HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-04-29 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa----I •
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W:e ':QU.aked,.But Didn't 'Break •
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:Coubty Riot Control Group
By Ei~ht Law Enforee1nent
Laoaehed
Agencies
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DAILY PILOT
~~ * * 10' * * * ... ; ,'f.\;I.~ Y' j;,rn,RNOON, /XPRI~ 2'1, 1969 ·-:-
.. , • J: : ·YOL.;&'MO. 1C..·t llCT~L M'PAOIS · .. ~ . . .
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·~A ":~·· ~oo~~ ta4 ' :.h ~~ .P.. ' . •« '(" ,~. • •• ' j ' .. •
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. . , , • ' • .' • • · .i DAeLY f !J.OT,1'1!1,...
llikirue1h·Paula 'H.ru;.. 1si a vtsltor 1ro'in , M0ntCialr;:br1gi,l*ns 'Iii'~
scene at Little Corma 'Beach as she play's a frisbee game on the-sands
Monday while moSt Orange Coast residents were perspiring in a
miniature heat w~ve,
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' 1es
'Peace Talks' Sch-edul.ed
On Harbor Annex Issue
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Nixon .Plans
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Newport Asks
Negoti~tion~
Wit "Mesa .
;-Say-GOl!-Menr--. -!-'-==....,. -~---Newport Beach city....,.._ ara r~
up with their "Gaza Strip" annexaUoct
feud with C.-.ta Mesa. • 1Tbey decided Monday lo negotiate w!tii
their Costa Mesa colleagues for an end kt
the bickering, <!I"' and !or all. '.
' W ASffi NGTON '(UPI) -President
Ni.Jon will ask O>ogress for changes in
federal laws dealinl with obscenity,
Republlean congressional leaden said to-
day.
After a GOP' leadership break!et at
tfle White House, Sen. Everett M.
Dirksen and Rep. Gerald R. Ford told
reporters Nixon plans to attact ob!cenity
by modifying postal statutes.
Under the prqposals, Dirksen said,
b r o w n paper-wiapped pornographic
material would be outlawed. The penon
making It would be required to identify
contents on' the wrapper or package, he
sa!d. In this way, Dirk!en nptained, the
addressee of unsolicited mall could reject
IL
Dirksen used the occa!lon to renew his
proposals for overhauling laws con-
cerning pornography. Specifically, -he
called for a constitutional amendment to
••get around" · recent Supreme Court
decisions.
The senator cited the current film, "I
'.Am Curious' (Yellow)," saying he un-
derstood there was to be a aequel, "I Am
Curious (Blue)" that woukl make the
first one seem like a "plnk tea party."
"You haven't seen nothing yet," said
Dirksen.
County Airport
Runway Reopens
'A head of Time
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WIDE AREA OF SOUTHE!lN CALIFORNIA ,EELS QUAKE
UPI Map Locatas lmporlal Valfay Eplconlar Of Jolt
Qw;ike I angles Nerves,
But That's About All
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of fM Dl llr l'I• lf.,, ·
A rolli"f: earth tremor and a wave of•
Instant, lnilnel' ~bit Monday, 5S
haun, 31. minutes and 4S, seconds from .
the enjl of a. monlb prOflhels of doom
p~ will be slnlul Southern
Cllllornla'1 Wt.
T~y. a<me peoplp are laugh.Ing, some
are dl>appolnted that they mlsJed the
4:21 p.m. jolt and others felt a blt like a
structure collapsed due to accummulated
stress aod fatigue.
Tall.buildings ohlmmled sllgbll!' fnltt
Las Vesas lo Loa Angelea, Loog Belich
and San l!Jeso, "•bile lhousandl U...gbl
(See QUAKE, P ... I)
Victim "Of Knott's
:kw~~ through a cemetery .. • 'Steamer' Blast
At the same time. Newport councllmt.:Q
Ul18l\imOally ..-lo: • . :
-Seet county approval 'fi annexation
or the Peslsus tract oouth ol ~
COunty Airport. .
-Seek county approval of · a 'strip an.
neu.tion along· TuJtin A venue that
O¥erllpa a portion of• a prqpooed Colla
Mesa anneuUon.
-Prolesl lo the county that portion of
the Cotta Meaa annexation lhal is nol
overlapped by Newport's strip an-
nexation.
The county'5 Local Agency FormaUon
Commission (LAFC) is acheduled lo lake
up lhe Coela Mesa proposal -laggocl
''Back Bay Anne:iatioo No. l" -on.May;
JI.
The LAFC will receive Newport's
coonter-proposals at that Ume.
Al issue In the lnter-<>l!/' !!quabble Is the
so<alled "Gaza Strip,' a corridor al.
i:esiden~ territory that stretches from
Santa Ana ll<lghb near the airport IOUtb
to Costa Mesa's 20th Street. Patches of
the llrlp are In bpth dUes, but most of it
is in neither clly ..
II .Ila J'OUlhly between Santa Ana and
IrvJn&.Tustin avenues. For years, the two
cities ba\re been fllnPil overlapping an-
nexation propoaa]o -and heated charge1
-at each oihs. .
N~ COUllcilmen made II clear
Modlfiy they're weary of the dec-
dispUte. ''Hl!lorlcally,'' said Councllmaa
(See ANNEXATION, Pase %)
Ora•••
Estimates varied slilbtlY u to the
C ty Ri t C t I Pl The main runway at Orange County tremor's strength, but naff engineer Bill £ }) Oun 0 On ro I an Airport. will reopen to commercial airline Gile at the Caltech 1 e Imo Io Ii ca I Dies 0 urns · · . use at 2 p.m. Wedneoday, two days ahead laboratory salct'tl hit 5.S on the Richter W~'~er
of loreeuta, Robert J .. Bremabap, county ·ecale of quake magnitude. ' Wayne o. Nulling, 7~ Los Angele!J The 1un'1-sleeplng in Wednea-
avtaUon director announced today. The. took-and-roll atyJe temblor waa owner of the 1117 stanley &earner day, m&Jch11 Its debut after the
L h d h L A • Bresnahan 111d the raiil-damaged centered in ruged S.Ota Rosa Mountains --~'ch ·~1~ •-·~-y at KM!'• -•-·•-roll '"' --~ 10 am a. unc e y aw genc1es rWIWaywhlchbasbeenrelllll'facedwilhl terrafnnorlbweslofBorrecoSprinp, 10 ww -.~ -~-~ "TM-• ••
. . five-Inch coat of uphall will be ready !0< unpopulat>d aru about 40 mil<s from :=lvJ:.""uie ~ ':.t. of bums ::;:. :::" the~::iu::., r;:a:
Eight cowlty 1aw .nr.,.,.mt.• .,.oar,
joi~ handil Monday · in launchJng a-
voluntary organir.atJon·cakulated to keep
comparaUvely riot free Orange County
exacU, tblt way.
Superior Qiurt ·Judge RoberLGanlner-
ho<le<I the orgaoizallonal meeting ln bis
coortn>om in a bid to create what be call·
ed "a formula' for mus Oisturbances, a
plan on which we hope we will nevv have
to call, but which should be ~vallable to
all facets of law enforcement."
The Newport Beach jurilt, cbalrman of
lhe OrMie County Criminal Justice
Counsel's subcommittee on rioll and
disorders, called ror lhe voluntary
coon:llnadon ol. police and co u rt 1
througbout the county in any future riol
situation.
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full ..... by all typa of plooos Friday ' tha ........ border .mid _.-·the·6oll<ln . . Or Coul
-morninc·" • .,:,....·-..: ·~ J ~;~ ••• 511;: : ~.'>''!: •.; '~\~~i>-"i'"•~·11 ·i...·~ r.:;~~1r'=·~-:t"'t ' ·' ange . :
He told .his audim Ilia•· a Ila!. be The earfy -1111 IO commercial car-. JllSLooe .year and••20. day. '"°"the Orallie County Medical Center, holplta l _ _ 1 JNSmE TODAY
recentl)rr.,..lvecflrom the or-. eo...,. rlen wu made poalble lhrouah a '4,000 ...., quab-prooe region g-.ted a akin said.
ty Bar Associalon would ellmlnote wbot poymenl by Air California lo cover the tmnor of llillblly mono rnaol!u!le which '11>ey are Nlllllo('• wife; Beth, 7I;
he regarded 11 the moe1 -""'"°'' COii of Sunday overtime ·by the con, wu aho fell lfuwCboul the ~, WU!tam Schub, Iii; his wl!i, Jo ....,.,
in any poe1 rillt litaatJon ,_ .. 111-tractor, lndumtal Alphall Inc. of.su... and cauoed m1nor .~. 24 """ their 1wo ~-~ 7 su!ficlenl ·number of-au...111,1 to -too.• The 111t11r11, -y lllemoon Joli---. --'"'-·! coo•-~ ~ the w. -u ~ -•y -•-•·-·-, ~• I -eelJ. and ~. I, all of 81, over the mammoth taa1t of 'piw-.,. -..--•-• ~ ,.. • ~ -"™ --.· ••w 'lbt -OC<Umd during the
and delet11e of PoOSlhly -of ..,. •ua.m. tnc lhabn -· -· boUlel and .-. aa11qaa car -11 Iha berTJ cused rloten. Air ca! and Air West an the only ...,. other &l....cootained m er c band I 1 • !arm In llaana Part. Lealtlng butane
Thal 1111 contains the ..,_ of 1• merdal alrU-Oyina from the airport. · smuhed In Borrego s~ bullam•. Pl opread ..., Ibo floor of lllo claalc
lawyers who have volunleered r ... ..,. Siiica the nmway ruur!acin( be(an, One of ·the quake • ·more -... car and wu lsnlted bf a cl«ianlle « a
lype of duly for which they may be ,.. \olh air-have b<en ocbedullng all aspecll -lince no one wu hurt -wu 1pjrt from the p11o1 lllltt. ln~lOrl
quired in the aftermath of a maaa < .._ County !lights from Lcl1C Beach the Immediate report of a !up br1c1t said.
disturbance. _ J.1rport. bulldlng'1 collapse In IOUlhwestero Loi se.en other penon1 ...... l<u ,...
"l'ltll doesn't mean thal I believe we ·Bresna!tan aald lhal work will conllmte Altldes. (See lfory, Page 7). loua!I ioJured In the bllarre acddenL
can expect a ,.r!0\11 riot in our county lt.rouch We<lneoday, with crew• 11111 G'arqeownera-vtflHoldalandhil Buena l>ark flremen aald Ille stanley
any day now," Judge Gardner .-. -~al qne '!Id. of the runway. The lour ,..plonl,. )>oiif(V ~..J!llul~ 1 Stt1-·llld b111 ~l....i_,.111,,_r
"II means Iha! I am sure '!bat 1naq of cmn will _,,oil the nmway when leta' mlttatei' bolill'a 'Ille ~ ninioioa 'w.lnld bul'ti' bu!aite Pa ratMr than Iha
(lie< RIOT l'IAN, Pare I) ,,. landing, Bretnaban aald. through the Soulhlond'• crusl, u Iha old -coal gr wvod ol former 701n.
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C.P.n •!'Ci«IV is like °"' bia
Peace corps. II /rucinating »-
ciol e%plri1Mt't, ICl/J 11 UC
11'11tne lecturer in giving some
lmlghl mto the Commwllill
, ulmld. Page $,
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PILOT
LOGBOOK •
The Times Are ·changin'
And Profs Had Better
By JEROME F. COlJ.INS
Of ... o.tfr "" ....
UCl's students have won the right to hire and fire two percent of thtlr
professors.
The students had said they wanted to hire and fire 10 percent or their
professors. But Channcellor Dan Aldrich split the diUerence and came up with
two. (ft's the New Malb.)
This is known as a compromi3e.. But tt doesn't make
any difference, of course.
Because the way things are going, the studenls
' eventually will get what they're really after -100 percent.
And this ls how, I imagine, the system will work:
Dr. F'ellswortb Cerebrwn, Nobel Prize..wiriner, wails
nervously out.aide the door of the UCI Student Council
chambers. He Is next in line for a job interview.
The world·famed developer of the mechanical apperr
dix has known hard times lately. In six years, he's been
fired by the students of 14 colleges. The reasons were al·
ways the AJM, ' Cerebrum, 81, couldn't keep up with the night life. He kept falling asleep
at campus pot parties. Not only that, he couldn't lift the bricks his contracts
required him to toss at passing college administrators.
Cerebrum ls reflexing sadly on all this when 3udden1y the door is flung
open. Out of the UCI Student Co.men chambers tumbles Or. Arthur Schlesing-er Jr.
He is followed by a shout from within: i·Neit!"
C'.erebrum, reaching for his cane ,riseJ creakily from his chair. He helps
Schlesinger up from the floor.
"Hello, Arthur." he says lo the cursing ex-Ivy League historian. "I
haven't seen you since those MlT atomic research students blew up Harvard.
\Vhat happened inside?"
"Happened? I'll tell you what happened," says Schlesinger, brushing off
his Nehru jacket and straightening out his love beads. "The first three hours
of the grilling weren't too bad. But then I reach up to wipe the perspiraUon
from my brow. That was m)r mistake." He chokes back a sob.
"Control yourseH, Arthur."
"I'm sorry, It's just that when I wiped my brow I ruined everything. I
knocked off my shuolder-lengtb hair-piece." Schlesinger bllt!ts into tears.
Cerebrum shakes bis head sympathetically. His own shoulder-length wig,
he happily notices, survives the shaking.
He. says farewell to his weeping colleague, screws up his courage and en-
ters the Student Council chambers.
It is pitch-black inside, except for a spotlight at the far end of the room.
Cerebrum, flashing a. peace sign, steps into the spoilight.
The questions come hard and fast: "You ever been busted~"
"Oh, yes. Twelve times last year alone."
''Hmm. Not bad. ijut what for?"
"Seven limes for participating in a campus riot and five times for as-
saulting a police officer."
''A what?"
"A pig. I beg your pardon."
"Your application says you're 2.1 years old. You look older to me."
"That's because of the subject I now teach, It's very wearing."
"What is it?''
"Guerrilla warfare.."
The room bursts with cbeen, Cerebrum, cackling joyously, ls hired on
the spot.
From Page J
: QUAKE JANGLES NERVES • • •
! . . tfor a moment the end predicted by a
\Variety of viliionarles had come.
; "I thought this wa·s it," said Tom
,'Turner, of El Centro._
"People near me were very un·
;comrortable, including myself," aakt
-advertising e.1ecutive George Becker,
1 who rode it out on the 23rd floor of the _
U.S. National Bank building in San Dle10.
·~ Businessman Jack Wells was working
~on the 32nd noor of the Occidental Center
,building in Los Angeles when figul'!s he
rwas writing jiggled right out from under
1he pen.
'TELEPHONED PAPER
• A Costa Mesa Woman telephoned the
iDAILY PILOT two hours later to ask il
:a quake had indeed occum!d, sayin! she
.. saw water slop over the edge of the am1~
•J.y swimming pool.
"But I have the stomach flu and I
tthoogbt maybe U was just that acUng up 'aaain." she explained.
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"\Vhat earthquake?" asked many
DAILY PllOT
N.,.,.rt IMcll H• ............. ...... '"" ,.....,. ,....,. ..........
CAUPOINIA
OIU.NGa COAS1 PU•llSltlNG COMl'AHY
1',i,,,, N. Wet4
,.,.si.tfll .,.. l'llM!lllw
J.clrl •· ev, .. ,
Yk• l'l"ftNtnl n OeMrll Mtf\I"'
Tlrl-•1 Kee•il ·-Th'''"' A. M11tpili11• ,,,.._lllt ldlW -~'9 *t: ,. '#111 ,.., 5trw' ,.._, a..dl: nu .._. .. ,.. ...,.....,.
L ...... .._Iii nr '°""' ,t.WllVI .......,lnlM!t 9"dl1 .. Ml '""'
others: who missed the Joggliag.
"I didn't feel It and I'm glad, because I
do,n't believe that stuff about California
breaking off into lhe ocean," said 1
Sunsel Beach barmaid.
General UmJts of the quake's noticeable
area ranged from northern Mexico up to
the Santa Barbara area and eastward in-
to the Nevada desert.
A Palm Springs policeman described
the jolt u the wont he has felt since the
1952 Tehachapi tremors, which kJlled a
dozen persons as buildings collapsed Into
thP. slrttts.
RANGE OR SCALE
Needlea on seismographs at two scien-
tific installaUons in San Diego "'ere
knocked off their graphs by the nearby
earthquake, which ranged from 5.25 to 6.0
on the Rlcbter scale, as it was monitored
al other spots.
The tremor which occurred along the
Coyote Creek fau lt on April 8 1968
registered 8.~. sevue enough to 'cause
major damage if it occurred in a
metropolitan a'rea of the quake-prone
Southland.
The Richter scale has no limit, but
each Individual point represents an
unleashed force 32 times greater than the
previous numeral and the San Francisco
quake of 1906 Is estimated to have hit 8.3
on the graph.
Seismologists re<.>orded the 1933 Long
Beach earthquake, \4-'hich killed 120
persons, at fii.3 on the scale, developtd by
Caltech profes.sor Dr. Charles F. Richter.
Questioned · Monday as to 'A'helhcr
Southlanders might expect any more .slKb
jolts Jn the Immediate future, Callech
sebmology engineer Gile said he cer-
tainly hoped not.
"Things are hectic enough here as It
Is," he commtnted.
While actual destruction was quite
minor, Monday 's moderate shudder wL,
most dama&Ing to a loosely-organited
program by earthquake e.zperts to calm
uneasy Ctllfornlans worried a b o u t
.socKMayers' prophecies.
RUMOR GROWS
Steadily In rettnt months -with Jts
bulc hlltory eolnl back tever•l lJiar' Into the carHr ol the late psychic ar
Cayce -a rumor has grown at
California "ould be rent by quakes and
sunk In the sea.
Geoloihta, selsmologlru ind other•
who are Involved In contlnuln& study of
all phaH:I of earthquakes say such a m11·
jor quakt and Udal wave Is lmpou:lblt
and of.fer reasons why.
The vi1tonar1es alto dJsagree amon1
lhtmselves.
U.S. Jlm_nbs_
Stop Reds
' "8.egroupi~g
SAIGON !IJPI) -8$1 bombm •Irv<;~ •·
tlghl Ulnes Monday 111<1 tod~ 1gainlt
the North Vietnamese Jst and 7th ·
Dlvldons regrouping along the Cam-
bcx:llan frontier for "·hat' South Viet·
namese intelligence officers predicted
could be a Ho Chi , Mlnh blrtbday or.
fensive.
The tempo of fighlitlg north and
nt:>rlheast or Saigon -1.ong th~ Tnvasion
routes from Cambodia stepped up sharp-
ly, 1nd U.S. air power and tanks wert
called in to rescue a 25-truck American
convoy from a Communist aml;ush on
highway 13 leading north to Cambodia
from Saigon.
The millions of pounds of bombs were
concentrated on War 1.one C, the
longtime Communist stronghold 3S to 45
miles northwest of Saigon where some of
the heaviest fighting of the war has raged
in the past. Others hit 35 miles northeast
~ Sai&on in War Zooe D. •
Military spokesmen said the B52s had
carried out 30 raids in the Camboclian
border region in five days in con-
centrated attacks rarely seen in Viet-
nam.
South Vietn~ese officials reported the
Communists bad ~onned and rearmed
their mauled 1st and 7th Divisions in
preparation for an , offensive expected
between the Cotnmunist May Day
celebrations and the May 19 birthday of
North Vietnamese President Ho Chi
Minh.
Although the North Vietnamese and
Viel Cong have no kriown defenses
against the high altitude B52 strikes, they
have increased antiaircraft defenses
against helicopter gunahlps and jet
fighter-bombers which sometimes strike
at treetop level.
The U.S. Command said the Com~
munist gunners shot down t h r e e
hellcoplers and one $2.8 million F4 Phan-
tom jet in South Vietnam on Monday, the
heaviest los.ses in six days.
The Communists' winter-spring of~
fensive appeared to have tapered off with
only five "significant" sbe!Ungs reported
during lhe night, but their ground forces
have been Increasi ngly daring in the past
weeks , hitUng U.S. bases almost within
sight of Cambodia.
P1•acticin9 for Moon
Ron Redick simulates use of self-contained seismic unit Apollo 11
astronauts will carry to moon. Seismometer, a 100-pound package,
is believed to be sensitive enough to transmit astronauts' footsteps
back to earth. Unit is part of Early Apollo 'Scientific Experiment to be-
placed on moon's surface this sununer.
Fron& Page J
ANNEXATION TALKS SOUGHT .•
Robert Shelton, "both cities Wave done
sneaky thlngs in terms of anne.1ations."
He said Costa f\.1esa's latest annexation
move -Involving territory south of the
Pegasus tract on both sides of M~sa
Drive -had caught Newport by surprise.· In the attempted convoy ambush SS
miles north of Saigon and 20 miles from
the Cambodian border northeast of the TURN OTHER CHEEK
Planning Ditf(tor Laurence \Yllson
said an agreement might be likely
because Newport's proposed Pegasus an·
nexalion does not overlap the Costa r.tesa
plan. The Pegasus area is bounded by
Palisades Road on the north, Santa Ana
Avenue on the west, the f\..fesa annexation
area on the south and Birch Street, south
of Orchard Dri\'e, on lhe cast.
War 7.one C battle area the Reds ran into
two hours of steady bombardment from
dive bombers; helicopter gunships and
tanks. The attackers lied lea ving 11
bodies behind.
The Americans lost four dead and 14
WOUJ?,ded in the fighting.
Two •f the lost gunships were part of
the air armada called in to bail out the
25--truck U.S. Army convoy trapped 55
miles north of Saigon near Quan Loi, a
SUPP.tr base for the U.S. 1st Infantry
Division.
Military spokesmen said the Com.
munist11 opened up with machine guns
and antitank rockets from the jungle
alongside highway 13 as it winds its way
toward Quan Loi and points north from
Saigon.
"If they sought not to sit down and t11lk
lo us about it, that's unfortunate." said
Shelton. ''But I'm willing now lo turn the
other cheek and make an effort to rea ch
some kind of general annexation agree-
ment wilh them."
Councilman Paul J. Gruber, whose
councllmanlc district Is adjacent to the
disputed territory, was less wann about
peace talks.
"Through the years," he said, "COsta
Mesa ha! made a hodge-podge ·of that
area with zig-zagged annexations. And
this time they 're trying to take ad-
vantage of us without warning, There !s
nothing fair or equitable about their
•.sack Bay Annexafion No. 1'."
Th!' N~\·, p:irt .!:1r·n a n n ex a t Ion ,
however, d:ies 01·r•·!"n !he tr'.!:.'.l Costa
Mc::a sccl:s. C~l!"d 1 ·. '1 ·1 r :·";i,1;i An-
nexation" by \\'ilson. it lnke~ in three cul
de sacs and unoccupied lo ls \rest ot
Tustin Avenue. '
Wilson p::iinted out, however, that
homeowners in the area have pctitoned to
join Newport. and do not want to be an-
nexed by Costa ~1esa. In addition, he
said, if Costa l\1esa were lo annex the
area, It could do so only to the west side
of Tustin Avenue.
The east side is already within the city
of Newport. "The middle of the·street, In
that event," said Wilson, .. would belong
to neither city. That im't very' practical."
2Announce
CandUlacy
j In France
PARIS (UP!) -Former Gaulllst
Premler George11 Pompidou and Sotj&llst
leader Guton ~rrerre, mayor of
ManeWes, announced today they will nm
ror president to succt:ed Charles De
Gaulle.
Pompidou, 57, first to announce, wa~
acclaimed later by a standing ovation or
the 29%-man Gaulllst party group in tho
National Assembly. He indicated he
\l.'OU\d be a strong man president in the
Gaullist tradition. (Personality Profile,
Page 4.)
DeUerre announced his decision to run
a few hours later when the Natlonal
Assembly reassembled for the first time
since April 2. Assembly President Jac-
ques Chuban-Delmas delivered a short
tribute to De Gaulle as: a wartime
resistance hero and national leader.
Olaban-Delmas described De Gaulle as
a man who "restored France's honor, led
her to victory and reestablished her
worUlwide mission." The Assembly, jam·
med to capacity, rose and applauded. 1be
Communists and some Socialists re-
mained seated.
Defferre, the Socialist floor leader,
made a brief reply criticizing De Gaulle's
interpretation of the constitution.
Deferre expressed hope the Assembly
would remaln in sesslo'n to keep an eye
on the presidential election. Then he an-
nounced his own candidacy.
The atmosphere was calm a n d
dignified in contrast to the stormy scenes
that marked De Gaulle's return to power
l 1 years ago.
Defferre "''as a candidate for a short
time against De Gaulle in the 1965
presidential race but withdrew before the
final stages of the campaign to make
room for Francois Mitterrand as can-
didate for all France's left wing parUes.
Former Premier Georges Bldault, 19,
who beaded the illegal secret anny
organizaUon n!VOll agalnst De Gaulle ln
1061-02 and who 'A'as allowed to retum
from e.1ile Jast summer, told a news con-
ference he also might run.
Mitterand has: not 1ald whether he will
run again but formation of a "Mitterand
for Prtsident" committee in Paris was
announced.
Actrng President Alain Poher indicated
he might run.
Pompidou, the former premier. was
fired by De Gaulle last summer but sup-·
ported him in the Sunday referendum
which De Gaulle lost.
Leftist and middle-of-the road poliU·
cians at once began hasty talks on can-
didates of their own to pit against Pom·
pidou.
As the political Infighting warmed up,
fears of an imMedia te financial crisis
eased although European bankine circles
forecasl eventual' devaluaUOa of the
franc.
The price of t old dropped from Mon·
day'a all-Ume record of $41.09 a fine
ounce to MS.66. The U.S. price ia $35.
The French franc, which slumped
sharply Monday, staged a a m a 11
recovery. Financial sources said it was
helped by buying of francs by Ille Bank of
France and otber central bank,,.
The price wu 4.9710 for one U.S. dollar
compared wttll U 73S Mond>j'.
A column of tanks rumbled into the
battle, spewing cannon and machine gun
fire into the high grass and heavy foliage
that hid the ambushers. '
"We will all have to agree that the
boundaries between the two cities west of
the bay are pretty hard to justify," said
Mayor D<lrecn l\tarshall. "Nevertheless,
it's our obligalion to sit down and discuss
future boundaries that are logical.·•
GRUBER AGREES Fountain Valley Recall
DA Hicks Voted
Salary Increase
Gruber finally agrrrd lo anr"·;;il''1
parleys with Costa Mes<'!. The council's
irler·cilv liaison committee n1embc~s
\ver-;: as;agned the task. They are Shellon
and llO\Yard Roge rs. The city staff 1vi!l
join in the inforn1;iJ ciiscus~ions.
fi1 ove Said Progressing
A boost in the salary of Orange County
District Attorney Cecll Hicks from
$2:'1,000 to $27,SOO a year has been ap-
proved by the state senate and sent to the
assembly for action.
The bill raising the pay was authored
by Sen. James E. Whetmore ( R-
Fullerton) 'A'ho told his colleagues that
the chief deputy district attorney makes
more mney than his boss.
The legislature periodically sets the
salary of the district attorney while the
Board of Supervisors ha ndles salary in·
creases for top as..~istants.
1"hc pay raise had been endorsr·I hy
both 1hc super\'isors and the county
Grand Jury.
City Manai::er H<1 rvey L. Mt1rll'-urt !X•
pressed the hope that sonic scrt of an-
nexation "packal?"., indir-1::-'! aCC''lrd
bet"'·een the tv•o cities cou ld be pre~cnted
to the LAFC on May 14.
l\'l 11rdcr Sus pect F r eed
For Lack of Evid ence
SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) -Robert
J<!hmc llk, a tall artist questioned for four
clays about the execution ~tyle s!:>yin:;s or
t'1rcc Uaig11t-A shbury rcsirlerit~. 1yas a
frcl! man today for lack of el'idence.
Cy TEU RY COVILLE
Of !~1 01!1Y l'lltl Sltfl
Sup;iorlers of the move lo recall the
mayor and l\vo councilmen in Fountain
Valley clnim today their movement is
proc::-::ding much better than they had ex-
11.i::lcd.
C:ir\>ora Sccour, 1~7 Santa Ynez St.,
:i;:id this morning that she bad no ac-
1ua\ count of signatures on petition,,
being circulated by tbpse backing the
rec all. "but our people are signing 80 to
90 perCfnt of thOse they contact."
Eugene Van Dask, leader of the op-
pos!Uon to Mayor Robert Schwerdtleger
Lifeguards Losing Face
Bea.c h Pollution Quarantine Turns Public Tempers
Dy JOllN VALTERZA
Of 1114 D•llr PUM 11111
\\ratcrfront businessmen in Newport
Beach have lost thousands of doll1rs
beca me of the record polluUon of haU of
tile city's beaches, but another group of
men have lost 110me:th.tng evtn harder to
regain -their image.
For the city's lifeguard crews the
sewage<aused quarantine·thls spring has
provided some bitter'fessons on human
behavior.
"They call U! everything In the book,''
said one we1ry lifeguard veteran.
"Every Ume you ask them to leavt,
they get out. then when you turn your
back th!y 'rt back Into the wattr again,"
another said. ,
Irate mothers, surfers attemptins to
win rllml)' arruments all add to the
liftguard1' anger over the record quaran-
tine that might laat into the 1ummtr.
Chief l~lfe:ruerd Robert E. Reed,
ch1grlned nt tht. abune hi11 men have
taken In lhc part five months, said today
.titalJl_lhe warm-weather continues, the
problems of keeping S"'immcrs from the
polluted brine will even get wor$t.
"Here we are. in an unnatural role
trylng to enforte the quarantine and our
image begins to drop to lhe point of being
'coercive ent'orcers for the establls.h·
ment.' At least, that's what a lot of the
young people are beginning lo think," he
said.
"The hours upon hours of time: il takes
my men to try to keep swimmers out are
impossible lo cal<:ul1te.
"Every time a man goes on the beach
to ask people tp get oul he has to spend
time reasoning -with the swimmers.''
Recd !iild some of th e greatest abuse
ha11 come from mothers berating
llfeguards for asking small children to
stay out of the Inviting, but dirty surf.
"\Ve're not out there to enforte every
nit-picky little statute, ftnd If the city
tried to enforce these la~·s to the letter It
would 10 broke," he 11akl.
While the ttlual costs of the quaranUnt
are dlftlcull to asseu, one fact 11 evident.
ReM said his men have had to be taken
from the ritual springtime duttes or
building new to1vers, repairing equipment
and, in general, preparing for the busy
summer i;cason.
"All our 'A'Ork Is behind schedule and
the pcllutlon has even caused our budget
-whtch Is already tight-to t xceed the
spending limi t for lhls Umc of year,"
Reed said.
The pollolion Isn't the only disaster to
hit the Marine Safety Department this
year .
Record er°"ion from he1v.y surr
lhrealened lhe headquarters buik!.ing
sever•! timts and the stall has donned
wet suits and worked hours hlp-detp In
PoUndlnjJ. polluted surf lo pile &andbop
and buUd mitkf!lhirt bulkhtlads.
The erosion, like the quarantine, Is ex-
poct<d to end IOO!l -perhaps by mld-
June.
The surfers and swimmers will reJoiCt.
7114!1 mothers will, too, but perhap. the
bl11m whoop ol joy wm come from Ibo
liftguards.
"~f•ybe, when It'• over, we can !tart
doina our job a.gain," Retd aald.
•
•
and councilmen Joseph Courrege! and
Donald Fregeau, was unavailable to com-
ment at preS!ll time.
Today was Van Dask's day in court on
the suit he filed against the city of Foun-
tain Valley for a writ of mandate to halt
<:ilnstruction on the controversial Larwin
Tract.
Council and planning commission ap-
proval of the 500 home Larwin Company
planned development wa.s the factor that
triggered the suJt and recall movement.
Oppanent11 object to small lot' sizes
such as 5,000 square feet in some o1· the
Larwln homes. They have also hurled
conflict ol Interest charges at Mayor
Schwerdtfeger who 11erved as real estate
broker in the affair.
The mayor has consistently abstained
from voting on matters concerning the
l.arwtn Tract because of his publicly
declared personal Interest.
~frs. Secour and Van Dask have re·
ccnUy gathered about 150 residents inlo
a group called the Fountain Valley
Civic Association.
While their primary actions have
\Yhie their primary actions have
\1.::in Dask claims the primary purpose of
lhe organization is not rc:.oall, but better
l{OVernment ;ind more citizen participa·
lton in city affairs.
Concerning the recall petitions, 1ofrs.
~.'CJur .said today that the only problem
ther. ha\'e run 1n10 Is getting enough
~tltlOllS OUt.
She could releau no f i g u re 1 on
slgn:Hurca but said. "lt'a golng much bet-
ter Ulan 1 expected in a town like this."
DeadlJM for submiUlng the peUtions.
with about 2,500 sl(Oatures of rtglstered
voters, Is June 1 at 5 p.m.
From Page J
RIOT PLAN . • •
you sh•re my convkUon that It will be lo
the benellt of everyorw U we can, amona
ournlves. lay the foundation of an
organlt•Uon thet can go Into Immediate
"cllon U and when we are faced with •
riot situtttlon. ·•
--------==-'
'"
Bqn:CingtoD. Beaeh.;
--
.
YOL 62, NO. 02, 2 SECTIONS, 24.eAGES ORANGE. C:®Nn', CALIFORNIA
.. , _.,. . ..
Ri,ot Controls Mapped
County Lawmen Jojn to Form Preyentive Gro"1p
Eicht county law enfotcenient agencies
joined hands Monday in launching a
volunlary otgahlJ.atiOo calculated to keep
comparatively·· riot free · Orange County
exactly tba~ way.
Superior COurt Judge Robert .Gardner
hoeted the· organization.al meeting Jn his
coortroom In a bid to create what be calJ-
ed "a formula for mass disturbances, a
plan.on which we hope we.will never have
lo .aD,. bot wbich should be available lo alll~oMawenlciloOemenl."
The Ne1'J>Ol1 lltJ<b jurlal, chairman o1
the Orange Cow!ty CrimbW Justice
Coonlel's. subcommit ... ·.., ·riots and
disordera, called · for the voluntary
coordinaUon of Police al}d c o u r t s
throughout the county In any futuro riot
situation.
He lokl his .Jlldience lbat a list be
reooitty received from the Otanp~
ty Bar Asaodaton ·..o.Jd ellinlnale Ybat
!>< reg.tded '!I Ibo --~ 10 ~ ·poet ... m · attuation _..) aa· ie-
•
-·
sullldent number of •tlorne)'I to !Ue.
over the mammoth taat of ~Uon
and defense .of posstbly lnmdiellf!« oc-'cused rklten. _ ·"-
That 1111 contains the umes ol 188
lawyers who have volunteered for.~ any
type of duty for which ~Y may_~,..
qulred · to the aftermath of 1· "-'-Is 'dlltufbln<e. . . ,..,.
·.,nu.;fdoean't mean that I believe-We
can expect 1 sertoua.riot In oyi cOaty
any day now," Judge Gardoer ~
DAILT PllOT St..,,,....
..
11It means that I am sure that many ot
you share my eonvlcUon that it will be to
the benefit of everyOne if we can, among
ourselves lay the foundation ol an
organiiiilon that can go into immediate
action If and when we are faced with a
riot situation."
District Attorney CeQI lUclu: was nam· ·
ed aa .overall toordinator of the antl·riot
organization: Worktng with him in the
.. tablishmeot of the organizational SlruC·
(See RIOT PLAN, P ... I)
Quake Comes,
But Shatters
Only Nerves
By ARmUR R. VINSEL
Of .. Dllltr l'lllt "'"'
A rolling earth tremor and a wave of
tnsta.Dt. lnnner repentance hit Monday, 55
hours:, 31 minutes and 45 second& from
the end of a month prophets of doom
predict will be ·sinful S o u t h e r n
Calilomla's laat.
'today, some people are laugblng, some
are disappointed that they mlsoed the
4:21 p.m..jolt and others felt a bit like a
boy wh1sUing through a cemetery oa a
dark night.
Estimates varied sUghUy as to the
tremor's strength, but staff enalneer BUI
Gile at the .Caltech seim 0Io1lcal
laboratory said tt hit 5.3 on the Richter
scale of quake mqnltude.
11le roct-and-roll style temblor was
centered In l)lfpd Santa0Rooa ~
~·=~~:J.fJ· . ~ ~ bo'11er and · ~loll Sea. . .~· ·~ -~ ~'l'f" .. ilMI 211 'alti w,.lbt
-. "'flll>l-Jod· ....... ol ..... PlllJ!llulle -
Wll ... lell lhi'Oogbool the Sou1hland
and ciUIOcl minor damage.
WARMING UP-Fountain Valley Bobby Sox base-
ball begins &turday ond these playors plan to be
ready. Girls are Catliy Twmnbley, 9 (with i bat);
Joali~e Twombley, 11 (pitcher), and Staci Eulotb.
9, (fielder). Ce'remoniM opening season are·sched-
uled for noou . al Folintain· Valley High School.
The !harp, Monday allemoon jolt ...,,.
ed only minor ~fll~· with a ~nk cell·
ln1 shakeD Jooee, wlb4ows, bottles and
other gl~ merchand,l1e
snwheij·JI! Borft(o Sf.rings blis!,,....,
Crlliser SJDashed
On W,aves Off
Sunset Beach
Scattered pieces of wood were the only
remnants of a j5-foot Chris Craft cabin.
cruiser pounde4 by, wav~s e~Jy this
morning near \lOth Street in ~t
Beach.
Owner Ken BTinvn of Maywood said he
was taking the :.iewly purchaaed boat
from Newport Beach to Long Beach when
the motor froze about 10 o'clock Monday
night. .
"It toot WI unUl1 a.m. this morning to
drift iqto shore/' he said.
"'lben when it .• was caught on. the
beach, the w•es ~ just pounded It to
pleces," Brown' continued.
On board were Brown and James
Peieraen. 10, soo ol. Pete Peterson. WJIO
El Morado, Fountain Valley, who bad
just sold Ibo boll lo Brown.
Pete PetA!noo wl,s walli"I In Long
Beach for •bis IOD '1Jd. Brown when be
received word !if thejioat trouble. No one
was injured, bUt the boat, valued at
$3,oOo, W"'I !"'Mldeno<l-nearly • total JO&.
Jt was not lnlufed. ,,
Peterson safd this.mOrning they"might
be able to salvage the engine and the
-b)'. dredging them out of tlie water, but~ mea Jooted.disa:lu.rqta,
u ·lhey surveyed boat chips stmm for a
mile along SuNet Beach.
.
Valley's Neal
Among 10 Due
For Vitnna Meet
I .
When City Manager Jamt1 Noll
represenll FY"it" Volley •t lht Int.....~ ol Local .A ......
meeting J!Jlle If-t, in Vlenna, AuS!rla.
he will be• In • oeled IJl'lllP of 10 olllclal
deloples from the U.S.
I.Ml. week Ne~1'Ceived • lelqram con111:min11 his lnvjtallon lo tho Vtenu
meeting and lllltni the other nine U.S.
deloptes.
Nut ti ochedu1ed to ~ Jl'ounlaln
Valley'• unique len.y-blld,.i lo representatives from more than 41 na·
lions and prepare a short paper !'fl Ille
subject
•
No Powder Puffs Here;
Valley Girls Play Softball
Diamonds aie a girl's be&t friend, but ,... Angela aren't the only base stealen In:
that wisn't meant to include basebl1J 'Orange County with the .openbw'" Of the.
bats, gloves and a bactatop. Fountain Valley Bobby So.1 Football
But Saturday young Fountain Villley I:-eac:e~~es will be held at· noon Satur.,..
girls will be out to prove the Califcrnll day,. on the Fountain Valley HJgb1 School
diamond to initiate the third year of girll'
Marine to Get
Military Rites
A Marine from Fountain Valley, killed '
when hJs helicopter wu shot down on a
Vietnam combo! milaion April.14, .will
havt a fall • mlJiJarr burial ....ice.
W..iitesdar al Pldllc View Memoriil •
Park, Corona de! Mar. ·
Rite. forcSgl. Roben M._ ~. SI,.
will .be at 3 p.m. iD the Corona del Mar cemeteey. . Deal!>, ~e !or the. boll<opler .. r1'L
gunner 13 rflll., south of Ha · home base
near Da Nang, when It was hit and
-led by groundlltt.
softball play in the city. Albert "Holly"
HollJnden, will serve as master ol
ceremonies. .
Games involving 10 different tWlll will
be played at 1 p.m. and 3:30 p.m ... Satur·
day.
At.out 150 girls, ages nine through ts;
are active in the Bobby Sox program:
Last year the minor league all .stars
from Fountain Valley captured second
place in toorney play In · nort11'!est
Garden Grove, while the major. league all at.n comj>eted in the. eypr... ..,,.;
loarnamonL
Weekday games will be played at I
~-on Tueadays, •nd Sitil<da)'s,
'lllundiY• at the high school.
·Sponsors of the league teams1thls ·yeir
,... . Elollca Nun..-,, Rayne Sc1f!waler,
Village Center MerchanU AAO;C1aUon,
Ind Bella Donna Beauty Salon.
One of the quake a more humorous
aspects -Slnce no one na hart -was
tho Immediate report of 1 illrae brick
building's collapae ln southweslem Los
An(elel .. (See IM!y, Page 7).
Garage owner Roosevelt Holden and his
fpur eJD.ployes, however ran out 14
mlnules be!°"' the earlhqulle rumbled
th!Qlgb the Southland'• crust. as the old
structure collapsed due to accummulated
&tress and fatigue.
Tall buildlngs shimmied slightly from
Lal Yegas to i... Angeles, Long Beach
and San Diego, whlle thoonnda thought'
for a moment the end predicted by a
variety of visionaries had come.
"I tbru&ht tllil was it," said Tom
Turner, of El Centro.
0 People near me were very un-
comfortable, Including myaelf," aald
advertlslog execuUve George Becker,
who rode it out on the 23rd floor of the
U.S. Nau.a.I Bink bulldlng in San DtelO.
Businesanan Jack Wells was working
on the 32nd floor of the Occidental Center
building In IAlo Angeles when figurea ho
was. wri!inl jiggled right .... from under
the pen.
A CClta Meaa woman telephoned the
DAILY PILOT two hours late< lo uk II
•· quake bad Indeed occulftd, "'""' sbo saw water alop over the edge of the famf.
ly swimming pool.
"But l haVe tfie stol]Jlch flu and I
thought maybe tt Wls1tJil lbat •cttnr up
again," abe uplalned.
"What earthquake?'' asked maey
others who m iued the Jeullna.
"J didn 't feel It and I'n\ il8d, "because I
(See QUAKE, Pop I)
·Reeall Drive Progresses
' V~~ Citizens Claim Solid Support of Ouster . '
By TERRY dmUJt J • ..... __ ..,..
Suppori<n of the move ·lo recall the .
mayor and'lwo coopid-In Fountain
Valley claim lodq lllelr inovelUellt Is
prooeedlng much beller Jhan they bad ...
peeled. f\ .
Barbara Secour, 18547 Santa Ynez: St.,
aid this morning thlit .ahe hail no ...
.... , count of 1\jpll!Ufts Oii pelitlons
lieln( clrculalod "' -boctdilg the tecall, "but our people are stcn1nc • to
80.~lll ol-lhey-.
Eugene Van Duk, leader ol the op-
position lo Mll)'<ll' Robert SchwerdUeger
and coundlmen J...,.. ~ and
Donald Jl'regtau, was unavalllbJe to c.om-
mMl ati. prtN time. '
11
)
Today was Van Dut~a day In cotrt on Larwin Tract beclUte ol hit pub.liCly
the ou11 be nted ap1ns1 the city o1 r.W,. declared personal 1n1eres1.
Wn Valley for• writ ol mandatt.to bait Mn. Secour and Van Duk ban re-
construction on the contrownlal t..nrtn Cf>lllty . .gatbeted about llO resfcle!U lrilo
Traci. Ii lfOUP called 1M FOUl!laln Valley
Council and pillnni"I ~ ap-Cfvi<: AsaoclaUoo. • • , , ...
proval of the ilGO home 1.a'rwln t:acli-.-.i..>1e · .. • 1mary •Ml;.• ha"
PlaAned devol--~wu the la<tot"ih;.' ~•• "'"" pr -· ~~' va ~·-· 'Wlil• 11>t1r 1 P.lnw>'. •Clk>iis . ihlv. tr= ~~~...!l\°':iimtriks . VmrllUk clalmo the:prtJ.m·~ o1!
llUcli. u 5,000 squm loot /n IOllle ol the Ille orpnballon II OOl 1"'"11. ~ be!MI!.:
Llnrln homes. ·-.......... llllrlod ... -and ...... d-plrtidr--conlllct ol In"'*'~ at ~ ' a11a1n. .•
SchwerdUeger who .-..if.u rtaJ eotate 1~., tho ~ peWai.,. VN •
broker In the al!alr. Secour aald todly lbat the !•!!1'.~~
The mayor baa COll)lat<n14' abstained · tl!q\J>an. nm Into 111 lellJlif ~
from voting oa mlllten concernl"I lht p;i!U.. CIUI. '
'
-:-.. -
·1
.TEN CENTS _
DArt.Y PrL.01' ........... •
HUDDLING -Superior-Court Judge· Robert Ganlner (seated) c11 ..
cusses formula for handling riots in Orange County with Newport
Beach Police Chief B. Ja mes Glavas (left) and Municipal Court
Judge \Valter Charamza, Huntington Beach. County law enforcement
agencies expect to be prepared. should a major riot occur. :
De Gaulle Praised
Pompidou and Defferre
Seek French Presidency
PARIS iUPll -f<>l"ler Gaulllst on tl;e presidential electlon. Then be ..,_ ~·G<org.._pOnl~ IOU'~ . noWmt his own ..,.Uda<i. '
leader G.;.ton ' Delre;W, ~or " ~ 'nie · atmoof>!iero . ..U calm ·• n 4
M.neine., umounced todiythey will,;. dlpllled Ill con1ru1·1o111e lllGrmi' -!Gt' prestdont to ..-Charles De · Iba! markeQllo' G-!• .-0 ID pOw.t
Gaulle. II JWI qo. .
·Pompidou, 57, first to announce, was DeUerre was a candidate for a ibort-
acclatnied.later by a standing ovallon of !line agalilst De Glulle In the 111111
the 292--man GauUJst party group In the presidential race but wJtbdrew before'the
NaUonal Aasembly. He indicated he:, final s~es of the ·campaip lo make
wou1d be a strong man president In the room for Fraoc:oil · MiUln'and as can-
Gaulllsl trlditiou. (Personality Profile, didate for all Frabce'a left winfl parties.
Page !.) Fonner Pnmler ~ Bfdp<t, •.
Defferre announced his decision to run who beaded the illegal ae"cret lnDY.
a few houn lat.er when &he National organbaUon revolt against De Gmlle ta
Asibnb\v riuoembleil for the !~st limo 1961-G and Who WU allowed lo' .-0
sine& April 2. As:iembly President Jae· lr<Xn a11e 1ut •unmer, jold a .,.... "°"'
ques Cbu-Delmu dellwed a ahorl ''"""" be a11o ml&bt nm. tribute lo De Gaulle u a wartlmo Mitt.rand bas natioald wbelller be will
· resltfance hero and naHQnal leader. nur a.pin but fonnl.Uan of. a "MlUerand
Qaban.Delmaa descrlbed De Gaulle as for Prelldent" committee Jo Parll WU
•
a man. who "restored France's honor, led anoounoed.
her lo victory and reestabllahed her Acting President Alain Poller lndlcated
worldwide mission " The Auembty, Jam· he..mlJltl nm.
med lo capadty, roae and applauded. The Pompldou, ·the former premier, was
CommuniJU and some SociallJts ,.. fired by De Gaulle lut l\lllllDer but aop-
malned aeated . Ported him In the Sunclay men!lldum
Dellemo, the Socialist floor leader, Wblch De Glulle loot.
made a brief ttply crtUc:izlng De Gaulle's Leltlsl and -.the TOid polill·
lnlerprtlaUon of.the .comtitulloll. !'lalll •t once btpn buty,tallla oa·can-
. Delarre eipresaed hope the. Asaem~ly ' dJdata of their own to pit l(alml Pom·
would remain In ....ion to keep an ~ya ptdou.
As t1!e polltlcal lnllghttng· wmned up;
fears ol an Immediate finandal ertall
Victiin of KnoU's
'SteaJDer' Blast
Dies of Burns
Wayne O. Nutting, 74, Los Alt(e1e>
owner ol ~ lt17 Slanier Sieamer
which esploded 5aturday •t Knott'•
Berry Farin, died Monday .of burna
received ln•the lreU accident.
Five other victims ol the oploalon .
remain In critical condlUon at the
Orange Cow1ty Medical Center, boopltal .
aides Aid.
They are Nuding'• wife, Beth, n:
William SChulz,' Ill; hl,s I wile, Jo Anne,
11 and ·thett twoidaupten,-CJlllhla, 7 .
and Qiasy, 3, all of Los Angeles.
The accident occurred • during the . aMual ·~ car,lhdW ,at the~.
lann .1n Buena Park. Leaking butane
pa .....i ...., the floor ol· the ·clusle
car and wu lptled by a ciprelle or • • spork from the pilot upt, lnveatlgalon
aajd. i SeVen other penOtll were 1 Jeu · .er.
1~,.lnlured lu the ~ eccldelll-·
-•l>art lltimen iald the Stlnlt)'
Steamer had hem allmd so Iii --1d barn butane ps m1ier lhtD the
c:o11· at -il former ,..,...
. ( .
I
-al1houih European banidn& -forecast evutual devaluation ol the
franc.
The f>l1ce ol gold dropped lrom Mon-
clajo'a all·tlmo record ol $19.111 a line
ou ... lo 141.118. The U.S. priC.11 $35. 1l)e French franc, which slumped
~· Monday, lll(ed • s m •II recovery. l'iDIDdaf IOW'CM Mid it WU
helped by boqlllc ol frm:s b7 the Bank of
France and other central bllib.
The price WU 4."10 for Me U.S. dollar
-pared wttb 4.9'135 Mollday.
0r ....
Weatller
The sun's iateepng to · W«fnat. I d'!I', . making Its debol •lier . tho , cbtd.s -roll by· around 10 •1.m.,
wblte the temperature nmalm r """" m u. ·upper .,., 10r 111o
'~.Cout;
• INSIDE' TODAY
I cui>m ~oci~ II W<e .... big • ,_ .c.,,,., • :fac;lrtoll>!ll ..,.
I <i4I ·~ ...... :.,.uc
lrviM l«t1lm-in ~ I indfll lftto ' tAt c ..... :
land. PO(le 3. ,
~ . .-.......~. =::-•tt =f...-.1 ~ 1 c~ lf ..._ .... ._.
Oltlll ...._ I -_, t I ~ '··=-. ............ I .... lt.M blal I 19 I tt • •n , ...... ~n ...... .....,....,
.... ....., 17 ,....,.... "
4 .......... ,.,....... " ,_.....,. tJ ....... • --........ ~ " ~ ......................... __
. •
..
' ' ' . • t
' •
.J DAll.Y PllDT " .'":*!· ~ 1', "'' .. E C
PIL'OT -·
LOGBOOK· -. '
•. . • •
••
·~ .,,.
. Tl1e Times Are Changin'
And Profs. Had Better
117 JEIUlMJi: '" COUJNI, Of ... °"",...._ ....
UC!'• sludenll have won lhO rtpt lo hire and Un lwo percenl of lllelr
professor1. ·
The studenls had aald they wanted fO blre and lire 10 percent or their
pro!wors. But Owulcellor Dao Aldrtcb 1pllt the dU!erence and came up wllb
two. (It's the New Math.) •
'I1lis la known u ' a compromise. But It doesn't make
any dlHerence, of coune,
Beel.UH the way things are 1olnl. the atudenll
..-al!J w1U set what they're really alter -100 percent.
And thla is how, I imagine, the system will wort:
Dr. Fellsworth cerebrum, Nobel Prize.winner, waits
nervoualy oulllde the door of the UCI Student COuncll
chambers. He ii nelt in line for • Job interview.
The world-famed developer of the mechanical appen-
d(> baa Jrnown hard times lately. In alx yem, he'• been
fired by the students of 1 • colleges. The rellOlll were al· ways· the same.
Cerebrum, II, couldn't keep up with the J11ibt Ufe. He kept lalllna uleep
at campuo pot parUes. N'" only that, he couldn't llfl the bricks his conlracll
. requlred hlm lo loll at paaalni coU.ae admlnlltralon.
cerebrum ls ..0"'"8 aadly on all thll when llUddenly the door ls flung
open. Out ol the UCI Studeol Council Cllamben tumbles Dr. Arthur Scblesing·
· er Jr.
He ls followed by a about from within: "Ne:rt.!"
cerebrum, reacblni !or his cane, rtaa creakily from his cbair. He htlps
· Scbleslnger up from the !lorr.
"Hello, Arthur," be 1&)11 to the cuning ex.Jvy League hiltorian. "I
h1ven't 1etn you aince thole MIT atomic re:aearcb students blew up Harvard.
What happened lllllde!"
"Happened? I'll tell you what happened," says Schlesinger, brushing off
his Nehru jaCkc:t and straightening out his love beads. "The first three hours
of the! grilling weren't too bad. But thep I reach up to wipe the per1pir1Uon
· trom my brow. That waa my mistake." He chokes back a sob.
"Control yourseU, Arthur."
"I'm sorry, lt'1 juat that when I wlped my brow I ruined everything. 1
knocked off my shoulder-length hair·piece." Schlesinger bursts into tc:1rs.
, Cerebrum shakes his hea4 sympathetically. His own shoulder-length wig,
he happily notices, survives the shaking.
He says farewell to his weeping colleague, screws up his courage and en-
ters the Student Council chambers.
l t is pitch-black inside, except for a spotlight at the: far c:nd of the room.
Cerebrum, flashlng a peace ajgn, steps into the spoUlj:ht.
The questions come hard and fast: .. You ever been busted?"
"Oh, yes. Twc:lve times last year alone."
"Hmm. Not bad. But what for?"
"Seven times for parUcipaUng in a campus riot and five Umea for as-
saulting a police officer."
"A what?''
"A pig. I beg your pardon.''
"Your application saya you're 23 year1 old. You look older to me."
"That's because of the subject I now teach. It's vay wearing."
"What ls it?"
"Guerrilla warf1re."
The room bursts with cheers, Cerebrum, cacklinc joyow:ly, is hired on
the spot.
OAlLY ,ILOT t"ff .......
WINS EAGLE RANK
Boy Scout H1nsen
DAii Y PILOT
O«AHOl tOAll l"UILIMUHO (QM.,AH\"
llelttrf N. Wtt4
~*"' aN l"l.IMlll'llf
J-.k l . C11111.,
VIU ,raiOtrol '"" Gt..ertr IMMllr
n.-•• ICtt•ll a111tor
Tl\0111 .. A. Mu1.hf111 t
Mttletlfll 1111fw
Atb.rl W. l1t11 Wilfit"' 11114
AN«l .. t .....,~ • ._..
ElllloW (llr 1 .. tw
--~ lll't lllt Sfrttl
M-1ll111t A4irttH ,,0, a.1 7'0, 'l~I --*""' Sffdlt UH *-' .. ..._ .... """ .. CM!t "'-' ,. ~I .. ,. Jlfftl L-a.+c"IJ Ut l'rtnf ,........,,.
Harry Hensen
Awarded Top
Scouting Honor
~
Hany E. Hanse, Jr., o( 6191 Dover
Prive.. Huntington Beach, hu bun
awarded the rank of Eagle ~ut by the
Orange Empire Area Council of Boy
Scouts.
·The !~year old Matlila High School
sopjlomore mide headlines just two years
ago when he and two fr ends bullt a
realistic looking space capsule and !UC·
cessfu1ly completed a 72·hour simulated
space fllcht.
. All three "astrotiaut.s" received keys to
the ciUes of W~mlnster and Huntington
Beach and awards from the local Elks
Club and McDonnell Douglas.
Hansen, a member o( Troop 551, was
one of the firat scouts in the Orange
Empire Council to receive the newest
merit badge, the_Computer Merit Badge.
He is aho a member or the recenUy·
formed Computer Science! Explorer Post
418, composed mainly of Marina Higtl
School students and SllO"'Ofed by
Management Computer Services ot.
Anaheim.
HanRn hu been a scout since 19&4
when ht joined Troop 811 in SlmJ Va!l<y.
Today he bolds 33 merit badges.
Ills lather, Harry E. !Wuen, Sr .. has
also been active in 1COUUng for 1eve:r1I
years and is cumnU, Troop Committee
Chairman of Troop 651, Hunu.niton
Beacb.
4 B each Choirs
To Jo in Voic~
Top chor1l lf"OU'Po' from the four locsl
hlib schools wlll put their ti.st volets
rorw1rd tonight tn Ole HunUngton Bt1ch
Union High School Dblrict's Concerl or
Ensembles.
Performancts begin at I p.m. in the:
Huntln(otn Beacb High S c h o o I
oudltoriwn, with admwlon pricu or 11
for adults and 50 cents for students and
cblldm.
RepresenUnJ lh<lr schools will be the
Troubadours from Fountain V1lley, the
Hannonaim from Huntington Btach, the
Marillm lmn Marina and t be
Chor a leers from W..untnsw.
M'.urderSuspectFreed
• "'--~~~~~~~J
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Robert
Jahmellk, a tall artlll quettlontd for lour
doys obollt the uccuUon stylt olay1np or
throt Holghh\JhburJ residents, was a
frtt man today for lack of evldt~
l
U.S . Bpm bs
-l • .-
,Stop R1eds
' . ' ..
Regro uping
SAIGON (UPI) -B!i bomber! struck
eight times ~fonday and today against
the North Vietnamese 1st and 7tb
Divisions regrouping along the Cam·
bodlan liontier for wh&t South VJrt.
namesc: intelligence officers predicted
could be a Ho Ch! Minh birthday of·
!enslve.
The tempo of fighting north and
northeast of Saigon along the in \!asion
routes trom Cambodia stepped up sbar~
ly, and U.S. air power and tanks were
caUed In to rescue a ZS.truck Amerlcan
convoy from a Communist ambush on
highway 13 leading north lo Cambodia
'from SaJgon.
The m111Jons or pounds of bombs were
concentrated on War Zone C, the
longtime Communist stronghold 35 to 45
mllc:s northwest of Salgon where some of
the: heaviest fighting of the war has raged
in the past. Others hit 35 miles northeast
of Saigon in War Zone D.
Mllllary spokesmen aaid the 852' had
carried out 30 raids In the Cambodian
border .region In five days in con-
centrated attacks rarely seen In Viet·
nam.
South Vietnamese officials reported the
Communists had reformed and rc:armed
their mauled ).st and 7th Divisions in
preparation for an offensive c:xpected
between the Conununist May Day
celebrations and the May 19 birtbd1y ot
North Vietnamese-'Preiident Ho Chi
Minh.
Although the North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong have no known ddemes
against the high altitude B52 strikes, they
have increased antiaircraft defenses
against helicopter gunships and jet
fightc:r-bombers which sometimes strike
at treetop level.
The U.S. Command said the Com-
munis t gunners Shot down t h i' e e
helicopters and one $2.! mlllion F4 Phan-
tom jet ir) South yietnam on Mon~ay, the
heaviest losses in six days.
The Communists' winter-!pring Qf·
fenslvc: appeared to have: tapered off wlth
on1y flve "significant" shelllngs reported
during the night, but lhelr groun·d forces
have 'been Increasingly daring lil the past
weeks, hitting U.S. bases almost within
sight of Cambodia.
In lhe attempted convoy ambush SS
miles north of Saigon and 20 miles irom
the Cambodian border northeast of the
War Zone C batUc: arc:a the Reda ran into
two hours of steady bombardment from
dive bombers. helicopter gunships and
tanks. The attackers fled leaving 11
bodies behind.
The Amulcans lost four dead and !4
wounded In the fighting ..
Two of the losl gunships. were part of
the air armada called in to ball out the
25-truck U.S. Army corivoy trapped SS
miles north of Saigon ne.-Qllan Lot; a
supply base for Utt U.S. 1st Infantry
Division.
Military spokesmen said the Com·
muniats opened up with rnachj,ne guns
and antitank rockets ftbm the jun&le
alongside highway 13 as 1t wlnd1·Jts way
toward Quan Loi and points nOtth from
Saigon.
A column of tanks rwnbled into lhe
battle, spewing cannon and machine gun
!ire into the high grass and heavy foll.age
that hid the ambushers.
Military spokesmen said one crc:wman
was killed and two were wounded when
ground fire downed one of the 1U11shJps.
while the second stricken copter carried
one man to hi.s death and wounded
another. Dama.p to the trucks and tanks
was described as light.
Cou nty Airport
R un·way R eopens
Ahead of Time
The maln runway at Orange County
Airport will reopen to commercial airline
use at 2 p.m. Wednc:sday, two days ahead
of forecasts, Robert J. Bresnahan, county
aviaUon director aMounced today.
Dnsnahan said the rain-damaged
runway which has betn nsurfseed with a
flve-lnctl coat of asphalt will be ready for
full use by all types of plantJ Friday
morning.
The early opening to Cilmmc:rc.ial car·
riers was made possible through a M,000
paymc:nt by Air California to cover the:
cost of Sunday overtime: by the con·
tractor, Industrial. Asphalt Inc. of Stan-
ton.
The: original contract for lhe job v.•as
$165,770.
Air Cal and Air West ar.e the only com-
mercial airlines flying from the airport .
Since the runway rtsurf1clng began,
both airlines have been scheduling all
Orange: County flights frOm Long Beach
Airport.
Bresnahan said that work will continue
through Wednaday, with. ere"'·• atlll
v.·orking at one end of the runway. The
crews will move off the! runwa y when jets
art landing, Bresnahan said.
Barry Goldwater Jr.
Favored to Win Seat
LOS ANGELES (API -Barry
Goldwattr Jr., was favored to wln .a
runoff tleclion loday for th< U.S. House
of Repre'ft.nt1tives 1eat for California's
2Tth dlstr!.:t.
Goldv.·ater, 30~ar-old stockbroker son
of the 1984 Republican praldentlal
nomlntt, WIS apposed by Attorney
John K. Van de Kamp, 33. 1 Dtmocr1t.
The di.Wlct Is traditionally Republican.
-
DAILY PILOT Stiff PllM9
Good Catch
Bikinied Paula Henry, 18, a visitor from Montclair, brightens the
scene at Little Corona Beach as s4e p!_ays a frisbee game on the sands
Monday while most Orange Coast residents were-perspiring in a
miniature heat wave.
No 8rown Wrapptts?
Nixon Will Seek Changes
In U.S. Obscenity . Laws
WASHING TON (UPI.~ -President
Nixon ·will ask Congress for changes in
federal Jaws dealiiig with obscenity,
Republican congressional leaders said t~
day.·
Alter a GOP leadership breakfast at
the White House, Sel). Everett tot.
Dirksen "1d Rep. Gerold R. Ford told
reporters Nixon plans to attack obscenity
by modHylnJ P.Ot~, stlltutes. _
called for 1 constitutional amendment to
"get' around" recent SuPreme Court
decisions. _
The senator cited tle cu?Tent film, "I
Am Curious (Yellow)," saying he Un·
derstood there was to be a sequel, "I· Am
Curious (Blue)" that would make the
first one seem like 1 "pink IC!a party."
"You haven't seen nothing yet," said
Dirksen.
The Republican leaders also said the
Pr~ldent is prc:J>¥ing a meatage ukin1-
!or a consolidation of execuUve wwer to
· pulf'together a number of progi'ains now
scattered througQ a vartety ol federal
agenclc:s.
Utt ·Gi~es·
·' ! Press Award
To Presiden t
-~
WASHINGTON -Prc:sldent N Ix on
spent 10 mlnutes ,Monday with Congress-
man James B. Utt (R-Tustin), who will
become his congressm1n whC!n the
President take! Po51es.sioo ol the Cotton
Estate in San Clemente as the summer
\Vhite Roust.
Utt .reported that Nixon told him he
intends to register lo vote in San
Clemente.
Said Utt, "I told him I'd be glad to
have him come back and vote for me."
The congressman visited the White
House to give the President a man-or-
the-year award f!'Qm the: Orange County
Press Club. Utt accepted thC award for
Nixon at the club's annual dinner c:1tller
this month.
Utt said the President is looking for-
ward to spending h1s summer vacations
in San Clemente:. "He mentioned how
he loves the ocean and be hopes Con-
gress will recess in time for him to a:et
out there," Utt said.
HEW Defends
Fund Cutb ack
For Hospitals'
Und~secretary or Health, F.ducatlon
and WeUare John G. Veneman, speaking
Monday at. the annual convention of the
Association of Wetem-Hospltels in
Anaheim, ddc:nded his department's re-
cent decision to end a two percent
allowance paid hospitals under the
federally-financed Medicare and Medi-Cal
programs.
, He said the hospitals have }lad "suf-
ficient Ume" to adjust financially to the
programs which have been in operation
for three years, and that the d~islon .was
necessary to combat "1eriou5-lnflatian o(
hospital costs which have become a na-
fional problem."
Veneman also said that t~e Nixon ad-
ministration will propose a program of
block grants to encourage expansion of
outpatient clinics, nc:ighborhood health
centers, skilled nursing holl)es and ex-
tended care facilitie.
He joined George W. Graham, presi-
dent of the! American HospilaJ As:socia·
lion, and Dr. Joseph w_ Ehrenrich, direc-
tor or USC's research institute of
business and eeonomic:a, in ~greeing that
the emphasis in health care mult. be on
pi'evenUoo rather than ca treatment a.Ione. .
More than !,000 hospital management
personnel attended the wt?ek-long con-
venUon.
U.nder the proposals, Dirksen said,
b r ow n paper-wrapped pornographic
material would ~ outlawed. Tile perso.n
malting It would be required to identify
contents op the: wrapper or package, he
said. In this way, Dirksen explained, the
~ddressee of umolicitc:d mail could reject
II.
F rom Page l
Dirk.sen u.sea tbc: occasiori·to renew· his
proposals for ovc:rhauling laws con-
cerning pornography. Specifically, he
DA Hicks Voted
Salary Increase
A boosl in the salary of Orange County
Dist rict Attorney. Cecil Hicks from
$25,000 to $27 ,:,oo a year has been ap-
proved by the: state senate and sen~ to the
assembly for acUon.
The bill raising the pay was authored
by Sen. James E. Whetmore (R-
Fullerton) v.·ho told his colleagues that
the chief deputy district attorney makes
more mney than his boss.
The legislature periodically sets the
salary of the dislrict attorney while the
Board of Supervisors handles salary in-
crc:asc:s for top assistants.
The pay raise had been endorsed bv
both the supervisors and the countY
Grand Jury,
RIOT PLAN. • •
ture will be the sheriff's offlce, superior
and municipal court judges, the juvenile
court, probation dc:partment, California
Highway Patrol, police chiefs throughout
the county and Hieb' own office.
Fonnlng the: basis of Hicks' Orange
County plan or action will be the riot
master plan adopted by Los Angeles in
the wake of the Watts riots and recognlz..
ed at the' meeting as being most suitable
for adaptation in this area.
Adoption of a related riot program
would, Judge Gardner said, give the
cuunly much grc:ater flexibillty and would
enable units of all agencies involved to
quickly trans.fer help from an unaffected
sector to a riot tom area.
RACE SITUATIOS
"We will face the situation where .,,'C
have to provide huge detention f1dlitit1,
extra Judgea, more courtrooms Ind more
pa!Lcemtn and all in a 1bort period of
lime," Judge Gardner said. "This is what
we have to be prepared for ind this: must
form the bull or our thinking in comlllll
Wttkl."
Working clORly with Hicks In t.he
pr•parotion or Ibo "'" plan will be !or· mer cble! deputy probatlon omen Keith
ConcaMon who recently took over the
post of executive offlctr for the crimln1l
justice counstl.
ConcfMOt\ ll cumntly preparing data
which· will hopc!Ully provide l™J,000 In
federal funds for the work ot the newly
formed organtutlon-
(
QU AKE JANG~ES NERVES •••
don't believe that slur! about California
breaking off into the: ocean," said a
Sunset Beach barmaid.
General llmlts of the quake's noticc:able
area ranged from northern Mexico up to
the Santa Barbara area and eastward in·
to the Nevada desert.
A Palm Springs policeman described
the jolt as the worSt he! has felt since the
1952 Tehachapi tremors, which killc:d a
dozen persons as buildings collapsed into
the streets.
RANGE OR SCALE
Needles on sc:ismographs at two sclen·
tific installations in San Diego were
knocked off their graphs by the nearby
earthquake, which ranged from S.25 to 6.0
on the Ri chter scale, as it was monitored
at other spots.
.The tremor which occur~ alona: the
Coyote Creek fault on Aprll 8, 1988
regjstered 6.5, severe enough to cause
major damage if it occurrt.d in a
metropolitan area of the quake-prone
Southland.
The Richter scale has no llmll, but
each Individual point represents an
unleashed force 32 times greater than the
previous numeral and the San Francisco
quake of 1906 ls est.imated to have hit 1.3
on the: graph.
Seismologists recorded the 1933 Long
Bc:ach earthquake, which killed 120
persons, at 6.3 on lhe scsle, developed by
Caltech professor Dr. Charles F. Richter.
Queslioned Monday as to whether
•o 0
'Mn.le'
, .. •t.
Southlanders ·might expect any more such
jolts in the immediate future, Caltech
seismology engineer Gile said he cer·
tainly hoped not.
"Things are hecti c c:nough here as It
is." he commented.
\Vhile actual destruction was qu ite
minor, Monday's moderate shudder was
most damaging to a loosc:ly-organiUd
program by earthquake experts to calm
u~asy Californians worried a b o u t
soothsayers' prophecies.
RUMOR GROWS
Steadily in recent months -with its
basic history going back sevc:ral yc:ars
into the career of the lste psychic Edgar
C8.yce - a rumor has grown that
California would be rent by quakes and
sunk in tbe sea.
Geologists, seismologists and otherii
v.'ho are Involved in continuing study or
all phases of earthquakes say such a ma·
jor quake and Udal wave is impossibltt
and offer reasons why.
The visionaries also disagrc:e among
themselves.
Sllll, however, many people. fc:ar the
pmUahment allegedly to come: and some.
like the: Teens for Christ c~owd of Hun.
tingtQn Bc:ach, have fled to the rc:latlvc:
safety of the Arizona deserts.
· But tht fact remains that the pred ic-
Uons came true to a vc:ry minor degree in
the month mentioned, a fC!B.r which had
bothered scientists as much as doomtday
quake predictions troubled the gullible.
WIDE AREA OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ~EELS OUAKI
UPI Map Loc•ftt lmperltl Valley Epictnttr~Of Jolt
I
/ ... ......
Grants to Reatcme ..
' . .Same Bed,
High Court Nixes , But
Joan Irvine . Plea·
By JACK BROBACK 91' .... DllfJ '"' ... ,,..,
Action by the U.S. SUprtme Collrt Mon-
day denied Joan Irvine Smith's peUtlon
for writ of certiorari thus ending, ac-
cording to the James Irvine Foundation,
the suit filed on behaU of Mrs. Smith
against the. foundaUoo in Augvst, 19".
The petition held that ownership of
Irvine Company stock by the foundation -
was invalid, that the stock rightfully
belonp to the Irvine estate heirs, not the
foundation.
N. Loyall McLaren, president of lhe
foundation, today expressed gratification
that the case has been ended and the
judgment in favor of the foundallon is
now "final".
He sald lhe decision would enable the
foundation to resume iU grants · tO
charities immediately. While the suit was
in the courts the foundation, one of
Orange County 's largest contributors to
charitable and youth causes, ceased all
grants.
\Vhen toki ct the Supreme C.ourt's
decision Monday; Chip Cleary of Newport
Beach, Afrs. Smith's representative, said
be and his client were much more in-
terestesl in current congrwional activity
on tax reform Jegislation which might
slrip the foundation of its controlling in-
terest in the Irvine Company.
Mrs. Sm1th and McLaren appeared
before a congres.!ional sub-commil.tee a
month ago whlcb is considerlJJi a bill
which wou1d restrict any non-profit foun-
dation from owning more than ZO percent
of any business and prohibit such
organizations from operating a·business.
Cleary said Che foundation now controls
5.1. 7 percent of the Irvine Company stock.
Mrs. Smith bolds 21.1 percent and is the
largest individual stockholder.
Cleary said he assumes President Nix-
on's tu reform bill now before Congress
Softball League
Forms in Valley
Formation of a "slow pitch" softball
league in Fountain Valley will start with
an organizational meeting at I p.m.,
Tuesday in city hall.
Prospective teams are asked to notify
the parks and reereation department of
their interest in the league and to have a
representative at Tuesday's meeting.
Five teams competed last year and at
least six are expeeted to sign up for this,
the second year U lhe league.
Slow pitch differs from regular Softball
tn that pitching is Umited to a lob style
and emphasis in the game is placed on
hitting and fielding.
. . •. .
·fOr hea·nng b\cl'.Jdes @tCh restrictions on . ,
.non-profit organiUUons.
· •le said Chiirman Wll6ur D. Mills, (I).
Atk.), ot the House Ways and MeW
committee, had indiclted he favored
·such restrictions and would tmlst on their ¥n•k>n In any tu reform bill that pass.
ts !1-'gh his committee.
tifra. Smith filed the original suit
terminated by Monday's SUpreme Court
action on Aug. 10, 1916.
Stripped of legal verbiage, it sought to
divest \be fcundaUon of P3 miRlon in
455ets which -her attorneys contended
should be returned to "the heirs at law",
or which she is the-most prominent.
The· action was filed~ In U.S. District
Court in 14 Angeles. Almost 18-monlhs
later, that court ruled againtt the
heiras. •
On Aug. ~ 27, 1961, Mrs. Smith's at:
l<>rneXS filed an appeal wilh the 'Ninfb
U.S. C.OUrt of Appeals in San' Fr~
ThA\ court rejeeted her chUm on Oct. JS,
1968. •
Tlie. final appeal for the·~\ of
certi9"arl which wa.s denied Monday by
I.be Supreme Court was then filed.
1be foundation officially ceased making
charitable gifts in mid-JJ67. DooatioM of
more than '584,<KKl in 1966 were iranted
before the lawsuit was first filed.
Organizailonll which went without
Irvine Foundatim 1Upport during the
past lhr<e years include the Laguna
Beach Festhlal ·of. Ille Opera, which
received $18,000 in 1965-M; Laguna Com-
munity Platers,~ ($6$,000 In 1966-ti7);
Harbor Area Boj1 Club and -Hoag
Memorial ijospital; ($100,000 196217);
Newport Beach YMCA ($50,000 In 1965-
66): South Coast Community Hospital
(Sl0.000 in 1965-U), and the Orange Coun-
ty Society for Crippled Children and
Adults lll0,000 in 1965.a),
Westminster OK's
Reorganization
The Westminster City Council Tuesday
night ·"voted to approve a plan to
reorganize city departments and appoint
an acting city administrator.
Under the new system, buildings and
public works departments will con-
solidate inspection duties. Street and
water field services will be separated
from the public· service department.
All fiekl services will be under direc.
lion of Jim Stillwell who will be responsi-
ble directly to the city administrator.
The new plan will be instituted for a
trial period and is subject to re-evalua-
tion in six months.
Second . . -
StinThere
87 ARTQ(n( R. )'INSEL • of lfll o.u,• ..... , It.rt
lie stepPed forwlftl ~o hll son's bed.side
and backward in time,
··rt was kind of shattering," said C.OSla
Mesa rea1ty compaD,y manager Bill
Sc!Unidt, who visited the Bolboa )iaval
Hospital in san Dleao Sunday. ,
He was seem, ~ ·a ghost, bu~ e:x·
perlenclng Uie psychological pbehomenon
known as d e j a vu --feeIJiig one b a s
undergooe an ldentleal ~ I\! the
pa.st -and with good reuon.
Anny capt. Ronald Schmlil\, 19, lay In
Ward 1-C, Bed lfj, the same win! and bed
where N&vy Lt. Donald Schmidt, ~ twin
brother, lay tour years ago witb aimllar
injuries also suffered in a V!efnam eom-
bat air crash. · l.
Public lnJormation officers at uie'Navy
hOspjtal said Monday they ~ve' 1,919
beds and no alphabetical assigriineot pro-
cedures:, ·thus ma1ring odds 'on the eoin-
cidence phenomenal ' . ·
"When I walked in .a found him in the
same bed, it wa.s eerie," said Schmidt, of
2972 Teakwood Place, ~ Mesa.
The scene must al.sci be eerie for
Donald Schmidt, who ii now finishing up
law school at the University of S:in Diego
and drops in OCCJSionally to swap war
stories with his twin brother.
Dooald spent five months convale."cing
from injuries suffered when he bailed out
of his crippled Y4B Phantom jel on a
Vietnam combat mis3ion and was
rescued by helicopter.
• Rona1d Schmidt faces approximately
the ...,..length assignment to Wan! 6-<:,
Bed 10, with a shattered knee in
mechanical traction and his smashtd jaw
rebuilt with wire, following a helicopter
crash.
The elder Schmidt said his Anny or ..
ficer son was direcUng a tank cavalry
maneuver aboard a helicopter 60 miles
from Saigon March 9 w h e n the pilot
iswooped down to reconnoiter a jungle
clearing.
"He said when the groundfire opened
up it sounded like New Year's Day in
Chinatown, bul he threw himself to the
floor and started shooting back,'' Schmidt
said Monday.
Evasive action came too late, however,
and the chopper crashed, but a rescue
shJp was quickly dispatdled to evacuatt
the injured survivors.
A th1rd son, former Marine Corps Maj.
Philip Schmidt, also returned recenily
from Vietnam duty as a combat jet and
hell~ pilot to reUre and becorile a
department it.ore executive.
'{he · three Schmidt sons are no
strangers to air crashes or to the DAILY
Pu.err, where their father was • staff
member until entering the realty Oeld.
~. A"'1 2', 1969 •Ull.Y-i ,,._
Coha ··nig Pea~e Corps·' J
UCI Lectu~er Tells of FascinatJ!!g S~~ .Exper~ment f
By THOMAS FORT\JNE 'archllcet from Diamond Bar, who aald o perlodltally1 .....U., Out to t • q
ot .... _.,, '"1.., tttff "Mf. Bray, you have spwt one hour burtaacnc:j blc:Ucnll and honal.:
"CUban llOCfety II lite one big Peo<e painting paradiJe, Do you have anything rps: Moot· people WOUid not be .,,.,_ to '*Y about the' 1111,9111 people wllo ltl~
Cuba!" fortable in lM Peace Corpe. 1• • I b Dr Bray answered thatwhen given a chan· T ha t ezplanatlon was I ven Y · ce to leave it i1 not surprising that many
Donald Bray, lecturtr in a UC Irvine ·of the nation's ~IJht •mWion populatloo.
course on Cuba, h&lS \.o why more than did. ·
500,000 refugees have lert Cuba 1n the 10
years of the Fklel Castro regime.
Bray was sharply upbraided by Cuban
upalriat.. in the audience. They accused
him of being pro.eaitro.
lte said he loots upon Cuba as "a
luclnating social eiperimeot."
Bray, auociate JX'(l(eiaor ol. eovern-
ment at Cal State Loo Angeles, aald the
<;u:ban government Js unique to ~ wor Id
in trying. to replace the wage mce,ittve
With moral tncenUves.
He said other socialiJt countries have
1lven up on the moial lncepUve idea,
qying, "it ii utopian, romantic, people
mUlt be rewarded materially.''
DERIVE. REWARDS
LEFT SOCIETY
"Probably mo,,l of us would have left a
society subjected to this klod of wren-
ching experience,'' he said. "Most people
aren't interested In aocial eiperlments.
They never have been anywhere in the
world."
He said II U.S. immifratioii restrictioos
were liltet. some Latin American coun-
tries toold be emptied in a weekend.
Major J ose Duarte, formerly or the
Castro army and now with the Cuban ex-
ile organization Unare, in an angry out·
burst. said:
"Why don't you tell them how the
Cuban revolution was bclrayed. I fought
against Batista. This is a prostitution of
the nationalist revolution. We are the
ones that made the revolution , not the
·Marxists. You haven't said that more
Cubans, he said, are· supposed to derive -than 60,000 Cuban revolutionists are in
J"ail." thelr rewards from service. He Indicated he is still skeptical about tbe idea that a Former UCf stud ent Patty Pannalee,
whole country can be run like a religious \1•tm made an unauthorized trip to Cuba,
order. : volunteered an explanation.
But one million residents or Havana, he "'Fidel thought originally he Could
noted, recently planted a green belt make a revolution for all classes. He
around the city. Their only pay was the found it to be impossible," she said.
prospect of future abundanct. PROBABLY GUILTY
He said rent on housing, ilready haJv. Bray admitted that he probably had
cd, will be eliminated neit year. Eggs been guilty of glossing over the seamier
and coffee are free, public telephones siQe or Cuban Ure. But he said for ·an
free, as first steps toward eliminating American group that has gotten its im-
rn;'?y· spoke during the UC Extension pressions from the mass media he felt he had to.overcompensate. ·adult education course "Cuba, Castro and He ticked of( a number of thJngs he Communism .'' said make the Cuban revolution unique : ·He was challenged by Felix Munoz, an -It has bee"n humane and not too
Macdonald Gets
Artists Position
Everett Macdonald, a Laguna Beach
jeweler and sculptor, has been named to
the Laguna ArUsts and Gallery Owners
Association board of directors.
Macdonald will assume responsibility
. for the association's Sawdust Festival
grounds and assist on other committees.
He joins eight other artists on the board .
Macdonald has been sculpting and
designing jewelry in Laguna for 22 years.
He has a shop on Coa.st Highway and has
been a Festival or Arts exhibitor since
I!K7. Last year, he participated In the
Sawdust festival in a glass blowing ex-
hibit.
The Sawdust Festival will tun frori'I Ju.
ly U. through Augwit 24. The grounds are
located on Laguna Canyon Road adjacent
to the new Boys' Club.
repressive. Some 600 were executed su m-
marily at first but most of the<:ssenters
have been allowed to leave.
-Never before in a Latin erican
country has every person had a shot at
education. After a concerted literacy
campaign Cuba is maybe slightly more
literate than the United States.
-Never before In a Latin American
country bu everyone enjoyed a
minimum level of nutrition. The diet is
not exciting but nutrftionally adequate.
-Public health is very good by Latin
American standards. Already 90 percent
of babies are born in hospitals. Cubans
may be the moat physically fit people in
the world because they don't overeat and
all do labor.
-People at lhe local level are gi ven an
Immediate slice of political power the
likes of which is unprecedented in the
world. (He did qot elaborate.)
-There has been relatively liltle con-
fl ict with rellglori. The minister of educa·
tion, for instance, attends Catholic Mass.
-Cuba has the most systematic cam-
paign aga.in!it bureaucracy in the world,
NO 5,U'D:iUUDI · • . Afkr belle .,_ko...t ~1 Ille ·o.wnumt
cpalrfaU., 1lriy i>olnii<f. out Ille
he loota on with dlalavor.
lie ufd he , "-'t feel there al.
• enoU(h lqal llfecnardl and DOI .....,,
play gtven lndlvlduil ...-iclty.
He remarked that he thinkl CUbaiw
Qverdo surveillance against another U.f.
attack and that he would like to aee ltq
cefl!Orship. 1
The Cuban answer to thb, he said, •
tht they are on a forctd march toward
development and haven't time ror •
ttntriclty nor money for frilly Jllblicir
tlons that would come with leu cenlOfl
ship. ·~
B r a y aald Cuba h a 1 made grUl
economic progress and that· it ii rKt
unreasonable to expect neit year It wUI •
reach its goal ol production of tt millioit
tons of sugar (compared to a little over
rive million tons UWI year) which b1J
become almost a national obsession. • ) MAKE QUOTA
When there last &ummer as an ~
change professor, he recounted, a youftJ
man said to him, "Well, I guess everyone
in your country is woDdering whether cit'
not we will make our 10 million iona?'' .11
Bray said he didn't have the heart ti
tell him , "No." ,1
Because of the press, he said, the u4·
, public lmage now of Cuba is Of
totalitarian regime that is a cancer in '
\Ve.stern Hemisphere. i.
He said it is not reasonable to e~
Cuba lo wither away because of thi
U.S.'s economic blockade. !
He said, "They are rationing now, bU&
everybody Is working hard and they ar•
investing in education. The reuonablf
expecialion is that in about 10 yean U>ef:
wi!I reach a respectable level of economt'
and we will discover them and have ti
come to some kind of agreement." •
Joh Employmeni
Office to Open {
Thousands of students will be aee~
summ.er employment with the end ofJ
school year, e1 ... 'COrding to Robert -
Martin, coordinator of work expert
education for the Huntington Buel
Union High School District. (
H! said the district operates a ref~
and placement service and employai
needing summer help can get inte~
capable and dedicated applicants
the school district. .
"We do preliminary te!Ung 'and'scretl\'
fng In 'accordance with the wishes of tbil
employer and rele three appllcanta fer
each available. position," Martin A.kl. I
Requests for ltudem heip-<lther ful
or part time-can be directed to Martie
at 536-11331. \
' A GREAT AMERICAN •••
Dwight David Eisenhower was a man
of greataceomplishment. For the first
time, here is the complete biography of
the general, politician and statesm an
who became a legend in his own time.
Relman Morin, the AP's two-time
-rulil.1.er Piize winner, provides a
detailed and colorful 140,000-word
account of the Kansas farm lxrywho rose
to become a hero of World 'Var II and
the 34th President of the United States
in "Eisenhower: A Gauge of
Greatness." Morin,.wbo knew Ike for a
quarter of a century, measures the man
by the gauge of greatness Ike set up
himself.
The resuit is this handsome volume
illustrated by more than 8li pictures in
color and black and white. !tis available
to you through this newspaper at the
special price of only $3 .
' l
'
... A _GREAT BOOK!
Tloll .,octal Mltilo CUii ~~ ll "' ClllllOI•
• l~®l!Ord tut wrillen br
... of Al'• _, nottd •11>«1·
,,., w11o had._, tu .tounon
lfllrt 25 ,..,. and lntlrllrnd
Nm peno!llllJ fOr WI vol..,.,
• 85 color Ind b~~ Ind wbllo
photos, IOllll Of ohich haYO
""" .,..., publlslJoil btfO!t,
•ltbhlrd«>undlna-.mo
srflll doth cont· Ind toil flt.
ttrlnr. ., OlllJt.1dln( ltldlllon
to your borne library.
• 254 papt, 8*•x II" .at.
Simply fill out coupon and mail with remittance to the address indicated~
I
-----r ... "G ... U'Gi Of' 5w00ss 0.-.• C-DAtLT PILOT
I ... u
, ......... N.T. 12601
J Enclomt ls ~-......... J9"-·-....... copltl of tbe Eisenhower boot.
N~-·-·-----·--'··-·-···-··-··--·-··········-·--·---
-,
I
I
I
I:
s""'---.. -··-·-................ -... ···-------
Olty,_,_., .. -.. -.-· .. ---···· .. ··--~·-····-···---
'
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• ____ ., ...... ,.-~-~----..
•;
•
Vote for President ·
'C-IN tr .. DI .. "" tatn
P•tricl• A. Yount, 17, nnd Wil-
liam A. Leadens, 18, of Minnea•
polls, Minn., are going lo Wash·
1ngton today to give Prt11ldent
Nixon his 25 percent profit. During _
last year's presidential campaign,
the teen~agers talked Nixon into
buying $2 worth of stock in their
Junior Achievement Company. The
stock is now worth $2.49 . • The electric organ laughed when
Toil Kint of Siftingbourne, Eng·
land sat down to play. But he,~hrug·
ged, then went on to play a 'l""rnirr
ute recital for friends, during which
the organ occasionally talked. Yes,
talked. When King, 74, was through
the instrument quipped, 0 Tbat was
quick, Ted." King examined the
organ and found that a couple of
wires had ~ot crossed and someho\Y
turned the instrument into a receiv-
er for a taxi company's radio dis·
patcher. "Ted" was one of the
drivers. •
WAS!llNGTON (UP/) -The House
J~cla{? committee Ft•Y approved a
pr<poMd COllllll\JUonil amendment to
provkle for election of 'America's
pmldents by direct, popular vote.
By • v 0 t I of 21 to I, the committee
adopted a prop:l6ll to do away with the
electoral college and establish naUoowide
popular election of a President, with a
runoff election it no candidate got 40 per·
cent of the vote in the general election. j
Prisoners
Plan Revenge
On Sirhan?·
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The prison
grapevine has It that convicts may
retaliate against Slrban B. Sirhan to
avenge the mW'der of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, a top state official said Mon·
day.
Lawrence E. Wilson, deputy director of
the Department of Coi'rections, said that
special precautionary measures will be
employed to protect Kennedy's assassin.
Wilson appeared at a legislative com·
mittee hearing called to con5ider a bill
that would allow Sirhan to be locked up in
B specially constructed zuite of three
cells at the CallfornJa medical facility at
Vacaville instead of on San Quentin's
d e at b row. The committee killed the
measure.
~e. the hearing room, Wilson wu
as~ by reporters U there had been any
funt ol<hreata to Ute Ille of the ZS.year•
old Jordanian inµnjgrant.
The Judiciary tommlttee'• veteran
chairman, Rtp. Emanuel Celler; (0.
N.Y.), aaid, "Tiils LI a red letter day."
He added tllat "tile first bold step has
been taken" toward electiOP reform.
Both Geller and Rep. William M.
McCulloch, Oblo, .ranking commJttee
Republican, said they were confident the
direct election plan would win necessary
.approval of S8 states -the two thirds re.
quired for ratification of connituUonal
amendments.
The plan drew blportlsan supJl!>rl, with
12 of 11 commiltee Ref"l1>llcans JoinlnC 11
of 20 Democrats In favor ot It. Three
Republicans Boo tb(ee .Democrats voted
against it. One Democrat was .abseiit. r\e.d
Je~!~°thew~:'d~u':'p1an
although he did not propoo< IL
In a compromile, the commJttee
adopted an effective date formula that
'•
made It questionable whether a new
method of electlng a Pl'Wdent could
become eJfectlve by im wben ·President
Nl1on will have a cha:nce to nm again.
• l'be compromise sgecllied tllat tbe
amendment would no.t take effect until
ooe year after Jan. 21 in the year follow~
.Ing raUfication by the states. ..
For eiample, if the amendment receiv·
ed ratificaUon aa early as February, lfll,
ii could not ,taj<e dlect'lllltil J111.1i, 1913,
tile day alter tile next scheduled presiden·
tial Inauguration.
"I would say it will take prompt actlon
on the part !If state legJ.11aUats,'•
McCulloclt said in estimaliag -of th~ ~ent1 taking _efl'~ ln Yme for
the 1972 ~idenUal elecotiOn.
The compromise was designed to iive
Congress and states time to pass Im~
plementing leglslatkln to establish. Voter
qualifications, methods of listing on
ballots and h o w the votes would be
counted and made public.
Laird Offers
Compromise
Over ROTC
WASHINGTON· (UPI) -The Defense
Department tod8.y offered to make some
minor changes in its Reserve Officer'
Training Corps (ROTC) progr""1 in an
effort to ease student protes1' against
milltar ytralning on college and universi·
ty campuses.
The changes, disclosed by Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird, were viewed
as a possible compromise to efforts by
student activists to bar all military pro.
grams from their campuses.
However, in a Pentagon statement,
Laird said: ••we are not prepared to see
the ROTC program degraded in any way.
The Defense Department continues ·to
believe that ROTC is an Important ele-
ment of our total national security efiirt~
We want to see its value, both to students
end the nation, strengthened."
~ ... ''Nothing that you could put your finger
on,,, he said. "There have been in·
stitutlonal rumors that there cou1d be
retaliati<ln taken."
Kennedy was•f-_lally 1bot Junes after a
rally celebrating his victory i n
Call!ornia'a presidential~.primary elec·
tion.
ARMED MILITANT STUDENTS REACH FOR FOOD SUPPLIED BY SUPPORTERS
Students Ar• Holding Llbrery Building at Voorh••• College, Denmark, ·s.c.
Roger T. Keiley, Laird's assistant for
manpower, cited lhe following as amona:
changes that might be made:
-SOme military training c<>uld be
shifted from lhe school year t() swn·
mertime.
Philip D. Guthrie. a department
spokesman, said that Sirhan will be con·
fined on death row.
Pompidou May Succeed
' .
''He will be totally Isolated," he said.
Guthrie and Wilson disclosed th at
Sirhan will be held in a "buffer zone" cell
-the middle cell of three on d~ath row.
The two on either side will be vacant.
Special guards will be a8'igned to his cell
block.
Old Teacher De Gaulle
Despite his rather toothy appear-
ance, this orphan oppossum. U reatly
;ust a baby insist.s Hunter Swearin-
gen. 2, <lf Tampa, Fla. Hunter ha.t
adopted the animal which was res·
cued by his fqilur when Mrs. Opos•_
sum was hit by a car and kilted. • \Vorkmen today installed \vall·t().
wall carpeting in the Neston, Eng·
land kennel of a black cairn terrier
which inherited $80,457 from its
owner, Vera Rae. 11rs. Rae died
Jast December, two days after put-
ting the 8-year...old dog, Sherry, in
the care of Mapleoak Kennels. Her
will was published last week. The
kennel operators said the dog's
boa,rding bill was about $7.20 a
week but Sherry will now start get-
ting deluxe treatment, starting with
a giant bone. The will said that
money left when the dog dies wlll
go to six animal charities.
0
Matt DiUon, 111issing for a
week was found safe b11 tlDO
boys (Ind has been t'eturoed
1iome iii Richmond, Vt. Matt
D#lon is a state police blood-
hound. He became lost a week
ago during tracking e.ttrcist&.
Prison Guards
In Ohio Strike
For Wage Hike
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Guards
struck at two state penal instituUons to·
day and were replaced where necessary
by Ohio National Guardsmen.
Only 54 of 175 'to 200 guards and
supervisors reported at the state peniten-
tiary in Columbus. A unit of '100
guardsmen augmented tbe guard force
+there.
About IO guard! reported at Mansfield J!eformotory where 130 would normally
be on duty. A unit of guaroamen from
Akron WU 11111 to Mwfield to stand by.
Adjt. Gen. S. T. De!Cono said no na·
ttonal guvdsmen w e r e sent into the
Mansfield teformatory Immediately.
Maury Koblents, chief of tbe Ohio
Dlviaion. of Correclion, said guard sillla·
tions were normal at penal insUtuUons at
Lehanon, London, Maeyivllle, Marlon and
Chlllicolhe.
SpOkesmen fer lhe striking guards at
the penltenUary said they 1re ,..king a
$1,500 &Mull acroa-the-board pay raise.
Koblentz said 'Waaes ~nUy start at
$4,990 a yw at all ina:lltutlons except the
penitenUary, wbere owting salary la
11,JtO I year,
By United Prets International
Genrges Pompidou is a man who learn·
ed from a master the art of politics. Now
he may be on his way to leplacing his
teacher as president of France.
For six years he serv&d Presiaent
Charles de Gaulle loyaJly aa prtmjer.
Last summer, however., i'f le r
masterminding a parliamentary general
election campaign that gave the GaullistJ
a landslide victory, Pompidou was fired
unceremoniously by the leader for whom
he had toiled. Some said Pompidou had
demonstrated his abilities a bit too well.
But bitterness he may have felt Ponr
pidou kept to himself.' Though De
Gaulle's defeat in last Sunday's con.
stitutional referendum campaign could
have been -and now is -considered a
stepping stone to the presidency for
himself, Pompidou worked hard in· the
general's behalf.
He made no secret of his own presiden·
lial aspiratiQns, but Pompidou also made
it clear if he becomes president some
day , he did not want to do it in lhe wake
of a De Gaulle defeat.
Georges Pompidou was born July 5,
1911, in the ceiitral France town of
Montboudif. The son of a school teacher.
he made a brilliant academic career.
Then he became a secondary school
teacher himself.
Soon after De Gaulle returned to Paris
after its liberation in August, 1944, he
called in Pompidou to provide him daily
nports on popular reaction to his
policies.
When De Gaulle walked out in 1946,
Pompidou, while working for the
Rothschild Bank, remained a member of
2 Fe~t of Deadwood Snow
30 Degree Temperatures Chill Vpper Midwest
,l.ltluq~.....,.
An<~or1~
Atl1n!1
fl1~ftJl~ld llhm1rc~
Soi~
Hlell Ln ~,_,
)i 4l
~o ''
" $1 It St si :;1
TT II . " . "
"'
-~
DE GAULLE'S HEIR?
George1 Pompidou
the general's inner circle of advisers.
He helped De Ga ulle jn his unsuccessful
comeback attempt at the head of the
Rally of the French Penple (RPF) in
1947-50. When De Gaulle finally was
zwept back to power in 1958. Pompidou
still was one of his inner circle, though
most Frenchmen did not realize it.
So it was a political sensation when De
Gaulle in 1962 fired his first premier,
Michel Oebre, and named Pompidou to
the job.
Slowly, almost. Imperceptibly, Porn·
pidou learned the governing trade. More
important, he learned how to work for De
Gaulle as a Joyal executor of the old
man's wishes and policies, but never as a
sycophant.
* * * Bankers Believe floslon
Chlc100
Clncln.,.11
Clevel.!nd
tl&nV9•
•9 ,, " .. ,, )7 :: Franc 'Doomed'
Coutal
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V.S. Summar!/
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PARIS (UPI) -European bankers
said today they thought devaluation of
the French franc is inevitable. tn
Switzerland, the banking capital of the
world, the prildiction was for a devalUl-
Uon of just under 15 percent.
The views by private and commerclat
bankers contrasted with statements by " .. .... t i ,, .fl Western governments and thtir ctntral
b&nkl that the French economy, together
with it& '3.8 billion in reserves and
forclgn readiness to help out. can with·
stand a run on tbt franc. The franc is now
valued Bl j~ under rive to the dollar:
the m11ket rate bu been averaging 4.97
.. " u . " .. .. u sr ,01
" " ts II .11
.. .. .to
" " " .. " .. .. " " .. .. " ... .... " " 11 si
54 JI .11 ,, l4 .At
to the dollar.
A pri vate French banker in Par is said
the franc could bold out, but only i( there '
is no run on France'• currency. All
agreed t h a t central banks can help
France but that there is a li1nit to what
they can do if speculative floodgates are " " " .. e1 opened.
Armed Militant
Blacks Take 2nd
College Building
Militant black students, armed with
rifles, shotguns and knives, seized a se-
cond building at Voorhees College in Den·
mark, S.C., today and the administration
ordered the school closed.
Slate officials marshalled National
Guard and Highway Patrol forces at
nearby Bamberg although Voo'rhtts
President John F. Pott.! said he will not
cail for outside help u n t i l absolutely
necessary.
The new takeover spread the oc·
cupaticn from the ad ministrat i on
building, sei~d Monday, to the science
building next door.
The blacks seemed set for a long stay,
as they were fortified with an estimated
$5,000 worth of food taken at gunpoint
MondaY. from the cafeteria.
Dean of Students Mrs. W. G. Jenkin11
<lrdered the school closed indefinitely
after today's takeover, saying all
students were expected to be off the cam-
pus by noon.
A spokesman for the militants urged
students oot to leave, saying the ad·
ministration "is trying to divide our
forces ."
At Harvard University unde rgraduates
voted not to renew a student strike while
at Radcliffe. Harvard's sister institution,
students twice invaded the administration
building and shouted obscenities at Pres!·
dent Mary Bunting.
President Bunting sat quietly at her
desk while abciut 100 students paraded In
and around her office. They called her
HPig," "Louse'' and a scattering of four-
Jetter words. The students were pro-
testing disciplinary acUon against 22
girls.
Nixon to Give Medal
To Duke Ellington
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will present Duke Ellington the
Medal of Freedom -one <lf the nation'•
highest civilian honors -at a White
Hou.se dinner tonight celebrating the
composer-conductor's 70th birthday.
It will be the first PrtaidenUal
Freedom Medal to be presented by Nii·
on.
-More civilian instructors might be
Used, displacing military officers whO
now teach ROTC courses.
-Some technical courses might be
eliminated entirely, while others cou1d be.
made more gene'ral rather tbalt military
in nature -such as management prin·
ciples and history.
Kelley said he recenUy conferred wilh
<lfficials of Princeton, Brown, Yale,
Cornell, Dartmouth, Tulane, Stanford and
Brigham Young about ROTC. He con·
ceded there are many who are
philosophically opposed to the-program.
"There is no nationwide philosophical
hang-up on the subject," he conUnued,
"but certain schools have a problem.
They will have to decide whether their
academic philosophy and ROTC can live
together."
Stanford Poll
Shows Most OK
Sit-in Demands
STANFORD (UPll -While most of
St.anf<lrd's students did not back the nine.
day sit·in of a campus lab<lratory, they
seem to have agreed with the militants'
position .
A campus-wide poll showed that two-
thirds of the student body and <lne-third
of the facu1ty favor bringing the Stanford
Research ln&titute (SR I) under closer
university oontrol with a committee
redirecting its research aCtivity.
Faculty 8nd students also voted heavily
to restrict chemical, biological a n d
radiological warfare research at the
Menlo Park institute and a clear ma·
jority of students opposed counter-in-
surgency atudies and research related to
the war in Southeast Asia at the institute.
The April 3rd movement, which con.
ducted a nine-day sit-in at t h e
• universJty's applied e I e c t r o n i c '
laboratory, strongly backed closer in·
tegratlon of SRI into the university and
opposed its Defense D e p a r t m e n t
research.
A total of 5,671 studen ts and 671 faculty
members answered the questi<lnnaire.
More than half the facultJ but only a
fifth of the students fav<lred sale of SRI
under certi.1n conditions.
\: oung and Deadly
Boy, 12, Nabbed After Gunplay
NORWALK (UPI) -Slterilf's deputies,
armed with tear cu and lbotguns and
aided by the lights of 1 heik'opter hover..
trc overhead. nushed. from a sporting
foods si'ore today I 12-year~ld b<ly who
liad held them at bl)' with • pellet gun
for 35 mlnulu.
The unidentified youth walked out or
the store cradling a 30-30 rifie and then
told deputles "My 1-)'etr>(lld companion
is inside. He's got a lbotgun."
Deputle' lobbed two tear gas canisters
Jnto the s~. b_ut no.OQe ebe appeartd to~
be inside.
Two deputies anncrlng a silent
burglar alarm heard the sound o( brtak·
ing glass when they arrivtd •t United
Sporting Goods sun abortly after mid·
night. WhUe Dep. Jack Ryon went to
investigate, his partner manned the
radio, ready to call for help.
Ryon saw a figure lnsid~ the store and
recognlied 1the juvenile whom he had ..
handled in an investigation a few weeks
earlier. But w~en Ryon called on lhe boJ
to come out, the boy opened fire wilh a
pellet gun, narrowly missing Ryon.
Within• minutes the store was su r·
rounded by 20 deputies. A sheriff'•
helicopter circled overhead, flooding the
scene with its spotlight.
Deputies said during the siege the boy
fired between IS and 20 shots •at them,
but they held their fire.
Ryon, talkinS over a bullhorn, finally
the boy told ofhcers, "I went in the store.
Asked what be was dolng in the st.or ..
the boy toldoflicers, '' l wtnt in the store.
The lights went out. 1 wanted to get out. I
broke the wlndow."
'!be youU:t, who had Anny sergeant'•
stripes stuffed 11'1 his pocket, was taken to
juvenile hall for questcning an d
suthor1ties said he woukt be booked for
burglary and possibly for assault with in·
tent to commJt murder .
'H.dd '? 1 en.
' ' Solon Claims U.S. Calls Some J,t.ccidents
W ASHINGTQN (N') -An
outspoken Senate critic of lhe
Vietnam war &ay:s the P• tacoo Is hiding the rell
munber ol U.S. battle deaths
from the public by clalming
many are accidental.
Sen. Stephen M. YOWli (!).
Ohio), said many or the ap-
pro1lmately a,ooo Amerk:u
d .. tm In Vietnam desJanated
"accident or incident" should
have been listed as batUe
fat.alitles.
Young, a member of the
Armed Services Committee
aDd an early critic or U.S. In-
volvement in Vietnam, P.id
concealing the true number of
battle rat.alities 1'is a clumsy
effort to decttlve the public
about casualties in this most
unpopular a n d undeclared war.
"Th e number of combat
killed and wounded have
become so great -on1y the
world wars were more deadly
in recent history -they are
trying to hide it."
USTED ACCIDENT
Young said he had found
deaths often are termed ''ac-
cidents" or "incidents" when
they result from such things
8$ the collision of helicopters
during a firefight or when a
t r u c k driver loses control
uoder tire and soldiers die in
the wreck.
••in World War II such
fatalities.were always termed
combat dtaths," he said.
I Legislature in Action
I r Tiii ASSOCIATl!D PlllS
Mtftdey, •••It ti
Slrtl1n llli.h111 Slrft•n now 11
Jdledulld lo 1w111 hl1 111 dl1mbtr ••·
KU!lon wlrh 71 Gtrltl" condtmfltd n'llll
Of! 0111h II-If $an Qu1n!111 PrllOl'I.
ACROSS
l Lot :S llnis .... ,,
.qulJlllltnl IJ Triangular . .. ... ,1 14 If lh1 facts were
. dlfftrtat
lS llltvlae a
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20 11111111 ont'1 •lght 22 Joliet'' ·-· 24 Sheet 111tal ~ WQl'lr:tts 2' Tin Pan
ij. Alley produet
.2 Utter Coasl td ovtr a • surfact
2f Artie It
JtEsletm 35.Flgurt or
speech 37 Clrcle's relative
311 Gloo11y 39 Whtrt Utt Palatine Is
40 Upright
supporttng
Mltlbtr
4J Plnnaefts
4S Tr•
2 l •
46 Tttnch
around 1
CISllt
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"'' Nottd'*MJ' reftrte 48 Tedious A9 Apparition
53 K, In but-• ball scorl!lf 57 Dralntd of
'"'"' 58 Lift
59 L•rador ort
61 Endnt nofst
62 Kttn
63 C1llfcrnl1 river 64 •• ,..
nlctnmit
65 Garment
66-Canrcin, Ariz. 67 Let out fot trmporary ·use
DOUI
l City of
Afghanistan
2 Ol"resln 3 Kind of flu 4 G1spe Of s;,,1
S Sett thltity
6 Maude or
Franlr:lln P.
7 River ff01I Ntw ltitlco
8 Frlghlirntd
9 Roofll In publlc
bulldlng
10 Coincide
11 Move
''""' 12 Length
units 13 lrlsh l1n;uq1 21 Shlpsh1i1e
23 Ttrmlnate
25 Kind
·of hard
""'" 28 Brl"' I 29 God' of
thunder 30 Dwell ing
unit
31 s1gn1nt1nt
periods In
. history 32 Ff""°" o actl~ 33 Bad 34 lmer htnd 36 Schoo I ,
executive
38 Kind 01 · vessel 41 Soclal arralr'
4129/69
42. Vocal txprnslvt-
""' 4) Small draft
44 Charles
StnJster
or Carl
Sandburg 41111inl1lns
onntlf 49 llinlng
rxc1v1tlon
50 Sarctesi
e.g. 51 Enz)'lllt follfld in
'"""' 52 Movtd
gr1duall1 forward
51 Structurt 54 Rush . SS Exlrt11t forc·t ol
fee ling
56 Russlilt
river
60 Fttnfnlne
nicklt1111
ANDY HAS ANSWERS
Thtt9'1 t11"r tllt J!•t• yo• t111 n114 ••r• 11uw1t11 tha11 four
1.hi1Jr111 have 11,11e1tft1t'-Ch11k tho .A1k ""''' fM+•r. t.,.ry S•t-
1trd1y 111 th• DAILY PllOf. Yo11'll Ilka Jt -a111f •• will your
, .. r1 •. 11ty.nlf14 yo111111t.rt.. -
---·
~.~H,1!6t
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
DAILY l'llOT •
LEGAL NOl'ICB
>.U •.M
•. ff
>.U •••
$.•1 ,_.,
I.fl
'·''
Nearly Everyone
'Listens'
to Landers
'
ff l>Ah.V 'Plll>T H T-S.J, AO<il 2', 1169
Y~ar M1taey's. \l'o rda
StandarJf·Pacific Cor., the
Costa Mesa home building
company, Monday reported
record .earnings and sal~ Jor
1968.
Revenues from all sources
increased lo $7,554,927 as com-
pared to $3,225.985 for the
previoo3 year. Net earnings.
•
1968 do not include the opera·
lions of Security Fore Corp.
which was acquired in Deeem-
ber.
The acq u lsi l lon was
originally annouhced on a
pooling-0£-interesls basis, but
was finally consummated as a
purchase for stock. Security
Fore Corp. sales and revenues
for 1963 were approximately
climbed to $616,720 as com-$6.81 million. Net income after
pared with income before tax e.s was approximately
spec.ial items (and as restatea-$Mll . .0011--------
for the pooling of Panel-Air) or "Because of today's . in-
$165,653 in 1967, ace-0rding to creased dem~nd for hous111~,
Arthur E. Svendsen, chairman the COffiJ>al>:Y ~ prospects In
of the board and chief ex-the home bu1ld1ng field appear
ecutive offiCer. extremely bright for many
Earnings per share In 1968 years to . c~e," accord in~. to
rose to 33 cents per share -Svendsen, and our acquls1t1on
compared to 9 cents per share of Secu_rity Fore Co~p. and
in 1967. The per share figures P~nel-A1r Corp. provides us
are based on an average of with a broayer base fro1n
1 868 525 common s hares which to capilalize on this o~tsianding during 1968 and growing market."
Oil Firms
1,903,539 during 1967.
Revenues and earnings for
I
Wagoner M0toe•-
Thomas R. Van Wag,.
oner of Newport Beach
has been appointed ac-
count ' executive in the
Laguna Beach office of
Roberts, Scott Co., Inc.,
member of t he New
York Stock Exchange.
He was"formerly ass<r
cialed wi th Goodbody &
Co. in Laguna Beach.
to Defend
WIDOWED?
DIVORCED?
AntND
Depletion Tax Credit
AL JARVIS SEMINAR
ON MUTUAL FUNDS
Newpo"9f lu
Til•r.., M., 11t .,.,..,
Mc:C•M~
S.C•tlfi... c ... ....
673-5741
oceallMrap~ic fJ~IL
A mutual fund fnveslln1 in tht
clnelopment ind use
of tl'lt ocean and its resources -----------Ml4'1.,. Dldrlb1tton. IJIC, ... ,.... ''""" Ntw Y.nt. N.Y. lllllM
"-•H "'"d -e ptotC!eCUll Olt
.... OCNf'IOCl'tptl~ f11nf, lflG.
SG1•
PHOENIX, Arit. (AP ) -
The nation 's Independent oil
producers are mapping plans
for a 6<k!ay campaign to
offset what they say have been
serious but unfounde d
Washington attacks against
their industry 's tax structure.
A basic objective is to
preserve oil's controversial
27\~ percent depletion tax
allowance.
Representatives of 12 slate
and regional trade groups met
Sunday and selected L. Dan
Jones, Washington counsel ·for
the Independent Petroleum
Association of • America, to
coordinate the campaign.
The opening phast. or the
campaign will center around
the 26 memben oi the Jtouse
Ways and Means committee
which today is to begin draf.
ting a tax reform bill .
Rep. Wilbur D. Milles (().
Ark.), the commi tt ee
chairman, has been friendly to
depletion in the past but said
last week Ute tax allowance
has btcome a symbol of t.a.x
reform and that it would be
al.most impossible to pass a
refonn bill without some ad·
ju.stment.
"The neit 60 days wUI be
the mmt critlcaJ IO days we've
faced in a long time." said
Harold M. McClure Jr., the
national trade group's presi·
.dent from Alma, Mich.
McClure and Al Kiltz. Mt.
Vernon, Ind., said they were
encouraged that President
Nixon. through 1 p r e s s
secretary, had reaffirmed his
support of the deple t ion
allowance.
He said the independents
must be alert to any
breakdown in communications
between the White House and
other executive branch agen·
cies.
Netum Steed, Wichita Falls,
Tex., president of the Texas
Independent Producers &
Royalty Owners Association,
said there is a need to be
realistic.
Jones said the industry nas
many friends in Congress but
that some have been shaken a
bit ln recent months by such
Incidents as the oil spill in the
Santa Barbara Channel off the
California coast.
''We must reassure them we
ht1ve a good caUSt," ht said.
Jones was selected a s
coordinator at a confenmce
held in conjunction wllb the
mid-year meeting of the na-
tional trade group.
Lockheed
BURBAN K (AP)
Lockheed.California Co. pro-
mised-the-Army P.1onday that
it can solve the technical pr ..
blems of its 250 mile-an-hour
Tank Contract
WASHINGTON (UPI)
General Motors Corp. an-
nounced receipt of a $3.8
million addition to an existing
Army C1:1ntract. The contract
covers advanced production
engineering on the XM·70
main battle tanlt.
MUTU
ASSETS OVER
... 2.s,000.000.00
HEAD OFFtCE ' : ..!'.;· ...
315 Ent Cokw9do aou-.va"!'.;.cr~ P.lld•ns. C.llfoml• 11109 .... _
Promises
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-Bomb Contro I N-ear
S~iets Step Toward Har1iessing Power
wASHiNCfroN <APf -·::. ~o...-Aiiiiisa 's1sliOPOI tiie-·-oo.:w,d o1 I ~without
Soviet ac)entists apparenUy AEC, clllef .. of the American an,y escape of the gu. The
have-made im)'onant gainl program, uid in an-interview h0ate1f gu -~ plamna -toward ·barnmmg the power • of the liydiogen bomb, a goal lief.,. the !leW Soviet achiev.. ideally would bl! so dense 300
\
that could lead to unlimited ment became known that trillion atoms cl. Ji Would fit in
cheap e~ power. p(evlous -~by ifent1sts of • ::':i~'!.:irviet ·
SUcceJS ill taming the pro-aeveral COWlltj .. had opened report leU 10 umes short of
ceJS that makes the sun's beat definite prqspepa ior having the .objective.; Bul he
and the big bOilg 0 I b y dropn-powered reactors said Artalmovlcb reported
thermonuclear e J. P 1 o s 1 ODS "wtll before· the tum of the corDpletlon "ot a l a r ge r
Would be a step to.Jrard reae-century!' machine is el]!tcted before
tors ~ the near·limiUeas the d f thla nd 1 hydrogen ut ocean water -in-REA'l'lNG GAS en ° year a P aM . are we:ll advanced for_an even stead of expensive unranium One reason, be sa.1d, was larger one capabJe Of 55 -as fuel. that American,. ~vtet and million degrees,
Prof. David Rose, a nuclear some other SCJentists were
engineering expert at the rouUneJy beating hydrogen gas &.-..ERGY PRODUCED
Massachusetta Institute of to temperatures exceeding 50 The energy of an atomic
Technology a t Cambri~e, million degrees Jn some types bomb or an .ordinary nuclear
relayed in a telepboOO 1rr of experiments. reactor is produced wlien
tervie1f the details of a report Although the f i g u r e s atoms of a heavy, radioactive
from Academlclan Lev A. reported ·by Rose for the metal such as uranium are ..,.
Artsimovich, director of the Russian experiment w er e split In the fusion process,
Soviet Union's work in the lower than that -about 20 -four atom.s ·Of hydrogen, the
field. million degrees -the tem-silpplest of all k n o w n
Rose, a key consUltant for perature was held there for elements, fuse into one atom
• ' '
AEC Returns Loaned
the United states one-fiftieth of a second, which of helium, releasing energy.
government's efforts in the is longer than earlier ex-Nuclear fuels such as
same field, said the Soviet periments. uranium are expensive and
report indicates "the best The significance of the diflipllt to purify, bu t
combination of experimental Russian report, Rose said, is hydrogen is cheap and pleir
ingredierits yet achieved by that it represents the best ~ul. A variant clilled heavy
any nation" in the nearly 21). combination of results so far , hydrogen or deuterium is Silver to
WASHING TON (UPI) -
They say it's a law· of
(political) nature that no
federal agency ever gives up
anything it ca n get its hands
on. • .not without prolonged
screaming, .anyway.
Jf that is true, the Atomic
Energy Commissio~ (AEC)
has been violating the law ; it
has given back to the U.S.
Treasury nearly 14,700 lo118 of
silver. It was in some in·
stances physically hard to do,
but the AEC did it, without
screaming.
The most recent return in-
~,~ than 2,145 tons of
~'.--worth about 11 2 4 million.
Back in World War Il silver
became more precious than
ever because it has the hlghest
electrical conductivity of an·y
natural substance. Copper was
scarce as a result of wartime
demands.
WENT TO TREASURY
So the Manhattan district,
the AEC 's 'wartime
predecessor, went to the
Treasury for silver.
The silver was used in elec·
trical conductors at Oak
Ridge, Tenn., as part (If an
electromagnetic' process for
--separaUonoffissionable
Uranium-235 from n o n •
fissionable uranium.
Eventually, this way of
separating U-235 was aban-
doned in favor of the gaseous
diliusion p r o c e s s now
employed on a grand scale at
Oak Ridge ; Portsmouth, Ohio,
and Paducah, Ky.
In the meantime, silver was
put·to work in the atomic prcr
ject where its purposes in·
eluded the c o i I s of huge
year-old worldwide q u e s t , The best combination would ordinarily used.
h. h 11 "I'm excited about it, and' so be a temperature of 300 '!be latest Soyiet advance
magnets, w IC ·n °1 m 8 Y is everyone else who beard the million degrees for at least was made in a machine called would h8ve required copper, a rt .. h 'd a "tokamak," a spec 1· a I usually cheaper metal. repo , e sa1 . GAINS REPORTED version of, . the doughnut-
FJRST SHIPMENT Valley Homes shaped device used t 0
The first shipment ol silver Specifically, Artsimovich generate the plasma and con-
bullio11 was made fro·m the reported a combinaUon of Decorator Set fine it in the magnetic field. Treasury's West P o i n t gains involving production of All such devices h a v e
depoeitory in Oclober, 1942. terrifieally hot electrified magnetic coils around the ex·
The silver bars were recast hydrogen gas and its con-Carole Eichen Interiors, a terior, but the Soviet Yersion
and rolled into long thin strips flnemenl, however brieDy, in-Fu 11 er. t o n -b a s e d sub-has a pulsating eleCtric cur-
which wound up in magnets a side a magnetic field. d eVelopment merchandising rent on the inside.
hundred times larger than any Until 1962 "the United States organization, has been re-"AJ a rough analogy," Rose
previously built.· was the unquestioned leader in ta.ined by PBS Corporation to said, "this extra current
Treasury
Ti:tnber Drive Starts These magnets were so research in the field but the decorate the four unit model twists the magnetic field, and
powerful that their pull on the Soviet union bas since Closed complex at their Century the hot plasma, into a rope-
nails in workers' shoes made the gap by mounting an effort Homes development ·in Foun-like configuration. And this
walking difficult. They tend-twice the size of the American lain Valley. twistiness and ropiness tends St. Regis Paper Company loggers step across thousands of logs as they help
ed to snatch wrenches from one in both manpower and According to John Parker, to confine the plasma longer direct them down 30 miles of the Machias River from Township 31 to Whitney ..
workers' bands, so it was money, the Atomic Energy president or PBS C.Orp., the than might otherwise be possi· yille, Maine. Some five million boord feet of timber will be guided down the
necessary to develop non-,-_Co_rruruss_·_io_n_•_:•Y:_'_· _____ m_od_e;_I_w_n_1;_ope'--n-J_une_1 _____ b;_l•;_-'_' ________ _:•::iv;_•::r_d::u::nn_:;·~g:_::th::•:_•::•::•::•::•::•::l::Ckl:=:•Y:_::lo~g:_::dr::i::v•::·--------------
magnetic tool kits.
11:ie magnets were the
hearts of devices c a J 1 e d
calutrons. Long alter mass
production of bomb stuff was
turned over to other pro-
cesses, calutrons and their
great magnetic fields, created
by electricity surging through
silver coils, did fine service as
producers of high purity forms
of various elemental
materials.
RECOVERY TOUGH
To recover the Treasury's
silver from the calutrons was
tough. It involved unwinding
mllts of silver ribbon coils
worth about $140 a fool
Somebody in the AEC
figured out that all the silver
borrowed from the Treasury,
if cast into dollars .stood
upright, would stretch from
New .York to Chicago.
Anyway, the AEC is return-
ing it all to the Treasury
where it again will become
part of the "national defense
stockpile" for future use, if
occasion demands, in elec-
trical conductors. It will not
be turned into coins.
non-
Moving soon?
·Call us~~ Out ··
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p phone service.
F.ree-saving Device
Peru-U.S. Crisis Just
Delayed, Not Solved
• By PllIL NEWSOM
VPl Foreip NeWt Analyst
A factt:aving device has
po6tpooed until next Aug. fi a
major crisis in United States-
Peruvian relations.
But it is only a postpone-
ment and unless by that date
agreement is reached on t:om-
pematioo for the $120 million
international petroleum com-
pany propertle:: seized by
Peru's military government
last Oct. 9, the U.S. by law
must take action certain to
reverberate through the whole
of Latin America. .
The Hickenlooper Amend-
ment of 1962 requires that the
United States cut off its aid to
any country expropriating U.S.
property and failing to take
"appropriate" steps toward
compemation within s i x
month!.
IJllED ONCE
It has been used only once,
against Ceylon in 196.1.
Originally scheduled in have
taken eUect this April 9, it
could coot Peru around 1100
millloo In loss ol aid, its sugar
quota and the right to buy llG0,000 worth of u.s_ arms at cut rate pni:es each year.
'Ille I o o p h o le pennitllng """'-nl waa an ad-
m1DlltraU¥e '"""" of the .-by ...........,t minisbies
considered to hive b e e n
-Feb.f.
Already U.S. families 'are
removing themselves a n d
their furnishings out of fear of
reprisals from a country once
regarded as among the most
favorable for f o r e i g n in-1
vestment in Latin Atnerica. I
Total U.S. private in-f
vestment in Peru amounts to
more than a half billion
dollars and the list of U.S.
firms operating there reads
like a "Who's Who" of
American industry.
It includes sueh giants as
Ford, General M o t o rs ,
Chrysler, Internal ion a I
TeJepbone and Telegraph and
ranges a gamut from cameras
to cosmetics.
The oil, which 16th Century
Spanish conquerors b o i l e d
down into pitch with which to
calk their ships, has been a
subject or controversy for
most of 50 years.
BRITISH OWNERS
In 19'22 an International
court found that a British
company was the rightful
owner of the La Brea-Parinas
cilflelds which lie in the ex-
treme north of Peru. In 1!124.
the British firm sold to
International Petro I e um ,
which btcame the country's
heaviest tupayer .
Support for the government
action comes both from Ptru's
vocal Marxist left and from
wealthy landowner.a whole
rortunes •rt among th e
greatest in the Americas.
The Marxlst.s charge that
the company has been stealing
national wealth. E:rtensive
social reform.a instituted by
the company have been em-
I
I
Just t.ell us when and where you're leav-
ing, when and where you'll aITive.
Your Service Repreeentatr..e will see that
·1~
your t.elephone is the last thing out of your
old house -th e first thllig int.o your new
one.• Anywhere in the entire Bell System.
We're-here to help.
I
Pacific Telephone@ .'
Ptn '1 oolloaallalk and antl-
U.S. ru1er1 have refUled to
badp -thtlr poo!Uoo thll the compeay, a sublSdlary of
Slandlrd Oil (New Jerlt)').
-Ibo coun1ry more thin I blllJoa clollm In tu<t and u.
1eol .,..OU aplmt only f71
mlliloo It It .uun, to pa7 in
compaaUoo. ba{rasaina to the landowners.•------------------------------------------------------------
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Valle . ' y -'
< ED.ITION ' " .
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:VOL 62,,NO. 102, 2 SE¢rlONS, 2{ ,A&IS·. . OAAN~ .CQUNTY, ~RNIA
t -.. '
. ' .-•• .. . . . . _/ ~ :Ribt -~t>.llt.rols
"' ' Mapped
.. r . -•
. County -.Lawmen ]oin .UJ Form Pr(mentive Group
-
Cruiser SJnashed
On Waves Off
Sunset Beach
Scattered pieces of wood . ...,.,lbt O°'Y .
relDllMb of a 2$.fool Chrli ctair . .Urn
cruiser pounded -by . wavei -..etlyt tiils· l110l1lllli--D081' 10th Stree! iri Sunset
lleach. .
Owner Ken Brown of Maywood said he
was. taking the newly purchased boat
from Newport Beach to L<lng Beach when
the mo~r froze about 10 o'clock Monday
nlg~l.
"It took us until 2 a.m. this morning to
drift into··shore," be said.
''11le.n when it was caught on the
beach, the ·waves just pounded it to
pieces," Brown conUnued.
On board were Brown and James
Pe~rsen. 10, 110D ol Pete Petenon, 9210
El Morado, Fountain Va'Uey, who had
just sold the 'boat to Brown.
Pete. Petenoo was waiting Iii 1-
Beach for his son and Brown When be
re<o!Yed word ol•the boat lnluble, No ci6e
wu , injured, 'but~ the bolt, valued It
$.1,0GO, was' considered nearly a total ION.
It WU"Dtt tnsured..t
Peteroo11'aald thls · momlng lboY • mlgbt .be able to salvage the eocine and the
trangmiuioo by dredging them out cl. the
water, but both. men looftd discouraud
u they, •llrl"Yed bciat Chips itreWll lor a
mile aiOl!I s..-1 'Bucll.
Valley's Neal
Aniong 10 Due
For Vienna Meet
Wbell Cit}' MJnql:r Jamet Neal
repraents Founlati Valley at Ille
International uni.o o1 Local "'"''•* meeting June IHI, In Vi<ml. Allllria,
he will be In a oded ll?OUP ol II olllclal
delegates lrom _lhe U.S.
Lall week Neal .-lvod a telegram
conflnnillg hil invitation to the Vienna meetJnt and llstJng the olber nine U .s.
delepla.
Neal iJ ICbeduJed to, pretent J'oQfttain
Valley's unique ten-yur budlet to
,..,.....,utifll from -. than 40 ...
tk>nl ...i prepare a short peper on the
aub)e<L
....
llllfflcMnl llW11ber ;i at1ome7t to take
over Ille ~ tW ol -1Jon
and del-ol Jl9oolbl1 hundridi ol ...
CUled l'lo!e<J. -. -.
Tl>al llll -the -'of 118 lawyers who !>avt ""'"'temoil I« any
type ol dlJly let wllJCb tboY !'IJY bl ,...
quired to Ille altehnath 'o'! a -mass -· . '~Thll dOesn 't mean tha"t I believe we
can ape<\ ' -rlol In our county
.., ~ unr.''. Jwi,e ~·-
' ~ "It na thlt I am IUl't many ot
you my convktion that It wU1 be to
the be t Qf everyone if we eari, among
ourtelv }ay the ·foundatkm -of an
orlaniza n ihlt can 'go into iinmedlate
action U and when we are raced with •
riot aJhl•tion."
District Attorney ~11 Hicks was, nam·
ed u overall coordinator or lhe anti-riot
organlsatlo!). Worltlng with him Iii the
establishment of'1he «ganJsatlonal atruc-
(llee RIOT PLAN, Pase I)
Quake Comes,
But Shatters
Only Nerves
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ......... l'tllt ,..,,
A rollin& earth tremor and a wave of
lnslallt. fmmer repentance hit Monday, 55
hours, 31· minutes and 45 second! from
the end of a month prophets of doom
predict will be sinful S o u t h e r n
C.tlilomla11 tut.
TOday, acme people are laughlng, some
are disappointed that they missed tlie
4:21 p.m. jolt and othen felt a bit like a:
boy whl!tling through a cemetery on a
dark night.
Estimates varied sllgbUy as to the
tremor'• strength, but staff engineer Bill
Gile at •the Caltech seimologlca l
Jaborotory said tt bit ~.3 OD the Richter
scale ol ~ magnitude.
The rock .... roD style temblor was
centered In rugpd SUia Roea Mwnlalns
terrain -~ ol Borrego· Sprli>p, an ,·,~.~~~--' ..... ''
.. ; • ' . : . " l . ' .• ' :
Diamonds are •·c!rl'• ~·w...t;b6t' ;Allgels .aren~.!¥·oolji bqe·lltalen Iii
that waan•t nieaftt. to :tnchm ·-· ,Orange County with the opening· of the
. ~1.s,:g1.wea anjl.a.blic~: ·. i.U:,~ Valley Bobby Sox Football
_But ~t.urday y<M&ng Fountain •Valley Ceremonies will be'held at noor. Satur-
. girls·wlll •be .out to-prove the<Califomia day, on the F6untaln Valley· ~gli School
Marine to Get
Military Rites
A Marine from Fountain Valley. killed
when his bell.copter was ihot down Oh a
Vielbam combat minion April 14, will
have a full mWtary burial service
,l\'edneaday· at Paclllc. View Manorial
Park, Corolla·del.Mar. . , Rttes for. ·Sil:.&berl M. Geadron, It,
will bl at 3 -1>.m. Iii the CGmla deJ.14ii'
oemetery.
DMlh .came for Ille belloopter aerlll
· gumie,: LI milel ooalh ol Ml Jlome bue
near D1 Nang, when it wu hit and
dlsabled.'.by ITOWlll!h<,
·diamond to Initiate the tb1rd year of girls'
softball play In the city. Albert "Holly"
Holllnden, will serve u mast.er of
ettemonies.
Games involving 10 different teams will
be played at 1 p.m. and 3:30 p.m., Satur-
day.
Aboot 150 glrla, ages nine through Ii,
are aCtive in the Dobby Sox program •.
Last year the minor leque an · .....
from Fountain Valley captured second
place in tolQ'ney play in· ~northwest
Garden Grove, while the riiajor learue all
stars competed in the Cypr.ea area
tournaJ1!enl. Weekday games will· be played ·it I
P"'I. on. TU<ldays,, and • ,saturdl11!,
Thuradaya al the 11Ji1i ~ · .
Spon111r1 of the~ tWna ~·yw
are Exoticl NUl'lefy, Rayne ,SOftw1ter,
'VIUlie Center Merchailll "-llUoq,
and llellalloona lleaul)' SalGO.
""
""81< -,..,. and .,,. dllt •!1110. Ille llllliit£1J= ....... iiJ;oiniid a -.If . _.,mapHnde whlcfl
wU allo felt tbrougholit the 1 Southland
anil ...... m1t1or damage.
The aharp, Monday afternoon Jo~ caus-
ed Only' nlinor damage, lfllh a l>alil" .. 11.
Ing shakin locfle,' wtnd0w1, bOUlel and
otber' llllH!ODlllned m er ch an d I s e ~In Borrogo Spring• bualbem1.
One of the quab'1 more hmnonlUS
aspedl -slnce·JJO one WU hurt•-WU
the. lmp!edlala report ol a large brick
bulldli1g'1 ..;u.,,.. In ..mhwestern Los
All(elet, (See ....,, Page 7).
G"araa:e owner·RoosetellHolden and hll
four employes, however ran out 14
mlnUlet before the earthquake rumbled
throilgh the Soathland'a crwt, u die old
structure coU.psed due to acannmulated
alms and fatigue.
Tall blllldlaga shimmied sllghlly from
Lu·V-to Loa Angeles, Looi Beach
and San Diego, whlle lhoosanc!O thought
for a moment the end predicted by a
variety of visionaries bad come.
"I thought this was it," said Tom
Turner, of El Centro.
"People near me were very un-
comfortable, "including myaelf," said
advertillng e1ecuUve George Becker,
who rode it oul on the 23rd floor ol the
U.S. If~ Bank buUdli>g ID San Diego.
Bualnessman Jade Wells was working
on Ille !2nd floor of the Oc<;ldelltal Center
building In Los Angeles when fl&utes he
was writing Jlilled right oot from under
the pen.
A Costa Mesa woman telephoned the
DAILY PILOT two boun later to ask if
a quake bad Indeed occurred, sayli>g she
aaw water 1lop over the edge of the fami-
ly swhru:nli>I! pool'.
"BUt I have the stomich flu . and I
thought maybe ti wu just that acting up
a&alni'' ahe ezpla.Jped.
"What earthqu·ue?" asked many
olhen who missed the Joallng.
"I dldo'rfeel ll and I'm glad1 because I
(!lee QUAU, Piii J)
Recall Drive Progresses
Valley Citizens Cl.aim Soli.d Support of Otuter
By TERllY COVILLE ................... Su_..... ol the .... e .. rocall Ille
mayor ·and two COUllcllmen In Fountain
Vallq da1m IOda:r their n_...m ta
--. llllldl beller than lboY had ...
pectad,
ilaJ1lan SocoUI', 11$47 Banta Ynez St.,
said this mornlnl'lhat • had no ac-
tual -ol atpatuna .. pelltlooa = circulated by -backli1g Ille t, "biit our people are llplns IO to :s,, _ lhq-"
Van Duk. leader ol the Ot>
"' to May.., Robert Sclnl'erdtfeger
and""'81<llmenJ-'>~and
Donald P'repau, was 1D1afallable to com·
,,,.,,. at ,,... Umt.·
•
Today was Van Duk'• dQ' in court on
the mil be filed a1alnol the city of Flllin-
taln Valley for a -'of mandate to hall
conllruclion oo the conll!wenlal Lmrin
Tract.
CoundJ and 1'[amllng ODm!lllaion· If"
proval ol Ille llGO holne Llrwln Oompeny
planned development wu the ftd« u.,t
tr!Qmd the 11111 and tocall .........t.
~ object to llftllll JO( 11Ms
aucl1 a1,IOI lfllw. feet In...,. of· the
Larwln ....... They bml alao burleil
conllld ol ~ charges at MIF
Schwerdtfeger who served u real -.
-In Ille affair. The mayor baa conslatenlly al>stalned
from votlbl on matters COll<e1lli1g Ula
l
Larwln Trac:! because _ol hla publlclt
declared peiaonai Interest.
Mn. Secour and Van Duk have re-
...,tly 1alhered about UO realdanta Into
a group called the Fountain Valley
Civic ~lion.
While· thtlr prlmar'y ~kins bin
Wble lhelr prlmar)' -.....
Van Duk clalmt the prlllllt)' ~of
the organlsalloa la not ....U, but lieller gov..,..,., and more c!U-perllclpe· lion In clt7 affaln. · . c..-nmc the rteall _pelltlonl, Mn.
-aald lndaJ that the only problem
they haV. run !nta ts lelttnc etlOUlh
petltlonl tut. • '
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HUDDLING -Superior .court Judge Robert .G~clner <-!ed.) dil-.
cusses formula for handling riots. in Orange County )Vlth; NeWJIO~:
Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas .(left) and Municipal Court
Judge Walter Charamza, Huntington Beach .. Coilnty law enforc~
agencies expect to be prepared should a major riot occur.·
• De Gaulle Praised
• Pompidou and Defferre
Seek French Presidency
' . '
PARIS (UPI) -Former Gaullisl
'PN!niel: ~.p;,..:11i4,.,va1w ~7aasion·· '~,: ·.,g,., or
llarieilln, allllOIJDted !nd'J lller•wlll l"!!I
::"-"'l~l .... ~ °":'"' De
Pompidou, 57, first to· announce, wu
acclalmed·laler by a standing ovallan ol
the .:J82.man GouJllll perty l!JOOP In the
National Assembly. He lndl04ted he
would be' a st-man president In the
oaulllat tradlllon. (Peraooallty Profile,
P11e 4.)
Defferie' annoUnced hla declaion to run
a (eW houri )ater when the National
Assem\lly rea....,bled lor·lhe first time
since · April ·I. Aseembly l'reildellt JaC-
queo Clwban-Delmas delivered a short
tribute to De Gaulle as a wartime
resistance·hero and national leader.
Chaben-Dehnu described De Gaulle as
a man who "restored France'• honor, led
her to vlcton-anil · reeslabllshed ber worldwide mlulf>n." Tbe Aarembly, 'Jam~
med to capacity. rose and applauded. Th•
Communists and some Socialists re-
mained seated.
Defferre, the Sociallst noor leader,
made a tirief-reply crlUcizlog De 'Gaulle's
interp~tation of the constituUon.
Deferre upressed hope the Assembly
would remain in session to keep an eye
Victim of Knott's
'SteaJner' Blast
Dies of Burns
Wayne O. Nutting. 74, Los All(eln owner of the · 19.17 Stanley Steamu
wlilch exploded Salurdlly at Knoll's
Berry Fann, died Monday ol burns
received in tbe tru_t accident. •
Five other .victims ol tho ·exploolon
remain in critical condltJOn at~ the'
Orange County Medical Center; holpltal
aides said.
They are Nutung's wife, Beth, 73:
William Schub, 211: his wife, Jo Anne,
24 and. their two daqllters, Cynthia, 7
and -Crissy, S, all of Los· Angefes.
The accident occurred during the
aMUal antique car show at the .berry
farm lri Buena Park.""Leatlnc butane
gas ,pread over the noor of the clau,lc
car ind wu lgnltied 'by a cigarette or a.
spark.from the pilot light', investlgaton
said. .
Se,.. other penoos were leas "".
lously lnJured Iii the bbam accident..
Bueill. l>aric llremeo said' the l!tUlay
Steamer bad -altered so Ill -would :bun butan< ,. nlher tbaa lho
coal <tt wood ol lormar ,..,..
' ' . NEW YORK .(AP.) -The alock market
punched' out a aolld gain ln tery active
trading today, with broken reporting "a
IOI ol biiYm who had been on jlle'
sidelines getting b.lck li>to the IC;
tJon. (SW qll<llatt11111, Pageo 10.11).
The Dow· J-lndUltrial a-·al
I :311 p,m. WU up.I.II al Ill .... Galni led•
toua-byabllleallian•·-· • '
-
....... --
OD uie presidential electloll. Tbeo he aft.
nOuiiCed ~ mi •ildlditjr. " ·
Tbe. abnd.ptiere Wal • a a I
di,mlied In -.to Ille_,~
tha!'inarbd De G..U0'1 return to~
11 ,_. ago. · ' : I
'0etrerre was a candidate for a ·lhcit
time against De Gaulle ID !ht 1i,a
presidential race but withdrew belore·lhe
llllal stageJ of the •amPl'iiD to mail
room for FraDcou. Mltterrand as can-
didate for all Fnmce'i 11111 winl partlea'. ' ' . Formll' J'lomllr <loor&a l!!dM!ll, •,
m-1 '~" • who beaded. the .....,.. -fi :"""1
orpnlzallan revolt aplnsl De GIDlle ,la
1911.C and -WU allowed lo -rro.n ufle last summer. told•. oew. ae-re......, he alao ml&ht run. , : ·
Mlllerand hU not said -be wlll run apln but ~ ol a "11141orlllll
lot Prafdenl" ClllDln!ttee In l'lrll_ w.-
""""111Ced,
Acting Prealdent•AlalD·Poher lndlca¥
hemJihlnm. . ' .
Pompldou, the former premier, wls
fired by De Gaulle last -but tuP, ported him In the SWlday relenlllhlD
which De Gaulle Ice!. :
LefUst and_ mlddJe.of.U.. rMd polltt·
clans at once began hasty lalb on can-
didates ol tbelr own to pit aplnsl PGo>o
pldou. " ' . : '>.. the pollllcal •tnllgbting .warmed. "V• tears ol an immediate ftnandal ~
eaaed allboolh European bul:IDg clrd4il'
forecut eventual devaluaticn of tlit
franc. •
The prioe ol gold d-from Moft.
day'a all-tJme r.e.nr ii. $11.0I a .line
llUlllll io 141.111. n1ev.s: pr1ce•1a 115.
The French Inn<:, which shnnped
sharply Monday, llafled a am a II
recovery. J'iMndtJ IOUtte& aald it•wa
helped by buylnfl ol lrana·~ the Baoh>I
France and other central baDD.
The price was 4:'710 for ane U.S •. dallar
compared with 4.9735 Moo!laY·
'eHal•
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Tbe .011 al1 r'll, bli WedJJes.. , I
day, maklnl Ill dellul alter Ille · ,
cloudJ • roll• by ~ 10'> 1':~ , .
whlle the temperlbn -mired In Ille ·-· Wr ler Ille
Or-~
INSmE TODAY
'C1ibatl Society, Is Uke. 01lf big
Peace Corp,11 o•tarcinotiNQ to-
dol •ipimlclll, . .._.. •. uq
> l~ll• tec114rcr In ¢i>lllll ....,
I lllllghl '1!lo IM 'C ..... o11111
!sr...I. Poo• 8. -.. ~ ..... ,_ ... ,,...._,. . "
--I -. ........ ""' . -" PINMtl Moll ... ...., ,,
.... UllJl M ~ U.... I! -. --·
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,...... ... :':"',,,.,... : --..
--I --.. ........... 1>14 =-= -.. -.. ..... \ .. .......... ,. .. .,... ........
f ::
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_I) OAll.Y PILOT H
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LOGBOOK . . I • ' ":"
The Times Are Changin'
.
And Profs Had Better
By JEROME F. COLLINS
ot -""' .,.., ...
UCl'a studenla have \'OO the iJcb1 lo hire ll1d lire lwo pemnt of their
I professors.
~ students ba<I said they wanled ·to hire ll1d fire 10 pemnt of their
, pro1....,._ But Cbanncellor l>an Aldrich split the dlllerence Ind came up with
two. (lt'a·the New Math.) '
' . ' •
This is known u a compromise. But it doesn't make any difference, of eourae.
Becauie the way 'things are going, the 'students
eveolually will get wbal lhey're really after -100 per«nt. ..
. '
And thlB is bow, I imagine, the system wtll work:
, Dr. Fellsworth cerebrum, Nobel J>riu.wlnner, waita
.nervously outmde the door of the· UCI Std\:fent Council
~bers .. ~ is nm in line for a job intervi~w.
l'J'be wotld·famed developer of the mechanical appen·
dix bas known hard Umes lately. In six years, he's been
fired by the student& of 14 colleges. 'nl\ re~ were al·
Wl)'I the same. ,.,,
Cerebrum, 81, couldni teep up with the nlght lile. He kept lalllng asleep
at campll pot parties. Not only ·that, be cooldn't lilt the bricks his c:onlracla
reqUlred bJm to toa at ~ collqe admlnlatr1tor1.
. Cerebrum la reflulng aadly .. au this when suddenly the door la flung
open. OUt of the UC! StUdeot Coundl CIWllbera Jumbles Dr. Arthur SChlesinf·
·er Jr.
He is followed by a about from within : "Nel't!11
Cerebrum, reaching for hia cane, riles crukily froin bia chair. He helpa
l SChlesinger up from the fkKr.
.• "Hello, Arlbur," he ·saya to the curairtg ex-Ivy League historian. "I
, . haven't see~1 you since those MIT atomic research students blew up Harvard.
, What happened inside?" .
"Hai)pened? I'll tell you what happened," says Schlesinger, brushing of(
. his Nehru jacket" and straightening out his love beads. "The first three hours
of the grilling weren't too bad. But then I reach up to wipe the perspiration
from my brow. That ,w~s my mistake." He cbotea: back a sob.
"Control yourself, Arthur."
"I'm sorry, It's just that when I wiped my brow I ruined everything. I
; knocked oil my shoulder-length hair-piece." Schlesinger bursts Into lean.
Cerebrum shakes his head' sympathetically. Hili own shoulder-length wig,
be happily notices, survives the sh~g.
1te says farewell to his weeping colleague, screws up his courage and en·
ters the Student Col.lnCil chambers.
It is pitch-black inside, except for a spoUight at the far end of the room.
Cerebrum, flashing a peace sign, steps into the spotlight.
The questions come hard and fut: "You ever been busted?"
"Oh, yes. Twelve times last year atone."
"Hmm. Not bad. But what for ?"
,., "Seven times for participating In a campus riot and five times for as-
-sau!Ung a police officer."
"A what?"
"A pig. I beg your pardon."
"Yo\µ' application says you're 23 years old. You Jook older to me."
"That's because ot the subject I now teach. It's very wearing.,.
"What. ls it?"
OAIL Y PILOT ltllll ""'9
WINS EAGLE RANK
Boy Scout Harinn
OAllY PllOT
Ro••rf N. W"4 '°"'"""' .,,. l'vbllllfltr Jeck It Curl1y
vie. Pra!Olnl ono ee ... .i ~
n..,.,, t •••• 11
ecuttr
Th-• A. M11r.tllf•1 Mio"""'-ffriw
A'"ri W. lilt• Wlll1111 a114 ..... ,... '41111""""' 8-11
ldl"" CJly !:tlOw .... __ ......
JO'f fftl Stro.t
M•n,., AUrttt: r.o. a.. no. t2M1 --"""""" t..c:rl: t1'11 W.l .......... "'" ... CMl1 ~' nt Wfll .. ,. $1,..1
L"""' hKI\: tn II'-! •-
Harry Hensen
Awarded Top
·Scouting Honor
:.,.
. , Harry E. Hanse, Jr., ot 6191 Dover
J>ri".e;. Huntington Beach, has been
aw~ed tbe rant of Eagle. Scout by lh~
OrJn&e Empire Area Council of Boy Scouts. ,
The !>year old Marina High ScliooJ
sophomore mllde headlines just two years
ago when he and two friends built a
realistic lookin1 fpace capsule and. sue·
cessfully compleled a 72-hour simulated
space flight.
. All three "astronauts" received keys to
the cities of Westminster and Huntington
Beach and awards from the local Elks
Club and McDonnell Douglas.
Hansen, a member of Troop 551, was
One of the flt~ !COuts in the Orange
Empire Council to receive the ntwest
merit badge, t.he Computer Merit Badge,
He is also a member of the recently·
formed Computer Sciences El'plorer Post
.fl8, composed mainly of Marina High
School students and .sponsored by
Management ·computer services or
Anaheim.
Hansen 'has been a scout .since 1984
when be join~ Troop 111 In 'Slml Valley.
Today he holds IZ merit badges.
Hb father, Harry E. Hansen, Sr., has
also been active in scouting for several
years and is currently Tri>op Committee
Chairmen of Troop 551, Huntington
Beach.
4 Beach Choirs
To Join Voices
Top chorel groups from the four local
high schools will put their best voices
forward tonight in the Huntington Beach
Unk>n Hij:h School District's Conctrt or
Ensembles.
Performances begin at I p.m. in the
HuniJnlO!n li<Kh High S c h o o I
audil<lrlum, with ldmbslon pricu of It
for adults and SO ~nb for studt.nta and
clllldttn.
Repmtntlng tll<lr schools will be the
Troobadoun lrom Fountain Valley, the
Harmot>alrt• lr<llD Huntlnglon Beach, the
Marinm from Marina and t h o
Cboralttrt from Westminster.
l\lurder Suspect Freed
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Robert
Jahmellk, a tall artist questlonld for lour
da,,s 1bout the e:recullon style &laying& or
tbree Haight·Aahbury realdenil, wu a
fm man today for lack of evkfence.
--
.
Sf9p lf~lls .... -
1f:grouping·
. .
SAIGON (UPI) -B5l bombers struck
eight times Monday atid today against
the North Vietnamese 1st and 7th
Divisiooa: regrouping alona the Cam-
bodian fronUer fOr what SOuth Viet.
namese intelligence offiCers predicted
could be. a Ho ClU Minh birthday ol·
fe nsive.
The tempo of fighting north and
northeast of Saigon along the invasion
routes .from Cambodia stepped up sha~
ly, and U.S. air power and tanks were
called in lo rescue a 25-truck . AmCrican
convoy from a Communist ambush on
highway 13 leadiilg north to Cambodia
from Saigon.
The millions of pounds of bombs were
concentrated on War Zone C, the
longtime Communist stronghol~ 35 to 45
miles northwest of Saigon where some or
the heaviest fighting of the war has raged
in the pasL Others hit 35 miles northeast
of Saigon in War Zone D.
MUJtary spokemen said the VSls had
carried out 30 raids. in the Cambodian
border region in five days in con.-
centr1ted atiacks rarely seen in Viet.
nam.
South Vietnamese officials reported the
Communists had reformed and rearmed
their mauled 1st and 7th Divisions in
pl'f!paration for an offl!nsive expected
between t.he Communist May Day
celebrations and the May 19 birthday of
North Vietnamese President Ho Chi
Minh.
Although the North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong have no known defenses
against th~ high altitude BS2 strikes, they
have increased antiaircraft defenses
against helicopter g1.1nshJps and jet
fighter-bombers which sometimes $trike
at treetop level.
The U.S. Command said the Com-
munist gunners shot down th r e e
helicopters and one $2.8 mllliori F4 Phan·
torn je'.t in South Vietnam on Monday, the
heaviest losses in six days.
The Communists' winter-spring of.
fensive appeared to have tapered off with
only five "significant" shellings reported
during the night, but their ground forces
have been increasingly daring in the past
week.s, hitting U.S. bases -almost within
sight of Cambodia.
In the attempted convoy ambush 55
miles ·north of Saigon and 20 miles from
the Cambodian border northeast of the
War Zone C battle area the Reds ran into
two hours of steady bombardmtnt from
dive bombers, helicopter ~ips and
tanks. 'I1le attackers fled leaving 11
bodies behind.
The Americans lost four dead and !f
wounded in the fighting.
Two of the lost gun!hips were part of
the air armada called in to bail out the
ZS.truck U.S. Army convoy trapped 50
miles north of salgon near Quan Loi. 1a
supplr base for the U.S. 1st Infantry
Division.
Military spokesmen said the ~
·munists opened up with machipe guns
and antitank rockets Crom the jungle
alongside highway 13 as.it winds its Way
toward Quan Loi and points north from
Saigon.
A column or tanks rumbled into the
battle, spewing cannon and machine gun
fir:e into the high grass and heavy foliage
that hid the ambushers.
Military spokesmen said one crewman
was killed and two were wounded when
ground fire downed one or the gunships,
while the stcond stricken copter carried
one man to his dealh and wounded
another. Damage to the trucks and tanks
was described as light.
County Airport
Run,way Reopens
A.head of Time
The main runway at Orange County
Airport will reopen to commercial airline
use at 2 p.m. Wednesday, two days ahead
of forecasts , Robert J. Bresnahan, county
aviation director ann01.1nced· today.
Bresnahan said the rain-damaged
runway which has been resurfaced with a
five--inch coat of asphalt will be ready for
full use by all types or planes Friday
morning.
The early opening tG commercial car.
riers \\'IS made possible through a $4,000
payment by Air California to cover lhe
cost of Sunday , ovtrtime by the con·
tractor, Industrial Asphalt Inc. or Stan·
ton.
The original contract for the job \Vas
1165,770.
Air Cal and Air West are the only com·
mercial airlines flying Crom the airport.
Since the runway resurfacing began.
both airlines have been scheduling all
Orange Counfy flights from Long Beach
Airport.
Brtsnahan said that work will continue
through Wedne'sday, with crews still
v.•orking at one end of the runway . The
crews will move off the runway when jets
arc landing, Bresnahan said.
Barry Goldwater Jr.
Favored to Win Seat
·LOS ANGELES CAP) -Barry
Goldwater Jr., was favored to win a
runoff eltcUon today for the U.S. House
of Representatives seat for Ca!Uornia's
27th district.
Coldwater, !MH:ar-old stockbn:iker .son
ol lhe Jiil RcP11bllcan presidential
nominee, was apposed by Attorney
John K. Van de Kamp, 33, • Democrat.
The db:lrlct Is traditionally Republican.
i
-. --------~~~----~ ----. ,. --·. -
Good Catch
. .... -~-------···-·----~-----··-----.i
OA!LY PILOT tlln ~
Utt Gives
Press Award
To President
WASHING TON -President N 11' o n
spent 10 minutes: Monday with Congress-
man James B. Utt (R·Tusl'in), who will becorDe hls congressman when the
President takes possession of. the Cotton Estlte in San Clemente as the summer
White House. Utt reported that Nixon told him hf!
intends 1 to register to vote in San
Clemente.
Said Utt, 0 ( told him I'd be glad. to
have him come back and vote for me."
The congressman visited the White
ijoose to give the President a man-of·
the-year award from the Orange County
Press Club. Utt accepted the award for
Nixon at the club's annual dinner earlier
this month.
Utt said the President is looking for·
ward to spending his summer vacations
in San Clemente. ''He mentioned how
he loves the ocean and he hopes Con·
gress will recess in time for him to get
out there," Utt .said.
HEW Defends
Fund Cutback
Bikinied Paula Henry, 18, a visitor from Montclair, brightens the
scene at Little Corona Beach as she plays a.frisbee game pn the .sands
Monday while most Orange Coast I'e$idents were perspiring in a
miniatu~e heat wave. · ·
For Hospitals
No B .rown Wrappers?·
Undersecretary of Health, Education
and Wellare John G. Veneman, speaking
Monday .at the annual convention of the
Association of Western Hospitals in
Anaheim, defended his department's re.
cent decision to end a two ~ent
allowance paid hospitals under the
federally-financed Medicare and Medi.Cal
programs. Nixon Will Seek Changes
In U.S .. Obscenity Laws
He said the hospitals have had "suf·
ficient time" to adjust financially to the
programs which have been in operation
for thrl"~ years, and that the decision was
necessary to combat "serious inflation of
hospital costs which have become a na-
tional problem."
\\'.ASHlNGTON (UPI) President
Nixon will ask ~ogress for changes in
federal Jaws dealing with obscenity;
Republican congressional leaders said to-
day.
After a GOP l~dership breakfast at
the White' House, Sen. Everett M.
Dirksen and Rep. Gerald R. ·Ford told'
reporters Nixon P,lans to attac~ obscenity
by modifying poslal statutes.
Under lho propoaala, Pi(!<se/I said,
b r o w 11 paper-wrapped pornographic
material would be ouUawed. The person
making it would be required to iOentlfy
contents on the wrapper or package, he
said. In UUs way, Dirksen explained, the
~ddressee of unsolicited mait·could reject II. ,
Dirksen USetI Ule occasion t.o rent.w his
proposals for overhauling laws con·
cerning pornography. Specifically, he
DA Hicks Voted
Salary Increase
A boost in the salary of Orange County
District Attorney Cecil Hicks from
$23,000 to $27,500 a year has been ap·
proved by the state senate and sent to t.he
assembly for action.
The bill raising the pay was authored
by Sen. James E. Whetmore (R·
Fullerton) who told his colleagues that
the chief deputy district attotney makes
more mney than his boss.
The legislature periodically sets the
salary or the district attorney while the
Board of Supervisors handles salary in·
creases for top assistants .
The pay raise had been endorsed by
b o t h the supervisors and the county
Grand Jury.
Frona Page 1
RIOT PLAN. ••
ture will be the sheriff's offic~. superior
and municipal court judge s, tbe juvenile
court, probation department, California
Highway Patrol, police chiefs throughout
the county and fficks' own office.
Forming the basis of Hicks' Orange
County plan of action will be the riot
master plan adopted by Los Angeles in
the wake of the Watts riots and recognii~
ed at the meeting as being most suitable
for adaptation in this area .
AdopUon of a related riot program
would, Judge Gardner said, give the
C{lUnty much greater fle:ribility and would
enable units of all agencies invol\'ed to
quickly transfer help from an unaffected
sector to a riot torn area .
RACE SITUATION
"We will fact the situation where we
have to provide huge detention facilities,
extra judgea, more COl.lrtrooms and more
policemen and all In a short period of
lime," Judge Gardner said. "This Is what
wt have to be prepared for and thi!I mu.'lt
lorm the basts ol our thinking In coming
weeks."
Workine closely wtlh Hicks In the
preparation of the riot plan will be for-
mer chl~f deputy probatlon officer Keith
Concannon who recenlly took over the post of executive officer for the crimlnaJ
Justice coun.wt.
Concannon is w rrently preparing dat.a
"Which will hopefully provide $2.S0 ,000 in
fedtral funds flM' the work of the newly
formed organization.
Veneman also said that the Nixon ad-
called for a constitutional amendinent to ministration will propose a program of
"get around" recent Supreme Court block grants to eocourage expansion of
decisions. outpatient clinics, neighborhood health
The senator cited tne cment film, "-1 centers, skilled nursing homes and ex·
Am Curious (Yellow),'' saying he un· tended care facilities .
derstood there was to 1" a sequel, 411 Am He joined George W. Graham, presi·
~urious (Blue)" that· would make the dent or the Amerlcan Hospital A!aocia·
first one seem like a "pink tel party." t.lon, and Dr. Joseph W. Ehrenrich, direc·
"You haven't seen nothing )'t!t," said tor -.of uSo •s reaearch institute of
Dirksen. business and economics, in agreeing that
The Republican leaders also said the the emphuil in health care must be on
Preaident is pr,eparing a message asking preveQUon rather than on 'treatment
for a,consolldalion,<11 ~uti~ power to , alo~e. ~ :· ......
pull•.togelher a.number or prop,ama now. , More than a,ooo hoSpital management·
, scattered through a variety of federal personnel attended tbe· week-long con·
agencies. ~ · . . vention.
.Eron• Page 1
QUAKE JANGLES NERVES • • •
don't believe that stuff about California
breaking off into the ocean,'' said a
Sunset Beach barmaid.
General limits of the quake's noticeable
area ranged from northern Mexico up to
the Santa Barbara area and ·eastward in-
to the Neva da desert.
A Palm Springs policeman described
the jol t as the worst he has felt since the
1952 Tehachapi tremors, which killed a
dozen persons as buildings collapsed into
the streets.
RANGE OR SCALE
Needles on seismographs at two scien.
tific installatio ns in San Diego were
knocked off their graphs by the nearby
earthquake. which ranged from S.25 to &.O
on the Richler scale, as it was monitored
at other spots.
The tremor which occurred along the
Coyote Creek fault on April 8, 1988
registered 6.5, severe enough to cause
major damage il it bctu~ in a
n1ctropolitan area or the quake-prone
Southland.
The Richter scale has no limit, but
each individu al point represents an
unleashed force 32 times greater than the
previous numer al and the San Francisco
quake of 1906 is estimated to bave hit 8.3
on the graph.
Seismologi sts recorded the· 1933 Long
Beach earthquake, which killed 120
persons, at li.3 on the scale, developed by
Caltech professor Dr. Charles F. Richter.
Questioned Monday as to whether
0 ••
\l .. lf(M. ... • Ill,
South landers might expect any more such
jolts in the immediate future, Caltech
seismology engineer Gile said he cer·
tainly hoped not.
"Things are hectic enough here as it
is," he commented.
While actual destruction was quite
mioor, Monday 's moderate shudder was
most damaging to a loosely-organized
program by earthquake e:rperts to calm
uneasy Californians worried a b o u t
soothsayers' prophecies.
RUMOR GROWS
Steadily in recent months -with its
basic history going back several years
into the career of tile late psychic Edgar
Cayce - a . rumor has grown that
Cali!ornia would be rent by quakes and
sunk in the sea.
Geologll!lts, seismologists and others
who are involved in continuing study of
all phases of earthquakes say such a ma·
jor quake and· tidal wave is impossible
and o(!er re,sons why .
The vislonaries also disagree among
themselves.
Still, however, many people fear the
punishment allegedly to come and some,
like the Teens for Christ crowd o! Hun.
t.ington Beach, have fled to the relative
~~Y of-1the Arizona deserts. :put the fact remains that the preciic..
tions came true to a very minor degree in
the month mentioned, a fear which had
botberta scientists as muclt as doomtday
·quake predictions troubled the gullible.
WIPE AREA OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FEELS QUAKI
UPI M~p Loc.atas lmp.ri•I Vall•Y Epicenter Of Jolt
'
r
-·saddlehaek
EDITION
' . , ••• •
•
• ~ ............................. "1.~' ----
•
·~
' YOL 62, NO. 102, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES O.RANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -f TUEspAY, APt\ll 29, 1969 TEN ceNTS ·
.
South CJast Facing Crisis
Orange County's st~ng population
fncreasel, the. Salt Creet ~ con-
troversy, airport needs and problems, ,
and planned community dewtopment
were.all touched upon in a wlde'r4J1Cing
talk Monday by Stuart Balley, .,,1stant
count/ planning director ..
"Can 1be Coastal Area Survive Rapid
TupWauon Growlh?" was the topic Clf
Bailey's talk to the Laguna Beach
Democratic Club, but lhe plaMer said
that it mlght well be, "bow are we goin&:
Down the
Mission
Trail
-
Registration Set
For Kindergarten
CAPISTRANO BEACH -Kindergarten
registration for children in the Capistrano
Unified School District will be held May 5
through May 9. AU youngsters who will
reach their filU! birthday on or before
December 2 an eligible to register.
All district elementary schools will
participate in signups between 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m.
Parentll must show school officials a
birth certificate, duly attested baptism
certificate, or pa!3pOfl ~ proof of age.
Information about the immunization of
the child for pollomyeliUs and measles is
also required by.law.
Parilllll,,MJ;,...,,.,,"'1~"':' .. Dient school ·'film'·<U lrtltt':'.;: ' · yj.Jley
Schpol, 29292 Cr~. V~y Porq'!f,
Laguna Nlpelo_.~ """1· VO.
School, 24242 La Cresta Drl~. Dqa
Point; Palisades SCj>oo~ 26112 s.m_..
to, Capistrano ·Beach, and ·San ~U3Jl
Elementary Scbool.,_31641 Camino Real.
San Juan Capistrano.
e IC B•n9ttet Set
MISSION VIEJO - A Charter Night
Banquet is to be held Friday at 7 p.m. by
the Mission Viejo Junior Chamber of
Cornrtttrm at the Sherat'on Beach Inn,
21112 Ocean Ave., HQDtingtoo. Belcb.
Guest speaker will be B ob
Reifschnelder, pr~dent of Qie California
Jaycees. Dinner is $8 a plate.
• E11e Te•ta Sl•tetl
MISSION VIEJ(}.-A free eye testing
clinic for preschool children will be held
\Vednesday at the La Paz Preschool.
24T12 Chrisanta Drive, Mission Viejo.
Olildren at the school will be tested
from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Other children from
three to five years old may be tested
from 11 :30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The testing program is for the detec-
t~n or amblyopia, poor vision in o.ne
eye, and is a project of the Califorrua-
Hawaii Elks Major Project, Inc.
e Sclellee Chief T•lk•
CAPISTRANO BEACH -P h I I i p
GrigDoo, science chairman ~or ~ Capi.!tranO. Unified School DiJtnct, will
address the aMUal conference of the Na·
tional Science Teachers' AssodaUoo
Saturday in San Diego.
Grignon, who introduced oceanology In-
to the curriculum last year and expanded
It into tilt elementary and J unior high
school curriculum Ibis year, will discu&s
the role o( oceanology sb..idies in a
modem high school.
e B.. Driver Cited
CAPISTRANO BEACH -~-Uicy
Cavagnaro, a bus driver for the
cap\strano Unified School Distrld, won
secmd plice for her allility to piiol a 91·
passenger Landem axle ICbool bus in
competltlon with drivers from all over
Orange Comly.
to teep the /lemmings &om pushing us
over the clll s of 'Laguna?" n.. county is grow~ by eight people
an h0ur1 Bailey ~. This means one
mare car for each seven people, it means
inCreutna: achoo!, utility and recreaUon
nee:ds and services, he said.
Balley J10lnted out that three years ago,
the 9,000-persoo conuriwlity of Mission
Viejo was open rollirig range land. The
area hQ grown to ~ee-f~ the !ht
ol Laguna Beach in just lhrte years, he salcl. .
'"Jbinp .,. rulbing lloo(. All thnoe
thinp ,,_. ""'"'Y and with lllOll\!Y you
csn bozy the Upper Ne'llport Bay;you can
buy Salt Creek, and other ........ u.n
are-." Balley said. :. ·
He nQted toO that becaUIO.~of the !.i-creases, Increased rec'reatiori land.would
be -..i. Ile lauded the 'cledlollioo by
the Ji\ilne. Company, Lq\nll Nip!, and
: . -. .
ee.
' • -.
D'.lLY'PILOT ........
• :W~tJ:i,.LAGUNA SCHOOL ~J4>Jll)o',ER, IT'S. SAF !;.TY Fl"ST·.
' · " '.fiink:M.Jio• Tops cou..r;:·'Drlvert In Test ol 'Slclfls : ·
·nus Driver from ·Lag~a
Captures First in 'Ro~eo'
It wasn't ei:act1y the Grand Prix, but
the driving competition won by Frank
Mello, a 15-year veteran Laguna Beach
Unified District school bus driver, no
doubt means more to Laguna Beach
parents. •
Mello won first plact in a school bus
''rodeo'' beld recently at. the· Anaheim
Stadium. Actually called" the "Orange
eoOnty 5cbool Boa ~ ~ Institute,~ the .competlticll invotn.l' l!iO
drivers. ,
'fhe driven pi!Oted lbelr 35-foOt long
yellow behemoths through • maze of n&r·
row alleys, made sharp tunll, park~.
and ran through other tesb. Cllifom1a
Highway Patrol olJicm,judged.
Mello has been witb the -I distli'l
since 1957.
He hu earned a ..iety award for the
district each year. Mello'• bl8'c assian-
ment Is at Alioo Ei<melltary Sc:hool
where be ado worb &1 a.pntener1
Laguna Beach was also represented by
Joe Fletcher, a new district driver who
placed fourth, Norma Condon, Allee
Wagner, and Raoul Alvarado.
Phytlls Hines, district transportation
dispatcher, said the district has annually
soot participants io the comJJe:t!tion and
UJUafly places one or more' ln the top
finishers.
. Tile IMltute ill one form of the c:oo-
·lllanl driver. tra1nJni prvsrala '!hit the
diitriel pirlicipates ln Iv ptOYlde, heavy
emphalJll on safety, she said.
Stock MarkeU
NEW YORK (AP) -n.. stock market
punched out a solJd gaJn In very active
trading today, with brokert reporting. 1'a
lot of buyers who had been on the
.sidelines getti(lg back Into the ac-
lion. (See quotations, Pages 10-11).
.
MlllSloo Viejo Company of lands for coun·
ty parks.
Rq~ Sall er.et ~. llalley z:ald
that the CownY Board <i supervisors
abandoned the road because in their opi-
nion it Wu oo )Gager needed as· a publlc
thorougblar<.
Followinc some hot questioning, Bailey
said that the supervisors did not have to
abandon the ,roadway. He said that
whether br not tbe public ever had access
to lbe ~blic tide.lands over the road was
a moot po~t and that Is now tangled In ~ be publlc ~: Tile Giiiy thlas
UUgation. ... could c1o wu'baJe them ....
Balley said that when tract ~ fot oo !hit anyllme the couaty SIU' -
the Laguna Niguel Company's defflo~ money tose:ther it c8n ,0 in there Ulf
ment at Salt Creek were prisented, he buy: it," Bailly said."' -t ~ > • I °' " tried _to require public access to. the . "'Ille public can ""!ft In ~ the c11f
ocean Iron! as a condition ol approval but after tomorrow and bbJ the road and tbi
that tile company atgued ·e1atnot It and partjng lot. I made very 111R· lbll tllo
the P'lann.in& commission decided ln tbe road was wide enouats. ud a. -'1nl
comPlll)y'1 favor. area was acceptatile lor'tbe pQbUC abo8'I
"I tried to c:oovince lbem that there (See PL4NND, l'ap 1( ·
l ·' '\ ~ --
au
., .
es 0
Ex-premier,
Socialist
Chief Ready
PARIS (UPI) -Former Gaullist
Premier Georges Pompidou and Socialist
leader Gaston DefferTe, mayor of
Maneilles •. announced today they will run
for r,resident to succeed Cbarlea De
Gaul e.
Pompidou, 57, flrlt to announce, WU
acclaimed later by a standing ovaUon or
the ·1,92-man Gautllst party group ht the
NaUonal 'A!sembty. He indicated he
would be· a strong man prelident In the
Gau)Ilst tradlUoo. (Persooality Prollle,
Page{.) ·
Ddlerre lllDOUllCed hjs·-to rim le ........... ~ , ilimbli!d~'fW· Simi r ' ~ .-h,.. ....... .,, 1_,~ PriSldml J.0. :
quu~~·-
.._' ... Do-:-llimlle .. '•· ·-' . (h PIWICB, 1>ap II ...
Laguna Cleaning
' , ts Because
No One Else Will
It's difficult ftndlng anyone that wants
to chop down Laguna's weeds.
And those who are willing to .-r1ate
the ta.st of rubbish abatement want to
charge clearly for the wort.
This was the ..........i today <i City
Manager James D. Wheaton as he e:r-
platned why the city ·ts bact in the
bUliness ol cleaning lots. It's to hold
down costs of the necessary work.
Last year the work of cleaning about
470 parcels was put out to bid of. private
contractors. Howls from property owners
followed because of the steep charges for
manpower and machinery working the
dilflcutt slopes and gulleys.
The dty this year is overseeing the
work of cleaning weed! and rubbilb from
the same number of lots to bold down
cost.s.
Wheaton said the tangle of-Wild growth
this year is thicker and higher than in the
past because ol heavy rains.
As such it presents a greater potenUal
lire · buard for the warm summer
moolhl.
Tile city manager eocouraged properly
owners to clean ,up their own parcels by
whatever meana' they choose. nus may
sWt be dooe where groWtb and ,.bbisb
have DOI been' reinoVecl by city treWI.
Whtean aaia the aba~ crews are
busy in the northern sector of the citr.
but have not yet started on centra ,
aoothern and Top <i the World sectors.
Property °""'" may.notify the city ol
their intent to clean up the property. The
city ltnltdles the parcel off the list and
checks back after the arranged date to
see that the· work Is 'completed berore
weed abatement cmn disband.
'' I ',• • ~~ •• ,;, I ~}.. ' • > ~ :s~l1i9~;.t, .~,,;:·~~:. · :-~~~·-:-~
Mill•· !l!lller, 9, fourth gpacf~r at Allio · School; dbpiays~·t&!ents ·in
warmup for skafeboa'nf, C\"!teat ,wi!lch •Wilh be ~of. 'ai'J>qbl's· par•
ent-teacher fund-raisllig<event startihg at ·10 a .m'.. Saturday on· p!aY· groUnd." · ' · ·
Flood Damage Suit .Filed
A $105,000 claim for damages has been
filed agalDst Orange · County • and 1lje
county Flood .Control DlstrfCt because of
destrucUon allegedly done by flood
waters in January.and FOi>niary. •
CJaimant Is Telenoico ~. Inc. of
21~ ~Canyon Rold. Tbe ltnn'a ls
the diinf cialm to be filed lilr Ibo same
cause by . Laguna Canyon property
owners.
Previously, Raymond F. Milt~, 213C
Laguna Canyon Road ~ a claim for
$39,394 and Loi; E. McGill, QI l1S'l2
Laguna Canyon Road, filed for damll<S
in excess of $lO,OOO,
Cause of the clabn y Telonlcs 11.w.ell
as lhe othen· is stated. ·u "gractib&, e:r·
'
cavaUon, remdvaJ of berms, road con-
•lructlOo and flood cootrot clianoel work . '
which diverted surfAce waters to ]lrlvaw
Jl'Opel'ty caualuc:,tbe damapl.''
All claima ha .. beeli 'clllllod. by the
Boord ol Saper'lllon and uf•ned to the
couoty cowilef. · .
Or••••
.
. .
The sun'f lleeplng In WedJles. .
day, maldnc •ftl l..debut after' tbe ·
~cIOU!ls roll by arumd II a.m., . Five other CUSD driven entered the
nth annual ...,.1y ._iitlon held la$l
Salimlay in the Anaheim Stadlam pm·
Ing lot. n.. """"' -• test " drl\'lni aldil, a '1niteo eum, and """'1-
ing about a dllficutt olleticle couroe.
After togjna --!JI• miles In l...lipa'a _.. and f\tid..,., Mello
noled !hit the """'~ twllllnC llitrOW stre0u and hilJIIcle rJlldl prom>! I $107,000 C0ttr1e1 Cut •
While': tllO' ..... ,........ -
mired bJ t'lt -••• ,... the Or . Cout. .-'
Driven taking pm included Mn.
eavignaro; Mn. Frwntle Wllc:ox, who
wm lecond place last )'tar; Midlael
Seyller, Joaeph Romm>, Jody Hillyard
and Jay Forrester.
e Sfieep V•e CeUqe
MISSION VIEJO -First uoen ol Sld-
dlebt<:t Collef:'• new penna~nt camP<!I
proba6ly '""' t be studeiillDllt """P· GrMlera are beginning to mate a few
dents in the terrain but mm ol the 1ltlt
OCl'Q ol rolling hills stlII ill covmd with .r... fodder Ideal fer gwin&.
AtconltnalY, Saddlebact trualeel Mon-
day nllht caIJed lot bldJ from lh<phenll
on ue of. tbt campus bt;tween M•Jt.and
• Juf)'.
-.
driYer'• &reltllt ~· , .
·Vandals Came Minor .
Damage at .Playhou8e
Minor damage to the waJ!a <i the -• ~a-Moulton Play ho"' e was ilb<ovei'<d""lfonclay alter yoang vandals
1ppamrtly climbed a 20-loot scaffold and
threw bolts qallllt the ptuter. oeor,. QulM, Job superintendent, said
damac< waa necIJgible but said there wu
<ooCem that the yOllllplen milbt have
lailen.liom the acallold. Ile said police have"~ to -ify palrolinl ol tjle
IOcUltJ tllel 11 IO -........
Saddlehac·k Feeling Pinch •
. I r ' •
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of .. Dllfrr ,..... '""
Fe<linC ~ pindt ol a tight budg<t,
saddieback ColJece ,,._ • lf-y
night turned cloWn teaching sWf ~
for vocailOoaJ·~ In mutlnl llld
electronics next fall.
The po\icrll!ll would have -116.000
for nursing and ~1000 ror dec!CroDicl.
Trullees didn't !eel enrollment • ...uld be
ll"•t enqugh to juJtily the upe,_ ; -----bl'--
' . • • •
without and wliat tl1e savlnp would be.
Boaril member Louis Zitnil<, <i tquoa
Bach: who .serves. m •the budp\·com-
mi!t;e, <Alil Ille pindl -yell' will
mutt from the addition <i blP COii, tow ' . enrollmeOt ~ _..... .
Ftlty·-attrttlon from the alarl <i
lhe lmlbman year to the beginlllol <i the
aophomore yw la normal, he.aJd,
Saddlebact tJjJa year' --' '(llee~ .... .,
l!UmE TODA 'l'
l
I l
•
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_, ti '
,,
LOGBOOK
,
'
, '
~· The Tnnes Are Changin'
,.,
" ••
.·,
"
' . .,
,
"
"
•,
' And Profs Had
\ .
Better
By JEROME P'. COLLINS
ot t1H1 Dtlf)' ''ltt lttlf
UCI's students have won the right to hire and fire two percent of their
professors.
The 1tudenla had aald they wanted to hire and fire 10 ~fcent of lheJr
professors. But Cbanncellor Dan. Aldrich aplit the dilference and Came up with
two. (lt'a: the New Math.)
'lbls is known as a compromise. But ft doesn't make
any i:Hlferenct, of course.
· Because the' way things are going, the stuclent1
eventually will get what they're really alter -100 percent.
j And this la how, I imagine, the syatem will .work:
Dr. FeUa:worth Cerebrum, Nobel Prlie-Winner, waits
nervously outside the door of the UCI Student Council
· chambers. He is next in line for a job interview.
' The world-famed developer of the mecbarucal appen· ~ 'dix baa known hard times lately. In six yean, he's been
fired by the students of 14 colleges. The reasons were al·
ways tbe same.
Cerebr,Um, 11, couldn't keep up with the night life. He kept falling asleep
Ii-campus pot part.ies. Not only that, he couldn't.lift the bricb his contracl8
., required him to tou at pas.sing college administrators.
1 Cerebrum is reO~ng sadly on all this when suddenly the dOOlf Js flung
" open. Out of the UCI Student Council cnambef1. tumbles Dr. Arthur Schlesing-er Jr.
'· He is followed by a shout from within: "Next !" .'"'
Cerebrum, reaching for his cane, rises creakily from his chair. He helps
.~ · Schlesinger up from the floor .
tt "HeJJo, Arthur," he says to the CW'Slng ex-Ivy League historian. "I
:i: : haven't seeu yoti since those MIT atomic research students blew up Harvard.
·: : What happened inaide?"
·'.' · "Happeiled? I'll tell you •hat happened," qya Schlesinger, bruhlng off
t>, ' his Nehru jacftet a~ straightening out his Jove beadJ. "The first three hours
of the gri,lllng weren't too bad •. lkJt then I reach up to wipe tbe perspiration
Crom my brow. That wu my mittake." He chokes back a sob:
"Control yourself, Arthur." . :. ' ' ~ ' ,,) ' 0 I'm sorry, It's just that when. ·I wiped my brow I fulned eveeytbing. I
knocked off ~Y ahouldtr·length hair-piece.'' Schleafnger bursts into tears. •
~ebl)im shak" hla head sympalheUcally. HIJ own sboulder·lenllh wig, . he happily noti«i, survives the shaking.
He 11ays 1afewe11 to hls. weeping colleague, acrew~ UP' his: courage and .en· ters the Student Council chambers.
It is pit.ch-black inside, except for a spotlight at the far end ,ol the room .
Cerebrum, fliahlDll a 'pea<• sign, mp.1 inlo the apotllght.
The quea:Uona come' bard and fast: '"You ever been bulled?"
••Oh, yu, Twelve times Jast year alone ...
ti' .-• "Hmm. Not bad. But what for?"
1.:' ' "Seven tiines for partlcJpatinc In a campus riot and five times for ag. 1auJUng a police officer." · · ~;. '
'
"·
"A what?"'
;, A pIJ. I t>ei 1'1111' Pardon."
"YQIU' lij)p~~Uon Ill'• )'lll!'re 2! year1 old. Yi>u look older to me."
"Tbat'a.becauae _:.of the JUbject I now teach. It'• verr wearing."
·~ is it?'' ·J ~
, • • 0 Guerrilla Warfare." ' • i,. • ~' • ~·1 ' :·'I •1 .. 1 ' ·me room tiuntl wll.h cheer1. Cerebrum, carkl!Dll ~oyOUlly, la hiZ<d on
,,. , f.he JP9!• I ·~ . . _
! Mission Vwjo Revelers
l Start ~arly, ~or 'Cinco'
I ~de Mayo will come on the fwrth ; ed fir the teen aet from 2:30 to $:30 p.m.
thLS year. with Verg H11opian acting as muter of I At least the communiJy celetiraUon · cerenionler ·
planned by more than 20·'~rganizatlons•ln · . I Mission Viejo ~·ill be held Sunday, May t ., -:-A E'ar.ade of decorated.bikts wUl roll
at Mission Viejo High School. out smartly .at .6:30 p.m. Jed . by th~
J There will be everything from selec~on Mis~ion Vi~j~ Band and DMll T~IUJl.
: of a queen to a rodeo. Events wilt i:uq Mar!achl music will be perfonned
~ rrom about noon until close fireworks through the day i at a p.m. Here 's the lineup: . · J -Mexican dinners will be served in the -The. Camp Pendleton Ma~ Corps f school cafeteria from 12:30 p.ril. unUI Band wHI perform from 7 p.m. unUI 7:30
• dusk . · p.m.
l -Game booli\s sponsored by various -Great Western Rodeo will break loose
organizations wiU be open through the at 7·30 pm ! ~~~-A snack bar will sell tacos and bur· -A fir~w~rka ,display will conclude the
• Balloting will be held to select a queen celebration at 8 p.m. f from rive finalists. The winner wll! be l introduced at evening ceremonies. I -A "Batlle of the Ban¢;" will be 1ta1·
•
I
' • • ' J
DAllY PllOT
OltAHGE COAll l'Ull t5HtHI) C()¥1'~NY
ltob•tl N. Wttll
P'ffti.tnt 11111 """'"""
llitt'l'lll Kt1wll
l.iier
Th•""'' A. M11r,hi,,,
Min"!"' ltllf.,
Rlcht~ P. Ntll , __
CllY ltll"" ..__ ......
2JJ Feret! Awt.
Mellf"t A44rtH1 P.O. l•ll 466, •Z612 --(811 Morsl~ 01 W101 ,11., llrtl't
H-..t Mell; ?fll ~I ..... l'llllt\ltrt
..,,.,.,.... lutfl: M Mfl ''""'
Tus.tin Board
Rebuffs Pleas
On Scliool Dr.ess
.
It "'asn't quite the mlni·skirt con·
troversy all over apin, but students
seeking liberalization of the TusUn Union
High School D~trict dress code "·ere
rebuffed by school trustees h'londay
night.
AboUl a dozen students from Tustin
High School were told to talk to their stu·
dent repretentaUves and principal, not
the board.
"We are charged with the job or seeing
the schools are run, not doing the running
ourselves," said Board President Wl llii:im
C. "Bud'' Hayward today.
He said the studenll didn't mention any
spedflcs they. would like chal\g•d but In·
stead spoke of their constitutionally
guaranteed rlgbts.
"ll was like they were saying you are 11
dirty do& • Mcau9e you have done
somethfnl to me.'' Hayward said.
It wu the 1\uUn District !hot fel t the
fury of lludent and parental pNJteat when
admlniltntort at TusUn Hieb School
btgan meuurtnc mlal.gkirts with a ruler
In fall ol 11117.
Hap1rd nid the school district has
had no more trouble since 1 revlffd drm
code wu adopted a year and one-half
ago.
''It Is rtally quite liberal," he said.
••Atmolt the_tole buls ll 1ood t.ste. And
\\'e'r• mlly preU7 Uberal about wh11t
Cult meam. ·•
•
PA,, T3ll{s ;Due 'ift!Sall J'1~quill
,,, J ,)1 . "'' . ,,, ,;.._-.... \I, • ~
' , ' 1 ... ~·
For.Ilia Ont linll tl!ls:.Y11t, -llnl tlit i.~ ~·!Ito S<l*l ,biotf . l)r. ,Slbcb I!'! Ol!I~ WCI . id· be ftprmnted by .th~ Aao<lallou'• ot. • !ht Sosi j'l"'lqln' Eknlenll!1 llcboel will bf ~l~ Ualeo W.., lht mlnls:traton .....uy attended i :'How to ficers. ~lol..l..J· WW,~"dlft-oYit " mutaQy ~ ;llfOI\ presentation t1 • nqotiate" worklhop for school ad· Stocks said be )las no Idea ·tiow long ~di .. ~ nd tht tet:"· b" made ·to Che bioa, Dr. William Stocki. minlstrators held in Massacre Canyon teachw .aala~ bargaining may ~kc and •u.~l . 1 en . ·~~ aslsstant iU"PertfitendMt saJd. • near ltivenide.. ~ indltafed that i' could'"draw Out. Ht said
begun a pomt and counter pomt Stocks said lhat ·diseusslon so far with A series of such mee ings have been that press coverage of the sessions would
negotiation over next school year's th! teacliets has .been very prellmlnary. held for county school a lnlstrators to hr. unlikely an d said that such thlngs are
salaries and benefits for the 300 teachers 'Ibe school bot,rd is ripected to _appoint teach them the ropes of bargaining. best done In secret until .formal presen-
ol Saddleback arta children. formally its negotiating committee at a Administrators say such instruction is tat1ons are re ady.
It ta a new erper~ence for both sides. May ,7 mee\lng. necessary if they are to be matched San Joaquiri teachers now receive
Previously, lhe teachen' association It is expected that if San Joaquin against lhe inc;euingly sophisticated slightly hiiher salaries than the average
made an offer to the ICbOol trusleu who tea~··· 'requetta follow the ceiieral teacher groups like the Ctllfornia county ·teacher: r.1edian county teacber
trlmmed thinp around and. pve their CG;11DtY·wide tren~. 111!Jry A~du~e of Teachers Association · (CTA). The. San Salary ls $8,200 while the· San Joaquin
approval. atioul fl ,000 to more than fat:800 ·will be Joaquin Teachers Association w a s median is '8,300, District Superintendent
This year, negotiating teams represen· presented. recently chartered by tbe CTA and may Ralph Gates said.
Quake Comes,
But Shatters
Only Nerves
By ARmUR R. VINSEL
Of Ille O.llY P'llll Stiff
A rolling earth tremor and a wave of
inst.ant, innner re):>entanCe hit Monday, 55
hours, 38 minutes and 4S seconds from
the end of a month prophets of doom
,predict will be sinful S o u t h e r n
California's last.
Today, some people are laughing, some
are disappointed that they missed the
4:21 p.m. jolt and others felt a bit like a
boy whistling through a cemetery on a
dark night.
Estimates varied slightly as to the
tremor's strength, but staff engineer Bill
Gile at the Caltech seimologica l
laboratory said it hit S.3 on the Richter
scale of quake magnitude.
The rock-and-roll ·style temblor was
centered in rugged Santa Rosa Mountains
terrain northwest of Borrego Springs, an
unpopulated area about fO miles from
the Mexican border and near the ·S.,lton
Sea.
Just one year and 20 days ago, the
same quake.prone region generated a
tremor of slightly more magnitude which
was also felt throughout the SouthlJnd
and caused minor damage.
The sharp, Monday afternoon jolt caus.
ed only minor damage, with a bank celJ...
-ing shaken loose, windows, bottles and
other glass-contained m e r c h a n d i s-e
smashed In Borrego sr.ringa businessts.
One of the quake s more humorous
aspects -since no one was hurt -was
the immediate report of a large brick
building's coUapse in southwestern Los
Angeles. (See story, Page 7).
Garage owner Roosevelt Holden and his
four employes, however ran out 14
minutes before the earthquak~ rumbled thl'O\llh the Southland's crusL,.as the old
structure collapsed due to accwnmulated
stress and f.atlgue. ,
Tall buildings sl!lnmlled sllgbUy from
Las Vegas to Los Ani;eles,, Long Beach
and San Diego, while thousands thought
for a moment the end predicted by a
variety of visionaries had come.
NL"\:on to Register
In Oemente; Utt
Asks for Vote
WASHINGTON -President N i x o n
spent 10 minutes Monday with f;ongress.
man James. B. Utt (R-~ln), who wil l
become his CQngressm1n when the
President takes· poisession of the Cotton
Estate in San Clemente as the summer
White House.
Utt reported that Nixon \old him he
Intends to register to vote in San
Clemente.
Said Utt, "l told him I'd be glad to
have him come back and vote for me.''
The congressman visited the White
House to give the President a man-of·
the-year a\vrird from the Orange County
Press Club. Utt accepted the award for
Ni xon at the club 's annual dinner earlier
this month.
Utt said the President is looking (or·
ward to spending his summer vacations
in San Cle mente. "He mentioned ho1v
he love.s the ocean and he ho~s Co:1·
gress will recess in time for him to g·.t
out there,'' Utt said ..
From Page 1
SADDLEBACK ..
only for sophon1ores.
A $9.5 million bond issue passed last
year by district \"Olers ls untouchable for
opera ting expe nses such as payment of
teacher salaries or utility bills. It is only
fo:-building.
Revenue for operating purposes comes
from the 40-cent tax rate plus '135 per
student from the state.
Trustee Patrick Backus, of Dana Point,
voted against deferring new course· ap-
proval. lie said:
"The administration Is making this
re<:Ommendation. That's l''hat they are
paid for. We have to make the transition
to the sopllomott level. 'l'Mse ~le a,.
the curriculum e1~rta, we're not. '
Trustees Hans Vogel. of Tustin, In·
dlcated he would like to cut out some of
the altern•tlve coorses to flll an elective
requirement 50 11 not to spread the
enrollmenl
~rd Prtsldtnt Michael Collini, of
Laguna Hllls, suggested a better eolutlon
would be to lncrt1se the minimum I C·
ceptable enrollment for electlve courses
frnm 12 students to perha ps JI .
Supt. Fred Brtmer &aid eliminating
some of the new courses. spread over
thrtt quart ers, would not reduce the
n.umber or full·Ume insln.icto_n nttded
but might ellminate a few part·Um•
evening lnstruetor positions:.
MERMAID MEET SPEAKER
Hosplt1llty'1 Walton
HospitJtlity Unit
Founder Slates
. .
Talk to Mermaids
DOrUe Walters, president Of HOSJ}itallty
Hostess Service, will speak Monday to·
the Menn.aids, the women's division of
Lagwia Beach Chamber of Commerce.
1be ooon luncheon in the Riviera Room
or the Hotel Laguna will follow a sOcial
bour at 11:30 a.m.
Mrs. Walters, who started a shopping ·
column ~ years ago, now heacb a staff of
200 ~ that welcome newcomers to
Southern California in the counUes of
Orange, San Dl~o, Los Angeles, San
Bernardino and' Rlvenide. · ·
Mermaids will also hear about plans
for the annual BeautifleaUon Awards
luncheon to be held May 19; a welcoming'
1roup' for veterans returning from Viet-
nam , and annquncement of the organir.a~
lion's looth mem~r.
~eningitis Vaccine
Gets Initial Trial
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A vaccine for
m::.1 :ngococcal mening:tis ,. :11 btgin n
trial today at the hiarinc Cor1i; It'" ·c·1t
Depot, where 22 recruits ha\'c s:1~fl:C:J
the severe brain Infecti on since Jan. 1.
El Toro Lancers
Win Stveepstahes
In Y Tra ck Meet ..
~lore than 50 youngs ters from El Toro,
Mi::1sion Viejo and Laguna BcArh con·
verged on Laguna High 's Guyer Field
Saturday to ta ke part in the South
Orange County's Gra Y inter-c lub tr Dck
m~I.
El Toro's Lancers captured the team
S\veepstaktll with 35 points compiled over
12 events. The Beavers of El Toro cap-
tured second with 26 points . followed by
Laguna's Makahu wit h 18 poi nts.
r.fisslon Viejo'• two groups, the Eagles
and Spartans, scored 15 ind 2 rt:speo-
tl \'t:!ly .
First place winners In the events in·
elude :
50 yard dash, ages 9 and 10: Eric
Springer.
50 yard dash , ages 11 and 12; Ken
Moreno.
JOI yard dash, age~ 9 and 10; Eric
Springet .
100 yard dash. ages 11 and 12; Ken
Moreno.
Softball throw, ages 9 and IO: Jhn
Rants.
Softball throw, ages 11 and 12: Shane
Stinson.
Long Jump. ages 9 and 10; Wiiiiam
Daniels.
Loni Jump, ages 11 a.od 12: David
Knapp.
440 yard Qlr:lnt. ages 9 and 10: Eric
Springer.
443 yard sprint, ages 11 and 12, Gabby
Grijalva.
High Jump, qes t ind JO; William
Danltla.
High Jump, "" II and ll; David Knapp.
Standing Long Jump, ages t and 10;
Jim Rants.
Standlni Long Jump, 11" II and U;
Gay Connally.
440-ylrd relay, ages 9 and IO: the
Lancers.
440-yard 1'lay, agel II ond II: the
Beavers.
· From Page 1
.COUNTY PLANNER SPEAKS • • •
the area be purchased by the public," he
said.
Bailey said it all boils down to a ques-
tion or where the county should $pend
jts recreation dollars.
• ' '• I ' •jts u better to buy 200 acres inland for
the county residents or is it better to buy
more ocean frontage ?" Bailey said .
He not~ that far· more inland property
may be bought with available dollars
than can ocean property. '
Bailey S:Jso chided these who criticize
the supervisors for not spending more in
providing wa ter recreation areas.
"I don't see any big grounds"'eli of sup-
port. I don't see people attending the
board meetings and saying, 'We don't
need more flood control projects v.•e
don 't need more roads, buy ocean 'fron·
'T~~ said thai ~~rvisOrS' action in
abandoning the Salt Creek Road was bas-
ed on a law which allowed such action
From Page 1
FRANCE; ••.
reslsta~ hero and nation~ leadti: .
Chaban-Delmas described De C)aulle as
1 man who. "restored France's honor, led
her to victory and reestablished her
worldwide mission." The Assembly, jam.
·med to c;apacity, rose and applauded. The
Communists and some Sociallsl8. re·
malned seated.
Defferre, the Socialist floor leader,
made a brief reply criticlzitlg De Gaulle's
interpretation of the constitution. · -
Deferre expressed hope the Assembly
would rem:iin in session to keep an eye
on the prcsidenti3l elecUQn. Tben'he an·
nounccd his Ol\'ll candidacy. •
The atm1;ph~ .. c \\' • ., <'·lm a 11 d
dignified in co·~tr:-~t t1 t!1c_~t::· niv ~c-;:r:·;
that marked De GJullc·s r(<ura io f,O\\·cr
11 ye:-rs r..:n.
Defferrc \':~s it c:-ndidate for a sho:·t
Ume ogalnrt . De Gtulle in f:e 19G5
presidential race but withdrew before the
final stages, of the campaign to mzke
room for Francois Mitterrand as can·
didate for all France's left wing parties.
Eormer Preml~r .Georges Bi<l:ault. 69,
' "~ headed the illepl secret lrmy
'organization revolt qal:nat De Gaulle in
1961.Q arti:I who was allowed to riturn
·from exile last summer, told a news con·
ference he also might run.
Mitterand bas not said whether he will
run again .but fomat1011 of ·a ~!Mitterand
for President" ·committee ,in Paris was
aniounctd. · '
1\ctin-: Prr-;idcnt Alain Poher indicated
J~r. mi::;ht ru 1.
r~:'l!'l1Uot•, the' former premier, was
r:1·~:.t by D::: Gaulle last summer but sup-
1 L·cl 1'~1 -1 in the Sunday referendum
\r'•ich De Geullc Jost.
Leftis t and middle-of.the road politi·
c: ·ns ;:;t o:icc bega n :1asty talks on can·
d:'.1~1cs of lhcir ow n to pit against Porn·
pidou.
I
providing that the 'public would-never
need the actess. again.
This word "never" he said was the
basis for some court action against the
county position. He noted that the courts
have traditionally been reluctant to
overturn such govemmenta:I body rulings,
unless the decisions were flagrantly
wrong.
Regarding the air transportation nee~
of the county, Bailey said that for the
foreseeable fu~ure; Orange Counly Air·
port will ha ve lo do.
He said that tr an s por t a tio n re-
quirements of ·the COWlty had increased
fantasUcally in recent years. He said that
Orange County Airport traffic had in-
creased from·B0.000 passengers in 1967 to
600,000 passengers in 1968.
MUST MEET DEMANDS
The county mu st rrieel such demands,
Bailey said or the present pr.otest over
the airports will be nothing but a tea pot
tempest to the cry raised by industry,
and others who depend "upon air service.
Bailey discounted the use of the El
Toro Marine Ai r Station on a joint com~
mercial basis. He noted that the Pereira
'report indicated a 'rhole new airport
u•ould have to be constructed.
He said the econon:ic and political
muscle is now being c!:crcised by the
Saddl eback Valley a~ :oclu lions and
residents and noted the st'Junch Navy
resistance lo any commercial intrusion-. -
Bailey said thct recently Air California
and Air West attempted to g et
pen11 isslon to use Navy bases at Los
Alamitos-or-El Toro while the Orange
County Airport runways "'ere being
resurfaced.
BUSING PEOPLE
"They said confidently 'Oh we'll just
use El Toro till you, resurfa ce the Orange
County airpor t.' Ai r Cal and Air West are
n::nv busing people to Long Beach," he
s: !'l.
However, Bailey said that as the tac-
fi-::i! operations of the base are reduced
in .Javor of the". reserve operations,
r .ih::ns some use· of. the base wwld be
considered.
He said airport problems would still ex-
ist, that "all you're doing is kicking it
over other people."
The planner said that off.shore air .sites
were being studied as well as a location
in the San Joaquin hills. Both presented
serious problergs of access, and for the
off•shore location, engineering problems.
Capistrano Council
Re-elects Mayor
San Juan Capis trano Mayor Edward
Chermak was reelected to his mayoral
post for another term -his third -Mon·
day nfght by a unanimous vote of the city
council.
MayOr pro-tempore William Bathgate
was also returned to that postilion by
councilmen who select lhe city's chief
from the councitm anic ranks .
OAll .. Y-"ILOT Stefl ....... WILLIAM DANIELS DISPLAYS WINNING FORM IN LONG JUMP
El Toro Yountittr, 10, Storts Jn YMCA MQt tn Laoun 1
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• • Reaeh
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:VOL 62, NO. 102 , 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES : ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRI~ 29, '1969 .TEN CENTS
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South Coast Facing Crisis in County Growth?,
.... . ... .
' °"'11ie County's startling populatlon
iOcreases, the Salt Creek Road con.
tr<Wersy, airport n«ds and problem.o,
and planned communlty .developroeot
were all touched upon in a wide ranging
talk Monday ·by Stuart Balley, aasistan~
cOOnty planning direct.or.
'Can The Coastal Area Survive Rapid
Pol>ulatlon Growth?" waa the topic ol
Bailey's tali:, to lhe Laguna Bea~h
Democratic Club, but the planner said thlt it -mig!it' well be, "bow are we gOing
. '
Down the
Mission
Trail
•
Registration Set
For Kindergarten
CAPISTRANO BEACH -Kindergarten
reiistration for children in the Capistrano
Unified School District will be held May 5
through A1ay 9. All youngsters who will
reich their fifth birthday on or before
December 2 are eligible to register.
All district elementary schools will
• participate in sl.gnups ~ween 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m.
Parents inust show school officials a
birth certilicate, duly atteated baptism
certificate, or pauport as proof ol age.
ln,fonnaUon about the immuniuUon oC
tho c)lild Ill' pollo!nyeliUs and mwles is
al~ ~ Ill' IJll'· , _ .t>Menls ~y go to· anyHt
lehool -l!>lo. !ls!: . ~ ... brvWll''V.-.";pi y,
La!IUna Nfcuel; Ricbard ~
School, ~ La Cresta Drive,. Dana
Point; Palllades School, 2G4li Sacramen-
to, Capistiano Beach, and San Juan
Elementary School, 31M2 Cimino Real,
San Juan Capistrano.
•• .IC Banquet Set
MISSION VIEJO - A Charter Night
B~uel i.! to be held Friday at 1 p.m. by
the Mission Viejo Junior Chamber of
Comriift.ce at the Shem'on Bead!. ~
21112 Ocean Ave., Huntington Beach.
Guest speaker will be B o b
Reifschneider, president of tht Cellfumia
Jaycee!:. Dinner is $8 a plate.
e Eye Tetu Slatecl
MISSION VIEJO-A rr .. eye wtlnji
clinic for preschool children will be held
Wednesday at the La Paz Preschool,
24772 Chrisanta Drive, Mission v,Iejo.
ChUdren at the school win be tested
fron1 9 to 11:30 a.m. Other children from
three to five years old may be tested
from 11 :30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The testing program is for lh~ detec-
tion of · amblf!lpla, pOOr vision In one •'i•. and J• a 'project o1 the eamorrua-Jawaii Elis Mijor Projed, Inc.
•• Scletaee Chief Talks
CAPISTRANO BEACH -_Pb 111 p
Grignon, science -chairman for the
Capistrano Uolfled School DIJlrict, lfl!I
address the annual confei'enet of .the Na·
tional Science Teachers' Auociatloo
Saturday in San Diego.
Grignoo, who futroi!Ucea oe<!.,.,ioCY in-
to the curriculum last year and q:panded
it into the elementary and iUQlor hlih
school curriculum this .year, wUI cll!cuss
the role of ocunology studies ln ' medem high school.
e 811• 1Jri.,er Clt_ecl
CAPISTRANO BEACH -Mn. U.cy
Cavagnaro, i bus drim for the
Capistrano Unified School Dlltrlcl, won
eecond place for her ability to pilot a 11·
p&sseriger tandem We. tcbool bus ~ln
compelltlon with drivers ftvrn ·all over
Onlng• C.Unly. Five other CUSD driftn allmd tbe
Jtth annul! oounty ._iitloo held lost
8ablrUy In tho -SllCl1im pork-
••• ·~ The cootal inelalled • tat ol .... -. ud-1-driviDI skill, a writen ~ .. bJi about a dlflk:ult obslade ... ne.
Dm<n takinl parl Included Mn.
Cavagnaro; Mn. Frankie Wilcox, who
woo .....,.i place last year; Michael
Seyller, JoMPh Romero. Jody lfillyanl
udJuyFomsltr·
:• Sheep Vse CeUqoir
MISSION VIEJO -First uoen ol Sad-
dlei.ck Colltge's new pefl11anent campus
probabb' ,...•t be lltudentl bUt "-· -
Graden are begbming to make 1 ftW
d<nts in the terrain bOt -ol the '°" _.. ol rolllng 111111 llill la covered witll
1'8SS fodder ideal !or gruln(.
Ae<ordlnily, Sadclleba<k lnllt.., Mon-
day night collod !or bids from shepherds
on -•Mlle t:ainP'I'--"" Moy ~
July. ' ..
to keep the lemmln&s lrom Jlll'hlng us
ovf:r the cliffs of Laguna 1"
The c:oGnty ... 'growing by eight -'~
an.-hour, 'Balley said.· This' means one
more car for each_aey:~.people,.il means
. inCreaslng 'scli0o1; utfllty anB recreaUOn
n~ and aervlces, ,ho said. ' -
ilalleY, pointe<fout that three yean ago,
the 9,tltlO-penon c:Ommunlty of Mlision
Viejo 'Wu open rolling ranie land. The -:-.,,,....lo lhrio-lour1hs the size
,
, ~ • ~... 11611,.Y l"ILOT 911ft ,,,_
' WITH LAGUNA SCHOOL 'llus DRIVER, IT'S SAFETY FIRST
* F,raok Mello T.,. C~y Drivers In THI ol Skill1
.... ! }' : l .. ~· I
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Bus Driver :from Laguna·
Captures First ·in 'Rodeo'
-It• wasn't Hactly, tlie Grand Prix, but
the· driving-competition won by Frank
Mello, a· tr.nu veleran Laguna Beach
. Uifilied Dtstrfct school bus driver.-'i1o
doubt means more' ·to Lquna Beach
parents. .
Mello won lint p~ In a .school bus
"rodeo" held recent!J at the Anabtlm
stadium. Acttlally called tlie "Orange
.. County Scbool Bus' 'Drivwi "l'ralni'!i ..
Institute/' the cooipetitioo involved' 100
drivers. . J • f
/!be drivers ptloied .their 3$;foot Ion~
,.iJow bebemollis.throqh a mue ol nar-
row alleys, made sharp turnl, park'ed,
and ran through other -· Calilcmla Highway Patrol ollicen Jac!lod.
'Ii.no bu been witll the oc1"1ol dillrict
llnce llfl.
l!e\hal eu..,.i a aa1~4wn tor tlle
:dllllrlct•uch ,..._ -·· -........ m<at la at Allio EI-• y Sdlool
wbeft lie allo-M I...-.
An,. ........... ·IJl.ltll m1les
Jn 1-&'1 *--* ..... ., .. Mello
.,,.,... tbat the tOwa'• tillltlDI narrow
, Laguna Beach wu allo re~tod,'by
Joe .Fletcher, a new distzict dr:fver who
placed · fourth, Norma Condon, Allee
Wagner, and Raoul Alvarado.
Pl!yHla jlines, district tranaporlaUon
dlapatcher, said the district baa annually
... t J)lltlclpants t'o tbe competition and
usuafly places one or more in the top
finisher&.
. The institute ii one form of the ~
stai\t dr(ver lra1iitng • P-.ilm !IM!t the
district participates ih tO pfovide'he1v1
emphasis on 'Saf~ty, she said.
Steele Jtfarlceu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stoc1; market
punched out a solid gain in very' acUve
trading today, with brokers rtpOrting "•
lot ol buyers who had bOtn on the
sidelines getting back ln'to the . ac-
tion. (See· quo«aUons, Paga !IHI).
Mission Vl<Jo Company ol lands lor coun-
ty parks.
Regarding Satt Creek Road, Qalley said
that tbe Cowny Board ol Supervison
abandoned the road because in their opi-
nion it was no Joilger needed as a public
thoroughfare.
Following some hot questioning, Bailey
said that the supervisors did not have to
abandon the roadway. He ·said that
whethtr·or not the public ever had access
to the public tidelands over the road was
e
Ex-premier,
Socialist
Chief Ready
PARIS (UPI) -Fonner Gaulllst
Premier Georges Pompldou and Socialist
leader Gaston De.fferre, mayor of
Manteilles, announced today they will run
for president to succeed Charles De
Gaulle.
Pompidou, 57, ·first to announce, w.as
acclaimed later by a standing ovation o[
the '97-m•n Gaulllst ~ group in the .
Natlooal A-.bly. H• iDdicaled ha
woold be •. otnioc· lllU prealdent in tbe
Gelllllat tradition. (Penonallty· Prollle,
a moot point and tllat b now tangled in
litigation.
Bailey said thal when tract maps for
the Laguna Niguel Cc¥npany's develop..
nient at SaJt Creek were presented, he
tried to require public acceBs to tbe
ocean.front as a condition of approval but
that the company argued against tt and
tbe planning commission decided in the
company's' favor.
"1 tried' .to convince them that lheris
e's
Pqe :t.\ , 1. · , _i, "' • -.... ~Cr :od "" tdilttifto'?ln~· .• a ........ ~ · wben thl N&llanal
lliaCe Miem Iii · JIOO --m ijllll!d~f'!Pr .. -~"111po -
qoioa cil6oa>Doimaa . • ohort
1rlllute to De Gaulle as a worlln'ie
(let FRANCE, i'ap I)
Laguna Cleaning
Lots Because
No One Else Will
lt'a dilficult finding anyone tllat -b
to chop down Laguna's weeds.
And those who are Willfnc to undertake
the task of ru~lsh abatement want to
charge dearly for the work.
'l'11is wu the asseument today ol City
Manager James D. Wheaton as he ex·
plained wby the city is back in the
business of cleaning lots. It's lo hold
down costs of tbe necessary work.
..
• • ' '·
. ' . ~ be pu~llc •cctll!'· Tiie orily ~
we could do wu have them d.eollJ>.tbli!p
so that anytime the CGUDty pta ....0
money_ together it can &o in tlllre ml
buy it," Bailey said. • •
''Tbe public can move1fD.:Ulen1theldfli
after tomorrow .nc:1.buy'u.arvac1sa parking k>t. I made vory m. tlllt. _
road was wide enoqlli) and 4be
arei. was acceptable for tbe plibllc ~
(lieO l'LANNElt, Pap ll '. . . .
' ' ' . .
Last yW the work of cleaning about
470 parcels was put out to bid of private
contncton. Howls lrom property owners
followed becau¥ of the steep charges !or
manpawer and machinery workin1 the
dllficult slopes and gulleys.
The city th1a year Is oveneelng tbe
work ol cleaning weedl and rubbl"1 lrom
the same 1111J11ber ol Iola lo hold down
costs.
Flood' Dalritige ·Suit Filed
Wheaton said the tangle ol wild growth
th1a year ii thicker and higher than in tlle
~ beca.,. ol heavy ralna.
As IUch It pmeots• a greater poteoUll
firt hazard for the wann summer
months.
The city manager encouraged property o,...,. to.clean;DP tbeii" own parcels by
whatever mqns they choose. This may
stlll be clone wllero growth and rubbl.ih
have not been removed by city crews.
Whtean said 'the abatement crews are
busy in the northern -of the city but have not yet llarted on central.
aouth<m and Top ol the World ll!Clon.
Property ownen may notify the city of
their Intent to c-up the property., The
city acratcl\tl the parcel oil the llst and
-beclt after the arranged clata to ,.. that tbe wa la completed helm
weed abatemeol c:rewo -od.
A 1105,11\ll claim lot damagp has•"
filed agillost 'Orqe \c.,mty~aod, tbe
county' Flood Control Dtstrfct becaule:of
ciestructlon ~· . ~ by ' flOo!I
waterS in rap.1uy:m~ .. ~ .. ·, · .~
Claimant Is Te"'"°""~··_ _., inc: ol. . . ' . I~ j.agUM ~ · . • ~ llnp'• Ii
the-third i!lalm to be filed for the, oame
ca'use by Leiuoa 'Cian)'Oll' proporty
owners.
Prmoosly, Ha)'.lllOlld F. Miller, Illa
Laguna -Canyon Road: filed a clllm' foe
139,311 and Lola E. McGUI, ol llM
Laguna Canyon Road, liled !or dl!Jlages
in exceii or'$t0,fl00.
Cause of the claim by Teloolcs as well
U the Others ls atated IS uqadlnc, ez ..
'
cavaUon,, removal ot~berml', road eOn.
itruct1on· and flood colilrol channel-~
wbldl dlverlod surface waters lo prlvste
Ji'Operly cauoloc U>e-~."
'All '<latma 1laYe ·-dOnled by the
Boord ·ol Supervllon and-referred to·lho
county counael.
0r .. ,.
su:.u ud .~ --'"• drtitr'I grui.t ........
--Vandals Cami Minor
. Damage at Playhobse
Saddlebac~ ·.F e-eiing . Pinch
Minor clarnqe to tbe 'tfllll of the new
Lapna-Moolton Pl 1yhou1 e· was
dilcoffnd MGnday-olter-,..,.,, vandall
appa"'111y cllmbed a IO-foot ocallold and
threw bolta agalnst the plalla".
0..,... Quinn, job suptrlnlonden~ said
clamqe WU JM!lllllble bUt said there WIS
ccin6ml that the. yOlllJCllen might have
falltn from the acafl'okl. He aakl police 11a.e ..,.... to-_,,, potroUn1 "' the
ladllty that is lo-· ~
(
By THOMAS l'Oll'.l'lJNE
Of ""' DMlr ftjllf tteff ,
· Feeling the pinch ol a tight bodgtt,
Saddlebeclt Colleg• trustees Mooclay
nliht turned down teachln«i rtall _.,
10< vocational programa fn ounlnc and
electmUclautfall'. _
The programs woold haye coot l\li.lltlt
for nunlnc and '61,000 for eledtonics.
Trustees didn't feel enrollment would be
great enoaglt·to·jaltlly tllo .. _.. •
Boord memben decided by -action
"'(
that · studellb ltltemlod In· -. two
vot11Uonal fields shall attend Orange
C06lt College for anod'ler year under
transfer •smment.
Twenty-students lrom the Sad-
dlebaick am thll year are eorolled in
llW1lDtl and JI In -· TnutOes lllO declined lo toke action on
approvll ol 34 new --beeiuae qi the .-y ouUilolt 10< -l<h>ol )'ear. They .ukadfGra._tatthBr-~ M., 11 on w!let C011rat1 the1 .can att by
without and w!iat the savlilp 'WQ\lld l>e,
Board mem)><r Lou!J Zltnlk.otLaglllla
Beach, who oerves oo tho budget com-
mittee, said' the pinch nm year wW """t lrom the addltloo ol bJCb cost. low
enrollment sopbomoft programa.'
1'111)' perceot altrltlon from tho starl ol
tbe lrt!hman year to the~ ol Qle
oophomore year lll normal, lie -•
Saddlebad: dill ,... -C...-SADI>l.iDaf,,Pll',ll
' ' I ' \.
-, :..--. •: -" --I .,_. I ............ ' .... II I 'lt ,_ ,..,. .... ..-.., ,, -.... "-....._. II :..-1
:..:: -.: . --" .....,-. w ~
--I .......... ,. . ....... , ..... ..... ...,, ... _...,..,, -.. ,,...._ '' .. -. ==: . .
'· '
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r
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PILOT .. . ,,, ~,.
LOGBOOK
The Times Are Changin'
I
And Profs Had Better
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of lllt o.11'1 Pllllt '""
' UCJ's students have won the right to hire and fire two percent ot their
"-prolwors.
The lhKfenf.s bad sa.Jd they Wlnled to hire and fire 10 percent of their
1 protesson. But Otanncellor Dan Aldrich split the differen«: and came up with • two. (lt't lhe New Math.)
' ' J
I •
'
•
'
Thia ill known as 1 compnimlae. But it doesn't makt
AllY dlfferenct, ol course.
Bec1ute the way things are gom,, the students
eventually will 1et what they're really alter -100 peretnt.
And thla ts how, I l.ma&lne. the 1yatem will work:
·. llr. Fellrwortlt Cerebrum, Nobel Prl,..wlnner. walta
· nerviwJy oulllde the door ol the UC! Student Council
clwQben. He Is nut, in line for a job interview.
· The world-famed developer of the mechanical appen·
dlx has known hard times lately. Jn six years, tie's been
fired by the students of 14 collegts. The reasons were al-
ways the same.
Cerebrum, 8J , couldn't keep up ":Jth the ni&ht life. He kept fallini asleep
at campus pot partjes. Not only that , ht couldn 't lift tht bricks his contracts
required him to toss at passing college administrators.
' Cerebrum is reflecting sadly on all this when suddenly the door is fluna
· open. Out of the UCJ ~tudent Council cnambers tumbles Dr. Arthur Schlesing-
er Jr.
'
He is followed by a shout from within: "Next!"
Cerebrum, reaching for his cane, rises creakily from his chair. He helps
: SCblesinger up from the noor.
' " "Hello, Arthur," he says to the curaing ex-Ivy League historian. "I
' · haven't seeu you since thole MIT atomic research ttudent.s blew up Harvard.
.: What happened inside?"
' · "Happened? I'll tell you what happenid," aay1 Schle1Jnaer, bruab1nf off
' 'his Nehru jacket alld •tralshltnlna out hia love beada. ''The flnt three bouro.
of the grllllng weren't too bad. But then I reach 'up to wipe tbe peraplraUon
from my brow. That was my mistate." He choka back a IOb.
"Control yourselr, Arthur."
"I'm sorry, lt"1 just. that when I wiped my brow I ruined everything. I
knocked off my shoulder-length. hair-piece." Schlesina:er bursb into tears.
Cerebrum shake. his head: sympathetically. His own shoulder-length wl1.
· be happily noUc.., BUrVlv" the lhaklng.
He saya farewell to his weeplnr colleague, screws up his courage and en-ters the Student Council cl>ambera.
lt is pitch-black iniide, eicept for a spotlight at the far end Of the room.
Cerebrum, ·fiullJna a puce &ign, steps illtO lite •potlllhl. .
1be queiU'On. ~ hard and fast: "Yea· ever been bulled?"
"Ob, yeai. Twelve ~ lut year alone."
••Hmm. Not bad. But what for?"
t ~. 0 Seven Umea for partlclpatlq: In a campus riot and five times for as-.
Sllliling • police olllcer." . ' , 1 .. A what?"
"A Pill· I bt; your pardon."
"Your a~pllcaUon H)'I you're 23 years old. You look' older to.me.''
''1'1?at'a -becauae of the subject I now tuqi. It's very w~.''
~ _11Wllat 1J it?", :r
'1 "Guenilla warfare." , '
Tho n>01J1 bunts with cheen. Cerebrum, cackIJna joyOUJly, la hired on
.the~-.
Mission Viejo Revelers
I Start Early f°':r 'Cinpo'
I Cinco de Mayo will come oo the fourlh eel for !he teen It! from 2:30 to 5:30 p:m.
thia yur. 'wltb Verg Hl(Opian a<ting as master ol
At least the community celebraUon ceieJDues
planned by more than 20 organitaUons ln 1
• • Mis..lon Viejo will be held,Sunday, May .f. -A parade of decorated bikes will roll
.et Mission Viejo High School. ' out ~artJ,y at ·e:30 p.m. led by the
There will be everythin• from selection iflsslon VJejo Band and Drill Team.
of a queen to a rodeo. Evenls wllJ run fdariachi DUlSIC will be perfonned
from about ~n un_til close firew<>rks ·through the day.
at I p.m. Here a: the hneup: The t" ....... Pendl I u · n. -Mexican dinners will be served in the -..... -... • .,.. e on iuanne vvrps
school ca!eleria from 12:30 p.m. unW Band will perfonn from 7 p.m. until 7:30
dusk. ~ . p.m. ~ ,
-Game booths sponsored by va_rious -Great Western ROdto ,_,ill break loose
organizations will be open through tho at 7:30 p.m.
I
~~.A snack bar "'ill seli tacos and bur· -A ~orb display will conclude the
BalloUng will be held to select a queen celebraUon at I p.m.
from five finalists. The winner will be
introduced at evening ceremonies.
-A "BatUe ol tbe Bands" will be otag-Tustin Board i ...... co•" ""'""''"" COM""' Rebuffs Pleas
Rob•rf fl!, Wt-'
T\oll'l•t l(,, .. ;1
Elfi*
Tlto101t1 A. M111,hf~t
MIMtltlt l•fltr
~icht" '· Nill ·-..... t i.., 1:.i ... ---212 F•r•t• A••·
M1ill111 AU.t111 1.0 ...... ._ tJ6JI --CISf• ~1 M Wftl ... , 1"-' ..._, hitdl: nn -.i ..... ......,.
~ .. tdl; -... "'"'
On Sthool Dress
It wasn't quite the mini-skirt con-
troversy all over 31ain. but students
seeking liberaUr.aUon of the TusUn Un1on
High School Dlslrid dress code were
rebuffed by school trustees Monday
•liht.
About a dozen students from Tustin
High SChool were told to telk to their stu·
dent representatives and principal, not
the boml.
"We are charged with the job of ~ing
the schools are run. not doing the running
ourselves," said Board President William
C. "Bud" Hayward 1'>day.
He u.Jd the students didn't mention any
spedflca they would like changed but In·
stead spok< of their constltuUonally
~rflhtl.
t'It wu like they were saying you are •
dirty dog because: )"OU h&ve done
something to me,'' Hayward aald.
It was tbe 'l\IJlin District that felt the
fury of ttudent and partntal protell whtn
admilllltralon at Tustin Hiii> School
bepn mHJUrlne mlnl-skirll with • ruler
In fall of 11117.
Hayward said the ochool dlslrlct has
had DO mort trouble olnco a ""1sed drw
code wll a~ year and one-half
110.
"ll la rtally qul1' liberal," he said.
"Almost tbe 10le liul1 II 1ood taste. Aod
we·re rtally prttly liberal about what
that mtans."
'
•
P~y Talk~. Due in San Joaquin
!.'
l'tr Ille fll'll lllllt WI YW, ttllCMr1 . Fl. ~ Biii JOoq,,111~ ~tary ~
~ ..... flallltW tYltPJY·
11lt CHJtrlct ·and the teaehen have
begun a "point and counter point"
negotiation over ne11l school year's
aalariea and benelits far the 300 tetchera
of Saddleback area chlldren.
It is a new experlenct for both sides.
Previously. the teachers' association
made an offer to lbe school trustees who
trimmed thin&• around and give their
approval .
This year, ne1:otiatlng teams reprtsen·
Quake Comes,
But Shatters
Only Nerves
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 l~t DlllJ ,llitt lltll
A rolling earth tremor and a wave of
instant, innner repentance bit Monday, SS
hours, 38 minutes and 45 seconds from
the end of a month prophets of doom
predict \\'ill be sinful S o u t h e r n
California's last.
Todey. some people are laughi ng, some
are disappointed that they missed the
4:2 1 p.m. jolt and others felt a bit like a
boy whistling through a cemetery on a
dark night.
Estimates varied slii;btly as to the
tremor's strength, but staff engineer Bill
Gile at the Caltech selmological
laboratory said it bit 5.3 on the Richter
scale of quake magnitude.
The rock-and-roll style tem}:llor WM
centered in rugged Santa Rosa Mountains
terrain northwest of Borrego Springs, an
unpopulated· area about 40 miles from
the Mexican border and near the Salton
Sea.
Just one year and 20 days ago, the
saine quake-prone region generated a
trt!mor of slightly more magnitude which
was also felt throughout the Southland
and caused minor damage.
The sharp, Monday afternoon jolt caus·
ed only minor damage, with a bank ceil·
ing shaken loose, windows, bottles and
other glass-contained m e r c h a n d J s e
smashed ln Borrego Springs businesses.
One of the quake's more humorous
aspects -since no one was hurt -was
the immediate report of a large brick
buUding's collapse in southwestern Los
Angeles. (See st'ory, Page 7).
Gar~ owner Roo!eve1t Holden and his
four employes, however ran out 14
minutes before the earthquake rumbled
thro~h the Southland's crust, as the old
structure collapsed due to accummulaled
stress and. fatigue.
Tall bulldlngs !hlmmied sllghUy from
Las Vegas to Los Angeles, Long Beach.
and San Diego, while thousands thought
for a moment the end predicted by a
variety of visionaries had come.
Nixon to Register
In Clemente; Utt
Asks for Vote
WASHINGTON -President N i 1 o n
spent 10 minutes Monday with Congress-
man James B. Utt (R·Tust1n ), who will
become his congressman ·when the
President takes possession of the Cotton
Estate in San Clemente as the summer
White House.
Utt reported that Nixon iold him he
Intends to register to vote Jn San
Clemente.
Said Utt, •·1 told him I'd be glad to
have him come back and vote for me."
The congressman visited the White
ltouse tG give the President a man-of·
the-year award from the Orange County
Press Club. Utt accepted the award for
Nixon at the club's annual dinner earlier
this month. '
Utt said the President is looking for-
ward to spending his summtr vacations
in San Clemente. "He mentioned bow
he loves the ocean and he hopes Con·
gress will recess in time for him to get
out there," Utt saJd.
From Pqe 1
SADDLEBACK ..
only for sophomores.
A $9.5 million bond issue passed last
year by district voters is untouchable for
operating expenses such as payment of
teacher salaries or uUlity bUls. It is only
for building.
Revenue for OJ)erating purpo.9!S comes
from the 40-cent tax rate plus $US per
student from lbe state .
~Trustee Patrick Backus. of Dana Point,
v ed against deferring new course a~
p val. He said :
'The administration is making thls
recommendation. That's what they •re
paJd for. We have to make the transition
to the 30phom0ft level. These ~le are
the curriculum experts, we're not. '
Trustees Hans Vogt!, of Tustin. in·
dicated he would like to cut out some of
the •ltematlve courses to nu an elective
rtqulrtment so as not to spread tht
enroum,nt.
Board Prealdent Michael C.lllns, of
Laguna Hills, suggested a better solution
would be 10 increase lhe minimum ac-
ctpta.ble CJlrollment for electivci courses
from 12 students to perhaps II.
Supt. Frtd Brtmtr A1d eliminating
some of the new couna:, spread over
three quarten, would not reduce the
number of full ·ttme instructon needed
but mtaht •llmlnate a f"' part4lme
tvenfne Instructor postilons.'
I
tllll tbe i.....e;. ... tbe ocllool """"
, .. ,~ "" """'"" ... oral um .. be/en tbe
llll&taU1 ....... -f""&eDtation II -19. 1be llolrd, Dr. WIUtam Stocks, asWtant aupe:rtntendtnt said.
Stocki nld that diicusston so far with
Ibo 1'a-1 bas ..,.. very f""llminary.
Tne school board 1 upected to appoint fonnally Ill negoti ting committee at a
ifay 7 meeting,
It b upected at if San Joaquin
ttacber's request.I follow tbe aenerat
county.wide trend, a salary schedule of
about '7,000 to more thin $13,000 w!U be
presenttd.
MERMAID MEET SPEAKER
Hospltallty'a Walton
Hospitality Unit
FoUJider Slates
Talk to Mermaids
Dottle Wallen, preaident of Hospitality
Hostess Service, will speak Monday to
the Merma.1ds, the women's divilion of
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce.
'I'be noon luncheon In the Wviera Room
of the Hotel Laguna will follow a social
hour at 11:30 a.m.
Mrs. Walters, who started a shopping
column 20 years ago, now heads a staff of
200 hoate.sses that welcome newcomers to
SouUlem California in the cOunties of
Oraag<, San Diego, Los Angel.., San
Bernardino and Riverside.
Mermaids will also · hear about plans
for the annual Beautification Awards
luncheon to be held May 19; a welcoming
group for veleram returning from Viet-
nam, and aMouncement or the organiz.a ..
tion 'a lootb member.
Meningitis Vaccine
Gets Initial Trial
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A vaccine for
rnenillgococcal menln&IUs will begin a
trial today at the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, wher' 22 recruits have suffered
the severe brain infection since Jan. I.
El Toro Lancers
Win Sweepstakes
In Y Traf;k Meet ..
t\fore than SO youngsters from El Toro,
1'.tis.sion Viejo and Laguna Beach con-
verged on Laguna High's Guyer Field
Saturday to take part in the South
Orange County's Gra Y inter-club track
meet .
El Toro's Lancers captured the team
sweepMakes with 35 polnta compiled over
IZ events. The Beavers of El Toro ca~
tured secand with 26 points, followed by
Laguna's Makahas with 18 points.
Mission Vlejo's two groups, the Eagles
and Spartans, scored 15 and 2 respec.
Uvely.
First place winners In the events in·
elude :
50 ya rd dash, age s 9 and 10: Erle
Springer .
SO yard dash, ages 11 and 12; Ken
Moreno.
IOI yard dash, ages 9 and IO: Eric
Springer.
JOO yard dash. ag's 11 and 12: Ken
1.1oreno.
Softball throw, 11es 9 and 10: Jim
Ranls.
Softball throw. ages 11 and 12; Shane
Stinlon.
Long Jump, ages t and 10; William
Daniels.
long Jump. ages 11 and 1Z: Davkl
Knapp.
'40 yard sprint. aa:'s 9 and JO; Erie
SprinJtt.
4fG yard sprint. ag's 11 and 12. Gabby
Grijalva.
Hi1h Jump, ages 9 ind JO; William
Danie It.
Hi&h Jump. Ii'' 11 and 12 ; David
Knapp.
Standing Lona Jump, aaes t and 10;
Jim Rants.
.~tandln& Long Jump. ages II and It;
Gay Conn1lly.
440-yard rtl1y, ages 9 and 10: lhe
Lancen.
441).fant J'f'lay, agu It and 12; the
Beaven.
or. St«b ·U<f · otber dfNICf' od·
ml'nlltraton rteently attended a "Kew to
. negotiate'' worUhop for school ad·
rninistrators held ln Massacre canyon
near Riverside.
.\ ~r;es of such meetings have been
held for county school administrators to
teach Lbem the ropes of bargaining.
Administrators say such instruction is
necessary if they are to ·be matched
against the increasingly sophisticated
teacher groups lli• the California
Teacbera Association (CTA). The San
Joaquin Teachers A.s.wciaUOn was
recently chartered by the CTA and may
• bl ri:presented by the Assocl1Uon'1 a(.
flcen.
Stocks said he has no idea how Jong
teachet $1laJ'y. bar&ainfng may .take and
lndlcat!d'Ui:ai tt4coUld draw out. .a+ said
that press: coverage of the sessions would
ht unUkeJy and said that such things are
best done in secret until formal presen-
tations are ready.
San Joaquin teacht rs now receive
slightly higher salariCs than lhe average
county teacher. Median county teacher
ulary is M,200 while the San Joaquin
median Ls $8,300, Dlstrict SuperiJltendent
Ralph Gates said.
Fron• Pege 1
COUNTY PLANNER SPEAKS • • •
the area be purchased by the public," he
said.
Balley said it all boils down to a ques·
tion of where the couoty should spend
it.s recreation doll.an:.
"ls it better to buy 200 acres Inland for
the county residents or is it better to buy
more ocean frontage?" Bailey said.
He noted that far more inland property
may be bought with available dollars
tban can ocun property.
Bailey al.so chided these ,_,ho criticize
the supervisors for not spending more in
providing 1,11ater recreation areas.
"I don't see any big groundswell of sup-
port. I don 't see people attending the
board meetings aad saying, 'We don 't
need more flood control projects, we
don't need more roads, buy ocean fron-
taJe.' "
Bailey said that supervl.aors' action In
abandoning the Salt Creek Road was bas-
ed on a Jaw wtuch allowed such action
Froon Pflflfl 1
FRANCE ••..
resistance hero and national leader.
Chaban-Delmas described De Gaulle as
a man who "restored France's honor, led
her to victory and reestablished her
worldwide mission." Tbe ·Assembly, jam-
med to capacity, rose and applauded. 'nle
Communist.s and some Socialists re-
mained seated .
Defferre. the Socialist noor leader,
made a brief reply criticizing De Gaulle 's
interpretation of the conititution.
Deferre upressed' hope the Assembly
would remain in seulon to keep an eye
on the presidential' e1ection. Then be an-
nounced his own candidacy.
The atmosphere was calm. a n d
ditnified in contrast to \he stormy scenes
that marked De Gaulle's return to. power
11 years ago. .,r '
Defferre was a candidate for a short
time against De Gaulle in the 1965
presldenUal rice but withdrew before the
final stages of the campaign to make
room for Francois Mitterrand as can~
dldate for all France's left wing parUes.
Fonner PremJer Georges Bldault, 69,
who headed the tllegit seeret army
organization revolt agalast De Gaulte in
1911.Q and" who was allowed ·tO relurn
from mte Iut a:ummer;told a news ~am
ference he aiao inlght run.
Mitterand has not. said whether be will
run again but formation or a ·~Mitterand
.for Pral~t0 committee in Paris,. was --· •. annou~. ..
Acting President Alain Poher indicated
he might run.
Pompidou, the former premier, was
fired by De Gaulle last summer but sup-
ported him in the Sunday referendum
which De Gaulle Jost.
Leftist and middle-o!J.he road pqliti·
cians at once began :1asty talks on Can-
didates of the.ir own to pit against Porn·
pidou.
l
providing that the public would never
need the access again.
This word "never'' he said was the
basis for some court action against the
county position. He noted that the courts
have traditionally been reluctant to
overturn such governmental body rulings,
unless the decisions were flagrantly
wroog.
Regarding the air transport~tlon needs
or the county, Bailey said that for the
foreseeable future, Orange County Air·
port \vill have to do.
He said that trans po r ta ti on re-
quirements of the county had increased
fantastically in recent years. He said that
Orange County Airport traffic had in-
creased from 80,000 passengers in 1967 to
600,000 passengers in 1968.
ftfUST tttEET DEMANDS
The county must meet such demands.
Bailey said or the present protest over
the airports will be nothing but a tea pot
tempest to the cry raised by industry,
and others who depend upon air service.
Bailey discounted the use of the El
Toro Marine Air Station on a joint com-
merciaJ basis. He noted that the Pereira
report indicated a whole new airport
\rould ha\"e to be constn1cted.
He said the economic and political
muscle is now being exercised by the
Saddleback Valley associations and
residents and noted the staunch Navy
resistance tG any commercial intrusion.
Bailey said that recently Air California
and Air \Vest attempted to g e t
pennission to use Navy bases at Los
Alamitos or El Toro while the Orange
County Airport runways. were being
resurfaced .
BUSING PEOPLE
"They said confidently 'Oh we'll just
use El Toro till you resurface the .Orange
County airport.' Air Cal and Air West are
now busing people to Long Beach," he
said.
However, Bailey said that as the tac-
tical operati~ns o( the base are reduced
in Javoi: ·,ol the. reser;va. opera.Lions,
1 :':·hens some use of the base would be
con.side red.
He said airport problems would still ex·
lst, that "all you're doing fs kicking it
over other people."
The planner said that off-shore air sites
'vere being studied as well as a location
in tbe San Joaquin hills. Both presented
serioUs probldns of access. and for the
off.shore locition, engineering problems.
Capistrano Council
Re-elects Mayor
San Juan Capistrano Afayor Edward
Chermak was reeleded to his mayoral
post for another term -his third -Mon-
day night by a unanimous vote of the city
council.
Mayor pro-tempore William Bathgate
was also returned lo that postilion by
councilmen v.'ho select the city.'s chief
from the councilmanic ranks.
•
•
DAft.T P'flOT &"ft"""' WILLIAM DANIELS DISPLAYS WINNING FORM IN LONG JUMP ~El To,. Yeune1t1r, lot Scor11 kt YMt;.A MMt In Laguna
'
r
.._.
Plan 1Set Up
By8GrouRs
...
'Eight county Jaw enloreement agencies
1~1ned han<ts Monday in launching a
voluntary organization calculated to keep
comparatively riot free Orange County
exactly Ulat way.
Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner
hosted the organizational meeUng in bis
courtroom in a bid to create what he caU·
cd "a fcrmula for mass disturbances, a
plan on which we hope.we will never haVe
to call, but wtlich shoukl be available to
ail facets cf law enforcement."
The Newport Beach jurts.t, chairman of
the Orange County Criminal Justice
Counsel's subcommittee on riots and
disorders, called for the voluntary
coordination . of police and c o u r t s
throughout the county io aay future riot
5itualion.
He told his audienct that a list he
recently received from the Orange Coun·
ty Bar Associaton would elizhinate what
he regarded as the most serious sllorta.ge
in a1;1y post riot situation -an in·
sufficient number of attorneys to take
over the mammoth . task of prosecution
and derense or possibly hundreds of ac-
cused rioters.
That list contains the names of 183
lawyers who have volunteered for any
type of duty for which they may be re-
quired in the altennath of a mass
di sturbance.
"This doesn 't mean that I believe we
can expect a serious riot in our county
any day now," Judge Gardner stressed.
"It means lhat I am sure that many ot
you share my conviction that it will be to
the benefit of everyone if we can, among
ourselves. Jay the founcbtion of an
organization that can ·go into ·immediate
action if and when we are faced with a
riot situation.,;
District Attorney Cecil Hicks was nam-
ed as overall coordinator of the anti-riot
organization. Working with him in the
est.ablishment of the organizational struc-
ture will be the sheriff's offi~. superior
and municipal court judgea, lhe juvenile
court, probation department, California
Highway Patrol , poiice chiefs throughout
the county and Hicks' own office.
Fanning the basis of Hicks' Orange
County plan or adlon will be the riot
master plan adopted by Los Angeles in
the wake of the Watts riots and recogniz-
ed at the meeting as being mOit suitable
for adaptation in this area.
Adoption of a related riot program·
would, Judge Gardner said, give the
county much greater Oexlbility and would
cnahll units of all agencies involved to
quicltf,-transfer help frorr. an unaffected
sector to a riot•tom area.
"We will face the situation where we
have to provide huge detention facilities,
extra judges, more courtrooms and more
policemen and all in a short period of
time.''·Judge Gardner said.
~o.t.ILT P'll#(' ... .;;.. ... ' '
HUDDLING -Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner (seated) dis-
cusses formula for handling riots in Orange County with Newport
Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas (left) and Municipal CoUrt
Judge Walter Charamza, Huntington-Beach. Courity law enforcement
agencies expect to be prepared should' a major riot occur. . ,
High Court T rns !Jown
Joan Irvine _ EJgal Suit
By JACK BROBACK
Of tfM D•llJ P'li.t Slaff
Action by the U.S. Supreme Court ~fon
day denied Joan Irvine Smitli's petition
for writ of certiorari thus ending. ac-
cording to the James Irvine Foundation,
the suit filed on behalf of Mrs. Smith
against the foundation in August, 1966.
The petition held that ownership of
Irvine Company stock by tbe foundation
was invalid, that lhe stock rightfully
belongs to the Irvine estate heirs, not the
foundation .
N. Loyall 1.-tcLaren, president of the
foundation, today expressed gratificatiOn
that tbe case has been ended and the
judgment in favor of the foundation is
now "final''.
He said the decision would enable the
foundation to resume its graats to
charities immediately. \Vhile the suit was
in ~the courts the foundation. one of
Orange County's largest contr.ibutors to
charitable and youth causes, ceased all
grants.
When told of the Supreme Court's
decision Monda,y, Ch.ip Cleary of Newport
Beach, Mrs.. Smith's representative, said
he and his client were much more in.
terested in current congressional activity
on tax reform legislation which might
strip the foundation of its controlling in·
terest in the Irvine Company.
Mrs. Smith and McLaren .appeared
before a congressional sub-committee a
month ago whic h is considering a bill
which would restrict any non-profit foun·
dation from owning more than 20 percent
or any business and prohibit such
organiiations from operating a business.
Cleary said the foundation now controls
53.7 percent of the Irvine Company stock.
Mrs. Smith holds 21.l percent and is the
largest individua1 stockholder,
Cleary said he assumes President Nix-
on's tax reform bill now before Congress
f0r, heai'ing includes such restrictions on
no~profit orgahizatlon!.
He said Chairman Wilbur D. 'Mills, fD·
Ark.), ot''the House Ways and Means
committee, had indicated he fav(J{ed
such restrictions and would insist on their
inclusion in any tax reform bill that paM·
es through his committee.
•
L DMY Pl.Of ii
1
Cuha .•Big Pea~e Corps"
, . .,,. -,.
UCI Lecturer Tells of Fmcinating Social .E~rime
pqlodloolfj ..... eat IO k I p
bliruucnc:r laodipl ud --
By THOMAS FORrlJNE
Of W.. Dllfr P'I ... Sl.tf
"Cuban aoc:itty ii like one hlc Peace
Corps. MO!I people would no1:6e. coin-
rort.able lrt the Peace Corpl.,.
' That explanation was given by Dr .
Do11ald Bray, lecturer In a UC Irvine
course on Ct.Iba, has \o why more than
500,000 relug.., t>ave left CUba In tbe 10
years of the Fidel Castro regime.
Bray wu &harply upbraided bJ CUban
expatriates in tbe audience. 'Ibey accuKd
him of belni ~-
lte sak! he looks upon Cuba e.s "a
fascinating social e:xpe:rimptl"
Bray, UIOdate profeaaor ,of eovem-
ment at Cal State Lol"Al>teles, said the
Cuban government ii wllque in the world
in trying to replace the wage· incenUve
Wi.th moral Incentives.
He said other socialist countries have
given up on the moral incentive Idea,
saying, "it' ls utopian, romantic, people
mwt be rewarded materially."
DERIVE RBWARD6 ·
Cubans_, he said, are supposed to derive
their rewarcb from service. He Indicated
he is sUli skeptical about the idea that a
whole country can be run like a religious
order.
But one million residents of Havana , he
noted, recently planted a green belt
around the city. Their onJy pay was the
prospect of Iuture abundance.
He said rent on housing, already halv-
ed, will be ellmlnated next year. Eggs
and coffee are free,· public telephones
free, as first steps toward eliminating
.money.
Bray spoke during the UC Extension
adult education course "Cuba, Castro and
Communism.''
He wu challenged by Feli:s: MW101, an
architect from Diamond B:ar, who said :
"Mr. Bray, you have spent one hour
painting paradise. po you have any~ing
to say about the 500,000 people who left
Cuba?"
Bray answered that when given a chan·
ct to leave it is not surprising· that many
cf the nation's eight million population
did.
LEFT SOCIETY
"Probably most of us would have left a
society subjected to this kind of wren·
ching experience,'' he said. "Most people
aren't interested in social experimenls.
They never have been anywhere in the
world."
He said if U.S. Immigration restrictions
were liftet some Latin American coun-
tries could be emptied in a weekend .
Major Jose Duarte, formerly or the
Castro atniy and naw witb the CUban ex-
ile organiutlon Unare, ln an angry out-
burst, sald: ,
"Why don't you tell them how the
Cuban revolution was betrayed. I fought
ag~nst Batista . This is a prostitution of
the naUooalitt revoklUon. We are lbe
r ones that made the rtv0luUoo, not the
Marxi.stl. You haven't said that more
than 60,000 Cuban rtvolutlonlstl are tn
jail."· .
Fonn.t ua studenrPattY Paniialft,
who maae an unaulhortitd trip to Cuba,
· volunteered an explanation.
"Fidel tbou&ht orlglnalif ht could
make a revolutio for ilY-ctdsts, He
fllund It lo·be~lile,"\he 111d.
PROBABLY GUILTY
Bray admitted that he pr_pbably had
been guilty of gl...ing over the seaml<r
aide of Cuban life. Bul he said for an
American group that has gotten its im-
pressions lrom ~ mus media be felt he
l?ad to overcompensate.
He llcked off a number of things he
said make the Cuban revolution unique :
-It has been humane and not too
repressive. Some 600 were executed sum-
marily at first but most of the dissenters'
have' been allowed to leave.
-Never before tn a Lalin American
country has every peraon had a ahot at
education: After a con~ed literacy
campaign Cuba ls maybe slightly more
literate·than the United States.
-Never before n a l..alln American
·country has 'everyone ·. enjoyed a
minimum level of nutrition . The diet is
not exciting but nutritionally adequate.
-Public health is very good by Latin
American standards. Already 90 percent
·of babies are born in hospitals. CU bans
may be the most physically flt peoplt in
the world because they don't overeat and
all do labor.
-People at the local level are given an
Immediate slice o( political power the
likes of which is unprecedented in the
world. (He did not elaborate.)
-There has been relatively little con-
fUct with religion. The minister of educa·
lion, for Jn~. attends Catholic Mass.
-Cuba has the most systefnatic cam-
paign against bureaucracy in the world,
,
NO !IAnGlJAlllll
Alter be1af ....,.._ hi' ,tJW
' -trlala, any: polmed out tbe '
ht !OQ,U on with dlsfavor.
He said ho -·t , .. , ther_!~~
'enough l<Jal ll(~ and nol-~
' play giv•n lndtvldual ecC<otrldty.
4 t ' l ) He remarked tNt he thinks Cu
overdo' surveillance against another
attack and that he wmkl like to see
censorship.
The Cuban IMwer lo thil, be atld,
tht they are on a forced march
development and haven't time for
centrlcity nor money ror frilly publ
Uon.s that would come with less ·
ship.
B r a y said Cuba. h a s made
economic progress and µiat It ls
unreasonable to upect next year it
reach ita goal of produetion of 10
tons of sugar (compared IO,a lltlle
five milJ.iOll tons tflls ~) whlcb
become almost a nUlonal obaelaion.
When there lut summer u an
change professor, he recounted, a y
man Said to him, 11WeD, I.cllesa ev
in your country is wopdering ~r
not we will make our 10 million tons?"
Bray said he didn't have the heart
tell him, "No.''
Because of lhe pres.s, he said, the U
. public image now o( Cuba is of
totalitarian regime that is a cancer in
Western Hemisphere.
He said it is not reasonable to ~
Cuba to wither away because of
U.S. 's economic blockade.
He said, '"They are raUoning now,
everybody i. W1lrking bard ucl theJ
investing Jn educaUon. The reuona
eq>ectaUon i. that In about 10 yon
will reach • respectable level °'-~~V
and. we will dlacover them and baV'I
come to 10IDe kind ol agreement."
No Brown Wrappers? J
Nixon Will Seek Change .
In U.S. Obscenity L.aws
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will ask Congress for changes in
federal laws dealing with obscenity,
Republican congressional leaders said to-
day.
After a GOP_ leadership breakfast at
the White House, Sen. Everett M.
, Dirksen and Rep. Gerald R. Ford tokf
) reporters Nixon plans to attack obscenity
by modifying postal statutu.
Under the proposals , Dirksen said,
b r o w .n paper-wrapped pornogra_phic
.
rr.atertal would be outlawed. The
making it would be required to. klen
contents on the wrapper or package,
said. In this way, Dirksen explained,
addressee of unsolicited mail oxald re iL .
Dirksen iJaea trlt occasion to re:new
propdSall for overtwillng Jan
cerning Pornography, SP""fically,
called lor a CODSUtuUonal amendment
"get . arouod" recent SIJ)l"mM
decisions.
A ·GREAT AMERI:CAN· . ••
··-----~==
. . .
Dwight Da,;d Eisenhower was a man ,
of great accomplislunent. For the.first •:
time, here is the complete biography of '
the general, politi.cian and statesman I
.who became a legend in his own time. I
Reiman Morin, the AP's two-time "
Pulitzer Prize winner, provides a , detailed and colorful 140,000-word
account of the.Kansas farm boy who rose
to become a hero of World War II and ..
the 34th Pnsidentof the United States
in "Eisenhower: A Gauge of ' • . l
Greatness." Morin, whoknewlkefora
quarter of a century, measures the man .,
by the gauge of greatness Ike set up i himself. ' I The result is this handsome volume
illustrated by more than 85 pictures in
color and black and white. It is available
to you through this newspaper at the
special price of only $3 .
• •
••• A GREAT BOOK!-
/ Till1 ... clal Mltlll lllb 11ifJ;$S .. _. ••
• 140,000.word text writlen by
one ol AP's mm noitd report·
""who had known Ike _for more
than 25 yuri and lnle!VltWtd
him personal~ for Wt vol1111e.
• 85 color and black and while
pholot, some of whldl flllJ
nmr been publlsl!od btf<><t
• tt 11 ha~ In 1 hlftd>omt
ITHll cloth CMf lllCI !Oil ~I·
temr. on outtUndln( addltloll
to ""' home llbnry. ··2'4pspi,1~· 111· .....
Simply fill out coupon and mail wi th remittance to the address indicated__..
! r AGA~ Of .U.T'Niss °'""'" C-DAIL 1' PILOT
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'
•
I
.
fc-IM "' .. Olltr "" .in
P1trlcl1 A. Yount, 17, and Wil-
liam A. Leadens, 18, of Minne•·
pOlis, Minn ., are going to Wash·
iq&too today to give p,...ldent.
Njxon bis 25 percent profit. During
18.st year's presidential campaign,
the teen-agers talked Nixon into
b\T.Ying $2 worth of stock in their
Jynior Achievement Company. The ·r Is now worth $2.49.
• •
ne electnc·organ laughed. when
Ttd Kint of. Sllting]>oume, Eng·
land sat down to play. But he shrug·
ged, then went ·on to play a ~min·
'ute recital for friends, during which the organ occasionally talked. Yes,
talk~. When Kin~. 74, was through
the Instrument qwpped, "That was
quick, Ted." King examined the
organ and found that a couple of
wires had got crossed and somehow
turned the instrument into a receiv·
er for a taxi company's radio dis·
patcher. "Ted" was one of the
drivers. •
. .Qespite his mthtr toothy appear.
anCe, thi.r orph<m oppos&um ii rtolllJ
;uit a babl/ imi!tl Hunter Swtarln-
Qtn, 2, of Tampa, Fla.. Hunter NU
adopted Che animal which tool rt,.
cued by hil falhff when Mr.r. ()pol.
sum tlX2I hit by a car and killed. • Workmen today installed wali-lo-
'"all carpeting in the Neston, Eng.
land kennel of. a black cairn terrier
which inherited $80,457 from its
owner, Vera Rae. Mrs. Rae died
last December, two days after put-
ting the 8-year-old dog, Sherry, in
the care of Mapleoak Kennels. Her
\vill was published last week. The
kennel operators said the dog's
boarding bill was about ,7.20 a
week but Sherry will now start get.
ting deluxe treatment, starting with
a giant bone. The will said that
money left when the dog dies will
go to six animal charities.
0
Matt Dillon, missing for a
week was found safe bfl two
boys and h<u been returned
home in Richmond, Vt. Matt -
Dillon is a state police blood-
hound. He became lost a totelc
ago during tracking e.rercUe1.
---... -~ •
Popular Vote ·for Rre~iden·t·
WASHlNGTON (UPI) -The House
Judldlry Commlu.e today IJ>PIO\'ed a
.,....-conlllluUOlllJ amendment to
provida tor electk>n of America's
president& by direct, popular vote.
By a vote of 21 t.o s, the committee
adopled a proposal lo do away wllh the
electoral colle1e and establish nallonwide
popular election of a President, with a
runoff electlon il oo candidate go! 40 per·
cent of the vote 1n the general election.
Priso rw rs
Plan Revenge
On Sirhan?
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The priloc
grapevine has It that ccmvicta may
retaliate a1ainst Sirhan B. Sirhan to
avenge lhe murder of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, a top state official said Mon·
day.
Lawrence E. Wilson, deputy director of
the Department of Corrections, said that
special precautionary measures will be
employed to protect Kennedy's assassin.
Wihon appeared at a JegislaUve com.
mittee bearing called to ~ider a bill
that would allow Sirhan to be locked up ln
a specially constructed suile of three
cells at tbe California medical facllity at
Vacaville Instead of on San Quentin's
deat h row. The comm1ttee killed the
measure.
Outside the hearln, room, Wilson was
asUd by reporten il there had been IDY.
hint ol U...t& lo the We ol the 2$-y..,.
.old JorWlian immigrant.
The jud1clary commltltf!'s veteran
chairman, Rep. Emanuel Celler, (0..
N.Y.), said, ''nlis Is a red loller day."
He added that ''the first bold step hu
been taken" toward electioo rtform.
Both CeUer and Rep. William M.
McCulloch, Ohio, rantmc committee
Republlcan. said they were confident I.he
direct election plan would win necessary
approval of 38 states -the two thlrd1 re-
quirtd for ratUlcaUon of constitutlonal
omendmenll.
The plan -blplrl1lu ouppori, wttb 12 ol 15 commltlti llepubllellll Jolollc II
of 20 Democrlll la !Ivor of II. Tliroe
lleJl"bikUI and lllroe llemocrall voled
qalnst tt. One. Democrat .... 1boeol
President NllOD "" recently nportod
leao!Jli tow1nl !be dl,..i eledloo plan
allhouch he did not .,._ IL
Jn a compi'omlae, the committee
adopted ID elfocUve dale 1onnuJa that
I
ll10dl It .quell!GN!blo wlleUler •• ....
-cl •leCUoc • Pnoldoat ... i1d booom<I el!ICllve ';t.1.: when Plalde!lt
Nlzm will bave a to nm .,11o.
• '!be """"'"""'" ~ tllat the a_.imeot would no{ tal<e ellect until
ooe yur alter Jin. It In the yur lollow-lni ratlflcaUM by the atatu. tor ewnple, tl the amendment recelv·
ed ratlficlUon u early u February, 1171, It ""1kl not tal<e ellect unW Jan. 11, 1m,
the dly alter the ... t scheduled pralden·
.,,.,.......,. "Netblng that you could put your finSer
on," he aaid. "There have been in·
stitutional rumors that there could be
r etaliaUon taken."
Kennedy wu fatally shot June S after a
rally celebrating his victory i n
California's presidential primary elec·
tlon.
ARMED MILITANT STUDENTS REACH FDR FOOD SUPPLIED BY SUPPORTERS
Stucftnt1 Art Holding Library BuUdlng at VoorhM1 Collete, O.nm1rk, S.~. .
Philip D. Guthrie, a department
fipokesman, said th.at Sirhan will be con·
fined on death row.
1 "He will be totally Isolated," be said.
' Guthrie and Wilaon di.sclOled that
Sirhan will be held in a "buffer zone" cell
-the midd1e cell of three on death row.
The two on e.l.ther side will be vacant.
Special guar<ls will be wlgned lo his cell
bloct.
Prison Guards
In· Ohio Strike . '
For Wage Hike
• COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Guard•
struck at two state penal institutions to-
day and were replaced where necessary
by Ohio National Guardsmen.
Only 54 of 175 lo 200 guards and
supervisors reported at the state peniten·
tiary in Columbus. A unit of 100
guardsmen augmented the guard force
there.
About 80 auards reported at MllDS!ield
Rdonnatory where 130 would normally
be on duty. A unit of guardsmen from
Akron wu Mnt to Mansfield to stand by.
Adjl Gen. S. T. DelCOrso said no na-
tional guardsmen w ere sent into the
Mansfleld reformatory Immediately.
Mauiy · Koblehtl, chief of the Ohio
Division cl Correction, Uld guar<I eitua·
tions were normal at pena1 lnsUtutions at
Lebanon, London, Mlr)'JVille, Marion and
Cb!Wcothe.
Spokesmen for the striking auanls at
the penli.ntlory said they are &eeklng a
$1,500 annual acrou-tbe-board pay raise.
Koblenlz aaid wages Cta'T!ntly start at
$4,990 a year at all iMtituUom except the
penll<!ltlory, whero lllartlng salory II
fl,240 I year,
Pompidou May Succeed
Old Teacher De Gaulle
By lltllted Pres1 ~tematlonal
Geor1es Pompidou is a man who learn-
ed from a master the art of politics. Now
he may be on his way to replacing his
ttacher as president of France.
For siir yean he served President
Charles de Gaulle loyally as premier.
Last smnmer, however, aft el'
tnastmniDding a parliamentary gi!neral
election campaign that gave the Gaulllsts
a landslide victory, Pompidou was fired
unceremoniously by the leader for whom
he had toiled. Some said Pompidou had
demonstrated his abilities a bit too well.
But bitterness he may have felt Porn·
pidou kept to himself. ThouBh De
Gaulle's defeat In last Sunday'! con-
stitutional referendum campai1n could
ha ve been -and now is -considered a
stepping stone to the presidency for
himself, Pompidou worked hard in the
general's behalf.
He made no secret of his own presiden-
-t1al aspirations, but Pompidou also made
it clear if he becomes president some
day, he did not want to do it in the wake
of a De Gaulle defeat.
Georges Pompidou was born July 5,
1911, in the central France town of
Montboudif. The son of a school· teacher,
he made a brilliant academic career.
Then he became a secondary school
teacher himself.
Soon after De Gaulle returned to Paris
after its liberation in August, 1944, he
called in Pompidou to provide him dally
r eports on popular reaction to his
policies.
When De Gaulle walked out in 1946,
Pompidou, while working for t h e
Rothschild Bank, remained a member oC
DE GAULLE'S HEIR?
Georges Pompidou
the general's inner circle or advisers.
He helped De Gaulle in his unsuccessful
comeback attempt at lhe head of the
Rally or the French People (RPF) in
1947·50. When De Gaulle finally was
swept back to power in 1958, Pompidou
st.ill was one of his inner circle, though
mo.st Frenclunen did not realize iL
Armed Militant
Blacks Take 2nd
College B¢Iding
Militant black students, armed with
rifles. shotguns and knives, seized a se-
cond building at Voorhees College In Den-
mark, S.C., today and the administration
ordered the school closed.
Stale officials marshalled Nationa l
Guard and H11hway Patrol forces at
nearby Bamberg although Voorhees
President John F. Potts said he will not
call for outside help u n t i I absolutely
nece.ssary.
The new takeover spread the oc·
cupatlon from the ad mini strati on
building, seized Monday, to the science
building neit,door.
The blacks seemed set for a Jong stay,
as they were fortified with an estimated
$5,000 worth of food taken at gunpoint
Monday from the cafeteria.
Dean of Students Mrs. W. G. Jenkins
ordered the school closed indetinltely
after today's takeover, saying all
students were expected to be off the cam·
pus by noon.
A spokesman for the militants urged
students not to leave, saying the· ad·
ministration "is trying to divide our
forces."
At Harvard University undergraduates
voted not to renew a student strike while
at Radcliffe, Harvard's sister imUtution,
students twice invaded the administration
building and shouted obsctnities at Presi-
dent Mary Bunting.
President Bunting sat quietly at her
desk while about JOO students paraded in
and around her office. They called her
"Pig," "Louse" and a scattering of four-
letter words. The students were pro-
testing disciplinary action a1atn.st 23
sir ls.
2 Feet of Deadwood Snow
Soil was a political sensaUon when De
Gaulle in 1962 fired his fi rsl premier,
lt-1lchel Debre, and named Pompidou to
the job.
Slowly, almo.sl Imperceptibly, Porn~
pldou learned the governing trade. More
important, he learned how to work for De
Gaulle as a loyaJ executor of the old
man's wishes and policies, but never as a
sycophant.
Nixon to Give Medal
To Duke Ellington
WASHING TON (UPI) -President
Nixon Will present Duke Ellington the
Medal of Freedom -one of the nation's
hi1hest clvlll~ honors -at a White
House di.Mer tonight celebratinB the
composer-conductor's '10th birthday. 30 Degree Temperatures Chill Up pe r Mi.dwest
' T~Pfl'attrres
Hi.ti~ l"rtt. ·---n ~
Antllorl .. ,. "
It will be the first Presidential
Freedom Medal to be preaented by N!s•
on.
------~-.
\I
Ual lnau(ur1Uon. · \.'
"I would say lt will tJke prompt ~~
on the part of stall legll~," McCulloch said In estlmatlai of
the -tUJng •!foci la time .
the 1171 praldenilal eleciloo: ! The compromi!e was designed lo e
Congress and lta.tes Ume to pass •
plementiol legiallUon to establish vo r
quailllcations, methods of listing Pn
ballots and h ow the votes wwJ.ll1 ~
counted and made publlc.
Laird Of fer s
Comp romise
Over ROTC
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Defense
Department lo<lay ottered lo make some
minor changes in its Reserve Officers
Training Corps (ROTC) program in an
effort to ease student protests agatnst
mllltar ytralnlng on college and universi-
ty campuses.
The changes. disclosed by Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird, were viewed
as a possible compromise to efforts by
6ludent activists to bar all military pro-
grams from their campuses.
However, In a Pentagon st~lemeT1t,
Laird said: ''We are not prepared to see
the ROTC program degraded In any way.
'1'1le Defense Department continues to
J>elleve that ROTC Is an important ele-
ment of wr total naUonal security effort.
We want to see its value, both to students
and the naUon, strenBlhtned.'1
Roger T. Kelley, Laird's asslslant for
manpower, cited the following as among
changes that might be made:
-Some military training could be
shifted from the school year tO sum-
mertlme.
-More civilian instructors might be
used, displacing miUtary officers who
now teach ROTC courses.
-Some technic.al Courses might be
eliminated enUrely, while others could be
madt: more general rather than military
in nature -such as management prtn·
ciples and history.
Kelley said he recently conferred with
officials of Princeton, Brown, Yale,
Cornell, Dartmouth, Tulane, Stanford and
Bri11ham Young about ROTC. fie con·
ceded there are many who are
philosophically opposed to the program.
"There is no nationwide philosophical
bani-up on the subject," he contlnued,
"but certain schools have a problem.
They will have to decide whether their
academic philosophy and ROTC Can live
together."
Stanford Poll
Shows Most OK
Sit-in Demands
STANFORD (UPI) -While most of
stantord's students did not back the nine-
day sit-in of a campus laboratory. they
seem to have agreed with the militants'
position.
A campus.wide poll showed lhat tw~
lhirds of the student body and one-third
of the faculty favor bringinB the Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) under closer
university control with a committee
redirecting Its research activity.
Faculty and studenls also voted heavily
to restrict chemical, biological a n d
radiological warfare research at the
Menlo Park institute and a clear ma-
jority of students opposed counter-in-
surBeRCf studJes and research related to
lhe war in Southeast Asia at the institute,
The April 3rd movement, which con--
ducted a nine-day sit-in at t h e
university's applied e I e c t r o n I c s
laboratory, sttoogly backed closer in-
tegraUon of SRI into the university and
opposed its Defense D e p a r t m e n t
research.
A total of 5,671 students and 671 faculty
members answered the questionnaire.
M~re than half the faculty but only a
fift1tiof the students favored sale of SRI
uoder ctrtain conditions.
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PARIS (UPI) -European bankers
said today they thought deva1uaUon of.
lhe French franc is inevitable. Jn
Switzerland, the banking capital ol the
world, the prediction was for a devalua-
.6, lion of just under 15 pe.rcent.
•15 The vtews by private and commercial
bankers contrl.!l.td with st.alementa by
·~ Western governments and their central
bsnks that the Frtnch economy, togethtr
with ill f3 .8 blllioo in reaerves and
.01 fottlgn readiness to help out, can with·
stand a run on the tranc. The true ts now :!: valued 1t just uuder five to the dollar:
the market rate bu betn avenging 4.17
lo the dollar.
A private French banker in Paris said
the franc could bold out, but only If there
hi no run on France's CWTtJ\CY. All
Afn!td th a t central banks csn help
,,, France but that there 111 a limit to what
·" they can do ff speculattve flood11tes are
·'' opened.
NORWALK (UPI) -Sherlll'1 depuUes,
M'med with tear 1u tJ'ld tbotCUM and
aided by !lie l!Chts ol I bellcopltr hover-
ing ovetheld, flushed fJ'om • sport1111
aoodf ""'" today • 12·yur-old boy who
fiad held tbeon II bay with a pellet sun
lorl5mlautes.
The unidentified youth w1lked out ol
the store cradllng a -rll1o and lh<n !old depuUa "My f.y<OMld companion
ls Inside. He's cot a lhotfun."
Deputla lobbad two IHr ps canisters
tnto the store, but no OM else appeared to
be \nslde.
Two depuUes answering a silent
burglar alarm heard the sound of bre•k·
Ing glw when they arrivtd ~t United
Sportlna Good.1 store shortly aft'r mid·
niaht. WhUe Dep. Jack Ryon went to
Investigate, his ptrtner m1nned ihe
radio, ready to ejJI for help.
Ryon saw a fl~re inside the store and
rte0gnized the juvenile whom he had
handled in an investigation a few weeks
earlier. But when Ryon called on the boJ
to come out, tM boy opened fire with 1
pellet gun, narrowly missing Ryon.
Within minutes the store was sur-
rounded by 20 deputies. A lhtrUt'a
helicopter circltd overhead, nooding the
sce11e with ils spotlight.
Deputiu said during the sltge the boy
fired between 15 and 20 shots at them,
but they held their lltt.
Ryon, tal~ over a bullhorn, finally
the bOy told off1Ctf'S, 0 1 went ln the store.
Asked what be wu doing In the ston,
the boy toldclf;c.n, "I wont In !he s-.
The lights went out. 1 W'anted to a:et out. r
broke the window."
The youth, who had Army sergeant's
stripes stuffed ln his pocket, was taken to
juvenile ball for questonlng a n d
authorities said he would be booked for
buralary and po6Sibly for 1ssault with In-
tent lo O)mmit murder.
)
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JEAN COX, 4'4-9466
T~, Altll ti, '"' L , .. II
Flag Wa·v-ing
Fashionable ·
Woman power from San Clemente to Laguna Beach is being
mobilized in an all-out effort to prove patriotism is not out of style.~
The goal is a Red, White and Blue Fashion Tea in the Monarch
Bay Beach Club Wednesday May 28, which will honor the U.S. Marine
Corps and benefit San Cle~ente Interfaith Servicemen's Center.
"The need for funds is urgent because supplies were depleted
during the storm when stranded servicemen were housed and fed for
several days in the center," explained Mrs. William D. Plowden Ill,
I co-chainnan of the star-spangled effort.
Mrs. Julie Connerly and her models are joining the cause by
donating their services and parading fashions supplied by Nelly's of
Puerto Vallarta in San Juan Capistrano, Designs by Robin of I.eguna
Beach, the· Wa1drobe and the Doo~ to Fashion, both of San Clemente
and Sax of Tustin.
Mrs. Michael Feruzzi of San Clemente is chairman of the event
where bay decor will be arranged by members of the San Clemente
Overseas Officers Wives Club.
MARINES CALLED -Jack L. Rincbich, ·a lence corporal serv·
ing the U.S. Marine Corps at Camp Pendleton, helps with decora-
tion·s for the upcoming Red, White and Blue Fashion Tea in
Monarch Bay Beach Club. Women asking his advice are (left to
right) the Mmes. Charles Giannetti, R. G. Prebihalo ahd Charles
Tyson. The U.S. Marine Corps will be honored at the May event
which will benefit San .Clemente Interfaith Servicemen's Center.
Other committee women are the MmeS. R. G. Prebihalo, Frank
Osborne and H. F. Keisker of San Clemente ; Malcolm Cruickshank of
Dana Point; Richard Parsons of Laguna Niguel, Paul H .. ~ower of
Mission Viejo and Ted O'Connell, Parker Christopher, John Holing
and Robert Mason, all of Monarch Bay.
· Tickets for the 1 to 3 p.m. event are $2.50 and may be obtained.
by calling Mrs. Parsons, 495-4947; Mrs. Plowden, 499-2128, o~ Mrs.
Li~hts, Camera, Action
Beautiful Places Vie .. ~ ... ~--,...,. .... 1'"' ..,~ ·~ -
For Laguna Awards
J{ollywood has its Academy Awards, ~way has its ToQ,y Awards
and·Laguna Beach will have its BeautifiCation ~wards Mo~a.y, May 19.
. The show, prOctuced and directed by -Mermaids, Woi:nen's Division,
'Chamber of Commerce, will put its stars-aesthetic new buildings, land-
scaping and examples of attractive remodeling and refurbishing jobs-in·
the spotlight during a fast-paced Juncheon in the Hotel Laguna.
To prepare for the third annual event, Mermaids have been motivat·
ing citizens and business owners to make beauty an integral part of
the community.
During the past 12 moriths scouts have been searching the city for
efforts by citizens to paint, repair and landscape to compete for annual
awards as well as monthly Beauty Spot Awards. .. {
The theory behind the search is that any area, no matter how un-
attractive, may with a little concern and imagination be transformed into
a wann colorful setting. Pocket gardens, a concept emphasized by the
group, 3re small areas improved with portable planters, a raised bed of
flowers, a screening hedge or trees.
A secret screening committee has made selections from entries for
the awards and final judges will choose the winners. Last year 24 awards
were presented.
· Those judging this year's entries will be Valier Knudsen, creatot of
Los Angeles Beautiful, who will participate for the third time; Mrs. Weston
Walker, chairman of the beautfication committee for the Orange County Bi·
centennial, and Forest Dickason , Orange County planning director.
Mrs. Robert Peacock is general beautification chairman. She is
assisted. by the Mmes. Clifton T. Nichols, Beauty Spot Awards chairman;
Fritz G. Peterson, mailing ; G. Melvin Sheldon, secretary; 'Thomas E. John·
ston, printing; Betty Meyers and Doris Lindsey, reservatioris; C. Stuart
Lewis, Frederick Siebert and Tom Glidden, programs; Robert Turner,
fi nances ; Leon AJ1:elrod, luncheon ; McClellan Cole, ho stesses ; Robert Gill,
Peacock and ~ichols, entries, and Robert L. Joyce, final judg es.
Feruzzi, 492-0575. -'
'The luncheon, a highlight of ·the ~fermaid 's beauUfication program, is
supported by area business firms. Sponsors for the third annual event in-
clude the Pottery Shack, Laguna Nursery, Laguna Beach Board of Realtors
and PeacoCk Insurance, Inc.
Entries judged must have been completed duting 1968 and up to
April 1, 1969. I
WHO LURKS?-Whp is the camera bug creeping up behind Mrs.
James Brimble at her gardening 'tasks? It could only be Robert
Turner. Each year tile real estate dealer highlights the annual
Beautification Awards Luncheon with his color slide program of
Laguna Beach. His pictures will be seen in the Hotel Laguna
Monday, May 19.
Cashiers Ringing ·Up Hostility While Aski.ng for IDs
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why do people
get belligerent and act insulted when they
want to ca.sh a check and are asked to
produce tdeaUficaUoo? Don't they realize
employees have to keep records? It Isn't
enough thal a person has an honest f&ee .
I work in a large store and I try to be
as polite and considerate Lo our ~slom
ers as possible. Yesterday when l asked
a woman for fdentlfk:aUon1 she snapped,
"£you tryln1 to say I'm a swindler?"
A hour latet a man threw his credit
c and driver'• Ucense In my race and
)' , "SOrQe freah punkJ ju.st have to
lhow their authority!" '
I'm IOI< rm no! the only Iii_...,.
who ha! this problem, '° please print my
ANN LANDERS [t]
letter. I'd like to tape it to the cash
r'egisler and I'll guarantee you, ao will
hundred.1 of otber employeet. -
ABUSED
DEAR AB: Here's y.ur letter and I
hope ll ltelpt promtte better underttlltd-
lnc on tbe _part ef the cntomen.
• DEAR ANN LANDERS : I did 1 slow
burn when tblt B\11 'lrTOle to complain
that 1U1 wife ICb like 1he'1 dolrig hlrh a
r '
favor once every two weekJ. A Umet.able
like that would have been he.aven to me.
' I married A&gle when I was 26. She
was Z2. wtujt 1 thought was high prin-
ciples turned out to be a palholock:al
hatred for su. from the night we mar-
ried unW I left here, 17 years later, Aggie
wore underWear and ankle IOI under her
nighlgown. She alao had this lhlng about
lubricaUng her akin eo it wouldn't
wrinkle. At bedUmt she put IO much
_.. on, 111e looted like she wu flllnr
to 1W1m Ille Englilll Chlnnel.
And then of ...,,. then ...,. the
bead1ches and blckaches and <0ld.s. She
mana,ed to get six cold• a year, each one
lasting a month.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Our 19-year-
old daughter 11 a sophomore at a wen
known school in the East. Judy alwaY1
haJ been coosldered one of the belier
brougbi up young ladle! of this town. Bui
erf ,,_ • her language since she has been away at J now am married to a wond ul gal achoo) is 10\n .. p; .. ,., Sbe uses 10me ve""
who knows lhat IU can be a tiood that dlrty wor-th'ln ... ~ary everyday cdt:-
ties a man and woman together. My only veraatlon. Her father, half-kidding, 1ald,
mistake was 'lt'alUng 17 yea~s to lead a "When you were younger 1 used to wash
norrnaJ· life. Y~ prinl lots of letters from your mouth out with aoap and 1 might
women who thini their husbands are ltl have to do it again." manlact. Pleaae print thl1 one and belp
even the score -ALIVE AND WELL IN ~ Judy's an1wtt was, ''I tell It like It Is.
DECATEUJI Worm an only sounds. Gel wllh IL"
DEAR ALIVE: Tile 1<ore wtD 1tver be
evn, l..c 1flW ld&a' Nips ballBCt It a What should a parent say ln response?
-~PEECHLESS
.DEAR SPEECB: A pam1 _, ,.;.,
"U yoa wanl &o nay ta W. lloae yta'cl
belltr.,. dec<tll 1_.,e to tell II !ID It
ls. We dol't 1• for P .tttr talk INUd
hen: and YOU'D better ret wl$ It.
If you have lroubJe getUng along w'lth
your parents, lf you can't get them to let
y o u live your own life, s e n d for AM
Lander;s' booklet. "Bugged by Parentrf
How to Get More Freedom." Send ~
mits In coin with your request and 1
long, stamped, self·ad~ envelept.
AM Linden will be glad to help 1"'
wllh your problems. Send lhem to her In
care of the DAILY Pnm, encIOl!ac I
slamped. .. u •• ~ envtlope.
'
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·•
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J
l .,
I
f ll WINGS WON
Suun Ecclnton
• ~.Former .CCC . '
... Coed Passes
:~ J Flight Test ··-Miss SUUn Eccleston,
, .. fonner Orange Cout. College
student, received her wings
from Trans International
I •. · Airlines. ' . . The charter airline flies
, . within the United States and to
:; ~~rol;ien~issAm~:si:::
assignment will be Honolulu or
New York. The 22-year-old
hostess now resides in San
Francisco and is the daughter
of Mrs. H. E. Wheeler and
c T. M. Eccleston of Los Ange-
les.
{' The foimer cosmetology
student completed an intensive
four-week training c o u rs e
which included international
geography, customs and im-
migration regulations.
military.ranb and rules, avia·
ro tion and airline history, first
a.id and emergency procedures
·and in-flight food service.
Shape Up
-~With Yoga ,.
Halecrest Club, Costa Mesa,
\\'ill offer a series or eight
yoga classes beginning next
. Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in the
,, clubhouse, instructed by '-1rs.
Allen Nelson.
_ Assisting i'n the classes,
.,. which stress stretching and
, · bruthlng exercises, will be
Mrs. Robert Seaney.
'· 1be classes are open to the
i. 'public and anyone wishing in-
I fonnalion may call Mrs. Swie.Y.-.
--.. ...
..
Horoscope
Libra: Be Ori ·ginal
J
WEDNESDAY
APRIL 30
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (It.at. 21-Apr. 19):
Your thoughts tum to Jove,
romance. If single, you could
get engaged. If married, you
could rediJCOver mate in
meaningful way. Accent on
partnerships, coolracta. Buy
gift for loved one.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20):
It is yoor kind of day. You are
surprised by show of affection
Summer
' .
.wedding
Planned
A dinner party in the home
of Mr. and 11..rs. C. H. Taylor
of Balboa Island was the oc--
casion for the announcement
of the engagement of their
daughter, KaUtleen Taylor to
Stacy Mack Morgan Jr. of
• Corona del W.ar.
The bride-elect a t t e n d e d
I Corona del Mar High School
and Orange Coast College.
Her fiance, son ol Mr. and
Mrs. S. M. M<rgan of Corona
de! Mar, attended CdJI. HS
;,J and Arizona State University.
The couple will exchange
vows in the sUmmer.
!tom coe who wu rtticenl.
Remember resolutms con.
ceml.ng health, diet. B e
moderate. Ell]oy younell but
avoid extremes.
GEr!JJNI (May 21.June 20):
Emphasis on success with
creative endea.Votl!I. You are
able to prove major point.
P1"9vide ttte.t for y o u n g
person. Thl.1 wtll make you
feel good, bring joy. Dipe out.
CAJllCER (June JI.July Zl):
Accent on practlcal issues
connected with iestdence. You
can linJah a project. Don't
KATHLEEN TAYLOR .
Betrothed
hang oa to put. Reallu future
proopecU WI be bright. Open
mind to new uperteoce.
LEO (July :ZS.Aug. Zl): Vlslt
can provide pleuure. Be
gracious, display sense of
.humor. Be versa.Ute. Be ready
with alternative me t b o d 11 •
Forcts ar! scattered. Leave
details to others -fint for
wrltlng, paintlng.
VIRGO (Aug. ZS-Sept. Zl):
Your hunch proves accurate in
connection with money. Belt
to heed own counseL 'Ibo8e
who try to be hdp[ul may be
misinformt!d. Guard
possessiooa. Be r e c e p t i v e
witf:tout being careless.
LIB~ (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Get started on pro j e<": t .
lliaplay tnitlative. Your """'
of. beauty and humor makes
you the hit ol any gathering.
Key _1 s · to be original, to
empbasize your own, deslrts.
SCOBl'IO (Oct. 23-Nov. Zl):
Remember one who may be
confined to home, hospital.
Excellent for club, group ac-
tivity. Be with those who
share special interes ts .
Theater party hits nail on
head.
SAG!TrAIUUS (Nov. Zl·
Dtc. 21): Friendly contact
could have good influence
where vacation, recreation are
conctmed. Accept S9Cial in-
vitation. Stimulatlng ' discus·
sion tonight makes you feel
like a ne'w person.
Leadership Exchange
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan .
19): Accent on dealing with
superiors. Important person i,B
impreued with yoiur ability.
Accept special assignment. If
diplomatic, yoo gain unique
privilege. Make .most of op-
portunity . •
Women's Day on Campus Highlights Gathefing AQUAJUUS (Jan. 20-Feb .
18): Good lunar aspect today
coincide! w I t h Jong.range
views, goals. SOme plans may
have to be revised. Be sure
you have solid base. Some
around yoo may be daydream·
ing.
occ Covers Fabrics
A theme entitled Fabrics for
Call£ornia Living will cover an
area as big and varied as the
state itsel£ -from hand·
w~ven fabrics for clothing to
dune buggy covers and sail in·
signias.
Orange Coast College will
stage Community. Women's
Day on C8mpus -'I'tlursday,
May t, from 9:30 a.m. to noon
to acquaint Harbor Area
women with the n e w e s t
developments in Calilornla
fabrics.
1be day will be&in with an
open house in the home
Sea Sirens
TOPS Sea Sirens meet In
Killybrooke School, C o s t a
Mesa, every Wednesday at 7
p.m.
econoniics department with
the patio area designed as an
Oriental tea garden. An in-
formal fashion show will con-
tinue through the morning,
followed by a light brunch. At
11 a.m. a panel discussion
covering Fabrics--Fashions·
Facilities will take place in the
scien~ hall.
A second presentation c-n-
titled Fabrics.Care and Clean-
ing will be offered at 7 that
evening in the student center.
Included in the exhibits will be
a displQy of new enzyme
detergents, irons, l!I e w i n g
machines, hand-woven fabrics,
Oriental fabrics and con-
temporary furniture and the
use of fabrics .
Area women are invited to
the campus day, There will be
no charge.
'Room Service' With a Smile
Wielding the president's
gavel of Orange County Legal
Secretaries Association will be
Mrs. Patsy Ann Lewis of
Anaheim.
• She will be installed with
other neY: officers i n
«remonies In the Revere
.Jtouse, Tustin next Thursday
at 7:30 p.m.
Miss Eula ~lae Jell of Costa
Mesa, foonder of the organiza·
tion, will be installing o£ficer
and also will seal the Mmes.
Melvin A. Buzzard, Anaheim,
vice president; Paul P. Smith,
Tustin, corresponding
secretary; Ruth Stewart,
Orange, rect1rding secretary;
Theodore C. Bangs, Pla«nlia,
treasurer; Robert F. Mat-
thews, Huntington B e a c h ,
governor, and Barb a r a
Rowden, Wel!ltminster, NALS
representative.
Orange Coast residents
serving in other capacities will
be Mrs. Jack Manusos ,
The Board of Directors o[ South Coast Repertory, Orange County's professional
resident theater, are hostin g a Maytime Merriment party Thursday, May 1,
acc ording to Ladislaw Reday and Jerrel Richar:ds, co-chairmen. During an eve-
ning designed as a nostalgic tribute.to the 1930s, guests will travel to the com·
panys' Third. Step Theater in Costa Mesa for a champagne buffet. Following
will be a performance of the classic 1937 American farce, 1'Room Service."
Elaine Bankston, actress, doesn't need to act when serving Charles Cringle,
board direMor and bis wl!e. !.=======================
Westminster, editor of Orange
Squeezins, and Miss Joan
Broadhurst. Balboa, programs
and legal procedure chairman.
Special guests at th e in·
stallation ceremony will be
Mrs. Glady::: Plato, Newport
Beach, past president or the
state association and NALS
direetor, and Mrs. Fern Man-
ning. Newport Beach, past in·
ter-club chairman o( the Long
Beach Secretaries Association.
Speaker for the evening will
be William L. Aldrich, director
of public relations and ad-
vertising of the Irvine Co.,
who is noted for his lectures
on public affairs.
Representatives of the club,
Including the new president,
will attend the state con-
vention in San Diego May 9-11.
At
Reinert's
5210 "'RAMILIN
ROSI" Deweese
Designs heraJds a
silhouette -the
SWIMDRESS with separate pe.nty in
Birdseye Pique,
Delicate rosebud embroidery trim•
the slde-111lt skirt and neck11ne further enchanced
by a 'Stacup' inner bra.
Colors: \Vhitc/plnk,
White/aque,
\Vhitc/yell o\\".
10/16-$21.0G
Aln 2·pc-$21.00
PISCF.S (Feb. 19-Mar. 20):
Stick to principles. Minor
pressure is but temporary.
You really ha ve nothing to
fear. One who attempts to
bluff has nothing to back
claims. You hold the trump
card.
IF TODAY IS "\'OUR
BIRTHDAY you hav~ a fine
sense of humor ; you are
artistic and appreciate art ob-
jects. Vigoroos changes due. If
single, marriage could be on
horizon.
To orcl'r St.clfl& Om.Irr'• 50-peoe boc*ltl, lhe Tru About AtlnilOQv, send loll ctn!s :v:m•rr llookt•t tne OAIL.Y PILOT, 32«1, Grind Cen--tr1I St•llon. New ork, H.Y. 10017.
CALIFORNIA
Use Your -l•nkAmeric;erd, Master Char9•,
Diners, Carte llanch• Crerlit Carcl1
• Bows Made in Europe ,. Only 2 More Doys Untll
MARGIE WEBB'S
Gigantic 'Once-A· Year' Tent
"SALE" ·E· BRATION
A whirlwind tour and ftstlve
pwties are planned for the
ninth annual Dtbutante Euro-
J>WI Hollday, cllmued by the
B.tll ol the Silver Hooe June IS
in the Palall SCbwmenbera,
VIMna.
l'<letball hlghllgbll or the
!Tip will be tho thlrd American
• Debulante Ball tn the Costlc
Scbleltoheim, Munich July l,
and the Gnind Ball in Malta
July S.
Patronesses •e Mrs. Paul
Wiiiiam Lawrence of Lido
Isle, Los Angeles and Palm
Sprlnas; Mme. Erne s I
Lembtraer, wife of His Ex·
ctllency the Austrian am.
ba§edor to the United States :
Princess Agatha Schoenburg·
ltartenrtcin, Her Jmptrlal and
Roya.I HIJhMSll P r f n c e 1 1
A1nt1 Von Und 1u
l~Jecht'115te"1. 11nd L I d y
M0tlnt Evans of London.
DESIGNH fAUICS AT TIEMENDOUS SAYINGS
Al" tNl'Mndou• cl.....ut walvu In our aevtl41v. Sito,
So, RM'lember th• D1t1
MAY ht
Anti h•lp u1 "S•IJ-E.Brata''
2094 So. Coost Hwy. Laguna leach
IN COSTA MiSA IT'!
D&,.A,.TMSHT 8TQft.lt--
1116 NIWl'OlT IOULIYAlD
PARK CONYENIENTL Y JUST A STEP FROM OUR
EAST ENTRANCE , •• Op., 01Hy 9:30.6; fd. til 9
Grind ln1uguratoln
of our new
Huntington B11ch
Health Spa. Public
invited, frff tours
daily. A few special
cha rter memberships.
still av1ilabl1.
• Flnnl1h Rocle: Sauna ROOft'lt
• Roman Stum Rooms
• Electronlt M1111g1
• Florida Sun Tan Rooms
• Whirlpool l1th1
• Conditioning
Fatllltits
• Swiss
F01cial
M1thlne1
'
....
(
FOR
LIMITED
TIME
()NLYI
*SPECIAL
, ..
•Anyone who purchoses their Health Spa Program
with their BonkAmericard or Master Charge will
receive absolutely free an additional complete
fitness program for any im· II-·-BE
mediate member of their ·-· ""'*
family. "PAID IN FUll."
CALL OR STOP BY TODAY FOR A FlEl TOUR
I HUNTINGTON BEACH Ill COSTA MISA
11111 MA •~ u> BIA\M 1 JN" "•~BOii l lVfl .
' . .
942-1451 S49-JJ68
II ANAHEIM I\ ORANGE
1•r \ ••~c .. t1 >'r ~-:' ~~'ILi• A>ll
. . . . . .
826·0381 630.2441
. ,-,
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! " N.Y.. se,dsli
VOL. 62, NO. 102 , 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORA~E ~OUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1969 • ' TEN CENJS
• .
Air Cal Chief Wal,lts New, Longer
. .
Ru.nWays ·
II)' JOnN V ALTERZA JCGfeOI ol llaonbo!den at ID amull -1· niaJD ~ be -to the San
" "' -""' "'!' Ing al tbe Newpar!er Ina. • ~ ~. "and Jlrilapo tt WGllld
Extension of the main 'runWay at· .Air Cal lost fl mJJ]loo dW1ng tbe ytar'i be ~le to~ die ~t .lree-
Orange County Airport, building or a new first quarter, ht aaiit. ~~t poiJ!t to allow for fUrther
runway and revision of flight frequency Benscoter urfed a fciur·pofnt.plan for_ • n.e 9 1'e;..1oD, he laid, w0u14 allow hb:
times for . Air Ca1ifornia jets were sug. the cokty to improve Alf' Oil service at fl!'llt'~ jets a 10nger .t.UeOlf Span, thereby
gested before lhe finn's Stockholders to-the . ab'port. He ~ saJd his firm would belpiac to eliminate noise. over noise--
day by the tattler's president. . CooJJe.rate 1n the· plans. "provided that . aenaiilve N~wport Beach• are.M.
Carl Benscoter, Air Ca1 head, painted a there" is appioPrfale pr~w i n He also called .for building a parallel
somber -but what h~ tenned a + ~bllahJng a regiqnal airport. ' -runway alona tbe temilna.l's existing
neveltbeless .Ptjmistic picture -'• for •the . BeQocoter ~ 11111 tbe tennlilal~ o!aln slrtlclt
' ' •
He .--<I i1me and frequency liJn.
Its !0< fliCIJls wlllcb would "help <Sllb-
llsh. ~. SOUDd community relaUons.
We could set It ao that flights would be
not top frequent. to disturb persons in
the surrounding communities."
Benscot'er also suggested a stream-
lining of Air Cal terminal services to
help end overcrowding and eliminate
need . for expansion ol the exlstin&
termlllal building.
He allo cr!Uclzed Onqe CGualy'a
Boord ol Supervllon ,....~
aplnit propoood Air CIJ llrptl to j{;jj
Pacific Northwest.
He said the latest action by the board
was not conajstent with Us previous ap-
proval of lllghts to SacrlDl<Dlo;
He told the oharehclden that tbe lloaOl-
clal losses th.ii Y!&r and., J_.t • can. be
blamed .on sJrong . CQntpeti\kin, from
Pac!llc SoulhW.St Alrllnoi al· Burbuk
. .
Districts Changed !·
..
Council 'in Harmony, Cook Objects
By JEROME F. COLIJNS
Of Ille o.llr f'I .. II.rt
Newport Beach city counclhnen resbul-
fled their home districts Monday nlsht.
~Y did It with no bickering among
themselves whatever -In sharp contrast
to redlstricting actioM of past years.
The vote to adopt one of three alternate
maps propoeed by the city staff wu
unanimous. The liew map, "Alternate A,"
changes the shape of dl.!trict boundaries
in at lea.st five aignlflcant ways:
-It removes Balboa Island from
distrtcts I and 6 and placa It in district s
(Ed Hirth ). .
-It aboves district 5 away from the
area --! of the Upper Boy, lea~ ii
enUrtly east of the bay.
-It moves distrlcl 7 · ( L·l·n d 1h y
Dbtrtct Map, Pap I
Parso111) out of old ·CO.-del liar Dd
into newly developed Irvine nndj11ncl
areas east o f MacArthur Boule¥11'd.
north of Filth Avenue and eul of Poppy
Avenue.
-It pu!IJ baclt the peninsula bo,..)Olarlils
of district I (Doaald MclMIJ) froai lllh·
Sir.et to 32nd Streol
'-It llv.. to dlltrld 3 (Doreen
Marsball) the Lido Sbopo .,.. and all of
Newperl 'Helgbts.
'!be only ~ over tbe realllnmeat
decloloc came from the COWICil dwnbm floor. -
Ex.mmcl1man Dee Copk pleaded
umucc...ruily !or tnclullali Gt all ol
Irvine Ternce, wlMn be -· In """"' (Seo Dl8!UCU, ..... ,.,
Two Candidates Pegasus Bid .-UShetl
Vie to Replace
Gen. _De Gaulle
.... ,.(wt~ -,.,..,.. ~
-GtOria Pomplcl.iu ..a !odanst
leaAer -Quton D<l!em, "1IYOI' of ·
Miriel!'-; afuioanc!.d today !he, ~ iun
for president to sueQ'eed Charles De
Gaulle.
Pompklou, 57, ftrll to lllllOWICt, WU
accl8imed later by a atandlng ovation of
the 2f12;man Gaullist party group in the
N1tloaal Asoemhly. Ila indicated he
wou1d be a strong .man president in the
Gaulllst tradition. (Pemnallty Profile,
Page 4.)
NfiWPPRT . REEWAY -Shaded .,... Indicates
swath filtpre Nl?wport Freeway is expected to cut
through P,Sta Mesa and Newport Beach. Vlew is
frqm C<>$8 Mes' looking. towai;d ,9£~. This route,
' ' '
lo • -•• , • "'
· favored by boll! cities, D<l\l' bu been recommended
b)' stale highway engln~~r. When engineers get
down to final stages of design, aclual route could
vary '' ~~/1° .Y•rds Oil ei~er side.
Defferre announced his decision to run
a few hours 18.ter when the National
Assembly reassembled for the first time
since April 2. Aaembly Pmidenl Jac-
ques ChubanJlrehdas delivered a short
tribute to De Gaulle as a warUme
re111stanc.e hero.and naUonal Jeader,
Sig:µal _of Doom?
Qµake Shakes Up
So.uthland Nerves
By ARTmm 1l VINSEL
Of 1" D11ff 'llM St.ti _
A rolling el!f'th tremor and a wave of
Instant, innner repentance hi't Mooday, 55
hours, 38 minutes and 45 seconds from
the end of a month pMphets of doom
predict will be sinful S o u l h e r-n
California's last.
Today, some people are laughing. some
are disappointed that they missed the
4:21 p.m. jolt and others felt a bit like a
boy whistling lhrouth a cemetery on a
dark night., , 1 Estimates varied slightly as to the
frJ:mor's strength, but staff engineer Bill
G!l~ at the Caltech sermologlcal
lai>9fatoiy said it hit S.3 on the Richter
scale of qµale magnitude.
The roet-Md·rOll style temblor was
centered uj rueged Santa Rosa MpuntaJns
terrain iiortbwest of Borrego Springs, an unpo~lated afta about 40 rqUes from
the ~mean border and near the Salton
Sea. •
" ' .. Chaban-Delmas d~bed De Gaulle I S
a man who "restored France's honor, led
her to victory and ~bllshed her·
worldwide mission." The Assembly, jam-
med to capacity, rose and applauded. The
Communists and some Socialists re·
mained seated.
DeUerre. the Sociallst floor leader,
made a brief ,.ply crlllcWng De Gaulle's
interp,.taUoo of the oomtltutlon.
Delem expressed hope the Assembly
would remain in session to keep an eye
The man whose own choice, by tradJ. local agencies Involved, for any last· on the presidentlal elecUon. Then be an-
tion, seems to dictate the state Highway minute comments. nounced his own candidacy.
State Engineer Clwoses
Red-Blue Freew~y Line
The atmosphere was calm 1 n d Commissjon's freeway ~ selection The majority of speakers and letter· dignlfied in conttaat to the stormy sctnH
recommends the so-called Red-Blue route writer• in the recent mOQlM have sup. that marked De GauUt's return to power
for the Newport Freeway through the ~ the Jted·Blue route, witb most 11 years ago.
Harbor Area: dl.ssent comlne: from residential property Defferre was a candidate for a short
State DirectOr of Public Works James owners whose land will be taken. time againat De Gaulle In the 11165
The original route wu picked In lt«, presidential race but withdrew before the
A. Moe •llll9Ull0ed that slato-,)UWvay l'l '\U' Ji&bl clown Newport Boulevanl, at final-stag" of the campatp to make
Engineer J.' A. Lqam .rtcOm.niends a Uine when: fteeways wert<-0nly a vque room for FraJWOia: Mitterrand 11 caD-
sclectlon of the $60. 7 million fretway concept and the area was sparsely 'didate for all France's left wing .parUea.
alignment from Bay street to·tbe coat\. developed. Fonner Premier Georges Bldault, 0,
No da. te has bMn ad for 'the' S~te Selecijon of a..dilferent route will Juve who headed the illegal lt<ftt anny Newport BouieY8rd 11 ,a IUl'fact atreet · organWIUon revolt agalost De Gaulle in
Hisbway CommiJsl<n to talle up the carrying tnte1'Clty tra!Dc, while aolvlng ltel.C and who 1111 allowd to rtlurn
quettion at a fonnal bearing, tNt-it a few other closely-connected problems. from exile last summer, told a news coo-
should be schef:luled Within 180 'day1 and ConstrucUon of Route IS, which will De ference he also might run.
co_...i ag~ notllled of the lime. bel~w grolnld leVel and'be croaeil by ctty Mltterand has not said whether ho will
dreetl above, is five to seven ye&n nm again but formaUoa ol 1 "Mltttrand Veteran obeelven uid today that the away, with two ypn estbnlted to draw for President" committee la Paris was
R<d-Blue route recommendation virtually up entPneertnc .M-1nts. aJJllOUllOed.
a~ that Route 55 will bt built on that .
alignment looplns out west 1hrouih ~l!n' ~i!n ... &. u," _ Co1ta · Tab~ 'lndefinitel1'
" .
Newport Seeks Pet;ree
lnAnnexationSquabbl.e
\1( ~·· ' . ' • • ~ . • •
N"*""" Beath c11y--.. .., .... -.\l-1-mi.-..,.11111e11111o
up irJth ~ "<lu&.M" ~.; ~ ·~Qua-~;/ • .=a;; o(
feud with co.ta Jl!OI&. ' • ~r ., , -
'1licy decided~ la..,_ wtth Saala,Anl ' -the·ltrPDrl-ii·
lheJr Colla Mesa cone..-lot u eod to to Oolta Mm a IOlll· t!lreet. Patdles <ii
tbe blckertnc, ooce Ind fGr all. • lbp llrlp""' In botll elites, but .-·of ·lt
At the ..,.. time Ntwport coaoctlmoa II la .DtlthOr dty,
unanlmOUlly agreed to: · It Hes· roqbly between.Santa An,a and
-Seti county approval of irw•1i61t ~~-~enuea. For years, die two
of the Pecuus tract aouth ol IJrllfp ~ ba .. _, fllnclnc ooertappllli 111-Coonly AJrport. • aentloa ~ -11111 belled cbarJtl
-II ucb oiber. --Seek county apprwll' o! a llrlp an-Newport counclJmen made R t1w
neJ11Uon along 'I'ustb) Avenue lhll Mondiy they're 1"'1Y of the deCade<>ld overlaps a portion. of a propoied Co.ta dispute. .. lliltcrtCally ., Aid Counc:Uman
Mesa anneuUon. .RObert Shelton, "both cities have done
-Proteat to !he county !hat portJon of lltOU1 tbilils in terma of anneuttooa. •
the Colla M-onneuU~ that ts not He laid Costa M-'• lalelt annenUon
o•erlapped by Newport 1 llrip ""' move -ln~vinc territory IOUlh of the
neut.loa. . .. , f-"uus traCt on ¥~-lld~ of Mesa
TM couply'a Local Ail•n<:l" Fonnotlcin -p;.iV.'-bad cau11J1f.Ntw'p/Jrlby iorprtse.
Commission (LAFCp1 scheduled to tab "U Ibey aoQlbt not to Ill ~ and tall:
up lbe Costa Mesa propoeal -tagged •--•-~ I "-t• unlortuna'· " --'d "Ba-• Bay '·-·•lion No I'' - -May w us .uuu~ t, ""' I """• -i
14 ~ ~~-· -Sheltoa. "-I'm willing now lo -tbe n, LAFC will rec<lve Newperl'I other cl)edc and make an ellor1 to rudl
• ··~ ··~-.... l<lnd of pnerat lllll<Ulion -coun~proposalt at Wiil IUWll'o ment w1tJi them."
Newport Fretting
About SCAG Air
Study, May ,1oin
Newport Beacb_may join the' Soutbern
CallfornJa ADoclaUon of Govti'nments
(SCAGY In ordet io have an lnOuence In
the sroup'• stu<11 .. of ,.. °'""" County
reskmal airport alt<.
City coundlmm Monday uked !he City
staff to get copies ol the "ar,-llila'a
bylaw•. Mombi!nbl~, ' the """1lcll in·
dicated, wtll follow later.
It coots 12'1\1 to join ICA~ Aid Com> cilman FA! ll1rlh, '!119 !lnt _ Opoiod ll&n-
lng up wtlh the mulU-clty aaoctallon.
"We would Caln.-by being oa ti, to
bave a voice and to know wllafl Ptnc
on," he e:splaloed.
CmnclJm•n Paul J. Gruber, wbmo
. ...me11mn1c dlslricl la &lija<eol to the
. dllpUted territory, wu less warm •bout pe... talb.
·'"l'broqb the years," he said, "Colt&
M-bu made. t bnd(e1l0d(e of that
.,.. , wtth tlg-l'agled annellllonl .. And
!hi., 'time lhe)''re lf1tnc lo take ad-
vanlaie o1 na -warning. Thm la nothlnr !air or iqultable 1bout their
'Back Bay Annt:atlon No. 1'!'
"We will. Ill have to agree that the
boU6ttiria tidweert the fwo clUes west of
the bly U9 prsUy 'bonl to jlll!lly," Aid
M.,or Dtnen Manhall. .. Nevertbtleu1 u•, our obUotlen to all dilwn and dtscua 1\1~ ,boundartos !hat are loa\<&L •
Gruber ftnally agreed 'to .nn.u11on
(See ANNEXAnON, Pip I)
Or••••
-~--The IUD'lr~ + In· Wedneto
Just pne year and 20 days ago, ~e
same quake-prone region generated a
tremor of slightly more magnlfudt which
was also felt tlu<oghout the Solithlahd
and caused minor damage.
The sharp, Monday afternoon jolt caus-
ed only minor damage, wlUt a .ft6llk cell·
Ing Bhaken «iose, windows, bottles and
other gl&55'C9fllained m e r c b a n d I 1 e
smashed in Borrego Springs businesses.
Mesa Msyor AMn L. ~·
Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
city offk:iala agreed on tbe Red-B1ue, or
S-7 route among five W>der consideration,
lncludtnc lhe original choice of a lrelway
right dnwn Newport Boulevanl.
Newport Bounces Bumps
dq, mNlnc 'Ila; 4lbul -""'
c:louda "'° by --10 .......
-the tem-.. .........
mlr<d to the """" •'• r... the -Onqe CGul.
INSIDE TOD.t. '\'
C•bon IO<iclN fa like on• big
l'tpc1 Corps, a /Gldll4lblg , ..
clal upcrimclt~ · '"Jll a UC .
lnrlnt l~ctvrcr fn giving '°"" l.,Jphr l•to · ~ c.,,.,._,
falo114. 1'0/I< 1.
One of the quake's more humoroos
aspect., -since no one was hurt -was
the immediate report of a large brick
building's coJ\apsc in southwestern Los
Anjcles-cs.. liory, Pase 7). ·
u•rage owner Roosevelt Holden and his
lour r.mployest however ran out t•
e::unule! before · the earthquake rumbled
1lmlugh \he 5oothl1nd'1 enut, 11 the old
llruclure collapsed duo to acoanmulaled
....... and fali,iue.
Tall buildings shlmmled sllghtl)' from
Las Ve;as in Los .Angeles, 1-Beach
and SM Di"'°' whDe lhoosands thought
for A mdQcnt tho end predlded by a (Set QUAK!:, Pagt rj
, ...
. Nai: all councilmen votln( oo tbe choice
•-sarlly . lav... lhe lied-Bille route Motortsts mlJ' bav1 ..-it Allinl{ recommendaUoos against them.
personally, but ·~ to h in !he in· throogh Newport Beaclr, after all. Rosera. however, didn't want to ... the
tcreat.s of, solidarity. ' City counctbnen, Jn a A ·v«e, Monday luue pennantntly killed. So he.uked 1 ..
AJ now .P~nntd, !he Jina! end ol tho night tabled -"inde!IAltely" the city'• IUad !hat tt lull be tabled, lndelinhely.
Newport rr-11 Into the Halbor Am Gnlat 8"rnp Cootro•tilly. It w11 awl!Uy. '
will awing west of the dowo-.i uu of -At I.we w11. 'a plan !noted .by a It 111 unUR111 though. that tbe MJbj<cl
NewPori Beach and then i>lcll: to Superior mfiiOrity ol -lo fnllOll railed -1riU again be nllld wtlll the _.i
Avenue at tbe Newport Beoch. berml In pilbltc -. In raldenll1I C!Mlnclt all-en~ Mayor <I> qr e c n
Runnh\i west of the a._..., 1111 tltht--nelgllborhoods a .,!auto opecd deter. Marshall, ,counctlmen · Robert -SbelUrl,
lone lrttway will tie Into the fUlure rent. Paul Gruber and Dlmald Mclnnlnl ore
Piclllc COiat ·rreeway-aiq Witlng '!be lpllt vote wil on a motlila by too oo1ldly ~ lo,tbe bumpL
Pacific Coal llJpway at the lhrff-way Ba-'• Howard Raters. wbo wu Of the tour. cnl7 Gruber -to table
inteneclion with Balboo -· • amonc tbe coondl'1 pro-bump.Jodllon. the matter. The Oiiier --agalnll Cop!" <I data ~ pollcy llltemenll Four at.er -had made Jt deoi llOlen' l11Gllon boeauae Ibey w&lded to Taraely """"'I ln prior rr.t.tY r.ute dorlnt urller dilr<t'sn lhol tbey GI> oee the COWICil tallt a pollq ~
htortnp have beta -lo olllclals it all !>OM Ille """"' • tloo ~·fit lllff 'aplos\ 1111 bor1pl. '1'111 _., .. table
'
c.-.... ... J i:'1 ~
0 p• " =:..:..-: --. ·=-"'·• " .... .... ...., ,, cc::.. :: -. --·
-. -' .. --~ ----== .. 11 ...... "''' ""* • .., •n -.. -.. -. == 11 · . . ..
# •
~ .,
t; ,•
... . . ••
I .D.\Jl y PILOT . , .,,..,, Allll~ 1 ...
. -t" 'f . ' . • -" j. ~ .. . • Pl OT • ••
• • J.OG•OOK · •
. '
The Times Are Changin'
And Profs Had Better
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of .. Dtllr ,,. '''" ~· UCI'1 students have won the right to hire and firfl two pttcent ol their
h'. professon.
,.
"" , .. ..
'·.
,,
.,
The 11tudtnt1· ·had said they wanted to hire and fire 10 ptrcent ol their
pro!esson. But Chonncellor Don Aldrich •Plit lhe dU!erence and came up with
twti. (It's the New Malh.)
ThlJ 11 known ea a compromiff. But it dot1n't make
: any dUference, of course.
.Because the way thlnia are 1otnr, the students
1 eventually will set what they're really after -100 percent.
And .tbta ls how, I Imagine, the sy1tem will work:
Dr. P'ellsworth cerebrum, Nobel Prlze-wiMer, waits
nervously outside the door of the UCI Student Council
chambers. He Is next In line for a Job interview.
The worJd.famed developer of the mechanical appen·
. dix ha! known hard times lately. rn six years. he's bHn
fired by the students or 14 colleges. The reasons were al·
ways the same.
Cerebrum. It. couldn't keep up with lhe night life. He kept falling asleep
1t ClmJ>U! pot parties. Not only that, he couldn't lift the bricks hia contracts
requited him to tosa 1t puling college adminlstr1ton:.
Cerebrum Is reflecting sadly on all this when suddenly the door is flung
open. Out of the UCI Student Council cnambers tumbles Or. Arthur SchlesinJ:·
er Jr.
He is followed by a ahout from within: ••Nert!"
Cerebrum, reaching for his cane, rlsea cr~Jdly from his chair. He helps
Schlesinger up from tbe floor. :~· . •• , "Hello, Arthur," he ays lo the cursing ez.Jvy League historian. "I
,;.-haven't seen you since those: MIT atomic resemh studenta: blew up Harvud. .. .. What happened lnside?"
"Happened? I'll tell you what happened.'' ••YI Schlealnger, brushlna Off
his Nehru jacll:el and straightening out his love beads. "Tbe ·flrlt three hours
of the grilling weren't too bad. But then I nacb up to wipe the pergpiraUon
from my brow. That was my mistake." He chokes baci a M>b.
"Control yourself, Arthur."
"I'm &0rry, It's )U!t that ·wbel\ I wiped my' brow I ruined eVloo'thlnf. I
knocked off my shoulder-length hair-piece.'' Schlesinger burrta: Into t!&r..
Cerebrum shakes his heacl l)'lnpatheUcally. His own shoulder-length wlr,
-· he qapplly noUces, sµrvives the $&king.
·.~ '
He says farewell to his weeping colleague, screws up his courage and en-
ters the Student Council chambers.
tt is pitch·black inside, except for a apotlight at the far end of the room.
cerebrum. flashing a peace sip, lttps into-the apotllaht.
The questions came hard and fast : "You ever been busted~"
"Ob, yu. Twelve Umea last year alone."
"Hmm. Not bad. But what for?"
,, "Seven times for parUcipating In a campus riot and five times for as·
aauJUng a police oUicer."
.. A what?"
l
! ' I • • I
I •
t •
"A pig. I beg yoor pardon."
"Your application says you're 23 years old. You look older to me."
''Tbat's because of the iubject I n~w teach. Ifs very wearing."
· "~t ls.It?" ,.
"Gumllla warfare."
.The room bursts with cheer1. Cerebrum, cactUni Joyously, 11 hired on
lhespot. ·
From P .. e J
DAILY PILOI
01.AMOI COUI f'U•llS"ttrtO (~AN"r
l•\torl N, Wt elll
l"fttlflf\1 .,.,. f'llM""-'
J 1c\ l . c ... 1.y
VIQ ,,,,...,.., .,,, (;_,II ..... IW_,
Th•"''' keewil .....
TkMtt A. M .. r,tilft1
IN"""" l•i*
,,.,_. '· C1lliR1 --(11'1' Ed~ ....,.., .... ~
2211 w.1t 1.r~ •• 1,.,1 ••• ,,
M•llh1f M4ttu: P.O. lu 1111, 92661 --(:ollt MtM: 111 W.1 ...,. Slrett l-9Hcf>· m ,_, ,._
...... ,_... tit~: .. 1111 l!rtll
US S Ne'v Jersey
Coming Home,
Arrives Monday
Somewhereln ~ iron bow.els of the:
world'& only 1cUve baUleahlp, the USS
New Jtl'lt)', 1 seaman third clan tod,ay
•WIS '.whJ1Ung _"Calilornla Hue I Corne,,,
and boplnj •hlna• itty peacdul. Navy orrrclab llMOUnced lhe big ship
ind her 1,600 crewmen will arrive In
home port at Long Beach MoOOay, after
being dlverted April I! when North Kor•a
shot down a U.S. spy plane.
The New Jmey w•s returning from
aeven months' duty In Vietnamese waters
and was only a 1hort sail from tM Or·
ange Coast when the Incident caustd re-
deployment to the Western Pa cific.
Navy officials never revealed the exact
destination of the battle"·agon. which put
Into port at Yokosuka, Japan, for fuel amt
suppl.its, then steamed out into the Sea or
Japan.
Walling relatives exJ>'Cthig a bil{
Welcome 'llome fettlval in Lona Brach
finally belleged lhe N•VJ with questions
until the unotOclal Koru·bound story
was given official 1tatus. ,,..
Child Discipline
Lecture Topic
Oranc• Coast C.ll•I• paychoJoclll Don
Bowlus will lecture 1t T:IO p.m. Wed·
netd1y at the Newport EJement.ary
Scbool. Balboa .
lfe will 1prak on the tubjtet of child
dltclplln•. Tille or tile talk Ii ''Con You
S1y No to Your Child!"
For further Information call M1rg1
carver, 17S-7431. The public " wtlcomt.
1b(rc ii no charge.
:·u~~~mbs
"S~p Reds
. . I Reg ro upi ng··
SAIGON (UP!l -852 ilomhen stru<l
eight time~ Monday and today aaaimt
the North. Vietnamese l&t and 7th
Divisions regrouping aloq: the Cam.
bodlan frontier for what South Viet•
namese intelligeoct offleers predicted
could be a Ho Chi Minh birthday of·
Scnaive.
The lempo 6[ !ighUni north and
northeast ct Salgon along the invasion
routes frQJn Cambodia .stepped up sharpo
ly, and U.S. air power and tanks were
called in lo rescue a 25--truck American
corivoy from a Communist ambu1h on
highway J3 leading north to Cambodia
from Salgon.
The millions of pounds of bomb• were
concentrated on War 1.one C, the
longtime Communist stronghold as to ~
miles northwest of Saigon where some of
the heaviest fighting of the war has raged
in fhe past. Others hit 35 miles northeast
of Saigon in War Zone D.
Cruiser Smashed
On Waves Off
Sunset Beach
Scattered piecu or wood were the only
remnants of a 25-foot Chris Craft cabin
cntller pouoded by waves early this
morning near 10th Street In Sunset
Beach.
Owner Ken Brown of Maywood said he
was taklna: the newly purchased boat
from Newport. Beach to Loni Beach when
the motor froze about 10 o'clock Monday
night.
"It took us unW 2 a.m. this momln& to
drill Into shore," he said.
"Then when lt was cau&ht on lhe
beach, the waves just pounded It to
pieces," Brown continued.
On board were Brown and James
Peter.en, 10, son of Pete Petel'10ll, 9210
El Morado, Fountain Valley, who had
just sold the boat to Brown.
Pete Peterson was waiting ln Long
Beach for his $0ll and Brown When he
rtteived word of the. boat trouble. No one
was injured, but the bollt, valued at
$3,000, was considered nearly a total Joss.
It was not insured.
PetenJon i&id this morning they might
be able , to salvage the engine and the
transmission by dredging them out of the
water, but both men looked discouraged
as they surveyed boat chips strewn for a
mlle alone sunset Beach.
County Airport
Runway Reopens
Ahead of Time
The main runway at Orange Coonty
Airport will reopen to commercial 1Jrlinl!:
use at 2 p.m. Wednesday, two days ahead
of forecasts . Robert J. Bresnahan, county
aviation direc:tor announced today.
Bresnahan said the rain-<lamai.?ed
runway which has been resurfaced with a
five-inch coat of asphalt will be ready for
full use by ·alt types of · planl!:s Friday
morning.
The early opening to commercial car-
riers v.·as made posstbla throtigh 1 $4,000
payment by Air Callfornla to cover the
cost of Sunday overtime by the con-
tractor, Industrial Asphalt Inc. ol Stan-
ton .
The original contract for the job was
$165,770.
Air Cal and Air West are the only com·
mercial airlines Oying from the airport.
Since the runway resurfacing began,
both airlines havl!: been S<'heduling all
Orange County fiight1 from Long Beach
Airport.
Bresnahan said that work \\'ill C'Onlil'1'('
through Wednesday. \\•Ith crc1~·s st'11
working al one end oJ the run,vay. The
crews "'ill move off the run,•;ay \vhen jet s
are landlfl.I, Bresnahan said.
" I • I
•I c ,
., ..
., .
-· -
•
" '
t: ·.A II --·---.... ~"' ..
NEW IOUNDARIES -This is new councilmanlc
diatrlct map approved by Newport Councll. ".Aller·
nate A" of three plans, it places Balboa Island in
one district, among other major changes from old
map. Ex-councilman Dee Cook lost in p!ea to c:oun-
ell to place all o! Irvine Terrace (northeast of Bal·
boa Island) in district 6. It will remain split by dis·
trlcts ·5 and 6, council decided. New boundaries will
become effective June 27, barring unforeseen de-
lays.
I
Swank Ghettojl
No Sidewalks
Shorecliffs, one of Corona del Mar's
wealthlut neighborhoods, "in many ways
ii ao upper clau ghetto," Newport Bl!:ach
Vice Mayor Lindsley PariOnl said Mon-
day.
Parsons spoke with f I r s t · h a n d
knowledge. He lives therl!:.
He complained about the ocean front
area's lack of sidewalks and parks. The
problem, Parsons told his council col·
lea&ues:, forces children to play and walk
ln the s~ts.
"This may be one of the city's most ex·
pensive areas, but it 1Ull lacks a few
basic things," he said.
His commentS came as an aside to his
• in Shorecliffs
discuss.Ion of a proposal le Install 'omnps
in roadways as an •ulo 1peed control
device.
As a solution to lhe playground pro-
blem, Parsons suggested that perhaps
parts of the streets could be used as
playgrounds by youngsters at certain
limes during the day.
"They have as much right there as we
have," he said.
He cited state laws that allow tern·
porary clO!ing of llghtly.used streets to
allow children lo use them for play.
Th!! idea, however, didn't stir fellow
councilmen too much. The dropped the
issue. in raver or contl,,uing arguments
over benns and traffic cnfor1..cment.
. .
Parking Meters to .Sprout
Along Balboa 'Main D~ag'
Something new will ·be added to thl!:
ttreets in Balboa next morrth-more
parking meters.
Tu.::y will be Installed along Balboa
E:iule\'ard between 10th and 15th streets.
l.1c median on that stretch or the boulc·
vard \1•ill also ~ mct~red.
Oi.h ~r n1eters, according to " c;1 y
C:>~tnri\ decision r-.looday night. \, ·11 b!
ir.stallcd on city.owned parking 11::3 in
1:1e are:-i and along 18th and l~.h
strc::ts at the bay.
At City Traffic Engineer Robert'
Jaffe's suggzslion. counciln1en decided
to meter only half the avall:iblc space~
between 14th and 15th streets on Balboa
Boulevard. Jaffe said the request v.·as
made by the Central Ne\\"?Ort Associa·
tion. headed by Dr. Robert Washbon.
The meters will be in operation lrom
mid-f\lay until mid-October on a 9 a.n1.
to 5 p.m. basis daily.
Councilmen also agreed to give spe-
cial parking permits to employes of
Newp:irt Elementary School. The per·
mlls will allow teachers, administrators
and other employes to park free a( 1:,e
metered spaces during the tV.'O monf·s
1:-i~ mettr opt ration overlaps ti;J
s::-hool year.
There will be no meter enforcement
at many parkini spaces on Sunday
mornings for the beriefit !f church-
1oers. ,
Jaffe said the additioaal parking
meters are requirl!:d by summertime
traffi c and parking con<lilions. They
\·:i ll also. h: noted, provide a lo( of
r:\'cnue for the city. He estimated tbe
r :",'C'lUC at from $40,000 lo $50,000 a
r ·~r.
T:!at is equivalent to the sum gener-
,R i •j by t.,.,·o cents on the municipal tax
r:::~:-. now Sl.225.
UCl's Student
Constitution
Fails in Voting
A controversial new st11deni con-
rtitulion voted on in referendum by UC
Irvine studenls failed on two coun~.
Elections Commissioner Jean Buckley
said today only 23 percent of 3,500
registered students voted. A 25 ptl'«fll
turnout was netded to make the vote
valid.
Ff'Ot11 Pege l
DISTRICTS .••
citmanlc District S (Robert Shelton).
Cook said It would balance the popula-
tions between districts 5 and 6, which in
the new alignment, as in the old, split the
neighborhood.
Cook, who Jost a re-election bid to
district 5'1 Ed Hirth la st April,, attempted
to assuage possible concern on the part of
some councilmen that his plea was aimed
at making him eligible to seek office in
next year's district 6 race. His home is
located in district 5. In both the old and
new districting maps. If it were shifted to
district 6, be could run next April,
Cook told councilmen that he does not
Intend to try f~r office ln Ne~rt llgain.
"I have no tnJ~rest. no persorial tnierest
'vh;li.ever, 1n this proposal t am,.making
to you/' he said.
''I assure you that I have no deStre to
sit In any chair up the.re again.'"
Nevertheless, councilmen stuck to the
staff's original "Alternate A" map,
unchanged.
Shelton, who stood to Inherit 1,000 ad-
diUonal constituents with transfer of
Irvine Terrace to dbtrlct 6, spoke against
any· change.
"We cannot take Mr. Cook's sug-
gestion out of context and look at it
alone," he said. "There are similar prob-
lems (population balance, djvision of
neighborhoods) elsewhere. But that is
just an unavoidable part of the districting
process. J don 't think the particular ls.sue
~raised by Mr. Cook merits any separate
attention.''
The action by the council Monday night
was In the form or a directive to City At·
tome'y Tully Seymour to prepare an
ordinaqce establishing the new boun.-
daries. The ordinance is scheduled for
first reading -and formal approval -on May 12. On May 26 it Is expected to be
adopted. It will· be effective a month
later.
The orily possible hitch ln the process
could develop, observers suggest. on May
12. If a large delegation of Irvine Terrace.
representatives tum out then to protest
the continued division of t h e i r
neighborhood, ·some councilmen might
have second thoughts on the matter. But
it 1s not considered likely the majority
WOllld.
F rom Pqe l
Rea~tor for UCI
Also, the.proposed constltuUon only got
about SO perctnt approval while two.
thirds approval wa1 required for passage.
Miss Buckley said there a.re no plans lo
revive the propogl In the geoeral student
body eledlon nett month.
,QUAKE ...
I variety or visionaries had come.
"I lhought this was it," said Tom
Turner, of El Centro.
Approval Seen if No Obj ec tio ns
LC Irvine should get the go ahead Fri·
d;iy to install a nuclear research reactor,
Unless a petition is filed by then to in·
tervene, U'le Atomic Energy Commission
in \\"ashington, D.C., will issue a con·
Slruction permit.
The Triga Mark I reactor shou ld be 1n-
stalted and in operation in four to five
mori~ia:, •ccordin& le Dr. George Milltr vi UCI. '
1'11lltr said he doesn't anticipate any
protest. He said there haven 't been any
callers. so far 11 he knows, after
P"'1oua publlcity on plans for the UC!
reactor.
The reactor ls to be u :ii t d to train
students and for research.
Miller aakt I.he rtactor b ol the safest
kind and remarktd that ht ot coqne Is
very to!lctmed a bout w.ty since bl 'II
be work1ng with it In the bastmt.nt of the
Physical Sciences Bulldin1.
"II ls self controlUna:." he·llid, 0 unllke
the atom bomb where the lilSkln JWCe11
goes out of l'Ontrol. As mor& neutroris are
r roduced the ttmperatul'f.I Increases
causlnc tht reaction to become Jell ef4
ficient. If the temperature gtts too high
the. cha.lo reaction l&.Opis."
'
The reactor will be the first 1nywbere
under a department of chemistry's con·
trol. Reactors al most universities are
used In nuclear tngineerina or reactor
physics programs, Miller said.
He said the UC! rea ctcr 11t•\\l be used
for production of short half·life 150topcs
that can be trace.rs both in chembtry and
biolofica.l science research.
A HCOnd' use will be!: hot atom
chemistry, In which atoms In highly et·
cited state alter nuclear rea ctio n can be
used to crute chemical rtactlons not
normally rulbed, M u\d.
Colt of the reactor 1 I o n e will be.
CS0,000 and for the entire facility
'36$,000, ~1111tr Wd. The rooney will
come from a Health, Education and
W•llare lt'ant to Olalnnan or Chembtty
F. Sherwood RoWl.and eeveral yea.n 110.
Rowland Is In vtertn1 this quarter doing
research •nd' bas turned the rtactor pro-
ject over durina hll abltnct; to Miller, a
lecturer in chemistry .
Miller said ~t or operaUni the reac-
tor 11 amall. It runs on low power and
!lsslonabl• materl1~ t5 kliocram& or
uranium 235. 11 UStd up only 1t lhe rate
of • re" crams per ytar. ,
The consUtuUon wtuch v.·ould have put
lruat In tlie wisdom of a minority ol
aludenb "" endoned by Student Body
l'Tesldent Ronald llJdile and opposed by
Vice President Bill Coon.
The hottest debated lssue would have
allowed 200 studenll re1pood.lng to a Call
for a general u'sembly to make a student
,Ovtmment deei1lon th't could not be
cban&ed or rttracted for Jwo quarters.
Sen. l\'lcGovern Urges
More Money for Poor
W ASH!NGTON (iJl'O -sen. George s. McGovtm toda.r w:1ed Conrrus to
provktt free food st.amps tor the very
poor. He. cllarf"1 Pmldtnt Nuon wltll
giving only the "battat nod lo lhe
hunl")''1 ln his new budget. ~
In a prepared Sfnate tpeteb, lht South
Dakota Demoaal Aid : "I had hoped that
the adminlltr.Uon'a vtrbal commJtment
to lhe batUe aplnsl hun8tr would he
followed by """" new: IJrOlrams and
tundJ to combat hunrtt. "But now we
find no new lnlUa.llves, and not a ain51e
addltional dollar !or tile bun1TY In the
President' a new budget."
"People near me were very un·
comrortable, ineluding myse.U," said
advertlsing e.xecutive George Bec.ktr,
who rode it out oa the 23rd floor of the
U.S. National Bank building in San Dieeo.
BUsinessman Jack Wells was worklni
on the 31nd noor ot the Occidental Center
building In Los Angeles when figures he
was wrlUng jlgll!:d ri.cht out rrom under
thr pen.
A Costa ~1esa woman telephoned tM
D.\ILV PILOT two hours later to uk If
" quake had Indeed occurred, saylnl she
saw water slop over the edge ol the raml-
ly ll'v:mmlng paol.
"But I have the: stom11ch nu and t
thought maybe It was Just that actinl up
ag;iln." she ezpla.lncd.
"\Vh1;t e.irthqudt~" askl!:d many
oth~r.i who missed the Joggling.
''I didn't feel It and I'm ctsd, becautt I
don't believe that stufr about CalifornJa
brukinc off lnto lhe ocean," u1d a
sunset Beach barmaid •
General llmits of the quake'i notlciable
area ranged from northern 1'1c1.lco up to
the Santa Barbara art& and wtward in-
to the Nevada desert.
A Palm Springs policeman described
lhc jolt u the worst he has rrtt since the
llW Tehachapi tremors. which killed a
dolen persons as buildln&s coOapsed tnto
tht strttts.
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~ . ..· ~W~rs~. €1othes -I rade:d ·f (()r Rarty A tti r:e'
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II you want something done, leave It to Ille &lrl•·
Not just any girls, but the Asslsteens AuD.llary oJ the Assistance Lea·
gue of Newport Beach. •
In addition to sponsoring fund-raising projects, helping· decorate the
AJbert Sitton Home's new facilities and volunteering to work as teachers'
aides in the Santa Ana Creative Day Cafe Center, they've had time to
pamper them,elves a bit.
A fashion brunch in Bullock's, Fashion Square, Saturday, !\fay 10,
will culmina~e } seu:I~-rovement course the members have been attend·
Ing, and the' girl~ will el new spring fashions for parents and friends
to show off their new se es."
Also highlighting the 9:il0 event, which· ls being planned around the
theme Spring Is ••. will be recognition of girls completing their provisional
year,Jraduating seniors and the Assisteeo-<>1..iie-year, the girl wbo bas
work the most hours during the year.
Recejving charms. from Mrs. Riafard Stevens, C<JordiDator· for Junior
Assisteens, will be the Misses Katherine, Klug, Michele-Edelbute, Kristin
Lillegraven, Jana Thagard and Susan Badh81n, all com_pleting their prov!·
6ional year. ~-
Mrs. Eugene Charles Jr., coordir or for Sentor Asaisteens, will give
special recognition to graduating se1 'S, the Misses Elizabeth Carver,
Jane F1etcher, Deanna Peyton, Diani ,lumb and Susan Wacbter.
Sunshine faces in pots in the As~ .eens colors ol yellow Md ora~ge
\viii greet guests as they arrive, wishing them a good time. Creating the
.sunshine (aces was Miss Susan Roletti, and designing the matchng invita·
·tons was 111iss Julie Jarvis.
Hostesse will be the Misses Badham. Diana Gray, Klug, Lillegraven.
Shelly Ryan, Kristie Speyers and Sidney Willson. Miss Edelbute is taking
reservations and Mrs. Ted Tiberg and Mrs. Jack Badham are coordinating
the hostesses.
Mrs. Joseph Ryan and Mrs. Albert Speyers, assisted by their
daughters, are soliciting door prizes and Mrs. Michael Blake and her
daughter Peggy are planning party favors. Mrs. Badham is in charge of
arrangem.ents .
Showing off their new modeling skills will be the Misses Carroll
Badham, Sharon Badham, Diane Barrett, Pauline Boyd, IJnda Busche,
Carver, Sue Chapman, Libby Crowner, Edelbute, Fletcher, Brynn Gamer,
Sandy Holstein and Jarvis.
Also serving. as mannequins will be the ~ Misses Tita Llllegraven,
Laura Manning, Lisa Pennington, Wendy Peterson, Peyton, Plumb, R<r
letti and Sally Storch.
Infonnal modeling will be done by the !viJsses Cathy Brandm~yer 1 Teri Hustion, Jenny Manning, Jaena Pulaski, Laurie Snyder, Teri Tiberg
and Lynn Weddington. Mrs. Jack Richardson is coordinating the fashion
show. ·
LADIES PERMITIED-.sights fit for a young lady's
eyes will be seen Sattirday, May 10, when Assisteens
Auxiliary of the Assistance League of Newport
Beach stages a fashion parade and brunch. The
sights won't be fit only for a lady'S eyes, however, as
the young women have invited their dads along with·
their mothers tO join them. Purchasing tickets from
the saleslady, Miss Deanna Peyton (left) are Miss
Elizabeth Carver (center) and Miss Jane Fletcher.
.i\.o "
.....
!:'T't
·;Male · Cantin.gent
•'
Takes Limelight
Traditionally Lido Isle Woman's Club
honon the Men's Auxiliary at its May meet·
Ing.
With this in mind, the program is geared
to the male outlook.
'Ibe gathering Tuesday, May 13, is no ex·
ceptlon, for Dr. Alonzo L. Baker, a well·
known .world affairs analyst and outstanding
authority on national and international af·
fairs, will discuss What's Right With America.
Dr. Baker ls a professor of political sci·
ence at Loma Linda University's College of
Arts and Sciences and also is professor
emeritus of political science and international
relations at the University of the Pacific.
A critical observer and active participant
tn America's national life for the past 40
years, the speaker knows American politics
inside out, according to Mrs. Edward Hayes,
a club spokesman. His subject is expected to
bring on spirited interrogation during the
question ·and answer session.
During the luncheon, Tennis Affair will
present an informal showing of the latest court attire', and festivities will begin around
tile custdmary puncll bowl at ll:ilO a.m. DOLLARS $-T·R-E·T-C-H-E·D-Measuring bow far their contrlbu·
lion can be stretched are members of Mesa-Harbor.Ol~b ;(left to
right) Mrs. Harold Lakin, Mrs. Pllul Kees, retliing president and
BEA ANDERSON, ,Editor
TN1111r, ANll "' 1HP N ,.,. IJ
Mrs. Ralph Hippert. '!be donation ol •1000, ralsf!I during the past
year, Is OarnuirKed for the purchase oJ drapes for the Albert Sit·
ton Home.
Mission
Possible
A ''Mission Impossible" cftn. ""
ner dance, a fall dinDer dance
and a fuilloa show have made
possible a mil!Pon on which
Mesa-Harbor Club embarked a
year ago.
Thant• to these flmd·raloln(
efforts, the A I b e r t ' SlttaO
Home will he enriched by
f1500 for tile ~ al
drapes when tile club meols
for Its cloolng luncheon jft-
_ M ... Venle Couatry Club nut
Thuralay.
Bel... rillllin« In • --year, wh<n new olfic<rl wtlt
be named and inltalled, ,.
check in tlH -will he·
pr-.d .. Ille finale to the
191M9-.
Receiving the cootrlbutlon
will he Mn. Margaret Booton,
directer of the home aod Mrs.
Rosemary Homa, presldent
of the Albert Sitton yulld.
Pre9ellta.Uon will be made
jointly by Mn. Rid!ard Par·
ri!h, ways and m e • n s
chalrman and Mrs. Ralph Htp.
pert, phllantbropy chainnan.
Allo under the -~ ol new-wiV he the-.· tlonol-~
tor the """"" ,.., • ..
•
·:Cashiers Ringing Up Host~ility While Asking for ·IDs
DEAR ·ANN LANDERS: Why do people
,.i he!U1erent and act lllluJted when they
want lo cub a. check and are asked to
produce identificaUan? Da:l 1 they ·realize
employees hive to keep records! It Isn't
enouch that a penon baa an honest (tee.
I _, in a Iara• llort and I try to he
u pollle and -to our c:ustom-tn 01 po11lble. Yeotentay When I utod
• -f<w ldentiOcalk:n. lhe mapped, .. Art )'II trytnc to HY I'm a IWindltr?"
A ball -later a mu threw hil cradlt
can11-...to1rtnr•1 -1n lilj< 1 ... iiid
yelled, "Some freoh punb j\111 have to
--aut!lortlyl"
I'm .,.. I'm not the ..,q wespenon
wbo bu tJ111 problem, IO pie ... print my
ANN LANDERS
Jetter. I'd like to tape it to the cash
rtglat.er and I'll parantee you, IO wfil
hundreds ol olher employees. -
ABUSED
DEAR AB: U...'1 Y"'r letl<r and J_
-liojiillielpi ....... -•aclentall4-
lq • ate pm1 tf dtt cu&omtn,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I did o slow
burn When that 1"1 wrote to· complain
that his wile acts like she 's doin& him a
•• . .
favor once every two weeb. A timetable
lite that wouid have been heaven to me.
J manled Aggie wben t was 26. She ,
was 22. What I thoufbt was hi gh prln·
ciplu turned out to be a pathological
hitna for SeJ:. From the .nljht we mif.
ried until I left here, 17 years later, Awe
wore underwear and ankle ao1 under ber
nightgo1n. She •Loo hid thil thine about
1ubrlcatlng her skin ao It wouldn't
wrinkle. At bedtime she put ao mucl1
.. --,,, ___
grease on, she looked like she was !Wng
to swim the English Channel.
bll. Thant. for wrltlef.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our 111-year·
And then ot course --..there were the old daughter Is a sophomore at a well
headaches and backachel and colds. She known l!Chool in the East. Judy always
managed to get six colds a year, each oae has been considered one ol lbe better
lasting a monlb. brought up young ladles of lbis town. But
. her 1anguace since lhe hu been away at t now am married to • wonderful gal ICbool ii appallillg. She uses some very
who knowa that .ex can be a bond t.bat dirty word• in ordinary everyday ~
lies a man and ~gether. My on~y veraatlon. Her father, half·tidd.ing, uld,
ml.stake was wal 17 yean to lead a.._ ·"When you were younger ( ultJd to wash
nor.,.! life. You pr . ol leUen from your mouth out wttll IOIP and I mllht
women who thlnk·their hul~ art ae1 hive to do it aga.ia." maniacs. Pleue print thil one and h<lp
even I.he score -ALIVE AND WELL lN Judy'• annrtr ••a. "f tell it like it ls.
DECATEUR Wonts are only llGUllds. Get with II.''
OF.AR ALIVE: Tloe ocoro will .... r be Whit ohoUld • parent ~ In ,_,..?
evea, but yovr &euer ltelpa balaace It 1 -SPEECHLESS
DEAR SPEECH: A part0t -HJ1 "U )'OI wut &t atly ill 11111 ..._. 1•'•
better ,,. olecellt 1-qe lo lell It lib ~
ts. We do11't 11 fw pt&er talk-1anad
here ud YOU',D heU« 1ot wtdl ff.
Ir )'00 have llouble 1ettln1 aiooc with
your parents, K YO\I cu't 1et them to let
you Uve your owa. tile, 1 end (or ~
Landen' booklet, "Bugad by P....UT
How to Get More Freedom." Send 50
cenll In coin with y-request and a
king, stamped, self-Hdr 111 d enYtlopt.. • Ann Landers wtU be alad to help ,..
with your problems. -them to llor lo
care ol the l>AILY Pll.(1!', eoclootac i
stamped, oelf~ddnued enveklpe.
I
··~-··lo .......... ' .. ·~ •• w• I·--
Hor9scope
Libra: Be Original
j
WEDNESDAY
APRIL 30
By SYDNEY OMAJ\11
ARIES (W.ar. 21-Apr. 19):
I Your thoughts tum to love,
romance. If single, you could
get eogaged. If manitd, you
could rediscover mate in
meaningful way. Accent oa
partnerships, contracts. Buy
gift for loved one-~
TAURUS (Apr. ZO.May Ill):
It is your kind of day. You .are
surprised by show of affectloa
Summer
Wedding
PJanned
A dinner party. ln the home
of Mr. and W.rs. C. H. Taylor
of Balboa Island was the oc-
casion for the announcement
of the engagement of their
daughter, Kathleen Taylor to
Stacy Mack Morgan Jr. of
-Corona de! W.ar.
'Mte brid~lect a t t e n d e d
Corona del Mar High School
and Orange Coost Colle~.
Her fiance. soo of Mr. and
Mrs. S. M. Morgan of Corona
del Mar, attended CdW.: HS
and Arizona State University.
The couple will exchange
vows in the summer.
from <me who wu retlcent
Remember rttolutlonl con~
<"'111"1 beollll, did. B e
moderlllt. ~ youneU but
avoid emtmes.:
GEMINI (May UJune Ill~
Emphuis M success wllh
creaUve endeavors. You. are
able lo prove major point.
Provide treat fer 1 o u n g
penon. 'Jbia will mate you
feel good, brtn( joy. Dine put.
CANCER (June 21.July 21):
Accent on pracUcal illues
coooected with fftlidence. You
cu lin1lh • project. Don't
bang oo to past. Realize future
prOlpedl con be brig!it. Open
mind to new experience.
U:O (July 23-Aug. 21): Visit
can provide pleasure. Be
gracloul. display ,..,. ol
humor. Be veraaUle. Be ready
With alternatJve m e th o d s ,
Forces are scattered. Leave
details to others -fine for
writing, painting_
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 2Zl>
Your hunch proves accurate ln
eonneotion with money. Best
to heed own counsel Thole
who try lo be helpful may be
misinformed. Guard
possessions. Be r e c e p t l v e
without being careless.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)'
Get started On pr o ject .
Display initiative. Your sense
of beauty and humor makes
you the hit <i any gathering.
Key i s to be original, to
emphasize your own desires.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. ZI)'
Remtmber one who may be confined to home, hospital. Grind ln1u9ur1toln
Excellent for club, group ac-of our new
tlvity. Be with those who
share special interests .
Theater party bits nail on
head.
Huntington Be1ch
Hulth Spa. Public
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-invited, frH tours
Dec. 21 ): Friendly contact
could have good inlluence d1ily. A few special
where vacation, recreation are
concerned. Accept social in· ch1rter membenhlps
vit.ation. Stimulating discus-atlll IYlilible. sion tonight makes you feel
like a new person.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
FIRST THEY GET THE VOTl;-And then they start messing with your sail
boat. Orange Coast College student Miss Dorothy Ditt of Huntington Beach will
be attending the Women's Day on Campus May 1 to learn how to make insignia
designs for sails. Themed, Fabrics for Calliornia Li'9"ing, the day will be gin at
9:30 a.rn. with an open house in the sponsoring home economics department.
Women 's Day on Compvs
Leadership Exchange
Highlights Gathering
19): Accent on dealing with
superiors. Important person is
impre5$ed with your ability.
Accept special assignment. If [~·
diplomatic; you gain unique
privlle~e. Make rrtost of op-rJ' ·
portun1ty. . •
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21>-Feb.
18): Good lunar aspect today
coincides w i th long-range
views, goals. Some plans may
have to be revised. Be sure
you have solid base. Some
around you may be daydream-
• Finnish Rocle Sauna Room1
• Rom1n St11m Rooms
I WINGS WON
Susan Eccleston
' Former OCC I'·.
· Coed Passes a·
!•-Flight Test
C~· Miss Susan Eccleston,
.., former Orange Coast College
·.,.· student, received her wings
from T r a n s International
Airlines.
111'' The charter airline flies
within the United Slates and to
• .: ·Europe, South America and
, • ·the Orient. Mlss Eccleston's
assignment will be Honolulu or
New York. The %2...year-old
hostess now resides in San
Francisco and is the daughter
..,.., of Mrs. H. E. Wheeler and ·T. M. Eccleston of Los Ange-
1>"· Jes .
. , • The Conner coomelology
;'. .atudenl completed an intensive
. • four-week training c o u r s e
which Included international
reography, customs and im-
migration regulations,
• , military ranks and rules, avia-
1 tlon and airline history, first
al " aid and emergency procedures
1 .and in-fight food service.
1 . Shape Up
_With Yoga
· · Halecrest Club, Costa Mesa,
will offer a series of eight
yosa classes beginninc next
11wnday at 9 :~ a.m. in the
, • • toCJubbouse~ lMtructtd by Mrs.
,, ~Allen Nelson.
Assisting in the classes.
~1.1which stres.s stretching and.
breathing exercises. will be
.. -Mn. Robert Selllty.
, I-·, The daues art OJ)e:n to the
-)public and anyone wishing in·
forma tion may call fl.frs.
l_,5w1ey, $16-11181.
occ Covers Fabrics
A theme entitled Fabrics for economics department with
California Living will cover an the patio area designed as an
area as big and varied as the Oriental tea garden. An in-
state itself -from hatld-formal fashion show will con-
woven fabrics for clothing to tinue through the morning.
dune buggy covers and sail in-followed by a light brunch. At
signias. ti a.m. a panel discussion
Orange Coast College will covering · Fabrics-Fas'hions-
stage Community Women's Facilities will take place in the
Day on Campus Thursday, 1 science hall.
May 1, frO!ll 9:30 a.m. to noon A second prese ntation en-
to acqua~nt Harbor Area titled Fabrics.Care and Clean-
women with ~e n e "!' e ~ t ing will be offered at 7 that
deve.lopmenls in California evening .in the student center.
fabrics . Included in the exhibits will be
The day will. begin with an a display of new enzyme
open house in the home detergents, . irons, s e w i n g
Sea Sirens
TOPS Sea Sirens meet In
Killybrooke School, C o 1 t a
Mesa, every Wednesday at 7
p.m.
machines, hand-waven fabrics,
Oriental fabrics and con-
temporary furnilure and the
use of fabrics.
Area women are invited to
the campus day. There will be
no charge,
'Room Service' With a Smile •
Wielding t h e president's
gavel of Orange County Legal
Secretaries Association will be
Mrs. Patsy Ann Lewis of
Anaheim.
She will be installed with
other new oUlcers i n
ceremonies in the Revere
House, Tustin next Thursday
at 7:30 p.m.
Miss Eula Mae Jett Of Costa
Mesa, founder of the organiza-
tion, will be installing officer
and also will seat the Mmes.
Me lvin A. Buzzard, Anaheim,
vice president ; Pau l P. Smith,
Tustin, corre s ponding
secretary; Ruth Stewart ,
Orange, recording sec retary ;
Theodore C. Bangs, Placentia,
treasurer; Robert F. Mat-
thews, Huntington B e a c h •
governor, and Barb a r a
Rowden, Westminster. NALS
representative.
Orange Coast residents
serving in other c1paclties will
be Mrs. Jack Manusos,
The Board of Directors of South Coast Repertory-;-Orange County's professional
resident theater, are hosting a Maytime Merriment party Thursday, May I,
according to Ladislaw Reday and Jerrel Richards, co-chairmen. During an eve-
ning designed as a nostalgic tribute to the 1930s, guests will travel to the com-
panys' Third step Theater in Costa Mesa for a champagne buffet. Follo'i\tin~
will be a performance of the classic 1937 American farce, "Room Service.'
Elaine Bankston, actress, doesn't need to act when serving Charles Cringle,
board director and his wife. !.====================
-. • -· Bows Made in Europe Only 2 More Days Until
A wblrlwlnd tour and festive ratroneMe:S are Mrs. Paul
MARGIE WEBB'S
Gigantic 'Once-A-Year' Tent
"SALE" -E-BRATION
perties are planned for tht Willi1m Lawrence of Lido
~amtb annual Dtbutante Eu~ Isle. Loi Angeles Ind Palm
• JlllD Holiday, climu:ed by lhe Springs; Mmt. Ernest
t')loll Ii Ille Sliver 8-Jun< 25 Lemberrer, wile Ii !Us Ex-
In the Palals Schwarzenberg, celltney the Austrian am-
~'tVNmt. bal98dor to the United Stites ;
P~ hl&hlightl Ii lhe l'rin<eso Agatbe Schoenburg·
' trip lrlll be tilt tl11rd American Harten<tetn. lltr lmperiAI and
Ci' J::litUliole Ball in the Cast~ Roy•I Hlg hnNI P r i n c e s s ·~1 Munich,July1,-Ag:nes Von Und zu
and II.. Grand Ball In 11.alta Uech<ens!<ln. •nd ~ a d f
Jul1 5. Mount Evans of London.
I
L
DHllJNll FAHICS AT THMENDOUS SAVINIJS
AIM lteoMf'l4feut ci....ut "''"" In _, hvtl'fYe IMp
So, Remembe r the Date
MAY ht
And help u• "Sell-E.Br1te'1
2094 So. Coast Hwy. Lo911na leacli
Westminster, edilor of Orange
Squeei.Uis, and Miss Joan
Broadhurst, Balboa, programs
and legal procedure chairman.
Special guests at the in-
stallation ceremony will be
Mrs. Glady:; Plato, Newport
Beach, past president of the
stale association and NALS
director, and Mrs. Fem Man-
ning. Newport Beach, past in-
ter-club chairman of the Long
Beach Secretaries Association.
Speaker for the evening will
be William L. Aldrich, director
of public relations and ad-
vertising of the Irvine Co.,
who is noted for his lectures
on public affairs.
Representatives of the club,
Including the nevi president,
will attend the state con-
vention in San Diego May 9-11.
At
Reinert's
5210 "'RAMILIN
ROii" DeWeese
Designs heralds a
Allhouett.e -the
SWlMDRESS with
separate panty in
Birdseye Pique.
Delicate roubud
embroidery trims
the side-slit skirt
and M'Ckllne further enchanct'd
by a 'Sta.cup' Inner bra.
Colors: White/pink, Whlte/aque,
White/yellow.
10/16--421.00
AIM 2-pc-$21.00
ing.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20),
Stick to principles. Minor
pres.sure ls but temporary.
You really have nothing to
fear. One whO attempts to
bluff has nothing to back
claims. You hold the trump
card.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you have a fine
sense of humor ; you are
artistic and appreciate art ob-
jects. Vigorous changes due. If
single. marriage could be on
horizon.
To ordwr SYdMV Om.1rr's 50-l>aot ~It!< -thol Trultl >,bout ,t,~troloov. .... ~ 'Pl: :'I:"""" ·~·m .... DAI Y 'I lT, J2 , t C...... tr•I ~,.,f::; tw on, f/.v. otl .
CALIFORNIA
Ute Your -81n\:Amerlc1rd, Mister Cherg•,
Oin1r1, C.rte Bl1nche Cr1dit Cercis
IN COSTA MESA IT'S
I
tJiruJris
DR'~AftTMl!NT
1116 NEWPORT IOULEYARD
PARK CONVENIENTLY JUST A STEP FROM OUR
EAST ENTRANCE ••• Opon Daily 9,30.6; Fd. tll 9
• El1etrenlc Mlsugt
• florWa Sun Tin Rooms
• Whirlpool l 1ths
• Conditioning
Facilities
• Swiss
F1el1I
M1chln1s.
FOR
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY!
* SPECIAL
"Anyone who purchases their Health Spa Program
with their BankAmericord or Moster Charge will
receive absolutely free on additional complete
fitness program for any im-m 88
mediate member of their 1111111111 111
family. "PAID IN RJLL.''
CALL OR STOP BY TODAY FOR A FRIE TOUR
I HUNTINGTON BEACH Ill COSTA MlSA
11118~ MA •"""' ll•C" l )!)O ""~~· Q ftl~l>
-. .
042-1451 549-J.16R
II ANAHllM I\ OSiANGf
·•0 ~ e1•(M ~1\r ' , I • ' '! •
. . .
826-0391 639-2'14 I
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Costa
l Mesa · •
N.Y.
. '
.VOL. 62, NO . I 02 , 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
• • I OlAJ':l6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WI caas'
. , "I : . . 1 l ·
Air Cal Chief Wants New,· Longer RullWays :
• By J9ffll VALTERU
OI "'9 Dallr Pl ... Sl•ff
EJ:tension of the main tpnway at
Orange County Airport, building of·a new
runway and revision f?r µIght freq~ency
times for Air California jets were sug
gested before the·iinn's stockholders tcr
day by tbe carrier's president.
Cail·Bemcote,r, Air Cal head, painted a
sombe.r -byt what he termed. a
nevertheless optimistic picture·-for1he
scort1 of sblrebOlders at Ill IMtW mee1'· m1ln · runWiy be meoded lo tbe San
Ing at the NewPorter Inn. . Die&O .Froeway, "IDCI perhaps It would
Air Cll lolt '1 mllllon durln& tiie yeor'• be poalble to de~ the pment fm. way II ~ -pobil to, llloW -for lurther first ~U¥t<r. be said, .......... N '
BenacoOer llJl'd • four-point ·plan for 'Ille extension, lie lllcl, would ano,r bfs
the county lo imprvve Air Cal oervice al flnn'•·Jell 11..,... lUeolf IJllll, u...t;y
the aiq>ort. He said bfs ~ f1nn 1'PUJd ~!11!>1 to, ·~ noiae ·over mJae.
. cooperate ln the~pbol, "~ thll oenafttve Ne.,.,i ~--· ·
lhen! is •a~ -•· t n lie· lilo cal1eil ·(« boil)dl{1i I puallel estab~·t~ airpoi;t.~ .. :_ ":'lay •loo& ;tlie ·imnuial·s ezbUng -·-t.d ~ta;;~··. lllrJtcb.. • ,.. . .. ~ ,_,.. • __,.. " ' .. .,c_.-• •
He proposed tlme and frequency lim·
Its for fllgbis which would "help eslab·
lish good, sound community relations.
We could set it so that fUghta would be
nol too freq.,.nl lo dlaturit persons In
the sumiundlng communft;.,."
Benscoter also suggested a stream·
lining of Alr Cal terminal services to
help · end overcrow<ttng and eliminate
need for expansion of the ellsting
termlnal building,
He also criUcized °'lnll' Coln!ty'o
Board of Supervisors for . t<COmm'J'clil>g
against prvposed Air Cl! fillhts to the
Pacific NorthWest.
He said the latest actloa by the biw-d
wu not consistent with ill pttv-. a~
provli ol fllg~ls to. Sacramento. •
He told the abarebolderi that the finan.
clal losses lhis ,year and lut. can be
blamed on atronc compeUUon frotn
Pacific Southwest Airlines at Burbank
' airport, winter rains, the Hong 1tq J'hf:
and I a!OW, but steady, 1tlempl lo reKll ·
I liruk-evm point in _.... II OI>-:
larlo lntematlooli Airport. • :
He aald that the firm wllJ J'dUIDO """:
eying Pl""Di"' trom tht ~ Coun!J:
teniljnll Wednesday alle' I -·· de!Q,: In lligbls to allow for runw11 ~'.
"We lost fewer pusentm1 a.a ez .. :
peeled during the no-4llgbl period. OUr;
busln( or -. to Lona Beaclf:
Airport has been ,qu!IO ~ ..-:
Color It Red-Blue 1
.
State Engineer Gives Freeway Clwice .~
....
'Ibe man whole own choice, by tradJ.
tloo, seems to dictate the st.ate Wghway
Commission's freeway route selection
recommends the so-called Red-Blue route
for the Newport Freeway through the
Harbor Area.
State Directer of Public Worb: James
A. 1.foe: announced that state HJghway
Engineer J. A. Legarra recommends
selection of the $&0.7 million freeway
alignment from Bay Street to the coast.
No date has been set for the State
Highway Commission lo llke up the
question 11 a formal beorinl, but It
should be scheduled wltbfn IO clayo all'f
concemocl ag'l'Clea nollfled cl lbl time.
Veteran observers Mid &pday that th.e:
Red·Blue route recommendation virtually
a!SllfOI tbal Roule ~ will be built on that
aJicrunent looping out west , lhrouih
ri!sldenUal Costa Mesa.
"That'll just about do it," noted· Co6ta
Mesa.Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley. .
Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
Two Candidates lob Probed, Toe
city <llllclala agreed .. the Jled'.-. ... !
S.7 ~among-five ....... -oll!io.j ~the~ cboloe a( ··-st; riebt clown Newport.Boulevud. .
Na( Iii councilmen voling oa the ~1 necessarily f1vor the Jtecl.Blue ._.
penooally, but agreed to II In lbl ln-lfresls or IOUdlrity.
>.> now planned, the · final end. ol the
Newport Freeway Into the illrl>or Atta
will swing west of the downtown area ot
• (See FREEWAY, PIP I) .
Vie to Replace No Decision Reached
~?!,e ~~~81 On New .City Treasurer ' ·--~~h·~ ~ID thJlO'~~,
Manellles, -«= they will run ~ whit -or '""" ,-._lhl[_!lf!U!l!n ·
l1lullr pool bm>Mllg 11\ly • llaarl' woril
-monlll and otalo in , .... eac!i
mliDldpli ....., lo'ftD· tho,.....,,
tloDII lllot, i
NEWPORT FREEWAY -Shaded area Indicates
swath future Newport Freeway is eXpected. to cot
through Costa Mesa and Newport Beaclb View is
from Costa Mesa looking to.ward ocean. This •route,
· fa yo red. by both citips, now bas been recommended
by state highway engineer.· When engineers .get
down to final staa~ ol•'d\!lign, aetlial• route could
· vary u . muc:b as 200 yards"<lo eilber iide. .•
Pl~nners Approve
Three AparJment
Developments
~
Winding up their b,usiness and getting
out 2~ hours before the city council,
meeting nearby, the Costa Mesa Planning
Commission Monday rt!p)mmended ap-
proVal 'of three apartment project&.
All are required to have zone exoeP.tion
permits, either due to the density of
units; or building height, as in the 'casc of
a 142-apartmeiit· Complex.
Unanimous votes for later city·council
approval were given Mayer Comtriiction·
Compan y's large development at 52S Vic-
toria St., and a :JJ;.unit project at '6117
Charle Sl., by Raymond T. Troll.
Quake Jangle$ Nerves,
But That's Abvut All
By AJ\THUR R. VINSEL
Of flle Drlllr PO" It.rt
A rolling earth tremor and a wave of
instant, innner repentance hit Monday, 55·
hours. 31 m.ln\ites aM 45 seconds from
the end of • mooth· prophets " ~ predict will be .sinful Sou t be r a
California's Jut. ~
Today, S<Xne people are lauihjng, some
are dlsappointecl that they ~ the
4:21 p.m. jolt lllcl othersfllt 1 1i1111Jb 1
boy whlstllng thrwp 1 eeaietery • a
dark nflhl.
Estimates varied 11.IJbtly u to the
tremor's strength, but 'stiff in&ineer Bill
Gile at the Caltedi 1eim0Joaical
laboratory sald It bit &.3 oo the Richter
scak! of quake magnitude.
11le rodt-and-roll style tembfor wu
ceo1ued ID ruQOdSaala llma,Mounlllns
-""1hwal or Borneo SprlDp, Ill unpopulat.ct aru aboot. 40 mllea from
the Mezican border and '11elr the Salton
Sea. •
Just one..ye1r -and 28,GQI l(O, the Ami'·~ 'rntm.1.pnerated I 1-.ol.lllPllY~1111111itode which .... 'alio loll CinWpoot the Soot•t...t
.... C!!IUIO<i --.... 11le lbati>, Monday anm-joll CIUl-
(llee QUAKE, PIP II
"1.f' li'N to iu ,Clialla Ile f&i' 'co.ta lle&a iltl' "~
G P~pldou, 57, nm to IUlllOUllce. wu clnlld-<loodm-1!iai>dl1 .. """
acclaimed l!lt.r by a standln& ovation cf joumln1 at IJ:Ol 1.m. todaJ w~-
tht 29Z-man Gaulllst party group In the Ing a man for tha job. '
NaUonaf Assembly. He Indicated be Not only tha~ but the nature or the job
would be •. str:ong man president fn µie'"' itself Is now In question.
Gaul.list tradlti~. (Personality Pro£1le, . "You just wouldn't believe It," MayOr
Page 4.) . Alvin L. Pinkley said today , during his
Dtfierre announced his decision ~ run discourse on the city council e:zecuUve a tew hours later wben the NaUoo&l seulon
Assembly rewembled for the fint time Another special meelln& Is ICbediiied
since April 2. Assembly President Jae-May 12 at which time teporja on the city
ques Chubao-Delmas delivered a short ~·s poaiUon wlO be beai'd from
trlbule to De Gaulle u a warllme City Manager ArlbUr II. ~Kemle CHy
resistance hero and national leader. Attomei Roy June liid Flnlnce btfector Cfiaban·Delmas described De Gaulle..p &bert·Oman • r•
a man wbo "restored F111JCt's booor, lid PromPted ~ ctty1 ~...timd ·Gecr1e
her to . victory a~ roeatablisbecl her A. Tucker, Mlyor PiDkley said ledly, the
worldwide million. 'Ille Aslembly, Jam-queatton of 1 city treuurer'• dulfOI and
med to capacity, rose and app~u~. The authority will be atiJdied befon ""°°""I
Communist& and aome Socialists re-a man for the job. The job }>ecame open m~~~ Socialist floor leader, when Treasurer W. C. (Cy) Ries dfed
made a brief reply crlti~ ~Gaulle'• rMft~~e applieantl for tbe flllf).per.
Interpretation or the constilutioo. month post Wt empty by !ht Mu'ch 8
Deferre expressed hope the Assembly death or w. c. ''Cy" ru... who -for would remain in RSSlon to keep an eye 18 ye.an. will then be bitervlewed an
on the prukie:nUal election. Then be an. over again.
noonced his own candidacy. City Clerk C. K. "Charlie" Prim, en-
'nle. atl'ilosphere was calm and tertained the four ''Variool appllc:anta ·u
dlgnJfiecl In contnut to the stormy scenes counc11na lnlorvlmid the flftb tn civic
that marked De Gaulle's return to power center conference rooms.
11 yean ago. . The city treuunr•1' job Is llrpq.a Defferre was a candidate for a abort
time against De Gaulle ID the 1115
prealdentili race but withdrew befon the
final · stages of the campaign to mate
rocm for Francoll Mitterrand as can.
dldat. for Iii France's left wlllg parties.
Fonner l'remlU Georges Bldaul~ •,
who -lbl . )11epl seem lrlDY
orpnlzatlon molt l(llDst Do Gaulle in
1111-G' IDd ilbo WU allowed to mum
!rim\ Olilo Jul IUl111n0f, told a DOWI COll-
"ference he also might run. ~.
Newport Seeking
.Ta]JLs With Mesa
'
On 'Gaza' A~i;iex
Newport BelCb city councilmen 1tt fed
up with their "Gua strip" anneutlon
Following the emanaUve lnlorYlewo,
the city council ,.....,,eaed ID --session, paaslng an ordinance tlghteniqg
city cootrolJ on going-«it.ol-businal
sales.
Weary councilmen tabled cooolderaUoli
of an ordinance t111tlioiJw poUCJ Gil IDIMI
exception pennits to allow lllCb. tn•
terprlsea .. bar• lllcl -to operate ID m111ulacturlng and lnduslrlil ......
The qu"tton will be -...cl 6pln
In July, Iller the pll!lDing :~
com*lel a de&allecl map on the number
or c:ommerclli ventura ..,. funclloalni!
In llUCll -ol the city.
Tabled allo WU an qreemmt wttb • Wbl-llCCOUJltlng •firm to. IC! .. city
auditors, 1 move li1owln& other finna,W
bid oa the job, U lily are 1n-.
Mayor Pinkley today vowed ll\lt 1111
1ltemale Monday meetlnp may coat!nue
for a ..,.0 U be and bfs coll-doo,
wlnd up eeveral fteml of unftnMhed
bullneu. .
"I A.id we're going to have them evrry
other Mondly . until they lelnl to slop
lalk!q so much and get !hUe lbfn&I
-oul," the mlY« ~
NEW YORK (AP)-'l'lle --puncbed oot a sollcl plo lo _, active
tndln& today, --roporllnji ... lot ol buyers Wbo bad been Oil tbO
sldellnes .-,· bad< Info tha ...
Uon. (See quolallam, -10.11).
· 11le Dow Jones lndustrfli 1-II
1 :30·p.m. WU up t.92 at m.eo. Glinl led.
lolaes by I bil Im thine illuea.
Commissioner Charles Beck cast the
only dissenting vote on the third item, a
zone exception permit allowing a 47-unit
apartment C9mplex of one unit per 1,501·
square-feet cl land area.
He said i! builders L. C. Miller and L.
B. Frederick!, 395$ Birch SI., Newport
Beach, are all~ this muc11 dens.ity,,the
enlir~ area should be studled and possibly
rezoned that way.
Same Bed, Different Son feud with <Mia Me.a. • -
11ley clecicled MondaJ, ID DO&olista with
their Coota -colltagues I« Ill end to the bickering. once lllcl for Iii.
Al !ht same time, Newport couiicilmen
unanllnoullJI ..... to: .
Or•_,•
,;Long Beach Asks
'Permanent DST
' · Citing everything Crom tnc..ued
children's playtime to a reduction in
crime In tbe streets, the Long Beach City
Cooncll has asked the Costa P.tesa City
€ooocil to su pport nationwide daylight
a ving lime.
A resolutlon urging Cttllfornia legisJa.
tors (o push for uniform dayllght saving
&ime laws throughout the country has
·been recel..U by City Ck!rk C. K.
""Charlie'' Priest.
The resoluUon notes that lack of
uni£onnity throws millions of houseboldl
and tho memben' schedules Into con-
.lllsion on eKh spring and fall 411 tht
olocb must be changed.
'
.
Mesa Father Feels He's Been There Before-and Has
By ARTHUll R. VINSEL ..... _. ...........
He llepped forwm"d to bil aia11 bld:l1de
lllcl bldrw1nM• limo. -'
0 It 1'• kind of"~" .W·Colt.I
Meas •n1i17 -......, BUI Scbmkt!. wbo Yllltod lbl ..... ll.IVll
HOlpllal In Im Dielo Bmdlj.
He . .... SOl:lnc not ........ but ~
perlencln( u.e J>Sl'tbolop:li ,..._,....
known 11 d e j a w -feellal ane b a 1 uncterrone an lclenllcli accU1i111<¥ in the
past -and with coocl -.
Anny Capt. Roolld Schmidt, 8, lay In
Ward~ Bed 10. the aame ward and bed
wbere !11vy LI. Doalid Schmldl, bis twin
brotl)er, lay lour )Un aeo with oimilar
injuiles: also suffered 1n a Vietnam com-
bat air crash.
Publlc Worm1ttoa oflictrl 1t the Navy
hooptt1I 111c1 Mondlf lbe7 hive u•
bedt anclno·~.....,,_ P">'
cedures1 th111 matblitoddl • the c:oiD'·
., ... -._
·~ pi!lnoi-1, ~-I walked lo·a-blnl lo lbl
-lio!I. ·---.............. " ' --Pm, Colla 11-Tbi ____ ... _ lor
Donold -· wbo ii.-flnlllllnl up Jaw 1cboollt lbl Ullt••lllJ.o!!!!m Dloto
aod'lliiljli liloce-.Dy lo mp •If'
-with bis twin brother.
Doolld 111*11 ll'n .-coaval«loc
ll'om IDJuries --be blllod -ol bis crippled ,~ jot ....
vi-.. combel -...i ""
-b)' beUOapter. . Roa&ld Sctlmidt ·-.. _...1o1, the Mme-ltnJlb aalgrunenl to Ward 1-C,
Bed 10, with 1 obltier.d -In
mecbanlcli lrlcilon and bis llllllhld jaw
rebulll with wltt, followlnc 1 bellcopltt e:ru h.
,The eidtl' SChmldt said bis Amtf of·
fker 10D "'ll.4Jrlet!na a tllll <l'lllirJ•
. ' ' ,,_,..., al>Olrd I bellcopter IO mJ1et
lrom Blip lllrch I W b I D tht pi1ol
awooped down to recoanoil« a lUlllle
~ when tht lfOUDIHlre .,...U
up II -Ute New Y11r'1 Doy In
Cblnalown, but be -hlmMll to the floor--·-.. bock," Scbmlclt said Monday. E-.e IC!lon came too late, bcnoever,
and = crubed; but'• ....... INp ... . ll' dlspalcbecl to ....... u
lbeln IUfVI .....
• A third IOO, former Marine Cor1lf Mlj.
P!dllp Sclllllldl, Ille returned -ll'
from VltllWD duty 11 1 combat J<1 1nd
bellcop4tt pllol to relln! and become I
deplrtment ll«e encutlft. .
Tbe three Schmktt IOl'll are no
11r1n,.... lo llfr ......... or lo tho DAILY
PILOT, wbft'lhllr lither -a -memller·imtll llllc1a( the nllty fteld. . "
•
•• 0-..... .._ .. • •
-See1t coanty 1-I ol'l!lDOlltlon
of the P-tract IOUth ol •Onnp
COUnty Airport.
-Seel: _, 1-1 " • ·llrlp ...
nerallon lioag 'l\athi A-lbaf
.... tapo • portion " • prlJllOlld COiia Meu-tloa,
-"'-lo the _,;that porlfon "
the Coota &1'81 f!lllO'llloh u..t ' ii DOI
overlapped' by tm.porl'1 llrtp ... tJtDtlon. I I
11le coqnty'1 Local Acmcy,,FOfllllUon
Commla!f9n {!.AFC) fl ..-to ~
up tht Coota MOii ,,_1 -tagec!
••Bae:t Bay Anneutk!n No. 1" -on]ll1y I!. •
The LAFC will rtcel.., Newport's
counter-prof)ollil at that time.
Al luue In the lnltt-dly -llble ii the
~ HGua S&rtp," a earr1dor ol
reoldenUll lmltGry lbll -ln>n\
Slnta Alo HelOil -1111 ~ -
IA<CCGola _,_ 11th -~ "
Weadler
The IUD'I ...,.... In 1f-
cloy. ~ It. -debut Iller. tho
c1ouck rqJJ by • .....i 10·· ......
'!JU!e the lempellun -ri>Jilid' lo the -... for lbl ~ COut.
INSIDB TODA'I'
C1'ban 1odcl1i Ii Ilk< ,.., big
Peocc Corp<, o falcill<lfi1lq , ...
clal ·~~ -• vc ' lnrine lec:tvrtr fft .,Qivingi . fOfM ,
l!lllQhl into U.. c--tiload: POf/I J. ·-, c........ »» ...... ..
CNN..... 1t ..... Hetlc9& • -· . . .,...,.. ,... .
• ............. 1t
...... 1•11 •wt....., ,,
""*'" " •U... ,. -. ........ " .....
=" : --.. ............... --. --. ......_ , ... ~ ..... ..., . ......... ,,t -.. -.. -· . --.. --... lhl~.,.~=.i;:..-:.r-a I
• I •'• ' • ~----------....... ' , .. ' r
•
' ' i
•
...... , --' ~---
c
PILOT ' ·~1 •
LOGBOOK· " I '•'
The Times Are Changill'
· And Profs Had Better
By JEROME F. coiims
Of ... 0.1ty , ... '""'
UCI'& students have \\'on the ri&ht to hire and fire two percent of their
professors.
The students had said"'tbey wanltd lo hire and fire 10 percent of their
. profe!SOrl. But Channcellor Dan Aldrich split the difference lJld came up wllb
two. (lt'a the New Math.)
! '
This is known as a compromiae. But it doesn't make
any dlfftrmce, of course.
Beca111t the: way things are goinc. the students
eventually will aet what lhey'n rully alter -JOO percent.
And this Is how. I imagine..-the sYttem will work :
Dr. Fellsworth Cerebrum, Nobel Prize.winner, waits
nervously outside the door of the UCI Student Council
eham~s. He is next in Une for a job interview.
"' The world-famed developer of the mechanical appen·
· · di1 has known hard times lately. In six years, he's been
fired by the students of 14 C(llleees. The reasons were al·
ways the SJme.
Cerebrwn1 II, couldn't keep up with the nisht ·rue. He kept falling asleep
at campus pot partiea:. Not only that. he couldn't lift the bricks his contricta
required him to toss at passjng college administrators.
Cuebrum is reflecting sadzy on all this when suddenly the door is flung
open. Out of the UCI Student Council ci'lambers tumbles Dr. Arthur Schlesing-
er Jr.
1'e is followed by a shout from within: "Next!"
Cerebrum, reaching for his cane, rlae.s creakily from his chair. He helps
SChlesinger up from the Door.
.: "llello, Arthur," he says to the cursjng ex-Ivy League historian. "I
> haven't seen you since those MJT atomic research students blew up Harvard.
• 1 What happened inside?"
"Happened? 111 tell you what happened," says SChlesinger, brwhing off
his Nehru jacket and stral.lbt.ening out hls love beads. "The first three hours
·of the. grilling weren't too bad. But then I reach up to wipe the J)ergpiraUon
from my ·brow.-That was my mistake." He chokes back a sob.
"Control yoursell, Arthur!'
"I'm sorry, It's just that when I wiped my br~ I ruined everything. I
knocked off my shoulder-length hair-piece." Schlesinger bursts into tears.
Cerebrum shakes his bead JYm pathetica!Jy. His own shoulder-length wig,
he happily nolicts, SUrvives the shaking.
' _, He says farewell to his weeping colleague, screws up his courage and en-
, ters the· Student Council chambers.
It is pitch·black inside, except for a spoUigbt at the far end of the room.
Certbrum, flashing a peace sign, steps into the spotlight.
The questions come hard and fast: "You ever been busted~"
''Ob, yes. ·Twelve timt3 last year alone.''
"Hmm. Not bad. But what for?"
t . "Seven times for participating in a campus riot and five times for as-
"( saulting a police officer."
' •
,
"A what?"
"A pig. I beg your pardon."
"Your applicati~ &ays you're 23 year1 old. You look older to me ."
. "That's becauae of the subject I now teach. It'1 Vf.r'J wearin1."
"What Is it!"
'" "Guert-illi warfare."
' , . The room bursts with cheen. Cerebrum. cackling joyously, ls hired on
· the spol
•
I From Pqe l
I~~~~~.: .. ~: . bank ~ii-
, ing sbaks loose, windows, bottles and 'I other glass-contained m e r c h a n d i s e
1masbed in Borrego Springs businesses.
• One of the quake's more humorous I aspects -since no one was hurt -was j the immediate report of • large brick
( building's collapse in southwestern Los
~Angeles. (See story, Page 7).
S Garage owner Roosevelt Holden and his I four employes, hov;ever ran out 14
t minutes before the earthquake rumbled
f through the Southland's crust, as the old
&tructure collapsed due to accummulattd
stress and fatigue.
I! Tall buildings shimmied slightly from
Las Vegas to Los Angeles, Long Beach
• al)d San Diego, while thousand.! thought
I for a moment the eod predicted by a
.variety oC visionarlu h.td come.
"I thought Utls was it," said Tom
! Turner, of El Centro. J "'People near me wtre very un-
i I
I
I
I I
I
I
I r
OAllY Pll OI j
UAANGl COAt1 ,USl lSMINC. COM,AHl
••t..,f N. Weill
P'rnldlfll .,., ,..,.lbltt1
Jet• R. Curt1y
Vlu P'ttskltftl l~t Gtf'tr .. Mlfllttl
Tlle11111 k••~a ••* The"''' A . ._.,,,h;"'
INftetlftt 1•1i.
Clilt9 ..... °"'" )10 Wed ley Streif
MelK119 Alir11t: P.O. In 1160. tt•?t ---Nt....,...i ~: '"' ................. v.,. LltlUIW Oeltll~ 2Jt ,._, A-
14u11""9klfl htdl: -Siii ,,.. ...
I
comfo_rtable, including myself," said
advertising executive George Becker,
v;ho rode it out on the 13rd floor of the
U.S. National Bank building in San Diego,·
Businessman Jack Wells was wpriing;
oo lhe,32nd 110or of lhe Occid<nlal center
buildffil in Los Angeles· when figures he
\\"a& writing ji&gled right out rrom 'under
the pen. '
A.Costa ifesa woman telephoned the·
DAILY PILOT two bours later to ask if
a quake had indeed occurred. saying she
saw water slop over lhe edge ol the fami-;
ly swimming pool.
''But l have the . stomach flu and l
thought maybe it was just that acting up
agalfl," she erpla.ined.
"What earthquake?" asked many
olhers who missed th• joggling.
"I didn't feel it and I'm glad, because I
don't believe that stuff about California
breaking off into the ocean," said a
Sunset Beach barmaid.
General limits of the quake's noticeable
area · ranged from northern Merico up to
tbe Santa Barbara area and eastward in-
to lhe Nevada deserl
A P1lm Sprlnp policemin cles<rlbed
the folt as th• worst he has felt Slhce the
J952 Tehachapi tremors. whidt kilted a
dozen persons as: ~dings collapsed b'lto
the strtets.
. Needles on seismographs at two scien·
llfic installations In San Diego were
knocked off their graphs by the nearby
earthquakt, which ranged from S.2$ to 1.0
on the Richter scale, as it was monitored
at other spots.
The tremor which occurred along the
Coyote Crffk fault on As;rit 8, 1968
registered 6.S, severe enough to cause
major damage if it occuned in a
metropalitan area of the quake-prone
Southland.
The Richter scale has no limit, but
each lndivklua1 Point represents an
unleuhed force S2 times greattr than the
previous numeral and the San Francisco
quake of 1905 ls eaUmated to have bit 8.3
.. Ille ir•ph. S•llmologisll ,....nled the 1133 Long
Btaeh eartllquakt, which killed 120
pertoOI, at 1.3 on the scale, developed by
C<ecb profes.aor Dr. Charla F. Richttr.
Que.tioned Monday as to whether
Southlanders might erpect any more such
jolts ln the tmmt!dlatt future, Caltech
Kismology englnctr Gile said he cer·
talnly hopecl not.
'"Things a.re heciic enouP here as it
iS." he commented.
\Vhile actual destruclion •as quite
mJnor. Monday's moderate ahuddcr was
mo11t damaging to a looaeJy-«ganiud
procram by earthquake experts to calm
uneasy Californians worried a b o u t
500thal.)'ers' prophtt.ies.
,
' ~ , ___ ,, ~ -----
'
u.~. 8p1pbs
·StopR ~th
'Regr~uping
•
SAIGON (UPI) -BSZ bomb<rs slrue~
eight times Monday and today against
the North Victnamc.sc Jst and 7th
Divisions regrouping along the Cam~
bodian frcn tler for What South Viet·
namese lntelllgence officers predicted
could be a llo Chi Minh birtl:d;iy of·
feneh·e.
The tempo of fighting north t:P.d
northeast. of Saigon along the invasion
rout~ from Cambodia stepped up sha rp-
ly, a~ U.S. air power and tanks were
ca;lled in to rescue a ~5·truck American
convoy from a Communist ambush on
highway · 13 le.a ding north to Cambodia
!rom Saigcn.
The milliona of pounds of bomb!! Wf'!'e
concentrated on War Zone C, th'·
longtime Communist stronghold 35 to 4e
miles northwest of Saigon where some of
the heaviest fighting of the war has rage~
in the"'past. Others hit 35 miles northeasl
of Saigon in \\'ar Zone D.
County Airport
Runivay Reopens
Ahead of Time
The main runway at Orange County
Airport will reopen to commercial airline
use at 2 p.m. Wednesi1ay, two days ahead
of forecasts, Robert J . Bresnahan, county
avialion director announcerl today.
Bresnahan said the rain-damaged
runway which has been resurfaced wlth a
five-inch coat of asphalt will be ready for
full .use by all types of Planes Friday
morning.
The early opening to commercial car.
riers was made possible through a $4,000
payment by Air Califol'.llia to cover the
cost of Sunday overlime by the .con·
.tractor, Industrial Asphalt In c. of Stan-
ton.
The original contract for the job was
$16.1.770.
Air Cal and Air West are the only com·
mercial airlines flying from the airport.
Since the runway resurfacing began,
both airlines have been scheduling all
Orange County flights from Long Beach
Airport.
Bresnahan said that work y,•ill ccntinue
through· \Vednesday, with crews still
working' at one end of the runway, The
crews will move off the runway when jets
are landing, Bresii~ai:i said. _
Fro11t Page J
FREEWAY ...
Newport Beach and then back to Superior
Avenue at the Nevrport Beach.
Running west of the avenue , the eight·
Jane freeway will tie Into the future
Pacific Coast Freeway·. along existing
Paclfic Coast Highway 4t lhe three·way
intersection with Balboa Boulevard.
Copies of data and policy statements
largely covered in prior freeway route
hearings hai,:e been sent to officials of all
local agencies involved, for any last·
minute comments.
The majority of speakers and letter-
writers in the recent months have sup-
ported the Red·Blue route, with most
dissent comtn@: "from residEintiil property
owners \l'hose land will be taken. ·
The original route was picked in 1944,
to run right down Newp'Jrt Boulevard, at ·
a time when free\lo'ays wue only a vague
concept and the area was sparsely
developed .
Selection of a different route will leave
NCY..1>0rt Boulevard as a surface street
carrying inter~ity traffic, while solving
a few olher closely-conneeted problems.
Construction of Route 6S, which will lie
below ground level and be crc.ssed by city
streets above, is five to seven years
away, with two years estimated to draw
up engineering blueprints.
\ I
CAILY '"· T 'IM!t bl' l.khtnl K .. lller
·Circus Conies to Town
Magic of circus captivates Doug, 5, and Beth. Hartung, 16 monl'1s,
as they observe "Ellie" the elephant at Orange county Fairgrounds.
Circus is making one-night stand in Costa Mesa under sponsorship
of Oranfe Coast Lions Club. Performances are scheduled for 4 o'clock
and 8 o clock this evening at fairgrounds.
Bea~tor· for UCI
Approval Seen if No Objection,s
UC Irvine should get the go ahead Fri·
day to install a nuclear research reactor.
Unless a petition is filed by then to in-
tervene, the Atomic Energy Commission
in Washington, o.e., wiH issue-a con·
structio.n permit.
The Triga Mark I f"eactor should be in-
stalled and in operation in tour to five
months, according to Dr. George Miller
of UC!.
Miller said he doesn't anticipate any
protest. He said there haven't been any
callers, so . far as he knoy,·s. after
previous publicity on plans for ute UCI
reactor.
The reactor is to be u s e d to train
students and for research. ,
Pl-filler said the re.actor is of the West
kind and remarked that he of course is
very concerned about safety since h:'ll
be working with it in the basement of the
Physical Sciences Building. .
· "lt is self controlling," he said, "unlike
the atom bomb where the fission process
goes out of <Xintrol. As more neutrons are
produced the temperature increases
causirig the reaction to become less ef-
ficient. If the temperalure gets too high
the chain reaction stops."
•.
The reactor will be the first anywhere
under a department of chemistry's con·
trol. Reactors at most universities are
used in_ nuclear~ engineering_or....reactor
physics programs, Miller said.
He said the UCI reactor will be used
for production of short half-life isotopes
that can be tracers both in chemistry and
biological science research.
A second use will be hot atom
chemistry, in which atoms in highly ex·
cited state after nuclear reaction can be
used to create chemical reacUons not
normally realized, he said.
Cost of the reactor a I o n e v.•Hl be
$250,000 and for the entire facili!y
$365,000.. i:Miller , .said. T,lw money , wilt
come from a Health, Education and
Wellare grant to Chairman of Chemistry
F. Sherwood Rowland several years ago.
Rowland is·in Vienna Utls quarter doing
research.and.has turned the re~ctor pro-
ject over during his absence to Miller, a
lecturer in chemistry.
Miller said cost of operating the reac·
tor is small. It runs on Jow ·power and
fissionable material, 15. kilograms: of
uranium ·235, is used up tnlY at the tale
of a feW grams ~r year.. '.
ShakedownRattled Youth;
Boolced on Drug Cl1arges
A San Bernardino youth who ratilcd
\vhen he \vas shaken was jailed early to-
day. afer a bolle or 39 tablets alleged
to be LSD fell out of his pants leg at the
ft'f't of a Cost a Mesa patrolman.
Graydon J. Binney, , as booked on
suspicion of posses n f dangerous
drugs for sate.
Officer John Stoneback sai e stopped
a car in \lo·hich Binney was riding on
Newport Boulevard at Flower Street
shortly before 2 a.m. for an alleged traf-
fic violation.
Patrolman Stoneback asked permission
to search Binney and said the. youUt
agreed.
Buralar Gets Radio "' A car burglar relieved auditor Gary O.
Poteet. of 2031 Walla~ Ave .• Costa Mesa,
or a citizens band radio worth $100 Mon~
day night while the vehicle wa!I parked at
Orange Coast College.
Slafppi1ag Out to Viet1aa11a
DillL Y l'ILOT Ir.ft ~
Cases of cookies baked arid packed by We Care
Cool<lelift campaign are processed through Costa
Mesa Post Offlce by Postmaster John Kluglew icz
t!cft) and postaJ \vorkcr Buzz i\1onlroy. Cookies \viii
-------
go lo Gls in Vietnam. Biggest postage donaUon so
far came from teen trio bt C. A. Gi!na famil y, who
colleclcd $60.41 from neighbors.
'
.J51ipU's C~
Yic~7.~
~ -.
.Succitn1bs
Wayne O. Nutting, 74. Los Angeles
owner of the 1917 Stanley S(eamer
which exploded Saturday at Knott's
Berry Farm, died Monday of burns
received in the freak accident.
Five other victims of the explosion
remain in critical condition at the
Orange County Medical Center, hospital
aides said.
TI1ey are Nutling's "'·ife. Beth. 73 :
William Schulz, 26 ; his wife, Jo Anne,
24 and their two daughters, Cynthia, 7
and Crissy, 3, all of Los Angeles.
The accident occurred during the
aMual antique car show at the berry
farm in Buena Park. Leaking butane
gas spread over the floor or Ule claasic
car and was ignited by a cigarette or a
spark Crom the pilot light, jnve!ltigators
said.
Seven other persons: were less ser·
fously injured in the bizarre accident.
Buena Park firi;men said the Stanley
Steamer had been altered so its furnace
would bum butane gas rather than the
coal or w~ of former years.
Constitution
Revision Plan
Fails at UCI
A controversial new student con·
stitution voted on in referendum . by UC
Irvine students failed on two count!.
Elections Commis!lioner Jean Buckley
said today only 23 percent of 3,500
registered stu<lents voted. A 25 percent
turnout was needed to make the vote ·
valid,
Also, the proposed constitution only got
about 50 percent approval while two-
thirds ·approval was required for passage.
Miss Buckley said there are no plans to
revive the proposal in lhe general student
body election nezt month.
-The· constitution-which-would have-put-
lrust in the wisdom of a minority of
students was endoPsed by Student Body
President Ronald Ridgle and opposed by
Vice PrtSident BUI Coon.
The hottest debated issue would have
allowed 200 students respondin& to a call
for a general assembly to make a student
government decision that could not be
changed or relracted for two quarters •
From Page 1
ANNEXATION •.
is in neither city.
It lies roughly between Santa Ana and
Irvine-Tustin avenues. For years, the two
cities have been flinging overlapping an·
nexation proposals -and heated charges
-at each other.
Ney1port counc;ilmen made It clear
Monday they're weary of the deeade-old
dispute. "Historically," said Councilman
Robert Shelton, "both cities have done
1neaky things in terms of aMexations."
He said Costa Mesa'!! latest annexation
move -involving territory south of the
.Pegasus tract on both sides of Mesa
• Drive -had caught Newport by surprise.
"rf Jhey sought not to sil down and talk
to us about i!, that's unfortunate," r;aid
Shelton. "But I'm willing now to turn the
other cheek: and make an effort to reach
some kind of general annexation agree-
ment wllh them ."
Councilman Paul J. Gruber, whose
councilmanic district is adjacent to the
disputed territory, was less \Varm about
peace talks.
'·Through the years," he said, "Costa
P.lesa has made a hodge-podge of that
area wiJh zig·zagged annexations. And
this time they're trying to lake ad·
\'antage of us without warning. The"re is
nothing fair or equitable about their
•Back: Bay Ann.exation No. I'."
"We win all have to agree that the
boundaries betwetm the two cities west of
the bay ate pretty hard to j~fy," said
P..tayor Doreen Marshall. "Nevertheless,
it's our obligation to sit down and discuss
future boundaries that are logical."
Gruber finally agreed to annexation
parleys with Costa Mesa. The council'1
intet-eity liaison committee members
}''ere assigned the task. They are Shelton
and Howard Rogers. The city staff "'iii
Join in the informal discussions.
' City P..fanager Harvey L. Hurlburt ex-
pressed the hope tha t some sort of an-
nexation "package" indicating acrord
between the two cities could be presented
to the LAFC on ~1ay 14.
Planning Director Laurenct Wilson
said an agreement might be likely
because Newport's proposed Pegasus an·
nexalion does not overlap the Costa Mesa
plan. The Pegasus am is bounded by
Palisades Road on the north, Santa Ana
Avenue on the y,-est, the Mesa annexation
area on the south and Birch Sl'rttt, south
of Orthlrd Drl\'t, on the east.
The Newport strip anne1atlon,
however, does overlap the area Co&ta
Mesa seeks. Called the "La Canada An·
nexatJon'' by Wilson. it takes in three cul
de sat1 and unoccupied lot& west or
Tustin Avtnut.
Wilson Pointed out, however. that
homeowners In thf: art.a have petitoned to
join Newport. and do not want to Dt an-
nexed by Costa ~tesa. In addition, he
said, U Costa ~fesa we.re to annex the
area, it CC'Uld do so only to the west J:idt
of Tustlo AveDUt.
The ta&t side is already wtthln tht city
of Newport. "The middle or lhe street, In
that tvtnt," said Wilaon, "Y.'O\lld belong
to neltht'r city. Thar isn't vtry pracl.if al "
I
l j,
f
j.
I
j
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• •
Gra•t. io, lteNtne / ,,
' J . . . .
High -Col,irt ·Nixes . ,
Same Bed,
'
But Second
3 !
architect from Dialnond Bar, who &aid :
Cuba 'Big Pea~~ Corps~
UCI Lecturer Tells of Fascinating §k_ial E riment -
Joan Irvine ·Plea.-So n .There.
B1 THOMAS FORTUNE
Of .. .,.. ......
"Cuban sodely lo like , one bii Peace
Corps. Moot people would ~ be com·
fortable 1n the Peatt Corps."
''Mr. Bray, you have s~t one hour
l>'lnUng paradise. Do you have anything
to say •bout the 500,000 people who "ft
C.'uba?"
periodlcally fteditlC out to k I I ,
buroaUa'aC)' fUD<tJonal and "booesi.
NO SAFEGUARDS
Alter being quatkoed by the CUba
u.:pattiates, Bra)' polnzed out the tbinpl
he loob on wtlh dfatavor.
By ,JA,CK BROBACK
OI 11141 c.llf Pl• flail
Actlon by the U.S. Supreme Court Mon-
day denied Joan Irvine Smith's petition
for writ of certiorari thus ending, ac.
cording to the James Irvine Foundation.
lhe suit filed on .behalf of t.1rs. Smitb
against the foundation in Augu.sf, 1966.
The petition held that ownership of
lrvine Company stock by the foundation
was invalid, that the stock rightfully
belongs to the Irvine estate heirs, not the
foundation.
N. Loyall McLaren, president of the
foundation,, today e1pressed gratification
that the case has been ended and the
judgment in favor of the foundation is
now "final"~
He said the decision wou1d enable the
foundation to resume its grants to
charities imm~ately. While the suit was
in lhe courts the foundation, one of
Orange County's largest contributors to
charitable and youth causes, ceased all
grants.
When told of the Supreme Court's
decision Mooday, Chip Cleary of Newport
Beach, Mrs. Smith's representative, said
he and his client were much more ffi...
terested in current congressional activity
on tax refoon legislation which might
strip the foundation of its controlling m.
terest in the Irvine Company.
Mrs. Smith and McLaren appeared
before a congressional sub-committee a
month ago wh.ich is considering a bill
which would restrict any non.profit foun-
dation from owning more than 20 percent
or any business and prohibit such
organizations from operating a business.
Cleary said the foundation now controls
53.7 perrent of the Irvine Company stock.
Mrs. Smith holds 21.1 peretnt and is the
largest individual stockholder.
Cleary said he assumes"'President Nix-
on's tu refonn bill now before Congress
Softball League
Forms in Valley
Formation ol a "slow pitch" softball
league fn'"Fountain Valley will start with
an organizational meeting al B p.m.,
Tuesday in city hall .
Prospective teams arC asked to notify
the parks and recreation department of
their interest in the league and to have a
representative at Tuesday's meeting.
Five teams competed last year and at
least six are expected to sign up for this,
the second year d. the league.
Slow pitch dUfers from regular softball
In that pitching is limited to a lob style
and emphasis in the game is placed on
hittinJt: and fielding.
\
19< hell'iftl lncludeo•lud! restri<Uorur "" _no"'1><o!Jt· orglllliallool.
lie sal4 Chaimjan Wilbur D. MUls, (I).
'Art.I, a( ~~ W~·and Means coaunittee. h.a indiCated be favored
sudrrtstrtctlons ind·w<iild IJiist on their
i.ocllJ&lon'ln any tax rt:form ·bW that pass-
.. 11\rou&h bll committee. ' . Mrs. Smith filed the original suit
terminated by Monday's Suprtme Court
action on Aug. 10, J900.
Stripped ot le1a.J verbiage., it sought to
di~t the fouodaUon of m million in
aasets whl~ -her attorneys contended
should· be returned ltJ "tile heirs at law''•
o( which she bi the most prominent.
Thie action was fiJed in U.S. DIStrlct
Court in Los Angeles. Almost 11-moOths
later, that court ruled against the
beiresl.
On Aug. fl, 1968, Mrs. Smith's at.
torneys filed an appeal· with the Ninth
U.S. Cour1 of Appeals' in San Francisco.
That court re}ected her claim on Oct. 15,
1968. '
The final appeal for the writ of
certiorari which was denied Monday by
the Supreme Court was then filed.
The foundation officially ceased making
charitable gifts in mid-1967. Donations of
more than $564,000 in 1966 were gruted
before the lawsuit was first filed .
Organizations which went without
Irvine Founda~on. sttpport .during the
past three years include the Laguna
Beach Festival of the' Opera, which
received $10,000 in 196&-66; Laguna Com ..
munity Players, ($65,000 in 1966-67);
Harbor Area Beys C)ub , and Hoag
f.temorial Hospital. ($100,000 1962-67);
Newpiort Beach YMCA ($50,000 in 196.).
66); South Coast Community Hospital
($10,000 in l~). and the Orange Coun-
ty Society for Crippled Children and
Adults ($10,000 in 196Hfi),
Westmi1isterOK 's
Reorganization
The Westminster City Co.until Tuesday
night voted to approve a plan to
reorganize city departments and appoint
an acting city administrator.
Under the new system, buildings and
public works departmenls will con-
solidate inspection duties. &treel and
water field services will be separated
from the public service departmen t
All field services will be under <firec·
tion of Jim Stillwell who will be responsi-
ble directly to the city administrator.
The new plan will be instituted for a
trial period and is subject to re-evalua-
tion in six monlhs.
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
04 lllt O.Uy ,llfl Sii"
He stepped forward to bis $Oil's bedside
and backward in time.
"It was kind of shattering," said Costa
1'fesa realty · company mana1er Bill
fchmldt, wbo visited the Balboa Naval
Hoopltal in San Diego SWlday.
He was seem8 not a &host, but' ex-
pe:rienctng the psychoJoglcal phenomenon
known as d e j a vu -feeling one h a s
undefgone an Identical oceurrenct in the
past -and wilb good reason.
Army Capt. Ronald Schmidt, 21, Jay in
Ward r.c. Bed 111, the same ward.and bed
where Navy Lt. ponakt Schmldt, bis twin
brother, lay four~ years ago with similar
injuries also suffered in a Vietnam com·
bat air crash.
Public inform"l'liori officers at the Navy ,
hospilal said Monday ll)ey have 1,989
beds and no alphabetical assignment pro-
cedum, thus making odds on the coin·
cldeoce phenomenal.
"When I walked in a found him in the
same ~. it was eerie," said Schmidt, of
2972 Teakwood Place, Costa Mesa.
11le scene must also be eerie for
Donald Schmidt, who is now finishing up
law school at the University of San Diego
and drops in occasJonaUy to swap war
stories with hi$, twin brother.
Donald spent five months coovalescing
from injutjes stlffered when he bailed out
of. his cripph!d F4B P~antom jet on a
Vietnam combat mission and was
res'cued by helicopter.'
Ronald Schmidt faces approximately
the same-length assignment to Ward 6-C,
Bed 10, with a shattered knee in
met"hanical traction and his smashed jaw
rebuilt \\'ith wire, following a helicopter
crash.
The elder Schmi,dt said his Army of.
fleer son was directing a lank cavalry
maneuver aboard a helicopter 60 miles
from Saigon March ·9 whe n the pilot
swooped down to reconnoiter a jungle
clearing.
"He said when the groundfire opened
up it sounded like New Year's Day in
Chinatown, but he threw himself to the
floor and started shooting back ," Schmidt
said h-1onday.
Evasive action came too late, however,
and the chopper crashed, but a r.escue
ship was quiclcly dispatched to evacuatt
the injured survivors.
A third son, former Marine Corps Maj.
Philip Schmidt, also returned recently
from Vietnam duty as a combat jet and
helicopter pilot to retire and become a
department store e1ecutive.
1be three Schmidt sons are no
strangers to air crashes or to the DAILY
PILOT, where their father was a staff
member until entering the realty field.
That u:planation was given by Dr.
Donald Bray, lecturer &o a UC Irvine
cOurae on Cuba, bas to why more than
500,GOO refugees have left CUba in the 10
years of the Fidel Castro regime.
Bray was s~ly upbraided by Cuban
u:patriatea in the audience. Tbey accused
him of being l'l'<K:astro.
lie aaiG be looks upoo Cuba as "a
fascinating social uperlment."
Bray, associate prolessor of govern·
ment at Cal Slate Los Angeles, said the
Cuban government is unique in the world
in trying to replace the wage incenUve
with moral Incentives.
He said other ~alist countries ha\'e
given up od"' the moral incenUve idea,
saying, "Jt ls utopian , romanUc, people
mu.sl be rewarded materially."
DERIVE REWARDS
Cubans, be said, are supposed to deri\·e
their rewards from service. He indicated
he is still skeptical about the Jdea that a
whole country can be run like a religious
order.
But one million residents of Havana. he
noled, recently planted a green belt
around tM city. Their only pay was the
prospect of future abundance.
• He. said rent on housing, already halv·
ed, will be eliminated nerl year. Eggs
and CQf!ee are free, public telephones
free, as first steps toward eliminating
money.
Bray spoke during the UC Extension
adu.lt education course "Cuba, Castro and
Communism.''
He Willi challenged by Felix Munoz, ao
Macdonald Gets
Artists Position
Everett Macdonald, a Laguna Beach
jeweler and sculptor, has been named to
the Laguna Artists and Gallery Owners
Association board of directors.
Macdonald will assume responsibility
for the association's Sawdust Festival
grounds and assist on other committees:
He joins eight other artists on the board.
Macdoriald has been sculpting and
designing je\\'elry In Laguna !or 22 years.
He has a shop on Coa.st Highway and has
been a Festival o! Arts exhibitor sinco
1947. Last year, he participated In the
Sawdust festival in a glass blowing e1-
hibit.
The Sawdust Festival will nm from Ju.
ly 11 through August 24. The grounds are
located on Laguna Canyon Road adjacent
to the new Boys' Club.
Bray answered that when given a chan-
ce to leave it is not surprWng that many
of the nation's ef&ht mllllon population
did.
LEFf SOCIETY
"Probably most or us would have left a
society subjected to this kind of wren·
ching experience," he said . "t-.tost people
aren't interested in 30eial uperiments.
They never have been anywhere in the
world."
Ile said if' U.S. immigration restrictions
were lifteC some Lalin American coun-
tries could be emptied in a weekend.
h-1ajor Jose Duarte, formerly of Uie
Cast.ro anny and now with the Cuban ex·
ile organization Unare. in an angry out-
burst. said :
"Why don't you tell them how the
Cuban revolution was betrayed. I fought
against Batista. This is a prostitution of
the nationalist revolullon. \Ve are the
ones that made the revolution . not the
Atarxists. You haven't said that more
than 60,000 Cuban revolutionists are in
jail:' ,
Former UCI student Patty Parmalee,
v.·ho made an unaulhor:J.red trip to Cubu,
\'Olunteered an explanation.
"Fidel thought originally he could
make a revolution for all classes. lie
found it to be impo.ssible," she said.
PROBABLY GUILTY
Bray admilted that he probably had
been guilty of glossing over the seamier
side of Cuban life. But he said for an
American group that has gotten Its im·
presslons from the mass media he felt he
t!ad to overcompensate.
He ticked off a number o[ things he
said make the Cuban revolution unique:
-It has been humane and not too
repressive. Some 600 were executed sum-
ntarily at first but most of the dissenters
have been allowed to Jea\'e.
-Never before in a LaUn American
country has every person had a shot at
education. After a concerted literacy
campaign Cuba is maybe slightly more
literate than the United States.
-Never before in a Latin American
country has everyone enjoyed a
minimum level of nutrition. The diet is
not exciting but nutritionally adequate.
-Public health is very good by Latin
American standards. Already 90 percent
of babies are born in hospitals. Cubans
may be the most physically fit people in
lhe world because they don't overeat and
all do labor.
-People at the local level arc given an
'Immediate slice or political po\\·cr the
likes of which is unprecedented in the
\vorld . {He did not elaborate.) .. ,
-There has been relatively little ron-
rllct wilh religion. The minister of educa·
lion, for instance, attends Calholic M&sa..
-CUba has the most systematic cam-
paign against bureaucracy in the world,
lie said he doesn't feel there u,
<nOUflh legal safeguard• and not eoou&b
play given Individual eccentricity.
He remarked that he thinks CUbqs
overdo surveillance against another U.S.
attack and th.at be would like to ~ leas
censorsh.ip.
The Cuban answer to this, he said, ~
tht they are on a forctd march toward
development and haven't time for ec>-
centricity nor money for frilly pubUea..
tions that wOJJld come with less etns«·
ship.
B r a y said Cuba h a s made great
econontic progress and thai it ls not
unreaso nable to expect nut year it will
reach its goal of production of 10 milllori
tons of sugar (compared to a little over
five million tons this year) which bu
become almost a national obsession.
MAKE QUOTA
\Vhen there last summer as an e.i ..
change professor, he recounted, a YOl.lf\C
man said to him, ''Well, l guess everyoue
in your country is wondering whether V
not we will make our 10 milllon toos?'• •
Bray said he didn't have the heart to
tell him, ''No."
Because of lhe press, he said, the U.S.
p!!blic image now· of Cuba is of ta
totalitarian regime that is a cancer in tJ:t:
\\'cstcrn Hemisphere .
Jfe said it is not reasonable to e~
Cuba to \vithcr away because of U~~
U.S. 's economic blockade.
He said. "They are r_ationing now, bht
everybody is '''orking hard and they &a;
investing in education. The reasonabf
expectation is that in about 10 years tht1'.
'vill reach a respectable level of economJ
and we will discover them and have to
cvmc lo some kind of agreement." ;
\
Job Employment
Office to Open :
Thousands of students will be seekhlr
summer employment with the end oi-tii
school year, d\.'COrdlng to Robert= hfartin, coord.lnator of work experi
education for the Huntington Bea
Union High School District. l
He said the district operates a referrjl
and placement service and employeu
needing summer help can get Interest.el,
capable and dedicated applicants throu'1
lhe school· district. J
"We do preliminar~ testing and scree'"
Ing in accordance with the wishes ol. LIJe
employer and refer three applicants fqr
each available position,'' Martin said. •
Requests for student he!Hither ftj
or part tlm~n be directed to Mart\1
at 536-9331. .
A GREAT AMERICAN •••
•• •
•
Dwight David J,;isenhowl!r was a man
of great accomplislunent. For the first
time, here is the complete biography of
the general, politician and statesman
who became a legend in his own time.
Reiman Morin, the AI"s two-time
Pulit.7-er Plize winner, provides a
detailed and colorful 140,000-word
account of the Kansas farm boy who rose
to become a hero of World War Il and
the 34th President of the United Stat.es
in "Eisenhower : A Gauge of
Greatness." Morin, whoknewlkefora
quarter of a century, measures the man
by the gauge of greatness Ike se t up
himself.
The result is Utis handsome volume
illustrated by more than 85 pictures in
color and black and white. It is available
to you through this newspaper at the
special plice of only $3 .
. .. A _GREAT BOOK!
• Tiil ,...W-..U lilr'$S .. --
• 140,000.word IL':! written by
one of Ws most noted report-
ers, who hid known Ile 10< m0<e
lflln 25 )tan and Interviewed
him ptllOlllllJ for this vol11nL
• 85 color •nd black Ind whit•
phot°" some of which hlYt
"'"' b01n pubRsllld ~
• It Is hlrdllound Int illlldsom1
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tlrinr; .. cWIJndilW ldllltlon
to ""' llcm llny. • 261pops,~·1 11• .... .... f. -Simply fill out coupon and mail with remlttanee to the address indicated-+-
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r AGAUli~ OF romTNiss ------,
0.-,o c:-t DAILY PILOT
I ... " ....... Hpslo, N.Y. IZiOI
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I .._.·---·--------·····-·---··-·-·------·-I I -·-... ·----·--.. ·-··-.. -·. -I Cl1Y.---·-···'"-·········'"··-···-~-:--··-------=-I
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"
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•
-· Aprl1 29, 1969 .
v~te f-or President
cc--.. ~ ... Deir ,, ... 11110
Patricia A. Young, 17, and Wll·
liam A. Leadens, 18, of Minnea.
polis, Minn., are going to \Vash·
ington today , to give Presklent
Nixon his 25 percent profit. During
last year's presidential campaign,
the teen-agers talked Nixon into
buying $2 worth of stock in their
Junior Achievement Company. The
stock is now worth $2.49. •· The electric organ 1aughed when
Tod Kint of Sittingbourne, Eng-
land sat down to play. But he shrug·
ged, then went on to play a 50-min.
ute recital fo.r frjends, during which
the organ occasionally talked. Yes,
talked. When King, 74, was through
the instrument quipped, "That was
quick, Ted." King examined the
organ and found that a couple of
wires had got crossed and someho\v
turned the instrument into a receiv·
er for a taxi company's radio di s·
patcher. "Ted" was one of the
drivers.
0
' WASIRNGTON (UPI) -Tha Hou,.
Judlclary Committee today approved a
proposed coruiUtutlonal amendment to
provide for election ol America's
preaidenU by direct, popular vote.
By a v o t e of 28 to 6, the committee
adopted a proposal to do away with ihe
electoral college and establish nationwide
popular election ol a President, with a
runoff election if no candidate gol 40 per·
cent oI the vote in lbe general elecUon.
Priso1ier s
Plan Reve nge
On Sirhan?
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The prison
grapevine has It that convicts may
retaliate against Sirhan 8. Sirhan to
avenge the murder of Sen. Robert F.
KeMedy, a top state official said P...ion·
day.
Lawrence E. Wilson, deputy director of
the Department of Corrections, sald that
special precautionary measures will be
employed to protf'.d Kennedy's assassin.
Wilson appeared at a legislative conr
mittee hearing called to consider a bill
that would allow Sirhan to be locked up in
a specially constructed suite of three
cells at the Callfornia medical facility at
Vacaville Instead of on San Quentin's
death row. The committee killed the
mea!llre.
Outside the hearing room. Wilson was
asked by reporters if there had been any
hint of threats to the Ille of the 25-year-
old Jordanian immigrant.
The judiciary-committee's veteran
chairman, Rep. Emanuel Ce Iler, ( [).
N.Y.), said, '"l'b.b b a red letler day."
•le added that "the first bold step bas
bet!n taken" toward election rtlorm.
Botn ~er and Rep. William r.1.
1>1cCulloch, Obio, ranking committee
Republican, said they were confident the
direct election plan would win necessary
.approval of 38 states -the two thirds re-
quired for ratification of constitutional
amendments.
The plan drew bipartisan support, with
12 of 15 committe< R<publlcans Joln!N 11
of 20 Democrata in favor of it. ~
Republicans and three Otmocratc voted
against it. One Democrat was absent.
President Nixon wu recently repclrted
leaning toward the dlrect election plan
although he did not propose it.
In a compromise, the committee
adopted an effective date formula that
maae it queslloriabio wbdher a new
melhod of electina: a PresldeQt could
become eUectJve by 1912 wheo Presideat
NJ.loo will have a chance to nan ap1n.
. The compromlle 1pecillod tbol· the
alnepdment would not take tffect unUl one year after Jan. SI in the year follow·
iq ratlficatJon by the states.
For euu:iple, U the amendment recei\f\>
ed raWicaUon as early u February, 1971,
it could not take effect until Jan. 21, 1173,
the ~ alt<r lhe nest scheduled pruldto-
"Nothing that r.,2 could put your finger
on," he sald. 'There have been in·
stitutional rumors U-.at there could be
retaliation taken."
Kennedy was fatally shot June S after a
rally celebrating hli victory i n
California's presidential primary elec·
tion.
ARM ED MILITANT STUDENTS REACH FDR FOOD SUPPL IED BY SUPPORTERS
Students Are Holding Library Building et VoorhHs College, Denmark, S.C.
Philip D. Guthrie, a department
spokesman, said that Sirhan will be con·
fined on death row.
"He will be totally isolated," he said.
Guthrie and Wilson disclosed tha t
Sirhan will be held in a "buffer zone" cell
-the middle cell of three on death row.
The two on either side will be vacant.
Special guards will be assigned to his cell
block.
Po m pidou May Succeed
Old Teacher De Gaulle
Despite 11is rather toothy appear-
ance, this orphan oppossvm is really
just a baby insists Hunter Swearln.
. gen, 2, of Tampa, Fla. Hunter ha&
adopted the animt.1l which wa.s res·
cued by his father when Mrs. bpos.
sum was hit by a cor and killed. • \Vorkrnen today installed wall·t(}o
wall carpeting in the Neston, Eng·
Jand kennel of a black cairn terrier
which inherited $80,457 from its
owner, Vera Rae. ri1rs. Rae died
Jast December, two days after put-
ting the 8-year-old dog, Sherry, in
the care of Mapleoa k Kennels. Her
will '"'as published last week. Tpe
kennel operators said the dog's
boarding bill was about $7.20 a
week but Sherry will now start get·
ting deluxe treatment, starting with
a giant bone. The \vill said that
money left \vh en the dog dies will
go to six animal charities.
0
i\1att DUlon, missing for a
week wa.s found safe by two
boys and has been Yeturned
home in Richmond, Vt. i\-fatt
Dillon is a state police blood-
hotrnd. He became lost a week
a.go during tracking exercise!.
Prison Guards
In Ohio Strike
For Wage Hike
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Guards
struck at two state penal institutions to-
day and were replaced where necessary
by Ohio National Guardsmen.
Only M of 1~ to 200 guards and
supervisors reported at the state peniten·
tiary in Columbus. A unit of 100
guardsmen augmented the gua rd force
there.
About 80 guards reported at Mansfield
Reformatory where 130 would· nonnally
be 9n duty. A unit of guardsmen from
Akron was sent to Mansfield toaitand by.
Adjt. Gen. S. T. DelCorso ti.id no na·
tional guardsmen w e r e sent into the
Mansfield reformatory immediately.
1ifaury Koblentz, chief of the Ohio
Division of CorrecUon, said guard situa·
lions were normal at penal instituUons at
Lebanon, London, Marysville, Marlon and
O>illicothe.
Spokesmen for the striking guards at
the penitenUary said they are seeking a
$1,500 annual across-the-board pay raise.
Koblentz said wages currently start at
$4,990 a year at all institutions except the
penitenUary, where &tarting salary is
'5,2f0 a year.
By United Press International
Georges Pompidou is a man who learn·
ed from a master the art of politics. Now
he may be on his \\'ay to replacing his
teacher as president of France.
For six years he served President
Charles de.Gaulle loyally as premier. ·
Last swnmer, however. ~ f l b.r.
masterminding a parliamentary general
election campaign that gave the Gaullists
a landslide victory, Pompidou was fired
unceremoniously by the leader for whom
he had toiled. Some said Pompidou had
c.Jemonstrated his abilities a bit loo well.
But bi tterness he may ha\·e fe lt Porn·
pidou kept to himself. ThOugh De
Gaulle's defeat in last Sunday's con·
stilullonal referendum campaign could
have been -and no\v is -considered a
stepping stone to the presidency for
himself, Pompidou \\'orked hard in the
general's behalf,
He made no secret of his O\YD presiden·
tial aspi rations, but Pompidou also made
it clear if he becomes president some
day, he did not want to do 'it in the wake
of a De Gaulle defeat.
Georges Pompidou was born July 5.
191 1. in the central France town of
Mon.tboudif. The son of a school teacher,
he made a bril liant academic career.
Then he became a secondary school
teacher hi1nself.
Soon after De Gaulle returned to Paris
afler i1s liberation in August. 1!M4. he
called in Pompidou to provide him daily
teports on popular reaction to !tis
policies.
\Vhen De Gaulle walked out in 1946,
Pompidou, \Yhile working for the
Rothschild Bank, remained a member of
2 Feet of Deadwood Snow
30 Degre e Temperatures Cliill Upper Midwest
Callfonaia Ptn'IEW Of ESSAwtATHllt M lAUFOllCASt ro T:ODl.M. EST + ·JO-"'
II W&I mct1tlv !1lr 1nd 1lo•ht!'t' ,.,_,~ · SHOWt llS Te1npe t"at11res
Mith ltw Prt<.
fctn11 ~" w1111 .. ,,1.b1~ .,1.,, ,lolldl COLD · : .: • •• _1 • COlD • ·::/ 1cuwnHn~ b'f 11rl't' mornlnt ..W :·.::.:·' • /_.., '111""' •• · •• 10110•
AlbvQUtl"IW " " 11,.ct1or1ve •• "
DE GAULLE 'S HEIR?
Georges Pompidou
I
the general's inner circle of advise rs.
lie helped De Gaulle in his unsuccessful
comeback attempt at the head of the
Rally of the French People (RPF) in
1947·50. \Vhen De Gaulle finally was
swept back to power in 1958. Pompidou
still was one of his inner circle, though
most Frenchmen did not reati:i:e it.
So it y,•as a political sensation "'hen De
Gaulle in 1962 fired his first premier,
1.1ichel Debee, and named Pompidou to
the job.
Slowly, almost Imperceptibly, Pom-
pidou learned the go,·erning trade. More
important, he learned how to work for De
Gaulle as a loyal executor of the old
man's wishes and policies, but never as a
sycophant.
Armed Militant
Blacks Take 2nd
College Building
Militant black students, armed with
rifle s, shotguns and knives, seized a se--
cond building at Voorhees College in Den·
mark, S.C., today and the administration
ordered the school closed.
Slate officials ma rshalled National
Guard and Highway Patrol forces at
nearby Bamberg although Voorhees
President John F. Potts said he will not
call for outside help u n t i I absolutely
necessary.
The new takeover spread the OC·
cupatlon from the ad mini stra lion
building, seized Monday, to the science
building next door.
The blacks seemed set for a long stay,
as they were fortified with an estimaled
55,000 worth of food taken at gunpoint
Monday from the cafeteria.
Dean of Students Mrs. W. G. Jenkins
ordered the school closed indefinitely
after today's takeo ver, saying ail
students were expected to be off the cam·
· pus by noon. '
A spokesman for the niilitants urged
students not to leave. saying the ad·
ministration "is trying to divide our
forces."
At Harvard University undergraduates
voled not to renew a student strike while
at Radcliffe. Harvard 's sister institution,
students twice invaded the administration
building and shouted obscenities at Pre&!·
dent Mary Bunting.
President Bunting sat quietly at her
desk while about 100 students paraded in
and around her office. They caUed her
"Pig," "Louse" and a scattering of four-
Jetler words. The students were pro-
testing disciplinary acUon against 22
girls.
Nixon to Give Medal
To Duke Ellington
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon wUI present Duke Ellington the
Medal of Freedom -one of the nation's
highe.!lt civilian honors -at a White
House dinner torught celebrating the
composer-conductor's 70th birthday.
It will be the first PresidenUal
Freedom Medal to be presented by Nix-
on.
Closer
..
Hal inauguration.
"l would·say Jt will take prompt actt_on
on the part • of state le&Ullturd; W'
McCulloc:h old In utimaling -of the amtndment t.klng efled In time for
the 1972 pruld..uaJ election.
The compromlle was designed to give
Congress and states time to pass Im·
plemenllng Jeglslltlon to establish voter
qualificaUon.s, methods of lliUng on
ballot.s and b o w the votea woulc1 be
COWlk4 Joel made public.
Laird Offers
Compromise
Over ROTC-
' WASIRNGTON (UPI) -The Defense
Department today offered to make some
minor changes in its Reserve Officers
Training Corps ( ROI'C) program in an
effort to ea.se student protests against
militar ytraining on college and universi-
ty campuses.
The changes, di.scl-Osed by Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird, were viewed
a! a pouible compromise to efforts by
student activists to bar all military pro-
grams from their campuses.
However, in a Pentagon statement,
Laird said : "\Ve.are not prepared to &ee
the ROTC program degraded in any way.
The Defense Department continues to
believe that ROTC is an important ele-
ment ~f our total national security effort.
We want to &ee its value. both to shldents
and the naUon, strengthened."
Roger T. Kelley, Laird's assistant for
manpower , cited the following a.a arilong
changes that might be made:
-Some military !raining could be
shifted from the school year to sum·
mertime.
-More civilian lnstt:uctors might be
,l!~· displacing military office~11 who
DOW teach ROTC cow-ses.
-Some technical courses might be
eliminated entirely, while others could be
made more general rather than military
jn nature -such as management prin-
ciples and history.
Kelley said he recently conferred with
officials of Princeton, Brown, Yale,
Cornell, Dartmouth, Tulane, Stanford and
Brigham Young about ROTC. He con·
ceded there are many wbo are
philosophically opposed to the program.
"There iJ no naUomride Phil090phical
hang-up on the subject," he continued.
"but certain schools have a problem.
They will have to decide whether their
academic philosophy and ROTC can live
together,"
Stanford Poll
Shows Most OK
Sit-in Demands
STANFORD (UPI) -While most of
Stanford's students did not back the nin~
day sit-in of a campus laboratory, they
soon to have agreed with the militants'
poaitioo.
A campus-wide poll showed that two-
thirds of the student body and one-third
of the faculty fa vor bringing the Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) under closer
university control with a commit tee
redirecting its research activity.
Faculty and students also voted heavily
to restrict chemical, biological a n d
radiological warfare research at the
Menlo Park Institute and a clear ma-
jority of students opposed counter-in-
surgency studies and research related to
the war in Southeast Asia at the institute.
The April 3rd movement. which con-
ducted a nine-day sit-in at t he
university's applied e I e c t r on I c s
laboratory, strongly backed closer in-
tegration of SRI into the university and
opposed its Defense Department
research.
A total of 5,171 students and 671 fa culty
memben answered the questionnaire.
More than half the faculty but only a
fifth of the student~ fa vored sale of SRI
under certain coriditions. coolf:r !Mn ~., In Sauttot1n Clll-n111l1 '• ~··-~ -~™ .·.·~
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:i Franc 'Doomed' ... ·" PARIS (UPI) -European bankers
said today they thought devaluation of
the French franc is ineVita.ble. In
Switzerland, the banking capital or the
world, the prediction was £or a devalua-
.f.l tion of Just under 15 percent.
.oJ The views by private and commertlal
bankers CQntrasted with statements by
.01 Western governments and their «ntral
banks that the French eeonorny. together
with its $3.8 billion in reserves and
,0.1 foreign rtadlness to held out, can \\•Ith·
stand a run on the franc. The franc is now :~ vaJuOO at just under five to the dollar :
the market rate has been averaging 4.97
to the dollar.
A private french banker in Paris slid
the franc could hold ou~ but only U there
ls no run on France's currency. All
agreed t h a t central banks can help
.u France but that LM:re: 11 a limit to wMt
.•• the y can do lf speculati\'t floodgates are
01 opened. •
Boy, 12, Nabbed After Gunplay
NORWALK (UPI) -Sherllrs deput ies. anntd with tur gas a.nd. lhotguns and
•lded by the U;hts ol. a helicopler hover·
~~verhead, flushed from a sparling
st'bre today a, 12-year-old boy who
had held them It ~ with a pellet aun
for 3$ minutes.
The unidentified youth walked out of
the store oradllnc a »30 rifle and thtn
told deputies "MJ 1-year~d companion
is inside. He's Cot a shotgun.''
De:puties lobbed two tear gas canistcn:
Into the store, but no one elae appeaN!d to
be inside.
Two dcput.lt• answering a silent
burglar alarm heard the sound ol. brtak-
lng glass when they arrtvtd at Unllfd
SportinJt: Goods ttore IShortly after mid-
night. While Dep. J1ck Ryon went to
Investigate, his partner manned the
radio, ready to call for help.
Ryon saw o. figure Inside the store and
=osnized lhe juvenilo whom he had . I
handled in an Investigation a few weeks
earlier. But when Ryon called o• the lx>)'
to come out. lhe lx>y opened fire with a
pellet gun, narrowly missing Ryon.
\Vithin minutes the store was sur·
rounded by 20 depu ties. A sherifrs
helicopter circled overhead, Ooodlng the
scene with lt.s spotlight.
Deputies said during the siege the boy
fired between lS and 20 shots at them ,
but they held their !ire.
Ryon, talking over a bullhorn. finally
the boy told officers, "I went in the store.
Asked what he was doing ilJ.Jhc store.
the boy toldofflcers, "I went iif'\he store.
The lights went out. l wanted to get out. r
broke the window."
;!be youth, wbo had Anny sttpant'•
stripes stuffed In his pocket. was taken to
juvenile hall for qucstonlng a n d
authorities said he would be booked for
burglary and possibly for assault with I~
lent to commit murder.
'
Bucher Signs Autographs
UP'IT ........
Cmdr. Lloyd Bucher who bas gained back about 40 pounds since his release
from a North Korean prison, looks hearty as he signs autographs at dinner in
his honor by the University of Notre Dame Alumni Club in Chicago Monday. He
said he expects to remain in the Navy even if reprimanded for his conduct
during the seizure of the USS Pueblo.
, GRAFFITI Fulbright, Mansfield
Bare Extra Earnings
U.S. Seeks
To Block
ITT Merger
WASllINGTON (AP) -Nix-
. on administration trustbusters
have made their second move
in two weelts to short circuit
the trend t o w a r d con·
glomerate mergers by filing
suit against the giant lnterna·
tional Telephone and
Telegraph Co.
ITT was challenged ~fonday
tn Chicago's U.S. District
Court on acquisition three
days earlier cf Caoteen Corp.,
a national food and vending
company with 1967 revenue of
$322 million.
The J u s l i c e Department
complaint charged the ac-
quisition might trigger other
mergers, a tendency govern-
ment antitrust chlef Richard
W. McLaren says he means to
stop.
1'IT, the country's 12th
largest busin~. thus joined
Ling-Temco-Vaug.ht lnc., the
14.lh largest, as a defendant in
separate government lawsuits
to slow the rate of economic
concentration.
Justice filed suit two weeks
ago to stop L TV's purchase of
Jones & Laughlin Slee! Corp.
WASllINGTON (UPI) -
Chairman J. William
.Fulbright (D·Ark.) ol the
Senate Foreign R e I a t i o n s
Committee, and S e n a t e
Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield (Mont.), drew large
writing and speaking fees last
year, reports under a new
mandatory disclosure r u I e
showed today.
Fulbright earned n e a r 1 y
$20,000, or two-thirds or his
Senate salary, and Mansfield
was paid $16,000 of which he
donated $2,000 to the Universi-
ty of Montane where he once
taught.
Sensation seekers hoping for
tantalizing eiposures in the
financial affairs of senatocs
are doomed to disappointment,
The first reports under the
new mandatllcy dilclosun: ruJe
are dull.
In wake ol investigations in·
to the financial affairs of
former Senate Democratic
secretary Robert G. Baker
and Sen. Thomas J . Dodd (I).
Corm.), the Senate broke
tradition last year and adopted
a rule requiring I i m I t e d
disclosure of interesU:.
Mansfield listed $ I 6 , o o o
received in honorariums but
he reported for the entire year
instead of the last &iI months
as required.
One of Mansfield's fees was
$2,000 for a speech at the
University of Montana wbere
he used to teach and included
in lbe report was the notation
that the $2,000 was donated to
the history department at the
Mexican Chief
Quits Hospital
lllEXICO CITY (AP) -
President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz.
was dismissed Monday from
lhe Central Military Hospital
where he had been
recuperating from surgery
performed April IS on a
loosening reUna in his right
eye.
Doctors said that although
his progress was satisfactory,
it will be two more months
before he is fully recovered.
Nixon 'In' 100 Days; .
Dems Still Not Out
WASIDNGroN (AP) -The
Niton Administration marks
its tooth day in power today
with scores oC holdovers from
DemocraUc years still oc-
cupyJng key jobs in the vast
federal establishment.
A government ·wide
Associated Press s u r v e y
disclosed tha1 while new
Republican faces dominate the
upper levels in s o m e
departments, a clean sweep of
Democratic appointees has not
materialized.
Some eramples :
-At the Pentagon, fewer
than hal£ ol the 19 fust·line
civilian jobs have been Wied
with lresh GOP talent.
-Seven of the eight &op jobl
ot the Office of Economlc Op-
por\unlcy, the federal an-
llpcwerty agency. ore still fill-
ed by hol•~ <rom the Johnson admi traOon.
-Of the 109 I subject to
polllical ap tment In the
A g r I cultur Departmtnt's
Washington headquarters, the
NIIon administration has fill·
ed 46 -less than half. There
are 38 hOldoven and 25 vacan-
cies.
Administration spokesmen
say Nixon ind hls tabinet
members have c:onctnlrated
fll'St on seJec,Ung appointees
lor upper ecbeloo posta before
moWig on to ~
jobs. This ls reflected in one
estimate that only hall of the
1,750 "Schedule C" jobs -
confidtnUal or political pom
usually in the $15,000 to l30.000
salary ral1(t -hive been fill·
ed by the new adm.inistraUoo .
NiJ:on biJmelf uys he 's
"""" !ntejelled In lonl·term
accomplisbmenlt than I n
whit's dooe In !ht firlt 100
day1 ol hla admlniltraUoo. "I
don't count either the daya or
the hours," be told reporters
Sunday. "I never thouaht In
those term1. I plan for the
long term ."
"
university's library.
Fulbright's $11,967 came
mostly from his writing IC·
tivities. He listed payments of
$5,800 for speeches which were
not itemized and the rest from
writing. The HMH publishing
Co. (Playboy) paid him 11.100
for an article and the New
York Times $800. He also
received $11,267 in b o o k
royalties from Random House.
Cairo Race
Flareup Hit
By Gunfire
CAI~O. Ill. (UPI) -
fire spitting from a Negro
housing project punched tnto a
file engine and drove police
and firemen from a fire-bomb-
eel building at the Tri-County
Health Department early to-
day.
It was one ol. eight firebom-
bings Monday night, the third
straight nlght of 1ucb In-
cidents In this racially troubl-
ed port city at the confiuence
of the Mississippi and Oblo
rivers, and it was the eecond
lime the fire truck wu hit by
buUets at the Health Depari-
ment.
In another incident, a white
man reported two Negroes
jumped from a car in a white
neighborhood and beat and
slashed him.
Gov. Richard Ogi.lvif tent 30
1\linois state troopers from 125
miles around to Cairo, which
has lS regular policemen, two
of them Negroes. Cairo has
10,000 persons, about 5,000 of
them Negroes.
Police cloeed all tavuna
and ordered everybody off the
streets, with the exception of
U.S. SI, which nearly bilecta
the long. narrow town. Cairo
is "3 blocks Jong and eight
blocks wide at its widest point.
Anyone turning oU tbe
highway waa challensed.
Campbell
Wins 3 Top
Music Titles
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Glen Campbell captured three
top awards Monday night in
the fourth anr.ual pr~
taUons of the Academy ol
Country and Western MUI!<: 1t
the Hollywood Palladium.
Campbell was honored u
the best male l'OCIUst of the
year, the top television
pcC1011allty aod for the bell
album, his record with Bobble
Gentry.
Kathi e Tayh>r WU voted
best female vOC1lisl The top
singJe reoord WU "Utlle
G<eeo Applea" by Ro(tt
Miller and the best JOn1 WU
"Wkhlta Lln<mln" by Jim
Webb.
TOOl Smothen, of the now
c...,.lled Smothlra Brothen
teltvlsion show, wu voted
man of &be yur. "Nudie,"
who ouUlts country 1 n d
wee:tern 1t1.r1 and movle 1c-
tor1 Jn watern garb, wu
prtoeni.d tl!e 1pecl1I Boord el
Dirtclma Aw1nl by Olllnnln
•rerb Eran.
• ··-DAILYl'ILGI' •
Japan Emperor
Becomes 68
TOKYO (UPI) --
New.Civil Right,s Package lntrodiwed -.
of eatltte!Mtlt wtU1ri*n
ci-.d Emponr illnlhllo at
ltls palace ..., .. bll 11th
birthday.
Tbe •m---four times on a baJCDll1 to. receive
the cheers ud oppltult. HJa
cooaort, Em..-N.,U..
WU at hil lidl.
•
WASlllNGTON (UPI)
Unwlllllll to woll lot-Prul-
dent NIRn to .-., a
blptr\llln coallllog or senate
libetala todoy Introduced a
ICIW'jlOlot clvli rfchll pocnp,
tncludlnl o Ove.yar exl<nalon
ol tbe Vollne JUcb11 Ad.
The pocaa• w11 Introduced
by Som. Philip "-Hart ([).
Mlch.), Edward M. Kennedy
([).Mass.), Hugh ScoU (!1-
Pa:). and Jacob K. Javlll, (R·
N.Y.) All ha ve been leadtrt lr'I
civil rights legi.!llaUon passed
In recent years.
11le first two parts of the
bill consUlute legislation scut-
tled last year when the
liberals were forced to make
~cessio~ in their successful
ellort to -the -"""'"" bill.
by The :.:7d!'t~tdc. ~
Johnson for several years,
would ouUaw discriminaUon in
the 1electlon of state Juries
and would give the
Uon in the 1etecUon of It.ate
juries and would aive ~
equ1il .~mployment op.
on the money
_,
,,.. looltil& commlaalon •...,.
tad dlllll" powen wbm ff
llndl lndllltry .dllcrlmlnatmc.
The otbeT two parts of the
packaae would eliminate tbe
appropriotioo& celling oo the
U.S. Commission on Civil
llights and Utend the 1165
Voting Rlllhll Act O•e yurs
beyood • Ila 1970 expiration
date.
' •
I
I
• 1,
t
...
,, ...
,.
..
you can't afford to risk!
The nation's largest federal.pays you every day, from the day your savings are
r-'Yllcl tQ Ille day they're withdrawn, and compounds your earnings dally at
the hlghelt rate avallable anywhere on Insured puabook aavtnge. There's no
minimum time period required.
PWS ... funda received on or before the 10th of any month will earn
dMdencla from the 1st when on deposit at the end of the quarter.
Now, mora tJ)an mr, the money you can't atrord to risk belongs at the
111111o1--n'1 ltrge8t federal I
5.25" Bonus Account: !Anlleble. lft mu111p111 o1 ¥1000).Emm111 %
._ .... ,... ..,, .......... puabooi rlle 1lfllll held s,..... '
5.13~PassbookAccount: s.13"-r~ont......ipr11111oat
aocounl9 when aff UYlnga 1ncl dlflcl·etKfa remain a JNI', U Ille 1% current
Wll ..... II~ and -pounded dlllr for I Jiii'•
California Federal
oad 1-1.-:i'h • II Olkm • --su-
Nm'JON'S LARGFSl' FEDERAL
AIWIElll OFFICE: 800 N. EUCLID AVE. • 771-2222
COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 HARBOR BLVD.• 541-2300
ORANGI! OFFICE: a10 W. CHAPllAH AVE.• ~
-Ollot:M10Wll1Nrt llMI., ..... ~
..,._., .-.re•Ju.-t-pa~I .,.,.-.t ....... •i:-111-••••o.,...,.,. __ t_.,.,tw-oa •
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I DAD·~ •no;r ED~~ PAGE I , , :. 1 •
'
> I ·, • ' ' 1 ·D~gusting , Frighteni~ •
. -· -.· '.
•
•
-·~11---1
I
I
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I
' •
Speettrs wm lnt~mipted by the audience, booed
and jeered ... 1
'!be meet1n4 chalnnan's 1avel was ignored •.•
During a recess, members of the crowd took o~r
the micmpbOlle to exhort the crowd .••
One board member privateJy expressed fears for
the physical safety of himself and his fellow meJD.
ben .••
Sound like a session at 5an Francisco state College.
or Columbia, or some other college campus where the
SDS or the black mllltani.. have engaged in disruption?
Would anyone have thought this could in fact be the
&eene at a local scllool board meeting on the Orange
Coast, with the wuuly crowd made up not of teen-agers
hut of supposedly mature, responsible adult ciUzens
and parents?
It really Isn't Important in which community the
foolish and frightening spectacle occurred. It's disgust-
ing enough that it occurred anywhere on the· Orange Coast. ·
Nor does it really .matter whether the topic in·
volved wes sex education or garbage collection or bus
routes or zoning. The violation of the requirements of
responsible citizenship was, and is, the overriding
concern.
The ugly situation developed when the Huntington
Beach Union Hlgb School District board of trustees
prepared to evaluate the status of a proposed currlcu·
Jum. for voluntary Family Life and Sex Education
courses which they bad under review by a 73.person
citizens advisory committee.
This became impossible when an emotionally sup-
ercharged group disrupted discussion with mob tactics.
They shouted at opposing speakers and even accosted
board members to the point where they might justifi·
ab1y believe physical attack would be the next move.
The tactics· might have prevailed but for the fact
the district staff already had prepared a recommenda·
'90 Percent
Of Everything
ls Rubbish'
o:i;;,;.;.,..::~
Theodore Sturgeon, that excellent eci·
ence-fiction ~ter, was once asked by
an interviewer why so much lcience-lio-
Uon ii bad. "Well," replied Sturgeon,
1190 percent of science-fiction is rubbish,
because 90 percent of everything la rub-
bish."
To my mlnd, Sturgeon's Law oupt to
be as widely disseminated aa Partin-
m'1 Law. In our blanket condemmr-
tions or so many modem items, we tend
to forget that the same condition bu al-
ways been true.
It is an absolute fact, for instance.,
that 90 percent of modern music ls: junk
-but 90 percent of ancient music was
Junt. Only the 10 percent that was good
bu survived to our day.
THERE WERE just as many bad
painters in Raphael's time u in ours,
ollly they have been long forgotten, and
only the cream of classical painting ls
ntll teen in the museums and the art
books.
Both Mozart and Shubert were de.
pressed by the mediocre composers of
. their day, who were often far more
popular and richly repaid than these two
ii:entuses. But nobody plays the junk of
their contemporaries, while Mozart and
Shubert have come to epitomize their
musical eras. What is good generally
survives, and what Is bad (no matter
t\ow popular In It! own day) ls mercl·
Mly forgotten .
*
. I
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Did you !mow that the word !or
cheating on a goU score la •1par·
lrilp"?
-Bogeyman
Tll)I .....,.. NHtdt ,....,... ...""" ""
-.-nl'r "'"' " ,... .....,_. ,_. ,_ Nf ........ ,_ ...... evt. Clell'r PU".
NOT 11 PERCENT of all the modern
novela pu:bllsbed are worth · the paper
they are printed on -but when have
they ever been? In the great flowering
of fictioo in the 19th Century, only a
Dickens, a Tbackeray, a Trollope, stand
out like proiiloot<rlea -.lbelr dpzeos ct
!qualld Imitators, who flooded the book·
Dils, are no rnore 1readable today than
m 1m·tailroad timetable.
The whole point of talent Js that it is
rare, whether it be in the arts, in the
Jeiences, in conception or performance,
as a physical or an intellectual gift.
Ninety percent of professional boters
are as destined for oblivion 11 90 per-
:ent of all practicing arehitects or psy·
:hological re3eartbers.
IT IS TOO EASY, in any given age,
lo loot around and deplore the medioc-
rity, or outright incompetence, of pra~
titloners In many mediums; but the plain
human fact is that while Nature endows
?ac}i me of us with something be can
119 a llttle better than others, only a
Vf!r'f few in a hundred are endowed with
something he can do far better than
:tthers.
U we accept the biological, and his-
torical, and cultural truth that the great
mas111 of man'• efforts Is doomed to brief
mortality, We might not be so hard on
the rubblah that confronts us, and might
fudge our contemporaries less harshly
in the fuD Iliht of et<rnlty.
Presidential Popularity
Felix Belair, Jr., New York Times, has
an odd Eisenhower anecdote, based on an
interview with a close associate of the
late General. Il Is not documented, but it
eounds plausible in v1ew of the General's
eomewhat naive candor in poliUcaJ mat.
tera.
The time is tht 19IO election. Mr.
Beli.ir writes that the General called Nii·
on the man "best qualified" for the
Presidency of any existing Political
fiiure-'lben the unnamed associate of the
General quot.es him as follows : 11But It's
a flutey thing about Dick. About
evsywhere I go, people tell me lbey
dcn't ute him. I just. don't understand
IL"
JI' 'IDE GSNERAL ts accurately quot·
eel, U calls for aome elaboration.
y.., recall lhe Item 1ut winter ct the
poflllcal old-Omer, who replied to l'n~·
-Jaluolt'• plalnt tltal people didn't
lib him : "Well, Mr. President, you are
Id ..,.., likeable."
'11111 ts hardly astonbltln1. Dozons cl
1'1-ll and candldalel, win or lo.w,
ltave undergone periods ol pubUc dislike. n lo .,iy fair to .. , tltat In the early
1#1 Mr. Nls"Cll WU pretty uptigh~ and
Jiit rood to -1Jrity foe Presldenll, u
I« .._ folka, ts reluaUon.
Pnlldent EWenhow'er wu 1 man who
lllt<td people, and tholip be could be ,
frudble, be wu geoerally smilJng Md
tt1aud. He wu thus as ''popular" a
Prtlldtnt as wt have known.
-
UNCOLN WAS 11oo relued In dtoll
-. but bis popullrlll •u --oa.i "1 bis ll>il'l' Ume. Andmo JacbCll
-llpll&ht, Ind more jtopulll' wJtll -... thin wtll1 contemportuin, ml-
l'rlnlllo _.,ell "" ~ IOIC<llt wflh!lJOfllloal anlqoolJts) by lhper 1"'
sooclsnce. Graot .w.u ldoliJe<f by ~
home fold (not b7 lroopo) dur1ng the war.
but the ldoWry dimmed when he became
!>resident.
Idolatry of Washington likewise rested
on military succas, but it did not last out
his Presidency. lie WU too good a PfW..
dent, and quUe unwUling to woo public
favor. Moreover, be was not a particular.
Jy llkeable man, save with close friends,
and his integrity was so ~summate u
to seem forbidding.
IN 111E MAIN, likeable Presidents
have not been effective Presldenta. The
office Is so const.ltuted that If lta occupant
operates at full steam, he will make so
many enemJn u to scale down public
e.steem.. lJocoln, a full-steam President,
ran into thia an11 at several periods.
Tbul amiable Presldenll, like Fillmore,
Hay .. and· McKinley, have not ,be<n fl.
fectivt. They tried to plem everybody,
and that fed to dln>mh>& and poctpooillll
hsrd dedsionl, lmpairlnC t h e I r
ltldmhlp. There .,. exceptlons. but
gentrllly amJJble Prtlhlents • h a v e
~e forgotten Presidents.
MIL NIXQN HAD 1n 1bldq affection
and admiration for P r e 1 l d e n t
Ebtnbower, but this does not mean he
must, or can emulate hhn. Deep down,
the people don'l want t m11 l'O u •
Presidenll. They want Presldents of
•lntoJ determln1tlon and bold .but lt!lll·
ble concepts. Whtn they get one, they
~not love him. but they1 won 't forget
.
UOll, which the board.acted dil"favorably at lA'meol!M.
'Ille advisory coaunlttee, yu·tdisbonded and lite C'W-.1
riculum Committee wu aalted to male ~ atudlts
and to preaent a recommendation at a lulure Ume. .. ., ' This can be ,lnltrpreted ~in~ that, as the .dig.
trlct adminlstraUon had ·recoi:nmtJlded, action wUl be
put off until those parenta· .. wbO supp0rt a family life
program, including sex education, come forwai'd and.
say so. · -I
Those who disrupted the 'meeUne·-we,. aub!ectrto •
arrest under paragraph 16'101 .of chapter 7, state law on
disturbing schools, wblch,zeads: "Arr/ person wtio wll·
fully disturbs any public.' school or any public schonl
meeting ls guilty of a misdemeanor, and punishable by
a fine of not less than tlO•nor more than $100."
But the real Issue ls \be idea that 50 to JQO or ·200
people should feel that by Intimidation and disi::Uption
they should gain the right to ban any consldF1tlon of
a topic to which they are opposed -to dictate J>Oliey
to officials elected ·to repr.esent some 77, 700 voters.
If students had carried on .the way some of the
adults did, there would have been instant -and justi·
fled -demands for severe _ disci plinary action; And
likely demands for an Investigation to·delermine If the
kids were under the influence ~ drugs, or part of some
anarchistic group.
'The issue of sex education is beside the point in all
this. The jdea that any group_, under any circumstances,
could so shout down ra.Uona). discussion of any school
problem is subversive of. the American system.
'\
. '
.
While deploring as we should the destructive temp-
er tantnuns of mobs ofr emotional young people on our
beaches or on the campu·s, Orange Coast citizens had
better be equally concerned and indignant over the
excesses of adults who trample the rules of citizenship
and disrupt public meetings.
'.What? Discipline black atudenta who use guns to take ouer the
This incident surely ought to be -and needs to be
-the last of its kind here on the Orange Coast.
-campus1 Think of our liberal reputations!'
Three Factions: Pro-SO-Viet, Pro-Peking and Trotskyite
SDS: Communist in Tenor, Ideology
WASJUNGTON -The revolutionary
Students for a Democratic Society,
primarily reapoosible for the disruption
and v~ wracking college campuses
~t _the country, is looking for a
place to hold a national conventfpn.
It's to be In June, but the location and
date are still up in the air.
SOS moguls are seeking a cpplplaisant
midwest college campus, but have had no
luck so far. Last year's convention was at
Michigan State University, East Lansing.
In additk>n. to selecUng national of-
ficers, the coovenUon will lay down the
overall SOS policy line. This is virtually
certain to be strongly Communist in ten.
or and Jdeology--on the bui1 of what oc..
cUJTed at the March meethii of Ille
organiza.Uon's national council. •
Tbe approximately 190 delegates who
atten:ied this three-4!.y affair in AU!tin,
Tex., acclaimed the "heroic .struggle" of
the Viet Cong, the "leadership" of Ho Chi
Minh, and sided with Red Chlna in the
bloody border clashes with Russia.
THE LA.'n'ER STAND was the work of
a large and aggressive delegation of
partls:ans of the pro-0\inel!le Communist
Progressive Labor Party (PLPJ. While
3lz"oog and militant, Utis . extremist fac-
,tion was not l!l\l.fficielltly powerful to
dominate the entire meeting.
lt was vehemettly opposed by ahother
large group aligned wflh the Commumst
Party ol the U.S. (CPUSA). nus elem!ft had one important ad-
vantage In the bitter feuding and wnu>gl·
Ing among the rival leftist cliques. Two
top SDS olflcers -Mtlonal secretary
Mike Klonsky and int~gani.zational
secretary Bernardine Dohrn -intensely
dislike PLP and are definitely ~ sym.
palhelic to CPUSA.
SlgnificanUy indicative of the Klonsky-
Dohrn". viewpoint ii their forcdul ad·
voeacy that SOS become an out·and-oot
"Marxist-Leninist revolutionary move-
ment" closely allied with the mllltant
black revolutionary movement." ·' . STRIKJJ!IG EVIDENCE lhal lhio con-
cept already is being actively followed is
revealed by the fact that in every cam-
pw distutj)anct revolving around blacks,
SOS .invariably gives them all-out sup-
port. In some instances, SOS rein-
forcements are rushed in from other·
campuses.
There was much fiery t.ali: at the coon·
cll meeting about "taking over the
schools and -initiating radical education."
The schools, specifically high schools
and colleges, were charact.erfzed a!I
"instruments of repression and, tool!! of
the ruling class." It was mamtained it is
essential "to make students fight not as
students but as radicals attacking
Amttican imperialism. We m u ! t
articulate and demonstn.te the cl!SS
nature .of this struggle."
This subject will be a major order of
business at the ·June naUonal convention.
THE DELEGATES and hundreds ot
others attending the A_ustin meeting were
urged to go to Detroit Utls summer to
take part in a "program to educate the
workers."
Although more than 1,000 s D S
memben attended the Austin sessions,
only approximately 190 had credentials al'!
voting delegates. The others participated
as "observers." Strict security was en-
forced, with the press:, cameras and tape
recorders being barred.
In addition to the large pro-Soviet
CPUSA and pro-Peking PLP delegations,
there was a sizable representation from
the Yoong Socialist Alliance (YSA), the
youth organization. of the Trotskyite
Socialist Workers Party.
The YSA appeared to he particularly
strong in some West Coast SDS chapters.
Tbfoughout the three-day national
council rbttting, held In the catholic
Youth Center, it was unmistakably evi·
dent that the U.S. Communist Party is
determinedly bent on gaining control of
soo and smashing PLP influence.
ntE NATIONAL convention in June
undoubtedly will be a fierce heU.legrouncl
in this backstage struggle.
Al a meeting« 300 East c.a.t SOS of.
ficers and members at Princeton
University in February, a five-page tract
calling for a "nationwide attack on the
ROTC" was distributed .
Titled "Smash the Military Machine in
the Schools," the document completely
paralleled Communist doctrine. In tenor
ideology and every other aspect, K
echoed undiluted party line ideology and
i»licy, inc;luding its cbaracterillic racist
appeal to Negroes.
Great emphasis was placed on PorltaY·
Jng them as the spearhead or the "mass
anti-war and anti-imperialist offensive.
The struggle of the blacks is a people's
struggle ; a war of li beration that is being
fought within the U.S."
THE TRACT URGED assaults on the
ROTC to "severely hurt the military.
ROTC exists on 348 campuses and Jn
many midwest high schools. • . . .A
~nated university4ligh school attack
will articulate the growing rebellion of
, black and white students in the direction
of a permanent radical movement.''
Recently, both the SOS and Black
Pantners have displayed an increasingly
pro.Arab attitud e.
Two issues of New Left Notes, official
SOS weekly, carried articles favoring the
al Fatah guerrillas. Similarly, Black
Panther, of!icial publication of that
organization, printed priral Fat ah
material. The Arab commandos have
received the same fr iendly treatment in
Muhammad Speaks, periodical of the
Black Muslims led by Elijah Muhammad.
By Robert S. Allen
and John A. Go ldsmilb
Immature Shoutdowns by Parents
To the Editor:
"I want my son to go to college
because I never did."
"My son shouldn't have lo work and go
to high school because 1 did that and it
was bad on my grades."
"l want my son to have a car becau.st: I
never had one at his age."
Strange Lhat such "supporting" parents
are totally regress.Ive on one major issue
-se.i ecJucation. Instead of improving
the )'OUllll 19~ they Insist. by Immature
shout-downs, that their children be as ln-
lbe-dark and often miserable.· as they
wire. The YOU!ll must not be allowed too
much freedom.-· ,
Unfortunately this is · a ve.rY natural
reaction. The unconsclou1 envy of botb
mate and female parent& is a mighty
force in the supression of sexual
knowledge. And this being• free country,
one has the right to keep one's children
as Ignorant as desired.
1---B11 Ge.ot-ge ---.
Dear George: _
l am a Communist "agent wlfo has
just been assigned to infiltrate the
John Blreh Society and I cannot
find them listed In the telephone
book. Could you help me, perhaps
with a personal ln~uction? 1
"''OUldn't think of being 10 bold but,
rrankly, Moscow Is nqgln& meter-
ribly and' I want to make> a good
lmpreqion on thl!I, my flrs:t,
assignment.
IVAN MULVICH SLIMMAVOTICH
,,,.. , ~t:;;tt • >
¥ ! ~· ~ailbOx. , , I
..,,. _,:;...,, " I
Lttter1 /Tom readers art welcome.
Normall11 writtr1 •hould c:onvev their
mtsaage in 300 wordi or less. The
right to condense letcers to fit space
or elimfnott libtt Is rtservtd. AU
letttrs must include iignaturt and
majlfng address, but namer may bt
toithheld on reqiust ff tti/fident rea-
1on b apparent.
PERHAPS SEX educatloO sbnld be
taught In the home, but it is obv1ously not
being done In many cases, Atter all, a
teacher must know many aspects of his
subject, not merely hi s own outlook, ex-
per:iences, and/or prejudices.
And the mO!lt humorous aspect here is
that you can be pretty sure the kid!! con-
cerned in the sex education issue a1ready
know the. material. High school is too late
to start; it has already bten learned
else\Ybert, \\·ttlch makes the whole
shouting issue more ludicrous. Isn't sex
education supposedly to avok! the
"gutter-learning proceu"!
When an issue gel! this contUAed and
this sad, there is little left but to consider
· it amulng, for the old lgnoranct, by it.s
shlrp persistence. wtll only kill itself by
ill •dunant proleslltlons, and thereby
ctt:ate aod perpetuate the very Jl"Oblems
Dear Ivan:
Goe, fella, I know bow tt iJ, on Quotes your first job and all -frankly,
however, tt's pretty hard to get In
the Birch Society these days .• Jl's
1lmoo1 solely made up ol Com· Cllrl< Kerr. U •prel. UC -"The
munistJ, you know. Hive you circumstances under Which I l!l!IUmed
thou&ht of gelUng a )Ob wltll 111e 111• presidency . . . one! those under
FBI ? rhey can alway• ute a e9Qd which I left were idenUcal. l was Ortd
double or triple · agient -1 Ute with enthuslasm."
turnover ,Js ~tl,y h!Pt ·~~-~~-... -: -" lo.ling gooo •P1'• to lndu!tlry one! to .-..,,, s.r., •·Apollo I m ...
all. Just mention rny name to voyq:e . -"It would •eem th•t the
Hoover onl)t thing left .,for man to concwu and
· cootrol Is blnui<I/."
~
It proposes to abolish.
RICHARD R. RUTLEDGE
He Sta r te d S houtjng
To the Editor:
A few weeks ago I attended a PT A
meeting at one of our local elementary
schools to hear a talk on a proposed pro-
gram for a Family Life class. The
speaker gave an outline of what seemed
to me to be a very plain, simple and
down-right semlble program, pointing out
t h e di{ficulUes the children somtllme.!!
bring to 9Chool from • troubled e~
vlronment. \
When he was through speaking \~
stated that " ••. it was left to \!le
decision of the parents,'' ·etc. and l '
rnumbJed to Ule: lady sitting n·ex:t to me.
"Does he expect an argument ?" l was
personally pleased that such a program
was being worked out and I was in full
agreement with the need for such a pro-
gram.
ALL OF A SUDDEN a mao stood up at
the back of the room and started shouUng
his disapproval by calling the program a
"filthy sex educaUon CQWle" that would
be loaded with "smut and poor timing"
and how Urls wu a plan deSlgned to
"train the youn1 minds of the chUdnn
towards communl$m," etc. etc.
I was shocked end disappointed that
anyone. could fttl thls way ai.::..it a pro-
Tax onTaxes
Tower City, Pa., Welt SCllaylklU
ReraJd : ''Savings must be set aside
before •pending begins. or there "'111
ntver .be any Avinc;a. And wouidn't we
appreciate It If our federal and otata
governments wtre to obserie ' th.at
law! TOday, everything seems to be
under fedt:r•l control ei.cept Ill
budget. Al. a result. 111 someone has so
aptly put tt. 'Our government has now
rucbed the piece where the oftly ad.
ditJonal fourct 0( revenue It can think
o( Js I fax on tuts'."
gram obviously designed to help our
children grow lo understand olher human
beings and their feelings in relation to
themselves. I came home from the
meeting bewildered and prayed that
there weren't many people who felt like
this man. As lime passes l find that the
score is higher than I imagined.
I GUESS everyone has his own version
of what "filth-and smut " is but I would
much rather expose my children to the
miracle and wonder of the h~ body
than to a grown man violently c8iiiflg ...
teachin& or human relationshlps "filthy."
If this is rlght, then we are all product!! or an evil act, and I certainly don 't want
to be the one to tell my children the "bad
news." I'd be afraid they would grow to
heUeve they are not clean and fetl·guilty ~
about being alive.
Children are the most practical little
human beings we have in our existence. I
say give them what they want and
1 deserve to become, and remain clear--·
thinking, searching, and hone!lt adults. 1 I NAME WITHHELD I
\
(A widow with two "•
children -and wbo •
needs au the help she •
can get from our fOCfe"'.) "' ., ...
,...-~~~~~~~~....,• •--4--\ --
, Tuesday. April 29, 1969
n• edltonal page of tht Deily
Pilot lttkf to jnfoM and ttlm·
ulote ~rt by ~ri1t"nting t1tU new~ r't o~hnont oM com.. men on topiu of inU:rert
med tficonee, tiv p-rovi<fing a
forum for th e t:rprtuicm of
our rtodtrs' op4nions, end by
presenting the dluer1e ufew-
ptrittt.t Of infOT'lntd obttrwrt
nnd spokesmen on top(cs of tl•t
dO!l-
,. •
Robert N. \\1eed. Publi,;her
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•
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--.!.
.,
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'• '" • ..
• -
•
•
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Tutld11, April 29, 196f -DAILY PILOT l
G •
Occupiiiits -· QUEENIE ay Phil 1n1er1anc11
: Escape as -r-----_.;_,--_, Discrimination Told
Surprise Defense Witness Testifies
I
The French 'Girl Is
!
Les~. Apt to1 'Marry
By L. :M. BOYi,) Lord-' Fauntleroy A n n I e
1 JUST AMAZING how few La.,-ie, Fablaff, Dicku:· In.
urgent baseball fan! can tell D a n n y D e e v e r a n d
you exactly ho:" much a D~Artagnan .... Q ... • E
Slwp Falls
LOS ANGELES {UPI) -A
anMtory · brick llu.~dlog col-
lojllOd In a heap or rubble
ldonday, .alter li\'in4 hut?
warning or its lmmhttat
death. I I .
-elt Hol~ wJio.J.u. .
ed 'tbe ltullillng \to ' -llll'
auto lpdy shop, said be hOerd
the rod "'popptng" ·.oo y ed'
to five employes inside: to ad
. out.
Seconds later tbe roof uvtd,.
Fl>RT ORD (UPI) -The
defense e.alled a surprise
Nea:ro witness Monday in the
trial or It Army prisoners
· tharged With mutiny ror
particlpatlng in a sit.down
·strike at· the San Francisco
Presidio Stockade.
1be witness, Joe Stephens,
20, Berkeley, 1aid he is now a
· civilian but was in the
1dockade when 27 w h I l e
. ;;oldlen held the demonslra-
Uon tut Oct 14.
were &wo defendants, Pvl4.
Richard illmca, 20, ol St.
Helena, CAiif., and Danny R.
Seall, 22, Orangevu1,, Calif.
Duncan and Se.a.I.a gave
&eaUmony similar to th at of 10
previou.s de Len d an t .1 con·
ceming alleged crowded and
unsanitary condition.. In the
1tocl<ade ••.
The l'I defendants said they
held the demonstration to pro-
test conditions at the stockade
and the. fatal shooting ol a
I
fellow inmate dwina: a n
escape attempt three daiy1
before.
Elgl'lt already have been
convieltd of mlltlnY and
sentenced to tenns •lllfllni
from nine months to 11 years,
but the three most severe
sentences have since been
reduced . Two defendants are
under medical care, ind three
later escaped (t'()nl t ti. e
stockade.
Bradley's Tactics
baseball weighs, isn't It? • . . Eyou born. friend?" A. In
WRITES Jim Larkin : "I once , Wash., am proud to
served aboard the U.S.S. f eport. Damn McGavin was
Franklin o. ~•l<wlth born there, too. so~as•ohn
three ensigns named ~lck, Mcintire Q "BOW Fil£.
Swift, anci S~." •.. "YOU' QUENTLY
0
d0es'1t happen that ·
CAN NO MORE keep a martini a man marries a woman at
in a refrigerator than you can least 10 years older than
keep a kiss there," said himself!" ~. That's the situ•·
Bernard De Voto, wisely . . . lion i.n about ooe out of every
In. '11>* lmtcie (Ol oot In time
ani:t no cne wu injured. F,ire
Battalion Chier KeIU. Wilson
blamed the collapse . o a
"laU1111e." • 1;-.z'
"We were lucky we heard it oi..rr_..._.._ ..... ,..,. --,--_,.,. /1 · i"l.•
Stephens · charged t h a t
Negroes stiffered f r o m
discrimination in the Army
prison. He said blacks did the
most work and stockade
guards broke up a n y
discussion among N e g r o e s
wit b comments like, "What's •
this? A Black Panther
meeting?" Co~par~d to JFK's AMONG THOSE DEVOUT • 100 marriages . .
..... ._..~ .-....,~ coming," Holden said. "It '---~.:=;.;::=;;;;;:.... _________ _,
seemed like a sturdy building ''Would Y"" mind It I lootld &t my wr.tch ! I think
After telling ot alleged
radical discrimination at the
stockade, Stephens was asked
why nelther he nor any other who believe in thelr own rein· CIGARETTESM -Is there
carnation as 40me animal anyplace left tn the 'worJa
other than human, m o s t where cigarettes a r 4P ~veted
women expect to return as more than mODey! lmean the
cats, most men as dogs , .. A way they were.'ln Germany 20-B~ CAPTAIN of 20 years plus years · ago. Doubt it. Who
experience claims h1s staff of remembers the Old Town sec-
bellhoes unanlmowly agrees tor of Stuttgart~ of r
that pipe smokers tend to tip Koenigstrasse. J was a civilian
small, if at all. in leather pants there. The
it'• time fOf' WllV coffee break 0 0 •"
before. I thought it wu pretty ---------~----------new ·.when I leased it six Negroes participated ln the LOS ANGELES (AP) campaigning on race.
Oct'. 14 demonstration. Mayor Sam Yorty likens what Democratic National Com·
LOVE AND WAR -\Vhlch place was cobbled and
is the more d e s i r a b I e shadowy . Sitting in a Gasthaus
matrimonial mate -the one night, I watched a
A,merican girl or the French youthful Polish m o n e y
grrl! Our Love, and War man, changer shoot the proprietor
the sly devil has been stu-to death in a simple robbery.
dying this r}jelorlcal inquiry, What the lad SOf,ght and got
too. "Exactlt 89 percent of the were two cartons of Camel.$.
French girls eventually get THE POLICE -"If you
married while 93 percent of don't want to be manhandled
nwnths ago.
"But then, all of a sudden,
we heard this popping noise,
and the sign bent a little .•• "
An earthquake s h o o k
Southern California 14 minutes
later but the two events were
not relllted.
Teen Sought
For Murder
the American girls do so," he by a policeman, treat him BERKELEY (UP I)
says. "Based on these figures, with due respect, nevef insult Berkeley police have issued a
one . might assume the him, _and avoid aggressive murder wan-ant for a 17-year·
American girl to be the more physical contact." Such is the old Black Panther in con.
desirable. On the other hand , illuminating advice of a team nection with an April 5 gun·
the figures may just mean the of sociological researchers battle near the party's na-
Frenc!J man is finicky while who looked into that question lional headquarters.
the American man will marry of why lawmen get tough. Homicide inspector J;i.ck
anything." That's not news, team. Why Houston identllled the suspect
HEADACHES The apply it merely to pvlicemen? -as Ronald Stevenson Jr., a
medicos have turned up a Any schoolboy who ever got former head or the Black
curious thing about headaches. his clock cleaned out behind Students Union at Berkeley
Older women, they say, tend the old gymnasium knows by ·High School. He is being
to wake up in the morning now thee ancient honorable sought for the gunshot death
Yith them. But the younger rules, yea verily. Nobody in · o( Ronald Black 31 two doors
girls are more apt to suffer whiskers abides a f f r o n t s , from the p a ~ t h e r head-
same in the evening. Why this nobody, nobody. quarters.
diffe rence? Don't know, don't Your questioru an~ com· Though police said they
know, m_ents are welcomed and were ~t linking Black's kill-
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. will be u.sed wherever pos· ing with the milltant party a
"WAS there a real Mother sible in "CheCking Up." group or former Panth~rs
Goose?" A. So it's sa id. Address mail to L. M. charged shortly · after the
Forget her actual name at the Boyd, in care of the DAILY death that B.I a ck ' s "ex-
moment, but such there was. PILOT, Box 1875, Newport eculion" had been ordered by
Also, there was a real Uttle Beach, Calif., 92663, Pan~er leaders:
Near Riot Results
Panthers Raided
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Tensio.n generated by a COi!!·
lng bail hearing for a Black
Panther party co-founder led
to ·a near-riot in a densely
populated Negro district here
Monday.
Police raided the Black
Panther local headquarters
after an officer said he heard
vulgar language being used
over an outside loudspeaker,
urg ing Negroes to attend a
rally supporting ball for Huey
Newton, imprisoned Panther
minister or defense.
Sixteen pe rsons were ar-
rested, 13 at the headquarters
and 3 others in a separate in-
cident. All were released ex-
cept seven who were charged
with disturbing the peace, in·
citing to riot and assaulting ail
officer.
A television cameraman was
surrounded by an angry group
of youths and beaten with a
baseball bat, police said. He
was hospitalized with broken
facial bones and an injured
eye.
Sgt. Ralph Schaumefl of the
police tactica1 squad said the
trouble began when his squad
car passed the Panther head-
quarters on Fillmore SL in the
heart of the predominantly
Negro section.
Schaumefl said a Panther
with a kmdspeaker was e1-
lhof'.ling a crowd to attend a
r.ally Thursday morning at the
Federal Building to "Free
Huey."
Newton will have a hearing
at that time on his peliUon to
be released on bail pending
disposition of ·his a p p e a I
against a manslaughter con,
victlon in the death of an
Oakland polictman. The rally
is sponsored by several groups
besides the Panthers.
Schaumen said he and his
fellow officer, Sgt. D a n
Howard, ordered the speaker
"'"' .......... TV CAMERAMAN BEATEN TO GROUND BY MOB
\i Staphan P•11ty Raporttd in Fajr Condition
to stop usJng obscenities,
whereupon the crowd began
reviling the two officers.
They called f o r rein·
forcemen~ and when another
car arrived, Schaumefl said lie
started into the Panther head·
quarters, with the speaker
retreating ahead of him.
"I was greeted by a rifle In
the stomach," he related. "I
yelled 'Firearms !' and fell
back.'/
MQl'e , reintorcelnents ar-
rived , and after the occupants
of the headquarters refused to
put down their guns and leavt,
.ipfficer11 tired seven. tear gas
-charges into the building and
fired a .45 revolver into the air
four times over the heads of the crowd.
The Panthers, several of
whom had guns, did not fire
back, police said.
As the occupants of the
building !led out the rear and
were arrested, the crowd in
front hurled bottles and rocks
and screamed obscenities at
the gathering foree of officers.
ConfuslOn reigned for more
than an hour. Rovlng groups
of young men smashed ears in
the area. Three were arrested
at a nearby Intersection where
they blocked traffic with a car
and used a loudspeaker to
urge residents to "get your
guns."
other:1 threatened people on
the streell and yelled insulta
at any paulng police: car.
Police radio reports said a
bu1 wu held up by three men
and Its puoengen robbed, but
hourt later poUce :i:ald no one
had filed • cornpla.lnt and they
·hid been unable to •erify their
OWn report.
KPIX-TV c 1 me ram an
Stephen Puzty wu beaten by one group, and KPF A·Flf
radio reporter Dave Lawaiy
wu told bluntly by one group:
"Turn rla:ht, keep a:olng, and
don't come baell:."
Meanwh.llf:, poUce entered
the gu.flllod Panther head-
quarten with masts and
emerged with a box. full of
RWllaM..-.SS.
Gradually, police withdrew
from the area, but for hours
..Cttrward k nt weU·armed
aquad car patrols lhrough th•
1rea.
Night fell, a fog rolled in,
and the patrol& reported the
street.I quiet and virtually
tmply. '~,
San Quentin Stabbings
Prompt Mass Lock-up
"They (the Negroe s ) he calls Councilman 'nlomas m.itteeman Stephen Reinhardt,
reasoned that :i:ince t h e Bradley's appeal for Negro working for Bradley, said
demonstrat.lon was planned lo votes to wll&t he terms Presi-later that Yorty was "trying be peaceful., they wanted It to :itay that way," Stephens said. dent John Kennedy 's appeal to do to Bradley just what he
''If black people were in· for Catholic votes in 1960. did to Kennedy -stir up votes
volved, the guards might Speaking on a I o c a I against him on the basis of
rough them up, might put television show, Yorty said biaotry." SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -All
San Quentin convicb except
those performing essential
services remained behind bars
today as prison. officials tried
to baJt a racial feud that has
lett three black prisonen dead
and four whites wounded.
Warden Lolrls Ne Ison
ordered the general lock•~:>
and posted extra ·guards on
walkways and in the mess hall
after twO blaCk convicts were
stabbed in a Monday morning
scuffle.
He also ordered the first
cell-to-cell shaktdown of the
prison for two years and
within a few hours had col·
lected more than a score of in·
geniously hand-made weapons.
Warden Nelsen der.ied any
gezleral racial flareup at the
prison and blamed the trouble
oil"a few boodlwns" of both
races.
Associate Warden J im Park
conceded there was a "great
amount of anger and a great
am~unt of fear'' among the
3,715 prisoners. About a third
of. the inmates are black and
15 percent cf other minority
groups. .
Guards saw a fight between
a barxlful of inmates in the
recreation yard between the
laundry and gardening a r ·e a
Monday. They fired two shots
in the air and the prisoners
ned, leaving behind .the bodies
or Floyd Neat, 39, a Los
Angeles robber, and Calvin
Bonner, 44, Los Angeles con·
vid serving time for assault
with a deadly weapon.
Both men died of mu!Uple
slab .wounds and guards found
Up to U.S.
To Prosecute
Oil Firms?
the two foot-long prison knives them in a predicament where N.onday he thought Kennedy Yorty, who said tus mcther on the scene. they would have to fight or get The twin slaylngs appeared into violence." campaigned to get votes oo w~ a Catholic, denied he opo
to be the third round of the Other witnesses at the court· the basis ol being a Catholic, posed Kennedy because of
feud . Jeff Cooper, b I a ck martial proceedings ~tonday and he thought Bradley was reiigiOn..
narcotics violator, was kllledl----'----...:;_---'------=----''-----"--------
1ast Tuesday and four white
inmates were the victims ol
non-fatal lmiflngs Jut Friday.
Park said the cell lockup
would remain in. effect until
the warden feels the prisoners
"can llve and work in safety."
Th·ey will be allowed out cf
their cells for meals and to
meet vl!ltors.
LA Scliools
Budget Cuts
Postponed
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
The City Board of Education
has decided to postpone action
on $41.2 million in proposed
budget cuts unttl after a
meeting 1 t ts seeking with
Gov. RQnald Reagan.
The 'board aslo Mcnday
o r d e r e d Schools Superin-
tendent Jack Crowther · to
come up with "major a n d
dramatic kJeas such as a
shorter achool year'' to help
reduce costs as alternatives to
~ he has already proposed.
Crowther has offered the
Board ot Education a "shop-·
ping list" of possible budget
cuts Jn an effort to avert a
financial crisis s t e m m i n g
from voter rejection of three
financing measure& in the
April 1 municipal election.
·Morris Plan's $5,000 Invest·
ment Certifi~iltas ·earn 5.5%
interest year~ -no lengthy
holding period required.
• Certlllcate:1 purchased by the Sih of the
month earn at the full rafe from the 1st, witt'I
interest paid by check at the end ol eech cal-
endar quarter.
• Since · its founding in 1916, Morris Plan has
prompUy met every request for wit hdrawal.
Asseta exceed $100 minion. •
OA : EARN 5.25% INTEREST PEA YEAR ON
PASSBOOK THRIFT ACCOUNTII
of any amount, with interest C9mputed monthly
and credited and compounded quarterfv.
Morris .. Plan
Among Q:owther's proposed
cuts are elimination o I
virtually all school b u s
transportation, cessation of
'school district HnanclaJ' aid to
interschool athletics and a
drastic reduction in t h e
number or teachers for special
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A subjects such as music and
federal judge said Monday it remedial reading.
is up to the federa l govern-In another development, the
ment to decide whether to Association of C I a s s r o o m
bring criminal charges against Teachers of Loa Angeles an·
Newport Beach -3700 Newport Boulevard -673-3700
oil companies in connection nounced It would conduct a
with an offahore oil leak in the "march" on Sacrlllftento May . Other alllcet throughout Califomla
Santa Barbara Channel. 1% to dramatize the financial
Judge Albert Lee Stephens plight of Los Angeles tchools.
Jr. said he will Wue a tem.1..,.;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i
porary injunctloo barring the II
Santa Barbar.a Coonl.v diJtrict
attorney I r o m pfoseeutlng
four on companies in con-
nection with the leak of crude
petrolewn.
Stephens admitted that the
vast slick caused by the leak
centered near a plaUonn on a
lease held by the foor com·
panies was a matter of "ex-
treme importance." But be
.Wd the "law1 ol California
don't apply out tbert" beyond
the tbree-mile limit. ~
The judge already had
issued a temporary
restriining orcltr· a.gal.mt San-
ta Barbara County. Dllt. Atty.
David Mloler April U blrTi113
him from fllJng any char .. 1
pendJni his appearance Mon·
day ti a abow C8Ule hearing .
Youthful Drug
Ring Busted
MENLO PARK, Calil. (UPI)
-Police have UTested •ix
higb ICbooJ lludents IUSpected
ol runnJna ·a dnl.I oeddlln1
operation at Woodside H11h
School ind Menlo Park Junior
High.
Police Chief Victor
Cisancku Uid ll o l he r
ycungster1 were roundtd up
as aileged drug uaer1. WbUt
the ~lleged uaen were -ed to their partntl, the
suspected sellers wert htld a
llllk:mt ~u•enile•Home. ...
D.ECOBATOB
·A,ND _MODEL HOME RETURNS
'
Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture
• Al' New Top (j)uallty Brand Names
A Decorator~s Dream Home Is On Display
Over Sl00,000 Worth of Spanish &
Mediterranean Furniture to Choose From! : t •
lt•m• •• fo,llowl: 6or9tous I h. ·c.u1to\.n ,ullttd 1oft .with stp1r•tt .Pillow• with
htaYy 01k trim decor end m1tch1n9 ch1.1r, ) m1tcfun9 01k occ11ion1I t•bltt,
12 I 51" +.II dicf?rator lampt, h•n9fn9 ch•in 1w•9 limp In wrought iron, •n
I -piece kinf 1htt m11far bedroom 1uite in pect11 p1n1led Medit1rren11n 1tyl•
with top qu11.ity S ytart warranty king 1iz• m1ttr•11 and bo x springs. Sp11u1h
dining ttf, .etc. ,
Any piece can be pun:hasecl ind i~dua lly. OtOp by •'"' sat our ttlection
of top quality Spanish and Medittrran•an f11rn iturt .. , fanti1tlctlly pricadl
COMl'l.El'E HOUSEFUL WAS REGUARLY $1528.00 ,
MUST SACllJICI JOI ONLY '69800
II II ,."r"i,,,,.,.
18,~·1 N1~w po rt Btvd Co\ to Mc.•\a (only)
. -
... ... ' ' • .. ,,. /,
nRMS -WE CAltRY
OUR OWN ACCOUNTS
• AT HAl-IOULIVAlD
.,
~·
·.
•
•
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I
•
I
I
I
' I
• t
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·-. ··-·-
County Far~ing Up
But Vrbanization Takes Heavy Toll
SANTA ANA -Orange
°' ·County 1gricultural production
had a total gross value or
more than $86.5 million ln
1968, up lour percent from
1967, according to 1 report
Issued by county Agricultu(al
Commissioner WiUiam Fit-
~ltchen·s figures spotlight~
the growing urbanlialion rt"
the county, with subdivisi~
taking over thousands of acrts
in the past decade formerly
devoted to agriculture.
Values, while ?xceeding 1967
did not approach lhe $113.1
million figure of IO years ago,
Fitchen noted.
Strawberries at $16.3 million
became the leader of the
"Million Dollar · Enterprise"
list for the first time but some
growers reported they lost
money because of unfavorable
weather conditions. An unsea·
sooable hot spell early in the
spring growing period caused
a surplus of berries t.o ripen too
soon, they said.
Top "Million D o 11 a r
Enterprises" listed by Fttchen
inclui:le after strawberries:
Nursery stock and cut nowe ,
$15.1 million ; Va I enc a
oranges, $10.9 million; chlck n
eggs, $10 million; dru.ry..-m
dustry, $9.8 mjJUon; to aloes,
$5.2 miUion: celery, $3.7
million ; baby chicks, $1.7
million; avocados, $ l • S
rnjllion; sweet corn, $1.4
milUon and dry beans, $1.J
million.
The strawberry emergence
as the top value crop was 32
percent ahead of 1967 and
grower. uid lhey P,lanled 29
percent more acres to tbe ber-
ries.
Fil n said: "Favorable
weath conditiOOB and higher
prices or some fruit products
helped ol!set reduced pro-
d overall. Tm huit and
berry ps was the only ma-
jor d' islon to show an in-
crea over 1957,
hard crops, lncluding
str wherries, !howed an in-
ase of $5.5 million, or 23
rcent.
"There were 1,477 acres of
tree crops removed and 612
acres of new orchards planted,
resulting in a net loss of
orchard crops in 19'8 of 865
acres," Fitch en continued.
"Of the 165 acres, 489 were
converted to other agricultural
uses resulting in a net Joss,
therefore, of 376 acres.-the
lowest. in many yean."
T h e agricultural com·
For The Record
missioner attributed the low
net loss of acreage to an in-
crease of new plantings in the
southeast section of the coun..
ly.
Valencia oranges made a
big comeback rising from fifth
to third on the list, up $1.3
million over 1967. But bere.
again, growers reported only a
·•fair" year with less net pro-
fit. Meetings
TU•IDAY
Mot1<l' Club ol H""'llOl1·!111boa, 1.,.1,.. CD11! Country Club, 4111 E. Co.>sl
Hltflwrt. Coro1i. clll Mar. •:JG o.m.
Co1l1 MeH. N-rl H1rbor Lions
DEATH NOTICES
BERENS
ll llllCI Marta llettf!S. Att lJ, !llf lfM
11 Ch1rte sr., c01r1 Mrw. 0 111 or
t1~1ttl, Aorll 25. Survived by IOn,
Dtvid Henry llerieo11 ; tll!e-r-lft.lt w.
Mt$. I~ Jal>lonskl. Son Pedr'o;
br-ol'Mr In l.lw, Mr. J~ W1nwalrll.
S.n Luis DrJ-11110. Or1ve1idt ltr"ll'ial
Wiii ti. lltld WeclnHMy, Aorll JO, f
PM, HolY Crc11 c~. 8oltr MM-
tu11Y. lSH f , COii! Hftf1Wtf, C0rone
ff! M..-, Dlrffi«I.
EVANS
MIN Wlnlfrecl 1Ew1n1. 2111 ChenMI
A:Md. Newoort 8Hch. $ur'f1¥..:i try .,.,,.,kn. Martis a.ktr. 81lboe1 key
$1. Hll•lre, Recll1ndl1 Emma $Nrl.
''"" 1r1l'ICldllldren, n ~""' 1re11-1r1ndchlldl'lfl. krvlcft wHI be held
Tllllrldly, I PM. Wntclltf Cllll'tl. In.
"'""""'· Moulllll~ Vft Cemetef'I', Alf ...... Oll'"KiN by Weslcllff C"-Pfl
MOr1111ry, ........
HENLEY
Emily Hefttn, Att t i, <Jf lt1l N~w
-' 81-.d., CCllll Mew. DI~ ol <ko11'1.
Aprlt 21. krvlon penc11,.. 11 wn1-
~r111 C/\lpel Mortui!'"I', '""4N.
GENDRON
lt.mert M. Gendron. Die<! April U IR
Vltln1r11. Survlwd b• wife. N1nqo '·
Gtndrm1 llllll9flr..-, It-Chitrft1 ....,, ~-Jr.1 lotMr, ltalio,rt A.
Gendron, C01l1 MHI: tnlr!M!r, Mr'-
Murltt Gtftoi1'9'1, Cot-de1 ...,..,;
brott.1'", ttldl1rd GletnU11, CorOlle det
M1r1 •l1!ft, C1lh~ lntll'mm.
Coone Mew1 1111t11mal 9r1nclmoff>tr,
Ml~ c;.ndron, Foun!tln V1IMv1 m•· ,..,.,.., 9r1nclperent1, Mr. ind Mri.
Htrf'Y Reed, T111!1n. Ser~lc'°" Weclne~
Otv. l PM, Poclllc V\e>lr C"'-1 wit~
tu!I mlllt•rv l!oflon;. lnt1rnwn1. P1<iflc V\e>lr Motmcio"i1I P1rlt. Directed toy p,..
cllle "''"° Mort111,... McMICHAEL
Don11d Ed<ert Mc.MlchM1. 4Ul F1ir-
lltld Orlvt1, Corene ""I Mar. D•lt cl
dNlh, Aorll 21. Su,...lwd by Wilt,
t Go!r'INOI!, DI the homt: Otuetlltr, P1-
trlcf1 Hol"'"' Slcr1ml'nlo1 t l11tn, IC111Wtifle !11lr, llurlll'*: Alma Poor-
m.n, L .. A""'lt1. and ~thy Mllltr,
Akron, Ollio; Incl -9r1ndcfllld. Set'Ylcft. Wednnd1v, APrll Jll, 11 AM,
PICiflc View C"'pet, Famlty ,,_111
HICllf! Vfllllln<lt !o make ~I t;en..
lrlbutfon., PIN.e <ontrlbult lo n.tlr f1¥Wti. chlrlty, lnlefmlnl, PKlllc
Vitw M-111 P1rlt. Dhttlfd bv P ..
clrit View Mor11.11r'f. DOV LE
Fr.1'Ck All.., Dootlt. :JO.IJ F lllmorl
W1v. Cwt• Mftl. Celt or cte1111, April
'l'I. Surv""ed a., wllt, DoR!tflv: •"11-0t~ Mn. Ellen W11111m1, De-
<lt\w, 1111,...111 Mrs. Merry Jennl,..1,
Mml, Cell!./ Mn. Slllron Sm!lll, Cos-
11 Mewl !we bruit.en, &ffl ~It. of
DCl'Wflrfi Incl Tom D<rtle, Alllu'l\IHO\ltl
t..11 1l•llrl• Mrs. Aflttn PtilllLPS, Mt,
A-4, OtlfOl'll Mn. K11hrvn Jolln. ,.,,.,, SIM• Anot. ltaurv. Tllftdlv, t
PM lte<1111t<'n Maw. w..innd1y, 10
AM'. bo!!I ll SI. John It'll !11ptl1l C11h-
ollc Church. ln~mtftl, Good ShH>l>frd
Ctml'lerv. Dlrt<'ed 11"1' !11111 Mortv-
1ry, 11~1 SuPer1QI', CMll MH1.
MEYERS
<>eo-.e D. M.Wtl, 16'0 Ori-A"'"
C111t1 Mew. ~lctl oendlne 1t Btll
8rDl4\n¥ MOrt11•l'"I'• 110 Brotdw1v,
(C-19 Mesi.
ARBUCKLE I< WELSH
WestdJff Mortuary
4%1 E. t7tli St.. Costa Mesa -BALTZ MORnJAIUES
C.rou del Mu OR U'51
Cotta Meu Ml f..!UC
BELL BROADW~Y
MORTUARY
Marriage
licenses
OltAHO• COUNT'( MA• • I A • • LK~1.•.:. ;~su•o '
Jff<OONO~KUGL"., A:8fldlin S., lt,
of an Tt•* •rid MIN 0., 14 or U.1 Moh1wll ltOld, both Cl, WeslmiMler,
llURl(E-OILLIMGHAM. w1m1n1 8 ..
ll, ol 15'0 Str..,.. Ttrrece Mid P1lrltl1 J., 31, of 200I 81!1, blllh of
NfWllOff Bllldl.
Ml$NEA:-TAYL01t, J1mn M, ''' o1
"5 At1te SI., \.alUN Bueti '"" k111!1ffli, 11, or 312'1 Ct1not....._
Swlh L1111111. ANTONOVICH-SCHA:AINfR. F t I ~ t
0 ., 2'2. o! 15121 H111nml"'bl!'d LIM
•r'ld llt!IY A., 2S, ol 1'U1 Hum-
mlntblnl Line, both or H1111t1119lon """'· tATE~UltTIU ltll'IMll P .. 44. ot :JO,
Elmlr• •rw:ll GllCln L.. •· ot Jll2 Elmlr1, trotll ot H\lnll"'a BNC:fl.
DE LUCIA_,,HIElt, Glrtld A,, 19, ot 1001 E, ll1llloll llML Incl Llfldl $., U,
ot 1001 E, 811t1N l tl"d., tiolll '11
N,_-t 8fld'I.
Div orces
In truck crops, acreage
decreased by 610, but pr<r
duction was up 2.149 tons,
although the total value
decreased to $15.9 million, or 6
percent below the previous
year.
"Sweet corn, celery and
tomatoes continue on the
'Million Dollar Enterprise'
list," Fit.chen noted, "but
asparagus, green b e a n s ,
caullflcrwer, bell and chili pe~
pen all showed considerably
less value.
"Field crop value was down
14 percent but lima and other
dry beans accounted for over
half the total value. Sugar
beets and barley suffered
acreage losses which helped
account for decreases in in-
come," the commissioner ad-
ded.
Baby chick productlo n
out.shone all others on the
livestock list with an increase
of 67 percent, but the total
value was down thrte percent
with beef cattle failing to
make the top list as the result
of u1ow feed supplies."
Gross value of crops by
category showed only nursery
11tock and cut flowers showing
an increase over 10 years ago.
The figures 1968 first, then
1958 values: Animal industry,
$23.2 million. $46.11 million ;
apiculture ,(bees, honey and
beeswax ), $178,700, $429.250;
field crops, $2.l, $7.5; nursery,
$15.l, $.1.4; orchard, $29.8,
'38.3, and vegetables, 15.9,
$17.S.
Man Guilty
In Dea th
SANT A ANA -A Santa Ana
man accused of murder at the
lime of his arrest has pleaded
guilly to reduced charges in
Central Orange C o u n t y
municipal court.
Judge Robert Rickles ac-
cepted the plea of Donald
Joseph Brackelsberg, 34, on an
amended count of involuntary
manslaughter and ordered
him to appear in Superior
Court May 2 for sentencing.
Brackelsberg was arttsted
last F~b. 3 after police
di'5CDvered the body af his
11avagely beaten wife in the
C1X1ple's Santa Ana home.
Three Applleatlons Up
•
DAILY P'llOT Sten P'l\ot9
Snakes
Loose
Again
•
SANTA ANA -If Y"/ lind a
long, tubular object Jyln.f ln
your yard this spring, it may
not be a garden hose.
It may )?ea snake.
Dr. John R. Philp, Orange.
County Health Officer, says a
larger number of snakes than
usual may find themselves in
peoples' yards, due to thi!I
year's heavy rainfall. Most
likely targets are ho.mes near
citrus groves aM open fields.
Some may be harmles.s, and
some may be poisonous. But it
is wise not to pick up a snake
unless you know the dif·
ferentt. To find out, call the
Orange County A n i m a I
Shelter. which will send an of·
ficer to help you make a
decision. The number is 834-
3181.
GOING HOME -John Sleppy, Orange County Fire
Department foreman , seriouslf. injured in a mud-
slide which smashed into the Silverado Canyon Fire
Station, is helped aboard ambulance plane at coun-
ty airport. He wa s flown to Eureka to be near his
parents' home.
Should you or your child
grow fond of one of the little
beasties, and want lo keep
him as a pet, you'll need a
license end a land-use pennit.
For inlonnation, call the
Animal Shelte r, Monda Y
through Saturday, between 8
a .m. and 5 p.m.
The
Withdrawal
Oinic Set
For Smokers
SANTA ANA -A Smoking
Withdrawal Clinic will be
spon.sored by the Tuberculosis
and Respiratory D i s e a s e
Association of Orange County
from May 22 through May 26.
The clinic, scheduled from
7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. al Costa
1'-fesa High School's Lyceum,
is a series of five sessions us-
ing a grouirtherapy formal,
combined with films on lhe ef-
fects of smoking and lectures
on its physiolagical a n d
psychological a!peds.
It also includes a ·•personal
control program" dealing with
situations in whi£t: the ex-
smoker may be tempted to
relapse in to smoking, and a
followup session one month
after.
Admission is free. For more
information, call the associa·
tion at 542-7213:
Gu y Daire
On Board
Of Brothers
SANT A ANA -Guy K.
Claire, 3\_Newport Beach at-
torney, has"tteen elected lo the
board of directors o( the Big
Brothers or Orange. County.
Claire. a graduate of use.
holds degrees in political
scienct and law. He is a mem·
ber of the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce, the
Irvine Coast Country Club and
lhe Balboa Bay Racquet Club.
His other aUiliaUons include
Orange County ToWn Hall, the
American. California a n d
Orange County bar associa-
tions and the World Affairs
Council.
He and his wile, Coleen, live.
in Corona del t.!ar.
He is a partner in the linn
of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher.
Slide Victim Flo wn
To Home of Parents
shoulder broken.
Veterans'
Ri ghts Talk
Set at Meet
O range Coast's
Most Complete
PRINTING
SERVICE
li!i·11iiiliili John Sleppy, 35, a for.em an
for the Slate Divis.ion of
Foreslry, has been Oown by
ambulance plane from Orange
Q:iunty Airport to Eureka to
be near the home of his
parents.
· His wife, Sharon. 31, was
discharged from the hospital
just three weeks ago. She had
abdominal injuries, a broken
jaw and a crushed leg.
SANTA ANA -Employ-Phone 642-43'11
ment rights and potentials of ''5:=:==::=:==::=::;::::;::::;::~
Sleppy, a county fireman for
eight years, was seriously in-
jured, along with his wife,
when the disastrous mudslide
smashed through the Silverado
Canyon Fire Station Feb. ZS,
killing five persons.
Sleppy, immoveable in a
cast from chest to knees, suf-
fered for 1 'h hours under the
debris and his pelvis was
broken in three places, his
..facial boaes crushed around
the left eye and his left
Same Office,
Different
Name No w
She has not Completely
recovered, has a wired jaw
the returning Vietnam veteran I"
will be explored at a noon-to-
four p.m. luncheon and
discuss.ion meeting Wednesday
at the Saddleback Inn here.
and her leg is still in a cast. Sponsored by the Merchants
Today, Mrs. Sleppy and and Manufacturers Associa·
their children. Kellie, II : lion, the meeting will feature
Denise, 10 ; Walter, 8 and guest speaker \V. J . R.
~1ichael, 5, will fly to Eureka Overath, acting d i r e c to r ,
to live in a hou se made Bureau of Veterans Re •
available by the State Depart-employment Rights, Depart·.
mentor Parks and Recreation. ment of Labor. Also speaking
The S t a t e Compensation will be Douglas H. Thompson,
Insurance Fund has made it cansultant in the M &: M
possible for the Sleppys to get employe relations services
to Eureka where they will be department.
able to reswne a closer family Topics to be discussed in-
life, but John will b e elude the significance of the
hospitalized until June. retu rning veteran as a man-
Although the couple will power source, and the role of
never forget the nightmarish the employer in easing the
morning of Feb. 25, 1969 their veteran's transition to civilian
future cans for a return to employment. Legal aspects of
Silverado Canyon . despite the veteran employment will also
fact that they lost all their be studied.
possessions in the f Joo d More than a mi 11 ion
v"aters. veterans were released into
SANTA ANA_ The name of "But we'll be back ln the workforce during 1968 and
. Augusl,11 said /\lrs. Sleppy a similar number are expected
LET'S 8£ FRIENDLY
U you have new nels:hbon
or knOW' Or anyone movta1
to our area. please tell ~
so that we may extend •
• biend1y welcome and help
them to become acquainted
in their oew surroundinp.
Huntington Beach
Visitor
968-4849
Costa Mesa Visitor
968-4849
So. Coast Visitor
494.0579
Harbor Visitor
494-9368
the Santa Ana office ar the -i'jhj"ij'jjiliyiliiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiii~nj..itjj96ij9i;. il,aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Bureau of Social Work has 11 ·
been changed to ''State Office r--• wm•w• ...... •.....-ZWM+
of Community Services." I m
The name change ls a result I ,_....
of the reorganization af the !Ii
state Department of Social I
\Velfare by State Director I
John C. Montgomery, and air !llii
Plies to all 42 of the field oI-1 I Mic~ Sr.n ficts under the n e w l y I · f C Iii": Wh1dbreali., designated Division <1 om· ;
munity Services. I , ... _
Ronald H. Frank. supervis-!i
ing psychiatric social worker I Cllrtstl•ll Dior
in charge of the Santa Ana I Mlddlsltod•
unit, quoted Montgomery as I w b"" T1et saying "the new name better !Ii ... ·•.
1912 HARBOR BLVD. (al 191h) COSTA MESA
.....
McGrefM -·
defines the overall putpOse of I
the field ofCices in serving the I
mentally ill and the mentally I
retarded and in planning Iii
preventive mental heal l h I l'liot1• 641·Jl77 hfly 10.t, Set. t -6
services in the carnm~ty.'' ~ ........... , ...... 111111111,,..., .... _
The Santa Ana Office of
Community Services. 1 6 2 3
West 17th St., provfde s
assistance to approximately
902 mentally ill and mentally
retarded persons in the coun·
ty.
110 Broadway, Costa Mesa
LI J.343'
DIWAY BROTHERS
UutlnfCO• Valley
Mortaal'J
F unds Talk
At Irvine Trai"ler Parks Get Stud y IRVINE -Advantages and,
possible pitfalls o( mutual
funds will be the topic of a
highway Jn front of the school. pubUc seminar lo be held at
and provide them with sewer UC.Irvine.
17111 S..9 Blvd.
BuUa"'° Buc:-
14t-Tl'll
PACIFIC VIEW
•fEMORIAL PAlllt
"A!:mekry e l\torhlary
Cliapel
JM1 Pactflc View Drive
N.,.,.n B<adl. Calllorola -PEE& FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
DOME
1111 -An. w.----
SREf PER MOR1\JARY
topu -111-llll aua.-.-..•
sMm1'8 MORTUARY
n~=-:.U LflMUI
SANTA ANA -Mobile action unt.il a master plan of
home parks are very big on . drain1ge faciliUet ls approved.
Wednesday's Orange County Clv11 Engineer W i 111 a m
Planning Commiuion agenda. Church, repl'96tntlnc the a1>
Applications are before the plicants, said tentative ap-
comm.ission for three such proval had been obtained.
projects with a total of 546 Next on Wednesday 's agen-
lraJler spaces. da is the applicatlon ol the El
Tops, at h~ast In number of Morro lnveslmtnt Co. for a
spaces, is the. application ot' we variance to construct a gs.
Bruce E. Nott aod Newell E. 5P•ce addilloo to the u.isting
Fait, ot Newport Beach, for a 20.kpace El Morro Trailer
use variance for a 35kpace Park.
park. Location I& on the northeut
Location is the northwest 1ide of Pacific Coast Highway,
side ot Jelfrty Road between aootbeast of El Morro School,
the Santa Fe Railro.d track& in north L11gtina.
and &he future alignm~n:t or The Laguna Stach Planning
Robert A venue just south of Conunla1on ls reported to be
the Santa An• Freeway in the atnincly oppoeed to the ti·
central lrvjne Ranch area. peMkwt ud have a.1ked tht
Action on the variance has county commlaaloo to tu111 it
been dela7ed Mveral times by down.
the plannen, largely at the re-Lacuna Buch 1 ch o o I
quest of the deve1opcrs" tn<eea have lndlcated thl\
1'be only problem rtm&.inlng txpansion of the trailer park
appears to.be a request by the might aid their campiign for
Ffood Control District to dtfer 1 tr11fllc 1ignel li1hts on the
lines. Sponsored by the university
District Superintendent Or. Extension, "Mutual F\mds and
William Ullom has been in· Your Investment Futurt" will
structed by trustees lo in-be held ftom t : 30 a.m. to 4
vestigate the matter . Some p.m. ~lay 10 in Natural
trustees doubt the trailer park Sciences Building room 167. A
addition -will "add much lo the $20 fee includes luncheon JDd
district," pointing lo ttiw tai parking.
yields from such facilities. For m o r e inlonnation,
The third mobile home park telephone 133-Mtt.
proposal is by Gabriel Barnett F========;I
for a 91-spact project on the
west &ide of Doheny Park
Road, north of Vi c t oria
Boulevard in Capi s trano
Beach. ThiJ location is in the
general bosioeu dlstrict zone
ol the beach community.
BEST
Thi DAllY PllOT •"'"" •• ,,.. •' t\• ... ~. f ........ .
hy 1rt.1I 1•rvey 1f t11d1rt,
1v1i11hl• i11 •11y •tw1p1p•r
i11 the 111tio11.
STEREO SENSATION!
The colorfal sound of
Ora nge County Mus ic
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM ....
From Fashion Island, Newport Beach
•
'?
. "
•
•
• in
1y
~· a
an
in
iis
ist
ar
" nd
'it
ke
lif.
ho
al
of.
a
34-
jJd
.tie
"'P a
Ut.
tll•
ay
' a
•
(
n
!I .. " tlt
ed ...
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...
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''
Deaths
' Sown Claims U.S. Cctlls Some Accidents
WASHINGTON (AP) -An
outspoken Senate critic of the
Vlet.nam war say!ii the Pen-
tagcm ls hiding lhe real
number or U.S. battle deaths
from the public by clalmJng
many are accidental.
Sen. Stephen 1.1. Young (I).
Ohio), said many of the ap.
proximately 1,000 American
deaths in Vietnam designated
"accident or incident" should
have been listed as battle
fatalities.
Young, a member of the
Armed Servl<:i!S Committee
and an early critic of U.S. In-
volvement in Vietnam, said
concealing the true number o(
battle fatalities "is a clumsy
effort to deceive the public
about casuaJ lies in this most
unpopular a n d undeclared
war.
"T h e number of combat
killed and wounded have
become so great -only the
world wars were more deadly
in recent history -they are
trying to hide it."
LISTED ACCIDENT
Young said he had found
deaths often are termed "ac·
cidents" or "incidents" when
they result from such things
as the collision of helicopters
during a firelight or when a
t r u c k driver loses control
under fire and soldiers die in
lhe wreck.
"ln World War II s u c h
fatalities were always termed
combat deaths," he said.
"The Penta.Jn 1dvlsed me
Legislature in Action
Mtll*Y, .... ,11 1t
S!rf'>ln 11151\&ra Slrl!an ,_ b
Kh""'11&d to •w•ll his 1111 d'lamber ••·
eo:utlan with 71 0111er ear.Mm...., men
on 0.eftl R_ew 11 San Quentin Prison,
,e:~YMA~~.': ~urc;.m!.!!:fd ~~vi!-':
commlulon1 lo review 911be•n&torl1I 1PS>Ofnlm.,,l1 of lllCIMI. !1 ,_ Wllllnt kif I rlv1I me11Ut'! to 911 11'11'1111911 Ille
:i.en1i..
ACROSS
1 Lot S lttll!S
of golf
eq'lli pmtnt ·9 Triangu lar
topsall
14 If the
facts were different
25 Revfse a
•anuscrlpt lft One who ., ..
f 1111orousl1
7 Curb I Llvely
• celtbraUon 19 Endeavors ZD With au
' one's •lght
22 Joliet's
1 partner M ShHt 111etat
•orters ~Tin Pon Allty product t7 Utter J8 Coasted
• over 1
J surface
29 Artlcle 12 Estem
3' Figure of
speech
37 C/rcle'i relative 38 Gloomy
39 lhtre the Pal111ne 1s
40 Upright supporting
cntmber 41 Pinnacles
45 Tret
46 Tteneh around a casUt
H Mlokey-:
Noted hockey
reftrtt •a Tedious 49 AJIP:arltlon 53 K, In base-ball scoring 57 Dralntd of
l!fler111 58 lift
59 Labrador ore 61 Engine noise
62 Ke~
63 Callfornl1 river 64-Bor's nlctn llllt
65 Ganarnt
66 -Canyon, A tit, 67 Let out 104'
trinporary
·use
DOIN
l City or
Afgl11nlstan 2 Oleortsln
3 Kind of flu
• Gaspe or Sinai
5 SttK
charity
ft Maude or
Franklfn P.
7 Rlvtt frolll New Meirl co
8 Frl ghltntd
9 Roo111 In publlc
b'ildlng 10 Coincide
11 Movt
brlSkly
12 Length uatts ll lt!sh
)1119'1Jgt 21 5hlpsh1Pe
23 Ttr11in1tt
2S Kind
·Of h1rd llquor 28 8rlollt 29 God of thundtr 30 Dwtlllng
unit
31 s1gn1nt1nt
periods In
. history
32 FrttdOlll of action l3 Sad 34 lmer h111d
36 Sdlool .
execuUvt l8 Kind of '
vessel
41 SOCl•I affairs
4/?9/ft9
42 Vocal
tlpfHSIVt-
nfSS
43 Small draft
~4 Charles
San_gster or Carl
Sandbutt 48 Maintains
ontstll 49 Mining
eircavatlon
50 Sarcns, e.g.
51 Enlpt found In
"'"' 52 Moved
11radu1tr1 forward
53 Slructurt .54 Rush . SS Extreme force of feeling
56 Russian 1\vtr
60 Femlnlnt
nlcklla111
ANDY HAS ANSWERS
f>l•r1't •Illy •11• pl1c1 J•• Clll fl"'4 111•r1 l ft lWltl th111 Jlllf
ch1141111 h.,.,, ~1111tlo111. Chic.Ii th1 At~ A114y f11tv,.. • .,,,., Sit·
11'1f•y 111 tt.1 DAILY PILOT, v .. ·u Jib If -•'"' •• will y111'
c11rl1llty.nlt•' , • ., • .,,., ..
DAU.Y I'll.OT •
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE I
\ •
Nearly Everyone
'listens'
to Landera
) • DAil Y ~llOT fSl
Your
' •••ff "" illdt.I Mltlll UV C .... Cllf, Money's·· Wo rth '11:.i ., ..... , ... r:.
-A--C-
S -OVER THE COUNTER -A· ... ,,.. !!! ·~ .... ,,. , -· ......... "" li' ... _. ta k • , R • B ' :!•j :r ': '~·~ 11J.., • :;\to ":..""P:c~ ·~ j f • " i :w.:_ ;-: -p-srrw ing iz oom1ng·1·--:,.~..u~o~L~1.~ •• ~ ... ~.~1o~.~-~~y.·Aj><~1~1 ~u~.~1 .. ~,'.."""'!'!"'i. __ c. __ -=---~,, ik ittl'f~ :i! .a!:s ::.rr1
11 ~ ~ ~ §~~
Ml!.W 'l'Oltic: ,..,, • Morodh'• mm~ z=,:r .Ji.n R tl ,,, 11,11.i _1 _,, ., .b xi ii~ ""' :111~ ~,~
.... WWW ... .,. 11111 ........................ t ..... "-11.UO.. ,,._ y.,.., $lodl II!~ irlc:HI ~,.,,,.... r.:i ltloo ... omw Oll M 1::11 2th """ """-1•
-· -• , ' -·~ --!Sc .10 111 1' M\\ ~:'-t 81 SYL••• PO~R eept. You -·y --may ..... ~·-... ..., •--....,... • s•"" ........ -A-~ ·~.. Id ...... d l'I ~
"&II n11:. ••-..... '""' • • ·• J · "' 1..,. -"' ::'kni.. 1 H it'" 1111 lj5' -' A three-day &UPP'" ol 1 ntw -pay' a small fee to et tend _ Ntw v "' ""'. !l\l klMI ,., »YI 11 111ttb. ., n ,. ""'" .... Z: ~ ... J 1m f~ ~~ ~ + .. -II((• '° J ~"' !t)! w '-
" Tiw fJ:.-"fm ~'II Ille l"'roo & ~-~ t'*'•"'91t·t.w c-.Cttt. A~ • t 'fr ~ f'J\? ~ Olftl/i~' ~': J.l I 1~-1&U I0041. i~ C:~uw~~ ~m~~~ost~ th~iIBee°.::t~RICAN Cancer~.._, '"' mo :.z..: iif a ~ 11':,;;w ~t• ""\j~ ~=1:;~~ is·~~"=-,~~.. 1: ~= ~" f.~ ·+ii: :ffi:: l:U ff: In! ,;~ ~;,~ ~·11 :::e7J~ ~ J ~·.~ ~ ~:! ~
local .i ...... stott. U you ----•1..-··gh i ts 3,000 Io ca I "'"' ,, •• i -• • EO: G tai. ...._ .... .,.,. .... ........... • '" n\ J1 11o °"N"'° '-" ·~ 1'\• ,,_ "' ....... ""''.... "'"""' rfMlll n .. 01\ l'I l•H Ac:~ 1.... ' ,... HV. ,.,!. +"'Amie< llC .. 1' \~ ~ Pf\ ·+,.,, om~ l·" ,, •Ht •I ~"
close to $3 1 pack11e at m"' Soclel""lt.self 11 now exploring=.... tll(,, .,. Mlh-mlw"" ~ ' NG t!.-. ACP: •no t• ill $1 •v. "''-..... ""' zrnc '1°1 ll14 111'1 ~ -\' ~~":ir"t° "1"' 1 ,~ 1"
pl,lf:theentirefour-week~ branches,. the pouibiUty of ... lwOI •'.. tr• ' I~::; a.of ..... I( 1' •l'l=.rt .• f-1111 r .. 1" ':~+t:.~ f.• ·~ l:I ~ 4J't:l =-"' =~ ~.:U im m: nw 1N.'+i~
, ' ""~'* Ir I, Ill t, ~I I U li.C' 11'1111 :t..0 ,.I " ••--, ~ .. :'I wlll 10 ~ 11\i '21" t \(,; MFrtl J.1!,. ~ It Uf9 •lo
gram recom~ded \ ln the setting up a n a t l o n w I d e ~n,lim. l:i. ~ """'~ ~ "!•' C~. M Mll111 '.j ~ 1J"' lit, I, . . . . Al'l\Ma ~11 110i ~. ".,~ .-. f 1~ °"'i_rL -'° tt '"'° rJ,,. f~ ::i ~. ~· 1.,-a<' ..., °"~lllC i;;a cldniH 1 . ..0 1s 11 ,$ +i"' MU'" Ull. 1• ..,... .. ~ 14 °"' 1n 2.tt 20 '1"" .1 , -"' ~ireclions. y tol>l In-network of noo-profit stop-""' -,!' ,• , u ~: ~ Aoinr~,.._ ~ 1-,_ +-. Alllt.1 .n · 1io u n~ 2~ :; 1:ll Ml '/1 SJ i•i. 1w. 5\\ + "'
Veitment might up to $20 smoking clln!c.s. The Sevenfu. ~ 1bi.i."lnte1. -· lit' 1s"I' ~-L c: lj"' 1 UCll)flfa "' ~:,,:~ ~o• 't1 ~ ~" ~ =t'\t =:r f::: ~ W1 U" wt -~ti ~°'ct'\:.., J~ i:.~ ll.. :.:~ +'i ..
Or mMe. day Adven"s'-already are ~!.'!.. ~$;"'1 ·~ r.. um j;ft ., " !ffi , t . • l'n:MI .l'Ob JO ..,.., '21" -12\1; -lV. Miii 0.'I 1.M II ..... SN 27U ' I,, .. A,.5ll 12 "" Jll4 '"~ .. "' u i.:11 .. _..... ··~ ~ I -ffil' " I ltedln '"° " --,.., .... -.... AilaO~ll I Cl ,,, '31\ •lllo d +1 !Ml "I" I' ~1• ''" dl\-~ .. This ls a big ,rxain II )IOtl CMductlng a med I ea 11 y :1 ~pt.,· 1..l w~ f 'JI 1 Mt ~Industries td 1•"' UI\ 10'1 +•\\ A-"'"' · u 4"' "'" C!il :I 11 · °" 1s? .55"' *1™ L~ .... •
kin kl 1'11111 ITll= 'I Ir ' r. 511 °:li£ ' A Gis l I ~'4 lf\'I ll\'I -I.II AAA "'C ·'' "> I~ I~ 10f'1o +'\1 ont O I Pl 2 2 ~'II ~ ~Vi -t •l manage lo quit smo g, or oriented slop.smo ng pro-1n1~n., com! ~ •wr 1 »v. R ngr AlbtnoC ,n 1• •5 .os -1 ~o•n 1.0 ,, .. ,,14 "~ -tl< ont su 1 10 ~' • ~ "'" .,,. A thr k -<I 1d in . .. ...... e r the mlt l•nc• IOI.ti Ul'I : :: 0 1 4 .r' l'I Ak.1nAlv ,If Ml J lO .... ~· -\\ A~l~"'Cvc' I 2t llh ,,.,.. M•• -" ont Ttl ... nt ~ Hvt "' .. f"'
Ing · I ·' \Y h lnl'I J ' A · 11-. 411 ln!lr lj Fib 7ill'I klltw 1ilt i{ Alt.QPw \·lf tl ~ i.lS '22~ -It Arm Cit I.Clo 10 7111 "'"' 1M --IM.i 2 JI\\ ]~ lnl -"1
course. ee-pac •8 a~_____:_ gram various --0 :" • ll I \. +I' ff. Mrnl.T ''" !'.! ..... .,..Co :::::le;, ·r: ~ ~ ~ u-:-.!: ~.:!s s ,10 :Jl ~ .. f,\l4 ~wirll ITtl 1)11• 411152 1 ..... 1.51\1 ·l'' diet can in lbese days of ~ U.S. Another group, Smoke ~c:: v~. \'t canr" ,m l!ll ~'tr' ="' u lmit ~~ -~ Atl1111 \IC! Pl J I .Sfl4 ,, .... !of .. + ~ ,.,"-'' '~ 1 51 ''1 ,.,... Sl \~ nO.I pU,-'O 141' '"~ ~ ""' '1
e1garet ates speuu as ate ers ., nc., IS &J· A, 1no , ...., en '"" ..," con .» R<M<tw E-u AJlltdO> .N • ~ :\:!\\ -1• A•mCi 111115 1io ,5 ,, .. ~ + "" -Colt ·"! 31 •2 ''" •1"' · ·
much aa $450 a year to SU"-grcssively profit-oriented lD : r11r, 'v.•"' IHll ~ K " !" §'I Pc; u 1-~M " m: Alli! Ml In .Cl • " 11 .,. + "" ArmRub 1.'6 :u '°'" •1"A 41\'I -'" ::r :.r.75 3t H t 11 ~ .!: ~ I'-'"' ,. wr.:i.., ~-~~ no El 1• "' tll• ;;,r. I All14<1Mlll .JS II 21 HVI '-IV. -V. Aro Corp .!'Cl ,:! 7•>it J•:it. 211\ -1,4 -llftd l.20 6 50'\ 50 5CM _ ,,, port his habit -and he can what 1t ronslders a $360 ~ -111v1 / ure na 11:.0 ' I"' 1 P ~' All9Po ·'° n '1" "6'11 u +""min 1nc1 1 1>'4 :n.... n.... 011111t,.. 50b ls 50 .... ..,,~ .,v. _ '•
h• ••-I .11-\'Ill l't' na1111t "f lfil • -RV. 3M All Sit" 1.«I 41 11>.k llli 311.\ -f.\o Ml!ld 011 I 70 "i;' '7~ ""' _ t:. --~II \.20 16 tlli 231'1 23"6 + '• add. hundreds of doUars more m1ll1on market wit in un: nex 'I !:i'1!•' i ,'l! 1£ \f 1 1 MO voe VI f[f11. "'""" "' >IVI AU 11 Ill 4 1110 6tVI 61 1'> '21'1 -v. AU!Oll llft.'oio 6 •1 ,.t'I ,, _2 orinttil .i•-,, -· .l!\';'' • ., _ ,, " • • r.•• I I I c-1 21 Al!ffdSup M 21 161• '"' ''~ +l(i Aud lrtW " 1]'\ "' '' • ~ .. to this ii his wile chain-mnokes live years. ~ ... -o \\ ~ .w ... gr •,,· 01' 0.1 YI 1w 1~ Al!lt CNlm 1n 31,.. 3CJl4 11 +l't Aud oo 1,. ' -GW t.• ll 211 211 t' -0.0 ~-.., 4 • ..... ) "' IMJ \' U V. AIPl'llPC .10D 1J ~ 24 ''"' -"lo 1<145 I ' 5'f "11 lf\lo M~ -a;to °'"-'In .22 S6 'WW :1t :1914 I~ too. Also, today 's non-smoker l' k' TV d Smoke Watchers has, in the ::e;f~ \ 1 Ill y\'I J1v. Inell ... ~ -6't nttlft ~· ~ IV. Alcolo 1.IO H 1'11 ,. ... ,. .... +l\lo Alld~.ft ·io: 11 ~JI.\ ~ :~~ +_,_!1 =-~·i50 .• lSS 't" l~~ I~~.~!
is eligible ror non-sn.:iker ure imo ing a .a ' ex· past few months alone, set up,"': ~' ·~• ~!: '°'l.•b '<I d .,.. ~ 1m ~ ~ ~ "v. Amal$vv 1·60 ' "11 »u. fl 1' -"Auoc:1n ... f 111 11 s11• " s•~ +:: [' "11 1.10 10l :11 11v. 1"' -.. hortationS from lheif tJOCtOrS, "' •• ~b SU 1:3'.ro ,~ ~1 Cotl r Ind \.1 l!V. AMBAC •fl\ l6 JSll!i 2J\~ l?-\lo Al~!'°" l.'60 21 l-1\\ S.C ll -~~ rlM .Klb 2' ~'t =(• 50\'J -•,
insurance at conside~ble sav-a dozen center~ 1n the New t: ~r'i '' 11 '"" 5Y!J 11m ,i"" • ~ur. G H ott OM ~ ' •.i. :::e~· p1f.~ 1l 1f i:~ ~ ~ ::1c:r:EI" 1·~ ,•,•,' ?r~ ?~'.~ !?~~ +_ B ~:::-,.~.~.'.in" 1°,•, ,U ~., ., .. ,'.• ?m. <,·.~. ings in premiwns._ health warnings on clgaret York area. and Jt plans many ~ IPS i. • r,~ m 11 :,e. ''; If .... ~ r:::: ov. wft,; Am¥1CMI J .., 11114 n.,,. 1 -Iii AtClt'IEI til' ..,., .......... ,., .... ... .N -,, -··· +
BUT THE ~!ATE ,·, k others el-.whcre ln the U.S, _ -,· "'•f:t.o.or 1 oxl 23 •lh 111 'tou11 !'~ eri. 01 6 1 MlrFlnr ,111 1• " ""° " ... Att Rldl 1.111 2q 1ot1~ lOlll.li 1,, +Ii 1.20 , S1'• 51 n ..... ,,,. .:..:>1:a.11 pac ages, elc. As one result, ..... -.., cw 1• 1s\li m , EDCO :isv. A111A1r11n .10 111 l4'11 ll . 3.4\lo-YI A1tRc11p1).75 110 601/o 6Q\~ 60u. ·~cork , '°''tot\ 11!'4-••
h I f Am P ' 2m rornao t\li IO 1w 6 tis CmP iS :M Am IMtr I •? :IOlt 19,. tt "' All Rici> pl J t 117 1l3'-" IU41 .+ p4 rll\OlnCk p1 2 1 4l •l •l .. t at out of the g.7 million adu t our national cigaret con-plus packaged _programs or Am s1 t Uo ll~ l4v. c.tndY 1ov. 1 "' UO'IW Ji"" :11VJ. 1.n1ak Nole ' n ?1•-. 21 11 -t~ Al!Rc1> t111.n 12 nit 11" n t\ +'' rownz. 2.10 131 MU •l:i. "l't +I'•
U S k h · f fl I b I 8 b I f •·-l AmSIG ~-I C SY• 41'1 J"' ~nell C ff'D t1 It 1-1 SIV. AmBOc:tl 1.611 lJ 61'.t 67\~ tlti -h All•• Ch II 13' :lt'li :It'!• 7''11 _ '" ~rn z 111•.?0 110 10 l'O 10 .. smo ers w o try to stop sumpuon e ast year y . use y corpora ions, ra...aua Anchor ca O.t• ''I'> SJ'° G&e v, u 11.o "1 SI ""' can 2.1<1 6? S5\'r55\io 551'1 . Al1•5 corD w & 111 ~~ + '• Ts Corp .~ 21 79~1 :io" 211\'t + '•
mo>;. ea h a I bo t b·11· · · •R ll ~111 1 1 di 1 sorts etc '""'Ylf 41-Y; MDOu• ~ lOVt •11k c11 VI 30v, """' H f' u AC•~ pf 1.15 ' "~ 21\~ ~ + ~ A11sc11 1111!k l300 25\~ 15 15.., +v, llCl•h., co 31 19q uv; 1 _.,. s 'V''g c ye r, on Y. a u 1 ion cigare.,, o a :n sag· organtZa ons, e re , . """''" u ff1r. ,..,, 011 2Jl'l 2~'-" I R•tv 11v. net t9"' 11 Am cem .60 11 11 16!a 16'-• -\.\ Autor• p'i.s 21 ll'' u "" uc111 ... p11.u 1 2,1. u 11 .. one in four succee<U. Would·be gering total consumption or The basic program consists of t1ttt:11nc1 ftVi v. = ~ 1: t: ::.=.1 Al 5ht, ",..-. i:ic i~ r~ ~~1~':1111·1. ?~ ~"' ~¥1 .»Y, -f-v. AoJtomt~ Incl • •11.11 " + ·;~ cuu;_, .11 I? n~. 71>6 ,,., + '•
f. kl ..,.10., costing Ardell ;;. 11"' JI• -'!". -~ 6"' t'4 M eii-~" ~·· ,r't',1 11.._ 1 ,,~-· , " ,-• • 201 -"' Avm co 1.:111 3u »101114 ""' _ .., cumm1n .IOb s .io·~ ..,4 Mt"i< . _ -·smokers ·-now spending 523 b1'll1'onl •· another says l"e wee y s ··-,.. -•• ·~ " .--. ... ,.. ... " -1 A'ICO 11u,20 ,. n ff 11 +1•1 CunnDniw 10 "° :JI'~ l"' ~ '""' ... ._ • n.;J • • • ..,....,, O ,..II) J.,._, Olft -MO II) 0 N Ttl ..i.I~ All! In 1.7' 111 3' .. JI\~ l2W. + '~ A...,., Pd .31 1 5' SI" SI + 1"o Curllas Wrt' 1 51 2Ho !~ 21 ... +,·•~ tens of millions of dollars to the American Cancer Society, "apiece to attend More ei:-~ MoP lU\ ??"' 11111"'.E!! ,.'"•' ",, •.~~ o, j wun G•• fjl'e AlllO 1 1.c. 12 """ A(tt~ ·~ t''"' A'ln.rlnt • '" ~ ,. 1•11> -"° cu..1 wr A 1 1 3''\ ~; 34'• + '• f~ ' "'~ H ftvt"" rll T....,, ~1J!a Co im El $v JV. I "OUllVI 119 ll 11 13\i li :i;, A~nel on.JO 1 H fl( ,. • , Cut!H H 1.20 3-C J&I• Jll'lo ll\~ -'• buy the products of today's fully 85 percent Of American pensive hotel-like "isolation trv ~ a ~ ~t•tlln 4I " M~'I ij"' ~ w Gas Co '!lo 1 ADu11 11r.'Ue I lJ'lo 1JVJ 13 .. -\4i Avon PO 1.'3 63 ln~' 145U urn +ll~ Cvct0<>s I.lo 1 .iv. •1 41 --,h "Sto-'mokmg· Industry" -dul'-. ed Iba ' lso . led to " f o1ro-Vi Hv, •brl~[f f°" l~ ~tdlc H vt l 10~ 11 ir:'j,.., ~~ Am£1,.,.. 1.U " 311-t 36:u 11,• -.. " -8-CY,,,uW '·"° 2'I SI 55>\ ~ + lo vv a .__,are now conv1nc I resorts' a are pro1ec ,.,~0 Frr, ll' FB•v , "'~ "'"' MpJ~rc ,.., , 10 s~ Jll'I r' Eentt..11 12 11 '~"' J D-
ranging from pills to Chiclels, smoking is bad for them . which smokers could check lo ~~!°mcS:' :..., 11g ~~Ina ~.1• tt \.1 =~~. C.ct .~1'1714 ~:~~ Pdd 511 fl..., A';.w1:! Pl~' ~ ~"i Jr-~ 1fh ~ ~• l~fi. 'J 1u !:"' ~ ft!: ~ 22.,, n lozenges, "pacifiers," sfon. . And, as a thi rd result, the for IWO or more Weeks ofAVMCP 1S SV.,fdN M1Q 212 21MklwtlGT211'1 2'\'I bK 7•, S Aml4ol5I .~ JJ ll lW. l1'-l+'~811tGE 1.7o ~ lli; llllo ::i:'.S?f,,.~1:~·~ 14 51 1• 50V. Uy,.;_:,•,, I' Alli'< 011 Ir. H\'i Fin S«ur J 10 Mlt1 Rov 11 11 uodl di ,...,,. ,.~. o. "'°"'e 1.41 11'1 55"' Sol'-'I S4l o -~ BlllG PICA J\lt 'l 63 = \:. Don• CP W1 I ;i_µ. 25:o.;. 25ll smoking books. etc . • Stop-Smoking business 1 s "cold turkey" withdrawal 1'1\1" 1 ~ 1lv. r:11BctS co 60\lt •! Mo11 G•• ~ lSv.. abo FO 1»1 11;. A"' Hoop .n e4 J• :n~ • .1,0•'" .... ;~ B0•,~•,"",',,.60 2511 33\io J2"1 J2µ -1. oan Ind .lOb 1s '°""" 46,.. ~~ : .. ;., · •rd Al l v, 1 \~ FstG'"' Ae 1•!'1 2 Miil v11 G l't 21 T•mol• llS 119 Amlnvll 1.1~ ?l 20'\ 20 • • ,_ J 41 •• '' .ti g1r1 l!ld Pl 2 :u J n , jl\{j ~1\0 Ate you among the 56 per-booming -and included in Significant sums of research 1 er M ~ '~ Fst Mt11e ,~"'~Mo Rsch \\ ~ T•,,.., " 16 ""'MF11v fl'I 1H 26 ?S\to '~h -,_,. B11K1P oll.15 , 36'~ uv. lS'4 -r aycoC p IMr 11 ,2 •I I\ 41~ + ·~
cent of U.S. smokers who, BC· this sphere are pills and gim· money are being spent to ex· B,:~:~nl :f' ii\lt ~t~~~Vi 2•: J~ ~5.~1:R lt.:'tt~ i:~7\¥ \,}~ rr~ !$:~li·7 '* u~ g[! u~ +1 !~ u~r~:c1·~n I~ tH: fh~ ti~~.~ 8~t ~:l:f} ti~ ~ ~<lo ~ "'.: ·~ cording to the U.S. Public micks which have only a plore other ways to help •Yless n v. i. FooOF Dr• 1' 19~ ,..._.,, s u~·. 'l"' T~• AmSut e 11 Am ~ 1 n " 36 36 -·~ B0•,•,•,• ,",," • tt~" 110.. 'JV• -\\ Ottt-t co 2 ~ .w. tno :'~ ·· ·
H Ith ,_ • h d h aJ I . t«Nom l6 ~ Fost Cr•nl 2' 1'~: M01th M 11 1 Th<ffm Air 17\1 U>, ti .S\• 6 i 2 OtlPlooLt 1 OI u 2• 2J'~ n•~ .:.:.,L; ea .x:rv1ce. ave ma e al psyc ologic mpacl. smokers slop smoking. ee11e P11t 11•• 1:ru Fotoc:lln't • "" Molor c1u b u~ isv. Ttlf•nv :n 2'"1< B•1111n<1 of J 11,. 161 lu • 0e1Mntt i 1o 52 ~ 1'V. 30111 +" l t . It t N ho h h Btlm Ind l '" 1•\.'t Fr•roc:hd ,.,. 10\\o N•rrMI c 3''0 n:u. Tll•n 11lo ,,., e.1onchlb .IO 11• " 59"• '°'"' I Dcl!iAlr "° 181 ,-, .. 38"" J9"t -f f t eas one serious a emp to ow. t ug , an effective MEANWHILE, as one w o Bels<:lll R Ol'l l2'h FrWlkl co 11>1) 121\ NI Br•ndl ~ 1 Tr11~ c~1 '"' '~ a,•,•,!r,eo,•, ·.1! s5> 41 ,, c,~. •,',',', _-•,, 0,11-inl 1, -1., ,., " 'I k' o d ·I h fBer•hH 1! •O FklnE'lec1t\.020"•N•IE'<1vl1tt '4 TrwC••lt•,1904~ _t,x;;;.,,.... .,,..,_, MCI ... 1) IJ ,,_ •M •-• qui smo mg . an more econonuca ap· qu1l more t an a year ago, lf't L•b 10 ~ Fu11 vr~ • 1,1~ N•I FiPd n"' "o,:, Ttnd 1:: 16'-I r'" :::r1~~ l 1J 41•, "°'• .,., + '·• oe"nM111 .Mt '~ •n• 46!..I •6>.< + \'
How much money have you proach seems to be in the of· can testily to the ract that I ~~°lonw J04 sf" guo:~fcts 1~1! 6!:! ~=I ~~ ;~..,,~~\'I l:l~1f ~ .. ,1;? MUTUAL 8~•1 Fas DI. $~ tr· i:1' W' -lh ~~n: ... R•:.,: 7f! ~·~ n~ ~~ +\,,
spent <in the Stop-Smoking fing : the stop-smoking clinic. your .determination Is the key ,1~ HI! JI~ A"" ~n Ky.::,~~ ~: ~ :::o1Sep"• 1~ "11'1 i~~.-:r G l~t; ~~~ =~~1 ·.!fa ~l :;1'" :,,, ~'ti i !~ 8:'~ ..:·~0 ': nr· Ir.: Ir-+i~: -~ •-I · Th h be · · th f' hi y °""' E 5 5'rl RI Ell 1~'-'l llV. Nf:'no GE l'll'D 2 UnAr1 Tl!• 19 lO Btteh Air IS 1• ?ll.it 7110 28"1 -''> Qpr~ Pl 8 1• 6SV. '5'' 45111 + 10 l"""u~ or on os1ng e programs al t e tler to )'Our w1nn1ng e 1g . ou I"" eerN ,,.,. uv.. 1 51., 6t~ NJ N11G 25 1, un 0o1i.r ,.,,, 11•, BPlco Pt• .:n 114 y, J5 w. -"'oeso101nc .90 1' ll' 11'• Jt -+l\:4
bets wilh other would-be non· clinics are drawn up by physi· cannot bll}' victory by JUSt ='~~' ~~? n~ l::';:u•nc ~J~ ~ ~1~11,~·~-,, ~;~:ft\(, H~ ~~UGf1 ~~ ~r-FUNDS =~ifH.~~rC~ .1f n:~ t~'li i~tr! +ti B:l~~l p:j~1o 3: ~·~ lr" ~tr..:,.·: •mo~s• co'ans d h l 'sis M 1 d' owutl" 71. 1 '"sn w •lVJ •1v. Niel B l214 l1V. us 'kNote 26 26:1.. eemls col 14 lll~ ll JI Det s1"1 60 10 17"o 111, 11;t -''.~ ,. r..::1 . _ an psyc o og1 • OS spen 1ng your money -no rllw•v G n~nv. ·• l!ub 1 ru NorAm RH 1 t u! rown !'"' 9\, Gendtx 1.60 11 46 •5 .:.:.»;, O.der-.JO· l:!O "'" •7 ,, -1 IN THE PAST fi ve years conduct regular meetings or atte \Vhat the claims of Brown Ar ~ :it lr1oh con 1011i non NC•r N<-11111 12 u nve1 , .,., 1s Be;l(ll• of J J n 11 '-" ff•1-1•, 01.1F•n•n .JG 11 u to "'• i.1.1. -·•,,
the nalion's so million adull m r 1~11 a., rs:io ~nv. i~hSf~ :I.., T~11t =~~ 811 1t~ il 8~ T'::t° ~~ ~. -0.) or--feri"11'$1':..l~ ~ :1V: :ii'; ll~ ::.:.~ &~!st:.!r\ \:: ~ "1' ~l~ im :..:.~ seminars, some pattemed On those Who are WOOing YOU wilh I?!,,' 60 6 ""'1 Ml ll'ot 11'0 lW N1IG jll>t 12 UP PtnP :Hi\. U'lo B'"'llF pt4.l0 1 1'1 11 n -.,. Ol1Sh pj Cl u nr, 37~ JP.~ -+_ \o smokers have been born-the highly s u c c e s s f u I the or sto~smoklng pills and •I w.i~ ... 1'\o " rnr10 RI 11\'J :x11<i wPub s~ ~ 211,1o u1111 ShLO 1·~ • BenF So/J.SO IlOI :w... :11o;i, »>\ + ~ 011s p1 01.n JS 201 lti\ '°'·~ -+' 1~ r " 1mco JS 1 .. 1nneU 12' 134 ox!r Rs~ JS ,, U!ll Incl :16•~ 38"1 A•r. ll lnvn Bos 13.SI 1•.11 Btn1111tl IJJ6 j•'• 11.., i••O + V. DIC'a""'°" 41 21 J•t~ l • barded with powerful an· Alcoholics Anonymous con-gimmicks ~"""" M 12 a.s Grove p,. 1s l' otiio w .. 1 3'!..., .nv. v~1 LOl!v 15\lt " New vo11io; 111 P1 $e•e<.~ '·l? '·19 B"""'tt 1n ~• '~ 21"' rn• .. oteb<I"" ..;1iib 1" 5,.:, ;"" ~\~ +f~, • tnnon 8 IO 14 Crw1h 1~11 20\.'J 6'1o l'lat Scan fl Hi: V•llCt S1n ll 1' -lM !ollowi[f,! O\J\I I Yori ,:v ~·i, t-~ BtrkPM .Ill 9J ?S\o 1'"-:ZS\ .. +(~ OIG!orglo 10 91 J.~'·• llh 35"' +.ro •-------------1 5::11 1~w f~'lo ~~ ~~rJ: fc~ ~·~ ~:~ f:0il!'r'~P ,!~ 1 v. ~=wt 11'~ 'fsot. \~1~·i11~F1:1.JJ 10~1~1, ' •,•,·•,•, ',','','• •1:~~n c~ 2~! ~:: is1;: ~1~ !'~: 001,,1!!.'!t""'• ,:•, /1 "'• "" " -'• ..., TK~ l:U. rv. 1111 lnl 11,.. 1,'4 era "'"' lj W1ctw111 P •IV.. 4.l'/:I 1t!on ot Se<:url.le1 Ye> · · i. T"'" IO 52 •t~ , "-., .. + v. ,,,.. 1 ..,.,, ,..,l, ...,.. +'•• ... ~t 11 '' 17'4 .... °"" ... ,.,, 15!.,lo IV cat I II w Rtldt 11\0 1114 Dtllf•i. h!CM •• , tvy 10.7110.n Blac•O• ,·1' ' S7' 511 ~ '1'1 .... Dil lor!Cos .S6 I 11'4 ··n .. IJU -••
• Record Earnin,gs Set
By Standard-Pacific
1 Standard-Pacific Cor., the 1968 do not include the opera·
Costa f.1esa home building tio~s of ~uri!Y F.ore C<irp.
company, Monday reported "'h1ch was acquired 1n Dcccm·
. d I f ber. record earnings an sa es or The a c q u i s i 1 i 0 n was
1968. originally announced on a
Revenues from all sources pooling-of-interests basis, but
Increased lo $7,:>54,927 as com-was finally consummated as a
pared to $3.225.985 ror the purchase for stock. Secutity Fore Corp. sales and revenues
previous year. Net earnings for 1968 were approximately
climbed to $616,720 as com· $6.81 million. Net Income after
pared with income before I axes was approi:imately
sp~Jal items (and as restated $401 ,000. for~ling of Panel·Air) o( "Because of today's in·
$165,65.1 in 1967, according to creased demand for housing,
Arthur E. Svendsen, chainnan the company's prospects in
of the board and chief ex-the home building field appear
ecutive officer. extremely bright for many
Earnings per share in 1968 years to come," according to
rose to 33 cents per share Svendsen, "and our acquisition
compared to 9 cents per share of Security Fore Corp. and
in 1967. The per share figures Panel-Air Corp. provides us
are based on an average of with a broader base from
1,868,525 CQmmon shares which lo capitalize on this
outstanding during 1968 and growing market."
1,903,539 during 1967.
Re~ues and earnings for Oil Fir111 s
Wagoner Moves
Thomas R. Van Wag-
oner ol Newport Beach
has been appointed ac-
count executive in the
Laguna Beach office ol
Roberts, Scott Co., Inc ..
member of th e Ne\v
York Stock Exchange.
He was formerly asso-
ciated \vith Goodbody &
Co. in Laguna Beach.
to Defend
s N •• l4il TS tom cm.e ltv. 1G 1Mt er d\~ ~s:u. W1r1h 11 1s 16 the .,.ices •t wh~ J,onmrn ,r.i.01.21.01 Bui~ L•...,· 1 2J n:O: 16'~ ''' -,. DlneoCI .50b :JI """' 2Wio -1• en Vt 5 2J\O l~ HM>d Yoo 6'14 1" PK Aulms ''~ J W1sh NG 19'!1' 10 1he5f \l!Cl>olliei tVllont U~ B"·• BOii I 5ll '"" ~ -••Disney lOb 2' t2'o 1'~ 1tV.-l'o l1>m Lum :!O\lo lY, H•-• s n ,...., Ptc Far£ '°"' -tt W•T Trmt 11 111/o coulo ~eve beffl Cu• e,1 20.•1 11 . .100 B;i;bie Bt•i ' Jt -'' !Ii"" -·~ Dl•l~•i I 111 1 •I" ,,.. .,,. .._ '\~ hemold 51t;, ·~·Maven \"" S>~ &\.\ PIMC.OI 1•\\ U\lt Webb Res U 16'1!, .ll>ld (b\d l er boUOhl !u' 1 2LJ6 l'-l Bot! 1 20 1~ !f,:Z ~i! ~~ + t° OrPePDer ·.80 12 ,','•• Sl\~ S? t Vo "" u111 lll't ,,..,, Hello Ar 11 11~ Pf;W'f Oil 11~ l·, wem1rn UV. 16'4 C1.lotdl M<my3v. v• ~· 10 if 1. I Bol1~1 '2511 11 -~ °"'™'Min IO ,, :M,V, 7~ +J'S•
l
xit'.rsf't '" l~ H~rii:~n F fl~ ~I p=~~~~ p i; ,r1• ~:1~~1: Jh. tt .... Abtr<lttn ~. 1 ~.n ~~ ~J I:n ::ri 8olwC ,.icld 11: :1~ ti \~ ;i:z _;;·.,. ~";.~ft/'¥1·0.a n ~·· !J:: 13'" '• orl•' .,, 110 1u ~;;.';., EP 10" ~ ol~Lso ill 1~wP .. \llth nv.21•,.A,,.,ller• 1.~ t.o; uss5r n.•111.s1,•..,.•M•'••'"••' 1a 11 21'.~ ?I +••00tr ouw.. l'I 10 11._ ?l-\11 :1!: fl-I f tV. Hoowr JI~ 3''i P• Enaln t f"I Wstn 11t1 121"11 22>,\ A\tllllltd 9.ali 'J1 UI 2 12.U l.2 · A ll~l 7J1o 2• -\'I !)ever (p .'4 15 .3' 311'~ ]'9 -f. I~ lllr Ur A 2111.i. :it t,1ous1 Fis J'o J ... P• G&W 7•'-'I :UV. Wna Wh!1 111, 18"" A 1 Amer 1.u 1.H ~ !> 1·°' !·'° BorO•n 1.20 I.SO ll'o 31•t 31~ -t' DowChm 1A 12l 11•, mo 11"\ _ , ,
!!Ir UIB 2$1'1 ""' HIKk ll\'• !JI~ PEC l1r ... 1 tJ\'t 1414 w1nnl>Mlo 70 711~ Aloh• 'j·"' 14. "•"•' "•' •• ~PW••, l.}S 12 ]ll>o ~ ]1'4111 Or•voCo 1.-IO 50 •Sl'J •1l4 •W. +ii. tvNPrlj2 l?,""Hlld!tlY 22 1.'llt P~rltu/2GV.tt Wn•IT 10 1l •1>Amc10 ,27 6.1 oar• .. 16 .,.,.min IO J973'••r-•22'>< Yo Dr"slndl.-IO 45ll'l~36IOI l:~onMI 1·~ 'it? ~::,rp~·~ H~~ ii:~ ~:n .:.~h 1i111 1~v. :Zl~1 JL ,;~ 2~~ :::: ~r:in 11:i: 1J1s .~::~,tDG!li 1,,:jl, 1',i:1~ ::r~~11 1n'c°' :t ~.:: ?::: r..r: -~ g~:~ ":li1 i; ~~:~ !~:.t ~;: ;:~;;
IOW •lV. 45 MVr$1 74 24:V. Petr!~ St :191/!o 41'1V, WVt"llol ·, 71', Am tn~ 10,00 10.00 Lt~ R•Ch 16.tl> U.•6 Br;t~•SI 2.'G I """' 511; Sl10. Oo~•Pw I.Cl 1J 31 Jll 31 lln!on 0 3 v, )1~~ Huoo1 d 16Y, N'" Perini l:\lo 11'o WldW E" >!:: 1 Am Grth I.SJ 1.11 .. e~not · ,,I BranllO.lr .50 I 111'~ 17 17 .... -f. \.1 D<•YfUiCP 1b ~ •I'~ 40'~ 4!\\ 1"
olffl!ln E I'" 9\lt Hyett 311> l?V:z Ptlrol! 44 d Ytrd Elec 6'o Am M~t 10.11 ll,!1 ~11~. 's''-. •'>" ,•.UOl Brisl M• 1.2CI ?&S 61 .01:. 61 l 'io 0ual1n CP ~ :lt>'o ~ • 19'~ ·:,:
""'"Pac 1.1' .16 L,fe 1n~ 1.SI l.l'O B"W'I Hi t. ., ' • "" on · ••' • • .--. -Am NGW l.50 .I?'-e '" 4 · Br!~IMY oll 01 • ol" oo • -o o I·~ ''' O > I l 'l'• J 11.n<hor GrO'JP: t'"" -1.41 t .1t BW'IH• plA7 J Jt 311 Jt 1• OuPant pU. IG "'~ 1A\~ 1.'iY •••.•
I C•o ,,90 10.10 POm•I SIYltl Fch: ,,,,,,,, In ,', •,•,,. ,·,2~ 42'" -11~ lluP011t pf], I SI'') Sl'i !>il'o .• t • G•w:h 11.111s,sc caned IO.ll.eo,ll,,_"c · " •• 111-o-••D...,Ll 1.u •o :lt'i 71'• n••-"•
L kh d P . Inv 9,7l 0.66 Canit 13.1• U.U w-.. O" 10 1• JJ>; 1• .+ \~ DUQLI 'Pl ? r110 ~'I•;, 3?"i ,,,.. ·' Fii Inv 10 119 11 'l'l Mui U.61 IS.•7 Br.own Co ~f 1J 11>.;. 111.1 111.'J + '' Oymo In ,jo&I 114 1P\o 7l1"o 1.f -f.1'~ Oc ~e romlses Anoc lll(ll 1:si 1:u Menhln 1.91 1.61 ~wn5~'f ~ 1J 71\lt 21'• 211., +'It Dvn1 Am .IO 17 19•,i, 11-• It~ -'1 •
.. ~u~oou.:h11~6.i 1.n ~:~ ~'jg a1l P1:ll B~nswlc .0"9 15,: ~i;: ~? g:? ti~ -E-F-
!un<I B 1~.10 10.f~ Ml .. Tr 16.13 I .1' Buck~li 1 . .-0 • 111 11''2 11'-:. + II> E11ltf' h 10 11 lll9 21 lJ\'o + '• tock 7.1.' ,.61 M1tn ·1.SS l.S! BllC'l'Er 1,20 1U 1''~ 111~ :190.:. + :11. E A~ · >•'c _,
C c1 Co 6.!IS .11Mllhf'n 1l.'3 1S."1 Biid!! Co 10 :It 77'• 7~'i ?6:\0 I'> e'" r .50 796 g~ .. 75 ·•
T C h BlllS~ I,, 1.•I McDon 10.'6 116& Biid!! Co Pl 5 ,.., ,.,, 1'.!'• u•:. +111> e~:1.Fstrl,1~ fl 2Po 71ll ?I•• -'l
0 Orrect eyenne ~:~~~tk 1f~1r.~ ~~v~c"~ 1~:;j ,,:~1 l=etF•n" .. ~ .~ 1i:: ,::.: ,i;~ _·,,,~·~:JI~~· ,,~ 21~ ~:: n~: ~~ tJ~. 11os1on 1.95 t.1~ Mao<lv ' U ,'4 16.00 Buff Forae I S l• '33'1 ;fl''>_ \~ E > ' ·1 < ~ llll -IJr(k00 ST ll.24 16.•I MorlOll> FUncl•~ 6ulo\I• 10b H 4rlo 47'\' Illa +1 a,on • • " 3''" 31•> 3~\\ + •,
B URBANK (AP)
Lockheed.California Co. pro-
mised the Army Monday that
it can solve the technical pro-
blems of its 250 mile-an-hour
AH56A Cheyenne helicopter
~ul:ox~ l~.2t 11.IJ Grwl~ 1?.47 IJ,61 ll unk Remo ?•t !4'~ U\'o UV._,, El Dn Pll.lt •I S5)l JS"-Js-, -1•1 · . IG Fii 1n.54 jl.•2 lnccwn 1.67 S.12 BunkR PIU 0 1 •l'~ 41 12 ,, Ebl>sco Incl ? 'tt 11\o 16\'J 11"o _ "' than desi red !hght speed. aMOl•n tf.ri, ~·~ ~i~'"Fo ~·:r.'1 2fif Burl 1nc1 1 . .t .-111 ll'~ 31'1• :M•> -110: ~~~:'oMo.I ·~ .. !?,, '"' lll't + ~. lo•! llCNC · o---. · · Bu"""' 10 t QlO>,' JOlh ~ '4 · '"' .... 41 •l +1'-o The production contra c I ao•," ,•~.· ,', •,~ 1\·;~ M~F ~~1~ ~ ..l t·'J Bur""" · 1.20 n 1~ ,., 1..,..,, 1 EctJ:w>nBrM ' 11 •1~ '11'./i ~ -" ...
all f Ch ~ " · · M · · Burrouohs wl •,,,,,,us 1151~ 1 EG&G .to 2:0 .1!1'1 :19't «1•1, tH• c s or 375 eyennes at a ha:1~1:' Fftff u.50 &,,inc ll.j"j·jl e~11unv 1Ju 1 75:u 1.1,1 ,j,,. _ \~ E1Mv51c .Otir 'TI :~ l:~ ~Po, • .. •.•
C"'t Of about $875 mlll'·on, ·1n ~ft~ s11< 1.96 2.I• Mui s11rs 2j-1 2 . 1 B~11erJ5h .la 1 :11 l,,_ 31>.1 -:u ~~~5 1~~~ GfW'111 7,M 8.ll Mu Trvsl .t2 i·'° ( F.l~c! Spec '1~99,1J I 1;:.tl~l ~ ~ addition IO a $100 million Inc..., a.11 •.d HEA Mui 11,,. 1 ·~ - -El!l!nNat Ind J1 14 13Yo ll\~ + \\
research conlract for the JO ,~::·t~O<Jn'-" 3·1J n:1 )"~ B:~ H~ c,.,"', •,.!! '~ , .. ,. )74" 31'' ::i·. -'• EIPaS<>NG ' 111 21\i 77~ 22 .... -~· . F net 1!.J& u •• N•I lnvnr 1.U 1.11 "-n ll ' • l?lo ll', ,. (~ Eltr1 C~ 1.70 41 lS"o JJ'A JS'll -\'o
Prototypes bui lt. F~.,.,, 1M.s~111,1s NII Se-c Ser : C1ll1h M ,111 106 7S•t ,. 7S. -t l'lt Eltra pl1,t0 z210 2''• :it•; 1'PO -,.. . snrlllll 1tS71 4.~J l!alan 11.lll2.36C•mPllL .•Sa 103 JI '• Jlit "i'•+I EmerEt« I JJ 5.J'" S1\'J 53'Ao ,, Wagncrsa1dChe yc nnes f"'"'cal ii1.s110J1 Bo".o s.111.nca,mo.so 1.10 ,•,, l2Y.' n1,1, 31•,.-ll EmEI 111B.fl't •JI JI 37 -1 1 Olvod • j> i )9 ( n Brew «I 11-11 1p, i h EmervO.lr .Ill 11 51~ ~U '57 +·
'an• have made 900 £lights totaJJng o~:'~~v· SO 5.96 l>I SI~ 1: J :.5 m' o'•" ,; ,.! •,., 11"1 17~, W Em~arl .60d 11 ,,,,_ •7~1 ~1'~ ... .. " h " •rw:I 1-110 U,J7 lroc:om S 9' 6.Jll al\I 0 ,JD -11 ~,, j1S. •i. EmpOllf 1.60 1a ]! 30\lo :ioto .. . 4.,.,-ours. Giwi11 1:11 1.ff s10C1< 9.5' 10.•1 c B11o1 11 ,•11o 11r; -1' Em""'re .90b ' "'" " "°' + ~. cellation of a production CQn· [""""'e'c 11 IM 11. G .... 111 10.00 ia _tJ ar11run '·"° ,", SJ>, 5> · -lo E!ldJoh" .llP 1 JS'~ JSYo :iru + ~ ~t ao S~l s. NII w"t 6.H 1.10 •r111i. ,..o !!=" j"', ll"' 1 "" EnvlhMln .Mt 111 21\ro 76 16 -1~ tract \\'Orth hundreds 0 r ~monwllh Fd5: Ntuwrlll 17.1 71.11 aro C&ull 5 lll 71 h Env M Pl•.7S I 162 161 161 -I ~.::::e::t.!-'".• _:-,:r 0t1D Fd 11.0911>1 New Ena 10. 11.76 i••o~LI \·'l 1f 360\'o U:.. •i. EnnlsBui .6-1 6 olO JtV. ..0 + i\
gunship.
Threatened w Ith
millions of doUars, the firnl 1..ccm 10 S6 I ·~ New '1ar x. 2 21 .n aro ch .60 2 31 11 -~ E•iotGas ,_Ml ,1 JS .1I~ 3,,\ __ ". lnVHI ia::J-1 I. New Wld 14.9016.~t •rrltrc.i .611 i. "°,., lm·. olO + \' ESB Inc I 20 11 27 :1611) 26u, ...
b 'ti d I th Ar I Slack 10 1' 1. Newlon 16.11 11.16 ltr(;n .S7Q J l '" ll"!o -\'• "•QUI"' .JO 57 7'1''1 2?"< ,3\lt + ~ SU mle 0 e myapan ~wnhC&D•:902. Noreo.>;I P.72H.'n!'"1trrf .4H1 ~ l\1 l/1.•, .. 1.esse•lnl120 ~ll7''Jl\l"l6"'+•
for COnunued •-.,elopment of F• _, •.I' 10. oc.naoh t.u 10.0'J: •se J J lth jr:? 1,.. + ~ E•n•I c., ·.. _ .. ,,, •• ,, +· ""'' Ol!ICI Bii 10.2• 11.U Otnt<1• I.ff t.OI ~SI~ Al.6' I DU .... 2Silli "" . .•• 7T .. ... -
the aircraft which it said mance :1:11 1l:~ ~I:~ \grf ~~nd 1t:ri 'tPi !:~:~Tr '1.~ 1~ "~• ~ 36~ =,•' ~~~'::& ~ ~~ t'~ ~:~ +.J: "combi'nes the best features of cone"'" u.16 1t.16 ~ wms 1'."6 1&.66 c1 M1rQC11 u ," ,ll..," ,f,,, -."' ;, ,'",,'°..'.o, " ..... 200 • 11 1a 11 . ,
!
<lf'J l"V 1J,2S lJ.6) (\'Nell 11.J11,.1l e<:o CP .to I I ,, ·~ •1 S9V. 511 ttl~ +l>li
th h Ii t d t h j m In¥ S 11 6.JI ~ooenhm V!'llYal tll-CP 1 101 '4\r. t114 6J\lo -1\o EV•rsf>lrp 17 191i 111'1 19 -.!'i e e cop ers an e B . f I ~~Let 16:.a 110i\ tnn ~ t.11 t,11 el•n olA•.50 ,,2 "'• ... I.<. 6'\loo -.... E•CellO 1,75 :JI 3Hi ll ll'lo + ....
al.rplane." ~trv Cato 1s0111 .21 •Mui •.tJ t.tl enco/ns .JO 511-. 55"1 S6V. -'' FectorA .l•b loo '6i• SI 54 -"•
WIDOWED'!
DIVORCED? Depletion Tax Credit
l'le S 11 town w a:11 t·•• P/'!111 lS.4'1 16.fl !en1 0¥ .100 1t 111~ 1••~ 1•11to -•• F•!td>C .SC. 3S1 I? Ill\ 17\IJ +1;11,, One or the 10 Cheyenocs oeveohM7l,Jl 7 ,l~Pllorim 10.,11 1.2'2 enHIHI I·~ ,• ?t;,1 ,.,. 211o-•,Fa1tdl Hiiier 18 II\' 11 11 -H· I i' Inc 137' 150? Pllol I s l,61 tn 1111.1 . ""' u1. :ui ..... Ftlrmont 1 S1 n 21·~ 22 +Ii built so far crashed March 12 I wire u:jl 1'.7S Ptne 51 12. 1 1 .n '\1LI '"· 140 11~• 1n1 Ji>. +11.lt F11rmn1 "' 1 l ?l"• 7l'.ro ,J.,. _ ,~ • Tr 9, 6 10.1' P\onttr U,JJ 16,IQ tn llP/ 1.1 !! 11'• 11''> 211.'J -lo Fels!lff .-IO 7J 13•~ 1) 1] _.""' and Secretary or the Army NE\Y YORK (UPll d Sllr •.0'2 I.to p •n l~v U.!>-1 l•.kl CenlLI I .u .•• 21:i,, 27~. n:i;, .•.. Fam Fin 1.lO 46 261. ?6\'o ~ -1, -OowTJ! I" 7,4S I.OS Price Tr 1•·f! ?1,19 CenMPw 1.1' 11 191, 19 19 ..... Fenslttl Inc Jt '15•,~ 71\'J UV. +lvt
Stanley R. Resor said the loss Another anti-trust suit charg-g,~~fu~EL11.0, i1'.ls ~~g.,1on1 g:31 1tli ~!::\ i'!'!.1 1:U .~f ~j~~ ~~~! ~~it:: \\ ~!~a~:: ~ •s ,,,.., 31 21v. ~'· "brough~ into sharp focus" 1·ng International Busi·ne~~ E••.,...Howerll: Pu•1t1n 11.6112.61 CtnTii'U .IOb ll ?•'• JJ'~ 2111 -""Fedder• .M 1:1 t; . ., ~ ~~ :t ~: .,.. a•l•n n.5t 11.lf P~n•m FuITTl. Cerro Co 1.60 IJ JS'• ™1. JS-" ,_... , • _ "' " ,
A mutual fund investin1 In tht
development and use
of the ocean and its resourctt -----------Ml~ Dktrlb•t9rs. IK.
M ,,_. Slrwt
..... T~ H.T. llMM
,.,.. • ._ ••IMf IM• .,_peet1111 Of'I
ttt. ~"°""'"Ii: fund, Inc,
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -
The nation's independent oil
producers are mapping plans
for a 60-day campaign to
offset y,·hat they say have been
serious but unfounded
\Vashinglon attacks against
their industry's tax structurr.
A basic objective is to
preserve oil's controversial
27 1.:.1 percent depletion tax
allowance.
Representalives ot 12 i;tate
and regional trade grovps met
Sunday and selected L. Dan
Jones. Washington counsel for
the Independent Petroleu rn
Association of America, to
coordinate the campaign,
The opening phase of the
campaign will center around
the Z6 memberi; of the House
\Vayr and Means commiltee
which today is to begin draf.
ting a tax reform bill.
Rep. Wilbur D. lltilles ( [).
Ark .>. the commit tee
chairman. has been friendly to
depletion in the past but l'iaid
last wetk the tax allowance
has become a symbol or tax
reform and that it would be
almost Impossible to pass a
rtform bill without some ad·
juslment.
.. Tht' next 60 days will be
the most critical 60 days we've
faced in a long time." said
Harold M. f.lcClure Jr., the
national trade group's presi·
dent from Alma, f.1ich.
t.1cClure and Al Kiltz, f.IL.
· Vernon, Ind., said they "·ere
encouraged that President
Nixon. through a pr c s s
sceretary. had reaffinned his
support of the depletion
allowance.
He said the indcpcndenti:;
must be alert to any
breakdov;n in communications
bet'A·een the White House and
other executive branch agen-
cies.
Netum Steed, Wichita· Falls,
Tex .. president of the Texas
Independent Producers &:
Royalty Owners Association.
said there is a need to be
realistic .
Jones said the industry ha!\
many friends in Congress but
1 hat some have been shaken a
bit in recent months by such
incidents as the. oil spill in the
Santa Barbara ChaMel off the
California coast.
';We must rus.wre them we
have a good cause." he said.
Jones was :ielectetl a s
coordinator at a conferenct
htld in conjunctioo ~·Ith the
mid·year meeting ol the na-
tional trade group.
ASS~SOV£R
$425,000,000.00
lechnical problems w h I ch •fa ch 1· n es Corp wi'th crw111 11.57 u.11 oui1 lj-u.s11•r1-1ttd .IO u JJ' • »v. »li ····· .......,og · ~ '4 33'\ T ·~ ,. . lrocom 6.11 1A\ D 1 ' 16.•? erl·lecf of,90 I ll ll,, .. n ...... FtOPK EIK 7$ 21U ?11' 71V. -to
might delay production. The restraining competition in the ~?:~•I ::ll H:ff ~~ 'i:~! 1~:~~ isr!,~1~fo13 I~ n1i 1.i; r.i~·+ ~ ~.:,:;~1.r ti ~·~ i~ ~a-~~~
Army Issued a "cure notice" electronic computer business ,~~~l' ::·~I~:.~ v"i~r.:1 ,~·J 1!;J~ :::~r 1~ 1~ ~~ W: ~t: ~ ~ ~.J's'i:nr1::J 11l~ ~i1~ ~:z ~(? .:.!'i. to Lockheed early this month. has been filed in New York nerov is:.U u.11 Aeo Tech 5.19 6.u ~1r1er'Nv 1 ' s1i4 ~\'• s~ ! .., Fl!<IDS!r .9S l•s l-1 "'' l-1 •. ' kh "'l!rist t,'910.fl Re~ert 1S.Dt1~."9 /\a-.eB~ 2.70 nl !IO " 10 I FeO M!<t Inv 11 16'• 16•~ 16V, +I• .. tonday's release by Loe eed Federal Court Tuesday. ovitv 1a.611t.•1 Sch11sr.1 r 11.n ~.oo NstBnk w1 2, "•J.. 12•• 51>• "' F•rro co 1.79 •1 54 s,,.,. 5~ _ •• · th not• , . , i!·G:n 1',ll 71.07 Sc1/llGtT' F11nct1 : llecker MGI ,.. 21"4 tt•~ \I FlbrebtO .l'O 331 43''4 '1'' 4! -" '• was In ansv.·er to e ice. The plalntiff is applied Data ~~'~ 11.n t"1 1nv MM 1JJ c-1n 1.m 16 4j>4 "' ~ -1-1v, F1tot0c1M 1,.t0 12 J1 lll'~ 31 + •1
Lockh d r l'f · p I R h I f p · versl In 169) 11.3!' 5oecl llt.1140,11 ChemNY J.6G :it '411) 61._., 6J~ _,., FIUrol 1 21 ~' .., 40->.t ee -...a 1 orrua res· escarc , nc.,, o r1nceton, x111or 21.M :lt-•j Bal 6.11 "·u Chemw•v .l'O 21 nh 1s-. lSJt -"" Fin Ftoeratn 111 J•)• Jl'h l-1'\lo +f ·
d I Ch I S S W g 'd N J 1· f I 1lrld 1).1) IS.1 Corn 51 11.S.11.$-1 Cftfl v, I 60 I ._...., •~\~ ''"' ... Flrestn• 1.60 191 6ll~ '1 61 +,~ en ar e . a ner sa1 ... a supp 1er o sys ems rm &Mu 12.1111.u s11: Div u.Gl 1s.11 c11t1 Oh!o ·• it 11111 •~ 61'11o + ~ F•tC!lrt 1.1o11 122 •7'\ "'" •n<i +1t.
..
'
one pis ·ncorporated i d The ., h Ftd Grlh 11,89 6.27 SM £ovU ..... •.15 CMlf'brO "' I.I 4J•, 45'~ ~s.., -.... F•INC't' 1.IOa 90 n•. 12"1> )l\(o i-\'o w e I n an programs. su1 c arg· ffd c•o 11.JS n,,1 Ste Inv '·" ,, .. Chit£1s1 iu 11 11 16'• 1•r-_..,, F•1Ns1r .l!oa • ~ lJ l• nv, -··~
kl ln'ld 71.ll 1'. 6 I So..:$ 11. I lt.116 ChiMStPP (I 11 ._._, 44\t 40a -11' Fl~r$cl .1• 11 21V. :01.li tl + "' wings and a pusher propeller policies hlld damaged the Fln1ncl11 Procorm: 1<1e 111111·14 ChMSPP oi s 2 14 1• 1• _,..,Fleming .50 • 11•. 111, 11'11 +,.,
the Cheyenne -small fixed ed that IBM's marketing 10 FunO 17·" 1•·r. ~!« Am 10·f1 11·11 ChlMi1 StP P 11 .u " •• .., _, Flschllc:l! 1.x 2 SI S7•1 s1tk _,
f ~nm t,JJ ,,ul •1 ml II 91 IJ D6 CMSP pf cl' 7 61 41 61 -1 Ftintto~ 1 ~ 76'o ?6"• 16\lt -·~ or forward speed plus a rotor plaintiff by retarding the ""'"1 s.JO i-1 a tnv l 0' 11.:17 c111 Music 1 1 2s ?s 25 , , F1• E c11e1t as lS4' :Ml'I ll?•· +•' . nc~ h 1k:a 11'~ :111~v~I l J~~ef,11l ChiP!!i:U 1,IQ I 0'• fS ... .IN + \i Fl~ G•1 .-IO Jl '17 Jll1 2H'o ~\1 for vertical takeoff--could be growth of the independent !!I /~r,~ 9:t11o's•. ver ,,.v u.1•n.n Chi RI Pie 1 21 211, 2111-Vt F11 Pow 1.52 1"' •n. ,,.,. .. ex"""'ted to encounter techni· computer software industry ,, Mul!I 11 .1~ 11.11 ~tFtm c;111 6.04 •n• c,~,"-!P,,, <>,N~ 10 17tl 11•1 2r~ -v. F1~PwL1 1.111 :n "'" lo>~ ~ "''• t"'" • sl N•! 8.ll I '9 Sti tt SI SJ 1J SJ.51:1 n ' f ,,. 20 61 116 ~ + '-Fii Steel ."O 7J 21'• 1'~ ?t<a -1-1:11 cal difficulties. But. he said, Damages of flW'IA million were f1e1 tao • 1• S1fldma~ F~s: c11oc•F1111 ·'° ,,',' ,",,, U'> 15>.11 -11 FllfDl"C• 2.oll 1~ •P~ t:i "" l'~ "'.,.., Flt! FO ...... Ind ,,.~. 1•.•• ~I C••ll I O•o c s • .t I~ fllfDI" Pf al I 61'' 11'\ 61'\ ll
•·we hare great progress and asked. Three . other ~nti-trust lf1~J • • · ·~1~, 1 ts ~I':::: 6:~ t:n cc11 ~=·'f" 1f :: . ., ;r• ;~~ + ~: ~~l1: .i\0 lf: ffl:: ~r\) ~.,., ..,.1;~
\\'e are fully confident that we suits ~re pending agau'\Sl 18.f.1, ~;:,.:r. ~:ff ;::~ s1f·1~1 Ft~ F2~~~'-1 ~~~:~1 i" ~ r,.~ ~1' ~~ .;_ l'll ~~F:r;.2~" 2! ~,~ ;tv. ~ .... ~~~
can overcome those problems includrng one by the Justice F1111r10 1J.1s u.3' •o 0o 16.Sf 16.5, c1nnc;E i.t:i 1t 21~ ?!'It 2n.. Foo•e ce .IO 11 1.,. u•, u141" . , Fr•n~11n GrOllQ: 1odl "·fi ••.tti c1nGt: p11.1s l30 nvt .. ni~ +1 Foote Min 1 19 .. 1'""' u1~ "
rcThma,1n,i.ncug.re, noti.,....,. sao·d the Department. fr, ;;r; D-~~nc:n&::: ,~: ,~:t ~~~f i~.O: ~ ~ ~~ U~ ~." ~::i'M:1,~ ]9I ~: ~\.'I :a -t·~ " -'P.t' lJ.tl u.~ 'MR Ao ,,, '11:" ClnSUf'\ ,.. I •1't •na 01,f-·~ F .... Mc1( .75 2111 m. JI•• 31'". "
Cheyenne had unstable rotor RAHWAY NJ (UPI) 111 1 » 1· Teech•, 1 .s os CtTFI~ .lei 111 '' * • + ·-FMcK 1111.10 • .n'> s1 571'1 ~ 11. • · · -'ntqm J,60 • $111:11Y1! ~flfYlll CIT F plJ,50 111 llO 111 +II.II F1111W'kl . .ob 1S 21h 11 11 -..
tionsl control during hover Courier Division agreed in ~,',',,~r ll:t. h:tl T~tr•'IO, .JR 3: 3 :it cf;'~' 1nv .. 1:iob,, 46l ,.,. '"" 11 . . Ft.,. SI• .J7 19 21•• 11 ,,., + ..
Oscillat1'ons 1'nad~uate d1·rec p I t C · Amer'1c Fr.ecim 9-" 1 · tcnncl 1 1·14 cu1e1 JV!;·, no '"'° """ '' -w. F1111 Wh p1 1 2 11 11 11 + .,,
' "' < l' t n n't' IJt &5 •1\'I 4611. •1 -'' t'retoSul 1,60 10 ll'I JI l-l"i _ t\
. ~.. -uro a or orp. s an Fund 11m 10.1111.-t TKh""h 1· ·H c11•., o1 , 411 1 Ht ll't tn +2 Fo)!boro .6G :11 JJ'~ J7\'I 371,1 _ •\
and rlight sideways, excessive principle to buy for stoc k ·~0 ~c •So& 10 ..S rin 1f1~ : 1 ::: 11v s1r1 "° s1 ?II 1110 20 -+ 1·~ Frue/ICP 1" " 3~11 Jt :u·~ -,..
\\'eight, \'ibrations and less Armored P.1otor Service, Inc.. ~:rJJ 1t% \i 0H; unllo""Ji""1 :U I ;ll ~i:~eg11 1..:, :: ~ ~ .. ~' :; : Fww• •~ ~'°.:::_ •2k Gat -:ti.
• • of Fort Worth , which has an· ~~1;,~ ~:'ll ff : 1 8n i.o Fu~·,2'1 ~:m\11~ it: 1~ ~""' ;~ ~ .:... ,. GAc CP 1,50 J11 6l~ 60u. 6l +1~
nu.I sales of 13 million for ~~•rd~ 21 > . ~um 1·" 1,1s c1.-J P11 J.511 i» 'sv. ss11o sru. +-. GAC co • 1 1 o ., .i -tt ' ~&C I t'I I . 1 t·!j Wc I .1~ 1 .Sil Cl.-Jlle 2.111 5, Ullo lol(\ 14t, +"° GAF Corp . ..0 ~14 ?6'' 15\i 7S''t -~ T k C I t 'lOCk '""Gill 10.ISl.1 n :~.r.MC!Of111L .JOll IOI 21\t 20\lo t1 t•+14CAF pll,:IO 10 l3\.'ll JJ ll\lt-~lft .. on rac . -. :~-· ~-:t t·!1 ~~r.... fr:. ru::! ~=~··.,·r lf Ir' rr4 Jr' ++tt i-~s511:..~1J' 2~ : ~ • +
BURBANK. Callf. (UPI) -ti:OO":"" :tn !t;r r:~ln t~ t:U ~=: :i111l1.l1 :: ~ ;t~ ~ = t =11111."560 J-lfl\ =-~ :3 =··u \\'ASHINGTON !UPI) i:IM•nr'I 15,t111.1So1s1t I· 11lico.sts1 G•s • .11'\<1,, ~+\\GatWOoO 30 n. ~ 1~ "
Gener.I Motors r-..... Menasco Manufacturing Co. nul>Smn 10-a 10. I V•nc:eS ... . .4 !"!i' .,,_.. 11 o .. ,,_. .1 .. ~ Gll'dOtn 1.)0 ,, 32 fl"" ,•,1~ = ~ ..,..,rp. ,,.. 1· I Gtft 6.6j 1· Vendrbl 1· ·m DC ol ll? lU 72¥, 11~'7' -(1 G•<f«t .II 2 1J\~ 21\t 71 oounced receipt of a $3.8 has obtained contracts tota 1ng ..:orr..., ~1~,, · ~knor!ICIPI : : oc• 1~ i.,. , ,,,.. J1"' tn1o + "oem1n1 c1,:. '' ,,.. 11 '0:: ~
million add.Ilion to an existing SI 4 million from Loc:k:heed ~ F,: 1lit i.: ~.i1i'$1 •n 1 , I . ~~A· ~1: ,,f: :! ~ :~ +i-. t:r:~" 1:~ ; il\4 il~ h:: .!
Army contt<1ct. The contract Aircraft Co. ·for "'Ork on the ~ 1,:U 1~:~ :::i:,:w U· 1,,:,. g::~:, :: ~ 3"' ::t ivi~,a H~•~:O., ':f 111 ""' ~ !1;-i
CO\•ers advanced production landing gear of the Air ~11~~ 1:j' •rn· w 11/r' 1 ~~"'!°i'rs.:i~ 11~ H'i? Si sot,! &!!~~'.~ '! ~~ rr~ $1u,_,·~
engineering on the XM·70 .. ~orce's c~ Galaxy· transport l~~~i'f 1f I : ~ ~~ 2':fi :§ i1 ·~ ::.:llf t c~~ ei.a C' =lu \(~(,,:::: 1:~ :; ~:~ 25'~ ~~: -:;.~
main batl1e' tank. plane. 1:: Pi:i11c: a· I ' ~T 1.t2 .1t es .:rt '1 n:Z ui:t JI:+ .• ~o.;!T ~ tl: g~ Jta Ir~ ~
~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~.,, 1 '
llTEIESJ DAY·ll ta-DlY·OUT
M -CAI llATCI m ~.
HEAD OF'FICE i·~itl\'··~-3.'J~ ~~ OTHER BRANCH Off'JCES
118 UVlllCS • I.ID ASSICIATllll.:
llAI IEAT m
315 E•st Color.do 8oulevard-..i. ,_,., J!\l
Pa19d•n•, C•lifoml• 11 lOI -''! .. WHt Arc9dla • OMN
Gt.nd•tt ' I
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Monday's Closing
I
ii
York ·Stock Exchange List Prices-Complete New .. =·---'ll:;r--------1
DAILY ,!LOT -
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J f ' ~LY PILOT
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llUM
TutSday, Aprlf 241 1%9
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Bomb ·Control ·Nea
Sovieu Step ·T~ra ··ga~ne1sing Power
WASHINGTON ' (AP) Dr, Anwa Bishop of the OO&Wtd o1 a IOCOild Without
Soviet. scletjlisla apparenUy .AEC, chlel ol tile American any eocape ol tho cu. 'The
have made Im~ Calno ,..,.am, said in an interview l!ealecs'111 -callld,pluma. ~~w:.i h~ !7'"oo1...-be!.,. the -Soviet achitve-ldea)ly ~.lit •i<!·~ '°'
that coold lead to ·unllmlted men! · becamo· -· -Olat ~ .. ol.lhrJllld lll in
cheap electrical power. prevloos gains by scleolbtS of ·• <11b!C "'!'~of apace.
Succesa in taming the pro-teverll coontries had opened Rote said the latest Soviet
th t --•--the • heat . · · , report ,feU It times ...._. o1 cess a ,......,. '"I',• definite J><08l'OCIS for having the oh~ s?"\e
and the h1g bMi! o f h y droge .. pow<red reacbln \ said Al1llmovlch ~
thermonuclear e i: p J o s·l ons !\vell betore the tum of the cOinpleUon ot .. a i..a
would be a step tow~ reac. centllr,: ., · mach1de ii .. .:_..... Lfor!
tors using the neaf.limhJess · tbe eDd of ttda ~..,.. ...
hydrogen m ocean water-in-BEATING GAS , are well iicJvSr:=.~
stead of uptDSive unran1um .One ~ be said. WU larger· oaf, cajable . of. 5$
-as fuel. that. American. soviet Jnd million degrtta . . .
Prof. David Rose, a nlicl~ some other scientist# were · •
engineering expert at the routinely heating hydrogen gas ENERGY PRODUc.JID
Massachusetta Institute of to temperaturet· exceeding IO The energy ,. an atomic
Technology at cambridge, million ~ in some types· bomb or an •orilinarY ·lllldear
relayed in · a telephone iJt.. of ~-.reactor is produced when
terview the details of a report Although the f i I u re t atoms of a heav)'. radloactfve
from Academician Lev A. reported by Rose for the metal such as uranium are
Artsimovich, director of the Russian uperiment w e r e split. In the fusion j\roceas,
Soviet Union's work in the lower than that -about 20 four atoms .of · hydrogen. the
field. million degrees -the tern-simplest of alI t no w n
Rose, a key consullant for perature was held there for elements, fuse into 01* atom
AEC Returns Loaned
Silver to Treasury
t h e U n i t e d s t a t e s one-fiftielh of a second. which of helium, releasing energy.
government'& efforts in ,the is longer than earlier ex~ Nuclear fuel& such a s
same field, said the Soviet periments. ur.,utmi are ~naive and
report indicates "the best 1be significance or the difficult to purify, but
combination of ei:perimental' Russian report, Rose said, is hydrogen is cheap and plen-
ingredients yet achieved by that it represents the best tiful. A variant' called heavy
any nation" in the nearly ~ combination of results so far. bydrosen .Or deuterium is
year-old worldwide q u e s t • The best combination would ordinarily used. ·
WASHINGTON tUPI)
They say it's a law ·· of
(polltica1) nature that no
federal agency ever gives up
anything it can get its hands
on. • .not without prolonged
screaming, anyway.
If that is true, the Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC)
has been violating the law; it
has given back to the U.S.
Treasury nearly 14,700 tons of
silver. It was in some in-
stances physically hard to do,
but the AEC did it, without
screapling.
The most recent return in-
volved more than 2,145 tons of
silver worth about $ 1 2 4
million.
Back in World War JI silver
became more precious than
ever"because it has the highest
electrical conductivity <lf any
natural substance. Copper was
scarce as a result of wartime
demands.
WENT TO TREASURY
So the Manhattan district,
the AEC's wartime
predecessor, wenl to the
Treasury for silver.
The silver was used in elec·
trical conductors at Oak
Ridge, Tenn., as part of an
electromagnetic process for
separation off is siona b I e
Uranium-235 from n o n •
fissionable uranium.
Eventually, this way of
separating U-235 was aban·
doned in favor of the gaseous
diffusion p r o c e s s now
~ Joyed on a grand scale at
/ uak 'dge; Portsmouth, Ohio,
and Pa h, Ky.
In the meantime, silver was
put to work in the atomic pro-
ject where its purposes in·
eluded the c o i I s of huge
magnets, which n 0 rma11 y "I'm excited about it, and so be a temperature of 300 The latest · Soviet advanee
would have required copper, a is everyone else who beard the million degree$ for at least was made in a machine called
report," he said. a "tokamak." a 1pecial usually cheaper metal. version ·of the doughnut..
FIRST SHIPlllENT GAINS REPORTED Valley Homes shaped device UJed 10
The first shipment of silver Specifically, Artsimovlcb generate the plasma and ~
bullion was made from the reported a combination o! Decorator Set fine It in the macneuc lield. Treasury's West P o i n t gains involving production of All such devices ha v e
depository in October, HM2. terrifically h o t electrified magnetic coils aroubd· the ei:-
The silver bars were recast hydrogen gas and its con-Carole Eicben Interiors, a terior, but the Soviet version
and rolled into long thin strips finement, however brlefiy, in-Fu 11 er ton· based sub-has a pulsating eleetric cur-
whicb wound up in magnets a side a magnetic field. d evelopment merchandising rent on the inside.
hundred times larger than any Until 1962 the United States organization, has been re-"As a rough anaJocy," Rose
previously built. was the uµques\laned leader in tained by PBS Corporation to said, "this extra current
Timber Drive Start s These magnets were so research in the field but the decorate the four unit model twists the magnetic field, and
powerful that their pull on the Soviet union Jtas since closed complex at their Century the bot plasma, into a rope-
nails in workers' shoes made the gap by mounting an effort HOrnes development ln FO!Jll. like configuration. And this
walking difficult. They tend-twice the size of the American tain Valley. twistineu and ropiness tends St. Regis Paper Company loggers step across thousands of logs as they help
ed to snatch wrenches from one in both manpawer and According to John Parker, to confine the plasma longer direct them down 30 miles of the Machia~ River from Township 31 to Whitney~
workers' hands, so it was money, the Atomic Energy president of PBS Corp., the than might otherwise be possi-ville, Maine. Some five million board feet of timber will be guided down the
necessary to develop non· Commission says. ~model will open J une 1. ble." river during the annual.IO-day log drive. magnetictool~ts. ,-----~~~-----~-'-~~~-~-~~---~~-~~-----'=--------'--=---~----------~-~
The magnets were the
hearts of devices c a 11 e d
calutrons. Long alter mass
production of bomb stuff was
turned over to other pro-
cesses. calutrons and their
great magnetic fields, created
by electricity surging through
silver coil~ did fine service as
producers of high purity forms
of various elemental
materials.
RECOVERY TOUGH
To recover the Treasury's
silver from the calutrons was
tough. lt jnvolved unwinding
miles o{ silver ribbon coils
worth about $140 a foot.
Some body in the AEC
figured out that all the silver
borrowed from the Treasury,
if cast into dollars stood
upright, would stretch !rom
New York to Chicago.
Anyway, the AEC is return-
ing it all to the Treasury
where it again will become
part or the "national defense
stockpile" for future use. if
occasion demands. in elec-
trical conductors. it will not
be turned into coins.
non-
ovingsoon?
Call US· about
'
p phone service.
F a ee-savi1i9 Device
Peru-U.S. Cris.is Just
Delayed, Not Solved
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
A face-saving device has
postponed until next Aug. 6 a
major crisis in United States-
Peruvian relations. .
But it is only a postpone-
ment and unless by that date
agreement is reached on aim·
pensation for the $120 million
international petroleum com-
pany propertie~ seized by
Peru's military government
last Oct. 9, the l,l.S. by law
must take action certain to
reverberate through the whole
ol LaUn America.
The Hickenlooper Amend-
ment of 1962 requires that the
United States cut off its aid to
any country expropriating U.S.
property and failing to take
"appropriate'' steps to~:ard
compensation with in s I x
monlhs.
USED ONCE
Jt bas been Used only once,
against Ceylon in 1963.
Originally scheduled to have
taken effect this April 9. it
couJd cost Peru around SIOO
million in loss of aid, its sugar
quota and the right to buy
$SOO.IXKI worth of U.S. arms at
cut rate prices each year.
The I o o p h o I e permitting
postponement was an ad·
millistrative re\1iew of the
cue by government ministries
consi&ftd to have b e e n
uadertUenFeb.6.
Already U.S. families arc
removing themselves a n d
their furnishings out of fear or
reprisals from a country once
regarded as among the most
favorable for f oreig n in-
vestment in Latin America.
Total U.S. private in-
vestment in Peru amounts to
more than a half billion
dollars and the list of U.S.
firms operating there reads
like a "Who's Who'' of
American industry.
It includes such giants as
Ford. General M o t o r s .
Ch rysler, J ntern a ti4n a 1
Telephone and Telegraph and
ranges a gamut from cameras
to cosmetics.
I
The oil, which 16th Century
Spanish conquerors b o i I e d
down into pitch with which to )
calk their ships, bas been a
subject of controversy for
most of SO years.
BRITISH OWNERS
In 1922 an int ernational
court found that a British
company was the rightful
owner of the La Brea-Parinas
oilfields which lie in the ex-
treme north of Peru. In 1924,
the British firm sold to
International P e t r o I e u m ,
wbJch became the country's
heaviest tupayer.
Support for the government
action comes both from Peru 's
vocal Marxlat left and from
wealthy landowners whose
fortunes are among t h f
greatest In the Americas.
The Marxists charge that
tht company has been stealing
national wealth. EJ:lenslve
social rt!onns Instituted by
the company have been em-
I I
I
I
I
Just tell us when and where you're leav·
ing, when and where you'll arrive.
Your Service Representative will see that
'I ([c~] -.......... ®
0 J ~UJ
your telephone is the last thing out of your
old house -the first thing inro your new
one.•Anywhere in the entire Bell System.
We're· here to help.
"--
Pacific Teleph one@:
-·
Peru'• nationalistic and anti-
U.S. rulerl have refused to
budge from their position lhat
the company, a subsidiary of
Swwtard OU (Ne:w Jersey),
OwtS the cowatry more than a
billion dollars in taxes and 11-
legll proOU qalnst only 171
milUOP it is "1WDa: to pay in
compensadon. barrl.ssffig Wt.be landownen.~--~~--~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~---~-----;----~-----------------~-~
" I
-
? ·•
e
•
-
I
•
' . \~ .... ~----"\",--.;..;.I
JODi AH.'HASTINOS, .1142..Qi1
""""' ... 9, I,. I ,_. 11
. '
•
Rider ·s Mount
For New Show
Outstanding Orange Coast riders and their hofSes again are pre-
paring for the ninth annual Spring Horse Show which will take place
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, May 23, 24 and 25, at Loll Alamitos Race Coone, ' ' ·
•
' . sponsoring the show is the Long Beach Community Hos pital
Aulliary and proceeds will bene111--0ie cardiac care unit now in the
proce!' of construction· at the ho~pilal .
• 'Started on a very small aca1e. the show bas increased. in scope
until It has become one of the outsWldlng displays of horsemanship
ID the state. ·
' For tbe first time, there will be an evening performance on
Saturday, May 24, with the famed Long Beach Mounted Pollce·opening
t,be. show in a blaze ol color.
1 Again managing the show will be Harold Dakan, and serving u general c~ !Dr the auxiliary ii Mn .• F. B. Mosher. A>sisting
are the Mm ... Byron Brown and William Howell. Heading ·the many
committees which contribute to the successful show are the Mmes.
Carleton Peters, advisor; Richmond Barker, advertising; .HarOld
Kaiser, programs; Bernie Heim, decorations; Ed Jaszewski, hours;
Alden Carder, finance; stepbanie Swanson, food; Leonard Haynes,
grandstand, and John H. Coffee, press.
Also assisting are the Mmes. Harold Utteley, public relations;
Albert l)ei:ian, box seats; Robert Nichols, contestants; Arthur Doherty,
sponsors; Frank Dutcher, trophies, and Bryant Annstrong, tickets.
Price of admission will be $1 for adults and 50 cents for children
, under 12. Tickets now are on sale and may be purchased from any
member of the auxiliary or at the gate during the show.
HORSES TAKE THE RING -Planning their ninth annual benefit
horse show are members of the Long Beach Community Hospital
Auxiliary. Now one of the outstanding shows in the state, it will
take place beginning Friday, May 23, at 'las Alamitos Race Course.
Preparing trophies to be awarded are (left to right) Mrs. Leonard
Haynes, Mrs . Ed Jaszewski and Mrs. William Howell.
Su rf Sounds
League Views ~
Women' s Role
By JOOEAN· HASTINGS
ot 1t1t DellY P• Steff
TIRED BUT PLEASED were members of the
HWltington Beach League of Women Voters who at-
tended the group's state convention in the Grand
Hotel, Anaheim.
Orange County leegne members served as host-
esses for the gathering and participating were
Charlene (Mrs. Ralph) Bauer (wbo was in charge of
decorations), Cornell! (Mrs. Herbert) Johnson, Ruth
(Mn. Gerald) Finley, Virginia (Mrs. Norman)
Whipple, Jeanette (Mrs. John) Turk, and Rhoda
(Mrs. Ken) Martyn, president ol the Huntington
Beech leegne.
A special vote of thanks is due Charlene Bauer,
who spent the busy week before her husband's ,tec-
tion ro the boerd of trustees making hundreds of
signs and badges for the 93 delegations present:
THE FARELLS are tmvellng again! Bill and
Judy leave in a few days to visit Paris, London, Bel-
gium, Stockholm, East and West Germany, Rome
and Milan.
Jn each city they will be entertained by trans-
portation officials (Bill is vice president of the Long
Beach Transportation Company) and also by the
Lord Mayor of London.
While on the combined business and pleasure
trip Bill plans to look for a Rolls-Royce to replace
two of his collection of large rooter vebices. The fire
engine iJ: going back in service in Fountain Valley
and their English l4xi is going to become a fare.
collecting cab In Long Beach.
Judy especially' was lntrlgned with some of the
invitations lo'parties in London which specifled ap-
propriate attire as "formal or decorations."
'
WARM WE LCOME -Members and gnests will be
invited to blow out birthday candles and 'participate
in the installation of new officers when the com·
hilled chapters ol the Huntington Beach City Council,
. Beta Sigma Phi, gather for a Founders Day cele-
. bration tomorrow. Prepared to greet guests are
(left to right) Mrs. Ralph Adams, Mrs . Roger Denig
and Mrs. Jerry Kramer. '
Founde rs Day Banquet
Candles Blow
For Birthday
A combination birthday party and installation of
new officers is being planned by the Huntington
Beach City Council chapters of Beta Sigma Phi.
Chapter members will join forces for the 38th
anniversary of the group's founding during a ban-
quet taking place at 8 p.m, tomorrow in the Hunt-
ington Seacliff Country Club.
Taking office will be the Mmes. Roger Denig,
Fountain Valley, preSident; Edwin Clark, Hunting·
ton Beach, vice president; Charles Higley, West-
minster, secretary, and Philip Elmer, Huntington
Beach, treasurer.
In addition to the banquet, traditi~· cere-
monies will be observed. The history of. area chap-
ters will be reviewed and new members will be
received during a welcome to membership.
The first chapter of the sorority was formed In
Abilene, Kan., and today there are approximately
9,100 chapters including 2001000 members in the U.S.,
Canada and IS foreign countries.
Arrangements for the Founders Day banquet
are being made by Mrs. Don Shelton, Huntington
Beach, and Mrs. Ran~rouder, Santa Ana, co-
chainnen.
Toostmiltress for the evening will be Mrs. Mar-
tin Pecen, president ol the Huntington Beech City
Council. Other members participating in the pro-
gram will include the Mmes. Richard Sherrod.
Ralph Adamr, Robert Goll, Eugene Grizzard and
Robert Cannon of Huntington Beach and Bernard
Bailey, BellOower.
Vice prelident of the Southern California Coun-
cil, Mrs. Frank Robinson of Seal Beach, will 1erve
as installing officer for the new slate.
~ashiers Ringing Up Hostility While Asking for IDs
,_
DEAll ANN LANDERS: Wby do people
1e1 belJilertm and act tmullal when Ibey
want to eub • cbeck and are uked to
produce ldentllicoUonl Don' Ibey ru!ize
employees ha,. to keep -! It 1111'1
ellOUlh that I perlDll bu lft-faee.
I wwt In a larp ll<n and I try to be
u polite and CO""'Wate to our tal&om-m M ~. Yeolel'dloy wfl!a I llded
I -far -fltatloo, D mapped, ••Are 1'IU trJinc: to IQ' I'm a IWIDdler!"
A half -laltt a man tlftw bll credit
card.I end drlvtr11 Hcenle In my face and
yelled, "Same frab punl:I Jul! have to
allow their authority I"
I'm IUl'e I'm not the onty aalespenon.
who hu this problem, IO pleaee print my
letter. I'd like to tape li to the cuh
registu and 111 -IM 700, ., will
hundreds ol olhor ei14*Yees. -
ABUSED
DEAit AB: Uen11 )'IV Jetter ud I
INpo II ... ,._. be11<r udent.ud-
... • die J1r1 el die culem:en.
DEAit ANN LANDERS: I did I •low
burn when that guy wrote to c:ompla1n
that htt wUe acts Uke 1he'1 doing him •
favor met every two weUk. A timetable
lib U.twauld have been heaven to me.
I married' Aggie """' I was 24. She
wu II. What I lhouCi>t was high prln·
c:lplel turned out to be a pathok>gical
hatred for so. From the. night we mar·
rled Ul1lil I ltft ilere, 1ryeara later, AU!•
wore underwear and ankle aox under her nigb!IO'im. Sbe aleo bad this thing about
JubrJCatlhg her •skin so It wouldn't
wrinkle. At bedUme she put so much
crease on, she looked like she was fWng
tb swim the Eogu.b Chann<L
And then ot course there were the
headaches and backaches and colds. She
managed to get six colds a year, eacll one
luting a month.
1 now am married to a wonderful gal
who knows that 1t1 can be a bond that
ties a man and •<mlD tocettier. My onlf
rniltake wu waiting 17 years to lead a
....,..1 lile. You print lots qi l.1ttm from
womtn who th.ink their liUsbanda art sex
manJacs. p'1eue print "1his one IDd help
even the score -ALIVE ANO WELL IN
DECATEU~
DEAR AIJVE: Tbe ttore will oever be
e)'ea, btrt 1oar letter btlpt bllutt H a
bll Tllanu for wrillac.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: OUr lt-year-
old daughter Is a sophomore at a well
"-11 acl100I In the Eut. Judy alw1)'1
has been c:onsklered one of. the better
brooght up YoWJ& ladlo ol thls town. But
her larJcuage aiDce abe bu been away at
achool is appalling. Sbe U1e1 some very
dirty words in ord1nary everyday con-
,.riation. Her father, hall·kiddlne, said.
"Wben ~ were younger l used to wash
your qiionlh out with soap and I mi&ht
have to do It again ."
Judy's answer wa1, "I tell it like it is •
Words are onfy sounds. Get wlth ft.''
Whal lhould a parent oay In ruPoMfl
-SPEECHLESS
DEAR SPEECH: A ,._1 .-llJ,
"If 1oa wan& M stay .. &Mt a.... 1'1'•
betur pe decnt 1-It tell II Db.II
IJ. 11'0 doo'I p !tr plier tall -
~ and YOU'D better cet wllll 11.
U you have tr...ble 1.uJnc alon& with
your parenta:, if you can't get them to kt
you live '/1'Z own Ufe, 1 e n d for Am
Landers' bookie!. "BuiPd by Pamdlf
How to Get Mort Ftetdom." Send 51
cenls In coin wtth your r<Q\l<SI and a
long, 1tamped, .. u.addmled envelope.
.Ann .Landen wULI••. ~ lo help ,...
with your probltms. Send Ihm to her lo
care ol the DAILY PILOT, <neloafal a
stomped, ,.u .. ddressed envelope.
• •
~--111!11--------9'!"--9"!'---~--:-'"""'!~-~----:-----.,..-----~·~--=;--~--··--. -• ..
t
Horos~ape
Libra: Be Original
WEDNESDAY (!<)In one who wu r<llctnt. hani oo lo past. Reolif.e lu\ure
APRIL 30 Reme,mber ,.,.lull<ins C<lll· proopec15 can be bright. Opeo cemblC hlllth, dW . B e mind to new experience.~
By SYDNEY ONA1Ul moderlle. Enjoy )'Ollnelf but LEO (July ZS.AU(. 221 : Viall
•void eitremes. can provide pleasure. Be
ARIES (Mar. 1l·Apr. II): GEMINI· (I.fay II.Juno IOl: gracious. display sense of
Your UKMlibt! tum to love, Emphula , on WC<leU with humor. Be versatile. Be ready
romance. If slnlle, you could creative endeavors. You are with alternative met bods .
get engaged. U married, you able to prove major poinl Forces are scattered. Leave
could rediscover rilate in Provkte treat for y o u n g detailS to others -f'ine for
me.aningful way. Accent on penon, Th1s wlll make you writing, painting.
partnersblpa, contracts. Buy feel food, brln1 )o)l •• Dlne out. VIRGO (Aug. ~pt. 22):
"""'~;,...:--..-gift-for loved..one'---~-•CANCER (June..lt.July_231:.__ Your hunc.!!_ proves accurate in
TAURUS (Apr. 20-Moy 20): A<ceJ\1 pn pracllcal IJoues connection witll money. Best
It is your kind of day. Yoo are connecteet w:i~ reside.nee. You to heed own counsel. Those
surprised by show of affection can f1nilh a projecl Don't who try to be helpful may · be
mi S informed. Guard
possessions. Be r e c e p t i v e
wiUiout being careless. Summer
Wedding
Planned
A dinner party in the home
of Mr. and Pf.rs. C. H. Taylor
ol Balboa bland was the oc--
cukm for the announcement
of the engagement of their
daughter, Kathleen Taylor to
Stacy Mack Morgan Jr. of
Corona del Y.ar.
1be bride-elect a t t e n d' e d
Coron.a de! Mar High Scbool
and Orange Coast College.
Her fia.nce, son of Mr. and
1Mra. · S. M. Morgan of Corona
del MM, attended CdM HS
imd Arilona State University.
LIBRA (Sept. ~-221 :
Get started on project .
Display initiative. Your sense
of beauty and humor makes
you the hit ol any gathering.
Key i a to be original, to
emphasize your own desires.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21}:
Remember one who 'may be
confined to home, hospital.
Excellent for club, group ac-
tivity. Be with those who
share special interests .
Theater party hits nail on
head.
SA Gm ARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Friendly contact
could have good influence
where vacation, recreation are
concerned. Accept social in-
vitation. Stimulating discus-
sion tonight makes you feel
like a new person.
FIRST .THEY GET THE VOTE-And then they start messing with your sail
boat. Orange Coast College student Miss Dorothy Diii of Huntington Beach wilt
be attending the Women's Day on CampuS May 1 to learn bow to make insignia
designs for &alls. Th"'1ed, Fabrics for California Living, the day will begin at
9:30. a.m. with 'an open house in the sponsoring home economics department.
The couple will excban1e
vows in the summer.
KATHLEEN TAYLOR·
Betrothed
Leadership Exchange
Highlights Gathering
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Accent on dealing ~·ith
superiors. Import.ant person is
impressed with your ability.
Accept special assignment. If
diplomatic, you gain unique
privilege. Make most of op-
portunity. -;
WINGS WON
Susan Eccleston
·Former OCC
t .. ;
· Coed Posses , ..
1--i: Flight Test
flt• Miss Susan Eccleston,
former Orange Coast College
0 "•student, received her wings
from T r a n s International
Airlines.
ltr! The charter airline flies
wilhln the United States and to
c .Europe, South America and
~ .. the Orient. Miss Eccleston's
?:;·assignment will be Honolulu or
New York. The 22-year-old
hostess now ri!sides in San
Francisco and is the daughter
of Mrs. H. E. Wheeler and
\"i"I T. M. Eccleston of Los Ange-,_.r Jes.
The former cosmetology
.,, student completed an intensive !; four-week training cour s e
which included international
geography, custonu and im-
migration reg u I at I on s ,
military ranks and rules, avia-
,:-='tion and airline history, first
ti ::-aid and emergency procedures
, ... and in-flight food service.
-1-
Shape Up
-•With Yoga
-~.
~ ~ Halecrest Club, Costa Mesa.
will offer a series of eight
yoga classes beginning nelt
,.. Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in the
•'•clubhouse, instructed by Mrs.
"!~len Nelson.
Assisting in the classes.
wttich slres.! stretching and e 'tireathlng exercises, will be
aPMrs. Robert Seaney.
·l·, The classes are open to the
'. ,.public and anyone wishing In-
~' formation may call t.-trs.
Seue1.--
Women's Day on Campus
occ Covers Fabrics
A theme entitled Fabrics for
California Living will cover an
area.as big and varied as the
state itself -from hand-
woven fabrics for clothing to
dune buggy covers and sail irl-
signias.
Orange Coast College wjll
stage Community Women's
Day on Campus Thursday,
May I, from 9:30 a.m. to noon
to acquaint Harbor Area
women with the n e w e s t
developments in California
fabrics.
economics department with
the patio area designed as an
Oriental tea garden. An in-
fonnal fashion show will con-
tinue through the morning,
followed by a light brunch. At
11 a.m. a panel discussi911
c overing Fabrics-Fashions-
Facilities will take place in the
science hall.
Wielding the president's Westminster, editor· of Orange
gavel of Orange County Legal Squeezlns, and Mbs Joan
Secretaries Association will be Broadhurst, Balboa, programs
Mrs. Patsy AM Lewis of and legal procedure chairman.
Anaheim. Speclat guests at the in-
She will be installed with stallatlon ceremony will be
other new officers 1 n Mrs. Gladyr; Plato, Newport
ce remonies in the Revere Beach, past presiden t of the
Hoose. Tustin neXt Thursday slate association and NALS
at 7:30 p.m. director, and Mrs. Fern ~1an-
Miss Eula Mae Jett of Costa ning. Newport Beach, past in-
Mesa. founder of the organiza-ter-club chairman of the Long
lion, will be installing officer Beach Secretar.ies Association.
and also will seat the Mmes. Speaker for the evening will
Melvin A. Bunard, Anaheim, be Willi.am L. Aldrich, director
vice president; Paul P. Smith, of public relaUons and ad-
Tustin, corr es Pond in g vertislng of the Jrvine Co.,
secretary; Ruth S t e w a r t • who is noted for his lectures
Orange, recording secretary ; on public affairs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Good lunar aspect today
coincides with long-range
views, goals. Some plans may
have to be revised. Be sure
you have solid bjtse. Some
around you may be daydream-
ing.
PISCES (Feb. 1~Mar. 20):
Slick to principles. Minor
pressure is but temporary.
You really have nothing to
fear. One who attempls to
bluff has nothing to back
claims. You hold the trump
card.
IF TODAY JS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you have a fine
sense of humor ; you are
artistic and appreciate art ob-
jects. Vigorous changes due. II
single, maniage could be on
horizon. ,n The day will begin with an
open house in the home
Sea Sirens
A second presentation en-
titled Fabrics-Care and Clean-
ing will be offered at 7 tbat
evening in the student center.
Included in the exhibits will be
a display of new enzyme
detergents, irons, s e w i n g
machines, hand-woven fabrics,
Oriental fabrics and con-
temporary furniture and the
use of fabrics.
Theodore C. Bangs, Placentia, Representatives of the club,
treasurer ; Robert F. Mat-lncludlng the new president, To ordtr $ydnn OrMrr's ~~
thews, Huntington B e a c h , wW attend the state con-boollit:.ii ni. Trv'tn,!boU, "~':t"~
governor, and Barb a r a venUon ln San Die10 May 9-11. h'l'rl'r P~r'6~. '\A~ n;,, acm(:!!J Ctn.
Rowden, Westminster, NAl.31~===========":'':':":''"'=· •:~:·=VO"":":= • .. v=·=~=ij·~:J TOPS Se.a Sirens meet In
Killybrooke School, C o s t a.
Mesa, every Wednesday at 7
p.m.
Area women are invited to
the campu.s day. There will be
no charge.
'Room Service' With a Smile
representative. I~
Orange Coast residents
serving in other capaciUes will
be Mrs. Jack Manusos,
The Board of Directors oi South Coast Repertory, Orange County's profe ssional
resident theater, are hosting a Maytime Merriment party Thursday, May 1,
according to Ladislaw Reday and Jerrel Richards, co-chainnen. During an eve-
ning designed as a nostalgic tribute to the 1930s, guests will travel to the co·m.
panys' Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa for a champagne buffet. Following
will be a performance of the classic 1937 American farce, 1'Room Service."
Elaine Bankston, actress. doesn't need to act when serving Charles Cringle,
board director and his wife.
At
Reinert's
5210 "RAMILIN
ROii" DeWeese
Designs heralds a
silhouette -the
SWlMDRESS y,•ltli
separate panty ln Binheye Pique. Delicate rosebud
embroidery trims
the side-slit skirt
and neckline further enchanted
by a 'Stacup'
Inner bra.
Colon: \Vhlte/plnk,
Whlte/aquf',
\Vhlte/yellow.
10/16-$21 .00
Alse 2-pc-$21 .00
CALIFORNIA
Use Your -BtnkAmeri,ard, M•ster Ch1 r11e,
Diners, Carte Blanche Credit Cerds
r. Bows Made in Europe Only 2 More Days Until
MARGIE WEBB'S
_Gigantic 'Once-A~ Year' Tent
"SALE" -E-BRATION
A whirlwind tour and fest.ive
parties M£ planned lor the
niftlb annual Dtbutante Euro-
•. pun Hollday, climaxed by the
~ 'ie.u ol. the Silver Role June 25
~ :1n the Palall Scbwan.enberg,
: Viema.
POllball hllhlllhll ol the
·llip will be Lbo third Am<rican
Debull!lte Ball In the Castle "''Sch~, Munich, Ju.J,y t,
and tloe Grand Ball In Malta
July~.
Patronesses we ~frs. Paul
William Lawrence of Lkio
Isle. Loo ~eles arid Palm
Springs : Mme. E rne s t
Lem berger, wUe oC His EJ:-
cellency lht Austrian am-
basaador to the United Slates;
Prtnceu Agatha Schoenburg-
Hartenstein, Her Imperial and
Royal Highness P r I n c e s a
Ac nes Von Und 1u
Liechtenatekl, and L 1 d y
~lount Evans ol London.
DESl•Nll FAlllCS AT TllMINDOUS SAYINCiS
AIN tr.l'MMMI tl.....e&tt YllWI 11'1 wt lhUtft!W lhop
So, R..,,tmblr the Date
MAT ht
And help u1 "Sell-E-8rate"
2094 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna leacli
•
IN COSTA MESA IT'!
DIP'AftTMllNT 8TQr\£--
llU NIWPORT IOULIVAlD
PARK CONVEN IENTLY JUST A STEP FROM OUR
EAST ENTRANCE , , • Optn D•ily 9:30·6: Fd. ti! 9
Grand lnau9ur1toin
of our new
Huntington Beach
. Health Spa. Public
invited, free tour1
daily. A few 1pecial
charter mem~rship1
1till available.
• Finnish Rock Sauna Rooms
• Roman Steam Rooms
• flettrohlc Massage
e Florldl Sun Tan Rooms
• Whirlpool laths
• Conditioning
Facilities
• Swiss
Facial
Machines
FOR
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY!
*SPECIAL
•Anyone who purchases their Health Spa Program
with their BankAmericord or Master Charge will
receive absol utely free on additional complete
fitness program for any im-Iii BE
mediate member of their IMlhlmWI -
family. "PAID IN FULL."
CALL OR STOP BY TODAY FOR A FREE TOUR
I HUNTINGTON BEACH 111 COSTA MESA
11~1~ "'Al ... ~· !!Al .. 1)\)(\ '1~~·0~ ~\VI'
. ' . 842-1451 549.JJ08
II ANAHEIM I\ ORANGf
11,, ~1•c•~11vo ~:';I •Atf(Lr, "•' . . . -' ' 820·0181 039-2441
I
•
I
•
DAA.Y l"llfl' JI
Wi ter Storms Will Qring" New Beauty to ¥6sem-te
17 BILL ST
Y 0 SEMITE NATIONAL
PAJU( (APJ -'lllls ,.ar's
IJe9'1 Sierra lnOW tneUI a
botm for visitors to Y ostmite
Valley this spring: bigger,
spl113bier waterfalls.
''They',. Just ~d
booming all over the , "
one yailey eniploye d t.bl.a
year/ P'"' Su~ i.. .. rence ljadley Slid the heal period 10< vlew-
!Jll the r~ tbb.yea• probably
will be the tut week of April thfOlllb the middle or May.
Th.It would be the period of
beavlest runoff ol mellilw
snow down lbe ttteb IDll auJ1ies that drain Into the
valley.
"This Is the year you can
come and name }'(ltlr own
fall.'' Hadley said. "There un-
doobtedly will be !alb that
have never appeared befon."
Jl'LOODS FEARED
1be reo!)l'd central aod
aout.bem Sima 1 n o w p a c k
thr<atens flooding In portions
ol lbe 5an Joaquin 'valley this spiliig ..
But Yosemite ofifcials say
they don't expect high water
unlaa there.ls n111P11Jly rapld
meltl"I ol ..... alOlll lbe ~· l,000 lo l,000 lbove
''There ls DO immediate COO-
-about flood)ng In the vaUey if there iJ a normal
smowmelt runoff," said Lynn
Thompson, park information
officer.
Meanwhile, campers' are
beglnnlng to flood the valley
even before all the snow Is
melted from the Door.
And the National Part
Service, despite its widely
publicized five-day w e e t
operations, continues Its pl"I>
...., Ji.ilncbed WI year to
uojam tlie ~ In the
valley GJring the peak'tourtll -· . Th1I means camperwnd
m.....-tud-
of one-way road p.o 11cie1
established lut yW, Hadley
Aid iD '° interview,
CURTAIL FVNCl'IONS
BecllUIO ol budget cuts, the
park DW11.&tment m U I t
curtaU some• functloos, such
as manning entrance cat.es.
'"Tbe ftve-day+--week opera-
Uon does not -1t in the perk
being closed two days a .•
'
week," e.dley ....,.._. Eady day Dllunllot Jolla
nie mojor vallq falls, Muir, f..-ol tbe Slemi
wh1dl pluap u mud! as l,Q Club, called the lhreHtqe
feet 1r<m 1be va11q rim, run Y-1te hJIJ "the ooblest
full llld !rte ~ tbe oprlnc dbplay o1 falling water to be
ud eariy • .._. 'l1ley f-!!J the valley, or perhaps
shrink In the late -ud ·In the world."
autumn u tbt Hieb Siem Ypsemite drops ln steps of
snowpacl; dluppeon. In dey J.1111, l7S and l:IO reet. years, even. the f a. m e d Some or the major tem-
Yooemlle Fill dries up. poracy !alb seen In IP>!Jll ,,.
'lbe JD01t faimq falls m on the east lhoulder ot El
Y-.Jlo ud Ribbon Cll the Capitan; on the cWla JUll eut
north Ude ol the valley; or Eqle Peil; ti>• Silver
Bridalveil ud Sentinel on the Strand Fall w.st of' Stanfonl
south aide; ud Vernal uc1-Point, and on the cllUs eut o[
Nevada falts up L I t t I e Glacier Polnt.
Y ooemilo Valley. _ Superintendent Hadley said
-
tbe -· -Ille '"" hu not -:ii lbe ~=-.. ::.:
... "''" llll bad lbe ..... powr to man the eotawe
stations," Badaey llld.
"We wUl this IWDDW!f, of
Count," ht added.
Lui year~ the port _,Ice
bepn ma...,ng camPCmmds
.. they ...... Doi .. erflowlng
ooaniullnebuis.
ASSIGNING SITES
"We were •·11i1nlna: campers into the lites in the
campgn>Unds llld when they
-Ml .. 61 IDI _ ,_,,
..... 111 ••• Itdld-....
ID OW' Juo"'·--• • -..-we did u.. ..:w14 'sHe
fnm '°'"campers. We ...
faced with tbe -" clu111g!ng the camplnr -
o!a lotol~wtiow... ...
cuslomed .. ...,,. lnlo Ibo
valley ud , camplnl pnllJ
much 11 they -· -.-. lo elbow," Hadley lfld-He Aid 111111¥ _. _.,
when they arrived and ,...
told lbe ~ ....
!ull. But othe1> ..me lo a ·
PrelS tbanU, lbe port cblef
said .
TOMORRO_W ONLY! SAVE 1/3 TO 1/2 OFF •• • NEWPORT ONLY!
never before advertised by Buffums' at these low prices .•. all reduced from regular stock,
no special purchases ... quantities and si:ies limited .•. no mail, phone, c.o.d. orders
FUR SALON
Ountanding values on beautiful furs from regular
stock:
Bleached white mink bo1, #1819, reg. 79.00 ... 49.00
Ji,Hfyed S1ble bo1 , #1793, reg. 125.00·-···-79.00
Neturel ranch mink capo , double fur collar, #17621:
reg. 39'1.00 ........... -··-···--··-··--···-···-··---266.00
Natural Lutotie • suit stole, double fur collar, #3134,
reg. 49'1.00 ... -......... -·-··········-----............. -.. 333.00·
Bluchod wh ite mink cepelet, #9340, reg. 49'1.00
-----···--.. ··-··· .. ······•··········"'''"'''"-···-···---.. ······· 29'1.00
Natural Aiurene• mink cepolot, #337, reg. 599.00
_,.,_, ___ .......................... _ .................... _ ..•..... ---····· 399.00
Blo1ched white beaver ~ coat, natural mink col-
YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHOP
Savings on washab~ rayon crepe shirts and shifts,
including some with tucked sleeves .. Choose from
a variety of styles and colors; sizes 5-13, reg. 23.00-
33,00 ....................................... --·--····-12.99-t 7.99
Juniors and petite dresses in polyester, rayon crepe
or voile. Choose from en assortment of styles in
spring colors , reg. 17 .00-20.00 -·····-···-·-·-·--···· 12.99
Save on bikinis in cottons and cotton knits; solids
and floral prints, 5-13, reg. 13.00-23.00 -·-···-5.99
Values on wool and wool blend sweaters in pun.
overs and cardigan styles, some with turtle neck
styling and in fisherman weaves. Available in wine,
camel, navy , and grey, sizes 34-40, re9 •. 12.00-
. 17.00 .......... _ ................................... -.. --········ .. ······"'"""" 7.99
STORE FOR BOYS
FAMOUS MAKER PANTS
1.99
Reg. 3.69-8.00. Select form on assortment
of styles and colors: sonie Sta-press in sites
to lit 8-20, or 27" to 30" waist.
Savin9s on ju mp suit in cotton terry cloth and short
leg styling. Completely we;h1ble and Sanlori11dlil,
1i1es 8-20, reg. 6.00 ..... . . ....................................... 99
PAJAMA CLEARANCE
1.99
Rog. 5.00. Blend of Dacron® Polyester ind
cotton, long leg styHngs; 1i1os 8-16 .
COSMETICS
.Toilet water in decorative Urns, reg. 12.00 v19'es
-.. ···-·---· .. ··-···--.1/2 Of!
Perfume in novelty holders, roq. 10.00 _ 1/2 OFFI
Save on perfume oil in a metal flower caddy, reg.
3.00 -5.00 . -·-·· . _ .. . ... _ .1/2 O~F!
TRAVEL .BAG SPECIAL
7.00
Save on fl ight bags, train c.ses with tipper \
closing and double hendlo1, reg. to 14.00.
Save on soap dishes or metal pedastel urns, reg.
4.00 -5.00 ......... . ................................... ·-I /2 OFF!
Savings on scented pomamders, two in 1cet1te
p1ckege, reg. 3.50 ... .... --···-·-··................ I /2 OFF!
lar, #2519, reg. 795.00 ................................... _ .. , 530.00
Natural full-length r1nch mink coat with double fur
notched collor, #5426-1241 , reg. 1795.00 ... 1195.00
SHOE SALON
Great savings on Ad Lib fashion pumps, in Jow
heel styling. Choose from an 1ssortment of colot s,
LITIU SHAVER SHOP
KNIT SHIRT SPECIAL
.49
Excercise or jogging suits in vinyl, reg. 6.95 _ 1.00 1
Double laced stand mirror, rog .'2.9S-3.95 .... 2.00 I I
Notur1l Tourmaline• mink ~ coat with double fur
collar ind border on sleeve and button, #3609,
req. 2295.00 _ .. ······-·-······· 1530.00
"TM •MIA Mll!l ....... « Mlol.
An Piii' l'f'MUt'-lllle ... " sMw wwtry ef .ntlll " lfl'I,.,.... f.n.
SPORTSWEAR BOUTIQUE
Save on "Sportwhirl" fashions , designed by Jean
c.mpbell . .Choose from an assortment of pastel
tunic tops, and fit-and-flair pants or lightwei9ht
wool. Top• reg. 33.00 -··-······· .......... -.............. _._ 20.00
Pints, reg. 33.00 _ ............................... _ .... -........... _ 20.00
Celanese® Arne'® triacetate jersey tops to mix
•nd match, in an assorted variety of colors, and fit-
1nd-fleir pents, req. 19.00-26.00 .......... _ 11 .00-18.00
S.vings on candy-striped polo tunic shirts and V-
nock pullovers. reg . 26.00 ·-··-· .. ·-· 16.00
SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR
S1ve on famous maker polyester Mparates, includ-
ing pents ind pint tops ·-··--112 OFF!
Great selection of wool pants in 1n assortment of
f1shion colors. reduced from regulor stock I /2 OFF!
ACCESSORY ~HOP
Savings on pants in •ssorted styles and colors, i11
cotton or rayon blends; sizes 8-1 6 front or b1ck
•ip styles in 1tr1i9ht or flair legs. reg. 7 .00-11.00
---------··---·-3.99
BUDGET DRESSES
S.ve on Dacron® polyester skimmers in cltssic
styling>-P11tol colon. Completely wuhoble in siies
10-20, 1'119-17.00 12.99
Gre•t reductions of misses' ind women1' dNJ.H1 in
polyoster 1cal1te, ind other populer f1bric" in
1uoriod spring colon, rog. 23.00.28.00 _ 17.99
NEWPORT CEHTa! -.
reg. 19.00 -·-·········-····-·· .. ····-··--·--·---··-9.97
LINGERIE
QUILTED ROBES
1/3 OFF!
Terrific savings on nylon quilt fleece robes
in short ind long lengths.
Famous maker Cordulon® nylon robe and match-
ing nylon tricot nas, in discontinued styles tnd
colors, reg. 9.0v-14.00 ...... . ..... 5.99-6.99
Special savings on Chemoisette and regular slips,
reg. 5.00-6.oo ·············--.. ·-...... ___ ............... 2.99-3.99
Half slips in broken sizes, colors, re9. 5.00 ......... 2.99
Shilts, pejem1s, end beby-dolh, reg. 8.00-18.00
........... ··-.. --.. ·--·· __ ... -.... -··--·-3.99 . I 0.9'1
FOUNDATIONS
Terrific savings on penty girdles of nylon tricot
elastic; lice rulllo trim 1t legs, reg . 7.50 ····-··. 3.75
Save on bandeau bras of soft ny~n tricot in 1ssort ..
ed colors; 'req. 4.00 ..... --··-·-112 OFF!
' HAN DIA GS
Savings on handbags in an 1ssortment of 1tyles 1ncf
colors, including calves, patents, pl1st ics, ind tape-
stries, reg. 7.00-50.00 ........ _. -···· 3.97-19.99
GIRLS' SHOP
Save on girls' dresses in many styl.s; choose from
pla ids ind solids and pastels, in easy c1re f1brics.
Somo 1leov1lon; reg. 6.00-1_8.00 __ 3.49-7.49
Spring ancl summer hits in strew, 1v1ileble in ~s
tels and white, reg. 4.00-5.50 2.49
Sleopwllr p1j1m1 or gown stylings, reg. 4.004'.00
_ .......... _. ___________ 2.99
Save on girls' co11tumes in rayon linens ind cotton
knits. Choose from n1vy, pastels, ind prints, reg.
12.00-30.00 --·--·-Ill olfl
I
-
Reg. 3.00. Select from 1ssorted colors on
short-sleeved, full turtle stylings, 111 com-
pletely washoblo. Si101 5-6-7.
UTILE SHAVER PAJAMAS
1.49
Reg. -i.00. You 'll lo ve the easy-care feature
of these pajamas in popular long-sleeve,
long-leg styling. They ere 65 '/, Dacronili>
polyester end 35 ~. cotton blend, end they
never need ironing! Sites 4-7.
COTION KNIT TOPS
.49
Reg. 4.00. Terrific selection in these com-
pletely washable, sanforited tops in 1ites
to lit 8-20.
Great 1avings on assorted knit shirts in completely
w1shable cottonj select from assorted stripes and
solids in short sleeve, mock-turtle stylinqs; reg. 3.00
........ _........ . .. .... _ .. ___ ... -........ -.99
CHILDREN'S SHOES
CHILDRENS' SLIPPERS
1.99
Rog. to 6.00. Select from 1n Hsortmont of
styles ind colors. Not in sizes in 1U stylos:
infents to site 8.
GIRLS' TENNIS SHOE SAVINGS
1.99
Rog. 6.00. Select from 1n-1nortmenl of
sty!1s ltftl colors. 1H from B. F. Goodrich.
#1 FASHION ISLAND ' • e . MONDAY, TliURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 T1lL 9:30
~ang'.n~ :1~mir~::_·:: ~ .... e! ~:rro~:-re~~=~:(;d. I
Perfumed so~d lockoti ind charm br1celets, reg.
5.00 ----·· ·--···----· -·-·---1/2 OFF!
INFANTS' SHOP
Save on summer dresses in prints tnc:I soGds, mln'f,
in permanent press styles, reg. 6.00-9.00 .. M· 3.99.
T orrall ind Fischel designer clothes for children;
limited quan tities I /3 -I /2 OFF!
Glm AND CHINA
Decorative glass items including bowls, bottles,
vases, and decanters: all hand-blown in deep, ric~
colors -········ .. ·-··-· .......... _,_ I /3 OFF!
STORE FOR MEN
S1ve on ,.;,,n's s"weaters in auorted puHov1r styt-
ings; choose from assorted weaves in woof, includ ..
inq boucle, lambs' wool, ind novelty blonds, roq.
16.00-25.00, S-M-L-XL. ··-····--· -·-··-·· 7.99,
Great values on mens' casual and dress slacks in
wool and D1c:ron® polyester blend worsted Wff~es,
rig. lo 27.95 ........... _ ·--····--··---...... -12.9'1.
Save on men's permenent press dress shirts in long
sleeve dacron and cotton blend from ftmou s1maker:,.
Somi-sproad collor; mid-1h1de1 of blue, qroon, gold1
some whae; not all sites in th co~rs, reg. 7 .50 . 3.991
S1ve on imported wool hose of lembs' wool ind
nylon blond, in lour fashion colors. Ono 1i1t li'1
10-13; completely l\'IWhble, reg. 2.00 __ 1.19 °"
--· ........ ·------·-........ ---·-·· ·-3/3,()()
VARSITY SHOP
S1v~ on button down sport shirts in pltids ond sol-
ids; some wit!. St...Proull in long ind short S:....
stynngs, reg. a.00-10.0o -·-4 ...
199· 14.00-20.00 -.. -1.99
S.ve on swHt.rs ift lamb.' wool; pul ••• ... v.
neck styrongs, reg. 16.00 -·--• 9.9t
• ---r O'Tlf£'R DAYS 10100 Tlll S:W
I •
•
I
I
I
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······················-·····-·-········•111! ... '!.'P.•!'!!!!!.!\!"!!"I!!'!!!"'!'~~~":!'"'."~~"!!'~~.~~~~-:-...-:':"">,------:-::.,..-;= ... ~-~ ....... .-............................ -· ' ·····~·-.. -................. ~ ....... -....... ~. ~ #-"'·--~·············--····"'"··~····-·· ·-····~· ••
] • IW1. v '11.0T
I
CAUGHT IN THE ACT -Ted Sizemore of the Los
Angeles Dodgers takes Tom Hailer's throw at
second base and tags out San Diego Padres' Ed
Spiezio, who tried to steal second base Monday
night. Backing up play is Dodger shortslop Bill
Grabarkewitz. Dodgers rallied for two runs in ninth
inning to edge Padres, 4-3.
Mod Squad Does It Again., 4-3
Parker Raps Key Pinch Hit
SAN DIEGO (APJ -The Los Angeles
Dodgers were eighth in the Nationa l
League in 1967 and seventh in 1968 and
first baseman Wes Parker thought they
were in ror another dismal year when
Cincinnali 's Pete Rose and Bobby Tolan
greeted them with none-OUt, first-inning
homers in the season opener April 7.
The bi.a.ts came off v e t e r a n
rightllander Don Drysdale, now on the
disabled Ust with a sore shoulder. and
reminded Parker of the Dodgers' season
opener at Cincinnati in 1967. The Reds
bombed Dodger starter Bob ft1iller and
Los Angeles went downhill the rest of the
year.
Bui Parker is high on the Dodgers 1969
On Tl' To11lght
Channel 1 J , 8 p.m.
chances and he's doing something about
it. Monday night, th e handsome swit·
chhitter tripled home a run as the
Dodgers rallied for lYlO runs in the ninth
Tennis Fails to Bra,,,.
Anaheim Misses Again
OnProSportPromotion
Anaheim has taken another bath an its
attempt to become a major sports city.
That ls to say, the recent professional
tennis tournament staged in that city was
about as well attended as Mass in Cairo.
There were more people at Anaheim
Stadium Sunday night than there were at
the Convention Center for the tennis
rinals.
So'
Well. the Angels v;ert playing in
Kansas City at the time.
George MacCalJ, president ol the Na·
······-····---~
WHITE
WASH
···················-
Uonal Tennis League. admits he took a
loss on the tournament and that he would
have to do a lot of hard thinking before
he'd want lo bold another such event in
Anaheim.
a name player. Ditto for Earl Buchholz
and Alex Olmedo.
However, paltry turnouts came to see
them perform with the finals reportedly
drawing 1,302 (it looked more like 750).
Perhaps the solution would be to hold
the sporting event~ inside Disneyland.
Around tire Clrr11lt
Once around the beat:
Bob Rule er the Seattle SuperSonics
pro basketball team will be guest speak-
er at the Cal State t Long Beach) baskel·
ball banquet tonight. Ru le once played
at Riverside City College and during his
career there belted an official in the jaw
during a game.
A sturgeon caught in San Pablo Bay
yieldtd a tag that bad been affixed 13
years. 115 days earlier.
Biologists !1lhnate the fish lo be 29
to 3Z years old.
Included among success ful Orange
Coast an?a fishermen who enjoyed ang·
ling at La Paz, ftlexico were Gerry
Thompson ot Newport Beach. W. D.
Rush of Costa ft1esa and the Peter
Coopers of Costa Mesa.
Marlin, tuna, yellowtail, roosterfish
and dolphin were among the catches.
Briaa Stern of Corona dtl ~1ar has
signtd a leter of inlent to play foolball
at C1I (Bukeley).
inning to snap San Diego's three.game
winning streak, 4-3.
The triumph, was the Dodgers' 13th In
their first 19 games and it kept them in a
tie with San Francisco for first place in
the \Vestern Division of the National
League.
The Padres wind up the home stand
Tuesday night as ID-year-old rookie
rlghtba,nder Al Santorini (J-()) goes
against the Dodgers' Joe Moeller.
Parker pulled a leg muscle Sunday and
couldn't start Atonday's game here
because of it. But his ninth-inning triple,
a controversial thing, followed a pinch
single by rookie Bill Russell and tied the
score, 3·3, against losing reliefer Dick
Kelley (I-2). Parker scored the winning
run on pinchhitter Ken Boyer's infield hit.
It didn 't matter that manager Preston
Gomez of the Padres Md the people in
the San Diego bullpen, in left field,
thought Parker 's hit \1'3S foul. And
youngster Lee was taken ofr the hook
when Andy Kosco hit a double that sent
Boyer to third before the Padres could
quell the ninth·inning uprising.
Meanwhile. Parker has lifted his
season average to .356, has knocked in 15
runs in his first 19 games and is lied for
the club lead in homers.
"A lot of us got to where it \\'as a
drudge, coming to the ball park, the last
two years," he said after Monday nighr1
victory.
Jim Brewer pitched a scoreless ninth
inning ft1onday night to save the victory
for Dodger lefthander Claude Osteen ( 4.
I) who had conquered the Padres, 14--0, in
the inaugural meeting of the team s at
Los Angeles recently.
LOS ANGILES
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BoSton Slight Choice
To Even NBA Series-.
BOSTON (AP) -The Booton CdUcs,
tested , pressure cooker playoff velerana,
rule a slight favorite to defeat the Los
Angeles Lakero and aqnaro lbeir bost-of.7
series (qr t.be NaUonal Bu~etball As-
sociaUon cbamplonabie lonlghl.
Tho peilica. bidding f., lhelr 11 lh MIA
Ulle in 13 YWS since player-Coach Bill
Ruise1.I joined the team as a rookie, are
determined to make their home court ad·
vantage stand up and even the sules at
two games apiece. ,
After blowing leads and dropping the
first two games in IM Angeles, the
Cel~cs, blew a 17-j>Oint lead in the third
period, but bounc.d back lo win Ul-105
Sunday on the hot : shootlnc of John
Havlicek aod Larry Siegfried.
No team has ever Jost lhe first two
Open Tennis
Helps Game's
Strength-Dell
WASHINGTON (AP) -Donald Dell,
nonplaying captain of the U.S. Davis Cup
team, says the advent of open tennis has
created a greater interest in the sport
that will grow even stronger.
Dell also said he hopes the 1970 Davis
C u p will be played as an open com·
petition -with both professional and
amateur players.
"I think open tennis competition will
make it a bigger game all over the
world," Dell said In an interview. "I
think it's coming and I'd like to see it
happen next year in the Davis Cup
Challenge.
"Tennis is on the th reshold of a real ex·
plo.sion," he said. "I look for increased
spectator support and public interest."
Dell, who played for the U.S. Davis Cup
team in 1961..Q-.63, said much of the ad·
d2d public interest in tennis will come
from players who will play for money but
still compete in international amateur
competition.
He foresees a world tennis circuit of 30
tournaments with $50,000 Jn priu money
for each event or a total of $1.5 million.
"You're going to be able to have from
20 to 50 players making a very good Jiv-
ing out of being tennis players," Dell
said, adding that he isn't interested
although it's tough fot him to sit on the
sideline.
Dell was asked why he accepted the
captaincy of th! U.S. Davis Cup team
again after his squad won it last year for
the first time since 196.1.
"The reason I accepted it was that
America had not won it and defended it
successfully since 11M7," he said. "And I
felt that it was sort of a personal goal
that I would like to achieve."
Angels Send
McGlothlin
Against Pilots
SEATILE (AP) -The California
Angels are 1-2 in the past three days. A
victory, and two rainouts.
The Angels trounced Kansas City 6-2
Sunday after a rainout Saturday in
Kansas City and another here Monday
night.
Jim ftfcGlothlin. 1·1, was tapped to
slart this afte rnoon's game for the
Angels against former California team-
mate Marty Pattin, 2-1.
One of Pattin's \'ictorits was a 4-3
decision at Anaheim in the season opener
over ft1cGlothlin.
tticGlothlin pitched six days later, goin.g
seven iMings in another 4-3 contest.
Howeve r. he wasn't on the mound when
the winning run crossed the plate.
\Vith eight days' .rest. McGlothlin work·
ed hi.s first complet: game of the season
to halt an Angel loss streak at six on an
8-() victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Since r<tfcGlothlin's triumph, the Angels
ha\'e won three o( rour and had the other
two poslponed by rain.
games and come back lo win the NBA
champiomhlp.
ibe Celtics, although opening up with a
line-up of five players averagin& n years
of age, hope to come out running -and
On Tl' Tonight
Channel 5, 6 p.tn.
keep running against Wilt Chamberlain &
Co.
"Rurutlng is the key to our game," iays
11avUcek, the Boston captain whO Jlas
scared ll4 points in three games. "We've
got _to keep it up.••
The Lakers, who art seeking their first
NBA title after winning the Western
Division plaYoffs, bad a 5-2 edge on
Boston during the regular season.
• ,.
'
However, they are looking tot a better
defeMe to stop the Celtics.
"We've got to Improve our def~l!Sf',"
Los Angeles Coach Bill von Breda Kollf
said. i•That's the big thing. Other than
that, after playing 100-plus games,
there's no sense changing things around
now.''
Jerry West. the veteran sharp-shooter
led the Laken, S~dpy with 24 polnta,
compared with outputs of 53 and 41 in the
first two games.
"We knew it wouldn't be a cakewalk
here " West said in summing up I.he feel·
ing ~f lhe Lakers. ;'We knew the Celtics
wouldn't quit. They never have and never
will. I'm looking forward to another
tremendously tough game." .
The fifth game is set for Thursday 1n
Los Angeles.
UPIT ........ "' ENDS DROUGHT -Not since the days oC Althea Gibson had an
American won a title in the Italian Tennis Championships, but Julie
Heldman of Ne\v York ended the !:>.year drought Monday \vith a
straight-set victory over Australia's Kerry Melville. John Newcombe
of Australia won men's singles title.
Sports iii Brief
Ligl1tly-regarded Julie
Ends Drougl1t in Rome
ROME -"I hope they'll call me first·
rate Julie now."
That was Julie Heldman's comment
after she had won her risrt major tenn is
tournament Mooday by beating Kerry
Melville of Australia 7-5, 6-3 in the
women 's final of the Italian International
Open Oiampionships . She is the first
American to win the tournament in 13
years.
Miss Heldman, a native of Berkeley,
Calif., who now hails from New York,
had been called by some "~nd-rate
Julie" before the match because she had
never won a big tournament.
John Newcombe won the men's title by
defeating Tony Roche, his f e 11 ow
Australian, In a three.hour,
match. 6-3, 4-6, 6-2, S.7, &-3.
* * *
20-minute
Hank Aaron is t1''0 up on Babe Rutb
lb.is sea5on but he's still 202 behind Ute
Babe In IUetime bomm.
Aaron cracked his third bome:r of &he
season f\londay night in Atlanta's l!-1
victory over the Houston A1trol to pass
former teammate Eddie f\latbew1 and
move Into sb::th place on tbe all time
homer list with 513.
Ruth holds the llellime mark but the
Babe gained one this season, i.acrusi.ag
his UleUme total from lhe long recopli-
ed figure of 114 lo 115.
He partially blames short public notice
(S week•) on the poor attend~. But
then he points to his experience In
Naahvilk!', TeM., where he drew S,800 for
the finals on thrtt v.·te.ks notice.
•'J can't understand it,'' he said while
dilcUssing the lack or support from
Orange Count)' fitns. ''People here are
tennis coruicious and they have a great
facility ••• I think the Conventio n Center
b one of the great tennis facilities in the
world for spectators. The.re lsn 'I a bad
R:e.l In the house."
Drysdale: He's Running for His Life * * * llAYWARD -John Carlos
predicted ll1onday U1at he would break
the world record for the JOO.yard dash
Saturday when he meets an outstanding
field in the event at an in\'itational meet
at nearby Sa n Jose.
Anaheim h.as already laid an egg at the
boi: office with pro basketb311 (the
Amigos) and pro football (the Ramblers.)
However, in Umt cues neither had •
Worthwhile product to oUcr for the
riollar1 befn« 90Ucited.
The Angell are hilling rock bottom,
too, but ag1ID lhty haven't exaclly been
OOrnlng up U.. le"iue wltb success.
So again you miShl abaolve Anaheim
and Oranae Cou.nt1 fOf' blame on lack of
support. -
J{owevtr, such ls not the case with the
lennls tournament
Rod Liver tnd Roy Emerson are two
or the world 's finest. Ptnrho Gonultt is
I
NEW YORK (UPI) -Nobody pays
much attention lo that big broad·
.shouldered guy who gets up ear!y every
morning, puts on an old sweatshirt, goes
ov<'r to the local grammar school and
runs for an hour or so all by himself.
~fe's not running for esercise, he 's tun·
ntng ror his life. His baseball life.
Don Dry9Clale will keep on running <it
that school nt1r his Hklden llills home
every morning for the next thrtt weeks.
which Is as long as the 32-year~ld Los
Anccles Dodgr:rs' right·hander will be on
the diublcd list.
''You aotta lot of lime to thl.nk when
you run .!ill olone like thAI," l<lughs the:
1ast playlng representative of too old
Brooklyn Dodgers. \\"ho ltads his club In
Innings pitched, strikeouts and shutouts
and who. as recently as last season,
pilched 581 i consecutive scoreless in·
11lngs to break \Valter Johnson's major
league record.
Drysdale has betn doing a great deal o'f
thinking and although he felt he might
call it qult.s last week because or trouble
in his shoulder, his U1lnking is different
toda)'.
"I left some room open," he says now.
"I was thinking along those lines a little
bit but l never S3id fl at out I was rctir·
ing. The doctors examined my shoulder
and from what l'\•e ~told, a little rest
might he.Ip. Anywny, I'm more optimistic
than I "'as. They say mainly rtrt and 1
few more shots m•y do it. l hope ao.
We'll see."
For the benefit of the morbidly curious.
Dr)'sdale aggravated the rotor cuff In his
rlght shoulder backing up an overthrow
of third base in an e.xhibillon game al
H~ton before the season started. For
those who don't go in for thoae fancy
mtdlcal terms, he has a sll1ht tear ln hls
shoulder slf111lar to the one Detroit's Den-
ny McLain came up with Jut season.
''I can throw but I can't throw with full
power .'' Oryldale says. "This I g
someU1ing I have to do. I've been t
power pitcher 1\1 my life. What happened
in my last start a,alnll the Oiant.s w1s
th at I couldn 't get any vek>clly on my
fast ball.
"I couldn 't (el. my arm up and over
enough and when that happens I get too
much etev1tloo on my fast baU and J'm
not the kind o( guy v;ho can pitch high. I(
I can't get the ball down I'm in trouble."
The Glanta beat Drysdale, 6--0, last
Tuesday night, driving him to the
showers alter four innings, and it was
al\er that contest he was at h1s lowest
ebb aod talked about saying bye-bye to
baseball ~ven though it is paying him bet·
ter than $100,000 a year.
Evtn now when much ol the pessimism
hes evap<M"ated and there seiems lo be
rennvtd hope, Big D, 1s many of the
Dodgers c:aD him, still 1ays he wouldn 'l
care to hang around and try to finish the
ac:ison if his shoulder fails lo come .,,..nd.
+
Carl9s, who bolds a pending world
record In the 200-meters. sakl he expttLs
lo run the distance in 8.9 seconds.
* * * SAN DIEGO -~In. Prilc:Ula M1urfdo
of Wllmlngioa. Call!., moved Into Unt
place In two eve.nts In the optn division el
the Women'• lalerutloisal Bowll•f
Congress champlon1blp touraamt:Dl Mon·
day.
l'ttr1. ~laurfclo, a mother of eight, roQ.
ed tM on pme1 of "4, Ill, Ut to llkt
the lead in liagles frtm Evelya Daact:r el
Carlton, ~tlnn.
Terry Ayer• of Fountain Valley, b • •
bttn ln first place IA all-e,•enll totals.
. ··~ .. _,,
---~~
A
Pit Stops Around
The Sports Worl.d
Lets' make a few quick pit stops around the sports
beat today:
UCI swim coaches Al Irwin and Ed Newland are
billing their standout, Mike MarUn, as America's finest
water polo-swimming performer ... in fact, the entire
UCI water polo program has reached the point where
the ~teaters are having trouble putting together a
schedule • . . it seems the big schools are ducking
UC! ..•
Ch1pm1n College In Orenge 11 going full apeed
•head on • fund·r•i1ing progr•m to build • 1r,mn•1lum '
••• the school presently must u1e county h th school
gyms for its b•1ket1Mll 91mes. .•
Can there really be any doubt that pro football Is
Amert~·s nati0:nal game? ... a recent baseball game
of th~ ~k presentation on TV drew a 4.9 Nielsen rating
•.. A Boston-New York·NBA playoff game scored an 8.6
while the Masters golf tournament drew an even 8 •.•
ell prO 'footbal !games averaged around 20 last sea·
son .• *'
Sin Joie Stet• 11 claiming the gre•test ltft..h1ndH
shotputter of •II time . , . Bruce Wiiheim h•• r••ched 64-
6 ••• Scr•tch those rumors concerning ex.Huntington
Beach High cager Greg Snyder tr1n1ferrlng to UCI ••.
he'• steying et Stenford .••
Oceanside High School track coach Tom Shields
thinks he's got a pair to watch in the state meet this
year ... junior J erry Culp has high jumped 6-10 and a
middle distance man, Gene Watson, has a 1:54.6 un·
pressed in the half ...
Sports lllustr1ted 11 flying a men out to do • spreed
on Orange Co11t College's craw program ••• A
newspaper in Fullerton 11y1 there's • strong ·chence
Dick Coury -who ju1t took a job with tht Pitt1burgh
StHler1 -m1y retum to Orange County to take the
footboll iob ot Cel Stole (Fullerton) •••
Apparently there's quite a story behind an ad-
vertisement in the Lakers' game program ..• a bank
bought an ad and used a photo of a Laker player to at-
tract eyes ... the player demanded some dough and the
bank's ad man got out his altering equipment. erased
the player's uniform number and m essed up his face
••• pretty sneaky ...
Our sports TV columnist, Bill Burns, strongly
recommends that fight fans flick on Ch1nnel S
Thursday for the Olympic card ••• he says th• debut
of heavyweight Rufus Hockenhull, a Keny1n, could be
an hi1toric1I event ••• in his first pro fight, he'• • 6-5
favorite over experienced Weyne Kindred • , • 11 an
amateur he w11 25-0 with 23 KO's .••
Newport Beach's Bill Voss Is apparently still in the
doghouse with Bill Rigney after he and Jay Joh!Utone
got their wires crossed on a crucial fly half tb"ree, weeks
a go at Anaheim •.. he's played very little since.
As this is written, the Cleveland Indians •re 1°15 •••
ia that the worst 1t1rt ever for• maior l11·1ue club? •••
Jules is bad enough. but Newport Harbor High
athletic director Jules Gage really winced when he was
introduced at a recent Bay Club luncheon as coach
Julius Gage ... "
When the supersonic jet commerclel pl1n11 1t1rt
flying, look for m•jor le•gue ba1ebolll to put franctilaes
in Tokyo, Mexico City end other foreign paints ••. Opi·
nlon: Chick Heern'a r1dlo cov1rage of the L1ker1 in the
pl1yoff1 has been m19nlficent •••
USC's John McKay says he discovered the solution
to Jong-hair types ... we tell our players they can pl ay
with long hair, but they have to play without
helmets ... "
The moat r1vealin9 piece we've read yet on the
black athlete 11 th• current Spart M191:z:in•'• article on
Sen Jon Stat•'• Lu Evens •••
What's taking the pole vaulters so lon g to hit 18 feet?
..• just watch, one guy will do it and then a dozen of
'em will be chasing 19 in two years ...
And whatever became of Emil Neeme? ••.
Prep Tennis Results
Tue'"J, Apltl 29,_}969:._ ______ D_Al_~Y_Pl_lO_T~J~7
LfH!p PrellttU Todll1 •
Tritons, I.aguna
'
Shine in-Relays'
Next Stop: Indianapolis
Corona del Mar's Dan Gurney unveiled his latest
Indianapolis 500 entry at Santa Ana's "Dan Gurney
Day" Friday at the Saddleback Inn. The Olsonite
Eagle has a unique design feature in that the engine
is enclosed. Owner of the car is Oscar L. Olson,
Detroit industrialist. The machine is 16.5 inches high
at the cowl and the 320-cubic inch Ford engine
develops 600 horsepower. The car left by truck for
Indianapolis Monday.
Springer Has Talented Freshmen
CM Spike Future Bright
, Orange Coast area track
fans who keep future books on
local schools are already pen.:
ciling in Cost1 Mesa ·High
School as a prep power for
1912.
'The reason for such heady
speculation rests with five
freshmen performers, all of
whom seem destined for varsl·
ty stardom.
One of them , Jon
Marchiorlattl, has already set
a national record. Wht:l be
high jumped &-2% last week,
the mark broke the national
record for a l+year-old. The
old standard, S.21/a, was set in
1956 by Joe Faust who later
beeame a seven-foot and
Olympic jumper.
If it weren't for a
sophomore who has leaped 6-8
at Santa Fe High, Mesa coach
Brian Springer would predict
a CIF class Bee champion.ship
for MarchiorlaW late this
month .
Another promising frosh
Oiler Upset Helps Newport;
Marina Whips Valley, 8-3
Newport Harbor High School
moved a giant step forward
Monday afternoon in the race
for a coveted CIF AAAA
baseball playoff berth with a
4·3 verdict·ovet Sana Ana. -
Coop led w I t h Anaheim's
surprise ~5 loss to host Hun-
tington Beach, it puts the
Sailors or Newport Harbor
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three games up un Santa Ana
and Anaheim in the all-im-
portant loss column of the
:itandings.
Other league hostilities saw
Santa Ana Valley losing to
host Marina, 83, and Western
beet host Westminster.
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track.man at Mesa ls sprinter
Rick Desmet, a 6-3, l~pound
specimen who has run the 100
in 10.3.
"I think Rick will improve
on lhat time -he's going to
be a good one," Springer com-
ments.
Desmet also plays basket·
ball and will be on the varsity
team next fall as a
sot>homore.
A no t h e r track-basketball
combination athlete is Doug
MacLean, who has run the
mile in 4 :42. A lean S.2 and
150, MacLean played on the
Mustang Bee basketball team
last season.
He's the son of an Orange
County r a d i o broadcaster,
Spider MacLean.
"MacLean might develop in·
to one of the most outstanding
dista nce men we've ever had
here," his coach said.
"The boy loves to ncn and
we don't have any trouble get·
ting him to work at it."
Last but not least are the
Olawang twins, John and Tom.
The two five-footers have
clocked 10:21 and 10:17 two-
miles. Springer says all they
need is a few more inches and
poundJ to achieve more start!·
lng results.
P1·ep Baseball
OtllANOI LIAOUI
ltt M:H1
Lot Allmlro, ••• El OOrldo ......... ·-· Los "mltos
V1ltncl1 MMNy-. sewn
W L O•
I > -
I ' -' . ' . . ' . ' ' ' . ' ' . . ' ' .
LOI Al1mll0f 7, Stddleblck '
K1Je.ll1 s, V1ltncl1 I
l!I Oorl<IO '· Lat Amltcl l
lll'M '· ,_, 0 TllV .... Y'I 011MI
1t1ten1 11 u.. "'11m110-
E1 OOrllllo II llckllttll<lc
lrw 11 V•l-1'1
Loo Am'-11 Sonora
San Cleftlente, La.Juna
Belcb ud MiNloa" Vlojo bJlh
IChooll oolered batUe In tho
Cnstvlew L<llUO tracl: and
fltld pnllms al Tbllln Hlil>
Lineback
Gains Tie
For· Lead
San Clemente HJgh Scl).ocil'&
Bob Llneback crashed into the
Orange Coast area track and
field honor 1'0ll Friday when
he ran a 4:2'.'1 fnlle.
The result ties him with
Westminster High's Wayne
Akiyama for the lead in the
event.
That's the only change in·
volving first place efforts in
the roU.
Two new additions appeared
when Costa Mesa's Jon
Marchiorlatti hJgh jumped 6-
2* for second place and
Marina's Bob Lemmon ran lhe
120 high hurdles in 15.0 for se-
cond.
Ytrsl!y Only wlnnlne Um.1 In .,1r1lty com· !>'lltlon con1ldtrtd IOI" honor rcll.
\GO -1. L•u tMtrl t.t 1. Geddes (SCI and P. M111 IFV) 10.0.
220 -l. LKY (Mir) 22.4 J. P. Miii
IFV) 22.1 J. J, Vtll1ml11l11 (Marl 1nd
Gecid11 CSCI 22.7, U0 -I. Muldoon (MO} 50.4 2. 0 , M111 !FVJ S0.6 J. ~ IFV) 51.J. &aO -I. Hu1twlck (L8 J 1:56.5 2.
Muldoon (MD I 1:57,0 3. Dean (CMI 1:st .o. Mill -I. Akiyama (WM) Ind Lint -
back (SCI ''''·'its Dl1lon {WM) •:21,7. LI~-~~(~} V:,l'.T :f.WtfJ1~'"'f.~Ji
t :G.J. 120 HH -1, WO"d IElll U.t 2. Ltm.
mot1 (Mtr) U.O l. ll1cter ISCI 15.2. 113 LH -I. Wood (E11l It-" 01.6w)
2. Hellon {MO) 29.2 l. Oun1111 CCt:IM)
20.l. '"° Relay 1. Mlrl111 (G1u1h1n, J, ind T. Vlftllml11!11i Ltn) .O.t 2. FOUtl-toln VII'"" 4 ,S l. ~n Citm. .... 41.2. Miii RlllY -1. NtWPOrt Hlrbol' Mlmt, Ro,.n, 8utllr. llloadl 1:21.I
2, Founltlft V1lltf 1:27.l l, E1l1nt11
3 ,]2,(, HJ -l. lltrnell (Ell} •·l\lo 2.
M1rchlor•llll l°"' •·2\4 l. Tll betw,en Ci'llld1 (Mlt , L.mtnon IM1rl,
McGIUN!Y IH ), Hl~ln tNH), 8111kfll (Elf), ti 6-2.
LJ -1. l1rntll IEllJ l2·1'4 2. LKY (Mar) 21·Sl'll 3. Wiii IH8l jl·11'11.
PV - 1. Wiid !HHJ Ind lllonl (E111 IH t. En1lon ( M) Ind Molw•Y (LI
ll50p -1. C~n1 fM81 JS.tVi 2. McC1nll lWMI !2..1~ l. llon:l1n ICMI 31·'''· Ol1c~1 -1. "'kltlch (NHJ 152·16°"' 7. Loulfll IE1t) 1!24 3. Johnson fCdM) u .. 11.
Prep Swim
Honor Roll
Only one change occurred in
the Orange Coast area swim
honor roll since last week with
Marina High School's Kevin
Williams pulling into a tie with
Costa Mesa's Jay Sponagle in
the 100 breast at 1:06.5.
After that the roll stayed
steady wilh better times
chalked up by Marina swim·
mers.
Y1Nolty
Only wl11n1n11 l!m" I~ \'1~lty carn-1>t!ll~n conslclered for l'lonor roll, 200 Mtdlt¥ 1111111 -1, CO!lll M .. I l :~2/t (Ml1~ltll, PO/l"'lt, Gllm"'<lfl, wn1 •ktr\ 2. M.trln1 1:4J..) 3. Corona d e! Mar :.M.5.
200 Fr11 -l. llppaldl (M•rl l:M.I 1. W!llttktr <C~ 1:50.6 ). $chftl' CCdMl Ind ltrltln IZ (CdMl 1 :~.o. 511 ~'" -1. 11111k1r ICMI 22.s t OOrl•ldi.on (Mir) 22.• l . LIPPOklt (Ml,j 27i&; 1ndtYldull Medley -l. Ll11POICll
1MerJ 2:0(.• 2. Wllll1ktr ICM) 2:10.S l.
Wilcox CHHI 2:12.7.
!GO F .... -'· G•mmon jCMJ S..3 2. F1rr (CdMl 57.l 3. EYlftl M1r1 57.7. !GO Frtt -1, Whlr.ir.v (CM '9.t 2. Dcn11cbon (Mtrl •t.I J. lilclr; (Cd,M)
50.1. 100 llld( -I, LIPllClldl !Mir} 56.4 2. OtGr1111 IE-1) 51.• 3. Slomr ((dMI 1''.l8crF." -1. LIPPOid! IMarl 3:5'.2 7, l(rumpl'loli (CdMI ~:I» . .U. w'lllt1kC1"
ICM! 4;06,,
lGO 8rH1I -l. SllOflltle ICM) Ind Wt11!1m1 (Mir) 1:06.S 3. Hlllm1n !CdM) 1 :07.2. MIO Fr.. Rtlt Y -I. Co1l1 Mat
!Wllll1k1•, Ml1follll. Jltw, Glfl'Wr!anl
3,23,1 2. Coront del Mir l :H.D 3.
Mttl/11 l::rt.J.
Rich Wamer's 350--foot solo
homer in lhe bottom of the
fifth Inning gave Newport
Harbor its . winning run and
kept the S'allors within one
g a m e of league·leading
Western.
WllSTllltN UJ
MKk, 71>
H1nae"-H
Praven~ll/, (:
•~rlllrlll
I 0 0 0
1 I 7 0
) 0 ' 0
4 0 1 I
3 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
l I I 0
, 0 • ' l I 1 0
2S J i I
Major League Standings
HUN71NOTON •I ACH Ill
•• r II r•l MCO!JOW!l,1• 4l1 0
Mvnifly, 2Do • I ' 0 an.u 4111
Wilsen, lb
HYHtd, lb
Roel, ff
L-1, tf
l.IMO!rdoll. 11
fp, II
'"''''
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Dlvltloa
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ellst DtvlJlon
UUs afternoon after the fonnni ~
two teams fared well In IM
Vista llellys Saturday al
Villa IDgh.
San Clemeolt, led by a ..i..
niog 440 relay team o( TcmJ
Plowden, Mike C 1m·pbe11 •
Mark Garcia ud IUcl< Ged-
des, took tblrd place In the meet behind champ l oa -
Oceanside and Escondido. 1
They clocked a 4U hi the •
winning effort and Gtdaa won
the invitational lOO ·wlth a 10.0
to tie tho ,-i recont.
wfs:~ ~~:8~k u!e~= ~:,
with a 4:33.0 and the di8tance
medley relay team of Riek 1
Brown, Dave Peter, Gary
Brashear and Biad WintOti c-
was second wilh an 11:02.0. ,.t._
Sophomore Kim Humphre)'
led the shotputting •ft-..
gregation to a fifth place witH~
a tM effort and the high JurnAi:
team or . Tom Terry, Merit( '
Heumann and Bill Allen w~
second with a 17·2 overall ef·
fort. ~
Laguna Beach's small ~~"
tingent was well represen~.
with second place flnishes iri:t.:.
the pole vaUlt · and sprin
medley relay.
The team of Gene Molway
Brian Ottmer and M i k e·
Sweeney chalked up a 34
mark in the pole vault and i
Wilfredo Plchey, Tellord COt~
tam, Brian Bagley and Dave l'
Hustwick ran a 3 :28.0 in the
sprint medley.
Bagley, Tom Jones, Cottam
and Hust.wick finished third in
the mile relay with a 3:3.1.J,
best in their heal.
Chris Lambert led the Cee
performers for Laguna Qeach
with a 3:26.0 in the 1320, good
for third place.
And the team of Sweeney,
Lambeff, Walt ottmer and
Mike Nathanson was fourth in
'48.& in the Cee 440 relay. Q
.
"
ACTION?
~-&ti
. . '!
THO/fOUOHl/IMD • racing
now!
9 llG RACE& DAILY
Tues. Thru St1. FJm
nca.MW..kdrp 1 :45
Satul'Wyl&Hdidllyl 1:15
ADMllSION PRICES
Grtndst•nd S1.75
Clubhouse $3.00
Res«Ved 8eMa S I .50
Clncludlt ...,,...111e r-1
~
t;;" i ., ... ·~
..
.,
,I
,r
R'fdfr,c '1 11 Wlliff1-'ld. 211 I 1 , WIS7MINSTIR (t) Chicago
.""'", • 1 'o ff rllrtl
Won Lost Pct.
IS 6 .714
GB
2 •
Won Lo1t Pct.
IS 7 .882
GB 19'9 •usrtn .AJmrica
£•~":.~: ff 4 1 , o H1v!W!\. c l , 1 o Pittsburgh
:,~11~~-'.'°':, : : ! : ~-::;i::::::.· ~: ! : : : St. Louis . 81111191~. p 1 o o o M. s.nctiei, 11 ' o 1 o Philadelphia 6
11 8 .579
10 8 .556
J2 7 .931
8 11 .421
7 10 .412
·' I
Saddlehack
Loses Again
I p;;;;;'ii"ii"ii' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;ii~;;;;ii' ii";;;;';;;;"';;;;°"";;;;"ii·;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii';;;;'ii'•'il New York U Montreal
7 II .389
7 11 .389
6\1
611
Bal Um ore
New York
Boslnn
Waahlngton
Detroit
Cleveland
II 10 .514
9 9 .500
I 15 .062
2Y.
I
3Y.
4
I
I
I
SaddJeback college hit lhe
skids agaJn in baseball, losing
Us l!lll game in a row when
l.nvadtnf Grossmonr pulled ofr
8 t-2 decision Mond1y aC· -· Don Sweetland hit Sad-
dleback's first home run of •he
ytar In the rourth Inning to ac-
count ror the Gauchoa' flnt
run and Lenny Kobahld doubl·
ed home the second tally in
the seventh.
$ADot.l lAClt (1)
Wlllltm"' :lb c.rtrrlhln , If .,._ff
S._tlt!Ml, e .-. ..
L_.fl', d -· .... ¥¥ •• '"""°""' • 1t•1tt1, ,,
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lOlt!I M t I I ..,....,,, ... ·----' .. '°' '" ,..... •• t . 000 100 ICIO-l ' I
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e Would )'OU bdleve a car
for S50? Wtll, 11'1 true. , •
check the paper today!
• Newtywl!d1 attenUon!
Need a relrlgerator, furn-
iture, a vacuum It. • ,
"bless her If she does", ••
a sewing machine ! Good
c~ to pick them up at
reu:>nable prlcta aC¢0l'd. tna to today'• paptr.
• BeUtve it or not, one can snu.. tlnd a 2 bedroom
apartment with loll of the
'nice featurt1 for SUS •••
better h u r r y on thl1,
though!
• Jt you'd like a little "Bua:"
in your tile •• ,there '• ont
in today, low mlleaze. A
low vintage •• check tocll.YI
Wetl DtvltlOI
Los Angeles 13 a
San Franctsco 13 6
AUanla 13 7
CinclMati a 10
San Diego 9 12
Houston 4 J8
Mt1111•1'• llMth
Cl'll(:llO 2. f'>llllldtlplll1 '· 10 11, 1.0ull I, Pl!t1bvr<all 2
Al111/111 12, Houlllll'l I
LOI Af!Plt1 (, Un 01-J Sin Fr111ci1JCO •, Clnc:lt1111tl l 0n11 ,.,,.., td'>tdulld,
TINY'• Ot""'
.884
.684
.632
.444
.429
.112
fftw Yoft IKaotmitn 1·11 11 ,,....,,,,,, 1011nl 1·11
Cllk.-IJ1nllln1 Jo.II II l'hlllOflpl\lt IJ.U-Jo.II, , ..
11. LOul• IGl111" 1.11 tt l"ltt•bv"911 (lvnnlne 1-u , ••• HolMton (L*"\tlltr NJ •I Allllllll (1"10•11 1·21, • •• I.OJ Annltl (Sinter HI •I $111 01"9 (Sfllltorlnl 1-0), ni.111
Ctll(.lnntll (Fl1her Ml II $ltl l'rlfKIKO Clollt'I 1-11
Wtat Dtvlalo1
MiMesota II 7
Oakland 10 8
ChJcago 8 ,
Kansas City 8 9
California 6 8
Seattle 6 JO
Mtfl'lllY'l 111:-111
MlnntJlll A, IC1n111 Cllr 0
N•w Yori\ I, ll.ol11111 0
Wltllffltletl ,, Ot1rolt I
l•ltlmor1 •' CltYtltlld, rel~
C1Hftm1a If S.."1'1· r1ln °""" ··-tcNd1i111d. T....,.fOt-
.611
.S56
.533 Ill
.471 21,a
.429 3
.315 4
C1U!<ll'fllt IMcG1ollllln 1·11 ,, $fflllt (P1111" 2·11
t1t:1n111 City !N•laon l·U '' M1nllll9!1 (WOOCJ-H) Wl~lntton (COllmtn t-2) 11 Dtll'Oll (OlllHo!! 0.11,
'"'" a1111-(MtNtlb' W) ti Cllvtl ... ('Tlanl M),
n1thl 9o1ton (Nl•Y 0-0) II Maw 'l'0111 ll!Oltl""1'"' J.0),
nl9ht
OnlV ·-Khedlllf'll,
AUTHORIZED
FULL SERVICE AND PARTS FOR ALL IMPORTED AUTOMOBILES
_f~l'lllP Lll I
H 111 p CI I•_,
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Aotllo<batl ..... AUmN-HIAUY -,....., ..... .,. .. --· w. ' S...tce
.
~---~ -~ -.. -· --· -
Available w/Automatk 'l't'9.nsmtislon
GOl.D SIAL USID CAIS
FIHUT SILICT10ll
OF USID SPOIT CA.IS
IN SOUTH-CAUfOINIA
J~r l.up orl
31111porl s
I
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JI DAJLV Pll.01'
MUSICAL ADVENTURE -Red SkeltoQ, above
rigbl as Clem Kadiddlehopper, eyes the fireman's
hat ~om by Maestro Arthur Fiedler who will lead
his famed Boston Pops Orchestra in a musice
comedy concert on the Red Skelton Show, tonight
at 8:30 on Channel 2.
TELEVISION VIEWS
TV Violence
Isn't Honest
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Is there really too
much violent entertainment on· television?
Or is it just possible that the basic problem is
that there isn't enough real violence shown at all
in the week.Jy melodramas?
What I mean is this:
When 90rhebody-is shot or stabbed or otherwise
done in on a television show, it is usually such a
neat and clean job of killing that the viewer feels
little or no pain at seeing a death.
HOW CAN THERE be horror when the process
of killing and dying is not merely repetitive -but
virtually palatable in terms of real ugliness?
I think perhaps the numerous deaths on tele-
vision have been no more responsible for killing
feeling in viewers than the more pertinent fact
that the slayings have not been particularly un-
pleasant.
And I'm not so sure television's current "anti-
violence" trend of cutting away from actual killings
at the crucial moment is a good idea.
MY OWN FEELING is that if you really want
to generate a fear, a hatred and a horror of death
on television -ttiat is, take a posi tive instead of
negative approach -then you should show killing
as it genuinely is.
And I think there would be such a feeling of
rew1sion by the public that its requests for less
violence would be steeped in much more real feel·
ing -so much, in fact, that viewers woqld under·
stand the correlation between the genuine deaths in
the Vietnam news and the phoney ones in melo--
dramas.
FOR EXAMPLE, what if a fellow on "Gun-
smoke" -instead of merely getting shot in the arm
or leg -was plugged in the groin? You don't see
that sort of thing happen very often on television.
, What if somebOdy on "The High Chaparral" -
1 instead of getting a scalp wound or dyUig neatly -
were shot right square in the eye, for all viewers to see?
What if a villain or a good guy in "Hawaii
Five-0" had half his head blown off, in full view,
before a nation of watchers settling down to watch
some nice clean killing! Vt~AT IF A woman in a melodrama had a
breast shot to pieces~ What if someone's mouth or
ears were ripped oU by a knife or gun wound?
Ob, you say, too horrible. Oh, you cringe, that's
not the sort of stuU one should see on television .
Oh, says a network executive, that would be taste--less;
I disagree. What is horrible and what is taste--
less is to see antiseptic death, the way it hardly
ever really happens. That is dishonest. That is im·
moral. That is the worst 'possible kind of lie. It
glamorizes killing. It glamorizes the s<rcalled nr
mance of dying in a melodrama.
'lbe truth could set a lot of people in televi sion
free.
THE CHANNEL SWIM : If the sixth and seventh
games of the Boston-Los Angeles-pro basketball
·playoffs are necessary, they will be broadcast by
ABC-TV: on Saturday at 2 p.rn. PDT, and Monday
at 1 p.m. POT ... more than 35 percent of Ameri-
can television hou seholds had color sets as of April
1. according to an NBC-TV survey .•. an hour
about the _proposed antiballistic missile system airs
.aonigbt oo "CBS Reports."
we DROVE. BE MIND
HANFORD S:Rl:M 'M TME
Hf LEFT.Met!,..._ R1N660LD
-W.AITU<'G R)llt A CJW.«:E 1o
JUDGE PARKER
BLAST NIM AN[)~ •
OUT "'5T-
KATMEEIWE? nus IS Lll'l:'.E ME •• ME'!>
LA.Ir.GO~ I HOPE I PIDWT W.uf ...UEAUY
'1()11 WT I W.\NT 10 O.n:.M ~ LEFT •••
&EFOlE-HE WEWT TO C.OUIIT!
TUMBLEWEEDS
WELCOME, BARBARIC BUFFS! THIS
SEMINAi\ FEA1URES A COURSE IN
'FANATIC PHOOICS: OR, THE .00\IMON
llWI CRY!... TO BEGIN WITH, CAN
SOMEOOE lE1.L
ME WHATA
WAROO IS ?
MUTI AND JEFF
• '
TUE S DAY
Al'ftlL 29
~ ....... .
• • IOllflld ... IMlnlt MlllM ............ ..--him' tlltllnlflllht tlolM trutp.
"" Mend will llt I~ ~ Jw. tisll •1111b. (R) ••
e .. ht TIW Ue (C) (60)
113 (J) -.,..so (C)
THERe WASlllT 'TIME.' BUT , > 60T A Gc!MPSE OF T~HE;,<----...11 1:00 II T1le If& """ (Cf (60)
LITTJ:RIMlj OM IT IT WAS A OuflPllJ.
HI lb ID (J) tin fllC 1..r1r IWI:
(Q ...... Ttii Ste It. ""' TH 1to1,. (CGO!edy) ''8 :....l loftathatt
Wilt:•r.-. J1c* Weston. ltiel111ot , ..
luul, Sll'l't 'A11t11, J11f11 Mtldows..
AR •rt expert hlttd by IR lnsutllltl
comp111 to p~ICt • ,.-lorim Rem-
brandt. dtmes 1 tdltme to tt111
1n UllKfUOUloUS •rt Clll1ICtof with
lifCll!IOUI idt.11. (It)
AS WE MSSED/ '?AOOf"MMAllHI It Im......,. • ..., (C) (30)
(IRCUC.ATION TRUCt(I 0 Utiln IMUl>ail (C) (ti/a tu) Wtr1 vs. C4!1tlcs Ill NBA pl¥tOns.
By Harold Le Dou
ICATHEtlNE? ME 't'OO
Tl-IEJl!E? WHAT~ WRONG?
IS. THERE ANVTMING
I CAN PO ?
By Tom K. Ryan
~ ....
-·~ I DONT
KNOW.BUT.
ITS SORTA
FUN!
By Al Smith
D lh WClt<t "'"" (C) .... ,..... ._ If Ttut' (westlnl)
'62 -Jill Mltcllu111, AltlWI ll4'. .lodJ' Mc:Cru.
a 1 "' (t) t601 m.., ... (t) tlO)
m..._ lCl tlO)
(ill {]) lltlY 5riffia (C)
• • ....... ..., (SO). "Thi Old
lfomtdM4. ~ A la It • cem11111nitp
pl•J at Slnnztf, Ntw H•ll\Pllllfl.
"4riclt ~ city lift In tti1 lttt ·-mu~ c.11r '•• E1U Pit!
m l1UI "'"' (t)
l:>I 0 me ,.._., (t) (60)
m1...,""' 1301
ID YOJ1t• ti tilt lott.11 11 the
.. (t) (60)
11300--(C) m ...... 11111 .,.. Qll (30)
' "Tutolinl Kelps.~ Cilf
flldllf Hlttlett ROIMf 4
hil prorra111 for oldtt students b:I
Kl 1s junior tuton. A p•renl shows
how sM help• Mor hlr child.
IB Ill Ill Ill -lCl mur• 111•, 1111 (C>
Q-5 (C) (60) Woody
Herman and Pili rounbin tt1 It ..
tuud.
tD ll£r Futiw.i (60) "The World of
Joie limo11." A repeat *'-in1 of
1 profile of . .lt:ie Limon, llOltd
Amerian modtrn ll11q1 IJl4 ci..:..
rtcar1phtr . with performances or
his '1he McOl's Pmne" ind "MW•
81tviL" Amon& \ht ~ Ill
Paullnt ltontt, Ll.ICIS HOlo'ln1 •nd
Bttty .lontL
Qi) a.tclM Aftllllllt (C')
,,,. a ~ m .... "' ,., t!O) ~,,
finds Mrs. Loomis' w1Uat ind th•
grateful wom1n suddenly ch1n1e1
Into In KCUstr whln she dlSCMrl
fi1·1 lloll1rs 1r1 mlsslni. o li1I m rn""" ,., t30l .. ,.,
lo'lt Hutt!t." A youni call 1hf
stauen Into the squad IOOl1I ind
!alls deld 11tu txd4im1ni. "Hf's
goln1 to kilt my mtml ... llr1 P1rker
11 featured 1s Vir1ini1 Teny ind
Brtn~· Smi1•1 It tten II Shi11e,
Rich1rds. (R)
0 Nin (C) (30) Tic! Mt)'lr1.
ID lZ O'Cloc.k Hit• (60)
!l)Hoy
!:45 m Dod1t1t Sc:or1bN14 IC>
7:00 :?tt~5c.-:i:~!~1 Htwi (C) (JO) 10:00 0 S 00 CBS Htws Report (C)
· (60) Htrry Reason~r and Mike Wal-
f)WW'i MJ LIM? (C) (30) lite •IPOrt on President Ntxon'1 m P...wd (C) (lD) ABM JllOlrlm.
113 @ -(~ 0 "'"' (Ci (60)
fl!! i IJICWI At fftMI Wttll Sim
Y1rtJ (30) Cflams Waite discusses
the m1ron1ty rice with Mr. ' Mrs. '""· a Ill "' '"" '"' 1~ m lsl1114s Ill ltM Sn (Cl
Q) Nn!Jwtd C1111t (t)
7:lOIJ9 (j)LllKtf CCI (60) Mur·
doch Linc., OWlltf af 1 nX uttlt
rind! hi tM Nortlltm Cllilon'lil of
the 1170'1, lefldl out I t1h lot his
lon1-mlal111 IOftf lo ~P him dt-
fend hh property 111inst would·be
lllld rrlllbm. (II)
n 113 mm""' ...., 1~ '"l Ntnettl fibl'I)', £d l'\ltt •nd En1el·
0 [jJ rn m Tlllt's lit• (C) (60)
'1ht Ninth Month." Slltllt, Winier•
p!ays 1 h1ppy·10.luck, b1by nurse.
em O•n• 1 confused lecturu on
child care. ind Klye sttvens sin11
111 tht joys ol motherhood. (R)
0 M1rshll DMIN .(30)
ID NEW SEASOlt USC Ml&Sk ftsU· 11! (60) John CrO'#n. ch1lm11n ol
tht plano clep1rtmtnl, use School
of MllSk, hosts • series luturin1
faculty Ind students flom USC, hi
thi1 suson's pr1mitle, lour st!J-
dtnts perlorm Mozart's "Adatio and
Fu111re"; Wtber's "Five Piece&, Opus
s~: Beethoven's Qua1tet Ko. 7, f
Major, 6'1us 59, No. 1."
bert Humperdinck runt. 10:30 O llwit: "'T\t ln*M" (4r1m1)
O @CIJ IBMlll ..... IC) (SO) '62~iH Robtlbon, Niel M1m1.
""''· Whit • rr.tty aus." ,._ m m ..... (C) 130>
lint •nd Julil btcoml dil'ldly 111· I!) Fallal*I ClruH
wlwd In robbery, Cll' theft 1nd
countll'feitill1. K1111J .>ona 1uuts
., Htrbtrt Mills. 1R> • 11:00 e o D mm NIWI 1c1
0 M,IHiH $ lllN: "Tiit Lut TIM
I Snr WM'" (comedy) '61-ltobert
Mitchum, J1d Wtbb, Oon Knotts.
m hdp!S hpd -WlfM·Mp (Cj (30)
ID Pltrf Muon (60)
Qil TH fnrKll Clltf (30) (R)
Im D Cl.rt. M1rt41•it111t
1:00 QI Dldl'l'I l&llbtlt (C) ~1 hr 45
min) Oodt11s vs. Sin Ditto Pad'ru.
Vin Sc11!1J ind Jtm Doaltt CIJI tbr ....
fil) W«kl Preu (C) (&O)
ml Dlscothtqlft 1 ,.,..,,
OMM Nitdad
ID !Mit: .. """" ·tw1 lr (dr1-
m1) '54-ld1 luttlno, st .... e Codlr1n.
li1I oo 113 oo a oo ,.., tc1 m RN11• ,..... c.lflrffcl (30)
m 1r1ritcbtd (01
11:30 iJ Mowie: (C) ''PtrlCliH LapeR•
(comedy) 'S3-KtnMlh Mort, SlllJ
An11 Howes.
0 113001?JIHIPt-1Cl
e ....,..= -ca""' "' • ..n-{comedy) '41-Bob HOPI, Datotlry
lunour.
D li1I 00 aJ "'1 '""' lCl ID Dollald O'Con1111 (C)
1:30119 Ci) ~td Sltllo11 (C) (60) 12:211 0 Movi1; "'Pb1nil City Storr'°
Robert Mu11U and lhe Boston Pops (dram-a) 'SS-John Mclntht, Rldl-
Orch11tu 1uest. Clem Kldlddle-aid Kiley
itoppef takes 1 1our of historic ·
Boston landm1rts -P1ul Re\'lrt's
Hou•. O!d North Church, Fire House ~umber One 111d the USS Con5!Jtu. 12:30 fl) ActitR TM1tr1
tlon.
+lAl/E ~U EVER
+lAD "ll-llS KIND
OF RASH
BEFORE?
WELL, rr LOOKS
UKE YOU'VE GOr
IT AGAIN!
11= YOU ASK
ME,THAT DOC
DON"T KNOW
NOTHING
Ba;, J1ll1 (C) (30) "f1rtwt\I. My 1:00 0 0 News (C)
Flfends, Hallo." Atroipace Indus·
tries' mlddl1·•1td mmt11ger (Ed· IJ Co11111uni1J' lul1diR lt•r~ (C)
dill Quinlin) llunchu 1 1om.ntic
C1111P1l1n to win Julia's 1!frctio11. GI Fr1t1 the lnsillt Out (C)
GORDO
"'• 1r's, ,.~. l'ARLING! 'Tl<ADI• 1 """'"-~~~I! PRESS
Cl' I 1L1.. THE TAKE AAA'/A. rT! VolOM~fJ l'lll•"'"s Cl' ,,,. '/IXA TA>J f P121lSSJN"1 • IWCM~
"'.;.j
vlv
MISS PEACH
CON6AA'TllLA11011S,AlrniU~!
YOU'VI! .W.DE A STIC.IC !
1111 f
.
RJ'W~~;·'~,w, * PfrflCO.Aif ii •• Ii
INDIA BONITA · i1
f~l.~ tNOIC.fNAS , il . ., . ' '
." •1 '. ,[ ' " ' ' ·~ . ' '
" . I
IT'S 51JLL NOT QUl1'E
A Pe~FIK.T STlCIC, 8UT r
1'HINK I CAN MIWSE WO!t'<
1Mf 8UeiS OUT .. ,
7
By MeU
wO<JLO 'IOU CONSa
GOlllG !!ACK ID'!Hf
DRAWING SCA/ID!
'
I
G1oucho Min 1ppe1rs in 1 cJmtcl
rolL (R)
0 .R11•lt hdftrt ~ {CJ (31))
Mincy Arllll 1uuu.
1;15 1J Morie: '1111 Seers! 11 Coiwlct
l.&~1" (mystwy) 'SI-Glenn Ford,
Grnt fieinrJ.
D @(I) G) H T•• • Tlriti !Cl (00) "Thi Gllloplna 5'Jn Game."
Riclnlo Mtnt.~•n Jim Michol1s 1;30 GI n SliMlt S1ri'
~" i11h~lioMI l1nce wllo II lllfl'.l!Jatin1 lot 1 lloltn trt1ty
wtik:ti Altullder Mundy t111 bttn' ?:30 QI All·Ni1ht Sllow: "Pl1tinum HIP •lli&ntd 10 obt.111. Mundy Is ltted Stllool" •ni "Thi Sttt11 P1opl1 ...
-
WE ONESOA)
DAYTIME MOVIES
12:111 D "CM It" (myshry) •3µt14
M.eMurrl)'. Mn Shtrldln.
12:30 8J (C} ~ SIM Slli," (drl·
m1) ··$2-fit1 Anar!i, ..,..,. My
FMdi .. (comld)o) '52-Mlllt Ob•-
'''"
''" m -" "' -· I:::.": t:DO 8 (C) ""-f IMI tt _.,.. (ro-'~Plh1Clt Birt, MatjOrlt
mMICt} '50-11111 Pllwlll. ..,.,,. Sui.
ltnL l :OO Q •4 lllilliMllN ltt Cllriltf'
l:JO 11,.,.,._.. (wtstm) '46-Ann (comedy) '51 -[le;rl\OI P1rku, rrtl 'fOH, Erk: !'Ottman, Mte:Mun-11.
D ..,..... Cll Fl'lfl 1 SlrM&_..
{dlam.1) '5~--41" Merrill Sfltllly 4:JI 8 . ..,. s....-· (ctr1flll) '41
W'"lftftQ. l -frtd MdufTIJ, .loln Crll'lfeif
• JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
011/{ty Ptll'ltiftf •Rd o.,. .... i,1. S.nolc•
fot lll•f• fhtlt I Q1;1ttftt' ei I C.llhlty.
PILOT PRINTING
121 1 wan IA\.IOA '"'°· Hl'W1()1lt 1· ACH
7
HE NEEDS REHEARSAL NOW
Dean Martin Wi th Jacqueline Bi5sett
No Clowning
Dean Se,.Wu s in 'Airport'
By VERNON SCOTI
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
There "'as an atmosphere of
disbelief on lhe set as the ac-
tor in the pilot's uniform ask-
ed the d.ir~tor, "Can we ha ve
a couple of minutes to run
through this'" A delighted
George Seaton. the director,
stepped away from th e
cutaway of the inside of a
huge airliner.
An a~istanl director called
of .humor. But he's also "'otk-
ing his head off.·•
Dir~tor Seaton concurred.
''Dean is the dream of all
lime. Everybody said he
wouldn't cut his hair to play
the role of Vem'on Demerest.
When I asked him to play the
part Dean said, "Ill shave my
head if you want"
"Dean ls a fine actor with
depth .. He also has a personal
sv:eelness. About 3,000 people
slood around on location at 10 out fo r total silence.
The actor repeated his lines degrees below zero at nights
several times, listening at-on location just to see him.''
tentively ti> Jacqueline Bisset. '·And he was a I w a Y s
a young beauty, as she read pleasant."
her lines. The man in the jet Seaton said actors. like
captain"s wardrobe reacted golfers and tennis players, will
variously until he \Ya s play up to the competition;
satisfied. "Okay," he told adding that Martin was more
Seaton. ··1 guess we're ready:• than holding his own with Lan·
The litClc behind-the-scenes caster and the others.
drama \vould have meant A decade ago Dean played a
nothing if it had been. say, small role with Marlon Brando
Kirk Douglas or Peter in "The Young Lions." He was
O'Toole. Butno. thil wasJ)ean an amateur then.
Martin, the easy-going. no-Not any more. Dean Martin
rehear s a I, shoot-it-once in "Airport" promises to
ch a rm er of television. become a serious actor to be
nightclubs, records and the reckoned with. AJthough he
Matt Helm thriller movies . refuses to fly, out of sheer ter-
No stranger to flovies, ~or. Dino's career is taking off
Martin has worked in many. Jct style on a brand new route
But most of his fi lm acting co..w!11 ••c•l'lc c:oAn "'a'"'n • mi n .
has been limited to fr othy ~-.,.
comedies, i1nprobablc hijinks
with Sinatra, Pet~ Lawford ~~'"--~•II
and Sammy Davis Jr. or Cot1ti"on Tod., fro• 1 :JO ,
··titatt Helm ." '
Now he is coslarring with
some real heavyweights in
"Airport'' at Universal.
Underneath the paUna of
sleepy indifference, Dino is a
proud man . He v.•a nted to look
good in company with Burt
l .ancaster. Helen H a y e s .
f\1aureen Stapleton and Van
J{eflin. !
TIIEV f.UIE m
ROBUSWGUi
ELKE GARY SOMMER LOCKWOOD
LEEJ. JACK
COBB PALANCE = •
An actor can't clown around 1 in that company. swinging a
golf club and changing the
dialogue to suit himself.
fl.1artin was Jetter-perfect.1';::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~,I
He took pa ins to rehearsell
eve ry bit of dialogue and stage!
business. I ~lack Gray . his chic r fac·
tolum over the years. shook !
his head in wonder.
"This is a different Dean
f\1artin," he said. "No foolin' I liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
around. He's still got his sense
Ca1·y Fussy
HOLLYWOOD (UPI\
Cary Grant !lays he v.•ill not
do another movie until the
right property comes along
-and il"s been two years
since his last film .
0 . C. FAIRGR'llS
TODAY
LAST TIME
TONITE 1:00 P.M.
UNDER WORLD 'S
LARGEST BIG TOPI
ITS SO GOOD
WE ARE
HOLDIN~ OVER
THIS GREAT
COMBINATION
FOR YOUR
P~ASURE
Or••age t:oast CQUege
Chorale Goes On in· Dark;
eonc.ert Not ·'Emightening'
By TO~ BARLEY attendance than the 100 or so
ot .... DtllY 'IM! St•tt onlookers we counted?
If chorale director Les Van l{andicaps apart however,
the recognition are : Laurie
Whilcomb, fiute ; RIC hard
Brightman, oboe ; R j c h a rd
James, c I a r in et; Kay
Brightman, bassoon ii n d
•
• • •
Dyke had done a little fuse· and Lord knows the chorale
blowing of his own ln the had plenty of them in that
Orange Coast C o I I e g e gloomy auditorium, it was OOl
<1uditorium Sunday he would a perfonnance tMt we wwld
have had the full support or at care to record ror later savor·
leaSt. this member of· an a.n-mg in our record book. There Mleil audlehce. was an immaturity about
Carlta Conrad, horn. We were solid 1cetu1ical nature.
not awatt of the existence o( Either way, it was a
this particular c h a m b e r """"ormance that de.serves the ensemble and wt need hardly ~· say that we shall be looking h i g he s t commendations,
tor their future concerts with especially In the light (?) of
some lnterest. the deplorable conClitlons we It , is a pretty pathetic turn much of the performance that
of events when you cannot could not be hidden by some
coqnt on the lighting system to excellent arranging and a
su!tain you in more than two deftnite hesitation and lack of
segments of your ope~ing perception in some .key works
selectK>n; it is downright -Flor Peeters' demanding
ludicrous when you have to ''Jubilate Deo Omnls Terra"
continue lbe program aided comeS immediately to mind.
only by the Jight that could be None of those "What did you
obtained by opening all doors expect in those conditions?"
in the auditorium. letters, please. We are trying
To our mlnd and taste, have outlined at length. Ac-
Anton Reich 's Blaserqulntette cidenls will happen, a.s they
Es-Dur • wu the most en-say, but did this one have to
joyable feature o.I 1 h e i r happen and did it have to be of
demandini prdgram but . we -=:;':":ch::;lon=g:d:;ur:;a:;ti:;on:;!::;::;::;~
And accompanist Karleen to evaluate the concert in the
Van Dyke had to provide the light of those very conditions\
vital support for some ex-and we have made every ef·
tremely complex choral works fort to bend over backwards lnl
aided only by the beams of a favor of the choir.
flashlight. brought to her \\'e do not intend to brand 1
piano as the lights failed dur· the performance as being
ing the chorale's rendition of without merit. But we do feel!
"Choose Something Like A Wat a lot more y,·ork will be
Slar" (no pun intended). necessary for this group to :
Our rev iew apart, l he again stage a program along
1 Orange Coast College Con1· the lines of that offered Sun-
munity Chorale and · the Van day. D-tkes deserve -and get from
this writer -sincere praise WINDS GIFTED
for thei r determination to Our criticism does nol ex-
pursue the program. We speak tend to the South Coast
from experience when we say Chamber Winds. This gifted
that lhcy gallantly carried on quintet s u r v i v e d ~ h e
in conditions that would have deplorable conditions we have
led many a group lo cancel outlined to the e;itent that we
the concert. were able to enjoy a fiuenl
and delightful rendition of
SPARSE CRO\VD v.·orks by Adolphe Des Lan·
And the morale or Van drcs and Anton Reicha.
would offer no arpment to ll
the purlst who may Insist that
1 Des LaDdres' complex ,
rigorous ''Trois Pieces en
Qulntette" offered the most
challenge bearing in mind its
~l~.~~~
ENOS TONIGHT
ACADIMT AWAlD WIHNll
CLIFF lOlllTSON
in "CHARLY"
ACADEMY AWAlD WINNll
JACI ALIElTSOH
"The Subject Was Ro1n" -··-··----·---··-
BALBOA
6n-4048
o,..
6:41 ntl.llJllN ...... '"'',.....
NOW-ENOS TONIGHT
A N•w Sc.:rHll Mnt9rpltc•
"THE l OF US"
•II A11•111lr Al-
"MODEL SHOP"
e STARTS WIDNESOAT e
Dyke's singers could hardly Coming up for individual
have been improved at the -~m~e[n~ti~on~an~d~o~u~r~s~ol~e~reas~~on~b~;~~;~~;~~~llr.::~~:~:~~1 1 outset when they lined up for a that they thoroughly deserve
mere sprinkling of spectators!
in the large aud ltorlu1n. Cer-
tainly it was a glot'ious April
day, but surely a 'f)rogram or
this stature merited a better
Dance Oass
Set at OCC
Famed jazz dancer Carlton
Johnson , v.•ho last appeared in
the movie "Sweet Charity,''
will give a master class al
Orange Coast College Pt1ay 7.
The. class is limited to 5j) .,
participants and a S4 fee Mil
be charged. Persons interested
should call 834·5766.
T h e lecture-demonstration
·will be from 3:30-5 :30 p.m. in
the OCC Dance Stud io.
JAPANESE
MOVIES
TONIGHT
HENGEN • MURASAKI • ZUKIN
SAllBY AKU ROKUJO GOYA
BROADWAY THEATRE
416 N.'BROAOWAY, SANTA~
KI l-4731
I•• Offlc• o,... 6 ''"'"
••o • I + o I • • CQAtr Hll~. U ill AU U• 11.~D. • llli•l'O~T llACli • 144•01W
Academy Award Winn1r
Best Editing
:llCQUiUM llSSll +=
olso Ctwt Edw•9d 111°
"COOGAN'S ·BLUFF".
ltdo J1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::;:~~~1l -t.<oUOoli .. "°"-'<1.COST ...... U,,_ S••·~\01 $"--...... ---··-..... ,.,.,.
tuw~on 11•c11 -e1 ,._ ...... ..
t• l•~•I••• ll4• hlo -o•. l·•U•
ENOS TONIGHT
5 ACAOEMY
AWARDS
GAIETY . . ·'
VIBRANCE I '
RADIANCE.
• JULIE ANDREWS COLOR
l>ll!STOMlf PLUMMER·OO.UXE
.U£J£4 •Q-
-ALSO -
SHORTS
ONI SHOWING
TONISHT AT 7:31
SHOW ST.Am 7 PM
"'"'" FfixsouTH coasT GENIR.ll PLAZA THllAT-
CUSIPOllATIOll San Diep frMWIY •I Bristol • 546-2711
Ac,... 14 FrN ~•'111111 M• Oftk • o,ent I :• Mil ,,.
NOW-ENOS TUESDAY
-WINNER Of 6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING -
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!
t ~t=E~~ a .. ,_.,,.,..,.1 llOllEIIT llOLT ·TECHNICOLOR·~ , -. SHOWING TIME -7:30 P.M.
'
-. SJ'fOWING AT f ,lS P.M.
j8CqUeS loussier· trio
!t2tY
BltCH .
contemporary
interpr.etat ion
of
J, S. Bach
pure Bach to
modern jazz
llch11td l111no.....JH1ft c.1111n1
W111lter Mcrtttt..-1-A•ll• lo
candy
Jechnlcoler'"aic: ~:r ~
•IN a....,.. Pepp-4 lo
"PENDULUM''
• • •e:AC" •L • 1'T •Ll.49 •
.. UNTINGTON •&1'CH I S4'7·•M
Acad•IOY Aw•rd Wi•Mn
Cllff RffertMo
Best Actor
... .........,.,.,.. ---·-·"-iu.,-11 MMllll IM"l'l • W MIO ma.
Ac .. mr Aw1rd Winner S.rg•in.M..tinee
Wod. I PM
F '" Refreshments MAT. ADMllllON 1.00 I CAL·STATE FULLE RTON GYM. isoo N. STATE COLLEGE BLVD.
FULLERTON , CALIFORNIA
__ lj);:=;::::;::::SH:::A:::R:::P:::;:=::::::=j-,,R/DA l', MAY 2. 1969 -8:00 p .m.
•
Low PRICES I .. ""'" ' • < HIUUll"
'• I• •
lolSllllA!lOllAL nus -•-•Mr11$N-;, u ,.,.,. • ,..,, ~"'"· ,,. ASSOCIATED STUDE NTS PRODUCTION ADMISSION : $3 .00
ftCtm If C1acil ~ o;"'~LIN eMniflre.! •111 Tlckels a•allabl• 11 all MJtual Ticket Anencles, Llbe1ty, Walllchs s.e.,.i.y ... w.~ • ._..., '••• • ,.... ••• W.#iff ._,,. •r,i119 ef Mus ic Stores, Sound Spect1um In Laauna Beach, Shafer's House of
'~• OAllY PllOT'S f1111'1011t Mu.sic , 7'11. ~· Hafbor in fullefton , Colleae Re co1d.s in Colleft Plfk<
''1'\"01 I Shopplna~nte1, Fulle11on.
•
D.llLY Pl(Of
DAILY I!ILOT
w·A·Nl ADS
HOUSES FO.R SALE
· Gener•I 1000 ---------COWGE PARK
Spaclous l!i'x26' ltvll1(J roOir1,
'14'xl6' Dinh~ 1'QOm, Bulll·
in gas kllche11, Roomy thr't'c
bt'drooru, I~• beth home. Lo-
cnted n t' fl r O.C.C. and
COSTA J.fJ.::liA CIVIC CEN·
TEn. Auume s,.. «;(, FllA
Loan $158 morith including
tues and lnsw-ance. •FULL
PRICE ONLY SU.!XXI . with
temlS. Acl f'{O\I.'~ I • * • ..
SOUTH SANTA ANA
\VlLL SELL FHA • locuted
only tv.·o blockl fron1 llar-
bor Blvd. l'oul· bc<.hvon1i1 ll
and a den) '''"0 bath hon1c with fireplace, J<~/A heat,
buill-.in kllchen and dinlni;
area. New ca11X'IS. t'Onl-
plctely draped, air-condltio~
ing unit In maslt'r lx.>droom.
llEATED ANO FILTERED
POOL, covered patio. cn-
cluse<I court yartl and de-
tached double garage. Only
$2200 do1vn v.·hi ch is lc~s
than the price or the pool.
\\'ILL SELL f AST -ACT
NO\V~l
Evenings Call 6~1050
Pacesetter Deluxe
Beautiful 4 an hont<'
with lots or used brick.
added J'Uffi!}US l'OOm
t•xcluslvely exquisitC'ly ·
r·u1-pc ted & panPll<'d lush
landscapin:; rUJ•ther C'n·
ha.nces this b e a u ! y.
Quiet street in choice
1'1<'sa Verde. \'ours for
. ' ..•••••••••. 138,50'.).
/OJa,,. co:rs
~WALLACE
~EAL TORS
~41>-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
Barrett Reilly l
pr1sents J . ~ ....
A Spac.-g•iner Home
Split level • 4 bdrm 3
bnths & sepa.rate family
roonl 1vith lhoeplaCP. J...o.
•caled In Bnycrcst In
11clghbo1'11ood ol healthy,
happy, ac!ive childN'n
Ow)1('r moving to Hawaii-
prlcctl !or action. $511,•
900.
160:i \\'eslclill Dr, NB 6~5-5200
5 BEDROOMS
\.:... $20, 950 -
Only $750 dou·n requlred to
n1ove into !his large family
hon1c. Close to shopping,
schools and churches. J115t
put on the n1arke1, this ooc
won't last. sue per 1nllnlh
lncludC's llL'<es a11(f insur-
"""' WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
20-13 \Vestclllf Dr.
646-ml Open Eves.
3 Bedrooms
+ Guest Room
$21,500
Absolutely wlthout a doubt,
II~ bl!st buy In Costn li1csa.
lmmacula1c 3 bedroom
house + J;UC'HI room. lart:C:
povl siz.ett lrt'C' sha.dcd kit.
Cheery Jl\lll1'; 1'0001, VC'l'Y
modei11 kitchen \.\1/h natur-.il
wood cablr.els 111ld buil!-in~.
2 car detached garage +
carport for bc>RI oc camp-
er. Don"! 1l'ni1.
Forest E. Olson, Inc.
64S.0303 ------Money Machine
Loo!< at this invcstn1cnt:
Con1n1crcl:il Bu 11 d Ing In
J OO~;., locntlon ocar 171h
111\'cel Ir. Ncv.·port Bh.-d. The
tenant payii YoU MOO monlh·
ly, $.15.tSO full price. Ch\•ner
WI.II cart)' nn t lru!!I 1letofl.
Good rch1rn. Goot! localion,
Good building. Call ?ilr.
l<rauter or Mr. rcral™)n
lorlay. 54G-2313
-BIG HOU_S_E_I __
LITTLE PRICEI
'Undcrprked Ii[ fl3.750, Fiii\/
VA . lm1n1c. 3 BR k huge
~ncJOll!'d pal'°, Nel·r taU, A
muat ll!C!l
Rltr. 6t2-BT'..O Evtl. ~ e KBlllDY
Back lay
off Im"
REi>UCED TO $38,300, 4 bod.
roam 3 be.lb, formal dlnlrc
roont. Lerae akk )'a.rd for
boo{ pool tic.
Jean Smith, Rltr.
6!s.m; )
HOUSES FOR SALll
Gener•I 1000 .
$21,750
Th• Price 11 Rlol>t
And iook Will.I It t>Uja; 3
c11~cn 117.td tied.room.•\%·
b~lhs.. LOVely bright ·and
cl\et'1•ful kitchen .wJth 11Un
11ood linllhcd cabfoe~. ~
1\'3.l! of . clai\s. overlookirc
rour own covered garden
P,'ll1o. Lar1e · P.Brk-like tor-:
ncJ'. Adult OC't"Ui>ted. ..
"For A \Vise Buy' .. •• Colasworlhy & Co.
•12.7177 OPEN EVEsJ
6% LOAN
or S'lS.oop ell.II be assunW by'
you & this 4 BR. 3 bath 2000 ..
sa fl, nc!:ar IX!1V home c
be )'<>W'S. LoCated ln North
Costa ?.fesa I looks like a
model. Fu!J price · ~
$32,950
Newport
II
Victoria
646-1111
$20,950 FULL PRICE
4 Bedroon1s. 2 Jo~ult Datha.
Plus Carpets & Drapea
throughout. Double Garace.
Cul-de-sac street. Wilk ·to
school.~. CI no cash ~ed.
$100 Deposit refundable qr
take O~X'I' S1H. ~"'a FHA Joan
11·ith payments of $124 per
month.
WE SELL lo HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
'76irz' F.<linger
842-4456 Of' 541).514(1
Open Eves.
New Usting-
. layc;rest
•1 Br's, Fam., Rm, Din. Rm.
House-i!'J e.'<cellent condlllon.
L.rge. s1.1•immlng poot sm.an
, fruit orchard. Separale yard
for pets. Quiet 1-esidendal
area .............. , $69,500,
~lrs. Raulston .......
Coldwell, Inker & C..
ftlf .. c .... ..,.....,
lf.....-t ...--.. c. .........
Kl f.ml O• ·-
ONLY $19,500
Otrr OF TO\VN 0 W N E R
~s. "Sell. Sell no down,
Velg or will aelJ FHA or
10% down." 3 big bdnns t\
on larre lot. IT'S YOUR
MOVE.
_ _r'll,E~R~N .. IE~ ... ~-..
CLEVELAND
1R••ltor,
143 Brttadway &b-0181
Eves. 646-41>79
BAYCREST BARG~IN
5 bdrm 3%: bath' home. Beam.
ed. ceiling in living room,
larie patio, space lor pool.
Ideal for big family. Own·
ar moving Eut. HUl'l')'I·
Arnold & Freud
388 E, 17th St., O f
Realtors . 64f>. 'TiS5
Cuy Of The Y~I
\Vatttlront • Vle1\' ol Cal•
Jina & Bny. 2 BR, 2 bl.
Oianncl Rttl 'Own )'OUr
own' Pent~ Apt. wilbf
FrpJc. $6215IXI. · ,
Aak·.for:
Chester Sa.IJabury, Rltr. '
315 Martnc ~
OCEANYIEW
2 BR. ~ bith,
I blOCk fo Beach
119.500 •
George Wllllomoon
Realtor
61J.it'.50 1 Evet, 67). 1* ' ,.,.,"!'""'~~~ ... ·
MYA hi· Mor
5 ledroom
The cleaneJI neatest hoin.;
in thts top, ares. All tDe
kitchen with. tlettrlc buDt..
ina. Room for bOtt or tralltt.
Looking IOC' 2300 lq. ft. u.&,
sperklet t -Thll fa It!
Tile REAL E:Sl'ATERS Ml-nn«*'Dll
$11_,'50 .. 4 ••• "" '
4 bedrooms,,. 2 baths. H'Ce
m:ttt~ ba'owi._ ........
bookca1a. Nlbnl brick
' ... , ... Uann1 buJlt.In kltcll. '
""" ' ....... i.o: e4~604 · i'Al:tl
-------·----
I• IWL y ~ILOT
HOUSIS FOR SALE
-r:.1rr-~ Hr-
Or•ngo c-ty·s
L•rge-1t
Jn E. 1111t St.
~
MEET
FATHER
NEPTUNE
he's tn yoUt front yard,
otrf'red tor the first Ume
on the market, this large
four btdroom beach
home w i th )U)Ctlrious
gold carpet throughout,
high beamed ~!Jing
adds chann as glass
Y.'alls overlook courtyard
entry and rear patio,
owner's health fori:es
sale at an unbelievable
$33.500.
Panoramic:
View
immaculate 4 bed-
roo m ho m e with
breathtaking view or SOLD •
4 yeaR old &Skin&'
only $37,500
ASSUME 51/4 °/o
-176.00 mo.
4 bedrm-College Park
Here·1 what lt has: dou-
ble firtpl&ce, elec. kit-.
chen. new carpet, 1700
sq. ft., rumpUS room, I:
is in a fantastic area.
EXPANDING
FAMILY 7 7
IJere is it, a big, big
house, 5 bedrooms and 3 baths, 2400 sq. ft if
you're outgrown you r
present home, and have
aJlProximately $3,100.00
equity. you can trade it
ror this one. 100% fin-
ancing available to Vets.
Priced below market at
$30,500.
DO YOU WANT
TO SILL YOURS?
THIS SPAC!
AVAILAIL! • , •
NUI
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
DON•T MISS THIS
RANCHO LA cu ESTA -u you've
missed Ille closeout of RANCHO LA
CUESTA'S 3 other units •••• DON'T
MISS THISll
Each succeeding unit costs more, so
take advantage of these prices. Come &
see our models on Brookhurst at AUanta
In Huntington Beach. Tbere are I & 2
stories, 3 &: 4 bedroom homes with 2 or
3 baths, Mission We or shake roof, Clre-
places, concrete driveways, heavy rough
cut beams, built-Ins, family rooms &
dining rooms. Close to Huntington Stats
Beach. These beautiful homes are priced
from $24,995 to $34,200 with VA or Con·
ventional financing as low as 10% down~
No 2nd TDs at 7.2% Interest Csll
968-2929 or visit any day 10 AM to 7 PM.
General 1000 Genor•I 1000
No Down Payment
$20,500 Tot•I Prlcel
For you veil who want a
SPICN-SPAN 3 Bedroom,
2 bath home on a quiet
filreet with Joads o1 SHADE
& FRUIT TREES near
schooll It shopping tn EX-
CEu.ENT AREA. nns IS
IT!! Low, low taxes and
payment& like rent. MOVE
IN NOW Mr. Veteran or
$950 Down payment to .all
other quallfl«I tiuyen.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & lee
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
54.>9491
Open 'tll 9 PM
UPPER BAY
Older 3 BR family home with
large play yard & located on
beautiful Bay View Street.
Owner moving East & will
aeJl VA or FHA financing.
$22,500
Nowport
•t
Victoria
646-tlll
I BR DUPLEX
Clean older units with dOU·
ble detached garage on 5jb;
140' lot. Assume existing
2!-1 TO ' ACRfl
R•ncho C•plltr•no
Is now oUerina a llmlled SS
parcels of fabuJous, oak
rrtudded, ranch size BPI't'ads.
The only ones o1 their kind
In the
Booming South CCN1t
Ar••
High above the smCli:' belt.
Private road1 and locked
gale guarantee the natural
beauty of this former Span.
!sh Grant surrounded by
beautiful Cleveland Nation-
al Forest. All utilities avail-
able.
PRICED FROM $1,000
10% DOWN -15 YRS.
For true country livlng, re-
tlnment or just plain invest-
ment at a bargain price. Call
or write for complete details
and free color brochurea.
Rancho Capistrano
4570 Campus Drive,
Newport Beach, 92660
54i-7843
OCEANFRONTS BR
Near Newport Harbor Yacht
Club. Colonial 2 story, 5 bed-
rooms, 3% baths, 3 car gar.
age, OVl!l'Si%ed lot, Cook! de.
light kitchen, large patio,
sundeck. $99,500. Exclusive
listing. By appt. only.
•
HOUSES FOR SALB
IDDD
DOVER SHOOS·
A twttpirlc VIEW
cl upptr Newport &.y
from thlt llPlcioul
5 Bedrooms, 3 be.th bOime
lf'Pll'< fa.mUy nn wt.th
wet bar and fireplace
love],y 1ardens lncludfn&
tuutilul roee 1ardtn
with fountain
ownen movtne born ~a
W•nh Action NOWI
R«IU<ed to 158,fJOO
Call' Jim Cobb
HOUSES ,OR SALi! HOUSES FOR SALi!
6-r•I 10000.nOfal · 1000
• San Clemente
10-/o DOWN· 61/:zo/o INT.
30 YEARS
$39,500 NO LOAN FEE
View 4 bdrms 3 baths, 2.487 sq fl of living
area , 2 fireplaces, built.Ins, new carpets &
drapes.
64S-3413 644-1655
R. E. LACHENMYER, RL TR.
-------------
'..., . . . . ' . ,, •. ...
HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSES FOii SALi!
No.,pert loach 1200 I.We 111o IUI
2 U.fts. $Z3 000 IAY,RONT DUPLl!X
0... .. ..... • Ow-i. Del.lrb""1 Dupltx s Bdm1
Ind.ud amJ boat --~-2 ba -.. New cptt. Bl kit " .............. din. i;m.. ~rm, 1ndl')I' rm
9!~ S!aft!~m ~ llALTT
HOUSES FOR SALi
~'l""''h
1-Unlh
1705
Hondymon Spocl•ls
1«. on OcdDlide ot HW'J.
ISO >di from. Beado. 4 Ip
Ape. ...... -point "
a...i .. """' -· pO. TDmAL INCOME~
CEEDING $10,000 ANNUAi..
LY. Prico $611.ZO. Neu NB Pott Ole. 646-2'14 Quolltloo Goloro MISSJON REALTY ""Oll!
:=1:=1:=1:=1=:111 3.1100 "' "-5 Bd. ""' ""· '"!!!!!!1185!!!!s.'!!'.~°'""~·"'i.oauna~~~I FEE cuner . Sot, be1I loca.. 5 bl, din nn, BIG pt.tlo, 3rd I Ls.o:xt DUPLEX. S al)d 1
Hon. $2S,900 cu/boat fP&Ce. 2 frplcl, cor. view just ,.emocltled
Qwm 6 comlort, $105,000 ~ _n• k' 11-•-·J ~-ff' 3 BR I: t.m nn w/POOL. R. C. GREER, R.Mlty ,.. ... wuu lllZ'"' ~·• Lovaly lamily home, .,..,, 3355 Via Lido 613-9300 ltENTALS
lchooll """ w .. tdltt Shop-I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' I 110.-Furnl1he4I ..... $52,500
WALKER RLTY 61SSlOO Huntll!fl., loach 1400 Rontol1 -to Sboro 2005
Genor•I 1000 Cost• -1100 • MAN to abate my 2 Bdrm.
Costa Meu. borne.
''Tiki'' HouN Specl•I
EASTSIDE • SparkJU>< Pad.
dock pool bome with cute
Tiki houat!, 8' hl&:h fence
around pxil A: patio tor
maximum privacy, a tatt:
&: metlcuJoU&!y clean 3 a:
tamll:y room, Prloed right -
undei: $36,0XI. Call now!
"f·5HO (.-cMllllllMt
Oll!GE REALTY l!GIAi-.ll~
New in Westcllff!
A truly ehannin& home, load.
ed with utraa. A large
bright Uvlna: room with
beamed celling1 and mu.
sive u.&ed brick fireplace.
Nice family room Soaks out
to lovely enclosed patio.
Brig'ht sunny kitchen cont· I~!"!!!..,!!!!..,.., ... ..,!!!!'
plete with over1ize service YOU owe it to )'uune"'iitOlii.
room. lluge bedrooms!!!! I w1tipte our 4 dlff.erenl
Extra large lot Ior prtvaey. trade-in pl'Ogl'l.mll.
A home with lots of charm
and warmth. Our exclusive.
Only $41 ,950, submit Your
&mailer home on our gnar-
antee sale plan.
WE ~ELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & lee
2().13 Westclifi Dr.
&16-mt Open Eves.
10°/o DOWN
642-3375 bdore noon
SINGLE cb':l ovtr 21. to
shatt: my Peninu.ala Apt.
Call aft. 5: 30. 'fm.3578
·-..------" II s1J,400 -6% 1oa.n • no 1oari ... fee. Only
2025 \Y. Balboa Blvd., N.B.
67~
ONLY '!'!:!"
no Qua.I.I.Mn& anyone can auume exl1Ung
GI loan at 6% lnL 3
SOlD patio, best eo&ta me5a
area near catholic
chur<h. $22,000
3 bednn. 2 story
$195.00 TOTAL PMT.
Immaculate au electric
patio • ldtchen, family
room with a fireplace,
11epar&te dinin&: room. ii:
its only 3 years old
$18,950
.-.. .. $137°0 ...
cold medallion island
SOlD no qua.U.fy1na; f u 11
,,nc.12<.!IOO
COUNTRY
SECLUSION
In the bfck bay l.ttfl1 10\\·l'trtna trees .-urrouna
It, "' acre expands ll. ~ enlrf hides tt. •·rr· ts a t;ambllng
' bedroom %lOO sq. ft. custon1 W it Anctual'Y.
LET ME
l!NTIRTAIN YOU
0r_... CrURty'1
l....,..t m .. 1711111.
'46o44M
$18,950
~
PERRON
. J'I( .. ., ....... """' ....
* 642-1111 Anytime*
WANTED
R.E. Saleswoman
\Ye have the advantage of the
EASTSIDE-3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths -
quiet cul • de • sac.
Sacrifice $21,750.
CALL 540-1151
(open eves)
HeritCIC)e
Real Estate
o:clusive agency for Ivan ;;;;;""'""'""'""'""'""'""''" Wells' new Dover Shores
Development + • captive
audience for males, Office
in new, excitln&. fumlabed
model on Galaxy Dr.
Roy J. Ward Co. Aak for M.
Pinover 646-1550.
General 1000General I 000 0-r•I
S@\\~lA--~t.~s·.
Soloc a Simpla S"""1\lllcd Won! Puzzle for a Cllaetlo
•t::l: .... t:r' ...!! :: ,.--...;,;.--...,..-:-......
.... .. "'"'""' --
ILACCE.N ·rr111
TIM<lgll ltCOftmTfl A ~.
ogor will 1ry onythlng ora
as long as It doaft' come out •
"'z,...,A""l"'ll-1..,.l---.. of hi• -lf-lt
e ~ .:-..... .i:e..-:!
8 1'111'1T Nllo<SEl!D
• l!TTflS
I UNSCIAMIU: FOii ANSWElt
,...i...1op1,.,.,,.No.s...._
1000
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8200
Costa Miu
$22,500
lint location
1100
Immaculate 3 Bedroom
home. Separate dining atta,
step SllVing kitchen. Fenced
rear. Call now 675-4070.
Stuart & Robbins Realtoni
Condominium
2 BDRM• TV. BATHS
1200 sq ft, $14.~ klan 6~'J:-i
lnteres:t available, Sale price
$18.500. Owner I Agt. 2400 El-
den, Ulrlt 15. 646-6927 eves.
DREAM LOCATION
Move in oond, Spacious 3 BR,
2 BA; Westc!Uf lhop'g area.
Owner. $31.500. 548-9500
Newport IM•ch 1200
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-1494
in range It OVt'l'I, crpt1,
drps, no toddlers or pets.
$150 mo. 64~1258 after 5
PM.
3 BR. bou.se; $165 J.fonlh
B-t ASSUME 6~% mA, 4 BR. fncd. yard. No pets.
•• $5250 tUn all $26,950 total l!KO-B Pomona st., CM In The · Bluffs prico. ·Call Real Emto by CLEAN 2 BR un!urn. duplox.
1959 VISTA CAUDAL Mc Vay 545-0458 or Russ at Utilities pd. Large yard.
$51,DDD ·VIEW. VIEW .. -~-~-----n<S mo. 286 KM• St. CM Income· Tax Shelter •-3 BR~ ., OPEN DAILY l·S ,.,..ecora.t.,.., new w/w 2 BR rear hou!e, fenced yd Duplex -· tenna -$$41,500 crpts, $31,500 -$1250 Dn. Jt..2 in rear $95 mo. 220~~ ?tlontt
5 Unlts, 2 -2 -2 -2 • 1 -BOYD loi. 216 Knoxville. OWner Vista 642-0618
$99,950 5.12-5939 I -=~~~=-~~I Newport Bt•ch Re•lty REALTY 4 BR 1%. Ba $22S mo/Frplc
675-1642 open evenings 3629 E. Coast Jftway, Cd~f Hunth~gton crpts, drps:, near OCC.
675-5930 H•rbour 144S1~,....=""-----~1
E/BLUFF, bay view: on ~~~~;;;,....,,,,,.1;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:-;:-;:::;; 3 BR house with fenced yard, \~Qe green belt; 3 Br. 2~ ~~:STBLUFF _ Con-WATERFRONT-byo~r· Welrtllide. Immaculate
ba. Spac. liv. & din. area.s. dontiniums. 2 aide by aide. .fl BR. • 2 BA., dock, 5.5 on $170/mo. 673-6350
~1any cust. featurts: mir-zioo JSq. ft. ea. 3 BR Ir water e~osed ~tlo $74,500. LARGE Bach., nicely furn. ro~ \vardrobe. bu I l er' a den, 2 BR &: den. Extra Abo 60 on main channel $110 Mo. Adults, no pel•
pantry, abundant sttlr>'; deluxe condition w/ choice lure 3 Br. 3 Ba., dock. 2285 Mendoza 54~54.21 ~':~~:cp~io!~t.nr~'. ~:~ ~-:;i.c.:PP~i =~:n.:,OOO:_:.:O>=nsldu==leue=='~= LRG clean 2 Br. t12S. Crpt1. 644-4265 1• drps, gar. No pell. Fncd Mark Les JUtr. patio. 1945 Pomona, CM. BLUFFS Best buy. Pool·te"° C.M. lnvtstmenl C:o. 548-7711 Fount1ln Vlll9f 1410 l ""'=~=,..-~'-~-1 ni .. view. 3 BR, 3 BA. 8)' ll.50: 2 BR., wateT paid ..,~~ ......., FOUR SEASONS Call before noon owner. . ..........,,,., Coron. del M.r 12.SG Just listed. Existing s" % 642-3315
CAPE 4 Br. Pool. FIL\ Iit.n. 3 BR 3 bath, 3 I'========= I
$59,o:xl. 1523 Lincoln Lane. Sandy 81yfront years new, 3 car praae, Newpert leach 3200
.Owner 548-9477 aft S pm. Warm 3 Bedroom l famlb' ternmo tile entry, sunken I ;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;.J
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS Rm, 3 baths, \\'!t bar. priv/ I~ room, formal dinlnc I 1
Dlal 642.5671 patio. near Yacht Club, only room, ocepUoD&14' 1&.rse
$25,0CO kitchen with eating area.
H•I Plnchin & AllOC. family room with wet bar,
B/B
TOWNHOUSE
PATRONS 3900 E. Cout Hwy 6'1>4392 dtaptL Block wall fence,
landscaping with sprinklers.
Split level 3 Bdrm -2 bath
Unit -spacious pool. Carpets,
drapn, firepJa~. •lee bit
ARE URGED
TO REPORT ANY
DIME· A· LINE
IRREGULARITIES THEY FIND
IN PRICING OR MERCHANDISING
TO THE
DAILY PILOT
[WARNING!
'Advorfoing not conforming to our Dim•·
A-Line regul•lions may be in violation of
both City and St.to Boord of Equatiulion
coded
IN V Es T NEAR TIU! -"~' l!~P i111 ••..•••••.••.• $265/mo. OCEAN 3 BR, 31,, ba, den, 2 ___ • _ Plea~ call 111rs. f'ay
frplcs, 3 1ar~s. brick, B • •--h
bcam/ccllmp, charm""1--========-I ay or '""'C home or use u Duplex, or1-Realty, Inc.
build 2nd home 011 bl&: lot. Letune 8uch 1705 901 Dover Dr., NB SU\le 221
Bia m-ono JND HOME? """""' Evu 548-6966
6 UNITS RetSrlt'll f Inveit~t 3 BR. duplex: 2 ba's., bltm,
9 }'ean old, annual lncot'RI! $5IO DOWN dshy,'!.hr., new paint, cpb:. l
tU,480. Full prtc~ im.soo. on excellent OCEAN VIE\l drps. Nr. beach. Year lac.
Oranl' Cont Property Lquna Lots at $5,950 blJ. $230. M0-7573
'"" • -anct $15 mo.. Small • JeveJ oJoH ul&rsutrlte 67WSi50 Pawd streets I: ~Wld TOWNHOUSE 3 Br., 21Ai ba.
Utila to bl CQl\.tr&Cted lhb: WW cpta, drpe, fpl. Fncd
BalbN hnln1ul1 18 aummtr. patio; elec. bltni, 2 car pr,
11 ;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;.1~""~·;121~0~..,_~!...!""~·~l02l~~...,~· pool. s:m. 642-7219 an. 4 pm
PRAmw
PRmY
2 Bfdroorn11, l'A 1-ths, ne11r
Bay l Octan on Peninsula
PolnL
Only Sll,250
BURR WHITE, Rllr.
2901 Newport BJYd .. N.B.
'75-46311 E-. '7Mlff 311' TO 'EMI
4 BDRM -l BATH Huntington Bo.ch 3400
Fam nn, near 1ehoob, p&l1I:
Tota.I price $)t,(Q) • 1~ On. J BR 2 bath. Immaculate,
anil owner wUI flnar'ltt "'"' cpts/rtrpa. Ad u I t 1 Los P.Mret Rlty preferred rxi peta.
4M •>S R.elerenets. $ 2 2 51 mo .
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT Ap
962-73.11 tor appoint.
~ountoln V•lloy '4 I 0
3 BR., den. fam-dib. rm-.;
bltlns, tnS/month. Leue:.
Avall. April 20. 139-1665
CltARGt 70W' wee ad now.
Dial 642-5671 for RESULTS
DAILY PlLOT WANT ADS
Alwaya a Go-Ga!
•
•~. •· i ·•·r1-r·,0 1•-: W¥'!' ·•·**"".1!$J '1 f ;., 't•S .-J, JI~' v s;a; # f .f t+>A+PWl, .. 0 144 .# PRC!&Z ifild$2 ;_;334; Iii
'HNTALS
Apts. F.urnlshtd
RENT~S
Apl!. Un furnlahod •
·RFNTAL.S
Aph. Unfurn11h1d
llEA L ISTA'l'E
Gen1ral
BUSINI SS 1nd
FINANCIAL
Gen•raf 4000 Gener i i 5000 Huntington S..ch 5400 8U1f n ... Ronl•I 6060 8'11. Opportunltlo1 QllO
$85: l·BR. Garage Apt
·w/w. Available now $140; l-BR. & den, 2 ba.
Broker ~l-69fio blt.IUI, w/w, child & pel OK.
Broker !JM..6980 $210; 2·BR. 2 ba. 2 Sty, con. =~~0-C='--'~-
do. W/W, ~ le: ~. Slf35~11~01t. W/'W, drps, pool,
piano, stereo. 8.kr 5314i9lkl a.i .... .,. O.K , Avail, now.
$UO; l·BR. close In Joe. •Bro=lw==S."""9SO=====
Nicely furnished. Avo.llable
oow. Broker 534-6980
Costa M'eu 4100
$30 WEEK UP
•Commercial It.ates
• Maid Service~ TV's avail.
e Cocktail Bar -Pool e \Vcstern trio Fri., Sal.
Costa MMa 51 00
Home Llkc AtmO!lpherc
Mlnin1um µpkeep!
Just redecorated! New
carpet! 2 b·cdroom1
APPROX. 120 "' fl ""' CANOY SUPPLY""-
• ...... from Villa Sbopplnl . ROUTE 2 BDR~. • 2 BA TH
$150/Mo. Sl25 11titn>'1 yr. Center. Exotl. lot' rtal (Part or Full Time)
Pool, carpet.s/dt'apel, bit-Ins, cltnte oWI!", a«ountant, ExooUe:nl Income for few
putio, Kidt OK. Fen«'d paint store etc. WO/mo. bra. weekly work (de,ya
Delaware Studio Apts, See at 82.6 \V, 19th St., .CM. or eves.). RefUllna and Bkr. 642-4422 colleetlr!c money from 2$20 Delaware, !tO. 642-2221 li nytlme 536-1816 STREET FRONTAGE Cot11 Operate<! Oiapcl)o
OIEZ ORO APARTMENTS On Beach Blvd. 1480, Sq. ft. sen in Coeta Meu. and
8234 Atlanta ~todclbomeidNJforlns\11'., 8~ areL No
r.iew 1.:z Bedrooms. Po,y ~ Rltr., etc. JBtlt. Kaklla and aeillng. (Handles name C£!rr!tosl S I g n s, lndacpd., brand candy & anacks.)
ele(tric only S25() mo. 10650 Beach Blvd, $1650 total ca:h required.
536-3927 or 536-2777 e 6*4120 e For rn ore information
Pool-Washers-Dryers g ======='-==I and details, ~nd name, -~~""="'=te:;,,.:G::.,..=t'S::... __ I Offlc• R•ntel 6070 addresa and phone num·
2 BR apt. All on 1st floor, C:.:.'""'-'~""''---"'C.:I her to:
*
""" Wh1ddya Wint? Whlddy1 Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIPICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spocl1I R1ht
ill Sll!S: 2 2 2 II II $ 22
NEAT, exp, Painter, tlO
drinking. Colleae ItudcnL
CetMnt, Concrete 6600 Very low pJictJ,. Steve ~549 eves.
e CUSI'OM PATIOS e PAINTING Int & Ext Lowcsl .
concrete sawing & removal contracled prices. Fully ina.
q
SUNNY ACRES MOTf:I~
2376 Newport Blvd., ;14g.9755
· upstairs, 1 k:ing·sizt'. Family
<ii<el" living room v.· i t h
lireplat'C downstairs. l~
BA. Bil-ins, dishwasher.
Private patlo__plus lar:ge pool
& recrealion f aci lit ies
available. $185 month (1st
laundry facil. Near Beach LAGUNA BEACH "ROUTE DEPARTMENT'
ffivd. & Slater. 962-7631 Ah" CondltlOMCf -P. O. BO:t 3846
5 LI"" -S tlmH -5 bucks
RUL&S -AD MVST IN(l VOi ~ .--~--Jr.ot. ~ "'°"' """' Ill "' .. Stat•-lJc. • 842-1010 SoaW.racUoo..auar-Free eat.1~..,_-
BRANO NEW 2 Ir 3 BR. ON FORES',' AVENUE Anaheim, Califomla 92803 a-YOOR l>lloM ~-.._.. 4-.1 111\f:t fll a4nrtllln9. 6-HOTNINO FOii SAl~ -TltADEI 0Nl'¥'1 • CONCRETE v.wk, bonded Jbn Weeks 613-1166
* Ville Pomona Apts. and last) . • I' I ca n i n r: deposit. 5-19--0614 from 1150 mo. Cp1', '""'· De'k opac" i.allable fJ> HARDWAR dshwshr. Nr Beach. 847-3957 newest oftlce building a: E PHONE 642·5671 " Ile. Concrete 18.Wlng. ~.-INT=,--_-EXT=~.~ANY="=s1=ZE~1
PhWlps ComenL MB-6380 JOB. Xlnt Work, refl, free "
Costa !\lcsa's ne\\·cst & niost 1----------prime location In downtown STORE To Pl1"' Your Trider'• Paradise Ad e CONCRETE "M>rk: all
Nr, new 3 Br. W·slde home. ~s~J;eck:s & cu.slom.
est. JThl. 642-4669, 646-3749
INTER or Ext. PAINTING,
lMMED. SERVICE. Local
re!. FREE est. 548-162'1 ,
lu.xurious apts now renunc. * Villa Pomona 3 BR Duplex I~' baths, Laguna Beach. Air coodl
cpls/ctrps, enclosed . garage, tioned, carpeted, be&uWUl HuntinMon Beach Fwn & unfurn. Adults only.
No pets. 1760 Pu1nona Ave.,
just south of 18th St,
$170/rno. 893--0661 eves. .,, Costa Mes..<1's t.ewest & most paneled partitioning. Two 8000 llCJ, ft. BU&Y shopping
luxul'ioµs apls no\V rentini; $140: 2 BR. new cpts, drps, entranCffi: Frontage on center. I~ of parking. Ter.
Unfur. 1 & 2 BRs, Adults stove & retrlg. Encl. gar. 2 Forest Ave., rear leadl to rific toe!~ will has bten SUS CASITAS only No pets. 1760 Pomona Blks froru ocean. Adults on-Muncip&l parkin& Iota. $50 built over periOd ol 44 years
FURNISHED Ave. just' south of 18th St. ly. 1401 Olive. 536-37511 per month for apace. DHk Fin, avail. For further infor.
l-BR. & Bachelor Apts. FAIRWAY REAL ESTATE and chain ava.llable tor $5, mation, 2110 NEWPORT BLVD. Gener1I Busl:"e11 houri azuwering BRASHEAR REALTY Medallion by Hotpoint VILLA APTS. _:c;;.._.e..:.;.. _____ I stt"Vlce available for $10. 847-8531 Eves 536-2123
Rent1l1 Wanted 5990 All ut:WtJea paid txcept -:·" ""-"-" CHATEAU La POINTE Near 0 . C, Airport. 2 Br. telepbone. ASSOC. --, MFG.
Lovely 2 Br. furn. apt. Pool, Apts. Unful"n, 20122 S.'lnta 2 BEDROOM apartme nt DAILY PILOT Man needed to associate with
carport: adull8, no Jl('ls. Ana Ave. ADULTS ONLY. nra.r beach, 1 J\lonth plus, 222 FOREST AVENUE company to &SJ!:.Unc duties
S150 .ti1o. plus u!ili!ies e 546·7602 e slnrting no\V. Phone D. LAGUNA BEACH or supcl'\'iaed production
, 1941 POMONA, C. ""1. O_CE_A_N_B_REE--Z-E-,-,,.-,-,-,1-. 1 Reyno I d s , Whitt I e r Gt--NG6 $10,000 investment required,
BEAUTIFU°"Y FURN. Lacge 3 BR l~ ba. bll·ira, 6'6-1124. oc '"ilc Bo' 4038, PRIVATE OFFICE fully secW'<d by lnvenJory 2 BR., HEATED POOL cpls ; drps., 5 u n deck \Vhittier 90607. & equipment $275 per wetk
Adults, no pets. $150. 2272 $\G!l/mo. 228G Canyon Dr. MATURE executive v.•ants 1 to start rlus share of profits
l\1aple. 540-5566: 642-lS07 No pets 545--3215 aft 4:30 or bdrm unfurn, frplc, gar, Secretarial service, air coo. \11hich should exceed $25.000
BACHELOR apt lurnishcd, 1 -'-"-"'''-"-d'-·-o_,_MI_2_·=---\\'alk to beach. Yearly lsc. ditioning, & parking. per year. For appt. 213 •
near 17th & Irvine. 3 BR LUXURY _6:.:':.'-.:"°'=.:mo::::.rn:::ing"""':,· ---Orange County Bank ffidg. GE 9-0203, ft sk for Mr, Gra· 230 E. 17th Street ham 9 AM to 5 PM. 1 ~===6_12~·3683~--~-1 e Split level, 1600 sq. fl. • LANDLORDS e Costa Mesa 642-1485 CANDY supply route, part°'
EASfSIDE: Quiet 2 Bdrm. e 2 1 ~ Ba. Crpts, drps, elcc: FREE RENTAL SERVICE
B k 53, ,.....,,, NE\VPORT CIVIC CENTER full time, days/eves, Refill Elec. bltns, patio, Adults • kit., washnn: .Like a home ro er ..,"°"' , ---------I Ottioes suitable for Com. & collect money from ooin only. 361·8 Ogle. 642-12!!8 •No pets. Sl75 .. 146-1152 3 BDRM home or: ydy l<a<e
1-,='=="'===;===.0?.: I mercia1, Medical, Dental. oper. Dispensers in Costa
B BEST value; 2 Br., cp!s, for family of 4, Cdr.-1 or Air-cond .. c~~. •l-·a•--Mesa & vie. No --'Ii-. Newport each 4200 s Ibo 1-• 61'°~ f 6 .,. ... ""' """ .... dl'ps, dish1~·shr., pool. Quiet. a a ,,,c, ..,.....,.,.,0 a t · 35c P ER SQ, FT. $1650 Total cash req. Send
Adul ts. No pets, .$115. WANTED: 3 BR unfurn hsc, 511-5032 OR 675-2464 name, address &: phone to:
FURN or UN FURN 2295 Pacific Aw. 54S·6S78 yr's lease. Prefer a.1. SlOY.i 2!1th N.B. Route Dept., P.O. Box 3846,
2 -3 or 4 Bedroom~ LGE. 2 Br. split level $150 · * 64S-S6G4 * Arti.sl studio near bay Anaheim 92803
Yearly leases $250/mo & up Up ..... r 2 Br 1135 N ~ts · -• 11 ooo SQ ~ MF .,... · · o,... 4 BR or equiv ... ent? CdM, North light -$50 mo. , . s: •. G. Fine Beach area locations .,,.o~ ~-1 d "''51~ PROPERTIES WEST "'°"'1 .. en o7A .,,...,. ~· 'Npt. C.~I. areas. Fncd yd. SCHWORER. 673-2654 Con1plete with offices on
1028 Bayside Dr. 675-4130 Villa Fino Apts. 3 Bit. Will leas<!. 633-4136 LEASE: store or ottitt.'1974 fenced 1% acres in
UnI. Children Welcome $150 \VANTED • Quiet, clean un-sq. f t. good location. 333 E, Rl'dlands area .. Gt ell
SINGLE Youni; Adults Lux· $74 \V. Center Apl 1 furn 2 BR apt, or duplex in l7!h St. C.l\1. 64&-40.t1 per ft. plus option.
n.....I NE\V 1 Br.~avail. AJay '''· .Nc_·.;B:_,· c,-:.;.:,:,;.:'~---~ For campi!rs, boats, dune ury gcuuer apts with coun-" "' ITTORE, affice & desk space b l ·1 try club atmosphere lll1d All bit-ins, cpl s, drapes, ONE BDRM Unfurn Apt. for 1842 Newport Blvd., CM, ugg es, trai ers. Owner.
complete privacy, SOUTH gar. &. pool. 241 W. \Vilson employed lady up to 54.S-0588 673-2654
BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at l ==s='='°=M='""'=h="=~"""='==-SIIO/rno, &12-00.36 --,J"oo.,....,s"q:.:.;;F;:t=. =-Off=i-ce-MAIL order. Start )'Our own 16lh Newport Beach. =========·I Mail Order Business as out
17 Fl fiber et&u outboard
and blr wheel dlt b'aller.
WIU trade for landscaping.
PHONE -Holl,ywood 7 un its, Income
SSSO/mo. $44,500 loan @
7%, TRADE $10,000 eq, for
twin screw cabin cruiser up
to l2'. Ed Riddle 643-88U
HAVE SlO,O«I tree & clear
R.J lot. WANT Newport
Beach homo under $50,000
or duplex.
Matcbem Realty • 646-4837
Have 10,000 plastic dttor-
ator candles valued @
$5000 (50c cal. Will trade
any or all fM' a BOAT or
item equal value. 67l-0802
Colo River Retort, Ariz, 2
Ban, Steflk house, Rentals,
gas dock. $80,000 l'q. for
airplaf)(', boat, TD's, ()C(!an
view home or '?. 545-00G!I
TOWNHOUSE 3 Br. 2~~ ba,
Beaut. appt'd, Priv. patio,
pool; nr.,bay. Val . $32,500,
tor T.D., car, camper or ? 1
Owner 646-6654
84' frontage N.E. cnr Olym.
pie Ir: Rosemead, Pico RI·
vera, free &: clear $25.000
val. Trade Td'i;, boat, air·
plane or ? . Owner 675-3243
25' TIS inbrd/outbrd Bert·
ram, fully equip, mlrl com.
pltly o/hauled. $12,000 val.
Trade for TD's, prop. or
airplane. Chvner. 675-3243
<714) 645--0550 Newport Beach 5200 Rooms for Rent 5995 COSTA MESA 646-2130 Distributor with SI.SO in-·~==~-~-~-I vestment. Write tor FREE -A I BEDRM . ApL, La~c Close BEAUT. 2 Br. 2 Ba., ready COR. slel!ping room. Cul de Commercial 6085 brochure to Audit Controls, * *
2 Ba, frpl, cpt.s, dlJhwsr. · ~
gar, opener. Val, $26,900. Cement Work-all kinda
Trade for T.D.'s or T Own-Free Estimate
er 846-1615, .U 8--0137 eve. * 836-0314 *
Have choice located Costa CEMENT Wot·k, no job too
~!esa 3 Bdrm&: 1am11y. small, re1U10nable. Free
wlll trade tor 3 or 5 unib. estlm. H. Stuflick. 548-8615
Approx SL2M equil)' •• The
Real Estaters 646-n71 • Contrecton 6620
·JNT. & EXT. Painting. Reu.
rates. Free est, lic'd &: in5.
Call Chuck, 54S-04Q"j, ~
PJJNTING & maiptenance,
in terior A exterior .
Reaaonable ratee. 646--3185.
PAIJ,IITING, Papering lS yrs
l
546-2313. ADDmONS-REPAIRS in Harbor area. Lie Ir bond·
· Older 3 BR house + 6-1 DR RD.-10DELiNG ed. ne[s (urn. 642·2356
units in Hollywood, $10,COO Designing &: Planning PAINTING ext·inl. Acous t.
eq $54,500 Jncme $580. F OR Kitchens-Baths, etc. ceiling. Lie. Ins.. 17 yrs exp.
local property, TD, boat etc Lic'd & Bonded. Ftte est. Frre est. 548-5325
Pc.rron Rlty 642-lm A & B CONSTRUCTION I=========
Owner/Agent will lrade 1122 Paularino, Cr.1. . , SGO!Xl. equity in 3 bdrm, 2 ba * 545-4941 *
home. Will trade for Apt ADO.A-Room, apt, units, • PATCH PLASTERING. ' •
units, ILf\Y cond. o.k., R-3 or cust homes, two story All types. Free estimate. f1
R-4 land or ? 968-3454. specialist, free I a y ou t , 1 _Ca_1_1 _~ __ 5_____ (
17 Ft. outlloard tor 1tation design. 20 Yrs in the Plumbing 6890 1., ~ businesa. Pacific Co a s t j
l\'agon or auto of equal val-Bids. 675-7191. Weekdays, PLUt.1BING REPAIR •·' ~
ue . Phone 64+4687 Sat & Sun at your service DRAIN CLEANING i ~
12 P.1·1 shops in 2 tilt-up QUA L IT y remodelirig, S.!6-2387 or 54Q.'1217 ,.._ l
bldgs. on Plaet>ntia CM. custom dealgn service. Refs PLU~1BING REPAIR. j
Value $150,000. Will trade on req. Frank M. Barden No ;lob too small
1/3 for prop, anywhere. For Constr Co., 1-039-1466 aft e 64.2-3~ •
balance ? Call 548-1542 4 pm -""'=--~~~~ LAKE A'RROWJ-IEAD • No. Addtions * Remodellfli
Shore Jake view Jot, all Fred H. Gerwick, Lie.
util & sewers, lake priv, 673-60U * 549-2170
Trade $5000 equity for nc\V
luxury car, 549.1392 eves. Drifting Service 6637
1 1/3 a c Com pton M·l o/ DESIGN DruJting electro
10,000 sq, tt steel bldg, ~II mech P/C layout '&. detail·
blk· topped, tncd. Trd TO s, j tlK Ken Sr ~ll91
land or 1 Owner w/finc.J,;,;:;·~==· =====
61>-3243 G1rd•nin1
* * *
Sewing 6960 •
} • Dressmaking. Altmiatioru: , , ~
Custom Oesign;J • f.
*646-6446 * )
Alteratlons--642-5145 · ~.
Neat, accurate, 20 yn:, exp.
Upholstery 6990 ; ~;
czyKOSKI'S Cust. Uphol. 1 1 :
European Craftsmanship •
100% tin! 642-1454 ii
1881 Newport Bl., C.M. •
to pier. Yearly. $150 1110. 1 · ' Blln d. h •-67~ onoo o move m. Is wsu1, Sac street, $60/mo. 642.{)39() FOP. Le ,. f M 1 Brookside Ave., Fair Lawn, ----------
ANTHONY'S
Garden Service
646-1948 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT 1 r .r-ouoo eye.Jovel oven & range: • ase n acre o -N J ANNOUNCEMENTS
encl.. priv. patio; encl. gar. I p 1 6000 property with small office. · ' and NOTICES
ANNOUNCtMENU
and NOTICES The best, costs oo more! ---------IPrune ... Piant , •• Prepare Coron• del Mar 4250
BL!( to ocean & bay: 1 Br.
studio $125: bach. apt. $!15. 1
Adult each unit; no pets.
Yearly. 673-7629
A•ur. ncome roper Y ,..,_mpleJely 1,-~ •'lh 2 FOR Sale Balboa Ii;laod \V/storage. $185 mo. ~ .....,, '"'or:u ... liilaria Was 54a--OQ93 laf!l'.e gates. 548-6304 Music Store. 223 Marine COMMERCIAL AV<., Balboa Iaiand. -
Found (frH Adt) 6400 P1rsonal1 6405 Monthl3 Maintenance Exp, Hortlculturii;t
Jcb W1nted, Men 7000 I,
I
EXPER Motel Mgr or Desk ~ 1·
Clerk wants to relocale ( , :
Balboa 4300
CLEAN Bachelor Apts.
All util inCl.'"$75 \JP,
315 E, Balboa Blvd.
BALBOA 673-99'1;'1
Huntington '8e8ch 4400
QUIET & BEAUTIFUL
Adults only; 2 Br., util. paid.
Pool. $200, 847-2115
17676 Cameron, Hunt, Bch.
Garden Grove 4610
SINGLE Young Adults Lux-
ury garden apts \Vith coun-
try club atmosphere and
complete privacy. SOlITH
BAY CLUB APTS. 13100
CHAPMAN Ave., Garden
Grove {714) 636-3030
Laguna &each 4705
2 BR, ne,vly dee, drps, w/1v Industrial Rental 6090 at above address or call
:; BR, 2 BA, fple. $235, INDUSTRIAL ==='-"=~--==1 days 499-3910, or eves MED. 11lu'd male. grty poo-
213: 98l-7039 . 2 New buildings, 30 units, FOR lease Laguna Nlguel, 675-3177 ·die vie. Wamer-Springda1e,
LOVELY 3 b<lr 2 ha tov.•n-fully occupied with waiting off San Diego Fwy at Crown1°LOCAL=c-c--cCOCKT==:-:A-;;IL,.-"B"AR°" H.B. 847-1732
house. Newly dee, pools etc. 'list; located on a main Valley, new commercial & old license full price $49 &JO I ;;:;;=;,;:=====~
Olli 5'16-371D. street. Nets $33,500 Per year industrial unlts. Delta Elec· Bryant Wl~st Bkr 646-1n4 Lost 6401
Sales price SJlS,000. F o r tric . .Days • 831-1400. Eves. • •
Corona del Mar 5250
-,_ c::::, -v ~(-'~~!".'.s~
ON TEN ACRES
l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfum
Frples I priv. patios/Pools.
Tennis • Contnt 'l Bkfst, put·
ting green.
900 St>a Lane, CdM 644-26ll
(MacArthur nr. Coast Hwyl
more infonnation please call 4!b-098. Bus. Wanted 6305 LOSI' 2 dop, vie C.M.
K. W. Small with 127X90 CORNER M-1, fncd.-Miniature blJ\Ckcll ,~ale poo-
Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. 700' bldg $9th It Whittier Wanted: BEAt.M'Y SHOP In die, needs ppu,., "Pler-
1818 w. Chapman Ave. C.M. $200 mo. 642-3490 ' Laguna area. \Vill pay cuh. re." Mixed black male
Orange, Calif. NOW LEASING -New M·ll""496-=9<°"36=======-I ~~:i~ s:~l80 & AIICh~~
541-2621, Eves-wknds 538-5971 Industrial 1350 square feet. I O 6310 Sal&: Sun.
Choice E'side 4-Plex
Near 17th SU'C'et, 3 • 2 BR
1 ba & 1-3 BR 2 bath with
fireplace. All units have
buill·ins, cpts/drps, pvt.
patios, garages. $55,500
$165/mo. Agent 642-1485 nvestment ppor. ---.,.-:----,-.,----* Reward* WIDOWED? DIVORCED? Lost In Corona del Mar. Lots 6100 We can bring you serenity. Beige Cocker & Poodle mix·
24 L B •1 I Call 24 hr. no. 673-5741 ture, l -old, answers to arge eaut1 u .,. Co I v tbe name ol Sandy. Please mp eted Ocean iew Lots, Money to Loin ~20 return, no questions asked.
Laguna Beach, underground --.:-------1
utils, no bonds, 2070 down, Isl & 2nd loans for quick Reward. P hone 64&-9303
$32,000 T riplex $340 balance release clause and cash. Borrow on your pro-LOsr 2 dogs, vie C.M.
3 BR. & den, 2'h ba., 2-Sty. llfonth 111:'ar Harbor Center. partial i;ubordlnation. Will perty eq wlthOut dl1turblng Miniature black male poo.
cpts, rlrp!', Adult s. Lease; 2 BR 1 ba, Wl-.ins, 2 pvt pa· also lake 2od's or trade. your low interest 1st TDs. die, needs clipping, "Pier-
$250. 675-3943 aft. 5 PM, tlos, 3 gar. Cali quickly on 497-1210 Also buyers for 2nd TDll. re." Small black mixed
HUG~ l·Br.. cpls, drps, this! R-4 LOT. SatUer Mortpge Co. Inc. male w/whlte fee t & chest,
stove, refrig, Nr. beach. Bob Olson Rltr, 546-5580 Zoned for 35 units. Serving Harbor Area 20 )TS. "Tiger." 642-4180 all d a Y ~175. 'l'rly. 673-S904 10::.F:cF_E;;;R::.,""'R:.:<::m.:.ov_.U_b.:y.::Ac:p::c:.:il I Phil Sullivan, 548-6761 336 E. 17tL SL I _Sa_t._&~SW>-·-~---
30, '·"ol')' 3-room •o•rtm••' · 64z-nn 545-06u LARGE REWARD' BUILDERS Attention R-2 2nd LOANS Aft. • Huntington Beach 5400
* PALM & CARDS * TAKATA Spiritual Rea.!ler. Past, Pres-JAPANESE NURSERY ent, Future. Help in all IUe
along Orange C o a a t . f
problems. Sl. special read· S4S-O'l24. Complete gardening
Ing. Open dally 9 am to 10 service. Headquarters !or
pm. 7421 Weatmlnllter Ave., all )'OUl' nursery needs.
Presently managing motel ' on Strip In Las Vegas. Write , 1
G. -R. Fleming, P. O. Box ~ ::
14141 Lal Vegas, Nevada ' ~~
89114. t1 Westminster 893-9854. AIJ..Pi BROS
7% INTEREST G~DENEtts Sti.JDENTS MAN 25, wants boat Malnt.
Write for ftte broclnlte working way ~ college.
de8Crlblng' 7% l n t e r e 1 t Exp. Lie. Reas. 646-4203
church bonds being !Old by CONSCIENTIOUS 1 a w n
Valley Baptlsi Temple, P.O. care; lndacp'g, sprinklers,
Box 5002, San J o• e , ciean-up.s & haul'g. 548-2134,
. : : . Job. Limited Exp, Wllling to
learn. Reliable. Xlnt Joe., ::
Rcl. 548-J341, M&-9251 Ask ::
Jor Paul. •'
caillornla 9a'150 64~2154 Job Wanted, Lady 7020
LICENSED· •.-:iJ'AAPPANESEANi;J;i'"'Coi:iAiiROiiENERrn;;;;I :E::XP::...::Boo:;;;kk:.::=!-"'"'.:'.:· =L~ic.:.. =IJ<=.1
Spiritual Read!Jvs, advice Maintenance & Cleanup sires wk. to do at hOml!, Orla.
on all matters, 108 S. El can 543-2.572 entry, payroll, qr t r 1 y
Camino Real, San Oemenle Reliable lawn service, /R & A/P ad-,_._ returns, T.B. A ,
492-9136, 10 AM.J.O PM mow, -"'· u...... etc. Rel avail upon request, '
SPEC!Af, S2 READING * 531-1404 * Will pick up & del. 540.1994
Attractive ExPlf'l. e EXPER J l'paneae CONVALE.SCENT AIDE
YOUNG WOMAN -·' Gardener Complete service-. PRAC. nurse or companion • d~r will teach yau all Free estlmale. Call 540-1332 available full or part time,
latest atepe. Call Ardell EXPER Japanese Gardener Jong or short tenn. Bonded
213: 591-4538 1·10 PM Monthly service. r e a• . and insured.
COUPLES, aingles; k:lnely? 832--0700 or ~1867 HOMEMAKERS ,.,_
i:
• " ,,
'
New in area7 Join the awing JOHNSON'S Gardening Serv.
to fun & pleasure Finest equip, expert )'ard
JAPANESE GIRL 11
• 635-9291 • Catt'! Reu! 962-1.035
Wants lo live In. Howiework. ~ : !
540-1332 100 CLIFF DRIVE
Large bachelor Apt fum.
A!J Delu."e Features
Ocean View. Walk to beach
$170 -}'{!arly lease
494-2449
LIVE
& garage building from Cap. lot, 66x301. 2635 Santa Ana "NEW Sma.11 brown & wht mutt, w/
istrano Beach Club site. Ave, CM. 546-9050 aft 7 pm. RANGED" Top cash for red collar, Vic N. Newport C L
OUers in \\Tiling to Capis-LAGUNA woodsy view lo!!, seasoned 2nds 543-8381 Bkr. Blvd .. NB. Call 642-3222 or emetery ob 6418
Cut &: Edge Lawn
Maintenance, Licensed
548-4808/645-23W aft 4
WEEK-ENDS and/or eve-
nings, clerk-sales cash.ier.
• 497-1569 * trano Beach lnvestm~nt Co.,. d ill · o-r---D #3 CM 4 CEMETERY J " undergroun ut ties, pvt. Mortg•-T 0 ,1 634S ....., ........ ,, ... n r. , . o , reas. 1050 Palisaire, Pacific Pal-""" <"• ...... , • • H bo •-1 M AL' G-~ In S I $6,950 & $9,«JU. .,.,-9748 wsr very large black ar t "'"'' em or 1 a T S ...... en g e r v c e
"Fish, Suri, Swim in your isades, Calif, 90272 $1950 2nd TD at $20 mo. incl Burmese cal Vic 17th 1 Park. Blue Spruce area. U Lawn maintenance, gan:len-Job W1nt1d
o\vn fron! yard." Private INC Units Jixl':r uppers C.M. Renches 6150 10% lnterei t all due 3 yn Tustin, c. M. Reward. 8-3075 ing & clean up1. 646-3629. Me.n & Wom1n 7030
Clubhouse, Heated Pool. Xlnt Joe, ~ood pot. Doyle Co, 320 A. Tulare County. Sacrif. on Oceanvlew lot Lagu~a &lS-1976 SERVICE DIRECTORY CLEAN-UP Speclallst! Mow· REAf:" ESTATE
ON THE BEACH!
.,
' ' • ' ..
PANORM11C \'iC\V overlook·
ing Aliso Beach. 2 BR furn.
all elec Mature adults, no
children, no pcti;. $ll!5 mo.
Call t'vcs, 499-3755
RENTALS
Saunas. Priva!e Cate \\•iltt Chris Tercgis 5-18-116.S, all 1 . k 581 t n,o:n Beach, 209'0 d I 1 co u 1 I CL MOL ~. edging, odd j o b 1 , "'··-JJent opportunlh• for ex·
Z.1 • hour Security Gua rd. 7 pin 5-18-9659. or qwc e 8 ...,...... per 494-ll37 Appliance R1paln Re8.80nable. 548-6955 ~ v
Alcctiten·anean adult Uviog.11.l~·ju~Nii'Irf:sf,j<ood;;;;:-Oeoiin<lruie·u~o,~.1 ~·~=;;;·;,2~ho~"~"'~';·;~~7~994~=IS4500 ltt TD, 8% ::!ue 3 yrs, °!~~~:..!'-0!~~Yv~~l~ Parts 6510 JAP~ Garder.er, com· ~:~~ ':!.e~os~ ~~ I
100% rented. Large sr.r,, Resort Property 6205 10'/o discount. blck O~e Ave., CM. l SUPREME Refrigeration .l plete yard tervice, free cessful fums • Pbone Mr. t Apts. · Unf1.1r nished
5000
RENT
l Rooms Fu rniture
$20 • $25 & UP
~[onth-To Month Rentals
WIDE SELECTION
Appliances & TV's avail.
NO DEPOSIT O.A.C.
H.F.R.C.
Furniture Rentals
517 \V. 19Ui, Ci\f 518-3tsl
1568 \V, Lncln, Anhm 774-2800
loan. Bargain at $106,000. 497-1210 p I ea 11 e re tum-reward Appliance Re .... i .. , Ask tar estimates. 540-1332 SchmidL 64&-71n r
2 BR. 2 Baths & 3 BR. 2 Ba. P litl Sullivan. 548.mGl FOR RENT Furn Marnmoth 646-6270 ......-7 fronl $250. INCLUDES \V/\V I _:..c.c.:,:::.:,:::c,:cc::_:_:::___ · C.Ondornlni M W od 6350 Tom. ~136.1, 54 :.Qi9l I 730 Sl!AGcptg.,G.E.Bltns.\vlth DUPLEX&: LOT ~1oun ta1 n um, oney ant SM bnm ColUe-Shpe. mix Hau Ing 6 Domestic He lp 7035
n c.Crlg, & dishwasher. BY O\VNER. sleeps 8" 675-413G \VANTED $35,COO ·l year 10% pup: wear'g ftea oollar. Ans Babysitting 6550 GENERAL HAULING ~--e Allen BylJutd •-ncy E-sidc CM. ~3589 to "Bolivar." Vic 131h Ir: .....,,.." ... ~
Hun tington Pacific
Apts.
Til Ckcan Ave. f3 Blk.~. W,
of l-funtington Beach Pier)
I'llONE: (7J ·ll 5.~·1487
LfNES. You can USe them
fot just pennies a day. Dial
642-5678
Mount. & Desert 6210 ~tllaTOt<"" andloan ~..$40000,0002ndin Balboa Blvd., NB. Reward! C'OSTA Mesa Pre-School & CLEANUP 1Q6.EmBpEloye. 16,lh,PSAayo54F7~
Business Rental 6060 ..,. • ...,..., · 675-5633 Licensed. Ages 2-6; open 6:45 $ll per load. ~ _______ .:;_;:.:..;. SALTON CITY Lg. CQr. Int, 497-1210 to 5:45; $18 Per wk. 962-6846 aft. 3 Ir: wlttnds. Chinese livc·lflll, Cheerful ·1
LEASE $275 P.!o: lge. bldg. Sea view. Nr. tlo1arlna & $15,000. lat. TD 8% TINY Yorkahlre Tl!rrier. COMPARE! 548-9803 HAULING, r -n<-', Top, Permanent. Experienced 'OX198 • -1 kl y chi club Sac •'INll'I •l Medical attentlon needed. ....., •-i:u .. ' ...., , P ng, storage. a · · ~-S",0.KI. 1st. m 870 838-5237 trtm, remove trees •-F'ar East Agency &42-8703 I
T ·1 I ho f 11 27~" ""n .on39 -T U pU Vic SaJ1la Ana A\'t, N. B. "" 01 t', s 111er ac • .JV _:~::~;::'.:'..-~,---=,...;·I Box P-0,1;1 he Da Y ot Reward. 6 < 2 _ 18 4 8 or BABYSIT 1 child, my home. hedges. Big John 642-4030 11
Harbor, C.M. 213: 927-2991 CUST An'owhd hOme 1600 sq $7600 lst TO, 5.v. ?' + 3 pta. 64&-4l9L $15 week. Edwards & AMBITIOUS College Boy He lp Wanttcl, Men 7200
SI'ORE FOR RENT f • every lux .. golf course Call Art. 847...3519, 962-7369 MALE BEAGLE, wh ite Edinger, North. ff . B . Has Truck Will Haul. Exp, DELIVERY.sLS. Ai:i ~~~~pt view, $34,950. 646-7994 ANNOUNCEMENTS w/blk Ir: brn apota, mixed 897-8452 Est, Free. Prompt. 83J.607S Need 18 Men
R. E. Wanted 6240 and NOTICES breed. Flea ool. Bakl!r Ii B~YI~::~: lo=· c!!'. Housecleanln'" 6735 Fairview, C.M. 540--0160 "
WANT TO SELL? Found IFrH Adil 6400 LOST 12xl4" pie'""'· Ol'IU!f" ~~ S.ach area HB. W!LLIAMS CLNG. SERV. Immediately
Call Farrow and start pack· FOUND: Srna11, hmy black & yellow yam. V I c Carpet•furn-compl. hSe. lni! dog, male, W/torne white MacArthur & Pacific Coast OftLD Care, my bo"!~ Prtt and apt clng. 642-8164 PART TIME EVES. '" v•-s·-~·-• H CdM "-''"'""' ovu 2 yn. Near ... th Ir: -· .... -..... mar ... nga. "'' ,......,., wy, · ~:r Harbor Blvd, CM. e HOUSE~NING e No uper, nectu. '-•-• uc
Rambler, Hunt, Beach. Call WHITE CAT. "Wh!te Siar'' 675-7468 Excellent wOrk. 52,50 hour. neat & ap11lve,.Age 19-27.
& Identify 962-3021 Child'• pct, Vleinlty af Call MS-S995" I-Jave auto Ir: money motiva·
ORANGE COUNTY'S FOUND Weimarancr viclni'" Falrvk!w A Baker. Pltaae J XLNT day cart, AM 10 led, Enm v 5,30, Hot meols. II c . CARPETS, Wlttdowa. !ll'tt, $
LARGEST Mitrine ~ Ba.y1lde ~ grown call 546-3634 II.arbor/Baker. S46-1S39 elc. Ru or Comc'I. Xlnt 3 50 HR
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 :au~ ~ .. ~~ 1ff' bl=' :-1~~! MATURE !Mb will babysit l work Reul Jteft. 548-4W e •
BUSINESS and Corona del Mal'. chair collar. Vic OSJe St. o;_2a.~o' Colleie Park Income Tix 6740 ,....,,1 .... 1.-MR. '"" ~ FINANCIAL SMALL boige mlxod _. C.M. £45.-0503 -· ~ ~ ~ "~ ·-·
B o riv Iii 6300 !<male do(. Vie. Sanl> LADIES Gold Wyler Walch. WILL BABYSIT )'OU' chUd INCOME T._ preparod JANITOR
"" ppo ~ • Jybo\ A Sanl> Ano, C.M. Iott! vie Wts!clilf Plua or fn ""' C.M. l<>me by ...,,, "°"" """'°• lollfl form com· $100 WEEK
FRIGl,DAIRE 642-1986 . Mulnera • ~--., !14M!08 nlpl, or week.~ blood, $1~ -. •
·--· bftck .......... ,, . -. SIH.dy tmployme1ll. Ni&hll. JET ACTION GREY Pood~e, "'"... FEMALE Gm.I Dane, fJwn l rltk; MIHnry, etc. Ironing 6755 Reftn'UU4 f'l'QUired, NO '
FM;ida·ere 18 min. eyde 11 kl~ ~ ~ collar. colored. V1c Fount al rt 6560 lronl-l Alter•thw\1 moonl\Jhttf"I pleue. aan :
the fastest tn the Industry. V · C. · Valley. 847-2171 ~ .. $o0.00'J5 * M.r. Lamomt, 545-7Ul
30 Frlrldalres do the work YELLOW Ca.nary. V I c • LOST: Gold Relrk!wr ~. <f BUILD, Rtmode:l, Re.pair SAI.E3: l need several ag. t
of 40 30 min wuhen Find Mtrldeth Gardena. H.B. mo1, feOlJie: vie. 3ft1l' St Brick, block. co h c re t e, ..i 67 1 Ml " Jnvm. t
001 how eu1 ft i, t~ own Sun, HU ID. 98).1913 evts. N'pl Och. Rew. fi3.S953 crpntry. 00 Jqh IOo ltMll. Janlton1I 90 = ~~~twNI')' aufO ~
a ~Ila ~undry. SM. Peke type, lg. hair tn. ~: Oicl'• prt&aipUoo Lte (:ontr. 962-6945 SPARKLE Janitorial Se:N. provided it you quality, C.aJI '
Garden Gm-e, Santa An., oolor female doe· M&-4408 al!Wltl. SuNltt Beach, nr Wlndowl. rttld.. e om e-1 , ldr. KUnt. m-«IGa Ol'e. I'
Tustin, Qranre, Anaheim FOUND Sling Ra)' l)"pe bike ~th St. 'R.eward. Ml--78:19 CetJ>'"ttflng 6590 con1t. cleanup. Frtt nt. EN p E Jt t g N cg D C!Oln-r
,Coln·O·Matlc: Via C.M. Clll -REPAiRs. AL'l'ERATIONS --blMllon---• ..., boL"'
Equipment, Inc. FEM. Sla.mele kitttn vie. Pe"'°""!' 6405 CABJNEn. A1t:1 altt job. DIAL dln!ct "2-5618, Chatlf A. 11:30 a.m •• Ben 8:tOl(a.'1
233414. W. VaJencla Tamura Sch. fV M14i803 ALOOHOlJCS Anonymotlll 25 )Tl. aper. 54&.67.U )"OUI' ad, then sit back and R4'at., 31J06 S. Coo.sl. Lq
F'ullorton n4; 0.7833 }"'or O.Dy Pilot Want Ada Pbnne SU.1211' Ol' wrlte lo THE QUICKER YOU CALL, Utleft to tht phone t'lnll 1,:Bc>ih:,,.,,,,.,=:-:::c::-::;c:=-I
------------,,,,.--'----------+.c---· ,__:.;,Wlt.:;l::le:.;El::::: ..... ==":.:.'_,.!_;Dlal=.,:642::::.611::18:..::f<>:.r .::RESUlJ==rrs P.O. 8o>t 1223 Otttta 1'1-· nm QUICKER YOU SELL OtARO& m CHARGE -wt.nl ad ..,,, i
I
l
n DNLY rllor T-...... 2', IM ' "~~~, -~!!~~!!!'.!~!!!!!J·~~~y~, -~!°!"~~_!&~ll~Jlillt~~L;50!:!Y?!Ml!!_!!!NT JOIS a IMPLOyt.liNT JOI$ & IMPLoYMINT JOBS & IMPLOYMINT JOllS & IMPLOYMINT JOBS & EMPLOYMINT JOllS & EMPLOYMINT
•• • W........, Moll 7200 Help Wenl9C. -7200 Holp W•m.d, -7200 rielo W""9d, -7100 Help Wonted, -7100Holp-Wented, -720l) Holp WantM, Help Wonted Help Wanted ,.. -·-w-7400 w..,_ 7400 _;;W:.::oo"m:::'°':;.n ___ 7_400_1
*HEIMDAL
MHIWllC
*TEST
OPERATORS
Knowtedee of buic elKtron-
ict one to three-yean ~
pe!'lenc<.
See~ \Vood
COLLINS
RADIO CO.
3324 W. Warner
Sant• An•, Calif.
Equal opportunity employer
ITT JABSCO
Cleaner, Deburr
Prefer aome factory ex·
perience in handling
metal&. Good benefits
and woitin& conditions.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
l48S Dale Way, Co.ta Mesa
Phone: ~ (n4l
Mortuary &: Cemetery
Serv. Career
WESTMINSTER
MEMORIAL PARK
. TO QUALIFY: Are ovu 35,
not over 60.
TEMPERAMENT: A real de.
sire to be of setvlce to
people.
HABITS: Good steady work
habits, sober & reliable.
This is a lifetime catter
opportunity with salary &
h1nge benefits
APPLY IN PERSON
9 am only
to MR. JEWELL,
14801 Beach Blvd., Wlrtmnstr
. MF.CHANICS: We need 2 lot
full time. Must have own
tools. Exp'd only. ALSO
need fl time SERV sr A.
he]p. Apply in penon,
Richfield, 19th &: Ne,wport
Blvd., C.M.
• REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't
you be selling the hottest
am Huntington Beach'!'
CaJl Phil McNamtt Vlllage
Real Eat.ate 962-Hn or
546-8103
Cook-Pert Time
Dlshwaaher-Pert Time
Sl1rl I.. Sirloin
5930 w. eobt~wy.
Newport Beach
EXPERIENCED e FRY COOK e
APPLY
Flying Butler
6'73-t97!
: FRY COOK. Yng. man,
exp'd, who desires PoS-
w/fut. For intv., Mr .
Schierhold "t.lt Steak" 2267
Falrvlew C.t.f. 642--0732
P1rt1 Counter M_.,-
Mwit have VW e)(pct. Good
opportunity &: benefits.
8424435 Ask for Herb
' JAJllTOR
EXPERIENCED
E•celllnt EmployM
Bonofll•
APPLY
Peraoftnel Offlc.
Third Floor
THE BROADWAY
NE\\'PORT BEACll
47 Courl• of Fathlon
FASHION JSLAND
Newport h•dt
An Equal Opportunlt;y
Employer
ITT JABSCO
PUMPS
Turret Lathe Oper.
Turret Latlte
Oper/Setwp
EQUAL OPPORTIJNlTY
EMPLOYER
1485 Dale Way
Costa Mesa
""251
Reteil Sales to $600
Some horticultural back-
ground prelen'l!d, Excellent
opportunity with Newport
Beac:b Olmpany. Age 18 to
40. (Split Fee)
Delivery Man to,$550
(Split Fee) •
Numerous other job oppor-
tunities, both fee paid &
fee by applicant.
AblllllH
Unllmlted Agency
488 E. 17th St., Suite 224
Cost& Mesa 642-1470
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY!
Join todays Wtett cruwtnc
profeuton-Mutual Fund sales
No experience necessary.
We train • full or part time
Mutu1I Fund Advl1ors,
Inc.
Npt B. 1603 Westclif1 642-6422
S.A. 1212 N. Broadwa,y
5<1-33.n
•COOKS•
• DISHWASHER •
NIGHTS
APPLY lN PERSON
REUBEJI E. LEE
ISi E. Co11t Hwy,
Newport Be1ch
MOTOR HOME
Assemblers/Bull~ers
Jmmediate openings for men
with experience in plumb-
ing, electrical, walls, cabin·
ets and finish _ or we will
train you. l.Iust have .some
hand tool•. See Rkk. 7135
Canyon Drive, Costa Mesa
642-9758
PART TIME.
Retired gentleman.
LITE l\tAINTENANCE
9 am-12 pm.
$L 'l5 per hour.
Contact Mr. Dinius.
3141 Ii11.rbor Blvd. Costa
M•'8
SECURITY OFFICER
FOR PATROL DUT'l
Over 40 fl'S. Perm. Radio
car provided. Non smoker,
d1·inker. 1,Jniform all'nce,
Apply: 4 PM • 5 PM, Roo1n
405, 325 N. Broadway, Santa
Ana,
STOCK CLERKS Accounteni.
$450 per month to start. Mon. Credit Menl~rt day t.hru Friday. Advance
to ulc1 or purchasin&:. Write Administrative '""'
Box M-483, Daily Pilot. LOCAL JOBS CAU. BOB. ~TJ96 SERVICE Station Attendant, ARGUS AGENCIES
grave yard shift. Exp'd A 1869 C N_,.,,..rt Blvd., C.M. local refs. 2983 Harbor -~..-
Blvd., C.M. See M r . 2 EXP'D Ure changers_ xlnl
SherwOod. wages, pd vacation. Ins.
DRILL PRESS MneUta, apply in J>UIOn.
OPERATORS Young & Lane Tire Co. 1596 Newport Blvd, C.M. No Mech. I electronic usembler phone calls.
trainees, Ph: 646-t61l I ,Y,;O~UN'=G="'M""'AN~l'"n7le-,.-,7Jed~l'"n
EXPERIENCED COO)(, S Jearnina: trade. Must haw
shift.I a ~-t-tk. Apply tn good references. Good pa.J
penon, Alley West, 2106 \\'. · & benefits, steady employ.
Ocean Front. NB me.nl 646-7721 H IX 5 0 N
DELIVERY MAN METAL FIN!SlllN<l
Needed for Magnavox Depl. BOAT
Kenn Rima lfardwa.re ASSEMBLERS
st&-1691 E.xperienoed
SERVICE Sutton Att.,....nr, O'DAY YACHTS
~·d, fu1J time. Olevron --'-3090~7Pullinan.==,,C.o-M-. -
Station, 3000 Falrview, C. BUSBOYS
M. Apply ln pen.on
LOT MAN, full time. Boat Balboi P•vllion
lhop. Muat be dependable, ·tOO ?>lain, Balboa
no hlpCI~ types. l S 9 S ~SA7LESMEN="°'==.'-Pu1=-'"t1me""'"~SJ20~ -Blvd .. C,M, wk, Work from own home. PAINT MAN we tnlll. Ca115'6-91!61< pm b:r""" erMl!d prefemd, Knni EXP'D MinlANIC A RJ~
Jllml u.rctware: Ointac:I GER. Must be dependAble. Dltlt WoldttL 546-'Jtll!O • 1595 Ne:~ Bl\d. C.M.
CAR WASH ruu. A Pr TIME. Exp'd,
• CASDER. PART TIME Snv. Sta. Alt., Comm.. il
CID eo<ml Ml. -Sharp OR W3:lO
: rvu.. time pclll1a'. 5 dll'I a n....11very ._. Wint.cl i WM11. Apply Dtsmondl. No. ..,.. -r 3,._1aluld, N.B. S<l llrold ... , ...,..,,. lldl. ·lffiiiii:ASUER~jiii["7. ';Alijjj,iijq;-;;;in MECHANICS-Outboerd
' -,Call -btWft ... ml VII Lido, NB MECHANICs.<Mbolrd
IWlil(e ~I Dtme+Uoe Call ~ bhm ~
•
* RNISH
CARPENTERS
*Mill MEN
wltllmotorhorM-.
El.ceUem. m. benefita..
APPLY IN PEllSON
EXPLORER
MOTORllOME CORP.
3021 Newport Blvd.,
Cotti M111, C1llf
TOPATRON, INC
*Mech1nlc-Shl11di"ll*
Will train. mature perwon
who bu expuience · with
hand ·& power toola &: who
wap.ts an excellent future.
*Shl1ldl"11 E"li""'*
Must be quaUt1ed in field.
fi?f appolntmtnt: Soi9-UT1
Equal opportunity employer
MECHANIC
We need 2 men \Yi.th exper.
in fteel truck rt-pair, gas
& dieseL DIESEL A MUST.
Must have own hand tools,
10 yrs experience, \villing to
V.'Ork any shift. Refercnt'i!.!!
requlred, $135. \Veek to star1.
Call Mr. Larcome, ~7117
AMBITIOUS & eager
"Salesman•• who desires
good future & advancement
with rapid growing Co.
Pre v Io us Hortieulture,
landscaping or r e I a i I
nun;ery exper. pref. Not
mandatory. Salary or com·
mission open. Call for
pel"90nal Interview. 642.-2243
Moo thl'U Fri.
Position open in fash-
ionable Newport Beach
restaurant for ambitious,
personable youn& man,
experienced Jn restaurant
management. Reply to
box # giving resume,
Box M-621, Th< DallJ<
Pilot. .
SERV. Sta. All., part time
weekends. lofust be bon-
dabJe, age 21 to 65, al.90 full
time employment available
in nearby areas. Apply in
person A.M, only. Sav-Mor
Station, 620 Ocean Blvd.
H.B.
COLLEGE Student
permanent position, part
time during sehOol, full time
summer, at Chevron Station
on beach In Laguna.. No
hippies or long hair! Must
be 18. 494-9003
TV SERVICEMAN
Part Time, Afternoon
Exp. in outside service calls,
hlk & white and Color. Bond.
able. Send resume to Box
M-666, Daily Pilot, Costa
M..._
ITT JDSCO
Prefer .omeone w I t h
mechanical ustmbly ex·
perie:nce.
Good benefit. and W()rk·
in& condltlooa.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Male or Femalt-
148S Dale Way, Costa Mesa
Phone: 545-8251
CONSTRUCTION
FOREMAN
L&rge prttast concrete man.
ulacturing finn needs fire.
man for pl'oduction type
work. Must be mature with
5 to 10 years experience in
motivating men. Exp. ln pre-
cast concrete preferred but
not neeeuary.
REFERENCES REQUIRED
A thorough b11.ckground check
will !)(> n1adc on all applic-
ants \\'ho pass the initial bl-
tcrvir\1·.
SALARY OPEN
Call Mr. Laroome. 545-TI17
ITI JABSCO
Mill & Drill
Operator /Setup
Good benellt1 and work·
ing conditions.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
1485 Dale Wicy, Costa Mesa
Phone; 545-8251
*COOKS
Apply In person
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
PRODUCTION
P~NNERS
McDONNELL'S ASTRONAUTICS
COMPANY
in Hunllngtoo Beach, bas lmmed1-
ate openings for structural and
mechanical planners.
As a planner you will perform com-
plete planning functions-including
tool coordination and Interpretation
oC specificaUons for major installa·
tion on vehicles.
' We of {er unparalleled top pay,
bene!its and work:Jng environment
for the right people.
Must be able lo provide direction
for other planners and associates.
High School diploma and four years
e11:perience required.
Apply In perton
5313 Boin Avenue
Huntington Be1ch, C•lif.
McDonnell Douglas
Astronautics Company
McDONNELL DOUGLAS
CORPORATION
Help Wonted, Men 7200
ITT JABSCO
Shipping/
Receivin9 Clerk
Pretair some wuehousing
e:icpertence. Ability to
Jeam routing, o rd e r
checking, etc. Must be
able to operate fork lilt
truck or stacker. Good
opportunity for right per-....
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
1485 Dale Way, Costa Mesa
Phode: 545-8251 (n4J
Help W1nted
Women
HUGHES
7400
NEWPORT BEACH
has an opening for a
CLERK
TYPIST
with above average typing
skills to usist in the prep-
aration o[ proposals, tech-
nical reports and special
projects.
Plea.sa.nt personality, ability
to work urxler pressure and
a net typing speed of 10
wpm required.
Please apply ln person to:
15SS w. Adam• WANTED HUGHES Costa Mesa Youn& man with dratting ex· =---==.:-:~=,--,! perience to start on the Temporary Employment ground Door ol large pre·
URGEJlny -flEDED cast concrete manulactur-
1,,. firm. M"" be ablo to
read blueprints, make pro-• LABORERS
Interviewing
NEWPORT BEACH
500 Superior Avenue
Newport Beach, Calif.
Equlll opportunity eomployer
M&F
MAIDS
""'tlm• .......
EXPERIENCED
Appl,y pcrnoMel otllce,
3rd ftoor" •
The Br01dw1y
. llWPORT
N"o. t7 Courta; of Fuhton
Ntwpor t Center
An equal opportunity
emplo)'t!r
EXPERIENCED
e t:SCROW e
SECRETARY
UNITED CALll'ORNIA
BANK
3141 E. CD111t Hwy
Coeon•delMar
173-!240
DAYTIME
• WAITRESS•
Apply in person
REUBEN E. LEE
ISi E. Co11t Highway
Newport Be•ch
See Be~ Bruce at
mi66lxec
Agency for Career Girlt
410 W. Coast Hwy,. N. B.
By appoint 646-3S39
F/C Bkkpr to $575
Newport Beach Area. {Split
Fee)
Abllltl11
Unlimited Agency
488 E, 17th SI, Suite 224
Costa Mesa 642.1470
CAN YOU QUALITY
CouJd you spare two hrs. a
day for five-days a week, lf
you receive $6S IM it'!' If so
call Mrs. Nel&on, 642-8560 or
5'14-6252, bet. z.t PM for an
appointment
MACHINE OPERATOR e TRAINEES e
Plutics manufacturer, Must
hr dependable. Day shill
Apply
Oranae Coast Plastics
850 West 18th, C.M.
ASTROTEK CORP
NEEDS * Receptionist *
,With typing exp. Ages
22-30. Apply in person
* * • ADVERTISING .. ~:·K::, =1 Secretary/
~:.".;..."':' .::= Bookkeeper
ml!!r eootact for abarp gal. Rtspon1Jbl1# top level
$500 &no 1te 11 relmbuned! position for 1h1rp, t11k.. 8.: ~~ ~ ~ 1!~ charp 9irl. Mu1t hive
4l1 and work. oufor ·nice boll 1a::cellent sklllt incl. + co, reb:nburae• feel shorthand; h1ndl1 lite
Gal Friday '°""" wttll front bkkpg ; bllll119. Under
offlee at>PearMce and can 30. Call B1r1Nr1. (714)
\ype 60, will take -·""" 642-3910. .fee job. 1:.c:::..:c..:.c:.:_FfllM~~-,-S~~-1
Bill Qerk. F/O appearance BU wltll 1ood typl"", and they'll ' 'i:. , .. 1.115 "' ...... ¥M NEWPORT
Slock C&shier, with heavy
eJCP. Co. will spllt fee and
pa.y )'OU $550.
Now Interviewing
F/C Bookkeeper. famil~ e SALES with Calilontla taxes. Will . ., ne• YoU $500 Fee job Full tune 36-37% hts., 1 or w
KeYpunch 1 fr exp, ~pha· nights. Part time ~ bra,
nwnerical to $455. Fee job. weekly. Mus.' be avail. ~t.
A/P Bookkeeper with NCR 11-4, some nighll 5:30. 9.30
3300 exp Will briog '°" $425 e BEAUTY STUDIO
to start' + good adv. P> Full time receptionist, Ex·
tential Fee job perienced operator pre.Jer· MERCHANTS "d. Facialiot • ex,.nenced only. PERSONNEL • AL TE RATIONS
AGENCY ~~'.e~ed in mens .It wo-
20'3 Westciill Drive Apply in pel'liOn only.
Cor ner 17th .l Irvine Interviews between 10.1 pm
&l.5-2T10 -~ I.: 2:30 _ 4:30 p.m.
ASSEMBLY
OPERATORS
Factory experience desired.
Must have good vision and
dexterity, hlgh school edu-
cation or equivalent,
COLLINS
RADIO CO.
19700 J•mborH Road
Newport Beach
'
#l FASHION ISLAND -. . .
TYPIST
MT/ST IBM
Evenings shift. Experience
desired, \Vil! consider appli-
cant witb rcpro-typist exp.
APPLY
MARSHALL
COMMUNICATIONS
3519 W. WARNER
Santa Ana, Calif. 9270&
fn4> 540-2820
An Equal Opportunity
Employer • • •
F.quaJ
0
'"'""""" emp!o}'" * WAITRESS
ACCOUNTING CllRK
Position is now available in
our Accounting Department
that requires the use of a 10
key adding machine, type.
writer, and the -usual ollice
akill>.
Apply 1n person
REUBEN'S
COCO'S Thi.! position offers a good
salary with attractive fringe 1555 W. Ad1m1
benelitg inclOOing fully paid Coate Mes• for medical, and Ille insur-1---'-"-"--'-'---
ance coverage, three weeks
vacation after 3 years, etc.
Apply in person at the * HOSTESSES *
DAILY Pilm DAYS NIGHTS
330 Wfft Bay St., Costa Mesa
Ask for: Mn. Greenman or
call 642-4321 for an interview.
Apply in person
REUBEN E. LEE
EXPERIENCED
STENO
151 E. Ptclllc Cit. Hwy.
Newport Beach DOORMAN
PARKING ATTND'T
Full or part time, day oc eve.
18 or over, lie, Calit driv-
er. Neat appearance, refs.
Call 644·1700, ex~ ~. 4 lo
6 p.m.
Mon thru Fri., 2·5 P .M.
fNTERIM
Personnel Service
duction drawings, learn qoo.
tation &: pricing procedures,
help in engineering, cost ac.
counting and inventocy t11.k· .... '""""'""'""'""'""'""'" ~~126='-=Loean,:=.:;,--A-"""cc·:_c• C.'-'M=·-I UN I TED CAL I FORNI A EXECUTIVE SFCRETARY BAR maid, no experience BANK * WAITRESS
1-~RY COOK • relief shift,
18 or over. experienced.
SI.art $2.00 hr. No phone
please. Apply in person.
C.Ottage Coffee Shop. 562
W. 19th St. Costa Mesa
SERV. STA. SALESt.1EN.
Afan to work full time. Jl.lwit
be neat in appearance and
handwriting, Over 25. 2590
Newport Blvd., C.J\ol.
445 E 17th Ct.1 642·7523 Future opportunity to enter SERV~CE ~tat.ion attendant ~es departmen~. enginetr-
21 to 65. Older men prefer-mg and/or quallly control
red. Gas & oil service only, Pre .. 1 M "£'(! 2:>.30 no exp req'd. Call 714 : requ1s1 es:. am •.
.,09846 n<· 542-SJ69 yn:, old. drafUng expenence, .....,... or . hig h IQ.
FUU. time nile man; truck Call Mr. Laroome, 545-ID1
route. Must have exp. in l-":;;.;,.:..:c=~~-'"7~=c l
complel• janlto,ial clean-DO YOU WANT
Ing: "'"'Ht>. Only qualdled TO WORK IN men need apply. 549-2425
si'.ilvtCE Stat~n att•odant. ORANGE
Must have experience Days. COUNTY?
Permanent. Apply 393 E. .
11th St. Costa Mesa We have several openings
MAN to assis~ Mgr. in a~ for Programmers, Accoun-
pliallL'e store; neat 11.~ FR: COOK: Graveyard tants, Engineers with dt>grec
pea.ring. Call: 534--0984 shift. Start $100 week. ~ and Draftsmen. Also some -'==;:;;,~~;;:_~:;--years exper. nee:. Apply ln good sail's positions. Come
SOCK IT TO 'El\1! person 562 W. 19th, C.t.f . in and st:oc Mr. Brown.
_J-!elp W1nted, Men 7200 Hein Wanted, Men 7200
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
CORPORATION
"'
in Costa Mesa
needs '
DRAFTSMEN
High School education including courses In
mechanical drafting (2 semesters) Trigono-
metry and Geometry, and al least one or
t\vo years experience in drafting ot struc-
tural and mechanical elements. \Vill pre-
pare detail and assembly drawings from de-
sign schedules or layouts under the super-
vision of an engineer or designer.
MACHINIST· EXPERIMENTAL
High School education and eight years shop
MERCHANTS
PERSONNEL
Agency
2(}.13 Wt'stcllff Drive
Corner 17th &: Irvine
645-2TIO -545-5635
2 Dishwashers
Age over 18, nights. Apply
in peFiVErC~bWN·s
RESTAURANT
3801 E. Pacific. Coast HW)'.
Corona dtl MIU'
No Phone Calls Please
SERV. STA. SALESMEN.
Young n1en, eves &.
'"'k.erxls. Must be neat in
11.fipcamnce } harxf'Nritina.
2J90 Newport Blvd., C.l\t.
e EXPER DAV MA N e
Mattl'le\\·s Union Service
3928 E. C08H1 llwy, CdM
\VAITRESS \\'ll.n1ed, Prefer
middle-aged. No t'Xperienct'
nttessary. 499-1153
experience In manufacturing precision parts Agencies, Women 7300
and tools or completion of recognized ap-
prenticeship. Will perform highly skllled * BEACH AREA *
ch. I k f bl ' k lcb /\u't. Bookkpr • .• ,$520/56.'l ma 1D ng wor rom uepr1nts, s e es f\tultl Corp. lhru T/Bal.
and written or oraJ instructions and speci-~' Fee pd. by cmPloYtr
fications. Adatts and lmprovises simple to Gi.11 f'ri. Jr .............. $400
moderately complex tooling and fixtures to Varlet)', type, file. phones
complete a machining and/or experlmenlal Sm plant rounlAin Valley
machining assignments. Fee paid by em(Moyer
Sect'y., Acct'&:. Depl. to SOOO
TECHNICAL PRODUCTIONS ~~ :.':: ~ •• ~
3 years experience In all production and ad~ ,.y .. Constntc:t .•.• to S600
minislrative funcUons of a publlcaUons da. FllA/VA or R.E. kno1\1•
partmenl. tcda<
~' rtt pa id by eomplo)'ft', Call, Apply or Write P1t1 H1tfrlch ~i reimbursed 90 da)'9
ll3J H•rbor Blvd., Cost1 Ma11 '2126 rev Jobs Allio
1714) S41 I030, E•I. 151 J, R. !'le"~ A~"«-.... ncy
1885 Newport, C.M. 6G.fi720 ~""'""A"n""eq,;,",,",,1,,o,;,ppo;.,,r,,1u"n"ll,;,y,,e,,m,;p~lo.;y,,e"r""""~~ DA IL y p !LOT w AIM' Al>Sl
Secretary to the superin-ncce5Sll.l')', day & night
terxlent on the Board of shift, Apply Vikki's Lounge,
Education, to per Io rm J7911A Ne\vport BI v d .
hlghly co ni p I e x and Between 10 & 6 pm. No
responsible clerical work. phone calls.
Fi'>'e yean secretarial ex-IMMEDIATE openings in
perience including l w 0 Ceramic Industry, in pack·
years as secretary to ad· ing or production dept. Ap.
ministrator or executive. ply Industrial Clay Products
Salary $628 k. $765, Contact 18765 Fiber Glass Rd, Hun-
classified personnel office tington Beach, Calif. 1901 Newport Blvd .•. Costa
Mesa. 645--0600 Ext. 56, on MASSEUSE WANTED
or before Fri., May 2, 1969 Apply 2626 Newport Blvd, * SEAt.fSTRESS * Costa Mesa. Hours 10.12
Experienced or \viii consider am, 24 pm on 413o. 511 & S/2 or call 6"Z-6009 young trainee. Apply in
person PAYING &: Receiving TtoJ·
Johansen & Christensen ler. P>ev. bMking exp. de-
898 \V. 16th SI., N.B. sired. Apply Security Pa·
Corner ol llfonrovia & 16th. cific National Bank, La.gwia
COMBINATION. Sh!U'P Bar Nigue l Br, t954501.
l\1aids & Go Go Dancers. GIRL FRIDAY • Ci v 11
Top \\·ages $3.0()..$3.50 to Engineering firm. Dictation
start. Ph. for int. S45--9!W 11. must. Need car. S hn dai-
SA&SY LASSY, 2901 Harbor, ly. Resume to Daily Pilot
C.1\1. Box M·322.
l\1ATURE woman to help SEAMSTRESS expenenced
care for bedridden lady. No power machine operator.
experience required, should NORnt SAILS, 913 Elec-
have pleasant disposition I.: trlc, Seal Beach. (213)
williiig to work 6 to 8 ht3, 596-4461
ll1on thru f'ri. 644--0440 WAITRESS, Exper., I u l I
\VAJTRESSES: Day &. time. Houra 11:30 to 8
Grave yard shift. 2 yrs, ex-Benton's CoHee Shop
perience nece1511.l'y. Apply 133 S. Coast Hwy, Lquna
in pel'Slln, 562 \V , 19th St. Bc:h.
C,1\1. WAITRE.SSES Days. Yng
l\tANAGER·TRAJNEE lady for famlb rest. Exp.
Sportswear shop, Balboa Isl. pref. App In per. Thurs.
Salff experience necessary. "l\1r Steak" 22li7 Fairview
673-8222 Aft 5 PM for appt. Rd . C.Jl.I.
LADY wan led for summer SALESLADY. Experienced
S('ason in beach coUee shop. only. For bakery.
Jo'o.· 11.ppoinl:ment c a 11 544-'3160
,638-=.;2::197::.,,;•::ft;_7;_.:,P.:;;m:;,·==-1 LIVE·JN or out babysitter,
DENTAL ASSISTANT for 4 chUdren. Lite hse-
Newport area. ke<'ping. Refs. Se:rxl resume
Call 548-3l£l to Box P 851, Daily Pilot.
WAITRESSES for ILll ,;hlfls; GIRL ov. 18 w/own car to
apply al Odie's, 212 E. 17th care for 2 boys. 9 k U 3 to
St. Costa t.1esa S: 30 PM. 61>1381 or
FULL t I m e , experienced &!6-8.146
.emot escrow clerk. P .0. MATURE 1Wma11 to do part
~ 100, San Cemente time babysltttnc: I: assist
\VANTED bebygltter Ir: lile ~w,,:/la,,;:cW>d:.c;l'l'""-. -"-'~-3929===~
housekeeper. my borne. 5 FULL 013.rge BKKPR-Glrl
day. H.B. area. 962-7621. Fr Id a y to 1 n t er I o r
L l V E • I N b I b y I I I t e t ~ll<x.wa~;_:,;;,::l<n'7'7""'"~~"=~=
litehousework. Ne:wport SPECIAL.. MACHIN E
Beach area. 673-7906 0 PER AT 0 R .PRESSES ..:;.;=:.c;ec:M::.;AIDSc;.,"-"e'----1 Slekdy. Garment Mfgr. 67",...
Ben Bro\\-n'1 l\1ote1, s11i. s. 1..::6:;tn,;:,_ __ ~---
..,.::c.:;°"'::;,' .::",,;°"';,'c. ... =='""c:.,;"':_::Bc;:;h;___, MAIO OVn' 30, pttmanent
HOUSEKEEPER • Uvt ln or po.rt time, 6 days/wtd:,
dD.ys. 5 children. -.us1 or 1 ,,:I.:.! ,.;1Se,hou=-o'·='94-8S21'-'-='·~---
673-3281 BAR MA.ID Sco t 11 t s
UV&IN or
OWn room
~
out bab)'iduer. Highlandtr, 436 :&. 17th
&: bath. Refs. Street :::oiita 1\fesa. ~ ~)')Ur w11.n1 ad now.
---·---~-------·
(Night Shiflj 3029 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 546-2033 l"lotcl Coffee Shop: Experl·
Equal opportunity employer cnccd only_ Apply 1n per&0n.
-THE * NEWPORTER INN HOSTESS-CASH IER 1101 Jambo"" Road
Hotel Coffee Shop. Must be Newport Beach, Calir.
experienced. App, in person TELLER TRAINEE
THE \Viii train capable girl for
NEWPORTER INN ~~/N=~cco::ei:!
1107 Jamboree Road and typing skill prefem!d.
Newport Beach. Calif. Good working conditioos/
LOC.ilJOBS_I__ benefits. Apply World Sa.v.
ings & Loan, 29:? So. Coast
Hwy, Laguna Bch. Sectys, Recpts Gal Fri, 0.erk
Typist & part time Dental
Asst.
Cali Doris, 548-T/96
ARGUS AGENCIES
EXPERIEN'"'C~E~D-I
WAITRESS
1869 C Newport Blvd., C.M. Apply in Person
IN.MEDIATE opening for SURF & SIRLOIN
young lady who wishes to be 5930 Pac. Cst, Hwy.
trained as a legal secretary. N B h Applicants must have xlnl ewport eac
typing &: shorthand skills. GIRL FRIDAY
Apply Law offices of Plat! Carpet store & blclg material
& Barnes. Phone 54.>-s.t-09 sales. Part time, J day week,
for intervi<ow. Call for appt.
Personnel Interviewer J . ~· Knickerbocker
Prerer agency e)(perience in H 18582 Beach Blvd "
ollice • professional areas. tg Beach 962·3351
Inquiries confidentla1. Call SARAH COVENTRY hu
Linden. opening$ for full or part
Superior Agency time S&les. !\fin. age 18.
Established 1946 Pleasant YMrir:, no invest,
1851 Harbor Bl Costa Mesa no deliveries, For interview
Call first 1fi42.n41 call 54!Hl614/ 837-4749/ .. ,~ STORE MMagU; terrtlicl "-,'-'=------
opportunity to join fut e RECEPT-CASHJER e
growing, ml'<lium priced Light t)'i>ing l filing: \York
\\'Omen's apparel, fashion hi;_s. 9: 30-5: 30 Ir Sat. 9: 3()-
11peclalty shop cha.in. 1.fust 1 .. : 3 0 . A g e 2 5 • t 5 .
have previous w 0 m e n • s SUPERIOR OPTICAL CO.
mauagerial exper. See: Mr.1_:•44-:.:_:11::1:.:< _____ _
Bttohn. Chrl1', 9821 Chap. WA I T R E S S E S wanted,
man Ave .. Garden Grove. Josefs Restaul'1lnl 2171 E.
TRAINEES . Sportn.ur Con.st HW)', CdM. Apply
factory. Xln •. opportunity. 11.fter 5 pm.
Knowledge or M!wi~ eAIHln-"M,::,A!'~lCURl:O:~sr=-1.,.-,1"'1""°'~1c-ur~l,~l l
tlal. Apply 4001 G .. Birch Josef t.111rnin's Be a. u t 1
St., N.B., 1 bUt. E. of O.C. Salon tonlact Atiss Sanden
airport Mon or ~'-S1()-505(I
SEVERAL OPENINGS INVENTORY a>NTROL-IN-
ror womtn ic1 lfomeketping V O I C I N G • R E c E p.
Dc!pt. of TIONJST. al. Wk. Call
PARK LIDO .. ,.,,., "'· 642-2606.
OmvalHoi!:nt Hogpllal PBX
1445 ~ Ave .. N.B. Ans. IK!rvict! netds l telt-
642-2410 phone Secy 11 pm • 7 am.
SECRETARY: inftllla:ent, T\lts thnt Sal; exp'd, 5fl'·'l"li9
eood lookhta, Zl ID «I: PRESS OPEMTORS
Ne'4-porl Beadi Offlce. Operators wattled for plasUa
$tOO Mo., start. &a..93Jl moldlna •'t'rl'. Ph: SfS-3.l'lO
1WO )"OUnl 'l\t>men, part bl!t. 8 am l S pm.
lime. AfiJy's Colftt Shop, BABVSmER needed 3
30218. Harbor Dh'd, C.M. children. day1. nzy ~'
Wblle elephants! DlmN.-Unt O\\·n trana. sta.(£12 alt ' or
BRING RESULTS? ~·knd!I. '--"='------
iT -
0
11 .. ..
I.
I•
" I)
' • I. ..
<·
<·
d
n
' '
• I
ftlldll· 4'111 29, 1'69 J~IS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMeNT 1015 & IMPLOYMINT ~RCHANDISI POR MIRCHANDlll .~r~m~iiiln.-1amlD~n
Hel W•nlod, Mon 7200Help Wanted, Mon 7200 . Jollo Mor, ·Wern. 7500 Jobi -· Wom. 7500 lchool .. l-11<tlon 7609 "&ALI ANO. r.ADI IALI AND TRADI IALI AND. TllADI.
MECHANICAL * *I ,., .. _ ---~~l:; 8'00Mlol1Hel~-: ~ J =·:.._ HU ft HES J.C.hnnoyO>. p, Schaoltflualntu 11<ED.r--.o11w• ---cw· U Fuhloo llland i 0 n:ATUR£S, >Ollow _..... JOIJll. odb 211 plJoo pol---0
NEWPORT BEACH Newporf·aeacll remier •EIO<trlc'J'ypewrltcro 1 "old-16MT1 Spmhk · ..,. .-Sllll. 11""'* Hu.,,..q •DlctaU.,,eQui-nt ~"1:..::--~ Ml.1,.,,..1• =.,..-::,l~k~
hat urgtnt reqUIJ'9ments for
SWISS SCREW
MACHINE OPERA TORS
with Torno experience and able to do own
setups. Top dollars for top men. Openings
on 1st and 2nd shifts.
tor PIUONNIL · : ~=.,up~ ..!.ii.. ;;;,-:-sso. 84M132 ' '°1:!-~-=-• -ti!. l'-7 .-A-CY l e 1...., wri~ okiU1 • 'ff -.1. _.. -SI& 21! * COOK * 441L'""11. Your..,.i.canboadlitY-Offl .. Pumllure IOIO At----~ S.1*1>SL-C.X. ... 111M '
With .... .._ and c--ed 1n 1 minimum o1 a 8' Wood caned arm dltan, 11-llllD 1 dll1r W ~ NI"'
-wtnu. to learn our limited -· w • e k • """"°""' 6 INS. Grouo -ol: olffl or love aeaL S Pc OdaCoD dork oak din oet Mlac. "':;-=--=-ii"I
memi. <lorqpeuu,. _... nM L 11111 11, woe kl. ""' 1or lion& :l':i..,~~~ w /black or avocado fr•med ehaln; 8 Pc BR $ WE IUY S ~~~" tncl... -::--m~ ~ 6fW81ll tor "'°"' fllml.... oeL Mr Mr. • Mn. dtelser, lg mirror, 2 FURNITURE $ I
p . THE NEWPoRT. Mcldalwl'& m.84!0 commod ... decoraUve beadbbard (Jj Spanbb $ I
Aw'JI II\ ,.,... &a!OOL OF BUSINESS 18'0 s. Anabello Blvd.. II\ oak dealgn With matcblns boa IP'lnP. mat-APPLIANCU 1'
lo • u -•PM FEMALE 133 Dover Dr N-Deb. Anaheim (alonpide S.A. treu &s frame. c.i,., TY" ..... ft ... ~.-.....·
-w • • • " • ··~· .......,, •t Katell&I I-Sold IMMoluolly 1 ,.,.. " "-""'
-DIE-MAKERS
with al leasl 2 years of experience in steel
roll die making.
-tl)nl n1lllY CASH RIGISTi!R Shop ANUnd -letor. you 11uy -USI CASH IN II MHMU
J-r namrv co A!ipll __ P.op.Jeo_ ~ ~~ National, s·dopt'• -VALUI $1095;'5 -PUtt-PRl~fS---~t-45·3 fl-4t-fl-1 --
• ~' l'vual ' YoUndf{ lndtvldually t~t°"' Cond. lf7...,._ AM'o 5IM86I 9t' fwml II low II "4.6' por wilok LuPey ~ ~
HOT MOLD
SETUP MAN
with experience on thermoset transfer mold·
ing presses.
ELECTRO· MECHANICAL
TECHNICIANS
to fabricate complex electro-mechanical as-
sem blies using special wiring systems. A
kn~w~edge of l~minating, potting, molding,
pamting, solderl?~ and welding techniques
1s req~ired. A; ':'J1IDimum of 3 years or experi·
ence in precl.5100 electro-mechanical device
fabrication and assembly is manditory.
lnt1rt1ted and qualified 1ppllc1nts should
1pply in person to: -·
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
500 Superior Avenue
Newport Beach, Calif.
Equal opportunity employer -M & F
Help Wanted
W.omen 7400
Temporary Employment
URGBm. Y NEEDED ••
• Clerks
• Typists
• Repro Typists
• Secretaries ·
• Keypunchers
• PBX OjMrs.
• Assemblers
Jobs Min, Wom. 7500
-EXPERIENCED -
Note
•Tetter•
APPLY IN PERSON
1st National Bank
of Orange County
1650 Adams
Cotta Met•
N F olden ril nd Fiie Clerk $321 ed Olllcoat ID 1....,,. '>Pin< IBM olflce etoc. """'""'"'· U.. Our"Slort Charge Plall or B111k Fhwl~ -. N._, M1i:Jo. a.,; 1 1 1 Will take b'&ll\ee. Nice oo-edloot. 113 Del Mar, CM. &<IOd cord. $11'. Jllodel 11, No Fall(y FrOllt -BUT Quality Val~• 1 a.me .... -l An equal opportunity portunll;y for airl 5'4'', able 54&-219 pica type. MT~ '
* employer * to advance. NURSES Aides &re needed! -
Campi, accttd, b'nlJ & job Office 1.,1_nt
TELEPHONE Sales. Guar. PYMIC9tlon plcemnt. Nines Tralnina: Al1I'OMATIC t e I e p b o n e
salary +. ffutior area. Good Secretcwy $521 Institute 4016 W. Como answerlnl eqWpmenL Sale•
responae. J r. Sport Direc> Must be able to Ute Frieden monwealth. Fullerton. J.. .l service • all maket.
tory. 714: MS--1290 or 213: Adjusto'Nriter, minimum one 1..:"2$-~'IS21:;:.._____ 540-6892
31'U781 collect alt 6 ,.., ........ nee. MERCHANDISE FOR ~M'°U1;'°T"'1°'G~RAPH=~-.-,p1-1ca-to-rl
FRlAR FISH & C111PS ...., SALE AND TRADI model OJ and oupplln. 1225. -. ----=-=...;:...._. ---
COUNTER HELP. • •• , Cilrl kldoy $J75 Fumltvre IOOO 64Z-502! 1fJ64 Babcock, C.f<.1~-:-~;;1; ... ~-~·:.-~NOO~~Ml~IC!l~l~l111~. ~·~·t~•;..i-~~ 19'17 D, Harbor Blvd. Costa Type 60, seneraJ otfioe
Mesa. dudes, fl&Ure aptitude, J.Jcht SPANISH Returned tram Garage S.le I022 ========I
HAIR Stylbt. c 11 e n t e I e bookkeeplna:, able to com· Model Hcnne1 at1 sale atwoo :=L=bnid=::; ____ l..;6 ::.=,..:IF
preferr.:!. Full or part time. poae own lellen. less than wholesale! Group ...........
643-2371: &U-2255 hrludes beauutul 9 6. • $100. 9x12 wool hook rue.
HAIRDRESSER WANTED qUllted IOf.a I Jove sut. SUpper chair, WU. cbalr, Sr Acctt Clerk $475 Antiqi.11 dry •Ink. antique Jackie'• Colflun: A • ,. • 3 SpaDloh Olk do<orabr ,.,,.., M••-·•-• _.__. 18756 Bea.ch. HB 962-7812 ccoun fteefvable, pm. tablet. l't':a& or table lamP1, ....-...... ., • ~
perly apply cub. Attount1 wall placque, .ldDK, queen. 40'! 38th St., N.B. 6'l3-451l
REAL ESI'ATE Salesmen or payable, ca.sh record , · or fuU mo bedroom sutte
Brokers wanted. Woodward journal, lG-key adder, type complete lPcl box -Apt> .. =1.;:l•...;•;;.;-;;;_ __ ...;l:.;l::;OO;i
Realtors 962-3M3 50. -mattress, iine111 &r boudoir 6 MO old WESTINGHOUSE
lamps, Spanish o.ic 6 pc tree 1tandlne double oven
dinin& set priced elaewhere elec Ra1'1&'9; ooppertone col·
at approx. $1195.00 AIL or. New. cost $469, wUI
FOR ONLY $399. $20 down. aacrWce $325. 13T..fl'67
U RN ITU RE VERY!~-~.::~~
AUCTION ~:,;;::
A~n.,.cl0110• Men & 7550 P-1 Time .....:==---= loolik-"' $2.75 kr * Able to 10 tbrouab trial HOTEL b&.lanceo, p I e • • • n t ap. pearance, could work lnto
DESK CLERK-1\lll """'·
CASHIER
St-/Soc to $550
Type 55, no 1horthand, han·
dle correspondence, n I c e
phone voice._ handle !IOnte
posting and dc"Posits.
$4.99 per .. f!ek , out ol
state credit OK. W 111 SERVEL Gu rdrlprator,
separate for quick sale. 3'th i'Ood condlUon S1S. 312
c.entury Furniture, 9 7 7 2 :rii..:::· Balboa laland. 213:
TUESDAY NIGHT
7 P .M. SHARP!!
Garden Grove BI v d., 1..;;::.,:=.~----I
G.,.•n G'°"' oau, 1o.s, 6 MOS old Frialdaire Rdrtg Ins-EARL y Sat 10-&, Sun 12-S Come w/autom ice maker, olive ,.. ....
1n or""' mo 5:!0-S240 am. 1385• _, ""· As We Sell 9UICKL Y I
20 Pc. Maple RAC eutomatk: w .. h.,.
( ..... 9"'11
2 YR old Sprlnpr
female, wonderfal w
eldldren; Needa 1arwe .,,,.....
BEAUTlnJL ·Germon
M,lr, tnale, S 1ft. w1l
ed. Needt -home, ---. L•rre male A
lheepdos; wry I e n t I e
Need• 11e. )'&rd .......
· Heavy experience on NCR
QXI. Good ......,., ' days.
Apply il'l pn'SOl"I. OnJ.y
e.'<perienced need ~pply.
THE
NEWPORTER INN
3 ROOM GROUP Good condttlon $15. 5.16-6612 AOK C I I G I
L .... SKty $500 lnclod": UYinl ..,m oet • Anti'!-1110 Omm SS On GI ery 2 FREE pet rabblta,
Two yean leial experience, table~ • lamp• • bedroom 7722 GAR.OEN GROVE BOULEVARD ::.m~-0~
type 60, •hortha"'1 60. E>-.... qllllled mat ..... -ANTl9UE SALE! I Block West of Beach mvd., oU G.G. Frwy. 615-244.1
1107 Jambottt Road ceUent opportunity to ad· pie dirtine room. AU for •• , Quitting Business hSMALL"7;"7';,,bla;,,ck,;:-;A,-wtd= .. ="'='ll Ne~:acb vance, $449 Everyth!Jl&: iOt• • dealm p/poodle, a wk1 old.~ ---===---. No down • Pmts. only $11 mo, wtlcome • wholeaale priceli & ,,_ 11 _ F S _1 O aft 5 p.m. 5/j
MTST Typl>I to $450 wll lf'S WAREHOUSE :,.,!_ ~. :::..!.1! ~ Pl•noo . v···~ ~ HI· I ' -•• • KITTEN s. PAR newpolt . Some gen<ral olfl"'· bl>t WI ..... * Dew * ThouAnd& • New Pianos • M 0 N Au RA L h I· I I RUSSIAN BLUES personn~ ,..., MTST 1yp1,.. Mo11 '""-''" "'" AM-FM 642..13M • have lllme experience. 60C W. 4th St., Santa,/lna oANTJ omalJQUIES&<IO<fAl.,MP! ERSAND WURLITZER A BRADBUl\Y radio, --" condition .. .,,..1,;;;;:;;=,,.~--=~I agency Open Diiiy 9 • 9 All ,.,,,., A ftnlobe' all •--FEMALE kl .. n. part 1W1x.i Sat. 9 • 6 Sun. 11 • 6 2624 Newport, C.M. &U-:1'.169 Americ&n made, as note, del M8-0D6l 8 wkl, bof>.talled A o&dl
Prof1ttlon1I Servi~
for the emplo~r
ind ""' •Pf'llCM! ' 133 DoV11r Dr., N.B.
642-ll70 549-2743
BOUTIQUE to Open-Needed:
Clork Typl11 $400
Type 60, aaOd" apeller. Thll
company likes mini skirts.
Good opportunity to advance.
f'llmlture returned from d!I-Vut 1tock Amer/Eur f\1Ml • --"ench A tuned, Pdcl •tart. C1mer1s & Equip. 8300 ..:ma&l""';T,;..,..,=.,,~:f
play 1tudio&, modtl homes, docks. Larry Marpl'l Anti-llW" at $499. AooRABLE tuay kit
decori.ton cancellation. ques. 2GI Newp. Bld., CM. PWIOI rented opt to bey NEW FllJlca Model ~l Super pu1:lall)' bate-Im., I wb:
Spaniah A Medltem.nean etc , • NEW • ~!!:\ft camera, uk tc! ~ · <*I. 641-0lll RD FURNITURE Sowlnt Machi-1120 Wurlitzer OrCJClns i.BLA'7.a<~•::;:""';..'"::.= ..... =1e ::::1J
ModoiHShop IM4N1wport8lvd.,CM '68 SINGER. ZilJ.ag, '"'°·~other •• ~~ Sporll'!fGoodo 1500 py. 2 monlhl old '
Work when & whir•
you wantl
Trahleea $146 every nl&ht tll 9 with walnut cabinet. Take at)>..,. -' ~ ~ .... ._ --1-f,r.45-rui;F.:~'ra--;;;;;;;=-=i.al
ASK FOR: Q u. a 11 f ie d aearru:tressea, Will work on •ma 11 Wed. Sal A Sun 'tll 6 over 5 pymnta, $7.25 mo. •tart at $595. SUlllFIOARD I RING-TAIL monltty
"'· Stamor.,. "''· Springer "'""-"""•""'· . pott•ry, modtlne•. Will train pis 20 PC. • MODE•N Call S2M6l6 anytime. EVERYTill!IG IN NUSIC Excellenl c:ond, ID ft. Ruoaell, ... -cap, uou Bulle<
INTIRIM
PERSONNEL SERVKE
445 E. 17th St.
Cotta Meta, Calif.
642-7523
Interviewing
Mon. thro Fri.
8 a.m. to S p.m .
Equal opportunity employer
SECRETARY I
$510. • $620 por mo.
An equal opportunily
employer
~afts, jewelry. On cxin-with mechanical aptitude. ,._ Beach Masi ( nl rfect board tor besUan lrv1nt m4.t98 ~::;;~0~.,, quality C...W 3 ROOM GROUP Muslcol IMI. 1125 1'ICtm7 Sola~ s.~~f ::0. se.1415 ADO!l. 81_,... ...,
pie shop, full time 9 am to Will ,_"!_ 1~·1 $1:?1Wltrlll lncJudel: l'k:n1 IOla A chair Guitar HeaclC1u•rten Daib' U bDOll 'til 9, Sat 9-5 MflCllllMOUI l600 !t=".-!. ~ NBkl, -· -------~ 1 12:00. VI'S PIE CD'ITAGE, "" .... ' .... aa.. g.,. • walr.ut tablea • la.mPI • e NEW and USED e 17f0f Beacb Blvd., (HW)' 39) ~ ...,...... "'-DISHWASHER 191 E. 16th C.M. ..,, mo"' !or OXJ>l!rlena" complata bedNom wllh quill Fender e Vax e SWtdel Ill ml. So. San DJeao Fwy. ELEC Sunbeam pwr ...,.... BLACK A .Uwr Gemtul
. TOP WAGES AND
FRINGE llENEFITS
APPLY AT
MANNINGS, INC.
BUSY beauty Won, apace ed mattreu • 5 pc. dineU.. e GIBSON e MARTIN Huntincton Beach 847-15341 A pwr edpr, both only Wied Shepherd. l'Jw 1o =
for rent, C.M./NewpL area. fff refmbUf'IM etc. AD for$. · • e WILSON e YAMAHA HAMMONt> • StelnWU • •. once, % price. LadM!t Olmo borne. -.er7I .
612-7800 or 642-mt 277 Drum Hoadqu~rte,. maha • ••" 6 --<kn.Iler bike ; men'• L,..,. 8ASK>:l'llALL Badlboud.i
Seeret.y$500 N"down-Pmt.a,onl,y$lOmo. eNEWandusme or an mana. Bnt bu:YI hi dtraller bike. Lrs exhaust YoubaQla~.
Schocla-IMl•udl•n 7600 Type 60, •horthand ... oome wll lf•s WAREHOUSE WDWIG, ROGERS, ASTllO So. Calli. rlaht -· l&n. •• """· Mtdl .. ra. .22 ~ .. Cl» work experience. un L.arse aelectlon with new • SQUdJM' MUSIC CO., Coll st;yl8 f'IVOIYl'l' w/ BEAUT IOvable )'Olm& adult
e FLYING LE ,SS 0 NS, pc seta with cymbal.a atart.. 11101 N. Ma1n. holster. '65 MG Roadatu, yellow mall cat. Loq hltrj
Laguna Hills (Leisure world) a nnpl pri. lie. Pki· from MALE 6IY.' W. 4th St., Santa Ana mi at $99.50. Pidala, hi-bat. Santa Ana like new. 962--86n Outty tall 5f2...8'1.. 4/J)
837-$) $600. ""' .. "'" learn! Dpeo Diiiy 9 • 9 and .............. AD """1 CONN ORGANS * AUCTION * T6ii Cat -• OhiliJ
BOOKKEEPER. fully exp'd, 549-0126 Sat. 9 • 6 Sun. ll • g I:'!:~~ceuor!.ta A cymbala ALL MODll!LS It )'OU will •U or buy Gnen eyn. Free .,
full charge . for Laguna PIANO Lessons: Tbe very A pll f QUAL. Kng Size bed w/ USt: rtve Windy a tn· home. MJ...1255
gannet Mt&. J ob oUen best in instructions. Call P cat pclyl ff qUilt.ed matt.. comple te EVERhYTHINM G(IN MUSIC Hear 1",_~NEW' 3 Man:O ual•. AucUona .... A .... 7.J)
CITY DF
NEWPORT BEACH
........... "'""°""bmly 6#->;39 p ... A Ne .. r -1911: ·-12J;O. Beac us c Cent r ~ ··-. p.m. LIVELY kltteno, ' wb· • good pay. Star May 26th. GOING To Europe this year? u '"'to $1000 847~ e Goukl Music Company Wincly11 Auction B•m 2Xil2 &W. C)1ftll. Sant&'
. £411 Carol 494-8027 Bruah up )'OUt French Exper1enctd buyer w I t h SO 2l)f5 N Main !A 547.(1681 Behind To111'1 Blde. Mat'J. Ana Hatt. MS-81163 ~ ='=~==-==""'""I r ti In clau knowledge of amall electric FA & Oialr, new, nevtr F11.etory Sllea I Service 0' 1850N, 1iA 'lll'lll1L N-rt,CM''""-FREE Kittea1 w -n .. ._..-DAILY PJLOI' DIME-A· onversa on my • tools, I nventory control uaed. Make otter . 548-6025 De.lly 12 noon 'tQ 9 Sat 94 .riJV _,.....,.. w-.-r ....,._ -"# .......
One of three sroretarial P?" THE SUN NEVER SETS o. 6@-6260 1 y 8 t em 5 , sub-contractor or 96i-30li9 eve1 only. 17404 Beach Blvd., (Hwy 19) wl~ ~ cue, NEWPORT Beach Tlnnla hair· White, S0.2l7f ~
sitiona in the Oty Manager 1 Classified's action power. CUSTOM BUILT manufacturing. 20 PC "MADRID'' l'A mt. So. San Dleco FwJ. S320 new, $2()0 or otter. Cub Membenhlp for Ale. PITS Incl LIVlnOCK olfice, Thls position oUers For an ad to sell around PLAYHOUSE $85. • Hw1Ur,iton Buch M74515 Er1c. 675-516') attar I PM Save $8). Call H • r r )' •-•
exciting du ties and respon. 1 k -·" "" -6~ 2025 3 R G 11--~--""'-H.a sibilitles for a highly qU&l· the c oc ' ...,.... Q"SVW<o * •.r * 001ft l'Ollp BR.AND NEW GIBiiON SG 1200 Bu....-., -or :;=r • '
ified career teer'l!'lary. Min. DllpCltcller $l'O wk. FROM MODEL HOMES GUITAR. HumbuCkinc pick· R.Hlo write, 1958 E< Bancroft, GERMAN Shepherd 111mm...
imum quallficatioNi include Jobs Men, Wom. 7500 Jo~n. Wom. 7500 Oen year exp er le n c e Includn: Quilted I01a I upa, &Olld body, excellent SCRAM LETS ClmarUlo. CaW. AKC, imparted a1re:-.d.-;!
100 wpm shorthand, 50 wpm dl.apatchl?ll" trucks, 1 0 me cha1t -2 end tabln & cof. action, plwh lined hard shell • QUAL. Krll 8be bed w/ tincatly raiaed,,lu'p bcmd:
typing and 3 years of in-TEMPORARY -typing. fe"I table -2 lampe-<freq. case. Guitar W&A: $3fO new quilted matt., complete 49S-2184
creasingly responsible ex-PART• TIME er.-mimlr-headboerd-and. cue $70. Best offer ANSWERS Never ued Sil: worth $250. ~G=ERMAN==-Sbe~phml~~-..... -,;i ..
perience. For appolntment ltfttol Att. TNfftff qtillted box sprlne I matt· taku . 4~ 847-0406 temale, black $25 e&cb:
information contact person· Atlantic Research has requirements for in· $2.25 ltr. te tt9't ren -5 pc. dininl room; FENDER 8 a 11 man Cancel -Woven -Bull)i BUY, sell or trade. 1'utn, Motber-f Good watch dOCi
nc: office, 3300 Newport divid uals who are interested in full time and Learn rent-a<ar business top IP.ble I: 4 hl·baclt chair.. ampllDer m . Cipher bua -em.er -ALLOWANCE appl'1, anything of v.lue. 5t0--5675
Blvd., Newport Beacb, Call· less than full tirD.e work. Most positions re. to bottom. 5~ day week. OOMPARE AT $749.95 l\Olt&r, like . new $ 5 o. Teen-aa;e ecopom)': A teen. Ace Furn It u re , 11'12 'M'°'J""N'°'JA""TURE==--,~=---<.I
fomia. m66l3 before S . IO h k d d d $399 M5-0906 ·-r ~·n• ...... ,....,,,,1 .. -once Nev.-port Ave .. Costa Meaa. AKC. pet or ohow,·" .. -·•·,· 2nd 1969 quire to 20 ours per wee as nee e ur· _.. .. ...... 1 .. .., ..... 4 MJ.. 5f8-t227 .. .._
p.m., Friday, May • · ing peak work periods. At times evening Cllief IMpeetor $700 No dawn-Pmtl only $16 mo. ooueu: sfT O!' u Jone u lt dol!1n't oome 7015 or . 1 rnak, & wkl old. Pk:ll: ~
T ,-p J
I~
U't ltEINDUU • r---AftlWP "°" c .. ,.. br .• ",.,.,,, .... ,....,.., ~ "-"' c~ "",..., PMM j46-Jlll
Please Call For
An Appointment
SECRETARY
RECEPTIONIST
work is necessary. Ain:ra.lt • I I cm b I y com· wll W•s WAREHOUSE DRUMS. Xlnt cond. out or ht• ALLOWANCE. • VACUUMS • litter. 831)..1187 ' e REPRO TYPIST ..... nts, •beet melal. know WI ms. 516-131' T 1 1 -s llD ap. Repoln • puts. TOY POOD1.£S, AKC. 1111';
mikes I: P.Ulftl, own toola. • ft tlon ·•"• Reuonahle. C.ouc Vacuum, 8 wetla okt. C.U.
Publlcation typins required. 50 wpm, work 600 w.O::, ~ ~9" Ano Pl•-I O!pno 11,SO 9 • '·f 111..l \ll • 1 333 E. 11th, c.M. IO-lll«I .,.._ '
from hand wrllltn copy plus understanding Trll •P•-*' -" Sel,. ""'11.. UMd Himmo!ld REN g UY tAR!<Y Amer. oouch A cltr. A~C Min. -.. Aortcx>t;
edit mar.ks and line justification. 3 years ·-"' $10,000 'Jf· M<.VING' MUST SELL 2 ORGAN SALi c•LeR 2 end tablet, _.. -or ... IJllallty. _)l/J'. I repr .. lyping •-rtence required. -··-, c2 •M ~··•-. mod. tablet A wkl. -• -. ~ -. -r.. uo:grte ot ,..., )'eUI ell:· Dbl wht canopy bed1, 2 wbt B-3'1, RT·,, , A·._'1, M· ~k"' 56085:5 -• ....-.,.,._ • OZAUD OPERATOR pet"len<e work!"< •ilh ,.. .. oruden,. "deoks & chn. 3 100·1, L-100'1, M-3. Aho '• · AKC Btqle -. 8 -ltj
Several years experience operating blueUne don. Koow tran!portation Wht cheats, Mplc cobblers many planoa -· stehrway, DRi:SSEti& 2 1 t 0 v e 1 • old. 4 malet. 1 *mllto
machine and Colding prints in a hia:h voltmm nte• and routes. bnch, Step end table a: Wurlitzer, etc. TV ~ mm~tamo: Bric-SL a..3952 ; O""ration. Bkcue, 23" Conl!Ole TV, Open SundlY l.2'1o 4 •u,._. ....,. eta GERMAN SbtPblrd PQ'PY
r-Loli T.U $SOO ndl. mlnot "'''" "6--0761 HAMMOND . C.M. Jemalt 31> -llO. A1kt • STENOS High od""1 cbeml&lr)' . .,,,.. 17 p KJ.u. Size to OORONA DI:!, MAJ!. UPllOL9TERlllG • (Eun>. S. lMW}ll '*tor Mllal. '
For Newport-Harbor Aru. d ~ in d 81) ..4o ,,_..,.. •-..I df ""'"""-215 *1n, RB _,,. ......-r;--, ·-... Requires one to three years oUlce •=r.ri· tab -rl<nce. c. ""' m4 E. Clout Hwr .. ~ FREE ~ crallwnl n.. ""'· -~1 ,ft-'-lKC _,
MllSI be atb'&ctiw, ...n enc• , -wpm typ g an wpm • o. v .... room ONCE A YEAR • ·-~~· -deait. odorle-. :
groomed, with fr l • n d l y hand. 1.9 T.cll T $44% t.arse 9 drawer dre~. mil'-WURLlnlR Bernard •}!Phol ~ * M1450 • :
mille. UndCI' :10 ,..,, ml•. 4 • ARTIST/ILLUSTRATOR H'•h ochool -~ •• 11 nd ro., 2 btdll<le otand• k1rc PIANO A OMAN SALE p1 .-Ii Labor S~T °' 11.~ ~!" wtndlth "~ POODLE. toy, _.,__. yr.:: experience. SH 90to100, • ...... "' a a1te bead:boe.rd, frame, quill· ,New PWm trom •••••• ss11 11• I: cart. 1111:lUU1W co ..,.,... maia T wltka. ,.......-.i Several year• •..n.rJence as artist tn techn.1· m1x chemical• RE Al'enta -•••• N ~ •---$1 M • .......I -•1-..... " -.U b' ' ' accurate typlnc a must. -r" · · OI' rnattnu. ta, bu:u111· ew .., •• ana .uU1u••1 •··-uo;:m _,. _.. ' *-.... *
Send typewritten letk'r A cal publlcaUon group. Cltan CUI, hlch I c h 0 0 I •ta. ete. WHY BUY USED' • appointment
comp1eo. """"" to B<a e T1CHNICAL WRITIR cbemlslr)'. 01ob or -• Ope• Mon • Frt -·t111 • -'AN1'1:;;;QUE;;;;;;;,-,;...,-,,.-...,~-..,~., • Klttana. part -m..·
1715 ~~:;icCalll. Five yean in proposal wriUng and edlUng. II-le Teat AH i:" $249 ~dta1~-~.; No Dep • 111 i:j,. ~::.: ;.:=,llTATION
ASSEMBLERS • OFFSn PRESS OPERATIONS T-ldm"' $171 wk No ...... Pmb. on1y 19 """ ~ N. Main. i+< Mt_, Rent 'W1ttl Fu LL ....,bonltlp: Ex· lolio & Yech!o 90GO ~~.':.;. ~:;.{p"r:i~:in";~~~n,:.of'r.:r1 iJ'!'n~ !::' .:,::;: w~.i=: WElX'S WAREHOUSE :~1!!,ST, ~f,! Oplfon IO luy ~~~~ n· CABIN o... 2"""" • 1 ~9811 and metal plates. tHU.,,, ncordll\r 11111. 1 _ Alwm Al • W• a1oo nnt tho r~: l WHEJ:L iiilOI, bnntl -· -. °""' °""" -my hi 0onna Ihle «il W. 4th II!., Soni. Ana AIW •i• * "'"'1-* W-6 ridden tw!Ce. Coot-... .... Needo """-11011 F=E::;.c:~ss ( 41 54W030 .. ~~·!~·.. r..• ~~ ~:J.. WARD'• BAU>WIN Sl'\1010 = * n.Jrlamobrl • Crlll<• 1100 . .-u. ~or:~ :.-8. al. Nf
81lbo1 ll1y Club WJ H1-111\td., (Olli Miia, Calif. .. .. MPL Buolc Bdo, Twtn A llDI Newport, CJ!. ICUIM 521 7555 G.E. -· bdrm, p--
I 1221 w. Clout Hwy .. N.B. Ml11llo Sy1!1m1 DM110n :ri.:-coma;:!1e .... ':i Obie, Clteoi., Orm, Callee SPINET w u R LIT z It R. • = !... ~-· I '1ii1"irr;iF'. '";p;;;.;;; .. ;;;,;;; .. ;;,:-i;&Wi!ii;Jiil
NURSE AIDE. 0-on lit Atlant1"c Research Pil>llcol. • end tblt, TV, Hutch, Din. Wl""'t • le<l-. wllh I •••••• I • I • = ~-· -~ • °'""" -(ID -• 1J: obilta. LAGUNA BEAOI M~ Chn, Lnt,.. 64>-rn6 bettdt. $315. -lei' , LI. '~ .,..,._ '-· -) OQ!lloull. Oiollm
NUllSING HOME. pH I QUEEN -llol·-KIMBALL Cooltolettl piano. * Credit Pto"!'9m•7 * Opmlrc 'botrt-MI!-""' ---· .. -' -CORPOltATION w.w.r $l.H ltr "''"""'. """ ........ """' Lish• finblo; Woo -llill· wi;; CAN HEU' YOUI rotmtaltl v...,. . .......,., tll' -· "'10 .. -.. RE.nAURANT HELP A Divltlen ef the Certlfltd, a* to r •ad dfd $35.. 5*GD3 5t6-8IS8I . W.W Color TV'a, attreol • W.\LK·tM CANPD tor Ille n . FhDnl ..... &ftlr" t ,_
_ FULL OR PART TIMl!I Su1quoh1nn1 Corp. bh1•pr1nta. oxperlonced tn 24 .. BAR otool&. Ill ach or l PIANO TUNING • llepoJr comboo. All MajoJ' Malt,., IStlll. 1!14-8 v-. CIC., 1,.. .. CLA!S lloat, !ID i.
545.9853 U.S. Cltl1t1uhh~ '"wire4 e llltl tlbrbUon. lor $12. Expert. rn.Dlabltl Mr. Dulce 522-6144 Need a CudeltarllJeT llO, ll1r. lllOQ, BM••
Dial 64i$ii tor RESULTS 1 r.-......... •,.•,.l,.••,.•,.1 0,;'.;,',.'".,",."1y!l!!!!!Lo,;',.1..,.!l!!!!!' -......... ..,.I * M6-00S! * Albert Aamt11 rrMM1 Whit. ~tl1 Olme-Mlne Find It wfUI a want .SI 641;..60U tit" •not
' ' • • •
•
I
'
• T-. Ap.n 29, lM
fRANSPO,TATION
9GOO Tnocb 9500 1"'11•""41 A-'"°° TRANSPORTATION ~~SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I !!~NSPORTATION _ TRANSPORTATION
lmpomd Autos -New?~'" ~ imported Auto1 9600 Ntw ea., 9100 u...i ~.,. 9900
TRANSPORTATION
I:::'.~~"'."'.""--,-• -... -! ... ":'°'~ ~~ ATf: Landlclpen1 6l ll T. KARMANN GHIA TRIUMPH " -
-1ilblre-ap. I. Xlnt eond O.V. ftat Nd. w/W' 1idN. KARMANN CH1A. 'ST VOLVO
..,_ SW Ji1areu. NB. Metl,l !Ml. tool draw~n. JD\m.at*it
'~ 5M-3'f1G R.D. tprln11. Ideal 8'154943
Zi' aianwi '65 u,rd ... ""41>k!u Ind. 64 Ii T •. 1.,.=======
twin Mm: lJO IO. Clean °""·' pl~p w 1' 1 •' MERCEDES IENZ
bllp, coot\r -... Ofkn. boan!o, ' tool box, H.D.:l--------
mln l$m nt:Hhlm ........ Both -.... COlkt. Ex. mf('han\oll $12915
.18'' v.a JN.BOARD I: traile'I': ea. 646-1788 ~~ ~\. ~ Sell at I -.Sl~OIEV=-.~%-lon_tnlek. __ '°"_
• . rec. o/ha.uled. 11 c Ip• r
Sall._.. 9010 '"""' • load lo"1eno. I--'.,...-''~·----$425. can M9-20f4
'1' DIESEL YAWL
Jmia-eloc..nl&. JMe! .. : ..
RJT, ':S~-;7· Sac. _....._'-67-"B'-R-O_N_C_O__ '67 MERCEDES 230 s < Dr.
Aux. Try S4500. 4-wheel drive with hut.. Sedan. ¥ua,t sell 847--5333
Hardtop, ml 6. whlt.e, ndio..i=af~t_S"'p_m_, •• ____ ~
ePA(lflC YACHT SALES• tutu, rear teal S1Sf». or J.966 230 SL Coupe, 4 -spd,
SM& Via Oporto, Newport Best f\ff-,,,.f19.8J8$ nA .. 1 beaut cond. Must see to ap. •
24 H"1r ~ 67$-U1U .,._ -
Coming CUSl"OM DLX K tl ,:;•;;"""'""';v-=:-:=°";o-Jip;rec=ia;"=Si~=·,;-;:_7.106:==
CAL ~ • Pmect lot family MILlTARY J~. awv v.a.
VOLKSWAGEN •
cnll!1ng Ol' racing. Slps 4, New llO x 1f tim. Maey_
1
____ M_G ___ _
bill carriH a doren.. Head. more atru. Will consider
'69 VW's
IMMEDIATE DEUVERY
Bank Financing ~00..Spiimam, boat bath. trade. MS-DO S.S.,~ Se~, P&rtl
Xlnt cond., $3500. 644-®6 ,.._.. 9520 lmmedla"' DrUvuy,
$213 DOWN
$~4.03 ~ 36 mos
Plus 1 final pymnt for
title. Full 2 yr, 24,000
ml warranty. Avail only at
e CAL-» by pri pty. GGod ;=;;;;;:;;;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 All Yodoia
.-. won ""''•• ""'°"' °' CAMPER eves ~1031 or '
lnl) 339.5194
CAN#<DIAN SOLING
AV AlLABLE SOON!!
Schock, . Newport 673-2000
.1~rt11po11
j\ Ill p 0 rt~;
T& MMOTORS
81111 Garden Grove Blvd.
534-2284 at Beach 892..5551 I
OPEN SUNDAY •
Solos. Rentol1
Authorhed Dealer
Eldorado . ·Four
Winds • Scotsman
30,000 Feet ol Camper S1DO w. -Coast Hwy., N.B. '63 VW Convertible •
1 •. JUST ARRIVED
ANOTHER BIG
SHIPMENT OF
Columblo 5.5 Moire
FIG, A-1, pficed right!
'114: '192-43il. 213: 'l99.Q22I
RT Finn, spare sail,
rudder &: boom. Good road
tnller. $1.fXr. 675-3188
' CAT. Choy desgn,
Ensenada vet. Extras. $8(8)
val, sac ~ 114!893-1D19
'68 Km No. 800. Perfect
condition. can aft.
6 P.M: 61>1907
SHOCK SABOT A·l condition
No. ~. dolly • cover.
-543-1668 14' HOBIE CAT cn-t> 64U335 <213> 439-7667
&o.t Maintenance 9033
Dls J 642-9405 540.1764 Paya Au''"--'-.. ~fG ~-•·r 4 Spd, dlr, owned by little • ' Theodore uiw-JU;\I """'..,.. 'ole lady in Laguna. $15 ROBINS FORD '65 MG ,,.....t ~r. liko C..h deb, toko , ma 11 I new. Desperate. lst $650 pyrnnts or older car in •
2CBI Harbor ~lvd. takes. 962-3611 trade. LB WID 437, Call •
Costa Mew. 642-00IOIJ =========-Ken, 494-9Tl3 or 545--0634
MGB ='"=~=~=-•
1968 VW Camptt w/tent, ----'---'----1966 VOLKSWAGEN. I.ow • xlnt cond. 1964 vw Bus mtlC!age. Radlu and heater, •
. • • MGB 66%, Rd a; tr , $1195. Connel\ Chevrolet.
good cond, best oHer. Prv BRG/blk tnt. R & H, 2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa • prty. 646-8886 Mon thru Fri Odrl ·•· . 19 000 . 9-5 • ve, uu wires. , m1, Mesa. 546-1203 •
tmmac. 675-1714. or aft 6, I :1'6G=~vo~LK~~sw=A"'GEN=-. ~ .. -d~io • COAO:I • TR.All.ER
RENTALS
W.9621 and heater. $1145. TBX527. •
Import car dealer. 18835
It's none tDO early to make OPEL Beach Blvd., Huntington 1
reservations for ~ HoL --------Beach. 54{)..(M42 tdaya! '68 ·OPEL Kadett Rally. Lo 1---------
WEEK·END OR WEEKLY mlleA, $1595. After 6 & Al R CONDITIONED •
546-0291. weekends. 548-7433 1968 VW
VACATION TRAILER Loaded with extras, xlnt •
I
•
. S '69 OPEL Station wagon, on condition, $1850 or best oU.
t'OMPLETE b:>at & yacht &ave a Scotsman summer warranty, low miles, $100D. er. Prv prty, 842-31&4 •
cl aning Deck. hill! inside Avail. locally by wk or 675-1297 • e · • wkend. Ph. for Reserva-1-="-'~====== 00 VW. $300. R/H, Good rub--"-out. General cleaning, tiom, 494-4922 ::i er , n e e d 1 work . •
...,, ,,,,,, • .,..,, pr;ce.. Call 1 ==-------PORSCHE r ..... ,.r1ation" will ...... •
1969
OPE LS
ORDER YOURS
TODA YI ·.. p be-4 • 5 '64 VW Campor, pop top, new·•---------• i .. r. age n pm. •· 640-1862 aft 3 • . 21J: ~7 tires, new eng , w/1500 nrl BEING TRANSFERRED EW
left on guarantee. Many ex-* '66 Porsche 912, 5 spd. '68 VW. Must Sell At Once! l~N:U~K
tru. 213: 592-9160 $DXJ Loaded! Haa only 12,000 mi. •
9039 8' SUDE in camper; 5• high. * '68 VW sq back $2250. A steal at $1655. Priv. pcy. • $2444
• for used cal"I 6 trucks :fuat
• call us for tree estimate.
: GROTH CHEVROIET
I
I
I
Ask for Sales Mana.gu
18'lU Beacb Blvd.
Huntington Beach
Kl 9-Jlll
Your Volknagn er P<ncbe
• i: pay 1op dollan. Paid lor
I or not. can Ralph
I 673·1190
• -IMPO==R~TS~\~¥-ANTED~--
1 Orange Counties • TOP S BUYER
I BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach mvd.
• H. Beaclt. Ph. 847~ I~--_;; ___ .;.;.;.; Xlnt oond. $375 Both excel. 833-2375 eves. Tn.9340 I ORDER YOURS
549.3004 1961 PORSCHE 6100. Tuned '61 LOVE Bug. goo d I TODA YI •
1964 FORD % Ton Custom exhst, lug/ski rack, car mechanical oond. Near new 1 •1,1 ,A;;;";;';;;";;L;a;;•;•;;;in;g;;;;;;;;;9;81~0
Cab w/Camper. Sleeps 2. cov. Jmmac cond. $200). tire!. Stabilizing bar. $550. 'I•
42,000 ml. SOOJ. 642-3666 w.sm · '4>-9182 • I LEASE -RENT
1========9040= ,,;;;::;;;;;;~~:;;;;:;;;~11--1959i95j:Jro;c;RRSCHESCiiE--1 1'62 VOLKSWAGEN. Oruy • • ALL POPULAR
1--~------Dun. Buggies 9525 can after 4:30 p.m. $595. RYS321. Import Car • I LU MAKES * 536-7433 * Dealer. 18835 Beach Blvd. 1 64 RAMI 8 27•ft. Fishing Boat DUNE buggy; atr legal. Huntington Beach. Soto...-0442 990 St1. Wa9on. Fact. •ir,1 FORD
CliJ':v*r ei:wtne, over-Compl ., tow'g bJtch, sand '60 PORSCHE. Sup. 90 Sun-1959--vw~~.-... -.. -".-.-,~ ... -IP.S., 's'''1· 104v"9'5lll • AUTHORIZED
........ Nov. ·~. S'-" i;-•, etc. Must sell, best ot-roof, Beautiful $1 9 9 5. ''6 • LEASING ua vo ~ .. .,.. "" r--&Th-2813 67$-1085 truck. Reblteng. Tape deck, • Head, Galley, ·Batt TanJc. fer. 962-1782 ' radio. Days 642-7093, eves , __ ;______ SYSTEM
Docked at Huntingt.on Bch. EMPI SPORTSTER, Corvair SPRITE 642-9899 1 ,66 CAPRICE I Get Our Competitive Rates
· $2,200. 633-7315 after 5 p.m. powered nyk>n top, Myers 1 Theodore
Ol' anytim kendl. .a..okats wide --. to .r---------1968 VW Sunroof, extras. •R&H, auto,, P.S., f•ct. •ir. ROB''NS FORD e wee ~ -·· •· .... ~ P '6'l SPRITE. pert ccnd. $1.650 $1lll0. .tTAX 9011 • !I _
cond. $995. ~2076 Or best offer 67l-11Cf> !Com-6'73-4984 aft 6 pm. I $2195 I ~ Harbor IDvd. Aircraft 9100 DUNE BUGGY Cm 1.---------MetaW.ake ing or Eves '67 VW, Red. Blk/lnt. Radio, • I ta Mesa 642-0010
th ownership et Cessna $7rl0. MS-6651 xtrru1. $1500. 675-2813 1 '65 OLDSMOllU 1
70. Call af!Or 6 pm ·-=======I SUBARU sr~1085 Y' LEASE 'EM Y' * 545-2600 * -1 4 door H.T. Factory air,. '68 Cad CdV full p ..
I rt ... A ~ ~~ --------'62 VW B t · l b k ' wr, air, ;:;m:;iPo==c;.,:U:;;•=--.;.•=-SUBARU ug powar I ••r1n9 r• ••·· vinyl top. Dri\:en 14,500 mi
9150
YING Club, Ceslna. 150, --------
.$650 or make ofler, 81ulo. 1$M01Y514691 5 • 2-l mo. lse at $149. mo. DATSUN * 673-8742 all 7 * • New '69 Eldorado, full equip, Retail Division '64 vw Sedan, clean, SS75. • I air, vinyl top $2211.87 mo. 24
$9.50 hr. wel Harbor Avla· --. Mobile Homes 9200
BAY HARBOR
' Mobile Homa Soles
Casa Loma • Roll-Away
Sheraton Manor • Homette •
Kit • Prestlg~ • Sa.hara
AU, SIZES
NOW ON DISPLAY
1425 Baker St.
% block East of Harbor Blvd.
on Baker
Costa Mesa (Il4) 540-!M70
DOUBLE 1967, big comer
lot, beautifully landscaped,
Adul t Park. 19361
Brookhurst, Space 39, H.B. ......,,.
DBL. Expando Kit 3roJan
20x55, Seacliff .Mob~ Prk.
890 W. 15th No. 108, NB.
Motorcycles 9300
'68 KAWASAKI, 175 cc
Buabwacker. Xtra
1procketa. xlnt cond. $450 or
offer. 962-0091
250 X.O SUZUKI
Scrambler. $325. Home
536-'65? It. work: 67l--090J.
Mr. Rowan
-"' Trail """· Perfect condition.
962-1782
'67 DAJSUll $1297 POE After 6 & week ends. • '67 TEMPEST • mo lse. '69 LTD 2 dr vinyl
$150 d "' 0 AC 548-7433 •Cu~t. Cpe. R&H, avto.,1 HT, air, $109.52 mo.
1600 CONY.
C speed. radio It heater,
hardtop, Drives good, CUJB
139)
$1695
ATLAS
n ...,. mo. • • ' 65 VW 26,000 ml. Su,...,rb con-I f ITRl l64) SOUTH COAST 1000 W. Coast Hl•hway •-,• ... s"'2· ''1" 95 I CAR LEASING • dition! Must Sec! Sll89.
Newport Beach 540-004() all 5 PM • • JIN) w. Cst Hwy, NB 645-~182
64S.OOSO * 540-2733 I '66 V\V Bus, rans great, looks I ,66 IUICK fR ANSPORTATION
good . Blt·ln bed, 1 •
$1495. 8<12-3691 Wildcat 4 door, F•ctory Used Cirt 9900 I 1ir, auto., pow1r •l•1tinq,lli '-=-""=---.:.:::.:
'65 V\V Bus. Good condiUon. 1 R&H. !SVX 0161 9 BUICK
TOYOTA
TOYOTA low mil'""'· 11200. • I $2595 6~4-1055 • OfRYSLER PLYMOUTH ' '68 ELECTRA Buick. Cost
2929 HARBO- R BLVD. $ SAVE $ '68 VW, mony_ "~"'• 1 $6000 To I '66 TEMPEST · c ose estate ·have
OOSTA MESA, 54&-1934 Executive Car Sale '* 8~~7ii'.1s * 1 Cuitom cp1. RlH, auto.,1 pink slip · $3900. 2611
Open Dally tll 10 p.m. Hurry While They Last! ---.:_:_c;.cC---~ • P.S., factory air condition-• Ba,yshore Dr. N. B. 548-5216
--;-69 2000 DATSUN " L I ~ V\V \\'ii.Ile Sedan w/b!k •in;. IST0 1771 I '62 BUICK Invlcta. Full
Roadster, 5 spd trans, 135 IHlll 111n: l mt. Lo~~~:t's • $ 1 595 I power, air-con<!. Good cond . h dlr --.. Id ..... 11 .... " tUllo U.Ul.O · · 1 1 $650 or best offer. Call alt 6 p, • ·~3-&0 3~... pm, 548-8743 :!~~er~a, ~~ ra:~ IMPORTS VOLVO • '61 CADILLAC 1 '6.'i BUICK Special Station
ml. Under fact warr. Take TOYOTA·YOLYO 1S1d. OaVllla. Full powar ... \Vagon Low ·1 Riii
older foreign car in trade or 1966 Harbor, CM. 64&9300 VOl VQ •'•ct. $'''· 11H0xs9,.,5} • air-co~. x1n1 ;,~t54M-4:1D9
S11S """"'"·Will fine prlv BILL MAXEY I I 1940 BUICK Spo< 4 ru-""'·
pny, LB YNW 4BS. <:all Kon, ~~·;...,--~--I $ SAVE $ • 1 vory good "°""· sz10 0, "''r
494-977l,; =UN IT@VIOITl!J Executive Car Sale •c0 .. :1~5R~i~5!~N~•tar.•1 1=0"='='=· =5434803
"="'-=====
Statloo w...,o 18811 BEACH BLVD. Hurry Whlla They Lastl •IRVX "" 1 CADILLAC
Radio, boator, automati<, H B h 147 8555 tifUJl Le.wl4' $1395 • dlr, xlnt cond. Honey beige unt. eic • 1 _1 1968 Cad Coupe de Ville.
exterior, $100 ca.ah dels or '.\ml N. of CoMt Hwy. on Ber> I FULLY LO
take older car in tn.de. LB TOYOTA I '62 CHEVROLET I ADED! ~700. -IMPORTS Pick-up. Plumbin& or Bluebook $6200. 540-4005
WBJ 589, call Jame 1 TOYOTA·YOLYO l clectrical special • '66 CAD 'convertible, 20,000
<194-9T73 llF:Af)(ll1ARTF:TlS • ...,.,, '-I bo C" uoMM 1 (K63951) I orig. miles. red with black
'67 DATSUN 4 Dr.; m, blk. ~ ' " '· ""· ~-I $1195 I top, all"""'· 644-2871
intl.':r., chrome rims; hood ELMORE IS YOUR AD IN CLASSI-
locks, ahacklet: intuned 0 . FtED1 Someone will be I I CHEVRO
.....,. &37..12'ltl 15311 Bead> Bl .... w--lo• 11. Dial 642-5618 1 '66 T·llRD •• 1 __ ;.;.;.::..:.;:c;;·:.::LET::.:._
· Phl:me 894-3322 for quick, efticlent results. Full pow•r, f1ctory •ir.1 1965 CI-IE V R 0 L ET El
. '-ENGLISH FORD •1sLV4t11 Motorcycles y,,_ Imported Autoe 9600 lmp0rted Autos 9 600 8 $
2595
• Camino. VB, auto mat I c 1---'-------::;::~:::::;;;::::=::=::;•\;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;, • -• ):IO\Wr steering, factory air.
•6f Hor.da, new 305 en&:. •DRANGE COUNTY1S '----''------Sl495. R.19259. Import Car
$315« ... t oU'" [i~[J~ar:J • ,64 IUICK I deal". 11183.I Boacl> Bl>d. D1>s ..._ '"" 125 VOLU.ME ENGLISH 11 · AmetJQ'st. Balboa lsland. FORD DEALER • I A •Wlldc•t Cpa. Auto.. Ps.• ununpin Beach. 540--0442
,_ .,.,.w••w• !20. "'---COMPLETE e Faet. air. IOPJ9441' • 60 OIEV Imp. 2 dr Hdtp
-~ ~ ~• $1395 I Rebuilt 293 <U In. 4 BBL
r<Ody, wry """"'· """" SALES -SERVICE ELMORE 0 0 . • •<lb 3 '"""· good tm. extno. $41U . ......., PARTS CENTER M T RS • I rad m & hoale•. 14 oo .
.NEW· USED 15300 llACH II.YD. WESTMINSTO H4-33ll .......... 54&-00T.l alt« 3
Tlt1ad11t'e I • '61 &.PASS. Sta. Wag. P\l.T,
JIOLLS Royal 16' soU-roo. ROBINS FORD 41V:2~0 I JAGUAR • Gtldo. tinlod gla" '""''~· tllll:ltd Trawl Trailer. All 2060 llaRor Blvd P/B, P/S. P/W, etc. Super
au.mti! E 8 1_y. t I It a:..ui Mesa &d.ooio • H£ADQUARJERS ! fine car. Top care & maint. ~ bltch plus tender "!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!.'II •c.mpl•t a Salas. Sarv·•' ·="'=·=6'15-co.,l=':.,1'~---
rorior, Tnv•t 9425
~OLIDAY
RAMBLER
UtoclC1rs
CHEVROLET _MERCU!;l
'65 Chev lmpalO HT 'Q MERC. eoio., Paric '
Full 'pwr, fact air. Owned pau. station waaon: pwr.,
by little. 'ole man trom Lel-ai...umd., radio, hee.tler:
sureWot1d.$150Dtllorto. blue w/ma.tcblaa
IN COSTA MESA """-Will 1i11C P"" prty. na-1nu.. In -
AMX LB RFH 582. Call James, oond. >Ont tlru; oaed but
&.97'1'3 or 56-0634. t»t a.bulcd: , drtvta ~
I \ l,.,;:-'C:CAP7:Rl;;CE,£':..:::onec::..._owner=. adulb ool7 <no -In
JAVELIM ~ p:~8;. P~. = =~'=:::y:::)=A==~='"'=":::"=:=·=·=·I
OFRI YOU A 11Sl5 llnn. S4o.2928 an 6 MUSTANG ' FREE Mllftloanhl1m' .. Ora ... CounfY"• ' .AMX
JAVELIN C U I with
tat "'"'taut.
llAND NIW .
'69 AMX V0•. 4 •P••'· F11ll.-f•ckry •quipp.d. Ord•r tod•y.
$2999
IRAND NIW
'6.9 Rambler
Fi.ill siia, 1aah 6, Ill H.P.
Ordar today.
$2043
IRAND NEW
'69 Rebel
Tl!1 P1opta Car. 1175212.
$24:$6
IRAND Nl!W
'69 Ambassador
Air conditioninq, V-1, Auto
tr1ns. s 1102•0
$3286
USED
CARS
SELECT TOUR
MONTHLY
PAYMENT
'65 Classic
4 DR. SEDAN ve. factory air cond ., pwr.
itaar., radio, haalar. INU-411. •
$1395
'64 Ford
2 .... v•. auto. trans., pwr it •• ,.
in9. OVC 959.
$995
'65 Dodge
2 ""°' VI, auto. tran1 .. pwr st1ar-
in9. RRZ661.
$1095
CHRYSLER
'66 CHRYSLER
'67 MUST ANO HT
Goddess rold ut., plulb
black int .. pwr ateeril\l, dlr,
aulD, ~nt cond. $90
NEW YORKER cash -« take -;go 4'DR. HARDTOP car. Fine prvt prty. LB
Radio, heater, power 1teeT· UOE 393. CaD· Kea CM-9773
In&. power brake!, power c•~•~54~5--06.14~~~-,,"""=~ 1 windows, p!J\'rer seata and 1968 GT Mustan& 390 CID, 4
loads more extru. {RSE ap, R/H, p/1, dlac btkl,
303> mechanic owned. Like new -
$2295
ATLAS
12,000 ml. $2000. ~
,'68 MUSTANG 2 + 2. V-8,
Jact air, Pl· r &-b. Jm-
maculate. Sacritioe! Call
alter 5 PM. 6'f3..1606
OIRYSLER -PLYMOUTH ========
2929 HARBOR BLVD. OLDSMOBILE OOSTA MESA 546-1934
Open Dtl1ly 'Ul 10 p.m. I ---,-llllVmfflV----.--
1964 CHRYSLER :DJ. Full Ul'llJUUlll
power, factmy air, one
owoo" $1095 JZX296. lmpcrt SALES & SERVICE
"'' doal.,. IB835 Boacb OLDH.tftDllt
Blvd. Huntingtnn Beach.. Jl'IUDU,I;
MG-0442 2850 Harbor Blvd.
'67 CHRYSLER Town It Costa Meu
Country 9 pass Wagon. 54().9MO Uted Can 541).881]
Radio, air, Rack. P/S, ,63 OLDS. 98 Holiday bdtp.
P/B, new tires. $3495. Air I llml'~ 83().-0581 ; llXUl'Y car I ~
model. $900. 545--0850
TEENAGER Special! '56 ;l!l58;;c:c.O~LD~SM'°"'o"B=u'=..,;...,,p~,.-.
Chrysler, Hemi Engine. P/B. A i r condltionlnc.
$185. ** 675-0816 ** Radio, heater. Auto trans. All or auy part. 84z.&n8
OLDS Toronado, $2,450
HM everythlne. Can finance. CO Mn
'62 COMET S-22, bucket _67"->-653!'="'""~--~~-I
se<1.ts, auto trans, new tires. '6'l CUtlau convertible, * Call 644-2616 many extru. Oean! Make
'64 COMET, 2 new tires, new ===·~"="~· ~644-~1589-..,,..-,.1
brakes. Ex. cond. Value '62 OLDS F-85 CUtlals Convt.
$650, sell $495. 546:-8044 P /S. Xlnt condition, $495.
CONTINENTAL
642-9019 aft 6 pm.
1961 OLDS"' F 85 Ddwre
Sedan. Like new! $475
'66 . CONTINENTAL Coupe 548-6925 or 536-7525
Fully '""'od + ....... ,. .. ========!
deck. Still under W8ITIUlQ'
$2850. 645-3)26, 645--0446
CORYAIR
'lil CORSA, very clean. $1Jll· Call John Mohler.
* 6404303 *
PLYMOUTH
'66 PLYMOUTH
BELVEOERE 11
2·DR. HARD1'.0P
Radio, heater. (SLU 342)
• $895
'65 Mustang ·oo VETIE. yellow, 371, 2
. Z Dr. HA.lDtor tops, xlnt cond. Make offer! ATLAS
VI, auto . tran1., air coM., Aft 5. 2131691-4138 CHRYSLER' -PLYM011l'H
29'l9 HARBOR BLVD. Vinyl roof., NHA 171. '67 CORVE'JTE -427, <'35 bp.
$159 5 ~ ,:;,;;. Xlnt o>ndltlon. CQSTA MESA 546-1934
Open Da.il,y 'til 10 p.m.
'63 Rambler lll68 ooRVEITE. Must Sell, $4000.
1964 PLYMOU'rn Valiant
Signet200. Au.totnatic,
power steering, .radio, like
new. $995 • Co nnell
Chevrolet. 2828 H a r b o r
Blvd. Costa Mesa. 546--Ull
AMBASSADOR * 54G-6761 1r
110, 2 dr. VI, •uto. tran1.,\I========
powar ttaaring. RVL 960.
$895
'65 Rambler
2 Dr. HARDTOP
X1nt 2nd ''" NPF 011.
$895
'66 Dodge
440 STATION WAGON
VI , auto. tr1n1., PS, I br•s.
lie. TRO 676.
$1595
'64 Classic
WAGON. 6 CYL .
0¥ardriv1, r1dio l h•atar.
OST 331
$899 ..
'65 Classic
4 DOOR SIDAN
VI, foclor.-air cond .. pow·'
1r 1t•arinq, r1dio, hattar.
INU 4l t.
$1395
'64 American
2 DOOR. 6 CYL.
Auto, han,., radio, h1al1r.
low mila19 1, CSR Oii.
$749
'66 Rambler
CLASSIC ttO
2 dr. H.T., VI, auto, tr1M.,
PS, & br•ka1. Uc. SMR 262
$1595
'64 Classic
WAGON. 6 CTL.
A11lo. Irani ., radio, ha•l•r,
lu99•9a rack.
5899
MAHY OTHll
MAKIS & MODELS
LOW-LOW
DOWN
DESOTO
'56 Desoto, p(IWl!r steering,
power """'"· $50 or ""' PONTIAC
oHr.r. 545-3903 --------
DODGE
-·,,\OO!iGE POLARA
4 dr Hardtop $295
See at 1145 Paularlno, CM
FORD
' '65 FORD
GALAXIE 500
XL COUPE
V-8, automatic trans., radio,
beater, power steering, pow·
er brakes, power windows.
(PJA 58,)
$1095
ATLAS
'66 PONTIAC GTO
2 door 11.T. VS, automatic,
radio, heater, factory air.
(QPS355)
$1295
ATLAS
0-IRYSLER -PLYMOUl'H
2929 HARBOR BLVD. OOSTA MESA _ 546-1934
Open Dally 'tlJ. 10 p.m.
1964 PONTIAC Ventura 4--
Door. Runs good. $695, Con-
nell Chevrolet. 2828 Harbor
Blvd. Costa Mesa. 546-UOJ
1966 LA MANS. Xlnt cond.
15,CXXI mile!, !-owner. $1750.
675-5765.
CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH RAMBLER
29'29 HARBOR BLVD. --------
OOsr A MESA 546-1934 • L 1 RAMBlfR Open Dally 'tll 10 p.m. M
'59 FORD, 8 cyl, 4 dr Sedan.
Auto trans, R • H, new
tires. Xlnt cond, S 1 7 5 • ........
'61 FORD FALCON
RANCHERO
Automatic, radk>,
fiberglau tonooau
CGVE 751)
~so
healer,
""""
STATION WAGON
Automatic transmlakln, ra.
dio Ir. beater. COTW &U)
$795 •
ATLAS
QfRYSLER. -PLYMOtml
2929 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 546-1934
Open Daily 'tll 10 p.m.
ATLAS 1966 RAMBLER W • co n ,
Auto, aiNond. Bdlt oner.
*"'2-6913* CHRYSLER -PLYlilOUTII l.:061;-;;RAMBLER=mi-~::Omvt.;,,.:-,-_,Full'°"I
l9'J9 HARBOR BLVD. pwr, a.iN:ond, au~ new
COST A MESA 546-1934 tirft:. $350. 54&-Gf3
°""'Dally 'ti)" p.m. 1-========-===I
CLEAN '62 Fonl, 6 cyl., otk. T ·BIRD
New trans .Ii 11eat Ulven. 1---------
Ud. tram. $350. 549-4039 '611 T .a.mo 2 DR. 1c atr, pwr
'67 Ford Squire-.. waaon.. w A seats, tlt a• whl,
390 v .s, + aJJ extru. amnm •teno I S I 9 5 •
Make oUer. 673-5912 646--8554 ......, UIN!d ' timH ... l•nk f111aneln! •••ll1bla "" CilEvy n Del ' fER• a Bl hank •ppro•• •f ct1dit. l ice •nd P•r+s 0 9p•rt·• -uxe Station
Pndk:aDy new! Privatt """"" fmtnt for JAGUARS 1 Wa,gon, 1963• Auto trans. 19 "'1 rnRO ·~·-V • -· 15'6-1987 --------11 l!nEE FR · ml to gal. Luwge nck, ~ •w ~ .. ~.auto., Excellent Terms '&4 T-BIRD. Xlnc cond. fW1
power, aif.«md. Must all
$1.195. ~l96t FERRARI rt\. • EE • S•• T\a bcHi19 I xlnt cond. Se>!! to apprec. HO D xlnt oond. Beklw wbolaale.
N"'1"ft lmporu LOI. °" ......... I.Lt .. , l•s Ven s v-atlon I "" , ...... ,.., I S<o-T.l1S m;, or 011" LI AV $550. ~= CLEAN .... Cow>IYt Cllll1 auibor< • v~ •• • ........ SHARP '64 IMPALA SS '63 FORD oiiiotr> SquU. '65 T-Bml Landlu. _. __ ,_._ • DAYS & 2 NIGHTS ,. wqon; ad-(Ol'ld.; dean Loaded wtaceea. S159S + ~-:s'Eavtcz.PAATS , .1 • FOR TWO • 23, f, 171h SJ. 1 i::=.t.~ to ap-AMlllCAM ,.OIOIS 64U939 tax. 6'n-139S or~ 3100N~!_Hchwy, 11111:.Ql;i; I Na P11rth•1• Naea11•ry I 541 7765 a '57 BEL-AIR 4 dr 283, Sain A s.iYfe.e '63 427 Ford C'.a.laxSe SOO XL '68 T-Slnt, Full IK'Wtt. 'If OIEVY \i Ton. lumber ..... _. oo:a • • 1 -•..,. & -4 ____. I dual "''•"'• -Air cond. 10,(Q) miles. 6'2-9f«S: ~1764 vlbrasonlc nd!o. Must ICIL * ~ .. --. ._, ~ 548-464 ,.,,,., ":," :::;r.-Authorbecl Mc 1"afer 15300 Beach Blwd. p ""'" "'"" • ......... '"'· <94-3891.<9!-11<0 .., ,_ ..... 1 " "•· 1s-1. -
1
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