reatrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE AU: TYPES OF JEWELRY
HA._ IHOPPIN•
CINTU
noo HillOI aw.
COSTA MISA M~MH
HUNTilleTON CDn11
llACH •IDl-
HUNTIN•TON llACH
nz.1101
' I
"This J1 the first Ume that I can
re:nembtr that ~·e've had a prolonged
flow d the $ant& Ana River. lJnlt111
somtt.h!ns u.nlbruttn happenl the pro-
blem will ba w1lh us WlUl tho !low
ceases. whkh could be as kling as two
11\()flth~."
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. -.
CHEERING THRONGS AT CAPISTRANO -.While Secret.Service
agmu •print and puff alongside tu. ·limousine. pre.ident Nixon and
his wifJ, Pat, draw an enthusiastic greetine Saturday 'frorli big cro.wd
DAIL y ,l\.OT ...... rw •Ucllll'll K9'JllN'
•. PIC.KET.S ON MARCH -Led by Robert 0. Bland of Laguna Beach.
several dozen Peace and Freedom committee members picketed
near Nixon headquarters in San Clemente. Police were called out ·
from Newport and Costa Mesa but there were no incidents.
.I DAILY PILOT 11.W l'Mle
awaiting' his appearance at sar.. J uan C.apisb:ano for tour of Mission
grounds. Nixon stayed on for lunch at bis favorite restaurant.
DAILY l'ILOT Stiff l'llelt
WORDS ON MISSION STEPS -President and Mrs. Nixon appear
to be listening tntent1y to words of James Francis Cardinal Mcin-
tyre in· fronf of' pJaque noting the founding of Mission San Juan
Capistrano.
..
8AltY l'ILOT Ullf l'lltlf
FACE IN THE CROWD -In
the crush of followers, Presi-
dent Nixon reco~nizes an
Orange C0W1ty ·friend a n d
shouts a greeting during Satur·
day tour of Mission San Juan
Capistr~no.
DAILY ,ILOT lttfl , ....
•
VIVA, VIVA -San Juan Cap.
ialtano merchant Larenzo
Padilla was 'Ill decked out ·1ri
traditional Spanish dress and
his store front carried the mes-
saae u Mlsalon city residents
prepered to greet President ·
Nixon and his party. 0
•'
M-,.Mllth lf, 1'169 DAI\. Y ~II.OT JI
' '
DAILY .. ILOT ....... "" "''' 0'0...I
TOURING MISSION GROUNDS -Gripped tightiy • by the band,
President N~on gets a bit of guidance on the Mission San Juan . . .
Capistrano grotmds from Seven-year-0ld resident Jeff Dunn. '
'' I.• ·r. • . ~ .i ·~ I ' : -
I '• ,\ ' '• -.. ) ,f
Nixon Tells Campus Stand
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Some college officials agree with Presl·
dent Nixon that disorders and dlsrupUons
must be solved on campus, but 1tudenl!I
have shown less inclination lo endorse
the President's weekend policy slate·
ment.
David G. Barry, executive vice presi·
dent of San Jose Stale C.O\lcge In
California, where Negro alhlcles and
other student.I 'have demonstrated, said
the campus ls where soluUons to society 's
problems· are sought "and the solution
~ not to be lound tb!,ough dimlptlon."
Chandler Young, dean of letten and
aciencu 1t the UnJverslty ol. Wl.lconlin
at M1dlson said he prelem<I "local
handling In the long pull. I feel concern
for our freedom iq handle our own
problem at lhe c~mpus level."
Young said, "What President Nixon
has slid would help us in this regard."
l
In a statement Saturday, Nixon de-
nounced campus violence , as a threat
lo iotellectual freedom, but limited
federal action to wlthhokUng financial
aid from students 'convicted or violating
the law. 1
Nixon saki Robert Firich, secretary
of health, education and welfare, would
seek "lo launch new iniUatives toward
easing teJU1ions in our educatlonal ·com·
mu11lty." But ~ President said the
federal gover~ent "caMot, should not
-mU1t not -attempt lo guarantee
campus peace." He aOI this was fu.
damentally lht task of coUtae ~d
minislrators.
The President lenntd hl1 plddlnfs
moderate. "Congreu bas doae no""""
lhan io withdraw federal ualatance frora
thole sludenil judged, not b7 UD1""1t1
rcgulaUon1, but by courts of law,· to
have vlolated crlmlnal 1tatute1."
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wkl fln'll II CIOMllOlld ti "'9 flll•lne us s-tf1 s-""' Strtl'I
"-wt-. -"' tllh .,.., ""* .... A ..... C.llllnlll Milt ...-If """"""" ,,. It fl:lrlows: Publll.htd Orll111tt Coa.11 D1hr •Uol, Cl•Tlf'IC.t.Tl Of' lUllMlll ....,,,.. L 1.....,....,.., 2$17 a-1 MMCll 11. 17 14 Jl, l ttJ 147..ff .. ICTITIOUI HAMI
'"'"'· '"-" '"""' C.llflnlll, • • Thi Uftfenlfned dO arllf'f' lfllol' .,.. TillollWf ll. llnditr, D'2 ..., l'lml eoMucilllt I llulolftlla II 1)07 lllliofl
"11a. a.... AM, C.Momla, LEGAL NOTICE IMI.. "9-1 9ffch, CalllVnlla. ~t
... ,..., L Mwf1...., 1«1 l lrdvnont tt1e f!Cflf~ nrm -o1 11•0 JM om.., AN!wlm. C1~ PD,. SEA•CM OF A CAGE BOOt(f'l'OltE
aw.c. f , Mlllw, • Mii Vbta Cl•Tll"tc.ATI 0'" COl"°1lATIOll l'Oll -lhll .. w-= ::,_ ~ ·~
.......... J~ _ked4._ Clllfltllll. TWAMSAC'TIOll Of' lllSUl!U UMDllt = ':!:"':11(111 Of l'tlldll'ICrl IN u .,.._' *'• · PICTtTIOUS IU.MI ~L .. =----THI!" UNO!IUIGHeD COllP'OUTIOH .. ~ E._, ~h lhlltt afld ltlchl"' ~It. '"'-· ... MrtlW (ltftlf'r "!!'..," -· ~-c-11' lid $1 .. """"' te.Cfl. ~ p1,,,_,. I bullnlll IOQM II ..._I • Cll".
.,_.., I!. ....,,.,.,.._ c--"'· .. ~111or1111 ~ "=e:"',:8 o.lld Mlrct. 1, ""· Glnlnl •lll'fMr h '""' -""' COM Is Doti Eld« Cll'*'C:e F lo\lli.r CIEUIEI C.0. 111111 111.t !.&If firm 01'!1.,I• $111Nr Lllltftld ,. .. ,,,_ · ClfNIOIM ti tht tottoorilot ~•!Ion. Rkh1rd ems
lfAtt O"" CAlll'OltHIA. wl'llll •rlllclHI •I.Ma flf bin'""' .. Sl11t o1 C1ltfomll. Orantl Co1mtr: ,_,llTY Of' LOI AlllBELEI • U fOI ...... : On Mlrdl t lHf, llllor1 fl'll, I '"""' " UNITED ltESOUllCIES CORP'~ 1711 Nolfr'I' P*I<-\n -for Hiii Slal1, On ~l'T )1, ,..,, ""'°"' !Mo t ...... ,.,. lllYd., 5'1119 111, lot ..,,..,11!$, H nontltr a""ared Dc1n EIO«, Dfnnlt
ltotln' Mnc In lflll for Niii $Ille. Calllornll f<IG.tl. Sllltfl" 11111 llldwlrll Crou ~ lo Hl'"MNllltr -1'111 HelW'V I. S~ WITNEIS lh hflld ftils 1Slfl II... IO lie f11t Pf1't0flt """°" llllTlft
Thl!odlw't II, elftdolr,, t'a<"Old E. MlllVll\tlr f:lbr\llry, 1Nt. ~ illbscrllled to lh9 wll!o!n ll'lll"""""I "" Cll,_ '· .:.\llllf' "-to -lif•lltd ltesources Cor•. 11111 ad.no ledMd Iller 1x1eutM Ille to ... thl • .,,_ ...._ ftlfltll I N ll;lclwinl fl. W111tl111, umt "" ~..:;::=....~.•'Id ITATIE \I~ "C:t't'Fo'11:NIA. COl<F.IC IAL SEAL!
.. ~ ...
.. Billt Ge••
Cadillac
Salesmen
Horwred
By CARL CARSTENSEN ..................
Knox Coaverse, Bm Rennick
and A. B. SwlJ'llOll of Nlbon
Cadillac, Inc.. <:Gsta Meiia.
have been hoDOr'fld for being
among the out s tandJna:
Cadillac u.Jesmen for the
past year.
The mt:n were named to
membersblJ in the 1 9 I I
Cadill.oc Crest Club. They
were among only D mu from
throug!!Out Southern Calllom!a
and Arizona wlto -....,. berohlp.
Cadill'C Zone M a 11 a 1 e r
George w. ~ told the
(ltOllp, 4f well-u Ill other
Cadillac lllesmen who tamed
membersbip In the Crat Chlb
allhoogb not rinl-wlnnm, that
the 3Z award winners
personally accounted for the
sale of over $22,000,000 in
Cadillac sales during 1961.
• • • ISEALl ' JoM9ll e. 01vlt &alMrt Zlldrnn COUH'rY D' LOS ANCiELES I u Nol1rY Put>llc.call'°'"'• ~fERCURY SALES lolollt'f' l"vllllc. On lfll1 1$lfl IM r ;rf Ftbrulr'I'. • D Ptlnc1Pll Offlce: Ill
,...., be4ot9 m1, 1 Ncll•rf Pklbltc In Orlf'lle c......,r-, REACH N-WGH ::.. ~~ ~lr•t and !or Mid c ....... iv •lld St••~. Hl'"IOM Iv Mr c-ll•loll E•Pl•~t r.o"
llAllTMAlf •6 s~N -•ml ltldMrd a. Wllkhn k"""'" Jun1 21. 1t1' E Zimm """""'. "-lo It'll to be flle V!~ Prnllltnl .,i PubllJhed Orllnte Co.11 01llr P!li:iot, Frank . ertnan, Jr.,
,.... w1....,. ,......_ .... "' "'--»on "''' uKUftd ""' """''" Mirth 10. u, u. 3l, 1Ht ~sut general sales manager for .. -11' Mlllll. c.111 tt11• 11'11~ t111 lltNlf .,i Tri. cor!>O<"tllOll
T.-.i · lhtnln llll'l'O..t. aftd Kkr1ow11t1g..t to LEGAL NOTICE L i n c oln-Mercury Division,
P'ulllltMd Orante eo.11 Dalh' flttot. ,,,. ht •Kii COOIOl'•llDn •~Kiiied Ille -------------1 while in Los Angeles to meet
Mardi lt. 11• u.. J'I, mt ll\-41 =·ICIAL SE.I.LI •-22141 with district dealers, laid the
GIYle G1t1tt •All•llH LEGAL NOTICE Not•"' Pllttllc • ea11t001I• cl!llT•P'tC&TI! OF 1us1Nl!ss American car buyer'1 desire
l"rlnc.11111 OHk:I In l"ICTITIOUS r111M HAMI for ~mium pntduc•-pi"• r .aJlt7 L• Alltl ... c-11' Tiie uMffl"Md -. het'lllW '"""' r .. ~ ..., Ull•IOI M' Commlalon IE.olr.. ltltt hi h Clllltdudffl9 a Mlnultclurlnt hJ""' 1-1 · IUlo ind"~ ·-••• Clltflf'ICATI Of' COltl'OtlATlClll l'Clll Mr! t1, lW blnllleb as '" lndlvldulol 11 7$1 H. &"' "1'1'1:1 ...,, .. :t ~
TIL&N$ACTfON 04' •USINlll \IND•• T.-m laJtYll, U111t H,, Dr111111. Cal!lot1tl1. are propelling the division to f'ICTITIOUI llAMI l"Vblitlllll Orantfi C.tl DI!~ ,.llol, U1tOW thl nct'ltllul firm ftll'M! ol D th d THE UND!llSIGNED COlll"OllATION ~ u1, 17, 24 :n. ,.., GHt & • MANUFACTUlllHG COMPANY and ano er recor year. ... ""*' art!tr thlt II II ~ 11\it 11111 flnll If --.ii of ~ Deli · f ; •• , ._.,_ ~ 11 m 11aur 11r1e1. LEG ... • NO'l1CE f9l•lftto ~ whoM ,....... 111 1.,11 ver1es o u~ n e w
Celli. Mna. c.r11orn11 ut'lder 11M nd1t~ iu. · '""' 11~ of ~ 11 •• 1ou1 ... 1n:, Mercury in the 1969 model fl,,., -d Hl.PltECISION GRINOIHG fo.Wll:
•!Id ""' 1111:1 flml II composld of NOTICI INVITI NG ••os DouelH fl, Brown. 21'0 Giff, year are running 31 percent
"" 1o1111w11111 corl'On111on, w11o1.1 l'l'lncl .. 1 Notice It .,.,..,,. •1"'" 11111 ,.... lkHlrd °''""' c1111om11. ahead of 1967 and 62 percent plltt of butlneu 11 11 tol"""': of Truslffl ol Tri. Or-C111tl Junior D•teid Mlrdl , 1969
DeLTRONIC COllPORATION. .,, Corl ... D11trkl of 0 1111111• Countr, Dot19bit p u--~ over ktrike-hit 1968. Southern ID:er Sh'ltl, °'911 Mesa, C1lllornl1 C1lllornl1, wlll NCotlVI! •!tied bldl UP STATE OF CALIFORN IA,
WITNess lh hind lhll 3111 di' ef to 11:00 l.tn. Thundl1'. Al>rll J, 1Mf, COUNTY OF ORANGE ) H. California sales are even
JllWlr'I'. 1N1'. • 11 th1 Purd!nll>ll Oet>1rl1"1•11I o1 uld On Mardi ,_ !Ht btlore '"" 1 hlnher «CO<POflll SHI! ldlOOI dllfl'ld 1oCl!ed ,, 7701 F1lrvllw ' ' '"6'' '
OELTllONIC COllPORA TION Road. c.._11 MHi, Ctll10rnl1, 11 whldl Nolan' Publlc In and tor 'aid Counly """--full·&'·· "°rt w•-8y lllchl~ M. latlllti~ t1m1 Ukl blck wlM lie Pllblktr ~ ll'ld Sl11t, t>e!WOlllllY -•red Ciowllt ••tc: 1'IC -"''<'
•resldlnl 11111 "Id f0< Furnlthl1111 o1 CloHd c 1rc:uu P. lrown known '°' m• lo Ii. 1111 restyled for 1969 and they're
llY Ph1'11 .. l 1n11t" TY E""l-nl. """°" -e -~ ltlttcrlbtc! to the Is Slo'9f1ry 11u b!lh. art 1o be In eccortillle'I !ht ... 11,.1n 11111nm-1, 11111t 1uu .... 1111tea hotteSt mode this year.
STATE o, CAl.ll'OllNIA.. witti con11111ons. lni1MKt111tr1 • n d to me"'''"" ~Ku1ed """urnt. Our new MarqW.. upper series COUNTY OF OltAHGE.-. li!Kffkitlonl '""'kl! art -on flle Wltnet. m1' hind lnll tt•I
Oii 91111 '11t ...,. .. J111111rv. ~D. •rl'f ml1' be '"""" In "'-olflcl COFFICIAL SEAL) ls accounting for half the
1Ht, lllfwt! rne 1111 lllldenitMd, • 111 1111 Purc,.nine Atl'fll of 11111 Kllool s.e ...... H. G,..... Me~·~ sales. Niian' flvlllle In alld !or Wld County t1Jtfl'1cl. Ncltr'I' Pul>llc<alllor!'l& ·~-J
Md It.... n11dlnt lhlreln, ifvtr c.wn-Eacfl blclctO!f' 1111111 wbmlt wllll M1 PrlnclNt Offlao t" "Th di · · , I ml111or1M 111111 ew«n, person•ti'I' •Plfffld bid a ~ihler"• chKll, urllfle<! cl\ed!, 0•11>11t Countr e VISIOD J UXUry Cars,
ltldla"' M. Ltnfltrf and Ph1'1111 .,, bidder'• borld midi Pl1'1ble to ''"' McOWEN ANO GllEEN the Lincoln Continental and Llf'llletl k-n to me lo Ill !Ill order ol lhl Otlll!lf C0t~I Jvn!or Collete Al_,.I
Prulcltnt tnll S«rett r'I' et tht co.-Ofltrict ao.rii o1 Tnnlen 1n an 1mo11n1 ut I!. Clllpmlfl the Continental Mark 111, are
-•llfll fhlll e~tculed till ... 11111n In-not leu TMn flvt Ptr<t~t (5'1l.I of Or'"''' C•llffrnla '1'67 28 pe"""'nt ahead of 1967'', 1tl'Vmenf on lleh•ll of ,,.,. corPOr1tlon wi. 1um 111'1 11 1 1u•r1nltt lflel ll>e T•h '1>-S1M '"'"
tt\1111\ft 1111Md, l lld 1rt.-lad1.0 lo bfdde• will enler Into 1119 pr-ed Publlih..i Or1n1e COltl OtllY P'llot, ,he Said.
me 1'1111 oucfl c11<-•llon ueculed tllt Conlrtt l i1 'he ••rM It ..... ,lied to M•rd! IQ, n , 2~. JI, "" ~ um.. him. tn t11t ev"'' et 1111u1e '" 111ttr "This is additional evidence
in w11ne:i.1 WIM:•lof, 1 havt he•ru~ 1"'9 ~ui:h c .... 111c1, t11t ''°''"°' et LEGAL NOTICE of the nature of the current 111 mr hlnll lftd lfflxed m¥ offlci•I 1111 ci..ct will bl! forfeltell, °' In tlltf------'---------1
-1 ni. 111,. 1no:1 '"' •~ 1111, car1inc.i. UH et • bDnll. 111e 11,111 ·-t11erl!OI ~ market". Zimmerman said. ''"' 1ii.w. wrlltwl. ...m "'fol1rl!lfed to uld tchool dl•lrld. NOTICE TO CllECllTO•S
IOF,ICIAL 5EALl No bidder ..... , wltfldra ... "'' Ille! for SUPElllOlt COU•T 01' Tltl "Llncoln-Me"""'"" s a I es •• ,.. s. t:cdel I Nrlod el lorfl'<fi ..... {'ll d•YI •119r STATI! o .. 'C•LIPOllNIA l'Olt ... _J
Notll'T Putlllc-Cllllwnlt ""11111 "'IDr ""-1 .... llllrl!Df. TNI' COUNTY OF CllAN41 since the introduction of the
Drllltl °"'"" TM SO.rd ol T~ '"'...... Ille Ne. A""21Jt 1~ od I 20 t MY c...rwni.1on E•ltt:1 trlvlletl ef r11ec11n11 .,,. •NII 11t llkll E1t1le ol HELEN GE II T II \I 0 IE w;;i m es are percen
JI!\. 4. If" or to WllW lftY lrrwtU11rll!n or kl· HOWELL, 1k1 HELEN CHAllLIENE ahead Of 1967, OUr previous WITTMAN a ICHMIDT, Allw1l&Y'I tom11tllles In'"' bld 0t In tlM bldd!n1. HOWELL, tki HELEN C, HOWELL,
"" ......, Dftft hilt • Price, lttneu and 111111111' Mint ~1. aka HIELIEN HA.51CIN5 HOWELL. •kl best year", he said. "We'n:
........,, ._., C.llfllnil• ..... .~ Wiii lie 1Jv1t1 lo IM arodllcll HELEN HOWE LL ~fifed. a cinch to sur "ulllnllld Oriinte C1111! OlllV •!Jot, lf'll'Wlt, m1nvf1clufld "" 1r11d~ In NOTICE IS HIEllEBY GIVEN to Tri. paSI our
Mll'G lo lf. 17, '~· lHt ~ lhfl 511!9 et Ctlllom!1. crtdlto" o1 tt1e ltlo'tl n1m('ll llt<fldtnl previous high of 3 7 9 , 3 0 0
.a.n m11Wr1111 1>r11vlded throu•" '"It '"•t 111 Plf'IOIU hlvl"' c111m1 "'IN' delt""ert'es and we•-aun· Ing lllcl lhlll c-ly """" Gover,..,...nl CPlll !hi u ld llfte-del'll i re required to flll • •~
$Kllalt ~. ni.m, wl!h !hi lllCHHr'I' VO!ldltl'J;, In for 475,000 this year. That
LEGAL NOTICE
SALESMAN OF YEAR -Sal Bemartline {right) of
Chick Tvenon, Inc., Newport Beach, receiv .. VW
Sales~Guild "Master Award" as top salesman ol lll
dealerships In tow-stale arN . .Mating presentation
is J. H.,)lcCord, general mm>ager, VD division,
Volkswagen Pacific, Inc .
type of transmission -fOUJ"-'
speed and automatic. Ad-
ditional judging will be held
to select the "sharpest" cars,
from tbe standpoint of ap-
For Coast Area
Here's How to Join
Rare Book Bonanza
By SYLVIA PORTER
DI !lot Dllll' •11&1 S!lff
Ned'ICI CHI flUaLIC "I A It IN. I '" l+Oll;MAN E. WATSON 11\e oflla-ol !tie drtk ol Ille •bo¥• I al , •IPOlll THE Sacrl't•r'I'· ao.r11 "' Tnnr..e• tnt1111c1 coun • ., ta Prt111n1 1111m. """" wil be a g n of 25 percent."
l'LANNll .. COMMISSION°" TMI OHn: Al'I'. J, 1"' H:tlCI t.m. 1111 n~rr ~rs. 10 "' Ut1o '7•--Annan sat'd that the As age era! rul rare book CITT' OI' .. ouNTAlfll YAU.IV Pllblllheid Or"'" COi,, Dlll1' Piiot. del'J;ltll\9d 1t Ille cflke DI c. P1ul ....... um; n e,
NOTICE 1s HEltEIY '""" ""'' .n Mlrct. 11• 24. 1"' .ffJ.tt 0..11011, Attorne,. tor Pe1111011er. m Oowr Cougar, up I percent na-values are based on rarity, w......,, Anfl 1. lfff, •I 7:• fl.M., NOTICE Oriv,, N.-on Be1ct1. C•mornla, Wllldl ·---" • I . 8 beauty, importance and con-1 1119 COUricll Ollrnl)en.. Clll' Hi n. LEGAL 11 1hl Piia "' M ir.KC o1 111e u..,.,..ie_, ttuwwy 10 sa es, IS up I per· ,i:,. ii.ter A-. ,._,.111 v111...-. In 111 m1ttert Perl1inl1111 "' "" at111 cent ln Southern California. dition. But the value of any C.llflnola, 1111 •llnl'llnt C.nmliilon ... u1 "·"'" of 1111c1 drceden1 ... 11h111 fl'luf' """""' boo I
l'lold lllUllllc ht•rlntt en 111e 1o1iow1nt c1•T1l'1CATI!" c, co1t•OllAllCN "011 11t1•"" fl••! PtJb11ctuon"' lhl• 1t11t1ce. He added, "Cougar seems to rare k can vary wild y.
\lcallonr TllAllSACTION OF tU•INl!IS UNOEll Oi!l!tl Ff'llru••Y 11• l~. al b Therefore 1'f your lt'brary con .,.,. 01 cM.iKIMI Uw ~-11 ..... ct .. ICTITI0\11 NAME Vlrtll ltut.ttll Howell be season auto with a ig • • ANnaonon IUbtnt"ed 11y G••"" G""" TH£ UND£ASIGNEO co1tP01tATtON E•ec.utor of ""wru bounce in sales each March lalns a volume which you have
unlfltd Sc11oc>1 0111r1e1 tor conatrvc:11°" 0oes 11erei.., (.lftltr "'" 11 r1 conc111c11noJ 111 1'-•tlo111! 111""" dece.11"1 and Apr'il." reason to believe is ex-°' an •ltmtnt•r'I' 'chOol Oii tr111frt\I 1 t1111l""t iou,..., ti 201 M1rm. 11...,nut, fu "~ ~ 1 ICIS
loctM!I MG '"' more or 1es1 narlh 111111o1 hllnd, c1111orn11, undl<" !hi tic-N rt 1 r ~ caitfofnl• t1•H Asked if the Mark Ill had ceedingly valuable, seek the
of Wlnllf' Awnue. '60 "" '"°" lltlous flml n•m• "' RUBAIYAT TOUR T ~-;, • ...::. advice DI a rare b 0 0 k or 1n1 .,.., "' N~ Street. ANO TllAYEL 1nc1 !I'll! .. 1c1 nrm 11 A;..,_.. w l!'x.cvi.r dipped into Continental sales
tn ...,......,,."" " oni111e-.... com_..i °' "'-1t1iowi11t ~·11o1t, ,.ut,jj~ orintt c~~1 D11i. "11&1. ' s pecialist (e.g ., in American 16 Att ..,,..~ " Onltllllf'ICI N•. ~ •rllKIPll 1111<• o1 butlMn 11 MatTll , 10 17 1._ lfft ~ he said it had, "but a Jot history. English li'terature • .., ""l.ltld u111 On1111111(.1, n amend· 11 ICll"""': .1 cc:..--;_c·--·----------I I th t d It'
.... 4'Cl'll:llnt rn1nlrnu11t noor t111et Tra111-P1dlk Twn. inc .. 101 M1r1,.. LEG" NOTICE ess an we expec e • s etc.). The S""""ialist could be ,,... ,_1~ '°" 1nclosed 111'1"' A'tlftue. 111t11o1 ••llnd. oi111orn11 ru.. a b ig year !or Continental." t"-~
•w.rlet't tn 111e 112. Ill. "" •• WITNESS th: hind "'" l'Oth dtY et'!------~-------1 library or museum cur ator o~,~~~ .. "*' ...., iu A.1P:lc.'tt1on '"'111rv, ~~IM-P.clfk Toun. l11C. a"A ir.r::S Queried about the possibility or a university pro(essor •
..........,,llttd .., E. w. 111nbt!Wt. 11 11r conn1• HO'Mi. Cli1tT1P'1t.t.TI! OP' •us1N!ll1 o( a new small car similar M ·r· 11 ber
-r1c.a111. •rwos!n. comtr;.>ctlon .. •n Viet •rnldenr FICTITIOUS l'lltM NAM& t F d ' •1 "ck ·-aid on: Spec! 1ca y, e are
o111n 11v11111111 -~~ Oii Piwtrtr 1cer11ctr111 Seen The ut'!Ckrtime.i ODH htfeb' mr111'1' 0 or s " a ven • •ic s • lhe three key fields in which luclttd $0!,lth of W1rMr •vtNH!, 135 STATE DF CALIFORNIA I II Iha! ht II condudlllll • ll•rblr Sftop "We do want something, bul ' I
,.. ""' rMr'I « ltll •••I d N .... llftd COUNTY OF ORANGE I llu1l"'1o1 II In lndlvlclu1I ti 161' w h h I you can lDVesl a port on of s1..-lft 1t1t CP 011tr1t1. 0n tt111 20th d11 QI F111ru.1rv. A.D. Fourlh 1trtt1, s11111 11n1. c-111fom11, t is is t e sa es manager talk· -.th
O> blll Cllllltl Ne. IH A1'Pllt111an 1Mt, 1w1on me. 1 NO!•r'I' Pulllle !n vncltr 1._ lktl!lou• firm "•m• q1 House · " Ob · I th . your savings WI e V e r Y IUbmltml lw 81hln •rid HISl!f•""•· Ind lor 11111 Counl1' arid Sfa!t. Pll'SO!llltlv OF NATURALS '"" !hit 11ld fl""' Ing. VIOUS y. ere IS a r easonable expectation 0 f
"' •1, 11 -"' rtc1~t1n1 clla11111 tPPt1rl!d conn11 Ho ... le k110W11 to mt 11 comPOSed of ~ to11o ... 11111 "rion. s mall competitive car in the • in .., _ °" ,,_m-1oc:11e0 on "'' to be 111e v1ce •res1del\1 er1 1111 c.or· ~ 111me in 11111 11111 1>l•tt g1 ru1111~ future for L•"ncol-Mercury seeing your vestment grow ~ 11ok o1 1!111,...r A.vtVM •lld "°"•'Ion !hit "ecvltd "" ... 11t11n 111-b •• tolio'N$. 1o. ... 11: ,.-in the years ahe d Elldld 1trwt lrom At Ciener11 ""'"""' 011 lle"•lf o1 1t1t COfllO••llori 1111py Kl.W, 1111 w. Fcurlfl St.. Division. a : AltfieVtlvr•I Dltlr\cl !o 111-PO 1DOO tri.l'lln n1,,.e<1, •rid •c-nowledtt<d to $Intl Arw, c111tornl1,
Slnt11 '""ltr llesldena alld •ttn""" "" 11111 1ui:t1 corwr•llon extculwd 1M DirH Frbru1ry 'Hi, 1Kt. IJ MEDICAL AND Scientific
0.Vttulomlnl, Cl LICll llu.IMH Ind Mll'lt. flillv 1(1...,.,. * t * p · l t llJ ~ 0-ltr Multll>ll ow.rnr11 (!11111 STATE 0, CALIFORNIA, apers on Imp 0 r an
Dtflrkh .. "'°"' rtttrlctlw dltlrlch. Jl(Clu-tnnt J. $Inborn COU NTY OF OtlANGE l u DRAG o•v COM"NG FOR discover ies and inventions. ln CW llllMI UM P-11 NII. .._ ltlt.::1 Nolin' l"ubllc C.11!•1111 Ori Fftlru&r'I' 211. Ifft, lletor• mt. "' I.I
Ill anl\llldlofl"""'""' -CIY. Prklc:1HI Olliu "' Or1fltl I Nolvr Pllbllc 111 II\([ tor w lct C-1'1' A.\fX JAVELIN this category, reports the Lon-
(f zr.a a-Ma. in 1in11ca11C1n ~~2'omrntulon E•Pl••• •IHI $1111, Jlll'IOl'llllY •P1>t1r1c1 fllllY ' OWNERS don Times (which maintains, 1vtmln.ll tw Mlrlf1 ...,. k1wlt\ll;fll, ...,,,11 17 lf71 Klrtw known to me. to be 1111 per.on All f X
.i •L ·~ -.. -''r11 e111t1t1 ,cHN v111ruE • '""""' "'""' 11 wbscrlbed ,. "'' ... 11h1n owners o M 1 and with Solheby & Co., the auc-
.. -.,. ~ koted °" 111e A"'"'" .i u. 1.._trumen1, •nd KkntiWIKl9eO " ITlf Javelin cars in Southern 1· • • d r ~ •lft • .i.n ..., HfWPllH. 1617 wllfcllfl Or~""·.. 11111 "'••Klltfll the"'""· 1oneers, a uruque 1n eI o
-111 .i ,._ Werner ctwo-1 f"'"' .....,.... a..c11. C•IM. ""' wllftno m' hlfld 11\d 1111. California have been invited to values in art and literary Al G4ntf&I A1rkullu,.I Dklrlcl te T·mN {OFFICIAL SEAL! ... • t · "0 I Th
111-PD "°° Sinlll F1m111' Restct•~c• l'ublllllld o r1r111t c,,.,1 Di!IY •11o1. c111r~ 11. wld~ pa. d Clpa e in a ay a e works). vaJues have jumped
1rW ,......., OIYelcPtntnt Com!lln!nti MWCll 1a. 11, 1t. 31, 1'6• 4'1-tt Not•"' Pub1i.e-c:1morn11 Drags" at Orange County more than IO "---•Ince the Dlttrld 11..ullllonf 0t fllOl'I mtrlcll<,o• PrlntlPll 0111ca In W lit:ll .
111111r1c1. C'.lndl!IDMI uu Ptfm1t NoJ. LEGAL NOTICE Dl'antt c-11' Internationa l Raceway on Sun-early 1950s. ~J nltlll Ill c:Ol\Junctloll with lllt 111wt M' Commlu!Oft EMl'Trtl d M h <t11 M
_c.,.. otc.1•.nn ay. arc ....,, R . · All of the great .. , r..M a--Ne. 1n A .. llc111on P·UMI ~u11n1,..., Or•ntt Co•nt 0111y Pllol, S t e p h e n s o n , AM zone llUllrftlt!M "' J. IC•-· •1 _,... Cl:llTl .. ICATE o, tCllPCllATICN Mlrctl J, 10, \1, 1~. 1Hf JIUf breakthroughs of m 0 de r n
...-111'11 '"'"'' Gf l'OM on .. OIOUIY 1'011 TllANSACTICN CP: IUSIN E5) manager, announced. t' h a ed 1oc11to11 """' .. slltrf' AWllut • .....,1 uNorr11 F1CT1ricus NA~a LEGAL NOTICE unes ve appear as
ol Cali. l1...-u ,,_ Cl L1t1I lHE UNDERSIGNED CORPORATION,!-------------Stephenson says AM exptcts articles in sc.R:ntific 0 T
fl utl11111 a15"'1c1 i. 111 Medi"'" o."'1" 11on htfm c'""" 11111 11 11 cOl'lllllcfi,,.. IAll·IUI some 450 owners to show up edi I • al II Mullllll 0 ... 1111111 Did••:r Ot ~. tiv1lnHt loc:•le-d ., S14 ""' $free,. .. •••••••• (l)U•T OF TME tfATl m ca JOUrn S, genera y r .. 1r1c11...., 111,1t1ct N, ... _., B~•tn. c:1111om11 undtr ' \.l'ith their cars. II bl t 1 t in :r-a..,:. JM. '" .o...,11r11•011 uc1111ou1 "'"' n•m~ et euSM 11our1ouE ,011 ™~' cg~~~~1 ~t1ANOE •va a e a very ow COS
1Ubn\1"1!d w ltfl!Vblk Monie,, n ·~ ~n11 ""'' \tkl 11r... 11 <°"*""' "' 18 A ,.1.., Drag trials "·ill begin a t "'hen published. All you. the
"lkl"'· tte1""""' c1111111 &I -NI "" '"'1""'1"9 ,.,..PO,.tlon,'""""" ..-i .. c.111•1 NOl1c1: oF MEA11itrte cF l"ET1T10N 9 a .m . and conUnue until I collector, need do is read the _.., \otl!N _,Th cl Wtrrer •l•ct 111 bu1l11M1 •1 f> lollowl: .. Oii AUTMOatTY TO lll!l'INA.NCE
A-•· ... f"1 rnor• ... 1eu t•ll JEANNE BUSH, IN C. SU 1tlh "''"· A co11•01t.1.ll! LOAN ANO TO A•· p .m . Eliminstions begin .at newspapers to learn o( lhe wJ lll'CIOthvt'tl Sfl'tel lrton 111 i !nvt• N•Yn>O<I Br1t11, C1ll1Crnl1, 01 l"LY CCNSl!RYATMSHIP •1tOf'lllTY "" Cl "If •· .. .,,1r, llflldtltU •llll ll~D Mte!u!I' WITNESS lh t11no:l 11111 "'"' •• , Al S!CUll:IT'I' .. o. LOAN l :o)\/ p .m . asses WI ui;: important developments. As
.,_,,.,. MulllPlt Dwtl!IM -"1•nnl'CI Fro.,,irv. lf69. , , .... Malt..• o1 t11e con1erv•rorthlo determined by ~.,;ne •ize and an indi'cat1'on of what 15· ha-0.01~ Clnlblnlr4 D I 1 I r I c ' (CORPOll:ATE SEA.LI O! n 11:o'i'E1tT LESLIE llAll.NE~ON, 1lt0[_:.:._::_:::_:_:_::._-:;::·~'.:_·::._::_:::._::.::__::::._:.:::.::.:::.:.::_:_::_::::_.:.::.:c~::., ltll'Vll~ 19 ... Hllfi OMl"ll11' M~l11Plt JEANNE 8U$H, INC:, I ROBERT L eARNEWN 1l10 Owtll/lw 0~ • "*'9 rfllrlctl.,.. 111'• Jel-llulh, ••tlldent llOWll II ' ' dfttrtef Pnclw '°llilft M6. 111 f"lnl fly: C!wrYI C.. !<IV $Kt1ltro ..,_,.It II.. L. 8AllNEWN, Con1itrvtl ....
'11 -·IWldllfri 1"1111 11111: lbow !G~ STATE oF CALIFOllNt.-'. NOTICE IS HeltEllY CIVIEN Ttlll
""-COUNTY Oii' OllANGE • THE flANIC OF (ALIFOllNIA.. N1tlo!ltl
Thllt -ltwli ..., llllllt •l'telt.ttll Otl ftlll 1'th dtl d ~tbfu&,..,, A 0 . A.noclootlon. •• .. Ct1111trv1tor. "'' lllell •TAB n ... --.. --.. _,.. • ..... .. -,....,.,"' L.-,; "' !ti. Ifft, brtott -Emat J, ldlll. Jr, i'llN'lft I "'''-.. A.vltlorlTV lo • ..,,. ., c.lftnls. (Gw'T, c.. ·~·* 1 Nott ... Pul)ISC tit •nd '°" Mkl c-tr Rlf~ • c...-an L$1fl •nd to "' Or_,. c...tr .
.t -.,) ...,. Ille jt_.,.., v.11,., -St•t.. '"kllnt lftlo'9lt1. dvi'I' cvm-~~tr c;:w~~-;"' ..tii: • •
Unfrrw Ol'WIMllCt. TN -tt-..,. llllMklllN -,_,,, ,...._11v •-"'9 _...,, • • M•rti lf•ct-tt, tl11ti1h, atf•meyt •IHI ,.,•f111i•11•I
............. , ......... fO Slctlon•I .ltinnot c a.mi •ncl °""'. c. FIV " maclt fOr f\lr!Mr ,N"'"'•"",.· -, • ,..,1 •••• , .... , ..... tti., ''' ........ _,,,,,, ~ Mwl n•tt '1ld ,,.._10. ~ ... Uv:l'Nfl ta' "" tG Ill! lfW ,.,.,ldtlll "'411 "'-llll'lt 1n11 •en 1r"' ,., , 2"""' OrllMrict. z.w. M-. 11~1 • .., Stcrtl•rY ef JEAHNe 8USH, INC,, lllt Mimi .hi• llMfl "' tor A1>rtl •• ••rYlc1. •
..... -~ """' -911 lilt""' c:orl>Ortflo<I 111•1 UICll .. ""' ... rtti!ft ..... ,, •.••. ,,, •• In "" CO•l'l'VOl'n
iii 111e ,_ °""""""" •no:I •n 1"'"""'""' 611 1w11.i1 Ill "" cc-.0t11i.." °' 0.-.""""'' No. J °' ••kl ceu,,, • FOR AS $ 60 PER 1vtlll"'-""' c ~ and •~· ~fl" ft-..!, Ind 1dl110Wl9Mtd le .i 1111 Wtil Eltlll t trftl, '" lht Clly • 14 • t!ft!Mlllll, -11111 Wdl ~allclfl ll)tt(UIM ti. °' Santi ""•· (II~. LOW AS MONTH TMlt lllftlr'ltlt It frttHfV 11 fll/00' ,,.,.,. 0111<1 Mitch U, 1'*' •
., In _...llllfl .. lhlN ~II al\ll 1~ .Wlll'llu ~. I """' """f\111"' W, f . ST JOHN •
.,.,_..., ..CM .. 9iWfl tit ""'°r~Jlt•lv Ml l'rl' hafld lfld llllrtll llW ol'lltllt 1tOa l•~: ~::SI:. Al<IO OAltl.ANO
9 di a. II ""1llllr lllforMAflon 11 1t1I 1M 1!1y end -Ill ltllt certlfk•t-t -C -· '°"" • ... _... '*"""' ... ,...,.ftr.,. 11111 ''°'" wrm.n. -..... · • II M>-204 .... l'Tf.-r le (OFFICIAL lEA.L) N--1 9-11. Cl~ ttKJ 1Jw •-ltt ,.._ ~. Nt £mnl J, ~. Jr. Tel~ (7U! ...._
Ht. If,, Z-c.Nnl• ~ Noll,., "'1blk • C.ll!Orr•t• Al-lw PtlllllMr • • 1ft .... !'2, flt'MiM Pll'll Prlfl(ipil Dlflca lft Publill'IM 0•-• C1111 Dlll1' Pll!tl, NI. 1111, Inf NI. ID 1M A11 Ai1•••-t Or-'-t'J Mlrcl'I II, 1"' tHt 14,. "or.-"'· -. Ni• c-"'*' ...,,,.. • l'Ui~ltrte OOMMISSIOfll ""'' ti, 1'7' •
OI" TMI CITY OP l>UllYI&. CAll•lllTI• I •••111s. PENETRATION • ..OUNTAtll YAU.EY At1n.
''"""" '-.......,.... "' °'"""" .,.,_ N11..i.. •-•rie rt•-'• tht • p ........ on.e.t ..... 1111 rTf ' •••
::::......._.,..,,,. "'111t r. o. k• 11M DAILY r1LOT, kM•few11 111w.. · · • ~ ~rn~:r 0.l1' ,.,.._ ~Nd'-:.~!"·c::' Dil!v P!'el, ~'.',',',, fet tloe F1lt1lev1 Ortflf• 11 e e e •••••••••• ~ tMt .., Motf'Clll 10. 11, ,., JI , '"' OlftlL------------I---------'-------'-..;;..-::;.._::_ __ _
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DAliY~ J5. ' . Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York ... ,_i-cai.o..r------------·· ._ • ITOCK 1.u1>111
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:11 l>.llLY PILOT
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®. ,' .
. . : : ' .. •7 4 squale inches of pic:;tur•. '
• Ligh'tw~iQ_ht, ;,_,ighs 1111 !h~." :ll· lb1. :
• •All ~honriel UHF oild VHF sing!' knob .f11r11n11
•Front rno11r.1e~ full _,;de'.lity ipea~ei-:
! • • ,. . '
. WESTiNGHOUSE MINl·COM8012,'~ TY; .
. PHONO AND AM~PR.UDiO . . ' ,. -. . ..• -i . \ .
229.95
value
•Jet 1et 1creen
• 1n1tcint-On TV wiih 7-4 sq. inch picture cireci
•Solid state>-AM-FM transistor rodio with w1;1ke·lo·m1nic
•"4-spe>ed phonogroph with autom1;1tlc chonger
• fl•••-1 ·-········
349.95
• 102 1q. inches of picture .
•lnJ!ont-On all chonnel UHF-VHF 111ning
•New trim shop• wilh top-front control Ii ·
•New Wedil'tghouse designed color chcuii1
with 22 i111provemen!1
WESTiNGHOUSE BIG SCREEN 18''*
PORTABLE UHF/VHF COLOR TY
379.95
valUe
•We1linghou11 high bright pic-11111 lube
•All-on-cane d iol UHf/VHF chonnel tuning
•Memory fine tuning, up-lronl sound
• lntlo rit color fidelily oulomotico11y ................ -..
. \.~ l ,l 'l"l 'l,I~. \.~ .\ti .lit)\ I~\· IJtJI\ \ ... 1 '. \h I~ .'tltJ .\'1'11S 1't> 1•,.\ \'!
. '
. t ·' WESTINGHousi 19"* Pot:Ta•t»f ' .(. , ... ;.
. ·UHF!V'liF llT 'iilT n · ·
. WESTINGHOUSE 22•'* INSTANT·ON
· COLO._ TY CONSOLE
• lt1ik111t-on feature ·and ~jg piclure TV
•Memory,firte tuning lets y~ pretune each channel
•IJlpmincted.pop-on VH F and UH.F number1
· •fwin .t4!le1coping ontenng • Delu~e hon die
. 1;.;--...... "'
FIVE FEU.OF ·STEREO IN.IOYMENT
WESTINGHOUSE STEREO WITH AM·FM RADiO
209.95
value
·•C~nt.mpOrary rl,ch ~lnut venfff'c~\tinet .'
• /JNFM radio with outomatic fre(iu~ncy co'ntrol
•4-speed autom1;1tic r~ord playe'r with 011tOmotic shitl·off
'•4 spRker aound system •Five feet of St~eo1enjOyme1U\ ,..
WESTINGHOUSE SOLID STATE STEREO
IN EARLY AMERICAN CONSOLE
355.00
value ..
•AMJfM/FM-1tereo multiplex with 6 1peoker 1ound sy1tenl
•4 1p•ed outomotic rKOrd thonger with diornond 11ylu1
• Si•ty woth of music power in 1olid .tot• high fidelity
•Early Am1r icon 1tyl~ng in mopl1 veneers
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569.95
value
••full 268 sq.'i'nch~ of vie111oblt1 picture
•Memory fin• tuning for perfect re<:epl ion
•Westinghouse choui1 with oll 22 improvements
• 1lluminc:ited Pop-up Uti_f c:ind VHF chc:innel numbers
• 1;., .. ..i·--···
wo•l.rs LARGEST COLOR TY SCREEN
AND STEREO COfttBINATION BY WESTl .. GHOUSE
899.95
value
•Feature• big 1<re•n lndant·On color TV
•Solid 11011 stereo and AM/FM rac!io and FM·Stereo
•Six 1Peaket 1tereo 1ound iyitem
•Authentic furniture styling in contemporary wa lnut veneer
WESTINGHOUSE ALL .SOLID STATE STEREO CONSOLE
.@ IN CHOICE OF 3 FINE FURNITURE CABINITS
e CHOICE Of 3 STYLES
•AM/FM/FM-ster10 multipl•• with FM tuning miter
•lope input·oulput jockl and 1xt1mol 1peoler jod:
•In Cont1111.poror'y walnllt, SponiJt Pecan, Fr11Kh
Provincial fruitwood' •300-tts pet1k rnu1ic pow1•
~------..----.:H:.:U:,:Ri::R:,:T:.,;.-UANTITIES LIMITED ••• SOMI MODEL N T AVAILABLE AT ALL STORES!
NOllWALK . NOllTH LONO BIACH ANANllM•BUINA PARK ANANllM•fULURTON WIST COVINA NORTHRIDGI RIDONDO BIACH
IM,lllAl ffW,, AT STUOllAkll l . SOUTH ITlllT AT CHlllY llACM ILVD. & LINCOLN OIANOITHOl'I AT 'ltMON. . AZUSA AYI. AT ,UINTI llSIDA ILYD. AT DIVONSNlll HAWfNOINI II.VD. AT SO.IAY CINlll
FOUNTAIN VALLIT LONO •1ACH
MAllOI ILVD. AT lDINOll LOS COYOlll,SPllNO & WOODIUJJ
HUllTINOTON BIACH
OOLOIN WIST & IDINOll
GAaDINOROVI BURBANK CANOOAPAlllK
T0,AN°0A CANYON ILVD. AT IOKOI
SANTA ANA
H. QIAN~ AVI. AT 1n" Sflllf CHA,MAN & llOOKHUIST SAN fllNANDO II.VD. AT IUllANK
SHOP A SA YI AT .IODYI MONDAY THRU SAT. 10 A.M. • t P.M., SUN. 10 • 7 ••• SA TllFACTION GUARANTEIDI . . .
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' EDITION
O~~ ~. ~ , . MpNoAY,•M~RCH '2",;1969· :TEN, CENTS
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'Pre~Ocions .. ,. . '
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San .Clftnente Talk . .
Nixon on • Coast: •
DAllY·PILOT Stllff l'llO ..
'HUNTINGTON UN-AMERICAN'· '/F d p · 1 d' _) Golden W11t'i Coton>1ro ' .• . re·e 0 m , e r1 e . .'
Unhappy Easter
In J{untington:
Beach Polluted
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL or ,... 0.11,. PHH ttefl
A three-Point policy declaring war on .
campus disorder but urging correction
of basic student irritants ..._ a guideline
fQr American educators -i5 being
studied today, fellowing its weekend
r e I e a s et by President Nixon in San
Clemente.
The statement was iniUally sent to
VacaUoning students cominp: to Hun--college and university administra~ by
' . tiom begin to die," be Rid.
"The proce11 .ls 1 ~·too
fomllW' to thoae who woWcl ·-·Ibo
wreckage of history. Aalault Ind counter...
assauJt, one extreme · leadins to· .the op-
J>OSile extrtme; the Yokel of. reuon ·
and calm discredited."
"None af us bu the.richt .to mppoae .
it cannot happen hue," be conUnued.
The President's basic statement on
(Sff NIXON, Pap It ·
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Qropout'
tington's beaches for Easter. Week this Robert .H. Finch, se<ntary ·of healtlt
year may bave their p2aDS for pleasure . , , :,:~~!.by thous~ds ol microscopic Full .Photo: ~ver190 H untingto"· ·~NTENSE .AY~Ji~11nl-"s TO:lPEAKtR AT ~~l;i,.q,:Qr.:. EACH c~uNIWci>N'GRlss"
ACcording' to Robert .$tone, director Of-Nlllon VISlt P1~e~ 13 . . •Ill!'. , Htoro C11y .Ducrlllod Ii• 'Pr-l0u1 Dropout Opor1t1r11 on Dlct_1to1 of .Trodltlon' · -
derm.rqafuentaJ.rbealfhfortbeCounty educationand'Wtlfart(,.~Olt ·tbe -&.,J : ·1:~· .. ,tj '-~'/:i · ~ .,;··1:·!·-,.:,~1 • · ::;'.:·;:': .. 1·:· : r ~ · .. J.' "'' t· ~ii.'!'~:~:,.=:~ ~~~!ii.~iilil~ ... , ... ttear.o·~.n~·: ·'~ . ~ ,~ ".--."'-.1~ .. ··~ ~•"~ .. ·ii .R:1·· .· ':',.·· · " , .. " ···
Stale Beach closed over Easter and -~ .. of crimlnaI vlllatloo. · ~.;..-__ ~ · ;: · -~ •· ,· .., • ·• · .. ' · ~ ~ !!!9."--.li!IJ ,.....,._ I k· •. 1 w·iJq ; •<.. • . >y.rt<.,,, ! ~ "':"l...i"•,...,:t 1t~* •»:D . ' ' ;f , . ,. •' by' • , ' ...... W'.t--•• m":M r~ .... 1. • • ~;.:"~ 0:. I y. , •• ~ '' ~: f'l1'1 ) ~ The pOllution ts caused :tewag& Finch ~&rrlen_t."'·~. ·~ itae : . ( . . t ' . ' ' .. '; . ' ;tr • I l ;';f • . • I ', ' • l . ir ~ '. • : t j • • .-r I •• '1 ~ -·.'. Dl." ~ :: .. :kfet.ur~.!~~g ~~=ic~~ l~eralvi.:'tence 'lip! 'ill Jlnpcioeo! ,_ A' )'!JQll• M...., '~· ~ 1111 ... . 'h J '.J : ' , I ! r, it , A~•·. J -C'll.; t' ; • ', . }J at · C . ' ~ I • .
content are exuninect by the health · cqpvicl by boll>.~. 1r•~t ' firebombed~· J!t•~·~, ' ' D~U°('OOJH ·t:I IV UJ.U.Ci(.W · ·~.Cl.zey, . ~ngress
• .h".! -" The primary .~ .• OU ~· en· llDeh. Thi ... ' l_laliift'.. ' . ',I.' "'~l' ' '· ·./' ' •. '' ., . • ' . J ' • • ' '· dti~I t.,. .,ong el~ht measuring sta-. larcemeitt o1 federil:·~ws pertibilq to Police · · , ,j ~ · · 1"11Dfc~. -· '. wilb;a'.,~.~ .~Jl<!UUon ·fcit',hiciuotr1a\-, Peter' Horton;.cllr'°'°* of pl" " .!GI' r· Ul~-:1~): ' educaUon and the aec&daiy ·Polnt. one . ~ tOllid , a:.,12N1~·trmt. ' .. t.., . ..,..,f'* ..... ' ~~. i ., '4fv.elo~·~· , . . . . . . -McboOneunouglii'AslttinaUUci<;i .. \1..t
',Bacteria have kept the tw .. ml!e state , •ir.s...d as far more lmPoflant · In · charred lbe .,_, •· doer ·ol tlii ·....,.. ,,.&+·~~IL" ·•"· '·-' ,_ , Wfllr.:.·~· lbet r•i>\d ec:Onomi..;~ . pr~ter !0<..!j>e_,,,_,,ic~' ' . beach closed !or , 1<ater contact for the pmt~lal atatemen). Is ~·· Jiorrll liome ahoqi)l m. "''"" ,..,...,....... 'P'!"!"' 11• 1 .w~, p,...,.. w 1 ln' sWuiirn (;llllomJi, Md, eapedally • aeininOr and aJOP~iw'1 f t" ',
several week< •• Us< .o! the beach area ti6n o1 lilde~~ dtallve hlglie< Dam ... wal ~ 'w· the .at.1J. . D~-. b(iL JI•,, · . . , ,. '" , 0i;inieA>Jiy, lo,.lllliillnllOa'~aef., 1n. bis .t!om~·ir~ , . , l
for sUl\halhing and picnicking is still .I~ tDieii..w.t,;....... d6oronc1·uplwhir1~'~illi: 1'11111.....,,.,bodtoom'!'•IT•llllodoi oov : lllic·ilsf~.-?'; .', Biach: '· '. ,',' ''"" ·,,.• 1 ~ al~:;;,~ton CUy Beach has been spared II'. in danger -b\ AmtriOL v-=·· but tbe ~'"' bod -f6wit 1be Jil!lol-can .. qliMe-.g. · Moot Pe!tPll!'Pld Ari. . He l!JP.lain«J two f'l"!<r.' mvdlvm:)lf
. '·
.. lat by ·tbe pa°"""eiu·c bacten·a because . ...-.... •• ,,. . .._. ...............' ln"-ldatloi\ to oertoa.1; llQlftib)Rauilho. ' ' hCi ·!i,,llif .........-~tlel ·Gf :W 1 tliey, bliked ~.;!fit ' cltt. ,... : a ·1aige' 'CQDl!i!l>li's,'~ :fill' ;a 'site. ·::-
wrug rvo-.. ·-~ ....,.....-""' 'Hanis'·Wlle ·wu· .b:dlt tbe" ........ JluntlntUnll-leMit /IDt';liftral:~ · qUire·m~nt1 ' o.'n c; m't1>.trc1al j Fintp~yti~~adon (ltqd,c(*ti .. ')'''~ • :.:;
therefu'.ae.movingsouthwarc.I. ·a.ii -accepted or at aD.teVentl 11' wu•notinjured.. 1 . · • tbelrowni ..... Wwoai.wltCilll"liL · · frimtbeftiletil el" '·' _,. "fa~(boli.llG&;'.t •ea;i1 ' ·~·· the prevaillnJ currem direction has kept ..., Is oeemin«ly'."' l1i 1111 w ~ at Ibo time, domC tlie · ._,, ti hr llatwdoy!S e.-111MilW ~lllid · ~bU~~ and~. a . ; Of1 , lnl.erut ar¥t li)eo .~t· ~-i . ; . ,. ,
"It fl pO.swle that the city be!!Ch" and not to .be avoldlid· .._ In 1be Det<ctlve Sgt. Joel Mibolts 'lotllllo • .~We .n11lluo<t11n4 omiJJ'...iniodlU.. •. \JeY~eiif ,of ' . , l~:wflt> 1. \1~;1'!iii~7 . , <,.;'.~ ;~~"
could also be quarantined since IM"~ claah. °' .. opinloo wll\lin the unlvmlty Incident ;,18 , •-., ; 1,eiulJ'; olu ltooJ-Jim for • -""' ·:::.:; 1 oq'ftl ,'lD!proYl'l!ld 'm 1 al""~ Cl!" :1 lliii:pWitempwyat~ ""*~ , .. f.1.~' ·
rent swells generally; change direct.ion --eonfines, he said. motivated.., · , •-1 • .... l.ilph-a.der, an~ Vffw· miibod for .~Ucinc ~'i ind.:_~' 11\te 'in H~;~· .; ... ' 1 ~.:r-1")•
aboutthiatJmeoftheyear,"said.Stone. VIOLENCE USED About 1 dozen Negio famllill Jl'le . ~.Jn ... ""•And ~1~~~atart : afJe•CClinznercitftnt:eiabto\~·a -~' ','fl!.4J.J>e?~J~.~~ ... .lfft:',H..-("~~ .
Headded;tbatcumnt·directionchange Ni.Ion said viol-is beinC Uled not ll>Hunt!ngtGn Bood!;.ni.r..-,bom oq.,;nl :,~ a"fU111n .Jor -,C<JIOlnl ,to , U •waa pointed .oul,_,,1"1'-ille ·Im-ti~~cll ,are;~~ '"!!!' ·~l·
hu alrady been delected in"""' in-olily to polilicize 'atudent bodies, but ' lewraciallncidinta..,..lod.lntlol]!UI. ·Clllfdty. 1. · . , •.,. I provemenlo,"'1,uhJ!!.ltrj.';;e{.\!!;/.otreeta. _H~ ,~'!f,~~};~!:j~ .,;:.. stances, wtilch "ooukl cause a worsening to_ poliUclze the educalional .tnstJtµUons Reinholb aajcf· Huril ,,... tbt· 'flctba Jeverat ,op.lniau enre.ed • m. the and 1 other -·df~fniu )~ are a J09d J~-~ 'N.~ -.,; ~~
ol lhe situation." themselves, action whlcll his In the . of. a n:lalod incldeot .to.Jl'ebn11!7 -E<OnOrn1< "~' 'pol'uOn .of I ·eUilillve.. to atlfl¢..,on ~ • merclal fu~tOdr\hi lldi\.'' '•.. ~,,
According to Stone, Riverside has cklne past. spelled disaster to both polilli:s unidentified tndlviduall 1·c r tb·b le 4 , !hlnM .... ,, .~ , !Dllk'akd .uuit, to • ,:,.. lirp·,~r iUdi t&.;~·~ Harfon' .aiib hotld ~ihat.1n lHibtlitPll ' ·_ f.r
th' h id h l ciltu'-hie--"~· .,_ ,,_ ;;;;;.;;;>'..;1 •• +.I.; .., • ...,.Jnot U.'t ·~•·• ., 'Dtfigld• -•-· · • '~ ·' ' ' ' (Sff:l;C01'10MICll, ~ It• lff. every 1ng 'tatceu umanybedonc arid tun:. · o cau~cm~w •. ~ ... · .. -i-r-:'--~~--,·~-I-rJ"li a"'~";4"9 1 ~:" -. , •• "';,r. ,_..,. ,.~
to ameliorat~ the problem, having · ;'It is, not. too stro11g , a. stat~ent · At that time Delptlcn: MfPed tr-.e · ~ 1 1 ..J...; , ·. * . "'ti, , 1 1 1 --k '"{:( 1 :· • ;y1 ; • · · . 1 • , ; , ; 1 • ~··
1
• , • ~ ts..· P(lLLt!rl.ON, P•ge z1. (o, declare that thls Is tbe way ,tlvlltza.. . th~ .Joul ICl'lbbllnp, ,an4 ~· Ibo : . . >; . . • • , • , , . 1 , • 1 . , : '1 , , , Huntntaton.• t~ •., • :
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DAILY~OT.lf9fl ....... PAT AND DICK WAVE GOOD.BYE FROM PLANE llAMI'
~ Sontlmontol Jovrnoy one! A lluddlo.., Vl-m
A milk boUl;~"Y~, . •1oeded '-'fll> ' ~ ~' f :· ' \. ' I '1 -•-'w' I~ .., --
. • ... ~ ... I . I r • ·.' ' ' I I 'n !1·'." I'' 1'rull.etll 1111·Hunt1nc'en·Be8ch~ .,,.,-:.__
lllJOllne, WU 'for, llaturclay'l ·bom-B. c· 't ' . . f' p· ~ ' . llltbdlcbodl Dlstfli:l "1Jl ..:..1:at• ,,,. -,.,,~ !>lnl. uld lleinbolt.v .. " .. , ., ' ' ' ' ' t ' · ll'llold.. it• Ille J;ff.;.·lleGilllb ·1 ·" ~tu;:. =7~·~ 1 l. y · 6 ~~n. : ~ · .. ·~PP .. : ... ·: ~!.i·=~~-~l ,:
..widdbtbetratt. r--:-, , .· _. ·· ..... , t; r ~ 1 ,· ·, •l,. ,.: ~ i' · fora-regutar't\11"'•-·n•*'''C" ___ ,'
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opefSta. a medibl<'·IUoi•; _In ;.. M 'dllli<uK u :,......, 01 ....... <ltow· '1!1lllill}' l'nlr ... If Goldin Woot~llqe. 1 c. ,
.....,,,. city, and omiou11t '-llad -lo lift~· _ ~, · !yon ~ ~-lllt!t*1¥t !l"ll_-.)he ~-NEW YORK (APJ -'II* -mll'l<el
hon: . I. loltl o • a.ell' of .111 lllal.,!lbilb lbe,t.k of ·=(. cl"'4-1·-loclOJ••Trodiolt -, llo ~ -....m.:li.. ~ Ln "-'-wt~~. ' ,· C .I< · •~,-...•·•-·,'--LLb ·, 'fuliab WIS "1ol!Yllyt ....... (S.0
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0 4 Clll009, ~ I ~ Ulm n::u.n,•"t"""!:"• • ,.. '" ' " • ~ • • ' . / . / •, j I , ~' ~ f I • I I •' '"" •• •) i 1 'o • 'It '.f •"' Y.
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polnlod '!'"!'JIU.,~ lot U,, ~:e:-~~'tllo ' ........ -'*"' •ton ... DR!OtrpC•W. aflDiiiDcoil\ -llll up-io 1...-_ . lnlaotl. piopooed p~ l!Oopllo~ ~ to. • '""' lliallqlon •M -l .,. lrJ llli!+Aflb U"IDt, -R. '
Dr. Geqo J.. ~JI'-oil ~ 'J!Mpllol1111111J ....... -:l"I'-. . Dr.-'l.'111•e,Er>-.J \ I . IN'llDE '~"" • tht boonl of ..,_'ff !lie llBH CorP-.. --........ "!!" Iii',.....,._....,, llr, I • • .,. ~I'~~ .. ownerofthepnpooitl~mlllioebooFW ~ · -····~~~~·.,_ ... llr• P'1ti* lli!llM!.~Dr: ' . A/l!l'k.OF.:.'~ • ~.11"."<U __ .. ff-.,,..-. . . ~· .1•f'*91( ,...., ~-'.:""" 'lo lft d.',Ji'.llilll#f!o-• .... ·~ •. ~~~~~ -Jd,Who-~ l~l!ill!•f\! ~,....,•{Jir; llllJ01116itr.' .......... I' ..,.... .. •'-ii"t.l~l ·U•'>U\, il·~Hunlin1ro.O· In lloii ·Ml llJI ~. · I ., lo-,·-id·" ~~~JI ~I , Wiii whtn tt•opoiled·tn H~ · '~ ·• 1 .11" =tt;U..-.....,.orx1*cl-1 ~.P"1" 2, , , ... , ' ,:, Ii"
•' ~lw;o ..... ·-will iAJjj tn !ft ' -.... , .• • • • • ' , llr thorflllll ~-ort 11t)llD I ~ !_." °' 1 '';f_,).l' i ' ·••" lti• ' ~-· _... >"6,;:.....L!="'. ~. • .. • .......... -.r--)I 1•-.... ,,., .I
and _., ~ .. ~ .... -.. ., -............ ;~ jleo<h •• •;' ·-• "' ·-· .. '.... .' !'. ofthe11M>er11pedalbedbtiotiltllalllo\ir ~. 'u~·~:;oana.·1'f'Qcl1tiil5.lri'biz¥h ra1·19 -· =..r--~ =.=i-;
l!ld Dejawere Streeu: I~ .... ,,. -.,. ~j:h -·ffeoJlilel 1tv 1 ~ -•."\;, m PreaenUy , --,,al Piltil ,.. fl'-f "°" 'U .... 1"1111; "ii\ 1 lltilpltll ls~ tO ') t h.r, • ":"",""" • l! f'
1 Harbor 0ener11 11osp11a1 ,Jii .Gont!I ,,,. , .... ,, , , .• > .. • tw"!;~~. ·~~ ,.la•!•".,.'-lJ-.5'~=-i 1·
urove, B-llaa ,ollO ·Mmd .. ~.,_,.,ttftddo. , ~ lw • .-~'"~ "• 'i;;.;.;;; , :: boopltalconsultantfcx;CblpmonHorpltal U ;.,_itr:U,11*W••~ f*.: ~·!~.•-: : ._., ~ 'i.S" · • • I· tn Orange and w1s~lol' for U. Mf:,.._ --.(~ ~-.;....-..!I'_ , aid", .,' ' 1 > l Hun~ ProleaiOilol ~ tn,_H..,. ~ty ~. , . lllldlllao·~llif • · ' _: -;.
. '
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2 DAil V PILOT H
,,,_. P_,e I
NIX.6N-.••
the hot -cl -turmoil ca!lt for the 1Cadtmlc community to cleaD
\IP lta own house flnt whm it comes
'" ............ -.. fa!oll1,
but ,..;ml._..., -. One principle to be oblerved, be aold,
ls that colleges and unlven!Uta are
placa In which m<n ar< judged by
achievement and merit in thtlr own
sptdllc mu of tnOwled&e and conduct.
"The l~ependence and competence or
the faculty, the commllment and eq..Uy
the compett.nce of the studtnt body.
are matten not to be compromiaJd,"
Niion said.
SECOND PRINCIPLE
The second and only other principle
to be coosidered, be continued, ii tQat
violence or the Utrut ol It must never
be pennitted to lnllue~ the acti~
or judgment or tbe aeadenuc commwuty.
"The federal pemment cannot.
should not -mU!t not -enforce aucb
principles. That is fundamtntally tJte
task and responsibUlty of the unlvenuy
community," be u.Jd.
He added, society need not fear for
continued appllcaUon of these two educa~
tional prlnclplt1, but every man must
dread damage to what be termed ~
largest, !rmt educaUonal gystem lD
history.
Nixon then spelled out a prescription
ror slckDeu in that particular soclety,
qualifying his statement with a lona·ttrm
program far Its eventual cure.
PRIMARY INSTRUMENT .
"From Ume immemorial , expulsion
has been the primary instrument o[
univeral.iy dlsc1pllnet'' be ukL
,.,,_ wbo would not abide by the
n1lfl cl tbe conununlty ol learninl have
simply been requlred to leave it. for any
other fonn of coercion woukl cauae: that
community to change lit lundamet>tal
nature.'' he uplalned.
He nolod alto U..t the lut eon.,...
enacted lawa stripping federal atcl and
...i.tance from studtnll eot1vlclld by
courll ol crimlnally dlanlptlng the edoca-
tional oyllem.
'"111e new rqulatloos ar< moderate
and Ibey are justlftecl," be .. Id.
"Given the .,.._,. tactics cl dlanlp-
tion anyone 90 convicted may fairly be
asmimed to have been uaaultlng tbe
p:ocelSel of tree 1nqulry_ whlcb are the
very Ille <I. learning," Nllon added.
PROTl!Cf IT!IEU' "Any IOCiety U..t will not proted H·
sell agalnll IUCh aaault exhlblll pre-
cious little respect for -mienect. com-
pared to which the lasue of public ordet
;., vtrJ near to (de mlnlmlt,)" be uld.
"The diffk:ulty of tllil moment, u of
most llm• wben fundamental priDclpla
ar< chall<D1ed, Is Iha! many cl U-
poslng the challenges, and even men of
thoOe .upporttng them, ... rupoodlng to
very basic problems."
Reasserting the twin principles of acl.·
demic treed.om while ignoring the issues
foremM\ In the minds of studenta posing:
a threat to them. hawtvtr, is not the
tot.al answer, he admitted. • •
SLOTHFUL, D18110NEST
"It is Jeu than ingloriOWI: tt Is aloth!ul
and dishonest. an iffront to those pnn.
ciples-and in the end fuUle."
Student. today point to many wronp
which muat be rl~hted, Nixon said, con·
tulng on to explain them in three broad
statemtMll, without mentlonilll 1pe--
clfics:
"We have seen a depenonalliation of
the educational experience. Our inltitu·
tions 'must reshape themselves, ltat this
turns to total alienation "
"student unrest does not utst ln a vac-
uum, but. reflects a deep and grnwlng
oocial unmt aHecllnl much ol oor world
tocby. 8ell-rtghteous Indication by eocl·
ety will IOlve none of Ulil. We must
resolve the internal coatradk:Ucm of ~
ei>mmunldes.''
UNIVERSITY REFORM
"Then must be university reform
including new uperimentation in cur.
ricu.11. aucb u ethnic 5tudles, student
involvement in the decision-mating pro-
cus and a new emphasis on facu1t7,
tea ching ."
Nixon said he has ordeml Finch, as
HEW director, to explore new methods
of accomplishing these needs and eu-
ing tenslolls in tht educational commu-
nity.
He said bil administration wUl always
be: open t'o constructive suuesUons.
"But the forcu of stp,rat.km and non--
rtason muat be replaced by vi,oroua:,
pmuuive and Jawtul eUOrts for con.
structive cha.rip," his policy atattment
concluded.
•
OftANOI CQU1 l'WLmt!Ne ~NIT
leMrt N W"4 .. ,....,,,. tflf ,..,...
J.c• l. C.1J.y
Ylcit,,...... eM ~111--..
fJi•"'•' K11tll -n.111 ... A. M~r•lll11• _ .....
AJMrt w. ••t.t w1111 .... •••• ~ tM!tlrltlM ... ••11or Cllf lf!IW " ............ lOt ltlri ltr .. t
M1m .. .-.w ...... P.O •••• no. tl'MI --.._.. ...... , tl11 ..., ...... ...,,..,..
c... ... , ... ~J"""" uw.. IMfll m a..._
BUSINESS ,\ND PLEASURE -Although bis week-
end visit to the Onnge Coast bad a festive air
about it, President Nixo11 also spent time cQnfer-
rinc with top aides on the Vietnam War. Ready to
board Air Force One for return flight to Washing-
ton are (from left) Nixon, Secretary of State Wil·
llam P. Rogers, U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam
Ellsworth Bunker, former U.S. Deputy Military
Commander in Vi.et.Dam Gen. Andrew J. Good.pas-
ter and oaUooal security advisor Henry Kissinger.
Coast Bids Nixon Farewel]
350 at El Toro See Pr.esident Off After Visit
By RICllAJID P. NALL
Of .. Di9fb' l'tllt ...,,
Project Dela1fid .
-Valley Stymied
.... I "
On LarWin Tract
Militant opponent.a ol the p:opoitd 5001&nd development.
home Larwln Tract in Fountain V11ley JllJlU E. £rl.ckson, a Santa .Ua 4t.-
are rallying forces today to eonUnoe tomey' repru.nim, the Larwln O:m-
the fight which gained ·them at leut pany, refuted C.ppiul'a claim.I poinUnl
a delay Friday In conatructlon cl the lo city onllnanw and atate lawa lo
email.Jot i-s. show tbat the Larwln Company had
Mort than 100 residents crammed City ~in a completely Ifill manner.
Hall Friday as councilmen heard four PU'ker ruled also that Friday'• bNrlng
and one-half hours of testimony, then was to be conducted on action taken
reached a 2·2 deadlock on an appeal by the Plannina Com,nlWon, and zoning
to reverse plannlq commission approval actiom taken earlier by the counclJ were
~ the Larwin development. not relevant to the matter.
' The tie vote means Larwin developers BASIC OPP<m'J10N
cannot move until the City Council takea Residents who live near the propoeed
elther affirmative or negative 1ction on Lanrin Tract pointed out more bu.le:
the appeal. The special hearing w1s ·Uo Som of their t. contlnued until the council'• April l 0~ n. e com:men ran as follows: regular meeting durlng Friday's session, but alter the meeting, city officials decid4 °l'm worried about having to PIY
ed to hold the hearing at 7 p.m. this for the klcls In the Lanrln Tract. I
Tuesday night. settled hert becawie of the dty'1 at·
mospbere of low density bouslnc·"
BEGIN AGAIN "I'm tired of bumping my noae on
If councilmen uphold the appeal, the a block wall just outside the back door."
·Larwin Company must begin 111 over "'People boUjhl here for 7,20!t iquare
again and submit new tract maps for feet. Your planning DO"if la pretty poor."-
approval of planner11. Jf the appeal i11 "'f WOJTY about the educaUooal qulllty
denied, the Larwin Tract will proceed of our school.! with high denalty bousin&.'•
as iCheduled. '"'Mle issue is not legal, I'm 1tmpJy
Larwiti Company propose1 to build worried about the quality and ablllty:
500 homes on property 1ocated between of this council to represent the people."
Talbert and Ellis -AveOues and Newland "The F.dlson Right of W1y figured
and Magnolia Streets. The tract comes in the tract u a developed park la
under the city's 7,200 square feet per usable ooly u a green belt. It's pro-
lot planned developmenC ordinance. , bably the biggest dog-nm in the state. Tbe pralclmUal seal on Air Force
One eeemed llldly 111Dbollc cl the
agonies of the pmidency Sunday u
Richard Nbon, hit wtle and atclea beercl-
ed the big jet at El Toro Marine Corpa
Air Slltlon.
AndreW J. ·Goodputer, former. deputy
commandd cl· U.S. forte1 In Vlelnam
and newly nained a1lled commancler cl
the Nortb :A-. 'l'r<aty Orpolzatloo
shoulder. He •tumed back smiling and
shook the )'CJWllsltr's mi.all hand.
Timothy tieanied-and saluted.
The Pre.sident in a blue-gray suit look·
eel tanned and relaxed after his San
Clemente weekend. Mrs. Nixon ·was
wearing a areen and yellow plaid suiL
Opponents. pointing to some of the "This tract Ui not new and untque. ·~
5,000 square-foot lots proposed in the "Even rals become neurotic when ·
tract, claim it will be crowded, increase overcrowded. l came here for bruthing
Tbe ftm:t •'Ii• that l)'lllbollzes
-cluiched Ill olive branch ol peace in ooe takn and the arrow• or
war in the other.
Thtt balance cl peace anci po-. the
Vietnam war, had been cll.oc:uued by
the President and hi> aldes llhortly before
a helicopter wldlked Nl1on and bit en-touraae to the Marine baae.
Before boarding Air Force One to
return to Wultlnlton late Sunday, the
Pruldent met with Ellnrorth Bunker.
U.S. ambusador to Saigoo, and Gen.
forea.. \
Tbelr dlacuuloDa cootlnued for three
boun SimciJy, thon ........ion the !Ulbl
back to Wulllngton.
A crowd ·« abool SIO _. wu
on hand al El Toro to apPlaucl and
bid farewell. n waa Nixon'• flnt vlltt
to the county of hit . blrtb alnce tbe
praldeotlal lnau11Jr11tlon.
There w11 a 1peclal trut for I-year-old
~ Fiona ol Wllmlntilon aa the
Prealdent and fJnl lady veered toward
the llllliUn1 crowd.
The boy waa tbnut by hit father
over the crowd toward the President.
Mrs. Nixon touched her husband's
Asked · If Nixon ·bad purchased any
real estitte· in Orange County, a press
aide told a reporter wlth a grin: "!
think he's taking a look at the Queen
Mary." The joke alluded to press and
public speculation \hat Nixon might buy
property for a home and library in
the area.
After about 1 10..minute handshaking
round, the President and Mrs. Nixon
hurried up the ramp, waved and left
on the shrieking thru5t of four big jet
englnes.
the lax burden, and destroy the original space and elbow room, and I don 't
la rge-lot concept of the city for which want to support the Larwin Tract with
they moved to Fountain Valley. my tu: money."
Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger opened When the final vote was tallied -
Friday's session, told the packed au-correcUy -councilmen John Harper.
I · · th and Edward JU!t favored stopping the dience he had persona Jnterest m e Larwin development while Fregeau and
rlevelopment, handed the gavel to Vice--councilman Joseph Courregta were In
Mayor Donald Fregeau and spent the favor of the tract. rest or the night sitting in the audience
with his wire.
BEA VY APPLAUSE
Heavy applause broke out, when at
12:30 a.m. the·councll f!nally voted and
the tote board sho'wed a surprise "yes••
by Fregeau's name and it appeared
the protest.ors had won 3-1.
* * * Councilmen Give
,,..... Pqe. I From Page l But before the clapping could echo
from the walls Fregeau yelled, "No!
l made an error and mistakenly pwlled
the wrong button. My vote is no!"
Reasons for
Votes on Tract
COMMUNITY CONGRESS • • • ECONOMICS. • • The boos that greeted Freguu's state--Once the vote was taken Friday night
unfortunately remains static once It ls
conipleted.
"We must re.oogniu that those jigsaw
pUJZlea 'All l!i'ftr be put toðer, tbat
we ~ve to·taie certaJn risks," he .cided. '
He advoctt.ed 1 cultural and educational
1ystem which is developed according
to a atratqically played game like chess.
one which is flezible and adaptable.
CULTURE IMPOSllD
:Under the jipa.w system cut1~ and
e<fucatjon are impQHd on the people
by prominent cltiiens, witJ>out; taking
into C<lttiideration bl'Old · community_
cooperation at the grus root.t level.
"Our block-walled, windowleas homes
isolate one another," be continued. "We
must b.-eak down these concrete barriers,
realize that we are alienated and work
together u .. family.''
Oatanzaro IUaut<d U..t tbe !int step
toward progress must come frun the
outside, that the city must hire 1 team
of Independent researcben to llucly the
city and rind out "wbo ft are."
Frotn P-.e I
HINDERAKER ..
can take to make it viable .
He stressed the need for a rule of
law, ba1ed or. broad consent and not
just enrorced by police. "If we have
to have a policeman every 10 fee t,
we can"t have. a viable community,"
he said.
The educator allo c11led on HunUngton
Beach citizens to provide a community
which can adapt to change, one which
hu the attitude of the 1chol1t who
Js alway• 11kln1 que.ation.s and uaminln&
the alternaUvu.
ID.nderaker pointed out thlit this is
one ol the cardinal concepts of a living
community, 11yin1 ''tht world dttnands
a lot more than citizens wbo remain
il.aUc."
"We must also learn how to accomplish
things within our poolltical 5ystem," the
keynoter said, yet at the samt Ume
calling for an open society in vth.ich
there i!: a fret Dow of ideas.
"A hllh degree ol lreedom ol apeech
brlnp wJth tt a certain amount of ferment
and some ol the best Ideas tW>lve out or dilagreement," he commented. "We
are an unhealthy toelety if we cannot
tolente tbe compeUUon of these Ideas."
He called on memben of the 0><alled
"establlahment" to leavt It open for
all the ' J em. t n t 1 d the community r<mlndltia tbe Jlll'&ll U..l "thooe who
stt out k> destroy tht establlsrneot are
U-""" feel that -Ibey clon't have an71hio& lo_ ..
The _. a1ao urpd Huntington
Beach to dlecrfbe to 1 1 y • t e m of
urban eotlllkm. to develop t a 1 k forces
whlch would lmmedi1teb" f a c e
lhem1elve1 with the problema of employ·
ment, law enforcement, hulth. wtUare,
cdueltlon and recr<alloll.
FinaUy, Hinderake r 1aJd, there h1 a
ntf!d l\Jr le1dershlp bAsed on perruulon
lnsltad of 1uthority. "Good le1der.shlp
mu1t •fmbollze the valuts of the com·
munlty r1ther thin tell It what to do,"
he said .
ment had twice the volume of. the on the Larwin Tract, uch of the Foun-
1'\en the city could set itaell some Beach there are only 300 houses for previous applause. When the vice mayor lain Valley councilmen 11ve • lhort
reallstio' goals, engage in~ p~ sale and tht vacancy factor in asked the substitute city attorney, Jack ammtation of. why be voted in such
ning and erUr" a pha&e of acgrta&ive apartme.nll Is 'only me pe!'Cf:Dt, making Parker. if he could legally switch his a manner.
'
achievement. -f it difficult for employes of a new firm vote. the audience shouted "No!". and Here's what they Wd.
t · lo ... .._ Jahn u .. --... .. , voted yes on the a,..,.11. GROUPS SBIVOl!'"Wlrn • • o move lD --continued to boo. ._.~ ,.,,.. ~~u -.. all · • ote be k to stop the Larwin Trac.ti "This Is not A Sm.II I•mem•·r d'-·-lon ~·p Rapid cbJn.te" ¥_.;'!I· mn town w1t11 Parker asked that a rev ta en, the tr cl . 1 .,. uo; ...._.,_ e•vM 1 nd , to I another tw" hen h aid same a map M saw 1· ·--n under the C•-·-·-·"'p ol Dr. Clare only a ior 1 re.ICIW'te, a arge and added 1st w e s , ,,,_. 1 ..... _ .. h....... . n..... ber ~~~ · --• of Ind I I d I t 11 the otln chin Vu~ or uie zone ......... ""e in ut;\;em . Hall, rtacted with shock to Catanzaro's city in ir=u Ultra eve opmen "I'm not even sure v g ma e 1t i!: dlfferent now and I am asaJn.st __ ., ....... Iha has made a tough adjustment for the used by this council Js even legll: attd ,·t." • remarks but g1:1-.a11.y ...,....... t city. J think a revote should be taken vocally." "aomething must be done." Edward Just, voted yes on the appeal, At lea.st part of the b~ ·waa placed City Attorney Donald Boofa expressed Angry citizens then filed out of council "In the past 1 v 0 t e d for plumed
th t f t.be .t b the view that the "city has a poor chambers prepared to renew the battle developments, knowing full well it mla:ht
on ehona ~d ~'H "•~Beuru yh .Y record in luring commercial development April 1. i·ump up and blte me u now, becauie one w !i8l • un .... -e-• ac is since· It gained· McDonnell Douglas." Throughout the more than four hours growing up too fast. 'I11e rtsident.s are o! testimony, ~1ichael R. Cappi:.z!, a I felt th•t If they met the ordinance
I ~-too ma dille nt s It was agreed by all that the land I had no -ounds for op-iuon to make com ng uum ny re source · 1. lawyer and resident of Fountain Valley ~ ...,.., M ....... It' __ , uJ•-bad Ji is here, but it has to be made attrac 1ve it stick. Now I feel I have 1 chance "'3--. s 11U1. q K as as wu served as pr imary spokesman for the represented.'' to developers. to stop a small-lot propo1al."
J F ol ••· p pert Ow Larwln opposition. Just conUnlH!d, "I also do not 1 .. 1 Another member of the diacuuion oe erm, "ft: ro Y ners CappizzJ, In nearly two hours of speak· group, Mn. Carole Wall, said much Protective League, said, "We've got to Ing, based his opposition 00 what he the Larwtn Company should tf:Cf:ive
work is already in progress to remt:mdy act fast. There has been a rapid change claimed were several JesaJ techn!calliles, credlt for land (the Edison Co. e1aement)
the "l u ....... she f It that the edi from farm to urban and we haven't • which it does not own. We are living: °' ua on, IN'-e m a adjusted." including the following: them land, and the cosl of developLng
wu not doing its job in telllnc the -A poS!!llble conflict of interest con-the park will simply be ............ on to pe:opl.e about it. Fenn, however, opposed any free give--cerning the mayor, city attorney F.dwin ~
Objection centered around t h e away by the city lo lure commercial Martin, and an unnamed councilman. ~ei::~. owners, rather than the
speaker'• .suggestion of hiring an outside investment. -Illegal zone changes made by the Donald Fregeau, voted no on the 1p-
agency to do a survey. It was felt Horton emphasized the people factors council in Ordinance 515, pasl!d Dec. peal, "My particular view is that over
by several ptrtlcipants that the com· for drawing commercial Interest. "You J7. the years we have gone throuch changes
munity should be included in such a can't attract business and industry until ~e or the planning commissioners on our master plan. This small-lot
project. you can get people to live here," he was too new to hla job to have adequ ate development i5 not something we have
Panel member Pat McGi.Mis said that 5aid. background to make a decision on the just plucked out of the a.ir at this
the average Orange County resident has "We have control or these factors," Larwin Tract. time."
been too heavily involved with the 11e added. -The special planning commission Joseph COurreges, voted no on the
aerorpace industry and has not yet Most citizens felt educating the meeting on Feb. 27 which reversed appeal, "My vol.log is based on the fact
learned how to get involved with the residents to what mlght h a p p e n , previous den ial or the tract was too 1 personally think this development is
community. especially in the way ol property taxes, hastily called. a good one. I remember hot charges
The general tenor of the discussion if the clty develops without a commercial -Apparent inconsistency or the Larwin made dw1ng the blt'tle for incorporation,
was summed up by one panel member base, would help the problem. Tract with the city's general plan of but look where we are todly.''
who added, "We all come from such 1--'----'---''---------------------------------
varying backgrounds that all of us iden-
Wy"with 10rrteplact ebit: than Huntington
Belch. t think that If we could begin
to identify with the community ~·e could
get ahead.''
FNM Pqe l
POLLUTION. ••
r.,,.ired the n1ptured line& three times,
only to have them broken again by_
recurrent flooding.
Slon< said the city upecta to gel
its repair project buttoned up tooay
but Lhal unfortunately the pollution wlll
continue for about two months.
"There are nine sewage treatment
planta in San Bernardino and Rlverslde
cwndff that are dumping 1 total ot
50 mllHon gallons of sewage Into the
tributaries of the Santa Ana River each
day," he aa.id .
"Althouih this is treated aewage, It'•
sew11e nevertheleu and k contains a
h1gh conteut o( b6cttria acccrdin1 to
our aamplinc."
Al Joni 11. t.bere" ls "ater flowing
In the Santi Ana Rlvtr bed the polluted
au-will be dumped Into the ocean.
"Thtte art no m te regutadorrl re-
quiring thlt the lNattd sewage be of
a ctrtaln quality. We c•nnot rely on
the fact t h a t the sewage ts tttated
and disinfected," t ald Stone.
"TN• Is the first tJme that t1 can
remember that we·ve had a prolonged
rlow of the Santa Ana RJvu. Unles1
30mt'thing unforeseen hlnpena the pro-
blem will be with us Wiii! tho flew
erase,, \\'hlch coukt be 11 long 11 two
1nonth~."
•
. , • • • • ;. • • · • • .. "·l. • • • • • • • •• ' • l •'I" ' • '
Q OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
e rings sized end repaired e diamonds end precious &fonts remounted e pearls restrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE AU: TYPES OF JEWELRY
HAUOl SHOl'PIN•
CINftl
JJOO HAllOl II.VD.
COSTA MISA 14S.t4H o.,.. M..., ,..._ I'll 'Ill ' ,...,
HUllTIN•TON ClllTb
llACH I DIN ...
HUllTIM•TON lllACH
ni.1101
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BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the_ Wind
01' Greasy Murphy dropped in
this morning to tell me a sad tale
about all the hassling on hospitals
in Huntington Beach and to suggest
that the City Council should give
at least as much attention to the
hospitals as they did to dogs.
"I've been tryin' to make some
sense out of all this yjikkin' about
whether it's better tot the city to
have just one big hos{>ital out there
on Beach Boulevard. or to have
that one and a couple or so little
ones.
"I'm not the kind -my clothes
are a bit oily -to be allo\ved
to wander around tlirough hospitals
so I don't know what's inside that
makes the differP.nce. • "I asked my doctor 'vhich 'vas
best and when he suggested that
I might need major surgery, I
decided I really didn't care about
findin' out all about the inside.
Besides that, he might have stock
in one of the little hospitals.
"Then I read in the paper that
the councilmen went right down
to the city pound to look it over
to see if it was fit for dogs when
some woman complained about the
place.
llf understand from some coun·
cilmep that they've never seen the
inside of either the small hospital
or the big one to see what kind
would be best for the city. • "Why, I understand that lhe
councilmen wouldn't even listen to
debate on the hospital hassle. Why
should they? The city attorney said
that they couldn't do anything
anyhow.
"Bob Zinngrabe is convertin' his
convalescent hospital t o a
lipecialized ho~ital to do certain
things over lhere and the big
hospital is complainin' that the
small hospital ,will make it im-
possible for them to expand and
buy a lot of big equipment.
"I don't give a darn if either
one of them makes a nickel or
not so long as there's a hospital
handy if I fall off the oil rig or
something'. But I sure would feel
better if I was sure the city council
had looked into this hospital hassle
completely.''
Of course, 01' Greasy knows
nothing at alJ about anything. He
even suggested that as long as
there has been no public hearing
on what looks like at least a semi-
public use, the people will never
really know 'vhat would be best
for the communitv as a '"'hole.
Perhaps no one raf.es. • Another dilemma is w h ere
should the 80 hospital beds no'v
needed in this communlty go -
to Huntington lntercommunity or
to Pacifica Hospital?
Both are privately-owned
facilities and both claim the right
of private enterprise to build as
best suits the profit-loss sheet and
the community.
Anyone who would like to
debate this one shou1d send letters
streaming to the editor and to the
city council. Th J s is one which
seems almost impossible to settle
without making anyone angry.
Involving
Question
Un~nswered
Do the majority ol residents or •tunt-
lngton Beach want to get involved in the
<Xlmtnunlty or to iake advantage of civic
opportunities?
This is but one or the quesUons raised,
but unanswered during Saturday's Com-
munity Congress sessions on Civic Op-
portunities. ~ionte Nitzkowski presented
the facts of civic opportunit'y to the
scores of CXJm.ihunity leaden, but It was
up to the leaders to find solutions.
Nitzkowski pointed out that Hunting·
too Beach has one of the finest. recreR·
tiooal beaches and climate "nywhere in
the world.
He explained how the "cilf govern·
ment is in a program of rebuilding
some areas and planning to create ne1v
development in parts of the city now
considered blighted and hopelessly out
or step with modern progress."
He could not answer the queslion or
v.·hether the citizens want to becon1e
involved in the community or not. Nitz-
kowski suggested that resident.s be en·
couraged to bectime involved.
"Youth, in particular, should be.
v.•elCXJmed to the civic are.a or the com-
munity life," he said.
Community Congress is not intended
as a device to solve all problems, but
to make people acquainted with each
other and with the problems that do
exist, acCXJrding to Dale Dunn, mana.s:er
of the sponsoring Chamber or Com·
merct.
Many of the problems in the civi~
involvement area were stated as ques·
tions:
"Does the majority want to get in·
volved? 'Vho would coordinate mass
involvement in city government? Who
would listen to youth? Why do we sec
the same old faces at every meeting'!"
Participants in open discusssions of the
problems of civic involvement pointed
out that there is no problem with build·
ing interest if a freeway is running
through the neighborhood or when a pork
site is threatened.
Nitzkow~ki pointed out that v.·hen
Mayor Alvin M. Coen issued an open
invitation recently for residents lo appl y
for committee assignments that there
were 30 applications from a population
of about 105,000.
"It looks like too many people are
waiting for the man next door to do
something," observed one of the discus·
sion participants.
'Through the open discussions it was
emphasized that participation begiru;
with CXJmmunication, a two-way CXJm·
municatioo from the leaders of the com·
munity to all segments of the city and
to all people, the young, old, middle
aged, black, white and pink if they
are here/' and back again to the top.
"We have the assets. There is prog·
ress. There is more participation now
than ever before, but the need has never
been greater," said Nitzkowski.
"Those presently involved in civic
affairs would lllce CO;IJlp&ny," he said.
During 8'1mtnatlon, Nitzkowski pointed
out that the.re had been suggestions for
weekly scoreboards in the newspapers on
the issues before the community. 'l'bere
llad been considerable discussion of the
need for better communication channels
between city government and the aver·
age homeowner.
There is a need for a youth employ·
ment sef'Vice as a part of getting youth
interested in .the comunity and a real
effort to represent city government
"like it is" is essential, panelists said.
U.S. Plane Crashes
F AJRFORD, England (UPI I -An
American military transport plane car-
rying six persons crashed today, the
Ministry of Defense announced.
Ministry spokesmen 1aid the plane was
a Hercules Cl30. "It Js believed there
were no survivors,'' the spokesman said.
wirudng Asaociated Preis aclence writer, for !}is frank and factual "Drugs 1969''
om" pub!Wied In UN! DAILY PIWI'.
Now you can havt all the information contained in the 16-part series, and
more, in Blakealee's booklet. "What You Should Know About Drugs and NarcoUcs,"
for just $1. Clip the coupon below and maU it in today (allow two to three weeks (or
delivery due to heavy response to this offer).
·--------··------·-~ I T•: o ... look!tl
O"'°"• c ... 1 Dally Pilot
P.O. lox 5
y..,.eck, N. J. 0706
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Send me ...... copies of "What You Should Know About Drugs I
(Make checks I and NarcoUcs" at $1 each. Enclosed is $ ......... ,
I payable to Al•oclated Press).
I
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I NAME ... _, •• _ .......... _ ........ _ ........... _ ............... -......................... -... -...... I .
I I I ADDRISS ................................ _ .. _ ....... _ ....... -.CITY _ ....... -.... -..... -......... I
I STA~ -----------------....... .%IP .. ________ I
~--------···-·-----~ I l
-· Mitt~ 24, 1'169 (51 _ DAILY l'lt.fl' ;j
Congress 8. Smashing Success
' ~
By WlJJJAJI lllZD ~ ~ every pl\Mt ol Ille
Of .. .. .... .... In tbe comD1UQlty.
The IOCOlld &nnutl'~ for Com-Spo1t10red by lhe Huntlncfon Beacb
munlty Progress 'In • lfUnthtclon 8udl • Cbamber ol °""'"""'"' the e.,al •b
was hailed a stnUl>i\ll ......., belcre to ·bring'~ 'lefdott <lf,'l!>e ciJm..
lhe end ',ol,lhe closllig i;;,,a,....Sat~ mlllllty and lo aoq.,.r..t lbem, With efdt
and pllJIS (or a tblrd ef'eiil~f"ti. alreldy -and with ...,. 0r lhe · ,..tlltms
being ~e before the 1iat ~deltpte 1ac1' •i<6 ..;..;.:._""' •
filed out ,ol the Golden ·West Collep · "Pi ·~· ...,....,...\>'.. ·
auditorium. DuM ~ !hit ~tlon ls lhe
Community Congress, sugg'8ted tw . main Soil and "Juclglnc from Ille II>
years ago by Councllman Hall'1 Kaul· maoed w)Ume of dlscUBllOO· ft;Ollt lhe
man and brought Into bflng locolly by opening· -.Ion to the cloM' ol the af.
Chamber ol Commer<e Manqei' Dile le.,_ ~ lhll waa a 'lllllllllllng
Dunn, wU attended by about 275 ~ ·~11 •
Nigeria Claims Six Biafran ·Planes Do:wll
' LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -Federal ,
planes shot down or destroyed • aix_
aircraft "in the Servi~ of the rebels"
of Biafra in the past four days,.Nlgertan
radio claimed today.
; It <Ud. not live at\Y fal'lller 'ldin-
Ullcatlon ol lhe '1r:craft. Plllfes•cwy)ng
relief to• Blafra, some m~· by
Americans, fly 1upplles · ·to· the
..... s1on1a1 .. bels nlgbOy.
SALE
on e-half p rice
alligator wallets
3.00-7.50 rev. 1.00. u.oo
'
Manhattan baa styled beaulilully marke<.
alligator skins lnto hcmdaom& ksy cases.
wallets. pcu;s.cmes or billfolds. Elo::ep
tional values! Call Jn your order today
may oo men.'11.furniahings 8J
His viewpoint wu lbared bf many
pmona attendlnC the cooarea for Ute
• aecond Ume. A new format w .. credited
by moat for IDc:reued lnttmt In the
event
'l1lree main tOplca were dlacuSled -
Civic Opportunitiee, Econ o m 1 c Op-
portun!U .. and CUitural and Educational
Opportunities. Following pmontatloo of
the facts in one ol the three areas.
small groups met and dJacussed in detail
the problems involved in particular
areas.
, 'f"n·o main sessions were held so that
a delegate could attend two of the three
discusilom. A summary-.of tbe diy's
activities wu given during the luncheon
meeUng.
The chamber today Js tabulating: the
questionnaires returned by delegates, but
several' ol the chamber memben irr
volved In staging Ute congreg said that
• already tJley ant.icipate a thUd congress
with a format &lmilar to the ·one uaed
this year.
Saturday'• c:oncras hrlolved a lot If
people and a lot ol -• •Uld -• .. lhe Individuals Who -.re ........
lion for 111·-· Dwm ,oald.
Dr. Iv111'Hlnderak.er, keynote' ipllka',
and. C. E· ~'BW" WOO!dl, ,cblmber ~ :
dent, wbo set lhe tone lor lhe -Peter Horton aemd u pmialor lot
lhe economic opportuptUes podlo!I. Panel moderaton were Diin L. Bpnet, Jr.1 Robert L. Merriman, Doyle MUler ana:
Kenneth ·A. Reynolds.
Presenting the civic opportuoilles pm.
gram was Moote Nitztowlkl. Paael
moderators incuded Jack P'eehan, Joe
Halisky, Ben Londeree IDd Raymond
Picard.
Handling c:ultural and educatlonal op-
portunities was Dr. James L. Catanzaro..
Panel moderators were Roger G.
B<tsworth, Dr. Ethan Fullmer, Dr.
Clarence Hall and Dr. Dale Miller.
Ready to mt In at in-tor and
moderator positiom were Dr. Henrr,
Kaufman, Jerry Shea mid Bill Wren.
SALE
our exclusive
Gold Toe hose
· reduced 20% ••• ,
for one week only
soc -·1.60 ng, 1.00.2.00
Now ls the time lo r&ettx:k your hoBlery
wardrobe. Every single pair of Gold Toa
socks in stock is reduced 20% IO you're
sure lo find just the cclors and typea p>u
wanLFromourWBtslY.leselecilon: ,
reg. 200 <l'm-lheoill"ooland nylaQ UO
reg. l.&lanklalstylewoolandnylon 1.20
reg. l.75 ovar-th&call a>llon llsls 1.411
reg. l.25anklet style-I.isle IAO
·reg, 1.7 5 over-th<i<:all textun.od nylon l.40
ceg. 1.25 anklet slyle texturued nylon I.DO
ceg. I.SO Orloitli> acrylic crewsocb 1.20
reg, l .&!Orlonli>aayllcdlesshos& L20
mayoomen'sfu~ 127
[.
C 'O
llll• S STOii
m"y co south coast plaza, san dlego fwy at bristol,. costa mesa;
546-9321 shop monday through saturday 10 a.m . to 9:30 p.m.
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Joe Stffl of Eastmanvile, Mich.,
ave up smoking last year after
·, physician told hirh It would
borten his life. Steel will be 109
farch 31.
~ The atomic .sc!nti.sts at tbe : gov-
lernment research center ~-
~eth, EnglaQ.d1 hav,e solved the
roblem of ;the, bathwater that aJ-
ays gets cold so quickly. 'The
bnswer, they announced in their
tiewspaper Atom News, is that it
doesn't. The bather just gets used lo the beat. •
LT-V rStoek
D~wnA~ter
Merger Suit
NEW YOR (AP) -The price ol Lilll'Tem<o-VOIJ&b~ Inc, and JOllll 11 LaOlhJln Steel Corp. 1tock<lectlnecl today
after the Jua~ 0.l)Ortment &IUIOlll1COd
Jt would file suit to force Ling-Temco·
V°'Jht !-0 dlspoae · of iu interut in
the steel company.
LTV sokl at N6. down •i.:s on JU
common atoci:, afW, ,l>elnJ delayed in
opening.
Ung-Te~Vought, a conclomcrate
company with wlde.ly di y e r a l f i e d
sub&idiariu, owiu 83-percent' of Jones
& Laughlin stock. It bu <lfered to
buy tbe remainder.
The Juaijce Dtpartment'a plan to move
against Ung-Temco-Vought on antitrust
grounds adversely affected !lock prices
ol other conglomerates. AMK Corp. stock
declined $1.25 ;• share. Avco; Gulf &
Western ·1ndwtries and Nalional General
\\-ere oU less than $1.
"If the Justice Department succeeds
in its test ~ it wo~Jd open the way
for further actions to force divestitures
in some of ,the bigger takeovers," said
Eldon A. Grim, senior vice president
of the brokerage firm Walston & Co.
-.--.
Living in Drains
---...... -
EaeestlropPitlfl l11ue
Review Okayed
For Hoffa,
F..m Tiie WIN Servi.., • ' that state libel l~l"' d not apply to
The s ~ .rdedl ~'Y that radM>televlsk>n broadcasts on matM
J ~:a fmprl.;ned ~amaters o[ public inttrest unless the material
Uaolmes chltr ~ farmer bea~l•"t Wf.S aired with malicious inlenl. on • · <! ~ ~ ... -In another declllon, federaJ ~ champion Caaaius Clay a!e enliUed to were given a chance by I.he court to
lower court n:vtew ol. ~ir clal.mt that win their freedom on grounds illtJ:al
they were. victims or ille1al federal evidence was used to convict them.
eavuctroppma. . They may raise the claim of an illepl ~.the basis of. its recent wittL1:pp1ng search even though the claim wu not.
decwon, tbe court also ordered similar made at trial and they are enliUed
rehearinp In about 13 other federal 10 a rul ing on the claim, tbe cowt
cases. said in a >3 decision. Desipte the reheitring order. there was
no indication that Holla, now serving
an eight-year penJtenUary sentence,
would be allowed his freedom while
the lower court proceedings are con-
ducted .
Clay, convicted of ref ming to report
ror d r a f t induction, is free on b a i I
pending the outcome of his ippeal .
Today's rulings stemmed from the
court'11 controversial March 10 decision
that government evidence based on n~
Jeagl eav~ping muat be turned over
to defense attorneys in it.s entirety if
the direct conver11ation of the defendant
was overheard or hill own premises were
bugged.
'Noguchi Wants
'Full Hearing'
On Dismissal
Grimm said the Just.ice Department's
decision 1o file su.it ''Wu not the massive
surprise it would have betn a month
ago."
The Jmtice Department in recent
weeks hu made known its intent.ion
to move against big mergers.
Vietnamese civili~.s forced from their homes by battles in a ~d
around Saigon Jive where they can. This group pf refugees -vic-
tims of the May offeiisive when their. houses were desti:oy~d in . th e
Y Bridge area -li"e in concrete drains tn the Cholon distnct.
In ordering the lower court action,
the court. also rejected out of hand
a government appeal for reconsideration
of the March 10 decillion on grounds
Jt would hamstri(lg 1ovemment national
security surveillance activities.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Dr. ThonW
T. Noguchi, ousted as Los Angeles cor-
oner after ·he was accused of praying
ror airplane crashes Ui bring alory '°
his office, Is determined to ficht bis
dismissal.
His attorney. Godfrey lsa{lc, demanded
Al noon today that the Civit Servict.
Commission conduct 1 full hearing into
what one pathologist calls the "affaire
Noguchi.'' . Demo Leader
Calls AQM
Plan 'Maginot'
Letters Reveal 'Interest'
Of 2 · Women in Fillmore
The court commented in the rehearing
ruling. for Hoffa and Clay that "of course,
a finding by the district court that
the surveillance was lawful would make
diacloeure and further proceedings un-
necessary."
In other actions, the court:
-Rejected a Chicago appeal which
challenged. the customary practice of
states to apportion th eir achoo! ex-
penditures on the basis of local property
taxes.
The County Board of Supervisors fired
Noguchi a week a~o after it~ ad-
ministrative ollicer, Lindon S. Hollin&er,
detailed in a 10.page Jetter w b e n he
said were examples of the coroner's
bizarre behavior observed by his ~taff.
One accusation jn Ute letter said : "You
stated on several oceuions that each
night you prayed that a (Boeing} 727
loaded Ui capacity would crash into the
International Hotel because the press
would then 'come and Noguchi would
be the center or attraction."
This cold-looking bird at ·Madilon
Wisc. Vilas Park Zoo ts actually en·
joying the balmy weather -pleasant
for him at least. This penquin, un-
recognizable when he's sitting down
on the job, probably is hoping the
~ director has hi! r_efrigeration sys-
m up to par since spring weather
just around the corner.
I • . -~ Queen Eli1.•beth's ,brother-in-law
lnay find himself on s,trike one ,of ~ese days. The E•rl Of Snowd'"en.
rofessional photop-apber and ·hus-
and of Princess Mlr~._et, HBs' ap-
ied to join the Association of
nematograph Television and Al· ~ed. Technicians whose walkouts in
e past have parll)yzed much of
ritish television. U the earl, 39,
nown to his press colleagues as
.t\ntony Armstrong:.;Jonts, gets into
lhe union -and the union says he
i\vil1 -he will have to join any ~trike or face possible expulsion. '
' .
\Villiam J. McCabe , 41, a twice ~
conulcttd forger, wa.s r elerued It
from the Di.strict of Columbia
Jail Jart 1Dttk afteT c court on:t.-
c arrWed reque.ttinQ hi1 free-
' dom. TM order wca a foraef'fl.
· Police acid McCGde appcrntt"
· drafted the document w 1': j l t
, wo:Jcing in tM jail'a records
offi«.
• j A stranger knocked at the door
p t Mrs. Adele Ll1berm•n'1 home
j n Menlo Park, Calif., and asked
!her 4-year-old dauirhter, Rabin, "Is
[Your mother in'?''l' "Yes," Robin
~ e p IJ e d, "But she's sleeping."
t"Well coold you bring me ber wal·
llet?" the man asked. Robin obedi-
lently brought the wallet 'Ibe man :took out '4$, handed it back to the
:little prl, and departed. i •
OSWEGO. N.Y. fAP) -The dlocovery WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen ate of 10.000 to 12,000 letters to President
Democratic leader Mike Man3field aaid Millard Fillmore. many of them from
today the Pe.nta1on already appears bent two women, has been disclosed by Prof.
on expanding President Nixon 's Charles fl.t Snyder of Oswego State
Safeguard antimissile system I n to ''a University.
great nuclear wall whose CO/!lts would The women were Dorolhea Dix, a
be incalculable." crusader for reform of insane asylums
Mansfield stopped short of announcing and prisons, and Ann Ella Carroll, a
his opposition to Nixon 's plan. But, in chost writer for Fillm ore during his
a statement, he reprimanded the Ddense uruuecessful 1&56 campaign to regain
Department for turning a limited pr~ the Presidency. He was president from
• posaI into "a vast program to convert 1148 to l&S2.
the entire nation in a missile ma&inot" Snyder said he found the papers whic h
-a reference to the World War II bad been bequeathed to the university.
Maginot Lint in Europe. ' Among the letters were mon than 70
He noted tbat Nixon called initi~y ffom Miss Dix expressinJ 4 "deep
only for two Satecuard inltallaUons, 11t }( penontJ .interest in Fillm~ ~du.rina: his
Montana and &outh Dakota, to protect. year as a widower," Snyder1Said..
350 American Minuteman mlMlles from · The first Mrs. Fillmore, Abigail
destruction ~ any Soviet strike. Powers died in 1853 after years ()f Bu~ Defenae Secretary Melvin R. Laird poor ~alth. Their daughter died the
and his subordinates, Mansfield said, next year. Five years laler the little·
now ·are talking like "an open-ended remembered 13th president.married fl.trs.
deployment of an area defense system Caroline c. Mcintosh, widow of an
aimed in any and all directions Is a Albany merchant.
foregone conclusion." Fillmore "made an · at.tractive figure
He said the Penlagon officlah were ... a real catch for inyone" the historian
playing "one-upmanship with Preaiden-said , but calling the Dix correspondence
tial decisions" and their testimony to love letters is "really jumping way
Senate committees last week "have tend-ahead."
ed to obfmcate, it setms lo me, the Snyder 11aid the letters show her ''deep
restraint w hie h characterized th e personal interest and concern for his
Pruident's decisions." heaJlh. They were cert.ain1y very cordial.
but beyond that the letters don 't show
Nixon, 'rru:deau
Meeting Clouded
WASHil1GTON (UPI) -Preoldel)t
Nixon welcomed Prime Minister Pierre
Elliott Trudeau today with a pledge
1o find "a common around better than
either of us had be.fore."
Nixon .said Canadi~American rela-
tions were 'not characterized by "a total
unanimity of view which destroys
creativity" blt by a -''lively dJvenity".
The ABM luue and Cuwda's drift
toward recopiUon Of Communist China
threatened to cloud the NJJOn.Trudeau
talk<.
an intimacy.''
A aecond set of letters Snyder df3CJ'ib-
ed as ... intriguing" wert: from glamorous
Miss Carroll, an ed.iU!r and daughter
Campus Violence
Lifts Fire Insurance
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Because
of campus violence and inOation, fire
insurance rates of all California school
buildings would climb 40 percent begin·
ning April I.
The Pacific Fire Ra ting Bureau, which
aets standard rates for insurance com-
panies, said Sunday the huge increase
was baaed on losses of $.1.I million
on achool fire insurance during the five.
year period, 1963-1967.
!Heavy Rains Wash Midwest
• : • !
•
lnt,ense Missouri Storm System Whitens Plains
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TUCSOAY
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ol a Maryland governor.
She "was not a bit reluctant Lo lry
lo influence Fillmore," Snyder said and
she often arranged personal visits at
campaign stops. But Fillmore avoided
her and was discreet in answerin g her
letters.
-Let stand a government order that
Chas. Pfizer & Co. must license its
drug tetracycline to other
pharmaceutical firms.
The. letters asserted Noguchi once con·
fided he was involved in a "forensic
Mafia" in which the country would be
divided up .
-Refused to interfere with a lower
court ruling in an Oregon case holding
Be a.u t y ·s a.lon•
., . :...·
FRONT ...
SIDE ...
BACK ...
ALL CURL, ALL COLOR,
ALL CUSTOM
\\'e snip and shape, custom-curl your ne w
h•irdo . Then w• custom-color your hair
with your own persona!iztd color. By
.1-·anci-tont, or course-our tint in a ne\v
push-button dispen ser that lets us create
j11s / the color you wan t, and duplica te it
''cry time! NRtural looking colors for gray
hair, to ning colors for bleached ha ir, and
ou r ul tra-soph isticated "Color Originals,"
th• style colors that set the styles! Fanci-
ton e color doesn't wash out,.conditionJ
your hair u it colon.
Ntwpoff Batch, Colil. llll ~ II~. Coata MMI, Calif •
111 I . ll'ttl tlt9'1
MtYlefr '"'""' ,_,_,
Costa Me.a, Calif. ,. ,..,.., ., ....
r;-N.11t l"lul Mt rklll' ··-"""f '9 ,,,...., ''"IUt
, Or•nff, Cellf • IW~.~ ... ""'°"' "D·n•
,,.... ... l$
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CklAM HA ti. TINT
with Shampoo
Most Cases
end Set,
$5 .75
COiia Mui, C1l if.
1¥ w. '"~ '"''' .. ,. ... f,q.))U
Santa Ana, C11if. ,. .,., "''"'"'"' '•hllw o..r 1'"""9 ..W.11
Fount•ln Vallty, Ctlif.
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JODEAN HASTINGS, "2-4321
.._..,, Mlrdl Mo IM I ·-U . .
In CHOC Garden
Fashio.nable
Ideas Grow ' .
Planting seeds for a garden will be rpem~rs of
CHOOettes, auxiliary to the Little Mermaid Guild of
Huntington Beach, When they meet tomorrow in the
home of Diane Barritt.
The young women will complete final arnmgements
for their second annual benefit whion sll<>w, a_ CHOC
Garden, taking place at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, April 19,
in the Golden Sails Inn, Long Beach.
Tickets, at $5 each, now are on sa1~ and alt'Proceeds
\vill be used for the support of Children's Hospital of
Orange County where the group also provides volunteer
service.
Miss Kim Hubbard, general chairman, will com-
ment on youthful sportswear provlde~11~ the Wet Seal
and after-five and formal wear from · ey's Fasbio1p.
Modelinf will be CHOC-ettes members including the
Misses Nancy Nelson, Laura Wagner, Renee McLeod.
.Valerie Arkle, Debbie-Bauer and Coleen Schroeder.
Assisting with arrangementJ are the Misses Juli
Sorenson, decorations; Nelson, location; Wagner, shop
:!ielection; Teri Thurm, prizes; Arkle, invitations, and
McLeOO, publicity.
Included in tlle prizer· to be given away will be a
weekend for two in Las Vegas.
Miss Kristen Cairns, a new member, will be we!·
corned during the meeting. CHOC-ette advisors are
Mrs. Charles Heller and Mrs. Frank Haigler.
SPRING? NOT .NECE SSARi LY - A lludy of c1othes ·flying out
of closets isn't 1lll indication that area young women are volun~
leering to help with spring cleaning. They're making room for
some of the newest styles they're planning to see when they at-
tend the second annual CHOC.ette fashion sh<>\>' taking place Sat.';
urd.ay, April 19, in the Golden Sails Inn. Planning to convinc&·
mothers that they "don't have a thing to wear" are (left•to right): ·-·
Renee McLeod, Nan~y Nelson and Kim Hubbard. •
'· ...
.. Royal Time
Predicted
•
A fabulous fun-filled Family ;Night at
Disneyland bas been announced as the next
major funding project for Children's Hospital
of Orange County.
The Magic Kingdom will roll out the red
carpet for a limited number of members of
the 13 suppcrting guilds and ii>eir guests on
Mother's Day, Sunday, May.11, beginning at
4 p.m.
Serving as general chairman of the event
will be Mrs. T. \V. \Velsb, Little Mermaid
Guild, Huntington Beach. Mrs. George Gartz,
Littlest Angel Guild, Yorba Linda, is «>-chair-
man, and treasurer is Mrs. Robert L. Doss,
Tres Osos Guild, Mission Viejo.
Tickets, at $3.75 each, will include un·
Jinu'ted use of all facilities with the exception
of the shooting galleries. They now are on
sale and may be obtained from any member
of. the participating guilds.
Coordinating the event. which will re--
place the annual fall CHOC Fair, will be the
Mmes. Robert Lucas, Cinderella Guild, New·
port Beach; Robert Thomas, Punch and
Judy, Costa Mesa; Charles Roberts, Queen
of Hearts, Laguna Beach, and Doss, Tres
Osos, Mission Viejo.
The tickets will not.Include food, which
may be purchased. in the park.
...
.Officers
Sealed
'\· '
New ' ~n will preside .
when tbe ."Fountain VaDer.
Hi!toricaJ ·Society meets at
7: 30 tonight in the home of ~1r. ·
arxl Mrs. Al Krukenberg.
Installed bf Mn. Dorise
Jesko, the city'• fir 1 t
librarian, were the Mmes,
Krukenberg, .P r e 1 i d e n t :
George ~aJd, first · vice
president in charge of p~
grams; Joseph Dltte, second
vice prt.sldcnt, membership;
Joe Courrege!, third vice
president, historian, a n d
TbClnu Kohl, fourth vice
pfesideot, special events.
Also taking office were Mn.
Ronald Murphy, secretary;
Mrs. Lorrin Lamme r s,
treasurer, and Stan Stafford,
auditor.
Chairmen appointed were
Mrl. Muarll Kato and Mri.
David Solonlno, holpltallty;
Ron Rice,' outside speakeri;
Don Fregeau, n.port.s from
other aocietiel;11 Mn. Orvie
Hlghum, hi.stoiical news, an(l
James Diet, parliamentarian.
Th<' society mtela the fourth
MQDday of each month and
plan1 to make the new com-
munity center its permanent
meeUng plEice next month.
Stud.ents
'Can Do'
•.
A community drive to co1·
Ject a variety of items needed
at Fairview State 'Hospital ii
being conducted by Marina
High S c h o o I organizations
under the direction of student
chairmen Kbrls Bender and
Jerry Miles, who • organized
the projecf.
In addition to ae«pting con:,
tributions from the IChoolrl •
student body, they 1lso are
accepting contributioDs frm:g_
are:i nelghborhoods.
· Among the things they are
collecting are clean, useable
clothing in small to large sizei
for men, women and children;
toys in good condition, ~
any type of uncomplicatect:
games. ,· . ·'· They also are acceptinl
chlldren's boob and fOCllS
coupons \yhicih will be use:4.
to help purchase a' school ~·
-for excepj.lonal dilldren. :;.
The Ancbbr Club will ~
making Easter baskets for t1*
hospitalized children, so ui • studenls also are collecUnt:-
~ soft, wrap~ candy. ~
The guilds also plan to award prizes dur· 1nJ1 the evening with first prize to be six days
in 'l!awaii for a family of four.
Membership again wilt ~
open to the public as soon
as the new center ill available
for meeUnp, and addiUonal
Information may_1 be obtalnod
by ca.llln& elmer M r s •
Krukenber& or Mr1. Ditte.
ALL· ABOAR0:..Everybody ls invi~ed to climb o~
the bandwagon to provide a bus needed for excep-
tional children by contributing ccqpons during a
community drive sponsored by Marina High School
youth groups. Majdng their donaijon toward pur-
chase of the bus are (left to right) Jerry Miles and
KhriS Bender, chairriien, and Cheri Pratte, Anchor
Club president: The young people's organizations
are cooperating in the drive to provide many neces-
.sary articles for Fairview State Hospital.
Cooperating In the coui:.!'
munity drive ls a committet
comprised of Greg Hellan~
senior class president; Shaws
Millbern, freshman c I a s I.
president; Qob Childs, Ke:f
Club; Cieri Pratte, Anchor
Club; Chris Leland, lneract
Club: Chris Briggs, Polarlst
and Alan M..W, Choir elul».: ~ ·~
'Tip for Brides: Jt Takes Two lo Tan.go
DEAR ANN LANDERS; Sever•l o1·
us camerameD here at UniversaJ StudiOI
in Hollywood read your column and
d!!CUJI it regularly. Five times in the
past two months you have publlabed
letters with the same basic theme -
"Men are animals, interested only in
utlsfying their own sexual needs ."
The Jetter that really ticked me off
wu the one Crom the wile who said
she felt like a prostitute. According to
her, sex was a nuisance and a bore.
She eot nothing from It but exhaustion.
She said she was will ing to put up
with It, however, in exchange for respec-
tability aJld lhe finandal security of
maniage.
You've stated many times that women
who are married to inept, clumsy klvert:
should teacb them. (Nl1ht achool,
ANN I.ANDERS
remember?) Well. I uy men can teach
night tcbool cl .... 1, ,too. And they ' DEAR ANN' µNpERS, I 1111 a If.
should. An Inexperienced bride often Is year-old girl with • mentally rtl~ed
fearful, lnhlblted and motionless. A brother. He is aevtn years older th'"'1
man who ii loving and consklente can I. Lately I've been wondering what
work wonden "1th' even the dumbest will become ol him when Mom and
partner if she is wllllng to. learn. -Dad pu1 on.
J:t.f. In addlUoo to being reterdtd, my
DEAR J.~f.t Bravo. Tlte eper1dv1 brother has a spinal prob~ .and. Is
words are comma.aJc1tSon, coeperatloe completely helpless. He needs to be
1acl alll<lflllme11. T H AN It S FOR bathed, fed llJ1d dressed like ID Infant:
WRITING. I'm beginning ,. wonder If t h •
reipomibilily will fall on me. • Please
don't think I am &elfish or cruel, but
I ·don't want the burden ol my ban-
dlcajlpod brothei. It could llJ>Oll my
chances for marriage.
I ~ve never beard Of a place that
cares for peoi)le who' are both relafded
and•ulppled. Have ~? I wouldn't date
dlacuu this With my parents: Please
help me. -CLOUDY. FIJt\Jl\E
DEAR CLOUDY: Yo. MUST discoss
this wills yoar partnta. I& lJ tlttlr
rupooslbmty ,. ,.. 11111 ywr b..-r
11 provided for arttr Ibey art cone.
b,n ln1uruct eollcy pllr'Cbued early
WfUkl plfll'l\ee 1ood c11re in a private
latUtudon. It also woWd give your
parents peace of mind. I ltope ~y·
hive Sidi a policy.
as Well as ..
' " .. :· ••
. If there are no runds ror private care.
and no "''llling rclallrc. the patient
becomes a ward of tht slate and Is
leltt le a state laltllulion.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother
was very disappointed when I marril'd
J>\>IUP· She felt he wasn't good enough
foe me because his parents were foreign
bQrn end not "society." "'
Every momin~ Mother telephoOH fo
mske some cutting remark about him,
such a1 "Philip's sox were baggy last.
night. Does he own garters?" Or "Philip
offended Mn. Beck because he Ignored
her and talked to the~ wo.man et hls
rig_ht all through dinner.'' I hate to
hear the phOne ring in the morning.
Right now rny stomach ls tied up in
~ knot.~. I need your advice. -UPTJGHT ~
DEAR UP: TeD Yo,tr mellter ~:
,.fuse ,. .. 1er ... ""1 1..-crldcltoof:
al y,.r hasbud. U ... f..,.U, c11op::
Mr olf la mldsentence. : • •• ~ What awaits you on tl'te other lid.!; •• of the maniage vtil? HO'lp' CID YOUir'
be SUt't your mlirrlage 'will work! Rea(:
Ann (..anders' booklet "Marriage -~
to Expect." Send your request to Ann>;
Landers In care of thi1 newspaper encloto;;
Ing SO cents In coin llJ1d I Joni, ltam!>«I.!
se~~:.v:rbe Clad to helpi
you with your problems. Send thtm~
to htt ·1n car< ol the DAILY PR:Q'r1 •
enclosing 1 sell·addrtsaed, atampeq
envelope. ' -
\ ~
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., YOU'RE INVITED -Joe Kroll (rl2ht), dean of
, student activ;ties at Orange Coast College Interests
.. Kit Weiler, Estancia High School senior and MUs
:~ Birth Defects Conference
Future Parents
• Every other minute a baby
ii born In the United States
with • defect ser:IOWJ enough
.. dlslblo, dllOpre .. kill,
1' lolol of 1,700 defective
bahlet 1n1 born each y<1r
In Orqe Collnty alone -a quorwr ill • million In the
U.S.
Tbe problem of birth defect.s
involves tJ1e young people of
today -for they are all future
j>amib.
the fields of medicine and
science.
Included will be Dr. Vlr&lnJo
Apgar, vice pruldent for
medical alfaln: for the f~
datlon.
Tb• dynamic speller ii
renowned for crullnc the
A.ppr score, the necmatal tell:
which can lead to rapid cor·
rection of early deflclencies
before irrtparable dama1e
rttuJts to the newborn. Her
topic will be Bettering the
Diane Munyoo, OCC nursing student Jn attending
Ille annual Birth Detects CoOference to be present-
ed Wednesday, Marcil 28, at Ille college.
Invited
Oddi for the Unbocn.
PredlcliJli tbe Future will
be dlacuJaed by Dr. Charles
J. Epstein, d sodate profeaaor
pediatrics, Univenity of
Callfomia, San Fra n c Is co
Medical Center. A bljbly
respected 1eneUclat, he hu
lectured at universities and
blab scllools throu&hout tbe
United States.
Allo on the panel will be
a repreaentaUve from the Salk
Institute for BioJoal cal
Studlei.
Horoscope
Aqua rius: Make Ne w Contacts
TUESDAY
MARCH 25 .•
., llYDNEY OM411R
~'Tbe Wilt min camraJa bis
~ Nlroloa poinll the ·=~·~!·= bef<n' dllClrdlna red llpe.
You hove • job lo "'"'plele.
Olio-wbo .tomP4.I Y«I -not
bovt 1"!!r ·inlomb at lie.rt.
. Tal:o. yoarJ.tlme. Avoid bn--pilli,. oc:tloo.
, TAUJllJll (April »Moy 20 ):
Activity -· Viola and vi1Ucn .. feltured. New ap-""*"' to aid praO!ezm "'" belt nlllllb. Be -w..
Utllill -. d llumor .
Relollv• wbo clbploy1 ..,,.,
b blulllnc.
Gl!:MlNI (llay JI.June IO ):
Check tendency lo om1peud.
ClOOoe quality, but llld to
necelllttu. °'1ld m a t_ e •
demondl. Be lair but 1"11Jble.
TnJ>t bW1cl!. You're moVing
In right dlreclloo. ·
CANCER (Jone 21.July D):
Domeltlc cnndlt!om could be
upset. Be reody for ~·· Don~ boW. -· Be flex. Ible. 'nle ~ Uuit occur
at· borne could be of ultimate
bene!IL Go o1ooi wltb il
LEO (July 13-AUI. Z2):
Important lo f o 11 ow in-
llrucU.... Apparent minor
details coold be major. Wise
.. put oil journey until •P-
polWDents are verif i ed .
Overcome -1 to be im-poUenL .
V11IGO (AUi. D&pl. D):
What appeara a blrgain may
be the opposite. '-tbis
and bt • lbnwd obllerver. 1'r1e>dl' wbo mean well may
be mlllnlinned. HMd your
own counoeL IlroW' upon past
experience.
LIBRA (Sopl. 2S-Oc:t. 21):
SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 2t): 11): one you depend upon BIRTHDAY you are Jn.
Be sub t 1 e . Communicltion _,. embert upoo journey. trospective, creative; you are
-·y cauae ch•noe cl·-'-able to determine what others ,,_ -... .-Avoid feeUnc ot resentmenL 1 11n You Don't burn . brl<IJ!W. Best to You will hove·choooe to malle are tblnkl!IJ. ee B·
retain good re.~. You ~ eontadl. PkDeer 1 ~ would make fine artist, wrlter.
may have to rep11.~ ltepl. J •c t : d 11 p I a y unique You al.so are attracUd to Jaw.
Know this and act ao-capallrlliUM-Promotion due; money comes
cording} from effortt of recent past.
SAG.,:;:ARIUS !Nov. Z2-PL!ICES (~eb. !!I-March 20): . GENERAL TENDENCIES:·
Dec. 21): A friend wbo ,... Today you get to heart of Lunar ....... tUon favorable tor matters. Includes learning .......,. quests money may be ea-truth abouf rpecial rtla.-fishing.
travagant. ln.si.st on facts. Be ""-·up. Judgm-t of one To tlnd Ollt ""'°'' 1~dcv tor .,..... ~1:11u '"' hi rnonfY •Ml lo\<•, order Svd .. Y kind without being careless. clo!e to you may be Jacking orn.r•'• bookltt. "SK•tt H111t• 'f' J•"'-t today 13· apt •-be Mtll 11111 women." Send blrthd1" -.-•• W be · ned 1nc1 J,O ct~t1 to Ornerr "''"' .. _., ~ lloo't be al ·d ,ft w re money u conccr . , Stcrirti. tne OAtLV PILOT. ao.w. Jl40o ._,,..,.,...._ TB.I "' Tl! y U Gr1fld Cen!rtl Sllllon, Ntw yon,; IF TODAY ~ 0 R • eipress the truth. _ • =,,;;=;;;~~;:=;;,,;:::;,,;:=;~··;·~'~~"~· =======; CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan.li
10): You are able to suc-
cessfully communicate vlew1.
Opportunities multiply. Key b
to choose tbe beaL Pt:rmit
mate, partner to 1 b a re
limelight. Tben you have feel-
iog of satisfaction.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
GAYLE PEARSON
Summer Nuptials
St. Andrew's
Rite Setting
,,. So, the annual science con-
•ference on Birth Defecla",
•Which 1gain will be presented
.at Oranp Coast Colleae, is
• being presented especially for
,._all Orange County studenls
and faculty.
Spomored by the college and
the California Association of
Secondary School Adminis-
-trators, District 21, the sym-
posium will be pruented by
'the Orange County Chapter,
N1Uooal Foundation-March of
~nmes from 2:30 to Iii p.m.
·W-y, Mardi 21.
Yvonne Collis Marr ies
Jack D. Richardson
STEWARD ESS
Poggio Ostling
T ra in ing
Completed
Expand oetMU11. Allume
autborlty. Be confident. Ac-
cent on ambiUon1, carter
potentlal. Family member can
help you fuHlll 1ooI. Study
CANCER Jnel681" .
Parents
Inv ited
Gayle Peanon and Phillip
Cotton have selected S t ,
Andrew's Presbyterian Churcb
for their evening wedding on
July 12 .
The daughter of Mr. and
1'-trs. W. W. Pearson of
Newport Beach will lf&duate
from Golden West College in
Jtme. While at Newpo r t
Harbor High School abe was
·~~~~....;_ _ _;__~ ......... ,i ...
Ill'!
' '
Tht Marqulse diamond, $4,500.
SLAV IC K'S
• Stressing birth defecl.5, the
ecnlerenc.e will feature na-
JiCNJJy known apeaken from
Yvoone Collis and Sp/5 Jack
D. Richard.loo, blah ICbool
sweethearts, u-chanced wed-
dinc rlnp and plediea before
the Rev. Jolm K. llurbom In
Chaptl O n e , Baum.bolder,
Gemfany.
Army Sgt. Jerry Thompoon
.-
I
•
-(
THRU SATURDAY ONLY!
,
Special Easter price
on our Sue Cory 'So French'
' PERMANENT
REG. 17.50
NOW 11.88
•• poo .......
Jewelers Since 1917 cave the bride in marrlace
during tbe afternoon nuptials.
Parenb of the couple are Mr1.
New and upectant p&rents a cheerleader,
are invited to attend a The bentdlct~. 90l'I of
meetln1 ~ by Lo the Robert Cottoos of Costa
Leche Leaiue of Hunttncton Mesa, was pduated from
Beacll Mardi a on ibe birth Corona de! Mar Hl&h School,
of the baby and lamlly rti. enrolled at GWC and now it
tlOlll. a sophomore at the University
I 8 Fashion Island
Newport 8e1ch -644-1380
Y•llr Clt1r9• Account W1lcom1-
B1nkAm1ric1rd, M1st1r C~1rg1, loo
E valee Tbomu fl. Cotta Y.:eaa Graduated from Eastern
and John. R. Collla d Sum--AirliMs' flight 1 t t e n d a n t
merland and V..r. and Mra. training ce!lter in Miami la
Jack B. Richard10n of Coata Mila Peggie Jeanne Ostling'.
Op1n Mond1y, Fricl1y ~ntil 9:10 p.rn;. """..,.{•
Mesa. The daughter of Mr. and
The new Mrs. Richardaon Mra. Stan OsUlng of. Mission
selected a floor len,ih white Viejo alao ia an alumna of
saUn and Uered ch&ntUly lace Newport Harbor High School
gown. Her full tlt:rtd elbow and Orange Coast College. She
length Jlluaion veiling was now is based out of New York.
Mrt. A. Lynn Meyers of. ·~of~Ca;UJ:;ornl=:•·:Ri=versi~·d~•~· :;:~;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::::::::::::::::::::~ Huntlnlton Beach will bolt1•
the 9:30 a.m. meeU.01. Anyone
wishing information may call
Mr•. David Watercott, M7-
80l9. cauiht to a pearl Uara and1-------------------
ahe carried a caacldidr bou-
quet of red carn1Uori1 and
fern.
Honor attendants were Sp/4
and Mr1. ROO«t c . Reynoldl.
The matron ot. honor wu
1owned in a red drea and
held pink carnaUon•.
A 11111.U roctpllon followed
the ceremooy in the chapel
hall. Auildnl were Mrs.
Marie Koontz and Mrs. Clay
JacklQD.
The newl y wed s are
graduates of Costa Men H1gh
School and lhe benedlct at·
tended Orance CO.st COllege
before t:nllltlq: in the Army.
He is a veteran of Vietnam
and will be stationed in
Germany unUI hla dlechar1e
In September .
The couple now are making
their borrte in ldar-Oberstein,
Germany.
Book Stud y
On Progra m
Coolemporary Boon w1u be
tile topic ol Mn. Temoce
Halloran cl. tbe Mrmorar.
Guild whto: lhe 1ptaka for
the Oran1e County Alumnae
ol 11Dll111culate Heart College
Wedneadoy, Mardi 21.
Mrs. Aluander Brunett cf
Santa Ana will ~ the 8
p.m. meeting. Nominations fGr
new officers also will be on
the agenda, &C<:Ording to the
pNllldent, f.lrs. James Cap-
passo.
NB Auxiliary
Newport Bt!ach Pollet Aux-
iliary ealMrs the last 'l'Uesday
of the month 1t 7:30 p.m.
Location 11 1v1Jlable with
Mn. Robert Wheeler, 1175-llzt,
AO'll lllTISllMINT
NO MONEY DOWN "''0r:·.~~"™'
CAl.1 POI Piii mlMATI AND SHOP AT HOMl ll•YICI
OW "9f...-elly trllftell llMll'lltlf Wiii ct'"" flf rhf lliot"lt II' ""'" , • , h1' W 9¥1111111 , • , WI"' fltl MIN """'"' Mlle!... If ... ,..,. w ,.,,.. ........ '" MtlflllM. " -ru.
PI Oll YOUI AllA CALL 548-8242 ~I 140.1117
BEAUTI PLIAT
DRAPERY & CARPIT
Acid Ctlotf!.ll
l"xcllll'Mrlt II Vwr lllOMI Dlaor ., •
W1111 11111 NIW
111 ... •nd 0.ltNI ··-...... e Tlelllb ··-. ._ -e V11t1MW .. ...,.. ....
CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERIES ••• .. $195
S4.tl y..i '-'
NOW ONLT Y' .,.
A i.tiutout Clll!lcilan ol hlgh 11111llty d~rttor l•brlq lnt!!ICl'lftt 1000'1 of Y~•Ot of hl(lh \tyle bouclH, t.1111/rft,
!IM'nl IMI llllrnlflll , • , 111 -.ii!I prlcfd.
DELIVERY IN 7 DAYS ..... _.. ""•-,,. •llM'•tt ew ,.,. "' ....... Wfrtl-=~·l!lt ,.. , ....... '"'"' ~lclloll ..... It •• 11.ty ....... 11 f'lllt .... fllfl tlJli"" Ille ti-t .._,._,,._ .. l'H't .. rtllMlllflill ...
111111111-.
OUI WOllMANSHIP IS sun••
HAIDWAll A I ODS CllT TO 01111
ROBINSON 1S
--·-~ ~
CLAIROL® SUNLIGHT GLOWS IN YOUR HAIR
The sun shines brightest on the wOman who has
discovered the magic of CUI"' fabul ous col or stylist s.
She's a glowing Clalrol@ blonde •• ,the p rettles t
blonde you know. Be one ! Custom c olorlng,
lndlvldually priced. P rice !ncludlng set, from
only 15.501 cut, rrom 5.00. Beauty Salon.
(Me.., T-I. W.d. °"'1) t3 llUDE AND GROOM ~UTIPLEn DRAPERY
4 CAJtPEr
w •••• 111ba in ...,. .. of~ wigs .
USI 'RIUll PINNIY CllAIOI CAID-
NO APl'OINTMIHT NICfSSAIY
9'1.ILUllTOtll HUHTI PtlTO" SIACM •IWHIT alM:tt
"'~·" Ctnllr Hllfltlft""" c..,,., , ......... 11 ....
hilflool',f11~ '"""-·").1111 h!llo!w,~11
' '
Are the two JnOllt Jmport-
ant people Jn a wedding.
tr you're ready to walk
down tbt: ata:le, get the
''How to Plan Your Wed-
ding'' Gulde. Send 25r in
coin lo P.O. Boz ll!, Hun~
lnfton lleoch, C11ll. 92143.
CAU PONIU .ISTIMAfl
SHOP .... T.ffOMI Sll'flCI 548-8242
NO MONEY DOWN •• '°M M .. ,,,, TO ••• ,_.:.;...:c:..:....~.:.::..;.....:....;:...::.;....:...~~~~~-·
Now in Our Family:
Family Wet~ly ,.-
HUMAN HA• snncH Wtct,CUSTOM STTLEO, 45.00
In blonds, bn.mettu, rroateds and greys •• ,What•
wlg to wur when your ONl'1 colr droop•! Save dUrtng
this limited emir. See our entlre wlggery gr-ovp:
ca!lcad .. 1 wiglets, long and medh.1T1 tall•. Beauty sa.tol"\,
ROBINSON'S NEVvfORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800
I'
"
t " -T .. ay!•.
. (' •
• .N.Y. Stoeks
• ! ' •
•
! :
' . ORAN6E COQHTY, CAUl'ORNI>.;'
'
01:. 61, NO. 71, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PA:6ES
' '
. ~ .:rEN:CDm ' ".) ·;-
•• ,
I . . . . ...
Coa st Citie s Ask More -Cont r ol of D.rilling
. By JERO.'!t F. t'OWNS
Of 1119 Dellr Pl ... Sii" SANTA BARllARA -Officials ol 21
CaUtomia coastal ~ities and .coon.ties
llldAy called · for ·state )eg!slatlon ' to
-..,bllsb more local control over offshore
oil uplor'aUon end drilling.
'Ibey alao agreed .at a two-day co.n-
'-nc:.< held here tllat a permanent lid
atiouid be· plaCed on all-dr!lwig In federal
watm.
Ne~ Beach City Manager Harvey
' '
~-H.urlhl'!I and Sell Jl.-h C!,itM'!"'I"
Lee Rimer were named to 1 spearhead
the drive'°' fc:s~ 'l~Jau'On .... at1 tbC state
and 'feder~tltvell. · '
The conference, lmted by Santa
Barbara . city and county, wu aimed
at assuring a unf!<d . !hint , agail)st the
• tiu.at of olf~ oU pollution.
. "We believe tbls~w11.addevel,11• said
Hurlburt.. · .
"There was u~rrl!DOIJS ,aariement to ' ~ I ..
• res1 e.n ·
I .
' '
. : • ' . ' 3. ;: • -:-•
·_;; , DAILY Pll.OT ~ ".)~:· Mii
Siie's Cou .. tg· Clla~p . . . · · ' · · ,
• . • ' ! .. ' •
Sandra Winieskl, an .eighth grader at Lagunfs· ThurSton SClu1<1f, ~ls
Orange County's speH!ng champion. She •pel\ed down·3:9·o\hl", ~dill)
graders in countywide bee . by correctly spenint '~gnaAlirioit$:';
. Sandra moves on to statewide competi.tiOn :April ~'in ~cranient9~
I '
Sex Education,Rock&Roll
Aid Commies, Utt Claims
faiths and there are now rommunisl!
in clerical garb at all levels ol religion."
pull t<Jcetber so we eould ha,. me
Ydce."
RllllU took ... the .......... ol dial· tine immediate\\'· •• _ .. bill ,lo
~ local la>O!•emorit In ·oil drJll.
ln& -laken'by the ·-lie plaDt to >Ubmll II lo the county's l<cblMtv• .. ~u-• s..r-•17 ~ week. •.
"We're png to try to tiave, it 1n
the i<~\.e bopper In llme for~
J'hree-~int
,• ~ .
Policy Told
..
At Clemente
By ARTHUR 11. VJNSEI: ·
• Of ,_ O.ltl Pllft ....
A three-point policy . declarln( -: m
campus dilorder but urging correcUon
of basic student irritants - a guldellne 1
for American educators _ . .,if f.ieb1i
stud~ed today, following Its ftekend
re J·e a 1 et by Pres1den1 Nb.on ta.:.San Clemente. ~ -. The 111tem<Q\. l!'.tr.·lp\tfa1Ji . .'Qlit to
collt .. · ~ 'U)ilv , • . by no ~·,"-.,. th
' y· • > ~! . . ... ,.~ .
' o+'-1-liJeli.)'i.lt'P~gedl ; I
..ioeauOD ~ .. Zbl.41i,c,U..
:AJIQHlf fl!lt. ')lcjllmlteJ!J-t •. w
lUW'd>y milll de.-tlnll mu!IL· '· ·
Questlom Gt ciiinlnal 19lolaUon· ol the
law mllll be' deler!dlned b)o •the CloUrts,
not the academlc·conununity, the N~
Finch 1latement tmphltilm, but the
lltttar sentence will be bnpoled upoo
conviction, by both qencle1.
The primary concern Is outright en.
forcement of federal law1 pertalnlnt·to
eclu.~tlon and the secondary pi>lnt, one
lllr<saed as far m or e bnportan! In
the J'..';'ldenllal statement, la p~•·
Uon of lndepe~ croaUve . hl&l\U
learning, "Freedom' -intellectbal freedOm -
Is in danger in Amtrlef-Vlolen~ . -
physical violence, pbyslcat· lntlrhldatlon
-Is seemingly on Its way to becom!nl
an a.ccepted or at all evertts. ' normal
and not to be aVolded eleintnt 1u the
club of oplnJon within the unlftrslty .
confines,". he said.
VIOLENCE lJSED
Nixon said violence 11 being used not
only to pollUcize l~tJ).t bodie1. but
to poliUclze the educational inlUtuUons
themselves, acUon which has in the
past spelled diaaater to both poliUCI
and culture.
"It ls not too 1trong a statement
to declare that this is 1he way civlllza·
Uons beiin '° die,.. be r:ald.
Loi Ancelel city m 1mmg thooe "well
--· "· Hurlburt 'polnl out. "Everybody.'' be saJd, 0 wantl to ~
• lid l'lt Oil drilliag In federal lldeimll ...
nae reuon, he uplalned, 11 that, unlike
In stlte'Waters,~there are no kal'bene·
111' -"'17 baaarda -from federal oU
explollallon. '
Other CQllC!usiom ' -by -f<renc< deleptea ..... that :
--Orlnge Couoly -olficials
•
.. , .
abould take the lead In the "uniled
froot" campllgn, with Hurlburt 11 P
ciPo.l coordlnatot, what c:ounty ·~•
do Will be copied 1bY other coastal.q,D.
cies. 1 _
-Ttie state.dlouJd .-.r ...
spect all ·(ederal"cfishore dr!llini .......
tjor)s, il a permanent ban ,, not feasible •
That state's re<fuirinients .,.m ~
to · be loogber thin the f~l ·rviim-
(See on: PLEA.• Pip II
'
1.sor
' . ' ., . . . . , ' . ' ' . ' ' . ,.
• ' · ~ ., ' '" -: ' . '' . • , • DAILY ~ILOT ....... •'J IUCiill:t NM RRESIDENT Al'.ID MRS. NIXON BID ADI EU TD ORl,NGE • t OUNTIANS AT EL TORO
, , .H.ndsholr.1 and A TJirlll for• Fl .. YHr.Old llefitro llttardl119 Alr ·J'erc1<!Jne · ",
; .
<
Nixon's . Visit ·to Coast ' ' .
~a t~ ·solnber, Pleasant
'-By.'RlaL\RD'P. N.\LL Of ..... .,..... ............
The presidtn~ • Hal 4?11 Air Force.
One · seemed udl1 l)'mbollc of the
q:~ea of the . pres)dency Sund~y as
Richard Nixon, hb: wife and aidel boanJ..
ed tbe ,big jet at El Toro Marine Corps;
Air· Statloo.. ,
The fierce .eagle that , .symbolius
America clutched 111 olive branch of
peace ir. •OOt-talon and the arrows of
war Jn the oljie:. , . Thla balance of peace and power, the
Vietnam War 1 had been diacus9ed by
the Preli~eqt and hll aides sborlly befor~
a heltcopter whliked Nbcoo and' !iii .0..
toure&e to tbO u.~"e baae. · ·
and newly named allied• ctmmanderl of
tbe North AtlanUc Treaty Organization
forces.
Their discUJS.ions continued far . three
houri Sunday, then re!Umed on tfie flight
back to Waahlnglon.-
. A c;TOWd of about 350 per!IOns was
oo hand at El Toro . to appla.ud and
bid farewell. It ·was Nixon'• first visit
tG the coupty of his birth since the
presldenUaJ lnauguration.
There wu'a 1peclal treat for 5-year-old
Tlmoth)I Flens ol Wilmington u the
President and first lady veered toward
the, nnlling crowd.
Cm:ri~,tlum Topic
F or · S~udy ~~l
A study se~on on 1 hlgh school CUJ'o
flcuJuln for· ~ Coming yfer"l Will Le
\><Id at 7:3(t'p . .;. T.e:iday t1y 1.alJina
Beach ·unified ·school' Dislrk:t ~
and administrators · :... . . . . •. r .
Desfrlbing the 6eS5ions a 1 .. fn-.
rormattooa.J; D i s t r i c t1 Superintende:nt
William Ullom aald . Principe! ,R<,>ttert
Reeves and his asmtarU will mu.
a presentation oo 'o I f e r J n I s and
alterilatives for aJI sect.km.
Dr. Ullom Mlid he · thought · t'llOl'e
emphasis woukl be put on Er:igulb. in
the coming school year and said • q,.
boerd also wanted to taie a . JOok at
business education and vocation&J ~
tioo. offerings. . . -
Sc.ele &rlee ts
.. ..
•
WASHING TON (IJPI) -Sex education
and rock-and-roll music are part or a
Communist con.spiracy to d e s t r o y
Am:frica, , Rep. James B. Utt, (R·
Tust1n} charges in a newsletter to bis
Orange County constituents.
·A,11 levels of the U.S. clergy have
aJ.91J been infiltrated by the unseen enemy
u a balic Strategy toward conquerlng
the nation through ·contrived collapse
The Califoml>,, ~an said Cqm.
munists abo used "~tic, · r~c
music'· to aSslst • iri . giJnliig aCceRtinCe
of their evil programs."· Ht ·aafd, rTiany
elemenlaey, schools uae•lriustC bf .. Y6Ung
Peoples' Records, Inc., an organization
(See.trtr; Pa~'" '
"The pro c e 11 is altogether too
familiar to those who would II'"')' the
wrtckage of history. Assault and counter-
.... u1~ ... aa.m. leailln1 "to. the op-
poslte eztreme.; the voicta of rtUOn
and cahn dllcredited."
"None of ua bu the right to suppoee
it cannot happen here," he conUnued.
'Ibe Pre1ident'1 bale statement on
the hot issue of cam.P41 turmoil calll
(See NlXON, hp I)
._,. ~~·Air , .... '°"" lo mum 'lo Washli)l!lon ,late SUnday, the
Pn:itdent met with. EUtworth Bunker, U.S.~ambuaador to 'Sallon, and Gen. ~" .J. 'Goollputer, tormer deputy
commander ol 'lJ.S. force< 1n· Vietnam
The boy wu thrust by his father
over the croWd toward the President.
Mrs. Nii:on tOtiched her l'lusbaOO'i :
ahoulder. He turned back smiling and
shook the youngster's amall hand.
Tlmoth)I beamed lll1d aaluled.
The Pmldent in abJu~grJy ~It look·
ed tanned and relued alter hil San
Clemente weekend. Mrs. Nixon wu
wearJnc a gnen and Yollow plaid sult.
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe otock market e
closed lower 100·ay .. Trading . near ·the
finish was relatl~el)'. 1l01ff .. (See qoota.r.
lions, Page1 lf..15). ·
o1 mor.uty, be a1so cliarges. ·
110ne or the basic activities of the
Communtsts Js their promotion of Cilm-
plete sex education in almost all school
arades," Utt wrote. "As mual noble aod desirable goal11 ' '
" Mystery Guests at Castle·
are advanced which, I am sorry .G ~;:·~·:::, ~·: ~:~·:.;~~ Rum ors of _Laguna · White Ho use P~rsist. Des.pite De~ials
in~:tll.IP!:·.~achers and embarrassed Despite o~ial and unofficial ~11 Rumon of Pybe Castle u a·~n-The ~-~~ would be ·~ ideal ~1' ·.,...permitting Communfat In-olpttS!~llnl«<OllilLigun&Beoch'I till llll!llner ha\111 ,..,. revived a1aln -for a llllI1Dltt 1VhlW House,
iplrod,.; -.lion ol children through l'YQ< Casile,.....,... In a bleck,·chauf· Sw!d1y, bowevet. despite official -with ~ore. IOClll'lty due to Ila
... of material provided by the Sea feur.<Jriven 1-toot a -·"'• loot to exorclae the recunin( ll!Otiel. , ...,...,. ~ loolallon. Information and Education Council o1 ,_ A blf, black -..in. c:urylq tine C&mp_P_ ll!fjolno the ...,,...iy
Aaked li Ijlaon bad pun:based any
real estate Jn Orange County, • press
.Jde told ·a reporter with . a grla: "I
think be'•. taking a look at the Queen
Mary.'' The joke alluded to pre11 and
public speculation that Nii:on might buy
P.~Y for a home and library in.
t,be area.
Alter about a IO-minute handshaking·
round, the Preaident and Mra. Nixon
hunied • up Ule ramp, waved and left·
on the allrieking thrust ol four bf& jet
enfllnet.
the United •Stales (SIECIJS), which be at the rambJtnc old f<ni••Sunillrf. women, l •llllll ml a chlu!leur whipped on Clll8 ·li<Je, •.the _., ,c:lilf lies. a!onl.
aafd' bad ".,..ad Its tentaeles Into just Prflldeol,.-~ lJlr,er the up lllllcr!'ll Drt .. lo Jilmber 'l'IO at another, whll& I waU lrootl th& estate Vitamin Loss 'Noted
about every state In the union." 17«r< Henry -Hmnlllon Oot1a1 ·Olla!• t :IS a.m. Sunday and ooomed Into the "'tbe llcle Jadnl·PaciJlc ~ lllchwa.Y·
"Cbvlous\l', SIECUS Is not lnterealed where be ,llayed In ~ CJeineute over rear parklnt .,.., · A'bdlcol*< llndlnl feclllty ii provjded Jn Oil-tainted Birds
tn ' inorallty," lJtt . lljd,1 "since 11' lha)lusy,,.._,bulno.~have l'ldldn't..eacythlnJ;""'""1'~t bya~l-Ooal!Q_,istatim'*1'by_ ...
tttaauter, lsadore Ru)>Jni ,an Identified •!'l*'e. 1 ·'. • A aid today. ''· '):~. >; l -1 a.i tbe>fourUl .. lide,,01(.,l~._,;J"l'"')Y r~~:Gaut-.....(Ullij ..... <lonullunls~ la edltor ol ~ 1>0mo1raP.hl4 '~ · ~ =~-laid !% ,Mel'Tict bow tho' l i..b4urid1!1,~Bld -a-_,.,~,. 3Uiff~bflllll~ttd:Jltllll<SOnjo>
ma_,.,..._ :sieiO"'-'' "l<J!tl 'fa'a·•~.--,=·11111......_.. t'&.'""':-"· .illt ·'· ~·• ·1· Tho.Nlxont....,.1~·-•iact ,,Ba;llaia.oll sUcll>u revtalecl .1~1 .-~ ._., •-"'"-" _£/;::,.~ .;::;w.-,.,-· • · .=<-... ~1Jllir,•••"'"-',.._.,. ' ' "~no-11•1ore:--"".u :!i~/=is°'~b:;.o;.~!:i def!ni..i;7'..l. ~;'.: '\1:1 m1n and · 10.A ii;;;;..t'Bilich and.~:-;;;: ?.m:!l'wb'>JOiOo;;..,.tocraY~;..
wtth 'Seloiogy.' " matter what -eile•JI. ph®gra:' ~ .. '. btJ! lit'! Pmldent ,.,.. 'to'tlaVot the · 1Tlie Jlltlonal • Wlldllf• H<alth ·Jl>un.'
Communlat leaden. Utt said, were Merrlct llld his naJ estate .,..-11avo A lfOUP · ol M~~:a..i,. 8an~lltl, • • .. F· 1· ·' 4•tlon reported ihe death late •-i'
"too ...n ...... ol the l!l"'•l lmD<IUS laid othenriae In tbe pllt. while another --.en Incl till~ ~ . . <Q,.. lb :the ~ ;,nd the blnb 1urider;"itlily WU dramalltl!1Jj
fllffll to their plans fY the !lellr\lctlOn lady , broker Ja,i Wftt t'Jauy. oecima c:onfldanl 11e11e '*-flr1','1HY ffr thtJ'/do qol.lo ... y h1Jt<d Wbetl acientl81a dl;coveroct' '01
o1 moral standard"' For tllat reaoon lhot ~-ere ·•-~-drlwa up tntereoled In -~•-1tiNI. • ~ ~ .. t111 • fhlunln ''•ll&llllo JI.I) de!lc:leney l'lirii!:
he llld, !My had "lool •I• Infiltrated awaltlnc lilnalun for purcbue cf the .., lnldOransend ,. , " . . ~v-:S.·~~ ~ . , ;;ro-; , I:!!l~"-'!! !",,"' ,' . . · , ,, I
The Dow ·Jones industrial ·avera1e at
1:30 p.m-. wu oft 2.24jlolnf.I at 917.71.
'W'eatlier
, How long'1 It bed alnce ""·had . . . ~ .
a ruce, warm Santa Ana wind?
'Xell,' tbtre'I one m 'tbe•.,.wfl,
elevattnc_.the 1rmtui) to 70 ·here-
. aboula and up to a furlher JnlaDcL -. INSm E TODAY
A pc1fr of"fomll~ IVP<"·playt
stoged withf• wallong dilf4!1cc
of each othtr {1l C~ta Mcao arc
r,vicud today. Ser £'rttcrJaf"}'
mtni. Page 24. • . '
• .;....:·: I~' .. "11~' \ =~·" ...... ooft .f .. ~ .. o,...~ ' ~· _._ t ··""' """' .. ~ " .......... ,,.,. ....,... .... • IM1t ...
... «'Ill c I 111 ........... 1t11
,.... M-11 ;:.;..~ ' • .. ,.,.. <* M . 111
._ • ..... 4
AM.._.,, 1f ....... l . Mii.... , ......... ..
' ' ' ~~·· ~-.. -.. ' ' ' mA" · Mn ,....., ' ' •••••-' .£.inb~' >' JlooM o! 'thlllllinl ;
the semlnarleJ of the leading rell&ious Cotton prllpetty. .... •·'j. 1 I' .,w• ~ ·~en · 1 , • • / ,,.'I: «•~;.J.1-r .•• ,,.1 .y-•· r .:.,: .• 1 A~\~ti~ ... ~· ..... 4 1 . :.11 •• ,t ~ ~ • ....... I
.•' " I "'':'"I ,.... , :-,. .. ...~· ~ .. • • ", •• I 1 •
" I
'I ' f
I
,,
'
I
I
I
% DAll.T Pll.OT l
Tax · Override. to. ~B.ankrnp~!>-C~pisi.rano?
By THOMAS FOl\TVNE •ot111r dlatrldl ud -. •we w.. lq ~ B...ii. °' "' -''"' "'" ... too ~ ud I !J lime lo .. ~prllldllil ol Orall(t Cq\>olJ
l'-Clfa_Coplalr_Ualllod • -Ol!IQil. 'T>~'iilloa. Wldcb ----tu -''ril !lad ... -....... .-. ' NII. .. Ji.ilol all ....., -•Doi• blhkrupt, • t1>e ._ "I -~ -lo ..... llQ' loll i llN --poslUoo ballot """""'1t will md. and lllt'_.r tlll • 1111 limb~ lllt ---JJ ~ .,_ AuUior RI Ibo ol!lclal "no" argument taJ,"'"iiiie Ult!. !Jir. • ·
for Ibo AprD 15 ballot is Mn. Emma She lald ollo 11&1 been •rcll'llnr with )\In. VlrJll Elkins, W!le ol lhe Santa Blr!n!nibam ol San Juan Capjstrano. Jooeph Fenn, ol Huntlqton B<ach, Jn Ana pr.,ldent ol lhe taspoyen usoda·
lier argwnent, buod oo the need for lltr lnv..U1alloo ol the school dl.!trlcl'• lion, said It bu 75 memben coontywlde.
l.11 reform, is endorsed by the Oraop coots. Ferm said he bu been through the
County TQpaym A»oclatlon. Ftrm 11 founder ol Properlf Owntrs 11me thing In H11J111nit4n Beach and
Mn. Blnnlll&ham Ille! li>t bu com-~Ive Leag11e whlcb hu opposed is able to "look behind tome ol the
pared C.plllr-School DJ.tricl -ocbool bond and tu override olectloos cllcllea used liy scbool admlnlstralbra
Youth Held
On Burglary,
Pot Charges
A ........ Beacb man WU amsl<d
early Saturday momln1 on suiplcioa of
burglary and marljt111na poueaalon after
a jewelry store window was shattered
setUng off the burglar alarm.
Police said the suspect Ronald Lujan,
21 of S26 N. Coast Highway was later
released on hi! own recognizance pending
municipal court arralgnment.
Sil Dave Brown aald Lujan ls
..,peeled of atlempting to burgllll'il<
Farrar Jeweltn, lM S. Coast Hi.ahway.
Nothing was taken.
Brown said Lujan wu found by police
lying in a lot at the rear of 240 Broadway,.
The offictr alleged that a :small bag
of marijuana wu ln the jacket pockeL
'
that .,. ~Uy not correct but
~ feel have ~ appeal.11
-8apL Cbltile "-'• ......
....... thal lbs ••••!do --cull ID Iba tduelUONll program made
Wt 1"11' and allow the district to b~p
poce wllll erpeclod enrollmtnl iDcr ..... nut year.
Due to rapid growth, he says, the
d~trict will bel"f:ly be able to hold
its own. Projected for nf:Jt fall are
J,too studentl over the present 7,'*I.
Cull to he restored are remedial
mding tescbtr1, library book purcbueo,
and preventative ma.lnttnaDCt.
• ...... Ilia --.... '61 ......
-lndeflnllol1 the--la-rate
from 14.U to"$!# por 1100 ol -
valuaUon . •
Mn. Birmingham aald wheft votan
read the opposition ballot argument It
.. Will give us exactly the amoi.mt of
publicity we nHd. They .can make up
tbelr own mind."
Her argument readl :
"The h&rd·pmaed tupaym oppooe
an tncrease of the tu rate because:
any addltlonal burdeo will find mtnY
t1111 .... ~ W14taillllfft!H odtclilate ""'1eallllo bat are vrry mucb
aware that tu re.form for achoo1 fina~
cing ii now overdue.
""Unlll tu rel"'"' becune a realltr
we urge curtailment ol unnecessary ex-
pencliturt!, prudence on the part ol
tru.t... and thrllt on the part ol ad·
miniJtraton and faculty to miitcb the
aacrtflcea we property tupayers are .,_ . maa.wg •• ~
Supplies Captured
Drive Launched
Into Khe Sanh
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. military
command today announced a third major
allied coonterofferi'!ive againlt the Com-
munists winter-spring drive -a puab
Into the Khe Suh area juot below the
demllltarlzed zone. A fron( cillpatcb said
U.S. Mari.oea capturfd vut quantities
o1 Communist suppu ...
UPI c<Jmspondtnt Davld Lamb, wllh
the 3,000 Marines and 100 tanks sent
into lhe abandoned Kbe Sanh area in
the newest offensive, said the Marines
captured huge quantities ol. arms and
what was believed to be the lara:eat
North Vietnamese rice cache ~ the
war.
Lamb said the caphaed North Viet-
namese supply depot, spread over an
area larger than t111'0 football fields,
contained 434. tons of rice, other foods
and supplies and hundreds of cases oI
anna and ammunition.
In an urlltr weekend arrut. police
booked Anlbooy Umberto Roa~ II of
31111 MooW-.y St., Soulll Laguns, and
Howard Roy Sheldon, 31, of Lu Veau.
on 1Ulpidon of credit card forJery.
Brown Ille! the pair Wtre arreJled
at the Coe IJquor Store ~ nilbl
afllr theY .U.pdl1 trted to pey lot
$11 wmb ol liquor and food wllb a
credit wd thal wunot thelr1.
BUSINllS AHD PLEASURE -Although his week·
end visit to the Orange Coast had a festive air
about lt, President Nixon also spent time confer-
ring with top aides on the Vietnam War. Ready to
board Air F'orce One for return fll&ht to Wuhlng·
ton ara (from left) N~on, Secret,ary of state Wil·
Uam P. Rogers, U.S. Amba.lsador to Soulb Vietnam
Ellaworth Bunker, fonner U.S. Deputy Military
Command.er in Vietnam Gen. Andrew J. Goodpas-
ter and national security advisor Henry Kissinger.
The first major allied offensive was
announced last week , Operation Atlas
Wedge. It ha:s killed 1nore than 600
North Vietnam.., and Viet Cong in Its
first week of operation in the Michelin
rubbtr planlltlon 4.1 mllea n«lh-.'!ut of
Salgcn
The HCOnd major offf:!llive wu an-
nounced Sunday -Operation
-Strlbr "111cb -3,000 U.S. paratroopen Into the A Sbau Valley,
SO mil., IOuth ol Xhe Sulh, to bnak
up a msjor Commllllist supply route
Into South Vietnam from the Ho Chi
Minh Trail In t.aoe.
He said the Marines ripped apart the
atacb of rice ball and 1l.9ed the 220-
p:iund sacks to bUl.Jd bunkers in caae
Communist troope DlOlll1ted a coun•
terattack.
Lamb said Red soldiers guarding the
depot fied without I fight.
Brig. Gen. Frank GamtlQl'I, 51, et
San Diego, deputy -ol the
U.S. 3rd Dlvlalon. told Lamb American
fOl'Cel bad the Communist supply depot
under oblervaUon tor two weeka.
Brown .-ted that 1everal other
credit Carda with namel other than the
•\JIPOCll ware In thdr -1<>n· The oince llld complainll would he sou&ht
today. Both men were 111ll In jail t&is
mornlna. In other weekend cuu, police ln-
veltlplld the theft ol lt.Jl6 worth ol
Paul Blaine Henri psintlnp from a
Lapna -home. PollC<I llld Gerry Huth of Burbank,
owner of. a retldenoe at !Olt Mar1nt
Drive reported the theft of three paln-
tingl, a televlaloo set and -radio
combination. Janll COWiin, .a oat st., reparlld
the lbe!t of ber 1111 gull&r from the
Hat.ch Cover tavtm.
AM ·1lt11ae1. -GI the eutla r. COii -y lhop, 1IO S. CoMt lllChwlY.
reporied the Iii thall cl a qprlU
tree lllif plant.
Police Hold 4
After Seizure
Of LSD Tablets
Polie< llld today they had -1~
LSD tablets bearlnc peace embleru Sun-
day night during the arrut ol four
youna: men in Llguna Beach.
Sgt. Dive Brown IRlkl the four, two
from Laguna and 11n> from Costa M.,.,
"''ere arrat.ed by qerQ of. U.e Federal
Bureau ol Narcollcl and Lq1ma dellc·
~"" Norm Babcock In the perking Joi
of Dtmiy11 Coffee lhop, 1800 s. Co11t
Highway.
Brown identified the four men 1s
Donald Edward ciirlst<Non, IO, ol 137
Woodllrd Drive, Lq1ma Beacb; Lynn
Allen Whiton, 18 of 4!6 Csnyon Acra
Drlvie, Luuna: James Michael El1u.
19 of 1911 \rictorl.a St., Coela Mf:SI, and
James Allen Cllppenier, 18 of 288 Vlc·
to<ja St., Costa Mesa.
Brown !!lid the arrtst was made after
an alJea<d offer ol Mle ol the tablets
to 1t1 undercover agent. He 1atd the
foor had apperently be<n taktn to Loo
Angeles for booking.
ouw.a COMt P\IRSN111tca ~l"
••Wt H. W•ff ,,........ .... ,....JWr
.I••• •. c...i.,. .,.. ,,....... ... 6-.i _,....,
T~11111t IC...,tl ·-,...._. A. M•,.til~1 _, ...
a1 .. 1ri.n1 '· Nill '•u1 Nl111R Lfflo'M ltlcfl ...... tMlll,_ UJ.... Dlffc• ---Jlt ,,,., .........
M•lmlt AIM'''" 1.0 . 111 •••. n•1:r --<-II Mlltt .. WMI ...., "'"' .....,, llMI: tfll ""'' ............. ,. 1•r • l•••u•••""'
Negro Coup"le' s
Home Bombed
In Huntington
From Page 1
A youna Negro couple's nome was
firebombed Satlll'liay nlgbt in Huntington
Beach. 'Ibo wile narrowly escaped injury.
Police lnvutliaton aald a molotov
cocllall Joued from I opeedinl lru<:k
charred the aaraae door o( the Irvin
Harril bome about 10 p.m.
Demage WU limited to the prqo
door mi upbl]t driveway, police llid,
bu! ~ aplOllon had enougb power
Id -1 Injure bystandm.
ffirrla' wife Wll inlide the 1111&9
at the time, doing the laundry. Sha
WU not lnJured.
Detectlvt Sgt. Jack !lolnholll lald the
lncldent wu "obvlOUJly r 1 c i a 11 y
motivated."
About a dozen Negro families li ve
in Hunungton Beach. There have been
few racial inck!mta rtported in the p11t.
Reinholtz :said Harris was the victim
ol. a related incident in February when
unidentified individuals :s c r i b b I e d
obscenities on hi:s garage door.
At that lime nel&hbor1 helped erase
the foul scrlbbllngs, and dropped the
matter thinking perhap:s It was just
coincidence.
,.,..,.. Pa9e I
UTI .. ~
"ci~ as subveraivt by the House Com·
m!Uee on Un-American ActlvlUea." In
addJUon, he 111d, echoola UR records
frun Pram records and the Children'•
Ricord Guild, both subeldllties of Young
People's Record•.
''Thtir records have been e1ttn11tvely
analyzed by noted medlcal ezperll and
by leaders tn U.e fieldl of hypnoeis,
and tbelt unanimous opinion la that the
hypnotic Induction produced by them
can easily place young children In a
most receptive mood for auggestiona of
vll'loua sort!," Utt aald.
NIXON •••
for the academlc communJty to clean
up ltl cwn bouae flnt when It comes
to dilorder tnvolvtna ltudentl or faculty,
but promlsu backup acUon.
One principle to be obaerved, he 1ald,
Is that colleies and unJverslUea are
placa ln which men m judged by
achJevement and merit In their own
specmc areu of Gowledge and conduct.
"The independence and competence of
the facully, the commi-and equally
the oompetence ol lbs ,..t body.
are matlen !IOI to ba campromlted,"
, Nlxon Nld. -,
SECOND PRINCIPLZ
Tbe oecond and only other prlnclple
to be comldered. ha conllnued, Is that
vlolenct or the threat of it must never
he permitted to Influence the adlons
or judiment ol the academlc community.
0 111e federal government cannot,
should not -must not -enforce sucll
prtnclplea. That \s fundamentally the
tuk and rea:ponalblllty of the university
c<>mmunity," he said.
He added, society need not rear for
continued application or these two educa-
tional prlnclple1, but every man mu1t
drtad damage to what he termed the
largest, freest educational system in
history.
Nixon then spelled out t:~rescriplion
for :slckneu in that parttculir IOCiety,
qualifying hll 1tatement with a long-term
program for il!I eventual cure.
PRIMARY INSTRUMENT
"From Ume immemorial, expulsion
has been the prtman· lnstrument of
university discipline," be said.
''Tho11e who would not abide by the
rules of the community of learning have
:simply bten required to leave lt, for any
other form of coercion would cause that
community to change its fundamental
n1ture," he explained.
lie noted also that the last Congress
enacted laws :str:lpping federal aid and
assistance from students convtcted by
courts of criminally dlmlptln1 the educa-
UonaJ system.
"'n>e new reculations are moderate
and thf'y are jwtlfled," he uld.
"Givtn tll6 present tactlcs of dlsru~
Pinpoint Pilot
5,000 Watch Capo Air Shoiv
Pete Obon of Dana Point can not
only )and on a dime he's a pinpoint
bomber pilot.
Ollon, 26224 Brill!lntlne Ave., proved
aa much ·during the weekend alrshow
that drew more than 5.000 spectators
to San JIW' Capistrano's airport.
The 01111 Poin t man capttnd flnl
In both the 1'1andl.n& on a dlme" and
"plnpolnt bombing" event.I at the unlque
alrshow and Oy-in of antique and home-
, bunt aircraft.
Ollon'1 wife Imelda acted as his bom·
bardier u he made his bombtni run
ovf'J' a taraet tlrcle. She dropped a
<anlllel' /Ult 10 feet from the bullseye
at about 00-feet alutude.
The C19lstrano Flylng Club hooted the
.. tnt under _.i,Ip ol Sport Flying
Mqazlnt.
Hlpuchb o( Utt weekend inc-luded a
dating JO.milt Jlldtr fllgbt from Eblnon
by El Toro l!tarlne, Dive H1rtman,
2J.
HartmlJ'I ucended to an estim1ted
8,000 fttt °" the warm Eblnort updrafll
and thell allot lbrou1h the """ or the Sanll Ana Mounllinl in rapid dOICttlt
Into cooler air: Ht 1ta1ecf the 1tunt
lor the llral limo Ju( yur.
The Sunday crowdl MW Dem Piccard
demonstrate a hot-air balloon ascent over
San Juan Capistrano into a pasture o[
the O'Neil Ranch about five milu away.
Tht Mini Jumbo Sky Van, built In ·
Jr,land. Yi'l :S demonstrated by Che'ro'Kte
Airlines in a wies of fly.bys. The twin-
enitne plane showed HI facility to
operate on one--engtne and its 1hOrt-tJeld
l1ndlng capacity.
Thel'f: were n alrCTaft entf:l'ed In the show. They include formtr m!Utary crifl
and lllran1t hom .. bullt modtla.
Wlnnm included:
Olden Ab'erlfl -A !HO Plptr JI
flown by Gordon and Sand)' Ruller, 15111
Burning Tree Sl., Wutminlt<r.
-Sbow --Sllorman NIN bullt In IH4. Flown by Ray Post ol
S1nL1 Ana.
Beil MIUtary Altttaft -SNJ.J, built
In 11'3. Flown by Clifford Shirpeer ol
Norlll Hollywood.
~tost Autbentlt Aircraft -Convair
Al-19 buUt In 1"3. Flown by Walter
• N. Wi1nlew1k, Sy1mar.
Mott Aath!ltlc Dreu -Mr. and Mn.
Robert O'Hara ol San Fernando. He
w11 In 1 Canadian Air Force uniform
and she 111·1:s Jn a Canadian \VAC unlform.
I
tton, anyone '° canvtcted may fatrly be
IMllm~ to have been usaulting the
~ ol free inquiry which are the
very •.tife .. of learning," Nixon added.
PRtnECI' ITSELF ''Mf"socif:ty that will not protect' it-
self against .such assault e1hiblts pre-
cioua little reapect for intellect, com·
pared to which tbe issue of publlc order
i.s Vf:f'f near to·'(df: iD.lnimil,)" be said.
'"111e dUllcttJlr: ll,Ws momem', u of
most timts wtila f\lridamenta! principles
are challen~ many of those posing the and even mol"f: of
those supporlblf! ~ are reaponding to
very basic problem..
Reasserting the twin prlnciples of aca-
demic freedom whUe Ignoring the llsues
foremost in the mlnda of atudent. posing
a threat to them, however, is not the
total an1nr, he admitted.
SLOTHFUL, D!8HONEST
"It is leas than lngloriou1: it ia slothful
and dishonert, an afiront to those prtn.
ciples-and in the end futile."
Student& today point to many wrongs
which must be righted, Nixon :said, con-
tulng on to ezplafn them in three broad
statements, without mentioning !J*
clflcs:
"We have seen a depenona)izat1on of
the educational aperif:nct. Our instltu·
tioru: must reshape themselves, lest this
tp.rns to total allenatioq_ ''..
Skin Diver Drowns
At Dana Point Jetty
A skin d1ver drowned Sunday while
swimming near the west jetty at Dana
Point Harbor, the coroner's office
nported today.
Dead Is Phllllp W. Walker, 27, of
Bell Gardena. He was brouJht to shore
by companions and lifeguardJ but flrat
•Id efforta fail ed.
Today'• operatkn wu code-nlmed
Maine Cr11 and atao WU deltgned to
cut off a m1.jor COmmunia:t supply route
from Laoa needed by the North vi.~
nam,.. to sustaiD theft lllocllly growing
offensive.
The communlJt offensive sent mortar
and rocket berrqes todey agalntt as
U.S. buea and South Vletnameoe towns
and c:Wet.
Alllod mllltary olfldala have predicted
111 all out -ult on Salp, pombiy
cocrdinlted wMh • mm~.ltrfke aCl"Oll
the demllltarlsecl .....
Girl Crippled
In Dangerous
Dive at Beach
Despite npeated w1rninp fr o m
onlookers and warnlng 1lgn1, a 15-year-
old .UU.1 cJrl dove off Rocky Point
in Corona del Mar Sunday, 1ullerina
crippling neck Injuries.
U!eguards reported that Deborah Soliz
walked out on the: small promontory
at Co rona del Mar's bayslde swimmln&
beach and started to dive from the
rocks into three fett of water.
Onlookers, Iilecuard• 1aJd, told the
girl to stop, but lhe dove ,.nyway.
A San Bernardino SherUf's of fl ctr,
Capt. Hillard Horton, saw the accidmt
and went Into the water to bring the
unconscious girl lo shore.
She w1s taken to Hoag Memorlal
Hospital shortly after the 1: 49 p.m. in-
cident and underwent surgery for the
fracture.
Her condition was listed as critical
Spokesmen for the hOlpilal 1ald she
migbt remain par1lyzed for llfe.
'
"We witched tbe enemy for two weds
while they put the stuff In place," Gar-
retaoo II.Id. "'.Mlen we pounded hJm.
Jt'1 pretty obviow we're ln hJs goodY,
locker."
In a campaiin earlier this year tn
inountains on the fringe of the A Shall
Valley, Marines ol the 3rd Dlvllion 1eiud
~ than 500 tOM of CommuOJ&t aup-
plle1.
From Page 1
OIL PLEA •••
ment's Hurlbert uplained.
-Thole couta1 communities not en-
compeued by the Shell-Cunninglwn
Act '• oaf llDCtuary lbould receive a greater share of oil revenues, "in order
to compenute for the estbet1c 1ou and
the COit of cleaning up m1nor oU 1Uckl,"
aald the Newport city manager.
t!OME TALK
Hurlburl aald there had been some lllk
at the two-day affair about a total ban
on all offshore drllllni· But ln view
of. the fact that JOme cltlf:I, 1 u c h as
Ventura, depend on .IUCh revenue, it
wu decided to concentrate iMteed on
obtaining greater local control over oil
exploitation decisions, he said. "We're
Jook1n& for the common element, and
local control appe1r11 to be it."
In addition to Hurlburt and Ris.Mr,
· Orange Coast olflclsll att.erdlng the
parley, which included a tour ol Santa
Barbara's oll-90titd w1ter front, were:
Laguna Beech Mayor Glenn Veddtr,
San Clemente Mayor '\\'ade Lo\\'er and
City Manager Kenneth Carr, Huntington
Beach City Adntini!trator Doyle ?\1iller
and Harbor Director Vince Moorhouse,
Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall
and Seal Beach Mayor Lloyd Gummere,
Hurlburt said another 11athering of the
oil drilling foes will be held later th.is
year In Oran1t Counly.
Ill Ill I -P'OOllllF'llPl_,&R-N
Q OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA ~
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE !i)
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
• rin91 sized and repaired
• diamonds and prectous atones remounted
•pearls restrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE All: TYPES OF JEWELRY
NAUOI IHOl'PINI wma
2100 HAltol II.YD.
conA MISA '41-NIS
HUNT1,..TOH CllffQ
llACH a IDINlll
HUNTINITOH MACH
ltWIOI
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Fashion Focus
On Young Se -t
Countless fashion shows and articles have left no stones unturned in
depicting haute couture for women and even men this spring.
But what about the younger set. Will rosy-cheeked young ladies romp
to school in beaded Indian costumes and suede boob or will the nude
look be vogue? And will young men be able to get away with last year's
Nehru shirts, or is a new fad in store?
These and other questions will be looked at when Mission Viejo
Recreation Center offers a special Easter Luncheon and Children's Fashion
Show, Saturday, April 5.
The style parade, to take place in the center, is open to all members
and guests interested in newfangled fashion for children.
.. Clothes will come from Bergstroms', South Coast Plaza, and school
children are welcome to attend with their mothers.
Festivities,. beg1nning with a noon luncheon, will include favors for
all 120 participants and numerous door prizes.
~trs. James Brustman is chairman of the event, and Mrs. Heruilng
Otto; her co-chairman, is making arrangements for colorful" spring
decorations.
Others laking part in plans are Mrs. George Webster-~nd ~fr•. T. J. ;
Stout, '· ~ '
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Tickets will not be sold at the door, but may be obtained' ~t tl.,IO
for members and $1. 75 for the ·gen~ublic, at the center, _-MOft?
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YOUNG GIRL'S FA'NCY -It's never too soon for a
girl th start thinkin' about her wardrobe, ac-
cordiljg to style-j:onsc1ous . Cheryl Webster, 4. She
ch"ecks ~ curreni ~uhue tre~s with Mrs'. James
tanoso Drive by Thursday, April 3. er information may be obtail!~ ;'. ~,,
by calling the center, 837-4084. •• -
In 'Magic Kingdom'
Royal Time
Predicted
A fabulous fun-filled Family· Night at
Disneyland bas been announced as the nei:t
major fundirig project for Children's Hospital
of Orange County.
The Magic Kingdom will roll out the red
carpet for a limited number of members of
the 13 supporting guilds and their guests on
Mother's Day, Sunday, May 11, beginning at
4 p.m.
Serving as general chairman of the event
will be Mrs. T. W. Welsh, Little Mennaid
Guild, Huntington Beach.·Mrs. George Gartz,
Littlest Angel Guild, Yorba Linda, is ~hair ..
man, and treasurer ts Mrs. Robert L. Doss,
Tres Osos Guild, Mission Viejo.
Tickets, at $3. 75 each, will "include un-
limited use of all facilities with the exception
of the shooting galleries. They now are on
sale and may be obtained from any member
of the participating guilds.
Coordinating the event, which will re-
place· the annual fall CHOC Fair, will be the
Mmes. Robert Lucas, Cinderella Guild, New-
port Beach; Robert Thomas, Punch and
Judy, Costa Mesa ; Charles Roberts, Queen
of Hearts, Laguna Beach, and Doss, Tres
Osos, Mission Viejo.
· Brusbnan (top) and Mrs. Henning Otto, members
of the· ~ssion ·Viejo Recreation-. Center. , .
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·The ' LaglJna Line
Irish Emerges
In Party ·Host
By JEAN COX
ot lllf Dllltr , .. Sl1ff
YOU DON'T have to be a
Kelly or an O'Toole to, hav.e
1be Irish come oot Oii St.
Patrick's Day. ' .
Mrs. Leo Gassman, for in-
stance, Is only hall Irish, but
Europa which stopped at 14
ports.
Mrs. Garst, who raved about
the fabulous food served
aboard the liner, reported they
· didn't experience a single day
of rain during their trip aw1y
from wet Southern .California.
tha't part of her personality The foursome boarded the
has been emer1lng for the liner Jn Miami where the · · Krocha·vblted their claughter-past few years at ~ in-law'.J sister.
parties hosted by her and her
husband. A highllgbt· for the Garst.s
was St. Thomas, an American
~land off the coast ol Puerto
Rico. 1be Krocha were equally
pleased with Juab St. Vincent
Island, which fdn, Gant l<J,:
milted wu the "prettiest
island in the Caribbean."
This year lhe Gassmans bad
10 friends to their Laguna
Beach home for corned beef
and cabbage, Irish coffee,
Black Velvetl and dart games.
It was ainong several sniall
parties the couple has been
giving recently.
THE DOUGLAS REEVES,
who are quite British. used
SI. Palr1ck's pay to ent<rWn
three Russian-born friends
over dinner.
The tickets will not include food , which
may be purchased in the park.
The guilds a1so plan to award prizes dur-
ing the evening with first prize to be six days
in Hawaii for a family of four.
GOP Women Ac/dee/ to Mem~r~nip Roste r '
Those present included Mr.
and Mrs. Adolph Kroch, Dr.
and Mrs. Norman , Nlion and
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Weldon
of Laguna Beach along with
Mr. and Mn. Leo Garst oC
Irvine Cove and Mr. and Mrs.
George Scott of Newport
Beacb.
MW Mary Chamot ol Lon-
don, where sbe is assistant
curator · of Tait Gallery, at·
tended with Mn. Ludmila
Sofonov of Leisure World, ~
hostess during her visit to
Southern California.
MW Chamot and Mrs.
Laguna Niguel Republican Women's Club Federated
signed up 22 new members during a recent miln-
bersbip drive. Mrs. Harry Umhey, preoident of. the
Tip for Brides: It Takes Two
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several of
us cameramen here at Universal StudiO!!I
In Hollywood read your column and
discusl it regularly. Five times in the
put two months you have p"Jblished
letterl with the same basic theme -
"Men are animals, interested only in
satisfying their own sexual needs."
The Jetter that really tk:ked me off
wu the one from the wife who said
1he ftlt like a prostitute. According to
her, sea was a nuisance and a bore.
Sbt got nothing from it but exhaustion.
She said she wu willing to put up
'rith !t, ¥-'!'ever, ln u change for respi:r-
lability and the financial security ol
marria1e.
You've stated many times that women
who are married to Inept, clumsy lovers
should teach them. (Night school,
ANN LANDERS
mnember?) Well. l HY men can teach
night ocbool d-too. And they
should. An Inexperienced bride often ls
learfUJ, inhibited lll1d motionless. A
man who is kwing and con&tderate can
work wooden with even lht dumbest
partnf:r il \he iJ willing to learn. -
J.M. ,
DEAR J.M.: Braff. Tbe oper1Uve
word.I are commuaJc1tioft, ~r1Uon
and unte1flallnc11. T B A N I S FOlt
WRITING.
' . DEAR ANN LANORRSf 1 om I If.
year-old airl with a mentally, retarded
brother. He is 11even years oltler than
I. Latel)i I've been woOderlna what
will becOme ol hhn when 'Mom 'and
Dad pass on.
In addlUon to being ntmled, my
brother bas 1 spinal problem and ls
completely helplell. He needs to be
bathed, fed and dreued like an .infant.
I'm beginning to wonder lf t b ~
. ·
i outhem divisi~. reads, the new names from her
notebook to (left to right) the Mmes. William .fl.
Eadle, Winlleld Sbiras '111:811d Daniel B. Boyle.
THE K R o CR s AND Soronov, both bom in the same
GARSTS, Jn c id en ta 11y 1 part or Ru.via, were joined
m:enily returned from a by Miss Lila Zall, who plans
three-week Caribbean crulse to vllit her bomel01m, 1bllbi,
aboard the German llne:r SS next June.
to Tango
. . \
responsibility will fall m me .. Please
do1ft think I am .elfish or cruel, but
I don't want the bgrden of my han-
diCapped brother. It could spoil my
. cbanca for marriq:e.
[ have never beard ol a place that
caiu for people lfbo an bath1 retarded
and crippled. Rave you! I wouldo't •clare
dlocusl lhil wlth my pennis. P1eue
help me. -CLOUDY F(mJREI
DEAR <J.OVDY: Y•~MUST dllnl1
tld1 •ltll )'OUI' puu.tl. Jt ... Mtefr
....,..albiUly to Ml! 11111 JOV -r
Al pnvlftd for after \Hy are 1one.
Al lntlll'Ute rpodey pard;ued · Nr:ly
woldd iaarutee «MCI care ii a priva&e
lutitution. It ala wolld clve y.-
pareall ,.... of mJnd,. I llope they
•ave 1ocll a pelley.
as Well as
U *re art .ne fucb for prl•ale care.
ud ae willln1 rtladve, ~ p1dent
becomes a wanl •f lite •&ale ud ii
1e11t lo a 1t1te lmdtaUon.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother
was very d1sappointed when I married
PhWP-: She felt be wasn 't good enough
for me btca1111e b1s parenll wen foreign
bj>m and not "toei<ty."
Everr mom1ng Mother telephones to
make 10mt cuttin1 remark about hbp,
such 81 "f>hlllp's IOl were baggy list
night. Does he own earters?" Or "Philip
offended Mn. Beck because he Ignored
her and talll:ed to the woman at bis
ri&ht all through dinner." I hale to
hear lhe phone ring In the morning.
Rl&ht now my stomach la tled up in
l
ko<>ta. I need yoor advtce. -UPTIGHT
DEAR UP: TcU ,._. mtdter Y•
..,.... tO '*'* 1111 -crilldna of yoar Joubud. .JI slle for,..., clltp
lier oU ho mldtm ......
What .cawaita you on the other aide
of the marriap veil? How can you
be Rite yoor ibaniap will worU Re.,i ,
·Apn 4n<!en' booklet "Maniage -Whl&
to Expect." Send your request to Ann
Landen ln care of Wt oew1paper.enclo9-
ln1 50 cents In coin and a Ion(, lllmped,
self-addressed envelopt.
Ann Landen wll be 1lld to help
you with your problem1. Send them'
to lier lo c:ot< of the DAILY PILOl'.1 enclooJng I seU-ocJdrwed, llampe9
envelapc.
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DNW l'ILOT
" ' '·YOU'RE INVITID -Joe Kroll (right), dean of
•tudent acUvitl., at Orange Coast' College lllleresta
, Kit Weiler, Estancia High School senior and Mias
Birth Defects Conference
Future Parents
Every olher minute a baby
is born In tbe Uniled States
with a defect ltl'i<lll enough
t•· disable, dlsflguno or kill.
i\ tot.al of 1,700 defective.
babies are born each yur
in Orange County alone -
a quarter of a mI1llon in the
U.S.
The problem of birth defecta:
involves the young people of
today -for they are all future
·parenls.
So, the annual science con-.
•ference on Birth Defecls,
•trhich again will be presented
the fields ol medicine and
lcienct.
Included will be pr. Virfinia
Apgar, vice presldent for
medical attairs for the foun-
ctaUon.
'lbe dynamic .,.a11u Is
rtllOwntd for creaUng the
Apgar 1COre, the neonatal tut
which can lead to rapid cor-
recUon of early deflclencles
before irrepar1ble dlma1e
mulls to the newborn. Her
topic will be Better_lng the
Diane Munyon, OCC nunlng student in attending
the annual Blfth Defects Conference to be pr .. ent-
ed Wedneaday, March 26, at the college.
Invited
Odds for the Unborn.
Predlctlni tbe Future will
be dlscuDed by Dr. Charla
J. Epatdn, usoctate prOleuor
ped.1atrle1, Unlversl{j o f
California, San Franc 11 co
Medical Center. A !ilghly
respected genetlcltt, he hu
lectured at unJveniUH and
high 1ehools throughout the
United States.
Also on the panel will be
a representative from the Salk
Jnatitute for Biological
Studies.
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Horoscope
Aquarius: Make New C:o~tacts
TUESDAY
MARCH 25
111 IYDNEY OMAIUI
1'1'e wile man comroll hb:
dM!ey •• .AltroloC' pointa the
way."
AllllCI (M~ 21-April 19)'
Ba """ <II legal cleanince
blfcn dJocardlng red tape.
You have a job to complete.
ODe who tempts you does not
have your tntermta at heart.
Take 7our time. Avoid im-
pU!llve actlon.
TAUIIUI (April ZO.May 20),
AcUvtty tocreues. Visits and
v!liton IN fe-atured. New ap-
pr-11 to old problems get.s
belt retult.!. Be versatile.
VtlllJ.e lel1Se ol h u m o r •
Re.laUve who display1 anger
Is blu!ffn(.
GEMINI (May 21.Juoe 20)'
Cbeclt tendency to overspend.
O>oooe quality, but aUck to
nectllltia. Child m a k e s
demandl. Be fair but sensible.
Trult bunch. You 're moving
In right dlrecUm.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
DomeotJc conditiOIUI could be
upaeL .Be ready for change. iioo~ battle progreos. Be n ...
Ible. The changes that occur
at ~ could be of ultimate
benefit. Go along wlth it.
LEO (July 2J.Aug. 22)'
Important to f o 11 ow In·
atructlona. Apparent minor
details could be major. Wise
to put off journey until ap-
Polntmenta: ire verified,
Overcome tendency to be iJn..
paUent.
VDIGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
What appears a bargaJn may
be the opposite. Know thi•
and be a shrewd observer.
Friends who mean well may
be mltlnlonned. Heed your
own COW'llel. Draw upon put
esperldce.
SCORPIO (Oct. J3.Nov. II)' 11)' One Y"" d~ QpOll BD\THDAY yoo are lo-
Be 1 u b t I e . CommunicaLim ml1 embark upon jOW"oey. troepectlve, crtiaUve; you art
may cause cbuee of planL Afold ft.tun, ol. resentment. 1ble to determine what other•·
n.t't burn brldlt:I. Slit to You will haft chance to make are tbJnking, feeling. Yoa
reta.ln aood reilt!ocs. l"ou nlJf' coot.di. Ploneer a pro-would make fine artist, writu.
may havt to repeat stepe:. j ect: d l• pla )' ual q ue You also art aU.racted t.o law.
Know U1la and a Ct ~ e1pabiUU• Promotion due; money coma
cordlngly. P-(Feb 1 .... ~ -)· lrom efforta of recent pHt. SAGirt'ARllJS (Nov. II---' rm-•~ . GENERAL TENDENC1Ell1 Today yoo ret to heart of Dec. 21): A friend who re--"-tterl. Include• lea-H.• Lunar position favorable for
qu..U mooey m•y be ti.· ..... • ,....,. f'•"; ..... tr1llh abool special rela· .....,. travagant. 1MlM en fact.I. Be ti•• .. ••. J•"'-ent' of one To 11nc1 OUT who'• llXllY f1H' vw "-• wi'••-" being ,..-1... ,...__.. ....... , In r'Mn•Y 1/ld kW•, ordtr !C'!il a&ilU u11.11.a .,...,.-. c~ to '-• may be lac1.;,.,,. em.rr1 !looll l•'· "St<.r•t Hin
Jud t '~ ls pt to be -~-IUU6 Mtfl ilnd WOl'l\el'L" hlllll •1 t gmen wuly I "-·-.....,.,..., ls --er-....1 1nc1 50 cmll to Om•" A•lr•ltft' ~ Don't be -'•aJd to Wuc.ie •u.,..w.1 .. .,.,.. ""''-'· SllCreh,. Ille DAILY l'ILOT. &N nAO. ._.,.~""'•• «U IF TODAY JS y OUR r,r1rid C1ntr1l Slll!on. New Y~
e•preu the truth. ·-===~=~=====':=·'::;";:"';:"::::======; CAPRICORN (Dec. n.Jan.lt'
10): You an able to suc-
ceafully oommonJclte views.
Opportuniti11 multiply. Key is
to choo<e the best Permit
mate, partner to a h a r e
limelight. Then you have feel-
ing ol aati.afacUon.
. AQUARIUll (jan,
GAYLE PEARSON
Summer Nuptl•I•
St. Andrew's
• Rite Setting
. .at Orange Coast College, is
·~ins presented especiaUy for
.all Orange County student.s
and faculty.
Sponsored by the college and
the California Association of
SecQndary School Adminls-
~tratOrs, District 21 , the sym-
}.OSiwn will be presented by
the Orange County Chapter,
'National Foundation-Match o[
'Dimes from 1:30 to e p.m.
·Wednesctay, March 21.
Yvonne Collis Marries
Jack D. Richardson
STEWARDESS
Peggie Ostling
Training
Completed
LIBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ),
Expand activities. AYume
authiOrtty. Be confident. Ac-
cent tin ambitions, career
potential. Family member can
help you 1umll goo!. Study
CANCER message.
Pb rents
Invited
Gayle Pe.arson and Phillip
Cotton have aelected S t .
Andrew's Presbyterian Church
for their evening wedding on
July 12. · ~
The daughter of Mr. and
Mn. W. W. Pee.non of
Newport Buch will gradu.te
from Golden West College in t ~
-June. While at Newport
HarlJDr lltgh Scbool lbe WU
The M1rqul1e diamond, $4,500.
SLAVICK'S
.. Stl'Mlling birth defects, the
conference will feature na-
tionallJ known speakers from
Yvonne Collis and Sp/5 Jack
D. Richardaon, high achoo!
sweethearts, e:ichanced wed-
ding ringa and pledges before
the Rev. John K. Durham in
Chapel 0 n e , Baumholder,
Gennany.
Army SIL Jerry Thompson
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THRU SATURDAY ONLY!
Special Easter price
on our Sue Cory 'So French'
PERMANENT
REG. 17.50
NOW 11.88
S•1 sp11 941 Mt ,3 (Me.., ,._ & w .... oely)
w •• , ...... "' ..... ., ~ 'lrit•
llA TOVll PINNIT QIAltOI CAID-
NO APPOINTMINT NICISWY
MU,.,-1,.0TOft llACtt
tM!tlat• Geftftr
JN n-. m-m 1
L
•tWNlf llACli ,. ...... ......
~flfw .... •Ull
gave the bride in marrla1e
during the afternoon nuptials.
Parenti of the couple are Mrs.
Evalet Thomu ol Colla N.:esa
1nd Jolm R. Collis ol Sum-
mtrland and 1/J. and Mra.
Jack B. Richardson of Cost.
Mna.
The new Mra. Richardson
telecied I fioor length While
saUn and tiered chantllly lace
KOWn. Her full Uertd elbow
length lllu1lon veiling was
Graduated from Eutern
Airlines' fli&bt at t e n d a n t
training center In Ml..U ls
MiJa Peggie Jeeone Oalllnl.
The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. St1n OSUing of Million
Viejo also ii an alumna of
Newport Harbor High School
and Orange Cout CQ1Jege. She
now is based out o( New York.
New 1nd npectant pu11111 a che<rlwler.
ate invited to attend · a · The benedict-elect, 10n. of meetlnc apomored by La fl1e ltoberl Cotto!ll DI Costa
Leche Learue of llunllnfton Met1, wu graduoted from
Beach Mardi 21 on the birth COrona de! Mar High Scl>ool,
of the bGy .Ind lamlly re1a-"'"'!led at GWC and now is
Uona. · 1 l!lpboi'nora 11 fl1e Univenlty
Jewelers Sine• 1917
18 Feshion hland
N1wport. Beec h -4'4'1-1]80
Your Ch•r9e Account Welcoll'l•-
l111kA111er!cerd, Mister Ch1r91 , too
Op•11 Mond1y, Fri d1y until 9:3 0 p.m.
l
Mrs. A. Lynn Meyen "'•~•:l:Ca:lll:Orllll:;:·:Rf:::veralde====·==~;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ Huotlngton Buch will hoat1 ·
the 9:30 a.m. meeUna. Anyone wllhtni lnlol'Dlltl(\tl moy call
Mn. David Wattrcott, 147-
IOll. caught to a pearl Uara &nd1--------------------ROBINSON'S abe carried a CAacadln1 bou·
quet of red carnations and
fern.
Honor attendants were Sp/4
and Mrs. Robert C. Reynolda.
The m1lron or honor was
1owned in a red dress and
held pink carnatlona.
A small reuptlon followed
the ceremony in tM chaptil
halt Allllttnt were Mrs.
Marie Koonu and Mra. Clay
Jackaon.
Tbe newlyweds are
graduates of Calta Meea High
School and the benedJct at·
tended Oranae CG&st College
before e.nll!tine In the Army.
He is a veteran of Vietnam
and will be at1Uoned In
Gtrmany unlit his dlschar1e
In September.
The couple now are m1k.lng
their home in Idar.ObersteJ.n,
Gmnlny.
Book Study
On Program
C<lntlmporary Books will be
the tofllc of Mrs. Terrence
Halloran of the Memorare
Gui ld when she speaks for
the Orange Coonty Alumnae
ol Immaculate Heart COllege
Wedntaday, Mardi 21.
Mra. Alexander Brunett cf
Santa Ana will host the 8
p.m. meeting. Nominations for
new officers also will be oo
the agenda, according to the
president, Mr s. James Ca~
passo.
NB Aux iliary
Newport Beach Pollet AUX·
Jllary g1thers the last Tueld1y
of the month at 7:30 p,m.
Loc1Uon la 1v1ilable with
1tfrs. Robert Wheeler, 675-1129.
ADVl"TltlMINT
IRIDE AND GROOM
AN! the t-wo moat import-
ant people in a weddlnl[.
lt you're ready to walk
down the able, get the
"How to Plan Your Wed·
ding" Gulde. send 25c In
coin to P .0. Box 388, Hunt·
Jngton Beaoh. Calif. 92641.
NO MONEY DOWN up '0,:' .~:NTH•
CALL JOI Piil llTIM.t.n AND SHOP AT HOMl lllYICI
O.r '""tK118111tf tr1~ ._.,,.., ""II ftlM • .....,,. """'9 tr Mitt
• • • ... ., ·--••• Wllfl .. "'"' ...... .....,,.. " ,,.,.,., tr Cl~ HlftllM. ..... lltlt• el .. .
PlOM YOUI AHA CALL 548-8242 01 ....... ,
IEAUTI PLIAT
DRAPIJlY & CARPO
Add COlorflll
••cl~t l't VII.Ir tllODm
0.Cff ' ' • Wiii! ltlct Ntw lclMf IMI
Ctll9MI ··-......
• Tll lackl ......
I C•tc:Hft ....
e v1i.nc" e A111lt11i._.
OUl wo••MANSHIP II SUPlll
HAlDWAll & lODS CVT TO OlDll
EIUTIPLEn
CALL fOJI Piii llTIMATI
SHOP.AT·HOMI lllYICI
DRAPERY
"'CARPET·
548-8242
NO MONEY DOWN u• TO. MONT" Tl "T
Now in Our Famlfy:
Family Weekly
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CLAIROL® SUNLIGHT GLOWS IN YOUR HAIR.
T he s un sh i nes brightest on the w oman who has
discovered the magic of our fabulous color s tylists .
S he's a glowing Clairol® blonds., .the prettiest
blend• )IOU know, Se one I custom coloring,
lndlvt~lly prlcecl, Price Including aet, from
only 15.501 cut, rrom 5.QO. Beauty Salen.
HUMAN HAa METCH Wl01CUITOM SIYUD, 41.00
In bl?onds, bNnlttu• rro.t9da and g,..y. ••• wtw.t 8
wig tow .. ,.~ yo.Ar own ooll°droqMI Sav• d.lrlng
thl• llmltld orttil". SM OJr entire wtggery gr-oupi
caacad .. , wiglet., tong and ,,.,.dlurn ,_ti•• Beauty Salon,
ROBINSOl'.J'S NEVvfORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644·2800
I
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• • . -costa .Mesa
N.Y. Stoek8
:voe. 62,' NO. 71, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ' . TEN CENTS
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Campus · Guideline
. '
Nixon Moves on Student Violence .
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 111t O.llY , .... IHl!f
A three-point policy declaring war on
campus disorder but urgin1 correction
of basic student irritants -a guideline
for ' American educators -.is being
studied today, following its weekend
r e 1 e a s et by President Nixon in San
Clemente.
The statement was initially sent to
college and university administratbrs by
Robert H. Finch, secretary of health
education and welfare,, spelling1 'out the
ABCa of fu.e, Jeg\uinate dissent vUsu.i
anarchy and it.s devutaUng resulls.
FUU PhOto Covaroge
Of Nixon v;,;1 Plig .. ,J., 13 ·
. Questions of criminal violaUon of the
Jaw must be, determined .by the courts,
not the academic community, the Nl:1on-
1''inch statement . emptwiles, but the
. . ... lliml _..,. will be bnpooed upon
conviction, by both ageodea .•
Tbe '_-prlinary coocern is outrJlht en-
f orcement of federal laws ~.to
educalloo and the secondary .pciln~ me
streued •.far· more important in
the presidenllal statement, is prewv•
tlon of independent, cr<aU.. hllher
learning.
"Freedom ..:.. intellectual freedom -
is in danger . in Amerlca. Violence -
(See NJXON, Page I)
Community Leader Utt All· Meet
Fails to Get Retired Doctor Milum,
'
62, Succumbs at Hoag . Off Grourtd .
J,I ·• •"~ )l ~ • "• _C ' • DAl\.'t ,ILOT ....... WI~ ... lpecUl.to tM DAIL~
Dr. Edward W. Milum, a retired physi-
cian with a lengthy record of community
service In the Harbor Area, died at
Hoag Memorial HospitaJ Saturday alter
an illness of several weeks. He was
62.
Services will be held al 11 a.m. Tues.
day at Pacific View Memorial Park
Chapel, with interment there to follow.
WAslDNGTON - A . . for • joint
meet1n1 of Harbor Atta . olliclais with
congressmen and senators over local
airport problems failed to come. off to-
day. ·
P~Sll>lirr ANOtMRS. 'Nl~ON , BIP ADIEU ,TO ORANGI COUNTlANS AT, El TORO
· Hln!!llMba:.n\I k Thrlll•lor • ,._Viar.Old lelor• loardint Air Foret Pna <
Coast Bids Nixon FarewelJ . '
Dr. Milum was executive director o( -,
the Newport beach United Fund from
1961 until December, 1968, when he
resigned due to ill hea1th. Jn a series
The session, which Costa Mesa Mayor
Alvin L. Pinkley had sought to arrange,
was expected to be held in the office
ReP. James B. Utt (R-Tustln ) ..
Robert Geyer, Utt's adm:inlatrative
assistant, said reporta of the meeUnc
350 at El Toro See PresUlent · Off After Visit
were incorrtd. "The people • froi;n By'JUCRARD P. NALL' shoulder. 'He turned back 1mlling and think he's taking a look at lhe Queen
Mary." 'n!e joke alluded to prua and
public speculnUon lhat Nb:on might huy
property for a tiome and library in
of successful campaigns, Dr. Milum saw
the fund goal rise from $53,000 in 1961
to $115,000 in 1969.
From 1959 through 1961, 0.. Milum
strVed as clerk and then president or
the •Ill Newport llaJ;bor Union High
&:hool' -Boord el Truateu. '"""' new high schools, Corona dei ~EsU!!l:.
cia and Costa Mesa, were 'dtll'ltt
hJs term of office.
Dr. Milum retired as a physician in
Corona del Mar in l!M7 -following a
heart attack, but remained acUve in
community affairs.
Named Newport Beach "N:an of the
Year" in 1956, be bad been a member
of the advisory committees of the Boy
~outs.of Ariierlca, the Girl Scouts. He
also served as a member of the board
of trustees of St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church and Hoag Memorial Hospital,
and was active In Lions International.
He ls survived by his wi!e, Madge,
Ge1i. Eisenhower
Growing Weaker;
Requires Oxygen
WASH1NGTON (UPI) -Former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower grew
progressively weaker during the weekend
despite the "vigorous" efforts of his
doctors to counteract his latest heart
.rfliction, the hospital said today.
Eistnhower, 78, requires constant ox~
ygen and other medlcal support after
suffering congesUve heart faJlure March
JS at Walter Reed Anny Medical Center
"ilere he has been hospitalized since
last 'Jlflng.
· Congestive heai:f. failure gerier~\ly. is
due to heavy fluids colled.lng 1n the
heart, Impeding ita aetloo. and reoulting
tn an inadequate flow of blood to the
rest ol the body.
Even as spokesmen at Watte!' Retd
disclo&ed Eisenhower 's erosion of
strength, Mrs. Mamie Eisenhowe\-told
the White House she Y.'ould pass up
Monday night's dinner for Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau
because of his condiUon.
And, at Mrs. Eisenhower's insislence,
President Nixon's daughters, Tricia, 23,
and Julie Eisenhower, 20, went to Walter
Reed to cheer up Eisenhower. Julie is
married to the Elsenhowers' granClson,
David, 20.
Burglar Spotted
But Gets $500
A Costl Mesa houaewlrt chtcking her
cits early today heard a bufglar ~a
into a nearby golf range office, but
ht escaped ~·Ith nearly S5<IO 1n cash
•nd cluhl before police rolled up to
t.he acene.
Usina 1 Ure Iron, the bur1lar pried
o(>en the door 1t the Costa Mesa Golf
ltange, 2717 NetVpcrt Blvd., and im-
mediately fled In a car, 1cwrding to
the woman who telephoned p)ol\ce.
Own• Roy A. Mar checked the
premitel and found $100 in cash. plus
&Olf clubs v11ued at MOO miJ&lng as
a regult or Ute brcak·ln shortly artcr
midnight.
Newport Beach and Costf, Mft.f,'' ht Of"" Dlili.-'lilt tJtfl shook the youn1ster '1 stnall hand.
sald, "wlll have to meet wita their 1be. presidenUal seal on Air Force Timqthy. bu.med and saluted.
.,_....,.n individually." One, ~; ~d.if symboljc el • the Th' r~ldenl in a blue-gray suit look·
Some ol t11ellarl><r'.Ara d•f0Jall"'1, 1gooles ·of .the .presidency sun11a1 u ed tanned and reiued afier hla San
no dooht .U..ppointacl, were ia. tJtt'1 JU-~ bis wjf< U!I ai• bolrd-Clemente ,-,.ee~<n<f. Mn. Nb:on was
1111* a1 tl>O Q>ue. , • t<I ~. 1·1:. Ill< #•lllt•on ~boipl · . ..-... Pll! and ,..U.W,._IUit. •• Gefer-iald tho ta J y -Ali. . .' · · . . . · Aalleil U Nli<m had pun:iwed any
UV. II> llie ·;qi;~!ii'.911::"" ~nm,. -,J,0 !bit ~U.. · reol , ealaie ip .Orange County, ·a ,,....
QWn ..-~~ 1ai1·'iioA .-.!liilo!W~JM ,.uit , ~·61 lllle·tolil •• t4>orter with• j!in: "I
the area~ ~ •ff-about a 10-mlml\e hanclsbaklpl ~ the Preslderit Llftd MJ-a:r,NWm
hurried up the ramp,· waved and left
on the_ shrieking thrust of faar bl& jel
eoglneo.
wwld attend, ·~:I.--~ 'Ollli>Wi>I. iii! "" ~ Gt . . . Sena1on GelJraoy : (&caltl.) and wit In ihhlthtr. ,.. · · · · ·
Aillt Q-anstoo 1 ). and ™P. ...... _ ~··-----· , . __,_ . ~. G ... lde T . l R Riehm! HaDna (l):WeStinlnl*).. V'~.-~. '"had""-:. °"1.""""'5~, ':: 0 . . n r'lnng e ' ezone "Wedon'tknowJf~calt1etMittphf;" n:w~u ..... ~ 11' MAI
aaid G<yer. "and ilamla' ls appearini lhe Pralcjenl.and fiis ai4ea lhortly·belort · ·
CIVIC LEAiiE'rt' SUCCUMBS .
. l)r. Edw•rd '/i. Miium
~ore the Supre~·Court m IOme m1~ a bellcoPter ·~ Nixon od hia en-
ter thla --•··. Q-wton ls out el toureg•-lo 1¥-Martn~j>Ue. · ... -·-.. · .. · )lel(/i'e ~ Air Force •One ·1o town." · . , . nbirn to Wlshffipod tAte SundaJ, the . The trip· lo Wuhlnglon by Newport ~ .•• and ' C.O.ta Mesa OffldJJa: w• btidJf President met with· Ellaworth ~Iller,
a wbte; however. They will be atumdhl& (J.S. ombwador 'lo Saigon, and Gen.
Request Filed in Mesa
or the home, 1215 Nct~llham RDad,
Newport Beach; a son. liobtrt, alao
or Newport Beach; a ' dalighte. Mii.
PhylJJJ: Marr, ol Pasadena, ind foor
graridchildren. ' '
The family suuesta thlt thoee ·wbO
wish may mlilte 1 memorial contribution
to the N_.wport.Jleai:h Ul\ited Fund.
. .
Girl C1ippled .
111 Dangerous
Dive at Beach
Despite repeated warnklgs from
onlookers and warning signs, a 15-year-
old AtUSa girl dove off Rocky Point
in Corona del Mar Sunday, suffering
crippling neck injuries.
' CAB '-~-• ~ J. · Goodi>uttr, JO!'lll'f 'deputy aC!vUA!rollauttcs&llrd( >--. comn/8nder ohii-.8.:.1~'-ln Vietiiani
Tuesday aOd ~pt Wedneaday on • and .. newiy nameil >llJed coinnlarider of propooal lo allow llacili< Northweol filgljta out <!I Orange C<ranty Airpol:I. lhe North Atlantic Treaty Or1anisaUon
Newport is opposed to the fllcbts; for.cu. ' · · . • •
CosLa Mesa fav~ .them. . Their diacussions .continued for thtee
Newport•• op-;tion will be _,;,..,,_ , llouia _simday,'then resumed on ibe.llistit
before the cAB by Mayor ~ back"lo 'l\!ubingtl>li·.' · _ .
Marshall and City · Attorney TuHy A crowd ol about ' 350 petsOn!i · WJIS
Seymour. RepreseDting Qista Mes&'• on hand at El Toro to applaud and
position .will be Mayor Pinkley, Planninc . bid farewell It was Nixon's first visit
Commis,,ioritr Jack Hammett and Plan-ta' the cowi.ty f/. ~his birth since U,e ·
nlng Director William Dunn. presidential inaugurat,lon. · · _
. The CAB is not 'expected to reach Theri:.wu a special treat for.S.1ear-o~
a decision oo the iuue for aevertl wee~. Timothy Flores of Wilmington u the
The board will probably do little more President 'and first lady veered ~ward
than take testimony . from competln1 the smiling crowd. ·
alrllnes and public agencies during the The boy was thrust by his father
heatln over th'e crowd toward the Pnsklent. g. ched ~.·.·--~ Sdme 10 airlinea are 1eekln1 IUlht Mn. Nixon ' tou · her uWuaou.s
awards for the 'P&elfJc Northwest route
from tbe Solhern California area~ Only
three of them have applied lo 111. out
of Orange County Airport, however. Tbe
othen propooe uaing other airfields.
Cranston Urges ;More
Money . .for ·Educalio~
A rtzone request to allow development
of a 17.S. acre _apitrtment complex in
Costa Mesa's so-called golden trlangle
distdct ii up for PlanrUng Commission
study tonl&ht, but no action is ezp!cl.e.d.
Property owners in lhe freeway-bound·
ed ·area of ·northeast •Costa Mesa are stronlJy opposed to such. a development
and the plannllig dei>artment says it
wouk! be premafure Without careful
StUd)'t
Planning Director William Dunn sug.
gests the· proposal by Peoples Inveslment
Corp., ·Beverly Hilla, be shelved until
the planning commission and city council
can study the entl're region.
. Previous requests to develop in · the
B<H:alled golden triangle section have
met a sbnllar fate; despite arguments
by applicants th•t rising laxes make
it a burden to let the land just lie.
Some. long-term studies indicate the
family residential development, and the
front was converted to 1Mtllutloila1 and
recreationa1 zoning some time ago for
a hospital project that never materlaliz.
ed.
The golde?\ tri~le a.rea will be ~n
compassed eventually by the .existing
San Diego and Newport freeways, tiotb
oi. .which will be linked Jnto a wedee
paUern by the future Corona de1 ltfar
Freeway.. .
City 'hall sources said an organize!!
group of property owners apposed ,to
the suggested development may show
up, but I.heir presence will probablr
only serve as a token indication of
feeling.
Nothing is likely to be· developed fn
the crucial area until the city's govetnlng
agencies deeply study its future use
and contribution to the !WTOUnding
neighbor: hood.
Most other Items on life planning 'com-
rnissiorr agenda are r0\4ine and a sliort
meeting -fo!Jowing a recent trend -
is expected.
Lifeguards reported that Deborah Sollz
walked out on the small promontory
at Corona del Mar's ba,_ldt twimming
beach and started to dive from ,the
rocks into three feet of water.
Onlookers, lifeguards said, told the
a:irl to stop, but she dove anx~IJ'.
~ng the award ai County Airport
are Air Calilomi1 and Air West, who
are aJrellly·located at the iocal"facjllty,
The' third line <ls f'lorthw"" ·Alrllnee,
whkh doel not now do : businesl at
Orona• Cowity Airport,
LOS ANGELAS (UP I) -Sell. Aillt n--. 1o:c&U1.>, toda;.· ..rg«i~u.. ·
led•ilpei'ninent to gpend 11lQl"'t ~
on tcl..,.UoiiaJ 1<bool 1""11'._,.f!f· ~
chlldrtn and . called on· ,the. "'Uon. not
lo \0 IOtLolied with preaenl· achool.-id
aPSfoprlaUons. -·
· area could be the center of what will
someday be mefropolllan Orange County,
a complex of blgh-rlse buildings and
cotnn¥fCial deveJormenL
The particular •parttl In question · at dr Sell H Id 1on1gb~a .?:30 meottnr 11 bordered by Chil ~n . · er e
, Pauiarlno Road, Ludlngtoo Stre<:L the RICHMO)'ID,.1\v. (AP\~ A middle411·
• SanDl~n.e'!'ay.anci an.Or~nt• COllJ>.. ed logger was. held )lll!ler f:,500 bond
ty Flopd."'°""1 Dillricl qianoeL . ' today, chacged wlih sqllcIµng hrn of
'A rear pbrOoo ls zoned for single . his six children for adoption. ·ponce Chief
A San Bemardlno ·sherl!t'"s officer,
Capt. Hillard Horton, saw the accident
and went into the water Jo brlna the
unconscious girl to shore.
She was taken to Hoag Memorial
Hospital shorUy 1fttr the, 1: t9 p.m. in ..
cident and underwent surgery for the
fracture.
Her condition was listed as criUcal.
Spokesmen for .the hospital said ahe
might remain paralyzed for· life.
Steele llferkm
NEW YORK (AP) -The llock market
clo8ed lower today. Tradln& near the
finish was relatively slow. (See quota-
tions, Pages 14-1~).
The Dow Jonet industr"'l averare at
1:30 p.m. was off 2.24 points at 917.71'.
"We can no longer ro on f q_ o I i .n g ~iv .. thit ow' federal aid' l!fOlrams Boar'd . ca· ndidate are sufficient," he told the ·state dlrectors1 •
of ·federally financed · ~ · ·
~=:.it1on ..;.i~=~~~ h.':y1o~~ ·Night ' Scheduled
prlorlly . In' federal · b u d 1 • t' .. ~-·
alderaUons." ~ CahcWlal:el · for Newport-Mesa and
• ' '.Orange •C<iast Junior College school
• • • J • I • · • • 1 boafdf. WW confrpnt tach other, Tuesday
R . k M . 'R d Pl t'0 ·nlght. •. , . .. . C Us'IC e . 6 1 r. ' ' A candidates forµm ·at t :ao p.m •. at . • 0 , . • , ( ' " ' • ' . ' 1 I • • ' KAl,ter Intermediate Sebool •2130 Santa
, '' '-. · ·~ · : • 'An&:A ." ~.M ...... iJik:~sor<d :
r ... . '· 1': .1 ·1J'.'·1·. :1 ',.l' 'bytbtr~·~·LbaUe '~lV'~
S E , C . 1 •· i . ·rr:r ·. 'J ·J ., • ·V~rs:_:N~di' ~.dut.•tl•l\ Utt Says . ex ducation AJfO o~mun,_._, ;.1:Qnt<·.: .; ':~~01\d -~ M•~.~ber ..
. . ... ., • ' . • ' , . ·~1 will lian' o .. 1mfllutes to WASIDNGTON'(IWJ)-S.1tducation "Aa uauai noble and -p1a . trul)nr •. l~ Rlloln, an ,Jdflll~ ·.,,.,..,.,malWqu..tlonna!rtal!d,tl1en
and rock-and-roll mllllc: an part ol a an advanced which, ·1 am ,_., lo ~uni.I~ Is lditor'(lf·~ """'°"a""" written quelliM< Jrili.be accepted Q'Ol11
c.ornmumst comptraey to de1tro1 •Y· have even drawn tht naUOoal child macnlns 'Sexology,' .'• Utt' 11·l·d. ·the .audltnct. -r-:-• •,
America, Rop. James B. Utt, !'!i welfan division ol the AmerlcaA Lellon · "SIECUS founder. Dr. Wlor.Jtlrk~ QuatJon. put lo the canilidalH by
Tllstln) c:barPo la a -Id~ lo hil bJlo oupport." 'Id Gl1lor olftclala allO-. .,.,_ mall, In brl<f, are :."
Orange County --. Ult aald teaaien and einbanuied -1,tll 'Suo19e'.' •:.. .. · . . , -'ftat•nlevant eiper!Mce or training •
Ali ievela ol tho U.S. clq)r havt -ta were penniltinc .CmununJlt !* -Ooow~' "'4f•· UU AidL~w!'" can•you wing ll> the job? • ·
also been infiltrated by tbt-o eoemy roplroll ae1 education o1 cblJdren lhrnufll ~ ...U ...,. bl .the' l!'al m>pm11L -l!'l<at ·c\llnge• abould the school ., a bMlc atratrgy towml cooquerln1 Ille el material provided by the Su v"1 lo the!< ~"by :u.e dOittudioa hoard underW:e now!
the naUon 1hroql\ cootrlved , colllpot lnfonnatioo and Educatlot!, Council o1 "1«.ai lltanil&ii!o.'" For U,t -· -Whi! are the muat _algnlficanl things
or moralily, he arso chargu. the United States ISlEcuS), whicll he he 11k!I they.1!a4i''iqI;g,4p illlillratecl the bl>ord ahould CONider In the nut
"One ol the . basic aclMtia o1· the. said had "'spread Ito 1'1\taciel' lnlO just t1it seminariOI el· the , leading raJJcloua four !(tan?
Communists it the~ pron19tloo of com• about every stat< In the union." , ffltlf~ ai}lf tliert are ,.11\'w· coqmu111lata -'Whit 1'1laia)ion mlglil be "'"!led!
plete "' education In aimolll ail tchoot "Olwlousiy, SJECUS it not in-' ld <!<11<il garb at 111 l<veli of ... Uglon.'' ' -Witat IOlll'µOI ol lundl do you think
grades," Ult wrote. in morallly." Utt aald, "ltnce its tltt, UTr, Pini) the achoois mi&bl tap?
-"~---
Frink Nassida ·said the' lOger, Paul
Grilno.sr .. admitted lldllng tile 'ch1ldr<n. '
Orange .
We.tiller
How ioria·J n beeii• slnct we· hid :
a nice, warm ""~ritt Ahl wind?.
Weil, there'•. one on the way,·
,eievatini th! mOn:ury lo 70 hfte. 1'1'°"ta anil up lo IZ ~urther in1and.
' INllilDE TODAY
I ~ pair of "fa!IUlv twc" plaJll
lt.QQcd toi.t1-in walking dilimtce • 1o/ .eocll. other in.Coata McMI: *"
reuiewtd.. todau .. Stf' E'\&tcrtdf"" 1
~t, Pvge 24. I.... iii
C:•-fllhoNI I •e.io n ,_ .. -=-llNIJlcott .:
•111 ...... '"' • l[llltf'I....... ,.. jf._, 1 .. is
Jl'lrl, <•Ila It ""9M.-II Aflll l.Mlln It Mtl.. ,
' •
Ii
•
--.......... -........ __ .. ..,-,
D.\ILV I'll.OT
..... ,. ""' -.....
'UNfillCll$AitY, DISltUPTIVI'
Ail'port. Critic l lMIY
Huntington
Negro's HQme
Firebombed
:NorthMrest Flights Said Airport Hazard
•
NoiseFoeEm;oryChitrges Route Too Much for OC A.irport
• Pacllle Northwest flll)lta !l'om OranJe
county Airport wtJI Impair tho ufelJ
ol amaJJ pianos, dlitort the 1irpori'1
n>le and coolllct wtth the poller or
the Civil AeronauUcs Board, it wu
cbarpd today by airport espanaion foe
Du l!lmoey.
'Emor1'• views 1ppear in advance
--, prepared 10< a CAB htarlna
.. the propoaed fllpta. Tbe haarlni
opem 'l'llalday In Wuhinltoo, D.C.
In hio JS.pap allidavlt, Emory,
chairman " the l,JOO.inember cl~
NGUe Abotameot Commltt.e, c n ti
!\ilWU . W!!if'116 II Iii alrporl,
•llOttllni that with pre,_ announced
we!Pt llmltatloos (95,000 poundJ), the
noci.top fU&bla would be Impossible
without airport r<furblahin1.
'"I'he airport," he sayd, ''is unsuitable
!or the 1mall aatellite tenniul role
... the Pacific Norlhweal aervk:o lo th•
alrport It unnecmary and dlaruptlve
to the 1\11TOU.od!n1 community, ml lhe
atrport'a rola In aervlna the need.I of
Or1111e County would be aerloully
cll.ltorted. ti
-Since otrvk:o <It the llllle oort ii
pllnned I« ·Lona lltlch and ,OnlaJio
1lrports, fllaht.1 .from Orange County'
would be 11~wldant and unnece!Slr)'. ''
The two other tenninllJ, Ule presen-
tation says, would be much better suited
for nonstop flights.
He cites San Francisco u the probable
refueling point for "noostop" flights from
Orange County, and since the CAB wantl
to e~toate eonaetUon at m a; o r
termlnala by 1dd1ng nonttop fltthtl from
sateJUte poi~, the stops required In
San Francisco, "would defeat the CAB's
purpou."
Emory araues that the addition of
fli ghts lo Orange County Airport will
add to already crit~l congestion there
and that the congtstlon could affect
safety ol aircraft at the airport.
"The absence of instrument land~nc
sy!ltems and approach lighting reduces
the 1n.argin o! safety durini bad
weather."
He cites aalety hazards when Uthl
planes must share the runwayt with
larae craft and daneers of mid....tr cot.
llsioru w~ fast and slow planes use
the same air space.
Emory also says air turbulence ca!Jied
by large jets would pn!sent ''severe
huarda" to llCh! planes .
ElllOl)' concludes hil praentaUoo b1
touchillf OI\ damAC• claims, totalin& Ill
milllon, roentect by mo« th.. .,
Homeownett ln the Harbor Ana over
noise and nuisance caused by Iow·fl)'inf
large jets.
The Nortb>'ff( (lll!rts1 he 11)11, "would
lncm.ae taltlofl nolaa Jevolt by as much
11 IO perceot due to alowar !lkeoll
lime brought about by heavier lull llllf
paaen.ger lo.ads."
"(It) ii of amt coocem and would
Undoubtldly pr.clpl!lte I -round of
damaa• claims."
F ro111 Pffe I
NIXON •••
~
physic1I violence, physical lntlmld1tion
-is se:emlna:ly on Jls way to becoming
an accepted or at all events a normal
and not to be avoided element in the
clash of opinion within the unl\'ersity
conflne1," he 11aid.
VIOLENCE 118ED
ceurll of criminally diorupllnJ Ula ~
tional 1y1tem.
''The new reaulatioas are moderMe
and they are justified," be aaid.
"Given the Present tactice of· dilru~
tion, anyone so convicted may fairly ~
assumed to have been waultina: the
procwes of f,_ inquiry which ~ ~
very llfe of learning," Nixon added.
PROTECT ITSELF
A yamc Nf#O cauple'1 'Dome WU
lireboaibed Saturdly a!pl In Huntlnctoa
Bead!. 'Ille wife lllm>WlJ eocopod lnJury, •
Polke lnveotlg-. Kid a mololOY
cocitall taooed lmD a opoedlnc truck
chamd the --<It Ille Irvin HaITll hlne al>out It p.m.
Nixon said violence is being used not
only to politicize student bodies, but
to politicize the educational institutio ns
themselves. action which has in the
past spelled disaster to both politics
and culture.
"Any society that will not protect it-
self against such assauJt elhlbita pre-.
cious lllUe respect for intellect, COJn·
pared to which the issue of public otdtr
is very DW' t() (de ~minimis,)" he uld.
Damap WU limllod 1o the -door and upllaJI drtvewlJ, polloe Nld,
but the <OqJloolaa bod .....,. ......,
to serloutly loJure b~.
Harris' wife wu inside tbe Pllll
at the time, doinr the laundry. She
was not injured.
Detective Sgt. Jack Reinholtz uid the
incident was "obvlowily r a c i a 11 y
motivated."
About 1 dor.en Negro f.amlliee live
in Huntlngtcm Beach. There have been
few raclal incidents reported in the past.
IUinholtz said Harrill was the v1ctim
of a related incident in Ftbruary when
unldenUfied indlvkluall 1 c r I b b I e d
obscenities on bis 11rq:e door.
At that t.imf: neighbors helped trase
the foul acrlbblinp, and dropped tbt
matter thlnkln& perhaps lt WU just
coincidence.
Inveotiga1on aald ~ two iocldento
.are now apparently linked.
A milk bottle, probably Joaaed with guollne., wu ultd tor Sa~y'a born·
bing, nkl ll<ll>holts.
From Pqe I
UTI ...
'Ille Calllornia -aald com-
munists also used "hypnotic, rhythmic
music to assist. in l linlnl acceptance
of their evil prosr1m1." He uid many
elementary school! use music or Young
Peoplu' Recordl, Inc., an or&aniz.aUon
••cited 11 subverlive by the H<MllO Com·
mlttff oa Uo-Amerlcan Activlties... In
11.dditi<>n, he ukl, acboola UR record.I
from Pram records and the Chlldrtn'•
Record Guild, both 1Ubeidiarleo of Y"'"'I
People's Record1.
"Their records bave been e:rte111lvely
111:1Jyzed by noted medical up<rla and
by leaders In Ille fieldl of ~ii.
and their unanJmou1 opin.Jon is that the
hypDOllc inductioo produced by them
can e.aslly place. youna children in a
most receptive mood fOr eugUUon,, of
various aortl," Utt Kid.
"tiie Beau... and their mimicklne
rock·anC-roller1, use the pa v I o v 1 a n
techniquu to produce artificial neW'OIU
in our youna people. Eitenalve a:·
perlmt11ta in hypnotism and rhythm have
shown how rock.and-roll music Judi to a destruction of the normal lnlllbll«y
m«han!Jm <It Ille cen!bral corlex and
pmnlta .. ., accoptance " immorality
and dl1re1ard of all morll norms."
itl'\11\ l'llOT
OllAMI COil.IT ~lt\.llUllHO COMl"AN't
l •Mrl ~. W-4 """*"' -'Wllllltr
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1\•11111 kfft'lf ....
n,,,.,, A. M.,,1ri1R1 ~,..... ... ,.
'•" Nh1tt1 ~i.N'~ ---))0 WMt hy SttMf
M1lll•t /rMNw P.O. I• 1160, tJt Jt --......_. hlldl! 1111 w.i ..... .....,. ........ ....,., tn ,_., ... .,.,.
......... hldl: • tlfl llnll
BUSINESS AND PLEASURE -Although his week-
end visit to the Orange Coast had a festive· air
about it, President Nixon also spent time confer·
ring with top aides on the Vietnam War. Ready to
board Air Force One for return !light to Washing·
ton are (from Jell) Nixon , Secretary of State Wil-
liam P. Rogers, U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam
Ellsworth Bunker, former U.S. Deputy Millta(y
Commender in Vietnam Gen. Andrew J . Goodpas·
ter and national security advisor Henry Kissinger.
Mystery · Guests at Castle
Rumors of Laguna White House Pers is t Despite Denials
Deaplte official and unofficial denlala
of pral-11 Interest In Laguna Beach'~
Pyne Catie, tomeooe in a black, chau(..:
feur-diiven limousine took 1 quick look
at the rambling old fortress Sui>day.
Presld5it Nixon reportedly llke3 the
17 .. cre Henry Hamilton Cotton estate
where he atayed In San Olmente•over
the bUJy weekend, but no declalOOI have
been made.
Preti aecre!ary Ronald ZJtCJir P ld
Friday that Thomas Merrici:'1 M-room
hillside mamion in Laguria Beach is
definitely oot under COll.lideratioo, no
Coastal Cities,. Counties
Seek More Oil Control
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of "" Dllh' ,lilt '""
SANTA BARBARA -Olficiall <It 2l
CallfQfllia COi.ital cities and counUes
today called for state legl.slat.ion to
establish more local control over offshore
oil UJ>kr•Uon and drllllnl.
Thty alao ap-eed at a two.day con-
ference held here that 1 permanent lid
lhould be placed on all drilling in federal
waters.
Newport Beach City Manager Harvey
should take the leed in the "united
front" amPlian, with Hurlburt u prin·
cipal coordinator. What county agtnciea
do will be copied by other coastal 1gen·
cies.
-The state ahould administer and in-
spect 111 federal offabore drilling opcr ...
tioJ\,s, if a perm.anent ban ta not fe.uible.
That state's requirements are conceded
to be t'ougher than the federal govern-
ment'• Hurlbert explained.
matter what anYone ebe says.
Merrick and hla real Ut.ate agent have
said o&herwbe · &ht ~ while another
lady broker 1Ji ..ef flaU, declared
that papen are already drawn up
awaiting signature for purchase of the
C<>tion property.
Rumors of Pyne Caltle as a presiden-
tial summer haunt well rev1ved 1pin
Sunday, howcvtr, despite official efforts
to exorcise the recurrlng .stories.
A big, black limoualne carrying three
WQmen, a man and a chauffeur whipped
up Hillcrest Drive to number 770 at
9:45 a.m. Sunday and zoomed into the
rear parkinl area.
"I didn 't see anything," owner Merrick
said today.
Mrs. Merrick, however, confirmed the
visit by the unidentified party and said
they inspect«! the grounds for about
JO minutes and snapped 11 o m e
photographs.
A group of Miami Beach, Fla .•
businessmen lncludiD& Nixon pal and
confidant' Bebe Reboio art reportedly
interested In setting the chief e1ecuUve
up in Orange Coast headquarters of
iOme kind.
The Cotton estate would be an ideal
location for a summer White House,
with euy·to-en!orce se<:urlty due to ii.,
remote, beachlront isolation.
"It is not too strong a statement
to declare that Otis Is the way civ1Jiza.
tlons begin to dle," he caid.
'"The p r o c e s s i! altogether too
familiar to those who would 1urvey the ' wreckage of hlato;y. AllauJt and counter-
ass~ult, one extreme leading to the o~
pos1t.c e1treme; the voices of reason
and calm discredited."
"None of ua bu the right to suppose
It cannot happen be.re," be continued.
The President's basic statement on
the hot issue of campu.s tunnoil call•
for _lhe academic community to clean
up 1ta own house first when it comu
to dl.sorder involving students or faculty,
but promises backup action.
One prlnclple to be obwved, he aaid,
Is that college3 and universlUes are
places in which men 1re judged by
achievement and merU in their own
epectfic areu of kuo.wledae and conduct.
''The independence and competence of
the faculty, the commitment and equally
the competence of the student body.
are matters not to be compromised,"
Nixon said.
«
SECOND PRINCIPLE
The lecond and only other principle
to be oomtdored, ha continued, ii that
violence or the threat of It must never
be permitted to influence the 1ctions
or judgment of the 1cademlc community.
"The federal 1overnment CIM<lt,
.should not -must not -enforce such
prlnciplei. That is fundamentally the
task and responslb!llty of the unlvusUy
community," he said.
He added, 11<>Ciety need not fear for
continued application of these two educa·
tional principles, but every man must
dread damage to what he tenned the
largest, fret3t educ1tional system in
blstory.
Nixon then spelled out a prescription
for sickness in that particular society,
qualifylng his statement with a long-term
program for Its eventual cure.
PRIMARY INSTRUMENT
"From time immemorial, e1pulsion
has been the primary instrument ol
university discipline," he said.
"Those who would not abide by the
rule s of the cogununlty or learning have
.simply been required to leJve It, for any
other form of coercion would cause that
communily to chang1 ft.s fundamental
nature ," he explained.
He noted also that the last Congress
enacted laws stripping federll aid and
assistance from students convicted by
"n.t difficulty ot(thil momenl, u of most times when fuidamental principles
are challenged, ls that many of those
posing the challenges, and even more. of
Uwe aupportinlf !hem, are ""JlOndlni to
very butc problenu."
Reasserting the twin prlncip)., of aca-
demic freedom while ignol"inl the isluff
foremOft In tbe minds of atu<teftts po1lriC
a threat to them, hoftver, ii not the
tot•l anJwer, he 1dmitted.
"It b 1 .. 1 than tnglorloos: It b 1Jothful
and dishonest, an affront to ibole prioo-
ciples-and in the end !utlle."
Students today point to many wrongs
which must be righted, Nixon II.id. con·
tuin11 on to explain them In three broad
statements, without mtntioninr •JM!·
cifica:
Date Bait Lures
Men From Bars
To Waiting Thugs
A young woman who made !plf4-the-
moment dates with two cart& Meu
gentltmen bar patrons -!or thup
waiting to beat and rob them outakle
-Is M1Ught today by police in the
Harbor Area.
The tavern-hopping woman viaited two
fairly fashionable lpcta In Cotta Met.a
early Saturday within a 30-minute period,
lurlna: victlms out to be robbed of a
tot.al of $33, investigators aald.
Detect.Ive Capt. Ed Glas1ow said the
bait ln the strqarm robbery schemg
WtKJld get the victims to offer her a
ride home or to another bar after striking
up a con versation.
Once outside, however, thty were
jumped and severely beeten by two
men described vaguely as being in their
thirties and vicious in their methods.
A 65-year-old man pelted up at the
El Pescador, 4UI E. 17lh St., lost $30
and a 41·year-old man who left the
nearby Bi.t<k Knight, a< 330 E. 17th
st., 111'1S roughed and robbed of only
13. police Aid.
Neither vicU.m w a s hoepitalli.ed,
althclJgb both complained of ertenslvt
beating, with cuts, bruiles and awelllni. n.. lirl who set up the bar patrons to be rolled ii deacrlbed u about :tO,
a brunette, weortna a white blOUle, dart
1Iackl and a brown jacket.
L. Hurlburt and Seal B<ach ctly Manaaer
Lee Rimer were named to apearhud
the drive for le;:lalaUon at the state
and federll level1.
Allies Launcl1
Another Drive,
Capture Supplies
• . . : • . • . • . • "' • • •• !. ; • • ' . • \ • • • ' . . '
Tha cont.,.._, lmted by Santa
Barbara city and county, wae aimed
at assurtnc: I united ff'Ollt aaainlt tht
tllreat of of!abon oil poUullon.
"We blUevt th11 Wll IChleved," NJd
Hurlburt.
'"M!ere wu unanimous aareement to
pull together ao ~-e could hive ooe
voice."
Rimer took on lhe assi1nment of draf·
ting immediately a "skeleton" bill to
l!lttncthen local involvement in on drill-
ing actiOM taktn by the state. He plans
to submit It to the county's legislative
repreaotltJves in Sacramento early his
week.
"We'r .. Join( 1o try lo have U In
the l<lill•Uv• ._, In tbn• I« •ctlon
thiJ Miiton," Hurlburt upllined, not1n1
that K ...... Id probably be expanded d\ll'o
In1 --beartnp. Hurlburt, Wbo bad flrlt 8Ullftted tile
Santa Barbar• c:onftl'U)Ct a month a10.
UJd ha WU pJea.ed by tbt .....,..,..
of eoasla1 qenc1,.,
11len w.,. at Jeut so city and county
rtprtoenlaUV<I on band. 'll>ey Included
offlelalo from .-every .-tat com-
mllllfty llorn San Di<I" 1o MooW-ey.
Lot Anaela city wu among UKllt 0 well
represented," liurlburt pointed out.
''Everybody," be II.kt, ''wantl to Ht
a Ud port ~llln1 In ledcrsl tfdtllnd1."
nie ru90n.)la e:rplaintd, ft thll. unlike
In 1t•te w1ters, fhere •re no local befteo
Illa -only hwrds -from federal oil
exploitation.
Other conclu.<lonl reached by con-
ference dtleaatea .-ere thll:
-Orange County eo1atal oNici1l1
SAIGON CUP!) -The U.S. military
command today announced a third n1"JGr
allied counteroffensive 1g1lrwt the corn-.
munflta: wtnter~n1 drlve -a push
into the Khe Sanh area just below the
demUltariied zone. A front dlapstch said
U.S. Mllinu captured vast quantitie.s
of C<xnmunist supplies.
The lint major allied offenaive was
announced last week, Operation Atlas
\Vedge. lt has kllled ihore than eoo
Norlh Vietnamese and Viet Cong in its
fint "'eek ol operation in the Michelin
rubber p\antatioo 45 miles Mrthwest o(
Saigon.
The second m1jor d!enaive was an-
nounced Sl.lnd1y -O per 1 t Ion
A1usachusetb Striker which sent 3,000
U.S. paratroopus into the A Shau Valley,
SO milts llOUth <It Kho Sanh, lo bruk
up a major Communist supply route
into South Vlatnam from the Ho Cb!
Minh Trill In 1-.
Today'• oper1Uon was code-namtd
Al1Jn1 Cra1 and alao waa deti&ntd to
cut of( a ma}or Cocnnlu!Wt 1Upply route
from Laol Meded by the North Vlet-
na,,,... to llUltaln lhtlr atud!ly l"'WIOI
olfcnalve.
The commun!Jt o!ftr\Sive 1tnt mortar
and rocket barrlgu today •&aintt 3S
u .s. basu I nd SouUI Vltt.namtM toWM
and cities.
I '
-"l
Jepair
Q OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
e ri ng s size d and re pa ire d e diamonds a nd precious stones rem oun ted e pearls r11trun9
WE CUSTOM DESIGN I MANUFACTURE AL( TYPES OF JEWELRY
HAUOR SHOl'l'IN•
CINTU
llOO HAllOI II.VD.
COSl'A MW 14M411
' ·~
HUNTI ... TON CIN11I
llACH a n1N•U
HUNTIN•TON llACH
H J.llOI
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11,
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IY
WIWAM
REED
.........
;1n the Wind
· 01' Giuiy Murphy dropped In
tJlia moriilnc to teJl me a sad tale
al>mlt all lhe'ba1111lng on bolpltola
In H1111llllgton Beach and to suaest
that the City Council should give
at leut aa much attention to the
bllspltals as they did to dogs.
"I've been tryin' to make some
sense out of all this yakkin' about
,.bether It's better for the city to
have just one big hospital ont there
· on Beach Boulevard, or to have
that one and a couple or 10 litUe
ones. ·
"I'm not the kind -my clothes
are a bit oily -to be allowed
to wander around through hospitals
ao I don't know what's Inside that
makes the difference . • ' ''I asked my doctor which was
best and when · be suggested that
I' might need major surgery, I
decided I really didn't care about
:l!Ddln' out all about the Inside.
Besides that, be might liave stock
In one ol'the.UWe hospitals.
"Then I read In the paper that
the cooncilmen went right dawn
tO the city pound to look ii over
to seli II It was flt for dogs when
ooirie woman complained about the
J>!ace.
111 undentand from 1om1 coun-
cilmen that they've never seen the IM!de of either tlie small hospital or the big· one to see what kind
"fOUld be best for the city.
' ' .
"Why, I understand that the
counctlmojl wouldn't even listen to
debate op. the hospital hassle. Why
should they?'The city attorney said
Illa! they couldn't do anything
anyhow. _
'.'Bob Zinngrabe is convertin' bis
convaleteent ,hospital t o a
opeciallzed hospital to do certain
things over there and the big
hospital is c:omplalnln' that the
• small' bo<pital will make it hn·
possible ·for them to e:<pand and
buy a lot of b!C equipment ''I don't give a dam if either
one of them makes a nickel or
11<1t 10 tong u there's a· hospital
bandy II I fail off the oil rig or
aometblng'. But I sure would feel
better lf I wa1 eure the city council
bad loolced into this hospital hassle
<ompletely."
Of course, 01' Greasy knows
nothing at all about anything. He
even suggested that as long u
there bas been no public hearing
on what i'IOks like at least a semi·
ptibllc use, the people will never
really know ·what would he best
for the community as a whole.
Perhaps no one cares. • Another dilemma ls w h e r e
should the 80 hospital beds now
needed in this community go -to Huntington lntercommunity or
to Pacifica Hospital?
B o t h are privately-owned
faclllties and both claim the right
of Jrivate enterprise to build as
he sulll the profit-loss sheet and
the c:ommunlty.
Anyone wbo would like to
debate tbls one should send letten
$earning to the editor and to the
city council. T h·i s is one which
seems almost lmpo1Sible to setU.
'1\11thout milting anyone angry.
Involving
Qllestion ·
'
Unanswered
U.S. Plane Crashes
'
F AIRFORO, Eoli&nd (UPI) -. All
Amerkan military tramport plane ..,...
eying m peno111 cru&ed today, the
Minl5try ol DeftNt lllllOllllCOd.
Ministry spolr...,.. llld the plane wu
a Hen:ulu Cl30. "It II bell<vod t!>el•
were M survivors," the spokesman Aid. 1
I Easy To Order I
PoUce dliela ol llve Orone< Coal e1t1f9 commended Al1'lo Bllkalee, awlnl·
'lrilinili( AJoocWed p,.. -writer, f<r hll frank and factual "Drup 1••
-publilhed' In the DAILY PIWI'.
Now you can have aD the lnlormall«> cootalned In the ID-port oerles, lllil
,_.,In Blak-'1 -1et, "Whit You Shooild Know A-Drup and·Nm:otlci;•
fir .Jull ,I. CUp the coupcn below and mall II In today (allow two to W.. weeks r.r
delivery due le helYJ nspame to lhil oller).
r•••••••••••••••··-~
I re. Dnt 1eo1i1et I
I o.w1• c-11e11r ""' • 1
I ~~~' ' T••••k, NJ). 076" I I -
I Send me ...... copies or "Wbat You Should Know About Dru&• I I and Narcotlcl" at •1 each. Enclosed is •· .... ---. -(Make checks I
I pay1b11 to ADoc1atec1 Prus). I
I I
I Miff.___ -------------.. ··--·--I 1 · , . I
' I ADDllllL.. ... ---_____ ,CIT1'.-----.. ·--I
I Sl'An · • ·------.. -"-·,.---"'---.... I
·-~------~··-·-----~
: • Nondly, Mll'Cll i4, 1969 (SI DAILY PILOT i
Congress a Smashing Success
'
nin-tlnl, almoll O\'Of)' pllale•of life
In the~.
Spol!IOtflC( bf, the ;Hunllnston )leach
°"'"111a" of ~-. the emd ... ts
to bllar tols"""' ....... ol the c<llll·
10uni1Y udlte -h>I 111om :•nth each
otber .. ••"•wlll\-sc!ine ol tbi';iln>l!'lems
1ac1ng 111.--m.m111:
Dunn, uld that ~m•n!c:a&n, Is tho
main Fl! ,and «•16dctni lniin the iJi.
crt.,..i •volluiie ot dllcu"'oo fl1lm the oponJoeo ~;to the dGre ·Of. the al·
ternooD-J:Wbetm, tlUI WU a :Jmasblng succe:u." . ' .,
Nigeria Claitns . Six Biafran Pipes 'D~wn.. -. -
LAGOS, N',,.na .(tJ>)· '-F.edf"al
planes shOt dolin or datnlyed llz
aircraft "in the sen1ce of the rtbeb"
ol Blain ID the put lour da,ys,'Nfcerlsn
radio claimed today. ,
It did. DOI ;tvO &IQ' further !den·
tlllc1tion of the aJrcrall. Planes cmylng ..nor to 'Jllalra, some crewed by
Americans, fJy ~.PJ?lla to t h e
secession.lat rebela 1lfll:ll.IY•
'
SALE
one-half pr!ce
. •
~!gator wallets
·!~OiJ .. 7 .so ----15.00
' : .~ haa1111eci beautllWlrmmkeo ·~Ulna lnlo bandoome., ..,_,
wall •• -or b!Dfol<!s. Esa!p-. . 1. .
t!clllal'll<lluMI Call In yoozr clldorloday . . .
•
Ills viewpoint WU ilhand by m>oy
peraona attendlna the conareu for the
second time. A new format was ettdited
by most for tncre8!ed lntemt In the
event.
Three main toplQ were dlJcuued -
Civic Opportunities, E con om l c Op-
pqrtunlUe1 and CUitural and EducaUooal
Opportunities. Followbag preeientaUon ol
the facts ln one of the thrte arus.
small groups met and dJ..,1MM ln detail
the problems lnvol..cl In psrllcular areaa. ' '
Two main aeulons were held ao that
a delegate could attend, two of the three
dfscu.!!iOM. A summary cl. the day's
activitler wu giveD during the luncheon
meeting.
The chamber today Is tabulltlng-the
questionnaires utumed by delegates, but
several of the chamber membenl in-
volved In stllging the -sald·lhat
already they anticipate a third congress
with a format &ln)Uar to the one med
this year.
Saturday'• -lnjOITild • lol "
people llld a !Ot, ol W<irll and -are the lndh1duall who -.. t-1-
tJon for ttl IUCCell, Dunn Mid.
Dr. Ivan m-Her, Dyoole spooler,
and C. E ''Bfil" Woods, ~ ~
den~ wbo oet the -.fer the -
Peter Horlon oerved u lftlOnW f<r
the economic opportun1Ue1 ROflloa. P ....
modera&on were Don L. Bytnes, J~.,
Robert L. Mtniman, Doyle 'Millor -Kemieth A. Reynolda.
PreMnUng the .civic~ Jl'O-
gram WU Monte NltUowUL ~· moderstors lncuded Jact Feeboa, J ..
Hallsty, Ben Loodefte and 11.,._i
Picard.
Handling cultural and educatkml .,.
portuniliU WU Dr. Jomes L. Cataeun>,
Panel moderaton were Rola' G.
Bet8worth, Dr. Ethan r.n-, Dr.
Clarence Hall and Dr. Dale Mll1er.
Ready to lllf In al pr-.t<r and
~erator posltiON were Dr. Blm1.
Kaufman, Jmy Shea and nm Wren.
SALE
our exclusive
Gold Toe hose
reduced 20% ••• ,
for one week only
soc --I.60 NII• J.()0.2.00
Now is the time !o r&6!oCl: your hooiery
wardrobe. Every Blngle pair of Gold Toe
socks in stock Ls reduced :lll% so you're
sure 1D find just tho colora and types :f'l'l
wanLFromourwstatyleae!ection: _
reg, 2DJover-lhec:zll wool and nykn LID
reg. l.SOa1tkletstylewoolandnylon Ull
reg, 1.75 oveNb&call ootton lisle L4D
reg, 1.25 anldet style cotton lisle JAi.
rog. l.75 over-the<nif l8lluri>ed nylon Ltl
reg. 1.25 anldet style tmlUrizod nylon !Jiii
reg, J.SOOrlon®acryllccrewooc:b 1.211
reg. l.SOOrlon®acryllcdreahoo& UO
mayeomen'dumishfngs 127
. '
• m.-y . ~o south c:oasf plaza, san d lego fwy at bristol, c:osta mesa:
546-9321 shop monday through saturday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. ,. '
I
••
~ ..... 0.-. 11'.W ,..,.,
JM Stoel of EulmlUlvlle, Mich.,
aave' up· smcklng last year after·
hi• pby&lcian told him• it· would
lhorlen his life. Steel will be 109
March 31. • ' The atomic. acleDtisl.s at the cov-
emmept res.,.rcb center at Cul·
cbelh, Enlland; have solved the
problem of the bathwater that al·
ways getl cold· so quickly. The
answer, they announced in their
newspaper Atom News, is that it
doesn 't The bather just gets used
to the beat. •
Thil cold-looking bird at Modiaon
Wisc. Vilas Park Zoo i! actually en·
joyin9 the balmy weather -pleasant
for him at lea.st. Thi! penquin, u•n-
recogniiabte when he's 1itting dOWT&
rm the ;ob, probably U hoping the
Wq director has hi& refrigeration SJIS·
ttm up to par since spring weathtr
i.s just orou1id tM corner. • Qu..., Eli1•be1h'1 brother-~-law
ma.r find himself on str~e one · o!
these days. The Earl of Snow4en.
pnl(essional pholograi>l!er aJ!!l .hus-
band of Princess M.rg•ret, lias ap-
Qlied to join the Association o! Cin~rapb Television and AJ.
lied Technicians whose walkoUts in
!be past heve J!8ral~ed .much of
British teJevision. If the ·earl, 39,
known to his press colleagues as
Antony Arm1trong-Jone1, gets into
the union -and the union says he
Will -he will have to join any
strike or face possible ex pulsion. •
William J. McCabe, 41, a twice
convicted forger, WdS retewed
/NJr'A the .Di.!trict of Columbia
Jail lo.ti week aftn' a court ord-
er arriwd requt1ting hi.s free·
dom. The order we.a: a loioerv.
Police IOid McCade opparentlt1
draftt.d the document 10 h i l c
working in the jail's Tecorda
offitt.
• A stranger knocked at the door
of Mrt. Met. Lieberm•n'1 home
in Menlo Park, Cali!.. and asked
her 4-:year-old daughter, Robin, "Is
your mother in?" "Yes," Robin
rep 1 i e d, ''But she's sleeping ...
"Well could you bring me her wat~
let!" the man asked. Robin obedi·
ently brou&lrt the wallet. The man
took oot '61. banded it back to the
little Sir!, and d"l"'rted.
LTV Stock
Down Afte1·
Merge1· Suit
liEW YORK , -(AP) -The pr~ ol
Lina-Teme<>Vought, Inc. and JOOOI •
Laughlin Steel CJoo>. stock d<cllned today
alter the Justice Department anziouncod
Jt would file suit to force Llng-Temco-
Vougbt to dispoae of its intere.at in
the mel company.
LTV sold •\ ~ down .fl .~ Oil its
common sf9ck, after. being delayed in
openlna.
I.Jng-T~Voughl, a cona)omerate
com~ with widely dlveralfied atiblidflrtes, Owns IS-percent of Janes
& Laughlin stock. It has offu.d to
buy the remainder.
'l!le Justice Depa,rtmtnt's plan Lo mpve
aga.lnst Llni·Temco-Vought on anU~.
grounds •dversely affected stock pnceJ
of other conglomerates. AMK Corp. stock
declined $1.25 ; share. Avco, Gulf &
Weetern 1nduatria Md Natkloal General
...... off Jes. than 11.
"If the Justice Department aucceeda
in its test case it would open lbe w•y
for further actions to fcrce· divestitures
in some of the bigger takeover1,'' aaid
Eldon A. Grim, senior vlce pre:ildent
of the brokerage finn Wallton &r Co.
Grimm said the Justice Department's.
decision to file luit "was not the m"aslivt
surprise it wou1d have been a month
ago."
The Ju&tice Department in recent
weeks bu made known its intention
to move qa1nlt big; mu1erL
Demo Leader
Calls .ABM
Plan 'Maginot'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate
Democratic leader Mike Marufield said
today the Penta.ion already.appears bent
on expanding President N i J: o n ' 31
Safeguard antirni!slle syttem i n t o "•
great nuclear wall whose costs would
be incalculable." '
Mansfiekl stopped short or announcing
his opposition to Nixon's plan. But, in
a statement, he reprimanded the Defense
Department for turning a limited pro-
posal into "a vast program to convert
the entire nation itt a mluile maginot"
-a reference to the World War 11
Maginot Line in Europe.
He note4 that Nixon called initially
ooly for 1"" Safeguard tn:itallatlona, In
Montana and South Dakota, to protect
350 American Minuteman missiles from ·
destruct.ion. in any Soviet strikt.
But Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird
and ~ subordinates. Mansfield said,
now are talking like "an open-ended
deployment of an area defense system
aimed in any and all directions II a
foregone conclusion."
He said the Pentagon ollic1a1s were
playing "one-upmanship with Presiden~
tial decisions" and their testimony to
Senate committees lut week "have tend -
ed to obfuJcate, it seems to me, the
restraint w h i c h characteriz~ t h e
Preaiden\'t deciaions."
Nixon, Trudeau
Meetmg Oouded
W ASHINGToN (UPI) -PrOlldtnt
Nil.an welcomed Prime Minllter Pim'•
Elliott Trudeau today with a pied(•
to flnd ''a common ,mmct better than itther of us bad before."
Nh<on said • Canadiu>Amerk:ao ,..j,.
tiona were not characteri&ed 'by "a total
unanimity of · view which destroys
creativity" but by • "lively dJveraity".
The ABM isaue , and Canad1'1 drift
toward recopi!ion ol Commanill China
thrta&ened to cloud tht NiJon..Trudeau
talb.
-.......
Li~ng in Drains
Vietnamese civilians forced from their homes by batties in and
around Saigon. live where they can. Thia: group of refugees """'-vie·
tmui of the May olf...tve when their. bowes wore destroyed in the
Y Bridge area -live in concrete drams In the Cboloo district.
Letters Reveal 'Interest' • •
Of 2 Women in Fillnwre . . ' -~ .
OSWEGO, N.Y. (AP) -The di!COvery
ol 10,000 to 12,000 letters to President
Millard Fillmore, many of them from
two women, bas been disclosed by Pror.
Charles M. Snyder of Oswego State
UrUvtrsity.
The women were Dorothea Dix , a
crusader for reform of insane asylums
and prisons, and Ann Ella Carroll, a
ghost writer for Fillmore during his
uMUCCessful 185S campajgn to regain
the presidency. He was president from
1141 to 1852.
Snyder said be found the papers which
had been·beq_ueatbed to the university.
Amorig the letters were more than 70
Llrom Miss Dix e:qireSllng;;, "dttp
:-:t"" pernW ·interest in FillmGn· durlnr hia
year u a widower," Snyder aald.
The first Mrs. Fillmare, 'Abig:ail
Powers, died in 1853 after years of
poor health. Their daughter died the
nut year. Five years later the little-
remembered 13th president married Mrs.
caroline C. Mcintosh, widow ol an
Albany merchant.
Fillm<lre "made an attr•ctive figure
. .. a real catch for anyone" the historian
said, but calling the Dix C<>ITeSpondence
Jove letters is "really jumping way
ahead."
Snyder said the letteT!i show her "deep
personal interest and concern for his
health. They were certainJy very cordial,
but beyond that the letters don 't show
an Intimacy."
A second act of. letters Snyder descril>
ed as "intriguing" were from glamorous
Miu Carroll. an editor and daughter
Campus Violence
Lifts Fire Insurance
of a Maryland governor.
She "was not a bit reluctant to try
to influence Fillmore," Snyder said and
she often arranged personaf visits at
campaign slops. But Fillmore avoided
htr ISld; WU discniet in urwering her
i-., '
Eav~•dro"'~ l••ae
R~view Okayed
For Hoffa, Ci~,
;i.. ft. wi!> s.rv1.t.
The Supreme Col\fl 'ruled today Iba!
Jamel R. Hoffa, bn"1s0ned ~ters
Unlou chle!, and former IH!1vywel1ht
champlcn Caulus ·Clay are entitled to
lower cOurt refiew ol' the.Ir elailms that
they were 'rictloll ol Ulqal federal
eavactroppln(.
On \be buiJ ol its rectnt wlretapphig
declsiqo, the Clllll'I also ordered Jimilar
rebearin1s in about 13 other federal
cases.
Desipte the rehearinl order, ~e was
110 lndkition that Hoffa, now sernnc
an eight-year penltentilry stntence,
would be al)owed his freedom while
the lower court proceedlnp are coo-
ducted.
Clay, convicted of refusing Lo report
for d r a f t induction, ill free on b a i 1
pending the outcome of hla appe,al .
Today's rulings stemmed from the
court's controversial March 10 decision
·that government evidence based on ii·
leagl eavesdropping must be turned over
10 defense: attorneys in, ill entirety if
the direct conversation of the defendant
wa, overheard or his own premises were
bugged.
In ordering the lower court actiol).,
the court also rejected out of band
a government appeal for reconsideration
of the Mardi 10 decision on grouOO.
it woo.Id hamstrinr aovemment national
security aurvellllnce activtUes.
The court commented in the rehearini
ruling for Hoffa and Clay that "of course,
a finding by the district court that
the surveillance was lawful would make
disclosure and further proceedings un-
neceuary."
In other actions, ·the court:
-Rejected a Chicago appeal which
challenged the customary practice of
stat.es to apportion their school es~
pendltures on the basis of local property
tu: es.
-Let stand a government order that
Chu. Pfizer & Co. must license its
drug tetracycline to other
pharmaceutical firms.
-Refused to Interfere with a lower
court ruling in •n Oregon case ho1din1
Iba\' ftale Dtid' laws do Dot, apply •lo
rldl..celerillon --'Oii matters , ol. public int!te!t unJess. the material •
was aired with wllclous intent.
-Ip· another ded!loo, federal prlloom
wefe given a clw¥lt by \be COl;lrl to
win their freedom on lf'OUDCll illepl
evidence wu used to convict them.
They DJaJ' raise the claim ol an Wqal
searcb e\'en \hough the claim wu not
made at trial and they are entiUed
to a ruling on the claim, the court
said in a W decilioo~
Noguchi Wants
'Full Hearing'
On Dismissal
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -br. Thomas
T. Noguchi, ousted u Los Angeles cor-
oner after he was accused of praying
for airplane crashes to bring a:lory to
his office, is determined 'to fight his
dismissal
His attorney. Godfrey Isaac, demanded
at noon today that the Civil Service
Commission conduct a full hearin& into
what one patho)ogist calls the "affaire
Noguchi."
The County BOard of Superviaors fired
Noguchi a week a~o after its ad·
ministrative officer, Lindon S. Hollin&er,
detailed in a ta.page letter w be n he
said were uamples of the coroner's
bizarre behavior observed by his ltaff.
One •ccusation in the letter aaid : "You
stated on several occa&ions that 9Ch
nlght you· prayed that a (Boeing) 111
loaded to capacity would crash into the
International Hotel because the pre.'I
would then come and Noguchi would
be tbe center of attraction."
The letters asserted Noguchi once con-
fided he wu involved in a "forenalc
Mafia" in which the country would be
divided up.
Beauty Salon•
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Because:
of campus violence and inflation. fire
Insurance rates of all California school
bulldings would climb 40 percent begtn.
ning April I.
The Pacific Fire Rating Bureau, which
aet.s atandard rates for insurance com-
panies, said Sunday the huge increase
wu baaed on losses of $3.I m.Ullan
on school. fire insurance during the five.
year period, 1963-1967.
FRONT ...
SIDE ...
BACK .,.
Heavy Rains Wash Midwest
ALL CURL, ALL COLOR,
ALL CU\STOM .
. \..J-
lnrense Missouri Storm System Whitens Plains
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Nllft9'1111 -~-... -lll:W 'lh.IPI' ·---· ll. LOiii'
S.flNI
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J-'anci·tont, o/ cou~t-m1r tint inane'"
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every time! Natural lookingcolo1'3forgray
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nu r u 1 lra-sopbistica ted "Color Originals,"
<he style color.o that set the •tyleo ! Fanci·
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)'uur ha.i r M it colon..
•
Newport Beach, Celli.
)Ill tie-' llM. "ll•t~rt ..... , .......... ""'"' ,,,..,,,.
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1DI W U>•-·~ ,.,,.,.. m-no
•
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U!ll ,..,.., '""'· 1("""'41 .. lq. .. lleN ..... .,.
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with She mpoo
Most Cases
end Set,
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---------
500 Held
At College
Face Trial
1SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) _:;
The first group of nearly 500
San Francisco State College
students, arrested durlng an
j llegal rally on the strife-torn
campus in Januaryt goes oo
trial this w~k in five sfparale
municipal proceedings.
The defendant! were ar-
rested Jan. 23 at the height
of a 113-day boycott against
the college by the Black
Students Union and the Third
\Vorld Liberation Front.
Student strike leaders signed
an agreement to end the strike
la~ week with a select com-
miUee of six facul ty members
and administrators. T h e y
made amnesty for those ar-
rested· one of their key
demands.
Gernian Missile Destroyer
The flag is raised on the fantail of the new 440-foot \Vest German guided~missile
destroyer Lutjens as it is commissioned at Boston Naval Shipyard over the
weekend. It is the first of three guided-missile destroyers to be built for the
Gennan Navy in the U.S.
New CRA Chief Raps
3 Nixon Appointees Here it is ...
M,..,.,., Matth 24, 1969 DAILY '!LDT IS
Fighting Erupts Along Suez Canal
' -J
llallod Prtl1 latuaallollal llta, 1balll !'> mlla below Wblie ftlhllnl rqod l<:l'Oll qr ... ble " 1 polillcal aet-
Egypllan .and J sr ae•!I Port S&ld at the northern end the 10!-mlle iOog watenray Uemeot ol 1J1t MJddle £111
artillery and la?tkJ baliltd of the canal, lo Suei City major political upheaval wu crtall.
at the south el'ld. liking place in Jordan. , Premier Bahjat Tathoutt
aloor • 72-mile ltr<lch ol the 'Ille Unittd Nations finally KJni HIWeln reahullltd his "'ilned and Foreign lllnlMtt
Suei Canal today. Israeli arranged a cease-fire after cabinet to be could iru1.all Abdel MonfJm .Rifai bep.n
mlllta.ry IOUrtt.S said• A?1b oll one abortive attempt. a Jordanlan premier more cboofin1 a new ca b I net•
refineriea were set ablaze and-------'----------'-------:.....:'------
E gyp t la n .artillery
empl.ll.cemenµi knocked oµt,
New lljhling also broj<~ out
along the IaraelhJordanian
tronUer and the •two Ilda .
fought · a 71 0·m l nute
machlnegun battle near the
Sea of Galilee. No Jordanian
casualties were reported but
a spokesman in Amman said
the Israelis were $etJI relllQV-·
ing three casuahies.
It WU the finl major light
across the Sue1 canal in· aix
days and an Israeli military
spokesman said the Egyptians
started the shooting, taking
advantage of the first cl~
weather in several days to
open up on the heavily
sandbagged Israeli bunkers
constructed along the east
bank of the canal on the .
fringes of the Sinili Desert.
SAN FRANCISCO, OAK.LAND
AND SAN JOSE
FROM ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT
CALL . YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR AIR CALIFORNIA
ORANGE COUNTY (714) 540-4550
___ __.A~l~R-·CALIFORNIA
The big guns of both sides
blazed all the way from Qan·
·~~~---~---~~~---~~~~~...:.....~ ........ ~~
For years, there has been a great need for a better quality suit at a
modest price. Two years ago, Robert Hall decided to do something about
it. To design and tailor a suit that would give a man thefabric, the/it, SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The
California Republican
Assembly, a 13,000-member
conservative ann of the party,
is now under the command
of a man who objects to some
of. tbe people President Nixon
has appointed to high olfice. the 69.95 suit ' . '
the appearance of a SJOO suit, without the •100 price tag. The first step was
t.o get the best man for the job. We found him-leading men's suitde8igner,
Joseph Salvatore, with many years of experience in the
higher-priced clothing field. He has spent the past eighteen months
designing and perfecting this suit. It is with great pride tii_at.w~ , --. '
Peru Raises
Ante Against
Oil Company
LIMA, Peru (UPI} -Peru
raised the ante on the ex-
propriation of the Interna-
tional Petroleum Company
(!PC) by almost 50 percent,
just as the United States was
ready to make its bid.
As a result, U.S. presidential
envoy John N. Irwin will now
be raced with Peruvian ex·
propriation claims against IPC
totaling $1 billion instead of
the original $690.5 million.
The increase was disclosed
by government officials Sun-
day, the eve or Irwin's first
serious talks toward resolving
the issue.
If Peru does not make some
move toward paying com-
pensation for the e:rpropriation
of the company by April 9,
U.S. law requires that the
United Stat.es cut of£ all finan·
cial aid to the country.
Government sources said
th e additional claims of $334.5
million dollars represented
taxes, tax delinquencY. fines
and other d e b t s IPC owed
the government and its state
oil company, some of them
having accrued since the in-
itial expropriation claim was
made last October.
The initial claim of $690.5
million dollars was the
government's estimate of
IP C's gross profits since 1924
from Peru vian oil field s to
wh.ich the government con·
tends IPC had no legal title.
James Kraemer, 50, a Pied-
moni real estate and in-
surance dealer, joined 500
delegates 'in criticizing the
new Republican ad-
ministration after he was
elected CR.A president at the
close of the convention Sun-
doy.
He objected to the al>"
p.lintment of James Farmer,
the Negro who formerly head-
ed the Congress of Racial
Equality and ~ now assistant
secretary of health, education
and welfare.
And Kraemer said he didn't
like Nixoo 's decision to name
as a top security adviser
Henry Kissinger, who once ad-
vocated a form ~ de-et!ca\a-
Uon of the Vietnam war.
Kraeme r also criticized the
appointment of Charles Yost
as ambassador to the United
Nations.
Yost had Served in the
Johnson administration.
The views of the three men,
Kraemer indicated, weren't in
line with what he considers
Republican principles.
Delegates to the annual con-
vention of the state's 11ldest
grass roots political group
adopted a resolutiori telling
Nixon that appointment&
should "be made from among
qualified people identified with
Republican principles, be they
from majority or minority
groupe."
'111al unanimous a c l i o n
followed a debate in which
there was heavy criticism of
Farmer, an unsuccessful GOP
congressional candidate who
joined the party in recent
years and has been associated
with its more liberal wing.
800 Anguillans Stage
Mock Funeral for Lee
THE V AIJ...EY, Anguilla
(UPI) -'Ille British govern-
ment today defended ~y
Lee, the resident Britieh com-
mlsstooer itTiposed on this
island at gunpoint, as the
"right choict." At least MIO
Angulllans wished him dead.
ln Loadon, the House of
Commons met today to con-
sider the Labor Government's
handling of the Anguilla affair,
with Forlegn Secretary
Michael Stewart the . prjme
target foc the conservative op-
~itlon.
Carrying a hand-made
casket, 800 Angulllan
demoostcat.ors Sunday ~ged
a mock fuoeTal for Lee and
Robert L. Brad:Wlaw, premier
ot neighboring St. Kitts who
wants th i s 3~square-mile
speck of coral to return to
his island federation ol St.
Kitts-Nevi! from w h i c h
Anguilla broke away.
The crowd marched to lhe
i s l a n d ' s a d ministration
buHdi ng. wailing in mock grief
over the "deaths" of the two
mtt:n. Jn the West lndies, such
mock funerab are common
wa ys of wishing to be rKt
ol !Km'leOfle.
The prd.eSt was held In lhc
mood of gaiety Md there wa!
no repc:titJM o( Saturday's
dcmonstreUoo whlch tumed
Into a brief 1Cufne when Lee
wu mobbed trying to enter
the admlnlstralloo building.
SeH1lyltd President Ronald
Weblter was In New York
\:Y tt)in& to get permi&'Jion
)
to address the U .N. Com·
miUee o n Decolonization,
which last week decided to
send a fact-finding mission to
Anguilla.
' Ray Retrial
Motion Due
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
-A motion seeking a new
trial for James Earl Ray will
be filed in Memphis "possibly
this week," according to Ray's
brother.
Jerry Ray said his brother
would plead iMocent to the
auassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. in a new
trial.
"A decision will be made
within the next three days
on e1actly what the petition
will say and who will file
it." said Jury Ray Sunday. •·we are considering two at-
torneys."
The lawyers were identiried
as J . 8. Stoner ol Savannah,
Ga .. the 1964 vice prtsldentlal
candida te for the National
States Righi$ Party, and A.
J, Ryman of Memphis.
Stoner visited Ray In hi&
cell at the Tennessee Sllte
Prison Saturday where he b:
serving a 99-year stnttnee
after pleading gutlty to Klng'1
murder. The Georgia lawyer
o.id Rtly was lnnocent and
had been "preMUred Into
pleadlng guilty.''
' that should
' sell fors100 introduce the suit that fills the need for a better quality suit at· a modest ' 1
price ... the Crown Juilliard' ... the 69.95 suit that should sellforSlOO!
-
0
~uilliard
69 95
alterations Included
designed by
Salvatore!
A!Ur years of d .. itninl and
controllint the qualily of Anwi<a"
two moat f amoiu $95-$1451uil1,
Salvatore creates the69.95 iuit
that should sell for $100.
Salvatore says:
•our imported fabrics are equal to
and many are superior to clotha rued
in the $100 and up men'lsuit."
Salvatore says:
••our 1tylin1 ii°' diatinctiveand
forward-loo/Unt as the moot .,,,.,..
1ive men'• 1uitl in the country.•
Salvatore says:
"Sevmof the$100and up...,.'•
auit makers u.se the l4lrN' inMr
canva& we have inour69.951Uit."
Salvatore says:
"There an lhtoill ill the $100
mit that add to the price withoat
oddillt to theappearlJllCf tli' li/t
of the •uit. We put the fil11i/it:onl
detaila inour69.96 mil.•
Salvatore says:
• w •... the"""" wuld..-"""'
found ill the$100and up•uit."
Salvatore says:
"Our hond-tailorcd •houllhr -· i& fO<llld ill 1uita 1ha1 HU for $100. •
Salvatore says:
"Tll4JIOOandupmm.,..,it,...
the ...... '1ft1J1head """"""''""' a our 1uil ot 69.SS." ·S=Y 11 to 5
COSTA MESA, 1611 NEWPORT BLVD., AT 16TH
GARDEN GROVE -12372 GA>ltDEN GROVE BLVD. ~~lfi!t·
I 11 ' •
l DAILY :1'1LOT EDITORIAL PAGE/
Puh~Ii c Disgu -st Mount s
Like !Iowan In sprlnJ -or weed.I, as the cue may
be -bills to curb campus violence have proliferated in
legislatures In nearly every state.
Public oPlnlon In California, where some 70 bills on
Ute subject are before the Legislature. probably typifies
naUonal opinion. The Mervin Field Poll reveals not only
public cli.sgust but an escalating demWld for repre.,lve
mee1Ures. For uample:
-Those strongly favoring expulsion of all students
who challenge ancf defy authorities have increased from
67 percent of all Calllomlnns In 1967 to 72 percent today.
-Those otrongly opposed to giving students more
voice in deciding campus rules is up from 19 percent
two years ago to 38 percent today.
-The Senate bas nol tborouffey re111arcbed pruent
laws appl.Yinl to current campui problemi. Conlullon
reigns. AU the public knows Is that wb1taver law1 may
be on the books, Ibey haven't been efiectlvely wed.
Assembly Speaktt Robert Mona1an laat week ao-
knowled'ed that most stale lelialatora feel it 1' "!Jn.
perative ' that they do 1ometlilne, paas ~ Jaw, to
stiffen penalties against thote who create campus dis.
turbances. TblJ reflects the l"leld Poll.
Mooaian also said emphatically that "we aren't
going lo solve campus unrest limply by pautn1 • Jaw ...
Al this di.stance from Sacramento, it appears that
the best hope for tnoderatlon, after rounding up all the
facts, resta with the Auembly. There should be clarili·
cation of old Jaws, where needed, and adoption of new
ones to plug boles.
..,a in the fa« of our brilliant ,
tactics of raiain/J ilituut ratu
tluw tilnu in the p&tyear. ·
-To the demand that many more black students be
admitted to California higher education institutions even
though Ibey do not meet entrance requirements. 84 per·
cent are opposed.
-In 1967, 32 percent believed that professors in
.tal&-supported institutions should ·have the freedom to
.speak and teach as they see fit. This figure has dropped
to 2.S percent today.
The pr .. ent situation cannot be pennltted to con•
tinue. At the same time, as the cllche has· it, we can't
attack the rats by burning the house down.
The 'Marching Martians'
Gentlemen, thia dmumda creatWe
thinAiif8. We nwat come up with
an evm better idea.
Let's raise the intemt
.rates again.
'~~
-Two years ago, 53 percent agreed that state cam ..
puses should be independent of political control. That
percentage is now down to 39.
In the face of this oplnlon by their consUtuenls, it's
not' surprising that some legislators are capitalizing on
the emotional climate and that voices of reason are in
danger of being drowned out.
The Senate has aJready passed and sent to the
Assembly four bills aimed at giving campus authorities
more penalties to use in dealing with students ail'f
teachers who are involved in campus turmoil.
Two disturbing facets of the &ituation are these:
-Present laws are either full of loopholes or have
not been evenly enforced against campus, as opposed to
off-campus, dertroyers of property, violent disturbers
of the peace and attackers of.persons.
Soutbem California Edison Co. bas won a national
''Design in Steel" a ward for its new utility poles. They
look like "Martians marching," accordin& to one
viewer.
Edison is trying to mollify objectors to its abov~
ground lines and poles by improving the aesthetic qua!·
ity . If high tension lines can't be put underground, as
claimed, then the Edison Company should be credited
'vith doing what it can to modify its own damage to
the natural landscape.
We can't help but wonder why, in this age of
sophisticated tecbnoloC', the abominable things must
remain on the surface. They may be an improvement
over the old poles, but they're hardly an improvement
over the .sky.
Politics and the ABM
Wrong Issue, Wrong Time?
Savings Bond
No Longer
Competitive WASHING TON -"If Nixon goes ahead
with the ABM he will have signed his
own poUUcal death warrant and we'll
elect a president in 1972," said one
of the most prominent Democratic
i..ten.
Ni.Jon ha! gone ahead, on a modified
bull, with the multi-billion dollar anli-
bllllltlc missile program. Congress will
problbly approve his slo1v beginning.
And the democratic leadership may find
that It has picked the wrong iasue at
the wrong time.
The political consequences of the ABM
declalon were cattfully weighed as
perhaps the single most important fact.or.
Tb1I led to the modification of moving
the launching sites away from the pro-
t..u., cilles, except for Washinglon.
ond posllioninc thole slles lo protect
hardened miulle bases.
BUT THE BEGINNING is being made
1n 10mewhat different form than in the
Johu:ln administration, and once begun
the deployment of this missile deferuie
1yltem is not likely to be ended aoon.
Tbere are several reasons why the
DanocraUc leadership may be making
a la'ious blunder in oppo.sing deployment
of the ABM. Nixon's proposal for An
lnitlll ouilay of $800 million v.·as coupled
w:lth an announcement that the total
dereme budget will be reduced by $2.5
blDJon. The argument that the ABM
Is robblng urgent domestic programs
therefcn becomes harder to sustain.
Even harder to 8Ui!llaln' may be the
argument that deployment would be a
tiostile act driving the Ru.saians away
from negoUation on nuclear anns limita-
tion. Nixon hu apparently correctly
/
' i.
(
. .,.
Richartl • Wils oii
~ ' -------.. ~
judged the Ru.s.slans on th1a: point. They
want negotiation on nuclear anna: limita-
lion for urgent reasooa of their own.
\Vhat is to be talked about i1 not destroy•
Ing or dismantling existing offensive and
defensive weapons systems. Both aides
desire limits beyond which nelthtr will
go.
ON ANOTHER POINT the Democratic
leadership may encounter a rough read.
It is harder to prove that the anti-balllstie
mi.saile system won't work than to
t?!tablish a prima facie case that it
will work, especially since the Russians
have already deployed 47 of their
missiles.
The Democratic fault runs deeper
because it is based not alone upon the
ABM deployment but on the general
proposition that unle11 Nixon pulls back
en nuclear arms, gets ua out of Vielnam
and reduces American c:ommltm.ents all
over the world he "ill have misjudged
the reasons for his e.lection and will
lose public support.
Unle5S Nixon acll soon in Vietnam,
the argument goes, Johnson'J war will
become Nixon's war and he wlll lllffer
as much polltlcally from it as Johnson,
and perhaps even more. Thi1 argument.
too, is difficult to suataln in view of
the North Vietnamese spring offem:ive
while peace neeotlatlons art 1olng on.
The uffensive lllu.strates clearly that U.S
forces cannot do what the war critic!
call for, a static remaining in plactt_
of our forces there and a steady reduc-
tion in the level of fighting. The North
Vietnamese will not permit that. If they
accepted that condition they would have
to abandon their war objeetlve of prevtn·
ting lhe fonnation of a stable Seuth
Vietnamese government under the unhar·
rused prottction of American arms.
THE ALTERNATIVE of a phased,
unilateral American pull~t leaving a
weak South Vietnamese government to
the mercies of the northern Communists
is not acceptable, eilher, to the rational
war crlUcs. In the end their dilemma
It as great as NiJ:on'1. They can
describe an Jdeal condition but they
do not know bow to create tb.at condition
without the cooperation of an enemy
who shows no dlsposiUon to cooper1te.
Ni.ion i1 in a poslUon to initiate a
peace offensive and he undoubtedly wiU
do so when the time is right. If such
an initiative proves again that the North
Vietnamese will not stop flghtlna, their
refusal to stop will be hard to blame
on Nixon, allhougb, of course, he will
be blamed for it by people who alJO
do not know how to stop the war.
Reducing our comm.itlnf:nla in the
"''orld , limiting nuclear atmll, 1etUng
out oC Vietnam -thue are all easily
stated objectives which lose plausibility
wben the time comes to act. When
presidents art called upon to act they
make declslo111 like Nixon'• on the
ABM, and they do not significantlf, back
away from the continUOW1 pol cy of
world·wlde invol\'ement of the past 25
year1. ·
'Christian Firepower, Sir'
"The spirilt.ioi firepower of tlic
Chrlltian Cllurcl!.-ba.sed on love of
Cod-is sufficient to destrov all tht-
Sovict manmadl mil.sile1 and rocktt.t
and txtirpaU ihis 20th-ctntury abtr·
ratlon"-J. Edgar Hoowr ln J1i.s new
book, ••on Communism."
1be J. Edgar Hoover Anti-Ballistic
MJalle System won immediate and
virtually univerul acceptance.
It wu discovered by a White House
aide klly leafing throUj'.h Mr. Hoover's
latest work, "On Conununism." After
exclaiming, "Eureka!" the 1ide bum
in oa the President, who was pacing
the lloor.
"U l spend ~.5 billion on a thin
Anu.cblnese Balliltlc M11slle System,"
tht Pruidtnt wu muttering to hlmseJf,
"I'll olftnd the Russians, 1Ur up a
Jt«m In Congress, open the way lo
a "° bWJon system and wreck the -· •'On the other band, if I don't, I'll
----Monday, March 2l, 11169
fM edftonaJ -Of Ill< DoiiU Pilot 11tkl to ta.torm and 1iim-
llloll ·-,,, ,,,...,.dng lh .. llC10lp<lp<r'• opmlofta and co....
IMlllarr °" lopjcl of ln14tf'1
!llld dgttlfjmflot. ,,, protlidlng •
f°""" tor CM upr«lll<m of .. , ''°""' op1n1om, cmd bu prcrntblQ ~ dfwnl oftto-
J)Oi11tt of t.fOt'fMd ob1.rwr1
cmd .,,......,,..,. ot1 top1u of Ill•
dof.
I Robert N. Weed, Publlaher
• I
f
offend f\1el Laird, stir up a storm In
the Pentagon. open the way to cbar111
l 'm soft on Communism and 'Yfttk my
image. Oh, "·hat':; the answer?"
"Christian firepower, sir," critd the
excited aide. "J. Efi&ar Hoover sa,ys so.·•
THE PRF.SWENT r1 verenUy took the
book, read the now-historic passa1e., clap-
ped a hand to his forehead and gupe:d,
"Why didn 't I thlnk of that?" ,
The bill authorizing The J. Edjjor
Hoover ABM System aalled throua:h
Congress -no potlUclan in his right
mind being willing to vote against elt&er
Christianity or J. Edgar Hoovtr.
The only fight came over an amend-
ment of(ered by Senator Jacob Javlta
to include Jewish firepower in tht
system. Thi~ was adopted after Mr.
Hoover testified in open 1w!on that
he felt ll woukt do no harm.
True. a few aclenUsb e:qirtaed doubts
that Christian nre:power would shooC
down Soviet mi.sslltra. But lbe:r conC'edtd
lD1der stiff r.rou-eumlnatlon lhat they
felt it "mild be o:ac:tly as e:flicltnt
In this respect as the original $5.S bllllon
system.
AND TilE PENTAGO~, after an OS•
baUJllve COll..Uecll-atudy, qmcl
tbsl. comparod lo !Ito Sprint 1111!1 S..llntl
ABMs. Cbrlatlan firepower lfOl1ld atv•
I (U 0 bfqer bang for I buck,"
So The J, Edg1r lloovtr ABM System wU lnatalled under the optratlona1 con-
trol of lhe Rev. Billy Graham. Teams
o{ pritSt.I, ministtrs and rabbis were
fn1t1tlcd around evtry major city on
constant alert 10 begin lnteruivt praytng
A
=====~~_c .i,_. __
the minute radar picked up an Incoming
enemy missile.
There was some criticism that thl8
was only a "thin" ABM aystem. But
as the President pointed out, "Once
the warning sounds, we can count on
every ciUien joining in. It wll1 be an
alJ.out national effort."
THE KREMLIN, at first suspicious,
finally aranted 7.3 billion rubles to the
Jooi-opprusod Russian Orthodox Church
to develop a compaUble Soviet system.
And the Chlneae, whl.le outwardly con·
temptuou1, secretly revi ved ancestor
wonhlp. But moll experta arreed Jt
was a crude, unaophJJilcated system
which would probably mllfuncUon in
an emergency.
Thus mankind, which had al l11t In--
vented weapons awtsome enouah to
destroy Ilse.Ir, complacently sat around
and prayed it wouldn't.
And what elle Is ne"?
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Stai. Stnalor John SChmita 11 aa
prtdidabJe u ever. Robert Wrich
laid down !Ito John Birch Socl<ty
Une on tu educaUon 1n Januar:r
and a few weeks later SclunltJ ln-
troduced a bill and two molutlona
to Implement hia leader 's lnstruc-
UO!U-
\\1• R. 8.
f~ll ..... ,. "'""' l'Mftrt' •llwl. .. lltaU~ ..._ f/I ,... -NH~. ,_.
•-.., "'"" fl G..,_y •om. Dtl!ff Pti.t
'
Uncle Sam ham't been playing fair
of late wilh the ndlllons' of Americ4n1
who invest in ~vine• bonds. The rate
of inflation is outpldnc the 4.25 percent
rate ol return on •riea E and H bonds
-actually tn>dln& the purdwing power
of llle dollan ssltad ..,,.., In them.
The ajtuation hu become untenable
as the aprtad widens between the yitld
on savings bonds and on other Treasury
securities. Anyone willing to put up Sl,000
for a IS.month· Treasury note, for ex-
ample, can assure hi.mlelf semiannual
Treasury checb paying interest up to
fi .'2 percent.
Two of the ntUon's most iofluential
business columnists hive called on the
government to start living the small
savings bond investors a fairer shake.
"The Treasury," wrote J . A. Livingston,
''has a fiduclary obligation to savers,
especially payroll savers, most of whom
are not load shoppers in the money
market."
SYLVIA PORTER put it more bluntly:
''I hold there Is no defense -none
what.soever -for promoting savings
bonds to the public at 4.25 percent in
th.ls era! The fact ls that when yo11
buy a savinp bond, you are: buying
a NEGATIVE RATE OF RETURN."
When the savings bond concept first
WJS originated durin1 World War IT,
a yield of 2.1 percent was set. That
yield was maintained for 11 years, untO
19!2, and the Jnveslment return has
been aweetened five times since then
-up to the preaent 4.25 figure. But
a 1917 statute prevenll the Treasury
from exceeding this rate on any or
Jts bond1.
The Nixon adlnlnistraUon baa: been
ftltudying the problem in recent weeks
preparatory to uklng Congrm to lift
the ceJllng. One danger, u the Wall
Street Joumel pointed out, is that this
could mean "tan,allng with such euy·
money ad vocates u Chairman Wright
Patman (0.Texu) of lhe House Banking
and Joint Economic Committees."
BUT THE altt:mallve11 to some
reasonable adjustment are even more
dlstuteful. The bond progranl could IUf.
fer a 1trlOU1 alump If little Investors
get the idea that thtlr government 18
dilcriminaUng agalnlt them. Thert Me
some dltquleUna: 1lgn1 already: 1961
salea of aa:vin&1 bonds totaled ff,17 billion
but heavy rtdemptlona left the Trtasury
with a net gain of only $87 miUlon
for the: year. And cah-ln1 well exetf!ded
ules In the flnt two months ol 1969.
.Nevertheless, mo&t Amerlctna attm
lo be holdlnJ on lo lhelr bonda wllll
impreulve tenacity. U.S. News • World
Report commented : "lllvelton aun are cllnJlni lo IU.7 bllUon In uvtnp bonda
that now art in thtlt lflCond er third
maturity ptrlod. Tb1t acet1Unts for well
over hall of. all the Ml .I billion In
E and H bond• -colstandln&."
OFFICIAL SURVEYS sllow lhal 11le\y
and c.'OQ\'enlenct are two of the U>aJor
...._ wlQ> poop1e b<l1 ond hold 11\itip
boodl. They are 11!• IIUn the price
decllnts that can hit bonds bought in
the marktl. They can be replaced easily
If lost or destroyed. Moreover, the opt.Ion
to defer federal income tar until bonds
are-rtdetmed off era a big break tor
perm"' wbo rtUrt and fall 1nto • lower
tax bracket.
Human Race Is
Schizophrenic
If someone were to ask flatly, "What
Is the prevailing characteristic of the
human , race," the only honest answer
would be "Schl1.ophrenia." We are a
tchizopbtenic race of beings, and the
left hemisphere or the brain dotsn't
want lo know what the right hemisphere
is doing.
Two dl.!linctly different minds inhabit
the body of mankind. One mind can
fly us to the moon, and the other plunges
us into hell . One mind makes the most
magnlfict11t conbibutioo.s to science and
medicine and technology , and the other
is sUll slithering in the muck of the
Dart Agell.
WE ARE WU.LING and eager to
bentfit from every development deviled
by theoreticians and scientists and in-
tellectuals and inventors; but al the
same Ume we wallow in obsolete pre-
judices, we engage in wildly irrational
behavior, we exhibit the s ame
parochialiam and rigidity and hostility •
that have always perverted new hwnan
tools to the use of old inhuman halts.
We are now approaching a technology
that can, if not interefered with, provlde
all of mankind with" enough physical
power, enough food, enough material
goods, to assure stability and comity
among all the naUons -but most of
this technology is the servant or our
passions.
WE ARE BOTH Dr. Jekyl and Mr.
Hyde -bul the faster Dr. Jekyl
disrovers better v.·ays for us to live,
the futer ~1r. Hyde turns these devices
into more devastating ways to die. Even
cur s~hizophrenia is out of balance, for
the wicked hemisphere of the brain CQr-
rupts whatever the wise hemisphere
creates.
\Vhat v.·e cannot see is that it ls
too late to be anything but a man,
a whole man, operating as an integrated
unit. Whatever divides us' will kill us;
whatever separates us will eventually
fracture this delicate spaceship we are
traveling on; whatever does not bring
our social system up to the level of
our technical system will compel us
to turn the technical system against
oursel\'es in global suicide.
PROVINClALISf\t is a luxury v.'e can
no longer afford; even natio nalism, only
a few hundred years old, is dangerously
obsolescent. The rule of force, which
has been the only universal law of
mankind, is now our greatest common
enemy -for it is now unlimited in
its potential to eradicate everybody,
everywhere, for all time.
One part of us knows this; the other
part prefers to ignore it, living in a
fantasy-world, hoping to cling to the
past while surviving in the future. But
there can be no future unle&'I we
repudiate that part of the past that
lures us in demonic fervor to our doom.
Sav ing Money for W ives
Things a columnist might never know
If he didn't open his mail:
A handy husband around the house
Is worth money to a wife. An insurance
company study found that the a\'erage
husband spends about 24 hours a wttk
performing home chores and thereby
saves his wife '51.SO it would cost her
to hire llomeone else to do the work.
Do you chronJcally munch on ice?
Well, if you eat as much as a tray
of ice dally, it may indicate you are
suffering from an old ailment called
pagophagla. Its victims suffer from an
iron deficiency and if given small quan-
tities of that nutrient they Jose their
abnonnal appeUte for ice.
It certainly wouJd ht a problem lo
fit a neaMi&hted bee with contact lenses.
'Ibese. insects have some 13,000 t)'es
-fi,000 to 7 ,000 on each side.
JIAVlNG TROUBLE with your hear·
Ing? That might be because too much
waxy choln:terol is clogging the blood
veuel1 between your hearing bones, and
It could be a warning of an impending
heart attack or stroke. Researcher! at
Purdue Unlverally found the he:Brlng cf
a number of staff worktn improved
after a regular program of e:Iercises
reduced the quantity of cholesterol in
lllelr blood.
Americana and Britons spe•k the same
langua1e but "they don't make it sound
the 81.mf!. It is eaUmattd that they
dUfer In ·0ie pronunciation of U percent
of lilt woru In !Ito English tongue.
Quotable notab!ts: "11applne:u 111 not
llavlng what yw wat1r,' but wanlln1 what
you have." -Rabbi llyman Judah
Schacht el
If civl!Jutlon comes in c1n1, Amtrlca
Is the most clvlllud nation on earth.
Lut year It led the world by produdn1
SS billion steel cans.
JUST l~UCl<Y: Our land l! a vinlent
1~rl!f but lotf'ly it has escaped 111 lt'n .. t
one form of violence. For three straight
years it has had no urthquake fatalities,
although last year it was mildly shaken
by 257 !<important earth tremors" in
21 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin
l slands. Throughout the world 20 earth~
quakes in 13 countries took 12,401 lives.
For the buck : Henry Sutton. author
ol the eyebrows-raising new novel, "The
Voyeur," is an honest writer. He says
ne writes books not for art's sake "but
for the money." He made a million
dollars with his recen t best seller. "The
Exhibitionist.''
The breakage: Women wiually have
fewer accidents than men be<:ause they
are more cauUous, but this isn 't true
when it come.s to skiing . In this sport
the ratio of lnjur1es is higher among
the ladies.
GASOLINE AND alcohol don't mh:,
and neither do aspirin and alcohol. The
British Medical Journal reports that
.aspirl.n-inductd gastrolnttstinal bltedini:
increased amon11 patients when It had
betn accompanied by the drinking or
liquor.
B 11 Geo,.,,e ---.
Dear George:
I've told my boy frtend no\ lo
park and gtt fresh with ~
However, ht kef!pa ptrklng and
setting lresh with mt. \\'hat should
I do?
ANN Dear Ann :
It all d11.pel'ld3, Where are you
now!
•
•
----------------·---------------------------i
Mon!U:P, March~. 1'69 DAILY Pit.OT 7
MAILBOX: .A Variety of Vfews
Smog, Air Pollution Draw Words of Concern
To the Edltor:
It Is more and more evident that
man is becoming less concerned about
h.is own well being in his environment
today. I address my comments to the
air pollution problem. The average
American consumes 35 lbs. of air daily.
Jn the more polluted areas, it is hard
lo estimate how tnu ch of the '25 million
Ions of pollution dumped into the alr
annually is being taken jnto th!! body
with each breath.
AIR POLl.UTION has b e e n shO\\'O to
rontribute to disease and premature
death:
J. Investi gations have linked air pollu·
tion with the incidenct of the common
cold.
2. Emphysema rates are highu in
the clti es than rural areas (pollution
being greater in cities).
3. Bronchial asthma is a condition
<>flen aggravated by air polluUon.
This is a' man-made menace and ls
controllable if the proper effort is put
forili. The resources are at man's
fingertips and in some inslances in
limited use.
'l'llE INT ERESTED citizen should re--
quest infonnation from h1s congressman
regarding ai r pollution, its effects and
control. This infonnation can assist in
organizing one's thoughts. The infonned
citizen is then ready to participate iii
antipollution groups such as the United
States Jayetts. Groups such as this one
can aid in channeling the interested
pcrson·s efforts in a constructive man-
ner.
~tan has a tendency to procrastinate
to extremes ... ''Put off today what
can be done tomorrow," if you like.
Ey the time "tomorrow" comes,
ho\\'ever, we may not be able to see
our way clear lo lake aclion on the
problern.
IF ONE THINKS or the economics
of the problem, it is equally startling.
J•:stin1atcs put the cost 0£ air pollution
.at around $65 pe r capita or an annual
cost to the nation of over $12 billion.
The individual can become interested
and participate in anli-pollution programs
by:
I. Getting the facts.
2. Relating the facts to others.
3. Taking action through various anti-
pollution groups.
Act now and you can presttVe tomor4
row. JOHN C. McCOY
.Hnsl<s for Children?
To the Editor:
f\1an has long been convinced that
he is set apart from all other creatures
and brought closer to the gods by his
;ibitity to think, to reason. \Vith help
f r om the J udea-Christian Bible he
becomes the ruler and user of all plant
and animal life on earth. The only prcr
blcm with this logic is that man is
nothing but an animal and just like
animals, man is slowly but surely
devouring his prey in the form of food
and natural products.
TllE ANALOGY between man and
animals supposedly, does not hold up
because man has reason and animal
does not. but unfortunately man has
used his reason to his own disadvantage.
\Vith all his knowledge and reason man
has been able to develop not only the
deadliest weapons, but he Is also slowly
emitting gases from his utilities, in-
dustries and his transportation in the
form of pollution. This pollution, unless
aclion is taken immediately, will soon
<1vercome and destroy man's culture.
· AN™ALS increase their population,
:ind eat their prev until they regurgitate
or they run out of prey and their popula-
lion starts dying off. It Js high Ume
for us to look at the fate of animals
as our own fate. Unless we con trol
our population and have stricter con-
servation laws abou t our n a t u r at
resources, we will ultimately annihilate
ourselvet.
With the incrtasing threat o! smoc
iusteac! of trying to dlmlnlsh lhe source,
we are progressin1 to bigger and better
ways of producing smog. The crowth
and progreu of the Orange County arta
·nit b mn II ,..ty II frm llr. k"' lill II Iv t
few days.'
means more freeways and mare airports,
or proposals for new airports.
TllIS PROGRESS which
transforms nature in.stead of blending
with it, will increase 8.ir pollution to
the point where one day it will not
be unfamiliar to see school children
wearing "smog" ma sks in the
playgrounds.
To prevent this deadly accumulation
of smog we should individually aod col-
lectively act now. Appeal to the c 1 t y
council, to the state representative, to
the senator, demand that your rtghis
as a voter be recognized by the elected
representatives. Tell them to act now.
for without your vote they will not
be in office during the next term.
Progress might be necessary, but if
you or your children are not around
to cherish the fruits of your progress
then it is no longer necessary.
PA UL POZNANTER
He Bln111es 611111
To lhe Editor:
It is a sad, sad week when 1 learn
of a young police officer in Santa Marta
being killed by the '• a cci den t a I''
discharge of his own gun and of a
14-year-old Costa Mesa burglar being
shot to death while fleeing the scene.
The mounting toll of needless death!
attributed to the gun and OlO' arthaie
gun oriented, Wild West society can
no longer be rationalized. When will
we learn? How many more must di1
first?
I find no great attraction to our
necessity for a gun, I am repulsed
by their very inference -that they
are designed to kill something or some-· ·
one.
AS I PURSUE my studies and con-
template the ramifications of our modem
American society I cannot find one sound
justification for the continued allowance
of indiscriminate gun ownership. For
those that insist that it must remain
so, I see insecurity as their hidden
motive. What manner of /ears can we
really overcome with the gun? What
morbid "sport" or killing game can be
reflected back ue?.n as true pleasure?
No longer is the gun an eS21ential
element for procuring meat for the table.
And no longer is that romanticlud
minute-men militia effective.
REGARDLESS many look for that
hypothetical invasion by Uric Commies
as their ludicrous just rationale. They
hold steadfast to Amendment 2 of our
Constitution and loudly proclaim gun
ownershi p to be an obvious basic right
as though we were delivered from tho
womb with this ridiculous appendage.
Circumcision never encountered such op-
'
Joe Na1nath's Successor
By L.ftf. BOYD
Note a ltfelboume, Australia, lady nam-
ed Dora Russell is training 200-pound
kangaroos to play football. To ki ck,
catch, carry. What a remarkable notion!
f leave ii to you lo conjure up what
1'1r. Joe Namath .... ·ill engineer at some
rhstant future date with a lively kangaroo
:imong his running backs. It is possible
the point-after-touchdown will be carried,
not kicked over the crossbars. Can you
envision the altitudes al which such
n rt..'Celver will pick o(f passe8? E,-pect
the most profitable point-make r ,
llO\\"f'Ver, will be the pOUcb play.
THE SECRET SNUFF Sniffers Society
r.( America must be recruiting. It is
a fac t American men now use 10 times
es much snuff as they used 100 years
;igo .. .SAY. fttONKEYS get bald, too,
I hc<ir ... WRITES Bob Hargreaves :
.. In 35 yean ol. research on telephone
1na1U1t r!, I've found the more important
the exL~ulive, the more courteous hii;
l!ccretary ." How trot!. .. ALlttOST BUT
NOT QUITE one doctor in five eventua lly
Is sue<I for malpractict ... WlllLE GIRl..S
calltd Vicki are worthy oC all the 11-
focUon they can aUract, 11y11 our Name
Game man, U 'a true thty require an
''OOmlOUS amount of 1t. An unloved Vicki
is a mess.
NO END TO frtsh examples of lhe
woclcl's sh<lrtt r poems. F'or instance,
.Joseph E. lllJck, Jr.'s exquisite com·
po.sit.ion call ed "One Night at a Conctrt
lo , \VJ~on-Salem, N.C." II goes:
"&:th?-Ach!", • ..AN OLD 80l' jusl
r-~~-...... ~ ..... -r
Checking Up:
i . ' ..
v.·ent by the house, whistling, "K-K·K-Ka·
ty.'' Everytime I hear that, I want
to go spend a lazy day in 90JTle town
where the sidewalks are sUll m&de of
wood. Are there any such ?
THIS JS A MATI'ER of some delicacy,
or indelicacy maybe, but it is rtported
in accordance with this de.partrnent's
pledge to leave no topic unassaulted.
Women tend to .be faWer ol flesh than
roen. How lone that bas been undtr1tood
comes clear when yoo re.ad Plutarch''
notes aboot mass crr.cnatlOM of humin
bodies In ancient Greece. Upon the re·
maim ol every 10 men wu: pilced
the remains of one 1romal'I, reported
he, to add fat to those furiouJ fires.
"WllEN I ASKED my barber why
i;o many men get bald al about 40,
he said thsl's when thty dev<lop big
midsections and the wtlght.s of l&nf!i
are apt to pull thtir &ealps tight, prevtn-
ling the hair from growlng." So report,
E.S. Gil/<Spie of Honolulu. H• says lho!le
Honolulu barbers come up with • lot
oI basic data like t.b8t.
Your que1tiom and commtnt1 ore
tvelcomed arid wfll be uatd wher,..vr.f'
po31fble in "Checking lJp." Addrtss
mail to L. M. B01Jd , tn cart of DAILY
PltOT. Bor 1875. Nt lDf)Of't fltoch,
Calif. 92663.
po&IUonl Amendment 2, like every other,
was not set forth In the spirit of inflnlte
necessity. If this were the. cue, Article
V o! the COnatJtuUon wblcb aeta forth
procedures for amendment would never
have been Incorporated.
WHAT A SELFISH, auldaled fool lhe
NaUonal .Rifle As.soclaUon is and how
blind we are to perpetually buy their
line. What a ridiculous bunch I
sometimes think we are for ever being
so brazen as to proclaim ourselves
civilized and intelligrnt. Law en-
fcrctment officials generally fa v o r
stricter gun control. What I want to
see is Utls standoff come to a halt.
Law enforcement agencies have the
courage to check in your guns and
lead the way. Does this sound fooDsh?
Or is it too high a price to pay to
regain the deserved respect of Ule
people?
R. D. SEYMOURE
Our Crowded World
To the Editor:
N. a student of biology I have become
increasingly concerned about the world
population problem. Recent evenls and
5tudies strongly indicate a precipitous
increase in the world's population,
particularly in the underdeveloped areaa
such as lndia and Africa, and to a
lesser extent as well in the United States
and Russia.
It is quite apparent that there is
a physical limitation to the number of
people that the earth can support, a
UmitaUon irilposed by food resources,
physJcal space: and waste production.
The saturation point is rapidly being
approaQhtd and may even have been
surpassed., according to some experts.
THE SERIOUSNF.SS of this problem
1>hould not be underesthnated, nor should
lt be viewed !lrtctly from the asper..'t
of atarvation. Overpopulation also has
aignlflcant effecta upon disease, pollution,
crlme, revoluUon and war.
It seems to me that It is the
· rt&ponslbllity and the duty of the United
States and other developed countries to
make a concerted attempt at controlling
thelr own populaUon and aiding the
und er developed and grossly
overpopulated nations to control theirs.
THE ULTIMATE solution lies in birth
control, bqlh art.iliclal corrtrace:pUon and
abortion. This ls, however, a long term
60.luUon aod will take several generaUoos
"Serl} ~ttr! f ftfltl ya or
piH1 ag1i1!''
to evidence any real effect. Tb.is does
not fuean, however, that it is not im·
port ant.
lmmedlate action can include vutly
incrtased foreign aid in the f o r m of
the new high-protein grains; careful
research into and immediate im·
plementation of microorgani~ sources
0£ food would also be a ·great aid in
short-term ,lid' 'to starvation I n
overp1pulafed areas. One has to realize,
thouah, that birU1 control ltse.tf cannot
be put off.
IT SEEMS QUITE clear lo me that
a choice must 00 made: Would It be
better lo give up some individual freedom
now (eg., not having the number of
cbJldren you want lf that number 1.9
over two) or malnlaln co mp I et o
reproducUve freedom now, only to be
faced with increasJng lick of freedom
of any kind in the lutur1 due to grossly
overcrowded and undersupplied con-
ditions.
Th.ls is the choice now facing America
and the world. I only hope that the
first of these alternatives ls chosen,
and chosen liOOn. Th.iJ is indeed the
vital revolution of our times.
R. WILSON GOltHAM
An Airport Solutlo11
To the Editor :
So you goUa have a big commercial
jet airport! One million Orange County
people must have jets to, arrlbng othe r
things, Costa Mesa Mayor Pinkley says,
"permit academic and sporting activities
with the Northwest." O.K. ! I'll buy it!
I don't like it, but I'll buy it.
I don't understand why everyone Is
in such a hurry, but it must be me
that is out of step. If speed is essential
for financial and "spo rting" s u cc e Ii s.
then put in as large an airport as
you want anywhere that you wish.
BUT! YOU DON'T have the mo r a 1
and, yet to be determined, possibly not
even the legal right ta wreck even one
person's health or financial well-being
to get" your airport, no matter how
many people might benefit from it.
Besides, the solution is so simple.
If you must have your airport, then
pay for tl!· Any person owning property
who feels damage should have the rlaht
to sell his property to the people for
a price equal to 1.he value wllhout an
airport. (Personally, l would like to
make it that the people who are so
insistent on having a big airport would
be the ones to pay for it , • • but
that is wishful thinking. I tnow that
we would aU have to chip in.)
THERE WOULD, cf c 0 D r I e, be no
value to the circumstance that some
person didn't want to move. The moral
and legal right or ernineot domain 1s
well established.
The people (county, state or whatever~
could then sell the property to the h!gttest
bidder whl> was willing to sign hla ac-
ceptance or an airport. You might be
surprised how little money would actually
be lost, and you would tmmed!1tely
eliminate all valid oppositlon to your
darned old airport.
BILL BOWEi\
J\11.ron's ABU Derblou
To the Editor:
Any rational evaluation of Mr. Nixon's
ABM decision, taking into consideration
what we know of politicians, the military
and Mr. Nixon, wouJd indicate another:
total victory for the military. The "year·
Jy re-evaluation" will be a lf.ep-by-e:tep
escalation, and the world will go down
lhe drain.
I PARTICULARLY noted ?ttr. Nilon's,
reply to a question about eliminating
the lax override, when he stated that,
after lhe military had submitted their
budget, if it v;as reduced, we might
either eliminate the override or take
a look at some of our other problems, ,
like starvation ; that was when I wept.
E. B. O'NEILL
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Throu~h Saturday
ACCESSORIES T AT SWING
INTO SPRING AT PENNEYS
·-h ~ .... hloh ...... pmtrhw• ......... . ........ ,,., .......... u .............. ..
!"*-ciM.rt JM'" wdi• ~ Wfllfrll'fl ._Ur(...'G.
--1.69 "'-'-"" "'*" •"-' Mgt ~"""'"" -• frtfll • ~ ,.... ';t'lf .w.. ......... ..+wt. ..... eotM.. .. .,.., ............. ___ ..................... --.
........ •3 ......... •s
w .... ...,.toii lhettr "°""" ... .......,. ~ ......... .,,... ..
~WOflM~ .... w•••••• ....... ....
..... locilil .,.,.,,..., '9lradl -...... °"' .... ,... ...
-'2
YOUR
PATTERNED POLYESTER
KNITS SET THE SCENE
STORE
w. ....... ..-. .............................. ..
............ ollt,..,. ....... --................ -.... Md....,... ....... _ Pl'lldicntt ........ ,..... ....... ___ ........ _ .. _ '""'-·-·-,.._ . .., ....... .... .,.,.. .... ..., ................ ic.M ..,..._. .... lo-..... ...... ...., ..... ___ ......... ~ .. -
....... .....:s..a.u ....... s.13,
•
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
(Htr bor Shopping Cenfet) (Hun tington Conter) (F•shion l•l1nd)
I
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I
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•
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"
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• DAILY '1LOT
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
assemblyman p r o p o s e d
stronger tfforts today to
lands citing r<c<nl flood and
.slide damage to homes as an
example ol. local government·
al bungling of the problem.
ol Jong-range SUCCHS."
Cities and counties have
Assemblyman John T. Kno.1,
(D-Richmond), put forth five
bills endorsed to preserve
more open areas in urban
localities.
Ir local government still
doesn't take the initiative, he J
.said, then "every pos.!ible
avenue must be explored, in-!
eluding more e1temive use
ot the police power. Eltective
action in the preservation ol
open space is mandatory, and
to the ei:tent necessary should
be assumed by the state."
He noted that the recent
program enacted by t h e
legisl~lure or allowing local
government to give tax breaks
to owners of open spaces,
especially farmers, was "to
preserve California's prime
fannland as well as to cont.a.in
and guide the growth of urban
areas."
But. he noted, "the fact that
only about JO percent of the
land under the Land Conserva-
tion Act Is either prime farm
land or situated within three
miles of any city seems to
indicate that the present pro-
gram is falling short of its
mark."
Knox added, "if s u c h
failures continue to prevail,
this program has little chance
of long-range success."
Cities and counties have
failed to use the power that
lawmakers gave them to
preserve open land, t h e
assemblyman declared, and
cited recent storm damage as
a result.
Mondi!', Miid! 24, 1169
IWMr. -Garvin will see yoa. now ••• er, he'• n~ver
forgotten be started out u & bartender •••
LA Close to Kennedys
At Best, Worst Hom·s
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Sen. Edward Kennedy, at a
memorial dinner for his slain
brother Robert, says Los An-
geles "bas been close to us
at our finest moments and at
our roost dilficuJt."
The Massachu&et t s
Democrat's brother John was
nominated for president in Los
Angeles in 1960 and Robert
Kennedy was assassinated
here eight years later.
To 400 guests who paid $500
a plate Saturday night, the
Kennedys' mother R05e said :
"It behooves us as parents
to get our &OllS lnt.erested in
goverrunellt and politics. He
may be a winner or a loser,
but he must be a participant,
not just an observer."
Proceeds from the Beverly
Hilton dinner and others
acrcm the nation will go to
Jl"Y olf 13.8-million campaign
debts incurred by Robert Ken-
nedy during his J::Nd for: the
1968 Democratic presidential
nomination , a family
spokesman said.
Fight Ends in Death
UC Brain
Drain
Untrue?
Woman Caught 3 Days
Sailor Found Her by Merest Ch ance
ESCONDIDO, C.UI. (UPI) But I dldnl think I was going R<turnlng tn heavy fog, lhe
-A chance stop by a sailor t.o make It." inadvertently turned olf onto
BERKELEY ( A p ) _ ended a lhree-day ordeal for Mlss Ingalls was rescued a seldom-used road. She
William J . Bouwsma, vice a woman who war trapped by the merest chance Satur-became lost and said she
chancellor of the University in her car when it plunged day afternoon. An unidentified blacked out.
of California at Berkeley, over an embankment In the Navy chief petty olrlcer was Her car ran over !hi!
labels as exaggeration reports Cleveland National Forest. driving thro .... h the forest with shoulder of the road and rolled that there is a brain drain "6'' on campus. Jennilou Ing a 11 s, 50, his family and stopped near for 100 feet down the !lope,
Bouwsma, who Js leaving Hollywood , said her rellgloua the embankment to admire coming to rest in thick brush.
for Harvard tbls fall, took f;tith gave her strength to the view. She was unable to cpen the
issue with a New York Times of luminary educators who &urvive 83 hours in freezing He beard 1 woman crying car doors, ~hich were held
6tory that cited hJm as an have come to Berkeley since temrw-." atures, her W r 18 ts shut by the brush. and a\. example of brain drain~ 196M7 IChool year. "'~ and looked over the edge of though the convertible top was
He claimed be was quoted Among them, Nobel prize bleeding from cuts inflicted the bluff. ripped open, Miss Ingalls has
out of context and is not, winner Charlea Townes of by shattered glass. "He climbed down the bill arthritis of the spine and coold
as the Times aa.id, leaving Massachusetts Institute 0 r "I kept looking back over and found me,'' Miss Ingalls not climb out.
because of campuB turmoil at Technology; sociologist Robert my life and I wasn't pleased said. ;•'Jben he yelled for bis "At night the temperature
Berkeley. Bellah of Harvard; ·1egal wUh what I saw," she said wife to get help." was below freezing and lt
Along with Bou w s ma . scholar John NO()(Jan d. Notre from her hospital bed here. Her lonely ordeal began rained Friday .
historian Carl Schorske and Dame, and former University "I promised God that if I Tuesday when she dropped off "I kept talking to God."
poliUcal scientist David Apt.er of Chicago Slavic chairman got out of there I would make a friend at Palomar Mountain she said. "I think he heard
were listed among the elite Hugh McLean. something better of myself. in northern San Diego ~ty. me." scholars departing. The lhree --'-------------'-------------.:.._~..;... ________ _
sjgned a letter that taggtd
the "alleged flight" of brains
"statistically untrue. f•
"Those who, like ourselves,
decide to leave Berkeley
generally do so for reasons
as diverse as their sense of
regret in departing is com-
mon," the letter added.
Bouwsma named a number
Intruder Kills
Two at P arty
LOS ANGELES (AP)-An ln-
der who complained of too
much noise at a party, shot
and killed Geneva Martinez,
30, and F..dward Martinez, 35,
and left the dead woman's
husband, Raymond, 30, with
critical head woonds, police
say.
An all-points bulletin was
issued later Sunday for a 42-
year-0!d man.
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
Why shop about
At frantic pace?
Your Easter's at
the Easter Place I
Look at the nice things
going on at Penneys-
for your_ fashion undercover story!
"Many local governments HERMOSA BEACH (UPI I Luxuriously flal lering
women's nylon satin
full length slips!
have passed up the op--Hennosa Beach Police to-
porlunity of preserving flood
plains and steeply sloping
areas u open spaces, and by
doing so have often permitted
construction upon areas ac-
tually unsafe for residentiaJ
building," Knox declared.
Samaritan
Shot4Times
THE BEST
Reede,.hip p • 11 • pr•••
"Peen11t1" 11 one el the •orld'1
me1t popul•r comic tfrip1. Roed
it Geily In the DAILY PILOT,
GIRLS •••
AGES4 -12
WIN
Many Valuable
PRIZES
IN
HARBOR
CENTER'S
2nd ANNUAL
lWEEN ·AGE
PRINCESS
CONTEST
CROWNING SAT.,
MARCH 2f -1 :00 p.m.
NAMI •••••••••• , , •••• , •••
ACDlll l , • , , , , , •• ,, , , ., , ,
f'MONI ••••••••••••• I ••••• .. , .................... .
rm wt •nd rtllll'fl tit c;--.
lludlo .. Dtl>Ct encl Modtllll't
In Hlf"OOf C..•
t)OI NAllOI I L.VD,
COSTA MU A
e Seereteriel e Medie•I
ln1ure11ee e lookk11pi"t
e D•"t•I
Ai1hti119
WANT INTEREST
ON YOUR BANK
CHECKING ACCOUNT?
YOU CAN'T CET IT
B1JT WITB PACD1C'S
SWftCll 'N SAVE ACCOUNT
Yoa an do llmoll 11 wall lly b1ping 1 lot len money in
year dllC•i• 1-.t 11111 a lot mon in your l'llcific 5" Pmbook
Accoant 11d awitdling money !lack and forth • att. • :yaa lib.
Became
evel'J" dollar earns every daf It I• la
7oar Paelfte Account-
evea for Just one day.
5" n11111J •• P111hatAca.nt1 _,.. ... lllilJ .. 1/Cll ...
jdlllll 11 tbne.,.r ••11 ..... 111 aimll 11111.
Savi111 11 ya.r ••• at ,111111'1 11d um fra• tli111t 11 Hf
••~ wlt11 nnlvd ., tli11tltli.
• -
WomM"1 f"CWtCy 100% nylon panties
.nth aswtod '""" ond odging>f
°"~.,Ion brio& ..... ;,, ---32.olO . $)
The bra chemise
9natfrwthe
clothn of today! ·--'"""" ... _ ......
"--""""" -lody loblc .............. I -.,ton'"""'· st .. 32-36t 4-1-C. Ji
$6 //
'"' ...,. ........... ....,.-"'°" ......
--fW( """"' ""' -.. -....... a--• -cl""""'""' trinfMll .... ciolcn. Canes in ... mt
32-31,, Of a.age 32"""'
Half slips ............ $3
w_.,._Jo!lat/!lat,
dicrt Ord CMl"Clg9 lengths.
•
Comfortoble Lycra9
non-curl lace cup
stretch sh'c!P bra
0... 1,..... """""" i... """' ~borllU Jo tJ. '"I" for addod
comfort. White and fashion
cdor-1 in sins A..a.c. $3
Complete comfort!
Lycra• front lace
long leg panty girdle
• ... ,,.n.. ......... 1""".,i..
-""~olllno -paoel. Ynri. and fmlW:in don lfl tiza
SJol.l.XL
$7
;
UllEYDUR
EN NEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TOCIAYI
""" ~ • -t -
a
I
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
(Herbor Shopping Center)
•
'•-.0.
,,--~
MOllda1. Mardi 74, 196? DAIL V PILOT I
County Fire Crews Pool Servi~es I Sae by Today's
Want Ads
OAIL Y l"ILOT ....... "' RkllWll ~-
MECHANICAL GIRAFFES AT WORK
At Anaheim Stadium,, A Fire Drill
Deatlis Deaths
REECE HUBER
Delll M. Reece. 12 Fle1!1 LIM, Wll-
mfnQ1on, su .... lved by three •OM,
J~met. F .• R1Ymond F, Ind P1ul A.
Atta; lour da1111hter•, Vl~l•n 8110-,
WIC'll, Donni Br1K'h, Huntington ll1111Cl'H
Helen J 1111!er 1nd Frances Sml1hi tour
brall\1!1'1;, Bruce, Biii, Geer99 and
Jack McC111y; three-sl•1e~. H11e1
FDx. Helen Wllson and Gr1ve Dev·
~·all. se .... ICl!1, We.!nesday, I PM,
Pfeil Femlly CDlonl1I FUIRfl1 Home.
Cllflord C. Hube<'. 222 Tustin Aw.,
Newport Beed\. su,...;vec:1 by c111111111er.
Mrl. ,..,_rll\'11 Irwin, CYP>Usl bl'O'll>er,
H1rok1; slt11!r, LI V~ne-a.ldWln.
Gr11vf'Sfde :ie,...I~, tod1Y, MonclaY,
lO:JO AM, P1c!flc v 1..... Memor111
Partc. Dlrtt'led by Bell 8ro&c1w1y M«·
tu.ry, 110 lln>i1clw11y, C111!1 ~.
ENGLE
Mlf': E1111le, 200 Newporl 81yd., ff,
c.:.11 Mesi. sv .... lved by son. Rov • .if
Cc.11 Mesa. Pr!v11te •~Yl~ today 11
" PM, S.11 Broedw1v Cll&Pfl, 110
e"°"dwav, Costa Mesi.
HUTSING
Mershln 11. Hut5lng. 2900 COl•I HlglJ-
way, Ne'<l($>011 BQC'll. Dttt al c!Nth,
Merch 7l. SU.VI~ bY wile, Mllrr1
'""• Oouii.$ H1ml11on, Prince ~' \llrglnl,; d11111hter, Alli Erl!lr/lfl'>,
New Yori!; """ 1lsters1 Ol'I;!! brot'llel'. end two 11r1ncldl<.IOh!ers. FuiRrll ,,,....
k!1 1r.d fnte-rmenl will bit held In
M11!laon, Illinois. E11lt1 Martu1,..., 1141
Sll90•1or, Cc.ti Mftl, torw1rdl1111 d\.
reclon.
COLLINS
H•1e1 Gerlrude Coltlns. 211 Senti , ....
~I, CDsl1 ~. D1t1 o1 dult'I, Mire~
'7. su .... 1wd by ..,, Ja""'• T. c.oinn"
0111n1h, Ttl!PI two sl•Hn. M ... LI\.
li1n S. Stml>SOll, COill Mewl Mn.
Irene Healh, SI. J D1$11, MD.; IH'Olhe<',
Mur,..,. J. Dorltv, L.Gl>I llff<:h; tnd
one gr1ncl!JllllllhleT'. Rm1rv, tonkll\I,
7 PM. Rl!<lllifm MISS, Tuesdl\', t AM.
boll! 11 St. Joadllm'1 Clltiolk C'tlurd!.
Entom1>ment, Hotv Sel>Ulcter c~.
Dlrecied bY Blitz Mort\llfY, 17•1 5""
perlor, Cost1 /11\eY,
JIAVDEN
H1rrv L. H1voen. 2•1 P1!mrr, C11tll MeH. Dile of death, Marcil 71. Sur-
vivt'd by wife, Cell•; son. J1me1 L.
Hayden1 two cl1unvhlers, Mrs. 8;>-tty
Jine Btrrlg.,n, Caplllrano 8Nf;111
Mary L(IJilt Hellen, An1~lm1 nei>hew,
L"l\t' o. Linwood; !O gr1r.dchilclren
and 9 g1"Hl-Or1nclchlldren. Funertt
lll!rY1ce$, lodly, 7 PM, at 11•111 Cm11
Mesa Cllepel, with Rev. J1me1 lll1lne
of!iciatln11, ln~rm4!nl, HartKJ~ A61 ~11 P1rk. Directed b1 B1lll
Mor11J1rv. 11•1 SVPttl«, cos11 Mesi.
NEIL
Jovph M .Nell. 215\lf :Ortd St., N.,...
C>Q01 Bff,Ch. 0.~ al dM1ft, Mlrcil 1J.
5UfY!ve<I by wife, A!1flllll; ten. J1mes
J Neil, Tuili.n; dat111hNlr, Mfl. JN,._
eile F .. 11111111, Hunt!noton Beachi moth·
er. ,,.,.,... N. MaollD«o. New Yori<:
two t>rOltwru l11<1r 1\st"'; 1lx tnonO-
tftlldren. ROS&rv was reclNld l1•f
nt!ll'lt, SundlY, Aeaulem Mats 'NII eel·
eorited 11111 momn\g at our LadY al
Ml. Clmwl Call\Olic Church. Dlrec.!Pd
bY Bil!l Mortuerv• 1741 Sui>eroot,
Cost• Mne.
BROWN
Ros• Brown. '10 E. E11y Ave .• B1lbOI.
Survlv-rd bY ""'· Alben fly1rd, CotTI
Me11; ~. JoM W\'fln; twa IA!o'
ten,, Mr1. A~1ft RD!lel'S 1r>d Mn. wir.-
nle Seeley. ServlcH, !ocllY. 1 :XI, Biii
Broadway Chl9el· lnlerm..,1, Wntmln-
•ler Memaf\ll1 Part:. Dll'l!IC'Nd b~ Btll BrDMlwlY ~ry. l!D BrGlclwlY•
Cosla Mesi.
BALTl MORTUARIES
Corona del l\!ar OR 3-9'50
Costa l\Jesa 1\11 6-!4%4
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\!eu
IJ s-313S
DILDAY BROTHERS
UnnUngtoD Valley
Mortuary
17911 Beach Blvd.
Iluntln.(1.on Beac:b
SU-7771
PACIFIC VIEW
•IEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e l\tortuary
Chapel
!t'iOO Pacific: View Drtvt
"'l'ewport Beach, Callrornir
6«-!700
PEEK FA~llLY
cow~~AL l'UNERAL
HO~IE
7801 \JOlsa Av~.
\VestntlDs~r 89J.l5!$
SHEFFER MORTUARY
Laguna Beach
San Ctutente
494-1535
llUIOO
SMITll'S MORTUARY
6!7 Malo St
Runttngton Rtacb
LE U539
DENNIS
£!11WDrth A. e>enn!1. 2010 T1111r11 Ave.,
CDsl1 Mftll. SU,...lved by wile. Mn.
Anne Oennl11 son, H1rokl Denn! ..
Ocetirrsidel d1U11hift", M~. Arie.. T.,.
son, H..-t Beed!/ two .1.~. M ...
~ Holhnln, Wlsc-ln; Mn. ,..,_be! Jal\otSCln, Grind AIPidi, Mlc1'1-
l11an; f(IJr tr1ndctlildren and fflrM
11rftt-11r11ftlldllldren. $efV!CeS, lomo<'·
,_, T\R'Sday, I PM, Pa(lf!c Vlirw
CMl>el. lnfennenl, PK:lfk View Mf-.
no-1111 Parle. Dindrd bY Bell 8"°"11·
WllY Mort\llrv,. HD llrmdw1y, Coste ......
GEORGE
Ctlerlotte E. Geonoe. 116 Rodln!tr
St., Cost• M1!11. survtlll'd by son.
C!iffOlrd; i:leuthlel', M~. Jeni.:. ~
l>M!, bolh of ClndnnmtJ, Ol'llo. $eT'YICft wm bit l'leld WeclMMIY 11 ""' Glll!Nn
Ful!H'.tl Home Jn Cincl~ lntwment.
Glfe of Heeven Cemetery, Clncln111tl.
ee.11 SrClldwly Mo.-ruerv. 110 B/'!196-
_y, Cc.ti MtM. lolWwird!no dlrK· .....
SMITH
!ll1nclle Smlth. :!060 NewPOi1 Blvd.,
co:111 Meu. survlYed by ~usblnct,
Guy; son. Mr. c. L. Arm1t,_, of
Vlt11lnl1: daw/lter, M~. Dor!s C11'1Cf1,
Lal V-•: sll'tfr, Mrl. S. A. YOl.l"ll·
Prlwle servlcl!S -•e lleld. tnummenl
wlll bit 11 Rose HUis ~mor111 P'1rt<,
Wllltt!rr. Olrec1$1 by Btl1 llrotdw1y N.orl\Mry, 110 Bri.dwaY, C01t1 Mn1.
GRAVF.S
JD1n Grtvetl. r.1•~ W. !Pih St., (:(1111
Mes.I. $«Vk:el pend!no. 8t" lfOICfWIY
Mortu1rv. 110 8rnedWIY, COll'I MHI.
TALLEY
"1td<'PW T1llfll. $«Vices Pff>CI!,,,. 1111 llroedWIY MOrtulry, 110 Broedwwr.
C•!a Mesi.
>llLUM
EVANS
lnflnt ""' ol Mr, Incl Mn. RDbllt1 EwM, 1on M-e Lene. MIP""'
Vltlo. Gl'IW.ldt ""'left w111 be hlld
""""" ftle" lllrWCllon ., &hefftf' l.llUlll •NCI! Murh>lrv.
Don't Ne9lect Sllppln9
FALSE TEETH
0o !llM tM'fft ~' 91{11 0# woblllt
Wl\fl'I 'JfN II~ Ml, lllltll Cir -«? Don't e. ...no'l'ed ll'ld emblrrMifd bw
111C11 hlftC!ic-l'ASTEETH. en 1111• llM (non-IC!f) ...-tlr TO •lr*le _.
'fOU' 11-111, """" ll-tltlfl ll'IDl'I 11""" i,l'I, Gl\lti c:nr>lldenl IW!I~ Ill
tK'llrlty •nd IOd9d mmflt1. Ne eumrnY,
llllOl'I' , ..... ""'11'11. °""'''" ... !ht! fi'1 .... -'1-1 TO PIUlll\. 5" l""W llltftllll 1'1911'11rr~. °" ,ASTEETH •I •II drut
col.'"!'"-
PEOPLE
T111t'1 whet lt't 111 about.
IVESTCLIFF MORTUARY
427 E. 1'7tb St., Co1ta l\te11 -1 Orie of tfle '"01t ptpuler d1 ily
f11futtt of th1 DAILY PILOT
I• P1opl• Sc1111. It'• 111 1l>cout,
•lrit•• co'""'o"ert, ••olri '"ii
ch1r1cl•r• -p1opl1.
By TERRY COVILLE
Of ltlil Dlll'I' f'U.t llal't
ANAHEIM -A gasoline
truck and trailer overturns in
Anaheim, 1pewlng gallorui of
gasollne and flames into the
streets or a heavy commercial ......
just as they would in a real coordinator lakes over.
fire, because they were not Emergencies oo a smaller
informed of what would ht1p-level ca.11 also be handled
pen." wlthln the network, rather
Rapid communication is the Lhan on a t'OUflly-wide x 11lc.
key to success ol the Mutual Network areas are arranged
Aid network. In the following manner:
''With our nets set up, we Net I covers all county fire
can contact one coordinator units.
who will broadcast on the Net. 3 rover.s La Habra,
mutua l aid fr equency and in Brea, Buena Park and
a matter of seconds that Fullerton.
single coordinator can have Net 4 is Stanton, Anaheim,
units rolling from all parts Placentia and Garden Grove.
of the county," explained Net 5 includes Orange, Santa
Picard. Ana and Tustin.
/
• OQ:u.Wo Trade: Party hu
double> bed outfit or pol"-
table typewrit~r to trtde
tor steno wilt Q( equa.I
value.
e Sego\lla 1' Not quite hb
i.-tyle, but you can do 1110n1e
n1Jghty fancy plckln' on
thi:-1 12 • string aCOW1Uc
g11l1ar. Perfect for the ~
ginner ... sounds iOOCI. $25.
e l.i!llt• Pl>Wf!rhowle: lt'1 a
F-0-0-0-1'-r-d!! A little
Ford Cortina, 1968, only 5
months old, For you, take
uvt!r pay1nenUJ, at $04
1nut11h. SZ10 equ.lt;y,
That's the way Ult coun-
lywide mutual fire aid ex-
ercise began last Thursday -
on paper at least. . All fire
depart.meri.s in Orange county
met in Anaheim lo work out
a fire fighting problem which
could have been real and
might be someday.
Before Anaheim firemen
could stop it, according to
the paper exercise, the curling
flames spread to several huge
commercial buUdings, leaping
from structure to structure
a't a wild pace.
In each Of the six network Net 6 Lake.s in Huntingtonl
sectors one city is designated Beach, Costa ~·lesa. Newport
coordinator and one city Beach, Fountain Va 11 e }',
Grande fire in Noverubcr of alternate COCN"dinator. For a Westminster and Seal Beach.
1967," said the chief. bl:ize in that net area, lhe Net 7 is Laguna Beach and
• Gl\lc Him the Slip: llemet
Doclor needs a slip for :?S'
Sloop during April a n d
~fay. He'll be aboard only
:? or 3 weekends, At one time city fire coordinator will organize the San Clemente.
dePartments in Orange Coun1y help from other cities, unless There is no net 2 becauseJ!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
signed separate mutu al aid the 11'-e ;, ;n !he coocmnaLing or a confHct wHh rad;o fre-Who Can Read Just One 'Pea nuts'?
As the roaring fire grew
rut « cootrol Anahe im
firemen hopped on t h e
Orange County Mutual A i d
communications line and yell·
ed f« help. 'lbat's the way
it will be done in a real
emergency.
contracts with each city, not1 _~c:H~y,~;=n~lha=l~c=ase=~lh:•::..::•:ll:er:n:•:":_:qu:•:n<:1=·'='~· _______ :_ _____________________ ~
always cooperating with all
Within a matter of minutes
more than 18 pieees of fire
equipment from every city in
the county arrived at the
scene, and in three hours
brought the imaginary
holocau..t und<r conlrol.
No -it never really haJr
pened -but it could, and
Thursday morning Orange
County firemen d~ated
how they could and would
meet such a disaster.
Working under cooditions
simulating those described
above, the Orange County
Mutual Aid system went into
actioD at Angel Stadium.
Trucks rolled, men ran ,
sirens screamed and water
spurted to far corners of the
stadium parking lot -an in
less than two hours.
It was all directed by Hun-
tington Beach Fire Chief Ray
Picard.
"We were really quite pleas.
ed wilh the way it went,"
said Chief Picard. "Our ti.ming
and communicalion system
held together nct:llently."
The mutual aid system has
been revised recently.
"We reevaluated our old
system after the serious Paseo
'f?
their neighbors.
The new ¥(up, officially
adopted by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors March
11, divides the coun ty into
six seetors and lum ps the
cities in each sector together
to form task forces for an
emergency.
"The old system involved
lengthy legal contracts and
an involved process," says
Picard, "now cities can sim ply
adopt the Board of Supervisor
approved plan and we're
ready to go."
In Thursday's dry run, a ll
portions of the county gave
full cooperation, with the
Anaheim fire crew rapidl y
bolstered by a task forct: from
each of th e sii: sectors, or
"nets."
More than 18 pieces of
heavy fire equipment rolled
on the mock alann.
"Even· though p I an n e d
ahead," explained the Jiun-
tington Beach fire chie f, "in-
divklual units were operating
Nearly Everyone
'Listens '
to Lande rs
spring spectacular
in our portrait studio:
THIS WEEK ONLY!
10 SPARKLING PORTRAITS
~~ !~.~h~.~~~~~~. ~~~~.!10
Bring your child in this week and let us capture
that special springtime spa rkl e in a fine portrait .
And at this spectacula r price you'll have enough
for yourself and fam ily gifts!
1J3FlDADWAY
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Phon• 892-JJ)I, •xt. 281
l'li1to9r1pJ. Stwclia Ill Flee,
All Penney Store$ Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
' ·'-
A
I' ..'
ti "'
\
UBE VDUR
EN NEY
CHARGE
I
ACCOUNT
TC CAY I
Picture prJtty Easter dresses ·for girls!
A. Spring fashions from Carol Evans• for girls!
little girl's Carol Evans• Arne!" trioc.etate /Forlrel .. poly.
ester dresses for Easter. These fashion comcious dr~ses
B. Pretty lace dresses for Easter from Carol Evans•
Sash !rim dress with ripples of acetate/nylon kx:. has
lOOo/o cotton lining. Perfect for Easter, it comes in spring
come in assorted shades. Sizes 4-6X.
Smart looking Carol
Evans• gloves for girls
100~0 stretch nylon snowy 'llihit•
gloves to complement her Easter
fc~~ions! Sizes 7-1 4, 3-6X .
fresh colors. Sities 8-14.
Fa$hionable girl's pa-
tent purses for Eoster!
Shiny potent plastic handbags lo
!&am with her Eostec..outfitl ~
sorted fothfori styles.
$)and 1.98
Step in fashion with
Penney's Easter shoes
New fresh look, poleot vinyl up--
P'!!f'S, ''T" strap, tqv0re bode heel.
aiack and white. Sizes SYN.
6.99
costA MESA NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
(Horbor Shopping Center) (Fashion liland) (Huntington Center)
'
10 DAllY PllOT Mondi)', March 24, 1969
For the
Divorces
OIVORCl!S flt.ED
Jo•«>ll Rol»r! (1br~r• VI "'"M M1rl• c.n, .. . l •I• ... C1in VI Juli ... l"1ln, Jr.
Jo,,ic• H. R0oellellt V• R-rt C.
l!ocMll• r~, E RtbV V1 E•rl E Rab¥.
<ama~lnt fo.• •01r11t m1lntM11nce
or Clv<>rct l\Mnlt D, W•ith! VI Wllllam H. ,,.,:on1 G•a••• J., w,,gM V'S Jerold E Wrl•llr
l•n,ct C E!l'111111 VI Jl)lln 0 . EMltsll
Mtll>.o J•wtll Cale v• Corltl Evt•t•!
(•1•
Blll• F. Fa~ V• Corl& For
i<a ... 1rc K•nM!ll F1g•• •I ~:.dUt
""" F1wtr (lltr'VI Ann SllW.•11 VI Gar<'Oll T. Sl\!9••• f'•99Y JllM Wolff VI l'lfftlf'tl Ktn""'" wom ElllM Marla Griffin .i G1rv l~hn
Gr!flln J••t>" 0. Snelli"ll VI Gltn<I~ Ann
5,,,,111<>g kl!O'l,l'lll!lh Frlflll Macti•• ..., Jvdv .lnn
M1cal•• k1tlli• Anne "'y1t1 vt <i:lch1r<I G1rci1
II.VIII
Jttnttl• H ll1gul11! vi O:!nal<I R
1!1g~1lt
!!fir. 0 . Sm\111 v1 l'aul R. Smitn
Pnvmi G. Ml1cl\tl v• Dan•el M1'thfl Har~Y Whitt VI Eloll~ll\ l'llli1t
Kllhll'tll R. 011ltr v• Miiton F.
01li.v
Sl.,.,..n~ A, llwn VI Al!lf'•! M.
Liwn
K1tlw.rlnl! Gr1c1 Surla« vs \/~""'"
Giibert $url1ce l oul.. E. Culrkl!lt ._. R•ll>fl W,
Cutrlt hl Conitanu A. Rlt011e n Hu•h H. Ritchie
Jimmie Let Lllff ,.. '11'11'1G1 Gr.ct
""' Ch111"1Dft9 M. Mc"-VJ Alfn N.
McK-
Jo.tn M. MelYn&ull vs N<lfmln
Mol•r>eU• Wall•n• P, Vellutlnl v1 Wi1ll1m J. lltll11!111I
Patrlda Slf1tl\tnton v' em ''""'~·•"><l"' e1rb.tra Ann P11tnam V$ Wtll<l•ll J•mn
Pulnlm
e.n~. J. Lud1 VI Ltm1>•I E Luo;:I• J<Jdllh A. Ce~ V1 11.-0. Cast
Mary L. Cllurdl vs Wlllllm G. Chut(r.
L.ooard L Holm" "' R-.rary E. ... ,_
Joan Noel Pel1! V$ Rltf'lafd L Pote
H .
Flol'd Mkn~I Ruin v• Kathletn "'""
11.u!n
Ro•ema,.., HolmH V$ Leonard Ltrov
Holmff
JoAnn Katl;•arl,,.. $1eckll '• v• E1>v~nt
Edward Sleckl1Tr
INT!llLOCUTOllY
•OEC ll.E 6S
J• a,1n I{ Oona""° •• L•"v I'" Oonanoo
-... r•
Record
Elllbtlh N, $11nt~vth n 1¥10. W.
$!1Mbil119h
PllYllll A. Mllorwv YI Edwa•d M_
Malonev 1{1!1\frlM l . Alusli11 VI Tony' Al1111i1a
f'IOrel\Ce J"" Hlrron v• Jonn P.
H~ron
Linda J, BrOQd "' ll.on1ld l . Brood ..:atnlPl'n Mi ry Slone v1 Ot11nls Rocen ·-RtbKc.i """ Sander& "' Jerome ll1rtholtmtw Slndotrt
Jo Ann T111111I vs J.,?1es Lewis 111"'"'
!wt """ Ro.tch VI Biiiy N11! ROl(I\
Cf'lerlolf• ~nn W1rr11111 ."' Evert Jn11ior warren
Jo.tn "· Kn•1111 vs Johft L • .: ... PO Ju1n1 LI••• YS Mill ... , u~.
Judilll M. An1ro V1 Jim~ F_ A:•"o
Slln!M Let Morris YI Jo Ann Mo.rroo
DOMI Ell.e Rodri11ll<!l •• G1~""' MatWel Rodrluuei
G!nnv F, L&ndl1 YI J1mes J. L1tldl1
M1ryl011 Church"' KenMlll F, (llurdl
K.ov Kvol(o Tarnowsll.e vs Otto Robert
T1rnow~1
Arl'hur E. LunMll <n Anl'lll lit.I LUnd.-1!
M.ll'Ylola 8•0lllW ... Robl'rl M. Sr~IW
Alber!• JIM GllHHn> "' Al1H:1 ! G~sens
Liurtne E~•lvn Gi !l"o vs '"'"••d
Glll'1JO Gorocn Get JerYlt vs Pri\cilla M~
Je,..,i• M~r~ Joy(e Squibb v1 Dontid 6tll
Sc.uobb
FINAL OECll.EES
JUDGEMENTS
Nine~ Ann Triom1>i.cn VJ '"'"'~Y Ru~rlord Thl>ml>son
Di~"" S1tr9lo1is "' C~rhlos John Sttrplot\1
E"ller J . l • Rue VI Mtdi1tl B.
Lt 11.Ut
B•t1• J. Znulk• v1 Joieoh E ~·1u~11 E1111er. Elaine Rln!'leY V• ,1'11n G111n-.
R•nnev
Minnie L. Glb\on vs Arnold D. G,b:;on
Genevieve Bour1ua YI. J•mi"S E,
Boor IHI
DINI E:, Heinl~ v• Er,,... L Heinly
!•nnu!~f'll) And"' -Hf"11 Hunler n Frl'd R1rmond
Hunter Vernon P. 611nkinlhi1> vs fr~nces
M. 811nklnol'll1>
Virpin1a JNn Mlr!in "' J1ck Lte M•rlln
B~ver1y Lvnne Wiison vs De1n Jlme..• Wiiton (annylmtnr)
M n Marie M•tKe!vry v' Lo"n A. 1nomas E. HanV(ft
Jennie E. Collins n Tl>om•• F, Ccl1ln! M•cKe!vrv
Pent loi>r Ann Mi ry Mort~n VJ !lrven
l(ellf'I Mcrg1n H1nych l•nn\llment)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
YOUNG! TENDER!
HUTRITIOOS!
ECONOMICAL!
SA TISFYIHG! -
Veal Breast .... S1ulled with
Bread Dressing
•• ' ••• a •••• ..59~
Oven ready'. Tender ~ty ,·cal, stuffed with a perf,..ttly ~('asonNI rirP.,,sing:
Veal Chops ........ :~~ ........ 7 9~
U:-an, <hdicint1s: ••• fin(' vrl\rtr !,..xturr 1:--yo ur lll'.SU!'ante <•f qualtty'.
Round Bone Chops .. . . . 99 ;, Veal Cutlets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... 89~
Serve 'f'm pan-f ried~ •.. \"C:-11 is deliciouF.: Serve 'vi th gravy-an<l bi~cuit1< '.
Veal Rib Roast ................ lb$1.09
Braise in hf.e( broth for fi lTt-fl.<1,·or: "l"he cla..<:.sic dish or V'icnna ••. rrad,\" to eook:
First of the week values in all departments
Artichokes ............................ 19:.
1-'rost ki,o;ed .• , nlorr fhlvorful, n1orr tl.'ndcr:
ltaUan Dressing ................. 29'
>;"r\\'! l "rom J,.1wry's ,., 8-ounte hol1 1r'.
Peanut Oil ........................... 59¢
Go\drn pure .. , liirht And ,·crsatilr: 24·0? •. btlr.
Del Monte Zucchini .... 4 '" $1.00
Coes srrr·at \\'i th veal: No. :H!3 C"Hn~.
Prirr.tt in rlf(rl /if ()'fl_., T11(':f., 1l'rd.,
!Jfnr, !'..;. !.i. !?6 ••• •'i o salt.If to d'n.Ur.~
Mayonnaise . H • q: 39'
T,;1ura St·u,Jder's .•. Sa\'(' JOr : ... quart.
Clamato Juice ...................... 49 '
I t '~ <liffrr('nt ,,. and :rnu :; .. ave l itr: 46-oi. can.
Scooter Pies ...................... 39'
Kirts love "cn1 .•• J'\A\"I" 10<: ! ... thrC'f' fla''Or.-:
Crescent Rolls ............ 3 "''1.00
Piil.~•bury':; •.. ~·01~ ... ~et tJ-ir Bakf'-Off recif)f':
ARCADIA: SIJll$tt and HuntingtOO Dr. (ll Ranclo Cenlor)
PASADENA:
320 West Colcndo Blvd.
SOUTH PASADEICA:
Fremont and Huntingtoo Dr.
HUNTINGTON BEACH :
Warner and Algonquin (lloan!walk C.111'1)
NEWPORT BEACH:
2727 Newport BM!. 8lld
2SS5 Lastblllff Dr. (Easlblufl Vin1ge Cont01l
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
---------------...... ~ .................. ······· ·-·
THl--STUNGnVOllD ..
/MR.MUM
-------------
5 Scientists Receive
$5,0QO AEC Awards
' ,
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
•
USEYDUR
EN NEV .CHARGE
ACCOUNT
10 WATT 4 PC. STEREO
COMPONENT SYSTEM REG.137.95
Now you, too can own a four piece walnut SOtM systena •••
including a 10 watt solid state amp'rifier,AM/FM/FM stereo
tu ner, with AF C, BSR mini changer Wtl h cover, a'ld two 'W'Oi·
nut enclosures -10" high X 8'/i' wide X 81/2" ?eep.
$
NOW
I
20 WATT 4 PC. STEREO
COMPONENT SYSTEM
50 WATI 3 PC. ANTIQUE
SPANISH STEREO SYSTEM
Reg.~:;~ $J78 Reg;;:s268
Pay os little as $8 ,., month Pcryca littfeas $11 ,,_ l'flontM
Ovr Penncr~st Delv:te .4 piece component stereosyslem 01.11" .( speaker Spanish stereo in oiled walnut venerers
includes: 4 piece walnut cabinet with..( speakers, 20 and hardwood hos a 50 watt solid stole amplifier, a
watt :.olid stole amplifier, AM /FM/FM stereo tll'ler, Garrard d,angerand lrU$hed oluminvrncontrt>I panel.
wit h AFC,4 speed a utomatic changer. AM/FM tuner with AFC.
NO MONEY DOWN ... USE PENNEY$ TIME PAYMENT PIAN ..
NEWP ORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
(Foshion lslond) (Hunf ington ~enfer)
,.
• •
.
' •• • • • r.
~ •
• • •
' ....
•
'
•
• '
• •
• • •
'
•
•
"T
-------------------------"""!""'-------------....... ~ •
Employes at V,CI Honored -
The UC Irvine campus is of Medicine); Los Angeles.
not yet four years old bot Mrs. Eva M. M a c k ,
has 15 employes with 10 or laboratory technician, college
more years service. counting of medicine. IS years (prior
time put in with 01.her UC service with UC Berkeley and
ve.mpuses or state agencies. UCLA); Pasadena.
The longtime employes were ' ~tiss Ruth lnderrn.iU, ad-
hooored at a recent ceremony. mlnislrative assistant, college
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich of medicine, 15 years (prior
Jr. presented service i1wards service with California College
to : of Medicine); 422 Carnation,
Walter Selufsky, assistant Corona de! Mar.
business manager, business Thomas A. Rolinson. sta(f
and finance, 20 years (prior ~ college of medicine,
service with UCLA); 25742 10 years (prior service ~·ith
Cervantes Lane, P.tission Vie-UCLA); Simi.
jo. Theodore Otto, s e n i o r
Andrew Jones, janitor, col· engineer. physical planning
lege of medicine, 15 years and construction, 10 years
(prior service with California (prior service with Lawrence
College of ~tedicine ); Los Radiation Laboratory); 519
.4.ngeles. Marguerite Ave .. Corona de!
Mrs. Sabra D. ti i 11 , Mar.
housekeeping aids, college of Gordon A. Marsh, senior
medicine. II years (prior museum scientist, biological
service with California College sciences, II years {prior
HAL AlllSCHIW
HEARING AIDS
CwJforn Aur•I Amplifi c.:•tio"
NO SALESMEN
3409 (, COAST HWY.
C.,_ dlll Mar '°' Appolnt.-it ,11-llll
service with UC Berkeley J:
1973 Kornat Dr .. Costa Mesa.
Gunnar L. Jensen, senior
architectural d r a f t s m a n ,
physical planning and con-
struction, 10 years (prior
service with UCLA); 2025
Centella Pl., Newport Beach.
Glenn L. Anderson, prorram
promotion manager, universi·
ty extension, JO years (prior
service with UCLA); 2140
Vista Dorado, fiewport Beach.
Mrs. Bette L. Abs, financial
aids coordinator and associate
dean of students, 10 years
(prior service with State of
California}; 16948 Edgewater
Ln., Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Alice V. Deremo,
library assistant, 10 Yf.fll'S
(prior service with State of
California); 208 A v e n i d a
Princess, San Clemente.
Miss Elsie E. Epp, senior
administrative a s s i s t ant ,
physical planning and con-
struction, 10 years (prior
service with UC Riverside);
14801 Newport Ave., Tustin.
Miss Dowrene Hahn, senior
administrative assistant, cen-
tral records, 10 years (prior
service with UC Berkeley);
1701 Bedford Lane, Newport
Beacli. -
Mrs. Virginia Klapper, ad·
ministrative a s s i s t a n t ,
university extension, JI years
(prior service with UCLA);
277 Ogle St., Costa Mesa .
OAl\.Y PILOT_..., "'919
An Artist's Rewards
Susan Dennis, fourth grader at Bear Street School ,
Costa Mesa, co~ plaque and U.S. Savings Bond
after being named grand prize winner in Newport·
~1esa school distri~' first Americanism Art Con·
test. Passing out S an 's awards are Sam McEl·
fresh (left), princi al of Whittier School and chair-
man of district Americanism Committee, and Jim
Garvey, representing Harbor Area Optimist clubs,
donors of various contest prizes collected by 31 ele-
mentary students. Susan is daughter of l\ir. and
Mrs. Arthur Dennis. 759 Olympic Ave .. Costa Mesa .
Most Air Hijackers
Are Latin Americans
HAVANA (AP)·-lnforma-They are credited with at least
tion available here indicate111 six.
the majority of highjackers A good portion of the Latin·
who have diverted airliners to American hijackers, logically
Cuba are Latin Americans. enough, have taken planes
Official records are not from their own countries.
available to newsmen. But in-Sometimes these hijackers
ronnation frcim pub Ii s hed have come in bunches. The
Cuban accounts, from Havana biggest group was 15 from sources and from repoN Ecuador. They forced ;in
originating in the United airliner to Havana last Jan.
States h>ws at least 90 hi· 19.
• DAil Y PllOT JJ
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jackers have come to Cuba SOl\IE PRO-CASTRO !-============================== on the 45 airliners pirated Some of the groups havel· since 1961.
SllYICI &YALllU M GIUtaUIS AllTJ<, OIAll6E AM VllflUll COUllllS
been idenl.ified as pro-Castro. By nationality, the hijackers Three were identified as
line up thus: 61 La ti n Venezuelan guerrillas who hi·
A m e r i c a n s , 23 North jacked a government plane
Americans. I Frenchman. I as retaliation for the seizure
Jordanian and 4 unidentilied. by the Caracas governmenl
TheLalin -Ameri c an of a Cuban fishing boat last
breakdown:· 16 Ecuadoreans. year.
ll All Penney Stores Open Every Night Mon. Through Sat.
Al~S~!!~TY'll
15 Cubans, 14 Colombians, 5 Two airliners were hijacked
Venezuelans, 4 Peruvians, 3 to Cuba in 1961 and two in
Puerto Ricans. l Argentine. 1967. Then the dam burst.
1 Dominican, 1 Mexican, 1 Most observers date the out·
Central American. break from the Havana con·
ftilOST SINCE IM~ ference of L a t i n revolu-
All but two of the 45 planes tionaries in August 1967. Dur·
have been diverted in the ing this meeting four Colom.
wave o{ hijackings that bians and an Ecuadorean fore·
erupted Aug. 6, 1967. At last ed a Colombian plane with
count, 26 of those hijacked 70 passenger~ to Havana.
since were from the United Forgotten~ some is the
Stat.es, 8 from Colombia, 3 fact that hijacking is a guer·
from Venezuela, 3 from Mex-rilla tactic Fklel Castro's
ico, 2 from Peru and L from forces used in their fight to •'.~
Ecuador. Latin Americans are topple dictator F u J g e n c i o
listed as stealing 24 planes, Batista. i
North Americans with I. On Oct. 22, 1958, less than \
Three were hijacked b y 21/z months before Fide I
pirates not identifiable here. Castro took power. two men
So far. none or these airline armed with reolvers hijacked
hijackers has been returned a Cuban Airlines domestic
to his home country for pro-flight with 11 passengers
secution. aboard. The plane later turned
up at a rebel airfield under Only one plane from Latin the command of Castro's
America is known to have brother Raul, now head of
been hijacked by Americans the armed forces and deputy
-a twin-engine Mexican craft prime rnini.ster.
forced to Cuba March 16, 1968 Twelve days later aooth~
Penney's top value
asphalt drivew·ay
sealer and coating
•
by three Negroes. Cuban domestic flight with 2S
OPEN Cubans appear to have con· passengers wa s hijacked.
centreted exclusively on Castro's forces later an·
7 DAYS 1 __ Pl_ane_s_fr_om_l_h•_Un_;_te_d_S_ta_te_s. __ noo_nc_ed_th_•.:_Y_h_ad_th_e :_•l_an_e_.
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to East Bay poJnts? Oakland International is "
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Driveway· coating brush and applicator 1.19
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(F•sh;on Island) (H untin qton Cente')
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J% DAll.Y •ILOT ........ M1t<h 24, l~ GRAFFITI b~LNry J
U.S., -Bass, <ihlaa
Arms Race Grows
-AstFonautK May-'fV Their Blastoff From Moon
SJ>ACE CENTER, -Spoco Admlnlattatlol'• Man-Air Force Col. 'l1lomu P. normal n>Ullne. astronauts returlllll& lo eenh,
(AP) -Astrooauts may oed Spacecraft Center. Stafford and Navy Cmdl'$. ?t1ounted on t~ surface of ·the camera could provide
!E mount a ttlevtsloa camera on America'• non ~man Eugene A. Ceman and John lhe moop to televise valuable englneerlna: data.
tile moon to provide llv• flilbl, Apollo 10, "will pro-W. Young -may a1Jo carry•l::::============~=~=:;==j coveraae ot their blastoff back blbJy be the most teievlsed an experiment.al camera toll L I In Southeast Asia
WASUINGTON !AP) -The
large inflUJ: of American,
Russian and Chinese weapons
into Southeast Asia because
ol the Vietnam war is leading
to a vast pool af second-hand
but highly usabl~ ar.ms for
internationaJ trade, according
lo a prominent defense
analyst.
to earth this-· lllgbt we have," Haney wd i:<Jay color TV. AU spacecrar~ ,,... CARPET! CARPET! CARPET!
Spacocralt-to-<arth ttlllCl!sta Jn an Interview. "'lllere are lo-<arth telecasts Jn tile past WOW ' f RD. S Ing br<ekdown on '°m• 01 In livln& color are a1lo under lndloaUOlll tile crew la willJn& have been Jn black-and-whtte . 1 000 S 0 YA the largest arms suppliers: study u Space Agency plan-
-1be United States, the ners oonsJdet how TV should to mount the TV camera in-Oooe regarded only as a ROLLEND$! REMNANTS!
world's largest arms pro-be put to work on future slde the cabin, turn it on gimmk:k by many persons in OFFGOODSI CARPET FROM
ductlon base with 20,000 com· Apoilo nights. and Jeave It on." Uie apace program, television TR.ACTS! •
panies, eold Ill.I billion wonh "There is a strong l.,llng Apollo JO, echeduled lo blast now is btJn& recognlud ., LOW, LOW PRICES
of oew and used military to try la use TV in a real all in mid-May, la• planned a u..tul tool, H1111ty said. c-. .t Warehouse aircraft, missiles and missile communications role -a! an • s a n a r o u nd-t&e-moon Left on for long periods in ~ r.-.
systems, ships, a r m or e d adjUnct to voJce," said Paul journey similar to the fllght the cabin, it would give OJaht 1753 South Ritchey • S•nt• An1
Louis A. Frank, 1 member
of the Stanford Research
Institute, says the war will
leave in its wake "buodredJ
cf thousand! of weapons,
ranging from small anns
tbroo&b IDtiaircraft g U D S ,
tanks, mortan, mines and
aircraft" that will be sold as
surplus.
vehicles, weapons and am-Haney, public affairs chief at of Apollo II last Christmas. conlrolle.n a better Idea of IN•wport Fr••w•y to Lli11t•r -W. to Ric~"'fl
muniticn from 1912 to 1968. ----------:--=tlle::...:N...:•:.:tional::.::::...:A:.:er:.:oo::.::••:.:I::""· :....:•::nd:..____:The.:::..::A::po::ll::•...:l::O...:u::lrona:=::=ula..::._::bow::::..:;•pacem!:::'.::'.'.'.:en:'...:":.o::_r:_:_:kln:._:tlle~lr'....!:====O=P=l=N='= Dell='='='"='=s.t=·="=A.=M=·=,.='='=·ll=·="='=JG=Jl=' Aircraft sales accounted for ....
Frant, who released his
study in a newly published
book., "The Arms Trade in
International Relatiom," also
said a re-equiping of NATO
forces expected in the early
1970s will add even more
weapons to the surplus
available for purchase.
ONLY llfmllAINTS
The only restraints on the
sale of these used weapons
come from the nation,, who
owned them originally. Such
are far from effective, he ir·
dicaled.
The armaments are put on
I.he market, Frank s a i d ,
because it is usually "too cos..
Uy to repatriate the weapons."
He said the ·weapons sent
to Southeast Asia will find
willing buyers not only in
South Vietnam, Cambodia,
Laos and Thailand, but also
in neighboring areas such as
Singapore and Indonesia.
The author. an economist
who specializes in defense
anaJysis with the Strategic
Studies Center of the Stanford
Research Insti tut e in
Washington, gave the follow·
37 percent of the total. Includ-
ed were 5,071 Nike Hercu1es
SAM! and 3,323 Sidewinder
air-to-air missiles mostly sup-
plied to the forces of NATO,
Japan and Nationalist China.
II.I BD.LION ORDER
Also included was a $1.1
billion order from Britain for
Phantom Jets. Britain also
bought $638 million worth of
Polaris missiles and West
Germany bought $250 million
worth of Pershing medium
range ballistic miss:iles which
have nuclear capability.
-Soviet Union, the second
largest armameots industry in
the world, exported between
1949 and 1968 more than 5,000
jet combat aircraft including
1,200 MIG ISs, more than 1,100
MIG 17 sub-sonic fighter-in-
tcrcepters to %1 countries.
Communist China received
more than 1,000 Soviet jet
planes before military aid
came to a virtual halt in 1961.
Moscow's second biggest
customer is Egypt with 750
jet aircraft; Poland received
620, North Korea 465 and East
Germany 270 to become the
other major recipient.
The Soviet Union has ex-
ported a wide variety of
missiles including the solid~
fueled Guideline SAM now
widely used in North Vietnam .
There are 50 semimobile
Guideline launchers in North
Vietnam.
Young People
And Narcotics
• Why dt tee•·•iers experi11tat with d"'ls •nd nJJcotics?
•-Wk•t sknlj tbeir ,areats d1 Jbout it?
• Wllll CAM tlley ff •b11t tt?
• Hn •JtlftrHs is 111rijuan2?
• ~It lllltly 11 lelll tu111ethi•r worse 1
TheM •r• just a few of the question s answered
In • bookl•t th•t re•lly tells it like it is by • m•n
.-ho knows how It is bec•uM he apent months talk·
1"9 to th• right people to find out. You can own
• copy of "Whit You Should Know About Drugs
•nd N11rcotlcs'' fo r only $1 . Written by Associated
Pre11 science writer Alton Bl11ke1IH, it's prob•bly
one of the most ncMlolds-H rred work of Its kind
ever wr itten for the general public. Clip the co\olpon
below and send for your copy now.
.. --------1r.,
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o • ., looktet
Oran9t Coast Dolly rnot
'· o .••• 5
T-ock, N. J. 076'6
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I NAME ... •4--••··------···-····--··-····-··· ·---· I I
No Cheap
Ship Line
For Students
LEYDEN, 'l'he Nether~s
(AP) -Dutch "student ships"
that provjded cheap
transat.lactic passage f o r
American and Ca n a di an
students for 23 years will sail
no more.
The Italian fuMr Aurelia will
make one or hlOfe Atlantic
crossings this summer with
studeots traveling from New
York to Le Havre, but il1'
traditional Dutch vessels have
fallen victim to air travel.
Floris Croon, 2 4 , com-
mercial manager of t h e
Netherlands Office for Foreign
Studenl Relations (NBBS),
said the two famous old stu-
dent srups Groote Beer and
Waterman were rold to
Greece. He added that the
Holland-Amerika I i n e r Ri-
jadan. which was chartered
for students last year, will
oot be available this summer.
"It ls very sad," Crook said,
"The cheap journeys aboard
Dutch sb.ips made the NBBS
enormously popular in the
United States. Tens o f
thousands of Americans have
unfcrgettable memories o( the
New York-Rotterdam voyages
between 1946 and 1968.
"There were panels. con·
certs, theater and movies,
parties and balls aboard. Ex-
perts from numerou! ooun-
tries used to lecture. Even
now we have 500 offers from
professors who want to take
care of the cultural part of
the journeys. Daily we arc
sending letters saying 'we are
sorry' to students inquiring
about cheap passage."
Croon said it has become
impossible to charter suitable
passenger ships and "group
pea.sage by plane bas nearly
ouated Atlantic Ct"06sings by
ships."
Based on data collected
jointly by European students
orgalUzatioM, a r e c o r d
number oC more than 200,000
U.S. students will visit Europe
this summer. Most or them
will fly to the main gateways
-London, Paris, Brussels and
Amsterdam.
10 Awarded
Certificates
By CoJle ge
Ten area residents ha ve
been awarded American
Jurisprudence priies r 0 r
academlc excellence Saturday
night at Western St a te
University's Spring Supper-
i;>ance.
The dance, spon.wred by the
Student B a r Association,
brought together students and
faculty members from both
the Anaheim and San Diego
campuses.
Certificates of honor were
given to Delbert K. Bailey,
16784 South Bayvie1Y Drive,
Sunset Beach -Torts; Ronald
L. Bartholomew, 92ll Tiller
Wa y. Corona del i\1ar -
Equity, Evidenet; Betty J.
Farrell. 100 Via Qui to ,
Ne\\·port Beach -\Vills ; Vin-
cent E. 1..aRosa. I 6 3 3 I
Myrtlewood St .. F' o u n t a i n
Valley -Pleading and Prar.
lice: Thomas G. Morrissey,
13502 Iowa St., \\'estminster
Contracts: Neill D.
O'Malley, 851 Domingo Drive,
Newport Beach -Corpora.
lions; Real Proptrty: William
P. Paulson, 32922 King Charles
Land, Sou!h Laguna-Equity.
and Marjorie E. Reed. Kil
Valencia Drive, Huntington
Beach -Torts. I AllDUSS .. .... ........ ..... CITT ···················I 11--------
:STATI -·-········· .................................. ZIP ................ :
I-Send me . . .. copies of "Whal You Should I
I Knlt!I' About Drugs and Namitics" at $1 eac I
I Enclosed iJ $ ....... (Make checks payable I
to Aaodaled Press). , &.; _____________ ,
BOAT BUFFS
AlfllM lec .. •lli•y It fht •111•
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At Penney's, your storage
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Handsome chalet style
steel storage building
Attractive end gable de~ign 1tt1I "tarage building iii white with
decorative trim. Tough and durable triple coated plastic finish
O"Ver ~galvanized sleel. Door• roll easily on nylon bea ring~.
Equipped with ribbed rteel panel1 for more str ength. 2' x 10
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UBEVOUR ENNEY
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Sturdy c{eep ribbed 1tetl panels f0t greater ttrength.
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Penney's attractive steel utility
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----·--------------~-~--...----~~ .... ~~-----~---.-.... ------
. .
CHEERINd 'THRONl;S AT CAPISTRANO -While Secret Service
agents 1pript and .Puff alongside his limou.sine, President Nill on and
his wife, Pat, draw an ai111 .. iastic greet;ne Saturday from big crowd ' .
DAILY l"ILOT l"lltt9 ~ ltldllN ........
PICKETS ON MARCH -Led by Robert 0. Bland of Laguna Beach.
several dozen Peace and FreedGm committee members picketed
near Nixon headquarters in San Clemente. Police were called out
Irom Newport and Costa Mesa but there were· no incidents.
Mond'1, Mardi 24, JM DAILY PILOT J3
at Capistrano
, ·oi.1LY. Pl1.0T 11eff,,....
awaiting his ap·pearance at San Juan Capi~trano for tour of ,Mission
i:rounds. Nixon stayed on for luncti At his favorite restaurant.
DAll..T PILOT Stefl' .......
WORDS ON MISSION ·STEPS -Pre•!dent and Mrs. Nixon appea
to be listening .intently. to words of Jame~ Francis. C~rdinal Mcinl
tyre , in front of plaque noting the founding of Mission San Ju:ln
Capistrano. ·
...
PA_IL 't l"lLOT Sti ff ..... ft
FACE IN THE CROWD -In
the crush of followers, Presi·
dent Nixon recoJnizes an·
Orange County friend a n d
abouts a greeUng during Satur-
day tour· of Mission San Juan
Capi11trano.
DAILY '1\0T ll•ff ..,.....
VIVA. VIVA -~an Juan C&P'
iat.rano merchant Larenzo
Plldllla was all decked out in·
tradlUona! Spanllh dress and
his l!Qro front carried the mes-
111• u Ml11loll. city resi4ents
prepared to grtet Pre•!dent
Nixon ond h!a party~ .
I
DAil Y PILOT PkM •1 .... O'OMM•
TOURING MISSION GROUNDS -Gripped tighl!y by the hand,
President Nixon. gets a bit o! guii111Dce oh the Mission san Juan
Capistrano groundst:fn1m •1tvpn-y.ld reside~i JetI Diuu\. ·
. ' ,· . ' . • , . ' I .
·, . --'
•J' I '
\ .
Nixon Tells Campus Stand
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Some college officials agree wi th Presi-
dent Nixon that disorders and disruptions
muJt be solved on campus, but studenu
have shown less inclination to endorse
lhe Prtsidcnl's weekend policy .state-
ment.
David G. Barry, execulive vice presi-
dent of San Jose Stale College ln
California. where Neira athletes and
other st.udenta have demonstrated, said
lhe campw is where 90JutJons to society's
·problems are sought ''and the solution
ii not t.o be found through disruption."
Chandler Young, dean of letters and
sciences at the University ot Wlaco~
1t Maditqn aald ht preferred "local
handling !n Ille long pull. I fee! concern
for our frtedom to handle our nwn
problem al tha campus level."
Young ta1d , ''What President Nlxoo
h:is snid would help us in thts regard."
I
In a statement. Saturday, Nixon de-
noµnced campus vlo1enct as a threAt
to intellectual lreedotn, but !United
federal action to withholding financill
aid from students convicted of vlolatinl
the law.
Nixoa said Robert Finch, secn;tary
ol health, education and weUare, would
seek "Lo launch new initiatives toward
easing tensions in our edueaUonal com-
munity." But the President said tht
federal government "cannot, should not
-must not -atlempl. to guarantee
campus peace.·• He said \his was fa
damentJ.)ly the task or college ao-
mlnlstrators.
The Pr"ident termed hll gil!dellneo
moderate. "Congress ha~ done no tnOl'I
than to withdraw rederal ·1UJ1tance from
tho,. students judged. not by un!ven!ty
regulations, but by courts of law, ~o
have violated -cri mi:{lal statutes."
!
!
I I
Jf DAILY PILOT Moodl!', MO'C\ 24, 1969,
LEGAL NOTICll: LEG.IL NOl'ICE ·-..... llOTIC• ~ Dlntf.UTJON .....-Ct .ClaTl~AT& Of' ... 111111 . Nottq It _.., t lwfl 111.t tht C:llTl•ICAT• °" COJll'OIATtOM f'ICTITIOVS ~
"'tMrlllt. ...,..,.,.,. t11t.fMll Ntw""' NI ... IUllMlll UNOll •The "'"""""°"' • illtl'tll\< •llW, .,. Cllll EVANS. SHIJltl.l!Y Ll!VIME •nd •JCTITIOUI "-'Ml I ~ctll'll ii Mlnil9f ., •llM lrlkt
ANNIE l"AllllEll dolM QI-Ullfff TH! UNOlllllOMlO C01U'0llA1t0M Cr-I M-' IMCll. C1llf0tllt1,
tne fl"" NIM tM •rit -' THI! OLOlll:'I' .... flffebV ltrttfr lllet ff II ~uctlftt llrodtr ih. flc:tltlollt flt'l'll -et OOfll
SHO .. ,, tn• Wttt Ooottl ,,.,.,, Cltr • ~-r--r Miii f\llllllh' "''11""' .-osTl!:tl'I SAU!J AND INT.lllOltl ti ., N-' 8.ec:h, s1111 •' C1lltor11i., buslllfM •I m Nonfl al'OOkl'iurJt, !twit .. ,. tlnn i. ~ f!I
W• Oii the It! 41r ol M1rdl, lfft, ANhllm. Cll~I•, ~ the HdltlOIH .. tlowirnl ..,_. '#MM "'""" Ill I ., ... ._. lrJ wlthd•IWll fr'Wll sa141 firm~ ...,..,. ,., ... HOTOMATlm!n •rwl11111 "W! .,.,. Pit~.,~ IN" filllowti ., ANNl FAltltELL ~llWM .... r. i:-: ,.... Oon•kflM ....,., ~ •rue. c-~·":' 'i'-1:1' '~~lN;iu ~ " 01::! '~:'th 1ausc=:111r~1 :':ic .. 'ho u<'Jt, N-1 a .. dl; e.w~nl~ ~ ~HlltLlY l.eVINE, wtlt tlNIH Ill 511'-l'f ~-=1 •F:r.:'·o~~J;'.""" C.Uttrfli., H~':'::' = ~It I t17-...._~1' for 111 tr....ad'-of llld (c.r. S..11 DIM Mardi t. tHi bwllllll .. 1fMi wlMl'IWlnt """"'' t11vln1 ' o..11 t4..ittltl Clmf111Y, Int. DtnaN l,, "-"'" twmll'lltM' r11et!Clil'I• 11\vtln, oi.nt Htlklll'I ~I'll '-' l'"•llf'
Dtttcl Mard'I I, "" Vlol .. r111de!tt ft ~ Stth ef Cflltllmta. 0...1111 C.Ulltyt SHlllLl!Y L'IVIN! STAT! OF CALIFOllNIA ) 011 Mll'Ctl .. 1Hf bffert ,.,., I
GAIY :E:l.ftc":J..,. COUNTY OF ou~oe I u Nolll'Y .. UMk" In .... for' WC $1t'9, ·-'et L.. Oil ffll1 17'tl llY .. Pil>lvll'Y• ... 0 . .-.on1llr • ..,.. .... Danetd l• l"ottlf IMJ, ..... l'l\t. t ~ ,llltllc Ill 111111 ~I'll F ... I '°''" kllfWll ICI 1U ...,.. ..... Drlw 1nd fw UHi C_,., lfld Sllfe, ,.,_tty tM iq M lt'lt __, ....._. MITlft ._.... "'"" et~t, ""'r" oi... HeU;1111 ltlWWll to ~ 1,. w1tt;cr1bMI .., .,. w11N11 1,...tr11llW'lt
fl ubtl1Mooli Ortntt C..•t 0111r "llDf, : ii;_ "'41 c:Jo'1.tfcw.""~ •,'t~:l'.11~'.: !:., ackMwltdtM ltltr Ultuttlll tht ,,,.~h 2'. lM' 56U9 wlth111 lnatrwntnt ell WI.Ill ti t111 ...,.. IOfFICIAL SEAL)
-•lloll tl'llNlll lllf!llOf, 11111 1dll'lllwll'Clt· Or1111~ V, U" LEGAL NonCE ... tot me ""' _,. Cf'Wlt11r\ UWllfed Nffll'I' ftlAl!le>Qlllfot111& . ------------1""' .. fl'll, 1'rlMIHI OfflCI In ....,..., WITHESI ""' ...... ''"' ..... o,.,... c-rr <.ITl .. IC&Ta Of SUllNQS {01',l(IAL IEALI M'f Clltlm ... 11111 l!JllllNI Ml,., JIM! (lmohu11411nt ~rdl t1, 1172 •K:TITIOUI ·MAMll Hottl'I' ""~UOC•ltttrntt ,ubllilltll Or1iiM (Nd D1ltr .. 1 .. 1, -~.-.~;.,";"~ .rii; ::"LI~ or1nt1 C~11tr I Mllt"dl 10. IJ, ''-II, 1,., 431"9
LEGAL NOl'ICE
._..,.,.,,..,. 1 ' Mr Colflmlisfell E~• '" SUllt 202, N..-t •Hdl, (1!lforll 1, Sept ,1 1'1t
.IJNl.r "" fktltloln """ 111tm1 d SI sm-0c ' eo. IN'Vl!STMINT COWAMV Ind tl'llt ... D ........ n .. AtfY.
11!1t firm Is ~ llf ._ fellowkll tSt $Nltl S.tfM llt'ftt
.. .._ wflost' ...,,... 111 f\jlf .... , .. cat "" ......... C.tttlnll• .. ,, p.121tf "r~ ., ... f!tllowl: l"V'UthM Or1n11 (Hsi o ... , •not, CeltTl .. ICATli 0, IUSINllS
..... ,., I. Sletstnbef'tl, "21 l unr1 MlfCll 10. 17 '~ "' lNt "40-'f ,ICTJTIOUS NAM• ltrMt, N...-t INdl. CtllfoN\19, .' ' flit 11ndlnJtoMCI N Clffllf'r llllY '" ~ ll 111"Nr. U'2 ••~ Firm condvdl111 1 11u11ntn 11 n111 l•lbM ,.i.e.. S111tl Arll, C1llfornl1, LEGAL NOTICE IMI., Ht-' llectl, Clllltmli, Vf!Clll'·
If ...... 6elir.
•
Sal.esmen
Horwred.
''• By CAJll.,CAR8'1'1!lN8EN ..... ..,,, ... itlit'.
Kno. Connne, BW.RemilC)r.,
and' A. 's. Swanaon '•l:Nabon
Ca,dlllac, Inc., ~ Mell
have been honc>red for ·belnc
.,..,,, ·the ,ou 111i,u•h1
~~dJemnm for · the
11ie men were named, 1o
membetsblp., ·in titre ,.1.,_11 . '• Cadlll1e Crest Club •. Tbq ..... °"'.., ,only.D.n"!' ~
tbrousft«JI Soulhtr\a Calllor'llia
.. d Arimna whoeOrntd mein-
-,
HtrtW E. Mld'f'111ft, 141'11rcl\rne.l!t tht flctltlol;1 fll'lll 111,.,. fit lltl:O IN
Drift, MIMlm, C1lltor1111, Punt llAlltctt OF A CAGE lOOKITOll.E . bersblji." ' ., ' ' ·, . ' . . $~LESMlH·OF·~EAlt·-Sa!·Bel'D!ll'dine.(rigbt) of
Cblct.IVenO!i;'Inc., Ne)\'!>Ol1 Beach, receivesVW ~e's G1illd '~Mast.er"Awml" u'toj> salesman of Ill
·de.lenlllpo 'ln'll!Ur·slate area. Making presentation
ii ,J; It McCord,. general manager, VD · division, yci!Uwagen· Pldflc, Inc.
Cl1N11Ce F, Mllltr, "5 M9r Vllll ClltTIPtCAT• O' (Olll'OUTlotil Htl ::: to~tr.!'1~.!:, :.:::::. 1i: Ori ... , N._n •tldl· C1Uftrnl1. TUIC&ACTtON 0, IUSINIU UNDI• ft.ln tlMI """" or~""'*"°' .,. •• Ott.id Jl-l'Y 31, 1H,, ~ICTITIOUI MAMI lll!Ws'
:::: .. :-.. ~~· THE UNDlaSIGNED COlllrO•ATION .. o..; fld1r:Dllwllt•S111ter Ind ltld'larf
Tlleodort It. a1nc1er. don Pl¥etol' c:trt!f'r"~ ,,':.., ~.:;: Cress. n• ltd $1., Newwt IMdl, C-r1t P1rtr1er I '""'1-loa!M ' C111f
Htrtikl E, MtttrtoWt. ~=·~II:"..: :'l'o,X;t,'.;E{r,.:ig D1t.0::!1'~ lHt. ~='~er, Cl!SSES CO, Ind thtl .... f1m1 It Otnnls Slllfer
Llmlltd ,.,r'lflu eom_..:t fit fhl tollcrwlnt C•'"1'•fkn, ltktlll'll Creu
STATE OF CALrFO•N•A. ' ~ ,,lncl1HI •Ila .. ltuliMSJ .. ll•lt of (ltlfonlll. O•lftll• countr;
-O• LO$ ANGE ES u folltWI: On Mardi .. 1Ht. klor1 mt, I COUN1• -l l u UNITEO ltESOUllCe:s COlll .... lnl Noltl'Y .. wnc In 111111 for 111cl 9111•· On JMUtrt 31, Ifft, Nlor1 m1, I leverlr 11vd., S11ltt ,.,, LM Alltela, ffnOllll~ , .... ,_ Diii Elder, D-11 :.:=.,~~:=., ~':..,., ~ ;:,~..,=· C•,','"'N•"u" "'"•• · '""" -tflls 15111 .riv S111fer ind ltldlerf c,._ ~ to . -. ' w "'' fro ... ttll ,.,,_ w'*i• """"' ~ a, llfldlr, ~Nllf If. Mlltvtllff Fetmi1ry, 1Ht. iubld'fblcl ft fM within J111fnrf!\el'll
•nd CloaNllC. F. Miiier ~ .. -Un!led' 11.ISOlll'a!S Cir•. ·~ •dtlloW~ 1ller IUCUllMI tll• til lie the ,_,. ""'-lllflllS ,,.. llld\lnl I W•l'kl.,._ 1
Wb$(rlbMI '9 IM wtfflln llllfrvl'lllll 111111 Vlo:e Jl'rnr'denl .. me. • E )
Cldl1llc 2-1M •an.a·r-er . ' , l
G<or1• ·W. · lllrrlloo told the
, .,...,,, u •wtll 'u tM ' ojher
Cldlllilc: HI~ ~·urned
memberddp Ill tlle.Crelt Club
illhoulh Dot rllll-. t!>al
the 3% award w·l1t.n·e.r1
.,..,..any acccunted for the
ale of over tD,t'llD,000 in
C•cliDac sale& doriDJ 1961. ·
* * * •dllowled9• lhlr •~llltf ftll 11m1. STATE 01" CALIJ<OllNl4, ) (OFFIC~~ll f. Owls
(S!AL) rbe Zlfd COUNT'I' Of LOS ANGILt'I , u Nott.,., '"*"~•llforllll MER--v 8" ~·
type· of:tnnsmlssion -four·
·speed and automatic, Ad--
dltional ,jucJiing will bo .held
to etect"tbe .. sharpest". can,
frorh the standpoint of ap-
pearance .
~ will bo awarded
to all w.inner's in the
performance and appearance
conteat.s. ·
For Coast Area ..
~ ri,l!lln"1111 On ltlll 2$flt Qr f!I Plbnf1ry, ,l.D. ,.rlMIJlll Ofllce in "un ~ ~ 1u'.i...· E I \Ht, lllfor.-,,.., .1 Nol•rv .. 11bt!c I~ Or11111 ~ Jl••cs -w·mGB ~ 2'. ~'71 ., res 1nd for .. 11t C111.1ntv 1M St1i., HrllCll'l•llV M'f Comml1lloll l!)(Jllfff • """ ,i-.Q
' 1~rod lltlcNrtl I , W1ftciM know" JWM .,1,.lt70 :::=i:.,.•~,.ON to m1 ,. bl the Vitt ,.rnldtnt of ,.ublllM.i or.nte. e.tt C•llr 'ilot, Frank E. Zimmerman, Jr.,
,... Wlltllfrt 1..,. .. kll9 .. , "" ornoer•tlor'I ""' •ec1111111 tht w1tt1111 ~rch 10. 11, u. 31, ttff &-ff general~ aaJes mlDlier for a ...... w Mllll. C.llt. Mii INtrument "! bll'l11i of th• eerporllloll
T"""1 1111rt1" n1rM11, 111111 1c1tnewrt110111 te LEGAL NOTICE • Li n,c oJn.M!rcury Division.
,.111trlll'>lof Ort"" Co.it O•l!r Piiot, 1111 lfllt ,sudl eerMftlloll exec:uftd th•l------,-,,,,,.~----1 while in Los Aqelel to meet
Mlrdl ll, 17• It ti,. UW-_.,,.., ~i;;;·ICl.1.L SEAL) l'-aMI -'lb .&;_...i_. .t...i..-.. ••Id ••-
Geyl1 G1ltn 9Al·i*'I "' U'OU .... ~ --. aai. UM::" LEGAL NOTICE Note,., Pllbltc . c11;1or";' c1at1,.1CAT• OP a1111t11n American cu buyer's desire
"'111el11I OHIO. 11'1 PICTlftoUS 'l!.IRM NAM• f-p--"·-......,__ plUS 1' UJilJ LOI Anf•!• Cl\lntr f1'll \!Mtnlfft" .... hlf'tbY C"1if'r "' l~UllUUI ,.. ......... _
M•·10I M_r Cornml111'n -hill"' thlt hi II Clllllludlllt t. ~nllfldl/11111 bi1h )evei auto , ...... ~. UJOS
Here's lfow to Join
Rare Book Bonanza
ClltTllllCATI OP COll:POltlTIOM POil Mn :t7, lHf bu.1111111 ti 111 /ndl'l\(1111! 11 751 N, '-WIJ"
TllAMIACTIOfll °" IUllNlll UNDI• T411tl l1t1v11. Unll H.. O!,fnp, C1ilfomf1, ire propellirig the Clivi.'lion to
P1CTrt1ous MAM• P~1bhlll or11111e co.st 0111r ,1i.r, llMI!' "" flctlllouf ,,,,,, 1111111 of o another record year. By SYLVIA PORTER pening: 10 years ago, a copy THE UNOEltSIGNe.o COlll'OUTION M•rdl , .. 11, , ... 31, Ifft @'t .... MANUFACTilltlMG COMPANY llnd of the 1"ournal ... which Eins·
ti°" hl••br tw11fY' thll II II CONl\lctl111 lfllt said fl"" Is Ol"'"'9111 ot ltl1 n..]" · of the Of "" Delly """ Shoff • b\11111111 1out.1 11 m 111nr sir.,,, LEGAL NOTICE totloWI"• ,.,-. wt1o11 ntme In 1u11 uc 1venes n e W tein's "Theory of Relativity"
C•hl MHI, c111tom11 111111er thl t1ct1n..... 1nd ,.11c:1 of ASld"llm 1s 11 tol!oWI, Mercury in the 1969 model la my last column, I appeared (pub"·h·' m· Lei"n•i"g tlrm n1me 9' Hl.PllECISION GIUNOING ti>wlt: u:i i;u ,.._,
llld flllt llllt """ II OlmPOlld ef NOTIC• INVITIH SIOI 0.Ul1M ,. ll'IWfl 21'0 Giff, year are runnillr 31 percent ---'ed to you that values • 1916) -~· ... ·~ trll followlr'lf -<1'10ll, w1lo$t •rlndHI Holle. II Mr.trr •IYen th1I thl 9Nflt Orlfllll, Cttlfo;nll. ' •s~• m W8S WUtu• .,,-.,.,,....; •t•c• et buiineu 11 " to11ow1: ., Tru.toes ., ,,., or1n11 C•lf Junior oi1a11 M•rdt s, 1u, ahead of 1917 and 12 percent of:rare boiOks and manuscripts today it's worth $5()G-4600. Fif· O!!LTltON1C COltPOJtATIOH. m C1tl"1 Dfllrld of o .. -C-fY,' Ooutlll p Urown over strike-hit 1111. Southern ~ f ••k.r str"', ~ Miii, ee111orn1. c.11tor-n11, wm rec11w ... 1111 •1cs 11P. '1ATt: °"' cALlirt:illNIA. • ~• . , · -•a fantutic eo ~t teen years ago, a copy. o
WITNESS Ill Mnd tllls Jlst Uy .. fe ll:DO l .m. Tllundlv, A•rll 3. 1,,,, COUNTY OF OlltANGE l 11. cantorma laiel are even 1-1~ •1--.... : '~•r's Ne" t 0 n I 8 • Ip r l n clpia J1n111ry, Ifft. 1t the ~11rdllat1111 D-""""1t of uld Oii MIRh 5. Ifft before '"' 1 bigber ' ~ u.c: ""..._ cc.r-po,L'::L~:gNIC eo11 .. 011ATION ::::' c~ ~"t,1~~~ :.•r= Nll•rY P111tllc In 1nd' tor 1111t ~ ...... ~ ,_,11 ..i.. ..._ _ / tbe"~f·i:iow.J~i JD.. Mathematica" sold . for ~
Ir ltld'larlll M, Lan11.,., lllM '1111t bldt wm M allbHclr '"'*' 11111 Stttt. J>IP'$lll'llll'I' 1H111recl Ofull•• 1wi: • .,..,...._ ..... -..-• .~-~· ~·"""'·'"'_" 1 •• ~ ~. $800; today, it sel.11 for ~000-
"'"'ldtnt 1/HI l'Md tor P11rrdll'l!N et °""' c1rcur1 ,., •row11 llMWll 111 ,,.. "' lit "" restyled for iMI IDd ,,_,,'n •-' . " ... 0 000 Al Jn the put 15 Br "lnlllk l.1no1'r• TV Equipment, --wl!o$e 111m1 I~ 1ue.trlblt hi ,,_,, :,,..;: ;.j':J.i.. ·1.:.... ..-, • SO .
s.cr111rv AH bid• '"' to· M 111 KconJl11t1 thl wtfhrn rnt1ru1Mr1t, 11111 •dl:newltdtiH the 'bottett mOdels this year. , .•"!! ~.IP'! ;:nu~_ .~s, Copernicus' • 1 De
STATE OF C4.LIP01tN1A. wlltl Ce11111111ent, 1rutruet1oris 111 d • m• t1111 ,.,, ••l(llfecl "'" um•. OUr ·new-M .. -•'•'upper .ene. :J>emg.iliiilJe_ 'lil'_lhh, far-vn-evolut"ioru"bus" (l543) has COUNTY OF ORANGE, 511. IHCltlCltloru wllldt •re 1111111' Ill flit WlfMIS rnr Mnd""" ..... -·-~
On tl'lll !flrt dlor fit J1n111rv, A.D. Ind llllV .,. 11Q1rM 111 th• etllcl (OFFICIAL IEALJ is accounUn1 for hall the ~d '°" tnv~ent, . are soared from $1,500 to $25,000.
1Nf, tMl!'ort ""' lll<t 11nd1rti.r'l9cl, • ot th• ,.urdlatlnt A.tent ti 1111t acl'ltCI SlrlN H, Gr'911 M •• 1 · .-11...;:...a .. .1 .... hft. 00 mJ••t Not1rv Publk rn 1n1t for uld Cou"tv dJJttld. Not1rv Publ1oC1llfo~i• ercury' a&1ts. . ~~{'!~~ 7~.'Y au Kraus sees a similar trend
•nd lttt., rnldln• !Mrtln, dul'f cell'I' Eld! toldlter must submit with 1111 •r!MIPll Offk1 111 "Tbe di~-'on'• Jn.~~ ·•-, ~ ... ·.a d~"lh o_f _ytbeour own for the ori"ginal papers on such "11Hioned 1nd IWOl'n • ...-.m•llr ''""''"" ltld 1 c1slller'1 d'IKk, cfl'flfltd dltck. Or11111 Ctuntr 1'1.lU ~-~ ...... ~!!!"'"
ll.ldl1rd M. L1r11lere t nlt l'hyl11s « blcl.der'1 l>Ofllt midi NYtbl1 'lo th1 MCOWEN ANO 9AllN the "··oJn r.~ ... · ntaJ ·-" J are W ?afe b aJrth ~. "llln Llntllre 1tnow11 10 "'' to bl thl &rdtr of fh• Or•-c .. st J11nl&r c.r1tw1 A1Nn11y1 a.ail'.: 'l.Nln .,au bOolC .._;-an!a., , re. rou~ .. ~ as pen1~1 ,
Prnldtnt lfld S•c•etlrv ot "'' <»•· 0!1lricl lffrd of Tru••-I" Ill 1meunl SM If. ClllM!M the Continental MG m, ate :-.· """:"' .. ,/ ,nnlio vaccine, the tranststoi, _..11or1 11111 exlOl!t' flit wltil11 i,,. not 1eu fhllll · th • ••rctnt CN-l llf 0r1,.....C1llftnll ttur 21 t ah d of 7" ' M-. '1 • "'-• •
strunllllt on Mhllt. ef tM -ratloll "" tum bid ., • Mr111te. tlllt "" T•I: UHi" ' percen ea -195 • Yvy WOULD ' IE only ' ~quilizers, atorruc fiss~
ther91n 111mtc1, •nd •~Ill to b!Odlr Wiit ent.r 1nho tt. •r-td ,.vbUlllM Or11111e Ceut D111Y "llol, he aaid. h"-"" . ii you -re SO Ill iet -.... .. t .. Uon, the 1ynthem ..,. 11111 1\ldl COl'llOl'lllOll flltc:l.llllll lllt e.ntrld If thf 11m1 II 1W1rdld to Mifdl 10. 17, 2'-J1, 1tff 45Uf .._..,,, ""' 1 y•v.,....,
N-. .., 1 -..__ ...... "'""-111 ttie .,....... 111 te1wr1 .., "'"' 1'1'his is additiinal eviUnce tJils",· <Olumn. 'I'll .nve y<81 of DNA, birth C1>ntrol pills, 11'1 WI'-Wher • .... ........ -ellCh Clfllnd, .... ,,.... fl/I LEGAL NOTICE --e1!.i1-'-'--. lA ..t ""' t11nf llld -""'"" "" lllflNt lhl cMc11 w111 111 '°""""' .. 111 "'-"------,,..,,------! t1f the nature d • the :current 1~ on how you, an e<.e.
'"'..,. •r •nd ""'' 111 tl'lli c:sflllc:et• U&t " ' ......,, ..,. fUll evm 1'"'"'1 3ll.U market", Zimmtrinin llld. =-..uatebi,,, ..... , ....... t.w.w.te -""' •boYI wrlttlfl. w111 .. ftrhlte.i to 111d Kfllol d( .... ld. HOTIC'I TO c••DITOll.I IUD "-" t-' -..y.
tOl'FICJAL IU.L) Nt llloH.r -r w11Mr1w 1'111 \Id for IU,.ltUOa COU..T o,. TNI uLincoln-MI"''"""' S l} e ti e'~ Jn .f4(e' Of· the fact that ,..,.. L Ecdel 1 -I.it d fol'tY-ftV9 101 Mve tftlr ••AT• o• ""Ll•Ol•IA.... ·•-• , Nottrv 'u1111c-a11rOm11 tt111t1t1 .-,... tM ._.,,,,.,, fhtr9o/. THI couNTY 0,. 0 ... ,... since the introdoction of the y~,.will bie'up against a small
Oran.-c.u~. ™ ._,... et Tn.ilMI rettrV• w. -. A.a1• ..,,. A.r-1 · 20 I .;,;,. of pro1.,.ional rare Mr Cen\rnlQllll 'E.,lr• 'tlvt,..1 f!I r.tec:tlll9 lll'f lrwl •11 b111a Ett1!e (ti HELEN GEllTA,,DI! 1-n'lvuo;:ll afe. per~ -•-J ·
Jlft, .c, Im . OI' "' Wllvt lllY 1r,.w11m1 .. or In-HOWELL, lkl HELEN CHAltLl!HI! ahead'° of lN'I, our prevlotis book, d,e.a I e r's, specialistll,
"'"MAN i:. -=ur-..:i:.~ ,..,,,.rm .. In lllY llld •r ffl ""bllllll1111. HOWELl, •kl HELEN c. HOWlLL, ~ year", he •-'d. "We'.re h_lokl Y~~··tr' ained-u n iv e r I i ty 1Jll Witte._.. c ....... ""' ... ra, tllnftl •nit •U•tltv ... ,,.,, _,, .. t41L!fll K.l.SKINS HOWELi.. an ...... ~ ,,.. :-~ ..
N........ ... I lrtflflllCI win tMo flYll'I " "" •""'uch HELEN •-"ELL ........ inch to ~....:.,. -·· liibr-cur • I 0 r s The l'utl!blllll ~.,... c-t OtllY "11111• ,,,_, mlnllfld'uf1ilf Gf PfMllCM In NOTICE "if Hfllffi GiVIN ti t1'11 a C u-.-.,... .~J ' • Mlrdl a. 10. 17, 14. ,,., 3IWt ""' Sflllll "' c.111ornt1. credlton of "'' '"°"' 111111111 •Cldtnt previDUI Jilah' of 3 7 t , ~ O O gUidflinu 'Come from H. P .
AH 1Ntlr!t11 torovldl.i ttlrwtl'I fllll thlt 111 ,..,.,.. 111v1,,. c111M, -1n11 v--N. .. jni 'Nft YOri: City, a LEGAL fiOTICE 111c1 t11111 _,., wrth GoWnHnMt coc11 .,.,. 1111t 111CHH1t ,,, ,...1111*1 to fill deliveries and we're aimln1 &U...,.
------------Sldton ......,. them, wtt11 ttie _..rv VlKICl!tn, 111 for -·ooo· ••'-y••· That -ld--famous · rare . b o o k ltOTIC• Ofl .. uaLI( MIA•IN•I '" NOltAMN e. WATSON !hi offleii ef lh• cltrk ., lhl •blv• '"'• ~ ...... d .. e .. ~•.·r. •1,.oa• THI ' Slaltlort •... rf llf TrvstMC Wllltlll cour1, or to 11reser1I tllem, wlffl will be a Caln Cif12S percent." &I
,U.MNIN9 COMMIUtoH OP TH• OllM: AM. J.1M 11:M I.IT\, t111 ~ vouchlr1. to tlll I/fl. •· al ruJ book clT'f o' .. oun~lft YAU.rt Pllbll"*' er-Curt D1tsr Piiot, lttl'llllMll 11 th• o111ee of c. ,1111 Zimmeqnan said that 'the '""I &enet' e,. rare
NOTICE IS HElt!IY' ..... ., thalt tlft IMrdl 17.,.. Ifft MWJ Dulols, AlforRtV tor P.r\lle11er. IU °"""" ,..,..,__ . • ~ t na values _. a(e. ba9ed on rarity,
Wltl ....... 1, Apr11 'L lM. It 1:• ,.M., Drtv .. N1Wt10rl ... m. C1llfw"l1, wllldl ............. , up • ' n ,· ~-.. ·1·y, 1 ..... po•--and -.. 111 ""' t11111CH ct1111'\111111, c1rr H111. LEGAL NOTICE 1. 1111 •lleii ., bul1 ..... 11 ,,,. 111111111111111111 tionally bl· Ales, Is up l' per-uc •u1 • wwi.;,. .....
1a:200 s11m A.....,,111, f'-'1111 v.n..,, 1r1 •n m1111111 ,..,...1nrnt "' !hi "",. -.. t •• Sou.••-Calli-.··. ditlon. 1But ttie value of any c111..,,,11, tlll '"llnnlflll COmmlnllll Wiii ....,.,.. of ulll dlctlltnl, wm.111 twr 1n011tfls "'"" u• W1"C1·11 .... _
tiokl 1wnc ttHrtnt• "' "" 1o11owr,. c•m,tcATW °"' co11,o~T10N ••• llftlr "'' t1111t 111b11cat1011 of 11111 11111cs. He added. -•'CouJu' seems ·.to ~ ·boot can . vary wildly.
•PPl!Cltleftl: TUNSACTIOH o .. .UllNlll UNDllt 01tecl F1bniarv :II, 1N9. ~-. ......... auto• w1~ .. a ,bl• 'Ilierelor.' ,e,11. ·your. library .. .. (1) ~l\tlllt \IM P"""t Ml. a ,ICTITIOUI NAMI Vlrtll ltUUtll Howell U'C llAWWU wi a
...,,.11u11on tu11m1t1tc1·~ G1r1t111 crwe 'nlE \INDR11.1r0Neo coa,011.ATION E~ec:i.rtor of"" wrn bounCe ljn siles each March ta1ns a volume which you have un111e11 Schoel or1frkt tor C0111truct!Oft .._ ""'* ~ """ 11 b c:onc1uc11111 of t111 •bow r'llrnM 111ecec11nl ..:..•-to '·"eve JS. ell· « 1n 11-hlrv school .., ,,_,,., 1 kll:1-leQl9d .i 201 Mtr111e AV'enV9, c. "AUi. OU tors and April.'' .__.., u..u
1oe11ec1 UD flltt m&r. « 1ms ner111 •• ....,. hi""""' c.11tor1111, 111\W "" 11c. m °""' °""' ~~ .. 1y valuable seek ••· el Wlrrlll' Aven111, MCI f'tlt mart tffloui 11,.,;'';'.,,. 9' 11.UIAIVAT TOUll. ~rt a--, CtllfN1111 '2'41 AJted il the Mark m had '-'"'\'""!';'64 ' un;:
.,,. 1eu welt "Nevmo,. str111. AND TllAVl!L ..., thlt Miit """ 1, ""-' 71•'~".• ·--·dlppedm "lo r-"--tal sales advice of a rare boo Jr: (1) ...,,.MlfiHIHI .. Orfinl-Nt. ~ tf tl'le tlfllfllrlfll _,.,fltll, A ....-XKv...-......,.IW...ll ..-...t.ll..f ( " Amer!
" ... 11 Arnench'Mllt "' 0rd1-"'· wt1o11 •rtfldJ>ll , 1• ., _ 1_ " ,.ub1W1tc1 Or•nta c .. ,, 0111r .. uot, he Said it had, "but . a lot ....-.-~ e .g., 1D can
"· "" L1rw1 u .. On11111na, 11 11111116-.. foll•w•: M'""' .. 10. 11. ''· lHt »Ut hlstofy, Enalish literature,
"· lllCl'N•int mini"""" floor JHct Tr-'•lftc T11Ur1. Ill( .• 201 M1l1n• LEGAL. NOTICE less than we eipected. lt's e•·.). --specialist could •· 1r11 r1C111t•1m..rts w e11Closed """" Aftllllt, •• ._ 11111111, C1llf0rlll• b' ~ar for r-"·'ntal" "" 1.m:: u.:
•u•"tl'll Ill ""' ll2. Ill, Ind •• WITNEU "' Mnf fl'lll '°"' ftY "''1-------------1 a 11,,.. l.NllMUli:: ' • • library or museum curator otttr1cta. ,....,..1,.,, ,,., ,. ,,,.. Queried about the rv.ast.,.11:.u ity f 131 'rfdM ..... Ht. u• A,,nc-111111 Tr1,..,.tclftc T&11111, l11e. IAlt·lGS r-...... ,. .or a univers pro essor.
11J11m1t1t111 11r r . w. 111nbr1m, •• • ., c-1• Mew1e ci11Ti,te•T• o .. e011t11s1 of a new small car limll~ ' M flclll •••
• ..,11q11t. ,_,,,. ~1n."C11o11"' •n v1e11 ,,..""" ,1cTiTtou1·,11tM "'"'' to Fonl's 111 •• --i.1.., he said, ore ·specl y, uue are offlCI b\111dln9 _... on .. ,..m cco-111 SNO Tiii undtr.i.Md ·-hlffltY c:1r11,Y Dl9V~ n:. the three key fields in which
1oc1"' '°""" ., w1t11tr ,,.,.n1>1, m: STATE o' CALl,OJINIA ' •' ""'' h• 11 c:on11vc11,,. • 11rtoer 111ot "We do want 1onfething, but you' can .m· v~ 8 port!on of Ill"",_... mol1ll Clf' lM• •ttf crf Newltlld COUNTY OF Ofl:MIGI I Ml""' 11 1~ lndtvhlWI 11 1•11 W, ~t.. 11. ~~
Slrwt Ill fhlo Cl' Ol1fTlct. °" 1t1i. 20tl'I ..., "' Ftbr'ulrv. A.O. FOllrlll 11rat. Stntt ""'' C..Hfwllla, this la we lilts manager tai...· -..i....... 'lb . {•l ~ C:"'"9 Jk. 1W AllP11Ut1on IHf', lllfl•• ml, 1 Nlhlrv "ubMl 111 llriMr thl fletfflou. firm 11,,,,.. of HOUSE 1.o.r11 Obvious] the ii Y"8' U...... WI e ,V e f Y
w llrnltl.c br • .,,.,. Ind Hu""""' •nit fir llllt Counf'y •nd Stitt, ".--llr O' NATUltALS lnlt t111t !llflt firm '"'16• 1. re • relJClnabli expectation 0 f
" ,,, .. _,, '"""""' thlnt• 1•"9r'ld conn1• Howi. tM11111 "' m• 11 arn11MM ., "" 1ro11-in. "'""""' e:mall competitive car In the . In '
"' ..,. 1n •....tr ._,..,, .,. "" " bl fhl v1c1 .... 1tdeflt et ""' cw-wlMIH 111me 111 full •nd 11,ee of rn1d1no;e ,, .... ,. 'for Linco'·M-ury seemg your vestment (J'OW
MIUtl'lll:lt '* et h i,,.., AvtVn1 111111 -·"°" ""' t11twllld "" w1111111 i... 11 " 1e1tow1. .....,,, ,..... ur ~... m· the ye•--•eod EUC'n• lfrllt l'rorn Al 0-1111 ltr\111\tftl _In bltl11f ti IM -rll'IOll B111r Klrb'f, 1111 W. Four!h SI.. Divisibn. ...., 1111 : All~ 01"'1ct '9 lt1.PO 1000 fhlr9111 Mll\lll, Inf ~lldlld Ill 111111 a-1, C1!1 .. ml1, •
sr11111t F1mllr • .._ •Ml "'•lll*ll 1111 ""' .i.im corHr•tllll a:IC\lfld !ti. 0111111 'F~1ry '" 1Ht. 1) MEDICAL.AND Scientific 0..11-mlllt, Cl I.Kit lu.CnltQ •Ml .. IM. antv K1tlrf * * * p • · ·t t lt3 Miii!-Otneltv Multl•" Owtlllflll , ... t) STATE OF CALIFOltN1A, ) apers 00 I m p 0 r . • n
011tr1ct1 or -. ,.,,1e11 .... dlrfl'kh. J1ee111ii11e J S111t1om COUNTY OI' oru.NGI l ff DR'G v•y· COMING "FOR discoveries and inventiOOS. In Cendlt5'rlll u.. fen!\11 fill. .U ftlllll N•ry Pu.ilc_ Ct1lferll,. O.. f lbl'lllf'Y 2" 1"9, llltOl'1 m1, a 4
"'Ot11!1111Cfto11 W111111t11 -uw. ,.,lllCIHI ott1e11 1n 0r1t1t1 1 Noterv l'utin.c: 111 11111"" 11hl ceu..'V AMX, JAVELIN OWNERS this•cttegory.,reJ>!lris the Lon·
(I z-a.._. Mt.. tn mltutklll ft':'~!nllft a.!f'lll 11111 Slll9, H•-llY .,_NII I H!r d(ln Tifn.is (WblCb D!ltitbins, 11.1bmFtt111 tw Morttt •M Kn .. llCl'lt. ~11 17, 1tn 11:1""" k,_,,.. 1e "" ,. bl 1111 ""°" of AM
"' II. •• -.. ~Int ~N• JONN Vl•TV• wi.e 1111111 It wblcrlblll 'lo "" lllllhln All owners i{ and ~th Sotheby .. Co., the aUe-
crf 1-• ,,...,.,., 1oc11111 "' "" .. .......,. • uw 11111rvm1111t, •lld ._..,._" "' me Javelin cars in Soutbem t " • • ....,,._. 11111t tf H•n 1,.. N..,_, 1,1, ...,.11,. cw..-M1. .. 11111 M -'" tt11 -· toneerr, a uruque mdex of
north ti 1111 w1m• aw-1 ,,,.,,, ~ ..-.. C1llf . .,,,.. '*"-my 11111'11 .--'· California have been invtted to values 1"n art and literary Al 0111-1 Atrlcll!tl,1<11 Olllrlct It T4111M (OFl'ICIAL SIA.LI .
1t1.po ,.. s11111te """'*Ir 11.n11H11Ct l'\lblllllllll ora1191 e..11 0111r ,.11Dt, °''"""Ill. w1een partlc!J>ate in • ''Day at The worla), values have jumped
,,.,. ,. .. nMll °""*"'"trit Comb111i,,. M8rdl tt. 11, M Jt, 1tff '4Mt No11rv ,..,t>1rc.c11lfwft11 Dr•n" at Qr•ri•e County -t.-~ .. M_, 10 tt'm•• ,,_ the Dl1trkt """II"-... ""'9 rllfrlctlft .. r111(1,..I otfleto kl "19---.. """" wwm .,.. ..,....,
.i.frfet. ~1 u.. """"" ,... LEG" N.....,.CE 0r-c-rv lnternatlonal Raceway on Sun-early 1950s .f.S flltd 111 COfllllftctltll with "'' tboft 4M v•• M'f CG1T1rnllli.n a...rrts d • M h 30 R. M · ~, e:::;. c..._ *· m A••llc:eHln ,...... ..utin.~:f ~.~: c .. tt 0111r ,.11o1, S ~y~ p h e8:s O·n,' AM zo~ A 11 of the Ir tat
•ullPTllltM br J. "'",.. " ..,._, c••TIPICATI 01' co•,o•ATtON Merell .. II. 11,"' '"' .,... breaktbrou&bs of m 0 de r n r-tl"' d>lllt• "' 111ne .,. ,,....nv ,..... TftAMUCTION OP su1n1•11 m~ltfr, announced. .:_., · •-ve appeared a 1 leolfM nor1ll .. 11'1tr ·-VI. _, UNO•• ,ICTITIOUI NAM• LEGAL NOTICE lUIJ 'AP: et C.lll ZlrtfOll '""" Cl Letti THE UNOElltSIGNl!O COll,.DltATION., ______ ~------1 st~enson II.JI AM upects articles in scientific 0 r •1111 .... 01ttr1d ..... , MelllUlll OeMFIY doe. l'l•••br c.rtlty thll " •• OD1>1ucn1111· . ~CA . to ~-
""'"""' o-t1in. D15trict or -. • 1io.111nn1 ••'" ., 51' ltth s""'· •A•·1• 1ome .. ,,.. owners· • e:U\lw up medical journals generally r~ •: ,.. ltl Allllltca!Wlll ~= 11~'C:."'.c~~~ :=1Q~ su .. 1at011. J0~1.::"1l"• STlTI with their cars. available at verf low cost
Mmlfltd br lttt>ltlblle. Hlmls, ... ,. .... 111•1 uld firm II _,__ 01 .. 0• THI! COUMl'Y 0 ' Oltl..... Dra1 trials will beiri11 at when pub]ishe<I. All you, the •lkl!!I ~ d'll"" " ISll "' ""' foll•lftl eor.,.11wi, ...._, "111C1"1 Nt, 1..-1M e-·
.,;,. leett... Mllltl't ., Wlf'Mf .i1c. of bonillfU 11" foll&'q: MOTICI 01' ".,,., ... OP ,ITITION t a .m. and conlinue until 1 collector, nHd do is read the :.... .... fill """"" w ... ffll Jl:ANNE IUIH, IN(, '1• ltlh Stl'llf, ,Oa AUTIIO•ITT TO ••PlttANCI El'-'··"-llf ·~ ttr.t ,,,.,.. ttl 111111!1 ..,_. •nc:ri. C1llfornl1. ... COlltl"OllATI LOAN, AND " ,,,.. p .m . llllWilU\IU~ begin at newspaJ;'ff'S to learn of the
llwnllr •• ,.._ ... tltJ.H> Medlllm WITNIU "' "'"Ill 1111• ,,Ill lll•Y .. ,.LY COIUElltVATOlllHI, ,.o .. •llTV 1:30 p.m. Closes will 1M: izn......I. ant developments. As 01111J1Y M•m.11 Dwtlh llld "1111111111 1'ttorv1rv, 1Mt. A.I llCUIUTT PH. 1.0A.N !"".•
0.•I""''*'' Clmtllrolnt 0 I 1',' c t ((011.l"OltATI! Si.ALI lll•o"'"•••M•"'L"••"•e ... '.~.-Eso•"'"'.,''n __ d_e_te_nnlnEd ___ bcy_encJne...;:o_. _ai.. __ .. _d_ .. __ lndlta_;·_,._u~ .. __ o1_w_1>a_;t_h:._~h~a::.p., lt9W..._. '9 It' H111t1 °"""" Ml.llTl•Jt Jl!ANflll! IUSH, INC. ef L A • I ,1 . °'"lllnt Olllrtd ... _,,. f91fr!Cflv. IV: Jwnllt aw.11, ,.,..1,.._,,I ~no-11 ltOl!ltT L. IAllNISON, 6bo 4lltl'ld. ,.reclu ...... Ho. '" flltlll l'I': Cl'ltrvl c. ... ,.. ltm!llrt ~ .. It. L ... ,.NESOH, c_,., .... , 111 COflfUrlcfllll Wllh ,,_ ...... aont STATE "' (ALIPO•NIA,. NOTICI! IS Hl!ltllV OIVIM 11111 a.. COUNT'!' OP Oii.ANG!, • THE .... HK OF CAlll'OllNIA. Nlllontl
.,,_ ~ ,,. boelllt •~m:llll Oft tlll• ""' .. ., of FMll'u1rv. A,0, ADOd1t11n. IS c-r"lltor. ft•• flied Jro~"" '9 ts. "l1n111M Ltws If lht Ifft, blfor• 1111 !!'Mtl J, lclllf, JI'. ~-Ill I "t!lloll lllr Al/thlrlh' lo Stllll et C1tlftrtl1a (Glv'f, CM!! j"CM 1 Ntfln< ,Wile ffl INf for .. llt Ctll!l'V ll.tf1111nct I C«P«tlW LMll 111111 N
tr1 ,..,) inf !hi-FOl.lllhllft V•tllT tlld Jllff, ,_1111"' IMl'l!r'I. 1'ulr com-"""' C0111•rv1lor1hl1 """'"""' 11 :C..lnt °'11lll1nce. TIM lOfie d'I.,._ l!'llUllMll -"' 1_.,, , ... _u., ._,..., Sec11rl"' for L11111, rlfll•tno:e to wl'lld'I
""1~ lnwlft .,...,.._,, 'lo Slditnll JMnn• c. 1 .. 11 •nll CillrYI c. "'" II '""" for .fllrl'llW ,.rtlcvllr., 11111
1)1"'1cf MIU '1+11 111111 ~\I, "'hi ·-tt ""' le bl thl ,.,_ldlllf flllt thl time lrwl •IKI ef ""'''""
z.i .. Orclllllr'ltl, ZollJM Ml't, Plot 1,.. Stcrtt1rv 9' Jl!ANNI aUSH. INC., "".., -~· htll i"' .. '°' ~~ r• -"' .. ttelM ,.llM 1r• tfl n .. 1111 --•'kM tl'let 1-.evttlll ftll Wlllllll I • It 9: .. l.m., Ii ~-"-" tit ""' .. llMll'lt 081......... 111C1 1r1 1"""1rntnt "' lllflllf tf tllt arMrlt1"' tf D1t111~ NI. I llf 1114 ctUrt,
•nlllMt fir lllNtc lnwecf1"' •nd ... tfllttln "'"""' Inf «It-""" 19 It ,. Wiii Elth! "'"'· ... ""' Cll'I' llfl'lfMttlft. 11'11 fl'llt tlJdl ~tiln MIC\lllf h Ill Sllltl AM. C1lltem ...
1'*' •rt• "' lfffflV lft ,,.,., -· 0.ftll Mtrcl'I ,,, '"' W Ill -1'11111 '9 lfltsl ,.,."""' ..wt lfl W!"'"6 W'Mntf, t hilW """"'kl W, l , ST JOHN
...-• wtll .. ''°'" '" w1erl',111ttr"' my hillllll 1M ""'"" ""' efllc1tl llOll1th~ ~••• ANO elaU.Nt " w -. ff """""' lllfWlftlllllll " •I ""' •r ""' ••r 111 tlt'9 Cl'l'flflni" .,.. c-'°""" ........ ~ ,,... _,_Cl !hi 'lfllllllll t1,.i ...... wrtlltll. M_,.,. Cc., Cl ....... ""' l>••"•1oM1I tf ~ tM Nfw ti (Df'llCIAL llALI Ttl cnf) -
CMllllJllMI V.. '-'" N1. a , Ht. CIMlf J. ~.Jr. -· .., -1¥ 11'1111 Ht. .... Z-°"""' Ne. M11'1tn' .. UWIC • C1llfiWll1• 1•, In , It! W IQ, ,,ec:IM '11111 .. rtnc:INI Offlcf In ""~'...... Ora... c:.nt D11ly "lie!, "" m w ,... m .,. All ....,_,._, 0r.,,.. ~ Mardi 11. tt '"' 101..i
.. Oll•4t.o -Mo MY ~1111111 a.I,_ ~Ml ... COMMISSION' ,,._.,fl, ltn
Ofl THI crrv o,. ou•T•A. u.11.,1WT91 • •A•N•s.
RIUJITAIN VAU.n' """'
..._. ~.:J:"kl "' Dll'IW Dtiw ........ ""'., ... "°'*"' .. "" , . 0. .. ,,.. .......... C:..111 '""~ .......,,. ...... C:.llf'. -.u ..... """ .,,.,.. QiNt JHI~ .. ,. .. , "-" ..... 0r.... CNtl 0.11¥' .. !lit, M!l'dl 14,, 1Ht • ..... Mtrd 11, 17, 14, Sf, ,.., m.... ..... <
PENmATION
H1erlr •••r,-•11• r••'• th1
DAILY PILOT, h•111tf•w .. 111w1-
'''" f•r th• F1hlt11• Ot111t• C..•t•
A $3 INVESTMENT' in a
well-chosen lcientific article,
Kraus bellevu, can turn Uito
a ~100 value in less than
a decade. Your key rule: ketp
the entire issue of the journal
in which the article appears
-in perfect condition.
2) First editioris of modem
YOWll authors ond pla)'wrlghts
who show great literary pro-
mise. Since 1950, well-selected
examples of modern literature
have quintupled in value.
Since the early 1960s, one ,edl~
tion of James Joyce's
"Ulysses, n illustrated b y
Matisee, has soared in value
from $165 to $600. A first
edition of Nabokov's "Lolita"
now sells for $65.
Again, WaJ'nl Kraus, if you
try collecting first editions,
"handle them like eggs," U
the pages are uncut, don't
cut them. Don't even open
or read them; don't remove
the dust jacket; just wrap
them .in plastic and put them
aside.
3) ClllWREN'S BOOKS 2
with "a certain eternity."
A first edition of "Pinoc-
chio" (Carlo Lorenzini, 1880)
now sells for $500-$100 ;
Henrich Hoffman's "Slovenly
Peter" (184&) sells for $2a,000.
$30,000; Lewis Carroll 's "Alice
n Wonderland" for $10,000.
$2'0,000. One reason for these
high values is that perfect
copies of any children's books
are rare. My own r.boicts for
more recent chlldren'1 books
which could become classics
are the Dr. Seuss boob, the
Hobbit books, Peter , Rabbit
and Stuart Little.
lncidentally, notes Kraus,
C1>mic books fall into this
category. But if you want to
stash some of these away,
make sure .. thfy're in perfect
condition and also have . that
"aura of eternity."
IF YOU FOLLOW these
basic rules; if you're willing
and able to hold the "growth"
volumes you buy; if you keep
them In per(eet condition -
your chancel of seein1 your
investment srow substanUally
are ucellent.
• • *
This II the last of Bv. Jn-
lllallmtnts In tllt present
series on far-out lnvtltments,
but I will bo baclc lat..-!hill
month with further ...,, ol
this· whole new '"Im of
moneymaldng. Ii you've had
a success story, send it in.
The subject is one wh'-re my
readen' v:perltnctS and aug·
1e~lioiu are especial!~
\\'elcomcd.
e ···: ar
'Home ·
Makes
•
Almost
As
Many
Shots
As
The ~
Lake rs
(Or Who~ver
Your Favorite·
Basketball
Team Is)
•
Thi DAILY PILOT's, photographic teem ·Covereil '44
9•m•s in the fint 50 dl)'s of th• urrtnt lta1lr•tklall
11i11on. L•d by Chief Phofogrtpher be Payne tt.,,
in photo •boveJ, our--t•tm, including Pattick-0'0.nnell
tfron~) •nd Richard Koehler 1will t'*·•reuntl +.·eltout
75 high school, junior col119e and1celf99• ca11 i.att19s
btfor• th• ••••on clos••· AM th•y'U shMt en e1f1 ..
m•t1d 2,705 pictur•• to mele sur• y«1: pt t• IM
th1 tdiot1 •f tht 91m11 th.y tft1nd. Here's the JM1t
••citing t ip-off ln loc1I be1lr1tb•ll. You'll••• th• hest ,
1hots in the
DAILY PILOT
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WHAT'S YOUR · . If ANGUP?
If mountain climbing is your thing, we can'! help you much. Bui if your real
"hangup" is looking for a broad view of the news that includes a good, hard •
look al what's happening al home, !he DAILY PILOT has !he line you should grab.
We give you a broader view· of !he world than you can gel even 12,000 feel above
Chamonix in the Alps. Mont Blanc, over there in the background, is !he highest
peak in Europe, which reminds us •••
.,
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Our local coverage Is hard lo lop. When it comes to piling up information about
local schools, sports, social events, entertainment or crime and calamity, we're
king of !he mountain. We're your hometown newspaper.
We make keeping up with the world, the nation, the state, the county, your town
and your school a lot easier than climbing a mountain. Just grab our line. No more
hangup. The DAILY PILOT will fake you where you can see the ~iew from the lop.
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18 DAILY PILOT Monday, Mart~ 24, 1969
-SAVINGS
,UP lO ~-
QUALITY DISCOUNT DEPA RTMENT STORES • . ..
WISTINGH•n1 i•-·PORTA•~' Tv
WiTH' ~L;f;QN .. L TU·~~
. ·','?--
WISTINGHOUSI MINl·COMBO 1,,,.,.,.,
PHONO AND AM-FM .RADIO
229.95
@
•Jet set screen
•Instant-On TV wifh 74 ·iq, inch picture area
•Solid 1tate AM-FM tran1i1tor radio with wake-t.~music
•4-1peed phonograph with automatic changer .. ,,,., .... _ ..........
WESTINGHOUSE 2o' .. P·R~BL~
UHP/VHf 111' iilT ff
229.95
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• Me"""1' fine tuning lets yo11 p1etvne. each channel
• llluminotff pof>OA VHF and UHf numbers
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• 4 1peoker so11nd sy.,eni • f i.,. feet of stereo enjo~entl ' ' ' ' . . . ' ~ . ' ' ' ' . '
WESTINGHOUSE · SOLID STATE STEREO . . .
IN EARLY AMIRICAll CO.NSOLI
355.00
value ..
• AM/FM/FM-1tereo lftuhipl1x with 6 1peaker sound 1ystern.
• 4 1peed automatic record changer with diamond 1tylu1
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•Early American 1tyl~ng in mople veneen
...
@ ' . I
1e102 • .q1inch111·ofpidura :. ' I
•rn1tant-On oll thonnel UHf..VHP. f1tnlng
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•New We1tingh,ou1e detigned cilor chclllil~ . . .. with· 22 improvementt · ·....---·
WISTINGHOUSI •IG SCRllN 11' ..
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379,95
value
•Wfttinghouse high brighf·plctvr• tuM
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• M.lllery fine tuntftg, up-fronl 10111rtd •
• lns.ta nt color fidelity automatica lly --··--
·I wuriNGMOUSE 22•'* INSTANT·O·
. ~-,, · COllt• TV CONSOLI
"
569.95
•Full 268 sq. int.hes of viewtibl<1 pichne
•Memory fine tuning for perfect rec:eplion
•Westinghouse c:hauis with Gll 22 improve"1enb
•Illuminated Pop-up UH_F ond VHF channel numbel'1 ·--·---·
WORLD'S LARGEST COLOR TY SCREEN
AND-STEREO COMBINATION. BY WESTINGHOUSE
'
199.95
value
•features big screen ln1tont·On color TV
•Solid 1tofe stereo and AM/FM rOdio and FM-Stereo
•Si• •Peaker 'lte~eo sound 1ystem
•Authentic fumitvre •!fling in 'onternporo'Y wolnut .,.n .. r,
WESTINGHOUSE ALL SOLID STATE STEREO CONSOLI . ~ . . IN CHOICE OF 3 FINI ru•NITURI CABiNits .
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•AM/FM/FM-1t1reo 1nvltipl1r with FM t11n i11g lft1ter
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l'rovincial frv itwood •300 watt1 pea~ lft u!it r ·
~-----------~H::;U::R:iR:,Y,;,,;-;., UANTITIES LIMmD ••• SOME M .DIL NOT AVAILABLE AT ALL STORES!
NORWALK NORTH LONG 81ACH ANAllllM•B UlllA PARK ANAHllM•PULLlllTON WllT COYlllA llHTllRIDGI RIDONDO BIACll
IMPlllAl NWT. AT ITUDIU.111 L IOUfN lflltt Af CNlllT llACH llVO, & LINCOLN OIANO"MOIPI AT LIMON AJUIA AYI. AT ,UINfl lllllA llYI. AT DIYONSHlll HAW1'HOINI ILYD. AT 10.IAT CINTfl
POUNTAIN YALLIT LHO lilACll llUNTINOTON 81ACll
MAllOI llYD. A1' ........ LOI COYOTIS,IPllN••WOODIUrr GOLDIN Wll1' 1 IDINOll
SHOP ft,SAYIATZODYSMONDAYTHRU SAT. 10 A.M, • 9 P.M:, cu•. 10 • 7; •• SATISFACTION GUARANTllDI . . .
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JODEAN HASTINGS, '42-4121'
....,, Mlrdl ... 1Hf • ·-v
In CHOC Garden
Fashionable
Ideas Grow
Planting seeds for a garden will be members of
CHOC-ettes, auxiliary to the Little Me~d Guild of
Huntington Beach, when they meet tomorrow In the
l\ome of Diane Barritt. ·
The young women will complete final &JTElfements
for . their second annual benefit fashion show, a CHOC
Garden, talting place at 11:30-a.m. Satuf!!af, Aptil 19,
in the Golden. Sails IJ!n, Long Beach. , ' •.
Tickets, at $5 each, now are on oale incl all proceeds
will be used for the support of Children's Hoopij:al of
Orange County where the group also ·provides wlunteer
service.
Miss Kim Hubbard, general chairman, will com-
ment on youthful sportswear provided by the Wet Seal
and after·five and formal wear from Shirley's Fashions.
Modeling will"be CHOC-ettes members including the
Misses Nancy Nelson, Laura-Wagner, Renee McLeod,
.Valerie Ark.le, Debbie Bauer apd Coleen Schroeder.
Assisting with arrangements are the Misses Juli
Sorenson, decorations; Nelson, location; Wagner, shop
sel~tion; Teri Thurm, prizes; Arkle, invitations, and
McLeod, publicity.
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Included in the prizes to be given away will be a
weekend for two in Las Vegas.
Miss Kristen Cairns, a new member, will be wel-
comed during the meeting. CHOC·ette advisors· are
Mrs. Charles Heller and Mrs. Fronk Haigler.
$ .:RING?_INot NECISSAll:fl.Y -·A fluriy·of clothes flying out
of~c~'..~n't an indication that area young women are volun·
t eenn#. ti)>l)e!p with lpring cleaning. They're malting. ~in for
some of the newest strles they're planning to see when they at~
tend the second annual CHOC.ette fashion show taking place Sa~
urday, April 19, in the Golden Sails Inn. Planning' to convincO:'.
· mothers ttiat they "don't.have a thing to wear" are (left to right):
Renee McLeod, NanCy Nelson a.pd Kim Hubbard. ,,,
In 'M pgiC Kingclo 17J'
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. Roya-I Time
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· Predicted·
' . A fabulous fun-filled Family Night at
Disneyland has been announced as the next
major funding project for Children's Hospital
of Oran~ County.
The Magic Kingdom will roll out the red
carpet for a limited number of members of
the 13 supporting guilds and their guests on
Mother's Day, Sunday, May 11, beginning at
4 p.m.
Serving as general chairman of the event
will be Mrs. T. W. Welsh, LitUe Mermaid
Guild, ~tington Beach. Mrs. George Gartz,
Littlest Angel Guild, Yorba Linda, is co-chair·
man, atJ.d treasurer is Mrs. Robert· L Doss,
Tres Osos Guild, 'Mission Viejo.
Tickets, at $3.75 each, will include. un·
limited use of all facilitie1 with the exception
of the shooting galleries. They now are on
sale and may be obtained from any 111ember
of th~ participating guilds.
Coordinating the event. which will re.
place the annual fall CHOC Fair, will be the
Mmes. Robert Lucas, Cinderella Guild, New·
port Beach ; Robert Thomas1 Punch and
Judy, Costa Mesa; Charles Roberts, Queen
of Hearts, Laguna Beach, and Doss, Tres
Osos, Mission Viejo.
The tickets will not Include food, which
may be purchased In the park.
Officers
Seated
New officers will pre.sJde
when Uie .FoOntain vane1.
Historical .. Soiclety meets 1t
7,30 tonlgbt In the borne of Mt.
and Mrs. Al Krukenberg.
lnstslliil -by · Mrs. rloriJe ;
Jesko, the clty'a f I r it ·
librarian, w~e the Mmes. ,
Krukenblrg, _p r e.ai d ~nt;
George fulwald, first vice
preeldent in charge of pro-
grams; Joseph Ditte, 1econd ·
vice pruldent, membersh!pj
Joe Courreges, third vice
president, hlltorian, a n d
Tbocpe Kobl, fourth vial
prelldenl, lpotial events.
Al.so taklnl: office were :P.11'1.
Ronald Murphy, secretary;
Mrt. Lorrin Lamm er s ,,
treasurer, and Stan St.ai!ord,
audit«.
Chairmen appointed were . ' ' Mra:. Muaru· Kato mtd Mn.
David SOlonono, holpHality;
Ron :111ce, outside 1peakeri; :om. Fregeau, repcrts from 1 other IOCJetlfl8: Mn. Orvie I HJchum, hl!torlcal news, on<!
James Dick,. porltsnwJtariaD.
The ooclety meets the fourth
Monday or ea.ch month and
plaD' to ·make the new com-
mtmity center Ill permanent -u., place next moolh.
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Students ,
'Can . I Do
A community drive to eoJ..
Ject a variety of items needed
at Fairview State Ha,,pital is
being conducted by Marina
High S c b o o I organizations
under the direction or student
chairmen Khris Bender and
Jerry Miles, who organized
the project.
In addition to acceJ1ling con:
tributions from the school'f
student body, they al.so are
accepting contributions frODl ..
are: neighborhoods.. , ,
Among the things they are
collecting are clean, useabl•
clothing in small to large sizes
for men, women And children;
toys in good condition, ancJ..
any type of uncomplicated.~
games. ;
They also are accep~
children's books and foo(
coupon! which· will be u!e\Cf
to help purchase a school btd'.:
for excepUonal children.
The Anchor Club will be':
making Easter baskets for the"'.'
hospitalized children, so th;
students also are collectin(
soft, wrapped candy:
The guilds also plan to award prizes dur·
ing the evening with first prize to be siI days
in Hawaii for a family of four.
Membenbfp apln will be
open to the public u IOOll
as the new cenW la ••allatile
for meetlnp, llld oddltlocW
Wormatlon may be ohtalne,I
by calllnl e.ltber M r 1 •
Krukenher1 or Mn. Dllte.
ALL ABOARD-Everybody is. invited to climb on chase o( the bus are (le!t to right) Jerry Miles and
tlie bandwagon to provide a lius needed for excep-Khris Bender, chairmen, ahd Cheri Pratte, Anchor
Cooperating 1n the com. ....
munity drive ls a commiH~
comprised of. Gree Hellancf."':
senior class president; Shaw(
·Millbern, freshman c 1 a s 1 .
president; ~b Chilits, Ke1.
Club; Oleri Pratte, .Anchor
Club; Chris Leland, Ineract.
Club; ·Chris Briggs, .P,,larls;
and Alan Meeker, OxNr clubt .•
tiooal cbildten by contributing coupons during a Club president: The young people's organizations
~unity drive sponsored by Mariha High School are cooperating in the drive lo proyide many neces· ·~,ffeups. M~g their donation towar~.p~·
1
.sary articles for Fairview Stat': Hospital,
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Tip f.or Brides: It Take.s ·.t wo : ;to .. 1·~n~6 • as
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DEAR ANN -!;ANDERS' Several ·o!
us cameramen here at Universal Studios
In Hollywood read your column Ind
discuss it regularly. Five times in the
past two months you have publilbed
letters with the same basic theme -
"Men are animals, interested only in
satisfying tbelr own sexual needs."
'lbe Jetter that really tieked me off
was the one from the wife who said
she felt like a prostitute. According to
her, sex wu a nuisance and a bore.
She got nothing from It but exhaustion.
She said she was willing lo put U:P
with it, however, In exchange for respeco
!ability and the lln.andal security of
marriage.
You've gf.aled many times that women
"''ho are married to inept. clumsy lover•
should teach them. • (Night school,
-,. '1c-.
ANN LANDERS A ~~
remember!) Well, I aay men can teach
night ICbool clasHI, too-Alld the1
should. An inaperienced bride oflen ls
learfu~ lnhlhlted on<! motionJ,... A
man who ii k>ving and considerate .can
wort wondm wtth· even the dumbest
partner U she ls willlna to learn. -
J.M.
DEAR J.M.: Brtvt. 'l1M: eperatlve
word1 are eommulc1tton, eooptr1tlon
and auelflahttt. · T H A N X S l'OR
WRITING.
DEAR ANN 'LANDERS: I am a lf.
year-old girl with a mentally retarded
brother. He ii RYID . )'Uri older than
J. La\tly I've been wondering what
will become of blm whtn Mom and
Dad paq on.
In additloo to belng retarded, .lJlf
brother hu a spinal problem on<! Ii
completely helPless. He needs to be
bathed, fed and dressed like an infant.
I'm begiMlng to wonder il t be
• mpoosllilHly ·Will fall on me. Pl..,. 1( tlltre are no funds for private care,
and ne wlllirtl relative, tbe padent
becomtt a ward of lbe 1tate and lJ
sent to a 1tate ln111tulion.
· •ttoti~thttik 1~aM -self1sh or cruel, but
J don't want the burden of my han-
dicapped brother. It cou1d spoil my
cb411Ce1 for marriage.
J have never heard ol 1 plaet that DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother
cares f1r people who are bolh retarded was ve ry disappointed when I married
and crWJ>led. Have you? I "tfduldn't dare .... Philip. St\e [e.lt he wasn 't good enough
dilcusa UUI with my partnts. Please for me because his parents were foreign
help me. -CLOUDY Fµ1t1RE . born a~d not "society."
DEAR Q.OUDY : Y" MUST dlscus1 Every morning Mother telephones to
this wltll yoar parents. It it Deir make some cutting remark about him,
reqoulblftty .. lee iut JOV brother web IS "Philip's BOX were baggy laB&
11 provided for •fltr t.bey ttt pne. night. Does he own garters?" Or ''Philip
Al ln1uruce ppUcy parchaatd urly offended Mrs. Beck because he Ignored
wr.On1!t cu•..-lttl cood care la • prlv1&e her and Lalkad to the woman at his
tnatUaUon. It 1llb ""1d ctv• your right all through dlMer,I' J hate to
p1rent1 ptlce of mind. I tHuie they hear the phone ring In. the morning.
••ve aacl • policy. Right now my stomach Is tied up in
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D~ UP : Tell )'fiKll' mother ~
refue to tolerate "'1 furtlttr crlticJmt.: • of yoar bu1bud. U 1k for1et1, chop:-! ' her off hi mJdsentence. ;! ,.
What awaits you on the other slde:: • ol lhe marriage veil! How can y~
be sufe yoUr marriage wlll work? Rea :
Ann Landers' ,lx>oklet "Marriage -~
to Expect." Send your request to Ann>;.
Landers in care ol lhil newapaper enclotoC~
ing 50 cents in coin and a Jona, stamped.):
self·addressed envelope. ~
Ann Landen wll be ala~ to he!~
you "with your p'-blenu. Send them •
to 1 her In care ot the DAILY PJLOT,
enclosing 1 sell-addressed, •tamped
envelope.
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DAILY rlLDT
YOU'RE INVITIO -Joe Kroll (right),' ~ean of
,,1tudent act1v1Ues at OranJe Coast College interetts
.!Cit Weller, E1tancia High School senior and Mias
~'.Birth Defects Conference
Future Parents
: Every -minute 0 blby the fields of medicine llJd ls born bi tbe United Stoles
fitll O de!ICI su!OUI etllllib
10 d!Nblt, dlJlliure or kill.
A tcita1 ol 1,100 defecUve
blbla · ... born uch reor
"' or-. C.U:Ku!""' -0 ..-ol o .. tbe
U.S.
'Ille problun of birth delecta
lavolvu the youni people of.
today -for they are all future
parull.
: SO, the annual science con-
f erence on Blrth Defecta,
~ qaln will be presenltd
science.
Included will be Dr. Virginia
Apgar, vice prealdent for
medi<:al attain for the foon-
daUon.
The clynomio spuku Is
renowned f« creatinf the
Ap(at scon, tbe neooaW tut
wblch can lead to rapid cor·
rtction of early deficiencies
bt!ort irreparable dam11e
results to the newborn. Her
topic wUl be Betteriog the
.
Diane Munyon OCC nunlng student in alt.ending
the annllll M Defects Conference to be present-
ed Wednesday, Mareh 26, at the coll~ge.
Invited
Oddi for tbe Unborn.
Predlctin( Ille Future will
be dlJcuued by Dr. Charles
J. Epste.ln, ulOdate profwor
pediltrics, Univeralty of
California, San Fr a DC l 1 co
Medical Center. A htjjhly
respected l'll'licllt. be bu
lectured at umversities and
high ochooiJ throughout Ille
Uzilled Stoles.
Abo OD Ute panel will be
a repreQntaUve from the SaJk
In1Utute for Blolo1lcal
Studies.
HoroicoP!
' A~!~riu:_~~~~~:~ ~~!~~.!~
Be I u b t I e. COmmUn!.-llJJl.1 -upon journey. ~ve, crtaUve; )OU .,.
lMY cause ehupbrl=ol ,1..-Avolll (Hlin( ol r~tnt. ahll t:'.~.'~.:,',1 o~ MARCH 25
9y IYDNS\' ()MIU
1'Tbe wilt m111 controll his
delllny •• .AIC:Oloa poinll tbe .,,...,."
ARID (llar<h llqil 11):
Bo '""' ., """1 --dlardJDc nd tape. You 111 .. a job ti> OCIDplete.
Oae wllo laftJpC.I you cfoel not
bave ,_ -ol 1'llrt.
Tan ,_ -· Awld lm-pulofvo oetloa.
TAUllUI (April Z.May lOJ:
ActlYlt7 izx:f 11111. V1lttl tlld
vllllon ... t.turw:I. Ntw Ip-
~ lo old problama ""'
beat -Bo -tile. UUU. ..-d l:tumor .
11.i.Un who clfaJ>lan' ......
II blullfnr.
GEMINI ()loy ll...Juna lO):
~ tendency to O'tfiiptud.
aio-quality, bUt -to n8ceslitlu. ~ .mate 1
........... Be fair bUt -bl•.
TnJat bunch. Youn ·11111\'lng .. ri&ht dtrlctloo.
CANCEll (Jllne ll.July D ):
~ Clllld!t!ana OOllld be
upeet. Be reody for cbln(e.
Doo~ blttlo --· Bo flex. Ible. '!be ~ !hit occur
ot bome OOllld be ol a!Umate
bentlll Go aloq wl1h ti.
LEO (July JS.Aue. D):
Imponlnl to I o 11 o w In·
alrucllona. A~ minor
dtllllo OOllld· be major. wi.o
te put oil joanll;y until •P-
polD(menta: are .,. e r I f i e d •
~_,.le be lm-
pott.nl.
vta00 (All(. D&pt. D ):
Whit appeon o barpfn may
be Ille oPPCl'fla. JCmw this
ml be 0 -oblervtr.
Jl'rimdl who mND. well may
be --. -,.... own -1. Dnw upoa plat --· L1B11A (lllpl. JI.Oct DJ :
Expull IOI!-=·-Hlllortty. Bo :coolldtnl.. Al:·
Doo't bum -· to YMI 'l!!U bovo c-to· make ar< -~... ·
retain 1ood rt tlOal. You --,...... a ~ would mal<e llne artist, "1itq.
may blve lo ._1 lttpl. joct·· dlopliyonlqu• Youallooroa«radldtollw.
Know Ibis and o ct .... _ ... \,u... • Promodor. due; monoy coma c:wdlngty ,.... !Nin ellorll of recent pest.
SAGnTARIUS (Nov. 22-Pde1!3 (Feb. !f.Marcb lO): GENERAL TENDENCIES:
Dec. 21): A !rltlid wbo ,. =.,you, "i!r!' ~~ Lunar pooltloo favorable for
q....U monty may be U· truth ..: tpoelal rela-fishing.
trava1a.nL Jnsist. on factl. Be timlhlp. Judime.nt of one ""Tt~ ~ ~ 1~ ~""3:
kind without bein& ·careless. -""--to .,.., ...... -1.-.. :-g omwr'• bool<leJ, "S«l'9t l · • ~ I""' .,_,, """ ~~l MM! 1nd W-." Sn I • Judgment today IS apt ta be -i....."' -y .,. --~.....__.. '"" 50 c.111i to °"'''f • • "Pll:" u.--~~ucu. -OAJLY P'ILO I• corTect. Doo.'t be afra.id to D' TODAY JS T 0 u R 1=" Ctnft•I Stltlon. "-tit;, eiprm the truth. it.'Y.'iwrt.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
10): You are able to suc-
cessfully eommunice.te view&.
Opportunities multlf>l1. Key 11
to -tht belt. Pcmft mate, partner to 1 lt. 1 re
limelighl 'lben you hove feel.
iDg ol sallslactlon.
AQVARIUS (Jan. 21>-Feb.
GAYLE PIARSON
Summer Nuptl1l1
St. Andrew's
Rite Setting
.at Oranae Coast CoUeae, is y
btlng pr ..... led .. pec1a11y f0<' ~ vonne
,all Orange County students Collis Marries
Jack D. Richardson
.and faculty.
s_..r by tbe coll•1• and
'the Callfornf1 Assoc.talion of
Secondlry School AdmW..
tram, Di!trict 21, the tym-
_JIO!ium will be praenltd by
'the Orange County Chapter,
'NationaJ Foundation-Mardi or
'Dimu from S:30 to I p.m.
•Wedneldly, Muth 211.
STEWAllOISS
Poggio 0.111119
Training
Completed
etall ·1 cm ambttlobl, · ' caretr
Po(enttal. Fomlly m<mber am
belp 1'11 lullill • pl. 'Study
CANCER mt IQ&~ ~
Ro rents
Invited
Gayle Pearson and Phillip
Cotton have selected S t .
Andrew's Presbyterian Churcb
for their evenlnc weddlna: on
July 12.
'Ibe daughter of Mr. and
Mn. W. W. Peuaon ol
Newport Beach will gradoate
!Nin Golden w..i Coll'I• In
June. While at Newport
Harbor High School abe WU
The M1rqul1• diamond, $4,500.
SLAVICK'S
•• Strusing birth defects, the
canference will future na-
.tleeally lmown l]leakus from , .
Yvoone Collis and Sp/I Jack
D. Rfcblrdlon, high IChooi
sweethearts, evb•nced wed-
dflil rinp Ind pled1es before
the Rev. John K. Durham in
Cblpel 0 n e, Baumbolder,
Gmnaliy.
i ,Army Sgt. Jerry Thomf)IOll
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THRU ~ATURDAY ONLY!
·Special Easter price
on our Sue Cory 'So French'
PERMANENT
REG. 17050
• NOW 11.88 .
S• , ........ •3 (MM,. T-I. W ... only)
We II II t ti. .. C8'9 of ,,..._ .._,
la 10UI ""NIT CllAROI CAID-
NO AnOlll-NICDSAIT
,. ... u.a • .,..
.. ~tire
• ... """"'' 11'1.ad
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MUlf,IN'9f'Ofl •UCtl
Mllllt"""°" Ctfl!ir
N llfllllt, m .nn
Ml'Wl"O•T llMlt
"''"""' 1'1t ... ii... lliOtf', ..... 111i
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1ave the bride ln man1qe
durlnf the afternoon nuptJall.
Parenti of tbt couple are Mr1. .
Eva! .. Tbonw rJ. Coal.I !(. ...
ond John R. Collis ol Sum-
merland and lr'.r. and Mrs.
Jock B. Rfcbard>on of Corti
Meu.
Tbe new Mrs. Rlchardaon
nJected a Door Janith white
Him and tiered chanUUy lace
aown. Her full tiered elbow
[engtb lllutlon vef1lnl WU
Graduated frClll Eutern
Alrl.l.nes' flight a t t e n d an t
training ct!lter in Miami ls
Mba Peglie Jeanne OsUins.
The daughter of Mr. aDd
Mr•. Stan Ostling of Mission
Viejo also is an alumna of
Newport Harbor Hlah School
and Orange Coast College. She
now is based out al. New York.
N.W and O)iecllnt pennta o cheerleader.
are tarited to attend a The benedJct-elect, '°" of -U. lponlGRd b7 LI the Robert Collom of Costa
Lecbe Leape of Huntiqt.oa Mesa, was graduated from
Bqch M11t1j S on the hlrt1i Corona de! Mar Hfgh School,
Jewel9BSinc9 1917
11 F11hion l1l1nd
Newport B•1ch....,... 644-1380
Y•ur Ch•r9• Ac:count Wtlc:om9-
l•11kAm•rlc•ul, M11t•r Ch•r9•, too
Op•ri M•riclly, Fridty uritil 9:30 p.m.
-~ ol Ille baby and fllDlly reJa. enrolled Ill owe ond now ii
tions. ·• IOphomore at the Univetlity
Mra. A. Linn Meyon of• ~ol~C.~lil~· omla.~~Rf~V<rllde.~=:;:::!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ Huntfli(too Belch wlll beet1-
lhe 1:30 a.m. meettni. Anyone
wiahinc information may can
Mn. Dovtd Wa'-11, Ill·
ltllt.
cauaht to a pearl tiara andl-------------~---ROBINSON 1S abe carried o wc:ldln( bou-quet of red ca.rnaUcm and
fern.
Honor ottendanla wee Sp/4
ond Mrl. Robert C. fteyooldL
The matron of honor wu
1owned in a red drt111 and
held plnk carnaU001. ·
A miall r<eeptlon followed
the ceremooy .. the chopel
ball. AulstiDg were Mn.
Morie Koollt& and Mn. Clay
Jacklon.
The newJyweda are
sraduotea of Coall M,.. High
School and the benedlct at-
tended Orana:• Coast Colle1e
before enliltJni bi tbe Army.
He ii a veteran ol. Vietnam
and will be lllaUoned . In
Gmnany unW hla dbchar1•
bi Sei<ember.
The couple now are making
their home in ldar-Oberate.ln,
Germany.
Book Study
On Program
Contemporary Books wlll be
the toplc ol Mrs.. Temnce
Halloran of the Memorare
Guild when she speaks fot
the Orange Caunty Alumnae
ol Immaculate Heart College
Weclllelday, March 2'1.
Mr1. Ale.under Bnmett er
Santa Ana will bolt the I
p.m. metting. Nomlnations for
new officers also will be on
the agenda, a<:rording to the
president, ~{rs. James Ca~
peoso.
NB Auxiliary
Newport Beich Pollet AlB·
Ol•ry 1athu1 the last TueldaJ
of the month 1t 7:30 p.m •
Location Is 1v11lable wllb
Mr1. Robert Whttltr, 675-Ilft.
~D'lll:lTISlMl:HT
IRIDE AND GROOM
Art the two mc.t import·
ant people bi o w«ldlng.
tr you're rNcly to w11k
down the a1a1.. 11'1 the
"How to Plan Your Wed-
dlll(" Gulde. 5end>.)!c lo
col.n to P.O. Bu 311, Hunt-
logtOll S..ch, Colli. !Im!.
NO MONEY DOWN "' .10 ,.:• .~~-
CAu POI flll ISTIWATI ANI SHOP At MOMl lll'llCI
ow ,........"' "' ..... ._.... Wiii c-. • "" ........ ...... ...... , .. -..... wt'llrl .. _, ................... .....,,. ... """ ............ "' ........ ., ....
ROM TOUI AHA CAU. 548•8242 01 14M"7
BEAUTI PLIAT
DRAPERY & CARPD
"'"-a.cli-t" YIVl'ftGOnl
Dkw .'.
Wlfll .. It fill"' '°"' •nd ... ~, ··-......
., .. hcb ··-·-.... -
1:=.
CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERIES ..... $195 S4.tl ,_. '9f
NOW ONLY fllll • A ,...,_. colltdton OI ~Joli lltUl!lty dt¢0rt!W flllrta
lrlol:!\1111""' 1eor. " Y•f1h 01 !lltfl 1tylt boudri. ~
I...,_ •I'll .. l\'lbltf, • , , •II Ult •k•.
DRIVlllT IN 7 DA TS "'M*' •-.. .,...... --
a.tM!fl ........... ,.. ........ -... k""4 lff'YkL ltlly •....,. ...... ,., ~ ...... •"""9. .. , ... ~ .... ......., ~ ... -·-OVI WOllWANSHIP 11 IUNll
HAUWAll • toos Cut to OIDll
EIUTIPLEn DRAPERY
4: CAJUIEr·
CAU. fOI All ISTIMATI
SHO,...t-'IOMI lllYICI
NO MONEY DOWN
548-8242
Uf' ~ a MOllTMI TO f'AY
Now in Our Family:
Family Weekly
'
l
I "
CLAIROL® SUNLIGHT GLOWS JN YOUR HAIR
The sun Shines brightest on the woman who has
discovered the magic of our fabulous color stylists,
She's a glawing Clairol@ blonde,,, the prettiest
bloride )'CU know. Be one! Custom coloring,
lndlvlctJe.lly prlc9d. Price Including set, from
only 15.501 out, from 5.00. Beauty Se.!Qll,
HUMAN HA• mlTCH WIO, CUITOM STYLID, 41.00
rn blonds, br'VnilttUt rl"Ollt•d9 and greys ••• what.
wtg to w.r When ywr own colr droops I Save OJl"'tng
tN• llrnltad OrftP". S•• OU,. WIN Wlggtry group:
CUCAcJM. Wiglets, long and rnadl11n ratts. BM.ut;y sa.ton.
ROBINSONS NEVVFDRT • FASHION ISLAND • 644· 8
I
----~---------·---..-· .... --,.. ..... -.-.. ......... -··~···-··~-·~....,,..,.-.................. ------.... -... -"!'-1!-••~"'!'--"!"'!'"'"'l'""'!'"'•••••••--....... 1111 ... ~111
\
r --
Delegates
To Travf!I
A time le< tnvellni hu
-dtslgnatod by confer-
ences Inti cuiventiou ol the
Daughttn GI the Amtriwl
Rovolutl"'1.
Att.ndlnt the stat. con-
ference in fuano earlier this
month were Col. Wllllam
Cabell Chapter delerateo, the
llfm<s. Goqe D. Buccola,
state a 11 i I t a n l leCl"el#y;
Selah Reber, rqent; Bnmo
.,.. N ormu, vice rqtnt, and Nell
v. Williams. ·
'Ibe 71th Cont i nental
Cooirm will be conductod
April 14-11 in Washinatoo, D.C.
DeJe1atea are the Mmes.
Reber and Norman, whiM.
cbc9en as alternates are
Mmes. Buceola, Guy Holmes
Cherry Jr., Edgar M. Cox Jr.,
and WllliAm B. Tritt.
During the ne.rt chapter
meetin& Jose Norman will
discuss Castro's Communism
in IAUn America. The group
will gather at 12:30 p.m. next
Wednesday in Island House,
Fashion Island.
Ho.stesses will be the Mmes.
•
DAllY l'!LOT, J.f
~ ........ ,.... . •••••••••• 'I•
• ii p1t·t ·are:
peeksi • llY M.wy.e • • • • • •
' It II quilt paulble thal .0.
April eve beforo looc Pa111c!O
Neal will stop forward a4I
accept the "Oscar" awarded f'
Best Aclresl for ber" por-
ance in Tiie Sahje<t W• 8-' -And, oo that very same pl'f
form Jack Alberbon mlg!d
well nc:eive !he Academ)ilo
Award for Best SuPl'orlf4t
Actor lo< his performance ~
MGM'a Metrooolor mo'lie 1"
SUJe<t Wu-. w~
yoo like to hear ai.i ..0 thelJ
~tloos and MY to Y"'4\-
, self, u1 saw Patricia Neal aad
Jact :Albertaoo In 1'lle SahJtGt
Wu ROlq at the Mesa." ~
Try viewlnt !'rant D. Gli-
roy's Pulitzer Prize winner at
the Mesa tonight or even ~
morrow night. Or botll l 'l1l9
accompanying moUon picture at
Ille Mesa during 'thia star-llud-T. V.. Pole, William L. Ben ta,
J. Harold Kt11oe1 and. Donald
\V. MacLeod. Open House /;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;&;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jil ded program u a-ti
Cardi.
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HAIR ••• HAIR ••. HAIR -That will be the subject March 27 wlien Orange
c&st College cosrnf:tology students compete for trophies at the annual hair·
styling" conte$t. 'Spectators are welcome to watch the coeds vie. Practicing
her skill is Pat Gilbert of Fountain Valley \vho "combs out" Gail Warner of
Costa Mesa.
League Invites
Paul Lauritz
Comb Out
Becomes In
At College
'Women'
Portrayed
Portrait.I of A m er l c a n
Women will be presented when
the Temple Hlllel Sisterhood
meets tonight at I in the Com·
munity Methodist Church, 6662
Heil Ave., Huntington Beach.
Forty women will be divided
irto panels ol ail:. Each panel,
comprised of a Catholic,
Protestant, Jew, Negro and
Mexican.American, offers the
audience an opportunity to ask
qllfll!ltiom followinc the presen· -· The public .ii invi1ed to at-
tend tile meeting.
Dual Showing ·
ParenU: and their nur-
sery school aged chi!•
dren are invited to an • ·r en house from 9 to
I :30 a.m. next Wed-
nesday at the SUnshine
Community School, lo-
cated at the M e s a
Verde M et hod i s t
Church. One of the
many facilities to be
view,ed is this tree
house which is being
ep.joyed by Suzanne
Pansell, KaUtleen Cecil
and ,l{eyin Dazey. In-
formation . regardbig
membership is avail-
able to th°'e attending
0< by calling Mn.
Denest Hess at 6(2.4236.
lures Viewers
YES MAM ,-.
We do have the largest
stock of SHAG CARPET
at the lowest prices!
DON'S CARPET SHOP
IJ llMlm ...... flf ~ Stii ... I
426 SOUTH MAIN ORANGE
Sears ·
Humble beginnings have
produced many men of note
.such as renowned artist Paul
Lauritz, who will be guest
at the Man:h 25 meeting o{
the Costa ·Mesa Art League.
Galleries and pri vate e<>l-
lections throughout the United
States contain hill works, in-
cluding Carnegie Art Institute
and National Academy of
Design, New York.·
\\'hat's new in hairstyling An impressive numJ:>cr of the ne\f Sheraton-Universal !
'''ill be dis.covered March 'n Orange Coast res1denb1 · are Hotel. Universal City.
when the fourth an nu a 1 expected at the 19th annual Serving on the p\an~i
benef•, 1,_._ect by Gold committee ill J\.1rs. Jean Orange Coast College com-,..,.__ Plummer of Costa Mesa who
petition take s place in the Diggers fot Cr I PP 1 e d ia in charge ol. prize.!.
OCC student center. Children'• Society. ----'--'-----~ii
Bii, Glorious 8:dl
oowa-Portrait
of Voar (ldld
The contest, .themed the The even1 •a doubl• o11ow-Gloomy Gus Tells ii Natural LQok, will begin at inc of Ne l m a n • M a r c u 1
6:'5 p.m. with rtudents from fashions -the firtt California
L turitz, a native of Larvik,
Norway, began his art career
by carrying ...,ls end paints
d. famous artists in exchange
for the privilege of watching
them at work.
Lauritz formerly wu on the
faculty of Otis Art Inst!tute
and Chouinard Art Inltitute
of Los Angeles and served
on the Los Angeles Municipal
Art Commission fc:r six years,
holding the office of vice
president.
the cosmetol'W}' department preoentation-Mooday, March As You See ii
competing for trophies. Judges"l"•3l;;;;;;and;;;;;;;;;Tueoda;;;;;;;;;;;;y;;;, ;;;A;;;pril;;;·;;;;;;1,;;;;;;ln;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ill will be well known hair stylists II
from the Harbor Area. He went to Canada at the
age of 16 and in Vancouver
and later in Portland studied
art at rUght and began his
career in commercial art.
Many years later be returll-
ed to Europe and studied and
painted in England, France
and Norway, eventually
returning to the United States.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will
take place in Adarm Slrett
Elementary School, Co s t a
J\1esa. f.1rs. Richard Intram,
president, will conduct a short
busihess meeting prior to the
program, which will be in-
troduced by Mrs. P a u I
Friebertshall8e1', p r o g r a m
chairman.
During the otyling and judg·
ing, spectators will be en-
tertained by music a n d
modern dancers from the
dance department.
Approximately 30 y o u n I
women wUI compete in senior
and junior division.s. Each
coed will have a model.
Charles Stevenson of tht cos-.
metology lft.'aff is the c:haiz'·
man.
The artist, a mt'mber of
the Royal Society of Aris,
England, and a fellow of the -------------------11
American 1~itute of F i n e
Arts, bas received 100 awards
for his wc:rkll.
Give to Your United Fund
FINE BAKERY
Arm11 Bread
Rich , French typ• round loaf te cut en feur
sid•s, enjoy with ch••••· 4tc
Chocolate Eclalrs
Fr1sh-99g p1estry with • rich filling of 1mcoth-
as-cream cu1terd. 2tc
BaKana Cream Pie
Fill•d with b.n•nas, in a fl•kly li9ht pi•
sh.II. A patfllicf w•y to encl • wonderful
maal. 1.49
~~~~1~~7
If your birthday is in April, May or June, stop
tn and fill out •n entry •.• a d1coratad 2·1ayar
c1ka tO !i lucky people a1 ch month! ~~LIDO C,E NT ER
1433 VIA UDO 'NEWPORT BEACH
' .. ' .. '
Elizabeth Arden face treatment
is much more than just a facial
A1 llllUll! Anlu "'"' in llullums'
Red Do~ TrHlmenl Ro°' wni help yor
discover delfahlful beauty secrets. You'll
flave • flee tre1lment *1d emerre with 1
luwriwsnl!'llf makeup 1s well as a rld ianl
fee iinz. ~ltk ln.llment. wlt oakeupll,M
S..u~ Sludlo,
Buffums·
Ntwll'•rf C.11ttr #I ft•hien lilen4' e 644-2201
~.ft., Th~r .. , '"· 10:00 tlll •:JO Oth1t D1y• 10:00 tHI 1110
Offw ixplm
Scmirday
!It 5 p.m.
::.·
c
I i
I
A wla:flll loeepeake for al time ••• lrlO
utm:al ..., ponnit •.•• mwc•ted.
l!lieable for bw•ini.
• Licl&: -,.. ehiltl, tn per f..;Jy
· ••• .,.1-ilhlt.U,..n
• Cllildl•'• P'WJlll taken et t9e per cllild --• l!llbjedl •hou !d be •ell er-net!
• ~. &,,.-I mt_, •"ry
e P~raphon heun 9:30 ,fo S p.m.
SEARS SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3JU IRISTOL ST.
PHONE 5-40 · 33J3
Abode ol Ille pute!Joordl,' Or c
Route Of Ccdl, la: all lboyt
international intrigue. Georp
Peppord and Inger SleYml set
deeply involved in a plot 6l
some 'Fuclsts who pJan to ~
over France and return Algien
to Fiench rule. 1t is rated "G",
!or ,eneral audience witl>ojil
1ge comideration. ·
•
The Lido bouU of a bill with
two mighty big movie!!. 1'e
Dirty Doseo plays alonpide t1!e
hu1• Lido acre.. with -
Pitt. Lee Marvin and Emeot
Borsnine e<>otar In the fonner
w!llch deals with a tough rrodP
ol Americans, all GI convicts,
who are trained for a Vtry spe--
cia.I mission behind enemy lines
during WW U.
Glud Prb: gives the thrllL!.
spills and subsequent romance
of racing guys and their gals.
James Garner and Eva Marie
Saint are in row one: u the
starter's gun sends this cm.
erama, Super-Panavlsi.on Metro-
Color motion picture down the
straightaway. At the Udo.
Planned for openers at Ute
Newport Lido for a new week
Wednesday will be Angel In My
Pocket which will play screen-
side with Loli Continent.
Andy Griffith plays the port of
a mini.!ter in a smaJI KaMas
town. He has many problenu,
with a rivalry within the parish
involving two leading families
who want to share a lol ol.
glory. The minister has his own
family problems what with a
nagging mother·in-law and a
brother-in-law who plans to in-
stall a still in the church bue--
ment. Fun for genenl audienct
appreciation in this one.
MESA MATINEES prml<r
the brand new movies which
are scl>eduled for a new week's
pl'Oll'am at the Mesa. When
there la a aecoad week ol show-Int. the Shopper'a Mailnee will .,....nt a favorite film ttealled
by popular demand. The pm.
JITlDll open every Wedn<lclay
afternoon promptly at I o'dock
with {te*irefreshrnentl.
FREE PASSES to tbe M ...
or the Lido will be malled lodQ
to R. ff. PulUkl, lCltlO Miramar
Dr., Bafbol, J. L HUtton, 19t
Oat, Costa M.,a, Jam" An<fer.
IOll, l,lO PofnsetUa, Corona dol
Mar Ind H. E. Wllllaino. llT Apolena, Balboa laland. .
'fllll quartet will be ....... .r :
"Picture Pttks'' at the LSdo « ·
the Mola ooe dl)' ru1 -. Wt
do hope !hat ,... my .,.. •
nlJl'lfl will be read here bef«w i too many moons pop up ancf '------------------!·------------------••fail down. I .
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·------·-~ --~--------·------~---~----~--~---..... --~--------~~-~---------- -
•
~· ., -t .. IW\.V rtLOT ~. M~ 24, 19!?
~wi~ P I~toon Wi~s· .NCAA
•
J 9-!Man Anteater
'
UPI T ..... ,.
.'.'.,PITFALLS OF RACING -Three drivers in the
:; .... -;sebring endurance race went through the bmnps
... ' and grinds of their dangerous profession Satu~ay .
... ,~.,.Bill Boye and Russ Shirley's Beach prototy_F,e t~ out
'!.::··of control (top) while a Lotus Europa pilOteCl by
John Howard and A. J . Lilly digs up dirt trying to
get back on the oval . And, a Porsche 906 driven by
Dr. Merv Rosen and Dave Morrell slams onto the
infield (bottom) .
.tnt1• ."4
O• •' Light Porsches Pounded
~Ford GT40 Wins at Sebring
•. ' •, ..
: "'§EBRING, Flo. (AP) -Ellmlnalion
of minimum weights for prototype sports
,,~~s in internalional racing this year
"" has produe«I bodies super liaht and
"'I~ OOwnrighl fragile.
;:1~ They were !O fragile that the rough
Sebring course and a seeminafy in-
.' U"tased supply of those traffic cones ..
'""·tbll police everywnere use to mark
f'"\lar\cs during rush hours combined lo
l"n ~i\ctally pound the erotic machine• into
· 'SUbmission.
In part. that is the story of the victory
• Ju Jackie Ickr of Belgium and Jack
..... o uver of England in the 11-bour Sebring
• Endurance Race Salurdly.
The rest of the H9rJ ts the charmed ..... ·.me of the Ford GTfo can, whidl have
·...:.· ...
been racinc five years and are sUU
gracing victory lart"..s more often than
any other machine.
When the Ford drivers first pitted
their sturdy machines against the brand
new, featherweight Ferraris and
Porscbes as qualifying beg.an Thursday,
they found their best was five seconds
a lap slower than Ferrari.
The difference was only a shade less
against Porsche.
"Competition becomes quite difficull
"'hen you are that much slower," lckx
said, "even though the Ford is still
qu,ite a good car."
The five factory Porsches from
Germany iook a pounding from the
rought concrete and asphalt course carv-
;;:,Yoss Sma cks Two Doubles
But Angel s Ripp ed, 10-1
PALM SPRINGS -The C&lifornla
Angels get in some homework today
durina: an intermission in thtlr 1prlng
eablbfUon game !Ched.ule after taking
a 10--1 lacln& from the San Francisco
three hits each while Ron Hunt had
a pair.
The Angels Tuesday bolt their Pacific
coast League farm club from Hawaii
when they return to exhiblllon play.
ed from an old WorlC. War U air base.
"I drove behind the Porsches through
lhe 'esses' several times," said veteran
Bob Grossman of West Nyack, N.Y.
"They bounded from side to side every
lime and I wondered if their suspension
was going to survive that pounding."\
It didn't. Two Porsches "·ent out of
action and the others had long pit slops
for repairs.
Joe BlWf:tla of Smithtown, N.Y., and
Rolf Slommelen of Gennany brought
one Porche home in third place, four
laps behind the winner.
Genhans Gerhard Mitt and Udo Schutt
finished fifth. Vic Elford and Dick At-
l\\'ood of England were seventh in the
other Porsche.
The Ferrari \\'as a casualty of
overheating in the final two hour1, at-
tributed at least partly to a collision
\\'ith a traffic cone. which banged up
the radiator at the rear ol the little
cars.
It linisbed second almost two laps
bnck .
Some of the Porsches also tangled
with the cones. placed alongside the
courses to mark off-road hazards such
as ditches. One Porsche had a long
stop to replace the left front fender
and headlights.
Even the winning t'ord hit a cone,
but it received less damage and was
repaired qu icker.
Marti n Pac~· UCI Conq uest
Dy EARL GUSTKEY °' .... o~ l'illt .,....
Thanks to elgbt 1wlmmers and one.
diver who 1elected. the r.libt weekend
to record their an.t1me b e 1 t
perfomwice., UCl'1 IWimmlnl leam
owna 1 naliooal clwnpionabjp today.
Wrapplna up lhe !1cM'1 co11t1e
dlvlslon UtJe early on Saturday'• flnal ..
doY of compeUlion al SprlnJlfleld, Mua.,
lhe Anlealers ~ed wllh a whopping
248 polnll to tile -pllce total of 1n lo111ed by Keuyoa College of
Ohio.
UC Da~Ui bagged . third at 141,
Wesleyan Uni.versUy of Middletown,
CoM., wu fourtl\ (IOI) and·bool Sprlna·
IWd Coller• (1111) fifth.
Eqhty4wo coJleie dlvi1lon o<boola
"·ere oo hand.
It's the first lllllonal championahlp
.,. for UCI in any sport.
And moot of lbe credll , ... to amuJng
sophomore Mike MarUn of Corona dol
Mar, who became the lint IWimmir
In lbe siI"l'ear history of lhe m..t to
win rive first placu.
. Martin won the 500 freestyle ev&W
Californian,
Mathis Duel
In TV Fight
. NEW YORX (AP) -U Jerry Quarry
comes out fightfug like he says he will,
then be and big Bu.ster Mathis shou1d
put, ft ' real Wlf in 1ll'adison Square
Gar"911. ®night. ~ • •
U he reverts to his former cautious
counter.Punching style, then · their 12-, , . ' ... .
0 ;J'on19'1it on TV'
7 :30, t hannel i;
rounder could turn out to be as exciting
as a spelling bee.'
"bon't worry about that," prontised
Quarry. "J'm going righ~ after him.
He'll quit after about six rounds."
"1 just hope it's not all talk,'" said
Mathis. "U be comes after me I'll knock
him ouL I'm too fa.st for him. I can
hit him five times to one. The filht
.lhould last five or Iii: rounds. or as
long as Quarry can take it."
The odds favor the beefy Mathi3: by
lbout 2-1. ·
Mathis suffered hit only pro defeat
at the hands of the auressive Joe
Frazier in a title fight in the Garden
a yeor ago. Frultt draped lbe blimp
from Grand Rapkls, Mich., over the
ropes and won on a technlcal knockout
in the 11th round.
Since then, Buster has won slx straight
for a 29-1 record, including 11 knockouts.
He is ranked slxth by the World Boring
Association and Ring Maguine.
Quarry, of Bellflower, bas won four
In a row since he lost a dull 15-rounder
to Jimmy Ellis of Louisville for the
WBA title at Oakland.
He has a 31).J.-.t record. incl1.1ding 11
knockouts, and never has been 1topped.
The Z3-year-0ld blond husky is ranked
second by the WBA and fourth by Ring .
Mathis, 24, wlll have big advantag"'
In height, weight and reach. He also
Is rated faster afoot and with his bands.
BULLETS' UNSELD
WINS MVP HONO R
NEW YORK (AP) -We! Unseld,
the rookie from Louisville wllo helped
Baltimore from lut place in 1961 to
the Eutern Division tiUe lhil anaon,
has been named the Most Valuable
Player in the Nalional Basketball
As9ociaUon.
Unsekl, the first rookie to win since
Wilt Chamberlain In 1960, easily be1l
out Willis Reed of the New York Knicb.
310 p::llnts to 137, in the balloting amoog
NBA players.
Billy Cunningham of Philadelphia wu
third with 130, Bill Russell ol Boston
fourth with 93 and Elgin Baylor ol Loi
Angeles fifth with 89.
Tbunclay, lbe lllO J'rldaJ, 11111,et Dtur-
dlf and docked tbe f-. • ..
the wlMlnC An14ater • Ad •. relay
leaml.
1111 114111 and 1,llO Umu of 1:11.1 and
11:11.0 • .,. natlooal· noordL 1111 100
le& on &aturdly'1 40t relay tum wu
11 oeconc11 ·11a1 -m-tenlhl feater lhlD
lbe wlMJng time In the 100 !rte evenl
lt wu a menonble performanct for
the Uthe rwlmmer and ofter the final
event .saturday1 tile IOI ..i.,, be wu
rewarded w I In a flVMlllnute llaDdJng
ovation fn>m the 1 ... wbo bad jammed
their woY IDto '8p:lnaftt1d Collqe'1
aquatorium.
But for Ill of Martln'I herolCI, It
Wu diver -Wllhlte who wrapped
thlnp· up fer 'the Aotalln. He WU
baflq 1111 -off lbe --board SatunllJ -bl llood olal>lh Iller
<!pt di,.., HO poJnll behlDd lbe leader.
But on bta Jut three dive1, he rece!T·
ed perfect ·-min Ill -jlJd&<I and 1JOD the event fot the third year
in • ""'· • . .
"Wllbllo realQ> took lbe pres111re off
lhe IOO nI., 10&m," coach Al Irwin
' -. "Alter that; tile .. i., ........... jull
1f1llll. out IO< a nil fut time, nol
baviDC to Won)' aboul a ~
tlon." The team ol Steve Fanner, RScJs
Euoo, Duane Ollon and tlartln c~
a ,,.... UCI ,_,i of l :U.t.
MaitJii WU aomelhJng to behold In
the 1,llO fMe. He fJnllbod two lapl
ahead of lbe rwmerup and his 11.11.t
time ls wllhln re1ch ol tile ""'1d mark
of U:lt.I, held by MIU -ol UCL.I, UCI'1 nmalnln& point winMfl 5abJto
day Included Ealoo, wbo qualllled thlril
and tool< lhlrd Jn Ille IOI tne final
Jn 41.4. Farmer quallfled ,....u. and
won his COOIO!allon heal l!I 41,1,
In the 200 bacutroke,Bob Dlke ~
flllh In 1:07 flal
Butterfly man Dale Hahn WU ninth
in. Sf.I. .
In recognition of UCI11 n11UOnal cbam·
pionshlp, the NCAA told lrwln the 1'71
college division meet ml&ht ~ mld at
the Belmonl Plua 01Y1'1plc Pool Ip Loos
Beach wllh UC! the boohchool.
Tbe lll70 meet will be held at ·OU!and
University In Delroll
$4,300 Per Foqt
For Floyd's Putt
JACKSONVllJ.E, Fla. (UPI) -Ray
Floyd knows lhe vllU< of mU!n( U>ose
abort putts: be got '4,300 a foot for
the tut one be toocied in.
A prel!lure-packed little two-footer on
the first hold of a 1udden"(feath playoU
Swlday was the difference between the
$20,000 Floyd got for winning the greater
Jacksonville Open and the $11 ,400
Gardner Dickinaon settled ·for as the
runnerup.
It took anolher two-footer on the final
hole of regulation play to put Floyd
into the playoff with Dickinson, who
hung a %3-foot birdie putt on the Up
of the cup on that hole and then missed
a IS.footer that would have kept the
playoff a1ive.
The 26-year-01d Floyd, a curly·haired,
sligbUy overweight former "army brat,"
bas two previous PGA victories to his
credit but bldn 't flnilhed in front aince
lhe 11115 SL Paul Open.
"It's been three and a Jlllf 11111 ·
since that last win," Floyd •aid. a' bit
mbty-<yed. "I'm really elltocl, you bqln
to wonder if you will ever w1n qain."
Floyd and Dickinson, 4.1,. flnilhed
regulation play with matchlnf IO-under
par 27Ss -two strokes ahead of U.S.
Open champion Lee Tre\'lno, South
Africa's Gary Player and Dewitt Weaver
-all of whom get $5,300.
f lntl ICO,_ lhlll "*19'( w1nfl'"°5 Ill rtlf Jed•
"°"~ui. Open: RIV Flll)'d, $20.000
G, Okkltiton. SHAia
LH Tr.Vino, 15,300
o.w1tt Weev.r, 15.lOf G•ry 1''-Ytl", l!,300
kbbV Col" $3.UI Arnold l'•lmer, ll.2511
lob CMrlel, S2"12
e m C11per, 12,.12
Jim Co!rwrt. SUit
Bflll MIKllftV• U"U
loO Resllur'D'. SJ,700
Al lllalnl!, tT,100 '°" OkUOn. 11.100 Mllclllrn Gf'l9IOl'I tl.61
8/Vlle Ct•'"'""' 11AO Frl~k 8H,., 11..UO
FraM .. .,.,.""' tlA
•11'*'11-m .... JG.1f.16-f71
6Mf.12-1G-:lll ... ,.....,,,..... ,,.....,,__,.
"'4,.1tu-»I 11Mt-7J.fl-2U 11.n-J0.4t-m
11·1~1Ut-2G n.11.11......_m
71·1+47·1'0-a! 7U1·1...,_:ld
74'7Hf.11-al 11.11~
11.n-1U1-..a.t ,,.70-74'7l-#4
ff.10.74-n.-.JM ...,. ..........
Didn't Need to Stall
DrakeShowedRealWay
To Piny Agaimt UCLA
Drake Univerlity'• 1pirited game last
week against UCLA reopens the case
of USC's stall t1ctica in Its cut.scoring or lhe Bruin> (16-14).
Drake graphically demomtrated that
a learn could play DOH-tc:Hlose basketball
with the Bruins without using unethical
tactics that make a travesty of the
WHITE
WASH
*************••
aport as i~ ta int.ended to be.
One last letter on ~ subject and
then it will be sealed forever .
promise.
For the tut few days all I have
heard is people knocking your column
about the USC stall against UCLA.
Although I have disagreed with you in
lbe past on many of your columns,
I find myself in total agrttment with
you on this subject. When a team stalls
it obviously admita that it is interior.
As it was in this case, USC had
to stall to 1aln a nuke win ·or as
you state, "a hollow victory." Having
met h1r. Boyd, I had a great deal
of admiration for him as a coach.
I have since lost muctl or my ad-
miration and mped for him u a basket-
ball mentor. }hT\'lng played 3 yean of
vltllly baskelball al Eslancia High
School, I know what it ts to win and
lose.
I have Jost to teams who were inferior
to mine and beat teams who were
superior to mine and I can aay that
for a team to win the way USC did
is not nearly as satisfying to a player
as it ?.'Ould ha ve been to beat UCLA
ltraight oul.
I think the st.all hurts basketball
everytime it is used. I think the 30·
second clock would be the greatest thine
for high school basketball since the use
of referees.
This \l'ould eliminate such bush tactics
as those used by Mr. Boyd and his
USC team.
The loss obviously didn't hurt UCLA
Jn their ranki ngs. The basketball ea:pert.s
realized that UCLA wu by tar the
superior team and \\'as most c:ertalnly
defeated by a once in a mllllon joke.
I certainly hope teams of. the future
will take a more mature atutudt tioward!
basketball and play it the way 1t should
be played.
Maybe that "ill make buketball pro-
gress instead of digress.
M1XE LillUE
Ch erkhag Area Tlllettt
Cbect1n1 out 1-0me el ... ,._r
Orange Ce11t area preps wllt .. 19
sports action W1 spring: '
Jon 1'11eek of Fountain VaDe7 Ull TOm
Read of Costa Mesa are -.tiedn&
I.I ttanl1 aH track ftr Wut.r C.Ueie.
~.Mjants Suoday. ~"!•;,:For the Angell. Bill Vou of New~rt ·s;cb had two doub&es and Tom SaU'iano !, .ty;o •i.nclet and drove In UM: only
Meanwhile, Giants manager Clyde King
became more cooCerned about tht quiet
bat of sluuer Jim Ray Hart.
Hart's concerned, too. Warriors Next for Lake rs
RHd, a lriple jamp tpeclllllll, <tm·
pleted basketball fw &lie heta wtUL
an average et 1.1 pobita: per pme ftl'
a team 111.at wu tu and wnt It
IM NAIA louney lie!,.. falllq. Mlle
Read c.r!1leolH Wt U flolnb per dh.
lie pnpped at N...,.,.. Huber.
Al Perlee of BUtta(len Berl 11 -ti UM: tlfeas1ve guard tudld11e1 rw
Slufori Unlvenlty football 11111 1prioi.
He wtlghl U3 and 1tudt M . •
c ,. omi.a run. ' ..£aufornla'1 plt.cbl.na: suddenly went
t m.4QW' in tbe Sunday 1ame and only 1 ·lcnuc:kJebl.ll artil t Hoyt Wilhelm. the
.. : .. f~ AneeJ hurler, etcaped without gi\•·
,,~.,up a nm. ,
n. -m»e Olanta drove Anpla 51.arter ~ Brune< Iran the mound arter ' • .' w; Tminp u lhe vetuan fa,·e up ~· ~ bll.I and WU charCtd wltb hve
t 'runa. Clyde Wrtlhl allowed four run.,
.. ,.Jwo of them earned, and Mlnnll Rojas
rr-·WM toucbed for the f1naJ nm. M;, ~oYlonl Perry ltl the Anetll down
1: Willi anlr -run u be ~ the
fl rll Hffn lnntnc1 and ICIUered teVtn
hit>. The Ollnll aot IMlr hllUos power
from J1ck Klatt and H1I Lanier •lth
He went into the game hitting .121
on four hits in n at bata, and added
lwo singles and lwo walks against !he
Angels.
"I'm jammioi myself," said Hart,
"holding my hands in too close to my
body. Can't get the bat around on the
inside pitches and can't ruch across
the plate foe the oulslde jobs.
"Me and the skipper are going to
have a few rounds to1ether In balling
practloe back ln Pboeni1. And torother
we'll get me stralshtened aut." .
"Timtng," aald Coach Wis Westrum.
"That's alt Jt 11, and Jtmmy'll get It
back by optnln( day." '
I.as\ ~cason Hart hil .153 with l.1
homl!rs 1.nd 71 rurui b1tled In.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In their tirst
full season 1t the Forum , the LOi Angeles
Lakers won 71 percenl o( their home
gRmH and e5lablished a seuon record
for most victories. They're hopin1 that
trend will continue Wednesday.
to.~ Angeles plays San t'ranclmfs
Warriors at the Forum next Wednesday
in l h e first or . a best thn!Hf-five
Western Dl\'ision series. The wlnntr of
that series meets the \\'inner of the
San Diego-Atlanta series.
The Lalcers closed out their 1!16M9
N3Uonal Basketball Associ:itlon seeson
Sund:iy night "'ilh a 128·1 I I victory over
the New York Knicks. It was triumph
No. 55 for the season and &ave Los
Angeles a 32·9 record al home.
"Wt'Y! never be!n more ready than
we are right now," said a jubilant Coach
Bill \'an Breda Kolff. "We're running
better, defenslnt: better and playing bet-
ter. But wt .1till throw the ball away
too much."
.. The key \o how we'll pl~ In the
pl1yoff1 ls EJcln Baylor. A res led Baylor
Is cur moll lhlportant asset. JSTy West
Is back Jn shape and I know Wilt
Cha mberlain wlll have a good playoff.
we ~an 1'.'ln It alt"
Van Bred11 Kolff said rookie Bll1 H~wiU
of Southern California and former UCLA
star Keith Erickaon were the most im-
proved players this aeason and 1aid
he expected sreat thlng1 from them
In the p1'Jofl~
NIW TOlll LOS AJ11•1L•• . ...... ,-
··~!! t t.t • OW11'1'111tt111n11 J., n l tNlly I U 21 C-1$ 11 1-4 M
Dtl_,,... I U " Irle*-It t-1 ft F••rler t W ,. Hewitt J M '
ll:t'ld 11 M X W.1 U 1·11 M e.wrne~ 1 M t <"....,., t tt ' Het•.rt I H t IEtlfl t ).J r
Mty IMtH1W11.llll l Mt RIMI•~ l M t(.1My t 0.1 4
Tt111t t7 11-ft 111 T1lt lt U 'O·H UI
MIW y.,ii ft lf h t> -111 lbl ... ,,.,,. • " • 11 -,,.
F.ulld llUI -H-.
1'tlt l l'Wll -N1w Ytrt )t, L" A"'t!n It.
"'"-""'"" -1'.l lCI.
Stuford's ttnB..11 team wtll • •
ftlldctably Wtakued •T tlte (rldudtl
Iola of Jamie Cami!, 1 .,.nnq ""ilkl
pla,yer wtie llam4 al Nt..,... HuW.
Sllort Gl9M4!u
Newly hired Costa Men fOOlbal) coach
MIX Miller Illa picked hll •ualtr
wl1tant1. lfldudtd wtll be Don Bums,
DouR Brown and John Sweazy.
'nit lrvlnt: League wlQ drep )l)'ftf.
Bee al'MI Cee. ftotHD Ja t• la '''°' er frtsl11nu, 1oplttmw. aal Yanity
•qvads.
----------~~,__,........_ ____ -:-________ .__
Mond&J, Ml/tit 24, 1169 •mY Piiar H
~arina Star DoJDinates Area Swi'ln1ners
B7 EARL GUSTllEY
OI .. Olltr f'li.t lllft
level.
But hit eo&ch, Larry Ana:elel, says
lbe swlD\ world ha.sn't xen anylJl.lng
yet.
hove made b\111 ll) All·Amerlcan wl
year,
But u good as LlppoJ b, the st<adlly AA a S.. laal ye11, Lippoldt llnlJhod
dropping awtm llmea In the en• i,neu third in the Jll0.711d bacbtrvte.
the Vltlng ,.nution will experience ,no Lu1ely because of Lippoldt, Marina It ls 1 matt.et ot lnore Ulan pau1ng
Jnttre~t when an athlete dominates bis
1port to the e.s:tent that Don Lippoldt
of Marina Hlih Scllool does.
Comparing lJppoldt to the rest of
the Orange Coast area'~ swimmers is
a pretty one-sided matcbup. Of eight
individual varsity eventl, Lippoldt has
the best time so far this season in
five of them.
"Wben Don gets into colle1e and i$
coo.fronted with tougher competition, he'1·
really going to be great," be aays.
Uppoldt, who l! aa lood at water
polo u he b · 11 swlmiDJn& Is not a
product of the twnln1 youlh group swim
J>l'OST&m!.
"Don d.ktn'\ t.a.ke awlmmlna ·aerloyaly
ur4ll he lo! lo Marina," his eooeb point&
cal!o6-walk to a ClF champloo.ship. ha• it.a fineet twlmminc team ever. Two ,
'"!be times In the CIF .,. much WW ' -ko ogo, \be Vttes handed Anaheim
now than they were tut year," Aqelel U.. first Sunset ~a&ue swimmingJWtat
11We swlm t ,000 to 1,000 yardlJ a day
ln our afternoon workout and Don ls
says.. ~ ln three yeat11 tMS. /' •
out. · always the first one to flnish." • r <!But w~ could see rJebt. IWJY ~t
"Don miabt have trouble winninc a Llppoldt won two events and handled
Clf· championship in lbe dtetance ,eve.nu 1 leg o~ a winnJn& relay te401 in that
The 6-1, 16()..pound aqua standout
recorded his best pttfonnance yet
Wednesday against Sant.a Ana Valley.
He turned the 400 free in 3:59.%, S.J
seconds faster than a time that would
he had sml po<enlJat. He· had a good
, strvk• and an ability ·lo 11<1 hlmaell
In rood pl\yslcal condition. When he
WU t Cff U I aophomOrt, be WU
swimming In bur varaity· meets.••
because of Gary Hall ol Rane.ho one.
Alamitos." Anielel il:ll!n>lni Marina into 1 c0unty
1 llallj\'on a sliver medal at the Ma1co •wlm J'!)Wer.,.. Bi; ~ a freshman, Clay In four swimming seasons a( Marina,
Lippoldt bas accumulated 13 of 29 scboool
records on the varsity, Bee and Cee
·" •
CHECKING STOPWATCH·-Marina High· swim flash Don Lip-
poldt checks out one of ))is nifty clockings with coach Larry
Angelel. Lippoldt is the top all·round prep swimmer in the
Orange Coast area.
Sports in Brief
10-mile Run to Bernick;
IOC Hits South Africa
James Bernick, rUMing unattached,
won the open division of the Newport
Beach JO-mile handicap run Sunday
morning in 53:02.
Blll Anderson of the Santa Barbara
Athletic Club was second in 54:33.
In the handicap di vision of the race,
John Halterlein oI the Senior Track Club
posted the top time of 46.22. Robert
Herman of the Seniors TC won the 40
and over category ln 48: 15 while Charlie
Suthhard posted the best Ume for runners
:;o and over in 49:26. ... ... ...
LAUSANNE. Switurland -T he
International Olympic Commit.tee rebuk·
ed the Soulh African Olympic CommiUee
Sunday for usln1 the Olympic five-ring
1ymbol at tlle alJ..•hite South African
Games:
In a telegram to the South African
group, <the commltttt'1 e1ecutivt board
ctnsund the South Africans for "misuse
of tbtse symbols with gamts contrary
to Olympic principles a.ad ideals."
The board took no decision on the
controversial Issue of amateurltm in
1kilng at its two day meeUnc h e r e
ud referftd a report on tbe question
to the fortbcomi.nc IOC mettint in
War1a1'. ... ... ...
LOS ANGELES -The 14' Angeles
Stars' season-ending rally get.1 it! stiffest
Rustlers List
'69 Grid Foes
Golden West College's 1969 football
schedule, which feature.s four non-con-
fennce and five conference games, has
been conllrmed by the new Southern
California Conference.
The Rustlers will open their sea'Kln
Sept. 20 against rival Orange Coast and
then play three more practice games
against Mt. San Antonio, Santa Barbara
and Sant.a Ana.
Although lhe newly formed Southern
Calliornia Conference Is a seven.team
unit. the Rustlers will onJy play five
circuit teams -East Los Angeles. Rio
Hondo, Loll Angeles Harbor. Los Aneeles
City and Cypress.
Southwestern, the 1evenlh conference
member, won 't field 1 footbal l team
unlit al fell!I tl70.
The Rustler sch<dule :
Sepl 20·1t Orange Coasl
Sept 27 al Ml SAC
OcL 4 al Santi Ana
Oct. 11 1t Santa Barbara
Oct. 25 •t E-..,t Los Angelell
Q<t 31 Rio Hondo
Nov. 7 Loi Angle1 llarbor
Nov. 14 at Los Aneeles City
Nov. 22 Cypreu
test Tuesday night when the Eastern
DiviSion leaders, the Indiana Pacers.
meet the West team in the first of
two American Basketball Association
clashes.
The Stars scored their sixth victory
in seven games Saturday with a 135-123
y:in over the Miami Floridians. .........
VERO BEACH1 Fla. -The Les
Angeles Dodgers today took their 01.ly
respUe from exhibition 1euon play after
dropping a H decision Sunday al
Clearwater to the Philadelphia Pk!We1.
The Phillies capitalized on the bitti111
of veteran Deron Johnson wbo hU two
home runs and a double to drive in
four runs that were more thu enoucb
for lhe victory.
The defeat was the elgb~ of the
spring for the Dodgers against 1even
victories. .........
OAKLAND -The Los Angeles Kings,
bounced out of contention Sunday night
£or second place in Ure National Hockey
League's West Division , now must battle
for a third place finish, but you couldn't
blame them for not trying too hard.
The Kings were dumped by second--
place Oakland H . .........
LOS ANGELES -Bootle fullboct Lar-
ry Smit.II ru. the ~yard duti In •
deadbeat wit.II •orkl cbmpl• 1prt•ter
Tommie Smit.II in 4.7 1econd1.
A few 1toan lakr, I.any was bobbled
with a brokea foot.
Re wu tajarec1 wbea u ai.rUDer
boardin1 ramp collapsed Saturday al&ht
al lntematlonal Airport.
Af.ttr 1pendln1 &be algbt at a bos pltal,
he Oew back home to FlorldL Doc&or1
said It wm be four or five •eekl before
the cut come• off bll foot.
SmUb, a former UnJvually of Fklrida
standout, wu tbe No. 1 draft cbolct
nf the Los Angeles Rams of Ute National
Football League. ... ... ...
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Not content
with the exercise he gets on the tennil
tour, Cliff Richey has added three-miles
of jogging to his daily 1ehedule. And,
it's been paying o(f.
Richey, 22, has won rive of the last
eight outdoor circuit tournaments he
competed in, Ule lat.est coming Sunday
at the Thunderbird Invitational.
R.ichey1·who says he "has been running
• lot lately," beat Spain's M1nuel San-
tana, M, H. for tht men's singles ch1m·
piOfllhip.
In other finab competition, Richey's
sister Nancy brttzed Into the women's
singles championship, unseating defen-
ding champk>n Patti H<>ian of UCI. S-t ,
6--0.
Miss Hogan and Peggy Pifichel won
the woman's dOubles crown. beating
F..ame Emanutl of South Afrlc• and
C.Ci Martine> H , 6-!, 6'1
City, Olympics In the <Ol).meter lndlvldu&! Jilv..,., who, be predlcjs, will eventually
medley event. brtat lll~lJppoldt's records .
,,
•
By EARL GUSTKEY Burke (6-S~) of Fresno City College (6-2). Palos Verdei;' Tom Rah.Son (6-5),
Of~ 0111,. 1'1111 II•" d D p th ,_, an ave ra er (6·9) of \.1\,Qden West." Long Beach Poly and John Woodard
Tile search for basketball talent al
UCI continues, despite the possibility
head coach Dick Davis may leave soon
to assume the coaching vacancy at San
Diego State.
With a surplus of talented guards
returning next season, UCI is zeroing
in oo front line players, the most notable
Of whom is John Borchert, a &-o ~
forward from Long Beach City College.
"Borchert is one of three junior college
players we would like to ha ve here
ne.xt season," says UCI assistant Tim
Tilt.
There are three Or'ange County high (6-3), Mt. Miguel, San Diego.
school stars who are also getting a Lawry received second team all-city
heavy rush from Davis and Tifi. UCI recognition for Bell thl'i season. Smith,
is jusl one school of about 50 after the 5-11 guard from Bishop, averaged
Troy's 6-10 Scott Magnuson. 26 point.a per game.
?\lagnoli:n's Dave Murray (6-6) is a Two prep standouts who have applied
forward Irvine would like to wrap in for admission to UCI and who are believ-
Anteater togs, as well as Jeff Powers ed to be leaning in the direct.ion of
(S.3) of Westminster. Irvine are Scott Wright (6-5), SOuth
<>4t~f-the area players UCI is pursuing Hills, and Bob Bahme (W Y..), Miranda
are are Garrick Barr (6-3), Aviation ; County.
Bob Black (6-6 Ya), Taft High, Los Two memben of Compton's fabulous
Angeles; Tom Kennedy (6-6), Pal0& CIF champions are .OO being recruited
•·we'd like to have Borchert, Verdes; Paul Lawryk (S.3), Bell; Rod by UCI: Ron ruchardson (6-1) and Louis
Yale Smith (ft.LI), Bishop ; Andy Woodcock Nelson (8-2).
Tempi~. '.fops
Boston, 89-7 6,
For NIT Title
NE)V. YORK (AP) -Neal Walk. Sim· mi~ _J{jll, Bobby Smith, ButCh Beard.
Those . Jere the CO~eJe basketball stars
who were to light 'up •the 19'9 National
Invitation Tournament at M a d i s o n
Square Garden.
But by last Saturday's final. ·all tbe
gliUer belonged to a hockey buff who
o~y took up basketball after he outgrew
his skates. and a former business school
student who n!VeT played basketball in
high school.
Terry Driscoll of Boston Coll ege and
John Baum oI Temple were the pair
who took their teams t.o the final . Baum
and the Owls completed. their surprising
surge to the top by beating the Eagles,
89-76, for their first NIT title s i n c e
J938, the year of the first NIT.
Driscoll, a 6-foot-7 senior pivot man
who ~·atched plenty or hockey games
in Boston but never a college basketball
game until he was a senior in high
school, came into the tournament with
little national recognition.
"I didn't start playing basketball until
my sophomore year in high school,"
he said. "I never anticipated anything
like this. It was beyondl any of my
dreams.
"But the loss takes so much away
from my MVP honors. We wanted so
much to win for the coach (Bob Cousy)."
Kansas, Rvun •
Invade UCLA
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -J im Ryun
and the University of Kansas track team
clash in an intersectional dual meet
Saturday with UCLA at the Bruins' track
stadium in the highlight meet of the
week.
At the 1ame time the powerful
·university of Southern CaUiornia take!I
on Occidental College at the Coliseum
in their traditional dual meet.
Southern California dominated last
Saturday's 31st annual Santa Barbara
Easter Relays by capturing 10 of IS
.events in the university division, in-
cluding victories in four relay events.
The Trojans scored It points while
ruMerup CalUornla had 31 and Stanford
scored ~. Arizona was fourth with 24
and UCLA, which entered only eight
men, had 19.
OulslaOOingperformanceswereWmed.
In by Dennis Savage 0£ Westmont in
the college division who captured the
open mile in 4:06.S and anchortd th e
.,vlnning two-mile relay team. He was
named athlete of the meet.
In the univer!lity division. UCLA's
Mark Ostoich hurled the shot 61·9%
t.o hand teammate Steve Marcus his
first Intercollegiate l.oss since 1967.
EARNS HONOR -Like a fine wine, Newport Beach's John Vallely
improved with age and capped his first season at UCLA by being
named to the NCAA all·tournament team. Va1Je1y scored 29 and 15
points in hi s last two games to play a key role in Bruins' drive to a
third straight national title.
400-Mile Off -road Race
Gets Under Way Today
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A new
madness has been introduced to Las
Vegas: 400-mtle off.road auto races.
Each year thousands come to La§
Yega!I to see how many shows they
can see without sleeping or how long
they can stay without losing their money .
The Mint 400 race gives the more
rugged visitors a chance to sec how
many bones they can break or kidneys
they can bruise.
The second annual 400-miler over
desert and mountains began today at
noon and should wind up sometime the
following afternoon . ,
This motor sports phenomenon receiv-
ed its biggest push three ~ears ago
when the first Mexican 1000 was run
down the rugged Baja Ca lifornia
Peninsula.
It rumbled into Southern Nevii.da for ' the first time last spring with the initia1
400 Desert Rally.
In eight 50-mile laps near Las Vegas
this year, motorcycles will lead the way.
They are normally the first to cross
the finish line.
Then there are utility vehicles 1ike
lhe Broncos and Jeeps. pickup trucks
and various shapes and sizes of dune
buggies. Last are the plain passenger
cars.
Apparently all of ltte mangled, dust
covered and weather-beaten hulks of off-
road machinery have been cleared off
the course of last year's rally.
Cox Named Athlete of Meet
VICTORVILLE -Paul Cox, Sad·
dlebact College's versa.we track 1ta.r,
was choeen tit.kl event athlett ol the
mttt in Saturday'• Deaert Conference
relaya held al Vipor Valley Collqe.
The 170-pound Cox competed in four
field evtnts, ran a leg on the Gauchol'
440 relay team and wound up the al-
temoon by setting a ptlr of school
rtcords.
Cot won Lhe dlscUll with a college
Tecord tou of 138-4\'.c and .was second
ln the javelin wJth a throw of 169 feet,
also aood for another Saddleback mark.
--'
The Gaucho star &190 finished thlrt1 in
the triple jump with a leap of 41-5
and fifth in tbc long jump with an
effort Utat meuui:ed 20-S.
In the uoofficial team standings, Sad-
dleback. compeUng in its fint traci
season, finished fifth in the eighl·team
field with 13 points:. Victor Valley won
the meet with 2' points, barely edgin1
Antelope Valley which t.allied 27.
Ed Jarrell also had a good afternoon
for Saddleback, placing tilth in lbe long
jump (20-6), fifth in the triple jump
(39-8) and running legs on four Gaucho
relay tenms.
Saddleback'1 best relay showing came
in the sprint medley wbere the team
o( Rich Moecowib, Jbn Yunt, Jarrell
and John Dauss placed second In S:U.O.
OaU&!I, who clocked 2:01.0 in his ao
leg or lhe sprint r811y w1s runnerup
ill the balloting for lr1ek athlete of
the meet.
In other relay race., the Gauchos
wt"re fourth ln the 440 (41.1), thlrd
in the dllt.anee medle)1 (1l:S4.0), fllth
In tilt 880 and fourth tn the mile (l:D .O). •
Sa.ddleback'I ltack team LI Idle ntxt
week. but re turns to action April 3
In the Southern California relays.
I
•
An added junior college proapect b
6-5 Howard Nicholson of Pasadena City
College. •
UCI will probably have t e \'en
talented guards competing for spots·itm.
season. The vanity returnees wnr be
Mike Barnes, Steve ·Sabina and Keith
Bean. Up from lhe frosh are Gary
Fox and Larry Wassennan. ~
And former all.CIF star MJke Kendall
Crom Monrovia has told Davis 1.e •u.
to transfer to UCI from the UnlYenlty
or Hawaii. 1
Tbe 1919-70 front line returnees •will
be Jeff Cunningham, John Farwell, John
Glavinovich and Gene Zeeb. Two OIJtlt.m.
ding freshman i;rospects are Bill Geirge
and Steve White. ..
Vallely, Lew
Make NCAA
•
All-tournament
LOUJSVIIJ.E -For John Vallely.
another bright year of UCLA baatelball
~ on the horizon a I t e r his sparklln1
finish In the Bruin>' 1969 NCAA cblm•
plonship drive which was culminated
Saturday when the Uclans amothered
Purdue, 92·72, in the linale at Freedom
H.all, here. •
Vallely, former Orange Coast College
and Corona del Mar" High School Whiz
made the all-tournament five, along wit~
Wlllle McCarter of Drake, Rick Mount
from Purdue, Charlie Scott ot North
Carolina and Lew Alcindor (mos-t
valuable) from the champion Bruin.t.
It was the second straight wee\ in
which Vallely had made a select 'Unit.
He was all-tourney in the NCAA
regionals. In the championship claulc
be scored 29 points In the Bruins:' 85-12
chiller over Drake in the semi!I.
And he came back for 15 more against
Purdue. Drake flntshed third at Loulsvllle
by cremating overrated North Carolina 104-84. ,
While Vallely hall another year to
look forward to with the Bruins, Alclndor
now looks to the pros. _
Alcindor's reign produced 88 victories
in 90 gamts for the Bruins, and. he
was complete dictator. He forcect op.
posing teams into dillerent tactics .1han
they would normally employ and alfnoat
always controlled the game.
But, that's all over now. Alcindor'a
nexl big challenge will come from pro-
fessiooa1 basketball, and It will be in-
teresting to see how he met ts it. '·
"I saw Bill Russell dominate cobq:e
basketball for three 1traight years;·~so
I had no doubt It could be done" said
coach John Wooden Saturday after hl111
team had defeated Purdue, f2.7Z, for
its fifth NCAA crown in six years. ~·
"I think Lewis will be like the player
he was in college in the pros, atlhough
it's very dlfficult to dominate the ~pro
game. "I don't think he's reached·.hl•
physical peak yet," said the Bruins~
coach.
Coach George King of Purdue; a
former pro player, concurred 1ff'it.h
Wooden that Alcindor should man a
fine professional player.
"There Is no question that ~I"
will be a fine pro," said Kini, after
big Lew had personally destroyed the
Boilermakers with 37 points and at re-
bounds ht bis collf«iate finale. .. l'v•
never seen a big f'lY witb that much
agllity and mobility."
•
Czech Olympict
Gold Medalist
At Long Beach:
LONG BEACH -Otymplc Garn ..
women's platform dlfinl 1old medal _,,tn.
ner Milena Duchtova of Clecboalotakl•
has accepted an invil•tJon to COJ1'\pde
against the United Stattl' flnut dJYtrW
In the Natlooal AAU Sborl Coone Swim-
.Ung and Diving Cwnplooablps April
.. ti at Belmont PW. Olympic Poot.· ,,,. c..chotlovUi .. 1111, to 116 .....
companied by her coach, Dr, Morla
Cermatova of Prague, will compete tn
UJtte.meler sprtnsboonl dlrilll April I
and In the pl1Uonn event April ' II,
but will nol enter the one-meltt sprlna· bol1d comoetlllon. .,
Tlcll:ets for U\f event are available
al all Compullckel ouilet& In Southent
Callfornla or by wrlUn1 AAU SIVIK
Cl!AMPtONSJllPS, P. 0. Doz !IOI, tons
B•ach, i!OIOl
l
I
I
'
ff llNLY r!LOT
Arizona
Spike1·s
Breeze
at !2~.,~~!..az
If Oran1e Coast Colle1e'1
track and field team manaees
to run into stron,v squads
than Mesa and Glendale com-
munity colleges of Arizona
they'll probably have to be
from a four-year school.
The pair of Ariiona ..oooi.
easily defeated the PlraLts in
a triangular meet Saturday
morning at Orange Coast and
broke sevm meet rtCOrd1
despite a aoggy trtck.
Mesa won the meet with
t:1 points while Gleodale had
73 and Orange CM!t scored
%1.
Mood11, Mm 24, I~' ,--
Even with the rl.i.n;oaked
track which turned the lns.ide
lwo lanes into a gooey meas
and added extra distance to
Top Barbor Area Athletes
any race over a quarte.r of Recipients of special certificates for being chosen
e mile, several Pirates turned Harbor Area athletes of the month 8re (left to right)
in fine efforts. Mike Ogden (Orange Coast), Jerry Rinker (SoCal
Miler Fred Skirdt was College), Bob Austin (Costa Mesa HS), Skip \Vil-
Iiams (Estancia), Lee Haven (Newport Harbor),
Jell Cunningham (UC Irvine). Doug Hilliard (Co-
rona de! Mar).
. in the middle of a fiereely -------------------------------------------
Pro Cage
Standin~s
••• l.ttlln OM .....
WLPcl•a • .. ~ n 11 ,.,J -"lll!Mt...,.11 .U M .4'1' 1\'i> HN Yortc U ft .ut I ...... ., " .• , ....
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HitW York 117, "" P-r1ncllm " ClllCl-tl 114. S.11111 127
MllWI .... uo. Siii 01-1116
Ol'llY t•rr.e. Kl'Mllultd.
ko""'l"• II-lb
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San DllN ¥l. """'°' 11 Pllllllle~llle C!lldnMI! at P'hllldlldllli
Onl'r 11ml!:I ~ultd..
Soccer Roundup
Rangers' Win;
Subs Take Title
Once-beaten Coast Ra~n: out of danrer when lAlf
malntained their gtp on first Werneid put a comer kick
place in Pacific Soccer League into the goal to make it U
OOstilities by taking a 2·1 with 25 mioutes to play. It
triumph over Fullerton Sun-was the .f<utb time this
day afternoon in a rainout see.eon that ht hid bffn able
makeup claab staged i n to hook in ooe of the kicks
Anaheim. for a ICOl'e.
And tn the. prtlim, Ranger But Fullertoo fought bact,
reseves clinched the reserve scoring off a corner kick witb
league champiooship / b Y JS minutes left to slice the
blasting Fullel'too, S-0, to up gap to :z..i. Hoftver. the
their record to lM. Rangers kepi Ille pr<0111n oa
Coach Brian McCaugbey's to maintain ue-advantage.
Rangers had a much rougher Tbil weekmd they play at
go with Fullerton's varsity. UC Riverside with the subs
Only a sparkling performance playing at DOOl1 and the flrlt
by goalie Joe Feola kept team at 2 p.m. 5cu'1n.I for E1mr!•:...,... the R8niers on top I! be sto~ Ranger raerv• a 1 • in 1 t
W L Pd •• ped Cfle shot' after anothtr. tl'..TI-'~ w-••·ve J~•-l'ldll~I '2 ,, .5" -H ad ~ k S'WK:JW'll .... ~ ~ \ll.U-Kentudk'f' 3' :n .w 1v, e m e "'~ ey saves (%), w h 11 e Andre Coultn.
Ml1m1 • M .SM 1\\ in the first hall as uA~ Weyer and ·~·. Mlnnn.ott :lol )p M6 W. lMllloll IWUll:'O
New York 11 n .m u McCaugbey'rgroup waa nurt-Moran"""' ooe each.
01lcl1nd O.iiv•r
Wt1tw11 DI~~ ,7'1 -Ulg I ]..(t Jead. Tb! only goal1----·--------
N-Orle1n1
Oell11
LOI Ant•lff
Ho111IDn
"42 31 .m 13 of the half cMnt after .4Q ~1 32 .MZ 1' i1 -» .!!, nv. minutes of beWe when Glen
32 lt .. oi ii James took a free tick from 21 51 .2H 11
s1111r11111'1 •-lh 20 yards out and Colin West ll:entuckv 11J, NIJ\lll York 107
N.W Orle1n1 11,f, MlnMtOl9 11~ headed tf)e baQ into the Det.
Ll!ll Angeles 131, Mllml 121 w~ W81 •~-to m1 .. Whal <UDpetitive race and had to
.settle for a ihird-plact finish
·tn 4:22.0 b&s all-time best. In
the race, be managed to beat
.Mesa's Bob Bogliooe, tbt
;ctelendlng national cbampl ..
who WOWld up fourth.
PRE.SCHOOL
SW I MF EST
W C B I' 0 1kl1nd U7, HOl.ltlon llS ~ .--e OVer Oa lnQ o.,., m. """'" McCauibey deterlbed as two
Olympic Pool for Tars ?1 __ ~B~es~t_i~n~W.!!!e~s~t __ _J£°~,~~~r~~k;,~:, ...... ~··'f;;..~'~~y~[~··:lr-____ -~~~~~!goolo~.-~~..!:'°~be~~====::::~
· Roger Palmer of Glendale
won the race in the meet
record time of 4: 11.5, edging
teammate Rick 11-fonciviaz who
ran 4:11.1.
Moociviu came back ln the
2-mile to nip Palmer.
In the 880 Terry Schmitz
turned in his top effort of
!he season, l : 51.%.. fini!hing
rourth ln a l :SS.3 two-lapper.
The Newport Beocb Tei>
nis Club's Pre-school Invita-
tional swim meet r 0 r
youngsters five years old
and under i! scheduled for
Mar . 30.
The meet will feeture 39
events in the boys and girls
dlvisions with entrants eligi-
ble to enter as many events
The possibility of building
an Olympic-sized swimming
pool at Newport Harbor High
School is being tentatively ex-
plored b y Newport-Mesa
School District officials.
Talk is ri a 50-meter pool.
more than twice as long as
the 25-yard pool now at
Harbor High. If built, the pool
would be for district-wide use
to spend $24,000 to replace
the fast deteriorating filter
system for the two Harbor
High pools.
District Supt. William CUn-
rllngham said the new filter
ma.chlnery could be moved to
another pool if one is built.
~. u11 GlllMl1 .. 111 oc:c nu as they ""••. ._ ,......,_,_ G...._le l. ,_,,... Time : "'!'"'
He said, "There has been
some interest expressed in the
community for an Olympic-
slzed swimming pool. There
has been a tremendous growth
in water sports in the area."
'Board members, seeming
inter¢ed in the propruia l,
asked him to investigate the
possibility of bull$1lng an
Olympic-sized pool.
a:;,_,. a.rtr.r tGJ '· 11t1t11ttti !Ml Event! start at 2 p.m.
). Tti.K CG) '· EM:l;e IOCC) OllMnce: after a 1:30 p.m. wann..up. ~1. ~ !Ml 1. 111 JorMn Interested parties should
cocci •nd K1i.er 1a1 '· Mni.r 1occ1. contact i -De 11 o ta , Hlfthl: ~l\.\. .._.T
M1i-1. fl'1tmer (GI 2. M..:l~llr Aquatic Director at the
1G1 1 a1'* 1occ1 '· .._.,_ cM1. Newport Beach Tennis Club. TlrrM: •:11.J. __ __:. ____________ _;
U--1. Jld!son CM) 2. llftllll tM) 3. I'
V1nlev !Ml '· ICtlHI' (GJ. Dl1t1nc.:
!1·11"'.
J1.,.11n-1. eent'-" (GI 1. ,.r1nld!n
fMI J. fl'rMt< IMJ '· 91rloe!' IGJ. Dls .. iw;e: l/ll>L
1211 HH-1. G ... 111 CM) 1. C•llu1e ff) 1 . .,......,.., COCCI .a. C.,...bell
iGJ. Tl""': 1•.1.
..._,_ R-11 IMJ 1, W, L ... 11 IGl
1. ~-!Ml 4. A. Ltwlt !GI. T'-: ... .2.
1111-1. ""*9n (G) J. Hall•fl IMI
I. Sftl!llMY (0CC) t . K•HV iOC:CJ.
TllM: t.I.
DIKvl-1 .... blolllr. CMI J. tl'fle
Ioctl 1. TMi. (G) A. JfMIOll IOCCI
Dllt1iw;e: 1Jl-I.
*-1. 9lldl !GI) "1.. '"l'lde!'fllnl CGl >. Mdl11rMT CMI ' lctlmltl
cocci. Timi: 1:».J •
.... l'MH'dlK-1. O•tlllll fMl 1. ll:l'll'r
tMI I. I'-COCCI '5twt IOCC).
Time: 5:1.7.
220-1. HaWlllll CG) I. Del$ !Ml l.
Slol~ (OCCJ '· Hale IM). Timi; "·'· T J-1. J.cluon (G) t. V1nlt\I CM) l.
5--Y {Ml 4. KeL,er iG). Olltttw:t:
•1·1.
J.ml-1. MOtldWltl !Gl l. P1lrn1r
(GJ 1. EtntMl"liflil (GI 4. IC.II-CM).
Tlm1: t:lt.1. l"Y-1. C,.,... tM) J. Mccolm CMI
l. l'r1ler !Ml 4. 119 l l1nd (0CC) t nll
I'~ !GI. H~!: IJ.Hi,. Mli. ..i.y -l. Mtw 2. Gllndele.
Time: J :U.6.
Pro Hockey
Standings
ttel\eAll \.NI.,.
••"' 01.W...
"'-!rte-I _..., W \. T P b. •"IA
•J u 11 101 '" 111 H 17 U ,, ?ti 110
:lt1$1Mtl61H
J:ll~1J tl2'2t20l
11 " 11 71 ?Jl '°' u:a1n24.ln1i
-y"' T .....
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WM! Dlwl ... R
$! Louil JS H U M lff ID
01kl1ncr ?I lJ 11 67 2CW 1U
P'llllldf,....,\1 If ,.. 10 • , .. lit
LOI Antti.o l~ 3' t JI llJ ?4t
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Plfbbu"ll 11 '5 10 U 11'.I Hl
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ll!llten J, ClllcellO J TorOo\lo ], Detroit I
PlltlbY ... h 2, JI. lol/11 !
O.kl1nd '· L11a A11111•i.1 o Plllledelltl'lll J, Mlnn1i.o!1 I
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OniY 11rnu KMdulM.
T•r•t ·-Na tllMI tdtetlui.11.
~
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for ~pecial
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DISCOUNTS on
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lob Paley
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INSURANCE
• •
474 E. 17111 St.
COSTA MESA
642-6500
l\.nne.,1 AUT8CENTER
•
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I
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"L....---..i '
Mondi)', Mlldl 24, 1'169
LOVE STQA'Y -Kalhv Carver flips over rock-and-
roll :tinger, Eddi~odges, above. and has a date
with him. He taltes here lo a party and sings to
her alone and tben goes a\vay. The episode of ·
"Famil~ Affair" is titled "The Flip Side" and may ·
be viewed tonight on Channel 2 at 9:30. ·
TELEVISION VIEWS
Vast Power
Outage Seen
By CYNTHIA LOWRY ,.,
NEW YORK (AP) -The possibiilty o! ano!heo
vast power blackout like the one that darkened the
Northeast in 1965 was raised SWlday night by the
National Educational Network's "PBL." ,
The ..hour-long segmer.t o( the pro,gram moved
inlo a number of areas involving electrification,,,
but focused primarily on facets o{ the continuing..·
controversy bety,•ecn public and private power
advocates.
PERHAPS PARTISANS on either s ide n1ay
have found the program more controversial than the.
average viewer. It seemed that i! the program had
an editorial viewpoint, it was the position that both
public and private electricity suppliers should work
together and that more elaborate safeguards -
power grids -should be built to protect the public.
CBS's "21st Century" early in the evening re-
emphasized by demonstration \l.'hat 1nan the de-
stroyer is doing to his world -polluting the air,
poisoning the water and generally destroying the
baJance of nature.
Neither program had much to say that was
new, but television perhaps also serves by remind-.
ing the pubfic that there is still work to be done i"
vital areas.
NBC ON FRIDAY traced the journey or mail I
thousands of years ago from his arrival in Alask<t
southward 16,000 miles to the southern tip o{ South
America. .
"The First American" took the viewer on 1r ·
camera trip, with archeologists for guides, fro1n
prehistoric shelters built of mammoth bones in ·
Siberia to a dig in Pat.agonia.
From evidence at the various excavations, It is
presumed that the first men in America were
Asians who crossed from Siberia, perhaps as long
as 50,000 years ago, when glaciers had lowered the
sea so that a land bridge was created.
AT THE VARIOUS sites, bones, early stone and:
metal tools were shown. Specialists told of early
man's way of life and showed the evidence of his
migration.
The progra111 \Vas highly educational although
a t times it seemed more like an illustrated lecture
than a television presentation.
NBC's "Hollywood : The Selznick Years'' also
on Friday was a disappointing and unimaginative
hodge podge of film clips !rom old movies intercut .
with bits and pieces from interviews with perform-·
crs and directors who had worked with producer
David 0. Selznick. ••'
THE PROGRAM seemed designed more a s a '
flattering memoir than a rounded portrait of a man
and an er a. It was interesting that one of his film5
that has been reissued received a lot of plugs.
The most interesting portion of the hour showed¥
screen tests of various stars seeking the part ct,
Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone With the \.Vind ," but even ·
these were handled clumsily.
Dennis tlae Menace
' '
' . I
DIMES TO DOLLARS
Spend JI'"''• '"''-'' J,lleti, Cttl' •-41·5611 for "'l will! •~ In.
•1111nti••, 1ur1./;,, DAILY Pt LOT Dill'lt-•·l ln• • ,
' lt4 DAil. Y l'!Laf
a.rn~
COOGans BLUf f
---~~ ............... ENDS TUESDAY
[!) --,...,..._......::n.-,...... I
GREGORY• EVA MARE
PECK SAM' , ... ,,. ......... -.,
Claildren's Theater
'Half Past Late'
Short hut Sweet
By TOM BARLEY
Of 811 D911y Pllet SMlf
1'lt1lf Past Late Jn Won-
derland" iii ooe of those
glossy, fun.filled fanWles that
seem to flow unerringly from
tho.se faithful cateren to
childhood joy -the Chldren'•
'lbealer Guild of Newport
Harbor.
To be surt, tb1s happy hour
of ideal holiday fare Jeans
heavily on the wit and wonder
ol. Lewis CarroU. But, ln sharp
contrast to some of the welrd
erlem.ions of Wonderland that
we've had the misfortune to
witness, this merry musical
romp is impeccably geared
to the inspired ideals of Alice's
immortal creator.
than lhat slncere accolade.
"Jt was marvelow:· but lt
wasn't long enouah" wu \he
unanimous verdict· ot -this
critic's four YOW'll crltks and
~ have to agree. But. Jet
us quickly add, wbal you get
for your mooey lJ top-lliglit
family fare aDd a crisp,
"MAL" f'AS'f UT•
IN WONDll•lANO"'
A ll'lllllcal ltla'f IW Jo.11 St.lllfortll
ll'ld fin Wl~ Mut!QI In'.,....
"""' by MIUl(o Ol.ollll\o ~~I' bl' °™" P ... I, dw~ beKd Oii Ltw11 Drl"l:lll'* "'AIQ 111 w~ ... ,.,...
sented by k H--1 H1rW Olll-
llrw1'1 n..tw GllUll """"°' 2t tfld :II 1t a.11 Me1.I Hitt! ~ trail.Im .n.1er.
Moll'W .. (llnl ..... el'llt), J.....t ......
M<#Mr .. (Mlr, 2t&:llOJ •. Sonwll W•-
Allce ...•.....•........ , ., .Sue ClfT
T~ Whfie R11bltll ..... A.bbit Mellllewa
Cheohlrt C1! .............. Gl11ny P111I
Tiie Wlt!te ~... •• . • .. !"el Rtdloy
T-11-Off ........ ,. . . Mary Mic-,
Costa Mesa High ~l au--
dlence.
Sue Olrr is a sweet and
conv!nclng Alice, .on Inspired
piece cl castJng -tor the not-so-
easy-as-it·loob role of Car-
roll's young heroine. She
broogbl to her Wonderl.;,.i
wanderings a freshness and
naivete that Weft Al ap-'
pealing as lhey were con-
vincing.
Mesa Civic Playhouse
'Remnrkable Pennypacker'
An Appealing Production
By TOM Tl'IVS
Of .. Dtllf ..... ..,.
"Morality," observes "The
Remar>-ta bl e Mr. Pen-
nypacker" -only slightly ruf-
fled when his l!OCOOd family
of nine in ~ city comtS
to light -"is a matter of
gqrapby."
Jt ii aJlo a matter of time,
place aod lndi vidual opinion,
as the Costa Mae Civic
Playbouae points out with
!lralght laced aplomb and a
W<1l peeled eye toward the
gent 1 e , 111-encompassjng
humor that would earn a "G"
rating from Ill)' movie censor,
and maybe even a 0 G whiz."
''TH• Rl!MAIUCAILS M•. Pl!HNYPACKl!R ..
loaded linea of the evenlnf
is Jack MurTay, hilarious as
the grumpy grandfather. Lois
Wilson has some fine moments
as the maiden aunt ("You
can't get married in a week
-It's immcral") w bi I e
Maurice Roland as the elder
cleric ma.ke.s a ~ foil far
Pennypacker's the o g i ca I
thrusts.
The youngsters -as engag.
1HE.STAU<INGMOONll'============~.
It's a worthy, if shorter,
successor to its G u i l d
predttessor, t h e glittering
"Simple Simon" that we recall
with fond affection. And even
Good Housekeeping can't pro-
vide a better seal· of approval
Tweedle Oum ......... Betty Mc:K"vet
The Mitll "'-tttt, ....•. Mlrw Slle!IH1cil
~ ............. , ... J Jmmy M•tY
And a gratefui bow for the
lhoroughly royal progress or
Peg Reday as the White
Queen. A fine piece of casting,
we tboughl, and :ri.1rs. Reday
brought to her role a pomp
and flourish that popped Car-
roll's Queen right out of the
pages of the children's classic.
A comec1V by Ll9m O'Br19!1, til-
rected bl' Pill T1rnbtt11nr. a..1111..t b1
ll11rt>.tr1 G1'11dt, tfdlnlc1I dlr.elor
W1rn!l'I Conck, ..i dnl9n by P1ut
Gf'l(rf, P~ bv 1111 Cotl1 Mtw
Civic Pl1Vhouw P:rkf•I' 1nd Slt11rd1v,
ckl5!119 Marci! 29. 111 I~ Comm1111Jty
C9fller •vdllorlum, we,t .. ,, Orane1
County F•l'lll'Ol/Nls, Cc-11 Mna.
MOST CONVINCING
Pet H•rp
Ing a brood as ever crossed
lhe footlights -are unifonnly
effective, used sparingly but
effectively to maintain the
ensemble effect. They include
Toni Bergman, Andy Vircsik,
Bruce Cooper, Krill Tam-
bellini, Ciody Van Atta, Tim
Flanagan, Brad Ogden and.
from the other side of the
tracks, Bruce Campbell, glv-
ing a fine impression of
youthful befuddlement. ~Ofl'"• M~i9C»r
1HDCUIEM
ROB IAS\'ElilS
ELKE GM« SOMMER LOCKWOOD
LEEJ. JACK •
COBB Pl\LANCE aa •
STARTS WEDNESDAY
4ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
"DAZZLING"
. ""
ROMEO cS"JULIET
llMllWY/l!M111111C
~:'!~!
• •ll:ACM • . ,.T •'-U• _ ~--'
'UllfTINGTON •&ACH • M7-
NOW thru TUESDAY
(!] -............ ..:n.-,._t
GREGORY· EVA MARE
PECK SAINI' .......... ,,,_.,
lHEsrALKlfG MOON
f5.1t Actress NominH
~""
' ~
.o--.... -~ • STAllTS WEllNISDAY
:j,_,_ .""l'"-'t
( --:_; r'l._;·Jo"-1-'
-----Arcs•·=. I
,
•
Who Can Read Just
One 'Peanuts'!
----Naminatod.,,. 7~yAwards
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTOR + BEST ACTRESS
Peter OT oole Katharine Hepburn
P€reR ....... ~~N€
01001.E _.,..+ri HEPBURN
•"""l!S! 1H€ UON INWINT€R -......
.. .wco DDAllT ----MAll.OBDBBSNOW---
?IUETS Al.SO OI WE AT 30VTM£ltll UllfUltlllA 19JSIC CO.
111 sot/flf Mill ST. NG All IM\IAI. TICUT GJllCIU ~
w.12411w -•Wiit ...,.. on;c, LtatWil
OAUIM-~ ltSOltl SEAT mt f*'I
STlllS ot0et11s CfNTURY 21
WEDNESDAY! •• -.. .... -.,,,_ •ox Ol'FICE Ol't:N DAIL T 11 HOON . f l'.M.;;;..;,;;.;;;..,
ef JOO'" ooly ONI MO'lle tltis ,_. ••• I ,.,, ...... bo ON!
of thtm!
STARRING
SA-r
.11.uai 29, 1919
,l:JO I'll-!:JO All ,,.,..., ,,
TBE CIASSICS IV • JGE SOUTH •-SHAl&O
THE wans 1131D ST. IHnHll IANG
WIWE ilm:llBl • 11tE samm mmTIOll • mt , Ai.
ENJOY
UNLIMITED USE OF ALL DISNEYLAND ADVENTURES ANtJ A11RACT10ftS (ace gt lbootinc pUeri~)
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Hond• 50's .t MrQl.Jral Bibi • hider llmbl lnstnmtats •
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C. stmos • HW Clfftar-4ri'NI UnGUllnl klr 10 dl)'I • C!.
PlflOIMll ApplialCa • S111Dt luk:en • Cooct,...,. Rldnt Jacbts
• Ctr11dol '1ft Certlfatn: • Coolin at p.pll • C.pltol Reconts
•A IM Reconb • ka:tl ._..,. TkUt& • Thlti: W•tchn • ~•t
IMt..tlc c..m.a. • Gff't ClfrtJflcata tRlllt PllldletOft • Cift C.r1ff· imn""" Rldlfttkl Oil. r.wm Coat •!Id Ptdflc Th11tt1 P'utS
• Plus bandrlds cf othW ptlztC. Ott ,..,,. ~ • WW
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""* of "''"" llltncOIS ..,, Bon-sooo ard. llcMtlmM~29$7.DOand . ...nablt..,, ... ~.nd. ,..,,._
C<Nm PilaMr .......... Dl•nt P111t
s11e1r 11-1..... . ....... L!nd1 5,,..,,
TMl l"LAYIHO CARDS
Kim C•rr M1rilv11 Macv
Roblfl C..rr Tortev Mor\111
Le.U, Fre-n.n Oetlble P1\lf
M11rylou Gllbtrt K1ren Pwlle St•rr HUODlna CJn11v Shill!> E~I .... K~ Joen Spe.llHlch
Klll'IV LlmbKk Lori Wix
Tile dtfld,_,, •re •II membeo-1 tA CTG's C.-tlw or.,na wn111oPs.
sparkling piece of pantomime
that is utterly true lo the
concepts or Carroll from the
first flurry of the White Rab-
bit to that last joyful finale.
Much of Faye Wilson's
tuneful . mll!l.ic carries definite
echoes of that magnificent
"Simple Simon" score and
Joan Stainforth's clever lyrics
are made to measure for a
cast that didn't, at the Satur-
day perfonnance· we had the
plea~ure to attend, put a C<Jl-
Jective foot wrong.
This well drilled, disciplined
C<lmpany reflects a polish that
can only be attributed to
t h o rough, . pre-performance
pr epa ration . We were
particularly deliibted with a
higly effective flurry o f
footwork provided by 14 young
"playing cards" in a routine
that drew a sustained and
deserved ovation from the
TNE CAST
P11 Penl!l'Mcltff ............ Ron 1"1!1111
Ml PennVlllld<lli' ............. P1l H••P
Wllbuf" FHie-kt .........••.. P1111 Grattl' K-. · ·" ................. YI,.,.. How
A11nl Jane .................. Lois Wllaon
G,...._ Pennyplld!;er .. , .. J1ck Murrav
HorKt 111 .............. 81\/Ct Campbell
Dr. Flr"111d •...••...•.... M1urlu Rol111d
L•urle .................... Tonl ktvm.an
Otvid ..................... Ardy Vll'Qlk
EllWltrd .................. llrvca c-r
E llz11beth ............... Krll T1rnt.l1lnl
Pe1111Y ................... c:no.,. V•n "'"' Ht>nry.,, ................. Tlm FllMHrt
T-.......... ,, ........... Brad Otllen
Qullll111 ..................... a m Slllner
Shtrltf .................... WlrrM C-
PUP1l1 .. Lri911 Altft I. Kay l.....,, B-11
Mary Macy and B e t t y
?ifcKeever did a beautiful job
or duplication In their twin.Ji..ke
maneuverings as T w e e d I e
Dum and Tweedle Dee and
f\.farge Spelleticb was no less
accomplished in her Mad Hat-
ter role -her "Tea for·
Three" musical romp was an absolute delight. It's true family eotertainment
Abbie Matthews devoted her at jts finest.
ever--fiowing energies to the Spaning with lines and
role of the White Rabbit situations that would be looked
( U""" as ",..;.,,,ue" at ·-time perpetual motion this girl) Y"'' ·~ .. (<'
and Ginny Paul was suitably or the play's setting -in
f II d the 1890's -"Penn ...... cker" e ne an mysterious as the . J t"'"
Cheshire Cat. A Guild ~ pl'OVJdes us with a most
ducuOn without little Jirmlly marvelous spoof of our strait
Macy on haDd 1,jUI( wasn't 1, laced years in one of the
Guild show and, sure-enough, "most a~ producti_or:is th~ ~ was flS the Donnouse · r« mounted oo the Civic
in ~~apot. Playhouse stage.
OVflibl.lective bouquet to the · "Remarkable" is an apt
man1 other t a I e n t e d description in m<>re than one
youngsim's in this fine cast. respect, fer in staging the
They ill played lbetr part _.\ft ,.. .. Liam O_'Brie.n ~edy, diree-
a pfodUction that puts ·~· fresh tor Pati Tambelli:n.I has done
coat of paint on tbt p-eatest f~ the Costa M.esa stage what
chlldrt.n's story of ~them all ~a.scope did for the mo-
-Alice'in Wonderland. tion picture theater. With an eoonnous · assist from set
designer Paul Gracey, who
bas fashioned the largest,
most decorative and
altogether luoctional _,
ever seen at the playhome,
she has creai.d deplh and
width of almost cinematic pro-
portions.
Too much mention caMOt
be made of the staging area,
w~~h reproduces the tUgh-
cedinged drawing r o o m •
hallway and frmt poreh of
an Eastern yesteryear, rellec-
Ung painstaking atlenLion to
detail. A double round of ap-
plause is due Gracey, who
also e1ceUentiy interprets the
conservative young minister in
the play.
Against t h i s impressive
backdrop is enacted a warm
comedy of the "old morality"
which, though it tends to take
its illCQllgruit.ies a bit too
seriously, presents a quite en-
joyable picture of one o! our
earlier "free thinkers," a man
born several decades ahead
of bis time.
Ron Filian portrays Mr.
Pennypacker, the head ol two
households who alternates on
an equal time basis between
each. WW!e a shade on the
youthful side for the part,
Filian makes the most or it,
deftly underplaying his
character and skillfully con-
trasting the radicality of his
ideas with a stern, n1>
nonsense demeanor.
Beautifully complementing
his performance with a teary,
traditional rendering of the
emotionally martyred wife is
Pat Harp who, like Filian,
lacks the years but not the
ability for the role. In a part
which could easily lapse into
soap opera, Miss Harp keeps
it well within bounds in a
most convincing portrayal.
The aforementioned Gracey
comes .of£ swimmingly as a
5tuffy suil<r, cootributing a
fine , believable tipsy scene ln
the later moments. A n d
Valeree How is equally im-
pressive in her East Lynnish
man ner as a conservative
rebel to her more progressive
(if that is the word ) father .
Delivering the most laugh-
Crossword P11zzle
~'"63 ~~#
~o-o-
-Also-
George Pepperd
Inger St•vens
Orson Wells
"THE HOUSE OF
CARDS"
Eve Show Starts 7 p.m.
Co11t. s ... """' s s.11. tr.111 2
11 IUPU l"ANAYISIDN illO lltmocoua
NOTE SHOW TIME
Dirty Dozen Once at 7:15
Gr and Prix Once at 9:45
••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• * COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. *
NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760
POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY ==---......
flwioobmREW -· RoMro ~ .9'.JUUET
NooMln IOW'! f>tnr,-..
e STARTS WEDNESDAY e
FDR ONE WEEK ONLY!
Some men are
starved for love ...
ACROSS
' 1 kind of bear
•Towel
Insigni a
10 Soates 14 Practi cal 15 EnthusiaSll'I
16 Go into llquld state 17 Insert:
2 wonts 18 lh!t't Eveqst is
19 "Thanlc you": Informal 20 Had an aversion
toward
21 North
Pacttic
island 23 The other
side
25 AcceSSOIY for Na ncy
Greene
26 Football •'''" 27 L•Bttl
-Pits 29 Foolish
person
31 Snea'/ Jl lslaa off
Tuscany 35 Come Into
si_ght
37 Given to
1 chatttrin g •l Ettol
4Z Threw down
tht gauntlet
44 Carried on
the person
I > '
•
"
"
'
4S Guatdlan--'7 lnfor11atlon
48 Lrgal matter
.C9 kind or Ytssel:
lnforn1al
51 Kill In
crrtlin ••>-53 Sort or: Suffix 54 Man's nid:naine '!i1 Ory .
59 Lowest 111
position
61 Put out
of office
64 Spinelikt
proce ss 67 W. African monkey
U Spiritual~
lst's word
69 Kind of
race hors• 70 or the
samr fam11y
71 Zig°' zag
7Z Rub out
73 Exigency
74 Bring
dlfleren\
in ldeeUt, 75 kind of island
OOH
l Door slsn 2 Grer\
Barritt
Island 3 Strret cleaner's pet hate
4 Strange
5 Tore 1way
6 Onerous
burden:
2 words
7 Femlnln r
""'' I Monsoon
f!1tures ! Hors
d'oeuvres 10 Ale utlan
Island
11 Rmovr
stubble lZ Platt of
pt'ttious
JRtUI 13 Gnissy
surf ate
22 Suavr 24 ,,, ...
27 N. Honduras .... 28 ..... s nllDt
JO Five book•
of lfoses
32S,uawt 34 P ural
noun s11ffix
l2
3/24/69
36 Certain
househol d utensils
38 Kind of
parfy
39 Head of a
republit:
Abbr. 40 Slan11r affirmative
-43 Europra1t -'6 Lecheiy
50 Act
52 E1prrssed
surprl se
54 An Italian
55 Elltit
.56 Contenls
of maqic
bottle
58 Rapacious
fiO Kind of tire
t.Z Witw.tl!t's.-
rand
63 llagnelile a.nd bauiritt 65 Bird-buill
structure
66 Spact
2 '
•
31 " ..
One final note must be made
on the subject of seaUng.
Friday's opening night au-
dience was treated to newly
purchased risers, elevating the
rear rows to the point where
\\'ell over 100 persons can -
and did -enjoy an unhin-
dered view ai the stage. Even
from the topmost seat at the
rear of the auditoriwn, it was
a fine production.
Only two perfonnance3 of
"Permypacker" remain, Fri·
day and Saturday at the Com·
muruty Cent« on the Orange
County Fairgrounds.
TV Drama
Will Study
Transplants
NEW YORK (AP) -The
trend in television dram&
would lead yoo to believe that
writers are creating script.!
with ne"'·spapers at their
elbows.
~1any stories are right out
of the headlines -campus
demonstrations, black • white
confrontations, drug addiction,
mental retardation, alienated
youth.
Such material makes the
screen fairly crackle with con-
troversy and tough dialogue.
It's not bad tor the ratings,
either. "The People Next
Door" and "The Experiment'•
on CBS Playhouse, "Teacher.
Teacher" on NBC's Hall of
Fame, and two recent NBC
\Vorld .Premiere movies,
"Deadlock" end "The Whole
WGrld Is \Vatching," did well.
Coming next is • ' T h e
Choice," on NBC's On Stage
Monday, March 30, which tells
of a heart transplant and the
conflict arxl emotions it can
generate.
P.1elvyn Douglas, who beads
the cast, said, .. The conflict
arises because the father of
a young man killed in an
accident doesn 't want to giva
up the heart. But the boy'!'I
V.'ife doos and it then become!'I
a quest.ion of v.·ho gets the
heart."
Will it be an aging diplomat,
played by Douglas ? Or a
gifted young pianist, played
by Frank l.,angella'! George
Grizzard is the doctor who
must make "The Choice."
"You want to hear a sweet
story?" asked Douglas. Thfl
voice is gri tty, the hair is
thinned and gray and he has
pouches under his eyes. But
Douglas has loot nooe of the
charm that made him a star
30 years ago in light comedies
\Vith Greta Garbo.
"Tom Donovan, the director,
had a doctor friend with him
to sort or act as technical
di~ector at the taping," he
said . "George Grizzard and
1 had a lill\e SCUlC at the
~· I take bis hand and say ~ m glad Chat the decision wa!'I
in the hands of a man like
him.
"Tom told me later the cfoc.
tor got tears in his eyes and to!~ him things like that made
being a doctor worUiwhlle."
Fox~s s.. Oiilrt r,_,-11 am... !M6-1711
HI LD OYEI 2941 wna
OrtN 6:45
CLIFF ROBERTSON
CLAIRE BLOOM
-la -
''CHARLY''
IN COLOR
-~~~ ... KIRK DOUGLAS _ .. .... -· THE llROl'H ERHOOO
-~.,..,...,.--~
. . ....... •
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I 21.95 25% I 16.,6 1.19
I 22.95 25% 17.n 1.
I 2'.95 25% .1s.·11 Z.o~
I 26.95 25"to ~.21 ~
I 29.95 25% 2%.•6 .-
~
I 3295 25% 2'.71 ~ .-
I 26.95 I 25% . ~·.%1 i"
I 29.95 25% 2%.46 .as
I 32.95 25% 2'.71 •57
I 35.95 25% I 26 ... Z.79
Gives up to 15% More Tread-Wear for greater '1iiv-
ing mileage
•' 'AilmATE Pa.uenrer Tire Gaamitee
Trtod Life Gaarantft
0--.t.eecl Aplntt .All f&DU1'811 ol. tbe Ure n.IUnC tr.-
llOl'm&l road huard.I or detecbi in m&ter1al • ~
JI'• Bow i-,: l'or the Ht. ot tbe orictMl tr.4. ·
Wlaaj; llelr9 wm Do:~ UU punctures at•...., Ill ' tJl.1 e&H of fiiilure, in exchanre for the Ure, replace It. .urrtnc
cnly the proporiion of eurrent regular Mll1ill&' prb pa. J'edtnl
J:xdH Tax that np~ta tn&d uaed.
Trtod w-.0.1 G-teo
O.......teed Apiut'1 Tl"Nd wear-cut.
Per How i-,-: nae number ol mc:et!w llP'<'lfMl!t
Wba& Beus wm DO: In exchange ~ the ttrt, nptac. it. ~
Ing the current regular Mlli%ll' pAc. plu1 ll'edenJ·lbldae Tu i.
the folloWtng allowance..
M .. u. Omru*-1
12 to 24.
27 to 89
..__
'"' .. ,.
4 Ways Better! Quieter,
Smoother with 4 Full
· Plies of Dynacor Rayon
1. Gives Silent Soft
Ride
2. Quietly comers,
easier steering
NO MONEY DOWN
3. No thiimp, &Iii!
no blimp!
4. No harali wann-
ups
When You Bay Y INr Ttreo al 8aaN on C....UL
12 Big_ Reasons Why Sears Brake
Relines Are Bett~r
All 4 Wheels 2988*
... ..,... .... _
... na..., a ••• ,_ ~.,, Ullllp ....... 'hit,.. ............
•auy.i, .. product. baYIDrc ....... vtt ...
and .,. wtUt. d1lc bakes .. llllbtl7 ......
.Uy acrn·fJ additlaaal parts adlltJlirll' ......_
able at a.an low, lair sirte-t
~ -----~----·--------------------·-----------------_._ .. ' --iA -. 521-._ MC11!11 &I U911 IOHG -HI! 5-0121 , PICO WE 11-4262 Wiii. II-'44a1~ -•. IW . · I ---MCMl661 ,.._at S.1004,.a .4-4611 «'l'MPIC • S010 All a.u11 . fOMOHf. ED 2-1145, NA u161, "" M75i' IAllfA 1110NCA1 EC 4-4711 ,vNJrr ro 14461, "' Ft I
I ecMPIOM NI 6-J/111, N! U761 ltOUYWOCO HO t..5'941 . . -637·2100 SANTA' ANA 1:1· 7-3371 50U1M COAS111AZA MG.:IJJI 'ITP"CMI fl f-1'11 .•
C011HA ~I -011'8'2.521 'rASAD!HAMU 1-3211, rt 1..(211 'IClt.INCI 5'12'1511 ,_______________________ _ ____________________ ,
S1..'i.ll'S
....., •••• Am ..
1
.., ....... , ..... . .. ~.
.If DAILY 'ILOT Mondlr, Mau 24, IM
NEW RECORD :..._ Don Aronow, 1968 oHshore power
boat racing champion from Florida continued his
reconkmashing perfonnance in the Pacllic Satur-
day 'by establlsblng a new average speed record in
the Long Beach·!!:nsenada International race. ...1
Passage Wins Miami
Race; Kia"toa Second
I
Aronow Cracks Record to Ensenada LEGAL NOTICE £iGAL NOTICE
IU,11.IOR cOu•T °'" Tltl IT.t.TI Of' CAUl'OIUUA POI. r411t1
Doo Aronow, Ibo I ti I Seavey, St. Cloud Fla., 2:51:!1;
ofJUiore poweroo.t r a cl n I fifth was Wave Layer, Petrick
dwnpSoa from Coral Gables, DuffeJ, ML Clemem, Mich.,
Fla., J>n>V'Cf that the PacUlc 1:09:28.
Ocean bolds no mo r ~ First West Coast boat to
myaterle.s than the Atl&nUc ftnlah was America, a %7-foot
saturdAy when he wen the Magnum with twin Johruon Lona B e a ·c b ·ED I e D I d a outboards sk.lppued by Carl
Intem&t1ona1 with a rtcOrd-Asmus, Sherman Oak5, iD
brtattng aver11e speed · of 3:13 :45.
TMI COUwrY ot' OU ... 1 CllTll'ICATI OI' IUMlilltS
... MMn · PJCTITK>UI JI.AMI llOTN:I W MU•tll9 Ofl PITfTtolil n. llftllln191*i ,_ cfffW M •
.. 1-HI. NHATI 01' WIU AMO POii ~lnl 1 Mlntlol ti lllt 0 M. Tbere were -starttra .,, Polnt: Crap Shooter, skip-"'"'"' T11TAMIMTA•Y ei....,., s.1111 ""'• c111ror11i.. """''
th and 10 f• la~a ~ b Du b K ll (MO IM)lil0) ""' f1dft'-""" MIM of OllAHGI e race o) mw~rs. -·--y tc a emeyo of ...... of T, H91.tttotl ,. ... , ''"Ir-COUNTY 0jtGAH SEllVICE co. '"'
M Fortn ' Z Z! W •-•··••• t I H TlllNl'\11 A, ""'' ~114od. ni.t .. Id llrm II <omi>OMd of lht aurr. ey II enor ppe e!UIJ..1..113Ka was OU a NOTICI 15 ~EltllY GIVl "f Ttlll lolfowlnt jlHIOfl, ... -r.-me !" 11,1~ rrom Newport Beach wa.s out Oce&ll!lde· Assuin Jerry Oorol,,.., 111:. '"' ,.., filed 11t.-.1n • '"" "-., r.icienc• 11 •• to11ow10
ol th With ••g'-trouble ••---of N·-~ s.' ch _ _. "'"'911 fW .,.,. ., Wiii 11111 ,... o.i o. s1. ci.ir. 1114 w. "•nkH'lll e race ,... ~ ...._ ..... ,_ • a , WoU11 1tMM11U !If Ll'ltfl Tet1nwni.,., 1o Serif• w.., c.111ort111. ' by the tlme be radJed U. · out at Ocf.l.Dllde wlth a ~'-" tNo ._.,, ralwenct " wt1lc11 01i.ii Ft& a. 1Nf. • 11 midi 1or f11ttNr .-rtlclli.ta, attd Corl O. 11. Clll• ' Newport Harbor e:ntraace. broken V-drlvt, and Bob ""-' wi. ,,,,,. ..,. 111m • t1wr1111 s11t. o1 c.1...,.11, ~ COii""':
Rapid Transit, an o t be r NordUoc'1 So&ocaust, Va n =.. ~ ,1":' .~ :' :: ::!1,..!!; • <>;;..~ :-.)...•tw ~· 11:;:; Newport entry wit.It Gary Nuyi, lo.t botb eQ&tnes oU al o-rtmeftt .... , • 111111 cwrt. ---llY ..... r.. Corl G. .,. Cl1lc u,...._ WU -~ a' D••• "-Jon* .. ,. w. •i.111t1 strW. 111 tlla ~ to me 1o bl -.. ,..._ ·~.
6UO mil .. per hour.
ArcMw Jn b!J slim new boat COOPER IN TROUBLE
a-lalely lllllled Tb e Hord luck Bill Cooper of
CIJ1rtlle, !luhed ICl'OOI the Marina del Rey WU JUMlng
flnlJb line at Eotentd• in an in (lfth place off Dtacanso
•---' time GI I boon !7 Point. Baja Cllllornla, wbeo = and II econdl. ' be 11<>ve a ·nJne.loot hole lo
............ """' • -... ua. Qtr fll ,..._ """ C.llflr!llL MOne .. 111bKl'lliiM .. ttll Wltlll11 lfOo l--''---.,..-------------------1 D•"'fl Mtrd'l IL lHt. lfrl/IMl!t Ind .m-lil6tld M ll:l!Kuftd A~ W .•• IT 'JOHM, C-.fY Cltl'l lfll Mtnl.
The old aveqe apeed the bottom of bll boot whllt
record of a mllos per hour ramming tJuwcb li-tf foot
in an offshore power boat race swells. Cooper and h I 1
wu aet Jn 11151 by Bill SiroiJ pwenger Jooalh<l1 EdwordJ,
of St. Cloud, Fla., In the L«tg ~I~ .:':l:ec1 ~;·~
Island Henne511 Grllld PrU pa ..... er crull<l. Neltber
race. wu btjured. .
FIRST RACE Winner in the c r u l 1 er
The Ensenada duh was tht dlviJlon wu Pete Rothschild
first race for 'l1le Cigarette, of Newport Btach in his 27-
a :J%..footer powered by twin foot Aqua Cralt, Thunderbalb
482 Cu. Jn MeiCru!Jer Inboard powond by two 427-cu. Jn.
engines. Mer Cru.llers. Tbunderballs
Second to finish iD the f1Dilbed the coarae in 3:57:03
oftsbore dlvlaion WU BOSI 0' actual elapeed Ume, not coun-
Nova a 32-foot Bertram with Una 1 stop at Oceanside for
Bill Wlshnick ol New York rduel!ni.
at the controh. Wlshnick'1
craft Is also powmd by twin SWINGER WINNER
482 cu. in. MerCruiaen. It Wlnner in the development
flnlJbed In !:~3.ll, 11 minut.I cla11 WU Swlnier n, akip-
behind Arorlfw, pellOd by Dave Shane of 1"I
••
The only medication '1Jlaf
.. ) --.I 1 v 1Gets to a MaJor~cause
of Hemorrhoids·
Nowt Most complete 3-way relief!.
lhli Important dev1lopm1iit In
hemorrhoid treatment comas to
JOU 11!1r five years of scltntllic 11nd ctinlcal testlng. N9t Ollly clues
C6unternoid1 wtirk by lessenin1
1pain fast, Ind by coatini. soolhlnL
and prottclf111 lnj11td fusu• ••.
but unliU MfJ other htrnotthoNi
product Counternoid al5o works 1 ,third way.
l1tion with DSSao p1nttr1ti1 ~
mil'IUl:e$ to the top ol Ult· rectal
area to soften tht stool 1NI 1111
th• bowel mov1m1nt. '
It 1$ I/lb .,;q.,. action I/lat"""' so much to mak;t Wril llnf'mc
possible.
So, if you live witi tht palll W
fe1t of recurrin1 ml/110l hemorrhoid
troubles, 1et tempotary relief with
medically·tuted Counlemoid.
Actually, ll!ed as di reeled, Coun-
ternoid offers the most complelt
3·way relief you can ret wtthout
a prescription or without surrery.
In 1t1inless cre1m or suppositories.
_. At ltl Sur counters. ~ __.
~ Mwr'Mtl ... ·-(OFFICIAL S!ALI ............... .........,. ._... Ct""'111a INrt hlh Mort.'!
Tith OU) •r>tt» MlllAl"t' l'llblloC.UflMll
........ ... ......._. l'rl!w;lpal Ot'tl<lt 1111
l'lilltlbhld 0r..,.. COhf 01lh' l'llDt, °''"" Courtty ......,din.. 24. 11. lNI' SJHf My COll'lll'llMlol'I l!ulrn
CE ""'M f, lf11 LEGAL NOTI ,_llll'lld or.,... Coa•I D•llY l'lltt.
,.,, •• ,. cou•T "' TM• nAT• ~ a. IL 17, 24. lfff 3l(Mt,
.,. CALll'Oll••• LEGAL N-CE Nit THI COUNTY 0 .. OUHI v11 .. ._
WOTtCa ... M..U .... M .. fflTJ(tW ,,_.
l'Oa ...... Tl Ofl WILL' Atto .. o. NOTICI TO c11•01TOlll
Lll'Mnt TlffAMINTAIY 11.WllllOlt COUllT 01' TM•
11 .. ll ti ~UOE JEMISOM COLE, STATI Of' CALll'OlllNIA l'Oll ,. ... 11MWn • MAUDE I. ('(IL!. 1• TM• COUNTY 01' OU.NOE ~ • ~UD! I. JblSON Cell, ... A-4.2112
1tllil Wwrl. • MAUDE I. JtMISOH &t ... fl (S'f'WElll GARDHElt, DKH~ 11'41 MAUOE 1&.UEL JEMISON, Ditc61• Id. 1 Id. NOTICE II H!ltE8Y GIVEN lo ~
HOTICI 11 Ml!lt!IY OIVl:N Tllll C'tldllol"I o1 Mii 1t1tW 111mftl de•eotr-nf
YllWU'll Ell!.. Brftll 1111 fltM ..... 111 ""' •II --f\rlltl9 cllllml 1111ln1t 1 "tlllln 1"r l'fOlllt. of wltl •NI ttw wtcl dtc.o.nt -.r1<1ul•ed lo Ill•
lot luv•llCll If Llthll'I T..t-ll r)' thl!ll. With the '*-r'Y wuchel"I, ! .. lo P.tln-r, r.ftt..O M whl(ll • 11'11 Offlo:t flf tlw <iiwtl of Ill• 11>(,v• • 111• for fUfftwr p1rtkvlllrt. 1notl tlllt 111tllllCI court, ., tD 1mitnl th¥n. wll,. 1M tlmf Ind •llelt et h•""9 ltll ft'll _,., YOUdllra. .. "11 ~
-has bittf1 NI tor Al'f!I 11, •lM, W.ltftltd at lfll fllflc:I et ATIU~SO!f 11 • t 1JO 1.m., I~ ttw ......,,,._,,,. 91' AND GIBIOtl, Atlllr.-n, n" . v~I\ ~ .... J itl wld COUM, ,, WflhlJ'llfQn ... _. Whittler, C•h"""••
JW W..I l!lei'lltl StrNI, In 1M CllJ t060I. wfllch h thl lllm ol ~u,lr.eiS
rA 11t111 All., c.11+omt1. et tM lll'ldltl"lleMd In •II rnetter1 per-' D1flll Mlirdl 21 lNt 11itn1,. te ft'll .. 11te -' Wtd dKrdtnl,
W. E. ST JOHN within four monttlJ 91'1.,. b tll"ll POl:LIC1•'
CoYnlY Cltri. !loll flf 11111 notlclt.
llLlllS, LOIWlf, BARANe•lll AND Dlted Mardi 3. lfft. MYIRI Johll I'. G1rdn.,.
lMI Wnlcllff Drl¥1 Ea9Cllfor II ltll wlll of ~ llldl. Cttw.r• 1'1661 ltll 1tboYI 111tl!lld t!Ktd.-.t Tith 1110 '4S-1At AT1UNION AND •t810N "
"""'"""' fer Pitt..._. mt ....... WnlllM ... A-l'vblf1Plltll Or111t1t CH1t 01'lr l'llltl, WNnlltr, C1llflnll1 ,...
Mlrdl :n. 14. n 1Ht IW-ff Tet1 11w•11n ' AllWMYI fw lmcvtlt •
Bob Joll>soo's 73-l<>« kelcb
Windward Passage was first
to -the 8ll·mile M1aml to Mont.ego Bay race in an
elapsed time of four days,
10 bwrs, 22 minutes and 28
.......is.
Quick Silver. a 21-foot An&elea 1n 4.:Cl:31. Swinger
lime .......i for Ibo Ill-mile Magnum skippered by Jolin II Is a 23-foot Formula N w 1·n Our Fam'I couroe ia.t week In four day1, Stenbeck o1 st. Cloud, Fla. Tbunderbird pow,...d by twin 0 I f :
Thanks lo an exclusive fotmula
'with DSS10 rw only Counternoid
gels to 1 major cal/Se of hemor·
rhoids: Painful hard cwtlP1lkln.
Without irritating lautiw 1ft'1ct.
Her1'1 llciw: Jn hospital X-rty tests
doctors have demonstrattd t1'11t
the rtmMklble COunternold formu-. . 1'T........-11t lloll_L&a...i,;-~ ' ---... l"Vbtl1111td Or111t1t Clltrt DlllY 'I~.''
March lD. 11. ti. J'I Ifft "41t:•
Tbe beamy ketch
sometimes refmed to u a
Ailing platfmn -wu over
11 houn ahead ol Jbn Kilroy'•
Kialoa II from N e w p o r t
Harbor Yachl Club.
In the race Windward
Passage was sailing under the
colon oC New York Yacht
Club and Kialoa II waa flylng
the burgee of Los
Angeles Yacht Club. KiaJoa's
finUll time .... 4:11;28;05.
TbJrd to flnisb in 5:02:47:51
was James McHugh's SJ.foot
11\oop Inferno from Qiicago
YC; fourth was Salty Tiger,
a '7·foot yawl owned and sklp-
p<nd by Wally Frank and
Jack Powell, SI. Petenburg,
Fla., and fifth was Ted
Turner's 12-m!ter American
Eagl< from AilaiG, Ga.
Tbe <H<>«-yawl Flyway ls
champion of the race for the
second !IUCCeSSive time.
Skippered by her deoigner,
Bob llenocktor, and owned by
R<p. Ogden B. Reid, R.N.Y.,
f1rwey broke her comcltd
four 11oun, •1 m1nu1<1 ind .,., third to 11n1Jh In 2:51:41: 211 cu. Jn. Holman Moody _ family Weekly
2llleCOlldl. . ~fourth=..:::._:wu::..:S=now'--~Shoe...:c.'~Ral......:pb;..__F_..U.~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-''~~~~~~~-t Tbe eame yachi, okippered•-
ln 1167 by Ted Turner at
AtlaiU, made tbe. voyage then
in four days 22 hours, ZZ
mlnut.a and 47 """""· Turner flnbJbed i.t on c<ll'-
rected time in the 1919 race
with bis 12-met!r I J 0 Op ,
American Eagle, wimer of the
recent St. Pderoburg I<> Fort
Lauderale 1,203-mlle race.
Rum«-up in the 2J.bool neet with a corrected time
<Jl four days, five boun and
C mlnuies was "stubby," a
:JO.foot aloop •kippered by Lee
Creelan<n of M 1 a m l ' 1
Coconut Grove Saillni Club.
Salty 'llg<r, the It It
Southern Ocean Ra c I n g
Confermce titleholder, WIS
thlrd and took Clase B bollOn
u well u taking the lead
in the new World Ocean Rac-
ing O>amp!on seri.. which
will inclode 11 races in a
U....year """'" The 73-foot ketch Wi.nttward
Passagt sailed the coone in
four da}'I, 10 boun, 22 mlnutes
and 29 lleCOndl but WU loth
on ...-..i time wtJlJe wln-
Diog Class A b<mn.
Pay your tax.:and relax
~~
BYC's Alsuna Captures
Drilling Islands Event
Alsuna II, Balboa Yacht
Club's enlry fn the March 311
LJpton Cup challenge was the
winner Saturday In the Drill·
ing Islands race, the first in
BYC's 66 Series.
Alsuna II, owned and ski~
pered by Allen Puckett with
the Lipton Cup crew aboard
benefitted by a fresh slant
of breeze near the beach
between Balboa and Newport
Piers and picked up a substan-
tia1 lead while others in Class
B and the following Cla!!!I A
got caught by a dying breeze
and left~ver sea.
Prelude, J im Linderman,
BYC; (3) Spiri~ Alexander
& Worrrnan, SDYC; ( 4)
Salacia, Tom Corkett, NHYC;
(5) Newsboy, Jack Baillie,
BYC.
CLASS A -(1) Prelude;
(2) Spirit; (3) Salacla; (4)
Newsboy; (5) Lark, Paul
Holmes, BYC.
CLASS B -(I) Alsuna JI;
(2) Atari, John Cazier, BYC:
(3) Sanderl!ni, Morrie Kirk
& Bob Poole, BYC; (4) La
Prensa, Al Lockabey, BYC;
(5) Vela, Jack Bibb, BYC.
CLASS C -(1) lmpetuOCll,
Charles Glasgow, BYC ; (I)
Brava, Jack Hogan, NHYC;
(3) Mistral, Bud lluenberg,
BYC; (4) Falcon, Bob Smith,
BYC; (5) Marvida, John
Payne, BYC.
LEGAL N<11'1CE
MOTIC• TO Cll•DITOlll
SUl'•llOR COUlllT 01' TNI!
ST.ITI 01' CALIJ'OllNIA l'Oll
TM• COUNTY 01' OU.HE
He. A.QIM
E1t1I• ti MELVIN ALBERT LEVOU.,'
DKHSltd. ;
NOTICE IS HERllY GIVEN to the
cttdlkll"I ol Thlt 1boYlt llltf!IM -.Ctdent.
rti11 111 l'ltrlOlll lltvlns cl•lms 1t91lnd ,, 1'1'11t llld dlCltditfll lrl l'IQUll'ldl IO Ille ., thlm, wl!h tll• _,.,, voudltr1. •n. ttll offl~ of 11'11 <llrk of llw lbovt 1t1lllltd court • .,. to l"'etent ftlem, .,..1111 •
1111 lllClttJlrY Wlldwn. .. "" 00-' d1n'9111d 1t ltll oltk.t II WILLlM\'
E, FOX, AttorneY, IO Soull'I I 1k1 Ave11ue.·
sutt. '"· l'111dtfllt, c1n1ott11e t11c1. which 11 1'hlt pW.clt ti llullrlesl (If tn11
undltnllntd In 111 mitttar1 pert1l11i111,
lo Thlt eitell ol 111d decodel'lt, within,
loo.tr -.irto. ettitr thl tint 1'UblJ,1tlon.
or !Piia 11Dt1e1. 01ttd Mardi 7, lMJ.
Albtrt Levor1 tke
Albtrt F. LtYWI Adrnlnl1lr111of' of ltll es11t1·
of 1'lle 1bovt llltll'IH dtctdtnl'· WILLIAM I . 'ox AllWMY ltt Llw 11 SlllTtl 0 111 A-, Sulll ll:S .,,..._ c11~11 rnn
'l'tl: 'li.+n"'6U A,,.,_ fw Afm1Rll'"'ttr
l"ubll1hltd o""'• Cotti 0•11'1' "llot, Mardi II 17, 24, 31, lHt ~»·'f
LEGAL NO'rICE ·-· CIRTll'ICAT• OP 8UllMISI
l'ICTITlOilS NMtl
Ttol unclln1'Md d09I cl'fllfr tlllt to.
(Of>llUtflllf I bu1lnltl1 II 1M1~ Sprue• Clrdl, Foun!1ln V1llltY, C1ntornl1, under'
1111 flctl!IOlll firm lltmt of DELTA.' fHTERl"RISES 1tr.c:I 11111 11ld llrm Is
c:om-td of !hit k1Uowlr111 ""°"' wl'lol,•'• 111trna II 1ublcr1btd to the w1t11111 In. •
nt me In full incl lilltt of rt1lll9nc1
II 11 fellowl' • G19n D. L1wlt11, 1M7' S,.l'U(t Circle.,
FOUT1lll11 Vit111Y, Citllfornl.. •
Dltwd Mlrch 7. lNt.
Gltn D. l.IWt.u
St1tlt "' Cal!f«lll1, Or11"91 County:
0.. Mardi 1, lNJ, blltort m~. •:
Nollry l'ulllle: 111 11111 klr 11tc1 li!tl•.,
,,_/'IOlll l1Y l~fed G~ D. Ltw~s. llrlown to m1t to bt the Plr&en Wl!oK 111~ b subKrfbllll to ... within n-:·
11'ntll'l1nt 1nd 1dt11Gwledted ~. 1~eeu1td f
thl 11rn1.
(OFFICIAL SEAL)
Glltd¥1 Doollll11
Nol•fY Pub!lc-C1lltor~i•
l'rlroc.11'11 Offlct In
Or11>111 Coun!Y •
MY Ccmrn1nkoll E•Plres •1
~I U, lf70 Publl~ Or111t• Cots! D1flf' l'llo!,:
Mltdl, 10. 11, 2<1.11. lf6f '°' .. ':
LEGAL NOTICE
,._:WJI
CllllTll'ICATe OF lU51NE$$
l'ICTIT10US NAME : Th9 ur.c:litflltnff does certify Ii• k, cenctuctlnt I busll!fU 1t 2052 Nl'WP"Orl t l lvd., Suitt 10, COJi. Mttl. Ctlllornlf ,1 Uhd1r ttll rlc!Ulou• firm n1m1 of lHE t
"EARL OF ARM5" 1nd flltl 11ld fl rm•
11 cornPOlltd or 111~ follow ing Pe''°"'
wllotl n1m1 111 lull and Pl•ce et resldenc• i
II II follows: 01vld Ross Wllll1rn,, 7110 N1wpoarl"
Blvd,, No. 10, Cost• Mew, Call!. 1
O.llCI Mtl1'h 7. 1'16f •
David 11.. Wllll•ms • STATE OF C.ILtFOll.NIA 1 11
COUNTY OF ORANGE I I
On M1rch 1, 1'69, ~ore "'' •I Hotarv Public In and !or w id 5:11~. •
p.,......,lty IDPttred 01•1KI Jl:O'llJ Wllli&"'•I
known to me lo be /he PHS<m WIKY.11
~1me I• IUbK•lbld lo !hi w•th:n I~· , strum~! •nd ltknowltdgfd hit 1xetu!id}
"'' ....... J ((lfflcl1I Sf~ll l Ml'Y K, tltnry
Notary l'Ubllc • Ctllloml• ' PrlnclPtl Otlkt In
Ort l'l9t CDUnlY ,..., Cornrnl11!on E~"irn
No~. 1l, 1'12 I
l'ubtfshtd Or•nv• Co-st tl1!1Y l'ilt!t, •
Mlrdl lo, 11. ''· Jl, 1Hf '"'"', • LEGAL NOTICE •
As lhe southerly breeze
freshened off Hunt Ing ton
Beach some of the late
starters caught up with the
earlier classes, resulting in
some close roundings at the
first drilling island. At least
two boats Jost control or their
.spinnakers and there was one
minor collision.
CLASS D -(1) VoJante
If, Mike Hinh, BYC ; (I) Ex·
one, Andy McDonald, KHYC;
(3) Pinata, Herb Riley &
George Bissell; LJYC; (4)
Helena, Vince Arrigo, St.
FYC; (5) Arriba, Dave Smiley
& John Tbome, BYC.
use our money! 1------------"
There were 68 enlrlES in
the race which inaugurates
the seven race 6tl Series. The
Jerits is divided into four
cla!Stl of Ocean Racing type
boats and one class or ?>.fidget
Octan Racing F1eet yachll.
Final nsults:
OVERALL -(I) Alsuna If.
Allen PuckeU, BYC; (%)
MORF -(I) Dolphin, Milt
Allione, VYC: ( 2) Sea-
quariOUJ, Craig & D o u I
Kut<llo, LBYC; (3) Kilo, Tom
Butler, BYC; (4) Cepheus,
Dean Durgan, BCYC: (I)
Aloha II, Glenn Reed, SSSC.
Pey,aurtaxbllt now with money from Morris Plan. You maybo1TOWfrom$100to$5.000.
«more, for lalUIS, bill consolidation, home or car repair, any good reason. Payrrea
ac:hecluMd to flt your income. You may have your money the day you apply-will\ no
1 llplltment for 45 days.
Monti Plan, Ille people who like to ssy ''yes."
4
l'·lll1J I •
Cl!llTIF!CATE OF IUSINES$ I •
"ICTITIOUI NAMa •'
Tlllt uncl"1i~,,.. dOlt cprflfy he i,, e·
condUctlne I buS\flftl I I 9111 C.nt••~'
G1rc!fn Gro\09, C1llforlnt, \lncllt lh•,,
llc!Ulou1 l!rm "'"'e of fl. J. MARINE,,
SERVICE 1'1d tlltl 11tcl flrrn Is cor111mtdi• ol IPll lollowl11t pero;on. Wl105tO ntm•,. In full ,..., pl1ce ot tnlctence 11 11
lolklwl: •
II.. J. Rtf!d, till Centr1I. Gt'11fl> 1
Grov1, Cell!, t
Ditl'lod M1rcll 5, UH "
Ru11ell J. RllM STATE 01' CALIFORNIA I tt
COUNTY OF ORANGE I
Bkrekfin Sets Mark
SAMPLE
LOAN
SCHEOOLES
YOUR CASH
$ 453.93
$1 ,018.57
$1,518.99
MONllilY PAYMalTS
$24
$53
NO.OFIDTHS
24
24
Oii Ml1'h J, Ifft, blfert m•, o •
H011ry l'ublk In I ncl fol" 111d St•'•,'
111tt10r11tll'I •-rl!d R. J. Rffd ~-n 1
lo mt lo bt Ille 11•-whow ,.,,.,.,
It ...tos<rlbNl to 1111 .... 11111" 1n11ru""n1 .•
Ir.cl ldtllOWledttd t-. 1•KVIM tt11 11m11. ,. {Ol'lld1t ktl)
MlfY ltlll Morlofl • ' • $56 36 NOllfY Public • C1lttwn11 l'rlncl111 Olllcl In
Or1ne1t Countv
My C°'""'lulen EQ>lr11 In Tri-Island Race $2.122.38
c.d ... dllll>lllty !nuance llYlllable.
$76 36 .-,.,11 t, 1tn •
PllbllsMd Qrll'lll Cotlf 01l1Y l'•lof. •' Mlrd! It, lT, 24, JI, 1Nt .nMt •
' Km DtM"'"''' 'IJ.foot ketch _......, ,..,._, LEGAL NOTICE .---.... ·-· 1-----,o-=,,,.-"----!: Blactfin from St. Fra ncis The Trt·llland Rice atartld ca1tTll'ICA~:': BUSINESS
Yacht Club finUhed L<ls Friday at 5 p.m. 1'ith the M • Pl 1'1cT1T1ou1 NA.Ml'
Angeiell Yachl Club'I 112·mlle C1a!s fleet ~H-IW .. flrat 0 r r1 s a n ..::O .... 'i.,""~'·=~":"., ~.;: w':,~~: • ~ •-•-~ I •• I' p m •-• _,, A""""", F-t•ln v1treot. c111to'"11, U!'ld•~ • lll'U~ race :.,; .. . . I "~ I n ..... --"'~ lhlt flC'ltlloul fltm ,..,,. of FOUNTA1'4 Saturday to hang up a new n. ~ eute:r y "--~lftlU VALLEY MANAGEMENT COM,.INY Pflfl
them to r ..... _ ..,._ ........ _ "·'·--' ll'>tt 11!• rllm 11 Cllrl\~ flf r.ra • elapaied time recQl'd for the .-i-Pl" Iola'• w-..i"" 1o1-1,.. otr-. ""'°"' Mm• 111 ,V11 •
--OI\ 0 ~--••..-nm, lflCI ~!itn et rtffdtflCI h 11 fol10W1: 0
........ .,.... .,.,....__.. E,.,,, Wl'!'Tlt 8ilnbrJOt.f, UUO' The new mart is 10.408I BllCkfln tOUDlkd S 1 n ta ~;:u1, F1Un1'111 v1111tY, c11;;or"1' '.
hours, lopping aome Onie Barbara Island at JJ:IO a.m. oiled "•torv•TY t1, '"'· •--off ~ Id ---..i -*' .... ..,,_._ t....a t ol u.. Eidt~ w, ll1lnbrlctg«
llUUll ... 0 '~" ~ • ..,.._""Y· l1'n. "° -I d 3700 ITATI! OF CALIFOINIA I ... • by Jim KilrvY'• 'IJ.root Kllloa catomarans -whlcb llarled Newport Beech -3700 Newport Bo.u ever -673-cou•" .. o''"'" • ..
Ir
'
·n 1-. IO m•-•-. ~~ _ .,...__. °" FM!. n, Ifft. ti.for? ""· ; "'''"'' .. , UIU-~I.IOU YICIU l'\lbtle: 111 ..... !It .. kt 11111. '"t&Orll ll·r • B*kf'ln WAI the fi:nt yacht ahcld on the nm down tbt •-1'1111 Eldtn w. 81l~llrk'>-t l'lftWrt '
lo Int II ht !Ill H tlOn whMf •11r<rt . I oi llf1 ~ to fhUb, beatina back aide o( C-.calm. and San .. tvbecr1t.H "' ""-W'111'1111 1"''"""'''11 • . ~ •~ •u·----, •~ ~ ci~-Ill*--'• tncl ICllle"ltdffd h1 t•~vttcl 1111 """"" , URI UJ• ~MY4'fl U~ _. <1:u .. ::uu1; -IUO. JOFFtCl.llL SEAL! •-
foot Sea Smote by a half-hour. Blxkfin •vt'd her tiJnl to ~:r.~ wPu~~~z,,11"'1111 DeMeux'• new <nnlmnn become the Nnt:tclp Ind ,. Ptl"t!NI Otltt• I~ ro-I Tbe O''"'' Covntw tdcb I• a &iattr-thlp lo '--Aw nntr. net WU My (OO'l'lmloslon E~~ ....
Sumner A. Long'• Ondlne JI bu firW m~jor competlUve •uri11,~!:i.~'71co-•l 0.,1, ~"""
ercrpt that'tlbe 1' llOm& 17,000 outing. !----------------------------------------------------------""'"" 10, "· '" .11. ,., ....,..
WE
ARE PROUD
TO REPORT
.... •-hT ..... ftc
43 TransacUoNI ln 23
dayl a record fwd to
beat ••. To sell fut or
to buy whely • , ,
C:.I floe ,.._ ••ys"
M6-7171e146-211J
...,., ...
Gorpoui ' ~ + apadous famJJy room 4
formal dtninr, new car-
peU A d ....... Sparkl" like new. $65,000 (not
leauhold). May be pur-
cha.wd furnished.
H-Hr.Jiio1141
Reflttti the pride and
care d. a proud 0W11er.
3 Bdnns., family room,
2~ bath 1. Hardwood
floors, plaiter interior:
One of a kind. $53,500.
Col .. ePork
Sharp. c I ea n, quality
built ''Cinderella" home
3 Bdrm•. 2 bath1, built
fn gu kitchen. $26,500
10% down. Don't miss
this one.
Newpon Heltllts
5 years new. Bir 2 story
w1th family and Dining
rooms. 3 car garage. 2
pat!~. Pl&.lter intertor
and heavy shake roof.
138.000.
The Plus Home
Beautiful 5 Bdrm 3 bath + dinina: room + fam-
ily room + heated pool + 3 car garage. Only
$49,500.
Spanlslo Hecld ...
Better than new! f
Bdrm. 3 bath "1th 1ar-
den kitchen. Step down
living room. Decorator
drapes A Indirect light-
lng. Low at $34,900.
Hones! Hones!
Big 66x200 with cozy
2 bedroom home and 2
car garage. Completely
fe~ for corral. Only
$23,500 Great terms.
4114nM.-521,flO
Move in tomorrow with OK'd c:Mft. New el~
-trlc range. Slldinr 1lus
doon to covettd patio.
$23,950 10% down or
try no down VA.
•It,,..,·-Great 2ox36 Playroom,
ready for wet bar or
bath 4 big bedrooms. A
per1Kt family home. 4 years new. $32,950.
w .. 1en11
vacant 3 Bedroom. 2
bath. Larae family room
ln move -in condlUon.
Fast escrow possible -
U0.950.
Lowely Uclo hie
DellghUully dttorated 3
~on an extra
Iarae 40' lot. All tlectrlc
blt-ina in brl1ht cheery
kitchen. S.UMY aoulh
p atio. Unwually low
priced at $49,&>0.
Dow« Sltorn
Needs Offen
3100 sq. fL of l\lX\Jr)',
All cwtom corutructed
4 bedrooms, family room
and form&l dlnL"Jg room.
Immediate poss euton
wtlh 10.Yo down -Ask-
ing $73,500.
9.1 .. hslll<I•
3 Bedroom•, 2 bath• In
a quiet non-traftlc street ~ living room with
brick fireplace, kitchen
wtth all eJectric built-Ins
:.... a dandy buy at s:zs.-
900 with io,; down.
O w n e r will eonsldft'
trade for 3 or 4 unlta.
leckhYVlew
Ettatt sizP "r.>x245 lot. 3 Bdmu 2 baths - 2
fireplacff. Country kit·
..... with !b"<place. "'· mut~ bedroom wtth ht•
a.nd htr'1 bath. Due to
hMlth ownl!r netdl
tmal1er hOl'J\I!. J.fi(ht
tra&. m ,ooo
Homo + l•UM•
Npt. HthtL Dllt. 2 bed·
room eomplete)y 1W""
modedtd + 1 bt!droom
re ntal -2 pNlff.
New drlvew9.Y• -Inc.
pot. $300 -129.SOO -
10'-' down.
OPIN 'TIL 9 P.M.
646-7171
Ol
546-2313
~----~ -~~~--_____________ __..,.~~~~~~-.~ ................................................................................................ .
16th & Tustlo -c .. 1. Mew
ADULT$
Most hom•• are built with only ehlltlren in
mind. We have five homos de1l1ned for tho
comforts and fun of adults. Beautiful to look
at, room for bobblH, private oWce, aeparate
dining rm, gu11t room with bath, I cu &•
rage, walking distance to churcha, Woatcllff
shopplne. and nstauranu. . ·
7% with 21% --m%,wlth 11% On.
no 2nd• -no paint.-" yn ... ul.-
l'rlctcl from $30,950 to $33,950
axclualw Aten!
p. a. palmer Incorporated
"77 VIA LIDO
Troe! Ph: 540-51U From L.A. Cell MA ~
·------------'-----=-
OllLY $21,500 BAYCll£ST
HOUSllS '011 SALa HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSIS 'Oii SALa _ .. ___ _
Generol 1000 Gener•! 1000 Gonorel
Unbelievable lut
·frue
Friends
Wiii Wonder
ZUtakle .CO-ta Mna hom• How )'(Ml bmd 10 mucb bomc
wllt added ti)) 111. ft. pan-for ·., bilk. 3 stoJY ovtr
tied tam, rm. wilb rock 2,000 1q. ft. l'mtr ot thl. molt
flreplact, e>il)&nded. ma1ttr ~ bedroomt l'Oll ever
bath wtth c111tom ftxtur'el, aw, Larae IOmW llvlne
adtkd room oft prace aJ. room wttb pk:tta. window,
ready plumbed tor bath, fireplace wall la an u.sed
plua: l Iarre bedrooms and brick and pa.nell1ns:. Imam
2 bathl on • ll5 ft. deep Jd~n lac1&ldt9 d!ahti••ttr
lot. All Jt needs ts paint ud dbbwubtr, briaht out.
but at P3t50D )"OU'd better door bn&ldut bar, covered
hWT)'. ' patio. Adult occupied and tt
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2'I I. 17th St. ~
4 ltcll'OOllll
l'lus l'ool
ln u exttllent area dole to
abopphtr and .:bool.s. Exce-1-
Jntt !loot plan llr':lth Muter
bedroom 11.llte <11 <!JlPOllDte
side of boule, from other
bedrooms. Hure beautitul
AnthonY POOL, heated and
filtered with lot d. dtddq.
Larte eovettd and encko9ed
patio. Rumpt11 room adja-
cent to pool Walk to shop.
plq, Catholic ICbool, ek--
fairtY IPf.l'ldet. Near south
·c.ut Pl.a ... ppln( .......
... only 135.~ • tmlll< .....
"For A Wl.e Buy''
Colesworthy & Co.
&Cil·mT OPEN EVES
CUSTOM HOME
SALES .MANAGER
A Ucenaed real estate broker with a aucceu-
ful record of ptsl 1ccompllsbmenll, lo 1.U
large, upenslve, custom designed & cuatom
built homes on our loll In San Juan Caplstra·
no·i then to build a 1lle1 team for other proj·
ecb In Orange & San Diego CounUes. Am-
blUou aggressive penon -on the way up.
Commlsalona only -annual eam.tnp Of
$30,000 & up.
Send r .. umo to P. O. lox 331
Sin Ju•n Caplstr1,_,. 9267$,
--------------·:--
BROW MARKU Assume 5% % GI
lNR
on thia 2 sl.ol7 beauty. The
immaculate 4 BR I: den
home feat\u'H: aunktn llv-
Drive by 321 Alile, Newport· He1""9
OutshlndlflCJ Value ly 0Wll9r $34,000
LovelY comer a bedroom home, llrai lanai,
1 bathl, dlnln& ~m. llril11 room with at. tractive fireplace, IU1h carpolhtf \hroJIC>-
out, ~ BeauUful lroel and plantlqa.
Call owner for 1ppoinbnenC to ....
548· 1444, '46· 1711
Gonerel 1000 1W
4 IEDROqMS 0:1' 0:~ i 1-:i. ":
Only '2.000 dn. Back Bl>· 2 Dbl .... ~
OPPOR'l'Ulm"YKNOCKSM writ lhp uu: lncd ,..i
)'O\l to own thl• 2~ bath well w/ rm b' boat or b1r.
located ranch style bomt, 3 Br. S S... 15x2! "pMn
nrpet, drape:s, built .. in tam rm "can be con"o'ft1ltd
rana:e / ovtn, diahwasbtt. to make S Br'a." Wood flrs
Mi&bt rent or leue option. &: trplc. 252:1 23rd St., NB.
A UNIQUE OFFERING -0'1U' at Tustin I: 23rd.
Tbh 3 Br • , . famfbt room
home In Me11. Verde ii
today"• belt buy. !'Unc-
tlonal 11oor plan bu 1"-
baths, all eleclric ·l]Ullt-tn
oven I r an1I!, nice
service p o r c h. spacioua
livinl room. w/w carpell
&;; drapes, fenced rear
yard, Good location near
ahopp~ center. ONLY
J2;5,950. VA or FHA terma.
"'·"" ,, .... =""'91~43,,_,~,,...--= Inc room, comer ftreplace, Herry A. Bon• FINEST Family area. wen
cptl/drp&, overalzed 2 car Realty 962.es:tT da:irned 5 BR, 3 bath MM>
I' \l I • \\ 11111
~I \1!\\11\\
1, I \ I I \ ' •'
= r1~~m~~ Low Down Peymtnt ~~~~r~._:
n:iore. Call now for irdorma-4 bedroom.. 1" tile bath. muter irulW. Vkw1ol hills.
tion. Rootn b boat I: tralkr. 2836 Alta Vilta. l'cr ap-
tOl2 REGA TT A AAum• his 111.300. 5lf." po-ont ,.._1192
Open Set/Sun 1 • S loan. FUii price 121,500. 3 BR Wa_, No. a
$35,750 Balboa c..... ·ue,011 .
A$UME 5%"° VA LOAN &
own this spacious ' bed-
room, 2 bath home.' Cttamlc
tile kitchen, Dialµ'naster le
dishwuhet". Drapfd I: corn·
pletely carpe:ltd. Comer Sot,
fenced tell' yard -a«aS
from eitbtt ltrfft. Lf't UI ar-
range the pQmmts for you,
SUR.1\fl'I' f1500 DOWN •
lWRRY!
Only $6800 down ,aftorda
,.,.. & -kmi!y all the pleuurn of Uw bnt
of fJChooh. 4 BR, 3
baths .. l&rse hMted il
ftltered pool, formal
dining room, family
room, 4 patk:. I: owr-
lir.ed lol Portion could
bt ~ioeed off tor pla.y
yard from pool.
mentaey, junior aod Hl1hl..,,..iiii,..,..,...,.,..., I .. ""°"· Pri<>d •• "'·~· Pele Barrett Really 11113 -·· c .M. ~"
&romit your 1maller home I ""'""'""!!!!!!~'!"!!'""!I!!"" I
ERNIE I Pttttt trad• !tlt acnap
CLEVELAND °' will constdtt other. 1111-1111
~
1PERRON on our ruarantee sale Plan. PreNnfl $43,500
WE SELL A HOME R.J lot with eomfortable Spanish Hacienda with 3 car CORONA D£l MAR ~COATS ~WA•~CI
llAl.TOIS
5464141-'°"" lwutln~
EVERY 31 MINUTES 2 BR home, close to prap, 4 bdnn•. Muter
-ONLY $22,500. Build on
front ol. Sot A: have tun re-
modH!ng 1 bedroom 11xtr-.
upper at rear. Own your
land amone modem duplu-
W lk & L lTlh sn..t -· bodrno"" baa 2T ot clooeb a er ee ""''"· Lo,.. ,_ "' .,,. wall plus orlull ... yant, alley In rear. treat, teparale tub A shower·
2013 Wettcl!H Dr. $15,IDI Lari< !amlJy room with bit-646-m.t Open Eves.
es. Bicycle to B1&: Cc>rona "'"!Jl!!J'"""l'~~~~"' I H C ff••• 11 .. cb & State Puk. Walk to 4 Br • Only $21,500 OfteymGOR 01"'11"
skfts while your ch.lldren GI • Totel Down $40
safely play~ block away at This larre t btdroom, 2 bath IRVINE TERRACE
· 1 ~ Wtlltclirl 1)1', ln wet bar, 45' of covered pa. tio, cemnlc tile prden
• •
NEWPOlt.T BEACH kitchen with lPdoor outdoor
bar + put tbru window.
~ ' ~ ExiatlJW 6% FHA loan pay-~--642·5,00 abl• $770 month lncludln( Conununity Youth Center. family home on OORNER Protusion of Roles, Shrubs
Asume exi1tin& financing! LOO' with room fcrr BOAT 2 BR. 2 BA. cnly S32,tm
'
Evenina1 Call 646-7887
5 BR, 3 BA, 9 nn 2 story
borne + pool I: ruest boule.
""·"'· $10,IDJ dn .......... 548-8333
THE SUN NEVER DETS an
OR CAMPER boaru exotl· HAL PINOIIN A • ...., 1 IR DUPLEX
lent k>catkm near achooll I: 3900 E. Coast Hwy. 6754392
abapplng on quid 'nu:E Qean older u11U1 with dou·
LrnED STRD:r. A little REAL Eatate Sale• me: n ble detached prqe on :Mb:
pdnt in the BlG BID-wanted. Newport Realty I: ltO' lot. Assume existing
ROOMS and KING SIZED Inve11tment Co., 1 8 4 2 113,400 -g% loan • no loan
KITCHEN will make this a Newport Blvd, CM ftt. Only
TERRIFIC BUY-' a..,., ""°"' $18,750
DREAM HOME! fl,m<I 4-lobl, R-1, Founta.in Valley,
DOWN TO ANYONE! 50x1XI, $5,0CQ and S6,0IXI.
EVERY JI MINUTIS Bogp RHlty, 96U037
WE SELL A HOME HOME -1W !oL Exc<1
W I k & L Westside. 3 BR 21M. ba, room a er ee ... ' "' 5 unit.. SG-1023 * -1771 Anytime *
~
tpERRON ,, -.-.. ·~·.
Ouaified'• action J)OWe:I'· 2790 Harbor Blvd. a.t Adams
Fer an ad to ..U around ~SEl OCEANFRONT Leue w(09-VETERANS··
eves. · ..
t.he clock, dial 542-5678. (}pert Eves tion 3 BR + lam. nn.
DON'T gi..,. b away, pt DON'T sift It a~. 1•1 $64,500_ ~ Ownu. t&io~ ~r -·~,!~
mdck CUb im tf: wttll • quick cuh for tt with • Dial &l2-5S7I tor RESUL ~ nn, fonnal din nn •
Daily Pilot want Ad! Dally Pilot want Ad! ltae7 llft ~ -DAn.1 multi.purpo1e room may tru.
taxes.
four Bedrooms •
$17,250
Mf'o'e into this large family
hbrne today. C1ose to shop-
Pnc. IChoolll and cburchel.
This one won't lut?!! $135
per month hicludea tun:
and inlu.rance! !! ONLY
$500 00\\'N! !
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2043 Westcliff Dr.
646-7711 Open Eve•. --------'
,J• • .:.-· -~·. --,•RMftor, * BAY vtE.W 1'ff iot 15'
x 195' wt plan&. 13(.IOO, * 642-1771 Anytime* 143 Broodw•y 645-1111 0wnu MA-!249, 5fM"1 ~!!'"!'!'!!'~~~~~I Eve1. '41-14.13 MMS7' Olll'STANDING View In "" SPANISH VILLA 1134 P.LT. B1un.J11r.s11a . ., __
Reminiacent of early Cali-You can't beat this monthly IOXI dn. 6f4..-0'1'7I
fomia hacienda,. this pie> payment on my lowly 3 ---------! tureaque 2 Jtory hOme bu a bedrm home.Ca rp• t 1n1
"' lillll owlmmln( poo1 lhtouabOllt "' J>ut """ ""'· Newport Helghte 111 au ~ Pool &lie back Y a r d :.;.:;;.;:.;;.:.;-'C.;...:;. ----1
brick bar-b-q, ' la:rle w/covet'ld patlo Kitchen ii e SAVE IN'I'ERDT • ?'OOTnl, formal dlnin& nn. • and a chArmiJW: livinc nn. all built-lna I n c I u d I n C 3 BR, 2 BA. New c:rptl,
'th fireplace actnted b)' rdrlgerator. Assume ~ drps, bltna, 1400 eq, ft.
:ported Philippine mahoi:· 6% G.L Loan. Full price Dttch dbl pr w/ elec
any wood work all on two $21.450. Phone S&l-7689 opener; alley acceu. BJ
tarp M loll. See tht. one ~· Prine cmQ'I. MMllT
today. DUPLEX
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-44'4
Near Beach I: ShoppiJ::W
Excellent Value -$34,950
Geor .. Wllllemson
Realtor
Eves. 673-156C
lelbee Coves 1215
BAYFRONT with boat .Up
lur• 4 BR, 2 BA, 1$1,IDJ
l2'IO dn. -3TMl8l
W-1111 12JO
EUREKA! s:~vt! ::-: :
Ye• we've found tt for you. 3 Jarse bdrms. 1"-bath1, rm; lt1'Vice porch, elec
A Calta Mesa. 3 BR 2 bath, hr.rdwood floors, larp Jdtcb. bltn& Oun apta 1: drJ9
HARDWOOD 11.00R COi'-en I: 81!l'V!ce porch atta. thru oat this 3 BR 2 Bl
ner home. Sharp! Sharp! Double 1ana:e. Big yard home. Prof. lndscpd A $21 990 with ahado A !roll °"'· malnL w/ clilldn•" play
1 S22,950. yrd a: pet ~L RcaV)'
P.S. Owner will .ell to veter. Wollt-McCardlo, Rltra. shake-rool cornpletn tb1a
ans with $600 down + cloa-:::==:=:::=:::=:::=z:::=C I channin& home. By OWner
;."'~""~"~=====~,;:"'~-"""~======~P~nm~~ef~aetfted~~',::"'~-567a~~ 1y ,urprl5e you. Just tell us -------· -wha.t YOU think it'• worth! -"Ge-=ne•r-'e'-1 ____ 1-'ooo"'-'-'Go-'-ne-r_e_l ____ 1;..0"-0--"0-Go.;__no_re_l _____ 1_0-_00_1 Howewr, it's tilted at
$41,000.
ing costs. N•w1Mtrt Like to Entortein? $U.950. 642-159&
• h b can to 1ee this Corone clol Mer 1250 10 n macna et •7s-s200
·~=~~.:: low to form four limp!. words.
IZAIREL I _' I I' I I' I _
ITYHIC I _' I' I I
I H 0 T I 0 . l 'Tw always thought motwr-· _ j 1 I j n;ty words •hould have signs
. saying .... _... 3-24-
1
,...Q_U_l'"L""'E,...C-.----., Jin. O.P. Loper
lt_--rl-rl ""'llT"'' ""'l',....,...1-t !fr~::.~=
• :~~~~'.;.~rn•RS r r 1· r r I' I' r
O ;'r:;;~LETIWI • I I IE! I
·---CIP I
.....
SCRAM·LITS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7500
START MAKING
MONEY NOW!,
CALL
642-567·8
ASK FOR YOUR .
DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR
AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT!
S•IHpaople Needed
54l·SllD
(MlfclnlrN tt.btl !?lkl~:~~u
Real Estate Sales
ALSO -RENTALS
Active Salet -Good Summer
Winter ~nt.al Ottl.ce. Per-
10nnel may enpge 1ti Sain
exclusive:ly or Rentalt «
both. Est/24 yn, 22 yn
same location.
Frencla HorvAth, Rltr.
3410 W. Balboa Blvd., NB
{Il4) 675-1972
ON THE IEACH
Excluaiw Ox1na c.ovt bom• •
yea.r around living • best
Harbor arta. 2 BR. 2 Ba,
prlctd to Rll fut at. sg9,500
By appt only
CORllN·MARTIN
REALTORS
IOJfE.c .. atHwy,CdM
''7S-1N2
--·---
OVERLOOKING
SANDY B!'ACH
Fantutlc valu,. 0 W NE R
WILL FINANCE AT 7%
FOR 30 YEARS. NO LOAN
FEES! Fixer -nttda work
but can be a decoraton de·
light. Ideal for arti.t or 2nd
home. Only $39,9:!0. Call to ,.. __
FOREST E. OLSON, Inc.
REAL10R
FAIULOUS
ArtlJtlcally dellptd S' bdnn
4 bath 8aycn:at home. 1 bed-
room suitable tor maid·•
""""· DdJabtl\11 pool.
Arnold & Freud
388 !:. 11th St., C.M .
Realtors 6t6-175a;
DUPLEX
2 -Z Bdrm Un lta
$22,200
DAVIDSON ll!Hlty
~ Eve . ...-
DELUXI DUPLEX
New l BR Unlbl Penitl.lula
adjattnt ·to Ocnn A Bay
$09.ll!Oo T" flllan<f,_, lelbee RHI lttete Ce.
1QJ E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa
613-4140
THE llST 'OR LAST
Ivan Wtlls model bomt mw
available 4 bdrm 3 ba tam.
room, pool. UC S.nttqo.
Roy J, W•"' Co.
(BaycrutOUkel
130 Salll\qo Dr. MG,1'50
Victor!• BR. plus 3 Ba, -di .... / BIG LO'r DOVER SHORES kmi!y mi. 2 trplca + play WITH A BIG VIEW
BAYFRONT 646-8111 nn. Enclooed poo1 apuata AdlowEmenldilaJln-
BeautUul 5 Bedroom home Play yard, SS2,50(). of $100,000 bomea. Owner
with pier I: Doat, la.rte bay-I~~~~~~~~~ W1lk1r R11lty may •ubordlnate or trade
side terrace, handsome ex-I . 0 "'"''""""''""'""'""'"",_. down in Newport uea. ••rio•. formal dining rm. S.lll"Cbln( ~ ::...... Thu TWO 2 BR HOUSES :l:~~°i!~~~
sunny breakfast room witb Mauty mtllt ha.v. t.e.n a
VM!w. Larfe muter btd-modtl. 3 Queen the bed· ~ zone, l k>tl 10Q:tl35'. can 221 PolnHHle, ~•u room wtfh walk-ln cl'ot1et -rooms. 1%. Bathll. Built in bulld2or3monuntts.Price Oneotthetlneftnntham-
• • • • • -"· • • •• •• • • • • • Slf2,SOO Bar, Antiqued cabinets, COV· $30,'lSO. es in the heart of CdM. lalpa
Shown by appt only ered patio in rear yard. Com-Leon VIMrt, RHtfer to Ocean, 4 BR, 41$ ba,
(714) 642-1235
901. Dover Drive, Suite 120
NeWJ)Ort Beach
-------·----
VIEW!
l.eaM With Option
LIMly -> BR t'.lohdo witb powder nn, wet bar,
and many other extras for
fine llvtna. Best B1uU.a
View, Immedl.ate occupancy
.................... $325 mo.
Walter Haase
Immaculate, ·4 Bed-
room. 2 story, h111e
family I: livin1 room
-both v.•lth tirept.ce.
Impressive entry, luah
11.ndacapins A many ex·
Ira!. $45.500.
·'1• · 1' , ... li t . I , 1 ,:., • , , , , , , • \
54 6-5990
.MOM& POP
Retinl to Palm Sprl,.a I
operate this 7 Unit Motel
whlle you enJoY the poQI and
cllmate.. Seil or exchan&c
$59,000 e(j:uJty 10f' Newport
area propert;y. $92.500 total
pribt. \
1111'*-".
REALTY
20'l5 \V. Balboa Blvd., N.B.
17,__
4 IR HOME
2 baths, fan'dJ¥ room. double
pn.ce, 1\.4 l()Dt 17th Sttee\
Shoppln( ..... Can b<tlld 2
or mort unit•. $2.4.950.
L-Vlllert, llHlter
~-BfiSIESt' m.rketPJIOI 'II
Cuslfted -1ion. s •••
__,. time • effarL. Laat
...._ 'l'!lo DAILY PILOT
pletely fenced. $21,000 FUU. ~ anytime $1111,000. {By appt.)
PRICE. GI no mo"'Y Down.!.=:====-==== D•L•ncy RNI lat• E~~r::~~ ;,:~:S 1Coat __ a_Meu ____ 1_100_ 2828 E. Cnut Hwy, CdM
W lk & L Four Bedroom+ Pool 1~~!!..,,_!!3!!110~!!l!!f 8 er ee Ovodoolnl beaulilul eo.ta I~ 1 •• 1 M,1& O>wrtry Cub. lmma· LI~ Isle _.
'7682 Edln1er culate condition Ir; prSced tor
842-4456 or M0-5140 Immediate tale at only $211,·
Open Evea. 750. FHA/VA or may assume
YOU owe it to youneU to ~ ~YI.% loan -S175 month to-
vio1tJiate our 4 dlffrrent tal. CALL 540-1151 (open
trade-In Pf"Oll"aftl" (Explain evea}. 1 °E.;;..i..:.d. l"~-= ... ,,..., ... -_--=--.1
3. 4% Loan
4. Speed Sale BY OWNER 3 bdr, 1% ba,
huae yard, Xlnt cond. $1500
dn T.O. G.I. !II" F.P.
,.__i $19,900 l:vea I: wkends
ORA GE COUNTY'S M2-121l
LIKE NO OTHllll
Beaut l'H (4 Bd) PLUI
pier/llip PLUS Inc Apt.
12 Bd) PLUS ntra kit.
4 CAR GARAGE, "90,IDJ
R. C. GREER, n.atty .
3355 Via Udo l7U3llO
=--=--=--"'------=---
3 Br& Beth H-
on Via Wuien • one of
Lido 'a very nlcHt •trlt:fl.
Aaldna $59,000
LIDO REAL TY, INC.
34<XI Via Lido m.wo LARGEST R"'E"'PUB='"'u"'c,-,-;Hom<--. -,,,-..,,..-
2'3 E. 17th St. 141 44'4 old, 2 ""''" 4 BR. 3 BA. I '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I tam nn, retreat nn. 3 car •--1 •-Wntcllff Area '""'''· "'·""· 11,. ...... ,. Huntlnvten -cit -\Valk to We:rtcllU Shops A 540-4905 2 BEDROOM
l\tarlners School. 4 BR. 21' ASS="uM=E"'1.ow'"'"--=FHA,"'°-3""11""R. $141 per month total lnclud-
ba, Jg llv rm + dlnlna: &?ff. Pan. den & fam. $26,&IO. ing tue•, fJ.100 down. BIJ.
AU built-in kitchen, bdwd Owner will t&kt 2 11 d . afUd power, Pl FA llMt
Drll, fireplace. Dbl 1acqe. 540-4722 6: waterheat:er, elec:t. bollt-
Anxious SM.500. ''•~o"u"LT"°"'Sec'""'tion,.--,CO=NDO='"°'. 3 b. rana:e I: oven, prllap
Rltr. 646..39'JS or MUJ.85 Br 2 Ba, ..._ti drJ>e: e:lec dllJ)OAl. w/w cptl I dl'Plt * LACHENMYER ,.;: -· o;;;.,: . ....;... db1. -with boat -· fenced I landlcQtd.
WOULD
YOU BELIEVE
Howe: for aall!
843 Govemor, C.M. . .....,,. .
A n x 30 Rumpu1 Room with -===·"·""· ====0 I a Giant fireplace 1 Bar th.at Coll ... Perk 1115 -------~-1
PRESTIGE seal.I I ~ A t bedroom + 4 BR redet. 26• llv rm, w/• ~ room, ~ Ill· tee:t cpt1/drp1, b'plc, dbl pr,
an total"'. ~ " x 200' lo!. tncd I'S.~ TWO STOllYS A 20' x 40' warlc lhop l.ot • fl!l,950. You Cul :rm Comoll 6'&-2308 Art I BR, lovely cpU/-II>
~13 MG-n71 ttrcom thrUout EJeetric ldt.-
n!E REAL UTATERS ff.ewporl -1200 ch<n. SHOWS LIKE A MOJ>. -~ EL. VA « FHA tftm&.
Experlenctcl RE 2 Units. $23,000 lllAIHIAR RIAL TY
Salesman Cote to Be:ach I: a.nr.i M7-«W Eves. 531-2123
EXCEt. COMMISSION l.Jve In -A Rent -DIVORCE
!Utr. 6'2.$730 Ji:\.-es. 548-om e KEHNBIY
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGIST
2'3 E. 17th St. M6-4494
De1poroi.-Mu1t Hll
Submit o.n dn pymnt AllUl'Dt
'll" loan. LoWl1 ' 1111 -·· HAFFDAL ltEALTY
8740 Warner, 1'V 8C-+Clll
PRESTIGE HOME
-4BR2both-.
-"'" 11fA ..... Exct!Jent IJ'fL
otAJtGg )'Ollr' ftnt ad now. BOWi 11
Dill Mum fcr 1U'.SULTS =Dl'"at'"'""~==~ .... -RESUt;===:rn
R. D. SLATES, llltr.
111-3519 EWL l&l-'1311
2 LG. Iota M. Nr $ pb.
anl!Hnedlcal. $111900 -. tmna.-KlrchJ.M)T ....
Kula Maul 11.twall
--------
LUXURIOUS 3 BR, 2 BA,
Fam rm. trplc, woo!. ei>tg.
J!td pool, t.rplc. ""' BBQ,
1ncd ana for children. Walk
to lhp'1, achls. Conv to
frwys. FHA appraisal
• .. $30,500. Ownr. 962-4915
RENTALS
HOUHI Furnished
·-· -·---------....------------.......... --------.
-INDUSTRIAL Bid&, new. 100~ oc cuPJed, cood
tenant.. N.B. 10% net
retum. 32,000 sq ft Phil
SUUlv,ari . ~Sl '
'
MASTER carpenter, $4· ~
hour. Remodeling -Repail),
642-6409 or SJ6..3900
REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS
CABINE"l'S. Any sitt joM,
25 yrs. exper. ~
Lett 6401 Cement, Concrete 66QO Part-time profits ot $400 to / ::;::::,. _____ c..;.:
$500 -per • month possible. LOST creen I.: ye 11 o w
Fulltime eUort can exce@d parakeet 1n Vic. 2 0 O
$1000-per-month. Poinsettia, CdM:. Ans\\'t"rs
to Pete or Momma's Pretty
If you drive a car and be-Boy. He will r!peat his ad-
lieve the Vendinc Indu!try dtt.u:. Re1vard. 547-3431,
ts here to atay, write a ler-633-W6
1ble letter a1vi111 a sood/,l;:;IOO;;...:REW="ARD=,.-.~,..,.,;;;uffy=
(::llmpse: of your ba.cJcaround. PeJ'slan kittens/ 1-cream,
Only 9Jlid and indmtrious J.grey. No queltiorui uked.
"workers" will be conaid-897-9102 ~! (lht your pbQne num. SH;;A:.OGG~Y;..,.,..-.,.-,,,-,m-,ol-,-,poo-c
ber.) WRITE: dle with red collar, vie.
Speed-Vendor, ~PL B-
7262 Natural Bridge Road
st Louili, llt!Mouri 63121
?..feredith GardeM. 962-7659
6405
CEMENT Work, no job too
small, reasonable. F r eie
estim. H. Stu.flick. 543-86li
* CONCRETE worlt. BorW!-
ed _& lJcensed. Con~
sawing ___ I
Phillips Cemenl. 5@.6380
Custom L•ndscapi"f'
BEST IN CONCRETE I
• 64&-123.4 • '
e CU~N. PATJos·e ~
concrete &awing l. ~
State Lie. e ld-1010 ~
Contr1don 66f
Additions * ~modeUns1 FREE Fred H. Ge.rwick, Lie. 1[ NATIONAL ORGANIZAnON ' 673-QMJ * 549-21,fo
Hu Untl.!U.ll Opportunity +
You too can 1et into your BOATING C1rpet CINning 662' ewn busine.!ll. Enjoy profits:
Ne competition (nothing like COD RSE PRDFESSIONAL Rua: fl it anywbtte). Amuinpy UpbalBtery OeaniJ1r", T.
klw invesbneqt. fyotected quality, guaranteed rmtltas
terr It er y. · No fixed BY Allen's Maintrnanoe 'f
overhead. Year around pn> Coast Guard Auxiliary 646-4063 er eves 6U-352Sc
fits. Proven aucce&S. Com-starts Thurs. 7:30 PM CARPET k Furn. cleanlflj;
pany will fl'ain. It YoU can March 27 for l day service I: qual~'if
Invert $3,000 and can spare Corona del Mar High School 1\'ork, call Sterlin&" rqr Rent1l1 .. Share 2005 B1lboa Island 3355 VENhoME lnduitrlel ·llen.tol 6090 --
YOUNG Working Girl or Stu·
dent tD share 2 Bdrm. CdM
Apt. $70 Mo. 6"-4049 Aft.
:: 6 PM
WANTED Girl 21 )TS or over
to share nice 4 bdrm beach
apt. 111-1234 ~ 397. or
67S-3224 ·~;eeke.nds or evl'l'S.
' ROOMMATE aervlce, male j-or 1emale. Efficient &-:
qualill<d. 83>-2100
• : Newpert ... ch 2200
$165-2 Br, beam ceilings,
bltns, w/w crpts, hld pool.
Adults. no pets. 642-2514 IMMACULATE API'S!
IMMED. OCCUPANCY'
ADtn.T le FAMILY Huntington BMch 3400 SECTIONS AVAii.ABLE
FREE RENTAL BOOK Closo lo Shoppl"t, Pork
DROP IN & BROWSE • Spacloos 3 Br'~ l Bo
• 2 Bedrootn.. J Bedroom. 1 Bath. Nice car· ~ Swim Pool, PuV~n
pets i. Drapes,. Double Gar-• Frpl Indiv/lndry fac'll
age. \Vater paid. $175 mo. A, h I A First and 1ut plus a Deposit. 1145 n• • m ve. Walker & Lee COSTA MESA ""-2S2•
RENT ---·-----
2111.!lllXB
FOR lease Laru111t. Nir!Jel,
o.H San Diep Fwy at Crown
Valley, n!W Commm:ial ft
lndustrlal wtlta. Delta Elec-
tric. Dayi -131-1400. Evu
-~99-4.lSB. .
e NEW M ~ l Blda"., 10,000
sq ' near Ah'port. Air · cond
oles. $900 mo. rros1. ..... ,,.,
NOW LEASING -New M~l
Jndll!trial 1350 aquare feet.
orily 10 hours per week, 2101 East Bluff Drive brightness! 642-8520 ,1 in less than ·2 years you RENT FREE: Shatt apt.
can seeutt an annual net with corrvalescent man 28 Carpet & Uphol Cleaninz;!
Profit of "' 000 to ~ ooo • It It's done right. , .• ....,, .,..,, • fr: exchange re r com-It's •'DUNN-WELL"! ;!
Get in on the ground floor panionship I: lite duties, -·--·!.
of this new e :It c It i n I part time. Student OK. Must Free Estimates .. , 54H5tt
business. 'Vrlte including be sober and de~ndable. C L & f telephone nun1ber: Presi-S.U-587l 1rpet 1ying ,1
dent. Colar . Co-ordinates .:.::_;;;c.:,L~IC=E~N~S~Ec~0--1 _____ Rc.•cP.•:.;i:..r .:c66:.;f;i::
Corp., 235 Fifth Avenue, C.' np~ ( l '" New York. Ne\v York, 10016 Spiritual Readings, advice '""' ""'~ nyons, \VOO•.
on all matters, 108 S. EI pozyesters,) Vinyls and Til-
CANDY SUPPLY Camino Real, San Clem!'nte. es. Latest styles and colorJ;.
ROUTE 492-9136. IO AM·lO PM Commercial and Residential. 1 bloclc'·from ocean· in SUn-$1S5fmo. Arent M2-1485 (No Selling Jnvolved) SPECIAL $2 READING Expert installation. !
BLANKINSHIP FLOOl~S ~ 900 Sea Lane No. "88 Bet Beach. 10 ..,.... new·, all Excellent Income for few Al! 1· E I
&\2-1403 541)..~
.::;: -~·
Drafting Service 663T
7682 Edinger 3 R F •t .r•v Lets 6100 hours \\ftk1y \\'Ork (Days er rac IV• XJMr S.U.4455 or ws140 ooms urn1 ure 2 BR 2 BA, pool 2 bdrm, Only $42,000 each. eveni"-), ~filling & col. YOUNG \VOi\1AN
FREE o,.n Ev". $20. $25 • $30 11111. ....~. "'>•· !np' ..... HAlllOUR Ill TY s ADJ. lob; room fur 11 ·~· '"""will ""h yoo all Property Mlirwigement ISP ~~A~RKUN=~~G-, ", .. --,,-,-w-ol~k-to FUU. OPTION TO BUY Sub lease $115. 67J.5224 147-8595 units. 33.3 E. 2ht st, Costa ledinct~ """'Yd
1
........ ~rn. coineo',~ latest steps. Call Ardell
-"-••-·" Ow '! "--~ ... .,_.,. ""'--era a.i ""~'"""rs . in "" 2U·. ""I •538 1·10 PM Av&1-1&,_. to ... , ners beach & shopping; 3 BR; CR.e!rla"erators Available) lalbea !300 * NEW FOUR..PLEX * "esa. vw ... r .,,,..._.,. 'i-'"';:• Mesa I. ISUl't'Ol.lnding area. I~=="~-'-~~..,,..-'-~-,..,
for a limited time bltN. attluded patio, pool No deposit o.a.c. ---------Near Beach, Hwlttncton · TOP LOC &, TION We est. route. (Handles CXJUPLF.S, singles: lonely'!
t t.Complete~ping • 'I HF R c ·---· ~,., ...... ..._.. A A-..i.. N ' •J ' th ' ma1nenance: many ex-• • • • GRACIOUS Adult Livinc. ...,. • ...,.._.. .... ,_. name brand c.,J<q &-: ewmarea. 01n C.S\\'lllg
2 -:1u'= pun'.:buinc-dis-tras. $U!5 lllo. 8J&..nt54 Furnltur• R•ntals Ocean & Bay view. Spadowl I .:::i::=:=:~====== I 'Ji=~= h:!n~ anacks). $1450 Cash requir· to fun !: pleasuno ·
: ~ l. Fully bonded J BDRM, blt-ins, wall to 517 W. 19th C.M. 54W481 2 BR. 2 .BA.. ""1.1k ~n luafnea Preperty 6050 c.; 1 mile horn 'San Dleio ed. For persoral intuvie'v in • 635-9291 •
Design-Dratting, el!Ctro 'i
mech, layout, detailing. •!
PC layout, tape up, lrg ·:
or small. Ken Sr. 675-ll91J
• -und '''all crpts, drp11, 2 baths, 1568 \V, Lncln, Anhrit 174-2800 closelll, beautiful ca.rpeti I. Fnvv. on Bea·-.. "'"Jvd, __,_ Costa Mesa area, send * Selective Singles * •· 4 • Yr ro or summ('r 96" " ,,.,:;. ... p I Boat U ".r ""' D r.-~ n•-· dd-·· • ho•o nwn . h' . . , rental lncd yard. $215. .o-u748 $135. 2 BDRM, l~i ba, patio. ..... pe.-1es. 00 · I P!I Prof • • .J «:to sell. -·..,,a '""" P " · Companions 1p, Sincenty
Call NOW to beat ,v/w, bit-ins. Children I: for tenants. Subteinnean ' ISSIO.... ' , HAR.BOUR: R:L TY ber to llfulti-State Inc., 9075 Introductions Confidential
Electrical 66.io
the Summer rush L1gun• Beach 3705 pet OK. Bia'. 534-6989 parklna:. 613-3003 B4T-i595 E, Impe.ria! fl\'o'Y, Downey, (2:>-55) 6'2-9676 S-10 PM
PROPERTI Es WEST -Medical lulld1'n1 Calif. 90242 REDUCE Safe, simple. Wt 1-•···Id 0 6..,, .,30 P•noramic View C0tta Me111 5100 Hu.nt ...... &Mch 5400 VIEW • no· ct Oce&n " CANDY SUPPLY w!tb GoBe!e tablets only G1rdenin'" u.M u-U9J• e r. ,_.__,_ NE\V J BR _ Hom(', 2 ba, city li1htr. $2!1,500 including ---•. ___ ....,._
330Caqft,4 &lltnon lant. (0) ROUTE 98c. Crawford 's RX OCE rn FRONT Apt 1 v.·lw carpets, bit-ins. stove ORIEUtr EXCLUSIVE choice eomer .ln dfflnblo JI 9' sq. ft. pad. IDT fParl or Full Time ) Pharmacy, COlita Afesa TAKATA :
E LE CTRICIAN Li~ru;eB,
bond ed. Small jobs Mainl.
l: repair. 548-5203 ''
Lart:~~Bdnn. (2 ~a) 'sl.25 dap1>1. 675-343( 830-2825 LUUU area. Immediata ocrupan'cy ~:i. View Dr. C'.dM. Excellent Income for f"v WIG & MAKE-UP JAPANESE NURSERY •
:. lnd. util. until June 14. NEW 2 BR HOME-AP S ON-THE·IEACH · $94,(0). excellent tenn.s :-==-o'-----1 hrs. \\'ffkly work {days 54&-0724. Complete rm:l~
'• 673-3088 2 baths, w/w carpets. bit-in T , 2 & • •--'rMm Aptt. WUI exchana"e. e V!EW er ocean, corner or e\·es.). Refilllni: and Classei1 S85 servi~. Headquarters '*
• I========= 11tovc. • ...,.. THE rox a>MPANY bluU. possible 6 1 t y, collecthw money from CBelle Coemetics 541-948'7 all your nunery l"lffi:ls. ~ '• 51 67~34. 83().2825 Luxury Uvtna to plea. the tnecliW Ol' apb. Will buUd Co In Operated Dis pen-ALCOHOLICS Anonymous : Lido Isle 23 vi.oat dlscrimbtatln&-.NOP 2363 E. Coast Hwy, CdJ..I to oult. ,._. ••r~ sus in Costa h-fesa and ALI.EN BROS •
• --2 BR, view, remodelled, 3 BR STUDIO available at 8T3-9495 or 642-6969 ~ surrounding are. a ..... No Phone 542-7217 01' write to GARDENERS STUDENT~ • EXECUTIVEHOME th t bl ' u-• nlf BUJLDERS, lnveators aelllng,(Handles na m e P.0.Boxl223CostaMesa. workingthe lrw.avthrucJ. ' p "' cp g.. ·~,. ·~ POOL "'• Hu a..t11n ~ with ettice/atudio, 3 BR, 3 $1.9i'i, tum. $XIO. 494-S748 '" ''I' 6CNO 60XOOO' pouible 7 unita, brand candy & snacks.) lege. ExJ)«!riencet., lice~.
BA, Gardener incl. Lea~e. __ luslMQ ll•nt1I choice area. Real ba)' $1800 total caah required. Anneuncemenh 6410 REAS! 646-420.'l , •.• fUm -unlurn $550. ADULTS ONLY $19.SOOBkrtla..5851 For more Wormation -. Lagun1 Nl9u•I 3707 ~ • Ille QE and deta.ils. aend name, NOT Jt@spnotlble tor any EXPER. GARDENER : mmo -~--~----PIC HUNTING"Tttl BEACH R-4 Lot, Co.sta &ea. Zoned addmi5 and phone mJrl). debt&, e~ than my Own. Mid-age Japanese Rellable.
Summer Rentals 2910
~ IDYU.WlU> 2 Br, new
rum. hM1ar: wf V'tew. Near
vWqe.. Summer rental $250
mi>Yearly $175 mo. 714:
675-lb7s: eves.
MONARCH BAY AREA 1741 Tustin Av•nU. &5 unUll. her to: William L. Allsup as ot ~·i'°;c",,',,•;;S.;!;_83;:.'-".:7::05:.· --~~~en~~~ C to/fM17th Str~ ...... 1 ru Ocean A\-e., H.» G~•LocDutKll•oY&SUSolTl•l•S Owner1Br61cer,·5'M7il ''RO~on:~TI-!ENT' 1=M-"""=::211tho=·='",:,·===-o!JAPANESE Garder.er, com-. ' ' ' DI a ese .. ,.._. n4) ._ LOT • ~ Hills Roa~, . ' JO.o plete yard seIVlce, free bit-ins, trplc, heated pool ( , 636-lflT Offices _.__ Anaheim. Calltornia 92803 Cemetery Lots
6411
.
S250 mo. 10 to 5, 496-124.l Valley Center $300 uuwn. ''LlnLE BUSINESS'' ,';::'iitimi7.-ati.""·..:"'°>-:_:;133l7,-,,-,~-I HARBOR l Ir. 2 BDRM -2 bath. ~ * AiNlond ~ utils Fortin Co. Rltr. &U-5000 •Operate from Your borne T\VO cemetery lots • t CLEAN-UP Specialist! llfow.
1sh style, sha&·crp't'1; prv *Carpets._ drps 6200 e FulJ or part-tlme Harbor Resl. Prime. Joe. Ing, edging, odd jobs, ligltt
RENTALS
Apts. Furnished GREENS fftr 6: prv ftlndeck!I. Adult * Rtc.ptton Rm Atrti'I• e HJa:h earnings Leaving area. Sacrifl~. mOving. Reu! 548-695.1 .,
llvin1, nr besthe.~ from Sl40-* aearu:n& A maint e N rl 642-J.j27 e JAPANESE GARD C RENTALS Gon•••I 4000 11so. T•te·~-•·-c·•-, NO•TH OF • ~ ~._:~ """"""' •-· CJ , -~ Heuaea Unfurnilhed ..,..,..., _...,w..,.~ .. .., • ft ~ n:e ..... -. Pf'Olr&rn FOUR ~mete.ry Iota at ...::n'lce ~anup, ....,iuscaii;
su o . ON£ lldnn nl"'1,y BACHELOR. UNFURN. &\Jtm'tfilAn S.C..torl&I s.Me. •vail ESCONDIDO •Eun wbJJe t..ntlnr H"b<r ""'' M•'"""1 Porte mg. 531-71l.l4"' 7 p.m. , ~· Gefaer•I 3000 fumis~. Available now. from $100 ~Uiiiii-Tm & Ceuntry • Sl500 lnwstment bu.ya In Blue Spruce 91'ldion. Call JOHNSON'S Gardeninc &!n°i.
1;;.;c...;......; __ ·-~-CloM! in, Bkr. ~ ALSO AVAILABLE l982'l Srookhunit ''1.&st N. ot Sheppl,. (lfltw .Approx. ~Ac&es. roZlinl com~ lnven1or7 LI s.:.:rr5 Finest equip, upere yard : FREE RENTAL BOOK 1 _ 2 ' 3 BDRM. "J .billa; "' R~ can e For lnformaHori care! Reu! !J6:l.3)3.j.
Drop In & B~.. S!~~:a:~n:~.~ w6~.· 11e:atied Poalt. Oilld Cart Adami.) n4/962..29ll 1B2 Beach Blvd. J,.., planted ln Avocadoa or e Call: SfG.6740 eves. SERVICE: DIRECTORY en W lk & l Center, Adj. to Shoppfn: -CHEZ ORO APAlrrMENTs (at EWI) Huntl~ Sch bold tor appreciation. Anx-TERR t F I C opportunity, • •
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. ,t & """'uU."" , a er ee ·B="'=· =-=======! No pets allcm'ed &DC Atlanta ff2.U07 lolls seller Is ulrinc $59.400. amaU coin open.led car A.pplianc• lt•p1rn "a1n enance. censed
A 2700 Pe \\' t 1:1 Ne1\• 1-2 BedroOms _. p~ ~ STORES ALSO 10% Do\1<n with interest onb' waah. ~ m"~ qu(t. .P1rh 6510 548-4SIB/645-2310 aft 4 -••a~ Blvd. at Ad•-• Co1t1 Mtu 4100 tenon ay, a ar-'--...... on balance. For mon! lrxfor-...,. --;l.Att;IVN;,;-7.';;,;,;;;..:._
.. w ---~ ---------1 bor le Adi.IN, Costa Afesa. e~c cm\1 rnaltc otter. Uw:a~ at 19th w ·~·rn • ~.,. n ... ~. SF.RVJCE ,, .. , .. ..,,1 -.... .,.,....,10 •~ -or c."Mr: .. -matlon, please. call K. W. ~n. ..,,, • ne .. l\fo"·~t ~ llOlJDAY r~ _,......, . .._., ,,,,.....,., FREE DESK · SP,ACE Small "-Ith I: Newport, C.Jd. 961--1'1:13 Xlnt-guaranteed re r vice ... , ge-vacuum ~ Open tfl t PM D'ELUXE, spacioua l·Bdrm.l!'!!!!!!ll!!!ll!!!ll!!!ll!!!!!!!ll!!!ll!! I Pool-Wa!he.r.Dryers 0 vlclntt)' or Balcer an ff alt 5 Pllr. Reu ralell. 147-3115 lJ 8--5646 alter 6 PM
J $fl5.4 BDRM, 2 ~ 1"\u1&. apt. $1~ Plus utll.· Prh'l.tt~ Brhtol(C.M.)lnniturnfor ltltheff&A.ss.c:.,lnc. UQUOR Uotne OraJ1C1 YARD Cle.anup . Tree
w/w, ba.tns. OiiltlrTn OK. H«!ated pool. Ample patttna NEWLY DECOJlATID DELUXE J bdrm, ta.m nn. laltJ.aa memtn: and ao-llll \V. Clflmsn,,Ave. t.ounty A quality fbr:turtt lat.yaitHnt
6550
lM':n.>lct, new Ja w n
1
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mt ~ No chfk1rtn • No pets '.I &, w/---... <I studio w/ranp. no peb. c:eptlnc dtJlveries. Drane•. Clllf, for complfJte. rtslaun.nt • • l}Jr'lnkJen, rototill. ~(.a.1• 1963 n...-..a. CM r --..--... ..,,,. '" ,..__ r......-1.a SU~. Evff.'ll·kn!Li S!l-591'1 -~ $JZ.. 2 BDRM t rl p I ex, ..,.......,_ DISp, • wattt pd •• nr acb1s -10 . ...-~ ..._.-. Notaey -Income Tax ·· Ins. I •"'!:"'!''l!'"!'~~~!!!!!!P I Ne1\-ell Auoc. '94-"'594 BABYSITJ'ING ~fy home., & eJAPANESE GAROE:Nqt
pnp, w/w drps. patio. Villa Pomona Apta 2194 "D" Placentia Aw. Plut. Call 5!1-"m& etc. 1 Del Nerte <Aunty W H 0 LE.SALE Distributor aSde C,flf. Prefer \\"et"kly. llttlntenance 4 Oeanup
Rcr. 5.l4-e9IO "'a-ta Mua '• ne•'tit a, mo1t e "'"412' e Call BUI R.cbln8Qn <Eves.) ~ ... -111_..._ ._ 1._ ,_ * 548-1557 * Cail ~2572 ..__ l a.ectt :5705 546-4471 Ntar ft~ Klamath River ·~ ,,.... i....--•-... u~ pm. ONE bdrm duplex, luxurious a.plll now rentins. $90. l Br ullf, UP11tain. Avail .. una In btut o1 the R~wood Na. ventory. 'ViD ~ hliti m. BAB\~SrT One or two AL'S Gardenlna s, r v 1 ct
' •/w, a .. '&llablt l'.IO'IP, good F'um It. anfum. Adults onty. 411. hfarure only. J % 2 BEAU'l'JFUL OCMn f'ront 2 llOO 1T shop. t11-.n.bouse. &naJ Parle. Calf G 1 en terelf rate1. 546-7015. chlldrrn tu age 7, my home Lawn maintenance. Prdt~
ll'M. Bier. ~ nu pea, J760 Pomona AV@ .. M..,nolla St. &f..4695 BR 2 BA. spuiows.roonu allt.)" truck tJitrance U25 n.o~ (n4) 532-2MI Or-nIE HUB ot activity rw run or part Time. 54&-6.77 lng &: clean ups. &46-362$ .
PLAQ J'GUf' wane .. wber.i Just soulh of !3th St. OJAL dirac:t IG-51'7S.. Qars1 Ii. nt.plaa!, avqe, Ltue. w/ utll 64&4544, 5"..an3 aJWe, Calli. or write Harold Rn'tc. ~--... tJM.· CHILD or Jnfan1~· Cal"f', Nr. E.'CPER GARDENER '"
rt.y AN Jooldnc -DAil. T THE Qutcxr:R YOU CA.u.. "1111' Ml tbte lit 11aet uif Unf'lan ss:;o· mo, tum $400 THE Qma&i YOU ~ Del Po<1tc, Box S3. Klamath. C...uied Ad" Dial M2·· Pac. Q)Ut I Newport. Ml~ Japa"'9e Reliable.
PILOT dUltflecf MWl7I nm QlJICitER YOU SEIL listm _; ttw p1Ka filWI mo. 494-MSJ mE QUIOCER YOU SELL Clllt. ts.3'11 to otf9' YoUr 1e:""9 ~'OW Re.11i. ()pm « AM m-5429 >.ton • Sat llJJ..-07(ij
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~--~~-~·~~~-~~~-__...-.~~~~~ ............... ""'!' ............................................. 1111111 ........................... 11111111"' .......... .
. . .....,, -24: 1969 :;-.a;•-1114•1••; .. -•; .. -·;--•;•1 SllVICI 111i~~y .IOU ' WLOYMlifl .IOIS,li IMl'L0Y'!11Nl .IOU Ii IMPLOY!i!!! JOIS & IMPLOYlil•NI A Y a
· P1a1ttr1nt. ""'"" AIO ~i. w~. ~ 7'11"l. '1'" Wl"'rfc,IMI 7200, ·""' w ........ -noo 11eri; w~ -noo Help w""9il. -7200 ... !.";""...,
e 'PAT'S -~...:. All MlCOUNTINC " * * · • "'-.---. ....._ ' . . ' ])~ , .~~·r-~ ~.. 111110i . nA.'fW011t ·llYf PUm ~':~":.,.,~i! UNIQ.11 ......w.. "'° m JAIS.CO . 1 1wM1D1Am.~ DIYISIOll ...... 1ai._ ..... ,., 1 _ _.......,
....Ll.I' P~';,o~.~ , , , "/A~ .. Nlt·::.mi liXPANSIOMIN Tunet~Optr. ~.!.':r....-11 ""-~,...-' U ~-. ·lec:lriW or. -•·-ORANGE COUNTY ~~~ ·-· --.e ...-. • :ACCO NTING HJah rSCllOoa,· dl!lliina -·~ -.... ---b1r11s tor our -.ii. PLUMBING :11. ljr ""'·' SUPERVISOR I (IO ... -l. .lcal _... .... ~ .... »:.: 'h-P~lde· Prechlan vtp>o _ _......,... W.rt-. lle.1ni, nmod, Ith kllO l<!d& ol not ._....,., .,.pt, °""'1"11 C/U/ .. la R ••th1lo•
...,,.ir ............ ~.-, • • :'...,.,,,_ w~-i ... ~ -ir,Jnhw.ll<pld ... MEN ARE NOW BEING Machllllst lleodl,oe_al _ , ...,.....,. \II' f'!!".,. .,..._ . ...-t lalo-mool INTEllVIEWED HillEll Bl'ld., JOit flll ... !!'!' 1)1.
Whl•dya Want? W'*"11 Gort
1
1Remodll, 114Hl~,1~"4o · Oppl>rturill)> lo<' an .,. --ta..mn~·. 'traln!nr• thorlaht man. Al<D TRAINED TO FILL Wl!JI ablllly la~-,.. """· ,_ I':"'"' • IPICIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR .,_.,. ;.lwW' atcollnt· .. tim,,kMoiloc proeodum • UP TO . GOOD PQS!TtONS wrrH totne ~ lo .,...iq lo&. w111,...m. • lllort tnlllll
NATIIRAL IORN SWAPPIRS ROOM· ~D:lli'i-Jp.N • •lll .ln ;a Fall dtvlilOrt and m•~ · "'40.. . 'ioP STARTING' PAY. ~odlont-....,. plrlOd al--tal7-
' spec111 1ta1e ~ ~~f ~t-~ ::.:,..~:,.~~ A»PlY ........... all Pi•c'!'u.NTH $512.-mo. & IP -,iu. ....-. =. i;.: 1:. • .:0:..
S.t1--5 11--5 llucb -1 .. 1~ two ,.. -U/41 546 -~ Appl At _..,. w111 be -
:· , .•
' ' . 1~,
•••
'1: ' ' .. ' .
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~ ::=1t~"4~:~Mun~u:::~": Rooflne· 6950 ~~~~~t. ro:a~'::~~~ PERSONNEL u~::'::"~ lMOE.N!n.:W,,,1• fttl4.
,... ......aTMIHGfOll:U.LW-JAADUOMl.VI ;.;J: t I '" ~DEPT• ~the pQroQ tbla week. Saftta.Afta
PHONE 642.$671 A &ol<r not • __ .. • Midi le .s~. Div. , 54"·2· 034 . Both -and .-n..i a Blod< """" ol Mchddln. lmmedlete _..._ In Te Plan Y.Vr Trader'• Paredl11 Ad LHJia .-.i. all· l>'l'I EQUAL Ol'l'Ol\rllNrrY , ..... , .,.. .~ -" ~ 1' blo<k W•rt" Graat.l ..,... •• ,.. ~'11111 C&blnCnl,..,., 2isbp 3 B~ 11< ba, Mon;_. =t'""J;;'.:"""'1'w.rt EMPLOYE!t .. AT,' A ~TIC * · * ·=t-=~:::: . thefellew .... arNa 196' Cond ptl~ (Mal~ or Femaie) ~l., ·-, ,. . , . ~r. , :l:°::J'. .,,...C:..:-1,": ,...0'."'i;aoo "::ii>'~·~_; Sew!"! "'°' ' · ~-DAY. BUSBOY . MINIMUM At-'"· Women 7111 STATimCAL
i' ~..;s,truck,...,.., :'r~1iti..~.::"~ TI:!l'.;..~ .. ~,:·11.!S~,i;r,1~"' RESE~RCH ~,~KNIGHT ·=~~~:ONs J~~!.~s!:!! ~:, Want late model Sportsman 1'1 Ft, fiber sJau outboard hma 1; clotht1 made. f; Hf Mheol.'1rH er Ute lh. id. b'Pltc. ExceD
l\>ATA
~ or tnJDM Ill
a... and/er ..-JI>' '*"*'
:-V&J; Haw u part trldo ''° -b;, W""1 tilt tnlltr. 8*-:11-0S . ro'!"°.l':". ToflO~ . , * D~ Y ..,1v11ent "'""" • ...........nt. ,· 11np&1a • 10 o.r,.i.. Sta . ww Ind• lor.landx&plai:. • ~-* INTERNATIONAi.* A-·· , ,D)SHWASl:IER .~ °',..~ c-rty ·work "1th....., <t ttcal-----dale lo -... ........ unit. lll1all llC1ft •. w .... ~-642-600 :a.: ' c:-...:.~ MFG." D~~~IBUTING I n.. ~Jwuja ('mp. * ~11\?HT U-~...i..11 Pii'XR~$40o
• · Equal opportunity •m•lo>er ' · DISHWASHER • i.d'lned y Good ""'"'-...u "'°""""· work lnvolwd.
t 21.''5 Ac.. NoSD Ca. &n HAVE Unlts & Tn1ltt Pik, A.lter11tkln~ EXPANOfNG TO • . • ~fee retmbunled 6 ml'nths. ·~ -Adj"""· RJR. U1il """""'Arb. • ac. All .... N•a~ accura ... ,. .... -o·RANGE COUNTY ....... to lfart work F/C B IL . • ... POUCY
SERVICE \ Trd tor 3m.t aq ft Ud Ind. ed. rm/35 :""10re sp, m.m ~ ·· . . ·· , , APPLY .1~ PEltSON now . c.onstrllC:J.a!i~~
. wtlta. Onr' Nn. Bingham Trade $30,000 !!fl. tor T in Trff Service 6910 · 1 ....., INTERVIEWS .
PO 1!3·Bat>oa m.8417 s Cal OR s.31145 • NOW HIRING ' · i.ir.r · l ft MON. • 11JES. '· R. Plttce "-· Agoncy
· · ESTATE Mal•t ""' s.rv PERMA1iENT rosmoNs In JABSCO . REUllGI· l · w; Kl '°""· ext. 22 = Newport, cM. ....,,. Pmtr " 11ut -,..., "
:c =:t:.~ ~~=t::mo1~: ~~ ~ AVAilJ,.BLEWl'nt ·151 I, Coatt Hlnhwey Astc·b'Mr. HW; H1ID W•ntM, f:·ra=pei~~
: !'PR:.~t,t ,..,..... "" Phone 644"'87 O~GE COUNTY • Po""""'1 llop&rtm<nt Women 7400 ... t P-..,...,.n1y ,.
', . * • """""''"' , e HUNTINGTON BEAOI ASSOCIATES Newport lllch "'""' Ex~•-t _,,,.,
. _..,-7 .,....-, SPECl'ACULAR Home TREESERVICE WEneedmeotowork .lnall ·MECH''Nl'"'•L -~-~.--i--
Mommolh La k 11 with. Expert, Jlou' .....,.,,, N --~· . '°' '°'" •v --·--. Cabana mobU:. 'born. oo tho •oouzh Unit, to dimlna" . . dopta .. o -.-•""" ..,... . ORA~SMAN MISS EVU Al'..Ell(Y
... ..,. boot '"'• avail. -· u ,.... tn1n. * CARPENTERS ITT JA8S(0 UR llUI •• ""'°fo<l bdnncoodomin. llnanclalroncom.Tnd•lo? Televlolon, Ropalt 6915 TOP STARTING PAY POLICY
; · lum. H.B., CM., Tultin !;';"tn,~~RI~. 6•!~ RAINBOW TV eo. No .,,.. AUTOMATIC PAY RAISES • .· .. . . * ELE(:TlllGIANS FM Pahl
...... Q5.Sll5 -_, v ·~ . ~--~.. ~ srART WORK '""""·chemlcal'llld... * c•BINET smERS Ltral ............. to 11511 TYPING HAVE· Double btd aprlng. Vloe ............. ! -~ wo • .., JMMEl>IATELY dw;trl&l pumps. Experi-" Sfc~/P R. $SOfl mattre·.,·~--.:.H•-.-. blkt<.whtor"'ftOL FOR•~VIEW r'" In-•---~••---*BUYER* . ............ --·-mlll. ~ Whll do yoa 'bave to trade?.
Lilt tt ... -lb Crane•
;~ Caunl;)"• larJrelt rud trad-
i uw~-~make a deal. :· * * *
• u--"'" --I u"= ~ """' -·~~··• Girl l'rldq, ""' ...... $500 tiplo Uno polley t:Ypllt. al+ es portable typr'Nrite, both e MONDAY&: TUE.SDAY ~ and dimension-With mobile home uput. A.P. Clerk <IPl!t) •• to $500 accuratltl, 1111 tM e1ectrlc.
ln good cond, WANT: Stereo ho 990 n4-7253 ing ealttnga ,e19!"Hal, ence. ~~nt beneflta. Gen Ote/Bkkpr, ntl••to $500 The kteal po&!tkm for mne.
unil lf equal value. 548-192.i Up l1t1ry 6 Shop t!Xflt!riMCe desired. . We Med IDtMOnt u back· PQ!"DU· ·············•••• $475 one who lllllel., trpe. I * LOOK * ,..,.,. APPLY IN PERSON up man lo< our .....,,.. ... 3'· ""'"' (oplll) ...... $400 . * CA........ . Agont w.· ... umalt pump Mall ~ PBX (spilt) .... $350 * * . ··-- ----·--------15 Yl"· ,.rv1ng °"""' Co. OPPORTUNITY! · EQUAL OP.PORTUNITY ·EXPLORER manuiacturer, • dlvlskm ol P.T: "'"1 Ok .. to ss.-KEY PUNCH
SERVICE DIRECTORY lllGCUSSATOVIMNGS l oin ~-·-•lutelt ~· ' ',i.J!'P. e ~r".!!t.i , . & la'I• !nt.matlonal oorpor. Applicant Pay1 l'H ~--·•-..:. .......;~
: r.! .. rcleftf.. ~· ...... _ ~~ ORHOM. £ QRP ation Purclluing in OW' op. Sec/Co111truction •••••• $500 ~ •-...,--.-.. ,. ,.. 66IO Income Tu 6740 . UPHOLSTERY __ ......_.... .-, "· MOJ ( , .,...On i. •.., llmcttoo, m. !:ocrow otlk<r ...... to $500 "1th at lout one ,.... ...
1--------h AND DRAPES Na ~.,...al it:.'"'' ~,,;. ·· · \.olvinl a' ·rei.uve.., ,._ Secty/Recpt •••••••• to $500 perience an ~ 6 ~
; SE.VICI DIRECTO.RY
cart Low-rite mo nthly Year round ofc. 328 No, .-...... -tlnstallatlon MUt~ -r:~ · . ;.11 ·: l(Uf) ~ New· port •---L • Keypunch •••••••••• to $500 1h1ft.
DEPENDABLE: Prof. yard • T •Tax Adviiors Our other services include: We ~· ... . 1 e Way, Costa Mesa 4000 C•mpus Drive portion at our ales·dou;·~ Secretary •••••••••• to ssoo merle IBM equip ml ....,
·a•allable. 545-1931 Nwptffivd, N.B. Reas! ._.Y" ---,-_··~·",-···-• ~· -....-. st ~~ -amJ f!\W. Call 645--0IOO tor appt. * CarPet A Rua Cleaning -1::.riJ .;l...,.p .. 2tt .. , _ _.. ___ ' .,.--------: F1eue .et'4 ~ lnclud-eno, ............ •• •• ··• to _,., Excellent tree btDtf!•• p.,.. •-:==:::::;=====c I 'WaiiU'ifi~;;;;;J;'ii-.-· Your aatal1Ac1km. is Npt a: l' . • 1 · hla' ularJr. rtqUlmnents or Bank Sec'1" • •• •• •• •• • $f75up -I· WalterllFahrenholzP.A. ~mortimportutaaaet 6:4 to ~u~.•&un OR * * call ~1 deput:menl Sfcretary •••••••••• to $475 manent. atMd1 work. Our
Generil Servlwt 6612 .. ~~~· ,!~., Servi
1398
:"_ Reva's Uphol•~ ·· \.J' 111M1SJ :IH ,. ~· SALES for appotn~l NCR Operator •••••• to sea poltcy 11 promo&a trom · ...........,., .... ...._ ..... --··1 · .. Tl"!:: , REXAIR NOW HIRING Girt Fri/Irui •••••••• to $425 within. Your fubn 11 deta-
Japa-Ganl1n1r 300 Palm. Balboa Ponn. · $0 • "m ,,..._. . SALESMEN AN ~uAi OPPORTUNITY Acctr Ok .............. S«IJ mJnod '"tlftly bf ,... Now
. E::Qer, corn.pl )'a1'd atrvice! Ironing 6755 673-279l 968-4791 -a.AllERIENCED We haw appointments. we ... ,. EMPLOYER General Ottice •••••• tu $tOO modern otttce, fritndb'. :~ FJft ntlma'!:, 541-795&. CZYKOS1'l'S Cullom Jflltl, . ' have the product, we bave ~ •••••••••• $350 pleuant a~
JAPANDE Gvdener, exp, Ironing $2 dmen Upholatery. E 'Ir o Pe an ftlllf ... t lmployff the opportuntly and we have 1486 Dale .Way, Coa:ta Meu Tra1nrte ••··•••••••• to $.150
n:_lfal:lle:· Mafntmance, ·fteu My home. Bring hangers. Cr a ft s m a n 1 h I p. 100% ~~ilU;jlJL i&i,,J.• ' .'~11i1!>Solhneflt1 . the top commluioi:is. c.Ilfom1a 9'lG26 flO W .. Cout. u•-~.• I
For Details and App't.
mo. n tes. --Financing. 642-1'54. rm ..... \!Qn,..,, ....... aril ~ .. , ' !!ALL MR. LEE ·-.. -~
· HAULING. Cleanup ~ ffiONING. 80c an bour Newport Blvd., C.M. ~9' t. . o!~•~}. APPLY fOR PllSONAL Newport Beach &t6-3939
• odd Jobi etc. Free est. Jim Pleue hrillg.ha.nzen peison to BOti .. _... · A Nr'IOrn-.1 Office INTlltVIEW WOMAN to can tor 3 .'=="PAINT.::;.;:~~ ~:s :.:~~M= lt-~I -·~&;~;.. . * ~~-* DESIGNER ~t;: .. .t;k:~
CID Collec:t
PERSONNIL
(213) 384-1213
"~OOIJ roes, ·ETC up ·-;~* roNVALESCDIT< Aide . 211t)OJWilar'Bhd. .. ~BEA~ * IUSIOYS * Eleclro-MecblalCll ?PM
companion er hl>pr., a..il. Colla -47 Courll of l'ilhlon l!:fJi'4 ~ w/ colJe&e ORTHODONTIC uatatant
UNIGARD '
INSUltANCI GIOUP
·, Haun.. e730 Lendocaplnv 6810 tong or '""" tum . *DRIVERS* FAS11r0!11SL.\No OVER AGE ·IB .i...J-tlonl<moch&JI!. over 21,..-nce<1, .. 1,,.. 1:..:.==----"'-"' HOMEMAKERS. &11.-' N rt lllHch . Exporlenced only. Full \!me Ci.J.-JU<eni lay-ftd not .......... WW tnJn
.. SAVE MONEY -,,. .... ""' LANDSCAPERS DAILY "°"""""' "'""" No !Jpe.ifenc• . . ~ . -. . Apply In ...... all 3 ..... out ......... work .. ~ quick -Pl u
The Rigger
. '•"' tt to the dump. Call ATTENTION .~. HB.. ~--~ -·· ,. • • -.. • ·-~~ -·~ __ .., __ , ;;wm:;;=:c,---,--~~ .. , -uw•u ··~ N~-1 An ·-··• ~-"'-'•'N , . . FIVE. CDoytNS ' --• ·~--•~~., 6G""6 ...._ I need land!<aplno, and will · 536-6!tll bafO.. 6 p.m. .' .--_...,.. r . ~-"""~-v REST•U"RANT" w/ milfWy _.tlcattono. GIRL lo cu. lor 2 .....
CLEAN Lotl/aarqes etc., trade a 17 tt outboard with ~·have ' clelii1 ' Calltamil ' ' Employer 380t E.~ (but ~· Radar op pJ'lfeJnd but not aft IChJ, my home 2:6$:30,
tree remov, dump skip big wheel trailer for yottr· Domestic Htl! 7035 ~~rd.' A~ · '' " .• "' .,.,._,'". --.-.--Cororw. del Mar e.-ential . moat haw own car. Vlc • W1Hr1sses •
......... !ID .,w. 96Ull5 ,.rviOOI. Ltt. l'I IO<•thtt. ~'LOW CAii 'CQ. .'liNTORY' · (No pboM ..Jiil RADµTRONICS Div of E. l!th & Ra Y mo n d •
""""' your b...,. ........ """"'All .. Byland~ . ··Ill' E.16tl! S(. ,._}: TROL C'LERK • ~· ... ~Corp. 675-1.111 m... -""'
'' u---'-· 6-S ""°"' """'1 Em-Pays· F" · · Thala -.,,..,..._ : ..--nl.. •• lo&a E.16tb, SA 517-<l3!15 . • ... s MBLER M . 181112 Tdlar ""· Beauty c-.. 1o ..
• ·--------Poor Man'• Friend °"""' -a-ut SECURITY GUARD • CARPENT·ERS Maintenance an Nowport 8'&cb. 833-2100 OOSMETICS. Xlnt -
EXPERIENCED ONLY
FULL TIME
• ~.:~~: cu~M=~G -.....t --Excl..W.. "'"""tlal ..... •PAINTERS s1ioDay1 .awHk *Busboys ~.bra, ......... ""
Xlnt work Reu! Reis. Far East Agency -6'U103 munity lo t h"e' Newport~ •
M8-t1U Mliaonry Brick 6830 · Beach arta. Must'havt-pre-ComPMY. ,benefits, free Ir> c k GENERAL OFFICE Glrl •
APPLY IN Pl!R.90N #11 ........ _
N-&lclt
. • Hel w---·. u •• 7200 vloua ............ Tho .... .... ....... ""'"t ......... .... REUB .... E. LEE * 00 Tel•pbono -' . . w=:=;.. S:~· PRICE & QUALITY P ~-~ tion will '°tall moot1y ""hi IJI , °"'" -°'"' 21. Pb: HUNT·INGTOM
VALLIY
CONVALESCINT
HOSP.
And Apt """ 6IUIM CUSTOM LANDSCAPING SERVICE SIL Att Exp'd, _., $400. In •lart, unlloma ''""' -Corp. 111,E...coaot Hlll!way 1,;,511).6373:;;::;;....,..,..,.,,-.-~ · e 646-!234 e n time d.ly shift. Union provided. P1eue ee.nd brid 235 Filher, C.M. NewpOrt Bffch Appl,y tn,pel'IOD DENTAL Aaiataat. chair '.r Income Tu 6740 · Station. .Santa. Ana I: resume or letter to Box M· i.ooKlNG FOR y Ac H T _...:.;,::.;;;'-'-:=.--:::-: aide, In Newport Btacb
Paperhantlng Paltades Rd. C.M. 509, The Daily Pilot. st<IPPi:it.' GOQO J.DB FOR e INS'i'Roc..'TORS -Full COCO'S atta. X-Ray exper. detired. NEEDS
l'ull n-
HOUSEKEIPll I JU;.SPONSIBLE pttparatlon P•lntln9 6150 SAILMAKER. Exp. desired. WANTED; Youne man to RIGHT MAN .. " Must BE Ot/and put time: Ntat • To apply, Pb: OR J.1166
Ii filing of all ~ncome tax NOR'I11 SAILS 913 Elee-learn eli!ctrical eatirnalliia: c.\PABLE •• MATURE. pnrance. Mud ·be able to REUB. EN'S DRAPERY WORK ROOM
returns by Certified Public VINYL wall c o ve r I 11 I tric, Seal Beach (nll with a potential aal&ly of RELIABLE I. S 0 BE R • i:rwet: and de&! with tbl: · · Immed openlnp for drapery 1312 N A H.B.'
A:ecountant. Available to gpecWlzt. Kit. baths. 596-4461 $D1 & fn1:!: Mull be Willing SUGGEST SEND PQ.bllc, good filure, Apply wartc, all pha--. 5t0-64&I. ~lw,,
teIW the needl af Corpo.ra· Material 6 lalQ. Est. MAN steady part time job to woric: 60 hours a ~k BACKGROUND, RESUME 1n penon, Holiday Hea1tb 1"5 W . Ad1m1 Beach Drapery Servtce. --=='.:=~.-.-.!
tiont, amall bualn:@•• en-847-1659 1 ~ adult X1nt. I.A at mlrtlfnwn wases wtibe & REFERENCES TO BOX Spa, 2300 Harbor Blvd.. (Ht• Met1 SALES lady, ..., 2J 9:1 45. SKREJAIY
1 terprlles and individuals. INTER or Ext. PAINTING, .;mts roU~e open. $23tr mo trainlng. Write Dally Pilot , M 409 DAILY Pnm. ~C:;:Mo:··------p &RT TIME full time, chlldml'• store 11 Your eomple~ •tiaW:tlon IMMED SERVICE l.DC&l + 962..(6.13 Box P-317. HAND POLISHER PART & FUlL TIME " .to. Cout Plua. Appl)t 650 Experienced penoa nsecltd ! 11 ~=RATE "L FREE Ht. .... lGn ;MBULANCE DRIVER PUNCH PRESS OPR. R•con: ....... •nee In •mall CAR WASH HELP TOP STARTING PAY D St. '!Uttln. to manqo of!lce of ....U
1• IMPROVEMENT INT . .1: EXT. Painting. AD Experienced-Must be fu1b KIWK.SET buildera Hardware. & NEW BRANCH IN OR.ANGE OOMB. JIOUllkeeper/B&by-. buainea ln Newport a..cia.
• C'OUNSELORS &euon rates. Free est. lie'd Lie'd. Top 119.Y for fiahl 516 E. Santa Ana St. KCWKSET EXP'D. POLISH •nd OOUNTY. WE NEED 25 sitter Full eharp. Mon-Wed.. General Secretarial A aoo&. e 6'2-9937 e A: ins. Call O\arUe. ~ man, Contact Bob. 837..cml. Anaheim 515 E. !Janta ·AM St. OITAIL MEN MEN FOR ADVERTISING Fri, g to2 PM. caD aft 2 PM bepinsoPftience l'l'llQlnd,
..
,.
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'• '
• K. cta r t: Acctg Serv. RF..5IDENTIAL painting a: BOAT AnC Equat ~0ppFcy Employer An Equal~:Employer T;,,~0focCA':1~...::.•t. =:~~~ 96hml ~;~re1Umeto
Income tax. penonal or paper hanging. Good worlt. CARPENTER ... oner... or1m1n, WORK FIVE DAY 1DPll"V" TE L EPHONE Anlwtrlnc·-======-='"'-1
-... your homo ... of~ Ruaonable pri"' . .,...,.. Expaimc<d Working., -by CUiiom PART' TIME --81..t". CM. ,,30 TO 10,30 P.M. roRiN'. Servi"· Exp'd, only. :1991 I DOMISTIC HILP '
21 yrs. op, klc firm, PAINTING Int a: E :11: t , 1682 Placeritla C.M. bu 11 de r for dlwnttled $250 PER MO. ,SENIOR JIOYER FORMATION CALL MR. Grace Lane, C.M. 540-2052 All kinda! ~
ICUlB:l or MS-0742 ~ lawelt contracted prien EXPERIENCED m-FI cotn· O?:anle County wort. F'ot NO EXPERIENCE NEC. m,.~t .. ~~ -~th-o~ JAMES. YMCA NEEDS TYPIST Cooks,** A O.,.rDorw.
auac HARRIS Tu Serv. Fully Ina. Satiafaction,auar. ponentsa)e1tralnee1.Sa)a.cy, :pp~ caU .... 'f.?·1665 betwn OALL ·MRo Rl·ID 1>1l1Jll~\;.. ... U""I MONDAY I: TUESDAY 6CU990 Refertneel req. r .. a: Pee
9th yr •• 3llT Roosew.lt. Free etll Call Jim Weeki. xlnt fululT. 646-8895 • p.m. ......,. ' 540-2014 , firms. Pmtlp company. 774-7251 BABYSll liJt, V5c sear-SL ..,.PaJt!.obL Call Mist Abby,
C.M.. Appoltttmtl.. 54l)..29'Tl 673-1166 FRY OOOK ... ,.. DESPER-AT-ELY need 9 'M to 9 PM· Tremendoul benefits. $1,100 11• .... ·-·· outsido ,.1., m·e ni ""' _ .,, ....,th. ·IF'" paldl SAIL llOAT Sehl. C.M. Call all I pm. ARGUS AGINClll
•INCOME TAX• PAINTING, Papering 16 yn; Odiel ReatauranL zi: E.17th mlnWratiw traµltes, ae-TOOL &·DIE MAICIR Beach ana. M 11rehant1 ..., SALESMAN MS-752> at wlalda. 1181 C Newport Blwl., C.M.
Done in )'CV borne in Harbor area. Lie. bond-SL, CM. &fS..M03 countanta. draltamen, •tock KtWKSET Pfflonntl. M5-2'17(t apr)ey. Yourc, agreutve, Jibefslu WOMEN to poUah • muk • SUPl::RVISION 6 :~:Tuel :; H~~~~ >WI' i.·Your Ad ht~clauUSedlT clerlci, and machinists. Ap. 516 E. Santa· Ana IC. SERV. STA. ATI. Dt,y man All boats. tn Newport. tiberlfu moldt.' APPl.Y W. 1ALES woaxe
-~. 1 ... -._ -. home look nlft d 0 w n T Someme w1l1 be. ktoldDI fer ply Merchanta: Pirnorme1. Anaheim I W/~ up. owr 21. Wrtte &JI: M fOI DI.fly Pflol D. Schock' Ch., -s. 1'tdl tblw. lf\llt ....... ,.,_ ~ -..,._ .......... 645-2770· qency An Equal Oppty Dnp~ 4901!. l'/tb. Costa Mta Acc.unt1nt1 G~. Santa ADa. apptartDCe, Ult to -1 ::ldl::iad.::,;$15.::;.;"'~'~m~;;;~tl93--4438~::~,_::~";;':"":"~L~~·L:Dtal;::~6C-16'11;:~~--SERV1"11' s c--.llt M•nater• SALESLADY: Muit ti.ve wltb people. ARlb' ta -SALEsMAN. 25 T :e'!!O! tWP. W""'1t W.. 7200 H.lp W•nt.d. Men 7200 Adm'W1tr1tlv• TmMI exp. tn bettft' ctrnRt. wits '°"' --
ST',,. "W> G ,..,.E-~1<¥. ....... Full -· -~;:;:;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,,1 CALL BOB, .... 7796 • ,,,. ... ~ ........ Gd Htlltlay Naallh .... ~,.--~~<Ul'Ll'OLl..ra.IJAN--,~-::::-0""::...; llhilt. "" Clydo, "9 0 SHEET M.ET' AL ARGUS AGINCIEI v.wk. """'L mao 2300 -Bltd., C.M. K y_...,,....,. ..... M NewportBlvd.,Coolal\1•1& ... UllCNewportBlyd,. CM. PBX Ano. Sav. "';oma< ov. ,EXPIRllNGID
..,. .._" ............ ..,. DRAFTSMAN. -· M. •cHANIC • PAINTER ---25. ...... )>ra. Expd. inc•. HOUllK••,•• TocfMlopmessogeforTimdoy, lnmobllehomep&rii;deslp. • lnll&!: 6 outalde, IOmt Qll53&4Al. (DA.Yaun) _._,...,,_.,...,. .. _ Too.,... fo<'r!Pl,...... ~ ~· Porm. ~ LlVE tn ...--lot PARK LIDO •
o1,....Zodlocb0th-Atthttechnl om.., N.& Needed immediately. High school plus 3 to ttoo. "" on "°"""""" .. ni _,,... ' ......_ eon.ataomt • ._
, ..., ,, ,,.,, ., ~ Coll ~ ..,.. 4 yean upctenee U, l•you1; \oftl.ng.1 flbrl· 673440/fl3..ii62 "" -. 611 zi' !HW2ID MW'10 Costa -
,..... """ """' WARElj.OUSEMAN cation, ahd U.embly of .slieef mettl p~ SUPEIUNTENDENT WAITRESS, PUt \!me ~=-~r:.. !l~ 'i!;!!i -,,.......,.. Kenn and wembllOi In boat bulldlng or related for ~ ' -N.B. D>YS OVER 21 CALL T.e ........ ..,. ... :r'-. iii:"" :::::.::-• IUma H""-W, IUI 11,eld. M1181 hne basic knowledge of minl-aroa. Giw aparltnca & -Wort<.CallltAM ..
·• ., ""'"""' .,_ Harbor 81"'-.\:-M. 516-!080 'tllum beod radll and ,'bend allowancei 811'1 -1&1uy; ,..,., DallJ w.-: 01A1R SIDE I p M. ~ ~
' . • 31! ,, .. , "'"" SECURITY OF•ICERS Pilot Box M..31S D--·· .~ .. .-·' -,.._.,, • ' ,,..,_ 6tYw • of malerlahpeclflcatloos wecl In 1heet metal ~"--·~· lY~ tt=.. ~~ hll time. SL'15 ·ptt hr. A~ wort.. Cart layout, plan, form wort from AITROTIK CORP. Pb.,.._ . TWO cbOdnn. 11 ._ ud ~!!!!--1 """ .,_ 72°' W.230E.l7th,Coota ...... templalel.~tlnthe.uoeotpowerlhean, ,Open...,; Lah mW S.O.!WD -ID. --10 -nNd..,., 11 llr '11~ :!~ n::z.. &C-10ef«awt. power bnkes, foot p~, aqueuen, and 'I'opPt.Y •. A·lmld'llnktorV. part.ttr.,ldlQ's/ ..... dQI. S ~ Olitlr , ~~ !:fe.. ~..... • c.-all other macblllery aod !qulpment used tr1 ,12!i7LopnAv.c.ar. $1.'15 hr • ....i thfld DMdt .......... ~~~~ ,,,._ .,,.. TTTo • Dllhw48'*rll\lli!ioY ah .. tmetil worlt. . . AllCll?rl:Cl'UJDJW1'S.DENTAL uslstant.,.. z. --· lJ~ :::z... lli:::: SURF. "W.OIN' C II p. ' u-11 I h MAH aR. II.,_ for .. Ont.......;.. -IUe and SAMPLE --2:1._... eo'Mflt '°~ 58.10 Pacl6c Cot.it lfW7 .. ND ; or appl,r to . te rw r c tabUlhfd NtwPOrt a.di tt9d Xn.YL Ma.nu ,.....~, ...,.. ~-..,,. il~ ~?%,. ~~· O\YCOOK G d 3"3 Htfbor Btv4.,,CMta.#MM cftkt:.60.aH GIRLi:irAvantGudefllma. Nlelt11•lteam•at,lil ~=-~==. ~=.... Mlft..2 ~ .;.._•:;to:e, (114} J4'I030, lxt. 15' !ERV. SfA. A.Tr.: Need a. Orw·XeMnT r...,.. Blach. ~·.VU.
"'t:."' ll-.-.· ::::::..... 11. slllO"" to rlarL ~ ~ Atla·nJi'c R-. Nil. h--...... -"' ...... iilliiCUIUif -" .. port ...... -.~ 51::-"'° M ,, . ..,....... In pcnon, Ml W.Uth e.:M. V9 !ii-. Unkm Servke 2211 BNch. MR. RON'S Mta'r DESPERAn:LY __. Pii.
a ""' -"='9 REAL ESTA'!$.· -•t c t" · N-Bhd. CM. Hair 1111Urw· -· dall lnllt. J'r, lee ,, =~ =~ :.... ... bo •• n ... "" -o,rn.or.1 .101 MAN™""'· -· drivo DAILY PlLOl UDI& .. -' lr. -..... ,o, ,a. 6\ """ .,... Hon-8t<cll! T-truck. & eto. CID -L1N!S t .. - --l'loul al'Pl1 11-\S:l'Gaoi w.Mtw '7Nir:iilsd v01qe RaJ x.tatt 9SM4n • · A Df•· .rTtit '"1!4•••n:w c.r... • ' 5«)...330,) ,.. • _.. • •· * Pcl'Mlll'lfl. ... '"' ....,. '-------------------------•Whl" tl•pbanlll ~ An oqual ~~ employ<r M/J' SOC& rrTO 'EM! -"1ltte....,.. lltou oa..
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DAILY PILOT Moodq, Mrdl 24, 1969
MllCHANDISI POlt MlllCffANDISI POlt . MIKHANDISI '°" MlltCHANDlll POii I'm an4 LJVIJTOCIC ' • " .,... ••EN" ;otl$ a iMP~OYM,NI MERCHANDlll POlt .MIRCHANDISI F'Oa
SchoolHntlnlcllon 7600SchooJt.lnatrvctlon 76001-.;:SA:;;:L::l:..;.:AN:..:D::....;T.;,;RA=D::.I_;;;;:;;;;:_=::....:=,::;=-. SAi.i AllD TIADI SALi AND TllADI SALE AND TUOI SALE AND TltADI ~ IUS )
fumltuN IOOOFvmllvre
MEN WANTID NQYt
TO TRAIN AS CLAIM$ ADJUSTERS
Insurance lnvoaUgators .,., badly needed
due to the tnmendow incru>e In claims re-
sulting from· auto accident.a; fires, llood9,
riots, storms and Industrial accidents that
occur daily. Insurance Adjusters Schoo!J of
1901 N.W. 7 Street, Miami, Fla., can train you
to eam top money In UU. fut moving, excit-
ing, actio ... paclc.ed field, full time or part
time. Work at tour present job anti •tudy at
bome, then attend fesldent training for two
weeks at MIAMI BEACH, Florida, or LAS
VEGAS, Nevada. Excellent employment as.
sistance. For details fill out coupon and mail
today. No Obligation!
fvmllvre IOOO Fumllure , IGOO I'll-& l)rtono 1130 Ml-II•-NGO FREE Bamboo d\1111p -;. ' "!
l'Unl!ture .. -,_di.. •' New· Pt.os • · * AUC110N * . ...,.., "' taJL You dl& "' • • pi., rtudlao, modd homct, <0t 54Mlii1. I 1
Botiaht Mtnul•d~ror't
'69 ·Showroom Samples 1>JT_ ........ __ .._
8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's chair
or love seal 5 Pc Octtgoo dark oak din set
w /blaclt: or avocado framed chairs; 8 Pc BR
set. 9-<lr Mr. & Mrs. dres<er, lg mirror, 2
commodes, decorative headboard In Spanish
oak design with m1tching box sprlnp, mat-
tress & frame.
Decorator
.._..,..__ Wl1RLITZE!l6BIWlBURY !wlllltllorbor * FORS&»or""'"* 1 I
-.t Medli.m-. tie All llJtea A lln"'*' oil W1nci1 a ..,. MID Red Male llocMllun4•
RD AIRNRVRE ---· ...... de! 'A Fridq T•IO -~&ti. 5..... • I 11441ffwportllvll.,~M :.~~~-·-...... ~~~,::.!:.:' llINIATURZ ouJe l
ewey """'~t!I 9 · W.tltur O-~ ,,_ CY-Dt.c"""1md al otod. -c Wed Stt • ""·-, .. , 111 • ,,.-•-'""'on. ,,,.. .. ...,... aft. 5 p.m. , [ " -..,.., e .KEW e •
LIKE New Beip...uc bod Mw -·· ...-.. Mll\Y MJoc. Wtfttod 1610 I 1WIN Bed --divan $12 5 •. OVeNtu.fftd atYlfs a finlabea-Prm ··-l Dble bed lrame, wooden ~
..,..i blue.• av....io cm ""'I"• .. WE PAY MORE p1.,.... 1149-l030 3122 ,
:!'. ~'15.~~·· o• $59.5 CASH =-~= =.::. i QUAL. ({qr Sia bod w/ EVER1TlllNG IN MUSIC ' mo. old. ~ S/25
quilted ... ..._ • o.. •.. Belch Musk Cenfef ••·1<111,.,,. · N..., UHd !ti; _,,, flOO. ror any nter now or used .,..IS OPENING SOON ,:
UT-Factory Saito 6 S1n1<o .......... appl1-, co!OI'-' Items Sold Individually I Approved for Veterallll under New G.I. Bill! J Shop Arour:id-Before you buy IM USI
·-·-· .... -...... -.. -·..,-----.. -VALUE $1095.95-FULL PRICI $529.95
Receives
Cancellation
of
$22,000.00 .
Spanish &
Mediter-
DaJly 12 ntipn 'di 9,' Sat M eel TV'&, Jttreol, pWlot, tit• NEW Plywood I er a pa,
Office FurnltuN 1010 11«MI Beach B?Vd., OJw7 39) pm, stoveJ. rtfrllen.toJ1, 64S-m1 Sl2S !
fN~=CEre~~E}?S Name.-............ -...... .Age .... --Use O:: ~:;:sc8:~ Pr!·:: C~~ancin ~~~'& Add"5s._ .... _ .............. -.. -· No Fancy Front -flUT Quality Valu_, 1nsfde
INS. Croup d!spoae1 of: at"l
& wood Exec A Secretarial
de•kl, chairs. table1, tilt's,
shelving, lockers I drattlaa:
room furniture.
~~~! ~~r.:. =.n::ce"t!:rm:~l = HWHI IUO .t
l'IANO & ORG,ul ~~· Dey, nlahl or QUARTER HORSES: l
P.O. Box 722 City ....... -·-···-·Staf.c ... -· • , BARGAIN HUNTERS! 638 3828 t-Whli. ,..,. wt ""' -~. Oranae Coullty'a tarae11t • $UO. 1...nuckskin maidnC ;
atock ot. new Ii: ued $150. A'ppaloola stallion, -' Tustin, Qlil. 92680 Zip .... ___ . .Phone ..... ---··-Mc?wWiAN'S 772:-8400
1830 s .. Anaheim' Bivd.. in·
Anaheim _ (alonp\de S.A.
trway at Kalella)
Pianos 4 0rpns rtr: vel')' iood •lock $650. , ' Accredlted Membtt National. Home Study Coundl ranean
Furniture
Spinet Pianos -. .. 13'8 $ WE BUY $ m.nr,o :
HolpWo-
Womtn
KEYPUNCH
OPERATORS
:Minimum of one year
Jndu1trl1I eaperience
Should be able to work non-
.itandard work week.
COLLINS
:RADIO CO.
'19700 Jombo•H R .. d
Newport Be1ch
~ opportunity employer
EXPERIENCED
e ESCROW e
SECRETARY
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
3141 E. Coast Hwy
Corona d•I Mir
673-9240
6 FT. ~Ow deak 6 match\rl« table. u~holstered
...... ! chair lllO. ""4110,
Baldwin Orpn ........ l!lll $ FURNITURE . $ PINTO GELDING, I yn old. :.!
Olickerhla: ~ ...... f7'5 APPLIANCES · quarter bone breed Ins
.Conn C.pi'lce Orpn . • well broken, centle. DI.YI "~
Save t.lllVI Celer lV -ftl•n•'-$f•ree'1 .,.,. ._.. .,.,, ,._ •I
all w:.:.:;,::.:•·;_·~:::.'°"..~ I Piece er Hev11 p:,.IJ -~--'''c..'c."".;;,,c-c.;_~"-""--1
'""'-._-r • .....,..., uuu.-CASH fN lO MINUTIS .
•COMMERCIAL•'oas&EMl'LOYMENT Furnltvre aooo All New Top Gar1ges11e I022 ..,..~~11yt.:;'"' • 541-4531 • TllANSl'OllTATION
TELLER Job5-Mtn, Wom. 7500 SPANISH Reta:rned from I J,W<E oner or we' 11 No down ~ent· WANTED: lb.t trailer loltt I Y1~hh: 9000 1
EXPERIENCED rn.a73
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
J029 Harbor
Coste Mesa, calit.
546-2'"3
SAWPEOPlE
PART TIME, DAYS, FOR
SPRING PROMOTION
Model Homes on sale at Qual1'ty b&rpln! All m~t ID· Great Gould Mu11c com,,.ny to Jl'ill 14 ft. Ahnninwn boat FREE
Jess than whoJtsale! Group buys. 6131ii Nat'r.lUUI, CdM. ~ ~·!::._"!_11· San~7= Mu&t be reuonable, .
includes beautiful 96'' ,.o .r~a:w..:t ..,_ ~2083
quilted '°fa 4 Jove seat, NEW deluxe ranae I: oven, Open Mon I: Fri evu 'tilt BOATING ,.J
3 Spanish oak decorator Brand dresser, chest of drawen, SUnday 12 to 5 FREEZER needed in 3 to ' , t.• desk. 9 to 5. 962--1428 PIANO TUNING ... _ 4 weeks. {preferabl.1 Fricf· ,.
ta111es, swag or table lamps. ========= I I: no::palr daire) 833-2935 (Irvine) c '
wall placque, king, queen, Expert. rtuonable! . . OU RSE ''
o• full w.e bodroom ou11e Names! A Appll•----•-100-Al-.......... 61""67 PITs •nd LIVESTOCK 1
Apply Personnel Office, complete incl box springs, CHEST FREEZER. 5 cu tt BY 1
Equal opportunity employer 3rd Door, 2 to 4 p.m. mattress. linens A boudotr $50. Gaa or electric dryer HI-Fi & S...... 1210 C1h 1820 Coast Guard Auxiliary '
ADVERT1s1NG Mooo., thru Frno,y Lim ... Spenl•h ... s .,. Decorator's $55. Auto '"'"" $58. All . . ...,... Thun ,.,. PM ,; dining oel pri<ed '"'"'"'re guaranteod. Coul Eloc:tric Sl'EREO I"'9 Solid otei. 81,.UE k S"l Point Kltt"'" M""h n "
Secretary/ The Broadw1y al approx. $11'5.00 ALL Servlc< Dopf......... deluxe................ • we<k, hou .......... ~ C.n>na d•l llfu Hllh Scbi>ol
FOR ONLY $399. i20 down, Dream Home O'KEEFE dlxe 40" ras spd chaft&tr. U!ft on lay each. 968-1877 2101 Eut Bluff Dttve ;
B kk 47Courttof Fashion $4.99 per -... eek / out of range, dble oven, brlr, ·~:!oray~.00"'!""'""1e-·bal. • 11' BAY IOAT :~
00 eeper state credit OK., Will ........... •'" ... '""' n...-1125 FASHION ISLAND separate !or quick sale. 20th minder, rrdle. alus shelf, CredJt Dept. 53S-72l9 .....,.. Like new .......... try $141111 ~
Responsible, top level Newport Beech Century Furniture, 9772 is on Display ' ,:,~,:,: .. ,.:.m.:,76.;.-&--'hn>_m_•_·~185-· MAGNAVOX Stereo C!>m· AKC Registemt Dachshund ~OL 2' ........ ~"~ ,-.~
position for sharp, tak• Garden Grove BI v d ., 1 • )Xlnents; 30 watt AM-FM Min. Ve'fY Loving Needs bot.rd ·•· •••· ••··· Li:ladtd. •
charg• nlrl. Must hav• An Equal Oploportunity Garden Grove D~ 10-9, COIN-OplP. auto. w a• her• stereo receiver~ 2 spkri w/ Good l. om e, i33. 449 ·~~laIC~arJ'NSALEse ;
• Emp yer Sat 1Q...6, Sun U.S Come 0 $100 000 CGm · re-«ind. Like new. enclos11tts, G8JTal'd turn Seaward Rd. Corona del ,,,,...,rto, ewport excell•nt skilla incl. in or call (Ut) 5J0..5240 Ver 1 $11.5. Guan.ntttd. CESD table, $120. 64J.6906 Mar 67~2022 aft. s· 30 PM 24 Hour Phone • • 673.UTO
1horthand; handle lite ------------------' 646-2486 ' • Coming CUSTOM DLX K (1
blckpg; bllllng. Under SCRAM LETS 20 PC. "MADRID" worth of • DLX Hotpolnl " cu' SONY 560 D, auto "'""'· SIGN up now for -" A IT FT Pm I'1and 30. Call Barbara. (714) •. 3 Room Group ~ refric, freeur below, like ss. eonomone 10 3-A' open dor obedience clusea. Delux~ ~n;ie~~ tJ.;:.
642-3910. ANSWERS FROM MODEL HOMES MSpa.nish & new, .... 613--4735, =::...,=·=""'==for=Lo<==Van=.I ~~~·~r~t~;,. •• ';;";:::';;t:-;:K;;•nnels=' :!:~o:=. Bir a::
· · Includes: Quilted sofa A: ed1terf'9Jr' ~~ ;t~to. Dd-:er, .. BASENJI African buidets tilt trailer. fioo or bQf: oft. BE JHf FIRST mu .. -Itchy -Booth -chair-2 ond tahl" & oo• f ! 'm ·ut.tm"' · · M"';loce;;;;l;l•;n;;••;ut;;;;;;;;;;;';;600~1 "°"'' od"''"· abort hair. •r.·Pbono.......,alterTpm
O ique -"O. B. QUIET.'.' le-! ta~~-=2J.amps-dreu-eaft Urft. ~ • AK~ champion .line, tennJ WANTED: Boat trailer .~
l.fcDONALD.S Is hi r In I "I've aJways thought ma-er-uurwr-headboard-choose fro • Antfq'.... 1110 Wllat Knot Shop .... available. 6U-4350 to pull 14 tt. A1uminum ·at. ·.·,·
COUNTER Wom.n to n .... -'. temity wards should have quilted box apring &: matt. r-•nr.RABLE ~... T M ~ •• ~ -5 "'·'--_ _. ___ ..___ H•ndlcroft & Art llUV • .. ..,-0 Y ust ""' reasonable. r.
Monday thru friday 11 am· signs saying "O, B. QUIET." acSS -pc • ....,,..16 room; 'i: t VASr ·Stotjc An>tr 6 Eur Poodles, apricot It cream. 5'5-aJIJ • table & 4 hi-back clWn. T NEW CONCE!'T --===~--·I '! 2 pm. Unilorms furnished, MATURE couple to manage COMPARE AT $749.95 ,, • "" f\D' Ii: ~ I.a r ry OPENING' March 28th $50 le up. 893-3306 1966 W Dlna:hy,
free meals. aptJJ: in the Costa Mesa $]99 ( E, XAMP(E) MNeo-Ijl•.vdntlqu., c"~· 2 f 21 Open Daily Easter Week AKC black Labrador $75 or make offer. APPLY IN PERSON area. 32 units, Children ac-Wiiort-•-Retriever pup•, bred to Mr •. w~ght 61" ·-.
M DONALD'S N d Pm ·•'•II ....,, work done by atta ftlll· .-. ....1000 c ceptable. 635--4481 0 own-ta .... ..,-6 mo. Items as follows: Gor4 6'x9' ORIENTAL Rug. Orie-denta. If YoU are internted hunt. 49f-5153 da, 4.95-4582 16' Glu.! boat &: tandem
6561 Edinger Cutter, Exper'-nced WELK'S WARfffOUS£ geous 8 ft custom quilt-cost $250. Bulloclla 1967 $50 in aelllng your crafts on att.s -trlr, $600. lt' boet a trlr,
Huntington Beach Immediate Opening ed sofa with separate tlrm. 6TM427 consignment • write "What POODLES, 2 mo«, 1 male, $150. ~2544 ~
Work N•er Home Beach Drapery Service 600 W. 4th St., Santa Am. loose pillows with heavy MUsfca. Inst. Knot Shopet:,'
1
2622 NeWpart apriCot. $50, l female, 1957 14• G~ Nttds e Accounting/Bkkps 900 W. 17th Street Open Daily g.9 oak trim d-or and ____ 1_1_25_ mvd., N.B. 92660.\0pen Pb.a,n~. $75. Small toy1. 10me work $125 ~ olltt--,,==~~~~~ • Semtarial Costa Me.a S40-6f6f Sat <U: SUn n.e .... Friday 2-5, Sat &::: Sun ](1.5 AKC 8Q.625ol • . ·,GERMAN LADY · ·"" matching chair, 3 mat· Gvltar Hetdqu•mrs l"'?!~~~~~;;.;,le.#i'' Afil"SPANi'Ei:<=RTe Mr. Wriaht 615-11811 • Reception SADDLEBAO< Inn, Laguna 17 p K" s· I::: BRITTANY SPANIELS-Rer, .=.=::;=::=:==:==''
f.qual opportunity employer
Wearelookqforamature •Typists Beach now hiring reneraJ C. lftCJ lie Ching oak occasional eNEWandU~D • BIRDS. of Paradiae *** 6 wke old. Xlnt hunfu!g$all._.ts 9010
JadY who can speak and Superior Agency hotel and restaurant pmion-Bedroom tables, (2) 58'' tall dee-Fender• Vox • standel HeaJthy bloomh!s we LI dop. 675-3570 or 6C9-276f 1---'----:.:.:c:1
type G er m an fluently. EstabUshed l9t6 nel. Call for appointment orator lamps, hanging • GIBSON • MARTIN eatabllabed 2 planbl: to a DOBERMAN·X Pupa: 1 SAil..BOAT 17'6"x6'1" Sloop,
5hould have eome office ex-UST Harbor Bl, Costa Meu. 494-9436 · Largt 9 draWer dttuer, mir· chain sw. ag lamps. in •DruWILSOm HNo!,qYuAMAHAa~rs 5 gal. container. OnJy • weeks Fine tem_.,.,,..,en• fiberglu. C&bln alff'P' 2 Peri~ and a pleasant way can fut1: 642-UU =""'~~--~-ror, 2 bedlkle atands, king ht 8--• •• few left at thla price tJI ~ .. 1 .,,.;,,_ •vr. ..... -;;;;:-., Dacron aa11a:, c u 1hi0 a ,.· ·:
with our customers. Full ======== EXP. Landscape aelesmen •ize headboard, frame, quilt· w_roug . iron, an piece •NEW and USED • only $5.00 for I plant.. Call ... ._, .... -· ~J>O~ head, trailer. Irwin Fried: .. ·~-~ can Mr -··-J L. .. w 00-or trainee. Salary+ comm; ~ mattreu. 1heel.I, blank· kmg size master bed· LUDWIG ROGERS ASTRO after 6 P.M. or all d• .. S,lLKY 'TERRIER PUPS. (~") ... ,-. µme,....... · rlalll"'• or o~en, om. 75 qUallfied leads. Fri n 1 e it · ' ' ~ .o.w ...,...
0
' 'Mn. Schmitt at TRANS benefits. Call S4&-<i846 ets:, etc, room su e m pecan Lar&:e aelectlon with new f Sa~ and Sunday. 1212 Male, female. AKC. Buena NEWPORT 30 Sailboat, 1 GLOBE Tr wl Buttau SJOCKMEN Oiolce or Spanish panelled Mediterranean pc, .seta and eymbala start· So. Rosa St, Santa Ana. Park 32'7"'966 old-like pl
' ~ • BLUEPRINT SHOP requitts or Modem Style style with top quality 15 ing at $99.50. hdall, hi·hatl REDECORATING v Small AKC Beqle femaJe 21 mo. for raclns~ ~~Ip
*Saleslady
tpr rtote at Fashion ltland
lll!eded fUll time seleslady.
!'Q hour week Monday
throuiih Friday, Pleue con.
tact MR. STEM. 644.al81 i Karls Toys
• 50 Foahlon loland
. Radio· Telephone
: .Dispatch Girl
¥1Jll know local area, Ap.
ply in person
. YELLOW CAB CO.
. 186 E. ]6th St.
Costa Mesa
e Medical &>ttetary e
Experience in c::onvalescent
home or mue Cross.
knowledge or Medicare and
Medical billings, aJao book·
keeping, trial balances etc.
Top wages. Pn!ter older
penon or handicapped. Box
M.sJS, Daily Pilot
SALES GIRl.S
PHARMACISTS
NEEDED FOR
ANOTHER
THRIFTY
DRUG STORE
OPENING SOO)'I
16141 Harbor Blvd.
Fountain V11ley
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
Good working t'Onditions,
blueline trimmer operator. AH For $249 yr. warranty king size and aets repaired. All am.all couch I matching chr & lie. Shots, tpayed.· $15. u.Us, many extru. By
1 ====,...="'="=== No down • Pmts. only $9 mo. mattress & box springs. ~ accesaorlea 1 qmbala coffee tbl. Pr shldk> eouclies M&-U75 owner, call OR. 3-0731 ; l " S . h d din. in stock. bolatv pill-·-•Y·-g1n WEI.K'S WAREHOUSE pants ecor . irig EVERYTHING IN MUSIC ....... .nan I AKC Reg. Poodles. Tcy's • VICTORY 12 • Sailboat set, etc., etc. Any piece Be h M , ( I tamp. Baulnot w/ "'1rt. Mini'•. ISO up, ·: 1 stud ser. Good nd Agenci ... Men &
Women 7S50
600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana
rt Open Det1y 9 • t newpo _ s.t , . , Sun. u . ,
personnel -20 PC. t,10DERN
agency 3 ROOM GROUP
The proteuional placement
counselors at Newport Per-
Mnnel, can adv!ae the sin-
cere job seeker intelligently,
Includes: l'toral tola 4 chair
• walr.ot tables • lamps •
c::omplete bedroom with quilt
ied mattrea • 5 pc, dinette,
etc. All for .. ,
$277
No down. Pmt!, only UO mo,
WEI.K'S WAREHOUSE
can be purchased tndiv~ iC USIC en er mat. "' cur1a1ns to match. sn.J851 or 511~ * s:..;, ~· Parrot cage. ~2070
C CAL 20, excellent cond· dually. Drop by and see
I . F111.etory !ale• I: Service our . se ection. of top Dally 12 noon 'til 9, Sat f.5 qual~ty Spanish and 1740& Beach Blvd., (Hwy J9l
Mediterranean fumi· 1% mt. So. San Diep Fwy.
ture. Fant as t I c ally Hwittnrton Beach 147-8536
priced!! NEW Fender Mu• ta n 1
Complete houseful
............ , 51528°0
Guitar &: cue. $150. or best
otter. 962-4779
Going out at Bulinets MER HANDISI FOi Raci..... gear wtth .. .,.· ,
ART SUPPLIFS • """" SALi AND TRADE -~ &: easels. apiniker, boet bath M4--0816
536 w. 19th St. CM. 'FREE TO YOU NEWPORT Finn. us N~ * 6U-9590 * 261, trailer, c::over, MW sail .
CARPETS, Vlnyl.1, Tiles, lat. "SNOCKER" pUp.I Ccocktt SUperb cond! $1005. 173-91'.BB
est styles and colon. Com· I Schnauzer) I wk blada: 8' SABOT: Fully rlgpd I
men:lal I Residential. Ex· male, to good h c me , equip. $85.
pert inll'tallatkm. dtlldttn preferred, 497·1088 * 894-3100 * ,,
642-1403 St0-7262 . . 3124 '
FREE PUppi"' am a II, Spood Ski Boote 9030 ·)' Sliver Fox ...... , Booton T. rr I er. Bull Th' k. nd .... ' IAR mother '42-fil.33 aft 5 11 wee e o....,, ,
Wurlltzer Bung. Piano Colt $350 • Mlllt lell tllll p.m. ' 3122 The pn1ect fibergl .. ·out· :
GIBSON J..SO
with Hardshell c::ue,
$320 new, S200 or offer.
Eric, 675-5160 after I PM The many fine Ustlngs of
jobs opportunittea for both
men and women are too
numerous to um. Please call
or come in and take advant-
age oI our service!,
833 Dover Dr., N.8.
MUST beautiful tone. $300. ttt ..,., board for Salt I-Sea, the ;
best offer. SD-4543. 6'2-0086 evenlII&'• "BARNEY" 2 yr old lovable ccean, wherever )'OU want ~
600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana SACR I FICEI CELW for sale, full she, QUAL. Kng Site bed w/ male child'• doa needs • a 17 ft to perform in rough ' Open Daily 9 • 9 • Lyon A: Healy. Xlnt tone. quilted matlrfss, c:: 0 mp, cood home. Pbone &U-znt water or speed on fiat r
Sat. !ii • 6 Sun. l1 • 6 $250. 592.-5l34 Ne\•er used $93; worth n::;o. 3122 water. Asking $700. Sat only .i
642-3170 549.2743 * $29.44 * $6 9 800 GUITAR. 12 . tic:: 847--0406 PLANTS, You Dia Sat. or at $500. M4-46f1. 64J...(980 ~ For 3 Piece Braided FOR string acous nREWOOD ::';;r 1 a I e , Sun. Oleander, Btle(Brush, 15' SI'YLECRAFT w/tr'·, ' Sounds good, must sac! $25. ul " • OVAL RUG SET • Call 962-8741 Walnut,• Eu ca l )' 0 ! u • • Phlox, Succ: ent.s 1627 Anita Men:: 58 h.p. enr. $6.95.
Nylon blend, ttverlible, ONLY Apricot, $47.50 cord, $251Ao Ln. HB Phone LI g..2886 "
good pay, many other bf!ne. 1 ,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,;;; I tits. I•
APPLY T ,,fl J Brown, coppertoue, rreen. Plinos & Organs 1130 ml. Summel' prices July FEMALE Cocker Spaniel 4 OLDS ~ffil SK 17' been ·~
1
need. a yoUng, &inale pl Thuradey & Friday Slzes: 8 x 10, 2 x 3, 2 x 6 Any piece can be pur4 I:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;; I " Ausust, $38.50 crd. Del. yrs old. AKC Rea:istered to stored needs detail• work. 1
wm can think on her own March 27 & 21 £ -'. AL'S UNUSUAL chis~ lndivlduelly, I• 6 atack'd free. Cl) 68&--0846 family with older cblldren. Ex~. Sl350. su.i3:u. 1
two f.el! Ynu will •nloY 9 AM to 4 PM "1 FURNITURE 11 FIRE SAU 11 GIBSON J..SO ....,.. 3t.14 ~· ·:
Girl Friday
woddna in Orar!&e County'• 'ffooRf:.::!L.·.~1= 17881 Bel\ch mv<1. Terms Available with Hardshell cue, LOVING mixed 2% yr. dog Mlrlne Equip. 9035 )
most eXcl~ buti!Jeu. can THRIFTY ,.... ";,.,,,.°':"l:tJii/ A..,., Huntington Beach 142-4464 Our gorgeou:. n cw store $320 new, $200 or ofter wanta nu hm w/ chldrn -
tor an appointment M$.2118. · 1 have outstanding openings 20 Pc. Maple to California burned! The pianos A: or-Eric, fi75-St60 after & PM. ro low Mr. &U-7829 btwn G MC 6 • 71 R. e c • n t I y
Sh•rp CarHr Gals (ma.le & femaJe) tor appli· Newcomen plll 1ufiered no water dam. CURTIS-MATIIES c 0 m bo lG-2 3/22 Overhauled, need• 90me
Sect;yt. Cert 'I')'plsts, Ge! DRUG STORE cants with excellent attltud· 3 ROOM GROUP •re, but they are smokeY, blk/wht TV, radio AM-FM' 2. 9 week old female puppies. Work to Complete It Trant.
FridaYI. Recpfs. Bkkpn, 16141 Harbor Blvd. e.1. Please c::all for appoint· Includes: Living room set • dirty, dusty Ii scratchy. We 1'cwd player (stereo), $135'. 1iS Poodle. Smart I: Sac. $1,000. Ewa:· ~251!
RN• a LVNa. Both 1" 4 fH Fount•ln Vall•y ment. tablet • tamps .. bedroorn Credit Approved moved them all back to our VM tape noorder $40. lovable. 1168-2&31 3/21 6 CYL Chrys crown marine • ~ jobs. Top co's! Call 546-21JJ aet • quilted mattreu • ma-old location Ir rnarktd eveJ,.. Couch A: chaJ:r, pld eond. LG Rtdwood Cron ''xB' )'OU enrine, 2 to l reduction ~-543-'1'196 An E o-··· pie.,_,_ ... for lmm.!dlately . thing •• FIRE SALE PRIC 165. 5'"''1361 -M, .... -, u'u E. '·t ..... 119•. OR ""553
ARGUS AGENCIES qui! •~·-·l,y --.. $roo44m.9~ •,' ES! So, U you dlr that "Old KIRBY V if"-·C.,,.-'~ ~
.. ..,..,;;;Eiimiipi;toyerii;o ... ..,;;;;; Schoolf.lnstructlon 7600 nme Smo)'ty FI av or", acuum cleaner; wy, · ~ 3122 Bo.t Sltp M•rint 9036 1818 C N"J)Ol't Bl\ld., C.M. No down · Pmts. only $18 mo, We CGrrJ OUr come 4 pt 'ern, Md at MW l9&9 model, dinette aet, Ll'ITLE lost .lhaa:)' doe l ---~--"---1
ltNI lbt•te Solo• * * Tho Newport WEI.K'S WAREHOUSE own accounts ,,....,., you won't hell.... contour cbalr. Sacnftc<! """'°' A Cocker? Nttd; -• Women J, c. Penney c.. School of Buslnoa WARD'S BALDWIN sruDIO ""'prty. m..--...... .,,,_ 3/U • SUP w·-
ErpendJIW qata. OtDcc '# P'uhion l a:lsnd 1801 Newport. CM. &Q.1484 CUST exhauat headen, tit MIXED Colle-female g 'AftlQI e
4 cpmtnp avaDabl• for Newport Beach FEATURES: «Xl W. 4th St., Santa Ana lr"T .. •-!!'O• l•!!!!,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l "S.S-'51 Chev v.a. •ll or mos tome abota loves A II & u. 25, 1 ~ma 6: womm In-e Eltctric typtwriters Open Daily!· 9 , I /] llAMblOND. Steinwq ··'" trade for &ood bucket teats. ~. 646-7374 ' 3122 pr ""'"' loep
1'IUlt: ....,._. It tralnbW· Mr Has openin& for • Dlctall"I' equipment Sat. SI • 6 Sun. ll • g • maha • new A: uatd p1anol 5'Ml34 SEALPOINT SI t ~ wilt be aboard onJ,y
Q.erdnlr. Sprta1 Realty, e 'lod H' _., MAGIC Vue xlnt Coppertone of all mAket, Belt buys bl LADIES oollta .. diamond amne ca , weekftlds., Dr. Colden,
* COOK * " •m •~<e p.~~wu femele 3 -o Id n076 ~11 ~ H et, _.,. e Brush up Grqg Shorthand $75. Wh t. \\'edge"'OOd $75. So. Calif. rlaht hen. 1.4 carats aIM!Oll new whlte ' ,,.¥. · "' '""'"' ur., em
CAN YOU QUALIFY? With ..,,. ,...,.....,. and e ,,.,,. .. , Dowlopment Siove $4'. Dh><tt• • 6 chnl. furna"ture SCHMIDT MUSIC 00,·-""Id ....,, .... Ste. $900. 2,..._ 3/ZI Calli. ortt4/6!8-1!18S
Need 2 ladle• 1#t qecial wllllnc to learn our limited <Mk about our special otter $35. Hpt. washer $45. Retrp 1907 N. Main. Phone m..a11 WHL Tnlla met&l boxl---------
work. 12 Monn Wff1.1 ••• S60 menu. eom-tittw .....,. which includt• ~ typing 520. to $4.5. l<elvlnator 165. Santa Ans IJPHO' ._._....""' needs 10me work. 361 Ogle Bolf S.rti ~ ~ Box • mat ... Hd ~ w . ~·-•G • $79.lO. '"c;·~M:..· !CW.~1291~---~~I-::-.;...;.""':';;;•=-:: por wk. can -Nelaon ............ hen•fll• lllclucl inotru<tion.) -. -. ~ ONLY AT ANTED. PIMoo. -pc. ,,,. ...... atltamon)I, at M2..a5eO between 2 and' t.rw prof'it a.harinl· 646-0153 ! :£11Si0·8~:~ d6k17. ~ Cuh paid n... est, del, pickup. 215 SMALL. mixed female doe Or•np CMtt Mlrlne .... prnoaa1 ~rview l F * ~ * Main, HB "Berny" ~ n e' d • Io o d ho m • • Olmple:te :.darlne Serviett . •-•-1n peno• .1 ET •ME G1t1, 1s. 3 ..... 16. "'· Rm. 1au 11-wporl Blvd. iJ•uooANv ~ ... , N.-. WEDDING _ ,.,. , c.p111:'1nOBcbf96.Z643t.11 .,, .,.,,."'"""· Htrh UVE In ~. full "l'Ji"'J typewrltine. Ch l Id re n, llOla It ch. 2 End 1: c:offt.e ... lftil ,._ .... ., .-iauu a v-•• wt Quall
ttrM: modtwrle. borm, NB 10 A.M. to 5 !.:if:... arandchlldren, or )"OUnll!!U! table A: i.mp~ JIOO. ~ ~ Xlnt cond. Private paiV. originally $250. Sacrifice 2 YR. old maJe mbc: cocktr • H ~ Marm:.nPerionnel,
...... • ....._.. Own Mond.,. thru .. _ In div Id u. II y tuto1'd • H'-'>oy $50. • mi.c. ~t H1rbor Blvd. * -* $65. W.2487 call ... .,_ • dacluhund, hltck. can • ...... • !>Ol"' --...., -a t....fcre_ I ChU 10 I • ~=:.:::::.,;=c;.,:=~cf ~ aft. 5 3/22 e 24 Hr, EmV'll!ncy Sf'rrioe
Pill I.. V'-•--coat ('l!IOf\I typing Items. 1500 A &zperlor St.. SACRIFICE trand _piano, • rtRE Ii: emisar Alum . .. 175-2460 *
am or alt 1 pm. J, (, PfllllfY (0, <Choo!. 173 Doi Mu, CM, C.M. 6f6..9l88 ( s1 Me """nul. In ,.met condltlon. S,.l<nU lnoltDtd u low aa FREE wuber • d"" ,.., w ..,..... ~.. N"""°"
iiBtSIJIER needed nery ,_,.._ __ 2859 _______ 3PctedionalU>PtI"lfCUon 0 I Si fr5..4290 $99. Call IU-S490 ' hall! away, 60-'364 l/)I ~2460orr7S.2&0
~at eYf!r'I ot1-dl,J for 24 Fath&on l1lend WANT To •.?Pak Frtnch like or mm otter. Floor moftl "" -5 PC DRUM 1ri $15. Prov. WHITE flutty ldtten. 673-ffilSl
a Wftk ar 1 C2 dtillftnl. An equaJ opportunil:1 a nail\~~ Thtn come to TV. \\'Orks $12. ~ Every r'llte 'tU t 1•lnltfon l20S tow 1t•l SllO, s pc siect1 evtt. !13' Alrcra~ flOO
IJ'Wl35 (IJTine) employtr ~ •• _rrenc:h _eonvenadon WN'1' JUST WISH b Mmw-E ~t ER s 0 N c 0 m b . $85, Deak SJ). ·~ LARGE Che•t 1)pe Frffztr. 1961 ~·-·A ·~ N
llOU™ .... uER/ ~ 2
1
!*!;!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!'lt!!'!!!I ~s 64U.iw 1,M .. to .... _,_ ........ .____ Wed., Sit., Sun. 'til 6 St 1~1 M • M ., ........ -3/U ... ~ ~. av-eom _ .. ~. ............. ...... 1Ufl.Ulfl ~y--tf'@O ...., pr A I 1r , 9' JOEY Oabtll Cua tom " • ~'"' 300. One ownt:r. Xlnt eond'
ad\111&. l,J\IHn, 5 dQ'. $D DAILY PILOJ'WANT ADS . ···find grut buYI bi to-N~w. Med. C..b. Lt. Walnut. .$UJ'fbo9rd, &ood coadit!On. JS" GAS ranp with own. $610'). Contact: --Paul~
Good rda. 67).7811 White el~ls! Dtm~inw BR.ING RESULTS! d17'1 C1Ulll1led Mio $400. 61J..4595 -M(), ~ old but clean . .(9f-35Z13/7J &ll~y. 64z.e900 ar m.im
ton '
I l ' ' •
. ---------.-~~~-__,-----~------.... --------'!"" .. "!"" ... ~~-----------~-..... "'!"'lllllll!~---~
Mcrldat, MN 241 lM DAILY PllOT
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO A ION T
!maort:o" A-HGO lmfO!I!'! A;;,., HGO Now Caro HOO BUICK Ulld Caro 9900 New Cars HOii : ..... --:::::::::::::::::(I : VOU<SWAGIN VOLKSWAGEN 'I oo RMEiiA. all -· COUGAR ,_ • ..., -t. AM/J'JC .--.1--------
St>tbae~l•
Total clalm 1311.
• mo. @ me o.a.c:. + !lnol·-t for 11111. Dir. (lJ_O<_
OPEN SUNDAY
'90-"-I Sol ~.... Pwr -•
8. X!nl -""· ---L II Of Th '66 ,AST llACK olottrn "'11M, olr cond a 'fl COU<:All, -!WI a e AMlnl radio, ..., d-........ -. -· ¥11"1 top; 1o ML NI .......
Uc:.-&mm • imo. rtt-1111: MWtD. .... '61 VW's $14'5 • • 'G•B\l!OC ~ oil pwr, •
imi IWIOU. R llllll • TUT DRIVE 1HE • j1' .::::.· ~i!,.."":; DODGE ~ n:=~t a'lll D • ·MINI • BRUIE • "'"'m u ooooc 2 nr ....... l!!l!!io~W!!~IM~~-_.!!'200!! UIS JOllD F-2!0 wl tb 36 at $44 78 VOllJWAl!.llll INC • oru<n • 't1 BU!OC CONVERT . IWI, nbll. q , IZ!Q. --e>.mper. 11 "" pldql • o.a.c. VU1, • • •• JUST ARN,..., • XIm SHAPE. S<95. ,..,Iii! E 1 " ....1... .,. + 1 tl.nal Pl.)'mtnt for title I m.'1393 ky Hor..., ••· •••• w-·~ AVAILABl.E ONLY A"' Authol'U•d • ANOTHER I G O
Malallo .._, ....... u.. ndlo, -·.... ~-M · s.1 .. 011<1 s.mc. • SHIP''ENT OF • ·«'Bu1CK ruvi.ra. Air oonc1. FALCON
ll'.:11'::::: ~ -=-~DJ ~ = ors pm Beacb Blvd. IC-4ll!I • 1"'969 . • =·~ml, XIDI cond '113 FALCON V..f. Hlr4 ....
12 wtDEI Hunt.-. -'a VW SQ. BAO< • • .. to -"' ..,...._ Deel. Cnnd. Radlo, JWllW, • 'ts BUIOC Rl-C\Rm, cond. 80-lll«l, -•.a'-e'.aq'.55'..,.« 22 • lot.cled. towner tact atr I========
,,,,..,_ ~_ltantelo _ts ....._ GudanG,...Blvd.atS.adl ~-• OPELS • IZ!e5.C.Um4e ' PORD ra.-·-In oil.,.. COACH -'l1WlZft -W m= or !134-2214 VOLVO • • ~1 CENTURY Buick ~0-1-------iGS lllloor Ill. lllNTALS , OPEN SUNDAY -r
11 bloctEutot-Blvd. 1ro -too-,....., S2 MG TD , -1---------1• . • dabio -""" car, ''5 ,ORD COUNTRY
.. --tor -~ Jmm...W.t., rJqml"'.,.... '4 VW llUG VOLVO • WITH AUTOMATIC • cl<an.11)(). _,alt~ SIDAN
Cotta.,_ <nt> lllGfl'IO u---• _, ' SOd dlt, radio. El!tn. nice,""'"" coodlllon. 1-• 2 D -••u•u1ss10N • Sta.,.., dlt, v~ . ..,"'"" ·~~y ~ .o ~"-~OR WEEKLY ..,...,_oc..W..l'OCUb prt...Sto..U.Llc.RYX'l!i2 .. A r.,_,. • T~~ CADILLAC lnr,D..U..lco-l'O ~·-~ ~-Tw __ ,. ol $1095 Now 164 Ol1 Dl1pl1yl • • --------1 CUb dela"' talre .........
In J:ldo Park. 2 --~m~ ~-LtmiA 1 .. th, .. 11o. v1ew , ,....., $31.113. QYll <5'1. cau -m HARBOUR m ·• • • .,. c.• °""' -~:' ;!;""' & c..11·~
biacl>-,ll!Wla ~ !~ "" Ol-ml .. -11&11 m • • IJk..:.:i:· ~ Ken, ,....,.,. .. ..mi 1!':.i:'!:=..:!:: MYIR'S TOW'D . s.i... .:.,., Pa11a VOWWAGEN, INC. : : ==>C=A=M=Alt=O==l·---'-,Q-F-or_d_X_L __
Sp.1!<.1111_ -1mm ...... ll<lJm7, TOYOTA-VOLVO OUR' 0 1'L p•1••s • Oalul• Hardtop
lmmtdtat. 0.lfveryl All MocWa Salt~u~or:::!nct: 1966 Harbor, CM. 646-9303 • • p " ~ '67 CAMARO \Vhlte ,exterior, plU&h t\lllo
Mai.rcyclao noo $341. -~-Dir. '43 VOLVO • START AT : 2 Dr. bdtp. v.._ Ra11,y ...... llebuc..,,.. ... ,.etdrlr. ---~ •• -.-·~----·----1 (1).lft,.Wl., ~ U7U ,,.. ... Blvd.' M2-443S 122 s. dlt, ..... -· • s17 7 7 di•. Sky blue ....... blk ... •Ir. $lO CUb d•U. wU1 line 19IMI --· CUlllDm,, OPEN SUNQAYS '68 VW Squaftback $246 .seat&. Excellent rtlIUUn& COD-• • blk. inter. Car bu had xlnl ptvt J>&t:b'. Pymnts $2!1.18.
necondw. ~ =-;!t DIPI Spc4tAn, Corvalr dO'wn, 38 mo @ $54.19 + dltion, All orJainal. $50 cuh • • ca.re. $75 Cub dell. or wW LB AYK°798, Call Ken$
"""' • IJOWel'td. nylon top, Jrl1ml 1 final pymnt for title, dlr., delivers, will " take trade. • take fortlan car 1n trade. rm or 5f5.-06U
Apt U.D, C.M. buckets, wide tirel. Top 3100 W. 0-t HW')'., N.B. ~N: :2'l84 wa,rrant;y. ~~ c:.·:...;;-LB. • Onler Yeun TM•r • \Vlll fln. prlv. pt;y. call Ken FORD MOTOR CO, '68 EX·
'Ill HONDA l25 Ser. cond. WW tndL $1195.. 6G-9Cl5 540-l'l&t ==-=.,----,..,,--1.===-=====o 1• • L.B. TPP993 '9f.9'1'13. F.cUTIVE reule car I • $3.50. 2900 nillel. ~ Authorized MG Dealer '59 VW Pick-up, &ood tires. • • '61 camaro SS 350 HUGE, SAVINGS on a wide
Clll MUID :=======:!:=======: needs low & reverse. u:zs. Antiques, Cl1ulca 9615 • llAND NIW • 4_,. _.__ .. __ ,_ "1 .. ....... • .,..., uuiu w~, .,.. ........ 1. choice ot near new '68 ~
'68 llAWMAKI 115 OC 1100. Im....,... ,._ MOO OPl!L ~ ':ii..i:"' ~-~2541 1 '36 FoM ,..mo, 2,.... doon • 'H IUICK • V•ry cl•an. lmil d Ir . '°""· M"""'Y, c.upn_
invotl... s,,.,_ lor ICl5. ~·· ""'·-·· ...,..,,., with 1Jau, 1 hood $2444 • 8S2-055l or ..,.,:128< For d•lalll call Mr. Brochu, ~alt. s. AumN HIALIY •66 OPEL ·•1 a1A """•"' ..... 1 hell -• ... .,........ '67 CAMARO v .. :m -,~-~""""0"'1r"".---~.
'6i' HODAKA. an tbl pod Extra nlct', auaranteed, n· with rear end. 1 '40 Ford • lm"*1llt. D.llnry • Sport, yellow/blk tcp, vinyl TAKE over pa,ymenll 154
raclnc ~t. $ 5 OD • 'IO A.H., rtiH: t'DI·• Station wacon. xlnt cazxl. 41 dk>. & extras. yellow with hood deluxe 1-1 Erille de-• • root, loaded w/xtru. 1 mo, 1968 Ford Cortina. 5
MS-1711 IWDo, buttr, xbrt com. IPd. dlr, radio, btatu. Sta black hrterlor. No. Pltti luxe. Set ot bade teat. for • • owner. $2395. 494-1155 mo. old. Equity $ J 5 D,
l17L -blut .... rlor. All orlain&1 $1795 V.W. SUL Phone 536"'11 • ~
* MAGS * 4 American Mart: w/ Jue
nuts ~ locD, $115. 6M-m'I'$
.......... fl5 CUb ..... wm m HARBOUR m H.B. ..... for SW. • • CHEVROLET '&<'"'"'=ro=RD~o.~-~Sq-. ----
!lne --lB = m • ., --AU: tor Ken 494-9m '61 OLDSMOllU • auto trans. r 1: h. pa. Pb.
,,,DATsuNwAGON PORSCHE YOLKSWAGBI, INC. ~~A;·."~ '
100 :!o~:;'.t~~!ift:·; .. ~.:;;:: S:to;~~r'ra'::L:r. :ff~'tt~S:~ DATSUN
bdlo, Heater, an the Xtru.,________ CASH •. uto, IMOY , .. ,.. • local car. Ecellut OODl!IHon. FORD '6'l eowm,. Squire, ~~loot"',,.. bolter. 1966 Mnrtin: 912 Authorittd $1595 • 15<'Cuh4'1oortalre-10...,. Alr-cond. Loto ol ..-..... _ l'VIU\flf; Salt!s and Service • car In trade. wm fine prvt ectru? Pampered! $2.750.
Tr1ll1r, Tr1vel $15'5 tm1 Beach Blvd. U2-"3S • • party. LB TXJ' 4M. 4M.m3 545--0'l'&l
11• ROD a REEL P.lll S lo ChooM From I '69 VW for med can .o ""°"'!not • 'H CHRYSLIR • or..,_ ''~~1-CIY=,..-,Sed,..,....-P"'i~S.""""P=JB, MU
VDY CLEAN Q ~· II All In Top Shape I I call UI for fret estimate. • Full powtr, ftctol"( •Ir. • WHITE '58 Olev Imp&la. Pwr RJH. Dependablt wart car.
4 -.-. oven a br!r. Starting at $J9t5 CAMPERS GROlll QIEVROlfT • INh• llO • S & B, ,,.,...... 3t8 w/3 406 E. 2"t ..,._
Dbl <dnl<, •loo WI!, doe VOWWAGEN It(. 534-22J4 or I 1) "2-5551 5 lldux. SUndlolo . •J,• $1895 • dF~~.~-•-tri-pwrn "!~ * XIm Cond ''5 0.try
-•-~ b !Ir ' Dir. OPEN SUNDAY T -• •-.. u -• ~·~ -'~ re .. ,. • n."W -com • · o .... Ul.>W .. -----Ask aiA.Sa1e1 Mana.pr ,. aale. lat nz; tm1. S49--2'12.! Sedan Wq. Alr, power, new ttra ..... T I: w. Authoriud '"" TARGA LATE '67 36 mo. @·f15.60' o . .:a:: 18fa!Beach mvd. .,_______ 45,tm ml. $1550. 5l5--62'lO
A naJ bu1 at $1118.a Salt!i and Snviet: 5 ~ • .Ameri'e&n map xlnt + finaf"Pit\t fdt 0H&. ·DU\~ l!'tlnston Beach • '61 IUICK 8 '64 CHEVY Impala SS Convt, ,62 FORD Galax.le ro'.I. FUll
1BIO Jntw. TnwlaD, um Beach RMS. M2-443S cond., muat be seen by appt. w ~1ol ~-,,,. KI 9.3331 • Eltcfr• COllP•· Full pow.,,. drk blue/wht tap, 321'-VB, Pwr I: A1r P!rled Cond.
,....u *~~*-'64 Oet1un Pickup $4600. Wm. Burtln1h1m , .!OPEN.iiiNDAY0 1..,'f3 • f•ct•ry$•ir. • =~· .fs.'::.'!'~ ol!.1!~ ~ut ~ Aft. 41 PM
-4 SO". dlt, nodio, nd ,.mt 546-0100. All 6 p.m. 5'8-1153 16f'J)f;B.:WJ'~ ''' W!'PAY CASH 1895 • 673-302'1or675-ml '61 GALAXIE GL Qmd,
l=T=ru=eb======,=500= .,.._ ""' ...._ I'll '63 s. ttboilt '"'" nu clut<h. ~!!?!!'".-__ .;;;_ . l' JOIJR W • • ·01 CHEVY 2 DR HT Exlnt. Tift• llOO, ...,_ Cub deh. or take small brakn. AM/FM, ch rm .. _,, .n.&ll\O Lie." • . Aft. 6 PM
foretp car in 1nde. L.B. whlJ, tuu rack. cust exbst. -•• .Htt .. -.~ • "66 IUICK _: ~':e ~. ~~b-=======:.
HAND nw '"' = sn. c.n Ko. $17'13 $21i1iO 11rm. 5t6-3tlO .. •un11111111· CONNELL •wi""' • '"'· ,,,....,-.....,,. Ml!RCURY 1/J TOii Plcklfl or ......,. ......., li1VOWW: .-na~"," . ·:· CHEVROLET •'''· ...... , .... '''"''•·• LE"r 8'd.ln 1n s '67 DATSUN PICKUP '68 PORSQfE 912, 5 ~. . •• ~ mvd. .R&H. ISVX Olll • ·:~cond. 36,DDO ~~ .... ~ :!. -:i;; 2195 '!r.~·:,~·=~bea~ ~~~~.= -. r ,. -•i ."".lf'O ·e1 i ~ Meu. ~mo • $2195 • =miles. Make otter. SAVINGS on a wide choice
$98 DN. p1ua Tat., -
CONNl!LL
CHEVROLET
-°"""' by Uttle 'o), l9>-0ll5l or ""'""' · AuUiorized ' ' '' ' -Will Buy • ot near ... '611 Lincoln. man in J..acuna. S50 Cub '68Poncbe911T s_~,tl!"i~.~~; .;;! ~1'.~. . I ''6 TEMPEST • 1965 CHEV Impala Wq., Men:ury, eou,an. For
dell or take foreJc:n car tn 5 lpd tra1ll ndlall. tow mu Beach'ltlW:~· ·'te>ft'J!f ":_>S:.g:3 : " • 396. RJH. fUll pwr, fac a.ir. detaill call Mr. Brochu. ~ wm tine prvt prty. miles • dlr 39)..M.ll • • • I t . Toarfi~. Pana •C111to111 cp•. R&H, ·~t... PrY prty. $UID(l. ~ 5'0-6630 Dir.
lB Prs an.r c.11-v .... $ · '5895, • 6f VW, new ~. lMli1 A p0 top dollan.. Paid tar • ~.S., f1ct•ry •Ir cNlh•ft·• ,61 QlEVY __, cont. $f'l5. , •~...n,... ... y ,. dr _ ~ ..._ or 5M-22BC sell, beat otter. CIC' not. Cll1 ~ lftf. ISTDl 771 • • .......... ~ MLAOw~n. • .. • ex rm or ......,. '&8 ,,.,....,, 911 L 962-lW 673 1190 • $1595 Coll Minter at 6'Ml511, cen.nt condition. 3 o 40 'ff DATSUN Sportomatlc, radialt, low • I a attn' T pm call MQ.-m& Grant, Colta Mna. $ll90
C.H. stc -.,, Ill bp, overltttta mile~ dlt. 15895. m.\'151 ·~~":.:::'.""ri:'• IMPORTS WANTED 0 '63 dliVY lmpala SS 2 5'l>-<090 cam enc., dlr. 4 apd, radio, or 534-2284 phone 646-2888 <>ruip· Cbinttn· • door. new brakH • tlttl, I========
00 a!EVROLET .,,....,. i.ator, · """ ttr.., loaded! '8'-PORSCHE, all .....,. . TOP I BUYER 1 'H T·ll•D 0 exoel. cond. ll2'0. 8'7-2157 MUSTANG , , aoo mllel undei' factDI7 ' ' 'iS VW IUG BILL MAXEY TOYC7J'A 1F111l , •• ..,, f•ct•ry •Ir. ========1-...:.:::;:.:.:;::.;: __ ;.:,,:.~ "':J .......,.._ Bai pm;· TU.. ;:'., ~ Xlnt cond. m"'-With ""''hinr Interior, 1"81 lleach Blvd. • ISLI "' 1 • CHRYSLER '61 MU!l'ANG, 219, all',-·
englnt, radio, heater, blr .tis c:uh dela or older"''" 118'7 • PORSCHE, 911 s """°;.'extras. Gaannle<d. IL.Bet<!>-Pb. 8'7_...,. • $2695 • auto, .. ., w/vln>I top. !500 rubbrr -Dealer la35 t.B, YNW017 Call after 10. IJc . .Jl.TF869. · -• WIP'E'S ,Car. 1-owntr. New Milet. $2800. 6G-111Ji dlyl,
• -· '9UM3. • suranudy w/hlacl< Int.nor. • · $1195 AUM ~'9lsl!1f 9110 1"'bs, -ohoclu. J.96t liH-ll392 ewL Bead! Blvd. HuoL llw:h. · Xlnl amd 19i-U92 I , · = __ -• F A 1,;.;;...:,;::.;::,:_,;:::o===-I
-... DATSUN ...... budtop · -·HARBOUR 13 *aur'o lWING • ·u cHmu• • Chry1ltr N ..... rt -. '67 •• eyl MU!l'ANG lldlp
1'61 FORD RANCHERO 000. r•h. xtnt cond. $1895. dlr. SUBARU ll1ill ' * •s .s. Rdlo. h .. ter, •uto... P/L 2 Dr. HT. ~ be N•w ...,. """ • •hocl<s. -~ '" -· PS. (RGU«O seen at Lido Short• Hotel, $1695. Priv ........ 56mJ5 M..-"1111 blacl< -· ~~ or --VOLKSW AGEJl 111( # ALL MAKES • l • 611 Lido Puk Dr., NB. I-'-==~-;-'~..,,.,,_-:_~ .... ~ .~~· FERRAii ~1969$129SU711A66RUM·~ • #Cl)MPETETIVEPRICES. $1595 • !T.>m!.IUOO ~.:.~·
·-· ~·· ·~--uvm ; rv Autho.Utd Cort Fox Auto L .. 1ln9 • llall•r. 111.15 Btodl Blvd., Complete ~·-"""'° "" W ~--u•-b • ''1 CHRYSLIR 675-5200 HunL Btacb. Ml).Ot42 FERRARI •v•_ .. car Salts and Service ·......,..,A..,. way • '661PLYMOUTH ~. fUl1 power, air, dlr.I========
. ., CHEVY c.1>owr, 2-T, Newpmt tm.,.... Ltd. "'-Kosta Kustom.~~ U7US.acl<mvd. M2-443S Newport• LEll<acl<ASING642"'1l• •• '"'" •••••·"~ ""''·= ... ....,.,.llODe~.wm OLDSMOBILE dutk&m dump. JI' ltttl anre Coanty'a cmly autbor-145 Baar, CX. ~ '64 VW, rAh., cuatom paint, •hHl•r. ITEZ 1121 tine. prvt, ~ ........ pay-1--------·~ -.... tzec1 ct.Ier -.. 1 ---"''""'.._a ..,._, • me:ntl of SU. mo, J.B QUR 1 .. rvnrnv -· .... -• -·~ ·~-~ ·-... Camaro, olr .... $89 mo. • $1395 $17'13 545. unlfi:iutll tr1n1mlulon. !2500 SALES· SDI;:'.:':!'· PARTS TOYOTA dlt. '6' Cad CdV, olr .... $89 mo. O ~.c.n Ken °'
5I0-4109, IC-4305 l1lll W. ~ Hwy, ..,__ or 5.14-2284 '«! CoMOlr M"" ""'152 mo. • -SALIS & SERVICI
'01 FORD Pue!, clla button -Nrwoan Btodl5'0-l'll4 TOYOTA '6' VW, SUnroo~ d>rm ""1o, SOUTH COAST • '6% CHIVROLIT • 1958 CHRYSLER. Good OLDfMllllllE
sunk int, rebuilt 292 erw., Autbarized' MG Deeler wide t1tta. exhaust. rlh. CAR LEASING •Pick·up. Plumbfn& or• enatne A tranmniulon. P/b, ~
:i5,Dl)J_ ml.. Mblt Me to bf. HEADQUA1\TER~ Sharp! $995. dlr, 88J..556l 300 w. Coast HJahway 1 •electrlCll special. P/1, R/H ~alt 1175. 646-76'5 11,..,,.,.otter.~ FIAT ELMORE or..,.,2284 NewportS.aoh ~M CK63951) • COMET 28500::";,!'vd.
·Ii FORD pl~..,.., duty ·~~:':ii. :.'.o. ~~~ U.: c.;. 9'00 • $1195 • 5fO.S6tO u ... ea.. -4 •peed. $2151). '61 FIAT. Good clean oond. tm Bndli Bhd Wlblmltr • ·a Comet, air, rtblt • .,,. '85 OLDS, "2, 41 spd. i'ellow
'56 TR 3, Ill ....inr cond Low mil•.... Opfn lo ol-Pbaot ..:_m, 642-944& be!<n •· JRAllSPORTATION • ,66 PONTIAC • Xlnt cond.1!115. w/ hilt Int M"" ..U • izo. &f9..2CQ'.I fen. Weekdays 9 to 5 p.m., 'II VW 7 JIUll!D&ff bua. U St. CM MS---25.15 u•--.,.,
-·-.... 1 BILL MAXEY St ,1 1 4 , F 1 W 814 Dam , . . beat oftar. 1 ownr, ,,_, ''3 l'ORD PICKUP Mr. -·••· -·= 11.000 ml, Xlnt thruout 1 '"" • ""· '" •" tt 4 ~K~ :E:I 1;:°oo.~ Jtwto Good. ITIOIYIOITIAJ : ~:; :°"" Bua CAR SAlf I i~';::1;; ,..,,. .. .,,,,.: CONTINENTAL a ~LYMOUTH .
W>iib '8' >,>TON ExoepUonal, all.~ .. ,: Credll tm>bl•mt S.. "'"'I $1795 • '!5 CONTlNENTAL, ex--
Good Omdl"°" Stiel< JAGUAR 11111 llACH llLVD. 11650. 673-3524 tnoturt d•Uwry, Jow prloe• 1 oeuent cond. 1'ul1 pwr, air, 1ff7 PLYMOUTH . * -* Hunt. -h 147.as" ... vw Bu, 9 ..... Xlnl ..., .. _ We -00 I ·u OLDS • iruo .... bnt otter. 675-1510 BELVEDl!RE II ·65 CHEVY Van. RIH. needs l9S7 JAGUAR XKE 2 plus I mt N. of Oiut Hwy. on !kb mech cond, pod paint, your credit Call or come In • ·-~· Model • i door •tatiOn WI.I-
,.... bod)>......._ $'50. 2. Automalk:, AM-FMndlo, '69 TOYOTA man oiler 6144634..., today. •c,11.,, "'" •·•· IWFH.0 CORVAIR on.Equlpmonl • ....,.•-* &d._1S35 * air conditklning, wlr• J40.4m Ill} • trw. autmn.tic trarwnluion,
=t: -U. Beautttu: _,. •o> vw With.,. """'· -' ILUI CHIP • $895 • '64 CORVAD< -· < opd, """" 1n1er1or, -r nu c.-.. 9520 -M .. -... wi"' .. ~~ FROM$1770 ""'" ..... -$!11. Coll AUTO SALIS • • --y•llow -.wblte.......Ullra. "~·------.... ....--. "'(!..r Ml-IM> 21C Harbor, Colt.a MllM • w/bldl: Int. Xlnt eond. $1t0. MILEAGE • 28,581 * PAK.-TOPS. oil •11•1 UXl mn... Doller. llll3S Lo"° S.lactlon 1'61 vw ts;JO, wtth ....., WI PAY CASH FOil • ''2 MRCU•T • 6'2-2919 UCENSE. UJB 309
lhalla. Salel I: nntala. no ~ mw. Hunt. Beach. Immediate O.llvt'T alr, FM, auio. $JJOD . _youR CAR, PAID .w.11ter; , ••• ,,,,. •• , •. ,. '83 Gr1tnbrier 1-owmr, lll'J CX>NDmON. Ext"ellent
.,._ BtiY tutnry direct. 1010 SIE US TODAY! .....,..,_ 'OR Olt NOTI P·• IG lfOI 0 hp, t opd, -""'' PRICE • 11915.
SO. JIUbor, S.A. DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! •• $695 • "'' $'50 <15-1191 lee al the DAILY PILOT, DI I a-!• W!dte !1tpbantl! CHA.ROE m == W•t &7 Street. C,lt or eaD
Imp•-A-96001---uana ·---·--A-HOO ••••••••• CORVETTI 6'Ul2loxt:m. l~~~~;;;;;r;~~~~ : .JAGUAR • '62 co1tv1n1 PON11AC • CHICK MIS()ll, 1K.
. O''IRS THiii (
OUTSTANDINO SPECIALS
BUGS It GHIAS -s399 .. s1a99 .,...__
.,, ....... c..,. '''" S,.cf•lly Prh.•4 IY" 6001 ........... '" ..... c,.. M-l•t•ly Ilk• II-·
IWYWtlll .......... -""' ~ "4y. ,,xz 1111
"" ..... t11 141tf .. t,.H ., ... ,,., •• ,_ (2 "'
••• , .. fr.,.ii~ fSIA 7151
llHWJfl l
'&I ..... tl 1 '"" S,.,+•M•flc tr1111111l11l•11,
, •• ..,, .,, ••IMllll•lllllf,
PM RA11l1., D•111•. N•••r ku 19tl1ttrH. N .. lt It
1'4 YW ......... St4tf
S1111 r••f. R•41•. IKDLfltJ
'" YW ,_ ...... SUH
t ''"'ftft' IHQlt7tl
'ti YW ........ 11m
'"''''' ..,., ... ,". 111 •• , th1, IOSL 0-47 1
.,, .. ... lllff
1..tr• •"•'I•· c.r ... ''" ,,,.
''''" f 'FXt4t I
CHICK IVBISON, DIC.
•
VOLKSWAGIN 549 NN
lt7D H•rlliH II"' .. C.1t4 M•t• 67J011t0
.J
If i ~ •• 11 • Black ...... .,, M .. I -lo '611 PONTIAC OTO
m==u=u=P=H==-• •l • 8fL • ]. IL!J : llUDOUARTERS • =~· ~ .:ir· ~ .. blue .... ""'"..,. v-1.
ILMORI MOTOR. •Compl•t~ Sol••· s.,..: =~~10.'"LB~it ~ :!.., ~~ ... = •eo TR!!.""" -..,..,., ___ Sfftoap-_..,.,,..._
'&C TR Spltin. new pt.int.
cluld\ A ndJau. 60-«l!T
11¥116Sat.
VOLKSWAGEN
'8' VW-$115.
Call 5'8-7ll4 -°'"""""'·
'67 vw --low ml.
l150ll, v..,.. ..... --ssa..MlO ewaJwtotndl
... vw
Rwta(OOdl-
• e.t&-3881.
ll Your Ad ln wr dalltfWtl'
Somta1e wD.1 be Jooldna" b"
•fee i nd P•rt• D•p•~. ....sm or ~ llCf b)' little 'olt 1adY in San
1 UDO llACH Iii.YD. WISTMINITll H4-IJU •mont for JA6U,..RS. 0 '!II CORVETl'E. >ellow, 3:17 ~=-: ~ c:" ~
. • s .. TII• bcltl11t • eftllne, • tpd, U.000 ort.c prvt 11f11, LB NRC 2(1, Cd
4 1 L2% . • "" '''"' lo4w • mlJn. l4500 . .....,,. K•n tM-m3 or -
Ii "'•••••••• COU ... Alt 'M PONTIAC sta w,._ ~ W SUrftr, mechanlcl deiWJL
•. -------· --------1 N-work. Act. 100,000 l•ftk fi1111Klllf n1ll•M• ..
•••k •Cll'""'' ,f uMH.
. FREE-FREE
I.ls V~s VICl!lon
I DAYS & 2 NIGHTS
POR TWO .
N• P11rck•t• "'''''~
15300 Buch BIYd.
Wtslllllnster
19,·3322
OPIN 7 DAYS
• 23' E. 17111 ST. • '61 COUGAR ml'L ... llcome. lll3 -.
I Lime Wltl> bladr ,.Mtd .... 54W372
•• 548 7765 • Loadtd""' olr,condlllon ..... -'5----.-...-t-ect-.---• ....,,, 1'", Stotts ICMll1. DtW dru. tnktt. PrW. • • • • •
OPIN1
7 DATI
AND
MNINtl
• -llD-111M party. * 673-1lll 1 HOW'S THE ·17 FIRE!llRll,-l'Ah. "' "' • • • t 0 """'· 121115. tllr.
• nMI! POil -or -~ qu1cK CASH RAMILIR fj),()()fp BUICK THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
'80 4 DR. Rabel, not l'llllllkor
l30· •113 Ambe .. d..-11a
..... pwr, olr, -1495. 873-4ltl . "' '" '. • : , • "' r
tc Dtol 8tUl!7I _,..,...,....,...,..,.,.....,...,...,_.,._,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! COSTA MES A
I
HOLIDAY
RAMBLER
IN COJTA MBA
AMX
JAVELIN
OMIYOU A
FREE
=~r..!:.. "'-= .IAVILIN cru· ...... ..... ..-
IUND NIW
'69 AMX
v.1, 4 ''"'· F.lly , • ...,, ~vi ,,..t. °"'' +M..,. $2999
laAND NIW
'68 .ICIYelln
l lt tntlft•, 11111111 price.
IP7ttlt
$2386
lllAND NIW
'69 Rambler
F11!1 1!1•, ''''' & 121 H.,. Ortltr t.J,y.
$2043
llAND NIW
'69 Rebel
Th• p,,,,, C.r. 1171212.
$2436
lllAND.NIW
'69 Amllaisadcir
Air c.iitltt1 ... h1t v.1, A.le fr•ft•. s110210
$3286
USID
CARS
SELECT YOUR
MONT)1LY
PAYMENT
'66 Dodge
441 ITATION WAHN
V·I, A1i1!•. tr•ft• .. ,-wtl'
1t1•rlftt a ~r•k• .. TRD676
•52,.._
'6' Ford
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f l'•lf, Y0I, •11f•, tr•M.,
p•w•r 1t.•rlftg, •PL 7J7
$66,..-; • " I ' '66 Ambauaclor :
ttl J: DL HAIDTOP ' " v.1, '"''·· tr•111., , • .,., ~
1turlftt I lN-•k••· SMA :
262.
$52,..-
'67 Opel
ltADlf 4 IPIU
C•lll"· Vlllyt r••f, rttllo
,114 h••t.r. UOl t I Z
$45,.,-
'65 Mercury
MAIAUDll WI. H.T.
v.1, e11to. tr''"" PS, Pl,
•Ir c•ntl. NHN 01' •49,., ....
'66 Sunbotlm , ....
v.1, 4 1ptl. lt•11tlf,,I ••r
ln1ltl• •rul •11t. ••K Jll . $64,., ....
'67 Ford
PAllLANI HI
2 Dr. HT. v.1, ••t. if•nt.
PS, UM•r 11,000 1111.
$63,.,-
'65 Claulc
UO 4-DOOl lllAN
Y·I, •11te tr•11t. PS. f•1t,
•It c:•11tl. VfU IJO $44,.. ....
MAHYOTHIR
MAKll A MODllJI
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l'f• T&L fer 16 -. ... ,,, ........ ~,.
HOLIDAY
W.&S.•lca _, ..... _
,_ , .. Cca:s t ca
1969 Hl!Mr BIYd
•
COSTA MEJA
642-6023
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