HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-05-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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Navy . Secretary ·upsets Court,
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-. ' R~-f uses ~eh-lo Court's '\ Martial
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 6,. 1969
YOL. u.· N0."111, ! SECTIONS, # l"AG~S
Third ltlissitig
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.Yachtsmen Save
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Pair From Ocean . . . ~ .
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By ALl\-10N LOCK.ABEY came up the boat wp.s swamped. With a,
. D•ltf Pli.t eo111n1 Edllor 120 horsepower motor an the slern. the
~lert crewmen on board Jack Baillie's boa.t sank rapidly.
12-ineter Newsboy today were credited The woman toJd authorities she was
with saving the Uves of two young San sure Hogg was drowned as they saw him
Die'go people who were victims of a swallow a lot of water while struggling to
swamped outboard off Point Lofl)a Sun· swim toward his companions.
day. Patterson was in worse condition than ~escued were Donald Patterson, 25. and the Miss Runyon because he had made
Beverly Runyon, 23, both of San Diego. several dives to try to locate Hogg af1er St~l~\ssjl'll -~1'<esiJmed.;1<:ohn!;~ • .: ~ d!Sappeareil. · · · · ·
th.li'cf mef?_ber· of ~e-0~ ~~ · , 0i,('be ~rvivlng_ two had on~ lifebelts and F~ ~Hogg of S.an Diego. . t ,,ere dinging to • buoyant geat cushions.
Bailbe and ~s crew.., were retumU'ig • The 'resc\1e 1ooic place about 7:20 p.m.
!rom. the ~nsenada race and h.ad stopped atld .it was d<irk before the Newsboy got
10 San Diego-to clear customs. After the pair back to the cumc>ms dock at San
leaving the customs dock the News~y Diego
was sailing about three. miles off Pornt . ·. . . Loina · on the 'leg to, Newport when Baillie said .customs of_f1cers wanted to
crewnian Bob Dickson, who was at the · search~tbe :Patr for poss1b~e contraband.
hellh. heard voices. Newsboy was ~ sail because she
Die JC.son called the rest of the crew on d~s not have an a~iarr motor· .
deck and Blair"Bamett. ·atso of Newport, We w_ould never have heard the ~r1c.~ 'climbed up on "tbe Newstioy's bbom for a for_ h~lp 1~ we· had had a motor running,
better view. He spotted two heads in the Ballhe said. . . water about 200 feet ahead. The woman told Ba1lhc several motar
Baillie said the Newsboy's course would boats had passed very close to them dur·
have taken them within 75 feel of the in~ the four hours, but none hcartl her
couple if they had not been spotted cries for help.
sooner
The crew or the Newsboy took the bou·
pie on board was unable ~to rad!p-for
help becaure~or low.batterres,.On the Way Bucher's Fitness
back to San Diego.Baillie ajk~ another . ~~Yc~:.'::"''to·radioah"'.~ to the us. To·DetenQineAny
~lie said both ~ man~ an,d. -:mmu\ ~· · ~ ' · . ~-In. state of •hoclc afterliemg.,the, -. Future Comma"':d· chilly .waters about four hours. 1'W+ ,. ! ~ · -~ ll
In moments of lucidity,the,wo~told' If'.
Balllje the trio had gonf; out In the JJ..foot • . From Wlr, Servlcts
outboard from M.lssion ~Y early in the WASfUNGTON -Ravy Secretary Jobi\ ·
afiernoon,and Uul~ as. the, wind and Sf!aS ,ff. Chafee said tqday the future fitness of
.• t·· r ~· ·~. • Cmar.•lJoyd M\~Bucher, the USS Pueblo
. )" 1,. !,akipper, will~ detennfue whether he is ~raa11e Coast glven command of another ship.
Weather
" ·. Our rcd:rai..'e:d weatherman is 1
trying again with (>fediction of
partJy sunny weather-Jor .Wednes-
day and' temperatures ·in the mid.'·
60"s along the coast.
INS.IDE TOD-'\'
Ti was prettv much like prev-
fol4' race1: the rmcU boau
f))ade the best of the windi tntd
took moj01' hoRO'rs over the
larger one1 in the annual 'En·
senadn rGce. Paae 20.
M¥1V•I P'lllltlt
HtlilHI HIWI Of'_,. C-lf ,,.,, ........
s.dal ..... -· s*'I Mln1lm ,,.,._ ........ •u-0111111 WRlll
Wt~li! He ..
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Cbafee told a news conference that the
Navy is asking Bucher what his choices
are. and "hJs future commands will be
determined by hia performance In the
future."
A Navy legal officer notified Bucher in
San Diego th t 1 .mamlng of Cbafee's
d~on not to dlsclpline any or the
Pueblo crew, although a court or Inquiry
recommended court martial I.rials or both
Bul"her_and another Pueblo officer.
Lt. Stephen R. Harris, the Intelligence
officer, said at his mother's home in
Melrose, Mass., that •e was "greatly
relieved" that be and Bucher woold not
~ coor! martlated.
Harrll is being asslgned to the Naval
C.onununications Command headquarters
in Washington, D.C,. and he said he and
hii wife Esther have bought a home in
suburban Bethesda, Md.
Harris said he believed the lo-
vesUgation of the Pueblo's capture was
••extremely thorough and extremely·com·
.peJent.''
fie said the 'board or Inquiry "did what
it had to do," and added : "Al far as J'm
concerned lhe secretary's actfon means
that the charl!es have been dropped . lie
(See BUCHER, Pare %)
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SOCIALITE SHOT
Beach's Marnett• PMk
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Narcoties .
Beach Socialite
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Peek ''Shot
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' • f • ' • t ' • , __ ._ ~ '--t ,..._~,.. -,· . r
Mrs.
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By WILLIAM REED
Of 1111 D•llY !'1111 Sllff
One man is dead and another was
severely beaten in a Palm Springs apart·
ment incident Monday in which Hun·
tington Beach ·social leader Mamelle
Peek, 58, was shot once in the abdomen
with a .25--caliber automatic pistol.
Found dead miles from Mrs. Peek's
npartment was her long time friend and
frequent escort, Or.· Lawrence L.
Peterson, S7, of 1146 Kensington Road,
Los Alamitos.
He was shot once through the roof of
his mouth with a .2Xalibcr slug and died
from what police called a self-inflicted
gunshot wound.
Mr!. Peek, who live! at 16461 Golden
West St.. Huntington Beach with her
parenta , Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reid, is
listed as in satisfactory condition this
morning at ·Desert Hospi~I. Palm
Springs.
Beaten 'at the apartment at 300 N.
Sunrise Way was West U.s ·Angeles rtal ·
estate man George Triphon, 39, who was
treated at the hospital for head injuries '
which reaulted, police said, "from a
beating." He wu released 'after treat-
ment.
Polite did not disclose results of their
interrogaUon o( Triphon.
Police Lt. Carl Hulslander said this
morning that the shooting...of Mr~. Peek
and lhe beating or Trlphon appartn'tly oc-
curred about U:30 a.m. Monday ii1 Mrs.
Peek's apartment' which she·keJ>t: ior her ·
frequent visits l.o the de.sert>fpa:1 'tMrs. Peek was shot once witn the .25
caliber automatic weapon. It was a
homicide attempt," officers asserted . She
w'as rushed to . the hopsltal where
(See PEEK, Page !)
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Wound.-Up
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By TERRY COVILLE
ot~ .otillf l"u.t Sl•ff
Huntingtoo Beach detectives today
were wrapping up paperwork on a st'1es
or raids wblch resuJted In the arrest of 31
adults and three juveniles on a variety of
narcotics charges. ·
Latest of the raids, nsu\Ung fl'Of1\
undercover investigations, was completed
Monday night. Twelve adults and one
juvenile were held on charges of aa.le and
possession of 300 LSD labs.
Armed with a search warrant, oflicen
approached the home, at. 81 1 Delaware
Stree t at 8:30 p.m. where they said lhey
v.•ere spotted by one suspect who ran in-
side screaming, "The Man is here!"
Police allege the ~P. about eight
ounces of hashish and two ounces ; o[
marijuana were on a table in the, midcUe
[See DRUG RAID, Page ZI
Navy Secretary Rejects
Pueblo Courts Martial
• WASHINGTON (AP) N a v y
Secretary John H. Chafee today ruled out
any punishment for any U.S. persoMel
connected with North Korea 's seizure of
the spy ship Pueblo even though a Navy
courf or Inquiry urged court mart.lats for
skipper Lloyd M. Bucher and a chieC
asslstant.
Setting aside major recommendations
of the 80-day inquiry, Chafee declared of
the men who Served on the PuebkJ:
11they have suffered enoligh, and further
punishment would not be justified,"
While prisoners 0£ the North Koreans,
he-noted. "Thty suffered enen!lvtlf
from physical al:iuse and torturous treat·
ment."
All charges 16dged against Pueblo
crewmen will be disinissed.
"f am "COnVlnced," Cb.alee said, "that
nel~viduaJ diacipline, nor the rtate
of dbclpllne or mou~ In the Navy nor
any otbtr interest requires further legal
proceecUnp with res;pect to any petlCIM-
nel ltlYOIVed ln the Pueblo incident. u
The Navy court ol lnqtliry, be dlldoo-
ed, Had recommended alter plllnl up
'4,360 PoP' of testimony that ... ,,.,
court martial trials be held for Cmdr.
Bucher and Lt. Slepben R. Harris, his
11reM!arch'1 officer •
Harris was the officer • .in charge of the
research de cbment aboard the Pueblo,
which was conducting an electronic
eave&dropplna mlsaion of[ North Koru ·~ •
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when she was seized.
Chaffee reported t h e 1 e recom-
meodatiORS had been made by the cOurt
of inquiry :
-That Bucher be tr:led by general .
coort martial for five alleged offenses in-.
eluding pennlttlng his ship to be searcn.
ed while he had the power to resist, fall·
Ing to ·take protective measures during
the attack. complying with North Korean
orders to follow t.bEm into ' port, "negJi.
gently falling" to deslroy all classified
material on the ship, and ''negligently
fall ing'' (o see that his crew was l•lrly
•killed In p~ lor destroying
classlmd 'malBlal. ·
-That Harris be tried by general court
martial "for three alleged offenses of
derelicUo'\ in performance or hiS dulie!,"
mainly cJoallrlg with the IKk of a51lityl
and readfnua on lbe part of ~ research
detachment lo "" able lo destroy all
claulfied materials dw'ing an emergeo-
<l'-
-That Lt, Edwml R. Murphy Jr., u-
eartlve officer of the Pueblo, be givtn a
lener ol admonition for failing "to
or1an1Je and lead the crew on the day <if
lht telzure ei:pedally ID the ship's major
internal task or emerg~ destruction of
claSBlfled material." -
Harris 1ald al h1s mother's home in'
Melroee, Mus., Ullt ·he was uvery, very
h11ppy" wllh Ch1fee.'a dedalon not lo lake
dlsclpUnm octioo, He ,.kl h<.woukl go
tin PIJJ!l!l.O, fJOlt, ll •
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· Comedian• Bob Rope Jok~s with reporters as he leaves New Yorlt'I
Institute of Op]\thalmology at Columbia Ptesbi:terlan Hosplta)·&!IAlir
lrcatment of a hemorrhag• of tit& Jett eye.
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PILOT
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LOGBOOK
~Disneyizing' the Woods
Not as Bad as It Sounds
B7 ARTllUB II: VINSEL
Ot ... OIMr ...... "'" Mineral King wu a Slerra wilderness where half my lUe ago, the ging·
er<0lored mule deer never taattd Weber'• Bread and root beer was 50 cents
a bottle. i
So I was llddened to ' learn the plcturelque thnberline vallty ln the
Sequoia Nalloool P-ii to become a SM millioo Wall
Dlllley Producllom wiDI« -ttland. "~ Dlmeylmd 11 mare than enough.'' said 1 col·
leque aidlly, 11 we dlamallr discusled Mickey Mouse
en mowshoea, giant 1tacupl under the pines and Bambi
apelled from b1s native paradise.
Sometimes, however, ode jumps to concluaJorui when
he's Jost touch with a place for too long a time, because
Ume ls the great changer of people and places.
* Maybe I had a phUOSQphical chip on my shoulder on
the way to hear Robert B. Hicks, project manager, ouUine the 80-acre recrea-
tional faclllty and its ramifications before the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
m=. Virtually Inaccessible during the winter months, 'I0,000 campm and
sportsmen nonethelea drove the d1zzyint 19-mile trip from the main highway
to Ille valley last aummer, a startlln( counl
So many people, packed Into such a am.p area -Mineral King b like a
chalice carved out of bald granite by a river and set with 20 jewel-like lakes-
created aanltaticm problems and sewage pollution.
Thil would have been unthinklble that turnmer u I bJked three miles, "'"'"1D117 Into Ille sl<y lllell, fl.sblng far fat brown troot lying al Ille lake
bottom like logs, on what was to be my father's final trlp to the mounlai.ns
be loved. ~
Nobody thought much about pollution 14 yeani ago. -* Now we must, and under agreements by the I>i!ney organization, the
U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies, the developers will provide
proper sanitation systems: 'I.'hey will build a modem highway cutting the es.
minute journey in half. Winter sports resources for californians will be great-
ly broadened. R.ural 1\tlare County will have 2,500 new jobs a¢ $4 million
more annually in tuelll.
Mineral King will never be the way I remember it, but nothing ever ii
and Hicks' talk cleared up IOJl1e prejudJC«I mJaconceptions based on snap
judgm<nl Development of a winter sports haven by the management of the Ana·
helm Magic Kingdom -in an area already suffsing touritt-IUa -does not
mean Taco Bell franclliJes on the John Muir T?'ail.
1"e Sierra Club would probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
in hand-t~hand combat anyway, should such prostitution get beyond the point
of ludicrous· point-maldng.
The Mineral King 11tory, It appears, is a di!fermt one and should have a
happy enQing.
l'r•m Pege J
PUEBLO FINDINGS • • •
to Washington llOOll. for a new as.slgn-
ment.
The court cl Inquiry, II "" dllcloaed, alao found that letters cf reprimand
,•hould be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Johnson, commander of naval forces in
Japan, and Capt. Ever<ll B. Gladdllli,
now rellred.
to be 1111 Invalid one" -mainly, that a
ship operating on the high seas would
always be safe from piracy .
i--~The-court held that Johnson, who ha11
since moved to a new assignment, was
''derelict In the per'formance of duty" by
failing to plan properly for emergency
.support fl the Pueblo tn 1 confrontation
and "negligently falling" to verify
destruction procedures for classified
documents.
He would not answer dlrecUy whether
Bucher will ev .. be gtv~ commaind of
another ship, saying only that Bucher'•
future assignments will be handled in the
usual fashion, Jn competition with other
officers.
He said the Navy has asked Bucher
about hb: personal preference11 for a new
assignment and "then It will proceed
Crom there."
From Page J
Gladding, then director of the Navy
security group in the Pacific, WU held by
the court to have been derelict for "fall-
ing to develop procedurt11 to insure the
readinea:" of the Pueblo's rtaearch aec-
Uon.
The Navy aaid the Pueblo'• offlcen and
men are no• wldely scattered -on
leave, discharged or assigned to new lta·
lions. They all atayed In the San Diego
area while the COl.U't of inquiry wu In
Rsslon.
At a new1 coafennce nplainina his
pasitlon, Chafee said be had not talked to
President Nixon about the COW'le of ac-
tion he had chosen.
Thett has been eome public controversy
over the quesUo·n of whether the Navy
was trying to saddle Bucher and hi• men'
with the blame for the Pueblo debacle
1'/hen higher-ups ought to be held ' ac·
countable, too.
Said Chafec: "I think It Is clear that"
everybody was adv&Dcing on a certain
assumption ind that auumption proved
DAILY PILOT
--11 ....... ----·---CAUPOUllA
OllAMCil COl'll PVllttHIHO CC*PAHT
••~ N. Wee4 ................ ~
Jeck R. C1ttey
Ytct ............ ....., .. ~,
n-••••• 11 ....
TliHi•• A. Mur,tll11• ~111111'
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PEEK. ••
· eritergency llll'gery wu perfonned.
Dr. Peterson wa11 found in 1 remote
area of the city, at Joyce and Blstra
streets, where he apparently had bten
walking alone. Officers laid he wu pr~
nounced dead at the hospital from what
they called "a ·seU-lnfilcted bead wound,
one &hot from a .Zkallber automaUc
pistol in his mouth at 4':11 p.m."
Police said that he apparenlly had died
about 4 p.m. some four and a half hours
after Mr!. Peet had been shot. Officers
declined to say whether the aame gun
wa11 used In both shootlnp. An auto!)!)' of
Dr. Peter900 b scheduled for today.
Dr. Peterson was 1 member of the
music department at Call!ornla Slate
College, Long ~acb and at one time
served as chainnan U the Ji'ine Arts
di vis.ion.
Lt. ljulalander aid Mn. Peek will be
interrogated 11 soon as she has rtttivtred
enough to talk •lib olllcen.
hfr11. Peek operatu: the Peet Family
Colonial Funeral Home In Wea\DllnSler
which abe acqulred more than oot year
ago in a divorce action from her former
husband, Lon Peet, now of !Uverstde.
Bolb Ille Peek Mortuary and lbe
landmork family home al Golden West
Street and Hell A venue are owned by Mrs. Peek.
Mrs. Peek ls 1 noted 10Clal leader In
both Loni B<ach and Orange County and
ls active in the buslnw community
lbrougboul Soutbern CalHornla.
Rain, Rain J rtSt
Won't Go Away
For Ibo lblnl stralg!lt day, Ibo Oranga
Coast and most cl Soulbern Callfomla
Wll dampened today • by a penlsltnt
dr1Dlt 'llhlcb kepi lemperatura mired In
the low to'a.
A bJP-levtl atmospheric disturbanco
WU blamed foe Ille IOUY but hardtr
atonny coodlilom which brnught lhowera
la the mountain and destrt ltt.U and
sporadic sprinkles along the Orance
Cof•l
The condi\lon was expected to move
tasiward into Artzona by \l.'ednesday, but
night and morning cloudiness was still
predicted for COO!tal1 areas. Sunny ar.
temoons were forecas&-t.hrough th e rest
or the :week.
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DRUG RAID. ••
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ol Ille --lhl7 ~-O(llcers ... rted lbt llUIPtdl beglO
chanting ttllgtoo\s -and told lllem,
"You're evil -you ail at home drinking
and ... l<'i arrested for aotng Our Thing ..
From PGffe J
BUCHER .••
Is lhe highest authority in the Navy."
Chafee, talking with reporters, said the
court of inquiry, In lts findings, did not go
into detail on the conduct of the Pveblo
crew while In captivity, although It noted
ln general terms that their conduct was
good.
The court praised some members
pmlcularly for t h e i r conduct in cap-
tivity. Their names were not released.
The full flndinp of the court were not
made public -only Chafee's summary of
them.
Jn armounclng hia ruling, Chafee said
he personally made "no judgment" co11o-
cemln1 guilt or innocence., ruling only
that neither dlsclpUne nor morale nor any
olhu interest required further pnr
ceedln1a.
Asked whelher this left the Pueblo of.
ficen und er a "cloud '' Cbafte sald be did nol lblnk IO. ' .
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50 BB-gun 1
Shootings
In Mesa
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Filly incident! of BB-gun firings haw
been reported in Costa Mesa during tht'
months of ~farch and April, ~ecording to.
police Sgt. George Lorton. ..::.
\Vbit ls most $.ignificant i3 that none o~
them were legal. ft ts Illegal to discharge
a BB-gun within the Costa Mesa City
limits, and that applies to most ol the
cities in Orange County.
What may be most alarmlns to tho
parents of mfftors who fire the gun,, and
destroy property ls that they are liable
for any damage.
Within the past two months, darnqe
has totaled $3.51Xl.
Sgt. Lorton said today that m01t of the
damage was in the fonn of shlttertd
windows. The majority were residences:
followed by businesses, autos a n d
schools.
BB-guns have also taken a toll in in·
juries. There were several within the
past two months, and last year, ac-
""' T•itllhot• cording to Lorton, one boy lost.an.eye. --
Prize ~inning Photo so~:~~i~~:!~~~0\~sc:;:. ~~~~' b~~ -· .._ --other autos.and business~s at random.
This picture of Mrs. Martin Luther King comforting her daughter Ages of the viola tors, said Lofton,
Bernice, 5, at her husband's funeral bas won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize rang~ generally between 10 and 19. Flnng a BB-gun, or a pellet gun, ts a
for feature photographer Moneta Sleet Jr. of Ebony Magazine. misdemeanor. For juveniles, conviction means a trip to Juvenile Hall. For adults,
it is a crime punishable by not more: than
Thousands Due to March
a year in jail and/or tl,000 fine.
Said the sergeant, "U parents want to
give their kids BB-guns, they should take
them someplace where they can shoot
lbem, but ooly wilb •<!1'1t supervtalon. •
Spanis~-
12,000
sq. ft.
of
Top
lj)uaUty
Fvmlture
YOUR
CHOICE $
POl..l.JTHll 01-
THISE 2 GROUPS
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e Sc1J1lt111'111 (°""llltHof t~•11 Ump
• (llT'fl.!1911 fflnllftf LUl'lf fmtJC'htl IOll ftibrl()
ONLY
No
Money
Down
First
Payment
June
1969
Why pay up (o s399 $799 for this
lavish group • , • .
'1--d
•
f·pc. ..... -. 1 ....... • •""'* ... ..,... ~ ........ i ·=-~ M •• """' ..._., ,,....., ~ "'""" ........ ._Clli.1'1111 . ha~~=11=-s3-99 the price ls
only ••.
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lfnntington Beaeh; • ,.-oday'• Fl•al
N.Y. Stoeks ED I f l:O ~
Vbl:. 62, NO. 108, 2 Sft10NS, 30 PAGES ElRANGE COUN'fY;-C>itlFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY -. TEN CENTS
' Huntington · Raids Net 34 • Ill Narco Roundup
By TERRY COVILLE
01 .... Dlllb' ,!Mt St•tt
HunUn&ton Beach detectives today
were wrapping·up.paperwork on a series
of raids which resulted in the arrest of 31
adults and three juveniles on a variety of
narcotics charges.
Latest of · the ratds, resulting from
undercover investigatiQns, was completed
ri.tonday night. Twelve adults and one
juvenile were beld on charges of" sale and
possession of 300 LSD tabs.
' Anned with a search wal1'ant, officers
approached the home. at 811 Delaware
Street at 8:30 p.m. where they said they
were spotted by one suspect who ran in·
side screaming, "The Man is here?"
Police allege the LSD. about e;ghl
ounces of hashish and two ounces of
marijujj~ were on a tabli: in th e 'middle
of the room when they entered . .
Officers asserted the suspects began
chanting reliiious songs and told them ,
';You're evil -you sit at home drinking
-~-Ch-ie...____
Bars Court
Eor Bucher
• \VASHINGTON (AP) Nav y
Secretary John H. Chafee today ruled oui.
any puniShment for any U.S. personnel
connected with North~Korea's seizure of"·
the spy ship Pueblo even though a Navy
court of inquiry urged court martials for
skipper Lloyd M. Bucher and a chief
assistant. Setting aside major recommendations
of the 80-day inquiry, Cha fee declared of
the men who served on the P,ueblo :
"th~y have suffered enough. and further
punishment would not be justified."
While prisoners of the North Koreans,
he noted, "They suffered extensively
from physical abuse and torturous treat·
ment."
and ;~e ~ arrested £or ~ing Our Thing
Prime occupant of the 811 Delaware St.
pJa~ w_at_ i_d_mtllied ~Y pOlice 4S 28-year-
old Clinton Southwell. West Orange Coun·
ty Municipal Judg~ Kenneth M.· ·Smith
had signed the search warrant.
Huntington detective Ca rl Vidano said ·
the ni;ircotlc.s picked up in the raid would
be valued at about $2,000 on the illicit
market.
During ths seizures and arrests, il
seven month old baby, Kristie Farmer, Week.end arrests clnclud,ed a~vlsl~. to a.
was placed" in protectlve custody in resiQence ,at .316 7th St.1 which netted
weekend narcotics arrests resulted rtom
a concerted undercover operation which
juvenile hall. Her mother, Karen Marie· seven adults "livfug at thiit address on
Farmer, 22, ~f Slllh Delaware Street, charges of·possession of JTI.arijuana and ·
waS one o"f·those-armtedin the roundup.-da.ngerous~drugs. -·
led to tip offs of various "parties." '
Th~ . ..QDons we.r~ ~~ Monda~!'_
West Orange County Municipal Court and
set for preliminary hearing May 19. 0no·
oth~t man arrested for ·furnishing
Police said they could find no respoQ.Sible Another arrest included a Gardena
adult to care fQ.r the baby. elementary school teacher and his wile of
Huntington ~&Cb police conducted five 17402 Lido Lane, Huntington Beac.h, on
other raids over the weekend which net-piarges of furniShing and possession 0£
ted 19 adults and two /uveniles arrested marijuana. Arrested were Stuart and
on ~arges of either sa e or possession or l.enore Orton.
marijuana. Detective Vidana said tlie huge to~ of
.. dangerous drugs waJ also arraigned
Monday. Preliminary hearing tor=-·Ri~
ard Worman, 19, 8012 Mennald 'Circle,
(See NARCO RAIDS, Pqe I)
----~----------------
-llB CSoeialite ~lmt
Marnette Peek Victim; Escort Slnin
By WILUAM REED
01 t1M 0.11'1' r 11tt Sltlt
One man is deoid and another was
severely beaten in a Palm Springs apart·
ment incident Monday in which Hun-
tington Beach social leader Marnette
Peek, 58....w.a:! ibot once in the abdomen
with a .25-caliber automatic pistol.
Found dead miles from Mrs. Peek 's
apartment was her long time friend and
frequent escort, Dr. Lawrence L.
Peterson, 57, of 1146 Kensington Road,
Los Alamitos.
He was shot once through the roof of
his mouth with a .25-callbe'r slug and died ·
from what police called a self-inflicted
gunshot wound.
Mrs. Peek, \vho •lives at 16461 Golden
._ West St., HunUngt.on Beach with her
d; parents. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reid, is
emergency surgery was performed.
Dr. Peterson· was found in a remote
area of. the city, ,at Joyce and B!stra ..
streets, where be apparenUy had been
walking alone, Officers said he was pro--
noJ!P~ed dead ~<!.tJ!te hospital !r:.om_ w~S.t
they' called "a self-inflicted head wound,
one shot · from a .25-caliber automatic
pi~tQI in his mouth at 4:21 p.m."
Police said that he apparently had died
about 4 p.m. some four and a half ,hours
after Mrs. Peek had been shot. Officers
dec lined to say whether the same gun
was used in both shootings. An autopsy of
Dr. Peterson is scheduJed for today .
~----xrJ"t-..charfeSToogea agatnstttuebm--
crewmen will be dismissed.
J
L
· _ .,, :-· listed as in satisfactory condition this
--m-ofiiii1g"at -ms-trt-iio~'Pitcii~~--Pahn · i.· " ,~ .fi ~ Springs.
Dr. Peterson was a member of the -
music department at California State
College, Lang Beach and at one time
--"Y<d--<!!loiFRl:o.~.m..-~-1 division.
'
l ,I
l
"I am cbnvinced,'' Chafee said, "that
neither individual discipline, nor the state
of discipline of-riloTaleln ~Na~ ~r
any ~.interest "'!uireS ·further .legal
proceedings with respect to any person-
nel involved in the Pueblo incident."
T1ie Navy court of inquiry, he dlsclos·
ed, bad recommended after piling up
4,350 pages of t~tlmony that general
court martial trials be held for Cmdr.
Bucher and Lt. Stephen R. Harris, his
"research" officer.
Harris was the officer in charge of the
research detachment aboard the Pueblo,
which was conducting an electronic
eavesdropping mission off North Korea
when she was seized.
Chaffee reported t h e s e recom.
mendations had been made by the court
of inquiry:
-That Bucher be tried by general
court martial for five alleged offenses in·
eluding permitting his ship to be search-
ed while he had the power to· resist, fail·
ing to take protective measures during
the attack. com plying 'vith North Korean
orders to follow them into port. "negli-
gently failing" to ~estroy all cla.ssified
material on the ship, and •·negligently
failing" to see that his crew was fairly
skilled in procedures for destroying
classified material. -That Harris be tried by general court
martial "for three alleged offenses of
dereliction in performance of his duties,"
mainly dealing with the lack of ability
and readiness on the part of the research
detachment to be able to destroy alt
(See PUEBLO, Page ZJ
*
Bucher's Fitness
To IJetermine Any
Future Command
From Wire Services
WASHINGTON -Navy Secretary John
H. Chafee said today the future fitness of
Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, the USS Pueblo
skipper. will determine whether he is
given command of ano&her ship.
Chafee told a news conference that the
Navy is asking Bucher what b\a cboicf:s
are and "bis future commands will be
detUmined by his performance in the
fut ure.''
A Navy legal officer notifl~ Bue.her !"
San Diego t h I s mom~ of Chafet s-
decision not to disclphne any of the
P1ebl' crew, although a court of inquiry
recommended court martial trials of bOth
Bucher and another Pueblo of fleer.
Lt. Stephen R. Harris, the inteUigence
o(ficer. said-at his mother's home In
Melrose. Mass., that be was •·greatly
relieved " that he and Bucher woUkl not
1>e ccurt martialed.
Harris iJ; being assigned lo UM: Naval
Communicati<Jr!s CoounlJ!d hiadqulrtm .
In WaaJlingloo. D.C., and he said be Md
hi& wife Esther have bought a home in
&uburban· Bethesda, Md.
Harris said he . be.lleved the in~
\•est.ipUOll of tile Pueblo's capture was
"ex1ttlllely tboroogh and extremtljl com-
petent."
He aald U... boWI of.lnq~jry "did what
ft had to do." and added: "As far as I'm oonc~ the JCCretary's action means
ttiat the cha.r~ have been dropped, He
(lJH J:UCHEll, Pa1• IJ
--·-· ·---'--
~~l.i~'"~•~ *1;t ,c>Jft'~ .,._,,,. Beaten at the ~partment at 300 N.
· ' Sunrise Way was West Los Angeles real
-"'' -eslate ·-j)<orge ;rrip!fm, ~. who. w., treated at ·U.. bOspltal fl!< head 'i!'iuries
Comedian Bob Hope jokes 1,vith reporters as he leaves New York's
Institute of Ophthalmology at Columbia PresbyterianJ!ospital after
treatment of a .b'emorrhage of the left eye.
Ocean View Voting Light;
School'Officials Optimistic.
Only a handful of the 21,000 registered
voters in Huntington Beach's Ocean. View
Sehool District braved damp weather this
morning to make the trek to the pools,
but~School officials· were optim!Stic about
the chances for approval of a proposed
$1.2S tax increase on the ballot.
Balloting will ccntinue until 8 p.m. at
Beach Home Fire
LOss Estimated
Flames and smoke caused $7 ,500
damage to a Hun tington Beach residence
Monday morning before 14 men. two
erfgines and a snor k.el unit had the fire
under control.
· Firemen responded to 9361 Nautilus
Drive at 8:47 a.m. al'ld found the attic of
the home belonging to Pat Bryant ablaze.
The fire apparently started in the beater
closet of the home, but <fire inv estigators
have not yet narrowed down the exact
cause-of ·the blaze.
Firemen had the last glimmer out and
were rollihg back lo the station by 8:57
a.m.
all district schools with the exception of
Glen View School. Vottts in the Glen
View area are casti;ng , their ballots at
Circle View School.
School Officials are seeking Vo!er ap-
proval of a $1.25 override tu that would
raise the district's tu rate for opera·
tional expenses to f2 ,V$ per $100 assessed
valuation. The current· rate is $1.50.
A spot check at several precincts in-
dicated less than one percent of the eligi·
ble voters had cast their ballots .by noon.
The district does not have a histoey of
heavy voling., Jn last month's school
trustee election, for e•ample, only 12 ·per·
cent of the eligible voters turned out. And
the weather was sunny, noted one school
official.
The campaign Involving lhe new 1ebool
Laxes has centered on the Qcean View
district's J>OOC, financial p:ictur'e and the
tax burden borne by dJstri.ct residents,
prlmarJly homeowners. The district in
north central Huntington Beach is con-
sidered a "bedroom community" without
heavy concentratioru1 of industry .aild
commercial developments to betf up the
school tax base.
whkh reid'fted, &police !atd, .... •ffom a
beating." He was released after treat·
ment.
Pplice did not di.9Cloae results of their
interrogation ol Triphon.
Police Lt. Carl Hulslander said this
morning that·the shooting of Mrs. Peek
and the beating of Triphon apparently OC·
curred about 11:30 a.m. Monday in Mrs.
Peek's apartment which she kept for her
frequent visits to the desert spa.
"Mrs. Peek was shot once with the .25
Rain, Rain Just
Won't Go Away
For the third straight day, the Orange
Coast and most of Southern Galifomia
was dampened today by a persistent
drizzle which kept. temperatures mired in
the low 60's.
A high-level atmospheric disturbance
was blamed for the soggy but hardly
stormy conditions which brought showers
in the mountain and desert areas and
sporadic sprinkles along the Orange
Coast.
The condition was expected to move
eastward into Arjzoria by Wednesday, but
night and morning cloudiness was still
predicted for coastal areas. Sunny af-
lernooris were forecast through the rest
of the week. ,
Steele Markeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mar·
ket . closed higher today , desp ih: another
bout of profit taking. (See quotations,
Pages 20-21).
Trsdinf was very ·active near the
close. The Dow Jones industrial average
at 1:30 p.m. was up 2.79 at 961.74 .
Air C~l Seeking Support
Req~st Puts 'Newport Beach in Awkward Position,
. ' By J'EROME F. OOl.UliS .. County supervisors last week straddled ' Local ofOclals now make connecUons to
Of .... Dlftr l'IW Si.If Air catifomta today asked the clly of no fence. They endorsed the Air Cal pell· ·Sacramento via San Jose, San Francisco
N 8 h k. jl~ . . lion unanimously . and Oakland or lhey fly directly out of ewport e~ to bac .• ~ petition to S lsor WU. ~1 "d h ' -Ang-'-'·ternatlonal "-rt. Hours
Provide di~ t ffgh'· •·twee o ng , uperv 11,m i-11.u ips sw t e l.v;t . ~ u1 ,......"" ~~c 1 ~ IA' n ra e fligh d are '"us added •· ••· fligh'·. County Airport and Sacr.amento. • non·stop ts -two a ay -to ,., w Wiii:'. "°
The request. which councilmen will Sacramento would be a "Va1uable service In addition to standing aside from any
consider .Monday. puts the .city ln an lo county officials, businessmen and endol'sement ol the Air Gal proposal ,, and
awkward pOsiUon. ' .. ~ school..:peoplt." · ·~ • , . • (Oflseq:Ue.otlY l)()t standing .in ita •·wa,y;
' i!'Jlo•N•wpof> J.WH!'~' . .a.s.~. ~~~l.'4 ~~ ,l\..,porl·COllllCJllll<n haye another opUon. · pooed 'to '~I . 1/4f,i I ·~r! ..... "!JI!~~"" ' They could back lb• .. rv1ce •• Ibo at Coiin(f ·~ ,"'BU · ·rvl t ,t.i·mc 'fbrirlll · ~ ·tht~way Jgroundt. that ft -would· tau within the
Sacrament<> would he a major con· fllghll. "We fU'inly btllevtj\tii !!; ~ ~ -11! County Airport's cie>lggtion by
venience to local govtmmeul. 'Municipal ,. ed &e!Yic:e and will be wflilt~~· ~p(ed William Peretra .. ,and Andcl&tes • tf a
officials, faced with oil, itrtrage and he('aust or lbe volur~ .. ].~ _trav,e "~'1." A,mtiroport .. by.the.county ·
freeway · prohtema, lately have had to necessary for local govt~ scho6f av:iat!on master planner's own derinltfon.
make 1eVeral lrtps to the stile ca.pltal to dlsUicts, C0W1ty officialt Jnilf~td ir-one Wbofe commercial filghll'" are
ptt'b Cot legishiUYe action. tltl!ens who deal direcUj;.'~ the , 1lhflll.ed to a 4001t'IUe rldius. '
_ What ls likely is that councilmen on various stale afUces tn Sa~"' • Jn' any ti@Jt. ~· pojiUcal re&Uties of ·
Mond.,. will elect to take no PoSition on B<oocoler laid 11\eie 11 ~~~"™'' 11he situation ""''ll!ii" eoouaJic tuei>oftor the Air C.1 oppli<aUon to !he •tale Publl~ community of_busine,. an<f~al:lo,. iuW<lUghts ]>)! collnt.Y oupe~.coi!)<l
UtlllUes Commission fPUCl. ter~t11 between the cwnty . and well prove to be the most effective arsu·
Faced wl~ the sam~ request, Orange Sacramento. (See AIR C~ P•1t l)
'
·--
OAt(.'t'f'f'.OT II ......
SOCIALITE SHOT
S.1ch'1 Marnett• Pnk
caliber automatic weapon. It was a
homicide attempt," officers asserted. ~be
was rushed to the hopsital where
Lt. Huls1aQ.d.er said Mrs. Peek will be
lnlerroga(ed as soon as she has recovered
enough to talk wjlh olfjeera.
Mrs. Peek operates' tbe Peet Family
Co\onjal Funeral Home in_ Westminster
wtdch ahe acquired more than one year
ago in a divorce action frOm her former
husband, J.on.Peek;oow of Riverside.
Both the Peek Mortuaey and the
landmark family home at Golden West
Street and Heil Avenue are owned b7
Mrs. Peek.
Mrs. Peek is a noted social leader In
both Long Beach and Orange County and
is active in the business community
throughout Southern California.
Alert Yachtsmen Save Two ' !"
From Sea; Third M~ssing
By ALMON LDCKABEY
D•ll"t ,1111 INllllf lllll•r
Alert crewmen nn boerd Jack Bailiie's
12•mete.r Newsboy today were credited
with saving the lives of two young San
Diego people· who were victims of a
swamped outboard off POint Loma Sun-
day.
·Rescued were Donald PattersOn, 2$ and
Beverly Runyon, 13, both of San Diego.
Still missing· and presumed drowned is a
third' member of the outboard partY,
Fredd·Hogg of San Diego.
'Baillie' an<f his' crew were returning
fronrthe Ensenada race and had stopped
in San Diego to .clear .customs .. Alter
Jeaviog -the'. customs dock the Newsboy
was sallint~ab0ut'1bree 0 miles off Point
Loma on the leg to Newport -when
ciewman Bob .OICkson, who· ·was· at the
helm, heard voices.
Dickson·called the rest of the creW on
deck and Qlalr' Barnett, al$0 of Newport.
~limbed up on-the Newsboy's boom rot a
better view. He spotted two heads in the
weier about 200 feet ahead.
Baillie said the Newstioy's course would
have taken them within 75 feet of the
couple if they had not been spotted
sooner.
The crew of the Newsboy took the bouw ,
pie pn board was uMble to radio for
help because of low batteries. On the way
back to san Diego Baillie asked ~nother
neirbysailboal to radio ahead to the U.S.
Col!St G4ar!f. .
·Baillie aaid both the man and woman
were in a' State of-shock atter bei.ngi fn the
cbtlly waters about four hours.
In. moments ·of lucidity, the woman told
Baillie the trio had gooe out iJ\ the IS.loot
oiilboanl from M!Jalon Bay early In the
allernOQn and that as I.he wiod ind seas
came up the boat ~as swamped. Wllh a
120 horsepower motor on the stern, ~e
boat .. n~ rapidly.
The woma~ told ,!fthor!Ues shi w;~" ..
' I'. <I • 410 Japanese lffiled
TOKYO (UPI ) -i\utomoblle sni1lhupl•
killed 410 penen• on J apaa•1 hlghw'l'I' In
the four.Qy holiday tbat ended Mood1y,
tho J apn broadcasting !ll~Uon said ·I ..
da1. It eotlmattd IO million "Japa._ ;
visited biachoo. ~ ZOOI and """"" ran rtsort.1,"Creotfni 10me tramc 1ama .....
thal e1ttnded more Ulan 10 miles.
>
sure Hogg was drowned as they saw him
swallow a lot of watv white struggllng to
swim toward hls companions.
Patterson was in worse condition Ulan
the Miss Runyon because he had made
several dives to try to locate Hogg after
he disappeared .
The surviving two had on lifebelts and
were clinging to buoyant seat cushions.
The reM:ue took pl8ce about 7;20 p.m.
and it was dark before the Newsboy got
the pair back to the customs dock· at san
Diego.
Baillie said customs officers wanted to
search the pair for }¥ll'JSible contraband.
Newsboy was under sail ~cause she
does not ha\ie an auxillary motor,
"We would never have heard the crilf,"
for help 1£ we had had a motor running, '
Baillie said. ,
The woman told Baillie several motor
boats had pasRd'very close to them dur-
ing the four hours, but none' heard her
·cries for 'help.
Orang~
Weadler
' Our red:faced weatherman is
trying again with" ·prediction ol
parUy sunny weather for Wedoe.-
day ahd temperaturts in the mid~
~·s along the CQast.
INSmE TODAY
It was prttty much like prev-
ltour raee1; the small boat.I
I "'<id•.·~~ b_•J!,<1/, Ille .tllind,; 'mid.'. J tbok --ma[1cw. -•°""°'.s'.:'Ov'1+. the-:i.
• laTger Oflef hi ltht ann\Uli E•
.•enoda: race. Pooc 20.
!C:.111wW1• • :ci.nlfM ,... c-1<• ll
'<_, n
o.91 ~~ M ....... ,... .
1lr~--II
•''""" .. ,1 ·,~ ....... .., , .. -.. JAM l...... 11 MaflMt • Mt"fllt tt
r
I
' .
I bAlt.Y I'll.OT "
PILOT ----------· LOGBOOK
'Disneyizing~ tlie Woods
Not as Bad as It Sounds
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. C*b' , ... Sltff . Mineral King was a Sierra wilderness where hall my life ago, the ging·
er-colored mu1e deer never tasted Weber's Bread and root beer was 50 cent:i:
a bottle.
So I wu saddened to learn the picturesque Umberl.lne: vane,. ln the
Sequoia National Forest is to become a SSS mUllon Walt
Disney ProducUorui winter wonderland. ~-Diane.yland is more than ..tnOUJb.." u.id a ..cal·_
league archly, as we dismally .discussed, Mickey Mouse
on snowahoea, giant teacups u.nder the pltle! and Bambi
npelled rrom his native paradise.
Sometimes, however, one jumps to conclusions when
he'• lost touch with a place for too long .a tJme, beeauae
tJme is the great changer of people and places.
Maybe I ha't a philosophical C!'iP on my shoulder on
~--"-"th"'e-'w"ay to hear Robert B. Hicks,_project manage~, _o~tline __!.he 80-acre reerea· ona T&Cility "ind Its Tafn1flciti0ns befofetneeosta Mes! Chamber ot Com·
merce\rirtuatly inaceessible during the winter months, 70,000 campers and
-aporismen nonetheleu drove the dizzying 19-mile trip from the main highway
to the valley last summer, a startling count.
So many people packed Into such a small area -Mineral King Is like I
chalice carved out of 1bald granite by a river and set with 20 jewel-like lakes-
created sanitation problems and sewage pollution. . .
This would have been unthinkable that summer as I h1~ed three miles,
seemingly into the sky itseU, fishing for fat brown trout lying at the l~ke
bottom like logs, on what was to be my father 's final trip to the mountains
he loved. Nobody thought much about pollution 14 years ago.
Now we must, and under agreetents by the Disney organization, the
U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies, the deve,lopen, will provide
proper sanJtalion systems. They will build a modern highway cut;ing the 95--
rninute journey tn haH. Wlriter sports resources fill' Califomlana will be great~
Jy broadened. Rur.al Tulare County ·will have 2,'4XI new joba and $4 million
more annually in taxea.
Mtneral...Ktng .will neyer be the way I reDlan.ber lt,jlut noUUnt. ever la
and Hicks' talk cleared im._ some prejudiced misconceptioru based on map
judgment.· ·
Development of a winter sports haven by the managmient of the Ana·
heim Magic Kingdom -in an area already auffsing_ tourlJt-itJs -does not
tnean Taco Bell fra nchises on the John Muir Trail. I
The Sierra Club would probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
In hand-to-hand combat anyway, should such proatltuUon get beyond the point
of ludicrous polnt-maklng. · ·
The Mineral King story, It appears, ii a different one and should have a
happy ending.
• l
• • . ,
cla.lW matertm m t an emera•
cy.
-"nlll LI. '!dword R. urplly Jr .. U •
eculln -ol lht P\ll:i be pveo • , ='~ ~!!"\ I "lo -.... Ii.I i!I ... , ol
the ulture especlaDy In llle ship's ma}or
. internal task of emergency duttucUon ·oi
classified material." Harrla aald at tus mother's home In
Melrose, Mass., that he wa s "very, very
happy" with Chafee's decision not to take
dladpllriary acUon. He said he would 10
to Washington to0n for a new aulgn-
me.nt.
'Mle court of inquiry, it was di!closed,
also found that letters of reprimand
should be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Johnson, commander ol naval forces In
Japan, and Capt Everet~ S. Gladding,
now rellred.
Tbe Court held that Johnson, who bu
slnce-mOV!!d--to-1 rttw asstgnment;.....a:s
'"dert1lid in the petfotmance of duty" by
falling to plan properly ror emergency
support of the Pueblo in a confrontation
and "negligently falling" to verily
destruction . prOcedui-es for classified
doouments.
Gladding, then director of the Navy
security group in the Pacific, wa.s held by
the court to .ha~ been derelict for "!aU4 •
ing to devel9p procedures to insure the
readiness" of the Pueblo's research sec·
lion.
The Navy said the Pueblo's officers and
men are now widely scattered -on
leave, discharged or assigned to new sta·
tions. They all stayed in the San Diego
area while the court of inquiry was in
session.
. At a news conference eicplaining his
position, Chafee said be had not talked to
Pre!ldent Nixon about the course of :ic·
tlon he had chosen.
Th ere has been &ome public controversy
over the quesUon of whetJie:r the Navy
w8s trying to saddle Bucher and his men
with the blame for the Pueblo deb1cle
when hlgher-ups ought to be held ac-
cquntable, too.
Said Chafee : "I think it Is cteaf that
everybody-was advancing-i)ft-l!t <:ertain
assumption and that assumption proved
to be. an invalid one0 -mainly, that a
ship operating on the high seas would
always be. safe from piracy.
He would not answer directly whether
Bucher will ever be given command of
another s~ip, saying only that Bucher's
future a11slgrunents will be handled In.the
usual fashion, in competition with other
officers.
He said the Navy has asked Bucher
about his personal preferences for a new
assignment and "then it will proceed
BOY OF THE MONTH
M ike Contr•r••
Thousands Plan
Charleston Mq,icli
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -The Rev.
Rilpli David Abernathy said today he ex-
pecta thousands of persons to march In
Charleston Sunday "in .a dramatic
wilnels against government oppreasion. ''
Abernathy, bead of the Southern Chrls--
tliln teadershJp Conference, a a i d
congressmen and lt.bor leaden have been
invited to join the demons~ation ~ be
expects many of them to accept.
He aald the Mothers' Day march for
poor peop!e, originally scheduled for
Wuhlngton, has been switched to
Charlellon because. "the eyes of the na-
iion are focused here." Abernathy Is
spearheading the drive for union recogni·
lion of holpltal workers who have been on
strike agallist two Charleston hospitals
for more than six weeks.
Abenrathy, free under $500 bail on
charges of vlolaUng a court order which
limits the number of pickets at the two
hospitals, was to leave Charleston during
the afternoon.
Crom there." ----··---··--Er..om..J!.QSL.~------___ ..=::.=='--------·---+.I
f[---k * s . h NARCO RAIDS NET 34 • • • From rage 1 panlS •
~:~Beech. was scheduled for ~~=~:=;~:St~e~l~~ BUCHER•••
AU others arrested i re expected to be 22, of 411 Lake St.; Thoma! John Lyon, 20, d 01 Lake St.; John Edward Konig,
8.lfai.gned todAy or Wednead1y. 22, ol 316 7th St.; Edgar Maurice Futch,
.Arrested Monday night on charges of Jr., 25, of 2.16 7th St.
safe of LSD were: Clinton M. Southwell,. And Duane Sylvester Schaefer, 21, of U,p_ 811 De1aw are St.; Steven C. Sa:s:on, 316 7th St.; Raymond Hurrell Odem., 21.
21, of 8221 Foxhall St.; Richard Wayne of 316 7th St.; Terry Charles Seekamp,
Peston, 21, of 8111k Delaware St.; Larry 19, of 316 7th St.; Ida Marie O'Stctn, 21,
Brian Murin, 21, of 811;) Delaware St.; of 318 ?th St.: Wendy F. Cross, 18, of 316
Karen Marie Farm er, 22, of 811¥J 7th St.; James Raymond Mattheis, 2S -0r
Delaware St.; Genivleve Wilson, 18, of 311 Frankfort Ave.
811 Delaware St., and Linda Kay Bentley, Also Lawrence Duane Ritchie, 21, of
18, of 811 Delaware St., all of Huntington 213 Baltimore St.; Brian Leroy Frantz,
Beach. 19, of 213 Baltimore SL; Cheryl Kay
111ortensen, 18, of 9432 Lanai Circle, and
OTHERS HELD Richard Charles Woman, 19, of 8012
Otben arrested Monday night include Mermaid Circle. John Vernon Martin, 23.
Richard A. White, 21, of 12.893 Adelle St., of 7901 15th St., Westminster was also ar·
Garden Grove; and from Costa. Mesa, rested in the weekend raids.
Archie D. McMyne, 26, of llO Wllaon St.; Those arrested Saturday and Sunday
11-1arjorie Lynn Schweer, l!, of 2932 Royal wire boOked on charges of either
Palm St.; Chert Lee Weaver, 23, of lSO possession of marijuana or sale of mari·
Wilson St., and a female juvenile !rom juana.
Costa Mesa.
Women arrested Monday were taken to
Orange County Jail, women'• division,
while the men were booked into Hun·
tington Beach City Jail.
Arrested over the weekend were, from
Huntington Beach: Stuart E. Orton, 31, of
Art Show Sch eduled
Opening of the Se.al Beach Elementary
School Art Show will be Friday, at the
Seal Beach ·Methodisl Church, at 3:30
p.m. The show wW be open to the public
through May 12.
OAllY PllOT
Roltort N. Woo4 ,,.."""', .... ~w.r
J.,.ii It. C11rl•y
Vlot Pml*tll • .,. Gtrwtal ""'°"""'
n"'"'' K11..;1 .. _
TJi.,,, .. A. M~t""lfto
ll'ot ...... ". l"dllOI'
Afti..rt W. lal1• Wiltiti•• lttt4
Al10Clol• -ll"li""~ IElllW Cl!~ 1.i19r
ttii1t .... •1Hdi0Mce
Jot Ith Stfoot
Ma11lftt Alldr•MI ,.o .••• 7t0, •2641 --~ looao; 1111 Wnl .. _. hulln1•
<-lo Mml; DO Wnt 11'1' ll,.,.. Utvrll t.c.111 112 ffttl ,,_
Mexican Woman
Drowns in Pool
A Mexican woman from Ensenada
employed by a Santa Ana famtly drowned
Monday evening in a backyard swimming
pool, the Orange County Coroner's Office
reported.
Marla Mulgado, 20, housekeeper and
babysitter for the Charle! E. Chunlng
family, of 920 S. Dennis St., was found
floating face down in the pool by a friend
who dropped by to bring her llOme mail,
police said.
Myron Babkow, of 9871 Voyager Road,
Huntington Beach, said the oldest of lhe
two Chuning children, Donna Sue, 5, told
him Miss Mu1gado was playing in the
pool with her and her sister Karen, 4. The
woman evidenUy slipped into the d e e p
end and drowned. sne could not twirn.
Santa Ana fire and poliee department
rescue units were called but were unable
to revive the woman.
Finch Slated to Gi ve
Commencement Talk
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Robert H.
Floch, U.S. Secretary of Health, Educa·
lion and Wellare, wtU deliver the com-
mencement addl'!:SS June 6 1t the
University of Southern California.
The former California 11 e u t e n a n t
governor will reeetve an honorary doc-
tor's degrtt.
Valley Bobby Sox
Baseballers lo Play
is the highest authority in the Navy."
Chafee, talking with reportus, aaid the
court of inquiry, ln Its findings, did not go
into detail on the conduct of the Pueblo
crew while in captivity, although It noted
in general lerml that their conduct was
good.
The court praised some members
ianicularly for t h e I r conduct in cap.
.ivity. Their names were nol released.
The full findings of the court were not
-nadc public -only Chafee 's summary of
them. In aMouncing hla ruling, Chafee said
he personally made "no judgment" con·
ceming guilt or innocence, ruling only
that neither discipline nor morale nor any
other interest required further p~
ceedings. Asked whether this left the Pueblo of.
ricers under a "cloud," Chalet said he
did not think so.
* * * Congress Chiefs
Praise Decision
Of Navy Secretary
WASHINGTON CAP) -House leaders
of both parties Tuesday supported Navy
Secretary John H. Chafe.e's decision bar-·
ring disciplinary acUon against the com·
mander and another officer of the in-
telligence vessel Pueblo.
Speaker John W. McCcrmack (0-
1.fas11.), said he believes "the secretary of
the navy has taken the right action."
House Republic1n leader-Gerald R.
Ford or Mlchlgat: said he agreed with the
decision not to take action against the
Pueblo officers.
Chafet overruled the Navy court of in-
quiry recommend1tlon that Cmdr. Lloyd
.Bucher and Lt. Stephen R. Harril, in
charge of the research attachmenl on
board , be tried by a general courl
martial.
Sen. John Stennis (0.MW.), chairman
()f lhe Senate Anned ServiceJ Committee,
said he would have to study lhe rtport
carefully bul that.. on the basis of present
informaUon, he sees no firm reason for
his committee to go Into the Pueblo c1se.
Sen. Peter H. Domlnlck (R.COlo.}, who
hnd contended that the Navy was trylng
to blame Bucher, said :
"I am hopelul the Senate. Armed
Services Committee will go into this mat·
tcr even more thorouchly to avoid having
any other officer subjected to the. same
kind ol harassment."
Rep ' Olis G. Pike (0.N·Y.), c:hidrman
of 1 House Anntd Services subcommit-
tee wh ich ha.s tnveatigated t.be Pueblo
case, said he agreed with Olafee's 1c-
Uon,
12,000
sq. ~.
of
Top
Quality
c..,. ... .,.,, .... , .... ,.
• Ovwll1• ..,,
1 (Con"""' CNllll • Makflllll LO'I--' e M~ COi''-T,.._
YOUR
CHOICE $
,Olt l lTHllt OP
THISI 2 G1tour1
Beach High '
Plcks ·Top
. '
Boy,-·Girl
.. ~
Star Chee.k •nd Mike Contreras ha ve
been chosen Boy and Girl of the Month al
Runtinaton Rach High School.
Miss Cheek , daugtitllr of Mr . and ~1r1.
Richard Cheek, 17291 Lee Circle. ls an.
acti ve member of the Girls Athletic
Association and has distinguished herself
as membe1' of the advanced tennis team
during her sophomore, junior and senior
years.
In addition she ha! been a junior o;oaral·
ty and varsity cheerleader for the past
three years, Girls League officer,
member or the Student Congress. and a
member of the German Club and the Pep
Club.
Mike Contreraa is a atar athlete and
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Salvi:dor Con·
treras, 19012 Delaware St.
lle has been a member of the school's
varsity basketball squad since he waa a
sophomore and was named to the 'ill·
Sunset League team for the past two
years. Thi.'! year he was selected as top
player of the SUllllet League for the se·
cond !lralght year.
The Girl •nd Boy of the Month are
'chosen bY the higll ochoot'a Girls and
Boys leagues.
Monthly winners are automatically
candidates for a Girl and Boy of lhe Year
Contest.
Citizens Committee
To Meet on Thursday
The seventh meeting of the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dislrict
CiUzeru Committee on Maximum Use of
School FacUltios wW be at 8 p.m. Th~
day in district offices, 1902 17th St.
During the sessJon, committeemen are
scheduled to review a suggested que'"
tlonnaire for discovering the needa of
students from minority groups.
GIRL OF THE MONTH
Star Cheek
Franc at Bottom;
Bank Intervenes
PARIS (UPll -The French fr anc
plummeted to its rock botto1n level today
and golt1 prices soard to their highest
since April 30 in a ntw burst of in4
ternational jitters about F r a n c e • s
economic future.
The franc hit 4.9740 lo the U.S. dollar,
forcing the Bank of France to intervene
to shore it up. It Was the lowest point it
has touc hed since fonner Preside nt
Charles de Gaulle's defeat and resigna·
lion April 28.
·From Page 1
AIR CAL ..•
ment for them. Th e PUC is not expected
to overlook the fact that supervisors, by:
law, run the airport.
The PUC has yet to sel a date for a
public hearing on the issue. But
Benscoter said Air Cal is pushing for ac·
lion "as expeditiously as possible."
No
Money
Down
First
Payment
June
1969
our exclusive
6 pc: ensemble
Cl'lld. ~ Cftl!ll'll llVll!IY fNturot' htl1r'-~1nd..,1rvft ....,..ind Mf1 •l>d IDv• ... ,. w!I~
Kod1l·Wl'tPPfll '°'" pUllw & 1ptlfltl tlttt CM-1tn1cllt!I ,., hlqrlOus aNllflt' camlt'1 tc111111..,
1111ln fO~jl Ml!"""" Cltf!N llDlt & d'ltkl ti' Ml' or ..... ,.. C'elTllMIH Ill ltN~llll 01~, AYOC ....
•• Ann. .. Wllnt. H11tt KVl!vrtcl Ctotq~f•l.ilw
tabla 11'"9 ~LUS cort.tlltd ~tntlnt llmp C9¥-
•All r. -~~"'91 vtlvirt l1br1t ltr 11111 "I"''
rltflt'' llOC'OttlOt h¥tll ••• m'"t ff .... lo .. l""ttllltd -Wll1 •I nmt lo IOllCllJI., •• _
ONLY
Why pay up to s399 $799 fo r this
l1vl1h group •••
•
USE YOUR •
•
•
•
n1 J',JPI < h H'J!'
J 1
Fountain Valley'a 9-membet Bobby Sor
girls' ao!lball team will be pitted agalnat
four gtrl1 calUna t.bemselvea "The Queen
and her Maids" al I p.m. S.turday at
Fooni.Jn Valley Rlih School.
The traveh"na exhibition team fe1tures
"Queen" Rosfe Beatrd, billed as the
fastest junior girl pltchl!r In lhe world.
"The Navy court of inquiry look a
hard·line pcsl.lion, 11 Pike told reportera.
"1"h.lch the secretary tempered with
mercy." ..
Pike uld the aec.rctary's statement
lut1ount!d to AYl na rnue wu-b111'1fe:
t:nough for everyone ln the Pueblo case.
AT HARBOR BOULEVARD
CREDIT
CARDS
(
j
•
-L
l .
----'
Start
by Deke
)
Spikers
To Vie
In CIF
Lloyd Ruby ls lhe sort oC fellow you forget to not.Ice until he's Orange County high school
leading t:he race. The other day everybody in motor sport ·came to lrae\ and field athletes will izl-
and realized that Ruby was No. I In the point standings that rate vade Westminster High School
the nation's best dr ive rs. Saturday for the quarterfinals
At !em, until the checkered fl ag drops at Indianapolis on in CIF competition.
Memorial Day, this leathery 42-year-old Texan is the leading race The pole vault starts at
driver of the U.S. Auto Club. He reached the top -0f the heap with 11 :30 a.m. followed by other
two typically inconspicuous performa~s. field events at noon and races
Ruby sat back in the pack at Phoenix while Mario Andretti at IZ:30.
and Bobby U116er fought it out, and at the finish he was third · The meet will qualify six
behind George Follmer. Two weeks later at Hanford ·Ruby was se-from each event for the CIF
cond to the fiying Andretti. semifinals the following Fri-day at ,Cerritos CoUege. By scoring 530 championship points in Olese two races Ruby
a1s9 moved into the top 10 of all-time .national Championship point First and second in eacn heat and the best six marks in 1tandings. Heiumped from 11th to 9th, bumping Bobby Unser and
Jim McElreath, both of whom drove in the same races in which field events will qualify. Included in tbe list 01 en-Ruby earned his points. · trants at Westminster are
He's now in rare comj>any, sort of like a hall of fame. The schools from the · Angelus.
eight men ahead of him are A. J. Foyt, R'odger Ward, Andretti, Crestview, Freeway, Garden
Earl <;ooper, Tommy Mikon, Ralph Qe ~Palma,, Tony ~-Grove, Jrvine, Orange, Santa
tenhausen and Don Branson. Only Foyt arid Andretti are still Fe, Suburban and Sunset
active. leaglles.
Jrooiea lly, the championship race veteran has only won fi ve. The top three finishers from
races in this league. His most important victories have been at each league will be there ex-
the wfleel oi a· road racing machine at Daytona and Sebring, cept for the Angelus, Orange
~·hich are far removed from the champ trail. and Santa Fe, which qualified
Only a plane crash after the 1966 Indy SOO prevented him from two athletes per event.
CdM NAILS
LOOP TITLE ' -------·~--· Corona del Mar 1:1ilh '-
School's Bee track and f111ld
team is the official lrvtDI
League cbaOlpiqn alter pl..,.
Ing third at the, loop, finals
Friday nllhl at Western
High.
Earlier it had b e e n
reported that Magnolia won
the crown. .
Coupled witb a Ont place
finl!h in dual meets, it gives ,
coach John ·Blair's Jiea
Kings nine points to nmneru,p
Estanci<i and Magnolia'•
eight points. Estancia was
second in dual meet stan·
dings and Magnolia filtA.
Prep Track ·
Honor Roll
Westminster High School's
Steve Varga took over the No.
1 position in the 2·ml1e event
for the only change in the
Orange Coast area track and
field honor roll involving first
place leaders.
Varga ran a 9:32.2 to
dislodge mate Don Diston.
Diston fell to third with Estan-
cia's Curl Hoyt second at
9:39.11.
trying for the triple crown of long distance racing. A back injury Other ClF quarterfinal sites
from tllat crash prevented him from co-driving with the late Ken are Chaffey, Long ~each
Miles at Le Mans. Millikan and Inglewood high ..,.,..11.,
Ruby twice Jed the 'Indy 500. in 1966 and again last May. •lis schools. .•·• Only wlnn1n1 lllT>e'5 I• Y•rslly com-. P<'!hion ton•kler.:t for l'lorlor' roll. fe~~~ti~:; t~!:C~~f ~~·1~y ~!ts~~~1~yj~~rted:~rr~= ~ * ~* ft 1~ '! t:~~*?Zf)J·!·0:· :~; tlmlfl!I (Mir) Ind G.ad" (S(:) 22~. see another race at Indianapolis again. Area qualifiers: .uo -,I M1,1ldooll !MDI 50A 2. o.
I hooted Ruby down the day after last year's race, in his v1n1tv M:3 ~v .50~ltw?c\"'~t'l)c"1~~.l11:
G C•ll M•M -S!ev1 leFever 1120 M1,11<10on (MD) 1:31.0 3: DetnlCM) garage in asoline Alley. HH. 1eo ~Hj\ Br1i;1 Bor11trutsP1. rl.; 1:59.o.
He sat on a bench leaning ba~k against the wall in the rear of Fr~s:,~-..~llH-'R'f~ ~~ §1~-HH. 190 P'htl• ~r llkh •11Mtt Mlle -'· .t.k1l1m1 !WMJ 1rd LHl Ch I I ) F ti ' Ch LIO'll'boc::k ($Cl 4:2'. l. Dilloft (WM) the shop. AJonoc:ide-.him was a bottle of Kentucky distilled spirits, mlle'l. G":Jr.':.e HV~.k~lf H .urt,}t:14'ton2V our· n1e a, 1np. ~· ':21·2· • .... ~ B1kket1 IHJL ''° rellY te1m. >Mi.J:t. -l. Vlr,. iwM/ t:ll.2 '· \vhich had been nearly drained. He offe~d to share. "-n11111 \latllY -o.n AocN n20 Curt """' IE•O t:Jt.I 3· D itOfl CWMJ
T•-d bef R b h db ht art f ·n· HW! car1 Hardin \:rl· LYie Riv~ Mrs. Margaret Graham (center) accepts copgrat-Ana 'Country Club. Mrs. Graham, of Laguna Beach, ''1°io'·HH -L Wooc1 <E1111 1•.t t. Lem· in: ay ore. u y a roug a QU er o a m1 ion pco-II~; P.fi~M~:~kn (Mfi-i:,1; 1lfki~ Kat; . · mon tMerJ 15.o J. B11c1<.,. tsc; 1s.2. pie to their feet screaming, not once but three times as he P . 0enn1s Mies !.uoi. Dou<i co<111e ulations from tournament chairman Mrs. Jona is the first. wo1nan to win the title four straight no LH -1· wooc1 ~Esil 1' · 111.,w)
,J.. "°, Ktv n Wllllims (1.inllel, ... o M (J fl) d M Lo' Ed fl l' Sh d lh ,; I h J d M Ed 1. Hellon (MO) 20.2 · Ol.lnllPJ CdMI repeatedly stole th• lead away from Bobby Unser. RuuY was a re11y i..am. mll• re11v 1~1m. ouron e an runnerup r s. 1s es a er unes. e parre e una o e to e ge rs. es 20.l. Marin• -eeve LicV 000\· Jff ven· ua Rel•Y -1. M1rln1 lG•~n, J, sure winner with only 2+ laps to go. He had no more fuel stops to timloll• '~l. so11 Child~ HJ1. Tom \Vinning her fourth women's championship at Santa by one stroke for the title. 1nc1 T, ven11m111;1, L1q1 .il.2 Foun-Rl~hlrd I J, uo rel1v te1m. ____ .:o__c _________ _:c_ _ _: _____ _c:::._:_::_::_::_::_::_::_::_::_::_:___________ leln Yll~Y O.J 3. ~In ~letMnle .2. make when he came roaring i11lo the pits for an em~gency •••m1ns1r _, &¢. Ch•mbl!r111n 1..,':~1~ a:~-euher;l"=: J~:N:
repair. Replacement of a faulty coil cost Ruby lhe lead and, <~J.'m~1:l:'r>!'~i9'~.~!·~~~11'. Don Dlston Fountain v11~ J:21 J. Maier Dt-t
bee th I 60 'J lo 't I t him u. N•WllOrl H1rMr -Scott Wiid fPVI, J:~i· _ l, Barnett (E91l ... 3\lr t . ause ere were on y mi es go, 1 os ..,.,e race. KeY!n Buller cPVl. mlle r~11v 111m. CeJ b , L nd • s A le M1rch1o11111 liM' .. ,~ l 11, ..,_
S h ·-foll ' d th ' t ho 'lh' Hunlll'!lltll •uch - url Clemen• e 1·1ty . t t SH RP 0 er:e t·~ owmg ay was e quie man w came WJ in (SPdl Jeff McOvown mllel. Tam a ~ngs . ay r A f..1~.J~:: \, ~~::i'NHJ~ ~:kk~ minutes of winning one of the biggest prizes in sports. plugging at Mi1nv~~~i!t _ eo11 e11,ker 020 . 11 _ 11;,o, 111 6'2. 'ght 0 _, bo · la · t nothi • rt' J nd HH !, Oave Pt!I<' flto!. Rkk Geddt• lf you're • th•rft tr1J1r, 1111 LJ -I, B•rftl'lt (EU~ ti.I~. 'LKr a strai · DVUr n tonic , s ring a ng 1n pa 1cu ar a ~io~~if~r; i'o't°9l1:~~;1i~:Jir:~ T S Dim•-A-lin• <:lassified ed1 ''1.~l!\~~?14 "f~~)11:J Jl,;~ l£t!I
keeping his thoughts to himseU. Was he considering retirement? .uo rvl•v lef,m, ou1·n~y et F ¥. llo · z R S1turd1y1. M1k1 • b1tt., J11I 1:M l £"'19'1 (CMJ -Motww IL•
d 't MIM" Del -M1ik Dunn 1100-220 \, or e wtai un h th ' b ' f l:l>O. ' "Right now I don 't know," Ruby sai . "I've given l som e P11,11 M111i;1_, 1~.o. 1tol. Rick JennlftOs · · . w • '' vou r• uy1n9 • sP -1. c1tm1n1 !Hiil ss.""' 2. · 'f f d · h ld f d ., (Miit). Terr) McKe-ol> (2·ml1el. Bob :h1 DAILY PILOT'S f1 moU• Mccants IWMI 52-•V. 3. lk>rdtn ICMl
thought. \\'hat I keep thinking ls, 1 0 quit. w at woo 0 · ~:,1n(-~1.125~~:)M~nH~~Ti'. ~W rri~~ Costa i\1esa Golf and Coun -,, 1111in9. 57~1Zc~s -1. Aldrlch tHHl l.U-lD"l' 1. Racing is the only thing I know." 1e1m. mile r•l•v teem. LoulH (l:sl) 1s2'"' J. Joto"~ fCdM)
h h h II•• lry Club 's th ird a n n u a I Skippers at Da vey's Locker The two area land ings arc;li~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'u~.~"~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;iil This is Ruby 's 23rd year of racing, 115 season on t e c nnl· M1rln• -Bob Dre111na 1~PJ. uo
I. rel ay team, Ju11o N1v1rro cPv 1. Celebrity Golf Classic ts and Art's Landing are.keeping sti ll concentrating runs on the pionship circuit and ninth try at lndianapo is. si~:'~~1~'fl46ii. ~~~ .. ~~t"'l1l~'f'1· a sharp lookout around San th ree Bs -bass. barracuda
N1tW11911 Hirllor -erid Schullz scheduled June 1· Clemente Island for the f1'rst d bo ·1 t'J th 11 j_mi. Kirk Ch11111orr nl20i. Rkh -an n1 o-un L e ye ows T!~~"':11~imiJ.; r~~~ :.,ee~:r1!~20 LHJ, The 36-hole charity event big schools of fightin g arrive.
b . b t Hun11n,1'" ••1"'--\'lctor M1r11ne1 contr>'butes the net p-eeds to JI '"I Andy Grantelli isn't the only man w o IS biller t at au o rac· CLJ, HJ\, Mike McG!vnef'i:P\'. HJ), '"'" ye ow .... 1 · Both landings de s cribe
d • I · Warren H-n 166111, Jim xlev ISPl. 0 Co h 'Li h ' J k' ood Ing bas turned its back on turbine powere automob1le15, n an tn-c-1 Ml M•• -Mite ~1er 1120 range unty c ar1 es w a "Conditions are oo 1ng g rishing good in quantity of fish
I Co U ~-H t "'~l M kt M1,1ner noo, 2201. Nick RMe I th " n.1.·1 T ' f f 'gh tervlew in the weekly racing journa mpeti on rn:ss, owme o 1. uo rel•v t111m. speCialize in the aid to ou ere. says c-11! ouer o i not we1 t. Mii MtU -RtlDfl Oe•n 1'601. D ' "Ther I nt f turbine builder Ray Heppeeslal criticized SC.CA for banning ~ M1c1.11n nml. Greo MHk• physically · and mentally han-avey s. e are Pe Y 0 "There are still all kinds ol_ c;;r,1· Jon M1rch1or11nl CH JI, Olve anchovies and squid for turbines from its road racing programs. l~t.iU'~':... Mike st-in noo. LJi. dicappe<I children. , the bonito, lots and lots of them ,"
T1u•bi11e Bau Rapped It's
Lat year the Howmet car created excitement In world cbam· r.~\ stu1r1 010 cLH1. em u 1d11w yellO'Ws to feed on and Tozier said . '"They're just
1 pionsbip endurance races here and in Europe. SCCA policy, ae-~l1!'nll,;'1~v1~eeo ~:f~f ''~~1' C•11" A practice round and dinner water is warming up -60-61 sriiall to medium. up to six
f he bi l'.Untifn Vinn -Oin Liwl5 CSPl, show is slated for May 3!. degrees.'' pounds, but tfiey're biting like
DAILY
PILOT
•
• '
t
•
I
' ' _,
cording to Heppenstal, prevented bis development o t tur ne J1~1;:e~~".: 'i:l·Frllol 0001, Steve Q . . 1 •· car for the popular Group 7 sports car series, the Can-Am. Hon1stmey1r C'60l. uartets, cons1st1ng o liu ee Tozjer said fisher:r.en have crazy." L"~"' 1.cll -er11" Dttmer !PV !. landed several yellows off San If be bad been able to race a turbine powered car on the Can-°'Ml:,~s~~f£ ..!.."a~iin ttnoleY \SPl. amateur players and a Clemente Island in , the last Barracuda being c a Ugh l
Am, many thousands of fans could have ~n t!JH>Sed to the Br':l'-M~=1e-iiiei~Vi»-i~~~!._cclebritY.. u·ill_pJay__a..b_esi_b_ill k . t 3b od range up lo three pounds while turbine revolution that was mostly confi ned to the speedway -v11 Ged......-<SPl. M1rk H1um1nn 1HJ. ' wee -running up 0 pou 6 the bass -are in the-two -and and 8 courtroom _ in Indianapolis. LJJ. "° rel1Y "''~ of foursome over the_ Lake and the landing is running a three-pound class.
c-• *' Ml• -R!'k K.,.,t !HJ!. Course a day later with the boat to the island once a week, A spoke&nan at Art's Lan-••ne SCCA bas said they don 't run a proving ground, they Georoe Ferr1ro csi>1, Johll M!le1 lllOJ, \Vednesd I k' I
run 1 sbow and will determine what is good for the show," Hep.. c~1:e1:x1~"t;-1n Biker IP\'l. Rick awards ~cheduled for that on ay, 00 ing or ding said the bonito and bar-
-n.stal said. ''If the governing bodies of American auto racing do ,,7i~~,'"it't1',c;, ~~"!'.''W~ i,s'1,lr evening. yellows. l racuda are going after jigs ,.~ "j "Once the big fish stru'l to and some anchovies while the not accept their heritage and responsibilities to the motoring C Liii~iao.~ ~8!~1~":~!~PllJ. 1oo. In vitations ha ve bo!:!!n mailed show up we'lt start. running later remains the favorite bait
public by providing a proving ground for tbe ears of tomorrow, /t°:JoJ.18PZu1 H~~1~~yJ1,'uo)':°'00~ to top Hollywood celebrities our all-day boat after them for the bass,
they wil l be legislated out of business. r•~1~~r:.~·v1111Y _ Jim Emery nfll· and leading amateurs and ear-dail y. Art's all-day boat leaves at 3
"'The only defense they bave from being compared with i: r1:~'';.~~i. Gimn Goto 020 L · ly entries include Jack Kelly, "Barracuda are starting to a.m. dail y and is con-
feeding Christians to the lions is that they have provided the safe· ,.1~F "i1120-L~~n81~·~~r1 (in\'. 8:~ Jackie Coogan, Buddy Rogers, get bigger with the warmer centrating on fishing around
ty features whicb are a reality today. and they llave provided the c'tlJ11.'j.,.~{~rUI _::e11°(\.,yn11 .t.klY•m• Richard Arlen. Paul Niwland, water and the big ones could Catalina Island, Hall-day runs,
technology for the performance of today's vehicles. n~1!~h"laft •11,11 _ John Mu111,.. Jerry Velasco and Norm move in an y day aloog with departing at 6 a.m. and 12 :15
"When they refused to take that as their responsibility, a lll1'l.i.Jp,;;110.,:r~v~~~j~.")R~·1f0~~; Blackburn. • the yellowtail." Tozier added . p.m .. have been cruising the
Ralph Nader or someone like him will come along, raise· a bi1 ~J1~ ci-nl• ·-ram Morri, 020 Amateurs desiring to play in Art's Landing isn't going coast· as far south as Laguna 1
hoopla, and that will be the end of motor racing." L't_~J~r ~~1711 1H_:1. Mik• sweentY the event can call ~1200 for ' alter yellows yet but plans to and' Salt Creek.
Interesting opinion? IP,X/.:,1111 v1e;. _ Rich Cordtrv tHID. further information. send its all-day boat after the Davey's aU-day boat leaves 110). Andrr Hotmei. n2~ LHl. '"' r•llY Gallery tickets are now on game fish once they start to at 5 a.m. with the half-day run
Chilli11g Disrovery 'efr.t.r Del -Jolln 11re1deft fll\O. 1io1. sale at $2 each. hit witJJ regularity. departing an hour liter. ~-"-"-'"'--~~~~-"~~=-~~_c::.:c:::.:2..::::.=::.::::.:::_~11
For no good reason J was studying the statistics of past In-
dianapolis 500 races the other nigtit and came up with a chilling
discovery.
Nearly every lime in the 58 year history of racing at In·
dianapolis that there has not been an increase in the average
speed of the race, some terrible calamity has befallen the world .
With one exception, speeds increased from Ray Harroun's
74.S9 m.p.h. in 1911 to Ralph De Palma's 89.84 m.p.h. in 1915, and
that record wasn 't broken until 1922. In the meantime, civilization
agonized througfl the first \Vorld War .
Prep Golf
E111ncl• CUI U) Mltn11l1
'lobe:rt.on CEI 13, Oel ,m+th CMI ti.
IS.{'). S(h1,1H1 (E) 7t, def Jollnson (Ml 16,
(3•!), Ceol'M (El IQ, def leach (M) '1.
!~). Ct'll'l$!PftlOn (M) 13, def RYlll (f) ...
().}), Brown (El 71, def Cllre IM) 19, (S.01.
Dolld CEI IO, iltt 11-er fM.l ,5, (5-QI.
The
Colorful
,,
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, \
" Sound of
Oran1e
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
f'J'IOM l'ASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH
CAIWllM Wlllro' •A BWCO • (ICl!ff Pf:OOf' • IMP'ORT£0 l'f MTIOIW. DISl!LLP:S '1IOOlictS CO.
Introducing ·
The smoothest whisky ever
to come out of Canada!
Compare Windsor with your usual American or· Canadian
'whisky. Once you do, you'll never settle for less, or pay morel
Tbniaht. make the compari&On: make one ,:rains and pure, clear rlaci•l wateNJ. And
drink with your "usual,'" Ule other with oni, Windsor is aged in Canada's mile-high,
Wlndlor. You'll be amued at'" Meed dry Rocky Mountain air. All
the 1Ipptn' 1moothnea of this 'flry.........., this, yet Wind11or ie priced
remarkable uto impor.t._'Ih&CI-__ $ f!..19 rlrbt in line with leadinr do-
becaUM Oftlw -Wlndtor iJ.m&d• _ tJ.,.OL. mutlci. whiskies because we im~
from hardy Canadian pralrl1 port It then bottle it here.
WINDS()
2 ·for· 1 Day
OUT AT _
THE OLD
BALL GAME
PILOT PETE INVITES EVERYONE TO
SEE THE ANGELS PLAY BALTIMORE
SUNDAY, JUNE l, AT HALF PRICE
G,t two 1111rv1cl 1111 li,••h for the S11nd1v •h1rnoon, J11111 I,
An91l1 ¥1, Oriole, g1 m1 1t An1h1im .St1d ium for the norf¥1
p<it.1 of on1 li<:k1t. (luy on•: 1111 OAILY PILOT 9iY11 yo1,1 one.)
2-$3.50
2-$2.50
TICIClTS
FOO
TICKlTS
FOO
$3.50
$2.50
' .
Yo1,1 c:11t ••1erv1 1n 1nfit1 •1,tion or j1,11I two 1•1h. l11t 'ii'* you,
p1rty to91th1r now incl m1 il in the order blink below with ch9c;k
or money order C no c11h, tf>ltftt l incl hurry. Oe•dl+n• for ticket
otd•rt i1 M1y 20.
Ea1·l11 Bird Bonus
0Jltn to youn91t1r1 "'PI> 16 v••t1 ofcl. ln<:!uc/1 with tic~1t ,,,.,
• tl1l•rn1nl of 100 worc/1 or les1 : "My f1Y<1ril .. An91I is~
bet.•1111 •••• " Enfti11 m111t b1 rec1f¥1d ltv 110:on 011 M•v II.
Tloret wiftn1r1 will be 11l•cl1d f or p••·91m1 c1••moni11, ~ '
They'll itfeet Their E'avorUe An9.!i
,--------
c11, ...i HI, wltlrt '*-k er MeMY er4«, ,.:
2·f•t·1 ..... Dey
O'•llf• Coat hill., Piiot
C/0 P•llc kr'Ylu hpt.
lJO W, lo, StrMt, CMtll Mfl:a, Callf. 92627
ll'LEASl PRINT)
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l trHt ,,,,,,,,.,,, ........ ,,, .• ,,,, ....... ,._.,,, •• ,.,,,, ••• ._,,.,,.,0 0~
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·~-· ............. , .•.. ~ .••......•.. , •• , .••.....• o.. ................. ...
I
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I Wini j , ... '·&.It,.,, ...•. r-...... -11, 111 ............ ,,, 1i tt1e Jllt'tt 1 Anq111 "'· Orlo!K .. ""•I ""'~elm '""lul'rl. ll'llr I .. ell t!Utt JM)t"tlrMldr t W111 rttaNt #I lfflt•I SAii' f,_ ~ ... DAIL'!' PILOT. I ..,.Mt IUGli1..M tdr<lt -) lkl!.•11. f ntlOMf Iii '
I
L ----•
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~.DAILY 'lLOT H TUHC111, M11 ~ 1'169
""''° I Kids, Give Up Pennies
away ln tbett-. • DENVl\f. (UPI) -!Gd<Ues. !wt $h!l\Jng .)LOUr J!iqj'
~-Uncle sam ne<!ds uie
~ you 've pt' st&lhed
Tile sltualiol).~ • .tt\!l!!i so
bad that lbe Denver Mlnt is
""'""" two ll·bour shills,
seven dly1 a week. trying to
catch up with the pt:MY
shortage.
PeMles, perhaps n e v e r
before held in such hiah
esteem, "are going out as Wt
as we can_.11roduce them.'' •d·
mils Denver Mint Supe.ri.n·
tendent B<lty Hlgby.
• : A mutual t...i lnmllnc In tM
:: IM\lllopmlftl Md Ult
; e1f\tltocean Ind its raotRtS
~---------... , .... Db11k1w1a. fK.
... ,... l ll'Mf
, """ Y9"1. N.'I'. 1~
"M~ pennies are minted
here than any of the other
coins combined, but we still
don't have enough of them. I
tnow it takes a lot or peMies
to pay for merchandise, but
somewhere there has to be
some hoarding going on.
~1,iiuM..--•,.,..,...,•M
' •• ttt. GA•noer•pfllc lut'MI, lflC,
'"Ibe shortage ()f the penny
is amazing," she added. "We
don't know where they are
going."
f ip
Nationally, banks paid out 22
percent more pennies In the
first two months ol 1959 than
In the same period a year ago .
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F/tff IH!fSTMINT FO/tUM:
Mer.rill Lynch
takes a new look at·
GROWTH STOCKS
::·A program about companies with sales
· of less than $100 milion " . "
.: -M•I<• your forum reservetions lodey .,
Merrill Lynch has just published a
Research booklet called "A New Look
at Growth''. covering selected compa-
nies with sales of less thal) $100 million
-compani~s _that we feel offer excep·
tional potential for growth. And you are
..
,, ..
·" -..
.. . invited to a fret! investment seminar on ... , • the subject-. . ..
,_
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DATE I TIME LOCATION
Twnday First Cablft loom of
Moy 1l
7:JOPM slia<p lalbocr ~Club
1221 W. t H'w•y.
Newport. hoch
Tloondo) E1ecuti•• c..fweKe Im.
Moy 15 s.rf' -Hot.1-6 .. "'· 7:JOPM...., 1555 S. Comt H'woy.
Lotuna IMc:lli
You'll learn the attributes that Merrill
Lynch looks for in selecting growl~
stocks-how management, marketing
ability, and specialization are taken into
account as well as technological
skills and research-a nd-development
achievements.
You'll get an analysis of the polen·
tial risks and rewards of in vesting in
smaller growth companies. And you 'll
find out which stocks Merrill Lynch
considers most promising.
Today the whole approach to finding
growth stocks is undergoing change.
To keep up with that change, lo help
you find the growth stocks of today, be
sure lo attend this valuable forum.
There will be a time for questions and a
free copy of the booklet "A New look at
Growth" for everyone who wants one . r Reserve your seats today. There's no
charge or obligation, of course. Simply
call or mail in the coupon below.
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1 •• fl.-.1~ r11••y----1•t• f., \IOU
I· 1:·
I•'
__________ ,. _________ _
1 Name'---~-------~~~~----
(.•
I .. Address----~-~--------~ I· I •City& Sbt'e-----------z;p __ _
I: I• f'hone'----------------1' l:5 MERRILL LYNCH,
E PIERCE,
I' ' F-ENNER & &MITH INC I:· Hiil NORTH lloADWAY, SANTA ·ANA '2702
I;. Tolopllooa: 547-7272 I , ~or lh• c•11••11I•""<• •f i11Y•1tor1 eur •lflc• I ll op•11 d•lly f10M 7 1.M. to 5 p.M •• ~
1:~ .. s .turd•'tl ,,.,,. ' •. ,.., lo 12 ""·"·
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J\IORE FINANCIAL
NEWS ON PAGE %4
Is Selllnq
MUTUAL
FUNDS
Llvlnt Color
WORLD
SECURITIES
CORPORATION
is pleased lo announce the
appointment of
PAT GORMAN
as president. Mr. Gonnan will con·
lrol the rapidly erpandinr -ucuri-
1ies !inn's operatiorrs from the hud
offic e at leisure World, l11unt
Hills. Wo rld Securities now has
offices in Seal Beach, lcn1 Beach
and Tustin.
23521 PiSto dt V1ltnti1
t11un1 HiH1, C1!i!ornil 92653
Phone (71 4) SJJ.2970
ASSETS OVER
S42!5,000,000.00
~EAOOF~
816 Million Job
* HALLI DAY'S *
The casual look or an oxford weave
button down shirt coupled with a
light weight tropical sport coat of
dacron@ and . wool blend. Keeps you
cool on the warmest of days.
SHIRT 9.00 COAT 60.00
TRADITIONAL MEN'S CLOTHING
PHONE
645.0792
MON. & THURS.
'TIL 9 P.M.
-WESTCUFF PLAZA-
17th & IRVINE AV E.-NEWPORT BEACH
315 E••t Colorado Bcul•v•rd ·~·~ ..
Pe....,,a. C.itfornla..IU.09 -r~ --.. .. . .. -
INGS
• OTH£R •RANCH 0"1'1C&;S
""t-W..t Arudf• • CcMn•
Glend•I• r "
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Tuesday's Closing Prices-wmplete New York Stock Exchange List
I =---°"'':
] ~ i imii.~\ i llf r
List
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TV's Emmy Award Nominations Listed
By VERNON SCOT!'
HOLLYWOOD (UP ll -The
N•tlonal Academy of
Television Arts and Sciencos
announced lts nominations
Monday for Emmy awards for
telecasting excellence In more
than 30 categories for the 1968-
69 season.
were : Carl Bttz (Judd ror the Montgomery (Bewitched). dwtry. award statuettes to wlnnert or
Defense): Raymond Burr Nominated for besl single The 1Js-t annual Emmy special events, news doc:umen-
(lronslde); Peter Graves and perfonnance by an actor: awards proiram will be tary. dayUme programming,
Martin Landau (Mis a ion : Ossie Davis (Te ache r, televised June 8 by CBS-TV. chi J d re n'' s programming,
lmpo.Mlble); and Ross Martin Te2.cher); David McCallum In addition to entertainment outs land Ing s In I I e
J (The Wild, Wild-West). (Teacher, Teacher ); pa u 1 series, comedy, drama and performances by actors and
Be.st actresses in a dramatic Scofield (Male ol lhe Species) ;;1jr'~Jl'C;::ia:l:'';::the~='=ca=dem:::y::::wil:-l;==a=c=tr=esse='=-======= gertes: B a r b a r a · Bain and Bill Travers-<Th e
IMlssion Impossible); Jo an Admirable Chrlchton).
One category, best cultural Iii ~ \J
_do-cumentar·y, had 41 •,1 ~fl
Blondell (Here C-Ome the Be.st single perfonnance by
Brides): Peggi Lipton (The an actress: Anne Baxter (The
Mod Squad ). Bobbie ~rrier Story): Lee
ULIOA
673-4048
I NDS TONIGHT
"Man For All St 11ons"
AND nominees. But the highly · I<'. '.t"fl i1l"1'!i"':t ,..:-..
rated, weekly series were ,.. -bnnT.&.i.nn "'
nominated 'in more ,._.,~T".'.!·~·:
manageable numbers. , ' • r
Nominated for best comedy
Besl comedian in a 5eries: Grant (The Gales of
Don Adam11 (Get Sman); Cerebus)~ and Geraldine Page
Brian Kellh (Family Affair): (The Thanksgiving Visitor).
Edward' Mulhare (The Ghost Nominations resulted from
''" and Mn. Muir) and Lloyd balloting by some 7,000
Nolan (Julla). members of the academy In 10 series were ··Bewitched,"
''Family Affair," ''Ge t
Smart," ':rhe Ghost and Mrs.
Muir" and "Julia."
the Game," "Net Playhouse" .Best comedienne in a ~ries: cities and counted by com·
aod "Mission: JmJ)OSSible." Diahann carroll (.Jul 1 a) ; P.uler. WiMert will be voted
. . Barbara Feldon (Get Smart): bf secret ballot of ~I
.,,..
4:45 7" I . l•llllM ...~ .......... '
"T1~ing of th• Shrew"
e EXCLUSIVE SHOWING -St1rt1 Wtdntsd1y
What is the Magus Game?
The came iS real~The Came i$ mystery. The game is love.
The came is lust. The yK:;M>tJs game the Magus plays
is not a came but life itself ... Best dramatic series: "The
FBI." ''Ironside,.,' "Judd for
the Defense," "The Name of
B_est ~ar1ety or musical Hope Lange (The Ghost and "blue-ribbon p a n e I s ' • com·
series: The Carol Burnett . Mrs Muir)· and Elltabeth posed of members of the in·
Show," "The Dean Martin.~~~·=~~·~:;,.-""===='=========,! Show," j{Rowan and Martin's1' .._ _____ _ Or is ii de1th?
W ar11 er Aid s
USC Cinema
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Laugh-In," "The Smothers
Brothers Comedy Hour" and
"That's Life."
IHDS TONIGHT
Clint E•lfwood 111
"A FISTFUL Of DOLLAll"
''A FIW DOLLAIS MOii"
STA.ITS WIDNUDAY
DAILY Pu.or sian ,,.,. 1.-1ovle producer Jack Warner 'I'll Protect you' today pledged ,._, million
Several of the nominated
series including the con·
troversia l ''Smothers
Brothers" were canceled dur·
ing the year and two were
moved to another networlc.
Series stars nominated for
acting f,:mmys in a drama
--. 1<>marSharlf·CallM18~MllM •
Robert Hartenberger (left) gets caught up in lhe
mood of his part as i>laywright Ronald Boussom
watches raptry and director Martin Benson eyes
the situation critically in this scene from "Room
Service," now on stage at South Coast Repertory's
Costa Mesa theater.
Crossword Puzzle
toward a building for the
University of S o u t h er n
California's Cinema Division.
The multi-story building will
be part or a '4.4 million
Center for the Perfonning
Arts -to Include the music
and drama divisions.
In the Ann and Jack Warner
Hall of Cinema will be a
theater, production facilities,
classrooms, offices and library
areas.
~----...-·---~ ..... -Warner wa& a foi1nderof.lh
AC ROSS
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J 63
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120 S/6/69
company now called Warner
Brother-Seven Arts. He w a s
elected a university trustee
last October.
ENDS TONIGHT J•-Gllffft' w.,, .... ,... ..... ,,
"SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL SHERIFF"
-ALSO -
I.ft M•fYI•
"HELL IN THE
PACIFIC"
STAITS WIDNISDAY
AeMlemy Winner
CLIFF ROBERTSON
ALSO
"FOR LOVE OF IVY"
U.l•AIH MATIMll
WID. AT 1 P.M.
flll llNUHMINT$
MAT. ADMISSION 1.00
... • • COloST Ifft. •T TMU• I I.VD. • ~ lliM:ll. tM.0110
Academy Awa rd
Winner-Best Editing
SlD1: l'l'ICCllJUN
'OOWTT'
-ALSO -Clint E•llwood
"COOGAN'S BLUFF"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
PLUS
Ri,h•rd Burton J•ll'l•1 Cob1ir11
W•lt•r M1ttli1u Ew• Aul i11 in
F-0'"·0
..-SOUTHCOAST IA l"LAZA TH-TRK
San Diop F-J 11 Brillol • 546-2711 11~~==:;:::::;:::;=111 ALSO Sidl'lfy Poiti1r ii•
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6;45
1
HIWf'Olf tl,liClf • ef tit• ••!,.. ...
ho MMl•H U'-fol• -O•. l ·l )SI
ENDS TONIGHT
ITS IU.UTIFUL
"FOLLOW ME"
-ALSO -
J-1-"'ds ,,
"THOUSANO CLOWNS"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
"FOR LOVE OF IVY"
STARTS WEDNESDAY wm-.. -.. .,.._-~ cowur "1ii __ ,..,
•AU O -01111•M1 rti11 h1
"WRECKING CREW"
-'·
._T_.,...., l!I•
Jmna.~llllce·Gll•---Page ~ AndMll•:!a:osswn 2•/lflaGwciw
ALSO PLATINfi -WINNll Oft ACADIMY AWA.IDS
SHOWING
NOW!
OUNGE
DRIVl-111
TONIGffT'S SllOWTmlS
"LOVING COUPUS"
1:00 • llolS PM
"THE SWINGER"
9'45 PM
s.nt.ANF-Soolillo
Chaomn A"""(Ustolf---"*" left • Sbtt C.t1ett HMO • Sonb Anl F....., 11"111 ii
C.-Avmue-SbttC...,lllld. on_,,,,,
• Sim"""" ... -··~-•
SHOWING
NOW!
HIWAY39
DRIVE-Ill '
TOMGllT'S SllOWlllllS
"LOVING COUPl.IS ..
a,oo • It.IS i'M
"THE SWINGER"
9'45 PM
On Bead!Blwd.-
C.rdto GIM llOd Slot Ditto F,_, • S..Di'lof-·
toBead!M(_.,,._> • On -llht Soa!h~--..-. • On-lllt
Nertlltf WUNlw.._
•
SHOWING
NOW!
•
I I
e 2nd Fetture .. ''The Touchi.bles" -In Color •
tr SPECIAL PUBLIC NOTICE!*
RESTRICTED PROGRAM • NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED!
Ellglble JOU1111 pmople lllU9t prlllnl drtvw'I 1ic.-
lllld/or -olher proof of ege.
If JOU'r• under 18, plNH Hlect •nolher mOwle pt0g1am!
ELIGIBIUTY WILL BE STRICTLY ENFORCED/
HOUYWOOD IS W..H-l-S-P-E-R·f·N-6!
THE WHOLE TOWN'S 6-0-S.S.l-P-l-N-G!
All AMERICA IS /JeU-1-1-1-N-G!
BOLDEST SCENES ON ANY SCREENI*
FRANKEST WORDS MR SPOKEN I*
*EXCEPT 'I AM CURIOUS (YELLOW)"
carm R.ISPIESDITS AIU ti. FM FitlOttlkM • mctlTM PRC11tm Mllll IDE:uJ.
~,_ ____ ,__at..-ri-·-----·~--··-
"All THE ~ ~~
\t\VINO COUl'\\C5 ~ -e ·· 1' vue-e ~ush·hush story-about real ~e~oo''
maybe a friend ... or a relative ... or a 11e19
YOU'RE l'llOMIL Y 'HEP' -LOVE IS 1HflR JHING / -·---
-llNIE • LlJll _.,•mt COii! • scon-
PAll ~T • 1.0.IA. liWl<lt • JAall: '1ISSE.1. • HOl!ltUJll Al.Dell ts MITCH
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Fountain V~ll-'y Today's Final
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·voL 62,. NO. 108, ECTLONS, 30 PAGES ORANG.E COUlllTY, CALIFORNIA · TUESDAY, MAY 6, '1969 TEN CENTS .. --·
1 • • •
Huntington Raids Nit 34 • Ill Nar co ~·-Roundup ··
• •
. By TllRRY qlvq.LE
ot fM ~ '"" Sl•lf > Hunlln&ton Beach detectives today
\\'_ere wrapping up paperwork on a series
of raids which resulted in the arrest of 31
adults and' three juveniles on a variety of
nan..'<ltics charges.
LateSt of the raids, resulting from
underoover investigations, was completed
Monday · night. Twelve adults and one
itlvtnile were helcilq cha_rge~of sale and
()9Ssessioo of 300 LSD tabs.
'
Navy Chi ef
Bars Court
For Bucher
•.
·WASHINGTON (AP) Na vy
Secretary John H. Ctiafee today ruled out
any puruihmentTof a~rsonnel
connected with North Korea's seizure of
the spy ship Pueblo even though a Navy
court of inquiry urged court martia!S for
!kipper Lloyd M. Bucher and a chief
assistant.
Setting aside major recommendation~
ot tl)e 80-day inquiry, Chafee declared of
the men who served on the Pueblo:
"they have suffereci enough, and furth er
punishment would not be justified."
WhUe prisoners• of the North 'Koreans.
be noted. "They suffered extensively
from physical abuse and torturous treat-
ment."
All charges lodged against Pueblo
crewmen will be dismissed.
"I am cmlvinced," Chafee said, "that
neither individual discipline, nor the state
of di11Cip~e or morale in the Navy nor
aoy ofher interest requires further legal
proceedings with respect to any person-
nel involved in the Pueblo incident."
The Navy court of inquiry, he disclos-
ed, had recommended after piling up
t .. 350 pages of testimony that general
court martial trials be held for Cmdr.
Bucher and Lt. Stephen R. Harris, his
•·research" officer.
Harris was the officer in charge of. the
research detachment aboard the Pueblo,
which was conducting an electronic
eavesdropping mission off North Korea
when she was seized.
Chi ffee tePorted t h-e-s e · -recorn-;-
mendations had been made by the court
of inquiry : .,
-That Bucher be tried by general
court ma rtial for five alleged offenses in-
cluding permitting his ship to be search-
ed while he had the power to 'resist, fail-
ing to take profective measurts during
the attack, com plying with North Korean
orders to follow them into port, "negli-
gently failing" to destroy all classified
material on the ship, and "negligently
failing" to see that his crew was fairly
skilled ln procedures for destroying
classified material.
-That Harris be tried by general court
martial "for three alleged offenses of
dereliction in performance of his duties,"
mainly dealing with the lack of ability
arid readiness on the part of the research
detachment to be able to destroy all
(S;ee PUEBW, Page %)
Bucher's Fitness
To Determine Any
Future CO:lnmand
F.-'.Wine Service• WASHINGTON -Navy.secretary John
H. Chalee said today the future f)tness of
Cmdr . Uoyd "M. Bucher, the USS-Pueblo
skipper will determine whether he is
alven c0mmand of ~er ab.ip ....
-Clµlfee told a news conferebce that the
Nav)' ii asking Bucher what his choices are and ''his future commanets will be d~rmined by his performance in the
future " A Na./Y legal officer nollfle<l Bucher In San Diego th 11 morning of ~ee's
· 'aecision not to disctplil)e any 6f the
Pdebl • crew, although a court of inq:Uiry
ricommended court martial trials of both
Bocher and another PUeblo officer.
Lt. Stephen R. Harris, the intelligence
officer, said at his 'mother'& home in
'-telrose. Mass.. thal he was "@'eaUy
relieved" that he and Bucher wotiJd not
be court martialed.
Rarris Is being assigned to the Naval
Cornmunications Command headquarters in WashlngU>o. D.C .. :and he .ail! 1't and
his wife Esther have bought a home in
ouburban llethtsda. Md. .
Harris said • be believed the in·
Vest.I.gallon of tht Pueblo's Capture was
"txtrcntlY tborwgh and utremeJy com·
petent." He Mic\ the board ol lnqulr)I "did what tt bad'° do." and added : "At far as I'm
cancerned thLae«tt..arY~uctJon_m_,,na
that the ch1trget have been dropped. He
(See BµCHER, Pap %1
. . '
Anned with· a search warrant, officers
approached ~he _home at 811 Delaware
Street a.L8 :30 p.m. where th~y sai$) they
were spotted by ~ne suspect who ran in-
side·screamlng, "The Man is ltere!"•
Police allege the LSD, about e:ght
OW)CeS oI hashish and two ~s of ·
rnatijuana were on a table in the middle
o( the. room when they entered.
Offi~rs asSerted ~ suspects began
chanting reUgtous songs and told them,
''VOu!re evil --you sit. al home drinking
and .~e get arrested for doing Our Thirlg ...
Prime oceupant of the 8ll Dela.wart St.
place was identified by police as 28-year-
old Clinton So.JJtbwell. Wesl.Oranp.,.Coun-
ty Municipal Judge KeMeth M. Smilh
had signed the search warrant: .
Huntington detective Carl Vidano said
the na:rcoUcs picked up in the raid would
be. vaJued at about $2,000 on the . illicit
ma;k~t.
During ths seizures and a~sts, a
~even moolh old baby, Kristie Fa!'."llr,
was placed in protective custody in
juvenile' hall. Her mother. Karen Marie
Fanner, 22, ol 811'4 Delaw!lre Street,
was One of those .arrested in the rowidup.
Police·said they could find no responsible
adult ·ro care for lhe-il>aby.
'Huntb!Jton Beach police conducted five
other raids over the weekend which net-
ted 19 adults and two juveniles arrested
on charges~of-elthtr .sale or-.pos:session·of
mariju.ua. · .
Weekend arresfs lncluded ' a vlsiL to a
reaidthce •at 3J.I 7lh St,, whk:_b_ ~netted
seven adults living at ,thaL address. on
ch&ries Of 'possession of marijuana and
dangerous drugs.
Another arrest included a Gardena
elementary school teacher and his wife of
17402 Udo Lane, Huntington Beach, on
charges-of furnishing and .posse.ision of
imlrijuana. Arrested werfi Stuart• and
. J.etiore Orton,
l>etectiv'e Vidano· said the·Huge total ot
wi;\eild narcoUcs arrests reSulted from
a Concerted undercover operation which
lf'd to tip offs of v8rious "parUet."
The Ortons ·'@r~ a_rraigned_ MQnday In
Wes t Orange County Municipal Court and
set for preliminary h'earing Maiy 19. One
ether man arresteit for furnishing
dangerous drugs was also anaiined
Monday. Preliminary hea_rJn$ .for ·Rich-
ard Worman, 19, 8012 Mermaid Citcle,
(See NARCO RAID8, ..... %) •
RB· Socialite
.
h·ot
Marne~te Peek Victim; Escort Slain
By WILLIAM REED
Of 1111 D1U1t l'iltt Stiff
One man is dead and another was
severely beaten In a Palm Springs apart~
ment inCident Monday in which Hun-
tinglOii Beach sociaJ leader Mamette
Peek, 58, was shot once In the abdomen
With a .25-caliber automatic pistol.
Found --dead mileS from Mrs. Peek 's
apartment was her' long time friend and
frequent escort, · Dr. Lawrence L,
emergency surgery was performed.
Dr. Peterron was1 found in a remote
area of ·the .city, at Joyce and Bistra,
.streets,· whft he apparenUy had bhen
walking alone. Officeis said he was pro-ri~ced dead at lhe hospital fn?m what
they called "a self-inflicted head wound,
one· shot frdm a .25-caliber automalic-
pistol in his m9uth at 4:~1 p.m." '
' -
·· ·pecerson; .,sr. -or ·-1146-xensingu,n·Roa<I, .... -
Los AJamJtos.
He was shot o~ through the roof of
his mouth with a .!5-ca!Jber slug end died
from what police called a sell-lnf1icted
gunshot wound.
Mrs. Peek, who lives at 16461 Golden
\Vest St., Hti:Mington Beach \l'ith her
parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reid, is
listed as in satisfactory condition this
morning at Desert· Hospital, Palm
Springs.
.. ---· -PoiICeSard·"tnar·hf; apparently bad.died-
about 4 p.m. some four and a haJf houri,
after Mrs. Peek had been &bot. Officers
declined to say whether the same gun
was used in both shootings-. An autopsy of
Dr. Peterson is scheduled for tOOay.
Beaten ·at tbe apartment .at-300 N.
• , . 'i 1
'ih:Utim -t-.. •JfieniOrj,
-..... , ~ Sunrise Way was·Weilt Lo$Ange1es real
. i , , , tsla\o ml\ll flMrrte :l)'ipllon, IJ,. 11)\0 "M
C~edian-Bob_HoP,e jokes with reporters fl• he leaves N.ew YOJ:.k's
Institute of Ophthilmology at Columbia 'Presbyterian Hospital ·alter
treatment of a bemorr~age-of the left ~yt.
' tre'ili..I~ ti'l""~r fot't~ 1")iltt.,
which resulttd, .police, u.ld, ·~from a
beating.'' -He. w11 rtleased after treat4
men~
Police did not dllclose resu lts or 1their
Interrogation of Tripbon.
Police Lt. Carl HulBlander said this
morning that the shooting of Mrs. Peek
and the beating of Tripbon. apparenUy oc-
curred aboµt 11:30 a.m. Monday in Mrs.
Peek's apartment which she kept for her
freqµent visits to the desert spa.
"Mrs. Peek was shot once with the .25
O.t,iLY I' ..... , '
-. SQC IALJTE SHO,t;· ! •\ · · . .
h 1'th11 Marnett• P•k
caliber automatic weapon. tt Wl\S a
homicide attempt,'' officers asserted • .lhe
was rustied lo the bopsital where
Dr. Peterson was a member of the
music department at California State
College, Long Beach and at onel' time
served as chainnan of the Fin~ ,Arts
division.
Lt. Hulslander · said Mrs. Pee'k ·will be
interrogated as soon as she has recovered
enoi,gii ti> ta1~·with·~· •
Mrs. Peek operates lhe Peek Family
Colooial Funera(..._Home in Westminst.er
whfch lhe acqutred mor~ than1 oDI year
ago in a divorce 1action from h.tt fOrmer
husb•nd, Um Peek, nhw of RJverside.
Both . the . Peek Mortuary and , the
landmark family home at Golden West
Street and Hell Avenue are owned by
Mrs. Peek.
Mrs. Peek is a noted social leader tn
both Long Beach and Orange County and
is acUve in the business community
throughout Southern California.
Ocean View VotiDg Light;
SclioolOfficials Optimislic
Only a hal)dful of the %1,oOO registered
voters in Huntington Beach's Oceaq View
SchOel District brp.ved damp weather this
morning to make the trek to lhe pools,
but scllool offic\llls were optirili.stic about
the chances for approval of a proposed
"$1 .25 tax increase on the baJlot. •
Rain, Rain Just
Won 't Go Away
Alert Yachtsmen Save Two
·an d~trict schools with the excepUon of
Glen View SchObl. Voters in th~. Glen
View _area are casting their ballots .,at
Circle View School. ·,.
S<;hool offici)tls are setlting ~* 'ap-
proval ·of• $1.25 override tax ·that wodld
raise the, district's tax rate for opefa-
tirmal e1penses to fl. 75 per $100 assessed
valua~ •• The current rate is tt.50.
l"or the thii:tf straight day, the Orange
Coast and most of Southern· California From Sea; Third Missing
Balloting will continue until 8 p.ni. at
Beacli ·Hom e Fire
Loss Es ti mated
Fla.mes and smok e caused $7,500
damage to a Huntington Beach residence
Mop<fay marring before 14 men, two
engines and a snorkel unit had -the fire
under control.
Firemen responded to 93$1 Nautllus
Drive at 8:47 a.m. and found the attic of
the home belonging \o'Pat aryant ablaze.
The fire apP,arently started in the heater
closet of t~e' home, but tire investigators
have n_ot ·yet narrqwed down :the exact
cause of the blaze.
Ftremen bad .the last glimmer out and
were rolling back to the station by 8: ~7
a.m.
A spot check at several precincts in·
dicated less ,than one percent of the eligi·
ble voters had .cast their ballots by noon.
The district does not hav~ a historY, of
heavy voting .. In last month's · ,school
trustee election, for example, onl; lZ per-
cent of the eligJble voters turned out. And
the weather was sunny, not~ one sCbool
oUJciaJ. · The c•mpajgn involving the new-school
tj\les has centered on the Oceap View
district's poor financial picture <10d the
Mix burden borne· by district resklents,
primarily homeowners. The dlstrlM in
north central Huntington Beach ""'Is . con-
sidered a "bedroom community)• without
heavy concentrations of industry and
comniercial deveRipments to beef up the
sCbool tax base.
was dampened today by a persistent
'drizzle which kept temperatures mired in
the low 60 's.
A high-level atmospheric disturbance
was blamed for the soggy but hardly
stonny conditions \\'hich broUght showers
in the mountain and desert areas and
sporadic spl-inkles: .along the Orange
Coast.
The condition was expected to move
eastward into Arizona by Wednesday, but
nl&ht and morning cloudiness was still
predicted for coastal areas .. Sunny a!-
ternoons were forecast through the mt
of the week.
Stork /tforkers
NEW YORK (AP) -The •lock mar·
Ket closed higher today, dellpite ·another
bout of profit .taking. (See quotalioM,
Pages 20-21).
Trading was very active near the
close. The Dow Jones industrial average
at 1:30 p.m. was up 2.79 at 961.7f.
Air Cal Seeking Support
By ALMON LOCKABEY
D&Uf ~uer ... 11.,_ l!dltor
Alert crewmen on board Jaek Baillie's
12-meter Newsbof tOOay were credited ~ith saving the Jives of two young Sail
Diego people who were victims of a
swamped outtioard off Point Loma Sun-
d-y. . ..
Rescued were Donal~ Paue'rsOn, 25 and
Beverly Runyon, 23, both of San Diego.
Still missing and presumed drow11ed is a
third member of the outboard party,
Fred.d Hogg of San Diego.
Baillie and his crew were returning
frpm the Ensenada race and had stopped
in. San Diego to clear tustoms. ·Af~r
leaving' the c.u.Stoms dock the NewSboy
was sailing abbut three tniles 'off POint
Loma Qll·,..tbe · leg 1 t9. l'jewWt 'when
crewman BOil Dlckson, who was 1at the
helm, "tiellrd. ~o~. · · , · p~~son calJed the ·r~· of . .the crew 9n
deck and B.la.ir llarneU, also of NewP.Ort, cljm~.4e ~·the NC'Ysboy~s boom.fO~ a
better view. ~e spqtte<I two beads 1n the
water abOUl 200 feet ahdd. ,
Baillie said tht NewsbOy's course wOUld
htive . taken them within 75 teet 'or the
couple if they had · not been spotted
&00ner.
The crew of the Newsboy·took the boll~··
pie On 00.ard was . Unable' to i ridio for
help because of low batterjes. On I.he way
bacli jo Sari Diego BaUUe uked l!OOlh<r
nea"rby &&Jlboar to radio ahead to Che U.S.
Coast .GUJrd. I ' '
By JEROME I'. COlJ,INS County supervisors last week straddled Local officials now make connection& t.o ))aillie said both the· man and 'l(Oman ot .,. Ddr" ,1.., '"" w~re .ir] a state of shock af(e:» beb!a ln'tht
Request Puts New port Beach in Awkward Positio n
Air Calltornla tbday asked the city or no fence. They endorsed the Air Cal peti· Sacramento via San Jose, San i'randsco chJUy wa,ters about f'Qur hours. ' '
Newport Beach tO ba_.ck its petlUon to lion unanimously. and' O.kland or they fly d.irtctlY out of tn lndmerits Ot lucidlty,,thi'woman lold
provide .direct nights between Orange Supirvlsor -William Phillips said the Los Ansetei lnthational Airpoit. Hours BaJllie the trio had 4one out ii) lhe tS. ~
Coonty Airport and Sacramento. no!Hlop . Oigbta -two ·a day -lo are tbu1 added lo the Oigbta. . oul~ ftom Ml'lW" Bay; ~tly . In tll._ ,
The request which councilmen wtl~ Sacramtnt.o would be a ''valuable attVice In ackUUon to standing aside from any afWn'oan ..and that as the wlncr and seas.
consider Monday, puts the,. city 1n an, to county of,f:cials, bu~:i and ~orsement ol. ~,Air C81 prO~l, ,and · came up lhc boat w~s S'l\lam~. Wl(h' a ·
awkward .posili~o::_ IC~I l>e<>Ple._ . . _ conseq~y1 tnot s~ndln-' in 'fts way, . 120 t,ior&eP!wer rnotOr on the stem, U1e
The Newport cOOnc11 Ii.on tteord op-J W Ci! pr<•ldent-~ .-~r~S-uncilmen lia .. -opllon. . b!Jal· '!'Ink t•Pjclly. • • • • f
pooed to fu~escalation of jet !Jl&hts. miles tile same plt<\,;li(lljl:~ l\>fS3 ... ~d;~c.\l"!~!i!r'i&. op .~' Tlie -t61i!'~fllles~'i l'i>
at ·County A1tport • .Bui IM',,;.sY.!Qi·,t.o;,,"".<i!Y. ,1!r ~:*-~II, -~' .. · ~~ 11 1 ~'fall· '."!..Ulln · thJ , . · SacramentO' -wOOld l)e. a ·.,.,..,~<11Wl1)iJl)fbillrie~!'·a.~ .. !" of~r~'r'·deS1~UOtr~y .. ;*)' ,.. '" ;f~1~1 ; ,t'
stire Hogg was drowned as they saw him
swallow a lot of 'A;ate~ while stru"1!ng to
swim toward his companions.
Patterson was in WOr!e · condlUOn than
the Miss Runyon because he had maele
several dives to try to locate Hogg after
he disappeared.
The surviving two had on lifebelts and
w~re clinging to buoy1nt seat cushions.
The rescue tooi< Piace about 7:20 p.m.
and it was dark bclore the tilewsOOy got
the pair back to the customs dock at San
Diego.
Baillie said customs offiCers wanted to
search the pair for possible contraband.
Newsboy was under sail becaUse she
does not have an auxiliary motor.
"We would never have heard the cries
ror help if we had had a motor running,"
Baillie said. ,
The woman told .Balllie several motor
boats had passed very close to them dur4
ing the four houn, but none heard her
cries for ·help.
Oruage
Weatller . '
Our red-faced weatherman la
ttrying again with predic:UOn cft
partly ,sunny weather fa< Wecines-
.day and temperatures in the mld-
'60's along the coast.
INSIDE TODAY
'
IJ W<JJ. prertv much lik; pre11-
fouf raci1; tht imal£ boot1 1 mall• the but of th< win<l3 •!'!!
todk mojor llottors OPfl' ( ~
lllrptr, i>ll<_l Jn fh• ·~~I . f"'
tcnadO race .. Raac ao. • • • 1
venlen<e'lo loca) government. Mllldclpal ed -and will btnr._ -~ !I'. "IJii'.< P-a an4{Asi9<\~lef' ¥ a , 410 '· J 11.panese . • Jed .
officll.ls, faced with oil, •wage and beca• of the ~~of l',*1•v~1 1 t'n)e(rqport.'"A ~· by'the''ComUy .. ~ ~ . 1 l · •1 · •'"' ....... ~
freeway problem.o, lately baYO bad lo . ~.for-ioctl ~"'."'"~ 'illOhool 'vj.>l'on ,., .... p1....,•a °'"' chi!jnlil«l. roK!O·!UPIJ -r ~e~ipotifl.e mwhupt , , 'n ::'.:;:' C:::, ~'
mille 8'verai trips lo the state capital to dlltr1cll, county o!flciell ariil ln~ed' js ....: 'whoile Oori\ntfrclal f!iibln are . kllltd •IO}>e.....,:on ·~·· \lfghw111.fil .,.. """" .,. ,.,,..._ "
prtUforle(islttiveactJoo. ctUzens who dtaJ ~~wt~ ti. .Urti.H!ti11k>a.f00.mllerldius. i. • • l:hC f~yhollday,thattndedM~ '"~ , ... ' =~ ::;;:
Wh.at ls . Uktlt ii that councilmen on various state offict.11 ta $1crnnento. '' l In ·6rr/ eveilt, .the poliUcal ~ o(. fie apan tirOtldcasUna· ~ wl :ti':,_.., '.,~ r.:t.:"•• •:
i1onday will elect to take no paslUon on Benscoter sald +-tbtr~ ls ·~~ ''a sttal( ,_~t.IOn lart plain e®ugh : auppol:t oC day. lt ~~·ttci 20 on Ja~ 11r1 ..,!Mtl" 1• ,_,_ •
the_Air ~al application to the state Public communl\y o( businesl and lndutltW·fn:. tM illJ!!ts by <.'Ounty supU\'ison could • vi ll!d-mou,,';;';::::+-.;.r"-:"~-;;=!!!!•!,• ,__.!:;;. :,::.w..;... ,1
Utlfltlu Commls..lon (eUCl. teoest" between tlle";Ci>Tllltl' o d.-,.eil"J>!O!e140.lli< moil Ol!ecUva arp -tsrA-,. : d'l!ltll1t"som'e l(ll!lc,~ '"'"' --
Fooed willl the same req11Ut, Oranc• Sacramento. (Set Ag\ c:.u., P.,. %f Ulal eitended more !hail lo mli<s, • '------"---"----'
' ' )
. - -- - ------._.:._ -.. --~ ---':___ .. --'...
t
.,-,,.------------------~-------.----
•
2 DAll.V PILOT " T""4ty, M., 6, 1969
PILOT
'
1 LOGBOOK ,
'Disneyizing' the ~ oods
Not as Bad as It Sounds
' · 117 Al\TllUll R. VINSEL '
Of ... DM1r ...., .. .,, '
Mlnaral Kin< we a Sierra wilderness wbert ha1l my life ago, the gtna.
er-colored mule deer never tasted Weber's Bread and root beer wu 50 centa • bottle. • -
SO I wu aaddened to !earn the picturelque timberline valley In the
5'quola N1Uaaa! FOftll Is to-become a 135 million Walt
Dl.mty Productlona winter wonderland.
"Qne Disneyland ii more than enough," aald a col-
\eqUe arehly u we dllmally aiacuwd Mickey Mouae
oa anowaboel,' giaot teactfps under tbe pines and Bambi
apelled from hla native paradlae. .
Sometlmea, however, ooe jumps to conclua.ions when
be'a lost touch with a place for too long a Un;ie, ~
tiJM Is the great ~ of people and phlces.
* Maybe I had a phl!oaophlcal chip on my shoulder on
the way to hear Robert B. Hicks, project manager, outline the 80-acre r~a
Uonal f:.i.cillty ud its ramllications before the Costa Mesa Chamber or Com·
mere<. d Virtually Inaccessible during the winter months, '10 ,000 cai;ipers an
sporbmen nonethelea drove the dizzying 19-mile trip from the matn highway
to the valley 1ut summer' a atartling count.
So many people, packed into such a anall aru -Mineral King Is like a
chalice carved out of bald granite by a river and set with 20 jewel-like lakes-
created sanitation problems and sewage pollution. . ,
Thia would have been unthinkable that summer as I htked three miles ,
seemingly into the sky Itself, fishing for fat brown trout lying at the l~ke
bottom like lop, oo what was to be my father 's final trip to the mountams
he loved.
Nobody lhougbt much about pollution 14 years ago.
Now we must, and under agreetents hy the Disney organization, the
U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies, the d~elopen will provide
proper sanitation systems. They wW build a modem hlgh'lt'ay cutting the ~
minute journey in half. Winter sports resources for Caill0f!l1ana will be great..
Jy broadened. KuraJ ~ County will have 2,500 new JObs and $f milllon
more annually in taxes.
• Mineral King wll1 never be the way I remember tt, but nothing ~ Is
and Hicks' talk cleared up some prejudiced misconceptions hued on snap
judgment.
Development of a winter aporU haven by the management of the Ana·
heim Magic K.Jngdom -in an aru already auffEl'fng touri.st-ltla -does not
mean -Taco Bell franchises.on,the John Muir .. Trail. ...... ·~ ........ ... .. ····-·~· ··-
The Sierra Club would probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
In hand·to..hand combat anyway, should such prostitution get beyond the point
of ludicrous point-making.
The Mineral King story, It appears, la a dHferent one and should have •
happy ending.
From P .. e 1
NARCO RAIDS NET 34 ••• •
Hlllltlqtoo Beocb. wu llCheduled 'for
Moy •.
All others arrested are expected to be
arraJiD«\ today or(IV~ay. ,
Ams1ed l\lon<lay night on cluirl!'I of
sale of LSD were : Clinton M. Southwell,
2.8, ol 811 Delaware · St.; Steven C. Suon,
22, of 8221 Foz!Wl SL; Richard Wayne
Peston, 21, ol 811~ Delaware St.; Larry
Brian Murin, 21, of 11114 Delaware St.;
Karen Marie Fanner, 22, of 8lllh
Delaware St.; Genivleve Wilson, 18, of
811 Delaware St., and IJnda Kay Bentley,
J.8, of_811 Delaware.St., all of Huntington
Beach.
QTllERS llE!J> .
Others arm:ted Mao§ly night include
Richard A. White, 21, 06,12893 Adelle St ,
Garden Grove; and from Costa Mesa,
Archie D. McMyne, 28, of l&OiWilaon St.;
Marjorie Lynn Schweer, 18, of 2932 Royal
Palm St.; Qieri Lee :Weavtt, 23, of 180
Wilsoo St., 4fld a female juvenile from
Costa Mesa.
Women arrested Monday were taken to
Orange County Jail, women's dlvllion,
while the men were booked into Hun-
t.ingtoo Beach City J all.
Arttsted over the weekend were, from
Hlllltington Beach' Stuart E. Orton, 31, of
Art Show Scheduled
Opening of the Seal Beach Elementary
School Art Show will be Friday, at the
Seal Belch Methodia:t Church, at 3:30
p.m. The show will be open to the public
through May 12. •
OAll V PilOT
l•tMrt N, WH4 l"l'nkllnot .,.. ""*'ltflel'
Jar:ii l . C"'l:f .
YICll 'rnl*ftt -GeMr ~
1'1-n 11:••¥11 l:~llw n-.. A. M11r,llh1e
""-11991 ... 1•1"' """rt w .•• ,.. wn11, ... "'" AnKIMI ..... ,..,....._.
1011... (ff'y '-""' ................... .,......
lot 1111 Str••t
Mtilff"t I.Ur.Mi P.O .... 7'0, •2641 ---~ ._,.l ml Wiit .......... IW9f9 c..t. Mml! lOl9 W•I .. ., ltrwt l ...... a...trl1 m ,.._ A,..
174111 Udo tine; Lenore L; Orton, 31, of
1740l 1Jdo Lane; 'lbomu Lee Flnley m,
22, of 421 Lake St.; Thomas John Lyon,
20, d UI Lake SL; John Edward Kunlg,
22, of 311 7th St.; Edgar Mourlco Flllch ,
Jr., 25, of 21S 7th St.
And Duane Sylve.!ter Schaefer, 21, of
316 7th St.: Raymond Hurrell Odom, 21,
of 316 7th St.; Terry Charles Seekamp,
19, or •316 7th St.; Ida Marie O'Steen, 21 .
of 316 7th St.: Wendy F. Cross, 18, Of 316
7th St.; James. Ra.ymond Mattheis, 25 of
311 Frankfort Ave.
Also Lawrence Duane Ritchie, 2l( of
213 Baltimore St.; Brian .Leroy Frantz,
19, of 213 Baltimore St.; Cheryl Kay
Mortensen, 18, <1f 9432 Lanai Circle, and
Richard Charles Woman, 19, Of · 8012
Mermaid Circle . John Vernon Martin, 23,
of 7901 15th St., Westminster was also ar-
rested in_...tbe weekend raids.
Those arrested Saturday and Sunday
were booked on charges or either
possession of marijuana or sale of mari-
juana.
Mexican Woman
Drowns in Pool
A Mexican woman from Ensenada
employed by a Santa Ana family drowned
Monday evening in a backyard swimming
pool, the Orange County Coroner's Office
reported.
Maria Mulgado, 20, housekeeper ind
babysitter for the Charle11 E. Chunlng
family, of 92tl s. Dennis St., wu round
fi oating fact down in the pool by I friend
who dfopped by to bring her some mall,
pollce sald.
Myron Babkow, of 9871 Voyager Road,
Huntingt.on Beach, said the oldest of the
two Cbwtlng children, Donna Sue, 5, told
him Mia MU:lgado was playing ln the
pOOl with her and her sister Karen, 4. The woman evldenUy slipped into the d e e p
end and drowned. She could not swim.
Santa Ana fire and police department
rescue units were called but were un1ble
to revive the woman.
Finch Slated to Give
Commencement Talk
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Robert H.
Finch, U.S. Secretary or Health, Eduta•
lion Ind Welfare, will deliver the com-
mencement address June 5 at the
tJnlveratty of Southern CaUforni1.
Tbt former California 11 e u t e n a n t
governor will receive an honorary doc·
lor'• decr«.
Valley Bobby Sox
Basehallers to Play
Fountain Valley'• t-member Bobby Soz
girll' aollball team wW be pitted •Ralmt
four girls caIUna thtnu:clves "'Mle Queen
and h!r Jlla\d1"· 11 I p.m. Saturday at
Fountaln V•lf•J High School.
The traveling exhibition team rcaturt1
-"<Ill..,.;' lloli• Beaird. bllled . ..as...the fastest junior girl pitcher In the world.
.... ---------~~
...-~------.~··--~~----....... -... ............. -~~----····
Pl•• P• l
PUEBLO .•• . ' . claulflld materl~ nrtn1 an emergen-
cy,
-'11111 IL Edward R, Murphy Jr., a·
ecuu .. -oi Illa l'llobto, be PiD •
1et1er d idmoil!llm "' 'fail!nl ...
................ ._,"' 1111, "'' al the seizure especially ln the 1bfp's m1Jor
internal task of emergency destrµction or
classified material."
Harris aaid at his mother'• home In
Melrose, Mass., that he was "very, very
happy" with Chalet's decision not to.take
dbdpllnary action. He sald be woukl 10
to Washlnc\On toan for a new a&ll.ln·
ment.
The coUrt of inquiry, it wu disclosed,
also found · that letters of rtprlmand
should be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Johnson, commander of naval forces In
Japan, &nd. Cfpl. Evmtt B. Gladding,
now reUrtd.
The court held that Johnson, who has
since moved to a new assignment, was
"derelict in the performance of duty" by
failing to plan properly for emergency
support <1f the Pueblo in a confrontation
and "negligently failing". to verify
destruction procedures ·f<lr claulfied
documents.
Gladding, then director <lf the N1vy
security group in the Pacific, was held by
th e court to have been derelict for "fail-
1 ing to develop procedures to insure the
r eadiness" of the Pueblo's research sec·
Uon. 1
The Navy said the Pueblo's officers and
men d"re now wjdely scattered -on ·
leave, discharged or assigned to new sta-
tions. They all stayed In the San Diego
area while the court of inquiry was in
session.
At a news conference explaining his
position, Chafee said he had not talked to
President Nixon about the course of :ic-
tion he had chosen.
There has been 8<lme public controversy
over the question of whether the Navy
was trying tq saddle Bucher and his men
with the blame for lhe Pueblo debacle
when higher-ups oogbt tc> be held ac-
countable, too. · _ _ _
fSaid Chafee: "I think it is clear that
everybody was advancing <ln a certain •
assumption and that asaumpUoo proved
to be an invalid one" -mainly, that a
ship operaUng on the high seas would
always be safe from piracy.
H.e-·would· not· a.n.wer ·directly whether
Bucher will ever be given command of
another ship, saying only that Bucher '!!
future assignments will be handled in the
usual fashion, in competition with other
officers.
He said the Navy has asked Bucher
about his personal preferences for a new
as.signment and "then it will proceed
from there."
From. Page 1
BUCHER ..•
i!f the hi&h~ authority In the Navy.". ~
Ch.a.fee, talking with reporters, said th~
court of inquiry, in its findings, did not go
lnto detail on the C{lnduct of the Pueblo
crew while in captivity, although it noted
in general terms that their conduct was
good.
The court praised some mem~s
ianicularly for t h e i r C{lnduct in Cap.
.ivity. Their names were not released.
The full findings of the court were not
made public-only Chafec's summary of
them.
In announcing his ruling, Chafee said
he personally made "no judgment" C{)O·
ceming guilt or innocence, ruling <1nly
that neither discipline nor morale nor any
other interest required further pro-
ceedings.
Asked whether thi3 left the Pueblo of.
ficers under a "cloud," Chafee aaid be
did oot think so.
* * * Congress Chiefs
Praise Decision
Of Navy Secretary
WASHINGTON (AP) -House teade:ni
of both parties Tuesday supported Navy
Secretary iobn H. Chafee's decision bar-
ring disciplinary action again.st the com·
mander and another of!icer of the in-
telligence vessel Pueblo.
Speaker John W. McCormack (0.
'-1ass.). saki he believes "the secretary of
the navy has taken the right action."
H<1use Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford or Michigan !aid he agreed with the
decision not to take action against the
Pueblo oHicers.
Cha(et overruled the Navy court or in-
qu iry recommendation tha t Cmdr. Lloyd
Bucher and Lt. Stephen R. Harris, In
charge of the research attachment on
board, be tried by a general court
martial .
Sen. John StennJs (D·Mi.ss.). chairman
<1{ the Senate Anned Services Committee,
said he would have to study the report
carefull)r but that, on the basis of present
information , he sees no firm reason for
his committee to go Into the Pueblo case,
Sen. Peter H. Dominick (R-C:Olo.), who
tind contended that the Navy wu trying
to blame Bucher, said :
"l am hopeful the Senate Armed
St!J'Vices Committee will go loto this mat·
ter even more thoroughJ)t to avoid having
any other officer subjected to the same
kind of harassment."
Rep. Ot~ G. Pike (t>N-Y.), ch.tlrman ot a lfouse Armed Se.rvk:u subcommll·
tee llillch hM Investigated the .Putblo
case, said he agreed with Cbafee'a 1c--
tion.
'"1'te ,Navy court of Inquiry took a
hard-line position." Pille told reporters,
"whtch lhe secretary tempered with
mercy.''
Pike said the secretary's atatement
amaunleot 14 ll'lni !hero. was blame
tnough for everyone In the Pueblo ct&e.
•
•
BOY OF THE MONTH
Mike Contr1r•1
Thousands Plan
Charleston March
CHM\l,ESTON, S'.C. (AP) -The Rev.
Ralph David Abernathy sald today he ex·
peels thowands of persons to march in
Charleston Sunday • "in a dramatic
witness q:alnst government opprtsslon."
AberDathy, head of the Southern Cbril·
Uan Leadenhlp Confertoce, s a I d
congressmen and Is.bor leaders have been
Invited to join the demoQslraUon and he
expects muy of them to accept.
He aald the Mothers' Day march for
poor pfople, originally scheduled for
Washington, has ~een switched to
Charleston because ':the e:yes..oLthe .na-
tion are focused here." Abernathy is
spearheading the drive for union recogni-
B.each .High
..Picks_ Top
I
Boy, Girl
~ ' ~
Star Cheek and Mike COntreras have
been chose~ Boy and Girl of the Month at
Huntington Stach High School.
Miss Cbee.t, daughter of Mr. anctM.n.
Rlcltard Cheek, t729f Lee Clr<le. ~ M
active member or the Girls AlhletJe
AMOCialion and bas distinguished herself
as member or the advanced tennis team
during her aophomore, junior •nd senior
years.
In addition she has been a junior vars!·
ty and varsity cheerleader for the past
three years, Girls League officer,
member or the Student C<lngress, and a
member of the German Club and the' Pep
Club. "
Mike Contreras i.s a star athlete and
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Salvador Con-
treras. 19012 Delaware St.
He has betn a member of the school's
varsity basketball squad sin<:i! he was a
sophomore and was named to the all·
Sunset League team for the past two
years. Thi.o: ye1.r he ws.s selected as top
player of tbe Sunset League for the se-
cond straight year.
The Girl and Boy ·of the Month are
cllOlen by the high school's Glrb and
Boys leagues.
Monthly winnef.a are automaUcally
candidates for a Girl and Boy of the Yeai:
C,,Oteat.
Citizens Committee
To Meet on Thursday
tion of hospital workers who have bee~ on The seventh meeUng of the Huntington
strike against two Charleston bosp1taJs· -Beach Union High School District
for more than slz weeks. Citizens Committee on Maximum Use of
Abtnrathy, free under $500 bail on Sc~I ~ac~Ues will be at I p.m. Thur ..
charges of violating 8 court order which day l~ district offices, 1902 I?t.h St. . . . · Dur1ng the session, committeemen are liIDJts the number of pickets at the two scheduled to review a suggested ques-
hospltals, was to leave Charleston during tionnaire for dlacovering the oeeds of
the afternoon. studenta from minority groups.
•
Spanish·
•
12.000
sq. ~.
of
Top
Quality
I
GIRL OF THE MONTH
· Ster Cheek
..
Franc at Bottom;'"
' Bank Intervenes
PARIS (UPI) -The l<'rench franc
plummeted to its rock bottom level today
and gold prices soard to their hi ghest"·
since April 30 in a new burst <lf in:.
ternationaJ jitters about F r a n c e ' I ·
economic future . 1
The franc hit 4.9740 to the U.S. dollar:
forcing the Bank of FranCi! to intervene
to shore it up. It was lhe lowest point it
has touched since former President -
Charles de Gaulle's defeat and resigna-
tion April 28.
From Page 1
AIR CAL •••
ment for them. The PUC ts not e:rpected
to overlook the fact that supervisors, by,
law, run the airport~
The PUC has yet to set a date for a
public hearing on the issue. But
Benscoter said Air Cal is pushing for ac~
tion "as expediti<1usly as possible."
•
No
Money
Down
First
Payment
June ' -· .1969
our exclusive
6 pc. ensemble
Chedl .... cwtMI ..-111')1 ,..._, ..,_ ....
Jll"k•"'N tWWlilntl .............. Mt!, -"'! ll:tdt~wt'llH'tf ..... ,.,...., .. "'1ftt' ..... c--
11""1""' m lull•"'--•""9 rMl!trt I~'°"' •In fteorfc)I Ma-.. C9fl• hlllle & dltolct rl
fttJI •r .... ,. ~ • 1,...W! Otfl, A_..
.,. Aall ... Wlln., ........ .,.,... C"""'•ladtr
lllllt .. "'II l'LUS _,..,hill hlflflt ..... -
•nid .. rMldl... """" f""'k ,... "''' ..,.,., rlglll'• ._,..., """"" • • • ll'IWI .,. -..
M ••tcl9tM -1111J Mt -Im IJloiarL.,..
'
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YOUR
CHO ICE $
ONLY Why pay up to $399 $799 for this
lavish group •••
•
FOi llTHJI OP
THESI 2 GROUPS
Fairy l•le !;eclroom al every
"
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AT HARBOR IOULEYAllD
USE YOUR
CREDIT
CARDS
~
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• • ---· ,,.,. . . -.. ~ ~ ' Sadllletiaek
• • YO!;. 62, NO. 108._ 2 SECTIO~S, 30 PAGES
·ue 0
r . . .
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pawn t"M \ .
Escort Slaita
.. .
, Mi·ssion C,~ast -So.cialite
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Trail r Mr·s·. Peek Shot
He Hadn't Otter
Been Friendly
J... LAGlJNA .NIGUEL -A si.x·monlh-old
pet sea ··otter named "Peanuts" bit a I Monarch Bay boy on the left forearm ·
Monday ·when a group of children found
the animal ·wandering loose and at·
l tempted to pet it.
• ··'Steve-HaythrOne;-8, of 2;2871 King John •·1· . Lane, was treated by a phy9cian and
I Peanuts was placed under quarantine at
). th~ home of its owo(r, pr. John P. Eriks-
moen CJf 32662 Empress Way.
I
'! I
County Animal Cootrol officer Jack
Edwards said the 20-pound gray and
white fema le otte,r wandered out of its
owti~r's backyard when someone left a
gate open,
Neighborhood children-spotted the
3nimal an~l/tbe biUog followed. Edwards
said Dr. Eriksmoen purchased Peanuts a
month ago in Los Angeles.
·• Rescue llnit Slated
School Employe8
Seeking Increase
Of 15 Percent
•
By IDCHARD P. NAIL
l Of ttlt Diii\' ...... ,, ...
A 15 percent salary tncr~se ls sought
by the classified (non-teaching) employea
cf Laguna Beach Unified School District.
The emptoyq have asked for ~ coun~
Jlroposal from the board and d1~u~s1on
ttriie that would include as a ma]Ol' item
the size of .tgcremental (built-in yearly)
salary increases.
Trustees at an adjourned rfl.eeting Wed-
nesday at 7:30 p.m. will likel_y set a date •
for' the discussions. The meeung ha~ been
rescheduled from tonight.
Or. William Ullom, di14'ktf: superin-
terldent. said he bad not · yet ca~at~
the · total amount that a 15 -~t tn·
crease in clasSlfied wages ·w:ould rpein lo
the district but will.
•
BEA VY DEMANDS
Laguna Building
Up $1 Million
....
At a recent board meeting, Dr:. Norn:ian
Browne bOard president, told classified represe~taUves tha~ he (ell-they had will·
Jngly la'ken a back seat last year to the
"heavy demands brought in by
'.~~~1~~s~:;: UCI .. Flap: Students Won?
frolh Dr. Jerome Klrk of UC! proposing ra~om study or high school stu~ta (or ....
the purpooe of determlnln( behavior M F l M b S 0 C • ~r='~!.tenns o1 <1ropou11, biP!Hes any. acu ty em ers tew ver · onces~wns .
_'_!!1 Kirk, unsuccessfdl in his bid as a By THOMAS l!'OR11JNE .In 1IP$ context._ 5amuel C. McCullcch Tbat was·°"'!' the acliviats' vic~es. ~ board ,candJdate1 is a UCI, in-Of,,.. a.iw "lltt ,,.., tendered hls raiin&Uon ai" dean of 'Ibe other was faculty conceSslon ~ ~tor. Dr. Ullom satoid ~:i~be~v~ The brash, young students have won humanWes Monday in a letter to faculty. permit ·studenls, »to. tecOmmend on the a government ,grant s."""1 v ora concess· s For the record, be pYe u hil reaacm a ·
pat;erns. The s:Oadcas't and prou,d senior faculty deatz;.e to return tO fWJ.tlme ttacblng. He hiting ol two per<;ent or protesscrs.
OTHER BUSINESS are feeling betraiyed. will remain at UCI u prof'eMor of The student volce decision was made
lrr other business Wednesday, the board n.~.. . !'fled •• •·• ha . th hllt.ory. ~' • · by a majority of the 7$ professors at• wilf v v"" ~m~ I " • per&Hllps. CN~ t t 18 -e It •1)90 was ~earned that . jirdf~r of tel\dtng ·t.M lat .session of the Academic
-'. eceiv,_e1 a' stall .report'. on the extent-J~oe"'.'.".!.·""~~~~ '~If .;· Hlolery,~'-11-iH~I • liM'WW:10 Sehalo, tile &QVemlng •bOdy lo which 210 of vandaHsm. 1 ~ • • \ ._ ;·~·~ >-y ,....,. ~-t_ · !!>':.~lit~·~~..! .,.m ~·~at thi.._~illv,ll'IJly -Appoint trustees t.arry1 Taylor and The dissident stuaenlS have !iinoect ol M'~ll. Hinke .,_Hnilid tb give lacultr,..member~ be1ong ..
Robert Turner as the board's ~,:~~ · their protest because they feel they have 1 reuon for leaving. • ChiJ_rman of the Academic.8enate JS:"1-
team to meet with teacher m:L. ed aceompliabed all they· can Ulis ~l • Hoftvw. he was one ol ~ aenior ne~ W"f9id said,IOme professor•··~~te
representalives on salary propoiall. year. They have won vJctortes. ... hiltoriw wliO • r~mtllid t be out of "sypipetby 'lf'llh ~ate a:.ctlfi:itf'
-Consider spllltilli the •10,000 <Olt of• Many faculty members. mtamlhllt, cl!anmaal o1 AllllllJ1! ~ of !late "'-1 to • .iay awiy from -I iys~ o1 11ft11 siplll to &low down are stewing. Ont ...Uor profesaor aid be ·lllMory Georae. W. Kent> n.t Jeoom. """ling•· Tbero. was •I walkout Wee
trallic p1st El Morro School wilh the fe<ls the. campus adminiSlration has bent m<Ddetiim wu oyerrµl<d bf. ~lor ...L~ ac•. . • " . , 1
State Division of Highway~ • over blckwanll to placate the acttvlOlt. Daniel G. AldrldJ .,Jr. '"' clc!vlce .9' 1' I The lltmqr•profeaor, wbo1"!W ·II>~
-Consider for ldoptlon .o hillb tcbool He utd the coot has been high In faoulty review committee, end ~wltr~,..... mlbi • ....nitd,._ uld io hit• op1iitiin
(itt SALA111£S, Paco Ii morale. moted to lllOc'lato FOi•-· ·· · · ···'(Sel-Oc·mVIN!!, ~!) "
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Fortim Discn*8
Problems From
Youth Transients
The Laguna Beach Coordinating. COJn-
cil next Monday will field a program on
pro.bl~ms Qrlsing from youthlul ·translenls
in Lagun;t BeacJt ,.
The meeting will be held In the com·
munity room of the CagUna Federal
building, 260 Ocean Ave., beginning at
,7:30 p.m. , _ •. _
Mrs ... Helen 1<eeley, council"vlc;,prefl·
dent, ,.Id the program w\11 lncfiisle:
-Max Rappa~. Youth Council, San Clemente, ·ouWMtg ·ttie'-worti dt ,Uiat
group: . .. '.
..-An ·account by i fotmet narcottcs
user. of her· uperienca: ' li1d 1 lier · .
rehlbllitaUon.· · , 1 _ -t ~
-Di.ocussion by 119ier Carter, Sliutll
Orange Coulity YMCA dlrector,: ot•'focal
youth prqblen'l!J. ' I -~ description of mources of cotfiity
agencies for-assisting .youth aOd fim.Ule1
, by Don u,uslrQlt>, c1eu-y Pll•tn·
tioo ·coardloator JOr Grange County. ·
• ~A aummary ·!>Y :Vleo-Mayoo:.Jooeph O'Sulll~an of ourrenvtfforll.fly clv.io-mln-
ded' incjividullt and '....,.,.to hanc!Je
lr'!l!slen,t lOUlh 1'!1!1tl«ltl. " ·
-A sum!Qiry ·o1Jocar~,,,..-ror.
' yout/1 UlllWlct ~Jloy·<;iry, mlnt>ter
of the Laguna Beach Methodbi Cburch. , Th•'1'1'!'1 ·ol ~:•lll4ilc ... tile' nUqlberl .~ or~ _f!'. ~· translent.1 11 , aJl!l wby \b01·""""lt 'flllJ~ Up pro-•
. b~ ol:t111Pl~ ~.....Uca .na meillctl <*'f, •
·,
• • ·-
Teday'•~J
:"N.;f'. ~
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Rain, Rain Just
W on?t Go Away
j
J
For the third sll·aight day, the Orange
Coast and most of Southern Callfo~
was dampened today by a persistent
drizzle which kept temperatures mired in
the low 60's. -
A high-level atmospheric dist\lrbance
was blamed for the soggy but hardly
stormy conditions which brought showers
in the mountain and desert areas and
sporadic sprinkles •loo&:· the Orange Coast. . •
The condition was expected to move
eastward into Arizona by Wednesday, but
night and morning ·cloudine!! was: atill
'Predicted tor coastal . areas. Sunny. af·
temoons were rorecut through the' rest
of the week.
Oranlfe (;out
Wea .. ~
, Our red·faced wea'iherman ls
trying qain '~lh predlctl'!ll of ·
partly SUMY weather for Wedne.-
day and temperalures In the mid-,'.
60'8 along the cout. .
INSIDE TOnAY .
' A UCI Negro pro/esS-Or saui
student prote.stor.s I.eek the wJ.tl·
to ~ .. n . ih~r t>alt1e• agOimt Utt 1
1
.illfminlsraion. Pdde to:· ... " ,.. ..
(•ll,..._111 ~ I Mv,,.. ...... 2f ~ .. ~ •41,•, =-= ...... ., .,_, CNIJ ><M c,........ . ti ·~""' ....... • ..... M.tlc• ,. IMllt ..,,. U.11 • ....,..,.,_,...,. 1~•
.... lJllMllt u ·--......... »II ""'-Jl,n ,......._ M ..... _ " -. ........... 1 ......... . ... .. .....,, ,, ..... ....... " -.... . ' ....... ..... .,
""'"' ta._ 0-
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T"""'1, M•J 6, 196'1
PILOT
LOGBOOK
'DisneyiZing' the ·:W otids
. Not as Bad. as It Sounds
llJ-Aln'llllll II. VIN!IEL °' ......... .., ..... ~ Mineral. Kine --Sierra wilderness wh~haU my Ill. ago, !he glng·
·er<0lorecf mule deer never tasted Weber's Bread ind •root beer wu 50 cents
a bottle. ·
So I was saddened to learn the picturesque timberline valley in the
Sequoia National Fore.st is to become a '85 million Walt
Disney Product.Jons winter wonderland.
"One Disneyland is more than enough," said a col-
league archly, as we dismally discuseed Mickey Mouse
on snowlboes, giant teacups under the pines and Bambi
expelled from his native paradise.
Sometimes, h9wever, one jumps tO conc1uslona when
he's lost touch with a pltct for too long a-Urne, because u.me is the great changer of people and places.
* Maybe I bad a philoeopblcal chip on my ohoulder on
Uie way to heAr Robert B. Hicks, project manaier, outltm! the 90-acre recre• '
tional facility and lts ramificatJons before tbe Colta Mm Chamber Of, Com-merce. . __ ·
Virtually lnaccelslble during !he winltr -Iba. '111,111111 campers and
~en nonetheleu drove !he dizzying 1t-mll1 trip from !he main hlgilway
lo the valley last summer, a. startling count.
So many people, packed into such a iunall aru -Mineral King Is llkt i
chalice carved out of bald granite by a river and tet wttb 20 jewel-Ute lakes-
crealed sanitation problems and sewage pollution.
This would have been unlhlniable that iummer ii I biked three miles,
seemingly into !he sky 11 .. u, fi>hing for fat brown trout Tying at !he lake
bottom like logs, on what was to be fuy father's final trip to the mountains
be loved. .~
Nobody thought much about pollution 14 years ago. . * Now we must, and under agreemenl.t by the Dlaney organizaUon, the
U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies, the developers will provide
proper aanltaUon lf)'llteml. They wtn build a modern highway cuttini !he 115<
minute journey Jn half. Winier lporta resourcu for Ca1Homltn1 will be grea~ ,:!Y broadened, Rural Tulare County will ha~ 2,IOO new joba _and 14 mlWoo
more annually ln tuea.
Mineral Klng will never be the way I remembtr It, but nothing ever ta:
and Hicks' talk cleared up · some prejudiced mlsconceptlom based on snap
judgmeht.
Development of a winter sports haven by the management of the Ana·
heim Magic Kingdom -in ari area already sufferlng tourist·ltis -does not
mean Taco Bell franchises on the John Muir Trail. -
The Sierra Club would probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
ln hand·to.hand combat anyway, should such pro1Ututton pt beyond the point
of ludicrous polnt·making.
The Mineral King atory, It appears, is a dlllerent one and should have a happy ending.
Capo. District Cuts One
Hour from School Day
Biiii achoo! !luden!I of U.. Caplati'lno
Untffed School Dtstrtct will Jose one
period of inltrucUon each day nett year
aa the result of 1 curriculum curtailed
because of lnadeguate achoo! finances.
Fm:tunen students at the district San
Clemente High School Will take a max·
imwn of five periods where previously
they were allowed to take siJ: or aeven
periods. ·
SOphomores, juniors and seniors may
take~• mini.mum of five +periods and a
nwdmum of alx. Previou.ely they too
could take seven periods of inatrucUon.
The reduct.ion of the class time will
reault In the aaving of seven or eight
teachers' salaries and Chll8 materla.la,
Prlnclpal Darrel Taylor told trustees
because their progtam could most easily
be separated from the rest of the cur-
riculum.
In other action Monday, the Capistrano
trustees approved employment of an ap.
praiser to evaluate the old San Juan
Capistrano Ju'nior High School 18 acre
site. It may become a city hall site.
-The d.lstrlct also Joined other county
school dJStricts and the library in an anti·
trust suit against the publishers of
chilcfreits library boo.ks. PrJc.e.JJ.xing is
charged.
•
FestiVal .Asks -:60 Mi>fe Seats ..
'!lit r.1u .. 1 " Arla' ..... ilq ·c111
.....µ iij~ '"~ ....... .. !he~ ... , ... l4p"
i..cant'• .,,.. ,._ .. -'
Willi IJ " lbt illflo 1-vtd Ill' .....
plimenlary Uckti holders, the PN>Ject
would increase paid Ralii'lg in the bowl
by 43 additional n seats.
Wllllam D, Martin, Festival board
president, 1n a 1etter to the council
pointed out that this would gross $3,870 in
addltiont! revenue from the· sell-out
Pageant ol !he Maslers. The city ahare
for ' yur "ould be '$67T. Tbe city baa
From Page I
UC IRVINE ...
Academic Senate meetings have become
"a wild·circus."
'
' . -oil<ld to niYe 11.t share !he first ! fuodi , 11y· F""P' ,of persont •inl!lll ,..,. -·· ~----• di\!1~.
'!lit ..... ---l"1 for ~-in ~ " ~ Ill ,...._,_ !he ITnl based tllo SOclely for l<riohna Co~1onao"4. ......-.-seaaoo on -Probably will not oppose JIU!
lltlmlted tnetel1ltlan coat of $1,875. Enterprises, Inc. i.pplicaUon to ttahdei-
In other business Wed.neaday, the coun-""an on-sale general liq~r llctnse . from
di: ' · ' ""· ' _., Gale H. and -Leonara G. Pili'ai-1161~.
-Wm likely deny and r.fer to !he In· Coast Highway ..
aurance carrie'r nOoaClam83t Claims of -Probably will not oppose lr"'1Sftr of
Telonlc lndu'\f!es,Jn< .. flOS,Oll!; Mr. and Saddleback Inn. 696 S. Coast Highway,
Mra. ~erbert W. Smithson, fl'7,410 ; Alba on-sale ce.neral liquor license lnvolvinl•
EIU., $1,801; Wayne EIUs, $3,150; .and 100 percent sale oI s£ock. .:..
Kenneth -Wumanp., $2,SSO. -WUJ consider a claim f{Om Mn.
-la to rule 131 "1 applicalion ~ JO!icil Dorothy C. Leander, 2M Cyprtu Dr!V., ·
Trustees in ·capo Given
Plans for 2 New Schools
Plans tor two new Capistrano Unified
School District 1ehools -one in Laguna
gatherings of 500 or more people were
planned.
He 111d legillallon baa been~ lbal
Is "halMllling In lta lmPlaclallooo." He
noted that a c:onuDJ~itee "u uked "to
aetdo within 10 day1, oil the top ol lhelr
beadl, !he moot Incredibly COll)pllcated
taaue" of lludent patticlpalloo In blrlnc
and firing of·piOI....... -
• Niguel and one in North San Clemente -
were presented for trustee cons~uatJon
Monday.
Superintendent Charles L. Kenney said
that the square footage norm4lly thrown
into such buildings would be used in
teaching areas. He caUed it a way of get4
ting the most out of the diltrk:t's dollars
and noted that the large roonui are need-
ed onJy about one hour per week. He ma
the new school wouldn't nted the big
rooms because of the way ll is designed.
The prol-r claimed YOUJll wtatant
profeaaon have aligned tbemaelves with
activists and are voling u a bloc. Any
quesUon of -legality raised is brushed
aside u a ob!tructionlst, he aald.
He also old in department afler
department there are junior, non-tenured
fJlculty membera who ahaTce their heads
r\ght along with the 1enlor faculty.,
The end result of all Ulla •0mllchief.''
he aald, has been a serious deteriora-
tion of faculty morale.
Many olher profe110t11 bold that view.
Many don't. Quite a number are con-
cerned · about tbt future.
Reacted Chalrri>on.,•l l!IJ!ory Henry C.
Meyer to Cbanc<llor Aldrich's decllloo
·two weeb qo to reinatate Kent:
"Every admlniatrator toda'y operates
with one eye orutate politics and one eye
on student pol!Ucs and the faculty is
caught in the middle. The admlniatratnm
at UCI la no exception and th1I declaton -
baa to be ,,.. in !hat light"
From Page I
PUEBLO ...
_ c1asslfled material! Ourine: an emerger>o
cy.
-That Lt. Edward R. Murphy Jr., ex-
ecut1ve officer }Jf the Pueblo, be given a
letter of adffionltlon for falling "lo
organize and lead the crew on the day of
the seii:ure esPt{:ially in the ship's major
internal task of emergency destruction of
classlfted material."
Hatri1 aald a\ his mother'• ho'me in
'-1elrOJe, Mass., that he was "very, very
happy" with Chafee's decision not to take
disciplinary action. He said he would go
to Washington aoon for a new auign-
ment.
The Court of inquiry, it was disclosed,
also found that letters of reprimand
sh2Y,ld be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Jolinson, commander of naval forceJ in
Japan, and Capt. Everett B. Gladding,
now retired.
The court held th8.t Johnson, who bas
since moved to a new assignment, was
"derelict in the~pertonnance or-diltY"DY -
falling to plan properly for emer1ency
support of the Pueblo in a confrontation
and "negUgently fall.Ing" to verify
destruction procedures for classified
documents.
The board approved preUminary plans
for Laguna Niguel Elementary school, a
6SO.student school costing about $771,000.
The school building will be largely open
with sliding· walls and depre~ f!Oor
areas defining classrooms and teaching
areas.
The plan for the flexible !ICbool plant
was wrought by William Blurock and
Partners of ~ewport Beach. The schoo l
wilt be I o c ate d in Laguna Niguel
northweat of Crown Valley Parkway near
Moulton Niguel Parkway. Construction
couJd start in early 1970.
A schematic plan for the district's ~
cond junior high school to be built b1 .the
Shorecliffs .area was presented for the-
board'~ information. The radically new
school drew some pointed remarks frorp
board member1.
· The sCbool b designed aomewbat like
two separate schools with education of
academic subjects being divided into two
"houses" each for about 500 students.
Each house would function Uke a com-
plete school teaching all the basic su~
jccls. Special subjects like music, drama,
physical education and shops are con-
tained in another house localed apart
from the academic areas.
Trustees expre!sed concern that no
multi-purpose room, or areas for large
-Spanish·
' I I ;
12,000
sq. fr.
of
Top
9uallty
Kenney said that assemblies of the stu-
dent body could still be held, and !ht 300
persons could use the. new school's
performance · area for plays and music
producttona.
The school alao featured the flexible
clulrootp arrangement and could be able
to meet requirement& of individual stu-
dent finl~le 1<hedullng.
• -::Z plant is being designed by Neptqne,
Thomas & Associates as a "middle
school." Kenney said that the achpoJ
plant . was adaptable enough to meet
whatever teachin1 ~s might be in-
trOduced into ih~ 41Strict in the future.
To Retire From Post ·
WASHINGTON (AP) -WUliam F.
.Schnitzler aMounced today his retire.
ment as secretary-treasurer of the AFL-
CIO, opening a J!018lble quiet power
strunle la the 13.6 million member ~bor feda(alloo. ·
•
Tor-141 lor medical ttpenJe aller inJluil.
"l!l!f:l'\>f!l'l111 .. ""-of_• llo!ll_ln ll1e
ltrfft,
-Will ~babl.v authorize exeeutlctn of
an agreemi:nt wtlh the State Division ot
Highways fu upgrade traffic signala: end
Ughtina along Coast Hi&hway with the ci·
ty share f56,000 •
-Will consider a request for a 20-
minute loading z;one in front of ~
Americl}r. C.athollc Church, 430 Park Av~J
-Will Ukely approve an agreemeflt
with the County Road Department frw ex-
penditure of fundS to Improve Summit
Drive, utab Sltt<t and Del Mar street. ,
" Front Page i
SALARIES .. ,
l-.
course q{, study for the 1969-70 school
year. > '•
-Probably accept lhe sole bJd of In·
tmauonal Business Machines Cor-·
poration in the amount of $660 per montb
plus I.lies for rental of electronic dat311
processing equipment already in use for,.
flexible scheduling ol classes at Thurston
Intermediate School. ·
-Accept realgnations of certificated
personnel including Kathleen A. Meyer,
high school; Joanne McDonald, district
nurs e; and Carol M. Hocker, Celia Kimes
and Jerry Ridgway from Top of the
World School.
-Receive a list of scholarships and
awards to be presented to the high school
graduating class.
-Hea r a report from Hal Akins, foot-
ball coach, on his attendance at the Na·
tional Football f"'.oaches Association in
Atlantic City, N.J.
-Adjourn Into executive session to con·
sider 1.ucher salary increase propoaals
an~ other benefit11 J"M!Uested.
Auto Stereo !Iaken
From Cat in Laguna
The theft of $180 worth of aulo stereo
equipment, tapes, sleeping bags, and
clothing from the ear of James Alfred
McKinney, 20, of 2721 Victoria Drive,
Laguna Beach, was reported Monday.
Police said the left front window of
McKinney's car had been forced openo
The car was parked In froot of the vic-
tim 's house, police said,
No
Money
I) own
First
Payment
June
.1969
'·
' Monday. .
16 AFS Exchange
Students Visit
Thurston School
-Glad+dlng, then directo~~. the ~Nayy __ _ --
Tbe echool bad planned on hiring II
new teacher• to meet enrollment in-
creases next year, however, whtfl district
voters turned down a requested 50-cent
tax override, the cuts were made.
The school will have a student popula-
tion of 2,240 and 87 teachers, officjals
said.
Upper class studenta .will start class at
7:30 a.m. and go until 1:15, or 2:12 p.m.
depending upon the periods they choose.
Freshmen Students will start. at 9:24
a.m. and go unUI 3:09 p.m. to make
greater use of the school fa~IUes,
designed for 1,680 students.
High school officials said that the
freshmen were selected to come in late
' OM IY Pll OT
OAAHOE CO.UT l'U•t LSHIHG COM,.AHY
fl•Mft N, W••4 ,.,..., ... llWl-.r
' J•clt It. C11rl.y
Vlc. "mi..nt •M 0-11 Mllll"'
Th•M•1 k11vil ....
Th•"'•• A. M1rphi11•
M9Mtlllt ldlf9r
fllth•N. '· "•'' L•""" ltMdl. Cl,, • ...,
i.,_..._.OMM
' 222 f.tN•f A"••
Mtilf119 "''''~' P.O. tn '66, •?61Z
0 ..... 0"'-.
(Otll Met.I i :bO '#"! h¥ 1"-ri
""'"" •Nd\: Jiii Wttl .,. __ --H1111tlfttl0fl 9"0i1 ••• ""61-·r -
Cinco de Mayo at Laguna's Thurston
Jntennedlate school bouted an in-
ternaUonal cast MonOay as 16 of Orange
County's foreign e~change students came
to tbe campU! for an lnternaUonal Club
progr~.
The foreign studen~ represenUng Latin
American countries, Japan, European na-
tions, South East Mia, and New Zealand
talked to Thurston students about their
home countries and customs.
Advanced home economics students
created a variety of foods representing
the culinary conventions of many coun•
tries.
Each foreign student was hosted by a
member ot the Thurston language depart-
ment. 11}e foreign students are lf>W at·
tendinl Orange County schools as part ot
the American Field Service student ex-
chan1e program.
security group in the Pacific, was held by
the court to have been derelift for "fall-
ing to develop procedures to insure the
readiness" of the Pueblo's research sec-
tion.
The Navy said the Pueblo's officers and
men are now widely scattered -on
leave, discharged or assigned to new sta-
tions. They all stayed in the San Dle40
area while the court of Inquiry was m
session.
At a news conference expla1nin1 hlr
position, Chatee said he had not talked to
President Nl.lon about the course of 3C·
lion he had chosen.
There has been isome public controversy
over the quesUon of whether the Navy
was trying to 1addle Bucher and hi.!I men
with the blame for the Pueblo debacle
when higher.ups ought to be held ac-
counta ble, too.
Said Chafee.: "I think it Is clear that
everybody was advancing on a certain
assumption and that assumption proved
to be an invalid one" -ma inly, that a
ship operating on the high seas would
always be sale. from piracy.
..Trees No Be~nty
Lagunan Wants No Part of Plan
"If ~embers of the Chamber of Com·
meret Beautification Committee want to
plant treea in front of their own property,
that'• their buaineas, but I don 't want
• anylb.ing more to Impair my limited
view."
Despite poet Joyce Kllmer•a view of
th,e majesty or trees, Laguna Beach pro-
perty owner Ml!s Catherine Syron hid 1
dUfertnt ouUoot -one thlt has ap-
parenUy been obatructed by trea.
Her dublousneu about the Coast
Highway Ir« plontlng project 11 In a let·
!tr lbat Will be part of !he agend1 city
couoclltnen will take up Wednesday.
"I would like to Ill~ that l delinlte1y
do not want· any trff/trees planted In
front of my properly (27U Solano Way),"
wrote Miss Syron.
"I am hi•lnc • dH!lcull Um• now
trying to tee pit 'ocean view' for Which I
purchaoed my home lhroulh . t h •
num ...... tr... olrtldy planted ·ln tbe
area and growing taller every year."
Miss Syron 1eid a rurvey would pro-
bably disclose that trees are usually
planted ln sldeyards or backyards where
they will ob!t:n.Jct the ne(&hbor's view not
1ht property owner's,
Not.in& the many rtltrictJons on
building In sldeyards, Mis& Syron
wonders why there are no restrictions on
·the number of trees that may be planted
per square foot.
"One yard ln my area has ap.
proximately 20 lrees1 and direclly in my
line of vision," she wrote.
'11le: Jetter also zeroes In on odoriferous
trees such as the eucalpytua. Lemon
euealyptui'I Is the city tree. Mlsa Syron
· 1ald she h~d to 1pend about '200 havln1
sueh trees removed because they--wett lb
pottnt they brought on asthma attacks.
~fJss Syron suggesu that a worthwhile
chamber bta\JllTlcoUon project would .be
sidewall<!' in !he 2600 to 2700 block of
c ................ .
• OWRIQ 561• • (Cvmnl o.111)
• Mtldlllll ~ •1111 .. 11...,......~, ...
YOUR
CHOICE $.
FOR llTHllt OP
THISI 2 GROUPS
ONLY
F<oiry !tie liadroom 11 every wom1n"1 price
......... , """""'' 0..NIW:I • • , ............. pt l'Mt'I .......... LIM ....._ -....... I MVIT ntl!J k -It ,..._ .. M 1"'6t»..._ .... f/I •II ... IAll rll'ICID ........ •l'1111.wr I.OW t • • " .,,.., .,.19__,...., .._ I ..... ,
T .. #MlllllC ...,... .. IM1 Tiit 1-IMI II tf!t. tf ll_l'llf._ •'tliltr a ~ . , . -...r
.. .,..,... """'-It .• ...a ........ ----Otl ,..... ... _..., wtll ........it ....,. ...,.....,._ ~l!'\IC'I-II 611etll9! """""'· '""' ................ ._..., ................... "" ...... ......... """"" -irr.= .................. ...,.. .... ,.....,. ....... etQeelit -= .. -f -""""' N ... • .......... tr HAND ... ,.. ...... -* .... "' I , ......... I
our exclusive
6 pc. ensemble
C1'ledi lfl•• CftlMI ""nty ,....,..., """"" l'llllCl-<:fl"\IM tftf'llut tllll M!OI ..... ,_,, Wllll
ICOdtl-"1'tlll'f!ll 11tM l'flltw a •Pl'lllt .... -tll"l,ld~ 19r lnltN'IMt .... , .... ~ Cctll?llM
lhllll l•lrkl1 M• .. rv. c61* It ... a CN!et "' h•• t r ...,.,. ""*" 18 INllllll oa11. ,,_..., •~ A/llloi!M W'lllhL H ... ,.-ntrwlil ~lllW
lillt 19~ "LUI ftl'rtMlW ti.Ml ..... ,.,.. -
trt• Ill 1Mldl'"9 """"" f*k .... ""'' "'"' rl9hl'' ..... ,., : •••• _, ..... ..
lbt ·~ -y "' ...... ....,1 .... ..
Why pay up to
$799 for thla
ltvish group ....
i :=:~.::. .............
I M .. lttlT.,..1 lt1'ft .,_ ""'""°' CMY•l 111"'9f
:l ..... tnww11 ... h•"'~=,i:;""s399 the price 11
only •••
·AT HARBOR BOULEVARD
USE YOUR
CREDIT
CARDS
' '~ I
. -
( f •
f '
,
I
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j
. Laguna ~l Beaell
:VOL 62, NO. I 08, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES · ORAN&E COUNTY, CAllFORNIAl TUESDAY, MAY '-'1969
1) . .
J
DQ1vn the
Mission
Trail
He Hadn't Otter
Been Friendly
LAGUNA NIGUEL - A six·month·old
pet sea otter named "Peanuts" bit a
Monarch Bay boy on the left forearm
Monday when a group of children rowid
the animal wandering loose and at-
tempted to pet it. · •
steve Haythrone, 8, of 22871 King John
Lane, was treated by a physician and
Peanuts was placed under 11uarantine at
the home of-its owner, Dr. J~ P. Eri.Q.
moen of 32ti62·Empress Way.
'Collllty Animal Control officer Jack
Edwards said the 20-pound gray and
white female otter wandered out of its
owner's backyard when someone left a
gate open.
Neighborhood children . spotted the
anima\ and the biting followed. Edwards
said Dr. Eriksmoen purchased Peanuts a
month ago in Los Angeles.
e Re•cue llnit Slated
SAN JUAN" CAPISTRANO -Orange
County CMI Air Patrol Group 13 has: an-
nounced plans to farm a se~ and
resuce unit at the capistrano Airport.
The announcement was made during
cere.moniel at which airport manacg .
Bruce Denham was preseute4~!1
iirtificate of appreciation for sefvtce in
assisUhg a recent search and rescue
practice mission for the south coast area.
e SpeUdotDn Planned
School Employes
Seeking Inc-re-ase-
Of 15 Percent
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 t11t Delfi' Pllfl Steff
'A 15 percent salary increase is sought
by the classified (non·teaching) employes
of Laguna Beach Unified SchOOl District.
The employes have asked for a counter
proposal from the Doard and di~u~slon
time th at would lnclude as a ma;ior item
the size of increment.al (built-in yearly)
salary increases'.
Trustees at an adjourned meeting Wed·
nesday at 7:30 p.m. will likel_y set fl date
for •the discussions. The meeting ¥"s been
rescheduled from tonight.
Dr. William Ullom, dlsffict superin-
tendent, said he had not yet calculated
the total amount tbal a 15 percent in·
crease in classified wages would mean to
the district but will. ·
HEAVY DEMANDS ,
At a recent boaid meeting, Dr. Norman
Biowne, board president, told classified
n!IJTesenlaUves that be. !ell they hail will·
ingty taken a back seat last year to U1e
"heavy demands brought in b y
teachers.'' ·
.. I feel it's ypur time," Broyme said of
upcoming raises ror cl'assJti.ed employes.
'The board will also consider a Jetter
fr0m Dr, Jerome Kirk of UC! proposing ran-' study of high llCbool ...-11 !or
the purpooe of ' delenninlng behavior
pllenomena in terms <>I dropoutl, hippies
and drug users. ~ .
Dr. Kirk, unsuctessful in his bid as •
school bGard candklale, is a UCI in-
structor, Dr: Ullam said he has received
a government grant to study behavioral
patterns.
OTl!ER BUSINEss
In other business Wednesday, the board
\1,1111:
-Receive 1 alaff report on the exteni
or 'vandalism.
.'..Appoint lrUt\ed I.any TOYlor and
&l;,irt Turntr as Ille boml 't n<Coth!lillg
team lo mtd with feacber •nd c:lwi!ied
representatlves on salary pro~ts •
:..COO.Ider splil!illlJhe •10,000 C<10t or a
l<J'atem DI llO(<ly'· algnllll lo slow down
ltaUlc pall 'El Morro· ScDocil wila ibe
State DlvlslOn of Highways.
--GoMiderli. lM adoption 1 high achoo!
(S.. 'sALAlllES. Page 11
\
•
,--., . "'
-ne O·
'•
' ' .
~ , ·--.. r E•cort Slain
Coast Socialite
:Mrs. Peek ·shot
Air Force Pilot
Laguna Building
Up $1 Million
Laguna Beach buildlng for the ..-first
third of 1969 is running about $1 ntillion
ahead of the same four ,months last ye..,-.
Clyde Z. Springe; city. building and
planning director, said total valuation of
buildiflg-permits through April of this
year amounts to $2,854.1543 compared to
$1,889,289 for the like period of 1968.
There .had been 172 permits <issued by
April's end compared to 157 for the same
periocl'Jasl year.
On a montbly basil, April just passed
had a lota1 permit •aluation of 1615,813
compar<d to only· 191,'40 during Aprll ol 1968. . • . ,
By WILLIAM REED
ot .. Dallp .,. '""
One man is dead and another was
severely beaten in a Palm Springs apart-
ment incident Monday in which Hun4
tington ~ach social leaQer Marnette
Peek, 58, was shot once ln the abdomen
with a .ZS..Caliber automatic pistol.
Found dea~ miles fn:im Mrs. ·Pee k's
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mar-
ket clQBd higher today, despite another
bout of profit taking. (See quotatiom,
Paces »21J.
The measure, which also must be ap-
proved . by the Assembly _would provJd~
state funds Jor new JWlior college
districts in a ratio of 65 percent state aid
to 3S, percent local tax money.
Over the next five years the Sad·
dleback District WtJuld be eligible for $9.l
million. ·
SB 508 was authored by Donald L.
Gnmsky (R-Wah;onville).
·uc1 Flap: Students Wo~?
Forum Discusses .
Problems From
•
Youth Transients
The Laguna Beach CoordinaUng .Cow-
cil next Monday ~ill field a program on
problems arising from youthful transients
in Laguna Beaci). .
The meeting will · be held ln the con1-
munity room of· 'the Laguna· F.oderai
building, 260 Ocean Ave., beginning at
7:30 p.m.
· Mrs. Heleii K~ley,...council-..vice.p,rf:i\..
dent; said the ptogram 'NllJ.Jnc\ucfe:.
Many ~aculty Members
-Max Rappaport, Youtb C0Unei1, San
·. Clemente, oulllnin'g1 the · work of ttiat'
Stew Over Concession,s gr~,e,; ~uni by a rormer ~"
.. user 1ff' her experiences and bCr B)' THOMAS FORTUNE ln this conteU, Samuel C. McCulloch That was one of the activists' victcries, rehabilitation. , • . °' • o.itt ..... si.tt tendered his realgnatJon u dean of The other was faculty concession to -Discussion by Roger carter, Sduth
The brash, young students have won humanities Mooday in a letter to faculty. permit 'st.udelits to recommend on tho Ortnge County YMCA director, of local concessions. For &he record, he gave u bis reuon a · youth problems. desire to return to fUJJ..Ume teach. ing. He hiring of twa percent of professors. -A descri ... 1,. .. of rttources of county The steadfast and proud senior faculty ~·1 -..... • ad ,,,.... will n:uia.n at UCI as .......,essor of 11111:1 student voice decision was m e agencies for aw11 .... VN.•th and families are feeling betrayed. rv• .... ,. J """
Pvenimplilied, perhaps. But that is lbe history. by a majority or the 75 professors at· by Don Hallstrom, delinquency prtven--
lt also' was leamef that Proleuor of lendine the last susim or the Academic Uort coordinat.or f~~l'·~ way some Important penoor on lbe UC HiSlory Lewis U. fflnit i!IU-ralptd lo •-•~• ••'-__ ., bod ' ., h 270 , -A !Unfmary by \'ice ·Mayer. Ji>leph
lrvtne campus see the a:!tuaUOD today. accept a po6t ttrtbe"raD ._U.Unlm1lty ~ .. w:. u...-govcriung Y t.Q. "'~c O'Sullivan of cun:«it tlfortl ~·civic-mm··
Tho dlMldent stlld,enla l!!lve.'11~ 4'!1•"$~11.·-dedlne<I to Jive fJlcu111 ~l\<'r• ~ong. , . ·ded Individuals and ·-ps"lo handle.
their, ~ -lhq Jet!.~ ...,... a -.fci.lu\(l!lg. • , Chairman, of lhe Acadel\Jle S,nafe Ken-• lrallSienl youtll:~•·
accompbshed all Ibey can this scbool H-, he wu· ~ ol'tht -1or nethW.For~aald-•prol~"quil• -A <wnmary ol 1ocal ·~ for 3e~. ~)'Jlo~n yj!:Wfi~·~ _ hiJl«iaN wlio~' ·· · I be oo · IX'!ll'iilby · ·' Jons• youth a~ooJ!ty . ..IID. mini;
Mariy f~y member&, mt;an'!hUe, d~ ~ ol _ ha~e cbcdea l0°'s l13 away1 fJ'OO'! r~nlof'th'&Laguna BeachMtth041et~Cburcb.
are otewing. one senior pro!eaor 11id he J!i.!ioiy Georp W. 'lbat """'11• me.tings. T1lere ·was a walkout three The J>!IM) «:-lion /rill·d=· lbe'
!i<lflhe campus admlnislratioll liis b<nl merl!!ati"' wu P-·ilo> Chlncellor montha .,,;· • • nilmbera and Grip.. ii( 1001) ltwi ,.
over btctwardl lo placatt the aclimts. Daniel G. Aldricb Jr •. .., advic< ol .• The 110nlor pror .... r, who asked to re-and why Ibey ct!lle. II will lake up ·
He aald the C<lit has been h.iah in faculty review committee. nd Kat will be1"'°"" maiQ lmnarned~ ~·I~ ln hi~ 'opinion blcm1 ol 'tniployment,...hotl&tni, narcotics
morale. mottd to associate p(fleMOt. .. ~ · (-Bee'--UC IRVJNB, P1ge t) - ' · alld nledical care: ' ,
.;;,
-· .. . ' •• flt ~. .~. I --"-~-·--!!!. , ..,,.,. '. --
, .
TEN CENTS
.
Navy Chief
S.ays Crew
HadEµough
Rain,· Rain, Just
Won't Go Away
For the third sb·elght day, the OJ:.ange
Coast and most of Southern California
was danipeOed today by a persiitent
drizzle which kept temperatures mired in
the low 60's.
A high-level almospt\eric disturbance
was blamed for the soggy but hardly
stormy conditions which brought showers
in the mountain and' desert areas and
sporadic sprinkles along the Orange
C..,.t.
• The condition was expected tq moOe-
. eastward into ;na by Wednesday, but
night and momi -cloudtnels was· still
predicted for tal areas. Sunny af-
ternoons were forecast through the rest
of the week.
Oraa11e
ll'.eadi";
OUr r.ed·(•ced weitbennan la
trYillC again wilh predlclion , of
partly sunny weather' for Wednes--
dOY and temperaturOi ill lbe mid-
illl's along Ille cout.
\INstnE TODAY
A· UC/ Ntr;ro pro/i .. br ··~
sJ)«l,tnt pro1 .. tor1 lqck 1/lc wUI
t9 .uma th,t ir batt!ts aoaimt the
a minitrClion. Paae JO. t 'I •.
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'' •
2 DAil Y PILOT
I PILOT • Festival Asks 60 .More . Seats1 l -I . " , ,
LOGBOOK
J
I
'
isneyizing' the ;Woods
Not as Bad as It Sounds
By ARTllUll R. VINSEL ' °'.~ ..... ...., M-11 Kini WU a Sierra wildemeS4 when half ·lllY Ille qo, the ging·
er-colored mule deer never tasted Weber'a: Bread and root bter wu 50 cents
a bottle. • '
'
The Nl'llJ " Arts ii teeltllc cl\I'
cot'1Cli b!ttz'"' ,_ay I<> idd • ~ -It; liq. Ille .., .at
Lopl\l'I --""'' -1'lllli 17 ol .lbi llibt.1-itd i..-
plimentary tkket bolder1, the project
would increase paid seating in the bowl
by 43 additional f2 seats.
Wllllam D. Martin, Fe.Uva! board
president, .in a letter to the council
pointed out that this would gro5' $3,870 in
additiOni! revenue from the sell-out
Pageant ol the Masters. The city share
for a year would he 161'/. The clty Ills
been liked lo wain lls share the Orel ,,..,. ~
The ~ -"""1d :-pay flt
~ lht llrtl season l\&Sed on Ula
-tad IMlallatlon costOl 13,875.
In other business WednesdAy", tbe coun-cil : . •
-WW llkely deny aJ>C! refer lo !be in·
surance carrier flood damage claims of
Telon!c Indusl'ries, Inc., $105,000 ; Mr. and
Mrs. Herber! W. Smithson, 117,410; Alba
Ellil. $2,801; Wayne Elli3i $3,150; a.pd
Kenneth W_,.,, 12,550.
-1$ to ndt OD an ilpplicaUOO to IOlicit
. . I
lunda. by groups ol persons lll"llng•
r•liaiout <tb&n\t and .d i I l t :l!!l!.;J Ulel'aturo on behal! of the la
SOclety [Qr Krishna ConlciOnsn~"T.'
-Probably wW not OPP96< l.UI
Eoterprlses, Inc. application to trarilter ~n on·~le gener81 liquOI' J~ .JfQJJ)
Gale H. and Leonara G. Pike at 1158 S:.
COast Hlihway.
-Probably will not oppoee transfer of
Saddleback Inn. 696 S:.. Coast. Higbway,
on-sale general liquor license irfvolvin& a
100 percent sale of stock.
-Will consider a claim from Mrt.
Dorolby C. Leander, 25$ Cypru1 Drive,
' -
for 161 ·!cir medical expense alter laiurJ I
ll!ffertd AprU 13 hacanae of a bole II! the -· -Will probably authorize execuUon of
an agreement with the State Diviltap o~
Highways to upgrade traffic idgnal! pnp
Uibtlng alollll Coasl lliibway with ':I Ci• ty Ihm llG.000.
-Will co~er a requ.est for a :ZO.
minute loading zone in front of th&
America,. Catholic Church, 430.Park Ave.
-Will likely approve an. agreomtnr.
with the County Road Department for ex·
pendlture of funds to improve Sw1uni1 ·
Drive, Utah Stred and Del Mar Sk"eet.
So I was saddened to 'learn the picturesque timberline valley in the
Sequoia National Forest is to become a $35 million Walt
DiJney Productions winter wonderland.
"One Disneyland is more than enough,'' said a col-
league archly, as we dismally di!cusaed. Mickey Mouse
on snonhoea, giant teacups under the pines and Bambi
apelled from hil oative paradise.
. Sometimes, however, one jumpe to conclusions when
he's lost touch with a place for too long a Ume, beCauae
tlme is the great changer of people and places.
Frqm r.,e 1
UC IRVINE • • •
Academic Senate meetings have become
"a wild circus!'
He said leglllaUon hu been ~ thal
b "halr-raJatna In Ill lmplacil!llona." Ht
noted that a commltttee wu aabd 1•to
aetUe within 10 days, off the top of their
heads, the moet lncredlhly compllcalcd
luue" of atudent partlclpatioo In 11Jr!na
·Trustees in Capo Given
Plans for 2 New Schools
From Pqe I
SALARIES • • •
course of study for the 1969-70 school
year.
-Probably accept the sole bid of In.
ternational Business Machines Cor·
poratlon in the amount of $660 per month
plus tax ea for rental of electronic dat.a1,
processing equipment already in use for,.
fltxible scheduling of ctasses at Thurston
Intermediate School.
* ... Maybe I had a phlloeophical chip on lllY shoulder on ~ way to hear Robert B. Hicks, project manager, outline the ao.acre recrea-
t1ona1 facility and its ramifications before the COatl. Mell Chamber of Com-merce.
VJrtuaDy lnacceuible dutlng the winter months, 70,000 ·.campen and
lpOrllmen nonetbel.,. drove the dluylng 19-mlle trip lr<>m the main hlg)lway
to the valley last summer, a startling count. •
So many people, packed into such a small area -Mlnenl klnl; 11 llke a
chalice carved out of bald granite by a river and set wltb 20 Jtwel·llke lakes-
cruted sanitation problems and sewage polluUoa.
Thia would have been unthinkable that summer u I hilted three mlle!,
seemlngtY into the sky itself, fishing for fat brown trout lying at the lake
bottom li~e logs, on what was to be my father'• final trip to the mountains
he loved.
Nobody thought much about pollution 14 years aao.
Now we must1 and under agr~ents by the Dlmey organiuUon, the
U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies, the developers will provide
proper sanitation systemt. They will build a modern highway cutting the 95-
minute jouqiey in half. Winter sports resource1 for C.lifomlanJ will be great..
ly broadened. Rural Tulare County will hava l,IOO naw Joba an4 If milllon
more ~Y ln tuee. .. "ftnual King will never be the way t "remember it, but nothfn& ever 11:
and Hicks' talk cleared up aome prejudiced milconceptJona baaed oa snap
judlJnenl
Development or a winter sports haven by the management of the An•
heim, .Magi.c Kingdom -in an area already auffering tourfst.ltla .-does not
mean Taco Bell franchises on the John Muir Trall.
'l'Jle Sierra Club wou1d probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
In hand-~hand combat anyway, 1houJd such prostJtuUon get beyond the pofnt
of Judlttaus polpt-maldng.
The Mineral Kfug story, It appears, is a different one and should have a
happy endlnJI. ' ·
Capo. District .Cuts One
Hour from School, Day
and flrlna of P,ofesaora. -
The prot_, clalmed youni .uelJlanl
prolesaon have allped themaelvt1 with
acUvtlll" and are voting u a hloc. Aly
question of legallly rllaed la brulhed
utde u a ohaiructionlat, he lald.
He alJO aald In department after
department ~ are Junior, non-tenured
faculty memben who ahU:e their beads
right along with the senior faculty.
The end result of all this "milchief,"
he said, bas been a w:ous deteriora-
tion ol faculty morale.
Many other profesaors hold that view .
Many don't. Quite a number are con·
ceme;d about the future.
l\eaclcd Chairman of History Henrf C.
Meyer to Chancellor Aldrtch'a decla!on
two weeu ago'lo -Ii Kant:
"Every admfnlalraler today operatai
wttb one eye on state pollUca and one eye
on studenl poUUca and the faculty la
caught In the middle. The admlnlatraUon'
at UCI II no ercepUon and tb1I decllloo
hu to be aeen In that light." ·
Froon Pc9e I
PUEBLO ... -
classified material!! cmrlng an emergen-
cy. -
-That Lt Edward R. Murphy Jr., e1·
ecutive officer of the Pueblo, be given a
letter of admon!Uon for falling "to
()rganize and lead the crew ()n the day of
the s~izure especially in the ship's major
internal task of emergency destruction of
classified material."
Harria aald at his molher'a, home In
Hfili achoo! ltudenll o£ the eapi.,\no
UnUled Schaal D!stl!ct wtll !oaa one
period of instruction each day nezt year
as the result of 1 curriculum curtailed
because of inadequate school flnanceri.
.. ? Melrose; Mass., that he was "very, very
bequse thetr program could most easily happy" with Chafee's decision not to take
be teJlarated from the rest ol the cur-disciplinary action. He said he would go
riculwn. t~ Wuhlngton soon for a new assign-
Freshmen studen~ .at the d.J!trlcl San
Clemente High School wW take I mix·
imum of five periods where previously
they wue allowed to take 5lx or seven
perlodl.
In other action Monday, the Capistrano
lrustees approved employment of an ap-
praiser to evaluate the old San Juan
Ceplstram Junior High School 18 acre
site. It may become a city hall alte.
ment
The court of inquiry, it was disclosed,
also found that letters of reprimand
should be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Johnson, commander of naval forces 1n
Japan, and capt. Everett B. Gladdin&, now reUted. ~-
sophomores, luWon and 1enior1 may
1---1tate-rminimum-~ive--periodt-•nd •8
maximum of ail. Previoualy theY too
could take seven perioda•of instruction.
The d:IW.lct alao joined other county
school duitr1cts and the Ubr!lfY in an anti-
trust suit against the publlBhers of
ehildren's library books. Price fixing is
charged.
The court held that Johnson, who has .
since moved to 1 new assignment, was
"derelict 1n the performance of. duty" by
falling to plan propuly for emergency
support of the Pueblo In a confrontation
and "negligently falling" to verify
destruction procedures for clasalfled
documents.
J
.. '
The reduction ol the clan Lime will
reJUlt 1n the S1vtng of aeven or el.gbt
teachers' nlarles and clua materials,
l'Tlnclpal Darrel Tayklr lold lruslees
Monday.
The · acbool-bld planned o'n hiriilg 11
new teachers to meet enrollment in·
creases next year, however, when district
voters turned down a requested 50-cent
tax override, the cult were made.
The tchool will have a atudent papula·
llon of 2,240 and 87 teachers, officials
said.
Upper class students will start class Bt
7:30 a.m. and go unt111:15, or 2:12 p.m.
depending upan the periods they choose.
Freshmen student$ will start at 9:24
a.m. and go until 3:09 p.m. to make
greater use of the achooJ facllltlea,
des.lgned for l,MO atudents.
High school officials said that the
freshmen were telected to come tn late
OAllV 1'1101
OIUHGf. C:Q.toll PVIL 1$Ht"IG COMP.ANY '
l•Mrt N. W1M
l'Nllillllt ............
· J1c• I , Cvrlty
VICI l'f'llMllM IJlf OMlrtl IMMttr
Thi,,,•• K•..,11 ....
Th1m1t A. Mu1pki11• Me-ffte Elllor
llickt!il P. Ntll ...........
Cl• ----• 122 h11tt A~1.
M1irf11t MU,,,t, P.O. In '61, t2'6St
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16 AFS Exchange
Students Visit
Thurston School
Cinco de Mayo al Lagunt's Thuraton
lntennediAte achool bouted an in·
ternattonal cast Monday u 16 ol Oran1e
County's foreign excliange students came
to the campus for an lnternaUcnal Club
program.
1'1le foreten students representing Laun
American countrle1, Japan, European na~
Uons, South E11t Asia, and New Zealand
talked to Thurston students about their
home countries and customs.
Adva.nced home economics student!
created a variety of foods re:preseDtirlg
the ·culinary conventions of many coun-
tries.
Each foreign student wu bolted by a
member of the Thurston language depart-
ment. TM foreign studenta are oow at·
ten4lna 6raaae County schools u part ol
the American Field Service student ex· c:haoae procram.
Gladding, then director of the Navy
security group-tnttfe Pacific~ was held by- -
the court to have been derelict for "fall·
ing to develop procedures to 1nlurt the
readiness'' of the Pueblo's research sec--
Uon.
The Navy nid the Pueblo's otflcen and
men are now widely scattered -on
leave, discharged or assigned to new sta·
tiona, They all stayed in the San Diego
area whlle the court ol inquiry was in
session.
At a new1 conrerence ezplaintnc h1I
position, Cha!ee said he had nol talked to
President Nixon about the course of :ac-
tion he had chosen.
There baa been 1ome public conlrover1y
over the quaUon ol whether the Navy
wa1 trytn1 to 11ddle Bucher and hia men
with the blame for the Puetilo debacle
when higher-ups OU&ht to bt held IC•
countable, too.
Said Chaftt: "I think It Is clear that
\every~ody was advancing on a certain
ll!IUrilptlon and that auumptlon proved
to be lit-invalid one'' -mainly, that 1
ship operatin& on the hlgh seas would
always be safe from piracy.
Trees No Beauty
Lagunan Wants No Part of Pla.n
"U memberl of Ule Chamber of Com·
rnerce BeautificaUon Committee want to
plant treoo In front or their own property,
U1at'1 thllr buaJneN. but 1 don't want
anythln1 more to impair my lim!U!d view:•
Oeaplte poet Joyce Kllrner11 view of
the majesty of trees. Laguna 8tach pro..
perty owner Mlaa Catherine Syron bad a
dlfferent 011Uook -one that bu If>'
parenUy been Obltnlctod by trees .
Her dublout11eu about the Coa1t
Highway tree planUnc proJart II In a let·
ter 11111 will bo part of the qenda clly
counc11mtn will take up Wednuday.
"! would like lo llale thal I definllcly
do. not want any tree/U..S planlcd In
front'<>f-my PfOPOrlY (1711 Solano Way),"
wrote Miii Byron.
111 am havlng 1 dtlflC'lllt time now
trylng to .. the 'octln view' for which r
purohaaed lllY home lllrouch t h •
nwneroos 1-t(readI. planted In lhe
area and growlng taller eve.ry year ."
Miss Syron ta.id a 1urvey would pr~
bab ly di.sci~ that trees are u!Ually
planted in sideyards or backyard& where
they will obttruct the ne.lchbor'1 view not
tho property owner's. •
Notln& the many res&rlcUont on
building In 1ldeyards, Mls1 Syron
wonders why there are no re.ttrlcUon11 on
lhe number ol trees th1t may be planted
per aquare foot.
"One yard lh lllY area hu ap-
proximately 20 trees, and dlrectly in my
line or vi!fon," ahc wrote.
The letter also wot! In on odoriferous
treea 1uch u the eucalpytu1. Lemon
eucalypt\]1 It the elty trte. Miss Syron
said Ille had to apend about llOO ha•l!li
such treell removed because tboy wtrt ao
potent lh•y broughl on a!thma attacks.
Miss Syron cuuest& !hat a'worthwhlle
chamber ltuutlflcation pn>Jtd would be
!ldewllliJ In the l60IJ to :70Q. block of
I
"
Plans for two new Capistrano Unified
School Di.strict schools -one in Laguna
Niguel and one In North San Clemente -
were presented for trustee consJderatlon
Monday.
The board approved preliminary plans
for Laguna Niguel Elem~tary ~hool, a
SSO..Student school costma: about 1771,000.
The school bW.ldln& wUI De largely open
with sliding walls and depreseed floor
areas defining classrooms and teaching
areas.
The plan for the flexJble school plant
was wrought by William Bluruck and
Partnera of Newport Beach. The school
will be I o c a t e d In Laguna Niguel
northwest of Crown Valley Parkway near
flfoulton Niguel Parkway. Construction
could start in early 1970.
A schematic plan for the district's Bi·
cond junior high achool to bf! built in tht
Shorecliffs area wu pruented for the
board's informaUon. The radically new
school drew some pointed remarks from
board members.
The school II dealgntd aomewhat like
two separate schools with educaUon of
academic aubjecta being divided into two
"hou.ses" each far about 500 students.
Each house would funcUon like a com·
plete school teaching all the basic sub-
jects. Special subjects like muaic, drama,
physical education and shops are con·
tained in another house located apart
from the academic areas.
Trustees expressed concern that no
multl·purpose room, or areas for large
Spanish·
ii,00o
sq. ~.
of
Top
9uallty
Fumlture
YOUR
CHOICE $
POlt llTHIA Of'
THUi 2 GROUPS
"':I gatherings of 500 or more people were
planned.
Superintendtllt Charles L. Kenney said
that the square footage normally thrown
into such buildings__would be used in
teaching areas. He called it a way of get-
ting the most out o( the district's d~Jlars
and noted that the large rO(}ml. are need-
ed only about one hour per week. He said
the new school wouldn 't need the big
rooms because of the way it is designed.
Kenney said thaJ assemblies of the stu-
dent body could a!ill be held, and tht !00
persons could use the new school's
performlftCe area for playe and musi,c
productions.
The school also featured the flex.Ible
classroom arran1ement and could be able
to meet requlrementa of indJvldual stu-
dent fie11ble scheduling. ·
The plant ii helnJI desl8ned by Neptun"
Thomas & Associates as a 0 mlddle
school." Kenney aaid that the lchool
plant was adaptable enough to meet
whatever teaching concepts ml1bt be ln-
troductd Into the diatrict In the future.
To Retire From Post
WASHINGTON (AP) -Wllllam .F.
Schnitzler announced today his retlrt·
ment as secretary-treasurer of the AFL-
CIO, opening a possible quiet pow~r
struggle in the 13.S million member labdr
federation.
-Accept resignations of certificated_
personnel including Kathleen A. Meyer,
high school; Joanne McDonald, district
nurse: and Carol.M. Hocker, Celia Kimes
and Jerry Ridgway from Top of the
World School.
-Receive a list of scholarships and~
awards t.o be presented to the high school
graduating class. , ,
-Hear a report from Ha] Akin.,, foot-. '
bait coach, on his attendance at the Na·' I
tional Football ·":oaches Association in ·
Atlantic City, N.J,
-Adjourn Into executive session to con•
sider teacher salary increase proposal!·
and othir benefits requested. ~
Auto Stereo Taken
From Car in Laguna ·
The theft of $180 worth of auto stereo r
equipment, tapes, sleepillg bags, and
clothing from the car o( James Alfred
McKinney, 20, or 2721 Victoria Drive, ·
Laguna Beach, was reported Monday.
J.'olice said the left front window of
McKinney's car had been fore~ ope.n.
The car was parked in front of the vic--
tim 's house, police sald.
\ . ~ \
No
Money
Down
Flnt
Payment
Juno
1969
,, '
"
' I! ,,
·•.l'"
our exclusive
6 po. tn,.mble
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K .... 1>wr1ppld .... l'llln • .,,._ lfl• -itrucll., Mr 11tn111tllft -11111 ~ (cwt.111 'IUllt llM'k)I M.....,. ~ 111 ... a d*t1 tf hn •t ..... ,.. " .......... llhfl 0.11, ... __
•• ""'"""' Wllltt. ""' ..... ,.. ,..,.."' .... t1ble II"" l'LVS c.nfettll Ila"""' llN -
''" -'"'""'"" ........ f9Wk ,., ,...., .. .,,., rlljhl'• flC'lrllW ...... -..... ..
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ONLY
Why pay up to
$799 for thl1
lavish group •••
USE YOUR ' ... ' -.
. AT HAlllOll IOULIVAllD
CREDIT
CARDS
r '
I
Be\leh Girl
Favorite for
'Miss' Title
With two or the marbles already ln her
rorner, Jackie Benitlgton of_ Huntington
Beach ioes after the whole bJg totpght.
.. The blonde Maqna HigR School Senior,
represenUng California ln the Artlerica '11
Junior Mis! Pageant aj ~iobile, Ala .
reigns as one or the favori tes in tonight'r
final judging.
. She has claimOO hvo of 1"he contesr s
divisions -physical fitness a p d
scholastic average -wotth a comblncii
$2,500 in college scholarships. She carries
a straigh~ "A" average and plans to
study biology at Stanford Uni versiiy.
Jackie, the 17-year-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Orchard Benington of 6191 _
'Gumm.Drive, will co1npete tonight on na:
tiona l televlsi_on (7:30 p.m., Channel 4)
for the America's title against girls from
, the other 49 states. Mike Douglas will
emce~ ~12th annual pageant.
A sour.note in the proceedings may be
sounded by a civil rights group, the
Ne.ighborhood Organized \V o r ~ e r s
(NOW), which plans to picket the contest
which it has labeled "racist.~' The group
has attempted three dimonstrations
against the pageant, but has failed to get
within five blocks of the auditorium on
nights of preliminary competition.
Some 320 persons have been jaJJed on
charges of unlawful asseµibly in the
demonstrations. A final Protest has been
caJled for the finals tonight.
Telegrams of congratulations and back-
ing we.re sent today by the Chamber of
Commerce ·and -the City Council. The
chamber t~egram told the Marina High
School senior that "all 110,000 residents
are pulling for you."
The council said il is "wishing you
complete success."
She won the local Junior ?-.iiss title and
then progressed through the regional con·
tests to the state title and the right to
compete in Mobile.
Judging in the constest which seeks to
name the nation's ideal high school senior
girl is based on scholastic ability ¥Jd
youth fitness, already won by Miss Ben-
jngton, personality, mental alertness.
poise and person] appearance and
creative and performing arts.
Freeway Repair
Work Scheduled
Near Mulholland
Motorists were ad\ll:Sed by the State
Division o( Highways today that they
may expect some traffic delays next
month on the San Diego freetvay in West
Las Angeles.
Pavement repair.s will nE;ce!jsitat~ U1e ,
intermittent closing of lanes between 9
a.rn. and 2:30 p.m. on weekdays fiom
Mulholland Drive south for about t~:o
mil es.
-----------------------------------------,,
Whinny of Relief
• . ..
Tutsday, Mai ~. 1969 L
llur'led BIU!h
.
Reds Make Bold
U.S. Base Attack
SAIGON (UPI) -A North Vietname,.
regiment of J,200 men UJing new model
antiaircraft guns firing at ground level
'
Film Couple
Remarried
After 2 Kids
Performers Jean Pierre Aumont and
Marisa Pavan were remarried during the
weekend In San Clemente. 13 years alter
their first marriage, it w a s announced
Monday.
In between, the two performers had
t\\'O Children. were setreUy divorced and
Jived as man and wife in New York City.
broke throulb Ibo defenae perimeter II( a
ll.S. hue near the cambodlau bonier
early today but were hurled back by the
outnumbered defenders.
The asaauU, heaviest Communist at·
tact in weeks ind one or the biggest Ot
theft wariing sprillg·winter orrensive, CO!t
the ;u,th Vietnamese 141 dead and 29
captured, But their human wav~ assault
killed nine Americans anq wounde'.d·&Z.
The battle 63 miles nor(hwest of Saigon
and on}y a few miles from .the Com·
munlst sanctuaries in the jungled border
area of Cambodia emphasized recent
govemm~nt warnings tb&t from two' to
four North Vietnamese· divisions 'were ~Peratlng in·the area tn hopes of s£arib,g ' . . a new offensive In early May. 1
Former "lady-in \\·ailing." Philadelphia Zoo's zebra
appears to be shouting her relief after ending her
gestation period with her sixth o.lfspring. The zebra
had been waiting since April Fools Day.
The Frenchman and his Italian wife,
"·ho is the sister of actress Pier Angeli,
"1ere married ?-.farch 27, 1956_. in Santa
Barbara. In 1963. they were secretly
di vorced in Versailles , France.
B52 bombers have been striking lhe ·
areas o( Tay ~inh province with some of
the heaviest blows of the war in hope.I of
pre.venting a major Communist strike.
The bombers new tour missions Monday
night and early today agginst Communist
base camps in the area.
I
I The bombers dropped at least 360 tons
Narcotic Raids Net 34 They didn't ta lk to each other for two
years thereafter.
Then their two sons, now 9 and 10, beg·
ged them to get back together, or at leut
return to the same houSehold. To please
the children, the couple set up housekeep-
ing in New York.
of bombs in today's raidS. In 12 t!8ys they
have dropped more than 4,800 tons of
bom!>s in 53 raids -some of the most ;.
concentrated bombing since the siege of
the Khe Sanh many months ago. r.
Huntington Underco ver Work Brings Roundup
The Communists have b e e n In--· ...
creasingly active along the border and
onJy Monday carried out two &ld am· •
bushes of American convoys iri the area. "
The attacks were costly b~ they ' were
daring and today's raid lvhich.began at Z
By TERRY COVILLE
Of ltlt D&llY l'itol $1.'ff
HuntingtC1n Beach deteclives today
were wrapj)ing up paper11'ork on a ~cries
of raids which resulled in the arrest of 31
adulls and three juveniles on a variety of
narcotics ch<jrges.
Latest of the raids, resulting from
Undercover investigations, was completed
Monday night. Twelve adults and one
juvenile were held on charges of sale and
possession of 300 LSD tabs.
Armed with a search warrant. officers
approached the home at 811 Dela1vare
Street at 8:30 p.m. where they said they
were spotted by one suspect 1vho ran in-
side screaming, "The r-.1an ls here !"
Police allege lhe LSD. about e:ght
ounces of hashish and hvo ounces of
marijuana were on a tahle in tht middle
of the room when they entered,
J.,.
Officers asserted the suspecls begnn
chanting religious songs and told them.
"You·re evil -you sit at home drinking
and "'e get arrested for doing Our Thing
" ....
Pl'imc oCcupant of the 811 Delaware St.
place was identified by police as 28-year·
old Clinton Southwell. W~st Orange Coun-
ty t<.iunicipal Judge Kenneth f.t Smith
had s~ned the search warrant.
liuntington detective Carl Vidano said
the narcolics picked up in the raid would
be valued at about $2,000 on the illicit
market.
Durin& tbs seizures and arrests, a
seven month old baby, Kristie Farmer.
\Vas placed in protective custody in
juvenile hail . Her mother, Karen ~tarie
Farmer, 22, t>f 81l'h Dela1vare Street,
was one of those arrested in the round up.
Police said they could. fi?1d no responsible
Alert Yacl1ts1nen Save Two
From Sea;_rhird Missing
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
01nv Pit.I attlillf '"""'
Alert crewmen on board Jack Baillie's
12·meter Ne\\'sboy today were credited
wjlh saving the lives of two young San
Diego people who were viclirits of a
s\\·~fllped outboard off Point Lorn.a Sun·
day:
belier view. He spotted two heads in the
water about 200 feet ahead.
Baillie said the Newsboy's course 1vould
have taken thQm within 7E feet of lhe
couple if they had not been spotted
sooner.
The crew of the Newsboy took the bou·
pie on board was unable to radio for
help because of low batt~ries. On the way
back to_ ~n Diego Baillie asked another
nearby sailboat to radio ahead to the U.S.
Coast Guard.
adult to care for the baby.
Huntington Beach police conducted five
other raids over the weekend which net-
ted 19 adults and two juvenUes arrested
on ·charge,s of either sale or .possession of
marijuana.
\Veekend arrests included a visit to a
residence at 316 7th St., which netted
seven adults living at that addreS3 on
charges of possessioq of marijuana and
dangerous drugs. 1
Another arrest included a Gardena
elementary school teacher and his wife of
17402 Lido Lane. Huntington Beach. on
charges of furni shing and possession of
marijuana. Arrested \\•ere Stuart and
I .enore Orton.
Detective Vidano said the huge total of
weekend narcotics arrests resulted .from
a concerted undercover operation Whlch
lrd to lip offs of various "parties."
The Ortqns wgre arraigned Monday in
West Orange County Municipal Court and
se t for prelimiTjary hearing May 19. one.
other man amstea · for futnishing
dangerous drugs was also arraigned
Monday. Preliminary hearing for Rich·
ard Worman, 19. 8012 Mermaid Circle,
Huntington Beach, was scheduled for
1.1ay 9.
Mexican Woman
Dro\vns in Pool
It was made legal dUring the weekend.
when the couple renewed their vows with
French actor Louis Jourdan and his wife
as witnesses.
F'airview Hospital
l!olding Open House
Fairview State Hospital is open to the
public this week as part of National
Health Week.
Guided tours will be conducted Wednes-
day and Saturday at 1 p.m. The ~ublic is
inviled to view the hospital facilities and
-activities. Tours start from the lobby of
the Administration Building. 2501 Harbor
Blvd., Costa M~a. . ~ ,. , .,
.. a.m. was no exception. ~
The North Vietnamese opeqed up a
' heavy barrage of mortars and rockell !
then charged into the American camp. ~
They captured two bunkers. bl ew up the ,.
camp's fuel and ammunition dumps with \•
dynami te charges, but the 300 American /
defenders rallied and drove them off in a ~
four·hour battle. •
"A lot of them got trapped in the open ,)
when the sun came up," said a U.S.
spokesman describing how many of the
Communist soldiers perished under fire
from divebombers, helicopter 1unships
and artiller.y. 1 The attack' against the gun base of the
U.S. 1st Air Cavalry division began at :&
a.m , \vith-a 60-round mortar attack.
Caryl-On is 63 miles northwest of Saigon,
nioe miln from U..Cll!lbodial -!
Woman Bolts Kidnaper
Stopping to Get Ransom
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) -The from her fashionable home In the South
terrified wife of a w.?althy b.Jslnessman Hills section of Charleston, 52 miles east
made the most or her "last chance" Mon· of here about 1:30 p.m. by a man who
A Mexican woman from Ensenada day night and bolted to safety from a to~~! hkenro:w you people have plen.ly ol employed by a Santa Ana family drowned
Monday evening in a backyard swimming -pistol·shooting abductor who ha d money and J need enough to get out of
pool, the Orange County Coron~'s Office threatened her life in a demand for the country, . ..
reported . $100,000 ransom. "I've lilied before and 1'11 .kill again,''
Maria Mulgado. 20. housekeeper and Mrs. Howard P. McJunkin suffered on-she said the man told her.
babysitter for-the Charles E. Chuning ly .a minor bump on the head during ~r Mrs. Mc.Junken, whose husband ls
1 ·
\
At such times as it becomes necessary to close two lanes al the same time; ce.r·
tain on·ramps may be temporarily closed
tO alforll better !f"8ffic coritfoJ:-
Rescued were Donald Palterson, 25 and
Beverly Runyon, 23, both of San Diego.
Still missing and presumed drowned is a
third member of the outboard party,
Fredd Hogg-otsairDte·go:----· -'l3aillie S8iCI txith-Uie man ana woman
were in a state of shock aft·er being in the
chilly waters about four hours.
family, of 920 S. Dennis St.. was found quick dash to freedom at '-local drive-m president of Mc.Junkin Corp. and
noating face -down In-the pool by a-friend--re!l.auran!. -chait111at1 of-the -eharlestorr-U~
who dropped by to bring her some mail, "J was afraid this would be my last Renewal Authority, said she w a s Ramps subject to such closing include.
Wilshire Boulevard on-ramp to, north·
bound San Diego Freeway, Moraga Drive
on-ram p to northbound freeway, Chalon
Road on.ramp to northbound freewa y,
Valley Vista Boulevard on.ramp to south-
bound freeway, Mulholland Drive on·
ramp to southbound freeway .
Sepulveda Boulevard may be used as
an alternate route when ramps are clos·
ed.
Baillie and his crew were returning
from the Ensenada" race and had stopped
in San .Difgo to clear customs. Afler
leaving the cusloms dock the Newsboy
1vas sailing about three miles off Point
Loma on the leg to Newport \vhen
crewman ~Bob Dickson, who was at the
helm, heard voices.
Dickson called the rest of lhe crew on
deck and Blair Barnett, also of Newport,
climbed up on the Newsboy's boom for a
Ul'ITt~
Pri:-e Winni~g Photo
This picture of Mrs. Martin Luther King comforting her daughter
' Bernlce, 5, at her husband'• funeral has won the 1969 Pulllttr Prize
lor feature photographer. Moncta Sleet_Jr. of Ebony Magazine.
' . -·
---'-·--
In moments of lucidity, the woman told
Baillie the t.rio ha·d gone.out in the JS.foot
outboard from Mission Bay early in the
afternoon and that as the wind and seas
came up the boat was swamped. With a
1.20 horsepowef1' motor on the stern, the
boat sank rapidly.
The woman told authorities she was
sure llogg was drowned as they .saw him
fiwa\low a lot of water while struggling to
swim towatd his companions.
Patterson-was In worse-condition than
the Miss Rwiyon because he had inade
several di,•e1 to try to locate Hog after
he disappeared.
The surviv:ing two bad on lifebelts and
\\•ere clinging to buoyant seat cushions.
The rescue tooi< place about 7:20 p.m.
and it was dark before the Newsboy got
the pair back to the customs dock at San
Diego.
Baillie said customs officers wanted to
aearch the pair for possible contraband.
Newsboy was under sail because she
does not have an auxiliary motor.
·'W"e would never have heard the crie11
for help if we had had a motor running,"
Baillie said.
The woman told Baillie several motor
boats had passed very close to them dur-
lfl( lbe (our hours, but none heard her
cries for help.
Wof f 01·d Heads
'
Highwa y Unit
George Wofford Is .. w deputy d~tricl·
engineer of th< 'Calllomla Division of
Highways, District '1, which serves
Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura coun-
ttea, it Wu announced today by Haig
/.ylllfah. district engineer.
The ne" deputy comes to Los AngeJts
from Stockton where he was a super'vJs-
ing highway engineer witb DIJtrlct 10, He
beian hb career with the OivlsiOn of
Jilgbways in IJ31 .
police said. chance, so I decided to run," the 47-year-handcuffed and .plaCed in the front seat of
Myron Babkow, of 9371 Voyager Road , old woman told poUce. the car.
Huntington Beach, said the oldest of the Her captors, a blonde man and a Mrs. McJun)dn escaped when her ab-•
two Chunlng children, Donna Sue, 5, told woman in their late 20s, Oed 'in a late-ductors sto.pped at the drive-in restaurant
him Miss Mulgado was playing In the model blue sedan and became the object to use a telephone booth to contact
pool with her and her sister Karen, 4, The of a manhunt that spread rapidly int.> McJunkin .. Mrs. McJunkin dashed by the
\~Gman evidently slipped into the d e e .p nearby Kentucky and Ohio. M r s • gunm~ toward the restauranL
end and drowned. She could not swim. McJunkin said the man lold her he had a Witnesses said' the man fired one shot
Santa Afla fire and police department suitcase packed with hand grecades and at the Oeeing wo·man. Although the 1bot
rescue units were called but were unable fireanns. missed, Mrs. McJunkln fe ll to the pave·
to revive the woman. Mrs. McJunkin said she was taken ment and her abductors fled in their car.
How to send your
son to college-
without feeling the pinch!
A college education .is more than a matter or
pride and ·accomplishment. In today's highly
specialized and technical world it is an absolute
necessity. But the question is ho'v to finance it!
One of the surest ways or building a fund for
the higher education of your son is to plan ahead
\rith Manufacturers Life Insurance.
By inve!ting in a Manufacturers Life Partici·
pating Policy you get a double safeguard . Your
savings accumulate on a planned basis-and they
grow through earned dividenda and guaranteed
interest. By the time your eon graduates from
J. W. TM , Ir.
Aa:ency Assoei•te
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: 547-562 1
high school, your equity can be largt! enough to finance hi! higher education.
At the same time, you know that should you die before your BOD entera
university-there will be sufficient funds available for thia. purpose.
Talk to a -representative from ManuCactuM'll Life about thi! impor-
tantambition of yours. He will be able to show you bow you can accomplish
your goal without feeling the pinch. Call him today I
•
MANUFACTURERS LIFE·
lll lURAllCS CeMPAllY
LL ....... --HUNTINGTON 8tlCll
Tot &47·1621
l
l
l
l
l '
.
'
j
)
I
1
• ' •
.
' • ' i ' :
I' :·
f
Wofford, 59, is assumW, iesponslblllty
·for Diltrlct 7 adm inistration, filling a
vacancy created .when ~puty District
EnaJneer A. w. Hoy retired on May 1
after 40 years of State "1"Vice. · ~ ·----------------------------------------"--
>
• •
...
4 ll.llLY P'ILllT
·~~ --. Diii~ r1• •t•"I
When it comes to finding a parK·
in e; place downtown, trucks that
tow away illegally parked cars in
New York can be a boon for the
resourceful. Constantin• Sldamon-
Elntoff, city transportation admin-
istrator, said some d rivers follow
t.owtrucks , waiting, for an illegally
parked car to be taken away. They
then slip into the spot. calculating
that the towtruck' won't be back
for some time, he said. • The winner of the beard growing
contest in the annual Lahaina, Ha-
waii Whaling Spree· during the
\veekend was Tony Lang --who-
didn't have a beard. Lang entered
the sideburns on1y category, but
the judges were so impressed with
his sideburns they named him
ov,erall winner. •
Polict searching jor narcotics . '
fn .the attic of a hou.st in South
Lakt Tahoe said they came
GCTOSS a moUJ:e which had at.-
ready found some. Of/U:ers iaid
the rodent, whlch apparently
had taten into a bag of seeds
believed to bl! marijuana, lat1 on
its back with glassy eyes. Its
only respon!e wa,s to wiggle it.s
feet when it.s st D mac h waa:
, tickUd. . . • . Dr. Al•n LOng of London, an ex-
pert in.organic chemistry, has an-
nounced research w h i c h shows
many cockerels are being injected
\vith artificial feminizing hormones
that make them meatier but stunt
their sexual growth. The doctor
told a National Conference of Vege-
tarians the medical profession is
worried the traces of the hormones
left in the chickens might, over the
years, affect men who have eaten
the birds. •
Hamming it up a bif, Ph11llis Hatch
"' Twin Falis. Idaho, ?'tadies for the
NationalJl..YSic Week program being
held in htr home tOion t1ifi wee k.
"And the music goes down and
nround ... "is tlte thtme of tht. t.vent.
but Phyllis seems to be having trouble
getting the sound 11p and out. • Western Girl, Jnc., a job place-
ment finn reported it found em-
ployment in Honolulu, Hawaii for
Miss Gwendolyn Kuuleikailia1oha-
piilaniwailauokekoaulumahiebieke·
alaonaonaopiikeakek:ino.
ABM Cost Raised
By $1.2. Billion •
WASHINGTON IAP) -The Safeeuard
mis.sile defenst system will cost aqother
$1.2 billion, the Defense Depai:f.P.lent
says, bringing 'the 1otal cost for lnltlal,
limiled deploymenl to nearly $8 bllllon.
In the most detailed analysis jiven
Congress so far, Deputy Secrelrty or
Defense David R. Packard gave a figure
of $6.6 billion for the complete system in-
tended to protect two Minuteman missile
bases in North Dakota and Montana.
But spokesmen for the Pentagon and
the Atomic Energy Commission · con-
firmed Monday...Jbal th.e..cost of nuclo.a.r
warheads for the defense mis.slles -$1.2
billion -was not included in the Defense
Departmentf"islimatc.
A Defense Department spokesinan said
the warhead cost wu nol included
because different agencies traditionally
provfded fi1ure.s for only their own part
or a project.
Meanwhile, Harvard law professor
Abram Cha)"S, who evaluated the ABM
for Sen. Edward M. KeMedy, said Mon-
day that Safeguard presents an enigma In
that it ls the first major weaopn, in-
cluding the H.OOmb ~nnot be tested.
''The fact is that the-.firi\ time anyone
will know for sure whether the system
will woi'lt Is when· it Is called upon to
mett an actual attack," said Chay es, a
fo rrner..lqal.advlsc.r to the State Depart·
n1ent.
The professor said he believes Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird conjured up
the Soviet threat of a nuclear first strlke
to strengthen the administration's case
for Safeguard.
Police at Purdue Rout
Camp-in: CCNY Reopens
By TH~ ASSOCIATED PRESS
Campus poliet! at Purdue University
arrested 229 students at a "camp-ln'' to-
day -Purdue's looth anniversary -five
hours before Health, Education and
Welfare Secretary Robert H. Finch was
to speak.
At the City College of NC\!•' York, the
school was open for its 20,000 students for
the first time since April 22. after black
and Puerto Rican students ended a cam·
pus occupation.
Jn Montgomery, Ala., police Monday
arrested 365 Negro students from
Alablima Slate College as t h e v
demonstrated outside the Slate Capitol.
At Purdue, Frederick L. Lovdc,
university president. ordered an enlt' to
the "camp-in," saying he feared a violent
counter-protest. The "camirin" began
last Wednesday as part of a protesl
against a tuition increase nexl fall.
About 20 unifonned campus policemen.
wearing while helmets and race shield~
and armed l\'ith pistols and mace spray
\\'capons, booked many of the students.
City College President Buell G.
Gallagher had said he would not call
police to clear demonstrators from the
campus.
In a news conference on campus this
tnoming. Gallagher. said : "There are
basic injustices in American society, an d
as long as these arc not vigorously at•
tacked, they will continue to have
Mo11key
repercussions on campuses all over the
coun try."
The spreading practice of seeking a
court order to end campus disturbances,
Gallagher added, is "a lot better than
calling the wlice. When honored, it is
more effective."
Nixon to ~sk
Food Stamp Hike
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministration plans to ask Congress for a
1najor expansion of the federal food
stamp program. it was announced today.
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford sa id following a GOP strategy
session at the White House that the ad-
n1inistratiOn's proposals wou ld be sub-
n1 ittcd Wednesday to th1: Senate select
Committee on Nutrition and Murnan
Needs. Ford, Senate GOP leader Everett
J\1 . Dirksen and other Republica n
lawmakers met with Nixon for mo re than
an hour.
Ford said Agriculture Secretary Clif .
ford M. Hardin would propose ncarlv
doubling the current apnual outlay for thC
starilps, which are sold to the needy al a
·• :<dlarp discount and are spent al face
value in grocery stores.
Business
Chimp Takes Rolls in 'Great Race'
LONDON (UPI) -Clad in 11 casual the journey. '1
space suit, the youngest competitor step-She was flying the Atlant ic in a jct to
peel into a chauffeured Rolls-Royce today compete in two segments of the race _
and purred to the airport to clutch at her fastest subsonic travel and the award for
share of $1«,000 in prizes in an air race the commonwealth citizen Tina was born
between London and New York. in Nigeria) who "displays the mo.sf
Clutch is the proper word. Tina , aged S, meritorious and ingenious way of getting
is a ape. across."
"A chimpanzee, actually," said The chimp headed for New York on the
Anthony Ellis. the-tall, d a p p e r _ heels of }one Brltish_aflatrit Sheila Scott,
Englishman who is Tina 's voice to the who arfived there Monday night after a
public she has amassed as a British 26-hour flight in a small P1~r Comanche
lelevision performer. plane from London.
"Tina was very elated coming down on Miss Sct>tt. 41, said she went without
the elevator. You see, she·s never ridden steep during the flight. Her place iced up
in a Rolls-Royce before ," he said. and her radio was not working .
The chauffeur eyed Tina, bit his lip. "I stayed awake without drugs," she
raised his eyes heavenward and cpencd a told reporters. "I feel as if I have been
rear door. flying for three weeks. I don'l know if I
Tina nodded at lhe chauffeur, in gray ever will sleep again."
uniform and red-banded cap, and stepped Miss Scott broke her own transatlanlic
ins ide. She sat, rested a manicured hand record of 17 hours and 10 minutes fro1n
on t.he leather arm rest and relaxed fo r Ireland to Newfoundland, set in 19'7.
~ .
Panhandle -Tornado Alert
Twisters in West Texas, Kansas and Nebraska
Ctlllforttla
lOS ANGELES ANO VICINITY
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1.1'1 Tti..>lltl•
3,000 Cheet-
Ellington
At. SF Sta'te
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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\ -Not aTI the
stomping at San Francisco State la the
• kind that is aimed at hurling gomebody.
'nlere was some o! the happ~ brand of
stomping on campus Monday as Duka
Ellin,Jton played a concert for 3.~
cheering onlQOkrrs. which wound up with
many of them dancing to the Duke's jaz1
beat.
One of the danef:rS was the if'>
repreuible actini;: president S. t •
H3yakaWa, who drew a lot of cheers and
a scattering of boos when he made • fe\f'
remarks and then did an lmprompt11
dance with a coe<l
Hayakawa, a jau buff. arranged the
C\l.neerl personally and called it .a "fan~
tastic success."
HAYAKAWA DOES THE SF STATE BOOGALOO
Acting President D11nces While Duke Ellington Watch
"We needed some kind nf happy event
that everyone could enjoy afte r months of
disturbance and misery." Hayakaw1
said.
I
NOW. GAS OVENS
CLEAN THEMSELVES
AND 00 IT
AUTOM ATICALLY
r .
sa goodbye
to toi and trouble
with Calorics ·new
self -cleaninguven-!
@~@
SeltClean ·oven ...
and Broiler!
Costs less than 3c
a cleaning!
'~ -=;;,~~:;Oven and broiler 1r1 1potl1ufy
,,\1 ;;-_. tlran In two htXJrs
. ~11 I ;..w~ Requ ires only two simple steps to ..;:~ operate _.;W-.~ -~..:... "IJJ\\\ fuss, mess and 1ffo~t are rliminated
-ffjf ~ Plus 111 tl?t·otlm' trrat C1lor1c· ftaluru ••.
Ultra-Ray• infra·rtd broilrr ..• Th1rmo-S.l$' burner·
with-a-brain ••• automatic meat probe ••• rotis11rl1 . , •
•cook and ktep-warrn oven .• , tnd many more!
NOW-NO DOWN
P'AYMENT-
AS LOW AS •••
NO SCOURING
NO SCRUB91NG
•
~~-1-61 ~ PER
MONTH
CALORIC SELF-CLEANING
GAS ,OVENS •••
PRICES ST ART
AS ·LOW AS • • • • • • .$269'5
ASK ABOUT CALORlC'S OUTSTANDING
3 YEAR PARTS WARRANTY!
• SINCE 1947 •· •
411 E. 17th St.
DAIJ.Y 9.9, SAT. 9·6
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Costa Mesa
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HOLIDAY AHEAD -Laguna Beach Assistance League members
Mrs. Williston Bradway (center) and Mrs. Baird Coffin (right)
play bus driYer and maitre d' to whet Mrs. Lucian W. Means'
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Garden enthusiasts
Mrs. \Villiam Francis Robb will be installed as president of Laguna
Beach Garden Club during a Juncbeon meeting in th~ Towers restaurant
at 12 :30 p.m. next Friday.
The ne"'. leader, who w.as .unanimously elect¢ to the high office at
a special executiVe_board meit.ing recently, repl aces Mrs. Leonard Davis
who relinquished lJ.er second term as president for ~Ith'" rfasons.
Mrs. Robb has been a mfmber of the club's execUtive board for four
years. Her current 'poSition as~-tf'easurer for 1969-"70 will befilled lJy Mrs.
Paul Harmegnies.
Other new oJficers to be i(Jstalled _by Mrs. Walter Rea.be. a past
presidenf, include the Mmes. Charles M. Achauer, Andy .J. Antosik, John
\V. Harris and J. William Devane)!, vice presidents; Jacqueline Norton anrl
Arnold M. Kearns, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Lyle
lngerick, financial secretary.
~rying out the club's theme,:Passport to Beauty, Mrs .. Kearns and
Mrs. Devaney, decorations chairmenr ,wil l µse dolls from around the world
to accent table arrangements which ' are being designed by the Mmes.
Achauer. Erntst. Becker.· David EriJ!;son, Harris, Ingerick-, Norton and
Mary Belle Tilt.
The afternoon's program will feeture Laguna Beach High School's
Choral Reading Group under the directiori of Charles Schiller.
Practicf~i an ai-t lhat dates back: lo the ancient Greeks: the teen-
agers utilize. Solo ·voices and humming .background music, make special
sound effects, perhaps incorporating a harmonica or set of sleigh bells, and
move about the! stage in new patterns foi Sch number.
0 The literature they read includes s!iious and traditional works such
a s Lincoln's "Gettysbur8" Address," modem and intense poems like Bob
DylaOCs, "Only a ... Pawn in Th~ir Game," and.llgbter works such as Thur·
ber's ..''The Little Girl and the Wolf.,. • ' ·
appetite for Fiie~dShij, Club's upcoming excursion and luncheon .
~esday, May 20. Mrs . Bradway is ·projects chairman and ?i.1rs.
Collin is chairman of the league-sponsored club . .,_
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· I AN .COX..-494-9466
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Club. Map~,
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Excursion
Friendship Club, a group sponsored by Laguna
Beach Assistance League for people over 50, has chosen
San Diego'SOld .... Tifwn as the .... destination-for-an annual
spring bus excursion-Tuesday;, M·ay 20. · •
During the grolij)'s visit, the city will be celebratin~
its 200th year anniversary with cultural and craft exh1·
bits, entertainment, dancing, music ·and other festivities.
To make the afternoon complete I\1rs. \Vill iston
Bradway, projects chai_rman; has arranged for l unch~n
in Mission Bay's Islandia restaur.ant. She is being
assisted by Mrs. c.-R. Beck .. Jr.
The annual excursion is just one of many gatherings
offered tp members of the social group. Mrs. Baird
Coffin, club chairman, and league members serve
refreshmenlS and join in cards a:nd games at the club
---meetings-which -take place ever-y--Monday-ev·ening-;-
ln addition,· birthday parties take place every
month, and other occasions, such · as Thanks~iving and
Christmas. are celebrated with special festivities for
the more than 60 club members.
All residents over 50 years of age may join the club
by attending one of the Monday meetings at 7 p.m. in
the League House, 526 Glenneyre. \
The club is one of the commun~ty services \vhich
the league advances under the heading of Proj ect
Friendliness.
Race Form
Well Read
Laguna Beach Ebell Club
members and their husband:t
and friends may be caught
reading Ule racing form in
preparation for a trip f11
Hollywood Park Wednesday,
May-28.
Special buses will leave the
Festival of Arts grounds at 11
a.m. for the Day at the Race.s,
an event chaired by Mrs. . . Douglas Kena6t~n.
Assisting her with prepar•
tlons are Mrs. Macauley Ropp,
ctH:hairman and committee
member s , the Mme!.
niOrnton Boswell, Clarence
CarsOn. R o b e r t Patterson,
Harry hawrence and Harold
Odmark.
Mrs. Larry Hunt , president-,
will be in the limelight when
she presents a trophy to ths
winner ol the race which iJ
named in hooor of the club.
Tickets, at $10 per person,
i nc I u de transportation. 'en-
trance to the park, reserved
seats in the upper cl ubhouss
and lunch. i hey may be ob.
t.i.ined by calHng Mrs. Ropp,
499-1528 or Mrs. Kenaston, 494-
528'.
Choral reading Is a performance oriented ··clan wbich Is taught •I
the bigh school to all interested students.. · · . . . · THEY'RE oFF -Laguria •Beach Ebell Club mem·
bers seem quite ready to spend a Day at the Races
at Hollywood Park. Hoping to pick the winners when
, tbe club bas a race named in its honor Wednesaay,
MaY 28. are (left to right) the Mmes. William Hin-
wdod, Larry Hunt, Cl'arence Carson and Edward
Ptoeeeds from the event will
provide funds for the club"s
operatlhg expenses. All other
funds raised by Ebells during
the year Co to varied
philanthropic and cultural ac·
tlvit.ies.
Nell. ,
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Candid Comment Halts 'Third Degree' .by osy Friends
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband
and I have betn readfnl your cohunn for • yeara and {eel we owe you IOl'Delhlng fOr
all the pleasure you've glVen ua. Can you
use an effective answer for JTWTied
couples when lnse.nsiUve clods ask why
they don't have any children?
ANN LANDERS
"
Yesterday, alter six years of being
needled, pestered and pill lhrough the eye and beDowed In a voke that could be
t h I r d degree by ~)' frlend.t1 stupid ~ ~ the, room, "'l'm llirUe. ''
re.laUves and tola.1 etrangm, the town Her la• dr'bpped ail' IDcbel ad btr
meddler came up to my husband at our glasse.s fell off. I thought he'd die
annivemry cocktail party and uked, laughing. Uee lt if you like. -PIE FACE
"How does it happen that your two AND PUSSYCAT
brothers have such lovel y families and DEAR P. AND P: Tllub ftr tM J•..,.
you haven't got a thi!Ji l.o show for 1ix tlropper. Mhlt •tpped, too. -
-)'UT'I (lf.merriqe.,~·~------------
My hllll>and looked lhe old biddy in lho DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 1 11-
. ,
year-old girl who ls nice looking but far
from beauWul. l am QOt anybody's Idea or , ,.. bomb .... t con'I agu;. oot irt11
a11 Uili ...ms to be-happenlng to me.
I went to the haltdrts!er's Friday and
when I put on my coat, lhe tuitrdresser
rollowed me to the back closet, pushed
me behind the cul'taln and mrted lo g<l
f,..h, I lold him oil ond Jell,
Ytiterd•Y J went to I.be dentist to 1et
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my teeth cleaned. When he snapped lhe
chin towel around my neck his band '"ae·
cideotally" dropped. Inside my dress. 1
ga., him a dirty look and he said, "Oh,
eiCuse nte."
This morning; .fht tailor who was
shortenlna my coat measured me around
lht hips for five minutes. Finally I told
him he wasn't making.a bathing suit and
lo kapck.it .rt. r. .
We ti.p rtadlhg 1bout how' Wild lho
teenagers are. The.seiirenare air ooEI W.
What's the answer? -DISGUSTED
DEAR DISGUS'fEO: Never trust
ID)'Hfl over 29.
om~ANN-LANl>ERS: Sevtr•l •eeks-
•go ~you atld proJOf!Jed mourmnc 11
unhealthy, that It serves no useful
purpose. You called it ''self·pity turned
insid e out." 1 :
My brother's widow used your words as
her defense when we (my two sisters and
I) told her itralghl to her face we
lhought it wu an insult to (be famiJ y that
she was going to the thealer, and dining
wi th a man less than sil months after
· her hw.bl:nd pn6td away.r, "
Usually: Jbu g!Ve such i;oocf ad\rtcf, :Ve
c1n't imagine your condoning 11uCh ir·
reverent behavior of ll y\lung widow. On
occasion you have been big enough to ad-
mit you were wrong. WU! you do so
agaln1 , R, L AND C
DEAR R. LANO C! I'm aw:t. I •llall -
bdt DOt 11 Ul11 lu&uee. I firml)I btUeve
tlaal ucll perM mut Helde rw Mmaelf
bow ioa, H W•Dll IO lllOlln. A.Del
wll.atever ihe dec.llloa, It aetd Mt be ex•
plained aor defended .
If you liave trouble gelling along with
your parents ... if you can't get them to
let you live .your own life, seod for Ann
Landers' booklet. ·~ogg~ by P~nl$!
Jlow fo Get Pitore Freedom.~ St:nd 50
-cents in coin w1Ur your request and a ,
long, stamped. self·llddreued env•lope.
Ann Landcr11 Will be glad to help yo11
with your problcrrui. ~Rd them to her in
u re_of tbe. DAI.LY PILO'l; encloalna ....
scU-addre.sstd, stamped envtlopa,
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TUfldlJ, MOI 6, 1969
Horoscope
Pis.ces: Keep Sen.se of Humor
WEDNESDAY
MAY ·7
good 111rm'11 II lwmoat
wHll 11.....,..
By SYDNEY OMARI\ ARIES (Ilardi 21·Aprll II):
GROOMING mNT1 Lou>ar Accent .. llOClabUUX. You can
poollha In ~.. locl1y 1podlpb lower .,..,, legs Wln ldends ad -pea.
ud ull ... Socu, -will )le pie. Get out; bo ..... Breu
nodced by maay. Realise this from routine. Be with con·
•nd Ille special tore I• 11111 · geolal penons. ~ your
areL nH yoa'll be pracdclo& desires. ?bey can be fulfilled.
Zonta Club Lunch~on \
Explored
STATE HONORS -Receiving top honors in the '
state for its aid-to-education program was the Junior
Ebel! Club of Newport Beach. The club was winner
of $500 presented by the Shell Oil Company and now
is eligible for national awards. Receiving the award
from A. P. Hynes, manager of the northern portion
of Shell Oil's Western Marketing Regio n, are club
offic ers (left to right), the Mmes. Warren Fix Ed-
'vard Whitehouse Jr. and Jay Moseley. '
:J~inl
mof~erj 'flJa'J
Wedc:Hngs, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To help fill requirements on both v;eCJ-
ding ~nd engagement stori~~ fOl"f!lS .are avaiJ-
able m all of !be DAILY PILOT oflices.
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes •ta!! members at 6424321 or 494·9466.
_ To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their ·wedding
stories with black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart.
ment. prior to or within one week after the
wedding.
'
Newport Junior Club
Receives Top Honor
~ringing home honors from th~ 13th annual O r an g e
Oistrict convention ·of. the
California Federation o f
Women 's Cl u b s, Junior
Membership, \vas the Junior
Ebel! Club of Ne wporLBeach.
Mrs. Eugene Ko v ach ,
Newp o rt Beach press
chairman, was recog nized as
the out s tandi ng press
chairman in lhe district, and
the club V.'BS cited in other
areas of endeavor.
Other area clu bs honored at
the Disneyland Hotel eve nt
were the Junior Woman's Club
or Huntington Beach, Seal
Beach Junior Woman's Club,
San Clemente Junior Woman's
Club, Laguna 'Beach Junior
Wom!in's Club and the Costa
Mesa Junior Women'a·Club.
The Newi>prt club received
fi rs ts in Edu cation, Fine Arts,
Federation Development and
Press and seconds in Bulletin,
Health and Build a Better
Community.
Hu nt i ng t on Beach was
given special awards i n
Americanism and Me n t 8: I
l-lealth and seeo~ in
Conservation and Educal n.
The Sea l Beach club was Workshop Set
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For engagement announcements it is
suggested that the story, abo accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture. be
submitted. early. U the betrothal announce-
ment and wedding date are six weeks or less
apart, only the wedding photo will be ac-
cepted.
Librarv ,
Exhibits
Announced
winner of s e c o n d s iri A card weaving workshop
American.ism and Federation will be conducted during a I Development, the L a g u n a morning and afternoon session
group received a first in next Thursday by Mrs. Leona
C'O n s er v 2 ti o n , the San Wheeler when South Coast
Clemente club received a se-Weavers' Guild meets In the
C<lnd in Fedet'ltJon Develop-Santa Ana Library at 9:30
ment and the Costa Mesa a.m . • . . ' group earned a apecial award The meeting will be called to ~ Thalidomide Children : May exhlblll In Costa Mesa jn Mental Health. order at 1 p.m. Center Street and Mesa Verde1------------=:.:::...::.:..!:::::_ ____ J•J:?
libraries have b e e n an-• i Handicapped Helped s HELSI NKI (UPJ )-Finland
>is trying to give a normal t education to childreo born
~during the Th a l i do m i d e
., trqedy instead of sending
~ 1hem lo Bpe<:ial schools.
.Some already have ente red
normal schools and , aceordlng
to Sulamma, they are doing
well.
"I am opposed to special
schools for these children."
he said. "l t is far better to
Jet them go to school with
.normal children."
He sa.id the handicapped
children he has worked. with
fl Between 25 and 30 severely
~handicapped children v.•ere
) born in Finland from 1958 to
:1961 before the drug was taken
~off the market as a tran· ~qulliw'. were well-developed in-
~ Largely due to the efforts -tellectually. • .
""°'Professor Martti Sulamma, S~a has s~_1aliied_ In ~a genial physician who has developmg ~ ope~atlon . which
!taten a special interest in can help Thalidorrude children.
•these children, they were not "In principle, the patterns ~-aent of£ to special homes or of the bones are ~anged ~nd
schools as has happened in shaped to make Jt possible ~other e-0untries. for .the limbs to work, .
~Stocks it to You' • • • .
' ' • ' ' ' • •
' t • • • ,
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especially the hand!. But It
is easier to use special
artifJclaJ limbs (or the legs,"
he 1aid.
nounced.
Selected for Mesa Verde are
oil paintings of seascapes,
landscapes and still Ji(e by
Mrs. E. A. (Jane) Huffman.
whG studied under David
Vaughn at Orange Coast
College and currently is taking
instruction from Clyde Zulch.
Mrs. Ola Meredith will e1·
hi bit seasc apes, desert scenes,
landscapes and portraits in the
Center $lreet facility. She has
studied' with Laguna Beach in-
structors, Bennett Bradbury,
Larry Kronquist and Fred
Rash.
Both are members of Costa
Mesa Art Leal\le.
Meet ing Plans
Or8nge Counly Cactus and
Succulent Society wlll meet at
noon tomorrciw in P a u I
Brecht's Orchid ti u r s e r y ,
Collta Mesa .
• • • , r • • •
$ • • • • I • • • • • •
The
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
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' • RADIO KOCM • • ~ 103.1 FM
" • • ~ • ~ • • • • • FROM FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT 'BEACH • ~
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THE BEAUTY SALO N'S
LONG , LO NG FALL
Pemper her meny moods
with the luxurious richn ess
of these 100% hum an heir
pieces. She 'II love you r
though ful ne ss and you'll love
what it does to her. Now these
lustrous hair pieces are yours for
the asking, iust choose the he ir piec.e
which suits her fanc.y, or beffer yet,
choose severel to complement
he r eve ry mood.
Long, long fall , 100.00 value, 38.50
Cascades, 20.00 value, 9.99. Falls, 45.00
value, 22.99. w ;glets, 15.00 value , 5.99 .
Curl, 35.00 vate, I 0.99
Tree t mom to the soft, lus trous Rani permanent,
Introductory price , 17 .50, includes permanent,
style and c.ut. Appointf\len ts not always
necessary. Phone from Anaheim, 53 5·8121;
from Huntington Beach, 892·3331: from
Newport, 6+1·121 2. Th e Beauty Solon, 60 1.
t\NAH EI M NEWPORT
'44 N f.,CUd ))MU1'1 ,,.,~.,.., itl•P'lll •o •12U
MOii. "'"' ,,,.,, Mttl, 111'1,I frl to •·"'· IO t ?:ltl p.lfl. lf f"' "" t 1IO 11 "'' ~I. It•"'· 10 t pm,
HUNTINGTON I E.A.CH
1'11 Elll1191t Av1 IU<Jill
r.,•~, 1tt111...S.L
·It ""'· It t:ll p.l'I\,
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WHAT BIGGAR'S
TRADtTION OF QUALITY
MEANS FOR YOU ...
Tod•y-11 for the put 43 years-J, H. l igpr 11 one of
the le1dlng fumiture and Interior da;p companies in
Southern ~lifomii. Blgga;rs represents the n1.tion'1 le1d·
ing manuf1ctu~r1 of hish qU1lity furniture, carpeting,
droporla, r.mps and •«amrl11. Our buyen caiwfully
ac.-. all tho -dooigna avalable"' oelect only tho best
for Clli!omi1 livlng.
In fumlture, q .. lity does not nec ... rily mean high priu •
Biggars strives to give you the most value for your dollir.
1; .c cc :-:-!J.iiny's i>oncr his a;lways bftn lo gu1rutee com·
plete iitilf•clion to Bigpr cuttomtn.
This ipring -11 well u every ipriOJ and f1D -tlgars
bu wide dltpl•ys of tho newat •nd bat fumlllliw for your
home. ligtn extensive Wlrehoutet enable ut to hlW!
l.arge stocks a;va;ila;ble for immediite delivery. Visit your
neimt ligprs store soon .and hive one of our experienced
st.if~_ members issisl you with your home furnish ing needs.
FINE HOME FUR NISHINGS• INTERIOR DESIGN
PASADENA: Colorado at El Molino
POMONA: Holt, ea~I or G1rey ~ ~ SANT A ANA ••.• AT ILIJINTH ? c ..
;.: • S1n l1 Ant Storo Open Mondoy Evenings ~
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EDI Tl-ON
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N P _l \ bl -p --·1 "!lJf-:· ~J... l ~ o · ue , o '-.:AOUr -1.-1ar11a-
Navy Secretary Rejects Recommeiidation of Brass
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WASHINGTON (AP ) Navy punishment would not be justifie4." nel ipvolved in the Pueblo Incident." Chaffee reported th ese 'recom-
Secretary John H. Chafee today ruled nut ,While prisoners of the North Koreans, The Navy court of inquirf, he dlsclos· mendations had been made by the court
any punishment for any U.S. personnel he noted, "They suffered extensively eel , had recommended after piling up of inquiry:
connected with North' Korea's seizure n£ from physical abuse and torturous treat-4,.350 pages of testimony that general , -That Bucher be tried by general
the spy ship Pueblo even though a Navy men!." court ffiill'tial trials be held for pmdr. court martial for five 11.lleged offenses in-
court of inquiry urged court ,martials for All charges lodged against Pueblo Bucher and Lt. Steph~n R. Harris, his eluding pennittlng his ship to be search-
sk.ipper Lloyd M. Bucher and a chief crewmen_w!ll be dismissed. "research" officer. ed while he had the poWer to resist, fail-
_assistant. "I am CQD.~." Chafee~said "thal _Hartis w.as tbe officer i.!!_ charge of the ing to take protective measures during
Setting aside major recOmnlenOations neither individual discipline, nor the slate research detachment ·aboard the Pue510, t.he attac;k, complying .with-North Korean
of the 8().day inquiry, Chafee declared of of discipline. or morale in the Navy nor which was conducting an electronic orders to follow tllem into port, "negli·
the men who served on the Pueblo : any other iriterest requires further legal eavesdropping mission o(f North Korea gently failing" to destroy all classified
"th'ey have sulfered en'ough, and further proceedings with respect to any person· when she was seized. (See PUEBLO, Page Z)
Sacra11ietat01fi'li9hts
'
Air Cal Seeks
City'i Backing
By JEROME F-COLLINS
Of ""' 0.ltJ P'llfl stiff
Air California today asked the city of
Newport Beach to back its petition · to
provide direcl flights between Orange
County Airport and .Sacramento.
The request, which councilmen will ~
consider Monday, puts the city in an
awkward position.
The Newport council is on record QP-
J>OSed to further escalation of jet flights
at County Airport, But the service to
Sacramento would be a major con-
venience to local government. Municipal
Newport Police
W a1it to Do Ow1i
' --
Pay Bargaining
Newport Beach police want to do their
own negotiating with the clty ad-
ministration and council over per¥1nnel
matters, such as salaries.
Detective Leo Konkel. presict$.nl of the
Newport Police Employees' Association,
today formally made the request of City
Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt.
It means that police employes, nfficers
and clerks, no longer want the City
Employees' Association to represent
them as a bargaining agent.
Konkel emphasized in his letter to
llurlburt-that police personnel will con-
tinue their membersJ;Jp in the 350-
member Cicy Employees' Association.
"However," he said, "We feel that our
employment has innumerable unique
facets ··w hi ch can only be properly
presented by p:>lice personnel. It is for
th.is reason th3.t we wish to represent
ourselves before the management of the
citx,of Newport Beach."
The police department has I 2 O
employees. Close to 100 of them are in
the Police Association. They aie also
members of Ule City Employees'
M!!!Ocialion.
Konkel asked that the Police Associa-
tion be recognized by the administration
in accordance with recenUy enacted state
leglslation that cleared the way for such
bargaining units.
City cc:.;ncllmcn are expected to
discuss Konkel 's request Monday. ,
Thousands Plan
Charleston Marcli
officials,· faced with oil, sewage and
freeway probleims, lately have had to
make several trips to the state. capital to
press for legisliotive ac~on.
What is likely is that councilmen on
Monday will elect to take no position on
the Air Cal application to the state Public
Utilities Commission (PUC),
Faced with the same request, Orange
County supervisors last week str;1t1dled
no fence . They endorsed the Air Cal peti-
tion unanimously .
Supervisor Wliliam Phillips said the
non-stop flights -two a day -to
Sacramento would be a '"valuable service
to county officials, businessmen and
BCl\001 people."
Air Cal president Carl A, Benscoter
makes the same pitch in his request to
the city for support of the f"·l nne-way fliaht&-''We firmiy -believe lhiS is a need·
ed service and wUI be widely accepted
because of the volume of. travel
necessary fol' local government, school
districts, county officials and interested
citizens who deal direcUY with the
various state offices in Sacramento."
Benscoter said there is also "a strong
conµnunity of busin~ and industrial in-
tereft" between the county and
Sacramento.
Local officials now make connections to
Sacramento via San Jose, San Francisco
and Oakland or they fly directly out <if
Los Aflgeles International Airport. Hours
are thus added to the flights.
Jn addition to standing aside from any
endorsement of the Air Cal proposal, and
cesequenlly not standing in its way,
Newport councilmen have another option .
· They could back the service on the
&rounds that it would fall witt),in the
scope of Coµnty Airport's designation by
William Pereira and Associates as a
"metroport." A metroport, by the county
aviat'.bn master planner's own definition,
is one whose commercial flights are
limited to a 400-mile radius.
In any event, the political realities or
the situation are plain enough: support of
th.e flights by county supervisors could
well prove to be. the most effective argu·
ment for them. The PUC is oot expected
to overlook the fact that supervisors, by
Jaw, run the airport.
The PUC has yet to set a date for a
public hearing on the issue. But
Benscoter said Air Cal is pushing for ac·
t..ion "as e:rpeditiously as possible."
410 Japanese Killed
TOKYO (UPI) -Automobile smashups
killed 410 persons on Japan's higtlways in
ttle. four~ay J,ioliday that ended Monday,
the Japan broadcasting station said to-
day. It estirriated 20 million Japanese
visited beaches, parks, roos and moun·
tain resorts, creating some. traffic jartl.!
that ixtended more than 10 miles.
.. ll Y I.OT. II'" ....
SOCIALITE f OT -Beech', .. ~~M P•it
+ ,, j.i,.'f{ :" •
Socialite-Shot,
Escort Kill$ Self
In Palm Springs
By Wll.LIAM REED
Of tM ~lty 'l'lltl Sltff
One man tS dead and· another was
severely beaten in a Palm Sprme,s apart-
ment inCident Monday in wliJCh Hun·
tington Beach social leader Marnette
Peek, 58, was shot once '.in. the abdomen
witli'a .25-ealiber automatic ;isiqt.
Found dead miles troln Mo.' Peek's
apartment was her long 'time friCnd and
frequent t>scort, Dr. La~e . L,
Peterson, 57, of 1146 ·KeiisingtOO Road,
Los Alamitos. . ,
He was shot once through i!'e, roo{1of
his mouth with !l .2.5-ealiber slug ~ died
from What p:>lice called a self·irlOicted
gunshot wound. '
Mrs. Peek, who lives at 16461 Golden
West St., Huntington · Beach w.ith h'er
parents, Mr .. and Mrs. Joseph Reid, is
listed as in satisfactory condition this
morning at· Desert · Hospital; ' P8.lm
Springs.
Beaten al the apartment at 300 · N.
SunMse \Vay was West Los Angeles real
estate man1George Triphon, 39, who Was
treated at the hospital for head .injuries
which resulted, police said, ,"from a
beating.'' He was released after treat-
ment. ·
Police did not disclose resulls of their
Interrogation o{ Trlphon.
Polici Lt. Carl Hulslander said this
mor~' that the shooting of. Mrs. Peek
and tlli·beating of Trlphon apparently oc-
curr~ about 11 :30 a.m. Monday in Mrs.
Peek's apartment which she kept for her
frequent visits to the .d.~ spa. ·
"Mrs. Peek was shot once .with the .25
caliijer 'automatic weapon, It was a
(S.. J'EEK, Page %)
* * * GOP, Demos
Back Chafee
---On Trial Ban
,
WASHINGTON (AP) -House leaders
of both parties 1\lesday supported Navy
Secretary John H. Chafee's decision bar-
ring discipl~ action against the com-
mander and another officer of the in-
telligence vessel Pueblo.
Speaker John W. McCormack (D-
Mass.), said he believes "the secretary of
the navy has taken ihe right action."
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford of Michigan sald he,a-wittl the
decision not to .. take action against the
Pueblo officers.
Chafee overruled the Navy court of in-
quiry recommendation that Cquir. Lloyd
Bucher and Lt. Stephen R. Harris, in
charge of the research attachment on
bOartl., be tried b~a general court
martial. .
·Sen. John Stennis ( ·¥ias.), c~irman
ol thfl:Senate·Anned Sttvtces Comrnittee,
said he would have to study the rep<>r:t
carefully bllt that, on the basis of present
Information, he sees· no firm ritson for
hJs committee to go Into the Pueblo case.
Sen. Peter H. Dominick (&Colo.), who
had contended that the Navy was trying
to blame Bucher, said:
"I am hopeful the-Senate Armed
Services Committee will go into this mat-
ter even more thoroughly to avoid having
any other officer subjected , to the same
kind of harassment."
Rep. Otis G. Pike (D-N-Y.), chairman
or a House Armed Services subcommit·
tee which has investigated the Pueblo
case, said he agreed with Chafee's ac·
tion.
"The Navy court of inquiry tO<ik a
hard·line position," Pike told reporters,
"which the secretary ~empered wittl
mercy."
Pike said the setretary's Statemeat
amounted lo saying there. \Vas blame
eoough £Or ev'tryone in the Pueblo case.
Franc at Bottom;
Bank Intervenes
PARIS (UPI) -The French franc
plummeted to its rock boUom level today
and gold prices soard to their highest
since April 30 in a new burst of in·
temational jitters about F r a n c· e" !
economic future.
The fr~nc. hit 4.9740 to the u.s. dOUar,
forcing the Dank of France. to intervene
to shore it µp, It wa.s the lowest point it
has touched since former President
Charles de Gaulle's ·defeat and reslgna·
lion April 28.
CHAlU.ESTON, S.C. (AP) -The Rev.
Rafph. David A~mathy.'said today he ex-
~ts .thousands or persons to march in
Charleston Slµlday "in a dramati<;
witness against government oppression."
UCI Flap: Students Won?
Abernathy, head of the .!)outhem Chris-
tian, Leadership COnfere.nce, sai d
t.'Ongressmen and lt.bor leaders have been
invited lo join the demonstration and he
expects many cf them to accept.
He said the ~lhers' Day march for
poor people, originally scheduled for
Washington, has been switched to
Charleston because "~ eyes of the na·
tion are focused . here." Abernathy ill
spearheading the-drive for union recogni-
tion or hospital Workers wl'io have been on
strike ·8gainst two Charleston hospitals
for mort tl'fanslt weeks.
Abtnrathy, free u"l'er 4POO bail on
charges of violating a court order which_
limits \he number of pickets at the two
hospUAls, was to Juve Charleston durinc
the afternoon.
'
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'
M:any Faculty Members -Stew Over ConC6ssions
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ""' P.atr ,llet ,,.,.
The brash,. young students have v.·on
concessJons.
The steadfast and proud senior faculty
are feeling betrayed .
Oversimplified, pe.rhilps. But that is the.•
wa y some imPort.ant ~s on the UCJ
Irvine campus see the situaUon today,, ,
The dissident sludentfi have dlsba~
their protest becauoe thb r..i Ibey ,b•!
accomplished all they can this sdlool
year .. They have won vttto!'les.
Many faculty members, , meanwhile,
are st(lwing. One senior pfofesaor said he
fee" the campus.administration h8• bent
over bickwar:ds to placate ·the activists.
He said the toat has been high in facult1
morale, ---
' .,
~hat was one of the acUvists1 victories.
The other wa! faculty concession to
permit students to recommend on the
hirlns ofiwo percent of professors.
' I
1'oday's Flaal
I TEN CENTS
'
Than;ks for ltletitory
Comedian Bob Hope jokes w·ith reporters as he leaves New York's
Institute of Ophthalmology at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital after
treatinent of a hemorrhage of·the 1eft eye.
Newport Lifeguard Station 1
Groin Construction Slated
The sea overnight coughed up two more
feet of sa,nd that it took from•, NewpOrt
~ach lifeguard headquarters this past
weekend, and now plans are being drawn
to bWld.g??i~ to keep °"I sai>d,lhere.
, Several hours of meetings ·this morning
among . city lifeguard,· engineering and gen~al . servic's deParipleni h e ad s resul~ in ~ pf ans 19 use wooden groins
to shore up the beach instead of
bulkheads lo keep-, the heavy surf out.
Air Force Pilot
Survives War,
Hurt iii Craslt
A U.S. Air. Fnrce pilot who made It
through a recent Vietnamese lour without
a .scratch was injured with, his wife and
20-month-old baby girl Monday in a Dana
Point head-on · crash. ' ' ,
Michael .Heck, 25, his wife, Dale, 23,
arid their chikt Jenifer of 6051n: Narcissus,
Corona de.I Mar, were north. bound on
Coast Highway When the driver of a
south bound vehicle apparently lost con-
t'rol of his car on the wet pavement and
collided with the Hecks' small foreign
car. 1 Both tars were going about 40 mph,
California Highway Patrol officers said.
The accident occurred•near.the highway .
intersection of Blue Lantern Drive.
Rain,'Rain Just
Won't Go Away
For the "third sti'alght day, the Orange
Ceasl and ·most of Southern california
was dampened loday'1 b)-a persistent
drizile ·which kept temperatures mired in
the low 60's. .
A high.Jevet atmospheMc disturbance
was bfamed t(or the aogg)r but hardlf
stonTiy con.dit,l~~whlcb'.,btought showers
in the: mountain and desert areas and ,
sPoradic · sprtnkles 1: atonC ' the Or~rige
COast. • ' . ' J
Tbe· Condit!On wiis1 ex~ted to •move
eastward into 'Arizona'by Wednesday, but
night and momµ,g .. cloudiµess was still
predicted for coastal areas. Sunny af·
ternoom were forecast thf!)Ugh the rest
of. the wee~.
Nixon's Brother; Ed,
New Commiit~eman
EVERE'l'!';W.,h. (UPI) -'-Pre!ldent
Richard M .. Nhr~'s y~nger ·bro~.
Edward, was elected Republican-state
com:rUttee.m~n. from Sf'IC?Hom\a}i County
Monday ntgtiL. . . , : ,
. ·Th< · 33-y>ar-old • AtdW~" Manor,
Wash .. resident received '89 of 91 vol.ts
: cast Tb& other two· ballots· were blank. · •• ! • '
' NEW YORK • (AP) -,. '11\o stock ·mar·
kcL close<l_,hli1'<[.{r:?'• de>plte ano~r bouL of pio!"~' _(See quota~""' ,., ... io-:a1i.-----,
-. Public Works DirectOr Joe De\llln aald
that construction on erosion-preventing
st.ructures wi!I start later this' )Neek.
The heaviest onslaught or surf and higli
tides In memory around pier area .over·
tQe weekend caused the loss of tons of
sand and heavy damage of pavements
and planters around ihe headquarters, hit
almost monthly sine~ January storms.
·During the city effort to stem I.he
erosion, Devlin suggested replacifli
unsuccessfUI bulkheads with groins to
slow the waves' wash and allow the water:
to drop sand instead of removing it. L.
He said that since groins'were incltlded'
In plans for a permaneiit bulkhead, con·
struction o( erosion-preventing structures
will start on schedule. ·
The actual wall against the sea,
however, will be eliminated, and as Soon
as the city council concurs, final plans
will be altered on the project.
The council already has:· authorized
inore than $8,000 for a liulkhead-con·
struction project at the headquarters.
Devlin said that when the groins are
built, they would make it easier for city
crews to dump sand around the area. ·
"To put it simply," he Said, "we're en~
col,lraged with the perfnrll!ance of these
groins. It looks like they'~in&. ,..
UCI Graduate
Dean Slates Talk -.
Dr. Ralph . W. Gerard, dean or the
graduate division, at UC Irvine, will tell
about the CQming of computers in educa·
tion in a Thursday talk at the Mesa
Theater. Costa Mesa.
TiUe of Gerard's talk will be "Educa-
tion ls About lo() Be Born." ...
Sponsored liy the' Newport Harbor
Service LeagUe, It ..-·ill be at. 10:45 a1m.
Besides being dean of· the gradµite
division. Gerard is professor of biology
and director of special studies at VCI. He
has laken parti.cular interest Jn the ad-
vent of comPuters for individual in·
structlon. · ·
Orange Cons&
Wea~er
Our red·faced · weathbnnan Is
trying again with predicliont of
parUy surui.y we,ther ~for ~ednes-.
day and temperalures in the mid·
60's aJong the coast.
INSIDE' TODl\Y.-
•
T
"
"
-;
2 DAILY PILOT
l PILOT ..
., J
LOGBOOK
'Disn~yizing' the· Woods
Not as Bad as It Sou nds
By ARTBIJR II. VINSEL
Of fM INlllJ Plt.f ftttf , Mineral Ktri"g wu 1 Sierra wilderness "here half-my Ufe ago, the ling.
er-colored mule deer never Luted Weber'• Bread and root beer wu 50 Ce.nil
a boUle.
So I wu saddened to lwn the plcturesquo timberline valley In the
' Sequoia NaUoul Foret! la to be<ople a '35 mllllon Walt
Dlllley Productiona winier wooderland.
"One Disneyland la more than enoogb," laid a col-
leque archly, as we d.lBmally dlscwlsed Mickey MOllle
on snowshoes, giant teacups under--xe pines and Bambi
upelled from hi! native parodlae.
Sometimes however, one jum -tOeotx:luslons when
he's Jost touch_ ~th 1 place for too long a time, because
time is the great changer of peopl~ and places.
Maybe I ha't a philosophical chip on my shoulder on
the WQ' to bear Robert B. HJckJ, project manager, ouUine the SO.acre recrta·
tiooal 'facWty and il& ramillcations before-the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com·
merce. Virtually inaccessible during the winter month!, 70,000 cam~s and
sportsmen norietheless drove the dizzying' 19-mile trip from the main highway
to the valley last summer, a startling count.
So mwiy people, packed Jnto such a small area -Mineral King Is like a
cballce carved out of bald granite by a river and ut"wllh 20 jewel-like lakes-
crealed sanitation problems and sewage pollution. .
This would have been unthinkable that summer as I hiked three miles,
seemingly into the sky itself, fishing for fat brown trout lying at the lake
bottom like logs, on what was to be my father's final trip to the mountains
he loved. ·
lfobody thought much abollt pollution 14 years ago. • * ' Now we must and under agreement.. by the Disney organization, the
U.S. Forest Servtei!' and other federal agencies, the developers will provide
proper HDitation system!: They will build a modern ~gh"'.ay cu~ing the 95-
minute journey in hall. Winter sports resources for Californians will be great-
ly broadened. Rural Tulare County will h~ve 2,SOO new jobs and $4 millioa
more annually in Wes.
Mineral King will never be the way I remember it, but nothing ever Is
and Hicks' talk cleared up some prejudiced misconceptions based on map
judgment
Development of a winter sports haven by the management of the Ana·
heim Magic Kingdom -Jn an area already suffering tourist-itis -does not
mean Taco Bell franchises on the John Muir Trail.
The Sie~a Club would probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
Jn hand-to-ha.QI. combat anyway, should such prostiM.ion get beyond the point
of ludicrous point-making.
The Mineral King story, It appear!, Ls a different one and should have a
happy ending.
FN>m P"1Je l
PUEBLO FINDINGS ...
,material on the ship, and "negligently
failing" io see that hi!" crew was fairly
&killed In pra«dures for destroying
clwified material.
-That Harris be tried by general court
martial ~'for three alleged offenses 9f .
dereliction in performanei! of his duUea,"
mainly dealing wlth the Jack of ability
and readiness on the part of the research
detachment to be able to destroy all
c1assliied matef.JalS curing an emergen-
cy,
-That Lt Edward R. Murphy Jr., e1·
ecutive officer of the Pueblo, be gjven a
letter Of admonition for failing "to
organize and lead the crew on the day of
the seizure especially in the ship's ~ajor
lnternal task of emergency destruction of
cl assified material."
documents.
Gladding, then director of the Navy
security group in the Paclllc, was held by
the court to have been derelict for "fall· int to develop procedures to insure u.e
ieadiness" of the Pueblo's research sec-
tion.
The Navy said the Pueblo's officers and
men are now widely scattered -on
leave, discharged or assigned to new sta-
tions. They all stayed in the. San Diego
area While the court of Inquiry was in
session.
At a news CQnference explaining his
'lion, Chafee said he had not talked to
ident Nixon about the course of 3.C·
he had chosen.
There has beerrsome public controversy
over the question of whether the-Navy
was trying to saddle Bucher arrithls men
with the blame for the Pueblo debacle
wh~n higher.ups ought to be held ac-
countable, too.
.. ' .
'
Si~ -y ~ riths .Arrested ..
, . I ' •
, _T~"fl·~ge._B (i~ _ la ry ft.~.ng : in Mesa Smas1Uql 1
, Iii,...... ~urfi'll Ml!!Ur llitl ., ·Ibo wbolo ll'OUii." quickly tumid Into cash. ,
owr Ult weea.d in eciliDectND With a • . ,..,_.~·to~ ~ege, mac» Four of the youths are in custody o1
juvenile burglary ring which police claim n..q.l of their forays in daylight hours, Juvenile Hall and two hive be"" rek•t. . en\frlnl lhrcuP.i an unloct..i root. door ' · ~· r • bu netted $3,900 in c;uh and property or "lndow, lenei'ally working alone. ed in the~ody of their parents. • ·~
over the past ttve months, tnvolvtng 128 Pplice satd the !Soy burgtati would PoHee emphas!ztd that no C&rCO\ICS
thefts in Costa Mesa bome1. make sure nobody was tftome by rlna:lng were\lnvolVed In the case. _,..
According to police1. the six boys, ~ang-the '1:1.oorbell. µ ~meone answt.red, the AutfUJrilles said I.hat the youths ttadUy
Ing !rt age fTom 18 tO 18, were arrested boy t'YrOOld say he ,was looking for a admitted to 126 crime.; however pnly '41
loUowing a montl!-lons lnveallgatlon that lrl~1 gMngll phoney name: · o! the lncl~ents had.been'""'"°" to-Iii>
began when 1 juVenile arrested in Janu-~ majority ot the ut.fts involved police. ·
ary In connecUon ·with Ill"" 11\an 80 ,m!d~lf-lncome "9use1 and ipartmeQla In Coola ~esa Polloo .Of&cer Artllur Q>
crJmes disclosed that one of his aceom-man.Y parta _of ~sta Mes~. Police are ex· Coorteai.. said, "There are sever.t
pllces was ~ 16-year-old. J,endmg thell' investigation to Newport rea.soo.s for this, Including apathy, an«f
Police saJd. that all the suspects are Beach. the fact that the burglaries often invdlved
from Costa Mesa. All have P,rior police Police said the loot includes cameras, small items."
r~rds. " . •• . wa~ jewelry, blue' chip stamp boob, Courteau added that often the victims
Like th~ Robin .H~ B~glar, wM cigantte lighters and tr~r radios, believed the loot, such as cash, jewelry,
share;I ~s bootr with his pals, ~e as well a.s cash. or trading stamp books,· had been taken
Juvenfle nng, police allege, pooled their Little of the merchandise bas been by relatives or by the cb.lldre.n of
loot to buy cars and "have a good time recov~. police said, because it was neighbors. ·
Real /).r. Foster Takes
Stand in Impostor Case
By TOM BARLEY
· Oi tM ooti,, 'u" Stttr .
Dr. Glenn Lyon Foster took the witness
stand today to offer the first testimony in
what the prosecution asserts will be "a
chain of "unshakable and irrefutable
evidence" against the man who allegedly
used his name.
The University of A1abama medical
~hool cardiologist told the crowded court
that he became aware of the fact that
someone-identified by the prosecution
as Robert Ervin Brown, 33-was using
. his name to practice cardiology at a
Fullerton clinic shortly before Brown's
arrest last Feb. 22.
The slight, bespeciacled physician smll·
ed as he ~amined the application form
allegedly submitted by Brown to the
Orange County Medical Association last
January. But he readily testified that the
six-page form was correct in every
category with one exception -his
signature.
Chief Deputy District Attorney James
Enright claims that Brown's extensive
knowledge of Dr. Foster partly stems
from a telephone call he made to the
physician before laking the Fullerton ap-
p>intment.
Enright claims that Brown told Dr.
Foster that he needed the physician's
personal background to include in a
medical brochure that he was preparing.
Dr. Foster today revealed that
relatives in Fullerton and a form e r
medical colleague Cont.acted him about a
man. who allegedly was using bis name to
practice cardlology in Orange County. He
told the court that FullertQfl police ad·
vised him of their arrest of Brown before
he could take any action in the matter.
Brown, 33, a former electronics technl·
clan is accused of practicing medicine
without a license. He was·indlcted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on 17 coun~ ot the charge after many of the 103
patients he allegedly treated for heart
disorders testified before the panel.
Enright today urged the seven·man,
five-woman jury to bear in mind the
"tremendous risks'' that many patients
ran In innocenUy submitting themselves
to Brown for treatment and diagnosis. He
recalled an alleged incident in which
BroY{n prescribed a drug for a patient in
a·quanUty that turned out to be 20 times
grtater than that normally prescribed.
"That patient was saved from likely
death and certainly serioua injury only
becauae a woman doctar and a very
alarmed" DUl'8e ovetbeard the order ••
Enright said. He al!O told the jury th~t
Brown's rtpeated defense to questioning
was that be was employing "some pretty
new techrµques" on his patients.
Today IB the first day of testimony in
what is expected to be a three: Week trial
before Judge Byron K. McMillan.
The judge late Monday st.ruck down
deputy public defehdu L a w r en c e
Buckley's demand for a change of venue.
Buckley argued that pre-trill publicity
had made it impossible for Brown to ob-
tain a fair hearing in Orange County.
AL9o rejected by Judge McMillan was
~uckley'a motion for seques(ering of the
Jury -Buckley feels that the juror1.
should be kept aloof from all·publicity""
the trial • ·
Spanish·
~·
12,000
sq. fr.
of
Top
9uaUty
Fumlture
F rom Page l
UC IRVINE ...
Academic Seliati meeUngs have· become
"a \rild circus." .
He sald legislation has been passed that
is "hair-raising in its implaciatlons." He
noted that a commltttee was asked "to
settle withi n 10 days,· off the top of their
heads, the most incre~bly complicated
issue" of student participation In hiring
and firing of professon.
The professor claimed young assistant
professors have aligned theniselvea with
activists and are voting as 'a bloc. Any
question of legality raised is brushed
aside as a obstructionist, he .said. _
He also said in depai;tment after
department there are junior, non-tenured
faculty members who shake their heads
right along with the senior faculty.
The end result of all this "mischief,''
he said,· has been a serious deteriora-
tion of faculty morale.
Many other professors hold that view.
Many don't. Quite a number are con-
cerned about the future. ~
Reacted Chainnan of History Henry C.
Harris said at his mother's home in
Melrose, Ma.ss.,-that he was 0 very, very
happy" with Olafee:'s decision not to take
disciplinary action. He said he would go
to Wuhlngtoa &000 for a new ass.Ip.
ment.
Said Chafee: "I think It Is clear that
everybody was advancing on a certain
assumpuo~ ••d th•t assumpuon-p<•...,-P a r s ons Ga:ns to be an. invalid one" -mainly, that a ..
The court of inquiry, it was disclosed,
•lso found that letter" of reprimand
1hould be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Johnson, commander of naval forces In
Japan, and CapL Everett B. Gladding,
iow retired.
ship operating on the high seas would
alway• be sa1e 1rom p~•cy. Su pport in War
From Page I
PEEK. ••
Agninst Copte rs
Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons is picking
c..,........, .........
e 0¥1n111 Stf•
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Tep .Jay cee
Burch Pickett, president of
Newport Harbor Junior Cham-
ber of Commerce, di splays
plaque awarded him as out·
standing Jaycee president in
Southern California District.
He helped raise local group's
rat.i.{lg in district from 11th to
4tll place 111jflt r·,•~1 'lnding p~
grams and projects.
'
Meyer to Chancellor Aldrich's decision
two weeks ago to reinstate Kent :
"Every administrator today operates ·
with one eye on state politics and one ey1
on student politics and the faculty is
caught Jn the middle. The administration
at UCI is no exception and this decision
has to be seen in that light."
' '
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'No
MoMy
Down
Fim
Payment
June
.1969
. '
our e1c1usive
6 pc. ens~mble
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he• " -rt co'""'" lo s,.ftllh 01t, ,, ........
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·The court held that Johnson, who has
&inei! moved to a new assignment, was
"derelict in the performance of duty" by
railing to plan properly for emergency
1upport of the Pueblo in a confrontation
and "negligently falling " to verify
destruction procedures for classified
up a little support for his campaign homicide attempt," officers asserled. 3he against low·Oying military helicopters.
was rushed to the hopsital where "I'm with you regarding those chop.
• IM'llen'-con. , .... • CWrtll'-11 Me1111"'9 LeN
{ft'llkflls .ol• l•klc) Why pey up to s399
..
DAILY PllOI
'
OllANGa COAS1 ,U.LISHtHO C:OMl"ANT
Rebell H. w,,4
''"'""' ..... ,111111 .......
J1t k R, Curl e.,
Vkt l"m~ ,,.,. Gtftffel Mttll ..
The11111 K11¥il ....
The111•1 A. M1r,.lll11• MlllMI,.. Edlllll'
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............ OfftM
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Meillnt A4ir~111 ,,0 , lo• 111$, t266J --C..\9 MIMI -Wfll ~ Str.-1 ~ looffl, m "-' ,..,...., HWllll'llltll flffca1 _, Jlll ll'l'tlt
emergency surgery was performed. P • 'd Bo · nft r 1"26 \V Dr .. Peterson was found in a remote pers. Sil nrue n.aw ings, ' . Ocean Front, in a letter to Parsons. "I area of the city, at Joyce and Bislra live on the ocean fron·t too."
streets, where he apparently had been Parsons' complaint of two week! ago
walking alone. Officers said he was pro-had been leveled at helicopters flying
nounced dead at the hospital from what over Corona del Mar at heights, he said,
they called "a self.inflicted head wound, of 200 feet.
one shot from a .2.Xaliber automatic Afrs. Rawlings said the problem ar-
pistol in his mouth at 4:21 p.m. '' fect.s her neighborhood, as well.
-Police said that be apparently had died :"Early mom.Ing those things come over
about 4 p.m. some four and a half 'hours the house making so much nolse it almost
after Afrs . Peek had been &hot. Officers knocks one out of bed. I don't know
decllned to u.y whether the same gun where they come from but they do.
was used in both ~tln&s. An autopsy ol "They fly so low over the pier." she
Dr. Peterson l$ scheduled for today. said, "lllat it's frightening. You are so
Dr. Peterson was a member of the right ln this."
music department .at California Stale Parsons' ~nse to Mrs. Rawlin'gs
College, Long Beach and at one Um'e was just as punchy:
served as chairman o( the Fine Arta "l don 't know that we can completely
division. eliminate noisy, low·flylng helicopters,
Lt. Hulslander said Mrs. Peek will be but letters like yours wilt keep us
Interrogated as soon as she has recovered trying."
enough to talk with officers. City staffers meanwhile today awaited
fl.1rs. Peek operates the Ptelt Family word from Marine Corps officials on
Colonial Funeral Jlome in We.stmln.ster what can be done to de-escalate the
which She acquired more than one year '..!fllghl~ over Newport -if anything.
ago in a divorce action from her former
husband, Lon Peek, now of Riverside.
Both 'the Peek Mortuary and the • Brandt Backs British landmark fal)111y houle at Golden West
~t "ind Heil Avenue are owned by
Mrs. Peek.
Ptlra. Peek is 1 noted social leader In
both Lona: Beach and Orange County and
Is active In the business community
throughout Southern Calllornla.
l\feet India Prentler
NEW DELHI, India tAP) -U.S. Hous-
ing Secrttary Geor1e Romney and So~t
Premier Alexei N. Kosy4in conferred
1eparattly loth1y with Prune ~1lnlster
lndlra Gandhl
I
Common, Market Bid
LONOON (AP) -VI c e Chancellor
WiUy Brandt pledged full Wesl German
backing tod!:y for British membership of
an enlarged Common Market' but warned
against pressuring the French for their
agreement.
Tht leader of West Germany's Social
Democrats labtled 111 "lmproptr and.
untenable" suggestions that the Bonn
government has been hiding behind the
coottails of tx·P~·dent Ch t1 r I• s ~ Gaulle on the issue {Britain's bid to join
th~ sU.-naUon ec c group.
'
YOUR
CHOICE $ '°" lfTHEI 0 , TH111 2 oaours
(
,
ONLY
I '
$799 for this
l1vi1h group •••
•'
USE YOUR
CREDIT
CARDS
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a
v
BEA AMDERSON, 1tor
Tlltld•Y• Ma, 6. ltff M r.-t• ll
'Grand Slam'
Seen • Cards
Bridge and brunch -what an erljoyable way to
spend a Saturday morriing.
This 'vas the thought of members of DZ's by the
Sea. Dell.a Zeta Alumnae, who have plaMed such an
event for Saturday, MaY 10, in the Lagun~· ls home
or Mrs. James Fogarty.
The hostess, also is chairman of the benefit and ·
being assisted wi th plans by the Mmes. Cecil ?i.1cCon·
nell, John Rodriguez and Harold Johnson.
Proceeds will be used for Delta Zeta's m.Un philan.
lhropy, the hard-of-hearing children in Orange County,
as well for contribution of clothing to the t-!avajo In·
dians and· the sorority1s national philanthropy, Unibetic
Camp for diabeti c children.
In addition to presenting monetary gifts to the coun·
ty hard-of·hearing children's program, DZ 's by the Sea
give practical help through workshops held twice yearly
under the direction of Mrs. Elsie Deeter, area·teacber
of hard-of-hearing children. Members cut and paste
pictures, make dittos or work on the current needs in
teaching aids. ·
'rhe forthcoming brunch will be the first event plan·
ncd by the new slate of officers, headed by Mrs. Donald
VI'. Avery, president. .
other leaders are the Mmes. Fogarty. vice presi·
dent; John Waller, secretary, and Rodriguez, treasurer.
Committee chairmen are the Mmes. Lawrence
Platt, Southern California Council delegate; Wallace
Hudson, recommendations; Lloyd McCoUum, publicity;
Donald Berry, telephone and hospitality; Fogarty, phil·
anthropy, ai>d McCollum, Panhellenic: dele~ate.
Mrs. Rodriguez .. ztJl accept .reservations for the
brunch by mail at J:Hr Calle Aragon, Laguna Hills. at
$1.50 per person.
-· •
J .
World Nex.t Week
STOMACH ACHE AHEAD -What does a father do
if he has two Girls Club members in the family who
want to t>uy him a chocolate sundae during Girls
Club week? Asks for two small 'sundaes or finds
another father to help him! James Dodd finds that
he is caught in that predicament by da~ghters
·Debby, 8(Ieft) and Pamela, 6. -
..
W I NNIN~ HAND -Competition will be keen but friend ly
when members of DZ's by the Sea gather for a benefit
bridge-brunch Saturday, May 10. in the Laguna Hills home
of ,.,lrs. James Fogarty. Comparing th e winning partners'
~
, ,. ' .
• The Girls Club of the Harbor Area Is going to show
oil a bit next week. . •
It will be National• Girls Club \Veek and the area
clu b is cooperating by planning a special event per day
and Inviting the coJIUDunity.
An ·open house, community service day, fa shion
show and several special parties are in-the oiling.
Monday, May 12, will begin the fiurry of activity,
· with Community Service Day desigr:tated_. Representa-
tives of the more than 1,000 club members will present
~and-<:ralted gifts to various Harbor Area civic organi·
zations. ·--
· -'l'uesday.-May...13,-will be:bigbligbted with a 3-p.m.
cake and 'punch party, hosted by members of Kappa
Alpha Theta Alumnae Association. The . clubhouse, lo--
cat~ at 1815 Anaheim St., Costa Mesa, will be the party
setting. ,
The middle day of the week wiU see a public open ·
house from 7 to 9 p.m. planned, with all parents in the
community invited. The girls themselves will be on •
hand for the Wednesday evening session to demonst rate
the skills acquired through Girls Club membership.
Mrs. Gleam Murphy, .executive director, will be a
hostess.
Dads will answer a challenge to volleyball Thurs-
day evening from 7 to 9, and have a l:hance tci swell the
cl ub's coffers by purchasing chocolate sundaes for
themselves and their daughters, at 50 cents each. Pre-
sent that night to assist with host duties will be mem· be' rs o Ube Costa Mesa FJre Dep8rtinent..and-U .S. Ma-
rine Corps personnel station~in Orange County.
Girls Club members; thei°?'-moth'ers and grand-
mothers will Cooperate in presenting a fashion ·show, A
Girl's World of Fashion, Saturday, May 17, from 2 to
4 p.m. in the Senior Citizens Recreation Center. Ne"'-·
port Beach. The three generations all will model clolh·
ing from Sears and ensembles created by the girls in
machine sewing classes at the club.
Tickets for the fashion presentation wil l be Sl for
adults and 50 cents for members and children, and the
public again is invited.
In the week-long ceJebration, the area club will join
144 other clubs across the nation affiliated wi th· Girls
Clubs of America, which encompasses a membership
of more than 100,000 girls 0£ all races·and reJ..igions.
All girls club progra ms offer instruction in sewing,
cooking, crafts. music, ~ramatics, grooming, physical
fitness and spo'rts in an after-school and weekend
program.
A silver anniversary is in store duri ng the week for
th e national organization, which will mark its birthday
on May 14.
The worth of the Girls Club program rs evident
'vhen J anet Anthony of Costa Mesa, a current member,
is mentioned. Mrs. James Dodds, Girls Club president,
lists with pride the 16-year..old's accomplishments.
A winner in the Girls Clubs of America re-
gional cooking contest, she was awarded a $500 scholar-
ship .by Readers Digest Foundation for her essay on
\Vhat a Career Means to Me , and an all-expense paid
round trip to Atlanta for the GCA national conference
\vhich took place last month.
hands are tleft to right) the mes. Donald Berry, telephone
and hospitality chairman; Donald \V. Avery, president;
John Waller, secretary, and John Rodriguez, treasurer,
,
Candid Comment Halts . 'Third Degree( by Nosy Friends
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband
and I have been reading your column for
years and feel we owe you something for
all lhe pleasure you 've given us. Can you
use an effective anSwer fOI.: married
.ooples when insenaitive clods ask why
they don 't have any children?
f esterday, after six: years of being
needled, pestered and put through the
t. h I r d .,,.te by nosy friends, stupid ·
·rtlatives and total strangers, the town
meddler came up to my husband at our
/
annJversary cocktail party and asked,
''Hc.w does It h11ippen that yau r two
brotilers have such lovely families and
you haven't got a thing to show for 511
years of marriage?"
My husband looked the old biddy in tbt
eye and bellowed in a voice that could be
heard across lhe room, "I'm 5terlle."
Hr:r jaw dropped ail inches and htr
glasses fell olf. r thought he'd die
laughiog. Use it if you like. -PIE FACE
AND PUSSYCAT \
DEAR P. AND P : Tlluk1 lor tH Jtw•
dropper. ft,tlne dp'f''f*f, too,
DEAR ANt; l:imoERS: I am • 1'-
••
year--0\d girt who Is nice looking but far
rrom beautiful. I am not ln)lbocb''• klu
of a se.x bomb and can't figure out why
all this &eenu to be happening to me.
I went to the hairdresser's Friday and
when I put on my coat, the hairdreuer
followed me to tile b&ek closet, puJhed
rt1e-behind the curtajn and started to get
fresh. I told him off and left.
Yesterday 1 went to the dentist to get
•
my teelh cleaned. When he 1napped the
chin towel around my neck his hand "ac-
cidentally" dropped h~lde my dress. l
gave him a dirty look and he said, "Oh,
e1cuse me."
This morning, the tailor who was
shortininlt my coat measured TM .round
the hips for five minutes. Finally l toitl
him he wun't making a bathing suit and
to knOck It off1
We ktep reading about how wild lhe
teenagers are. These men are all ovtr 40.
What'1 lhe answer ? -DISGUSTED
-. unhealthy, that It serves no use!ul
purpose. You ~ailed it ''self-pity turned
inside out.''
My brother's ~w used your words as
her defense when '\e (my two slste11 and
I) told her straight to hu race we
thought il was an Insult to thi family that
she was going to the theate~ and dining
with a man less than six months alter
her husband .passed away. ·
U.!iually, you give such kood advict, voe
can't Imagine Your condoning such lr·
reverent behavior of a y.>Ung widow. On
DEAR DISGUSTED: Never tru1t occasion you hive been big enough to ad--
1nyone oYtr ~· _ _mil YO!l 1\'C[f:J!QJll.--.Jtlll_~Jt_-1!L
OEAJl ANN LANDERS : Several weeks ags1n? -R, L ANO C
ago you said .prolongtd moum°l& i! DEAR R, LAND C: I'm 1H1.rt l-1h1ll -
1
but DOl ID tblt IDl laDCe. I firmly btlleve
lb1t e1cll person mu11t decide for IJmsdf
ltow loag he wa1t1 to moan. ADd
wb1tevrr I.be declll011 It 9eed' lot be el·
plahte.4 ltOr defended •
If you have trouble gelling along wllA
your parents ... If you can't get them ta
let you live your own liJe, send for Ann
Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parents!
ltow to Get More Freedom." Send 50
cent.s In coin with your request tnd a
long, stamped, self·addreaed envtlope.
A.nn Landers will be glnd to help yoq
wit~ Your probl~ms._ Send t_hern_ lo her ~ill_
Ca(e ol the-DAILY PILOT; enclostna I
st.U-addreased, slamped envelope ..
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Horo scope
Pisces: ~eep Sense of Humor
WEDNESDAY
MAY ,7
-By SYDNEY OMAllR
GROOMING HINT: Lunar
potfdon In Aquarfu1 today
1poUJgbl.I lower areu, lq1
ud uklet. Socks, bole will be
nodetd by many. Realbe thJ1
and take tpeclal care In &his
area. Then you'U be practicing
good croomlng la harmony
lnlogy.
(Marth II-April 11):
A n socla'Wllty. You can
win friends and lnflueoce peo-
ple. Get out; be seen. Break
from roUUne. Be "1th con-
geniar penons. Ezpreas your
deslres. :?'hey can be fulfilled.
Zonia Club Luncheon ..
Oil Problem Explored
STATE HONORS -Recefving top honors in the
state for its aid-to-educaµon program was tbe Junior
Ebell Club of Newport Beach. The club was winner
of $500 presented by the Shell Oil Company and now
is eligible for national awards. Receiving the award
from A. P. J-Jynes, ma ri8ge r of the northern portion
of Shel1 Oil's Western Mai;-keting Region, are club
officers {left to ·right), th e Mmes. Warren Fix, Ed·
ward \Vhitehouse J r. and Jay Moseley.
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
Newport. Junior Club
Receives Top Honor
! Bringing home honors from
the I3lh annua l 0 range
District convention of lhe To help fill requirements · on both "'ed -
ding and engagement stories, form s are av ail·
able in all of the DAJLY PILOT offices.
Further questions ,viJI be answered by Social
Notes staff members at 6 21 or 494-9466.
1 California Federation o f • Women's Club s, Junior
tl Membership, was the Junior
J1 Ebell Club of Newport Beach.
Mrs. Eugene Kovac tr ,
N e w, p o r t Beach press
chairman, wa s recognized as
the outstandin g pres!s
chairman in the dis tric t, and l~e club was ciU!d in other
areas of endeavor.
. To avoi d disap ointment, 1 prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy photo·
graphs lo the DAILY PILOT Society Depart·
ment prior to or within one week after the
\Vedding. Ot.her area clubs honored at For engagement announcements it .is
suggested that the st.ory, also accompanied
by a black and while glossy p i c t u r e, be
submitted early. If the betrothal annoU.nce-
ment and wedding date are six weeks less
apart, only the wedding phQlo · be ac·
cepted.
f the Di.snwland }lotel event I.
f-
f 1
: Thalidomide Children
~ Ha n dicapp~ He lped
HELSINKI (UPI) -Finland
:is lryirrg to give a normal
·education lo children born
~during the Th a lidomide
tragedy instead of sending
.. them to special schools.
: Between 25 and. 30 severely
::handicapped children were
·born in Finland from 19511 to
:.I96I before the drug was taken
:off the market as a tran-
,.quilizer.
Largely due to the efforts
j,f Professor MartU Sulamma,
"'a genial physician who has
taken a 1peclal Interest in :~ children, they were not
... sent off lo special homes or
:.schools as has happened In
;-other countries.
>.
~tocks ft to You'·
• <
" • • •
Some already have entered
normal schools and, according
to Sulamma, they are doing
well.
"I am opposed to special
schools for these children,"
he said. "It is far better to
let them go to school with
normal children."
He said the handicapped
children he bas worked with
w e r e well-developed in·
tellectually. >
Sulamma has speci alized in
developing an operation which
can heJp Thalidomide childr~n.
"In principle, the patterns
of the bones are changed and
shaped to make it possible
for the limbs to work,
especially the hands. But it
is easier to use special
artificial limbs for the legs,"
he said.
Librarv ,
Exhibits
Announced
?\-fay exhibits In Costa Mesa
Center Slreet and Mesa Verde
libraries -have b e e n an-
nounced.
Selected for Mesa Verde are
oil painUngs of seascapes,
1 and still life by
rs. E. A. (Jane) Huffman.
ho sUtdied under David
ughn. at Orange Coast
allege and currently is taking
tructlon from Clyde Zulch.
s. Ola Meredith will ex-
hibi seascapes, desert scefieS,
landscapes and portrails in the
Center Street facility. She has
studied with Laguna Beach in-
structors. BcMett Bradbury.
Larry Kronquist and Fred
Rash.
Both are members of Costa
hiesa Art League.
Meeting Plans
Oranse County Cactus and
Succulent Society will meet at
noon tomorrow in Pa u I
Brecht's Orchid N ur se ry ,
Costa Mesa .
were the Junior Woman's Club
of Huntington Beach, Seal
BeaCh J unior Woman's Club,
San Clemente Junior Woman's
Club, Laguna Beach Junior
Woman's Club and the Costa
A1esa Junior Women's Club. _
The Newport club received
firsts in Education,.Fine Arts,
Federation Development and
Press and seconds ih Bulletin,
11ealth and Build a Belter
Community.
.H· u n ting ton Beach was
given special awards i n
Amt>ricanism and J\f e n ta I
lfcalt h and· seconds in
Conservatio n and Education.
The Seal Beach club was
\\'inne r of s econd s in
Americanism and Federation
Development, the Laguna
group received a fi rst ln
Conse rv2tlon , the San
Clemente club received a se-
cond in Federation Develop-
ment and the Costa Mesa
group earned a special award
in Mental Health.
,.,,.,.
THE BEAU TY SALON 'S
FALL
Workshop Set ?
_A card weav ing workshop 2
will be cond ucted during a I
morning and afternoon session
next Th ursday by h1rs. Leona
Wheeler when South Coast .;;J
Weavers' Guild meets ln the "-
Santa Ana Library at 9:30 2 a.m. r:
The meeting will be called to f1
order at 1 p.m. 2
I
I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 2 <'. ~ ~
't • • •
l'--..J::ot'llper her many moods
with the luxurious richnes s
~
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• • •
1J .
• •
• ' ' •
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The
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RAD IO KOC M
103.1 FM
FROM FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH
•
of t he se I 00°/o human he ir
pieces. She'll love your
thoug hlulness ond you'll love
whet it d oes to her. Now t hese
lustrous heir p iec ere yours for
the asking, ju choose f
which s · er fancy. or
choo several to comple
hel' very mood . •• Long, ong foll. 100.00 volue , 38.50
Casca es, 20.00 volue, 9 9. Foils, 45.00
val~e. 2.99. Wiglets, 15.0 value, 5.99.
Curl, 3 . valu e, l~.99
J
' Tree+ mo to the soft. lustrous Rani permanent .
lnlroduct-ory price, 17.50, includes permanent,
style and cut. Appointments no t always
neces,.ry. Phone from Anohe ;m, 535-8 121;
fro m Hunting ton Beoch. 892 .J JJ I; from
Newport . 644 ·1212. The Beauty Solon, 601.
ANAHEI M NlWl'ORT
IU N [ll(Hd J..U.1121 (f F•1lllon t1l"JCI •u 1112
MOii JltN '''' MQll,.!l!!'\l_fr1 10 '11'1. ftr't::ll) p rn. 10 t m -Iii t:» 11'"
!Otl. 10 ''"· 19. " ....
HUNTIHGTON I EACH
11'1 l!dl/\ffr ..,...,, B'1•Ul1
..MO... 1111'\.i..1. 10 f.m. lo •:» p.M.,
?. I ~ ~ ~
$
2 ~ ~ r:' ~ ~ ~ ~ ?.
r:'
. ~· WHAT BIG
TRADITION OF QUA ITV
_MEANS FOR YOU ...
T od•y-H for the P"•t 43 ye•rs -J, H. Bigg.tr is one of
the leiiding furniture and interior design compa.nlu in
Southem-C.lifomia. Biwn represents the n1tlon'1 lead·
ing manuf1cture11 of high quality fumiture, carpeting,
driiperia, limps ind accenoria. Our buyers Ciirefully
~rttn all the new designs IV.J1i11ble to select only the best
1Jr C.llfomia living.
In fumitur,, qu1lity does not necew.rily mean high pri~ •
Bigp,1trivt1 to give you the mo1t value for your dollar •
Ti1e corp1ny'1 po licy ~as alwiiys bttn to guiirantee com•
pl,te uti1f•clion to Biggiir cusl'>mers .
Th is spri ng-11 well u evtry 1pring ·and fall -llgga,.
hu widt dltpl•ys of the newat •nd best fumlture for your
home. l igg.irs exten1ive warehouHS enable us to h.tive • large stocks .J1v1il.J1ble for immedia te delivery. Visit your
nearest Bigg.Ji rs store soon .lnd hive one of our experienced
staff members assist you with your home furnishing needs.
FINE HO~E F>HINGS •INTERIOR.DESIGN
~14'1.
PASADENA: Colorodo at El MoHno
POMONA: Holt, eii.St of G1rey
SANTA AN MAIN ·AT lllYINTH
e· Sant• An• Stora en Monday Evenings
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I ~osta Mesa
YOl. 62, NO. 108, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES OAANGE ·COUNTY, €ALIFORNIA
No Pueblo urt Martial
Navy Secretary Rejects Recommendation of Brass
WASHINGTON N a v y
Secretary John H. Chafee y ruled out
any punishment for any u: . per.so ~I
connected with North Korea's · f.
the spy ship l?ueblo even though" a Navy
court ·of inquiry urged court martials for
skipper Lloyd M. Bucher and a chief
assistant.
Setting aside major recommendations
~ the 80-day inquiry, Chafee declared of
the men who served on the Pueblo:
"they have suffere<i enough, and further
punishment would noL.be justified." net Involved in the Pueblo incident."
While prisoners of1he Norih Korean s, The Navy court of inquiry, he disclos-
he noted, "They suffered e:rtensively\f, had recommended after piling up
from physical abuse and torturous treat· 4,3SO pages of testimofty · that teneral
ment." · ' court martial trials be beki for Cmdr.
All \charges 'Jod ged against Pueblo ucher and Lt. Stephen R. Harris,' his
crewm~~ will be dismissed . "research" officer.
"I a~ convinced,'.' Chalee said, "that Harris was the officer in charge of the
neither individual d~jpline,por the stale research detae_hment aboard the Pu@!g.
of disciJ)line or morale in the Navy nor which was conducling an electronic
any otbel-·Interest requires further legal eavesdropping mission off North Korea
proceedings with r~pect to any person-when she was seized.
Chaffee reported t 'h es e recom·
mendatlons had ~n made by the court
of inquiry: '
-~t Bucher . be tried by general
court martial for five alleged offenses ln-
<!ludlng Permitting his ship to be search-
ed while he had the power to resist, fail-
ing to take protective measures during
the attaci,.comply.ing_with_North Ko:rea_n_
orders to follow· them Into port, "ne~li·
gently failing'' to destroy all classjfied
(See PUEBLO, Page Z)
Sacra1nento Flights * * * GOP, Demos
Air Gal · Seeks Bat;k ~h~fee
On Tr'iarBan · City's Backi~ WASHINGTON (AP ) -House leaders
of both parties Tuesday :supported Navy •
Secretary John H. Chafee's decision bar·
ring disciplinary actiorl asainst the com-
mander and another off.leer ot the in-
telligence vessel Pueblo.
y JEROME F. COLLINS
Of Dall)' .Pl ... Sl1tf
Air asked the city of
Newport each to back its petition to
provide diiect flights between Orange
County Airport and Sacramento.
The request, which councilmen will
consider Monday, puts the city in an
awkward position.
The Newport CQU.ncil is on reco rd op-
posed to further escalation of jet flights
at County Airport. But the servi~ to
Sacramento would be a major con·
venience to local government. Municipal
•
Mesa's Attorney
'Gives Computer
Firm 2nd Cliance
' "It is difficult to see where anyone
could come under the spell of an IB~1
machine," opined Costa Mesa City At-
torney Roy E. June.
City councilmen agreed and decided
?.tonday to amend seelions Of the
municipal code to permit Computers for
Fun. Inc. lo once again set up shop at
South ~ast Plaza.
The Los Ange\es·based !irm, headed by
Stewart M. Krakover, opened there
March 3 with its computers reading the
future at SO cents per customer by selec·
ting personality traits from a master
bank of 500 cards keyed to the 7.odiac.
A week later, it closed, after June
' received a complaint. tt-. Krakover alleged the complaint was fil·
ed by a competitor, who cited a little-
known ordinance forbidding astrology,
personality and hand-writing analyses in
Costa Mesa.
The competi tor charged Krakover was
miffed about losing out on the concession
rights.
·"Our ordinance, as written, bars this
twe, of business inasmuch as il is the
practice of astrology. I see no objection,
however, to exclude this from the
oi'dinance inasmuch as the astrological
readings are made through an IBM card
system which eliminates the. alleged evil
which th<. ordinance was intended to pro-
tect our community frOm," wrote City
Attorney June in hi s legal opinioii.
The mot ion to write lhe amendment
carried unanmiously.
Tliousands Puin
Cliarleston M,arcli
<;HARLESTON, S.c, (AP) -The Rev.
Ralph David A~mathy said today he ex-
pects thousands of persons to march in
Clfarleston Sunday "in a dram.itic
wl'fness against goveriune:nt oppression.''
Abernathy. head of the Southern Chris·
tillft Leadership Conference, said
congressmen and lc.bor leaders have beeh
Invited to join the demonstration and he
e~ts many of them to aCCi!pl.
He said the Mothers' Day march for
poor people, originally scheduled for
Washington, has been switched to
Charleston because "the eye., of the Tia·
llMI are focused here." Abernathy is
spearheading lhe drive for union rtcogni
tiort'of hospital workers who have been on
strlle against l\\'O Chafleston hospitals
for inore than six wet k5.
officials, faced with oil, sewage and
freeway problems, lately have had to
make several trips to the state capital to
press for legisl<.tive action.
What is likely is that councilmen on
Monday will elect to take no position on
the Air Cal application to.the state Public
Utilities Commission (PUC).
Faced with the same request, Orange
County ·supervisors last week straddled
no fence. They endorsed the Air Cal peti-
tion unanimously. •
Su pervisor William Phillips said the
non·stop flights -two a day -to
SpeaKer John W. McCormack {0·
Mass.)1 said he believes "the secretary of
the navy has taken the right action.''
Hous epublican leader Gerald R.
Ford of Mi · gan said he agreed with the
decision not to take action against the
Pueblo office s.
Sac;ramento would be a "valµable ser vice DAl\.Y ,1LoT '"",.... .
to county officials, business men and SOCl4LITJ; ~OT
Chafee overruJed lhe Navy court of in·
qi.Jiry r'ecommendation lhat Cmdi-. Lloyd
Bucht!t• and Lt. Stephen R. Harris, in
school people." a..c1i'1 MO-PH!i Air Cal president Carl A. Benscoter · '""'flf
· charge of the research attachment on
board, be tried by a general court
martial. · makes the same pitch in his reques~· '
Ule Cii:1 for supi)ort.-Of the $20 one y . • • . _·
fl i1hts. "We firmty believe this is a need-ite Shot
ed servi~ and will be widely accepted '
s'1. John Stennis (0.Miss.), chairman
of the Senate Armed Services Commft"iee,
&aid he would hive to study the report
carefully but dlat, on the basis of present
Information, he sees no finn reason for
his committee lo go into tht! Pueblo ;ase.
because or t}le volume .of travel
necessary for lilCal government, school
districts, county officials and interested
citizens Who deal . directly with the
various state o[fices in Sacramento."
Benscoter said thete is also "a strong
community of business and industrial in-
terest" between the cOunty and
Sacramento. ·
Local officials now make connections to
Sacramento via San Jose, San Franciscfl
and Oakland or Ibey fiy directly out of
Los Angeles InternatiOnal Airport. Hours
are thus adde.d lo the flights.
ln addition lo standing aside from an ..
endotsement of the Ait Cal proposal, an<!
consequently not standing in its way,
Newport councilmen have another option.
They could back the service on the
grounds that it would !all withip. the
scope of County Airport's designation by
William Pereira and Associates as a
"metroport." A metroport, by the county
aviation master planner's own definition,
is one whose commercial fiights are
limited to a 400-mile radius.
Jn any event, the political realities of
the situation are plain enough : support or
the flights by county supervisors could
well prove to be the most effective argu-
ment for them. The PUC is not expected
to overlook the fact that supervisors, by
law, run the airpor t.
The PUC has yet to set a date for a
public hearing on the issue . But
Benscoter said Air Cal is pushing for ac·
lion "as expeditiously as possible." ,
410 Japanese Killed
TOKYO (U~ -Automobile smashups
killed 410 persons on Japau's highways in
the four-day holiday lhat ended Monday,
the Japan. broadcasting station said to-
day. lt estimated 20 million Japanese
vl1ited beaches, parks, zoos and moun-
tain resorts, ~aurig some traffic jams
lhat.erteJ than 10 \·
Escort Kills Self
In Ptilm Springs Sen. Peter H. Dominick (R-Colo.1, who
had contended that the Navy was trying
By WILUAM REED to blame Bucher, said:
01 tll9 o.ili' l'li.t s1.n "I am hopeful the Senate Armed
One man is dead and another was severely beaten in a Palm Springs apart-Services Committee will go into this mat-
'flent incident Monday in which Huo-tcr even more thoroughly lo avoid having
tingtcffi Beach soclal leader Marnette any other officer subjected to the same
Peek, 58, wu shot once in the abdomen kind of harassment."
with a .25-caliber automatic pistol. Rep. Otis G. Plke (D-N·Y.), chairman Found dead miles from Mrs. Peek's :ipartment was her long time friend and , or a HC?Use Ann.ed Se,rvlces subcommit-
frequent Pscorl, Dr. La~rence L . tee which has investigated the Pueblo
Petersnn .• 57, of 1146 Kens; .. .non Road, .;case, said he agreed with Cbafee's ac·
" .. '6. lion.
Los Alamitos. "The Navy court or inquiry took a
He was shot ouce lhrough the roof of hard-line position," Pike told reporters,
his mouth with a .25-caliber slug and died "which the secretary tempered with
from what police called a self-inDicted mercy."
gunshot wound. Pike said the secretary's statement
Mrs. Peek, who lives at 16461 Go~den amounted to saying there was blame
W St. •. Huntington Beach with her enough for everyone in the Ptleblo case.
r. and Mrs. Joseph Reid. is
in 53tisfactory condition' this
Hospital, Palm
Beaten at the apartment at 300 N.
Sunrise Way was West Los Angeles real
eslate man George Triphon, 39, who was
treated at the hospital for head injuries
which resulted, pollct said, "from a
beating.'' He was released after treat-
ment.
Polict did not .disclose ruults or their
interrogation of Triphon.
Police Lt. Carl Hulslander said _ this
morning that the shooting or Mrs. Peek
and the beating of Triphon apparently oc-
curred about 11 :30 a.m. Monday in Mrs.
Peek's apartment which she kept for her
frequent visits to the desert-spa .
"Mrs. Peek was shot once with the .25
caliber automatic weapon. It was a
(See PEEK, Pa1e Z)
Franc at Bottom;
Bank Intervenes
PARIS (UPI) -The French franc
plummeted to its rock bottom level today
and gold prices soard to their highest
since April 30 ln a new bunt of In·
temational jitters about F r a n c e ' 1
economic future.
The franc hit 4.9740 to the U.S. fjollar,
forcing the Bank of France t.P intervene
to shore it up. It was the lowest 1)9int it
has touched since former President
Olarles de Gaulle's defeat and resign•·
lion April 28.
UCI Flap: Students ·wo.n?
M":ny Facul ty Members Stew Over Concessions
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of tllt 0.llY f'lllf lllff
The brash, young students have won
concessions.
The steadfast and proud senior facully
are feeling betrayed .
OversimpUned. perhaps. But that is the
way some important persons on the UC
Irvine cam pus see the sltuallon today.
The dissident students ha'le disbanded
their protest because they fee.I they have
acco mplished all they can this school
year. They. have won victories.
Jn this context, Samuel C. McCulloch
tendered his resignation as dean of
humanities Monday In a letter to faculty.
For the record, he gave as his reason a
desire lo return lo ruU-time teaching. He
wUJ remain at UCl as professor of
history. ·
It al.so was learned that Profesaor of
Jllstory Lewis U. Hanke has resigned to
accept 1 post In the !all at the University
or MuucbusetU. Hinke decllntd to rive
a tt:uon for leaving. •
Thal was one of the activists' vict.oriu.
The other was faculty conctSSlon to
permit students to r~mmend oo the
hiring of twe percent of pro!essoi:s.
The iludtnt voic:e dee.talon was made
by 1 majertty of ih• 75 prore...,.. at·
tendina the last &easiOA of the Academic
Senate, the govemin1 body to which 270
faculty membe:ra belona.
t.
Today'• FINI
N.Y. Stoeks
I
TUESDAY,' MAY Ii, '1969 TEN CENTS
U'I TI .........
Thanlu tor Memory
Comedian Q.ob Hope jokes with reporters as be leaves New York's
Inslitute of Ophthalmology at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital after
treatment of a hemorrhage of the left eye. -· ..
Mesa Teen Burglary Ring
Smashed; Six Youths Held
Six youths were arrested Monday and shared his booty with hls pals , t~
over the weekerid in conn~tion ''with a juvenile ring, police allege, pooled their
juvenile burglary ring which police claim loot to buy cars and "have a good time
has netted $3,900 \n c~h Ind property with tht whole group."
over the past five months, involvlna 126 The suspeci.s investigator's allege, made
thefts in Costa Mesa liOmes. man of· their forays in daylight tiOOrs ,
A~g to police, the siJ boys, rani-eqterin& liu'ough an unlocked rear do0r
ing in Bge Crom' 11 to 18, we're arrested or window, generalJy working alone.
following a month-long invesllgatlori that Police said the boy burglan1 would
began when a juvenile arrested ip Janu-make surt nobody was home by ringing
ary in connection with more than Ill the doorbell. lf someone answered, the
crimes disclosed lbat One ol his 11ccoin· boy would say he was looking for a
plices was a 16-year-old. -~giving a phoney name. ,
Police said that all the suspects are The majority or the thefts involved
from Costa Mesa. An have prior police nUddle-Jncome houses and apartments in
records. many parts of Costa Mesa. Police are ex·
Like the "Robin Hood Burglar," who tending their investigation to Newport
Beach.
Air Force Pilot
Survives War,
Hurt in 'Crash
A U.S. Air Force pilot who made It
through a recent Vietnamese tour without
a scratch was Injured with his wife and
20·month-old baby girl Monday in a Dana
Point head-on crash.
Michael Heck, 26. his wife, Dale, 23,
and 'their child JeOifer of 605Y.i Narcissus,
Corona del Mar~ere north bound on Coast Highway ~ the. driver of a
sou th bound vehlc pparenlly lost con-
trol or his car on the wet pavement and
collided with the Hecks' small foreign
car.
Both cars were going about 40 mph,
California Highway Patrol officers said.
The accident occwnd. near the highway
intenecUoD or Bftle Lantern Drive.
Rain, Rain Just
Won't Go Away
For the third stl'a.ight day, lhe Oranae
Coast Ind most of &Nthem California
wp..dampened today . by a persislent
driule which kept iemperatures mired in
the low &O's.
A high-lever almospheri< dlsturban<0
was blamed ror the SOUY but hardly
stormy conditions which bfou&bt showers
in the mountain aod desert IJ'e&I and
sporadic oprlnkles llOlll the Orqe
Coast. .
The ,condition wu expected to move
easlwanl lnlo Arizona by Weclnoldl!', but
nl1ht and momln(·cloudlneai wa 1Ull
predicted lot coutaI ...... SUnay 1r.
temooos were f..cut..uitwch the rest
of lhe week.
' Nixon's Brother, Ed, •
New Co~itteeman
' EVERET!', Wuh. ·(UPI) -PrHldent
Rlchard·J.\. Nixon'• ypu-· btelber,
F.dward1 was .elected Rcpub'ucan ~te
comrni\teemM ftom SOobomi&h County
Pollce said the loot includes cameras,
watches, jewelry, blue chip stamp books11
cigarette lighters and transistor radios,
as well as cash.
Li.Ille of the ~handise ~ been
recovered', police sa~as
quickly turned into cash, • Four of the youths are in custody 'ol
Juvenile Hall , and two have been releu-
ed in the custody of their parents.
Police emphasized that no carcotics
were involved in the case.
Authorities said that the youths readil)"..
admitted to 126 crimes; however, oniy-l i
or the incidents had been reported to the
police.
Costa Mesa Police Officer Arthur R.
Courtea1. said, "There are several
reasons fo~ this, including apathy, an·d
the fa ct that the burg laries often involved
small Items."
Courteau added that often the victimt
believed the loot, jllCh as cash, jewelry,
or trading stamp books, had been taken
by relatives or by the ·children of
neighbors.
Stock Markeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The slocl< maJ'
ket closed hi~her today. des}>lte ·another:
bout of profit laklhg. (See quotations.
Pages 20-21). ,
Orange .
Weadier
Our red·faced weatherman 11
lrylng again wlih prediction el
partly sunny w~albet for Wednes-
day and temperatures in the mid·
IO's along the coast.
INSIDE TODAY •
· A. UC! Ntgro profeasor .taita
1t11dtnt prott.stors taclc tht wil, ...
(o win &lltir t>oittes ogcUnst-ate
cictminttroion. Page 10. • "-' , -·-• .'! .. .-..... :.:·= _.., "' " ,_
n --..
-· Netlc• " ..... -!SU •lllllwlal ,_ • -'"'' ·--.. ---·-.... ,_
" ..., •'11111" " -•
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~ AbeorJthy, · free under $500 bail on
ctwsu ol violating a court order which
lhntts tht number of pickets at the two
ho0plta!J. wu lo leave Cl>arles\Oll durlna
th< oliernCOll.
Many' faculty membt!rs, meanwhile,
are stewing. One senior profeseor said he
fetls the campus administration hasDent
over backwards ~ placate the activists,
He uld the coat hu been high in faculty
mor1le.
However, he · wu one of the senior
historians who rtCOlr..!De.nded t h e
dismtasal of ~ Profeseor of
Hl!iory <l<l>r&< W. Kent. That recom-
lnendat1on 'lU ovtm1led by Chancdlot
DUJel G. Aldrich Jr. "' advice of a
review committee, and Kent wtll be pro-
moted to a.ssocl.ate professor.
Chairman of the Academic Senate KCl)o
neth W. Ford said tome profesa«s "quite
out of sympathy with senate 1cUons"
have chOsen to stay 1w1y from recent
metUngs. There wu • walkout thret
months •&o.
:rhe senior prof....,., who ulu!d lo ,.
rnaln unnamed, said In his opinion
(S<e UC IRVINE, Pali I)
)lenday nlcbl· . '
The ll'yeor-old Alderwooll, Manor,
·Waab .. rt1ldent received It cf II votes ·
. cu~ The othtr two ballots were blink.
-... ..-. Mii.._ -.. -• I
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! ~V PILOT e futSdl,Y, Mar &, 1%9
• •
PILOT • ..
'Dis:lleyizing the Woods
·Not as Bad as It Soilnds
. ,
By !.R~ ~~El.. ,
_ Jllinlral Kine wu 1 Sierra --where hall my li(e qo, the lini· er~cnd mule deer never tasted Weber'• Br.ead and root-beer was 50 cents
a tiOttle. , -
So I .,. .. llddtae4 to ~ ~ plcWooqut umbeillne valley in the
. Sequoil N11lonal Fomt la to become a f1$ million Walt
Dllney Productfona winter wonderland.
"One Dilneyland is mote tha.n enough," uid a col-
leoglll lrcbly, u we dimially dllcusled l\Uciey Mouse
on 11110Wsboos, ct111t lelcups under the pin .. and Bambi
erpelled lrom hla .. u .. J18<1di!e.
Sometimes, however, one jumpa to concluilons when _
be'• lost touch with a place for toO Jong a time, becau.se
time is the great changer of people and plices.
Maybe I hJ' a phllosophicll chip on my shoul~er on
the 1!'7' to bur Robert B. Hicks, project manager, outline the 80-acre recrea·
ttaml focltlty·ud ltacramlllcaUoM before-the Costo MeA Chamber or Com·.
merct.· •
Virtually inaccesalble during the winter months, 70,000 campers and
lptrilmen nonetheless drove the dizzying 19-mile trip from 1he main highway
to the valley 1alt IUDU'fler, a startling count
So many people, packed into auch a small area -Mineral J.Cing is like a
cballce carved out of bald granite by a river and set with 2ll jewel·llke lakes-
created aanitaUon problema and sewage pollution.
This would have been unthinkable that summer as T hiked three miles,
aeemingly into the sky Itself, fishing for fat brown trout lying at the lake
bottom .like lop, on what wu to be my father 's final trip to the,.inountain11
he loved. . .
Nobody thou1ht much about pollution 14. years ago. ' * Now we must, and under agreements by the Disney organization, the
U.S~ Forest Service and other federal agencies, the developers will provide
proper wUtation systems. They wW build a modern highway cutting the 95-
·minute journey. !..11 haU. Winter sporb resources for Californians wlll be ~at.
ly br~ened. Rural Tulare County will have 2,500 new jobs aaj $4 million
more annually in laxes.
Mineral King will never be. the way I .remember it, but nothing ever Is ind Hieb' talk cleartd up some prejudiced miscon~ptions based on snap
judgn\ent.
Development of a winter sports haven by the management of the Ana-
heim Magic Kingdom -in an area already suffering tourist-His -does not
mean Taco Bell franchises on the John Muir Trail. ·
The Sierra Club would probably defend that rugged wonder to the death
In hand·t<Hwld combat anyway, ihould such prostitution get beyond the point
of ludlU'OUS point-malting. .
The Mineral King story, it appears, is a differept one and should have a
happy ending.
From Page 1
PUEBLO FINDINGS .•.
material on the ship, and "negligently
falling'' to aee thi.t bis crew was fairly
Ullied in ~ for destroying
clauifled material.
-'I'l!at Harris be tried by genei-al c:iurt
marttaJ "fer three alle1ed offenlff of
der.elletJon in performance of hiJ dati!s,"
matnly dealing with the Jack of ability
and readiness on the part of the research
detachment to be 1ble to . destroy all
classi!ied mat.eriall d'uring an einergen-
cy.
-That Lt. Edward R. Murphy Jr., ex-
ecutive officer of the Pueblo, be given a
letter, of adrponiUon for falling "to
orgaruze and lead the ertw on the day of
the 5eizure especially in the ship's m8.jor
Internal task of emergency destruction of
classified material."
Harris saJd at bis mother's home in
Melrose, Mass., that he was ''very, very
happy" with Otafee'a decision not to talce'
disciplinary action. He said he would go
to Washington soon for a ,.new assign· ment. ,
The court of inquiry, it was disclosed,
also found that letters of reptimand
should be given to Rear Adm. Frank L.
Johnson, commander of naval forces in
Japan, and Capt. Evertll B. Gladding,
now retired.
The court held that Johnson, who has
a:ince moved to a new assignment, was
"derelict In the performance of duty" bv fall~ to plan properly for emergencY
sui>POrt of the Pueblo In a confrontation
and "ne&llienl1y failing" to verif.1
destruction procedures for classifie
documents.
Gladding, then director of the Na 1
security group in the Pacific, was held b
the court to have been dereUct for "fail
DAILY PILOT
OllAMGI CO.t..$1 ,lJ.llSHIMO COM,AMT
Jl•lt•rt H. w,,,
Praldtftl ft l'llbllllltr
J1ck JI, C•tl•v
Vice "rt11W1>l tllCI CkMttl Ml"'W
Th•tntl K11Yil .. ,,,
Them•• A, M•r,.hl111 ~ ... , .. ..,. ---JJO W•1t l1y Str.tt
M•i""' u;,.. •• : •.o. ,., 11.0, tJ•t• --..._. 91Pr nu w.1 .. .,.. loultff111
Ing to develop procedures to insure the
readiness" of the Pueblo's research sec-
tion.
'fhe Navy.µid the Pueblo's officers and.
111111 are !klw widely scattered -'en"
leave, dischirged or assigned to new sta-
tions. They all stayed in the San Diego
area while the court oC ·inquiry was in
session.
At a news conference explaining his
position, Chafee l!iaid he had not talked to
President Nixon about the course of .ic-
tion he had chosen.
There has been some public controversy
over the question of whether the Navy
was trying to saddle Bucher and his men
with the blame for the Pueblo debacle
when higher-ups ought to be held ac-
countable, too.
Said Chafee: "I think it is clear that
everybody was advancing on a certain
assumption and that assumption proved
to be an Invalid one" -mainly, that a
ship operating on the high seas would
always be sale from piracy.
-•
Sea'· 'Gives · Back .. Beach Sand =
' ' ' . . . '· •
The IOI!~ coqbed up hr<> moro
reet or Andliilt tt tool< !tom Newpor1
Rooth liltfulrd ~ 11111 put
W~.fild 'till plltit ...... drlWD
to bWld ...... to k"P the and llle!O.
Several houn or meeUngs thJs mominf:
among city llft(IW"d, engineerln& and
general services department b e a d 1
resulted l.n the plans to use wooden groins
to obore . up the beach lrutead of
•
Fro111 P09e l
PEEK. • •
homicide attempt," officers asserted. :>he
was rushed lo the hopaital whtre
emergency surgery was performed.
Dr, Petersctn was found in a remote
area of the city, at Joyce and Bistra
streets, where he apparently had been
walki.ng alone. Officers said he wu .pro-
nounced dead at the hospital from what
they called "a seH·infllcted head wound,
one shot from a .25-callber automatic
pistol in his mouth at 4.:31 p.m."
Police said that he apparently had died
about 4 p.m. aome four and a half houn:
after Mrs. Peek had been ahot. Offictra
declined to eay whether the same gun
was used in both shootings. An autopsy of
Dr. Peterson LI scheduled for today.
Dr. Peterson was a member ot the
music department at California State
College, L'ong Beach and at one time
served as chairman of the Fine Arts
division.
Lt. Hulslander said Mrs. Peek will be
interrogated as soon airshe has recovered
enough to talk with officers.
Mrs. Peek operates the Peek Family
Coloni;l.I Funeral ijome in }Vestminster
.which she acquired more than ohe year
ago in a divorce action from her former
husband, Lon Peek, now of Riverside.
Both the .Peek Mortuary and the
landmark famllY home at Golden ·West
Street and Heil Avenue are owned ~y
Mrs. Peek. .
Mrs. Peek Is .-noted social leader In
both Long Beach and Orange County and
is active in the business community
throughout Southern California.
3 Mesans Hurt
In 2-€ar Crash
Three Costa Mesans were injured Mon-
day evening in a two-car collision at the
intersection.,of Harbor Bou1evard and
Fonl.,Road .
Police said a car driven It Mrs.
Beverlee Marguerite La Jeunesse, 41, of
365 Ramona Way, collided with a car
driven by Joseph Socha, 16, of 314 Vic·
toria St., whose brother, Chester, was in
the car with him.
~ The accident also slightly'damaged two
cars parked near the intersection.
All three victims were taken to Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital with cuts and
bruises.
Bomb Breaks Loose
In Ammunition Ship
PORT CHICAGO, Calil. (UPI) -A
Vietnam-bound ammunition ship ~as
repacked today after at least one 500-
pound bomb broke loose in the hold in
heavy seas off the California coast.
The SS Bucknell Victory, operated by
American President Lines under contract
with the Navy, was escorted back to Con-
cord Naval Weapons Station Monday.
bulkbelds to tlo)> the heavy !1111 oul
!'ublk Worb Dlrlctor Jot !lfvlia Mjd· . ---~--'-'--. lllol. ~ ... ~ .... u.c
atrvcturel wW ltl(t later th1s week-
Tbe belm.t' IXll!augllt of surf Ind hf&h .
tld8f io q:aemory tl'OUDd _pter area over
the weea.:t cauaed tba ba ot tons of
&and and heavy damage of pavement.I
and planters around the bradquarteri, bit
almos! monthly alnce January storms.
Durlnt the city effort to stem tbe
eroolon, Dovlip ~ti!! ~ unauoCetaM W.dkh.a with lr01DI 'to
11Jow the waves' wuti •nd allow Iht water
to drop sand bU1ad of removipg It. -
He said thil!, since groins were lncllldtil
tn @.lians for a penn~t ~d, con~
stnlition of erosion-pretmtinj: ltruct.w'ei
wUl atart OQ acbedule.
The actual wall agaln!t the sea,
however, wW be eliminated, and u sooft
Real Dr. Foster Takes
Stand in Impostor Case
By TOM BARLEY
Of 111t O.llJ •lift Stiff
Dr. Glenn Lyon Foster took the :witness
. o1and !nday to oiler the r~.t teatimony in
what the prosecution asserti will be "a
chain of "unshakable and irrefutable
evidence" against lhe man who allegedly
used his name.
The University er Alapama medicAl
school cardiologist told the crowded court
that he became aware of the fact that
someone-identified by the proseeut'ion
, as Robert Ervin Brown, 33--was using
his name to practice cardiology at a
Fullerton clinic shortly before Brown's
arrest la.st Feb. 22.
The slight, bespectacled physician smil-
ed as he ex-mined the, application form
allegedly submitted by · Brown to the
Orange Coo.oty Medical AllOciaUon la.st
January. But he reacIDy testified that the
six-page ~form was «Xlrred Jn .. every
category with one exception. -his
signature,
Chief Deputy District Attorney Jaines
Enr1Kbt claims that Brown'• mm.tve knowled~e of Dr. Foster partly items
from a telephone call he made to the
physician before taking the Fullerton ap-
pointment.
Enright claJma that Brown Wld Dr.
Foster that he needed the physician 's
personal background to Include in a
medical brochute that be ·was preparing.
Dr. Foster today revealed t b a t
relatives in FUilerton and a f o r m e r
medic~! colleague contacted him about a
man who allegedly was using his name to
practice cardiology ln Orange County. He
told the court that FuHerton police ad-
Spanish·
12,000
sq. ft.
of
Top
9uaUty
vised him of their arre1t of Brown before
be could tue any action in tbe matter. 1
Brown, 33, a former electronics tecbnl·
clan Is accused of practicing, medicine
without a Ucenae. He was indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on 17 counts
of the c!WJ:e after many of the 103
patients he allegedly tnated for heart
diaorde.rs testUled before ·the panel.
Enright today urged the seven-mah,
five-woman jury to bear in mind the
"tremendous risks.'' that-many patients
ran in innocently submitting themselves
to Brown for treatment and diagnosis. He
recalled an alleged incident in which
Brown prescribed a drug for a palient in
a quantity that turned out to be 20 times
greater than that normally prescribed.
"That patient was saved from likely
death and certainly serious Injury only
becau.se a woman doctor and a very
..alarmed nurse overheard the order,"
Enright ~id. He also told the' jiiry that
Brown's repeated defense to questioning
was that he was ellij>loylng "some pretty
new techniques" .on .hls patients. _
Today. is the firs t day of testimony in
what is expected to be a three week trial
before Judge Byron K. McMillan.
The judge late Monday struck down
deputy public defender L a w r e n c e
Buckley's demand for a change of venue.
Buckley argued that pre-trial publicity
had made it Impossible for Brown to ob-
tain a fair hearing in Orange County.
Also rejected by Judge McMillan was
Buckley's motion for sequestering of the
jury -Buckley feels that the jurors
should be kept aloof from all publicity on
the trial.
•
• •
as the clty eeuncil concurs, filial pla•
wUI ~ llttrld oa tht project. 1'be COuncll already hi• authoriltd
more than ~,900 for a bulkhead coil·~
5tructlon pMlJeot at the headquart!fS·
Devlin said that when the groins are
buUt, lhey would make it easier for city
crews to dwnp und arodnd the area .
"To put It all!lply," he said, "we're en-
couraged. with the performance of thtse.
groins. It lookJ like they 're' worktnc. 0 .-
From P .. e l
UC IRVINE ...
Academic Senate meetings have become
1'a nild circus." •
He said legislation has been passed that 1
is "hair-raising in Its implaclations." He
noted Jhat a comntltttee was asked "to,
settle within 10 days, off the top of their
head!, the most incred ibly ccmplicated .
Issue" of student participation in hiring
and firing of professors. '
The professor claimed youn1 assistant"
professors have aligned themselves with· ·
activists and are voting as a bloc. MY .
question of legality raised Ls brushed
aside as a obstructionist, he said.
He also said in department after
department lhere are junior, non-tenured
faculty members who shake their heads .
right along wilh lhe senior faculty.
The end res.ult of all this ''mischief,"
he sald, has been a serious deteriora-
tion of faculty morale.
Many other professors hold that view .. ·
Many don1t. Quite a number are con-
cerned about the future.
Reacted Chainnan of History Henry C •
Meyer to Chancellor ·Aldrich's decision
two v.:ee!s ag,51 .to .. retnst~te Kegt · ,
''Every adnurustrator today ~rates·'
with one eye-0n state politics and one eye
on student J>!)Jitics and the faculty is
caught Jn the D)1ddle. Tbe adrninlltratlon
at µer is no exception and this decLsion
has to be seen in that light."
Romney and Kosygin ,
Meet India Premier
NEW DELHI, India (AP) -U.S. Hou11·
ing Secretary George Romney amLSoviet
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin conferred
5ep8rately today with Prime Mini!ter
Indira Gandhi.
No
Money
Down
First
Payment
June
.1969
our exclusive
6 pc. en .. mblo
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DAILY "ILOT lltrt l'Mlt
Looking for Jfferma.ids
Steve Perrin, chairman of Miss Mermaid contest to be conducted in
conjunction with 24th annual Newport Ha rbo r·Costa Mesa Lions Fish
Fry June 6, 7 and 8, Is on the lookout for cdptest entries. Girls t&.21
years ol age can enter the beauty contest by Callin~ Perrin (548-5002),
or Dr. Bernard Simon (54()..1170). \Vin nCr \Vill r eign over Fish Fry
events .
I
.. ------
F1iry tole bodto0m I!
AT HARBOR BOULEVARD '
•
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"
Bea~h Girl
Favorite for
'Miss t Title
With two of the marbles already in her
corner, Jackie Benlngton of Huntington
Beach goes after the whole bag tonight.
The blonde Marfna High School senior,
representing California in the America's
Junior Miss ,Pageant at Mobile, Ala.,
reigns as one or the favoriles in tonight's
rmar judging.
She has claimed two of the contest's
divisions -physical fitne ss and
scholastic average -worth a C{)mbined
$2,500 in college scholarships. Sbe carries
a straigh~ "A" average and plans to
study biology at Stanford Uni versity.
Jackie, the 17·year-old daughter of ?i.1r.
and MrS. Ot;chard Ben.ington of 6191
Gumm Drive, will compete tonigh1 on na-
tional television (7 :30 p.m., Channel 4)
for the America's ti lie against girls from
the other 49 states. Mike Douglas will
emcee the 12th annual pageant.•
A sour note in the proceedings may be
MJUnded by a civil rights group, the
Neighborhood Organized W o r k e r s
(NOW), which plans to picket the contest
which it has labeled "racist." The group
has attempted three demonslrations
against the pageant, but has failed to get
within five blocks of the auditorium on
nights of preliminary competition.
§ome 320 persons. hav~ been jail~ ~on
charges <>f unlawful assembly In the
demonstrations. A final protest has been
called for lhe finals: ton(ght.
Telegrams of congratubtions and b~ck·
Ing were sent today by the ChambU or
Commerce and the City C<>uncil. The
chamber telegram told the Marina High
School senior that "all 110,000 residents
are pulling for ,you.''
The council said il is "wishing you
complete success."
She won the local Junior Miss title and
then progressed Utrough the regional con·
I.est.! to the state title and the right to
compete in Mobile.
Judging in the constest which seeks to
name the nation's ideal high school senior
girl is based on scholastic ability and
youth fitness, already won by Miss Ben·
lngton, .pers<>oality, mental alertness.
poise and pe·rsonl appearance and
creative and pesfonning arts.
GWC Slates Class
On Smog Control
Golden West College instructors will be
helping others in doing something about
air pollution beginning May 7 with a
course in smog control licensing.
The class is desigi:ied to prepare
students for the Califohiia State smog
control licensing examination and will be
offered fr om 7 p.m.lto 10 p.m. Wed·
oesdays for three week .
Enrollment ls limited to 30 students.
Registration will be conducted in the
Golden \Vest College Administration
Building from 6t1s p.m. to 9: 15 p.m.
May 6.
The class will meet in lhe college's new
'392,000 Trade and industry center and
will be taught by instructor Kendall
Tough.
Fairview Hospital
If olding Open House
:fairview Slate Hospital is open lo the
public this week as part of National
Health Week.
Guided tours will be conducted Wednes-
i3a)r and Saturday al 1 p.m. The public is
lnv)ted to view the hospital facilities and
activities. Tours start [rom the lobby of
the Administration Building, 2501 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa.
------~--------.-------------
Ul'I Ttlt!lh1tt
• s t :JLY rlLDT 3
Burled Back . • • • Reds Make Bold ;
1
U.S. Base Attack ~
SAIGON (UPI) -A North Vietnamese
regiment 0/.1.200 men using new -model
antiaircraft guni firing at ground level
~ilm Coupl£
Remarried
After 2 Kids
Performers Jean Pierre Aumont and
1\1arisa Pavan were remarried during the
week.end In San Clemente, 13 years after
their first marriage, It was announced
Monday.
broke,lhrough the defense perimeter of a :·
U.S. 'base near the Cambodian ~ •.
early today but were hurled back by the
outnumbered defenders.
The assault, heaYiest Communist at-~
tack in weeks and one ot the biggest of : •
their warJng spring-winter offensive, cost .~
the North Vietnamese 141 dead and ~ •
captured. But their human wave &Maull , '
killed nine Americans and wounded 62. •
Tbe battle 63 miles northwest or Saigon •1
and only a few miles from the Com· '
munist sanctuaries in the jungled border j
area of Cambodia emphasized recent i
government warnings that from two to !
four North Vietnamese. divisions )'/ere }
operating in the area in hopes of starting j'
a new Qtfensive in early May.
lfhinny of Relief
In between, the two performers had
two children, were secretly divorced and
lived as man and wire in New York City.
T~ Frenchman and his Italian wife,
who is the sister of actress Pier Angeli,
were married March 27, 1958, in Santa
Barbara. Jn 1963, they w~ secretly
divorced in Versailles, France.
B52 b<>mbers have been striki~g the l
areas of _Tay Ninh province \Yith some of '
the heaviest bklws or the war in hopes or i • preventing a major Communist strike. t
The bombers flew four miss.ions Monday \
night and early today against Communist l
base camps in the area. ~
Former "lady·in wailing," Philadelphia Zoo's zebra
appears to be shouting her relief after ending her
gestation ~riod with her sixth offspring. The zebra
had been waiting since April Fools Day. .
Valley Sc1wo"ls Signups
Scheduled Through May , ~::i~:s ~a:~·-
Air Force Pilot They didn't talk to each other for two
years thereafter.
Then their two sons, now t and 10, beg·
ged them to get back together, or at least
retum to the same household. To please '
the children, the couple set up housekeep-
ing in New York.
The bombers dropped al least 360 tons !
of bombs in today's raids. In 12 days they >
have dropped more than 4,800 tons ot "
bom'>s in s.1 raids -some o{ .the most ~
copcentrated bombing sinCe the siege ot t
the Khe Sanh many months ago. : ~ ..o'f.he .... Communist,s havJ!:. b eje n in·~
creasingly active along the bord4ir 'and :
only Monday carried out two bold am· ~
bushes or Amencan convoys in the area. ~
The attacks were costly but they were ~
daring and today's raid which tx!gan at z ~
a.m. was no exception. . ~
, '. . ,,. ft was me.de legal during lbe weekend,
when the collple reneYled their vows with
French actor L<>uU Jourdan and his wUe
as witnesses.
Pre-registration for children entering
kindergarten in the Huntlilgton Beach Ci-
ty School District will be held f r o m I
p.m. to f p.m. May 14 at five elementary
schools.
7,000 Expected
At Huntington
Summer Scl1ool
Nearly 7,000 students are expected for
summer school classes in the Huntington
Beach Union High School District, Sum·
mer School Principal L<>ren Moll said to-
day.
He said the 6,968 students enrolled
represen~ more lhan half of the regular
day class enrollment ""of the ""'current
semester and is a record for this district.
Huntington Beach High School has 1,386
signed; Westminster, 1,924; Marina,
1,751; Fountain Valley, 1,848: and the J.
H. McGaugh Intermediate School in Seal
Beach has 61. ~·
Classes are scheduled on a two-hour
basis, 8 to IO a.m. and 10 a.m. 'to noon
dally. A .student may take one or two
sessions. The classes begin June 18 and"
end J uly 25. There will be no classes on
July 4. Full information on the classes
may be obtained by calling 536-9331.
Wofford Heads
Highway Unit
George Wofford is new deputy district
(!nginee.r of the California Division of
Highways, District 7, which serves
Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura coun-
ties; it was announced today by Haig
Ayaniao, district engineer.
The new deputy comes to Los Angeles
from Stockton where he was a supervis·
ing highway engineer with District 10. He
began his ca reer with the Division of
Highways in 1931.
Wofford, 59, is assuming responsibility
for District 'I administration, filling a
vacancy created when Deputy District
Engineer A. W. Hoy retired on May 1
after 40 years of Slate service.
Schools open for regi stration that day
arc:
-Agnes L. Smith School, 770 17th St.
-Joseph R. Perry School, 19231
Harding Lane.
-John R. Peterson School. 20661
Farnswqrth Lane.
-Johri H. Eader School, 9291 Banning
Ave.
-Lois and Harry Le Bard School, 20451
Craimer Lane.
Parents are advised lo register their
children at the school nearest their ·home .
To be eligible [or kindergarten a child
must be five years old on or before
December 2. 1969. A birth or baptismal
' cerlilicale as well as:proof or polio and
measles immuniU!tiom Jre required.
fr ·-{:( *
IGndergarten
Signups Slated
For Huntingto11
A U.S. Air Force pilot "'ho made it .
through a recent Vietnamese t~ur without
a scratch was injured with his wife and
20·month-old baby girl Monday in a Dana
Point head-on crash.
Michael Heck, 26, his wife, Dale, 23,
and their child Jenifer of 6051,~ Narcissus . . Edison Permit Goes
To Beach Planners Corona del Mar, were north bOOnd on
Coast Highway when the driVer of a
south bound vehicle apparently lost con-Members of the Huntington Beach City
trol or his car on the wet pavement and Planning Commission will consider a con·
collided with the Hecks' small foreign dilional use permit at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
car. which would allow construction of a
B?th ~ars . were go· g about 40 m\iir-Southe~n California Edison Company
California Highway trol officers s~T. substation <Tl. Golden West Street and
!he acci~nt occ near the highway EWs Avenue.
intersection of e Lantern Drive. The planners will decide the fate of the
The family was released following proposed one-acre facility in the City
emergency treatm t at South Coast Council Chambers, located at 5th Street.
Community Hospital, aides said. and Pecan Avenue.
Woman Bolts l(idnaper
Stopping to Get Ra.nsom
The North Vietnamese opened up a :
heavy barrage of mortars and rockets ~
then charged into the American camp. "'
They captured two bunkers, blew up the ~
camp's fuel and ammunition dumps with ..
dynamite charges, but the 300 American J•
defenders rallied and drove them off in a ~
four.hour battle. .'
"A lot of them got trapped in the open ~
when the sun came up," said a U.S.;
spokesman describing how many of the •
Communist soldiers perished under fire .;
from divebombers, helicopter gunships
and artillery.
The ·attack against the gun base of the ,
U.S. 1st Air Cavalry division began at 2
a.m. with a 60-round mortar attack.~
~lo~ is 63 miles northwest of Saigon, •
rune mlles from the Cambc?<fian border.
Freeway Repair
Work Scheduled
Near M ulliolland Fountain Valley SchQOls have·scheduled
registration and roundup progr;ims for
kindergarten-bound youngs ters and their Motorists were ad\/Med by the Stale parents throughout May. HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) -The from her fashionable home In the South Division of Highways today that they
Registration for p r e _ s c h 0 0 1 kin-terrified wife of a Wi!allhy businessman Hills section of Charleston, 52 miles east may expect some traffic delays next .
dergarten enrollinent will be held at each made the mGSt of her "last chance" Mon· of here about I :30 p.m. by a man who month on the San Diego Freeway Jn West ~
of the district's schools according to the day night and bolted to safety rrom a told her : Los Angeles.
following schedule: pislol·shooting abductor who had "I know you people have plenty of Pavement repairs will necessitate the
Sch
Arevalos School, May 8: Bushard .. threatened her life in a demand for money and I need enough to get out of Intermittent closing of lanes between 9 ·
ool, May 5-9: Fountain Valley School. the country. a.m. and 2:30 p.m. on weekdays from
May 5-9: Ful~ School, May ::: and 9: $IMr00,0005. n'o~ardmP. McJunkin suffered on· "I've killed before and I'll kill again," Mulholland Drive south for about two
Gisler Sehool, May 7; Harper School, she said the man told her. · miles. May 5-9 and Lamb School, May 5·9. ly a minor bump on the head during her Mrs. McJunken, whose husband i3 At such limes as it becomes ileces.sary ,
Registration will also be held at quick dash to freedom at a local drive-in president of McJunkin Corp. and to close two la~ at the same time, <:t!r·
~1cDowell School, May 5-9 : Ne~'land restaurant. chairman of the Charleston Urban tain on·ramps may be temporarily cle>M?d
School, May 7: Nieblas School. May 6-8; "I was afraid this would be my last Renewal Authority, said she w a 5 to afford better traffic conlrol.
Tamura Sc~ool, May 5-9 and at \Vardlmv chance, so I decided to run," the 47.year· handcuffed and placed in the frl)nt seat of Ramps subject to such closing incliut..e
School. May 9. old woman told police. the car. \Vilshire Boulevard on·ramp to nottb-'
Parents V>'ishing to register their Her captors, a blonde rnan and a Mrs. McJunkin escaped when her ab-bound San Diego Freeway, Moraga Drive
youngsters may find out the times of woman in their late 20s, ned in a late-ductors stopped at the drive·ln'restaurant on-ramp to northbound freeway, Chalon
registration by telephoning the JChool model blue sedan and became the object lo use a telephone booth to contact . Road on·ramp to northbound freeway, 1
district al 842-6651. · o{ a manhunt that spread rapidly intll McJunkln. Mrs. McJunkln dashed by the Valley Vista Boulevard on.ramp to south·
In order to enroll their children in nearby Kentucky and Ohio. Mrs· gunman toward the restaurant. bound 'freeway, Mulholland Drivo on· ·
kindergarteo. paren~ must _prove by McJunkin said the man told her he had a \Vitnesses said the man fired one shot ramp to southb<>und freeway.
birth certificate or legal document thal suitcase packed wiUi hand grenades and at the fleeing woman. Although the shot Sepulveda Boulevard may be used as .
Uieir child wtll be five years of age firearms. missed, Mrs. McJunktn fell to the paYe· an alternate rpute when ramps are clos~
before December 1 and that it has been .
0
_M_r_s._M_cJ_un_k_in_s_a_id_sh_e_w_a_s_ta_k_•• __ m_e_nt_a_n_d_h_e_r_•_bd_u_ct_o_r_•_fl_ed_ln_t_h_e1r_c_ar_. __ •c:.d. ____________ _
immunized against polio.
Parent and child <>rientalion programs
have also been scheduled by tbt !1'ountain
Valley School District.
DAILY 'ILOT 511ff '"""
How to send your
son to college-
witlwut feeling the pinch!
A college education is more than a matter or
pride and accomplishment. In today's highly
specialized and technical worlll· it is an absolute
necessity. But the question is bow t.o finance it?
· One of the surest ways o! building a fund for
the higher education of your son is t.o plan ahead
•ith Manufacturers Li le Insurance.
By investing in a Manufacturers Life Partici·
pating Policy you get a double safeguard. Your
;avings accumulate on a planned basis-and they
grow through earned dividends and guaranteed
interest By the time your son graduate. from
J. w. Tvrk, Jr.
Agency A&socl1t•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: 547°5621
high school, yourequi ty can he large enotlgh t.o financo ht. higher education.
At the same time, you know that should you die before your son enterg
university-there will be sufficient funds available !or this purpose.
Talk t.o a representative from Manufaeturen! Lile about this impor-
tantambition of yours. He will he able to ab ow you how you can a=mplish
your goal without feeling the pinch. Call him .today I
LL GUbre.ttt
Aftncy' Astott•tt
HUNTrNOTON BU.CS
T~: 547·562l"
' /\ta Artist'• R .ewards -
·MANUFACTURERS LIFE 9dcan Vlew school oilicials present first place
tfophy and ribbon to Unda &hander), 8, winner o! ~en! art conlesl in flunfington Beach school s.
Marine View third grader's drawing ol bunny cap-
tured trophy donated, by Broadway Department
\
• • -
Store al Huntington Center. From left are Ocean
View tn1stees Leonard Shane;· Linda's t eacher,
Jean Nordby; t~e artisl; Trustee R. James Shnller,
and Trustee 'Robert J. ZJnngrabe. ·
..
I NIU• AM 0 I 0 0 MP AM y
·-
I
. •
•
4 DAILV PllOT
l~ltllllll ft J"! 0-1!1 1'11111 5t.ffl
When it comes to finding a park·
ing place downto":'n, trucks Lh~l tow away illegally parked cars 1n
New York can be a boon for the
resourceful. Constantin• Sidamon-
Elrstoff, city transportation admin·
istrator. said some drivers follow
towtrucks, waiting for an illegally
parked car to be taken away. They
then slip into the spot, calculating
that the towtruck won't be back
for some time, he said. • The Winn~r of the beard growing
contest in the annual Lahaina, Ha·
waii \Vbaling Spree during the
weekend was Tony Lang -who
didn't have a beard. Lang entered
the sideburns onl y category. bul .
the judges were so impressed with
his side~urns they named hin1
overall winner. • '.!ft ' av. . u .v:&
~t1 Police searching for narcotic:! ~
''' the attic /Jf a house i1t Soutli
Lake Tahoe said they came f.,
across a niou.te which had al.· •
_reqd11,Jound somt. Plfic!rs said I
. the Tode nt. which appQrtntly
had eaten i nto a bag of seeds
btlieved to be marijuana, lay on
its back with glassy eyes. Its ~
only Tesponsc was to uiiggle its
f,:' feet whe11 its s t o m a c h was ~
{; tickled. ..., ......... '°"' .... ,,,.~~ • Dr. Al1n long of London, an ex ..
pert in organic chemistry, has an·
nounced research w h i c h shows
many cockerels are being injected
\Yith artificial feminizing hormones
that make them meatier but stunt
their sexual growth. The doctor
told a National Conference of Vege--
tarians the medical profession is
worried the traces of the hormone s
left in the chickens· might, over the
years, affect men who have eaten
the birds. • ···-
'"·"'4-t . ,,,. ~
\. -· Hamming it 11p o bit. Pliylli! Jlatch.
n/ Twin Falls, Idaho, 7tadits for t.he
National Music \Vtek program being
Ji.tld in her hom.e town t.llis wtek.
''And the m.usic goes down and
nrottnd •.• "is t.ht theme Df thr. tvent,
but PhytUs stems to bt having trouble
uttting the sound up and out. • Western Girl, Inc., a job place·
ment firm reported it found em·
ployment in Honolulu, Hawaii for
Miss Gwendolyn Kuuleik:ailialoha-
ptilaniwailauokckoaulumahiehieke·
aJaonaonaopiikeakekino.
,
•
ABM Cost Raised
By $1.2. Billion
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Saleguard
missile defen st: system will cost another
$1.2 billion. ttlc Defense Department
says, bringing the total cost for inithll,
limited. deRloymenl lo pearly $8 bUlion. ·
In the most detailed analysis given
Congress so far, Depuly Secretary of
Defense David ft. Padc:atd gave a figure
of $6.6 billion £or the complete system in·
ttnded to protect two P.1inuteman missile
bases in North Dakota and Montana.
But spokesmen ror the Pentagon and
the Atomic Energy Commission con-
firmed Monilay that the cost of nuclear
warheads for the defense missiles -$1.2
billion -was not included in lhe Defense
Department estimate.
A Defense Department spokesman said
the warhead cost was not included
because different agencies traditionally
provided fi(ures [or only their own part
of f project. '
Meanwhile, Harvard-~ law proftssor
Abram Chayes, who evaluated the ABM
for Sen. Edward M. Kenne<ly, said Mon-
day lhal Safeguard presents an enigma in
that it ls the first major wuopn, in-
cluding·the H-bomb that cannot bt tested.
"The fact is that the first Ume anyone
"'ill ~ for sure whether the system
\Viii work is when it is called upon to
meet an actuat attack," said Cha yes, a
former legal adviser to the State Depart-
1nent ,
The professor said he believes Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird conjured up
the Soviet threat of a nuclear first slrike
to strengthen the adminlstralion's case
for Safeguard.
Police at Purdu,e_ Roui
Camp-in~ CCNY Reopens
By TH~ ASSOCIATED PREM repercussion s on campases all over the
country ." Campus police at Purdue Uni versity
arrested 229 students at a "camp-in'' to. The spreading practice of seeking a
day_ Purdue's looth anniversary_ five co1.111 order to end campus distu rbances,
hours before Health. Education and Gallagher added, is "a lot better than
\Velfare Secrelary Robert H." Finch was calling the police. When honored, it is
mort: effective." to speak.._,_. • ,.,, ... ; .... ~ .•
At the City College of New York, the
school was open for its 20,000 students for
the first time since April 22. after black
and Puerto Rican·student3 ended a cam-
pus occupalion.
In Montgomery, Ala ., police Monday
arrested 365 Negro students from
Alabama State c;,.ollege as t h r y
demonstrated outside the State Capitol.
At Purdue, f'rederick L. LQvde, ,
univlrsity president, ordered an end t11
the "camp-in." saying he feared a violent
counter-protest. The "camp-in" began
last \Vednesday as part of a protc.1il
against a tuiHon increase next fall .
-About 20 uniformed campus policemen,
wearing white helmets and face shields
and armed with pistols and mace spray
weapons, booked many of the students.
City College President Buell c:.
Gallagher had said he would not call
police to_ clear c:temanstrators from the
campus.
In a news conference on campus this
moFning. Gallagher. said : "There are
ba5ic Injustices in American society , and
as long as these ;ire not yigorously al·
tacked, they will continue to have
Mol1key
Nixon to Ask
Food Stamp Hike
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad·
ministration plans to ask Congress for a
n1ajor expansion of the federal food
stamp program! il was announced today.
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said following a GOP strategy
session al the White House that the ad·
ministration's proposals would bt sub-
mitted Wednesday to the Senate select
Committee on Nutri tion and Human
Needs. Ford, Senate GOP leader Everett
M. Dirksen and othtr Republican
lawmakers met with Nixon for more than
an hour.
Ford said Agriculture Secretary Clif·
ford M. Hardin would propose nearly
doubling the current aMual outlay for the
stamps, which are sold to the needy al a
sharp discount and arc spent at face
v?lue in grocery stores.
Busi11ess
Chimp Takes Rolls • 'Great Race' in
LONDON (UPI) -Clad tn a casual
space suit, the youngest competitor step.
peel into a chauffeured Rolls-Royce today
and purred lo the airport to clutch al her
share' Df $144,000 in prizes in an air race
between London and New York.
Clutch ls the proper word. Tina , ageU 5,
is a ape.
"A chimpanzee, actually ," said
Anthony Ellis, the tall , d a pp e r
Englishman who is Tina's voice to the
public she has amassed as a British
television perfonner.
"Tina was very elated coming down on
the elevator. You see, she's never ridden
in a RoJls.Royce before,'' he said.
The chauffeur eyed Tina, bit his lip.
raised his eyes heavenward and opened a
rear door.
Tina nodded at the chauffeur. in gray
uru.form and red-banded cap, and stepped
inside. She aat, rested a manicured hand
on the leather arm rest and relared for
the journey.
She was flying the Atlantic In a jct to
compete in two segments of the race -
fastesl subsonic travel and the award for
the commoowealth citizen Tina was born
in Nigeria) who "displays the most
meritorious and ingenious way of getting
across."
The chimp headed for New York on the
heels of klrfe British aviatrii Shtila Scott,
1,1·ho arrived there Monday night after a
26-hour flight in a sm all P!Per Comanche
plane from London.
Miss Scott, 41, said sbe went without
sleep during the flight. Her place iced up
and her radio was not working .
"I stayed awake, without drugs," she
told reporters. ''I feel as if I have been
flying for three weeks. I don't know if I
eve r will sleep again .''
Miss Scott broke her own transatlantic
record of 17 hours and 10 minutes from
Ireland to Newfoundland, set ln 1987.
Panhandle Tornado Alert
'f u;i.sters
Callfol"ltia
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HAYAKAWA DOES THE SF STATE BOOGALOO
Acting Pre1ident Dances While Duke Ellington Watches
3,000 Cheer
, Ellington .
At SF State '
• SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Not an the
5lomping at San Francisco State ls tho
kind that is aimed at hurting some'body.
There was some of tht happy bfand of
slomping on campus Monday as Duk1t
Ellington played a concert for 3,00!'
cheering onlooken, which wound up with
1nany of them dancing to the Dukt's jau
beat.
One of the dancers was the Ir•
represslb\e actini;: president S. I .
Hayakawa, who drew a lot of cheers and
a scaUering of boos when he made a fe\Y
remarks and then did an impromptt!
dance with a coed.
Hayakawa . a jazz buff. arranged the
concert personally and called it a "fan•
lastic success."·
··v..1c needed some kind of happy tvent
that everyone could tnjoy after months ol
disturbance and misery." Hayakawa
~id.
.
say goodbye
-) , to toil and trouble
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lNIMlleglc ,_,
How Much
Weapons
Is Enough?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
llow much nuclear deterrent
Js enough?
This question has become
one of the central issues in tQe
national controversy over the
antiballistie missile (ABM)
system ...
The Nil.on administration
has built its case for the AB1'1
mostly on the argument that
Russia might achieve in the
197ps the capacity to mount a
nuclear "first strike" against
the United States, knocking
out the U.S. power to retaliate.
Therefore. the first f.as~ ·
.gssigncd to the proposed
"Safeguard" ABM is to pro-
tect U.S. Minuteman in·
tercontinental ballistic missil·
es (ICBM) from Sovie( attack.
In r cc en t congressional
tcslimony and in a speech last
week Dr. George W. Rathjens,
\l'eapons evaluator in the Pen·
tagon and special assistant to
the President fo r science dur-
ing the Eisenhowe r ad-
ministralion and now visiting
professor of physical science
at ~1assachusetts Institute of
Technology, challenged the ad·
ministration's claim with
these points:
-The U.S. TCBM, Polaris
submarine and bomber forces
together have more than 4,000
nuclear "'arheads for use
against Russia. Only 400 of
these could destroy 75 percent
t cf Soviet industry and 30 er 50
Percent cf her pcpulation.
\Vilh multiple warheads, the
U.S. farce will grow to 10,000
warheads in coming years.
-To assure itself of a sue·
cessful first strike,~ Russia
would have to . count on
destroying 95 to 99 percent of
the u.s) retaliat.cry force.
-Russia could not knock out
the U.S. ICBM, Polaris and
bomber forces simultaneously.
If Russia launched missiles at
U.S. ICBMs and bomber bases
al the same instant, early
warning would allow 40 per·
cent of the bombers to be on
the ground before Soviet
missileW,il. If Russia struck
bomberDases with submarine-
launched missiles by surprise ,
• the U.S. would still have 20
1 minutes to fire its ICB~~s
before Soviet land b a s e d
, missiles arrived.
., To Rathjens all this seems a
very strong deterrent, making
r.chances "almost negligible"
.. that Russia could launch a
first strike with impunity for
· many years. He said the U.S.
can wait longer before Jll&king
an ABM decision.
Defense department officials
see it very differently. They
say that if Russia keeps
building big SS9 missiles,
equips them with multiple
~warheads and improves lheir
r accuracy, the Soviet Union
could knock out a large part of
the U.S. ICBM force.
Rathjens •once calculated
that if the gloomiest Pentagon
estimates <If Soviet missile
development come t r u e ,
Russia might knock out '1SO
. U.S. ICBMs leaving 250. I-le
considers 250 a more than ade-
quate deterrent.
The Pentagon, figuring
failure rates and the numOOr
that might be shot down by a
Russian ABM, considers it too
low.
Defense officials say th e
U.S. must mainlain three
separate deterrents -ICBMs ,
Polaris .and bombers -
because all have their un·
certainties and the Soviets are
working on ways to defeat
1each.
So the question -on lhii;
one issue -becomes: !low
;sure must the United States be
.,or Its reteUatory pawcr lo
,deter nuclear war?
-Mcsan Elected
" t Janice M. llaines, 11 ,
!~aught.er of Mr. '1.and ?.trs.
'Robert D. Haines. 11 7 1 I
Moncov1a Ave., Costa Mesa ,
ba~ been elected president of
'1lex\ year's junior class nl
\\'eslm.IMte.r College, S a 11
Like City, Utah.
She Ls a irraduale .• of Costa
Mesa High School. -
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c [DAILY PJL01\ EDITORL\L PAG!j
Faculty -Masquerade
-'
~an:hy on many of th•· nation's campuses bas
reached the point w~er~ either administrator~ and
rt.cul ties at the institutions involved must slop the . non·
itnse by on-campus means (suspension s, expulsions,
police) or an outrap publ\c wlll do it for them ..
\Vhen that happens, their ptized academic freedon1
l\'ill be gone.
The picture on tbe score ot faculty fir1nness is
mixed. But th e seriousness is nation\vide. ·
At Occidental College, for example, the faculty
voted under pressure to bar military recruiters f.rom
the campus for the remainder of the year. Whose free--
dom of speech .does thai ~ction protect? It can b~
argued that studen ts ~vho might \Vant to \Year the uni·
form of their coun try have been denied the right to talk
to military recruiters on campus.
On Uie other hand. at Stanford University, pol1ce
\vere brought in last '"eek for the first time in that
university's 78-year history. And 1,000 white students
drove 200 1nilitant and vandalizing Negro students off
the campus of Queens College, New York.
There is m.ounting evidecce, at Cornell University
and on other campuses including Stanford, that the pro-
fessors are still not getting the message. They can't
seem, as a group, to get it through their beads that the
people who pay the bill s {either taxpayers or private
donors} have run out of p_atience and tolerance for ex-
cusing campus outla\\'S and fiJebugs.
One of the facultv number does understand, ho\V·
ever. He is Sidney Hook. professor of philosophy at
Nev.• York University. Writing in the April 19 issue of
Saturday Review, he observed, " .•• the Trojan horse
in· American higher education is the rickety structure
of doctrinaire thought that shelters the Students for a
Democratic Society (SOS) even \\1hen it takes official
responsib.ility for violent actions, gives it a free field
for operation, retreats before the politics of confronta·
tion, and either shrink s from applyirfg fairly and firmly
the rules Of reason that should bind the academic com·
munity, or intererets them a s if they had no · more
restraining force 111 times of crisis than ropes of sand."
Prof .. Hook correctly describe;; the foregoing at ti ..
tude as "administrative and'or faculty CO\vardice mas.
querading as educational statesmanship."
Th~ nation,s attitude is reflected by President
Nixon, Vice 'President ·A_gne\\' and Attorney General
Mit~ell, \Vho vigorousl}'-conde~ned campus anarchy
a nd violence. Still· the problem ~an best be 080l\'ed al
the local level.
The campus caMot bC a sanctuary for la\vbreakhlJ!.
If it sho~d become suc;h, the first to be destroyed \vould
be the professors themselves.
Moving Stage Cen ter
The Republican National Con11nittet' n11ghl a:;: \vell
desert Washington Ind move l('I the Oran~e Coast -f.:ir
that's \Vhere fulure GOP action '''ill ht> renlered. it ap-
pears.
Republican Statt> Chairn1an Denni!; Carpenlat has
already moved state GOP headquarters ll' a location
ne_ar Orange County .A.irport. And ncnv il appear's t•er·
tatn that President Richard ~I. Nix('ln v. ill bll\' thi> t~11t-
ton es tatt> at San f.len1entt•." ·
. This ~dds up to \\•orld·n•icl e •. nationl'l l and stale pv1 J.
t1c~I spotl.lght~ focu sed on Orange County, and e:<pcci nl -
Jy its Orange Coast, for several years tn t·omc.
Some folks like the idea. sOn1t' don·t. Soml' th ink
of. Ute prestige ';Ind .\lligher property values. Others
think of the tourist 11ll1Ux-and.. probabl~' higher prices
all along the line. 1
For most, though. it 's jusl nici> thCJl Dick Nixo n is
coming home to his native Or<1ngc County to re-estab-
lish his voting .-esidence near the begi nning scent! of
his ·long and rol!ky rise to the most po\verful job in the
world.
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~ixma to Boost Foreig1a A id? The E ssential
Cliaracter of
1'rit e p,.,wer
,
Passman Chides President
\VASHINGTO~ -Presidenl Nixon is
preperini~ to ask for nearly $1 bill ion
more for foreign aid than Q:ingress voted
for the current fiscal year .
That's the flat assertion of Rep. Otto
Passman, D-La., chairman of the House
AppropriatiomJ subcommittee in charge
of lbe foreign aid budget. Long a vigorous
opponent of large-scale foreign aid spen-
ding, Pasaman claims he has conclusive
informaUcin the President will propose a
$959,400,GOO increase.
The current foreign akl bUdget is $1.75
billion. With the addition Passman
declares the President will seek, this
bud1et for the new fl.seal year would
come to $2.715 billion.
President Johnson, before Jeavlng ef4
fice in January, submitted a foreign aid
budget of $2,695,800,000. According to
Passman, President Nixon's budget will
exceed that by $20 million.
IF PASSMAN'S contwtion is accurate.
the President (aces a tough uphill battle
to gel this budget approved by C'Angress.
Jn recent years Q:ingress has steadily
whittled down foreign aid spending. This
trend has been bipartisan, w i t h
Democrats as well as Republicans tak.inc
leading roles in wielding the <:1x.
Last year, in voting a record low uf
$1.75 billion for foreign aid. Congress lop-
ped off $1.15 billion from a $2.g billion
budget proposed by President Johnson. In
reeornmending that figure he \\'as sub ..
milling a budget limited to lhe actual
amount voled by Congress in 1967.
Sul the lawri,iakers, l n c r e a s I n g I y
disillusi®ed~Wtlh large-Scale foreign aid
spending, rer~ to be placated and
hacked of[ anOlher $1.IS billion for an
,ever1U lotalcof $1.75 billion -an a\1-timt.1
low in the 2:b:Year bJ!lofy of the foreign
aid program.
REP. PASS!\.1AN SAYS the ~59,400,000
increase President Nixon v>'ill propose
will consist or $904,400,000 for ~conon1ie
aid and $55,000,000 for military aid . He
sharply chided the President on both.
··11 would appear that all Presidents
have a way of getting hooked on foreign
aid.'' he declared. "They ll re \'lilling tu
reduce requests ·for funds for justifiable
projects in America but they always ask
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'Tiit PriMewt· ic >H.,.
trl••lnt Ille ~udgetl'
for increased funds fnr proj('C1S un(lcr
lorcign aid.
"Actually, the total lu11ds ref~ucstcd lor
Foreign aid for the con1ing fiscal year,
carried under 2-2 separate headlngs,'\x-
ceed $10.6 billion. Foreign aid as such i~
only one item in this stupendous cx-
renditure."
By Roh,rl S. Allen
and John A. Goldsmith
Bernardo 'Won' His ·case
I first saw him in the cocktail lounge of
the Maria Christina Hotel In Mexico City.
As he entered, accompanied by three or
his pistoleros, he took out his own
handgun and shot out all six of the bulbs
In the beautiful crystal chandelier hang·
ing rrom the celling.
Thi.ls, in typical ·fUhiOn, did Bernardo
Sanchez announce hi!t entry. Berriardo
(which is not his name) was one of tho.se
swashbuck ling lawyers, not uncommon in
1'.texlco in those days, who was a Ja \V unto
llimseU. He killed, the . way other mt>n
went a(ter pigeons or deer. \\lith
B~mardo. there was no season.
HE HAD A SQUARE face, heavy
beard, and brilliant compelling eyes. His
deep hoarse voice had seduced hundreds
of juries, and hundreds of women. Ht
grew up in Sonora, in Pancho Villa coun-
try, and did not discourage the rumor
that he may ha\•e bttn an illegitimate
gon of that noted bandit.
l~e had an office, but never seemed to
be in it. With his g1.1nmen and his girls be
traveled from one bar to another in l\lex-
ico City, and Cuemavaca, and Acapulco,
talking lo friends and clients. He,even
made out and collected bills in these
public places.
oNE OF HIS clients was a distincuish·
ed American oU company. Bernardo \Vas
a young man the.n. Lazaro Cardenas \.l.'SS
President o! Mexico, and he arranged for
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Tuesday. May 6,. 111611
Tht tdltoriol pagll! of the DoU11
Pilot 11tk1 to inform arid 1tim·
ulatt rtadlr• bf pre1ent1110 this
ncw.pc1p.i!r'1 opinionf.. cmd com-
menecru on topfc1 of intncst
and 1t1111lfl«tnce. bv prooldlng a
forum for •h• •;rpr•ul<m of
our rrodtrs' DP'nfons. and bg
preut1ting tht dtl)tf&t vitw-
poinU of 111/ormed obserwr1
41Uf ..IPOkll!JfM'J OJI (Opj(:.S_ Qf.J!!L.. dav.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
.,......, "
u1c e.xproprialion of large Atnerican oil
cOmQ.anies in his count ry.
The companies tried to \vln their con1·
panics back, through due legal process iii ·
l\lexico. The Yanqui ·was ,·ery unpopular
in Mexico In those da ys. and due legal
process \\'as easier asked for than had.
'ry\c companies ,~·ere .geting tlO\YhCI\!
fast. '
Then one of them heard of Bernardo.
\\'llo was _1\rtadl gaining a reputation as
a lad who had a pn!lty covaliet \\'ay \\'i!h
the la\\'.
TUE PROBLEM was explained to
the young lawyer: There 11'as a case
before the Supreme Court ol Veracruz,
JalapaJ which appeared to be going badly
against the interest of the Yanqui l.'Om-
pany. Could something be done about it".'
Bernllrdo, who never lacked con-
fidence, said sontething could. The
A1nericans did not wish to hear any
delai\s. A fee was agree<l u]lOn. Hands
were shaken.
The follO\\'lng Saturday Bernardo drove
do\\'O to JalRpa, with a 5<1uadron or about
ten men -lawyers. gunroen. and
servants.
The court, of course. \\'as oot in
session. 'The judges and counsel \Vere all
in Veracruz rOr the wtekend: enjoyinR the
marimba bands, the lo\'ely girls, and the .....
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Quotes
•
!\1rs. Ooog Ktnamun. a11tbor·ltctur.r
wife of IOtff anfst, \'laltlni: Callfornl:a
-"The most Important thing lor 1t
woman it to be herself al\\•ays, In ha\'C
her own identity, her own mc111ul
stimulation. carttr interests."
t.lorrls ~Redl Rudfnslriy, rrfflr 1nctl ~nrc
cracker, now •ulhor, on 1 •. A. \'i!!lt -
"You don't repay your debt 111 socltl)'
in prison. You dn It on the llul~ld<'.'1
Eii~C:-D'"., JOi-ye.at-old 1>astball
ran -"l''<e been follo\\·lng thd sport
all my llrc. I guess that's longer than
mosi fans dn." '
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'inc fried fish of that pla<>e .
IN THI!: OOURTHOUSE. lhere "'llS a
handful of retainers. As Bernardo and his
1iosse niadi:= their 1\·ay to th e office of thr.
bailiff, he passNI oul hundrf'rl peso notes
:u everybody h<' SH\\".
: 1,e we11t into th,e bai!Hf"s oflice. placed
~000 peso note.~ on thr .ifficial's d~sk. anrl
ttxplained th at he ~was newly·appointed.
attorney for lhe, Yaoqui oil c0;111~n . ..:. He
demanded that all legal docamenls-in the
~clion be.fore the court be turned over to
him for inspection.
\Vith some slight reluctance. lhe bailiff
go\ out the record11. great bundles of
lh~nl.
One 01 Bernardo"s men produced a
portable charcoal stove, of a ·kind com-
1nonly seen on the streets or ?>.1eXIC1> City.
A fire \\'as buming brightly wilhin.
Sl)LE~l!\l Y LlKE a bishop con-
ducting a 5ervi~e. Bernardo burned all
the papers. a fistful al a tin1e. The bailiff,
\\'ho knew \vhat \\'as good for him. just
looked on helplessly.
So ended this particul ar bit of litiga-
tion. 11·hich had been going on for months.
i"cOuld tell yOu Jio\\, on the wa)' back to
~icidcn ChY. Bernatdv kille<t..a rnan by
dl'op{>:ng hi1n into the Great •role at
Ayala. which L<i so Ueep that the 8ound of
anytlling landin,.:: is never heard; bul lhat
is anothtf story.
Dca1·
Glooufy
Gus:
Who nttds lewd plclurcs In lh••
"Candy '' class In these da):s of
lowered moral slandur<ls? Ccr·
lainly it'i:; 110 n1cdcl for our C'hil·
drcn to folio"·· The 1t10\·ic 1ntl11~·
ir~· shouli l in1pro\e its sho11<!i 10
h<'lp the country and \1orld
stral'ghtcn c1ut.
-A. S.
c•~''===
!\lost of us. \\'hen we lhink al all about
1'po1ver," think about it lhe way a child
does. To a child, "power '' consists in hav-
ing your own \\'ay, or in gelling'\\·ha\e\"Cr
you 1rant \'lhen you want it.
But Lhis is a very shalto,1· and
unsophisticated way of looking at it.
Unfortunately, many adults in posilion3
of both private and public authority con-
tinue to regard po1rer i11 the samr false
light.
The ability to get \1•hat you ll"ant 11·hc11
ro11 1rant it is part of the patho!fl~~· ur
power, not of its norn1a! natur·e. The
essential character of trt1c vo1rer is the
abili ty to reach a particular _gnaL as Ur.
Karl Deutsch poinls out. "1rith the lcn~t
loss of abilily to choo.~e a dillerenl
beha\•ior or lo se('k a difftrl'nl ~0111."'
)lNCE WE BEGIN to undcrslantl lhi~.
our whole concept of "po1,·cr" und"rzo<'s
a maturing and vit:i!izing change. For i11·
stance, lt::l us look at lhe 1nost dramatic
rxhibition of flO\\"er in the 20th Century -
{he rise of Naziisn1 and Hitler's in·
crc;:1sing power in the dl;cade follo\\•in,~
J9JJ. 1rhich thrralened 10 ('nguH all
Europt•.
t\ctuall\'. Naziisin \\•as doo1nctl h~c;u1sc
once it h~d st;irted on its path, lhcrt· w;1.s
no turning back. no \\"BY to go but 1norc
conquest anQ in\·asion. 111orc. rni litariza ·
lion and oppres~ion.
Tll E PATii THAT Hitler 1Jeliber;1tch•
chose was one that relinquished the abili-
ty to choose a clifferenl behavior or to
seek a different goµI. He 1Yas relrn!lcssly
tlrl ven. by the ~IYnamics of his O\\"!l polirr.
anr.I became in a real Einse impotent lo
rhange either his· direction or his aims,
-, C'\'en afte r his General Staff kne"· th:it
Ilic Nazi advenlure could only end badlv.
Oiological systems are the same ",1:ii
social systems. The dinosaur 1\·as lhe
1nosl ''powerful"' beast on Earth. but it
couk! not adapt its beha vior to changing
C1>nd1tlons. and so its 1·ery strength con-
demned i~ lo extinction. like a runaw.iy
locomotive that can only continue on the
same track until it smashes up of its 01111
heedless \·elocity.
TRUF. "PO\\'ER," then. rnust inc!udr a
lorge clen1ent of nexibility. It n1u;;t le!l\e
n1any options open. it must be 11·illlng lo
ro1npron1i~. lo adjust. even. In c!eflt'<'I its
<1iin if getting \1·hat it wants is not the
best th ing for 11 at the Un1e. In this c-.:·
tended se nse. "po"'·er·· is appetite con-
trolled by 11•ill. anrl will be dir1•c-tcd b~·
rcason.
, \Vhen \'IC Jose our abillty lo 1:h1)0SC a
different behavior. we are then po\1·cr!es11
-like lhC 1nad1nan who cnn only go on
fronl one killing to another. or the nation
fro1n one conqn~t to anotlwr. Onl'1 those
free enough to change are J)O\\'erful
enough to achic\"c "·hat is best for lhc.111.
Light Str eets
Co\•inJlon. Te nn., Lt:adt(: "II you ask
a \lOlire chief \\'hal will 'help most to
reduce crime in his ci t)'. the chances are
th:lt the replv will be short and sin1pltl.:
'l~ight.' ... \Vith modern technology. wo
ha\'C the ability to light cit~· i;trect~ to
le' els \\ hlch effeclively deny con·
ccnlrnent to 11·ould·be crhninal$., 1'r4~.
hnpro\'ttl llghtinr. to.!lts money .• Bul the
ln1 csl111ent \\'ill be repaid many limes ·in
t'l1tllng both crime nnd lrarfic accldtnts.
ln-0t1r~1>1nioi\, ... ligl~1ho1ild-bewLhe..basio •
con ll!Jrr3Uon in 1111 eUorts of local st3te
11111d federal program' to make our
i;trects sa£cn"
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Pentagon Mind
Is Revealed
A fe\\' years ago we became vaguely
;nvart.' thot e~ery A1ncrican allusion out
of Peking contained the 11'ords "hn-
pcrialism'' or ··imperialists."
During and imrnC<liately after the Cold
\\lar \\'e had become inured to the
epithets issuing from ll.1osco\\._ cspccie1lly
in sorne l\larshars harangue· on 'Red
Arn1y Day. Rut \Vhen il became. prescrip-
th·c in I'cking con1n1unicatinns. · the
Russians, \\"ith an un11-·ontcd delicacy,
scefllCd to abandon such provocations.
FOil A GOOD i\IANY years loyal
Americans had n1et them either 1vith
a1niallle ridicule or earnest indignation.
You niust reme1nber. ho1vevcr. lhal last
~'car so good <in An1erican as Senator
Fulbright. inveighing against the Johnson
. ;idvcnt1.1rc in Virlna111, applied the l\"llrtl
•·in1nerialisn1"' to our behavior th t•rr.
ttic • dictionary meaning or ··i111·
pcria!is1.11" and "in1perialisl"' can be
fo;ind in dictionaries, bu! everybody
krOl\'S the general n1 can1ng anrt the
:1lig111a attached. They n1ean a some\l"hal
intin1id<1tory attitude on the \\'Orld scene,
and a j]ngoist teOdeney lo g c l
nver\\Tou r.ht al a real ur fancit>d injur~.
l\Tussolini in EthioJlin is a si nister if vain·
r.to rious c~an1pl<'.
IT IS SllB:\flTIED here that our di~
patch of a fonnidable nal"al lle~l to the
~ca of Japan 11aLers \\·here our espionage
Pla ne, EC-121. 11·as shot do1\·n br the
North Koreans. has an .. i1nperial" lone.
ll i.<; doubHu l H President Nixon ill·
lcndf'd il -he is subjccl to the advice of
hi~ NovJI· ran~s -as his public pledge to
givt> armed prolcclion to (uturc espionage
inissiOfL'i o\icr international 1\·atcr:ii \\·as
caln1. reali!'tic and free or jingois1n.
But the sheer niagnilndc l)f the n<i\'a\
O[)('ration is disturbing. and \\"hat is niorc,
Rovce Brier
)
puzzling. 1lre Pentagon allctnpled t?
forestal l pointed questioning by ex-
plaining the scale of 1he responSJ. but'9t \\·a~n t very convincing. • ... ~
THE !<~LEET ~IOVll'\G frotn J aJlancse
bases CQnsisted of three attack carriers,
an a•1li·sub1narine carrier. three cruisers
and 16 destroyers. ll had missile and
2nti-missilr eapability, and deployed· a
21)0.plane air COl"er. with a 17&-plane
s:andb.I". Pcnlngon says the North Kor-
eans hetvc 444 ~·11c: fig-hters. 80 bon1bers
and a fe11· suhn1a rin es.
This !!eel. knuwn us Task i'"orce 71,
rou!d fight a stnnll-sclllc na\'al engage·
n1c111 1rith <iny minor po1vcr. but the
Pc•1lagon didn't 1nenlion it. Pentagon
sr;ys it 11'as large because the North
Korr.'.lns 1night be te1rptcd lo al\.ack a
sn1aller air-sea ·escort for an espionag6
plane j nn such plar1e is reported in the
area a! !he 1non1cnt \. Shouhl one appea r
and be atlnckcd. says the ~entagon. our
fort"C C1>uld 1nake retaliatory raids on
North Korea.
THIS OF cou nsE 11·0l1id be another
Asia!ic \1•ar, and ti.Ir. Nixon is quite
uliHkely to initiate one. but the ~uggestion
rc\·eals the Pentagon. mind, \\'hen le(! to
itself.
1\lto~cthcr. TF 71 looks like \Viclding a
sledge han1n1cr to SWiil a gadfly. The
gadfly rnay deserve a warning. but with a
smaller · production and less· theater. It
ni;iy be doubled the 'Norlh Koreans want
another \\'ar. 11·hen ii iS so 111uch run -
and sa fer -to be n sadflr. though a
Jnurclcrous one.
The Way of I ri flation
Tn the Editor :
The Nixon Ad1ninistralion de~erve:ii
1nuch crL"<lit fOr the recent anti·inflatton
bills \1"hich it has proposed. These bills
1nay not be popular 1vllh those in the
population \\"ho bcnefil from go,·ernmenl
excess. but they do help the population as
a \Vhole.
!\'ly re~cart:h indicates 1t1af much of the
'·p:·osperity"' createtl b~· inflation is more
in the 1nind than in the purse. If one
1\oui.llcs his sa lary with dollars 11'hich are
\\Orth only half as much as before, one
has not rr.adc much or a gain.
Ji'' ONE RETIRES fJn :1 fixe(I hu.111nr..
nnd discover!! one day thal his int·on1c
1\1ill buy cnly half as much as al the star!,
then one has sustained a subsl<lnlial loss.
That is the way nf inflation. ll is the
gre:>I 11-wlndlcr -holding out lh<' prom!si~
of riches 1\llth one haoct and plokJt1g ont'i
!KX!ket y,·Uh the o01er. Again, l·<'01nmen·I
t h c anU·lnflation n1casurcs of tht> ad·
n1ini!-itration.
TERR)' \\llllrt::
' it1•1•roce• 1hr.<1rlf
Tn the t:1hlor
l"m writing In regard io your ed!lori.'11
iApril 241. c1<pres~1ng you r nt\\'Sll3\1t:r's
opl11io11. 1vhich lnlcrestetJ nle \cry 1nu<'h .
I too. lut\:l bcen,grePtl) nlnnnrd 111 11111uv
of tile United Slale!t Suprc1nc Court
decisions to be hnnded dn\\ 11 in rt'Crr!
yeon but the dcclston rt>nchL-'d by nh
Oro;ne:e County Supcrlor_t:ourt~Jur_y .• thi'.'i _
month lo awsrd $1.000 It> the. b~lar
(petty thefl l v.·ho was shot by the "gonll
neightl6i"s prol~llveness" I~. In '"' ori ·
r
'lailhox
l•Ue:• "°"' •-fl ~·• *''<om• Normall~ .. rl1•fl ~l>OulO convt~ lllt ;r mftl.~f m ]((I WOt"ds or ~H. no. r~l>I 11> c~r41tnSI' "'ll•ri ta Iii N>l<t or t Hmf. •HI~ liWI ·~ restrwftl. .t.ll 1111~•1 murr inctLIGa
'i9"'1!11•P •rod m".lllln• t>Od•t U. bu! nll'l'lf'I ll">IJ ta
will'll\tlO on rt<11,.,! If wl!ic:~~I •Hann ii lp.,.,...1.
nwn. au_ouUi.lllndlng ·decision.
'
\lJl,\T If" THE thief hat.I been a
juvenile. 1naybe your SfJn or mine, and
our good neighbor ha~ shot him a$ h4! ran
(11\"tl}''!
Ju 1ny 1nind. the trigger nappy .. good
neigllbor." v.·ho ,,·ould kill someone for
:-lcllling i\ coLiple of la1,·n chairs. Is as
nn1eh a danger to our FOClety as the
erimin:il hin1sr.lf.
TllO:\tAS r.. RILEY
Student, Dept. of
CrlminolotY
Calif. Stule College ,
Long Beach
f!!I George ---.
De:lr Georl!;e :
l',rr \l'rlt!cn you thret> leUers
i:•;·ini I lh "k your column should
l:i• rC'3tl"Cf.\e(t hcrausr there 'll" nn
p!!lrf' for s.illinw In llils serlou'
\'.'Orhl , \11 :hrN• time.-. you
• nnr-::e:~I lrisult;n~Jy ancl I phtn
h!!n""rorth to ll'rll c 111 ~uur rdlt-0r.
•-• • f"'URIOUS
Dettr 1'~ur'laus~
Cff1'fL I ,,_·a:oi: fle ll ing 5fck of you .
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CHECKING •UP _•
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Sca11di11avians' A1~e
.
Called Best Shots
By·L M. BOYD
A 1 AtlLD'ARY MAN "'ho
condu cted, a study of target
range recOrds says men of
Scaodinavian descen t appear
, far and away to.be the best ri ·
fie shots. . .AM ADVISED a
Los Angeles couple named
their flrsl son Cong. Never
mind the inWrnational con-
flict. \Yould you I I k e to bet
that boy won11 wind up
nlcknam4'!d King?. . .THE
FEUOW WHO Invented the
lawnmower, Eugene Brewer.
lived more lhan 100 years.
And there are those \vho credit
that longevity to his use of
same. Consider that. n1ii;ter.
LOVE AN D WAR -\Vhen a
nlan loses his lady fr iend to
another' fellow, first thing he
wonders is what he did \\'rong.
But. \Vhen a g i r I loses her
genllema n friend to another
girl, first thi ng sH'e wonders is
. \vhat the other girl did right. A
1nan will go off by himself and
have a drink and as k himself
hO\V ne goo(ed. A young lady
in this situation, holVevcr. is
apt to mak e lnq1,1iries about
tile other girl. J\1aybe e\·en go
so far as to call her up. To try
lO get lo know · her. To sec
\i'hal' special ·tricks · s he
possesses. Obs:?rving this. (lur
Love and \Var man concludes
somewhat cyn ical lY that most
any maJ! realizes he has too
Jitfle sex appeal. But rare is
the girl who thinks she lacks a
sufficient supply of sainc.
ON Tli\IE -Note fro1n a
San Antonio subsc ribe r reads:
''l \l'ill tell you the difference
bcl\vcen us J\tc xi can -
An1er icans and }'OU Anglos.
You listen to you r l\'alch. and
in l::nglish say, 'Good, it is
running.' In our speech, \vhen
\l'e listen to our \•:atch, we s;;iy,
'Good, it is "'alkin~. · ··
CUSTOi\IER SERVICE : Q.
"\\'ERE you '1\l'are so m'.! night
spots in Los Angeles no\1'
fl"ature boltomless dan cers?"
A. Heard thal, yes. Under·
stanc:I <tha t lawmen have been
arresting them .at 'a rate of
· about 50 a month. . .Q.
"AAtONG r ece n t singJ?rs.
whom do you lik~ best!" A.
Tossup between . GI en n
Yarbrough and ?ii Ji h a l i a
Jai"kson .... Q. "DOES VINCE
L0ti1.BARDI. that ex-Packer
foot ball coach who is going to
put W~shington, 0.C ... on ·lop.
hav.e ulcers?" A. Don't think so. but l'm told he's a carr:cr. '
· lf\'PNOSIS -Wide.spread is
the belief that no man under
hypnosis "'ill do anyt hing con·
lf°ary to his moral conviction~.
But that• rio1v appears to be
wrong. Says Or.' 1'. H.
Hargo rve: .. A hyp'¥ltj~ man
1vil l kill. if he i~ nu1de ' lo
believe his victi1n is about Iii
kill hin1. He wi ll rob. if he is
made to believe he is taking
back hi.~ o.wn stolen loot. He
may even rape, if he is made
lo believe the lady desires
hirn. All of this can be done
th1·ough hypnosis.''
1\1fSS STAN\~·\'cK -Nrxt
tilne you \Va tch "The Big
Valley ," if ever, take·a look at
the snappy manner in "'hich
the • matriarch marches. I
refer to Barbara Stan11•yck. It
is her claim she developed
that fascinating stroll by
wa lching panthers in zoos. She
has great body control. Sort of
like Elgin Baylor, but a lilllc
sto11·cr.
NEVADA 1\tARRJAGE -A
typica l 11·cdding in Las Vegas.
Nev ., is described by Vance
Pnckard . Says h~: •'The young
bride 11'ore a pink, blue, and
ycH01v polkadol pant suit . Tl1e
teen-age groom wore a lenthcr
jacket nnd \\1 r a p a r nun d
sunp.IJss'es."
)"our quesfio11s and com·
n1c111s ore welcomed and
will br used tolierever pO$·
sibff' iu "Clieckhiu Vp."'
Address tn ai l to 1,, ,\T.
Boye/. iu ccsrr of tl!P DAfl.Y
PILOT, Bax 1875. f\1eu;porl
Beucl!, Calif., 92663.
Dog; Fi g·lits Brou,g·ht
'F<.1J1s' Fro11i 6 St:<ites
_Pulitzer
•
Goes to ·
Indian
NEW YORK (AP) -A
, lavorlte and a long shot have
emerged with the Hl69 Pulitzer
prizes for drama and fiction.
Playwright Howard Sackler,
39, 11·as ilnnounced MondR)' as
Lhe drama prize winner for
his ~oadway tlit '"l11e ·Great
\Vhite Hope," based on the life
of onetim~ heavyweight box-
ing champion Jack Johnson.
Surprise winper of the fic-
tion prize wa.\ N. Scott 1\toma-
day, :IS-year-old Kiowa India n.
for "House Pifade of Dawn,"
a novel about the lribulatlon,s
of an Indian veteran of World
\Var II.
As far 'as is kno1vn, l"•loma·
day. no1v an English professo r
at lhe University of California,
is the first member of his race
to 1vin a Pulitzer. He said he
\\•as una1varr that the novel.
his fi rst, had even been
nominated for the aw'ar-d. ' In the field of journdlis1n.
the Los Angeles Tiln::s won
ll1c prize tor public service for
the third tiln~ in 27 years.
This lirile the awo:ird "'as for
an expose of corruption \\'hil"h
led to a shakeup of the Los
Ang:clcs c~ty goven.n1ent :ind
three convictions for bribery. ·
\Villiant Tuohy, 43, a Titncs
correspondnet. won tilt' prize
in internalional reporting for
combat cover age in Vietnam
-bringing the ne\vspaper '9
total uf Pulitzers through the
years to srv~n. including threr
since 1966.
The prize !or n e 1v s
photography went to Ecl\1·ard
'f. Adams, 35, of T l\e
As!;oc iatcd Press for hls pi'h·
lure of Brig. Gen. Nguyen
Ngoc Loan, the South Viet-
namese nationa l police chie f,
shooting a Vi et Cong caplive
in th<' heud wit h a pistol. It
\Vas the 23rd Pulitzer Prize for
1\ssociated Press sto:i Hcrs.
Norman ~lailer, previousl.v
best knov•n for his novel "The
Nak!!d and the Dead." shared
h:n~ors in tl1e general non·
fl :::tion categ,ory ll'ith Dr. Bene
Jules Du b o s , Rockefeller
U n i \' ersity microbiologist.
~l ai ler "'as hono red for "The
Anniei! or !he' Nighl'' anll
Dubas for "So tluman an
;\ni1nal."
I
Service Back!
After W reek I
POHTEriVILLE. C a I i r . on burglacy charge5. r ROSA.~10ND ( A P )
(t:P_I) -'Phc Tulare County ''It 's a very SAdL<;lic thing." Service resumed on t he
shl!riff's of rice a n no u n c e 11 said ?firs. Ann Dula, head of So:iuthern Pa elf II" main line
?i'ionday the arrest of 66 the Tulare Gounty Humane through the San Joaquin
persons and the rescue of six Society. "One of the dogs Valley Monday night after a 41
"badly chc\ved up'' bulldogs in stolen from the-clinic 1vas in a ca r train derai lment tore up
near coma "'hen 1ve brought r:early a quarler mile of track a raid on a professional dog him in.,, and closed the tracks for more
fight that attracted fans from She said she believed all the than 15 hou rs.
at JeaSt Six slates. dogs 1vould survive, but said A railway spokesma n said
Deputies said \11'0 of the I he an i m a Is w h i ch the derailment 1vas tent.atircty
Iron-ja wed dogs had to be partici pated in the fighling blamed on a broken \\'heel, but
pried apart ,1,ith stiCks \\'hen ive re "badly chewed up with lhRI , invesligat::irs 11·ould not
officers swooped down on the cuts and bites on their mouths, have a fi nal answ er for
1
noses and ea-." several da ys · fight ring Sunday aftcrnoon--inl,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;0
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;.·.------. a remote area in the foothills
east of Porterville. 1
"ll's on!" of lhe n1osl
grue!'omc thin3<; I've e1·cr
Seen." one deputy ren,arkcd. I
Undc ri;hcri'f La1vrencc John
said 1tct ails \1ere sketchy!
about ho\1• the fight 1vas ar·
ranged and why most of those
arrested 11·cre from out of
slat e. He sa id those cited -
haili ng from as far a"'ay as
Texas . Oklahoma. Idaho and
Utah -11·eren'l oHe rin1'! any
.free in:orma tion.
"They're prell.v c Io s e -
mouthed about it," J ohn said.
"Bul one fcl101v fro1n .. Texas
said he had been training his
dor.s for thl'ec 1nonlhs for \his
fig:hl."
Elercn animals 11•ere con-
fiscated and deputies issued 66 r
ciUl tions ~1ndcr a lavt wh ich I
1na kes tl of birds orl
animals for iJ~hling a misde·
meanor for bath ~pccfators'
and pa rticipanls. 1
John said the small vallc~'
could be rea ched on ly by one
road , but three or fou r persons!
escaped from the area by
driving off into rugged ierrain
in 11 four.wheel dril'e vehicle.
Eight injured dag.<; \\'ere
taken to a veterinary clinic
here and three others were
placed in the Humane Society
shelter, but someone stoic two
from the clinic and two from [
the shelter Sunday night.
Aulhorllles sough! the owners!
J a pau·s Old es t
Man: 116, Di es I ,
KAM AISlll. Japan (AP) -
J ubel Nak:1mura. who doctors
said was bom in 18", the year
U.S. Adm Matthew Perry
opened up JBpan. died of a
-
C4!LY P!LO? 7
No .Jorlsdlctlon? · -Unrest 1st
Target • Solons . Won't Actqii" Fortas
Of Reddin W ASHINGTO.N (API
SDS Fou11der
1. !)
·_~c;hi11k
JEDIO lrlhQ
25th U.S .
Plane Go es .,
<?RliNf'S PIANOS To Havana 1 JANS$£N (\\'olnut) Wo• s 1299 No...,· $1099 W Jrl1t:e• $rior••I
M1ult l ~'~ $759
$449
$"89
Ml ~~1I (A P) -A gu ninan
and a com pa nion 11•ith a shinv
knife hn\'C carried out th~I
year's 25th airliner hijacking
to Cuba,
JORDA N IEbony) '.':ns i 1099 N ow S899 ,1.1.,.,. il Weber Studio Uprlght
l'l ert nlshed '"d R.e::>ull t .................. .
Tlic sky pir;it cs sl:i?Je1I
behind ln ll;:v;in;;i, but 1hc
other 66 passengers ancl thei
crew of seven relurnetl to 1
Miami early tod~y aftC'r a
four-hour slay on the Con1·
n11•nist island .
A N a t I on a I Airli nes
spokcsn1a n said the 1 11• o
po:isse11gers v.•ho did not rrl11rn
identified themselves as "Pi1r,
N. Marion" and "~1r. J Gag-
non."
JACOBS BROS. fEbony) Was $ l l 99 N ow
NEW and US ED ORG.A.'15
WU II: LITZ Ell: 8
THOf..\AS I
G
'iA.MMONDS
$1099
' ' '· c
' •E SUl'l l!: TO ABI( .-.aou T OUJI. PIANO .11 £NTAL.PUP!"H ASE PLAN
,.Fl.OM f t •5. Pl!:R MONTH,
I
e r•:lbu•v S11•net
t::hon ~ r"""" ..
ll:Ef'(TA.LS RETURNS
WUl UTZ!t'-M1d1I 16tC
(onoo1t . Sob!• Finl•h
11\'U ~l.IT ZEt-Me~•I 2620
C1r·~l1 w.,1.,..,1 Finish
'l.'.!'IJTER SPIN:T. Cherry wood
... W ••'~", ..
$AVE $200
$AYE $200
. '/1/as S769
PIANO LESSONS AV ~l l.A81.ll
. SOUTH COAST PLAZA
~ •.ll llTOL AT TH E SAN DIEGO rAEEWAV, COSTA MESA--=MG:31 .. . . .
5rAl\.Ot.;;o OF Tl!E \'/0!\LD
'.
\ If it's the only tin1e you have to yourself, make the n1ost of jf. ... 1\f1cr a long b1:.!iiness J~1 v, it's a 1vondcrfu l
feeling to enter !he rela x.I ng an d lu xurious
1Yorld of CadillJc. For no olhcr motor car
so co mpletely insula tes its 01vner fro m un·
nece~sa ry dislractions,and undue demands.
Th e inherent quietness of a Cadillac is
immediatel y anparcnt You 5en ~e It in !he
... olid. precise sound of the ciostng door. in
!he \Vhi spcr·quier response of the big en·
sine; in the isolat ion from road noise: in the
~urp risinglr muted ~on nds of jtree t traffic.
As you lean b<ick. en joying 1be comfort
of the con toured cushionj 1v1th 1he se.1 t
adjusted to the posi tion of your preference,
}ou exp erience a most \vclcomt: release
from 1hc tensions of the day.
And ho1.., reassuring ii i~. as you blend
effortlessly in lo the flovt of !he free\vay,
to have a t'your co mm:\nd 1he p,re:cise, s~rc
respon~e of Cadi\lac·s vaiiat>le -r1uio pow·
er stcerfng and p<iwerJront dlsc r,a~es.
Al the end of your joumey you 1n:iv1
home, pleasantly refreshed ind relaxed.
re:\IJ)' to en joy the eYening. Ao d1 thincet
are, you'll be looking for1v)r.d to the a.rJv~nt
of another d1y i.nd to another Quiel hour
• "'lih your Ca dilla c.
'
•
ort anme"l--l<ld>y. Aell6.he 411 (,... .t.mt , --.,lOSJA~-HfSA -·
WAS believed to be Japan's D1Uy '. 9, s.t '. ' -'4&1614 -~ldcst man . ll.~~r.-~--~..;..~~~~~~~~~"°" ... ~~~--11-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---,,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;"~~~~~~
~tt l·ou• Alll'llORIZtD CADILLA <:_EE.ALER'S ATTRACTIVE SEIJ!CTI0/11 Of NEW .(ND PRlVIOUSLl' OWNED CADIUACS TODA Y.
" •
\ ..
~ ...... .__ __ --~ -~----------'--------:.' ___ L. __ -----. .,;·~·:..r:o:::c:,.
• ---... . -.--. . . . . . . . ........ _, ·-· .. ··--·-··· ~--------
I IWlY l'IUIT' TUftdq, M11 6, lM
Big J's Skipper Shows Ship's Worth
. Reagan Plan Faces New Inspection_ LONG BEACH (UPI) -lubes In lhe world. would'ckclde not lo oend tbO Snyder .. 1d .
Capt. J. Edward Snyder Jr., "These IS.lncn shells · can battlewagQn back to Vlttnam Would be stl11 be the skipper
the salty skipper of the bat· penetrate 30 inches of soUd in the fall. tr the New Jersey return. to
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Gov. Ronald Req:an's tai
ttfonn prorram, already pkk·
ed over by the .slate's ad-
mlnlsttatiVe tu: eiperts, to-
day faced ariother inspection
by pu1i1ic and priv1t. ~.,
whO WG'1d be affected by 'the
.. _.i dlll1fles.
be levied along wUh a
statewide $3.~ per $ 1 0 0
;assessed value property tai on
business property ooly.
tltsbip New Jersey, had an· rock." Snyder went on. "Jt can "If the level of hostilities re-the Far East?
tlcipated criticism that the ex-destroy Communist. caves that malns the same, the Niw "WelJ they. told me I had
pense did 901 justify the olherwise can only be taken by Jersey will be back on station coinma~ for two years,''
reflllt.s of his ship's seven-jnfantry walking with name-off Vietnam during t-b e Snyder 11ald. "That Is, if I'm
month deployment off Viet· throwers and explosives." northeast moMOOn season in not court-mertialed for \vhat Revenue from t h e s e
measures would ht returned nam. Snyder said "oiily an Idiot" OCtober or N 0 v e m be r , • • I've said today."
The pipe-smoking captain. al--'-----__::_------------,,,--,....----:,..:....----
Tbe Asaembly R<venue aod
TuaUon Committee Monday
"1gbt beard a blihlY lechnlcal
cilamion by tu: experts on
the elleds ol the governor's
tu package. It WllS evident
the legislatim -at present
aUlchily outlin<d Iowan! lol1fl·
ranee goals -faces major ame-,.
Cludnnan William T. Bqley
(R-San -Rafael), said purpose
of the special Dlght hearings
was to .o:mider the effects of
the entire pack.age ..
"We are doing o u t
arithmetic," he told the <ml·
mittee. -
The goveroor's tax package
Is tw~proapd -to shift part
or the burden of taxation from
cruse property tax e1-
emptions. re· subs t l tut e
personal exemption! for tu
credits in figaring income tax-
es and further reduce the
business inventory tu.
In the aecond stage, a flat 1
percent ta:J on income would
;,,_ '·' <,· ,_, ~ ' . v·~
to school dhtrict.s on a Oat
school population basis, aban-
docllng present equaliJation
fonnulas. I Biddle sail! he was already
thinking of abandoning the
governor's proposal to shift I
from tax credib to personal_ L
.... ---. ~\ -~?~
' I ~ 'lj ,c < . .,. -g: ' . ., " . . ' . ~ . --. exemptions in the income tax. ~---------
He said perhaps a combination
of exemptloru1 and credlts
would be fairer.
He rtacted to a study by
legislative Analyst A. Alan
Po.st that showed a return to
personal exemptions would
raise taxes for those with in-
comes of $10,000 or less and
lower them for persons in
brackets above $10,000.
Post and the other tax ex·
perts were crilical of the
school financing plan_.
Reagan Sets
Welfare Aim
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Legislators have been told by
Gov. Reagan that his goals for
state welfare aid are "life
preparation for the potentially
self-sufficient and ilfe pr~
tecUon for the permanently
loc.k ol ha!r faJllog over his
forehead, ht:fted a 23-poUild
piece of shrapnel from one or
the New Je~~y 's twcrton
shells which was .recovertd
from a Viet Cong fortification .
He slammed jt down with
such force that it almost
splintered the table at the
news conference held when the
ship returned. to its home port
t-.1onday. _
"This goes through the air
at mach 4 (four times the
speed of sound) and there is
nothing 'ln Vietnam that can
stop it. The name battleship is
a misnomer. It is, in fact, a
floating artillery p I a t f o r n1
with the nine largest arUllery
Visits SF State
dependent, the aged" and the SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
di.sabled." Duke Ellington &ubstituted jazz and dancing for debate
property to income and lo p~ w lk vide more stale aid for a ·
.schools.. -Don!J tRuil
Assemblyman W. Craig Bid·
die (R·Riverside), sponsor of
the Reap.n tu plan, said it
.. is simply that we increase in-
come tax and decrease the
property Wt ...
Portly Doctor Advises
Reagan made the statement and • picketing at San Fran-
Monday in a written mes.sage cisco State College during a
outlining the WeUare bills he tw~hour concert on Monday.
supports. He . had previously Ellington, y,·hMe 7oth birth-
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Dr. Ludwig G. Lederer is a
poFtly fellow who dlserves to
become a legend in his time.
suggestion, poked fun at the endol'led the measures. day was honored at the White
f d f · -b · t· llouse last week, brought his new a 0 JOggmg Y porn mg The slate welfare system, b d h It out that joggers apparently 14-piece an to t e co ege
"come in all shapes and he remarked, "is fraught with ·gymnasjum at the invitation of
degrees of disrepair." inequities lo recipients and his friend, acting president S.
5~'5 OT.
(
The place is
anywhere! Old Crow makes
it a little more special
~OldCrow
!.:5;J . • for home
IUlfUctf $Tl!1JCll! IQURttll \'llU&lll 86 Piotf. DIS II LUO A!ID SGl'lllD IY {ll IU ctOl llrlllUl'I CO.. fllllJORT. lf.
foraavel
He said the program also
"attacks the education gap
between high wea1th and low
.wealth school districts."
Caspar w. Weinbtrser,
director of finance, said the
loae-tange goal was lo in-
cruse the staie•s· ~· of
achoo! support from t h e
present 34 percent to Ill per.
ant.
He's an expert on physical
fitness, and it's quite likely a
mulUb.ule of portly husbands
will soon be waving his advice
under the noses of a multitude
of critical wives.
"In ·i all -1 7 taxpayers alike." I. Hayakawa .
c1y er c1y, come ·-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w a.m., the steady clip-dop of1 1
Both Weinberger and Biddle
!misted the plan would nearly
balance: out with no overall ID·
creue in toes statewide.
''There would not be any
tray the state can make any
money out of this," Wein-
berger said.
Tbe pdndpol elements In
the pvernor's plan are to ~
Group Urges
Report on
Tuition Plan
Lederer, medical director
for American Airlines, is
responsible for keeping its
pilots in top condition. He
outlined his philosophy Tues-
day at the 40th annual me:eting
ol the Aerospace Medical
Association.
The good doctor warned
men who tend to be on the hef •
ty and somewhat lazy side to
avoid sudden diets o r
strenuous eurcise to lose
weight. He suggested such less
vigoroos pastimes as "run-
ning down • • • friends, jum-
ping to conclusions, sidestep..
p 1 n g responsibility and
(llllblng their lock."
Ledem', following his own
rubber soles against i;oncrete
signifies a hopeful parade of
misshapert, unshaven,
dedicated men in sweatshirts
-puffing their way to and
from local parks," he said.
Lederer said such daily
dedication probably is #Joing a
person's heart. lungs, muscle
tone and Weight control a lot
of good -"providing ... it
doesn't kill you, or bring on a
coronary attack, or leave you
gimping around on bad knees
and ankles."
He suggested that plump
people refrain from
unsupervised jogging or mort
strenuous exercise. lfe said
they are more likely to avoid
heart strain if they regularly
stroll across the room -and
tum on the television set.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -'lbe t•e••••e•e •••e•• ee e•e••••e• e
California O:lordiDatin& Coun-: •
cil fot Higher EducaUon's • t n-nance committee Monday :
urged tl>e JI-member council
to make a full report on pr~
posed tuition or increased stu-
dent fees at the state universi·
ty and colleges.
The cmnmittee said the
report should be on estimated
income aod uses of revenues
from the proposed measures
to provide more money for
: 737 Sunjets from Orange County to •
;SAN FRANCISCO, OAKLAND and SAN JOSE~
• • : can your Travel Agent or Alr Californle (714) 541)-4550:
:e••·•·····•·••e•·••e••e•ee••e••·•e••••••e•·e•
public higher education. 1----------------~---1
The council is an advisory
body, whose meeting con-
tinued todoo'. Final acdon on
tuition at the Univer'sity of
California would be up to the
board of regents, while the
legis'eture a.lid Gov. Reagan
wwkl have to approvt tuWon
or incrtued student fees at
tbe 19 stale tolleps.
Mutiny C.ase
Hears Doctor
FT. ORD (AP )
O vercrowding and the
shoollog death of a pNooor
-lo -emotional -llld ...... " clespalr In the San Francisco Pr..tdfo
51.ocbde, • J:SYchi•trist bu
telti&d in the mutiny court-
martial of 14 men.
Dr. Henry Werdegar of Sin
FrandlCo made the statement M_, ll the military trill of
14 ol the Z7 prisoners who
stqed a singing sltdown p~
test Oct. u.
Dr. Wenlepr s,Ud the
de!..mnt be uamined. Pvl.
Froncis Schfrv, 21, of St.
Petenbar1, Fla., a u ff e re d
from "inadequat. penonaUly"
a n d "chronic depression,"
through he was not psychotic.
pretense attorney Terence
Hallinan is pre9enling a series
of expert wltneues this -k on the mental conditions of the
t4.
BRADLEY
NOW ON TOP
LOS ANGEi.Es (AP) -Ci·
ty Councilman T h o m a a
Bradlq would win elldlon IS
mayor lf 1bt conte.t Weft ht.Id
now, llQ'I a Fit.kl Research
Corp. poll COllll1ll..tone by
TeleviDxl 5Calloo KNXT.
Reduce
monthly
payments
50%ormore.
'L' \J
IF YOUR BIU.S LOOK LIKE THIS:
CAR LCWI • • •
WASHER-ORYER
Ct.OTHING STORE •
CREDIT CARO
-·-Ol!N'JlST Bill.: • •
Amount Yoor
o-i Payme""' $ 880.00 $ t;()_oo<'../
210.00 35.00
• 110.00 15.00
220.00 25.00
280.00 15.00
$1700.00 $158.00
use our money!
Bom1lr $1 ,700 1o pay oil all those bills and
nopay on1)' $62.C.Q for 36 monlhs. You may bo<·
-from $100 1o $5,000. or more. with pay-
menla 8Cheduled lo ft! your income. You may
have r-money the day yw l!PPl1-wlth no
,__.i tor 45 dlyL
Morris Plan The poll llafd Bradley woold
carry al ie.t ill perc<nl ol the
vote and Ml'yor s.m Yorty al
le.ut 35 ~·Thirteen per-cent ol lht dit• rqbl<nd Newport l!Mch -3700 Newport Blvd. -673·3700
. COMMUNITY EVENTS
MAY 17 ·11 I A.M .• ,P.M.
RUMMAGE SALE C.M .
JAY CEES. CA LIF. FED.
BLOG. 2700 HARBOR
~
JUNE 6·7 ·1
Fi1I. Fry Fe1tiv•I end P•r•de
Coil• M11• • N1wporl H•rbor Lion1,
City P1rli:
flave you met Anita our Gal of the
ftfonth fro»& ft.ft. Clemem, Afich.
As I lttn•ger 19'1,,,.. ~. 11vlnv1 ICCCNtt!
•ncl now 11 Mr1. L111:11 Incl• prO\XI C•I FEOEilt. •
>fie Ql".tcff wr ttlltr HM. Anit1 i. upecrtng •11 incrN11 lo! ,,.,. f1mUy In July.
Cot10r•h!llllorlli 1r1 Ill Qr"Cler far I Wlllldtrlul
'fOl#lll mollltr IO M.
I
MAY 24 • Jl l :JD P'.M.
.. Middle of the Ni9~f'
C.M. Ciwic Pl•yhou11-
Communily Rec. Cini•• IW~il UU• O.C. Fe!.-grOUllO•)
1
NOW!
DIVIDENDS
PAID FROM
DAY-INTO
DAY-OUT!
Neighborly. That's what the
nation's largest federal is!
We're local people, from our manager to our tellers. And we're anxious to p~licize all local
community activities. It's our way of matching home-town friendliness with the efficienrservice of
the nation's largest federal savings association. Ifs why we have been winning so many more
friends in California every ye ar since 1925. Stop in and open your account now. Eam from day-in
to day-out. In addition, funds re ceived by 10th of any month earn from the 1st when on deposit at
the end of the quarter. ·
5 253 BONUS
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{Available in multiples of $1000.) Earns y, 0/o
bonus each year above regular passbook rate
when held 3 years. '
5 133 PASSBOOK
• ACCOUNT:
5.13o/o annu al yield on insured passbook
accounts when all savings and dividends
remain a year.if the 5°/o current annual rate is
maintained and compounded daily for a year.
C~P,fQ.ffi~~~,.f.~rn~~.!~Jro §@!!!!gs
•
NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL
1
-COSTA MESA OFFICE:
2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams• 546·2300
CLIFFORD M. WESOORF, ASST. VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER •
....
CALIFORNIA
ftDERAL
SAVINGS ···---••• 9 1
·-
vot.en are I UD undedaect or .~ -~ 1.1t111111r. rtdtr•l llome LNn-.Jllnl(.S'wtc:m . ~ CMl!t•, LMtt ll\Silll&llelll ~ telM to abrwer. ~ ........ ~ ............ -... -------------.:...,;,;"""_.;;,,,;;,,,;""";;,,;;,;;,,,..,;,;,;,;.;,;.:.:.:.;.;;,,,;;_ _____________ J
..
------------~ •
Viet PeQC~ Needs
Set: $2.5 Billion
SAIGOll (UPI) -A report repalttd and "311bslanUal pro-
prepared for Jtrtlident Nbon &re$$" toward higher Uvinc
saya thlt once the Vietnam standards can be made in ·•a
war ls over, South Vietnam compara,tively short time."
will need A:.5 billion in loreign "With an appropriate set or
aid to become economJcally pollclta:, It is believed tha\ the
independent within 10 years. termination of dependence on
Most ol the aid would come foreign aid can be achieved
from the United Stat.es. The wlUlin to years," lt says. Saiioo a:ovemment Would re-. . quire solid leader'Ship and · In order ~ attain this 10-
sound ccooomic pracUces to . year goal, the report sa)'!, the
fulfill the 10-yetr goal ol p~lvate stet.or of the ~th
economic self-reliance. Vietnamese economy m:ust be
The U.S. government paid encouraged to. grow, Wlth the
about a million for the report, go~ent discouraged from '
entlUed "The. Postwar Devel· exLerel. mnlhag l~oo much control. .
opment of the Republic or 1 1en s report recom·
South Vietnam : Policies and ·mends a ~wo to . three-year
Programs '' It is not yet on reconst.ruchon period follow-
President ·Nixon's desk. ing ~~ war. to include the
David E. Lilienthal , former repall1ng of war damage and
chainn&n of the A t 0 m t c the resettlement of w a r
Energy Commission. headed refugees.
the task force of 11 U.S. and 55 After that would come the
South Vietnamese experts who seven-year economic develo~
\Vorked on the 535-page report menl phase. Part of this would
uiider gayernment contract. be development of a water
The report says that once control system in the Mekong
peace comes to Vietnam, th e Delta. South Vietnam's rice·
ravqes of war can be rich agricu ltufal center.
Bring
Witchcraft Classes Offered
ULTING, E111land (UPI) -
A county cooncil education ad-
vise r Is opening a school for
witchcraft.
For tJ.60,-a person can get
six lessons. ..
The adviser, Derek Walters,
said among other things he
\vill teach:
-How to make love potions.
-How to control a person by
bewltching '2 doll .
-How to deal with enemies
(exact fonnula unspecified).
• "1 have had 60 applications
in a few days to enroll in the
school," he said. "Quite a few
are from parcticing witches
who want to meet others with
similar interuts.
"It's not black magic. or
course. That's too dangerous.
l tried that onct myself and
cursed someone -it re·
bounded and almost killed me
instead."
Walters, who advises the
council in music lessons and
has . its permission for ·the
witchcraft school, has had one
success with the craft l:iO far.
"l put a spell on an in-
surance company and manag·
ed to get $144 for flood
damage to my car -even
though the company had point-
blank refused my claim
pre~iously."
Baja PeQ Offers Cons
Chance to Run B1,1siness
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -
For convicts at B a j a
California's State penitentiary.
,good behavior pays off. They
can earn weekly conjugal
visits and participation in the
prison's free enterpri se
system.
The prison ls a flouri shing
self-contained com mun it y
where trusties roam freel y
within the walls.
Shops anct industries prov ide
profit for the ambitious in-
mate and the prison will even
lend him money to start his
own business behind bars.
Warden of the facility on the
out.skirll ot this border city is
Antonib Martines, a 49-year-
old former salesman who
believe& that most convicts
will ' respond if given the
clWlce to work and make
money.
~HOPS BUSY
Convict ~ within the
priaon turn out fpmiture , mat·
tresses, toys and o t h e r
handcrafts. During the sum-
1 mer, the prison manufacture s
up lo 2,500 bongo drums per
weet for shops catering to
tourists in downtown Tijuana.
"We encourage lhe
prisoners to work, but they
don't have to and about one·
third don't, Martinez said.
"But for those who behave
and work hard. life in her!' is
not too grim."
Trusties in the factories and
shops work on a cooperalivr
basis and cam according to
how much they produce. 1 There's a radio repair shop. a
1 tailor. a barber. a bathhouse.
a grocery store and a
restaurant, all r u n in·
dependently by the inmates.
. "lf a convict has a good idea
•for a business and needs
1noney to start it, we advance
the funds and he pays back
the Joan rrom his Income,"
Martinez says.
7%0 AT FACILITY '
Aboµt 720 prisoners are kept
at the facility, across the
border from San Diego, Calif.
including about 30 U . S .
citizens.
bailable in Mexico.
Trusties are free within the
1valls 24 hours a da y. but they
have to earn this privilege.
Nrw arrivals progress throug h
a series of live tanks before
lhey are made trusties.
GREATER FREEDOr.1
Each Ian~ a 11 o w s pro-
gressively greater freedom
and the prospect of being
made a trusty provides the
prisoners with considerable in·
centive, says Martinez.
Trusties live-two or three to
a room in separate
apartments in new buildings
and can be alone with their
wives one day a ·week .
"We have three visiting
days a week and up to 1,500
_persons ~come in on those
days. It's just like a big picnic
inside the walls t b e n , ' '
Martinez says.
The prison was built in 1958
and lor several years was sur·
rouncled only · by wir! fences .
On foggy nights, prisoners
sometimes scaled the fence
and escaped.
PROBLEM SOLVED
This problem was solved bv
construction of a 30-foot wail
and there have been no
escapes since then although
some have tried to tunnel
under it.
One convict, a U.S. citizen,
carried the free enterprise
system beyond the allowable
limits.
He v;as accused of operat ing
an extensive stolen car ring
from inside the prison. Cars
stolen in the l lnited States
were brought to the prison
where identifying marks wert
changed. The cars then were
solll either in Mexico or
California. 'l1le man is sti ll iJl
pr ison but not in business.
For I.hose who misbehave,
tberc are small solitary cells.
Dances Set
For Yottths_
"We ·gel a lot ol A~rican~ Dances for seventh and
who have managed to get eighth grade studenLs are now
themselves arrested on mari· sponsored every oOler Friday
juarla char1es so they can nig~t by the-· Westminster
evade the draft in their own ~rea.tion and Parlu Depart-
country," said Martina. "A menl.
Jot of Americans come in The dances, scheduled from
thinking the.y can buy their 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the
way out of this place, but they Westminster Civic Center,
11re in for a big disap-8200 Westminster Avt .. is open
poinlment." to students attending Johnson,
Maiimum penalty in Me.iico McCarvin, Sta~. Wamtr or
is 30 years, but a convict can ll'\line lntenntdlate School.
be tlven eonseeoUve ma:r· In additioo they mmt have a
imum sentences which keep , Teen Club card or in ap-
O!m for Ill<. pllcalloa !onn filed out and
~1any prisoners spend seven signed by thdr pamils.
to nJne months JI.Ill waiting for Teen cl1;1b card a.pplications
ttj1l under Mexico'• judlclaJ are available at any of the in-
a)IMem which give• the judge termedi1te schools or from
up lO a year to decide the the RecreaUon and !>arks
Clise, Narcotics cast'!'. 11rt1 not Oep:irlment.-
I • ' I
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•
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i
. ·"
• ;, ,
• •
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may co south coast plere, sen diego fwy et bristol, coste mese; 546. 9321
1~op mondey through so tu rdey 10 e.m. to 9:30 p.m
•
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MAVCO
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·.
,•
Jf DAILY PILOT T•Hdly, May 6, 1969
Probation VCI Negr o Prof Believe•
Given on ·
Pot Count
Students Lack Will to Win
LOS ANGELES -A U.S.
District Court judge has
sentenced \Vesley Gordon
Plinke of Newport Beach to
four years' probation in con·
nectlon with marijuana ~n1ug·
gllng eharges brought against
Plinke and two other Orange
County men by feder al
authorities.
The senlent'ing of Plinke, 20,
of 2544 Newport Blvd., follow·
ed federal court action on
Paul William Wehrle o (
Anaheim, who was sentenced
to five years in federal prison.
\Vehrle and Plinke were t~·o
of three men arrested by
customs agents last net. 9 at
Chino Airport. Investigators
alleged they found 512 pounds
o f unprocessed marijuana
stowed in the light plane
operated by the trio.
Gilbert Zamora, 18, Garden
Grove, was cleared of the
smuggling charges.
Olga Connoll y
'falk P lanned
County Sets
'Goodwill
Week' Fete
SANTA ANA -A lull
schedule of activities is plan-
ned by the Orange County
Goodwill Industries lo
celebrate "National Goodwill
Week" this week.
Tours . of the large pro-
duction plant at West 5lh and
Fairview Streets here will be
held all week, officials said.
The local Goodwj!J
Industries recently paid its 10
millionth wage dollar, an in-
dication of the instituUon's
\VOrth to the county's SANTA ANA -Olympic star Olga Fikolova Connolly economy, officials pointed out.
will be .the guest speaker May Among special events plan-
JO at the Fourth Annual Book ned are an annual Hobby Show
and Author Awards Dinner by Goodwill trainees and
sponsored by Friends of the International Day, both on
Library, UC Irvine. at the Wednesday.
Sadd.leback Inn. Hosts for the Hobby Show
For additional Information are Gregg M e Y e r of
and reservations. call the Westminster and .D a r c e y
Friends' Desk at UC Irvine Palmer of Yorba Linda. Judg-
833-5000. ' •. ing-of wirutlng.hobbies will be
D eat h No tice•
LO NG
JI~ I, l-. .t.11e 11 oJf 10116 Orlol1 ol,y~ .• Fou11t1I~ V1lle't'. Dl!t of Oelth,
Moy 4, 8"1ovtd fllMr of Mr1, II. E.
McGet, M1'1. J.P. OCiltllll'l'~l Elll11
ci..rles J. L-. Bro!ne<-ol Mlrtt """
Vk l-. .t.llO ~11rvlvlld b, U '''""" chllclrw:n 1no ont 1tf'Nl .. r1uldcl'llkl. R~
ell.Ilion oJf Ille Roury, TllHd1y, 1:»
P.m. Ae<lll~ Miu, Wtor>HOIY, '
1.m .. both 11 SS Simon """ Judlle c ..
lllollc Cllurdl, Huntl.,..tot1 llQCl'I.
aan .. ic.ulbef'I Morh.1ry, 1111 w. L•
P1I,,,., .t.n11>tlm, directer•.
CEFIS
J1tk C~l1. 223' F1lrylrw R-. CPsJ1
MH<i. Diie ot 11e1111. """' s. surv1v..i t..,. wlte, 5.,....111.o; son. llld'Mlrd, ToltG<I.
Ofllo; C11....,,ttt, Mrl. l1ur1 Ellll,. Co...
11 MtM; Incl -,,..ncld'llklre". Ro-
Wl'Y• Wednn01v, 10 1.m., lhn BrOICI·
"'"' Cltfilel. ln~met1I, H .. 11or Rnt M~I P1rti:. Olre(llCI br II r I I
llf'OIOW1¥ Mortu1nr, 111 llrllldw1y,
t wit Mew.
GOOCHEY
Gfrlrude M. GoocM'f, 1ut S.11 It•·
nl<Cllllo Piia, CPSll Mn-. 0.11 ot
delll'I. ,,_., 4. S11r¥I .... tr\; f1111,Nnd,
Wlllllmi '°"' Wlllllf'l'I Jr.1 twotlier,
H1rold <Wtteorci. S.1'111 Anti two 1li..-
ltf'11, Mrs. MttMrtl Noni, Fultrrltwl;
Mrs. Mlld!'M Kennt1't', TUlllll. Gr1ve.
sick> Hnlk:ft will be lltld Wecll!6Clav, 10 1.m,. H...tlor RHI MemPrl.ol P111<,
..,;111 Rt¥. ~rl Jolll!IOl'I offldtl!nt.
8e!I llro.tclw•v Mott~..,., directors.
ROBBINS
•rvlnt t . Robbins. 2131 PrniOtnl
PIKe. Cwt• Me11. 0•-CJf Clltlll, M•Y
J. Survlvecl b't' wit., Florftl«; Ill~
3'11,,., Curtlt. C•I• NlaaJ DolltlO, On.-
!1rlo1 aM WHll1m, Monkltlr; 1lsl•r.
Mrs. Miidred Flll89nlkl, Florld1, .ev·
en vnndallklr..,1 '-1rt1t .. r1f\d-cfllkf,...,. Sen-1~, W911f!ftdl't', 1 p,m .
'Bell llrotelw9y C~111tl. .. I I" ReY.
lorWt\ Fllckln;er offkl.otl111. l n~rmtnl
wl!I be held In llron1on. Mklll91n.
aeu lrOldw•y MOrt..1rv. Olrectors.
LANE
to't' v1,.,11111 Lint . .t.11e '5. ol IQ k~n:-
1/>lfOll .t.vr.. Hunrinllon Be.ti>. Sur-
vlvecl b' l>Ul!lll\CI, Tom. S<!'niktl.
T1>und1y, t p,m., Smll!K Ch•cid. I,._
INmenl, Vllla11• Cemei.ory, N D' r n
HDlh•wDOd. Smllfls Morh11rv, Olreclo"
McFARLAf\"D
Oorll Mci'1r(1tld. '31 Cllll Oriw•. l1·
•11\/fll Beed! . .t.1r ~. Survlwed b't' iun.
G-A. MCF1rllflCI. V1!1, Coloraoo
Scrvk" Prlldln1 11 Wesrc!IU C:~ll>l'I
MPl'IUll'Y, ~U.
BAYLEY
S1m\ltl BIY\l'I', ,10 111~1111: Vlll1~e.
Newriort Be1cll. S..rvlwtd by wt!•.
Oll...e1 lwv .ons, Alln atld Ne<m•n
LeWIU 1-1r .. ldCllllO<!fll two brt>lll·
ers i nd -1l1ter. ~llOl!lc 1ff\llcl!1,
WtiOnesdev, ,,30 p,m., Wnlcllll C~ID·
el. In~. P1clfic V~w MemMlt!
P1rt.. OJA<'!ed by \'!fl!Cllft C:~a~I
Morlu.rv, 6~11.
ARBUCKLE & 'VELSH
West.cllif Mortuary
4!7 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa
'4"48"
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Coron del i\lt r OR 3-'450
Costa &lesa l\fi ~2.fzt
BELL BROADW AY
MORTUARY
111 BrudW1y, Costa l\teu
LI S-3433
OU.DAY BROTHERS
HanUntton VaJJey
i\lortaary
J79ll Btacb Blvd.
lJUDUn(ton Beach
Mt.ml
PACIFIC VIEW
'IEMOR!AL PARK
Cemetery e J\lortuary
Chap<I
$00 Pacific View Dri\'e
Newpo rt Beach. California
644-%70t
PEEK FA~ULY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'i8Cll Bolsa Ave.
W-lesler Di.ml
Sllln'ER MORTUARY
~ 11.... IM-1115
S.. Otm"le llW!OI
SMl'l'll'S MORTUARY m JWa St.
Ba~.::•••
•
held Wednesday.
Fifty ezchange st u d e n t s
from foreign countries will be
guests on a tour of the plan t
on International· Day.
Former Goodwill trainees
now holding jobs in private in·
dustry have been invited lo
revisi t the plant Friday from I
p.m. lo 3 p.m.
Reinec ke to Speak
To Pollution Group
ANAHEJt.1 -Lt'. Gov. Ed
Reinecke will be the keynote
, speaker Thursday at a Jun·
cheon during the 4lst annual
conference of the Californi3
Water Pollution C o n t r o I
Association (CWPCA) at the
Disneyland Hotel.
Men responsible for \Yater
quality throughout California
will gather Wed n esday
through Saturday to hear
more than 40 experts in every
phase of wastewater handling
·and reclamation.
Association P r e s i d e n t
\Valte.r E. Garrison said idea s
wi ll be e1changed on pro-
tection or coastal waters, ii
subject of keen interest to
Orange County thii:1 spring:
the reclamalion of waste
\Valer for reuse. and progr~::s
in chemistry and computers.
Fred A. Harper of Orange.
general manager of the county
Sanitation Districts, is co-
chairman of the conference.
\Vinner of the 1969 Leon B.
Hevnolds Award, Robert N.
Gailoway of Santa An a ,
superintendent o[ operations
for the county Sanitation
Districts, will be honored at
the Thursday luncheon. His
4 From OCC
Are 'Malta'
Four Orange Coast College
UCLA Coach
To Address
City Leag ue
PLACENTIA -Coach John
\\'ooden of the UCLA national
championship basketball team
will be the speaker at the
general meeting of the Orange
County League of Cities there
May 22, Placentia :P.1ayor Jack
Gomez has announced.
Gomez noted that Placentia
City Administrator Edwin T.
Powell was an assistant coach
to Wooden for six years.
The dinner meeting will be
held at the Alta Vista Country
Club. m Alta Vista St.,
Placentia . A social hour at
6:30 p.m. will precede the 7:30
dinne r, Gomez said.
Award Giv en
To llelen Huff
students will represent the IRVlNE-Helen Huff of the country of Malla at the 19th
session of the ~lodel Unittd UCI Foundation has reci!ived
Nations of the Far West May the second place award in the
7.10 in Fresno. California Press Women's
Hosted by Fresno State Writing Contest for ~t fea·
College, the session will draw ture magarine article.
representatives from more Her article, "The UCI Foun· I
than 100 colleges a n d dation. . .A United Effort."
universities in the Western appeared In the Sept.ember, 19611 issue of Orange County U.S. Illustrated. The fou.r~y stay, financed ----------by the student body. ends
several months of preparation
by the group, studying the
mach inery of the U.N. and the
backgrouod"of Malta under the
guidance of OCC political
science professor Ru s s e 14 ' •
Millar. · ~ ffl
OCC delegales will include ~
Patti Terrell of Corona del
Afar : John Capadoni!: of
Newport Beach: Tom Boland
or Costa Mesa; and tllalnnan
Larkin Stentz Jr. of Costa
Meu.
FAVORITES
N1flonot 1nil IKol rooilor.
,hip poll• ,,.,. th1 DAILY
PILOT ,1rtlo1 •ot'\I' of tho "''°'' pop11l•r c:of11,.,.n1 ""ii
lo1hlfOt IYt rlollle to •"Y
111w1p1por i11 tll1 Uftlt•il
Stal••·
•
l.BGUNtl reoePBL SBVINGS
BBN HBLP YOU BUY, BUILD, IMPRove
OP R8FIN8NOO YOUR HOM8
260 Oc:•n A'ltfTll•
l•iun-e.c.ri. Calllorll!•
T11tphont:•9-4·7541
l fltANCHts:
lqufll NWwt. l ~..,. ~z:t
T!!IRphoM: OD lMO • '\96' )201
S•~ c:a.m.tltr. 601 H. Cl 6n.i.. ""' T~o.92-1195
Over the past third of a century we
have financed hundreds of millions of doll.an·
in Orange County residential real estate. All these
ye: an of expcric:ncc make it poWble for our Joan
officers to offer you the important advantages of
PERSONAL ATTENTION AND SEJtVlCE, PJtOMPT
LoAN COMMITMENTS AND Ex.PERT Esa ow.
We invite you to ask our
home Joan counselors .about our
• FAVORABLE LOAN TERMS
• CON5ntucnoN LOAN PLANS
• FLExIBLB LOAN PLANS
• UNIQUI! INTERFSrRAm REDUCING PLAN
Where you borrow DOES make er cll//a-mce!
I
I HUNTINGTON BU.CH
1 !313 MalN al llfACM . ' . . .
842·145.I
II ANAHEIM
~10 $ IHl!CM llVO ...
' ' ' ' ' '• I • . . .
826·0381
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LIMITED TIMI DN LYI
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Scientist~ Confirm
'
Neutron Stars Idea
WASHINGTON (UPI) • -
There really are neutron stars
spinning and flashing in the
depths of space.
Their matter is so densely
packed that a bit of it the size
of a sugar cube weighs a
billion tons.
They are only about 120
miles in diameter, but their
mass is equal to or greater
than the sun's.
Their magnetic fields are 20
trillion times as strong as the
earth's.
The most recent 1upemni1
observed on earth Will what l!
now known as the Crab
Nebula, which flared brl&hlly
Jn the skies-in 195t. It hi! now
been determined that the COl'J!,
or cinder, of the Crab Nebuli
is a ·pulsar which emits eoerp
not only in radio but also in
visible light and X-rays.
Astronomers now belltvt
that ~uch of the energy · of a
supernova is retained in ltt
rapidly ·spinning, hi&hly com-
pressed core, and that this
TORN APART core, a neutron star, emits
The tr gravitaUonal at-radiation as it spins. Particles
traction Is 50 powerful that an flung out at nearly the speed or light from the star's
astronaut lrylng to land on one magnetosphere may be the
would be tom apart, before he source of cosmic rays.
got closer than 60 miles.
They may be the primary 100 BELIEVERS
source of the immensely One scientist said a poll of
energetic cosmic rays which his fellows probably wou ld
flood all space. show 100 believers in the
A year ago neutron stars ex neutron star theory of pulsars
isled only in theory. They now to every two against. And the
exist in fact. two dissenters, he said , i
This was the consensus of "would b..' crazy."
astronomers whc participated Discovery of the neutron
in a symposium at the annual star-pulsar in the heart of lhe
meetiq of the N a t i o n a I Crab Nebula, 36 quadrillion
Academy or Sciences on million miles from earth.
pulsars, tbose strange objects disposed or the nolion that
in the beaven.S which emit pulsar signals might be from
electromagnetic signals at intelligent beings. A supernova
regular intervals ranging from e x p 1 o s i o n w o u 1 d ln-
30 times a second to once stantaneously vaporize a 11
every 3.75 seconds. planets around the star, thus
DISCOVERED IN lM7 destroying whatever civiliza· lions they may have harbored.
Pulsars were discovered in The t r e m e n d o u s com-
1967 by British r a d i o pressional forces of gravity
astronomers. Unable to ex· which can shrink a sun to a
plain the rtgulilrity o~ the body only 120 miles in
radio pulses, some scientists diameter are hard to com-
wondered if they might not be prehend. One of the scientists
an attempt at interstellar tried to make it clear this
communication by advanced way:
civilizations on planets of tr the earth were so com-
other solar systems in space. pressed, he said, "you could
'This was quickly ruled out, hold New York Citv In the
however, and a )'!.ar ago palm of your hand.""
neutron stars were suggestedl-r=========J
as the sou rce of t h e
mysteriou" pulsation. Many
aatronomers scoffed at thb
notion. ~1eanwhile, 36 other
pulsars have been located in
our star family, the milky way
galaxy.
Neutron stars had been in-
vented by theoreticians con·
ciTned wi\1. the birth, life, and
d~ath of stars. When a star
ll~e the sun, say, had used up
the nuclear fuel in Its core,
Liley calculated, il would col-
11.J> SP sudde nl y and
catastrophically under Its own
gravitational forces. Its mat-
ter would ~ compressed into
39 extremMf den se super-fluid
nuclear soup
SUPERNOVA RESULTS
The visible result would be a
s11pernova, a stellar implosion
abruptly incrtasing the old
star '1 luminosity to a billion or
1~ billion times the sun's and
hurling vasl masses o !_
materla' i n t o surrounding
sflece.
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LET'S BE FRIENDLY
U YoU have ~ ndehbon:
or know ol anyone movtna
to our area. pleue teU us
ao that we may extend a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acqualnt('(f
In their new aurroundinp.
Huntington Beach
YlsHor
96Ml4f
Costa Mesa Yisffor
968-4149
So. Coast YisHor
494--0579
Harbor Visitor
494-9361
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e \Vould you believe a cat
f~r $50 ? \Vell, it'& true. , •
chccl' the paper todl)il
• Ne~.eds' attention!
Need a refrtgerator, f~
iturc, a vacuum .tt. , .
"bless htr if she does''
a sewing macliine ! ~
chance lo plck lbtm up at
l"t'UQnable prices accord-
ing to ~·s oaper.
• Believe It 0t not, One cu
snu find a. 2 hmroom
aputment w:ith 10!1 of th!
nice featut'e$ for Jill ..•
bettet h u r r y Oil um,
tboijf.h!
e ti 101.1'd like• Uttle "Bur"
In )'OW' lit, •. ,there'• one
in. today, low milC!ap, I
low Yintt.ce. ,check todl)'I
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see through shirts
dotted on voile
""'"" Falhk>rl $iys the see-through is here. And May Co
has the are• OMS. We show you just one hete. In
easy-ure Dacron$ polyester and cotton. They're
best dill.ractions for the not.quitHO daring.
a. Shirt in navy, blick. or brown, 8-16, 9.00
miY co better blouies 39
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b
soft jabot blouse for
special size mothers
Mother will love this softly feminine blQUse whipped
up in a cool, light fabric. With a lace rimmed Jabot
and sl~. A cameo at the neck. Ahd In com·
• pletely Wilshable .soft triacet:ate and palytster.
b. In white, blouse sizes 38 to -44, 13.00
may co women's sportswear as
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Tut~day, M.t.r 6. 1%' DAILY "LOT J!
we have sweaters for
all kinds of mothers
We show you Just one of ma ny sweaters, looks ldea1
for Mother's Oa}t. This a diamond stitched cardigan,
In Wintuckil Otlon!ll · acrylic. Whatever kind o(
mother you may have, we have just her kind of
sweiter.
c. Blick, pink, yellow, blue, white, 36-40, 17.00
mav a> $p01Uwear accessories 7 2
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MAY CO
may co south coast plaza, s~n diego fwy al bristol, costa mesa;
shop monday through saturday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m
546 -9321
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J f OAIL Y PILOT Tuesday, May 6, 1969
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Transplant
Key Found
In Spider?
LITILE ROCK, iuk. (UPI),
-Venom from a shy little
spider -more t.oxic thaii that
o( the deadly cobra -may
provide a key to 11eventing
rejection . o ( transplanted
organs by the human body.
Dr. Paul N. Morgan, a
research microbiologist at lhe
Little .Rock Veterans'
Administration hospital. has
disco\•ered that the potent
venom of the comtnon brown
recluse spider inactivates a
vilal link. in the cha in of the
body's rejection mechanism.
If the specific component of
the venom that slops rejection
can be isolated and chemically
reproduced, l\forgan believes,
the biggest roadblock facing
transplant surgeons could be
~·iped Swa).
J\1organ·s research may
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have opened other doors for 0 h f 1•1
medicine as well. The tiny rp 011 0 't' 01"
drop ol crystal clea r venom Animals can be orphans, too. This winson1e puppy,
from the fangs of the brown an orphan of the Vietnam war. travels kangaroo-
recluse could lead I 0 style in the back pocket of a Marine 'vho adopted~
breakthroughs in treatment of him at the Dong Ha base.
cancer and hemophelia, he _::::.c_::::.::::.--''---------------1
believes.
Scientists agree that ri;-
jection of foreign tissues by a
body depends on. two biological
substances -antibodies and
"complement:'' In combating
pneumonia, for example. the.
body produces antibodies
matched to the mjcroorganism
-called an antigen -causing
the infection. •
But antibodies must ha ve
· corriplement to be totally ef-
fective against antigens. And
this is where Morgan's
research comes in.
When an organ ,js
transplanted into a box, the
bod:t "assutnes'' the foreign
tissue wlll ~ harmful and an-
tibodies are produced. These
anlibodise eventually cause
rejection of the organ.
Up to now, all efforls to stop
rejection have aimed at sup-
pressing antibody production.
But this leaves the body with
no natural defense against in-
jection from the real antigens
-bacteria, viruses and other
orga~sms.
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Scientists l(eep E y e
On Sunspot Activi·ty
PASADENA (UPI) -The
appearance of extremely
bright areas on the face of the
sun may herald the growth of
violent sunspots which in-
terfere with r a d i o com-
munication on ... arth and are
hazardous for astronauts.
Dr. Harold Zirin, a n
a st rophys i ci s t at the
California Institute .of
Technology, said the brighl re -
gions seem to appea r 12 to 36
hours before the sunspots.
Zirin. a staff member of the
Mt. Wilson and Palomar
observatories, keeps a 24--hour
watch on the sun with lime-
lapse movies.
"In a brief survey of movies
from 1968." he said, "we have
identified 13 clear<ut ex -
amples of such regions, six of
them in September ·alone .
Eight of the 13 regions
developed i n t o significant
sunspot groups."
Scientists in the manned
space program are wary or
sunspot activity because solar
flares emit gigantic bursts of
magnetic particles and poSt a
serious radiotion danger to
space travelers,
"In fact," Zirin said. "it has
been rumored that I h e
Russians ended one of their
manned flights earlier than
planned last year because of
sunspots. They ha ve tended to
be very tautious about solar
activi ty."
SUMMER SURPRISE ... SNOWFLAKES BY. BALI
Vnderfashions so delicate and fragile they simply cool off
summer on sight ... and so artfully desiqned they flatteringly
curve and control with a touch as light a~ their looks.
1Trousseau-matched in white or tempting pastels. Underwired bra
sl;p,,short or average length., 32-38 B. 32-40 C.O , 1~.00. Pad ded
bandeau, polyester fiberfill, never-show fla t seam s, 32-36 A-B,
5.00; lightweigh t Lycra® span de11. brief, adju ::.table garters
S-L, 8.50. Wired bandeau with support for even the DD's
32 -38 B. 32-40 C, b.50; 32-40 0-00, 7.50. Long leg panty
g;rdle, S-XJ,,-15.00.
Mail and telephone orders invited.
Foundation s, 19.
·MEET BALI STYLISTS
Just for you. we offer expert consultation on figure flattery in our
Huntington Beach store, tomorrow and Thursday.
I l
·ANAHEIM NEWPORT
.. 44 N. Euclid 535 .1121 47 F11hion hl1nd 6H-t212
Motl. ·th1u·'S'1t.
10 •.m to. f :)O p.m.
""-Mo·n1 thru Fri. 10 1.m. t-o~,:lO p.m.
Si t. 10 •.m. to 6 p.m.
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HUNTINGTON BEACH
892-3331
""Mon. ·thru St+. to a.m. fo . t :)O p.m.
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Hits Sunset
There's going to be a carnival. in Sunse! Beach!
A ·display of area talent will be offered on Saturday, May 10,
on the fire station_ grounds under the sponsor-ship of La s Damas Club.
A carnival atmosphere will prevaii for the show which will take
place between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Proceeds from the fund-raising event
will benefit the Sunset Beach Youth Fund.
Intermingled with assored art work booths wiU be clowns,
puppet shows, candy and food booths. Included in the mixed media
show will be paintings, sketches, pottery, collage, stitchery and other
exhibits of arts and crafts.
There will be a boutique section with hand-knits. crewel work,
home-sewn garments, jewelry and other products of hobbies or col-
lect.ions.
All area artists are invited to display their talents during the
shoW, and many of the objects will be offered for s~Ie.
Booths will be . sponsor.ed by the Sunset Beach ,Chamber of
Commerce, the city's woman's club and a Children's Art Corner
directed by Mrs. Paul Brisco.
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FESTIVAL OF ARTS-What's nex t in Sunset Beach?
A display of talent by area artists! The art festival,
sponsored by the Las Damas Cl ub of Sunset Beach,
\Vill take place between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Satur-
day, May 10, on th e fire station grounds. \Vheeling
by to selec~ paiiltings· for the display is Mrs.
Among,. the many area arti.sts who will be displayi~g their works
are the Memes. George (Ruth) Chisler, A. James (Jane) Ayers. Tom
(Nona) Carnahan and Bob (Jean) stanfield. Also exhibiting works
\Vill be Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jones, Bud Wilie and Dick Swift.
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New Slate
Introduced
Encouraging international
understanding on a peopl~·to
people basis are the new offi·
cers of the Huntington Beach
chapter, American F i e I d
Service.
Introduced during a recent
meeting were Miss Florence
Boosey, president, and the
Mmes. Warren Burns, vice
president; Johit Graham , re-
cording secretary; Scott Flan.
agan, treasurer; Juan Dillon,
Americans Abroad coordina·
tor, and Robert Whelan, cor-
responding secretary. Robert
Neyman will serve as finance
chairman.
Jn the Huntington Beach
Union lfigh School District'
nine students have lived and
studied abroad and ar:ea fam-
ilies have hosted 27 · foreign
students
Now attending Huntington
Beach High is Audun Tvedten,
who resides with Dr. and Mrs
Bemard O'Loughhn. The Nor·
wegian youth "'as the princi
pal speaker during lhe election
meeting of the adult AFS
~apter, arn::I by. illustrating
his talk with color slides, he
informed the group of his
m a n y extracurricular activi-
ties and impressrons of the
United States since his ar·
rival.
He will present the same
talk when he r'eturM to his
homeland th is summer.
11 arold rlenderson who is accompanied by her dog,
Tippy, and offering some selections is Mrs. A. James
Ayers. • t
Additional information regarding the event may be obtained
by calling Mrs. Roland Shutt, 592-5134 ; Mrs. Roger Kerley, 592-1612,
or Mrs. Brisco, 592--5365.
,
Offiqus Presented
Meeting Keyed
T 0--Y 0:1.:ihg Needs
' ' An insight into the life of th e emotionally dis-
turbed c'hpd and his family will be presented dur-
ing the m.ee~ing of the Golden Key, support group
for the Child Guidance Center of Orange County.
Mrs: Selma BrOwn , psychiatric social worker,
will speak to active and provisional members gath·
.ering. at 10. a.m. Thursday, J\Iay 8, iri the home of
.Mrs. Robert Holman.
During the business meeting .. a new slate or of-
ficers will be presented to the general membership.
Servin2 next )'ear will be the Mmes . James
Hughs. president; Williain. Ha,nna, first. vice presi·
dent: Frederic Forster,' second vice president: Cy,
Peterson, third vice president: Jack Greeley, treas·
urer: Bob Goodson , recording secretary, and Fatr
lan Gomez. coITesponding secretary.
Follo\vin g the meetin ~ there will be a potluck
salad luncheon ,Nhich \vill izive members and pro-
visionals a better opportunity to get acquainted.
Serving on the hospitalitv com mittee will be
Pilrs. Stanlev Ruiz. ~1rs. John \Vyatt and J\.1iss Lea
Hood.
Mrs. Forster. ways and means chairman. sug-
gests that all members purcha se their tickets for
a Day at the Races on Thursday, May .22. The
!!roup will leave by chartered bus at noon. Reserva· i
tions may be made by calling Mrs. Hanna, 847-~341.
~Area residents who are in-
terested in volunteering their
services for the AFS program
art invited to call Mrs. Bums,
536-2702, for additional infor-
mation.
YOU'RE TAGG.ED Already pl anning next year's While Tag
sale to raise fund s for the Am(!:rican FieJd Service program are
new officers of the Huntington· Beach adult chapter. Seeking area
merchants who \vill participate in the one-day sale are (left to
right) Miss Florence Boosey, president; Mrs. Juan Dillon, Ameri·
cans Abroad coordinator, and 11rs. Wairen Burns, vice president.
Residents in SeaJ Beach, \Veslminster:, HDntington Beach and
Fountain Va11ey are invited to buy a White Tag for.SI which en--
titles them to a 10 percent discount in any participating store.
Nominations for Woman·Of·the-year now are
being accepted, and plans for the fall season now
are underway with Mrs. Raymond Morehouse
named as fashion show chairman and Mrs. Richard
Teske. holiday bazaar chairman.
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Candid Comment Halts 'Third Degree' by Nosy Friends
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband
and l have been reading your Ctllumn for
years and feel we owe )'ou something for
all the pleasure you've given us, Can ycu
use an ef fective answer for married
couples when insensitive clod! ask why
Uiey don 't have any children?
Yesterday, alter six years of being
needled, pestered and plil through the
t h i r d degree by nosy friends. stupid
reliUves and total strangers, U\e lo.wn
meddler came up to my husband at our
anniversary cocktai l party and asked,
"How does it happen tllal your lwo
brolhers have such lovely families and
YOM havf:n't got a thing to show for si:r
year• of marriage!''
Pt-ly husband looked the old biddy in the . '
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eye and bellowed in a voict that could be
heard across lhe room. "I'm &ttrlle."
tter 'jaw dropped six lncht.I and her
glaSsts fell off. I thought he 'd die
l:iughlng. Use il if you like. -PIE FACE
ANO PUSSYCAT
OEAR P. ANO P: Than.ks for lbe Jaw.
dropper. rt1ine dropped, too.
DEAit ANN LAI\'DERS: I am a IG-..
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year-old girl who is nice looking but far
from beaulilul. l am 09t anybody's idea
or a sex_ bomb and 'Can't figure out why
all th.ls seems to 6e bapperiin·g to me.
I \\'ent to the ha irdresse r1s Friday and
when I put on my roat, the halrttresser
followed me to the back closet, pushed
me behind the curtain and started to get
fresh. l told him off nnd le.ft.
Yestf':rday I went to lh e denUit to·get
my teeth cleaned. When he snapped tlle
chin towel around my neck his hand "ac·
cidentaily" dropped inside my dress. I
gave him a dirty look and he said, "Oh, excuse me.'' . ·
This · morning, the tailor who Wll.'I
shortening my coat.measured me around
the ttips for live minutes. Finally I told
him he wAsn't making a bathing suit and
to knock.it orf. -
We keep reading · abOut how wlld the
teenagers are. These men are an over 401
What's Ule answer! -DISG USTE D
DEAR DISGUSTED: Never tnu:&
uyone: over 31. ,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several w .. ks
1ao yoii said ptolo"led mourning L'>
' unhealthy, thAl II Serves no useful
purpose. Y_ou ,cal}ed it "sell-pity. turned
inside out."
My brothltr's widow Wied your words as
her defe~ when we (my two sister& and
IJ told her stnlcht to t. lace we
thought It was an !Milt to ibe family that
she was going to tile theater Land dinin_g
wltli a Tl)M. less, Uu1:n 111 months alter
bci' bwband~ pasStd away.-
Usually, you give 1uch 1;ood advice, we
can'l imagine your condoning such ir·
reverent behavior df a y.xmg widow. On
occasion you have been big enough to ad-
mit you were wrong. wtp you do so
again? -R, L·AND c _
DEAR R, LAND C: I'm aor. I alloll --
bttt not 11 tbls W:S..nce. I firmly t>tlleve
that eattl penoil mutt decide for b.imself
bow long be wutl to mourn. Aad
wliale:Vel' die deCltlODt It Med DOI be tX-
]llaloed -deleadt<I.
J! you have trouble: getting along wiU.
your parents .. , if you can'lget \hem tO
tel you live your own life, seod for Ana.
Landen' booklet, "Bogg<d by Parents?
How to Gt& More Freedom." Send !le
etnts in coin with your request ·and a
long, stamped , stU-addressed enve.lo~.
Ann Landers wiU be glad to help you
with your problems. Send lhem to her in
cart of lh• DAILY PILOT, tncl .. ina I
ae.Uiddressed. )I.amped envelope.
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JI DAILY PILOT T-. M11 6, 1969
Ho roscope
Pisces:. Keep · Sense of Humor
WEDNESDAY
MAY 7
By SYDNEY OMAllll
GROOMING IUNT: Luur
pe1tdon In Aquaria• today JPO*Upg lower areu, legs
ud uJde1. Socb, bole wlll be
aodced by m•Q)'. Real.lie Ud1
ud t.b •peel.al care ta tld•
art.L Tben )'oa'U be pr1cdclDg
AIUZ8 (lllattb ll·April 11):
Ac<:oot on llOclablllly. You <111
win lriendl and Influence peo-
ple. Get out; be seen. Break
from fOlltlne. Be with <.'On-
genlal per,..., ~. yoor desires. They can be fUlfllW.
Zonta. Club Luncheon
Oil Problem
STATE HONORS -Rcceiying top honors in the
slate for its aid-to-education program was the J unior
Ebell Club of Newport Beach. The club was winner
of $500 presented by the Shell Oil Company and now
is eligible for national a\vards. Receiving the a'vard
from A. P. Hynes, manager of the northern portion
of Shell Oil's Western Marketing Region, are club
officers (left to r ight), the Mmes. \Varren Fix. Ed-
'vard \Vhitehouse Jr. and J ay Moseley. ·
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Wedd ing s, Troths
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Pilot's Deadlit1e s
Newport J unior Club
Receives Top Honor
Bringing home honors from
To help fill' requirements 9n both ~·ed·
ding and engagement stories, fo rms are avail·
able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
F"urthe r questions \\1ill be answered by Social
Notes st~ff mernbcrs at 642-4321 or 494-9466.
~:
l the ..,13th annua l O r a n g e
r1 Di.s Lrict convention of the
Californ ia Federation o f
\Vomen·s Cl ubs, J un ior
Membershi p, \Vas tfie Juniof
EbeU Club of Newport Beach".
Mrs'. Eugene K o v a c h ,
ti N e w p o r t Bea,·h press
~ chairman, was recognized as
. To avoid disappointment. p rospective
brides are reminded to have their weddin l'f
s.,tories \Vith black and 'vhite glossy pho tO-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart·
n1ent prior to or within one week after the
\VCdding.
~ the outs t a n d i ng press
chairman in the district, and
the club was Cited in other
T 1 areas of endeavo r.
f'or engagement announcements it is
suggested that the story, also accompanled
by a black and \vhite glossy p i c t u r e. be
submi tted early. If the betrothal announce·
menl and wedding date are six weeks or less
apart, only the wedding photo v.'111 be ac·
cepted.
Other area clubs honored at p the Disneyland liotel event
Library
Exhibits
Announced
' .: Thalidomide Child ren ..
'.Handicapped Helped
• • " liELSINK I (U PI) -Finland
\ls trying to give a normal
edption to children born
dui'mgthe T h a Ii dom id e
7tragedy instead of sending
O:them to special schools.
;, Between 2a and 30 severely
"'ilandicap ped children v.•erc
':born in Finland from 1958 to
•]961 before the drug was taken
,.off the market as a Iran·
~uiUzer.
' Largely due to the efforts :cE Professor 1.1artll Sulamma.
;.a genial phy&ictan who has
:;taken a special interest in
,;these children, they were not
°,)ent cf[ to special homes or
f-fiehools as has happened in
~ther countries.
!stocks it to You ' ..
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Some already have entered
normal schools and, according
to Sulamma, they are doing
y,·ell.
··1 am opposed to special
schools for these children.''
he said. "It is far betlcr to
let them go to school v.·ith
normal children."
He said the handicapped
children he has v.°Orked with
'~ e r c v.'cli-dcveloped in·
tc\l('ctually.
Sulamma has specialized in
de~·eJoping an operation which
can help Thalidomide children.
"ln principle, lhe pattern~
or the bones are changed :i.nd
shaped to make it possible
for the limbs lo work,
ri;pccially the han ds. But it
ii; easier tn use special
artificial limbs for the lc gi;,"
he said.
Meet ing Plans
Orange County Cactus and
Succulent $ociely will meet at
noon tomorrow in P a u I
Rrecht's Orchid Nu r se r y,
Costa Mesa .
--The
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RAD IO KOCM
103.1 FM
• FROM FASHl.ON ISLAND, NEWPORT BEAC H
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THE BEAUTY SALON 'S
LONG , LONG FALL
Pemper her meny moods
w(th the luxurious richness
of these 100°/o human hair
pieces. She 'll love _ your
thoughfulness and you 'll love
what it does to h'er. Now these
lustrous hair pieces are yours for
the asking, just choose the ha ir piece
which suits her fancy, or better yet,
choose several to complement
her every mood .
Long, long foll, 100.00 value, 38 .50
Co.codes, 20.00 value , 9.99. Falls, 45 .00
value, 22.99. Wiglets. 15.00 va lu e, 5.99.
Curl . 35.00 value, I 0.99
Treat mom to the soft, lu strous Ra:il permanent.
In troductory pries, 17.50, includes permanent,
style and cut. AppoU,tments no t alway s
necessary. Phone from Anaheim, 535 .8121;
from Huntington Beach, 892-333 I; from
Newport, 644-1212. The Beaut y Solon , 601.
ANAHEI M NlWPORT
U~ N EllC-1"' UMlllU F11~1ori 11141,... ~o.1111
MOI" lt1ty llll, MOI', lflrv Fr!
10 <I""· JO t·JO II m, lt • m IO t tlO P·"'·
$•!, 10 1.m. IO f P.rl'!.
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HUNTINGTON IEACH
1111 Edl~"r Aw ff2-J.J,ll MOn. 111111 .. ,.
10 ...... lo ':JO p,m, . .
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:Jkin£
motker:J 'JJay
WHAT BIGGAR'S
TRADITION OF QUALITY
MEANS FOR YOU ...
Today-as for the put 43 yHrs-J. H. l lgpr i1 one of
the ~••ding lumiture •nd inttrlor desip companitl in
Soi.them C.lifom ia. Bigprs represent. the na.tion's lead·
ing manufacturers of high quality furniture, c•rpeting,
draperies, lamps and. acceaoria. Our buym c.1refully
IC...., all the ntw daignl ilYlllablt to stltet only the but
for caJifomia living.
In lumiture, qual ity' dot1 not nec ... n1y mtan high pritt.
l iggars 1trivos to zive you the most value for your doll•r.
Ti1c. compa.ny's policy hu always been to guarantee com·
plete u.tisfi.ction to Biggir customers.
This spring -H well ai tvtry spring and ton -l igprs
h 111 wide dis pl11ys of the newest and best furni tu re for your
home. l igprs extensive warehoutts en~le us to have
lu ge 1locks available for immedialt dtllvtry. V"llit your
nearett ligprs 1tore IOOfl and hiw one of our experienced
1t11ff members •ssist you with your home furnishing nted1.
FI NE HOME FURNISHINGS• INTERIOR DESIGN
J.tt'StfiA'lo
PASADENA: Colorado •t El Molino
POMONA: Holl, east of G11rey
SANTA ANA MAIN At IUYIHTH
• Sant• An• Store Opon Mond•y Evening•
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In Catholic Ceremony
Nuptial Vows Recited
During a noon nuptial mass.
Gayle Marie Ridders and
Ronald Lee Wu ssi ck ex·
changed their wedding VO\VS
and rings in \Vbitlier's St.
Grtgory the Great 'Calholic
Cby.rch.
Officiating for the ceremony
w~ the Rev, Matthew Ryder.
I nsf,ilufe
Installs
Setret 1 sisters and prayer
pall wit~ be revealed during
the meeting of the Holy
E ucba r Is t lps'tit u t e ,
Wes\,lhlnster, durlni th e
m~tinl taking place at 6: 30
tonlabt.
There Is a job fo r you in the Harbor Area-a
position needing no other qualification but your time
and Willing baQds. There are thousands of ~these
openings for men and women from teenagers to
senior cl~eos. ·
Positions are awaiting your telephone -call to.the
Volunteer Bureau. ?.1rs. Linn Arkusb at 642--0963 is
tbe executive director ait( will assist callers from
9 a.m. to noon every weekday. · · •
JO~S WORTH WAITING FOR
. -
DAILY Pl(OT J S
.Newlywed Morrisons .
'
Home From Honeymoon
l{OOie Jn Newpart Beach
following a Hawaiian honey· moon are Robert Hicks Mor·
ri.son and• his bride, the for·
mer Penelope Loui.se Proud
v.·M eicbanged vows a n d
rin&s in ta Habra MetbOdist
~urch.
seats were Kent Thayer ol
Afanhattan Beacb, William Davenport of Newport Buch,
Dtnnls Protld, lbe brtdt't
brother and PatrJct Pritchard
ot Long Beach. Davi<! Osteen
of Brea w_u tht-ring bearer.
A garden rtctpUon followed
at the home pf the bride's
parents.
Given in marriage by her
father, U1e bride wore a full
length A-line dress or organza
over. taffeta trimmed in im-
ported lace, and styled with a
detatjlable chapel length train .
Following the potluck din·
ner in· the Knights of Col-
umbus Hall, Mrs. Michael
Reid wiU prtside during the
business mee ti t.11 . A
nominating commit~ will be
--..iec~nd-a -deJepuc and
alternate to the Jline con·
· vention' In, Palo Alto" will be
. elected. +
Pennanent posi tions now are open · in th e Well
Baby Clinics·. Babies in six different cUnics ·mu st
be weighed, measured and exa'm.ined. Your assign-
ment can be arranged at the bureau ..
•Parents of the bride a.re Mr.
and Mrs. Gilbert L. Proud ol
Brta and tbe _ _..bridegroOm 's
parents are w . and Mrs;.
Charles Morrison of Loos
Beacb.
GlYen ln marriage by her
fal)ler, t& bride wore a gown
of pe.au de 50ie with a tact
coat ' Her elbow length veil
was held by a bow of lace.
Tbe bride. a teacher in
Fountain Valley School Ois-
triet, attend e d California
Westeri--Uniffrsity and-Call·-r
fornia Stat'e College at Fuller·
ton.
A class in arts fJld crafts is beg~ng soon. Her husband is a griduate I
of the Urilversity o( Soutbet'n ~ Her cathedral veil featured
an imported lace headj)ieet!
and she carried a rosary
blessed by Pope Paul in
Rome. Her bouquet w a s
fashioned of white daisies,
fern and baby roses.
She-Wirattended by h e r
sister, Mrs. Charles Fehr of
Westminster. matron of honor,
and Mrs. Morris Loranger,
·Sooth Gate and }.1rs. Walter
Moore, C o s ta Me sa,
bridesmaids.
The matron or honor was
gowned in a modified A-line of
mint green chiffon over linen
featuring daisy trim on the
sleeves_ and collar. She carried
matching daisies and iern with
mint green and y e 11 o w
streamers.
Bridesmaids were attired in
identical t'>Wns of yellow and
carried bouquets of yellow
daisies with mint and yellow
streamers.
Heidi Fehr. the bride's
niece and flower girl. was at-t .
tired in a flocked daisy over-
dress over yellow fashioned by
the bride's mother, and she
carried a basket of white dai-
sies. ,
Any Catholic women in the!
area interested in joining lhe
organiution are invited to call
Mrs. William Catty, 537-8162,,
or Mrs. Reid, 897..fi660.
Peering
Around
\,
JOHN R. BA VEN. soJ of
Mrs. Earl Haven of Costa
''.! Mesa, has been invited to join
the Franc.;Calliopean Society,
a local creative w r i, t i n g
honorary society at Denison
University, Granville, Ohio,
where he is a sophomore.
CHUCK GIFFEN, v I c e
president of Orange County
Cosmetology Association, ":as
first place winner in open
salon sty;~! nrg competitiqn >
sponsored by the California
Cosmetology Associati on in
the Ambassador Hotel. Los
Angeles.
Volunteers will be prepared to teach in, these ar,eas
'vhe.n they help out in convalescent homes, schools
for the handicapped and hospitals. Here's· your
chance to learn new techniques ~nd ideas.
Osborne-Fenton Vows
Watsonville Setfi'ng
W.earing gowns Qf yeUow
linen with lace trim were Mrs.
Ronald Hartwick of Los Ao-
geles, matron of honor and
Miss Sharon Ithurralde, Mrs.
William Shryock and Mrs.
.Lawrence WoOdward, .all .of
Newport Beach who were the
bridesm'aids,
Attending as best man was ·
• Or:·Paul Johnson of ·Burbank ..
while ushering guests to their
Barbara Leigh F e n t o n, where the bridegroom ls· st•·
daughter of Mrs. Phyllis Fen. . tioned with the Air Force at
ton or Newpon' Beach and Ed McLellan Field. Toastmistresses
Fenlon of Orange, became T h e bride graduatea from
the bride of Lee Warren Os-Orangt High SchoOr and at-Surfside Clubhouse in Hun~
borne Jr., son of Mr. ind Mrs. tended Sant a An a Col-tipgton ,Beach is the meeting
Lee Warren Osborne of Wat-lege and the Univers1ty of place ror member.; of Las
sonville. California, Sarita Cruz. Her Olas Toastmislress Club o(
The couple exchanged vows husband is a graduate~of Huntington ..Beach on the se-
and rings in All Saints Epis· Watsonville }\igh School and cond and fourth Wednesdays
California and the University
ol Calilornia, l:lil1inft _~hool
of Law. l(e .... pradice& law .in
NewJ)Ort Beach ~ is afh)..
lated with Sigma Alpha .Epsi-
lon and Phi Della Pli\,
Mothers Called
Tuesday. May 13, marks lhe
evening for the third meeting
in a s~ies of four sponsored
by the Cost.a Mesa Chapter of
La Leche League .
Binh of the Baby and Fami4
ly Relations is the subject to
be covered in the Costa Mesa
home of l\frs. J er o·m e
Hjeltness at 7:'l5. Further in-
formation may be obtai~ by
·calling Mrs. H. W. Moore. Ma..
'l359. copal· Church, Watsonville: studied at Oabrillo College. 'at 7:30 p.m.
Given in marriage by her 1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 father, the bride wore a whiti:! II G l~·iu~;~.~~~~~~:i~f~: ive Mom something···
~~rw~<IJ~te~~t:~ite or-to watch
Pale pink chilfon over taf· -· _ _· .
feta gowns and bouquets of •
pink camations-aM-stepba-no-b · •·d ·, th k•d ' tis ~·ere selected for Miss es es e s Frances Crane of Santa·Cruz. I . . I maid of honor and ft1iss Deb-
bie Ce c i I of Watsonville,
bridesmaid.
The bridegroom·, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John \Vussick of
Whittier, asked Dan Galla to
se rve as best man, and
seating guests were h i s
brother, John Wussick and
Jim ft1artin. His nephew. Ran-
MRS. RONALD L. WUSSICK
H1w1ii1n Honeymoon Anglers
Cast Off
Best man was the bride-
groom's brother, Lynn Os·
borne, and usher was Henry
Valentine. dy Wussick, carried the wed-
ding rings.
Following a garden recep-
tion in Scandia Gardens, the
newlyweds departed on a wed-
ding trip to the Hawaiian
Islands.
The bride, a graduate of
\Vestmi nsler High School, a:t-
tended Golden \Vest and
Orange Coast colleges.
Her husband is a gradu ate
A Decade From Now
o( Sierra High School and at-
tended Fullerton J u n i o r
College prior to enrolling in
Rio Hondo Junior College,
Whittier. Officially opening t h e I r I
fishing season next TI1ursday
'viil be Ne\Yport Harbor Lady l
Anglers \\'he'n they board boats 1 I
at Art's Landing, Balboa at 5'
p.m.
After a honeymoon in the
Southland, the bridal couple
are at home ;" Sacramento
1 :Jliink I
mofh~rd '])CL'J
Fashion Lines Remain
Tbe customary launching,
open to members only, will
feature an All Nations theme
and those attending will wear
costumes depicting the theme .
NEW YORK (AP) -A peek scious sister'<>( today.
into fashion's future indicates • The Parsons School of
the well-dressed woman of Design offered that peek when
1979 may not look very dif-it presented its annual fashi?n
ferenl from her style-con-show of clothes created by 1! •
Buena Park Selected
For Newlyweds' Home
t\.1essiah Lutheran Church in
Buena Park was the setting
for the wedding or Patra Cail
Tucker and Theodore K.
Skarsten. The Rev. 0. A.
Wech solemnized the double
ring nuptials.
Parents of the couple are
Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Tucker ol Westmin.ster and
Mrs. Goldie Skarsten o f
Garden Grove and the late
Mr. Lief Skarsten.
The bride, given in marriage
by her ~at.her, wore an empire
gown of brocade satin with
embroidered lace inserts. Her
veil was caught lo a jeweled
crown and she carried a bou-
quet of white carnations and
an orchid.
Miss Llnda Skarsten, sister
of the bridegroom, was maid
of honor in a floor length pin k
crepe empire gown with lace
trim. She held pink and white
carnations.
Gene Blum, the benedict 's
brother-i n-law, was best man
and ushers were D a v i d
Tucker, brother of tt1e bride
and John Grunewald .
Assisting at tlie reception in
the church hall were Miss
Vickie Skarsten. sister « the
bridegroom. Mrs. Blum. Mrs.
Tucker and ~ L o i s
Skarsten, sister of t h e
benedid, at the guest book .
Special guests were·Mrs. Sally
Tucker of Anaheim. t he
bride's grandmother: ~frs.
Ragna Miller of Minnesota
MRS. T. K. SKARSTEN
Spring Bride
I and Mrs. Doris Domback of
Carmichael, aunts of the
benedict, and Sgt. and Mrs.
Charles L. Tucker o~ Castle
Air Force Base. brother of the
bride.
The n e wlywed s honey-
mooned in northern CalifornJa
before making their home in
Buena Park. The new Mrs.
Skarsten attended schools in
Long Beach and graduated
from a Garden Grove beauty
college and her husband at·
tended schools in Minnesota.
graduating students.
The would-be N o r m a n
Norells and Chester Weinbergs
generally chose conservative
Arranging the event _,e the
hlme!. Lew Bellinger, Leota
Curtis, Andy Bradford and
Ralph C. Fore.
shapes and styles. Skirts were Laguna Group extremely short or · down-t~
the-floor, no midis or maxis. American Legion Auxiliary
Shapes were fitted through the of Laguna Beach gathers at 8
bust and waist with fre~·flo\\'· p.m, the second and fourth
ing skirts. Thursdays in the Leg!~" Hall.
The youngsters also scornedll -.'.'.'.'.~~'..'."...""'~~'..'..'.:'.'.'.:.c.==========
the see-through look, although r.:==================;i ·they bared much of the body
with cut-outs and halter tops .
Simple jersey dresses, wilh a
· bi b in front and lacking in
i>ack were offered in black,
llurgundy and navy for both
day and evenb1g wear by
several students.
There were fewer pants than
one might have expected from
students of the trouser revolu-
tion. When slacks w e r e
presented, they always formed
part of an ensemble, topped
b)'. tunics, sleeveless vest! or
tWeed suit jac):'ets.
One unusual costume in-
cluded a black and white
tWeed wool dress worn over
white linen shorts which
peeped out for about an inch
under the hem of the skirt.
Several students made In·
teresting use of fabrics, com-
bining panels of tweeds and
jersey, suede and s h In y
leather or wool and satin.
Among the hlt.s of the show
was a simple evening
shirtwaist with short skirt.
The front of the dress was
made of layers of white organ-
dy, the back of black velvet.
Jann Johnson of Sacrament
to, won the David Kidd award.
Two Books
R_eviewed
I
For Ebells
We specialize in •••
'• <3f •• •
,w
All YIAR-ROU~ nil-
lARGE & HALF-SIZES IN
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• BLOUSES
• ROBES
• SHlm
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• GOWNS
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. ' • flOSIE1tY
• CAPRIS
August Date Chosen-· ~.:~ed!r£.~b~~:~
meeting ol Laguna Beach
tf y•u'r• l'ltl l \Ht tf
htr 111• - -. •r lust
c•n't llMid•, ltt htr
Ml'M -k• htr ewn
.. .. cti.1t. A cake decorated with
doves, rings and the wedding
date chosen by Barba ra
Dresel and William McCoy.
told the news oi their engagc-
JJ'le:ll to cktse friends and
telati ves.
The occasion was a dimer
party hosted bf Mr. and Mrs.
W•her 0r ... 1 ol liunUngtoo
Beach, oarents of the future
bride.
.t. Miss Dresel, an alumna of
tt lckory High School I n
Sbvon. Pa .. is • CUQI J11ude
graduate ol ImJnaculate..Heer:l
Co!Jege, Los Angeles. She
presently attends UCI and i.!
.wdcnl teadling at Le 8"'d
Elementary S c h o o I , Hun-
Ungton ~ach.
McC.oy. son of fl.fr . and ~trs.
Frank McCoy of \Vest Mid-
dlesex, Pa .. ala.o is an alumoos ot ..Hickory High and now at-
tends Penn State University.
He will graduate in June with
a bachelors degree tn history
and plaos to teach In the fall.
The coople will ex~e
vov.~ Aug. 16. In SL F'ranctJ
Catholic Church, Hunttngton
Beach.
E~U Club's literary section
hosted by Mrs. Alfred Kress.
Her review included "The1
Five. Smooth Stones," a novel
by Ann Falrbafm about a Ne·
gro Crom New Otlean11 and his
invqlvement in tbe Civil
RightJ mov~nt. :
! .. ,
: • NII Oln IOlCIS
' ~~·sHALF·SIZE SHOP
I
1805 N•wport llv!f.,
Costa Mna
The 8eC-Ond book, 1'Jubilee,'1~
by Margam Walker, is a Civil
War novel baaed on the true
lift story of the author's great.
grandmother. Following the rtvitw, Mrs. "I/a W•k""'., lltl ltl'..r"
Kreu served lunch w Ith HOURS : 9:30 to 5:10,
m
•t.he help of ~hosles..'les Mrs.• 'rk11r t• t :OO
Edward Nell and Airs. w. &.I 1'='==~·,..~·~·~•;o~··="'"'~ot~•~M~ot1~,~"'~'"'~•;·~·=~!;:~= Alan Fer~ • loi
'
. -
You'll thrill Mom for years to come when you give Mr this
portable Sylvania Color TV. From the smart Walnut grain
finish plastic cabinet to the 102 sq. in. screen ••. it1s evf!f'Y inch a
dependa"ble Sy!vania .. Haa built-in UHF and VHF antennas.
Convenient "'.'rrying handle, too! Ask for model CB34W. $29995
TV RE CE PTION SIM ULAT ED
... or something to soothe her nerves.
Give her a gift. .11he'll enjoy daily
1or years. Sylvania's miar\lJ Aly led
AM ClockRadiomodel SK39. Lu1Lsbu
to slee p to her !avorit.e late 11how.
Wake.11 her to her favorite morninr s~.
And keeps her company all day lonr.
Corytpletely transietoriied for ~
years-t..xome reli ability. $24.95
SouncS. to brirhten any Mom'• day. That's what ebe1l .
b&vewhert i he owna aeom_ped.: S7lftu.ia porlabJ.
steno nmnl player. lloclel'EXP•/25 1h<nm her• bu
itall.Plua C$,M ancl7811PJl......-d3.S.-Jten
detach for thatbla...,.._...i. Tbodelueturntablo
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and,recehe at.-o arJdi.
t.iOoal eharre a 5 neord
albo11t "'Sylvuia'1 Acoe.t
oa Today." Worth ,19.SG.
com., ..... p1e1e wllh.•l.-.d lt)<lo~
Stand ineladed. $149.95
lotMH~,_tuP'llllllYUIMllANOmDiiGi&llUCi~-• ' .
REMEMIER: MOJHER'S DAY, 'UND'AY, MAY 11
· 411 E. 17th St. Costa .. Mesa
DaUy 9 • 9, Sot! 9 • 6 -646 ·1684
.• ;_ -I ••
•
•
I
1
I
•
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SINGING LENNONS -Jimmy Durante is sur~
rounded by the Lennon Sisters, from left, Dianne,
Peggy, J anet and Kath y, who will blend their
voices tonight at 10 p.m. on ChaMel 7, This i~ a
previe\v showing of their new fall series. Guests
will be Bobby Goldsboro and Hines. Hines and Dad.
TELEVI SION VIEWS
FoJ!mula Play
Spicy Drama
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -"CBS Playhouse" sets
a sia e its soapbox \Vednesday night when it pre-
sents a· spicy drama a bout a group of persons tra p-
ped overnight in a business office during a power
blackout. '
"ShadO\\' Game'' is the name of this 90-minute
original teleplay by Loring Mandel, and_ the i!hfef
thing to recommend about it is that it is great fun
-and totally undemanding -to watch. ,ln case
anyone has forgotten, there's reall~ nothin'g' ~rong
about just enjoying yourself whil.e watching a
theatre piece. , I
MANDEL 'S T ELEPLAY, dfrected tightly and
s urchandedJy by Paul Bogart and acted by a Cirst-
rale cast headed by Daniel Ma~sey, is. at its cor e,
a formula piece -but one that is done expertly.
The formula is one of the oldest and most sure-
fire in the drama bu siness: The throwing together
of various types of cha racters in a situation in which
they a re trapped tog'etber. and the subsequent
scenes in which they reveal themselves. ln the
case oi "Shadow Game," the r evelations extend to
lhcir busi ness as well as their personal motivations.
:.\s I say, there have been m any variations be-
fo re: The group of strangers t rapped in a snow-
bound ca bin the Collection of souls on a life rail set
adrift in the ocean. and so forth. It is a formula
almos t a s certain of success -if handled correctly
-as a courtroom drama, another predictable sit-
uation that is nonetheless riveting.
"SHADOW GAME" is the sort of thing that
J eron1e We idman, that author of nifty and racy
shark-eat-shark business world t ales, might have
\vrittcn for "CBS P layhouse.'' But he couldn't ha ve
done it much better than Mandel.
The story focuses chiefly on an bonorable young
executive (~fassey), who. during the course of the
Jong night's journey into day, discover:; that ~n .un·
principled colleague in the same office (\y1tham
Shalner) has been stealing his as:counts, with the
boss' kno\vledge and quiet. approval. It see~ th~s
is the boss' way of employing the dog-ea t-dog tRH-
niquc to corporate advantage. · .
DU R ING THE LONG night, !\1a ssey, who is
respected and admired by others in the offi ce, is
urged by them to employ the dog-eat-dog approach
against Shatner if he hopes to salvage the career
that is being ex ploded ri ght out from underneath
him. An office romance with a beautiful but con-
fused woman (Ca rol Rossen) complicates Massey's
moral struggl e even more. His decision would not
be fair to reveal in advance fo r viewers.
Like Massey. Shatner turns in a fine bit of act-
ing -as a truly offensive sha rpie with business and
the girls. And the remainder of the cast, althou~h
a ppearing in basically for1nula roles. r esponds wi th
verve and professionalism that inakes the fun for
vie\vers much more important t han the obvious
n1essage that some person.'i descend to animal in-
s lincts wh en trapped.
THERE IS, for instance. \Villiam \Vindo1n , as a
fellow "'ho has been a round the company for a
'vhile and doesn't Jet the self-devouring competition
get hin1 do"'" a ny1nore. There is Richard Dysart as
a fellow whose car~er is all but \\'ashed ;.ip. whose
family life is in dangerous shape. and \\'ho d runk·
enly (or partly dn1nkenlyl tries to make love to a
S\Veet young gi rl in the offi ce after trapping her
alone in a room.
Dennis the Menace
< .f
I
.... • J
' •
. .
j
. . · . • . '
•
PEANUTS
.. .... " ., . .. · .
By Charles M. Schulz
,...,...----.,-, r-~~~~""!!,S!'.i!"!_;?!~~-
&f51D£5 l\IAT, l MEAN.
PERKINS
l MW 11115
15 •SE KINO
'TO ANIMALS
llJEfl('
JUDGE PARKER
I PIPM'T NfCT
VOi TO IE ~
tt.K; THE POOR, "I!:. LAl!:GO~
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
OH, OH!
I TH INK
WE'RE I.OST,
EPIC!
~.
MUTI AND JEFF
JEFF. OO YOU
BELIEVE IN
THE TnTW IS, !t.t.lrA .. K>.n-!EllNE:
~E:P ME EARl't THIS MOii.MiNG
••. M.l.,JIPSET: .lll'.t.llENTl't, !»+IE
-.Hl1 M.AH MAYE 1£61 HAVING
SOME TlOUBLE ! I 6tles!t St-IE.
JUSt: NffP£P ,_ 5HOllLPEI TO
-<.ft ON ! PO YOI Wo\NT TO
~ U.TMEfUNE ~
@ .
"'"' ;:. YOU KIJO.V \llllAT THE OLP TIMERS
SAY='WHl'N l OST
IN 1\lE WILPS,
PON'T PANIC,USE
YER HEAP..~
00 I SELi EVE .
>N "114E HIPPIE MOVEMENT? THE HIPPIE MOVEMEr-11'?{:-lrlTITF="~
GORDO
°KEU.Y
$CllOOl.
HOllO~
$0C1ETi
AAEtrf
I
•
·-·---
' .
By John Miles
By Harold Le Doux
I OJ'KT I'P IETTER
eET KATHSIME: •.• &UT,
PLE.t.SE •• l10N 'T LET"
HER KNOW I TOl.17 YOU
AIOOT T}lE ~ILE
TI-IEY'li: MAVIM6 ~
By Ferd Johnson
FO•TUNATOLY,
H• PIDN1TS,AY
WHOR•To
PUSH If.··
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
-... ·-.__ .... _ ,._.,...._ •·•
By Gus Arriola
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T U ESDAY
MAY I
~ ...
Qui doMMllb lilt will U.-I 16ft&-111bllna Natl nt Cl1111llllL (II)
GI .., '"""' ICl ·'"'' m .. "',.., ._.. CC> <60)
@(!I r,...,
9 PREMIERE NIGHT * TOM REDDIN NEWS!
l:IO 8 111 lie 11.,.. IC) (60) Jtfl} Dunptty, a 1111-1ci ,.,,
......... ('C) ('90) I'll
l'1ubtn. lob fln1hln. DMd lluffi11,
l.Jillh frtrt Ind Dmi Blffy tllllt
D 111 OUedl: Mwlr. "'JI HMn" ' 1'1rt II (....,...) '65-JAIMS G1r·
Mr, Ev• M1rit Sllnt. Roel Tf)ior.
g r"' <Cl l!Ol m ,., Cir* tc> <30)
m ...... ,., 130l
@ (I) M11' Crtlti1 (C)
ED WW'i ""'1 (30) "Inland w ..
11rw1y." Solnu of wildllf• 110n1
lht lntr1C01st1J W1ttrw1Y tf1rou11!
South Ca~ln• tlld Florid1.
m u. c.i.-, .. Ell1I ""'
aJ•PUI -(C)
t :IO 8 111 m""' .., ICI l!Ol Oorit 1nfJu1nltl pl1n Mlllt dun·
up, fix-up projects aniulld th• lloua•
Wltllt !hi tuldtftt lllllff tfl oft HI
1 llfdteftd t1mpln1 !rip.
o ~m m .,,., t•> u•> "O.id"fy Clrtli af Ylol•n~" Ward
ind Corm 1r1 1al1nld to pratltt
1 Southern ''rld·neck" from •
lfOilP of mlUl1nl bl.c~ s!lld1nl'
out to rn enp th• bomblna: of 1 1:30 0 MIC "lftll"Ylct (C) {601 Neira thurth ln the Solrlh. (R) m I lM luqo (30) fJ Ntn (C) (30) l td Mtytf3.
m v.,.... ti .. lttt•• ,, tilt m l! D'Cled HIC' (60)
S.1 (Cl (fill)
ll) rn_ .. _ (Cl m""
ftJ ..... WiUI , .. QIW (30) 10:00 . mT leperta (C) (lll) ''Spetd'
"P1rtnt Education far ['lll}'Dlll." ... LA's o..dty 11 .. Tuni.on.•
Two LA City Schools t1tdlt11 di~ SlllCtf at !hi tnlfc mlsutt of '"""
CllU th• YllUI of 1Mftnt td l.!Utian phdamina. Th• Pl'OfTl lft uplallll
cllSHI with Mtrion M111halL how Hit d1111 11 uRd t nd the
QI (j) fI) iii Nws (t) uu beco~ tddictiw1, nsultl111 hi
SMft phJJl(ll and 1111atlon1I U m·
1.11, lits of deep dlprwlon, lnun·
itJ and l'ltn duth.
~ let't M1l1 t Dul (C)
7:GO I) C1S l:ft11i11 ._ (C) (JO)
'W1 /ttf Cmnlti!t.
fJ Wiiii'• Illy U..1 (C) (30) m ,.....,. (C). <30>
@ Cil ..... ric.11! (C)
ED Nu .. 11• 0,.. tMtl (30) ~A
Thouund Words.'" Ru Mell Connof
demanstriles l!aw m1ny w1y5 1
paintin.1 tan be tnalyzed by t critic.
OJ (I) "De Cood Guys {C)
g;) lsllnd1 in lilt S1111 (C)
(f) Dr1111 HwM (C)
7:30 0 9.a:J l1nc1r IC) (60) In or·
dt1 $'iiiot" Scott at • criminal
th1rae. John111 finds it 111CISSllJ to
jeopardiz1 both his buddin1 ro-
mance with loYely Julie a.rm ind
Ille u fetr ar her brolhtr, • wanted
man. (R)
0 PICK THE WINNER! * AMERICA'S JUNIOR
MISS PAGEANT FINALS
50 TOP HS SENIORS!
9 PREMIERE NIGHT * TOM REDDIN NEWS!
em -1C1 ''" 0 t17J Cil 9 I lfl{IAJ TM t•· non Sisti"1 Dn (C) 160) A pre ·
view af th• upcomln1 tr:rlN. "'Jlrn·
rny Dur1nl1 Pre1111ts TM l111no"
Sisttrs.." Slnaer Bobby Goldlbo11
i nd tM si111in1·perfonrdn1 lfOllp,
Hin~ Hi1111 and Dad &UMl.
' 0 Mtrsllll DHIN (30)
ED UM: Mak fatinl (60) ,,.,.
isl Ad1i111 Ruiz" pelforTns ''Softll.I
ill 8 Mi"nor," by Ulrt; "Thi M11d111
and tht NJlhtlnttle,'" br Grtl'lllke
"Htvarr1,'" by Albenlt; tnd ''So·
nail," by Cinaster1. .s (j) l!All: Sptcill
IE 1111ria111
10:)0 fJ 9 (J) Whe, Whi t, WhtR,
Whtr .. Wl!t! (C) (30) ''Th• Corrt•
1panden!s Report: Tl!. First H1111·
dred Days at Ridlt rd Miion. .. Wal-
ter Cronkilt, f rie Stnrtill, Rollf"
Mudd, Din Ratti... lllld Dlnitl
Scllon nPMt.
0 Ml'rir. (C) "SeMI Cltiet et
Colt'' (d111111) '55--Anthany Quinn.
0 @ (4) m amm::J A-ic•'t
J11nior Ml11 T1jiiit-(Cf (60) T111
n1tional Un11s of the 1969 conttsl
!ram 50 "ide1I hilh xhool *liar
1lrls"-one lrom ttdl IUI•. In 1d·
dilian to the !ilia, the wiMll" 111·
ceJ'lll 1 $10,000 xhol1/ltllp arant.
M!kt Oou1!11 Is host of ttl• CUt·
monies orialn1lin1 live from MO· 11:00 IJ 0 0 Ill mm flttws (C)
bile, Alt. ~icll Ramin tnd The D Alfrlld ffilcllCKk
Voun1 .t.mene1ns ruest.
O t•ll ill S,.u (C) (ISO)
0 @ (JJ IE Mod $4tuad IC) (fill)
"Whtn Smilty Comu M1rtllin1
Homa." A ne1ro youth wtnltd bJ
lllt polite lor homicide tu1ns to his
friend. Linc Hiyes. lot protection.
Lou Cossett 1uesls as Smitty. {R)
0 Million $ Mlrit: (C) '1111 Siq·
er, Ntl tllt Sen(' (drtmt) '61 -
Di1' Bo11rdt, Johft Mills.
m U111 Club (C)
m Mo1it~ "Tht Cllrl f1111 M111htf·
tan" (comedy) '48 -OoralhJ Lt· mour, Ceo111 Montaomery.
ED Au1111b1J Tu Kttrl1111: Co'ltr·
1p of tht state usembty hNrlftl
Oii G~emor ROl\lld Rupft't \a
rtlG!"I paW 11.
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1!:15 0 Jrll)lllt: ""lifiliurt All.,.. (drt-
1:30 II a (I)... Sblttn (C) {60) m•) '47-TJTO!lt POWlr, .lotn lion·
Mtrtht R111, The Flnt Edition ctell.
runt. (R) JZ;30 m Action llllltrt (C) "Hi1tiway
D m J11ll1 (C) (JO) "Th• Union•· Dr1.1ne1.~
litst Nlatit al !ht WHk.." Moments
•rt.er Jullt 11ree1 ID btb:rsll far !ltf 1:00 O O Nm (C) n111hbo1, 111 Almy buddy of her lalt
huslltnd phones f-ot • Ut1. (R) O C11u111nltJ' lotllh INrl (C)
8 Jim111it lloOpn Shn CCI (30) m fr. tt1t llllWI ht (ta
<hu1 Bniwn II. pests.
n lH) rn m tt T•ta 1 111111 m 1:1s a Morit: -..... hcUt. ...
(la) "'ASOtir Wote." Suztnn• Pie· TrMI'" (c.cH!ltdy) '59 -Tht· Till'N ~tiene 1uesls 11 Ille 'll'Ofld's rnort stoo111.
tempertment1I epen •hf, Aneel1[· •
funello, who htlps Alu:1ndlt Mundy 1:3'1 m n Su..t ~
WEON E>OAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
12:<0 0 ......... _. ,....,,,
'Si-lt!f ErlWon.
lZ:JO m "ftnlailt Wt llW CelM' (14·
v1nture) '43-Ue J. Cobh, '"Jiii
l ltcl ~ (MMem) '$4-4tfJ
Merrm.
• JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Ow•lity P?l11ti11t '"' D•pe1111l1lile S1r•lc:e
fo, 111•r• ttl111 t 0 111rl1t 1f 1 C.11tury.
PI LOT PRINTING
1211 wnT IAUOA ILft. NIWPOlt I U.CM'
(~
------------------------,..--------------·---
• TutldoY, Mq 6, 1969 DAILY 'ft.OT J7,
Cool, Confident Celts Outlast Laliers, 108-106
By GLENN WHITE
OI tM O.Ur l"ll•I l11H
INGLEWOOD -You are in the cold,
concrete corridors of the Forum and
marvel at them for the matter of fact
way I.bey are handling themselves.
Moments earlier they had won the
basketball championship of the world by
defeating the l.o8 Angeles Laken, 1()8.
106, before a record LA crowd° or 17,568.
It 1s a fantastic achievement for the
Boston ce1ucs, a team that had finished
fourth in the Eastern Division of the Na-
tional Basketbaq Association -barely
good enough to qualify for lbe playoffs.
And perhaps it is more amazing in view
of the fact this band of old men had re·
bounded from certain execution to win it
all.
They once trailed 2--0 in the series.
They won the fourth game of lbe best-of-
seven set, 89-88, on Sam Jones' off-
balance mot [ro~ the free throw line
with uie .......i to play,
Had lbey not captund tbal uil lbey'd
have lost tbe atria and the world tiUe in flv~ games. · ·
Too, lbey bad dropped all three
prevkw pla)'Oll claabel at !he Forum
and were 1-6 there fw tbe 1eUOD..
Yel lheae i!llYI an lootlng fa< all !he
world like a coostructioo gang j,mt gft.-
tlng cif the job, not new champs. ·
) A ("'! of them jog toward lheir locker·
room. Others walk noncbalanUy. Some
wear broad grins but ~ not rpcaL
Otben_ bave no eipressicm at all
CloJ1 player-coach BW Russell disrupt•
the melhodlca1 mood ol ii all u he
bowDI down the cement and e1chana
shoots with a tall admirer named Lew
Alclndor. r
You share lbe iollmacy ol lheir dress-
ing quarters and wail Jo hear !he pop,
pop of cbam-corks being released.
But the only comparable noise is the
I 2-for~l Ti~ket Offer
J
j Daily Pilot Plans Angel Day
The DAILY PILOT today completed arra:1gement.s to take "everyooe"
snapplni ol metal tabs 11 lbey open ....,
ol soda pop. There la nothing harda' !ban
Pepsi to be seen aoywi,ett.
Now you JDC)Ve to the back of the area
wbero)a fellow wllh a retreating baltline
and~ wrintled face is standing. He'~ the guy who woo that fourth game
for 88stor1 and he's about to remove his
Celt.ic uniform fer the final tlme -he's
retiring alter. u pro campalRN.
Is he senlim<!l)al about taking oU No.
24 for the last time!
Indeed nQt. In "fact, he's 1 little
chagrined that he bas to tum in -the
jersey. "They don't let you get 1way with
i\Othing, ti be laments.
Then It comes to you ••• why this sup-
!Oied.Jy over--the--hlll team has been able
'> win another world crown.
Call ii poise, coolness, confidence.
That's the Celtics.
Tbelr gre1t player John Havlicek calls
"1e victory the b1gb point of bis career,
Raceway
Fatalities
then immediately goes tnlo a lonf pitch
on what • great player the Lallrs Jerry
West ls.
And he admits that basketball Is get~
Un1 tougher for h!m every year. He hints
there won't be many more years of com--
peUUoo.
AroUnd the corner it Is a different
scene. Laker boss Bill van Breda Koll( is
philosophical. "The sun always comes up tomorrow. And there's a lot of guys in
Vletoarp with a iot more to worry about
than us. So we'll klOk to next year and tr-y-
to do a better job.''
WUI Chamberlain labels il "the
toughest Jou of my-career," then walks
away, his bead hung downward.
West, who scores 4l points and ls nam-
ed most valuable player in the series, is
crush"1 by the loss. "M8J1be;they wanled
lo win more than we did. We had enough
opporhmiues late ii> the game.
"But we took a lot of bad &bots at the
wrong time. I relt we had the best team
••• we wori.ed all year for home COtlrt
adv antage &hen couldn't take advllltqe ot it. YOu have to give them all tbe credit
for winning," West tells the DAILY
PILOT.
He also ssys there aren1 may playing
years left for him. '
The Laters hive never led in the game,
But after they Ue it at fO with 10:13-&.o go
in the third quarter you think they m1y
win it.
Tben they go flvt-mlnutes aild 10
seconds without .scoring 1 point and fall
behind, 71-51>.
They still trail. 101-39 wU.b 7:• to go In
the game aa Jones leaves with bis sixth
fool and Chamberlain ls about to go out
with a.knee injury.
West coes wild at this point and hits
eight Points in two µµnutes as the Lakers
trbn the gap to 103-100. A bucket by Mel
Counls makes it 103-102 wllh 3:04 re-
malnlnt.
But Don Nellon'• sho< from tthe free
lhnw llneups It to 106-JOI with Tl seconds
lei!.
And when Keith Erit.'kson throws the
ball 1w1y and Russell blocks Counts' shot
undemeath, the LUen are finJslled,
ailllough they make -i. belated N1
in the lul "'°"'"' to lole by lwo.
The thousands ol ballooilt llon!d ID !he
Fonun rafters mnain in tbe1r bap. For
the Laten there can be no fuUvtU~ • , •
only post..mortems on the series.
-IOfTOlf LOJ Alll•IL.IS •"" ... ,. .._h ' 1·2 f hyltr I U »
H1¥llc8t 11 •7 » l:r~ I 2.J '
ll111Mll I '-' ' OW""*°"tl 1 '-1J 11 e,,....e t » Jt EPI' J U f
J-lt ..i 14 Will I• 1•11 • .0
N11Jofi 6 •7 1' ~-f M J $1..,,rltd 1 J.' 1 C-.b ' l·I 9
To11i. U »-ll Ml Tetti. 1' »-D 116
80!llOn l'I JI J2 11-I•
l OI Allg91es 15 11 21 lO -106
Fovlld 04!1 -lotlOn, Jonei la ..........
EticlllO!I.
Tollil fovl1 ' -lof;fOn l4. Los ......... 2'.
AIMnll&ra -17.-,
I
I
'
• out to "the old ball giime" at half price. 'I June 1 was set as DAILY PILOT "2-for·l Angel Day•• at Anaheim ! Stadium. The Angels will play the Baltimbre Orioles in a Sunday aftef1!;000 fl contest.
Investigated l
·, For each $3.50 or $2.50.,, reserved seat ticket a reader purchases through
~ the DAILY PIIm for the game, the DAILY PD..ol' will give that reader an·
J othet ticket equal in value to lbe one he purchases.
, A ticket order blank is published on Page 19 today and will appear daily
:; ln the sports section through Monday, May 19. Deadline for ticket reservations
Is Tuesday, May 20. · ti.
As an "earl): bird bonus " the DAIL\ PILO't also has arranged for ·
three youngsters ~ either boy~ or girls -up to 16 years old to he selected to I
partiCipate in pre-game ceremonies and to meet his or her faYOC.ite Angel
player.
"Early bird" entries must be received by noon on Thursday, May 15, to
be eligible. Entrants should send, along with their ticket orders, a 100-word
statement or less .saying : ''My fa vorite Angel is ............................. .
because ••. " Winners will be selected on the b~s of human interest and/or
originality incori>c;irated jnto the writ~ert sta.\emenls.
1 .Earl Gust.key, the DAILY ~!LOT'S: man al Ana~eim Stadium, will ac-
i company .winners of the "early bi.rd" prize onto the r1eld·for pre-game cere
morues.
~ There is no limit to the number of Z.·foi--1 tickets a J;>AILY PIU>'.f,read-ll
er can order. Reservations for any numper from two Uckets to an entire sec-
tion will be accepted.
~ · Tickets (both the purchased ones and the free ones} will be mailed direct-
' ly to the purchaser. Free tickets will be for seats adjacent to those purchased.
l Ticket purchasers should send checks or moncy--0rders ·-not cash -to
' pay for their tickets.. ~: . . ~ f.l:: ... !Cil>::lllDilC!IU'21EICl::m .. D':.JJ!IFil.MllM* pp ''ffWW es+1+a,
His . ./ffagie Works
Williams Injects .Life
Into Sad-sack · Senators
WASHING TO~ (APl -Few believe
pennant \Viii fly atop Robert F. Kennedy
Stadium at the eod of tbe season, bu
many shake their~ in.disbelief at the
Washington Senators and wonder wha
rrlagic; is being dispensed by rook.:
manager Ted Williams.
The mental snickers could be hear.
across the nation when Williams , who lef
baseball nine years ago in a blaze of
glory and with a slew ol records, w~
urged out of retirement by neophyt
owner Robert Short to manage th
longtime sad sack club ol the Americ~
League.
After all, he had no expet'Jerice a.,
manager. True, he was one of the game'
greatest sluggers and the last to hit ovc..
.400. But he ·also was considered te·n
perament.al.
Could Willialtls, the su preme periec
lionist, withstand the slipshod baseball
played by the Senators, who finished 37 ¥ ..
games in the ce.Uer in 1968 and bad oot
11ad a winning season since 19521
Williams, SO, signed his cootracl a fen
days ¥ore the beg~ing· of spring
training and went to P'lorida apparentl)
fully aware or the problems he face(j.
But alter the firSt month of the regula
season, the Senators, with basically t11
same ballplayers who were· mired dee pl"
the dark caverns of tbe JeagUe. appear
to be a different club.
They have woo 16 ol 27 contests lhi
year to put them in second place of the
"East Division. , ·
They have had two winning streaks of
five games each and have now taken 10
nr their last 11 starts fo give them the
Jastest get.away since 1952.
To the fard, the difference is t h a t
they're winning this year. To those who
follow the.club closely, there seems to be
a spiri t among the players tbat never
was or at least never surfaced. Perhaps
the two are Intertwined.
There are many arguments over the
fil'l"t dillercnce, but none over the se·
CCl!d; simply, it's Williams.
Huge Frank HoWard, who last year led
lhe league in homers with 44, is off to a
great start with .JO and a tie for the lead.
"Williams has that enthusiasm a club
·ieeds" he Said. ·
"He turns it "on when it becomes game
~ime and that enthusiasm has to rub off."
Hank: Allen, a part-time player in 1968
who hit .219, pas been among the league
leaders since the start of the season, and
Ed Brinkmaa, the veteran shortstop, hi1
.210 in eight seasons is 50 points hight>•
now.
Gabe Paul; president ot the Cleveland
Indians, also says Williams has been th
Jifference in changing the club.
"Ted bas them believing they can win,''
:1e said. "No matter who the pitcher is he
'hinks he can win. That's the way it is
·ith a club in a stuak."
Sutton Guns
For I-hit Mark
CHI CAGO (AP) -Johnny Vander
1\ileer pitched two coosttutive no-hit
games for a major league record. Thr~
National League pitchers have hurled
back-to-back one.hitters.
Don Su tton of the Los Angeles Dodgers
iooked to become the fourth senior circuit
pitcher to pitch two straight one--hitters
today. ·
The Dodger ace was scheduled to start
t"odJ.V against the ChJCta~o Cubs and left·
hander Ken Holtzman, J..J .
Sutton, 3-2, has won three straight
games and was working on 25 straight
sco reless lnni11gs before today 's iame.
He allowed three runs on four hits in
the firsl two innings on April 23 to Cin-
cinnati but then shut out the Reds the
rest of the way on two hil.S.
In his nut outing, Sutton whipped
Atlanta 10-0, allowing only four hits. And
last Thursday he one-hit the Giants.
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of ftle DlflJ l'lllt St.Iliff
An investigation into the recent rash of
auto and motorcycle racing deaths at
Orange County International Raceway
discloses two predict.able conclusions:
(1) OCIR has been <tult more than its
s_hare of bad luck and (2) if you're going
to participate in either sport, OCIR U as
safe a )ii ace as any. ·
On Sunday evening, 27-year.(lld Al
Burnett of Lynwood was killed on the
track's motorcycle course during a
sidecar ra ce. That ~ followed by
three weeks the death of another cyclist,
David Gaines, 26, of Loo Angeles.
And three days before the Gaines
fatality, Gillert A. NieJsoo of Norco died
after an auto drag racing smashup.
Until those three fatal accidents the
track had been visited by death only once
before, when Mike Sorokin died in a
dragster Dec. 28, 1967, as his machine fell
apart at 200 mph.
Mike Jones, OCIR's general manager.
readily agrees that motorcycle racing is
a dangerous pastime, but claims his
facility is the safest to be found
anywhere.
"If these guys didn 't have our place to
race at they'd go somewhere else and I
guarantee you ours is as safe as any
place you'll find.''
MANY INJURIES
Jones says it's a rare weekend when
there aren 't three or four broken bones to
come out of a Sunda y afternoon cycle rac·
ing program.
Usually, the ambulance-makes two or
three trips to the hospital, he says.
One who insists cycle raCing isn't all
that bad is Jim Manning, a West Coast
representative of the AFM (American
Federation of Motorcy clists).
';Si nce HMS, there have been only two
deaths in AFM-sanctklned events," he
maintains. 1
··1r we feel a h:pck is not sare, we do
not sanction it and our member s don't
race there. Orange County is one of the
safe st tracks going. Just chalk it up to
some bad luck."
He added there are only four motorcy-
cle racing tracks in California sanctioned
by the AFM.
FEWER BIKE DEATHS
Manning is also an insurance agent who
sells policies to auto and motorcycle
drivers and knows a thing or two about
racing deaths.
"The fa tality rate for motorcycle rac·
ing is far less than for auto racing, but
your chances of gettJng banged up in a
bike race are greater than in auto rac-
ing."
Another whose opinions are meaningful
on the subject is Doug Bingham, a 36-
year--0ld bike racer of seven 1ears ex-
perienre from Van Nuys. He builds side-
cars for motorcycles~
"I've been in motorcycle races for
"seven years and f've entered hundreds of
events and never been hurt," _he says.
"I wall In the race when the fellow was
killed Sunday and as far as I know th'fs
the first · sidecar racing deal~ in the
history of the sport."
lie minimizes the risks.
','I don 't feel I'm taking a grut risk.
Ohce you accept bike racing as an outlet
.and you drive with a dlsciplined' mind and
know your limits, you're OK. ·1 find it
quite relaxi ng, actually.
"Motorcycle racers are a pretty
fraternal group and we all feel quite safe
at it. It 's a growing "Sport tn Southern
California." ,
As for the deaths on the drag strip,
Jones points lo the recflrd . "Before
Nielson was killed last month, we.Jlpd run
off about 96,000 tfmed races without one
injury."
Halos Send -May Against NY
A 'few years a&O the CQllfornia Angels
p\Qi!d Am<rlcan teague l>aseball In Los A,..tlei When. t~ New York Yankeu
ca.mt to town, there were big, crowds ind
1°'9 ol eidtement because the Yanks ...t the Booll>n Celtics ol butbaD.
New York hlSll.'t been doing IO Wtll
nooeiitly and sloce the Angol• mov,.i In
this city in orange COwtty, Calllomla-
YMkeea cooluts haven'\ been the bl11t·
trtcUOl'l:S they once wtre.
TOll!gbt !he lwM mttl for the !Int
I
time this year. ' '
"Mie AngelJ won eight of 21 cl1shts with
\Vestem Division opponents in their open·
Angel Slate
11~ ' -Anot1t "' t-19W V..._ 710 •·rn. l(JlliPC
f1~fY 1 -.......... "' ,,,.,. Yort;, J:SS !\"" l(Ml"C
ing g1mes. The record ls lhe s(!C(lnd
worst in the di~. outdistanced only
by expaD&ionlal &atU<.
1'ht Yankees a1Jo are next to Wt in
their _division but the East DlvLs lon
generally is ra ted the tougbe.r..of the two
league ~nits. Included in New Yoflf•
division are BalUmore, Washington ,
Boston, defending W0rld Series winner
Detroit and Cleveland. ln lhll com-
peOtlon. the Yankees have won 11 and
lostr 15.
To start interdivtslonal play, Ule Anatla
will ~nd Jludy M1y1 l·l, eta!nst Frl\1
Peterson, 3-.3.
--------------
..
DAILY PILOT....._ ~ ·~ K•llf
WILT PUT ON ICE -Boston's John Havlicek (17)
puts Wilt Chamberlain out of action by locking his
ann around the Laker giant during Monday night's
world championship finale at the Forum. Celtic 1
mate Don Nelson <19) stands by. Boston fought oil
two furi6Us LA rallies for a· 108-106 w,in.
Cyanide Pellet Only Cure'
Sooner or 11ater tn most eveyone's life
comes a time when a cyanide pellet
would be as welcome as amnesty from
laxes.
Such wa s the case in this writer 's er·
istence.
The occasion was a !pl'Cial charter
boat run from San Diego lo the Coronado
Islands -a trek desi• lo .gej. the
Border City's annual yellowta.i l d"er6y. off
the ground.
As far as this comer ls concerned, it
turned out to be about as lucrative as the
Bataan Death March.
Seasickness rates a 15.8 reading on the
Richter Scale. It's about as desirable .u
residence on Death Row gr an indefinite
visit from in-Jaw5,
· Thi s victim can be attacked by the ii·
lnes5 by simply watching the.ripples on a
glass 61 tilite'r. So add the-mnell of dlCRI
fumes and the odor of fish (ugh) to a
pitching boat, and you might Jmaglne
how severe lhe seasickness became.
We pulltd out at the unlikely hour of 3
a.in. By six 1 was telUrig myiseU 1 woukl
not get sick this time out. While ttlOSC!
thoughts were 1oii1g through the mJ.nd I
searched for an alisic.k bag. Or would It
be a seasJck bag?
. .
By seven 1 needed the bag. By eight 1
needed three bags. By noon I was ready
for the pellet. But there"'"was none.
After that came the last resort : 3CUl·
...................... ,.
WHITE
WASH ...... '''''''''"'""
tling the boot and laking my cboncfs
with the shark!. But by ll\en I. wa.s too
weak: to get out o( the bunk.
Only two things would have looked good
ttt lhia stage. or tbe mlsadvtnture -the
iandin& or lbe pellet. -
Egan I• Goct ·
Perblps Johnny E1u l1 llMI mttt llkl:J
scapt1oat for lM Lllten' lots &e Sol ...
Monday nlgllt.
I& was E1an·1 p1lhttic dtftnslve wort
Utlt aJ'awed Emmttt.e 8ry11tt 6o cct •
bealthy lllat< ol 1111 ZI ... ts. Aad -WU £ia11 c:boH Poodl& . tHt britt
-killed U.. Lallen -It _..... ""7. •
were lohll &o Uke tlte le .. ( .... fltlllat
tbey were DeVtt Ible te dt).'
Egan c.uc off Oree times wt.en d.e
score w11 IMI. Be mined all ~
shots • .ud oa eid .ccasloe &Mi Celtics
rebounded ud came """ te K'Clf'e.
Wiien It wa 1ts-lli Epe •cat. pmted .
-and again. missed.
The former Provideoce p11yer was eoe
or Borloo's most dfedl"e W'HpGU.
Add Judge Roy Holhelna to Ille Ust ol
thou who are disgruntled by the NCAA"
hard·beaded stand against high school
all-star games.
The I u d gt, operator ol the H-
Astrodome. had hit Tell>-Otlahoma -classic ned out by !he NCM wben !he
latter refused to granl sanction to the
spectacle.
.,_f--~c..t-w.
ball players an --, f• "'°" at U.. UalTenlty ti WulllqM •
lncioded ·-... trio .. °'"' CU.y, e..c.nu .,. Mir HIP typo
Pl•"" dtleulllt Ltetle· 0.. OrssJ· .. s-.1~ I ..
an offentlv1 ~ uplttM ff'lll <WM
Wt1t C0Ut1e; Dick S...U., a •1•1cW .
lmn Batlqioo '*'-
. •
••
I
I
•
-
e l JI DAILY. Pll.OT
' B•le• Floumlftlg .
• -· ·wm Angels: ~epire Bo
. : ' ' ' . . .
..
'" T~ Beef U:P Mo~d ·staff? ....
After watching the Angels llOll!lder In o~ce had a meior league at.ml ' ho so,ya. 1' 'their writhing agony Sunday .afternoon, "SoiDe Ume ago I ta1ked wlth1 our
''''you are provoked to scan the~ of m11nager at Hawaii {Chudt !fanner) and
the club's minor league teams; we discussed. players w~ ~ght be
, . .' 'It ill apparent the Angels are desperate brought up tblS ~8SO!'·-Belinksy s name
for pitching help and the general ·was never mentioned. ~
""-manager Dick Wajsh, intends-to get it·~._ "We'. learn he is ~3-at the moment but
'1;'• by trade 'or by promotion. · · that.he's thrown well lately."
,~ And so on the Hawaii roster, Y~ see \l.(aJsh wou~ prefer to make a trade
enscribed the name Robert Bo Belinsky, rather than bring up Belinsky . Anyhow, if
""'"33, of .New York, Los Angeles anl:I, any Hawali hurler is called up in th~ near
_ht;aven forbid, Philadelphia. · . . future. it's likefy to be Greg Washburn,
-Bo has experienced rough sledding sm. not Bo.
*************'*" . I I .. EARL
GUSTKEY
. " .
~,,:,. ce that memorable nigh\ five years ago ~" at Washington's Shoreham Hotel when he
, • sl ugged I.As Angeles Times -Sportswriter
Braven Dyer in the chops.
• " Canned immediately by the Angels for
putting the boff on .Dyer, Bo subsequently
found journeyman · employment a t
Houston, St. Louis, and Phila-
delphia. He married P I a y b o y bunny
~ • Jo Collins along the way and today Bo is
, , a father - a station in life none W?uld
predict for Bo in the early 1960s when he
was getting neon tans in Hollywood.
Walsh says be bas no plans at the mo-
*' ment to make Belinsky an Angel again
but he doesn't say he won't. either.
""-ll I know about Jklinsky is that he ,
\ . : .: .Bruin Cagers
•
·· Set to Face . •
;:. Pistol Pete
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The three-time
national champion UCLA basketball team
will play 26 regular season games in 1969-
70, including Louisiana State and the
Tigers' two-time scoring champion, Pistol
Pete Maravicb.
AthleUc 'Director J. D: Morgan. an-
nouncing the Bruins' schedule, said the
defense of the school's tiU,e will start
Dec. 1 agaJnst<Ari1<ma in Uct.A's .~auley
Pavilion. • '..
Louisiana State is due here Dec. 23.
Maravich, now a senior, has led the na-
tion in scoring ·the-past two years.
The ~an:ie slate includes 14 in the
Pacific-8 Conference.
In other cage schedule announcements
;;I'emple, Southern Calilomia, Michigan
~tate and DlinOis were picked as the non-
Northwest teams which will e-0mpete in
the Far West Basketball Cla.ssic in
Portland next December.
Washington and W?ishington State also
will compete in the event, '!__hich is hosted
by Oregqn and oregon State. .
Pairings were announced by Athletic J?tectors J.4,!o Casanova of Oregon and
Jin Barratt of Oregon State.
The tourney will open Friday, Dec. 26,
with Southern California m e e t i n g
Washington and Oregon State meeting
T~lllPle ..
· The second night ifs Illinois vs.
Washington State Oregon vs. Michigan
~"'"'·
' U.S. SOCCER TEAM
··TESTS HAIT.I AGAIN
SAN DIEGO -The U.S. World Cup
soccer team; with its back lo the wall ,
will meet Haiti in San Diego Sunday in
tbe second of ~ two-game seri,r.s to
determine the North American represen-
tative at the 1970 World Cup tournament.
The match will be played in the San
,tliego Stadium at 2 p.m.
• The U.S. lost to Haiti , 2-0, in Port-au-
, Prince, April 20. A victory in this game
for the Americans would mean a rubber
match to oe-p1ayed4n a·neutral country
in June.
A victory or a tie for Haiti would all-
vance the latter to I.tie finals of the North
'American.Central/ American-Carribbean
11eries against llonrµd as or El S~lvador.
The winner of this series will travel to
the 16-team World Cup tournament to be
held in Mexico next year.
\ .'l)e United St.ates has been to the finals
only three times since World Cup play
began ill 19.10.
Tickets for the match are now on sale
' at ~ P8dre ticket office and at all
, Metro ticket agencies.
'
The Ange.I GM was up at 6 a.m. Mon-
day and on the phone to club offices in
Detroil, Clevelapd, Seattle and Minnesota
before lunch .
"We have a surplus of ouWelders and
some minor league pitching we could
part with. But we don't do it unless we
can make a movt we think will help us." •
HOOP DEPT. -Magnolia High basket-
ball proeped Jan Adamson bu taid he'll
enroll at San Joie State nut fall. He's $-
6, %19 ud averaged 15 points and 15 re--
bounds per came for the Sentinels lasi
season.
FOCYI'BALL DEPT. -UCI will do well
if it can ~art its football program with a
coach the caliber of Dick Coury, who
last week cast his lot with Cal State (Ful-
lerton).
UCI won't start football for at least
five years· and who knows, the Anteaters
might even latch on to Coury himself by
then.
' -PROSPECT DEPT.·-That-UCLA fin!
baseman who hJt two bomert Saturday,
Chris Chambliss, b a former Oceanside
high school and junior college star. A zoo..
pounder, he'll co bJglt in Ille pro draft tills
year.
TRACK DEPT. -Orange Coast track
coach Jim Mcilwain says ·he ..could put
together a fair SOCi:er teain. His miler,
Fred Sldrde, is from Germany, vaulter
Les Bland hails from Canada and Nico
Klaassen, a javelin thrower, is from
Indonesia.
Edison Names
Two Coaches;
Staff Complete
By ROGER CARLSON
01 Ille 01111 l'llet Still
Edison High School has rounded out its
C-Oaching staff for the 1969-70 season with
the selection of its varsity baseball and
aquatics bosses, the DAILY PILOT
learned exclusively today from highly in·
formed sources.
Eric Emery will head the water polo
and swimming programs and William
Morris will be the varsity baseball chief.
Emery , 31. 1formerly of Huntington
Beach High School and Orange Coast
College, is presently ckiing graduate work
,at Cal State (Long Beach).
The aquatics assignment is his first
high school coaching assignment after
training lifeguards for the city ol Hun·
lington Beach and the State for over IO
years.
He'll• also teach English at Edison.
Emery competed for Huntington Beach
High in swimming and water polo and
graduated in 1955. ·
After co1npeting in the Navy he went
on lo Orange Coast where he was on the
Pirates' undefeated Eastern Conference
s~·im team of 1960.
Emery competed in the breaststroke,
butterfly, some distance freestyles and
the individual medley in higb sehool and
<.'Ollege.
As a \Valer polo player, be competed as
tt center back and guard in high school
and AAU ci{cles. ~1c>rris mas been the junior varsity
coach of ~ira Costa High in the Bay
League for the past three "years, chalking
up one third aod two second place
finishes in circuit action.. ·
Prior to that he coached Loyola High to
hvo successive titles in the Catholic
League in junior varsity play.
Morris. who'll be 27 this week, was
graduated fro1n Loyola High alter
leading his team to a loop championship •
as a senior and making first team All-
Catholic League as a pitcher.
Included in his efforts was a no--hltler.'
He continued his education at Loyola
University where he was a starter for
four years.
•
Here Come the Anteaters
Mission Viejo Golf Club pro Jack Fleck, former
U.S. Open champion, shows fonner U.Cl basketball
coach Dick Davis {left) how to line up •a putt for
the second annual Ant~ter Tournament at Mission
Viejo May 16. ·Looking · on arc UCI cheerleaders
Peggy Carey and Elise Smith. The event, spon sored
by the Big I Boosters. \',ci)J raise funds for~the col·
Jege's athletic progian1.
Needs 9.1. to Win
i ,, ;
Miller Works on ,Start,
Looks Ahead to Carlos
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Soulhern
California 's Lennox Miller has run the 100
in 9.3 seconds and the 22tl in 20.3 but
Monday he said he 's been handicapped all
season by a poor start.
"I haven't started well at all this
season," Miller said. "I won't do any run·
ning I.his week. I'm just going to prac.~ice
mY start so I can be ready for Carlos.
Miller a USC senior, told the Southern
California Track and Field Writers thal
he expttts John Carlos of San Jose State
Oakland Downs
Indiana, 144~117
INDIANAPOLlS, Ind. (AP) -The
Oakland Oaks 'rolle<l over Indiana 144-117
Monday night and took a 3;" 1 _lea~ in the
American Basketball Assoc1atlon s cham-
pionship playoffs. .
The hot·shooting Oaks roared oul m the
second half with 15 quick points to put the
game out of reach.
Oakland ouscored Indiana 41-21 that
period after the ~a~rs had !ought to a
69-59 halfUme deficit.
Indiana, appearing ~isspirited after
Saturday's 134-126 overtime Joss, shot a
cold .534 from the floor. .
warren Armstrong had 30 points to
lead the Oaks, followed by Doug ft.1oe
with 27 and Gary Bradds with 26. .
John Fairchild led the Pacers with 18,
including four 3-point field goals.
The series moves to Oaklru:id W~·
nesdav and will return to lnchanapol.1s
Saturday if a sixth game is necessary 1n
the best-Of-7 series.
\Viii be the man to beal for the NCAA 100
1fUe. Asked what he thinks it ·11 take to
win the 100, Miller said:
"Oh, it will be fast .. " Then he added
that a world·record time, of about 9.1,
can't be discounted. ' ·
"Carlos is one sprinter who ac·
celerates after he gets started. Some of
them, even the good ones, start fast, then
slaw down half way Lhrough. When I
meet him, I hope I can be even with him
after the start. U I'm not , it will be very
hard to catch him."
Chi Cheng of Formosa , who now lives
in Southern California, said she likes the
new 100-meter distance for the women's
high hurdle event.
"The race is longer, the hurdles arc
three inches higher and there is more
space between them ," said the pretty S..
foot-7 sprinter. "I have longer legs than
many of the women hurdlers and I think
that will be an advantage." Formerly,
women ran hurdles at 80 meters.
t1iss Cheng has run 100 yards in 10.5.
fastest time Jn the world this year, and
has the second fastest ever 100-meter
hurdles, a 13.5. The world record of 13.3
is held by Australian Pam Kilborn.
The writers chose Edesel Garrison,
USC's fine middh~ distance freshman run·
ner. as track athlete of the ~·eek. Gar-
rison ran the 220 in 20.5 for a use frosh
mark and then cruised to a 45.8 victory in
the 440. Both races were held during the
UCLA-USC meet lasl Saturday.
Field athlete of· the week was Roll Hop-
~ of &in Fernando Vall ey State, who
tossed the ja\•elin 241-~~·last weekend for
a school and South A'merican record.
Hoppe. is a native of Chile.
Gauchos Win
Again; Down
Rustlers, 5-4
Saddleback College is off on another
streak -but this time it's a winning one.
The Gauchos, \\'ho just shook off the
miseries of a Ui·game losing streak last
Salurday, b a t t I e d to their second
straight victory Monday a{ternoon at
home, downing Golden West College, 5-4,
in 11 innings.
Pitcher Greg Pennington halted a los-
ing streak of his own at 12 setbacks,
going all the way for his second victory
of the season.
Pennington was roughed up for three
Golden West runs in the first inning, but
then settled down the rest of the way and
started the Gauchos.' g~me-winning rally
with a lead-off single.
Scott Longnecker and Rick Nelson then
worked loser Gary Marks for a pair of
"'alks to load the bases and Mike
Derbyshire ended the game with a solid
single that cashed in Pennington.
Earlier Saddleback sent the game into
extra innings when Don Sweetland tripled
in two runs in the seventh to eve n the
score at 4-4.
Saddleback closes out its season Thurs-
day at home against Cal State's
(Fullerton) junior varsity. Golden West
played Chaffey at home today.
Goldllft Weil !I)
•bthrbi
Pine~, cf 5 I I 0
P<l<Ji.on, 2b ' I 1 I
l!lc~~rdson, lb 6 o 1 o
Teece •. c ~ 1 I o
Cor~!I, lb·tf S O 2 I
Elder, ll·tl • 0 l 1
1!11uel1." 50 11
H<!'!11!ri<19e, rl • O O O
SClWllft, lb I 0 D 0
Sommerfield, o 2 O O O
M~rk1,o 2010
So>ddltb•<k Ul
•brhrtli
LonQnKker. cl • O l O
Ntl!OOI, H 4 1 0 0
O.r!>yshlre, II ' l 1 I SwH!IOnd, C 5 1 l 2
Eagle, lb 3 o 1 I
koorolskl, lb • o 2 1
Vick, rl • O O O
Wllllam1, 2b 5 G O O
Pllftnlng!on, o • 2 2 0
TOl~I; •l 4 10 • l<l!llll l9S10 J
Golden West
So>d<ll~fCk
Sc•r• by lnnin91 ••• lOO 010 000 DO -• 11 0
700 000 "'° 01 -5 10 3
Calendar Major League Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Oivillon
Chicago
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
New York
St. Louis
Montreal
Won Lost Pct.
18 ·9 .667
lS JO .600
11 11 .500
11 14 .440
JO JS .400
!) 15 .37S
\Vest Division
Atlanta
Los Angeles
San Francisco
CincinnaU
San Diego
}louston
17 8
15 JO
15 10
11 14
12 16
8 20
.600
.600
.600 ....
.129
.286
GB
2
41 ~
6
7
7 ~2
2
2
6
6\~
JOI'.:!
A~1ERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
\\''on LO$! Pct. GB
Baltimore 20 8 .714
\V~shington 16 ll .593 3 ~~
Boston JI !O .583 ' Detroit !I 13 .4511 7
New York 11 15 .423 8
·c1evelahd 3 l8 .143 131.!i
\\1e.:;t Division
Minnesota 16 7 .696
Oakland !I .JO .583 21.2
Kansas City 13 IC .512 3 ~:.t
Chicago 8 ll .421 6
California 8 13 .381 7
SeatUe 8 " .m 8
·----.,.--
Understudy
~
Says Joe
Is Humble
•
BEAVER FALLS, Pa. (AP) -Me<I
Larry Bruno -Joe Namath's un-
derstudy.
No, you won 't find Bruno listed in the
New York Jets' American Football
League brochure. He's just Namath's
former high school coach at Beaver, Pa.,
and proud to have lived in Namath's
shadow.
"He's done a lot for tne by giving me
the privilege of coaching him ," says
Bruno. "I feel I've been repaid many
times already.''
Bruno wishes to dispel! assertions by
some critics that Namath has no idea
what humilit)I' means.
"He's a good, level kid ," Bi'uno says,
''He's the most humble kid you'd want to
know . He's confident -but that 's not
cockiness .
"In the Super ac>wl, he guaranteed ti
victory for the Jets with his e-0nfidence,
He actually believed the Jets would win
-and because he believed it, so did the
rest of the team."
Joe was right in predicting a victory
for the upstart Jets because they handily
defeated Baltimore, the National Football
League champifln, 1&-7.
Brune> recalls Namath as a skinny
sophomore, too frail to make the Beaver
.High varsity in 1958.
"He didn 't even get to go to camp,"
recalls Bruno. "I wasn't coacll that year
-but I probably wouldn 't have wanted
him, either.
.. "It probably did Joe a Jot ot good for
the coaches to tell him, 'Go home and
come back next year'.
"It only made him more determined
and he worked harder to make the team
in his junior year."
Namath was Bruno's quarterbaclt when
he first took over the coaching job in
1959. The team , a longtime patsy in
\Vcstern Pennsylvania, suddenly had its
best record in five years.
Beaver Falls was 4-5-1 in Namath's
first year. In his senior season, the team
was undefeated in nine games and won
the Western Pennsylvania championship.
"We had a wonderful relationship,"
Bruno says. "When you have a boy with
Joe's ability ·and you get along well
together. it makes it all the better. Joe
always had a desire to win and always
listened to you.
"He was that way with Bear Bryant (at
Alabama) and is that way now with Wecl:i
Ewbank (the Jets' coach). I've never
known of Joe disliking any of his
coaches."
Namath's expertise in the professional
ranks of picking apart defenses was in
evidence even in high school, according
to Bruno.
"He called more audibles in high school
than anything.'' Bruno explainS,
"And he was always a good faker. But
no matter what , he'd always go along
with your game plan. He was so good,
that yo1,1r plan was his plan."
Bruno said pride went a long way in
making Namath what he is today -
possibly pro football's best quarterback .
"You think of high school and the old
college try in non-professional sports ...
but he displays the same type of atttitude
in the pros, a desire to win," Bruno sai~.
FAN BELLYACHES:
HE'S HIGH, DRY
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Ticket
manager Pete Giannini of the San Fran·
cisco 49ers football team says he has
found a fan who thinks of eve rything.
Giannini received a letter for season
tickets which requested :
"Please switch my seats to row 50 or
lower. By the time the beer salesman
reaches row 63 he's run out."
1969 Austin America
. '
1Ruth Loses 715th Homer MW•r'1 RHWlfl No ••me' ''l'>edulfCI.
TH•1'1 G""''
ClflCinnaU 4M•k>ntY l-0) w~H 0.4!, nlfhl
NEW YORK (AP) -Babe Ruth•s 7J5lh
j home run Yanished inlo thin air Monday
when tht spec.la! baseball rules com-i mjttce reversed its previous ruling on a
.wlnnlng bil Of a June 8. 1918 game.
1be bPme-run-in queslion was the
resu:Jt of an old ru&e that limited * win·
ntng hit in tbe•Jast half of the final inning
to the minimum number of bases re.
quired to tc0tt the iJe.brea.king run.
U· the poCeriUil lie-breJ.kinj run was on
third hue, the batter was ciedited only
wli.h a ~le even if tie wtre lo hit the blD out Ol llie -pork. -.
ln Ruth'• case he hit 1 ball out of the
park in the 1918 game but was._c~edited
with a triple because the base runneflfho
scored the winning run bad been on firsl
base. By changing this to a home run, the
comm ittee had given Ruth homer No.
715.-
A team of researchers for Information
Concepta. Inc .. authoriltd to research all
baseball days from 1878 to the present
discovered 36 such Instances, including
Ruth's hit.
"The mission ot the computer people ,"
said Joe Reichlu, baseban•s public rela·
tions Clirector ana a mtmbCr ot the ~
mittee, "as aulhorlted by baseba:IJ's
special records committee, was to
research aJI data, correct obvious error!,
uncover missing malerial and clear up
gray areas.
"Upon rellecUon it was felt that the
committee had gone beyond its authoril.v
in the interpretation of its instructions. IL·
should not be the function of the com~
mittee to change or tampef with rules
which governed baseball records at the
time at which these records were made."
RelchJer said the five·m•n committee
vt>fed lo reverstlU oriiinal votl bYlfl--2
margin.
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-
Start
Your
Engines!
by Deke Hou/gate
~loyd Ruby is the sort ol fellow YOIJ forget to noUce •until he 't
leadmg ~ race. The other day everybody in motor sport came. to
and realized that Ruby ~as No. I in the point standings that rate
·the nation's best drivers. , •
At least until. the checkt'ted flag drops at Indianapolis on
Memorial Day, this leathery 42-year-old Texan is the leadine race
driver oC the U.S. Auto Club. He reached the top of the heap with
two typically inconspicuous performances.
Ruby sat back in the pack at Phoenix while MJrio Andretti
and Bobby Un&er fought it out, and at the finish he was third
behind George Follmer. Two wetks later at Hanford Ruby wai se-
cond to tbe flying Andretti. •
, By scoring ~ championship points in these two races Ruby
also moved. into the top IO of all-time national champiOMhlp point
l!~ndings. !!_e j_l;!.mped from 11th to 9th. bumping Bobby Un;:;er and
Jim McElrealh, both of whom drove in the same races in which ·
Ruby earned his poinls.
He's now in rare company. sort pf like a ball of fame. The
eight men ahead of him are A. J. Foyt; Rodger Ward , AndretU,
Earl Cooper, Tommy Milton, Ralph De Pahna, Tony Bet·
tenhausen and Don Branson. Only Foyt and Andi'etU are still
active.
lr<>n!cally. the championship race veteran haS only won five
races in this league. His most impi:lrtant victories h~ve been at
the wheel ol a road racing Iµachine at .Daytona arid Sebring,
which are far removed from the champ trail.
Only a plane crash after the 1966 Indy 500 prevented him from
trying for the triple crown or long distance racing. A back injury
from that crash prevented him from co.driving with the late Ken
Miles at Le Mans.
Ruby twice led the Indy 500, in 1966 and again last May. Hi s
pulJout from the race i11 '66 was such a jarring disappointment to
fellow Texan Carroll Shelby that Shelby said he never wanted to·
·spikers
To Vie
lnCIF
Orange ·Coonly hip school
track and field athletes will ~
Yade Westminster High SCbool
S.tunlay !Or the quarterfinal!
In CIF. competition.
The pole vault starta at
11:30 a.m. followed by otl)er
field events at noon and races
at U:SO.
The meet will quilify Six
from each event for the CIF
semifinals the following Fri·
day at Cerritos College.
First and second in each
heat and the best si1 marks in
field events will qualify.
Included in· Ute list. of en-
trants at Westminster are
schools from the Angelus,
Crestview, Freeway, Girden
Grove, Irvine, Otange, Santa
Fe, . ·suburban and SUnset
leagues.
The top three finishers from
each league will be there ex-
cept for the Angelus, Orange
and Santa Fe, which qualified
two athletes per event.
~er CIF quarterfinal s1tes
are Chaffey, Long Bea.ch
Millikan and Inglewood high
schools. ·
see another race at Indianapolis again. Area qualifiers:
I btmted Ruby down the day afler last year's race. ffi his v1n1ty · G c .. 1. MKll -sr.ve leFt~~ 1120 garage m asoline Alley. , HH, uo Lm! Br•lf ayrdtn 1sP1. £rlc
------~--... -. ---· .. . .. --. --. -~ .. -~ ... -,....... ......
DAILY PILOT JI)
CdM NAILS
LOOP TITLE
• Corona del Mar H,i,h
SchooPs Bee track aJ\d 6el4
team Is the official lrvloe
League cbarnploa after plao-
ing third at the k>op finals
Friday nigh' at Western
High. ..
Earlier It had bee n
report.ed that Magnolia won
the crown.
Coupled with a firs' place
finish ill dual rneets, it gives '
coach John Blair's 'Sea
Kings nine points to runnerup
-Estancia ana: MagffOlil'I
• eight potnts. Estancia was
second in duil me:et stan·
dings and Magnolia fiftlt
Prep Track
Honor Roll .
Westminster Higt. School's
Steve Varga .took over the No.
1 position in the 2-mile event
for the only change in the
Orange Coast area track and
field honor roll involving first
place leaders.
Varga ran a 9:32.2 lo
dislodge mate Don Diston.
Diston feR'to"third wtth-Estan--
cia's Curt-'Hoyt second at
9,39.8. , . ..,
0111~ winning times ll v11'1!!y, com·
H lillon tonsldtred for honor 1011. 100 -1. LICV CMl!rl t.t 2. Goelftl !Kl t .t 3. P. M1n IF'IJ ro.o. 220 -'· LIQ' (M;ir) n.4 2. J. Vtfl" llml•HI (Marl •nd G.odts CSCI 72..S. .t.tO -l. Mulcloon (MO) 50.4 2. O. M111 fFVI 50.£ l. Gw•l>•rt C~rJ .Sl.O. UO -. Hu1tw!cl< IL8l 1 :5'..S 7. Muldoon {MO I t:S1.0 J. OelnlCMI
I :59.0.
He sat on a bench leaning back against the wall in the rear of Frt~'f.~~ -'R"i1.1~' Q~ P.t:·HH. 1110
the shop. Alongside him was a bottle of Kentucky distilled spirits, :;,~~·1.c=~ Ht1r~1rlHlu~J~,Ol;~o\?.; F Our~ti11le C hatnp ef~ken {HJ L '411 rtllV teem. ""hich had beffJ nearly drained. He offered to share. F•ntaia V•l19Y -o.n 11:oc111 1110
Mill! -\, ol~h·•ma {WM) Ind I ll..e~cl< .(SCl 4:26.1 J.' Ol1lon fWMJ 4;21.2.
l•Mill -I. Vl<p IWMI ,,32,1 7. ~,3•1.11ov1 {E1!l P:Jt,I ). Ols!!lfl CWMI
-HH ) C••I Hardl11 !UO), Lvlt lt~moml M M t G ah ( l ) ( ( An C Cl b ah · The day before, Ruby had brought a quarter of a million pee-1·~· Pn11 M••s 0001.1201, TH Lvddlln rs. argare r am cen er accep s congra -a ountry u . Mrs. Gr am, of Laguna Beach, 120 MH -1. WOll<i {E1t) U.9 1. Lem-mon IM,.rl 15.0 3. B\ld<er (SC~ IS,?. . h SP , Tl'" Funk (NI.le), Miki K•lo ( t' f I I h · M J ' h f' ( ' 'tl f pie to their feet screaming, .not once but three tunes as e " !· DeMis M•u c.t.t01. 0ouo GcK111e u a ions rom ournamen c airman rs. ona is t e irs woman to win the t1 I:! our straight 180 LI'! -1. Wood lljlll UA,fll.4w/ 1. Mellon IMO) 20.1 ~-Ounlep (CdM
edl I I f Bobb U R b · ... o • Kevin Wllll•ms f2-mllt), '4Q M (I ft) d M Lo ' Ed ! fl l' Sh ed th · h I ed '! repeat y sto e the ead away rom y nser. u y was a ''1t t::"'· m11e ~v ,,.ml ouron e an runnerup rs. IS e a er 1mes. e parr e final o e to ge :t rs. Edes
sure winner with only 24 laps to go. He had no more fuel st.ops to i1~~J11 /.iof.''e'ob 8:11~00,Hir. ¥.:i winning her: fourth women's championship at Santa by one stroke for the title.
:111.3. ~ 4'10 lltl.fV -. I Marl,,,_ CG1uihan, J. and T. V11t1tlml11(i1L LllQ') 4).2 2. Fou,.,. t1l11 v~llt.v 43.J l. :.an ~lel'l\lllte .u.2. k h h · • t th •ts"f Rl~rd ~.uor111v1 .. m. ----------------------------------------------ma ~ wn~n1 e_ cameofroarfmulg 1m o ., e p11 R obr a1nh em1 adergenndcy '"°'' 5'~~" v., .. -1:r!ti. CB:.,m~r~::: !A~1~s. 11:4~1-Bu!itr r'..:f{ l~bilf Founllln \/'1111!¥ 3:21.l l . .\U't.,. o.I
3:31.5. repair. n.cp acement a a y co1 cos u y e e a • '2·ml141I. ~rv• B.,., IHJ1.
because there were only 60 miles to go, it lost him the race. K'tt:''fv11er 1l~.m1t=°1\,~1~~vi.
So here the following day was ithe quiet man who came within 15~Vll'17,'r ~~~w-; ~:;:'1'ie1~1erq.:rJ
minutes of winning one of tlle biggest prizes in sports, Wugging at M~~lv"l~~/e _ eob 11•<k&r 1121
a straight Bourbon tonic, staring at nothing in particular and ~HJ, &';e,r.~'eAJe~1• 1~;'le ~OM!d:a
keeping his thoughts to himself. Was he considering retirement? ~t"'l.4'1!1e~-BOD Lf:b.:ck '~"",r,1,
"Right now I don't know.'' Ruby said. 4'I 've given it some P1'::r'ki1~ (~.·~P."~l'c:~1t°r111~:
thought. What I keep thinking is. if I do quit", what would J do? l":~~l.i ,1~i'fe1~~-... 1~1ltt ·=~
Ra 'ng · ••-I th' ] k " Ito LH), Stev~ Morl)ln !HJl. 4411 rel•v
Cl lS uoe on y 1ng now. r.1m, mlf• rein ~·~·•;.·~_i,gjfi'."i;;' This is Ruby 's 23rd year of racing, 115h se ason on the cham-M•rln• -eob~" fl'J, •
pionship circuit and ninth try at Indianapolis. '1t;:t1':."!Ws~uuo :•rr !,.';~· cuoi,
Turbhte Ban Rnpped
Sttve Bevier \, n Hurst 113201. H.w-1 1'119r -6r1d Schultz n201. K/rtr. • 11on n:m1. Ille!> Fletclllr 1320), .l)Vr1 ll.t1e$tr 1110 LM I, Terrv olllbrltton SP), UO rtllv.
Andy Grantelll isn't the only m-an who Is bitter that auto rac-1L~~n~~~! ... M1t'~cGiv~10~p~~·~1r1'. . b'l I . wirren HOQ•n ('611), Jim MollleY fSP ' ing bas turned Us back on turbrne powered automo 1 es. n an ID· ...-,.., Mir -Ml•t ~vier 1120
I Co .... p H t MHl. Mlkt Muller noo. 22(1), Nick 11.ose terview In the weeldy racing journa mpeuuon ress, owme om1. uo rel•v teem.
I Cff .. Mftoll -llllr. C•1n ('4(lJ, turbine bulldu Ray Heppenstal criticized SCCA for bann DI eova M1cLe111 1l:° . c..e' Mm,
turbines from its road raclac programs. ~~· 1Je'l. Mire" 1•111 IM 1• 0•v• '--E1l•nc1' -Mlkt $k1w!n f\OQ. LJl. Last year tbe Howmet car cnated excitement 11 world caam· ""'\ s1u1r1 nxr !LMJ. Bill L11cn1w
ll ~ LHl. L" He~rer fl'IJl, Cr1lo pionship endurance races here and in Europe. SCCA po cy. ac-r• 1Pv1. "° re11v teem. · , ounl1ln \/'I ii! -Din Ltwls (SPJ, cording to Ueppenstal, prevente~ bis development or Use turbine Jl"1 Hoeiltller SP). Miter Oii -od Frllet (1QG\, Sieve car for the popular Group 7 sports car series, the Can-Am . Hf~~~:vj~~"'62: &r i•n Ottmer !PVl,
If be bad been able lo race a turbine powered car on the Can-o~l.si1~~f: ~"'::1111 ~n<>tev rSPl.
Am, many thousands or fans cou ld have been exposed to the 8,':d" M~~':l'l: !iioi~\'i11 I~:~ 1\\~~'.
turbine revolution that was mostly confined to the speedway -v11 Gednov SPl. M1rk 11eum1nn !HJ.· LJl, uo re!•v tt•m.
and a courtroom -in Indianapolis. c ... _ -.t Mir ~ .. ll:Tc~ ll;ent (HJ\,
"The SCCA has said they don.'t ru.n a proving ground, they Georae F1rr1ro (SP\, J0!\11 Mll•s cuai.
run a SbOW and wJll determine what is good for the SbO'ff," Hep-c:1~•!1\'e~1n B1ker IPVl. Rick
penstal· said. "If the governing bodies or American auto racin~ do p1~~~~"~/,fl~''1°&, H'"°Trt':i~ ~~/(
not accept lheir heritage and responsibilides to the motorln• !L/· SPll O•n S<>lelbt!roer ISP~ I> 1t1n<: 1 -Dan j.j1um1n LJ, 100.
Public by providin" a proving """"Und for the cars or tomorrow, 1110~ Terrv H•un nnoi. J1 MOili'• t> I>' y fl ), P1ul O.rfrn1noczv CUOJ, 440
they will .be legislated out of husiaess. re k:tr:r;·v11..., _ Jim e 11ac1.
"The onlv defense they have from bein• compared witb J!m we1cn (660). Gl111n GotZ'l'ilo Ltl · -" uo re1•v te1111. feeding ChrisUans to the lions is that they have provided tbe safe-T:-~ R/120-L~i"n11 1~'t'l.~1 tc's'iV. g:~:
ty features which are a reality today, and they have provided the COJJ~e;-J~~l.r4.!0 ~~··~•v...e Aklv•m•
technology for the performance of today's vehicles. 0~~11,._1111 &••d• _ John Mulll"'
"When they refused to take that as their responsibility , 11110), B•l•n eeviess jSPJ. ''" Noble ' • SP\· Jim WorthY CH ), llon Collf1111s
RaJph Nader .or someone like him will come along, raise a big H~ii ci."""1' _ Tort'! Morris !l'IO
hoOpla, and that will be the end or motor racing." L~i.J:." \'.':;'11 IH_:l. M l-e sweenev
Interesting opinion? IPiX'~,1111 v1111 _ 11.1ch eeroerv U!X!.
1901, Andre Holmu 1120 LHI, 4«I rellY 1"'M~iw o.I .: John llr•lde" (100, lstt), ChUlh19 Discover11
For no good reason l wa~ studying the statistics of past In·
dianapolis 500 races the «her night and came up with a chllling
discovery. Prep Golf
Nearly every time in the ~ year history of racing at In-
dianapolis that there has not been an increase in the average
speed c4 the race, some terrible calamity has bef.:illen the world.
l SltRd• Ull (I) Mt1..-H• 1
Robertsc11 l'fl 73, del Smltlt !Ml ti.,
l~tl. Sdwllf {El 74, de/ Jcltnwn IMI 16,
(J.1). With one exception, speeds increased from Ray Harroun's
74.59 m.p.h. in 1911 to Ralph De Palma's 89.84 m.p.h. in 1915, and
that record wasn't broken until 1922. In the meantime. civilization
.agonized through the first World War.
George (EJ 11;. del l••dl !Ml 91, '
(5-11).
CltrlS!111SOn (Ml •1, def Rv111 t El ''· l:J.2).
ftrown !El 11, def Ci.re (Ml It, fS-01. 1 OOUd lEJ 14, dff 81k"" !Ml fJ, !~OJ.
The
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
FijOM F~SHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH
-...
Celebrity
Tou1~e y Set
Landing·s Stay Alert
For Y ellowtail Ru1t
SHARP
If you'r1 I 1h••p tr1d1r, u11
Oim•·A·Line cl111ili1d 1d1
S•turd1y1. M•~• 1 b1tt1r d••I
• • • w1!1th1' vou're buvint of ~h t DAILY PILOT'S f1mou•
11Uin9.
MJ -1. aar~t (Etll f.l'll 1, Marchlollttl ((Ml 6-N l. Tit bs!W'ft<l Chlld1 \Marl. Lemmon ( M 1 r I • McGlv11ev CHB>. Me~ CNH), 81kke" CEstJ, 111 6-1. LJ -1. Ber1111tt lE•!l t.z·I•.~ l. LKt (Merl 11·1\'J l. WIH (Hiil 21·1'11. P\/' -1. Wiid {NM) •nd s111on1 (£s11 13-6 3. E119l1n CCMI 11>11 Molw1v !L8
l:J.O . SP -1. Cll!men1 (Mftl U-tlh 2. M(C1nt~ (WM) 52~'.0 l. Borden ICMI S1·41h. Dll(US -1. Aldrich CNHl U2-10\lr 2. Lou ie!<. (£11) 152-6 l . Johnson (CdMI Costa Mesa Goll and Coun-
try Club1s third a n n u a I
Celebi:ity Golf Classic is
scheduled June 1.
Skippers at Davey's Locker
and Art's Landing are keeping
a sharp lookout around Sfln
Clemente Island for the lirsl
big schools of fightin g
yellowtail .
The two area landings are --1:;s.11.
still conccntraling runs on the:l;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i ... i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii
The 36--hole charity event
contributes the net proceeds to
Orange County charities wha
specialize in the aid to
physically and mentally han·
dicapped chlldren.
A practice round and dinner
show is slated for May 3L
Quartets, consis~ing or three
amateur players and a
celebrity. will play a best ball
of foursome over the Lake
Course a day later with the
awards scheduled for that
evening.
In vitations ha ve been mailed
to top Hollywood celeb rities
and leading amateurs and ear-
ly entries include Jack Kelly,
Jackie CoOgan, Boddy Rogers,
Richard Arlen, Paul Newland,
Jerry Velasco and Norm
Blackburn.
Amateurs desiring to play in
the event can call 540-7200 ror
further information .
Gallery tickets are now on
sale at $2 each.
"Conditions are looking good
out th ere ." says Phil Tozier of
Davey's. "There are plenty of
anchovies and squid f o r
yellows to feed on and the
water is warming up -60-61
degrees.''
Tozier said fishe:-:;-:;en have
landed several yellows off San
Clemente Island in the last
week running up to 30 pounds
and the landlng is running a
boat to the island once a week ,
on \Vednesday, looking for
yelJows.
"Once the big fish start to
show .up ·we'll start running
our all-day boat after them
daily.
"Barracuda are starting to
get bigger with lhe warmer
water and the big ones coukl
move in any day along with
the yellowt.ail." Tozier added.
Art's Landing isn't going
after yelloWS yet but plans to
send its all-day boat. after ttie
game fish once they start to
hit with regularity.
three Bs· -bass. barracuda
and bonito--unlil th~ yellov>'s
arrive.
Both landings de s c r I be
fishing good in quantity of fish
if nol weight.
"There are still all kinds of
bonito, Jots and lots of them ,"
Tozier said. "They 're jlL'lt
sniall to medium. up to six
pounds, but they're biting like
crazy."
Barracuda being c a u g h t
range up to three po'unds while
the bass are in the two and
three-pound class.
A spokesman at Art's Lan-
ding said the bonito and bar-
rai:uda are going after jigs
and some anchovies while the
later remains lhe favorite bait
for ttie bass.
Art's all-day boat leaves at 3
a.m. daily and is con·
centrating on fishing around
Catalina Island. Half-day runs,
departing at 6 a.m. and 12 :15
p.m., have been cruising the
coast as far south as Laguna
and Salt Creek.
Davey's all-day boat leaves
at 5 a.~. with the half-day run
deparUng an hour later.
IntrOducing
The smoothest whisky ever
-to come out of Canada!
It's
DAILY
PILOT
2 -for -1 Day
OUT AT
THE OLD . -· .
BALL GAME
PILOT PETE INVITES EVERYONE TO
SEE THE ANGELS .PLAY BALTIMORE
SUNDAY, JUNE 1, AT HALF PRICE
Git iwo r111r¥td se1I lick1l1 for lh1 Sund•v 1ll•rnoon. Jun1 I,
Angels v1. Oriol11 111m1 •I An11!1im St1diu'" for the no",;.;'tl
price of on1 tick1t. f8uv on•: the DAILY PILOT 9 iv11 you ont.I
2-$3.50
2-$2.50
TICKETS •o•
TICMlTS
FOR
$3.50
$2.50
You c•n r11erv1 1n 111lir1 11ction or ju1t two 111h. lul 1111 your
p1dy fo91ih1r now end "'•ii in lh1 ord1r bl111~ b1low with c~1clt
er mon•v ord1r fno ct1h, pl1111 l •nd hurry. D•1dlin1 for fie;k1t
01d1t1 i1 M1v 10.
Enrl11 Bird Bonus
Op1n lo roun91#1rJ up lo 16' y11r1 old. lncfud1 wilh fic.1f erJe,.
• tl1l1m•nl of 100 word1 o r l1u: "My f1¥01it1 Angil i1-
b1c1u11 •••• " Entri11 "1Ull b1 ••c1iv•d by noo" on Mey II.
Three winll•rt will ~· 11l1ct1d for prl·IJ•'"• ctr1moni1s. '
Tl1e11 'll 1'1eet TJ1elr Fa·~orite Angel
r-------
1
I
I
I
Clip e111I IHI!, whti ch•ll •r M9"'f •rWr. t.:
2·for·1 .&11tt4 Dey
Or11111 .. c • .,, Dollr rllot
C/0 P•llHc ""''• O.,t.
JlO W. lor S"•et, Cttt• Mtta, Cirl/f, 92627
«PLIAJI PAINTJ
NI ....... ,. ........ , ............. ., ••. ., ••••••• , .. ,, ... , .. ,., •• ,. ... ., .. Compare Wlnd1or with ~our u1ual American or Canadian
·whisky. Once'yOU do, y·ou 'll never settle !Or le11, or pay morel I · 1 . 51rttt ............................................................. ~ ... .
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
'Ibni1ht, make the comparison: make one rrain.s a.nd pure, clear glacial waters. And
drink with your "usual," the other with • onlv Windsor is aged in Canadll's m.lle-hiah.
Wlndeor. You'll be &mued at - -PrkH dry Rocky Mountain air. All
the 1fppin~ smoothness of this this , yet Windsor is priced
remarkablexmoimport. That's $5.~90!. rirht in line "'ith leadinr do-
beuuM O'ldN Windsor .II made -· mestic whiskies because we Im·
from hardy Canlldian prairie _port lt. then bottle it htre.
j cnr .............................................. 11-................ ..
I l'h-............................................ O•~····-· ....... ..
I
I
L •
I_, 2, 4 6. 1.,11,' ... , .. '-* -1'1. tll 1Mrtd ~
""' 11 tho J-l AllQl!l ""·Oriol" gtmt 11 Mlhll1m SIHKJll'I. hr I 1.ocll lltkll purd!utd. I wlll t«t1¥1 111 H ltctnl. '"' f"'!"'f-1111
OAILY PILOT. ' -· Sl.Wll,,M lclrclt _, IJO;tff. EIW: ......
1 , , I \l!'llltr) .. MI llrilll wnl M t111t to -~ ""'U I 'j Undftfl1Jllll tMrt '""" tJt rte ff(fllntl II I lot!W dKlrlt ... ~ .....,,., lltl•lt,
--'
-
•
D.lll Y. ~ILOT
Kids , Give Up Pennies
DENYER (UPI) -Klddl".
at.rt -... your pill)' ~ Uncle Sam needs !he
p;inies you've got stuhed
&WI)' ln then!.
The situatlon Is cttilnl so
bad tblt the Denver MJnt Is
nuuib!& two allour ibllls,
seven days a week, tryinr to
caicb up with the penny
sbort.IC•·
·Pennies, perhaps n e v er
before held in such blth
esteem, ·•are going out as f11st
as wt Cl.ft produce them," ad-
mits Denver Mint Superin·
tendent Betty Hilby.
----------
'1More penniea: ·ate minted
htre than any ol lht other
coins combined, but we stlll
don't have enouab of them. I
know it takes a lot of pennies
to pay for merchandise. but
some¥i·here there has to be
sCNJ)e hoarding going on.
.... M~ Dhtriw.n. 111e.
• ....... Strioef NIW Y ...... N.Y. 1111M
.,._ .-n9 IN 8 pW'S I$,..,.
~ -~ fuM. IM..
"The sbortq:e of the penny
is aiilazing," she 3.dded. "We
don't know where they art
going."
Ciu
•
Stat• tip
Nationally. banks pald out 21
percent more pennies in lhe
first two months of 1969 than
in the same period a year ago .
•
F•l£1£ INVl£ST/111£NT F'ORU/11:
Merrill Lynch
takes a new look at
GROWTH STOCKS
. A program about companies with. sales
of lesSth1n $100 milion
11/falce your forum reservations today
Merrill Lyn ch has just published a
Research booklet called "A New Look
at Growth" covering selected compa·
nies with sajes of less than $100 million
-companies that we feel offer excep·
tional potential for growth. And you are
invited to a free investment semin'ar on
the subj ect-
DATE & TIME
Tunday
Moy 13
7 :lO PM sharp
LOCATION
FIF1t Cabl• Room of
Balboa lay Clwb
1221 W. Coast H'woy.
Newport leach
Exetutl•• CORf••c• Rm.
Sort & SM Hot°'"'lll fir.
1555 S. C-H'woy.
l .......... h
You'll learn the attributes that Merrill
Lynch looks for in se lecting growth
stocks-how management; marketing
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You'll gel an analysis of the poten·
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smaller growth co mpanies. And you 'll
find out which stocks Merrill Lynch
. considers m9st promisi ng . •
Today the whole approach to finding
growth stocks is undergoing change .
To keep up with that change, to help
you find the growth stocks of today, be
sure to attend this valuable forum.
·.There will be a time for questions and a
free copy of the booklet "A New Look at
Growth" for everyone who wants one.
Reserve your seats today. ThJre's no
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call or mail in the coupon below. ,....,.-
~I Pl••I• r•1•,...•---1•t+t for your Growth Stot~ For11111 011
I I ••--------I ld1l1l lloc1tlo11)
I 'Name-----------------~-1 I Addrns------------------
1 ' CitY '-Sb•lL----------"•---1
I P,...,.-----------~ ,I
. .
. MERRILL LYNCH,
PIERCE,
FENNER & SMITH INC
1001 NORTH llOADWAY, SANTA ANA 92702
T ... p.DR•: 547°7272
Fer tht co11.,.11:111co •' t11•Mt1u 011• elfi ~•
i1 epon dtily fro"' 7 •·'"· to S II'·"'· 1 11d s •• ,,,,.~, '''"'''·"'·lo 12 110011.
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•
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Al .MrYls
ls$eRI ..
MU.TUAL
FUNDS
Llwln1 Color
•
673·5741
WORLD
SECURITIES
CORPORATION
is pleased to .lnnounce the
appointment of
PAT GORMAN
as president. Mr. Corman will corr·
trol the rapidly ex1>1ndina .. sec11ri.
tin firm's operations from the head
office at Leisure World, Laguna
Hills. Warld Securities now his
offices in Seal Beach, Lona Beach
and Tustin.
23521 PISIO di V1t1nti1
L11un1 Hills, C11iforni1 '2653
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ASSETS OVER
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• • '
•• Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New
I
I
York
l utsdly, May 6, 1969 s
Stock Exchange List
---------------------'------------------------------
DAil V Pilaf Jl
TV'·s Emmy Award Nominations Listed
OAll Y PILOT Slit! l'i.19
'I'll Pt•otect Y 011'
' Robert Hartenberger (left) ~els caught up in the
mood of his part as pla}'\vngbt Ronald Boussom
watches rapUy and director Martin Benson eyes
the situation critically in this scene from "Room
Service," now on stage at South Coast.Repertory's
CC>Sta Mesa theater.
Crossword P11zzle
ACRO SS .
1 Female 5 Small
!JI anti ty:
2 words 9 Whether: Dla l.
. 2 word's
14 Top drawer: 2 words
15 Baking '" Ingredient l6Thesls
17 Yukon and Alaska
ne<:esslties
19 f.lan --:
2 words
20 Jewish
matriarch
21 Ftmlnlne name
4e Carry ln;
SO Healtflful
51 Contain ers 54 Send to new
station
58 Nov!lllb1r dale
62 Part of 1 •
magazine 63 Equine
sound 64 Sautem t :
2 words 66 Vtsstl
fi7 Earth
fiB Noun tnding
69 Correct
70 Comts to 1 scrtechfng
halt 11 ·cantgrass
DOWN
Ytsterday's Puzzle So.lv1d:
S/fi/69
12 Atabian 44 Ground sultanlate lttlh 13 Become less together
. Intense 46 Exclusive
18 Stock tk• 11roup ol
changr unlt people
22 Holds 47 Install I
Dy VERNON SC01T
HOLLYWOOD (UPl)-The
National A c a d e m y of.
Television Arts and Sciences
announced tts nomin1Uons
Monday for Emmy awards for
telecasUng excellence in more
than 30 categories for the 1961-
69 season.
One category, best cultural
documentar y, had 41 ,
nominees. But the highly
rated, weekly series were
nominated in more
manageable numbers.
Nomlnattd for best comedy
series were ""Bewitched"
"Family Affair," '' G ~ t
Smart," 0 The Ghost and Mrs.
Muir" and "Julia."
Best dramatic series: "The
FBI ," .. Ironside," "Judd for
the Defense," "The Name of
Warner Aids
use Cinema
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Movie producer Jack Warner
today pledged $1.5 million
toward a building for the.
University of S o u t h e 'r n
California's Cinema Division.
The mulU·story building will
De part of a $4. 4 million
Center !or .the Performing
Arts -to include the music
and drama divisions.
In the Am'I and Jack Warner
Hall . of Cinema will be a
theater, production facilities ,
classroom!, offices and library
areas.
Warner was a founder of tne
e-0mpany now called Warner
Brother-Seven . Al:ts. He w a s
elected a universitl trustee
last October.-·
~
~ illlPlllllflMlll--tl
rachel..!41111
-~ .. liiiil(--1 . namaur•--.a'IO WIS'I
Plu• Al..AN ARKll'f
"Tht He•rt Is A
lonely Hunter" 23 c.,.., ..
and hold
25 Smallest
possible
26 ACTH1_ lor one 28 Squasn:
2 words
l Billiard shot
2 Natlvt
of Iona 3 Equint
sound ~·--Folly
5 Trtt t 6' Author's
24 Places-new englna
21 Ne1wo1k 49 "scram!" lr;~~~~~~~~ll of plprs 52 City of • 29 Friends Franc~ JD Tulsa native: 53 Descend111t
Slang . 55 Of sh eep 32 Football
play
37 Wesltm
U.S. rivtf
JB Gloucester'.s cape 1_,
39 Cranial · cavity r
41 Recline ·
42 Cheat
45 Caused to diverge >
"
"
2J)
•
2 ..
6J ..
"
production
7 Having no
faults
BA seisat!on 9 Affirms to
be genuine
10 Reduct in
certain way 11 Half:
Comb. form
31 Rr1J,1irt111rnl 56 Sixth -
32 Ship 57 Wooded structure-511 Noun ending
Jl Preposition 59 Countersink
34 Erg is on1 60 E1ploslv1 35 Bird weapon 36 Wo1d on 61 "You
a door don't ~D Enga11e In say!"
a skirmish 65 Naval
43 Ontarlo lnslg·
Lake nl1: Abbr.
11 2 I
•
' .
• •
120 5/6/69
lllJW( SOUTH COAST FCOST•-
Gllll"-ox ,.LAZA THll!ATRIE
ClllPDRATJON San Dltco frNWa)' at Brittol • 546-2711
ACRES OF FRE~ PARKING
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:4$
•
\
ENDS TONIGHT
Jti11.s G91'MT
Wolttt lroMa• ,,
"SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL SHERIFF"
-ALSO -
LM Monl"
11HELL IN THE
PACIFIC"
STAtn WIDNISDAY
Academy Winner
CLIFF ROBERTSON
-A!lO -
"FOR LOVE' OF IVY"
IAll:GAIN MATINll
WEO. AT 1 P.M.
FllE 11,.llSHMINTS
MAT. ADMISSION 1.00
MIWPOIT l lACM -Ill .... ,.,,.._
t. leMl•M lklt Ilk -01. J•IJJt
ENDS TONIGHT
IT'S IUUTIPUL
"FOLLOW ME"
-ALSO -,,
"THOUSAND CLOWNS"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
J...,.. • .,...
were: Carl Betz (Judd ror the Montaomery (Btwllcbed). dustry. award statuettes to winners or
Defense); Raymond Burr Nominated for best single The 21st aMual Emmy special events, new s docUmen.
(lronalde); Peter Graves and perfonnaoce br an actor: awards program will be tary, daytime programmm-.
Martln Landau ( M I s s I o n : Ossie Davis 1 e 8 c h e r 1 televised JUDe a by CBS-TV. c h I I d re n ' s programming,
lm.poSaible); and Ros3 Martin Tetcher); David McCallum Jn addjtion to entertainment out 1 tan ding sing I e
(The Wild, Wild West ). (Teacher, Teacher); p 1 u I :series, comedy, drama and perfonnances by adors and
Best ictmses In a dramaUc Scofield (Male of the Sptclea); ir='~pec=iala=, =Ute==•c:a:de:my:::wU::l;:=•=ct=resse=='=· ======; series: B a r b 11 r a Bain and Blll Travers (T b e
(Mission Jmpo6Sible); Jo an AdmirabJe Clirlcbton).
Blondell (Here Come lhe Best sln&le performance by BALIOA
Bride!): Peggy Lipton (The an actress: Anne Baxter (The Mod Squad). Bobble Currier Slory); Lee 67J-t0.41
Best comedian In a series: Grant (The Gates of
. Don Adams · (Get Smart); Cerebus); and Geraldloe Page
Brian Keith (Family Affair); (The Thanksgiving Visitor).
Edward Muthart (The Ghoe:t NomlnlUons resulted from
""" ML..._1:41 .. ....... '
INDS TONl•HT
11M1n For All Se11on11'
ANO
''Taming of th• Shrew'!
• EXCLUSIVE SHOWING :_ Storti Wodn.,d1y and Mr111. Muir) and Lloyd balloting by some 7,000
Nolan (Julia). membera of the academy in 10
the Game," ''Net Playhouse" Best comedienne in a series: cities and cOunted by com·
and "Mission: Jm;>ossible." Diahann Carroll (Ju Ii a ) ; puter. Wlnners will be voted Barbara Feldon (Get Smart): by' secret ballot of special
What is the 'Magu$ Game?
The game is re1I. The came is mystery. The game is love.
The came is lust. The vicious came the Magus plays
is not a came but life itself .••
Best variety or musical Hope Lange (The Ghost and ""blue-ribbon p a n e I s ' • com·
ieries: "The Carol Burnett ?-frs. Muir): and Elizabeth posed of members ct the in·
Show," "The Dean Martin,-====='==;o-===;:::;=========ill Show," "Rowan and Martin'slr "-------1 Or is it death?'
Laugh-In," "The Smothers INDS TON16HT
Brothers Comedy Hour" and
"That's Life."
Several cf the nominated
series including the con-
trove r s la I ''Smothers
Brothers" were canceled dur· ing the year and two were
moved to another network.
Series stars nomiriated for
acting Emmys in a drama
•••• • ••••
o tl».JT 111n. -f llW:AITMl/R •lVD. •
llUl"Olll' ~ • "4•07.0
AcMlemy Awerd
Wjnn•r-Best Editing
~MCClUllN
'WLLITT'
-ALSO -
Clint Ea1twood
"COOGAN'S BLUFF''
STARTS WEDNESDAY
Rieh trd 811rlon J•m•1 Coburn
W•lter Mallhau Ew~ Aulin In
ALSO Sidn•v Poitier 11t
"FOR LOVE OF IVY"
STARTS WEDNESDAY wm-.--Oll-'(IMNI "'¥.<~ ---.
-· ALSO -Daan Marlin ht
"WRECKING CREW"
"A PISTPU~ OP DOLLAIS'"
"A PIW DOLLAIS MOil!"
STA.ITS WIDNISDAY ' '
SHOWING
NOW!
ORANGE
DRIVE-IN
TONIGllT'S SllOWlllES
"LOVING COUIUS"
800 • n,i5 PM
"THE SWINGER"
9:45 PM
-An1F-ldllo
Chapmon A"""'(bsl oll""""-
thot left• Sbla Colqe ~ • s.t1Aar,;,.,;-11
~-Sb11ColqelW.
off-nnip • Slllt Collett SW. SOClllt 10a.,..,n-•
SHOWING
NOW!
HIWAY39
DRIVE-IN
TONIGHT'S SHOWM1S
"LOVING COUPUS"
U)(J • US PM
"THE SWINGEl"
9'4S PM
OnlleldtiM.Mtne•
Clrden Grtve tnd S.1t Dill'D frtnlf • S.o Diet• r,....,
lo Buell Bhd.(Nar1!1 oll-) • On-llMI,
South of ClrdiM Glow: lahd. • On-!M. -
""11tefWlllll~-
•
•
SHOWING
NOW!
'
,,,. c r., ·n·~ Ji \ !(}<*~ ,.,_,.
~.~ .,.v,:. '•
e 2nd Feature • "The Touchables" -In Color e
*SPECIAL PUBLIC NOTICE!*
RmlimfflOCRAM • NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED l -
Ellglbl• young people mull present drlww's lic:enM
•nd/or some other proof of •D•·
If pou'N under 18, plene select •nolher movie program!
ELIG/8/UTY WILL BE STRICTLY ENFORCED!
HOllYWOOO IS W·H-l-S-P-E-ll-f-N-6!
THE WHOLE TOWN'S 6.Q.J.J./.P-1-N-G!
All AMERICA IS BaU-1-1-1-N-6!
' BOLDEST saNES ON ANY SCREEN!*
FRANKEST WORDS MR SPOKEN!*
*EXCEPT '"'I AM CURIOUS (YELLOW)"
':4·ll THE ,~
\\lVING COU\'\\~
/\ \rue·ltfe ~ush-huslJ slory about real ~0~1\
maybe a friend ... or a relative ... or a ne•\l"
YOU 'RE l'llOBAIL Y 'Hfp• "' LOVE IS THEIR THIHGI -· ------
M11WA II.ME • LY/llN ClRMIQ!T • PAil COM! • SOOTT GRAHAAI
PAIA. lAMIDT • CilORIA MJ.HOlf • JAClll l\Gil • MORllNI M.Dlll as lllTOt
•
. '
......__.._ ________ '-'--=--'-~-----=~~---"---'~---"=--------------------~--==="'""'KWE'Sa ................... ""'== ="'·'-·""'~-.. ~---
• DAILV PILOT 23
..
CHANNEL REEF APARTMENTS TOWER OVER KERCKHOFF MARINE LAB ONE OF NEWPORT'S LARGEST, FORMER AHMANSON HOME BOASTS 14 ROOMS
Originally Built for Violinist Yascha Heifitz, No. 18 Harbor Isle Now Owned by Sullivans Gas Company Executive William G. Kerckhoff Donated Funds for Cal Tech Facility at Turn of Century
.Man. Who l(nows Gives .Newport Lowdow n
' '"""·~.;.. ._,. 111· .. ,,,
'""'" :j, • ' ..•.• :.(;I ""·\
OWNERS DENY ESTES' STORY ABOUT THESE HOMES
Hopkins Home on Peninsula {right) Was Built Around Boat House
Story and Photos
by
PAT O'DONNELL
l
J
Passe~1gers Get 'Scoop'
From Excm~sion Skipper
Not so many years ago $25,000 would have purcha::.ed all
of Lido Isle and. developers were selling waterfront lots for $I 00
ond throv1ing in o back lot free.
Now , according to a man who shoul d know, these same lots
are .selling for $100.000.
Very few people in the Newport·area know the harbor bet-
ter than Rciy Estes. For the past eight years he hos ski ppered New.
port Harbor excursion boats and during thcit time he hc!!s learned
a great de.::il about the h.::irbor .
As tour guide, Estes must know what he is talking about
because most of his pa ~sengers cire famil;or it the area. Com-
pany figures show that 60 percent o t e passengers live within
a ten mile radiL1 s ond 90 percent haye been on the cruise before
and are taking friends.
Estes pilots his croft through the harbor describing various
points of interest over the boat's public address system.
During the seven ond o holf mile trip he discusses the his-
tory of the harbor.
Estes say5 that Newport Harbor is the largest man-made
pleasure boat harbor in the world with chonnels over 20 feet deep
at low t~de. Of Bay Island he said, "It is the only na tural isla nd in
the harbor. It is the only island that was not built up from a sand
bar." He said it was purchased for $300 in 1906 by opera singer
Madame Modjeska and divided into 12 lots. "She gave the lots
io her friends and about half of the origi nal families st ill maintain
residence there."
Estes doesn 't claim that all of his stories ore comple tely
true. "It is rumored that Collins Island was once owned by Jame5
Caqney who reportedly won it in a poker qome. Property on the
sma ll island now qoes for $I 00,000 and up."
While passing Balboa Island Estes comm ented, "It was only
mud and sand in the 1920 's and nobody warlted the !and. Now
water front lots sell from $60,000,"
Estes points out the homes of raan y fan:iou s_personalit ic~
living in the harbor. The veteran siteseeing guide said that some
of the motion pi cture celeb rities en joy b~i g recognized by pas-
sengers aboard the boat. ''So me of the ors wave to us as we
pass by, but others turn the other way ," e said .
He tries nat to offend anyone though. "We don't mention
nriybody's home tha t doe sn't want it. Sometimf?S famou s people
are bothered by folks vacationing down here," Jie said.
But, it goes the other way too. "La st week a lody a ~k ed
me how come I didn't mention her home," he iaughed.
EXCURSION BOAT SKIPPER KNOWS HARBOR WELL
But Ray Estes Doesn't Claim Stories· 'Completely' True
HARBOR 'S TINIEST ISLAND RUMORED WON llY CAGNEY IN POKER GAME
:4 Collins IJland One of Area'i New1r Homes Is Hom• to Mr. ind Mrs. Lonnie Dunn ..,
FRENCH NORMANDIE HOME UNDER CONSTRUCTION ON NEWLY DEVELOPED lfNOA ISLE •
Mr. ind Mrs. Robert Grant Are Among lnlt i•t Own1rJ on Land Formerly Known a~ Shirk lsla(Kf . -
. ., ,j •
' •
• • •
I :
l .
1
I r
' ··1.
I
.· ..
ZI D.111.Y I'll.OT
Your Money's Worth LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICfl LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
P.nm u•-1m P-nMt
Small Borrowers Hit. by Treasury
C•ITl•ICATI: 0, Dl"OMTIHUANCI' l'a1t SUl'IRIOlt COUit 01' Tl!I Cl!•t1•1CATI 01' •UllNISI ... "Mi AMOIOI AlANDOftMIJfT ... CllaJllUC:o\1'"1 ... au11111•11 STATI! OP C:Alll"OtNIA PO• l'IC:TlflOVI MA.Ml
,IC't•nout; MAM.: •tc:itll'toUI NAMli TNa COUNTY o" O•AHOI t!lt 11114'~ ... c.ttlf't ,_ la WI>
THfj l.l_HOlltllONl!D doefi ~ 'Illa ~ .... C~ lie .. COi'-... .wl111 Cklellfll , lilutl-•I 1tm!,') INCi! IM,
cttllfll !Mt, .tt.cllWT •rr 1', lNI "'dUtfN ' MINH •' ~ 11:1111111911 It.. llOTlC:li ... MU.a1NC1 Oflll ,ll'TITION HIH'lllfteftll lffdl, C•ll!W111•. ~r ""' t~ "' • •i... ""'*' tr. fie:· ColJ• Mft6. (•IHOtftl .. ~ 1119 ti(· ro• l"ll:OIATI 0111 Wll.l. AMO "" lld!lklUI """' "'""' " ADVANCED !lflou. """ -.. .IOHN l. TMOUIANO Ill'-flNn IUI-of THe RAIJ,.MAl(E•S ,, ''°''"" '0 •lld II"' '4111d firm "' ~ dlW• EMl"IRi: ENOINl!lElllNG •I IH _, fNI MIO ILr111 It com,_. of It. ~rc::Tl~~:~:,NT:.~.~:· 01' llOttd o1 t,..; toUowlftt lllnoA. Wiiow
By SYLVIA l'ORTER
' The U.S. Treasury has just
issued a tax ruling w hlch
shows an astounding in·
diUtrence to the plight of the
little fellow who pays r.ltes ap-
proximaUng 2 percent a
month (24 percent a year) or
more for loans from finance
companlts. At this time of
historically sleep rates -of
all tilnes -Its ruling would in
eU«t slash the inrome tax
deduction which the llttle bor·
rower hu been able to c\ahn
for finance charges.
To summarize: anti I .now ,
.you. the small borwer. have
at least been able o ded~l
the finance charg on your
loans as itemized interest
deductions. This hasn't madt
paying the high rates any
easier but it hBS moderated
the blow .
You cannot dtduct lhe portion
o! the finance charge which
covers the ltndtr's cost or
making and processing lhe
loan.
"And who's suppo!jed to
know how much of the finance
charge is deductible Interest?"
asks Leon Gold, chier tas. ex-
pert of the Re.~arct\ 1nstitute
o( America. His answer to his
own <i!Jt'Stion is that the
Treasury suggests this is each
borrower's owo problem -
although the lender might help
the borrower Identify the
deductible portion. Some help!
loan borrower. It holds that to
the extent that the loan charge
compensates the lender for the
cost of specific s e r v I c e 1
per1onned in connection with
a borrower's account, It Is not
deductible Interest.
Therefore. sa,ys the
Treasury, the finance charge
must be divided to identify the
dtductlble interest charged for
the use of the money and the
noif-deductible charge r 0 r
services.
mE TREASURY. by the ~rifolm1:,"' ... ~~l""~:w:: ..:: :~~ r:=.'t': z;:::,.,~ fMll -ADM!NlfTUT10N :'o'll:,'1~ lull 111C1-.IKI of rnlclW• It ..
cl,_ lhorily f "-com-.. di tht. ftllowlftil Niten. Wllolt DAVID W. DARST, lffl l'UllertOn o!!'.'!o of Mll(li G. Vtr...~FANA. •obtrt J, Smllh, 11)-11 Sanf• C•l1lln1
way, """'no au or l...:;i ""m4' In fVH •nti ... u"' rill~ It .. C•I• ~ HOT1ci: IS HSlEIY orveN TIM'! (ll'dl, Fciu11l•l11 VtlllY, C•lllOtnlt.
posiUon. Actually, the ruling fol~ ~111,~ •• .,, Wnt 16111 o.=.:-~~ ~~~ ANTONIA VII.UFA.NA •Fiii MANUlr.. 0.l'N ,.,,w t1. lfft, seems ln conllk:t with some of lkwt. N.-t .. adl. C•llfOl't_1ll. .$TAT! °' CA.r..lf'OlNLA l Vlr..LAFAHA lll'lll 111" ... , .. n • Htlti.o. ITATf RW1c~i.1'ro1:'NlA l ,.,tfflufo, "' trtftMCflon " llWI-COVNTT 01' O•ANOe M; ter l"l"CINI• Of Wll -for l"""""9 of COUNTY 01' OllANGE I ., ill own previous stands and WllW -. ._.. l'lc(ltloue n.,,,.., tftd If. On """' 11, 1Ht, iDlftr't "" • Net.rY ~ Tell_.,., "· 111 t11e .-.~ °" ;.,111 21 1"" Mtot• ,,... • Not1rr flcltvll ., Mlklllloli ltllf .... ,,.. "" flls p~ ill efllll flt .. Id Sit It. --..uY I~ Lltltn ot Hl'"lfllltr1tloll 10 Pi'fillon-l"llblk Ill ·~ tor • .. w Sr.It • ..,._ny
with court declaions. Ill "" offlot OI 1111 CaunlY cw" ot --'"" 01Yl4 w. 01n1 ~IWOIWll ,. ,... '"· ,,lerMcl "' Wlllcil "' 1Mde tor Nrtlllr ·-•led ROllcrt J 11"1111 )I~ to ,...
And hll .... ling . Or~• ClunlY ......... 1119 -lllOll• OI ,. .. IM ,._ Wllolt ftlmt k wble:rlb< P1rtlcu11r~ •Fiii 11111 1"41 t!Me •lld PIK• IO OI the Mrson . .....,_ ,.,. I 1ui..
W C uua JU In· ltdkwl 1ol4ol ol 1fle Clull (0.S.. lid Jo .... wtthln T111trum111t tlld OI llHrtnt thl MrM lie• bttll NI lot Mir Kr!btd 1 Ille Uhl lna~frl«l.11 tnd volved Ohio law it would ar\. w.•TNess ,,,., 111111t tfi1, 1t111 d•r 111 •&-ledtM 111 ••KlltH lht ....... 1, lttt. 11 •:at 1.m., 111 '"' OM1rt.--,., of "' -· 111 w n ,.., "" 1'111
• I" APtll, lMt. (OFFICIAL IULI DINrtm..\t No.SOI Hid Oll/11, ti Xt0 W. ' 1lfNf elllCu .. • ply Lo '•ll othtt st.ates with JOHN L Tlt00$AHO dlb/1 Mt I(. He £19hlll $tl'tt1I Ill Ille crrr OI S.t111 ...,,. tOFFICIAr.. -SE.-.L!
similar mWJ loan laws. =-J~Er=:EfltlNG Mot':rr l"11b1:':"'<.t1it0t11I• C•J.n;t~1; n ,,., . ~:z.;·;:.c1mom11
1be undert .. i.... Treasury MllM M. Dltt.I. ~IN:."'9I~ Ill w. E. ,, JOMH Prhlotlllll Olfk• In
su'6 .t.twMW M u w -c-.11rr a.r11 Or•-ce1111rr llieory can -be--,;ushea" to u-. ... S..-1. ::!. c;:wr,i;;:*' Ev!.... 'll:ANIC M. MOO•I ~ Commlu.loll a;,Jrt'
absurd extremes, GoUI pol.nta ::9s.::":.~,,..n Put1111t11•1I 0r-c-1,• 10.,..ur :,:; :.:"'9.:!.".!:::. •twt. l"ubll::ch0,~n!mco." 0,11y .i1ct1.
out. "A lendtr's interest o-. ,....,,... nWt AIN'H n. 29 •N Mer " · u.. a..c11. C•tlfvlll• '"'°' APrH 21. 2t ind ,,.,, &. ll. •Ht '"°''
chal'tl'e for the use of. money T•1
= <7141 '*'"" LEG'"· NOTICE T•1: 121" 427·'"1 LEGAL NOTlCE • D Publl&Md Of'•"" Cull D•11r Piiot, -;-Attlnlty ,., '•lllillltf'•
must pay ror the lender's l'MV " u. 20, v, '"' lJ0.4' Publ"lled o.1ne1 c°"1 0•11., Piiot.1--=====,-,===---
businesa operaUons ••• Does LEGAL NOTlCE HOTICI •::·~'::.:oiro•s· ..,,, .. 2t. :IO, •N Mey" *''' 7•7-M Nn,o•T·Ml:U. 1.110•11:0
the Treasury mean that . IUl"llUO• COUll:T Oii TNf. ~~:!°~~.,~::·~: ~-NSm 1T.-.TI 01' CAr..1~•NtA.P-O• LECiAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HERElllV GIVEH tri.I ""' terest pajd on all bank loans 15 CEll;TU•ICAT• OI" IUllHISI TN• COUNTY 01" OiltAHOI 8olr1t of Ecluclllofl OI 1119 N1W11011-Mlsi
partially for services because l'KTITIOUI HAMI .... Mlm P-lH.M UnHled Sd'laol Dlslfk:I 111 °''"'' c-rr. . ' Tiii llllderskllled lilOel (lr'llf'I' Ill "' c-E1l1te et MA.ll:GA•ET c. RVOER. •A•·IJM OllfOtllll, ..iu rKllYI MIMd blcb u. lo the bank checks credit, etc .... dll('fillw • Minna II 2U6 ,llc:ltllll Cos-~Heel. Cl•Tll"JCATf OP-6USlfll'ESS J•OO,. M., Fr!dlr fhy li. 1Ht ,, '"' of• . " ti ""'"'· Ctllfomlt, U<*t' lhl 1lcflt1out NOTICE IS HEJlEBV GIV!N lo ~ l'ICTITIOUS l'llM fll.-,ME 1ke oi Scf1Do1 Ft<llflhH, IOCllH It 2DCI! firm ,..me of r..a.B COP-l'Ef IHOP ANO credllof'l Df 1111 1bow fllmed dee~ The llnlltfl ltned do lllrfVll c••llf'I 11111 CJlll OrJw, ffl!WPll'I Budl, Cilllornle, 11 TRIS WOULD be an upset· CATERING """ tn.tt .. kl 11..,, 11 c-"'" 111 .,.,_ ... .,i,. cl•l'"s ~•lMt 1119 111ev ''' cot1c11.1ttln• 111 011 "''d 111 wtilch fime 111d hkb wrn be 1t11blk1Y
t.". gh ling d n. POsod of ltll follow~ ""°"' when ll kl de<Odlllf .,. l'tQ~lred tD 11141 lfltm, 111/Jll\flt •• , CO-Plr11!91'SI •I lt10 No -"" •nd ~..., tor·
NOW, T H 0 UGH , the .
To start from the beginning:
an Ohio law seLs .a maximum
rate which may be charged to
a small loan borrower and
provides that this maximwn
loan charge "includes interest
and all manner of com·
pensalion for an 'J ex·
amination, service. brokerage,
commission, or bonus. and
reimbursement of any ex·
penses," etc .• etc.
And how do you handle that
division? The Trtasur)' merely
says that if the borrower and
lender "~ at arm 's
length tn the loan contract as
to what wss the proper portion
of the maximum loan charge
that w~ Interest, such an
agreement would ordinarily be
aceepted for federal income
,tax purposes." But a ~te
ment by the lender that the
entire charge was interest
would not be sufficitnt '"ir the
facts indicated that a portion
of the charge was attributablt
to specific services.''
l,'G enou ru un er ..,,e ,.. ..... In NU •rid 1>1.u of rttldetM:e It ,1 w!ltl 1t1e necenarY VGllClltrL 111 Ille on\et Nordic l"l1<e, Dr1111M1, c111..,..n11, undti ll:ELOCATA&Li: CLASSROOM t)egt Of Circwnstances Jt follGws· ' et IM cltrll ol tllt •be"* fllllllM coYrt. llj' 1111 llclillout llrm ,..me ot COPELAN BUILOlNGS .-.No
seems lnde'fe .. aib)e 'du . . • Rlci..rd ... Lt ..... r'I, n.u Aw11oti. '°'"to WIS'lnllo ,:~1:11ec1~1 =-:::~ LIMITEO f'ARTNE•SHIP No. 1 .... ltllf \fARIOUS SITE Treasury says that you, the
borrower, can deduct only that
portion of the finance charge
which represents "pure" in·
terest charge for the money.
Old Stocks
May Yield
Fortune
NE\\' YORK (AP) -lfs
spring-cleaning time and that
old tnink" in the aulc or base·
ment might yield a fortune in
stock certificates l h o u g h I
worthless.
Estimates are that $15
billion worth of securities are
lying unclaIDled in all sorts of
odd places.
Many of these stocks have
gone unnoticed since the stock
market c r a s h of 1929 when
their owners thought they had
been wiped oul but actually
weren't.
Tracers Co. of Americ:i
makes a business of finding
missing stockholders for com·
panies and banks which want
to clear their records of Jong·
dormant accounlS.
Echvard H. G o I d fader,
general manager of Tracers.
recalls an investor v.·ho went
down in the 1929 crash. Broke,
he built a squatters' shack on
an island off the Florida coast
and papered the walls with
stock certificates as a remem·
brance of better days.
But one of the firms ln
which he owned stock survi v·
ed. It hlred Tracers to find its
unheard from stockholders.
Goldfader says that when th<'
stockholder on the island \\1as
located, he sawed t h e gold
certificates out of bis walls.
presented the bundle 0 r
lumber and paper lo the coin·
pany and \vas paid enough
money to buy a good home.
And. says Coldrader, there
was the school teacher "'ho
paid $5 a share for 1.000
shares in a company which
later became Tex as
Instruments, Inc. The teacher
thought the company had gone
bankrupt because it no longer
appeared in the stock lists.
When Tracers, on assign·
ment from Texas Instruments.
found the stockholder many
years later her stock was
worth $256.000.
Tracers says that in lhe last
4:> years, working for cor-
porations and banks, it has
reunited some 500,000 so-call·
ed "lost" stockholders their
heirs "'ith mort than $150
million. Tracers' fees are paid
by the concern!> which retain
it, not by lhe stockholder or
heir.
"Tht. changes 1n corporatl'
structurt. have a curious wa''
of escaping lhe notice Or
stockholders,'' Goldfader says.
'·These firms nierge. con-
solidate. reorganized. chani;:('
their names and even their
rnain business interests. As a
result many a v f' r a g e in·
vestors, or their heirs. have no
idea \\'hat old Sl'Curities lying
around the i r ho me !!
represent." "'
Gold!ade1 says all :.ci.:urities
dating back tt 1860 can be
checked lo dt'te.rm1ne if they
have any "'or1h.
Markel
Bolstered
Dean Witter & Co. sayi
PresidtRt"'f'fixon's request for
repeal of tht ln1•r.stment tait
credit, coupled with other antP.
lnll40ooary mdves or the ad-
mlnlstraUon and the Feder.qi
Rest:rve Board1 "appears to
be mlecUd "'-'~ boBd prica:. and a moderaltt
Jowerlnf of Interest ratts. ••
Jncrtued tnvmor interm lrt
r11ed lnc:ome in,.estmentJ In
~al and in 111unlci!>"I
can be upect«J, the
firm J10io1o ouL
THE TREASURY'S new rul·
ing involved an Ohio small
Forecasti1ig Session
,._ It Mt11t (tllfornll YOll'C!Mrl, s llSO Yid flrm Is COlllPOlld of Ille lollowlllf IMPROVEMENTS
period when finance es 0~1t11 ,.;,ru fl, 1Hio. ""• '°s "~..!:;:"~.,!>· ";'.'.~"'"~Mell ... l'lOnl, who1t ""...,.' In 11111 •lld PIKes AH bllll 1rt 10 1:1;1 In .c:corcll11Ce with -··"Jn I -•-Rld\lrd F LVll\etl · 111 n · lice 111 OI IH•dtna 1r1 • Joi~, to.wll: C-fllo<ll. lnstrvct!Olls 111<1 5P«.fll~Uon1 are at C1ui1u g eVCJ-3 e STATE OF CALIFORNIA ) Ctllf«nlaet '::7U,:=~ 1~111111P lftllltn HERSCHEL L. COPEL.AN, M.0 . and 11111 Pi.ns wlllcll ire ,..,w on Ille "" 1t11
small borrower is staggering COUNTY OF ORANGE I SS ~'1'r to Ille 1111 ot wkt dtcldlftl, JOSEPH '· COPELAN, I en f r I I Olflct ol Wlllllm Bluroc~ .. Pt•IM~ . °" ,, Pf• •• II... fl htl Plrtnen. tm No Nordic: PIKI Mthllecl~ lSSO B1r1kle OrlYe, COO'-del UQder their burden Apr 71, lf6', bllllrt '"'' I NOllrY wltl'l!n tour """'lh1 Iller lht Uni PU "' Orat111, Cillfornl · ' Mlt C !!lo I Alld be (II)! IMd W . Public lt1 •nd for Slid S!11T. PKSOlll!ty tlan 111 11111 ,..,11c1 GER.i.LO T 1· ' · • rn 1' mlY 1 ·-•red IUch1rd F Ltnllf'I kl\GW.. to D ltd April ?J .lt6t • PLITMA.N, MO.,, li'J.I de9m1llt111 1211.00 for flCll It! OI -rll me 10 be the per.;.,,, whoff nlmt ;1
1 P:I 11 'ra C P:Y~I MadlSOf'I A._.,, Mtml>!llJ, Tenflft-. 1>lens Ind 1peclf1c1tlo111. TMt cr~sll w!ll subscribed 10 the within 1111!rumen1 end Ad",,S,,1~tri•or et the E1!ale FREOEAtCIC D. TURNEil, M.D,, llMJ be rtfunded 11 Ille Mils art rttvrntd Cl>l'l'I• 1cknawl'°"Ged ~· execullld Ille .. ,,,.. ol Ille •t:.~t named c1tctd1nl E. C~a11m1n Ave .• 01an¥f, Calllornl1 Pitt• and In llOOd aindl!lon within flvo !OFFICIAL SEAL~ ALll'll:!:D 0 WILLIAMS. E... JOSEPH F, TRIGGS, M.o .• 15CCI E. ellYt an1r Ille bkl OPenlng, Josel>h E OaYls 1 'uw Kattltt Ave .• Or1nt1e. C1lllo1..,1a Eld• bld<k<" mutt i.uhm lt • bid blind
t+oltl'Y Pi.blk • (lhlornll ~ll;.w;-Ys!ft An!Hll Drlw, EOWARO R, STONE, M.0., '100 E .... Ull to 11~ l>tr Cflll ($"'°)al lhe tmounf -· ' Prine/NI Ofllct In '-""• i.t.c:ll. ClllHntl• ... , Ck.l1>ma11 AYt., Oranff, Ctlltorn!a. of lllt blcl, m~ l>IYlble IO lilt order 111 Of-11111 County l';el· UISI lU-llf4 RICHARO L. GOLOMA.N, M.O .. lDOO 1111 Nn<il>Ort·Mtil Unlt'ed Sdlool Ol1lrlcl.
N d MY ComtnlHIOll E•11lre1 Alti.r..r fer Admlnltlrll.. W_ LI Vf11. Ortnee. C1lltorni1, 111 Ille !Nfnl et l1Hurt IQ ftlltr lnlp :wtll June Jl 1'7G p bllsMd 0 "'' Coa1 o111y Pllo1. Otte.:! lo1>rl! lJ, lHf conlrlCI, the full wrn lllertof will be ame 1"11bH1~ed Or~11111 Cot•I Oally Piiot A ri 2' end M;~ 6. 13, 10. 191!' 127·H MtTlc:llll L COPtltn, M.0 lofltlltd lo ..,Mt SChOol Ol1trlcl et Or11111
A1rll 2' Ind Ml'I" ll. 20, "" 11M9 "" ,.. J~lePh B, Ct111er.... C~n~: .~ ... ' ' ' • _,
L NOTICE oATE OF CALIFORNIA ) ,.,...,. '"" ..... 1tr11 on ''"' LE6AL NOTICE LEGA COUNTY OF ORANGE ) ... Per'lormanca Bond will be rtou lred et 1~11
Companies to W atcl1
LOS ANGELES
Pressures "'hich "·ill slow the
shorl·tenn ecooom)' will ease
in the first quarter of 1970, ac·
cording lo two s!ock. market
research specialists. ,
The financial anlaysls pin·
pointed spetjfic compa~es ex·
peeled to fare well dunng the
immediate, intermediate and
long.range periods.
The s t ock. marke t
forecasting session was the
third annual forum sponsored
by J . Barth and Co. and more
than 600 investors attended the
session in Los Angeles this
week.
They heard Claude N .
Rosenberg ·Jr., genera I
partner in charge of research,
and John D. Leland Jr,,
general parlner of J . Barth, as
they correlated forecasts for
the general economy and the
investment outlook for spttific
companies.
Leland noted, "The impact
of the 10 percent extra lax is
just being felt now. and con1 ·
blned wilh tightened money
conditions, will be a major
factor in the flatness in
durable goods sptnding during
the balance of 1969.
"Eventually, the tax will be
reduced or lifted, monetary
restrictions will be cased. and
thal will reverse Uie outlook
for hard good !<:, the
homebuilding and auto in·
dustries," he added.
During the nat or _sLuggish
period, the conservative and
quality Issue investors might
look at the servia-oriented in
dustries and those with strong
brand name product s,
Rosenberg suggested.
Included in these groups are
American Express, Foremost
Mc Kesson. Seven Up. Bristol·
Myers, Warner Lambert and
Gillette.
l ___ ".'.'.'.:'.~'....'.C'.~'.:'.:'._ ___ , _____ --;;:;;;;;--------------1 On A1>rl! 11. 196t, Ollctt mt. a "'"''"' Contractor •tlectfd. T·411ti P11blit In •1111 for tlld county and Sll!t Ho bidder may withdraw Ms bid tor I analysts felt that the market ..... ,," • NDTIC~ TO CRl!OtTOllS l>e•SONllY ai>Pttred HERSCHEL • l Ptrk>d ol IO•!'f'41n (~S) cliYI ''"' lht NOTICE TO C•lt:DITO•I su,E•IO• COURT Df THE COPEL.AN Mo •nll JOSEP · d.l!t a.el lor the °"'t1lr,g lhtreol. bas partially anticipated peace IU,lt:IUDR CDU•T OP-TNE STATl OF CALlfORNIA l'OR COPEr..AN. li11Gw'n 'io"" to be '"" ;!,,.!· The Bo1rd of EdilC•llon Ol llle New-1·
d d ._they· tn ST.-.TE Of CAl.IP-0.HIA P-DR THE COUNT'!' 01' O•.-.NOE whose "lmt' •rt .00.crlbed to Ille W!1hl~ Mell Unitltd Sd\ool Dlslrlcl re11~1 """ an an en w le am war THI: COUNTY· Of' Oll.-.l'tOI' N•. A-4"*' R IMl"""'n1, •nd •cknow!Htoed to me Thll rklnr 10 reiKI •t1Y or •II bids. 11\d nor wi U not bnng' 8 significant Ni. A-41511 EIT•le OI MARGAllET c. ll:VOE ' lhno t•KUll'd Ille Sime nKft$1rlty ICCl!'PI Ille !owe.I btd, •nd 10
k B al Elfilt ol PAULINE LAMSON, Dectit-Oeailld Witness lftY ,._nd 1,.d !ell WtJYI 111~ l11lorm11Ur or lrr19u1irity In mar et surge. ut, a re ed. NOTICE t-S HEREBY GIVEN to '"' (OFFICIAL SEAL/ 1ny bid rtcel'ffi:f. breakdown in peace negotia-NOTICE 1$ HEREttV GIVEN 10 me tredl!cn of '"' lbett Fiimed OKtdt"' Liiiian M. Edwards WAOE RATES: , ,c....,llors OI Ille 1bDve rutmed dKedenl tlYI 111 1>1rlOl'IS ni~lng cltlms 1111ns1 fllt Nol~r p bl! ~ 11 Purw1nl lo the t.1bor Code ol tt>e Slel~ t1ons could depress the market that 111 11er»ns havT"9 c11lm1 191ln11 Ille Mid dccoden.• ire re<iuirtd 10 111e the"'' PririctPal 11011f,, 1 t:ort1le 01 C1llfor1111, Southern c111111rnJ1 Bvllct!ns
lo the Dow Jones level of 8SO ttld,..ftcfdent ire rt<1ulrtd to 11!1 tt>em, wllh Ille nectu•l"f vDUChfrs, 1n Ille cl· Dranve Countr ~nd Con1tr~ctlon lr1<1e1 c 0 u 11 c1 11 , . , · wllll l~esury voudltrs. 111 !lie office !let ol Ille clel'll ol Hoe •Co!VI '"tl!IKI My Commlsalon E•1>frt B11lldl"11 Ind Con•ll'\lcllon Tr10l5 CCKintU ··Actual peace could take1he .. ,.._ cleril of lfte_ •boVll .,.1u1ec1 court. « 11 ,,,. ta ..,._, ii.em wlltl the nK~· Awuit '.It 1n1 ' o1 0¥•11111. cwnh'. !he uld ..,.,,. Of'
DJ •• th I OOO I I d la P~I ltltm. with lllt Motulrr toll to ln urCieril_.:I 11 !he Publ!slled Ortn9i C 1 0 .1 p Eduatlon hit ISC:trt.rned 1111 tMfl"•I up w e , eve an w1uch•tr•. to .lhl u11clu1ltl'M'd 11 "" office 1'"' voucn..s.11 '0 w 1 1 11 • ,., •. APrU 22, 29 •lld "''' 6, v;• lK9 •1 ' 11'::; Pl' ... 1111.,. rite 01 ""' diem w•oes 10~ beyond " Rosenberg told the of 111t "tlol'~, Monte w. Stilr!f'y, 1u o111ce ol A r•d 1 s · 1o.11to1111> o.iv•, • • t•dl crin or """" 111 -icMtll llHdf'd to , • Wttl O!Ym1>1c lllwd., Los Angt!H. AllOl'MY. 11Slt Ell 111 ho LEGAL t•ltU!e "" canlrlcls wt'll<ll will be "The more speculative in· investors. canfort1I• tCIOU, w1itt11 11 111e •1"" of Lant BHdl. c1111orn11 <Xll47, wioi~h,! 1. • NOTICE 1w1rdtd 1111 suc:cenful bldcle11; ""' ,~ slo · ht ·d B itiii' , OOllfllu of Ille under,1911ed 11'1 Ill m1ftet1 or.~ of but!nn~ ol Ille undtrlt '" o~vllt!M rates 1r1 cont~lntd In wld ve r m1g cons1 er e S, 'Ultirr.ately, peace w 111 .,.r11rn1ne 1o the este!t fJlf .. id oect11t111, 111 tn11tter1 1>trl1lnln1 lo 111e et.Ill• "1 flf6T1c1 o" TRUSTEE'S SAL! soecll!tarlon1 •d~ltd b' 111e Beard, •"'1 Everest and Jennings, Maul bn·ng <OO 000 lo 500 00 young wlthlt1 lour mon1~ ,u.,. 111e 11111 11ubll"' S11ld decedent. w11nin f<K>r monlh1 ""' Nt. P-/C ,,.. are 1s Hsted below: ' • · lion OI !hi• 1111Hce, thl flrH P11bllc1rlon ot !1'111 11Gllce. Oft May 2tlh, !Mt. al 10;00 1 .., it lllt Any cl&Hlllcetlon l\GI 1ntlclp1ted ""' Bros .. Western International. men back into the labor force 011o<1 .-.Prll 15, 196• o1r..i A111U 1s. ltl!t. wesr ~1x1h Streel entrance 10 i11e"or•ni1e billow 111tt11 •h•ll be 1>8ld •• Ille c~rrent Hyatt Coldwell Banker and h th "II t· f · J1me1 M, Lam1on R!thl'd C. RYder Cwnly CCK1r1 Houle, C!h' ot S1nl• An1 wave r1ttt lor Ike 11>1>11cab1e tr~e •nf ' W ere ey WI COn ffiUe aml· ldm lnh!r1lor ol !ht Eslalt t i AclmlN1tr1!or pt Ille E1 .. te ol Counh' ol Otlr•te, $11!t et CtUfornl,i ci.Hlflca!lo" In effttt with. lht 1be--. National Systems," Rosenberg ly formation and a signif'icant lh• 1bove nuroed d«odtnt 111e ebove n..,,.,., d«tdl!n! BANKERS LJl,NO INVESTMENT COM· 11111d Tredel coundlf;. tf 1nv rain ns1'd
added : . " MONT ... w. SMlaLlt:Y, .... Al.l'llEO o. WILLIAMS PANY, • '°"'°'''k>ll flormtrly 111111!.trl below ere not curnnl or '" re~bt1:1 ""' ' COntr1but1on 10 !he economy. 114 W, Dlrm•i<: l f'ttl., 11St Etsl SI~ .-,ntonit Ori"' t"vnlmt11I Comp1ny, I co"'°'~llonl, 11; ltbor lffffmlnts dur!111 Ille blckHllii l!..,..
From 1970 to 1971. the Barlh In addition to stocks tied to """,.,...in, Ctllf##I •1s L-lt•c~. c11il ..... , T"n"' unc1tr Ille """ °' !rust t•ecuttd or eot1tJrvct!on ttme, suc:ll rn-111on1 ~h•ll rch t . . Tel; 121u 7_,, Te!· {Jill 4l ... 1U bV JAME$ EllVEN HUTCHISON ANO be OOllSidtl"td • ~r'I of 1111 below Ill~ resea group expec S Ill· the projected SWingS Of the AllWMY fw Admlllltl,_111' Att.irner l.r .-,dmlllltlrl !Or .'MRV LOU HUTCHISON. llllShllld tnd rll'et. AnY lluttn, well11t, YIUlton. pro-leresl rates will retreat. bous. e-n y the B nh rts Publ lJ/led Or•n9t ceast Oe!IY 111;01, Pubt11htd or1119e co.,t 01nr Pilot. wi11 11111 --corded ,.,,.., l l, IN7 In 11oo11 1110llon 01 o!lltr t1tne1111 1111!1 iw lft •"" .. v om • a expe .-,pr!I 29 ~1111 M•Y ,, n. 10. "" 116·69 A1>rll 19 ind """'v '· 1J, 20, ltH 111 69 ~·~~. P~~~ M 01 Offltlel RKWcls "' dltlon 10 the beiew ll1fed wave 1c11t1 . ..,,.. ing demand will increase and cited two other groups with or1ntt Cout11\1, c1111orn11, 1IYen 10 1ecu~ 11r~ttcr1 m1r ~ empill'ltd 1n conformity
\he government pressures lo II t · 1 t le LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ;n ll\debttdr.«1 In ''"°' Pl T. J Bene, wnh Section 1717.5 111 tr.a Callfornl1 L1bor exce en 1nves men po n· comPenY ol C•llfo•nl1, • corPCrailon now Code. contain inflation will ebb. tial· •AR·1617 llA•·IS4t owned 1nd hfkl by Stitt of ca11101nr•, OY1rl!me 1111!1 be P•kl ,..,. wcr~
"The recently-passed Om· E. · . 1.n the NOTICE TO CREOITO•S NOTICE TO CREDITORS P1t•hllc: ~~lftl>lovfft' Rellrement System Otrformtd In t~cn1 of Ille rteultr d1Y'< mergmg companies sul"E••oR COUl:T OI' THE THE armer., s111e EmPlllYfft' Rt11r1ment work and at the 111e for o.,..r11,... Pl 111t
nibus housing act calls for an computer peripheral equip-'i~~Ecg~NcTAYL1;:~~·:N~~R :~;;E1.ig: c~0r..~:!.:~~ l'Dlt ~;!~·"' ~ac~,:~~'°of ,.~~1i'!°'.S,11~~.1~ a~11~171"':'in be ,11 11o11c11n '"°"'"ire11
average of 2.6 million housing ment and depressed stocks. No. ,._.0., THE couNTr OF. ORANGE •KUre.:t ""'""'· 110tlc1 o1 w11;c11 w11 1n 111e cor1ec1;.,., t111rg•1111111 1grff!N't1t starts annually over the next I h 1 f · 1 d " 1 wvNH ... USE N H1 A-4Ut7 recorded JtNJ•rY 13th, IHt. rn Boal( '*'°· 1PPllc11>1e lo 111e P1rllc11t1r cr1n. n t e compu er I e ' E~tll~ ol PAvL . . E•1~te "' ROSEMARY J. TALERICO. P111e "'· et will Ofllt l•I Recorclo, claH llkl•""' or IVH ol ~ decade, compared with 1.54 Rosenberg cited some firms 0~6~11(ciE is HER EllV GIVEN ,0 "" Dtce"""' Ban•ers L•"" 111YeS1<Mn1 c_n.,. , emoloYed..., 111e 11re1ec1. million last year" Leland pro-. . 11,, 11o e11 ., fCle"r NOTICE 1s HEREBY GllfEN 10 1he corperetlon will sell •• 1>Yblic •uclion 10 11 "'"' bt tn11nC11torv u""" llle Con-, which are strong in other eleC· ~~~11~~· 01 h 'In~' t!~7.:;, 11111~,, the cre<11to1J 01 '"' abovt t11me4 dectdtnl the hlgWt bidder f0< c11~. 11avable 1n trftctor 10 w"°'" • cot11rat1 11 •w1rded jected. tronic fields such as Hewlett i:. ~..e.k,»ns, avrtQuil'ecl 10 rue them. "''' 1 11 person' h•Yine claim' 111lNI the taw1111 m111"Y o1 tht United Ste!"' 11 lhe •nd uPOn 111 5ut.:on1r1don uncllr 1111", ll't r.. \\ th t k · · 11 ' nl 1 1 ln the offict !lid dect<lanl ire re<11utred 10 Ille !~ti"• llmt ol ule, wltl\0111 warr~nh' '' 10 tlllt, oaY nor It•• ll>ln 1tld gener•I 1r1v11llnt 'Vuusequen y, e s OC S 1n Packard, Tecktronics and :;11~h:h:ie'i:'!:-'~v .~~~·111td (our'I. 0, wllh the neu••Arv v<>Uthtrs. Jn""" olllce p0un11on or t11Cumbr1nces, 1~ 111hlre11 r11es ol"" e;.m w•v~ 10·1n wor•'"t11
related durable goods and sav· Xerox F th · I •t 1 tilt wlih 1119 necesMlrr 111 '"' ciertr. o11111 1boYe <!f'lllled court." conveYHt to •nd now 11e1c1 bv H•d Trustee emt!o'rtd !n Ille ttttutton ot 1111 contr1ct, . d I I k ood · or e specLa SI Ua· '' prelfft ""m~ 1 ntd 11 1111 allia to prnent 111em. wllfl ""' l'llt'e'IWrr under ,..1c1 deed l>f lru•I· in 1ncr 1o Ille CAlt•!:NTERS HOUl"ly ••tw
1ngs an oan sectors 00 g lion seeker he recommended ::i~'iii~neY ~"'t ";: gstrot11 EI.a .• 450S vouchers. ,0 '"" lll'>dtnl9ned 11 t111 !>Hice to11ow;111 d~rit>.11 P101>1rty, '111.Hottd 111 C:1'Ptnltr s.n for the long tenn he added ' ,, • .. L. .. Its et his tllorlll'r ROBERT M. RICtl, 5115""" City ot Casi• ~.County ol 0¥1111e. Ttlllt-WW -··•or 6.tl) · • · a look at Data Technology. wi:r:"c!'.~11 B~, s~~~ch 1~ ,: Pl;:: of 8111 Read. c'Yorl'I$, c1111ornl1 t0630. s111e"' c1rttorn11 111owu: MltlwTitM 4.11 Speci!ically, Rosenberg pin· Jn the "depressed" area he ~1 1 Ille u<ld~nlgntd 1,, 111 '"•tiff• w111c11 ;5 the p\a.;e "' bullnen 01 tN Lo111• 111 Tr1c:1 t+o. satt,-. shown Oii Nt!ltr tP....,ma11c1 1.11 ' led th [ t od ls . ' 1 nru C to tl'oe eil•lo ol ... Id dectdotnl Undtf119Md ln 111 rNll!t! Plrlflnlnt ,lo I MIJl1' recordtd In Book 111, PltllH 16,. Fort:ml" 6llc ptr hour fllOl't 1111~ hlQh•~' porn e ores pr UC suggested (ollowtng stocks 0~jh~ n;:r mc:nttn •rttr ,~~ 11,11 1>ublica'. ,~f e•t•!t of seld dectOfl'll, wiltlln ll'tur 11. 11. ''· 20 • ..., n "' Mlsctn .. neavs claullltatian sUPervl1t11, 1 "e e • t group, including Boi s c such a s Santa Fe lnterna· ~on ; 11115 no!l<e. monlhs •lie• the tirH 1111b11c111on of lhlJ ~.·,\'l~rnl~d1 ol Oran"' Counrr. c:R.;';'r''lc nailer.
Cascade, Potlach, Fibreboard tional. f'oremosl. Utah Power Oh!ed AP~~r;; ~9''wyn~ausen no~~~~d AQ111 11, uo EXCEPTING ~" U11dlYldM o"e.ha11 r..tNDLEUM U.YER and some O( the Ut'lderpriced and H"lco E~ecu•rl~ of !I'll' Will ot ~a!vatore John CrllelH ln!ereit 1~ I!! o!I. gas. rnlntr•11 •nd C1r119t, Llnole11m & Soft Tlltr Lever 5,•l
h h 1 • tne abott ntmM dectd enl E•ecutor "Iner hyd,,.•a1""" subflanc:"' l'o'lnt CEMENT MASONS Utilities -SUC as Ula Powcr1--------------· lrDEL It STRDTE E'• ol lht Wiii l1I Ille below I deplh of ~ I~ without the C!'mtnl M1to11, lloe!l119 1nd lr-!lt1t
·and Light and Idaho Po1\ler. LEGAL NOTICE -,ttorhtY." L•W ' ' above ftllll'tll dtefdelll '1~n· 01 'yrtt•• e"''Y ~' •rs.e "lt<I !n It.to lft1Chl111 l>Ofr11or J,JJ Both f th h ~~I wllshl .. Bl'I~ .• Sulit t it, RDIERT M, RICH, 1!1•. = l~oni Pi>elllC M~~I °:'ft': Ctment Ml:ion JourMYmtn J.21
0 e re SC a r C 6AR·1•11 Los ,1,,..,11,, CaWtornil -· !ll.5 B•h Raid, Ottobfr 3o.,1,.; 111 c.r,,:r:7~n, Ir 'iii Pl For1m1n .0C per flout lbe'Vt NOTICE TD c•EDITDllS I r•I• (!\]) 6S~·l•H Cr•re<~. C•"""A'• Milt Olllcltl Record.. ' P tc JourM~""'" rllf, SU,ERIOll COU RT 01' THE A~!1rn1• \tr E•ecutrl~ . Ttl: 17H) 127·1171 lor tn.. P•irPOst of Pl Ing obl'Aatlon ELECfRICtANS STATE OF C.-,Lll'DRNIA FDR Pun1l•neO Or•1111t Ca..,I 011!~ O\k>I. Altorn•1 f~r r A...:"'er r "' 1 Foremtn
M f Ve w THE CDUNTV DI' OR.-,NGE l\prU tf and MiV I, ll, 10, 1tM 81• .. 9 Publl•Md Or1ntt1 Cw•! Cal!~ P ilot,~~~~~. :Z., e':!'!nse°:'~ t:::l~~~e'C!.'':'. JO(lrneym1n Wl~man anpowel. 01· 1et a1· E~l•lt ol co~:· J~"'J~~Al!OS. Otc•·~ LEGAL NOTICE .-.i>rll 15, 17, 7t and Mir'· ,,.. 1G'l·6f ~· .. ~·· .. :· ~~v, ul'cl•• 11\e '•;rr i of uln ~'i."!1;11e:.welder "' LEG L NOTICE et • '" ere1 tlferl!'On 1nd I 6.042.211, In Glezler NOTICE rs HEREBY GIVE N " II\~ ... ,,,, A. VnPtld grlnci1>ol of Ill• nGle lftUrHI bv lllDN WOltKEllS J,,,
'" l-------c7'CO::O-_____ W.!il deed, wllll lntorest t~'•eon from creditofl ol Int lbollt n1mtd dectd~nl NOTICE TD CRl!OllDRS IAR·lSU il,Utll'I l, lffl 11 l" Sllld nohl ind by lew Ornament1 I lr0t1 Wor~n •.1J
T Stab liz t 541 000 lhf' t ll 'iirson1 h1ying cl1lm1 ev•inst !"" SUl'ElltDR CDUltf OF THI': NOTICE TO CllEOITOl:S providfll, Jl:tlnforcln11 lri:in Wor~er 6.10
0 a e a
'
Hlcl d«• en! Irr ro<:1ulrtd lo Ille l~em, llAT E OF CALll'DRHIA FDR SU,ERIOll CDUllT OF THE Oltt<I A1>•lt u , ltl!f. Forttnan '5:' ffr llou': more lhl" hi9M,i
W Ill lht llftt\!•"t 11oucnt<1, In tilt office TME CDUNT'I" OF OltANGE BllNICER S LANO IN VESTMl"Nf clesslllcatlOll s11.,.r11otn1, ol I~~ c~rk or lht lbeve et1l!l\Ht tOUrl, o< Kl. A .. 1'1I STATE OF C.-.LIFOINI.-, FDI: COMPANV 1 car-e!lon LABORERS '
\VASHJNGTON fAP)
Arnerican manpower in Viel·
nam has stabilized al 541 ,000
the pasl three months and
Pentagon officers say the U.S.
troop level probably will never
reach the authorized 549,50().
man ceiling.
Some officers believe Uie
number of U.S. personnel
committed to the war will not
exceed 543,000.
The chief reason for lhl'
leveling off in manpower, they
say, is the progress of the war
as viewed from the Penlagon
-not any presidential direc·
I ive lo hold back on nc\r
deploymenls .
The U.S. command in Vie•-
nam handled the North Viet
namcse spring offensive wC'll
b:ittlefield casualties are drop
ping and the Sou th Vietnasnest'
military force is developin~
under an accelerated trainin~
program, military sot1r·cr<o:
say. .,
As long as lhe situation docs
nol worsen and there appe;;ir!l
to be some progress in the
Paris peace. talks, they !lay the
n1anpower level could ren1nin
where it L' today, aside rrom
minor weekly nuctuwlions due
10 rotation of troops. Between
40.000 and 50.000 re2lacements
11 mOnth now inln Vie am to
relieve those completlJli their
nonnal one-yeur lour or duty
Jn !he war 1.onc.
Offi~ say all major com·
bat units are now In plact in
Vltl.n3ln,
The peak U.S, strength
came in mid-February when
the troop level hit 542,5()0. The
Je\•fl immediately dipped and
hu remained bclo"' $42.000
since then. Jt even dropped lo
539.~ In March.
The S49,SOO-man ctiHng was
authorized by Ptffldont Lyn-
don 8. JQhnson In 1968 after
lhe North Vi~tnamese began
Uielr February TtC ofltnsive
which shoo\ a rather com•
plllCf!!Jt attitudo coocem!ng
~~VC~~~~n:o ::;:m..:.11e":~",11~n..,1 ~e0•,,1,", E'lllt of FLORENCE ELIZABElli THE C0~~:~ .• ~HORANG£ /lo•morly '11~n\tr1 Jnv•~tm~nt L•borer•. o~n•111 or ton>lrud\an 4 14! "' '"' SHUPP o ti~ ComP•nY. 1 Cor1>0r1t;o"J Tl'\lt~ee Op•ta!o!" ""~ tellderJ o' DftfUmll!C .!Ind lhe war's progress. or M~ ,Alhlrney, G~ree T. POP<>t .. J7n NOTICE"~s HEREBY GtUEN to"" E!!ale of W>HTFIELO A, HAVDOH, Sy 11•ralcl G••llflCI tl«.•r•C too .. ,vlb••llon m1cfll11C• an' K8ttlli Avenue, Suite 20<!, L~ Al1m1!0•, ~ bo 1 td dfctO•lll Ott~~ltcl. Snn,or Vitt Preside~! •lmila': mtc~an1c•I 10011 Mii HPl•a!ely The Pentagon's n1ainlenance ca111ornla. whkh Is "'' 1111c' "' t>uslness creditors al 1 eh• 1 v• ,1~1:, ,911n•• in1 NOTIC E 1s HE~E8'f GIVEN 10 1~· sos 1u 45 tle.1•llitd ~ertl" f us
ol lht uncllrsltfltd In tll melltr\ pe r· lhAI all periOr1• •~r"!u'red 10 Ille tnem c•Htllo.rt or tht el><lvt named cletedeM PUbll~htd Or•nqe Coeit Oail1 Pilo!, A1PhRll r••~• ~n~ lrrm•r <.Jst of a Vietnam Force Level !einlnt to 1"' '''Ate cl s1ld dee~n!, •Aid dttf(lent ~~ v~u<"..." In the olflt~ the! all l>f-f10f\S havl"!I claitn' •~eln!I !tie ,t,pr!I ,1, 19 •nd MIY ~. !9&9 m.u Cc"<•e~ cu.-r • lrnn.,vlo"' mtmbr•nt wllhl" 11>11~ mon1~1 •!!tr the llrs-1 1>11blicA• wl!h ttie, "•IC~•lh abov• fntitlt<I court, or '"Id !IKecienl 1rp reouired lo file lllem. u1d form clle• f J.!.I 6 000 or 7 000 men short of the !lpn ol 1~11 no11c1 °1 '"" c !r 0 • 1 m tlk w1rt11 c1 · , • 0 led A 11 15 ·1™ 10 o•es~t 1~11.., wllh !hf MCll•lrv with 1ne nec'u~ry v~u<ne.--., n • o t LEGAL NOTICE ow t•l'H"t •.l•i d 'ling y be ' 1 "'MarPiO 0. Murvllle Sto;;;d• vcvc:htrs. to the linder1klned fl 11• tru<I ot '"' c~k of ll>c! Ibo~! frrtill fi:I court, o• "' .. ''""'"~ 1.•'' approve eel ma !n Admlni..trl1P, of 11v ,.-.... n ~eoertnient, SECURllY PACIFIC NA· to ort1~! lntm, wolh 1ne 11Ktu1ry SUPERIOtt COUl:T DI' THE Fortmfn lOc pe_r hocJr "'~~ !hfn 111tl'lt'll
t
\eherpNre.,..1eodnbaydsmom,·ne1·starsatieovnidewn•·'1e GED•GE T'M,o•,.~'E' ~::td i.: ,, ~~~:~;,d. B~~~n~~ c~1;~rn11co1:~~ ~rucn~:; •o !~~or~~~rsio~':o"~d~· oi~r Fo11s~~~E c~~HC:vJ..4:~'b~':NGE ~f~~!'~T'1~~11 E~~;~vE~1 s • ~ I, AtlonMy II .Ltw ' . ~·l'llch I~ !ht pletf ot t1Utlt1~1 ct lht ROCHES l ER. Il l Weil Li H1br1 Blvd. ND A 6t•N G
'1'2 Ktlllll A"l"Ut Sulit '6< "ndenltllfi:I in 111 mal1tn ..arlRlnlno lo LR Habra, CillforniA 906J1, which i.. lht NOTICE DF •A.L•,' OF I EIL AND c;'o~a 7 •.~I as has been widely reporled Lo' Al•mUos, ca11i*rn11 ' 1:1t "'"'" of s•ld dftod•~!. wl!hl11 "'"'Piece"' bu$1nen "' me ufld•r•l~l\fcl In •II l'ERSONAI. ,.-RDl'IRTV AT l'RIVAfE r.'OUP 1 ~ 1~ Ttl· ,7141 H .. tJSI •.•onthl af!ef lhe 11'11 1>ubllcall~n DI !hi' mal!ers ntr•~lnlnt to the el!a!e ol •~·n S"'LE AS U IT Y ~roua i .S '1 begin withdrawing American .-,11~rner 1or .-.dmllllllrll•r •Olk•. litcotc1~111, wllll!n lour month••"•' t~e MINtSTRATORAPROIN"'TE C~DE 5~~:1 ~;0110 ,s <•f p bll 11-~ o ,. 1 0 1 ,11•1 011~ M•Y '· 1~9 tlr•I "''hll<Al'on of '"'• notice. ' ouo .Sn units from Vietnam this year. ~ '·~ •lnff ... o~, ., y SECVRITV PACIF IC NATIOtl-.L Ol!fcl ..... 11 11 lK• TIOH JJ•.• Fortma~ l5c l>':r l'oollt "'°" '"'" h1 p""51 """1 79 •nd May'' 13· 10. l"f ~o P.ANIC, 1 Harlonil e 1 n t +"a Miry "'~~ Hardan In tne Matter OI Ille Esl•:e or cl•11ll1tA1ion 3Ul>ervhed, Secretary of Defense ~1elvin '"°''a1ian Admlnl•tra!rlx MARJORIE o. POE. 0ece1lf'll l"AtNTERS LEGAL NOT ICE j ev· J Ff•d c 1,,.p1M:H. cl th• E•lttr of 1ne NOTICE 1$ ~E R~1>Y U!VE N thM J C. R1911!1r bru,~ N lntcc R. Laird said Saturd:iy that J 11,••'l!jn1 '"''' omcer r»ov• n.,...._,. <'•r""'•n• Pot. as 1dmlnlllrttor of !ht ttt•t~ •Ill! S•nd1>11,tpr l'·UUI £••tu!<>• ol Ill" wnl GEORGE W. ROCHESTEI:, 1"11. '""' will l""l•e<I OI M11lorle 0, Pot, Jour11tYm1n Soc1v
. .,
' ' ' ,, troop withdrawals (."QUlcl begin CEltTll'ICATE 01' IUSINESS ol Int •l!Ov~ ,..mf(I det•d·~t 111 w. LI H1br1 l;I••. drcrn<fd, will 1ell ,, 1>rlw1:e µlet, to !ht "l'E Tl:ADES FICTITIOUS NAME TAYLOR & IAltKE• I.I H•h•>, C.,1;1·-;1 .otll "lnl!t31 ~nit lle1t b;d.,..r, Und•• the termJ Plumbtri lnCI lilltrs .S l'I if any one of three basic U.S Tl•• un<1rrslll11td ao cerll!Y tr..v ~·e 111 sou111 s~•lM st.. Ttl; 111•1 ,,, .. ,n '"" co...,lllon• hertln1t1er meorlonect, Ind Genertl For""•" · XI'• •boYt pro;.1
d. . tonduCTi,,g 1 t>u1lnH1 11 678 West 19th, suni 11~1 A!!grn1y f1>r Aom1111,1r11rb subltc! 10. conli•m1tlon ~Y Int Su~•lor JCK1rnevm1n ••T~. CO~nS .are me1 : Ccsll Me.a, Calltort1!8, 11nd!r Ille lit· t.~' An1111>;, (•Ill. ttfl, • Pub!l1~ed Oranve Co11t DflTr Pll(lt, Court, Wlihln !he 11,,.e ~llc~d bv law, a! For•rn1n • 10-.. AboVt i ron Joyrn~)m•t -Hanoi· agr-s lo a m"I".' I 1;11ou9 firm Mm" ol l9!n -ST. CAR WASH Tel : U1ll ,,~.1111 "orlt 22. 19 •~d Moiy 1. 13, 1969 713·'' 1"9 olllc" of H...,.w!lt, Hurw111 1nd rtlt, = " "I •nd tnu ••Id ti•m 1, compesed Pl the Alt.,n•v• ltt EJecuter . Remer. lltornon tor ukl ldm ini11raior Ul!ll!Y Olo•ll"' JO\t1neyman
Pullout of A. merican and North lollnwint ... r ... 11•. whost n1mes In !vii Publl1htd Or1"9• Co••1 Oto!Y ,',','~1,· LEGAL NOTICE II •lG -J7.'\d Slrtet. Ntw"""I ll••tl'I. Ut.m. P!<>tllne Forem1~
Vietnamese troops. Joll11 •fld Moirttl• Pt"1'CY. 1001 c....,. aAll·llfi 111<1 e•l•tt lh8! th• e11a1e of M••lorit JCK1rMvm1n
-The S.o u I h Vietnan1cs1• m~ft Rcr .. Ne..._, B••cn. C11ifornl1 LEGAL NOT ICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS D, Poe, OKe•s.ed, "''' bv ~rllion DI ~~~e~":ntm•n
"' "' '" \ .• I
5.71 I
And 1>1•<•• or rntdence .,., •~ lolloWI: M•v '• IJ, 20, 11, lf6' '" C•lltornl~, 111 !fie rltM. title ancr lnlert11 IOOfERS
h O•!l!'d Aor;I 10, 1... tU,ERIDR COURT DI' THI! law o• Oll'terwl•e, fCQUirtd othe• 11111" OI' SNEET MElAr.. WORKERS :lrlllY is Upgr<1ded to l C poinl Jo hn Purn E1tlfil N•. U,U).-DJ SfloTE Of CALIFORNll FDl'l Ill lddltlon TO th.i ol Ille d~--~I '1 tht Sherr Mell! W rk r 0 II "· •t I k · f ll'~•ttl• P~~•c• NOTICE TD CRED1l0RS ORAN E time l>f lier Mllh. lft •nd 10 "''"' (trtA:n H ,1" 1 1° " \\'11<_.r(' 1 can a '(' over lll:lJOr ST ... lE OF CALIFOlltHA I DI' &ULK Ttl ... NSFER AND 1NTl:NT!DN TNE co~~T! .. ~~I • 0 •HI '"d .... ~., prOPfrh'. sllu11M fn !hf F:re:n:" ~t~~-:· ibOYt Joornerl!'lln r:1;1
' 11nba1 responsibili ties COUNTY OF OltAHGE 1 I' fD E)(E[UTE SECURITV INTEREtT E•l•t• 111 ... LEx°ANOER STAlll( RUM· C!lv et/ Hunllltq~" tleach, Ccunh' er fE ... MSTl!ltS .
-The level of fightin g by O" Apr il IO, 1'1cl,, ~!111, mr, • No111~ IGREEMENT MEL. Oec1•111C1. ~:·.~~'"·~'.111 pf Cll•!ornlt, end d<('~rlbe<I For1m1n J5< 1>tt l\Ollr mare t111n hight~!
h Public In .!Ind !or 11ld S!a"', Hr1on1J!v llec. 1111-4111 U.C.(.) NOTICE 1$ HEii.EBY GIV EN lo I~, l..': ' Clflllflcatlon ~uotrvlsfi:I th(' Vi('! Cong and the Nori 1oea11fi:1 ./olln ~e•tcr •nd Mt•celf Notice 1, htreby glv9" IO crtdllor1 al creo llofl ot 11\41 ibott named dcte..itn1 , 11 "Jr'°"'1 i'011ii•lY lntluft~s Oriv•rs o1 dvm1> l•~clt~, l~H 1111~ 1
Vietnamese in Soulh Vietnam Pearcy •-n IO ..,. tD be •t.t "''"'n1 111t wllhln n•med P••llf1 ,,.., • bulk th•! 111 1>tr10119 ~1v1.,. c111m. •••ln,1 '"" ~~: ;,1 ,,;."':'·net'' ·~•r;tor· was.her, ya1. 1.n -·• namn "' whc•\bfi:I lo 1ht Wllflln !rtRllt• •nd Ille t11ecull011 of • 1tcurly ,..Id dtetdlnl In! r"'1.llrfi:I IO flit ll'lem. not' '1 ' 1 rt •1 ~11.''· Orl¥ers of du""" lrud<~ J ydt, but ~ll is redUeed SUbslantia\ly. IMll'\lmllll Ind t<lo::-leclted lhrr t•· lnterttl It'""""" lrt lbOUI la bt m• wilt\ ll>e ntctl,._n' 'tO\tdlen. 111 Ille olllte I 1'I pr'(IOe y '1 •IH II 1'11•1 IMn t l'dl ._I.I ecuttd ll'>f wme 1 ........, 11er11.,.l!ff ClllCrlb--,_ "'"' _..., verntss L•"'· Hu11Ut111to11 Bttch · Officers already are ex· !OFFICIAL SEA.LI., "" ""'°"' 11•~·' ot 111t clert ol lhe • ~.., c ....... "' c111fono11, 11111 ., ....,, ••rtku.,riY OrlYtrs of trll(.lt•. ltt•I ••Yltoed c•1>1tlh
td to 1>rnen1 t"""· wltll ""' lltCHJlrY d~rtbtd 11 toliow.· ltH 1t1111 6 •-•.U prts.sing satisfaction al the IMry K. nrv Thi ,, • ..,. •nd tou1lnt11 •lldrtt~ °' 111t vouct>tn 1o 1119 vndtnklned 1t lf!e otliY L 1 JOG. T t · Olivto "' tf'V(:U 1tt111 ,. • .,1o1c1 ci1>1c1t1 f th So tl\ VI t Nola"' l'ubOt·C1rltornl1 \..,t,"Gtd t,.Mfe•or 1ncr !nltrdtd HCll'ed al Mi ,fio,llfY, ,ATRICIC I:. DUGGAN, rec!raeo1 1~ fl;: 17~1~ 1' :r m11 bf!Wft" , ind io I0(1-• 1 N
progress O e U e -~~~Pl::-Ofl~ 111 l>oll!Y lftr e, L Ell. 1'01 L f !tie UCS Et11 Ulfl Slrfff, Senll Alll. (II~ 50 ot Mllcella-.s 'i.111:~R~o::,•i:: Otl'ftrl al Tran!ll·mhl lruckt u~· I narncse force's training efforl • M c jn CHAR LES " M • 1 '" · 1ornl• "101, ..,,;c,11 11 ''"' 11!ac1 o1 bud· Or11'>9e CCKin!y c11110,,.11 v•rd' s.Dt
In one major program N: ... ;"!'.'7,;;"" E••1•'1 ~~~:.!:·~~ c:!'::~: •ddreo•• of ...... of Int uncler1lol>ed ln .•• , m1111r' SllM!ttl "'' ~Vrttnl 111<~. c~ven•nls, Orlvfr5 ol l r1 ... sll·ml1< 1ruclt1 l Vd1 O! ~""'th Vo"etnnmese ltno'ts •re Pub11"1td Or•n9f' Coest Dilly Pl191, tllt Intended tr1n1ttrwu •1111 !nttl'lded "'rl1lt1ln1 lo •lie tll•lt al 11~ clt'~tdt"', condltlom. rn.1rlcil011S, 1ue•~•tlons. m~re .1.21
.;JUI.I ... Atrll ti, n. ,,, lllCI M1y II. 1Mt ifll.lf dtll!Ots ,,.,, with!" iour monthl •fler '"' 11'11 Ill/... rl~hll. ritM• of Wfy, tllfmtnh '"d ti<• ~~LES:ETTl:lt !.11 !ICheduled to take over the bal· EAIC .. WING Incl JAME$ M, Mt-llcllloll ol !hi' notice. 1111nt en<llmbrMICIS Ill Tl'CO•cl. , It "'' 1--··· ••.• -LEGAL NOTICE ""''¥' fll • fist El Mocllftl Nt_.i 0.lfd ADrll \I, lf6t T,,. """' •nd condll10fl0. el II..-..,11 ortman • '"' 1n.11 11 "" .... tie gear held by 2 , 5 U 0 Be.U. cin~• ' c11111tr Mlndelbl\1111 trt: etsll 111 l•wf\11 monn of lllfc Unllfd ""' •llcln sefll!'I. A en. an• allnwlng d•••· Tiii• .!he ~ prOPfr!V -II-Admlnlstrttor Slllts "' lo.metka. Ttll Cl~) l>t•Cent oi llLI Hll.•E• m ·' ' •A•·1m 11trt1a 1, dncrtbed lft ..,_11 .,: ot Ille Elt•lt of ~ 1111 •-' bl' " 1ctt1mJ11nr Ille 111,1, Tlle 1et1tr htlllef tivatlon of the U.S. unit:i and NOTICI: TO Cll:EOITORI Mllt$11.41 u11111l 11. rMN:hlnclhe. lbovl ·-dlucl ... I ~n!IJ 1119 btllnct lo bl ••lcl Ml COii-Dt!td APrlt 2', lfft.
I r th SUl"IERIO• cou•r Dfl TMe toulpn!t<ll •lld Ofll IALI! llEER PAT•ICK I! OU'iiClN • •lrm•llol'I of _,. .. bY "'' c1111rl. T'""'• '".._.,.Mt,. Unified reass gnment 0 e in· ITATt Ofl CAr..IP-OaflllA ,-o• LICENSE . Ind ·~ lot•ltd t i TME IMS • 11111 's1r I • E-re1111. 0Ptr1u,.. •nd m1lnlt!t1ll\(f Ill• Schoel 01,1r1t:I al
dividu:illl. TH• co~~.fx"o..,11 ORANGE GOLOEN AMCHOll:. 1tOI LI., .. ~. 111111 A111, (•flt:.."'" r>tnlt'.I, oi '!'.! .~•mllll"S IHI l11tu•1n(e It ~·~ ... ~ ... II~. Clllfo1nl1 • Ntwll(WI 111'1(11, C.ll«irnl1, Ttl· 0141 Mt..U'' "~ I ' •v ,.,. ..,rcn•,er lhl!I lit ato-' 1ryey The firsl rnove In thl!:I pro-1!1111e "' MINERv.-. Nt. JOHNSON, lh•I 1._ lll•et wlllr• '"' 11eriln Al~ 11 11te.:t •• ot •M ~" al confirmation 01 Purcna1l1111 Ati!ftt · J A .1 l'I 0.U.Htl. !bed 11Ulk In "' llld tlon ol "'"' r Alinl!lltlr•tor "'!I Tiii ex1'"ln1t1on ot tlllt ttcolitl11<1:1 MS.HOG gram came n pri w en li NOTICE 1! Hl!lEtlY GIVl!N " ""=~llY lll""KI ,:...,,,."' ~l<~':.nc11i11 i: ...:-:~1r;; Of• .... Colt! DtllJ •llot, et m,, .. ..,.llt. Ind ,,,., llfle ' '""'"'~ °"'" MIY !ft, Ito, al ~~ao "·'" U.S. artillecy batl.9.Uon handtd erwrror. of llW •bow MmiHI dtc"""'' ... COftlll-lld " ,, '"' tflltt ol ' .• ,, Ind Mir'· lM TIJ'4J POlky "''" OI II Ille -ol Ill• PUbll\lltd 0••1111• Co•'' 0111 Piiot.
over its weapons to a South 11111 •II --ll1w111t c111nu "'r"'' ""' Ot.-m •-c-•., .»n w ''n "'''" Mrll "· '"" ,,..,., " 1'6t m.., ... lcl clt<'Nfnl lrt r-irN to fill llllm. SI LOI ~ (tl!!Otlllt' tftOld,, .ft Ot Att bids llld ol!f'1 ""'51 bt In W!'lllMlpimmmmmmmmmmmm;;, Vietnamese unit. w•ltl "" 11Ktu1•r ¥0\IChars. 111 Ille "'1ce .~ M•'f 1,., "" The '""' will be rtUt>teC1 11 t11e olllct 11111
1... Ill lllo! cilfli: et 1111 lbo>rf '""'lttd c:wrf. Ot S. 1,, 1$ i. llNiwii 111 u9' W lln. Ille li-lti. Hunoltf ind tt_,., •I• Other steps. experted lo uc: 10 •-• hf!\, w1111 1111 _,,.,., ,0,.IM,,,. lddfl!Oftlt ~1-,..~ '"" 110r~ ""' '"d ec1'"111r11111or. ,, 'lO _
' P.tt.m are '"'"• tak•" lo _,...,., 1e 1119 ""'""1.....-'1 1111 Ol'l'IC• 1<10rtun v..e ., 1•kl ..,.11n w11111~ "" Or"onge C••st's nM '""'· ,.,.._ .. ,,1<11, c.r11om11, •f • ' Ul!l"'& "'' 111 1111 '"°""""· Mlld!IH lo Hitt, '1J '"""...,.. 1-.t Oltl trtt "'° 1111"11,... •It.• !hf 11'11 wuhllut;c" t'f 11\JI lel the South Vietnamese ::is-w,,, Ith s''"'· su11w :rn. ""'' A11•· BY s•ld '"""°"" tr-''""' '-J C I -ia ...., btlltte"" ,..,~~11111"' 11111 ••It
Sum. more Or th. War burden Callftw'ftlt t11fl1, wllltfl 11 !flt Plitt ol NOHt IVIOSt Omp ete Tiw r\thl II restrvfll lo ••Itel lhr Intl
111111""' of 1111 unc11rs1tntct 111 •" '"'".,' e .. ,. 1,.,flleltd M1tori · i n lllh. They Involve Jetting South 11t1111111111 "'"" u111e ., Hiii ~toK!fllt. vNONl ' PRINTING o.-.Teo: .-.1!1'11 11. '"'· wl!hlll four "'IOftl ... tnf' ~ 11,..1 PllllllU-DtlRI: ""°If."*' J. C. Pot V"tnamese troop?S movt:! into 111111ot11111 no11ct. CHAR T. aALMI!~ 11,*"1"1'tt''°'"'
an area to f(ee U.S. units for o.tto1 .... 11 n. "* E•tc wtJt1G SERVI.CE iiw u111• w1111 Ille win C"'1tlt" tt. ""'""" JAMft"M. MtVAT -'-•Pd If Mll'lorlt 0. ~. combal elsewhere. Adrll1111t1r1tw. tT1o o1 ""wut Jtn« ~
for example, lwo ·-·th " "" lbOW: "'1fftH Olletd ... I ~Wltd °''""' G011! Dtlty 1'1111. NUl'WIT'l. MUlt.,lll Mil ll:INllll "'"' MITtHUL a ltA•T M•r 1. 1,., Ml~ 1 ''' J-&. Mlc0...11j1 Vietname34!: regimt'nls 1vere AH_.,. •1 L.•• • I .-."-'"' "" •ffll111i.1,.,., "' '*· .,. ",...,.•"'"tu. GI G T II ;tq••wi1;••t•••>1et1 ''" -'1"~ "''"'• 8.S.~i,ll:Oed tO lhf! dtmfhlariz~ h81(1 ..... , C•tlflnlll f'lltl oomy us e S 1"t ··-·-•I• II Nt~ lt•lfl. C1IN0t!!ll 'flMI ~l\nO\ allow'"" two u s l11, 1110 t»-fln l•h ""' ,,J.nn ...... ~. ..~ ' •. AnerMYt '-' ...,.,"lllrltw. CTA As s Pull%'htd °''~·· C:llOlri 01!!~ l'llfll Mnrlnfi regiments lo move to Publll-or ..... C011I O••tr •ll<!I You ee it -Phone 64'2--4321 MIY t, Jo .... " .... ''· 11. ll, u ·~ 1t' AMlber operation. •n,. "'rd M•~ 1. u, 10. ,,.. t?1.., • 1~. "· ·1m · Mttt
1
•
PUT CASH IN
YOUR POCKET •
Stoll Utm'8ntrd \lMTI!'
with a DAILY PILOT
C111S&llicd Ad.
,HONE
642-5678 ..
'
.__.._ .... ..__ ____________ ~~-------------_______ ·_::._:::__..:___~-------
•
,
LEGAL NOTICE ·-c:c•Tll'ICATI Of' •UllNl"ll f'!CT!TIOUS HAMI
TM 11-rt~ 0-. c-rttt\I lie i. CM-
udlflf, • ~ et 17S w. 11'th 11 ..
ostt ~. Callklrnlt. "'*' Iha llt> ,i.0111 firm .,,..,. Ill CALIFOllNtA CO.
nc1 MW ~ fl,.., II cOlftNMO of Ille
llOwfM PWIO!lo wi-....... \fl 11111 Ind
"'• of rulclrnU It fl lelll!wl~ llglioef1 Lllf'A 1006 E,.,.i.nci s• .. Hu11·
tlnvlon 8-.c:fl, CtHI,
Dtlfll AIH'U 19, 1Mt
Robert LQIVI
t,t..TE OF CALIFOR~IA
OUNTV OF Q,llANOI! •
On Apr!I 21, IMf, btlort ,,.,., o Nol•.V
uDll( ln •nd 1111' WICI 51•1•. ~•t0111llr
ppc1rtd 1'.GMrt Loh/I, llnO"llln to mt !Cl boi ~• ~rJ.On wllq1• ntme Is w~1erlbf<I 10
nt wllf!Jn ln1!rum1111t tnd 1CllJ>Owledgl!(I
• ·~oculld tht umt. on1c111 5":111 Je~~ l. J()b1I
NaltrY Pul>llt. c1111ornl1
Pr!nclpal Ofllce. In
O•anK Caunly
Mr Cornmlu lQJI !,;1.otrrs
March 2, lti'l
l'u!lllllh~ Ortnvt C0.11· Dal"" Plkll,
prol tt t lld Mir .. ll. 20, Ifft II-
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI! TO CllEOIT0115
SU,1!1.IOR COUllT OF THE
STATI! op; CALll'Oll:NI ... l'tll
THI COUHTY OF OllAHOI!
Nt. A..UU
EV.le of t'IEA8ERT MATHIEU. SR ,
Oect•~· NOTICE IS 1-iEllEIY GIVEN 1'0 IM
rtfO!lllfl rA Ille lbOVI iwo,.,....;t clfcMlet!I
tnit 111 ~ l'Mlvln11 cl1lmi •g1lral tht ,.,111 d~edt'nl 1r1 reciulrtd hi Ille 1111'1'1, ,.·1111 trll ~rr vou<::Mn, In tht otlke
~' the cier~ cf IM 1bove tnllllt'd tou•t. or
IO P<eHnl Thim. wlrn tilt ""'"'rv •<1\1<'.hff" IO Thi undenl9Md 11 the oUlte
1, Allen Kll..,et111tnlth, Attorr.e'v 11 Law,
1/191 114!1ch 8cUlev1rd, Hvntlngton Beec:h,
c*n1ornl1 """· w!lkl'I 11 !ht place ol l>us!ntU ol the u(Kkr1lgnf0 In 111 milters
ner11lnl1>11 to !he tittle ot 11ld dece~n!,
,,.;1nln IOI.If month• 111er lh1 llr1! J>Ybllti·
i..;n of th!• notice.
0.!lfll APrll 77, 19fit Herber! Ml!hieu, Jr.
E•KUIO<' ol I ... Wiii of
the 1DOv1 n1m1d dec..i•nl
ILLEN KLINQE NSMITN
111'1 B11ch BNt."rlll l'unllnfton B11d1. Cl(llf. t2._.I
leltpllollf: 170) IM7-U41
•MorntJ IOI E1ecu1er PuDO•~ Or•nflf Co.11• o~.1, p,1a•.
AorlJ U, 2' 1r>d M11 I, ll. 19'9 7JU9
LEGAL NOTICE
P-141tt
CEllTll'ICATE 01< OISCONTINUJtiNCE
01' us• ANO/Oil AIJtiNDONMENT OF
FICTITIOUS NolME lHE UNDERSIGNEO Mrelrtl arlllv !~al. 'effecllve Ju,11 ~. 1961 BlllLCO, INC. ~ Ctlllomll rorP. Cff~ lo do Mines.• ,.,neer 1111 tlcUllow •lrm r.eiM ot
SIZZL ER STEJtiK HOUSE Ne. 71 •' m
E••t 11th Slrffl, Cost1 Mttl. C1lllol'nle, v.~·<'l buslnttt w1s camPOi.><I ol lllt
foilowlnt eor....,.atlon """°"' narrw. In lull ~oa p\•ce of bu11ntts i re It tot~. IP.
'"''' Brileo, tn<.. 13.14 SVl""'" Lint. N•"'PIJl"I Beech, C•l!lornll , certlllc1!t for lran$1t!lon of bllslMU
'<l<lt• the •bOYt l1dlTHlUt n1m ... Ir.cl ••. t divll ol publlc1tlon lharfltt. ire o~ Ille
'" rn. olllce ol tht Countv Clt•k of
0•1n9e CountJ, under TM P•<>v•tion• ot ~~ction 14'16 of lht C1lllornll Civil Cooe. 01ted thh 10th dlJ of Aprl!, lff'.
BRILCO, INC, By : Wllll1m M. Sltw1r1.
Pr .. •<'~~1 ~. l~E AOJlilR, Jlillorn1y
11~1 v111tcllU Or!•• ~vl!e llf • "''"'"°" e11ch, c111torni1 Publlih~ Orang<' Co11! Oally l>lkl l. A~ril JS, 72, 2' end M1Y 6, lHf 707·6•
LEGAL NOTICE
p.Jft1'
(£1lTIFtCATE OF-I USIHESS
l'ICTITIOUS NAME
Th• undertlgnl'd OOH cenll• ht Is con·
ducllflll 1 buslnest 1t 47• E. Hlh SI., Suioe
l'tlll. Co1t1 Mt Y. Call!ornl1, ul'ldtr Ille
r.ctilious llrm name ol MAYo\N TOURS
"ND EXPE01110H5 ind the! H lcl tlrm It rom~ (rl TM loHowlnfl prr.en. whcet
r,•me In lull end pllte of r••~nce Is I >
lollo>i".'~~IS JAMES NJtiCKOS, llSI Min.,
s1 , co.ii ,,.,,,.
D1\tjl April 11, 19'9
LOUIS J. NltkO'I
<!ATE Of CA.LtFORNIJli ) COUNTY OF ORANGE I u : On April 11, lt6t, ~rt mt, • Nol~f'I
Public In incl tor s•kl Stitt, Hr-•1"
•oPe•red Louh J1m'1 Nttk09 kncwn
lo mt to ~ the "''°" w!loM n~me Is <ub1trlbecl lo the wl!hin ln1t•ument ,incl ~r;knowltcl9~ lie executed the 11me.
IDFFICIAL SEJtiL)
. M~f'Y K. mnf'I Nohrv Publlc.C1lllornl1
Prlncloel Office In O•ange Countv M1 Comml11ion Explrtl
Nov. ''· 19n l'ubllill~ Or1ngt Co~1t Oal!Y Pilol,
,1.artl 11, ~ Ind MIV f . 13, 196' 17l'49
LEGAL NOTICE
P·ll1 ..
CERT"ICollE OF 9 U5UU!SS
FICTITIOUS HAMI!.
Tne t1ncl1r1lg~ OOI!• ct<litv hf Is con·
·Utij"ll ~ bl.nlr>US ., lCJ .... M1in SI .. Hun-
"!lfon Belch. C1l!fornl1. und-er tlle llc-
!lou• firm n1me ol 1-!AlF MOON CJtiN·
Y BROl(EAJtiGE 1t>d th1! s.akl llrm I' omPO\td of !ht lo\io>,.Jnv Hr1on. whoo~
•n•e In lull 1,.0 pl1« ol rnloence Is 11
cl/o,..•· • Fr,int lln Trov '1ogrrs. 121 Jltll SI ..
lltWPOrl Bt1cn, C11Uornl1.
O~tfO April 11, n~•
. Fr,l'llr. T, lloqtrs
TATE OF CJtiLIFORN!A I
OUNT'f OF ORJ.NGE ) IS
On Apr\I lf, 1'69, bll!ort me, ~ No!~•'f'
ubllt In 1nd for Slid S!ott, PlftonlllY
r><>ttrea Fr1nklln Trov R09•11 ~noWfl lo ~ lo bt lllf ...,.en wh01t nftme ls
,,b,tl'lbed to lh• WllMn !nstrum,~I incl
<~now!ed9td hf exttll!Od int 11me.
OF FICIAL SEALI
Je•n L. Jotnl No!1ry Publlc·C1!1Torn;1
r1lncl1111 Olllc1 I~
Dr~ntt C011n1Y Mv Commis•lon l:x11lres
M1nh 1, 19n "ubl1'h~<I Or111<1e (0811 DtllJ Pilot. n .. 1 22. n 1nd MIV •• I), 1t 69 7~~9
LEGAL NOTICE
BJtilt·UH t(0T1CE TO CR EDITORS
SUl'RRIOR COURT OF THI;
SlATI! OF (,t..Lll'OllHIJti l'Olt
l HE COUNTY 01' OltANGE
Nt. Jli•t21H
E~t&1~ o1 JACK GILBERT, DKNH'd.
'IOTtCE 15 HE REBY GIVEN to !M
"1llftlr1 ol t'l>I above Mmed clecedtnl
al 111 per11111'll ti.vlnt clllm' •tt!Mt """
"O Oe<tdtnl 1rt rec1ulrf'd to file lllfln,
lh !ht nec:nHrv voutl'le"' In t'l>I Gfflct lh• clPrt ol TM 1bow. t~l!llfO court.
ro present '"""· wl!l'I 1111 lllCfS.Sdn' _ tl'ler,. It! lhe ~r1lgnf0 11 tl'le OHite
htt tttornl'f', ROIEllT H RICH. SllS
•II llNd. (~P•ns. C~lllornlt t'OUO. ~l(fo \1 IM pl•~ cf buslMH of tht
dtrtltl'td tn 111 m1tter1 llf!'lllrll"' It! • ettlle ol' •tld c!KfMnt, wHll!n tvur
onttts ''"'' "'' tin! p\tl>llt1t1on of 111;1 lie•. Otlfd Apr;I 11. 1"9 Dttoru Jtillt~
Jtictmln!1!11trl•
ol !he E1111t ol lht
....... r.emMI o.ctllf~t
OlllllT H, lllCH, IEI~.
lJ Btll'lllo.d
••r••· c1111on1l1 _,.
1: 1710 1'7·111'1
!IOI .... hr Admlnlttr1trl1 PubUll'll'd Or1J\9e (Ot t! OtllV r uo1
r1I IS, ~ tt t rod MtY •• lffl 1!$411
LEGAL NOT ICE
•AR·IJ»
NOTICI. TO Cltl!OITORS
tUPl!RIOR COURT 01< THE
STAT5 OF CN..ll<OJINIJ!i 1'011.
TH• COUMTY Ofl ORAHGI
HI. Jti•HH r.,.,. of NATt(JtiHJtiEL WU.LARO
LKEll, "'' 1f1thll\lll W. Wil~H,
ttlle'G. jOflCE n HEllE8Y GIVE.H lo .,,.
tars': c1 ,.... aboft ......eo dKIMt'ol
. ! •" rHf~t n.""" tltl!M -!Mt 11'11 cl lll~tt6tftl i re r_,lrOICI 1'0 1111 llltm•
!'I 1W l'f'CPft&"" voucl'lfl"9, In lhfo effitf n.. <11111. ti lhe ·-""'!ti.ct ~'· 01' pr~)#nl t!wm, wlll'I llM ...c: ... pry
lltll, 'O "'-umt-'!'tltll"d II t /O VNG, PlttMN[ll it.NO HEWS. iu
ti Tl!l•I itrf'fl. -.n11 -· C1lll~u.,,ll
01, wl'lkl'I 11 n. IMP ol llullM11 01
-... lltnM \ti 1H mltltf'f Mf111"'
,, "'' f'ITU" ot .. 111 dt't""""' "'"''" • mor111, 1lltf" "'-l••Jf 11<1fllk1I~
th!~ "'°"''· •llRrAPITTTI,~
Vk kl II, \holQtt
•dmin11111tt •• of !fie Efl•lt of !I'll
.. ~ '1•mtd dr<tl!~'71
u "o, flllNNlll JtiNO "IWS Wt\! Tl!lrd llrffl
r• .1.n1, c 1111..,..1• "17tT
~ '"'l to~ ... Jlilllmllft~(Wll11t •
llblttllte-Or,.., (Nl! Ol llW 11!0!1
11 U. n,. 7t t M MIV t. t... l"Mf
•
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
1Jlill•l6S2 SU1'511011 COUllT OF THI
STATI OF CALll'OJINJA fOll THI COUNTY 01' OllANOI
NI, Jti·•ID• NOTltE 01< H(AltlNQ ON l'ITITION
FOR l'RO&ATE OF HOLOGRAPHIC I WILL AND FOii!: LEnERS TllTJtiMl!N· TJtiRV
Etlt le ol MARY E. DULLANTY,
Dll'te•i.tO. NOTICE 1$ l'IEllE8Y GIYEIO Thet
Thomts lloWtl 011!11~1'1 b" I/led l)tr1ln a Nt!Utlon tor Probll• • Ko1otr1l>hk
Wiii llld fflr 11111111« cf Lttte"
Ttt.t1mtnt•f'I IO P1llt!-•, ""'""" to whltl'I I\ mKe kit h1.nht• p1n!Cull•1. 1nc1
tl'lll the li")f tnd P!ICt ot he1rlnfl tM
umt 11u bffn stt tor Ma'f' 7J, 19',, •I
t .lD 1.m .. In the co;,rtroom ol 0-rl·
meti! No. J of u l<I t<Klf1, ti 700 W. Eltrh!h
Stret'I, In lht Cll'f" 01 Sfn!• JliN.
C1t11o-rn11. Otltd ,_...,, S, 1Mf
W. E. ST JOHN
Co;,nW Ci.rt
Llllt'IMJtiNN A"O Lt'OHJtiRO, ft~1.
)I Suiter Sfrttf,
Sift Fr9ftdstt, Cdlel'ni1
Te+: COSI 421·1111
Atlemrf1 for Fttmetttr Publlshe<I Ortfllll CtMsT 01llV l'!lol,
May '· 1, u. 1ff9 .,...,
LEGAL NOTICE
P.JUM
CEllTIFICJtilE OF IUSIHESI
FICTITIOUS NAME
Tne unll<!ttlgMcl don <•rllh W Is con·
<lutll"O I busl~ I t 1231 Bl11t11Um. S11!11
"B" Anallelm, ~tltornla, un!lfr the llt-
1!1IOllS llrm nemt of JEAN'S EQUIP·
MENT RENTJtiLS and thll uld firm 11
comPoted ol Ille followlno "''°"' ""°" name In lull Incl p(tCI ot rlllcltfl<• II •• I
IOllCW5' j •Merit Jt1n Clark, 21S'1 Ktnlllhe
Line, Hunl!nvton 8'1th, C11Horn!1.
Ol!td Mar 2, 1969.
Merle Jttn Clark
STJtiTE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF 0'1ANGE I SS. I On MIV 2. 196'/, bl!!Ort nw •• NOll'Y Public Jn anO !er 1-1110 S!•lt, 1>1r10n1llv I
1ppe1r.O Mt•le Jt1n ci.rk kl>own to mt to be Hit Dttrson whott n1me I! SUblCJ'll>
eO lo tM w!tMn lnstru111tnt 11!11
•cknnwltdgecl she t~KYleO Ille semr.
tSEALJ Thomas J. O'Kee!P
Ni;illrY Publlt
THOMJliS J. O'KEEFE, Jtitte""r
U» N, lll'Nlfwl J, S11!1t ..0
S1nl1 "'"'· Cttlfo"'11 '2106 Pubtlshecl Oraf'gt Co.isl oanv Piiot.
fUJ '· ll. 20, 77, 1969 161'49
LEGAL NOTIGE
P·)lll7
CERTIFltJtiTE OF e.USIHf:SS FICTIT&OUS NAME
Tiit 11nclt•••11ntd dO certify lhrv 1rt
conduclln9 • bulii•u• at 2976 Bimini Pl.. Casi• Me», Ctllfornia, ur>dt r thr flt•
tltiou• firm namr of BRJtiUN & JtiSSOCIATES and that •aid llrm ls com·
POttd ol tn' to!\cwln9 penon•. WhOH
name1 Jn lull and gllcts of rf1l<ll'ncr are
•• !ollow1: Wiiliam M. Braun, 7916 Bimini Pl ..
Cm.Ta Me1a,
Pe!er Marin, 47i w. liltocnf St.. tn-
gltW<lcO. 01trd April 23, Ifft,
Wlllla"' M. Braun Pe! .. r Marin
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
COU NTY OF LOS ANGELES 1 II
On Jtiorll 71. 1969, btf~tr m•'. 1 No!arv
Putollc Jn and !or ••IG Stale, Pf''1<>n•llr
aDPearM ~illl1m M. Braun I. Peltr
Mi<in known lo "'' to be Ille Pt "on1 w""'' Mmes arr subotf lo !h! wllh1n in1l•uiMnl and acckno ledgtd lh•V tJ·
ecutl'd TM 1amr. (OFFICIAL SEJtiLl
Roben D. Con)"~ No1arv Public c111torn11
L"' Anvele1 (,llunt1 MV (amm1 .. i;n E~Dlr ...
Ja"· n , 1t1J I
Putl,slled Orange f~••' Oallv P•lo'
Jti"rlj 1t ind M1y 6, \l, 21), 1%' l lHf
LEGAL NOTICE
8All·ISSt NOTICE TO CREDITOR S
SUflElllOI COURT OF THE
STJtiTE OF C•.LIFORNIJti FO!t
THE COUHTY 01< OllANQE
Ne. A424H
Eslate or HOLLAND LEACH W,\LKER.
aka Holle~ L Walker, ake Ho!leflll
Welker. Deer••~.
NOTICE fts HEREBY GIV!':N 1o the
c•P<lllt!rs <:/ !he •bc~r named dectd~nl
lhal all p~scn1 havln9 claim• t9tlnil !l'lfl salG Gtc rnt arr reoulr.cl lo !Hr them.
with the fCt11arv vovcl'lfl,., fn the oltlct
ot lhe clrjrk ol !hr 1boV1 enlllltd court. or lo pr15,n1 t,...m, with lht nect1Ut'I'
VOlltlltrl, !o the undrrslon!d al c lo YOUNG. PRENNEll JtiNO HEWS.JU Wn t
Third Street. San!a Aoa, Cal!lt!rf\11 971'01,
whic~ Is Ille p!ect ol 1>usTnr11 of Th• ~nd,. lgnf<I in all ml!!Prs oentinTng lo
rM '''"' o1 '''" oecrde11t, wltnin fo~r months •'~ ll>e 11,.1 Pl.lbllc1tfon 01 11111
11otlc1. Oiied April 11. lfft
Vick• R. V11t011
Admini1lratri• at the EsMte ct ll'lfl 11)(1ve n1mPd ~odP11!
YOU NC, fl•ENNElll JtiND HEWS JlS W!"ll TMMI SlrHI
S1nt1 Ant , c-tnor"+. 1n o1
TlltPhenol! (1U) Hl..UJl
JtitlO<'n•r• fot Jtidm:"l'llrl!•I• Pulltl\Md Or1n94! Co.111 011!v Pll?l
Aorll 15, n, 2t ancl M•~ 6. It~• 7U.ff
LEGAL NOTICE
T·•IUI SUfl ERI R COURT OF THE
STJtiTE F CALIFOllHIA 1'01 THI' C UNTY OF ORJtiN~E
HI. Jli4ll&I HOTICE 0 HEJtiRIHG OH PETITION
FOR Pll BJtiTE OF t(OlOOllAPt(IC WILL A 0 FOR LETlEllS 1,STJ!i·
MENT.t e,1f1e I CECIL F. MJtiRT IN ,
Date••~. NOTIC IS HEllEBY GIVEN Thtl
Ramon attr l!ts liltd h~r,1n t Pelltlan
lor orcb It ~I Holograp~ic Wiii Ind lor
luu•ncr of letltrt Te•1tmtn!lr1 lo Ptll·
non•r. l'lt1t1"'• to wl!Ttll li made for
t~rllltr 1c1kui.ri, •"" !hat I~• !Imo Ir.cl
Plltt htarlng Ille '"'"" !Mis Dffn ~"' for M v 2l, 196'. •I 9·30 1,m., In t~
toul1r m c• Oep1tlmtnl No, J cf 5110
totirl, 11 100 Well El9hth Slrtt•, In' ll>t
Cf!J ol Santa Ana, C1!1fornl1.
Dlttd Mav 5, lf6'1.
W. E. ST JOl'IN Coun'1 (1rrk
11. KEITH OLMSMDOR
»1 E1•t in11 s'""'
SUl!t Nu1'!1MPr 111 t1t1t1 MIMI. C1Htornl1, f'2fU
1,1 1110 J.lt.nS&
AlterMY Joi "ttltl-• PUblllM<I Ort"9~ Coe1t D1llv Pol~I
Ma• I. 7, ll. 1169 llS.6t
"'LEGAL NOTICE
fl·Ul7l •
CE RTll'ICATE OF C0'11'0RJtiTION 1'011
Tf!JtiMSACTION o,. •ut1Ness uN0•111 I
l'ICTITIOU$ NJliME
THE UNOERStGNEO CORPOJIJtiTION
don lle<'e!IY (trlifV !l'ltt It 11 ton<IUC!int I
bullnt!t locltt'd t i llS Wt ll 1'111 StrHT,
Ntwporl B•etl'>. C111fornl1 under !ht llc-
llttou1 litm nll<r)t ol E M P I I E
EHGI NEERING Ind lhet u ld firm 11
comollleO cf t~e 1011_1,,. eorPOr•!lOI', "'"°'' pflnc\st~I PllCI cf M lnen 11 II
1ctiow1: WOLVE lllNE WE$TERN COii•
POllJtiTION, 115 Wtlf 11111 Slrter.
Nt-' SNCl'I, Clll!ornlt .
WITNESS 111 1!1r.cl 1111, 2Sll'I dtJ ol
AD,11, Ifft
!CorPOl"•!t Stell WOLVEltlNE W€$TEllH
CORPOl!Jti 'l'fOOI Jl"ln l , TllDuuW. Pr"lclt<lf
STATE OF CALIFORNIJti l
COUNTY OF OAJtiN~E I SL
Of\ thl1 1!1h di~ DI A ... 11. A.O. , ... , btfD•" mt. Mlliin M. 09Jll1 f Hollrt
Pul!l!C '" Ind '°' "'" Count'r •NI Sll lf. rnkttnt ~. _,.,, ,_,..1..-.i lllC!
1worn. H'10JllllY' •-•red Joflrl L. Tholu .. r.d k,.._ IO mt lo M lftt Ptaf·
"""'' of fl\e: cor-•llOfl '"'' ••«utt'CI Ill<' wil!lln ln\lrl,l!l'll!nf on blhlll 01 IM tor•
-JIJon -rln 1191'Md, Intl Mkll0¥lildt•
!'d to "'' "'" wen c.or.«1lion ••rculH
'"" llmt. ' 111 W11"'1t Wf\t~, I htW flttllUfllo \II
mT llllllf •rw:I •"l•ed mY otntltt -t pw
di¥ Ind Yl lr ff\ ...... CWltf'IC1te tlri! fbht """""· . ' tOFJ:ICIAL SEAL )
M!J.ltl M. Dolt1I No11ry Putillc{;•!J10!'t1lt
PrlntlPil Offke I" 0r.,,.. C9Ul'ltv My tOITlm1Hlln t'~tl,..t
Apt11 "' "l'O Mlllft M, Ooflll, Alllr.,.l
Alltf'ftl1 Jtit l ....
Uftltrft a1Mr S•wtrt, SIH'lt t•
ffO Ult!~ .Mtlll '""' Or1~11, C-illfffill1 nut
'I•!: 1n n •n·m• l>UO!ltl'tlfll Or~"" C&e~I 0 1llV l>llot,
......... 1). )(I,£"· .... ...~,
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•
DAILY PILOT
~ -------------------
DAILY PILOT WANT A s
T HE BIGGEST SINGU: JlfAJUCft'PIACE ON THE OKANOE CO AST -CAI L DIRECT 642-5678
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOU SES.FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
General 1000 General ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;; ll!l 1 "
10000-ral 1000 Gen•r•I 10000.neril 1000 Gener:.1 1000
.
a r r ~...--
Or1 nge County'1
L11r9ett
2'3 E. 17th St.
~94
WALK TO
1 BEACH
You can auume the ex·
lsUng low interest Joan
v.•ith payments of $195.00
per mo. Including laxee
&: ins. metleulously Clll't'd
With family room with
its own fireplace. built-
in kitchen and isolated
5eparate dining Toom.
call now asking $30,900.
100°/o
FINANCING
4 BEDROOMS
-SHARP
Vets -this home is In
better than new condi·
t1on, ne\v kitchen, new
carpets. covered patio,
completely repainted,
oversized lot, total price
$23.950, hurry! ~
OCEAN VIEW
OWN THE
LAND TOO
Located hieh. on the
bluff \\'lth a breath tak·
in~ view of catalina.
l 'iOO sq. ft. 3 bdrm.
h 0 me. professionally
landscaped, courtyard
entry and man).', many
extras $37,500.
DON'T FENCE
ME IN
Acrl' quiet cul de sac
street -a stones thro\V
ft•om the fabuloUs \Vtst-
rliff area. Large 2600
sq. rt. home wjth 4 bed·
rooms -double fire·
place -photo lab oT of-
fice. for the bu5y or .re·
tired seeking peace and
quiet.
THEIR LOSS
YOUR GAIN
Price reduced for quick
sale. Large 4 bedroom
home located a short
walk from the beach-
plush carpeting -beau-
tiful k.llchen -dining
room -speciBI bonus
comrnunity pool a: sche-
du led kiddie acUvitie5-
NO\V HQ\V ABOUT
THAT!
DO YOU WANT
TO SELL YOURS!
THIS SPACE
AVAILABLE •••
FREE
ASSUME 51/4°/o
• 176.00 mo.
4 hr.drm--Collcgc Park
Here's wh!ll it hali: dou-
ble fi replace. elec. kit·
chcn. new cB rpe.t, 1700
sq. ft.. rumpus room, I
Is in a fantastic area.
$18,950
Charming 2 bedroom
house on a gigantic lot
f>Oxl 70 ioned R-2. possi-
ble variance to R-4 or
commercial located just
ofl Harbor. E"cellent
area.
EXPANDING
FAMILY??
Herc ls It, a big, blg
house, 5 bedrooms 11nd 3
baths, 2400 aq, ft. if
you're outgrown )'our
preii;cnt home, and have
nprroxlmatc.ly $3,100.00
rquHy, you can trade it
for 1his ont'. 100% fin-
nnrln~ available to Vel'I,
Priced bclo\v market at
SJ(J,500.
4 bedrm & ROOI
Sl54.00 lNC. TAXES
No 11ualifying, anyone
ain M5UTne SJA. ~ loen
or !500.00 total le> vel.$.
Hurry on thill one.
Or11nge Cwnty'a
Ler9e1t
293 E. 17th St,
6'66-4494
••I I••
IN
COSTA MESA
Now under construction
SEVEN CUSTOM HOMES
from $28,575
WITH SUCH FEATURES AS'
• 4 Large Bedrooms
• VA & FHA Financing
• Wood Roofs e 20 Year Guarantee Dishwashers
e Oversized· Lots e Roman Tubs & Shov.1crs
• In Prime Area
• PLUS MUCH MO RE
SELECT YOURS NOW I,, CHOOSE
YOUR COLORS & STYLES
DON'T MISS THIS
RANCHO LA CUESTA -II you've
mi8sed the closeout of RANCHO LA
CUESTA'S 3 other units , •.• DON'T
MISS THISI I '
Each succeeding unit co&ts more, so
take· advantage ot these pric,.es. C9me &
see our models on Brookhurst at Atlanta
in Huntington Beach. There are I & 2
stories, 3 & 4 bedroom homes with 2 or
3 balhs, Mission tile' or shake roof, fire.
places, concrete driveways, heavy rough
cut beams, built-ins, family rooms &
dining rooms. Close to Huntington State
Beach. These .beautiful homes are priced
from $24,995 to $34,200 with VA or Con·
ventional financing as Jo\v as 10% do wn.
No 2nd TDs at 7.2 % interest. Call
968-2929 or visit any day JO AM to 7 P M,
General
3 Bedrooms
+ Guest Room
$21,500
Ab l\Qlutely without a doubt,
lht• bvsl buy In Co11:111 Meu.
ln1maculah1 3 bedroom
hoUlM' + gurst room, )llf1\'
;.ool sized. 1ree 5hadl!d Jot
Ch\'ery livuig IUinn. very
modrtn kitchen v.•111\ natural
\\'ood cilbktt!ts and builtin~.
-'.! car drtatc!u."<I ).':tirai:;e +
1·:1rport for boat or camper.
Don't wait.
F'OREST E. OLSON"
&l.5-030:;
6 BED~OOMS
Would You
Believe .••
6 Bedrooms, ,3 hathll • ._ lam·
i!y rooni plus n dlnini: arta,
wlth fi-rsh pnlnl, and all the
11.dv11ntai;cs r;iC a llat'IXlr
Jlig!tlantls loC'ation rot•
$·1~.~..00
for information call 1000 General !---------1000
•
COATS & WALLACE REALTORS .
I49I BAKER STREET
546-4I41
COSTA MESA, CALIF .
IMMEDIATE
POSSfSSION
CHEC K THESE
FEATURES ! I I ~
FAMILY AND
BUSINESS!!!
Lawson
JU6 Via Llrlo, NB 67:>-4562
UNDER ONE I ___ CA-LL--
ROOF!!!!!! * *
• , ! I :c
r: Fttshly painted in and out.
11 IL:. Fully carpett'd and draped . T~~ :::.t 00': ,:;"ti:' LACHfNM YER Really
General 1000 General
Thref'. bedrooms, two baths. 1000 15'x26' Living room with
-rooms, or conve11 4U1 bed.
room into den or dlning
room. T\~·o full baths, tau11+
dry area inMidc. built-ins.
Plus huge. POOL-v.·ith lols
of decking. Tll(o young ones
can ~im while Dad run.<;
the store. Zoning perrnils al-
mosl any klnd of business on
properly. Hurry! Won't last!
Full price is $25,500. Sub-
mit your smaller hon1c on
our guarantee sale rilan.
\\'hen you wanl lo IL~t n~ ""II
youl' homr we aff" in conlacl
"'iih ti2 familie5 nioving 11110·
thr Newporl Beach & Cot;ta
Mesa a1'f'a in the next 60
days. Ft'('(' appraisal. CDM·COTIAGE
2 BR bon1e w/lnc unit needs
some TLC. Walking distance
to everythin&:. $33,500
terms.
By appt only
CORBIN-MARTIN
i(j;ALTORS
3036 E. Coast Hwy, CdM
675-1662
Step1 to Ocean
Li.ko new 4 BR, 3 ha, fam
rm, new crpls, drps, paint,
fixture&. emp~ -ready to
go, $35.950.
2-Story "A'' Fr11m•
Fixer Upper
$28,900 -co1ne with offer
C•ywood Riiy., 54&-1290
6306 W. Cout Hwy, NB
Will Lease Option
Or Sell
Custom built spacious 3 bed-
room , family room, pool
home. 2510 23rd St., Ne\vport
. Beach.
JEAN SMITH, Raaltor
400 E. 17th SI., Costa Mesa
646-3255 .. 2 STORY
S BR 3 baths. cpts/dl'Jll, elec-
tric bullt·IM, shake roof.
Near ALL schools. $.16.750.
Well1.McCerdle, Rltr1.
1810 Newprt Blvd .• NB
s.i&-7729 anytime
BEACH HOME
Pllll GUtlf Room &: Bath
block lo Beach, $29,500
Geor9e Wiii iamson
ft(:aJtor
l
Evt!!. 673-Hi&4
MOST WANTED •.•
Features -Blur • Oeun
View, pool (20" 40), <I Bdnn
In lovely lrvlne TetTSce.
Del ancy Re11I E1t1t1
2828 E. Cosat Hwy, CdM
613.lTIO
3 BR 2 bath ho~. comer
lot 130d80 • add 5 more
units. Drive by t~ Sant•
Ana Ave. then caJJ
· il111tia &ralt 11 ..,..,.,
DUl'LEX Costa Mau
Sell or nc:hanae for hou.e er Unlta near Slate Collqe
Fullerton.
FORTIN CO. G42·5000
1~. We1tclltt Or .. NB
Whitt elephants! Dtmf'oW!na
----------lt'.P, Din!ng mon1 and Bk-
fst. roon1. BI N kitchen,
stainless sink. 12'xl8' DEN
off covered p11tlo,_Large pa.
lio with bar.8-quc. Loads of
built-in closets. cupboBrds,
cases, and shelve~. Corner
Lot-Dbl. Garagr. Near Cos ta
f.lesa Park, Gir,l! Oub, Boys
Club & downtown. Priced to
sell, lO~i. down. Ov.•ner 11 ill carry 1st r .o. fo1· quaJitied
buyer, ACT NOW!!
FOR GOURMET
BUYERS!!
Newport Heights 'flth the
cool ottan breeze is where
this beautiful custom 4 bed.
room hon1c Is located. Your
\\'ifc will love the time sav.
ers with j bnthls for the kid·
dies. handy scrVlce area off
the very best plannEd kit-
chen. Top grade v.'OOCI panel·
ling lhruout, ~.200 sq. feet
of quality 1vorkmanship and
design as only builder Jack
P.1cLean is capable of. The
alley access makes a perfect
spol to housr your boa1 or
trailer. since the concrelE
&lab and double gates are
ready for use. Only such I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;
homf' In the area. $48,500. I•
Submit your sn1a\lf'r home
on our i;:uarantrc saJes plan.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 3I MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2tM3 Westcliff Dr.
646-T711 Open Eves.
DOVER SHORES
A sweeping VIEW
ot upper ~ewport Bay
from this spaciou5
S Bedrooms. 3 bath home
separate famlly nn with
1\·et bar and fi replace
lovely g¥"den.11 in~Juding:
bC'autilul roS<' garden
with fountain
o"'TIC'l's n1oving from area
College Park Corner
Plenty of room for boat &
ca.mJ)fT + a large double
detached: garage. 5% % in.
tereat available to anyone.
No qualifying. Payments
$158/mo includes everything.
Call now to see.
$26,995
Newport
•••
Victoria .
646-llll
GI Resale
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 3I MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2!H3 \Vestclifl Dr.
646-7TI 1 Open Eves.
Nit• Club Patio Room
A room of tbis type is ver-y
special for it saves v.·car
and tear of the rest of lhe
house, Besides being a fun
plaet' for adult par!ies, it's
11. splr11did ineentivr for the
younger members to enter-
tain at home. Tbis 5pacious
and sparkling 5 bedroon1
home reflects good value tor
131,950
''For A \Vise Buy"
Colesworthy & Co.
!S6(} Nc~·port Bhd .. C.\! '
Rllr. 616-39'18 Eve. 6-M-165:i * LAC HENMYER
iiU a -john macnab
IRVINE TERRACE
Jl.1agnificenl vic1u uf jetty,
harbor and Catalina Island.
2 B<!droorn cine! den, 3\l
bath, lom1at (lining room.
.....•. ' .......... '' .$82,500
Call for Appointment .
(714) 642-8235
901 Dover Drlvi" !iu1te lztl
Newport Beach
,EASTSIDE-3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths -
quiet cul • de • sac.
Sacrifice $21,750.
CALL 540-11 51
!open eves)
Herita9e
Real Estate
Lido Isle Luvlies
2·Sl0!'Y 4 BR plus den, CU5-
!unl s1ylc kHchcn. Trrrific
family home.
Call for Appl.
Roomy 3 Bedroom
Custon1 home on 51 rt lot.
Priced $69,500
W•lke r Rily 675-5200
Wants Action NOW!
Rerlucrd lo $58,COO
Call: Jim Cobb
Take over 6';~ GI loan of
s1s.soo with payments or j ......... ~"'~·~=~·:.. ...... , I :~=;:;:-:;::~~~-S:'.~I mumo, '"o1. '" • "'" ' In Fabulous Avalon BR & family room oo "'" ABflll llTElY
$1800 TOTAL 00\VN 3
bdnns, fire place, vc.ry
sharp. To!ml payn1cnts,
1198 per month. See
anylimc.
/fja,. COATS
~ WAL~ACE
~EAL TORS
--$4Ml41-
l()pon ·'""I"""
IUY of !ht WEE K
&\STSID'E -unusually &hnrp
Paddock pool home with 8'
high fencing for ultra pri-
vacy. Minimum care-yard.
"ti~" hoote. quiet cuJ.(IC-
dC t:lr:. $)5/150,
S•6·SSSO
nrr _ room for boat, trailer JU.LU
"" u'""• ~ 1"·550• ""' Baylronf Holel ::".!i,'"'" Owoo. 0"'''"-BEAUTIFUL
54i ·Sl!O
lntar cintml thlltre)
OLLEGE REAL'!!
1500 Mims 11 Hllblt,'"""
TRI-LEVEL
Priced fo1· ln1m~latc 11ale.
Excellent carpeting, sunken
family room, fonn11J di.nln1
l'OOm, in fantastic realden-
11&1 lU'l'll. Vacant, ready for
lmme<I. posReJs\on. Quick
sale at SlS,500. CALL JACK
llAM1'10NO S.1().1151 (open
t'vrsl Heritart Rc11I Estate
describc:o1 this adult occupied
l bdrm rustic home located
on cul-de·sac & close lo
everything. ~1ust sec lo ap-
preciate. \Von't last loni; at
thl5 price of
$26,950
7682 Edinger
~·C!.4•1!Q or 540-S140
Open Evr!I.
Dining rm, 2 bars. 35 rooms
plus View 01\•ner Units.
BU RR WHITE , Rltr.
2901 Nl'\\'flOl'I Blvd., N.8.
675-4630
Mesa Del Mar
5 Bedrooms
A DREAM
Custom bull! 4 hdn:n \Ycs_t-
clill home with family 1oorn
&: scparalo dining roon1.
Large patio with 5Jl8rldlng
pool, You'U love th is one.
Arn old & Freud
388 E. 17th SI., 0 1
R(n11tors 616-7™
6%
Lovely 2 story hon1e • 1 lMJre.
hd1ms den, lorna.1 dinlni In
r xcollent roosldrnllal :u'C"1
S<l900 dOl\'M • tak<o over 6'1 WANTED loao, CALL AL BLACK SID-
1151 Jlerl!agc Ren! EsratT R.E. ·Saleswoman 4Beo!lM-:' ,21 ,950!
\Ve havti thli advantage 01 the NO DOWN GI
r'C1•ll1.!!lve 8if'nC)' lc>r Ivan Wt<lls' l'll'W Dover Shem Summrr p;.irtlr~ k fa1nily
Develop1nf'nt , , a captive. Cook-Outl' ln the dtllr.htf\11
audir.nce for regales. Otfke covered parto. :? pullm1.11
In n<'W f':rcrilina. rurniJhed baths. FamJty roc>m. Spot·
n.adtl •t JU} G111laxy Dr. loo.• l\vm; dining room
Rot J. \Yard Cc. Ask lor M ~.W.1720
Plmvu 6<6-1500. TARBEL L 2955 Harbor
i ,,__-2--B-AT-HS-. -$11-,500 __ ... i -, NCOM E.
fl'lllttlnttnll~ -High beitn1td ceilings In liv-
ing ~ family rm•. Spad0>m-6 Unlts-$60,000 GE REALTY ~~1ttwrbor,CM. lf'S Stach ho\lR. Um~. Bii · bedroom,, Gernat b1 rantl· ROOM TO BUILD
f'd. i\U.../lUlh·ln k!trhl!I' JU ""' -F.\ ,.~. -142-6691 TARBELL· Ir. "•~•., . '" ~~•w
-Now< BR 2 ballo, fl>!, • KEJlNEDY .
We.W aottcnnr. Heated
pool. 64Z-9852 (!\~.
,
SOCK'IT 10 'EM!
. -
\
..
•
~-' I
-.-·
•
' . ~y flll.111" T,..,lf, Moy 6, 1969 -s FOR SALE HOUSES.FOR SlCE HOUSES FOR SAL! ~~~·~·:~~:1~000~ Cost• l\luii
HbUSES ,Ollt ~LI!
t 4 fled
HAPPY
IN
Mesa Verde
There al'tl hundreds ot
houses in-the counry,
most at a }Ower price.
BUT
You'll enjoy living more
le have a· Itw tbour.and
dollars more e.quitY
when you resell if yuu
choose: a Dome in Mtstt
Verde ...•
r.tay 11·e show you an
ex~ptionally neat, :!
bath home priced al
$26.0CKI~ •••••••• " .....
Owner \vill help finan<:e
for low down payment.
Call Arlene or Jim at
S46-9521 Eve. 540-4631
J. K. Nichols, Rltr.
301;; • A Hlrbor Blvd .. C~1
VA $800 DOWN
BIG, BIG 4 BEDROOM
28m Chi ea
Quiet S t: be.I Flrepl~. Shake · tc
roof: tmt & back yard
isprinkltrs; 1 block to
clemcn1ary sehool. nta.r
Estancia & paric. Patio
& play area. BY owner.
call: 546-lnS
Cost• Mes•
Home + Income
Npt. Hghts. Dist. 2 bedmom
completely remodeled + l
bedroOm reota.l -2 g!t.rage.s.
Ne\V driveways -jnc. pol.
$300 -m .soo.-.10¥.; qown.
'nle ReaJ Estaters
5'1s.2313 -646-n11
No Oown GI
$24,950
5 BR 2 baths, with ocee.n vtew
Rand Realty 645-2340
3 BDRM-$19,950
Assume 5~ Ii~ FHA Joan, Sill
mo·. pays au. Wl:" itlCd yard.
nc1vly redeco1-.
01vner. 548-5221 or S4G-T:i6'l
New 4 BR 2 bath. 1''r"pl.
\\late1· soflener. Heated
pool. 642.9852 Eves.
POITE
PRAIDCAI.
PREnY
~ Bedroom!!, l lti baths, near
Ba.v & Ocean on Pl'ninsula
Point. -
1707
House Pinching
You!
C)nh· s~~.'.'-.ii
BURR. WHITE, Rltr.
2901 Newpor t Blvd .. N E.
675-4630 E•••· 67J.Oal9 Spac 4 BR home, located on
genUe !'Oiling hlil with con1-
Lido Isle 1351 manding vicv.'. Sep din rm
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;. J & breakfast area. 6'7S-4070
Lid o Phefiomenon Stuart & Robbins ReaHors,
Need loads of ~'(>Scn 7 ttENTALS
Come to see this spacious f'tOuses Furnishea
5 BR. 5 ba channer on an
01•ersizr.d c:omcr !or , $105,000
R. C. GREER. Realty
3.%5 Via Li.do 673·9300
Rentals to Share 2005
\VORKING girl to $hare furn,
Universily Park honie "~th
same. 546-0918: SlJ..1531 eve
Rambling Ranchero
One story slick as a whistle!
For the gro\\•ing young su(.°-
ttssful ramily this beauty
oozrs with pride of 01•.'IX'r·
ship from it's bC'aulifu\Jy
kept park like .,.i"Ounds on
neat r. tree I of \\'ell·kept C ' «• SOO Buy I AN 5 lV,4 ~· Co<ona d•I "•r 0050 homts to its lush carpets 8: 3 BR. 2 ba Lido Beach Home. m ~"
custom drapes throughout! INTEREST YOU? Buy no11., and enjoy all sum-2 BR. 2 Ba. Z.Story
ALL ELECTRIC BUILT IN $162 per month including tax· ml'.'r. Onl;v SlO,<O) Dn. $250 ?i1o. New carpets.
kitchen with dishll·asher! cs. A charming 3 bedroonl LIDO REALTY, INC . 514 Fernleaf. 015-6044 Bkr.
Cozy FIREPLACE! 2 pull. fan1ily room hofll(' in a pride I 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 t'OENTALS
man baths! LARGE COV-" ERED PATIO on Pool Sized or 0"'ncrship setting. Plenty I Housei Unfurnished
lot! All this ONLY $Z5.500. of room lo strelch out and I H t' t B L 1 .~ play. Hide your b!>at or un ing 0~ eac" <tVV Generol 3000
EVERY 31 MINUTES camper. sn,.500 abo includ.' Assum• 51/4o/, VA loan -;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;; WE SELL A HOME
es le.ndscap1ng. •
W lk & L 646-Tln • 54&-2313 Total payn1cn1s or $98.00. A IRVINE TERRACE a ·er ee THE REAL ESTATERS l'C'al sha~p 3 bedroom doU I========== hou se with extra roon1 to
2 R & den, fantastic View,
beautiful condition
2790 H.arbor Blvd, at Adams l I IO i;ron'. Car""ls almost nrw ~. Mesa Verde """ .,..:J-9491 ,.. 1hroufh®I. lovely drapes.
S550/n10 Unfurn ~ $T:i0 Furn.
l•--O~";..." .. ·~Jiiil ii9iiP•'•'..,..,, I ~lESA Verde llighlands 3 Space> saver.kitchen. Submit BR. 1%. BA. J(ij() sq. ft. 2 your dO\\'n payn1ent , Anyone
irplcs, waler :<oftener, qualifies. \Viii sr.11 GI no
shake r o o I, landscaped. down. lIURRY!
BEACON BAY
3 ~dnns, ~nimunity beach,
pier, tennis court. $450/mo, 5%% FHA LOAN
Car. be assumed on lhis
J\.1esa Vt>rde 3 bdrm & fam-
ily home. You l\'On't find
another as in1maculate,
with ne" ca.rpeting, large
·ush landscaping & even ha:;
a hobby room built in ga·
rage. A steal at only
Very clean. J\1inute11 to WE SELL A HOME
sch!s. S27,500. EVERY 31 MINUTE·S john mac:nab
REALTY COMPANY
642-82~ 1690 Iowa St .. 549-4226 c~~~~s i:'~ ~ee~~~~in; Walker~,~ Lee
h, 30's. Nenr golf t"Ourse. 7682 Edinger $135: 2 BR. l 'Ai ba. t'nhouse. ,-r;w, range, oven. Children
OK. Avail June 1. 534-6980
BKR.
Low maint.. lndscpd. By Stl4455 or 540·5140
appt. 549-3704 Open Eves.
$26,950
Location
Does Count
Let us prov• it.
-105 Holmwood, Newport Hts.
3 bedroom -dining a r e a.
"Easy to "'ork in" kitchen.
pleasant living: room "'itb ad·
joining den. Invlting family
atmosphere. Minimunt yard 'vork: A good val ue at
$43,500 and you own the
land.
llllDllF REALTY
:.'025 \\'. Balboa Blvd .. N.B.
67S-6000
Newport Beach 1200
2 Units $23,000
Close lo Beach & Channel.
Includes smJ boat n1ooring.
0 A~-.
7!'EAtTY
Near NB Post Of~. 646-2·114
NEW HOME
Pl'ivatc cul-Oc·sac. s1rrcl. 4
bedrooms 3 bath, 75xJ2:) lo1
forever view of Back Bay.
Delta Rea! Estate 64&--1,114
SACRIFICE 2 mo. o I d
Harbor Vie\v 2 Sty. 4 or 5
Br .. '! ba, lain. r111, 2 fpl.
cpts, drps. 6.9' ,, Loan
6#401'4 0\l'rtcr
BEAUTIFUL home in the
I Bluffs. Outstanding Bay
Moor Y•cht At Your view. 3 Br. 3 Ba. B.v O\\•ner.
Door Step I &14--0718
40 ft. private. dock is one or B=~,u~=,=r=s.-,~,7b-ul~ou-,~,.-.• -,.-,-0-"
t~ many _fin~ fea!ures of green belt •\·/Uay vie?,\'.
lhi! 1-lunhngton .. Harbour ~lany cusl. features. '.j Br. 3
Cape Cod. Huge hVlng room Ba. Best oUer~ 644-42W
JUST CUT•PRICE
$1600
WAS $22,500
NOW $20,900
THIS IS THE LAST \\'EEK
l bedroom, 1 bath, Carpeting
1hrughout. Covered Patio.
Lots niore extras! You own
Lhe land. Assume my 6%
V.A. S4300 d o I\' n. SIM
P.l.T.I. House is vacant.
Private Pe.rly. 962·7689
WALK TO BEACH
NICF large 3 txlrn1 house
11' I pool on 1,t acre lot,
Tustin area. Lease S285 Mo'.
~-44--8612
$170 Y.RLY rental 2 BR.
bf>ach holl8C. Childl'l:'n & pet
OK. Br"Oker f'34-6980
Cost• MllSll 3100
FREE RENTAL
SERVICE
for cxan1ple, 3 bedroo111s 2
baths·$225.00 per n10. Call .
arr~~
ORANGE COUNTY'S
Listed 1,ust in tio1c lo enjoy
sum1ner·fun at the beach.
No car needed f1"0n\ this
nice modern 3 BR hon1e !or
only $26.500. Not lease hold.
s141n1it on financing.
\! ·LARGEST !!W:!1 ~_sm01• 11 293 E. 17th st. 646-4494 ~ T"!!"rm10i 3 BDROI \\'/w cpt;,-lrplC.
CUSTOM HOME
fani rn1, dishwshr. lnl'Ctl yd
& patio. "Iesa Verde. nr
4 BR 2 bath home on com-schls. park., shops. I rhild
mC'rcial . -zoned 101. A nict OK, refers. $mlmo. r-itr.
homl': +good potential. Pric· \Vood. Bkr. ; .. 1&-59'.IU or
ed for fast sale @ $22.500. I -·~·1~i-7797:..c,3~c~v~"~·-----
G1 or l"llA 1ern1s. AVAIL. ~tny 10: Li:::c. I Br. &
MUTUAL REAL TY lanai. S150 :r.10. Cpts. drps,
8·12·1418 Eve. 847·6978 1''.l Ila: 20~ \Valla ce . f>-18-3934 ..i.
DIVORCE 3 BR. 2 ·bath, carpets &
TakC' over 6'# loan no quail· drapes. $195 lease. lnqulrc
lying or sell on ne"' VA or 2459 Norse Avf', CM
l"l!A. 4 BR l~.i. ba. $1600 in ne\v ~pts. lg c:ul-de·sac Jot, 2 BR duplex. Utilities, range
\1·alk to schools. Quick poss. t,. refrig. furn. Large yard
BRASHEAR REAL TY S155 mo. 286 Knox St.. c.~1.
•
RENTALS
H..,... Unfur11lohed
NewPorf Heights 3210
LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA, Wlfurn.
Dining roon1. Lease or rent.
$275 mo. 64~~-
Coron• del Mar 3250
LARGJ:'. 2 BR. ne\V shag
carpeting, ne1\1 paint in11ide
& out, stove & refrig. SlSO.
~Iadge Davis 642·700t
Unfurn 3 BR. 2 ba. Xlnt.
$275-$300
Clevidentc, Bkr. 675-0044
Huntington Beech 3400
FOR LEASE
4 BR GJen1nar, 1 ~~ ba, bl!·
ins, fenced. Ne\v carpeting
&. 1..-ompl. rcdecor. $225/mo.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
84i-8531 Eves. 968-1178
NEAR Beach ·1 br, 216 ba,
patio, bllins, crpts, rlrps. Sl9J
Coron• chi .Mir 4250
BLK to ocean ~ bly; 1 Br.
(rplc. S150; bach. apt. $00. 1
Adult each unh; no pets.
bease. 673-$29 === Huntington Beath 4400
QUIET I. BEAUTIFUL
Adults only; 2 Br .. util, paid.
Pool. S200. S4i·2125
11676 Cameron, 'Hunt. Bch.
RENTALS REAL ESTATI REAL ESTATE
Apts. Unfvrnlthtd General Gener1I -=-=:::....---1
Cost• Moo 5100 llAlnt•lt W•nted 5990 lndustri•I Rfnl•I 6090
SPACIOUS, c1'an i Br. a: Eilli bPfiBN l'OR , .. ,. lAgun& Nlalld.
studio; ne,w \v/w CIPll, drt>;t. e LEASE of1 San Diego FwY at crown
elec. bltns; quiet .w::a: 8 RENT Vallfy, ~w commtteial A
adults, no pets. 549-CHU •'amlly of four (boys alld industrial units. Delta Elec>
eve/wknd girl '1,p tetns) wish a home Uie. Days -831·1400. EYe.s. -
Villa F.ino Aplli, 3 BR. iu CDJ\1 hlgh 11chool i£: Lio-1 ,;"""'::,;:::"~· ~,-;co;--;--,--: t;JnI. Ch~ Welcome $150 coin area. liaw been living 33 X 30; 12' O'head door.
814 W. Center Apt. 1 in area alnce Ftb. and plan Spa.ct tor o!fict. Good loca·
LARGE Bach.; adults. no to \Ocate pe.rmanently. Prier tiu11. Ne1vport Beach. near
pets; cpts, drps. bltns. $90. range to $"50 per month. United Paree.I. 642-2809
2885 Mendelµ 545--5421 Will fumish list 01 reJer· l2TX90 CORNER ~1·1, locd.·
Unfun1 2 bdrm &pt, Newly ences. Would like to be lo-700' bldg l9lh & \Vhitlitr
painted. 135 Albert Pl, C.M. cated beiore f.temoriaJ Day. C.!tt. $200 mo. &t2-30J ' Gra-6777. Please .call 675-4800 day or 1.;;:=;;;;;;;;;:=;,;;;:=,=,I
nite. Lots · 6100
3 bdrm, 2 ba.. lu.'IC. Span.
decor, frplc, dishwasher, WORKING lady ~ill Bhatt 24 Large Beautiful
~pa-clio'"°', ~·~•~t"~"~'"'~·~l-509"'°. ~-I your hme/apt, with same. Completed Qctan View Lots, .
2 BDRM. APT. $110 Pvt ba. ample closets. Cdm. Laguna Beach, underground
l ~mall child OK .No pela C.lif., or N.8. ar~a. 644-0470 utils no bonds 20S~ down ~18-M62 Eves & \\'kends. day&. ' bai.Uice relea~ claUSe and
Garden .:G.;.':.o•:.;•;_ __ 46=10 CLEAN &:. attr. 2 B1·., new e LANDLORDS e partial subordination. Will
cpU;, d1>p11; bltns; carpoM. FREE RENTAL SERVICE also take 2nd's or trade.
SINGLE Yowig Adults Lux-No pets. Adlts. 548-6769 Broker 53-4-698249 ·::'-=·l2l=0 _______ 1
ury garden apts with coun. j-.-=''=='====== -try club atmosphe.rc and Newport a .. ch 5200 -LACUNA \\'oodsy view lota,
con1plete privacy. SOUTII -~---=-= Rooms for Rent 5995 underground uWilies, pvt.
BAY CLUB APTS. 13100 3 BDRM beach a'.pt unfurn, SLEEPING room, \\'Orking I -"$6:.:•"°c:·~&:.;S'J:::•:=liO::'-c. 4c;"".:..:97:.;48:__ I
CHAPf.1.AN Ave,. Garden crpts, drps, year round. lady, home piivileges. $50. • R-4 LOT •
Grove (TI4) 636-3030 $2.5ill. mo. 6-1G-618!:1 i\'lo. 548-3909 Zoned for.35 unit5.
1165· 2 BR 2 B I Phil Sullivan, 548-6161 L & h • · ~· enc· gar. NICE Room for \\1lrking . agunl _•_•_c"'-__ 4:.;7~0:.:5 Range, oven, difillwshr, reL man w/ kitchen privl. E. BUILDERS A~ention M
PANORAMIC view overlook-Broker 534::..6980 Costa J\.lesa. 642-0326 lot, 66x301. 2G35 Santa Ana
ing Aliso Beach. 2 BR turn. Ave, Olit. 546-9050 aft 1 pm.
all elec. r.tature adults. 00 E1st Bluff 5242 lnc~me Property 6000 Acreage 62nf ~i:,d:v~~.~J;~ $185 °10• e NEW DELUXE e E-Side home + income -31 ·;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;
3 Br. 2~~ ba apt, for lease BR + 2 Apt.s, $27,000: inc I•
RENTALS -Incl. spac. n1str. suite. din $348. 6-f?. side uni Is, COUNTRY
Apts. Unfurnished rm. &. dbl. garage. auto. $56.000; lnc $743. Sell or LIVING
door opener avail. Pool & tradf: clear S. CaiU borne or
-
___ _:5=000::: rec. area. Nr. Catholic Northern r c s 0 r t Bia 30 Acres in corona with beau·
Chureh & school & Corona 646-3750 · tilul 3 bdrm. b'ome, pool. etc.
;tip; 2 BR 1~; ha Studk>. del Mar High. Te1Tilic view. SS0.00'.l Down
r'atio, \\'(\V, air-cond, mge TRIPLEX nr. College Park · h · & oven. 534-698(1 Bkr. • ONLY S270 e C.1.1. 2 BR ea. kit bit-in, \V1t interest only for 5
837.STI Amigos \Vay, N.B. cnl'i. i::arages. Jnconle s:wo years. Full price $350,000.
Ganer•I
Cost• a.a~-_ 5 I 00 C ino. S32,500 O\vner 642-9192 For more informalion pleue
3 BDRM, 2 ba, new cr,>ls, ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii oron• del M•r 52.50 call K. \\'. Smnll \vith adult~ preferred. No pets. 13 UNITS. good coridition. Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc.
$225. n10. 962-7331 . JIARBOR lOO% rented. Large 6% 1818 W. Chapman Ave. -ioan. Bargain al $100,000.
213·823-0485.
"""' Ph"I s !ti OJ,'8.nge, calif.
San Clementi 3710 GREENS fl.. ort• I===' ="=""":=·=:;54~,..~761~ 1,""~·26~2~1l'l, l'!!El'l"l'l'l'l"'l'lkn~d~s~538-~~"'1~1il
;; BR, 2 BA. Sea.View. Avail Busin .. 1 Rental 6060 1-:
June 1. r.!60 mo. 403 E. San BACHELOR UNFURN. "ON TEN ACRES STORES for lease Village Resort Property 4205
J uan. 544-4294 from $110 1 Ir: .. BR. .Furn ~ U~ Shopping Cent<'r. cor of El FO!i. RENT Furn Mammoth
... _, lo\L::O Frpl~ I pr1v. ~t1os/Poals. Camino & Mendosa, CM. Mountain Condominium,
Apts. Furnished ALSO AVAILABLE Tennis · Contnt l Bkfst. put· Suitable coUet: shop, dress, sleeps 8. 675-413C
1 • 2 & 3 BDRM. tin& green. shoe repair etc. See Liquor =;;="'===~=====
General 4000 .J-feated Pools, Child Care 900 Stoa Lane, CdM 644-26ll slore for key. Al \Vagnei Mount. & Desert 6210
~nter, Adj. to Shoppi ng -11\facArthlll' nr. Coast H\';ryl 213: 981-6510
$175; J BR. 2 ba .. W/\V, No pets allqwed !!!l!~!iiii!!!ii!!iii!!ii!!!!!J5;iiii~~~-;;;-;;-:;;:;: SALTON CITY-lg Jot pa1io. Avail now. 2700 Peter110n \Vay, at Har-LARGE APPROX. 720 sq ft store . ' ~r · • Children OK. Bkr J.3.4-6980 bor & Adams, C'.osta 11esa 1 Br. So. of Hwy. across from Vista SllOpping sea vieiv, nr. Manna "-546-0370 Stove & ref., new cpts. & Center. Excel for real Club. Sac. $2000! 549-4039
$!05; Bach. Apt., patio,' '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"~!'!!!!!!!!'I!!!!! J drps. ALSO, furn. bach. apt. estate on.ice, accountant -
CarpQrt; \viw: util paid. I' ~ ~·=· v="="=· ="="'=""======! paint store etc. $110/mo'. Exthlngff, R. E. 6230
Broker 534-6980 • RENT • ~ Bilbo• 5300 See at 826 W. l9th St., Ch-I. Hastings Ranch north east
Costa Mesa 4100
$30 WEEK UP
e Conimercial Rates
•~laid Service -TV's avail.
• Cocktail Bar . Pool e \\'·estern Lrio t~ri., Sa.I.
SUNNY ACRES MOTEL
2376 Newport Blvd., 548-97j5
3 Room• Furniture
$20··$25 & UP
r.fontlr To-i\Ionlh Rr.ntals
\VlDE SELECTION
Appliances & TV's avail.
No Security Deposi1
llFRC fu111ilure Rrntals
517 \V. 19th, Cil-t 548 ... 'l~Rl
1568 \V. Lncln, Anhm 174-2800 * Villa Pomona
Costa i\tcsa's 1.ewest & most
llt.l(Urious apts now renting
Unfur. l & 2 BRs. Adult.s
only No pets. 1760 Pomona
Ave. jusl south of 18th St.
_...._.:.;_ _____ ::.::.: Bkl'. 6424422 P;..sadena horn~ ,vi th
2 BR, 1~~ baths, trplc, STREET FRONTAGE unW1ual swim pool designed
ne\v carpets. d 1 <1 p es. Ou Beach Blvd. 1480 Sq, ft. for outdoor living. Desires
S27f,/mo. Adults only no Model home ideal for insur., hi trade for home on Lido '
pets. Rilr., etc. {Bet. Kate.Ila and Isl.!. Call {213) 792-37~ if no
BurT \Vhitr. Reallor Cerritos) Signs, lndscpd., answer (2131 681-3768
2901 Ne"'P(lrt Blvd. NB ;250 mo. 10650 Beach Blvd. BUSINESS •nd
675-4630 642-"":.3 • ~"''~ =="===·=~~:;-:j -=0
• FINANCIAL
Huntington BHch 5400 Balboa Island Bus. Oppo•tunitiff 6300 Store or 0U1ct. 1627 sq ftl::;:::..=~::;::;::::;;::.::::::1
LIVE RIGHT
ON THE BEACH
f lSH. SURF,\SWli\1
In your 01vn lrtint yard
with \V/W' carpets. $600 pr. FRIGIDAIRE mo. " will dlvido. Blcr. 642-955ii JET ACTION
e LAGUNA OFFICE e Frigidaire 18 min. cycle is
Attractive modern bldg. cen-tlie fastest in the industry.
:raJ Joe air cond S9S 30 Frigidairts do tht work
Private clubhous~. heated on lse. •4942466 ' mo. of 40. 30 min. washers. Find
SU
S FAIRWAY poo1, saunas. private gate out how easy it is to own CASITAS VfLLA APTS \vith_24·hour security guard. Office Rentil 6070 a paying laundry. FURNISHED • 1'1editen·anean adult living. Garden Grove, Santa An1
* Villa Pomona Apts. Cost~ Mesa's ne~·est & most
luxurious apls now renting.
Furn & unfurn. Adults only.
No pets. 1760 Pomona Ave.,
just south of 18rh St.
J.BR. & Bachelor Apts. Near 0. C. Airport. 2 Br. LAGUNA BEACH Tustin, Orange. Anaheim'
2110 NE\VPORT BLVD. Apts. unrurn. 201n Santa 2 Bedroonis. 2 Baths Air Conditioned Coin·O-Matic;
Medallion by 1-lotpoint Ana Ave. ADULTS ONLY. rroin S250 ON FUR 8 546·7602 e ' ES'l AVENUE Equipment, Int.
CHATEAU La POlN1'E Desk space.s available in 233411 \V, Val•>>".'"
Lo" I 2 B f p I OCEAN BREEZE t INCLUDES \V/\\' ~hag .. ,,. ·-fli • • ~e y r. urn. apt. oo , upper ap . " ... ne:-vcoo O _ce building a: Fullerton 711: 525-7833
carf)Ort: adults, no pets. Large :l BR 1~4 ba. bll·ins, peti~ig. G.E. built·ins, "'ilh pnmt locauon in downtawnl-;;""~"=oc--::.'.:...'.::'.::=
Sl!iCJ f.lo. plus utilities c pt s / d r p .• !5 u r. deck refrigerator & dishwasher, Laguna Br.icb. Air condi· AFFILIATE
1941 POMONA. c. ~t. SI50/n10. 2286 Canyon Dr. Huntington Pacific tioned. carpeted. beautitul IMMED. INCOME
1
Bdrm Furn. No !X'ts ~J-321:1 aft 4:30 or Apartments paneled partitioning. T w 0 CNO SELLING INVOLVED)
Util Incl, $\OO. 1\·eckclfds 01' i\11 2·2222 or 111 Ocean Ave. 13 Blks. \Y. entrances: Frontage on Qualified individual 11•ill be * s;:,.6846 * see Apt. 1. of Huntington Beach Pierl Forest Ave .. rear leads to selected by Multi·Sta!e Inc.
P RO FESS to NALL y PHONE: {1141 536·148i r.luncipaJ parkini; lots. $50 10 supply established busi.
AVAIL. J\lay !~th: bach. apt. Decorated 2 BR. sundeck. per month !or space. Desk ness \vlth finest lriple A·l
New furniture. Adults. alr-cond, ulils ·incl. adults. 2 BORMS, • 2 BAJH and chalr11 ava.ilab!t for $5. national products (candy &
$12J. UtiJ paid 549-:JS66 $200/nio. Bkr i; 7 3 _ 7 4 2 o Business bours answering snacks\. $1,450 Cash rcquir.
EASTSIOE: Quit'\ 2 Bdrn1. 673-9127 Slj()/~lo. SI2j if :-;lay 1 yr. service availo.blt for SIO. ~d. For personal interview
Elec. blll\s, patio. Adults 2 BR 0 1 Pool. cpt/drps. Kids Ol\, AU Ulilitiea paid e.xcept 111 Costa ~tesa & surround-
onl> '"I B O"t 642-1298 · up ex. Bltns, crpts. 1,1, .. , ,." • .>U • .., e. · I 1 1 Dela\1·a1t' Studi o Apt,. .,.,one. ..i; areas. send. namt-. ad·
'vi•h all glas.'\ .,vaU overlook-'~~~~---'-~"-~ ing patio and boat C'hannel. 3 BR \Vaterlront No. 62
Coey der 1vith uSP.d brick Balboa Coves. 5 6 0 , 0 0 0 .
1ireplace and -4 large bed· P~fer tr~de for acreage or
rooms, all combined to make 1v1l. consider other. 548-7i71
1h~ an exceptional buy at CAPE COO 4 Br. Pool.
$13,900. FOREST E. OLSON. S59,000. 1523 Lin1.."0!n Lane .
645-ln03. Ch1'T1er 54S-94TI att 5 pni.
847..8531 Eves. 541·2·142
4 BR 2 BA. Ne1v shag
carpets lhro-0ut. drapes. 2
ear gar, lrg fenced yard. Nr
s<:hls on cul.de-sac. Take
OVj'r GI. By appt only. C.all
all 4 pn1 . 968-5.f:il
c rps. cnc Ol;C'l gar. ;.rard. DAILY PIL d & h • N::issau Palms e Oldcl' adults. 110 children 26:!0 De\a\\·arc JIB l1T rcs11 P one number to
$275: 2GOO SQ. Ft., 2-story. 4 1 & 2 BR. Pool Sl30 c.•o A-~3 °""'8 64:.1·~2'21 anyt irne . 5:i18!" 222 FOREST AVENUE Multi·Sla!e Inc., 907ii E Im-1 B 3 ' B • · ' .,...,-,J,, or """"" 84 v LAGUNA BEA . t l . g. r.. 1:r a .. fam. rm. 177 E. 22nd St. 642-Jfr!~ CHEZ ORO APART'IENTS I CH pcna hvy, Downey, Cali!
Din rm.; lgc. lnd11cpd. fnr.d 2 "JR Duplrx, privat" palio. s~• Atia"ta " 4:H-9466 902.12 . .
Newport Beach 3200
Barrell Realty
presents
LIDO. Price Reduction
S300J oft makes this charm·
ing home on large corne1·
lot a very good buy. Sunny
patio, maximWTI privacy. 3
bdnns, dining roon1, 3 car
garage. Call to see •
Westcliff 1230
HO~tE - R-2 lot. Excel
\Vl•stsidc. 3 BR 2'4 ba. room
tor 4 or 5 units. 549-1623
eves.
2 BR. 21 ~ BA Condominiun1
Open HollSC' Daily 1-4
BY 0\\'NER: T1·11n s rer
forces sale of :I BR, 2 Bath,
1nany extras. $150i.. below
market at $21 ,200. 962-3170
ye!. Bu~s to all school~. LARGE 1 BR. built-ins. Architect designed. Adults. L->~ " \rANT Lor.
1
Blk. from Sanln Ana carpets. drapes. Adults on· no pets. $150/nio. 675-29-\2 l'-1ew l·Z Bedroon13 , Pay ~ .
1 ED TO LEASE: CANDY supply route, part or
C Cl S
ly . $12.'.i. 5'18-2897 eve~. elcctri" only ReUi'l.'d laivyer \1·.ould like to fuU time, days/eves. Retm
ntl'y. ub in anta Ana $1 20: 2 BR "''~"" apt. lc~"n •. .., ,.,. & U " "~" :J'..'.G-:\927 or 53&-2727 u ..... ""'1"" 1n s o ni e «> C'Ct lllOllC'Y from coin
lights area .Jf Np'1. Bch. Ar!uH~ tl i11 fant 01\). Carp.. cstabhshcd r · o· Avail. Junc 1st. j.li-l09~• Newport Be1ch 4200 clrpi;. Garage. ;)46-.'\866 Poo!.\Vashcrs-Dryer.; ,, Ne"'poi l Be •a\hv 1rnc1 in ~pe1 r. ispensers in Cost.a Pd\·ate r.arages w · ac or os1a "esa & vic. No selling.
3 BR. duplex: 2 bn's., b!1os. SINGLE Young AClults Lux· LOVi:LY 3 bdr 2 ba toi\·n-:;2 -;;;o;""~~=;~'---1 J\.lcsa area. Purpose is to $16;,0 Total eash req. Send
clsh\vs hr .. ne11· painl. cp\s. & ury garden apts with coun-houSI'. NCwly det:. pool~ r.lc. BEDROOi\L 2 b a I h . havc soine> place lo put my nanlC, address & phone to·
drps. Nr. beach. Year Jse. try club atmosphere ;a.nd Call ;,.1G.J'ilO. carpet.~. drapes. blt-in11. l feC't O!l lhe desk. Have the Route Dept., P .lJ. Box 3846.
S230. 540·7?73 compll'te privacy. SOUTll -----IJ!lr to .-. Pts .. storc!<. o\vncr f ;l.!~•1\•ing library: Complete Anaheim 92803 '
E•stbluff 1242 2 ••p··•-t• 2 '·-d'~''' •-. '''''· TO\\' U BAY CLUB APTS. 1,·vino ol BUSIEST markC'tpla cc in 64:.-01.'..0 or kc;v at i701 Ellis Pacific Reporter, U.S. Codes \l'ONDE"-'L .
,;
;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:: ,,... .. " "" "" '"' NliO SE 3 Br., 2\1! ba. town. ThC' DAILY PILOT Apl D ru v op 1 .,., -4 rar ga''"'• ,I hloc.los lo ,,,,. op>< cl-• !pl ,. d 16th Neo,i:porl Be11ch. · · Anoolated, Ne1v California A · 1 pot uni..,,? -' · · ·,.. • · nc ClassilJcd section. S a v , D cquu't' ovely Bo t'
1072 Buckingham Lane.Dover
Villagc. Broket 675-1662 , TWO ON A LOT
"P•'<k of the L•'lte•" OCC'an. R·3 zone. $35.9j0 pal• l bit 2 (7141 ~j..05:)() Bil.ANO NE."'\V 2 & :1 Br. rnn. I g est, misccllaneous o-·· S . u ique · o: c cc. ns. car gar. l =="'°=~:=o:::o;~~~ I mo.,.y, time & '•l!ort. • ""k ra1·i ··~ hop by taki~
P I J R It I 27
-.,.,,,, .. ........, Sl50 1no. Cpts, drp•, iornia Codes. Jo rm 1• t C ... ovtr
$27,500 au ones ea y poo . S .1. 642.-14..1.3 alt.' pn1 DAJLY PILOT WANT ADS? now?!! 1 1 1 N b:>ok 1 .. ven 011•. ountrv club WAS $22,500 (}.vncr oUers choil'f' Blulls 841-1266 Eves. 842·2296 <is 111
' ir, I". Re a ch. _s, etc .. Pus loo much beach area 546-::'.66.:. '
Now $20 900
Gene••I 3000G 847-39j7 furniture. 675-0016 ·
1
, Plaza. l·story 3 BR, 'J. ha. 3 BR mdcc. FIC\V. w/'v crpts. --"-"';;..;.;_ ____ .:,::.:;:.:.;•~n~O~•;•~l ----_::3:000:'.:'.~G~e~n:e~<~o~f--3000 BEAUTY Sal THIS IS TIIE LAST \VEEK dbl palio. best l<w: lowest $20,&00-\ $12.JO dn. tt-2 lot. ___ :;..:.:.; 2 BR duplex, stove. dsh\\lhsr, PRIVATE OFFICE clientel • SI ?n: g
0 0
d
3
·~--C I crpt•, d"'"· SI°". Adults O"· oble, e. J allons. Reason.
1005 WeslcliU Dr .. NB 642·5200
uo:wvum. a -p e ting ma Int. Fee t..· leaSe hold , 216 KnoxviUI.?. 0 w n er I " · .. ~ "" "
t
•-·ahout. 10 x "" .......... -d ov•il ~"" ""~" ly. 1508 ouv~. 536-8:>23 . . , '"'"" ~v ... .,.~,,. · ~ Secretarial service, air con. 543-14n
patio. All built in kitchen Call f>.14.fMl C\"<;o:;. C../IQi-Q j)"\.. ,_ 1)""'(1 bQ.e DELUA'"E 2 Br. a.pis, Crpts, ditioning, k parking, BEAUTY SALON Lido ·-o ~~ai~ige:\~~ ~ [Tll~~E~B~L~U~f~'f~-s"'"-~,~-,~,~hi~o> ... u.b'"le H-~UH~n~!~irio~g~tu~or~" ___ l 40S \:)~ J.'-Q'CJ ~). (.!1 lJ(./9
'\:) 1~1~' $~~~1~;:· \Vash·i Oran~ ~u;.z. =1Bld&. ~~ es;~blis~.' 11ust .... ~11:
out. House is \•acant pll!ll 2 slory, 4 BDR~t , 2 bath: Solve a Simple Scrcmbltd Won! Puuk for a. Chuckle BEAUTIFUL 2 BR. all ex-Co!ta ~tesa' G42-l<'"' 548-~ r. wner/bmktr.
auume 6% V.A. Joan. S4300 fully •carpt'(ed & d.rat'Jl!!d, \VATERF'RONT -by owner · 1 ~ down, $134 PIT! Private Frplt'. Pool, patio, blln~. 4 BR. 2 BA .. dock, ~· on o l!'.orronoe i.i1.,1 cf tht ;1~im':1962~;;_~ mid·May, L4~XASl98E LoS275 J\l~; lge. bldg. WANTED: oU-aale liquor
Party. 962-7689 $34,500. Call aCt G r m &· \111.tcr enclosed patio $74.500. four JUGrnbled words be. .
1
· pking. stora~. l!Of'nse. Ornnge Count
E
1
, lie B k B wknds. 64•-<>!16 A1'o 611' on m•ln ohann<'I low" f~m 1~, ••P" -.. LARGE 2 B<.: I " 2 T0>l'1, •howor fad!. 2730 Call· 642-8.13' y. ~.q'2:re • »~.2SO~y Corona del Mir 1250. i~~~. ~~~si~c~~ase~~: IT OV MI E I ~~~~1~:n~:·~~J1K; cpts. =· ~~: ;3~~-2: l;VEN;;R;;oq;;o;;rn;;i;;::G2:,;Ro::u'.:,.:!:.!::~lO~u-nJ~i..
Vel\·el gtttn lawns. King Jon. 592-5998· II I 1• I' I REAL ESTATE SQ fl 'good location ce333, E' """"""67! .. !~ v.~kly. $900.
sir.eel bedrooms, den. New · · .,,~""~;,· ~~,;;~====! SOUTH OF HWY. G•ner•I 17th St., C.M. 847--8536 • -·•
built-in aPPli:tncts. diioh· l1gun1 Beach 1705 M v.•lfsher, 2 titijilacts. FOr1nal .spacious 3 Dr, Dining and I LY w o' L I Ront•I• W•nted 5w 300 Sq. Ft. Office onoy .. Lo•n
dinh1a room, Brick trim ex· !4mlly on 2 ove.rsize lots. • . 1 ~~., COSTA J\.IESA 646-2l'O ls'
terior ~charming coach· priced aL Jand \•aloes. Income Units I' I 1 IJ PROFES S JONALman " c~r.~ ;;:1 '°;8ns for quick
man'• lanlern. 04lJ.17'0 H•I Pinchin I. Assoc. Hendyman Speci•ls . . . . w/famlly doslres 3 " 4 Comrnorciol 6085 pert · ~ho on you< pro-
TARBELL 2955 H bo
l.t:ioo E. Coasl l·I~·}' 6T>4392 Loe. on Oceanside ol tlwy bdrm house. __,1unt> !st 10 · · Y eq ~'"11
ut dislu.rhi"'1 Ir r 150 yds rrom Beach. 4 !gt S17i No IX!IS. &Ts.-4917 p ll OFE.SSIONAL building your low lllten:ost ls~ TDs.
• ,.c;;.ost~;;;•..;M..;IM;;:.":...--...:.:"°"'oi '~·~S3TBR. ~~.de~~ :~ ~~:~;..,nc::n=~n~· . ,NUl'SEl'E I I The police can't use clubJ, ( ,1,1a,,"o::'c-'';::'·=-~7.""---~·I :esa~~ ~"; ;~r ~os~a ~~u:Y:~:nf;~;'t~~
F ANT A ST I C F O UR frplo" 3 B"'"""· b<lcl<. TENTIAL I N C 0 M E EX • . • . . II<'• °' dog•. I IUPf'O'O they l BR unlmn, • wilh •tove ~ oqulppod for .;odl<al 0
; S<"'lng Hnbo< A"" >! A
BEDROOM. Lovely Mesa b • am/oeillng" cllannlno CEEOING 110,llOO ANNUAL.-Will how to u .. - -. "frig"''°'· Up to Slb. multipu'I""· 49l-2'50 °' 3J6 E. 17!l. St.
Vtrde 1oca0on. '~-farnl· home or use " Ouplt ;c, OC' LY. ?rict> $69,950. lrR_l_P·L--R.-M------1 _w. T. Buek.le11 ~.rr:r C.M. art":a . Junt Ill 494-4US &12-2J71 a4>-06U _.... bulk! 2nd horn b I:" 5 b Ull'l>~t E, f.1a !n, Torra.nee, RENT Sal "NE\V ~nd LOANS
11 room.-lutb csrpcliflC. tll• e Ot. Ii lot. 1af1SSION REALTY 49<t-073J 11,--,1,.-,1•""T1--1,.-., ..... ~ • Con'\pi.t. tht chucklti ~ caiu. • or e -[)(Jll'ntO\\•n • .. AR-oeDtnl t&ndlcapinl;. ~ Bkr m.2010 985 So. Coasl, Laguna I w, ftlllM 1fi die ~ _. W Costn ~1esa lafllc 1.2 ooo ~ RANG ED Top cash for
Jot A dole l0
1
S(boollJ & SHORF.cUFf' 3 SR. z BA. I,.,..,...,...,,....,.,,..,. I -you dwelop lroin •NO. 3 b.lor.or. _ ANTED:. GaJ'a.it rental for ft storqe lol, com.plctcly lieasoflC(I 21lds. dqlpf~. Auumc 6\t'iii Quiet trM lined an"a by tll( REAL gi\~·an·ayt Go~ .. ,'~ •• -DI' 1• r I' J.Sf'-· 1' I' r I ~~ ~· only. Call tc~I & !!mall office " 54.)..1311 Bkr.
loin. no )oe.n lttt. t168/mo •· rte !!lmple. i\('('f'~'i to 2 ,.\('\\". 4 bd rm, l ba hem('. V' .... ~ . . - . ---+ . . -" 3-5420 l'llOra~ garagt'. ~1 lncl"6es ~. CALL 54Q. butbes. u~ s~.ooo. By t.tu,.-1 M'll na;1·. &16-2598 WA.N1'Et>: 3 BR unf11n 1 hM:. SELI. 0r tn uk': conimtN'it1l Mortg•ges, T.0 .'1 6345
ll51 (opm l'IWS) HaitJ;gc O\vne.r. m-.3&tl $.15.00if 6UPLEX. 2 and t () ~€.tAM<' I I I I I I • 1· I I yr s leaM-. Pnofer CM. prop. on 19th St C t.1 \V'll Sil'
Real E6tate 11.?ooo _ 10} •• ~ •• ''In .. ~ BR. vte-w, j11st rernodeled, _;.t!t!SI -• 64~ ~ tr:t.df' $22 oo.J _ .. 1 · ·
1
,i(IO lst TD, 8~ due 3 )TS, ..... uu.,. " ,.,. ' • ~.... or power 10~ dj5,,,w11
(;l(ARG'1 JOUr WUI ad l!ll)W. Jn~rtsj.. 2 Houw. R..2 So. rl\'I, \\'~1 kildtem! 494-91 .. @ ONE BDru.r Unfum Apt . for ~I 40.· or OYer. $45,sao. By .f!i,t'J1n
Dial IO.SZS tor Rl:S"l1lll'S ot Hl&h--.v. 61S-«M4 Bia. OAlLN PILOT "'ANT ADS! SCRAU·Lm ANSWERS 1N "LASSIFICATI;,,N 9000 .41
n1plo)'O(I l1rl v Ufl 1 o Ch\'ncr. 4!l-l~!t511 -~ .. "' m•'mo. 642.oosi; \Vhilo •l•phon~• Dt-'-•.JI"' OAlLY PILOT W~AN~'r--.-,,~-·1
_.,;.....:,:.;:::::;~~· ..'.'.'.~"~:::::'.-'.'.'.'.'. . 011~1 61~.:iG;-t I ---
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DAil Y PILOT 27
¥, * * ·* * ANNOUNCIMINTS
orMI NOTICES
SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY JOIS. IMl'LOY!i\ENT JOIS. IMl'LOY-E " • ~.,. T •uB•. c~•OTMlifl'i
lobyolttl"I · 6550 Poptrho"91n9 • ,..,_lo 6405 Polnllnt 6l5o Holp WonlM. M,on ~ , Holp, w_..,tod, -7200Holp WOfttod, Mon n oo Holp Wonted, -7200
' BABYSITIJNG by Ibo hour ART TREASURES OF ot week. ElQ>orle"'*' 6 INTERIOR. >:.terlo< pam• ,
EUROPE TOUR mat~. ~rus ing. nea&00&blo rates, Ut'.
JANITOR MECHANICAL
-~· ' ... _
let S weekl in Auaust 1111. Call Chuck 543--0405 9f'
JWy n lhru Aug. Zhl Brick, Matonry, etc. 6t5-0809
S p1 l n, Itaty,· France I -65601 'NEA=~T~.-.,-,-.-Poln~-.. -,-.-,.
a ........ Penonally plaMod drlnlilng. ~ mid<••· I conducted by Mr. 'R&lph BUll.D, Remodel. Repair Very low prices. Steve It Butterfield, Rlvtrskle Briel, bka. conc r e t e, ,..~ ~.,...., .._
at)< ~e PniI., artist & cqiatry, m job klO small. ~ evn.
lecturer. lnfo 4 brochure,,Llc,_;Contr;_;· .. "'=""'5=;' ==.o::l'P!'.!l'!•!!•l'!•!:!•l,'!RI! .• :,,:R~.,..~~lr~61!!1~0 4Ul Glenwood Dr., River-r:
Whoddyo. Wont? Whoddy• Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Ri te
side, (n41 6lW.501B G•Pptntering ' 6590 e p ATC H PLASTERING.
7% INTEREST CARP ENTRY All types. Free estimate.
\Vrlte for tree brochure MINOR REPAIRS. No Jobl-iCe:=l:=I :5'>"825======0: dt'ICriblng 7% I n t e re 5 t Too SmalJ Qlbinet ln gar-I'
church ~. being &Old by a .t ~ t be r cablneta. Plumbing 6890
Valley Baptlst Templt', P.O. ~75. Uno attswer luve PLUMBING REPAIR 5 LI--5 ""'" -5 bucks RVL.ES -40 MUSt INC\UOI! "Box. 5002. San J 0 s e • msg at 646-2371. H. O. No job too small 1-w~ ..., ,...,. to tn0t. '-Wl'lllt '!'Oii WMt 111 ,,.._ 1 i-.TOUlt ptOie •lldlor Ml"I. "'-5 ftnQ of ~rlblnt caliIOlT11a ~ Ande~n * &U-3.lZ •-'-NOTHlttO FOR SAL.I! -tltAOES ONlYI *PA LM .-CARDS* REPAIJI Partitions small PLUMBING REPAIR . PHONE 642-5671 Spiritual Reader. Past, Pr6-Rernodei etc Nile
0
or day DRAIN CLEANING To Place Your· Tra der's Paradise Ad enl. Future. Help _in all life Reas! c~ KEN ~ ' 5'16-2.187 01' 54~7217
Want clear lots or land for
. $.'15.500 equity, lovely 4 en
home Las Palriias area
Palm 'Springs, 01· submit.
01vllt'r 673-7071
22' f'iberglass Cabin cruis-
er, cus. trlr, 100 hp Mere
mtr. Runs like a top! Trii.tle
for like cond 'fiS or '69 Sta·
lion ""'&&On. 549-3283
$5100 SOlid corporate note
SICCUred by seasoned TD,
61h '7~. -due 3 1/3 yrs., for
late car; Continental, Cad.
' or ? 644-U65
Xlnt opport;µnity • take over
clean Beauty Salon, Lido
area, long establ., 6 slalions
Trade for lot or submit.
()y,-ner/broker. 548-7711
Der \9ienerschnitzel. 1951
ilarbor, CM. I.and & bldg.
Income S500 n10. net. $45,IQ)
equity for lots, Back Bay.
673-Sl30
TO\VNHOUSE 3 Br. 2'h ba.
Beaut. appt'd. Priv. pa1io.
pool: nr. bay, Va.J. $3'1;500.
for T.0., car, camper or ? ?
Oy.·ner 6'1&-6654
'65 FORD COUNTRY
SQUIRE \VAGON!' TRADE
my equity FOR eco'ilomy
cat 1vorlh up to $850.
538-8669 633-7541
Need room! Edward's Ba·
by Grand piano, ebony:
\VOrth $800, Trade even for
Spinet in good condition It
tuned. 673-7751 a.ft 3 ptn.
Commercial bldg, Granada
II.ills, Ul.OOl equit;y, Want
home or duplex. Newport,
Laguna.
BKR 49-t-1330
Brownin&: Semi-automatic
shotgun, Remlngkln semi·
automallc 30-06. Trade for
gold coins or proof seU:
1946 up, 546-4109 k
2~ apt units in L.A. Trade
ror boat, hOme in Orange
County or T.D.'s. f\.1r Post-
rna, 546-8030, ext t34, or
894-4094 eve.
8 cemetery lots, choioc lo-
cation in Chicago suburb.
\V A N T ,..tediterranean
breaklront_ 49:>-5-170,
problems. $1. special read-liMASTER4Aim:R'"wW.;t;1;:-1u.-;;;I=========
ing, Open dally 9 am to 10 hour. Re=~~·Re~ Sewing 6960 pm._ 7C71 Westrn.lm:ter Ave., 6GM09 . s:£.3900 -1 --~-----~-
Westminster 893-9854. .,, · or • Dremnaking _ A1ternations
e INTERVIEW e REPAIRS. AL~TIONS Custom Designs
'IV a>MMERC MOVIES CABINETS, Any sue job. *64&-6446 * , " 25 :rn exper 548-6713 ~~-~--=~=-Mt aps, No training req.,No • ' Alter ations--642.$145
exper_ nec.-e:sa. For app't. c.m.nt Concr'9te 6600 Neat, accura.te, 20 YQJ. exp.
C8ll: R1cb-Art Productions 1----'------I'="======"="= e Cl) 826-3460 e e CONCRETE v.'Orll. all Upholstery 6990
LICENSED ~M~et:ks & custom. CZYKOSKI'S Cust. Uphol.
Spirihia.I Readings, advice lluropean Craftsmanship
on all matters, 1C8 S. El Cement Work-~ kinds l00% fin! &42-1454
Camino Real, San Oemente Free Estimate'
492.9136. 10 AM-10' PM '* 636--0314 * 1881 Newport Bl .. C.M.
SPECIAL $2 READING e CUSI'OM PIANOS e JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
COUPLES, singles; Joaely! concrete sawing & removal
New In area? Join the swing State Llc.•842--1010
~fun & pleasure CEMENT \Vork nc. job too CONVALESCENT
• 635-929l • small, reaso~ble. 1', r e e AIDE
LOOKING lor my Astro-estim. H. Stulick. 548-8615 PRAC. nurse or companion -
twin, March 2001, 1928 -* CONCRETE rk bonded available full or part time,
42N-TIW. Trennel P.O. Bo."< & lie Concre~ 'sawing long or short term. Bonded
1281, Santa Ana, Calif. 9Z102 Ph'U' · Ce "'~" "~°"" · and insured. -~~~~-----,-='='"==m:=':":"~=~=~===i:H;O;>~l=E~MA::::K~E~RS::=_'-__:_5':1~""8~1 ALCO HOU CS AnonymoUJ 1 •
Choice 124 acre horse & PhOne 547-7217 0&' write to Contr•cton 6620 TEENA'S compll'te Typing
grain ranch (many other P.O. Bnx 1223 O>sta Mesa. Service • eUicienl. prompt,
uses). Trade up for Resi-ADDITIONS-REPAIRS tlelivC'ry, Cheap. 5'!6-0469
dential, lndust'J, Cornm'I, Ann·ouncemepts 6410 REMODELIN.G LOCAL lad)' wilh Practical
Income Orange Co. Bkr. --1 Designing & Plannlne Nursing t'Xp. ~ousc Y.-ork &.
675-0473 llALECREST aub Children's Kitchen&-Baths. etc. -l'OOking OK. 54~7882
12 M-l shops i!I-2 tilt-up Dance Recitil M~ ~7-Year Llc'd Ac Bonded. Free est. PRACTICAL NURSE.
bldgs on Placentia, C.l\t. _J.:QU.Jld~~ct!,Vl&e~c~ _A....1' B CON~RUCTION Avail. day ru_• nite.
Vallie $150.000_ Trade pQrf ouru -ilr cmoc:r -·--.J.122 Paularino, 0.t. · Local ref 8.16-8028
ror property. Balance? ships -Mrs. Jack Smith • 545-4!W~ * ·
-O<!l-1155 ..; " Call 548-la.i2 . * ADD -Rc.n!OJJEL * Domestic Help 7035
ONLY Best Pancake Flo1ver CABINE:l'S-BLOCK WA.Ll.51-----~----* * * * * * says Pete Willson -al ·Pan-642-9852 evening:<; George Allen Byland Agency j,!!i!!J!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!'!!~!!'!!!'l!!'!!J"'!!!!'!!!!~ cake Breakfast ,..'lay 10, 7-EmpQyer Pays Ft>e BUSINESS ana ANNOUNCEMENTS ll Afd. C.M. Park. Drifting Service 6637 106-B E. 16th, SA 547-039J
FINANCIAL and NOTICES FREE Prize! &. Continuous DE.SIGN Dntfting, electro Chinese live-i~s. ~rful
Drawings Kiwani.s Break-mcch P/C la.yoot & detail-Permanent. Expenenced
Money W1nted 6350 Found (Ftff Adt) 6400 fast • C.l\f. Park, May 10. ing. KPn Sr. &T::~-11~1 Far East Agency 642-8703
Cemetery Lots
EXPERIENCED
Excelleftt EmployH
llonoflls
APPLY "
P ersonnel Office
Thi rd Floor
THE BROADWAY
,_
NEWPORT QE.(CH
47 Courts ot Foshlon
FASlllON ISLAND
Newport Baach
An ~ual Opportwtlty
Empk>yer
Mortuary & Cemetery •
Serv. Career
WESTMINSTER
MEMORIAL PARK
TO QUALIFY: Ale over 35,
not over 60.
TEMPERAMENT: A real de-
sire to be of service to
people.
HABITS: Good steady 14·~ ,
habits, sober & ttliable.
This Is a lifetime CIJ"ttr
opportunity wilh salacy "
tringe beoefils
APPLY IN PERSON'
9 arn only
to l\lr. JE\\'ELL,
14801 Beach Blvd., \\'stn1nslr
• $100. \\1EEK +
SECURITY OFFICER
t"OR PATROL DUTY
Ch-er 40 yrs. F4rm. R.adk>
car provided. Non smoker,
drinker. Unifonn all'nce.
Apply: t PM -S PM, Rm.
405, 325 N. Broadway, Santa .,,..
Night Riders W 1nted
It you can t'Oanl the Orange
Count)' range, eves. Podnor.
I need you in my part lime
page. Alt my "hands" get I
a sa1al'y. Cal! ShrrHf B9h at
HUGHES
N!WPORT 111,lCH •
h 11 ufttnt Nqulremenh for
SWISS SCREW
·MACHINE OPERATORS
with Torno ex~rience and able to do own
setupa. Top dollars for top men. Openings
on !st and 2nd abilts.
DIE MAKERS
V.'ith at least 2 years of experlenci In steel
roll die making. · •
HOT MOLD '
SETUP MAN
with experience on thermoset transfer mold-
ing presSes.
ELECTRO· MECHANICAL
TECHNICIANS
lo fabricate complex electro-mechanical as-
se1nblies using special wiring systems. A
knowledge of laminating, polling, molding,
painting, soldering and weldfng techniques
is required. A minimum of 3 years of experi~
ence in precision ~Jectro-mechanical device
fabrication and assembly is mandatory.
lntert1ted and qu1llff9d applicant• should
apply In penon to:
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEA'CH
500 Superior Avenue
547-TI82
--Accountonts Newport Beach, Calif.
Credit Managers Equal opportunity-employer -1\1 & F
Administr1tive Trnees 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~="!'. LOCAL JOBS -
CALL BOB, 548-7796 Help Wanted Men 7200 Help W•nttd, Men 7200
ARGUS AGENCIES y
1869 c N•wport Blvd., C.>J. RE1111E• E. LEE
REAL ESTATE. ShOuldn'I
151 E. Coast Hwy.
Ntwport Beach
WANTED
Young 01an v.·lth drattJng C'X-
pc1ience to ilart on the
ground noor of large pt'\!·
cast concn>te 1nllnulac:tur-
lng lirrn. ,..fust be aLic to
read blueprints, make pro-
CONSTRUCTION
FOREMAN
LarJo prtCUt concrete: man..
uf1cturln&; t1rm need$ fOftoo
man for prodl.lCUon b'Pt
work. Must be mature·wttb
S to 10 yeal'll experie:nce in
motivatlrw men. Exp. tn pn..
cast eoncrefll preferred but
""' """"""'' REFERENCES REQUIRED
' >
A thorouah bllckgrouM! check
Will be made on alt applic-
ants \Vho Jla,IS the initial in-
terview,
SAURY OPEN
Call .~1r. i.,.ttorne. ~m1
2C 10 30 yn old for paint
mgt1ing ,..-,:n •. Full time,
year round. 1'-1lllta,ry obliga.
Uon over. Apply 1603 W.
Alton, S.A. KI 5-7101, u k
for Bob
Help Wonted w...,,.n
MAIDS
Full tln11:, da)'s.
7400
EXPERIENCED
Apply personnel ollice,
3rd 11oor •
The Broadway
NEWPORT
SECRETARY
TO $700
Excellent eon1rany n1ovii1g
to beautiful ne\\I offiC't's ill'
Newpol't Beach. Need gal to
asslst controller. Accurate
typist wllh knowledge of
bkkpg or acctg, This i.:om-
pany pays your fl"r. \Ve al-
so have ftt jobs. Call Ja-
son Best En1ployment ;\g-
ene~·. 2120 So. Main. Sanla
Ana. 546-5410
KIWANIS Breakfast helps
support Cirele K Club for
farm cducalion-May 10-C.~I.
Park.
FOUND package of yardage
al Orange County
Fairgrounds Friday.
5'"""355
yti•1 be selllng lhe hottest
area Huntington Beach?
Call Phil htcNamtt Village
RL.al E.c;tale 962-<MTI or
~S-810.';
Expe rienced --FRY
COOKS. Apply JOLLY
ROGER P@rsonnel Of-
ficit. J2'17 Logan Ave.,
Costa Mssa.
---*-BUYER--
~lAS IMl'lEDl,\TE NEED
FOR duction drawings, learn quo-1 ----------· 1
$5,000 2nd TD, 10% plus 3
poinl.'I. 1 yr.; BluIJs home ,
$12,000 Equity. 644-1265
• $15.000 -IO~h Interest •
\Vrite: Occupant.
20dS Thurin, Costa f\1C'sa
" ANNQU!l~tMEf'l.TS
i nd NOTICES
Found (free AdsJ 6'400
FOUND: Glasses in lirown
caSt!; parking lot Manny's
Coffee Shop, Huntlnglon
Beach, 4-30-69; Jia111lhornc
Optician·~ nan1e inside case.
892-7986 alter 6 P.,...1.
SMALL black female kitten,
4 whitP feet. About 12 wks
Vic. Lake Park, H.B. 536-
7656
FOUND, Boston Bull Ter-
rier, \\lilson & Fairview,
Costa f\1esa. Call: 548-1462
IRISH Setter, Female Fri.
!'\'C. \Vil.son SL CM'111' Iden.
...... 19
SEALPOJNT, Si a n1 es e.
feinnll'. Mesa Verde area.
f'46-44'18 Appliance Repain
Pim
Lost 6401 . . e EXPER J "" pa n es e f "RY COOi< -11.'!lef shift,
----------SUPREJ\1E Relr1gerat1on & Gardener C.Omplete service. 18 or over, t:Xperienccd.
LOST -Bro\vn & whilr shag-Appliance Repair. Ask for Jo'ree estimate. Call 540-l:C2 Start $2.00 hr. No phone
FOUND, Sniall black shaggy gy mixed breed · male dog, Tom. 54~1363, 547-'691 please. Apply in ~rson.
Poodle. Near" intersection ol light brown hack, 11,•tilte OJt &: Edge Lawn Collage CoHCt' Shop. 562
Fairview &. l\1urray, Cosla chesl & feet, about 16" tall, Babysitting 6SSO f.taintenance. Licensed \V. 19th SL Costa ?.1esa
l\1csa. 67l-8750 nan1ed ''Brute," Jost vicini-548-4808/6&2310 aft 4 \\'A...'i"TE'D
FOUND: Black, bnvn. \\'hi, I~ Santa Ana, heading for 24wkH~ hr~~· ~ !i~ AL'S G~nlng Ser~~ c e J<'ULL & PART Tli\fE
!'haggy male dog. Vic BC'ach Newport. Reward 548--4269. · ..-' Lawn ma1ntt'nance, g...,"en-R fre<l 11 1 & Slater. H.B. 847-ffi&.t an 4 6-t2-823:i (office). sltle~ fine Ultre al all ing & clean ups. 646-3629. .e 1.1 ·a1 gen .~niA.rt 'd "•' times. All meals inc., fenc-. . Jani or1 Y."01 , 1ns1 : .
P .f\-1. LOST: Yng, male, black e-1 backyard. supervised CLEAN-U~ Spec1ahst!_ ,..fow-oulsldr.. Con!act f\1r. Dinius
MEDIUM Size, shaggy dog:, Lahrador Retriever. No play Overnight 01. wknd lni-;. edging. odd Jobs . 3141 Harbor Blvd, C.f.I.
male. Vic New-porl t'rce,vay lags. Vic. Coasl Hwy & cn.iidren weloome. 540-181D Reasonable. 548-6,955 f.fECHANTCS
& Edinger. 540--09.">0. e\·es ~_;:~7 N.B. Re "' a rd· RESPONSIBLE Young adult. J APANESE Garde~er, com-\\Jc need 2 for full llm~·. f\tt~~I
633-2876 bah sitting Preferably plctc yard service, f1'et' ha1·c 011•11 tool.~. r~x-
BROWN Puppy w/Blk Tail. DAUGHTER Lost ri ng: eos!'a f\te'sa or Newport estimates. 541.r.1332 perienced onl~·· Apply In
Rrd & \Vht. Flea Collar. de cc as e d grandmother's 8 ca ch a r e a own per.t0n. RICHt lELD. 191h &
18th & Cresltnonl, C,..f, keepsake: vie Standard Sta, transportation. $1 hr . H1uling 5730 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
646--6575 ~~~ Fairview. Reward. 642-002'l GENERAL HAULING YOUNG MAN inlercsted in
ONB small black female C. M. Mother will care for & CLEANUP learning trade. }.lust ha\'C
1nh.:ed brd. dog. Vic of Rey LOST: Germ. Short-haired ,:IOUI' child in cul-de-sac $rl _, load. gd. ref's; Gd . pay & bc>n's
Jr. Hi. 5/1 646-8714 Poinler: brov.'l\ wfbrn. &: hof!le· Fenced yd, play rm, !IGZ-6846 ';11. 3 & wkcnds. Steady emplnlf. 646-7721
SH 0 RT_ hai r ed Gcnn white 1narkings: co 11 a r loving pup, lunch, 540-1580 HIXSON l\1ETAL
Pointer, recent mo1!l<'r dog. W/Laguna lie. 642-0428 aft 6. HA.UUNG, General, Top, !>~INISHING
2070 J\1arion Way, 642-ro.37 \VHT & Yellow Persian n1ale BABYSITTING nlY home lrim, zi:movt. trees & SERVICE slaUon allendnnl
YOUNG Poodle, Champagne cal. 'Vear'g plastic flea col· day & nights'· \Vallace i,,, hedges. Big J ohn 642-4030 21 IO 65. Oilier men prcfer-
color. Vic. of Do\i•ntown lar. Vic. Monrovia, C.M. I{ a 111 1 I t 0 n .' area CM. n>d. Gas & oil sc1vice only,
Cl\1. 640-$32 Re11·ard. 64&-4753 Pc!rmancnt 64>2Sl5 Infant Housec:lunlnq 6735 no t!X"p l't!q'd. Call 714:
FOUND Ladies prescription BLACK & \Vhilc Rabbit, lost , OJ\. e HOUSECLEANING e 538-98-16 or 714 : ;~2-9369
, sun glaSSC1i. Near beach 1n , vii:. 2nd & Begonia, Cd1'1. I COSTA 1'1esa Pre-School ExOJllent \\.'Ork. $2.SO bour. --DRILL PR-ESS--
Laguna. 4!M--3908 673-2025 , Licensed. A~ U: open 6:45 CaU 546-599S OPERA TORS
FQl}ND: Friendly Calleo LOST Large female Irish ! to 5: 45; $18 Per wk. CARPETS. Windo\vs, firs. l\1cch. I r.IL'Ctronic assembler
cal. l\·lcsa Verne area. &>lier, vie Placentia & Vic-COMPARE! 548-9803 t'tc. Res or Comc'I. Xlnl trainees. Ph: 646-0011
M9--0695 loria 0.1 Rew! 646-8786. 838-5237 \\'Ork Reas! Refs. 54&-4111 W A N T E D : M a r I n e
GERMAN Shepherd, fcnialr., 1-...405 J XI.NT day care, A,..1 to HOUSECLEANING, quality c 11 r p e nleni, assemblen
ti ntos.. ~ilver gray. in Personals 5:30. ltot meals, I i c. v.'Ork! Broolal Clng Serv. rol.leNJ, bonders, l' n gin e
Mission Vil'jo, 837-2ti66 Attractive E xpert Harbor/Baker. 54~1539 C81l 64'2-2812 anytime men. 547--0lll. 12.12 E .
Pl<'asc Ii!<' .:priiica!ion
by MR)· 16th
CITY OF' COSTA i\11':.o;A
77 Fair Or. 83+-5:.IJO
SERVICE Slu!lon n1anag\'r
nced('d. Top pay. p11Jfi!
sharing. l\ttL'll, be ambillous.
willin&" to \\'fli:J;, n1ust h:i,·c ;;
refc!'cnces anc.. NUpervisory
C'Xpericnc;" Call !i49-40-I~
DR1\FTSJ\IAN ! B 1 , elcr-
tro.m..Ch. \\'ilh son1•· 1'CCCnl
experience or !raining lo
r I 1• c I r o n i c drafting.
Docun1entor &ience~ 2~09 S.
Bmaclv.·ay. S.A. ;.u;..n-11
-STOCK-CLERK_S_
$60 per nionth to &tart. ?-ton..
day thni Friday. Advance
to !lilies or purchasing. \Vrtle
Box 1'1-483, Dnily Pilot.
-*·-NIGHTS *-
!'ull tln1e janilorinl 1naintcn·
antl'. Cali nft 4 pin. 847-2259
or 847-9j25
----~-~ HOTJ<:L As.sistanl. ni~ht and
day ell'J'k, split !<hir!. Re.
QU I!'(' rll'rical, typing, and
sonic maintermnce, bond-
able. 491-1196
illAN 21 or O\i:'r, ()311 thne &.
lull tin1e. Apply after 10 AM
Mc. & Eel's Piz1;i Parlor .
16532 Bettch Blvd., H.B.
PLUJl.IBER; Capabll', ag-
grcMive, plumbing &
healing rcpah·. Co1nn1. l
bene.lils. t94-7j25
. YOUNG !\f~~-
Pick up and Dch\"Cry
Appl,1• llub Aulo surpJy
217AJ Harbor, Costa l\iesa
FRY COOK: Gnureyard
shift. Start $100 \\ttk. 2
yeal'!I exper. nee. Apply In
pc~n 562 \V. 19th, C.M.
*COOKS
t. DISMW A.S~:ER
NIG llTS
APPLY IN PERSON
1'-: Bushoy
Apply in Person
R F.U B EN ~s
COCO'S
1555 W. Adams
Costa Mesa
MECHANIC
Jou1·neyn1an mechanic, ex.
pcrirnce foreign or Dome.'1-
th:. One or the oldest For·
eign c11 r se rvice 1l1:p11r11nt'nts
in 01'11nge Co, rJat rat•! &
'l'l:lrranty work $9.00 per
hour, ra. based on j()/5!)';'. .
E xrellrr11 ''nrking t'Ondi-
ti1111~. !\lust ha\'(' Ol\"n hand
f()()l .!1. Call Ken 1~ 1-9771. ur
-*-DRIVERS _*_
No Experience
Necessary!
1\-ltL~I hflve clrnn Califurnio
dril'illg 1'\!conl, Apply
YEL LOW CAB CO.
1116 E. 16th St.
Costa :vie~
2 Dishwashers
Age O\'C r 18, nights. Appl)
in person alt. :; p.m,
FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANTS
3801 E, Pacific ConJJt Hwy.
Corona de) f\.1ar
No Pho11r. C«n.~· ·Plt-a!IC
YOUNG \"O,'IAN CHILD Ca.re, Pt1nn.-Fri. ,..1y Pnn1onn, S. A. DON"T JUSf W1SH for some-,y " WANTED service station 111-___ .,-_ ... -.. ................ ..
thing to tumish your honiP dancer will teach you aU I o v e I y .N . B . ho 111 e. Janitorial 6790 SERV. Station attendai11 . Lendant & mechanic. Local
... find great' buys in le>-latest steps. ean-Ardell Reaaonable. 61~ 1nu1t know tune-up & 60l:l
day's Classilied Ad s. 213: 591-4538 1-10 P~t DAILY Pltm WANT ADS! SPARKLE Ja~torial Serv. 'irakes. Al's Union Station, ~ls req'd. Apply at ·
Salnman
l\lature & Sleady
ru11 lime only
Apply In pef'IOl1
GranlJ Surplus '
..
'
""
' .
Windows, resid., com c I , corner Warner &: Mll.gl'IOlla, 1 =W~'""=='=A~"'=·=· =H_.B_·=..,--07 const. cleanup. Free est. HB. EXPERIENCED Chalrsktc ' ST "Ir i 968-2691 l:EXP==·o~.--=s.-"'-'"'--,~,-,~,~,-0-n ILSSlstanl for general prac-
1 .. :1<-'f.JY A\ AR GA'ZER:1<.. COUPLE Spodaliling '"or-...,,m.,, \My. pay + tk• omci!, l.agU"' B,,.ih, 5
'-~ Br CLAY J.. PO•L'"IAN----r---'~ fices & apartmcnt5, day or co1nm. Ovt!rtln1c pay all. 40 ="~•~Y7''-w~k~. _<_94-_973_,7--.,-.,,.-
_Aft ,!!~1 ~ Y-Daily ActMt,t Wide )'{ DY ~ r1'1. night. t!M-2551 hMI. Xlnt working eond. FUU.. tln1c service statlon ~ m. 19 , Acai(ding te Iii• .Sfon. 'Y" a:i-a ~ t•or appl: 644-4131 attendant, day1. Anden;on's
I"\ 1: a.1e.~ To develop me.s50g11e for Wednesday, ' P1perhanging CAl\-IPER, M f i· n ee ds: Union 76, 1&.t5 Adams, CM.
L::] ~ raodwordscouespcadingtorunbm ~ Painting 6150 Fra.men, ca~inet man & 54G-!2XXi
TAUl lll of)'l?Ul'ZodO:birthsign. --p ----.... PAINTING Int&: Ext Lowetlt alumlnllJJ'I sJrinrer. Apply *COOK, FA~T FRY =~ ~~ ~~ !iI:-i otT;:P contracted prices. Fully im. 1'-1ajorwa,y, '2120 Placentia. \Viii train, last ad\18.ntl>, ~ ..,,..-~, JF ...... 3.lCa•wit',.63C.. NOV.II Sa"~•c·~-m .... ~-t CM. PaclllcCoasllly,y,HB
• .,··~~.. <IWho 341doo ' 6'1'4-t 18-1 U4I ........ ~ l'OO" ~ l:.===~---"7-0:-=:
-1•-1 ~Yau'll ilp.-65Htttt Jim \\.'eclal 6'B-llli6 FL00Rl\1AN, 2nd & 3rd MAN to U1i1: Ma:r. io ap-
ClMINI ~~ J7 = ., ~~ MmTMM "MR FIX-n'" shift~ pllance •Ion!, neat ·~
c;;Q,, IM~21 IS.... l&Yw • "°' ICH.ZI ..Aa Paint, Elect. Carpl'y, Haul 1346 LOGAN AVE. Pelrine· C.U : S34.(l9M • ~{<,:,~ ,:;: ~~ .f. ~= ca!u Q!! e 642--042'1 e . \..COSTA "'1E.SA MECJIANlC w/ own tools.
ti50 Nc\\•port Bh·d., C.l\I.
TV SERVICEMAN
Part Time, Afternoon
Eicp. In oul.lkh! eenrice calls,
blk Ac white: and-Color. Bnnd..
•bit. Smet resume to Boll
)f-&66, Daily Ptlot, O>sta
f\feSR. ~"~"'"~?l·,4~ 11 ~ 41 M 71 ~ "!:!""°~ e INT _ EXT ANY SlZE Ef'.P'D. Serv Sta Alt~ndant Ask for Jack 871 W.-l6tb St. ~ C4HCO :;~ 2~ ~~ :;!.l JOB Xlnt worlc rm lrce 'fSClfETTER OIEVRON N~;port Beach -
i W »!l'' :;= :_;=.a, ~::.;toct. ~ est. iJM. 60-4669. &t6-.ti<t9 ~ NeY.'))Ort Blvd., C.M. l\fORNlNG Dl&hwasher. Ap. II ~tve1~1 R'*':l Betf
1 ~ ».Yn hi~ 46"'°"" 76MoitM .wl.it ~-INTER or Ext. PAINTING. MECHANICS.Outbolrd ply In pel"IOt'I btwn 2-& pm . WI uo: h nne •<t groomed
.... -.L'l; 17c:.h •7~ n v,.,,,, ; , IMMED. SERVICE. • -• Call &44-615 btwn g..s 1902 E. Harbor, Cl\1. pt>.rsonntl. over 21. Full ' ......... 7 II,,_.. ... ,... 71 t.i:oftll ' .........,... part time. Apply 2-5. AIMl
-1''"-4'1'-'r 19lwl .J..G mt FREE est 548-1621 TOOL I DIE MAKER III-FI aales-trainee. Salary, uo :ion. !!GH!iW eo~·· llll'•-........ wlll be lnle rvl ewlng 1 Mr} 21,_.... ~I~ 91 u t ~ PAINTING, PlperifW 16 >n Apply ~· Placentia Aft. •lnt tututt. Call r.Ir, Van mlJ1ai:U traintta. 211-t W ! ~::: jt::.._. !}~ ~2:t.: :: In lhrbor am. lJc: I bond-O>fla Me1a, OillL _h~twn~=,..._==-~=71 =~~-I Oceantront. NB. ·
f\),t!f'!-21 ~~ ~ ::" =tz:: J. 9-;1,a • f!d. Refl tum. 642-2356 TRAINEE, Bus machines e F.:XPf:R DAY MAN e EXPERJEl';CED Se r vi c 41 !1:!._ JSM !6"-111 PAlNTING le malnl~a! $75. •·k start + overtime. Malthews Unk>o -~ gfaUon M.Jnman, OYft' 21.
mco V~ Y e-VAii "ICll .lnl<rlor I exterlor '.7&6W.19thSl.,CoiitaMeu 3928E.Cout ltwy,Cd.M Neatevw-tl®l fotthcal· ~ n 2fl 1i..,a1..,.. ,_......... 11 F,.,.,,_. "': • ~ •· 2''t'-S.Oa:XM 19ktn Reuonable rates. 64&-JUIS WANTED: -resmen and • BUS BOYS • ~moon llhltt. Part or full ri;.n 30 ,. __ , @.or~...__ ~~1 -;J~,.,,~ NEAT. r..xp. Palntt"r, no MethAnlcs. Apply 1 ·r2~ Ben B'ro'wn'1 Restaurant llme. Sff Oon, Chevron St. L---~==-==·=~==~===~==="'====:~=v·"6:::··~-~.___j_!·='='"~kl!!!"~~·~Col}!l•~ .. i!~'f"'~rlfi!nt.1 _&~'""--=rtor=, ,.em=ta=M7."'=,--I 31106 S, Out, S. L"f\rnn lion. 100 W. l!tlb Sl, CM. Low prit1!sl Stew; 5CM549 ,soc_K rr TO 'EM! While. t'lephant.a? \Vbite elephants! Oime•·llne
' -------~·· ' I .l.. ..
talion & pricing procedurPs.
heo!j'I in cngince ri nt:. cost nc.
L'ou11l i11i; 11nd inventory tak-
l11i.;.
ruiure opportunity to en1e1
sales dt>paMment, engincer-
in,:; and/or quality l'OrllroL
P1'l'11.'qn lsilcs : i\larri«i, :t5-:1U
~·1~. old, dralting experience.
high IQ.
Call J\lr. Larcome, 545-7117
WANUD
:; Painl"t':+-Traln~
I E:lec·trician-Sklllrtl
:! C:irr>t•ntcrs-~';'\lcd
! Bo,i<lers-Skil'<'tl
·~ S.1n:lcrs--Trnint>e
;; Ai1Sl'n1hlrr!i-Tr11inf"C
l ShirP"I' of y;u;h!s.
l::.lander Yachts
JTl'JI &:. PLACE,~Tl,\
COST A 1\:I ESA
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY!
J oin toda.1,s lasrest g1vwin&
pro[c!<~ion-~lulual Fund salf'~
No experlC'nC"e nf'Cl"ssAry-
\Vp tt·ain lull or part tlm•
MutuAI F und Advisers.
Inc .
Npt ll l~J:l \Vestclill 6f.!-642'o
SA 1212 N Bruao"·ay
!'·li-~"..11 ---------
COOK
Exp~ri•nct>d Onl y
Ch.er IS. 1\m>lJ in Pt'l'SUU
Five Crow:is
Restaurant
3$01 E. Coos! Hwy,
Coi"Dna rlcl J\.tar
Trn1por.i1')· r::n111loyment
URGENR Y NEEDED
•"LABORERS
PROOF
Ot'ERATOlt
l::.\:PER!El-<CED
United Catlfo rnia
Bank
,1;a; i\faeArthur rn,-d .
51()..44ZI
Equal OJ•portunily employC't'
EXPERIENCEO
e ESCROW e
SECRETARY
UNITED CAL IFO RNIA
BA NK
3141 E. Coast Hwy
Corona d11 Mar
673-9240
Equ:•I opportunity en1plOl'er
F.XPERIENCED
STENO
UNI TED CALIFORN l.A
BANK
3009 Harbor Bll'd.
Costa t.lei;a ~G-203.'{
Equal opportunity e.mployer
CLERK TYPIST
~~or lat~!! i;toc·k brokC'I"
P"C oU:icr. J\1 II :s I be
yoong, attractive, type
6.'I + wpm, .$375. Apply
l\f~r 9:30 AM !'ihct1rson,
l111n11nill &.:·Co. 5,30 N~·w.
po1•1 O;intrr Dr.
LEGAL-1r81~. StPno/Sel'.'tt-
turr. to S 100. Al'lon11'y \viii
•train. TYJll" 60, limilvtl HllOl't•
hond. Heavy on slenocnnl I
girl officio. Xlnt opportunll)'
tnlt'rVlewing
~ton thru Fri., 8-5 P.M.
INTERIM
P ersonnel Service
-to lcr1111 legal In N.B. Appl.Y
Dollr/.~ O<!vclopmPnt Corp.
1767'.? Ar1nstron1. Snnta Ana.
&46-';I~.
4-15 E. 171h, Cbt &r.1-7523
~ MOTOR-HOME--
A11emblers/ Builders
lmmcdlalt' 011enirg11 for nlen
~·ilh eqw!rlf-OC'e In plumb-
i111:. electrical, walls, cab~
eta Md finlah -or we wUI
train you. l\f111t have some.
hand tools. See Rkk, 2l3S
Canyon Drive, Cotta Men
&tZ-9758 '
-PostUon open In rasb-
lonabl•-Newport Beach
tt11tauran't for ambitious,
personable young man.
~need In rtstaura.nt
~I. Reply to
box # 11vtrc resume.
... M.QJ, Th< Dan,
P\/ol,
--Med-ica l-Recpt.
Mu$l I.I(' e.~pcf\ accurate typ.
ist. son1e bkkPK. 1ble to talk -
with peoplr, no Sat wortc.
MOO. mo. Beach IU"l'a. Call
Dorts S48-7796
ARGUS AGENCIES
1869 C Nn'JIOl'I. Blvd., C.M.
* BARMAIDS-.-
No ~XP. ntt, No costume
req'd. Tp $3. per. ht. Pb:
$32.9'11 for SW-0327
, APPIY
HONEYCOMB
l<2S E. Chopmon, CJrana<. * GIRL f RIDAY * Atlnci.lvt, Bhlrp 1al. ap
20-30. look:lrw for an optJI*
tunlty to m6ve up fut. Type
$().$), np S!-1' Selary $3i>
MAN JI to 30 kir lawn et1f·l-'-i<00."'-_,&12,,:,,,-'3q="==~--I
ltng routo. Stead)'. Slu1 EXPERIENCED
uoo monlh. M"'1 "'"'"own WAITRESS WAllTED
tnJVipo!'fatlon, Apply 8 AM. Contact ~tr. ur ?.tn1,.Zl1na1er
~ Gtlry Dr, Industrial Flying Butlt r:
""'' ol'LagUn. Nlgu.1 moon
't
----~--------------------------------------~------------------------
• •
'~ • I' . . .
• .. r • • -
MIMI. ~ & IMl!LO MllCHANDIJE-llOa MliRCHANDISl -FOR-t,llRCHANDISI FOR SALii ANrlJ>'l'IADE. -·
SALE AND TAADli SALE AND TRADE SA LE AND TRADE ME RCHANDISE FOR
1 ~~5,1"'9 _ t;!--.,~~ ~ga EMPLOYM~!!IT JOIS&
•' ~tip WlllllM w-7.00 Holp We-Holp W•ftl.d w..,:,,.. 7.00 Help W•ntetf w-7.00 W-1.00
.
I I! 'I
I~
11
1'
I
1-.
, ,
,.
'
I
Temporary Employm"t ADVER1 1S ING
URGBITlY Nff.DED. . Secretary/ ...
• Cleib
• Typists
• Repro Typists.
• Secretaries
• Keypunchen
• PBX Open.
• Assemblers
Work when & whtN
you want!
llllfllM
PERSONNEL SERVKE
445 E. 17th St. '
Costa M111, Calif.
642-7523
Interviewing
Mon. thru Fri.
8 e.m. 1o 5 p.m.
Equal opportunity employer
* EXECUTIVE * * SECRETARY *
Magazine pUblisher nei!'ds
good right arm with top
:;Ir.ills. Must be self starter,
accurate. fast and capable
of handling o w n c o r •
respondence. A big
plusabilily lo write good
promotional copy and/or
advertising ex p erience
Bookkeeper
Re1pon1iblt, top ltvel
position fo r sh1rp, t•k•
chare-girl. Must heve
excell.nt 1kll l1 incl.
1hor1h•nd; honcllo Ille
bkkpg; billl"ll. Under
30. Coll BorboMI. (714)
642-391 0.
RH'S· KU
Excellent wdrld~ COtlditlonl,
·above average Wary and
fringe benefits,_ <;all person.
nel dept. bet, 8:30 am • 5
pm, ~Ion. thru Fri. 527·?7f.!
Stanton
Community
Hospital
Typist with 1 futurt l
$476
Excellent company moving
IG beautiful new offices in
Ne1vport Beach. Need ae·
curate typist -will train
preparation o! the work.
Call, Jason Best Employ.
ment Agency. 2120 So.
Main, Santa Ana 546.5410
Salary open. Jmmediatel-~===='-
placement. For interview EXPE:RIENCE-0
"'1! Mn;. M ' F ' "a " WAITRESS s:-16--4370
HousekHper~live In Apply in P erson
i\lature woman needed for SURF & SIRLOIN gen. housework & cooking. Newport Beach tamily w/4 5930 Pae. Cst. Hwy.
children. 1-t ust be able to Newport Beach •
swim & speak fluent Eng-RN'S
li&h. Oear $225. per mo ·t-11 Pr.f to 7 Ml. Full and
room & board, Send em-part time.
ployment history ~ re.fer· LVN'S
ences to: C. T. Wallick, 1000 3 PM lo 11 PM and 11 PM
So. Grand Ave., S.A. lo 7 AM. Full and part time.
ATTENTION! PARK LIDO
Bar Maids _ Dancers. Apply Convalescent Hogpital
al the Bunny Hutch. We can .1445 SiJperior Ave., N.B.
offer you hig salaries, high 642-2410
UP' plus a groovy Pia"' to·l--G~IR_L=,F:..:R_l~D-A_Y_ 1
work this summer. Must be
attractive & 21. No expert-In busy stock brokerage of-
ence necessary, we will fice. r.rust'be young, attrac.
train. C~ Gary or Jerry live and energetic, Start $325.
al 83S-3202. Apply aft. 9:30 AM Shear-
Work Near Home son, Hammill & Co, 550 New.
• AccounHng!Bkkpg port Center Dr.
• Seorolaria! GIRL FRIDAY
• Reception Carpet store & bldg malC'rial e 'I)tpists sales. Parl time, 3 day \Ve<'k,
Superior Agen~y Call for appt.
Established 1946 J. J. Knickerbocker
1851 11arbor m, Costa Mesa 18582 Beach Blvd
Coronet ·
Employment
Agency
Serving _
all ol
Orange County_
Th••• •elected po•i·
tions e re with Or-
an ge County firms
noted for excellent
working conditions &
job sec urity. We in-
, vite your inquiries on
these and other fee
p a i d ~r applicant
paid career oppor-
tun ities.
Beach Area
Opportunities!
Bookkeeper
$600.
Fee negotiable. A-
lert, capable gal to
a s s i s t con troller
through P&L state-
m e n t s . Construc-
tion, real estate or
allied background.
Dynamic company
with challange.
Typist
To S400
Front office, com-
pose simpl~ letters
& type bills of lad·
ing. Excellent medi-
cal & dental bene--
fits. Fun1 young,
busy office. Fee by
applicant.
Production
Control Clerk
$100 Week
-------Otllco
Secretaries
Typists
ALL OFFICE SKILLS
EA1'\.N MORE wmt US
Chlmpagne
Temporary Help
ANAHEIM
775 W. Le Polmo
NEWPORT BEACH
3849 Birc h Strfft
SANTA ANA
1616-F, E. Fourlh
540.7345
An Equal Opportunily
Employer
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR
\Vith a ln.inimum of
one year's experience
on IBM ecfUipment.
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
500 Superior A venue
Newport Beach, Calif.
Equal opportunity
employer -M & F
EXPERIENCED
PART TIME
TELLER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
222 Ocean Avenue
Laguna &nch
494-65"46
Equat opportunity employer
T,~' IX;
UZ #.E/NDER:S • fw-M A_, 'JfJP c...,,.., D•. • H~ a-11 ... ..,. ... , ,,_ °'-• c_, ..... ,.,,,
PhoM .S.f6.21JI
Please call For
An Appointment. Call first 64'2·7141 lftg Beach 962-3351
SECRETARY For Laguna
Hill• law ollke. Cmporale DENTAL' ASSISTANT
Experienced, ag-
gressive gal with a-
bility to work with
minimum supervi-
s i o n . Electronic
background helps.
Company movin g to
l r v i n e Complex.
Room for advance-
ment here. Fee by
applicant.
1 ~~~
Or probate ex p e r ience
prefel'red but not required. E U 1 ·n· M 1 ha Good skills, salllry com· xce en poSJ on.. us ve
mensurate with ability. age front desk experience.
25 to 40. Telephone 830-0150 Call 546-.5613
·ror appl. SJ\RAH . COVENTR 'f has
TELLER Exper. over 21 at-openings for full or part
tractive and personable. time sales. Min. age 18.
Also new acrount~ teller ex-P leasant \Y'Ol'k, no invest,
per . or will train. Royal no deliveries. For intervie\v
Savings Laguna Hills, Mr. call S.10-0614/ 837-4749/
Purnell for appt. (714i 847-8950 __ __
&17-Slll LOCAL JOBS!
\VOr-.1EN Needed as Vanda Sect:ys, Recpls Gal Fri, Oerk
Beauly Counselors. Teach, Typist & part time Dental
ai'lvise & show this p.restige Asst.
cosn1etic line in your free Call Doris, 548-1196
time. 67a-5195, 847~6 or ARGUS AGENCIES
546-1765. For appt. 1869 C Ne\vport Blvd., C.r-.I.
MALLIE'S TYPE AT HOME-
Wig & Beauty Salon has op-Need women with good typ.
erllngs for r.tBJlicurist &for Ing skills to work at home.
P edicurist, guarantee &/or ll1ust have experience in Jeg.
commission. Hair Stylist al field. Call 3 PM to 7 PM
\vilh some following, 548-3446 only, 968-1087
TELEPHONES o I i c Ito r , Me dic al Transcriber
exp'd pref. CM oltice 4 pm -1 year e>.-per. Type 50-60 wpm,
9 pm. 5 days. S2 per hour. no Sal \\1lt'k. $450 mo. Beach
Permanent. Call 545-0137 area, Call Doris, 548-7796
Mr. Fo..,Jadl ARGUS AGENCIES
SALESLADY \\'anted, Ladies 1869 C Newport Blvd., C.M.
wear, some exp. preferred DENTAL ASS I ST ANT,
good salary, 5 day week, P cdodontic practice. Ex-
Mad-Fashions. 10055 Adams perience desired, Se n d
Ave. at Brookhurst • resume to: Box l\f.SOS The
\V AlTRESSES: D a y & Daily Pilot
Grave yard shlfl 2. yn. ex-1'w"o,::ME:::,,.cN=~W~A-NT=E=o-~r -o ,
perience ~. Apply assembly & lite shipping.
in person, 562 W. 19th St. Apply Teto Div .. \l/OOLSEY
.C.P.l. MARINE INC. 887 W. 16th,
RESPONSIBLE Babysitter Newport Beach
needed, Refs required. Own WOMAN or girl for lite
transportation. S.A, area. housecleanlna. Pa cl t I c
8.18-9759 Sands area. Live-out; v.ill
MANACER-TRAINEE train, S300 per mo. Call
Sportswear shop, Balboa Isl 536-2456
Sales experience necessary.1'w"m==R=E=s~sES=.~Fu"""JJc-"O&-pa-crt·
673-8222 Aft 5 PM tor appt. time. Apply in person. Swiss
AUTOMOTIVE OMV clerk, ChaJc t, 414 N. Newport
Theodore Robins, Inc. Costa Blvd, NB
llfcsa. Call Elinor Wall fur 1o·-FFl-~CE--O.-ER-K.-~b-a-,~,-,i
appt. £42..0010· «kills. Appfy; MBcCmgor
SALESWOM A N Ex· Yach! Corp. 1631 Placentia,
perlenced In ready to wear C.M. 9 to 12 only.
File Clerk $286.
Recent high school
grad, neat & trim,
5'4" plus. No experi·
ence necessary. Fee
by ap plicant. •
Re pro
Secretary
$100 Week
Tech publication de.
partment, h e a v y
typing, good spell·
ing & grammer a
must. light short·
h a n d . Company
pays fee.
Jr. Sales
Secretary
$100 Week
1'-linimum 2 years
experience, short·
hand 80, gels the
positi on with top ..
company. Fee paid
by company.
PBX Relief
$80 • $85 Week
Will · train Spanish
speaking with some
office experience.
Type 50 lo 60. Front
office appearance.
Company pays fee.
Coronet · ·& sportswtar, Part time. MAIDS, Ben Brown'11 Motor '
CM. 546-2462 Hotel. full time, good 1>8.Y· J
L.J VE·I N b abys i tter 311065.Coast.S.Laguna ,
litchow;e'WOl'k. N t W P O rt ~tEX[CAN HskpNlve iri. 1
"'•'" ...... ,...""' ea.. ror, '"'""""' ....... , Employment Q<JAIJTY fishi"' rod ~ Niguel ~720 I
per. Brown1ng Mlg. Co. 1919 GIRL Fliday, l·tjrl ollio.. I . = ~'!!11
.... =_.w. ca!! 1 Agency
time ba.byl:ftting &: a&.11st Eiqi'd aeanutreA to sew
w!laundJy. e•'l-39'1l camper curtains. Clll
DENTAL ASS ISTANT 89l0311> all<r 'p.m.
Newport Beach 6f6.5(ll DENTAL ASSISI'ANT
• J'1JLLERE'JT&S. l~avt Ne~ arta. ~ ~ pkk up omen. Call 548-3Ul5
AYI; $2,fiO pet' hr. 5*-6T~ MAID O\W 30, permanent
TELEPHONE SolkitOC"I tX• part tJme, 6 days/week,
pu. Work at heme-no tell .. , tl.7S hour. ~
top dollar. In.!) m..lOOT MASSEUSE WANTED
SF.atETARY I Bookkff:per, Hoon Open. Call for Ar>
'd tmmedla.l• ope:nftw. potntmtnt. M2"-6009
::..., White ekpbantst DlmH~
1202
E. Washington Pl.
(Gr•nd l S.n• An•
Fl'Mwe y)
Santa Ana
541 ... 171 ·-----.)I
____ , ___ _
See Betty Bruce al
mi66lxec
Agency for Career Girls
410 W. Coast Hwy., N. B.
By appoin t. 646-3939
IMMEDIATE opening for
young 111.dy who wishes to be
troined for general oUice
clerk in the moving & 1 storage industry. Appllcan!s [
must have typing skill, will
train ren1ainder if qualified.
Apply in person. 929 Baker,
C.?II. Lido Van & Storage.
Insu rance Clerk
?ttedical exper. Work plll'I
time 1~16 hrs per ~·k. Pre-
fer non.smoker. $3. hour.
Beach area. Call Dtlris 548-
7196
ARGUS AGENCIES
1869 C Newport Blvd., C.M.
* SEA.r.1STRESS *
Experienced or will consider
young trainee. Apply in
"'""O" JohanS£?n & Christensen
898 \\/. 16th SI., N.8.
Corner o( 1tonrovia & 16th.
ALTERATION \VOMAN
Full time, experienced, for
ladies & mens alteratlons.
Call for Appt.: 540-5050 Ext.
30. JOSEPH MAGNIN
Equnl opporturiity employer
COf.IBINATIQN, Sharp Bar
ll-laids & Go Go Dancers.
Top v.'ages $3J)0·$3.50 to
start, Ph. for int. 56-9983
SASSY LASSY, 2901 Harbor,
C.M.
DREAM Job • Kee p YoW' im·
portant job as wile &.
mother & earn a wkly
payc h eck. 544 -3854,
636-3497, 531·1010, 542-1891
GIRL FRIDAY • Civil
Engineering ilrm. Dictation
a. must. Need car. 5 hrB daS.
ly. Resume to Dally Pilot
Box M-322.
SPECIAL M AC HI NE
OPERATOR • Top ~"
Steady, Gannent M f g r.
&Jl."'6
BEAtrrY oµentor with
aomc foUowing, Full or l)lrt
time. Corona. del Mar. Call
after 6 PM 673--0968 •
\YJNDOW Rirl.s wanted, 20 to
35 yrs of age. Work from U
AM ti! 2 PM. Apply
McOoll&ld'a 635 W. 19th, CM
HSKPR. & ehild care, live
In, 5*' dAYS, Pvt rm. & ba..
Ref's. $200. mo. ~rlodtc
raises. 54().9214.
BABYSITrER, my homt;
Tues 3-10, Thurs 9-2. Fri .11). '·
LIVE-JN or out babyaftter.
Own room 6 bflth. Jtets.
S!B-3170
Jollt -· Worn. 7500
P,emier
PERsONNIL
AIHNCY
445 I , 17tlt It.
Cotta M-. ........
1l04 I . 17tlt St.
l•nta Ant
547'"'721
FEMALE
F M P aid
Gt nl Ole Trnff $340 ' .
Type SS, (fent'ral oHice ex·
perience. Will train as
Claims Secretary.
Fumltu,.. IOOll Fumlture IOOll Mi-I._ . l600 Ml_ll._ 1600
[l;rJ~-~FURNITURE
' ll4ualit. Monuloct11rer'1 •
, 169: lhOwrOom S1mpln AU ____ _
8' Wood carved amHliYAD, lg. man's chair
or love seal 8 Pt·Oc:tagon dark oak din set
w/bla<k or'avocado framed chain; 8 Pc BR
se~ ·941' Mr· I< Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2
cOmmodes, decoraUv~ headboard in Spanish
oak design with matclting box springs, mat-
tress & frame.
Items Sold lodlvlduelly
Shop Around-Boforo you buy -USI
VALUE $1095.95 -FULL PRICE $529.95
, or terms as low •• $4.66 per week
Use Our Store Charge Plan or Bank Financln~
No Fancy F)'ont -B)JT Quality Values Inside
.. "
' : ... '
AUCTION
TUESDAY NIGHT
7 P.M: .SHARP!!.
Inspect EARLY
As We Sell QUICKLY!
AOK Commission Gallery
n22 GARD&N GROVE BOULEVARD
1 Block. West of Beach Blvd., off G.G. Frwy.
-~ FM R1lmbur1ed
Secretary t o $500
Type 60, shorthand
Bright, some \\'Ork
perience. Exce:Uent
portunity ~o advance.
furniture aooo' Pl1nos & Org1ns 1130
~~~~~~~~\~~=--~
:: :J"::~==::'::W=om.=7=500= Schaol,.lnlltruction 7600 20 Pc. Maple
op. , Edw:ational Vaoation <th 3 ROOM GROUP
Used Organs
C2 Hammond \v/Leslie $1495
4500 Wurlitzer Console $1695
Jfammond rhord, ebony S3*'i
Hanunond chord, walnut $295
4140 Ww·iitzer . , ..••. , $1295
4070 \Vurlitzer , ....... $99j
r.10c1 A llam1nond wiles $1595
Applicant pa ys fn
Legel Seely $525
2 yrs legal experience.
Type 80, shorthand 100,
able to~ dictaphone,
Wutr $110 wk
Experienced dental waxer
urgently nttded.
Public ation
Typi1t $525
t year expe r ie n ce
operating F r i e d e n As-
justo-writer,
Gtnl Office $398
Type 40, will anliiw er
phones, filing & COl'-
respondence.
. Receptionist ~ , ..
Front office vivacious gal.
A lot of phones & public
contacl, type .fil-50. Some
work exper ience.
Keypunch $105 wk
Data Proc:essing A or B. 1
year experien.::e Alpha or
Numeric.
FC Bkkpr $500
Escrow background, 1st &
2nd Trust Deeds. Ex -
perience In construction
forms & statements of ac-
crual.
File Cl erk $286
Good chance for slim gal
~'4" to advance. No ex-
perieiice necessary.
MALE
Fe• P aid
Inside Sales t o $600
2 years college w it h
n1cchanical orientatlon.
Applicant pa ys fee
O rd er Desk $600
* ' * graders • , • Sr Citizens OtiL lncludes.: Living mom set . J . C. Penney Co. coat 10 Jesson typing Sehl table, • lamps • bedroom
Fashlon Island Trial Lesson. 173 Del Mar set • quilted mattress • ma·
"Newport Beach C.M. 548-2859 pie dilling room. All for •••
l las opening Pl:ANO Lessons: The very $449
bcl;t in instructions. Call !or 644-2G39 No down -Pmts. only $18 mo. * CO~K * . '::n'!.. K::,•'~~,"i:':.."~ WELK'S WAREHOUSE
W1.lh_ some experienc~ and Singing. 642-5512, 494-9340. 60t W. 4th St, Santa Ana
'\lillmg to learn our limited' Open Daily 9 . 9
m;enu. <;ompetiti~e ~ages, f u rnltur• 8000 Sat. 9 • 6 Sun. 11 . l outstandmg benelit.s mclud. . .
in fit h · 20 PC "MADRID'' OILED Walnut d1n1ng table, g pro s anng. • 8 upholste~d chain;, 15"'1.
Lowery Hoi!day ........ $695
Baldwin 71P .. .. .. • .. • $695
\Vurlitzer 41 ........ , • $495
Gulbransen· Rial1o .•.. $2500
EVERYTHING IN f\1USIC
Beach Music Center
Factory Sales & Service
Apply in person 3 Room Group 54~5653 <2l3) 379-396,1 Daily 12 noon 'til 9, Sat g.5
10 A.M. to 5 P.M. FROM MODEL HOMES W~UT double bed, box 17·104 Beach Blvd., (Hwy 39)
Monday thru Friday Includes: Qullled sofa & springs 8:_ ·mat 1 "{_es s : l~ 1ni, So. San uiego Fwy.
chair _ 2 end tables & cof-·spotless, $50. 847-2125 1-luntington BcaC'h 847-8536
*
J. C. PENNEY CO.
24 Fashion Island
An equal opportunity
employer
* ASSEMBLERS
*
Electro-mechatlical assembly
including soldering, Experi-
enced, or ~·ill t1·ain,
Call Personnel Dept.
1714) 494.9401
TELONIC
ENG'!llERING CO.
Laguna Beach
Equal opportunity employer * B~'!'~OYS
AND * W~ITRESSES
l\Iu!t be over 21
Apply in person 2 to 5 Pl\1
J\fonday thn1 Friday
HUNTINGTON
SEA CLIFF
Country Club
3000 Palm Ave., H .B.
OPENING
}"or Experienced
Real Estate Salesma n
in we.JI established office
"C" THOMAS. Realtor
224 W. Coast Hwy, 548-5527
FRIAR FISH & CHIPS needs
COUNTER HELP. App:
~927 D, l{arbor Blvd. Costa
Mesa.
f~ table -2 lamps -dress-EXTENSION Dinette table ~ ONCE A YEAR
er -m!rror -headboard-w/ 4 chairs. Student desk. WURLITZER
quilted box spring & matt-Baby Gfl!.nd piano. 546-792il PIANO & ORGAN SALE
ress -5 pc. dining room; New Pianos iron1 ...... $579 I
table & 4 hi·back chairs. Off ice Equipment 8011 . New Organs fron1 ..•.•. $699
COMPARE AT $749.95 WHY BUY USED?
$399 CASH REGISTER Open ''°" & Fd °"" 'Iii 9 . National, 8 dept's, good e Rental Purehase Plan •
No dmvn-Pmts only $16 mo. Cond. 8'!7-8536, AM's 5364868 Gould Music Company
WELK'S WAREHOUSE Ger•g• s.1. 8022 2045 N, M•;n, SA 547-0681
Use d Ha mmond
ORGAN SALE
s.3•5, RT·Z. C-2, A-lOO's, ?4·
l\JOVING 600 W, 41h St., Santa Ana
Open Daily S.-9
Sat. 9-6 Sun 11.S Bargains galore! Suiling
dinghy, desk, yarn, \\'rap.-
SPANISH Returned from ping counter, lamps, o i I
Model Homes on sale al paintings, p!'ojeclor, titter
less than wholesale! Group totter, clothes, chest & etc.
includes beautiful 9 6'' Tues, Wed, Thurs 10.7. 400
quilted seila & Jove seal. Belvue Lane. Balboa !Bctw
3 Spanlsh oak decorator L & ill St) 675-0181.
IP.bles, swag or table lamps,!-=========
\Vall placquc, king, queen, Appli1nces 8100 or lull si~e bedroom suite ~~------
complete incl box springs, 2 REF~GERATORS, l
n1a1tress. linens & boudoir 1~nder counter Westinghouse
lamps, Spanish oak 6 pt' g.reat for wet bar $50. 1 Full
dining set priced rlsewhe~ size G.E. $30. Both clean &
at a pprox. $1195.00 ALL in good cond. 642-7274
FOR ONLY $399. $20 down, KENMORE A u tom a t i c
$4.99 per .. Pe k out of 1vasher, late model. Xlnt
state credit OK. ' W i 11 cond.
separate for qulck sale. 20th $50. * 847-8115
Century Furniture, 9 7 7 2 BRAND ne\v GE refrig. 12
Garden Grove B I v d · • cu fl never used Only $170
Garden Grove Daily 10.9, or. be~t oUer. ~197
Sat 1()..6, Sun 12-5 C.ome ===~~~--,-
in or call (7141 53(}-5240 HOTPOINT Auto \Vasher,
. late model, xlnl cond $45. 20 PC. MODERN • 11414115 •
3 ROOM GROUP NORGE GM Dey.,, !ale
1 1 d . Fl _, la & chair model, :xlnt cond. $50. nc u es. o,..., so • * 8'!7-8115 * 1valr.1.1t tables . lamps
complete bedroom with quill FRIGIDAIRE Imperial, c1-oss
ed mattress • S pc. dinette, lop. $75. or best oUC'r.
etc, All for . . . 536-0019
$277 N<. down -Pmts, onJy $10 mo. Antique• 8110
WELK'S WAREHOUSE v.,1 •tock Amec/Euc rum & clocks. Larry Morgan Anti-
~ W. -tth St., Santa Ana ques. 2428 Newp, Bid., C.M.
Open Daily 9 -9 Sewing Machines 8120 Sat.9 -6 Sun.ll .6
lOO's, L-lOO's, 1-1-3. A Is o
many pianos -Stein\vay,
\Vurlitzer, etc.
Open Sunday 12 to 4
1-IAMMOND
in CORON·A DEL J\IAR
285-1 E. Coast 11wy., 673-.8930
CONN ORGANS
AL L MODELS
NEW & usi:;n
Hear the NEW 3 Manual!
Gould Music Company
2tl45 N, Main, SA 547-0681 * BABY GRAND Piano;
French Provincial styled.
Take over paymen t s.
546-2815
1205
e COLOR picture tubes,
ne"'• installed $75. Call
962-5303 anytime
Tape Recor ders 8220
W Ai'JTED lo buy Sony 250
tape deck. Reasonable!
646-1982 or 83> 1211
Sporting Goods 8500
US Diver's Scuba tank with
rcguJator. Like new? $100.
673-9440
M isce ll•neous 8600
K n o w n1 o l o r p a r I s ! --,.,..-,H'°'Al'°R"ST=Y;;L-;IST=-;e.--
catalogu<'. mechanical ap-W1TH FOLLOWING
17 P K• s• 1969 SINGER with zig-zag &
C. lftCJ lie walnut console. Makes bul-Bedroom ton holes. designs etc., $5.25
Large 9 drawer dresser. mir-mo. or $36.00 cash. 526-6616
MAPLE bookcase. i\1aple
night stand. Bleach ed
mahogany hook c a.se.
Wrought iron glass-t op
tahlc. fltarb!c top cigarette
stand. FlorenHnc ""hite and
go1d 11er !able. Bu r n I
01ang<' upholstered chair.
solid lorass candlestick table
lamp. 1''1oor swing· t i p e
lamp. Thiis •i.s quality
n1erchandise in good con-
dit1on. 54~0906.
titude, somP. invenlory con-LIDO AREA OR 3-5930
trol. high school grad.
Mo1int Mech $3.50 hr
Experience in plant con·
veyor and equipment
maintenance, electrical &
mechanical, kno\v pumps
& pipe welding.
Renttl Agent
Trainn $2.25 hr
lA!arn rent·a-ciir business
top to bottom. Managcn1ent
opportunity.
H ardware Sale• 'IE wk
Exper ience in au types of
hardware sales, military
complete.
Lumber Sties $115 wk
Expt-rience in alt 4ypes of
lumber sale~. citcellenl o~
portunity to advance to
mMagement, m i 11 t a r y
oomplete
Fork Lill Opor $2.75 hr
Ex~ritnce. ln shlppina &
recefY1ng. \Va reho use,
aom~ bobtail driving.
Agencies, Men &
.Women 7550
It's Not Luck-
It's Know How
Female
Sec., Exec. aggttssive to $650
Bookkeeper, thru T & B $550
Clerk Typist, 60 WPM •. $450
General OUice. good skiUs
........................ $41111
Me le
Administrative Trairl('e,
Fee Pd. • , • •• .. • .. • • .. $650
Buyer. Electronic exp.
Fee Pd' ................. 9K
C.Ost Estimator, some
college, Fct!. Pd .... , $780
Public Relations sup\'.
Fee Pd ............... ljK + many n'o1·e pollitions
(Also Fee Jobs\
MERCHANTS
PERSONNEL
A1en<'y
20-3 WestcliU Drive
· Corner 17th & Irvine
~s.mo -545-5685
newpon.
personnel
• agency
P rofes11onal Service
for the e mployer
and the epplie1r,t
Olli M . LU Dover Dr., N. B.
Ct achono 642-3870 549-2743
R1pelrm1n to '$800 mo , BUSIEST marketplace In
EX'ptr~nee in repairing all town. The DAILY PILOT
om~ m1u::hlne1 In !hop & ClAMltitd fiect}()n. Save
field, dtpcndable. money, time & c.Uort. Look
nowllt
ro1, 2 bedside slands, Icing •
size headboard, frame, qullt-Musical Inst. 81 25
~ mattress. i;h~ts. blank-Guit ar Headqua rte rs
ets, etc. . e NEW and USED e Oiolce ol Spanish
or lliodcm Style
All 'For $249
Fender • Vox e Standel e GIBSON e MARTIN e \VrLSON e YAMAHA
No do"rn · Pmts. only'$9 mo. Drum Headquarters
WELK'S WAREHOUSE • NEW ""' USE.D • LUDWJG,)WGEP.S, AsrRO
6((' \V, 4th St., Santa Ana ~ selection \\'Ith new 4
0 0 il 9 9 pc. SC!ts with cymbals star!-
" t gpe~ a ~ "11 6 ing al $99.50. Pedah, hi-hats
ut · • un. • and sets repaired, All small
Furniture !'1'1urned from dis-parts , acessories &-cymbals
play studios, model homes. In liitock.
decorators canceUation. EVERYTIUNG IN MUSlC
sp'Ro" •RIR'NITUR'!" Beach MuJic Center
1844 Newport Blvd.,. CM Fl\clory Sales & Service
every n1ght til 9 Dally 12 noon 'HI 9, Sat 9-5
\Ved., Sal.&~ 'tit 6 174<» Beach Blvd .. (Hwy 39)
DIAr-!OND custon1 designed
cockl.ail ring; ov<'r 2 Ct ..
appr. $1450, sac. $475.
673-3600
DIAMOND approx 2 carat
$2 000 vnlue for $1,000 or of·
lt'r. Priv. Party. 2421 D
Ehlen Ave .. CM. 646-3389
DIAMOND Tiffany wedding
set. flawless; appraised
$775, sell $200 Cash. 675-4W
\VEDDlNG gown &. head
dress, designer model. Size
8. newr wom. 67;;..745!1
• 'TIS Tropical Fish e
Opening 'bout May lS!h
Foun!Ain Valley 8424 530 LEAVING State must sell l* mi. So. San DlegQ Fwy.
2 compl bdr sei.s, 2 refrigs: Hu11Ur.gton 'Beach 847-8536
dinette srl, livrm fum, TV. nICKENBACKER Gui 1 a r NE\V Singer portable SC\\'\ng
:146.tilS:I aflM' 5, hallow body, "6". $400. machine. mw;t ~II-best ot·
QUAL. Kng Size bed vr/ value. \V11nt $260: 549-1760 fer. 642-3192 Chns.
quilted rnatt., comp I et e FULL membt'-n;hip : Ex. ~~r used $98:-'llJOl'th $250. P iaftOI & 0 1'91ns 81 30 1 -dus.ive-Ne.Wl'Qrt"'fkach-'f't>n:
8474100 \\'E'RE back in our rte\v nis Club. 644--06.17, :>45-9419
FRENCH Provincial end sto~. Big Celebration • Big C0l\1P. 9 station beauty
table. "'Ith one dra11.u. Sale. sa;on equip. for sale; good
\l/eJl-maCle. S3S. 549--0674 CLOSEOtrr or Con.sole Plan-mndition! 54~7472
SD1'~A & Chair. new. never os at savings to • ..... $'100 1V's: t1·· Emerson. 19" Ad·
u!k'd. l\fake oiler. 543--6025 CLOSEOUT of Baldwin over. mtral UJ each. Boy's a;·•
or !162--3059 eve!! only.' axe pianos at savings to $349 bike $10. 656 Surf, C.f.1.
-~;-.;:;-;c;;;;:-;;;-;;--1CLOSEOUT of 1968 Organs NOW'S THE at Av;,,., to .......... 1236
TIME FOR No down o", 5 m Jo ,.,,,
WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
1819 Newport, C.M. 642-$484
HAMMOND • Steln••ay ·
maha • ne1. .l used plll.l'IOS
of an m&kca, &st bu.rs in
So: QiliL ri&ht here.
SO!MIDT MUSJC CO ..
1907 N, M•lh,
Santa Ana
'
f\fOVtNG. Kr lviMIOl' rerr,
good cond $10. Needle point
bench ~-4~ Locu~r. Lag B
WALNUT Dresser 1vfmil1'0t'
$10, C'hest drawe:n $10. Pr
Prov sofa $5CJ. 45-1 Locusl,
Lag B
WOOL Rva1• 1Qxl2 beige, fix
10 51ray no ca, whiff' hQokcd
S25. 454 Locmt, U g B
MERCHANDISE FOR.
SALE ANO TRADE
'
MERCHANDISE FOR TRANSPORTATION
SALE ANO TRADE Auto S.rvl<H
l600 Swimming Pools 1900 &: Pam
4 BOX atalJs for ~n~ <>ra.na:e
C.o. !'alfl:rowxh. 543-3249
, I
,
'
TuH4<1YLM11 6, 1969 DAlLY Pl~OT %11 -
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSJIOltTATICIN
9600 lmpottlG Aul•• 9600 lmportlG Auto• 9600 Now C1r1 9100 Autoo Wonlod 9700 Utod c .. , , 9900
KARMANN-GHIA
KARMANN CHIA 'ST
Immaculate
m.4913
TRIUMPH
''5 TRIUMPH 4
Rdatr, dJr, 4 tpetd, ove.r-
drive. wire wheels. new dilC'
brakes, Jct black ext. new
top, iOOd rubber all around,
Xlot cond. a100 cui. dell or
trade. WUJ llnc ptvt p;111)'.
LB RlY Xll. Call JCen.
494.9773 or 545-0634
'67 GT-:6-Trlumph-
$2500 01· offer. 002-0!!3
VAUXHALL
•
VOLKSWAGEN
vw
CAA1PERS &-BUS'S
'IT eu...,
'66 Bus Deluxe
'61 7 pus. Bus
'&3 Deluxe Bus
Cl.500 Englnel
•
W!' PAY • •
CASH
. .......... llZll--,,. H•Zl'&>.-. Kl-WE Plf Wll'
FOR YOUR W
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
FORD
• 't6 FORD WAGON
9 ,_ Squ.ln, Auto.,
Powr ltetl\I. Bralott.
11985
1'0& aaJe 'I Fw!\t Galaxy, l
.......... '.f, JIJce MW,
PIS, P/8, uklng $595,
M6-J802. Aft 6:30 pm.
'68 TORINO GT, 3!ll V-8 :
auto. pwr. 11tttr. • brk~.
Fact. air; 7,COO M1. $2500.
833-2557
MERCURY
'63 MERC. Colony Park 6
pus. ltadoD wqon: pwr.,
aJr..cond., radio, beater:
blue w/matchlna:
nauph;yde intar. if' perfec
cond. Xlnt tires; UJed but
not abuMd. • driwn by
adulb: onl,y (no chl.ldn!n In
famfly) A Q.EAN tar, $895.
00-3589 eve/wkendl
1959 MERC. Excel. 2nd car.
Only 49,!X» ml., aood all
around cond. $175. 60-5143
'fi8 MERCURY CoJony Park
station wagon, 9 .pasaeriaer.
fully equipped, 646-M!n
'67 CX>UGAR, auto trans. ps,
pb, radio, tint $2200 buys
It! 613-2252
MUSTANG
'65 MUsrANG
2 dr. H.T. VS, auto. trans.,
a.it cond., Vlnyl root. NHA·
111.
'67 BARRACUDA 3&1
Xlnt cond. ,All extras!
673-4010 aft 4 pm.
RAMBLER
'64 WAGONS
....
2 CUllCI. 1 autoinatic, 1 ov-
erdrive. OST3Jl
~ ~ _,
NEW '69·11998
• AMX • JAVELIN
ffqDQUARTERS
~
642-6023
STUDDAKER "" :I ;;;; -'IT-• =·""'· =· a , ...
•
•
. . 1'1 ~ • • • •
.. " ' .. ~ • ·1
-TutSdlt, Ml1 6, 1'69 • , ---4..., ....
. ' '" , ' ·• I · , 4 • t•
1
, >, :Q/1 rAfll r la1sciit1Nt:$A 'v14Ns1 · t1N111 · ... ·
. ;DISCOUNI .
. '
PRICES and · ....... ' ..
TOP-:Q·UALI TY !
'
' '
fA~I:· JOHN • SKINUSS • a.oz. ricG.
LINK 29 ·. SAUSAGE c
. FAD'""°' 57c .BACON ..
MINIM.UM WEIGHT 1 ·l•." 6 OUNCES • coouo
BAR BQ 99.c CHICKENS · · IA. .
' \ ' \
' . ... •.
• '..I.<,·\·"'--' --
.. '
u's:D.A.. QIOKE oR ;FAD ",T~~L"
.ROUND ·STEAK· ~~i
~.N ROUND
• ·.GROUND , IEF FRESH DAILY
.lb
c
lb
·1:
. lb
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR fAD "TEND!RFUl"IONWSS
SHOULDER .
·CLOD ROAST c
U.S,{).A. CHO!CE •OR AD "'TENOERFUL •·sruKS • TAILS REMOVED
T -BONE 'or .PORTERHOUSE
lb
139
!
"'· liSOA·CHOICE OR FAD "TEMJERfU•~
·CHUCK
_ROAST
. . . .
'
c
lb
STORE HOURS:
DAllYi 10100 A..M. TO ,,00 .. .M. '
'SAT. lo SUN. IO•OI? kM: TO 7100 '.No.>
~ .. "T'r.:1.1~"0.:.~...-• ~··
'""'"'""' 20 PC. 'DlllERWOE SET ~ ~
(Jci:C-;Ai;E~ · · 4••
~~o;~~m 'saaiPmR688
~~=--nr.::=.r:iL'"i-r-~T.'.r
EWTRIC HAllD lllER
~ =.,~ :JlC:v'd:-::0:1:, • IM. a.••
HOWWARE SERYlll ~CES
, ••
19c u. 1•• IA.
' .
• iii:~~Oiii"'coi~· 19c
. · MARG1AR0INE10
" 26C
i;i;~l'"&;;.kfilst 49c
• ciFiliiftii'k 99c
• Fic1iri.iisuE 22c
•. F";brit'sofii1E1 39c
.• ~~~~!~~ _43c
BAG COOKIES 4i 1 oo . . .
' woliii "IREAD 3i1°0
•-siiss"i:ii'isi · 3:1°0
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