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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-05-14 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaI ' I I I 1. ' ' -. ·---' --,---- •• • o.nr~~~p g -. -. .... .. ·--· ----' .. .. .. ,;_··1-'· • ... -·st · · ~·ae. ¥-~~~ _-:, ~ r:.~p ~~,~~· ~~\I =· .. .. . ~--lo ~ ~ -,_. -, -:.::. Bolde~ of Ma~_ • • ·. • ----";,': .... -:~Z.. -~ . ·-· -- • ' • . . ---· ............ '• -.. - . .. 690 in·; .. Westmins·ter .Asli ·t ·l F' o· r ·· 's··u' '-. .,•ta: .. -·.·s: .·· 'l e··: '··:,I ~;;~s· '·e·: ,° ": ~> .. , '1 jl ·, ,.;.' .. ~,., .. • • • ' • '• ' , :·, : ;· ''· •• : • rt ' ' ·r .+ ·;-; ,. , t ' ....... f ... ~ ... <I'" , , ' . . Fair Man~ger Tells of Ter rot ' Ride by Youth Three joy-riding,ju'tleniles apprehended by the Orange County FairgrOunds nianager took him along for something MOre akin to a terror-tour Tuesday, cOSta Mesa police said today. :Fair manager Alfred G. Lutjeans, 44, ridaped injury when a 15-year-old boy, dri\ling his mother's car w J th o u t pttmlssion, rolled up the window on his a'U)t and ·drove off. · .#Jtieans, of 18232 Bay6erry Way, Irvine, told investigators he was dragged alolig for about 60 to 70 feet before the youth stopp;d and rolled down the win- dow , to free him-: :buring the wild ride, a 12-year-old girl aOd 15-year-okt boy in the backseat were y¢lling for the driver to stop, Lutje3ns told OOicer James Farmer, called by a witness, groundskeeper John Nieves. The young girl jumped from the car dUring the brief stop and fled, but was o"idered by l.A.itjeans to halt and wait for police to arrive. . lnvestigators were on the SCi!ne JUSt across Fair Drive from police head- quarters witl»D moments and ~ u.e· 12: .. year-old ·girl ,oamed the two boyS who diove ofl at hilb spe<d. · , Patiotmin RandY Nutt was sent to a home .in lbe .ii!f ~\o<~ ot J'r!!S,id'."!>Drive, where he picked up both youngsters and returned them to the station for ques- liOnlng. '.tutjeans said he .saw the car near the ra"irgrounds maintenance yard about $ p.m. ·and chased ~ driver until he stop- ~~ wanted to question lhe trio about their business dUe to a wave o('Weekend 6urglaries at the fairgrounds, but sald tljO young driVl!< jumped back Jnto the car after he demanded to see a driver's UC'ense: • ·Luljeans' upper Amt was caught when M lried to reach lh,arid tum ofl lbe ii· rulion as ltrbog trted to nee. 'The,ll""'gne,. -released to' lbelr J!mnli, pendtnc Juvenile court heorings on charies of aaSault wlth a deadly WJiapon a.rid Jack of parental control ' . ~ So,iet '°l{ero, 53, Dies MOSCOW (UPI) ..:. The Soviet anned forcei newspaptr Red SIM • ~ <;l<i1" .ed lbe JIQth of cot. v asili !l. vanov1 53, a lt!!!lln& test pilot. He )l'Q lio a nero, ot q,e Soviet om.... ,&d Star said he died May I "after 1 bort but gr aw illness." ' . ., ' . ' --,,,).· . A tg .... a a~ Friend Star!~ Elsa BaHa,..Jt, of-Havana' a!1'llls l!long !1!• beacl4.at C!lMO•· France, with her· guitar and pet Algban bound, PaJ\clllto, while in the city tor C81Ults f'llm Fetlival. ' . ' . Also Presents Valley Names BY RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ' Of_.., j"' ~"'' staff ' .., Sex ·ed!lcation ~. an uncomfortabJe topic In the Htintington Beach High SChool pistr,ict -b~~zy flared up again Tuesdpy . ni&l)t ~ a . )'le.tplinstiir parent ~led· a1 l[llO-slgnji\Ure pot!Uon asking trustees for ''.a ·suijable·f.,mly life and sex liducation ·Ccame:"· Robert M. Gor<iOO.)earer of the peti· tion, said he was ~tr94~ by newspaper account.i ol the last· board , meeUng in which a siari1ar aex course was tab1'd by intimidated trustees and 'ul'ged that an' appr<>j>rlate program ~ instttu\ed "l the district in 1969. He also handed a. peUtlon with the signatures o£ 291 Fountain Valley High School students to. the· board members who felt ·that they would benefit from a sex educati.on course. Tnistees Richard Wilson ,and John BenUey reminded Gordon that tile ser course was '~y ohelvecj• t•afilr. because or a 1 laei< outnariCiar C!Pabftlty and Uiat the curriculum cqmmittee was· 1F;our ~~. cOun,ty "Youn&-tad~,; f1ce armia .Jilbba)o Charges lnda,y after tliey Blflj"edly relieved ·a Long B'each man .cl. bis pants at gunpoint in Hun- tingtoq Beadl;lben fled in bi! car, Hn .. 1na1-lice ldOOtlfjed t h'O ~~.~Ju )!IX Hqwal'd lfalir PI Long Beadl. Bahr bareJy·managed·to hit' chhlke to the police staUon at 12:20 a.m. toqay We;ui"{ l!"lY .his shorts, • T~lrt and' grim ~ion:-' • •· ' He told1 pOuce lbe etilaode began· ln a Lofig ·Beath tiar where be tnet one Of the Y""l'I! ladles.' Bahr h;iif· be9n1dumj>e!!. m an olUleld al'el'·nair Cliy ia'nd.-·~ weH rifteeW:.+J ! .~·.~ ; 1n I o•r .. ~ ~ ~ ~·Xna·:wnce ,~,tl'lc! ffm1·ie :!. ~li:ilbiit la11t 00ft<:/iit!1rii"1 '· ef40 -riod.ali1*Ji·ot a Mo 1··i11or.vkl.1Swton'<lli• ~-c.irniir· ~ Edl-~AvenUe ihd' Mairi s&eet.1 Santa Ana!' · ' Arfested were Sliaron·.Brown. J'S,.and Etiiabeth Mlles;24,. both .of 317 E:· 17th LA;. H~rt-EXpert . Says l~po.Stor .. _ ....... , .. , . 'Wen· Di . . ' agn . ·. · · .. studying the ;.wrse for possible incluiol) . T • By, TOM BARLEY "at a Mure date." " • "'~·"" °"" PIM'twff Therefore, no action was taken on the A Los ~eles heart s~ciallst today petition. testified \Uii\ ~~iii Bro!fi! r ..,, Bentley also 'Challenged alleged ac-am!Mtlon' aild cllainoolo-•f P.ffe'Dll'1t·1 hi. • ~-•.1:.. .. F.,ullerton cllnie was "entirely com-counts of r.-"mw.i-.ation ·saying, ac-patlblet' with ~ nlidkar· Prac-.: tually ·at the. lasi. meeting. J dkl not have, lice • ~ ., ... :. . , the feeltng ot intlmldlltion, but I do .-._ ' · • • ' My-..,..itim.on""tbe"bo&rd has been sulr · Dr.1-~l ,,~.Goldfarb, I'~ ~ authority In µie,;tleld ·of cardlolOI)', ook ject to recall ·and I think· that is •. file ,•-• _me·(.....,_ the stack" of medical' tbrea",' • ~N U~U ' ~•b<f0re hbn in the WI-bo:< to · Several in. lbe &0dience and Tnute<. delenil Iha .re.trt<ar etillsieer ·wtio pooOcl• Miltt Weyuker, cbastlat4; \he JX:e!S for I ~. •· ti>eir, alleged .118.ck. fo( rAuonal. ·"'-."••" as Dr• Glean,L)'on'IFOlter i 0!'1.1,:"e weew • -~...... at ihe north COWlly facility; · ., C , • s 1w R-, d In reportlng lbe;.it boort! ~'during, 'MIO llhock witnoso; cail'I! in/by;dePlll1• Ounn-n t, am..-n o ll'l!iCh eprqod,~,voc!S~ anq-oex J!Ulllicdef-·La..,.,_,B11c$ley·ato. ' .,....,, . , ' ··~ . mui:atio!\ varentr :~··; lbelr, stap 1 wbenr 111111 · llll'Dl<ola '"'"'' . ' "-· , •-. . ~ ~Udj · tio~r~ ~\Id ti CM.ierG.~meftU!d tiq>e, B C • A"'' #' /, A ' UJ,e"' 1 ·• ':· :, tilm~ ~.,M'.~.'S!'~ and! =---~~~~:'.' Y ar ' ..... , cc ' . nt stl<I. "~haljo ii;,l;pjld., .... not· ond ........ ·~i:ol. '~ -oa d• . ""' '~~'-~~~!.~a.!, =~":.i"':.=:J:i-°rJ1::;: • fl~ tbit'J W~.~~t ~·~¥', ~ ... ., , I I f' Ii.' ; Mayhem over a mil*" ~-!dent. , Lo!. Angeles Police Sgt. Frank· L. • dcifng Ill '!lfeCl~!ji!ej~~~ In~ . · . Ja'a........,.. )le ~lllll Bn\WJI . early today ,has lelt a ~ "Ian In Spencer M o[Alii~im •hai beenl°IJlle .. '~ ,lliolc; . lllcieour.'. • .,.1D1l1114lf ,li-)l.U.r-oid ·11\0!t+ pollont 11 critical c..i<lltion, SJiot twice by In Olf.cfu-• u· ed :...: . ' Or Mwlnl jlchool ~ Din ~...... length Ind -~ ,hlnf 19 -be ' ty ll'ilce ..,..ant Md-nm crnr by 1 car '"' •~t ~ bizarre case. 8".'9 . ange d<#nllod iloe !""-!or -he,oald "-"!ft. ., .. .-rtedl<llle'' fiw Pn~8'•Uon o1 aM tbt'.._,, lllt foe help: Coullty District Atl<ifnq C«lf Hicks Is "falr'Ud occilrlte": ~ OI Jlio1ao!, ~,.._.,.In the hear1 irw I new . • Jin!Dl1 A • Heney 121,..ol "liim Orange.. ~ing the fac:is. J?loellnc· "4 iddod,'''1fiit wu !he bi&· ond -AO<>n ol j>url IAIW, · , Ave.,' '<;)I ...... Is ' in. Marlin Lutlt<r Bllc!riff's Cal\I . .Ja.,.. .Bf~IL said fut JlliOllitullaJI,# .A~ JUllice I • · 1<llill lllputJ ~ MtoiQiY •Jomes. ~ ... ~ with two bullet tnvestigalioa nOw in(Uca;tes the off-duty hllv.-ever tee11.' --Enri&bt .. ~ up '..-peNntty ~·· ~ --in'Ui< --• frac-police sergeant'• .. bwnp!Jd tlte rear~ .~l·IJ)l 11tttliilll~ l'CMlll ol ........ <toNlu!J poodmc( tile ~dll-, -turod lelt .,,0, Injured rlbo •nd muJUple Heory's auto nn the, Riverside Freeway b1cfbten bet.l'!iJ!l U Wl!Y the P.lico, bl tl)e, -.""'l tfa4i!Y ldn>lls .u.,t lie cull ond brulles. , (See-SHOOTING, P• I> ' would have beeri In there bustlncDeaclo." (See BROWN', Pie• I) ' ·t j , , ' ---. -·-- ~t., Spni. '••a ana· Blirbara F41eite:. ~ ana K8thte'.fn Reid,' 22,' Doth of'unoaiotd J'alqi Street adtke~ ip,Garden ,Gnw~(, . . Santa f>na p01ic~ allege Miu 81'.ow!l fipd a.n air Pls!olw~ldl teaem~ll'!!,• :ti> caJIJ#r autOl\laOc aJ>i1 Ml<s .l'jd1eue "'" carryjng a switchblftle knife. ~ • , ,. · ·. Balir told Hliolingti>n S.adl'·p0Uci\ be met Miss Edgetterih 8ft:ong 'Be3Ch'bai. She asked for a ride home to Garden Grove, ~e said, ·and he-allowed her· to driv!. .because. be 'dldn"t "kiloW Orilnge County." · MiH,lc!ftlle~'s, . • ff""'"! !o~Jii. snotlfel"'°tif' .. . .. --~Ballr . iifl .•f '·1-·•r· ~. sai.i,.· al~; o p· · . ·.m.. . \inBtOA'~acti ~~ w'\,l.f!'tJ\W.Bf lie .•• ~­ Die !Pilt,~oin · \r~-i;;,;;:o4t.,. tile,&; ,, ""'"' .[f..-·~ .. "'-to'"'""'"'.. . anu .a~,5~'?4?:-r·~ug -=u· ·~u . ~,"'..,... r · A11 !PW} women'·are c:urren~y -in Saata Mt· cl~ ·iali. wattjJig 011\f.alfM>°"', 0o cl;larges. of. attempted 'armed· robhlitiTV la sa~ Aha. 8!ld .a\a(o. t~ ai;KI' am;i'ro,~ bet}' cbarges fro/I' Huntington Beach.. · ~ . ~. ·, •' • I I ; f odgorn.i-~1\.o~ea_1' LONDON (UPI)-7' smet Preside.It Nikolai V.1 P.i>cfgomJ <is visiUng Nortf Korea mid Moogolla becauae of lbe ~ ~g tiiitibl<s wlili'COmmlint;t'Ohbl•'~c!a have ma'de ttie' f{lt.~1'1~•~No. 11 Pre-occupation. diPJoDjitf<; sources· said today. ' , . .. ' ! Or•••• (A ... ! ........... , 1 Extremely heay,. h&.e -that I weat~er ~ur.ea~ ""di~e)!l~ for mog -aw&Jll GnJ tM-IWrilOn lee ~ Th~·'1, , Y!i~ .~ ~es .boost-> ing lhe mercury. over the 76-de- gree '."ark. I I INSIDE\ TODAY • • • ·Or .. IJC ...,ij•s· BooNJ of SuprMlil6tT ·hot join•ci" t<><111c!' cllif•· no" lhel1 -pOip for •fl· -11i...C:o1z drillbig ""11". Pogt lS. ' ' • . " • :/. ' • ·--. f J ---I I 'M ' f'f, IW .14, IW NiXon· Report·s.-Tonight -' On ~·Viet Peace Hopes . \ Fourth ·Tavern Under Ban on Mesa School Slates ' . P-aiiel on Narcotiea A pontl m narcoiles uae 1n cooU -wtll .. ,_..i at I p.m. rrYq at Tm.tie Scbool, 31!4 .coB!omll A.,,, by !bl.cost& M ... Repahllcan AaemlilJ. LtcaJ, mon1, ' oodll, and mental' aipecla ol lhe drug -p111blem will be dila'TS9 d by a panel that 1 iQcludes Aaoisnl>qman Bob asrte, Faiber John Alylres,. ~·, .. ol DU<Otfd ... , a Coltl Mesa police oUictr, a former ad· did, a Jim It-. attorney. • DAILY Pl l OT .......................... ----·--CAUfOllllA C1aAMG9 COMl l'VkllMt... CCIMl"M't W .... rt N, W"4 _ ... _ J •••• c.,..., °"" .............. , .. ...._,... n.-" IC...U ·-.,,.._. A. M .. ,111• ........ , .... . -"' 'Olia ... I_ ..... ..,, ltfWf ~ ...... .-.:01 ............ ..... l. ___ I_ ...... ._ Iii I SIS ... , •• ,.._ .... ' ~. : .. . . I• T"laere a D~tor in Bouse: Hoping to attract a _doctor to,lheir fair town, the aty talh,P of Greenwich, Obio, have bung a sign across Rt. 224. TbiJ -Huron County farm commun- tty of 1500 has been without a physician for 18 months. when fonner doctor moved to another town. Letters to all hospitals in Ohio and •urroUnd· : big Jtate. and contact with the American Medical •· Association have been to no avail. The nearHt town · with a doctor, 12 miles away, provides 24-hour am- bulance service. House Republic(lnAsks Investigation of F ortas .. From Witt Servlcet 8peda1 lo tbe DAILY PILOT W ASIDNGTON -A leading House SACRAMENTO -The AMembly' has RepubUcan called today ror an in- approved Wlanim.OW!lly a bill compelling vestigalion d Supreme Court JusUce Abe the State Lands Coourusslon to give Forta! by the House Judiciary Com- ooutal citSes and counties f<r warning of ,Jnittee to determine w b e t b e r im- bearinp on «fahore -Clil drilling ap-peachement proceedings are warranted. plic.ations. Rep. Clark MacGregor (R·Minn.), a Aaoemblyman Robert E. Blciiam (fl.. member o1 the committee, said he acted Newport Beech), author of the measure, after ccn:iferring this morning with Atty. said today he expects the Senate also to Gen. John N. Mitchell. approve the bill without a dissenting vote. "The attorney general raised no ob- The legislation. wtdcb has the en-jeclion," said MacGregor. "He indicclted d<nesnmt of. Lt. Gov. Ed ~e. he w o u I d cooperate in au c b an dillnnan "''Iba -Commlsr!on, ;., Investigation." llO'fr In the Senlte'• NeturaJ Resources CommWee. Jt wtll bt taken up at 1 cam-The coune suggested by MacGregor is mittee bearing 'Thur9day. one of several that could lead to im· The bill, AB 622, wu prepared by ~ent proceedings in Con~. It Badham at the recJJeSt of Orange County calli for a. p-';-;·0 -·, infOnnaJ in-olll<iu. J<tl.:i., lN~ Jleldl City ·--, Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and Seal vestigaUon by a Judiciary qommlttee Beach City Manager Lee Risner. panel to set whelbtr the facts warrant It an:ee frOm vifpoul protats against going ahead· with impeachment. Lands Commiasion approval of ex-"I can't ait by any longer and see this ploratuy drilling by me Shell Oil Com-matter tried in the news media when we Justice could have no objeclions to ai; tioo.s which are legally within the prerogatives o( the House.'' The statement added : "The department spokesman e1plalrM.i that any possible cooperaUon between the Department of Justice and the Coogreu would be gnided by the statutory lll:f Constitutional powers and obligations iiz>- posed upon each branch." This could -but did not necessarily -mean that Afitchell might resort to "u:. eculive privilege" and decline to pail: along to the House committee any m. lonnation gathered by lhe JusUCi Department about Fort.as. . ._ From P .. e I SHOOTING ••• 11 1: shortly after midnight. .- .. ... The tw9 men drove down tht Eudld Street offtamp to discuu the · matter, Capt. Broadbell Aid, bul during the in- cident, Henry allegedly struck tbJI policeman with a board . pany Wt January. have procedlll'f.S for bringh)g Ole facts Shell was granted 8 permit to sink test out Into Uie open," MacGregor said. con boles oU Newport H a r b 0 r , MacGregor hand-delivered a request San Ciemente, Ocelmide and 0 th er for a preliminary inquiry into Fortas' af. offshore areu. 'Ibe Lands Commisslon in fain to Rep. Emanuel Celler (~N.Y.), N~()n Plaits to Va~iiQ~ Knocked flat by the blow, Sgt. Speocj told sherlfra investigators, the angi-1 Henry raised It over his head as thougb to strike again. · Mardi reaclnded tbe pennlt be{,.. any chainnan of the Judiciary Commlti... drillln& bad talten place In Orange County H• uked' !or a meeting of Ille full com. waters. mittee nest Tuesday and uked that CoaataI ~ bad complained that Fort.as and Mitchell be Invited to appear. !hey hid recelvtd no Flor notlco of the Celler later told the H-thll he and In Clemente-But Wheti? The Los Angeles lawman said be pulled his .31 caliber revolver and fired twici!! f with slugs lodging in Henry's shou1dei and hU abdomen. · - Sgt Spencer said he left the scene 1a get help, at whlch time a hit-and·nnl motorist crushed Uie already-wounded victim as he lay at the scene of the shooting. 1'be vacation ICbedUle ii N~ an the Whllo -will lodly, bu!; • the boot In !llOll llllllar ....--. l'rtll· -Mri>a -~ put clol!n tbe dalls l>e'lllp<lld In Sa~. Mrs.-Rlchanl NIJ011 l<iW ......,.. 'l'uallly that the lint lamli, wlD .pend two weeb « a month at the new aun- mer WhUe Houle, wbole fM0,000 pun:hue WU llllnOUnced Mooclay. Jull wben thof will vial! the tree- ahrouded villa r.u.at being boqht from Mn. Vlcloria c.tton, 90, widow ol Ille late mnumatre Qentocrat Hiram H. c.ot- ton. ;., lllJJ an open quWlon. The Finl Lady oald lhe hectic pruldentlal acbedule will probably keep Mr bmband lmn ntumlnC lo the beachlranl adobe mansloo tlte)' vlsllod two months aao unW Congress adjoutnl. '!llla WGUld put the White 8-West visit aometlm• lat. In the year. around September or october, ""'"' Ml'I. NIJOll henell er olber members ol the llinll1 January Lands Comminlon bearing on his commit.tee's ranking Republican, should $"P In al U.. t~oom -· the Shell pennlt applkatloo. Rep. Wllllam M. McCulloch ol Ohlo, had 11We bavt!ft'l beif.d a word. abOut Uie Badham's bill requires the commlSlion reached agr~ment on a course of action. time," S&n Clemente City Maillpr Ken-to give so days rd1ct on hearings on all To Rep. H. R. Gross (R-!Owa), who bu neth Carr Aid today; . '. . explorlllon l!IC! drilJing r<quest.s from the callel lor.';l'lill;S' lmpeacbmeat and who He eoplalntd that he·would·be !old Im· oil lndllllr)'. asked wllar coune ol ldion bad been medla&ely tr Police Qilef Cliffard·Murray decided upon, Cellar said only: ~ bad been contacted by WbJ2 J1oi11e Ude& "I'm sure the ge:n.Ueman will tie 1o bec1n preparlnc 1o wort wtt11 s.cret DaVJ·s New CD Head saliJl1ec1 with t11e act1on 1n 11e ta1ten 1n S<rvtc:emen on pratdentlal ~-th•"'" too distant future ." A ~ deal to pUrcbaae the Cellar said he would d 11 c u 11 maimon and five tumJU:ndlnl acres of WASHINGTON (AP) -John E. Davis, MacGregor's proposal with MacGregor the ooee-rurai nncbland estate for former governor ol Ncrth Dakota, was later today. $100,000 down and the rest aver a nve named Wedneeday lo becoiRe director of The JU!tice Department's atatement year period at 7.5 percent interest was Civil Defense. Davis, 58, will succeed said MacGrep telephoned Mitchell and Sgt. Spen(:~ ~ld1 he went to Martin Luther Hol!lpltal for help, both for the motorist who allegedly attacked him and to have a four-inch cut on his own bead patched up. Surgeons worked throughout the earl' morning hours to save Herii'y's life and spokesmen saJd today that the victim.;, responding to treatment. _ . No charges have been filed, but the m. vesUgation was i::onUnuing throughout the day. 8nnounced Monda)'. JQlelil Romm effective May 20. "was infonned that the Department of EarU«ft!ICJl'llllidtheNlnoaplanned I~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::::;;=:;;=:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::::;;:::;;:::;;:.;:::;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;::::;;=:;;:::;;;;;;;;;:""':':::;;:::;;:::;;;;;;;;;::::;;:::;;:::;;:; to take ewer the new White Moue West --' -"' July, bul palnlln(, repairs and perhapa even·eomtrucUon of a rwim· ming I"."" are yet !o·be 00... IIeaideo carpo114tr1 l!IC! palotero busy around the p-ounds, men are working on a survey to determine if the lite ls 1Ulttd !« tbe future Nilan m...,.,, and library. FromP.,e l for one moDth only 'DR. BROWN' •• - .-.II to show th•! Brown, In other ..,., bid pmcrlbed tbat drug - llroplne -In the q11111Uly r<coprlud by tbl ~I prol...too to be the standard adnilnlltnUOIL lllO!m did not deny that his carear, '""" tbl )!me ol hJs sradl!&tlon from •• Alabama blP tdiool, bad &etn atuddtd with lalle ,.,.,....., ~ IWl\el and lor1ed dlplomu and ctesr-. Bui he lmilted In 1111 allght IOUthml drowl tbat hll medical practlcl 1>otb In Or-Ccun\y 11111 "' MJaml Beach bad pooed DO danler lo IDy bwt pllionl And ht arl\led tJia1 IJll ...i-.t ~ tl -th....,, m..uc.t ._·Md 1.,.. tllt lludenl g.U.ry 'Iii • liujlllil opetlting l'OOIDI WIS"'°"'==-to IUll.lln hJo prlClk:e .. • . . Brown II -I GI ,._.._ tr*8dne 1f1tbout "& ni... llt• I IA COUllls cl tbl cMrp --""' aplnst hint alttr .. b'tTllqlOit-,, .. Orup CoontJ ~ ,.,.,. °"""""" caunoal ..,_ ~ .. "" trial. m11-jO to tbe ""1 IN lloli · af. ltn>OOll. Bucklq llilad lliif. 11111 .....,_ can ...... _.. •l.i;r ttlt'""'ft1 bj two rmtblr wlttm• acne 2001' on To'1e;tJ El Grand'9 and Kinq Richard • palkms In aolkl .U:ver ' . COlffiNIENT TERMS • IA~M!RICARD , MASTlll CHM&E • -..... -.., ... •ta ..... -$41.00 J. C. J./ump/u-iu.' Jewe~~ ' ' l.2l NEWl'ORt YEl:IUE · .COSTA MESA • .. ' ' ' I ---------------~------- v .. --111.00 ' . • . ; _, -" 22 'TtARS SAME lOCA TION • PHoNE· Ht.)-101 l • Boniingion Beaeh . . . EDI TlON VOL. 62, NO. ·11s, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ~RN1.4 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14," 1969 ,J ' . Teday'• Ft.al N.Y.8~ TEN CENTS Downtown Fate Weighed <I' Council Studies. -Parking, Civic Center Plans . By ltlLLl.IM llEED Of tllt MIN ,, ... twl The fate of 00wntowri HUnUn~ Be1ch ""'Y be on tbe line Thursday night when tbe city council takes a elOlltt look at propooals for a large 13.t mlWoo park· i.ng lot and • new civic cen(er. strip ·one, block deep from 5lh •Strett to La)te,Sµ:eet. Coat of \he" I.I acres al $?.la per square f~ would be a. total of $3:.13 million, aceordlng to city figures. Impro\!ements nee;ded to build 1,078 park- ing spe.~s would make a grand total of $2.41 million as the cost for this secUon alooe. nt,950 maklnr a net cash merve (profit) or $2,715 arinua1ly. P•kin& section i on the map Js a strip belonging to lhe Huntington Beach Co. It is south of Atlanta Avenue and east of Lake Street. Cost of the 5.JS •cres at $2.IS per aquare foot is estimated at $007,800. 'Improvements' needed to build !174 parking 1paces would make a grand total of 4181,GIO. would be $4.1,000. Expenses o!J!!>3Stl lll'1! addedo makinf a -nil reitrve pc '61;350-~---­ from this section. 4th Straight Day Reds Press Offensive With Rockets, Mortar SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces pushed their "general offensiVe" into its fourtll day t<r day with rocket ,atid mortar ~ttacks .on Da Nang and 45 other allied towns and bases. Hanoi radio said the drive had dealt U.S. troops their heaviest losses ol the war, but American military sources said the Communists were paying the heavier price. 'The U.S. spokesmen estimated at least 1,500 Reds had been killed in the past thmi days. U.S. l~s were put at about 150 dead and 750 woonded. South Viet- namese casualties were described as "Ugllt." The Communist shellings. however, were taking an increasing toll of civilian lives. A IO-rocket salvo hurled into the heart of Da Nang, South Vietnam 's se- cOn<I l~rgest city 1 killed 12 persons and $2,_000 in Loot Gone From Homes Burglars with a taste for fancy household ltems made a quiet visit Tues· day morning' to three Franciscan model homes in Huntington Beach. wounded 29. Five ciVilians died and one was wounded in the provincial capital of An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon. Secretary of State William P. Rogers arrived in Saigon on his mission to seek avenues to peace and deplored the Com· munists' attacks as "senseless~ acts which "cast somewhat of a cloud" over their illtentions at the Paris peace talks. U.S. military ~eadquarters said 10 of the dead and 24 of the wounded in Da Nang were South Vietnamese civilians. The others were government soldiers. Three nights ago, Communist rockets or mortar shells slammed into 212 allied bases and towns, followed by 40 two nights ago and then the 46 late Tuesday and early today, accwding to U.S. figures. Hanoi radio In two broadcasts monitored in Saigon hailed the attacks wh.ich began Sunda) as a "general or~ feilsive" that has penetrat~ major A111erican camps up and down South Vietnam. "The flights will continue,'' Hanoi radio said, "This is the heaviest blow we have in- flicted so far on the U.S. aggressors since the beginning of the war," one broadcasi said. It said the olfensive YiU designed to dcmonttrate the Corn- muni.!ts' 11abundant flcbtlnl power" on lhe battlefield. The parking lot proposal is divided Into three parts and the council could order further study on any one of the possibiliUes or on all or any combination. The first section ol the' proposal is a Heart Doctor Claims Phony 'Compatible'. By TOM BARLEY Of ,... OallY '""" "'" A Los Angeles heart -lalist today testified that Robert Ervin Brown's ex- amination and diagnosis of patients at a Fullerton clinic was "entirely com· patlble" with recognized medical prac- tice. Dr. Martin S. Goldfarb, a recognized authority in the field of cardlology, took file and file from the stack of medical records before him in the witness box to defend the.electrical engineer who posed as Dr. Glenn Lyon Foster for five weeks at the north ccunty facility. Total revenue expected would . art)OUnt to $211,540. Retirement of a bond issue of $2.'3 million would oost St8l,875 fl!!l',ye&r. To, \liiB is added operating expenaea of 'Ibe' shock witness, called In by deputy public defender Lawrence Buckley at a stage when final arguments were sche4ule.d to commence, oommented titne utl. '"'"°' •!ler time IS he le~H .through petlettl {!n~b ,s-te , · reCQ?d:a11~1 B~1 ~ ~Ot tdr\IP. ~ .!1>!.f~i·l·. . 1 ,.i..~~. an.It blOOd, cbo~'?ll urme , 1n·d ,, RePUblloon How~rd ,Wa'y 'lot;-' laboratory tests and heart limitation. ex· ·maj]y t06lt over today u preai. en:lses w.,. what he~ would have d~~ tem."4--lii• sta~~-· pres'crlbod. ' ate, ·s~eeding -Democrat Sen. In one instance, he noted -that Brod,. Htlgft Bums w60 was ouste4 exainined i 15-yW-ota male patltrit at Tuesday 1 length and tben prooounced him to be ----·--------••an ldeal candidate" for implanation of animal organs in the heart area, a new and rerioed form of heart surgery. Chief Deputy District Attorney Jam'es Enright looked up expectantly as Gord£arb pondered the lengthy dlagn08is by the man who readily admll5 that he po.sed as a cardiologist. "I would have done exacUy the same thin£," Goldfarb said. "All tbe tests 'and the results fully support such a finding." Enright's cross examination of the key witness was not available at press time. Goldfarb's analysis of JO records of pa- lienls in who~ treatment Brown was ac· lively involved could pOssibly lip the scales in fllvor of the accused Alabama man when it comes to the jury's con· sideration of the length of his sentence - if Brown is found guilty. Brown admitted Lime and time again Thursday through a long grilling by Enright that he fu1ly intended for a long time to practice as a cardiologist. But the 33-year-old defendant stressed, as often as he was allowed to, that he knew his limitations and would not have imperiled any cardiac pa~ent. The soft-spoken Birmlngham engineer challenged the testimony of a woman doctor at the cUnic and a St. Jude Hospital nurse that he had prescribed a potent heart drug in 20 times the quantity normally administered. And Buckley went lo the medical record!I to show that Brown, In other cases, had prescribed that drug - atropine -in the quantity recognized by the medical profession to be the standard administration. Brown did not deny· that his career, from the time of bis graduation from an Alabama high school, had been studded with false references, assumed names and forged diplomas and degrees. But he insisted in his slight soutllem drawl that his medical practice both in Orange County and in Miami Beach had (See BROWN', Pl(e I) - Four .D€$igners-. Bid for Contract ' On Civic Center Four architectural firms hav~ been recommended to the Huntington ~ach City Council as candidates for design of the pOOj)<!Sed 16 million admlnlstratlon a11d poljce facility. ~ ,. Councilmen Tuesday night :met'. ~lh members of the Design ·Review Board to discuss procedures for selection of an architect. The board has interViewed several !inns and recommended John B. Parkin Associates as its first choice. The firm has offices in Los Angeles. Second was Kurt Meyer Associates .in association \\l'ith Honnold and Rex, Architects. Next on the list and tied for the third place are Charles Luckman Associates and Victor Gruen Associates. The council will interview each of the architects and finally hire one to begin design work on the center. Thursday night the council Is expected to make a final decision on location-of the new civic center. Officially the city has designated a 12 acre site at Main Stree' and MeMion Avenue for the new centet. Councilman Henry Kaufman Monday night suggested to the council that they should adopt the present civic center at Sth Street and Pecan Avenue site for lhe new center and buy an additional .block south to give enough room. Swck Jllarket1 NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market closed with a lair gain today, with brokers reporting hopes of peace pro- gress helping it to advance. {See·qu~ tionr, Pages ll-Z7). Toi.I revenue expected ls $118,990. Bood 511"Vice COltS on an issue of $600,000 Shelving Rapped The third section Ls two blocks between 5th and 6th streets and PacUic Coast Highway and Orange Avenue. Cost-of the 3.57 acres at $5.23 per square' root wou1d be $813,700. Improvements needed to build 438 spaces brings the total cost to $906,260. Total revenue expected would amount (See DO)JNTOWN, P11e II Petition Brought For Sex Classes By RUDI NIJ;DZlltLSKI ot .... o.llY l"ll•f 51atf Se1 educaUon ...: an uncomfortable topic Jn the Huntington Beach High School District -briefly flared up again Tuesday night when a WestmWter parent presented a -..signature petition asking tl'Uitees for "a suitable family life and sex education coune." Robert M. Gordon, bearer of the peU· lion, said he was outraged by newspaper accounts of the last board meeting in which a similar sex course was tabled PY lntlJnldllted lnlltffs and urpd tbat •n ~)>riito ......... be --ln,U. d!s!r1<1 !!I J"'· . . 'lit lllo,.bu4ed a '~ 1111'1 li!" slgnatureo ~"ilii Fountain i.'illey· llljjh · , Schoo( lllbdenu -1o u._ t>Oari11 l!IOll!li<ft wbo:lell .~""y ~ !>enellt h'onO tel ediJCitloii cOurse. TrualM& Richard Wllloa and Joho a..., ,...,_ Gardao 11111 ... -· c:ourle ..... only llhelved ·le-1111J -or .• lack or -caplbillty and that the curriculum committee was stildylng tbe coune for poulble lncllllion "at a""future date." Therefore, oo action was taken on the peUtion. BenUey also challenged alleged ac- c0Wll5 of his lntlmldaUon aaylnc, "ac· tu ally et the last meeting I did not hav• lhe feeling of intimidaUon, but I do now. My position on the board has been sut.. ject to recall and l think that ls • threat." Several in the audience and Trustee Matt Weyuker chastised the press for their alleged "lack of rational thinking'' in reporting the last board meetng during which enraged and vociferous anti-sex edueation p a r e n t s made their displeasures known. A P.arent in the audi~e who identifi.ei hlmsell •• Dr. MasteriioUo ~ tnd said, 1~perha~ lbe. ·~ Was nOt reportina the eveftts as they .appeared. l felt somewhat lnt.imlated myself by the •fact that. I was cOnoiqeHcf ..,...., lif doing an*a"dequ1le job U a parent tn· RX educallao by -proposing tbe ooune." M.vti-JllCh SChool -Du~ def~ u.; preu for wblot he· laid""° "fair and eccurate" account. of. lbe 1*st meeting and added, 0 That was the big· fest prostitution of American justice I have ever seen." • "l am sure that U a group of students had been behaving that way the police would have .been in there bUJting beads." Nixon Reports Vietnam Peace Cha111:es . Tonight . . WASHINGTON (UPI) -After nearly four month! in office and amid a flurry of diplomatic activitf, President Nix.on reports to the American people tonight on "the prospects for peace in Vietnam." Henry Cabot Lodge, chief U . S • negotiator at the Paris peace talks, new to Washington this aflemoon and ~crelary of ,State William P. Rogers flew Into Saigon .as the President worked in the presidential part or the White House on the 'text ol his 7 p.m. speech, which will be carried live by all three major television networks. Lodge refused on his arrival In the capital to·say anything more than that he was home for "consultations on the Viet· nam question" and that "I expect to see the president while I 8m here." Although White HouSe officials ruled out announcement of any partial troop withdrawal and said nothing spectacular would be revealed, they did tenn the speech a "major address" containing ''new material." Backing that .up were these f1ctors : -Nilon scheduled his ftrst joint meetlng of the cabinet •ad the National Security' Oiuncll for Thursday morning, alter tbe lddrea Is delivered. -senate Republican leader Everett M. the war ha.!f not changed. He .said Jl was "the establishment of condiUODJ which assure that the people of South Vietnam can determine their own future UD· cooditionally." -Ellsworth Bunker, the U.S. «m· bassador in Saigon, met for the third time in three .days with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu. -The White House said Lodge would be given new instrucUora in meelln&s with Nixon after the address. On Monday, Nix· on consulted for the fiNJ1 time In person with Gen. Creighton W. Abrams. U.S. commander in Vietnam. Nixon's address, to run half an hour, will be his fint full atatemeat on Viet· nam. It comes al a Ume when i!IOme senators of NixoU own party were showing in their speeches an impalltrice at a laCk'of evJdence of progress toward an end to the war. Weadler Police said a~ $2,000 In small household furnishings was taken Crom the three mode1s Of the Franciscan Homes development . at Goldenwest Street and Slater Avenue. sometime between t p.m., Monday and 10:30 a.m., Tuesday. One consistent Item taken from each or the thn!e homes was fancy toilet seat covers. removed from all the bathrooms, police reports indicated. Man •oepantsed!' in Beaek Four County· Women Facin,g Armed Rob~ery ,Charge& Dtrben, briefed in advance by Nixon, 1Bld. "J1'1 Plne,lo be a rltber llgnlllcant 1peech.11 -Lodge, on, lelvlng Paris lbls morning Indicated 'he• tmew what tl>e l'olfd<nt would IPDCilmte ... l wu sumrnmed bY the ""'1dent for -11aUons," he uld. "But, of..ctllnt, 1 ctnnotlCOOP Uae·Pred-d<oi~on· he mikes 1111 -taoJ&llt." Ex1remely helvy hue -that , weather· bureau eUphemlsm for am«?S -awaits oo the horiJon for ThJr.doy, wllll 1U1JDY llkles boos~ ing the mercury ovtt the 10-de-- IP'ff mark. • • ' INSIDE T8DAY Other Items included lamps, bed si)rtads. small carpels, and any other portable objects. Investigators said entry ·was made through unlocked sliding glass wJndows, but no other clues were found. Disney Film Slated "White Wlldemeu." • Waft 'llllne1 film on Arcllc ngton animals •nd btnl life will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday by the JtunUngton Beach Public Library 1'1fm Forum at tht library, 525 Main St. Four Orange County '"Y'auna ladies" face armed robbery charges today after they allegedly reliev.t a Long Beach man or his pants at gunpoint In Hltn- tington Beach, then Oed tn hit car. •Iuntington police tdentWed th e pantsless victim u Max Howard Baht of Long Beach. Bahr barely managed to hit- chhike to the police llaUon at 12:30 a,qi. IOd~.' """=· bis .i..-ts, 1. T-ohlrt and grim . Ill 1eld Ille epl-began In • Lonf·Buch banrbm1>el!M!I one'Ol Ille young lldl<o. 8"br hod b«n duttlptd In an oilfield ll'UI ~near C111 and Golden Wmllttds. Santa Ana police arrested I.he female quartet one-half hour later on charges of conspiracy to comrnu armed robbery of a Mobil Service Station on the corner of Edingu Avenue and Main St.reel, Santa Ana . Arrested were Sharon Brown 2:5, •nd Elllaboth Mileo, 241 both of 111 E. 17111 St., Santa Ana and Barbar• Edgette, 25, and Kathleen Jlold, U, lloCll of UMamed Palm Street address in;Garden ~G.rove. Santa Ana ~lice allele _ liOit Brown had an air plfiOl WYcb ftiiiz@hd a .4.> caliber. automatic aod I0.'"'41~ was CArtylng 1 sw!tehbllde~· Bahr told JluntJoctoo ~police bO \ ·, • met Miu F.d1e11e 1n • Lona -.be;. · She asked !or 1 ride home to Clldtn Grove, ht saw, ind he allowed _,. to drive becau1e he cUdn't "knaw' Orfna• .county.". ~"-1. urivln& lo 5al1J011 !or four days of consu1taUon and obtervaUoo, mlde 1.JIOlol ol·assurlng tbe South Viol- ..,_ 11111 tit• Amerl<an objective In • • Miss F.daell.e'I three friends foUowed"in • 1 ·"'' _. .:t;;,:ii:~r;ntJ: :,.11rb;i: ·Soviet· Herc;i, 53, ·Dies ijJl81<l! Buch, 11 which Line he clllml · • l ' the foor'-rorcW 111m.oofilf'lhe.e.r 14U1CX>W (UPIJ -ni. s.v1e1 .... ,,,r and•LnNlOinlonleredhlmto-.: r ..... -per R<d si.r tod11 -. -Orangt c ... cy, Board of Sup1roi.1ors "41 jolmd cocutcl citjt1 tn thrfr campaign for off· 1hore: oU drilCl1'Q curb1. Paot 1$. •*""" ,. -" ._ n (WMr ~ ,, he~ .,~ ._ .. -" --...,... tJ ....,.. " ....._ .. _ 6 •••11•1t111•tt ....... ,..,., -.. .... -~ . -. .............. ti ...... 11 --......~ '• .............. ,. ...... ~ .. "• .. --.. -----• ... , I •• .. .............. =-':I --.. --.. Alfto0i -·~ • ........U,: In !1!!11P r.,.;ted tbe daUI of Col. Vu!H G. !W.· cilj JaO walllJlt li'ral;rimijron ·lvonov, 13, • ~pllq!. )le wu ' char'" ol IUenpted armed ~ In • Ibo • ...,.. fll !hi loYM! llnteo. • 5anll AM and IUlil lhtll and '""""·,.;.,. Reif stir uld he dleil M11 I "after a berydllrlff -"'"''""'"" ~' .. ahott'bul lflVe lllne=":·:..'."_·:.,,.~-· _· -"--==·=-=========-.... t ' • r ' • -----,. --- I D,VI. Y PllOT .WolModly, _, 14, 1969 Y out!f s Courag~ Xp~ on Lost Fi~gers 111 iomivALmllA c14it4 lwldl. 1111-(lil!llllJ 1111'1~· .,S .,., ___ . TomlleKbettor,Colowjllopln-,,.,.~ .... klal4 . 'l1le stttam of friends flowed steadily lo i.p Ibo! _,.. pool ol ~ tll4l ••• t jlll Giiiy -·,.. · 'xw..r Ina. Ille hosp It a-I room. 1bey wm be bu 111ed ofleo In &ii )'OUllJ Ule. hmt 1ilni "°""' with me in 1!>o Aigeloo, N~rt ·Harbor lllgh School sllldents LOST FINGERS or otay . witl> rtSJ>0118ible frl~ }• cutilftg a claA or two in see• friend. IL'• iOmethlng tl>al ii umpleasant in Newport .1'ben be coold work .Gil. tho One pretty girl about 14 aald they came talk about, and he doesn't talk aboUt It. boati that he loves ao much. It wu because CoJ.ston "Cole" Hale, 16, was "a But hla brother, Frank, 23, relited the ellbet th!K. or Los Aageles," Frank aaid. !tte IOul." -tlse in Balboa ailo thoogbt It , Thi conversations were in the wrencbJng impact that the bl al I \\ a lood tdea. • partlwlar gener•"""'• alang. Wor<la Uke lingers bad on Cole last Saturday a{. :'He'o a !"•I Uger,:' ,Wd blo boas, Aft "bwlmer" .i ~" abounded. temoon in a freak accldent on the docU Gton1ky, owner of Att'S Landing. "Y<ah. I gu..,, tt•s · a bummer all of Ari's Landing ~,U.lboa. '.'lie always !Oved to. hang around U.. right," COie Hale said quietly as be look-Co~e. ~ has · • · well, a reeU:Y laOdlng and aboo~ a month ago we finally fd a. _ et tried to i~ _ hla b&n· deep love for boats, was starting into had a cl\ance to sign him 001 becaUR our ,_ ----.-.:!.:!'--r-.~bis MCMtimontb as a dock.attebdanLaL.~ss was picking up. Lhe sportflshing landing, alld, admlttodly • T k' was looking forwanl in the lood pay.from ~PIN<; IN NIXon to a e the coming llllflUl1eJ' ,.._ The gang down here alnoody has Then something happened. start.cl ~ in a bit he'l and there In that most rouUne of maneuvers with for !Jim," Ile siid. boats, he started to tie the line tossed Small allOW'!QCes from both brother~ Coast Vacation; Time Unknown him from the "Froi>Uer" onin the dock. and Social Security ~m his serlOUl!fY ID The boat lurched at the""'"' time and father · pay for Coles ex~nsea ·at-blo-- Coie, in angu!ah and left.or saw his footer home on the penln>Uts. A retlremeot dinner honoring Myron Tai~ former Ocean View School Diltrlcl governing board merilber and current retiring adm.inistralion office custodian, will be h9ld May 23 at the Meadowlark Country Club. Tait served on the board from 1947 throush 1955. He haa;·worked as a CUJto- diao slnce 1958 and in addition to his district offlCe a&&igmneqt has .served as custodi1n · at bOth Pleasant View and Crea( Vil!w Schools. ' The dinner is spoJ)SOred by the local chaptel: of ·the Calliornia: S c Ii o o I 1 Employes Association, with 'Mrs. Fellpa Perei and Mrs. RoSe J ulieri serving as general chairmen. Mn. Bev Clardy and Mrs. Mary Ob- bards are assistlng. The event ii open in the public. Ticket. at 13.SO may be obtained from the district administration Mf1ctl at 'Be a c b BouleYard and Warner Avenue or by call ing !47.a51. DAllY PllOI OllAHGI COA.11 PUIL'ISHINO COMl'Afll'f lt,i.t,.. N. Wttl · l'ln'-"1 tnll r!MI.,_, J•lf l . Curley Vb Pralcrtftt and GtMral ~ n-·· 1e ••• a ··~ T~ol'llM A. M.,plll"' ~-llltl (fl ... ~rt W. ltl1t Wllttt111 lt1al AtHC.1ai11 Hunu.,.1000 lf«lil e-""' , Cl•'I' 1•11• ..... ..,... .... OM. ~Of Ith Strtet .. Mairi11t ANr.t11 P.O. S.11 1fO,,tJMI .. --..._. IMOI: l71J W..1 lfllllM ~ . °"' ... : .... lfly , .... ~ IJllci\I ~ f<naf AY'lfllul fingm ripped from bla hands' "HUI staylng at the home is much more · · · than just a financial arrangement. He STRING OF FRIENDS loves it ~re and they love him as their But it wam't his hands that dominated own," Frank said. his mind· at· the moment. Frank and the And in about three weeks he'll most string of friends !pOke with him In the likely return there and will face the jn. Hoag Memort.Jl J{ospital teen wing room. evitabJe challengt1 that come up when Cole was thinking about' his brother, you 're 16, full of rugged detenninatlon Dudley, 34, an Army helicopter pUot en gained from a lifetime of struggling •• , route home on emergency leave from and you've loot almost all your fingers. Vietnam. "l guess J'll have to make some ad· Cole was viaibJy nervowi, his· tongue justments," he said quit~ u he stared cocked above hla upper Up, toes twitching at the bandaies that:cmctal little. methodically. In conversaUons he looked They are awesome for a teen-age boy, ls There a Doctor in Bouse? Hoping to attract a doctor to their fair town1 the city fathers-of Greenwich, Ohio, have hung a sign ~cross Rt. 224. This Huron County farm commun- ity of 1500 has been without .a physician for 18 months, when former doctor moved to another -I town. Letters. to all hospitals in Ohio and surround' ; ing states and contact with the American Medical . 1 Association have been to no avail . The nearest town ·~ with a doctor, 12 miles away, provides 24-hour am-· ~: bulance a:ervice. · al Frank and In silent gi>n<:es asked .. lhingl like appearance ••• gtril ••• thousand questions. about lbe gul!M he play..t Md die work ..- No woro bad arrived about .Dudley's 00 tl>e high school gymnutlco team. Assembly OKs' House RepublicanAsks Investigation o.f Fortas ... return, and both were wonied. (He at· FINANCIAL ALLOWAN-, nved late Tuesday). "'c.o The soldier's arrival Is important -Financlally.# the allowance:a fr.om --'OiJ-W • ' especially h:nportant, since the three brothers will come, and the SociaJ Securi--armng brothers have only eodi -.. ly, too, and the b.Ws for 1111rgery, hospital Some call it misfortune · othen aiin-care and rehab1litaUve treatment wt1l cidence. There are many 1r8Uonales for ~ from workman's compensation and· what the Hale boys have undergone. msurance settlements from work. . Cole is 16. His father is paralyzed in a 'Ibre ll!I, bo~er, lhat one fact that Wll1 San Francisco ·convalescent home. always remaJn, illustrated when a nurse ffis mother, remarried · and livlilg in entered Cole's room during vlaiUng Northern California is abo physically hours. unable to care for th1e teenager. She asked softly: "Would you like something for your SOLID GRADa 1 hands?" Besides mainta~ng solid grades at Cole looked at her, smfled weakly, then Newport Harbor High, Cole worked as a gazed at his bandages with the two pro- dock hand living at the home o( guar-trudlng index fingers .. , then back at dian&, parents of his best friend . her. He moved to their Balboa home a year "Ob , • 1 you mean tor the pain?'' Countinn Shot, Rammed From Pagel DOWNTOWN •• to $108,4'3. ReUrement of a bond issue of $925,000 would cost 169,37S. To this figure Is added the operating _,.. of 110,950 making a net profit of $28,120. Combining all three proj"'il would result in a coat of f3.45 million for the 15.52 acres hued on an averqe cost of $5.10 per square foot. !,OIO SPACE\! Improvementa to build 2,0llO parking space! brings the total to $3,897,960. Total revenue. projected would be $362.425. Rttirtment ol a bond issue of $3.925 mHlion-would eo5t $294,375 pet year. To thJs is added operaUoo costs of $52,150 making a net profit of 115,800. ~omblnlng 1 and 2 alone .results in a S3 mlWon project 0£ 1,515 parkin& SPficel Valley C.Olleeting ' ' Bulky Rubbish For the IOCOlld Saturday In a row Fountain VaOey resident& wlll have a chance in dlaelrd large bullcy Items "1Ulout going in the .._.. o/ hauUna them in tbs dump. , From 8 1.m. ta 4 p.m., Sltunlay, largo trash-bina will ' M plaeed at City Hall, 10200 Slalf:r Ave., and fire ltlUon No. I, 17737 Bughant S~ Bµib ~ l!IOi1 II <!Id chairs, "'lfU, televlsfons, etc. may be placed in the traoh bins for fret rlckup by truca from Rainbow DilpoM Co., worklnc In cooperllion W!tb tl>e city in ,mlA May a Cllf·wldl cloaill~· mootb. • Eich Salulday In &fay a new •lie •ID be -lot tho ,... ciilposal - and a net reserve of $28,630 per year. Combining 1 and S results in a '3.325 milllon project of 1,626 spaces and a net loss each year of '6,235. The loss is ex- plained by a difference in on street park· ing spaces added into each project area and 1 and 3 have fewer on street spaces. '11le city already has a civic center site adopted at Main Street and Mansion Avenue. This 12--acre parcel would cost the city about $400,QXI according to figures released by Councilman Henry Kaufman. CENTER REMAIN Dr. Kaufman bas suggested the civic center remain where It is (5th Street and Pecan Avenue) and that tile city buy an extra block for expansion of the center. Councilmen are expected to act on bis suggestion during the 7 p.m. meeting at city hall. U Dr. Kaufman Is succtsaftil in con· vincing-his fellow councUm'en or the merits ol his ldea, 1nd U the council adopts at least the tHird of the Parking Au1hority propoaals, the c Iv I c 0011tr wou>d be at the bead of a block wbJch would extend from Pacific C e a 1 t Highway in Main Slre<t. Currently the city la compleUng a 12.1 mlllion PJrkin1 Authority project on the oe<an side of Coat Highway from the pltr·toUth to Beach Boulevard. The projtct, the first for lhe authorl\1, ts apec:tod to be completed lai. Lhls aummer. Davis New CD Head WA.$111NGTON (AP) -JObn & Davlr, former ..-.Or of Narlll Daloia, ,wu · named Wednaday i. become director ol Civil o.r..... DaVll, If, wUJ .......... JOlfph Romm eflecUve May :io. ---- ' Legislation Special in tl>e DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -The Assembly has approved unanimously a bill compelling the State Lands Commission to give coastal cities and counties for warning of hearings on offshore oU drilling ap- plications. Assemblyman Robert E. Ba<fham (R· Newport Beach), author of the measure, said today be erpect.s the senate also to approve the bill without a dissenting vote. The legislation, which has the en- dorsement of Lt. Gov, Ed Reloecke, chairman of the Lands Commission, la now In the Sena\e'1 Natural Resources Committee. It will be taken up at a oom· mittee hearing Thursday. The bill, AB 622, wets prepared by Badham at the request of Orange County officials, led by Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and ·Seal Beach Clly Maneger Lee Risner. It ar0&e from vigorous protests against Lands Commission approval of ex· plorainry drilling by Ille Shell OU Com. pany last January. Shell was granted a permit to sink test core holes off Newport Ha r b o r , San Clemente, Oceanside and o th e r offshore areas. The Lands Commission in March rescinQed the permit 'Qfore any drilling bad taken place in Orange County Waters. Coastal agencies had complain«I that they had received no prior notice of Uie January Lands Commission hearing on the Shell permit application. Badham's bill requires the commission to give 60 days notice on bearinga on all exploration and drilling requms from the oil industry. Meeting Canceled From Wire Services WAS KINGTON -A leading House Republican called today for an in- vestigaUon ol Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas by the House Judiciary Com· rnittee to determine w h e th e r tm- peachement proceedings are warranted. Rep. Clark MacGregor (R·Minn.), a member of the committee, said he acted after conferring this morning with Atty, Gen. John N. Mitchell "The attorney general raised no ob- jecUon,'' said MacGregor. "He indicated he would coowirate in such an investigation." The course suggested by MacGrtgor is one of several that could lead to im· peachment-proceedings ii) Congresi. It calls for a ·preliminary, informal in. vestigaUon by a Judiciary Committee panel to see whether the facts warran~ going ahead with impeachment. "I can't sit by ap)o longer end µ:e this matter tried in the news media when we have procedures for bringing the facta out into the open,'' MacGr~gor said. MacGregor hand-delivered a request for a preliminary inquiry into Forta.s' af- fairs to Rep, Emanuel Celler (0-N.Y.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee. He asked for a meeting of the full com .. mittee next Tuesday ·and asked that Fortas and Mitchell be invited to appear, From Page l 'DR.BROWN' •• -. ' ·• Celler later told the Hou'se that ffe'\uid· his committee's ranking Republican, Rep. William ~1 McCulloch Of Ohio, J}ldi_ reached agreement on.a course of actioh: To Rep. H. R. Gross CR-Iowa), who has callef tor Fortes' impeachment and who asked what course of action had been·· decided upon, Cellar said only: ~ '> ~ "I'm sure the gentleman will be '": saUsfied with the action to be taken iii · the not too distant future ." .; Cellar said he would d i s c u s 1 · MacGregor's proposal with MacGregor later today. The Justice Department's statement · said MacGregor telephonOO Mitchell and .. .. was informed that the Department of : Justice could have no objecUon1 to at-- lions wbJch are legally within the prerogatives of the House." -: Pellets Sicken i • ' • ' -· J; 13 ]~each Youths. Thirteen third grade studeni.s at Wardlow School in Huntington Beach suf. fered minor effecta from tasting fertilizer - pellets Tuesday, but school officials sa'f. the pellets are not poisonous. --" Wardlow Principal James Macon saJd· the pellets were spread Tuesday af.; ternoon in the standard fashion t.o fertWz:e the playground. "Some of the youngsters wandered onto.· the groonds and put the pellet. in their. mooths," said Macon. "As soon as wa:· posed no danger to any heart patient. learned what happened, the school nurse:· And he argued that his prolonged study of inspected all the children." medicine, through medical libraries and "We also checked with the poison from .the student gallery . in .. hospital center at the Orange County Medical operatl118 rooms was more ~.sufficient Center and Jear:ned tbe pellets were not to sustain hJs practice as a cardiologist. seriously harmful unle'ss taken in a Brown is accused of practicing a large dosage," explained Macon. medicine without a license. Seventeen All children are back in school today, counts of the charge were recorded reported Macon, with the exception of · against him alter an investigation by the one, who is out with a cold, The June, IO meeUng of the Huntington Orange County Grand Jury. Some parents apparently thought the Beach Union High School District Oppasing counsel agreed today that the children had been fed dangerous pel]e~. Citizens Committee on Maximum Use of trial may go to the jury late th1' af-Macon labeled the reports "foolish." lfe.' School Facilities has been canceled, It temoon. Buckl~y stated that final said the fertilizer, Best Turf Special, IS ' was announced' today, Next session for arguments can commence: after commonly used throughout the FountafiJ · _lhr•:":h:oo:l:groo=::p:w:il:l:be:J:u:ly:1:0:. ====te:•tim:·:o:•:y:b:y:Lw:o:tu::rthe::r:w:ltne::":.,:·====va1::;1':'.:y:Sc;:h:oo:1:0:1s:tri:c1::1o:r:p:la:y:groon:::d:s.~'7: for one month only sav,e 20% on Towle'.a El Graiidee and Kinq Richard pattema in solid silver CONVENIENT TERMS l>JCKAMlRICARD - -, ..... -'51.liO .... --- J. C. .J.lumpfu.i~ ~ Je~eferj 1123 NEWl'ORT AVENUE .,.... --'1Uo L ·2t -YEARS SAME-LOCATION ! i •• ,. M'~ER CHARGE COSTA MlSA -=:=:::::-==============""'~---~~..._--..J __ PHONE "''·'401 --·-·----- -----------------------------------.. __ _ • • ,. 1:00 e '".,'' N111111u.. <t> • <30> Grtllllf J11111 • trip to Hoottrrillt but b .alOetrtckld wht11 sht thlnb tllit Jed 1$ pl•nnlnr to m•n'Y J1nt lttth1W17. (R) . . D KRAFT MUSIC HALL :ooe ~•il """AC> (60) Jerry* Sandler.& Young, Judy. Dunptty.i Carne, Lena Hornt TOM .REDDIN NEWSI Newi that IS NeW1! • ., ................ (C) (30) 1!1 9tll&l""' ....... (C) 11-+-! • i u. ---(ct 1!"1-'!"'*"-(lll).:lhi111s1 " 12 shOlllll taped "' , · · Dive DudleJ, Ptt ;!Jut· , Eall•nd it1r0ftt: U. sln1l111 tum tnm, 111d Pttw M1"'1all tut«. of Tony Sandi« •nd Rll(Jll You111 D • D'CWI 111tM: <ct ......... •1111 cilnlldilltM Judy c."" of t1M ..,.. (ldrMttn) '53-Rlcharl "llll&fl·I•.• Tonitbt'• llllSb •rt Wldmlrt, Don ll)'lor. lt• HorM eftd Ttny·Tholl'llL 8-(C)CIOI II I 111J (tJ (60) D tfJl Cl) ID••....,• •...,•••••-••1 .. ,..,; ... (C) C3~ IMlii" CC) ..... m - ..... {acMrltwt) '65-btph Cot· (C) (30) 1.., °'""' JkGl'lln, Phlllp c.m,, 19 n.t'• Nlwt (10) "'Spa.~ ' ltantJ Kan~ Julie SomNrs. 111 Tllr11 l!Drt b-1111 1111dir th• lldllll trill ttirrin& t1)1,of tht ewnb lud· c:ondftlois lhtt 1stronellh 'fllll tl'I· ln1 11p to ~' lnt Shlfld, Col. eounb!r'tll tht moon.· Custer Is prot11\$ed th• Prnldtntl•I -u ... ,_ nom ln•llol! by powerful lobb)'iS1s In .,. • -,.,. btl .J'Mf W1sllinrton in return lor fortin1 !ht al KPl.M N.....vlcl (t) (60) Sioux lndi;ms orl their valuable,, trtaty·protecltd land. ''o D .,,,. "'""""' 'C/ (601 GJ I lM LLK:J (SO) ' CB v.,... " tht 10~• 11 tu SU (C) (60) 1,;. 81 Lit'• T_,. AMwl: tttns (30) '1eens 11t tht Go." LA. City School tapl'anlbtlwes 1nswtr 90n'Jt ques· tions 111Gut tod1)"1 mobil1 )IOUth: "Who'• drivlnr tt.· arr' ''Wh•• ,,. JIOll rolnrT' "Wilen wlll J1V11 .. _. fl ..... ""' • Diii '(C) aas . ...,., -CCI Wik Croflkltt, @I lnltr111tion1f M11uint (60) a> Sylwi1 y Enriq111 1:30.EJ Qj [() lir11;1111 Acr.. (C) (30) LIM a~d0li¥tt 0o·urlu-.nd 11· ~ Het)'Ont the In Hootervi!I~ W1it ucitldlJ for tht btoHe1st ,. wits of • 111tlona1 contest thty'vt 111 «ittred. (R) 0-CCI C30> Tod ~""­mu ........... (GOI t0:t0ilam--ic1 c.., D•ITllJ' '#lili11111 ._ a ~ tlrt fill-or ~ • ll!FI kaf· PEANUTS I ' ' s~ ·~":' 'f'ME..:N J O:>lA.o DO . · I' !VE '\'!AAS ·r:ofl JUS·T NAVIN' '".O+-'T SOOK~ PERKINS D WIMll'a MJ ~! (t) (~ m-!Cl'"' \' (~ fold to her dlltt\ luml11 lit• Ille Wll Under tbl lllfl~ of e p.,clledtlic drur •t tht tirnt. Brtn-'"''---. · da Scott ruests. (II) ,, 1· i I ml TN P#CIPtiw Phil: (30) "Creativity." Betty Smith ot!otu ••rs of dr1wins creativity oUt of I chlldr1n 11 111 earty a1e. First ol 1 two·part pr02r1m. m W1nderhm (C} fE DFNlll Houst (C) I .30 IJ Clea C.111pbtll (C) (60) Georp llnday, Merilee Rusi!, John Hirt· ford i nd Bill MldJ11 cuest. • 0@@ &'I 1\1 ·Virllllln (C) (90) "lm1p of .,. Olrtltw," Otll Stroud avtsts in du&I roles 11 "' Innocent r•ncb hind ind • 111ntii criminal who 1tt1mpt to 1ssurM Heh other's idtntity. (R) • .... .. -(C) ('5) ail• c.ta M1nd1111iewtl '"' m""" C<I (30) 0@ (IJ l!m Tht •-;· ICGOI "As Cold 1s""llhes." Actlni on tht 11st wishes of 1 efient, D Rost attempts 10 dell'ler the m•li'J·•shes lo 1 friend, .but unfollunatCllJ runs Into the man's e.nrm irs On th• way. (R) I e TOM REDDIN NEwsf * News that IS Ne~s! em-CCI (IO) D Mallllel Diiion (JO) fD fil• IMpltlioii (30} A p1ntl of tum tMChtrs 1nd psycholoeisll dis· cu• stud«lt-films 1!\d loot 1t 111 nperimenttf Him by 1n Ocddenbil Colllp ducltnt titted '"Md It Goes On tnd On." 1111•- 11 :30 • Movit: ~ (mystery) ·~ienn Ford, Broderick Cr1Wfotd. a@ oo mr"""' -CCI e Mn: "E""' D•Y• • Ht11c1.,.. (comedy) 'l8-M11 West. D tHI Cil Ill"" ..... ICI m 0onaN o·c.n,.., <Cl m ...,.._ (C) (30) "Thi Trtm· b!lllf Earth." Dtvfd Prowitt report! on DIW ,tlethods of stud~ina: 11rth· q111ku, •nd talks ll'ith a ismo1oelsts 1nd reolol:isll 1bout tht San An· drtu 1rid tllt Den1H (Alaskl) ltull 1il'ltS. The ansitive equipment uMd 11 Mimllc stltlons i1 abo suAeyld. lZ:l5 G Mtvlt: "lndedructibl• Mtn'" Im MltrcMI MllSlctl (horror) '56-lon Ch1n,y Jr. ·ZS 8 Wtltdlrtul World of Sport (C) 12:30 m Actlot Tllt1lrt: "Whi*l*lllf Smith YL sutfand Y1rd," ·ICI IJ Tk ltod 11111 (C) (30) Rufus J.2:45 0 Cotui1nllJ l1llttin IM {C) Is drivtn to 4nper1te mtaUrM to •• rid hlmtlll of "" unweleo111t lllOIDI 1:1111 DD Ntws (C) aunt wMn his bU11dy, 111 Tom, mows ltt 1fter • 111u1bbl1 wiltl lti1 GI f!O!ll ., llllilt Ollt (C) wifL (R) g Wht W1t11 .. Sbft (C) (30) 1:15 8 Mow* '1M World W11 1111 Roblrtl Slltnl'C!Od tnd Rqis Ptlil· Jllf'(' (dr111M) '~dmolld O'Brien, bin 11Ja1. Mont Freefn111. D (Ill (ll Gil Tht "" •••HJ CCI (JO) ""'fht. d111 bikes 1 mirslcll IOok 1 :JO ID 77 ~ strl11 II Hme. m • .., Clril'rtll <t> (90> 1!J ht fw Y111r Lift (C) {60) DAYT'iME MOVIES :I) G "nit MihMI'" (comedy) '51- Donild o:eonnor, P\Pfr l1uri1. ' :JO ... , .. , hlfl" (Q)!Mdy) '47 - Join C.lilfllld, Willi•m Holden. Mont Fr•m1n. 2:30 m Afl·lfflM ~ ~A DIS911ch From Reuters'' ind /'Dtnrt Wit." f! ..._... FW!lt'" ·(comedy) 'JS-. YfOllt Powtr, srl• Henlt. U:DO II "hlHd If IAll Slits" (horror) ·n-a.i. LulMi. U:H m 11111 ... Ill" (dr11n1) '42- Tyront Power. Jolfl Fontaine, 2~00 Q)"""' ........... ('1tt$1· ern) '58-loll .Allllf'lr'lt. 3:1111 0 (C) "'Tilt Pride .,.; tlle P11- aioll" (dr1m1) '57-Ft•M: Sin1tra, C.11 Cr1nt 4:30 II (C) "MH.1..,11'1 lnll" (wtl1· e111) 'SZ -Rtnclolpll Scott, Donn• ..... • JOB PRINTING ' • PUBLIC;t. TIONS • NEWSPAPERS Qii.lity llrin1int ,.,4 Dtp•ndtltl• S•r•IC-1 fot moro tlrl•n • 0111rl1t 1( 1 Co11tuty. GORDO MYSWEETIE "TUMBLEWEEDS! HES DISAPPEAREP ANP TOOIY IS a.JR WEPl>IN& At.Y! • YES.~ DARUNG, WHAT (SIT? ly Clicarlff. M. Schull ---~: ER· ly John Miles ly Tom K. ~yan llSTEN, HdJ!_lllE FIRST ORDER OF BUSINESS .JS TO G€T HIM TO TilE AqAR! ... HES .GOrf'lmTY OF TIME TO PROPOSE AFTER WE'RE MARRIED! . . CAN YOU SWIM? --~J ----- By Gus Arriola -/ . I ' I I -'tti•--v'~-~~{~~~::'.:::=i,:~·;L.J~t1;·=·1t~l~~~1~I~~\~."."~; l!.!--~!:::..4 ~ 1211 WIST IAUOA at.ft. HIWPO.-r llACH ---t - . ----.. ~=...,..=""" UNDERWATER SEARCH -A diver from U1e ship, Calypso, searclles tor !fe!lsure tonight at 7:;JO p.m. on Channel 7 during "The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteall:." Tl;le fUll hour documentary in color is the sixth of the series. TELEVISION VIEWS ABC Putting Bet on Youlh By· RICK DU BRDW , HOLLYWOOIJ (UPI) -ABC·TY is belting on youth to pull the network out of its ratings dol· drums next sepsoo,. and C,BS..TV is aiming .again basically for the older :audience to maintain ita prominence. , . A look at soino .ABC·'l;\( s~ows indicates what the smallest commercial network is trying 'to do : "'The Mus\c Scene," for instance, will ' stress pop records and 8nti·establishment humor .. "THE NEW PEOPLE" will ' be about young persons fomiing their own SQ!;;iety w bile marooned on an isolated island. : ~' "Love -American Sty le" will offer tales of young romance. · ' "The Mod s·quad," of course, will continue with stories about three young persons belping t he police to understand the new generatio~. 11The Flying Nun/' of course, has a very· young star, Sally Field. "Room 222," will focus on a high school teacher. ''That Girl'' has youthful Marlo Tlwmas as its headliner. The Tom Jones variety hour has a definite em- phasis on youth and pop music. · THE LENNON sisters, n<Jl long ago litUe girls on the Lawrence Welle show, will !rave their own · Series. · 1 "The Dating, Game" and t•Tbe Newlywed G8tne'' !are strictly for the almost-marrieds and the just,marrieds. · And i•Land of the Giants" is a children's ver· si'on of science-fiction. CBS.TV, meanwhile, apparently sees little reason to change from the big shows that have hooked an audience that is .essentially rhiddle. aged and up. "Gunsmoke" and Lucille .Ball a nd "Mayberry R.F .D." and Doris Day and Carol Burnett will be back on Mondays. "LANCER'' is a stock Western with no ~pecial youth appeal despite two younger leading men. Red Skelton will be back, and.so will "The Bev· erly flillbiUies" and "Hawaii Five~O" and "Fam- ily Affair," which has two older maJe 1eads-:-Brian KeHh and Sebastian Cabot -despi!e all the pub- licity and attention for the show 's child Performers, Jim Nabors, who used to play, ''Coiner .Pyle,'' will have a variety show that off~rs no Jn~cation it will be youth-oriented. "Hogan's , Haroes., and "Get,.Smart" and "Green Acres" anCl · "Petticoat Junction" and Jackie Gleason arld ;1My Three Sons" and Ed Sullivan and "Mannix" and "Mis· sion : Impossible" are all returning. OF ALL THE three commercial networks, NBC· TV appears to be the one trying most to achieve a balance between youth-and-age programming. NBC·TV's series range from "Laugh·ih'' to "Julia" to "The Virginian" to the "Kraft Music Hall" to Dean Martin's hour to "Daniel Boone'' to Andy Williams to "Bonanza" to the new Bill Cos· by show. Because television, with few exceptions, has not really tried to woo the brigllte<t members of the young generation. the chances are that ·the r&tings once again will go to the folks who generally stay at home -the aucUence that is middleaged and older. Dennis the Menace l ' ' < ' \ I • I 21 DAI.LY m.GT H Ll!JGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 16 Jet& Sold ! '"°" ,_ ,.,.,IQ NEW voag (UPI).'.. Pan · 0 f r.R THE COUNTER ·A· .. ~ a.n,eu,.. .. •wih••u trt0T1c:1 ro c•IOtfOflt Ame" .. n World Al-·••• has -•• ' ~· •ICTtTMIUI MAM9 IUf'l•1011 couaT Of' THI r1... ••-.. ;, ....................................................... l~~~~~~~~~~~~~--F. ~ I~ -°""" -h -lTAT I Of' CAL.lf'O&NI.& ... ... IA 16 f .. !!_"6fOll 6ICtW , ;: et .. 11 A""9!1\f 0rh1r. THI COUNT'( IW OIAflilOI announced wl llKI OC lln .,...1 IN ~~ ~~~~:': Ell•ti .. vi~O.~t ~CSL .._. jet Falcon bullness plaoes, 1 NASO li•llnga for TueMl•y, May 13, 1t6t . .rJ,'!'fv:.i"f,Jt"l~:;'.~ ~ ~1 COMfl•NY Mi !Mt .... """ Ill (-\llCTOALA LOlO ,LOSS. --Vl(T0•1• record for any moath since the .......... """ .....,.,...i.,. ............ ...,....,......, • A.M. t-M.t.SO. -A-::s~ ~." .....i '4 ._ ............ --"' ""'*' flLOSS. D«ff.... • flric:-a _. ~ ..... tt' _...,,. _,...,.. tt' <_,WM. Ml IWll Al :C.'."Mt..,..~.,,..~11e1c,:~".,'s.,:~•="..:.:: 11irline bt1an marketlnl' lbt l<IEWvoJnccA" •IW 1111 1-'f ttll'llll"f"A •tt 4 ~I N t.1;'IJ;i.A"'-1M ~-;:.:::..o:•"-.::;...~"."":t:::!.:::."~~~"':."::."".:.:. piano""',., .. aa•. The-''".:l'.'r":.1'z ·""'" 11.r,.11:::::~-tr-n~,~ ~ 11 ~·T:1 11 n~ 15f·~ w.;::: OtftoiJ:::J~':n.o-•imw :'':.."':....~~.li,~:£': plane, "'ttb •capacity oLlO i!•'=''7:ti ~Hu.~ ~:r1.., HW l!::Yt!tlJC'il?Au. "1~ U ~ =~::Ja::c.s: ....... callfief'llLI Or .... ~! ,. .,_, *"" """" "" ,., pel'IOll! IDd • r~e ot 1,900 ,;; ... ,tr I~.:: ... :'.:Intl ~imir-... :! SD: if. r.l• .. ·~"'4 l~~ tm" ~ ,Jjl ~ ... li .... ,.. I" .. - .............. .,... • ..._.,., .....:Mrl. " lti. ""'""'"""" ., ..... ~In II •• od • b .. :i::. " • ' ' I •• , •• 1 ' -. AW ~.. .21 .- _ -_ _.,.kl s1a1e. ,.._.11¥., l'IJa .~ ROIEAT50N. HOWJE• m es, ~ pr uc y we .cu r•mao • • n ;rz: 1 ,. '*ff"t' ... ~, ....,., !.~ .....Wo.vw7 Ktlltl Doe/Wtkl .. _ .. GAtltf..ANO.• <Mt ~' Or!w. F,rench firm of Avians MarctJ ~==:.i:r;.~lfl't:: m ~M 'f 2l ::r~1 l4ll lf' =~ .. 0 n'lt I' ... ~1'cr1 IA ls' 0 f4 '';f; ~;\ •---" ~ 't : c:-_:::w .! = .,:-.,:;. ~~::.::=, '-rn ~ DaS$8Ull. =.ru1:fleiJ .. '1 "':.M~ py. ,.,_ /~ ~\.u tit f =' '~lk~lt "• ~~ A 111 ~'-' 'ij 2 +'\Z 5 c'.':,. ;,.~ - ..-; lit eucvttd •.,_ ~ ""'""" "'1•1nlfll to ..,. -.i.i. ., ult Pf't •• I' WlllCll ._ lonlr n;. '"" nl Mer Pu NH '714 ~ !,: l ?t -tt, AM. 11'1'1 A CCHJFICIAL S.l!Al.I • C1KNl11I, wltl!l11 tour fttCll'I"'-.rter tfle LEGAL NOTICE ~~11:11......._,, ':~ °" ~""; fl-~ I~ f: ltf I\~ ~ 21.-ft-f '' ~ ~·~ ~:t:ci CU · ,, .. ,, I.. JolMt 11r.1 ttVMl«tlall of ltll• Mllcw. ~ ~ed\ .,. r31" lCMi 1i~ ,nt f;,. 1s1& i:El'i P~llllr1 J::f 1~ A, MO• \u• JI • -Amt•• n Niltrl l"vlMIC-C.l~"'I• DlflN ,,_.., ·~ Ifft. •A• 1''9 ~lw (llldl. tlltf' Ir... Hiio m IM~I * \\ ,.,,..._ ft\ JV: 0i ;~ 1f -i ~ fJI "'1MINI OH~ In =~iir.:.i:.•of fM Etltle SUI'•··~ co"u•f 011 TH.I di•::., ;;:= ,-.+i n. B ...... c. .',im I..... ~: .·.wnt~, fl ... tJ ~I 1· .olt .. And!Hoc 1,llO ~ C°l'"Z,. O,lru of ltM ::_ NrnM ._t STAT• OP CAl.ll'ORNIA '°• out ltlf: dtr. Ptl°"' r• • 3l ~U' j~" r,'l '~ t5 I'~ c .. 'I" t\lio ~I '.I to lJ~ \t I"' ~~l wll Mttdl Tit':J ROIAAT50~ MQWSIA • ..... LAND THI COUNTT 01' CMIAMOI :ltin NI ,,:: ruf:lc.to ~ ~114 1,1\ j:r.~.:,f llj 'if' ~.:r~ ilt ~ ... Al n •:n ~ ~~j? I = .W ~tr 111 l'\lbllllf*I Or-CM•• D•fl¥ l'llot, ,,........,.. •1 u.w C... ,'!'!-_ ... , -E w -.=r:r In 21\11,.u. t11M&IW ,..., 1 ll•n.bl EJ 'li ~ Ul ·.a +I Mtii ~ """" 1, ~ 21, n. ""' ll'Mot "*-'~~-~"",.,· .• _ .. ..., v "' , 1111¥ Mell uv. tJ" l'"""" 11w. 11 llnctlrn "'\ E !" I + A,J. s.v J.11 EGAL N01'1CE Ttl: SINtM SELIM IC, FllANKLIN, OtttNllllt N;nM"EI ll • 8""" Fl! I.Iii ~·~w" ff •1V. lltait E'• °*~Al t o1 • 040 -:'!.'l 1 .. _ ___ MAIUIETT• 5. ,.ANl(LIN. ~lolflltlff v .. M '°"' 11 1, ... o..,. n I"" I'd• m I\ ··~n'ld c. li • • 1 • ... Wt ~ -~o., r: L -~..,. AlnM•ltt"* PEOfl'Lf. OF THE. STATl!i ol<' CALI· ~ll• 31 JI..., 1v Mir " 2' • -llf II A~ "'?. ''°"' Al t .., U •I A 11t'D's.,,2C1 PUOIW'ltcl 0.-.l'ltt CO.II 01111' l'ilot. FOtltHI• lo ,.. "°"" Mmed Oef"'4tot11 AF a . :n o.c... INJ lf 17 • 1r u:l •lall 4\o!o .u Al 11'11 • t . •" Arll'ICioll .t.:l'O •• A·l'll Mlv 1~. fl, :rt~ J-"-lfft f)Mf VOl,I lrt Mrtelo dlrlCtft to 1111 1 .,.. ASf O ,•,< 1,t\li efl111ct I f'lll lOYi tl,n &. T flll; Utt ,• s ~ A~ .to'°' ',:': •. •Yi Anno$t\ wo ' ,...,.,, F9 " .vi. OtlUlll C~ • ft Ktlltlt nio tltotelw • ""' A Ito A -IUP••IOll cou•T OP T • ,.., , .. .., ... 111 ·~ .. ,,._ ..-111ec1 A k 11\ot u 11'11 APJll ~ '"' Ktl~ .. ltotlbln ~ il An'llllSUO I 61 \'!I "--..... ST•T• ... e.t.L.tP01tt11• Fe. LEGAL NOTICE UWJW11t1nt of ,,.. •'-' _...., Plellllttt A Sid· 31111 12 8'" c ... r 1 lj Kwt a. c: " 21111 111,,,. Cll tv. v. AN.=AMJAC ..,_ • _ "• =.J'.! ~~ TM• C~NTY OF o.AfllO• With ,,.. cltrll "' "'--... entltlN CllUtt Allul Lil 2S 2' ti ll1t8r 1 Kt'l'H Fie 1'2 n •GYOtl'.t " I 1::... Ann th~ .... A-<lntl !fl 1!1t 1bov. tnlffllllll 1Cf1c1ot ~I Al~ 81!\1 11\lo 1"4 Dfttrl' IEI 1 WI • 1(1v1t CYI ll 41 lllKI ~fr Amr 0'\'61 1 -flll A....::11 "j•n MOTKIE OF ICl.l.lltMI l'OA AP· T-412" -l•1tl vau In uif court. wllJll" TEN ::I:'~ ~ ::& 01:-Crv ~ ~ :_.,11;.c; I~~ iii. :li.,.c-~ '1111o mitr ,1\11 '11 1 Atmlllb A l'OIWTM•NT Of' 111 •ST IT 11 TI! NOTICI TO C•l"OITOlll Oln titer IM MrVk:t °"' YOU ef ttlb t.un>-AUIH Et tlol. 10111 ti Ii " I(= ot "' ,. ik s.:i._ 1:1 Ml 1 llfl • 2&. I "' A,.. Cort ·'° TllUSTl!I Of' •VUC TUNlqa mont. H Off'VtO Wll!lln tfle .tiov. MmM Alpii Geo ,1'4 22 M.. I\ jl\.li ~ VMI Zl\11 &um Ind 29 Am tr' Y 71 \lo Ar'1ot Incl l IStdlM 1111.. (1111 ......... c.Mtl • ts.a. fltl .. lff U,C,C.) '°"""'· or wll!llft THIRTY d9)-• II .........., AnlldlC ' '"'Dow J~ :IO :12 IC•• '""" "' ktntllll El ~ 101A ~ ~.J t ~ + ~ = 011 l.2t ltJ•M ol ALFAEO M. COKE• Notlc:tl•Mftbl'llW<l"lhl.Crldlt61'11INWl\ot<•, Anl .OTel 26162' le N°:H nVo.t1\ll Ott 1~ I~ 111'11\ll fj! ;: \l +~~l1"1•~ ......... ' y .,,,, '"'' • •, SLAVEN ~1.0&. .. "~~CTION$. ,",',·,· vw, ON .. ,•tbr 1'0f(n.il Ir.It ........ ,_ ~Ei.'i: ll~ li ~ •. ~ !, u . ~ I ,.._ n .. ~ kl =. ~\~ ~:15~ ~ .... DI s • :i:·u. At.Id oJt'f'.20 NOTICE 11 HEAIEI t;an1t"°"" -.,..i.e .. ntu AOOreu '• .. I It I wrl WI.I~ .... 'i..ctlht, uld 1~ \l\11 D"'*r: D .. ind• 11 'i: '" c, IA Am Cem AO ~ 1,1 AICIS.. l..40b '1'etMI tw 11Mt .-!"'"""'' ol THIE E, W/11111,.., Pullff1ilw!, C°""IY fll Dr.,.., Pl<ltrttltl wlll llkt IUClllmenf tor ,..,. montr :: ~~~! :If 40 , ~\4 ~ L.-= r~ m: t1 i::i"' 1f1,4 12 A Cll1ln 1-'D :!' _1,. ~~~o'',~, , ...... IAMI( OF CAl.IFORNIA. N1t lo"'Jst1!t olC1llttrnl1.n..l 1 bUli:lrlil\l ..... loor dtm111t1 --In 1M 'tffltitdAn1Ht•!t l61'i0l1V.E•rl:.°"A.1< 14 l'111ot:'eo.1 -7~ 1~ OM 'S ,, ~s':!1 1~ 1 1\ii 1t__,-1'AiTO,EI I.» ~llllDll. 11t SUl,TITVTIE T~USTElll ,., IO bt nifae M Jtmtt; tit. llfoetl('ll'I C_ .. 1111 .. l•ltlne -<.Ol'll•ICI, or wJll Nri lftSID 3S'i'J l1"'1 E111 S1>C 29 I Ltlwr• G 4t 70 Seti-It 2111) 2'11:1 re;;· t>f •)II rOO 1(li ., Ille Tniatl CfHhld undl'f IM llll w ""' Shi l11ioiln1f'I. Tr1nater.n. wtlmt -l'r I• tllt Qltlrl f« ll'IY ol!ler ttll~ •m MfOl 71 ,, Econ Lib ~ .i6 Lt¥1n "fn I• 11 Sc:•IPlo A lO'M 10-. AlnCYIM' 1.2S m 3)J!, "' -""AK:l~IEI. ff• •"" Tlltl-"' crl IM dfe,tdenl .... , -IMinffl -clclrttt 1$ "" IEMI ltll'I Swe.1. -•noted I" Ille VtrHi.d CG!nfllllnl A MIMS 23 23'1. IEdtdl SH 11\lo 2Ji L-11 &F 1t\.'I 20\lio ,..., .. "' llllt " ""' Dh!UI , 21• ll~ i ~ !P111e11 ldl ~.rs U!I for Frklf'I', Jllflt •• 1'6t, •I t ;ll ""'' m tt /11.111, CO.....IP ti Or-t, .Sl•'9 ol You may Mell the •""k:• o1 •n ~ Am P1Pf lilll l~ Educ Sn 1S 1' Liil lllOll 2:J\j, 7A"4 SEDCO 2W. 2t AOutlVI .17'1 JI I \Co fil Afl title.to pf 3 ' ..... court,_.. ot o. ............. , .... l ol ~lltotnlt °" llW "'-"-' (Ofll!tded w11j, ""~ AnlSI Gob ,• ,•,l'l El p-El u~ 1Alo Llll'r ]6\lo"" $.i1 Cm• 3s-. ""' AOu1l pl.Ml 1 13l'o t. t? •nftcl'I JIG.• " ..... ~ Slrtll 111 !ht •• .. ' I h ... ,.. .t.mSI G pl I El Niie ,l 1' Lobl•• '"' 1111 Slqouovlf'I .. st AmEIP'w LSI A20 ,, ... • ~· utd -rt, 1t 10I W. • ' TM PrOJi'Hl'r to ltfll trW I pl1lnl et !1•11 1ummon1. Sti<ll •llorntv Andlor Co 1•v. 11'4 El Nud 2l'4 t•'A Lott Candv t l~ S.Wn Uio lJlli '6V. Al'll Et11t1 1 S3 31 Jl\'l -'\Ii 111 " .t0 (ilp ol kftll Ant, C1lllornl•. ti 1$25 North Slnt1 Aloi Avmut, C0.11 al'lou!ll '"1H' Cllllllllled wUhl1t lhe !!me A,.,.,,_r 69'.l.o 70111 IE!ec!CO'I' l)>(; •lh L~llCh C ~ :U'h Shep NU 57 Am Enkt ti 17'6 at. at.+1·16 A!!fl orp OtMd Ml'I' '· IHt. Cit II ~··· CO\lnlp ot Or1Mi1, Slit. el limit •lllld Ill thll wmmoni. f« 1111119 . Af'j(OM CF .~. ~ i11rom.. ' '"' MMI G&E ll\.'I 14 !lemeftS H 61\li "~ Am E~p Ind 1'1 3'~. 1r~ + '4 ~11.Cp "/.fa!.I( w I!! ST JOttN. Cou""' I C1tllornlt Ill! I Mii I I Arc•t• N ol6n 41\'1 lee c.. ltV. *"' 'Mr.I( Ch 3J'l4 :u~ !SIMI 10 1~ AE•lnd pt A' 110 7,.... ~ . . • . Ulf'.11 I ltOl•1tTiOJi NOWll!• • GAlllLAJIU> S..ld p,._rlJ' If llffulMd In ltnt••I ; '" P 1__.. "111 o !ht tfrl'IPll l!f. Arcs Ind U 2t I C $yf 1 1¥o Ml l'ltly 11\o't U Sorl P8P 'U 71 "'mHol1t .70 4' ltV. u~ -t l~ :~:~,: j= '-•OO -• O I.. 11 "' -01>men! •led Mtl•n I, 1'6' Ardfft M Ill\ 13.,., I Ottt 51J'lt S2 M1 nt~I S.\lio ,M\lo $C1I W1! ]7'4 11.\lo A Home 1..0 200 61 4)1t C-""'"'• ftUJ II:"' ><IK n r e, -.,,-•co. l'IY W. E, ST JDtlN. Cll'r~ Atclfon P!PI 43 4S El Modul ll)q;j 11\li Mlll9m Al I\\ ll'i MINE "f rl 15111 "6~ A Homt pt 1 5 '°"° 90V. V. Aulm Ir.II Wl Ml'w....t -..Clo. Cellfw!llt tnd food will Of lhll NUtHr>~ $c"Oel llY Frt(lk J R1>nll..-Arm l(oP ll\~ 1~ EmPS 011 25 2~ M Manl"9 IV. l'llo $oV11 Gls lS'A 3541 Am lto!P .21 Jtj 37V. ll;7; .·.~·~~co,, <,r,,J..20 "f•h t7UI 540-Jlfl 1 1;1t11lne11 l<.n<>W~ II (LA V I S "' O , • .-Arri¥# H H 51111 E"trt, (11 61' 11 M 8r-cr Al\lio U SW El $v 11 lt Aml"l.<SI 1.10 • .~ '°'••" ,••, '"''' eo N, 1 AIWllt'l'I MONETESSORV !CHOOL" tnd toc11N ti PU¥ Atvldt 21\lt Uli'J Erte<IY 1111 ' tl.'t Md SlllPO 30 l7 SW GtlCP lil\ 17'11. AmMFd¥ ,90 -.. " ~ P..Ollshed O••l'ltf (NII Diil¥ Piiot, ISts HOflh S1n11 Al'll ·-· Cotti WITTMAN ANO I CHMtDT Al cc Bot 30 30"-Eon Cp Sl'lo •V. MIVer 0 .! .... •21.'J SKIYI 11 11\lo I.Mt! Cl 1.90 U4 51'~ SJ +1 AvMI h>C .40 M•r u ·~ 21. 1'6t '3Ht MeM CO\lftf'I Of Or.t.not Slit. ol 1$11 WtllcllH Drlv. Au•! O!I l1\'J 31\6 1Eli!llil¥ au 1111:1 1'\lo M..,., cc , ... 310. Std Rq\1! ~ ll\lo .................... ,,.--. Avon Pd 1 IO ' c 11u0,..11 ' Soltt m Au!o Fir• JS 37 E:•lr Trell lt\li 711 Mc:Qulw 3' «I Std St••w l<l\li :lS m&l9M·• _ LEGAL N01'1CE ~ .. ,,· ''' Irr wm ,,. IRR~.,,111.,1:1 ......,_, IMdl, C1Nlorftll ttut Auto kl ti(. l~V. Esltrlln .ftV. .50\'J Medic H 31 ll 511nH Pd 2t 31,_., 81~~ w l,lli .,,. ...., "~ __ -nn Awtrnco 10"' \OV. FB Ctc:o t N MMltr~ ll\lio lS Straw Cl I.I..., )I., UTUAL "'" ----,.,,,o=:,;:::=--;;;;;;;;-;;;-;;;;---1°" or t ltef' IM tlnd dt¥ Of Mkof, lHt, • Alt • ••• '"' AVM CP 1$\li 1~ Flbfl r.it: lOV, lMt.MelPllr J~ l 'h Sut..c Tv ~ ~ M •"GEllT .ts HI' 10 A.M. al GJtO\IER ESCROW COtlt· -YI r n • Al!K Oll ln'o 11\.!I Fth11d T 10\!J 11'4 Mldkl CtP 10\ 1~ SuQdl, Fels ,, U V. a::~ Pl~ii1'. ••,•.•,•,",0: c~~~=~.:rA ~o. POAATION, 111 So. llllnotl, MtMlm, ,,.:~~!~IMG., ,f'~, C011! O•!lv PllDI, l•bOlll 12111 lllA F81V Mr 5016 Jl\lo MldlU 1 1\11 11•l:lo "'d 1l 11111 81naPunr '° • COlllllY ot Otll'lllle Slllt ol Clllfornle • ' 1 Ullt '· ltff f.n ... ltlrd At 1~ 11'\a FHct Mr hi 11 Mldw&I GT 11'.& 21114 tmH• 111 lfO &trbOll I.JS! TMli COUNTY DJ ORANO • .. , • '' liker M n~ 2Wi F•rrfne 31y, J2\lio Ml" Atw 'H\4 71111 ''""' 1' 21 8•rd \' 1 "'· A"2m So !tr ts k-n "' Ille •-lere11, • LEGAL NOTICE 8•1 P1rn1 1 TWi "'eGN Ml9 201 2tit Mpll G11 :>JV. :M "f11•M" 271'1 flUi NDS o '' • NOTICI 011 ICU.A ING Of' l'IE-YlftO" IMlnep...,.... •nd .c:ldrft&el lolled b'I Ir.. lflunl WI S.. :J6 Fin 5tcuf" ' ,.... Miu \111G 11 21u, T1ut~ lllll l•V. FU 8:f.~ ti~ ,.-Tl ~ WILL .... o FO• T••Mf•nwa tor Ille ,,., .. 'IN" llSI o.,r, 8trwld< IS 16 Fll&OI Cp 70 n Mo Aid> 1 1111 TWP." w .. 6'\lio 811~ I •O:,IAI TliSTAMINTAAV ire: Cllvl1 ""-l!'$$0P'V kl'!Gol, 2021 E:. •Atlt·1'61 &11tn P l~ lS F1IGtol RE 24 25YI Mol'ltwk • 30 ll Ttk An\Sul 11 U &iuscl'IL~ .to L• ...,.AMLEV L. Mtc:Mll..LAN C,,_.,..,, Fulllrtort, C•llt,. Or1P•9f c-NOTIC• TO CAl"DITOAS 81ylf51 1W, lllto F•I Mlft 3114 31\lo MIMI Pk 16\lo 11 Thim> Alt' llVo 1~ BtdtLtb .II e ..... till •• • ..... J UPl!itltlOA COUAT 01' TH• l!letdo-:J6 ,, Fii tlt""p 6¥o 1\lo ~· Pd 11\lio n Tlflany l<l\4 "v. B•vllllCla .so o--. Q.,... M 1 , '"' ,,.,, °" ... , Btl .. hit 11¥. 1114 Ff! We.IF 7'111 t ~-. s .i llVi TI!t11 111,1, If"" lt••I""' 1 Hell'I .... Mt<Mllltfl NI tiltd Mrlll'I • J. ~ l!ll'-!Ml'I. TH• COUNTT o• OtltAHCJli Btltcol R 10\o't l!\lo Food F ....., I .. Motor c;lub 17'111 JM ..... Gt$ 21V. 11~ ""' 11 ""'ft 80. Un1w.r1 Hl•Fdl ol 4 NOTICr ts HIEAEl'I' GIVIEH Tiii! • ., • • -....... tJOltNIA POR lelrn Ind 13V. 1Ni FU9111 s-1 ,. 'D M 11\li n r-est '!\ .... ;·· Fdto 1 for Dbllt of w!H 11"11 for 6111 -Y. 91t-..lnetl Nt. A"'2n l ller.11'1 It J7 40 1'"1 Gr-.it llM JI •~If C :JI:\.\ :llll:i Tt1~ M \:Rt ~\!lo NEW VORK fAJ'l lnvt1! Gr-: tdtmln .5t l>tfl!llll ol .:'~ tnl•lllt!ll•,., ,. fhl TrMSterea E1111t Of MIKE G, VILLAFANA. lati L1D .U )I..., "'o!OC:hm • ~NI .l••ncb ~ Sil frlnd tl'lll 2Tili 1'\lo TM lolDWl1'19 -Miit \l.JJ \J.1j F :fs __, .. wttlch 1 mtOt tor ltltOVIA 'lK•OW CO•f.-clecwll'd 111"""5 W 11 11\lt F'r1ftdld 10:W. l!N 11 IE-It '° 6' Trleo I'd 31\IJ 3M -, lloM. -lled 11¥ Prot J .2t S.7 Alt' • .. 1111ontf'. r.i.rtl!Ct !hit ~ tlmt ll'ld 111 M JllMft HOTICf IS HEtltlEIV GIVEW lo lf'WI Bl,d Son .U Al Fr1nkl C• 12\ot ll\lio NII Ffl'I! :t:IV. '31'! T•llltlr 11 If ~ Nitlonll .t.150((· StOCk ";·ltl'-07 I' Ffl _:I ,..,...._ ,...,k:u .................. "-' been HI AllllteiM. Cllll • ..., cr~llon el !he •!IOYt ..-_, girld!rHlt if:! :i:: ~~~1\~ .ni:: Ill?~·' Gto 0 lt~ M~ i~ G :m ll"' Ilion of S.c11tllln ~':!"~ • ., .:Ji ::u a:H tr:::. .IO olt<t ol _,in. ftM I , .•• '" In IM IK,.... ..... 1 ..... 1 '"'' ••I PllWM 1'11vl111 cl11m1 -Ins! ""' v= El * •v. F'ulMew '"' JOI'! N:r k:c"· 15 " UMrl Tit 3' l1 Oe11ers. ll'IC., ••• hw • ..,, !.N S..!I &.11 j;;;;fCOfl tor Mn 2'.;, 1:',;.~~1 NO.'. j' °' Hid •ulllltlltd Or1nso1 C0111I DtllY Pllol Ml¥ ukl dtc:lllltnl •re rMUlr..s 1o 1111 llltm, Bolt lttl'f 11 'It G"'1'1t'lkl '' lN Nttol I' J\lo 11.'J un t>ott1r ::Dl'l l<I r;:.rcn :0,~1~ ll!tl 25.10 ,.,., 1 1 ::::il' !(.''°' _._ 700 W I Eltl\111 11 In 1f>t Cl!y u. 1Ht tl wt wlt!I Ille M<l:llSf.rv YollC.l'lto. In IM ofllce lloolht C at\to 3114 Gt1 Svc lfV. j~ t,lfr>I GI!: ~~Un Ululft JM JI I auld lli v• DMn :vat 11.ll 11.10 tnd ~ p1 l court,l'I "11omi ·• lfltlf,clllrt:ol~1t.ov.en11!1edcovrt wBotC..,:11 o,.... iAln:tt l'li !V.NJN1IG j:J\1111 "MCGtt nv.n~cld(b!ll)orboll9ft! wv 10.t6H.t6 8_1Fln 14 of S..11 ....,., c;.i •• NOT CE IO •rfwnl !hem wll'll IM -~·" e.ow.lt'I' No ™ 0.~l(es j.... N\dllln F 1 31 " Rll'hl 111' 1, .... r ... 11 TundlY' J HllCock t .Sli 10.41 B•n~P pl4.li0 D1!till Mtv 11. 1Ht L EGAL l 'llllldltri IO IM u'r>d 1 Md f lllt olll lrt:••¥ G '11 1t n GllDert 5 11:1 H 1!1 A 3' 3''ilo VS BkNol1 211 ~ Bid Aik Jllflnstn 22.U 22.11 8•nl F 014.3'0 • W t!. ST JOHH, ' er'll 1 Ce lrOWll Ar lOV. ll\/o l(l111t1Q $\lo "'ffl11l 8 :16 lolWI US ~rOW!I 7\i t \'Ji De cl 2 u JOI KeYil-Fund•: Ben Sor.l.5o . c.iur,fr Clel'IC. OI -Ir l"°"nno. FtltANI( M, MOOllE, BNsll Ber ~ 36\IJ Ill 1E1i 10'0 11\lio N(ltAnl Res JU I US ""r ,, .... 1' A f ettl 1·19 flO Cui II 20.411 71.:111 Fltnouel MAAWo0o SOC•N .. AOKINSott Ct!.lTIFtCATIE 01' •us•N•ss E1<1 .. 41115 L-l11d1 ll'td., L-9etd\, Buck~• 11\1, lt\4 Gtoltl 11(, I"' NC•r NG 11\li n us U91r )I Sltlt ~\1."!r'~ 921 10·0· CUI 87 11.SI "·" 1•!Mll!tl In • Dr FICTITIOUS MAMIE Ct!Uornlt, Whlcft 11 IM PllCr Of Dutlnt11 Bur""p S 13"° 14\ll G\no'1 ll14 3'\lo HoEut 011 ~ •V. US Tl'kL 4'\'i 41"'1 lul;t l:i Oll.:iol Cu• 8• 10,JO 11.21 trkPr>o .171 Df NtWftf't Ctltltl' • Tltt llllOlrJlllM'd -· urtlly thtv •rt ol 11\t Ulldtrsltned Jn •II m1tle<"1 roe•-lu1!11H1 F 23'..:0.34',l, G tlftM 4t\to '~ NPe11n Y 15\lio 11111 UP PenP 16\~ 2""' ~II ..,mer l~I 1 2' Cus 1(1 J.Ot t .11? 1•rmec Coro T•I '44-ltll I ~ucllnt 1 bullnel.I tt 11311 &ettll fllnln1 lo 1119 fllelt of 11ld dtcl!dfftl Cel W1t$w 3l )I\\ G1!:11n W .U'h 4'\lo NW Nel 11'11. 11¥o Ulth ShLCI n4 IV. All>l!I ll'M \('I.I Cus K2 ,,31 t.•1 eth SU l.IO M__.i ataclo, Cl. O __ ._ ' Ctrnco ll'h lSl'I G~ R.ib I ' NwPuD V :r.t'll 2JV. Ull1 Ind l6 JI'~ 64' 1·°' Cus SI 21,1315.13 I" 1"rff . .cl AlllrMY ter l'•lllllMr. llwd .• HunlhlOIOl'I Be1t11. Ctlllornll , und•r wllll n tour .,_,,,.. l fllr 1M /It'll Pll~llCt-C1nnon M I I U Graph Con 2J"J 14 Nt1clr Jtlh 32 )6 VII Ll)e¥ H~ U:\.I Am(IP f l J''1 Cu1 SJ U.M 1l.1t ltc Dk 1,20 Pt1Dl1,ntd I" 0••!11• C1111t 0.11, PHO!, !hi flelllklll• firm ntm• ol AVTl).MAGIC lion ol lhl1 Mtl.... CllnJ\Oll B '° •• Gr•lll> Sci II •• Ohio WI! l2.,., Jl.,., V111<;• St JO 31 !~ ~Y$1n n·&. u '21 CU• SJ •.JS 10,ll 91115 ~1110 I M u 1$, tnd 21 "'' '314f SIEJtVICE •nd 11111 1•ld ll•m 11 comp0111d Otred ""'' •• lH•. C•P ln!A 21¥1131.'i GIWOI!\ I" 211'1 7)111 001 Sc.Ion 60 63 \I Woodwd 11"4 18,., Arn Gr~n 1'n t '.u Cus S4 •. ts 7,$t 81~• 8tll 1.10 IV • ' ot /M tollowl"' penon1, ......,,., ntmt1 In Antoni• Vllla!tnl CtPlt Sow 21 2•1,0 Gr"" Mt 11'.lo 11'' DrlTIOfll 15"' J6l'o W1ddell R n n•!J A I ,.. 10·52 1o's2 Pol11l1 S.12 I .JI B~lt Btkt NOTICE lb! and pllt•• ol rnldence '" 1s M111U1I Vllll!tnt C~fi Teel\ n:; 1'1; Gr"fld Rl '2'01.'i tti.; R!.ltr "fP 2QU1 1\li WICl'Wlll P IQ •• .:;: ,J;ut 10·61 n ·,1 !$n!ckb t .52 '-~ flO<"•ng 1.10 LEGAL •ollow1; CO·E•tculoti ot '"" Wiii ~r.: N~lls 1!•.'f n~ 8~~~·~r' 3\'lt ~~· ;s;e•tc~1· ~\,\ t}v. N •r~~~ lr" ir~ Am NGw 3:61 1:02 c:.~~ ~Ill n::~ H::. :~::~c· pi'fi'd --~CC,,.,'7CO:".:O-=;:;;;;;;;;c--·1 RoDerl IE. IDur!•nd tnd Esttll E. ol 1"-t bDve n1mtd dtadenl Ctn! VIPS 17b 1JV. Grwtll 1"11 ltV, 711\lt Pl"I Ir 10" 51\/ii Ntlh NG ~ 'l'O\~ Am Pl( ~ft.Vall Lex ~Kii 17.olol 1t.M Bolld Sirs I Ct!.TIF'ICAT• OP •UllM'ISi I 011rl111<L 61)'1 Wintprgr~n Drive. Ht1n• FAANK M, MDOAI!:, 1!1•. Chm Ltam 10"' 11\4 Gu•rd Ch l"-fl'J PK Aulm1 1 2\li Wat -Ytmt 2<1111 21'/o A~hor Gr°t'f26 1121 LllMrtv 7.11 1.'1 Bool<Mlh 1.21 fllCTITIOUJ NAMI l1"81on llt•cll, C1lllor"i1, Allll'MP I t L1w Cl\tMold S\ii 6V. Gulch Td'I 4 l lolo Ptc FlflE Jll~ 40\!o WIDb Iles 111.~ 11 Gapl!I ll,J'lJ.tl Life S1-5.SS •.i» Bordl!n !.:Kl Thi 11.....,rliV~ do ctrlltf 1111'1' ltr Dated M•¥ 12, IHI. U.S LM9 ltl<~ 1 1¥4,, hQ Util llY• ltV. Gull In! 11 1' P1~co 10 10~ Wekltrn I-AA U!h 1,:::' fy 10·13 LUe Inv 7.tl l,61 &<lrgWtr 1.25 ....... .-Int e DuslntSI 11 UJO IE. EGIMft, llobert E S®rltnd L1119 .. tch C1lltw1tll toM7 Chi B•&I 13 IS Gyrod¥nt ll:\11 U V. P1111col l.'i 1~ tllll\O M l4 JI\ ..,0 lnu li7ll•till Lll'lt .Ml 1.41 8orm1n .. ,10 __ _. '"' '' '''"'' . ' ' ... Cll•l•I s 130 133 Ham c~ 20\lio 11•4 PkWT DI• 23 21 tilt ROI u 16'h . ,·,6 Looml' StY'-i Fdo: llOI Edi• ,,OI Sin!• ......... c1M lor11l1. ~ndt• c e,tt~l E. ......i.nc1 T.i: UIJ) 427...-..I Chril1 pf Hll 111 ........ v'I I V. 7•.li PtuloY p \SI~ I~ SI" NA llU, 1( Auoc:lll'll 1.SS ,..,. Cini<! 11.5' 11.5' B1111l'M Ir>< II""' -of OIELQUA INC• 0 I A. Sll!t of C•l.lornl1. Orl"8t COUftlY : All1t111P Mr c•t~lcultr' Cllllde! I~ 9\11 H•.....,•• 2tl'I 30 Ptvtllt 11 U .... Wotn M19f 16~ U\lio Altt Hoo.i!lhloro1 CtPI! ll.s.111.$.1 Bri"ll"'\r .10 11\AtltOSI COMPANV t nd Thtl ••Id lltm lo Of\ MIY U. Detore me. 1 Not1ry Public Pwbll1flfd Or1ngr CGttl D•lly l"llot MIY Clllr U1A 21\lio ?ti ... He¥9n dn SI~ J\~ fl Ol•LIO II.Ii I~ w P\/Dl1-$!1 21\lo 72'1• ~U~ ~ 1:·~ I~~ Mui 16,17 l,,11 l\rltr71St 2.111 ~ ol -tonow!.,. Pr•to!I•· w-In •nd for 111cl Sl11t'. ~ton•U• IPPtl•ed u, 21.,. Ind Junt •, lffl •ll4t CUit U!B 11 , .... H!lh Mor 1' ltV. P1 E11tln l 'h ' Wotn s.ies ll\'> 2S \,\ s!:..:-•'n 181 •""I" 1.2' t.07 B•lt ,.,,, I.XI ,..,.,.. 111 lt/'U t!'llJ pltcft ol rt11•nc:' l <t tlt!'berl E. Bourland -E1!1ll E. . !"'N Pr! 111' l?'lt Hfntedn F 2t\lio lO'll P1 Ga.W ,Sl~ 2~ 119 Wtll:I 16 1'11:1 Sci C• i10 J 2I Mltl Ft>d 12.17 13.11 Brl,!My pt J f&ll•WI· •ov•llnd kroown N ~ to, t>o !he Prrsor>1 LEGAL NOTICE Cl.a~ Mf 21 25 HU.,wn l'OYI 21Yr PIEC lirHI UV. 11 w1nn1::1qo JJ 31 llDiQI\ f:µ tu Mli• Giii n .11 14.0I Bd'Wv Htlt 1 .. ·-· l .. ,osl Ptnlllenl IM whose Mmet •rt tUb..c•iDld IO Ille wlthlo> c;11v!Ofl -~~ SUI Holm IEI' " •• Pfft"!Ht T II\\ 711 l~I T ' ....... __.."' , .• 3 1:.1 MIU..,, 16.90 Xl,ll llWYHI "'"2 n . • "· Cl!nl Mch lJll:i ll\11 Ho&Yer 21 "" p,,.,., REI 1 .... 11v. Wltc J'L ~ 13 ......... I . '' ,. MtlH 1.22 1.n IJWYH p!Awl ..._ M1r11I, se<:•tll rv, IOI .. 1 ... , ln1tn.menl ,,., ICk...,wl-ed "'" ••• T-411'1 CUnlOn 0 32 Jn:, "'°"'~' Flt j 'I~ Pt• W1>11 ' .... Wk!W En 1 1\~ "°"' SIN 1.07 . Mllllt•• lJ.N n.n Bk1¥nUG t.n l'\lcil, ~ l •KI\, C•lltornl•. K\llw'll IM ••me. ciow ''"" 15 ttuck 11 UV. Ptrllll 11~ l:MO-WY•l!Clol 2211:1 n•.;, l osron f ,U IO.Oll McOoll 10." u.~ 11_.n co Dllltd,,.., •• t•"· !OF'FICIAL SEAll NOTICI DJ INTINTION "fO Coinntft IE l \lo ' HUd ltv 11\\ 11 Pell;• St •JU '4"1o ltd Elec 1\'J I B,·y~NSI ~l:al:·tt MlllA Mui 1,31 '·"Brown Co pl (C•"' $Hll .Hin L. J<!IKI CltEATt!. 5ECUAtT'I' INfElllST ,~ Fd 109011 '7'~ Co 17A lt,10Bwn Shirl> I • DIELQUA INC. Nollrv P11Dllc-C11l101nl1 IS.Ci. t111-41t7 u.c,c.1 Ctnt<lll" 7.i9• u :n Moodp'o 11.~ "·"' llwn~ I.~ S~ L M1•111, Prt11d1111I J'tlntlPtl OlllCt Jn NOTICE ii ,,.,..tDv stlwn lo ""' Ctpll !iw:; t.39 lG,2' ~.1:"thFu~ l( \1 :~~ iO: .._ MafOl,l, """l•N O..instf c°"'"!' Crfdltpn ol J.,,,., •· ltloo:llngft fnd S!I• Caplt Shr 1.01 1.13 l11Com •.16 f:r.t 1;;c;~ 1 2o s111t"' c.11t'Dn11.a. 0.1 .... CtMl!Yl ,.,,, c.ornm1u-E•plr11 !:.::"i:V,:;5 ~!!:"~,1~~1.11u~~: .. ::: Money's Worth ',~¥-~ ..,1ai!:s!3.1t rnsur '·'' .n llllOCI co · •• On IMr ' Miff, llelore -. I No!trv M1rcl'I 2, ltT.1 1 l Jl ii 'II MIF Fd l'O.Sl 22.U IUdl F "'110 JOuDUI Ill ~ tor uld S"'ll, MrlOl'lfllp l'ubllsnect Ortnse Cot1t Dlllr flllol C1111111¥ Of Or-f, Slllf <II Ct!lfotnl.I. lhtl ~:::~lk 'i02 ill Ml .. ~ ,,411 '·lil ludget In :'4 1_,... 1-tef:101 MlrDll l/'ld Stll>flen L M1t 14, )f, 71 trwl J11rte •• I"' ,..., I H<tlrll• l"lf""' ii t boul IG be cre1ll!cl Grwt~ 7:11 I.SS f:: O/'l'ohl!ll~·:? 1t·;j ll~H ForGe I ,,,.. .,_ft IO ...,. ,. tie IN ••Mfll Dy Oebtor Ind l'ln1ecl lo Sllw.n Intl. ll'IGOll' 1.n '·"'~I 511,..11 11·1111·11 l::..."'ii"•t1ti-=. '""'*" -ire tt1Dl<J'IDed M tM Wilf\ln LEGAL NOTICE PrWticlitr., t..c., Secured P1rtv, ....._ D • d c B SPKlal 3:" J.N M~t T1111t ?.i7 w:tl Bu"kll: pn ~ llllltnl!Nflt enll KlmowltdM'I .,.., t•-~:-::... 't'.:!11 1 1 ~ ~:.-E, .•• vr!~'!; iamon s an e Ch!!it G""\):53 14 n N "..Miii 12,41 kt.~ lt1rt Ind (111 OKVfld -umt C o CA> M I "' ·-"' u llO •ll! • .ft Nt\' -.ySe<; 11,JI "ll. Burl'ldY 70 lOFFICIAL SEiLl t!.llTI I •OJ IUSI Iii CtlllOrnlt . ~°Id! l)'1lf?l N1 11'111 12.1$11. 1.,,.,._,;,. F111-"· Flowtr fllCTITIOUI H.l.ME Tl\I! PTOPff'IY '" WMlll "" kc:urll\' Cft~lctl 19'.13 21:03 :·.: !!.'~f$1.~.4Z t.I B1!\UnY 1.?lf Noli rv Pllllllc-Ctlllorfll• Tiit \lodfrtlened do clfllly ""'" tre lntere1t win be cre1ttd Ii. In 111ner1I, A!! Colonial: Btt=° 5tli.ff x2.il Bulltr'ISh .IO Prl..clptl Ottlct In cono...c11,., • Mine» II 1tS31 Trenlon ll•lurtt '"" f!o<lulltmtnl, fUtnllu,.. 11'1d y B F 0 d E...,11¥ J.l>I ,,1, Bond S.N 6.40 Ori""" COUfllY LIM, HIH\lllltl'On Be1el\, C1lllorn\1. llndft' lurn11lllng1 Df OtDlor COllttl"' PtOPtrf¥ our est ri.en Fund ll.S0 \'.75 OJvld 5.02 5.ff Ctbol CP llO C t O ll'r J'llcrl, 11\e flctllklll• firm l'lltnt of KENLEY ""W locilecl ii li?l North Sinlt Ant Ave.. Grwl~ 1 -it I 19 Pl SI~ 7 7' I"' ' Put>ll-.ed °'"11191 Oii I ,,,..., KOLOllPHOrollCS tfld 11111 ,.1d firm 11 CD!IA -·· C1!11or"i1. •1'111 Dllslllel• Ven! ,.,J •. ., II . 'u Ctl F!11anl Ml~ 1" 11• 21• Ind Junt '· lHt t;:OlllPOHci Df , ... to11owtn11 ptf'IOnt, w~ KNOWN •s "(LAVIS MONETESSORY Commerc 1J:211•:S1 s~ ;:~ itn ~:~:ct ·~ OTICE nll'llfl In It/II fOd PllCl!'I cl r•tlde"CI •'I SCHOOL". ComSI Bd 5.60 6,~ GtW!ft 1G.l7 ll.33 C•mPS• l 10 LEGAL N •• lcll!T#I: T~. t!ore11ld ltC~•llY lrll'IU(llon W]ll (Ed •t • N Tl. ti h . . Jh c"C'""'ll"'11,~-" ftdf~ Nit Wtd 7,0l .10 CanSOll Ri J Wetl•y l li•s Hoover, 195.l? Trenton be coni~mmirH on or ,11,, , .. ,,,. ,,, l or S ote: us IC rvcry yeat". T t! eros ion 1n C , ~P d 11·u n·19 Nevwrtto ».M lt.M Cdn Brtw .AO ••-• 1 ' ' < '' ' •• S d II • h · !ICom • • New Ellf 10,93 11.I? CdnBrw In.IQ •·....... ..,., Hunt1nv en t•cll. • lgrn •· cf M•'· 1'6•. 1t 10 A,M, 11 GROVER tlii·r• 1·n a seri·es of speer·,., U. . o ar s pure as1ng power 1nve1r 10.1' ll.6t New l'lor :J0.16 30.16 Cdn Pac 3 C•RTIPICATI! O• •UllN•SI Keftl\flh L. 11,.,,lhtr. lllO PtllltGe1 ESCROW CORPORATION, 111 So. llll"ols. I" . . t I Stock 11.(16 11.M N-Wld 15 n J66t Cdft Pie In 3 PIC'1'1TIOUI N•M• lld .. No. u. s.iml• A~•. c1morn11. "'"•Mim. c1111,. In 1n•t•llfrll"'•· 1.,,,,, .• 1• IS now running a an annua cw1111 -''B 1.7& 1.t1 Nt"W!cn l6:n u :ss c8n•IRd 1.10 Tll• undlnl;nM do c.rtl"' 11>1'1' '" ctlf\· Otlfd M•Y 1. lt69. So 11, ,1 ~nown 10 the S.curfd P•rty reports Olt far-out " ,, t f 5 1 t •t ·· cw1111 CD& 1,t1 1.11 Nor••" '' n 11 11 ciit c l dg! c!uctlnt I but.lnHI 11 "' W, 1&111 51.. KtMtllll. l(tftlltt' ~llbutlneHnlf,ll'llllfl~dClrelstlllUd~ ra eO · perCen ; I SCrQS!On com~AI \l.l!il<l,31 ngp~ .:'910:31Cirbrun 1.-ICI cos11 Mt11. caUIOl'Tllt. 11-,..., 11cu-Wr1ieY II. Hoowr• •ht Oebto• 1or lllt 111r" Yr•,. 1•11 Ptst me1tts). in '68 was 4~4 percent; in '67, ~"~d ~g:!: //:lJ ?:1: 1;:~ 1:::i ~~~~~. ·'\°,., 11ow tlrm 111..,. ol clEOAll 1UMMl"f •""" St1te OI C1tilot"11, °''"'' CO\lnty: ire: Nont. B• SYLVIA PORTER 3 I ...,,reenl . in '66 3.3 ..... rcent com11 Fd 11.36 12." 1c1 "'und 10.0 11.M C•rPTcll i.60 llltl H id lltm ti -.eel Of !tit ft:lllow-On Mly 1th. lt6t, Detorl me. I M<>t•rv D"'TED: Mly lit, IMt. ~ · t"' • ' t"-' Comslk 6,1$ 6.ll One WmS 17.1S 11.?S Ctrrl..-CP .60 1.,. _._, "'""' "amn IOI lu~ -PuDll( lft Ind lot .. Id Stele, roeriont llY SECUAED PAllT'I' }f yOU had invested a big This dreadful performance Col>Crd ?ln n·~ O'Neil Vn1w1!1 CtrrGn 1,51g ,.~. el rtsklfnc:t ,..., 11 follow': •CHl•ed Wl!'I'"'° l llu Hoover tnd Ktn· SlolYe" 1..,.., PrOd. Inc. r"OftS..i'Ylnv 6.0J 6.•3 P';:~m, i·:! ;·~~ f',',,'",w, ·•~ HIJ9fll A. 5.lndtr•. ~' H • .t.111. venturi. nerh L 1<e1111ur know~ 10 ~ to Dr •ht Nell J. Sl1Vi:"' P•u. sum a little aver a year ago In fo~ four years has more tha n Corp L<! 11.1 1 11.11 P• Mui 10:,7 10;,1 ci1e 1 Al ,•I Al .... G. ••rMll, 11' w. ""' SI,~ Co&-HI-I w-nt""'I .,. iuDlcrlDt<I IO Gr•vtr EIC'rlW <•111, a lop qua11·tv d ,. am 0 d ~ t f . '""" C•P 1S 19 I' u Phil.a 1$ tl 11 ~ c 11.Jk to lllt wlt~rn Instrument •nd •d<nowltdvlll 111 se, nM...ii J n Wl"'"-u OU ~".ery penny 0 In· c;rown w 1:41 t :2G ll!lrlm IO)J 11:11 c!;trTr 'ij g •• m::!r J. tt•"""· "· o. '°" 141, •It l'llfT 1•"'utec1 ""' umt. .. ...... 1 .... c1111 ... ~1, weighing four car ats and if terest or dividend s earned on cr.~ w 1•' ~.'·,", .~i.:r.r,, P11o1 t.u '·"cc• M••'lll' lell Llk•. /OFFICIAL SE ... Ll E1crtW Ne. 114+.ll . dtwetl\ ' . ""· P!rw St 11.11 12.,1 CCI M p!LU •• "' ._1115• Ifft. Htncv e. ~ Putillslltd 0r.,,.. Cotlt D•!tv ,..tot you had been able lo buy this savings accounts, most U.S. 0«11 1..c 1•,•.,•, ',',·",, Pi-r ls.a.i 16.u c"'o co .to -'•••-'"''" '''"''''' M '' ' ' • t N y • d I G d Dt l....,tre · · Pl1_n Inv U 26 U SI i•ttnfl.CP 1 AINn G. •1r11n · • ...... •~ • Ht t:J.M• gem a ew or.,. ea er ovemment bon s, many cor· 0en1 Tr 9.1110.•,1 Pritt Tr 15:,5 25;,5 111n Pi-".SO E ....... G, Hlnllfl Prtr.clotl Oft'k:e In t• bo d 1.1 · Olvid S/'lr 4.15 •.5 Pro 11 ]I 11,)I f!l'ICO lm1 lD HU911 ..... 5.1..ot•• o...,,.., Cou/'lfV LEGAL N.OTICE prices. the value of your pora ion n s, 1 e insurance D-Th 1 1.62 1.11 Provldnt s.St •.11 cft,tFdv .iOd ''OIUUA ) MY Comrnls1loll Eaolrt-1 ,. l" ouJd be JI • rt lh Dr1•el lJ.n 19.11 Pt1r1ttl'I H to 12.M Ce!! Hud 1 u !.TATE OF CAL Mlrcll 1•. 1tJl ' 1nvesunen w now up po c1es, many mo gages, e orf"t'M ''·u u.n Pu•n•m Ft1nds: c ... IUlt 1:32 """ .. ~!,",.°', ... ", --~.)IS!.ettrv ~l!lllfd ln 111t Or111et CN1l D1llv NOTlCI' TO Cat!DITOltl 116 ""'rCeOl. ffl8).0fitv Of common stocks Et!on&l-low1rd: Eault !l.70 11.91 CenHIPS 1.11 ......-h -·-· J'ilcrl,MIYl'-71,:it tnCIJIH\l'-lHt m SUJ'EA!OR COUA-Y OF TMlf t"-J • 1~1111 11.1911.'9 Georl lJ.-16\e,to(.,.ILIEI ... :,:c,: H':, ':.;:.:::':'ii:~~~ tt s~~~Ecg~::;-i;~~~1:N~°.1t Last year too. according to LAST YEAR t~. there were f,;"'~ 1::~ 1~;~ f~om 1~:~ \~:~ cf~l'W' l:~ 1111, Etmtf' J. HI_,, ~-11 "" to "'· ""Utl Franz Pick's World currency 38 full or partial currency s..ec1•1 1•-51 u.u,, 1nve1r 1.1• 1.11 en1 Sov• ·"" LEGAL NOTICE • . . . 510<\ 11.63 II. Vl111 11.IJ u.~ enTelUI ... 111 "'---w11cNt "'""' •re 1uo Ett•1• ot HERBEllT MATHIEU, SR.. Report on "What Was Best in devaluallons rn nine countn es. E~r11 15,111&.61 P111 vov 10 . .0 11.111 ctrroco l .60 mtrlbed M Ille wlltll" l,.lnlll'lffll Ind l e. Dec••-1ecl. f O h h h J . Egrtl U,4S 16.1t llep To:clt ,,16 6,JJ C•rMef<I .to ~ltd tM'I tlKUleG '"' lllTW. NOTIClf "fO Cltl:DITO•S NOTICE 1$ liERIEBV GIVEN to t,,. 1968," dea ler prices or l\\'O• n t e ot er anc' against a E~•gv 15 7• lS.7' R~wtrt l!.H 11.11 CO!'f!-ted pl 90 iDFFICIAL SliALI SUPIAIO• COUAT 01' "fHE c•eclltot1 o! lht tbovt n•med clf'<eGenl t d . d k Jed JOI • d d f d . nd Ener1 Sc t .1110." Rosenthl lo.Of ll.Ol ClliMAlr ,IO S9AfE OF c"'L1FOt1tH1A JOA Iha• a11 per1oni htYl!lt d•lms •g•ln!I the cara 1amon s roe e ' iiurg1ng eman or iamo S Entor111 10.n H.ll sc.11usier 11.02 1•.•9 ci:1 su .llO Mlrv K. Htfln' T"E CDUNTT ..... ,., ,, ... ' '" .. ,,. -ent . t 0 ll fro A I lh F h Equl\>/ 10,9311 95 ~-... a.tier l'unds· htdbrn Inc Ho11rvPubtrc-c-111tornl1 1• « •~ ••rret111 • •v , .. ~m. pr.re : prices or nt>-cnr; m mercans, e reoc ,,Eat111G•htt~J1.ll.,..1n1 i nv 1,,6516, mPS i.:KI J'•l11CiPll OH!ci In Ne. A41U4 w!lh IM nttei11N vouci.f'I. In li'>e OlllCt d . d •• I I I Af • h~ h ' 11 ,1 3 0 '>t y ' Dr•llll•Cauntv E11•reorOon1 Lo"11n~Mlsrr,1>ece1• o1111ec11r~o•trw 1ttovte1111t11C1 C011rt,or Jamon srose.ioperecnt.ttn1 ruers o r1ea, l c1e asE~~, ln lf?lU.'1 8"f 'tiJtt~· k 110 M1 comm1u1on E•olre1 M. to Preun! 111er11, wHll tllt n1u.11rv even more sparkling were the been a rigid regulation of sun-. E•Plor 21."6JO.olt0 c!n st 1:H 11. W1 N 1tn tiOTICE IS liEREIY GIUEN 10 Ill& VOU(l\l!t!, lo 1he tlndet11911fd It Ille office . . ,. Fal•ld U.f? 15.1 SK 01¥ H IS 15 ~" M~I l>t1bl~· J:~""' c111.1 0111v "'"''· credltoro 01 ,,,. •Do'o-e NmeG dK'°"n1 e1 Alll<! 1<11"'"''"'1111, Artor ... ., •' L1w. investmeot recor ds of s uch llJp ply or newly m ined diamonds Frm BMu n . .., 12.4' Se( E<1u11 1:J1 '· 11" 1.10 Al>rlt JG 11'111 M•Y 1, '" 21. ltlt '""'' "'" .ii Pt•Mllll h1v1no cl11mt •93T"sr the uni Be1ch lw...,1ra, Huntlftgton s,1c11. quaJitv colored gems as sa1>· by De Be ers Consolidated ~1"3 2;~11 1~:~ l~:~~ !;f~n~m 1l.~~ it1~ c~:::;~~' 2:;& -----------~---.,••Id d~'nl ... rl!<!Ulted re !lie 11\em, C1lllo•nl1 ,,.-16, •Men It"'' oltct a! J d • M. . sa th A r . Fd F11!'1d U,J.llt.IJ el Si>«5 111'l049 Cllo Va lUJ LEGAL NOTICE wnh tiwo l'lfCes•••Y ¥t111CMt"1, in rrw 0111c1 bll:llntu ot Int unde'1lv...,, In 111 muttt'I. phires. emeralds an rtJbh?S. Ines Jn u r JC a "'!d "frnd 21.36 XI.ff !lie u:)O u:•l f~s o~IP ·, ot IM dirk or 11\1! t boYt ff!lllled court, or perl•lftlM lo lht tll•hl of ulll dt'eden1, D Flnancl•I PrQ<lrm· SI 1111 t JO hp!' '1 ---------------·rio P•rHnl !Mm. w11~ lhf! n1ettltry wl"'ln tour mon1111 1ntr 11\1 1w1t 1>uDllC•• WHY DID diamond price!'!, eBeers controls an eslimaled Dvnm 1.t1 1·.n si:"l~~ 13;151~: .. ~it ~~Y lu •-PJ6ol l'Otld'lff'I. to "" 110\dtrslo""" i i !!'It o111ce ll!lfl crl ltlit NlllA. whic' h hanJlv nioved fro1n 19fi~ 85 ..,.rcent of world diamond rn11vs1 s.u .ts smu~ e 10.62 10.•1 !hlM i s1P P C•A"fl,ICAT• 01' •usiN•s• of 1111 A~•MV•. Polnde•ter & L~llCl'I, .. ,. Dlltoel Apfll rt. ,,.. J .. ~ Inc.om 1.n l.t'l SW lnv~•I 10 ~ 11 j l lllMStPr. " FICTITIOUS NAM• tentlOll O.vlll H. Ntl~, 'H Wll$111rt tt•t'\lerl M1thleu, Jr. to 1967, take o[( last year? production -and Of course Fsl 1nr.tto 10.1l ll.1' Sovrr Inv 11:11 11: S Ill Mut c I "fMlll'lclt•1'Vr!KdcMr•RrflfYMll$H11·80t11tv1rd. Stlllt NumDtr HOG, LJIS IE•teUlorcrlll'llW111ol 'd h h ,, ft I l 1. 'F1t 1nst1o t.n10.n!1Fr111Grnt.ll •.11 ~P~f'ptto •uctin. • Minn• •t 111 wa1 111t1 street, ,...,..i.n, c11iforn11 lOOH, *"lcll 11 111e ''-•bov<I "'t'l'tlil OKlllW How d 1 t ey manage 10 1 t e suppd'! o rdu Y .op qu 1 a 1ty, F!: ~i'11 1 i:~ '~:~ sk'it:lk,,J4Nn..,~}S ~",',',er :YP c."' Miit, C..Mlomll ........ !tit fie· •!ta' ol Du1l""1 ol !hf unclen11....i '"•II ALL•N KLINO•NIMITH outperform almost all of the arge 1amon s IS a wa.ys .. S1 VI 11.ll ,.,., Am llld '1·$} l(.1t Ill Tltlo"i'~ 1111oon firm,.....,. IJf "G•AF'ICO COLD mil"'" H•l1!n1111 to lllt tsl•lt ot 11ld 1m1 ••ldl ~,,.. 1A I . l . 1. •ted F'lft CtP 1025 Flduc o t !! ,,v TYPE .. •""""' Hid r1rm 11 ~ o1 "'"""· w11111n iou• ._11'11 *'"' ""'Hvn111111111 •-11, c111. 91"'" tradilnina 1nvestmen media 1m1 . "'lf1 Fd 11:11 ::· kl1n ,:a 1:07 J::'i,*f~/,1 :f ll'lt 1e1kl*1nt ""'°"' wtK:et ne_. 111 f\IU n ... t 1>1.1b11c:11'°" oi thit llOtke. ..,,..,.._, c1111 10-H.i• in which the vasf majority of Another reason for the soar · ~::, ~'::. ::g: ::H S••,',"• •~ ',","".-i'•.•• g"•,• ~.",.,' •I'd ~ Of Fllldlnc9 K IS fol .... 1: D1ttd AprU 13. '"''· """"'" tll' •1tc1tllf' F ndt t 10 21 " ~•u ••-• ,.....,.11i,. nJt C1ll'lt<'I"' "''"~ o. Mi-Put1111hN or""" C0111• 0111v io1101, us ketp our extra funds? Can Ing demand for d iamonds ou " 13·'1 · C•P o.. 11,n 1.u 11 orJ1i' 1 •• -E o -· W "' .. 1-1'6' JlJ.'' · FlllO"'° .57 14.ll Slodc 15 .U 15..U hrom111 ... fllKe. '-" MeM. C•11for"lt.. ~«11""' "'" 111 APrll :n. " • ' •· .. v0 u, the amateur, hope lo Franz Pick s la tes unabashed-"', .. "",.•',ouJ:: , ... SuP •llGtl'I 1:12 •·'° h~ler 2· D•-AP!'ll :t, lt6t. of "" •bO""' ntmM lle<Nl•nl J • . • om -... Syner Giii 14. l U.36 In .E 1.((1 Po11w A, Hfnllrl~• ,. •. ,.,v, SUMMER J.,.B make money by bu y ing ly, 1s that "up lo $2 .5 mllhon 0••,,rc •:·~ 1,•·,31' TM• •• 11.u "·" 1nG n1~.1i S"fATI!. OF CALIFOANJA I """"~•er & LFllCPL ...,-d od , II .f ood t f•ltln I ..... . Tud'ln 11.ts n.u In E pf • couNTY OF O•AHGE 1 ss ..,11 ... •i.oi: 0•¥1• M. "11.011, NTE d iamon s t ay. ·ere are o g s ones, J g com-inc.om '·" 2.1.1 r"""'11 1.~ •-~ lllMm 1 .... °"' As>tU "· '"'· Defer• '"'· 1 Nollrv '1' w11:1111r1 Sill~• N111111otr 11tt, WA D guidelines for ynu, a non-ex· fort:ibly into a c i g ci r l' l I e ~~':"'lm it~ 1t:t1 1::::1 l·~ :·~ 1~~~·1,,Zf40 l'llbllc Ill 1nd for uld 511~. P"'t.OnllllT L11 A,,...IK. C11i""'lt ,..ti -d a •k Id be b h la G"'" SK ll,9l 11.tl Tin" GI 2J'311S'.J.:J lli.t SW , .. _,eel Pell¥ .... ltfl!Clrlkl k-Ill me Ttl: t11JJ U.fSM ACCOUNflN$ hlAJOI .. pert Jn ia1nonds. p c age, cou raug t GIDr•fftr 1 .lJ 1•.JJ y_,. MA 1)3 •.5' !\'S CYQ~ tt 11t 11>t i>t•-who .. "'"" 11 •u*''D-•11-'1 ttr l!•tcuier Pl1tt•. SAN DllGO STAT• UNIYllSITY The worldwide surge In the freedo1n from a controlled G•t:~0 ~: ,,6710. 1 '~:~ cy11 '·'?01rM 1f:1~:voi 11 ,. Ill 11\e wllhln l"!l•Vtnrn! •llCI PuDll•Md Oto..,. CNS! tt1nl' c,,,,,,,, ,,,,·,dool of S oo 0 1090 nd I •. d h •th. a h ' n· h <-31 I•"" 10 '" -0 J. • -llY Stn olt -·--" ••• ••ec:uttd tto• ··-. Aoo ll :J, JG •nd M.av 1, i•, 1t1• "'"! dema or iamon s as a rea w1 1n a,. our s 1g t '"" -·~ -.:12 Tw,..,.. nc . . .. 1 , kEA 1·:! ..uw..... .,,.. -.... S I y o •1·,,, p . F11I "'d •.Jt 10.10 unit Mut 1 31 1 .• , ~ '' • 10FF1c1.1oL SEALJ '" • oun9 •puo' ' been the direct result of the from London ar1s or Ne1o;o Grth 1ne1 13 60,•.ll un111 11:.0 12.u ~1;~c1111 1 ii> .IMHth E. D•vl1, LEGAL NOTICE SAU.IT SlCONDAIY y k,. ' Grvllhol'I :io1221.tt Vl'llitd Fu11C11. •eve 111 l·" Nol1•v Publlc . c11Horn11 DPIOllNCI \VOrldwide searc h far hedges or . G1t1ron 1',DI 2'G1 Accm !-'1 t.~ ..., "! • .. "" Ott I • . Hl.C LOW 16.o.l 17.:M In('°"' l 6t 1111 ' I' . ' 1 " 1 •c• " '·JHS 'llMAIY OIJICTIYl against iofiation And against Fln,lly, diamonds are a (a. H1m Gt11 10 .i n.:1t ~1en '·ll •.•$ ~ .: tn 50 ~~'"Z!m'..."':'.";\!.. E•01tr1 CE1tl1,1c:r.1.11t-~;' auuNESS Avi ili \il• ·10r !Rtervi•w devaluations of currencies. voritc for federal laX dodgers ~:"' .,':1 l~ '1.l; u~ ~ ''/:. 1 .,in:.!~ F1~H'°"t0 pw11.:.°: J.'~.!11col\t 0111¥ Pllo!, fl'~TllJOus NM>IE Frlll•v 1fl1rnooftJ or St+~rd1y With pitifully I e W CX· and )'OU can eas ily tif ii· ~:E11 l~il ~1; r~rn l:J: 1i·~ S:\...,,11~-,01~1 ....,11 lO •nd M•• '· 11, 11. 1'6• m-4• c.:::i~c1~;:~:'1:::::1nu":.11'';~f' E~1::°yc0:~1 WllTI 01 CALL: JoM lrltc;M ccptlons, the major currencies legally} pass them froin ~:'11~ 1~.~ 1t~ v~,\11.,,1 '::ft 1~::} CN~ ~!~,'ft LEGAL NOTICE Hle~ ... Y. co,..,.. ~1 ""''· c1111or1111, 5505 Mo"t11u"'' Rd., St n 01090 of the world have been (and generation to g e n er at I 0 n H """" 11,5711.11 VtN;tiDI . 11·'' $!W) s1.,~,\ undt' lllf: l!Cllllollt firm ntl'llt of cir citl ,11141 ~16-Jl10 I • ~tlbimn l01110.7t111ntd 1·' .&)l':~K:' ------,,:::;;------11-1A11ao• 1NvEsTMEHT cOMl'AHY •nd ., 17141 .. 44•11 07 still are) losing signi ica nt wh 1lh 11 oot the paym~nt or in-!fl ~ t~ ~:N ~l':rn'."'"' :; :ff c.: •• r~ 11~ .~·~~~~ /:: 1 ;:~~.m !:"': ~ft"'ru:.811!;; amounts of bu)'ing power er an~ taxes, mt a" 11.ss 1~.Ji: 111s1 1n j'·i• 11. <••r1P1c.1.r1 OF 1u11N1ss ol•(e1 of rnldtl'l(e ,,, •• lollowl; MINO YOU, anybody caught :OF"" 1~·~\ 1~" :1¥1i:u 1'ijt~ JltCTIT1011s MIMI! WILLIAM c. JtlNG, lllb1 S.Ha. SiJf' • • • • • • • • • • • • • s II di A_,. I l the !l'C Fd• Untv~ wi;l' Ind • !·" Thr Add d Ti. 11,,,.,..11111'11 Ooel ctr1!1r lie 11 (.,... Ori", (0""'1 del ,,_.r, Cl!llortllt ( mugg ng tl:mvuuS n 0 llld'r.: 1t.l'l lt:fl lt#lll lt l ,Ol ee e Hill'IWIV, C••-••• M•'· Cllitor..11. 1>•11'1, CorOlll Cltl Mir, C1lltom!1. 'red d t 111 ·s111 •. .., ~I ft t 11 •UC1fftf • Dutl-II 1Ml E111 Coett HASTErt It. lllNG, UOI l t;nlOe ' U.S. and faUJng to pay the rt-I=!~ 11«1 Ao wl!tl1m . l:C ""*' "-11c:111io... 11.m ... me o1 tLsco 't1MOTHV •NOltEW 0Ev1N1E, ,.,, •TAI h. tM ~ ...., ....... ""-"" ........ • qw 10 percent uty on ,: ~ 1s: ,,JJ W\.~ 1 ,'1 11· .. .,.. t1111 uld fl""' 1t. ~ o1 111e 0e1""1" Ttrr-•c" c11-Ott Mer, • o,...o CMAty. them is liable for a N>n!llty of '"w GI/Id 11,f •• W"'1!t 1 •·'' •.11 -• •ttl....._ --· ..._ "-111 lull Ind C1H'ortll1. ...,,.., •Jael o1 ~ i. ., 1o1io-.: D•'" Ftbnllrr 1, 1to • , , 1 _, 1 • 1• five years in JaJI and a $10,000 c. .'"O. '"' "' .. _ w•n c ,..... "'-o t• G&Ctott. t:1•nl 1h, 1ltcirn1v1 •ne pr. 1u1011• w1u1AM " 1 "' _., '"' • .,... "' fine. }low@vrr, It is enlir.s .. Dfiw., c..r-dtt Mlt, C.Htotnlt. H R. Jtlfll .~t•pl• 1111 TAI \i•c1u11 t~•'I' Clll 0•P•"0 o~ r•lt.1.11 '"~ o. ... """""" ,.. '"' Tl/'l'IOll'n> ""' o.v1n1 ,.,.;,,, • legal for Americans to buy l-YA1'E ~'*"afi,~"'..1A 1 ~~1~Y0~,,_cA~~=~1A 1 " and store diamond! tn :1 safety couNTY OI' ortAHGI! 1 11 °" F~ ,., ,,..., Wlofl' ,,.,, • • FOR AS $14&11 PER • de~it box In a fortign coun-°"' ~ • ,..,. ""'''"' ""· • Not•rv "ullffc kt' tfNI ..., wkl ,,.,,,, LOW •s UU MONTH 1 h . h · MNIY fl\IOk .., ....... MOI M1i., ,..,_Ill' ,_, ... W'll""' c. Altll. ,.., ry w IC Imposes no govern-~ -"" W'lhl4tlft c. ttll>t tt"fft" 11. 11rn.e .,... '""""'""" AA-• • ment cont.rots on impbrts. ~ " me tt bt 111t ~ ~ t'lw Ot¥1!i. 1INWll " ""' to tit tllr TAI ~ -"'« '°'' ,i-.. Qf if beq •• -t1 t'*""lllolll ie ""' w1111111 .,.. ""°"" wt>tM -.... •lllll(nbef kt _._., . ...__ .. __ L --1 ,. .. course, you ura ... , •lr\lfllffll •"' KMIW'IMIW "' ••t(VI" ~ •lll'lin ~ ..,,. m-""'"° • -· Nqw ... ----..,IF,...... • diamonds In the U.S. or ir you "" """'· """ n«Vl'ed ""' -. II '·-~ tOFPICIAl SEAll !OFFICIAi. St.All 8t lnoq ot • pro ..... you are = ~~ = ~.:Cir•tornl1 e • RUpposcd to pay appropriate "•t.w:lNI Offk:I 111 flrlN.INI: 01nct •n Federal taxts. But again. :.~:i ~ ~.'T ...... C.:, (M11rt1 e • diamonds are tiny and il's .._.. &. 1tn •utust &. 1•n virtu~lly lmPQSSl~le for ~-:.:.a::::· :::~,~~s e 3u~rltJe3 tO ·catch parents <..--,..,, ~· c-... ,_., c....... e h'lndlnf ~ ti Jislful of these/ -nw:lllJllT .ITIOAlflT , • • • , ,_....... Of"'"-.'°"'' DtJlr ,. .. , l'llblilhtol °"'"" c.ot Otll'f P1fot, ••• • • • • • • .-. • gems to their chlldrtn or sctJ.. """'' 11. • ... """" 1. 11, '"' nNt ....... ti. •· •"II ..,.., '· 1•. '"' YIM• • Ing them for cosh. Mill Approved WATERVILLE, Mc. (llPT) -\Vyaodotte lndjstrit!, Inc., of ~1an<:hestcr, Conn .. uld a $4.7S mlllkln lndualrl•I revtnue bond pcrmjtting IL to C'Onstruct a rnodern mill In \\'11ten·ll~. has been approved by residents of Lhal a.rca. Plnns call for the constructlpn of a ~,000 square root "ultra" modem" textile mill, the com· pany said. Wyandotte has an clisfing mill in the city. Three add!tlons to tht Air Californi• management le.am have been announced by Dudley Miller. \'loo president. m3rketlna:. The lhrtc appointees are: James Dlcklt. managt'.r, customer se;.-lce; Frederick Oavi.s, managt'.r, !iChedules and l'COnomlc planning; and GJenn HaWeld. m a n a 1 e r , publlc rtlallons. Dickie, an 181'tar a.lrlint: vett!ran, was diretlor o f customer strvict for S&tum Airways, Oakland, 1t the llrnt of his ilppolnlmenL Jfrevlousty -.. IW..l Nltll Uw a.-. To Air Ca(: he •a.a associated wilh t.,ke Central Airlines for If ytln', where he rose frum llatlon a.gent to vict pN!Sldent ·of customer kf"Vjce. ' Davis was manaa:er of ~te proceedings for \V e s t t r n Airlines for the past two years . Prtor lo thllt he served as a market analyst fo r Douglas Aircraft Co. for two years. llatlie.1d was Jo r me rl y associated fth P e r e. I r a • ifl'Fadden advtrtistng and public ttlat.ions agtncr' In Nc"J'Ol'l lle.1<h. • • .. DAILY PILDT .. .. , Wednesday's Closing . • • • 1 I " ti f 1 .. '"-"'---------------------------------------·-----------------• JI DAil. Y PILOT • LEGAL N(ll'lc& LE;GAL NOl'ICE I • I ' ... ' 'P.eer'· Ends Scott's occ· Car~er·1 By TOM TITUS Of hie Oalr.-l'llet lltff Nearly I& years ago Lucian SCott signed on as a drama \n. slruetor with Orange Coat College and start.d t h e school's most popular theatrical tradition, the sum· mer mu.slcal. M • ~. " ~- ' LLVJu:1i ~,,,, Tonight. with !he opening or OCX:'a 1 pr l n g produdlon, "Peer Gynt," Scott closes out his long career at Coast - directing and playing the uua role in the Henrik Ibsen fan- tasy. Scott, who is leaving after graduation to teach -at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City, Urst came to • OCC in 1955 and, apart from a brief hiatus from Its sister school, Golden West College, has been at the Costa Mesa school ever since. In 1956 he inaugurated the summer musical with a pro- duction of "South Pacific," a show he repeated last summer for OCC's 20th anniversary. In the inttrim ht 'has directed a number of student shows and community musicals. Scott shares the role of "Peer Gynt" with Roberto Marcarelli of Costa Mesa, who will play Peer as a young man in the first act. The second half of the show will see Scott as the older Gynt, reflecting on his life. · Appearing as Gynt's mother "I; t: 2-Er-vts[-r. PREsr~ ClllUUUJJ tl1e-rnesa Tf1, ;')1r1 ,t f-1n1 f~,-·\.V A 1·F~,'1r1tn 1: r1ts N [WPORT AN LJ Hi\RBCJR IN rosTA M ES A NOW SHOWING PwlN..._1. ''The S.C r•t W•r of Herry Frin '' ... ''H•nn1 ba1 Brook1'' A MIChael Winner Film OCC FAREWELL Lucian Scott ~t~ ~~:~a~ra ~jfth~S:a~~ Sheila O'Connell, J a m i I a Mynderse, Dennis Hanrahan and Maeve Robinson take the pl ay·s other major roles: '·Peer Gynt'' will be pr esented for fo u r performances. tonight through Saturday at 8: 15 p.ni. in the OCC auditorium . Admi~ion is free, but tickets must be ob- tained at the college bookstore. • • • An old fashioned ghost story is the fare at the Fullerton F o otllghters' MuckenthaJer Center were "Sight' U~" opens a three-weekend run Friday night. Walt ~nheimer is dirte· ting the tale of an English noblewoman who inherits a haunted castle. Christy Dwyer and Richard Clements play the principal roles, with Des- mond Grogan, Anna Heins and Bobbi Aller cast as the ethereal ancestors. Others· in the cast include Sybil Levey, Anita Malk and Ron Dragt. The show will be staged Fridays and Saturdays through May 31 at the center, 119 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton, with reservations vailable by calling 871-4710. • • • Resuming tonight for its last four performances ls the original drama "Winter Will Ask," presented by the Irvine Repertory Theater on the UCI campus. Clayton Garrison is directing the play, written by Jrvine professor Daniel Stein. Robert CQhen. John Hag. gard, Ann Pearson and Jeri ' .~ "''If' the cut of the ~1'u r y d r ara:a"'a . · will be glVen difoiuCb lltilrd.y al lh• Studio 'f!Je'te1· ·1'91 the .FiJJe Arts • bWI~ !h UC~els available at • • · ... , * ~ •.·~ tvl.ce" moves into Jts tOuft weekend at South Coast Repertory with David Emme.s directing tne' rtsur- rected depres~ion era~. Don Tuche, RonaJd Boussom, Martin Benson and Michael Douglass bead the cast. The 1 shOw plays Thursday throUcb §unday at SCR's Third Step '!beater, 1827 Newport Blvd., C<lsta Mesa. 'nckets IDay be reserved at the box· office or by callinS 646-1363. * * •. The Westminster ¢om.. munity Theater heads into its second weekend with the com- edy "Once for the AJking." John Moran directs with Arvid Malnaa, Pat Warner, Joan Hagerty and Ralph Appell in the principal roles. Friday and Saturday performances of the '~how are given at the theater, 6569 Westminster Ave. in the \Vestminster Center m a 11 , Reser.vatiions may be made by calling 893-r.443. • • * Ann and Ron Fillan share the spotlight with Lee HOW• ington in the comedy "Ask .Any Girl," being preRnted Fridays and Saturdays by the Santa Ana Community Players. Frank Ruge11 directs the large cast show at the Players Theater, 1020 \V. 18th St., San- ta Ana. The number for reservations is 541·2188. • • * Final performances o f Golden \\'est Co 11 ege' s "Tartuffe " will be given Frl· day and Saturday at the G\VC Patio Theater. Drama in4 structor Charles Mitchell is directing. "The Lion in Winter," held over for a fifth and last weekend, Is the fare at Long Beach's Forum XJ Theater, 835 Locust Ave. Kerry Johnson directs the medieval drama which closes Friday and Saturday everUngs. A six4weekend run of ''The Family Man" at the Long Beach Community Playhouse concludes Friday and Satur- day. Ralph Richmond takes the title role at the theater1 5021 E. Anaheim St. OC C Student to Show Ver satility in Music will present a work by Bach on the harpsichord, "Partita in A Minor." His tenor presentation will include "Three Songs froin Dieterliebe" by Schuman n; and three songs by Gabriel 11 .. 1 :: ! ' Fond a Film ' Wins Kudos At ~nnes r,. CANNES, France (UPI) Peter Fonda straddled a motorcycle and roared of£ on film across the American - South\vest from L<>s Angeles to New Orleans carrying a message for movi e audiences. It was an eventful trip for the "Easy Rider." portrayed by Fonda in the film be pro- duced, with detours for su. drugs and C&SJJal death on a Louisiana road. ' Fonda, son of actor Henry Fonda, said after the movie was screened at the Cannes Film Festival It was made to tell of life in these Uoited States., He passed the word. lf au. dience reaction is a judge. The festival crowd gave the film an ovation and it created the first real excitement since the annual festival opened last week. "My father made a movle, 'The Grapes of Wrath.' about the degradalion of people, a land grab by the government, the unfairness· of the police and so forth in 1939," Fonda said after the film was shown. "Now it is 1969 and we have the same thing : degradation of people, unnecessary tas:es and wars." Indian Quinn HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Anthony Quinn will star •s Flapping Eagle, the hard4 drinking Indian in Sir carol Reed's "Nobody ·Loves ' a Drunken Indian." WlnMr., ' AcMemy Aw1m1 om1r llMrltt "DL ZHIVAGO" 01vkl Niwn-COllH' .. ,,.MMe nd the Piii" ll.ummeMM' ,.., .u11n•t Faure. His piano work v.'ill be ALL DIUVl!·IN STilTS "Preludes for Piano" by '-AT ouuc Shostakovitch. lr--'";;;';;;':::=='"'='=•c.:12:;W::=:i.:.J=..., EYE SHOW $TARn ,,4$ CONT, SUN. FaOM 2 P.M. ACADEMY WINNER BEST ACTOR CUFF ROBERTSON ~Sin"'1lbcntiolwilh R08fll1SON IS!OOll1!$ l'Ull CUFF ROBERTSON •1 C#A~~ PACIFIC DR IVE IN THUTlllll Sl"l!CIAL NOTICl TO oua l"ATllO!"S -. _..,_ 531·1271 l"t .... ~ll N"'llttlll -lttt _..,... ... _,. '"""' w ..... tuNIMI: "'-.. MIU IN THI PACIAC" ....... CLAIRE BLOOM -DI·-· ·-G· .. •"'u··-~·- •uo. - • --·-- ..................... • ' ' " ' . ' ..,..~.,.,.-.... ..,.-~-ii Foun'8bl Valle~;_ N.Y. Steelul , • VO~. 62,, NO. 115, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PA6ES ' ORANGE ~· GALJFORNIA ' ~·WEDNESDAY. MAY 14, 1969 ~ ~ . ' ' TEN CENTS . . . .t j '"" ••• • 1 ... • • --IJOwuf~Wn' ~lite W eighe<'.I MUNICIPAL DILEMMA -Huntington Beach City Council faces deCisions involving (A) adopted site for new civic center, (B) present civic center and (C) extensior. of existing civic center as proposed by one council.malt. At same time, coUQcil is pondering downtown parking projects (!) between 1st and Lake, (2) south of Atlanta and east of Lake and -(3) two bjocks ·betweep 5tll .'l"'\61!1. ~.lligbway and Orange A'°nue. Parking project already in progress (4) s!refclies along beach from Main to Beach Boulevard. 4th Straight Day Reds Press Offensive .. With Rockets, Mortar 1WGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese ud Viet Cong forces pushed their "genera.1 offensive'' into it.s fourth day to- day with rocket and mortar attacks on Da Nang and 45 other allied towns and bases. ~ _Hanoi rad)o said the drive had dealt U.S. troops their heaviest losses of the war, but American military sour«s said tOe Communists were paying the heavier price. 'Ibe U.S. spokesmen estimated at least J,500 Reds had been killed in the past Uiree days. U.S. losses were put.at about ISO dead and 750 wounded. South Viet· namese casualties were described as "light." The Communist she11inp, however, were taking an increasing toll of civilian lives. A JO-rocket salvo hurled into the heart of Da Nang, South VleLnam's se- C<Jlld large.I city, killed ll p<rSOOI aod $2,000 in Loot Gone From Homes Burglars with a taste for fancy fibUseiiold Items made a quiet visit Tue~ fikY morning to three Franciscan model homes in Huntington Beach. Poliee sald about $2,000 in small househOld rurni.ahlngs was taken from tho three models of the Franciscan Homes development at Coldenwest Street and Slater Avenue, sometime between 9 p.m., Monday and 10 :30 a.m., Tue!day. One consi.ste.nt item taken from each of lk three homes was fancy toilet seat c:overa, removed from all the bathrooms, pollce reports indicated. Olhtr Items included lamps. bed sprudJ, small carpcta, and any other port.able objects. tnvesllgators said entry Was made through unlocked sliding glass Windon, but oo other clues were found. Dis~cy 1''iln1 Slated "While Wlldem£SS,'' a Walt Disney fflm on An:tle region 11nin1als and bird Ille will bfl 1hown at 7~30 p.1n. Friday by the Huntington Beach Public 1.ibrary Film Forum at lbt l!brary, ~ Main SI. wounded 29. Five civilians died and one was Wounded in the provincial capital of An Loe, IO mileo north ol Saigon. Secretary of State William P. Rogers arrived in Saigon Cll his mission to seek avenues to peace and deplored the Com· munists' attacks as "senseless" acts which "cast .somewhat of a cloud" over their intenti()Jls at the Paris peace talks. U.S. milit.ary ~eadquarters said 10 of the dead and 24 or the wounded in Da Nang were South Vietnamese civilians. The others were government soldiers. Three nights ago, Communist rockets or mortar shells slammed inlo 212 allied bases and town:;, followed by .fO lwG nights ago and then the 46 late Tuesday and early today, according lo U.S. ligures. Hanoi radio In two broadcast s monitored in Saigon bailed the attlcka which began Sunda) u a "general of· tensive,. that has penetrated major American camps up and OOwn Si>uth Vietnam. '"Ibe fliihls will continue," HanOi radio said. . . "This is the lleavieM blow we have. in- flicted so far on the U.S. ag(l'tSIOrs since the ~ of tbe war, .. ooe broadcast sa'ld: It said the oUenslve was designed to demonstrate the Com· munist.s' "abundant fichting power" on lhe battlefield. F~r Orange COUntJ 46foun& ladies" face armed robbery cblrge1 today after they allegedly relieved • 1-Beoch man of his pants al CUDPOiDt 1n HLID- tlngtoo Beach, then fled In h1a car. Hunlingl<ln polko ld<ntlll<d t h e panlaleas. victim u Mu Howard Bahr of Long Beach. Bahr bar<ly-rnanos<d to hlt- chhil<e lo the pollc< atatlon at IJ,IO a.m. lodl)' wtarlng only his ........ I T-lhlrt and pim .. ........,. He told poflce the episode began In a Lons Btach bar where he mel one of UH! young ladles. Bahr had bffn dumpod, in an olJrteld 1re1 near Cll,Y aod Golden Wett ,s\reeta. ; . ' ~ 1 C9 ncil Studies Parking, Civic , C-enter Plans ' By 1!lllAM REED strip one blocl deep rrom Su,. Slred·lo °' 1"' DallY ••..., Lake Street. Colt ol the I.I acres a-.,(7,11 . The lato, o! downlo•• untington-por oquare root would be a--ril,!S.13 Beacl! mq be on lbe JJne 'nnir.i>y nlgbl million, ae<0rding lo city, flglirq. wben the city council takes • closer klok 1J'(lprovtraenta needed to build 1.G71J>&tJ· at pro~ls for a large fS.t million park-ifli spaceii would' make a grand total of ing 19' and a new civii: Center. · $2.4L million u lhe cost ·for ~ section ~ parking lot proposal is divided into alone. " .. three parts and the eopncll cou1d ·order Total. reyenue elfpecf.ed would amount furlher study on any one of the to'$21~,540. ~tlremenl of a bond issue.Of J)ossi.billties or on all or. any combination. $%.0 mUUon would cost ~181,~ ~ J,W. • The first section of tJl8 proposal is· a To tlils )s a'dded Operating, eiP.e~":"-Of $26,950 making a net ta.sh reserve (pr•llO, ol $2,716 annually. ·Parldng section 2 on the map b a .strip belonging lo the Huntlngton Beach Co. II is south of Atlant.a Avenue and east \If Lake Street. eo.,1 of the 5.15 acres at $2~ •per square foot Is estimated at $507 ~· Improvements needed to build 574. PJF)dJJg 1paces would make a grand total i>C!Git.6\IO. Tor.I-' 1'1\yenue expected Is IHJ,990 • Bon 1erV1Ce ctets OD &n isaue of $600,000 ' SJN;Jvlng 'Bapped ' . woukl be $45,000. Expenses of '14,350 ire added, making a net reserve of $Mi,3SO from this sectioo. -pie ,third section ls two t>locka between , 5th and 6th .streets and Paclflc COast H1ghw8.~ and Orange Avenue. Cost of the 3.57 acres at $5.23 per square foot would be $813,700. Improvements needed to bulld 4.SS spaces brlnga the total cost to !006,26q. · Total revenue expeeted would 81ftO\IOt (See 00'\\'NTOWN, Pap I) Petitio~ Brought Nixon Reports. Vietnam . . Pe.ace CharteeS Tonight Stock ltf•rke_. NEW YORK (AP) -The 11ock mart<! closed with a fair gain ,today, wl\h ' broken reporting hopa o! peace pro.. gr<M·helplng 11-to ldvence. (Seo-quota.. lions, Pagea 2'-27). ' -Santa Ana polke amsied lbe remale met Mi11 EdgeUe In 1 Long Be•cl»bor. quartet one-half hour later on charges Of She asked for 1 ride homt to Garden conspir1cy to~mmit armed robbery ol a Grovt, he Wd, a.od be allowed bier' to Mobil Serv~ Station on tne comer of drive becaUse he didn't .. kooW Orange' Edin&« Avenue and Main street, Santa County." WASHl,NG'fON . (UPI) -Al~ nearly fQUt mon~ in olftce and amid a fllUT)' 0£ diplomatic activity, President Nixon reports to the Atnerlcan·people tonight on "lhe prospects for peace in Vietnam." Henry 'Cabot: Lodge, chief U . S • negoUator at the Paris peace talks, flew to Washington this afternoon 8¢ &cre\&ry .of S.tate William P. Rogers new into Saigon as the President worked in the presidential part ol the White House on the text of hls 7 p.m. speech, which will be carried Uve by all three major televialon networks. Lodge refused on his artl.val ln the capital to aay aJJything more than Uiat he was home for "consultations on the Viel· nam quesUon" an<! that "I eipect. to see the president while ram here." Although White House oWclals ruled oul · ameiuncement ft any partial troop withdrawal and said nothing apectaaJlar would be revealed. .they did tenn. the speech a-, "major address" ~t.ainlng "new material." Backlnl: that up wen these tactor•: -Nixon scheduled his first joint mee\ing of the cabinet and the National ~11. Cotml:il f9t.j'h~ _mo!!!i!1i, after the address ls de.livered. -Senate Republican Jeader Everett M. Dirksen! briefed in advance by Nixon, said) 01 '1 aotnl to be 1 rlther slgnlflcant ........... " ' ,,,__ .. -Lod!Jt, on leaving Paris this morning Indicated he !mew whit the Pesldent would announce. "l was summoned by Ute: Prts!dent !or conaultauons," be ~d. "But, of course, I cannot ICOOp the Prtst· dent before be makes his addras tooighl" -Roten, arriving in SaJgon for Coµr i days .ot consultation and observation, made I point ol ISSUring tht S«llh Viet-, namete that the Amertatin ~jective in . ' Ana. Mla Ed1ette~=:nfritncls foU.owedJn . Arrtsted wert Sharon Brown, 25, a...t another car, to Babr, Polit'8 s • . •+· 53, n· Elizabeth Miles. 2•. both o1 111 E. 17111 said nn.111 &o.lnr~ bis ,,... 1n Hm•.. O\'lel nero,. . 1es · SL, Santa Ana aod Bat ... 1 Edgette, 35, tirtg\to Bloch It ·wlllch lllne he cllilml . and Kathleen Reid, ~ both ol unoamed the four women r......i hhn out ol lbt car ,M05COW <UP.I)•-'.l'b< So9tet armed Polln Str.el lddreU In Gardon Grove. and II gungolm -·1tm to.-..-'""'°' ·~-lied • ---.r • 8anla Ana police allege Mlot lk'own • All lciur .-IC> ~ io ·s.ita: repciMI lbt deelh ol ,c;oi, V1111ll , o. ' had an air pillol which~• Mo 'Ano cilY )Ill wollln( ..,.~ .., l•..,..111, 1 IOldittl ltSI. Pllo\-Hew·..- caliber aulomotic and~" l!dlJiu. "'J , ~,ol atltplpl~ __ C-,4'i aieo• ....,,Clf lhe<8o•kl Um. . · careylng a "'!~blade lfe" .. ~. • ")&lrili ~.,.~-~ ...... ~. lltd'Sl,or did he dleil May l"'alltt .a . 'Babr lold olluiitlliKton lieut;;,...;. • 'bery chirics'!roro HuntJoilqn ~-; •horl· bUI irave'Ulnea.1' . t ~ -• ' . ,.. .... t' '". '. ' • • • • the war had not changed. He said It was "the est.ablishment of conditions which assure that the people of South Vietnam can detennine their own future un- coodllionally." -Ellsworth Butiker, the U.S. am. bassador in Saigon, met for the third time in three days with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu. -The White House said Lodge would be given new instructions in meetings with Nixon after the address. On Monday, Nix- on consulted for the first time in person with Gen. Creighton W. Abrams. U.S. commander in Vietnam. Nixon 's address, to run half an hour. will be his first full Jtatement OD Viet. nam. It comes at a Ume when some senators o( Nixon's o'wn party were showing in their speeches an impatience at a lack oE evidence ot progress toward ~ end to the war. Ora.al(e We•tliii' Extremely heavy haze -that' weather bureau eupbemllm tor smog -awaits on the h0r1i0n fot 'nlur&day, with swmy tkie:a boolt- ing the mercury over the 70-de-- gree mark. INSmE TODAY Orcmoc C6urtl:u'1 Boon! of Supem..sor1 ho1 joined coastal dlM1 tn thtir campafUf' for off· 1Mre oU driUing curb.a. Po~• JS. '"""' '' _., n -.. c-c.... ,, ~..... ft-: ,_ " ~~ lS . ~ ,. ...... p_ f ................ ,.,. .,.... ,..., ·-.. ! ... ..._ • --· f : Mtll lfl .....,,. u ,, -" -.... --. ....... ,....,. ... 0r-.. c:-t'f 1S .... . ., ..... ,..,,.,. . Mdll .,... n.,. -.... Dr ..... '" .... .. tlld ...... ...,,. T-D ,.,......, .•. .... ...... " --.. • - ---------7~- ' IWl.Y PILOT II ., 1 • ¥ outh' s Courage ;rested on Lost Fi 1111 JOIN VALftd.\ ' Of .. Dlfll' • ..., ..... ( ne stream of friends flowtll steadily bKb the b o a p l t a l room. 'ftley went Newport Harbor High School students cuttln,g a claas or two to 8Ce a friend. dqid lwll!I. ' To maka It 11<11«, Cole will icflo ht"' to tap Iha\ ...... pool " ....... Ulat ha bQ used often In his yOlll!g lile. L06T FINGERS .,. ~. left "" V,illnam lilil ~~":;i';!rJ:~ Dhar 'have him <Onie will> mt ~Aiigetec, ...iU> mponslbl< Ir~ bi where he could worJI.: · Ule' that· he kwte 90 m > Wll one pretty girl about 16 said Uley came because Colston "Cole" Hale, 16, was "a free IOI.II." Wa IOlllelhing Ulat Ii umpl<uant to talk about, and he doesn 't talk about it. But his brother, Frank, 23, related the wrenchb>g lmpect Ula! the loss ol 6\\ finger1 ¥d on Cole last Sab.a'day af. temoon in a frtiak accident on the docks ol Art '1 Landing in Balboa. , """" that, or Los Angeles;;: ~•nk ld. Sooieooe el,. in BalbOo a1oo thought H. ' a good Ide.a. ' .,. ' 1be conversations were ln t b e parllclilar generallon'• alang. wcim Ute •'bummer" and ~groovy!' abouiided. "'i~ J ' pess li's a bummer all right,' Col< Hale Sa!d"qule\!y u he look- ed at -yet tried to lgnon1 -bis ban- Nixon to Take Coast Vacation; Time .Unknown The vaca,tion sehedule is banging on.the White llOuse wall today, bu~ unlike the bo5s ·in rriost major organlzaUon.s, Preli· dent Nixon hasn't put down the datea be 'II spepd 1n San Clemente. , Mrs. Richard Nixon told newsmen Tuesday that the first family will spend two wee.ks or a month at the new sum- mer White House, whose $340,000 purchase was announced Monday. Just when they will visit the tree-- shrouded villa retreat being bought from Mrs •• Victoria Cotton, 90, widow of the late millionaire Democrat lliram H. eot. ton, is still an open question. The First Lady said the hectic presidenUal schedule will probably keep her husband from returnhig to the beachfront adobe mansion they visited twq months ago unW CongrtS!I a~journa. This would put the White HOUie West ·visit sometime late in the year, around September or October, unless Mrs. Nixon herseU or other members of the,family should drop in at the 10-room home. "We haven't beard a word about the time," San Clemente City Manager Ken· neth Carr said today. Re explained that he would be told im- mediately if Police Chief Clifford Murray had been contacted by White House aides to begin preparing to work with Secret Servi«nlen on presidential security. A completed deal to purcbue the mansion and five surrOunding acres of the once-rural ranchland estate for $100,000 down and the rest over a fJve year period at 7 .5 percent interest was announced Monday. Earlier reports said the Nixons plaMed Cole, who has 11 ••• ftlt, I J'tl.lly deep love" for boats, wu starting into his second month as a dock attendant at the oporlfishing landing, and, admittedly was looking forward to the good pay from the coming summer seaaon. Then something happened. Jn that most routine of maneuvers with boats, he started to tie the line tDSsed him from the "Frontier" onto the dock. 'lbe boat lurched at the wrong Ume and Cole, in anguJah and terror. saw hia fingers ripped from his hands. STRING OF FIUDIDS But It wasn't bl, barlds that dominated his mind at the moment. Frank and the string ol friends spoke wjUI him in Ulo Hoag Memorial Hoepital teen wing room. Cole wa1 thinking about hLs brother, -Dudley, 24, an Army helicopter pilot en route home on emergency leave from Vietnam. Cole was visibly nervous, his tongue cocked above hil upper lip, toes twitching methodically. In conversations he looked at Frank and in silent glances uked thousand questio1;1s. No word had arrived about Dudley's retum, and both were wonied. (He ar- rlv"1 inle Tuesdey), The soldier's arrival is important - especially important, since the three brothers have only each other, Some call it misfortune; others coin- cidence, There are many rationales for what the Hale boys have undergone. Cole is 16. His father is paralyzed in a San Francisco convalescent home. His mother, remarried and living in Northern California, is abo physically unable to care for the teenager. SOUD GRADES Besld.es maintaining solid grades at Newport Harbor High, Cole worked as a dock hand living at the borne ol guar- di!lnS, parents of his best friend. He moved to their Balboa home a year ..'He's a ~ U,tr/' Ald.hl11 bo6s1 ·Art -... ~kY, OWOI" of Ar\'t~g. , • 'He always(loved to hMs around tbt landintand abou\ a.month ago we Driaify had a chance to sign him on, because our businesa was picilng up. ' CBJPPING IN f ~·Tbe· cang ddwn here already biS ' ~ chipping tn a bit henl and there for him," he said. Small allowances from boUt brothers and Soc.W ~urity from his seriously ill faiber pay for , Q>le's ex~ at · hla I,..._ hilm<! on the oenlnstila, ••Hja t1taying at lilt hotne is much more than juai a !inancial arrangement. He loves Jt there and they love him as their own," Frank sald. And in about three weeks he'll most like:ly return there and will face the Jn.. evitable challenge1 that come up when you're 18, tun of rugged detennlnafion gained from a lifetlme d struggling , •• and you've lost almost all your fingers. "I guess I'll have to make some ad- justments," he said quleUy as he stared at the bandages that conceal Dttle. They are awesome for a teen.age boy • •• things Jlke appearance ••. girls • , • aboot the guitar he played and the work on the hi1h achool gymnastics team. FINANCIAL ALLOWANCE Financially, the allowances from broth.en will come, and the Sooial Securi- ty, too, and the bills for surgery, hospital care and rehabilitative treatment will come frOm workman's compensation and insurance settlements from work. Thre is, l\owver, that one fact that wilt always remain, illu!trated when a nurse entered Cole's room during visiting hours. , She asked softtr: "Would you ll.ke something for your hands?" · Cole looked at her, mniled weakly, then gazed at his bandages'·with the two pro- truding index fingers ••• then back at her. , "Oh •• , you mean lot' the pain?" ' Countian Shot, Rammed to take over the new White House West B c A f A id. S\Jllll!tiziie in J(tly, b~tilalQtlng, r~ y ar· ter CC ent . ~ aJld per)laps ---lion it J mm-. · · ' · \ ajlna pool ~Y"''° be done. -· ' . I, •, (~es c~tefs"and painGr. buq , -. - -• • • l .. ~ "" .. ~, -:; 'i \; ~d. the grollnas, men_are working on 'Mayjlem over a minor ~affic accid ent policeman with a board.~ • ' _.. 1 •.survey to determil)e U:tl>e site Is $111jed. _.ari; ,~ay hu left a fl'press miji In Knocked flet by~ blow, Sgt:~ncer ~ the 11.1Wfe ~~on.m+ fM_ ~~. . crltkai condJtion, shot 'te.by b citf-du! told £hfi:1fr11 -·1nve!ligators, the angry . "• .., Henry ra1~ It ·.over his head. as though ·""" ty wlke sergeant and -J1ver-by a car to strike· again. ~ D• ' . t ff alre; u; lawman left for help. The Los Angeles lawman said he pulled mner 0 · 0fi0r Jimmy A. Henry, 22, of 5922 Orange his .38 caliber revolver and fired twice, • i • Ave., Cypres!I, is in Martin Luther with slugs lodgin' .in Henry~ shoulder S h I C todi. I:tospltal, Anaheim, with two bullet and ~ abdomen . .._ · · ;, C 00 , US 8ll wounds-one in the abdomen -a frac-Sgt. S~ncer ~(~ ~eft\tbt' Beene to tured left arm, injured ribs and multiple get help, at whitjl tune er. Jilt.llnd-run A retirement dinner honoring Myron Tait, former Ocean View School District governing board member and current retiring administration office custodian, will be held May 23 at the Meadowlark: Country Club. Tait served on the board from . 1947 through 1955. He has worked 811 a custo- dian since 1958 and in 8dCUUon to his district office assignment has served as custodian at both Pleasant View and Crest View Schools. The dinner is sponsored by the local chaptei of t\le California S c b o o I s Emp!Oyes Association, with Mrs. Felipa ~ere:z and Mrs. Rose Julien suving as general chairmen. ' Mrs. Bev Clardy and Mrs. Mary Ob- bards are assi&Ung. The event is open to the public. Ticket.! at '3.50 may be obtallied from the district administration afflces at B e a c h Boulevard and Warner Avenue or by call ing 847-2551. ' DAILY PILOT . OflAHGI COAS1 PU8LISHINO COMl'AN'r Rob•rf N, W••• Pl'Qlftnl 91111 l"llM!Wr J-.:k R. Curl•y V~ Prakltnl arid Genet-8' ~ "'-·· k11-ril l!dllfr l~Of!IM A. Mur pfiln• Mfllfflllf E•llw .. lb.rt W, ltfh Wilt.a"' Ra•i • ._,... till!!!~ ..... Edlltr CJl1 E•llw ----J;f Ith Stratt M•1lllf A•"-i1 ,,0. lit. 7tO. tZ'41 --......., tetcH: 2111 .. , ........... ...,_. ........... : UI Wf11 .. , SIMI . '-'""' ""°'' m ,...., "_.._ cut3 and bruisea. motorist crush~ ,the · alre*.Wounded Loi Angeles Police Sgt. Frank L. victim as he lay at the Scene of the Spencer, 44, of A.paheim, ,has beem ques-. sl;looting, . \ ; ttoned about the bizarre case and Orange Sgt. Spencer said he w.em; to Martin County District Attorney Cecil Hicks is Luther HO!pitsl for help, bQth for the studying the facts. mcrtorist who allegedly attacked him and SMrlff's ,Capt. Jame.a Braadbel t said to have a four-inch cut on bl! own head tnvesUgaUon now indicatea the ofl-duty patched up. . ~ police .sergeant's car bumped the rear of Sur'eons work'!d. throug}ioy,t pie early Henry's auto on the Riverside Freeway mornmg hours to save Henry's Jiie and shortly,a.fter midnight. spokesmen said today that the victim is The' two men drove dOWJl the Euclid responding Co treatment. Street Offramp to dJSCUS! the matter, No charges have been filed, but the in· Ctpt, Bioadbelt said, but during ttie in-vestigation was continuing throughout I.be ctdent, Henry allegedly otru<k U>e dpy. Frotn Page l DOWNTOWN .• to $106,443. Retirement of a bond issue.of $925,000 would cost $89,375. To this figure is added the operating expenses of $10,950 making a net profit of $26,120. Combining all three projects would result in a cost of $.'l. 45 million for the 15.52 acres based on an average cost of $S.10 per square foot. Z,090 SPAC~ Improvements to build 2,090 parking spaces brlngs the total to $3,897,960. Toti.I revenue projected would be $362,4.25. Rttittment of a bond issue· of S.1.925 million would cost $294,375 per year. To this is added operation coots of '52i250 making a net profit of $15,800 . C-Ombining 1 and 2 al ... """!Is In a 13 n1Ulioo project of I,515 parking spacea Valley C.Ollecting · Bulky Ruhl!ish P'or the aecond Saturday In 8 row Foontaln Valley restdents will have a chance to c!lscard large bulky items without going to the expense of hauling !Mm to Ula dump. From I a.m. to C p.m., Saturday, large traSh blna wlll be placed at City Hali, 10200 Slater Avt., and fire station No. 1, 17737 eu.hard SL • _~ulb Jttma auch u old chalrf. sofas • ... ev1slons, ~. m111 be plac.d In· Ula trash bins for free rickup bY. truck• from Jlalnbow Dlspooa Co., 'working tn coopention will> the city to make May a clty·wlda cl<anup niootli. Eacli Saturday tn May a .... lite ...iu be aMOUDCed lor the !rte dioposal -, .. and a net reserte of $26,630 per year. Combining I and 3 results in a $3.325 million project of 1,626 spaces and a net IO;Ss each year of,~,235. The Joss ls tx· plained by a ditferenCe in on street park- ing spaces added into each project area a,nd 1 and 3 have fewer on street !!paces. The clty already has a civic center' site adopted at Main Street and Mansion Avenue. This 12-acre parcel would cost the city about $400,000 according to figures released by Councilman Henry Kaufman. CENTER REMAIN Dr. Kaulmaq ha.11 suggested the civlc center remain whert It is (5th Street and Pecan Avenue) and Uiet the city buy an eitra block for expansion of the center. Councilmen are expected -to acl on his suggestion during the 7 p.m. meeting at city hall. If Dr. Kaufman is successful in con- vincing his fellow councilmen of 01e merits of bla idea, and If ihe councd adopt.! at least the third of the Parking Authority proposals, the c i vi c center would be at the hea4 of a block wt\leh would extend from Pacific C o a 11 t HJghway to Main Street. CurrenUy the city is completing a $2.5 millkln Parking Authority project on the ocean si~e of Coast Highway ·rrom U'ie pier llOUUI to ~<h Bout.vard. 1be project. the first for the authority, Is ex-peeled to be completed late this summer . Davis New CD Head WASlilNCTON (AP) -John l!l. Dtvle, former a:ovemor 'of Narlh Dakbta, was n1med Wednesday t(, becOme dir@Ctbr. of Civil De!ense. Oavfl, 54, wl.U ·gucctfd J,..pit Romm tflectlv. May 20. Is There a Doctor in House? ~oping t!) .attract a d~toi--to their fair town, the city fathers of GreenMch, Ohio, have hung a sign across Rt. 224. This Huron County farm commun· ity of 1500 has been without a physician for 18· months, when funnel'\ doctor moved to another town. Letters to all h<>&pitals In Ohio Bild surround-. ing states and contact with Uie American Medical ··" Association have been to no avail. The nearest town:. ~ with a doctor, 12 miles away, provides 24-hour am··~, bulance service. Assembly OKs I 'Oil Warning' Legislation Special to Uie DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -The Assembly has approved unanimously a bill compelling the State Lands Comntission to give coastal cities and counties for warning of hearings on offshore oil drilling ap. plicatlons. Ass'emblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach), author of the measure, said today he expects the Senate also to approve the bill without a dissenting vote. The legislation, which has the en- dorsement of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chainnan of the Lands Commission, is oow in the Senate's Natura1 Resources Coounittee. It will be taken up at a com- mittee hearing Thunday. The blll, AB 622, was prepared by Badham at the request of Orange County officials, led by Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and Seal Beach City Matteger Lee Rism!r. It arose from vigorous protests against Lands Commission approval of ex- ploratory drilling by the Shell Oil Com- pany last Januiiry. Shell was granted a permit to sink test core holes off Newport H a r b o r , San Clemente, Oceanside and o t h e r offshore areas. The Lands Commission in March rescinded tile pennit before any drilling had taken place in c;>range County waters. Coast.al agencies had complained that they bait received no prior notice of the January Lands Commission hearing on the Shell permit application. Badham's bill requires the commission to gfve 60 days notice on hearings on all exploration and drilling requests frotn the oil indu$lry. Meeting Canceled The June 10 meeting of the Huntington Beach Union High School District CiUzens Committee on Maximum Use 0£ School Facllities has been canceled, it was announced: tdday. Nert session for the school group will be July 10. for one month only save 20% on Towle'• El Grandee and , Kinq Richard palle~ in ' ' 11<>Jid .. ail¥er House RepublicanAsks Investigation of F ortas From Wlre · !!lervlces W ASlUNGTON -A leading House Republican called today for an ln· vestlgation ol Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas by the House Judiciary Com· mittee to determine w h e t he r im· peachement proceedings are warranted. Re p. Clark MacGregor (R·Mlnn.), a member of the committee, said he acted after conferring this morning with Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell. "The attorney general raised no of>. ject.lon," said MacGregor. "He indicated he would cooperate in a.uch an investigation." ' The course suggested by ~lacGregor is one of several that could lead to im- peaclunent proceedings in Congress. It calls for a preliminary, lntorma1 in- vestigation by a Judiciary Committee panel to see whether the facts warrant going ahead with impeachment. "I can't sit by any longer and see this matter tried in the news media when we have procedures for bringing the facts out into the open," MacGregor said. MacGregor hand.<felivered a request ror a preliminary inquiry int.o Fortas' af. fairs to Rep. Emanuel Celler (0-N.Y.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee. He asked for a meeting of the full com· mittee next Tuesday and asked that Fortas and Mitchell be invited to appear. From Page 1 'DR.BROWN' • • posed no danger to ~y heart patient. And he argued that his prolonged study of medicine, through medical libraries and from the student gallery iD hospital operating ,rooms.,,was more tl!an·sufficieot to sustain his practice as a cardiologist. Brown Is accused of practicing medicine without a Jicense. Seventeen counts of the chatge were recorded against him after an investigation by the Orange Counly Grand Jury. Opposing counsel agreed today thst the trial may go to the jury late this af. temoon. Buckley stated that final arguments can commence a f t e r testimony by two further witnesses. • .. {: Celler lat.r told Ule House U>at he inil his committee's ranking Republican, Rep. William M. McCulloch of Qhio, Ha6: reached agreement on a course of actfbrf. To Rep. H. R. Gross (R-Jowa), who hu callel for Fortas' impeachment and who asked what course of action had been decided upon, Cellar said only: "I'm sure the gentleman will be saUalied with the action to be taken in the not too dbtant future." Cellar. said he would d l s c u st MacGregor 's proposal with MacGregor later today. . The Justice Department's statemerit. said MacGregor telephoned Milchell 'l.fld "wa!I informed that the Department. of Justice could have no objections to ac- tions whlch are legally within th~ prerogatives of the How;e." Pellets Sicken -;: 13 Beacl1 Y out~. ' Thirteen third grade students at Wardlow School in Huntington Beach Sul •. fered minor effed!I from tasting fertiliZer pellets Tuesday, but school officials &al' the pellets are not poisonous. Wardlow Principal James Macon said the pellets were spread Tuesday ·af· temoon in the standard fashion to fertiliu the playground. · "Some of the youngsters wandered ontO the ~ and put the pellets in theit mouths," said Macon. "AS soon as we learned what happened, the school nurse inspected a.11 the children." "We also checked with the poison center at the Orange Count)' Medical Center and learned.the pellets. were not seriously harmful unless taken in a a large dosage," explained Macon. All children are back in school today, reported Macon, wlth the exception of one, who is out with a cold, Some parents apparently thought the children had been fed dangerous pellets:. Macon labeled the reports "fooli!!h ." He said the fertilizer, Best Turf Special, 14 commonly used throughout the Fountain Valley School District for playgrounds. • · ---- •• • COHvJNIENT TE~MS • BAN~RICARO • MASTER ~ARGE. \ ~·\ d-J{~J?.hn~ 'Jewel~ 2t YEAR$ SAME: LOCATI~ . ' . -' -\ ' 112J NiWPQ.RT AVi~UE COSTA MESA ' ~HONE S41·l401 • I I I I • .. I , I . .. , .. • -T -• j • voe. 62, NO. '11 s, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAl'.lfORNIA WEDNESOAY, MAr14, "1969 TEN CENTS . • ' \_Salt Creek Road Hinges on By ·TQM BARLEY , Of 1111 i..ny •• ,,.,, Both aides in the dispute agree that the IUture of Salt Creek Road may hinge on an estimated hour· of argument Thursday 1n,Superlor Court. For much of that hour will be devoted to Laguoa Beach altomey William Wtlcoxen. And be will have to convince J.udge Claude Owens, as be failed to con~ vtnce him in an .earlier huring, that the · W,guna Niguel Corp,'$ acquisition of the Down the Mission ' Point Yacht Club ' ' Entry Right OK'd i>ANA POINT - A right of entry agreemenL to property now owned by the Dana Point Yacht Club was approved between the county and the club Tuesday by ·the BQard of Supervisors. . The pact will allow the Harbor District access to the Yacht Club property at I.he s0uth end or the Street of the Violet Lantern ·in order to constrqct "a portion o( the ~tension of Del Obispo Streel10 which will border the now-under-con- slruction Dana Point Harbor. Tbe county. is in negotiatioo with the Y~cht Club to buy the property in the near future, following an appraisal. • Sheep for Campu• MISSION VIEJO -From D to 1,000 hhl! or •heep will crue o11 lb< Sad· dleback College penn'anent campus beginning next week as t~s pick up iome income for temporary 'Ille of the ~ty. ' : Gratian Bldart, of El Toro, bid 1.2 tents per head ~r day to grut his sheep th'"J'e until July 15. Only a small part of tHe 200-acrea owned by lhe college is being graded for first prefabricated b}lildings for next fall. .• Viejo GOP Rall11 "MISSION VIEJO -An old fashioned Political rally is Planned by the Mission · \'.ltjo Republican Women's Club for 7 P:in. May 25 at the Mission Viejo High School multi-purpose room. The rally wW feature a buffet-style chW:ken dinner, patriotic music sung. by tile Sing Out Amigog group and rag-tii:ne rnwk played by Sadd?eback Jwuor College students. ,-Tickets are $3 per person and are available from club members and Mrs. Paul Ricker ticket chairman. Tickets will not be sold at the door, Mrs. Colli as said. • l' oga Clas• Starts ·\nssION VIEJO -Controlled weight, ~ed poise and longer Ille are the binefits held out for a new yoga class $£8rting at the Mission Viejo Recreation 'Ceiiter. 'enee Tay lor, aulhority on yoga, lee• lurer and traveler, is conducting the· Classes ~tonday evening from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. for eight consecutive weeks. Two More Flood :Pamages Claims l'otal $67,500 ho m o r e claims totaling $67 ,SOO "bich charge Orange County wilh responsibility for flood damages in the Laguna Beach area during lhe Janhary and Febrllary storms were denied and reterrtd to the county counsel TUesday by the Board oI Supervisors. The two bring the total flood damages !10\lgbt in the area to dale to more than ~5,000. ~Vet.erinarlin Carnet Rose Trevino, also tilown as . Dr •. Gamet Rose Ekeberg, wants $$7 ,500 foe damages to her pro. pe11y at 20372 Laguna Canyon Road \,blch allegedly occurred oo Jan, 14 and tet1. 21. -'She charge.s lht county with ''failing to JltOVide a surtlclent waterway for rain runO!f.'' .. The claim includes $3,000 for loss of ln- !:«ne, $3,000 damage to improvements; iUOO tor labor and equipment, 110,j ror mental 1Ufferlng, and $40,000 t rettbre rtal propen.y. puPlk right of way was an act of fraud . WDOOlell believes thal he hu alrtady proved bis polnl In the volwnlnoua pelt. tiOlll and doa10n be has flied with Judge ~ In ~ adloo. Bwl be will have to go through what an lbe motions ia tht-law 11.Dd motion dMdoa ·and ham- mer home verbally whit he bas very blumly Nied In writ.TI fonn, 'wll,couo may feel ll!al '"• In-· ten;upllom ol his l<stimony -be could DOI complele bis state~ MOllday and a ' . " * * Laguna Niguel lawyer'a, previous encqe- meot prevented Tuesday's hearing 1olng Into the afternoon hours -will not l!elp his case in tenus of the fluidity and con- Unulty ol what he feel!! to be a convlnciJ)g argument But 51!pporters ol the battling Art Colony lawyer look on thole lnte!T\aptions -certainly the Ursl interruption Monday -as an act of providence. For their champion was visibly angered by the Jong, painstalting aUacill oa aspecls ol ' ' his "'it by Laguoa Nigu<I attome)" Mike w°"""""' obvlou&IJ...t....,. uc1 1•thtr· McCormick. • Inf ..._, wu eut bJ Jlldle 0..... •·A complete sh4r:n ... a green Tigb4 for u he<. 'Pl cibvklUlly ....,-iMo ane sayiDg everything and a11ythlng_.he· C&D • counter-.. and 'told to wait mitU about us ••. H:rlous and Unfounded ac-Tuesday. lie fliOed the court on Tue:sdiiy cuaaUoos agalnsl publlc ollicials , , , morning calm Md colle<ted and ob- ruth1ess, rash charges 11 vlou&ly,detefinlned to "plly it cool" McCOrm.ick pulled out all the stops. in a IAlUD& Nigue).'1 usual battery of tirade that eventually brough Wiko.un's lawyert -McCormick, Eugene Bell, and co-ptalnllH, Mljiliael Sagar, to bis I!!'! to Altx Bowle; with the support of' Deputy object "to th.ls attack upon the character Qounty Counsel 'Ihomu Conroy -bas of. of Mr. Wilcoxen." ~ fered the corporatlorl's.. final arguments. They wlll, or course. have the opportunity to tt:ply to Wllcoxen's summation before Judge Owerus rules oo the dispute. They contend that Laguna Nil!IJel has lawfully acquired the abandoned Sall Creek -and that ita inclUlloo In the 100-acrt development planned by the cor- po~tion ~ be challenged on th• him ol any eXisting law'. And,J!leY have, they say, the aban- donment action ot the county planning (See SALT CREll, P11e l) Wilcoxen Gets Help Of Surfers Real Physician Testifies - Hundreds of South Coast surrers are deitnnined that the financial strain im· posed on Laguna Beach lawyer William Wilcoxen by the many hours he has devoted to the Salt Cree.k Road issue will not "wipe out" the Mt Colony attorney . 'Dr. Brown' -impressive ' By Phil lntorl1ft4l . ' , Witness Says . Coordinating their efforts to provide dollar support for l\Vilc!l:len in his bid to preserve the public right of way is Bren~ nan McClelland, president of the United States Surfing Allsoci.ation and that organi.z.atoion's representative on the International Surfing Federation. Festival Board May he Judges . Of Art Exhibit . Tests, Diagnosis ~ -All Compatible McClelland, 31231 Ceanothus, South Laguna. left: Tuesday's inconclusive hear· ing on the Salt Creek Road battle to con- fllll'l that area .surfers had opened a fund devoted to Wilcoxen's campaign in the United.California Bank branch at Laguna Beach. "We deeply admire this young Abe Lin- coln," McClelland .said, "and we have detided that· we would like to use this prl:~ way of be1pinj: him preserve a n,bt ol way that -11 eo vital to surfers seeklng,accm to the """"'·" "And "tluit fund wilt be ' maintained regaidJeM "of what happens In this cur· rent c:oot'\. adiOJl. '! McClellapd stressed. "We will ccmtinue to oppo.te. any move that is aimed to deprive us of our lawful access to the Pacific Ocean via Salt Creek Road." Brennan stressed that his group J,aa no quarrel with "lhe right of the Laguna Ni.guel Corp. to develop the 100 acres sur- rounding the area. That is their business," be said, "but when it comes to U1eir barring our route to the ocean then it very much becomes the public's business." It was not possible ,at thjs date to state the total funds collected on behalf of Wilcoxen, McCreUand said. "But t h e response is tremendous," he added, "and we want to as.sure anyone who wouJ~ like to back this brave young man in the best way possible that we would welcome their support." Thurston Sets Spring Concert Students of Thurston Intermediate school will hold their sprlng concert Fri- day at 8 p.m. in the school auditorium, 2100 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. . The school's Senior Band, Boys' Glee Club, Girls' OlOrus and Mixed Choir will perform in the concert. under the supervision ol Jeff Fosler. Music will range from "My Fair Lady" to "Scarborough Fair" to spirited marches. Tbe cooctrt'1 fmale will present all four music groups, nearly 150 students, on stage. Tickets are 7S cents for adults and 25 centJ for students. Proceeds will 10 toward music awards." By RICHARD P. NALL Of "'"' DallY Plitt Stiff The Laguna Beach Ftstival or A?s board may sit in judgment of art worU at the All Calilqrqla.Afl ~bit, Festival cllrectors·. ~ c\!fT;I over wbetlier tbe7 ltJ!~ to· w'ho sfioold take fir!£,:·~ aod places. .... Winners receive pu~ .flWards of $500. $400 and Pill aocl Ille Festl•al ·receives the work. The Festival finan- cially support!' the sh0w July 12 to Aug. 24 at the gallery of Laguna Beach Art Associat.ion.' Frequently the bo"'°d in the past has poked fun at the purchase award works most of which are in the realm of modem arl As the board discussed handling the judging duties personally, Director Richard Brooks, a potter. asked in- credulously, "ls this board goin1 over and ~me an art jurY?" The board voted 8 to 1 to handle U1e judging with Brooks voting no. 'He questioned whetl>er the board was the best available talent to deciQe who should win the money. fie suggested lhe board might invite the Festival grounds jury to handle the judging, Director Helen Keeley suggested. thet the board might haridle the juryin& in conjunction with the Festival jury. · Board President William D. Martin said be had no intention of personally trying to choose the top three paintings. Director David Young said after 12 years on the board and looking at past jurylng results at the All California Art Exhibit, he would like to have a share In the responsibility or choosing which works the Festival is buying. Director Paul Griem mentioned all the "hilarity" that greeted past choice of winners. He said with the cr!Ucs nar· rowing the field from 2,000 to eight, he felt competent to vote "one, t"·o and three." Mn. Keeley said, ''I don't · feel ipologetic about my taste; I'm willing to take a whack at it." ' ' Laguna Siude.~ts Ele~t Howard· Hills, P-resment By TOl\.1 GORJ\1AN' or 111e c.11r Plltl 11111 Sixty-ei1ht percent ol Laguna · Beach High School's student body tw-ned out ~t the polls Tuesday to elect junior Howard Hiiis lheir next president. A runoff election today between.Stuart Rablnowltsh and Mark Sizelove will delennine next year's vJcc-preataent. Hills, president of the Progredive Education Club, beat out Dale Anderson and Oavld HuAwict in the nip and tuck election. He ran on a platform of "The time has come today," lhe title of a.SOD& performed by the singing , group The Chambers Brothers., The combined votes of Rablnowlt.sh and Si.telove eliminated · 'Chris Bowman and Gale Mowell ' a s vice-presidential hopefula. Nixon to Report Tonight biaM Jady, whQ ran unopposed, will be installed u lhe new secretarr. Qt!ier 1_1ew officer• who ran 'urloppoted include Charlie Ware, (Student Congress Pre.al-- dent); 'Charlie's brother, Don, (Com· missioner of Organizations); Ma.rk Resig, commisalooer of. finance, and John Reynolds cmuniasloner ,of assemblies aild rallle1. 1 Lucy Boyd beat out Nancy Ashford as .the 00tt aSaiatant treasurer. while ·aeidi 118Uock 'de!ea!ed Debbie White as the new.commlx .• of iiubltcai!ons. Pres:A,,,nt ro Give Outlook on Hopes for Reace p1~~i;;r;:.;;ia~ob.°'.1Y!1/: ;i~1~ ~ r .. Edith Rotffi\. While no one rU for boys' WASHING TON CU / -Alter ne1rly speech a 0 major addres1" cOtltainipg the war ht1d not cbanaed. lie &aid il was 'wtJfare, Shannon'Cook will be next year's four months in offi and amkl 1 Ourry · i"new material." ..Backing that up were "'the e.stabltshmtnl ol condl.Uooe which 'commisstoner 'or &ir11• welfare, after ol cllplomaUc actfvily1 ~t N-••-1 M•-asaure that the people ol. Soulh VIetn8m beJM ·-•over Anne )l'~l!ilry. ' reportstotheAmerlcan-'8tonJCbton ·-•·~·' can 'cletennlne their .,,.. Mure . ..,,. ' MW'°Catha-defea!Oclfouroth<rficil . "the proopeds for peace la Vlelnam." -Nixon scheduled ~ lint Joint cooditlouaUy . ., • as C!'mrnlnl-of pep. llopefuil had Iii· Henry Cabot Lodlt, chief U . S, meetiM: of the cablnet and the National -Ellsworth Bunbr, lhe U.S. am-ctuded bf'Or) ~hell, 8ecky Evans;bevy negotiator at the Parll peace talks. Dew Security Cooncil for Thursday morning, bauador In Saipl, met 18" 'Ult <\llrd Llayctolld Jean M11011. Loron1 · Lum was to Waahington this .ttemoon and •fter the addreu b delivered. Ume In three days with South Vietnamese elected over Claud.Ja Miller as com-- SE:cretary ol St.ale 'Willlan P. Rota's -Senate Republican 'leader Everett M. President Nguyen Vanl'hleu. '\·. mlalooer. ol. correspondence~and eleo- new tnlo Saigon u the Prelident woibd Dlrben, briefed in advance by · Nixon, • -lbe White Houee Aid Lodge wowa be lions. . in the presldenUal part « the White said1 "lt1s going to be-a rather signlficant glvea new ~ons ir;I ~ with Mick~ Glotlelty and Linda Bauer will Hquse on tbt t.est tl. bis 7 p.m. speech, speech. 11 Ni.DJt.4{ter tht !ddma, Oq Monday, Nix· teem Up u nut 7ear'1 achool mucot. • wblcb will be carried u .. by oil tbne -Lodge, on leaving Parll, !hi/': , "'I -4\ed for !Ill Ont ·timo lo -~ chlealed JtaMle · ROwe, · IJld the major televlsioo -· Indicated he lm<W what ,lho wii!I ··~, c..Iptoo W. Abrwl, 11.S. 1 .. 111ofJIUMillerandDrllel16dltm.for Lodge refuted on hlt •rrival in the would announce. "I was In •Vlttnam. ... ~ • ~ the pep.-pcwdtion. -• • " - capital to say anythln( mono than that he the President for conaultatlft.' . 'Nlion'o ~ to run 'h&H ., hour, In the Ollb' other runoff toctay, Jllld was home for "consultations on the Vitt· ''But, of eoorae, I caJfMllt ddp the Presi-II be hil fl,.._.(ull' 1~ on. \')et.. Mumford 1Dd Tncy Sticeo.!_111' ~ nam questioli" al>d lhat "! expect to ,.. deot before he ... )lb llldrosl · 'l!lm· . · for commloelooer ol Pll••dty. .Clody the president wtllJe': am here." tonight." I r , It corOes .t I Ume •htt\ IOl'M~&ors StnUh WU tllm1nlkd lrcm the ballot Although White.. House officials Nied -Rogers, arriving in 'S.ipn for four of Nl1011'1 owu p1rty 'ftre ahowtnc ~in Tuuday. A Los Angeles heart speclall.st today testified that Robert Ervin Brown's ex- amination and diagnosis of patients at a Fullerton clinlc was "entirely com· .patibre" with recognlzed medical prac- tice. ~ · Qr,. Martin S: Goldfarb, a recognized au.Ulority in the field ,of cardiology, (ook I •• . '' fll•r •1 rue ~ (be Nck of medlea.I reconk·be!ore him In the wUness bolt to de{..,;s the •iledrical enginttr who poled A:I· Dr. GI. Lyon Fosler for five weeU at ilit ntll county laclllty. The shock witness. called In by deputy 'pUblic defender Lawrence Buckley at a stage when final arguments were scheduled to commence, commented time ,. alter time as he leafed through paUent records that Brown's orders for drup, and blood, cholesterol, urine a n'"'d ·laboratory tests and heart lim1tati6n ex- ercises were what he himself would have pri-sdibed. In one instance, he noted that Brown examined a SS:year-old male patient at length and I.hen pronounced him to be "an ideal candidate" for hnplanaUon of animal organs in lhe heart area, a new and refined form ol heart surgery. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright looked up expectantly as Go!,!ifarb pondered lhe lengthy diagnosis by the man who readily admits that he poaed as a cardiologist. "I would have done exactly the same thing," Goldfarb said. "All the tests and the resul.Ls fully support such a finding." Enri1ht's cross examlnaUon of the key witness·was not available at press time. Goldfarb's analysis of 10 records of pa- tients in whose treatment Brown was ac- tively involved could possibly tip the scales in favor of the accus~d Alabama man when it comes to the jury's con· sideraUon of the length of his sentence - if Brown is found guilty., Stock Market• NEW YORK (~) -The llloclt market cl<>&e<i wtt.h a fair 1ain today, with brokets reporting hoi)es or peace pro- gresa helping it to advance. (See quota- tions, Pa1es 2&-27). ' Oruge . (;ouC W~tller Extrerhely heavy hate -that weather bureau eupbemi•m Ior smog ~ i.waitj on the hotlzon f~r Thursday. •Ith wnny skies boost.. in& the mercury over Ole 70-de· gret mark. ' INSWE TODA l' Orange Count'1'• Board of Si.'P.ertli&ors hat joined cao&tal Citie• in thdr campaign /or o/f· 1hort oU drillino CMrbs. Paoe 1$. ' ,' The second claim ls from Melita Ji'Omer alleging damages to t a 11 i n g f]O,ooo to an 1partment building sht 0"'1U al tlll ClUf Drive in Laguna Beach, ~she charges that on Feb. 16 "ac- CllR\ulat~ water Oowtng under, through aDd ag1illllt the building resulted in wu.tenlng, cricking ind destroying the tiu.lc slructure ... oot IMOUllClmtnt of lUI)' partlal troop days of coasultaUOI\ Ind observation,, 1 their .-h=flltltnoo a a U.CX o( SUnnan F°""', thlJ year'1 aw.tant withdrawal and llid noi.hlng •pectacular made a point of assuring tbe ~th V 1 ,eyJdeDOe ~ towll'd an e{KI to.~ treauer, will 1Ulom1Ucilly be pro- wouJd be reyealed, they did tenn tl11 namese that the Ame:rican. 11 wer. ----·"'---~m~oled~~t!.o !'nc~x::,I .r.' ~''!.';!'•~tn!!!lllll't~;!r,_. __ ...,._1, ___________ _., __ _ -, ,~ ~ f ., .. • ·~ '( ' • \, ,,. 1 ( . • • • ~ • ' ~ -~- ...... ___ . • .. ct: " -- J DAILY !'MT l • Festival - Y ou,th'~ Courage T~ted;.on Loaa, Ei'-g~rs May Get Ill' .JOll!I VALTEllU ot .. ~, ........ 'lbe atrtam of frleDd1 nowed ste:l4lly lmb the b o 1 p II a I niom. 'lbe7 were Newport Harbor Htgh School lludent. cuttfllg 1 clau or t..'.o to aee a frleod . Oat prdt71lrl abolll 15 11ld thty came ~ Oo1IJon "Cole•' J!ale, 18, WU "I fl'9t.'lllU1 ... ThO converulionl ,..... In I ht partku1ar 1eneraUon'1 1Iang. Words like ••buriuner" and "groovy" abounded. "Yeah, I guess it's a bummer all right,'" Cole Halo Aid quietly u be look· ed at -yet trttd to lsnor• -bll htn- d .. ed bandJ. To make 11 bdler •. Cole will qain,.l11ve lo lop tl>at ,_,.. pool of coarage ~ ht liu"used olltn 'ID hio young Ille. LOST FINGEIUI Its something that ts unpleuant lo talk about, and be doesn1 talt about I~ But bli broth<r, Frank, 23, retattd the wrencblns Impact that the loss of 61> fingers had on Cole last Saturday af. temoon in a freak accident on the docks of Art's Llndlng in Balboa. COle, who has " ••• we.ti, a-rully deep love" for boats, wu starting into his aecQPd month u a dock attendant at the sportfllbblc landlnc. and, aci,plttedly .... looking fotward lo the good pay fmn the coming summer eeuon. Tben something happened. In that most routine of maneuvers with boat.s, be started to Ue the line los&td him from the "Fronlier~onto the dock. The boat lurched at the wrooe Ume and DAll..Y PILOT Stiff l'Mtto STILL ABLE TO SMILE Accident Victim Hale Cole, in angui.ah and terror, saw his lingers rippec_! from his hand!:. STRING OF FRIENDS But it wasn't his hands that dominated his mind at the moment. Frank and the Students Pick Leaders For Next Term at VCI UC Irvine stud~ta today began voting two· others seeking the vice president and on student leaderi for next school yell'. secretary ·officta. Their goal Is to be reaponalve to all facUons at lJCI. Of tbe five running for student body He says they want not so much to try preeldent, ·one la an acttvlst and fO\D' are to puah their own Ideas on the !tudent a1mlng the:fr appeal at 'the silent ma· body ·but to try to pull out those of all the jority. AnOther activist candidate has studentl, inclu<1in4 the activists and the been dllqlWltled. -... conservaUves. Two years ago, Irvine had 1n activist Amon& the campus conservatives ls studeut-pr"Hident in Michael Krllman. Jim Heyne, an 18-year~ld who rang 'the student pmildent this year, Ron doorbells for Ronald Reagan In 1966. He _.,.. Ridgle, i Negro, at Urnes toot anti· ls the onJy candidate who lives off cam· eatablilbment stands, but played no part 'J)US, commuting from Newport Beach. In itudent diuent Over firing of pro-Program direct.or of student acUvltln f.....,., ' this year, lie · bu been fru"1attd by Peralltent aCUvlsm on campus this crttlclllns. He propesea 1 nndom 11~ple .,_ .,,., caUJO ~ elecUoo blctlph -'ofl!!lOii' ~D l!i'i'; cOUl>I~ Of -an thote lludenla who ~ .. "---can best rep~l abOal llllllYlnR and dat1ng[1 ... ms the ~t ..-. ' . ~ -and ......... lo atM-. -feel.. ,Hf ··-·" conunlaalen ~ in-~. ~~ 11·~ 'l'!frr:'lntQ, •. \ucb:_,·thi llrAlf ll!ld -Horman, w1Jo-~jbeal4' and 1,.11111t1an .of . marij-,011#11 ,......., ~ ""'ioliar:ltla b&lr' iferti-fli'long;• --·1o bo lh .. fqr the lluclY. Be iJnabitalni1studeata want .t6'tau-a Roger ltlril. a junior, aays be would raclli:ar appro.o~ . . "'preienl the lludenta and !IOI' be dlc-.. Rriman'• platform includea free tat.ed to "by a feW mrerruat. telf·aeekln& dlltrlbut1on ot1birl,b. C(ll\rol devices by and dogma.Uc indlvtduab:." the ~tudent Health Cenler., ~~g He a~ the driving force for student campw: police, an eod' to gra~ with ·government ahould come from thoae or coui'lel to be taken pus or fall, a public the middle ground. He ~ a addrela S)'llem avlllable lo any lludenl tjghlening of the budget.with !undo lo be or group at the noon hour, publicatibn af spent on .campus 'for .entertainment, and a guide evaluating faculty, and more ad-broadening of opinion among the staff Of ~.,,,._..,.. ........ la lllo lfoli_lloipllal __ _ • 0o1e -thlnkfna a11ou1 111s -her. Dudley, SI, on Ann7 helicopter pllet en route home on emergency leave from Vietnam. · Co~ was vllibly nervous. his tongue cocked above bis upper Up, toes twitching methodically. In conversations he looked al Frank and In ollenl gl..-asked thomand questions. No word had arrived aboul Dudley's return, and both wert worried. (He u. rived late TUesday}. ~ 10ldier'1 arrival Is important - especially lmportant, since tbe three brothers have ooJy each other. Some call it misfortune: olhln coin- cl~. There are many rationales for what the Hale boys have undergone. eole ts 18. HlJ father ls paralyi.ed in a San Francllco convalescent home. His mother, remarried and llvlnl In Northern Calttomla, is allo physically unable to care for the tttnager. SOLID GRADES . Besides maintaining solid grades at Newport Harbor High, .Cole worked as a dock band living at the home of guar· dians, parents of his best friend. He moved to their Balboa home a year ago when Dudley left for Vietnam and .Frank found work in Los Angeles. • "It Is the only choice we haCl. Either have him c<>me with me to Los Angeles, or stay with responsible friends in Newport where he colild work on the boats that he loves so much. It was either that, or Los Angeles," Frank said. Someone else in Balboa al!o thought it a good lGea. "He'11 a real tiger," aald ~ boa, Art Gronsky, owner of Art's Landing. "He always loved to hani around the landing and about a month ago we finally had a chance to sign him on, because our buslne-u was picking up. CHIPPING IN "The «ang down here already has started chipping in a bit here and there ror him," he said. Small allowances from both brothers and Social Security from his seriously ill rather pay for Cole's expenses at bis foster home on the peninsula. "His staying at the home Is much more than just a financial arrangement. He loves it there and they love him as their own," Frank said. And in about three week!' he'll most likely return there and will face the in· evllable challengu that come up when you're 16, full of rugged determJnatlon gained from a lifetime of struggling .•• and you 've lost almost all your fingers. "I guess I'll have to make some ad- justments," he said quieUy ~ stared ···at thi'Wildlges tlat:~ .. ~ They are 'awe.some for a teen-age boy' •. things 111" anear'*e .•. lifrls ... about lhl:·llldtar·'lle .I>~ed. and .Ille work Ol1 th• blgll'icbool ~"'·~· FINAJIQA~ .W:OW;\NCE . . . Fln.lnclally, the allowante1 f.r om brolhen:wlll ·come, an<Mbe Social 8ecori· ty, loo, and the bUls for mgery, hospital care and rehabilitative ltt!atment will come from workman'• compensltlon and Insur~ setUemenlaifJ'Oil\ work. Three ia:however, that.qne. f.J.ei that will alway& remain, iUustrat&l,when a n!lrse entered Cole's · room duriq vi!i.Ul'lg houn. • "\,,. S~e ailced softly: . ' DAILY PILOT Meff ...... Picking Winners Mrs. Weston Walker, chairman of county Beautification committee; Forest Dickason, county planning director, and Harry Babbitt, man· ager of U1e Newport Beach Tennis Club (from left) today are ponder- ing thetr selectiom as 3udges in annual Laguna Beach Mermaids Beautification Contest. Awards for improvement of Laguna's visual image will be passed out May 19. Nixon Plans to Vatation In Oemente-But When? The vacation schedule Is banging on the White HOU!e wall today, but, unlike the boa.! in most major organlza.Uona, Presi- dent Nixon hasn't put down the dates he'll spend in San Clemente. Mn. RJchard NIJ:on told newsmen Tueldly that the flrsl family will spend two weeks or a month at the new llllll· mer White HOuse, whose $340,000 purchase waa anilounced Monday. Just when they will Ylsll the tree- lhrouded villa retreat belng bought from Mrs. Victoria ~ SIO, widow of the late in!lllonaire Democrat Hiram H. Cot· toil, ii lllll an open question. The First Lady said the hectic presidential schedule will probably keep her husband from returning to lhe beachlrorit adobe mansion they visited two months ago until Congress adjourns. 1'hb would put lhe l\1llte House West visit sometime late In the year, around September or .October, unles,, Mrs. Nilon herself or other members of the family 6hould dro~ ln at the IO.room home. ''We h&~en't heard a word about the time," San Clemente City Manager Ken- neth Carr said today. He explained that be would be told Im· mediate.ly ii Police Chief Clifford Mmray had been contacted by White HOUM akles to begip preparing to work with Secret Servicemen' on pttsidentlal'aeCufriy. A completed deal to purchi.. the manlion tnd five surrounding acret of the once-rural rancbland emte for 4100,000 down and the rest over a five year period at 7.5 percent interest wu annotmced Monday. Earlier reports eld the Nii:ona planned to take over the new White Houae West sometime In July, but palnUng, repairs and perhaps even construcUon o{ a rwim· ming pool are yet to be done. Organ. B~cJ.{ . . ' .... An m4ated ·-organ whldl tht r..uva1 of Aria cave lo Laguna' Beach Hlgh )!cbool may be headed ·clo!MIU ·loward the Festival ·ground• "'"'l'-, . The' orpn, wben.--new and Jldity, was ~ed on u a defente bulwirt·.agalnit musician'• wUon pay dtmandl foe the Pqeant of !be Masten. It pr<ived a frail retd of de!e,,... The musician's got their pay ~ l9 AC• ...,.pany the living plcl&ons. · Perhaps tbe oraan wu crafted· under an !Mated star. Four da>? ~ the 1111 Pagean! clmtd,,pack rata cletcended from ti\< hilla 'lnlii the amplittlieiter of Irvine BowJ. · • · '!1loy rubbled at the lllltrumfnt'1 In· nard• with sharp Uttle teeth, muling lt.s m)lhty voice. . " Festival directors, after a few yuks about the rat!, decided l.o retrieve whatever JJOSSible and &ell the organ to lhe highest bldder ~There were no bkls. Then they decided to give It to the echool district on condition that the &ehool districit repair the organ and make It available each summer for uR in th• Pageant. The school thought lhe organ a splendid gift and wrote a n.ice leUer to the Fe!Uval. But the school board declined to pay for repairing the rat-ravaged in- strument. Festival directors were about tn of(er (o pay for half the repair cost when one director said they ought not be chintzy about the gilt and they paid the wlwle $350 repair blll. The hl&b school gol the organ. . William D. Martin, board president. told the Festival board Tuesday with a chort}e, "They want to give the org111 back to the Festival, rat!! and all." ;: Director Stuart Durkee said the orein might be placed on the stage of the new forum theater and rehabilitated. • · Director David Young said the Festival had paid $8,000 for the organ. "It's a damn nice organ and a few people in Cbe coontry stUl enjoy organ music." he !ikl. Dlrector 0 . E. (Bud} Schroeder a!ked, "Why doesn't anyone wact it." Young, possibly referring to past news stories about the organ, said, "It became a wti;ip. ping boy." •. Durkee IUQ tited that It be returned'lo the thuter and "see where we go from there. Conladtd today, Dr. William Ulloco, dlmct superintendent, said he bcliev~ the organ was 5lill operable but there. were some space problems connected with its site. He said the 11.aff would be comulted oo the future of the organ. South Countians:·: Sought for YMCA. ' Relations Trip _. Sooth Orange County youlb w~hill!l·lo attend the YMCA 's Human Re;latioos Laborat«y this weekend must sign up by 'll11mday. . iruuions for minority and poor white the studinl newspaper. atudenta. Posten for BrUc< Mills, 21, bill him as · "Would 'You liJte soritethini for your hands?"· · Besides carpenters and pa.Jnters busy around the grounds, men are ~orklng on a survey to detennlne If the site Is auJted for the future Nilan mwiewn and library. 'Ibe excut3ion, described by t~e YMCA's board of dl~ra: as an ~­ c&tiCNl esperien«:e in inter-personal it- tatiomhip. will be held at POgrim PUies in Yucaipa.· Candida.le Fernando ''Ferd y' • "'Ibe Only·Candld&te Who Reiptcll YOdr : Mualmlno Jr. ls a 20-year-old Arpntina_.. Apathy." barb water polo star. He at.and! al.x feet He offera·fret legal advice for any sf.u. tall, weighs 200 pounds and bu 1 better dent arrested on campus and more time, than a B grade avenge. effort and money .to go toward setting up ·· M•ufmtno ii running on a slate wltb experitnental classes. Rite• Mark Little League Opener Cole loOted at h!r, smiled ~akly, then gated at his bandeges with the two pro· truding index fln1ers •• , ~.back al her. "Oh ••• you mean for the pa.in?'' f'roM Pllfle I SALT CREEK ROAD • • • The $15 cost of the trip, which includea: tramport;ation via. a chartered bus, lodg· lnl. meals, and accident inmran<:i!, must commiulon and county supervm,rs to terly condemns c:oonty 11upervisors for be turned tn at the Y, 4.91 Jl'orut Ave., 1Upport their areument that Wilcoxen is abandoning the thoroughfare "with no Laguna Beach, by 4 p.m. Thursday. flogging 8 dead horse and trying to flout vote and in an action that is contained in 'f'he expected turnout or 40 teens will all established rules of property Jaw. six lines of transcript." leave Laguna at 6 p.m. Friday, and re· You can't lake away a public right or tum at the same time Sunday evening. Wilcoxen argues that the road was way just Uke that, he cont.ends. And you The group discussions will be led by deeded to the county by the State of certainly can't Interfere with tidelands five professional cOllllultants of ~ California In 1933 a1 a pubUc right of way which are obviOU!ly and of neceaslty an YMCA. ~ and that Jts status has not and cannot be area of public domain. Two previous weekends have dri~ changed. He regards pie maneuvering of The hearing will resume in Superior approximately 80 local teenagers. A~·- 'Play Ball' Saturday fte cry "Play Ball!" rlnp out satur- da7 at noon In Lagwia Beach u the llMll Ll!tle League seuon offlclllly opens with f~et mayor 'Jeue Riddle tosalng ~t OMIV PllOT ORAAGI '°"'T "'ll!IHIHO COMPANY ..... ,, "· w,,, ,,.."""' ... l'Wllfllt Jtck a. C•rirr "* l>ra*"I -~ti ,.,,..,..., n-.. ····ii ·-TkMH A. M1,.,t.1 ... ~···-Jldtti P. N1U ,,__ (If)' ...... ---121 ht.t A••· W.m_, M41"'°! f.O. hs UJ. f2UZ . --Cell• ,_.., ....... , ....... .......... l.llidl; "" .... , ........ ....... """"""" 9ffcll: .. S411 lfl'IM _.fa - ,.._ __________ __, • tht first ball at the field named In hi s 'honor. Colorful ceremonieii at Riddle Field ln Boat Canyon wjll open the M:aaon prior to a double feature of baseball, with teams from both Laguna 's American and Na- Uonal leagues in opening action, American League Elka and Pottery Shack teema will be featured in the opener. Thll game will be followed about 3 p.m. by a National League contest between Rmry and VFW. . Outing the noon opening ceremonies, members of both Natlon1l 1nd American league teams will be introduced. Laguna Beach High School Band wlll be on band u will Mayor Glenn Vedder and other clty ornclal.s and Larry Hunt and Wally Chrlaty, }W't.Sidents of National and AinerlCan LeagUeS, l'OlpteUvd)>. S~l recognltloft wlll be given Marv Dlerk.; oul'lolnR Amerloan League presl· dtnt: Dtn Houlton, former Kiwanis team matllitf: and ilon Cooley, form<r ~II manqer who became a Ml· Umt Umpire. Cooley will bo presenltd the City's 'l'ro!llll' WOO by bll Opllmlst squad. M..acm. cotcbeo, bit boys and '""' motherl who will be Introduced -In that PoweU Enters Race . For NY Mayors' Seat NEW YO"llX (AP) -Rtp. Ad1m CllytM Powett, veteran eooatWJntn lrom tM Harlem dlsttlet, hu en\fnd the race for the Democratic nomlnlUon for N)'«, mtk:lnc a field '11 ~--Poo#tll filed his nomlnetfnJt petlUon1 'J'Ueaday, t.lle deadline. His rivals In the Democratic primary June 17 lnclude rorme mly0i'"l!Obcli't"F:-Wa111er and author Normen Mitiler. ~ ' Laguna Niguel towards acqlllsiUon of the Court before Judge Owena at 10:30 a.m. dlti.onal information i.<; available at tlia order -lni:lude: footpath as highly BU1plclous and be ut-Thursday. Y, or by calling 494-9431. · Klwnl1 -Phil Griffl~1• Hank MUler, I..::;:;:::::::::::::::::======================::;:======:;:, Steve Griffin and Belt Mwir. · / ~ J>oUet7 ~k -J!)el Snyder, nu... Landr<th, Philip McCarty. Juanit. Hogan and Betty Armstrong. Elb -Leroy Comwtll, E 1 r j Carpenter, Mike White •nd Nancy Let. Lapaa Federala -Martin Kruger, Nick Gllluple. Randy Jobnaon and Su.sle Johnson • VFW -Chock Benton, Jacll Kennedy, Mike Newton and Charlotte McManUJ. Uou -Frank Buck, Jim Armstrong and Don Wickham, Randy Back and Kim· my Knapp; Stacta Annstrong. Sptrta World -Roy Wanl, Jack Pen- neJ and Bob Sclloek, Gr.g Harner and Rene Oliver, Judy Penney. Rotary -Dtek Nunis, Pren Ta ylor, Scott BeMon, Kay Goodman_ Director of the Minor Leatue is Trlltan Kro11:lus. omc:era and directi>ll ol lli< American Leque lnclUd• Ctlril!Yo prealdent; Chuck Payne, vlct pmldent; ~ Llljeatnnn, socretary; Car<>l Cooley, treuurer: Poul Wrtght. playm agent : Kathy Dlllllqulll, cant et n; Wally Otrla:ty, equlpmen( m&nager · Jerry Johnlon, at.Ustltlan; Ron ~...... publicity: Horbert Let, "rety offic«; 'l'rls ,K..,tµs, minor dlrectw: Paul Wr!lht. ~~· Ol!icen anil dittclon o \be Natloo1l Letl\I< Include Hunt, pml : \lb1ll1la Hunt. vke presid1t1l; Y v o n n • Czmllacbow•kl, aecretary; J ., ry McManut, treasurtr; Gene Wilbur, pla,..,.• qenl: Bruce Canc:li. -..,,. pir<; J1ckle Buck, statilllcta: Stacia ArmM>Dtl, publicity: Fay NeU.·conteeo: Pit Pattuaon, aalety diroctor : Pren T1ylor, epecial eventl. • Cotchea of the Minor Lta"* Include Jim Vjbfftoo, F......, Cllr-. Bob lffiilh~-Klll ind-Wllllll'd Br;>do. far one month only acne 200/o Oil T~l•'.• EIGnmd" and Klnq Richard pattcu l.n eolld all••r CONVENIENT TERMS • IANl<AMERICAkD M sn ~l;!Ak&E ·-· --....... J. C. · )/umpf:r;~ 'Jeweler~ uir NEWPORT AVENUE -COSTA-MltA'·-----~-· ' (, T• ·--$11.IO 21 YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE •. lil·HOL .. ,; ' • ;- i .. I • .-•• • • • . :-· J . ·--. 'foday's F lnal N.Y. Stocks ' ' · YOL 62, NO. 115, ~ SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' --• \,VED~Y. t:ijA'\' "f4, 1969 • " JEN CENTS . \ Salt. Creek Road Hinges on Hour Arguµient By TOM BARLEY Of 111t DellY PAlt Steff .Botti sides in the dispute agree that the Mre of Salt Creek Road rnay binge on .0 estimaled hour o! argumen<Tbunday In Superior Court. -.. li'or inueb of that hour will be devoted to ~ ~ach attorney William wncm:en. And he will have to convince ~udge Claude Owens; as he failed lo con- vince him in an earlier hearing, that the £,.guna Niguel "Corp.'s acquisition of the public right o! way w .. ID acl of fraud: WUOOUll bellevea tbal he hu al1'1dy provad his point In the volwnlnoos peU- tiom and doultn be hu flied wtUt Judge ~ In pre-bearing actloo. But be will haWJ to IO throu"1 what are the motions in the law and motion .Uvision and ham· mer 1)ome-verbally 'what be bu , very bluntly stallld in wrti.n fonn. WUcmtn may reel that two in- temipllaol ol his tatlmony -he could not complete his statement MODday and a * * *' -. Lquna Niguel la"Y'f's proviou> ........ ment prtVented Tuaday's hearinl lolllC Into Ute afte,,_, boon -will not help his case In tenns ol the Ouldlty and coa- tlnUity ol what he fttlt to be a convincing .argument But supporters of lbe battlinc Art Col<my lawyer look on those intdrupUons -ccrtalnl,y the first lnlerniptlon Monday -as an act of provideJJct, For their champio~ was visibly angqed by the long, pamstaking atlaw oo upecll of )Us suit by Laguna Ni111<I allomey Mike McConnick. . "A complete sham •.• a ireen ll&bt for saying everything IDd anyUtlng 'he can about us ••• serious and unfounded ac- tw1aUons against public offlclals ••• ruthleu, rash char&es " McConnlck pulled out all lhe stops In a tirade 'that eventually broogh Wilcoxen's co-plaintiff, Mldlael Sagar. to bis feet to object "to this attack upon the character of Mr. Wilcoxen." Wllcohn, obvlausly angry IDd gaUter- tng ateam. wu ail abort by Judge Owens as he WIS' obvklualy ge.utnc klto IOIDe COWJler-charces IDd told to wait unUI Tueaday., He faced the. court on Tuesdliy morning calm· and collected and ob- vioully determined to '1play it cOOI." Laguna Ntguel's usual battery· ol lawyers -McConnlck. Eugene Bell, and Alex Bowie, with the support of Deputy County Counsel Thomas Conroy -hu of- fered the ccrporation':s final arguments. They will, of course, hav e the opport.unlty to reply td Wilcoxen's summation before Judge Owens rules on the dispute. They contend that Laguna Niguel hu lawfully acquired ~ .aban~ Sale Creek Road and that its Inclusion in the 100..acre development planned by the cor- pOration cannot be challenged on the basis or any existing law. And they have, they say. the aban- donment action of the co_µnly planning (See SALT CREEK. Pal' I) Down the Wilcoxen Mission Gets Help Real Physician Testifies Trail ' • Point Yacht Ouh Entry RightOK'd Of Surfers Hundreds of South Coast surfers are determined that the fmancial strain im- posed on Laguna Beach lawyer William Wilcoxen by the many hours he has devoted to the Sal1 Creek Road issue will not "wipe out" the Art. Colony attorney. 'Dr. Brown' Impressive DANA POINT - A righl of entry aJreement: to property now owned by the Dana Point Yacht Club was approved between the county and the club Tuesday by, the Board of Supervisors. -The P,act will allow the Harbor District ~ss to the Yacht Club praperty at the south end of the Stnet of the Violet Lantern in order to construct "a portion ot the extension of Del Obispo Street" \llhich will border the now-under.con· 1truction Dana Point Harbor. The county is in negotiation with the Yacht Club to buy the property in the a~ futuie, following an appraisal. • Sheep for Campus MISSION Vl&JO -From IOO to !,OQO )1old ol sheep wi}I gra .. on tile Sa~· dleback Colltge permanent ·campus beginning next week as trustees pick up some income for temporary UJe of the Property. Grattan Bidart, ol El Toro, bid U $ns per head per day to graze his sheep l!\tre until Jul,y 15. Onl,y a small part of tlii 200-tieres owned' by the college l!I being graded 'for first prefabricated buildings for next fall. .• Viejo 60P Rallv MISSION VIEJO -An old fashioned political rally ii planned by the Mission Viejo Republican Women's Club for 7 p.~. May 2S at the Mission Viejo High Sd>ool multi.purpose room. · 'l1le rally will feature a buffel·6lyle #ken dinner, patriotic music sung by Ulj!·Slng Out Amigos group, 8l'ld rag-time riiusic played by Saddleback Junior College students. Tickets are $3 per person and ere aVailable from club members and Mrs. Paul ·ructer ticket chairman. Tickets will Id 'ht sold at the door, Mrs. Collins said. ·e Yaw• Class St ar ts ., ~MISSION VIEJO -Controlled weight, added poise and longer life are tile benefits held out for a new yoga class &tarting at the Mission Viejo Reaeation center. . · Renee Taylor, auUtority on yoga. lee· lurer and traveler, is conducting the ~s Monday evening from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. for eight consecutive weeks. t Two More Flood pamages Oaims Total $67,500 Coord~g \heir efforts to provide dollar support for Wiicoxen in his bid to preserve the public right of way is Bren· nan McClelland, president of the United States Surfing Association and that organization's representative on the International Surfing Federation. McClelland. 3U31 Ceanothus. South Laguna, left Tuesday's inconclusive hear- ing oo the Salt Creek Road battle to con- firm that area surfers had opened a fund devoted to Wilco1.en's campaign in the United California Bank branch at Lagwla Beach. "We deeply admire this young Abe Lin~ coln," McClelland said, "and we have decided that we would like to use 'this pradl~ way of ~iQI him pre1erve a rijlit ot. ow tllllt· )i ;. >rital lo llllJ'ferr seeking access to tile ocean." "And-'lhal fuud will be .maintained regardtea of what Iiappens \II thjs ""1'· rent court action/' McClellaDd stressed. "\Ve will conUnue to oppoae,' any move that is aimed to deprive µs o[ our lawful access to the Pacific Ocean via Salt Creek Road.'" Brennan stressed that his group had no quarrel with "the right ol the Laguna Nlgue1 Corp. to develop the 100 acres sur- rounding the area. That is their business," be said, "but when tt comes to their barring our route to the ocean then it very much becomes the public's business." It was not possible at this date to state the total funds collected on behalf of Wilco1en, McClelland said. "But t h e rcspollSe is tremendous," he added, "and we want to assure anyone who would like lo back this brave young man in the best way possible that we would welcome their support." . Thurston Sets Spring Concert Students of Thurston Intermediate school will hold their spring concert Fri· day at 8 p.m. in lhe school auditorium, 2100 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. The school's Senior Band, Boys' Glee Club, Girls' Chorus and Mixed Choir will perform in the concert under lhc supervision of Jeff Foater. Music will range frcim •1My Fair Lady" to ''Scarborough Fair" to · 1pirited marches. The concel1'1 finale will present all four music sroupa, nearly 150 students, on stage. Tic.tet.s are 7S cenfi fer adults and 25 cents for students. Proceed.I will 10 towanl music awardL Festival Board May be Judges Of Art-Exhibit . By RICHARD P. NALL Of .. DIMr .... lllff ,,., ........... /. . • By Phll' lnt1r11ndl The Laguna Beach Jl'esUval or Arts board may sit ln ~· of arf wOrb at !he Ali' caIU~'~ • · ·~ ,: ~' FesUval ·cllreclor! 1 . . d!lleftd ~: ="1o1:',:J.C' ::..~ -; pl-. Winners receive puka,e awarda fJI $500, $400 and $.lllO and Ute F..tival receives the work. The Festival finan- cially supports the show" Jult 12 to Aug. 24 at the gallery of Laguna Beach Art AssociaUon. FrequenUy the board In the past has poked fun at the pwdlue award works most of which are lo the. realm of modern art. A! the board discussed handflng the judging duties pe.nonllly, D irec t or Richard Brooks, a potter, asked in. credulously, "Is this board going over and become an art jury!" The board \IOled 8 lo· 1 to haodJe the judging with Brooks voting no. He questioned whether the board was the belt available talent ·to decide who !ihould win the money. He suggested the board might invite the Festival grounds jury to handle the judglng. Director Helen Keeley .1ugge1ted that the board might handle the jurying in conjunction with the Festival jury. Board President Wiiiiam D. Martin said he had no intention of penonally trying to chime Ute top Utree paintings. Director David Young said after 12 years on the. board and looking at past jurying results at the All California Art E1hibit, he would like to have a share in the responsibiJidr: of choosing which works the Festiv&r ls buying. Direct.or Paul Griem mentioned all the "hilarity" that greeted past choice of winners. He said with the. critics nar- rowfug the field from 2,000 to eight, he felt competent to vote "ooe, two and three." Mt1. Keeley said, "I doo 't feel apolocetic about my \&'le; I'm willing to . take a whack at it.." I • ' < ' .. I 0: ,, . . • • I •./ "Haro I' LI o. In An ~ .. c.a..y, l :Havo All t~o Tim• In th o World • To Palnt·ao\cl I ka,;11."NOtfililt io Say."" ' ' ' "" •" I . . . ' .. Laguna Students Elect Howard Hills President By TOM GORMAN Of .. Dloltr Pu.t Maft Sixty.eight percent of Laguna Beach High School's Btuden~ body turned •out at the pol~ Tuesday to elect junior Howard Hills their nnt president. A runoff ele.cUon today between Stuart Rabinowitsh and Mark S~love will determine next year'• vlce·prea:ident. Hill.!, pnalcienl ol Ute ~ive EducaUon Club, beat out Dile ~enon and Dav>l lluatwick In the nip and luck election. He ran on a plaltonn of "The Ume bat come tqdly, '' the-title. of a eong performed by . llie ~l!il)I group The Chambers Brothen. . The combined votes of Rablnowitsb and Sjzelove eliminated cbris Bowman and Gale Maxwell a s \lice.presidential bopeluls. Djane Judy, who ran unopposed, will be lnstalJed.u the. new .secretary. other new olHcers who· ran unoppoeed .include Charlie Ware, (Student Congress l'resi· dent): Charlie.'1 brother, Don, (COm- miasloner ol. or1antiaUons)"Mark Beslg, cOhimlaioOer of finance" and John Two mo re. claims totaling $67,500 Reyno&dl commiaiooer . of assemblies which charge orange Collnty with N • R · T e h' mt nWes. responsibility for nood damages in the t f ·g t lloguna Btach area during the January IXOil 0 epor . Oll·I _ '. Lucy iloyd bee( Oil\ Nucy Allllonl .. and FebrUary storms were denied and the nut aasiitant treuurer. 1'bDe Uekll ~ei·red-to the county counseJ Tuesday Halloi;:t difetwd Debbie ' White •• tbe bJ, the Board of Supervbors. Dew ~ of publlcaUona . . The two bring lhe total flood damag.. p ide t to G. 0 tlo .nk on If f Peace ... . Next year's social aCtlvlUea wlll be sought in !he area to dale lo more than res n ive U V Opes Or planned by Peggy Hobn, wh<I defeated '215,000. , F.difh Roesen. While no ri ran for boys' • Veterinarian Garnet Rose Trevino, also WASHINGTON (UPI/ -After nearly IPf!tcb a "major address" containing the war bad aot chared. He ~d Jt·T.·u welfatt, 'Stwmon Cook will be ntlt yur'• iTiown as Dr. Garnet Rose Ekeberg, rour monlbs in otfice. and amid a fhmy "new material." &dine that up were "the e.atabl.lshment ol' coodl"°"' whldl C(l'r'llmissi~e;r ol girls' welrare, after w1111ts $57,500 f<r damages to her pro-of dlpbnaUc activity, Prllident Nison tbMe factors : assure lb.at the ~ of South Vletnam ISeing choeen over Anhe Wellst.ry. petty at 20.172 Laguna Canyon Road reports to the American people tonil(bt On can determine tbelf own hiture urt-Margot Cather, defeated four otber' girls whlch alleg<dly occurred on Jan. 21 11\d "the proopects for peace ill Vlelmm." -Nblon scht4uled bit fin! joint condltlooally." ' as·"""""-ol pep. llojJefull had Jn. f-'>. 21. • _ ·-. .-Henry Cabot Lodlo. ddel I/ .5. meett,. Cl Ute cabinet IDd the NaUooal -EDowol1h Bunker, the' l'.S. am-eluded Btm Eichell. l!eckr Enns. Devy Witness Says Tests, Diagnosis .i\11 Compatible A Los Angeles heart specialist today testlfied that Robert Ervin Brown's el• aminatlon and diagnosis of patients at a Fullerton clinic was "entirely com· patible" with recognized medical prac- Uce. Dr. Martin S. Goldfarb, a recognized authority in the field al cardlolOg)', IOOk Ill• ind file from the otick of medical ~ b<f...e him u,·Ute witness box to defend the eledricaJ ..,..;.., who posed ... as or. GlefU\ Lyoo l'oster for five weeks •!Iha oorUt couni, lacility. The slioclc wltDe&t, called In Joy deputy public defender Lawrence Buckley at a stage when final arguments were scheduled to commeoee, commented time after time u he leafed through patient records that Brown's orders for drugs, and blood, cholesterol, urine an d laboratory tests and heart limltaUon ex4 erclses were what be himself would'hava prescribed. In one Instance, he noted that Brown examined a ~year-old male patient at length and then pronounced him to be "an ideal candidate" for iinplanation of animal organs in the heart area, a new and refined form of heart surgery. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright looked up expectanUy as Gofdfarb pondered the lengthy diagnosis by the man who readily admits that he posed as a cardioJoglst . "I w9t1ld have done exactly the same thing," Goldfarb said. "All the te~ts and the results fully support such 1 finding." Enright's cross examination of.the key: wit~ was.not available. at~ time.· Goldfarb's analysis of JO records of pa. tients in whose treatment Brown was ac- tively Involved .could possibly tip the scales In favor· of the accused Alabama man when It comes to the jury'• con. sideratlon of the leng'lh of his senteoce - lf'8rown Is l"'nd guilty. S teele MGf'lcets NEW YORK (APJ -The sfuck market closed with a fair gain today, with brokers reporting hopes of peace pri> gress helping it to advance. {See quota- tions, Pages 26-27), or .. f e Weadler ,E<l{~ely heavy h112e , -ihat weatl:ier buretu euphemism for smog -await! en the horizon for Thursday, with IUMY skies boost- ing the mercury O\IU the 70-de• gree mark. INSIDE TODAY ·:;i;e charges the county with "laillng to negotiator at Ute Paris -lllb, 0... SecurilJ' Ccundl"t..-Tlllndat .-ntng, busador 1D-SaJcoo,. met "fOf the thlnl Woyd and Jeon Malon. Lorana Lum w11 ~de a sufficient waterway for rain to Wubington this aftemoan ud after tbe address is delivered. time lo three ¥YJ With South Viet.nainele elected over Claudia MJller u com-Orange Countv•1 BooTd of rUi10tl " S.cretary of State W'dllm P. Jloten -Senate Republican leader Evett!! M. rr..-N'py~ Yan Neu-· mtaaton<r o! -·~ IDd' eJec. S~J)frt11.!ors hos foln-.d COGllaJ . the 0 claim includes $3,000 for loss o( I~ new into Saison as the Praldent worked Dlrben, briefed in advance by Nlloi, -The Wbttfi ,ffou. said Lodge woukl be lions. clttls in their campaiqn for off~ c:ome. $S,OOO damage to improvementa; In the pres.Jdentlal part G( the Whitt ~ "Il's golng to be. 1 rather significant &)vtn ,,_,,_ imtrvctms In mtetlnp wlttl -"WCkeJ' Cilotlelly and, Li.nila Biuer wlD' shore oU drUUno curbs. Paar 15. Jl,5CIO for labor and equipment, 110,000 House oa the tut of bis 7 p.1n. lpee.Ch, speech." : ffi&Onlf'et-theeddrets.OnMonite,y,Nla· team up u nut Yt•r*'l~sdN>ol""mUcot. ,;.... 1, .... ._ u for mental suffering, and $40,000 to which will be carried liv,e by 111 three -Lodae, on leaving Paris this, mom ins j on eontdlu:_d for tht flnt ~ in ~ '.Q>er ·ddf!t.led .J.e.amte1 ftowf, and tbt IMM• :n :;: ..., restbre real property. major television oetworU. lndkaled he, kin what-tbe .. Pllkld WWI: Gen. Crtl&l*n W. Abrams., U.S. tMm ~ill Mlu,r and DIDlll Adam;. tor ~==--:i .......:.,ir:_ +?! The second claim ls from Melitaa Lodfe refmed on bla: arrt\lal ln the would announce. "J wu. um1KJned bj c:Ommamw·Ja VletDam. ·Ute pep posjtbl. ' c,...,... ~ .,_ c..r u F.i:nter alJqinf damages tot1llln1 c.pttal\oaayll'l)'tblncmorethlnthatbe thtPresldmtfwconadW...,.,beaaid. Nb:oo't eckha:, to"IUll hall aa'hOur,· :111 tbe Oft]Jr ether runotr LodaJ, Janet ~==:..... n ·;::.......,. : •lb,000 to an apartment building sbt owns wu home for "consuttaUO. on O>e Vi& "But1 ol coune, cm..x ICecip the J>ftD. wlll be bis f1nl full sta&8Deld • ~ Mumfotd and Tracy Stice wlU e11mpete. =........ ~: =! _.. = ai ·JWCliHDriveinLlgunaBeacb. nam~l'andthlt"l ·ar.ecttosere dent before he m&m'<bls addriu 'oani. fQr: comnUutoner of publicity. Ctndy" '""'"" ,. ... • 0r • ...._,... • ',$he charges that on Feb. 2tl .,ae.-theprWldentwbllelamben.' toniCbt." • '' Jtcaam1t1Umewheaeometenatom S',.uth ,wu eUmlnaled from the~· :;_'::"_. ::; =:..=----: ;u~~!tn;1':e 0Q,.,unde~~ ~~'::,== d;;,~~~m~~;.1;:,t= .~~=-..... ~=.::-=:: ~Jiatnet.'.lhll1ear'.1.ual8tl~ ~· ~ == .i -.alcmtng, cracking and destroying the withdrawal and said nothing spectacular ma~ a point of a•n:tna .. ~l'Jll\.:;J.V~ oi.pa111e9*.lowird.aaJeocL~ · tr--.ut«, w · 1~llJ-l>"'1 ... ;--t·~._......,..,...,1c, '•·-='-."' .. '-'·--.-.-'+--~-H bask-llnk!lur~~ ;..............WOOJ<t-be -reYealed;""the.f-dfd 1mtrlhe-n~that ~Aiiimtii\1iltiedf_ .. la;.-'war. .. ·/.," mGlt4 to ne.xl y.,t's UUa\trtr . ... '"'·"' . ' • ' • f' • • • . . l I ' _,. I D.111.V I'll.OT • W<4nHUy, ..., 14, i969 • It. Was ·a •nn111 Youth's Courage Test,ed ,on Lost FiDgers 11J JOllN VALTEllU ' .... Wr PUii .... The ltrtllll ol lrlendl flowed lleadlly kM the b o 1 p l t a 1 room. They were NewpoR -lUgb School -~ttbtc • class or two to tee a friend. one P"llY girl aboul 15 said they came became Colston "COle•• Hale, IS, wu "• free IOUL'" 'lbe convtn1Utiiis wm bl t h t partk:\11'1' generaUon's alang. Words like •'bummer" and "groo\1)'11 abounded. "Yeah. I guess Jt's a bummer all right," C.Ole Hale old quietly as he look· ed II -yet tried lo Ignore -hll bln- daged blndl. To.mate it better, Cole wUJ again have lo lap lhll ....,... pool ol coor11e lhll he bu Wiid often In hil young life. L08T FINGERS lb something thal Is unpleuanl lo wt aboii~ and Ile doesn'l lalk about II. But bJs lrother, Frank, 23, related the ~ ,Impact thal the loss of 611 fiilgers had on Cole tut Saturday af. t.emoon in a freak accident on the docks of'Art's Landing 1n Balboa. :?111.""Tt.:ct::;,~ Colt -Wnklne -Ml • Dudley, 21, 1n Army btllcopter pilot oo "n!Ute home on emergeDCy leave ~ Vietnam. Cote was v1albly· nervous, hl.s tongue cocked above his upper lip, tots twitching methodically. In conversations he looked at Frank and ln silent glances asked lhoUaand qQt!tloos. ~ No word hid aTrived about Dudley's retum,-ud-bothJ.ere... worried me .,... rlyed late Tu"'1ay). The aoldier'a arrival is important -~especially lmPortant, since the three brothers have only each ot.Her. Some call It misfortwie; others coin- cidence. 'l'.bert are many rationales for rl;,c}--":hat the Hale boys have undergone. Cole Is IL Illa father i> paralyzed In a san Francllco convaiesctnt home. ' His mother, remarried and living ln Northern caU!ornia, " alao physically unable to care for the ttenaaer. SOUD GRADES • Be~es mainlaining solid· grades at Newport Harbor IUgh, Cole worked as a dock hand living at the home of gu&r· Cole. who has ". , • well, a really deep love" for boat.I, was atarµng Into his aecood month u a doct ~ant at the sportllahlnJ llndlng, one!. ldmllbdly was looklog lonrud to the good PIY from the com1ng summer R&&On. DAILY PILOT Miff PMM STILL ABLE TO SMILE Accident Victim Hilo dians, parents or his best friend . t1i;....-f!fi-:, He moved-to their Balboa.home a y ago when Dudley left for Vietnam and Frank found work in r.os 'Angelel. Then IO!llelhlng happened. In that most routine of maneuvm with boats, be started to tie the line tossed him from the "Frontier" onto lhe dock. Tbe boat lurched at the wrona time and Cole, In anclWh and terror, ,.,. hil fingers ripped from his handl. STJlING OF FRIENDS But it wasn't his hands that dominated his mind at the moment. Frank and 'the "It is the only choice we had. Elther have him come with me to Loe: AngeJes. or slay With responsible friends in Newport where he could work on the boats that he loves so much. It was either that or Los Angeles," Frank said. Someone' else in Balboa also thought it a good iciea. "He's a real tiger," aald h1.s baa, Art Gransky. owner of Art's Landlng. Picking Winners • DA11.Y Ptl.OT tt•ff ..tii. Students Pick Leaders Eor Next Term at VCI "He always loved to hang around the landing and about a month ago we finally had a chance to sign him on, because our busine!ls was picking up. CHIPPING IN _Mn, \Veston Walker, chairman of county Beautification Committee; Forest Dickason, county planning ~rector, and Harry Babbitt, man- ager of the Newport Beach Tennis Club (from left) today are ponder· ing their selections as judges in annual Laguna Beach Mermaids Beautification Contest. Awards for improvement of Laguha's visual image will be passed out May 19. -"The gang down here already has started chipping in a bit here and there for him," he said. . UC lrvlne students today began votlng two others seettng the vice president .and Small allowances from both brothers secretary offices. nteir goal ls to be and Social Security from his seriously ill on stu4ent leaden for next school year. responllve to all factions at UCI. father pay for Cole's expenses at his Of the five running for student body He aays they 'want not 80 much to trY foster home on the peninsula. Nixon Plans to Vacation president, one ill an activist and four are to push tl)elr .own ideu on the student "His staying at the home is much more aiining their pippeal at the silent ma· body but to try to puU out those of all the than just a financial arrangement. Ha joiity. Another activist candidate bas · atudenbl, including the activi!~ and the loves It there and they love him as their been diaquallfied.. conservaUves. own," Frank :said. Two years ago, Irvine had an activiat Among the campw; conservatives is And in about three weeks he'll most In Clemente-But When? Btudent president ln Michael Krisman. Jim Heyne, an 18-year~td who rang likely return there an·d-wlll face the in· 1be student president thia year, Ron doorbell• for Ronald Reagan ln 1966. He evilable challenges that come up when The vacation 1ehedule Is hanging On the llldgle, a Negro, at Umes took anti-is the only candidate who lives off cam· -you're 16, full ~f :U&&ed detem:iinalion White Houae wall today, bu1, ..unlike the establishment stands, but played no part pus, commuUng from Newport Beach. gained Crom a lifetime of struggling · · • boss in,m011t major organiµ.tions, Presi· tn student dissent over firing of ~ Program director of atudent activlties a.lid you\'e lost almost all your fingers. dent Nixon h"a!n't J!'lt doWn 'the dates fesaora. this. year, he hu been frustrated by . "I gues~. I'll h~ve t~ make .some ad· he 'll spend in San Clfmente. Pen!Jtenl 1ctlvlnn on .cam. $fi~ lie Pf?JlllR' a~"' oa~. ~·~ll· e said 9w~Uy,\.., he ,lilared, Mrs. Richard Nixon told newsmen :,,~.::~ l J~~Ca~~,.~ •, · • I ~• ~~,&.~.• ~e!~~~ ~ ~f=~ :1w'::~ about atudylns, aDll dalinl. i,af.lal thl ~ 'l!bm-•• lh.ffig~ like ~PJ)':&faACe ·!· • Is • • • mer White House, whose $340,000 rbotorfu ..i p<otal ii.olltii. l[OI!!! ·f<t!!p.. .!lie ~ ·-~11;dool-'t: aboul the. 1Ui11r lli a the. work purchase was aruiounced Monday. ''Ille ·ICllYlll '~'itii".,-l,!~11'!'. c#'Y lbt6 ~ouch Y:, ' all aJid onlhe . ii1clio01"i'Y ' Just when lheY will visit lhe tree- Peilt !Y.!!;!L , """" .,. -~ ~·,Fm · ~-. ' .. '.' ' ohrouded villa retr<ll being bollgbl lrom ®'i iiol!-liio , _ ~ ,. Iii Ill lllftlf tar Oil. • , •• · .[ln~alf), tjie >llowanca Jr 0 m Mn. 'Victoria Colton,. "'· widow of lhe He-NW.IN .1"•"ed• nit to ~ a Rqt9'-Ktne.-a janivt, .. 11.J>e ·wouJd-··liOibln:ff~:.:iooine SOCl&t~l=--~e Democrat Hiram H. Cot. fa~ approach. repreaent the atudtnb aJ\d not .be die-t too and the bill. fOr surgery hospital kin, ia rtill an open quesUon. Re{llWl 11 p1alfena lncludes free tiled to "by a fri' utremitt, 1ell"'8eeking y, ~ habillta~ve treatment will The First Lady said the hectic d1ltributlon of b1ft1i ·control devices by and dogmatic lndlvkfualJ." care. f re km•n'a ~atton and presidenUal schedule will probably keep tbe".~ent Health,. C.enter, •diUnning . He auerts the driving force for ltudent come n>m wor ~ls IW.m work · her husband from returning to the campus police, a.n enc( to ired~ witb gOv~ent ahouJd come Crom thole of ~an~~ernentb (~ fad ihat will beachfront adobe i:nanslon they . visited COUl'lel to be taken pua or fail, a public the .Dilddle . gnnmcl. He propofN!8 ':a al ~verillU.:ated when· a nurse two months ago until Congress adJQurns. address l}'ltem available to aqy lludtnt tighteiJJn&ol the budget ·'fritb tunds to be ways , • · . . . This would put the White House West or group a1 the noon hour, publlcaUon of spent Oft Wnpus ~ en~ti and e.nt~ ~Qt.~ 1 room .. durinl vtsiting visJt sometime late in the year, ar~und a gukie evaluating faculty, and more ~ broadmilnR Of opinion among tbe ·ataH of hoW's. J_ed ff ! September or October, unless Mrs. Naon miaaions for minority and poor whlte the stqdent newspaper. ~he •:id.. so 1. y: • thin ' f herself or other members of the family students. Posten for Bruce Milla, 21, bW him as \V~! you like some g or your C&ndldate Fernando t •Ferdy . • ''Th.e Qnly ~.date WhO Re~ts Your hands? . should drop in at the t'O-room borne. "We haven't heard a word about the tlrne," San Clemente City Manager Ken- neth Carr said today. He explained. that he would be told im· mediately if Police Chief Clifiord Murray had been contacted by White Houee aides to begin preparing to work with Secret Servicemen on presidential security. ~ completed deal ta purcliUe the mansion and five surrounding acrta af the ClllCe:rural ranchland Wte for $100,000 ·doWn and the rest over a five year perioa at 7.5 percent interest wu announced -~onday. ' EarUer reports said the Ni.xoru plaMed to take over the new White Rouse West .sometime In July, but painting, repair• and perhap! even comtruction of a swim· mJng .pool are yet to be done. Besides carpenters and painters buay around the grounds, men are working on a survey to determine U the site is sUited for the future Nixon museum and library. • Muaimino Jr. ill a 20-year-old ArgtnUna· Apathy.'' Cole looked at her, ~.oo weakly, then born water polo star. He stand.a aiz feet He offera free Jega_J advice ror any ltU· g.~ a~ his b~es With the two pro· From Page J . tall, weighs 200 pound.a and bu a better dent arrested on campus and more time, ttuatng index fingers , , • the~ back at than a B grade averqe. effort and money to go toward .eUlnj up btr. . " SALT CREEK ROAD • • • :Festival • May Get Organ Back . . , . ' • l • • An fil.fllad tlecln>ol&Mllft W~ Ibo F..U~1I of Aris gav• 10 Llg1llll Buch Htgb School moy be helded ·dOW11lllll low'1d the Festival pounds qilo. Tbe organ. when new andflh:ln>', ••• looked on as a defeo1e buJwark a1a1nBt mutcian'a union pay demands for the Pagnnt ol the Masten:. Jt pro_. a frail reed ol defense. The musician's a:ot their pay hikes to ac· company the living pictures. Perb.lpl lhe orpn was ct\ltOl("under an fil.fated star. FOW' ·11aya before the 1966 Pag<anl clooed, i>a~ rni·<\<l!'inded lrom the hills Into the amphithe~ter ol lrvioe Bowt: . They nibbled at the instrumf:nfs In· nards with aharp little teeth, mutin& its mlghly voice. • Festival directors,· after • few yuks a~t the rats, decided to retrieve. whatever possible and sell the organ to the highest bidder. There were no bids. Then they decided to give it to lhe tehool diatrlct on condition that the achOol district repair the organ and make Jt available each summer for ue in the Pageanl - The school thought the organ a aplendid gift and wrote a nice letter to the Festival. But the school board declined to pay fOf' repairing the rat·ravaged in. atrument. Festival dlreclon were about to offer (o pay for half the repair cost when one director said they ought not be chintzy about the gift and they paid the while $350 repair bill. The high school got the organ. William D. Martin, board pre&ident. told the Festival board Tuesday with a chortle, "They want to give the organ back to the Festival, rats and all." ~ Dll'«tor Stuart Durkee said the orgin might be pla~ on the stage of the D!"· forum theater and rehabilitated. Dlreetor David YoW1g said the Festival had paid $8,000 for the organ. "It'1 a damn nlce organ and a few people In tie country still enjoy organ music," be salcf.. Director 0. E. (Bud) Schroeder asked, "Why doem't anyone want it." Young, po61ib)y rtferrlng to past news stories about the organ, said, ''It became a wh,ipo ping boy." _ Durkee suggested that it be returned tG the theater and "see where we go ~rom there. Conlacled today, Dr. William UllOQI , district tuperintendent, said he believed the organ wu lt!U operable but there were some space problems connected with ilB aitt. He said tbe staff would be consulted on the future of the organ. South Countians ~ Sought for YMC! Relations Trip , South O<onge County youlh wtshinf to attend the YMCA's Human RelaUOOI Laboraf«y thi:I: weebnd must algn up ~~~ ,N The excursion, dMC.ribed by t fie YMCA'• board of direc<ors u an edit; caUonaI experience in in~r~ooal ~ lationsbip, will ,be htld al Pilgrim PinH in Yucaipa. Magshnlm la running on a slate wltb apertmental classes. "Oh •• , you mean for the pain? 1'be $15 cost of the trip, which Includes tramportation via a cha.rtertd bus, lodg· IJ).g, mu.ls, ind accident insurance, must commission and county supervisors to tcrly condemns county su{>trvisors for' bf: turned in at the Y, '91 Fort?!t Avt., support their argument lhat Wilcoxen is abandoning the thoroughfare "with no Laguna Beach, by 4 p.m. Thursday, Rite• Jtfa.rk little League flogging a dead hone and trying to flout vote and in an action that is contained in The expected iumout of 40 teens will six lines of transcript." leave Laguna at 6 p.m. Friday, and re- all established rules of property law. You can't take ·away a public right of turn at the same time Sunday evening. . It's Wilcoxen ariues that the road was: 'vay just like that, he contends. And you The group discussions will be led by deeded to the county by the State of certainly can't interfere with tidelands five proir&lonal. consultants of .~ California in 1933 as a public right of way v:hich are obviously and of necessity an YMCA. ,., : and that its status has not and cannot be area of pubUc domain. Two previous weekends have draliJt changed. He .regards the maneuvering of The hearing will resume in Superior a~lmately M local teenagers. Mt· Laguna Niguel towards acqui51tion cf the Court before Judge Owens at 10:30 a.m. -d1tional Wormation ls available al tlJe 'Play Ball' Saturday l Tiie cry "PlaJ Bau!" rlno OUI Sllur- dl7, II -In Laiunl Beach,. the 1111 Llllle LNcue -ollldlll7 ...... wllh former 1n1yor J-Jllddle _., oul [lfll!V P1IOJ oaANOll CO.UT" PUallltONCJ CCIMl'AHY Jt•Mrl N, W•-4 ,,.... .. .......- J .ck Jt. C.rl.,. \ Y1ct ,.,.-it .... CMMt• MaMIW n.. ..... •••"ii .... lli•111•1 A. M11ral!IM ...... fl. l l•!.tNI '· N•ll ---Clft llllw ---121 F-1t A ... )ftllT11t AUrMu P.O, I•• ffl. f2112 --c .. 11 M<M= m .,., "' 1_. ......,, ..,_., rtn '#ltl .. -.. ...,....,.. ~ IMdl: ... 111"111 _.,a - ' .. the lint ball al the field named In hll honor. Colorful ceremonies at Riddle Field in Boat Canyon will open the se.alOll prior to a double featurt of baseball, with team.1 from both Laguna's Amerrcan and Na· tional leaguea in opening acUon. American Ltague Elks and Pottery Shack teams will be featW"td ln the opener. Thia g1me will be followed about S p.m. by 1 N1Uonal 'League conies\ bettreen Rollry and VFW. • Durlna the noon opening eertmonles, inembera of both NaUonal ~nd American JOaglie leam3 will be lnlroduced. Laglllll Beach High School Band wrn be on band u wm M1yor Glenn Veddtt and Giber ciljl olllclall Ind Llrry Hunt and Wally Quilty, ptelldenls of N11tooal and Amerlclft ~. niii>t<Uvely. Sped,al recopUlon Wlll be g!Vlft Marv Dltm,' lM'fOlnc Amer!Cln l.elgue proal· dent; Din, Houston, former Kiwanla team in ... pt; and Doa COQley, former opumllL .......... who becllllt I full· ume umplte. COQley will be proltnled the City's TropllJ won by hi& Oplimisl oquld. M.....,., coochel1 bal boys and te1m ~ wbo will be IOlroduced -In lhll Pwell Enters Race For NY 'Mayors' Seat NEW YORK · (AP) -R<p. Ad1m Claylon Po!NDi ""4rin cao.,_..n llonl lhe llar)<m dlsb"lct, hu ent.rod the ....,. !or the Domocrlllc nomlnllloo fol -· llWlnl I Deld.of Wftn, . "-"' !llod 1llo -nlllnl petitions 1'leldly, 1M chldllne. His rlYl!s In the Qemocralle prl1!11f1 JUDO J7 ·lncJudo former tllJIYOI' Robert F. W•JM'1 and IUlhor Normon Miller. -- -· order -include : , ~fool~pi~lh~•~•=hl=gh=ly=1!U=sp~l~cl=ou=•=a=nd=h=•=u=t·==T=h=ur=sd=a=y=. ===========y:·::or;;;by=call=::ln:&:':!l+:94=31:.===::;, Klwa-.11 -PbQ Griffin, Hank Miller, r Steve Grllfln and Bett Miller. P1tlery Shack -Joel Snyder, Ru11.1 Landreth, Philip McCarty, Juenlb Hogan and Betty Armstrong. Elk1 -Leroy Comwtll, E 8 r j Carpenter, Mike White and Nsncy Lee. lApna Federals -Mart.in Kruger, Nick Gillespie, Randy John.Jon and Susie Johnson. VFW -Chuck Benton. Jack Ktnnedy, Mlke Newton and Charlotte McManus. Lion• -Frank Buck, Jim Annstrong and Don Wlckh~, Randy Buck and Kim· my Knapp, Stacia Armstrong. Sports WOrld -Roy Ward, Jack Pen- ney aDd &b Schock, Greg Harner and R<ne Oliver, JU<fy Penner. Rotiry -Dlck Nunis, Pren Taylor, Scott B~nson, Kay Goodman. Director of lhe Minor League Is Tristan Kroglus. · · - Officers and dirtctori ol tht American Leaaue include Christy, president; Chuck Payno, vice presld<nl: ll.<lh Llijestrom, aecrctary; Carol Cooley, treasurer: Paul Wrll!h~ play<rs ag<nt : Kalhy DalllqulJt, canteen: Wally O\risty, equlpmen( manageri Jefry Johnson, statlstStlan; Ron Annstrong, publlclly: Herbert Lee, safety officer; Tri& lttotlus, minor cilttctor; Paul Wifgb~ chief uznplrt. • Oflicer1 and dlrec\Ol'I of the Nlllnn•I IMgue Include Hun~ pruldenl; Vlrg1rib Hunt, vice president : Yv o Jin e Cmn11chowsk!, aecttlfry: J e ~ McManus, t.rtMUrtr: _ Gent Witbbf, played 11en1; Bruce c.i:.ott.. ~~·um· pire; Jackie Buck, ttaUrilcltani stecia Amlllroiig, pubUclly: Fay Neu: conteen ; Pa! P1~.e>0::, 11kty director; I'm Taylor, tpeelal e\\'enta. · C..Cha ol lhe Minor Leaaua lncbtde Jim Whulon, Ferron ~·Bob 8r«l!erton, Don Knopp Ind W1llord Bryde. ,, I for on• month only save 20% on Towl•'• El Grandee and Kinq Richard pattems in . 10lld · atlver . CONvlNlitlT • TiRMS- BA!iKAMERICARD - MASTU CHARGE • : • FOf' w ..-..., -.W. 0 Ota f11 _, Qw lllldtenl ........, ,...._.,. ..ia.t11a K 20% oft' tM ,..,.. .. , .-.tall :· prb. Nw 1" tM tllm to sttrt er Mi\ll• )'OW' •Mel ill ao1k1 tihllr ., t: ..... You ..,.. 20% • _,. pan:t.a - -------Doo\-.· eom. in tnd.IY- 4 .._ _..,.., ......... --~ -- .... --...... .... --..~ J. C. Ampfu.i~&, Jt~!f,lr& Jt YEARS SAMl LOCATION 1121 N!WfioU AVENUI COSTA MESA ( l'HONE 141-1401 • ' ' . . . Okay for . A pollo F,l'!.!ht The three Apollo 10 astronauts· (fr0111_ ~(I) :John W. ;r.re reJ"'rl<!d,.r.eady I<> go•S11nday (9:49 a.m.' PDT) ···. Youn.g, Thomas P. St.afford, an4 Eugepe A. Ceman, on man s closest flight to the moon. They ~were pr<r oassed their last big medical checkups Tue.day and nbtmc<!l'in top,pltysical shape. . ·------------~------------"-''-"-----'--------'- in 4th Day d,I t • • j• 46 A.llied Towns, Bases Hit by· Rocket, Mor.tar Fire -,,· •.• ,~, SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnaznese .Ylrl<f Viet Cortg forces Pushed their •:i<general offensive" ihto its fourth day to- . ,9ay wilh rocket and mortar attacks on :sA School Chief 'Tabor Quits in . .. Da Nang and 45 other allied towns and bases. Hanoi r~io said the drive had dealt U.S. troops their heaviest losses of the war, but American military sources said the Communists were paying the heavier price. The U.S. spokesmen estimated at least 1,500 Reds had been killed in the past three days. U.S. losses were put at.about 150 dead and 7SO wounded.· South Viet-··B · d D • l namese casualties were described as ; oar ISpu e "light." " . ."·Santa Ana school system chief· Dr. The Communist shellings, however, ·Glenn Tabor resigned Tuesday night were taking an increasing toll of civilian ·because of a falling out with the school lives. A 10-rocket salvo hurled into the ,board. '<heart of Da Nang; South Vietnam 's se- , Trustees of the Santa Ana Unified and cond largest city, killed 12 persons and Junior College districts accepted the wouhded 29. Five civilians died and one ~perintendent's resignation by 3 to_ ,Z ,.,.as wounded in the provincial capital of ·Vote. Friction between Tabor and sOme An Loe, 60 miles north of S8igon. :members of the board dates back three Secretary of State William P. Rogers " . .;rears., arriv~. in s.aigon on his missio~ to seek In resigning, Tabor said that the avenues to peace and deplored the Com- dishannony that exists between members muni&~', 1attaoks as "senstless" a.cts o( the board and himself carrot he lp but which "cast somewhat Of at'CJood" Over have adverse effect ·upon the ~ucat;wi of their intent.ions at the Paris peac. e talks. the cliildren. · The resignation is effective June ' 30, U.S. military '1eadquartere aakl 10 of ..tabor. 44, ~ill be pai9 $58,SOOJt?r ~ ~ the deid. 8Dd 24 of the wounded in Da ~aining two years ol·his contract. Nang were South Vietname5e civilians. In another county school district, The others were government soldiers. Cypress Elementary; ,trustees last ••k sacked Sup(. Vincent •Devaniy. Three nights ago, Communist rockets Devaney, 47, resigned his $20,500-per-or mortar shells slammed into 212 allied <.-year job after allegedly being told in a bases and town:;, followed by 40 two closed session to ''resign or be fired." nights · ago and then the 46 late Tuesday ·:·-Devaney proteSts'that he doesn't know and early today, according to U.S. lt(hY he was fired, but sources in the "school district accuae him of indulging in figures . ~P,euy pontlcs' to, make himself look good Hanoi radio in two bro a d c a s t s . ~t the expense ol otheri. monitored in Saigon hailed the attacks ... . .., . Pilot on Road . " , .. White Traveling With Angels . ' which began Sundal ·as· a "general of. fensive" that . has penetrated major American camps up and down South Vietpam. !'The flight& w111 continue," Haf19i radio said. "This.ls the heaviest blow we have in. flicted so far on tht U.S. aggressors since the beginnlng of the war," one broadcast said. 'It said the offensive was designed to demonstrate the C.Otn- munists' "lbundant ·.fiatj.iiig po~er" on the battlefield. 'Strip Robbery' Charges Jail 4 Courtty Women .. Four Orange County "young ladies" face armed robbery charges today after they allegedly rtlievcd a Long Beach man ol hia paqts •,b gunpoint in Hun~ tington Beach, then fled ln his car. Hunlinglon police Identified th • pants1e!3 victim as Max Ho·ward Bahr of Long Beac h. Bahr barely managed to hit- chhike to the police station at 12 :20 a.m. today wearing only his aborts, a T-6hirt and grim expression. He told police the episode began in a Long Beach bar where he met one of the young ladies. Bahr had been dumped in an oilfield area near Clay and Golden West streets. Santa Ana police arrested the female quartet one-hall hour later on charges of conspiracy to commit armed robbery of a l\IIobi l Service Station on tile corner o( Edinger Avenue a.nd Main Street, Santa Ana. Arrested were Sharon Brbwn, 25, and Elizabeth Miles, 24, both of 317 E. 17th St., Santa Ana and Barbara Edgette, 25, and Kathleen Reid, 22, both of unnamed Palm Street address.lil Garden Grove. ·,. DAILY PILOT Sports Editor Glenn :White hits the road 111.ursday with the ~la Angels to cover an eastern )imtet dial is cruclal u.the Anabeim·bas- -~ baseballers are to make a showing-in .. the current season. Santa Ana )x>lice allege Miss Brown had an air pistol which resembled a .45- caliber automatic and Miss Edgette waa carrying a switchblade knife. the Angels in • hon;ie stand that will' in-Bahr told Huntington Beach police he elude the DAILY PILOT'S "2-for-l Ang"el met Miss Edgette in a Long Beach bar. _White, who shans-coverage of the _.American League "hometowners" with ;Earl Gustkey, DAILY PILOT sWf sports ~ \\·riter, will be watching the Halos in New :York, Boston and Detroit and sending : back exclusive stories for Orange Coast : readers. : His first story will be on Friday's road :stand opener in Yankee Stadium. : White .will ·return to his horDe 'desk on : May 27:,.•juit in time to get-tet to;COVer Day" (Sunday, Jime 1) whm the Halos She asked for •· rkfe home to Garden will play the BalUmore Orioles. Grove, he said, and he alldwed her to the DAILY PILOT is ..nmna readers drive because he didn't "know Orange ...._ u-o County." a free $3.50 or $2.50 reserved seat tick el Mi&! Edgette's,thtee friends followed In for each one they buy in those price another car, unknown to Bahr, police categories: ror the June 1 game. said, finally stopping his car in Hun- Tkket order blanks for "2-for·l Ange] tington Beach at which time be claims Day" are published e.very day Jn tl\e lhe four women forced him out ti the car DAILY PILOT and will be oont.inued and at gunpoJnt ordered h1m to disrobe. through Mond8y. T~. oouppn appears to ... · All lour women are currenUy in Santa day on Page 10. ·, • • Ana city jail waiting arraignment on . Nex~ Tuesday <Mar·~) is d~lpelpr' c.hi'rge.s or attempted anned robbery in ticket re!etvatioos f~the DAILY'PltOO' Santa Ana and auto theft and armed roJ>. half-price deal. ·'~.charges from HundDaton Beach. ~ .. , . •• . ri"'\of(· li.JO . ·OUR·. • •· . - ' ' ' • ' l i ) ! I . -~-. ,, .. ~ . LErA.~B~::bUR . ~·~:AN SibRE . ' ' . ~ ----'----'-'--------·--~ W,rd-.,, ;;., i4, 19" I <. -1,Y f'llOT (t Impea:ehweBt IDllted ' House Sofun Oal,ls for PrQbe-0f Ft>rtas .• 1 -. I I • , , ....., ·Wire 8'rvlcel chairman ct the Judlclary Commlttee. "I'm surt the l'l1tleman w1U be -WASlllNGTON _ A leadinl ~ , H• uted.lot a mee~ of the !ulI ':i .::.tlaf.: .:i:.:i :\:,.\o be IQen bl ~ cafle4.. IQdoy for an :\1 =zlli!c~i4'1'1~~~... Cellar said be would d ii c ,,., ~of Su-Cc!urt J~...,. 'c.llir Jitiio,'ioltlhe 11t111o ~.!lli'IOd M~'a -1 with MacGnp F.,,.w by the i!OO&e ' ludtcllry Com· his -mllf!''i ~·~n taler toc!&Y· · mlttee to d~, w,h et b or Im·, ~ ·""'llli\l~M ' ~ad The Jli8tice De~t'a at•-·I peachem<OI proc•ecllnp are·...-raplell. ~ • !ail.ii~!(~· . -..Ja'llacGregor tel<Pboneci Mlldllll•lllll Rep< Clark MacGregor UH4tna.), • ,..!<!.~~'Ii: rl.os!lf.~i ' bQ "wu informed thet the Depa-ol member.of the committee, aaf~ )lo odted c,ilI<l ~or·Fqrlls' tm~' who Justice could have no objecllana to ... after COnlerrina:thl! mornlnJ wllh·Ally. ~~ 1fbai c.lirse ·ot; Oi:llOri bid ~ which Ire Iogallt wllbln ~tho Gen. John N.·Mi!cl><Jl de.;id_ed \IP,Oll. Cella~iiJ<l.on!y ; ' 0 pren>C1Uy<a ol the -' "The altomey general · raieed, .l'.lO otJr. .• · 1 jection," said MacGregor: Hffe indicated ~· · · ':' 1;:.,::i::1/~ ... ~· 1n •uch .. Owtraged'"Father The coUrse suggested by MacGregor.ls 1 .. • ' one of ·several that could lead to Im-6. 90-. w' . A k ~1~~:rr~· :·.il! . .. in · estmirrsret s.· vestigation by a Judiciary Con\mittee panel to see wbetlier the f&cts warrant going ahead with impeacbmenl "! can't llit by any .1o.nger and &ee ·this: matter tried ln the news media when we . have proceduru rw ~lnging ~e facts' out lnto the' open," Mll;Gregor said. Ma~regor hand~ellvered a request (or.a.preliminary inqUlry into ForiaS' a.f· fairs to Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.), Fullerton Closes Park Over Riot A FulleJipn .park, scene of ·rock and bottle ' throwing 'fii\its on tile paot two ...etenm, wtn be cJMOd Suiidiy, city of. ficials alU\Ounced Tuesday. Last·Sun<:lay, 17 Police were called: to quell a Hillcrest Park uprising over tbe arrest ol a man suspected of being drunk. Ntneieen petsonS wei:e jaUed. .• the Suud.ay before five were jailed in a disturbance invOlvirig about l50 "hJpple types" over the atTest of a teen·ag~ girl for drunkenness. . - Two poqce officers h4Ve been injured by flying objects. The emergency measure to prevent furth er troub les in the park ·located near the inte:rsect.ion of Harbor Boulevard and Brea Canyon Road was 8nnounced by · Mayor Loul1 Reinhardt. Reiqhardt said he took the action after a poll of councilmen during a ~l session , Monday. P~llce Qtiel Wayne Boqlhoft requested the clusing, the . maYor said: · City oiflclals said ·ntirmally l ,500 visit.or& w;e .the park on arSunday but when·the facility la closed this wee~end all traffic,. vehicular or pedestrian wW be b,loc:Ji!d . For 'Suitable':Sex .CIJiss By RUDI NIEDZIELSKJ 01 tM DlllY ,lllf lllff Sex education -an uncomfortable topic in 1 the Huntington Beach High School Dlstrtct -briefly Dared up·agafn Ttiesday night when a Westminster paren t presented a 690-signature petiUon Mklng trustees for "a suitable family life- and sex education course." Robert M. Gordon, bearer of the. pell· tlon, said he was outraged by ntwspa~r accounts of the last 1board meetiitg· in ·which a similar sex Course wa,s tabled by lntimldafed trustee.S and urged th'at an appropriate program be lnstituted in the district in 1969. He also handed a petition with the signatures of 298 FOWltain Valley High, School students to tfie board members who felt that they would benefit (rom ,a sex education clJurse. Trusteei, Richard Wtlson and John Bentley reminded GOrdon that the 11e1 course/ was only shelved tempOrarijy because of a lack' ot financial ·capability and that the cuniculum committee was studying the course for possible lnctuslo11 "at a future date." Therefore, no actklll was taken on lhe peUtion. · Bentley also challenged alleged ac- counts of · his ifttimidation ·.saying, "ac• tually at the'last meeUng I did nol have the feeling of intimidation, but l do.now. My, position on the board has been sub- ject to recall and I think that is a threat.'' · · Several ln the audience and Trustee Matt Weyuker chastlse:d ·.the pre~· for their alleged "laCk of ratlbnal thinklng" --__ , " ' .. .. . . ' ',. IQ,r-ting the~ boud moe!nl.di?C whlc~ •enrl(ed•ood voclf<roUI -educ;.ailoo p It e.n t S ptade ~thelt; displealurea :tnown. . . A ,.rent in.the audJence.wbo,identifltd lllmaeU ·u: Dr. Maoterpolk> ....,.i. 8!Mi ~&:· ~W~_aps the presa wu, 1not rep0rtli1glht events as .they appeared. 11 felt· somewhat lntunlated myaejl bJ'IJ>! f{l.ct that I was conaidered incapMlt of ~oing an· adequate" jo~ as-a.parent In.Id education by thosei>ropoting tbe cOdrW. •• Marina High .• School student Din.Jenell defended the press for what he said were "fair and accurate" accounts of the list meetin,. and added, "Th41 Wiil! {t;ehli-· gest prpstitutidh of. Amer;ican t . " I have ever seen:" · -.. "I am sure that if a group of ltudentl!I had been behaving that way the police wciuld have been in tbere bt15tlng beldl~" I srael Pays Another · 'Ship' Compensation •WASHINGTON (AP) -lsraeHw•poid $3.5.mlllion as compensation for",164 U.S.· ujlors injured In Ille Israeli jet and torpedo· attack oo the American ·com- munication shlp Liberty during the 1967. ·Ara~Israeli war. An. earlier payment ol $3.3 mDllm -made for the families of tbe·34 men killed in lhe attack 15,miles north of ~ Sinal peninsula. The United states ii ~ !Y aik\ng 8notber fl milllon.for clamq-. to the ship. a ' ~ , •• -' . ,,......, .. ~ ............ Pr-Sdllt...., figured ~er rig~ wen beinC violated when the Duquesne Ltgbt Co. in Pittsburgh put up a pole with a crossbar over- b&ng1111 her property. A Judge agreed with her. The company was ordered to pay Mrs . Schlereth '270 for violating six inches of air space above her p~y for 19 mouths, and to cut off 11le overhanging ·end el the crossbar. · • "Trouble" owntd bJ1 Mr1. Dor0Utt1 Morrill of Milford, Conn., "41 enough oJ it& own with her own . Utter of kitkm at fee4ing time, but Sht takes time out fOT Mr "adopted" squirrel. The famJl11 cat will aUota 1tfangtr1 to pick up the kittem but it'• 1trlctLt1 hcmd.a off tM bab11 1qui11el which we. found abandoned. • o.o,.. Perkins, 68, cf Bourne- mou th, England, carries an Blann clOck, woond and set by bis wife, to remind him when it is time to leave the pub. "Mr wife got a bit mad at me for staymg tpo long ... " Perkins says. "I'm not henpecked -it's just a reminder." • A magistrate in · Rmne bas dis- missed a charge by Police Com· mlnloner Vlncenso Fontana of. Ge- noa that Gino LoHobrlgld• broke the law by describing oolicemen as ••crotins" in the film '1.Buona Sera, Mrs. Gampbell." The magistrate •aid the remark was made during a comedy aequ...:e tn wlli~ the mate believe police dld ci>mmlt some stupid f ";'vers, .· ., -- -. The ~· of the Pio•on Inn in Spalding, Englond arc ¢olng a fiw-oallon barrtl of beer to 89-fltCT·Old Ja.clc Eaat, G Ct.lftO- mtr 10 faithful. that he Ml worn a hole in the floor by hit favor- ite apot at the bar. Ea.tt dotDntd hit firat beer in thl pub tahtn ht WG1 19, Ond h.t haa been a replor cw:tomer ever rince. "I 1ta7Ud latt, but I ha.~ bfen ma.k«ng up for ~t rinee," he said. ·1 . mMlt have drunk nwuah pl nu (of ""' J to buv the plac• twict OVCT." Electrical service in porUoos of El Puo, Tex., was Interrupted tWice in one night because of ani· mals. The fir•t interruption was when a crow caused a short qf a U ,000-volt line with bis wing, cut- ting off electricity to the area near the La Tuna Correctional ln1tltu· tton. 'nle second came when a cat crswled on top of a substation H&Wstor, causfng the regulator to m8ltunction. Missis sippi Town G,ets Black Rule FA Y!Tl'E, Mlu. (UPI) -111< bold of Mlalllllppi'• llnl -... -o( a biracial munlclpalily • l n c e reconstruoUon ltlt1s1d a llw and order theme today ii a pn:cram to "mate tbb town fit for all God's cbUdren." .Violence will not be toleratod,,NeJll'<) leoder Charles Even aald. One ol the flrtt ·laws ol hi• admlalltrMlOll will be to make it illegal for dUuna l.o carry llDll or knives tonier than two inOOea. • Even' fint act early today wbeo it wu certain that be and five black '°"" COUJ>- cllmen Would assume offJCe July 7 wu to lead a prayer meet.in& at Hollywood Bap- Usl Clwrth. "Help me, Gjld, to be the kind ol mayor to look out for all of us -the whites who hate -us and the black.! who distrust us," be prayed. $vers, 46, whose brother, Medgar, was a1ain from ambush in Jackaon in 196S, ... and the new Councilmen were swept lo1o office Tuadly in statewide municlpal flectjol'il in wh1cb more than. )00 Negrou sought porla in 11l9ut 4Cl mWllclpaUU". Evers apparently wu the only black maywalty candtidat.e to win, but at least aix Ne.groes won eouncll and aldermazUe ·aeeb ln the D!m>Ocratic prlmarles around the atate and e1lht others advanced to runoffs. A number d Ne,roes qualified as independents and will l1lll in the June I general electlQos. Everi, a MlsaisSfppl native who relur. eel from Oilcqo after his brother's .atayjng to aucceed Medgar as Mississippi field -ol ll>e Nalloaal ~ fir tbe ActnncaDcnt ol Colcnd Poople (NAACP), imseated R. J. "Turnip UPI T ...... 19 ELECTED MAYOR Jubilant Charles Evtrs Greens .. AJlen, 73, who had betn mayor ol t.hls towu about 30 milto from Nll<bez for the past 11 yean. Final returna save Even 386 votes to :SS tor Allen. Stanf ord_,ColumbinMake Concessions to S tuilents ' Frem Wire Services STANFORD -Jn the wake of student uprisings, · the ZS.year.aid afllll11ion between Stanford Unlveraity and the ad· jacent Stanford Reeearcb Institute is en- ding. biological or chemical warfare." · Instead, SRI should be inquiring lnto ••the solution of pressing soclaJ pro- blems," the trustees said. "There are mallers of urgent social concern which should be the objects or vigorous research atta.Ck and activity by 10Clety in general.•• • • ' , ' • • if you buy an electric range with a self-cleaning oven now.* ., ' *Buy yours before June 30 from your local participating dealer • and the Electric League of Southern California wUI mail you $25 if you choose any of these brands: Frigidaire. General Electric. Horpoint. Kentnorc. Thermador. Weatinghouse. You're tired of scrubbing, scouring, and scraping that oven of yours. anyhow, aren't you? Why put up . - STBmPOUT with all that drudgery when an electric self.deaning oven will clean itself for less than a d!mel When your new range is electric, you car\ cut way down on cleaning your kitchen, coo. With a flameless range there arc no by-products of c.ombustion to dirty walls, windows and curtains. Beside> a cleaner kitchen, an i electric range means a cooler .. kitchen. Electtic heat goea Into the food-not up the aid.. of ., pots and pans. Electric ranges now outsell gas ranges from coast to coast. You can see why. r See your local participating dealer. Give him your addreaa , when you buy a range. The 1 League will mail you a check. ' ....rs::· ,;:::,-( Southern California Edlson1 / " ' DRUDGBRH now! Stanford'• board ol lru!tees decreed the severance Tuesday. Board president W. Palmer Fuller saJd no deadline .was • beca\411! "it erobably will 4ke C1>n· aiderable time." SR1'1 war-related research projects, targila ol • ntoe<lay -.it Ill-in which began lall Atril 1, bmlchl cominent that the -.,.boleheartedly et!donod"' a ban qa10lt projects "deillng dtredly In New York Tuesday, Columbia University . trustee! voted to eod the /--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;========================;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r Naval ReserVe Officers Training Corps with ·the ~ ol --ol •,, Maroysian Mob s· Defy Curfew in Viol.ent Outbreak KUALA LUMPUR (UPI) -Mobs· ol Ma11yi and OU-. -armed. with cemnOnlal claQm, Jllllll and Glhor weapo111, today. defied the U11Gur curlew impoaed on Kuala Lumpur becauoe ol - ol the wont ootbruu o1 raclaJ •lolence in Molaysta'1 hlllory. ••·• KJiic Tulntu IanWI Naalruddin -· blued a proclamatloa callin& out all military .......... to ..w-"'Jllllar oecurlty forces u a secood night o1 ln- terc:ommunal fllhtinl thrutened. The Sengalor state police r<pOTled at least 10 penons """' ldlled Tueodly and today lD clashes between Malays and <llinese and with socurity lorces tryin( to dlspene them. . Witnesees reported that the enUre -by vU11ge of Gombok appeared to be cori&Umed by flam•• during th• day. Refugees were reported 1 t r e a m I n I toward the capital. -=:.~'~il::r.:.=~'1.lll~ l\. · · oman procram will finlsll at ..an acCelerated rate.. The trustee.! also approved a linimfity aenate of ltudtfilll, . faculty, emphtyea: and adm!nislraton to serve as , the ma1111ovuninc biii!y for lbe campus , tgurt of 17,IOll." .j( *-* National Guards C.alled to Quell ' Lotlisiana Riots ' ' ' BATON ROUGE; La. (AP) -A sludeol1JOll<e baUle that left U slud<nts and two sheriff's deputies Injured Tue.-dai at Soutbera University led to the callup ol mo"' tjlan lllO ·NaUonal Guardsmen on aJert near the campus to- day. Studenla -brandishing II a m In 1 · tordles and burling °"' bombs, n>clts and bottlas fllled with acid -lie! booPres and burned a construction truck pari<ed on the Baton Rouge campus ol the predom· lnantly Nqro univenlty. Police fired tear gas and a few sllotgun blasts in !1!tum. Poli~ anuted 17 persons. charging three. with aggravated battery and the rut with c:rimloaJ mischief. CONTOURING ANO OP£N\NG Gil SAlON fOR Of 1-NOtHER RE coNtROl aous f\GU £ GlM'O .. s V£1lY S\MPL oU1l M£1HOD \ tlO lllO\\\tllS J tlO £1£RC\S£ ~ tlO f\\.LS Windstor~ Rips Uniontown I IO D\£l\tl6 I PHONE 534-7950 Now For Appointment OP91 DMY · t A.M. TO t P.M. MON. THIU SAT. 137)2 S. EUCLID, ~ARDEN G OYE (1 .. So. of G.G. Frwy.J --------- Safeguard Picks Up Support WASHINGTON CAP) -Tile . Nixon administration has pick· ed up more Senate Aackers for Its Safeguard mlsSile system than its opponents have wooed over. the latest Associated Press survey shows. Nevertheless, opponents of the system now number 48, three votes s,bort of an absolute majority. Advocates of speedy in- stallaUon o( the limited an--· ti.ballistic missile system pnr posed by President Nixon can now count 46 Senate sup- porters. Six senators -who hold the key to resolving the issue - say they are undecided. GAL~ED II Based on the AP surveys, backt-rs of the system have gained the support of 11 ad· dltlonal senators while op.. ly Phtl lnterlancll •'The way I look a't it1 Smokey the bear not o1tly ~ts us to prevent torest titta, he expects ua to behave ollr&elvea in the national forest.a." ponents have picked up five. ----------------------1 Jn the first AP poll, taken before Nixon shifted ABM em· phaids from city proetction to defense of orfensive missile sites, 43 senators y,•ere counted as opposed and 35 in favor. In a second survey, in April, the t..Wnt was 47 opposed and 43 in favor. Since then, although the situation remains flu.id and subject to change by events, anti-ABM rorces hqve picked up the support or Sen. Warren G. f.1agnuson. (D-Wash.) and a GOP senator who asked that his name not be used. AB~1 supporters have gain- ed Sen. Robert P. Griffin, (R· i\tich..), and John L. 1tfcClellane, (D-Ark.). They can also count Sen. Len Jordan, (R-Idaho), previously listed as opposted. VOTE OTHER WAY Many of these and other senators 1ay they rould be persuadOO to vote for the other side -if the evidence was strong enough. Magnuson, previously listed as undecided. is now defining his posilion this way: "I'm still not convinced i t ' s necessary for n a t i o n a I defense. As a matter of priorities the money would be far better spent on domestic ... and social problems rather than going ahead with a missile system which has questionable scienlific and technical capability." Jordan now t e 11 s con· Stituents: "If the vote were counted today I.would vote to supixirt the Safeguard ABM system ... However the vote is not likely for several weeks . . . I reserve the right to change my mind s h o u 1 d evidence be introduced pro· ving the system to b e worthless.'' MUCH PRESSURE "It all depends on whal lhe President does," said an aide to a Republican senator who is leaning against the program. "There is a lot of Senate pressure on him to ask for a moratorium on deployment for a year or so while initial disarmament talks are begun with the Soviets. "Bi.it if he comes out swing· ing and fighling," the aide said, "a bunch of Republicans \vho are now against ABM are going to begin wondering whether their continued op- position is worth it -whether they ought ·not stand behind their party.'s leader." Aides of McClellan said he is now Jeadning toward deploy- ment of the ABM system as necessary for defense. But they said he still wonders whether &ufficlent research t . JOIN OUR GYPSY CAR.AVAN • • • and development work has been done to justify the estimated $7 .8 billion cost. Private vote counts made by Republican ABM opponents list up to SO senators ready to vote against deployment. STILL UNDECIDED One of lhese lists Sens. George D. Aiken , !R-Vt.); Howard W. Car.non, D·Nev.); and Thomas J. l\1clnlyre, (D- N.H.), as being against the system. All lhree man say, however, they are undecided and uncomr.:ilted. Others now listed as un· decided are Sens. C a I e b Boggs,. ~R-Del.); Clinton P. Anderson, (0-N .M.), and John J. Williams, (R·Del.). Saine senators report a change in the tenor of mail on lhe subject. A New England Republican says the early mail on ABM was strongly against it and mainly from the academic and intellectual communities. l\10RE WRITING "Now the rest of the people are being heard from a lot more of the mail is pro-ABM," he said. A Magnuson aide said ABM mail remains very heavy aod is about 4 to I against. . ' , .• ond discover the lore and lure of Summer fashion '69 in our ~any . de,oa rttnents ... everything with the free-spirited feeling of Gypsy! • ' ·. WIN A TRIP TO SAN FRANCISCO VIA PSA GYPSY-JET .. J ust fill out an entry blank at any Broa dway, and you may be one of the I 0 lucky winners of o San Fraricisco weekend-for-two . Prize includes ro und trip flight from · Los Angeles vio PSA, deluxe room occomm a·tions for r doys and" 2 nights at the Sir Fraiicis Drake Hotel, and a Valear Rent-A-Car ot your d;sposal for 150 mHes of travel. ANAHEIM • 444 N. Euclid 5!5·1121 Mon. •hrv Sat. 10 •.m. to 11 :30 p.m. ' , • NEWPORT 47 F•1hion l1larirJ 644.1212 Mon. thru Fri. 10 ,a.m.,to t :lO p.rn. Sat. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. DAILY "LOT $ . . GYPSY! THE UNTAMED BARES I. Pull on a w;ld sk;rt and poasanf blouse. Rush into our sensuou s lea ther sandals st roping your feet here ond there, leaving you bare to flirt with the sun. You 're .footloose and fancy free as the -~" : summer wind-end those-romantic 'll~~~ lial;an craftsmen make ;t happeo. By Sport;v a Meda: A. Stuck white. !lone. ·12.00 B. Knots, wh;te ,bone.brown , ·12.00 C. Offset T, wh;te, bone , 12.00 By V;vo ltana: D. Cross Vamp, bone, white, block, 7.00 E. Strapped Vamp. white, red, yellow, bone, 8.00 F. Str!lpped .Vamp with contresting edg;ng, wh;te, bone, 8.00 G. By Tintoretto, Pocionar wolnuf buffalo, 11.00 Casual Shoes. 75, Budget Fashion Shoes IO I --. HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Edl119or An. 192-lJl I Mon. thrv Stt. 10 •·m· to 9,30 p.m. I I • , .. AILY PILOT EDITo~ PAGE I ·p _uhlic's Right to l(now Tt took the better part of two days to dig out the basic IS&ues, figures and proposals in the teacher-school board negotiations for Capislreno Unified School Dis- trict in the coming year. The Information should have been public and reodl· Jy available. It not only affects 300 teachers of lhe district but the children, parents and taxpayers who have a rlgbt to know what's going on. • They bad a right to know that teachers are asking $500 more at the bottom of the scale and $1,000 al the top plus a number of other benefits. They hid a rigbl lo know that the board lnilial!l has countered with $100 at the bottom and $200 at the top. They have a rlgbl to know the multitude of other issues. These aren't the plans for nuclear weaponry being discwsed in secret. They relate to future erpendit~re of public money and to policy in the public schools. Yet apparently by tacit' agr!!OU!ent. scbool officials and teachers bad agreed rl<(! to disclose wba! was going on in secret until they were ready to aurface with a package of agreements that would then be routinely approved at a board session. Explaining the agreement to keep dilcusaion and proposals secret, Charles F. Kenney. district superin~ tendent, said that when the public is lnfonned of neg°" tiation progress, problems a"I'ise and people take sides, He overlooks the point that taking sides in public busi- ness is both democratic and healthy. In fairness, it must be said tb<it the Capo district doesn't seem alone 1n this attitude. It is being mani· fesled in other districts as well. ' commended for releasing the Capistrano figures and proposals in the public interest. Even high pressure labor and management nego- tiators are more than willing to make public what is soulht for empJOyes and to jlL!Wy their relative posfU011s. -· Undvrstendably, bargai.lling limits and slrateiy are kepi quiet by both sides.. And the press fun<:tionmg as tb_e 'PlJblic's eyeS and ears, is not being curious for curiosity's sake. . Each pi'oposal or COW}ter proposal, once made, should certainly be public. Specialized Hospitals Formation of a .separate hospital service area for the Southern half of Orengo County has been approved by the Slate Advisory Hospital Council. The action will allow officlals of south Coast Com- muni\y Hospital to gel on with master rlanning the tailor·made medical services for the area s population explosion. This planning includes as a nucleus a rather excit· Ing concept for satellite boopitals, each with Its own specialty and litUe ot no expensive duplication. ' Jl South Coast, for instance, specializes in open· heart ·surgery and treatment of cancer, a future Leisure World satellite hospital might specialize in problems of aging. A Missioo Viejo-Laguna Niguel facility might pick industrial accidents. \' . . ; -~~ ~ .-. !Wbert P, Belaley, board vice pr .. ldent, is to be Congratulations are due hOS{>ital officials who have worked three years to see this unportant step become a reall(y. L • ~E'S MY ON~Y CHILl>. PLEASE 6ET 1-!IM OFF T~E CAMPU>: Significant Turning Point? W,\SlllNGTON -The lurnoroood on the hunger program wu probably a ~ Ing palnt of considerable aignlflcanct in Ute Nb:On Administration. For one thing, President Nixon affirmed his own credlbUJty on this oontroverslal question. He had JX'Omlled an eipanded hunger prograqi and then It appeared for a while that be Would not deliver on the promile. At one point he told Agriculture Secretary llardln to hl4 face that there was no money to elpand federal pro- grams to foed the Wldernourished. Later, under 'JIUblk and congressional preSSUtt, be merlld to the pos!Uon he took during the campa.lan ind in hla early days in of· flee that trun&er aod malnutrition could not be tolerated In the wurld's greatest food producil!& naU°"' : . Once limlll deddeCI ti!ll. 'thm ..... waya to·flud $274 mW1on more for an ~ mediate ezpaftslOn Ind project a •• billion increase when the expanded pro- gram ia In full operaUon. THIS WAS A HUMAN decision as well as a poliUcal decision, but more than that tt rpay show that Nixon is determined to stick by the judgments he formed when he ran for the presidency. In this conte:1t, it lheretore does not follow that because he recognit.ed the ~oUonal and political drive for an expanded hunger program he will alao give way to the emotional' and political campaign agaln>t the ABM and ror an early unilateral pull.out in Viet· nam. H Nixon reverts to his earlier judg· ment. as he did in the imtance of the hunger program, he will not back up on ABM and he will not bug out in Vietnam. -'~-~-~-· ..... ·~ -"""" -;.'<., .. ~· '$'·' t.\ 'fa ' ' ' ' ' J -1 ~ ich~rd Wi~QD f,, ~ .. ~:.e.~~ ~~ .. J/ He will go ahead toward nuclear parity with lht Soviet Union. He will find ways, as he promised in the campaign, to fight a better war in Vietnam wilh fewer men tf there is to be no acceptable negotiated settlement. He will go ahead with a thorough. reor1anization of the State Department. He will start numerous ~ grama to weave alienated youth back into the fabric of American society. He will go BM.ad vigoroualy with programs to Irr volve the private sector In racial am;euoration and urban r~~ He wUI proieeed more vigorously With law and order program! to guarantee safety 1il the home and on the street. AND HE WILL DO ALL this In the framework of a balanced budget and government surplus to check lnflaUon with a reordering of priorities which will anticipate in the future an expansion of reorganized federaJ prograrm to improve the human condition. These were the premises on wblcb Nls:· on was elected to office. Th e y represented the middle ground between the extremism of George C. Wallace and the conventiona1 liberal democracy of Hubert H. Humphrey. They were general principles alluded to in Nixon's inaugura1 address. It lqoted for a while as U Nixon might conveniently forget some of his own Jdeas. He could not find a Democrat for the Cabinet as he had promised. He began to talk about "sulficltney" in nuclear weapons rather than parity. He reorganized the Job Corpi but did not abolish it a.s he advocated durlne the campaign. Perhape now hiJ decillon on hunger represenil a return to hia original lines of thinking. It is likely to be interpreted otherwise, however, by the group of senatora who share their concern for tho hungry with their determinltlon to force Nixon to withdraw from Vietnam and abandon ABM deployment. They may reason that if Nixon $ni:ed hb ml~ on hunger under publlc -and congrisstona I pres1ure he can be forced lo do so on the Safeguard ABM deploynienl aiil on early Vietnam withdrawal. THE BUNGER PROGRAM illust.rales '1.nolher polnt. Like other presidents before him Nixon Is dilCOVe!'ing that good management in government ls not enou9h. New approaches lo <'Id problems are conttriuously required. However much Nixon might wish for a hold down, a breathln& spell and a period o( calm and restraint, the dynamics of this kind of government call! for constant change and lmprove~t. This leads a pruldent · toward the proposal of new progr1m1 \9'bJch bear the at.amp of his ad· mlntatraUon. If he does not take the in- iUaUve the initiative wUI be wrested from him in Congress. An administration cannot stand sUD or hold the line for any extended period of time because stagnation is not politica11y popular in 1 country with 90 many unmet need•· Wage-earners Are Restive tnflaUon has been described as llai ori the poor and the elderly, buL evidence mounts tha& it ii beginning to hurt the average wage-earner. The gr e.a t American middle class Is having trouble making ends meet, and its mood is turn- ing ug}J. Pete Hamill calls il the revolt of the White Lower Middle Class. "The working. class earns its living with its hands or it.· backs," be writes. "Its members do not exist on welfare payments; they do not live bl abject. swinish poverty, oor in fiafe, remote suburban comforl 'nw.y e1rn between $5,000 and $10,000 a year. And they can no longer make it ln New York." Their grievances seem to be C!enttring -in New York, at least..-en antipoverty and welfare programs for Negroes and en the failure of local government to provide IYr'.Vlces to match galloping tu rates. Gus Tyler calls It "tlle revolt of Mr. Mid· die." • ' A UNION WAGE study released on April J3 showed how higher taxes and ris· Joi prices bad virtually wiped out pay in· ----- Wednesday, May 14, 1969 TM edltortol page of tht Dailr PUoc 1etki to inform and .stim-- ulctf rtodtr1 b11 pre1nti11g thil ncwpopcr'1 opinionr and com- menta'll on topfc1 of intrre1t and dgn,jlconce, b11 prooldlng a foru m for the ezpr11rlon of OJ£r mad«r1' opfnlom, and bv prtttntlng &ht diuerst tritw- poi11r1 of Informed ob1ertlfr.s and 1poktrtntn 011 topiCI of IM do11. Robert N. \Veed, Publisher -~ .,...._ ' I I Editorial ' I Research ~ ' ""' -.. • v creases obtained by New York City workers between 1965 and 1968. Of the 24 industry groupings studied, workers ln 12 ot them suffered a net loss in weekly purchasing power during the three-year period. . One e:umple: A construction Industry worker grossed $170.U weekly in 1966 and $201.12 in 1968 -an illcrease of $30.43 a week. But his real net gain after higher taxes and inflation was enly $1.36 per week. (,']early some of the impetus for tax reform iJll stemming from the desire of the average worker lo get the tax burden 1 shared more equitably. Playing the tax loopholes has become a science for the wealthy and their lawyers, while tht! lltlle man is lucky to save $20 on his lax bill at the nearest H&R Block office. The! averagt! taxpayer now $pends two hours and 34 minutes out or every eight work· ing to pay his local, state and federal lax· ... "ADAM SMITH," the ubiquitous and lroq-Uy -.et pl1l!aoopher of tho mCIDey Dlll'tl, b11 Invented a tmn for the new kind of paper wealth being created In Amerla today. He called It SUpettur· reney. 11\ll could be money earned In a company wbich goes public aod sells aL thirty U.... lhe earnings. ..---•• o ...... ---'. CONrlDENTI AL TO MY MOTHEl!.lN-1.AW : Go home, 111 ls forglffL (Write ~ George, th@ Jdvlce col· umnlst of whom other adv!Cfl coJ. -umnl.m say : "Who!'') . . 4'So they have thirty time. as much money as we poor people who only earn the money and put it in lhe bank," writes Smith. "The poor innocents among us will not know there is a superior currency around. They will still lhink tbe green stuff in their wallets is money, and they will be bewildered." A BEWILDERED public Is a poten- tially explosive one, and warnbigs already have been posted of a ••tu. peyers' revolt." Some citilens, moreover, are making the connection between In· flaUon and the war In Vietnam which. ac- cording to many economlN, is· the too& cause of rising prl~ and the lfOWlng cost of government at all levels. Something is ip the w1nd. For the nrsl time in years national spending proposals such as the antiballlstic m~Ue sy1tem and the supersonic transport are being subjected to close ecooom.lc as well as technological and political analysis. For lhe Nixon Administration the big question <>[ 1969 may be not how to deal with the Russians <>r Hanoi but how to pacify reslive American wage-earners. Dear Gloomy Gus: So Charlit Peddicord 1ay1 he doesn't w111t his Junk yard In the city. We11, I'm a tily resident .1nd, frankly, J don 't want it In the city, tllhtr. -L. L. Tiilt '""'" '911Kt1 ......,... ........ ,... •KftMHIJ """' tf ffrlt _.,_, .... Hllf' "' _,,. .. OIM!trt ~ .. DallY Pl ... , Peace Corps Losing Its Main Purpose The Peace Corvs, once a simple idea which allracted young, i d e a l is t i c Americans willing to volunteer for two years <>f service abroad at a minimum substance, i.! acquiring ronsiderable tarnish both from the rest of the bureaucracy and rrom its new leader· ship. Several years ago Sec. of State Dean Rusk sent a message to all U.S. posts overseas, saying "The Peace Corps can best serve American foreign policy by not being a part of American foreign policy." The import or the message was clear. There was to be no involvement in the work of the volunteers by other U.S. agencies o v e r s e a s ; under no circumstances were Ibey to be used as sources of information; they were to be as free as any other American abroad to speak their minds. BUT LAST WEEK the State Depart· ment erdered a study to see if there could not be more interchange of person· nel among foreign policy agencies. in· duding not only the Peace Corps and the State Department but alS<> the Agency for International Development (AID), the U.S. Information Agency and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. What Is ignored in this approach is that tt was precisely to create a new and dif. Ierent American image"' abroad that the Peace Corps was begun. Ir the identity of the Peace Corps volunteer, living at the level of the people he serves, is to be merged wjth the__.resLof lhe-U.S. cotn• munity abroad, Jiving segregated and - by local stand ards-luxurious lives In an English·speaking enclave, the main reason for the Peace Corps is gone. ~fore ominously, a project which put Peace Corps lall'Yers into the Pacific trust territories of Micronesia. to help tribal cllunclls codify their laws and to help set up institutions of sell-go\•ern· ment, has now been shelved. apparently at the insistence of the Department of Defense. AT THE SAr.tE m1E, the new Peace Corps dJrector, Joseph Blatchford, made it perfeclly clear in his first appearances &Mt he wants older technicians overseas, with higher pay, allowances lo r dependents and work projects which can be measured in terms or economic development. There will be, apparently, Jess of this ruuy talk about self-help and community change. Once again. the zeal for change ebscures the reaso n for existence. The his tory of the U.S. effort in un- derdeveloped countries is largely a hi story of failure in just this kind of ac. Uvity -U.S. economists and technicians trying to rit other cultures into our own eronomic measurements. ll was once the Ptaa! Corps' special mission to remipd us that man does nol live by gross na· lional product al<>M. By Frank r.tanklewfa and Tom Bradtl ;,. Federal Land Alllan'-1:, Nebr., Tlmes-lterakf1 1'Vast federal lsnd holdings )lav• ~ectua!ly become a hindrance to the economic pro- , gress or some states. ~ (cdcral govcrn- mtnt o'Nn!S 98 percent of Alaska ... 87 percent ol Ntvad~. 67 percent of Ulah, and st percent of Idaho. Surely $Orne of lh11t land couJd be released or rec.lasslfied without harming the cause of con· !ervaUon." Clarification of UCI Proposal To the Edilor: Jerome F. Collins' "Pilot Logbook" col· urnn in the DAILY PILOT of April 29, was somewhat amusing, but the facts from wh.ich he took off were garbled in his first few lines. First, the 10 percent of [acuity sug· ge.sted by students (and endorsed by a [acuity.student committee) meant 10 per· cent of new faculty. This would be three out of 3{I new faculty next year. The two percent meant two percent of all faculty. This would be six out of 300 facu\iY next year. Second, Chancellor Aldrich had nothing to do with either the proposal or witll any "compromise" leading from one to the other. The second proposal, involving two percent of faculty, was originated by a faculty member and was endorsed by the faculty Senate. TlllRD, FOR TJIE record, the proposal is so far just lhat - a proposal. If it is enacted , the two percent figure may change. Also, the hiring authority will not be given to the students, but will be re- taine<I by the chanct?llor, where it now Is. Presumably, faculty will also be con-- suited, although the principal advice to the chancellor on these few appointmenl!I "'ould come from students. The ap- pointments in this category would be temporary, non-tenure appointments. If the piece were Intended only to amuse, it would be all r i g h I . Unfortunately, 1 think it gives an already jumpy public a distinctly wrong view of what is going on at UCI. • KENNETH w. roRD Chairman Irvine Division of the Academic Senate LWV Says Tl1anlu To the Editor: During this past year the League of Women Voters or Orange Coast has been studying the altitudes of 11 i g h school youth toward lav1 and law enforcement. This study of attitudes included as well a study or juvenile law and juvenile law en· forcement practices, and sent us lo con- sult many people working in this area in our community. These local officials and fellow citizens ·were our teachers, our textbooks, our laboratory. Busy as they were, we found them always interested in helping us find the informaLion we wanted. The high school siudent8 in our coast communities -Newport Beach, C.Osta J\1esa, and Laguna Beach -gave lime and effort to help us understand their side of the problem. Their selected representatives, 1'-1iss Donna Long; Mr. Ken Whit~. and Mr. Eric Stodder, were especially helpful in voicing the studenls' point of vie\v lo lhe community. OUR ClUEt~s OF police, Mr. Glavis, ~fr. Neth. and Pt.fr. Labrow, as well as their staffs, gave blocks of their time ex· plaining to us the requirements. training, procedures, and problems of police work. We gained mlJCh , awan:ness of the magnlludc of their jobs and of their dedication. The schools administered our ques- tionnaires. the city st.arfs helped us lraclt down statistics. The county probation department provided us wilh lnformatlon as lo their procedures in working with l·uveniles. Judge Sumner, Mr. Turner rom the district 11ttomey'1 office, Mr. ~toran from the public dttendtr's office, tl'plained to us the workings of the juvenile court system in Orange Cou.nty. ~· . ..,..-; ... T ) "' . ..i4· t: M~ilbox i ' ·"~ ~ ~) LeCttr.s trom readers ar1 tottcomt. Normally writers 1hould convt~ tMir mtssagt in 300 words or Jes1. Th• right to ccindense lttteri to fit rpace or eliminate libel is reseTVt'd. AU Utttrt mmt includt slgnaturt and mailing address, but namc1 may be toithMld on requ1st if suffi.citnt rea- son ii apparent. youth and law enforcement. \Ve will work to see young people more spectflcaJly educated in our. public schools as to their responsibilities and their rights in a democratic soclety. We feel they need to understand the basis for laws and law en· forcement if Uti.s society Is to continue. We will support special training for poliCe offlei!rs who work with juveniles; we \Viii support salary schedules th at reflect our understanding of the complexity of tho police ofticer's role. \Ve can work inteUigently toward these goals only because of the C<lnctrned men, v.·omen, and students who gave us our education. To them we would like to say publicly, "Thank you." HELEN K. HOLLINGSWORTH President LWV-OC Daw Bo Did It To the Editor : Why is the North Vietnamese govern- ment so much stronger than the _iove!_Il· ment in the South? One obvious answer is that there is no vocal opposition in the North while there are many critics in the South. Vet, the real answer is the method used by Ho Chi Minh In eliminating his opposition after he gained control. The first thing he did was to send specially-traJned cadres into the roun-- lryside to make a sun:ey with regard to an impending land reform. These cad res were inru'ucted to list all untrustworthy individua·Js of means with the most un- trustworthy to head the list. AFTER 111E lisls had been completed, Ho ordered that a certain number of thooe on top of the lists were to be ex· ecuted while a larger number were to be given long prison terms. Of course, all of lhe·individuals were to be given a trial. The trials could be described as instant justice in that as soon as a death sen· tence had been handed down the in· dividual of means was taken out and ex· eaited. The method of eii:eculion "a~ about the same as the North Vietnamese used to execute hundreds of South Viet· n81Th?5e last year while Lhey controlled parts of Hue. Apparently the Hrst land reform WI!! Inadequate because Ho ordered a &eeond round of erecuHons which were incrtased by • ractor of six. THE BEST DTir.tATE indlcites that U North Vietnam had as larte a popuJ1. tton as tht U.S. they would have txf!CUted one million Individuals of means during both land reforms. With variations, thJs method OI tllmlnattng untrnstworthy 1rialvld111I! of means wu perfected by the Russlan11fli used by China. Cuba, North Korta, etc. Thus, the blueprint for strengthening the South Vietnamese govtrnmcnt Is vlab'e WE FEEL IT WAS a succeWul st.Udy. but the 1cadera ln lhc S<luth art trying to Our league will now work to lmplemtnt emulate tlle U.S., which also has many bctU:r Nn'tl'i'iunlCaUon 11ild c:Oofd1n11il~'"H'tUCf 1iflOvtnfffitnt. aniong groups who are conctrned with HAllRY B. fl.tcDONALD Jn. ·- I II I I , . ' ---------,----------:-:~-=--~--------~-----· ---------~- I ~o ..... r IUNDAY 9 'TIL I . . OFFICIAL ' COLEMAN I • REPAIR . STATION . FOR ORA~GEY. COUNTY * PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 14 TO fKAY 20 ~ ' . . .LlNfERN $1 O" • Single M111tle • · COMPl£fE-ST9C*AfGRANT'S! ' • Modtl 200.A ' ' . ~~~&~~·$3~ NEtD A C0UMAN CMICK·Uf? lltlNG JN YOUI lAlfTPNI AND STOVES-NO SllVICE CHAIGl AT ;IA"f'SI OU.NGE COUNn'S ONLY Of. flCtAL COUMAH ltEPAll STATtoNI POLY-LITE COOLERS FROM [9/eman ;.1 llghtweigh~. tough ind h1nd1om1 le1Ul1f11r.ln1d poly~ tlhylen• r•Sistl ac111tching;Kutfing •nd chlpplnp Urethlne lnaulation holds cold 50°' longer than ordinary u*1lation reduces ice klad, increnea u.S11blt _nar.ge-sp.Ce. ~ interior. 0.ep di'y storage tr1y. l.Ak-proof pie#tic drain. Two styles: • 38-QT. 5 11'~ 30°QT. sa;s . _,. \ t :.. ~l ~ [•;w I fo~ '69 .. + ,.. ,. ~ • SCOUTER/CAMPER CE TER Grant's His Tti. Greatesi·selection Ana lqvtest Price~ ·Tr>! HIGH SIERW? We havt a c1t11,im tflte.· fief! tf 100% Dffm.flllM •111 fw tM rnttt ,,.. f11Montl ff "'"Pl"' SLEEPING IAGS -,.. c.io.1 .. j .............. ~-··---•• r.a ai,,w, wtl'M ,......,.-.,.._ < • SJ77 S. fir1at's Flfst! WE'°'RENT $10.H , ..... ''lust Add -water'; ' · *:C~mp1-.1:•'8IS · * Main Courses ... · * Desserts, etc.! .. · "·VAGABOND" ~AWOND"'-tonl tltM 111• ('l!llM~. flMn ftty •ry wfth MW ffu~lt ~· H llflen "-" ttl1t ext.iM 1 O." ,i.w; ,,... •• ...... Off.-.... ..., ................. lo .... 'n,1t11 l'x10' SLIU'S ·4 ~-sa:t•s • ALL SIZES IN .. ST~I . , GRANT'S CHECK LIST FOLDING CAMP STOOLS ............ 98c CAMP TABLE I. STOOLS .• ,,., •• ; •. $29.95 MREADY·BATTIRIES .•• : ••••••••.. lOc Jl.J FIRST AID KIT ............... $6.95 MOSQUITO HEAD NETS ........... :98c LAUNDRY BAGS .••.•.•••..•••••.•.. 98c TENT BAGS ..................... $1.98 TENT POU BAGS ................ $1.98 DUFFLE BAGS .............. from $1.98 WATERPROOF TARPS ....•... sq. ft. lOc MOSQUITO HITTING ....•.•.•. yord 49c 100% WOOL BLANKETS .......... $6.95 COLEMAN MANTLES .......... 2 for 39c CAMP COFFEE BOILERS ............ $2:59 100 FEET 14" ROPE ............... 9Bc CAMP AXES .............•.. from $2.49 AIR MATTRfSS REPAIR KIT .......... 98c RUGGED COMPASS . . . . . . •........ 79c GI WATERPROOF MATCHES ..... box 19c WASH BASINS .............•. from 49c FOLDING CAMP SHOVEL Everything In "°' ,.., -lill( ([ iMJ(lc ---G.I. STYLE UP.$1 .H CAMPING "' '"''" .......... ·-. EQUIPMENT! . • • . f.!tlt c..,.cttr .., lttrlf':o . ~ ., .... TYPE FOLDING COT 1110. $5.95 s4n . J ' HG. $1.29 .. SNAKE llTE Ill =~~;. •1• •Heavy Con~a• Duckl HAMMOCKS . '6'' \ "Off&ll'E IT" ti .11111.T'I ' suliill!us · WI- AU MAJOI I CUDIT CAIDS II BE 981 • • WESTERN STRAW HATS · :.:o •2• New •Stoci Jut Atrlw9'1 Wl.'NGUll · lfWI auck11sfyt. WISTlll IMTS $19'5 WESTERN SHIRTS · LONG SLUVIS ''It's BELL~Boriolll,Time" ~ . . .. (FOR GUYS I from Levi's®· ' 'ITA·PIDTN;.._Mt,..a.1wttli'iM.W s9· (. ie-'""" lo·., ... ""''" Gel4 1l4 P•Wll•r 11•. Sb.ti 26' t. M, ' I •'~ /co&011Si ' I •W SIUSI I . ·~ m1111 I -Xsi THI IXPnnt -··a .. 0;,. ...... ,, • "' • .,.,.. ln:their fl,W of 1hooti~JI Whit.,.; yt• ••Y Wlftt1n_,,..,..,..froni,. •' '\. ~ $20.00 22:.tlflt to 113,SOC>.OO ·SMtfun, Gr1nr1•fr111 jlt fft '•tocll· 1CHlt In IM ·IH for yiur1tlf~ont of tht l1rp1t 1tockS of tu:n• In Sovthtrn C1llftrnitl · , . I . • Wincht1t1r • B1mt1 • Arm1l1t1 • Smith I. • Browning • W1'1htr Wtuon •·WH!fttrby • S1yia1 • Remington • Clltrles D1ly • lthlll • Lltmt •. Coif • Ruge, •'S1ko •Hl.R I "The World's Strong.-1. Bolt-Action Rlfltl" TIM kit h tile h11rt 1f whtr "''"' ahortttr1 t11H the fl ne1t 111 .. ,..,g r.1t Plltt rlfl1 111ldt. $1Jkk it .,. •. y ... ·Q tf1 tht tlNl'lftlf•Kfitll '"' llUf·fll _,.-rlfli. Sltm it doutl. Ntw ,.ur clrtrl4f1 htttl 11 ,,-.tKtt4 ., tkrM tYfrlllllllnt ri.,.,.t Mlid 1tHI. Yiu '""'t 11t Hf. frtt ..ccurtcy. Or 1 dMfltr tr'nw p!llll. Or t t.veh•r ftnllh. Or 1 ,,.,. cMlfort. .w.-.. RE.IN$TON Mod,I 700 l'l·1$1 CUSTOM D'LUIE · .222 Rm. ,U2.liot. $. 9· . 9· ·9· s· M19., 6mm UST l'llCI $154.95 I , -.?~~I $55 I . . . - I rants 1 I '•! ' ' f CAMP TR,ILERS * Eosr to ~I~r · . * Ear flt· Potlr! . , * Eu~ fo Set Upf .. * Ear to Ownl • WhM yM to c.piq; you w1nt ft ..., """'Mo.(......., bOws tlttt, S. .... WI' ...... tw CIM"9il· trlfltrl :we·..,. I JI• hi -... 1ltt tltntt II·, ffnt of hln••e, 1.., '"""'' ._ .f!Nt tolkipo!O ,... ... , .... """'--" _,..to ~-- s7· " ,5· ' ~o $17'5 • ' • --. -- I I l - ' J. OAltV ,II.OT I ·-' ' I Nee•ue ·to Coaeh Costa Mesa .,·c-gers. ' By GLENN WlllTI:. .................. -at any IDOllltlll. superlon-...... ol w~ la ""1!llilly In ~ hla lealnl flnlshlnJ MCOOd'IDll lhlfdj eIPI ~eon,-rec:ordln& • ua.ai ...._ Nteme la curmUy teacbln1 •t power. ln~':*w~~id Ibero by 11111 ~bltibia,ollbeperiodillcludowllma Emil Neeme, 47·Y<or-old f..,;,., .. n1. ty balkelball -II Newport liarllor HIP and Mator Del, la upoctod to be named beod -totor II COiia -Hip Sdlool ~. "lbe DAILY PILOT learned...-, todo.y. Newport Hellar but could be aulbarlaod M!ace: hla~ .Git 1:::0:::, Aimltrooi the &UY who nu led °""P."l'' lbe Hanllql<m Beocb Inv•1Ilnow.l ID na, to ._i. "'-blWll>IH aa an oulllde --. be did -ll>atJila ~ow HIP to und'llealed.aea,...1)11 P!'a! ~ --ia& i llllMlnC UPl'!I.,.. Bw4! p ICIMl1. IUd> u lbe caae with Eatnda ol coochhlg ..... bee> empt;-. .'·, )iWw, In Ille fin>\': beollnii -~ teocbet Pol wtloon. "Coochlng la !llY llill love,'' be told lbe Neeme came to N~ 8-"" In~ ·"""'4>1.., ~ twice ID ._ Wl1loo -u Newpor\ temiit coach DAILY.PILOT. "I -up with --aod wu vanity 118.ehlD coOc:h and >'1icp bacl:lnto"""""'!Gr .... ,_. alter scbool houri _ and be auJded the ball In Micblpn and Indiana pa ~ tanl yantty football IMi>£or ior ' e · -~Jdni Mater Del hasl<elholl I~ -prlndpel Frllllt Lopes -to ccrnment on ~ Neeme'a upected •Po polntmenl to lbe vacaocy cnaled -u.r this year when Herb LIViey rtalped to Ille Ille bead pool •t Onnp c.ui College. to lbe •·-~ , • . ·•·-"'-•'; and then here to Callfoml• ~a ._it." ~· H1J baaebaU teaml ,..,.. blil!1.Y In !lllM'I and owm. a -noqrd. lldl Tllll .,._ ~•gue . ..,..u.,..._..p. 'Neeme wu an !Jl.lndi•na Con!-suC<'031ful, placlni IOCOlld In the -. be Ielt the Mooarcha, reali%lng Uill !oo&o Neem< II a well·known, colorlul honor•ble ll)efllloa o!mtill his !IHI......, League throe times, first (I~) ooct and bal\ dominai.d·the alhletk scene at 11111 penoollllty an the °':!"&m<J::-aru-atBulllr..u.Ivenit~fonnrd~ -fourllronce. --. } -· ··-- C09Cblng some. He wu from center. · In 'S6 bis Tar' went td the ClF Slnce then he's served a,, a radio .., the poslUoo be mJoftd for eight years at He began coach1ng in CaUrornla at sem1n'na1s be.Core. bowm, to Burbank. DOlincer, offlclll and teacher. Bat be'a However., hlcllly lnfonned 10UrCe1 cloee to the ,.... AY Neeme will (el lbe job Newport when a 'per10Mlit)r clash Lone Pine High School, ''Where-he served Neeme was namtd· v~ basketball =nghad his heart set on retw'niDC to developed ~een himoell and achool in 1951-52. HIJ -~ined reconl was ,37-21 «fa!;h in 1907 and beW lbal pooltioa for · ·n........-.,.,,...._ ______________ .._. ____ .,,,....._ __________________ .................. ~--------__., .All at Once Mantle Realizes He;s Not ~'Player ' . NEW YORK (UPI) -ll Wtes a while and alter be finl.sbed doinl Whal be had tltlJll '1vldly. All at once it hit him. .Aile< the good years I had it wu tough to CountrY, Gookin' restaurapt chain. I for the ahock to hit. to do he thought he'd like to 10 lnto the "For the first Ume," be says, "lt really"'" take the bad d'lya. There were times "The men's stores have caught oa In Mickey Mantle's case, il took a little Tigers' clubhouse and aee some of hi:! dawned on me that I wasn't a ballplayer when l knew what had to be done, onlLJ__greRl 50 far,.!-' Mantle says. "--They!re loqer, nearly two rDOG&A&.--Then-K-hil---buddlt&-like-Norm Cab, 1-K:aline-.nd-anymore." · wun't able to do it." keeping me busy but I still have time to him att at ooce. But hard. Denny McLaJn, off whom be hlt his not-That fact has sunk in by now. During his early days with the spend with my boys and that's somelhing .r Tbe pbrue-mahn and romanUciat ~last homer, wblch put him one up on It has sunk in with Mantle; it has !!Wlk Yankees, Mantle confesses he was l couldn't do too much oC before." tQ'mally might guea that if it wu golng J1nunie Fou. in with hla wife Merlyn -"it's so something ol a pigeon when it came to Mickey has four sons, Mickey, Jr., 16; to hit Mickey Mantle anywhere tt pro-Once inllde the Detroit dressing room, wonderful having hlm home for the first any outside business. Mickey's initial David, 12; Billy, 11, and Danny, 9. All are _bably wwld do so aomewhere around his Mantle got the &lad hand all around. He lime'' -and it certainly has sunk in with venttas didn't nactly bracket ·him in home except Mickey, Jr., who attends '·home In Dallaa or m:urbe during a visit to hu always been llted by rival players. the Yankeel. They miss Mlckey Mantle, the same league with the Rothschllds and Riverside Military Academy at Yankee Stadium, but they'd all be dead The 37·ytar-o)d ex-Yan.tee slugger felt whlch makea it mutual because when you Rockefellers. Gainesville, Ga., and sPends three wrong because that wasn't the way it wa completely at east. there in the Ticers' pln him down he admits he ako missei But time!! have changed and so has months of the school year at Fort •at all . u•tenr liddiPf1 'wacbin.a and cbattln& • them. --,..n~ley MlnllF. He's-doing fine now Lauderdale-. --· ---- . · 1be place wbert it bit him was Detroil . with his old friends. "After 11 years in a baseball uniform, financially wlth hia: Mickey Mantle's ri lanlle doesn't ordinarily get excited He was there to do IOflle of t.he color Mantle doesn't remember whom he it's a. little ltrange not to be auitin&" up men's shops, which show 55 franchises about something one of bis boys has done, commentary in conjunct.ion with NBC 's was taJkinc to at the time or whit he was every day," be &ayl. "Really, though, I already sold around the nation and more nor does he usually get worked up too game of the week a couple of weeks II• talkinl about but be does remember on should've qui~ three or four years ago. Wyers anxious to gel in. and with his much over a caf£b by a ceoteriielder be- ' Before Betlre1nent Banks Deserves Chance ; To Taste Baseball Plum It always has seemed • great inequity that Stan Musial should not partldpate In one more World Series before hinging up his Canlinal uniform for good. He had IUCh a fabu1ous career and was such an outstanding penonaliti' that it seemed only right that baseball's grealesl event -the World Serlea - would come his way in those last few ......... ' And so it is now wlLh another of the greats u be U!W'edly i.s on lbe final stePJ1: d. the career. At SI, Ernie Banks doun't figure to be active many more years. In bis previous 16 soasona with the Chicago CUbs he hasn • had a prayer of ~laying in the famed October baseball classic. . But now, after suffermi through some ~ campaigns as a C\lb, Banks may at last realize \he ambition of all major lea,guers -playing in the Workl Series. '1be 06I. are cu rrently laking the Na· liooal League's £a.stern Di vis.Ion apart. And Banks' bat Is one of the rusons. In fact. in six ionlnis of actlon against the San Diego Pldrt3 Tllesday, Ernie dtove in seven runs with a pair of homers and a double in bis team's 19-4 victory. HJtting home runs has been old hat I Angels Send Knoop to Sox That trade Angel gerieral mana1er Dick Walab has been promising lately finlllly came olf Ibis morning. He traded good.field, D<>bit second basemJn Bobby Knoop to ,lbe Chicqo White Sox tor switch-hitting leCOnd baseman Sandy Alomar and relief pitcher Bob Priddy. · 1be Angel& waited six se1aons for Knoop to start swin~g a big bat before gjvin& up on him Uils morning. He was ·hitting .117 after Tuesday's game. He ls consldered one of the best fielding second basemen in ba!eball.· • Alomar, a 15-year-old Puerto lUcan wt'io bu been playing pro ball sine ht was 17, !pt .2M last year in a reserve role with lbe White Sox. ll'I lbe b<ll aftrlie be's pooled in the 1m1j«'I. Jilt'• hitting .D4 now. • ~ wbo U-in Yorba Unda, had ·hll belt ......, In 11115 wbeu be hit .•. , l>rt he's log<d wboequalt ,.....,. ol I .m, .145. and ,Ml. , Bo&b players will join the Anie11 Fri· tdaJ In New York. f A1amar was mo"ed to the leadoU posl- a1ra: he came to the CUbs ln 1953. He only socked t w o that aeum. But after that the bat of Ernie Banks quickly became a respected item by oppo&ing pit- chers. Banks clouted 44 round-trippers in 1~ and was over 40 for four stralght yurs (11$7..0). His high -47 In 11$1 wben he was voted the most valuable playtr of the Nallooal Le ..... He hid 45 the following year when again be wu named MVP. The Cub great, who never played in the minor leagues, is a cinch to So over the 50iLmar.kJor_.llls c....r sometime this el.INN WMITI .............. ,,,,,. WHITE WASH _,,,.,,,,,, .. ,,,,,,, seuon. He had 474 coming Into the cam- paign -lbe moot ever by a ahortstop. Al age 37 Banks belled D homers. Clearly, be's one of the greats of the game. He's betn in lhe annual AD.Star game, Including the 19&'1 clas&c •t Anailelm Sladlwn that went 15 lnnlnp. But it seems only iroper that this great player and gentleman should be tn •t lwt one Workl Series before reUl'in&· PS -How tough would the Cube be this year if tbey sUll bad the late Ken Hubbs, the fine young -baseman who perished ln a plane crub aft.er Mtt1na; a major lea1Ue record for conaecutive chances without an error. Hubbs' younger bnJlben lhould be coming up on the atbletic 1tme at Colton H1gt. School in the next year or two. * * * How about pl:fu Brwl Mce.t.ery of Co.ti Mesa mp . . • Be baaed • bole .. ID .. -reoemtly •t c. I t • l'tteaa CoaatrJ au, pUtac bll we• Ute IU-yard 11&11 hole ef UM Mesa Ultda C..rtt, ull1 a .. tro.. · Exci ted! llanll1· He 11n111J llad a bole-bt-ooe earlier t. tlle ..... * * * The -.I Ia that Emil·-la the new •aroity hllllethalI ooooh 11 Costa Mesa HJib Sdlool. And lba1 klad ., ,_. -yw main- tain faith In mankind and the theor7 that jusUce will oul Neeme hu -thr<uch hla lharo of mlaory and ---A se«Jl1d chance Ia certainly In order In lbl1 Ul'I TtlepMM MICK AT THE MIKE -Starting a new career'in television broadcasting, Mickey Mantle mans a microphone during an NBC game of the week tele- cast. Mantle said the fact that he was no longer a ball player first hit him during e visit to the De-troit Tigers' dressing room a couple of. weeks a go. Se1iators Win in 10, 2-1 Injurie_s Still Plague Halos By JOEL SCllWAllZ Of IM Dlollr Plllit Slftt Wbo'1 an lint, the old Abbott and Costello baseball routine, was a pretty IWIJIY bl~ but there's nothing fWllly about the Callfarnll. Anegell' cu.rnnt dilemma, who'• In unllorm. A weary BW Rigney wat<had his bang- ed up Ancell llumble to their 10th loss in the last 13 games Tuesday night at . J,nabelrn Stadium, :t-~ In IO tnninis to the WllhinClo< Senators and then looked ahead to Frldo.y. "We lhould have (Rick) Reichardt and (Tom) Satriano r.adl, but I don't know what we're eo&ng to do until then ," the Angel lld-aald. '"!be ~ mlDIJ" ts going buggy trytnc to pt 111 IOme help and I've never been lbll llraj)ped fer players. With a ell.lb as thin as thll yva can't move too qukk, you hive to wait for that ooe big chanct." when he used one plnch·bilter and two pinch-runners ln a futile attempt to even the 9COre. Bobby Knoop opened the frame with a bad-hop single of.f Frank Howard's glove. Rigney then sent Clyde Wright in to run for Knoop and Ruben Amaro in to hit for reliever Ed Fisher. Amaro tried to sacrifice \Vright to se- Angel Slate 1,taf' ,, -N'Gell n Wt•hil'lllorl. f ;U 11.m. KMPC Mty lf -A11tt lt; 11! Ntw Y•f'k, •:M •. rn. KM.PC 1710) ,..,., ,, Anv•I• I I "-Yo~ l~:!S 1.m. ICMPC 1111) "'! [-Af>Olll ... Nrw v ... k 121. •:!S 1.m. K.M f' 01 Mty -l\'IOtlS •I 8*1oft, j :U p.rn, KMl'C l"ll MIY -Al\QotlS •I ~;ts D.lfl. l(Mp( 1l Mo:Y ,2 -An!1tll •I 111111 IO:ts •·In. kM~ll MW H --'""ls et , 4:.U f·"'· KM 110 Mir 2' -Antllb u t, I :li t .m. PC 1110) cond, but tapped the ball back to \he mound and Wright ~·as forced at aecond. Dennis Hlggina then got Roger il<po& and Jim Fregosi to end the game and send 7,741 fans home. ' done it right for us. He's usually good at it. "This was the win we've been looklng (or in the µiree weeks. We can't get any better pitching than Messersmith gave us. He just can't pitch any beUer." ~1essersm1th held the Senators to only four hits in the seven innings he worked, but one of them was Mike Epst.cin'a home ru n over the «nterfield fence in the top of the first. Babba Morton got Messersmith ofl the hook in the seventh WiLh a long homer to left, but that only prolonged the Angel agony. Consecutive singles by Kl:D Mcl\-1ullen, Ed Brinkman and Paul Casanova off knuckle-baller Fi.sher in the loth decided it. Jim 1'fcGlothlin (2-2) wUI go for the falterin& Ange.ls tonigh t again s t \Vasblngton's•Jim Hannon (2·2). cauff: ho has made a couple himself, but he stilt can't get over a corker turned in not Jong ago by Mickey, Jr._ "Up to this year he had just been a real good golfer,'' Mantle says about his oldest boy. "He hadn't played baseball at aJI . But at this military academy where he goes now he plays center field and it looks as though he's going to be a real good ballplayer. I saw him play one game in Fort Lauderdale and he made one of tb.e damndest catches I ever saw. I mean it was a great catch." To keep his own hand in, ManUe often goes out to bis backyard and plays catch with David, Billy and Danny. No bitting, just tossing the ball and catching Jt Banks Gets Seven RBis In 19-0 Win CHICAGO (AP) -The rampaging Chicago Cubs reached some giddy heights with a record-tying 19-0 victorY aver San Diego and are convinced they can win the National League pennant. The CUbs tied the highest shut.out score in National League history Tuesday as Dick Selma turned in the team's third straight shutout and Ernie Banks clouted a pair of three-run homers and .drove in .seven runs . "The Cubs will shine in 69," hollered Banks in the clubhouse after lhe game. "This is our year." Ernie credited his big day to two Utings. "It was senior citizens' day," chirped the .:JS.year-old Cub, "anti I bad to give my people something to cheer •bout. And my &-year-old daughter, Jan-Elizabeth, was out there. ''No, she didn't say anything, all she could do was smile. WhaCs prettier than a smile from a G-ycar-old girl." The only other homers Ernie tw hit this season came in his first two times al bat opening day when his father, Ed Banks, was Ernie's guest. The tt-O triwnph equalled the league record first set by the cubs in 1906 against the New York Giants and equall· ed by Pittsburgh against SL Louil in 1961. • Selma's first Cub victory, a three·hlt shutout with 10 strikeouts. followed shutouts by Ken Holtzman Sunday and Fergu.oo Jenkin& Monday. The feat tied a Cub team record of three straight in 1909, but is far short of the major league mark of ai:r straight posted by Pit.t.shw'gh back in 1902. Selmi'was both elated and disappoin1ecl with his performance. He walked four and felt that af te r walldag Tony Gonzalez in the first inning be shouldn't have given any free passes. Andretti Hits 171 in Indy Practice Run INDIANAPOLIS, ind. (AP) -Marlo AndretU conUnued hil drive. Tuelftay toward the 17S miles per hour speed he predicts is needed to win the pole position for this year's Indianapolis 500. l'tion in the White Sol batting order Mays and !tu hit .:rat! 1inct then. Priddy ha1 no record la four ....... Cl.le, after Whit I alwl)'J called I flrat elus setup in hia firing from Newport llarlJor several 7ean qo. That big chance for Rigney and the Angels came in the bottom of the I ot h "The bunt was the big play." Rigney said. ''It's the first lime Amaro hasn'l Ws practice lap of 171.494. m.p.h. was the fastest by a piston engine cu in the -{::( -tf -tf history of the Indianapolis Motor w.uiutt•TOff c.u.i•oattiA Speedway. On1y turb~ cars· have gone ..,,... ••r•l'M raster. I . C d • L h d h B d ~,=. ~ ~ : ~ : :;:;; .. rf., ! ·: ! AndretU already owned the faetest lap {' a n a . I a n s a s ~ y run age. ...... .. . ' ' ' ,_ .... " . . . of the year •1170.197 m.p.h. 00 Monday . N.At1e11. 11 ,, • • • "'.,..,.,, " ' • 1 A. J. Foyt Is next with a --.1 ol IH.237 P'"°"'lrd. If 4 I I I A.ROllrlwu,. ai ' e 1 ,..,._,.. IN u.ii-• ' • • • ltlMn, 11 1 ' 1 m.p.h., and Foyt was over 199 h1 two MdlWI*" • ' 1 1 o Dllvenu •• ,, 1 • 1 pr1ctJee runs Tuesday. l rJnlll'l'lfllo tt ' I t D I!.... c I t e I c1-. c ' • 1 1 ic:~ "' • • t AndretU repeated Tuesday bis predlc- • 1.M9ot-. ' t • 1 • wr1tti1. "' • • • tlon that 1M m.p.h. ~u be tha •-~ TOllONTO (AP) -A,.r..:.::=;:j about a -GI Ibo ._t wtddl NYO rulol," lbe .,.,__ -,,__, __ n It woaldnl be ·"~le for lbe Olympic .,_ • • • • • _,,, • • • • •• w' -. .,.... •-...-..---...,.,,..... "---." ~u tt111'Mfto"" 1 • • • v....,.,. 1 • • on the opening day of quaUlyinf Salllr· J:l·,....oid prtlkSeDt a( &be -tbe m.nbfn of tbe. tllk fcree ftiel that *•"'""'• "If Cinda doesn't like the ndts, U9llJICll Hlnlnt. P 1 t I I l!.F~. P 0 e I d ~ c.c.nmHtee JI ....... ..t tn the .....,..... 11\e .1.. Al!W~ Jll'I 1 e t ay. _,~ • ,...,_ •'tbe preveWac OlJmplc 1'11111 are Jt can pt out n•i u limple N tbal newspa.per aUIU quotes Harold L.........., "' • • o AndrttU . who baS been 011 the pole In lTona. ,...,._ ~ telllnc Ull'fllBatic" al llllflll tblt Cmldl ''otymplc rulm are wrttten bJ the Wrfpt, °"' pmtdeot of the Canadlln t~" • 7 1 i.:'1~ '°' ~ .! ./ two or his prevloua four &OO-m!Je races • .. : tr!. ':'-by 911a .ruJa tl&ablilh ff. own Mt " otrmpic: rui. iep-.at.IUYll ol 125 dtfftrent countrta ~ .. ~~ =ort, 11 suppoi'ting Brun· ~~:.0,ll'lt1M 1, c.u':,.:\. t'g, •: ..J.~~· hoped to lake his Lolu~·Ford •nd STP ...... •1 .. ~1.. .. to Jtua••-.. ""*" " c.i"'"'i. '· ,. -,..,...,,.,, ic""°' HR Speclll out one n'IONl llmt 1\tesday, but • ... ..... dltlliJMUnf VII Ute --...... our. W\llJ. tbrou&bout \ht world. UnW they're Jl'rom Rlbat, Morocco, \Vri1hl Is -l!Mltlfl UJ, M9rtoll IH. ,, -Dll .... 1u-. l -the tratk WU closed by light shoftrs tba npml fll tbe l'* farce OD ipCIJt fGt T'bt report IJlo 9'111Mtl there is no chanl"d, they lhould be respected'. quoted II st.yinl CIQada a:hould accede \0 u,..r. ,, M 11 •• 11 10 last two hours. p Oz• u.at wa tlbled in tbe Houle reuon lmlltur'I can't eomptt.e witb pro-''JUlt becllUltan individual doesn'l,lilt the Olympic rules and: •~· ..a11 • 1 1 • s -1t'o)'L't--tUm.mat&,~Rojff-M~uske)' ~-Qanunw Monday b7 Health Mbdlter fmJonala_ Ind 1tiD rUln &btlr amateur~~Lbn!&-DO-W-·'9'"""""'~~"4donlt-thfnhhatCanada~:;: cw.u1 1 ,... " , , : ,-drivtnl a car klentical to Foyt'1 '#ilh ~ Jolla llanrl>;--iw:i. AIYinl· "U CIMdl dotsn't lib the rules. ol only 2t,OOO,OOO people -should make ~·1:;:,.~~.o.n ; : : :· : : turboChargcd Ford tn,glne, hid the third ~1C1ll)', BNndqe. WM t.aJkin1 "The Olympic Games bu ill own 1tt of iovemlnc Ot.Jmpic reprtte:utatives, tbtn 1t.s own Olympic rul es." HI, -av 111~m11~ 111roui11. l lll'lt _ 1 "· f~test speed oi the day, 168.287 • . · . ' •• .. \ • • ' I . . WldM!d'1, loloy 14, 1969 ·'1( DAILY I'll.Of Jf County Invitational, . ' Engman· Ch·arg~s Into Spike Duli~s Amooa prominent sporta fitllJl'OS in Ora11ae County, Earl Engman would eui- ly secure a rani.ing in the top 10 in any poputarit~ poll. A ham-handed, gregarious 1 or t, Engman has an infectious laugh that rests somewhere between Pbyllss Diller and Ed McMahon. And IO his many acquaintances were quite piuled to learn that the Santa Ana High ~I track coach had been named meet director or Orange County's second annua l invitational track meet. The smooth-skulled Engman bas p1ung-' ed into the task with no heslblUon. "When 1 was asked if I'd be Interested In iunnlng the meet, my answer -was· 'Let's go.' " The meet, scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Saturday, June 14, will be held at El Modena Stadium where Engman spends his early evening and weekend hours get- ting the place in shape for some of the world's greatest athletes. l2IO for !he atadlwn. ~ -I loll them we~ve 1ot to makjt any kfn4 tl physical cbani•. tt'• ...... u ..... E ..... n. 15, has been Suta Ana 111,it.'a track coach lince 1960 a..t aJao ..,... ., sn assistant vanity footbsll coacll undet Tom Baldwin. He's Just now fin1ahing up bis llld school tracll seuoo and the work lood fir the June 14 meet ii acceleratinl. 1 "We're just now atartJna &o ~ work. I ...,.. I've pot in about • boUn of phyaical wo,k on it now IDd thin'• 1 lot more to come.)' He repon.. only ..,. ~ t0 far. ·:we came rtal cloae to pttiq-IDIDt of thole Kenya Olyn\plana for.the meet but they had Cemmllled --It another meet just before we ccmtacted them." "We did get Jay Silvester'• fDb'7 blmlll today, though." Silvester, an Olympian, Is the dllcii, world record bolder lrom Utah. Ott to CIF Tennis Wa.-• Again Newport Harbor }fjgb's temJls team,' year In and_,.., out UDOOJ the CIF"s finest, em!Niib upon another CIF playoff campaign Friday. Newport woo the tiUe in 11167. Front row, fiom left: Gl111n Cripe, captain; Klm Perin9, Dave Eastman, Bill Paley and Bob Ogle. Back row: Bruce Charles, Bob Hukell, RDbbie CUnningham, Pat Wilson . coach: Jim Rapp, BilLBrock, Bill Hart and Greg Ogilvie. The Tars' fin! match is Friday against Balsa Grande. "Last Sunday l took ' five of my distance runners and one of them brought his girl friend and we painted numben on 6,100 seats in four hours." The prelbninary entry lists suggest the meet will easUy be the top track and field event ever stated in the county. Olympic 800 meter champion Ralpb Doubell of Australia and countryman Ron Clarke wlU be on hand, in addition to iOflle of America's finest. Two Orange County Olympl.ana an II· peeled to perform -decathloD cbamp Bill Toomey ol LqUna -ad blp jump ailver medafltt Ed Canllbn ol Garden Grove. Other establl!bed -·~ are Frlllk Covelli, javelin; Jofm pole voult; Geolf V-and Roe Wbllney, 400-mtler bunlleo, ad Ar1 Walker, triple jump. LONG GRAY 'LlNE FOR KATELLA ACE Bob Shmfln, prep basketball standout at Katella Hill! School In Anaheim, will eorbl1 at wen Point this aummer, the DAILY PILOT has learned exclusively. A J-10, high-scoring guarti, Sherwin was undecided between Stanford and West Point for 1everAI weeks. He has been a~ed a Congressional appointment by Rep. James B. Utt. In addition to being student body vice- presktent at Katella, Sherwin carried a 3.5 grade point average. He averaged 23.7 points per game Jut season and was named to the CIF'a class AA first team. Santa Fe Puts Heavy Sticks Against. Tars . By ROGER CARLlON Of "'* OlllJ """' l!Mt • Newport Harber HJ&h will be fa<ing a couple ol _400-plua hittm and lhree pitdlm of equal streng1h when Ille Sailor> journey to Santa Fe lll&h School In Santa Fe Sprlnp Friday afternoon for lint round hostlWUes In C1F AAAA baseball action. Santa Fe's Chiefs, runners up In the San Gabriel Valley Leegue to Bellf1ower, posted a M mark In cireu.it play after I• ing five oi their firlt nine games. Leading Ille olfemive depariment for coach Bob O'Higgins nine are Steve Hickam and Nat White. mckam has a .430 league batting average while White is a step down at ,121), Backing up those two ls first baseman Mike Snapp with a .375 average. The pitching talent has been divided equally between Ron Clark, Alan Bill· ingsley and Reichi Emerson. Clark has posted a =>-4 mark with a 2.1 ERA while Billingsley is 4-I (l.12) and Emerson 3-1 (0.68). The Chiefs won the Warren-Downey Invitational tournament before league play with three one-run decisions over Gahr, Warren and E:icelslor. O'Higgins considers his catcher, White, his most reliable hitter. White has three home runs to his credit in San Gabriel Valley competition. n.e Chiefs finished a game up on. Norwllk and Lynwood In league play for the right to enter the playoffs, dropptnc their final tilt. Hickam. MUte and Snapp an: .U. leque candidates. Newport's last venture into baseball playoff acUon ended in 1984 when Loq Bea~ )Ylbon eliminated the Sailon. Santa Fe (13-7-1) 2 Lynwood 2 Poly 2 2 Bellnower J Pioneer O 3 Excelsior J Jordan 3 6 Norwalk 4 Gahr 31 Cal High 2 Warren 1 1 Lynwood 1 Etcelaior o 9 BtDftower I Bellflower 14 2 Excelaior 4 ExceW'"' I 2 Norwall< o N-Orwolk 2 4 Ca l High 14 Cal High I 2 Lyn...00 •-"41•-..1 J 0 • 2 0 • I I I J Barons Honored ·Mission Viejo Trio Sea King F()e -. Loaded With Engman is checking early to make sore any world records established at the meet will nol be denied recognition because of irregularities. "I'm going to check oul the pole vault area closely because I have a hunch the concrete slabs that support the standards don't confonn to the rule that says they have to be from 13-& to 14-2 apart. On All-Crestview .. · Mike Gray of Mission Viejo High School led a ccntingent of three Diabkis on the oflclal All·Cresiview League baleball teem as selected by U>e Orange County Sportswriters Association. Gray, with a ,356 league batting average, waa selected at catcher while mates steve Hai.an and Tom Gardner mtide fint team selections at fin! base and outlield. Champion Villa Park's Stan Russell was named player of the year While Mel Grable of the Spartans was named coach of the year. Orange Coast area performers who JlC'eived honorable mentions were Blair Bollas of Laguna Beach and.Glenn Tsuma of San Clemente. AU-Crestview League P~or $d...i Closa Pn. R-rd 7-1 3-2 .405 .286 .329 .353 .244 SIS!! RuneU " Vllla Park Sr. P Daw Waiting El Modena Jr. P llllkt Gray Mission Viei• Jr. C SteV' Hazan Mission·VieJo Jr. lB Art Rocco Tu.son So. 2B Stev6 King·-Villa Park S5rr.. 355B cl~. El Modena Kim Oran1e Sr. OF 'l'Oltr er _ Mlaslon Viejo Jr. C . 348 .3M <;larY ann Oranke Sr. OF .. Jesile $alpdo Oranie So. Utility • 375 .390 Player of the Year -Rwsell, Villa Park Coiieh of the Yeer -M'1 Grable, Villa Park Hilliorable Mention : Bob Blacldidge (Foothill), Frank Bojorquez (El M ..... ·l, Lee Myers (El Mode118), Howard Hoyt (Foothill), Blair Bollas (Laguna Beach). Glenn Tsuma (Sen €lemente); With .347 Average Rustlers' Richardson Tops Area JC Batters The 1969 Orange Coul ares Junior col- lqe batting ra<e was a OllHlded contest riglll from Ille opening day of the bueb1D teant when Golden West'1 Ron -banpd out lhree blu In foor tripe-• JUchlrdlon naturally couldn't maintain that .750 p.ce 1t the plate, but wound up as tbe Jeadlng baller in the area with a 50lld .347 average wtt.b P, lU13 in 101 trips to tbe plate- Hll closest challeapn and the area's only other JOI hitters were teammates Noel Paulson ind Myron Pinel. Pauboo, wbo banged out ftve hill in hi.! tut Nne at bl.ta doled Gill tbe campaign with a .DO mart wblle Plnel put together a .302averqe. ()rap Coul Ooilqe'a leading regular hitter was Mike Leec:b. who compiled a m avera,e, while Scott Longnecker paced Saddleback C01lep '11 regulars wllb a .291 mark. In -to winning the batWng tille, Ric:blrdlon Jed tht area or wu among the leadm in almoot ..,.,, bitting category. OU.M•t COAST Al It M 11111 AVI, W•lf'b J021AI COl'l'llnt I I I I .nt Uldl 111 ,, " " .m K.,,_..,,, M I M 4 .m 11..-" 11 u It .ns J.,..I,. Ut ,. ;aa 22 .211 It ... •••l-M1 ~ .. ,, .. ,. ""-"" ' • 1 • .1YI lfilt'f' Ill II It U .JU ,.tlmitf ,.. It >t I .lU '"""' 111 '' 1J 11 .m l'illNr •t I I I ,ltS ...,,..,, Jll ' , ' .114 W'Msrllr .. M I! I .ltJ ~ "''~·'" ~· . . . , ·"' """"" II I t 0 M7 cri... 1 1 1 • ,a ,.. .. -J•llk"IM· """'· ,,... ca tKlll L•h lOS 2/J f1 11 ,, !/J 11 11 " 1fJ 'JO • ' , ' ll/J s 1 SAODLllACK )6 '"' ro 0.1 ' •. ' .. ' ,. A• It H All AV .. ~I 30 J106 .HJ L--a.er u. 6 u n -"1 ........... ,., 16 16 u ,,. Sill* 62 10 IS ! .2'2 ~ 11112 .111 11M:k.... 10 • 1 • ·'°° EHlt n J U S .lt• °"1l'n!llrt tt ' 16 ' .llO WIU*"t Sot 1 I ' • Ut NriMn 16 6 11 1 ,Id P'I-,. 1 4 I ,IJt ~lnffWI .fl l I t .lJI ,....,,. IS I 1 o .111 VICI '1 1 $ 1 .Gal llllnl 161 10"'3 ... _ 111 11 .ui I'!..,.,,. 12 I o o .llOO Hit -""""laM (l), JI -S-19nd, L~- 11' 11 ..OJ. HI -$wwllalld. 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Heavy Hitters SanUago High School lumlshes the op- posiUons for Corona del Mar High In first roond CrF AAA basebaJl action Friday afternoon and the cl.vallen present a formidable force with Imposing batting averages, good pitching and eight wiris in their last ntne «rtlngs._ Coach Dave Jarman of the Cavs brings his second-place clllb from ·111e Garden Grove League into Coron.a del Mar's con. fines with six batten m the; starting lineup with •Vl!l'll!S .300 or better. Hls big_ aun; ca~ .;om Beierle, aports a .1111 leogue "°"age. ' · Two othera at .400 are Terry Llndsay at seco,id but and Steve Keithly in the oul· lleld: Jarman hopes to start his ace righthander, Bert B!yJeven, but the decision ls still in the air because of JIJ. ness. Blyleven has an 8-2 league mark with an 0.85 era to his credit. He's beaten champion Garden Grove twice dW'ing tbe campaign, .(..t and 2-1 . Liit year he fashioned a perfect game in '"-1ng ol Paciflca . If Blyleven can't make it, the Cavs wiU 1tart ~er Don Kolstad, 2-1, who bas two shutout. to his credit. When queried about Heirele, the Caviler coach replied, "He'li everything. "He's aood for the long ball and is just an overall threat everytlme he come's to the plate. He doesn't strike out." SanUq:o comes into the ClF playot(s no stranger to the competition. 1be Cava won lhe Garden Grove League -title lut year before bowing to Orange in firsi round action. Santiago (134) I Neff 4 Saddleba<k 6 El Dorado 6 Sonora 7 Pacifica 0 Garden Grove 2 La Quinta 0 R. Alamitos 3 Bolsa Grande 5 Pacifica 0 4 Garden Grove 1 S 2 La Quinta 0 2 7 R. Alamitos 4 2 2 Bolsa Grande o 3 5 Pacifica 6 1 2 Garden Grove 1 3 3 La Quinta O 3 6 R. Alamitos I l 4 Bolsa Grande 1 7 ''What t do not wan' to happen is (QT a recwd to be turned down that 's set at the meet "I'm going to call people Uke Ed Burke end John Pennell, to find out just what they Want in the hammer and vault areas." The meet will be taped by CBS and shown lhe following day on nationwide television. Engsman reports he's rece.lving abun- dant cooperation from all frqnl.I. "The Orange School DJ.strict has just been great -they 're only cbargin& us Kennedy Whiz Player of Year Kennedy High School's sensaUmal Alan Bannister was named pl.ayer of lhe year for the official All-Freeway League baseball selections by the Orange County Sportswriters A.!.sociation. Kennedy, champion of the circuit, land· ed four players A>n the first team. Dick Stuelz of Kennedy was named coach of the year. Ba.Wster led the Teague with a phenomenal .523 average while mates Gary Atwell (.455), Dan Parma (,500) and pitcher Art Sanchez (6-0)' chlpped in with great efforts. Al.L·P:RlllVf.l.Y LIAOUI ,lrtt TM111 N11M, Sdltol Cit•• '"· ...... Calkin. '""" "· " "" ,,.kmlne, Stv1nn1 "· " .JU h Mllt.r, Kl'Mtdy ... .. ,m HorNn, kV•n,.. ''· .. ,,,. Pt.,,,., K111Md, "· .. .... Arw.11, ,,,,_ ''· OF ..., H ....... n. Ful~ "· OF "" k-.Lowtll "· c "'' H1t1Nn. L-ir ''· ' "' •-o ,.....,, "· ' .. IUtt111Jkl, $1Vt!ln. "· Ulll 4-2. ·'" St<tlHI T11111 '"'-· klltol c .... ·~ ·--11.Clbln..,,,. L-11 ''· " .l il St'91•t, S11nv Hl1l1 , .. .. ,,~ soenm, t,..,.. "· .. ,ns l51lrd, l 1 H1br1 ''· " ••• C1mi>bell, $.IVf""I ''· 0' ... K1w, Sun11V Hlll1 "· OF ·'" Lawson, ·~~ .. ~ ••• OF ••• W1lll1, LI HtOrt ,,, c ••• Clrll'l1nd. Trov "· F ,, Schld, ""''""' ''· • ... k!ndtt, l.I Htbrt ''· Ul!I .... ,,., Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvltlon W L 22 It 17 14 14 17 12 16 13 18 JI 18 CHICAGO Pl'M'SBURGH NEW YORK PlflLADELPlflA ST. LOUIS MONTREAL ATLANTA West Divllloa 2t 9 18 12 18 13 14 16 LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO CINCINNATI SAN DIEGO HOUSTON 15 2D 12 23 Pct. GB .667 • 548 .452 .429 .419 .379 .700 _300 .581 .467 .429 .3!3 • 7 1'h 8 9 AMERICAN LEAGUE Eut DlvlNoa W L Pct. GB BALTIMORE 22 12 ,647 BOSTON 19 II .633 I . WASHINGTON 17 17 ·_500 5 DETROIT 14 U .483 51>, NEW YORK 12 21 .384 91> CLEVELAND 5 2t .192 13 Welt Division MINNFJSOl:A 19 9 .879 OAKLAND 211 JO .!67 CHICAGO ' 12 12 .500 KANSAS CITY IS t5 .500 SEATTLE 13 17 _433 CALIFORNIA • 10 18 .M7 TftM•r'l l-ltt Oehelt i. O!luoll I CJtWi.nlS 1. k.,._.. Clty ' MlntiaOll .. l1IUmlf1 J Ol~lfftit ........ WQllll'll'a'I '· Ct!ffofnlt 1 111 Wllnltl hlttl1 I. Ntw 'l'Ofk I 5 5 1 • T ......... _ llotloll IC11l1t $-II 11 OKllNI I°'°""" W), '"" NIW 'l'lrt {~ !>JI 11 Siii"• (MtttNll 2-J), 1111M C ..... llnd fMc:O..n Ml 1t ic-s City Cl>fllO 1.{I), 11111111 Olk 1911 f~ ,.() ., ~ twlltOll. ,.,,, ..... W-'*"1111 IClllmlll NJ ti Ctll"'"'ll llfrAo. Glollllllt 2'tJ, llleftt • atttlrrwN: ll'lllltM 1-11 1t M'"'-tl CWdo ~ ... ,. "'""' AUTHORIZID FULL SIRVICI AND PARTS FOR ALL IMPORTED AUTOMOBILES Tlckeu, priced at 12 ind 12.lt, art available at mutual qendel and .t tht benmttlng Children'• Hoapllal In ~ Area Sports Clipped Short Estancia High School finflhed -to Newport Harbor in Cee compet!UClll al Santa Ana High School In Ille Bee and Cee CIF tennis cbampi0111blp toama- ment. Estancla's doubles team ol Jtrr'/ Winters and Steve Emery woo the CIP' doubles clwt\p.ionahip by defeat In i Newpmt Harbor's Kim Perino and Daye Eutman, U, ti-I, &-2- Newport's Bob 'Ogle won the Cee lingles title over Lolta'a Ken Maley. Re•ettl Wlu Esiaocla High SCbool's Art RMW a'efeated Steve M~y of Loara for Ute Irvlpe ~ague termJs !lniJes cbmn· pionship Monday afternoon at Colla Melli High bu\ tbe Eagles' doubl" team fell !JI the finali to a pair from Corona del Mar~ Sea Kings Steve Tait and Dick Miller, defeated Jtrr)' Wint.era and Steve Emery, U, 7.S, 6-0 for the doubles title. ' Oller• Seoul % Sunset Leap 1olf cha.mpkn fflin.., t~ Beach qUall!Ied two for the Cl1' bidivldual champlomhlpe at Mont.cito Couotry Club in Santa Barbara June I at the Sunset circuit qualifying match. John Bitting of Huntington Badl ril second with 74 to Westem's GIU'J' Hook over the par-71 course at El Toro. • Steve Hayea ,of Huntington Wll foartJi with a 76 while Dou1 Smith ol Newport Harbor was filth with Tl. Ahabelm's Roger Koch picked ap tbelr other place with a 74. Reehl Ffru 7% Irvine I.ague champi.on Esl&Dcla and runnerup Corona de! Mar will fumllb aQ five goU quallfien from the loop for the CJF individual cbampiOMhips at ~ tecito Country Club in Santa Barbara J une 2. Mike Reeh! (72 ). John Fl'ffS (73) and Buddy Cox (78) or Corona del Mar and St<ve Roberl!on (73) and Lee Dowd (71) - or Estancia qualified for U>eo finaJa at Seacliff Country Club In Huotington Beach Monday. 1969 qedp Am:1b 51885 D lllAL UllD CAIS flNIST llLICTIOll OF USID SfOIT CAIS IN $0U1HllN CAL1'0llllA ' m . W111rtttr (II. »I -l'ttl ISi, l11ltf, Jlll'llll11t. lrt'l'lfl (I ledl), lllldl, 1'1""-• IU1N•tlfl, l'lltW Cl .cflJ. ti -81ll1Y, '**11'11. L"9dl. l tllWfl, l(lllO lJ = h ltMr, ,.IVI. C..t111t, Wl!lt!lfr, ·-.. . .. ,,, ...... ~1 .,. n .. lt JS , ,, , . .., JIOO WUT COAST H .. HWAT -NIWPOaT IUCH _f~1 lu11111 I 11 11 I LI 11 t I , , -l(lm,i'*' (J 111$1. -.. .. ....... 11• ,,, ., " lf ,., " " ,,, • •• • " .. ,. » » '' ,,,, 17 ' M MZ.f .. 5 -1764 .. -,.. ._ M•' e AUSTIN-HIAUT - •,•, --PllUll Dooltr, W. A S.wlle -1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.. .................................................................... ~ ' .. _ • ' l . -. ' by ·Deke 'l • .Your· Engines?· . Hou/gate ~ ~· cri.,:.. at ·1_...,.11 &<f> -11er • ....,. ,...; 'iia•not GI lbe -Id la --led ther< tiy I Briton, I _,,_ __ all Al,lllrion. . ' ' . All "' -..-Enslla" well and .... undentand the ~ ldloQI. ll'a almoat u II Ille United Natlolll Illa Wroed ill bock ... -aUto racloc. ~Lut year~_.. ... be ... "' f<ftico dri-. u..il .the at· ddalll lhal -!ht -GI Jimmy Clark and Mia Spence and io)....i Jadde s~ On<! bflfore tho wHl>drawa! GI turbines to be driv<n by Demi Hulme and Brue< McLaren. Hulme drove lllOlher car to join Jochen Rind!, Graham Hill and !O Ame"""'8 ii> Ibo otartloc'lield. . " . RAi11n*1f1 !<II'-,. ot, !he ~ay are llJll, ~uh?e arid Rmt To liCCWui~ thein; the. F.J.". almoli ·CIDCUd the famous Moole Oarlo GNncl Pm thla Sunday"so ~ 'cooild coo- _.. .... Indy ljilOllfylnl! ' . I . . • ' · It'•·• lDlbelli'fable atatimeot that all tl:l,ree drlveN have ·an ocellenl cbanCe to win. W«ld clasa drivers like them don't 1perld a month In Indiana doin1 toothpute commerPaJa. Hill and Rindt come to Indy coun..y of Andy Cr""""1ll'1 wbclrrle acquiskklo ct the Ldus team, for whom they drive. HUJme la to be a team-. GI Ca1Rrn1an Dan ~-• · At.UU. early s;ige of the gom,e it ts tiiugh.to . ict lio_w '1'~11 they will do, even in quallf.ioatiOns, but they are laid to hive oars wt*b r~ the only ''smart''' approaches to winning the ·race !ID year. HiH and Rindt will drive bigbly rt.lined w~ LotUieS ftir the STP.team. They will be pnioomt by tUrtie Fords and.will b9ve the advantate not ooly ol ((IUl'-Wbeel drive ti.it ct C.Olin ~p­ a-'a upertJoe In building the .m.tinodern of .all .fWD cballljs. Hulme will drM a auper-low 0-Eag!O powered tiy a Cumey-l>nilt -k block Ford. JUii in case tile atock block can't 8" the jcb done, there's a turbo Ford with Hulme's name oo it lilting in the Gurney garage. . · 'I'ho5e are the two ways to go. Turbo-ctwgtd or ttock block. Having a world chsmpklnsb.ip caliber driver in your ur isn't a bad idea dber. Who are hee invllden and how.eood are they ccimpared with the local induct! . . - Hill won the thing Ch~ years .ago. That.3od1Us .worl~ gr~ prix driving championships are .his credentials. EnipnaUC HHI, the caricature oi a modem maJOl geQeral,,somedJ}P.g betwee;n David Niven and Nigel Brute, is at once contrtive~l, 11ikeable. aloof, suave, colorful m)CI' •edictS.blt: · . , He is 40 years old~ AJthopgh J!i:ll it a.aid ·to be on tbe ~· lel"Vative side as a driver, he is Usually Dee:f jbe front. He ts a good ~-to wil) !I. U)er)o p< dllllcnllia luvolvmg the hot dog.-.rbo rue supposed to w.irl. Hulme IDJlber, f~ world champion, was fourth last year belind.Bc,biiy i!•r. GurJW mid Mel Kenyoo. Al. the age of 33 be irl alfeaey .i w<)rid gra..l;prix champ and -of the Can-Am opoits Clir ·..n... . ' . He firWt. made waves in intemaLlonal radog circles Bl! , New 1,ealand <16b,dr,iv.er ,ll!lll to Europe m. unique "fellowship' pro- .. ~ ~1'&lil!:> .a:ave the world Bruce McLaren. Hilim!: ,iO '!lie aort -likes w lead the race and l>'!Vet look lid:.11e b'tinfamlllar in the role of a otralegist, scheming to gel t11e'Jliotlrl 6W onitx fellows in !ml! ct him. He .will priilla'bly try lo ~ bis~. Curney. · · · · iHallt I• Glamor Bo" ·1u..tt. "Ile'• uie ri-boy " the lot. Ill llll llnl trip to J~apo.Ua, 1967, be learned tbe liiidlly of !be"""'""" walJ lbe·~ way,...,,....,. .. ven11Mmdr<d feet of U iO .a ~ .Cll<. His IYfo f-alJndy _haven'I been apec· ~· .. ' Ni .. Jo RiDdt 11 Europe's ~•youne man'oo the way up." Heds -Z7. yeara old aDd 81 enthusiastic about ractnc as ally YodnC ~~ manager Roy WinkelmaOO once !aid ~ him : "He'd raoe at.eainrvlle:rs if be bad to. Put him in any car, any ~ime, ~y pMioe1 ancf you know he 'U get the last ounCe rot ol 1t -end himself ~ " ver has an oil day." wui thla nebe the. yW-they play somebody else's Natiooal Arfiu• CID Memorial ·Day? . Si.-.lflcall&t E.,_u Two seeminllY ~ 1abd relaUvely obscure eveotl may hml sf• ~e f(lf'the future of auto rw:;n.. . A few. 1'eeks ago t>Odgt factory driver Charlie Gfotzbacb qwl tbe NAICAR CNnd NaliciGU &tock car clr<Uit and leooled a blast ot NASCAll: ,saying it w~ a "dictatorship." . «e~ been severely penalized for a minor infr~oo in the pits duriiii i. race, and DO~ knows Whlt else WU going through bis~wlloo·ht leed.ofl oo NASCAR officials. Glotzbach is one " ~ tfPe:s wile> ~ .sl~ to anger and immovable \\'hen they ma1< .. up their mlndS. • • .> . ~ · ~ circ:Wafinl ~ dw: vast, highly efficienl aulo rac· loll gr.,.-are lbat be ii soon to appear on>the USAC stock, car drclbit-WMli • CIJmPU'8bie')ld«y rlie. That means Gkttbach il not oui.t~~ ~ but baa merely switcbtd clubs. A few"ckye ago at ·a USAC stock car race, U.S. Alio Club ~ ll>arlie ikocima. told newam<ll his ...,.._ and die Sports (Jar Club GI America are diacusBlng rmrtuol problems and wcwidtJ::i:ll a merger. Tbat~USAC anl SCCA would consent to cooperate with each otftel' ls a progmastYe l!ltep for the sport. Talk of merger means either a big league, mullknillioo dollar step forward or • step t.ciward toward the aort ofUnvisible "dictatorship" Glotzbach was clalmln,g. ' · • What it amounls: to is that Juto racing is m~viQc (fOfWard or bockwanl depending oo. youi; viewpoial) toward -Illa! <Uie GI or)!Miiati'on enjoy<d tiy Ille National Footl>all League. It may not blppen but many are wolting \Q make Jt a reality. unrortunateI1 for Gkttzbach's J)9int ol view, which is.not ~hared publicly by anyone ebe, the major sanctioning bodies art ap- pa"lltly in a mood to work more harmcniously fr«n now on. If tbey get together, there may be less. freedom of choice for a mtver choosin& to do whet GloUbach did. At this point in history, the same type of sanction body feudal ~ esist:i In m--' that ca....i the NCAA-MU d"'· ..,,,..... A chaiige .....,. lllupid sanction wars moy no longer be -Ible. ·-Nobody in racing wanb a dictaton'bip, but there may 8000 """ -_.,,. Junta al the top lnllleR1I of aillandful GI warlon!I. Ryun Admits He Quit ' 1During Relay Race TOPEKA (AP) -Jim Ryun wu quoted today as saying he .nt nmnlnl on the secood leg ol the anchor 880 in the spring JDedley relay 1n the Drake llelayl 11 llel Moina two and I half-1(11. talk about it. 1bere wasn't 1 second chanct ... Ryun b "1lenld In Ui< al and the mile In the Big Eiaht OUtdw Cllamplanahip Relays Frld17 and SaWrdly at Amee, Iowa, Mater Dei 74 Victor In Wrapup M-. Del . IUih Scbool'a vanity baseball cootlllgent finished Its Angelus Leque Ruon•on a whinlnc note, ban· dbl& Servile a ~7-4 dafM1 at ~:it=· Santa Ana Vk:tory 11ve· the Monarchs an ov~all ncord ol 11·10 and ended the Angelus campalp with a M mark, good for sole pouesslon ol third place. · Tbe Monarch1 had beaten AHULUS LUCUJI ,. ,,. ... , W Le• ' l 1 l • , 1 ! I .,. , Newport Hlrtior lllCb khool ' rwim and' l1mnutlcl fl!ll , J Checking tke Aref'i Greem • r Tar Stars ' ' ,, . I . V1ie r ' . Honored ' McCabe, Montg~~~ry · ' Bill McCabe ano CbUc• the club'• annuli Pro-Am lllo tourney ...,__ lo B. II. , Poreymao and ~ their teams TU,oldaf llloolgomery will play for the toorney Wcdnesdoy. Playen Dll1 .iao lllWnpl to Georp Cllalfua, wbo tled with nlgbl-at . the acboal cafelarla president'• cup championship Included ID the li.sl of .,.,,.. ~ _... IJ.S. Open cllln>-721 ' •n<I Doog'Dovey •llad "'IJ at Irvine Coast' Coontry Club pelllnrs b Jut -ar's Y/~ /!": JICI< Fleck, wlio ta dine-,;_ ~. and "·yd Ith ""I'··' ~-· Salllrdoy after s u r v l v Jn,, .1~ o( -w. II u•-•-Vl"jo. .._..._.. _... .......,. " UM:: ivu s ..._"" OI ~ • pro, Bob Roux, alona •~· _, -_._.._ .1...a 1 ---• ~· In -•mmJ t!uwJlb the elimlnatlona. Jimmy-Poftll, Jerry Barber, 'Entrants in the Anteater c,;._ -ar -· ••~ ""'. ng. In the vi.:. prestdenl'a °'8111 Jimmy Clark. Jlnugy E. -•bo better Flecl<'a 730. DoJey wu namod Cl!llWll IJt wBaaK!nllooJC.nl<lf. In dendfeaflinl Tbompoon, _ Hnwanl Sml!V.' ...,. t11atday·wtU'beJ1wVded , Wllllam,\'.ciu!>i ~a tii>le "'."!.,most val.~ for the • • I r., ive 1 OW', Moon Mullins, Jack Ellis and special prila., fn one satarcay on tbe ~t3Ui v~ty swim ,team. for the title while• t be John u.~.. Chris Rei wu named 'most ·-~--o•·•t ts still In -·, 'Eotry tee b 1:111, which ;,,. bole. YCIWll """1 • four.in>n In aluabl . ~·-' ..,. up · The eftDt 1s·1w .. 1ow ball of eludes,...,, fee electr\C earl v • m l!)'1IU1llltlca lbe air between G o·r d a n •-•-• .a_ accompllabillg the' 70-yard S-'-.-'-. P •----nd John J -"-flvesome. with 1 noon sh.......... and adm...-1 to the IWll'u;ii f 1 ·--,B~ .. ,-,ad Edna •M·-n· h starling limo. ·•-party. ea -.· 1 Varsity -·, Ca(lllln: Doug 11 an C ug Fu ... M... lolo 1· L.... ... Doveu; MV : Dovey; Most combined for a 1411 to lake a H'--1 VI J '"~r nna •on can ~ S•llt• A-'·-• J -·-recent mbed foursome tom· ,r,-... Oii e O obtained by calling 13H835, • Improvi::u: lrn n-&-..u. blned nel of "'"-rs -·ent t~·-•ment •-scb""'•led Fn·-S--·l'ff Keo. Nowling defealed Jack T~·--MV~J ' FBruce ,........ .. ~·~ q ...,.. --• • --.•;' ' aY arru; with Carolyn Gray and Hank day and will be.nefli the UC Wilder oae up on tbe Jath hole M~t Improved: Farrer. P,orcella second at 147. Irvine athletic scholarship pro: Jim ThoR\J*ID won ·the: ban-for the pire1Wte}11's CllP cham-Cee _ Captain: JI m Sa1Urday'1 better ball oc: ~am. . · dicap·fllgbt ln men'• club 1c-Pionlb.lll at s.Dia ~· , Clarkson; MV: ct.rboa; Most paitners In men's club acUon 'Backed by the Big I Booal lion at Seacllft Saturday with It wa Nowtiq:'s f i r·s.t Improved: Scott· Wall. wU won by Bill Deutsch and ers' club, there will be pitch· a I& In a best ball tourney. presldent'1 cup title. ·Chuck Andres wilh a 60 follow· lng._pnUlng, longest drive and Second pi... -t ,to Dick 'lbe)'. _,, tled • ...., into CJ111Hlllca arcll·rival Servile earlier In ed by BUI SCbaupprter and closest to the pin contests· in A Shootman',r •~followed. by Art the 17th bole _... NowUna Varsity --Co-Captains: the ye~. a..1, to complete a Fred Kallenborn at 63. addition to the IS.hole touma· Brownell's 71 and Joe .eosta•s7. birdied llDd Wilder ~ a Chuck Smith and Chtil Rei; two-game sweep over the Irvine Coast bas Invited 36 ment. 71. ~ r ulree-foot Puit'for ¥8 bintie to MV : Rei; Most Improved: Friars. . .prof '==eulonala=·==-.::toc.· ..:co::~==-=1n'-_o;=·=·k=-=Da=vts=-o=f...:1J:.:c:....::1rv.::l=ne:....:::b_..:Callow=="''Yc.ru=g1rt:::...:honon=:::...-=;.....'1=ve:.:·Now=.::u.,,,. ,_.;·*::::.""'r"·----'R"'on.::...;W;.ca_lk-'e:,.r·_,_ __ _ Coach .Bob WilJllote's ouUlt -1 wasted lltUe t1me in decldina the Issue, scoring four tlmes in the initial inning and adding three more In the second sfanza to obliterate Servite's cJwicea. Adrian Witt pitched lhe first four iMi.ngs. and then · came back later to mop up alter ooe out in the sixth to gain his t~nth win ~f the year against four losses. Mot.Tea 011 11) . , " ..... 1 , 0 0 l g : g 0 • 0 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 {I , 0 i 1 I t l I , I ' ' : ·l ' I : • f 2 I • I l I ? I I ·o 0 I n 1 1 1 ,•, ""' 1 a o o 1 • 0 0 •• i ' I I 0 I I I o ' I I ' l l .• I 0 0 0 I ~ f f f 0 I I , l l l 21 ' • l 5-1 '1 !11nJMI S..-vlte (11(1 1i2 o -~ 11• tll'I ~terDtl OIQ(l)ll-1 •1 Bonito Top Area Ocean Fish Action The outlook for Ora11ge Coast area weekend anglers is a cheery one today. Both of Newport Beach's sportfiahing JanWngs report lively .action with bonito off coastal waters. "We're cetching from 1,500 to 2,000 bonito on our weekend days;" ·reports Lee Goodwin al . Art's Landing. "Tiie barracuda are on- again-off-again and the halibut have been very slow. We're averaging about three sand bass 'per fisherman in the five. lo-seven pound cl a SS'." GQC>dwln also said his boats tia ve sighted yellowtail off Catalina but haven·t yet hook· ed any. "We're catching some nice bull bass off Catalina with live squid," be added. Al Davey's Locker, Robbie Robinson files a similar report and says an angler boated a IS ~; pound halibut off Laguna Beach this week. SC Nette1·s Fall in CIF San Clemente High School's varsity tennis team dropped a 7,01/i • 11/i decision to host Bol11 Grande in opening round action of ClF tennis pla~ff competitlion . The winners will travel to s e c o n d • s eedtd Newport Harbor Friday for seccud round action. Gosch Harlen Chambers' San Clemente ouijlt. first team ln the 'IChool'a hiatory to reccrd a league championahlp Jn tennis wllh a tie with Villa Park and Fqothill, was led by Roblo Sepe's thret wins in singlt1 action. VAlllifY l .. C ....... I~ UtVil •.is1 ' 11111• PJemn fK) loll ,.., , .. , '"'' won " J, 1t1lls CICJ i.t :M. M. M 1 -.. ,. S-!Kl Its! M t ._.. .. '&. .. ,, ... w...-~ IKI IHI M.""14. A : -.. ' ' . •• I• "All-Weather 11" Tires • Clean aldewall deaign, radial dartl on shoulder • Triple·tempered nylon cord coa1truction • Buy now 1t these low price• (Jst your sst tot1ay! GOOD/YEAR $ 81 5::. tlf'I """ ... ..._ ANY OF THESE SIZES 7.75115 7.75114 L25114 SiRVING ALl SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Jl1ull -qoio4ed by aports idltor Bob -" the T..,.u Cllpllll.J'"'""1 In to-dlJ'• .... M 111ini, "l did Bruins I Up, 2 to ·Go . '" YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. 15'6 NIWl'OllT ___ ., COSTA MESA -It .. 1 aula1aM tKLA beW a one-came lead 'Ille 1J111Mnill1 GI Kansas today In the belll'ed •Paclllc.a _._. WI booed tor his_ bueball race with two ~es ,...,._ lo tlle .-., and · ...... Jltalk w••2!W left lhlt wetbbd in the~· .-.. lllil,.., rettnee 1t11t1n agalnlt arch- •• JDt .t =wanted me rival SOUthem Calffoml.I. lo ....,. -rlPt The ·Jl-rulna·btltt4 em.• be Aid. ,._ I pl Washington 11-J, In Seotlle on ....... I wu ao ...... ,1 Tleada1 wlllle Sllnlord fell d """" I cfldD'I waa1 lo • ... pme behind lhe froot· I runnen, losing to Orqon In Eu1ene, 4-1. All eight teams in the league face their tradllional foes Fri· day and Saturday, The Trojans, who km W to Washington State In Pullman on 1\lndq" 1Ull have a malbamatlcal chance lo lie for lhe """"' H U.., CID top UC1AA twice. YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. THEODORE RO.INS FORD Oz OCIAN A YI. -· 4'4 "" , . 2060 H~IOR avo -. ...... 642.0010 • -----·-·- LAGUNA .. COSTA MESA I ~ • ' • ' • • • I l • • l _, . - . ' -. - • . " ' • Today'• Flaal N.Y.,Stoeb ·y6l. 62, NO. 115, 6 SECTIONS, M PAGES • ORANGE ~OONff, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, '1969 TEN CENTS ... City Won't Budge on Boat Slip Policy By JEROME F. COWNS Of tllt 0.llY ~Ii.I Sl•ff Thousands of Newport ~ea<:h pier owners can relax. ·City go\iemment is sucking by Its poli_cy or allowing only waterfront hOmeowners to build and use boat slips. Councilmen made that clear this week when they unanimously rejected a plea from Balboa Island realtor Harvey D. Pease· for ·a second hearing on his ap- plication ror a permit to install a pier in It Was front of 50meone else's residence. C•y Harbqr Coordinf.l<f George Dawes strona:ly recommended against reopenlna ttle matter. and he gave oouricllmen 10Ud reasons -1ncludlri'g !eg~ precestent - for ftl81ni.ng the traditional policy. ' Two wee'ks ,.go, the coUneil turned down P~'s &ppllcation, which, if ap- P.i:oved, woul!J have placed, a,. cloud over the use ot .. some 2,IXM> private piers Jn Newport· H~r. Pease h~d 'argued th.at the city's • histori<: refusal to allow inland resident.. to own piers is inequilable and di~rlminat.ory. He asked reconsideratJon of his ap- pllcaUon this wtek, c1airnlng thll coun· cilmeo' at lbeir last aeuion had acted hastily and without sufficient con· sideration of the subject "in view of lhe public interest', scope, IJla&flitude and meritsrof lhe issue raised." .. DaWes supplieq councilmeO wllh what they considered .ample justification for ··neat Bum1ner' Newp ort Youth's Coqrage ·Tested as Fingers Lost By JOHN VALTERZA • 01 flltl D1lh' l'llM' Stiff . The stream of friends flowed steadily into the hosp it a I room. They were Newpgrt Harbor High School students cu,,1tir1g a class or two to see a friend. C>Cie prettY girl about 15 said they came beeaUJe Col.ston "Cole"' Hak!, 16, was "a free IOU!." ·The conversations were In t h e particular generation's slang. Words like "bummer" and "groovy" abounded. "Yeah, I gliess it's a bummer all right," Cole Hale said quietly as he look· cd at -yet tried to ignore -his ban· daged hands. To make it better, Cole will again have to tap that reserve pool of courage that he has used often in his young life. Jts something that is unpleasant to talk about, aad he doesn't talk about it. But bis brother, Frank, 23, related the lVrenching impact that the loss of 61f& fingers had on Cole last Saturday af- ternoon In a freak accident on the docks of .yt's Landing in Balboa. Cole. who has " .•. well, a reanr deep love" for boats, was starting into his second month as a dock attendant ;i,t t)J< sportfilhlng landing and, admi!ledly wu looiliijlorWard tO 1\,;;g9\)d pay (rom tlie ·coming summer selsoin. Then something happened. ln that 'riiosh'Otlttne llf-manarvers with ~ · botls, he started to tie 'the line tossed tf I hfil from the "Frontier" onlo1he dock:. • the boat lurched at the wrong ttme and ' ' * * * Rotarians Plan Scholarship for Fi1iB·er Victim j Newport.Balboa Rotary Club members 'I'.~sday night voted unanimously to spbpsor a scholarship fund drive for ~ Coie Hale , the Newport Harbor High Scfi'oor 'junior who -1·0 s t" Several Uofters in a boating accident. 'The Rotarians. some 100 ol the'm , then egreed to make the initial donaUon by dippiiig into the club treasury. The $250 contribution will be followed by personal donaUons from individual members and -It is hoped -other organizations and private citizens, the Rotarians said. The action was taken after DAILY PILOT reporter John Valterza spoke to the club about the 16-year~ld boy. his at- tit'ude and his needs. Valterza in· tervlewed young Hale at Hoag Memorial Hospital earlier in the day. ijotarians Fred Swemon and Ralph Hitson volunteered to serve as chairman fof the scholarship driv e. they said they planned calls ~ oth~r ltarbor Area service clubs to enhst their supPort for the campaign. Contributions toward the project will be transferred by the club to a savings in- slU.utloR. DonaUoiu may be sent to the NNport·BaJboa Rotary Club', PO Box ~~·. 'Balboa Island, Calif., 92662. Checks ~d be made out to Uic club with a notati on on them saying, ''For Cole Hale r·und." ,I' 'Hi . ' B di pp1e an ts Rob Two Youths A pair of hippie-type holdup men who appeared high on drup robbed two youth! gangland..t7le, lhe victims told Calta Mesa poHce late Tuesday. Ross E. Batker, 19, of 2099 Centella Plact, Newport Beach, said be lost '20 In calh and a peajacket to the pair, while Sllnle'y ~f. A. lfurwiti, 19, of 4117 W. M.dr1dden Ave., Sanla Ana, had oolhin& to hand over. 'l'.be victims told or£ictr James Farley th.~ were. picked up about 1L:30 p.m., wl)l!e hltchln~ a ride north on liarbor Bo0li!\l1rd at Wilson Street\,but driven ot'f &ne-boulevQird after a few k>cks. "Where a:rt we £olog?" one asked. al t.·hlcll~ thTie one: ol the 1bch.1ctor1 puUed a Jf cal. r:evotvu and told them they were eotng along for a ride. Arriving at an eastslde apartment com· pfu. Barker and Burwlt: said. they were ordc~ out of the car, robbed and the bandits drove away after wamiJli: them nof to tum around. . ' Cole,. Jn. anguish and terror, saw, his finger1 ripped from his hands. 1',ut, lt Y(asn't his' hands ~at dominated hlk ·mind lit the fuomeilt. lrrani and the slring or friends spoke with him in the Hoag Memorial Hospital teen wing room • Cole was thinking about his brother, Dudley, 24, an Army helicopter pilot !n roote home on emergency leave from Vietnam. Cole was visibly nervous, his tongue cocked 1bov! bis upper lip, toes twitching methodically. In Conversations he looked at Frank and in silent glances ask£;! thousand quest,ioll!, No word had arrived about Dudley's return, and both were worried. (He ar· riVed late Tuesday). The soldier's arrival is important - especially important, since the three br~ers have only each other. ~me call it misfortune; others coin· cidence. There are many rationales for what the Hale bOys have undergone. Cole Ci 16. His father is paralyzed in a Sa,.n Francisco convalescent home. His mother . remarried and living. In Northern California, is also physically unable to e,are for the teenager. Besides maintainipg 119li9 gradu at Newport H•"'°f lj!P,,,~ l'orkad • ·t ~oek hand ll~a.of ~ ·il'"!·;-\$,. '11! . ' ' e mov~ to e ~ year a~ wliln ~el', • leln , !f1!1 Frank loui>cl )l'otk Ill ~. ~ "It is the only choice' We had. Either have him come with.fn:.e.to Los A1'1ieleS,- or stay wltti rea~le' friends In Newpor1 wtiire lie · could Work on the ' (See t'OllllAGE, Pap I) Nixon Plans to Vacation In Oemente-But When? The vacation schedule is han,ing on the Wh.ite House wall today, but, unlike the boss in most .major organizations, Presi· dent Nixoil -hasn't put down the dales he'll spend fn San Clemente. Mrs. Richard Nixon told newsmen Tuesday that the first family wlll spend two weeks or a month at the new sum- mer White House, whose $340,000 purchase was announced Monday. Just when they will visit the tree- shrouded villa retreat being bought from l\'lrs. Victoria Cotton, 90, widow of the late millionaire Democrat Hiram H. Cot· ton. is still an open question. The First Lady said the hectic presidential schedule will probably keep her husband from returning to the beacb!ront adobe mansion they Yi.sited two months ago until Congress adjourns. This would put the White House West visit sometime late in.the year,,ai:ound September or October, unleu Mrs. Nllon herself or other members of tbe family should drop In at the tG-room home. "We haven't heard a word about the time,'' San Clemente City Manager Ken- neth Carr saJd t9Cfay. ' He explained that be would be told im- mediately if Pqlice Chief Clifford Murray had been contacted by White House aides to begin preparing to work with Secret Servicemen on presidential security. A completed deal to ·purchase the mansion and five surrounding acres o( the once-rural ranchland estate for $100,000 down and the rest over a five year period at 7 .5 percent interest was announced td:onday. Earller reports said the Nixons planned to take over the new White House West sometime in July, but painting, repairs and perhaps even conatruct.ion of a swim· ming pool are yet to be done. Besides carpenters and painters busy around the grounds, men are working on a 111rvex to determine ir the site Is suited for tbe future NiJ:on museum and library. Hat.bor Teacliers Near Shawdotvn on Salaries By THOMA.! FORTUNE Oftllt DelW ~-.... tncru.s.ingly militant Newporl·Mtaa school teachers today are moving toward a showdown with the IChoo1 boa.rd oo salary negotiations. On< bundrtd filly teachen met early thill week ind decided ~ a plan for persuasion. The plan ill for a m 1 s-t meeting of an district. te.cben Tburaday, mass alttndanct at tlie IChOol board meeting nm Tuesday and anothc!r strategy meeting afterward if ntcftlUJ'. Te.acbers ha~ armed lhtmlelftl with an opinion poll that ahowl a large number of them faVOf rather militant steps to exert their wln~ , Polled by Newporl·Meoa &tucatlon Msoclation, more: thin half of the 65 per· cent of ttachcrt ropondlng .• voted In favoc ol 1.p.it.car,ieacher attlke, legal action and not ~ting contractt for next 11Chool year. The more thin 1, 100 district teachtrs have beell instructtd by the teacher aSIOciaUon not to '1gn next year's con- The pgll was taken tl'I a period of ca1m, teacbtts' Elec'utlve secretary Bart ]lake I -__ ... _ ----··-.. pointed out. "In a period of stre!.!I we don't know what I.be reacllon ,will be, but it can't be any lesa, ·~ he claimed. He uid, "Teachers are trying to be resl)Oftllbly militant. We don't want any bot lloads going of! the deep end . There are ,.... peliple thlnldn"' pretty bot, but Ibey ... willing ittolft!· . A •chefs' neaoliall,la: team has met on IC occasions In recent months ,with SUpl. William Cunningham ll1CI other top level admlni&trakn. The I a t e s l barpln111g swioo S.lurday luted from _. t a.m. tmlll 4 p.m. wilh only time out lo grab a 11ndwich, said Teachers Associa· !\On Pmldent Ray 511J'der. AddlUonal bargaJnJn1 sessions: are tcheduled for Friday and next Monday, with the board meelinl Tuesday the leticlle:rs' target date ror aome kind ot ~ t. ' 1()11, Boerd Pmldenl James W. "Biii" Pcytoo •aid he wasn't aw,,. ol any leochers' large! d11< ond the liOonf would look at the proposal w~ it comes before ll. He said he didn't lhlnk.~ would (See TEACllEllS, ~ I) .. , del1J'lng Pease'a sec<llMI request. 11ie harbor administrator:, a retired Milrlne'colonel aM yachtsman,..aaid it la unUkely that Peas'e. coold au~ply. any act- diliMJll lnfoimation that co.M cJianfe the tiaslc fa'-18 that led to the orfgi;Ml denial ol Ille permit appUcatJon. · :'His request CC!llflJclod ,di~. -.,ith the estabn.bed city policy•l!>lt ~·· necled plera and noala bay'atd. of re'sldenUal ioned areas are riWved for the ~J>A!?ls of the. lbutling up~ pro-- perty.'' said Dawes. He pointed out that tbe munlcipal policy Is In line with the sta\e Public Resources Code, which allows state agen· cies to limit use of piers on slate ti.delandJ to abutting landowners. The tidelands of Newport Harbor are administered by ·the city in accordtnce with a grant agreement from the state, Dew~ noted. · .Pease, wl\Q ~ght to 'b!!ild a pier In lront of the home of Dr. Oliver G • · P.reselats Jte~ords Howell, 204 S. Bay Froal, Balboa lsilod, had challenged the city's ri&bt to Jld. minister the tidelands In a. fashion thai prevents him from having bis own pier. Pease lives at 30f Collins Avenue oo tbe island, several block! from the bey. Dawes indicated to the council that It has the right to continue lhe ban on ,.Up ownership by inland residents.. ':11le cooncil," he said, "has ample diacre:- tionary powers for &Qmlnl.sterinc the (See BOAT SLIPS, P•1• I) Heart Specialist ' Says 'Dr. Brown' Diagnosed Well DAILY PILOT St1fJ ~. RETIRING AF.TER 15 YEARS Tr•ns'port Ch~tf Morrison . "-... ' John Morrison, head of transportation for the Newport·Mesa Unified School District, Is retiring •Iler serving local !Chools for 15 years. "I don't plan on doing anything special,'' Morrison, 65, said today. "I have always enjoyed working." He started rolllna: the school buses out on lime \ in 1954 when there ·were ten. "We get 53 on tlie road now," be said. Remlnlsctng about foggy mornings, he recalled one of the worst one day lai:t year when school buses had to be held. "The fog was so tblck, it was a hazard and we couldn't take ttie risk," he said. Many of the buHs are still in use that were •running when be arrived 15 years ago, Morrison noted. 'T'hey are kept around 20 years and have 200,000 m i 1 e s before they are disca rded. We keep them in lop shape. It's usually \he bodies that wear out, not the motors." be said. Morrison and his wife, Bertha, live at 156 Monte Vista. Costa Mesa. They have three 11ons. One UVe.s In Berkeley, one In Huntington Beach and one is: a student at Yale University. By TOM BARLEY Of flltl o.ai, Piii! lltft A Los Angeles heart specialist today testified that Robert Ervin Brown's ex- amination and diagnosis or patients at a Fullerton clinic was "~tirely com ...... patlble" with recognized ?Peihcal prac· lice. ' Dr. Martin S. Goldfarb, a reccgnized authority in tbe·field of cardiology, look fi\e and JU. from the stack of medical -1-·-ill.the -.Im.lo <lel!=e1:tricol englneer·wha pOsad ia ' ' G won F!l'l<r for n,. -1ia ~" . <Gifity f~ ' ~.~ ~ >l\ld< ~ ·<aJW lit by ........ pubHc ffl.qaerlLa,;......, ~"1j~- stap when .. final a~ we_re scheduled to commence, comfilente4 time' afl<r-tl!tie u . he leafed thl'O\llh plllent reCOrdl that Brown's orden for dnlp·, and blood, cholesterol, urine a o d labonltory teats aod heart llmltatlon ex· erclsel were what he himself would ha~ prescribed. In one Instance, he noted that Brown examined a ~year~ld malt patient at length and then pronounced him lo be "an ideal candidate" for implantatioo of anlmal organs in the hear1 area, a new and refined form of hear1 suraezy. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Eru1ght looked up erpeatanUy as Goldfarb pondered the lengthy diagnosis by the man W'ho readily admits that he posed u a cardiologist. "I would have done exactly 'the same thing,'' Goldfarb said. "All the ·tests and the results fully support such a finding ." Enright's cross eza:nilnatioa of the key witness was not available at press lime. Goldfarb's analysis of 10 reeotQs of pa· lients in·whose'treatment Brown was ae· li\'ely involved could ]lOS!ibly tip the scales in raVor of the accused Alabama man when It comes to the jury's con· sideratlon of the length of his sentence - if Brown is found guilty. Brown admitted lime and time agai n Thur~day through a long grilling by Enright that he fully intended for a long lime to practice as a cardiologist. But the 33-year-old defendant stressed, as often as he was allowed to, that he knew hl.s Jimitallona anti would not have imperiled any cardiac paUe'nt. ' Newport Boy, 11, StI'.u~k ljy 0-f.," ' The soft-spoken Birmingham engbteer , " challeoged the leatlmony of a woman · • doctor at Ute clinic and a St. J* B k B th y _ ; ' Hospital nuf!e that he h1Jd prescribed a rea s 0 J.Mgs polenl heart drug in'20 lilries the quanltty . , normally administered. An 11-year-old Newport Beach boy #ho And Buckley went to the medical darted lnto traffic in Eastbluft Tuesday . records to show that Brown, in other afternoon was struck and thrown nearly · 80 feet ·by a small foreign car, brei.klni both his legs. EJrlc John Cates, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Cate., 2101 Descanso, was reported In falr condiUon at Hoag Memorial Hospital thla morning. He ls under treatment for compound fractUres of both legs, severe abrasions and blood . 1..,, hoaP,ital aid15 wd. PoUce ;aalcl tbtl accident occuned at 4.:30 p.m. wtMn, witneaa reported, 'the boy darted lnlo Eaatblu!f Drive near' the VIiia del Sot lntenecllon. ' The .auto, driven by John D. COO!t/ 31, Santa An•, ~as U;:avelln& mU:ibound and hit the boy, lmocktns him· Into Ui pave- ment. Eric was,c.Toasing tht:street wlth·a•IJ.. year~ld friend. wtxJ ~as f19\.tiurt. ' . Pou .. Aid Ute driV<I' will not be died. 1 NEW YORK-(AP) -in.< st.cl\ 'norlqet cloeed with 1 fair pin ·~I)'. lrUh brokers reporilng • '-al pe1<e pro. greu belplnc lt lo advance. (See ... -lions, P.,.. •11). Trl!dlnc wu acllve nur the clo/O· The Dow J<Xlel Industrial ""8'' ·•I l•'IO ~.m. wu up•·• 1t 917.38. ' -i.. ::::::9' • New Boundaries For. Coun~ilmen ·JV.ow Locked Up · New boundaries for Newpori Beach's seven councilmanic districtl are Virtua1ly . locked up today. · Skond ,and flnal reading of an ·ordinance creating the new Allgmntnts wilt, be oa lhO City conuclt'a May lill 8'en- da. No pr0b!em1 an anUclpeted. ~I '!'•ch •as lndjc•t'<! at tbla ~oek's councll ,.,.10rt, Myni<IJ>8l l1w..U.rs tel 'the formal Mln1h( ·~ate wllhooii I' peep from , pllri!ilt1 ·m1e<1 """"'" c11am1>m. Among those in altendance for the flr1t readl!'I or the ordinance, which, ba<l tie<!> ~red pttpa...,f by 'counctimeo , two • •etU fC01 WU fonntr Councilman Dee Coolr. Cool< Oii ~prtl 18 faacht ap!nsl aplll' ting up tmne Tur .. ce, where be u,., ' into two COUDCil dlstricts .. COUnctlmen, llo.....,r, ttltllfd lo order any revlaloos ln !he city sta!ra or~I -~ --·-- cases, had prescribed that dtug - atropine -in the quantlly reeogniied by the medical profession to be the standard adminislration. Brown did not deny that his career, from the time of his graduation from an Alabama high idlool, had beeo atudded WflD'""false refereoca, assumed names and !orRed diplomas and deirees. Drill Warning Bill Approved By Assembly Sj>eelal It Ille DAILY PILOT SAClW(EN'l'O -The Auembjy 1w approved hnlnlthousty a hill compelltng the State Lands Commission to give coastal cities and counties for wantln& of hearings on offshore oil drilling 1p- plications. A>aemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport B~ach), author of the meuurt, said today he expects the Senate also to approve the bill without a dWentlng vote. The legislation, whlch hu the en- dorsement of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chairman of the Lands· Commission. ta now in the Senate's Natural Resources Commit.tee. It will be taken up at 1 com· mlttee hearing Thursday. The bill, AB 622, was prepared •Y Badham at the request of Orange County officials, led by Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and Seal Beach City Mani'ger Lee Risner. ' It arose from vigorous protests agalnst Lands Commission approval of ex. ploratory drilling by the Shell Oll Com- pany lasl January. Shell wa11 granted a permit to sink test core holes off Newport H a r b o r , San Clemente, Oceamlde and o the r offshore areas. The Lands Commiasion In March rescinded the permit before any drilling bad taken place in Orange County, waters. Coastal agencies had compla1ned lhat they had rectlved no prier notice of the January Lands CommJsston bearm, on the SheU permit· application., , • Badham's bil1 1reqUire.s the commission to gi ve 60 days notice on. heariQgs on all exploration and drilling requests from the oil industry. ' ' Coan WNdter Extremely heavy two -that weather bureau euphemism lor •mot -awaits on the borlzon for Thunday, with lllMY nits ba\>01- !ng the mtreury aver the - gree mark. INSIDE TODAY Oronae Couiti~·.t Board of Suptrvbor• haa jotned cocasto& dtli• m thal.r compaio" for of,.. , 1h0Te ofl driUi11a, curbs. Pao• 1$. 11,... ,. ....... 11 9MftlN 11 ,...... .... ... __ .. -·-·· (_,. c.... ,, .......... ..... +1• CIM.iW tM1 .._ c..tr II (Mik i U , PtA M (.......... " ...... ..... .. O.llfio M9tfCW \I IMltl ,.... 11• o•--14 ...,. ,.,. llfftlrili ,... ' DI'. ......... • .............. ..,, lttdl Mwtl* .. •111-.. if.t' T....,.._ 21 ...,....... -» ....... • ......... . .... --" IMl9n ' ..,. .... .. .. 11 hmcit '' I • • l - , --·--- 2 my PILOT • --.,, M., 14, lM Ni·xon Repo·rts Toniglit On Viet ·Peace Hopes W.lsRINGTON (Ul'l) -Allor nearly four monllll Jn office and amid a fl""7 ol 'diplomatic aciMly, Preol-Nboo ._ta lo tbe American people lcolCbl on •1the 'prospecl, ror peace 1n Vletnam.11 )!""I' Cabot Lodp, chief u . s . neptfalor ot Ille Pw peaoe laJP, new lo Washinglon lhls afltrnoOft and Stcrl!lary of Slat. Wll1iAm P. Rogeta flew into Salgoo. u the President worked In tbe presidential part of lho Whit. House on the ten of bis 7 p.m. epeech, which wtU be carried live by all tbreo major WeV!sloo networu. Loclae mUled Oil his· arrival Jn lbe capHal touy anythloc more .lhan lhat he WU home for ,fCODIUltatloDI OQ the Viet. nam queatlon" and lhat "I np,act lo "' tbe pruldent 'llllllo I am hero. ' Allhougb Whit. H-olflcfila nilad rut -of 1117 parUa1 troop withdrawal and said noth1na: spectacul1r would bl mealad, they did term Iba Higbie Granted Another Delay In Drug Trial 'l'"ocll 1 "major -· COlllalnlnl •<new lnattrlal." Bactlna: that up Wtlrt lh ... lacton: -Nlloa IChedulecl hit first Joint meotln( of Chi eablntl and lhe Naucinal Secur!fy C«md1 .for Til\ll'lday momln(, after Lbe addrta Is delivered. .....:senate Republican leader Evert:tt M. Dirksen, briefed in advance by Niron, aal!f, "It's going lo be a rather all!nlflw>t speech." -J..od&e, on leavlna Paril thla morning Indicated be knew wbat tbe Ptlldent would announct. "I waa llllUllMted by tl>e Pmldenl for consullaU..,," he aald. "But, of. courae, l cannot acoop the Pn:al· dent before be makes his addr<ss ton.lgbL" -Rolen, amvtna In Sallca for four days of """"'ltatJon and ·-.Vallon, made a point el wuring !he Soulh Vie~ namea lhat lho American objedl .. In the war ~d .not. changed. He atid it •NI "the establilhment of coodlUona •hlch assure that the people of South Vietnam can determine tbe!r own future un- conditionally." -Elbworlh Bunker, tbe U.S. am- busador in Saij:on, met for the tblrd Ume In lhree daya wilh Soulh vi.inam- Pnsldent Nguyen VaD Thieu . -Tiie Whii. HOU!< said LocfJe -.Id be given new instrueUON in meeUngs wllh Nl1on after the address. On Monday, Nix· on co{mllted for the first time tn penon wllh Gen. Crolghlon W. AbrlmJ, U.S. commander In Vietnam. Ni.Jon's address, to run half an hour, wlll be bis first full statement OD Vlet- nam. ' It comes at a time when some senators of Nixon's own party were ehowin« 1n t}\tlr speeches an impatience at a lac\ of evtdenco of progress toward ab end lo tbe war. Parking Will Be Policed At Court Site-Pinkwy SHl'I NUMllR ONE COnJnt l ntranl ....,_old Fair Manager Tells of Terror Ride by Youth 'lbree Joy·rldlng juveniles appr<hended by lhe Orange Coonly Fairgrounds manager took him llong for something some people evldenUy picture 1 1ea of complea:, ICCOl"dlng to the mayor. more akin to • t.error·tour Tutlday, Balboo !~and lawyer Rlcbard Higbie, Mualanl', GTOI, and Volklwag"'" wllh Students may oomeilma find J:!'klng a Costa Mesa police said loday. 3'/, bu 'C'.!n BllC!'her poetJ;>011ement ~ hit occ deetfli tn their back windows nert to problem· at the OCC campus, mayor Fair. manager Alfred G. Lutjeans, 44, trial on c•arges of co•~'-cy •· lmporl lu uni lpal ~.... .•• "· noted, ·tiut college president Dr. Robert esca~ injury when a l~year-old boy, u.n -,.u • .... any t\U'e m c "vui • Sh.oi:: on 1.ue Moore 11y1 a ~" lot for IOme eoo cm dri .,_ fl.7 million worth " marijuana from Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa will be built at S Street and Merrimac vklg n1o1 mother'• ~ar wi t h o ut Me-~. w permlulon, rolled up the W'tn4ow on his .&1',:U Mesa. ay. arm and drove orr. The .n.W dai. for the trial fl sUll not ,U IO, tbey'A llein( phanirlml, decbres Thole who mlghl ~oadlo bc>mlW Lutjeana, el 111132 Bayberry· Way, firm , bui A!slstant U.s: Allorney Darrell ~la M.,. Mayer Alvin L. Pinkley. parking ams acrosa "" r anyway Irvine, told lnvmllgaton he waa dragged W M 1 .d ... d ,_ " 111 ..... "There Is evidently concern from the however, may find them1tlve1 again ... 1_ 1 bout 1 . c ntyre w .. "' new au: w Ll'CI n•r"•• In tbe _..... Jot on otflclal .......,.,, Or a 80 to '19 eet before the U I county in re11ard to the parking situation ,.-.... ,. o.vw • ........ 1. st peel nd Deel do " -aome me in the ear y part of June." o busl•••• -Ith the traffi·c dlvlalon. .7.,.. .. , op a ro wn 1.ue at the site, due to the idea Uiat students ,....,.. .. d lo f lu The matter came before the U.S. "The -"·ty can•-a11ured that the cl· ow ree m. from Oranpe Coast College and Co!la .. ..,,..., """ Durin th 'Id Id 12 Id · 1 District Court ln Loa Angeles 'l\lesd1y, Mesa High School w!.11 find It more con-ty wUI provide parking enforcement at I e WI r e, a -year.o gir enl " h Id In eel •·t the court &lte as we have been doin& for and 15-year-old boy In the backseat were the latest date !or trial in a aeries of v ent, e sa a prepar s"° &-1-. yellin• ror the driver to stop, Luti·eans ment. years at OCC," Mayor Pink .... ,. em· " postponements in the cue. Costa Mesa officials and directon of phaslzed. told Officer James Farmer, called by a Higbie, whole offices are at 227 Marine the 3Znd Agrlcultural District Association "We've got 1 police department 1 half· witness, groundskeeper John Nieves. Ave., wu named late last year tn a hope county superivom will IOOO agree block away._,ao we'll take care of any pro-The young girl jum~ from the car feclaral Indictment aecualng him el COil• f b I I blem ••-t -•••t come up ••·-e," he aald. during lhe brt# .. _ .,d nod, but WU IPirlnl with two other men to bring the ~a::f:!•~:r.~ ~~ ~v:.te 1 Cou~~ ·~Ison ar~espected to ordered by Lutje;;r to halt and wait for itlegaf weed into the country and Oppanenta wtll ~edl yuse theoretic hear a feasibility report on the Costa police to anive. \ transport tt from a private plane at Pilm parking probiems u one of their in itial Mesa and Newport · Beach sJtes next InvesUgator1 . wtre mi the tctne just Springs ~· argumem in WWI of getting the new Tuesday and copies of the mayor's acrou Fair DriVe fiom police head· The weed, bowevtt, turned out to be Harbor Dlstrlct Judicial Court loc aled in release were sent CN1 last Friday to con· quarters within momenta and said the IJ. alfalfa, agenta admlllod. a future Newport Beach Civte Genter cerned partln. year-o1a .. ,ilrl !'PP'ed Ute two boys wbo One of the pair involved In the alleged drovi •ft'-at hl&H' apeed •. • ,._ • .. con1plracy was an undercover •aent for Patrolman Randy Nutt was aent to a federal custom. agents. • -D .J 4 -hom6 In lit• 9CIO bklek of Praoldlo Drive, The. tllfrll ,....,. ·w fltll all.,.. _._ "''J, -., < .... -~· .,..,. ,.. "if-1 · "O•·· l''<.f>o;. ' wh<!re.ba plckad ap bollt ,.,....._and 11pirlcy, Identified u • Lyle· hul BOAJ SLIPS returnee( them to lhe statJon for. ques-G<rman, Dad lo Mexlco before afeola _ , . Uonillg. could &-i ftlm. IM nporta• • .Jt.e _ = . , ;lf = -t Lutjeano said he oaw lhe car nur the wu still et largo. ,. .. ti~c.1!i;,lbt bait rl of Chi oome &Wr¥,P to ,,. 1ljillvi!~' fairgrounds -ya1\I about 5 ' , -, . ;• . . · ~. • ~--;~ ill ~ ~ ~ !' . · . ....i~.liWJ ,e·ji: . p.m. and.clwod !Mdriftr until be stop- Ldi• dl d. F'' is med'• pollciOI ba•e -1..lislied • reoldenc:< • not bO··unrtuonl or peel. . . " n Or ID · · ,,. · ~ · -He wanted to question the trio about 'Extra' TenJU1t Rlymond Everett Jones, landlord, di-he bad one lenant too many Jn hill Newport Beach apartment hou&e rue1day - a hippie sleep!na Jn a 1tora1e 1ocker. Jones, who manages apartmtnta 1t too Sea Lint, d!Jcovered the remnants of lhe lenant, but not the lodger blmseU. He told police he found 1 small mal- tresa, clot.bee: and penon1 I effect. In the rarige storage cabinet. The unwelcome cueat wasn't around. He and polict now are waillni far tbe '1yalocy 111<11 lo COll)I baclc "honio." Podgorny in Korea LONDON (UPI) -Soviet Preoldent <ikolal V. P<dgorny is v~lllng Nor111 toru and Mongolia becaW1e of tbe grow· ng troubles wilh c.om.muntst Ch.Ina whiclt 1ave lftlde the Far Eut Moscow's No. I 1rHCCUP1Uon, diplomaUc aoun::a: Aid oday. DAILY PllO l ~GI C0411 P\IM.llMINO COW'AllY ..l•~•rt N. Wee4 •m*"l .,.. '"'*'lllltt J••• R. Cu,11y yq ,rts!Oellt ...0 ~lltfll ""-- t•'"''' "''"11 .... Th11111•• A. M•,phln1 IMflllllllt ftli.t J1rt1111 f. C1lli"1 ...-., ..... (Uy .,llw ---211 I Wi tt l 1rli11 l111l1•1rl Mlllilh11 A4Ur1111 P.0 .111 1111, 'I••> --~ -...i. '#tit'"'""' ~ liMdl: m ,_. """-· -~··· IMal: ..... ·-- balanced tile or Pdtlands ltii"rOllndlng arbltrarlly . ed. their business due to • wive of weekend Balboa Island by providing for mulUple Dawes concluded by suggesting legal burglaries at &he . fairgrounds, but said UJeS such 1s toating, navJgatlon, swim-questions may prove lo be ~ary. the young driver jumped b1ck into the ming and flah1ng on an equitable basis." "The problem may re;al]y~be '• utural car after he demanded to aee a driver's He uJd there are a111o 1•practtcal Id· iequence .to-..the aa~don., or~ n~a.r licen&e. mlniltn.Uvl bondderatlons. '' He tt• aa~lion ~ ~·, Ind. bellCh ifacilt· Lutjeans' upper arm wu caught when ' plained lhat proMnl pollciOI provide con. ti... " he tried lo reach In and tum off lhe lg- trola over. l{$itJ lltrVlcea on JN.en and Mayor ~ Marsball ,spoke for th~ nition as the boy tried to nee. toilet ficllttJes. . cooncil wheD111be obeerved that Dawes The youngster• were ffieased to their "Tbt latter oonAder1Uon," be llld. "is, repcn WU l, • good ~ bl. the parents, pending juvenile court hearings In tum, one of aeveral controll iov•mine many thtnp the city consider ".~ it on charges of assault with a de.dly walo< polluUon. Tbey alao act lo provide adopted lhe policy many year• a1o, weap0n and lack of parental control a meuurt ol. protection for l.DcUVidual properiy ownm, aimllar lo pr<lt.ctiOll af- forded by zonln( ordlnanm, wblclt p ve Frem P .. e l COURAGE •.• boats that he loves so much. It was either that, or Los Angeles," Frank said. Someone else Jn Balboa aho thoughl It a good ltlea. "He'a a real tiger," aaid his bosa, Art Gron.sky, owner of Art's Landing. "He alway1 loved to htng Aftlund the landing and about 1 month ago we finally had a chanct to aJin him on, becaUlt our bu,_ w11 plclclng up. "Tiie Banfl down hero already hu atarted ehlpplnc In a btt here and Ibero for him," he uJd. Sm.all allowance1 from both broUlers and Social Security from his aorloualy Ill 1,tber poy for Col•'• npen"" at his foltor homo on tbe nen!Mula. 0 H11 1taylng at the home ls much more. than j\llt 1 financial arran1ement. He lov04 tt Ibero and lhey love him u lhelr own ," Frank said. And in about thrtt week• he'll most Dkely 1<lum lhere and wtll fact l!le Jn. evtt.able challtnftt that come up when ytAJ're JS, full of rugged determination 1alned fl'onl a Ufetime of stnialfn1 . • , lftd >'ou'va lGlt aJmoot all your flngen. "l guta, I'll have to m•ke some ad· juatmtnta1" he Aid quietly as be rlartd at lh• llei>4!,.. ~I coneoal little. Tiley -. aw ... 1111 for a taeHp boy , -• lhlnp fib appearance ••• ilili· ... about tltl 1P1ltar ht pla~ QI! lbt work on lbt hlCh achoo! fYJ!lilasllea loam. FJnancially, lhe -fr e 111 brolllln wtll eome, and lbe Soctal 8'curl- ty, toe, and lbt billl for ourp;y, belpilal <art o1"I robablJllaUVI troat<ntnt will -fl'lllll workman'a -~Md illsurnca -la Iran\ warL 11leie Ii howovor;lhat ono l@C! lh.11. will llw111 re.rnaift, Illustrated wbtn • nu.rte al<Hd C6l•'• room chlrJnc _ "11111111 Mura. From P .. e l TEACHERS • • • act the same night, thal It would ~ 1 1it- Ue unusual U It didn't otudy lbtpropooala for a while. ., No agreement bas been rtached u yet between the teachers and 'the ad- mJnistrative ataff On recommendaU0115 for aalaries. Ope rea!JOl'I b the great num- ber of other teacher requ~ being cleared out of the way first . Teachers are asking for things In 27 different mu, only one of which is salarie3. . J.: A joint press release, the first puol.ic Information on negotlatiol'l5, was relea.s«I loday by bargalnen for both oidoo. It llsted pointa: of agreement and continuing disagreement on other requesll but still not a word on salaries. Matters of agreement provisional in that they are only TtCOmm~ations by Supt. Cumtingham to be: made to the !Chool board. Following are some o( the tm- derstandlngs betwetti the bargalntrs: -Greattr teacher Involvement ln decision making" to be worked out for nert school yw. -The master'• degree be eliminated as a requirement for salary advancement, 1nd monty be set &aide to give rai9efi to th<»e with 45 educaUon coune units but nol a master's degree . -Hetlth h)suranco beneflll he slll)>tly tncreased. -Pay for . Iller' achoo! duly be In- creased 50 percent.~ -Up to l1x yean ttperlence ia another achool district be acctpled Jnst.ad of five yoan mutmum le< placement oo pay tt:ale. -No ..,..ment ruehed on lncrtuJnc IUblUl.UU pay. -No ._matt nachod on -ac:hool aalarles. -No agreemtnt rtecbed on Mw many nm esptrlence and addHl00tJ educ• Uon counot needed !9 f'<1tlve c!Gubll a bc&Snntna teac.hei'11-..Jtry. -. •I Powell Enters Race For NY Mayors' Seat N~W YORK (AP) -Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, veteran congresaman from t.he Harlem district, bu entered the race f<r the Democrauc nomination for mayor, making a flel4 of seven. Powell filed hll nominating petitions Tu.,day, me deadline. His rivals In lhe DemoeraUc primary June 17 include former mayor Robert F. Wagner and author Norman Mailer. for one month only save -20% on Towle'.• El Grand" and Kinq Richard pa{teiu 1n solid .n.,.r --- I ' In the Rvnning· This Beautiful Baby's 1st in Line ... YIU lritl a r.t• ,..'n ~ One. Tha.1'1 whOI Mlchello Homaveld fl today: Number Ooe and ari!>nlnl a \ol· Tiie eillit·moolh .. ld dau8'iier of Mr. and Mn. H. J. ,ffOt!llV•ltl, tit Priflceloq Drive, Cos<a. Mesa, fl the first blby con- test entrant in (or the upcoming 24th Al>- 1 nual Costa Mesa-Newport Hubor Llonl -Club Fish Fry. Babies may be entered In two cateaories lo be judged during.the June &- 8 soiree, 1n Costa Mesa Park, which last year drew 17S Want entries, according to chairman Cal Mean. Children 1ix through 11 monthl and 13 through 24 months can be retistered by coolactlng Mn. Mary Knipp at Cal'• Cameras, 1780 Newport Blvd., prior to tlto J-3 4"H1llOI fl I rrllltin --uilll!r""' for fie gala annual wllUnd feelurinl a parade. cmtlval, beauly'canttst 10< big babe! 11 well u Wanl.s and lhol!sancl$ of flal) din- ners 1ernd dilly. Each year, IJons. dlalrlbute ...,. lhan f!(l,000 to Harbor Area youth . acUvity organlzaUons and agencies ~· the ' blJnd, anUrely from Fish 1Ty procoffl. A new Ford M"'tanfl wW be1ho Crand prl&e among dozens of valuable. handed out each day of the communJty celebra- tion, which features one of the· largest fen'i!: wheel1 in the world. The Saturday Fish Fry Pa~e will be videotaped for televillnl throu&hout the Southland like lbt Role Parade, wllh lh• tab plclced UO by llllrbor Area 'IUlo dealers. Students Pick Leaders For Next Term at UCI UC Irvine students today began votin& on student leaden for next school year. Of the five ruruting for student b6dy president, one is an activist and !our are aiming their ippeal at the al.lent ma· jorlty. Another activiJt candldai. bas been dlaquallfled- Two years qo, Irvine had an acUvilt student president m MJcbaet Ktliman. The stud<nl !'""ident this year, Ron ~1 a ·Negro. at thnet took anU. eslabllilhznent stOndl, but played DO port in stqdent dissent over firing of pro. '-"· Pori~t actlvfltn on campus this year may cause an election backluh amons all those students who quietly go about studying and dating, leaving the rhetoric ind protest to others, BOme feel. The activist candidate la 21-year-old Peter Herman, who dresses neatly and does not wear his. haJr particularly lonr. He maintains students want to take a radical approach. Herman's platform Includes free distribution of birth contrnl devices by the Student Health Center, disarming campus police, an end to grades with courses to be taken pus or fall, 1 public adciru,, system available to any ,student or group at the noon hour, pubUc1Uon of a guide evaluating faculty, and more ad· missions for minority and poor white 6tudents. Candidall: Fernando ~'.Ferdy• • 1.fassimino Jr. is a 20--yeir-old Argefitina· born water polo st.ar. He 11tanda alt feet i.u, weighs :IOO;pounds ,and bu a_,. thao a B grade,,average. • Massfmtno 'is nmninl on 1 alate with . . two otheri setking the vice president Ind secretary offices. Their goal is to be r~live to au factions at UCI. He says they want not so much to try ttJ push their own ideas on the student body but lo try lo pull out tho!e of all lhe studenl.s, including tbe acl!Vil\a and lhe conservatives. Among the campus conservatives Is Jim Heyne, an 18-year-old who raJll doorbell8 for Ronald Reagan In' !!If. ·He is the only candidate who U\tel otf~eani-­ pu1, eommuliJla from Newport Beacb. ·: Program director of student activities this year, he has been frustrated by criUci!lns. He propose1 a random ~ student opinion poll ~·very COQP1e of weeks so programs can best rtpresent student wishes. .. • He also would commission student :3n· quiry into topics such as lhe draft and legalization of marijuana with co~ credit to be given for the study. ;: Roger King, a junior, says he woutd represent the -'ludents and not be die· tated to "by a few ertremlst, seU-seekin& and dogmatic individuals." "' He asserts the driving force for lf.udeflt government should come from those·.of the middle ground. He proposes a tightening or the budget with fUIJdJ to be spent on campus for entertainment, iM broadening of opinion among the rtaff•Of Ule student newspaper. • Poaters for Bruce Mill_., 21!, bUl him 118 "Tiie Only Candida!< Wb<l Respects YC>llf Apathy." · He offers free legal advice for any stu- dsrt arnated •on campus and more tinlt, effort Incl ......, lo c• toward IOlllnl llP u:perimentaf duaea. · ~ ·U . Newport-Mesa District Ge~s Up Summer School. -' " ·: The Newport.Mesa Unified School District is gearing up for an intensive summer sdiool program for grades one through twelve. No bus transportation will be avallable to clasaes which will be conducted at Harbor View, Lindbergh, Mariners, Meu Verde, Pomona, Sonora and Newport fOr grades one through four; Lincoln, Kaiser, Ensign, TeWlnkle, Rea and DaviA ror grades rjve through seven, and Costa Mesa and Newport Harbor High Schools for grades eight through twelve. Summer -8e:Mions will be b·eJd June U through July 25 for grades one through seven, from 8 a.m. to noon daily. For grades eight throua;h twelve, the sessions will begin June 23 and conUnue through August 3, from 7:M a.m. to 12:1S I ........ --..,Jiit - p.m. daily. July 4 will be a holiday. ;."' The el~mtnt.ary grades will offer thrtt types of Classes: reinforcement t lutes to strengthen and maintain baslc skills, enrichment cll!!lues, and elective classt1 to provide for the indivt4ual student needs to est.end learning . Grades five through Kven will also reature classes exclusively for mentally gifted students. Students graduating from eighth grade \\·ill be ellglble to receive high school credit and present high school studentJ, may earn up to ten units of credit towai4 graduadon. ,. • Parochial and public school stude:JiJI are eligible to register · lh'°"ib ~ district school office. • .. ... --- " She "kid IO!\ly< ,,-"Would you Hitt tomtthins for your hlr>di?" cOic looked 1t her, sm.Htd weakly, UMm g....r.at his banda1es with tbe two pro-fnld/l>I Inda flnaen •.• then back at &r. -Salary negotllllons to be .._.i durln1 lhe • yur H addlUonar ?llOt!e7 becomtl 1vlll1blt or ii money le taken 1w1y by IC't of the Ntt LqlalaCurt. -Where fcuible.-11l1ry IDd taecher benefit negotlallons to be held di.ring school hours with ntgotl•ton' clMan beln1 taken by 111bslltutes. CONVlNllNT TERMS IANKAMHICAR~ MASTtl! CHARGE J. C. )/ump~rie6 'Jewe~rJ 22 YlARS SAME LOCATION HQb ••• you mean tor the SJl.ln?" • , . l 1123 NEWPORT AVENUI COSTA MESA • PHONE 541-1401 \ ---~---.... Safeguard Picks Up Support WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nixon administration has pick- ed up more Senate backers for its .Safeguard missile system than its opponents have wooed over, the latest Associated Press survey shows. Nevertt\ele54, op(>l.>nents , of the system now number '48, three votes short of an absolute majority. Advocates of speedy in· stallation of the limited an- tiballistic missile system pro- posed by President Nixon can now cOunt 46 Senate sup- porters. Six senators -who hold the key to resolving the issue - say they are .undecided. GAl."llED ll BaM:d on the AP surveys •. backers of the system have gained the support of 11 ad- ditional senators while Op- QUEENIE ''The way I look at it, Smokey the bear not only expects us to prevent !orest f~, be expects,. us to · beh&ve ollrselves m the national forests. ponents have pii;:ked up five, ----------------------1 In the first AP poll, taken before Nixon shifted ABM em· 1 phasis from city proetction to quesUonabl~ scientific and and development work has defense of offensive missile technical capability." been done ·to justify the sites, 4:1 senatnrs were counted Jordan now t e 11 s con· estimated $7.8 billion cost. as opposed and 35 in favor. In stituents: "If 'the vote were Private vote counts made by a second survey, in April, the coonted today 1 would vote to Republican ABM opponents count was 47 opposed and 43 in support the Safeguard ABM list up to 50 senators ready lo favor. system · · ' However the vote vote against deployment. Since then, although the is not likely for several weeks situation remains fluid and . . . I reserve the right to STILL UNDECIDED subject to change by events, change my mind s,_!1 o u Id One of these lists Sens. anti-ABM forces have picked evidence be introduced pro-George D. Aiken, (R·VI.); upthesupportofSen. Warren ving· the system to be Howard W. Can:ion, D-Nev.); G. Magnuson, (0-Wash.")"and worthless." and Thomas J. Mcintyre, (D- a GOP senator who asked that MUCH PRESSURE N.H.), as being against the hfs name not be used. "Jt all depends on what the system. All three man say, ABM supporters have gain-President does," said an aide howe ver, they are undecided ed Sen. Robert P. Griffin, (R· to a Republican senator who is and uncom~itted. J\1ich.), and John L. lean.ing _against the program. Others now listed as un- McCIEillane; (D·AI;k.): They "There is a lot of Senate decided are Sens. Ca I e b can also count Sen. Len pressure on him to ask for a Boggs, <&Del.); Clinton P. Jordan, (R-Idaho), previously moratorium on deployment for Anderson.~b-N.M.), and John listed as opposted. a year or so while initial J. Williams, (R-Del.). VOTE OTHER w A. y disarmament talks are begun Some senators report a Many of these and other with the Soviets. change in the tenor of mail on senators say they could be "But if he comes out swing-tbe subject. persuaded to vote for the ing and fighting," the aide A New England Republican other side -if the evidence said, •·a bunch of Republicans says the early mail on ABM was strong enough. \vho are now against ABM ar~ was strongly against it and Magnuson, previously listed going to begin wondering mainly from the academic and as undecided, is now defining whether their continued op-intellectual communities. his position this way: "I'm position is worth it -whether still not convinced i t ' s they ought not stand behind MORE WRITING necessary for nation a I their party's leader." "Now the rest of the people defense. As a matter of Aides of McClellan said he is are being heard from a lot priorities the money would he now .Jeadning toward deploy-more of the mail is pro-ABM,'' far better spent on domestic ment of the ABM system as he said. -and social problems rather necessary for defense. But A Magnuson aide said ABM j than going ahead with a they said he still wonders mail remains very h,eavy and 1 -rru_·_ss_il_e_s.:.y_st_em __ w_h_i_ch __ ha_s-=:-w_h_et_hc_r_su_H_ic_ie_n_t_~_es_e_ar_c_h_i_s_a_bo_u_t_•_1o_1 _a_g_a_i_ns_t_. --·. ~I \ • ' JOIN OUR GYPSY CARAVAN .•• and discover the lore and lure of Summer fashion '69 in our many departments ... everything with the free-spirited feeling of Gypsy! WIN A TRIP TO SAN FRANCISCO VIA PSA GYPSY-JET .. Ju~+ fill out an entry blank at any Broadway: and you may be one of the 10 lucky winners of a Son Francisco weekend-for-two. Prize includes -round trip flight from Los Angeles via PSA , deluxe room e ccommod~tions for 3 days and 2 nights at the Sir Francis Drake Hotel, .and a Voicer Rent-A-Car &t your disposa l for 150 miles of t;ovel. ANAHEIM 444 N. Euclid 5l5-11Jt Mon. thfu Sat. 10 a.m. fo 9:30 p.m. • 7· G. • -----------------------r .. - I • I NEWPORT 47 Fuhion lll•nd · 644-IZIJ Mo1t. thru Fri. 10 •.m. to 9:10 p.m. Set. 10 •.m .. to 6 p.m. • Wednesday, May 14, 1%1t DAILY PILOT S ' • • GYPSY! THE UNTAMED BARES a. Pull on a wild skirt and peosonl blouse. Rush into our sensuous leather sandals stroping your feet here and there, leaving you bare to flirt with the sun. You're footloose and fancy free as the summer wind-and those romantic Italian craftsmen make it -happen. By Sporl iva Modo: A. Stuck white, bone, '12.00 B. Knots, white,bone,brown , '12.00 C. Offset T, white, bone, I 2.00 By Viva Italia: D. Ccoss Vamp, bone, white , bl&ck, 7.00 E. Strapped Vamp, white, red, yellow, bone, 8.00 F. Strapped Vamp with contrastin g edging, white, bone, 8.00 G. By Tintoretta, Paciona, walnuf buffalo, 11.00 Casual Shoes, 75, Budget F&shion Shoes IO I HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Edln9tr A••· 192-lll t Mon. thru Set. JO •. m. to· 9:30-p.m . • J ' • I DAU. y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I • Too Much Freeway? Don't look no,v, but there's another freeway coming. It's the Orange Freeway -and, as now ,:ontem· plated by the state, it will knife its way along one side of the Santa Ana River toward our beach communities. Dlstrlc:t were told that they -meaning local taxpayers -rniCht have to spend s-everal thousand dollars to keep aircraft noise lo a tolerable level_ at lhe new East Bluf! Elementary School. Consulting engineer Donald Loye disclosed that Jet noise at the.school site measures in the 60 to 90 decibel range. Forty.five decibels, he pointed out, is considered an acceptable noise level for a classroom. lt wUl connect here with the adopted alignment of the Pacltic Coast Freeway, the third north.south free. way with.In three miles to tie in with the coast route. The other freeways -also slated to be built sometime in the next decade -are the Newport and the Hwiting· ton freeways . A big question, perhaps the biggest, facing the Har- bor Area is which side of the river the final segment of the Orange Freeway is to be constructed on . Costa Mesa would llke to see it on the Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley side. Huntington Beach and Founbain Valley would like to see it on the.Costa Mesa side. Newport Beach has indicated it just might support Coota Mesa. But why come that far south with the freeway at all? Our neighbors west of the river say perhaps the Orange Freeway should terminal~ at the San Diego Freeway, with the Huntington, Newport and Corona del Ma,r freeways all available to disperse southbound traf- fic from there to the coast. They say it isn't needed and could create .a monumental traffic Jam at the coast. Costa Mesa City Manaser Arthur R. McKeilzie says that is an idea Worth looking into. At this stage, it certainly appears difficult lo justify three parallel north-south freeways that close together. Ghost of Playa del Rey The ghost of Playa de! Rey is now haunting Harbor Area school officials. Last week, trustees Of the Newport.Mesa Unilied Loye said he reC<>r<led a total o! 51 nights over the site in a recent twc>hour period. Most of the flights originated at Orange County Airport. tlow can the noise be muffled? Seal the classroom windows, Loye tqld the school board, and install an air conditioning system so the windows can remain shut during hot weather. The cost would be an estimated $55,000. Trustees decided to think about it. Jt was, after all, an unanticipated expenditure. And it was only a promise of things, to come. There are nine other schools, and there ultimately will be several more, near county airport takeofi patterns. "These financial considerations," said board men1· ber Roderick MacMilllan, 11should be taken care of by whoever thinks there iS a need to P.iil in a super airport.'' It's a matter that will very likely wind up in court. Until the question of Ultimate responsibility is set· tled, the Harbor Area school district will just have to shell Qut. It's a picture frQu~ht wlth conflict. The public ob~ vlOUJly finds the jet flights beneficial and convenient. Yet, because of the jets, up go taxes and down go resi· dential property values near tile airport. And those who are damaged, rather than those who inflict the damage, are the ones who must pay_ As' the DAILY PILOT has declared before, It is very clear that expansion of Orange CoWlty Airport can· not be permitted. The present situation, quite clearly, is bad enough. (N) Nixon Revert• to Earlier Po•ition Peace Corps Losmg Its Main Purpose Significant Turning Point? WASHINGTON -The turnai'ound on the hunger program was probably a turn· ing point of considerable slgnificanct in the Ni1.on Administration. For one thing; Prtsldenl Ni1.on affirmed his ow-n credibility on this controversial question: He had promised an expanded hunger program and lhen It appeared for a While th.It he wou1d not deliver on the promise. Al one point he told Agriculture Secretary Hardin to his fact lhat there was no money to expand federal pro- grams to feed the undernourished. Later, under pubUc and congressional preSSW"e, he reverted to lht position he took during the campaian and in his early days in of- fice that hunger and malnutrition could not be toleratelf in Ute world'& greate1t food producina: nation. Oncl having dtclded that, therei wer.e ways to find $274. m11Uon more for in im- mediate expanilon and project a $1 bllEon increase when the expanded pro- 1ram Js In full operatlon. Tms w AS A HUMAN decision as well es a political decision, but more tban that It may show lhat Nixon is determined to atick by the judgments he. formed when he ran for the presidency. ln this coil text. tt therefore does not follow that because he recogniled the emotional aod political drh'! rw an expanded hunger program he will also give way to the emotional and political campaign against the ABM and for an early unilateral pull-out· ln Viet- nam . lf Nil.on reverts lo his earlier judg· ment., as he did in the instance of the hunger program, he will not back up on ABM and he will not bug out in Vietnam. .,,,,_.. . ,,._ Richard W,ll~on He will go ahead toward nuclear parity with the Soviet Union. He wU I find ways, as he promised in the campaign, to fight a better war In Vietnam with fewer men if there is to be no acceptable negotiated settlement. He will go aht.ad wlth a thorough reorganization of the State Department. He will start numerous pro- grams to weave alienated youth back into the fabric of American society. He will go ahead vigorously with programs lo in- volve Uie private sector in racial amelioraUon and urban renewal. He will ~ mo('e vigorously With law and order programs to guarantee aafety in the home and on the atreet. AND HE WILL DO ALL this in the framework of a balanced budget and government surplus to check inflation wllh a reordering or priorlUes which will anticipate in the future an expansion of reorganized fe<leral programs lo improve lhe human condition. These were the premises on which Nix- on was elected to uffice. T h e y represented lhe middle ground between the e1.tremism of George C. Wallace and lhe conventional liberal democracy of Hubert H. Humphrey. They were general principles alluded to in Nixon 's inaugural address. It looked for a while as if Nii:on might conveniently forget some of his own ideas. He could not find a Democrat for the Cabinet as be had promised. He began to talk about "11ufficlency" In nuclear weapons rather than parity. He reorganized the Job Corpe but did not aboliSh it as he advocated during the campaign. Perhaps now his decision on hunger represents a return to his original lines of thinking. It is UleJy to be interpreted otherwise, however. by the group of senators who share lhelr concern for ijle hungry with their detennina.Uon lo force Nixon to withdraw from Vietnam and abandon ABM deployment. 'Ibey may reason \hat U N~on cbanaed hil mind on hunger under pUbtic and cOn,reuional pressure he can be forced to do so on the Safeguard ABM deployJ\lent and an earlj' Vietnam wilhdr~waJ. .t THE HUNG.ri. ~ROGRAt.f illustrates another point. Like other presidentJ before him Nixon is discovering that good manageme.nt in government ls not enough. New approaches to C'ld problems are conUnuously required. However much Nl1.on might wish for a hold down, a breathing spell and a period of calm and restraint, the dynamics of this kind of a:overnment calls for constant chanae and Improvement. This leads a president toward the proposal of new programs which bear the stami> of his ad- ministration. If he does not take the in· iUative the initiative will be wrested from him In Congress. An administr1Uon caMOt stand stlll or hold the line for any extended period of time because stagnation is not poUUcall1 popular 1n a COW'ltry with so many unmet needs. Wage-earners Are Restive Tnflation has been described as a tax on the poor and the elderly, but evidence mountJ that It ill beginning to hurt the average wage-earner. The g r e a t American middle class is having trouble making ends meet, and its mood is turn- ing ugl/. Pele Hamill calls it the revolt of tbe White Lower ~Uddle Class. ''The working claM earns its living with its hands or its llacks,'' he writes. "Its members do not ei:ist on welfare payrrienls; they do not Jh-e 1n abject, swinish poverty, nor in safe, remote suburban comfort. They earn between $5',tXKI and $10,000 a year. And they can no longer make it in New York." Their grievances seem to be centering -in New York, at least -on antipoverty and welfare programs (or Negtoes and on the failurt of local government to provide services to match galloping tai: rates. Gus Tyler calls it "the revolt of ~1r. ~Ud· die.." A UNION WAG E study released on April 13 showed how higher taxes :ind ris. Ing prices had virtually wiped out pay in· --iWWW- \Ve d n es day , May 14, 1969 Tht tditoriol pogt or tht Dail¥ Pilot seeks to i11Jo~m and 1tim· 1datt rrodtrs b~ prestrlli"f Lilla uwspapcr'• opinion.r and com- menta;, on topfcs of inttrt1t and •tontftcanct, b¥ providino a torvm /or Uit tzpre11ion of ow rtodtn' o,nnfom. and br prutnUnq the diuer•t vitw. pafnU of in/Ormt'd obstrver1 and l'p0kt11Mn on lopica ·o/ '"' fl"N· Robert N. Weed, Publl•h<r -, Editorial ' l Research · ': i I creases obtained by New Ye>rll: City workers between 1965 and 1!168. Of the t• industry groupings studied. worker11 bi t2 of them surfered a net loss In weekly purchasing pov1er during the thtte-year period . One example : A construction lodustry worker grossed $170.69 weekly ln 1965 and $201.12 in 1968 -an increase of $30.•3 a V.'ttk. But his real net gain after higher taxes and innation was only $1.36 per V.'etk. Clearly some of the Impetus for tax reform Is stemming from the desire of the average worker lo get the tax burden shared more equitably. Playing the tax loopholes has become a science for the wealthy and their lawy ers. while the l!ttle man la lucky to save $20 on his tax bill at the nearest H&R Bloc k office. The average taxpayer now spends two hours and 34 minutes out of every eight work· Ing to pay his local, state and federal ta1.- es. "ADA~1 S:\1lTH," the ubiquitous and rrequ!:ntly on-target philosopher of the money marts, has Invented a tum for the new kind of paptr wealth being mattd in America toda y. He c.aUed U Supercur- rtnc)'. This could be money earMd in a company which aoet public Md sells at thirty times the earnJngs. .---B11 Geol"f• --. CONFIDENTIAL TO MY MOTIIER·IN·LAW: Go home, all ls for1lven. (Write to Gtorge, the advice col· umnl$t ef whom other advice col- umnl&IJ say : ''Who?") "So they have thirty times as much moMy 3s we poor people who only earn the money and put it in the bank/' writes Smith. "The poor innocents among us will not know there is a 1Uperlor currency around. They will still thlnk the green stuff in their wallets ii money, and they will be bewildered." A BE\Yll.DEREO pubUc Is a poten- tially explosive one, and warnings already have bten posted of a "laJ:· payers' revolt.'' Same dtlZ2n1, moreover, a"" making the connection between l1t- flation and the war in Vietnam whlch, ac- cording to many ecooomi1t1, ls &he root cause of rising prices and tbe lf'Owln& cost of government at all leveta. Something is In the.wind. For the first time in years nationa1 spending proposals such as the anliballlstic mlulle tystem and the supersonic transport are being subjected to close ecooom.lc as well as technological and political analysis. For the Nixon Administration the big qu estion of 1969 may be not how to deal with the Ru11sians or Hanoi but how to pacify restive American wage-eamt.rs. Dear Gloomy Gus: llow come they are planning AN· OTHER Boy1' Club -making It Uvtt -wbtft DO one la doln1 any grtat thlnC lot the ONE Girls' Club that serve., the whole aru? I( they have the money as they say thty h1n·e -why do they make app«"a.ls ror $$$$? -E. L. 8. T~lt ... ._,. .. !!IKft ,.,.._. .,.,.._ WI llt«Hl•llY tt.M l>I ,,.. ,.......,,, SMll ""' HI _.,. f9 GIMn\y .... DellY Pl•. i : ,.........._ -..,., Mankiewicz and Bradeil, • ( J The Peace Corps, once a simple idea v.·hich attracted young, i d e a I i s t i c Americans willing to volunteer for lwo years of service abroad at a minimum substance, ls acquiring ronsiderable tarnish bolh from the rest of the bureaucracy and from its new leader- ship. Several years ago Sec. of State Dean Rusk sent a ruessage to all U.S. posts overseas, saying "The Peace Corps can best serve American foreign policy by not being a part of American foreign policy." The import of the mess~ge \vas clear. There was to be no involvement in the work of tile volunleers by other U.S. <ilgencies o v e r s e a s ; under no circumstances were they to be used as sources of information; they were to be as free as any other American abroad lo speak their minds. BUT LAST WEEK the Slate Depart- ment ordered a study to see if there could not be more interc hange of person- nel among foreign policy agencies. in- cluding not only !he Peace Corps and the State Department but also the Agency for lnlernaUonal Development (AID), the U.S. Information Agency and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. What is ignored in this approach is that It was precisely to create a new and dif- ferent American image abroad that the Peace Corps was begun. If the identity of the Peace Corps volunteer, living at the level of the people he serves, is to be merged with the rest of the U.S. coin· munlty abroad, living segregated and - by local standards -luxurious lives in an English-speaking enclave, the main reason for the Peace Corps is gone. More ominously, a project which put Peace Corps lawyers into lhe Pacific trust territories of Micronesia, to help tribal councils codify their laws and to help set up institutions of self-govern- ment, has now been shelved. apparently at the insistence of the Department of Defense. AT THE SA!\tE T~tE. the new Peace Corps director, Joseph Blatchford, made it perfectly clear in his first appearances that he wants older technicians overseas, with higher pay, allowances r or dependents and work projects which can be measured in terms of economic development. There will be, apparently, less of this fllZ"lY talk about self-help and community change. Once again, the zeal for change obscures the reason for existence. The hi story of the U.S. effort in un- derde veloped countries is largely a history of follurc in just this kind of ac- tivity -U.S. economists and techniolahs trying to fit other cultures into our own economic measurements. It was once the Peace Corps' specia l mi~sion to remind us that man does not li\'C. by gross na· tional product alone. BJ F'faDk 1\tallklewln and Tora Braden Federal Land Allia1 .. e, Ntbr., Timea-llerald : "Vast federal land holdings have actually become • hindrance to tht economic pro.. gresi; of some st11les. The federal govern- ment owns 98 ~rcent of Al;iskl! , .. 87 percent of Nev&da. 67 percent of Utah, and 64 percent of Idaho. Surely some of that land could be released or reclassified without hannlng the cause of oon· strvatJon." .... ---. Clari( ication of - UCI Proposal To the Editor: Jerome F. Collins' "Pilot Logbook" col- umn in the DAILY Plwt of April 29, was somewhat amusing, but the facts from which he took off were garbled in his first few lines. First, the 10 percent of faculty sug. gested by st udents (and endorsed by a faculty-student committee) meant 10 per· cent of new faculty. This would be three out of 30 new faculty next year. The two percent meant two percent of all faculty. This would be si x out of 300 faculty next year. ' Second, Chancellor Aldrich had nothing to do v.•ith either the proposal or vdth any "compromise'' leading from one to the olher. The second proposa l, involving two percent of faculty , was originated by a faculty n1ember and was endorsed by the faculty Senate. THIRD, FOR THE record, the proposal is so far just that - a proposal. If it is enacted, the two percent figure may change. Also, the hiring authority will not be given to the students, but will be re- tained by the chancellor, where it now is. Presumably, faculty will also be con· suited, although the principal advice to the chancellor on these few appointmentJ v.·oyld come from students. The ap- pointments in this category 'orould be temporary, non-tenure appointments. If the piece were intended only to amuse, it v.·ould be all r i g h t . Unfortunately, I thin~ it gives an already jdmpy public a distinctly v.Tong view of what is going on at UCI. KENNETH W. FORD Chairman Irvine Division of the Academic Senate Lll'V Says Th1111k• To the Editor : During this past year the Lcagut of \\'omen Voters of Orange Coast has been ~ studying the attitudes of :1 i g h school youth toward law and law enforcement. This study of attitudes included as \\·ell a study of juvenile law and juvenile law en- forcement practices, and stnl us to con· suit many people working in this area in our com1nunity. These local officials and fellow citizens were our teachers, our textbooks. our laboratory. Busy as they \!.'ere. we found them always interested In helping us find the information we wanted. The high school students in our coast com1nunities -Newport Beach, Costa Me sa, and LPguna Beach -gave time and effort to help us understand their side o[ the problem . Their selected representat.ives, Miss Donna Long, Mr. Ken \Yhll.e, and Mr. Eric Stodder, were especially helpful in voicing the students' point of view to the community, OUR CHIEFS OF police, f-.1r. Glavis, ~!r. Neth, and Mr. Labrow , as v.·tll as the ir staffs. gave blocks of their time ex· plaining to us the requirements, training, procedures. and problems of police work. We gained much awareneS! of the magnitude or their jobs and or their dedication. The schools adm inistered our qu~s. Uonnalres. the city staffs htlped us lrack down statlstlca. The county probation dcparlmtnt pro\•ldcd us wilh inlormttion ::i:io to their procedurH in working with juvtnllcs. Judge Sumner, Mr. Turner from the diatrlct attorney's ofOce, 'Pt1r. Mor&n from the pubUc defender's ofC!et, expl::iined lo us the workings of the juvenile court system in Orange County. \VE FEEL IT WAS a ruoocsslul study. Our league v.•ill now work to lmplerrie.nt belier communica tion and coordination amon1 group& "''ho are C1>ncemtd "'ilh i I -·--------........... • Mailbox '" t! -:If',• ..... Lttters from readen art wtlcome. Normally writers should convev tlffir m.tssage in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit ipact OT tliminate libel is reservtd. A ll letters must .include signature and mailing address, but Mmf!S may ·."b it withheld on requert if sufficienS n a· son is apporenl · ,, youth and law enforcement. \Ve will Wl§rk lo see young people more specifically educated in our pubUc sctlools as to their respoQsibilities and · their right s in a democratic society. We feel they need le> under.Stand the basis for laws and law en· rorcement if this society is to conlinµe. \V~ will support special training for police officers who work with juveniles; we will support salary schedules that re(]ect pur understanding of the complexity of lhe police officer's role. ; We can work intelligently toward these goals only because of the concerned men, women , and sludents who gave us our education . To them we would like to say publicly. "Thank you." HELEN K. HOLLINGSWORTH President LWV-OC Uom Uo Did It To the Editor : \Vhy is the Norlh Vietnamese govWi. ment so much stronger than the govcTn· ment 1n the South? One obvious answer is that tbere is no vocal opposition in the North while there are many critics in the South. Yet, the real answer is the met.llOO us.ed by llo Chi Minh in ellmlnaUng.' hls opposition after he gained control. The first thing he did was to send specially-lrained cadres into the COun. tryside to make a survey with re gard tC> an impending land reform. These cadres were instructed to list all untrushvorfhy individuals of means with the most lln· trustworthy to head the list. AnER TUE lists had been completed. Ho ordered that a certain number or those on top of tl1e lists were to be ex- etuted while a larger number \\'ere to be given long prison terms. Of course. al? of th~ individuals \\'ere to be gi ven a tri1t. Tht trials could be described as Instant justice in thst as soon as a dea lh sen- tence had been handed dov.·n the 'in· dividual of means was taken out and ex· ect1ted. The method of execution was about the same as the North Vielnarilise used to ei:ecute hundreds of South Viet- nami;>se last year while they cOntrOllcd parts of Jlue. Apparently !he first land reform wa~ inadequate because Ho ordered a secvnd round of executions which were lncreased by a factor of sl1.. TllE BEn F..STf~IATE Ind icates that if North Vietnam had as large a papula· Uon as th.-U.S. lhty would ha\'e executed ooe million lnd.lvlduals Of meens dwing .both land reforms. With variations, thls method of dimlnallnJ untrustwortlly lndlvlduais of means was pttftctcd by the Russians and used by China, Cuba, North Korea, •tc. Thus, the blueprint for slrengthC!nin1 lhc South Vietnamese government b vi.Ahlo but the leaders In the South are trying to emulate the U.S., v.•h\ch also has many crltJcs ln government. UARRV B. McDONALD JR. • I, e. 'ir It '" Ill id be ••• . rk 1.Y ~Ir a to TI· IC. " ill ur he se n. ur iy ·a nt >C •· TI• is ,. ,. xl j5 id n· to " IY n· d. o[ ,. "' o[ nt 11· X• " se ~·· 'd at ,. ., 'i of of ., :c. he •le to ny • . . , • . , ·i . : . ' Costa . Mesa N.Y~ Stocks • ,. . : . • voi:. 62, NO. 115, 6 SECTIONS, •• P.A6ES .. ., ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFQ_Rl\llA ' ' WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, "1969 TEN CENTS ' ~ppointees " Still Targei Of St. Clair . '. Thwarted at a more tensitive time, CW ~lesa City Councilman William,..L. St. Clair is agajn proposing a committee to evaluate candidates for appointed m'imicipal office. •11 do not know or any rommittee, cum· iilrssion or board appointments now peo-- dlng so I believe we should again in· vestigate establishment of pr<iper pro-- cedures and criteria,'~ he dee.Jared. ·He • said proper selection of best- qiialified candidates is of utmost lm· }>Ortance for two basic reasons: --Quality or service . :_confidence by C<ista Mesa citizens that service to the city is not a closed game and that any interested persons may ask to play. .. •!for .these and many other reaso ns, I request the mayor to appoint a com· mittee composed of two councilmen and the city attorney to invesUgate and return with recommendations on pro-~Ure • and criteria in all fut Ure ap- poihtments." he concluded. . The remi:irks are included in a press release drawn up by St. Clair who will presumably outline the plan at Monday's oity council meetin g. Recently, he proposed the same thing and simultaneously suggested a delay in appointing someone at the expiration of Pijlnning Commission Chairman Nate Reade's term. Charges of politicking flew during the heated council meeting, and Reade was re-appointed to another four-year tenn on a 3 to 2 vote. St. Clair voted against it and was join· ed by Councilman George A. Tucker. who stressed he was doing so in support of St. Clair's study concept and not · in op- po&it.ion to Reade himself. CofC Publishes ')'" ellow Pages' df Area Firms 'Everything from notions, lotions and eolions t:i synthetic heart valves and spaceship switches is made in the Harbor Atea and lhe Costa Men Chamber of commerce is now offering a com- Pr~henslve manufacturers' directory. · ·Extcutive Manager Nick Ziener today •Mol'anced that catalogues listing 462 companies in co s t a Mesa and sur- rriunding communities are available to the public. l'inm-are listed alphabetically by ilime, with address, executive in charge, prOduct!l made, number of employn and ttl'ephone number . Ziener said. teographically, the roster is 'quite im- pressive' in its show of exi!:ling or about· tG-Open plants. Crom tiny operations to major national suppliers: -Costa Mesa -266. -Jrvine Industrial Complex -78. -Huntington Beach -47. -Newport Beach -44. -Segerstrom Industrial Compl~ -20. -'Santa Ana, right at Costa Mesa's border -7. . ·Copies are available from the Chamber of'Conunerce 683 W. 19th St., at $3.50 for m~bers and $5 for non.members, with a SO:_Cent added charge if the buyer wants ~t ,nailed. 4.stronauts Study ~~oonscape' as Launch Men Rest ·~APE KENNE DY (UPI ) -While lauoch crews took a break the Apollo JO asironaiits boned up today on features of a. ''father blah" land ing site they will in· s~ from nine miles above the moqn. Spacemen Thomas P. Stafford and John W. Young met at mid-morning with gebloglst-astronaut Harrison H. SChmilt fo( a briefing on landmarks they can ex· ~to see during ,21A days or orbilirig the moon to clear 'the way for the A;pollo 11 !>Ming in JuJy. •Schmitt saJd he would hold an af· tirrioon briefing for Young and Eugene >.. Cernan on intriguing moonscape tJ{lets for Uietr~ill end movie cameras wfP!.e Apollo 10 swings around the moon ln ltnan's closet approach. • 6ruund crews, n1eanwh ile, began a ~nned ll·hour "hold" to take a rest trGm the meticulous job of preparing the tmge Saturn 5-Apollo 10 spact com· t;jilatlon for a scheduled blastoff at 9:49 o:m. PDT Sunday. ·t Davis New CD Head • WASHINGTON (APl -John E. Davis. f_9';mer govtrnor~ol~orth Dakota, was bpfutd Wednesday t1.. become director of ~1fl Defense. Davis. 56. wlll lUCCttd JOaepl'I Romm effe<:tlve May 20. " . ' -'Dr~ BrOwn' Defende-d LA Heart Specialist Agrees With Diagnoses By TOM BARU;Y 01 IM C.llY ,lltl tie!! A Los Angeles heart specialist today teStifled that Robert Ervin BroWn1s ex~ amination and diagnosis of patients at a· ·· Fullerton clinic was "enU~ly con1- paUble" with· recognized medical prac- tice. DAll.'W' •1LOT stafl' PPN11'e ' RETIRIN\; AFTER 15 YEARS Tr•n•port Chief Morri1on Schools' Head Bus Driver, 65, Plans to Retire John Morrison, head of tr.ansportalion for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, is retiring after serving local schools for lS years. "I don't plan on doing anything special," Morrison, 65, said today. "I have always enjoyed working." He started rolling the school buses out on time in 1954 when there were ten. "We get 53 on the road now," he ~aid. Reminiscing about foggy mornings, he recalled on~ oI the worst one day last year, whoJj 'lil'oqi b,u.,.. !'Et• \le' held. '.'llle {9C.,Vf$.J9''~, ·jt,was ~hazard and we couldn't take' the risk," he said. Many of die buses are 'st.ill in use that w.ft runnlng when he arrived Ii years a~ Morriion noted. • ~ are kept around :JO ytani an8 have 2fl0,000 m i l e s belore they are dt.scarded. We keep them in top shaPe. It's usually the bodies that wear out, not the motors." he said. Morrison and his wife, Bertha, li ve at 156 Monte Vista, Cost.a Mesa. They have three sons. One lives in Berkeley, one in Huntington Beach and one is a student at Yale' University. Mesa Police Set D,epartment Tours Speclal hourly tours of the modern Costa Mesa Police Facility will be of· fered Thursday, as local officers hold a public observance of Law Enforcement \\'eek. Groups of interested citizens will be shown through the headquarters at 99 Fair Drive beginning at . noon and con- tinuing each bour, with the last one at t p.m., according to Capt. Dean Pollom. The facility includes the city's all- purpose communications center, crime lab, eltclronically controlled jail, briefing rooms, auditorium, claie<l-c.ircuit TV system and automated reeoros bureau. ' Stock /tfarkets NE\Y YORK CAP) -The"stock market closed wiUi a fair gain today, with brokers reporting hopes of peace pro- gress helping it to advance. (See quota tion1, Page. 26--27). .. \ Trading wn active near the cJo·se. The Dow ·Jones industrial average at 1:30 p.m. wa~_ up 4.39 at 967.~, Dr. Martin S. Goldfarb, a recognized authority in the field of cardiology, took file and file from the stack of medical records before him In the witness bor to Pinl<ley Says Court Parking Will Be Policed Some pe9p1e evidently pieiufe· a•sea, of P.tustangs. GTOs, and Volkswagens ·with OCC decals in their back windows next to any future municipal court site on the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. If so, they 're seeing phantoms, declares Costa Mesa Ma yor Alvin L. Pinkley. "There is evidently concern from the county in regard to Ute parking situation al the site, du e to the idea that students from Oran~e Coast College and Costa Mesa High School will find it more con- venient," be said in a prepared state- ment. Coma Mesa officials and directors of t~e 32nd Agricultural District Association hope co'unty superivosrs will soon agree to negotiate for a nearby court site at Fairview Road and Arlington Drive. Opponents will reported! yuse theoretic parlcfng problems as one of their initial a~me!lS ii! bebaU. oi Ke!llng ~ "-"' . Harbor Dlstlicl Judlci.11 't&iiri Joell~ in a future Newport BeaclJ ·Civic Center complei:, according lo the mayor. Studenl.J rii•Y sosnetimes find parking 1 problem at the QCC caIJJptiS, the rn~ior noted, but cpUq; "'81dent Dr. ,ll®trl f..foore says a Mw IOt for aome toO cars will be built at S Street and Merrimac Way. Those who mia:ht choose to borrow p;irklng areas across the road anyway however, may find themselves agaio pa'rklng in the court lot on official business with the traffic divbion. "The county can be assured that the ci- ty will provide parking, eDIOrcement at the court site· as we have been doing for years at OCC," Mayor Pinkley em- phasized. "We've got a police department a halt· block away, so we'll take care of any pro- blem that might come up there," he said. County supervisOrs are expected to hear ·a feasibility report on the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach sites next Tuesday and copies of the m!yor's release were sent out last Friday to con· cemed parties. Complaints Due Following Raid Costa Mesa police detectives today \Vere seeking complai nts against some in- dividuals arrested Monday night, when eight persons were rounded up 1t an alleged marijll.IDI party. Investigators said today that not all of the lour men and four women present In the home at 341 Ramona Place would be formally charged . Of(icer.; sent to ask occupants to quiet down their loud party artt:11ted the group • when they smelled burning marijuana and found contraband item.• In the home, including pills. defend ,the electrical engineer -.rho posed as Or. GleM LY.on Foster fOr fiVe · wff.ts . ( . . . at the north county facility. The shock witntss, tailed In by deputy pub.lie de(ender Lawrence BQcklex at a stage .wh~ final arguments were scheduled to commence, commented time· af'!r1 bhe as he leafed through patient ~ds thal Brown's orders for drugs, and !Qod; cholesterol. urtne a n d la -tests and heart limitation ex- ercises were what he himselr would have prescribed. · ln one instance, he noted that Brown examined a. 6$-y~ar-o)d ma!e patiCnt at length arid Ulen pronounced him to be "an ideal candidate" for implantation ot aitimal organS in the heart area, a new and refined fonn of heart surgery. Chief 0ePu'iy Olstrici Attorney James Enrigtit looked up expectantly as Goldfarb pondered the lengthy diagnosis by the man who readily admits that he '"Bom1ner~ Fing~r Victim Shows Courage 0.t.11.v Pn..oT s1•,.... STILL ABL~ TO SMILE A~illirit'Vi~fl!!' Hole By JpHN VALTERZA Ol'IM O.llY Plltl Ii.It The stream of friends flowed steadily lnio the h o s p I t a t room. They were Newport Harbor mgh School students Cutting a class or two to see a friMd. One pretty girl about 15 ~id they came because Colston "COie .. Hate, 16, was "a free soul." The conversations were in t h e pMUcular generation's slang. W0;rds like "bummer" and "groovy" abounded. "Yeah, I guess It's a bummer all right," Cole Hale said quietly as he look- ed at -yet l.ried to Ignore -his ban- daged banda. .. To make it better, Cole will again have to tap that,reaerve pool of courage that he has uaed often in hls young life. Its &omethlng that is unpleasant ttt talk about, and he doesn't talk about it. But his brother, Frank, ~. Ttlated the wrencbin& lmpaet that the loss of 61~ := Ji<ld !!'!;. Cole 1111 Saturd4r ,1. in ''fi&~ adc'"'1tt'il0 the\dockl ol· Ari'> ,Lap~lng in Bi!lboa. ~o1e, who ~ ". ·~ • well, a r~ally deep lov~'' f9r boats, w11 atarting into hi~ ll8Cqnd month as 1 d(d'iatteitdant___8t the sporlflshing•landing, ind, admittedly , (lte COURACE, pjp II Harbor Teachers Near Showdown on Salaries By THOMAS FORTIJlllE Of IM 0.llY •lltl Stiff Incre~ingly militant Newport-Mesa si:hool t'eachi?rs today are moving toward a showdowri with the school board on salary negotiaiiOns. · One hWldred fifty teachers met early this week and decided on a plan for persuasion. The plan is for a m a s s meeUng of all ~!strict teachers Thursday, mas:> attendance· at the school board meeting nex t Tuesday and another strategy meeUng ,afterward it neceaaar;y. Teachers have armed themselves with an opinion poll that shows a large number o( tOern favor rather militant steps to exert. their ~will. Polled ro-: NeWPQrt·Mesa Education Associat.ioD, more than half of the 65 per~ cent of teachers ruporidirig voted in favor of ' a part-day teacher strike, legal action and not aigning coritracts for nest school fear. The more than· 1,100 district , teachers hrve been. instructed by the teacher association not to sign next year's. con· The poll w~s tak.en ii:t a period of calm, tea~s~ Ei:eculive.Secret.ary Bart Hake oolnltcl,°'11; !'Jn-• pejlod O(,!,trW we don1t:botrvwpat the rea.ctlon w,tJl'&.. bU\ it can't J>el«ny less," fle.clalf!ttd .·: • He said, "Teachers are trying to be responsibly militant. We don't want any hot head! going off the .deep end. Th're are some people thinking pretty hot , but they are willing to waJt.11 A teachers' negotiating team has met on It occasions in recent months with Supt. William Cunningham and other top level administrators. The 1 1 t e s t bargaining session Saturday lasted from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. with only time out to grab a sandwich, said Teachers Associa- tion f resident Ray Snyder. Additional bargaining sessions are scheduled for Friday and nut Monday, with tbe board meeting Tuesday . the teachers' target date for some tind of ac- tion. Board President James W. "Bill'' Peyton said be wasn't aware of any teachen' target date and the board would look at the propoaal when it comes before it. He' said he didn't think the board would act the u me nilbt, tha\ it would be a lit- tle unusual if it dldn 't study the proposals for a whJle. posed as a cardiologist. ' "I would have done exactly the aame thing,'' Goldfarb said. "All the test! and lhe rewlts fully support such a findiQa." Enright's cross ef:"amlnaUoR of, th9'~ witness was not avallablf: at preu tln\e. Goldfarb 's analysis of IO reeords of pa• tients In whose treatment Brown was ac- tively involved could possibly tip the scales in favor of the accused ;4.labama man when it comts to the jury's -COD• tSee 'DR. BROWN'' Pace I) Fair Manager Tells of Terror Ride by Youth Three joy-riding juveniles appre~ by the Orange County Fairgroundl manager took him along for somethin1 more akin to a terror-tour Tueaday, Costa Mesa police said today. Fair manager Alfred G. Luljtaoa, 44, escaped injury when a 15-year~ld 'boy, driving his mother's car w I t h o u t permission, rolled up the window on his arm and drove off. Lutjeans, of 18232 Bayberry Way, Irvine, told Investigators he was dragged along for about 60 to 70 feet before the youth stopped and rolled down the win- dow to free him. During the wild ride, a 12-year-old girl and 15-year-old boy in the bacbeat were yoUl!Ji for the driver ta "°!'• Luljeans told Officer JamH ·Fanner, ca1le<I by a witness, groWldSkeeper John Nieves. The young girl jllmped from the tar during the brief stop aod Oed, but wu: ord~ by Lutjeans to bait and wait for pbllce t.D arrive. lnvtlllpll>rs' were on Jbe t<W J's! •Cl1lll Fair' Drive from police he» quorters. wttlUn momenta and said !he 12· year-ofd girl named the two tioyt who drove off at ltigb speed. , Palrolman Randy Nutt was sent to a home in the 900 block of Presidio Drive~ where he picked U}> both youngsteni and returned them to the station for ques-o tioning. · Lutjeans said he saw the car near the fairr.ounds maintenance yard abeut 5 p.m. arid chased the driver until he sto~ pcd. He wanted to question the trio aboat their business due to a '!\'ave of weekerid burglaries at the fairgrounds, but Said the young driver jumped back into the car after he demanded to see a driver'• license. Lutjeans' upper arm was caught when he tried to reach in and tum off the lg· nUion as the boy tried to flee. The youngsters were released to their parents, pending juvenile cow1 hearings on charges of assault with a deadly weapon and Jack of parental control. Powell Enters Race For NY Mayors"Seat NEW YORK <API -Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, veteran <:ottgreMman from the Harlem district, has entered tlfe race for the OemocraUc nomlnaUon for mayor , making a field of seven. Powe ll filed his nominating petitions Tuesday, the deadline. His riv1ls Jn the Democratic primary JuQe 17 include former mayor Robert F. Wagner and aulhor Norman Maller. Nixon to Report Tonight No agreement has been reached as yet between the teachers and the ad· minlstratlve staff on recommendations fot"salarles: One reason is the great num- ber of other -te1cber requests being cleared Out of the way first. Teachers are asking for lblnp in 27 diUerem artas, only one of whlCh is salarle11. A joint press· release, the'. first public information on negotiationa, waa released today by bargainers for both sides. It listed points of agreement and continuing dlsagteement on other requests but still · not 1 word on 1alaries. Weadier President, to Give Outlook on Hopes for Peace Mitttrs ·'of agreeinent provtslonal In Extremtly heavy· hat -!hot weather bureau euphemism for smog -awii.lts an the harb::on for Thursday, with SIJM1 <lkloo -~ ing the mercur~ over the 'fO.:de.. gree mark. WAsHIN.GTON (UPI; ·l.~·-ly four montha. In olllce and lnlld • llllrrY. of dl,tomauc actlvlty;!'mlaenl ,...... reparts to !he Amettcu ~ IOnllb!,oo "!he p"11peds ror ~ ltl·:VW-·" Henry Cabot Lodft. !;illlle(,,u.: $. nt!gotiator at the Patil~' new to Wultlngton this • \ and S<crel>ry of Slate Wll~• llopts new lnto Saigon as the P~.~ In !he presldenliol port Ill "'I Wh;.. Rouse on the text of hia 7 p.m • .;petcb, which will be carried UYe'>'bJ in three major television networb. . ' Lodge rtfused on bb arrival in the capital to say anytblna more Ulan that he wu home for "consultations on Ult Viet· nam questlon'' aod that '1 expect to,see the pratden{ while Jam hett.11 Althou&h White 11005< o!Uclals ruled oul announcement ot any partial troop withdrawal and llJd notl'ling spectacul ar Wllllil! be revoalld, Ibey .did lttm lilt apeecb a "major 1ddress" containing the war had not changed. He. said il was that they are only recommendations by "new material." Becking that up were "the establishment of condJUons wtilch Supt. CWtnJngham to be made to the a.,.ure that ~·people o(S0uth' Vlebiam scheol boord., • these f~rs: can detefnllne their own fuiUJe -un-Followlrig are aome QI the· un- -Nl.J:oo scheduled !Us nrst joint condllioh4lly." derstaodingil between the'bargalneni: ' metting of the cabinet and tht National -Ellsworth Bunker, the U.S. am --Gr1eiter teachet invoWtment In Se<:urlty Counc,il for 'J!t\lraday morniq, bassador in Saigon, met for tile-tf:llrd · deci&loti• fntkl11g to be worked out for •fl.er the address Is delivettd. time In three daya with South Vitt'narnese nett tchool year. -Ora11Qe County'1~ Boor<! of, -senate Republican leader Everett M. President Nguyen Van Th1eu. -The mater's del"ff be eliminated as S~PftVllors has 1olntd coo.stoJ Dirkstn, briefed In advance by Nixon; -The White lfouae Aid Lodge would be • Tequlrement for salary ad~t. cities if! their campaign for off· saJd, ''It's going to be a rather signi!ieani given new i.nstruc1JonJ Jn m'teling:s With arid money ~set asi~ to give rllau lo shore oil drilling curbs. Poqe lS. ,.......... Nixon aft•r !he add...,.. On M-•·y. N'-. those With 4$ education course unlll bill ..,_...., Vll\WI 14 Slt1Wt 14 .......... ll -Lqc, on ltavlng Parts this morning on consult.e.d. for the lint time in person not a master's degree. ....,... t 1 Mnin ae l.odlcat~ he knew what the Pe!lident with Gen. Creighton W, Abr1m1, U.S. -Health lnsurance benefits be 11Jght1y :"'t.,_ :~ ~ ':. .?: would &nl'IOIJnct. "I was summoned by commander in VJetnam. Increased ~ c1Mt1n.. .,... °" ..... c..t1 ts the President for consul&atlons," he said. \.i~llon't address, to ND h1lf an hour, -Pay for after school duly be In--~::"'rWfl'f ·=: :::.. ......,. _ : "But, ol coune. r cannot acoop the Preli-,ww ha.. his first full ttettmtnt on V\et.-crtaMid 50 pttetnt. =._"""" 11 •r.i -.. •• dent before he males hi11 address nam. -Up Ui 11.r y~ars experience In another 1....,... ,... 1! ~:.....,,.... '": tonlgbL '' tt comes at a UnM when some aen1tors school dUtrlct be accepted instead or five ,.~ "'*' ,,. .,..... ..., -.Rogers, arriving tn 8.algon for four of Nbtoa's own pmy were showlria: in ye'an: maiimum tor placement on pay ~ "·g ~-==-• days of COMWtlUon and observa:Uon, their 1peechn 1n lrflpallente. at 1 lick of scale. ;;.........,.. ~ = = f made a point of assuring the South Viet-evhtence of Pf'9Cl'CSI tow1rd 1n end to the -~o agreement reacl>e·d on increastnc -. , .. ,.,,. la ..,.,.. lhll4bt American ob _ lve,,,_111.,_~w.,.a..,r, --'---(See~ Pqa I)-'-.. -'-----------·1--- INSIDE TODAY \ • • I -------------~-·--------· -·""'-~ -------------------_____ __. _________ ,_~ ___ _...__ ... • J IWl.V PILOT° c -In-the Rnqning Thia Beau_tiful Baby's 1st in Line •· . Yau pin a lot ~ you'r< 1111/bber o... 3\a{'J •t Mlditlle Hou••eld II 16day: Number 0.. and CriMllll a ~- 'Ille e!Cbt-moqlh-old daughter ol !Ir. ud-Mn. H. J . l!omsveld, 270 Prlocotoo Drt,., c.ota M ... , 11 the fllll baby ...,. !ht tntranl In !or the upcoming 21111 M- nuai ~ .lllm·N•wport Harbor LIOlll Clyb F11b rry. Babld may M enttr..s In 1 .. categonea to be Judg<d ckirlnC the JWll S. I solrtt, In Costa Mesa Part, which last )'tar drew 17S infant entries, according to chairmao Cal Mears. CbtJ(j,.o aix lhzouch II monlllJ and II through 1f months can be registered by c:ontodlJli Mrs.· Mary Kllipp at Cal'• Cameras. 1780 Newport Blvd., prlot to 11>t Jw>o I de1clllno. ... ......"'*' ...... .,..... wey '" lilo P!t~ ..... llllutji(-•.MW. ..., ~ Olllteat ... "'* U!iii" ...u 11 ln!in11 and ihotisaoda of llah dlz> nen aeived d.aJ!i<. Each year, Uona .distribute more lhan $20,000 to Harbor Alea 1oulh activity organllltlona and nenciel belping tho blind, entlttly from FIM Fry procoed1. A new Ford Mustang wW be the &rand prize' amons doUns ot valuables handed out each day of the community celebra· tion, which featu~s one of the largest fenil-whlell in the. world. '!lit Saturday Filh Fry Parade will be vldeolaped for televWng tbro111hout the Southland llke the Rooe Parade, with th• tali .picked up by Harbor Area auto dealers. Students Pick Leaders For Next Term at VCI UC Irvine atudent1 toda.y ~gan voUn& on student leaders fer nest 1ehool year. 0( the llve -ranninl for student body pre.sident, one is an activist and four are aimi"I tbtlr 1ppeal at the allenl m .. jority. Another activLst candidate baa been dloqualilied. two .years ago, Irvine had an acUvilt otuderit ·prea!denl tn Mlc:hlal Kiiiman. The student president lh.iJ year, R.mt Rid11e, a Negro, at Umea: UM* antJ- eatlblla!unent atandl, bul played llO ,J>lrl 1n student diuent over tiring of pro- tht middle ground. He proposes a Ugbtenin1 or the budget with funds to be spent on campus .for entertainment, and broadening of opinion arnonc the lllafl of the student newspaper. Posters for Broce Mills, 21, bill him as "The Only Candidate Wbo Respect! Your ApaUiy." He offers free legal advice for any stu- dent arrested on campus t.nd more time, effort and money to ao toward setting up uperimeotll clwe>. From Page 1 -~· Schools Gear For Intensive Summer W ol•l{ The Newport.Mesa t!nlfied SChool Dlstrict is gearing up for an intensive summer school program for grades one through ~welve. No bus tran!portaUon will be available to classes which will be conducted at Harbor View, Lindbergh, Mariners, Mesa Verde, Porpol)I., Sonora and Nt.wport for grades one throueb four; Llnco1'1, Kal.aer, Ensign, TeWlnkfe, Ru ,and ·J;>m. for grades Ovo lbrough , ....., , ml: Calla Mesa and Newport Harbclr Hlgli S<hoo!s for grade1 eight through twelv_e. • , fessora. COURAGE Summer sessions will .be held June 23 Persistent 1ctivlam on campua lhl1 · • • • through July 25 for grades one .through vear ma; calllf! an election batklub &even, from a a.m. to noon dally.~ ·~ -ho 'etl was looking forward to the good pay from For grades eight through twelve, the amon1 all those. students w qw 'I go the coming summer season. Aessiona will begin June i.l and continue about studyin& and daUng, leaving ~ha Thtn aomelhlng happened. throug}'.1.Augual 3, from 1:55 a.m. to 12:15 rlWoric and protest to others, some feel. In that moat routine of maneuvers with p.m. dally. ·~""\~cUvist candidate 11 21.year-old boala, he lla:rted to lie the line tossed July 4 will be a holiday. . Peter Herman, who dreseea neaUy and h1m Crom the "Frontier" onto the dock. The elementary grades will offer thrM The boat lurched at the wrong time and type& of classes: reinforcement cltmea tQ does not w.ea.r bis hair particularly long. Cole, in anguish and terror, saw bis strengthen and maintain basic lkills, He maintalna atudenta: Want to t1tt • fil).iers ripped from his hands. enrichment classes, and elecUve cluses radical approach. But It wasn't hU bands that dominated to provide for the Individual student Herman's platform tncludea fr t t h1a mind at the moment. Frank and the needs to extend learning. · b string of friends spoke with hJm in the Grades five throuah seven will also tiiltrlliuUon of birth control devieta 1 Hoag Memorial Hospital teen wing room. featura classes exclusively for mentally the . Student Healtb Center, dilannlnC Cole wu. thinking about hlJ brother, gifted studenll. campus police, an end to gradU :wltb Dudley, 24, an Army helicopter pilot en Students graduating from eighth grade counes ·to be taken pau or fall, .a publlc route home on unergency JU:ve from will be eligible to receive hlgb school ddr<SI ..,.._ avlillble to any llludont Vloloarn. credll and present blgn acllool -• .,._ Cole wu vilibty nervOlll, his tongua may ..rn up to ten unlto ol crtdlHowanl ()t eroup at the noon bout, pubUCIUOn of cocked above hil upper lip, t.oea twitching graduat1on. a ruJd• evaluatb!C fl<ulty, Ind m~ id-_ ~~-~onvenaUons Ile~ a'aroclllal and. p;blic aclloi atudents m-for ~ IDd ~ -aF · .. nt &J~' ,, .. eU&ib!o ttj~ ~xy &tu-i "' ' ?~i " ',"f iJ\t ' ·' • ...+t ., · '" r -• • c1litrioQ.cllooJ off! ' i· I ~ · ~ .-.r~·i"r•ftj~. ~on.i:,,"" ~r . '; ! _.,, · -·"' 1;. ·7,;r1· ! ''. '· l\ta-tno Jr. lta .. ,.......d Al • .mum both were worried (He .,.. born lfiter p01o·atar.'Ha lllanda iii feet rived i.ta Tueoday) · Hi b' G t cl lall; -..e!&bt lllO,pouildo and Ilia I 'better Tllo aoidter'I .,.rival la Important -· , g Je ran e than ~ B lf'lde ayerq:e. eipeclilly Important, since the three ~. -" Mabimlno 111 ~I on • allte with brothers have on1y each other. D J • D ' · two others Heklnl !hi""" prea!dlient ~ Somo call il mi!fortune; others coin-e a y Ill rug aecretary offices. Thdr pl to uv • cldence. There are many rationales for r~l'Ye to llll factlClftl at Uct. what the HaJ• boys have underioDe. J T • J "' aay• thty Willi not .. mucll to try Cole ii 11. Hts.lather II paraly7ed 'In • mport na to pulb their own kteaa on tht lhldent San Franclaco'"Convalescent home. boey bal to try to pull out thooo of~ Iha Hio mo\her, remarried and living tn studento, .!ncludlq lbt iu:Uviato Ind lhl Northern Cal~omia. io aJao pllyaically conservaUves. Wllhle to care for the teena1er. · AmoaC the campus cionaervaUva la .BeslW malntilntng solid grades at Jlln Heyne, an 1&.year-old who ranc Newpbrt Harbor High, Cole worked m a doorbells for Ronald Rea1an ln JIM, Ht dock hand Jiving at the home or iuar- ia the only candklat.e who lives. off cam. dlw, parent. of his best friend. pus, commuu,n1 from Newport ~· He moved to their Balboa bOme a year Proaram director of student acUvttJ• llO when Dudley left for Vietnam and ~a year, he bu been fl'Ultrattd by Franlt found work In Loa Angeles. crttlclsms. He proposq 1 randam sample ••it 11 tht only choice we had. Either &tudent aplnlon pell every couple of have him come with me to Loi Angeles, weeks '° pl'Olf&ml can best represent or stay wtth responslble frlenda in 1tudent wilbeL . Newport where he could work. on the J;le also would commission student , ID-boa ta that he love,, ao much. Jt was q,,ury in~ toplca ~h •s the. draft and either that, er U. Angele:i," Frank said. lega~ltatlon of marijuana with course Someone else in Balboa also thou1ht it credit to bt given for the 11t.udf. , a good IC:.ea. Roger King, a Jun1or. nys he. weuld "He's a real tiger," said his boss, Art repreeen.~ the student.a tnd r.ot lMI d.Jc. Gi'onsky. owner of Art's Landing. t&ted lo bJ a ftw ~ NU-tetkiq: "He always loved to hang around thei and dolm•Uc tndlvlduall, landlng and about a month qo we finally He aastrts the drlvlnc twee for student ,hid a chance to sign him on, because our 1overnment lhould come tram those of bualn8~ wu plckin1 up. DAllY PltUI J1tk R. C11rl1y \/kt ,, .. lftM .,.. ......,.., ........... ., Tlt1•1• A. hitwr,hi111 -·- -,'The gang down here already bas started clllppinr tn I bit bero and tbers for him," lie 111.!d. Small 11lowancea from both bre\hera and Social Seourily from hi• aer!oualy Ill father pay for Cole'1 expenau a~ his toeter home on the penlnsulL "His slaying at the home Ul much more than just a financial arrangement. Hei lava it fr.ere and they love tum u their own," P'tanll: a&id . And In tbout thJ'ff weiks he'll most llkt.17 return there and " U face the in· tvitable cballl:oau that come up when you're 11, full of rug1ed determinaUon Balboa tslaod lawyer Richard Higbie, 37, has won anOther pottponeinent-in his trial on charies of conspiracy to import $1. 7 milllon worth of marijuana from Mexico. The new date for the trial· is l!ltill not Urm, but Assistant U.S. Attorney Darrell \V. Mcintyre said the new dste "will be &Orne tlm1 in the early part ol Jtmt." The matter came before ~ U.S. District Court in LoB Angeles Tuesday, the latest date for trial in a serie1 of postponements in the case. ' Higbie, whose offices are at 227 Marine Ave., was named late last year in a federal indictment atcu!llng him of con· sP\ring with two other men to bring the illegal weed into the country and transport it from a private plane at Palm Sprtnga Airport. The weed, however, turned out to be alfalfa, agents admitted. One of the pair involved in the ane11d coftapiracy was an undercover agent for federal custom.1 agents. · ·The third person Jn lhe alleg~ con- !plracy, identified as a Lyle Paul German, flt<! to Mexico before a11ent1 cou1d arrest him . Last reporta said he was 1tlll at lar1e. Fr:om ,Page I TEACHERS • • • ....., __ &alned trom a lifetime ol atrugglln1 . • • substitute pay . a.od y&u'vt kllt·11inost aU your fingers. -No agtttment nached on summer JJO W11t S1y Str11t M•lll111 _.,..,.,,, •.o. tR t IM. tHK --"l iuen I'll have to make some ad. school salaries. · N1tme11\.s," he laid quJeUy ••he at.and -No agreement rtachtd on how many 1t the bendqe1 tbtt concW lltt.lf. )'tan experlenc1 ·and additional lduc1· Th.,-1n1 awuome for a teen-ace boy • tlon COW'8el needed to rettlve double a •• thlnp Uke •ppell'MOe ..• glrla • · • bqlnn!ng teacher'I aatlly. lbcut 1111 llllllr lit plaj'Od llld !he work -Salary oegoU.Uona to be reopened on the lqtl .:bool omnaat.lca team. during the year if addtUonal money 1'1nl$lal]y, tl'le allowances from becomes available. or U money is taken !lrolhlr& will come, and the Social Socur1-•way by act of the stat• Lectol1ture. ty, too, Ind the bllla !or IW'lllV, lloapllal -Wllero reastblt, aaJary Ind telchtr ean Md )'OhablU&lllvt -I will benefit negoU1Uon1 to bt held during ..me (rilm •llman'• compeNMloe Ind ochool houri wtlll oegoUator&' clllla lniUtanct tettlemenl.I from wort. belng taken by subslltute.s, Thert ls however, that one tic:t ~l will - atwa111 rtmalrl. Ulustrated when a nurae entered Cole'• room durtn1 Vlliltn& bOUr&. ' Silo uked aoltly: . •jWoukl you llkt aomtlhln& for your handa1" Cola looked 1\ her. smiled ""''kly, th<n pzed at hta bandages with tile two pro- tn1dJna index 11nar:ra ••• uien bac:t ai her. "Oh , , • you mean f~ the pelnf'' .. • Podgorny in .Korea LONDON !UPI) -Sovie! P"11id<11t NlkolaJ V. Podgorny .Ji vtalllng Nortl'I Korea and MoneoUa bee•••• ol th< ltO"· in1 troubles with Communist Otlna '*hlcb ha\•e made the Far FA.st MOICOW'i ·No. 1 pre-oc:c:upaUon, dlplom1tlc IOurcea llld tods.y. Crash Ends in Mayhem Countiap. Shot, Run Over Alter Accide.nt Mo>'MJD qver a "'1oor traffic aecl\lenl early ltll•Y bu Jell a Cyprw man In c:r!lical Coodlllon, 1h11Uwlct by an off-du- ty poUct eerseant ud run ovtr by • car arter the lawman ldl Jor h~lp. Jimmy A. J:le.nry, 22, of 5921 Qrange Ave., Cypress, VJ in Mirtlti f.uther Hospital, AlWltlm, wllll two bullel wounds -one in. UM 1bdomtn -a frac-tured !ell 1rm, li>Jurod rib& and mu!Uple cuts and brui&el. t.Os Angeles Police Sgt. Frank L. 5petlcer, 44, ol Anallelm. ho• beetn que .. tloned about the btzarn cue and Orange County Dtltl'iq, Attomey Ce<ll lllcka ii atudytn& the !ICU. Sherlff'a C1pt. James B1'11a@elt slid investigation no'# lrtdlcate1 the off-duty pOUce sergeant's car bumped the rear or Henry's auto on the iUVerllde treeway ahortly after midnight. The two men drove down the Euclid Street offramp lo dl!cUY the matter, Capt. Broadbelt said, but durinl the In- cident, Henry allegedly struck the policeman wltl) a board. Knocked flat by tM blow, Sgt. Spencer told sheriff's lnvestigatora, the angry Henry rllstd it over bis head as though to strike egaJn. The Los Angeles lawman .said he pulled his .39 caliber revol ver snd firtd twice, with slugs lodaing.. ln Henry's shoulder and his abdomen. Sgt. Spencer alid he left the scene to get htlp, at which Ume a hit-and-run rnotoriJt crushed the already·wounded- victlm u be lay at the scene of the i;hootlng. Sgt Spencer said he went to Martin Lulher Hoapltll for belp, bulb for lhl Mesa's 'Bonnie' Pleads Guilty To $200 Robbery A Clfde-lesa BoMle from COila Me~a decided to skip her 1Cheduled jury trial today In Superior Court and pleaded guilty to charges of armed robbery. Judge Jame1 F. Judge accepted thei plea of Alma L. Gravitt, t!, of 28M Orange Ave., and committed her to the Callfomla Y(!uth Authority for an In· definite tmn. The attractive, bosomy brunette was arres1<d after obo took llOO II '1'"PDtnt March II from a Tic Toe market ID Santa Ana, Officers reioovertd the cuh and a ptatol froQl the WOIT\&ll 't car ·shortly: after the holdup, 1baut the period in wblcl1 I well-built moll tried to rob a Costa Mesa market. 1 The woman who .trttd to, rob the .aupermarket at 2300 Harbor s·tvd. claim· ed to have a gun -,but didn't show one - and ned whtn the ni1ht manager b~ed at hand.Inc over money. City Treasurer Spot Still Open No decision w111 reached Monday, as Iha Colla MOii C I t y Council britfly d.i.scUIMd appointment of a new city treasurer, then delayed select.Ion until their regular meeting next Monday. Five men are belnj: ·conaidered for the $100.per·month po!t left open when veteran financier W. C. "Cy" Ries died seven weeks ago. During the special meeting Monday in civic center conferen~ rooms, coun- cilmen approved hiring of a Whiltitr ac· counting firm as flseal year city auditors. Permhaion w111 al8o given to Wayne R. ilauser, of FCB Cablevision Inc., 262f W. Coasl Highway, Newport Beach, to UH Costa Men right-of.way at Tustin Avenue and 15th Street to tay ·a TV cable. The lint will serve 21 families living In- side adjacent Ntwport Bu.ch city UmltJ. for one month only save 20% on Towle'a El GnmclM and Klnq Blc:hazd patterns la solld lll'Ar molorl•t who '1!eaod!Y ~!tacked hlrn ln4 to hive a four-iacb ~t on bia own be..t poldled up. Surg'-worked lllroUll>oo\ lhl urly moll!ini hours to 11ve HW)''• llle ud il'"keamen aatd \od•Y !hit the victim II rtss:>ondlnl to treatment. l'I• ohar(oa 1".veJ>een !UM, ,but the In- ~ 1'11 canttnulng thn>upout Ille day. Nixon Plans to Vacation In Clemente-But When? '!lit v1e1tlon ochedule II banatn1 on !hi White Houle wall today, but, unlike t.ht bola tn moat major organhatlopo, Prell· deot Nllao -·1• put down lhl datol ba'll Jpond tn San Clemonte. , Mft. Richard Nixon told newsmen Tueaday !hit' the llrst famlly will opend two weeks or a month. at the new sum- mer White House, 'whose $340,000 purchue WU IMOWlCed Monday. Just when they will visit the tree. shrouded villa retreat being bought from Mrs. Victoria Cotton, 90, widow of the late mllUon~e Dernocr1:t Hiram H. Col- lon, is sdll an apen quesUon. Tile First Lady 111.!d tll• llec:Ue presidenUal achedule wilt probably ketp her hwband from returning to the beachfront adobe mansion they vJalted two months ago unUl Congress 1djourn1. This would put the White House West visit sometime late .in the year. around September or October. unless Mrs. Nixon herself or other members of tbe family should drop in at the 10-room home. "We haven't heard a word about the time," San Clemente City Manager Ktn- neth Carr said today. He eiplained that he would be told im· med iately If Police Chief Clifford Murray had been contacted by Whit~ House aides to begin preparing to work with Secret From Poge 1 'DR.BROWN' • • sideratlon of the length of hi! sentence - if Brown is found guilty. Brown admitted time and time acaln Thursday through a long grilling by EN°ight that he fully intended for a long time to pracUce as a cardiolotist. But the 3.1-year-old delendant 1treased, as olten as he was allowed to, that. he knew hil limitations and would not have lmptrileCt any card.lac patient. The soft-spoken Birmingham engineer ch&.llenged the testimony of a womih doctor at· the clinic and a St. Jude Hospi~l nurse that he had· prtseribed a potent heart drug in 20 Umea tht q1JAJ1U1y normally administered. And l!uckley went to tht medical nconis to show that Brown, Jn ether cases, had prescribed that dru1 - atropine -in the quantity recognized by the medlc:aJ profession to be the standard administration. Brown did not deny that hla career, from the time of bis graduation from an Alabama high school, had been studded with false references, assumed namea and forged diplomas and degrees. But he insisted in his alight r;oulhern drawl that his medical practice both in Orange County and in Miami Boacll had posed no danger to ai1y heart patient. And he areued that his prolonged study of medicine, through medical libraries and from the student gallery In hosplta1 operating rooms was more than sufficient to sustain h\1 practice as a cardiologist. Brown i~ accused of praclicln& medicine without a license. Seventeen counts of the charge were recorded against him after an invesUgation by the Orange County Grand Jury. Oppoaln, counsel agreed today that the trial may go to the jury late this 1f- temoon. Buckley stated that final argumentJ can commence a ft er testimony by two further wJtneaes. Servicemen on i:n•idenllll llllCW'Ify: A completed deal to ·purchl,M lh~ mansion and five ~ aCrea of the once.rural ranchland estaM for $100;000 down and the rest aver a five year period at 1.!i percent Interest was announced Monday. ~ Earlier report& 111.!d Iba Nb""' planned to take aver the new "WhHe House West sometime in July, but painting. rep&Jrs and perhap11 even conrtructlon of ·a swim- ming pool are yet to be done. Bea.idea carpentera and painters busy around the grounds, men are workin1 on a survey to detennine if the site Is suited for the future Nixon museum and library. Abernathy Raps Antihooger Plan As 'Half a I.Oaf;, WAS!UNGTON (UPI} -Tile ~· !Wph David Abernathy condemned tl>e Nixon adminir;lration's anti-hunger pro· eram today as a "half·a·loaf" plan. ., Appearing before the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Humfn Netds, Abernathy, heading what he calla chapter 2 of the poor people 's campaign, demanded Immediate action to get food into the mouths: of the hungry. Abernathy, chairman of the Southerit Christian Leadership ·C-Onference, 58id'it had been two years since a Congressional investigation found "shocking instances of hunger In Misaissippi, "yet Ute Congress still has not acted to provkte adequilte food prograrns for thase ""° need them. , "The prior admbtlJtraUon ignored 111r!' Abernathy said. "The prNent ad· ministration has finally come up with a hunger program which asks the poor and the hungry · lo· wait still another tWo :years, until 1971, before being fed •NI even then to be content with haU-a.:loaf:j{ "We do not and ceMot accept this. W! are hungry now and we expect to be fed now.'' -· .- Burglar Changes: Style Successfully A bur1lar evidently returned ti) tJlt scene of his crime a month ago again ta.. day, found his original point of tnl:D' blocked and broke into the service lltatk* another way, Costa Mesa pol.ice said. Someone entered Snuth Coast Shel1 Service, 3045 Bristol St., via the lube room door and took $100 from a noor safe, aceoiding to employe Jerald H. King. Patrolman Bob Arnold said a burglar broke into the station early in April by tearing out a wall trash basket in the men's room, a route was subsequently blocked by a welded metal bar. Louis E. Neeper, of 284 Flower St .. ~ Cost.a Mesa police Tueadly tha~ a burg1'-t. took StOO in auorted mechanic 's fuili from !ti• truck, ptrkod behtnd his aporl; ment. · . ' . .. .. Forw--T ..... ll•w••Oir-.:t. ___ _. ..... _ ..... __ pri08. Now II h time to -.f: ot ; I t 'Ml "*° .,... .. .aid ..... lir i:ftle. Yot -20" °" .....,. ,_d••-slnrlt pi-. ,._ ~ • .,,. a1 -. a.wt...,_. COm• in tDdly. . .pieel ...... Q '' ............. ~, .. ., l!Jtll) ..... --., ... ... ---.,.. --- CONVENI!NT TERMS IANXAMERICARD MASTlR CHARQE J. C. ..J/.umphrieJ 'J11w11ferJ 22 YEARS SAME LOCATION • I llll NiW,ORT AVENUI COSTA MESA ,HONE &4i-J•or Safeguard Picks Up Support . WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nixon admini stration has piok· ,ed up mon! Senate backers for Us Safeguard mi.ssile system than its opponents have wooed over , the latest Associated Press survey shows, I . Nevertheless, opp.:inents f>1 the system now number 48, three votes short or an absolute majority. Advocates of speedy ln- slallallon or the limited an- tlbaUlslic missile system pro- posed by President Nixon can now count 46 Senate sup- porteri. Six Mnators -who hold the key lo resolv.ing the issue - l'ilY lhey are undecided. GAL~ED 11 • BaM'..d on the AP surveys, backl"rS of the system have gained the su pport of ll ad- ditional senators while op- QUEENIE By Phil lnttrlancll . 1-n,e way I look at it, Smokey the bear not only expects us to prevent forest fU"eS, he expects ua to · beha.ve ourselves in the national fore&ta." ponents have picked up five. ---------------------1 In the· first AP poll. taken . before Nixon shifted ABM em- phasi s from city proetction to defense of cffensive missile sites, 43 senators were counted as opposed and 35 in favor. In a second survey, in April, the count was 47 opposed and 43 in favor. Since then, allhough the situation remains fl uid and subject to change by events, anti-ABM forces have picked up the support of Sen. Warren G. J\1agnuson, CD-Wash.) and a GOP senator who asked that his name not be used. ABM supporters have gain- ed Se"n. Robert P. Griffin, ( R· ti1ich.}. and J o h n L. Mcctella~. (0-Ark.). They can also count Sen. Len Jordan, (R-Jdaho ), previously lis ted as oppostcd. VOTE OTHER WA V J\1any of the se and other senalors say they could be persuaded to vote for tbe other side -if the evidence wa s strong enough. Magnuson, previously listed as undecided , is now defining his posiUon thls way: "I'm still not convinced it 's necessary for n a t i o n a I defense. As a matter of priorities the money would be far better spent on domestic ~and· social problems rather than going ahead with a missile system which has I • ' questionable scientific and technical capability." Jordan now t e 11 s con- stittlents : "If the vote were counted today I would vote to support the Safeguard ABM system ... However the vote is not likely for several weeks . . . I reserve the right to change my mind s h o u I d evidence be introduced pro- ving the system to b e worthless." f\1UCH PRESS"RE "ll all depends on what the President does," said an aide to a Republican senator who is leaning against the program. "There is a lot of Senate pressure on him" to ask for a moratorium on deployment for a year or so while initial disar1nament talks are begun with the Soviets. "B ut if he comes out swing- ing and fighting ," the aide said. "a bunch of Republicans \'lho are now against ABM are going to begin wondering whether their continued op- position is worth it -v.·hether they ought not stand behind their party's leader." Aides of McClellan said he is now leadning toward deploy· ment .of the ABM system as necessary for defense. But they said he still wonders whether s.ufficient research • , JOIN O UR GY PSY CARAVAN and development work has been done to justify the estimated $7.8 billion cost. Private vote counls made b,Y Republican ABM opponents list up lo 50 senators ready to vote againsl deployment. STILL UNDECIDED One of these lists Sens. George D. Aiken, !R-Vt.); Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev.); and Thomas J. Mc:lntyrt, (D· N.H.), as being against the system. All three man say, however, they are undecided and uncommitted. Ot~rs now listed as un· decided are Sens. C a I e b Boggs, (R-Del .): Clinton P. Anderson, (D-N .M.l, and John J. Williams, (R-Del.). Some senators report a change in the tenor of mail on the subject. A New England Republican says the early mail on ABM was strongly against it and mainly from the academic and intellectual communities. J\10 RE WRITING "Now the rest or the people are being heard from a lot more of the mail is pro-ABM," he said. A Magnuson aide said ABM mail remains very heavy and is about 4 to 1 against. ... and discover the lore and lure of Summer fashion '69 in our many deportments ... everyt hi ng with the free-spirited fee ling of Gypsy! G. WIN A TRIP TO SAN FRA NCISCO VIA PSA GYPSY-JET Just fill out on ent ry blank ot any Broadway, en d you may be one of the I If lucky winner s of a Son Francisco weekend-for-two. Prize includes round trip fli ght from Los Angel~s vi o PSA, deluxe room accom mod ations for 3 days and 2 nights et the Sir Franc i5 Drake Hotel, and o Velcar Rent-A.Car et your disposal fo r I SO miles of travel, ANAHEIM - 4"'4 N. EucHd &35·1121 Mo n. thru S•t. 10 •·"'· to 9:l0 p.m. ' • • I F. E. -• NEWPORT 47 Fuhion lslend 644-121 2 Mon. thru Fri. I 0 •. m. to 9:30 p.m. Sat. 10 •:m. to 6 p.fr!. • , • I • DAIL y PILOT I GYPSY! THE UNTAMED BARES B. Pull on o wild skirt ond peesanf blouse. Rush into our sensuou s leat her sandals straping your feet here and t here, leaving you bore to fl irt with the sun. You're footloose and fancy free as the summe r wind-.end those rom antic Italian craftsmen make it happen. By Sportivo Medo: A. Studs, white , l:ione , 12.00 B. Knots. white .bone.brown, 12.00 C. Offse t T. white, bone, 12 .00 By Viva It ali a: D. Cross Vamp , bone, white, black. 7.00 E. Stropped Vamp, wh ite, red, yellow, bone, 8.00 F. Stropped Vamp with contrasting edg ing, wh ite, bone, 8.00 G. By Tintoretta, Poc iono; walnuf buffalo, 11 .00 Casual Shoes. 75. Budget Foshio n Shoes IOI • HUNTINGTON· BEACH " 7777 Edln9or A••· 19J.Jll I Mon. thn.i Sat. 10 4.m. to 9:l 0 p.m . • I \ r - • . • IDMLY PROT EDITORIAL PllGEI T oo Much Freeway? Don't look now, but there's anothe,r freeway coming. I It's the .Orange Free~·ay -and. as now cont~m .. plated by the state, it will knife its way along one side of the Santa Ana River toward our beach communities. It will connect here with the adopted. alignment of the Paclllc Coast Freeway, tbe third north-south free- way within three miles to tie in with the coast route. The other freeways -also staled to be buiJt sometime in the next decade -are the Ne\vport and the Hunting• ton freeways. . A big question, perhaps the bigges t, facing tbe Har. bor Area is which side of tbe river the final segment of the Orange Freeway is t.o be constructed on. Costa Mesa would like to see it on the HUntington Beach and Fountain Valley side. Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley would like to see tt on the Costa Mesa •ide. Newport Beach has indicated it just might support Costa Mesa. · But why come that far south with the freeway at all? · Our neighbors west of the river say perhaps the Orange Freeway should terminate at the San Diego Freeway, with the Huntington1 Newport and Coroq_a del ~tar freeways all available to disperse southJ>ound traf- fic from there to the coast. They ~ay it isn't needed and could create a monwnental traffie jam at the coast. Costa Mesa City Manager Artbur R. McKenzie says that is an idea worth looking into. At this stage, it certainly appear& difficult to justify three parallel north-south freeways that close together. Ghost of Playa del Rey The ghost of Playa de! Rey i.o now haunting Harbor Arca school officials. Last \Veek, trustees of the Newport-Mesa Unified District were told that they -meaning local taxpayers -might have U> spend several thousand dollars to keep aircra!t noise to a tolerable level at the new Ea:1~ Bluff Elementacy School . Consulting engineer Donald Loye disclbsed that jet noise at the school site rrtea._su.res in the 60 to 90 decibel range. Forty.five decibels, -hij)Oiiited out, is cqnsidered an-acceptable noise level for a classroom. · Loye oaid he recorded a total of 51 Olghts over the sit~ in a rec~nt two-hqu_r period. Most oC the fljg~ts originated at Orange County Airport. How can the noise be muffled? Seal the classroom windows, Laye told th.e school board, and install an air conditioning system so the \Vindows can remain shut during hot weather. The cost would be an estimated $55,000. Trustees decided to think about it. It was, after all, an unanticipated expehditure. And it was only a promise of things to come. There are nine other schools, and there ultill)a!ely will be several more, near county airyort takeoff patterns. "These financial considerations," said board mem· ber Roderick MacMillian, "should be taken care of by whoever th\nks there is -a need to P.ut in a super airport." It's a matter that will very likely wind up in court. Until the question ·of ultimate responsi bility is set-. tied, the Harbor Area school district will just have to shell out. It's a picture fraught with conflict. The public ob- viously finds the jet flights beneficial and convenient. Yet, because of the jets, up go taxes and down go resi- dential property values near the airport. And those \\'ho are damaged, rather than those who inflict the damage, are the ones who must pay. As the DAILY PILOT has declared before, it is very clear that expansion of Orange County Airport can· ~ot be permitted. The present situation, qulte clearly, 1s bad enoug:11. (Cl Nixon Rev erts t o Earlier Positio11 P eace Co rps L os ing I ts Main P u rpose Significant Turning Point? WASHING TON -The turnaround on the hunger program was Jfrobably a turn- ing point of considerable significance in the Nixon Administration. For one thing, President Nixon affirmed his own credibility on.this controversial question. He bad promi!ltd an expanded hunger program and Ulen it appeared for a while lhat he wouJd not deliver on the promise. At One point he told Agriculture Secretary Hardin-to his face that there was. no money to expand federal pr<r grams to feed the undernourished. Later, under public and congressional pressure, he reverted to the position be took during lhe campale,.!~ In hls early ~ays in of· liCe jllat hlffi,er. and malnutrition could not be tolerated' in the world's greatest food ~g naUoo. once haVint deetdid that. Ihm W'"1 ~ays to find $27• million more for an im- mediate apanslbn and project a $1 bill~on increase when the expanded pro- gram is in fUU operation. TIUS WAS A HUMAN decision as well as a political decision, but more than that it may show that Nixon is determined lo 5tick by the judgments he formed when he ran for the presidency. In this context, It therefore does not follow that because he recostized the emotioruil and political drive for an expanded hunger program he will also give way to the emotional and political campaign against the ABM and for an early unilateral pull-out in Viet· oam. If Nison reverts to his earlier judg· ment, as he did in the instance or the hunger program, he will not back up on ABM and he will not bug out in Vietnam. -·..--""" ..... -- .. t ' ~ • • 1Richard Wilson ' I He will go ahead toward nuclear parity with the Soviet Un.ion. He v.·ill find ways, as he promised in the campaign, to fight a better war in Vietnam with fewer men if there is to be no acceptab1e negotiated settlement. He will go ahead with a thorough reorganization of the State Department. He will start numerous pro- grams to weave alienated youth back into the fabric of American 90Ciety. He will go ahead vigOrou-sJ, with programs to in- volve \he private sector in racial amelioration and urban renewal. He will proceed more vigorously with law and order programs to guarantee safety in the. home and on the street. AND HE WILL DO ALL this in the framework of a balanced budget and government surplus to check inflation with a reordering of priorities which will anticipate in the .future an expansion of reorganized federal programs to improve the human condition. These V!'ere the premises on which Nix· on was elected to office. They represented the middle ground between the extremism of George C. Wallace and the conventional liberal democracy of Hubert H. Humphrey. They were general principles alluded to in Nixon 's inaugural address. Jt looked for a while as i( Nixon might conveniently forget some of his own ideas. lie could not find a Democrat for the Cabinet as he had proniised. He began to talk about "sufficiency" in nuclear . weapons raijler than parity. He reorganized the Job Corps but did not abolish it as he advocated during the campaign. Perhaps now his decision on hunger represents a return to his original Jines of thinking. It is likely to be interpreted otherwise, however, by the group or senators who share their concern for the hungry with their determinatlon lo force Nixon to withdraw from Vietnam and abandon ABM deployment. 'Jbe}' ma y reason that if Nixon Planged his inind on hunger under public and congressional pres.!llte he can be forced to do so on the Safeguard ABM deployment and an tarly Vietnam withdrawal. • THE HUNGER PROG~1 illustrates anolher point. -Like otlier presidents before rum Nixon is discovering that good management in government is not enough. New approaches lo C'ld problems are continuously required. lfowever much Nixon might wish for a hold down, a breathing spell and a period of calm and restqint. the dynamics of this kind of government calls for constant change and improvement. This leadS a president toward the proposal of lie'" programs which bear the stam11 of his ad- ministration. If he does not take the in· itiative the initiative will be wrested from hin1 In Congress. An administralion cannot stand still or hold the line for any extended period Of time because stagnation is not politically popular ih a country with so many unmet needs. Wage-earners Are Restive tnf1ation has been described as a tax on the poor and the elderly, but evidence mounts that it is beginning to hurt the average wage-earner. The g r e a t American middle class is having trouble mali:ing ends meet, and ils mood is turn- ing ugl;. Pete Hamill calls it the ti!volt of the \Vhile Lower f\Uddle Class. "The \\'Orking class earns its living with its ha nds or its backs," he writes. "Its n1embcrs do not exist on welfare payments ; they do not li\'e in abject, swinish poverty, nor in safe, remote suburban comfort. They earn between $5,000 and $10,000 a year. And they can no longer make it in New York." Their grievances seem to be centering -in New York, at least -on antipoverty and welfare programs for Negroes and on the failure of local government to pro,•ide r;ervices to match galloping tax rates. Gus Tyler calls it "lhe re~·o!t cf Mr. Mid· die." A UNION \VAGE study relea5ed on Aprll 13 showed how higher taxes and ris-- tng prices had virtually wiped out pay in· \ ---- Wednesday, May 14, 1969 TIWI tdltoriol page Of the Daflv Pilot sctk• to infonn and .stlm.- •lotc rtadtrr.s by prtst"ntirzg tht1 uwspaper'1 opinio11s end com-- mcntorr1 on topics of i nttrc3& a11d 1iQniJiccttc.t, bu providing a Jorum /or the tz:pre11fon of our rtodtrr' oplnJon-1. and bl/ prt.stntit1g tht di verse vlew- l>Ol11ts of tnformed ob1trvtr1 and 1poke.smtn on topic• of th1 dau. Robert N. Weed. Publisher .. 1 Editorial ' j Research I ) creases obUiined by New York City v"orkers between 1965 and 1968. Of the 2~ industry groupings studied, worken in 12 of them suffered a net loss in .,.,.eekly purchasing power during the three-year period. One e•~mple : I\ construction industry '"'orker grossed $170.69 weekly in 1965 and $201.12 in 1968 -an increase of $30.43 a \\'eek. But his real net gain after higher taxes and inflation was only $1.36 per week. Clearly some of the impetus for tax reform is stemming fron1 the dt5ire of the average worker to get the tax burllen shared more· equitably. Playing the ta x loopholes has become a science for the wealthy and their lawyers, while the Uttle man Is lucky to save $20 on his tax bill at th e nearest H&R Block office. The average taxpayer now spends lwo hours and 34 minutes out of every eight work· ing to pay his local, state and federal tax- es. "ADA~I S!\.llTH," the ubiquitous and frtquently on·tarsot phllo110J>htr or the money marta, haa ln\'ented a term for the ne-w kind of ~per wealth being cruted In Amerle1 today. He called lt Supercur· rency. 'ftds couJd be money eJrntd In a company which goes public and sell$ at thirty times the earning11. ,_ __ Bt1 G~•l'f• ---. CONFIDENTIAL TO MY MOTIIER·lN-LAW: Go home, all is for81Ytn. (Write kl George:, !ht •dvic:e col· umnlst of Yi·hom other advice col- umolats ••f: ''"'ho?"} "So they have thirty times as much money as we poor people who only earn the money and put it in lhe bank," writes Smith. "The poor innoctnts among us will not know there is'a superior currency around. They will still think the green stuff in their wallets is money, and they will be bewildered." A BEWILO~RED public is a poten- lially explosive one, and warnings already have been _po.!!lted of a "llx· payers' revolt." Some citizens, moreover, are making the connection between in· nation and the war in Vietnam which, ac- cording to many economists, is the root cause of rising prices and the '&rowing cost·or governmenl at all levels. Something is in the wind. For the first time in years national spending proposals such as the anUballistic missile system and the supersonic transport are being subjected to close economic as well as technological and political analysis. For the Nixon Administration the big question or 1969 may be not how lo deal with the Russiaps or Hanoi but how to pacify restive American wage-earners. Dear Gloomy Gus: How come lhe)' are plann ing AN- OTHER Boy1' Club -m1kin1 II three -when no one 11 doJng any great thing for the ONE Clrh;' Club that serves the whole area ? If they' ha\'e the money as they soy they have -"'hy do U1ey make flppea 1s tor $$$$! -E. L. 8. T~l1 li1iun r11...ett tfflf..rt' •If-"' -•1wr;1y Iii.ff ti ,,.. ,,_.,._,.,, 1111111 \'Mr -.! -VI ft 01111"' 5111, D•!" l'IM!, { i -r ) ' j MankieJticz and Braden'.4, .~ • 'i ' ! The Peace Corps, once a si mple idea w.hich attracted young, id ea l i s tic Americans willing to volunteer for two years of service abroad at a minimum substance, is acquiring considerable tarnish both from the rest of the bureaucracy and from its new leader· ship. Several years ago Sec. of Slate Dean Rusk sent a message to all U.S. posts overseas, saying "The Peace Corps ca n best serve American foreign policy by not being a part of American-foreign policy." The import of the message was clea r. There was to be no involvement in the work of the volunteers by other U.S. agencies overseas; under no circumstances were they to be used as sources of information : they were to be as free as any other American ab road to speak their minds. BUT LAST \VEEK the State Depart- ment ordered a study lo see if there could not be more interchange of person· nel among forei gn policy agencies. in· s:luding not «lnly the Peace Corps and the State Department but also the Agency for International Development {AID). the U.S. Information Agency and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. What is ignored in this approach is that ft was precisely to create a new and dif- ferent American lmage abroad tha t the Peace Corps was begun. If the identity of the Peace Corps volunteer, liVing at the level of the people he serves. is to be merged with the rest of the U.S. com· munity abroad, living segregated and - by local standards-luxurious lives in an English-speaking enclave. the main reason for the Peace Corps is gone. More ominously, a project which put Peace C-Orps lawyers into the Pacific trust territories of Micronesia, to help tribal councils coctify their Ja1\'S and lo help set up institutions of self-govern· ment, has now been shelved. apparently at the insistence of the Dep<1rtment of Defen5c. AT THE SAl\IE TIJ\.IE, the new Peace Corps director, Joseph Blatchford, made it perfectly clear in llis first appearances that he wants older technicians overseas with higher pay, allowances r o ; dependents and work projects which can be measured in terms of ccOnomic develop1nent. There \\-'ill be, apparently, Jess of this fuzzy talk about self-help and co1nmunity change. Once again, the zeal for change o~cures lhc reason for existence. The history o( lhe U.S. effor t in un- Q~rdeveloped. countries is largely a h_1s_tory of failure in just this kind or ac- 1tv1.ly -u., S. economists and IC'<'hnicians trying to ftt other cultures into our own CC()nomic measurements. II was once the Peace Corps' special 1nission to remind Uli that man does not live by gross na- tional product atoue. By f'rank ~lanklewlei aad Tom Bradea Federal Land AUlaa"e, Ntbr., Tlmt1·Re~11d: "V1st federal land tioldlngs have actually ~me a hind rance lo the economic pro- gress of sonle st.ates. The fede ral gof•ern- ·ment owns 118 perc~nt of Alask& , . , 87 percent of Ntvada. 67 percent of Utah, and 64 percent of Idaho. Surely somt or that land could be rt1ca5ed or rttlasaifitd without harming the cause of con· scrvation." Clarification of U CI Pr9posal To the Edltor: Jerome F. Collins' "Pilot Ulgbook" col- umn in the DAILY PILOT o{ April 29, was somewhat amusing, but the facts from which he took off were garbled in his first few lines. First, the 10 percent of faculty sug- gested by students (and endorsed by a faculty-student committee) meant 10 per- cent of new faculty. This would be three out of 30 new faculty next year. The two percent 1neant two percent of all faculty . 1'his would be six out of 300 faculty next year. Second, Chancellor Aldrich had nothing to do with either the proposal or with any "compromise" leading from one to the other. The second proposal, involving two percen t of faculty. was originated by a faculty member and was endorsed by the fa culty Senate. · THIRD, FOR TllE record, the proposal is so far just that - a proposal. If it is enacted, the two percent figure may change. Also, the hiring authority will not be given to the students, but will be re- lained by the chancellor, where it now is. fJresumably, faculty will also be con- sulted, although the principal advice to the chancellor on these few appointments \vould come from students. The ap- pointments in this category ·would be temporary, non-tenure appointments. If Hie piece were intended only fo an1use, it would be all r i g h t . Unfortunately, I think it gives an already jumpy public a distinctly wrong view of \vhat is going on at UCI. KENNETH W. FORD Chairn1an Irvine Division of the Academlc Senate L ll'V Suu• Thanks To the Editor : Dl1ring this past year the League of \Vomen Voters of Orange Coast has been studying the attitudes of :1 i g h school youth toward law and law tnforce n1cnt. This study of altitudes included as well a study of juvenlle Jaw and juvenile law en· forcemcnt practices. and sent 115 to con- sult many people working in this area in our community. These local officials and fellow citizens \\'ere our teachers, our textt:iooks, our laboratory. Busy as they were, we found them al"•ays interested in helping us find the information \\'e wanted. The high school stud ents in our coast communities -Newport Beach, Costa Mesa , and Laguna Beach -gave time and effort lo help us understand their side cf the problem. Their selected representatives, Miss Donna Long, l.fr. Ken \Vhite, and !\tr. Eric Stodder, were especially helpful in voicing the students' point of view to the rommuni ty. OUR CIUEFS Of police. Mr. Glavis, f\.tr. Neth. and Mr. Labrow, as "'ell as their staffs, ga ve blocks of their time ex· plaining to us the requirements, lrJining, procedures. and problems of polia; work . \Ve gained much ewarene.ss of the magnitude of their jobs and of their dedication. Tbt schools administered our ques· tionnaire5, the city staffs helped us tra(k down •tatistics. the county probation department provided us with Information as to lht.lr procedures in working with juveniles. Judge Sumner, Mr. Turner from tht district ettorney's office. Mr. 1itaran from the public defender's office. explained to us the "·orklngs or the ju\-enlle cou rt system in Oranae County. WE FEEL IT WAS a successful study. Our league wlll now work lo implement belier com munication tnd coordination among groups v.·ho are ~erned wllh '!"" -~,,,-;, • '.--·---' Mailbox .'!! Letters from reader1 art welcome. Normally writers should conve11 their message in 300 words or less. Thi right to C«lrtdense letters to fit .space or eliminate libel is reserved. Al,l Letters must inClude signature and mailing addres!, but namts moy bt withheld on -request if sufficie1tt redo son is apparent. youth and law enforcement. We will woTk to see young people more specifically educated in our public schools as to their responsibilities and their rights iti fl democratic society. We feel they need to understand the basis for laws and law en- forcement if this society is to conlinue. \Ve. will support special training for police officers who work wilh juveniles; we will support saJ_ary schedules that reflect our understanding of the complexity of the police officer's role. We can work intelligently toward these goals only because of the concerned men, women, and students who gave us our education. To them we would like to say publicly. "Thank you.'' ' HELEN K. HOLLINGS\\'ORTI1 Presiden~ LWV·OC Hom Bo Did I t To the Editor: Why is the North Vietnamese govern- ment so much stronger than the govern- ment in the South? One obvious ansv.'er is that there is no vocal opposition in the North while there are many critics in the South. Yet, the real answer is the method used by Ho Chi Minh in eliminating his opposition after he gai ned control. The first thing he did was to send specially-trained cadres into the coun- tryside to make a survey with regard to an impending land reform. These cadres \\-'ere in5lructed to "list' all untrustworthy individuals of means with the most un· Lrustworlhy to head the list. AFTEk THE lists had been completed. lio ordered that a certain number o! those on top of the lists were to be ex- ecuted while a larger number were to be given long prison terms. or course, all of th'! individuals were to be given a trial. The· trial5 could be described as instant justice in that as soon as a death sen- tence had been handed down the in- dividual or means was taken out and ex- ecuted. The method or execution wll.!!l about the same as the North Vietnamese used to e:1ecute hundred s of South Viet- nam.?se last year while the y controlled parts of Hue. Appartntly the first land reform was inadequate because Ho ordered a ~ccond round of executions which were increased by a factor ot siJ . THE BEST ES'TB1ATE indicates thRt if North Vietnam had as large a popula· tion IS tht U.S. they would ha\•e executed one mlllion individuals of means during both land reforms. With v1tl1tlon1, this method of ellmJn1ting untn1stworthy Individuals of means was perfected by the RUMians and used by China. Cuba, North Korea, tl.c-. Thus, the blueprint tor stre:ngthcr'ting 1he Sooth Vietnamese government Is viable but the leaders In the South arc trying to emulate the U.S .. \\lhlc.h also has many critics In go\'emment. HA,RRY B. McDONALD JR. -· SA Scl1ool ' . ";l Board· Chie Taho1· Quits ' \Santa Ana school system chief Dr. Glenn Tabor resigned Tuesday nigh& pse ot .~ falllng out wilh the biatd.. .. . . . Etef:s:~ 'llle Santa Ana lJnified &nil J Coll<!:~ djstricts . acoopled lhe s lntandi?nr.t:..ruignatl6o by 3 to 1 vtlt. Frictlon lietween Tabor' and. aome "l'mben• .II iJii board dal<S back .thr .. years. ' · 1n resigning, Tabor said that the disharmony that exlsts between members of the board and hln1self cannot help but hfve adverse· e.fJect upon the educ rt lion ot l1* childre,n, .l'1le resignation is eflccUv~ June 30. TJl:lOr • .f•. will be paid SS8,500 for. the re- ~inin& two years of his-contract. ~ In another county school dislrict. Cypress -Efementary. trustees last ffek iOCked Supt. Vincent Devaney. pevaney, ~7. resigned his $20,500-pcr-. year job after allegedly being told in a CIOsed session lo "resign or be fired." Oevnney protests that he docsn 'L know "'hy he was fired, but sources in the school district accuse him of lnduJglng in petty politics to make himself look good at the expense of others. It was s.aid two assistant superin· tendent.s and at least four principals had Uveatened 1o q u i t il Devaney wasn't replaced. Earlier lhis year, Tustin Union High School District's Supt. Robert Dah:Jberg resigned under fire fro1n the board,andj1 now serving as lame duck superiJr. tendent. Ki·ishna Menon ~els Bengal Post NEW DELHI, India (AP) -V. K. Krishna Menon, the volatile former dtfense minister who dropped from the political scene t\110 years ago, was qverwhelmingly elected to Parliament in We~t Bengal Tuesday -boosting the riior;ilc of.leftist forces in the country. Kri shna ~tenon's elections ca1ne at a time when left and right forces are strug· gHng for po\\·er am.id bilter dls5ens ions in P.rime Minister Indira Gandhi 's govern· tng Congress ~arty. ~"'l'he 73-year-old ti.1enon. who was sup· ported as an independent by West Bengal Slate's Communist-Jed government in a by.election, s!"all]ped !i)s Co~ress op- ponent by ·more lhan Hiii,, 000 votes. Israel Pays ... Another ~Ship' Co1npensatiou :WASHINGTON (AP) -Israel has paid $9.5 million as compensation for 164 U.S. sailors injured in the Israeli jct and torpedo attack on the American com· in.unication ship Liberty during the 1967 A'rab-llraeli "'ar. An ~er payment of $3.3 million was tnade for the families of the 34 men killed iri the attack 15 miles north of the Sinai pininsula. The United States is reported· ly asking another $7 million for damages t.o. the sh.ip. Valley's Jaycees Collect Trop!Ues At State Meet An armload o{ trophies was captured by the Fountain Valley Junior Chamber of Co1nmerce delegation to the recent state Jaycee convention in Anaheim. Foonlaln Valley walked a1vay 1villl first pl aei! awards for outstanding local chapter, outstanding president tGeorge Scott ), outstanding state director (Claude Coss), Project of the year (Vietnan1 clothing drive) and "write up project" {by Eddy Arnold). other honors given to the local chapter inclutltd a third place award in t11e in· · ternational relations category (Vietnam cloUting drive) and a third place for public relations work in the city's bond drive and community searchlight project. The chapter also had two of 10 rinalist.s in the oulstandinl:; youth category. Fountain Valley was competing agaiTlit other Jaycee chapters from c ofsie ot~e.r Jaycee chapters from cities of 25,000 to 50,000 populalloo. Foontain Valley ch apter mcn1ber Bernie Svalstad also \\'on an individual award for his work in chapter manase· men\, ~e IQCa.l chapter has more lhan 50 l!lemQers.(ReK.~lar bus!nes& meetings ;i.re Condutted., the second Monday o( every month in Foorit.ain Valley City Council chamben. Dinner meet1ng:s.aJ50 .are held on. the' Jast Monday or every momb at the Guy Fawkes restaurant in Fountain Valley. Weshninster Band Sets Concert Tonight The Westminsler High S,chool Sym· phonic },\and will perform selections Crom "Victory at Sea," "Hello Dolly" and "Oii:ieland Jamboree" toni(ht in the school gymnasium. The 7:30 p.m. con.cert is open to the public without charge. • Pilot on Road White Traveling With Angels · -DAILY PllAYr Sports Edl14r Glenn White hits the road 'Thursday with the California Angels to tover an eastern jtv:lket dlat is crucial Uthe Anaheim·ba&· ~ baseballers are to make a showing in the carrent season. .White. who shares coverage or the American League "hometowncrs" with Earl Gustkey, DAILY PlUYI' staff sports v.·riter, will be watching the Halos in New York, Boston aJJ(l Detroit and !ending back exclusive stories for Orange Coast ieaclers. H.is first story will be on Friday's road Stand opeoer in Yankee Stadium. : White will return to his home desk on ft1ay 27, jusl in time to get set to cover the Angels in a home stand that will in- clude the DAILY PILOT's "2-for·l Angel D;i.y" {Sunday, June 1) when Uie Halos will play the Baltimore Orioles. The DAILY PILOT is offering readers a free $3.50 or $2.50 reserved seat ticket for each one lhey buy in those price categories for the June t game. Ticket order blanks for "2-for-1 Angel Day" are published every day in th~ DAILY PILOT and will be continued through Monday. The coupon appears to· day on Page 10. Next Tuesday {May 20) is deadline for ticket reservations for the DAILY PILOT half-price deal. rosr OUR Natinn Ready to ·Start M i-ssile Limiting Talks GENEVA (UPI) -The United Stales is ready to start straiegic missile timila· lion talks with the Soviet Uni!'Jll.' in Geneva in early July , quallfied Western sources said today. That v.'as the target doile set by the United Stales for the n1gotiallons which could have opened a year earlier U the Soviets had not invaded Czechoslovakia, lhe sources said. A final dale and site for the opening of the U.S.·Soviet talks .has not been agreed 011, they said. But the Soviets were ex· pectcd to agree to as early a start as possible, the sources said. Cotnmunist sources said the Soviets may prefer the talks to open in Vienna so as to emphasjze their strictly private nature and avoid any cooncctlon with lhe 17·nation disarmament conference. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson had been ready to begin the talks last August but the Sovitt 'invasion. of Czechoslovakia made tt· politically and dJplomatlcally. lmposslblt. ' President Nli:on for his part did not ~ Scholars· Honored At Westminster About 300 Westminster High SchOOI students will be honored for their scholastic contributions at 7 p.m. Friday during the school 's annual Royal Ban-- quet. The studen\s have been nominated in 23 different areas of achievement. All nominees will rece.ive certificates with four to be drawn from their number to compete for-the Leo Award as tbe most oul!ltanding student. • Featured speaker at the banquet, scheduled for the Westminster High School gymnasiwn, will be Orange Coun. ty Supeirntendent of Schools Robert Peterson. His topic will be "Answers lo Apathy." 15 Westminster Girls Seek Title F'ifteen beautiful Westminster glrls will go on parade Saturday night in the an-- nual Miss Westminster Beauty Pageant beginning at 8:30 p.m. on the mall out.side the new civic center. Tickets Lo the pageant are available from contestants, their sporucn, and the \vestminster Chamber of Commerce, sponsor of the event. Price ls $1.50 per person. A special prize will be eamf.d by one of the 15 girls who sells tht most tickets. want lo rush Into the talks y,·ithout carerUily preparing lhe U.S. position. . Nixon. recenUy anriounced that Gerald Smith, C:irector of lhe U.S. Anny's Con- trol and DisAnnament agency would be chier U.S. negotiator. '. The disarm&ment confere.,« ends its spring session May 23 and opens the sum· mer ses~ion July ~. SJ11ith is overall head ot the U.S. delegation to the disarmament talks and wli$ expected to be on hand for the resumption. As defined by both sides the talks aim at limiting the use of strategic nuclear missiles in which are antimissile systems (ABM) a's well as offensive in· tercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM). West.em officials said the talks represent the biggest undertaking yet by the SO<lets 'and thi Urulid Slates to try lo ~trOl •lhe' wms raCe. LEASE ON ' OUR ~ .MEttAN • ' • W~...,l4.HW ' S ·Pentagon ~ 6egin~ Bui di~g .~BM .. ' ~ • 4 .. • WASIUNGTON {U I) -The Ponlagon bu decided II does "'"<\ to wait f0< eonueu to a . ' the 11Saleguard11 antlballbU~ missile ( Ml syalem and has stor{ed construclljn. Despite a ple<tge last month no money would be · spent ,on the ABM until Congress gjvu the go.ahead, , Deputy Defense Secretary Oevid Packaid said Tuesday the Defeme Departiiienl has begun .•'4uiflng missiles and r;1dars !or the proposed syste m. He told newlmen parts are being bought witb funds voted by Congress last year for the old "Sen· tine!'' ABM system President Nlxon BbRndohed . . Pacµrd .s&id ii Congress, rej~s tlle system, the government will have to pay ror several hun.dred mjJ.!ion dollars worth Qf radar and missile parts Ior use in B nonexistent defe,.sive .m.lssile system. In a speech Monday night Dr; John S. Fostei:_ Jr., the Pentagou'.s chief of rcselireh and engineering, also disclosed that 15,000 people at several hundred firms were working on the· Safeguard program. Ir Congress decides to put off authorization of.the ABM, he said, most of these employes would have to be re. 8.S$lgned to other projects and it would take some nlOnlhs to reogranize them at a. later date . Packfird's diSclosure · came as the S e n a t e disarmament subcommittee reopened hearings today into the ABM controversy . !ts witq~ will be two scienlisls -. Ors. Edward Teller and Jerome 8. Wiesner. Teller, a La\\•rence R a d i a t i o n J,aboratw-y physici 6l known as ~he fa.tl!fr or the H·Bomb, favors tbe ABM. Wiesner, a formerrf,~~idential scie~ adviser now at ; ~sachusetll ~ Institute of Technology, opposes it. A month ago, Packard promised the subcommittee the Pentagon would not begin work on the Saleguard ABM until It received specific spending authority from Congress. The question came up b e c a u s e Con~ress last year appropriated $612 mllhon to begin deployment of the Sen· tine! ABM -$346 million for pro. curement and $266 million for site ac· quisilion and construction. The Pentagon still has thi"s mOney, even though the Sen- tinel has been abandoned. The Sentinel system had a dU£erent purpose than Safeguard. It would have been deployed around major cities to pro- lcct lhe populatioo. Wben Nixoo took of· lice, he ordered deployment stopped. In March, he proposed the new SaJeguant • ABM .•Y•l<m. Uo ·purpoae ls not to ll'O' led lhe c{t{ta bul to guard Amertc.n misoUe allol and lliifnber but.a from 1 imea\ allack. -· TAKES OCEAN. VIEW POST • M<KlnloyvHlt'a Co,,,.,l New PersonnelT; Qrlef Selected JameS Carvell, currently supertn. tendenl of McK'irileyville Unicn · Elemen- tary School District in Nott he r n California', has been appointed us:istant superintendent for personnel for Hun. tingtOfl Beach's Ocean View School District. He 8S1JU{Tles his. new dUti~ JUiy I. . He. will fill the Job le~t open. sirice the resignation "!or' personal reasons" two months ago of ~ean View personnel direct.or MarUn Matson. Carvell Is a graduate ol HUmboldt State College where he wa.s awarded • bachelor's degn?e in aocial scierri!sand a master's dCgree in elementary school ad- ministration. lle has taught school ln Freshwater, Calif., and has been an elementary school principal in Arcata, Calif. He has bekl bis posiUOn. as s \I p er I n1 e n,.d e--n t bt- Mcf\inleyville since 1955. · • • 4 Ull.V PILOT w.......,, 11., 14/ 1•• II Totin REIS ,~..., ... Dal .. ~"9ff) 'ronce1 Schlereth figured ·her rights were beltig >iolaJed when th~ Duquesne U'ghl Co. tn Pittsburgh put up a pole with a crossbar over- hanging her property. 'A judge agreed with her. The company was ordered to pay Mrs. Schlereth $271) for violating six inches ol. air space above her property for 19 mont,hs. and to cut off the overhanging end el the cross bar. • "Tro.Wle" owned by Mr.!. Dorotht1 AforriU of Milford, Con11., ha.1 enough of its own with her own litUr of kittens at feeding f,imt, but sM t.ake1 time out for her "adopted" squirTtl. The family cat will allow strangers to pick up the kittni.i but it'1 strictly hand&: off the bab11 squirrel which WOI foun4 obandont:d . • George Perkins, 68, of Bourne. mouth1 England, carries an alarm clock, wound and set by his wile, to remind him when it is time to leave the pub. "My wile got a bit mad at me for staymg too long ... " Perkins says. 11l'm not henpecked -it's just a reminder." • A magistrate in Rome has dis· Mississippf -Yowii - , Gets Black Rule FAYE'M'E, MIA. (UPI) -11>1 bud of Mllaiulppl'a flnt all-block ,...mmcnl ot a biracial munlclpality 1 1 n c 1 reconstrucUon ttrased a law and order theme today Is a program to "make this town flt for all God's children." Vloleqce will oot be tolerated, Negro leader t'harles Even said. One or the first laws·of his adm\nlstraUon will be to make it Ul'egaJ fCJr c1Uzenl to carry (Ul\I or knives longer \than tWo inches. Evers' first ICt\eat}Y today when it Wll certain that ~ and five black town coun- cilmen.would assume office July 7 was to lead a prayer meeting at Hollywood Bap- tist CIUU'Ch. "Help me, God. to be lhe kind of mayor to look out for all of us -the whites who hate ~ and the blacks who distrust us,'' be prayed. Evers, 46, whose hr~. Medgar, n;s a1aiD from ambush in Jack.son In lflS. and the new councilmen were swept into office Tuesday in statewide municipal elecUoos In. which more than 100 Negroes IOU&ht posts in about 40 munlcipaliUes. Even apparenuy was the only black mayoralty qandedat.e to win, but at least six Negroes won council and aldennanic seats in the DemocraUc primaries around the state and eight others ad vanced lo runoffs. A -nwnber of Negroes qualified as independents. and will run in the June 3 genera1 electiQns. Evers, a ~i.s.si.pp1 native who return- ed from Chicago alter his brother's slaying to sucCeed Medgar as Mississippi field director o( tbe National As.sociation for the Advanoement ol Colored People (NAACP), unseated R. J. ''Turnip ELECTED MAYOR Jubilant Ch1rle1 Evers Greens" Allen, 73, who had been mayor of this town about 30 miles from Natches for the past 18 years. Final returns cave Evers 3M votes to 25$ for Allen. Stanford,ColumbiaMake Concessions to Students From Wire Services STANFORD -In the wake of student uprisings, the 23-year-old affiliation between Stanford University and the ad· jacenl Stanford Research lnsUtute is en· ding. biological or chemical warfare." Instead, SRI should be inquiring Into "the solulion of pressing social pro- blems," the trustees said. "There are matters of urgent social concern which should be the objects of vigorous research attack and activity by society in general." I ' --· --• I if you buy an electric range with a self-cleaning oven now.~ *Buy your• before June 30 from your local participating dealer and the Electric League of Southern California will mail you $25 if you choose any of these brands: Frigidaire. General Electric. Hotpoint. Ken'morc. Thermador. Westinghouse. You're tired of scrubbing. scouring, and scraping that oven of yours anybow,arcn'tyou? Why put up STBmPOUJ with all that drudgery when an electric self-cleaning oven will clean itself for less than a dime? When your new range is electric. you can cut way down on deaning your kitchen, too. With a flameless range there are no by-products of oombustion to dirty walls1 \vindows and curtains. Besides a cleaner kitchen, an electric range means a cooler kitchen. Electric heat goes Into the food-not up the sides of pots and pans. Electric rangea now outsell gas ranges from coast to coast. You can see why. See your local participating dealer. Give him your address when you buy a range. The League will mail you a check. ~ Southern California Edison DRUDGBRH ROW! missed a charge by Police Com• missioner Vincenzo Font•n• of Ge· itoa that GiM Lollobrl9ld1 broke the law by describing policemen as "crotins" in the film "Buona Sera, Mrs. CarnpbeU." The magistrate said the remark was made during a comedy sequence in which the _make believe police did commit some stupid maneuvers. St.anford's board of trustees decreed the severance Tuesday. Board preaident W. Pilmer Fuller aaid no deadline was set because "it probably will take con· ilderable time." SRI's war-related research projects, targets of~y student sit.in which began last April 3, brought comment that the trwitees "wbo1ehw1ed1y eodaJ'ltd'' a ban agalnat projects "dealing dlreclly with the development of weapons of In New York Tuesday, Columbia University trustees voted to end the 1--;;:;:;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;:;:;:;:::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;- Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps on campus by 1971. ~o new cadets will be accepted, the)' sa.i9. and students in the program will ftnish at an acceleralttl rate. The truslee8 also approved a university _ senate _.of studen~ faculty, employes and admln~ tO ....,. u the main governing bod1 for the campus ol 17,lOO. -.--. The oumer1 of the Pigwn Inn in Spoldiftl, ·England are giving a fivt-QOLlon barrei of beer to 89-uear-old Jack E4!t, a custo- m.tr so faithful that M ha.! worn a hole in the floor by hit faVOT· ite ipot at the bar. E4!t downed hi& first beer in tM pub when he toa1 19, and M .· ha& been a reQ'lllar customer ever since. "l start.td lat.t, but I have bfm making up for it aince," he aaid. •1 must have drunk enough pints (of beer J to buu the place twice over." • Electrteal service in portiOllS of El Paso, Tex., was interrupted twice in one night because of ani· mals. The first interruption wes when a crow caused a short of a 14,000.volt line with his wing, cut- ting off electricity to the area near the La Tuna Correctional Institu· tion. The second came when a cat crawled oo top of a eubstation regulator, causmg the regulator to malfunctioo. -- Mal.aysian Mobs Defy Curfew in Violent Outbreak KUALA LUMPUR (UPI) -Mobs ol Malays and · Chinese, some armed wilh ceremonlal daggers, guns and other weapons, today deHtd the 24-hour curfew imposed on KualaJAmtpur because of one of the worst outbttaks of racial violence in Malaysia's history. King Tuanku hmall Nuiruddin Shah lMued a proclamaUon calling out all military rt1ervet to reinforce regular security forces as a second nlgbl ol in- tercommunal fighting threatened. The Sengalor st.ate police_ reported at least 4o persons were ldlled Tuesday and today in clashes between Malays and Chinese and with security forces trying to ~rse them . Witnesses reported that the entire nearby village of Gombok appeared to be consumed by flames during the ,day. Refugees were reported s t r e a m I n I toward the capital. * * * National Guards Called to Quell Louisiana Riots BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -A student-police battle that left 15 students and two sheriffs deputies injured Tues- day at Southern University led to the callup of more than SOO National Guardsmen oo alert neat the campus t~ day. · Studenta -brandishing f I am i n g torches and hurling !Ir< bombs, rocka aod botUes lilled with add -set bonfl1'S and burned a construction trucl< parkj!d oo the Baton Rouge campua of the predom- lnanUy Negro univeraity. Police fired tear gas and a few shotgun blasts In return. Police arrested 17 persons, charging three with aggravated battery and the rest wltb criminal mi.schief. Windstorm Rips Uniontown Twisters Strike Plains for 2nd Night in Rotv Callt°"'Ma · wr1 WUT14lt mouST® (:-al Molflf' cc..., ..... ,,.. u.t tfrll• '""""" wflll ,..,..... dMtN ... t frl • .,..,,_. ...... Wk*.......,..., II i. 11 ... '"""" ..... 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JI .• .. .. ...... .. ., " ff ,, ff . ., n JO T lloman , tgurt CONTOURING • AND OP£N\NG G 1l SA10tl FOil Of At10tHER URE cotltll01 GI.AMOROUS FIG\S Vi.RY S\MP\.£ OUR M£1HOD 1l0 lllC\\\IES ./ MO ElERC\SE ~ MO P\L\.S ./ 10 D\El\IG \ t o 1 1t1tH£S 10SE \ti 90 MJH\ltES Oil PAY t10nl\tlG ' PHONE 534.7950 Now For Appo intment ~ OPIN DMY '• A.M. TO• P.M. MOii, THlU SAT. 13732 S. EUCLID, ~ARDEN GROVE (1 ... So; of G.G. Frwy.·) • Safeguard Picks Up Sup?> rt WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nixon administration has'pi~k .. ed up more Senate backers for its Safeguard missile system than its opponents h,ve wooed over, the latest As.90Clated Press survey shows, Nevertheless, opponents of the system now nwnber 48, three votes short or an absolute majority. 1 Advocates of speedy in· stallaUon of the limited an- tlballistic missile system p~ posed by President Ni11:on can now count 46 Senate sup- porters. Six senators -who hold the key to tt!Olvlng the issue - say they are undecided. GAINED II QUEENIE ly Phil lnlerlandl Based on the AP 'surveys, backers of the system have gained the support of 11 ad- ditional senators while op- '"The Way I look at it. Smokey the be&r not only expects us to prevent forest fires, he expects us to · behave ourselves in the national forests." ponents have picked up fi ve. --------------~------ In ' the first AP poll. tak en belore Nixon shifted ABM em- phasis from city proetction to defense . of offensive missile sites. 43 senatr1rs were counted as opposed and 35 in favo r. In a second survey, in April, the count was 47 opposed and 43 in fa vor. Since then. alU1ough the situation remains fluid and subject to change by events, anti·ABM forces have picked up the su pport or Sen. Warren G. !'.1agnuson. ID-Wash.) and a GOP senator who asked that his name not be used. ABM su pporters have gain· ed Sen. Robert P. Griffin, (R· fl1ich.). and John L. ~tcClellane., .(0-Ark.). They can also · count Sen. Len Jordan, (R-Jdaho), previously listed as opposted. VOTE OTHER WAY Many of these and other senat.ors say they could be persuaded to vote for the other side -if the evidence was strong enough. Magnuson, previously listed as un~ided, is now defining his pdfftion this way: "I'm still llol convinced i I ' s' necessary for n a t i o n a I defense. As a matter of priorities the money would be far better spent on domestic and social problems rather than going ahead with a missile system which has questionable scientifi c and technical capabilj!y." Jordan now t e 11 s con· stituents: "If the vote were counted today I would vote to suppor t the Safeguard ABM system , . , However the vote is not likely for several weeks , . . I reserve the right to change my mind s h o u I d evidence be introduced prt> ving the system to b e worthless." l\1UCH PRDSURE "It all depends on what the Pr~ident does," said an aide to a Republican senator who is leaning against lhe program. ''There is a lot ol Senate pressure on him to ask for a moratorium on deployment ror a year or so while initial disarmament talks .are begun with the Soviets. "But if he comes out swing- ing and fighting ," the •aide said, "a bunch of Republicans 'Yho are now agaihst ABM are g.oing to begin wondering whether their continued op- position is worth it -whether they ought not stand behind their party's leader." Aides of McClellan said he is now Jeadning loward deploy · ment of the ABM system as necessary for defense. Bul they said he still wonders '"hether sufficient research ' \ ' JOIN OUR , GYPSY CAR·AVAN . . ' • , • and di scover the lore an d and development work has been done to justify the estimated $7 .8 billion cost. Private vote counts made by Republican ABM opponents list up to 50 senators ready to vote against deployment. STILL UNDECIDSD One of these lists Sens. Ceorge 0. Aiken, IR·Vt.): Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev.); and Thomas J . Mcintyre, (D- N.H.), as being agairn:.i the system. All three man say, however. they are undecided and uncomr.i.ittcd . Others now listed as. un- dt'Cided are Sens. C a I e b Boggs, (R-Del.): Clinton P. Anderson, (0-N.M.), and John J. Williams, (R-Del.). Some senators report a change in the tenor of mail on the subject. A New England Republican says the early mail on ABM was strongly against it and mainly from the academic and intellectua! communities. f\10RE WRITING "Now the rest of the people are being heard from a lot more of the mail is pro-ABM," he said. A Magnu~n ajde said ABM mail remains very heavy and is about 4 to I against. <, . lure of Summer fa shion '69 in our many departments ... everything ·with, the fre&-spirited fee ling of Gypsy! ' WIN A TRIP TO SAN FRANCISCO \'IA PSA GYPSY-JET J ust .fill out an ent ry blank at any Broadway. an d yo u may be one o f the I 0 lucky winners of a San Fran cisco weekend-for-two. Prize includes-round trip fl ight from Los Arfgeles via PSA, deluxe room accomrA·odbtions for 3 days and 2 nights at the Sir Fran cis Dr1ke Hotel, and a Valear Rent-A.Car at your disposal for 150 mile s of trove!. ANA HEI M 444 N, Eucfld 535-1121 Mon. thru S•t. I 0 •.m, to 9:30 p.m. . . • ( ' D. " NEWPORT 47 F•1hion l1lancl 644 .1'212 Mol'I, fhru Frf. I 0 a.m. fo 9:10 p.m. Sat. 10 f .m. to 6 p.m. • -· • GYPSY! THE UNTAMED BARES DAIL V PILOT /J 8. Pu!I on a wild skirt and peasanf blouse. Rush into our sensuous leather sandals straping your feet here and there, leaving you bare to flirt with the sun. You're footloose and fancy free as the summer wind~nd those romantic Italian craftsme·n make it happen. By Sportive Mode : A Stucls. white, l:ione, 12.00 B. Knots, wh ite ,bone ,brown, '12.00 C. Offse t T, wh ite, bone, 12.00 By Vive Italia: D, Cross Vamp, bone, white, blacl:, 7,00 E Stropped Vamp, whi te, red, yellow, bone, 8.00 F. Stropped Vamp with contrasting edging, white, bone, 8.00 G. By Tintoretto, Pacione, wafnuf buffalo, 11 .00 Casual Shoes, 75 , Bu'dget Fashion Shoes IOI HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Edln9or Ave. 19 2-lll I Mon. thru Sat. 10 e.m. to 9 :)0 p.m . • o I DAILY PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGEj Recall Not Nec~ssary Residents o! Fountain Valley who Initiated the re- call action against their mayor and two city council· men have apparecUy won at least partiaJ victories in their movement against small lots and alleged con!lic t o! Interest. In decisions la st week, the Fountain Valley Plan· ning Commission demonstraCed an unwillingness to accept Iota built on less 1h#ln 6,000 square feet. They also asked developers interested. 1n planned develop- ments to limit their lots to an average of 7 ,200 square feet with a 6,000 square-foot minimum. , Also last week , Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, pri· mary target of the recall movement, told reporters be would not be a candidate for re-election next April. Schwerdtfeger has been the subject of much criti• cls m for his action as real estate broker in the contro- versial Larwin Tract, a factor first pointed out in a DAILY PILOT editorial which noted potential for con· flicts of interest by the mayor and the two councilmen. The Larwin Tract itself was stopped by a Superior Court decision holdinJ the council's approval of lbe tract invalid. That decision, however, may be appealed. \Vith these victories in hand, the recalt advocates would do well at this stage to study what it might cost the city of Fountain Valley U a bitter recall battle is in i;tore. Jn the first place. recall almost never resolves com· plaints against elected officials, except in such obvious cases a s those involving criminal conviction. If the movement is continued, Fountain Valley in· evitably will be plunged into continuous upheaval and turmoil for at least a year. From six to nine months would be required to get a recall election before the people -and regular municipal elections are to be held next April. Mayor Schwerdtfeger already has said he won't run again, and Councilman Donald Fregeau would face re-election next April if he chooses to try it. The question isn't whether or not these elected official1 have acted cowiter to public will. The question is whether rreater damage to the city can be avoided' by waitini three or four months longer to vole on the same Issue. Both sides apparenUy agree now that a recall would dlvtded the city Into bitter factions. The bitterness could endure for many yean. Is the recall really ,vorth that gamble! ' Annual Parking Passes An annual parking pas.s system to allow holders to park anY"'.here in Huntington Beach without having lo feed parking meters is under consideration by lhe city administration. It could solve some problems. Main reason for considering a SlO or $15 annual pass Is that residents of homes or businesses \Vith parking meters..tp front often are paying meter fees during the off sea:SOQ when the meters are seldom used and blocks are alm'ost deserted of vehicles. The· pass suggested would be available to anyone and it would apply to all meters. Parking spaces could not be reserved, however. Most of the parking problems are ill the old downtown area, where 'meters are used for some 90 to 140 days a year, then are empty the rest of the year. Residents living nearby still must pay the fee or break the law. Police may ignore the law violations, but that procedure is subject to obvious criticism. It is a procedure unpopular with those charged with uphold· ing the Jaw s and unacceptable to residents who would like to feel they are law abiding, yet need parking space at a reasonable price. Use of the parking pass at least on a test basis would give the city government and residents a chance to either make the pass system work or time to develop an acceptable substitute. s Nixon Reverts to Earlier Position Peace Corps Losing Its Main Purpose Sig1_1ificant Turning Point? WASHINGTON -The turnaround ·on the hunger program was probably a turn· ing point of considerable significance in the Nixon Administration. For one thing, President Nixon affirmed his own credibility on this controversial question. He had promlstd an expanded hunger program and then it appeared for a whlle that he would not deliver on the promise. At one point be told Agriculture Secretary Hardin to his face that there was no money to expand federal pro- grams to feed the undernourished. Later. under public and congre.ssional pressure, he reverted lo the position he took during the campaign and io his early days in of· fict that hunger and malnutrition could not be tolerated in the tJOtld's a:reatest food prodUclng nation. "' Ooce having decided that, there were ways to fisMf $274 ril.ilUon more for an lm· mediate expansion and project a SI billion increase when the expanded pro- gram is in full operation. TRIS WAS A IWMAN decision as well as a pollUcal decision, but more than that It may show that Nixon is determined ,lo sUck by the judgments he formed when he ran for the presidency. In this context, U therefore does not follow th.at because he recegrtlzed lhe'emollonal and political dri~ for an expanded hunger program be: will also give way to the" emotional and politica1 campaign against the ABM and for an early unilateral pull-out in Viet- nam . Jf Nlzon reverls t() his earlier judg· ment. ts he did in the Instance or the hunger pr()gram. he will not back up on ABM and he will not bug out in Vietnam. r:-... .... '{ -,,...,-~.. ..,, 1l1;,,.,, ~"1 i · Ri chard Wil.Son He wiQ go ahead toward nuclear parity with the Soviet Union. He will find ways, all he prom ised In the cam paign, to fight a better war in Vietnam with fewer men if there ls to be no acceptable negotiated settlement . He will go ahead with a thorough reorganization of the State Department. He will start numerous pro- grams to weave alienated youth back into the fabric or American society. He will go ahead vigorously with programs to in- volve the private sector in racial an:ieUoralion and urban reoewaJ. He will prti:eeed more vigorously with law and order programs to guarantee safety in the home and on the street. AND HE WILL DO ALL this In the framework or a balanced budget and government surplus to cheek inflation with a reordering of priorilits wbJch will anticipate in the future an expan!lon of reorganiied federal progranu to improve the human condition. These were the premises on which Nix- on was elected to offiei!. T h e y represented the middle ground between the extremism of George C. \Vallace and the conventional liberal democracy of Hubert H. Humphrey. They were general principles alluded to in Nixon's inaugural address. It looked for a while as if Nixon might conv~ni enlly forget some of his own ideas. He could not find a Democrat for the Cabinet as he had promised. He began to talk about "auUldency" in nuclear weapons rather than parity. He reorganized the Job Corps but did not abolish it as he advocated during the campaign. Perhaps no\v hi1 decision on hunger represents a return to his original lines of thinking. It is likely to be interpreted otherwise, however, by the group of senators who share their concern for the hungry with their dete.rtnination lo force Nixon to ~withdraw from Vietnam and abandon ABM deployment. They may re.ason that If Nixon changed hls·mlnd on hunger under public and conlrtssional pressure he can be forced to do so on the Safeguard ABM deployment and~an early Vietnam withdrawal. ~ THE HUNGER PROGRAM illustrates another paint. Like ~!her presidents before him Nixon is discovering that good management In governmen t Is not enough. N'w approaches lo C"ld problems are conUnDously required. However much Nixon might wish for a hold down, a breatlling spe.ll and a period of calm and restraint, the dynamics of this kind of gO\lernment calls for-constant change and improvement.. This leads a president toward the proposal of new prorrams which bear the stami> of his ad· ministration. If he does not take the. in- iUaUve the initiative will be wrested from him ln Congress. An administration cannot stand still or hold the line for any extended period of time because .stagnation ts not politicall)' popular in a country with so many unmet needs. Wage-earners Are Restive Inflation has been described as a tax on the poor and the elderly, but evidence mounts that It is beginning to hurt the average wage~arner. The gr tat American middle class Is ha\•lng trouble making ends meet, and its mood ls tu.m- ing uglj. Pett Hamill calls ii the revolt of lhe White Lower Middle Class. "The workiii.g class earns Its living with Its hands or its backs," he writes. "lls members do not ex.Isl on welfare payments; they do not Jive In abjecL, swinish poverty, nor in i;afe, remote suburban comfort. They eam between $5,000 Bod $10,000 a year. And they can no longer make it in New York." Their griev111Ce1 seem to be. centerlng -ln Nt,.w York, at least -on an tipoverty alld welfart progralll.!i for Negroes and on the. rauure of local government to provide servk:es to match galloping tax rates. Gus Tyler calls It "the revolt of Mr. Mid- dle." A UNION WAGE study released on Aprll 13 showed how higher taxes and ris. ing prices had virtually wiped out pay in- ---- Wedn esday, May 14, 1969 Tiit editorial page of thi Ddllv Pilot 1t1ki to inform and 1dm. tttate rtadtr1 by (>rt'Jf'llting thf1 ntt01paper11 opinroni and com- JMftUlfV on topfes of i1tttrt1i and liglll/i<:anc., bw providing a fOTVm for the erprc11icm of our rtadtr1' opinlon.t. and b11 prtttntina tht divcrs1 ulc11> potntl of 1 i11forn1tJd ob1trwr1 ond rpoktsni.en on topia of th"l dOJI. Robert N. 1Ve1d. Publisher ' . • Editorial Researcli j creases obtained by New York City workers between 1965 and 1968. Of the 24 industry groupings studied, worker! ln 12 of them suffered a net loss in weekly purchasing power during the thr~year period. One exa1nple: A construction industry worker grossed $1 70.69 weekly in I96S and $201.12 in 1968 -an increase of 530.43 a "·eek. But his rtal net gain after higher taxes and inflation was only $1.36 per week. Clearly some or the .impetus for tax reform is stemmlng from the desire of lhe average worker to get the tax burden shared more equitably. Playing the tax loopholes has become a science (or the "·ealthy and their lawyers, while the little man is lucky to save $2Q on his tax blll at the ne8rest ll&R Block ofHce. The ave.rage taxpayer now spends two bours and 34 minutes out of every eight work· lng to pay his local. state. and federal tu· es. "ADAJ\1 S.'tflTR,'" the ubiqui tOUJ and frequently on-target phUosophtr of the money mull, has invented a term for the new kind of p11per weAllh being created in Amerita today. He called it Supertur· rency. This could be money earned In a company which goes public and sells 1t Wrty Umes the earnlnp. Quotes Shirley Templt Bla<'k. Woodtlde •1The Ctteho!lovak people intend to df!«!rmln11 their own dtll.in)'. The l'.twlans have arasped 1 ne:ule.'' "So they have thlrty times ~ as much money as we poor people who only earn the money and put it in the bank," writes Smith. "The poor iMocents among U1 will not know there is a superior currency around. They will still think the grten sturr In their wallets is money, and they will be bewildered." A BEWILDERED public is a poten· Ual\y explosive one, and warnings already have been posted of a "tax- payers' revolt." Some citizens, moreover, are mak.ing the connection between In· flaUon and the war in Vietnam which, ac- cording lo many economlsU , ls the root cause of rising prices .and the IJ"OWina: cost of government at all levels. Something is in the wind. For the first time in years national spending proposals such as the antiballlstic missile system and the supersonic tran.!pOrt are beiftg subjected to close economic as Well as technolQgical and political analysis. For the Nixon Administration the big question of 1969 may be not how to deal with the Russians or Hanoi but how to pacify resUve American wagwarners. Dear Gloomy Gus: Howcum I.he mllkmtn 1te allowed to atore crates fUll of empty GU.SS milk bottles along the curb tines In Huntington Beach? Kids love brtaklng the. bottles -bul ifs tough on tlrts. not to mention unsightly. -Effie ftltt lttfltr. Nlllcft P91tH'"*' ¥1""' -... ,,_tl!y ""'" " tll9 .. __ ,. , ... •-"' ......... OflltM!¥ li<lt. Dflll\I l'li.t. ,. l .. f" • ' Mankiewicz . 'I ' ' and Braden l ' . I ~he Peace Corps, once a simple idea which attracted young, idea Ii s t i c A1nericans willing to volunteer for two years of service abroad at a minimum substance, is acquiring considerable tarnish both from the rest of the bureaucracy and from Its new leader· ship. Several years ago Sec. of State Dean Rusk sent a message to all U.S. posts overseas, saying "The Peace Corps can best serve American foreign policy by not being a part of American foreign policy." • The import of the message was clear, There was to be no involvement in the work of the volunteers by olher U.S. agencies o v e r s e a s ; under no circumstances were they to be used as sources of information; they were to be as free as any other American abroad to &peak their minds. BUT LAST \\'EEK the State Depart· ment ordered a study to see if there could not be more interchange of person· nel among foreign policy agencies, in· eluding not only the Peace Corps and the State Department but also the Agency for lnt.ernaUonal Development jAID ), the U.S. Information Agency and the Arm!!! Control and Disarmament Agency. What is ignored in this approach is that It was precisely to create a new and dif- ferent Am erican image abroad that the Peace Corps was begun. If the identity of the Peace Corps volunteer, living at the level of the people he serves. is to be merged with the rest of the U.S. com· munity abroad, Jiving segregated and - by local standards -luxurious lives in an English-speaking enclave, the main reason for the Peace Corps is gone. !\fore ominously, a project which put Peact Corps lawye rs Into the Paciric trust territories of J\fjcronesia. to heJp tribal councils codify their laws and to help set up institutions of self.govern- ment, has now been 11heh•ed, apparently at the insistence of the Oepart1nent of Defense. AT THE SAl\tE TIJ\IE, the new Peace Corps director. Joseph Blatchford, made it perfectly clear in his first appearances that he wan ts older technicians overseas, with higher pay. allowances fo r dependents and work projects which can be measured in terms of economic development. There will be, appa rently, less of this fuzzy talk about self·help and co1nmunity change, Once again. the zeal for change 1 obscures the reason for existence. The history of the \J.S. effort in un· derdeveloped counlries is largely a history of failure In just this kind of ac· livity -U. S. economists and technicians trying to fit other cultures into our own economic measurements. It was once the Peace Corps' special mission lo remind u.s Ulat man does not Uve by gross na· tlonal product alone. By Frank '-1nklewlct and Tom Braden Federal Land Alllnce, NOr., Tlme•lltrald: "Vast fedtral land hold ings have actually become a hindrance to the economic pro- gres.s of some st11teii. The federal go\!em· ment owns 98 percent of Alask& . . . 17 }>treeot of Nevada, 67 percent or Utah , and 64 ptrttnt of fdaho. Surely llOme of that land could be rele11sed or reclasslfied without h11m1lng the cause of con· 3er\'8t.ion." t>Mf goAR Mother Favors Sex Education To the Editor: It seems to me that what we condemn on the college campus is occurring on an adult level right here in Huntington Beach. I refer to the controversy over sex education in the schools. \Ye are allowing a small, unruly and hysterica l minority to speak for all of us. This grou p behaved disgracefully at the recent Marina meeting. A totally ir· relevant smut sheet, calculated to panic parents, was passed to adults. LOCAL EDUCATORS are harassed shamefully not only by adults but by students v.·ho follow their parenl$,' hor· rend ous example. I totally reject the Birch claim that thi~ (or anything contrary lo niy views) is a "Communist plot." Didn't we have enough of that nonsense during the Joe r.1cCarlhy era? IL is tilne the quiet, rational, sane citizen slood up to be counted. A good, flexible family lite or sex education course given on a voluntary basiS cannot help but benefit our chlldren. AS TllE ~IOTHER of three boys, I firmly endorse it! Our local educators are to be com· mended not only for their efforts but for 1 he way in which they have conducted themselves in the faee or some very ugly accusati'ons. t hope lo read more si milar letters in 1hls column. MRS. MARY MARGARET LEPORE. 11£1 Proposal To the Editor : R.N. Jer')me F. Collins' "Pilot Logbook'' col- umn in the DAILY PILOT of April 29, v.·as son1cwhat amusing, but the facts from •which he took off were garbled in his first few lines. r~irst. the 10 pertt!nl of fa culty sug- Jlesled by students (and endorsed by a faculty-student committee) meant 10 per- cent of new faculty. This would be three out of 30 new faculty next year. The two percent meant two percent of all faculty. This \vould be six out or 300 faculty next year. Second, Chancellor .Aldrich had nothing lo do with either the proposal or with any ''compr()mise'' leading from one to the other, The second proposal, involving two percent or faculty, was originated by a faculty member and was endorsed by the faculty Senate. THIRD, FOR THE record. the proposal Is so far just that -a proposal. If it is enacted, lhe two percent figure. may change. Also, the hiring au thority wlll not be given to the students, ·but will bt re· tained by the chancellor, where It now is. Jlre5umebly, faculty will also be con- sulted, although the principal advice to the chanc<!llor on these few appalntmenls "·oo\d come from students. The ap- ;xiinlmehts in this category would be trmporary, non·tenure appointments. If the piece wert intended only to amuse. it woukt be 1\1 rig h 1 • Unfortunately, 1 think it gives an 11lready jumpy publtc 1t disUncUy v.TOng view of what is going on at UC I. KENNETH W. FORD Chairman Irvine Division of the Academic senate BOID Ile Did fl To the Editor· Why \"' the North Vietnamese govern- mrnt so murh stronger lh;tn Ult govtrn- m~nl. in the So\1th! One obvlou:ii answer Is !hill there Is no vocal opposition in the North whlll! !here ar<' mony critic~ In U1c Sooth. Yet, lhe real ans~·er is the method ( t Mailbox Letters fTom readers art wtlcome. Normally wri ttrs shoul4 convty thtir message i1i 300 word1 or leis. Tlte right to conden1e letters to fit space or eliminate libel is rtstrved. All l.etters mil.f t includt signature and nwiLing addres.!, bu t nomes moy be wtthheld on requtst if sufficient rea- son is apparent. used by Ho Chi Minh in eliminating his opposition after he gai ned control. The first thing he did was tC>-send sj>ecially-trained cadres into the coun· trysidc to make a survey with regard to an impending land reform. These cadres \\•ere instructed to list all untrustworthy individuals of means with the most un· tnistworthy to head the list. AFTER TIIE lists had been completed, Ho ordertd that a certain number o( those on top or the lists were to be Cl· eeuted while a larger number were to be given long prison terms. Of course. all of th~ individuals were to be given a trial. The trials could be described as instant justice in that as soon as a deat h sen· tcnce had been handed down the in- dividual of means was taken out and ex- ecuted. The method of execution was about the same as the North Vietnamese used to execute hundreds or South Viet· namese last year whlle they controlled parts of Hue. Apparently the first land reform wa!! Inadequate because Ho ordered a seeond round of execations which were increased by a factor of six. THE BEST ESTl1\1ATE indicates that If North Vietnam had as large a popula· lion as lhf' U.S. they would have executed ooe million individuals of means durin g both land reforms. \Yilh variations, thls method of eliminating untrustworthy individuals of means was perfected by the Russia ns and used by China, Cuba, North Korea, et c. Thus, the blueprint for slrengthening the South Vietnamese govern ment is viable but the leaders in the South are tryin g to en:t~lat~ the U.S., which also has many critics m government. HARR Y 8. McDONALD JR. .---By George ---. Dear George : l'·;e been thinking, George -you waste your lime with your liltle hurr.orous column, as much as I en- joy it There's a lot of level·headed wisdom beneal h some of your ansl't·e.rs and r11 bet if you got a bit more serious you could be just like Abby and AM. A FAN Dear Fan : Thanks for the kind words, but rm afraid I h:iven't a chanei! to comptle with Abby 11nd Ann. Th~ kids are cute, and I simply haven't got the rizure for It. Dear Pet Editor: Is It lruc that a rolltd-up newspaper ts lbc best ~aining for a. doa:? R.S. Dear R.S.: Not lf you'rl! housebreaking him -spread It out. (Long ago 1 foun1t lhat the man 1 a:et, which .should have. gone. to others in the office, Is a lot mott lntrrtstlng than mine.) ' ' I ' ' • I l • ' > l ' • [ • r t • t r r I • Politicians' Pal i Has I . l a Cozy De~l When henneth A. Roa .r .. ls not lob- bying among legislators in Sacramento for cement ~ tractor companles, he ls working for I.be legtslat.on. producing tpeir newaletten:. liowever Jegal this may be, Mr. Ross 1clearly-presents a conflict ol. interest pro- , blem, 'U detailed In a Los Angeles Times ' story last week. - 1 He • has a pretty aweet operation, I tak1n11 kt over '100.000 a you 1n atato funds on an n.dusive contract for ~ f dudns and maillQ& the newsletten wblch • most Al5emblymen and Senators send to constituents. THE LEGISLATOQ uoed to handle this project themselves, financing the : lheeta out of their own pocket. But in 1 1"7 lhey.declde•fto ltt the alllto pick up the tab, and consolidated the operatioo under Mr. Ross, a former legislator, because he had a list of voters in massive Los Aiigeles County. The key to the busiJ>es8 Is I computer • 1 with reels of tape holdlng the names and addres,,es of registered voters, divided by district.s. He had these tapes for Los Angeles but not for many other counUes. Enter Sen. John McCarthy, R-8an Rafael, with a bill requiring all but the · smallest counties to send a copy of theit voters' roster to Sacramento, where the data would be put on tape at the counties' eapense. The state was to furnlsb copies of the tapes to anyone wUliog to pay a nominal dupUcaUon fee. MR. ROSS was more than wUling; the 1eglllaUon wu for him penonally. But for the MCCarthy bill, the entrepreneur would have hid to 10 tlirougb the U· pensive process In IODlt! Case$ of making • the lllpea hllmell. Mr. Roos aa)'I he has ,Pissed on the production saviJlgs to the legislature, thus Indirectly benefiting the t.upayers. • Thanks. There1s a1so Mr. Ross' assurances that his lobbying acUviUes and his work for the legWature are kept separate. Separate, maybe, but darn cazy still. UNFORTUNATELY, there's no law to cover this case. There is a law whereby employes of the legislature .cannot func- tion as lobbyists, but no similar restric- tion governing those who hold contracts from the Ie1lslature. The distinction between the two iJ not convincing, and should be rectified. Rlvenlde Preas-Eattrprlse Heart Is Just an Organ Since the most ancient times, the .,heart" has been considered to be the source and center of human emotions -every language in the world ls rilled with references to the heart as the ver} core of the passionate personality '!lien along came the heart transplant. Suddenly, the whole human metaphor has to be changed. Science has shoWn the heart to be what it always really was -nothing but a hollow muscular organ that pumP6 the 'blood through the body. one heart Is as good as another, and maybe better. A black man's heart in a white man's body makes absolutely no difference; .& woman's heart in a man's body makes as little difference; ·in the near future, perhaps, any large primate's heart will make no dif · ference. THE HEART HAS been dethroned fron1 its supreme posiUon in legend, literature, folk-lore and song. In the~st, people have been stoot·hearted, -hearted, • cord-hearted, hard-heart I a r g e • hearted. Now it is all the same -a hollow muscular pump, raceless, 5ex- less, heaUess, and utterly devoid of a sense of fee ling. "" No longer can we legitimately speak of man's vital spirit a<s re6"ldlng in the- "' heart. Feeling, sensibility, capacity ~ .. for sympathy, courage, enthusialm, romance, all were wiped· out with the flrst successful heart transplant. The ancient Polarity between "heart" and "head" i$ now seen as a meaningless metaprnt' -these emoUons are just as much a part of the mind as logic, grammar and geometry. IT ft.JAKES JUST as much sense to apotheosize the llver or the gall·blad· der as it does the heart; lo speak of a "warm-livered'' man or a "hard gall· bladdered" woman. One organ in the trunk is as characterless as anotber. In the long run, this dethronement of the heart may tum out to be a good thing,, for it may help us think more clearly about the relations beween mlnd and emotions. They are not separate functions, as we like to think, but both parts of a single pattern of behavior, a total personality response to any given sltuaUon. 1 FEELINGS OF A KIND are in- volved in all ou r thoughts, and thoughts of a kind in all our feelings. And feelings, Mke thoughts, can be ra· tiooal or irrational; that is, a P" pn>priate or In.appropriate to the ob- jective reality. Likewise, feelings can be traine41, jUJt as thinking is trained; only they must be trained in a di[- ferent way, by love and example, rather than by formal instruction. Getting rid of the heart as a symbol of ·man's effective life ts clearing the ground for a bet1.er understanding of our emotional drives. II only it were as. easy to transplant some sense into feeble or feverish minds as to transplant hearts into cardiac cases, the human race might begin to make some real and permanent progress. Cool Off, Work Better " By L. M. BOYD HERE'S a medlca who insists a man u does h1s best thlnklng when the tem- perature Is around 40 degrees F. . . OTHER DAY I l&W this sign in an ''Everett, Wash., cafe: "One of the two 1 most overrated things in the world is home cooking.". . . WHERE D I D everybody get the idea Franklin D. ' ·Roosevelt was an' only child? He had a ~half brother .• .POWT~RS claim most t parents think $4.65 a week Is just abOut • t-he right allowance for a 16-year-Old son .. , MAIN REASON you so rarely see ' a waJrus in a zoo is said beast eats three ; .times as much u an elephant. .. . • POLl'nCS -The COsa Noma figures J'lt coats about $100,000 to buy a New , Eniland poUUclan. So reports a national t •perlodlca1 wbich clalms FBI men turned ·.'lip that fact with an authorized wiretap. lnlereatlng. Unfortunately, the r<porl doee liol make clear whether aucfl la the price of a disbooest or an boOeat politi- cian. That b , does the ~-pay for one r Javor only? II ao, they're talkine about a , c1lsbonesl pollliclan. You know whal old 1 Morey Amsterdam said: "An boneal f pollUclao ii one wbo, when bough~ stays bougbt." .. j WOULDN'T DO lo ask you how much , you ordhlarlly spend on a birthday I present for your matrimonial mate. But )'Dll might want lo know what the na· t UOnal average ls amoog husbandl and ! wtves -$11 .•. IN UIS ADVICE to young fellowa conttmplat1ng matrimony, thJt I Love and War man ci yesteryear, Hesiod, I aaJd , "Marry In the aprinlllme ol your life. Neither much abofe nor below the 'i •1• ol Ill. Your bride should be Ill ber 1 11th year.11 ' CUSl'OMER SERVICE' Q. "[ doo'l suppose us bellhops have a patron saint, do we? A. St. Tbeoclotus 1s the patron saint ol hotelmen, •• Q. "DID YOU SAY Raymond Burr weighs 350 pounds?" A. That must have been a typo. I said he reports 2SO poundJ. •. Q. "IF FLAWLEM. wbicb is the more valuable, a ruby or an emerald!" A. The ruby, now .•. Q. "CAN APES swim!" A. No, sir., .Q. 141WAS11 when that wooderful dance tune 'Cheek to Cheek' was most popular. How old am I now?" A. Ju5t about 50. THE RIGHT -u:a Spring, and all the quick bright girls go coatleas out to lunch, hair to the lee, sk1.rl! toned, ankles atwinkle and boclles pressed neatly In pmsed blou..,, swinging through arcades where the wann winds blow. I have at hand the adtnonlUon of Maud C. Cook. expert on mamen, who ap- proxlmaiely IO years ago declared: "lo the rt&ht. an honorable man will not stand on the .street comers, or in hotel doorways, or club windows, and gaze lm· pertinently at ladies as they pass by." Go forth now, gentlemen, and be: guided-by the right. IF YOU HAVE NOT U!ed the same waffle Iron for at leut 40 years, you can· not wrest the wafDe iron longevity record away from Mr. and Mn. Fran!< H. Greve ol F,._, Cal. Sorry .•. ONE REASON girll called Anita make auch tuperb restaurant holteues, 18)'1 our Name Gune man. ii they tond to develop a speedy smile that' tnsplres good wlll at first ·allllCe. , .TO THAT LDT of matrlmonlal m1tu Who celebrate the Quotes same birthday anniversary add ailo Mr. . and Mr>. Stephen A. Zipay ol Llllbrop Vlllage, Mlcfl. I NOllMAN ELLINGTON, -Y Yokr l/lltltlonl and -"""" are I ll!Us -"When par'"ts eTerywMre accePt their own I n d I v t d a a I wetcomtd and iinll be 11r11d t0Mre~ responsibJlity for dl1clpllning their ~sslbfc tn "Checking Up/' Addrts• c:li!ldren lllstoad ol oxpe<Un1 U ta--..OU-io L. M. Bo¢, m care-o/·DAILY come er0m Jaw ofUcer1 and teacher1, PILOT, Boz 1!7S. NetDf)Ort Bttith., ! then mayOO we'll get somewhere." Calif. 92643. .. . • WtdMsdq, M0114, 1969 Individuals Hand Rows To Groups No' Stooplag fer Dita High~P.rinciple~ Yorty At a recent West Coast meetlna, one ot Ul1I colwnn's readers asked me ff I we.re a liberal or a conservaUve. He ei:plair>ed that my views sometimes appeared to reOect one standpoint and then another. I answered that I considered myself an enlightened nineteenth century liberal. lie burst Into laughter and said the one thing he enjoyed about these columns "·as the occasional dUpla,y of humor. LOS ANGELl!S -U Ma;.. Sam Yorty Is ddealed far l'Hloc:lloa lato this mooth -as now _, W.eiy -bo wW be the firal victim ol a -ly..u-.red 1ecllni· que ol vicious racist campalgn.bla. The mayor dllCOvered lhe technique himself • ..\¢ there's no quesUon that It's being employed by his opponent, City Councilman Thomas Bradley. Art Hc»ppe Bui, despila an all-oul eflort, they have been :mable to disguise Mr. Bradlay from 1olng aromd 1ootllig W.e a N..,... ~ "He lnl1lll on it," uld ·one top , sha~hil head. "And you know bo stub caodldat'5·can be." Th ~"!'lf forces, have latoly acaillOd Mr. Bradley ol not oa1Y looking like • Negro, but also ol looting like a eom, munlst in. wbal 11 obvl°'*f a blatant ap- peal for the CommunlJt vote. But the~ haven't DUlde this charp 1Uck. THE MAYOR. a one-lslue man, is hit. ting bard at the one he can prove. T~ro is some fear that in the closing days of his 10olng campai1n be may yield l<I oyerwbelmlng ptellW'tll apd, despite his pleqe, lloop to the viclalla racist laciie1 ' ol hil oppooe!IU. Naturally f am pleased be thinks I have a good .sense ol humor, However, I leant- ed many years ago that short, fat men are rarely taken serloualy. lf I wettPtall and cadaverous, rny answer ·probably would have been taken seriously and ex· am.ined On its merits. Accordingly, r regret 1 am not tall and cadaverous for I meant my answer moat .Uiousl,y. I am a modem nineteenth century liberal. But ~ mayor, u hlsb-11\lnded and fair-splrite(fa& Always, ays He will never -to tM raclsl lacUct ol his opp<ioellt, whom he refers to u "'!"" Negro Caii- .didate." In fact, he ill1I 10 Ill eVflf1 ·_.;,. Mr. Bradley'• tecbnlque, u tbe mayrt so percept.lvely analyies it, is lo make a blfllnl appeal for the N'l<O vote by belilg a Negro. Ju4ges Sho11:ld Tell, All TIIE STATEMENT a ppear s con- tradictory and accordingly merits ex- • . ' ' Guest Report THERE CAN BE no queollon ol the ac- curacy ol. the ma)'Or'1 dlargtl. Jn every single newspaper photograph, in every, single television appearance dur· ing this bitter campaign, Mr. :er.;tley bas managed openly and trar.enl)' to look like a Negro. Not ODCe, despite numerous op- portuniUes, has Mr. Bradley denied that he ls now, and has long been, a Negro. planalion. The nineteenth century liberal Nor can there be any doubt that Mr. was concerned with the righla of the in-Bradley's technique of looking Uke a dividual, any individuaJ, as opposed to the Negro has succeeded. 'I1'e latest sur vey right& of the state, Whereas the e1gb-shows that t7 percent of the electorate tecnth century liberals, exempllfled by now recolJllze him as a Negro. (The the French and American. ravoluUonist.s, other S percent preswnably toot him for sought to decrease st.ate power, they did a Malibu surfer.) not encourage\ the estab!Wunent o1. And when you con.tider that ap- anarchy. proxlmately 17 percent of the Los WASHINGTON -Lalell baclulage deve~ Ill the llllemllylllg atorm over Justice Abe Fort.as is a blunt d• mancl that the House JudlcWy Com· mittee hold bearings on a l9ng·pending bill requiring Supreme Court and all other federal ·Judges to make detailed an- nual re:porta: on their outside income. The powerful committee was p.it on the spot on um red-hot Issue by the outspoken author of the legialaUon - Rep. H. R. Gross, R·lowa, leading ecqnomy advocate. lo a teller to Rep, Emanuel Celler, [). N.Y., ll·year-old chainnan af the Judiciary Committee, Gr06S pointedly noted that be introduced his bill on February 19 -some three months before the senutlonal disclOIUl'el resardin.g Forlas'. Added Gross: The nineteenth century liberal prefer· Angeles electorate are th e m s e I v e 1 red individual freedom to group security, Negroes, you can see how widespread (l7 °IN VIEW OF certain recent events, anarchy to communism or fascism. Even percent) Is Mr. Bradley's blatant appeal. re.fleeting seriously and adveraely on the loc\ay. lhe USSR and Franco Spain IN ALL federal judlclary, I urge you to hold reserve their harshest condemnaUona FAIRNESS, however, it must prompt hearings on H.R. 7211 lo the end and swiftest retributions for thoM who be noted that there are honorable men that It be favorably reported lo the HoUJe dare raise the black flag of anarchy. And high in Mr. Bradley's campaign orginiza-floor." I, given no other choice, would prt:fer the tion. who have fought tooth and nail What Celler does remains lo be: 1ee11. dangers (If anarchy to the secw-ity of against their candidate's racist tactlca. With the furore over Fortas: making But prior to that, he !iJvlre<I Rep. Gro"'' bill to make them do tbal. Whether anything comes of Celler's belatod profeued Interest ii conjecluraL Gross intends to make lt bis business to see that the comm.Jtlee does act oo bis bill. state slavery. 11lua far, U>ey·have managed to keep ~ad.Linea, tbe Judiciary chalrman now the fael that he Is a Negro oul ol "tlr'J aaya be favors requiring all federal a, Robert s. Allen HOWEVER, OTHER choices do exist. press release, speech and advertilement. judces to submit aMual financial reports. Qd J• A. GoldamJtb They are the choices ol peraonal 1-----""'---------.:..._=---'·-"~c;::..:::=.c..:.::==..:..::::.::.::::_ _____ __,:=.::=..:::_=== freedom, personal re spo n s ib II i ty, personal involvement and personal con- science. It Is possible to tread a path between anarchy as one extreme and state enslavement as another extreme. This is what the nineteenth century liber'1 tried to do and, in large measure, succeeded in doing. The "robber barons" who built our railroads, steel Industries, oil co mplexes, chemical empires and shipping lines are usually presented as great examples of the excesses or the nineteenth century liberal philosophy. Yet the personal wealth accumulated by the ·"robber .barons'' ·was a minuscule portion of the total wealth created by their efforts. The price paid for their services was cheap Indeed. IT IS FASWONABLE today lo decry "lnd.ividualilm" as being unworkable and lo Infer that group action is always preferable to individual action. The pro. tagonists of group action preach hr dlvidual security is achieved best through group security. This is questionable and history would certainly i n d I c a t e otherwise. However, group security must eventually result in enforcement ol the dictates of the group and this result8 In some diminishing of personal freedom . The e:ttreme example Is the peniten- tiary inmate who is given mamnum security with tili.nimum freedom. It is no exaggeraUon to state Soviet Russia is a national prison. Personal freedoms and liberties as we know them simply do not ex.lst there. In Russia no rights are God- glven. Instead, they are rewards con- ferred by the state and the state, in the final analysis, is either the police or Ute bureaucracy. I WAS NOT attempting to be: humorous when I said my basic philosophy was that of the nineteenth century liberal. It is dif. ficult to be trained in science and to be otherwise. Scientists may wock ln groups, confer with each other, respect each other's opinions, but they are by and large Individualists. Science does not exist by dictum but by sea rching inquiry made by individuals. No laws of science are !O sacred they cannot be Qestroyed by convlnclng proof oUered by one individual. So strong ii the sense of individualism In scientists: that totalitarian stat.es grant to their sclen- listl freedom s nol gr anted others. No per&MS in those countries are more outspoken than are the scienll.sts. HOWEVER, individualism Is no longer the popular philoaJphy. With the e>· cept.ion of 1etentlsts who find today'• pace of progeu unnecessarily slow, most citizens art bewildered and somewhat friglJlened by the complealUea of our age. They are teekln& comfort and security and are more and more wllllng to exchange peraonal ft&J>ODSlbWty for group action which promlsel them security, however WU!lve It may be . Unfortunately, there is no way of know· Ing the direction ol mass group acUon. It may, like the stampede (If the buffa1o or the watery suicides of the ltmmlngs, not be what the ll'OUP bad In mind at all Jolla J. 'lforu Prttlde•t ll1ct1, I.De. (Cl>ellllcal Prtd'ICUJ Gun Control Wllde1111, Miu., Plooeer Joumal: 0 ••• analy111 ol lhe lalttl FBI Unllonn Cl'ln\e ~ ~ reve11U, ft'lany states with llllle firearms rtgulaUon have much lower crime ratea than 10me other states with rigid Jaws. Temperaments, tern· ptrature1 and IOClal aUllud., appmntly influence atat.e crime ratu far more than 1un conllOIL /;/,y flat claim that aevere run lam curb c:rtme, therefore, may be questioned a.s statistical rau.l~-daule." ' . Take the cool approodt to a 11<at lhoe-fahion id""! The up.front look ia aandalized for llllJlllDer in.IOll white lather with a !add .. of akinny atrippm,. The toe is a gmtle round, the heel la lb'aiiht and faoeted. Made in Italy, W1 10.99. QuaiiCrafe1 eoo1 8· 99 10 99 _h .. to all the 8Ull!lller 100b ~ mOltly , to , -~·- -FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTIN$TON IEACH S.OUTH .COAST PLAZA: COSTA MESA . • I I • f 1111.'W;Pll.~T ' Wtd~y, May 14, 196CJ ' -~ •W. N...., S.-. c.tw, C:-. ..... • ,... • ' e nlfl ...-tw. • MMt• *""• _. ' MAii--OUI lllw S10llAl1 HARBOR ·BLVD. at.-,EDl.NGER · • Pl •• ..,. .... ~~ ..... c.tw. c.. M'¥ . ' • MM& ...._.A"' If. .., f 11 r _.. Cllflr, .....,. ....-. • • "'' .~ ....... t I "*I °'"-c..., ~ ...... .,.,... 1HlltHtit ......... ·PellllUls ::, 4~ I , ,,.,,, .... , I ....,.,..... , ........... ·l• 11 ~J . Wafers .Wiui lllspwer ' ' -'-"-na~ ~ , ·ws.. Wtt•33• dl••••••r "•J.• ... ·-tll • I ii3ll( ~ fl':':~ ~:~ Sale of Scre.wdrfvers i ::::-~8 c i __ ,_ " ~ plat•tl ti ,._. -~ l88i8S i3ii8 .. ~·------- • .... •• ....... ... • ,.... It, ••• , . --· ,,.,. ,,,. e 11* ,.._.., 1J. at T...,._~,c.tlf', ~ V""1 .,.. • .....,...,.. '"""*' ...... -...~ua1'Ut' ._. =~ ~f.-.,it c;>f ihe Loom 9fc Sofa ·Pillows , -.-f14ew Fabric! New Colors YOUR CHOICE c 11" aquaftl and-oc- tagvna covered wU.I). rich "Shiba" acetate and filled wttn .ott , cotton. Up -to-the - minute color1! "s2. 98 Value A.diusf.al.Lite IQtane."Llgbter · ' Reg. ''8 41 ~c: i· Ho,spitali!f: , Tumbler Set;: . $6~.,·~ · Regular S9c: Tablets and E,.velopes Fruit or Vegetable Sfr.1119$ . . "'"""" - " t ~' M••lft• ,el I _.l1 II .., Pli.--.r, t'4' "' CMk· I t.at, I I -.. ••er· . . ............. . t ••e ll•, 11~ ... . .. ' Ct.le• ..... ·-' ' ... , ... ~. "" ! •• !no 11.lll Choo •• fr(llll 5 ~1ut1tul eo\or., on.nr•. blue, am-<1l1te. Id e a I for hf.r, srttn A: cboc. home, office or plant. t&.-e on ftor· l l(e IPICI , • • the7'r. •tried to 1t.eli:. · Store. & Save Containers M ... 'el cl-,i.lc ""'r.--...i'!"I .2:88 .Twist Boards ·•tt.i.$3.H ·:.)& Jl.00 77' ...... Choice oJ i con· venle11ot 1l1e .. Ctllortlll decora-tor lop. are 1lt· lite aad. leak· ...... .... lliodt ofJ' luUct. l• n•t•r lll•ub eolorl a!ld •Isa. LMaw lill ILl7 · Individual Glass Bakl"' CasserOles . • GI~~!~: of sw.ruitffd &ot to er.ck nrt ltlnir ,ilia. = .. w4,..99c Interior Latex Paint . $1.00 Value! Sport , , Cushion 67' Sturdy Yi DJ l Wt"ll'l!ld poly t~ with con- venient hand- earryiq'. ldea:I for •port•.- u .2: 29' ·" ''°"'Y a llilck a lox!" Spart "' K"'9s Pony Cigars IOX OF SO $,~- $1'.4f Value! Moel ll!f!it I~. et .Allle'o le. • i.tPst MIUnr elprfll-. v.,. ,..,... c.lall1 Jll'tced t . . Watch Bands ...... 57 ..... 9 ..... ~ .......... ' • ...,,,.., Lii ...... ..... e 11•1 V..., Vtlw • Q-· 91 IS II .... ..,._ ...,_ $7.95 Yalue!'Fu!l .Leilqth 1 I Door .Mirrors "'· . \Yood or •rasl Frames! $1 ea. Yal•es Venus Imported Cosmetics YOUll'CHOICE J $ 99 1.· Handsom. m1tron ·•t !fabulous •rillp! 1""5t" with bru- atone frame .• : 18:it H " with wood. "Per-fect for bath or bed· ..... ""°"' ' · $1~95 .. Vciluf: Electric 'i , . Hcii.r.setter .:) ' . I ,, ........ s.t. , -t ""'~ .... !"'! ,.,. ..... 731 fD mlalitl!ll ·"° ··., . ',12 . • rou,r~-· nr d. . . ~'~1.r. late ~ , .. m au~~ 111ttmori&t. • .... contNI.-'Wqi-~ °" all . , , ~ tfpm of llUt, Yip A: .,j ~. •, Al.Ill. ' : }..: w -• • I . • Wednesday, May 14, 1969 j . • r a ' iflt ::::s 1.....-.-tt.wttr ........ CMtw, tffll 111 .. e 11111 1.-.. IM. ti AMMll 7 9 t' leedrl • ... .. I •·M. .. c.w . ...,.... .... .......... .._ ..... ' e <t"61 V-1"-lfO• 7 I 111' ............... I • ' , falues to $1'2.-SO Y arcl 1h27 Inch· Mehawk Rug Remnants . ,WIDE ASS°'TMEN1' !!! I ' . . ~ c . "~ 1·52.26 Value · r Re9. $1.19· ~wiftls ~Piece Coinb lCombin«Jfion : $2,00 Value! , Tussy ': Midnisflt __ Ha"-d & BOdy Lot!on · · Gallon ·size· ; Plant f o-C>d • , lie9. SI .49 ·-aufferin · lottie o1 roo T.W... • r ' • ' '\'/fdntl<Lu, May 14, 196~ I 1 ) I I KAft YOU f1lffll 4"111 MIW1100 AT: • ., DAtLV rn.~r IJ ' • UI a. •Ill a..~ Miiii....,.. c-.,,.,.. MIM e .. **'9-...lil'·-I , r. r ..... r.tw ..... ...,, e tiMl~A'fLlf&o 9 I ....... ~ ............ .... e 1-..w.1.._.M1~1t. •uc C...1W1J. e 1Mf ~St. M T.-.t-Vllliee -..,,, ia.-.•~ e s.cll 6 ._.. Mil I' tt e' ............ t.1111911', 1111 II st ..... HARBOR . BLVD. at EDINGER . 'Women's · ,, 1tc.ncin ~e~ther . . . Sandals ~s1.n·varue! Surfer ,. 1 'rS'Yift loard : J'J?a ..... Pely,_ ' .~ .. . Alumlninn 14tfdJ. . .. 119 . . .. "' · . CamphHI ,Cot $111 $6.77 POloron ·Pia .. l~e'Chest . $s.ss:. Rtt•mFl!lla.rs "' Glov.es · · sus 1 ius '*· 11111 11.:.sul $11.95 .Value! 20 Inch ; • $5.99 " -$1.19 Value! $4 Pc. Picnic Assorhnent . . . t~~· $\.4t Po1y Picni~ JUCJ ~_,. .... t C.11011. Ille ••lt1i Coalll Olllft" 11hell, hlOll'll mo.a. i.Urior. In time IOI: ~ ............. -' U Tllf'lft7 ....... ··-1--, .... ~ ... , $1.49 Value! Air . Mattiess ::94' sa.9a·va1.-e! f.fel\:h SU& .. Glasses I......,...,.._. • -• 1'ilOi( • " ' ~..=.:: '1" :=t:.·=,~ ... ....... : $10.79 ·3-lb. Acrylic ·'. · Sleeping Bags · IN NEW MOD. COLORS J, a"" TraditiO'!al, ~oplin IYCAMPMASnR $ "' .,., ~·-: St,roQc CIO'Mw, ,GOSY .·~ lblinp, Ue ~ foe'~ r •••l' roll-up 111111. S5! aton.ge. 100"'z.lpper. ~ Weather strtpped tat oo warmt.h-Cotton . poplla or n.70a COV• ~.~ er. ~·· •. '~ 7-?X~ :::&:~ -::~:::!"~ $4. 95 Value! Printed Ch~lse Loun9e Pacls r1..;,.' $]33 Pory Fill .J4z12" Gay floral prltlted ···• eoorer ~--,a old •• dl&i.!MI look like MW f ~ ~;:~i ~-$i ~:~ ~1.·39 RecordiilCJ , · Tape ·Cassette -~artrid9e · 51-.of • cc- ·-- • ' . . I , I I Je DAILY ,!LOT '"Reds Jeer Rocky iri Salvador ·,SAN SALVADOR, El :saJvador (UPI) - •Ilemonstral<ln displayed signs that said "Rockefeller go home!" and poftralt.s of Cuban revoJuUonary Ernesto "Che" Guevara Tuesday at ~·the arrival of New York Gov. -· Nelson A. Rockefeller. Rockefeller arrived from Guatemala City where he spent 31k houn as part of bis Latin American fact-fmd.ing tour for President Nixon. He was to confer today a se- cond time with . President Fidel Sanchez, then move on to Honduras. · Rockefeller stayed only a ' short time in Guatemala because, U.S. -sources said,..bis bodyguards feared for his life. Three U.S. officials have b:een slain in t b e past 18 months there· by Castroite Communist ·gunmen. · G u a temalaii newspapers complained that the visit was too short even tor adequate exchange of oplnions, let alone for siting up the situation in Guatema la. -In his meeting with Presi· dent Sanchez Tuesday, Rockefeller beard complaints about U.S. lrade practices on cotton, sugar, citrus fruits and coffee. His next s t o p was ·' Tegucigalpa in Honduras. , - Wldftttd.IJ, Mq 14. 1969 ~ ' •'UPI Resting Vp tor Big .Jurnp .. -Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller's Arkansas trog under_goes "positive sU_ggestion" sleep training for next weekend's International Frog Jwnp at Angell Camp, Oalil, William Steed, owner of a San Francisco sleep training center, feeds re. corded frog dialect, such as "Make Three Great Leaps," 1X> croaker via loud· speaker under the pillow. ' · 'Gas Travel Plan Halted - .Senate. Support,s Cut in Job Corps . ; • WASH!NGTON (UPI)" - 'Ille Republical>S o u I b e r n Democrtt coalition · has en.- dorsed President Nix.00'1 pin lo clO.. S9 Job Corps con1ers. The vote gave Nixon a victory In hll first partisan skirmish in the Senate. The coalltloo defeated 52 to 40 Tullday i: "sense of the :;_..ate" molutloo ..... the acfmlniPraUoa ·to reavwkkn: r 11s ·plans 'to reduce the Job Corps 'program. Twelve Democr•ts, all ·~ two ol lbem ·fh>rn ~ South. joined all 40 llepu-!Ibo were present in sqpponJng Nixon. AU 40 votes against the adminillrauon were cast by • Democrats. The Southern bemocrata broke 10 to 7 on the side of the administrition. Sen. Russell B. Long (J>.La.), aald later he opposes cl011ing t b e camps and cast hi.5 vole with the - • Paris Paper Picks Poher , COMING SOON CORONA DEL MAR Pre-Summer ''CLEAR-OUT'' Corvair Reaches End Of GM Assembly Line WASHINGTON (UPi) - , Rockefeller then still must ' ---\lisit Nicaragua, Costa Rica DETROIT (UPI) -The the rear, the front end was The Pentagon has stopped Its Corvair automobile, defended lighter. The rear wheels were controversial plan to ship and damned over its brief but on independently s p r u n g 27 ,000 tons of potion giu Cl'Ol5S tempestuous life of 10 years, suspenslolUI. country until the nation's most _went quietly into obllyloo to-Cries went up that the ('ar eminent scientific: bod y day. was hard to handle because of decides whether the.operation l ·· and Panama before com· pleUng the first lrip of his four-part Latin American toor. J{e will visit 23 nations, taking The last model of the little its weight distribution anJ can be done s8.fely and ef- compact car with the only charges were made that the fectively. · him to every Latin American ~ country except Cuba. rear engine built in America independently spt'Wlg r e a r The Defense Department, 1!l rolled oU its last assembly line wheels had a tendency to the face of m 0 u n t i n g · Delro1·1 "tuck under'' -cave inward in · Congressional and public· pr The Chevrolet Corvair joins -on a sharp turn or \liolent tests, backed down Tuesday · Czechs Hike ... Prices 54% a long but illustrious list of maneuver· and announced it would not more than 3,000 nameplates in A large number of court American automotive history suits were instituted against begin moving the nerve gas that have appeared on the the Corvalr by persons who and other lethal agents until scene, spun their brief mo-had been in accidents. At one the National Academy of ment upon the hi ghway and time, there were about 150 Sciences completed "an jo- lhe b d suits in court charging faulty . ''"'PRAGUE (UPI) -Ca'r n were ear no more. design of Corvair's from 1960 dependent review of our : .•Pa rt s and coffa? cost The Corvair was the only through 1963. plans." Czechoslovaks up to 54 percent failure ever Rroduced by the ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;o;;::;:;:;~ii;iiii;iiii;iiiiiiiiiiiii;iii;iii;ii~~ II more today because 0 f world's biggest automobile I government-imposed price in· m a n u f a c t u r e r , General . creases to steqi inflation and Motors. Only one o t bet . .save the faltering economy. nameplate by GM, lh e Basic needs such as bread, Oakland, has suffered such ig-nominy -and even lhe · ·milk, eggs Jnd rental housing Oakland lives on in spirit in ·, were not affected by the boost. today's Pontiac. , Most other coosumer goods • were. -AutomOtive historians will argue for years over the A government statement merits of •.tbe Corvair. promised that further in· ·.creases were likely by July. Basically, the car died Economic IOW'ces said those because t\ was , not selling price hikes Would a f f e c t · eiloogh to make it worthwhile. transportation fares. 1ti 10 years, a total of more than 1.7 million units were Czechoslov~a·s eeonomy · h d has been foundering in recent produced. But its ey ay was seven years ago, when 306,000 months, largely because of of them were turned out. rising inflation and too few gocids on the market. Thl.s year less than 6,000 Pueblo Exec Quits Navy BOSTON (AP) -Lt. Edward B. Murphy Jr., an ex· ecutive officer aboard the USS Pueblo when it was seized by North Korea last year, has resigned from the Navy, the Christian Science M o n i lo r reported Wednesday. Jn a Jetter of resignation. Murphy said, 11nie results of the court inquiry into the Pueblo matter and subsequent actions of lhe Navy Jn regards to my career leave me no alternative." The Monitor said fi1urphy was dissatisfied over the board of inquiry's recom· mendation that he be given "a letter of admonition" for alleged dereUction in the performance of duties at the time of the Pueblo's seizure. Corvairs were produced to meet demand. This from a company that produces arou~ five million cars a year, with Chevrolet division alone ac- counting for about three million. Perhaps two main reasons account for its lack of .salea. One probably was that it was a car that never found a true marketplace. It was alone, neither a true family passenger car nor the sporty car GM tried to make it. Jt was sort of in between. But there can be no doubt that the most iipportant reason of all was the storm of criticism that surrounded the car. / It was the only rear-engine car built in America. lt had the first American-built 1llr· cooled engine since the old Franklin car disapp!Bred in the 1930s. The Corvair had a pancake engine - a horizontaJ six with thne opposing cylinders on each side. eecause the engine was ln DIRECT FROM COASTAL ORANGE COUNTY TO L.A. AIRPORT Fly all ·the way, start with LA.A. FOl CONNECTIONS TO ALL AIRLINES 22 FLIGHTS DAILY " ' °"' Z,000,000 llJt-NEWPOJlT IUCH/CO..t 0••"'9 c-1, Artt illld: L.A. INTEllNATIOlfAL AIR!lOllT". A• the LAA 1111'11 le-a onr,o $0 '"""""" ttllt Mf'Vlc• lo """ tlltll -/louf' clow-le )'Ollf" COllMCtlnll P,.11, •I rhl L.A. Alr"°'I tti.n .,,., """" ll'IMm tf •Ir w tweuN tr•111'*1•ttDll. ·, , ........ c..t..i °"' '°·000,000 M ... Ttt. NfW"°llT aeACH HELIPOl;T Is llCtlotd on ttie 9f'l\lllCI• of .... "'"' .. ,., 11111. '" :f•~ llOlMll jusl Mrll'I !If 'llt (MS! Hltflwty, Arr...-"" CM> MCllnO 11111111 II'( Clll"" \"M' 1'1"91'119 trnel .._ er, roll!' <*'11*111111 1lrl1M w LAA •> I"'' "4-trll er (tlJI 6*-11V. 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 two r•11rv•d 1111 tico••t• ror the Sw11dc, 1ft.r11eo11, •:Ju11e I, A1191l1 Vt, 0 1iol11 9tm• 11 A111lltifl'I Sltdi11,,, for th1 11om1I pr;,, of 011• tlc•1t. llu, 011•; th1 DAILY PILOT f iv" r•• 0111.I 2-$3.50 2-$2.50 TIC Km FOi TICICm FOi $3.50 $2.50 y,U C.111 flltrY• I ll t nfirt l•CfiOll Or i111f fWO l•lh, l ul tef Vlllf p1rtv to9•th1t 11ow ind ,,,,11 in the o•il•r bl1nli: b1low "<ith check e r mon•r erder 1110 c11h, ple11•) 1nd hurrr. 011clli11e fo, tlck•t ordtr1 it Mir 20. Earl11 Bird Bonu• Open le youn91l1n up to 16 y11r1 old. l11clwcle with ticket 0~1t 1 d1t.ll'lenl el 100 •11d, •• l•u: "My f•vorit. Ant•I ;____:,_ .. ec1w11 ••• ," Entri11 l'l'IUtl b1 r1c1iv'4 IJy 110011 on Mey II. TI.r11 wi11"•" will be 1•lect1i for prt •fllrll cer•rno11i•1. The11'll "leet Their Fa1>orite Attgel 1---------., 1 I I I I I I I I Clip all -.ii, wlffl cNck er ....., erffr, '9: J·flf-1 ..... hr o,.... c ... hAy Plitt C/0 hWlc 1errkti O.,t. (PLIAll PllNTJ I I I I NtlM .................. _ .... ,......................................... I """' ................................................................. . Cllr ....... ,,, .................................... t11t ..... , ........ ,,_ ,._ ............................................ Ottt •••• -........ .. f -nt 1. 4. •••• 10 •.••• '. • ' ,...,.,... "'"· Ill "''" ......... or, •I tt. J\llll I """" '°'· OTlelM .. '"' -' AM!Mlm 11"!\lln. I'# •Cf! 0011 -Clll""-I Wiii -'W t11 ld!-1 Mii I•• fl'ttn 1111 OAILY ~IL.OT, I_, U,$0/IUO lclru. -l !ldl11$. l:O'ICIOMlf 11 1,. ............. I .,....ff111N lldtltt -.Ill Dt ltlli IO'"'.,,"'-"· I 111\dfnfllll'lll llllrt Cllll 119 nt Ud\11111 " I .. !tr tttclde It liW'OlflM "'*'' ttdltlJ. I I I I '---------J WdllEll wuym Jet Action Clothes Care with Automatic Soak Cycle • Gentle, thorough wublng. Deep Acllon A1itator moves up and down. Clothes plUDp deep into sudsy water where cJean· Ins'• belt. • No Jlnt trapl Jot-Away run .. gets rid of lint and acum automatically, thoroughly. • 1-n otubbom llalna and dlrll Auto- mallc Soak Cycle prepares laundry for wuh cycle. $ Coatpaaloa Frtsldalrt Drt•r. · • Durable Pr-. Cln for ao-- lron. clotb•• • No·ll•at for nutn.n.s • Daa-on Unt ICl'ffft Oil &b• doarl 88 2-Speetf Washer wltli 4· Water TeQtperatures • Launder all wubablea ll&folyl Dial "Jlelu~ 1 lar"for evel'J'da1 loada. .. Deu'cate"for more fncU• thlnp. • JUll--.!Jht wmperature•l 4 choices fntlud-. IDS cold -wub. rlnM for cold-watar dotlr-· • 19atll • Leso lronlnsl Durable Pren Caro holpo no-·· • Iron fabrics deliver their J'romlM. ~ ;.. $ ' M•klli•I rrt,Walre Drfl'r. • .o.raw. "'-' Catt for ao- 1'9 doUMs • No-MM cycle for n•:ttlns • Dacron lint .... -tbe doorl • Serving Tlie llarbor Area Since 1947 • 88 DRYEll WAR RUTT 411 East Seventeenth St. -Costa Mesa DAILY 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 6 -Phone 646-1684 I • • le_ !§ Ir ot ti b " d " IC •· " ~- lol ~ ~ ~. - r . } ' ( I ! ! • • • ' I . . j • • . . I 1_ ' ' THE P~NNEY STORY ''One eye on quality; one on price''' By ROBERTA NASH More oftCll than nor, In a 1tofe11 newspaper advcr· tising, the emphasis is' on the price of merchandise, for this is the nws that readers want to know. • But the Penney peopl,e w2nt to be sure you under- stand that this emphasis on price docs not rep re- sent the thinking Cllithin the Penney organization. The thingthatmakes Pen· ncy wheels go round is t:alut, or what you gtt fo r that low price. "We h1.vc to keep .one eye on quality and the other on price/1 is the wa y one of our bu yers put it. " ' -------------:--. 0 ll!*l'. M11 14, lt69 I . ' I I Red hot news!· Boy~' Ranchcraft' . F·IRE HOSE ,JEANS ARE REDUCED THRU SATURDAY 1rs A FOUR ALARM HAPPENING! OLH tough canvas jeans, with the look of a firehose, and the stamina of •· fire truck, are reduced. Now, he can have thot greot new look for' less money thon ev•r. And, mom, you get t~e side l>enefits of Penn-Prest• easy core, that• means no more ironing. Just machine wash and tumbl• 'em dry. No wrinkles, and the crease is permanent. The cut is slim and trim ••• he'll wear 'em low on the hip$ wtttem style. Soil Rel~ helps you get out most stains in one washing. 50% polyester/50% cotton. Siz:n 6-18. REG. 3.98, NOW SLIM REGULAR ·• HUSKY Reg. 4.49 NOW 3.99 • • • THIS,: SUMMER ·START YOUR. LIVING OUTDOORS AT PENNEYSI • I --... D.\ILY l'ftAf Q lTr~sii : Plan • • • Propose~ \ "' ., WASHINGTON (Alj) -The blueprint for a muJtlbUJ>Pn dollar attack on mass tr495it problems Secretary of Trllllp0(1.ltion John A. Volpe Is expected to send to the White House in two weeb: l.s certain to stir strqng debate within the admlnistration. One IMUe will involve the financing Volpe has indlcat,ed he will use for the program. Another problem could arlso because the plan l.s expe&<t to lack spectlic propo.Ws lor actioo. ~ But, Volpe says, "I'm a fighter and I expect to see \lli.s through. · Volpe admits h1!1 researchers have not been able to come up with a ch~p. practical way to move masses of people into, out of ·i\'nd around the nation's cities. NO DOUBTS But a Volpe aide says this doesn't mean there is any doubt about the need {or money. "You 've got to have the money should the answer be found,'' an aide said. "You've got to be ready to go with this situation because the proble rn becomes more severe ~~ch and every day. " "It should have been grap- pled with I 10 years ago." The financing is expect~ to Involve a trust fund COIK.'tpl used in the federal highway construction program and ad· vocated by Volpe in a recently proposed airport construCtiora bill. Opposition to this financing by s o m e administration ecunomists has resulted in the temporary halt to the airport bill, which the White House returned to Volpe for further study . PROVED SUCCESS Although the trust fund a~ proach has proved highly 5U..:- cessful in building highways, some govern1nent economists oppose extending it to other areas because it commilt.,. funds in advance, makir.~ them immune lo budget cut- ters. "Nonnally, ft'C don't like funds committed in such a way that · they are locked in when the President, four. or five years from now, might want to make new budget choices," a Budget Bureau ol- flcia l was quoted as saying when the White House sent the aJrport measure back to Transportation for f u r t h e r study two week$ ago . "If you don't like a truiil fund, then you suggest an alternative that will get the job done," Volpe says he has' told opponents of the concept. The new nd1ninistration's position on mass transit ·has been somewhat u n c I e a r although President N i x o n made solving congestion in the cilics one of IO major goals. The Johnson administration gave mass transit No. I priori- ty among transportation pro- blems and Volpe vehemcni:ly denies the Republicans have downgraded it. although the fi rst two bills pushed out of his department were a v i a ti o n measures. BILLION DOu.ARS TI1e secretary mentioned the blllion dollar figures for mass lrll!Uit for the first time at a New York news conference Friday, saying the program being worked on would gro1• to "about $1 billion in two or three years." Volpe also sairl the program ultimately would amount to a billion dollars ,a year He declined to say bo,\v much money would be soughl inluaJ.ly and when, b q t presumably nothing wou Id ~ ttq0ested until fiscaJ 1911. 'Mie Nb:on administration canctl•d a request for an additional $l'i million for new research money in the 1970 flSCal yeer starting July I. • The White House noted 1hpt $39 million already w a !l available for research aild demonstration and said tb8t amOOnt "is probably about 111 that could be effectively ~ ed." j Volpe has indicated researib ls no longer hls aim anyway.· "We are doing a great deil of research. What I'm hoping Is that one of these days \te can stop the research snd start the action," he told 4n Interviewer Jut week. · • ' ' Nearly Everyon• 'listens' to landers • • • • ' ' ' _, I I • DA!I. Y PU.OT ~range eoast Area ~e .n " • Ill .. Sst-IUcllanl S • Hom· mtnCl&lag, flOn of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Hammerschlag of 3132 Samoa Place, ~ta Mesa, is an air trailic con· troller with the l974th Coro· munications Croup at Udorn Royal Thal AFB, Thailand, a unit that was cited for outstan- ding communications 1upport to combat units in Thailand. The sergean!t.la a graduate · of Costa Mesa wgh School and attended Orllll8e Coast College before entering the,~ice. duds, surprise firing devices and unsafe ammunlUon. Two Orange County men are serving aboard the U S S Pripeeton, prime recovery ship for the nation's Apollo 10 launch slated for Sunday. They are Avl•tlon Bo•&lwaln's Mate Ftrema" Kenoetb R. Letther1. Jr .. son ol Mr. aod Mra.' Kennelh . Leathers of 167 Cabrillo St., Costa Mesa and Seaman Robert A. Allen, son of Mr. andMrs. C9nrad Allen 'ol 15442 Capri Circle, Huntington Service Around the W oriel Beach. The shJp will carry a 10.... helicopl~r detaclunent from H e 1 lcopt.er Anti-Submarine Squadron Four, Naval Air Sta- tion, Imperial Beach, Calli. Spee. '· David R Bennett, 21, son or Mr. and Mra. Leland C. Bennett of 426-C Avenlda Castilla, Laguna "l:lllls, has been assigned as a mtcha·nic with the 1st Logistical Com- mand, Vietnam. u. Rlcbanl J. een, ~SMC, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton J. Bell ot 2332 Bunker Hill, COsta Mesa, received his "Wings or Gold" and baa been designated as a naval aviator and belicopler pilot. J:le completed Naval Air Training Command r I i g h t training with the Helicopter T'raining Squadron Eight al the Naval Air Sta li011 , Pensacola, Fla. PO J.C.Ear l W. F ro s·t. USN. son of Mr. and Mrs. .lames E. FrQSI of 539 ~tllill9 st., Newport Beach, has been assigned to the Naval Alr Station , Lee.more, Cali!. High School. Airman G1yle J_ Clark, son -' of Mr. Ind Mrr~Jay C. Clark, 3MQ CJevelaod Ave.t .Costa M.,., hi> been assigned to Laredo AFB. Tei., for duty wllll Ille Air Tralnlng Com· mand. The ainnan, a graduate of Costa Mesa High School, is an aircraft equipment repairman in the U.S. Air Force. ·.... 1 Ornelas of illLSh&nnon {lrlv~, Huntmgt,oo .Qeacll, I~ -lot_ aboard tbe" U.S. Naviu Afr.Sta- tion, ~re, Ca1.if. " The staUon, located ln th• central San JQ&<luin Valley it the Navy's neWest and ·largesl• Master Jet Statton· ' ' , Seaman Rct. Frederick F"::t Hershman Jr. USCG, son or Frederick Hershman o( 2571 Bayshore Drive, Newport Beach, has graduated · from basic ·training ' a( the U.S. Coast Guard Training and Supply Center Alameda, Calif. Alnau· Dlvkl D. DeVriet, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence DeVries of 2737 Sandpioor Drive, Costa Mesa, has ber.n assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex. £or trainini in ·tpe civil engineering mechanical and Women Serve Too Named as Class lionorman at graduatlon ce remonies at the Naval Aviation Technica l Training Center, Memphis, Pvt. l.C. Larry S. Eckman, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Eckman, 2955 Chi lion Way , Laguna Beach, has been assigned as a machinist with the 1st Logistical Command. Vietnam. Jovey Gilt Shop DISTINCflYI Glir1'$ 10,000 ngratulations are offered Lt. Col. A. K. "Hondo" ain, after he pilQ(.ed A-6 Intruder jet, leading arine All-\Veather Attack Squadron 242 on 10.000th ·etnam co1n bat mission. The mission set a Navy- :Jlarine Corps unit rccl.)rd for that model aircraft. ::0. Col. Frain of 821 Cortez SL. Costa Mesa. is l~adron commander of the El Toro MCAS based 1l. , . electrical field. • Airman DeVries is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and attended Orange C.Oat College before entering the service. --- Lt. Patrick: Ptf. l'ifCDt~Ou, USN, son or P.1rs. Bert Hulsebus of 1386 htorningside Drive. Laguna Beach, is ser· ving aboard the USS Henry W. Tucker with Task Force one in the South China Sea. l\laj. R. D. l\lulcaby. 1657 Oahu Place, Costa Mesa. is in charge of two Ammun itiorl Supply Points al Da Nang Vietnam. The company's personnel in- cludes Explosive Ordnance Disposal teams that serve all Marine units in Corps I. Their task is to disarm all types of . , Pvt. l;C, l\tlllideea w'nver, • USMC, daughter of Mrs. Nerly Savant of 1259 Baker St., Costa Mesa, is serving at the Marine Corps Supply Center, Barstow, Calif. The center stocks, repairs and supplies materials and equipment for Marine ·Corps activities and units west or the Mississippi and in the Far East. Pvt. l\.telany J. Walton, • daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Walton of '/JYl'l Killybrooke Lane, Costa Mesa, completed a clerical training course at the Women's Army Corps School, Ft. McClellan, AJa. A graduate of Costa Mesa High School, 1968, she com· pleted lhe eight week course which included Instruction in typing a n d adf!dnJSt:ratlve duties. P\'l. Mollie P. ' Stevens. • daughter of Mrs. Patricia Stevens of 2680 Victoria, Laguna Beach, ha! cOmpleted eight weeks of basic training at the Women's Army Corps Center, Ft. Mc!Clellan, Ala. Sgt. Sherry Doughty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Byron L. Doughty or 252 Virginia Place, Costa Mesa,' has been assigned to a unit of the U.S. Air Force, Wiesbaden, Germany. The se rgeant, a I 9 6 5 graduate of Corona del Mar High School. is an ad· ministralive specialist. She at. tended lhe University of Maryland European Division before entering the service. Tmn., the aviation structural Av I a t Ion Ordnance.man Ml I E 2'°2 Affll -Htwl*f INC~ mechanic, is a gra::luate of Airman cbae , Onielas, cia11inc1 M._,11 Newport Harbor High School, _u~S~N:'.:·~so~n~or~M~r~s-~~'.'la~g~da~l~en~"""""""""""""""""""""""""""~ 1966. ,. Two Orange County men are serving with the First Marine Aire.raft Wing in Vietnam. They are Sgt. l\lonstoa L. ; l\.1edlocli , nephew of P.1r. and : Mrs. D. L. Stokesbary of 120 • Ocean Front, r;eWport Beach : and Lance Cpl. David 1\l • Prolt, son of P.fr. and Mrs. I • HaToid Prottor J311Nebraska New ''.WALl(-QN / ; Pia~. Costa Mesa . c • I ; AkmanMlcbael A.Guy,son ommuter Service.: of Mr. and Mrs. Herman L. ; : Guy of 7802 Newman, Hun-: : lington Beach, has been : ; assigned to Sheppard AFB , ; ~ ~~~~-: : ma~tena~ce. . t call your Tr1vel Agent or Air C alifornia (714) 540-4550 : T e atrman 1s a 1968 •••, ••• • .-•• ••, •• , ·• •. • ••••• • ••• •••••••• • • ••••• graduate of Huntington Beach Hot weather's iust aro~nc;I the corner .•. everything is specially pric~d du.ring Penneys • ' I • ' ,) BARGAIN DAYS .. ' ' ' ' • • • • ' • , '. Specia! buy on women's perfect fit panty hose 2/1.99 J\lsl whot you wont when il'1 too hot for o girdlti!·5-<rmles1 and 1tr1tchable. Suntm or golo In J.ort, _.ogir, \Qng ond X·long. Women'.s cool, sleeveless tow priced shifts s4 ..i s5 5-M-t X1. XXl, XXXL Sv111m•l' 1hiht •t terrific , ] J I prlc11. A11orttcl c0Jor1. I I Special buy on pant dresses for girls! ,.., 2.50 , ... 52 Get~J th.1eP'11W1- prtit' pan1 ••"es! All0t1.d • ~. pti'ltl., wl ids, norol&. Specibl buy on bab~' thermal crib blanket! 1.59 What a price! Cot. ton/ocryfic crib ,;tt1 mochine wo~blt .. , in portel colon! --~ .. Special HyOf! misses' cool,sleev91ess blouses ' 2/'3 Tolr;1 home a handful of ti.. tieewlesi bloUMIS of Docran• polye111r/c:otton and ,..,..,,ODttoft.. tolick Of print.I Lok of Colon, tilft 32.J8. Girls' ankle pants and mock turtleneck shell 1.99 ... 100% 11y!Oft 1hetf, •!retch d~im Dnltle panh in 1HS0t1ed colon. Sil11 7·1-4. Sp•cial buyl Medium weight gauze diapert 2.22 .... 01K 20 111-iO inch dto. pwnorw~I, quick to dt:y. comfy on bobyl 12 per poc:k. Men's pullover knee length cotton pajamas 2.50 ~ -'""''• 100~ ~ bot!H mton, thort 11ffYM pojomcu. A11or!id prinh. Silet S-M.l·Xl.. Special buy! Docro n•/poly- ester tailored panels 99' .. .,. ... ~, ""'' t1WO'f YOU!' "'-'Y Jl '" " dtOPft for the l\lm• "*' cmd hong lt.s. ~ .._,,, °Mlihl only. Si11t •1 ~ ~. 4111181. •"';' Peme)."s.91eal'barbecue wagon,~ tel I ific buy I 19.99 J~t tht 'M:JPO" for tht f-iy t+.at """°" 'th. good Iii•' O!Jtdoon. H'°"Y stMI fir• grot.. ._ tlt•pl.os. thl outdoor fiyjng fom. ~ ···-~ ·-·----- Special buy on toddlers' boxer short and polo 1.22 ....... Cool '°''°" kftlt M COOi rtol1y tob to rOU9h ploy. AltOrtld cokin, li:r11 1-4 . Woven jacquard towel ensembles priced to save! l oth towel 88' ._-fau t~. 2 for 81k '. Wo~ doth I for 88c Tone. on I~ in gold, ma1s. pink or tangerine to give )'Oii!" both the boroq..,. look I Boy's Towncraft fine hosiery from Penneyi 2/88' Special buy on infants' 2-piece print sleeper 1.33 Don't min this te-1Tific buy on infantf' JOOo/., cotton pliue two piece printed ,!eeper with Cl gripper wabt. Auoried print1. Siz:es 1-4. Men's crewneck polo ~hirts ... they're Penn Set Terrific savings now on women's denim jampicas 1.49 Hond1ome co mbed collon l111t 1hirt, Chesl podtet. Foih- lon ~olon. Si1•1 s.M·l-XL Spocial buy! Infant's hooded nylon jacket 1.99 lin.d with 100~• cot- \, 1.99 0 0fl'f mill #Iii greQI bu)"! Wornen'1 1trelch denim \ jomoic~. "";ligo & lashitm ~""· \'hades, 10-18. Great buy now on boy's knit polo shirts! 2.99 Fanlcnric .a'Yi!IOI on boy'1 Oi1on9 oayHc K>~ in onorted colon. Si1e1 s..M.L. ton flannel. l lght-I /'\f>i#~~ weight, but worm. ' ~'o¥''-Anon.d c:olon.. Sizet 1·3. In li111 te ftt big ond llt!le hoy1. 100% 1 /\.>...ol'po~ter ht auortod cobl.. Siz:tt 6-18. ,. \ 'Surplus' For State Di scounted SACRAMENTO (AP) -The legislature'• flnancial expert predicts a '140-milllon l!lllrJ>lus in lhe 1969-70 budget, but the head of the Assembly financial committee says U'll be, eaten up ·by light mooey and rising colt. . Legi&lative-AQllyst A. Alan Post fold the Aa&embly Ways and Means... OommJttee Tu~­ <lay the" bUdget for the 1969-70 fiscal ye&r will contain more than $148 mUlioo•extra. And he said that, althOU!lh Gov. Reagan proposes to return •too million to tax- payers in 1970 in the form of a one-time income tax cut, the legislature itself has the final say on }Vhat to do with the ex- tra mor\ey. · The committee's Republican chairman, Frank Lanterman ol La Canada. replied that there would be no surplus. Any money which l'IO\V appears ex- tra, he ~aid , will be taken up in meeting problems of tight money on the bond market and an expected increase in v•elfare costs. "There Is no surplus in sight because of the bond problem," Lanterman said. But Post said it would be a' technical surp!u~ and the legislature would have the op- tion of giving it back to tax- payers, meeting bond pro- blems or giving stat e employes a pay raise. The surplus question was brought up by Dante Trolio, Jobbyst for the California St.ate Employes Association. He urg· cd the committee to add $15 million to clear up salary in- equities fo r some civil service emRiloyes. . Cal Reclaims 'Park' Area BERKELEY (A P) -The Universi ty of California says it is going to erect a fence around a plot, intended for a sports field, which bas been take9 over by volunteers who built \'heir own park. Called People's Park, the plot is bounded by Dvi'igh\ \Vay and Haste and Bowditch streets. About a month ago B e r k e I e y "street people," stude nts and residents. took over the lot. laid sod, planted trees, and set up benches and playground equipment . Cal owns the land and chancellor Roger Heyns said Tuesday: "We have to put up a fence to reestat;llish the con· veniently forgotten fact that the field is indeed t h e un iversity 's and to exclude unauthorized persons from the site.'' 3 Worn Tires Slated for DA LOS ANGELES tAP) - Investigators say three worn tires taken fron1 a bus •that crashed near Castaic, killing three Girl Scouts, "'ill be tum· ed over to the dis trict attorney along with a report on the ac· cidcot. The bus plunged off rain- dampened U .S 99 on Satur day. ••• DAllY 'U.OT Sam Yorty I nsist,s Red M~nace 'Real' ........... .. ·ML MUM Reeruit Goes AW~ 'They Tried to Make Animdl Out of Me' ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -'!'be 1lvon Bradley by a l1nd Communist menace is real, developer Involved In the ca.se. U)'I Mayor Sam 1 Yo r t y , Br•:r.11y11be money wu a despJte laughter evoked by b1a cam contrlbuUon f o r ~ Tuesday nlgbl that J\e!I. Jameo Roosevdt. the U.S. Commuolat party City et .. k Rex Layton chief supports bis opponent for e.sUrnated the May 27 mayoral mayor. election wJll draw go to 75 per· NEEDLES (UPI) -Almost every youth Wtderaollll the rlgon of mWtary boot camp conslde.rs the p(lll!blllty of golng over the hill when thln1s g•t rouah · Most decide to stick It oul, flauriril a rew more weeb or b&rd tnocb is betltr than nr court martlalfd fec sand s1nct Wed...,, ~· abMat without leave. -,. Krennlnl ukl: he wu ohn Kttnnh\c 19 enlisted on a bench outa&de '* In the Marines' ln 1 Wichita, rack! lb at day whtn t!"_... ., becauae be felt the ficer walked by. • dtol:lpiioe would do him good. "I didn't see him, eo I~ but he went ovtr, the Jenee at 1et up and 141Ute," ~ the Marine ll«hlll Depot In said. "Two drill lnS~ Sari Diep' beeaUIO the COIJ>f I didn't even know who U.. "was trying to make an were -snw me and C1ftM1 '1!1mai out of me." ' over and chewed me out>AM; When Yorty told 1 Sherman cent of the city's ll .12 mUllon Oaks audience that Thomas registered voters to the polls. Oil Disaster Report Sent ToDuBridge Krenning wu ln a Needles started rou ghing me up. •'lit! hospital tOday, claiming he kicked in the back." ~ uescaped" from boot camp After chow, Krennlna sneak· after a bealinl.by two drill in· ed Into tile bushes, cllmli!JI structora because be didn't see over the fence, got a map an officer in Ume to salute f.rom a gas statk)n, aod set~M Bradley's candidacy ii 1u~ - ported by Gus Hall, many laughed. • , "I feel JO('t)' for 'em, Uttle kids," said Yorty. "I went through this in '39 and '40 with people laughing wheo I tried to tell them that Hitler: wu a menace •• , Now you can call that McCarthyism or whatever you want." Yorty bu made the asser· tion repeatedly that Hall sup- ports Bradley, and the Bradley forces have nplied that (he contention should not be dlg?Ufied by • noply. Meanwhile, Bradley, a city . councilman~replied to a Yorty claim that he is running a racist campaign. "I have never appealed to anyone for votes in this cam· paign on the basis of color." he told a Kiwanis meeting. "1 have told the black community that they shouldn't vote for me just because I'm black, and I havt!: told the whit& com· munity tbey shouldn't vote again.st me just because of my color.'' Yorty apparenUy lost in a move to have the county grand jury reopen a San Fernando Valley zoning case lo determine if Bradley might have been involved. Joaeph Lederman, chairman of the Jury's criminal com- plafirts committee, said the zoning case has been fully in- vesUgated and the grand jury woul4 take no further aclion. Yotty bas questioned fl,000 ' HayaklJwa hlm. on foot for Wichita and bamtri,., Dl'. Darwin Ridlardlon said "I gue911 I wun't real~.!I H ?1 Tops Best Known List the young recfuli bad iower my rig.bl mind, or l w LOS ANGELES (AP) _ back lnJurl.,. "·1'1ty lool!ed as bave jumped the f~. ' . Special presldenUAl science if they Wfl't bruites from a Krenning said in the hoe:pl~ !I j adviser Dr. Lee OUBrldge neit blunt object.·He appears to be /'l wasn't thinking stra- SAN FRANClSCO (UPI) _ ~~·============:=:=:~::::~ week will receive recoan-tellln& the tn&tb. He's ia 1ood because of that last bea~1~ omla he kno _ menda.Upns from 1 WhlLe shape now, but be had been Krenning said he has ., ' CaUf 111 say t Y w House Panel that lnvestJcated-real sick for two da)'t." been contacted by t ""' and like Dr. S. I. Hayaka"•a, the Santa Barberi t'bannel oil Krenninc wae found wander-Mar~. The Marines . s .. the acting president of San N h Case Tak disaster. Ing in the delert Saturday Krenrung was absent w1tho<I, Francisco Slate. ognc J• to e wJth a ll)S.de&ree -temperature leave but had no other COlftl: That's th• findings or th• • . Panel cbalnnan J 0 b n, and sulferln( from dehyd ra. ment e:xc1pt that no oflldal California Poll, whlcti tested Calhoun. vice prealdent of , tJoo and heat ·ubm•st:l.op. Re charges had been brougbl' res Iden t. on 11 men At 1..e· ast Two Week.s Tern A&M Unlvenlty, Tues-bad ., <loalnl Uu,)ugh the against ••Y drill lnstni<!or. ' prominently mentioned as day declined '° 1ay whit his possible candidates for high 11-man unit would rtcom· political oflice nezt year. The mend. • it- results were announced today. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Jl established." The committee ol•,tOloglall, Almoal nine out of 10 (89 appears ' that at Ju.st \wo ' No guchi'1 adminl!trative englneet'S and heads of h government a 1 e n c le.a con-percent) said t ey knew weeks of testimony will be deputy, Herbert Mc Roy , ducted two dlys' of meetinp .something about Hayakawa, -needed to sort out what a testilied Monday that Noguchi to tieU auggeetlona .from placing him ahead of such lawyer called "this complex once said he would like to rtpresentatlves of the Unkn, well--known figures as former . Gov. Edmund G. Brown (87 collage which is Thomas "kill" a JiUbordinate, that he Gulf, Mobil abd Teuco oil ~ont) and A s s e m b l y Noguchi" took pills at lunch ind lhRt co=' es about drllllq on Of federal I e 1 1 e · ocratic leader Jess Unruh The nrst day of testimony at Nocuchi'• speech frequently (79 percent), the next most an open bearing before the w1a slW'red. boinlon 'optr111t\s tbe welllhlt familiar names. Civil S er v i c e Commlsslon, • County administrative of-ble"f' ~t Jan. Jl, coatlftl hu. And 82 percent of those poll· ~ dreda r mil f the ed had a strongly favorable or which Noguchi requested aJtcr fleer IJodon nolllnger, who p.o ~are arid ~~ of favorable i m p r e s s i o n of be was fired Matth II, began recommended firing Noeuchi ~them California beaches Hayakawa while only 8 per-Monday. from hll Pl,lOf per year 'job, with millions of gallons of cent fa vorable and 29 percent His attorney charged the implied In a IO-page letter to crude petroleum. cent had an unfavorable or Japanese:bom coroner ia the the county aupervlaors 1hat The oil seepage continues at strongly unfavorable opinion. victim ol racial prejudice and Noguchj suf~ f r o·m a J'.riuclHiiminbhed rate of a By contrast Brown had 49 neuroUc fantule, and was in few hundred gallons d a 11 y percent in the favorable cate· professional jealousy. need of peye~lrlc help. compared to.a T.! 21,000 gories and 4.1 percent in the However~ Dep. Co u n. t Y Noguchi arid hil attorneys gallons a dly, e aay. unfavorable. Unruh had 50 Counsel Martin Wet t I claJmed the firing w a a At a news con ere n c e, percent favorable and 29 per portrayed Noguchi u preying polJUcally ln1pired and that Calfloun wu asked lf further St•. REWARD FOR LOST MINIATURE BLACK POODLE. cent unfavorable. fori.-cUaaaten to . br~ distlllf· aoci&aatlOlll J:bout hil behavior ,oil leakl -could be ,prevented. S W Robert Finch, form.er tioft tci Ida oUice. -· were "untrile. distorted, or He reptiid: "lt wouJd be en. · ay lieutenant governor who out-, ~He uld Noguchi tokl ~, acmet1mea aid In jell arwt foollab .,..,•. to Ill!/ that you ~i..rc~ black '~die with distln· IJllll!iable grey spot of hair on back betwffn shoulden. 7 Y"" old, weighs about 8 lbs. Answen to the name of Marlo. Dog requires speclal diet due to alDng condition. Last lffll In New.: port ll!each. Westcliff area on Anita Lane on Saturday, May 10 in A.M. No questions will be asked. Please caQ any hour: 646·3526 or 673-1060. polled Ronald Reagan-in the emplO)'fll of the dhner' l of:.. blown out of. all proportion." couldg'tlbi.ye ari accldtnt." 1966 elections and moved to fK:e, "rbad a vision. ~~that•·-;:==:;:::::!:'.:::::=======:::========================:; Takes A i11i the Nixon cabinet was fourth (Boeing) 727 loaded to capaet-1 on the list with' 69 percen t ty ~rashed into a ho~el. And recognition. He is · a popular amid lh.e flames, I. ThOmas T. At LObb yistS_ figu re with 68 percent havlng Noguchi, stood, and the press a fa vorable impression and f was there." percent an unfavorable one. Weeks also said Noguchi SACRAMENTO (AP ) -.:==========; danced around his office as Sen. Howard Way I e d Sen. Robert F. Kennedy la y resurgent Republicans back to BEST dying in Good Samaritan the State Senate leadership Th• DAILY PILOT •ff•A Hospital . last June and after 13 years today and ""n' of th • lt•1t fMhir••· cbcriled: "' am going to be pledged to cut down the power by •rlu•I 1u,...., -' r••4•r1, ·~faifl9U&. J.; hope be dies, O( lobbyis~ bl '.the upper •v1ll•bl• in '"Y ••wsp•p•r ·becaumifbe4!~,thenmyin- h ~ .;,.. 111 th• n1tlon. '"""I:" °""· r=::=::=::=::=::=::=::==::::=::::t~erna~·~ti~on~a=l~re~pu=~'==Uo=n=w=ill~be OnJy the formality of a final:lr official vote by the full Senate remained before the tall. micl d I e-o f·th e -road Exeter Republican officially took over as President pro tern re"plac· ing Democrat Hugh M. Burns of Fresno, the presiding of- ficer since 1957. In a victory news c.:>n- rerence, Way's first targets were the handful · o{ business lobbyists who are friendly with Burns. Asked about lobbyists, Way said "what we need to do is minimize the role of a very fe\V s p e c i a 1 interests and emphasize the interests of all the people." His second target was the polverful Senate GovernmentAI Efficiency Committee, under the chairmanship or Sen. Richard J, Dolwig, R • Atherton. This committee hears every type of legislation and, in the vast, has been accused of kill· i'hg bills in secret and without elfPlanatlon. '11 know there is a feeling among assemblymen a n d others that legisla tion In the committee has been treated in a high-handed and sometimes arrogant manner," sald Way, "and I would hope to dJ something about that." As President pro tern, Way' will wield great influence. As c-hainnan of the Rules Com· mittee, he has a major say ir, whether bills live or die because be is Instrumental in assigning them to committees. I See by Today's Want Ads e Ram Size! Roll around In this Kiili slr.e bet!, and ret better sleep. A great bua•ln. •. quilted, complete never --••• $98. e Rt-traction AttracUon: Retractable clolhl-1 line, uted for a "'er"I lhott time, SI.I •••• beautlly -backyard wben not in \lie. •Power~: Well, this 00&'• a camper ••• .'58 VW, wltll 1500 e~ """· .•. &00'! for"-~ l>aula. N"' po.lat. tn e:ii:celltot conclldon. • • • 1125t • 14.e Quolc: A 1956 ?Urlr: lt Contlnental a .. tc. ••.• ln ,...1 condl· tlon. Emprt11 white., Hard to Ond tuxul')'. $3495. I• A Father's Doy is June 16 AL!.~!!!!,,. • ORDER THIS WEEK! Let Dad see your love .... -. GIVE HIM A FINE PORTRAIT of you and the cltildren ·A95 ONLY ... ~. ,, ..... ,.,,,.,, ., .... ) .... , '"'" ,..p1. Any g;ft will tell Dad yoo 1 ... hirn, but enly a family portrait left Dad '" yaor i-1 And, h0'1f '"a on Father's Doy and every day of the yeor. Hurry in now ••• orv. Dad the onrt gift • M'JI trtasure forev., ••• a Poffrolt of his foMilyl :s..on .....,_ "'-,.,. ""'"' "'°" -,..,,i.> ~a.,,.emlter, yoy earl char,. ir at,.,.,,.,.,, ,U1.UITM n,•1191f•" Ct~I• ...., '""'· 111-4)CI MUlfTINeTOM II.I.Qt ""'"'l<Wlorl """' 1nd ,,.., • tn-t1" JllWPOIT •U<M F•N!IClll 11i.. JllCI """ • ....,,,, I FINE 17 JEWEL:-BWIBB WATCHES I . . SPECIA-L PURCHASE I TIMEPIECES WITH l'ASHION IN MIND • YOUlt CHOICE! FabulOUI f01h~1 lri the •pitit 4f tJ-,flmetl Jilw,n will find ..,. of •hock ab~bant, water ,.peUenf watc:he1 wltk ''*"P 1KOnd hands. ScNn. with calttMlort, ond either l94tf.r .,. u'pan1ion ~ •. for WOfMt'll ....... watches Jn pendanfl, bnscefet1, lapels, ond rings. Spom wa1che1, too •• • • , •••••• '. · •••• foch Ont has Q: •uperb, 17 jew•I rriovement de1Jgned to give you hours upon houri of elegonc•. If YO¥ want a wokh wlth fothkil'I Jn mtncl, )'OU"ll have • good tTm• ift .vr fine Jtwtlry lwportment. 88 CHARGE IT At 'YOUR PENNEY'S FINE JEWELRY DEPARTMENT • •• FUUERTQN H•rbor •t Ore1191therp• Or•119•foir C•11t•r HUNTINGTON BEACH l-tu11tl119io11 C:•1tltr E41119t1 •t S•11 Dl•i• Fwy. NEWPORT BEACH f•dtio11 hle114 M•cArth111 •t p,,, C:.I. H1"y, , • ' • I ... J llAll.Y 'ILOT , • . I ' . .. . • • Wol..,.l\ Mu 1', 1969 • • ·Orang~ C·oast A;.-e~ ~~i_t~l .Statistic~ ··' - !!'1 Dl"orces IMVMCD ,ILI O '-. V11111!M Ardllllll "' Alfr.io M. ~ ....... ;....., LI• Carellfl VI Mlithltl .,~ L.-« CarM!I ~""-'"'-ElhllJI W/Nd ¥1 •ldl•rcl 01i. •!fW.'11 •Ai"""" Thllme1 J-1 vt Btlt\I Lou ,_ S.rM Eltiati.111 llfktnbedl n J&JM1 ~o-fl:Olllrr l lrkt nbticlt ·-a I[. ~ ¥1 ll:tlolo W. . ..,,;-,,;:.;;.._ ""°"' tMrr MPlm ¥1 John $1ffhef! 1 •• ...-Jllltl It.. P1!1r.11 ¥1 LNl&nd Ci.1 Pt"ltn ·~rl L¥'1'11 L1YI ... VI M~I Hll<· ~ rholl LIYMn \llltlW JHn "••ktr "' G••ld Leroy ..... "•rkllr Mllllr'H Ytl'rlfttloll ..s Ktfll Y1rrffltlolt WI'_, M. llhdctr .,. a ....... i. DonlolO I ltlldltt ' ·. ;-- • •. • ll6Mk A_ (lolrt; VI lt111tford W, (ltrk .H~ Alocfrt "' Jolwl Afldrt ll'IMAL OI CllJll , MAtMiri. Ulr~ vs Jolwi Ulrlt.Mft ~ SoMwel Gllrrie,... ,,. l..,...eM G""rlw• WIHll• 0, l"ft'ttlt. Jr. VI ll-Nin fer-"' ' lt~nl M, CIWVa~W n M.11""'1 A. ,,.,.... .. "" Dorf O•N Ml111t vt ~ .t.. MllM ~111'1 A, hll(ller vs WllllMI A. ... _. Suwn 0 . TM111i,.w1 P111l..\f'. Tlf'l'll>lt. Jolln II.oat< C11ervo' v1 P1!9tY Ntll ,_ 1111111 E. G~tltrtit 11, Gtorlff: Gulltrr1i LMll JOY FoWltr YI er.it •• ,._ .. , Jl.'01111 Jo.iin IColll YI llOl>ffl , Cllftio!I .... WllH•'" Tern> FlrWrock va f11rber1 Ann l'ltlllfDCk • l1111!Je A,, Meflr~ \IS ~Id LOlll' .., .. _ Ooroth'f H. ~rd'I "' How11.i:I N. Marlh L""'' Joota-B1rry w1 'ot»rt Le• •.. .., NO\'eli. Jlo'M' Chlldrns .... JOI ( . 0.Jlclma • $1!1\' M. C.~ ·-"' ltlcNrd C. C1"-"11 Somero t k about a flame e • I it's a • • . ' ' . • WO • ' . Hog wash .. A gas flame is cleansing. Not dirty. You can keep the door closed'when you broil a steak on a gas range. The flame literally devours the greasy smoke. The makers of flameless ranges suggest you leave the . . . door open, Well, what's so all-fired clean about a smoky ' ' kitchen? · If a pot boils over on a gas range, you simply tum off the flame. When the flame's off, the heat's gone. You can clean up the mess in no time. Try that on an electric range. You can tum it to Off, but the red h ot co·ii takes its own sweet time to cool down. Meanwhile the food drippings are going up in smoke. Flame is a dirty word? Consider the plight of the family who lives in a .home. with' radiant heat, the flame'e~ kind. They keep war¢ all right. But the air they breathe is stagnant because.it·has n o place to-go. (Unless they open tJie. wihdows and' let in dust and_ dirt.) Gas.fqrced air heat is circulating heat. It's designed'i:o warm you, then exit to be mixed with fresh outside' air and recirculated . . Instead of settlihg on your furni- ture, dust arid dirt; !ire tqipped in the filter. . , P:lame is a dirty word? Com- pare what you're charged next month for electricity and for gas. You'll find there's only one thing dirty about our clean blul'. flame. It's dirt cheap. THE 9 9§ ' I 1 . I 'SELLERS CIRCLE' I WE'RE SAVI.NG. ' . ' SPACE FOR YOU ••• ~ ~ ~ ~ .. .r-;;rl ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't aavertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the h a rd way· The Service Directory I classifications 6500 -7000 in the classified ad section daily) g 1 v e s you en advantage you get through no other adver- t ising med ium . It reaches customers who are reedy to buy. Be there whe ri your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start e category just for you . Pick up the phone r i ght now and reserve your space i n the "Sellers C ircle" • • Your Direct Line to Directory Results · 642.-5678 DAILY PILOT CLA$SIFIED AD DEPARTMENT I , ' l • l . ' •• ., .- I . .. '' , ' J I > • -• ' ' IAttle Ff.ttf•re • Food .Stamp .Pia~ AP:P.roved For The. .Rec.or-0 By JACK BllOIACl fie ellimaleoi COUD1Y ccsto °' "' - --far tbe llnl yur at fll0.000 I SANTA ANA -With .• aad tltal -UGO DMdY lula.-. llld leu ~'or.. .-..,.id -lldvanta&e Cool8'Y IUllOCViaor• ~ " tho -· He will -adopted the le<loral r1IOd II to • ,,... woril<n to ad-' Stamp Protram prwaoled by mlnlller tho _..,, Peoples the Community Actloo CGun-lald. ell. "One concern about this In contrast to an April %9 prosram b lts administrative, ~on when seon'I ol. ~ complellty," Peoples to Id poneols of the procram crowd· aupervlsors. '"I'hree dlfferent ed the 111pervison' bearing levels al government ~federal, room, only a few ""°'led' up llale llld county) ••• ""' In-~ and non.,poke. ' volved. Coonty Dtrectar of Social ' ''S!Me tbe food slampa are Wellare GranvUMi Pe opt e a ~ly !'luivalent to cash, recommended thai the board theN ""' veey rigid controls adopt the program for u>t involved · ln bandUng and coming 1919-70 !local year. dlolrlbuiloa. Tho manual of operaUont coata!r\a 1bout 190 welfare d e pa rt m e n t or Paa" ol lnl1fU<llon, IDcludlna thnluP banks. Bankl In other some XI reqilln!d fon'M. For ., counllel have been reeepuve theae ,.....,, I b e ad· to the plan, Peoplts lald. mtnlllnlllve <Ms wUI be -Ill vary. A mother higher,'' Peopi• odcled. with throe children, drawtna The net btntllt tn tncraued fZ30 a month net tn wellllt. food ~ power averages would pay m for stampa and between '5 and ti per family f'K'tlve $98 on food value, a member each month, the net or '24 worth of food a wellare director sald. monlh. While the county must plct Stamps are.-said to have In· up the tab fGt adminl!trative creased rttaiJ food sales coets of the pJ'1llram, the U.S. where they bave been issued Department of Agriculture from seven to 10 percent. re.lmburses all cost o( food Before Tuesday 0 ran I e purchased over and above the County was one of three In the amount • recipient spends for atate that had not started the t.be stamps. procram (20 have), or taken Stamps are aold by the actloo to start it. 1be other • two are Butte and.Sierra COUD· Ues tn Northern Cilllornla. LHNrd ,_..w,.,., -dw $1,. fftw- POl'I llHCti. o.11 'ot"•th, ~y lf, surv1w<1 tw wii., enuo.1111 d4111thter, JuclYI four ~. Itri BMskeN, WQtfb, Clllf.1 Jaftn '-'ltlftl, llnow. te-li CHI.Ir a..--. U....,..,1 1 ft d F,.1'111 llMMlnt. Wllcoll, A.{ltO!ll: two ,, ....... .....,... J111i1 'Mlmw. Afllmton1 •nd M"L 1..-Ot'lffftlrt. 1....-ood. Ito. 11.rv, Tl'll.o~y. l ilt • .,,.,, &illi e111 .. •••. 1741 Swerltr, eo.i. ..... J1.-i111en! ~ Frlll1v. t .,m .• $!. J~Jmi C1ttiotlc Churdl. ,.rtv"'-; lllfwmlnl, 111111 Mortv1tY.,CoU.I ..,.., Dlt'Kton. Junior Art ' Sought for Festival Legal Tiff Sparked By Preserve Errors Coitnty Asks LAFC Start Annexations ~ANT A ANA -Orange County school prlnclpalt and teachers who wilh to IUbmit stUdent art worir lilt )ud(itl( tn the Anna Mary Beet Junior Art Gallery OD the Festival of Arts (fOUnds tn Lo(UOI llHch ACOSTA .. this summer have until May .-,..nces 1.. kA1•. s.iil w. 41t1 st, 16, to do so. ~.,i. ""'· &urv1-i b~ uvefl 1CW11, Student· work should be Ar.ee1. Jtablrt •nd "'""le Rodrl1ve11 taken to the Art EducallCll'I Of. "''"-A.ndm, R1lph 1nd J-1n 1.a.1111 ....., d•""'''"' 1.111111111111 Rod-flee Room 220. at the Orange ,,~, 11"' Da111 a1n11 two' bro111..... n....~. Schoola ~--JI~ W E-ko ..-Id Albe!'T Luenenoi 22 ,,.~ ........... ,. UIUI."'· '" • U'llld,.,. anc1 -,,...111r11ndd!Hd. "'°' 8th St. here. Slln'o TlturMl•Y, 1 :10 p.m. RMllllm h ,,.,.,,, Frlotev, t 1.m .. tdtl at $1. 81•· .Judging to determine whlc blr• C•"'9llc Clivrdl. Dll'KIKI by k will be Jnctu~ tn the Piek l'llYlllY Cotonlll FUMl'lll Homt. WOI'. ~ pro1ect will •be , held at the GRENIS First Baptist Fellowshlp Hall SANTA ANA -A simple move to torrect ao-called "cleriell ernn'" in · t b e descrlpUon ol lbe. 51,000.acre qrleultural prtserve - merit -the Jntno Co. and lhe county led to anappy lePI ,._ 'l\relday before the.Boord of SUpervbon. Loi Al\geles attorney Lyndol L. Younc, representing Joan Irvine Smith and her mother, Firms OK'd For Audit Mrs. 1bunnood Clarke, ob- lecled to the agreement and its amendment aS he had at the original hearing last Feb. SANTA ANA -St ate 18. leplaUon allowlnOlli' Local Young asked for "a pubUc Agency Formillon Com· hearJn," and charred that mlaslon (LAFCI to tnttlate an· very Iltlle of the so-called nes.allon proctedinp f« untn- "prmrve" wu devoted to corporated island areu ~ agricultural purposes. pletely · ·IWTOW'lded by clUea County Counsel A d r I an was propoeed Tuesday by lhe KU1{1e!' said Young's attacks Orange Coµirty Board of wero not per1lnent to the mat· Supervisor!-· ter bef,... the )>oerd wbjch The .-..men! dllpatche4 w• '~~1 : a _ correction of to countj iep1aton,, la pat· minor derical errora. The terned after -)l!_..t by board bas already signed the the Or-County l-tque ol aBt:ffment.," he emphasized. CIUes. · 1 , • Pertinent or not, Young LAF,C Chatonan Jame 1 L...,15 G. ~~11. 1:1112 LC11!11sr st.. in Santa Ana" May 19 and 20. · wn1m1r11m. survi-i bv w~. Elli•· Abouf 300 works of students beffti -d1uthten. l!ll~ttl S1116-,..,.,. 1nc1 a1rto. .. c1111co, bfol~. P•t In grades k Ind erg art en GNnk; 11mr. """ tt•llonn. Ro1~rv. -throu'"" ll:f/! ICbool are an- persisted, arguing lhit lhe Workman,' ·mayor ol Villa SANTA ANA -County amendment · •;opened up new Park, told supel'vllon actiOl'l Auditor U. A. "Vic" Helm has areas ind reopens the entire by the conurdt9.lot1 would not been llveo pennlsaion by the lllli\ld.T.He qaln dimililed ::..:::.~ w:::t.: T11u~v. t 1.m., Peek F•mllv Colo-&'' .. 111 Funeral Home. J1~1.,,, Ml••· nually erlb ted ai the FesUval Ftldly, t 1.m., eie.ec1 s.cn..._i of Art& which Utls year will be ct~ic Ctlurdo. DlrKle<I by Pee II. thr '"'" Fimnt eotonlt! FllMl'"•I Home. held from July 11 ou .. , UNDKE Aug. 24. county Board of Supervlsora to • new public bolrtng. · ~~ lo< o u ta i d e ac-Ku...;..., tetcried. that ."no cities io ellniloate the illands. ---· ,~ nie .. -15 . of them tn the ::-""~ to ~:1'" =~! ~~ ~ ~;~ttie;de~ '"f.'1:u C-. whire tnbabl'"" -emec1 by the board. the .,.,..,..._.. ., .,. Q ·' W••·.., 14, 1'69 r A. V. 0 Bud" Jones Jr'. of Paci.fie Telephone has been named president of lhe OranJ.e County Safety Council tor 11169. THE BEST k•ff•r•hlp ,. • f It ~"'' .. 'P111u1t,'' 11 9M ,f tlt1 .•01"14'1 mtut p1p11l1r C11111lc tfrlJH. Rlitll It dilly I• tk DAILY Pi.LOT. . ' Countr QKs B Ji' On Oil Qrilling SANTA ANA -A ,.,olutlon aimed at a federal and ttate government qreoment to pro- hibit oU e.tploraUon or driUtna tn the f-.i Udelanda areas off the coast WU adopted Tuesday by the Orange County Board of Supervlsor-3 . As proposed by Superior Al(9n E. Allen, the reaoluUon declares that all exploration and drUllng sbould be pro- hibited by the federf!.l £0Vern- ment oublde the three.mile limit just as It I! il\alde that limit by the SheU-Cum!lngham Act of 19$5. That stale law banl dr!Utng in lbe offshore area from the Sanla Ana ruver to the Mel· lean border. Allen· waa active in £etUng ·nU eicploration drilling of1 the Newport Buch O>Ui' balled last February loUowirlC the disastrous Santi Barlla" o!L leak. Several oU companl<t bad been granted ~mt.a to "LUt core" drill off the Oran&• Coooty cooat by the lllto wds Commtaaloo. • Followlna the uproar ot. JR. test from local cltlxeDI, fife commission cancelled t b e penntte and agreed to bold public hearings on s u c h permlll in the future with ade. quate notice to comrnuoWis and individuals involved. ; Le1tslalloil to eatabllab 91ls is· now ln process. ~ The -1utloo will be forwarded to Interior Secretary Walter Hickel. U.S.' Senatora (ieorg~ Murphy and Alan Cranston, 1 11 . con- gressmen reprtsenllng the ~ty, all state lt&lJlaton, and state officials coocemed- •¥· ~----·-areas .are concerned. the peo. Helm lald help will be need-Under a )moUon b Y· ple:r .. idiJI& tn lhooe ,,.. · .. ~rillft A.. Ll,.,.,i.e. m Ml111on Drlvt . A.111. 1, Colt• IMM. Survlw<l by rw... band. Elmtrl -dw~ler1, M r I, Pttrlcll Mdt<I, al 5"oulwdlll M Is I eetti Llndlte, "' 1111 h0ml!1 twa """'· Rlltltf'I, U.5. M•rlne c;or,iu Ind O.rrv1 Llndkt, of 1111 home; bru!Mr, How1rd V1n RI-. ~ V<rl1 lwO 1lslt:n. ,,.,.rv D'Amlco, Holrvwoad, ll'w:l Mlrve Md.1uotilln, N"°' Vor1<1 ard I w v er.ndo;tilldttn. s.trvlcet, Friday, n 1.m.. Btll lll"OldwlY CNlll&l, W 1 I II R ..... L. v. Tornow offld•llnt. II e 11 ll~•Y Mort..-rv. 110 8tOllclw.Y, Gnt1 Mew. Dln-cton. Reagan Set To Address County GOP Id to audit the books of the Sup<rvlaor Altai E. Allen, ihe would ·havt.the final aay to a district& of the "laraer and beard tennlnaled the dObate ..ie. he aplaliiacL -STEREO SENS ... ION I higher activity type," In-and approved the changes. "In som•Jnslln<es there ls .. I • c1udin1 Flood Control, Harbor, The vote was 3-l wit b no way to iQitllte such an- Cypress Recreatloo and Park, Supervisor Robert w. BatUn, nexations under present law," Th• colorful ·-und o~ .,., 1 Roamoor C o u n t y Mafn. who had opposed the nriginal workman told supervisors. ""lf!"'- tenance and Water Works agreement, voting against lhe1,.,--------~.1 Oran1• County Musi ll!a1rlcla No. I and 8. propoo!Uon. The audits will be for the Supervisor David L. ~er LOCAC ANAHEIM-Governor llscal year ending June JO. was in Washinlton, D.C,ltJU· No oth .. ,..,., .. , hll• '" RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM . SHEFFLIN • - Ronald Reagan will be the 1be cost of the outside r~ on a U.S. Sena,te bill coo-..,.,,, •••ry il1y, 1Mut wh1t'1 " ...... c." ""'""· "' ·-· feature<! speilker May 22 al audittng btlpwlll be detenntn-cerntnl thetrwler or ""'Plus , •• ~. ' ...... th ... "''''.! From 'Fashfbn~tsland,' Newport Beach ' air. L111.m• Bffd\, o.11t "' detlll. th Or c I Republican ed by neeotiations between federal land to other pvern· Or•n.r• C.iat '" ffl• 'DAIL' . . • ~1~r 13Mr~rv~~i! bl. ~~;i:.11!"~; r C~lr~~~~:xth an._~He~im~and:::!..!prt:.!:v::•t:e:.;au:::dl:::l<>r::_:•:..· _ _::m:•::nl::.•e:hl::::lUes::;·-'-----...:.="='P=·=-=======:l...----'lf:L•.._ _______ _..;.~-~-·-..___,J;tt., ___ ~ ____ ...,..:,~ · Yori<.' Memorl•I UNl«'I w!H be held -1 ··-~"'-Al•l.C ' rat the , ... 1 --''" Tllunday, 1 p.m.. Communltv p,... -.....-~ brierl•n Ch!Mfl p.,1.,..,. F~ml Jv ,.. Anaheim ConvenUon Center. "' """"" ttiose wl"'I"' l<l m1-e mem«· ••• contrlbuttm>t• plHw CDl!trrtiu"' to '"1e dinner,-wbich has B!I Its 111e Sovtti coet1 H_.1i.1 Fund. SM!· theme "Cballenae Year tf10" kt l.11ur1t l ffdl Mortwry, OI~ .........+....I dr .-:. is e .. ~ ..... to aw mon w~n FJELD 1,000 of the party faithftlL Rltt11n:1 HHlr"I' F1o-1c1. ""' i1, of 1su The dinner wJll be the major Newporl, COU1 Meil. Survived bv f d Is' e en( ••hedUled w111, M11c1,,..t1 brot11..-. c111r1K, L-un -ra mg v ""' eQCtl: .i""'. M,..., Otlft c1n11e. Lon• by Otange County RepubUcans a"c11. Mr. Fllld w•s • viembef °' In t96", lald George Brokatt, Cullnerv Union d L-&Heh. Lani • ,.,, S«Vlcn. Ttiund1v. 1 1.m .• Smlttl:I dinner chairman. CllM>tl. lntef>Mnt, wes'"'1""~ Me-Broka'" said that 1-~n ,......,., ...... Olredft bY Smllf!:I Moro ~ PIV Wlll '"""" · pose a major challenge to ETHERIDGE Republicans, since all the con- GISRIEL I ARBUCKLE & WEl.'!R 1 WestclUf Mortuary i U1 E. 11lb St., Costa Men -llAL'l"L MORTUARIES t Corona del Mar OR 3-HSfl , C..ta Meas Ml f.11%1 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY ltt Bro.tway, Colt.a Meu UHl3j DILDAY BROTHERS Baattngtoa Valley Mortoary • 1'7111 Buell Blvd. UuUngtoa Beacb au.mi PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortury -p .. :~~°"" Newporl llM', Ca!Utrala MU'llt' PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 71tl 1e11a Ave. w~- sBEF~ER.lllClllTIJARY Lien• ...... ltf.15lS SM Clem-UWIM SMml'S MORTUAllY U1 Mala SL. Hunua.-aed LEMAI \ sUtuLional offices wJll be up for grabs, 88 well as the run Assembly and half the state Senate, plu:s all seata: ln the U.S. House of Rtpresentatlve. and one in Ute U.S. Senate. Tickets may be nKr\.""ed throurh the United RcpubUcan Finance Convnittee, 1509 S. Grand Ave., Sanla An a, 547-8ltl6. Peterson Talk Set at Knoll's BUENA PARK -Dr . Robert Peterson, c o u n t y superintendent o( schools, will be !he principal speaker Satur· day at the S1nd Annual MeeUng of the Orange County Farm Bureau at KnotL'• Berry Farm. A social hour and reception for Orange County leplatotl and county supervlaon: will begin at 6:30 p.m., with dinner at 7 p.m. Safety Council Seeks Dollars SANTA ANA -Oranp CounU1ns will be aaked _ to "Give a dollar to 11.ve1a lite" by the Orange County Safety oouncu. The campalp wW be Cl!' rl<!l to -lndullty, ~ clubl, ,......., "°""' and llmllar organlzallorra, aaltl A. V. Jond, council - and Oivialon Plant anapr for Paclllc Telephone Co.'1 Santa Ana·Rlverairle div-. ·' :n-ber, you don't have to epend, a million to look like a milUon, JuaJ; be OUl'tt lo pt a Jot more for your monay. . Eumple: Cutlaas S. Thia -·• rot Olda clam and Qlflllty written all over iL There'•. Rocket 360 V-8-tbat ,_OD rogular .... A puuiuoOldarideaud ' handliDr action that mob you feel like a million, too. 'Ihere'• even an anti .. theft •tooriui columu lock you can't get on many cara at any price •. Put them all togelller and Ibey acid up to .. Ira value that lJOOI far beyond the modaot Cutlaas price. How to Jookljke a million on the same old budget )'OU had befo1e. '• -'· ,, ' ' ~ I • ..... • Off imson is tctiveiY' ;noouragiDg · •imen to triter its nhka. To lJVe you an Idea ~of the ·•hortage, the U.S. Department Of Labor estbnates that by '1975, there must be a 165 per- cent lncerase in podiatrists just to meet the he'.alth needs pf people over 15. Toda,y, t ~ some ~·llcens,,d : podiatr:ista, or .one podiatriil lor.~ery:23,lllO ,\merlcaii8, u compared io ~e dentist for .,.ery 2'1fl0. ftert are only five accredited ft 011 e g e I of podiatric m.llcine .and ,lhey • Jre world QI.~ mad to u- pand th<ir llif#lo!. ' • Two lactorf~lylng an-• 1;c1pa1..i ~;;Jo ao ... panding with a greater ~ j( older people, the .,.-~~ mOll loot c"*i~· (2) the treild toward, · peyen-~ve loot ca(i'~ ." · I! increasing. ..,...k. ' . J' 0 B S coM:: "P-Qdiatrists ~eep people on their feet by Cliagnosing and f r e a t i n g ~eformitles and d i s e a s e s iPedically and surgJcally, US· ing .drugs, prescribing proper lhoes. and fitUqg correctiye dev.(ces. 1l>ey <mRloy X ri)'I ind _P<rlorm tiiooil and other ...... 1 When tbe podiatrist suspects • ' '.UCI Lists -~mres for 'Next WeeK - The following public l~tures Will 'be offered by University of California Exle~on, Jr· vine. the week of May 19: : f.oast Girl . ~ ,. ;Wins Honor ' · J ... A. Geplorl, ~...,.... ol Mr. and Mn. C. II. Geplert, 7lf Saotona Dr. ~ dtl Mar, Is -of ". Ulllwrslly flf ~· Dt.nver 1lUdentt r•.ceotlf named to Pbl Bell flappa. • To be ell.Clble for mem- loonblp In the honor ooclety, J!mlon In the DU college ol arts and ICiences m U I t sbleve a ti cradc average end Im.ion must attain a J.5 ~· ~ lane, 1 Jqbior ma)otlng In wtll liit lillfoted at Ult .. lllliul ........... r.!' IT. t. ~ ii • «raduate of .... lorlml·Un!IXI Hl&h School. ' I ' , • on Best ----· OILT rousH llMOYll Nn $1ptr '"tit F1r•11i! lk J1r._Si11 4 i$)' "PElffCTION" Folding Syringe Co!fllle!e wi!lt l1ttm~s aJXl ..,it\Ncarr)'ingca~e.1 29 Guaranteed by SAV-Oft It(. $1.59 • , =·:c ' e • ___ : "Matchbox" Models Ctlll'ltlj Mill St1\1 -*II 11 amrtlil ctr' IACb, Jld"1., tit. . ~ --- ' • MlfcHIS ; lhll•& •AMllilct •Z• • Qffl"lttt • CNtllM • h1tl1c • J11, · • tills • Tmk1 ""' ... ""' ~ """'' ""'" =.. 3:1.00 ~Drag Strip ·- • Foot • _Ill ,. ··- 22 SAL l'lASTIC Trash· can S!!'ll 5"'o • Witi ~3ul\"81ita' Au't 'I · ctfen ' ~· J.to:ded slt2pe~ to ltokf ~cut-· lerv. Choose hom assorted s~\id co!~5 aflll •• ~1te.' Rec. Sl .49 Rec. "' ' c.m,art-5 e .. prt- ment "lllelt 9gc 6~ ·"Meds" tAMPOllS ••• tf " ANCHOR HOCKING ' Goblet .... 16 oz. si71 in your ch11ice o'I 1old w·1wt.ro color. 311 .00 ANCHOR HOCKING Tankard Mug 1 13 az. s11e ift 101~ 111 avliC34o color. 311.00 cg. • .,,Bi£. "Ten-0-Six" lOTfON This is the ~11e cleansi~g a·d correth~t tosme1·c 1ha1 !1'1ps your ~~In 10 comple!e niblral beiUty. .... 3 95 S5.H Piltt • I w•••~.~~o~!~.~ E l NIWPORT BEACH · 1Qt lbfNI IN WISTCLI# Pl.Ali HUNTINGTON· BEACH ADAMS I UOOlHUlST HUNTINGTON BEACH SPllNeDAU 6 IDIN•ll ... _, ' ... ' . "MaalOl" AllTA(ID IUI llt• llit Sewing Notions ""· 47c Slz1 111~ 7nc Sl11 a~ A shade thj\'s 1ight lill' · rr, ia derller •.. cover every br1111etle ••• go ligbf-1 49 giay comp_letely, ?15 Sin, 1 ggc 1:·:·~---:-~- i:========~ PlAYTIX 11111. Sizt SALLY HANSEN Hard-as-Nails "h ·L••I" •ilk lfJI•• fims 111r1 Ell1ctlY1 l1r PROILEM MARS Pr1t1cts 111l1st . 'r11ki•1· s•lil· ti11. ea ••i•I ··· 1111111 •r1k11 11ils. 1.50 '-'Pra'' tl.*s ''Tease'' As s'! colon .•. lq.4k 2gc . '' "Tease 'a lift" lil1 t41. or. . Ila.Ill 36c "Nurser" Kit . ~- -The nearest a!lJlroai:h ti ~ ~rust feeding! No stenliL-• j mg eq•1prne11t needed.;~ 6 59 -bottles to clean ~p. •••. t.15 • - 1 - "L I" yso u1u~ The fasl!s~ easiest l10$I tffecti~e Wif lo des!rGy hqtsehold ular er Pine swt ' ......... ,,.,. 3 1 DO Sk 5tL Silt • • "Turtle Wax" , •• -l -a7c , __ lllicliy ,....,. ·~ l(!ip. I •. Spaege aad car Clath ~!-· • •••• -!"111 ........ =~:r:'ci:~~ ltlit 77c : ....... '-·------J ... ___ ,_l_l-•IOl ... IU .. 1111"-"'llllllllllllllMlllll!ll!lllllllllllllllll ;._ ___ ;__-& :1 ,, -.I • • 1 ' I l ! i f I OFFICIAL cQluUN 'J • . .•e~~ll . · .tSJATION FOR .ORANGE .. COUNtt : !. 1' \: .... ~ l * PRICES IFFEC1'VE /#Y 14 TO MAY 20· • POLY·LITE COOLERS fROM role:nan, .. L~,f .. lightw1ight. tough ind h1ndso,.;.,f.Jilh1r-gr·a1n.d pol'f' ~Jeno ruists scr1tching,'scuffing ind Chipping, Ui'.ih1ne fi'l•u\11~ ,holdt. cold~ longer thlll otdin«y 5nsul1tion . :. tec!uces ICI load! inct~ ..... usable s1£1!'8j18'SP!'*· One-plec1! rnt1rlor. ~ dfy :tforage tr1'y. LNkili'Oof plritic dr1in. Two 1ty1H: ~ .. . .. ·~ ~ • I"; • '38-QT. $1 l'5 ' . -' ~. ·-Granrs111s The Greatesf Seledion " Ari-·low.est"Price•:"if~o! -, ' • I· HIGH •, SIEIRIS? W1 htv. • C'Onl,!ltt NIK· tlM •f 100% hwn-lilltd ht• fw the ,,..If ,, .. ftUJll!lf .tf Ul'l'lpml .. ·i.~).jEflN.'IAGS . I ". . ...,_,"'°~ '""· •·•i;.1 .. #1,11 ••• "'t·; . ~=,~"' "-4 .,,,._ ' -.,..,.~.,. " ..... . . . , t·-·~ . -. .. ':-:;~·." s ,,, . . $10.U Voluol See lir11t1t's flfst! WI RENT "' Ev~rithing In . ' ·"Just Add ·Wate~,.. . . . . .*·Compttte JAecili .. *Main: Ccn(tses t,. ·, ... -. ' . . ,. • ~ j;. 1. . ' ,\I 1 .. · * Des~eits; et~~~r.1..'~ . , ' ,_ ..... .. ; \. ! I . -' ''VAGABOND'~ . FOLDING CAMP STOOLS ............ 98< • CAMP TABLE & STOOLS ......... '.$29.95 EVEREADY .BA TT ERIES ................ 1 Oc J&J FIRST AID KIT .. "' ............ $6.95 MOSQUITO HEAD NETS .. : ..... !. .... 98c LAUNDRY BAGS ................ : .. 98c TENT BAGS ..................... $1.98 -TENT Ppl.I 'AGS ......... , ...... $1.98 DUFFLI BAGS .............. from $1.98 WATERPROOF TARPS ........ sq. ft. lOc MOSQUITO HITTING ........... y1rd 49c 100% WOOL. BLANKETS .......... $6.95 COLEMAN MANTLES .......... 2 for 39c CAMP COFFtE BOILERS ............ $2.59 100 FEET 14" ROPE ............... 98c ()MP AXES ............ , . ,, from $2.49 AIR MATTRESS REPAIR KIT : ......... 98c RUGGED COMPASS .-................ 79c GI WATIRPROOf MATCHES . ; , .. box 19c , , WASH BASINS ............... from 49c FOLDING CAMP SHOYEl CAM PIN Ci llOT MT OM hi l iMfli& MNllll ludllK ~l. G.I. STYLE RIG. $i.91 . ~n· ...,,, l.. •• .... ~ ••• ,.. · £QDIPMEN·T ! , .. Fein ,.,.n11 hr 1ttrqe. :-~· ,~. ,. . i:~ ~:o ,: ..5-PC. MESS KIT i'fiia1 99c $1.29 SNAKE BITE KIT · REG. · $2.98 '1'' NAVY TYPE/ ~~ •Heavy Canvas Duck I • ' 99c · UVEITUP .. : . rsst~nf 1\yll: ' I• New St~ 19't Arrlrecll. WIANGLEI • • ·• WESTERN SHIRTS . ' _ YOU'll.1l0Vt THIS(-111 n1w c1lor1 111 ,11141 , .. anil ion•' \flen. C.1111plttt 1fotk 1f ntck 1i111 '1nd 1IHYI lttflfll. '$695 LONG'. SLEEVES "It's BELL .. BOJTOM Ti.nie" . ' ·l FOR· Guvs I fro~:~evi~s®. ITA-PMST MlfH.Jhp~clt1.,wl;ti' th1 hll $t IOtt•m m11'o;o' ~ N"J, Whll\1 ""' "-. 1 1t14 P1w4d tlu1. Slz11 26 t. ~4. .. ' ... ' .. . . ....,l!!"I: Dver 400 ·Rifles •nd Shotgiin~ On ·Displ~y~~. " .1 SIC· ~H!' IJ~rlr ~G""r' l!lilot ~"'"Nt-b i't!'!!l''r b,..;t '<ID tMlr fltl~'iJ~flntl lll'l!Yfl'JOU lftfJ-l'hi ...... front• -..-~" $~0.DO 22~1ftt tO'i~,5.00.~Sh9t9..,, G'°'!r1·1jils. lf 1ti··11icld' !A!!i• Jn inf "' ltr'yo~ ~ of tllt Urp>t ~-"'-""" hi F'·-~ntiUftml1t ., 1 • 1~ • f\ ... I l?.. ''t ·· :t1 ' ~ ' 1 ' ' • • • • Wiltchitter • Btrttt1 ~ • .Atmtfi••· · • Smith & • Browning . • Walihtr Wesson • Wt1therby • S~ • Remington • Charlts D1ly •/1h1ci · <' Ll1in1 ~·Colt .Rulfr • S1ko • ~ &·R • ' . ~ ~ "The. Worid'1 'Slro\19'st klt·At!Wn· Ji!lel" :t..~:· ::.i ~:. ~:::, ·:,,:~ ..... ~ RE~ll,GT,ON Modc;t.I . ~(»Oi': ""' nflo mou ..... " ... ~ ,..;~ .•. ' 11•1•£•-"USTOM DELUXE . '!-th• •fr!!'l••t 1cK1111 •"' !Mii hi 1.;1 . . ~ • J.,,-,. , · _ , ' ' rifle. ~11111 it clo114. Now yeur c1rtrldti1 222 llm · 2,l I 9 . . , rin11 1f IOIJ4 1fHI. Y" wi11't 11t ••t· Mlg &,n"t . · ttr 1ccur1cy. Or 1 clelftH trittff ' II. '! · .., ht1d " ,ro11etl4 •1 t111" •••rl•Hhtt · . ., · ~ "" $99 s Or 1 touth•r flnl1h. Or 1 """ coMt'rt-USTftlCl_.ftil.ts · 1 ' Abl1 •lock, , S~VE $SS 1 I • I . j Trailers at Cirint~s·. --I • ·-.l '· , . CAMP' TRAitERS ~ ' .1* fasr to fowl " . . * fur to Patld ' ,, * fasr ·fo Set Upl , * Easr to Own!· . I . . , Wlttll) ftV ft~ cantplftt" ytU. Wint ft Clfl9' : treuW ~"· Colem1n knows thlt. St .... '. wt diskiMd evr~(Mlplif ti'afftrs 'wt bpt , f" hf litlnd. 1111 r...tt Jt l ·lbtt 9f .... Ill... I 1 .. , .i,.11n, .... ,.... ""' .ottlld,ift l'"W .'. -~ °"".......N uiOlplltt p!ol1h111. · ~.795' ' . !' . r • , . ste ffltm ~l~I Gra,;t'•I' · • • ... ~ 1 • • . . " '.~ I \ . l . \ • • • ' ·I-a-.=--=--------------------------------------..----------------------__, • '.All at-Once Mantle Re~lizes IIe;·s Not a .. Player. .. • L NEW YORK (UPI) -It takes a wblle fer the lhock to hil · In~y·Mantle'a cue, It tool! a little loqa',. nearly two months. Thell It hit him all at once. But hard. Tbe phnue-milin and -'""'1Jlllly might guea tblt U It WU Coin« 'lo hit Mickey M1111lle anywhere It pro- bably would do so somtwhere around hia 'home In Dollai or maybe durlnf a vlllit !o Yankee Stadlum, but llley'd all be dead ~wrong became that wun't the way U wa "lit all. • , Tbe ploce w~ It hit him wu o.u.it. 'He. was there to' do IOfne of, the color ~ In COllJundioo with NBC'• :Same ol.lhe week I -le of weea ii• . ' and all« be I-.s.1n1 .W be had "' do be Ulought be'd like to .. Into the Tiltn' clubhouse: and aee acme of hi! buddies like Ncrm c&ab, Al Kalil>e aod Denny McLain, off whom he hit h1a next· to-la.st homer, which put him one up on Jimmie Fon. Once ·lzlalde Ille Deln>lt dressing room, Mantle got the aJad hand all ll'Olmd. He has alwaya: betu Uked by rlval players. The 37·year-old u-Yankee sluger felt completely at wt there In the TI,ren' q-ldddlq, laucblnl and chatlln& with 1111 old frlendl, · Mantle doesn't remember whom he was ta1k1nC to at tbe ·ume or what he was ta1kln( .-but be -nmtmber on Before i·Retlrement Banks .Deserves Chance To Taste Baseball Plum • It al><ays hag aeemed a ~al Inequity that SCan Mua!al llbollld not parlldpate in one more Workt Series befort bantlnl up his CIMlnal. unllonn fer good. He hid IUCh a fabulous career and was iuch i.n outltanding pt;nenallly that It ... mec1 only righl that baseball'• grtl&elt evert -lbe World Serles - would come his way in lh~ last few ~-' --~ And 50 It is now with anotber of the groats u be aaauredly ii .. the final ateps ol Ille caner. ' Al JI, Ernie Banks doool!'t fi&UH to be eeU~ many more years. ,In bil 'Pfevlous )& •~.aaons with tht Chlcaco Cubs he ham • had a prayer of playln1 In the lamed October baseball claaslc. But now, after suffering through some borrendoul campaigns as a Cub, Banks , may al lut mJiJe Int amblU~ of all maJor )equers -playing in the World -· ' , 1" <* are currently taking th'e Na· Uonal t.eacue'a Eutern Division apart. And Blllb' bat ii ooe of the reaaons. In fad, In m lnnlnp ol IClioo agalnat the San Diep Pam.. Tuesday, Ernie drove tn seven nms wltb a pair of homers and a double In his leam'1 I~ victory. Hltt1n& home runs bu been old hat Angels -send Knoop to -Sox Thal trade An«el general manager Dick Wallh hag been promlllng lately finally came off this mornlng. He traded good.field, no-hit second buanan Bobby Knoop lo lbe Chicago White Sox for switch-hitting second but.man Sandy Alom1r and rtUef pitcher Bob Priddy. The Angela waited 1lJ seuol\ll for Knoop to 1W1 awtngtnc a big bat belon gtvtni up on him thla morninC· He wu ·1Utlln& .117 after Tu..ciay'• game. ; lie i5 considered one of tbe best fielding tecond basemen In bl1eb1JI. I Alomlr. a :ZS.yaM!d Puerto Rican wllo blll been ~Yin« pro bell 1lne be was 17, bit .254 last year in a reserve role With the White Sox. 1 Jt11 tale l:ii!1st amap ht'1 pogted in the 81&Jon, u.'e h!Wng .224 now. Knoop, who Uvee In Yorba Unda, bad lib --,jn lie when he h~ » .. .Ut ... , JotlfJCJ ,ublequent seasons or J3I, .J41 • lllid .)#. • Bafll llil>tn will join the Aniels Fri· 4IY ra Hew ,Y ""-· i . ' AJomir WU -lo Ille leadoff pool· fi,; In the Wlillo S..·battlng order May I Gd bot bit JI! since tbei. Priddy hag no 1-'lf ID Illar pmcs. alnce he came to the CUbe In Ull3. He on11 socked t w o that eeucm. But after tbal the bat ol Ernie Banks qulckly becap>e a mp«tOd ltan by oppoolng pjl.. chers.· Banks clouted t4 round-tripper• fn 1916 and was over 40 for four straight year• (1957-$1). Hi111irh w• 17 In 11151 wben be wu votod Ille Jll9ll val.,ble ~yer it Ille Natlooal Lea&ue· ' " He bad "5 the foUowlnJ: year when agaln be WU named MVP. , 'l1le cub ..,.at. wbo nevar-~ 111 llli minor leagues, ii a dnch to go ewer U)e 500 mark for his career IO?lldime this ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,, WHITE WASH •••••••••••••••••••• ....... He had 4'11 camJnc Into Ille ..... palgn -Ille moot ever by a 8bortltop. At 111• 37 Dana belted SI bomera. Clearly, he's one of the create: of the , .... lie'• been In Ille annual All.Siar pm<, locludlng the 1967 claa.Jc at Anallelm Stadium tblt went IS Innings. But it tetma only proper that thil put player and gentleman ahoukl be ln at least one World s.rtea·belcn l'llll'iq. PS -How 1!>urh would the CUbe be thil year JI Ibey aWJ had the late Ken Hubbe, the fine Youni lltCUXI baoeman ·who perished in a plaoe cruh after letting a major league record for conaecutlve chances without.an error. Hubbs' YO\lllltr brolhera abauld be ccmlng up on \be athleUc acme at C'oltcm High School In the next year.« two. * * * How about plier Brad McCar1Mf of C.la Mesa mp . . . Be beged. a We. .. ID .. -l'ftll!9llJ al C t I t· a MtN Couley a.•, ....... Ms iict •Ute lll·yard llllt llole ol Ille M-Uada c--.adlca~ Excited? llardly. He olnad) Md a llo~ urller la lite -· * * * The WOl'll ii that Emil Neeme ii lbe new vanity bookelball coach at Colla Mesa Hllh School And that kind of news makes you main- laln lallll ln mankJOO and the lhe«y tblt JuaUce will out. Neeme hu ,_ tbrou&h his llw< of mllery and IUldeo<rved -l A lltCUXI chance ii c:ertalnly In on!er In Ulla cale, aner what I alw_,. called a IJnt claas setup In 1111 llr1nf from Newport --ilyearsqo. I Canadians. • I ibool I -ol lbe report wllich ll)'a Ibo memben ol lbe. lail< 1 .... llel that ··~ pre .. lllnl Ol:lmplc rulll .are Ullt'olllltlc," IDd ....... that Cln*fa ••bYob Ha .... le! ol Olrmplc ruioa 111CCOtdlaa to our altuaUon." Tbe report allo .... Mii !hon II no ' ,..... amateon can\ cotnlltl< with pro- f<Nlonali IDCf otll1 rdaln thelt -atatus. "The Olympic Gama baa Ill own set ol thine vividly. All al once It hit him. "For lhe Ont time," he ny1, "it really dawned on me that I wasn't a ballplayer anymore." That fact has sunk ln by now. It baa sunk in with ManUe; it has sunk in with bia wife Merlyn -"It'• ao wonderful having him home for the first tlmt:" -and it certainly has aunk 1n with Ille Yankees. They mils Mickey Mantle. '1.illc.h matea: it mutual because when you pin him down be admlil he al&<> mialea them. "After 18 fears in a baseball uniform, It's a little 8'rango not lo be IWtinc up every day.'' lie aaya ... Really, tboqb, I should've .quit three or four years .ago. C-. . /lll<t the pod yeara I bad It w11 Joorh to lake the bad dl\YL '11!ero"~ Um .. ; ·-1-what bad to be done, only i . wmt ,a'ble to do it.'' ' During his early days with the Yankees, Mantle confesses he was oomtthlng ol a pl(eon when It came lo any outaide buslnea. Mick ey's lnitJal ventures didn't exactly bracket him in the same league with the Rothschilds and Rocl<ef ellen. But Umes have changed and ao has Mickey Mantle. He's doing fine now financially wttb h1I Mickey ManUe's men'• sboc>I, wblch show 55 franchises already 110id ammd the nation and more buyers amious to get in, and with bis Country COoldn' mtaurant chalo. "'.fhe · men's storu have caught on great so far," Mantle , says. "They're keeping me busy but 1 sWI have time to spend with my OOys and that's something I cou1dn't do too much of before." Mickey bas four sons, Mickey, J r., 16; David, U; Billy, 11, and Danny, 9. All art home except MJckey, Jr., who attends Riverside Military A c a d e m y at Gainesville, Ga., and spendl three months of the school year at Fort Lauderdale. Mantle doesn't ordinarily get excited about something ooe of his boys baa done, nor does he usually get worked up too much over a catch by a centerflelder be- cau.ae ~ made a couple blmlelf, but he still can'\ get Over A corker'b;J'ned in oot long ago by Mickey, Jr. "Up to tti1I year he had ju.It been a real gocxl golfer," ManUe say1 about his oldest boy. "He badn't piayed -11 at all. But at this mllitaq_academy wbere be goes bow be plays ceoter fte1' and II looks as though he's il:oina: to be a real good ballplayer. I saw him play one game in Fort Lauderdale and he made one of tbe damodcst catches I ever aaw. I mean it wu a great catch." To keep b1a own hand in, Mantle often goes out to his backyard and plays catch wllll llavid, Billy and Danny. No h!Wng, jusl tossing Ille ball end catclllnC II Banks Gets Seven RBis In 19-0 Win -CHICAGO (AP) -The rampaging Chicago Cubs reached some giddy heights with a record·lying 19-0 victory over San Diego and are convinced they' can win the N aUonal League pennant. MICK AT ·THE MIKE -Starting a new career in t.elt'vlaion broadcutlng, Mickey ManUe mans a ml~ooe during an NBC game of the week tele- Uill'IT.....,_ cast . Mantle said the fact that he was no 1onger a ball player first hit him during a visit to the De- troit Tigers' dressing room a couple of weeks ago. Senators Win in 10, 2-1 Injuries Still Plague Halos By JOEL SCHWARZ Of '" O.l!r Pllft lltff Who'a OD fint., the old Abbott and ColteUo battball routine, was a pretty funny bl~ but there's nothing fwmy about Ille California Anegels' curnnt dlle1pma, wtM:l'1 In unJform. 'A ._y Bill Rigney watched his barg· ed up Angels 8lumble to thelr loth loss in the last 13 1ame1 Tutlday night at Anaheim stadium, 2-1, In 10 Innings lo the WaahiJ>Clor Senators and tbeo looked ahead "'Friday. "We llbollld have (Rick) Rdchardl and (Tom) Salriano roocly, b11' I dofl't know what we're' eotng to do unW then," the Anael nipper said. "The general manager ls rioin& buggy trytnc to get us aome help and I've; never been this strapped for playen. With a club as thin u this you can't mowi too qu&ct, you have to wait tor lhat one bl& chance." Thal bll chance for Rigney and Ille Anll•il came In the -ol lbe 10th rulea," tlle TtJecram quotes ~ a 1111nr· "U eai.ta _,\ like lbe rulea, U Clll pl "'l n •1 11 limple II.that. "Ol:lmplc rulel are wrlttan by the ,.,._,..u,. ol IJ5 dlllerenl countrlea ~ Ille w0rld. Until tbey'n chanpcl, they -be ""l'O<l<d· "JullJ>ecause an lndlvldllal doem'I Ukt the rulea. lben'I DO l'UIOl1 lo dlal1p ll)'lng. "II Canada -·t llkl the rul .. eoven11., Olympic "pmentatlvea, then when he used one pinch-hitter and two pinch-nlMUS in a futile attempt to even the llCOre. Bobby Knoop opened the frame with a bad-hop single off Frank Howard's glove. Rigney then sent Clyde Wright ln to run for Knoop and Ruben Amaro In to hlt for reliever Ed Fisher . Amaro tried to sacrifice Wright to se.- Angel Slate IMV 14 -A•I• .... WU llJl'lllfori. 7:!S I ·"'• ltM"C "'" 'M'I 16 -AflM'b •I N"'° Yort, •:14 Jl,m, KMPC (1101 Mt'I 11 Allffll ti N-York. 10:11 1.m. kMPC (1101 MJ! H'it) A"llUI: cl NfW Ytr\ t2l, t :» u.m. "A:, -Ant911 •I e.-. •:~IJ.m. ICll<\il"C UIOI -~-""9tll t i ~ 4: •. m. KMPC 011 ,,,,.., -~ ,, '°"1~ io: •.m. '™CS tt'I' MIY -A*I• 11 J , •: f•£$· '™'.""'kM~ 11m.., -""'"" • 1ro11, 1 , •• m. c cond, but tapped Int ball back to the mouM and Wright was forced at second. Dennis Higgins then got Roger Repoi and Jim ~gosi to eOO the game and send 7,741 fans borne. ''The bunt Wll the big play," Rigney &aid. "It's the fil"ll time Amaro hasn 'l It wwldn\ be eligible for the Olympic Garnes." The MWIJllP<r allo quotes llarold Wrtght, ""' pi:ufdeiif of Ille Canadian Olymplc Alloclatlon, as supportlo1 Bnm- dage In his lland. From Raba~ Moro«o, Wright · Is quoted M aaylng Cl!lada should accede to the Olympic rules and: "I don\ think that Canada -a coontry . of only 20,000,«XI people -should make Its own Olympic rules." , done ll right for us. He'll-'itsually gocxl at IL "Tb.is was Lhe win we've been looking for in the three weeks. we 'can 't get any better pitching than Messersmith gave us. He juSl can't pitch any beUer." M~smlth held the Senators to only four hits in the seven Innings he worked, but one of them was MJke Epstein's home run over the centerUe.ld fence in the top of the first. Bubba Morton got Messersmith off the hook in the seventh with a long homer to left, but that only prolm.ged the Angel agony. Consecutive singles by Ken McMullen Ed Brinkman and Paul Casanova off knuckle-baller Fisher in the 10th decided IL Jim. McGlolhlin (2·2) will go for the faltenng Angels tonight against Wa.shingtoo's Jim Hannon (2-2). WAIHllrttTOM CALll'OltNIA •II r II r1tl '" r II rllf IJftatr, ti J I t lttPN. t1 $ t , 511'9uO, rt a • t ,.,....1, u , • 1 El'lttiri. Ill J I I Jttw.l'DM, cl 4 t 1 H.A.11191, II I 0 0 Momori, II ' I 1 ,. .... -rd, If 4 I 0 A.ROdfltUt&. Jto 4 t I l .Allt1I, 211 4 I 0 Slv•rt 111 J O I M<4\11lltfl, Jto ' I o Ouv11111t. rl 1 o 1 lrJflk1N11, Ii 4 1 o E .. n. < J 1 o C.MllO.,., < ' I I ICflllOfl, 2b ' t J l.N!Mtt. p J I t Wrltl'll, pr t t I kld'w'ri. II I t I IMlMrM!IJl'I. p 1 I I Hol!N11, ._ I I 0 Vo.., pf! I I t HltOlrll. II I I 0 E.Fbl>tr, 11 I I t ,f Al'M,._ pfl I I I t UOlll\iM. pr 0 • • • Toi.It JJ J 1 J T1i.i. ....-, t i W1illlflf"" IOI 000 -I -, CetlrVllll 9t11 001 toll t -1 Of'. -WttMIM"" 1. C•llfror11'9 J, LOI -w_. """" '-C..11'onlle 6. ttl -Fr1100tl, IC,_., H" -f"'t.lft Ill, Mort'Olll 01. II -0.'<'t!lllo. I -UMlr. ''"""''" l.M00r1 t-2/J I 1 1 1 I taWtti I/I I I I t I """"" CW.WI J • t I I t """""'mtlfl I • I l I t l .Flllllr IL,0..1) t J I I t 1 HIP -lty Mn51,..mll~ !Slr'Ol.ICI). Tims -2.Jl, 'I'tle CUbs lied the highest shutout score in National Leaaue history Tuelday u DI.ck Selma turned in the teamt1 third straight shutout and Ernie Banks clouted a pair of thJ'ee.nqt homers and drove in ..... runs. "The Cubs 'Will shine in 68," hollered Banks in the clubhouse after the game. '"I'hill i.! our year." Ernie credited his big day to two things. "It was senior citizen.a' day," chirped the 38-year-old CUb, "an'd I bad to give my people something to cheer abc¢. And my 6-year-old daughter, Jan-Ellabeth, was out there. "No, she didn't say anythlng. all she could do was smile. What's prettier than a smile from a G-year-old lirl." The only other homen Ernie bu hit this season came in h.is first two Umes at bat opening day when hls lather, F.d Banks, was Ernie's guesl The 19-0 triumph equalled. the league record first set by the CUbo In 1906 agaimt the New York Giants and equall· ed by Pittsburgh against ·St Louil In 1961. Stlma's first Cub victory, a three-hit" shutout with 10 strikeouts, followed shutouts by Ken Holtzman Sunday and Ferguson JenkiM Mmday. The feat tied a Cub team reccrd (If three straight in 1909, but is far &bort of the. major league mark of Ill straight posted by Pittsburgh back in 1902. Selma was both elated and disappointed' with his performance. He walked four and felt that a f t e r walkmg Tony Gonzalez in the fint inning be lh8uidn't have given any free J>MSeS. Andretti Hits 171 in Indy Practice Run INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (.\P) -Marlo AndretU continued hla drtwl 'l\leldq· toward the 175 mJlea per haw spied he predicts ls needed to win Ille pole posllion for this year'• Indianapolis SOO. ' His practice lap of J7l.49t m.p.h. wu the f1stest by a pislcn engine car in lhe history ol the lndlanapoU. Mal« Speedway. Only turbine cara hlv• ....,, faster. ~ AndtetU already owned the I-lap · ol the year at l'lll.117 m.pll. on Monday A. J. Foyt is next wllll a speed ol !11.137 m.p.h., and Foyt 11'u OTtr t• In two pra~ runs Tuesday. { , .... Andn!tu n!pe•ted Tutsd.ly 1111 predJo. Uon tblt 171 m.pJ>. will bi Ille top speed on the opening day ol quaUf~ Saluro day. Andtitu, whO hil .....,..,, Ille-.... la two of hll prevlou1f four 500-mUt rlCISJ hoped to take his Lot,.Ford and STP Special out..,. more tJme ~.but the track wu cloaed by lifl)>t showero Ille last two boura. - Foyt'1 teunmale, Rotor M<Qustey, drlvlnr a car ldenUcaJ IO foyt'o Willl a turbocharged Ford engine, had Ille third·· fastest speed of Ille day, 168.?17. • I ' I < I I l ' I I I I ~ ( h h \ ~ ti ti It p B 2 1 I 4 2 1 I 4 0 u • • i • ... • •... . y., " •;: .... y Ott to CIF Tennis · Wars Again . ' OAILYPILOT • County Invitational , I Engman Charg~s1 Into Spike · Duti¢s -pmn1-t oports· llpru bi Oranp c.umy, Earl Enpws would easf. ly aecun a rlllldbg In the lop 10 In any pop.•l•dt¥ poll. . A ham·handed, gttgarious 1 o r t , Engman lw an lnlectlous laugh that rats aomewh<re 'belween Phyliss Diller ond Ed McMallon. And so hi! m1ny acquaintanf;!eS Wert qulle pleaaed to learn Iha! lhe Santa Ana High School track coach hid been named meet director of Orange County 's second annual tnvitatiOflal track m~. The srnoollMlkulled Engman has """11· ed into the task wtth no hesitaUon. ~- "When J was Wed if I'd be interested In running the meet, my answer was 'Let's 10.' " The meet, scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Saturday, June 14, will be held at El Modena Stadium where Engman spends hla early evening and weekend hours &et.- ting the place In shape for some of the worli:l's greatest athletes. "La.st Sunday I took five Of my dlstance nanners and one of them brought his girl friend and we painted numbers oa 6,100 seau in four hours."· 1210 !or the atadlum. And -,I tel them we've got IO mal!o "'11 -IC phyalcal cbaJ>Ce, tt•1 .. good .. -.. Encriian , 45, has been Sania Ana lllCb'I !tack coach ...C. 111111 ond allo -al an 1s1lstanl varllty football COICh ander. Tom Bakiwlo. I ! He'a just now llnllbJnc up Illa bllj; scbool ltock .....,. ond Ibo_, !old ,.., the June 14 meet ii acceler•Unc· "We're just """' atarlin& lo rull)l work. I ,_. I've put in ~ • ~ cl peyalcal. _, .. u -Pl ...... lot more to~come." ~ Ho reporla GOly ... -•Car. "We came real clole to setUnc ICIDt of U-Kenya Olympiom for Ibo meet but they had coounlued themael-tO . another meet just before we cent.ad4!d them." "We did get Jay Silvest<r'a eolr7 bllml: today, though." Siivester, an Olympian, la Ibo dilcm ""'Id recMI holder Crom Utah. Two Orange County Olymplana .,.. oz, peeled to perform -decilbkn -.P. Bill Toomey ol Lquna 8-11 llld btcN jump allver medallsl Ed Carulhon ol Garden Grove. Newport Harbor H!gh's tennis team. year in and yeer out among the CIF''s finest embaits upon another CIF playoll campaign Friday. Newport won the tiUe in 1967. Front row , from left: GleM Cripe, captain; Kim Perino, Dave Eastman, Bill Paley and Bo..b Ogle. Back . row: Bruce Charles, Bob Haskell, Robbie Cunningham, Pat Wilson , coach; Jim Rapp, Bill Brock, Bill Hart and Greg Ogilvie. The Tan' first match is Friday against Bolsa Grande. The preliminary entry lists suggest the meet wUJ easily be the top track and field event ever stated in the county. Olympic 800 meter champion Ralph Doubell ol Australia and counLryman Ron Clarke will be on hand, in additioo lo 1ome of America's finest. Other establilhed -... i:::J: are Frlllk CovelU, jawettn; John ., pole vault; Geoll VanderMock llld 11<it1 Wbltney, --· and Art Walker, lriple jump. LONG GRAY LINE FOR KATELLA ACE Mission Vie1· o Trio Sea King Foe · Loaded With Engman is c~klng early to mate sure any world rtcOl'ds established at the meet wUI not be denied recocnJtion because of inegularitits. "I'm going to cheek out the pole vault area closely because I have a hunch the concrete slabs that support the standards don't conform to the rule that uya they ha ve to be from 13-&i to 14-2 apart Tlcketa, priced al 11 and II.JO, are avallable 11 mulual .,.._ ond al Ille benliitlln& Clllldna'a liolpllal bi arui,e. Area Sports Clipped Short Bob ShUwin, prep bastelball st.lndout at Katella High School in 'Anaheim. will enroll at West Point this summer, the DAILY PILOT has learned exclwively. A ~10 h!gh;-scoring guar'd, Sherwin was undecld~ bftween Stanford and West Poiiit for several weeks. He has been awarded a Congressional appo intment by Rep. James B. Utt In addition to being sludent body vice- presldent at 1Katella, Sherwin carried a 3.5 grade point average. He averaged 13.7 points per 11ame laat season and was named to lhe ClF 's class AA first team. Santa Fe Puts' Heavy Sticks Against Tars By ROGER CARI.SON Of tM o.Jb' Pli.t Stilt Newport Harbor High will be facing a couple of .~plus hitters and three pitcben -of equal strength when the Sailon journey to Santa.Fe High School In Santa Fe Springs Friday afternoon for first round hosUWtles in CIF AAM baseball action. Sant.I Fe's Chiefs, runners up in tht San Gabriel Valley League lo Bellflower. posted a M mark .in c~t play aft.er 106· ing five of their first rune games. Lead.lng tbe oUenalve department for coach Bob O'Hlgglns nine are Steve llickam and Nat White. Hickam has a .430 league batting average while White is a step down at .420. Backing up those two is first baseman fo.1ike Snapp with a ,37S average. The pitching talent has been divided equally between Ron Clark, Alan Bill- ingsley and Relchi Emerson. Clark has pollted a 5-4 mark with a z. l ERA while B\lllngsley is 4-1 (1.lZ} and Emerson 3-1 (0.68). The Chiefs won the Warren-O'Jwney Invitational toomament before league play with three one-run decisions over Gahr, Warren and Excelslor. O'Hlggins considers his catcher, White, his most reliable hitter. White has three home runs to his credit in San Gabriel Valley competition. The Chiefs finished a game up on Nonralk and Lynwood in league play for the right to enter the playoffs, droppln& their fiq,iil tilt. lUckam. White and Snapp are an. league candidates, On All-Crestview Mike Gray of Mission Viejo High School Jed a contiJ!gent of three DiablOs on the official AU.Crestvi.ew League baseball team as selected by the Oran'e County Sportswriters Assoclll!fon. Gray, with a .356 league batting average, waa-selected at catcher while mates Steve Hazan and Tom Gardner made first team selections at firs! base and outfield. 'Charfipion Villa Park's Stan Russell was named player of the year while Mel Grable of the Spartans w8s named l'Oach of the year. Orange Coast area performen who received honorable mentions were Blair Bollas of Laguna Beach and Glenn Tsuma of San Clemente. All-Cr_estview League Poa. p Pleyor School Cleas Stall Russell Villa Park Sr. p c IB Dav& Waiting ' El Modena Jr. Mike Gray Mission Viejo Jr. Steve Hazan Mission VieJO Jr. Art Rocco Tustin So. 28 3B SS OF c steve King Villa Park Sr. Daryl Carlson El Modena Sr. Klni 'Cates Orange Sr. Tom, Gardner Mission Viejo Jr. Rocord 7·1 3-2 Gary Wano Orange Sr. Jeslie Salgado Orange So. OF Utility . 405 .286 .329 .353 .244 .343 .3M .375 .390 Player of the Year..,. RusseU, Villa Park Coach of the Year -Mel Grable, Villa Park Honorable Mention: Bob Blacklidge (Foothill), Frank Bojorquez (El Modena), Lee -Myers (El Modena), Howard Hoyt (Foothill), Blair Bollas (Laguna Beech), Glenn Tsuma (San Clemente). With .347 Average Rustlers' Richardson Tops Area JC Batters The 1969 Orana:e Coast area junior COi· lege baUing race was a one-sided contest right from the opening day ol the baseball seaaon when Golden Welt's Ron Richard<on banged out 1hrto hlta In four trips. Richardton naturally couldn't maintain that .'750 pace-at the plate, but wound up as the leading batter In the area with a aoUd .347 average with 35 hJts in 101 trips lo the plate. His closest challengers and the area·s only other .300 hitters were teammates Noel Paul!on and Myron Pine&. P'1ntff' "'~ ·~ ... .... COt1t1nt 105 2/l t1 II 2/l II 16 2/l 20 . ' l l/J s SAOOlllACIC 11 l' ~J 11 10 0-2 • 7 0.1 ' s 0-0 2 1 1 .. Al 1t N 1tt1 av•. Kollollkl lll .) 10 ' .lll lontnldlff 16 ' u 12 .20 S\lllMtlenll fl 16 H lJ .71111 s..-. '' 10 IS S .2'2 Ill~ '1 I J 7 .1:11 llldl:ll'OOll 10 0 1 0 .200 E .. i. n J U s .It, ~lr• It ' 16 6 .Ito Wiii*"-M 1 I 4 .UI N•llell 76 6 11 1 .US ,,._ ,, l ' ' .13' "-"""" JI l 1 o .ur ,...,,, lJ. • 2 0 ,ll.) Newport's lass.• venture into baseball playoff action ended In 1964 w_hen Long Beach Wilson eliminated the Sailors. Paulacm, who banged out five hits in his last nine at bats closed out the campaign with a .330 mark while Plots put together 1 ~ a .301 average . * l-::r Saata Fe (12·7·1) 2 Lynwood 'Jldl •1 l 5 2 ,OSI lllv.. 1, 7 I D .06) 4-1fll1 .05' P'lt<'l:N 11 t o o .aoo Mlt -S"'"'ltftll fll. l• -S-11...,, L0119'1td:· ff {1 t«ttl. 71 -Sweetltflod, E .. le U ..adll, L°"'" lllCkff ((), $1!,lbbt. ICOYO!tkl, DtrOyal!lrt J 11<111. lllf1tflO!dlr, Wlllllm• (1 tKhl. 2 P9ly 2 2 Bellflower S Orange Coast College's leading regular 1 Ploneer o 3 E1cetslor 0 biller WU Mlke 1-11. who compiled a 1 Jordan 3 6 Norwalk I .297 average, while Scott Longnecker <I Gahr 3 I Cal lligb 2 paced Saddleback College's regulan with z Warren 1 1 Lynwood o a .291 mull:. 1 Eicelaior O 9 Beltnower I In addltlon to winnlng the battlin& U\le, J .BellOower 14 2 Excellior 1 Richardton led the area or wu among <I E1aLsior 1 2 Not.-w1llt l the leaden In almoot every bllllng 1 category. o Norwalk 2 4 Cal High 11 Cal HJgb 2 l Lynwood 3 Barons Honored """ "'°'1lty -MV1 P'lln IMMI Cott!11!11 °'"~It M t n . ... _ Cl..tl!": t:4 .MdtfWll M'J: 0~11 09'of, c. -c .... 1,.; ""'" Melo"""'; M.V! .,.,,,,. l Mdl. ·--··· ~.,, ... -,._, ... 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'''· """",._ '"· DtOeer. ,.,.. 11111, ltWIMWI 0 Mtfll, )a -JI:~ (JI, Or1f. Hffl, ......... T-. ill'INI, HVtCfllMll, Mel'k .. ill'l 'fflo _. 11 ~). 21 -ll~ [II, P'w• 141, .,._ ""' ..... fl ..,.,, Clrftltt. Of'lmtlt. a-it It .c1t1, ~. T~ It "9dll. HollOll ..... "''"""' ...... -.. ·-............ . ...... . ... .. ._ ... i) 1/2 ,, " » •. , ,1 4 >11Jto• 1'113 3 ,,, " w ., J :l'I 3' 1• .. 3 " ai » 11 1·1 t l/J 11 ....... ' Heavy Hitters . . ' Santiago Hlah Scbool 1111'!1iJhes the op- positions !or Corcna clel Ma. lligti In first round CIF MA baseball ICllon Friday afternoon and the Cavallen present a formidable force with lmPoSlng JbatUng av.,...es, good pitching and eight wins In their last nine outlngs. · .Coach DaveiJarman of the Cav(l>rlngs his second-pJac& club 'from the Garden Grove League lnto Ccrona det Mar's con- fines with ah: batters in r the starting lineup with averages .300 Jr better. His big pn, catcher Tom Heterle, apprta a .620 ~ aviraje. Two others at .400 are Terry Lindsay at second base and Steve Ketth1y Jn the out~ lleld. Jarman hopes to start his ace richlJiandtr, Bert Blyleven, buL the decision Js sUU tn the air because of ill· DOSS. Blyleven bas an 1-2 league mark wilb an 0.85 era to his credit. He's beatea champion Garden Grove twice dwlng ~campaign, 4-1 and Z..I. Lut year he fashJoned a perfect game bi dispoolng cl Pacillca. U Blyieven can't make It, the Cava will start rilhthander· Don Koltlad, 2-1, who has two llhutoull to hi> credit When queried about Heirele, the CavUer coach replied, "He's everything. "He's good for the loo, ball and Is just an overall threat everytlme he come's to the plate. He doesn't strike out." Santi.ago comes into the CJF playoffs no stranger to the compeUUon. The Cavs won the Garden Grove League tiUe Jut year before bowing to Orana:e in first round action. Sutlaco (tM) I Ne!f 0 4 Garden Grove l ~ Saddleback 6 2 La Qulnta 0 6 EJ Dorado l 7 R. Alamilol • 6 Sonora 2 2 Bolsa Grande 0 7 Pacifica · 3 5 Pacifica 6 0 Gardea Grove 1 2 Garden Grove I 2 La Quinto 3 3 La Quinta 0 O R. Alamitos 3 6 R. Alamitos I 3 Boha Grande 1 4 Bolsa Grande I $ Pacifica 7 "What I do not want to happen ia for a record to be turned down that's set at the meet. "I'm going to call people like Ed Burke and John Pennell, to find out just what they want in the hammer and vault areas." The meet will be taped by CBS and shown the following day on nationwide lelevision. Eogsman reports he'• recotvln& abun- dant cooperaUon from all frontl, "The Orange School Dislrict lw 'ju&t betn great -they're only chargi..PI UJ Kennedy Whiz Player of ·Year Kennedy High School's sensational Alan Bannister was named player of the year for the official All-Freeway Leque baseball selections by the Orange County Sportswriters ASllOCiation. - Kennedy, champion of the circuit, land· ed four players on the first tum. Dick Stueti of Kennedy was named coach or the year. Ba.in.1st.er led the league with a phenomenal .5.23 average while t111tes Gary Atwell (.155), Dan Parma (.500) and pitcher Art Sanchez (U) chipped in with great effort!:. ALL-,llll'WAY L•&OU• P'ln l T•"" N•-. Id""' '"" ••• ·-Oiiton. 1'rfN ''· " . .. A.elunlnt, s. .... ~,,. "· .. .JI( .,N'lltllr, ~ ••• SS ... H-"· ,...,,..,,. ... " ••• Plt'IN,IC.,,""'1Y "· .. .,.. AIWl9!1. K~ "· OF ..,. -·· 'ullitrtlll'I "· .. • •• ic-.L~I ... c "'' H........,, LOWtll "· , •• ·-·-· ''· • .. 'l ltl.,1t11;J, S.vt-... Utll •a."" sec.M TMlll "-· ld!Mt ,_ -·-· ,.._ ,_, ••• " ••• ,, ..... , SllllY' Hlll1 ''· " .w IWw!i, TnN •• .. .ns 1111n1, \..t "'"'' "· .. ·"' c~1.s.-... OF .... IC••· Su""' Miii$ ''· ., .... l•-· ·-""' "· .. ·'" W1lllt. l t Hitbr1 "· c ••• c:-..eltnd, Trvf ... • ., SdllCI, ....... ,,,.. ... , M Klnilff, LI -~ ... urn ..... Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE Eul Dtvlatoe W L :IZ 11 17 14 14 17 12 II 13 II II II CHICAGO Pl'M'SBURGfl NEW YORK PHluADELPH!A ST. LOUIS MONTREAL ATLANTA· Weit Dlvl1loa ll • II 12 11 II H 11 LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO CINCINNATI SAN DlEGO HOUSTON 15 20 12 23 Pct. GB .661 .54& .152 .129 .419 .379 . 700 .eoo .111 .4'17 .129 .343 • 1 ,,,, I • 3 !\\ 7 I I\ 11 ~i: AMERICAN LEAGUE . E11t Dlvtdtl. W L BALTIMORE 22 12 Pct. GB .1147 BOSTON 19 11 WAS!f!NGTON 17 17 DETROIT 14 1$ NEW YORK 12 11 CLEVELAND 5 21 Wat Dtvhloe .133 JOO .183 .3114 .m MlNNEOOTA 19 I .17t OAKLAND 20 10 .M7 CHICAGO 12 12 .500 KANSAll CITY 15 15 JOO SEATl'LE 13 17 .'33 CALIFORNIA 10 11 .3$7 -·-O.ir.11 lo Olic.,t 1 C,.,.lf!WI I. ~ City 6 M.,.,,.._ 4 .. ltlllwr• I OeklMll j, ..... w ......... t, C.llf9f11le ' ftt lMlntll ... ~ s. Ntw Y"1I ' l 5 51\ 911 13 5 & 7 I ,...,.. ... ,. ._,.,. ((WI •U •I o.111911111 I°"'*' NI. ,,.. ,._ .,. ... '""""° 14) ,, "'""" (NolraM• .... J4), "ltftt CltvtJtlill (Mc00Wtl1 J.j) t i Kt n••• C:llV !Oriti l·GI. flittll Cflkltit ,,...,., Nl 11 OllJM (WI• 1-4), .... Wftlillllt!Ol't (OllM'ilfi ..,) ti CIH'°""' l#o 0'9tl'lllfl t-j), """' M~-(JttiolM WI t i Mllltlaolt f"°'*' Mn I .. ). 1111111 AUTHOltlZID l'ULL SlltVICI AND PARTS· l'Olt ALL IMl'ORTID AUTOMOllLIS Eatancla Blgh School Onlabod -to Newport Harbor bi Cee ~ al Santa Aoa High School In Ute Bee and Cee CIF leMis champlomblp tourna-ment. Estancia'• doublea team ol Jerry Wln!era and Sleva Emery """ Ibo CD doubles champlonablp by d o le at ID I Newport Harbor'• Kim Perino ond Daft Eastman, 4-6, M, 6-2. Newport's Bob ()glo won the Coe tlngles UUe over LoUa11 Ken Maley. Rosetti Wltu E111ncla Hlgb School's Art -deleoled Slave J(aley of 1-a for Ibo Irvine UqlJe 1eDDfl singlea cbant plonablp Monday al1ernooo al Colla_ Hill! bu1 tbe Ea&lel' doubles taam fall hi the lloaJs lo • pali fnlm Corona del Mar • sea KiDp Sieve Tall ond Dick MUJet deleoled Jerry Wlnlen and Sieve Emory, U, 7-6, H !or the !l<Jubla UU.. . Ollna Settfl % Sunset League Soil champion Jim>. tlnltoD Beach qateltn,d two for tbe ClF lndlvldual champlomblpo at Monledto Country Club bi Santa Barl>ara June I at the Siwet circuit qualllylng maJ<h. John Bltllng cl Huntln&too Beac11 waa oecond wllb 74 to Western'• GUJ Hook over the par·71 course at El Toro. Sieve Hayes ol Hunllngton Wll ·foor111 with a 71 while lloui Sml!h cl Newport Harbor was lillh with 77. Anaheim'• Roger Koch picked up their other place with a 74. Reehl f'lra 7% Irvine League champion EltaDcla and . runnerup Corona clel Mar will lumlab all live goU qualllien from the l!>oP for Ibo CIF Individual champlonahlia al Man- teclto Country Club In SaDla Blrbora June 2. Mike Reeh! (72), John FrMa (72) and Buddy C01 (71) ol Corona del Mar and Sieve Robertlon (73) and Lee Dowd (71) ol E•tancla qualllled !or the llnala al Se!clilr Country Club In Hllll!logtoo Beach Monday. 1969 , ....... , .. . . . '1885 r Ava.flable w/AuhwMUc ~ 60U MAL UID CAU l'INllT IBICTIOll OI' UID. -CAii IN SOUTHllN CALl'OllM J~ l lll fl LI I I jl 111p111 I , J100 WUT COAST Hle!IWAT -NIWPOU llACH J~ L'\.ll p 1J 11 31111por t •,, '42·MOI M0-1164 Ao1-.1w• Me e AUSnN°HIAUT - """-ka• .. IA.I -· W. a ...... --------- ' .. DAILY PILOT Start Your Engines!· ·-Houlgafe ; ""hie:1 .... ~ al Jndilnaj>olls eets smoll•r<. eY<l')I ... Ttie ... al tbe -Is r<pr<sented tber< by • llrital, • !Jiltw' fe\endpf -.t In Allltrilll. All al ll1em -" Englilh well and can understand the Americon ldiiJm. lt'a .almoot u K lhe :United N~tiono ha. turned its b.ct m AiDreical auto racln&. . . . ·Id yt:ar there were to.be BeYert fore~ drivers um.al Ult. ac-- cidm)a 11\0t -'the lives al Jimmy Clark and Mil« Spence 8W iqjured Jai:kle S""'8r\, and before the wilhdrawal al turbines lO be driven by DenMi Hulme and Bruce McLaren. · Hulme drove anoCOer car to joi1 Jochen Rindt, Graham Hill and :IO -in the otar\lo( field . Retumi'lC for another go ll the .peedway are Hill, Hulme and IUndL To accommodele them, the F. I.A. allJlOll OlllCOled ,U>e famoul Monte Carlo G<and Prix Ulis' Suriday ,. Ille!' ""!Id """" _,,.. oo Indy ·qualil)'il)I. , . ' Jt'a a unbellev8ble' statdlilft that all Uaree <drJver1 have an uceUent chance ao-wbi'. WQr)dl-.elassJirivth like fbem dori't speod a· month Jn Indiana dOini: lOOthpaste commercials. . ' . !WI and Rindt come to Indy coorte<y o1· Andy Granatetli's whoksale acqui.sKion « the Lctus team, for whom they drive. Hube i& '°be a tea~ ol Californian Dan Gurney. At lhll early st~ ol the game h Is tough to predid ho\11 well tbef°WW do eYen ill QualificaU<m, but they are eaid·to have 1".91" which ~.i:.ert the only "smart" approecbes to :w1nniol \be ,r~e tlliS .,-. IUJl a Rind! wlU drive hilJllY relined wedjfHhaped Lotu~ for the ST.P team. They will be powered by turbo Fords-mid ,will have.the adv&ltage not only ol four-wheel drive but <i Colin ~p­ man 'a expertise in building the most modern ol all 4WD cti.asm. Hubne Will drive a super-low• Olsooite Eagle powered ·by a Gurney-built otoc:k block Foro.•Just-io CM< tho sleek block can't get the job dent, there's a turbo Ferd rill !J~e's name· on it i.itti.og in the Gurney garage. Those are the two wa)'I to go. Turt»cbarged or Mock bk:lc.k. Ha~ a world chlmpioOlbip caliber driver in your car lS!l't a bad tdeo ellller. Who are U--and -good are they compared with the local product? Hill won the thing three. years ago. That and his. worl~ gr~ pri.x driving championships are hLs credentia).s. Enigmatic Hill, the caricature d. a modem major general, some.bing 'between David Niven and Nigel Bruce, is at once controversial, likeable. aloof suave, colorful and WJ:predictable. He' is 40 years ok1. Al~ Hill ii said to be I.Oil the ~· gervative side as a driver, be u ~yoeer the fhd. He 1! a good bet to win U t~ ~ difflcultlal i!tvOlvilfe :tl1t·Mt dogs wbo are supposed to w.in. . Hulme, ~r fo~ )'IPr.ld .chaP'tp)on, was fourth last year behind Bobby U-, GurneY a Mel K"'l"'fl. M the age cl !3 he ;. already a ·wolld gfQhd Prix cliamp and w!nne< ol the <Jan.Am spcris car lerk:!s. • . He W -made wa'ft'S in internaUonal racing CU"Clts as a New 1.ealand clUb df;iv~r 11!1'.ll.to Europe oo a.urrlque "fe&wshiP''pro- eram thft 8190 gave the world Bruce McLaren. H-;,· the tort wM likes to lead the race and never look bact.'lle'li Ull{amlUar in the role ol a stcatqllll, odiemlng to get lbe·bOot'ol-liYe « six lellows Jn mo ol hi\"· He will J!RlblblY try to ,~"!)'~ his bosll, Gurney. ; . B l adt Is Gla ""'1' Boy ' Rindt. lie'• the gliunoor boy ol the tot. • . In hjs first f:rip to Indianapolis, 196?, be learned tbeTili<lity of th•·~·waU ibe bard way, scraping several tmnd.red feet of it fti a fiaini:tg car. His two fbUatJhe!I at Indy haven't been epec- tacu'lar.' .. Viednese Jo IUDdt ii Europe's "yoanc mm•(the wq tltl-·, He is 27:y""'·""' and as -u&iaollc I/boot racing as any )'OUl1I ! ! "'""!. ' driver.. , . . ~~""'' 'J him "H '" To"'11 .._., ROI' Winltelmam ~ -·~ ' e u race semnrOUers If he'had to. Put him ii1 any car. any time, any ~. ... :you know be 'U get the last ""'1« out ol it -and bknltV He.newer ha an off day." wui 00s be the year they piay somebody else's National ~ on: Kemorial .Dey? ' · .. Slfa llle••t E_,.u ·+.«. seein~ly unrtlated and relaUvely ob~e events may baft i<Oll ~for the future ol auto raClll(!. ~ A-feW.wtek:! ago Dodge factory driver Charlie Glotzbach quit the'NAIC&R Gia>d NatiOnal stock car circuit and leveled a blast 111.NAS!:i\ll.. sa);og tt wai a "dictatorshlp." Qe bad.'bi!en'.eevereb-peoalbed for a minor infraction in the pi&; duritc a'raCe, and no·ooe knows what else was going through his·~ whea be teed «I. on NASCAR ofhcials. Glotzbidl is one of11iofie ~who are slow to arcer and immovable when they make up their miOOs: · ~ c:.iJ'cWal2nC.tbroUgh the vast, highly dficient aulO rac· inC eripe\'kie '1e that he ts som to appear on the USAC stock ~r ~JW'Mb ·a· compar~ fact«y ride. Thal means Gkltzbach 1s not out of. ~ aK.oge(Q!r but bq mereJy switched clubs. A .f~ day. ago at a USAC stock car race, U.S. Alto Club ~.Charlie B.an told newsm"' his «tl'lf1lzatioo and the .~ Qar C)ub al•.A!Jteri.... are diocussitlc mutu.i problems atd wllklerq a n>erger. . Thol·USAC ..i SCCA would coosect to "'°"'"" whh each dhel' ii a 1~ve-lttp for the gport. Talk cl muger means either a .J;Jtg league, mulU·miWon dollar step forward or a step backward •towJJ'd the sort of invisible "dictatorship" Glotzbach was cl~. . J • • • (I -~ What it amountJ to is that auto racmg as movmg Ol'W4'"''°' backward, depending on yOur view-pcm.) toward that tiece ol organtuUon enjoyed by tbe NallooaJ rootbeU ~e. It may not happen, but many are working to f!lake 1t. • reahl.Y. . Unfwtunately for G~'s point of Vlt~, which IS not shared pmticly by anycne eJiit,<th!! major·SlllOlionlng bocjid:ar< ap· p.entty in a mood to Wk !ITIOl'e harmordousty from now on. II they get together there may be Jess freiedlxn ol choice for a drl...-choosing to0do whol Glotzbacll did. ·At this point in hlltory, the same type or sanction body feudal l)'Mein exists in motor eport that. caused the NCAA·AAU don· 11Jbroc*. A chanc:e means s.up!d sanctioo wan may no lqer be ' Ible. ' Nobody .in racing wanU a dictatorship, but there may soon be gov""*'I junta at the top m....d ol a handful ol warlmls. Ryun Admits He Quit Dur ing Relay ~ace TOPEKA (AP) -Jim RYUll u quoted tod"1 os PYing be t ,,,,,.q on the oecand leg U>e and>or e in U>e spring relay In the Drake lays at Des Moines two and half-U qo. talk about it. There wasn't a second chance.'' Ryun h enw.d Jn lbe 880 and the mlle in U>e Big Eight ~ Championoblp Relays Friday ond Salllr'dey at Amel!, Iowa. Mater Dei 7E4 ·Victor lnWrapup • " .. 'i l, ' { Cli~cking· the A'rea Greem .j. If ar. ,McCabe,. Montgomery V. ... i .. ,e , 00 " Newport--~ • t ~im all$l. pmni:sUCli flUI Bill M<Cabe 81/Q Cbue< lbe club's ahnual Pro-Am U>e toU,,..y ctkm.n., 1 to "B. M. p...,;..n and hooored lhelr teams TuesdaJ • Malf< Del Hllll Sdiool'• M"""°""'7 will ~Y for the tourney Wednesday. ~n may llllo allempt to Georp'Cbellwl, "111>,tled Wllh night al ·the scbool ~ varsity ba!eball tingenl president's cup < mpiooshlp Included In tile list of com· beol one\ime U.S_Opeo-cham· 'Ill!. ,,..., and Dou1 Dovei waJDd!·..,.i con at Irvine Coast COOnti:y Club .... 1,·10-ls last year'• -"--'ng pion .Jack Fleck, wbo II~. • ~ • .,_ d finished Its Ange1us LeJUn•• Sat d al J 1 r-'" wuuu · 1-:r.. Gtorge uuwun and Lloy with the lk>n's shire of honor• -o-ur •Y ter s u r v v n g pro, Bob Roux, along with tor of golf at M.is&ion Vier· aetaon on a winning note, han 'throoah tbe ellmlnaU~. Jimmy Powell, Jerry Barber, Ei\il'anta in the Ant.eater Grlfnth tied for secimd with_,. in swimming. dlna: Servite a 7-4 defeat at In the vkt president's O.,nt Jimmy· Clark, Jlmmy. E. touma~ who better Fleck's ns. • -' ~ Dovey was named ~ptaia Manorial· Park in Santi ADI It wu Don Conklin dtfeaUnc Thompson, Howard Sml~ score th.Ii day will be awatded William Ywng scored .a bole · and most valuable fbr • the Tueaday afternoon. J. B. ~Jr,, five and four, Moon Mullins, Jack Ellis and ,pee~ prbes. In one Saturday·'on the ·13th .varsli,.!Slrim team. . Victory gave the Monarcbs for ttie • '1JUe ' while 1 h e John Hardy. . -Entry ree 11 $20 which in-, t-iron . Cbrll Rez waa namid m«st an overa11 record of 11;0. and secretary fiigbt ls still up in • The event 13 tw1>iow ball of eludes green fee:, electric cart hole. Young used a tour-. tn vaJUab)e in gymnastics. ended 'the Angehia campaign the air betwten Gordon fivesome with a noon shotgun and admission lo the awards accomplishing ~ l'TG-yard Swim.mile· with a M mark. good for &Ole Peterman and John Jacobs. tart· U rty · feat Varsity _ ClpWn; Oout possesslon of lblrd place. ~and JEdna M.cHug!i s ing me. paFurih.er in!ormatkln can be Dovey: MY: Doyey~ Most: The Monarchs had beaten for a 146 to take a Mls1io11 Viejo obtained by calllng 833"935. S a nf:CI "-•• Improved: Jlm Wlllon. t mixed foursome com· Bee -Clptaid :f Bruce .t.N••~r ... t,•.t.•u• blne.d net ol partners event tournament is sc heduled Fri· Semelffl Ken Nowllng deteafed Jack Talmage ; MV : Jay Farrer~ f' J. •• with Clrolyn Gray and Hank day and will benerit .the UC Wtlder ooe up on tbe lkh hole Most Improved: Farrer. 1 S. I o~ second at 147. lrvine ath1etlc scholatship pro-Jiri'l 1bompsoo won the ban-for the ~rrt's·cup cham-Cee _ Captain: ·J t m '1 l, I ~ -~fu1me':·~~1u:8a"cu: gr:~Jcfd by the e.l I B~t ~~:Paf1~1\':t~~d~yubw~fb ~k8t ~ng~· 'f Ir st Clarkson; MV: Clarbon; Moel ~--r-_-:. tg Improved: Scott Wall. wu JJOn by Bill Deutsch anil era' club, there will be pitch· a 16 in a best ball tourney. president's cup tiU" ChbckAnc1reswltha 6ofoUow--Ytf,•putting, longestOriveand Second place went to Dick They were ·tied goiug into Gynmu~ .. arcll,riva.I Servile earlier in ed by BUI Schauppner and closest to lhe pin contests in Shootman's 68 followed by Arl Uie 17th hole when Nowling Varsity Co-Captains: the year. 8-1, to Cilmpleti a Fred Kallenbor11 at 13. · addition to the is.hole touma· Brownell's 71 and" Joe Costa's · bli-died anll Wiider. mWed a ' Chuck Smith and Chris Rez; two-game sweep over Irvine Coast has invited 36 ment. 72. three-foot putt h:lr,Jlis birdie to MV : Re't ; Most Improved: Friars. professionals to compete in DICk. Davis of UC Irvine ls Calloway flight booors Weot glve NowUac the edge. Roa Walker. Coach Bob Wi~ore's caztfit -'---='-'.;;....=.;:;.:..;;.... __ =::..;=.;:..."-':..:...;.;._=-;;.-=="-=::..;====--"'===<..:c~=------------=. wuled"1illle Ume ·in deciding lhe islile, scorir~g four limes 1n· lbe inllial inning and adding three more in the second stan18 to obliterate Servite's chances. Adriao }Vitt pitched the first foor ipnlngs and then came back later to mop \Ip a(te'r:one out in . the sixth to gain ' hi s tenth win o( the year against four losses. MAT•W. Dll 11) • r II ,_I I I 0 D 1 : g z 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 ' ' l • ' . . l l 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 • I • ' • • 1 2 0 • 0 l I 2 0 11 ' : ' · Bo1tlto Top Al'ea Ocean Fish Action The outlook for Orange Coast area weekend anglers is a cheery one today. Both of Newport Beach's sportflshing landings report livel y action with bonito off coastal waters. ''We're catching from 1,500 to 2,000 bonito on our weekend days," reports Lee Goodwtn at Art's Landing. ''The barracuda are on- agai~fl-again and the halibut ha ve been very slow. We're averaging about three sand bass per fisherman in the five· to-~even pound class." Goodwin also said his boats ha ve· sighted yellowtall off Catalina but have n't yet hook- ed any . · "\\fe're catching some nice bull bass of( Catalina with live squid," he added. At Davey's Locker, Robbie Robinson files a similar report and says an angler boated a l!B2 pound halibut off Laguna Beach this ~·eek. SC Ne ttel's Fall ·in CIF San Clemente Hilb School ... s va rsity tennis team dropPed a 20~~ • 714 decis.ion to host 8olsa Grande in opening round action of CIF tennis playoff e<1mpetitHon. ..._ The winners will trayel ·to second·s~ Newport Harbor Friday for . .econd round action. Coach Harlen , C~beq' San Clenlente outftt. first team in the school's history'to record a league championship ln tennis with a tie with Villa Park and Foothill,·was led by Robin SeJ>f'S three wins in singles actJon. 1 .... --. .. AllltTT ·- II~ (llrMMI 11'\'I Ut\.\l •t1M '"""" ""'"'*" CKI io.1 , .. , 2 .. , 1-61 -.. .. . "'"/"'I i.t :M. 4-t. M l -6-2. 5tM IC Dt M l _, W , 6-2t W. w ....... (~· -· .... , .... u , -'-.. -kr.llleiet lll'ld Forru* CKJ losl , .. , .. ~w1i.1 w · 11111 elllf l-N,. ($Cl !Ml' .... )4, .... ,.. • . 1 "All-Weather Ji" Tires • Clean sidewall design, radial darts on shoulder • Triple·tempered nylon cord construction •Buy now at these low prices Get yoqr set todq! $ • ANY OF THESE SIZES 7.75x1 5 7.75 x14 1.25 x 14 4FOR$5l!.. """"" SERVING ALl SOUTHERN CAIJIFORNIA ' • R1Ul1 .... quoted by sports tor Boll -al the u Clpltal..liMlnlal In to- '• -11 llJ!ac, "I did Bruins 1 Up, ~ to Go • YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. I 596 NEWPORT l'lloo• 541-tlll COSTA MUA II -• """'... UCLA held I -game !tad 'l'bl UalriUlty ol Kansas today In Ille heated Paclfk>.I .. booed 1• h1I bueball race with lwo anes ID Ille relOJ mil r:;;;::=11;:.· 'Wk wtlb MWW left thla weekend ln the cos.- .. -fmnct1 -aplMt arch-... 111 ti. poap1o ·-mt ri,.I Southern Calllomla. • .... 1t••w11t1 dPl The Bruins belted ..... .1ia Aid. "Wbea I Ill WuhlnJ!oo W. in Seattle on 11 , ,.. 1 ,... ,. ....,.... 'lllllUy wbile 6tanloro fell wJll> "'1aelf I dldD't waal lo . • pme behind the f/'(/Qt· • runners, losing to Ott.con ln Eugene, 4·1. All el&ht teams tn the ll!:ague f1ce thelr tradiUonal foes ·Fri· day arid Saturday • 'l1te TroJ1ns. who Jost w to Washington Stale In Pullman an Tuaday, illll have a matbanaUCal chance to tie for the ........ u U>ey cu top UCLA twlc<. ' YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. THEODORE ROBINS FORD ' 412 OCEAN A VE. l'hoo• 4tWH6 20.0 HARIOR ILVD . l'lloo1 642.00 I 0 LAGUNA COSTA MESA • ' -..,, llq lC, 1969 - VSI Subsidiary -- , R, Ci M~~ine Prodzy:t$ Acq~(re~· . . . I Weleome Aboard All A bout · Record Due ··At Weekend 'W eig ht~~g' , ~w::~.!~.~=z~ By ALMON l:.OCkABEY predicted for Vern Kinman's roii..B!mm""-~ .,,......151 1' , -. Crucifier entered In nu:t ~ ,t. '"ime a,ne"' sailing yacht scornful and fCCuaipg voice : weekend's Spring Drag Ch•m· P'P.t • 'That rating is b a s e d on pion$.ips at th~ Long Beach a~rs on 1the racing scene calculated "rather than actual Marine Stadium, The even'i ls ~ starts Winning races, you weigh of the boat.' sponsored by the National c&;t almost ~t a· lot of ~· ls • . .'·' o. ~L ... )'..:1 .J>IFFEREN~E Drag Boat ~iati~. · , .. J>,e stiatpened -1~ ·~ betw , W1\~ and 1 ~11lile; • The ~Sier p, 0 •·e (. c d •-f t' "T • ~la .cil . ~c~ lame Ii Ilia! · • -• ' fD' ""· a ew c o m p u ;e ~ 1 Wilder' , . f\'l , smoket evfl. ~er !""1'DPlarie has , kt w · 4'1!P·..,... lo check bver ' ·smelliNt-Clgan, Qr hide l:fehind records in its last four 1 ap-~~' 'cal>'cert~icate. 1 a beaver. _ ~peara n us running a ~ · greed Watchdog in "I have agreed because supercharged engine on th1I dfpartme~ is T o 1n Wilder spake the truth. gasoline and the Los Angeles ~ one-of e staH of "Windward Passage was . 'd. led th It h m,&51.: ers for t ~an ,Rae-weighed ari.d measured last racer 1n 1ca e era as inc. l~t of p u,~h er n .~m"'ber ID' Florida · right yet to hlt Its fu1t Potential CaU!ortla. ~, ·. arter &be wai launched for her speed. · . ON T-E .OT .sl.~ ·orf t~e wqrld"w,i~ · ycean r a c i n g On March g at Lohg Beach fcnc'e af the ow Md skip-car~!' · : · ' the .. unbioWn gas hydro'' sped pers of -ne"T. )'achlS who, -"'l'.he CCA pieasure.r and his' lh"tough the 13%-Joot timing oOOe tht get ta certificate. eleclr()Jl~ scaJe {same lYJ>:e as trap of the quarter mile drag d!)n't rei a;y tamperiqg • are used to weigh airplanes) course ,at 124•04 miles per bo\lr •I* &am especially if it is . Vfent W w.or.k on the 73-footer for a. worl~ mlrk. April 13 low enoug to lasure they wit! · llgllt di3placement k e t c h Kinm&n lutned l2' miles per wm,-. their ~~ of · Iona designed-by Alan Gurney. hoar at Ski-Land n-Perris distance ra~s.. "GURNEY HAD' estimaJed and 'accelerate(! still further to This more o_f less sets ~e Wirldwaid .Passage Wou l d. 129'.24hlPhatSki-LandMay4. ecene for a\ Hi.tie drama 1n-weigh aboUt 80,000 pounds. volvlng two ·very fast yachts This was joyOUJ news to -_Bob JohrtsOn's Windward Johnson, who fJgured his com-wlthou( even bothering lo sall Passage, ahd -Ken De peUtion would be the sister. the Mlaml·Nassau race. Meuse's Blackfin -both ketches Ondlne II and "Our computer says we'd 13-footers which seem to have Blackfin. Ondine's weight is in have picked up 35 minutes for a habit of .runrdng away from the neighborhood of 125,0IXI the St. Pete-Lauderdale race, the competlUun on elapsed pounds -some 23 tons which we lost on an overall time -and tfionally save hea vier than WP. (handicap) basis by just under their time forr.· \ rail haildicap ''ln the light or this you can 20 minutes. . ' • honors -a the local imagine t "he consternaUon "It also says with the lower measurera who \tjll insist that When the €CA measurer call· rating we'd have won the Lip- the two yachts be weighed and ed Passage's weight at ts,350 ton Cup which we lost overall remessuted before they can pounds. Johnson and Gurney · by three minutes. tail in the HC?flOl.ul~a~e_. B~th prQ;lelled it"ehemently. They "On the basis our wlftning Of yachts have :'ahd ertihcates. won. ~ CCA certificate was tht Venice, Lauderdale, Lipton TUE PROTAGO ST on the ~'°'etl With the weight and Nassau Cup races Y.'Ollld side of Wln4ward assage is cal Cu lated 11t. 80,000 pounds. have given us a 'weithted' 65 Chip Cleary, sail~gmastcr '"That gave the yacht a percent -the Miani'J.Nassau and crew chief, \Vho sailed on tating of 76.8 feet, and made race being worlh 35 percent. the yacht in its fi rst outing, her the scratch boat in lhe hot Tbe Mlaml-Lue,aya race is op- the Southern Ocean Racing fleet that nee in the SORC, tlonal for the Venice race, or a Conrerence.• ;(s is now hlstciry, WP was lhrow"ut. Jn a "Dear Al '' letterl\o this ·first to finbh, ir. all £Ive racu "JOHNSON'S U ONES T column -a sure way of get-of the SORC she entered. She belief is that WP doe!n't ac- ting into pHnt -Chip aims set new record! in three of tually weigh more than 80,000 some barbsi at Wilder who ap· them. pounds. California measurer parenlly 1¥1s be.en making '''AS YOU KNOW, the SORC Tom Wilder is skeptical about PASADENA -R. C. Marine. Products, Joe., of Newport Beach, one of the nation's 1arpat iroctucers of marine hardware for the leisure boa Ung indu.stry, has been ac- quired by VSI 'Corporation for an undisclosed amount of common stock. president. ''Thia acquisition indicates a flscll 1969 volume {narlne hardtA'are stores. marks VSl't entry into the dfJ •TSO,,oo, !1 "33 pe.rctnl in-The . com"pany . alarted in· marine field which we con· creue. , ll:uaineit In 1961. It employs sider a growing, dynamic .Jn addition to.. such marine ~ "5 .people. Founder is market. I\. C. Martne will p)"Oducta as winches, cleats, 'l\01 Clrlloq whe rematna "Ith serve as an eX;CtllenL nucleua aplnnaker> poles and· custom thetnrm as president. for further expansion in this hardware, the firm manufac-VS( Corp. ls a dlvenlfied jll'ea." tures «Uoy masts for small metaJs compa,ny sen Ing the ' R. C. ~1arine will operate as a wholly-owned subsidiary of VSI. R. C. Marine Is located in bolts and speclali!ed caatlngs aerospace, conslrucLion and the Irvine Industrial Complex ·for lndµstry : Approximately' 70 plu(fcs lndustriea with 21 in Orange County. It bad s'ales percent of R. C. Marinc's manufacturing pllnts and l~ of nearJy $500,000 in Its 'last • bus1neaa is with Ball and motor war~bwses in 12 state 1, fise;al year, ended SeP.t-· ,30, bolt· mapufatlurers. The Tt" ' Canada, ,M • x l co , Wes.t 1968, and Its currenf sales rate ma1nint 30 percent it with Germany and Belgium. Now-in Our Family~;;-. . Accordlna to Mason Phelps, Family Weekly .,, "' ,j • .l~ .; . '- " -... AUl~CENTER • I lnt.roducing· the FO.REMOST GP . Qis1GNlP FOR THousAND$ OF ' MILES Of;TROUBLE FREE ·DRIVING!. • I J • • • Pu~.'p;olyester cord on all 4 phes! Tous;; s11pei:-strength polypr•.~• rubberl 33 MQNTHS GUARANTEE · .:·'. I ; WITH 17 MONTHS FREE REPLACEMENT I;~ . ,,, -. ' -, . -. ' .~ c }) ' • , ti . · ·U, r-..S. tlll 9'WX1tl t ~,._tl!M.-t . t· II __ ....__ out duti111 tho ftl\t · ' halr of lfli·aulrant• period, return it • with yo,ur IUlflntM certificate arld Penne;ys will ~K• your tire with a flew tire, chtrii!!J )'OU 50% less th•n the tl(rrent •Hing prioa including 1. Fedtfal Ex.cill TJX; if Yo1Jr tire wears ' · ; out -dwti111 t!Jp '8cond Nit, JOU pay 25% j•·thin the Ctlnt:nt Mlling • \ prlto nclilitlri& fld,... Ei<clso Tu. ~ .............. tf • f'IPlatetf'6 tir11 durit11 th9 free-tlcimei'Yt I period. thn 11 no c if WI replace the tire 8fttr 1 fllHePllCetntnt p:erlod, you P1Y 50% or 25!4 1.U than· the cunw'lt aelli rc price of the tire lneludlnt Fedet11I ElrciM Ttw. . . ,' ~·k •11 .. -. nu.,...., 1s void whn PKSen-i·~,.. fl" ~ on trucks, Uled for Jnm.ordrivtn ovtr 30.000 mi tu OM~r. .. ....... ..... .,.,,; ...•. , .... , .... ......... , ......... _,..w .... -i.. ''" ,., .... ,. ~ ••••••••••• 1•17 .-nrh• SO%_,, ~ •• , •• .1145 •ntll• 2S% -tf ...,Wt.•.• .264J Met1th1 > . "5141 ......... 1.7t ........... """ BLACK. TUHUSS 20.95-700.13 plus 1.94ftd. tax 4.old lire 20.9s-aa.14 elus 2, 19 fed. tax" old 11re 22.9~8-14 plus 2...11 led. tax & old 11,. 24.95-F78-1" plus 2.54 led. tax & old tire 26.95-G78-U plus 2.66 ltd. tax & old tlN 28.95-H78-14 plus 2.89 lod. tax & old tfN 30.95-J78-14 plus IJ ftd. tax & old tire 20.9~15 plus .l.76 fOd. tax &old !Ire 24.95--08-15 plus 2."5 fod. tax .& old tire 26:95--078-15 pl"' 2.62 f.d. tax & old tire • 28.95-1!78-15 plui 2.8' 'fed.·tax & old tire WHITEWALLS •2 MOREi -' DllYJ 111 ••• ~I m ' f •rt ' • l 'f· • ' ' -• .. ' -~ • ' ,, •j threatening noises about WP's races are also g f Yen Uiat. handicap ct~fical.e. 'weighted' valt'iet for tbe win· '1ln the light of 'o\'hat migbl · Here is (hip's commentary .ner. The St . P~Venlce race have been for WihdWard -and we ~ould be less th an rales JS percent: the St. Pete P"assage in the SORC if surprised ii we do not shortly Laudrirdale and MiatJ!i-~U?U JQhn.wn had gone along with receive a• rebuttal fr o m rate 33 percent each, and the .ttie measurer's 'actjlal',.weight SAVE '10 THRU I • -- SATURDAY! Wilder: LiPton· Cup .and Nassau CUp • ha!! me wishing. "In preplll'ation for the ar· are worth 71.-!i percent each. "I'm wishing Tom ml 's rival in California of "In addition to our inventory CCA-Transpac cont r o I e d Windward 1Pm1ge for her of crew, sails and other items scales will say Windward partlclpati<ll in the Honolulu for use on Windward Passage Passage's actual wei&ht is - race com• JJJIY 4,\1 ·~ate betn, \when facing~ we also ~ave l;he to pick an attractiYe figure· at discuuioi!I With v a r-1 o u s abllfty ashoft to compiet.e with random -lS<l,'50 'Jl(IUndl. boatyards from Sall Diego to Tom Wilder and his banQ of Without affecting our SORC San ,Pedro the matter of her mysterk>us computers· that demonstrate~ performance, of haul-out !pr weighing and spew out his ratlnes based on course. l"1!measuri111 to mecL the 'actual ' )fe.iahts. "JUST THINK of it, a Class rating con<ltions of the race. "I COO!IUTted our c rew A boat fike ours going to "AS YOU KNOW, there has member, Al Gooch, who kindly H'onolulu with a ratlna that beer\ ,cW11iderabJQ, dialogue does this computer v.1>1'k for almost puts us on a com· tOSsed abbbt on this subject -us on Tulane University's preUitive boat·for-boat-b a s I s not di' about Windward bank. of third 1eneratlon com· with the Cal-40s. Pusag pi:esent CCA. rating wtert: .. Suppose, I Mid to him, "Can you think of a but 1 tlackfln -~lch 'Is we had acce_pted the CCA WILDER dream than thal1" t .xpectctt o be our m.aig com-.meuurer'a 'actual' weight of ED. NOTE: Frankly, ChJp, I peUtlon r flnt.to-finlsh at 9$,350 pounds Instead of can't. Unleu, of courte It Dlamorlf Head. £ighllng for 80,0007 What wookl le•d Wlldtr to chlnae "Our mutual fr tenl:t, Tom .. ·ould have happened ? his-first name (to Wllder. Tbtn Wildu, 'the Transpacific acht' 'j BEFORE ME arc the t~ would be known as Wiider Club's tealous meJ.SU.r~r( h;u print-out! and a soqow(ul note (Wild ror 1horl), Wilder, put- linled 'me" on seve.ra oc· rrom Gooch: OUr CCA rating Un& him lht ... si.me fraternity tasloiu recently a bo u t ~·0t1ld have dropped from 76.8 of such other well known WindWE4d Pam ge't Rr•sent to 73.7. We would have won yachtsmen 11s Morgan Morpn CCA r1llng. Saytth lie\ In the S 0 R C championship and Baldwin Baldwin. ·- FULLERTON CANOGA PARK BUENA'PARK 1-... ...... ~--1 FOREMOST MOlORIZED MINI BIKE* U0.119.11,NOW 109.88 smon, but mighty mlnl·golt )'O<I up lo a cool 22 mpht i:-1cal os wojl ••• up to 100 mlleo ,..r gallon of QGS. Oltc biolt11 on NOr whto l, 2\i HP, -4 eye!. Tocumseh 1ngin1, outomatlc -lfvgol clutdl. • Mfi\I blfiw CIN llOI fer racing or for UM on hlghwayl, tlcltwolb or ·-" ... •If• -...... .16.11 NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA HUNTINGTON B.EACH ... " ·- 1- I ' 6 ' .· ... ... • ... .1•111!•· 12 otlatt <:olie,es I• ) UCLA Directs ,Housing Stqdy With U.S •• LOI .Al"G!LES - A broad, tw.JW~olwbllprlvale ---do abo<ll boos· IOI .,.-m in t1ecaytng ' Oakland, Sae gr~•· Compton and Fresoo, . ; Nelrlrk, N.J.; Baltimore. "d.; P.femphb, Tenn.: A t I ant a , Ga.; and Colwnbus, Ol11o. Fred E. ca.., dlreclor ol lbe • and Rulgen Sllle Un!verally Unl,.nUy'a HOllSinc and Real of New J-i'. , Ellale Slu{lla l'rolr&m. 'Ibo lful WU made by lbe bring about massive private IDvealmeDI ID bouliq lot lbe unci.r-'t;he study wut c o • e r -·· lepl and social r... tors -lor example, con- Grant homu In ca!llornla cost $20,000 or more, IDd tberefcn ball of tbe 1tate'1 populaUon is prieed "" ol'to pe-l ol lhe . stale'• supply of alngle-lamlly / homes. -ol American ciliel has beea uDclertakeo by t h e Unlvenll! el Calilomla al Los -and 12 olher colleges anCI unfverlltles Under a fll0,000 llfanl Crom lbe lile ln- aurm:e bwilneSs. ' The study will try to determine w~y the present housing supply system .baa not been able to meet the need and bow I.he system can be improved to provide adequate. housing for inner.city families. O t h er partldpatlna fft.. Ufe lmuraace Awc'atioa ot sUtuUom lnclude the Un!veral-America, which recently an- ly ol Southern Cal~ornla; nouncod lo President Nixon Unlver1Hy of CaWomla at that t&e nat.10ll'1 life· com· Berkrley; Lill ,An I e I es, paniea would divert an ad- Fullerton, Fresno, San DieJIO dlllonal billloa dolbn lo fulan. and Volley Slate colleges ; ce bousio(, job crulU,, ... Gtorsla Slate C o 11 e 1 e ; terprises and c o m m u n l t y Memphll Slale Unlvenily; laclll(lel !or pooplt ID blighted Ohk> State u D l v e r • I t 1 : nelgbborbooda. wllllt bolh .lbe new study .and the lll'boa lnv-11!.)lnllhm ~ ~ol. lbe. !lfe;lqour- tqtM.81' ov.eraB ~ to.:betp lllO:I soluilons lo uitan pr<> btema:· •bivesi1i~nf •or ·the bllllen dollan will proceed wiu..it delay and wilhoul awaltbig re$U]ts ol tbe two- year ~study. strqcllon COila, bulld!Jlg c:odea, unloo p-acllces, risU l • lenden, and the probl<m ol providinf community facilities for famIBes who move into -·houl!ng. Besides co 11 e I'' s and universities, more than a half. 1 dozen Federal pornmenl ~31;-;;:":;:-::S;:«.! and buslneu orpntzatm are '\\• • !'9 ftaearcb will fOJ:114 OD hou~ h1g markets 1D 8.t lei.st 10 diC· fettat chles.: J.os Ange1es, 'Ill< study will be ad- ministered al UCLA by Dr. Unlyenily ol Pennaylv~ LIM anplwlwd •I b a I , The aludy wm try lo !ind new ways in whioh private enterpriae and govunment can betW work tofetber to Dr. CUe polnted GUI lhal IO per<enl of all siq!e.lamlly cooperating ID !he aludy whlcb fir-- will be conducted during 1919! •I.ff lllCl'•IN Ull'•DU and 1170, wttb the ltnal reporl'" ~ M.IOS. nerl year. · llft ..... -... -vaSAmlw..:il •.• , ..... 4 " 'i ~~ .. . . .. .. . ...,..... ....... . hair ··•·1-1r •hod• to loolt like your own, Venatll•" and flanering. RMAM llAIR niLAlilll liii"liiill• llelr .,. .... wilti MhRM ......... Mack ... iw--....-.. 1. ·-97• -.. 2. ........ StiRWOAll lllAD •OR WIH ....., ..,..,_ J-' prolMt5 Giid ... ,_. ..... •l1ht ., for "'"'"• J9• • 2.00-1.. ' "' nA1•11•• •GOl.DEH HITS •ONLY fOl lOVERS ,HAm.H_fAIT --· PULaLAail •-Sl'llAYf ·H ........ • ...-.... 29c •Al'Of. '·"-491 lllrw~-.._ .... .... _, ...... ::!~, .. ...... ,,, ... •"•""-ffr ·-doubl• .d .. ~--· ~,. .• _ ................... ·-blod• ·~ ;,;.,. SAYISO. ....... .u.w••• "UllllllSIROOM 2000UALITY 100PAMR PRllHllllR PACIAL n1su11 ..... 9c "'191 a .. 191 1.00 4 :-' c ..... -··· 111• •Pl .. , !Dftildw'. ,. __ ·~~t"Mae ........ _ •t~~· ,.,.. ,tom '-' ''-·~-•••.tao . ,...ttff, tt1c...C. SAVl 4hl ...... -. er pali• di~I"• I A\fl 20d IAYI Jlc . , , ............. . ..... ,. ""9RIPllAY SffROCUPS .... .. ,_ QUALIT Y DIS CO UNT DEPARTMENT STORES , ..... , .. 171 WOMIWI UDTllN'I STD 111111111 SABAL i ..... , .. 171 •Cool, co111fortabl• ,..,.;~.b~ncl $Gndal with •Wlpe'111wear wjiitief111t.. ....... '-th!'' . ..,.. podded !MOie • ~:::::::=::::;::: • MeUow ..,.,;.. . .......... ... ' ..... . '•cw.._,, ... ... 12 25• vtilu• .. • Qual ity·UblMr 11.-wor• in yovr dioiee.l 5 1id. •NewGolcftfl: W..,..t~ a•IMr ' •.Old fethlonetl,·luice, .· hi~ll ..... ,._. ~ ·~ ta..-.hrown ·•Antiqued stud• , •Siz;,. 5 to 10· PA•ULOUI KITCHIN PLAITl~.--IAUI 1.27•••··· CIC YOUll CHOICI . IA. • DeeoriitOr colon •Colorful, v.ful oc- •~f0f ~111, ' batt.1 ... •!eOt-dff. h '. ~ .... _,.. "'Y .•. , able plDltk 7•f00TGARDIN UMllRILLA , ... ,.;.1 •• 867: '3 H.P., 4-CYCl.I 20" POWIR MOWIR ~.:., 39·. 87 •alue. ••.• , 1·4· 87 -"'-··'"" •3_,pnh • P11ll nspernio111 l~ng che1• li•k 1prlR. '!~d•cl ... .,,,,.-. -Wr1a1un'n6ui1 -S~VJNfil ~8JC:BD POPllMR BIKE1 r ..... titt •••fra• ·~·-•'---u:=:;:: OUTDOOR fUNI ' tJ.,, r . • "'41 1 39c ,,,. •1~....., •Whit. "1'"-. <Ml .,., Mt., f9'4 . TITHl •• ALL sn , CONYIRTIBU COBRA· I -llDIWALK BIKE. I ,, ··~~i..,.;h • ..t.. to-i..Hi ,_,1_ IAVISld POll!'ULAR tliK· TOOTllORUlll ... 171 .... .,_,'-kto .. i.dw~i•' - • .... WALK IMPlllAl NWT, AT STUDllAl.11 ,.-.11-.-. .,, .. . .....,..,,, 1av1"t1d IAVltld., .......... PIUT·AI• TOOfltPUTll HAlmYKJT ·,;. ..... ' ,~. ......... 57c~ .... FIRSTAID ·-.... .................. -··-··~--f..ity. ·--....... ... ~ IAVllkl 1 ........ OIAMOND SALEI YOUR .SA.9 , CHOICI -_y_ - <lrillto" di_.. lo 1-1y 14-lt .. Id a"4 now lncr•clll1l1 low prkecl ot lecfrrtt Yovr choiU •f .,.uow er white 9olcl. INClllDllLI LOW PlllCIS Al Z9DYSI ' . FOii IOYS AND OlllLll 22.95 ••••• J 1617 •PaNUI cerrvertlhle Cebra by Hil ... ,. •Wildpurptewitlli ch~fwcfM ............... _ •P'ole1addla • Hi·ri• IM111~1eber •Cho in guard •Inc Jud .. training wt.-11, step.brake •For boys or glrl1 6 POoT x 1.1 IN. DllP ITlll. WALi. POOi. 9.:to ••lu• 87 Zo<lys Low Prlcol •'Large bockYQnt,M,oot,dia*. pool · •"Weoth•r tr.otH" rwt ffliltaftt corni9atff 1tffl 1idewall1. ·e Printed heavy d'lfY plciafit linerwfth clraift plug. •Wamt weother kiddi• funt AllAHllM•OUlllA PARK AllAHllll"fULUllTOll WllTCOVlllA ... TllRIDGI llACM llYD. A ~INCOlN OIANHTitOl.PI At UllOH AIUIA AYI, Af PUIJrifl llSIDA ILYO. At DIVONSNlll PO.-TAlll YALLIY LOllO OIACll llUllTl~TOll OIACll IAllTA AllA OADlll OROR o•OAlllC· 7.95 . . 7 4 144 ·'' value" ' ' I o\t ' ' . l • '1an for oil a ••.m.ct·~ \ 1J.MI ffth•,.. , ' ball •HllClvy duty 9-ft. f , pole \ •Ground 11•"9 •Tether rope •Complete witJ. •toro,. carto• •IDOllDO~CH HAWTHOINI ILVD, .. , SO.I.AT ctNftl .. • • . ,~ ' ... J l ' .. . ~ :• ... _._. • ,. :2.t'inH!Jay, May 14, 1969 '. \ . . Vfej!nl1<'41, May 14, 196.9., 0 0AIL \<PILOT 'g \ . "1 • !.B!'!' .AfHnlt Mer'/ • ·-~~Wife .. Has ·!Reply to Letting ~H.usband elax at Night • r ~y I. wrote a l'Olwnn YOU AGREED he should lerruiwhlle doing her an ,t.Jie-ure ol the tired hus-have a halt boor of lellllre, job. band. !1lfllrelted that he be with feet propped and the She's only baby talk r:fven tline to J'.'.\lu before din-newspaper, before dinner. I'm : 1 J}i er men hours, aod ner W' preffpt uleer and sure your advice will help Mr. droppiDc food from the ~ypert.iuion. llere are some G. 's high bkM>d pressure or table, yeUed at the kids to lntereailtg react.ions : • ulcer but may half-kill his fiallb tbelr lunch. AU while DOCTOR IN TH E HOUSE Dear Pr· steihcrohn: I feel wife! hubby ~ ~ titely bas for a Utue while so she can get com~ to write after If abe'1 ln my boat she's had hid an Hour·leisurely bmcb ~t · a decent diMer prepared -re.idlri: 1n )'OW' colu.nin ttte ~adorable scream t n I ' the oftice. - --before they drive her ~ , letter hn harassed Mr. G., children · since eari, in the • Wlll!:N ll1lBIY a r r I v e s raving mad. p ~ined about -y , morning .6efore he ttft. Sbe . lbe'1 reldy for IOllle adult She wantl: to get dinner over ti!tWoofd to a h.urriod....... ..it1ed .,..,....ts, Ued ahoea, tall:.ol dinner . She aeeds .... , !ut ., Ibo can do the disheo, '1g>Oll drival from work. bas had a dozen or moro iJ>. -to take over tha ldddleo set the ldddles· bathed, otortea .'• . ' • •flavor •lecto,. " • Kffllll: coff" lllot lnd•finitel~ •MocieSA to 12.C~,Mof f"!rfKt Coff•··· . . ' • • 1'.year·unioncfltionally guaron· 1...i. " . "· ~ '' •TsMi . : • XODINT ' f ' I . ' FAMOUS .. Kl,: !l:·TOOTH•RUSH 2·1LICI TOAf'il( '. 't9.~ I 0'' 17.95 -5'' . ...... _· ••••• . • •--Mled by ..... ntitb tfaoft • T ooat color .Fontrol dial. • Hlitpct cru'ltil)'trC.y - •One ~r '-nconditional guaranfff (. \ all oth.r ~ tooth...,_ com- blud ' •••. •Approved by Council .:n b.tdal ther- ~ci of tfre AIHrican n.ntaf Au• C~Olt.' PORTA•LI HAND WATIRPIK• ORAL HYGllNI APP~Allei MIXER value 544 24.._il 1·6•-r val•• . l powerful I ReCOflllllencled by"thoui.and1 of rilh1fn; 1peed1 dentilhl '· 1,,95 rt11.d and all tucked in' bed, at I nuonlbJe hour. She still bas clothes-to fold .. iiaalng to do, • mendlng and what-h.:9e- you. . Hubby, meanwhile, bas been relaxing ao he can properly digest his !ciod afl!I not acquire high blood pr:fi:AW:.e or an ulcer. The average mot&er hasn't cigtlted a meal properly ht months or years. Why Is it eo bnpcirtant fOr''the lnen? 'My • dOctor bas J<>\d me 10 . take •r-v.caUon from clllldren.' II'• really a loll~ Mn.K. .INOTHER REAcnON, Dear. Dr. steincroha : Tttis bu been my experience fer many. many years. Wben ,my dear bu*"" comes boime from work -the flnt thing he ezpecll me to say, "dinner is ~dear." . . A0!1 U ii JSNT,, this Is .,tiat I heal, '"Wtiat have you been . ' ' doinC sll day! Jut! sillln1 around W.lcblng TV?" Believe rne, I make sure the hoooe Is neat ¥ a pin and a rtne dinner ii waiUna:. -'Mn. ltmeOlmlUCh'M~­ln&. elc. Al_ .......... u..-whlcll w111 mue Ibo swelllnc dla-. \I. FOR MRS. Y.: Aa )'OW' doc' MBDICAi.ErrES (Replies to< ~'I (10< y_,.) adViHd to Readen): operalloa !0< yoo1r llllrine F0< Mrs. T.: Th e Wflalnly fibnld, ""'-in repeated swe!UnlJ at the eods ol the ~Pl -... that i t ling"' In P!llieolf who have 'Wasn't ptllq larpr .. N°" °"""8rlhrltlS are co 11 e d that he -surpry, II Jo llfl>erdeo't No~et. Usually . likely that lt'lw _. JIW!h lhey do not tnterfere with indicttionl W haveJt ~!· . " .iODYS ~OW Pll!CEi • $198 .·~· •A reall~le color portable M •Ceinpect cabinet IR hanchonle waliwt fl.Uh · • Au~c d•.avnetiZ!' for trv.,.,........., 1 · • Pretet'fi• tuning control .... • j I Dipole er1t1nna and rec .. ed ca""'"' .... tr -, " •Hugo 1.C.pou~d cai>acity ' •Two-speed au'to'!'aiicwashfng ' , l -.t •Four position water saver t • Fourw~sh·rinMt'iemp9rature aalect'ionl !t •Porcelain finish top and safety lld · - ANOTHER FABULOUS ZODYI YALUll ' I PuihbuHon bealer relecue IWot.r Pi .. carri1s Oft tilt f~b I Fingertip control yovrtoothbnltft It.tins· · - 11-year wnconditional guor· I Cl•9f'I• htacceuible plate•· antee. yo .t'btwli ecmnot reoCh ~ I \ IVDlllHN": , L MMl•l4611S M.MIJ9 1fr. [i~•d,1•5'.al G•ara"iee on•the•spot E.Trha,..e .,. AU 'l'r.tr'le Appliatttt• • ReMOI~ tontrot micro- phone •Solid 1tote •Witt! 1tOrphone; torry- lng strap AM 1•L1D'ITATE POCKIT RADIO 399 , 9.95 value • Sol;d atat• 1• pocket..ai1• radio •CaiTy;119 case, earpMn• •Wlrh baHetyaftd gi~bot . ,,. . ~ ..... ,, • ' • l~lt.tn AFC ' • l'recilion tonal c9ntro\ • • lofll I01tin9, r•liotlle ..ti'lll ltOte ,, <o~ion i;Jf."o•lnt1.1 .1 • • A~el11ift lto•ed , . . ...,. ... a111, ... n.,. .... ..,. .. •Full volume AC-OC power • Pr..ci1ion tone contrOI •Big volume "·inch 1peaker •.t.•th•rett• cabinet ...... , ..... SW ncOIEAM'UDIO l 2·SPUD PllOllO ,, 19.95 1387 ,, .... • a troMittor AM radio • 2·•peed phonograph • Hi·fl 1peoker •Ploys 33 and •.s RPM r•<ord• ....... , ..... 11.95 value •Solid irate for iMtant ploy•'"' ,.liability • Waket you to Mlic .... ~-"°''""" Wfto .... ..._. • ..._,.._ ......... ._C;_ul ..... ,' ' ' .. HARll!tWIC!I( ~O..INCH llLF·CLIAlllN• GAS RAllGI ' ' ,111111 •• , SCIEEI •on~u UllDCUmD COi.ai TY $219 ~.f!'H•339 :ZODYS , 1pw Pare•: ... ,· . ' •cj-.J'clOot broiler for .,...ok•ltsi" cleo• cooking e:~~pllift-off c.H top • '•Uft..tf .,.n door with <hroMe liner • Avtontotic interior fight J: &..::-. ' I •TP•f9'11p svnace _,.nen •i.autifol fa1hioft co'IOri1 yello.#, copper, 9'4"0C•do, white • HastdcveftN '°"°bl• colotTV choui1 • S...Y!' ..... ciolor demlodwlator for tnte color • Sipiir .... ,..... 12 chan•I hlnint ~-.. , • 1.4Jaq. Ht. ,_.....ktrpktwrewlth 21,soo..,..,..., • selkl lhlit. 3-stae• video If a•ifier for ~ty, IMftlihfn••• •SepotGt. 1lide tontrol1 for·hue, m1or and""°'""'• 15.95 value , '910 tnn•htor :r:.-:c:~::.;.t AJA -.. -1,.i... '"""11'7·17'MC •w.,i. ..,..,i.., ..,.,._., .. .. o•·••T" z,.ys c••••lllT c••D•T .. You• ~AllKAMD•e&•• ••• ••'•••amm. ••a•ANTl•D ALwAn• IHOll! & _IAYI AT ZODYI MON. THRU PRI. I~ A.M. TOt P.&J IAT. & 1• 10 TO 7 •• ·• LOTS oP .. in-PA•KINOI ,!'• ....,~~-;..~~--~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~-=-~~~~~....;·~~~~.:..:.~~~~~~~~---' . . • • l f. - J ' . . ------ • .. DAll.Y PILOT Wtdntsd.ly, May 14, 1969 I • IN~Ji' ASHIONS. I • • 'DISCOVNT PHICEDl · I I MEI'S CIEYETTE KlllT SlllTS A. s..,. 44,.. Cowol 1hort 11...,..ahirtt with MOd!: tvrtlefl.U. styling, Ha'""°'" ch..,.... bit with Melt detail1"9 in waah- •ltl•·rayon ond Cotton. Awillable In blu•, white, lflOi-ra or ,, ... , iiz• S, M, l. XL 4.99 val•• 2'' .PElllAllEll PIESS •ss SLACKS 1. SrM aS'611 C•tiutttal style 1lodn with t.rrific tallorir19, finished bottolftt.. PERMANENT PlfSS DotrOl'I• polptter and Awit• rayoft .... ,. a 1horp appearance. In gOld, .blu•, whi'"1, blocki 29-40 woht. 1.99 velue 5'' - 80Yl'HHTYU NYLON .IACKDS .~f:. 2'' Sne .U~I P0P4tlar COMp9tf. tion 1tripe ;adiet at • .avi11p ·prkel Stvrdy. lightntght two- ply c1.11forcl nylon 11 1tytecl wilti stand-up collar and snug :rippo' front. a1 ... , gold, ora119e, wt.isl..,; sizes It. 11. IUMMIRWHlft NO.IRON .llANI 3.99 velue 2 ., 5•v• 27'4.I The i~look for 1ummer, whit• \eon• with trcidi- lional styling. They're ...ade to .._, tN11t aMI bright in PEI· MA.NEHf. PRESS polyester and cotton. White 111 •lz•1 I to 18. LITTLI 80YI' 2·111C.-NO.IRON IHORTln I'' l•ff is-. Tollotecl shirt of colerlvl tetteniol plaid with llMlkM'tl •tt end c..rdlnai.cl. toUd ,...., lloxer • ltJI• pcHth.. lrt mtN ...-,ceN h:IMAHENT PIUS ,...,, ... , e!Mll cdl9fl. ·-,..lch: .... 3 .. 7. Illa IKlaT ltlTITI DRiii A. ..... iqrtW ............ 4'}.. .... d•bl• IHkh tfM: MClc oncl ..... n.ffla. Doer.• ....... of .. 1t1 .. .....,\_ ...... 647 ,.t.,...., ·~ cotton ill gold, pi11k, enlftl•· i ,. ''""·Jr. P.tite sir ... 3·11. l .H ••I•• IUIPIMDla CUL,TTl.IHIPT I. s. .. 41 .. 1 'ei/'7 ,pool "''" with i..11• 4 6 7 in bra. hcdttr !:'~ pa,tdt pocbti ii. · , no..., o!WI rM ltiytt.. irl"'. hnded twill kna o.-ton•·aa;t1cr $.14.1.ff ••I .. TURTLINICK IPORT TOP C, S.w' i7,.I E0.,"""'90r, u1,..cara eyt.,. ~lt """ top ill tailored ownliil1 styli~ 3 77 '#llll.J -.ulor or 1'1iOCk tvrllen.O, ripper, Dpd1 lo tnatch slocb ,h, NCI, ca_,, crq,it- berry, green, n<r¥'(, browt1, Wack, white; :U..40. S.tt "'•• NYLON ITlllTCH ILACKI D. lpeciel l•wf11111 Trim atrekh ~II-on slocb with slitch.0.C:NC1M, wide leg open· , 5 6 7 i~. Dyed .. ~h the top ht cranb.ny, gretn, bl'OWfl, "°"Y• lifaclt, whi .. 1 I to 16. 6.ff ••••• NOVELTY SLEEVELESS SHIFTS r. •114 f. k•a •Pt• 53'61 Choo,. •lripff nylon tricot tltaight 1hlft or florol print ac•tat. tricot A·lin•. N-colOt'J; S, M, L V•IMI t• 3,tt 1'7 .'J!J Girb' Fun 'n l'OftC!f Summer Plapear LITTLI GIRLI' 8RIGHT 'N PIRKY ILllVILlll PAllT DRllllS A, S••• i7~1 Cool ond l>reery pant dr•uo1 in M>lid1, ttripe1 ond perky prints. N-at littl• boy leg ., n.,. l•st pant Nlf'tl, perfett far w:hoat end play. llu•, Oftlrtt•• noyY, 111oize, pink tetton; 3-k 2,9' "'••• I'' COORDINATD NINI 'N IOLID TWO.PC. .IAMAICA IHOU In •• ·..._ ,,_, Dainty n .... , print .tli,, with ' 2 7 '•te' 'on and Johnny eolian and print --• b~t with 101icf coonliflCltecl it.om. 'ink, illu•, !ron9e, ''""' 7·14, 1." "'•• •••••LO•• aua •~u•• ... _. ANAm .. """8TIMI W11T c•Y1u ....atM ...,., At llVDILUll .. IOU1ll 1111111 At c•••n OIAHOlfMOl,I AT llMOH •IUl.l AYI. A' PUINfl IAllTAA•A •o.TAlll YALUY LONa lllA~ HUlinHTOll aUCH •• ••DOI llft. A' ID!NM• LOI COYonl.IHtN•& WOODIUff . OOL91N WUT ......... N. OIANI A'IL A' 1 nM lflllf GA•MN .. OYI CHAMAN a llOOltHU .. T •OaT•IMi alDONOO•IACH ltllDA IL'ID. AT IHVONINtll HAwtHOIHl IL'ID, A' 10.IAT CINTll IHOlt & IA-YI-AT ZODYI MOIL THllU PRl.10 A.M. TO t, IAT. & IUIL 10 TO 7 ••• LOii Of Pa11 PA•~INGI • l } ' J .. . . • • ~ • .,. . ,,,_ ' • C:· • ' . • • • o 111),t ~ =~ r . - --. " - 7, l:Z - • ,,. :111 - I ' ~ • f'" ' 8 TOM REDDIN NEWS! * N... thlt IS NNll ;·re::::. .. -(C) '<IO>. Jtny ••ti• ..... .., tea~ . ·---(C)·;:.p ,....... __ ."' . tni111, .. !'Cw M.WU , • . ··---(C)-... W' ("'""11H'1) '53-Rlcfi ... d WW-°"''''°'" J • t:W IJ ltnrlf HlllilUt.. (C) (30) G11oor 9'11111 I ltfp to lioottr¥ille but Q MdtltlcUd wM11 .,_ thlnU tMt .W It pt1nnill1 t• """' J1111 • HlthlWI)'. Cl) D KRAFT MUSIC HALL ;i.. s.Oc11.r a. Younc, Judy Carne, Lena Horne D 9 Cil llll lnft .... "" (t) (SO) ""fht'. first fll 12. 11w1 bpH la Ensl•nd •ll?!.111 t111 111111ns -. t of Tonr St_. aM blpfl You111 •Ad COll!tdltiihe ,.,,,, Ctfllt If "l1u1h·l11." Tonifht's pl1ts 1rt l1u Konit 111d T1rry-Thotn11. ..... (C) (IO) ~ ·' ....... (C) (30) j • -... (C) (60) ! ·D JHl(])dQAlt W1t1111••r ~ tc) ""-..... Situ .... loKtl" (ldvtnturt) '9-.losepll Cot· 11r1, O.r11n M~ Philip C11er. ~Niner ~ Jullt Sornrn11s. In 1hla stlfl'\nt ~It ef the 1¥11111 ltld· ill( Upi lo ~lr'.I list stand, Col. ·-(C) (JO) • ...,, ..., <30) ~s,-.". nn. ..,,. tr1h1 ll"°'f the Kt.al · ~ thlt 1strtMub wnl ,. CM!IW 111 thl -. .......... &lllPW Custtf ls ~ llll Pmidlntitl tlCNlllMtioll .,. ,..,tut lobbybb 111 WtlhlllltDn hi rttam fW tordn1 the di IPlll I a •• iC) (60) j • ~ •• SiolLt llldltnt off lhltr nlu.1bl1. trNtJ-proQljtld l111d. '108 ... N "" (C) (IO) ..... ..., ('°' j ---;· ........... , lllfUiM-(60) ei-........ . •-""' -""''.t>»••m-.... '" ,,., tit CC> (80) • · 'Oiii 1nr01wtr Dol.Jslit--tnd 11· 19 Uf1 TIA Meut ti.. (30) ' moll IVlfYOll9 till in Hoelervillt- ilflMI "'tfll Go." LA City Sd!ool wilt witldly for tt11 brMdclst re-,..,,....tlm '"""" 30IM quu· suits or 1 i.ltional c:ontMI tt111'v• tieftt *"' todt(s mobll• youtll; all trtl•td. (JI) "Wht'a M¥1111 tM wr• "Whtrl · Cl .... (t) (lq) lid Mllfl!s . • ,, ,. Plllr· ''When w1H )'Oil m iz O'Otd; HIP (60) bl hcqt!"' lllAl'l_•..,(C) lO:G096m--.(C) (IO) • DtnnJ Wll"i!ams -1 ,ouq 1111 . fl~ Jtillllf-ff'9111 I llitfi SCff• 1:11 •ca .-. ..._ <C> (30) fllld to 11tt dMtll, lllnlilll 111u Wtltlt er.Hitt. ll'lt w~s un6tr tM inti~ af 1 PEANUTS ·PERKINS II Wlld't My Llllt! (C) (~O) 'qcti*!lc dnac al the tfm1. llrr11-, .,,,,__ _____ ci1 Scott flltltl. (R) 1- m •-'" "'> a o oo m ""•-(<> '"'' 8 Tiii ~· hrtlll (:ia) "As Cold 1s'"lshu." ktin( on tti1 ~Ctutirily. ~ a.tty Smith 11;,iom ltd wishts rl 1 ctitnt. DMd Rose Wtyl "' *-1111 <nltMtr ad " •ttempl:s " ..... tht NII'• 1M I ~~~ dlildr.n et 111 MrfJ llL flnl II I to a fritrld, but til'll~ ruht 1: ...... ,.......... into th• •11'1 --... \hi e w • 18 (C) w1r. (R) 11 .... -(t) 11 TOM REDDIN 'NEWS! I * News that is· Newil 7:IO•l ... ._I (C) (IO) G"1P gm lTlldtlr.JM1rll•• Rusi!, Jof\11 Kirt · ~,.._ (C) (60) •~ •nf Bill M.cr., au11t. 1 G 111-..1 PiD•11 (3D) DU m min. Ylr&Niiu fC) fl) fllti l.,,iuion (3D) A p1 neJ al (JO) "l~p of 111 Ol.IU••·" Don fifm teldltrs ind psycllolqbls dis· Stroud ru-ts In dUll rolu H Ill tUJI .ui+:nt. lilms Ind looll: it in ''"'= nnch ll•ml •nd 1 walhd nptrilMlihl lilm !If '" Occ1d1nt1I C011ttt student titled .. Arid It Got1 trimin .tia •tternpt 19 USUf'l'll 011 •nd Oil ·• -.ell odlw's ldlntit)'. (R) @I) Miit~ 8 l1'J Ill l~ll•H C111t11~ JO:JO Q Mlril: ...... at VII Ttp" ·~-·(C) (55) . • 1 jjldll ) (10) Su!*111 Trnsurt. (dr1m1) '59 -LIUl'tfltl H1rve1. ·' P~• tells cl th• .mi for • Si1110111 si.,..,.,t · wra ti the U1111m111d 1111, of tht .... .._ ,. .. Wllfld k!MCl1 "' Sp,th1 th1I CD PIMlc .... , f\il "" sullk Oii • tarlbbeln r•f in m Tiii Cr ..... lit (30) "Clm~s 1614 wltll more tt1111 two 111llllon and Coritwn,oriry Mor1llt)'." Dro 4ol1rs In ll9kl Md lilv• 1botrd. Atral kllOld, USC~ Jnfff:IOI', (W) lllk.I lbowt the ......,,.. al \!!I r rlllCh -Jtst. Miid Clln111. Hats •rt Dr. R-ltltl-•IMI Dr. FNdMicll . .,.. •• c-tt ........... ···-(C) (30) ·Z!·--~ ..... (C) • Will ......... (C} (30) Roberta stllrwood , ... ltt1i1 Pflll· ... -. U iHHJllllT>o ... ,,.., <CJ (30) Thi: dlll ttUs 1 m111ie1I loolt 11 tlmt. m ... """<CJ""> ... j .. ,_ Uft (t) (80) tmf .... C..... 11:308 Mwlr. "'CMmld" (nirs;lff)') ~ltnn Ford, Brtlderk:' Cr1wford. B@Cll &lT_. -(C) 9 Moftl: "f:vtry Dey'1 a HtlldlJ" (r.olftldy) 'JS-Mae Wast U l!lJ (1) Ql "" ..... (C) lZ:JO fD Acli•I Tll11t1t: "Wlli19trint Smith n. Scotl11'1d Y1rt .. 1:15 8 lllcMt: "fM W.ltl Wu Hit Jury9 (dt11111) '58-CdmOnd O'Brien, MOlll frnm111: Z:JO ID M-•ll't Skr. ~,. Dl1p11t:h fl'Olll Atult11" ~llCI "DeMrt Wt1." I T l<J~'C·'<' II "1.-M ,....... (co1111d)') 'JS-firoM l"owtr, ~ Henl1. u:ao • .. ....,. " L ... 11111• (hofrot) . ·n;-a.o, '""'· .. I DAYTIME MOVIES , ... .,.. ....... '"""') ·11- Do111 .. O'tonMt, Plpw l111ri1. l?:JCI 9 '"Tldl AMt ,,. (dn1111) '42- T7111111 1"er, Jotn F9nl1in1. Z:DO .. ...._ S• ti M•" (•est· tn\) '51--1.911 Nbri1M. J:DO IJ (C) -n. "'** 1M ttlt Pis· •" (dr•rMl '57-fr111• Sln1tr1. City G11nl :• .... 111111" (CO!Mdf} '47 -4:JID. (C) .......... ..... (..C· .IM11 c.atlllld, wim1111 Holl... ~ '5Z --.ndolpll Stott. Oon111 MOfll F,_111111. R .... • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS ,Q11Uty M11t1111 ,,,.,, o.,.M11bf• s-i('• f...-111•r• Hie• • Q.•rtw '9f • C.11t11ry. 1211 wm IALIOA &'9. flflWPOlf HACH MUTI AND JEFF GORDO MY SWEETJE TU'<IBlEWEEDSt HES ll!SAPPEARED AND TO(;jlV·!s 00R WEPPIN& W.Y! Yes.Yes. DARLING, Wf.IAT 161T? SO HE FINALLY PROPOSED EH?- El?· THAT'S WCI< FOR VOO! ly C!i.les M. Scliulz By John Miles By . Tont K. Ryon lly Al Smith .. -.,.. By Gus Arriola. ' UNDERWATER SEARCH -A diver from t~e ship, Calypso, searches for treasure tonight at 7:30 p.m. on Channel 7 duri{ig uTbe Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau." The full hour documerltary in color is the s~ of the series. TELEVISION VIEWS ABC Putting Bet on Youth By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOI> (UPI) -ABC·TV is beUing on youth to pull the network: out of its ratin£:s dol· drums ne.xt seuon, and C~TV is aiming'-again basically for the older audience to maintain ita prominence. ."i.. look at some ABC·TV shows indicates What the s malles~ commercial network is trying to do : "The Music. Scene," for instance, will: stress pop records and anti-establishnient humor. "THE NEW PEOPLE" will be about young persoos forming their own society whil~ marooned. on an isolated island. . -1 , "Love -American Sty1e•• will offer tales of young romance. "The Mod Squad," of course, will continue with stories about three young persons helping the police to understand the new generation .. "The Flying Nun ," of course, has a ver~ young star, Sally Field. ':Room 222," will focus on a high school teacher. "That Girl" has youthful Marlo Thomas as it1 headliner. The Tom Jones variety hour has a definite em· phasis on youth and pop music. THE LENNON sisters, not Jong ago little girls 011 the Lawrence Welk show, will have their own ·series. "The Dating Game" and "The Newlywed Game" are strictly for the almost.marrieds and the just-marrieds. And "Land of the Giants" is a children's ver· . slon or science-fiction. CBS-TV, meanwhile, apparently sees· little reason to change from the big shows that have hooked an audience that is essentially middle-- aged and up. , "Gunsmoke'' and Lucille Ball and "Mayberry R.F.D." and Doris Day and Ca rol Burnett will be back on Moni:JayS. "LANCER'' is a stock Western with no Cpecial youth appeal despite two Y?UJlger leading men. Red Skelton will be back, and so \Vilt "Tlie Bev· erly Hillbillies" and "Hawaii Five-0" and ~'Fam· ·By Affair," which has two older male leads...-Brian Keith and Sebastian Ca6ot -despite all the putr licity and attention for the show's child performers. Jim Nabors, who used to play 11G9rner Pyle," \viii have a variety show that offers no, indication it will be youth-oriented. "Hogan's HeroesP and "Get Smart" and "Green Acres" .AA.if "Petticoat Junction'' and Jackie Gleason and "My Three Sons" and Ed Sullivan and "Mannix'' and "Mis· sion~ Impossible" are all returning. OF All THE three commercial oetworks. NBC· TV appears' to be the one trying most to achieve a balance between yo uth-and-age programming. NBC-TV's series range from "Laugh.in'' to "Julia" to "The Virginian" to the "Kraft ·Music Hall" to Dean Martin's hour to "Daniel Boone" to Andy Williams to "Bonanza" to the new Bill Cos· by show. Because television . with few e~ceptions, bas not really tried to woo the brightest members· of the young generation, the chances are that the f'atings once again will go to the folkS who generally stay at home -the autlienc~ that Is middleagl\<f ·and older. Dennis the ltleruice ' ... AMO l))tlT GET1ltl!IV!' ,. • ' \ ,. { -o.u&.Y ll~OT I s r \ Mill Approved , WATER\'n.L!:, Me. (UPI) -Wy1ndolte Indjslrtes, Inc .. ol Manche.lier, Cona., aaid a ... 7i millioo indu1lrl1I ,.,....., bond permltlln& H to a>nst.ruct I modem mW ln Waterville, bas bffn •Pl'fOv.d by resMtenta of thM am. Plant call f« the construction ol a W ,OOD ICfUUt foot "uHr1· mo<lern" te.Ule mil~ Ille com- Pll\7 1akl. Wyandotte bu an ex1'1Jni mill In !lie ci17. • Three Added To Air Cal 'I'hree addttiOQS lo the Air ht was associated with . Lakt: Caliloml1 mml,tment tum Central Airllnes: for 17 Ye1rs, Jlave bttn announced by where he rose from atation Dudley M1Jler, viet pru;Mknt, agent &o vice.' president or marketing. custotnf'r st.rvict. Tht thret appointtts art: Davis was manager of route James Dickie, ma n a 1 e r • PJ'OCetdlngs for we 1 t e r n cuslomer It~; Frederlck Airlines for the Past two Davts. . manager. tchcdu1es years. Prior to &hat he IUVtd and ·economtc plannJ.nc: and as a market analyst for Glenn Hallield. m I n I I • r Douglu Airuall Co. ror 1 ... public ftlttions. • [)k'-t... )'Urs. ~ an l"1tar alt1ine HaU.ield was f o t me r 1 y vet.e.ran. was dirtct.or of UsocUite.d with p e re t r a. <uotomer .. rv1ce for &ltum MCFadd<n odvertlsJni llld Almy., O.kland, •I lhe Ume public rtl&UOlll •r<nc7 ot b11 -1ntment. ~ously Nowpott ll<ach. In ·l - ,. " . ' .. . . ~ • • . : • • • • •I l ; • '• • • \ • • I • • • • • · · ; , · !~es~ay'.s , d0sing ~ I ' ' /I!. Prices ·- .~--.--:c=---' ' • .......,, liqlt, 1%9 s ·st«>clt -Exchange ~ist I l.J.st I, ' I I l .. ---·---·------------ 1 ' •' U Oolll.V Pll.OT . Wtdllttdq, MIJ J4. 1'69 ' LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Tltea.ter Notes I Cl•TU•tCAT• Oii' tUllNlll 1'41Gt ·• ....., I •ICTITMM.11 HAMii CIJl1'11JICAtl 0, •ut1NU1 Cl•TIPICAll OP' aUllNl.SJ tM _,.,..,_. .. C8ttllY ,.,._. f~ •tc:TITIOllS KAMI •ICTnMH.11 JiAMS ~ ~=. ·~ w:; ..!.":..~-=... ..... Mirr,,.,.:..=; *"'r""u·~:.::.:-= crJ:' w~ ~= ti:... f1rt1t ·-tt 14LIOA INlf"-IJ. ~""'•rd. ~ 1..0, C.1ffiof'llla, l lYf,1 .N-1 It~ Cf lltwl'lff, _,, #o\ENT CO .... llJlll 1114 ll•lfl It ""'°" fllt flctl ..... ~ -If "llNO'I Ille nc'l!tiou. llrrn --' W. I(, llGNS ..,_... .,t h ttl•1 .. ,.,_ wflM9 •IUA" •1111 flllol .. i. """ i. ........ tf Mii tlwol uN 111'1!'1 ¥ ~ ., 11'1 M!Mt 1" fl.Ill .... ..,_, .. ef .... ~ .,. IM INlewl ... ...,._ .,,._ NIM Ill f\111 ....... lftt H'-• WfltM _,. lfl tuM '111111 'Peer'· Ends Scott's OCC •t follfwt• .... •i.t8 ol r!Klo.n« II U fOllPWt: Jlt<• qt rt1i.tnc. II ft ._.llv<n: o-" p c ...... , 11'111 MM19rlif l , Jof!!I ~Ilk. M Joftln llt'ffl, Wllllt"' A. i<wtlv, ltlt W ltlbM c ... wr m,. CMllMI .d.. llllloi, CN!f MeM, Cltlfofl'lla. 11¥f,. Ne-l hell.. Cfll~I•. 0.1• Mtw t. lfff. Deltd AMN If, INt Df!MI Mn 11. IW. Joflfl H......... • Wlllltlll A IC.ow•IY ~tforlf 1. C•rwr ""' 01 C•llflfnl .. °""""• Co\IMY:_,, ST4TE OP CALl;DltHl4 I o.or..-P' Corn• f e.. Mb t. ltw.1 ...... 1 lll'lt. I M<I"'° COUNTY OJI OltAHGll u lll"° o1 c.111omia. °''"" Ceuntw: PllOOC lfl tno lot' MW ll•i., """''II' On ,..,U n, !Ht, Mfor• ""'' , No11,., o.. M•Y 17 1Hf, INfor9 "ll'• 1 Nott,,. -•rtel JtM H~llk ~ I'll rne hi ,.yllll< In end lO!' Mid 511t1, •tr-llV P111tllc In 1..it 1W Mid Slalf> .. f'Ml!lllho °' ........... ,.. ...~ n ... , _.._,,..., ';!'~.~~ '""'" WILLIAM A, kOVEL V kMwll le ,_ ..... M•lorll L, C1rw1r Ind OWfW' le _,. __ .,_!""'ll\ltl'lt'I -~,..-....,,. -Ill be It.. .. ,.Of! ~ ftllll'lf 11 p Clfftl' k"llMI lo me hi llt ftlt llCi'tOlll 9111 fie -tlll Nl'M. lllblcrlbed 1'0 fnt •ll~ln INtnlt"'ftl W wi.ost ...-1 IN 11/Mcr!DeCI lo"°' wlll\1" 10.l'lllCIAL llALI IC~lldffd"" t•..::11IM 111• 11m1. 1,..1r-I 11111 1Qlnowlellttd ltiw t•· J-.il!N• ••• .. •1ji_'f~ 1,.__. (Oflll"ICIAL SEAL) ..,.,fttl Ille llri:>l' .,..., ..,...., ....-n Mlrv K. HM,.., COi<FtCIAL SEA.LI Prl11t1HI Oft!QI In Holt,.., PVblk•Onf0¥111 Mt,.., Btltl Mtl'toio Otlflt't C:-.., l"rl11tlP1I OHi« In Holl,.., P\ltlllc-C1llflfnlf Mw C-llllon Eulru Dr111111 c-tv Prtnc:IN I Otfltt In \ P,.11.,..'-•,.· 1t7t CIMI 0.lh' Pl1ll. M-, Commluloft E•11lrtt Or.-CGu111Y '"" NO'it'mbu :U, 1f1f Mw CemmlAIDn E.l~ru ""' 1, I•, JI. 71. IM M.wt PUbll1hlld Or-t CNll Ot111 Piiot, .... 11 '· "" l . LEG.. NOTICE Apr/I • •Ml Mew 7, 1.a.. "· lNt .,.., "ullllll'*t In tne Ott"" Co.It! O.llf AU l"llot, Mtw U, JI, 21 '""June 4. 1fft '21·1--------,----,-- 4t MOTIC• 01' SM•l lllfl'I SAL• LEGAL NOTICE BY TOM TITUS 01 ft11 0.11¥ Piii! 51111 Jllearly » >\ean ago Lucian Scott signed on as a drama in. structof' w1ttJ Orange Coat College and started l h e school's most p op u I a r theal!:ical tradition, the sum- mer musical. . " . ,, 'U/.Jtl~l .,. .,, . . " i<AltMEllS .. MEllCHANTI BANK OF 1------,..,:=,------HI LD om LEGAL NOTICE I OHl'I ~"A"H, •'• . Pl•lntlH VJ. ,..J:IJM •--------cc,..,7''.:""-IT'HEOOOlll! I. fj~flt, ti(, et •1· •••·IMI Ste"'• Mc.Ov••n 111 'S SAL• QeWlfinr CllllT1,tCATl OP DtSCONTINUAMCll ''BULLITT'' MOTJC• 0' TllUSTll'I No. IN .7•1 .,. OJI USI AND!Olt AUMOONMlMT O" T.S. .... .,.. , Ian A.M I Bl' \'lrlvt et tfl t)RtVI• btu111 flll 'ICTITIOUI MA.Ml plut o,,::::: :!,.. lttt '~°'tr::.Curll'f Tit~ H Ftl:lru1.., 1'1f'"' 1M ~· ewrt, T'HE VNOEllSIONED doH '*""' NEW SECOND •IATU IE '"" f llCI .. or111 • ........, C-IV °'LOI""""' Shit al Ctltfoml•· ~Ofr' 11111, elfedl ... Mlcdl u, lNt "' w EC 1111ur...u c_,,.,., m " ' -• llldlflMllt ttit.r• 1n ,....., "'c••M<I 1v eo M1neu llfllltr 111e 11d1t1e111 ''THE R KING ln ll>t Cll1 ,.":-.ttf: ~;.~~It 1:_ FAllMEllS AND Mfll(HANTS BANK llrm -If G•lnld• l"l11flt1 C:o. 11 Ml CREW'' ',11~~':,·e c ·~· ,.UANY I ~•lioft. ti OP LONG BEACH •.• C&llforllll blnkl111 No. ••ttvi., DrMt•· C1Jtl9"111t, wlll(ti U • ' .. llted __.tlkln •• lllfltl'Mllt uMllW .,.. bulW.1 wit Mr.,,...IV -" Df lilt witft 01111 M1r-ti11 1r<1>IM 1111C11r 0Mct OI ,rull t•« 11•IMI THEDDOllF. E.· FISHEi, •IM tollOwlr>t P"'1m. w,._. ,.....,. In lull•"" bT Ci'IAllLES I. ,OllEYI!~;. 11=.::,~ k-.. T. £. FISH.!111 ... --I'~ tM ruldenc:• i. .. to!lowt, to-wit: C..ti!IHM s.~ 1:30 ''"'' re,&relfel Otcerr>btr 5, 1 11 1., THEODORE FISH£1t1 kATHl!•YN H1rold J. k~. lit No. Rel<f«llll~=========s===='I no. HM In llOI* Uloi, ~~~=.::~*:, S. FISH£R, Uo. k-u l(.f.THl!:llYN Orlw , l~•IV Hllll1, C1tllorn!1 '°21D. Reconts I>! thl offl« "' 1'15M£1t " ludttr1enl dft1et1. ~ CerlUlc1!1 tor lrl111fCllo11 ot btn.IMn Or111110 ClllUl'll1'; C1liforn!i,~-= 1 net blltl\CI of 1111.nt.19 •~lly unOtr 1111 1bove fldlt!ou1 ntme, '"" tl- M!lutt In ll'le ,.,..,.....,...," ltidudl~lhl -Ofl "Id '11.0dtment on 1119 d.11ot fldtvll of 1111bllc1tlon ll>trftl'I', '""on 1111 obllt•t't-MC11r9CI tht 'f DI It.. fsiuin~ of Miki 1•..::uflM, I In 1111 offl(I of lht County Cltrk of bre.,_ or fttt1111, noll~ of w11~:i 11aw lt\'led llPOn '" llM rlthl, 111i. D••ntt COlllll't'. under ttlt 11rov!11ans ol recor<M<I Jt_,.., 27. 1 11 tM Id tnd lnttre1t of ulll ludtrr1tnl dtb!Oll Secllon t.U tM lht Civil Code. no Uftl I" Mok ~~· ~··~ "7b!lc !~c. In !ht .,_,.,.,. 111 ttut CoulllV of OttM• W11Nl!5S mY ht nd tllls 2•111 dtY II Otllc!ll "~t:llj~ .. ,,.:nl ';'1 lo tltll Sl1l1 411 C11lfeml1, dtKrlMd It foll0wt1 A,rll, ltff, lion for "•" w w rt'4 ln"''"j Loi II In block D ti Trt d No. H11111d J, Kurt Po$$UalOll. or t11Cumb••11:," Id [)toed DI SU ln ltw dfy of NIWP(lrt INth, w,. "" c ... 11-~. All'/1. C""V•Ytll ,, Mid Tnnlff I lltl!t City Oil CClllfth' Oil Or••· stilt GI' Ollfomlt n2t °''"""'''" Aw. 1r111I .111.,...-. •, 11111,•'!,i ~r11111t. Stilt II Hr M•11 reco•cttcl !n &ooll: 17, ·-· Park. CtHlll'"I• NoWll&rf tac ' tH1n y Pqes lJ to 36. IMlllll'l't 0 f P\lbl!lhtd Or•lltl Cotti 01llw Piiot. II C11\tomll.I ~= ,•: of Section • mlKtllt neout ITllPS "' Ille Offlu of Mil' 7, 1•. 21. 21. 1tff .. , . ., N~I 11 h In HM CllY of N-rt ltw County Recorder of Or111111 COYnlV. 1-------------- • •K_. on 1 m•• ,,..,~ Tottllwr w11t1 •H llld 11111u11r 1"-LEGAL NOTICE e1<11. 11 1 21 fellememt, tier9Cll"menb ,,... ,,., ------,,-,=,------r~ ln M ~ ,.!:o,d:•: 11ki 11Vrtenl11Cet !htrl\lftlo belo11tl11t or ln l' P·Utll ~l«ll~lty II'' ~..,...I•• -r"'"''""· Cl!llTIPICATI 01' OllCONTINUAMCI !or ';:' 11:,""POW of NYlr>t obtittllonl N'lTtCE IS HEREI~ G ~VEN ltlll 01' UJI ANO/Olt ABANDOHMl!NT DI' 1eaired 11\1 llld OHCI of Trinl, .... " M11 Ifft, I I 10.06 tcloclc AM . PICTITIOUS N4MI! 0 ltd AHii,. IN• II fAl ln L.#'f, Courtltoute. 700 W•I THE UNOEllS IGNEO '*'" Jie,.b'I • secu1t1Tv TITLE l!!ltl'lh Strltl, .City of S.nl• AM, County certify ltllt, lfllctlvt ,.ru ,,, IKf, he tHSUllANCE COMPANY of Or-1, Stilt tM C•nftff•i.. I wm l'lld culld le dt bullllftl Vllder the fie. BY J B ,,_,_.. • Mii II Pllblle tlK'lloll te the h19hnt flllous llrm llfmt tM O .. M FINANCE .1.1111i1ni Vb-Prntdl!ll ::,:*[; 1,: it:," Inn le~I ~111: co. 11 441 B1vtld4o Orlw, NtwPott lkt(tl, fC&r-lk $NU n ea,. 1 r ' Ctlllornlt, Wllldl butl11ta w11 lllr!nfl"ly llu~lll>td Ntwllort Htrtlor New•l'ltt' •nd lnltrnt ol Ilk! ludsmfnl dtbfon tom..-ed of !tit Ioli-Int 11er1.o11, w1'loM r~mhlnlll w1111 O•llv "'°'· N-rl ln ""-h •:;:-e eol' llei.cr~, :~.~ Mmt In 11111 •nd •II« of rnldtntl It •s !Sffc~ C:tllfor.... April )It •nd Mrt 1, to muc r IS lollowl. ... It. H, rMt · HMt lo 11t11tv stlcl n:KUl\on, wllll •«tvfll ltklllt'll W. llrkln, '-" ••vilde Orlvt, :_:._:.cc_ _____ ~=,,,---· llnlvffl Ind cetb. N--1 k tell C1ll1ot11i. LEGAL NOTICE 01ltd '' s.nt1 ,._,.., C:1llfornl1. 22nd Ctrtl!k:1!9 for' tr1111fdloit ol bullnn1 -__ _::=~-------· 1""'11• lNt. Uf'dlr The tbcl"9 flctlllou• ntmt, •"" ,,.. JAMES A, MUSICK, Sheriff lldtvll of 1>11bllclllon ttwreof, trt on 11111 p.mn County tM Or111111. C1lflornlt 1 1,._ Ille OI lhs COl,lnty Cle ~ ti CEllTll'ICATI! "O It 11tAtilSACTINO Bl' C. A. lltndtll, OtPulv II o • ' BUSINl!IS UNOllt A ~1rd P. a11m1 Or-t C011nty, under, Ille DrOvlslo.._ of l'ICTl110US M~MI! l"lolnllW• Alll.......,. Sec:tjon 14611 OI ttw Cl\ill C(ldt. !I ts t\t<tbJ cerlllltd Ille! tilt u,.. tnll Wllshlrt Btvtl., 'ull1 06 WITNE15 "'v htnd l~ft 1111! dl'f ol d I ned 1r1 1r .... wcttnt l>lt!lMll In ..... ,1,. HUit, Ct ll!tl'ftll "211 April, 1'''· c~nl!.. or or1111, 511te of Ctlltol'ftlt, Pubtl1hed Nt1111>11rt H1rbllr NIWI l'ren Rlchtrd W. l erk\n unm • nc:tllloul .:..,,., or• dtll•n.ilool combined w!lh 01llv l'!lol. Newitod DI! l'Ollll BIT HOMI! ""' 111cw1111 1111 ""me o1 the peflon In· lt1c~. C11lltrnl1 Aorll :JO 11'1d M1-,. 1. ~::."':!..! ~ ltrt•led flltrtln. lo wl!: I Joi. lM• 7'2 ff Ktrt11 Ktl'""M41 C1lli 'MISSION PROllE~TIE5, 1"5 Fron T .... IM ' . """' Sin Dll11c1. C1 llfornl• '2101, LEGAL NOTICE PYbllllhed Drl"9f COit! Otllw Piiot, THE WEIGHT WATCHER SIOR}i ,,., • It r.rJpi ~~;; I 81ilrr.:r~::! °"Bit "i:';!JJ1 """"" CLASS OPININOS HOWi CAU (7t4) US·SSOS Tonlghl, with Uw! optaing ol OCC's 1 pr l n g production, "Peer Gynl," Scott cloets oJt his long career at Coast directing and playing the tit!~ role in the Henrik Ibseo t~ tasy. Scott.-who Is leavi~ after graduation to teach at the Neighborhood Playhouie In New York City, flnt came to OCC in 1955 and, apart from a .brier h iatUJ from ils sister school, Golden West Coll~ge, has been at the Costa. Mesa school ever since. In 1956 he' inaugurated the summer musical with a pro- duction or "South Pacific," a show he repeated last summer for OCC's 20th anniversary. In the interim he has direded a number of student shows and community musicals. Scolt shares the role of "Peer Gynt" with Roberto Marcarel!I of Costa Pifesa, w ho will play Peer as a young man in lhe flrst act. The second half or the show will see Scott as the older Gynt, refiecting on his life. Appearing as Gynt's mother WITNESS our h1ncl1 thll 11th lllY tM •-II,. "'"" .. , >,I<, i••o ,, ... """1• '~•N coNsT11ucT0Rs, 1NC. Nor1c1 oP TT:t':r••·s s•L• ... ·~ LEGAL Nm:~cE :,;-+-+-+-+-+++n+++i+~+-..-....-+rn lh: R. H, Wllltr, "••llclt!ll T.O. Ht. TS 7.ft + .ii.. llY Shirley A. llrtncln. AHi. SKY. On Mly n. \NJ, •I 11 :00 4M .• TITLEl--------------1 + I \lll Front S!reel INSUllANC:E ANO TRUST COMPANY, 11 f'·JDN • ..-~In 01"11. C•ll1twnl1 n101 dulY ·-'"'"' Tnnltl llndff l!ld ClltTIPICAT• (Nf .UllNass SOUTHWEST CONTllACTOltS ll\lrt~.,,I to De1C1 of Tt1.11I dtlf'd July 27. PICTITIOUS NMll! + Q v + INC. ' 1N7 Eiretlllfd 8v: . CHARLES S, TM !JllClll'llt .... fob ftrtltr ht It c1111-.... '!/. , By: Mervin B. J.ohn-. ""•ldenl Olt£'fl!ll, 1 1111111 tn111 1nd rec:.oroecl ducllne I ~lfOQI 11 Cot0111 dtl Mtr, , r, + ev Btrbe,. J, Jollnton. Seuel1r-, Juho ''· 1t'7, 11 lrulr. No. IS<IQ. tn book C.lllornll, ,,,,..er ,,,. flctlllwl ftrm + .._ 511 Soulll Brookhllfll Ro.d 13". Pffe 1$!, of Otlldtl ltKOrdl In llM llllrll et Ht:LLINIC·AMERICAN 1norl 1T!' Fullerton, (lllfornlt ~ll tlflce Oil Ille Countr lllCJ.WGll' of Ortntl lhtl 11111 firm Is Composed of the IOI· + + IT.I.TE OF CAl.lfORNI• , c-tr. CtHfornll, WILL SELL AT lowl ... 111r-. _,. ri.me In 11111 •"" DANCING I the VILLA FONTANA COUNTY OF SAM 01e~O I SS "U8LIC:. AUCTION TO HJGHElT 810· Pltc.e of rt1klrnc:1 11 11 follows: + a + On April 17, ltll,, belor1 !M, OER FOii: CASH f,._vtblt ... lltnt" of Ille FRANKLIN 0. ROSE, .m (1r1111lon n.1 unc1en ltne<1. , N•l•rY l'ubllc: In llwtut rnoM-, of rhe United Sll~sJ In 11iw .. Co•G111 dtl fMr + 'll Tow n I Country. A cro11 from Fashion Squa re .r.L In ,,... lor r..n 01"90 COii""· Ctllfornll. Ille lclbO'I' of It'll wnl l1>1r1d11111 lot) en-Delld Ffblutry 1, 1Nt 1T" Oetl0"'9''' -•rl'CI Mu .. ln 8. Jot'lmon lr1nc:e of Tltlor ln1ur1na 811llcllnt lluleo F. 0, 11,,.,. + BEGINNING WED MAY 14th + kN>Wn to mt lo bl-Ille Pre1ldenl .. 1nd on Ille Nortrl!wul ccrrie• o! •Elsthth '"" S1AT£ OF CALIFORNIA 1 • lltr,,.rt J JohtlSOll ~-to me to lie Mlln SlrMll, $.Into An1, Ctlllorn!I .ii LOS ANGELES COUNTY J !S ..&.. ..J.. 1h• Secrtl~rl' cl IM torto,.llon !f\11 t•-rlthl. title '"" 111 ...... 1 conv~l!d lo •nd On Ftbtll•<'t 1, ,,.,, llefore ""· • ~l Tl w· d. ..-tt\lled the within i...1r111N!nt, 1r.c1 known "°""' lllld lw 11 11nc1tr 111d OH'CI ot Trust Not1N P11bl!< rn tnd 1111'" 11111 S!itt, + ie 10 J&mmt>r~ + 10 ""hi lie !he Hrtom wflo ~•tCUlfd !hf In tlM: lll'OPt,rfV 1Jlll11C 111 tlM: cllv ot _,II'"'"' '""'Ired F. o. llOH •nown • (f I l N t Be h) wll~tn lnstrumtnl "" llehtlt 6f tlw tor· N-rl B11ch. In llkl County ll'IO Stitt 11 me lo be lhe Pfnon whost ntme b + ormer y a ewpor SC + "°'''1on 111er11n n11T1td. '"" 1ci<now1tdt-1111c~bed:n•:..' Block 3 °' T tc1 No 112 1 wl>!icrlbed hi 1111 w11n1n 11111r11mtnt •nd + AN EXCITING DUO FIA.TURING CURltlN T + ed lo mt 111•1 IU<h corpor1llon 1•ec:11led llM c/!Y of Newport .~. coi.ntw c:/ •dl!OWlfoOtld hi 1•ec:11ttd tN 1•m1. ULA T · '"-within 1111tr11mtnt -ur•11o1nt to tt1 •v· Ori11te. !tit. °' ci111orn11, 15 ,., ma11 ~t''''~U:ii ~rir 1 + l'OP It UNIS FOR YOUR DANCING l'ltASURI + LIWI Of I RelOlullon tM llt lo.rd of rec:orOld In look JJ, Ntts 5 Incl f ol c!u!~ ol Lo~ : ... r:i:: D 01~,:0N~·s.s mv hind Ind ollk:ltl ••I. MIK,ell1r.to111.,""•'' •,•, thf ~let tM the MY Commln!ofl l!•lll•ei + ANCING WID. THRU SAT, + to1111 v recor r 11 c011n... June 3D 1'119 + IOFFIC~ .... ~o~ ... ~At) Mtllllu! co~~.nr~~ :;~ •• ~. r:::~H~: l~~rl:'. ;,:Ji,b!Jr"U .!""'":~ 1c:1;1\,:•11V ~~_':t 8:30 P.M.-'Til Closing. Phone-547·09·1·1 + Nori.,. l'11bt1c.C111tornl1 rt1ttrdt11t !Ille, POQ111ton. or ,,.. ' ' + ' .... ~~~~~:!., 0c:~ty1n ~~o':~:~es.oftetti:'Ynot:' ,=.::.n1 ': ";~r,; LEGAL NOTICE ~+++++++++++++++.+.+.++++-.) Mv CommlH\on E•llHtt Deed o1 Ttllll, to-wll : Q,000,IXI, wllh ln·1-------;::;:------ March \J, Ul'll l1tt1t tnim A1111111! 1, 1'111, 11 In 11111 no1t 7tlU 1~---------------------------,1 Sllll ol C.lllorn11 l SS ffOVldtd, 1dv1ncn. II •n1. ""''' ll\f NDTICll 0,. INT•No•o TllANll'elt C<111nh' ol Sin Ditto l le...,. of 11111 Oeld of 1r111I, /ff1, ch1'11n ANO Ll:ASIBAC:K On April 11, IN•. bllort me, !ht tr.fl ••11t1111S ti !tie 1ru11H ind of !tit Nof!cl 11 "-relw t lvM Ilia! llotu ltlley, uflcltrllJMCI, I Nott.,. P11bllc In tn• !or lnnl1 cr11ttd ...,. s1!d O.ed flf Tl'llS!. o.o.s.. Tr1111lt~r, Df lfttl Wtsl Clfff Sin OJ-eou..11, Ctlllornlt. Jlfflontth' TM beMfldll"I' 11ndlr wld Oted ti 01'\w, Cl.., ol' NIWllOtl 8-.dl, Cthfornt., lll'llftrt<I II. H. Wttler known lo "" lo be Tri/St, by relSOll ol I bntdl or dff111tl In ln~1 le Hll C.rf1!11 Nl'IOllll P•oPll<IY the PrnlOtnt, •net Slllrle1 A, lrtndn Ille obl\91llon1 U<ured I ht r f bl', hi: Lt111<N l11 c.._ttkln, 1 Ctlllornl1 k.-wn IO me lo bt lh• A11l1!1nl s.c,.11rv htretolor1 UK\lltd Ind cllllv.,ed to lht tori'.• lnltndtd Tr1n11., .. Cl-), of 9f 1111 COl"llO,.llo!I 11111 ''Kiiied Ille \lfldtriltntcl I wrlllen D«llrtllon ot t30l Wllllllre ll'tll., City ol Btvtrtw Hlll1, wllflllfl ._rumen! '""known lo me le be o.f1ull tflcl Otm•nd for Slit, Ind wrlltln C1tlternl1; 111d !ht! 11ld lnl.ndld lht 11tr10M wl'lll execllfed the with in 1,.. ..,tic• of br11cll tnd of tltc:tiOn lo <•UH Tr1n1ltrtt fl-), Leeff011!11 Co•-• ••roment on btl'l.IN ol' lllt <O<POtlllOll IM llnlltl"lltned to Hll 11lcl 11'-rtY fl lion, lnleflcl1 hi 1t11H>eck lo lllcl Rcttr !~In llMl!ed, 11111 Kk-ltdted to ..,. Hlllf' stld obll111lons, Ind ""''al"'•• on ltU1-,, D.0.S .. 1r1n11tror ILfHN J. TM th.II svc:~ cooior,,.lon 1~ec111M llw within Jlftlllf'f' n. ltllt. 1119 undtl"l!OMll etuttd ulCI per1on11 11r11oertr, 1 11ner11 llncrlP. ln1t..._.., _._, lo Ill Bv·Ltws or 1 Hid noli(t of bl'Ndl .rid ol' tlt<llon lo llf. llln OI whlth ls 11 lollows. ~wit: O.nl•I Rnolutlon ot Ill llol!rd ol' Olr1<!0<1. •PCO•d~ In bocik I UJ; Jlltt ff. tM Miki "UlPment, olflc1 Hlll-nt. l11rn1t11,. WITN!SS mv l'l.lnd Ind oll lcltl INL OlllCltl ltlCOl'dl. • .... ll•turn •nd loc1led 11 lfOl Wtll Cl!fl !OFFICIAL SEAL) Otl9: A11rll J~. 1'1\t, Orlvt, Cltv ol N...-1 Bt1ch. C11Uoni11, C:1rol~n S. Mlthlwl Tl1LE INSUltAMCE ANO Ind lhtl llld Ille t ncl 1etHbl<k tr1n11c-Nollfl ,,Vbllc:-C111torn11 TRUST COMl'ANY. II ,.Id lion 11 lo tie C011111...-ttd 011 I~• Hnd Prlnc:lt•I OH!ce In 1ru1ltt, div of Mlv, 1'M, ti 10 '·"'·•II lh• ottlc1 Sin Oleta Co\lnlv I V ELMER W. HEINZEll ot L•l'"UlP Cotitorillflll 11 tl01 Wll1hlfl My Car..mlnlon EKPlres AuThcl!'llld Sltn1111re IMI .. Clly of 81•erl'f Hl!ll, C1lltornl1. Mlrdl ll, 1'1t. l"ubll1/led N•w1tort H1rbor News Prtn 01ltd !hit 6rh dew of MI Y, !Ht, '°~bll11'11d Citt"9t (otlt Olli' Piiot, Ctlnlb!rted with OtllY llllof, Newpert Lt1,.oul• C&r-lllon, All>tll 21. lO I nd Ml~ 1, 1•, INJ nu, lltch,_ Ct lllomll • C1lifornl1 COff, ""rll 'Ill 11\d MIY 7, U, 19,f t0f'4t 111 M1tvln lttt'Y>I" Ll!AllOUI ,. COllP. LEGAL NOTICE ttt1 w111h1r1 •tw. -~w,;;;;;;;;-;;;~;-;;;"T,;;"--1---'~~:'::..C'.:::'..'.::::'.:'._ __ ., ltwrl1 Hiiis, C1tlf, "211 IUl'llltOll COUIT OJI THI P-ttl11 Publl~h"" Or111tt CH1I STAT• 01' C.'.LIPOllNIA B.'ll•UM Mtv U, no LEGAL NOTICE Dt!IY F'lkll, t2'4t POii THI COUNTY 01' OIANGI! C:lltTllllCATa OP BUS041!1S NO, A .. 14K LEGAL NOT ICE NOT1C•· Ofl IALI! 01' ll•L AMO PICTITIOUS NAMI! Pl!lllONAL "lt01'1 11Y AT P'lllYA1• 1he Undtrtltntd dO <Nl!lv lheY '"'1--------------SALI! Al A UMIT I y A.Do ~11,ll~I I bu11ntH II 1M1 E11! CHI! P·UJ11 MINllTl.llTOll, PllOIAtl! COOi: llC· Hlohw1,, Coron1 c!oL Mir. C1Mlornl1, 1Alt·l'4t TION 711.J ~r lht flcllllOUI firm ntmf of ClllTll'ICATI: 1'011 I" 11w Mltttr of tht fllllt o! NEWl'ORT HAltaOlt I HSU It AN CE TltANlllCTION 01' I USINl:SI MAllXlllE 0 POE Dr«ued •O£NCY '"" !hit ""firm II com,oM!I UNOlll fllCTITIOUI NAMI N01"1CE IS He11<a'y GIVEN lhll J c of lilt tolklWllll CO•POrtllon • ft II 1H E UNOERSIGNEO cloel ~ertb~ Poe, •• ..im1111itrilot ot lhl n li!t W11~ Nrlrlfrt~lo ~ "•m•I In fu!I Incl trr111v lhll he 1, tonctucllr>t 1 floor 1ne wi• ••Mll~M Df M.,lor;. o Pot tllcn tM b<lslntll Wld •tlklenc• ,,. 11 covtrlllll 11111111111on bv<IMtl loc:•led •I · ' followt: 7ll N. 81t1vl1 Unlll E &. F, OrtnH, Ofettl"'• Wiii iell II prtv1tc Slit:, IO !tit M.411:101. INVESTMENT COMPANY. Ottllltt COlmlv. C1lll0<nl1, !llldt!r 11\t !Ito hl1l>elt 1.nd bell b'<!dtr. 11ncltr llw terms tHC:. 1111O11 I! R Ty MANAGEMENT llllOlll fltm nime of Hll TON C41111E1 .... condir-l\t'll!\tft ... mtnllDl'lfd. •ncl 0 1\llSION, I C1hlornl• corPOr•llorl. 21'1 $£11VIC£ tncl lh1I ~•ld !Ir.,. I• tont-.d tllblect ':-· conflm11tlon bv lhll SvN•lor Et1t Co.11 H!tllwf~, (0'111'11 dtl Mir, tM the totlowlnt PlftOfl, whole Nl'1"' In Courl, w.ll\ln llM l\mt .t Clowld by 1tw. 11 C.llfornlt. by: Wlltl1m C. 1111\11, l"r1.i. 1u• 11111 pllc:t ol' relldwl!CI ~ 11 lr.t tffk9 OI 11-111, H11rwl!1 '"" cltnf. lollowl. fO.Wll : Rtmlt, •ttornen tor Mild lllmlnl1tr11or ANOEll'°N ANO AHICH, bl' Mlrce Ltr" Hltton, ~lt Sllv1tdilf, ,_., "' 'll -l2nd llrHI, H-1 8ttt"' "· Anlcll, 1114 GolOtnrof, Cor1tn1 dtl Ctlllorllll, C1llflolt1. 111 llM 1toh1. 11111 '"" lntttetl Mtr, C111tornl1, 0-ld 0 . Andtn1111, WITNESS rnv htnll lhls 2nd lltl' of Ml'f, Ind trllfe ""9 #It tlftlt Of llltrtori. 1Ml COITlft'l(IOlloA llOlll, "-' B11cti. INt. O. P119, ~-II. Ills. by -•11on af C•"l.,1'11, 1"" Robtrt a. Mlt\lrll. J21S L&•r'J Hiiton l•w ., ofllt,..,.,., llOtlll,.., ollltr lllln ,,, Fotl11111, Newl'O<'t le1CJ1, C1tlltml1. stile tM C1tllel'nl1. I In tdlllfi.n lo lhtl tM tht etc:ecrtnt 11 !ht Oiied Febr111.., 7', lfllt County of OrtllH M llfne af Mr fttt". In 11111 hi lh.i <trlll" H.t.1110~ INYl!:S TMENT On Mt~ 1. INt, Mfort "''· 11•1 ul'lo- ''" 11111 ,..,._, 11tt1Ptrty, IJlvtllM 111 !tit COMPANY, INC, dlol•""'· • Ntll,.., l'utlllc In -I~• 1•1d Cltv of ttunltntflon Bttdl, C_t, of PROl"EltTY Slllt, rtthtllnt tht"I"' d\.111 tl'1\mluloned tl1e-rnesa Tr, . .:--J1r·-Jt frr11 ~j. 1.',: Ai:-1p<.:-1r1tn1·_nt ·; NEV/PORT AND !!ARBOR lN COS TA MESA TELEPHONE 541-1552 FOi INFOIMATION Cl•tlltt!, Sl1tl fll Ctlltoon!t, ..... lflKrlbtd MANAGEMENT DIVISION llnd 1-.i, 11trM111ll'f •-•f'CI Ltrry 11 fotlol<tt: Bl' Wlltllm (, Ill... KUion flMwn " "" to bt !tit M<Wlliljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Tiit NfWl\lf tf-rfy Ille~ Ptt1ldenf wllolt flMN II tut.(rl"°' hi the Wllh}n tlr'lltll, .. ._ l'tfrlttrt!ar, w1 .... r, ANDERSON ANO AHICH "'""''"Ml, •11111 tckNwltdlff te mt lhtf f..,.r, dt.,_.I l!>d t dlvlff<, M1rco P, A.llkll M til<\lttd the """· Tiie "" .,..rt, 11 lllult.d I I 1Mfl °""'Id 0, Af'llltrf.Oll Wtlftetl ,.., 1111\d •nd ofllcllr ~t. l...,ntU U1>t, Hv~1l11tfo!I llNch. Robert I. Ml1'.lm !OllFICIAl. lliALJ C111foml1, 11111 11 "'°'' Pt•llc111tr1¥ STATE OF U.L!i<ORHIA ) MUrltl J, MIH•netr dntrltllrd u hlllowl: COUNTY OF 011.t.MOE I It. "•llrl' l'\lllllc.C1!!hlfft11 LOI .... Trtcl Uh •I "" m111 °" Febnlt,.., n . Ifft. befort mt. !ht ltl'lllCIMI OH!cl tn r-INll 18 Booll: UJ, "'''• q , ., tflf llndtrtltr.td. • N1t1,.., "vb!lc 111 ,.,. fer Or•l!f• Counl'I' SO d Mll<•llllllOlll M•H, RtCOl"ch of stld (OUlll!' l lld $1tlt, Nl"lOOl!lll'f 10• ,,,,,. C~IUIOfl EJ:1>lrt1 Orw, Counfl', C1 tll9"n!1. "'"' win1a111 c. 1t1111 1rinowft It "" JI.IN 11, ltTI lllbleci fe; t'UNUOI •••u. Cllll9~•nlt. " tie ·~· Prhldfr\I of ttlt c.0"',_111en !ht! P~n..... O•t!IM C:Msl OtUr Pllol, undltloM, fftl<lctlon&, rt1t...,t!lof11, t~twted 1111 within lllllfll!Mlll, -ntWfl to Mt!' 7, U, fl. n, Ifft ltHt rf9hb. r""1'1 tM "'''•••-nit,,... t•· ll'ot to .,. the ...,._ who ••Kul., thtl----:-::-::"'.-:--;::::::::-::::,---11 llflnt ~llr111Ct1 of •Kt•t. within IMln.MWnt on bthllt of lllt c.r· LEGAL NOTICE Tiie flll"IM tllll ~lllonl ot !hr Mi. Mrt!lon 11\tfttn ntmed, 11111 tc*llowlldt-1r1: u.n In llWful ..,...., ti ~ Unltff td tt ,... 11111 tudl urw1tr.,. ...c111tfl------,-,-,-.,-.-,-----· II l!•ltl of Arr1trlc1. Ttn flll"•I ilttctnl of "" wltllln lntlrumtfll '""'""' i. th Irr-NQTICI TO CllllDITOltS lht •-' ""' It t«On1Pt n1 lhl Mffr It., or I i.Mhtllon tM 11'1 ...... ol' flrte'> IU,,l,r!IOll COUllT OP 1Mlll: Inf lfll' '91911U lo M Pl!d Oft Ult-.... STATI 01" (fl,L.ll"Clll:PUA ,Olt tlrmett.in " Nit "' ,, .. Cnurt. Tt•ft. WITNESS"'' .n1c1111,,....... ..... THI COUNTY 01' o•ANOI ffftll. ••1111111 Inf ""lntt1110•1:t ,.,. C01',.IC1AL SEAL! Ht. A.u411 fllflMI. W 'rMllUIM Oii lfllur111C1 IC> Glottt .ltffrlll £ S !AN ~ ·-•1"$ ~·-~ ... fl'lt -<NMr lhl• lit .... Note,.,. ,."'k tl/ltol'lll• ,, ... fll u ,.., ..... .. ' ~ ''""' .. ff ll'lt dlle ot nnfl""'llln ot 6fl!r1Mltlt l Otntt lfl "NOTICE IS Hl!ltEIY OtVEH 11 111t Ult Tl'l9 IHf!llMlllfl ... flli., ~... r"'" C-T'f ttlfllln r1 1M '"'°"' NITIH lttatllnt GI' •11•r•ct .,,. -111\t lotlU(lflCt M'f C:-IHIM Eatll'ff 111111 '" ........ lll•int tlelm1 ""lllt "" Nlkv .,... be II 1119 e~ttnH M' !ht Autwt 4. l•JI '1111 dte'llltfll ••• ,_!!'Ill 1e 11!\ ft'tm· tsttlt'. STATE 01' CA~lf'OllNIA, '#Ith f1w !!ICM..,., YIUCl'ltrt. In ltN-Mlal Alf ..... lllf olftr1 -" In -ittnt COUNTY OF OllANGI I u.. f1f 1111 c ..... M' tlw tblw entlltM courl,.,. ..... WIJI Ill l'ftllWltl II lt>t elfkt ti °" f'tllrw,.., x . ,..,, .,......., -· llw " .......,. ll'llnl. wlltl lht llKtelll"I' H-1fl; Hwwtil lflf l•n'Wr. II· -tnlllllf, • Nef.t,., ,.1118< In ..... fir ¥llllcfltn. to 11w llflCle"le""" 11 1111 ctflu 1.,._,, Ill' •llf ldrftfnltlTI,., .i l)O -ltld Stitt. --111 ..... ,elf M4'tU rl Jiii' ,..,.,,...,.._ OUltYlA. CAlt,,EMTI" :r111111 Ml"WI, N""""1 tHCI, Ct'lfern11. ti P. Anlcfl. o...111 D. ~ ..... • BAllNll.. Mt Drfll' Drlw, N.-t lfl'l'lt,.. l1'lt 11'111 ftrtr Nlk•ltoll ti lflla 11°"11 t , Ml~ If-,_ "" te ... Bnd\; C1111on!11 wllkl'I Is 1111 11lto Ill Mfi<9 W lffwt ftW INllM flf 111f 11111. lllf ,lrlnerl ol' flWi ~ ll'ltl ... M l-ol' !ht -*"•1911ff In 111 mtlttft The rliJM h ,_,,... It reftcf '"' tOlf KVltol flW wllflln I,.,._,• •llf "'1111'1nt .. tl\f .. , ... ff Mlf '«"""'• • n """'· 1t•111W'"'tef lo -!Ml Midi "~"' w1111111 M.w ~ lflw<" 1111 tint Mfltl. 8ATl!D: AOffl U, '* bl(Ulld 111t M-· lltfl flf thtt "'""-1. C. 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PORT THEATRE-S•lurdoy Nl9hl •I 10:30 MAJOR STUDIO PREVI EW FEATURE BIG COMEDY STARRING ALAN ARK IN Come 1t 6:45' Sff All ThrH; No Advence Price NOW SHOWING P•I N•wf!IU 111 ''Th• Sec ret w.r of H1rry Frln '' ... '1H1nnlbel Brooks'' G.awho ......... ~ SuttCo...,. luttL•tc•h1•lypcnile• .!t ...... ~ I n1 _..., ...... N ...... • A ""1>"" -Fiim \ OCC FAREWELL Luc ien Scott will be Barbara Smith, also of Costa Mesa. Biii Cochran, Sheila O'Connell, Jam 11 a Mynderse, Dennis Hanrahan and Maeve Robin.son take the play's other major roles. "Peer Gynt'' will b e p resented ror four performances, tonight through Saturday at 8:15 p .m . In the OCC auditorium. Admission is free, but tickets must be ob- tained at the colleg e bookstore. * * * An old fashioned ghost story is the fare at the Fullerton F o otlighters' Muckenthaler Center were "Sight' Unseen" opens a three-weekend ruo Friday night. Walt Assenheimer is direc- ting the tale of an English noblewoman who inherits a haunted castle. Chris ty Dwyer and Richard Clements play the pr.incipal roles, with Des· mond Grogan, Anna Heins a nd Bobbi Aller cast as the ethereal ancestors. Others in the cast Include Sybil Levey. Anita Malk and Ron Dragt. The show will be staged Fridays and Saturdays through May 31 at the center, 119 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton, with reservations vaila ble by calling 871-4710. * * * Resuming tonight for its last four perlonnances is the original drama "Winter WUI Ask." presented by the Irvine Repertory Theater on the UCI campus. Clayton Garrison is directing the play, written by Irvine professor Daniel Stein. Robert Cohen. John Hag· gard, AM Pearson and J eri Col~ nead the .c•st of the lfth cen t ury drama. Performances wUJ· be given lh""'gh Slilln!ay at. U.. Studio Tht•t•r 1n the Fine Arts building with tld<eb available 11.t &u4817. * * * "Room Service"' moves Into Jts fourth weeken'd at South Coast Repertory with David Enunes directing the resur- rected depression era comedy • Don Tuche, Ronald Boussom, Martin Ben.son and Michael Douglass head the cast. The show plays Thursday through Sunday at SCR's Third Step Theater, 1821 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tickets may be reserved at the box office or \~Y calling 646-1383. * * * T h e Westminster Com· munily theater heads Into its second weekend with the com· edy "Once for the Asking.'' John Moran directs with Arvid Malnaa, Pat Warner, Joan •lagerty a nd Ralph Appell in the p rincipal.roles. Friday an'd Saturday performances of the show are given at the theater, 6S69 Westminster Ave . in the Westminster Center m a 11 . Reservatiions may bt made by calling 393-5443. • * * AM and Ron Filian share the spotlight with Lee How- ington in the comedy "Ask Any Girl," being presented Fridays and Saturdays by the Santa Ana Community Players. F r ank Rugell directs the large cast show at t he Players Theater. lO'lQ W. 18th St., San- ta Ana. The number for reservations is 541·2188. • • * Final performances o f Golden_ West Co l lege's "Tartuffe" will be given Fri· day and Saturday at the G\VC Patio Theater. Drama in- structor Charles 1i1itchell is directing. "The Lion in Winter." held over for a fifth and last weekend, L5 the fare at Long Beach's Forum XI Theater, 835 Locust Ave. Kerry Johnson directs the medieval drama which closes Friday and Saturday evenings. A six-weekend run of "The Family Man" at the Long Beach Community Playhouse concludes Frida:t a11d Satur· day. RaJph Richmond takes the title role at the theater, 5021 E. Anaheim St. OCC Student to Show Versatility in Music B renton Ranney Almond of Westminster will give a r are sophomore recital at Oran4e Coast College this month 1n wltich he will demonstrate his mastery of four mediums - organ, harpsichord, voice and piano. The recital will be held May 24 at 8 p.m . in Music Studio No. I, There 1is oo admission charge and the public is in· vited to attend. Almond, son or Mr. and f\.1rs. David B. Almond of Westminster, Is a graduate of Bolsa Grande High School. At OCC he has been a member of the chorale iand madriga l singers. He will continue his education at C h ., p m a n College, where he has received a music scholarship. He has studied piano, organ and harpsichord with his uncle, Jack Ranney; organ with J. P. Colyar of the OCC music department; and voice with Charles Berger of the music and E11glish depart- ments at OCC. Almon d 's organ performance will be "Toccata and Fu e'' Bach. He 1lio TrfUUD!o] ff[Wf'OllT llACM • Oft.I-UM will present a work by Bach on the harpsichord, "Partita in A Minor." His tenor presentation will irn:lude "Three Songs from Dieterliebe'' by Schumann; and three songs by Gabriel Faure. His piano work will be "Preludes for Piano" by Shostakovitch. Betty Grable Shoiv Folds LONDON (AP) -Actress Betty G rable says , "I'm not crying over this but it'!> my first flop.'' Belle Starr, the musical which brought the World War JI pinup girl to London ror the first time, will c lose Saturday after a 17-.rlay run. "You're only as good as your material," Miss Grable, 52. said. "Some or the things l had t o say "·ere absolutely embarrassing. J oke,s were in bad taste." IYI IHOW STA•TS ,,45 CONT. SUN. JIOM I P.M. ACADEMY WINNER IEST ACTOR CUFF ROBERTSON ~lM\lPICTUR!S~callbonliol,,;~~ llll!ER1SllllSSIX:Il1Uf11111f1 CLIFF ROBERTSON •• C#A~b/ u .. ~. CLAIRE BLOOM ncma•·1w· .... e-.llllf• ... c-•: ... •, ALSO .. ,,.,,~ l'erme .,"'9 ~er --" -- J \ I ! Care,J.t " ; . l 'I ~ ' t l Fonda Film l Wins Kudos At Cannes CANNES, France (UPI) Peter Fonda s traddled a motorcycle and roared off on film across the American Southwest from Lo! Angeles to New Orleans carrying a message Cor movie audiences. It was, an evenUul trip for the "Easy Rider." portrayed by Fooda in the film he pro- duced, with detours for sex, drugs and casual death on a Louisiana road. Fonda, son of actor Henry Fonda, said after the morie was screened at the Cannes Film Festival it was made to tell of life in these United States. He passed the word, if au· dience reaction is a judge. The festival crowd gave the film an ovation and it created the 1 first real excitement since the ~ annual festival opened last week. "My father made a movie, t. 1The Grapes of Wrath,' about the degradation of people, a land grab by the government, ' the unfairness of the police : and so forth in 1939," Fonda " said after the film was shown. ~ "Now it is 1969 a nd we bavt " the same thing: degradation of people, unnecessary taxes and wars," ~ • Indian Quinn • ' HOLLYWOOD CUPI) -" Anthony Quinn will star as Flapping Eagle: the hard-,. drinking Indian in Sir Carol ~ Reed's "Nobody Loves a Drunken ID~an." PACIFIC Df""["'\' 17r -m : I . .j l • ,, ~ LI._Jll;;J Wltlnlr " ' Acldlnrf A,,.,.,.I Omtr Shtrttr "DI. ZHIYASO" O.vld N!v.n-Cotor "Pr•4ewc• ...i fM Ptll" lt..::omlllll!Old '" Mvrttl l"ACll'IC DlllVli IN .. THIATllll $"1CIAL NOTICI TO OUlt l'ATllOMS Tht Dlc:lllr1 l!sltd I" this bclK ml'f Ill comkl••ed bl' tome to t.. 11111vll1bi. lor tMlclren •rid 'fOl,lng '*'Pie -111111 reciu1re ,,.,.,,!al dlicrlllon. Contr1ry to adv,•tlt1119 be'fOl'llf our c Ont r o I Incl •PPttrlllll lh•wt!tr1, 'l'OUl!lt peoplt llndtr II !NOT !fl wUI no! be 8<1mllttd lo PAC:lf'IC'S WAil-NEll DRIVE IN THE,..,,TRE le IN the Jllclurt 11,11111 In 11111 be,. unln1 ICCO"""llled by JI.rt n t o• •duff g11t•d11 .. : "LADT IN CIMENr' ::::.. IMS.JJII -=--.... · Ul·11'71 -.... -. w.- N• -~ll Mtttln.1• lln kallll!Nl'lllf ti' ,. ....... ... ,. ...... ltf11 LM Ml"""9 MHIU IN THI PACI~ l'rull SIMtrt .. LI.DY IN CIMINT" . ........... , ....... . .. .. .. .. '• • - .. ·~ r- "' :•. •t I r ( I 11 0 h y b a • ,, ,, cl N II'. h; h' iii .. h• p. n Ir P< Ai p• ni lu 18 I CD Or Ca th• To Au p.1 at COi dir Ru De of I lea ing the the 1 SOJ, b8' Ke: am wil Up Dr. R., F0> s ROI Be; l n •pp ~1u1 lion mu! )'OU! Tl olde be Ang ID b five ''ioli ""Ill WI ta lei oach '"" win, SOloL clw lht J <IP. taine . . . ... . ' . ' . --.. . - "'-· ... , 14, 1969 DAILY PU.OT Handel's 'Te Deum' Memorable Concert in Grove" By TOM BARLEY all connecled with It draw the (the oeld>raled Cuckoo 1 n ci Vallty orc'inml Dator Wettoo lrllod!l>IP for w b I c b \his ., "'°'" --i\laheol pralOe from Ws critic the' Nill>llP!Plll and,._ In lhll ••teaoo:J. Mr. Weltoa wrller la ¥el')', very antlOfUI. aw-crowded Drai>at G:oast for an l111Plring dlflvery ol a ~·· ¥aP> In G Minor. verJ ~ 04lilted 'me ol lbe But wbjl oo earth dldn1 they· muaful l!alaodar ramy, at-work piat lend> llleU ·"'com-. S,enor Gulnaldo lhowed' ao~pet;rl;"l;"";"";';«~·=u;·=ld==•;f =lal;·;~=~C~'°';"";ty~knqw=;!=:d' fords us UM! oppoitunltY of p 1 e t e 1 y t o c h u r c h astoni&hinl technical mutery:r; "11 venturing further afield and performances wlth Its unal· ol the ioVely lllndel work and >! ==~zt~ ;;~;~.iii~ ;t·i.:1i~ ·- lioft.Coul cultural olfetlng. ~. ~ IOCb I llfort\e wllb - 'rbat ~.wu ~ully Very, vtry moving, indeed, the .concert audilnee. dan&led before us }qt week, and we aball keep with mi for He and the _.,lra com- hOwever, d ' lt-wai ~ bite a long .~e our memory of · blned perfect!J for tbe that llDl ua t.o Garden Grove lheee two hne choirs ~ the Albinonl wort, 1 ref._ , Suoday ev"""' lot a surpri> \°"1Y ~urch In which we ,....live tcore ,. ndolmt ol 1q1y tlnblralded ~ , were pnvileged to enJoy their the ....,. llld dlaftn 81, ol ~ Fredlric1t Hlndeh apllfldld, perlo111u1nco. poundid bY Ibo -Ill ''Te Deum Laudamus" -bet· But this wu ~ all. We century It.all.u compoien. ter tnown to the music lov~ ahould ~.re;nlls ~ lf,tie Our program very COl'ftC'tly d as lbe groat m a • t e r a •xcluded ftinn our lilt ol defined Alblninl'• WllJll adat' uutrecht Te Deum." crtdlta PY:t fine Argentlnlq io u npl"eleDtin& the Ont W• readlzy encfortt U>e organlJI, .Norberto Gulna14o tracinp ol "It ttylt plant," 1 I efalm oj the United. Mothodllll llld !be \I-member ensem\lle 1 mode or ~ whlcb Church to be b1euOd wl\11 f1ro-tilat -od so hard and arOUJed and llll(liNil J"9ICll . bably the flnltl acou1111ci In fllthlully In \Is ••PPort ol the and Jtallan \allb fil Jllll 1Int any orange Cowlly gaiberlng "Te Ileum." bll1o)l of dl!<ipllned mUllC. plac• and we are !llHJ Indeed OllGAN CllNCERTO Q9r <Jilly brickbal Is for· Ille I iY ou're ·Stett .. ReaU11 Despite Ronald J1oui1~'~1i1lenot that he never fell belle;,· QI!)' Collar. Don Tucbe and llrutln llllleon (ll'Om l11t) try to convlnqt blrn Olh11'!rii1 In 1111• scene 1n>rn ·1111 ·South· Colll Reptrlory comedy "Rooln Strvlc1 " rllllmlng tbat we f.....t it llll It; fw Both wore b•ard \~splendid P1of1e wllo flllld lo.fauocb 1 the llawl~ dlstrilMtlftrl ii lllll 1Mect i n pro-intermission -t~ l'Ul>lldlJ cam- magntncenl wor} 111:11\t 1111 performances of Hi n d •'I'! Jlllin fOf iltll ftae -and on what we f'llll Wll a lr\llt QI' OOncerto No. 13 in F we do 1111 r.• Fountalo m~moraWe ~ Ind •:1p1iiiiii1;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;;;;iili .. 1iiiliiiiiiii;;;iiiiii~;;ii;i;;ii =::i:t~ ~ hlO GORDON i.IGHTFOOT Thursday at .lbt 'l'M,rd Step Th•llf In Costa Mesa . . I lla<kto& the ellUoll ~ In .this 1empea1.-MmlllCJlll at . lJ C J work was a c.ilfomla ltate College ' at Fullerton choral group and It proved to be e superb coo;i.b_lDatlion under the biton of that 1ble general Lightfoot Concert Set At Irvine Gordon LlihUoot, the bright , new star o1 the folk world, marks his return to Orange ' County with a concer. at UC Irvi ne Thursday. Lightfoot is 'just returnirig from a highly successful tOur of the East. Local fans may ha ve seen him earlier this year as Ughtfoot performed before packed houses at UCLA and UCR, as well as a three- week stand at the Troubadour. Some of his better-known sones,· all composed and writ· ten by Lightfoot. hlmseU, in- clude "Did She Mention My Na1ne," "The Mountains and Maryann," and "Early ?otlorn- ing Rain." Lately, LighUoot has been perfonning in movies 3.nd television specials, and is wotking on his fifth LP alb.um. The concert at UCI wUI be held Jn Crawford Hall at 8:30 p.m. Tickets, all sold on a reser.red seat basis, range from $_1.50 to f4.50, and may be purchased at Mutual Ticket Agenciet, at the Irvine cam- pus , or at the door on the night of the concert. For further informaUon, call 833· 6875. 'Dylan' Cast Listed At Laguna Playhouse Cast members for "'Dylan," the final regular season pro- duclion of the L a g u n a Playhouse, have been an- noonced by Doug Rowe; guest director for the S l d n e y Michaels biographical drama. Playing the Jeadin& role 'of Dylan Thomas will ·bl John Feriacca, who will bt lhl first artistic director at • th• new L a guna·Moulton Playhoult next season. Pat · •rown. a member of · the South Coal• Repertory company ln Colla Mesa, will play Ute ptlacltlJ female role of CllWn. Scott and James Cooley. "Dylan" wllf open I ~ Wed.ne1dayS \h.rqugh Salurd,.y1 ot the playhouse, week run' en M1y •. pl1ytng 3"19 ocean Ave. Reservations . may J>e obtained by calllnif the box office 1t 4H-8081. Film Study Center Set · Fred Stoufer. COAST PREMIERE 'Pre-performance publlctty advised us thlt .~JWu the West Coast premiere ol tloia .WlrUna:, .complex, Te Deum tllld t)leee lflted ·~­us ouc!IJ, w)IY thO 'llti1I IJ!ld thus far been "'l!lecled In iiilt area. , !fbe· ·structure of the "Utrecht"' is such , that ool)' the ft) o 1 I 1111bltloui a n d o•Plbll ohOrll lr<illP cbjJd hope Ii -Wiii\ iii'~ deftlandt bl I public ,..,..,.._, 1ldt pdftil1\lance .... ,.... In OtJr I>"* aa fa\1111111. And 0th" ma Jo•· lllllOOl'll"I l !!:VIJILY HILU! (AP) -U 1-11 nk roles will be taken by otoflrfj ·Th• .\nl•rican-Fllm lnstitut• p II/. t •a Riker, Pamela Brown, Les says It plans a Center for Ad· Ingledue, John Moran, Elaine v&nced Film Studies with 15 HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Barnard and Jill Carter. student fellows starting in Gene Evans has played some Completing the cast are Doyle Se Pt.ember. 100 servicemen roles i n McKinney, Betsr J:lewelt, Red "We are working t 0 movies and television BJ an Stoddart, Bob D Isidoro, Steve establish a tutorial tradition ·in enlist.e:d man. but becomes a Cloris Signed HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Cloris Leachman, one-time co- star of the "Lassie" television series, will play a Supporting role in "A Hall of Mirrors" starring 'Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. American film such as exlsta colonel in "There Was • in architecture, m u s i c , CrOQ.ked Man}' medicine and law," si.id its ----------11 director George Stevens Jr. The center will bridge film study and film making as a profession, be said, providing a place where the finest prac- ti cUJg artists and craftsmen can dedicate time, experience and knowledge to the young filmmakers who will work and The ' Orange Coast's Most Comlete PRINTING SERVICE C lle ' J B nd study at the center. • 0 ges azz a S Stevens said two· Ye a r ;1c.,1;w1er.. felloW1hips wtll be given to I~ ••-••-••- yo_ung professitlnals and rece~ Phone 642-432 l Team Up for Conce.rt 1 ...c~"'-ad~~-=~_':_:'.,.:ch_·_~_::'_._lt_y·_fllm_'.::::::::::::::::·11 r.fuslel.1 sounds from the combined conctrt bands Of Orange Coast and Southern California Colleges and Crom the cool sai: of jazz virtuoso Tom Kubis will fill the OCC Auditorium Sunday afternoon. Costa Mesa : Ray Tomko, Fullerton; Vern StraceMer, Whittier ; Jim Loya, Costa Mesa: Ed Grell, Cost.a Mesa ; and Don Roseff, Costa Mesa. Crossword Puzzle The C<W!Ctti, scheduled for Z p.m.,.wlll be open to the public at no charge. 'The 60-plece concert band will be under the direction of Dr. Ch a r I e s Rutherford ol the OCC Music Department and Robe.rt Helde of sec. In addition, the concert will feature the 25-member even- ing Brus Ensemble of OCC, the Percussion Ensemble and the OCC Slage Band. This year's crop ot jazz soloists will enable the st.age band to play arrangements of Kenton, Basie, Buddy Rich. and Woody Herman. Numbers will include Splanky, A1orrltor, Up Tile, Mercy, Marshmellow, Dr. Wong's Bag, Rainy Day. Recall and What ~ I Hert For? Soloists will iDclude Tony Rodriquenz o f Huntington Beach ; Laurence W r i c b t, Kubis, a Huntington Beach High School senior, will be special guest soloist. He has appeared with many pro- fessional groups including Bob Crosby, Firehouse Five Plus Two, Wild Bill Davidson, Mickey Finn and Ben Pollack. He also hu appeared at the Sands Hotel in Lu Vegas, Story Line Radio Show and Palm Spclnp. Concert band numbers will include "The Sinfoniam" by Williams; "Fantasia in G Ma· jor" by Bach; "Pictures at an Exhibition" by Moussorpky, and works by Mennln . Persichetti, W h i t e and Shostakovich. The Brass En s emble numbers wtll include wort:s!f Shahan, Hartmeyer, M , Gabrieli and Meie1. Th e Percussion Ensemble will play "Toccatta by Chavez : "Three Brothers" by Colgrass; and "Evolution1' by Farberman. Thursday · Deadline ACROSS 51 Visitor to tht blood 1 Wat tr body ba nk 5 Girl Frld1y 52 Jlnkes lO ProJtetlon on 56 Athl1te's ;a horseshoe concern 14 Peek 1 -60 Prod 15 Mr. G1rn1r 61 Sallsbtl1y 16 "The Good Pl1ln Earth" stnlcture heroine 64 M<1tted 17 D1111on to f1brlt Phylhl1s: 65 John 2 words Mt Con111tk, 19 K Ind of for Oft• thorougfifll'e Wi On top or 20 The Tatler's 67 The other foundtr s ldt 21 Sin uou s 68 Ekh1usted 23 Garmtnl 69 Coln of 26 Narrow Europt Inlet 27 Bird 30 Unh1pplness 34 Was lnd 1bted 35 Rl~tr of Monlana 37 Ancient monty of iccounl 31 -·de deux 39 Lurche s 41 Lusterless 42 Swiss canton 43 Tem.ir 44 G1 rde n ... ~ ...•. 45 To wr ite with DOWN 1 Ke•r -··on 2 Ass st 3 Color 4 A book for nof1s 5 Qu l1t <1nd IU!lteful lo Word el1m~t m11nlng lhrte 1 Befort I Nol on• 9 Ont ol two lwothlfs: 2 words 10 Orns •dj•"'' llJa - 47 Soap opera p1rt1 F Y M • • 50 P1ttofa or oung usicians . 1!::::~; 12 Not Wtll fllle4 out 1) Joint Thunctay Is the deadline for 11ppllcatlons &o the Young A1usiciaiil FoundlUon 1969 Na· tional Compelltion for g\f\ed musicians 25 years a n d younger. The compeUtion, largest ind oldest on the West Coast, will be held June lt-a ln Los Angeles with $10,000 ln awards lo be prresented to wlnnett in flve c1t.egorie& -piantsts, violinists , celll.st.s, singers and eo111 posers. Winners In each of Ult five tategorles will receive fl ,500 each and all other nn11Jsts will receive career grants of JMO, \\'inners will be pmented 11 s?loists with the Young M\111· C'1ans Debut Orchestra during the 1•10 aeason , clans Foundation, 43t South Sin Vicente Boulevard, Los Angeles, 90041. SAC Players Stage Comedy " The Santa Ana College Playus will present the fami· ly comedy, "Tate lier, She's I' Mine," Thursday, Friday and m-r-t-- Saturyjay. CUrtain Lime is I p.m. Gene111I admlsslon ticketa are JI . They ca n be purctilsed at the Santa AM C o 11 e g e ~.,n-t--t-'"' bookstore, 17th and Br istol i,..,.-t--+-l- Sta., Santa Ann. " Rrservalions ea n be madtl lrr+-1---f-' Yesterdsy'.!.PUlllt Solved: 18 Fl9hter pil ot's concern 22 Detroit or Vancouver teoam 24 Numerical prtflx 25 H1ndl1d the tlll et 27 Apptar ~ctedly: 2 Weitdl 28 Cognizant 211 Fossfl IMbtr or copal , )1 H;ad <11 flthl J 2 H ;tr <1n9ut 31 Ebbs )lo B<1nd lead.r's concun 39 lhtrl ttw lloSQut of · A111ur I~ 40 At -·--·: Re9wdlt• or of the price: Z words 511416• 44 "Is It •.• ····1 ": 2 words 46 West Point or Kln9stor. students 48 lntrodutt 49 Junior to • 1unlor. In Qt111al 52 Flt of tnget 53 M011nt119":"' Co11b. fOrai 54 Co•1t1ttlsh giant• 55 Mann tr of woalklng 57 Opposite : Comb. (n '8 Borodin h•~ '• Nucl11t entrf)' for lht Pit· pufslqn of <1lrcnft: Atilt. 62 Nu111btf 6) flevtfSI of: Pr1f11 IJ ll Th"nday, May 15, 1:30 PM CRAWFORD HALL Tickets: . $2.50°$3.50-$4.50 Information: 833'.•17.5 _ F. o._.i'"•OUTH COAST '""" l"LAZA TH..rRK C:O.PORAllON Sin Dte&o F,....y at lrittol • 546-2711 ACRES OF FRE!t PARKING WE ARE PROUD TO PRESENT THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST FOREIGN FILM Th• Twe ,_, Production of Lff Toktoy's ----------~· ..._. .... M'D Alttr M llAP'Ol(Off lftATM·TUlltf. •Mfll(UI .flf Ttl( """"OOIKO IY ITS Ollf'(ltOlt! '61AC( UlL AS T1fOUSMIOI DMCQ PAIT I ;:::.:,::: :::::,,.~. STAiJS MAY 14th ~ THE ENTJll.E PRODUCTION OF "WAii. ANO PEACE" WILL IE SHOWN IN TWO PARTS. EACH PART Will IE SHOWN FOR ONE WEE~I PART II ;::·:::..:."~·:::.:.STARTS MAY 21st SCHIDULES OF l'HFC>lMANCI$ W_.,......,, Mey 14 .. -........ :.<; .••• _ .. ,, ........... -........... 1:11 ,..m. ~y, M•Y 15 .. --·-......................... -..... , ......... 1:11 .,..,., Frld•J. May 16 ....... :-........... -............. -....... 6:SI I 11:11 '°"'' Satvnl1y, M1y 17 -...-........................ -l :OIM:M·1t:tl IM"• luncl1y, M1y 11 _,_ ...... -................. 12:Jl.4:10-l:tl ,_,,.. ~ontl•y, M•J 1t ,,_ .................. --··· .................... _ .. l :M ... .... utMl1y, ·M•J 21 ................... .... . ... -....... 11• """ SA.Ml SCHEDULE fOlt 21'41 WIEK !GREGORY· ~MARE·------ PECK SAINT ~ SfALKINO MOON' ' STARTS WEDNESDAY-MAY 1hl ................. WIRR~mastllllitadflle~I 11111 ............. ' . "' r 4lfif' Ill""'*' rna ... 11111..mium ~ • . . ALSO good Pf its candy! . .... -..,,.l-' ....... ,.....r.,.,... ACMll.......,,..._ dllm~·Nab!BmlD-i!adlml·mmc.ca..n .km Hustat·Vtbl!r~·~!Dr.:.. ~AW!. Wiii Nl•HTS: DOOn .OPIN 6141 IHOltT IUIJICT 7:11 HNI wnM WIND l:tl P.M. CONTINUOUI SAT. • SUN. MOM 1 P.M. CLARK GABLE VMENLEIGH LF.SLIE HOWARD OUVIAdeHAVJLLAND " ' •• " " • _, • AllllllCl lllllWlllllPmE·mJUici.'l.r9l..llliiilftm•' 4 • AppllcaOons may be ob- taiDtd from the Young ~tusl· for "Take Her. Sht.'s Mlne" b)' calli ng the bookstore. ----!!' _SltRUl't•m~·l«lfOXID« o ~ '-~~~-~------~~~-"'---~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'( T > T • . I -----..................................... ____________ ~~~~~~-----'-~~~---~-- I I • \ I I '' -· • I • • • , / --~---• ' • • FJSK.80AT. ~·~·TIR!ES .,,........ ....., .......... ,...... ........ ~~~ ;ut/._ 7ss TWiii JET AUTO AIR CC>Jt.DITIQJ¥R . 139.9'P.' • l•i• '-'"'"" .... ··-. ,,_,.,,, ..... ...... Plllllltlll•lio •1Wliit¥ ..... ( ...... ....... 11, <kldl "".,... --·- "SlllJ Ill . ' 1716 ~ ,37.DQ. tltnl S?·Dd ~-...,..--- . - • • • • _..,...-,. SUK 1/1Sf M --. ' . • • • ' • , =-~alt? .CHARGE ITI. "Ill Ill CIHJT • IVY Wllll:Jll ll(IJ'Y""' FISK COMME~CI !:~. \,; ' I "' ' ' ftSK ~-' 15 TRUCK Tl"ES . . ' TRAtfSPORTM'ION ._..,, ~· , . ~\I ' :=::.: .' ':.o!:t . ' . COMl'Ulf BRAKE OVEllllAUL -~ . 11Ch ' DON'T !;A"'IU · " WITH IAD ·DAICIS ""' < ~ :=·.!!a..' ,::.iw!i ll9t .,:=_ . ~ =~:;"~~( ·..':'.. ,_ ... ·.,, ~-~-u":'ru --.·-~' ~ • He. ......, qf;...., .... ... /, ... ; .. .n 4 ....., •. • '"""'· ~·ti ...,,_ .Ii "" ..... i2f7 ! I , - CD2 u~ .._I ,,_ ... .... Wit,.. '"')J'Ji'Oifii;Ci I • lloff •" """ .,,_., .. ..... -.... ~Jlif .... . MOIT C.AJll ......,_ .,!"',,_~~ ... ..... .,...., .. ..... . ,,.., '"" -,. ........ . .... ...... , -ri...w .. .. ,_,,..,...........,.""' - l ;TUCK STDIO TAPE PLAYER \_74.97 SPAii PL"'5 llKE TltE 47t. f76 ~5-lOJ~t-"S.~ • • ''72-lt.d& l~-um -THE.SE SPECIALS GOOD AT THES'E L.OCA.T.IONS ONLY IUENAPARK . WESTMINISlll BUENA P~RK · COSTA 'MESA SANTA ANA 1M!t llACH II.YD. • 11H IJllCQUI A YI. • SJ01 llACH 11. YD. • ziao HAI-II.YD. ·~ 1400IDI- Af1111P1•111a ~~YI:· "' Lo."'-... ........... _ ......... ' . ff2·20BI • 2 .. 5800 Sll-3040 54WOBZ 546-7132 ' - ' \ " .. By•Jd OLSON ~ ' blue eyes, Difieten~ pro[flns have d)Uere nl -l' or ~ DIMt' riw ••• genes. " Will man soon b4. able to man.ipulate bis Once il was established that behavlor is bei~li"l' and produce algnl!icant cbang_H In • .clue . to biochemistry, whole ne1' vlslas .,w~r~ ~ , ht; 1111.Jak'\.l!ili}•JIP?, · o·.' .: ·, . •QPOned lo _re.:earq ac~Ufls, as well as ~e.w 1. . ~wilLra M atil• •wa)!ow a'plll o~ {ii, -, ~ qu~-~· -, ,-- ' cei,;,M; ~oli ~ 9u>.tJ!!f ag'IW p..O:l,', · , . Beorll).ilart e~lained ~tit now ia f!O" c~~ ·*-' ~~ilnlosl ~ .,...lblµI "'""lo ~·Jib an~ arr~e In sequ~e, -•' v · rt..""'· ~ j . 1 h •. :.'Jlf 1• .;, ; if;-, Joun~ ~y s .._ 46 ch~omosome.s,, pr ~ ~ .' • • ,, ~ ..._ ... ~,. , t P&1k',"'afl111 detenntbe Y1h1cb ·chromg;onfes • "" I €~rr,nt !"''""~j l~at IJa,' takep place , IWSe irreJ)!larili~' Of r~tardati~n, ' , , . , ·~-l'P'5.,.l.beCl0 ~t"o1',~ '. l 'l'befil!Jli,oow.c •ben-~ot-a,yer~ "·' ~t R"'fjir lllijlltians aUendlng lhe eal'ly· state of deve ·en1,' riM if a dellet· · amual meeting ot' the cantol'Dl• t Olete\ic~ ency ls fo\lnd. aD!>rtiqd coufll~becoma,a poss i· ~iation In lite N~rter Inn · · ' bility. ILpcldltional rese.ai:<IJ ~s fruitful , cor· Researc~ ~ l llt.<ove ·es h; Ml'"' 'lv r~Uoos coul~ ~ mlll!e tbi'oilgh manip\l!ation ., QE ' •°JI '.1 of·genes. -. ~ 1>-•,.' \ "'.~• desc.ri~·Dr. .1rv~g Be~g.e11.dqrf, '; . Possible fl\an&&e ,J,eqt of lti.i, g e.n es . science ed1ti*. ·o~th~ Los Angelea Time•.1~and , \ throug6 nut;ition was-oUWned· by t.ije -scie n .. new knowi.edft)..f"~ ~gl,ng proct11s was OUl• • tiSrnAs an ~ example, m~pulation of the llrled by.~ f.:~ Tappet, ~rof•!>l"".1'1 fQ\lcl": ge s In con1,.a Tood eaten ~Y peopt~ throu~il· 1 science t~gx. bloch~s\·and P"':'. oul e. world,. showed !hat, corn codl,!f be en-_ _' f84sor of pµ!rl lioii. at iii~ Umvers1f,y1'f.'C&!"'-. • riche<I with cerlllin substances.that cou1a pro- f<lflia , Dpvi'' ~.~ ··' •. ' ~ ~ ·~ .. ·~{ dUce healthier people and people free · fro411 , . .., "f Beng!!l1.0ri.l(Jlt!ke~to •the dietitians o~ • certain defeC,ls .> 'Foocl, Beauty Refafea' By JOHNA BUNN BEV~¥. HILJ,S - , "EaUng lbe rifit foods is .In- d~ lo gooct ,J..U, :.vour body·ia v1-ry much UU • sa""iis bailk. It ... taloi 1ifial" roo put lis&o it,~ beaufy:es~< "lf'!I' Rally Mjen 8'1id ... st\e', inunched OD a tuncl'i fit~ ~!all,"""'! at llel' hqnle. . • S<aled al Ille gtW:l<ljltJe4 labie hi Ille .bftaldut "'°'II - • ao airy, iwmy room' irilll Uled floor and p8nO!ed" -·that' .~1 '!!!o: pref....,. ·IOI'· sou L.b er D MedJten:aneanl archit.clun -ohe -diet , beaut)". andJiOw Children 1 r<llec:I ~ -· '1004 lutes, both· good olid bad. "GOl!ll beaith and a goOd figure are -the-compOs.ite·of proper diel • and. exercise. Basically, yoY1re vuy mUch • • • • I n~tritiou;s .. !Ole in;~ tfelevance~f rnol~ular 1 ,, The;rectpt Notiel p'r{ie' ":wiMlng "Dic- biology,..llMI -genet1C$ IP hwn8t¥nd. -· ·. . .ttonsry. ·or We" was shown-where lhe 'pro.·. _ ' · I Ge~.--Uhysletiqµs sullj~J uofil ~y -bes1~0( -th~ transmistion~of.-tJie genetic me~ what you wete•broughl up to , be. u P.olly was l>rQUght up pi ~ville, ·Tenn. "I eat a. resutar cet. Anyone who: tbfnb_of ~ ouly 1in terms of reducing .111: making a mistate/1.-..e said. ~ !ecen\ ;~ts,, .. tas dismissed· by 14on~!1P . sage "'Yas a.b·stracted._, an4. Be.ngelsdori que,s.. •n,the l&lh .Ceq19ry •J an "unfalb,omable mys· f!pn~·tl •s•ence ~. WOUid be ~ble tc ·pro- tery". arferi.'the 'f rtncb essa,Yist ,"8.n~. phll~ gram the transmissjon proc·es~. . . . s~her tried to. unde{.S!-and where:h1s 1nbjr1t· . Die titians will be :iJ1volved ~bi the mani· cd; t.endency toward kidney stones bad laln 1 ' p.ulation of man's environinent .'through fooJ hidden until the 45th ye ar of his .J.U-e. and food supplements, BengelsdOrt warned . ~ Scientific investigation ot genetic~ began the gathering, and concluded viilb a pregnant \v\th the. questions what is nature lik e and qu estion of future social implications. I~ ·' ·1. ., "Duril'l1· •lhe last : io years, my food babits·have changed a lot I'tn' DOW a \regttarjan . 1 ·m callm a lazy eater because I'm always the last why i.s it .the.·>JV.ay it is. D~A subs~uenlly Tapp~l also offered .unusual possibilities was. 1dentifed as _th~ earn er of lile, .the for hum~n manipufation tJ?,rough the develop-v~1cle Jot . tr~nsm1ss 1on of the message of ing knowledge of· U)e aging 11:rocess. He out-t~e gene~ to, the ceUs. · lined the recently set-forth loqt..step sequence DNA. the carrier of heredity is made .up leadihg to cell damaging. ~eactions, then ll :l H one at \be table.'' She smiled. N .. I love vegetables, salads, bre&!1 and:~· I could go. a long llmf I l"'l~ but I do fike g , , rm,glV<n a , l o!l!' .. roteins and proteins cause cbaracterislics mentioned foUr elements known to slow the s"t" as straight or curly hair or brown or: aging .reaction. 1 • ~-"WI not· st·eak or but soup and a t• ,_ '· . . ,-.:. • ' I ' , .... ' " l R~ast :. Sptk~d With· .. Sauces '· ' Retire your spice shelf to art nouveau status wt.en you discover~complete c ookin g sauces f()r meat. Each of the rive sauccli blends spices, herbs and olher enhancing ingredients inW a tailor-made sauce that sim- mers beaulliul fla vor into the meat. There's a complete cooking sauce foc skillet chicken. nJ'eat Joar. pork chops, Swiss steak and bee f strogaoo£f. Take meal loaf .£auct. for example. Just mix ground bttf and complete cooking sauce f<ir meat loa.l fo~lng label dir'ections and gake, Yes, that's all you need : the meat and one can of the appropriate cooking sauce: \Vorks the same for all fiv e o1"the dlsheS. Sounds simplf~ It's beautiful ~ Here's a pot roast Jdeiiolng just that : meat !oaf sauce, aking witJ:i mushrooms and chopped parsley, give the sa uce a new look and enhance the basic tomato and onion fl avor. A touch -0f dry red wine for elegance and you have an ea.sy way with pot roast. SAUCY POT ROAST FOR EIGHT 3 to 4-pound boneless. pot roast I can (abou t 4 ounces) bu t- to n mushrooms, drained 2 tablespoons shortening I can ( 13 ounces) meal loal ·sauce _., \~ cu p Burgilndy. · or oth er dry red wine \j cup chopped parsley ,, . -blo.a\lon." • Jll'• &"Ulng. harder aild birder ,io ell riiflt to4ay," she ' •iaif;t. "Se many foods Contain , •j add!Uy~.-jl'hen .I ·tooka\,~I. •• LOV~-~~D GREEN 1 / I h o jj• • celloplfllll61'8ck&aO<I· .. , , • • iSlM.. ... '.\. . ·~ " ,;, IOodii 'il's,harde< aad haiilor• • f.r'T T9"" r • • -I te. lrftagine that a ~at field ~ : "• 1 • ·-" ~ • / • ... or ~t tree hid anythin1 to ' , • , '· \ 1 · _,. ' 1 . z•itli tbem.'' . There'1 lha!.~able lilnd . ,~, ··roc~lk........ • /BU.IC lmslEliH' • · ·1._ .:,V.,,,YTlllNG ' ohtwlthaO doesn~IJDeor9'g. 'One .,'""11 head western I (ll\EltN SAUD ' • "':'•:-Q ""' • I dor\'I fta,,. ll ~~mother ' .K:eber& lettuce · • ; ' ' ' '' ! , / Llvlng '"·the age of '!"tanl oever tad l~~en a i ·n~-tomat.es, cut In One~ ~!'I-~ ' / =-=~~TVta::':1~ w~ boml ,. ·~P9d ~H:ln .,QUl\lten !~~~i:=t •fe!ltiom "tbe joy out of · ccMi\ina, she C8J'I ~ 1 l pnpcr 2-~ked eggs. sli 2 ill · be 1hinl Mid. "I've been ~ since care. ' l · , ~ • .J::l. cucom rs, · 1 .. I •fll I yun o&d when I look Aging i..~ i. ·~ loss n ' cUp rUW.1y sliced !tUh ~ .,cup whole . pitteJ. ripe caM-Gl a kid sister while both o_f~ n.in~ ~\ ~I Y<!'-1 ;:Amushrooms I Olives · " -' • "· ' ' ··-· __.... TV d' ' ' •""1;.-~ ~ ' · '" · ' """'' ~· loltuee; droin on, 2 tab'~--v....lar . 1 -· ,......,. .. ,..,.,~·< •Dn<,rs Latiii"-""""-'-'-"'--".I Obsorbenl • . }lef~gera••, .,....... """ "'are tbe ICOUl'll of o u r ex· " ~-.. ~:.~~ov,;-:-~ s /.' ,""! ··l/t cup v••'"" .. lJ•oU ~· . .;. isl.ePce':· Ho-f -ein an IBM l ~~I" .~ ... ~~ve ,~ In plastic ettuce 'qiiper (or _Salt"'" , 'P~~ , mactime1·~ bow you like akiri. . , disposable p\utic lfag). When· .. )'GUI' t mlibe;d p o l a l o e s LOVE FOR 's.\uDs rt1dy to servet/ cut lettuce ~ = =~ ~ ' seasoDed?''' . head in quartets', lop to bot-1/4 teaspoon dry musliri. . pollj Borgen Uies well Polly, who ·now mms and lom. oboul % Inch thick and \ !ab"•- ' ........i 1~· ""'"said. "I'm dir<ctsJier 01"ll ,_i;c oom -place on lndivtdull/-.lalad., ...;..,.~l"P!tl, : --. pany, -shows· her • love for plates. • ... -t\ • ..,.-•3 ~~PJ>Pll' to not ~ of , a lluct _eater Slladsl Jn ber 4 989 Jine. Her Ar~e two !. t:o ma to • "'~ . ,_ _ ;..i ~ even ·thriugh 'Wt have an ex-eye sliades, for ln.stance,"'have quarter. 'llld thret"f&ll._slif:@.u~'ji~i ~I ri ~ e-1 e t,t u c e ce~lent ~b~k. l ~Ike SUC!h'~vege&l rlan names as ·on eaciti ~ttooi ~•nt: .. ~ -. y; ~r,Tt raerve, vegetables ~ with dill , "dilly green" ahd "celery" with sliced muslitNms.' S~ 1 !ear ..-.igh I~ liltO bite. parsley, 'gar!~ salt aDd peb and "~tuce green.·• d~ over. lllact (or use. ,ilm·pieees to ami:luilt .tciibout per, dabli a(lhll mid that. I'~ n•"y said, "Yoo can't~-%f,'lll' caloti. ·, ltallao .-•~·~ lwr OIJll· "'!I.--and laid -• lbe "la•· In Uila· ~-. ~,.• .,.,...... oil I •'""11owtl house: r dtmaid fteib fruits cnap, refr~slung salads ~ess ixed . with Chopped ~ ves Vls1:=.!..7.ebcta~:; and vel$ble9~~ when you lake time t~1 prepa1" the /~: se~.at1 11DCe. ~es .~tbe~.w.ctbowt. t ot aeuoo. ~ f 8h greens properly. One of I~ •· • .: ,, 1 • "-6"'. • • :getables Joot~ ... r~ favorite salad stableS is &He :t;GO\JIJMET"GREEN' -·:!rltfPi~ ~l~?;rmalnlngl'ftpare added.. ~ ~ ' • ·• .~~ Iceberg lettuct ~ • BtJFP'ft SALAD • , ... ..!!,.~_.! m·~-·u '".'i·~ w'i!h ~--·· .... •'-·-"'lonship '"· her adopted stale. 1 ooe.liea.' d lcebe-let-.... -~~ ...... -.,.ic ~.,. ~ ._.,.w; ·e lid. Shake well to blend.. Pour ljletween fOllf, ~~ beauty. ' ' ''.Salad soreefy begiril with 1 cup finely chopped celery over lettuce ; toss lightly io "Green1 ··.~. are seled.iag finn heads ihat give -!Jto tomatoes, cut In wedges 1 Se 6 good for~lkllGBllt.Youi at· slightly to finger i rmu.re," SmiJJ jar artichoke hearµ, ~ 1"9. ';!:0,~1 •nc. - tltude al!o ·ctUAU;: You a~ . stte instructed. "Oifce y~'re iqlned (reserve liquid) •• whit you want 'o b8; Within home, twlsl or Ill~ the.core out 2 ~1eypoons wine vinegar lhe '""' ·"' ptadkabllily. I with the fingers. Using l'lmife ... cup olive oil Appl 'esauce know It sOlindi corny, but the to remove the: core discolors ~ tahlespoon chopped grien whOle process stirti from ilie.C!Ut'edeet1soooer'." c;hiU pepper :.. . ' (' · .. • • • ', ,.l -~i withln. , The letltlce should be 2 teaspoons capers Add Z . "How can a •--~MY carelully washed and drained II leaspooa,!l"eel basil • . . S.· • j~,., begin ~ be.• beauty untp -tbq before refrigerating to tightly-14 teaspoon girltt'f)Owaer • -. , . "·~ has found berself as a person closed pJasUc bags, she said. Pinch salt; freShly gi"otlnd Add zing tQ.._applesauce and and dlscovered Wh:'l It is that Thrtt recipes from Polly for pepper. • · ~rve., with pork chops' makes her a distinct and siJJJplo' summer dining follow . Core. rinse lettuce: drain · · · separate person for others to · . thoroughly. Chill lettuce to llORSERADISH , look at and admire?'' she ask-.POLLY BERGl'.N'S make criSP;~Pr~re dressing APfLESAUCE ed. · ~~ciiA." sAi..Ao by combi.nihl v1Defm:, ·olive · 1 can 11 pcur'ld, t ounce) . "How you live, the .kind bf F;.,. Ott &rem herb dresslnJ oil,' chili;. c;iprer:s, ~s:Ui garlic sweetened ~ life yoo l1:ad reflects 1n your 'M l'\I v(!g'itable oil powder, saft and pepper lo 1 tablespoon lemon juice face. Not eoough sleep, too I P taste, plus marinade from 1 tablespoon slightly drained mu.ch liquor, smoking, lm· j l.1ii tablespxins wine vinegar c~ ·a]tic~ ,CteU~' 1/3 IJQWJ!C11\fttite horseradish proper dlel are only part of it 14 teaspoon fine herbs cup). f.fij_'dm:~{I& w . ; Grated Jemori Md Any wom1n can look better. ~~~ypooogrousa~~ _peppe. r to Tp .~~. Sii~ I~ ,hi.to· , ~g\ll~ .stir togetber the ar.;J It need not'be a time-con-rafls, ar·above, then ht MCh •PJ;llesauct, lemon juice and sumbJR efiort," she'sald. taste raft lenglhwite. into ·.itrip8·. hotseralil.sh ;-! chill. Sprmkle "Good skin can ~ ·I' tablespoon chopped i:reen (equivalent of 4bout •.aii>J). wiUt llfJ'IOO.·tind:·, hereditary, of eotirie, and scalllOIJ _ and place in serving bowl 1..~ .. · To. ~ 1.l i:h 1 J y drain the therf'1 no ckpJbt -that gobd · Gon1blnt ,all. ingredleitls in artichoke IJearts, choppped horsen(di:91t, · in mei.snring ~For interest. you can make easy additions like adding chopped green papper to the meat loaf mi 1t~ or by mix ing instead of matching sauces and rooats. In large heavy. pan, tirown meal and mushrooms in shortening. Poor df fat. Add remaining ingredients. Cover ; cook over low heat 3 hours or until tender. Stir now and then. Uncove'r ; cook to cjesired COMistency. Mllkfll'! 6 to 8 servings. POT ROAST SAUCY, TEMPT·JNG bone ftr\tClure helps 1 Oertlin small jlr .. Cover Ughtly, ihake celeey -and tomato wedge. press 'ouc.•Some of the 'liquid kind'Otfa~ sta1 youni. G1"bo until .weir blend~. 1Makes Pour dreulng Over salad: Toss with a. fork. Makes about z bNr.1'1"1)'1., been beautUuJ. · ·aboul;l/J cup drels1ng. eently to coat. Serves f.6. cups. ~ t I I' ~ 1 Orange County Ranks Nuniber Orie Wi:th Strawberry Crops By DOROTHY WENCK ~~.._....,_ Consider Ute strawberry that most delectable of rruils: so easy lo prepare ; so good for you (high in vitamin C and 'tow in ctJorlcs t.oo) ; and so inexpensive light DOW.•\ Last year strawberries were Orange Cou nty's number ooe agricultural crop, outranking the ceu.nty namt38ke. (When someone asks, do they still grow oranges in Qral)ge County, lhe pswer is, "yes, but we grow cved more:strawberries. '') Our growing conditions are ideal for o1n early ber:ry that reaches markets ahead of those from other product.km areas. And our strlwberry grw·en have ao much know·how that \}le> harvest more 1lrawberries per acre· thin they do In other parts of the counll'J. Thal helps to explain •lty you see 1lrawberry patches nestled here Alld U1ere and eve.ry\vhere on hi&h prked land In lhe mid!\ oJ. industrial and hOU$1n& development&. • Home News and Views Aren't we lucky to be ab~ to drive up to a roadlikle ltlnd and buy reasonably priced boxes of rreshly picked (ruit? PRIC~ IS RlGHl Now while dtt: prk:t Is rt1bt 11 a lotd time. to P'!t some away la yeur f~; Strawbenlft tre easy tt frtnt. Cliotle -lllal .... lilly ripe, ... ftr:m. 'll'ullllle--. ..... -1 ... to bndJe diem. JlaU af1er dleJ ... ve dralaed !Wwl!lly .. You can freeze the wtde ~es wilh oo sugar. Simply spread them out in shallow pan1, place thtm in lhe freezer uncovered tmtij frozen solio. Then JMtek In plastic bags. This l3 the easiest. way to ff'l'tze berries, Dut the fruit will not maintain a fteslrable lf!Xture for very kJna, to uae than witlibftraree months. ~awberries sliced and mlxf!d wllb dry sugar maintain firmness, flavor and•tolor best and can b4; stored for a longer Ume. Slice berries lengtbwise then add ~.to t cup sugar per quart' of betties: Let stand a few minutes lo allow sucar. to diSllOlve. Pack in containers a~.,,_ While you'rt stash.Ing strawberries away, how about makinC' aome of that w:zuJ uncooked straw"'-rry jam .• "n>e c:olOt a beauutul brlgb! r<d .. lhe navor just Ire fresh berries, and It's slmple lo -.. WHAT TO DO M11ll or Ull1ly 11tct: J caPI 1trawber· rt .. -I pol mine In ~ bt...iu brt<Oy. Add• tap1 s11ar, mis dtoroup.!y ..._ ~ s&atNI abelt 2' mhtltn, .Urri.11 IK'· -.ilJ. A61 II lloalo .... pcdlo·or.I .... ' packap plPdued pedia boUed I m.Jnte 1Way food . prica? We .. "' tbrte chicken ? Do you use nonfat milk or wldl l elf,~·· Bar abellt t mllates. tee~gen It feed aDd U .seems Hiit ow reconsUtiMed nonfat dr)' milk in!leacl~ oI P1111t btl4i deU jln, teal wkll deu Uilt.' irocery biD Is bluer every month. whole milk? • Ld .__. et reoia. tempuaart .e laMr. R.drtprMe UCO Rt, flt will DM be as '-"While your children are in their teen Q. My S-year-old 1t1 stt.DU '9 lack die &Mct~rtpllr,jtllf.), . ye.rs, you ce rtainly do not.ice lhe vlmuclft&.ordalto&Mr~bil.Jp Sine< lbil 14m Is not cooked, ii m'l't be. "1"""'" oo lhe f'!O'l>blll -il ~ more ..... He'i Jollelf n4 "'14.• ... If~ stored in your mftstnlOt or !nib.er. f to feed a:teenager than an tdWt. Ando in-time. CoUi'lt'M hll &l? tie "'Iii~ Try It oft walfles or b: crt,am Cor a real ; Uatton tnSkel it worse. Hawtver. /ood Uvet • milk, waqe. )ilcer ~ taste treat prices have not been going up as fut as et.e.tte ud 1roa. ci'ackm .• When you buy strawberries sive theft} the overall ~ of Uvfug. Last year the , the smell test to be sure:+of TJett1j,,g consumer ~ illdex fenl up aboyt 4.5 A. 1f ~.~eats~ fneft ot·egp !" flavorful fn&il Berri.es llcklna the lYPbl percent, while the co:st of f~ purc:ii&sect dark gteen1vegetaDleS tt'a hlg'bij poatie strawberry .... allO will llCk · ffle •· UM •t heme role en .-Verage<.of 3.Z that he ls iactlng JrOit in Ill! diet~~ 'Jn flavor yoo me. in t:Jcepdan is btrrief. percent. The prica fot food eaten a;.ay turn coukl be cai.ising anemia -lac.-ot lhal have been hokl undet t<lrlgerali"1 ~ home~~ petten!. 1~1 ho2 10 Iron In the blood. You shou ld halve liim -tbeJr ll'OIM4MJ be ..... ~ ;.s ~~eue: an ~. me thorou&bly uamlned .bY. J i Wot INt thin lhlt ol Warm fruit costs is ..... ..,....._. for tth. fQUow tM: doctor's reCommCodaliona u Whllt tilt big berTles loo~ lhe moot To llmjt' your akyrocteting food cosll to dieL lltiousi, I.be smaller berries often have you ma(. oeed lo do a be.tte.r job of plan-Q.· It petn•t butter that lln •Mell btttf!r flavor and a finner texture. )n ad· nln1~fore r.ou &hop~ Do YOU make a llat 1toi'fiil In t\e c•pboierd for • )'ear • dltlon )'OU get more berries in ,8 bot a~ 4{sck w+ui lt at l~ mar~et to avoid N tt. '* tat? when ' rou buy small Ont! and tbe price ililpulie purcha•? Do you avoid hi&Jl· • often la tower ' co5l. low food value 11\ack items like aoft A. Yts. year-Oki peanut bl:tt.er "t'ill - · , ~chips, artd crackers? Do you use be &ale, bat It may not tu«. too pod QUESTJONS WE ARE ASKED: low coit meat aubstltutes such u peanut because the fat mi.)' haw turned ,_., Q. WNI .,. .-e i<1a1 to .. Uoll ru-buller, -. 111111,. c:oitap ch<eao and. a/let lbia 'loo& a lime. • " \ \ .. • • \ !ti DAii. V PllDT • ' $ai.lor Reli\/es 1968 Voyage ·to T erro·r • By JODEAN HASTINGS ....... ,,..,_.. There wun'l a dry eye - lncludlnc her own. • Pew Slater received • st•""""' ovliloa ftMl • • ltQOlna salts and their wives , al the eonclusbt ol her ........ tnr accounl ol her t• VO)'age \ to Temlr. Sbarlng h e r enlt.ment. *"""ion. delpalr, loneliness U{1 evenllW' fear • e r e members ol Balboa Yacht Club where she spoke during a combined me,p and. women's luocheoo. want to go ahead. "I wanted to tum left -to Haw all.'' "I finl thought ol the trip as a big advU!ure, a v~ sail, a shakedown for an eve. lual four·)'tar trip. "I'" sailed """" ....,. lilpeo lie!ore. I'll never Iii! alO!lt again, .. Ille aald WIAl1. _ On July l a large ll"l'IP of ---to ... the ., veteran of seven HalW'allan crilllilou o!J aboard her ftd. hulled 1Cellenberr u sloaf, Valmtlne ll. • Aftu btln& oo1, .. hour. and ooe-haJl oul her ham>Wing ... perlences began. Si.I cla11 \.i.r, still hamper. =itl::. reall7.ed cleld W l the log WU e, IO llbe went over the aide to retrieve lt. She drow duckle9 when she added that, al ~ and .atone ln midocean, she still dw>&ed llllAI a batllln& suit and cap bei.i, dM11& In. The~ Bloom was depl'1llllng. Tllt<e the IUD petUd thrOlllb bul bid btlore aha could ruch lhe ..n..L ped, and both she and the re:i:t of the saU were in the water . Trapped between the water· filled aall and Valentine, COii· tlnuins ahead at a brbk 7"'- knoll, Peggy hung on. Each time the boat wool• head off the wind she would be dragged under, praying the boat wou1d c6mt! back in time for her to catch a breath . Finally she m~ged to ,,ach the toggle., free the sail, and half-drowned, she climbed ' ahoanl 1'By this time I was aW6J'e that I had lots of problems," the c•pa.ble skipper stated simply: Then star t ed th e hallucinating and unconscious periods. talking to the Coast Guard ship Grtsbam. friimd.ly e1COrt vessel for muy Trans-pac races. They radioed m. structions to p.it up a radar screen on the port shroud. A d!lflcult device to -.nt>le under the best cqndiUonl, it went up u ordered and Pe1J)' even took a color Polaroid pie· ture ol It. She imagined her brother had --.-and '11'\th A r n e 1 s chartered a plane. When they found eoline, they decided not the boat for fear of wa~g her! wu out ot rue1, a11d my bal· teries w e r e low," she con- Unued s o f t I y , her voice betraying the vividness of her recollectlool. I turned oo the radio again, alnce It didn' seem riecusary l,o save the bit.terles any IOOMer." A stern voice crackled through the staUc: "you're MlO miles of~ course: slop rlgbt there." Soon an Air Search and "Rescue plane ~lrded and dropped flares. · l • • .. .. • .. ' ' '· ' For ~ first lime since her harrowing experieoce t h e world renowned yachtswoman, practically bom with a tiller in her hand, publicly opened the l"ibook of that singlehanded voy•ge which nearly cost her life. rt wu ·then that her automatic pilot broke. Sbe managed to get a tun fll with the ...i..t, bul 1"<1 cioum plagued her oo the ...,..~ ol the journe,. ' A faulty steerhag vane caUI" ed Valentine to jibe lvMe. wrapping the topping lift and main sheet around the eod of the boom. While triyng to un· tangle this mess the winch handle new oot or her hand breaking two tnuckleS and splitting her hand ope!) • . • then the log fouled tn the pro pellet. With the borrowed HI SW radio wblch eventually saved her Ufe, she wu able to tali; to her old friend Jim Arness oa Sea Smoke, eo route to Honolulu In tbe third annual catamaran• race. Arness ~ mlsed to be walling, mai tais In band, when she docked. ~In&. her appeUi. g on e , Ptw wu encouraged when she reached her estimated posi~lon iQI'. ~ final lack into Molokal Channel. "I would pass out in the cockpit or the galley -which was good because my head banRing against the stove would bring me to," she said wryl1. 'INTREPID P1t9ty Slater The faulty steering vane cable broke, and she had to give up her half.hour sleeping periods to band-steer. Weaker and verging on desperaUon, she noticed a ship's Hghl.5, so flattening her main.WI for maximum speed, she started foUo~ng -but the ship was making 20 knots to her five, ''Then this mounf.aiQ (• Jepane.se freighter) appeared over lhe horizon. They threw lines and dropped 1a ladder over the side, but it wouldn't reach. Finally they tossed a line which I fastened about my waist, using the short end to all.acb • seabag in which I packed a dreu and my checkbook, since I thought I was beaded for Ja pan . '' Actually she was tramferred to a CG cutter and returned to Hawaii. •• ' , Attired in her favorite color -red -Peggy explained to her . entranced audience how the idea for the trip occurred. A yacht broker, she was bring· ing a boat up ; the coast to Marina del Rey when she sud· ljenly discovered she didn't In the middle of the manuever a sudden squall took most of her j i b • overboard, aM attached to a workllne abe went forward to haul in the sail, Tbe bow dip- During her hallucinations she would imagine talking to the racing "cat" fleet. They'd tell her they were coming alter her -hang a red towel on the shrouds ( w h i c h somehow she did), The n they would tell her they had to go on in to Honolulu for the trophy presentations, b u l they'd be back tomolTow. "Knowing racers, l could understand this," she said with her winsome smite. Another time she imagined · and it disappeared In ape di!tance. "This broke my Spirit. I put down everylhlns and reacted like a girl -tired, afraid, lonely. J figured this was it. t Has Peggy Slater become a a landlubber since her har- rowing 23 days? Wilh tears in her eyes she finished with a determined, ;'Bui 1 still like to sniL" TIME OUT FROM SPRING PRACTICE -Mr. and Mrs. Robert Basmajian (al right) greet John Mc Kay, head football coach .at the University of Southern California and quarterback Greg B~m· er. Basmajian, president-elect of the Newport Harbor TroJan Alumni Club, is confirming the Saturday, May 24, dinner date to which McKay is invited. The Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club \Yil l be the sport-filled setting for the annual dinner an.d social hour beginning at 6:30 p.m. Coach McKay Signals Chalk Talk Calling a time out from spring football practice is John Mc- Kay. head coach al the University of Southern California. The sportsman is traveling south Saturday, May 24, lo address the Newport Harbor Trojan Alumni Club. The lineup for the annual spring dinner will form to the right at 6:30 p.m. for afocial hour in the Costa Mesa Golf and Coun- try Club. Following an introduction to McKay and members of his roaching staff, guests will be seated for a prime rib dinner al 8. The coach's era at USC has been one seldom equaled in the chronicles of coUegiate football. In the past seven years. urider his leadership SC has won two national titles, finished in the Top 10 ratings on six occasions, won fiv~ Pacific 8 titles and appeared in the Rose Bowl four times. The Silver Fox, as he has been dubbed by Los Angeles sports- writers. is recognized as one of the most inventive coaches in the business. The 1962 Coach of the Year is one of the nation's fore-4 most football clinic and after dinner speakers. He sprinkles his football lectures with wit and humor and is in constant de1nand for public appearances. Following his talk, a short business meeting will be conduct- ed by Ray Benson of Lldo Isle who will turn over hi s presidential duties to Robert Basmajian of Newport Beach. Frank Anderson of Costa Mesa will accept the office of vice president while Miss Judy Hurst of Newport Beach will continue in her ~st as secre- tary and Conrad Schweitzer of Newport Beach will remain as treasurer. Tickets are priced at $6 per person and reservations are be- ing accepted by Mrs. Sch\\'eitzer at 644-1163. Deadline is \Vedn es· day, May 21. The club. celebrating its 15th year, schedules l\YO social events a year, wit}I a no-host cocktail party in the fall. There are no membership dues. ~1embership is open to Trojan alumni and pe rsons interested in promoting the university's scholastic and athletic programs. Additional information regarding the organization may be obtain· eil hy telephoning Benson at 67l>-4257. ttii£#4!&0! SOLD TO THE WOMAN IN FRONT -Mrs. George Palmer, president-elect of Orange County Stephens Alumnae Club. pounds the gavel, and Mrs. Beam Griffith, incoming treasurer, admires her prize. Mrs. Palmer acting as auc· tioneer will get a sample of presiding over the club on Tuesday, May 20, at 12:30 p.m. for the annual installation luncheon. Gold elephants or desirable items are wanted to sell, \vith proceeds to be used for a scholarship. Proceeds Earmarked for Schola rship 'Elephants' Auctioned Stephens College Alumnae As:lociation of Orange County is introducing an unique auc· tion Tuesd ay, May 20, during • its annual luncheon and in· stallation gathering. Gold elephants will be auc· tioned oU. Thi.s is not to be confused with an "ordinary'' white elephant sale where unwanted objecl.5 are sold. This sale is for desirable items, staled Mrs. George Palmer, auct!onttr. Proceeds are ear1narked for the treasury fund which in the future will be turned inlo a scholarship for a deserving Orange County coed. The group netted $200 last year. The three-fold meeting will take place at 12 :30 p.m. in the home of 111rs. Leon Jones uf Tustin. Co-hoslessts during the luncheon will be Mrs. Jam es. C. Fielding of Santa Ana, class of 1919; her daughter, Mrs. Glen Fergu.son of Tustin, class of 1945, and Mrs. J. Barbee Robertson, who has been laureled by the college for her achievements in Ole field of music. Officers to be installed are Mrs. Palmer, president ; Mrs. William Lowance, vice 11resi· dent ; 11-trs. Char\es Vaught. secretary, and J\1rs. Beam Griffith, treasurer. Board members named arc Mrs. Henry Hast ings , hospitality ; Mrs. M a r i o n Tackett , membership ; J\1rs. lilargo Hammack, program : J\frs. Don Snyder, telephone, and t\1rs. \Vynn Chapman,. publicity. The Orange Co unt y o r g a n ization traditlonall,y hosts an orientation tea in August for new and returning students and the fall progran1 features a potluck and get-ac· quainted meeting. Alumnae interested in the gathering may telephone itrs. Carl Hansen at 536-3M4 or Mrs. Hastings at 548-2413. Other funding events lhc alumnae group sponsored dur- ing the year were a wine· tasting party in April which netted approximately $500 and a stationery sale for members and the public. Stephens is a four-yenr liberal arts college. It v.·a5 founded in 1633 as the Col· umbia Female Academy. Early Launch Leads to Piracy on High Seas of Matrimony DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 marrit.'d too young, mainly to gel away from a mlas'abte home. The marriage was a rniltake [rom the bealrming. After 16 7""! ol. unbelievable hell, complete with mlarlines. I told my husband to ret out. '!!lat WU ln 195'1. In J11nuary of lhis year, he asked for a divorce ao he could marry a young widow md adopt. her two small children. We hive two children also but he was never much ol a father to them. ANN LANDERS don't suggest il. Just tell me If you think I'm sreedy bt<:ause t insist that he pay thr:'oulh the nose for what he has done to m1 Ule. -MOON RIVER )'uur Ufe, but what bavt you dont to bis~ 'rbe dlscardtd woman 11 understandably bitltr, but the wife whe bttomes es:· cesslvely panlUvt ind 1ttempt.s to impale her husband oa thorns of spite invari1bly ends up the loser. that .,.,.e serve coCfee and dessert about 10:45 iO he's been coming early to 1e1 in on the refreshments. I go lo a lot of trouble to prepare iflo dividual pies or tart.s or ice cream molds for the girls. One recipe makes four. When Sol shoY.·s up l feel 1 ihould offer hln1 mine. He never refuse.a. Whars the an!!1Yer'! -EMPTY PLATE If you think you are. beat -you are. If you think yoo dare not -you don't. If you'd like to \.\'in, but think that )'OU can't. lt's almusl a cinch Lhal you won't. I've told him no divorce unless he g\\·ts • the house, lhe cara and ketps me on ' Ml tnwrance policies. Also, I insist on a hullhy oettlement and trust lundt for our children. He says I'm 1 grasping, greedy. miserable witch and my touah terms are a true measure of my lousiness. What do YOU think! Before you answer l'd like" make it clear that whtn we mmled we wttt broke. Today he Off1'1S a bl& business and has 50mt very good in- vtrtments. There's no hope for fl reconciliation 30 DEAR MOON: I can'l ua•·tr beca111t I don't have enough inlorma0011. if1ybe ~·hat you consldu 1 "healthy setllemeal'' bt consltkn piracy on tbt biglli 1tas. You've teld me wb•l he bu done ~o DEAR ANN LANDERS: I play cards every Thursday nlghl with three nice won1en. T'Wo or us are widov.·s. The third woman's husband is out of town a lot or lhe lime. The fourth y,·oman 's husband is retired and doesn't i1a\•e much to do, ~o Sol picks up the three or us and takes us homt'. Aboo~ thrte months ago Sol s1an.ed 10 pull an underhanded Irick. flt lt'arned DEAR E~tPTY: T1te answer la don't be an cheap. T\lake a doable reel~ and offer 1 tart or whatever you b1ve to your free cb1uffeur. CONFIDENTIAL TO AFRAID TO THY : Paste this little reminder In your hatband. It mi1hl help: ' Drlakl.n1 may bt "In" to tbe kids you rlll'I wttll -but It tan put you "oat" fOI keeps. You can cool It and stay popular. Read "Boote 1Dd Yoo -For Tttnagen Only." Send SS ttnll la cota and a lonl( stlf·addresstd, stamped tn,·t.lope wit.ii your request. Ann Linden wll be glad to btlp ~­ "itb your problems. Send them io Mr le care of the DA.tLY PILOT, cnclo1lq I at.If-addressed, stamped envelope. • • • . . .... ....;;..:;.,;,_ _____________________________________ ----------------. ... ------------------ ' .. ! .• ' ' . . " " 7 •. l: ,, ~- " A• W!dotsdoY, Moy 14, 1969 D"1LY, PILOT .U -t Horoscope S.corpio: Get I Legal Counsel THURSDAY MAY 15 BEST BUYS BY ASTROLOGY : Products which e,mpba.s.be or hfgbJight the ~. throat represent fine buys today. laclu'de s necklaces, necktlea. Viilnut trlned to Mart spells romance and a good Ume to purchase apparel for loved ones. ARJES (March 21 ·April 19): You get compliment from in- dividual you respect. Fresh ouUook indicated as you gain added lmo\vledge. Money ques- tion can be settled. Use your imagination -means be creative. 1'.AURUS (April 20-May 20): Close contact today could lead to meaningful relationsh.ip. But don't play with emotional fire. Whispering s w e e t nothings could actually wind up costing plenty. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Mate, partner may appear argwnentative. If you display seflie of hunror, storm will pass. Acceflt today oo what happens behind the scenes. Be discreet. You learn through observation. . CANCER (June 21-July 22 l: Friends could distract you from essential chores. Be gracious, but do what must be done. Important to · be -' thorough. You could make LIVING T~IBUTE -Taking part in tree planting ceremoni~ ,in Estancia di scovery of value. Park . honorin.g Mrs. Charles Stanley (center) outgoing presi~ent 0£ the Costa LEO (July 23-/\ug. 22): Day Mesa Women's Club, are Mrs. William Kerrnode (right) amertities chairman, features chance to harmonize and Mrs. Robert Fi~her, press chairman. various areas of life. You gain Beautification, Too Trees Grow in Honor 0/ Past Club Leaders through member of opposite sex. Room at the top is made for you. You are given an honor. You enjoy it. VIRGO (Aug. 2J.Sept. 22 ): Practical affairs. such as budget and costs, come to fore . Gain cooperation of family members. Money is spotlighted. And you need help to solve dilemma. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Study Virgo message. Short Journey. vacation with loved one is beneficial. But there is a money question. Answer it by being frank, forthright. Problem can and will be solv- ed. SCQRPIO (Oct. 23-Nov, 21): Day of extremes: nothing hap. pens for you halfway. Includes dispute with one who tries to pull wool over your eyes. Get legal counsel. if necessary. .AulhoriUes apt to be on your side. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): You finislt rather than begin projects. Appeal can spread. Your philooophy develops. You gain in stature. Accent oo how you relate to close associates. Be kind. con- siderate. CAPRICORN \Dee. 22..Jan. 19) '. Good lunar aspect today coillcides with romance s, crealive projects. You get a chance to express true feel· ings. Do so and be confident Young persons aid your eaus~. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Light touch adviSable. Be mo~e receptive t h a n ag- gres.5ive. Combining force with Cancer individual today pays dividends. Your intuition \vorks fine . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Friends and 'mone y to mix to- day. It COi.lid be through. friendly contact that you get needed backing. Key is to be versatile and sociable. Collect facts and commit them to paper. IF T 0 0 A Y IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are IOyal to family. You are artisOc, creative. U n usu a I voice shown and definite dramatic ability. Current cy- cle is one of completion. You get aUen.tion from varied sources. One relationship could end to be rt>placed by · something more beneficial. Miss Linda Lou Hayes and Bill Norton (right), residents .of Newport's South -Bay Club, receive a tribal headdress from Oliver Frank, chief councilmari for the Indian Center of Los Angeles, which will receive funds from the fiPSt annual charity ball sponsored by the clubs. Setting for the ball will be tl\e Internation- al Hotel, Los Angeles, Saturday, May 17, at 9 p.m. The lion. Ed Reinecke, lieutenant governor of California is honorary chairman. Orinda Ceremony Lagunan Clajms ~ride __ ,.,,.. Scott l:.nwrey Boyd, a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army, claimed Barbara Stahle as hls bride during a ceremony in Sanl.a Maria Church, Orinda , perfonned by t h e Rev. Richard Mangini. The bridegroom Is the son of Charlton Bpyd, a Laguna Beach City Council member and ti.1rs. Boyd, who recently w a s elected to serve as a trustee for Laguna Beach Unified School District. Hls wife is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Stahle of Orinda . An unusual tribute is given tree planting ceremony. each year to r e t i r i n g The general membership presidents of the Costa Mesa will meet for luncheon and in- Women's CI u b and Mrs. stallation ·of officers next Fri- Charles Stanley was s o day in the clubhouse at noon, honored last Thursday. with Mrs. James McCalla, Members of the Garden ~-Or.ange District president, as tion of the club, who plant a installing officer. Countians Honored With Diamond Awards For the ceremony the bride chose a silk <lrganza tafetta gown styled with an empire waist and a ·chapel train ()[ ch.antilly lace. Her bouquet consisted of roses a n d stephaMtis. Miss Marian Stahle aUended her sister as maid of honor and her other sisters, Miss Laurie Stahle, ~1rs. Thomas C. Souza and Mrs. Roger Ricketts joined Miss Lury Boyd, the bridegroom·s sister, ; lttfERIOR DESIGNER Mh's Patricia Wright ·~ . . ;> . iltpert Views Q' filome Design Miss Patricia Wright, assis- tant professor of interior design at California State College at Long Beach will tell her audience about Choosing Creative Colors and Textures tomorrow at 1 p.m .. tree each year as a tribute to Filling new posts will be the the out.going president, this Mmes. Phillip Hay, president; year placed a sycamore tree Ralph Littlefield, W. A. in Estancia Park, Costa Mesa, Clegern and W. H. Goodwin, for Mrs. Stanley. vice presidents; A. L. Present for the ceremOny Gillespie, recording·secretary; were Mrs. Bessie Joh~. L. E. Robinson, corresponding Garden Section chai~ -~retary, and E. I. Moore, Mrs. William K e-i: m o d ~ ,.... )l'tasurer. amenities chainnatt;.-,and )ffi:. Mrs. Stanley, Mrs. Hay, Stanley, along with other club Mrs. Littlefield a n d Mrs. members. Arthur Crooke will report on A salad luncheon and in· the recent convention in San stallation of officers by the Francisco of the Cali£ornia garden section preceded the Federation of Women's Clubs. 11rs. John Hill and ~lrs. Ruth Garvin will receive Dia- mond Circle awards for 50 years of membership when Southern Californi a members of Alpha Delta Pi sorority celebrate t h e i r I 18th an- niversary. The Founders Day luncheon will take place at noon next Saturday in the Sheraton- Universal Hotel, Universal Ci· ty. ~·la king the presentation will be Mrs. 1-loward fiiJason, state membership chairman. Province president M r s , County will be the Mines. Ronald Barnett, Harry Casey, Wilbur Al!en, Harlunian, \V. D. Tarlton, Herbert Morris and George Bl"iggeman. NB Auxiliary The .Ladies' Auxiliary of Newport Beach Fire Depart· ment gathers the t h i r d Wednesday of each month at 8 p.m. in various locations. Information regarding location may be obtained by telephon· ing Mrs. T. C. Dailey, 548-9835. as bridesmaids. ' They were gowned in floor length nile green creations and carried cornnowers, c o r a I roses and white and yello'v daisies. Joseph Mastranlonio Jr. was best ltlan and ushers were J\lan Boyd, the bridegroom 's brother, along with Charles Delgrado, Leslie De La Brian- dias, Steve Franich an d Ross Fay. The new Mrs. Boyd attended Colleg~ of Holy Na me s , Oakland and California State MR. AND MRS. S. L. BOYD Washington Hom• College at Hayward. Her hus. band i.s a graduate of Laguna · Beach High School and the Universi ty of San Francisco. Returned from a honeymoon trip to Hawaii, the newlywed! are making their hc>me in Lacey, Wash. He is serving the U.S. Anny in Fort ·Lewis, Wash. The admission-free program will take place in a model home in the Missions develop- ment of Laguna Hills, and is open to the public. Leaguers End Year Peter Nelson, San Diego, wi11,------------------------------------------ Miss Wright, who currently produces designs for Daily Films, a division of. CBS, believes the South Coast leads the nation in progressive architectural design for mid- dle income housing. Further information may be obtained by· calling Miss Pam stewart, 642-4910. Newport Residents Included JANE WEERSING Engaged Mrs. Thomas Barnard will ·open her Newport Beach home for the final meeting of the Trojan League year fo r Orange County Tuesday, May 20. Honored guests at the elec- tion and installation meeting will be the nine n e w patronesses who will lend their support to the various libraries of the University of Southern California . Guest speaker w i 11 be Dr. be speaker and honored guest at the luncheon, and one alum· na from each association will receive an award for outstan· ding sorority and community s.ervice presented by Mrs. William Morse of .Laguna Beach. national chairman of awards and a past regional director. ~trs, Douglas 8. Anderson, Burbank, is chairman of the event assisted by Mrs. Robert T . Hartunian, Huntington Beach. Attending from 0 range June Date A.nnounced Meryl Ruoss, director o( USC's Institulion of Urban Economy, a part of the School of Sociology. Ruoss will ex- plain the wo~k being done by Altending a black-tie award Costa Meson the wtiversity in its com· The engagement of Inez presentation banquet in the munity·related role. Rose Meatham and Allan F. California Museum of Science Claims Bride Members have been asked ~let.z of Garden Grove ha.s and Industry, Los Angeles, to bring · items for t h e been announced by Mrs. Inez were Dr. and Mrs. Daniel G. University Thrift Shop in Los Anthony of lluntington Beach, AldMch Jr. and Mr. aud Mrs. In June Rite Angeles. mother or the bride-elect. Walter H. Brewer of Newport The couple plan to inarry Beach and Dr and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Jay Saturday, June 7, in Jehovah 's _Arnold 0.--B~an of _Corona -~~~!sing_ o.f_ ViSalia .~ave _~-_ Rebek~K_L.od_g_e __ 1~!n,•, .• ~.· ··neKi~hd.o~~-~ 11 , de! Mar nouncea tHe errg:iy-ement or -..... 6 .. , .... Serving as a hostess was their daughter, Jane Weersing Triple Link Club o( Mesa The bride-to-be is a graduate Mrs. Thurmond Clarke of to Thomas Jerome Cook, son Rebekah Lodge has meetings of Hiliilington Beach High Cof9oa del Mar. of Mr. and Mrs. Frr.d James the fourth Monday at 8 p.m. in School. Her fiance, son ofl.Mrs. The statewide ,banquet Coo~ of Co.5ta. Mesa. various locations. ~frs. Doug· Alma Metz. Anaheim, is a honors the scientist and in-~11ss Weersmg atten_ded the las Morgan at 548-1938 may be graduate of Anaheim High dustrialist-Of-the-year. C~llege of the . Sequoias and called for add l ti on a I in· School and •California State Selected for top honors this will graduate 1n June from formation . College, Fullerton. ye°'ar were Dr. WaJtCr H. Fres!'O St~te Colle~e. An Munk, dirtctor of t h e Enghsh ma1or. ~he will w~rk University 0 f California's tow a~ her teaching credential Institute or Geophysics and ~tul~orn1a State College at Planetary Physics at La Jolla, Her fi~nce attended Chan.. and Rudolph A. Peterson, Coll ' sl...a--t f Bank of America. man ege and graduated P1;' ~1 o from Fresno State College. A math major, he is compleUng . ' Secretaries Orange County·Harbor Area Legal Secretaries Association work on his masters at CSCF. lie served two years with the U.S. Navy. A June wedding is being planned. ---the1hird Wednesday ol Ufe nionth in various places. ----------- FOrlher WorrMtlon may be Who Can Read Just oblalned by calling Miu Sheron Dresser. s10-0110. One 'Peanufs'l, 1.1embers either at 7 p.m. "BITTER CARPET CLEANING for lmER CARPm" REWHITENING • ORIENTALS • WATER DAMAGE Phone SH-VAL 847-1678 • YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATIEND OUR (}entk <Zf nflivetfaj!'Sa/f ! for tlie fin:t time in the ten year history of Barr's, a storewide sale of atl items is our way of thanking you for our growth in your community. See our wide variety of outstanding jewelry creations, as well u a fine selection of silver piece$ ind unusual gift items ••• ill reduced in honor of our ttnth' anntvemry •.. some Js 1T1Uch as .SO percent. CllAlW!S H. BARR This is a great opportunlry to choose a gift for bride or graduate.. Come in ind see rhe ma.ny specials among the regularly featured quality products ·from such world-famous names n Rolex, Movado, Patek Philippe, Towle and Royal Worcester. Now is the time to make your selection during our flnt sale «!'Ver! Now through May 31st WesWHf1fua --.~1¥ 211M.mt.-\~ ..,,,.. ,_ QlllomlL:_ • • . " I " > ' I \ l I T I ·l I ' I r1 I •• • ' • -• • • • • • " . . .. ' • • ' ~ • ' . , ' • ' • ~ ,, -• • • ' ' • • •• • • ! ' i . • ! I l I l ' Wedntsday, MIJ 14, 1969 MRS. BRIAN J. SOMODI G•rden Grove Home AITangements of w h i t e blossoms, acei!nted with blue and-yellow flowers, adorned the altar or our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church wh en Maureen Ellen T o r r e n c e became the bride of Brian Joiepb Somodi. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Richard C . Torrence of Corona del Mar and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Somodi of Santa Ana . • ··Escorted down the white , c~peted aisle by her fathe r, the bride wore a full length empire gown ol organza over taffeta. Her ventse lace bodice featured a hlgh collar and her chapel train was detachable. A crown of matching la ce held her tiereJ silk illus.ion veil, and £orming her casCade were white and yeUow rOses and stephanotis centered with a japhet orchid. Miss Katherine Davis of Rossmoor served as maid of Peering Around i t §Wl&il1 AA\Al§$iW i4fjbj W1'•t 01111 left ;,., r.h1r91 of th, "••q Shop." Vir9i11i1 1011• mollitrl i1 1njoyin9 • combi1>1tiol'! ~11dn111 111d pl11111•1 trip. At th1 morn1nl 5'11'1 111 C1rm1l 111d th111 011 lo 511> Fr1nd1co, Shi lift IWifh •f!l11th 111l~111l11m lo thick 011t 11~111 I,. Norlhtrn C1lifor1101, ~hilt ..!'P r1 i~!-h1 rq1, tho119ht w•'d 11rptrifl'l111t 1..d 111 j111t how '"'"" t11.J tliit lilll1 1d~ttli11m1nl, So brinq your 1d 110 .. 9 tl'ld 911 10 % di1co1111I 01'1 your p11rth•11, Sef YOU 10011, EVERYONE'S FAVORITE 11 •chttl fttdtttlilp poH1, &flt of th• niott pop11ltr t1t 1W1p1ptr ,_, .. ,., In A1111ric1 it ih• An" l•11dtr1 col11111t1. ll't • cl1ily T • ",,_,wf1r" ft. tf1t' DAILY PILOT • Weddings, Trot~s . Pilot's Deadlines ' ' To avoid diSappolntment, prospeCtive brides are .reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy1 phot«> graphs to the DA!Ly PILOT Society repirt. men,t prior to or within .ci:n.e. week a ter the wedding. ~r engagement announce ments it is 1suggested that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glo~sy picture. be submitted early. U the betrothal annottnce- ment pid "led\ling cfa~,are $ix wee~s or Jess apart, ohly the wedding photo "will be pc· cepted. To help fill requirements on. both wed· din'g ~nd engagement stories, forms are avail- able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Furtller questions will be answered 'by Social Notes staff members at 6424321 or 494·9466. •• Reciprocity Groups Meet New Officers e 1969, Colpte-P•ll'PIOll\111 Co!'Plo.1r'IY Hs··couple Married At Lowery AF Base Mothers Honored Mothen will receive a tribute durlna t h • Sunday, The chape1 aL Lowrey Air length blue dress and carried May 181 meeting of the Force Baae, Denver, was the yelfow daisies. • NewPort Beach Night OWis, t0•' ~""" bu!: f tbe · r The bridegroom, iOn Of Mr. take place at 2 p.m. in ~he ~~~ela 7ean ~an..~3e J:C Dnd Mn. Harvey Bolinger of Senior Citi?.ens Recrtalion•1c=== Thomas &linger. H~ Beach, asked Center, Newport Beach. Ji · hter 1 M Airman """'• Chrl!temon of On the .,...,.,. will be Mn. The bride, da~ 0 r · Anaheim "'TiOi serve as best J. s. Hill of santa Ana. planlm and Mrs. Eugene Carr of Hun· w ltz tington Beach, .selecte9 a man. and vocalist, Miss Kay e WITH 1•11.n: simply styled : fioo'r ~ S~ial guests at the wed· of TusUP, 10, organist and goWn of.cotton brocade featur· ding included Mrs. T. A. Bol-vocalist, and Miss Bonnie Lee Jng a sweetheart neckline l(lger, Clayton, N.M., and Mrs. of Fountain Valley, 12, pianist LAST WEEK trimrnetj in lacei and she car-'Richard ....Bohn,__ Sedan.-N..M... and dimcer:. -A BIRTH ~ ' ried a fl:9uquet of white roses grandmother and great-aunt or Night Owls lnterested in at· BABY mROs and -daiSles. • the bridegroom. lending the Festival ~ Arts or This weelc a •.• Well, 'YJMl.l She · was attended by the Both new!nreds are gradu· plrticipating In a trip to the would YoU ea11 it il>you aaw a bridegroom's sist,er, Miss Peg-ates of Marina High School San Diego Roost may make mound of sand about 7'teet gy Ann Bolinger qr HunUngton ind Bolinger• attended Golden · reservauons d u r i n g the long an rounded up niCf in l~~Be~a~ch,~w~h~o~w~or~e~a~s~tr<~et~~W~es~t~~CoU~e~g~e.~~~~~~=aI~~ternoon.~~~~~~=· ~~I the right proporUons •.. ·and I with a cardboard tombstone stjcking up at the top .that said, "R.l.P. Here lies 'Dead Eye Dick' caught usinif a 'Goolo'Uet's cottee Cup w. 1969." ~ More fun stutf goes on around the old copal. The coffee shop is going through the big remodeling, do • • being enlarged, rede<.'Otated, new· tables and chairs, . the whole ball of -more dellgt\ffuJ. breakfast and lunching Wax. The pile of sand was .Jieft, just outside by the cement people, and some body couldn't resist. J •• wr. to ••td'l "Tl'!t Doctors" In toter, NBC. ~IY lhrou&f't (rldQ, 2:JO.l:OO P.M. N.l'.T. • . . ~-. '~- \ • I • Wofnnda1, M17 14, 1969 PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 15, 16, 17 1 ·~ ,. EXTRA FANCY, SWEET, JUICY CALIFORNIA NA¥EL . Organ Stren1d1 For Your Pl1•sur1 LIDO MARKET CENTER Oranges 6 LIS. $1 ,by -.,nlc9 Foy NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIOO ISLE / . I fRESH, YOUNG AND TENDER MARSHBURN'S Carrots SATURDAY; MAY 17, 10 TO 3 P.M. ~ GROCERY M.J.B. COFFEE 1 ·~69¢ . M.J.B. COFFEE M.J.B. COFFEE .... 1.37 '"· 1.98 FROZEN FOODS JOHN'S Cheese Pizza IS ... 69¢ JOHN'S SAUSAGE PIZZA 15 oz. 69¢ TREESWEET GRAPEFRUIT JU ICE,... 5 ,., 51 BABY RUTH SUNDAE BARS .,.. 49c VAN DE KAMP'S Northern Halibut ,.. 6,9¢ BIRDS EYE FRENCH GREEN 9 <>L ~-Beans with Almonds 3 FOR $1 BIRDS EYE I B oz. MIXED VEGETABLES ......... _ 3,., 51 BIRDS EYE with Mushrooms Rice, Peas 1 ••• 3 FOR $1 BAKERY WHOLE GRAINS, RYE AND BARLEY GRANERY BREAD .· 45c WHEAT TEA ROLLS RICH 'N MOIST, DATE.NUT · 6,., llc 89c DESSERT LOAF HONEY.ALMOND COFFEE CAKE .... 15c FLOWER SHOP MARGUERITE DAISIES Sprightly yellow or white R°'ulor 1.Z5 99¢ IUNCH CAINIDY IN , OUR PATIO IT'S A GLAMOUR RUMMAGE SALE FOR GARDEN LOVERS! If you hove slips, or too many Iris or Geren· iums or whatever. that you'd like to d.onate, bring them down FRIDAY, MAY 16 ••. and bri.ng your friends on Saturday! This gala is sponsored by the WOMEN'S DIVISION ·of the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce. Proceeds to beautify the Corona del Mar Library , and Newport Beach Beautification. MEATS RICHARD'S TOP OF THE GRADE U.S.D.A. CHOICE lean Ground BEEF =:.=-~=rry7 · 49¢ LI. SUKIYAKI-A QUICK, UNUSUAL DINNER ROUND STlAK SD<ttliolrfarS.klyekl 89¢ LL n'' . . IDEAL FQR BElf '.fERIYAKI , STEW BEEF Ttodercubtlolbetf SWISS STEAK To lralsa 2 LB. BOX Hamburger Patties SWIFT'S PREMIUM -8 01. 89¢ LI. 79¢ LI. Brown""" Serve Sausage 59¢ LL R°'olar, Mllooo, Koo""Y Kltchft, 1acao aod 5anate, Smohy Flomlr. RICHARD'S, KOSHER STYLE Corned Beef Briskets 5'1'" Md•d 89¢ LL HORMEL Black label BACON 69¢ LI.· ' WHAT'S YOUR PLEASURE? HE WE_~K { I ' 2.fWURE OFT . •1c esualstone" by Coventry ¢ COFFEE COCKTAIL CANDIES D•iquiri , Martini, Whis••Y Sour, Stoe Gin IN A SHI.Kl•, IOXID, 01 IN 'AIS 25c !'kt· Off BULK COCKT~IL CANDY ~ .. 75cLL Come in end simple some! witht«lt CU.P $3 p.irt11tse l1tie. n\IMlnd cuPt.e tullJ' • speci1I bcrf .. ~Mehl $lode up this weelc. ntntmblrkia you11 Wint .....,1l n lr1 to tdd Y'INI more pluwre to Yo!' satl NABISCO VANILLA WAFERS ll •1. 37c ARDEN AA , BUTTER , ,.. 83c CHRIS & PITTS POLISH Sandwich Spears PILLSBURY WALNUT BROWNIE MIX COLLIER'S CHARCOAL 11 'J• ••• 39c 39c BRIQUETS lO LI. 89¢ DEL MONTE SLfCEO PINEAPPLE I Yo s ... $1 DEL MONTE CUT Green Beans 303 5 FO• $1 DEL MONTE ITALIAN Cut Green Beans "' 4, .. $1 DEL MONTE GOLDEN Cream Style Corn ... 5 ,.,$1 DEL MONTE WHOLE KERNEL GOLDEN CORN ... 5 ... $1 DEL MONTE EARLY GARDEN SWEET PEAS '" s ... $1 DEL MONTE SEASONED PEAS "' 5 '"Sf DEL MONTE STEWED TOMATOES ... 5 '" $1 DEL MONTE TOMA TO SAUCE .... 12, .. $1 DEL MONTE TOMATO CATSUP ..... 5 ... $1 DEL MONTE NEW POTATOES ,., 6 ,.,sl DEL MONTE INSTANT Whipped Potatoes u v .... 49c DELDCATIESSEINI KRAFT SLICED MONTERE-Y JACK CHEESE , oz. 39¢ fANCIFOOD OF BRAZIL HEARTS OF PALM .... 69c REESE LEMON PEPPER av, ... 3,., Sf . BAR·M, SMOKED LIVER 1Braunschweiger LL 69¢ PURE CREST NATURAL MUENSTER CHEESE '"' 69c '£;.d • ....t.'-MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS OPEN DAI LY 9.7, SUN . 9·6 OPEN DAILY 9·6 ' ' OPEN DAILY 9.4 ' DAILY 9.5,30, SAT. 9.5 OPEN DAILY 9.4 DAILY ,,30.4, SAT. 1,111.s • • • ' • • ; • • • • ' • • • I l • • l t • • • • • • - -- • • ,, I I " I f J I - ---;;-;.--;-;-.. -· .. ljj . u.ii. i' ?!LOT WW~ iti11lo1,1%°1) . •. ~s1 prir;ig w·11it ·Activiti~s ' J ,., I • ~ " and ia: 1n tbe youth 1efvices MSOclaii<81 ~illnf •. <II<~ • er illZ:.s 1Ut!·/ctk!11 ... ~ . Pa RD8n · esa. .-~ lbn 1~5~'f!!'I~ \Jirota d.lr. ~ ·br 1\-trs. Elgie Armour, 548-1945. . f )1 J , : ~' Balearic PT A ttfrs:. Ch'arlu .eoOt President " COMIN(; U P : ~<icl1001J ' ,. . , .. mcetln& at 7:30 p.m. Tues-College Pk. PTA doy, 11~ IO. Nto; ""'*""" .. l(m. ldrfolak llanMm are O,vta Elaenman,' pq'si-,. , ... 'I'"~! . 1 dent #Jd Gordon ~aru~11,• REP9!1Tll! ~~t!On ~t vice Pft~dent: A1'<! !ervi_nt Yeilfrdfl>. i l\'hal s • I\ Ml • ·'.i.; M . inf ' About wu;tl;.,, topi~ Of the .a:re ., ,-me.s.\ iixOi '"grade "stude'ntl panel Daruelson and D a v I d discussion with. W w n e r ··waghe~ .. .:yl~~ Rrelidents ; 'Carlson, pr.ldctDal of Davis ·Gerald Miller and Philip SChool. Sfxth grade students H•a ~ ~ .Je:Cr,wies ;.. ~r.ated and room mothers J~!I cuue.r ~ ··~ treaihirer. hosted. ' ,Da~ielson will serve • as Cd M 1... h PT¥: auditor, ... Mtg I"'\ '\ " •. Mrs. Robert K€mtile President COMING Ill': Special wvice plaque will be awarded Fri- day, May 16, to Pep,Club for excessive \bne andt~vltiet' , given to schooJ.l 1' evtnts . . Ronald. McN~s •.• advi&or,·. anCI :.carolyn Kemp,! Presi~ dent will accept: REPORTS : During bo a.rd ·Tueeting plll;llS wtre disc~~ ed for givi.ni a -diCtatinl 'machlne:to· the scttqol. LeOn Meeks, principal discl'isse4 .. , dress regulation and teenBie .. ·narcotic problems. ? El Morro PTA Mn. Bruce Clarke" President Long John Silver Never Had It So Good COMING UP.: May Festival of '",..Folk Dancing will take .• ~ place al 11 a.m. Friday, May 16. Dessert will be serVed to all performing students. What treasures and flU1 await: young and oJd,.f.>up-, > Elemeh~~Y ~cho_ol's · carnival froin 10 a.m. to ·4 caneers on Panther Island in Pomona Sea? Roman p.m. FeatUred ·will ~e games, rides, contests and Kaiser PTA Mrs. Norm~ Egli President Scheidel and Doug Pauley, fifth graders, (left to plenty of food. right) will find out Saturday, May "24, at Pomona 1 ' (!)nit's Project Becomes Reality . , ' I • ' • ' ~ JU:ran Watkins and· Suianne· 1.aCkey are captivated . l;:y the new Library -Rc- s®rce Center at Pre.siQio,School as Mr~. Paul Engd~l , P~A libr~ry·~.hair~an_. 81t5ists them -in locating material. Th e center is a un1Lpr0Ject ~1cb t>etame a t:OMlNG UP: Genera l meeting at 7:30 tonight in nasium. School orchestra multipurpose room: 1.jark and chorus will perfonn. Of· Hansen, special education ficers to serve are the coordinator or the Newport-Mmes. Harold Shaw, presi- f\.fesa Unified School District , •dent : Loren ·Heather. Franz w)llspeakoncommunication \ Han so n and Victor -~ between parenls and chil· · Cia nflone, vice president s: tlret1. · · ' •Alex Simspon, · treasur.er.; ' ._ . Rh,nald Craig-an_d David. Ensign PT A. .Bilnnell Jr. secl--ies; Mrs .. J . H. ·FOlltr · John Scapple, historian,.alid. ' 'P-resident Johii C!irlton, · pa·ttfatQ_~ COMING . UP: Spring Fe~tiva tarian·. Also-• serving ar.e at 7:30 tonight in gym· • Dwayne Meyer as auditor rfity when dedi,cated ea_:ller this year. · !1!!!!!11111!!!1' ...... .,,,.. .... ~~'11~.~~.~~1:.·.--:;~~: ! -l,1t" , • ~ • \ and·-Willard Reett;-pr~I as i dVlsor ... Memkf'l;"wJll host 1he Harbor }Coilnclil . meeting at 9:30 a.m.' ~o~· day, May 19, in..tbe libr1Jfy. · .. ' ~ 'm~ ... . ,,. , ";f ' . Ma~pers :P.tO ~. :; · ~o.bert. E. Andtr1eft ~. , President COMlffl; UP: Annual' -Spring Sing tonight at -,:30 in cafetorJum .. Kennetn Owen will lead the orchestra; Miss Katherine Harris will direct · the chorus, and f\.1rs. Jerry Kingsley will lead Camp Fire Girls in the flag salut e. Officers to be elected. REPORTS: Board meeting was held last week in the home of Mrs. Robert Dickenson. Mrs. Edward Conway announced that the sixth grade coffee will be held at 9 a.m. Friday. May 23, following Flag Deck . Monte Vista PTA Mrs. Mark Morris President COilIING UP: Boara meeting froJ11 9 t0 .11 :30 a.m. tomor· row in the teachers' dining room ... Mrs. ti.lark Morris will attend the Harbor Coun· cil meeting,. Monday, May 19, in the li brarY at 'Horace Ensign .~ho61.·· REPORTS~ · 400 students at- tended the May Happening Carnival. .NH . High 'pr A l\1ts. Roi>ert Hetzel President Paularino • PTA Mn. Niguel Balley President COMING~ .UP: Kindergarten r.eg{sb'QtHm from 6:30 to 8 toni~ J.,n:l mullipurpose room':~. "'Feac~FfS and staff \vi ii honor old ap<f\.ne\V board member,s' at, an \Bflernoon tea in the 'hOme j"of Mrs. James Seblio ..... UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich .Jr. v:ill speak· at 'ihc unit meeting Tuesday, May 27. ·1;,,lf,,;..r St . John,.,Ayil. COMII':JC . JJP:. }1eeting and J\frs. l\Obert~'Reid approval of budget at 7:30 -President tonight. J-loinc economics COi\tING . UP : Tasting bee ·1 · \ t fro,!TI-noon to 3 p.m. f\1onday, department wl 1 P.r e ~en f\1ay 19, bring yeur favorite lloroscopc of Fashion .69. recipes . Sporls award Newport Hts. ·P.TA !\In. Elgie Armour President COl\ljNc; UP : Boar_d ~~ting lo be conduct.ed Tuesday, f\1ay 20, in the hoine of Pilrs. Ken Logan . J{EPORTS: Student Council and physical fi~ awards were presented last night by Mayors Doreen hlarshall and Alvi n Pinkley and Coun· cilman Donald Mc J nn is. Parents. council members and students too:: part in a panel discussion GQvern· ment Ls Kids St u ff. Refreshrrienb wefe served by mothers of first and fourth graders. banquet friday, May 23: Mrs. Jerry Samsel i s ctiairmcin .. , "The D1•eadful Dwarf of· Blue Mountain" a fairy 1tiile, will ~be presente.d at 10 a.m. ~aW.~-~y. Alay 24. in lhe scboOl .halI. Tickets. at 50 cents, ·may be obtained by calling Mrs. Terence Clark at 546..()147 ... Honorary life member \VIII be selected at May 26 board meeting. REPORTS: Officers are the Mmes. Dennis Wali, presi- dent: Reno Peirotti, vice president: T.ony O'Gorman and tt 1> b e r t McCormish, secretaries, and Thomas Matheus, treasurer . . . Carpet \Viii be instaUed in the principal's officf ~ and library: additional shelving will be added to the library . . . l\1rs. James Moulttup presented the auxiiiary with a certificate for its effort ~n the annual !\-1arch of Dimes. Victoria PTA Mrs. Fred Woodworth President COMING UP: Family Fund Night from 5 to 7:30 p.m. 1'hursday, May 22. Dinner 1 ickels are 50 cents, games and prizes will follow . , • ' ' Pinn o chi o'' will bo presented at the South Coast Repertory Theater' at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 24. For tickets-co ntact Mrs. Doug BO\vler . ProJ?;ram meeling at JO a.m. Thurs· clay, May 22. in the home of Mrs. Paul Peterson . • • Budget meeting at IO a.m. 1';riday. May 16, in th e home of l\frs. Ken Adams. Wilson PTA · l\1rs. William Outlaw President COl\.1ING u P : Association meeting at 7 p.m . tomorrow i~ multi-purpose room, Spelling bee' awardS will be presented by Hugh Leatherman, principal and safety certificates by Donald F:riekson. REPOR TS: Tuberculin tests \vcre given to 61 students. Assisting v.•ere Mrs. Robert Sankey, Mrs. Gary Clark and ~1rs. William Stevenson. Varied Sp'eakers Take Podium A ·,rouch ' of Poli.sh, a'nci Oli:l~fasfii'on.ed Elbo w Giease . ·' ,. ! t . ' 1 lnstead'. Qf ''Pt'eS'eritiRg her with an . apple siudents to 4 'p.tn .. Bt' the 'Gi.irt, station on Brookhurst and Valet)\ Kyzer and Tom Carr (left to right) are Ellis. Streets, l·Iuntingto" Beach. Tickets are $1 and poUS\ing their principal's car. The eighth grade funds will be use4 for the, grade's gtaduation party. stuOeiJJs ·at Gisler Elementary School are ' sponsor-Admiring her students' wqrk is J\1r.s. Carl Cunning- ing t;he "\vash up" Saturday, P.1ay. 24, fron1 10 a.111. ham {right). · TO ·Pulls Another Stunt for Children ~easanl. Vi~'!' ~I :fTO unit I• pulling anotber ribbft ou( lif:!t.\.Ut •4-itJ>J\OJlSOr~,a Captain Magic sxrow on Sriiid•y, .May 17,.at 2 p.m. Tickets arc 25 ctnLS for cbildteii and adUJts and Fountain Valley ' I HJgh School will be !be seWng. Joel O'Camb (cen· tcr) shoY:s his magical skiUs to Dorie Fambrough a nd Steve 0 1Can1b. Next time the rabbit \\'ill be real instead of stullqd. _4._ _____ - (Editor'~ Nole: A page devoted to l'OUl\!111\ Vll!eY, 1;1u11ll11g!<l11 et•fl'l- ()µ111 vr.w, Se•I Be•ch • 11.d wutml111lar School Dl1"ltt 111rtn1: !eachlr or•1nl11flo11t will 111011r ln 1"- CAIL Y PILOT eath wttk. !11f<)rft\fltlOn muJ1 be teuilv~d by Mt1. WUl lam Putlord, ln60 $1111• LuCl1, F'ounralro Valier. bv ! p.m~.Frlllav for 11ubtl(a1k>ro We<ll\fJll•V.l FY Council r.tr,~ Ronald Murphy President COMING UP: An nual workshop for Fountain Valley Sc!lool Di!trict on \Vednesday, June 4., in Fulton School. l'nstallation lunctieon will follow at 11 : 30 a.m. in the Sheraton Beach Inn: Officers to be lnstslled '8r·e the Mmes. Gerald H.ix, preside n"t ; Wi 11 i a n1 Kowaleski and J a m e s Ellena, v I c L presidents: Vern Dart, corresponding secretary : Eugene Mooring, treasur:er ; Charles Lipot, publlcily; Rictiard Wilhelm, auditor, .1nd Doug I a s ~1eyers, historian. REPORTS: A representative -from Huntington Be a ch Parks and Recreation spoke at general meeting on the extensive program for sum· mer aclivilies for Hun- tington Beach and fountain Valley residents. Circle Vw. "PTA Jl.1rs. Ron Jensen President REPORTS: OfHcers Installed for the comirlg year by Mrs. Ray M y e r s , Huntington Union Council psst presi· dent. are the l\I m e l'i • Edward Aleson, president: Robert Casto, Frank Ben· nett and 111arvin Hagle, vice pre!idenb; Sam Erner and La1vrtnce Ohler, :i;ecretaries:-Douglas Lambkin, treasurer ; .. Paul \Vaaaoner, auditor and " -· ~-·--··----- \Villiani Smith bistorlan. . College Vw. PTO Mrs. Joseph \Vood!ord President COMING UP : Sea SPeciacular fron1 5 to 9 p.m. Friday Jl.1ay 16. The galley '"ill feature hamburgers, hot dogs, cold drinks, pie , cakes and coffee. Game boolhs and white ele phants will be featured. REPORTS : Officer James f\'1ahan of the Huntington Bea~fl Police Department presented a movie o n "i\1arijusna" last n i g ht . followed by a question and answer period. Third grade choir provided en- tertainment for the parents , . , \Vinners in t h e PTO Festival Poster C o n t e s t were Mike Smith, Julie i\1ercurio, Velan DeLaura. Larayne Rogers. M i k e l\turphy, Nin!! f\1oen and Kelly Huso. Eastwood PT A ~1rs. Roberl f'1tscnius President COi\·1 ING UP: 11.1.i.ss Beinta' ,Jakupsstovu from the Faroe tslands. Denmark. a n d American Field Service 5tu - dcnt at \Vestminster High School, will be featured at unit meeting at 7:30 p.m. l\1onday, l\1a y 19. Brov.·nic troop 668 will conduct the flag salute. Installation of officen; for the coming year. Musical entertainment by school choir. FY Ele . PTO ~tn. \\'Ullam Duna President COMING UP: Unit wt II sponsor Carter D a y s • coordlnnlcd by Mrs. \Villi11m Dunn and Mrs. Andrew &lward!. Repre sentatives from different professions 'viii present various aspects and advantages of their chosen field. REPORTS : Officers elected to serve for the CQrrting year are the Mmes. Ed1vards, president: Dunn, vice presi- dent : Richard Uhler, treasur~r. and Jane Edwards.·. se'.cretary. FY High PTA . Mrs. \Villi am r-.tason Presidcnl C0~11NG UP : Board mect\ng and potluck dinner Tuesday, May 20. in tile teachers' cafeteria. REPORTS : ~~·Drug Sym- posfllln·. scheduled for 7:30 p.m. WedneSd~. May 21, has been canceled aOO will be reschedUled in early fan . . Newly elected officers were installed .oy ~frs. Jdseph Dittc , Huntington Union Courieit.president. Harper PTA l\1rs. Cha rle! Lipot President COf\.IING UP: Involven1enl in Leadership i.s tbeme of unit meeting at a tQ.nlght, in the music rOQm. Offteers for the coming ye.cu: will be in· stalled. Historian's r!!Port v.•ill be given and publicity ret"ord book presented to the president. JUl\ior.Glrl ScouLs "'ill lead the flaa ctfemony. I , . '! Hope View .. PFO !\tn. Raymond Tannler President COf\flJ-.,G UP: Parks and Recreation bond election will be di&CUssed by Ron 8alier during unit meeting <1t 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. fl1ay 20, ln the mu1t1eurposr room. Nie blas PTO l\trs. Richard \Vilhelm President COMING UP: Paper Drlve from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, May 24, at school parking lot. .. Fash.ion show <it 7 p.m. Monday, t-.1ay 26, in Peek family Colonial Terrace Room . 1 Oak View PTA i'llrs. H. Bruce Turner President COMING UP : Mrs. William Suter, past president of Hun· tington Union Council , will install new officers at 7 p.m. Tuesday, 1\1 a y 20. in the 1nultipurpose toom. Dhtg Abuse Education speakers will be Richard Slurgts, principal 9f DeMillc School, Westminster, and James F. Mahan of the Huntington Beach Police Department. A question and ans1vcr pe riod . \Vil\ follow. formt'r drug ad· diets from Teen Challenge will be present. Program is recommellded for fourth grade and up. accompanied by parent or guardian. Baby -si tt ing wil.1 be availabl~. PTA board members will provide re- freshments. Tamura PTO Mrs. Lo"•ell 8rink President COMING UP : Kindergarten Roundup at 3:30 p.m. tomor- row. REPORTS : Honorary It f e membersl\ip award w a s presented to ~1rs. Wa1flf McGrady. .Mrs. Lowen Brink. retiring president, received .!I silver tray from uni t .Unit donatad pla yground climber. e9al posts, slide projector 11nd camtra to the school. \ S L Poultry Industry < ' (' '· ~ \'" , Inventive " , ' · l'llol tllq> took the· tea then; : off 'J)le chicken. Then Ibey siartN dO!ng 'Ill the cleaning. YOll• !llJchl think, ,Ibey did it • just tot: you. , .to make cook· iril for)_wo easier. Maybe they didL s~.the first ''new" pro- cessing methogs of twenty· aome years ago, the poultry Industry hasn't stopped In- venting ways of dofng pert of your work. From featheis to feet and from the inside out, , "' drudgery and dirty work have disappeared from s e r v i n g chicken. · If ftlU don't feel in the mood l4J cook a chicken .•. the local grocery probably bas one hot and ready fOr you. Jf you don:t fut ·in the mood to plan a menu. . .call or visit a take- home cbjcken shop. Or pick a frozen-on-a-tray chicken din· ner in the market. Even the "all light" or "all dark" chicken meat twosomes i:hate the luck. Chicken parts are just what you need and they're packaged in just-for· two sizes. With all the innovations. you can still buy one ·whole chicken ... cleaned, of course. For this recipe, use a whole broiler·fryer, cut up, or eight of your favorite chi c k e n pieces. ClilCKEN TANDOR 1 broiler-fryer , cut up I large onion and L tomalo, both coarsely chopped t green pepper, diced 1,~ teaspoon each : salt. lurmeric 1 and iJ~ teaspoon each: cur· ry powder , cumin. cor· iander 1;, teaspoon each : cinnamon, garlic powder, pepper 1 cup chicken broth. or bouillon 'h cup white wine Place chicken in shallow buttered baking pan. Sprinkle with vegetables and seaso n· ings. Pour over broth and wine. Turn chicken to mix all ingredients. Cover and marinate in the refrigerator several hours or overnight. Uncover and bake in 375 degree oven for 50 minutes. Serve with rice. Makes 4 servings. California Supplies Artichokes It's artichoke season down South, up North,, East and West. And the entire supply comes from California. The present crop is something o(. a study in survival ... of ram and more rain. But a turn toward belter weather, good care and a nat;ural In c l i nat i on to overcome all obstacles have brought spring artichokes to perfection's peak. You may not think oi artichokes as fun food. Isn't any food fu:i if yoo can eat it with your fingers? Think artichokes. You may even belong to that group which in· sists tbe only way to eat an artichoke is uncooked with salt, pepper and maybe. an. oil or butter dre55ing far dippmg . No matter how you are going to serve artid'loke6 - raw, cooked, dtilled or stuffed -choooe nothing but the best. St.art by picking tbe size that fits the appetites because sit.e has nothing to do with quality. All sizes <J..-artichokes grow on the same plant, largest ooes at the Olp, smaller ones toward the boltom. Once you have foul'KI the size artichokes you want. check f o r the sips of top quality. Your choice should be comped, plump, heavy in relation to size, good green color and tightly clinging leaf scales. Avoid buying "relax· ed !~' artichokes with 1 preading leaf scales that art hard -t i pped . TlleY 1art overmature al'KI the good hut· ty flavor has dbappeared. Al9o, the texture tends 'to be a little woodJ'. Artichokes need no special storage care. Treat them as you woold any good green •egetable. The v e c e t a b I e crisper iJ a good storage place Mcause artichokes I I k e cold. Don, put oll uslng l>em. ~y can get that relaxed loo« when 11tort6-too Jong. Use Lhem ·wW'lirl a day or two after i>uylng. When ready to use, wash and cook the artichck" and tnjoy•t:he fun of eatina: with your flnltrt. ----------------- Ntdn.Way, M11 14, 1969 DAILY' "!tOT \37 I ' ' o•t\tSS 9 CHUCK . STE.AK CKICKE N WHOtE lEGS & THIGHS FRYER PARTS LUER QUALITY • LINK SAUSAGE 3 80Z$1 PKGS. ••••••••••• .1'1',\'\'.JJ;1!11l'"' :: . 100 BONUS -:J: ' ~ BLUE CHIP $TAMPS :j: I · ~ WITH w·1~ -~· PUICHASE ot-Ji;C IU.NO ~ _;. i : MULTIPLE VITAMINS ;:;:i• :, _ CH!WAILE flttilT • $169 -PLt.VOlfO 100 TAI LftS ,. • I WITH COUPON-llMlT ONE • VAUO tl.r11 MA'f 22 :_. I I . . , ll'.\r,L\ lt\lJ.) ' ll\1: •I I • , " • , ..••••••.........•.....••••.. A PRELL LIQUID SHAMPOO lA RGE·~c $1.09 SIZE ·GLEIM TOOTH PASTE FDS BATH OIL ~:'¥.' $138 SIZE Extro large CLE ARA SIL FOR ACNE ~EOlUM 77c TUBE 89c SIZE ' flfSH fROZEN USDA IMSPECTED-IOAST LAMB SHOULDER sllciD"BACON ;:~ 65c $139 I~ CRYOVAC PACKAGE McCOY PASTRAMI THE REA L McCOY BEEF BACON 12·0L 79c ~KG. ' 39c GREEN t•Ef LUNCHEON MEAT 12.oz. CAN 1000 ISLE .• 1890 FRENCH, ITAUAM toz.29c MILANI DRESSING ITL fOOO GIANT 2 9 C LIQUID DETERGENT ,;:;~,~< 'FOOD11GiA1Nl"cOFFEE ~!~ 59c . ASSOll:TEO BEVERAGES V2 GAL 29C MOTHER'S PRIDE loAil'ATO SAUCE 3 ~~~i 2sc F-RESH ICIST -PEAS OR CUT GREEN BEANS· TAIL s 1.· 3.0J CANS 6 DELICATESSEN LUER QUALITY FRANKS ~ ;~~:5fc fOOD GIANT SUCEO ASSOll T!O 3 . LUNCH MEATS :,~; fOOO GIA NT OELUXE WISCONSIN SllCEO PASTEURIZEO PROCESS CHEESE PIMIENTO 45c AMERICAN o• sw<Ss ~~a': CASE Of 12 flflHS ll.14 ANAD~·· PRIDE C0 HAMPAGNE $)~.! SPECIAL RESERVE t----,----~------,;:--:::-:--c--1 c'-:-i·''l\sl .. ,,._- ''l{IOf· :t11:id~,.~·11:~~ · .. , ·:· .; . ·- CA •• NPAo•DTl•AD N iciiCii"W...1sKY $4?..~ CUSTOM HOUSE UGHT 01 DAii( $ 339 WHISKY IMPORTED RUM . """ $ 399 M'AY''wlii v~:.~~· 88c 0.S( Of 12 flfTHS $10,$6 ::.;9 FIFTH I ::J~ I :~4:.s:.-:··.~:.$1 .1 ~:~ 19 .. c 'lb. fRESH f•OZEN USOA INSPECTED - LAMB RIB C.OPS FRE SH flOZEN USOA INSPfCTfO SIAAlt LOIN LAMB CHOPS tAIGE ,Silt, OPEN FACf'PACIC'AG£ BREADED SllllMP '. MAXWE LL HOUSE INSTANT COFFE ti:EYSTON!, STEMS & PIECfS 4 •oz. $1 MUSHROOMS r' CANS INCWOl5 IOc Off "'""'·69c: STA PUF RIN~E """" l"Mo" S10URu mEAM t,oz.21 C ~ l lZf WHIPPEO JOPPING >or,55c REDI WHIP SIZE VtTA p.-,KT CHtllfO <IOZ. 75c ORANGE JUICE Ill. BEECH-NUT STRAINED 8A8YFOOD Alt VARIETIES INclODING illJCE$ .8·.·c . REG. JAR. ' 59~ SUPER STAIN REMOVING COMET CLllANSER REG . PKG. ONE-COUPON PER CUSTOMER ··PICTSWEET VIGETABUS -' i •GREE~ PEAS 5 10 oz.$ ·1· · • CUT CORN PKGS. . co•CORN SAIA lff POUND CAKE ··sso•tEO flAVoR -: ·MCP DllNKS 'ltElMJNS ASSOl'fto . MEAT PIES ' !"\""'' 45c 4 EAIS 12.oz •• 5c SIZE 2 6·0Z•23C CANS 4 a.oz ••• C 'IZE .ORANG! P•INICS 1 3' lllDSEYE AWAKE ~~-. c aEEl'STEW,CH1CK-PllNGS,MfAt•AllS $'189 .TOM THU ENTREES ,., "· .... u.s. NO. t tifW CIOP . ' j f.f:IOEl fft:SK WHITE IOSE "' CRISP CELERY POTATOES LARG! STALKS 19~ 19:~ S:29c All GREEN FRESH BROCCOLI 1 • 39c ·: V2-LB. • • LARGE IROWN STEAK • MUSHRO,MS MJB -L m Deep Cleaning Haid Soap ............... , .. "' '<Tofl!JC ---SUNSHINt BIBCUli Mr. C~an Houseliold Cleaner , ...................... 21·•· bll. 73c COOKIES RErRIED ' BATHROOM • Burger Rounds • Chicken Rounds • Chicken Parts • Chicken Stew • Pel Stew 1.111. ~ ........ ~!Ir. l·lll. C1n ••• , ••. S 137. 3 ... Cao ••••..• s 1.9!) IH$1MT (IO Ol.J Sl.l!l Pillsbury Uyer Cake Mixes Pillsbury Frosting Mixes Borden's Danish Marr,arine Toast 'em Pop Ups, 1osl!d " Unlrostol Pacific C11ekor H""Y Troat Grahams Bold L3'ndry lletergenl (Incl. 25c ofl) 2 ~49 c ice. !Ill· 39e IJ·IH, ~I· 4 Jc l·~~I· 39c IO-otll!.49c I·•· ~1.37c -. •intri1tto. $1.20 ROSARITA BEANS hn 2lc JOJ C1'I NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS 11• 47c ~. Safeguard Deodorant. Soap, •••..•.••••••••••••• , • r•t· urs 2 for 3 lc C~PCOIJ.I£ fUDCE SAHD'MCll S~leguard Deodotan\ ~OaP •••••••••••••• ' ••• ' •••• ~ith bals 2 for 4~, Oii CMIMlAL Pl:AllUT BUTTER Pillshll1y Buttermilk Biscuits ••••••••••••••••••• ·· •.·•·11.1~bt 10c 69C Sun Country Ro rim Deodorizers ...... , ••• ·-· ·~ ••••• ,.,, •~, e..1 6.X ~,::· SCOTIISSUE •·Roll ' 3·9 c P~1. BLACK GROU ND THESE PRICES UQVID DETE1!1;£NT SCH ILLING PEPPER THRILL EFFECTIVE . THURS. tftra SUN.; i!i>O~ 59c 4•Q. 45c Coo JIAY 15·18, 1969 /lAt'C ' • •I 2300 Barbor Blvd. at Wilson St., Barbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa ' -------___ _._ ~ - • .. ,. ,. • • .... ;' . " • . ; • • . • " . • : ·' • • ! •• I I ·- llAll Y Pit OT Wodnt!doJ, MIJ 14, 1'169 . • • Gelatine Adds Sparkle .· • Die.ters Dealt Delicious Dishes •'ti Piel dishes needn't be dul~ clilsolves. Add non-caloric cheeie. Yield : 8 servtaas, 90 water lrl saucepan. Place over , .Aa delicious Sunlhlne Slim at.-aweetener, salt and lemon: calories ·per serving. low heal and .Ur conatanlly t<lts. proc:W at hi&b speed unUI GARDEN SALAD MOLD until gtlatlne tllalolv<os. 4·or 5 The modem met« knows lemon ls liquified. ... 2 envelopes u n f I a v o r e d minutes. Remove (rom heat; il\al the best wSiy to keep slim Add carrot pieces; cover gelaUne stir in tomalo sauce. Is to live , for keeP11. on low-and chop by turning lo high 2 cups cold water Cb.Ill until mirtft,lre mounds calorie foods that satisfy. speed and off several times. 1 can (I ounces) tomato slightly when dropped from a By consuming delicious low· Tum into bowl. Add pineapple sauce spoon. Fold in remaining io- caiorle meals instead o f and syrup. I 1/3 Cl.IPS chopped peeled gredients; tum &ela.tlne mix- dellcious high~lorie meals, Cflill , stirring occasionally, cucumber lure into a kup mold. Chill the dieter can always leave until slighUy thickened. 'l\im l,i cup chopped green pepper until firm . Unmold and the table contented and well into 3-cup 1nold. Chill until 2 tablespoons finely chopped garnish with salad greens if red. And .~l ~ the ~t of tirm_, ~veral hours . o r onion desjred. -V. the succeslfuJ permanent diet . cn'emi.ghl. Unmold. Serve with i teaspoons vinegar Yield : a ~.-53 calories For any dieter, UnflaYored salad greens and cottage Sprinkle gelatine over cold per serving. gel>U...18io()ingt«fienttbat's1----''-----.:.....-_.:__-"-------;.:.....-:-__::_ _____ -;--;---:-----_:_=...::..:-:--:-~--;---T,C-...::..:_:__:_:.:...:.7=~\----------~ a must (qt putting sparkle into • -. low.ulorie food. Ao ~velope 'or gelatine It.self ' conlains ' cnly 2 8 caloiits; because it h.as no navor ol iJ.s awn. unflavored gelatloe combines beautifully "'ifh a wide variety or other low-calorie foods. EASY WITH BLENDER Easy to use. too. Making Sunshine Slim, for instance. is a real snap. Jnto the blender go 'unflavored gelatine and orange juice, and you process over low speed until the geletine dissolves. Add the seasoning. process at hlgh. Then you chop the carrot, also right . in the blender, add the pineapple and ch.ill a bit. Tum into a mold, chill until firm •.. and that's all you have to do to make this wonderful dish .. It's a sparkling, handsome gel .•• and eacb servin&: is on- ly 90 calories. , SUoshine Slim, served on a bed of greens with cottage cheese. is a great lunch dish. By itself it comes to the din- ner table too as an ac- companiment for just about any meat you choose . • , a roast, chicken, or hamburgen, for instance. Garden Salad Mold adds equaJ_ sparkle to the diet menu. Jt combines cucumber, green pe~r and minced onion in a 'tangy sweet-aod- 1.arl dressing: it's as easy as pie .•. in fact, m~ ~ier. Regard]ess of lhe wbtber, Sunshine Slim · and other nel salads add a note or SUMY cheer to the diet menu . SUNSHINE SI.IM 1 envelope unflavored gelatine 1,4 cup cold orange juice ~4 cup boiling orange juice N o n • nutritive sweetener equivalent to 11, cup sugar 14 teaspoon salt I lemon, peeled and aeeded 1 p.ip carrot pieces t can Cll> ounces) d.ietetlc pineapple (chunks or crushed) Sprin~ gelatine over 11, cup cold orans-.. juice in ~l!nder container, Add boiling orange juice; cover and process at low speed unUI gelatin e Nehrµ Hit Gt,Aeu-'BM£ Knit this fashionable Jacket •ith cnirt )ea{ "panels to top oCC Spring .separates. Knit a newsy Nehru jacket with raised leaf panels in front, sted-atitcb collar. cuffs, band of worsted. Pattern 7923: sizes 32-46 included. J'IF'tY CENTS (coins• for e.:h pa&tera -add 15 cents lo< eadl plltem lo< lint • class maillbg and special handling; othetwiae third <:l>ss delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks, the DAILY PILO'T, I 0 5 Needlecrolt-Dept, Box 163. Old Cbellea Station, Ne\v York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, .wdrell, Zip, p I l t I r II Pl litt. G.ianl, new 1• Nf1 lr~raft Cll&llls' -over ........ to-, JIM J>lllernl p;im.d inside. -·--· QWI •·st INSTANT Gll'TS" -lobulaus ac:=. !GJI, doi:orll« Mlllt it IA>dl1, -cJve it t n>Wl Jde-1 for •II occasions. 00 C<11ts. Priets · ort discounted ·t•ctpt on foir· troded ond, govrrnment confrOl!td ifems. I D RIODS ;•; • • • -:....>.. • STUINlll 11UY FOOD =t"'..._&• JUNIOR IAIY FOOD =-"'~ 12' SIMllAC LIQUID :;:,""'!"' 27' . MJ.I. COFRE -~69' • MJ.l.COfflE ... -•1~r MJ.I. CilfRE--'l"' · MJ.8. INSTANT:::.'-.~.11• LUCKY BONDED MEATS, UNCONl)ITIONAUY GUARANTEED ~ FOR FLAVOR & TENDERNESS! ~ k 7Jt &Nt/ts lllf 1fl, ,M~tlf'.I r-----Cf-NT_H_C-UT ..... ,_ .--. TAILS REMOVED ' . ROUND ·STEAK ,!:~Ps~E~l~!~~.~.~1 21! '£~~.~~~.!~!~!. .... 48~. LUCKY IOMDID 8 7 C FOi TINDllMUS lb. RUMP ROAST .............. 87 ~. SIRlOIN TIP STEAK •••••••••• 'I~ SAUSAGE ........ ~-::.. •••• 89~. LUCKY BONDED RIB STEAK ,........ Jilllal--~:ru VEGETABUS -·•-··············--37' --•esmt:Ylta_.._ .. ",_ GREEN GIANT M'--····················-··· 33' --•lllfl""l'l•U.IKl-~(--~-llll ·FRENCH TOAST::::.':::'.' __ . __ 36' LEMONADE =~~------·-13• ORANGE JUICE ~;:::__.....:_ 29' COOK IN BAG :::':~ .... ···-·-27' !Mc. tm-iuca ntllf.cmal 1 IA fMI VEGET ABUS :::.":'~···········--·---·--· 38' •• \'INT'llU WI-lolllU·HIM ll tlnl ... WI..-., ltQln&I--) ORANGE PlUS M<U•.-.-.-50' ... Klj&y/.·-- VlllA '~!_!F~!~~! .. ~~~.~~~.8.8~ §'~"~N! .. ~.~·~·~·. 4 91~ .. GROUND ~!1~: •••••••• 81.~ UPTON TEAM<-.. 11'. ,,.: "'.'_ '"'~·i 0 <" •. ~ ~. ~~~~~:~ '· •,; .. ~ .. PAPER PLATES TfNPt:I & JUICY ., lOOCOUNT PKG. APRICOT HALVES 29.QUNCE CAN 297° TURKEY QU ~RINTEDRS 29·(~HOUSE ....... :::·~ •..•. •1~ • CHUCK ROAST ...... ~~ ••• ss.:. ROAST OR 111·1.CUE U.S.D.l .IRllE 1......... lb. BONELESS SIRlOIN TIPS ~::,:---····--43' KOlD KIST BEEF STEW .,, __ 35• BAG O'PIZZA ;:.-:::;-::..~~-89' . . DJlltA PEACHES l'W7':~· -- FRUIT' COM All:".:.' 23' PINfAPPU CHUNKS ::::,,~.-25' IRIAllFAST FIGS :::l...'.-.. --27' . . . .t HARVEST DAY PEARS-~ .. 33' ' CHERRY PIE FllllNG :::rn: ......... 59' GRAPE"BERRY JUKE ~':'~' •.. 47' PRUNEJulcE ':!.~ .. 59( rr-. ....... /<8/lktf.---. V:/' POWDER AJAX DETERGENT ""49·0UNCE BOX . REFRIED BEANS:="" 29' ' . TOMATO JUICE=:'~ --33' BACON 1·LI. 5'8 ' ,... c • LUCICT ILICID ~.~.'!!!~Ill~~!~~~~--···--67' swtn PIEMJUM IACON 77' ....,l_,...... ________ .,_ ...... ~·-- ~.t.~!l~~_c~---·77c !!'.!~.~~~~~~····--· .. -·--... 89< ~2~~~.'""""'M"""'~:,l.~:~~.~: $133 ltlCIY'S PIODIJC( IS SELECTED FIOM THE FINIST IUAUTY ... THAT FIELDS AND 01· CMAIDS YIRD ••. rAMPEIED TO IEEP THE flUllUS llD FLAYOI FOi YOUI IAT· 115 llJOTMlllT •••• AND THEY All DIS- CDUllT PIKID IYEIYDIY. -'B-OUNCE JA." VEGETAll£ JUICE ~.:'..-.. -35' STAR-IUST TUHA:':': .. ~--;-·30' • LIBBY'S RED SAlMON ::'.Tl..._ 99' I PACKAGED ....... ,~"' OREO cooms~:..£_ .. 47' cH&Z-IT wcms::. 37' BURRY SCOTIIR PIES-----43' CORNED IEIF HASH=. • ..:.: ....... 47' C.H.B. SWEET PICKUS::-.....__49• orl.ARGE OUVES~·-.39• WRCH JAM =~--·····-··39' .. l'fftliffllt .RUSllET BIScum ::':'t ___ .39' 'IOUIUON CUIES ~N.-........•...• J9' C.SE FOOD ::t=~~95' SllAIOL ~-'11' Ptm TUNA CAT FOOD -.--:is• COUIR IRIQUETTU----'1" .READ ___ ..,..,._ 25' -'ltMlll.WM ___ _ IDOK FORKEY BUYS ~11Y lllS:' .. •••_.. .... ,..... 'r -........ .....,,........ ..... _ .,,, ...,..~ .................. ... ...................... ,. -~ .... ,., .,~ -...,...... ..... _ .. , WAlll lYll,NY SANIM. _r- . 4-LB: TURKEY ROAST • -< t WIUONWNO ...... $439 NOWASTI ~BEEF ~-:;:'.:--s1•• ftiED HiHBUJ ::'L':.~ nc FISHSTICIS ~=~---·--····---·39' ~~~~~?..~~~~.~ ....... : .. 4911.. "'CINTllCVT CHUCK ' FRIED SHRIMP :::::::'.' _______ 85' APl'lE PIE =~--·---69' . ORE-I DA POTATOES ::"::"::r .... _28• !?.~~~~2D~AND JUICT.. •• , ••• , ..... 5911.. STEAK DIUCIOUI &Aa...a..culD Jot Tiii INtlll fAMILT ... Klj&y!.--. AlUMINUM REYNOLDS FOIL E-Z CUT CUBE STEAK $J09 lUCl'f IOllDID ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -... n.. ., ' 75 FOOT ROLL ~.Wll:a:W"MW '. W&'l':';!ll AHL 1 0 "l\; PO T'IAl: ...... .:W:ll":W.~;::~x.~.:.-o;:~:~:;;~::;;_ fJllSff DflfCTAlll Dfll lflMS ••• D1stoUNT PaicfD IVfJIYDAYl ~~~~~~~"l'~-... :'~ .. 31c ~~~~~?:-~.~!~!!.~ ... ,.. sc ~J!.,~*~~-·---... 11._, ... 37c ~~1c~1!!.~_:::-~a9c DANOLACOOllOHAM 65< ............................ , ........... -•• AW. ..... ,.. :~s~~~~e.~~~-~~-~:.~48' ~ •.... Klj&yr.-· -..... COUNTRY KITCHEN TABLE SYRUP 36-0UNCE BOTILE 59.c llOUUHOLD ITfllS :,,'1 CHEER DmRGENT---_ .. 83' ~ AXION~~.~---63( DRIJT D£TERGINT·-·---·--79 ' r. wnax =~~---3•( IVORY uQulD =.-:::'--------·--·Sa• · CASCADE :1:':.'l ..... --....... -... -........... 69( COMET CUANSER ,, .................... 25 ' MR. QEAN =~ ... --......... _64( PEltfORM STAICll::'.. 43' IOT Al UOWll COLA 63< -~ ... ,~ ....... >••HOOUM<•<••>OH• YIN IOSl WINE ) 31 ....~ ........ "'. uo•nM•""'""""'"•••"•> ~~~!.!~~~ .. : ...... 2" ~1!!."!l J~~~~~--··-~-::.u. ••• 73c Our LOW Ever)day Pri ce ! All.MEAT LUCKY FRANKS POUND PACKAGE ss~ • r, , ' il.OUSElfolJ. fUIJ,1',,;,' , HAND! WRAP ~.:.." _____ ,31• GAIN DmRGENT ;~"'--~83' DEl.S('f TISSUE:::\,.... _ -2~" ,,.. scon Towns :::::. __ 31• NAPKINS ::.~.::.~····---..,-10' lUCllY FAOAl TISSUE-a.--21' PARTY DIPS 34 PLASTIC CUPS~o ... ,, ......... 65' . ....... -....... _ ............. _ ..... ,& c -~· .... Klj&yt-- ~~~~~~GS -.. '.'.'.': ..... ~ sa· SWEET, HAMBUIGER 0 ORHOTDOG iw~Van de-Kamps•• .iEINZ RELISH AN OUTSTANDRIG vlltlm 11-0uNCEJA• . OfFlllSHIAllRYTlllATS ~ lf:!o fAT .... UCD'fiOIU) ~ ~ ·111.1111f1111••• 111111i1111J1D '~· · LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES 8 BEAUTY AIDS HEAD & SHOULDERS ' SMAMl'OO -Wll SIZE lOTION °':.~.\:O:m'.'~' $ J 24 HEAD & ~llOUlDERS SHAMPOO !AMlll SIU TU.IE ~t;, OVl lOW $121 --._, ,11(1 HEAD & SHOUlllRS SHAMPOO LAIGIJAI OUILOW NICI $143 • 36 QT. FOAM ICE CHEST WITH Wiii HAltDl.E " •. , ,.,. till•-Mtl ..... ._.,plait •t '""'""" • ..,. .... . ,,.. .. ,_......,_ OUILOW , . •11<1 $148 o•,;--;,; '.-, 30 QT. FOAM ICE CHIST ltVlllAGU A• rtots .. , C "''~ '" , .. , .. , •• tr 88 Ml IOW rltQ., •••• , •• _ •• "SCOP~" MOUTHWASH r~TIUl-17-0L "'" ,,.,_· ,,. '"$1 OS t.M on tow"""' ----------.- lft'edne~1y, MJy 14, 1969 I • ~-------~ W1•1•dlr, M•) 14, 1969 I ,_ I Will Wallace ·.Run Again?-·He Says. He's Stronger • ' MONTGOllll:RY, ·Ala. IAPl -ll ('on_laiu to be ...,, wbelber C.O,.. C. Wallace will run ror pmldent ogaln, but an a.Ide iayJ be alrtady haa "the *11 for 1 better na- tialaj orpftilolloo then we hid ID tbt eleetloo last year." American Party. WIS that ln the procea oC get. DtW party. A source cl* to Wallace wroucht up the people a.re and delCfibed the 11ewly ~lanlied what Presldtnt Nixon does." party as the nucleus of a Hardin, a NaUonal Guard political forct which "can be two-star general, gawe up a used lf Wallace wants to use It •flf,000 a year job u legaJ or lf event.s dictate thal he COWllel of lhe State Flnance or about IO employ ... 8UbS<:rlber conlrlbule flJ a yur. ')1IO aide; Ta]!lor Hanlin, said it wu J>Ul' lOpthet over the weekend In Cincinnati, Otijo, when Wallace parlis&ns from 31 states lrinned a new ,Welded t.otelher were Wallace's old American ln· dependent Party and kindred lblrd-party al Uances -lo -st.ate or another -whJch .up. ported the fonner Alabama gcwemor 1D 11168. Ung on lho ballol, by peUUoo T. Coleman Andrews of "we wound up with a loosely Rich mond, who headed the knil organization" with. little 19&8 third-party niovemerit In central control. Virginla, wu e.lected naUGnal Wallace dilclalmed ._any ac-chairman and Bill D•vis ol Uve part lo the new orc_aniz.a Covington, Tenn., a , p r o Uon but aatd be wu 1'pleued Wallace candidal,e for ~ with the outcome" and With _ g~ss earlier Ulis year, ii "the the Officers chosen to lead the vice chalnnan. • should use It." Department to work full time Whether the former as director of the Wallace wa11,ce •pencb moet of hi• time at the cam~ htad· quarters ana rtedltly began pubJJeatlon ol • , monthl y newtletter for fund-r•l&lng and as a poUUcaJ fOl'\lm , More .than a million copies were malled across lhe nation with lhe request that e a c h The response, Hardin aaM, has been "e1ce.llent." W11bout going lnto the dollar vohUnt, he said the returns have been sufficient '° , keep the cazn.. pala:n going. Ooe · weakness in the cam- paign last year, said Hardin, governor runs, the source campalp, as the movement predicted, will depend on "how l!lttll is known. He has a staff "We're solvenl," he added. "We have paJtS all our bills.'' ,, Hullfiettoii leacll -.1SS11 So. Edwards .Lapna ... ell -790 So. Coast Hwy. Founhlin Valley -16042 Magnolia H11ntl11tton leach -1911 AtlGlllS Corona del M.-3049 C-t Hwy. Foui: Coast Men Named \ ' ' ' . _.. To Board Foor men have been named 'lo pooitions on lhe Sooth Oranae County YMCA Board ... -or Directors bringing the bOdy \ to a total of 29 men repreaen- ting ~Wion Viejo, Lag\lrla Beach, ~ Niguel, Dina , Point, Sao · uan Capistrano. El '· Toro, an(l. n Clemente. Barr Fletcher of S a n Clemente, Jack Walker of '- Dana P~, Gary Zimmerman and BQb, Hench, both of Laguna Beach are the new directors. They were &electe;d at the board's April 22 meeting. Fletcher and Walker have participated in the ''Y's" In- dian Guide program as has Hench. Zimmerman has been active in the Gra YMCA pro- gram. "These four men represent the rinest caliber of men in our program, and it will be a great addi tion to our board to ha ve their participation and involvement,'' Roger Carter, YMCA director said. $3.6 Million Route Bids Advertised Bids are now being ad· vertised on a $3.8 million widening program along the Newport Freeway f r o m Anah eim to Costa liiesa, its prese nt soolhern terminus, ac· C{)rding to the state Division of Highways. Existing four.lane sections will be widened to six just north of lhe Palisades Road- Bristol Street intersection with Newport Bouleva rd, north to just south of the Riverside Freeway. Eventually, lhe freeway will be widened to eight Janes wlth bids on the six.lane project to be opened June 5 in Los Angeles and completion of the .... 'Ork itself one year from now. Inter c hange s and Un· dercrossings will be included in tht widening project at Baker ~treet, Pau l ari n o - Avenue, the San D leg o Freeway, Maln ,.Street , lifacArthur Boulevard, .-flyer &ad and Edinger Avenue. Fom1dation Gives Camp To Sco11ts The lloag Foundation has donated a 137-acrc camp lo the Orange Empire Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America. The land is located on Highway 33 in the San Bernardino National 1'~orest. two hours from Silllla Ana. Jt y,·jlJ serve as an overnight god \Veekend camp for the Scbuts, ' a snow camp in the winter, ;i.nd as a summer camp in the 1980's. Purchase price of the pro- perty was $310,000. The camp will be named Grace Valley Camp, honoring · Mrs. Grace Roag, wife of the creator of the Geora:e H o a g Foundation. GRAFFITI by Lury MOSES (,OT SENT UP THE RIVER • G)oomy Gus Tells ii ·• As You See ii . . PORK CHOPS •;bC" .... ~ ........... lb 79c : PORK -CHOPS ,,;,c,. ................ ,. 89< SPARERIBS ''"'";,,,, ................ :.,. 5'9( POT RC>AST"'"'''"'" .............. lb 73< CHUCK ROAST,,,; ... ,, •. ,,. ...... 1b 49< PORK ROAST •ollHolllooo , .......... ,. 69C CROSS RIB ROAST,.,,., ......... 1b98c . GROUND BEEF ~·,:;~:~::o~· ........ "47< CHUCK STEAK 1"'1 "'" 01 ". 98< &eet ••••••••••·••••••• ,l'D LEG 0 LAMB IJow70olood U5 DA 79( ' ln1pec11d •••• •• ••••.,.,, •• • ,1.b LAMB SHANK NowZ<olood~•O A 49< ln1pectt d,,1 •• •••• '!.'•••,lb FRYER BREASTS ..................... "63( FRYER THIGHS or LEGS ... "59< SLICED BACON ;i;';::.:'.:: ...... .> .. ,b63< . . . CORNED BEEF ~:~:·;:.:~: ............... 79 r tORNED BEEF "''°'''''""'"""""'"b89( SLICED HALIBUTw, ............... " 89< RED SNAPPER ,,.,, ,.11 ................. ,, 79c RIB OR LOIN END PORKROASTi FRESH FRYER . . -LIGHT-LEAN PORK • WE WELCOME YOUR CHECK· am1NO t04 CHARGE LEGS -OR THIGHS FRANKS ::.:::".'.':'.': ........................ "· ~3< CHIPPED MEATS ~::::::;: ................. , .. 3/ 1 BISCUITS .............. 9< LUNCH MEATS ;;:·.:.:~·::· ........... ~. 3 / l9 M.AIN 'MEAL MEATS w•···'""'··" "69 ltel ••><u•.1J l 4et. •••••••• ,,6,. ....... , ... tk •••••••••• ...................... ... KRAFT CHEESE ~;:.:·:::, .................. a9c • • CHUB SALAMI ............................ ,""· 1 19 JANET LH A A 16 OZ. DIET WI LS HIRE BORDEN 'S KINGSFORD HALF GALLON -LARGE EGGS PEPSI COLA CU CUMBER CHIPS DANISH OLEO CHARCOAL BRIQUETS PUREX BLEACH 41( 58 ~p ,, 59~ . ., 38~, 79.~, 37c "DOUBLE DEAL" G s . I ,,,,..fwowo,.-Bloe rocery pec1a s Ch.,,"""''".""'""""""' VEG ET ABLES :::.:::~~!:::~:::,., ... 20c MURIATIC ACID ;~;..~•.::: ........ 69< ALL ;::::::·~ ........................... 64C ORANGE JUICE ;;~~;< .............. 46< POP TARTS ....... ,,,. ............ 39C COFFEE MATE ........................ 99c DOG FOOD ..... ................ .•• 7 < BORDEN 'S MILK ·~"···• ........ .,. 36< COFFEE ~"~·69~ .... ~.~1 37 ...... ~~ l 99 REDDI WHIP ::';:;°'''. ................. S 5c ' EGG NOODLES ._ ... _ ...... 28< VANILLA WAFERS ~:~ .. :;·:::·: ... ,,,,36< POOL CHLORINE :::i;: .... ~ ... 45.c TEA BAGS :,;;~;:::'. ..................... 94c PLASTIC MENNEN MENNEN MENNEN Wilkinson GARDEN Baby Magic Sol-Strolce SKIN RAZOR HOSE LOTION SHAVE BRACER BLADES lltS. 1.•I ¥AUit •1G.1.tJ .tOL •«•-7 .. • IOC O•f lfG.l .~S ·tOZ. ll0. 7•t 99< 88< 48' 79c 49c .. "DOUBLE DEAL" P d S • I "" .... w .. ,. ,, .. . ro uce pec1a s ,,,.,, ... , .• u ........... . LIQUOR-BEER & WINE Pink Chablis, All ~.:.,,(e•Gollo-., ••••••• .'· •• , •• _J~' Chateau Rene Champagne '"' ......... 171 S ' s c .... "' J Jll eogram s even rown .... ~1 {.o1i. ••••• ALIE•TSON'S 16 '100, • Sth -8'' Crown Russe Vodka '""" 110.1 .. . Bourbon :~~:~·,~~· 399 Puerto Vallarta Tequila ............... S" Orange Juice .......... 26 ' Orange Juice ,, ...... '1 110. S7 < Banquel·-•··18< •·~ .. 37 ' vegetables w ... ~ ..... 25 ( B I SI k'"'"" 65 ' ee ea •~., ........ 120. C. R-'I .... '" 66' 1nnamon °' s,.,,1, .. G G• nl ''U•lt11.'•01.~lo<od 33< reen ta ...,~, c ... G .. 10.. G G. Sl\ee ,., c... 38< reen tanfa.b, L ......... '°"' I M'lk '··-··· 35 ( ce I .... , .. ,,_ ...... );.,Cl Gol "''"""' Deluxe Fudgesicle ,,.,, 56' fresh 0~:.:~:~"· In-Store Bakery . SWEET VALENCIA ORANGES +DONUTS •• ' POUND PPLY BAG GRAP1 EFRUIT 10/1. H0.1 WMntlON PO.TA TOES 4 .•. 29c . ' . ' ; I I . I • l'llNOCIOft CARROTS~;;.·" 10< , . RAISED · GLAZED or SUGAR 59( Squaw Bread , ......... 3/1. Appl!! Pies .~-........... 69c Cookies ................... 4 ... J. ----------· -----------------~~--- PRICES. GOOD r!!AY - 14 thru 20 • . . • - . . . .IM.Y PllOJ . . Apples Popular I Sauce A,.ie sau« , , . funny how the nome ol a F. food could be the old·fas,tuned equivalent ol "you're putting me on." Ap,ie aauce popu I a r I l .Y hasn't sufier~, however. It J.S ·the l1IGlj pojlular ol all opp!< 1'f<Xllldl and ou\oelb other cirnned ln111 exctpl peac1'es and-le. Akllc With canned apple slicd ..and juict, CitifOmiam eat lbout 150 .percent more apple 1..uce than they did 10 years ICO· Not even the pop•'Mm ~ can ac- axmt lor IU(lti an increase! Part or the an:sWer can only be homemakers' dlscOvery the procee.wrs' pn:iducts . are as good as homeflladc ..• and nq more expensive. • Processors don't claim to be mind readtt:: . . . bul somehow-they found out you -- would like !lPPle 58llce varia- tions. You can choooe plain, smoodl apple ~uce as usual , and you can choose the chunky ilyle. Chunky apple · sauce really does have chunks ol ap- ple in j,, giving it an interstlng · textW". For Oavor and color intere&t, appie sauce bas be8ll combined with other fruits, !ruit flavors a 91>ices. . Wben processors make ~ ple sauce, they start just the w~ you would if you were doing it ... With good cooking apple:i:. To please a 11 preferences in flavor, color and coosist.ency (some people like thick apple sauce, some do oot), apple sauce is usually ferent apple varieties. T h e feroot apple varieities. The excepdoD I s California's famoua Gravenstein a p p I e sauce. it's madi! exclusively of Gravenstein ~pies. Apple sltces: are gaining in popularity as famllieS discover their goodness and ~y. You can buy them p1abi or spiced , usually packed Jn a~ pie juice which helps them stay firm . yet juicier than nature made them in the first place. Apple juice. or cider, is one of the oldest known apple pro- ducts. There are sWI kts of people who like to get their apple a day by drinking it. If apple juice is juke .. ~what's cider? It's apple juice too. I~ California there is no dif. f erence. However, Y9U can buy it in its crystal cleai-form •.. or a l.iWe c~. Which you like is just thl( ••. personal preference. 1be clear type has every bit or apple pu]p removed. Cloudy apple jukt (cider) hBB some or the natural apple pulp left in for tl»ee who like it that way. lJnmolc:/ing Made Easy To unmold gelatine, dip the mold in warm (not hot) water to the depth 'ol Its eontents. Loosen arouod 'the edge with the tip of a paring knife . Place a serving dish tightly on lop of~ mold and tum it upside down. Shake, holding the serving dish to the mold . .Jr -gelatine -dO"...s not readily slip out., repeat the procedure. The same process applies for unmolding loaf pans. For family service, you may uR a bowl or individual dessert dishes for any recipe that calls for a mold. This eliminates umtokling ; for the bowl, just scoop out with a , large spoon. Make Rusty Parts 'New' Color-eode home workshop tooll ln minutes, make rusty bike parts look new, mold over the handfes or pliers an easy. to-grip. eu&hloned,.electrically and the:rm11ly in sul at in g cotllna -with ·a new liquid vinyl poduc:I. 11 adbera ~.,metal. wood or plalllc. YOU OMer dfp the oJ>. Jed into the llquld or brush It .... 'Ille liquid bq1Jll to harden Ill once, moldl1111 lts<U Into a ..-. colorful, Cll5hioned -.. ' Tbe thlcknllll can bo built up bJ aililltlonal dips or brullliap., Jt COmtl in bNe, red. ytl .... and white. --1Lettuce . . . . l B'.' BONUS DISCOUNT SPECIAL EASTERN GRAIN FED FROZEN MEDIUM SIZE , -~-~-'--'-''--'~-----------------------------------·---~------·--- ' . Liintttd f'llW Qff!\' • · T ·'·H·..i; 1911 .. lp~··'•}.i-~. Ml:w;ktt llClfut.r.thnivt y, Gol. Cqssack Vodka 16',. .. • DAllV l'ILOT ·ill- ' -. ...... ' ,• ~· .,, ~ ". . ' •I {'"' II, !\. \ 'tj; '• '-n• . ... "I, • . • • ... ' ' L t.,. F ' :-. ' ' . ' • -• . . , .. .. ,._'"" . . .. ,,,-... '• , I • "MITCH". McLEOD STORE MANAGER ROSEM£1D ..• ' .. ; * .,, .... ~ , ~VJ -y~u . ~8~41 · ! · ·-~ • • •r.w NWi•ll -.itM'on .... ~ .. cfJI I Tlltfl11D•ld• llucfl N"'9f H.lllllt& ...... Wlft lll:tliilllt"f Mtt.'1Tt UAID • 'FftO'Zttl · • ' 1:21 LEMONADE • bUNC!: c'=' · 1 s• 31' BIRDSCYE • F'JloztN ill-OZ. PACKAGii OUJK·THAW STRAW· "JIERRIES. J£w' -.41 clW!Gr~ ti ) • l lllOSEU: • fllO'ZDI ID-OZ. l>ACJ:AQ' ,(tU~TKAW ' • • ' ; I '..,,,, 1rotl1t1·«1'scoUNT PRICES FIRST OF THE SEASON . SPRINGnME SWEET & JUICY ·p1•·CHES . . -llOWtLOCAL GROWll Co'ACHELLA ~ALLEY CORN 6i49'~ JUltV • VAlEJtCIA ORANGES ' . WASlllNGT°" WlNESA• 5 L $1 00 APPLES ~ ._ -, SUNMAIQ. • r.,llfl.PACK 2ftC RAISINS I~ •:;J· '7 ... JUST ROMltD • SALTlD IN THE SHELL I OUNCE PACl<MiE 4 F $100 PEANUTS ~ -""'0R 'w11·~.:ot\=u1"c~£. ·c.w 31c 291 · . MIXED . . . . A H '"' ; FRUIT . ~·'·'A· CAN. n:GUl.llt GfllMD . ClllCOJIT '68' . ~ "?l!Nct·c.w > .,, "' ··::-'.i:...·'. 3ec, . ,LuZllllll OOFRI,. 69'.·. .... .. --~ • TlilSEftOWCE PR1CE'S'UFECTIVE1HIJRSOAY throuafl Wt.DNESDAV MAY l~,ttiniu1h MAY 21 ., ' ~j;~W,'"''.oz.c•• 211 ~, 9 · . ~ .:"•Ice 21c ·-~ :··. &£'11'.lc'sll:r''~' . 39c . 37' ; F'eOZEH ..':J.11. V.lftu:Tl[S C ·~ l' · •· . 6' llll UET ·Dlll•ERS 43c ~------"' , .... ,.,.,. /1 • "· · · • 'ilRIQ'ii\Tlllllll· 1.01 -:_ • ,..-IAitY:JObD . ·_·11c . lO!Al Ol';COll~IS I V[RY JA r 111111[ Al"'J:t = Ot Pll/C[ 4 OUHet PA~M;! • "ltll!CA• 31' IORD£11S 811Allll CHEESE ~ 11 ouNC?'fANr• REFfllOERATtD 1Dlll 1Sl:AND 611 IL!O CHUSE SOME &l"4A K'll ITOt:U 01$COUllT ~£ l'IUCf iiai'o'Ll'sti'dioilii a1c 651 ' . 4 O?. PACl"AG£ • IMPORTED 6'k VALUI: 5ac AIPllA IETR SUCED HAii . 7 . ' ' eox or 36 , . FOIL WAAPP£0 TABLI:TS ALU·SELTZER: ia• 851 Iii OIJliC£ BOTTLE • VltTK 800'?' $127 -IRECIC'CRUM RIISE 111 .. l'OUNC£ PLASTIC SPRAY I OTTU: IACTIIE'- FIRSr.·~111 .. SPRA.Y _,.. 73c 571 PACK or ' TUBES • EXTRA HOU> 991 Kindness CondHlontr 111 . PONitS CTALCWIFWWI/I 1• 871 J M0EUEKSkln lr1cer 89c 71 1 -:.::.=· COMPl.tTE SEl.tCTIOU SUllTAI PRODUCT$ Al.L DISCOl.mf PRICED ct ALPHA BETA •T•J• •Coppedou !' ... &Al PACI:: OF 15 • S(/i'l:l'l STA.llfLE&B 1 •. $1 H GILLETTE II.ADES PU1.ViiX6UPER •DOG&CAT $1 SI . FLEA COLLAR '"1. """ 1" , • *~ . ,. ... .... 21/i CAN • WHOU: .,' ~ ~'iJ'ift~w APRICOTS 37c ~. ~~~'K'i·~· 1ti14• ~ 2•/, CAN Zk .. HUNT6 • I ,Qt. CAN 1' Ail TOMATO SAUCE 11•1 ~ ·AlrllR l!TA .,,, VALU& Ill' SALAD~ Jl.0Qutf'011J' 1k VALU? . "- / -l'"I lffl • WISCONSIN 19e 18' 1111.1 cNEDGAR CNUS£ u. "" r . ' . 7 OUNC~ CAN 39• . ROOS WHIP·O-TOPPINI ·. 4lo · ,. ·Your ALPHA .BETA Noiit>bOr~ IMd!er llhe i\1in·ln the Re4 Apron) Proudly Otte" BUTCHBl'S PIIDB MEATS MMTI J,OU'LL II PROUD TO SIRVI • D15'0Citll'lllC£D • QUW1Y l SATISfACTIOH QJARAHTUD • • U.i,• GOm!IMUIT ~EU CO.OR!OO BEEF . i . WILSON'$ ~~~ ~RISPRITE I PlUMI' " TEM>£R • FRYER SLICED PARTS BACON . LOW, ·~· THIGHS LOW AND PRICE 'LEGS GIBl!TS c NO SICKS, lttCll$ Oii 41 BEST OF LL .. FRYER BREASTS· SS• n.. EASTERN O!!ALITY '" All'llA·BETA llllmlllll DIPINOAllUQUlllTY '--------"' "----<''ih. GROUND j I SHURnN!ll GEH\JINE f.ISllJll QUIUTY 63, ,:{ ) • Inf C FllOZEN ,....,.,,,. IACOI •'\ BEEF l.lo:.'~~0\'111 LI. FRITTERS jlPJIA 1£T• . A "'·SEASONED • lfAll\' TO IAI<£ 65'• 89'• lfTCDll Ml IEEf FRESH MEAT LOAF u. 1111111111111111sr1CnD SKlll.£1S • 1-0t PM.• PURE~~ ,,_.,,., . SAUSMI .,, , fllll CUT ROU!m l1IAlt llOllEWS ~IOD ROAST LINKS A 'mfrAST ~ GIVE 10 THE UNITTD CfUM.\l ,AlS'f' ASSOCIATION A HCMe '° ... MMCH IM ntl LOS AN01US AIU lltNHJ MAT 17, 11 & 1t -. Ii AllllA llll llliMn WCOlli: C11£CK . 95• 98• fl[(f llADE CUT .lllOllT CHUCK RIU ROAST G 591 , ' PRICES EFFECT:tVE '.IN ALL ALPHA anA MARKETS .. '4-· • COSTA MIU 241 E. 17th SI, HUNTINGTON llACH-9045 Aclomt HUNTINGTON llACH-1Nl1 N. lololn St. FOUNTAIN VALLIY-"30 Warner LAO\lllA..-30l22 S. C-Hlw1y ... RECIPE ·-CllOPS 111 A1PU IRAYY" • I I. I 1· . ' I I .. I ! • ·" 'Ii .. ' ' .. • ' " ~ .. " ' • ' ' • -- ... ------------~------~~· ------------------------------------------ ,• I I 1 I , . ._ .,. ..... .--=~--,.;;.~;::;:::.:-:-. -:.-;;.;::-:; .. ::-~-;.-:.-.;-,-,,. . .......... -.......... ·'-·~· ...... . 0 Dljl.Y l'ILOT For Adequate Diet .Build Good Breakfa$f Eating ··Hal5its Nibbles Should Be. Planned • n la 1 fact and we might as eating a good .substantlal often short or llcklq: in eila-.&Dd meat. table encourages milk drink· • "'ell face ll. Many women still breakfast will pay h I ah breakfast. A llcbt brukfut paUtm ln-Ing, so vital for building good ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Did you we 11 ·est abli.shed custom rntals may result ln not only a ""need to Improve l h e i r dividends for all the family in A cood bruldut provides cludu fruit, etrul or bread, strong bones and teeth. \l:now that 10 to ts percent of a especially among chil dren ind buljlog walsUh)e, but also ill brtakfast habits. the form ol greater work ef. one-fourth to one-third of the mUk and otbtt bev--. tr ' ··'-of ··'-I ~~ -~· Cereal and milk are a per••n·; daily "'11lorles b sup-leenagers. sig'"' or fVVV' nutrition . .., Studi.es of the diets of ficiency for grown-ups, more daily requ.u~mentl ~ ea, ucau 1:\1. --.... ,.... .... representative women from 30 buoyant energy for children; protein, v l lam l n I and A medium breakfast paUem bargain team; an extremely plied by ;,nibbles?" The suggesllon ls that food "Don't give \ip snacks en· lhrouch 92 years vf age less mid·mornlng fatigue Lor minerals. 'n:le:re are no bll'd Addi an eg or~ economical twosome that sup-The st. Louis health depart· eat.en between meals sho~d be tire.ly, even lf you are a ~lght revelled that about three· all. and fast rules about how big a A hearty breaJUut adds plemeot each other .. ,in im· ment says "UUs is not planned fnr and counted as 1i1o·atchcr," said the health fourths of those interviewed Miik and citrus or other good breakfast ls, but It Is a eggs with such me&la: as 1 1 1 b I" r ... 1 .... 1 ~ b ..: •• i. portant nQtrienla vftaJ la the part cu ar Y ad, because food part of ti,t to.tal amount eaten department. "Think of 1nacks :liad breakfasts that were fruit or juice that rates hl&b in solid act u.-...... e s a-aeon. NUllft, ham , 1-.u. ' be 2. .. • below recommendalions for an \•itamln c are the foods most ptoteln in cerealJ and ml.lk, ·A pitcher of milk, On the ~ dlet. ..._ tween meals helps some during lhl _,. as a parl of your day's food. · • adequate breakfast. _:=:::_:..;::.:.;:::_':==============::::i:========;;i;:::;---7,----persons gel an adequate dllt,11 , ''The tttrill lfta.rr_k usuaUy subtract a dessert from your Is it any v.·oader that so _J Some people have dWlt\il\J' providti .1;,....,... 111d if meals ,1.hcn you snack, <f- many of our children attach FAS_T _DRAW in eating all the ealorMil, .:M· eaten .• • cl-" to~ when party.fare 'mounts uo lltUe Importance to breakfast , eed In th Is ......... ~-i:ic ' when they see Mother slight DIM•·•·LI11• Adi ,,,.., tM f11f••• ,,,,.ftt• I• tM •••t. C•ll '42-5671 ,,., tilt tll1111 n rce mea · can.,."'"' :tr":'. t ~our calories." A bealth d e p a • 1111 t II nutrllM! MIC q• ' . . · "this important meal. •t•in1t yowr own clock. spokesman said UIM -~ pe~ • Bui , Uu.•_ final warning 1s: • Nutritionists agree that bet.ween mull bU''-9 u •llMllt '91 GM to umake a wise snack chol~.'' ~~~.,-.=========================:::.-.~~~--=::::.::::..:::::,;:.;:::.::.._::!~:.:.::::.::i.....::=.:..::::.:::::.::.=::.. l Summer Shope J I ( , ti - ~· 'tqAeu13~ E mbroider e d sprays dramatize shape of neckline, hem . Sew flov.·er.fresh skimmer for Summer parties! Easy - just 3 main pieces. Pattern · 17311 : transfer, printed pattern tNEW sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. ,Size 12 (bust 34). State 11Je. ' FIFTY CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for first-clas!l maili111 and special handling; otQerwise third--class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooka, 105 Needlecraft Dept., Bo1 163, P ld Chelsea Sl.aUon, New ;tork. N.Y. 10011. Priqt Name, Adcl(ta. Zip, P a it e r n Nambtr. Giant. new 1161 Needlecraft Catalog -over 200 deaigns to choose, 3 free patterns printed inside. Send SO cents now. NEW! ''SO I NST ANT GLFTS" -fabulo4S fashions, rtoys. deairator acctssorles. "Make it today, give it tomor· ltow! Ideal for all occasions. 50 ~nts. · "I' .Jfiiy Rap" to knit, cro- p et, weave, sew. hook. 50 cents. • Book of U: Priu Afghans. 50 cents. • Barpin! Qailt Book I has 16 beautiful patterns. 50 cent!l. l\tuseum QWlt Book 2 - paltems for 12 superb quilts. 50 cents. Book 3. "Qv.Uts for Today 's 'Uvlng". lS patterns. 50 cents. ,. ; Interest ·Tempting · Even simply p re par ed vegetables can be varied ln in· teres:ting ways. nGURE-RIGHT PEAS 1 can (1 pound, 1 ounce) g~n peas wilh onions 1 cup thin celery crescents Tum peas and onions into a strairier set over a I-quart saucepan. To the liquid from the peas add the celery: bring to a boil : boil gently until celery ls tender<rlsp -about $ minutes. Add peas and oniong; Teheal; drain. Salt and pepper may be added to taste. Makes 4 sezvin&s. ' Tiny Bon Bons These tiny hr\y Bot! Bot!s are delt.lned for the young at hearL Form firm Jee cream into balls with a meJon ball cutter; roll qalcldy In finey dlCJllPOd null ol yoor cholct. Place on a tray and frttze for 1bwt t hour or unUI Vf!rf firm. Worklni 1111, dlp NCb ball In melted lmlisweet chocollte blll ud refre<U .... ill ?UdJ "' """'· 'Ill~~,:.=. 'l,""'~ baas ar on a tray: wrip 1D foif or tr...,..renl wrap. '·DELMONTE PEACHES i SLICED AND HALVES, NO, 2 1> CAN _,,,_ ................ .. FRIZEN . HADDOCX DI N RS SAJfi~~RY REG. PKG. BANQUET. CHIC. TURKEY, BEEF _ ............... . TOILET ' TISSUE _ SOFTWEVE 2-ROll PACK .... -................. . • • • .if.. --~!~~~l~c::.: s~ $ J .- WHEATfES 1~/6:·]b$1 ' . R . CHEfllOS 10)1-0Z.. KVC f-Ol,. .. ,._. ... ··--... - !~o!~.!~!!,!_ ___ .,_ .. _ 59' HEAD & SHQULDERS SHAMPOO ~ DdWa.tf&Sfll, -... U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOta . . !,\!,!,,~!JOLOGN~ 59' l~!,,, .. i~,VlAG~_ "59 SJtl~!_CH_E_ES_E --~~ 33' ROUND STEAK1 Ol' VIRGINIA ll•C11 lillEATS~1... IJ'i. ,,. ROD'S DRESSINGS ~ .. _ .. ::remlll! s• HOFFMAN'S Dllm FRANKS _,.,. •c .. c. 7• PlllSIURT CllSCHT IOUS '"",,.. ---~,. MIDGET SALAMI Ol llOl.OCillA ffo~ -49 ' I FULL CUT BO NUN . !9;!2.~~~---· u. ~SC 1 for • • OllOllS '-."' 3k 29' ~~l!!CJ,A ORAICiE_~----6! $1 U.S. NO. 1 Sf'ANI~ • s ~~~!!! .'. ____ ,,_, ___ 2i 29 ·-Wllllll Swirl conee Cakes,,._" 149' Banana Nut I LNI .. -.. --·" "59c Onil's . $119 F9" Cake.. ... ,,.,.. llJ\llllJWlll\VW ,ADYOTISD PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FILL DAYS..fHIS., JIAY '' llir• Wit., IUYJI • TRIPLE STAMPS ~. wn'H lMI' (°""°"' GOOD llU. y 15 THIV ...... y l t u r;;,.;;:,.::,.-::.,;:.!i.,~· I -,~ tASMlfl l-Sflr l' "'"'7_,_":.'""'!,";."'":""~.'tf'::°!:.':":"..-1-. JiMJM 'frtu.si I ' :::,_..::. . ..,,z~----............ . I I ---~.:.o.----J ' ~----------------~-------~ LARGE . EGGS COUNTRY PRIDE LARGE GRADE AA DOZ. -----·-- MA YFRESH EGGS LARGE GIADE AA 00, ~·· l ma_yfair Froz~ Food · • ' ORANGE JUICE 4ys 1 MINUT E MAID 6-0Z. CANS __ ,,.,_,,_ .. ,,_ .. , .. -.. " ............ . WAFFL~s 1 . .:]tiS 1 DOVllMY flAKE l'IHG$ZE 10 Cl. l'J:G ............... -............... --I ' . f~~S~.f~J.~~-~~-.,·---~4~s 1 ~!~!!"~s'!!o'!~,GS. ]tiS 1 ( NlllfTS COf!N, GREEN llAN~ All IN BUTTEi! 5AlK.E llfG. PKG. l ., LEAN SHOULDER U,S.D.'A. GRADED CHOICE I PORK ROAST TENDER EASllilN PORK • RUMP ROAST LEAN. BONE IN ..,ge·· .,-J ib .. , J!!R~ B~T!_-~_!_~~-K~ 69'" !9..~~J~Q,o'~-A-~ ~-~~~-" ~. 109 · .f..~1.l,,"r.&l,T~.~----"· 69', ~-ma_yfairL~uors :::::::;_~-· ~tl~~~~OOARI $ 369 !~~~~ .. ~~~!~~ $1139. !~!Y.!:.~!s.!RPJ!I_~~--s9'1 'OLlllll llfW nil, J4 1i.1lr __ ,w •r IOYAL OCCASIOll CHAMPACillE !llt\11<''~""""•'1". STIAl'"T _llY. IOUllOll ..,...,.,. .. ,..._ ·--,. 'l'' MAYFAIR MARKET-175 EAST lri'H STREET, COSTA MESA 2030 Wnt 1st Street, Santa A11a 9192 Wntllllnster A¥taM,' Garden Grove ------~---------~~-------------·------ FROZEN FOODS 59-~ .. , ' ~.,. ,I , , . , • , ; ~er -• ~"""° . 6 '· 51. · pra11te Juice Blend ~ · ............. 25' " • . YOUR MEAT · CUT TO ORDER , -. • • • EVERY . TIME!! . . . .CORN .. PEAS ........... -.,G.R"UND - .... i·;_·.eo. .... -;._;;._· : .... ;.:_n~·-·~N-"n ..... 'EES .... • ..... '· _3 .... 9!. __ ROUND C FRYING ·~· RABBITS . ~ . . ~ . . LIQUOR DEPT . · ROU•OFF .-M 9-t • VODKA $3·" :· KENTUCKY TOWN -FIM s3tt BOURBON · K-ky Srraltltt-16-l'raol ' • THE Wl~NER -CRES~ENT ROLL.Si: -29c eacli . • PILLS'BURY BAKE-OFF SPECIALS CBANINSEDCUl"'S . 5' COOKIES IUCI•~ ... ~ ... I •-· ... TURNOVERS , -,. ... -p!,-,.-D-0-UG_H.,..&-SA_U_CE-.-..... -4-9c: COFFEE CAKE·-. HUNGARY JACI< ROLLS ••• 35c: DANISH ROLl:.S J - ' ' . • • 39c . 49c 4'c '"' --~~ Foremost '!2 pint ·c·REAM. Foremost l/2 gaL Imitation SOUR , M·ILK · Hills Bros. C:OFFEE 89 ~ Foremost l/2 pints Royal Yami '2 <~~ $)37 1 <~b~ 69¢ 'YOGURT 3 lb. can DR •. PE.PP.ER L ·I K. E ~~~~.!! 6 ~ 49c 120L-'" · R · 5~~!~P 6i49~ ' ... ,,_ /w ~ • CARN·ATION Choe. ' PACIFIC ISLE SU(ED #2 c1n• INSTANT Choe. ~II 89' ~!_EA~!~S! .... ~. : . . PINEAPPLE 41$1 ' - L~~g 2G;ti~ RICE 39¢ BANANAS ·· c~~. 10~ CUT GREEN BEANS BLUE GINGHAM 8 01 F· $1 llo. 303 uns ' J COACH.LA WHITI Grapefruit -.. 4:29' . ; FRESH GREEN CABBAGE . - WILSHIRE PIC~L'-~ISH 5 ~ $1 • s-1 • Hai Dosr R . ".,,,.....,., . ' ' VANILLAWAFERS 39' • Wv"Diox c:ooKirs· · 49' SODA• CRACKERS.._... 25' VAWABLE COUPON R09. $1.43 99¢ King .Size ,_ PRICES EFFECTIVE: Thun., Fri., Sat. Ir Sunday May -15, 16, 17, '18 l'rl-1ub)ecl lo •lock "'! hlndr . ITALIAN SQUASH 2 11~_29' WEGrJI t> I • I ' • • ILUE CHIP w1 'orn ...:. ILUl.CHIP ~ STAMPS , ~. ITALIAN SWEEl-RED . ON.IONS 10~ ColllMESA 19111 •• Pllalllll· ., ,PUmmA "· 710 w. OlpM . • . . . ' .. , • ' I 11 I .. -- • • 44' ....,Y•,...f---,----.w-., M11~ .. l<J!>9 ( --.. r.: -, fi sh Go~d · .for Yo~r ' . Noodi·0 ITALIANS OFFER CUISINE TIP ~ Pasta l~ea · . _Straight from Rome Fish .and pasla -unlikely corfipaniona? Not is the Italians tee It. SWTOO.nded on three 3kfts by the sea, they naturally rety OIJ the bountiful deep to com- plement their popular pasta. You'll llke-Utls recipe which include! splgbetil~ lUl\I Ind spinach for 1a meaUess meal- in-a~isb. Preparation lime ls whittled down lo a me~ few minutes when you r.ely on can- ned Italian. style spaghetti lo I~ easy authenticity to the menu. Now, as never before, this canned spaghetti (enriched, ·thin spagtlettini) with more cheese •• 11p;ices and tomatoes tastes truly Italian. There's no I o n g , hour·after-hour sim- mering process to be CQn- cemed with. Alter just 20 min!llU of baking time, the tuna and spinach acquire the delightful tomato -good, cheese-rich flavor of the s~tti and the casserole is r:eiay.-to enjoy. A colorfuJ antipasto tray is __jhe__perfect appetite-stimulator for the main course. And for the finale, serve steaming full· flavored espresso. "sPAGHErn AND TUNA ITAUANO 2, cans {IS'/• ounces each) Italian style spaghetti 2 cans (1 ounces each ) funa , drained and flaked 1,l cup liDely chopped onion l package (10 ounces) frozen spinach, cooked a n d drained I teaspoon lemol) juice 1 cup garllc fl avored croutons -.. Combine spaghetli, tuna and onion. Layer half spaghetti mixture in shallow baking dish (10x6x2"), Spread with spinach ; sprinkle with lemon juice. Layer r emli!i ning spaghetti mixture. Top with croutons. Ba~e at 400 degree F. for 20 minutes or until hol. Makes 4 t<> 6 servings. Westerners Experts at Cookout Game ' U you're looking for a sensa· tional barbecue formula, come t \Vest. Westerners arc experts al the cookout game , , . a hearty tradition that springs ~ from chuck-wagon limes. At the end of a long day 's workout doors·, cciwhands needed food that was plenty sturdy. Barbecued ribs have long been a favorite for gr i 1 I cookery. The meal is cri:,,-p and juicy, and the oul-ol·hand catlng suits the informality of t a · barbecue party to perfec- tion. They're a favorile with )"OWlgsters, too, who always love the fun or finger foods. As any cood cook will tell y~. ribs are ooly as good as their barbecue . sauce. And nfulaS11ea is the p e r re c l s11'cetener for a sweet-tart stiuce. For lhe Roundup Ribs ~!!-)~ barbecue sauce, m o I a s s e s combines with c atchup ,• vinegar, onion, garlic and a variety Or nippy ingredients. To get the ribs crisp and fat free. bake in t h e oven before gtilllng. Pour olf lhe • fat, bNSh again with the barbe- t..'\le s.auce, and finish cooking over the griU. And on a day when rain '1Jives you off out- docr cookery,. just continue bUinC WIW done . With the ribs. hearty Chuck Wagon Bean Salad is a perfect accompe.nimenl It's a snap to make,. too. Combine canned baked beans with molasses, celery. cucumber, onion and seasoning and chill. ,aIUCKWAGON BEAN SALAD 2 cans (I pound each ) baked beans 1 cup ·diced celery -1 cup chopped cucumber l medium onion, sliced -:J tablespoons vinegar l tablespoon molasses 1 Ceaspoon sail '4 ... _ pepper Combine all inJrcdients; cbJlL YJeW: t servings. '-,.WP RIBS == :::/lbs• CUI in SI 1,.._..it "• mplar;e1 "'""'-.. '4 cup .mopr 1-oiiloe, finely chop- ' ""' \, teaspoon Tattasco I lemon. thinly lliced l prilc clov•. cruah<d 1 taMMI*'\.-prepar ed ID1llllnl . J tablapoDO Worce.stulhlre: .. ll<f Place spareribs in shallow loll·lined baking pan. Sprinkle with salt. Bake in 350 degree ~'. oven 1 hour. Pour on fat. BARBECUE FORMULA FOR WEST£RNERS Blend 1ogelhe1· mo I asses . catchUJl and vinegar in a saucepan. Stir In rtmaintn1 lngredien1s except I em on slicts. Bring to 1 boil. Reduct 'heit and simmer ll minutes, sllrrina' occasionally. Place ribs on outdoor barbe<:ue (Till. Brush wllh sauce. Coot 30 minutes lonatr. turnina frequently ~nd brushing with aauce. Top wlt.h • lemoo ali«s. Yield: I servings. -- • Note: Rlbs 1!13Y be baked the entire amount ol lime in the oven. Brush sauce on last 30 miJIJla baklna time. ... . ~7 < ' Prlca Efltctlvo'il licensed Slfewlt)'111tors. tin ~un.. May IS • ' • . Thu". th!U s.~. t.tay IS thru 11 Prices Eflective in Licensed Sa1eways ,loltlri, $ 99 Scotch s .. ~~ •• d MacNairs-SG Proof Flflh Bourbon$ 99 Old calhoun-86 Proof Fifth Vodka $ 98 Kavlan~O Proof Fifth D G• $ ry -1n Stantons-80 Proof Flftll ·1$'0:. w· h·1skey $ -"""' .. ,~, -....~'P-, \mi-"' Coldbrook Blend-80 Proof Fiftll 29 , . ·u 1000 Bayside Or.-Newport Beach 24 Monarch Bay Plaza-South Laguna .. ......... _,_._ ____ ___: . . . . . -.. . . . .. --------------~ ------------·------------~-------~----------..;.. __ _,, ____ _ I . l ' ' Peanut Butter -•·1n" 49c a__.ar ,...., ei.., s.flh.. )Ir . ..,,,._ Tomato Sauce • Ill•~ latlon .. Pooch 'Dog Food .... v ... -. ......... . _...., CllllcMlll. ............. . ,.::25c . s Pineapple Juice .. . . 111111 Br11l-T1qy, Tu~ F11nr , 4 41«. 'I J:: 11 Riel H11111H l"lla,,ies -:Mel S Tomato Juice · Ton H11111 Brt!'-f~l Wll Julct 4 -.,; •1 = • wni "Just JllPI" Fins. u..1 liDDlt -2111 S Applesauce ~::-3-::-SW i. s Grapeifruit =-~· ' S Green · Beans l:'.":;;I:"" 4, .... $1: ... "'' tomato-s,up Tt~~,"'IO ':t $J =.m1 ••n Ttn ll••12 $J MftllflD'lntl I«. T1 Cooli:td Foodl · .... S 1..0C.deSoap=-.0.::.. ... s 'cleanS.r ~...:' 10.iiS'IS 2·:.-:254S Mr "' 1-.n • · .s ·Sah,d Dressings=· 4 =.SW! S Dry -Milk =.'r'..:.::t.1:=-·:: 1'1 a .(hunk Tana ....:.. Catsup . •§) S..,OHllnl:::l"' 2.t• 1•rp11=::=;::-a::•t ::~"·· .. 5 1 ... t. SJ ··i •• r, .. ., ,11 . 2• illld: Tom1to.. htti. , .., ll&hl Meat ii,.. 7 - _.,, ~.:· fw~ ·~·. , , . ~ -·~· , ""'·'" "'n • . ·"" ..,,IJl!I.' , USDA Choice Grade ... , . llHICll f1Mrfu1 and Tulder ts ~y I Slftl'fl)',Bfff ""'' "" Be. Oltll !Or I SitldlV Pot Roiit. °""'Thi• 5"'"'1 lb Low Price! • . 7-Bone Steak · 6, ". DH11r Cil ·Illa•• U.S.D.A. tltoict Grllll kt! .. 9c ldtfl t• Ovtar e.~ Fanner Joh...r.H; Coeked Fii s.k PllflN Cul from Tinder ll'td lil~IY bst1rn lil'1i1: fed 10llll Puk. Lu n incl Muty. Check This low low Pritt lb •. Cooked Hams ' Fin 1111 hrti" ~Ste - =-~ltc· -c...=r;;::.• .=. 4" c.n111C11111 =:i!.;1..£· 29' .. .. Frankl ~'~w::; •·"-59c . "" . .... 6ftc ··~. . .,- :~ 59' . _,. Sliced Ham :=-::: 59' SllFEWllY EKT/ill VlllUES Luceme Instant · fast ----~;4f Cragmont verage ~ ........ .~~··· U.Wltt*ol ~fMritn 8.::. 51 ~-- 'Town Hou• · · li•lablis • Jnlt•-....._. --............ 1 • , ..... ~"'='=-' • ....... r--= . • •-'-, __ ':ti.:_ Yl'll .......... , ... S:t'I I Yacuu•Piwk'i Eclwa.-: Coffee -~ -~·llUW ·••·Bii' Lucem~ Ice Milk , """'°'-1---Rict, v.::r .... -·-Rldt ~ fmlt llllly-=ate ':' 27• s ranfieJuice=: / S Meat Pies ... ~i!. .... s:: 'I ' Great for TIStJ Sltaclf. lllllCit · 8-, Or To Slke cm. Bmkf•t Cereal. -c lb. Vale.ncia .Oranges ~.'.\·,~·~:. a:r"' .. 1'1 s ... 29' 1 --3:C 29' ltali.an $quash r.::,:J11~:4ti1~' Wfi·1e· Potat WI;~ .... v .. ~ 1 oes u.1 "" l "'"'"' Yellow Onions ~~:r'-. . .. lnlptfrvlt JllCt ::t .=. ... ·= (anots:=.: 3 ~ 2t' . . .... ....... = 4 ~-H'- Cltm•• ...... t" ... It' W•••lw~ .11' ...... ~-. ··~21' luflWI Dltl1l:::U'l:, :: 19' litlcll1k11 ::. 'I:. ~ .... ' 24 Mon1rc~ 81y P1111, So. laguna 636 N. Co1sl Hwy., Laguna Belch Sinli Ana Freeway al La Par, Mis.lion Viejo fal"lew AYe & Wilson Sf. I • • • -~-- I • ... II 'DAll.Y l'ILOT Wed'ntsday, MaJ 14, 1'6~ 4 J:. l ' I • • I I ! ! • ! CHUC5K ROAT \ -cA·NNE.D PICNIC . . • U.S.D.A. CHOla'OR ST ATER BROS. CERTIFIED IEEF 47~ ' • • • • IL ;- . PATRICK CUDAHY READY TO EAT' COOKED SHOULDER 3$ ., . BEEF J·\" ROAST ~ LB.CAN LB. ·PORK_ STEAK EA$JEIN GRAIN-FED TENDER-TASTY U.S.D.A. CHOlq OR ST ATER -ROS. CERTIFIED BEEF • '~SPECIAL! 59!.· ROUN0.57c i SLICED•E!EEF" SPICY BEEF l!lG.391 tA. CORNED'BEEF" 5US:U> HAM' 3 , $1 0 ,liRK l URl{CY SAL.AMI Plrft• BREAST OF TURKEY· "'G;••• lA. SLICED CHICKEN 2 ..... 89.t ~i!~!-!~GI .............................................. Ls.6 3 9 5 : SLICED BACON BONE ROUND STEAK LB . · LIVIR IAUIAGI ......... . . .. 12-oz u.s ...... cHo•CEotsru••••o•:a•r"""'"' . -5 I 09 IONEl•~· .. ,-00 . 89' CUBE STEAK ..................... LB, ROLLED ROAST .......................... LB MOR8ELLS YORKSHIRE 1-LB. REGULAR U.S.D.A . CHOICE OR STATER BROS. llE~ OR 2-LB. THICK 57~ B~~E 17c U.S.D.A.CHOICEORSTATERIROS.CERTIFIEDIEEF 99 FRESH·•U~N·GROUNOHOURLY ' 49 SIRLOIN TIP SIEAK ..... ,. ...... UB. c GROUND BEEF ' ..LB. c MOitRIU.S,Rl,Dfll·OuHCEPKG. ' ' ' 43c U.S.D.'A..ot01c10~sT,'ATERIROJi a\TIFIEDIEEF 87' LB. IOMEUSS ........................ LB.97' WIENERS AUMEAl ............. PKG . . RUMP ROAST .......... .LB ' ' ' DIAL DEODORANT ~·~~' ·-59'. OL 79' LA VORIS GILLETTE TONI INNOCENT COLOR "'"-"' '1" MOUTHWASH BLADES TOOTHPASTE um•"'~"' ..... : ....... •-oz:81' 93( SUPll 73( LIPTON TEA lEMON CO·CAL 79' 1S OZ STAINU" IN5TANl ......... --···· 5 OZ. • • S'S ' CHUNK TUNA CA>NAllON 29' -. uGHf .. .. ..• _ .. __ \.1.CAN ll-OUN<l •••• Sl.17 PICC.Of 15 ••• $1.7• HOLLYSUGAR ~;~:r~';i ,, ...... 5, ... 58' SEA & SKI PEPSODENT OY~T-ER STEW .,,,LA""'""-·--.. -"·oz.37' L01)9' TOOJH I.RUSH TY D BOWL CLEANER ··-···-....... 12-oz. 79' •ouLr J9( HYDROX COOKIES SUN5"1NE 49' 2-DL MEDIUM RlC.-MINT -· 1·L8. • -6.HARD. I MIXED NUTS ~~·,'J:;, _ ........... :_ •. ou79' 1.r.,,.1.01 .... '" ..... '" . ., , • _ . ,. . .. , . VALUABLE COUPON W!TH THIS COUPON GoodOtrft•t STATER BROS, Good WHk of MAY 1 5.·21 '"' l ·POUNDC•N .•. '"" .. S 9 c KERN'S PRESERVES ~rn~~~ 2ooz 55' Co F FEE '1·LB. PICKLES A UNT JAN~'S ICE BERG 57' : ' ' ' STATER BROS .......... CAN . POLISH OR KOSH ER ................ 26-0Z. c IVORY IAKEISDEALACK~Gf '. ,· 'CLIFFCHARBRIOUET~ ... lOL Bss 89 LIQUIDDETERGEllT . ' cDOW ENCLEANER .... 160z.1.09 VALUABLE COUPON ' ANTHONYLARGUllO'# 2 39 VETS BURGERS ....... 360Z 83 540Z. 1.17 ·"' · MACAR·ONI C HUNT'SSPINACH : .. No:21;.cAN27' ""-=" w""'"'s couPO• · ......... l-LB.PK. HUNT'SPORK233c Good Only••tSTATERBROS. ·DONCANHINfSASsotnDLAYERS 3 89 .L 'BEANS GoodWnkor M•Y 1s-21 CAKE MIX. · c a ·-···· .. 100J:•Ns ..... llMlf <iNE COUl'ON PEii CUSl OMlll ' ' ............... PKGS. HUNT'S APRICOTS ' ' NO. 2 li-CAN 37' ap IPLES p•••N·•R••ACHEo ... 5 .. CH!•E•••AR••LE . VE 5 .......... La2. 'AR 4 9 c H UNT's CH ILi BEANS ············· 21; CAN 31, .. • RED BEANS ~~~[~ 'N0.2';·CAN 29' ·s· ... 1111GtON RED DEucious ~ SAUCE ~~~l~,'g~,~1i Bns .............. 2 s oz. 29' w .. " SMA.LLFA.NCY COCKO'THEWALKSllCEDORHAlVES s 3sc BEA-HES 4N02'11 I PEANUTBUTTER ~!1E~ ............... 1s oz.61 ' 2 ·5 -r. ~ .................. cANs MUSTADD 19c LB • ' INSTANT COFFEE . GULDENS 8-0UNCE NESCAFE $I 09 MARYGA0RiNi'.'~g~~~;·: .. ··:1Ls 29' COIN · .\:AllGf J.fANC'f swtET 3 ..... 2s·· 'oNIOMI U ... MO. 1 swm itoWN --3 ... ~25·- r:-CRA CKERS .............. 1 LB. PEARS ..................... io.oz. 0 ACIFIC TREATS . 39' NJOU CFOOLGER'S *'?ft./JllLM, ';ooef,_ 1/aku."* CRISCOSHORTENING . ' .3LBs 85' LARGE EXTR•z· FANCY D 9 .... FFEE __ ,---CUT GREEN BEANS ~"~~~E~S 21. 2 -c ~~~UNO 69' Miiic'iii'DINNER _' .... 39' 3-SISTERBEETS ~~~~b .... 6cl"Js S1 LBS.. "''· CA•'l.!7 3-ll. "'''·" ii"C:Hii."iDAS ~---.3 , .. ,s 1 CHUNK TUNA ~~t~,··~, . \;CA N 31'. u.s.N0.1.lltliVH.VlT 2·29' PlllSIURYCOOKIE5 SOLE RLLnS ... -.ll 69' ALLSWEET 26c YAMS · ,._, ... LIS. l ~~~:G. w ............ 4CJ< CHE°EsE PIZZA ...... 31.oz. 9f ii'i~OOCOlti~~=~1r _ 10.oz.39e MA l_Ki ARINE ...... 1 ·LB. . ....... ·3 29 Wl!•~8Uflt~S•Uf.( 'J'>c -SS(IAllDf~AVOllS 211< CASHEW PLAN TERS •FRl •. TENDER c ' COTIAGE CHEESE BIRDS EYE PEAS _ .,.,_.i,i· POPSICLES _ .. .,. ~-NUTS QDY DO ST 79' LAc~L-· GTS1-Li. ~ "",..,..-.. 31' -C1Tr'C01N::.,,._,.,,33•-iliffilsT0Ni11 _ .... 98' -PANISH-NUTS '''NTE~s .............. s-oz. 411e ... ' ~ PKG. . I . QUAITSS••~---~ . l(()lDIUST 39 . DRY ROAST ...... , ...... ,,. 9-0Z. .,- • SPIC &SPAN CLEANER -..... o.31' MR. CLEAN CLEANER ....... u.oz 41: TO~ JOB CLEANER ...... . 21 oz. 1(1 COMET CLEANSER .. 2 "'°' 33' ., ·~~on TORTl2i SIRLOIN TIP ____ .. . _ , •• c PEANUTS bL•Afl6~~r . . 9-oz. 59' 13 .oz. 83' ' ~t.':'.~ ' clii'A'MED CHICKEN _ _39c INSTANT COFFEE FOLGERS '' 10-0Z. 11.39 ~f,!s~~Jt ~ii~~=~ \~~!f&Ai~~~:1~'; l~~~Y ~~~S ................. 4 .... 23't.".Gs:35' 1r;WT1u1s1.ua 37c '~*"~,,.~flllui.~ 3S ABC-VANILLA ' WHITE CORN 2~ir. "·'L BIRDS EYE AWAKE _,., ' OR WHOLE WHEAT ........... 16-0Z. BIZ PRE-SOAK GIANT 7"' PJ(G. ,.,.. 7- ?.!~K~:~!!~rPEAS _~ r~~r~:~!-.\~~'?,E.8 ·~ PERsoNAL 1v0Rv . ··--··· 4 BARS 29' BURRITOS ..., •• ,._.. KOLO KIST STEAKS GAMAYSOAP ... ... . .. 2BATH31' STARVALUY SWISS CHEESE ~-~ ....... 35' I SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 7·FULL DAYS, THURS. thru WEDS .. MAY 151h-22nd J4Jt w. U.C.t•. A..tltl"' tsn w 25, .. w ....... ,, ....... .."", ....... , .. w......., 14212 Ml"" A.._, Wlilttftt II ff New,. rt 11"4., Cn,_ Mn. 1100 L C•lllM. Or • 707 W. lftti St., C•i. Mft• ''J O ldl1t99' S:t,. sn:'All• llll '~·-... """· ...... ep,.... .. . ... : -· ' . . :• . a n rm em· r w ·---·-·---------------------~-------...__ __ _ • . - . . PRICES and COUPONS " . E'FFECTIVE I • THURS. thru SUN .. MAY 15, 16, 17 , 18 ' • SMiiiD PICNICS Short Shank Family Size . -7 LBS. i LB. . PRE~SLICED ........ 49~ • f'RESff SEAFOOD SPECIALS Chinook-St11k1 to broil per '1 '' ', SALMON .•.•.. ~ ••••.•••••••. lb. Clii11ooll--~ie1;11 lo b1k1 per 9911 SALMON •.....•.•••••••• ,., lb. Fr11h Fill1h 1f por 70- TIUCOO ., •••..•••• , ,, ••• , lb . Fr11li' fi!lah of 1 p1r ·~ MONTEIEY ROCK 'COD .••.• , lb. BREA.KE AST SPECIALS . . S&YlH·IONI 59 _ 1ROAST .. . . ·~ ROAST .... 65~ -a ·ioiiNb'iil°F· .. 55~ . ' u.s.~.A. ''CHOICE'' BONELESS BEEF .. 1 • CLOD STEW FAMILY CHUCK ROAST BEEF STEAKS ROAST • ·os~· as~-98~ as~ LB. • ~E~LO BAG HUNT'S -SLICED or HALVES CLING . PEACHES ' ' i SUNNYFRESH BLENDED U.S. #I NEW CROP • • : ORANGE 3 ·9 BERMUDA 3 J:9 19~· i JUICE. 9 ..... '"· _c 'LARGE . ONION$. • : • • • • 21;, JUST RIGflT FOR SALADS . 4 Co llo 2 9c TIN TOMA TOES . . . . . . . wp-::.·d · LAUNDRY DETERGENT" GIANT AJAX • • G;.,1 65c Pkg. KELLOGG'S SUGAR . FROSTED FLAKES • GIANT CHIFFON s'uN' FRESH PRE·SOAK PAPER AXION TOWELS 2s .... 65c "'" 29c Aut. Pkg. c.1.,, ~ ~loirt loll PRECIOUS BRAND RICOTIA ES CHEISE 1.1b: 59' Pkg . · OCEAN SPRAY CRA.NIERRY COCKTAIL · 48-0Z. BTL. REAL FLORIDA · 6·0Z. TINS .. , c ... I _. 20 ........ Pkg •. ,~_ I -' . -· 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST. GARDEN GROVE e 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA AU I ) • I I l ______ ...., _______ ...., ________ ...... _......._......_..,._._...AULUo.o.a ..... uo•_.,_.A •.,ltla::A.• .i. Z. .CA • 4 « :t #I L~£:": t >t II l'".:i2 r i& ,_ ~ '! -• •-· · -.-.. ..,~...._~ ! I" .. IWl.Y PILOT WMl!f!daf, Ml)' 14, 1!69 Delicio us Su-rprises Included ' .. Be You.r .. Qwn Ch.el :~Yugoslav ' ~i~hes ~arded· tavi ~h~y W.ith' .·o nion~ ~a~~:~o~· :·1?~~~·:~ BELGuOl!J (UPI) _ On<t . tun unlorpttobl• aott ol Ii~ '11 1111blle as French or as a recipe for •)var, vouclMld foi; popp.n ·1n prebea~ 3IO' iirllc, minced' and juice i>I I ' = ~~ ~ ~~~ ;I: ·~~~' cooked • • ll.O!!'"" accommodll«l l""lf• w.ier. AB the m111 wbo 1 aophtmcal<d u H1111&orian; by a Yugosla• cbel. It can be • de.,.e oveo u"1U tender when lenion.GraduaDystir In ~ cup 3 cupo (pacUd ~ l«n amok.i tongue Iii! (O \be uiea lhlt almosl tried It. but II will put eitra poaods oo .. rved with any meal d~ pt.reed with a fork. of oil (prelerobly olive olll or romaine ! CUCIOllber. pated and ""ry maln dish Includes a There's more, much mon tbe Unwary-vi&Hor. with or ln plact of salad. Peel akin from hot u much 1 u ve_getables will . ,~cup drained ceoked green · sllced 10:: ol .:;1.:; And not an of 11. despite llrat As a poot=ipt -and ooly · YIJM.YUM vegetab" and chop or mince ~~· Mix well. Serve In peas , .. . 04ve oil. wi"';i ~gar, ult ~bu ~tses. ~i;:.:~w~ :~ :0i:; 1:::~J:ut=ic':e::x1-:1~ to~:~!:ie~~-t:11 ;~r:~~~·pep~1 ~:S: h\i~wtthg~of ~ ~1~;~~~ M::SS:a:~:-r :nart;ai't some dellghUul ~~:::.:...:::=::..:::::.,.:::_:.:__:.:::;_,_.:::-=~~~-'-~-;.~....:.__:::....:~::.:.:::....:__:~--.;.:..::..;,.;:..:;~..:._.::.:...::....::...,...:.:;::..;::::;::::.:.~~,.,..,,-,,,~~-===__:c....;:___:_~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ties -heavy, rough , .:1 ~ \;. "' -Wllh UOllUfPl"ed taste Md' texture, and dellclous f!<tel red P<PI"" stuffed with t:.n:r:"~r~ a deUciouS, always :m.tast.ing salad made ol Al. lllGREDllNTS !Q! '.PERFECT sweet red peppers and taPlinl mashed together into ,puree. ~:Dalmatian ham, a smoked ~ight not unlike Italian pro- t?Jtlo or Swiss bundnerfleisch ~n-dried beef). has to be tasted to be believed. 7 PATIO PICllCS : .The Yugoslavs. like many Oeoi>le in this pa.rt of the loorld, excel at pastrymaklng. The apple strudel served al ~ '-fetropol Hotel I n &fl~de is a legend among b.inst.s and western visitors .:.:. deservedly so. $-:Slatko, a Serbian preserve in •hlch the fruit is kept whole tither than being crushed, is anade from cherries, itrawberries, pean. f i gs . aooseberries, peaches a n d jhany other fruits . It is all ielicious. "·Yugoslav mineral waters t re among the tastiest in ~ope. The national plum Jinndy, sljivovica (slivowitz) • • ~ Flower Fresh ~ ... # l • i :~ 1: 9175 SIZES2-8 th 11f,..;.., 11f ,..1' ... ~· ,. i Tulip petals spring up In the ·..,;most. surprising places -see ~.how they outline yoke and '~kets or a sprightly skim. ~Sew it in one color or with •ltosting of white. '; Printed Pattern 9175; NEW ·Children's Slz.es 2, 4, 6. 8. Siu ~. I takes JI/, yards 35-inch. "· SIXTY·FIVE CENTS In .-:coins for each pattern -add ;. JS cents for each pattern for ..,., r1nt<lass mailing and special ;.. bandllng; otherwi.e lhifd.<lass ._> delivery will take three Wttks 'i pr more. Send lo Marian : )futln, the DA1L Y PILOT, ~Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th St.,' New York, N.Y. 10011. j l>rint NAME, ADDRESS with ~:llP• SIZE and STY L E .NUMBER. ~: Spring Send~f! ~1ore fres~. -}oung, easy-sew styles m ~jpring-Sumrner P a l t e r n I\ Cat4Jol. Free pattern coupon. , . .-;!itJ ceols. t i:Chicken .. i creamed i:_ SUU another version of a in.atocourse redpe..that's been • inakla& the rowxts. ! IMMA IL LA W'S "" QllCll'.EN AND CREAM 2:: 4 mte broller-fryer chicken II°• .,._ (split, booed and -) • 1 ca (10~ ounces) con-~ -cream of cbicken . -. * pint COllllll<f<ial IOU1 i. cream • l/J cup drf wltlte wine , Pllil::e cbk:ken ln one layer :i. ·-J.<luarl glass hlk· ......... : la a dectric blender, blend ANOTHlt VONS EXCLUSIVE PIAN TO ATlllll TIE 1969 HOME SHOW ATTll PAN PAcmc AUINTOllUll MAY IS tloru MAY 25 l'ICI! UP YIM 11111 DISCOUNT TlClm AT AU VONS MllS. 15 oz. LOAF Vons Donuts -1'\AIN O• -POWDERED 8-PK. CRUM& OR cOCOHUT 6.PK. Vons Sandwich Bread ~"":n. 31 .. 'I Von s Sheperds Bread tlk&. llllllf 39- Vons Egg Twist Jread mu.. 10AP .~3-. Vons Malt n' Hon~ Bread 1-..u. \CAI 3" ----$ENOOO SUKTIONS -T..a.<..,..W-\ Sww•W. Slttb : .. •1•;r-" ~ ......... c..,,.;. N ...... ..-«. 1.a...-...... -.... .., c-.... .................... ~-........... 1." c..-i.. hi. l'lllett --••••••••••••••••• 7k e-i... ·-c.• .. -11 ... : ••••••••••••••••• •k ....... ,. ....... o.i,. _, .................... ,,. Tll9ll taUJJIO \lf.ll PA.,.,..,l)IANA .......... tk •••COUPON•••• •• • • DOUBLE BLUE CHIP • • ST AMPS wi th this cou· • 8 pon on the tota l emount • • • of any pu rchase •xclud· • 'p Ing lfquor, toblcco and • '-fluid milk products. 1 • Ii' coupon p • r customer. • • Coupon good Thund1y • • 11\ru Sunday, May 11, lo • • Thond1y , May 22. • • • •••••••••••• U.5.D.A.-(ttOICE Beef Roast• ....... <HUCKlOU'I '"""'" sholll .. ra.I ~at .. 98' fonuift l Bo I R . d ... ,. 11" ne ess 1U1 =' lb. . Family Steak ~"" ~. 981 Chuck Steak '"'"" n.. 551 .. ~'f • Sliced Bacon = ~·, -::.c ~ 69' Boneless ~ams :r.:: -.. '111 Tavern Hams :::::.:"'_, '1 1!. U.S. NO. t RUSSET lro• ... -'""' . Cantciloupe Watermelon :::: Roney'8ws ~;' ,.: 8' "''' ,...,_....,. 2. 2• (uc11111b1n; • • • !<ll 7 ---" 4• FalCJ Pecms •••••• lb. '7 GRAPEFRUIT - ~~~ 3foi4~ ·Pork Roast Boston Butt Pork Steak Link Sausage FRESH PIC NIC 39c Cut Green Beans DR /NJH1t4 ;;. 99c 5 LB. A VG. Jb. 59c Welch's ,Drinks 0"'!;~;!.:'"' 3 FtR s1 FR ESH J ENDER LEAN & MEATY FARMER JOHN SKINLESS 11z tL /; PKO. ... ,. DundH Grade AA REFRESHING LO.CAL DIET ~,,--&a~. PEPSI ~.i---. • FROZEN ASST'!>. Banquet Dinners rtrAll'ff 'u.wrr M>S Prell Shal!P" WIL.KINSON DOUBLE-EDGE =-.: 84~ SWORD ~~fo iiiifun:rw BLADES 'M.:..· i"oUMIASK 11• -J Tc ~~ ·1·1 Chiffon Spreads •v~ 29c .. 6tc ,. . . 29c Sturdy Dog F~~ ~':.~ _49c APPlf-CITY APPLE SAUCE INCLUDES lOc OFP PICTSWEET GIANT BOX Frozen VEGOABLES WHOLE KERNEL or CREAM STYLE Del Monte ~ORN· xun..., ,_.. :.i:c:~.!.i. 4 '°' •1 ,_ lrntlllf' :-:,::_,.cc. SP llOYJJ. Whllt' lt«MI c.. •,.,. -,.... 20& c_,,,, s.,i. Qelditt; Cot11 """--1+«. 20i: • Gelatin >Ct'""· 91 I Hvr111 whole r..f.d r--. •u.11ll!il ... u. 1 M J B C ff C&H Sugar •~• ,_... ,;.,..,, 8 "' •"' 0 ee Hunfts,i-11 NC"fl 27c 1l&CAH.,,J1.J7 69 "·""SS· toMBChllwlH'"'-tll<M 31c lll.UH ... t," ,.. c '10lt.,,,1.1f tflllriftT"""'°"°~.,,..""fl'-1lot'19t MT.lHT ,,, .. ,T&.C'TIT• C.uf Nia. Vlllllllll Wofen -a. ,...,. -He------- ...,_., Popw "-le,._,.• a.lft• a. SJc ...._,. '°""" P'!.tt. .,.......,. l•CT 1 ... ~ 99t • I •• 'her the mnalnl!1J lo-~; pour over chicken. a.a. u.-ettd. In a SSO. deer« will """b. (0< ,.:.:""~1:'. 1011 Adams Ave., at Brookhunt, Huntlntton ltacl. 1:..-:aauv._.. 5922 Edlng« Avt., at Springdale, Huntington l•ach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Vall.y • ' , • -...... -_ .. -'--'-~------ I • . . I • -------------------------- . DAILY "LOI 41 Yes ... owa.nwwwwa , "°"'· _ ,_..... -·-....................... ...... -·· o ........ , .. -.. try ......... lit ..... or -'Ry thot -°"'r U.$.D.4, chaico ~i.,, ..i -.I floworful; the .,.:• '*' 90CMI eating.' l'1lli '- whore. In '""· it ii ... ::..-, ........ _ ....:.lulcy: -.........., <Ulting, ...__,_'IUllljiy in OV<lry -~ •atche4 O'(tr for perf~~~· and PGckoging ai are • u.s.D.A. GRADED CHO.la U.S,D.A. GRADED CHOICE . U.S.D.A. GRAQED CHOICI U.S.D.A.GllADID cHOICI ' . LEAN, MIA TT lf.11 • lEAN TENDER CHUNKS · LEAN MEATY BEEF . IONIU5S tHOULDIR GRjMl!lfD fllllM HOURLY U,S,l).A. GRADED CHOICE ··: .. RIB.·~·' ... STEW SHORT '.:·~·Cl ' ·, GllO,UND ': .-.:.'RIB . I s~TE·AK " BEEF . R.IBS ROA· T .... ··aiEF ··ROAST .. -,_' . C · C C ~~ C· :c . . lb lb . lb. tit. .. lb . • LO IVA D 11F.1111~/c'/J ll F.F.F .~PECIA L~ LO JP ADVERTISED PORK SPECIALS ' ' -. -. BACO.V ..1 .\'D PO ULTRY SPECIALS -. ' ' •11·~· . ·' . . c U.S.D.A. GRADED "A" POULTRY CHUACDK0STEAKs·. , •. sac I BONELESS CHUCK STEAKS , .. Sac MEATY TENDER . sac 7-BO·NE ROAST ... ,. FRYER LEGS AND THIGHS, BREASTS ....... : ...... PORK CHOPS ......, •. 5·8 ' cdUNT•vnvu &Be SPARE RIBS............ . ,.. _ . CENTER CUT RIB .. ' PORK CHOPS , •. 98c • LEAN MEATY 7ac 0-BON E ROAST LB. ' HOFFMAN'S BETTER MAID -LOINEND . 68c PORK .ROAST ................. LB. LEAN TRIMMED BEEF 2 PLATE BOIL . ..L •. 4.c SLICED BACON SMOKED . c·· SHOULDER, PICNIC • . FGROUND CHUCK ,.·Gae 1-LB. PKG ........................ .. PORK ROAST ......, •. 4ac . sun &ac· PORK STEAKS ............. LB. WHITE FRONT'S LOW EVERY-DAY DISCOUNT PRICES PLUS VALUABLE COUPONS -.. ARDEN DAIRY PRODU'J)TS IMllATION· ICE .MILK $ GRADE AA for EGGS i~~~. ... FLAVORS . c A•DINGIAD<AA 79 BUTIER I LB. CTN. . < TOPPfNG 6-0Z .... 39' iio'Psii:LES .... 49' STRAWBERRIES U.S. NO'. 1 SPANl$H ONIONI '3t29' • LARGE , LOCAL, 12-0Z., BASKETS SWEET RED RIPE . for s- --' . ' 1ARGI SUNKIST V AUHCIA • ~ $ ORANGE5 _ ........... _6s 1 CUCUMBERS .. 2j 29< I I • SHASTA 11-0Z. BOTTLE 6 f s 1 SOD A POP. ~0.~&K~. ~ FAMILY TREE LIQUID J2-0Z. DEAL PK. 29' DETERGENT , ..... ::-·· r--------i Wiim f R07.L \ FOO/IS FIOIT PICTSWEET POLY IAGS, CORN, PE~S. MIX . VEG .. PEAS 6. CARROTSGIHN 3 b s i FROZEN VEG ET ABLES ... ~~.!!.~... R . SWANSON FROZEN MEAT PIES . '.~rr..,,, 5is1 LIBBY'S FROZEN FRUIT DRINKS ~.~I.'t.Ns ...................... 12isl PINEAPPLE UPSIDE DOWN CAKE Y:~r.'.':"".• ..................... &gc HUNT'S PORK 'N BEANS ~~N . 5151 ' HUNT' s TOMATO SAUCE w-0z ....... gc JENO'S PIZZA MIX ~~~.;th . . 3gc N£STLE'S-OUIK 1t• .............................. 3gc V-8 COCKTAIL JUICE ~z ............. 4gc LIPTON 'S ONION SOUP 2•< ........ 3isl FIRESIDE CRACKERS ,.ti ................... 1 gc oull Qt;lfi1t:Jo ¢. . ruoo-->' J:tiiir ;~· . - COSTA MESA lllSTOl AND PAUl.ARINO MON. THIU•l10AY. I l :JOA.M.wt:JOP..M. SATUIOAY.•:JOA.M.l•t:lOP.M. ' SUNDAY, 1 l:JOy. fOJ:lOP.M. 'PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. THRU WEDl!fESDAY MAY 15THRU MAY!I ______________ ........ _.___._....__......._.,....:...;._,............_....,;,:,,.;,__...J__ -------'" . -... --... -"' .. ....c--________._,._------. .. ...__.~--~-----• ... .... . ~ ) \ l I ~ I • 1-- • • !~ I • ' . ' ' ( I '. ., I . " ' . ! . i ' t • • ,, '. .. . . . I 0 . Th~y.'U JqV;e a straw~~ pie •..••. 01'., .strawPeri:;M and Jee cream ••• or ll-.1}1~ .... ,. > tut·n(1matter"hmv:·you iserv1 · L .\· ~erries ••• top them with Pen and Qui~l Whjp Topping ••• reg. 39c , ,.• • now· •• , 33c for ~~ oz. aerosol can't ~· • . f.i~;;,,._ " -.: " , . · uni -~HDB SPEAflS! . 21· ~ '-~ _ 9 .aragus : ... :-. ......... ~ ....... ::::...................... }; ~· · · An green ••• and all tender ••• from tip to tip! Extra!fancy. quality for extra fancy pleasure! ' . ' / Art e ·h· ·k' '--·. · · F 1~CYQUALlrY! · 5·,·$.1· ' ' ,.f\11, . 0 ' ' • ' J • • •· '" ' ~· •· • : ""''°''-• , ,. I . IC . 0 ............................................... • . . . . - ' · fµlly foliated ••• more tender tuty tiP1 to give you more of the good eatin1 you're looking for! ' ' ' · • :;.·r ...... .,.,,, .• ,. ~_.;_.. -. 'fi>."1 -·· 81,/per Grocery 'Va1ues · . ' ' -' . . ·· = Vegeqbles. - , ,Ni!J!~~. Medium Pell!," White OOrn, 4 F $1 · Catrot Nul!l!'ls or Baby Lunag ••• all . in 'rich, tem);Jting:but~ sauce!' 0 .. Frozen·;·'· .·reg. 37c and S9c ·. R ' ' . ·v· ; t . ·b1 . C· . kt ·1 Y·• ,.oz. CANS 12 ~ $1 . ege a . e . . oc 11 .......................... . . ' ' Wow.! It"aure doesn't taste like tomato ~juice~ ••• because it's a zingy blend of nature's finest ! . ' . ). \, . ; . lmperiai"Margar"1e ·::····:·:·· 3 "''1 Quality flavor, , •• eeonomy pril" ! I !b. p\p. •·•. • I ( •" • , ! Kiv11 Instant Coffee; .............. 79¢ RicJi. ~eUtJJib.re\v .•• sa\·e 16c op 4 ·Oz,. site t .. ·~.)' ' .... ·-r~ · 99' ~ w~ra ............ ,_ ............. ~·: .. ,. .. ... ' COtt~:·~~ ·with Cremora. ! ... save 20c, 16 oz. I \. '1•' '" •' r..~·.. tao... ·o • k 39' "'ape-.,... •. 1 ,r1n .................... . OCeanspray"Yieds cranberries and grape! t Qt. Archway:tookies ................ 3 "' '1 ' You{-.chQi~>Df temp_tin.J S9c varieti~! . !"1~~iSour ·cream ............ 29' .. .. \ .. , Rqd.'1 ••• f~' cook.ing,.Gressing, berr.ie! ! .•.. 16 oi.. White K' ' "D" ....... : ... : ............ 49~ Save 20c on giant pkg.! lncludea lOc off! t ... , _., li \ • o.o, ·Qf en . Cletner .................. 98'- NOw ••• t.he job ia ao much ea11ier ! lter. t.25 t tLJ.B. Coffee ........... .-.... :: ........ 61~ z· . cu·.: .. I.SB ', 8fl~lj.ri -..1. t 1.91\', , ( . ;,, ~ .,,.... ""\·"' . ,. i' " ''\... .. _ ff< . '. .<t;l'JJ!Rt mli ·ti " ·,. . ~ ~' I~ '"~ .;, -· ~!._ 'J · · ~· • t t . \ r .. 39'. ts .,r • ._, 2.,' ~ .... ........... •. • Ill . .. . : ' ... rlllll>urT• _. ~ ,,-.it for ·~~ ...... ,fubt "'-ec1'5...&:. ~::. l • • 'nN S . E ' 39'-wanson . ntrees ............. , ..... . Ghicllen, Meat Loaf, Veal, Turkey, Sali•bury Steak Pink Grapefruit Juice. ........ 3 *'sl :. Treesweet ••• 'vake-up fl&vPr1 ·46 oz. ca.na. · . , . . ., 4' French Joast ........... ~ .......... ~3 ~~'l:. · Do":nyflake ••• frozen ••• toast.and serve! 12~z. . . 0. . J • . . 4 ~OL '1 range u1ce fllOZE!I .••••••••••• : can. &nkist ... California11 best! 12 oz .... 49c Shredded .. Wheat ..................... 43¢ Nabisco's epoon sizei.. •• save 6c ••• 18 oz. ; .. ,•1 Spice Islands Tea .Bags ........... 59-' Exotic varieties .•• satisfying flavors! ••• 20 ct. ' . . . ~.. ' Miracle White . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69' Qt. 'The laundry additive that works! •.• Y,-ga!. 1.29· I Miracle White.Bleach .... 1~oz. ... 43¢ Safe for all synthetica! ••• 26 ounce ..• ·69c Fabric·Rinse ............................ 19" Miracle White •• WJ\orta softnei>! Quart •• . ,·§!f Pt! Liq~or Values! "' '" ,.c,. ~ ; . i..,!t"••"•1-oc' ·V" • I !o • Efi1j.1) •. ., .. -.:.,Mll~ ........ ~t1J4, . Strals¥-whiskey,. •. 84·Proof .. ., at 1.50. ••inp'! • ·: -' : ·~ l : .;t.· -~ " G. · .-1--llll~•u"· .,~,.~-;~; '..... TEXAS:BUBY RED . • .. 1 o-·,:it ? 11_ p~:.f 1 ~ . lt;,z:;'. ..... ;.:···::·········· .................... ·.. · -~~··· Sweet ••• pink meat so juicy ~and refreshing,. ...... ~or a breikfaat treat. , or de.sSe.rt ; •• or anytin1e l i.-~ .... :. . ~ . ha' 1··: .. n . S' . .. ·h· .. . . GARDEN F.JIESH ·19c · 1a~.::.~,. .. ~gpas ... : .... ;~: ... :.; . ., ...... ·: ....... :......... · r So green •• ., finn ~·~·£·te~.~~ · ; .. ·: ~aqua.sh "ii al\vays a welcome-1'dd~tion to ttte menu! ... ;~ •• ,... .'<) • ...... :.. •• • ··: ;< ~1'·. •" .. ;_, ': .. :: Super M~{it-Speciiils , l . ~ . ·:-~ , · · · 1/tJnndSt;lil : . • -1. ' :t :~ "' . ... ...._;:1; ~· .. .. U.S.D.A. Choi<!e,Be.t ... , quality that assures you)l!,r. 'te!lilerjl1!111' ~ '. and .fl.Ayor . t11a~ will ~ win ~eel.aim I I . fo~~the \V-i.se horne~nle.kfil. I "" -I . ., ... G d R .. d . . ,;; , ,ir roun oun ......................... 1.: ..... 11• So lean • · •• flaV~ril).l •• ·~ ·&,nd. yo£ know it's ~w'b..~t . . . --~ , , "I ,,, . , . , r.:1~. ··-.; Q.-wahaR.~~s-198~ $wiss~Ste11k-,8~5~ 'l'h/ck and tender ••. _. ~'~~at its best! .. .. _. _ \Yliui,'l!j!!ll'• 1'~ .. r\'·; •. witl1 swiss steak ani!"j>ot,&~j Rum,roiit 89~, -HBlilfuia,:S~'fti You1ll l>e delighted ~ith ·EI RanCho'• closer trim! Averi&"e 11/• to 2 Y,lbs. •. perfect for baki!lZ or il)!Q! .. ·~ ' . '. '! : Co.nadian Style B~con s1s~ . ~I Rancho Ba.~on ..... ~:-:~;69,t ~ilaon'a Tender:M•i4 ;-•• 1~ treat If remember!.'.: .... ~-~rl•.:· ,_;-.1~-:a a li:tle,;blf thfolil'hSo ~· .-~~~~~~~~~~~~...<.'~~~ . -•• • • • . ' ,,. ~ . "·.; '• '· . ' • 1 I ti. . : Jiit "~-~x ....... : .. .., .. ,, Lauder's··scotch' ...... ouilf! ....... ~99 c.d>e :·,~: n~~ ~~~.,I~, pkr._ :••'ll wanr$fa, t~l 86 proof .•. •ippable! " • _llUNTI~G~ ~-i . ...,...._ , ,__ . . i 11th s ~ Mett -·:·-: .. ,.3 ;.-1: L ~·,...,,.~"Ulla ...... m»._: .. '4;89 ' . .NEWPORT 1B£ACH: 2727~~V®rt Blvd. ~5~5 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Villa e Center)'~ 1 Bolosna. T~~. ou ... J>,ckl• • 11imeito 01.~1at_m&rprlt.u1 ao proot ••• quart ••• ·&.M • A)sf! colivsni6f1t/y1~ (id stores In Arcadia, Pasadsn'8 ari_cJ·Soutti 'PaS{J.dsna \ ; , ·-..... . . .. -. .. ... . ..... • ~,1 -.. . • . . . ' . ' . . • * ••• .. . ·-----. • • 'j • VOLUME· SIWN.G MEANS 'VOLUMt ~VINGS FUU PllCI • ' ,,.\, FURYlll ., · .. ,. . ' ' . ) . - 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Fully oq11ipf. ;$ 8 ·o· 0 ~I. air .cond., torqueflitt tra~... . ~ ~ steering, tinted ·glass, ·l'ldtO,. ;. . ' Ninyl roof, deluxe Wheel co~ · ' · · ; ~itewalli plus many luxury··tX'·' · ' . · 111 1 1 Iris. Sr. No. PM2J.f9().1 303,80. . : · DISOOUNT MO;" . . . OH. l/t); ' . . iu .. v-.w~ I. . ; . '. .. 'tl'IATSUJI :J,,,~ ....... I .. nHt~, • 1877 hll 1 Pric. $29 ·* $29 I I tDN. MO. 61 v.w. . '&I IHIA '--~~ ....... KAlllMANN Gl11A' Diii, H,T, ""' "" HMIH r.Mf FM rldi• 4 •"""" $777 Full wn1i.w11 a. l/,T 771 $1077 full I Price Prfc. • $26 * $26 $36 ;* $36 . ·DH. e . .. DN.• MO . ' I • ~ • ' · · ·'83 llGlllE . : '· · '83 ctlRYSUR 0.lt, A.T .. lllMl, ,_, .,..,, IA m ~ • $277 ·~'!. $10 ·* $10 DM: . . ·1MO. . , '84 FORD ' ~UITOM I Dlt. Hl)Mt "~· ""rt"' FW! lldtr? ~ . "· Pun ·•. Price $13 *·'$13 Dll.· . MO -·-! Hl!~~-'~~11;. H.T. ~ui. .. '"~!s.mFIJ" •'-" ·$377 ~~ $13 * $13 Dfl'.. MO. '83 •PALA I.,.,. H.T. A~·· 1::;,., ""t.t'•f.' 'Cm"" I ' $477 F".' .. Pnce $16 * $16 ON. MQ. \ ~'-H.U :•· '86 v·w. · . .;!... . ~~~D~nor-~f'le. . , 4 ...... $6 71 . ti"' ' ... $23 * $23 DH. MO. '84 v.w . v.n.nt .. w-' ............. osu ., .. $7 77 full Price $26 * $26 DN. MO • :•13 DODIE Dtrt S.T. I tllw M~dl9. AU-. ··~4· ...... " _,I. I / ~} Pnc. $10 * $10 ON. MO. '85 PL YIOUTH 'DOOR"''" HM .... ,W!i '"'"" 9¥D. ,lllFIC !"'$477 ' ••."'" .· ·.. ,,,~ $16 * $16 DN.• MO. 100°/o . GUARANTEE ., . ' Wl<f-. Moy 14, 1969 p ' '86. Dedci. Cer..et $877 I ""· ~-Alllwn111e, .. d}G. nNtw, ~ ON. ~~·tA', ~~ ~·~ ,~c:t .•. 1W PllCI -----.... - DAILY I'll.tr fJ • ' ! l . DONtT . MISS THIS RANCHO LA CU ESTA -If you've missed ' the closeout of RANCHO LA CUEST A'S 3 other units • . . • DON'T MISS THI Sll Each succeeding unit cost.I more, so take advantage of these prices. Come & ... our models on Brookhurst at AUanta In Huntington Beach. There are 1 & 2 'Stories, 3 & 4 bedroom homes with 2 or 3 baths, Miuion tile or shake ror>I. fire- places, concrete driveway1, heavy rough cut beams, built-Im, family rool!lll & cllnlng rooms. Close to Huntington State ~ach. The$<0 beautilul home.s are priced from '24,995 to $34,200 with VA oi Con- ventional financing as low u 10% clown. No 2nd TDs at 7.2% inlenst· cau 1168-2112!1 Qf· visit any day l_O AM to 7 P M. 'V ACAIT-1.0TS * R.l Exd ...,_.. •. sr. HU· 8!2tT WOOD ••• , SJ..5,960 • &.1 UPPER BAL CUI-de- sac Street ....... :. $17,500 * R-2 115'x234' wm take & UNm • • • • • •• • • • m .im * lf.1 6bloo """' "" ....... -Umta .. PJ.lm * M US' x "135• .o. • ,$23,000 * C2 '15' x 360' 'llAR.BoR BLVD. tront.0 tbru to 1-ck meet • • . •• • $15.000 * M (IWbii.il!d) 24% Ac. OCEANSIDE. Priced lo .. at Dab' $5,IXO lot. . CA.MEO SHORES FabuSoua white water view, priv. l!otra.nDlt to beach. 4 Bcirms., 3%1 batlls, fomW diniq: nn. Teakwood panel. lng. Pool. fl.57 ,OCO. Call 1oc app'L 3 BEDIOOM PLUS GUEST JUJt pMect lor that JD..aw ..,.. -.. privacy. Shal<eroolaoddoubl,uoed brick -· Goonnet kilcbeo 'fl.th an built-1nl. hardwood floors, ~ clean througboot. Large covered 1U24 ft patio. '"" spaekiua ft.al' )'I.rd MIUl'el q'1dd and =· .. 11 lcatat vaJae,at HCXlllS FOR IALI HOUSIS 1'911 IALI , , I llloe _., · , ' 1• .0.-1 1• Oenorol , 1000 tinpott luch 19 Lide lslo 1151 ~ MESA .VEIDE TIMFS UP 2 Story "Colonlar' '.I:. ~ur:"io~ LOVI LY ~'fiS1tQNT: $.'A% fHA lOAll 4 RDIOOM Fomlly Rm + 6 9r -trwlo for ........ ar 4 BR + maldl, ......... ..;; 1 OVERSIZED YARD wttb . · S Nlba. bi&: f1'ftliJ.Y l'OOID • wll J \1P.otbal. •Tnl po1ure, pJtr A II.Ip tor _ c.. ....... -... ·lhb _.. ............. l Make· Offer .ie-... _. w-.. wn; ...,.,,..,... ..... l ""...,. .,,,...., -Mia Verde 3 bdrm 4 tam-trdlr, prdeD. WS.. doc ~SptcW.11 landlcaped J'Ud. p-.a Wi wfbal \flrw. matWI' BR. CID W ~-·' U,. iiame. You Wl:ll't find m wtiat bave ,_! NW Hip lftll:I • .._,,,flnl~ Fruit' dtNI tftie1. 540-1120 ...... c:ust. teabnL t Sr. J W•llctr Rlty Q~ -u .. .-.. ... cpls .. an ---~ ... -_ .... TARBELL 2'55 Horbor BL -oiler! ....... 1'1111""" cupel!Or. larp .,.._,_•lee Bil I. -wit>. -BEAUTl11JL hOm< Ill a.· -a.-1 ..,.la_ a.,... has ll/IV.· .. ..uai.a.;..., ,,...... ~ all ....., ,.. ..,. Costo Mow lllO -. ou-Bay ~-""' " a bobby room bWlt tn ca-akie alter s.1.e. Call now 6 excellent ooad.ltke ot um .., 3 Br: 3 ea. 81 owner. 3 BR, 2 bi Udo 9-4 Romt, ,.... A steol al anl)I 64&-Tltl ,., ..... ., ,.. • biim. You'U Dire 1be ·-Th /f /n.....I ._.om · s.., ,_, ...i -an -. $26,9S0 =f!L'«YA'"'O: l!lon;..,t>lhebo!atedlivq ret Ill.._ l ~~~r::'.!!! uiio°1~~NC .. "• ,- !PERRON J "f .. .. ••••• , •• O THE HE.AL "-LSTA1THS """"· 1am11y """"a blc WIW:hmeans.,..,.-Wootclllf 12101 ;·:~~v~1o~1~..,~"'!'~;:;t. bilmu:. Located in 'MESA , ~ VERDE on a nice quiet a ioYeb'. S BR, 1"-bath HOME -R--2 loL ,E:loel • st1ttt with schooil nev by. home with fam rm. and. • wesi1"9e. 3 BR w, ba. room BAYFRONT DUPLEX· ·, Elcrow' ii doalIW .:KID an inrlmm1nc pool at a pnoe tar ' • I antta. ~-DelilhtNI duplex • I bdrm. , new home IO ona llYl )'Oii will bardlY ~ve. ewe.. 2 1:L -. Nw cpta., Bl kit. EXCLUSIVE BRING AN OFFER CID Call U1 To See: t BR. 2~ BA Condomlnium Dln. rm., ....., rm., laUllo . ri&blaway1.,...'D,;.able llURRWHITE,Rltr. 0pea-Dollyl.. dr>" Excel l ent 1rnns., Coll* Pl ... Comer Y~:.~~~ .. a~ r5 .. -· a ...... """' ,..... '9111 Newport Blw .. -N.B. =-m I.om Dover ~Im. ' . ta ~ -u• ,_.. ...... t""'' e(f at $2&800 But ?r! '75-4QO Ev ... '73-0ISf vm.-Broiler 675.1882 °R. C. GREER, Realt:t t• • Realty Of6oe Exctustve. Ex-' · '".....,... 3.§5 V\a Udo m.m. · Plenty ol room ....... a -·· ..... rilbl on ... J, K. llkllols, Rltr. REOUCED TO lootlllfllf 1241 ;,;;, =.o======J camper+ a W.. -...-"""'ol!p"" 311 $20 950 Bolboo lolond 1)55; d•lachod ....... 51'1& ... Ft. ..... 2 Bdrm., 2 balb, .146-'521 _, ---·--.-..,.. ~:" .=: '",,:~ ~d=: ,.":,;... °': . I "A"#~EXsE E~=':f~&'' 115&/molnd_....,....., prUlionatthbprlce,113.lOO oc~ FRONT POOL-3Bdnn·.Famnn. ea-lot --al Jan.\ Clll ,_., -· A -will'°"""""',...._ SHANGRI LA IUVmo..,.. d •• 51'% Int.. At kq wt we can ...,..t ..,.., $43,l!O) $26,995 •. !l!llfltmJ_tl N"IW in Ibo Se.;.,,. Col. Rond Roolty MS-2340 -finest. Angelita Plan, BOYD REAL TY •. .......... ony i8 the ''Gfln of the TWO SI'ORY 2600 1q 1t. 5 ~~I.2°~":: 3629 E.~wq, ~ Newport Ocean" fronl The inviting bedrooms • 5~ % Jou • ex· a1 lavi&h 'decorator eppoint. ""°=~==:o=;~"C'.l FANTASTIC R E A L T Y aon"1 beach m .. i. the roil bli"I loan 1 218 / mo n 1 b • chol 1 G"'nbelt -• • I M-.Ao....rranean 1t m w. Bali.oe. Blvd., N.B. uw aurt. Attncttve, ~ total· Full price $36,950. mtnta • ~t blame ua Huntl!!f'°'! BMch ftlrTW '7MOOO emiaed 2 bd home ~ CALL st>-ll51 (open eves) fnilltqe • n . 6 Bedroom, 4% ,_..., !&<. Victor!• ' ~ .-,. bl!...., Her!'-Real -le • '°" -""'one.-· FIXER-UPPER . =-~._..-, -" llNll:B u· v -TV. ---3 BDRM-s19,95o EXQ.USIVE wrra 4 .. ._ Urnll ..... apt. Si"lla .., pr. Allume 5\4 9' FHA 1-· $111 $25 000 ' rm. pluo nmp -tor <ar _, f , .. • 3 ~e room Older 3 BR family home with or hilt. 'l1lts ·pnlll(11:;y b tn mo. PQI all Lis tnod yard, Don't ~ money. Just ~· . 2 sta~s large play yard A located on lmmaculate condition. J>ri.. newly redecr;ir. {pt ~ bnl5b A painl Ool,y I • 3~ Car earaa:e, 3 patios. H11rbor View HlllJ beutiful Bay VJrw street crd at only $59.SOO with a-Owner 5tS52'l7 er $41).7561 old. .f bedrocml. 3 baths, . dog: nm. Fl!ti land SpectacUlar view from this ~ movins Eut 1: will cellent tmns to ctualified BY OWNER 3 BR Homn. 2-iamil.Y room, tirepla.ce, Mary Lou. Marlon modem borDe with 3 view sell VA or FHA flnandne, buyer. E. sick, 2-W. skle. Very Ira: 1 shake roof, No doWn tD G.l. . bedrooma 1nc1. l.uxuri"" $22 500 "C" THOMAS tnmt.rable 1oans 511 .. 11"· B..,.rs •=· muter .Wte, Separato tam· ' • N...i cub. 548-lllOO 2414 Vi<la Dd Orn FOREST E. OLSON t1y """' adjoim cbe<rtul, REALTOR HOUSE lo GuatH°""' on R-N•':'r."11~'b '4r030" led - M V all electric kitchen. Home .......... 224 W. Cout H-54S-552? 3 k>t. F.ubide Ql. Owner. ...... H ..-• Loca .. ... ..... c.ww.n. ...... 'eo. bWlt """""' -....... ., I!==~~ de. with 2'.4 baths, briettt. -a. c .. Ml.-r nung· pool, Priced to .u at at Newport Beacb., Eft. ~ 6C-2983. $21..900.. JUST LISTED ah1ny kitchen with all built.. ...... ._.. c.lllrlllll 't=====·=·1~::~~~~=~ .~ . •-Id-' -I la-"' ,.... 0 • '"-$69 500 Victwla I 1 MIH Del Mtir 1105 ''Pl k of~-Llttor" 3 BR 1"-bath, el~ bull~ ~ ... _ .,... or ..... .,.. ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~I eall: Keat Kingsley C 109 in ranp A: ov~. prbqe .L-lamtly-Pricodbelowmar. Paal In ll!-cL-•ye RES u•••12 ·~11 2SIORY5BDRM.3Balbs. $27.500 d1'poul, u..,..,,ied '""" ~~:... o::Ao 3?75. ket at $33,950. ~ llQI ' _.,..._ 1' • Water aoftutr, elec bltm, Owner olfen choice Bluffs & drapes, double> prage, ; ; --::~-"'~:,,:::"'-""=',,.,;.--I ,..nn 5'6oZll3 Newport' leach ' EASl'BLUFF. !Wes. """"" patio. Walk 10 all Plua. 1....., l BR, ' ba. 1arp '"''"' 1o~ ,.,.. ""'·/ ' FANTASTIC Loclllrd near11t¥efltefi"'"t Buy Of The Y-'· ~, ·~ " ocltls. Pricod ..iow man.1 dbl patio, ,.,t Joe, iow"t '""patio.°""' $15,800. • Bay, Thia Iuiur!Oua execu-lahhc.ped, aD the fea. value. By owner. 546--5492 maintenance fee & lease hold : OCEAN VIEW tive home feattln!I a ·tpark-Waterfront .. Vie'! fJt Cata-tures )'OU would expect. avail.. Call 644-0005 eves. ... ~~· •l:' . Sit lll l2tt.tivlngroom""" li"ll 311' """"'"""pool, lino .A Bay. 2 BR, 2 ba Jinmodlat. occupancy. Moll Vonle lllD'l'"~~~~~~!!!P I ----aee an the Wa.Y to c.a.1;na -~=====--mp patio, hua:e _ •livinl c:::twm!l RHJ 'own your J111t listed. :r UL L NEW BLUFfS -1 ' .._ ...-coodltioo A TTEN110N room, panellod lamlly """" own' P<nlhouse Apt. .,;to PRICE ........ $39,950 * BARGAIN! .,.,. v.,.., ' BR. 2 BA. Spllt ""''· MV\Y Blue Ribbon Spoclol , · J tht<>cl""" .,;1> ottnctm YACHT OWNERS -wood b<JmlJ1!Jlioplaof, 673-4400 ~ ... · .162.500. • COATS """'" Joe. 3 "'· l% Ba. CUilom 1'""""" all .i.e., Invlttn 15"30' pool,...,. of! shq ,carpeb; and decorator 4 spadoul bedlfximl and 3 I !!J!~!!!!J!!!!!!J!!!!!!~!!!!'!~I ~ lmmac! Leavins country, etc. Lowest malnL & lease. ~ tlo 2 5locy 1 dnpa. Owner i& wcdling ~!"1.·~ie .. ~~= batlls. Far appointment call 1: Oestu Sallsbur7. Rltr. W ': .__ mut edL Save brokr'• fee, bold. BY OWNER. catJ Dick :~R. 'e;! pa 'mt':)' ..... area and of!en al • ., • .,~ FOREST E. OLSON FOUR BEDROOM 115 ........ 673'"'"'1 AL-call owner • ...._ Dyer ,.._ "'' 4-01 or JI!" ' .,... • . ' bas tiup: uvq room over· ... RIAL TOU 536-3532.. cpta/d:rpl. fully landlc... · . ! 1 1311.Sm lookl;,iwa .... °"1de•-64r "303 •$19,500 , 546041 tBR P~oo ·lrg, . •ume5\4%Glloan .;,;,;,;;:i f 5*ml .64&-'l!n """ --"""-· ' """ h-·~ WANTED -" -"""' .....,. lot. Rm .., THE BI.um> • Futuonable will belp fiD.135.lOO I , large bedrooma..Fcw appoint. .--"'""'"""'"'"-"" Move into this Jarse ........., •-.-41 I 1"111 boat, trtr, etc. Lota of Pab condo. 2 1tory, 4 BDRM. 2 P•ul JO.... ~ l 'i ~ """' call WANTED ..... .....,, ao.. to'Olloo---and .....,.,. v.... .-. Muot ... , .... , '""' """""' & drap. 84J.1266 Ew, ~ ; ..__ E. Olsaa Pin&. """'°'" ...i .......... -"'"' -_... 135.000 * 546-<1353 ""· Frplc. Poot, patio, bl.... '· ""' w.ba ................... and -I ONI.Y ,.. . . ., ··-11 n..-tty "E· ---L ., On Huntlntfan Streot ' ..,.._ R.E.Salesw-n ,,.. --'·1aot1 ll53 tiw -of -· 1 133,im. can ai1 'pm~ GI RESALE l 64., "303 per month Uxiudel tun area prope""'. . • No--rt n--~ 1-wlmd M4-<m.6 ~ ' $26,500 °10•/o Dn. ---==-=~-.,.,,..,.. .. .....,, 1or '""' Tot.i"""........, bomaRl> tm.oeon '"' -•• •• BY °"""' • er just """ Clih '°"" ,. ·' 8"' this bealltlf(ll 3 BR 1% $38,500 Wella" new Dovtt Shores WE SELL A H.OME aeaLto. redieoora.ted home, h; choice Corona def M•r 1250 GI loan. Sl&B per mo. includ· •. -.: .._ .... L.--• __ ....... ..,.. __ , of FIXER UPPER ~ .. ,_ 1 ,..,.; .,.._._...._ praHntt f.. -" l BR 11 ,_.., bl ..._. ......... ~-..Lila • ""'~""'V' .. en · • a ca,, .. ve EVERY 31 MINUTES ;,...., --~-Newport Heig:hts loc. Mam-es ...... 1 1;1: t Ttl:ltin Ave. Larz.e livi'-( Bedlwm .. i baths., family Audience for resales. Oflioe w lk & l .,,,.,...._.. moth front yard, open beam $75,000 BUYS • • • ins&; lArge lot. '. ·1 + family ...... with en-""""· .fonnaJ d;nh11 room. "' .... exdling, ·-a er ee $55,951 Truly A Dream! "!lings, ...... cupels, -A""' home on 0..an mw.; TRADEWIND~ RLTYJ ' 1ram:e to arvered patio. Need more bedrooms'!' U91! model at 14XI Galaxy Dr. Beauttfu1 pool• yani cm A: drapes. Jncl. matched A home on Big Corona Beach ~ I·' t Quiel ""'l BONUS ,.... aa dcrtnitory, Roy J, Wud Co. AS< lar M. 20!3 WmcliU De. "'""' "'""llvin& room, ,..,. • nolrl&. N""' mly OR a beautiful hOm< .,;to FORECLOSURE ' < 1llO Newport Blvd .• CM Appx 5 yn old. Pil'IM?'I' ~l!fiO. 646-ml Open EWA GOOD TERMS dining room, kitchen A simple exterior painting. a.n income unit' ,,I ' Rl1r*·· ...,.,.LACtfEEw..NM6"-Y1'55ER JEAN SMITH l t D 6 Un its Closo In fomtly room. s bdrm>" Xlnl ;...,imeot al l"l.000. o,,.,. Cooat Property l:iO"""' to GI...,... .. ~i · ' ''A•• Frame J IUtr. fi42..9TJO EYeS. 548-0720 den, or 4 l:d'ma. Lovely 6t6-0789 332 Marguerite 61U550 ~ ~3er ~"all~~ 1 1 llALllOA POINT !~ Un;que 3 bdrm home Mlb Uvt * Simply * Oeligh"ul • KEJlllEDY :::,~; :i~le."" 2 UNITS $23,000 21x16' lamlly ,_, NEE9- lhlmm•rina ..-i &. plenty G1pntic yard 10 store kids. ,..__ to ~-'h .._ _._ ___ , SHORECLIFF QUICK ACTION! , _:•j Nt!'fb' paiiited 3 &. borne. 400 E.17th Costa Mesa -~ .. .,._ ~ ....._ • ..,....,,..,. FEE LAND j Lee. pi.tio for .un • fun. or space for badminton court pets, pools, tn.ilers &: boats 3 BR 2 bath home, comer 1600 Westdiff Dr, NB.......,. Includes sml. boat --: Old "Sty _, ,_, 4 Br BRASHEAR REAL TY-.-. · BAYFRONT APT. or gard•~ V•oanl • ready • Sur>lu. scOOOO. pario; & lot ,._,_ • add 5 --·• " ~ . · ~on-· 847-85.11 """ m""" I Best 1oc.. A bay! U2.500 h .. -•. 1 3F ..__ .J..JU1UOU """"" I.:\, Ocean view from upper ' 1 , Ba-Rool Eatote Co. Vi•ta Dd Lido. p;,, & ollp fDr ,...,. ' wud P "'· ·~·• • unli.. Drlve by 1545 Santa CONDOMINIUM ,,..,, """'-$90,0Xl Shoko Roof Ruallc ·.r. I all bl E ,_,. Arnold & Freud s-x~ Fl-IA~ bii; loan. Ana Ave then call • ~-7QJ E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa av a. e. nc...,. ca.rage. 646-ll7l ~2.nl · ~DULT SECTION 2 BR, clln-~ t:f'J? DeLancy Real Estate Very clean 3 BR A den ~~ j' """4140 $28.500. w Ill ,.. E. nu.. st, CM ilania Beatty """""'.'""""' "'ndttton. N.., NB """' o1< . ....,414 '8l8 E. """ Hwy, CdM balh• hardwood°""'?-~!o G..,..e i •mson Realtors 64&77S5 00-6560 Exct:Uent carpets &: an bcilt-673-37iO )'&rd wilb 2 patio9, ~ a..i .. r ~======:1 '"'· S..I ... Ibo""""'@ I d -.... ~ .. """°"' 1 EASTSIOE On b eautiful Robinbood Place, a quiet cW.--de-sac. Unique: 6: a~ Adult«. ~ Plddock pooJ home. ~ &541·5"0 ---lhlltrll GERE~U, _ .... l $22,950-4 BEDRM AD the ''Trimmings", 2 bda!, Amil,y room. Delight- ful oovered patio. Large )'Ud. Wide concrete drive. 540-1'120 TARlllLL 2'55 Horbor .,. ·•··· ' m.4.3.50 Eves. 673-1564 Big Family Home $20,9501 $19,500. CAIL 540-USl (open Cu e Sac s.nc1y INyfront &: price ii right at $23.500. .>j I NEWPORT HEJ6ffTS Ju" """" • 5 bdrm" 2900 1~% G.I , LOAN ""') Hert!ap RW Em.le • • Wmn 3 Bodroom & fsmily MUTUAL Realty.~ sq ft Colonial with Anthony King aize bedrooms, pluah Slt,500 Rm, 3 ha.th!, wet bar, priv/ 842_1413 a1')'time - cozy 2 BEDROOM pool. N•ar Mtm Venlo WTSIDE 2 BR doep •0• .,.,.,.u.1" All 3 -' ....... -· Lot + Baclc Bay ...... -patio, """Yaohl Qub, 0""' DIVORCE ) Id -• f ~1 llr Coun1-· a b ~.nor ·-~· electric puab buttmi built· All ··-~-buill•ln ~·-· 4 •-•-m 3 i.to. __....,... i..• $2S,COJ Down. e... °" ""• nners or re · fen-ed~ ~t ~fie;·. u ... _ OONDOMlNIUM 1% baths. ln kitchen. ~"'""" .... \QX... ~""' ·-~ ...,., Hal P inchln & AslOC. Take over 6'.!ft an no quaH· ~o~tiso~· Re•lty $14,400, loan 6\;% av:ai]able. TARBELL 842-6691 ~=--~ Park .. like i:i: ~ ~tetraile'~l4 3900 E. Coast Hwy 6Ta-4392 fy1ng or RU on new VA or l 546-5400 Eves, 642-4951 ~ ~6·5110 ~ _2s~--642-r/•:ml. evCll, TARBELL 146 0604 THE BLUFFS FHA. 4 BR 11,6 ha. like nc.W. ·---~" v••• ·~ 2 STORY SHORECLIFF 3 BR, 2 BA. """· II ,.........., Jot, wil)\. Would You Bollovo?-OlLEGE REALTY !!!!!!!~!"!l'!""!!!l!!l~!!!!!•I POOL • $U,500 O..rlookU!g Back Bay; 1 yr. Quid tree lintd .,.. by"" 10 ochools. Qulok -. •·· 1 4 BDRM -$22,500 l!Ol~ll!IMer,ttl OLDER HOME 5:: 3~~~P=· ~ Shake: root, pl.aater walls, old condo.; 3 Br. 2% Ba., .ea. Fee simple. Access to 2 BRASHEAR. REAL TY . Brick patio with gas fired I '!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!'-with huge living rm, fplC', Near ALL tlChoob. $.10.'r:iO. hardwood Ooon, covered cu.st, drps. I: ca.rpet.&. By beaches. Under ~.tm. By 847-8531. Eves. 54l.Jtti BBQ. 2 baths. Rear Uving rrs Nim hardwood ftoora. Oil 2 lots I pt.tlo. J-lealed ~ tilteml owner $53.900. 64+2370 owner. 613--3681 room. family room, built-in This vacant 3 BR 2 bath In Low down pm.L Wei a--McCa rd&e, Rltrs. pool. $2fill) down. 541).172(1 Reduced $200).Now $38,150 $!»,000 -109'.t Down, 6%% ARTIST Owned A decorate:l kitchen. 540-1720 'FORTIN CO. lSlO ~:V.J:rt .. ~:~ C.M. TA.RBELL 2955 Harbor 4 Br, 3 Ba. fa.m. dln, ulll/. Interest. 2 Houses, R-2 So. 3 bdrm., 2 b&., Dutch Ham! H rbo Halecrell. Hardwd fin, bll-.,..,.., ••;o> ~ ._.... Co. Club, on ~ TARBELL 2955 • r in kit, 25· liv nn, frpk:, new-1701-A We~t.cliU Dr .. NB DON'T JUsr WlSH for 11t1me· laun !111· Total 2400 11q. ft. of Highway. 675-6044 Bkr. featured t n Souttia1anis DIAL direct M2-56i1, CW'ge ly redecor, Excel. )oc OnlY ""'==msooo=o==~= ls Your Ad ID our elaaUieds! thlrw to fmniah )'OW' home 325 V15ta Ba.Ya. <>wnu.oeves NO matter what tt is, you ~. $29,900, 19' Joan',: J"Olll' ad, then •It back and $23,450 EZ tenns. DAil..Y PILOT WANT ADS Someone ~1U be kioldnc fOI' ••• find great buys in to-646--154:2 can ~ it with a DAILY Owner 897-6tll0 ar m-111Tl listen to the phone ~I PWC ~5440 Dial 641S678 it D\al 642-SJB da.Y's Clau1fted Ada. White Elephants! PILOT OassWed ad. No Ag!:nts. 'l 1000 Gent:r•I 1000 0...1rol 1000 General 1000-rol NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY NEWPORT BEACH OFRCE 646-7711 2043 Wutclllf Or. ot lmne Open Evonintt COSTA MESA OFFICE:~ 2790 HAUOl ILYD. Opoo lt1olo11 '111 t P.M. ASSUMI Slf• •.1. LOAN-DNlT $119 Pll MONTH Leu than, ttnt and look wha.t It hu! LARGE FAMILY ROOM or massive 1*l-- room, PWS 2 more BEDROOMS! STONE 1'1REPLACE. carpets and dn.1>991 Gleam:iac HARDWOOD FLOORS! Fenced 130 .foot det>p lot in nice area on quiet towering lhadt trft..1lDed atrttt. ~e ovtr Joan or NO DOWN VEJ'S or $1,100 -to all o~ $150 DOWN INCi. .COSTS VA llG, 11• 4 llDlOOM -IAMlllNli IANCHllOI One story slick u a whistle! Fot" the srowfng -youne 1uccestful flfftlf1, thll ~bea.utJ oozes with pride or ownership. Bee.utlfully kept PARK UKE Gl\OUNDS on neat 1trett of well • kept bomes. W SH CARPETS and custom d"PM thtou&houtl ALL ELECl'RIC MEDAUJON KITCHEN A. dl'hwuMr. C.00 nu.. ~ PLACE! 2 PUU..MAN BATHS! Pool l1ud lot I: LARGE COVERtI> PAnO! AD this ONLY $28..SOO. FASHIONAILl IASTSIDI COSTA ,MISA CUSTOM l l l 1 I Home. "1th HARDWOOD H.OORS and lath • plaattt comtrudlol'I ! Gora:eaua 3 bedro«n, 2 bath with soft as allk THICK SHAG carpets A eu11tmn dnlpesl Two fireplaces wtth one In Co%J FAMILY ROOM ! All bullt·ln W... ldkhml 1Gd4 SEPARATE WORK SHOP or ~ for Dad! PLUS 1U24 8£PAR.U'& G~ ROOM hldt-t:way1 NlM: YN" you.nit on QUiet cul-de-•c alftetl You'll be to caU thls ~•lf.ly p cJoos, homt_~r own. ~ at a_J.OW, W -far IMMEDIATE SALE! ONLY 13.500 DoWiL ...... l ' l ' ------------------------------~ ____ .... -------...£--- L11 I ~ """ '11' Jou &ji• ar< "" .... ~ W~I , .. SE w "' LY El< & GA !\.\ ~ \ti Gh .... ;~ ' . ' % OE •U $1' " L !J h "" p Stll ... $!! 49 135 m ... 1i Gt RC 3·. Uf 13 n; c. .,. Bi fl • " ..... , .. , r•' • .... • W.._,...,14,IWI DAILY '.It.OT ltlA1. IST ATI -·· :· *· S'P'cilt SALi"" •ENTA~S .... rALS • I RENTALS ~~'U/I lntloft llaadl 1400 Hqu,.s Unfvrnl•had Apia. Fvrnlthtd 1 Aim-Furnlthad _Apia. ~n,f\(r""'*' * * * , MAR home: ! ''""" 3 ~"''°' -~OOO Gonoral •000 Bal~ 4.J9G ~ ._.h 5100 1~ "''''"' '°°° famnn. 2 b«lb•P<lOI.: SSB.1 BR, "'.;tj''• w/w, lc"f-1.;;.=...;;.-----•!iAOllO:t:.Oft AP'l' Cheloo 1'1klo 4'Plox patio, MW paint in. ced )'ard. C O.K. Btoktr _•S'ingle f)2> 1~1.11 lodudf4 , enRMS: 2 8a$ht. trplc,. Near "i11b Street. 3 • r. BR • $33,000;•002'-2«8 alt i 534-$ s.3G-3Wt, 613-6342 .DIW, rtfrle.; DflW ~. 1bl.Ir1-3 BR 2 bath with "';;k;;;;;;c;;-;;;;;;;:;-;;;-;;;;;;;~1$150. 3 BR. fenced yd. Slovc, BACH. Apt., util. i.id $'1';';; ~.-~·4' beach. *215 ti.l'Cplace.. AD tmlbl .have a:> ICE hon1e by owner: cllllch-.en welcome. Broker y ME~-~; .... :1Bl~ ~~~:no B'Uit:'Wm~ m~:~ built-ins, cpta1d1114, pvt. I ~~~: :;·: ::·1 !~I ':i534:-6980=:· ======= oung , u.l......,. yu,, _..... 2901 Newport Blfd,, N.B. paJ'°' pragea. $55,500 v . $39,750. 842-79<1 Cotto MeN 3100 Balboa l11and 4355 ~ ~ $'2,'00e Triplex $341 sAJi or ~-~; Py owner, ':1 Ad It Month near Harbor Center. I • l BA. b'ple, new <Pl•" FREE RENTAL u s Ll'ITLE l~e. Attrac. 3 '"°m E-1 II ff · 5242 2 BR 1 0.. bl>ins. 2 pvt pa· ' alk u1>pei-. Awn. M*" n to :::•::•::...:;::•:::. __ __..;;:~ "--3 ~· ........ "'· pool~ ... Jot. w Jo SERVIC' E ~ ~. far. -~1 ·-Jn "' beaeh. ~ Jure 21 · "" ""-61....:131 e •NEW DELUXE e thbl . """ ,MonarW•nlM . 6HO 'im"Y. Hu 3. SIS.000 bt TD:I. \Vant to borrow· $10,000 at tO% each. Mt~ ~~===;:;,;;;=.,.,ltor example. 3 bedroom., 2 LuxUzy single, 1 & 2 • 3 Br. 2lit ba a'.pt. for Ieue Bob Olson ,RJtr. H~rnpn ' batlu $225.00 per mo. Call bedroon\ apartments, Hunt1npton le.ch 4.tOO Incl. aplc .• rnatr. IU.lte, din Whtcldyo Wmtt Wt,o.wy.· Getf · 5~1CIAL.CLASSIF.ICATl0N · l'Olt NATUltAL IORN SWAPl!lltS ~ tf•rbour . 1405 furnished and unfur· QUIET&. BEAiJTIFU"-1'111· ,&: dbl, CIU'a&':· •uto. · h I I · door opener avail. Pool " RONT • by owner . .nlshed, w1t comp e e Adults ortl,y;, 2 Br., ulil. p;Ud. rec. area. Nr. , Catholic 4 •• 2 BA., dock. 55• on ORANGE COUNTY'S pr·ivacy itnd landsc ap-Pool. $200. 847-2125 Chw-cb & school ic Corona NICE 3 bdrm, lt~ ba, 2 1\fO bdnn units. All on san\e IOI. OWne.r wiJl deal or lr"dde for vacant property. 2 1 3 : 865-5915, TI4: !i21-3811 SP..111 Rote . . . S Linat -5 tll)>OI -S louckt ANNOUNCEMENT~ ' ind NOTICES kr~neloeed patio<$74,500. LARGEST ed country club at• 17676 Cameron, Hunt. Bcb. 4el ?ioJ@J' H!ih.. · Alf! 60' oo ·main channel 293 E. 17th St, 646-44'4 1nosphere including Laquna Buch 4705 • ONLY $260 • l':UlES -AO MUil tMCLVDi -t-Wtitol .,.., fltve'1e trllft, ,...'Nlllt yeu wtnt In ,,..._ ._._OU• ~ •1141/W ..,.rtn. ,......, """•·et "''""Ill .. F.Untl !Fr11 A'4tl ... FOUND Ladles praeriptkm san glasses. Near beach La...,..494.- iaiie 3 Br. 3 Ba.. dock, ~ ~ $750,000 w o r th of --------837-871 Am.laos w~. N.B. SllO,Q!'.O .. Cons ider lease/op. 2 Br. $145. J lli. $175 -N;w r ecreational facilities t-HOfltlNG FOi Ml.I! -Y•ADllOHLY1 PHONE '42-5671 Businen R•nttl • 592-5998 cpls, drps, paint, ga1 .. 'l · d d t Cbldrn OK No pets: ls1 & des1~ne an opera • To P.lllc• Your Traffr'1 Pardi• M STORES for lease Village Coron• •t Mir 5250 Shoppin& Center, cor. ot El I ;i~i!iii;;iiiiiii;iiiiii;miiii~ Camino A. 1'.lendosa, Of. Do )'OU y,•ant mote income~ Oceanfront Apt feluntain Vall•y 1410 last plus deposi1. Jnquire e d ')USl for Sing 1 e t.::r,.. 1700 Ne\vport. Judy Susak. people. Smnil cott&ge studio, $1601• Suitable Deli., TV, variety, \Vill trade $26,000 equity, 1 n1onlh i11<'1udes utilities &: ' ~ .. ; Hobby, e1c. Sec Liquor s tore E-slde units Wt S370 mo, \Vant clear lots or ~ for $35,500 equlty, lovely 4 ~R home La,s Palrna11 area Palm SpriJl8:s, or 1ubmlt. p AR,,\KEm' • turquObe 'V)c. }ioag Hospital May U, 1969. Call 642-6611 , 5115 FOUND a grey )IOUJll: male $, EXECU.T'VE BR LOVELY 3 BR 2 ba humo GARDEN GROVE '4ove this spaulOUS 3 . \vilh" dblc garage £: 11•/1v (urnished, Perfect for single ~ for key. spendable Income, tor yoor adults or elderly couple. 'P,.! : • •~• Al Wagnu 213:•981~!ll0 horpe equ.ity.,Bkr. 646-3'r:>O. Owner m.ron Sea.30n hom 0 e on ~ ~tg carpets. s175 per ow. A:;t. 13100 CN,pnian A\'C. IOI. 'theres a d1n1~ig 5.J6-4.I4l (4 Blks. \\I, Santa Ana F1vy.) 49-1-3!).19 or 61:>4070 ~ '•"ooo""SQ"""F"."T"'. "M~.1,..,-.. -,,,-'-,-',,C,th \Veil secured 2od TD. Bal. Stuart. & Robbin.'I Realtorll ON · ACRES offices. ?llew bldg. Im· s2.ra0 at fir.so mo, 7.2~0 ,-cc=~------I cat, p&eee pldl: him uP. ~lA VE R-2 · Lot. Newport CUL 962-4692 for fo1'mal entertain. I ~===-~-~~ (TI<ti" 636-3030 ~nt, eating area in the EASTSIDE !ii sol~!. 3 RENTALS I A: 2 Blt Funi f( Unfum mediu te occupancy. Logan due 5 years.. Trade for late l.fgts, Sl7;500 clear. WANT: GIRL'S Ot woman's watch. Duplex or Tripl«.l, Corona Foupd , ~ond4)' May U. del Mar or Npt 8ch. Match. Costa t.fesa Park. 6421,;'ll 1i4hl a.lry kitchen for family Bedroon1, 2 Ba~1. $17a 010. NEWPORT BEACH an9.cks &: a huge famil y * 548·1059 * J1;vine and 16th St. Apfs. Onfurnlshec:f Fl'pl~ l·Pfi "· pado./Pools. Ave, Costa· Mesa. 546-653:1) model car and ? ~ ?' Call: Tennis. C8ntnl'L81d.st. pu.t-e LAGUNA OFFICE e 613.0113 room for rwi. 3 baths, ..a ca r (TI4J &15-0550 g~ as 1\·ell as many ~~:'!e.'!rt .Beach 3200 5000 ting: O'ttn. Attractive fuodem bldg, cen-Xlnt oppartunlty • lake over $175. 3 BR · 1 ~, ba. stUdio .• J900i"!'!ii•':ii!irthiiLa>leii'"i!'!i.;..ii,OIM'!iC!iioi!"ii'«<.!i"~'~!i!!' o"nall·:"'. ·,.:';~,,~nd, $95 mo. clean Beauty; Salon, Lido General am Realty. 646.-4831 · FOUND Tborobenl crey,dof. Trade· mink stole t0r C.B. Vic Ward k Edinltt, F.V. radkt equipment with ~ l!J76 Moming Glory •. F.V. tenna or ,?? other fine features 1vith ex- cfptional financiilg, -M• ' L~gu~ Buc.h 1705 B/B TOWNHOUSE SPLIT-LEVEL J Bclnn, 2 bath Unil. Faces p u o I, c:a1·pe1s. d!'"a.pes, [ircplai.:c, elcc bJl.ins, S265/1no. RAMSHACKLE 2 BDRM, 2 balh,, ""' "'' NCH HOUSE pets, ~wly painted, adulls Ollly $2'25/1110. ling Eal'ly Calif. ranch PIC'asc call l\lrs. fay s;yle home, located on spac. Bay & Beach iOus grounds in city or La· R It 1 i:.Una sectjon. \Vell designed , ~a Y' nc.: . ,.,1 afChltectWie w/ex1erior or 90! Do,eL Dr., ~B _s~1tr: --, ~ plank, heavy !!hake 64:).2000 f.ve:;. ;i 18·6.<16!i l"Qflllnes, sheltered <..'Ourl NEAR 2 . 3 bed: ~d enlfl"l'aY new ::;lory, weate111 style fl~r plan fea-l'OOlll 2 baths. Oouble gar· tU~s 3 BDRJ\1. & DEN, age. 1..:. blocks from beach. SERVICED BY 2 .BATl-l.S. Lease only, $300 per nio. · 1860 N('1vpo1·t Blvd., CM \V I \V. carpeting thruoul Rlt · 6:16-~928 E. 61'1·165.'i (~EDS CLEANING BA.D. t. " \oc. LYI. A" up lo d.t• KlTCll-* LACHENMYER EN HAS BlLT·IN RANGE . . .. , . . . &·-o V EN DISIIWSHR. 3 BR.. duplex .• ~·· blt11s, G RB D sP BREAKFAsT dsh1vshr., OC'IV paint, cpts. & ,,.~._ ET. 'c •.. 1 drps. Nr. bea(~h. Year lse. ~ . opens to am. 5230• 540-7573 ii~ ·~en \v/CENTER FIRE-1~==,~~-~-~ ~CE OF USED BRICK 3 BDRnl. 2 Ba., frplc:., dbl. \fTI'f-l. W 0 0 D l\.IANTLE. garage. JX>?L $275. ~ G!Us door opens to rear J\ladge Davis G-12-iOOO grounds \VITI-I -AN A \\IF.· ~IRI.liG UNOBSTRUCT. Newport Shorn 3220 -~ YIE\Y. '. · J EDP.~!. 2 Bath~1c;k T~1~ ls! qu11l1t.y ho1ne is not \\"alk 10 l.x-ach. Pools. S27.i - a. .,w-rkcr. It has been :iban. J.o;c \v<1il inimed. 96:l-Tii6 dt:med & JS IN NEED o~~ . I Pl\INT CLEAN-UP &. ~ll N· 1 =0·~· =-=''-'"""""===== OR; ~PAIRS. Irs nn out. Corona del .Mir 3250 sa.nding value a! $31,950 FULL PRICE 01 LGE. LOAN AVAILABLE n , A REAL BUY t ·roR THE Ai\IBITIOUS MISSION JIEAL TY 985 So. Coas! 1111)' ., Laguna f'.hona ( 71.4 I 494-0731 Beautiful 3 BR 2 ba, carpets, dra pes,. F'plc, bl l-ins. Children over 12 01.;:, $275 on leaSl". Corbin-Martin, Rcal!o1~ 3036 E. Coas! l·h1.·y, Cd~T 6i5-1662 Sl!rERB viCI\". ll('\l"Cl' CU!\. 3 CHAR MJNC 2 BR, crprS.. Br. Sale or ex eh an g c. drps, stove, refr ig. July l~t $15,000 equity. 6 7 5-6 5 91 ; yr!y i.<;I'.'. Married cple. $215. 494-7161 Res. 67:;..2f,67 , ________ _ $35.000 DUPLEX, 2 a nd 1 Unfurn 2 BR. 2 ba BR: view, jnst remodeled, S2;xJ, pvt, wild kitchens! 494·9748 Cle\'idence, Bkr. G7;HQ:t4 .cfNTALS _House• Furnished Huntington Beach 3400 Furnished Jlwfodels 01>e.n Daily Immediate Occupancy South Boy Club Apartments Costa Mesa 4100 G •• · A c I """"'"-'-'-~=::...--~~ area, long ettabl., 6 stations arage, pa ....,, · • • Trade for lot ' or submi.t. children & pet O.K,. Bier. S. OF HWY, NI~ 2 BR for LEASE;: store or office. 1974 ft ~ 1~"-~ 333 E O\vncr/broket. 548·7TI1 534-6980, reap on s i b I c &. dis-sq. · ......... ..,.. .. ......,.. · $1lO; 1 BR. closed garage, criminatiog -adult&. N ew 11th St., C.l\f. 962-8559 \Vant Motor Home, Trade 11,,11., r /o, util pd. Broker carpeting & painL Drapes, SANTA ANA S.000 sq 11, A-1 '&t Olds 98, loaded with full 534-6980 trplc, wndeck, bltn-ift oven location, ample parking. pwr, fact air, pl~ 1s: travel · & stove. Private &. quiet. S200 nw. 54'l-2412 or 646-7512 trailer, 1;eU ci>ritained I I \4 SDO. 2 Br, 11'9 ba • .11tudio. Upstairs over ·garages on acre, Palm Sprgs. 536-ll31 RIO, A.C., \Vf\V, Patio. rear \t of.lol 675--063l Office Rental 6070 HAVE: i Unit lot neur 111" (1) 493-4677 * f'()UND blk ld~n. 'fhlte paws vie Collins A Park, TO\VNHO(JSE 3 Br. 2;1ba.1,:BaJ=:lioa;Wand;:;67l:;:1>4898:,::=· ==I Beaut. appt'd. Piiv. patio, 1 • pool; nr. hay, Val. $32,500; for T.D., car, camper or '! ! Owner~ Lost 6401 S1M. Avail 6/1. Bkr. 534·6980 Laguna Beach, clear apt $27 .50 Wk. Up H t' to It h 5•"" LAGUNA BEACH '""PP'"•· llO,'!" ' 1' "· bldg. wm ""'• "'°""1 Cost• ••--.a SIOO un 1ng n ac: · ~ WANT : tloUse or Duplex bomt!-Palm Springs area 1. ck P..ct'-REWARD • Do)·. 11·cck, 1nonth. m-. , Air Conditioned Nc"'P<>l1 B c a c h B.N!a. Lo1t-B • .. LIVE RIGHT or Vista in ex.cha.nee. B1'Q. • S1 udio & Bach. Apts. ON FORES'.A' AVEN\Jf.: f.1atcham Realty. 646-4837 ker _ ·4M·l330 f.tinlature cbarcoal -black • Jncl Utils & Phone se1v. HARBOR ON THE BEACH Desk spaces available In Wan! Travel Trailer for eq. poodle with dlstin(uisM.ble. • !11nh.1 SC'rvice. TV avail, new• office bu.ildiJ\I: at on 3 BR + bonus roont Beach home, stone's throw areY apot of hair on .back • Ne'v Cafe & Bar FJSJJ, SURF, "Swu.1 prime location ta downtown 101 ocean. "'xchana:e for behveen shoulders. 1 yn. GREENS hon1c in excel, cond. 1v/ ""t' 2376 Ne\vport Blvd. 518-91<>5 In your Own front yard Laiuna Beach. A.it condJ. s mall houst in ~.ta l\lesa old, ,weighs about 8 Jbs. ~ HOLIDA y PLAZA tioned, carpeted,· bMutiful fantastic landscaping. Bier. or San Diego. we.rs to name of "Mano" ~· I I bho •·led -··'ed .. ,, .... .....,,.; ... T o 540-ll5l Heritage R.E. FORTIN ro. 6'°•~ U 1.1-~·1-'-..i .. ; DELUXE, spacious 1·Bdrm. BACHELOR UNFUR..'I". r1'lva e cu use, rica ~ .,................ • w ...,.,._ rsen......,., ·~-"s _._ Furn. a pL Sll'"i Plus utll. from $l l O Pool, saunas, privale pte en1:fUeH: Frontq;e on '68 lt1u.stan_g, low mileage, De w· hn'izel. 1951 diet to ailing cond. Lut teen I-teated pool. Ample parking wilh 24-hour security iuanf, Fcrut Afe., rear leads to air, R/JI, washers, auto t ieoerac 1 in Newport Bch, Weatclilf No children. No pets ALSO AVAILABLE l\fediterranea.n adul'/ livln&'. Mwi~pal P*rkins Iota. 150 trans. Will exchange equity ~bor·iJ:,· L&nd lr.$4.'>Wf, Area on Anita Ln, on Sat. 1005 Pomona, CJ\! l • 2 & 3 BD&'d. per· month for space. Delk !01' I't'modeling or carpetm&:. lflfC n\O. nel ,000 Ma.y lOlh AM, No qwmtions Heated Pools, Child cart-2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths a.nd chain a•a.ilable for $3. ~1-08$9 days, 546-2176.eVes, :t-1~for Jots, Back Bay: will ht asked. ~ tall * Villa Pomona Apts. Center. Adj. to Sboppini:. -From $250 ' BUsinMS 9oun .._,erln& \Va.ntl'd: Glass J>oat up to any hour. 646-3526 or 673-1060 Costa J\.tesa's newesl & most No pets allowed .mice availli.ble for $10. 20',• Have cho;,... U .ac .... r. · 12 J.I.1 •1""'8 iil 2 tilt·up • ~ Bm 6 -~'te ·•··-· luxurious. furn. l & 2 BR. 2700 Pete1-son Way, al Har. INCLUDES \V/\V lhag ·car-All utilitlM paid except eels w/(antastic view~f bldp on1 Piacentia, C.M. ~~ ~ed ~ ~: 1 apts. Adults only, No pels. bor & Adants, Costa ?.-lesa peting, G.E. built-Ins, with telepl'.one, Pauma Valley in· N. San Val\k! $150,000. Trade part brn. back,1 white chest ~ 1760 Pomona Ave., just soulb "!!!!!!![!!!!!!ii!ii"6-03jji70i'!!!!·!!l!!!!!!!!!!I re!i:.igerator &: dishwasher. _ FODA!}-..!,..PnhrA.,.,..".... Diego Cnty.. tor proper1y, 88.lance·? feet: about 16" tall; named _0~' ~1'~'"=8~'~· ~~==~ • • RENT • Huntington ·Peciflc -LAGUNA. aEAOiu.. * 61-2.3513 * ' Cail ~1542 srute; lost vie. ~ta Ancl, CMATEAU La POINTE Aflartm.nts . ~Mii * * h'din&: fOr Newport. Lovely 2 Br. furn. apt. Pool, 3 Rooms Furniture n1 Occan Ave, (3 Blks. w. ---:=~ .-,==--1' * * * Reward. 54 1 -4219 or ,.,.,,,,.,, •dull,, ,,. "'"· ol Huntlngton"Beaoh Pi"! . QNL Y $~ MO ..,._ Sli'JO Mo. plus utilities · $20 • $25 & UP PHONE: (n4l 53&1481 For. top .noor ceotral lace. REAL ESTATE BUSINIS$ 'aM • PART Schnauzer puppy with 1941 PO!lfONA. C. M. f.tonth-']'o-ntonth Rentals 2 BDRMS 2 tioh, 3 rooms It large pvt General FINANCIAL hair cut., 9 mos. old, male. L,\RGE 2 hr.: w/\1-, hltns. \\llDE SELECTION • • BAJH balcony, w/w plush crptg Vic:. Sea!lhor'e &: 48th, N.B. hid. pool. A<lulls, nu pe ts. Appliances & TV's avail. lhruout. wal~~,t paneling, Acr••I• 6200 ' · Little girl in hospital very $1,c ~I 1 -1 ')')7"' No Security Deposit $l50/M 112• 11 dt]>S, view wiouows, sliding Bus. OpportUnltin 6300 an:dou!!! Re\vard. · 64z.-0077 ..., ~ · 0· pus uh · ---llfRC F"u••>•'>u•o R••ial• 0• 3 stay 1 yr, I d vt 't If -t -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J ~·Japll". j!{).l)f,G; 612.-.ISOi .,,, IV. 19U>.· ~,· ~·;.., ~A"l POOL, cpt/drps, l{ids OK g a..o.s n, p ex!. 0 Su-..e • cou· NTRY FRANCHISE a.ff3:30 ----" "'"" -"*'N'OO Delaware Studio Apts, parking, cleaning seTVice For a modest U4,500. you can mix DF:LUXE Apl. Spat'10us 1 l_JGS \\', Lncln._Anhm ?7'-. ""'· _ _ ~law•-, ll.B. provided, lse ol' monthly, LIVING Jl'EMALE Cocker-poodle BR pool, id(':ti for ilachelor . --"'<UV ""' """" Qual'Lied' I' 1 1y acquire all exclusive !ran-lost ~y 3, Lag. B. Blacok AVAILABLE uay 22 642-mI an,,.;..,A "~" 1816 1 app •can ! l'l'P $120/nio. 1993 Chu r c h, """ ¥'""'' ._ for appl to: 01''f 'ICE. Box ?II A I Co-. "th be chis(.' fl'om: \V/Wbite, ~ chest le paws, :i.!S-9633 2 ~m with carport SllO. CHEZ ORO APARTMI:NTS 1774, Nvipt B_ch. ""'1.1.,"'3'bd' " hom•vna ~pool •1t1· ANTHONY MASTER "Yoly". Wellrin&' exp~ Disposal, water pald, Near .,,.... A·ilanta ·1 rm. e, .t c. n111M,ODELERS Sac ramento tara . NICE~.2 BR. $14-0 ........ I T .•. : . S50 000 Do R~ 1613 Santa Ana Ave, schools. New 1-2 Bedrooms. Ply~ PR VAlf OffKE ;;r~1uf v1e\v. cdy ! \V~ SYSTEM 1,tEWARD .. 621-113J , 543--8572 eves. 2194 "C"' Placentia Ave. electric only. . t nterest or :> a·••-mo.anm··,tant linan-FOUND: Glaasel"tn brown • ,., '120 e · years. FUii price $.b0,000. "" """"" . $130 CLEAN Furn 1 BR, ulils -536-3S2? or 536-2727 Secretarial service, air con-' For more infonnation.pleaR cial success. No limit Is in ca:Je; par1tina lot Mumy'1 iri•·l. Bachelor only, no pets. OCEAN BREEZE. AP. T . Pool-Wasbers-Dryen Q ditionlng, &: parking, call K,. \V. Stnall "'ith sight for the booming home Codee Shop, Hllntinatoo 543-0522 Large 3 BR 1~4 ba, bit-ins. Private Garaaes Orange County Bank Bide. Eckhoff & A~soc., Inc. remode lng bUsiness. Antho-Beach, 4-31J..69: Hawthorne ~--~-~ cpls I drp., $150/mo. ·2286 2 BEDROOUI, 2 bath, 230 E. 17th Street ny's outst-..:iln• nsme I:. Optician's name tn;skle cue. 1 BDRt.I com p·J pte l y C D N 54.~1-"··taM 1818\V .. ChapmanAve. .,...,. B9"-'•"ertPM anyon r. o pe_ .ts. .,..,.. a carpe_ts, drapes, blt-i11t1, 1 ......., esa 643-1485 O••nge, "·'II. proven formula .srur., '°"• ~=~,;,•""'-.;.~=-'~~·~· ~..., 1 redccoPated $125 .. Polo. See ft 4 30 k nd • uu :: t.lgr at 21 31 Elden. c. ill. a : or wee e 1 or blk to S Pts., stores, owner OFFICE ·SPACE \VANTED, 54.1·2621, Eyes·wknds 538-5871 term Jll!CUrt~. No previous GERlµN Sbepherd, black&: ?11.1 2-m2 or see Apt. l. 645-0151 or key at 77tl1 El& aales rep, building products 1 ~~~~~!!~~~! I construction" e.'qleritnce is white, female. Lt.ft lower EASTSIDE: Quiet 2 Bdrm. r.fOD&ft.N 2 BR unfum apt. Apt, D. co. needs 250 to SOO sq ft. nr required, You will be given tu!h broken. SCar on side. Ek'<.:, bltns, patio. Adults 13.> Albert Pl $150 mo utill;N;iE1"'•""'2'-=ar=-"'d-up~Jex-·-.,-.,-e Orange Co. A Ir port Resort Property 6205 180 hrs of intensive class. An!wel'S to Daffy, Lie No. only. 361·8 Ogle. &!2-.1298 incl. , No ~ts. 675-6727, dsbwhr, crpt/~. s150' w/phone answering & room and on the joti 1J'alninf 9617, 546-0937 ar '!'681' 2 BR Trailer $12a + util. 546-1968 adull.!i only. 1508 Olive. aecretarial service available. MAMMOTH MT. by Anthony's experts, The NEW Green Sc: h w inn Married cpl. 30 or older. 2 BR. nr. shopping: elec. 536-8523 . Cali D. Moffat 2.13: 866-3122. O O FOR SALE extremely lucrative "Orance •lin&raY at .weatclifl Plaza • 132 \\'. \Vilson. C.t.1. 548-9377 bltru;, drps; w/w cptg. Ga;. CONOOMJNIUr.1 Apt. 3 BR, CHERRY Air-cond offices. L~ur~~ :ind borne, profit/ Co. & Loni Beach-South Bay edReward. ·o-'23' ISNo questions aak.- 1 BR, util paid, heated pool. Adults; no pets. S 12 a . bltns, ind washer, dryer & Mahg sound-proof ""alls, pleasure lnveslrnellt, Split-ten•itorle!S ·art 1tfil available, o;ros.r- Generil 2000 4 llR 2 ba. \1•/w cpts, fncd 1801 V.'hi1tier. Sho1v before 518-63.>7 re.frig. Crpts, drp.!;. Avail acoustic ceilings, e I e v, level 2 Br. "'ith quality Earnings In excess of $35,000 LO$T "ilenry", Terrier IG 1::.=::..:::_ ___ _;;c.c.; yard, lg fan1 s1yle din & kit. 3. ~222 EASTSIDE - 2 BR duplex. J une 1st. $170 mo. 540-2285 balcony. Fron1 SW. Medical craf1 smanship, sleeJ)! 8, the bl year are readily al-Shellie dog. Black wlbrown. ROSSJ\100R _ llrs Alam i!os. con1bo .. lg !iv n1i \V/frplc. Ne\V carpeting _ att garage. LARGE 2 Br.· 1 or 2 iruites: $85. 488 E. 17th St .. at Year round management, tainable, \Vitb Anthony's Vic. 16th St. C.?.1. A1ay itb. 3·.BR, 21~ BA, fur nished or B111·t1 Z shop c e n t c r s · N•)Vport Btlch 4200 2 children OK. ~o dop $125. CHiidren OK. ·~t OK; cpts, Irvine, CM. Owner. 673-6574 recreational complex-sauna, support, eaming11 llhould tn-Ml-4816. unfurn. Pool. Elec gar dr. $250/mo lse. 968-4~11 aft 6 646-8362, 642-0791 d-•. -·••· ~.7637 3345 NEWPORT BLVD. wh.lrlpool, -sWlnimlng pool, crease each year. F« inior-• "---·. "Sy•-,~," blk. • .,,,1 64, .,17 YEARLY rental, Oce. anfront, • .,.. .... , JQ4, llo t \ ~~ ,.,., ""' a ~.,,,.,;-ease. · 'r"VJ 2 BDR.i\t, conver1 den, 2 ba, 2 BDR, ,1,, bit·•·,,,, l \', Ba, Offices sulta.ble tor Com· rec. ball. Close ro lilts, OV-ma n con ac : 11('\vly furnished Z B r , ... UNIVERS white male dt, black col-.. ~ gal'den rooni. clcc kilch. w/sundeck, n1nn ·ied c:ouplt' near OCC. Adults, no pet!, L_agun• llleaCh 570S mercial, Aledlcil, Denial. EIU.()()KJNG POOL. $29,950. AL tar: vie. Lh:Jit. Isle, NB. ~nt1ls to Shirt 200S \Vater soflencr, garage dr ''""50'lg 1 5 Air~nd., c:rpts, elevator Also [or rent. 1127-CI FRANCHISE EXCHANGE · .,., ~-""" only, No children, no pets. .Tt\I"" • A l. • 1617 \\I llJ! ~ Su Reward. ''""""'°' .,.....,,.,.lNG G. 1 h 2 opener, frplc. :10..-2716 s225 mo. 675-t82tl alt 6 pnt. 115().2 BR 2 Ba d. FOR LEASE. near ocean, 1 35c: PER SQ .rr. PROPERTIES WEST cstc. "''· itc 210 wvrw. n· to :o are . , Stu 10. BR, view, large, channing 541-0032 OR 675-2464 10'l8 Bayside Drive Ne~port Be~h. Cal. 642-2713 GOLD Grandtnother's charm ~ Apt. Cd?.1. Pool. Ten· Liguna Niguel 3?07 BAYFRONT -I BR. Yearly Carpets, drapes, garage. apt, single person only. Sl50 =""'""',::...-"'-c....:.:..:c:.:,:_ NeWpOrl Beacll NE\V TO WES'l' CO bracelet with 6 charms. n1&. 6#-0926 IX'f.11 aft.3 !Pase. 714: 6'7J...1~78. 213: TR Adults. Owne\'. 713: 592.-5227 unfurn, available furn. DMELUXEl~oUi~f inl Co.st• 67• •JJO At CAR WASHb AhST * 64J.506'i' * EXEC residence -z Br. 2 7'-4332 esa, """ sq t. Ar cond, ~ u o · rus & 2250 -==~~-,,-2 BR, crpts, drps, encl patio. Referenoes. 494-8392 c ....... •· drns. "'" •761 press. High invest. rel. ~11 10 1 YR old Bluepoint &:mile C«on• dtl M•r Ba . bltn~. d s h 1v hr . ::-A ·1 M 19 1=B \" 18th .,...., "' .... .....-... ..... s v · ~ .:.,._ 0.....1.. !~=:.....------DECORATOR"S PAD. 1 Br. va1 ay . Mr ¥. • REAL ESTATE 50% Fits in most fill, sta-iamcsc. IC ....,... cou;a, 2 BR 2 Ba , Story t.1'J)t/rlrp. Bc2 ••2>5view $300. S!ereo, C. TV. nr bay. Avail 67I>-1821, £73-6261 "'----rol N. B1·1 •"'° 11~· 1!;-,..,~/prid, R. E. Wanted 6l40 lion bays It ama.U bldgs No Hntg Beach. Call 536-8461_ · · •· 836-.')750, ;,.1 -1 l 711. Lst'. S73-~0 -pane e o 1l:e • .,.,,.c,., y 1 ho Will · .. ,l 2ZIO Mo. New carpet5. 2 BDRM unfurn, crpts, new space avail: Owner G42-2809 Selllnn Your Hom•.?? a r. Wash&: wax in '7:; REWARD, I.rtah1'SflUtt ~4 .}~emleaf. 675-6044 Bkr . RENTALS drps, garage. Adults only, Rent•lt 'Wint.cl 5990 ... 90. see. 675-4158 aft 6 pm. puppY, Oehl.ware a: Hunt. "' _A-'p'-tc:•.c· _F..;u.;.r_n..;ls_h_ed ___ c_o_r_on_•_d_•_l_M_•_• __ 42_SO Sl50. ~776 300 Sq. Ft. Office 1. We have over ~ S&Jes-RETIRING-Beauty s a 10 n Dr. H.B. S3&&m or 5Jt>.11+t. Bil.bo1 2300 000 AVAIL -w. • -2 B•·. 1 Bn LOVELY 3 bdr 2 ba tmvn· \VANTED fmmed:.l Br. hsc OOSfA J.IESA 646-2l 30 2 lpeoV ple. h I I o Sale. Been ln same loc for ,...,.. PROM p"· lrom =='-------!General 4 '"' '""6 or ap1; CM or NB area. . e are t c argesl n r. ~ .... 4 °'aR. 2 BA, beach. view, lrg priv sundct'k. Fool. houst'. Newly dtt. pools etc. Unfurn. have sm pet, will· Commercial 6015 ani::e C.OUnty. 13 )Ts, good cUentele. Ada Ne\VPOrt Harbor m. Fouftd j.tay 23-Jun 28, Sls:> 1110. Jun $140 l BH, lower, \V/\V, Close lo bch & shp'g. BeauL $210 Lease. Call 54&-3710 ing 10 paint, •clean-up etc. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. J. \V~ can GUARANTEE to Marie's Beauty Salon, Tues.. ln park in OIM. 613-SlS9 {iJul 12 $185 wk. 57:;..;,ooo cloSC' to oc~a11. BrokC'r. loc.; gar. $200 mo. yr'11 lsc. NE\V ·llL'<ury apts.; l & 2 BR. Will pay to $110 per mo, sell yaur hon1e. :!d, ~· S:,~828 ~~"'r~ BLACK LABRADOR 1 :"~~====7.;;'.1~534-6~~980~~~-~= Adults only. 67~7970 or Adults. No pets. 3 7 8 Can give refs. Ca ll btwn 8-5. FOR LEASE WE SELL A HOME &: ?!ton 543--1740 548-4448 aft. 5:30. Ude Isle 2351 Sl.55. 2 BR 4-plcx W/\V, 833-01TI or 644-3461 Avocado 673--0823; 67"~ 642-8181. Aft 5 548--3(l2j 31.00 sq ft PI'&ie BWg, on EVERY 31 MINUTES Jrtl:;;;l\:::..re;.:;;"''--,,-.-v-•• -L-id-o I ~':.o~~· i;::~~ 0 c: a t i 0 n . Ly~!:r1~~t~ila;:1! ~~~ n~i IT"S ~ach house lime. Big-QUIET lady dealres un1\im ~~ Wvd. 4 double doors. wa· 1 ker & Lee ~~~us,~ED exp~~~ .. """'..:-;;.;;.:c'';:;'-----"""' I Nord. $1500 n10. except . gest selection ever! Sec the apt., non smoking nl.tt'Se w/ Newport/Balboa area. Will FREE' August $2000. Photte ID: they· arc Joo~~g -.DAILY 5 or wk-end. DAILY PILOT Cauified tiic:e car, Will consider 615-&191 494-71&1 eve~. 1682 Edinger train female partner with -• I-Webster 4-(X32{1\ or 271)..4&47 -P,;Iwr~~'~";:"~"::;"'~d. ;"'2;;:·56=7='=..:0:C>:Ol:iA:OR:G,;;E:>o;0=•'=w='="='='=d="°='='·,.!,,"""°"===N;;OW;;::' ==== share. $lOO or le!S. P .O. "Box 1 8424155 or 540-5140 funds le direct activities to = 2'261, N.8 . COMMERCIAL Uit ; ht Open Eves. secure Investment 635-7470 Basic Boatl"I Cl•tHI G.n.r.I 4000General 4000 Gentrll 4000 time ottered. 705 E. Balboa Huntington Beath 2400 ...;;.:;::::.;::.. ____ ..;.:.;c.:.. __________________ IUNFURN ~ Co1ta Melltl Blvd-(Next to Balboa HAVE Clll!h do\vn pa,)1ucnt &Mobile3!5-6261 Offered to the.pU;blic or ~ewport atta. 3 BDRM. 'Ibeater.) CaU 64J..2'lll3 ,!pl• Triplex or more iD "BEA="'lll'Y='""s'¥>=P.-.'L<'"ase--,.,.,.."th by the BalbO~ ,POW•1 BR Condominium, Nicely Musi have fenced yard. Orange Co. Pyramid Ex-Option lo bu.Y-Fully. equip-er ScluadroD> staiting t n. Enclosed fiatio. C./Ji\1-0 kl'' -J)'-C·bQ.• .;lc.,250-~$2'15.'c.·--c.· -'"""-'--....;;~r lnclulfrlel ltentil 6090" chartgOl'l! 646-261.I pea.,.t bedroout ~t 2 7 p;M. Monday Jwl $150 * 96'1-a"JiS \:)~ l.'Q'CJ ).'I). ~ pq•;:> IVANT2br, unf\Jmo'putly BUSIN&S$..... ... .... 'IJl<e new .. B•r. 2,NewpoitHa;rbor Solv •• Simplf' Scrambled Word Puzzle for a C"uc~1 turn.,Coata_ Mesa. l.fea. ),UD FOR la.le lcuna Nl&Ud. 642-6115 y bt Cl b 720 W t mmer Rentals ~910 P or lest. Lady 1r, one child. ob San DieroliAY &t eroWn FINANCIAL ac u ' . es BEA!ll'Y SALON, Udo..... Bay Ave • Newpo.+' LIDO ISLE l ba.yfron1 location. J.'urn. BR. ;+ de.n home; plr.-r & Ip. J ufl4! I lo Aug , Jll;t, .000. Oc:cupMC)' can be CX· nded. ker fiia-2000 PRIVATE BEACH lh swim & boat. La~c 2 , big patio, ~hotu. y & Aucust, 646-25-n or ••tAL) HovMI Unfurniahecl ntrtl 3000 BEACON BAY. nns, communtty beach, , lennit court, $(iG!mo. john mocnab l\EALT.Y.COMPANJI R2'823l Sl3.1. 2 BR, IW b81 woboullf.. \'t'/W, RIO, \ldre11 O,K , Br<1kl!r 0 R:.orrono• te"en or the /--..,,,...;--,__,,....-., four scrambled WOfd1 b• low lo form four 1i111pl. words. --6'6-400.1 -+ Valley, ·~~Jll, • lur.-OppM'tunJtiet-~300 ~Jona established..-Must-lltll-Beach.-:.;1n-r o l 1 ... i!. e LANDLORDS e industrial units. Delta. Elec-be1t aUer. 'OWneffbmcet. :C-1 I IKA·YCEL '1'11'11 IKEDAI I ' I' I I IHOCAC I • I .j I Definmon of o violent ,;.,.. . • • • dent riot-rouser: "'He ccmiu --------~a -in his pentil box." li<OYJEC I S•llJo hy.:...;l"'' .... l' ..... "l''""'l-..--1 ~ !!!:i!~~1 Et f9 r:~: NUMBIRED I' I' I' I' I~ 1· I' I' c I -- ., ~~iS:if"' '°'I I t1 I 1. I I I I ·""'-~~ ...... SCRAM·LETs ANSWER IN . CLASSIFICATION 7500 FREE RENTAL SERVICE bie. o.,.. 831-1400. """· . FRIGIDAIRE ~mt cli18S. Fo~ addlllonall Broker 534-6982 •~ information p h o n e >f.l SPACES wo. 2500, OOOJ JE:r ACTIDN Bui: Wt-6JOS 675-0487 or 673-11155. i ONE BDRM Unfurn ApL 1or aq fl, new bldg. lOc sq It. Fri&ldaire 18 mJn. ~·~ IS LICENSED ' empk)ytd lad)' up to complbte In June. Locan St. the fas~t in \be Industry. HAVE flS,000 to lnvest In ac-E:J SUD/mo, 642-<nl6 c. M. 646-0&Sl 30 f)iJidalreJ do lht work tiW! or Inactive: o .C ., s:n1r~ n!'~~~ WANTED: untum. 3-4 BR 1 .4000..,c.~SQ..,c."'rr=":..,-w~b~ldl~. -1U' of 40, 30 mln. washers. Find bilslnells. Background In Camino~ San 0 hoU&t, apt or mndm. BluUs. Baker 6 Harbor. Al.so 5000 out haw ea.ry ft Is to own teachirtt. e: 1 e c tr, on l e a -492-9136. 10 AM-io PM 1 Up to $.150. 675-7854 !'ft ft nr Bristol 6 Baker. a paying laundry. managemerit I: uJe!I, Write SPECIAL S2 ltEADINO ..... Garden Grove, Santa Ana, O.Uy Pilot Bok M 326: 1-.;;c,==c,:;c..;;;;:=.;:;;,~ I WANTED: 3 bdrm tiome, 540-4429 · Tuatin, 0r&nae: Anaheim I 1==="'"'"'"'"'"'=· AttrKtlYJI 'IJcptrt ""1" """' vtc .. yr1y leaae. I 'ro""°"R-,.1ca:..,.-.. ---~1nd...,..,,,~,r1""'.i Co1'n·O· .. ....,C ly ANTED.: ~ 11).whod YOUNC WOMAN • Unlurn. 6Q...81 639, lftGTI dwnp tn.IC'k 1n plOd coo-'=~J.~~L ~T 1 Equipment, Inc. dllion. prtfcrably 1'-ilh job. ~cer will teach l'OU aJl 2334'.4 W. VtJe.ncia * 131-175.1 * llt:est attpt. Can Ardtll Fut , 2\3: 591-4MI ~·10 PM I PLEASANT -In pri Lott 6100 .. ...,. 114, 525-7833 HAVE 110,000 lo """'" ... ro•= ~ -~·-·. = CANOY pl t vest 1n o:t. blls.lness. Mite ... ~ . .._.... .... ,._,. ...,.."' home, kltf!h pr!'v. Phone In , .. CUNA _ ........... view lot!, WJ> Y rou e, part ot New Jn.,,_? Join a..., room. &4&-.1393 .-....,.,..~ full t:hM, dA¥$/iews, ReflD Dally Pilot Box )t-324 lo nm 4 ..i ...... undtr;rou.nd 6t0itfe1t. pvt. le rollect money from COi'd ,,.....1Un1 Income "~!!'! 6000 16,900 a 19,200. '94-4!U -· Dlapenam In Coota Mo>tey. te I.Mn ~ 1.,.,=,.,•""7_,_:;,.:;;;::.:•::,,..=!:ll 3 ADJ. lofl: room fOr 11 M~ 4 vie. No stll~ "NE\V 2nd LOANS ~ ~~t ~ .. 4 UNrT _,i, 3 ltloeka-lrom· uni ta. 333 E. %111 SL, Coo -SUlO..l'Otal c:ub..nq. Send ~. ·-~ -. "P.". 9 .....,_."""--.= f beach. l BR, larp dfon., Me!la. Owner of9'-00'n eve. "*1nf, addre.u • ~ to: .. ruuu:= 2nds ToP ~ tor ·"'!' ~ ~ ~ - newly decorated. 1000 1q. ft. BUSIESJ' marketpla.ce tn Routt Dtpt .. ~.o. ~ .e ir•• ,...,,1• lkr BUSlEST m~~ pa-unil Income $400 ptr -town. The DAILY pn.ar Anaheim 92803 ~,,..... • toiinf. Tbc DAILY mo. 403-7th St .• H.B. SJ6. aa.mtled nc&n. S a v e WANTED: off.We liquor DIAL diJ;'c<:t ~ a.rte Quaified_ teC'&n. la 2510 Arent" money, time ' eUort ~ lktnse, OnwJe cou.nty. , Y,OW' ad, then alt baC'k., and l'DON!f, ti.ms 4 .ai:.rt. Lili Wblta elephants! DlmiNJJne no.r!ll C.O; MU:US lialtA to the phone rlnal -llllO'rf'l l l · ;J Roomo for Roni ' 5'95 • . ., -~--·~-. --·-........ • • I / r ........ -.. --... ·~·-· -----..... 1 • • ----~~~-~~-~~~~~~~~-.~-.~.~~.~~-~~~~==-.~~.~.,--,.-~-~-.,,,..--,...-~,,,,--~,-~,..--·.-,.,.,.....,..~.,...-~_.,..--~ ..... .,,.~ •• ._ ........... ,. r . . . . ...... .-. ' . • • • • . " I ~ I ~ ffDAl.Y moT Wtd .... "11114,.lWI ;;W;;td~n .... ~yC.:, lli:::_Y ,::14::., .:;lM::.:... __ =========:::l• ~ll!IWlra,.::;;;;:.,;Dln;llC!TOll;n;,_.,Y..-l"'l"IM""'C"'lr-blmlOlllCTOl,,,.;myr-i-,,JOiSB> & IMPLOYMINT JOBS A IMPLSYMENT JOIS I EMPLOYMINT JOIS •& EMPLOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMlHl LEGAL !ICl'llO&· -' ~· ~-·••'rw ...;......,..,.. Hele Wonted, Mon 7200 "•'• w-.1 .... Min 'lOO H1lp'W1ntod, -7200 Holp Wanted, -7200 Holp Wanttd, Mon 7200 ....... '5IO ,........ • ..,. WAHTID, 5...LESMEN , ; EXPLORER SUPRDIE ~ Re-p~_snt a Dt 'Lowett U fO&l are a pi l&leaman, * , * Fl"EMA•N ,..... -.. ,_inu, <lly. """'1 ... ' ....... 'hliP lriiC .... -" ~ lllu! -J. c. p,..,., Co. . II\ . "" MO'ORHOME CORP. .._ Tom. 541-~ 5'~ S.-!9,._..... .... pie, lh~ ....... may Ile >'aahl<>n l9land , I' .Tun W..alli~· ... worth $500, to it~OIXI. to you. N~Yport Bu.ch DISNEY,LA< ND ,,_,_... 6SIO PAil<TING, ~ II ,.. ~ "'~:=~~'::. = , , . I !NOIVlllU.U.. _.,. lb--Lie " -.. ,,.... .rile (Wbo -"Pf"-I NEWS •• c:bud c.re by ~ ed. Rlfl fMm. tG2'51 ter MC'Urity'' to • mink' , i _.I'; lloe-k!nd•rc.....,, NEAT,• up. Palnc.r, no c;oat). We deal In helping SACAMLESEMRAEN SIASONAL OPENING WITH POSSIBILITY i.a-No ln!Anl" -~ Olllqo •tudent other peopl" This ~ 001 . OF PART TIME PERMANENCY. RISPoNsmu: Hiib Scboo1 Low prices!~ 54M5d pots&: pans, Uk iNiuiance-, Rl!Cent success!ul expe~nce EXPERIENCE WITH CITY OR COMPANY ;tr1 'fMl'ltl B e ·by ll t t I a I PAINTING A maintenance, eacycloptdiu or d.oor-to. In retail sales prefen-ed, Full 'PlltE DIPAR-TMENT ESSENTIAL ... N"'1'0l't lUfebts are a •• lntttior I ext er 10 r • door tale& ol any kind, A lime employment, excellent -Reasonable ...... MS-3115 -tlon will .. held ~· amngemenl, outot-CALL 10 AM to 4 PM ,;=::;::::::;.~~~--~ l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r;-;;;::::;:~::;;:..,:;-;;:; ~ mqrninc ?4y 16th at • ....., Will bal!ysit by the week. ~ING"':':·~ ...: 10:00 and ••••• Friday at. Ing benefit~ Chance lo..... Monday "'"' Friday y,. lllmiob tnnoponat.ioo. ...,.n • ,..._., at 4:3; in the San Ucipa,. in growth of thia 1714) 533· •456 Ext, 678 Call 6(2..~407 Horman. &f2..0U2 ;Juan Rm. ~raton Beach r1ew, expandln& ·Jjne. .., MATURE lady .,ru alt days. e JNT' ~ EXT, ".ANY SIZE nm:-mµ Ocean Ave., Hunt. ews A: wknda. Prefer NB or JOB. Xtnt wort. ftte. free lbctOll Beach. Attend either. CM &l'ft. ~ .:'19:13 eat. JIM 642-48&9. Sf6.37e 'Briqi ycur wile iLyou wish. Apply in person, 10 A.M, to 9 P.N, Mooday thnl F'rld1tY An equal opportunity employ.,-. •• • I or 2 SM .chldm or ln!an~ Pl 1. R I ••-day er nitr. CM area, my 1st1r ,, .,. r --RETIRE,D MAN . J. C. PENN£Y CO. Holp W1ntocl •. Mon· 1'200 Holp W•ni.d. Mon 7200 home. £t5..2515 e p AT c H PLASTERING. ~ as part time mana.aer CHILD Care tn my tw:mle, v\C All types. Free ~te. ol mott deluxe sell-service · etach Blvd a: w&mer, as. Call _... .... laundry in Calif. (carpeted, «tm~CIJ'!! ... 7-3W. .,.... 1 color TV, etc> He will work. . . . l'lumM"' ~ from,:~'.,'!;. noo~ lhruk ':r' 24 F11hl0;n Island An equal opportllnity employer * l~MIMftry,etc.-. ,·...,.iv..n..ta ,..._'ani. evel) .. ,. .... .,,eac w~. e * 6560 ~~" ._.-Af""~ must be sober • reliable • !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I * J. C. Penney Co. FasbioJl I.slam Newport Beach Has ope~ for 1----~---~·=·;;.;; .. Jio jOb·a ama1l ~ likeable, have experience in BASTANCHURY- Stin..D, Re;;;;&:l) fl.pitr • * ~ • ' meeting the public & llve BOTl1LE WATER ro. AUTOMOTIVE * Brldc. block, coneret'•• PWMBING REPAIR close to the store. Very, very Established franchise rOutea SERVICE MAN crpntry, no job loo nnatL DRAIN CLEANJNG modest salary, See the store available in Long Beach & Recent experience Jn muf· Uc Ouitr. 96U96 ~2381 or Ml)..1211 before callin& at Mesa North Orange Co. Beach Area, ners, shocks, tire' balancing, shopping center, Baker at Short paid training period: lube and oil change. Carpenferl"I 6590 Rooflnt 6950 Fairview, CM. Then call 2-6 Wks. Guaranteed min. • ' l:;~:.:;~.:..:.;~---"'"-''I~:=:::::!!!.-----=== John Briscoe between 5 ' monthly earnings~ .• att. Excellent working conditions. CARPENTRY UCENSED Roofinc Contr. , 5:30 pm, 644-1307. route assignment. .XI n I competitiw wage.s, , out- MJNOR REPAIRS. No .Job w1ll trade roofin& work for I!!!!!!~~!!!!!~!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!! growth asslgruhe nl. Good standing benefits including Too Small. Cabinet tD Pl'> beat. auto er ! 642...a5lO MECHANIC credit. Valid dtiven1 license. Hospitalization a nd profit apa &: o t be r eabhletl. Age 21-38. Prefer family sharing, S4S-8175, ll no answer ieave 1s.~owl~::,;;"'~-----'-"°-' We need 2 men with exper. msg at 646-a312. H. O. in fleet truck repair, gas Anderson e Dttlsmaldnc . Almn&Uolll &: dieael. DIESEL A MUST. Custom De&i,ns Must have own band tools, MASTER carpenter, $4 per *6*-844&* 10 """ e..,..._rience, wWina to hour. Jtemcdellog·RePlb'l.1...,,.,,......,c.--~,--;:-,. , •• ·~ -~ 642-60 or 536-3900 Alfwtr.tlons--+G--5145 work any shill. References "~AIRS, ALTERATIONS Neat,. accurate, 20 yn. exp. required. $135. Week to start. ~ Call Mr, Latcome, 545-TI17 CABINETS, Any -job. U•._._.._ ,_ 25yn.exper. ~,;;,,..=-='-.;...:''-----~-~TRUCK DRIVERS & 1• HELPERS One drivtt wilh REPAIR, Partitions, Small C%YKOSKI'S 0.t. Uphol. cla.u I license & diesel exp. Remodel, etc. Nlte or ~. European CraftmwWd.p -bu! Call KEN 540-4619 100~ fin! &e.l45f We would prtfer some con- lDl ·Newport Bt. C.M. struction experience, or will men. FOR INTERVIEW Call 525-1163 TOOL & DIE MAKERS Excellent working condl· lions, overtime and 1ringe bene.llts. APPLY IN PERSON Apply in person 10 A.M. to 9 P .M. Monday thru Saturday J. (, PENNEY CO, * 24 Fashion l1land An equal opportunity employer * STOCK MAN FULL TIME • 40 HR. WK. 8 TO 5, 5 DAYS Excellent Employee Benefits APPLY Personnel Office ' Third Floor Tift BROADWAY NEWPORT BEACH 47 Courts of Fashion FAS1110N ISLAND Newport Beach An Equal Oppor\UQity En1ploycr PLASTICS MOLDING MACHINE OPERATORS NEEDS * ELECTRICIANS * MIL ii-MEN * CARPENTERS * CABINET MAKERS *WELDERS * GENERAL HELP * LINOLEUM MEN *CARPET MEN Overtime · Doy Sh ift Excellent I ri ng e benefits, Jile inaurance, paid bolitJm, etc. APPLY IN PERSON 3021 Nowpnrl Blvd. Costa MeJa, Calif. *Busboy Apply In Person REUBEN'S COCO'S 15SS W. Ad1m• Costa Mesa STOCK CLER=K=s~ $450. Per mQJllh to start. No exper:ienee needed. Monday thru Friday. Chance t.o ad. vance. Write: Box M·506 The Daily Pilot. KITCHEN HELP - Dishwasher. 6 days, 7 llf?\-5 pm. 'Hi Time Deli, 548:--9314, 495 E. 17th St, C.M. See Terry. WANTED 1 gas station mechanic, day shift. Salary plus comm. 1900 Newport Blvd, c.~1. C C cMe 6'00 train. Contact Mr. McKay, ement, on JOBS & EMPLO')'MENT 1343 Logan Av., Costa Mesa. THE HARTLEY CO. Due to growth 'in this area, Perm. position. Xl nt. DRILL PRESS 1987 Placentlo, C.M. a large nationally · known working cond's. Overtime OPERATORS e NO job loo an&ll, I do -, ...._ 7020 549-l<Y.15 them all! Side w a 1 Jc s, Jol:t W• ' --r WANTED: Service Sta. Att. dtvwys, cone aaw etc. IF You need a sharp E)C. Local references & local 6t2-8514 ECl1I1VE SECRETARY to resident only. 7 to 3 and 3 to • CONCRETE work all summer 1 u I J t i me 11 shifts open. Must be neat types. Pool ~ A cua1mD. ttlpODSibiUty on a PART and b o n d a b 1 e • App: A Div. or Eversharp Schick company has & all fringe benefits. Im· Mech. I electronic assembler , mediate openings on 2nd trainees Pb· 646-9811 JONE'S TIRE SERVICE SALES OPENINGS : & 3rd shifts, Experienced • . ls expanding and requires ·preferred. No phone calls BOX BOY, week-day morn- EXPERIENCED ' after 5 PM. ings, up to 40 hrs. Gd. rates Call stB-1.324 TIME bui1. 1M-C994 aft 6 Ba)'lhott Richti'ld aN> W. Cement Work---all kinds COMPANION For elder, or Coast Hwy, N.B, * Retail Salesmen The individuals we want .&. benefits. Richard's Lido * Tire Servicemen must be_ age. 24 or over, with CAL~ORNIA Market 3433 Via Lido, N.B. * Front End and some college or sales back- und Th t .. ln1'ectlon Moh:linn YARD Salesman • Over 21. * Brake Mechanics gro • ey mus ma· ., Free Estimate will cook dlnnm. References BOYS 10 -14 * fi36.-03'74 * exchanged. 482-lMS CUrier Routes Open * CONCRETE work, bonded ,PRACTJCAL NURSE... Laguna Be~r $4. Laauna Salary plu!! bonus and com· lure and articulate and Costa ::rias Ave~ :;se pei;.1e~':~c~~;ft.e; ~-paid benefits. 0,.,_ work well with people. We ,,._..~ .. 11-·-~Ing ··•·-• ·pl An .....,ual opportuni"-' tals 2167' Harbor, CM. .t lie. Concrete sawin&. ~van. day Cir nlte. DAILY Plt.m Phillips Q!ment 548-6380 Local ref. .~ 6424321 portunlty for advancement. Ou.er a S...u• ...._.,, us --. v App]y: 2049 Harbor Blvd., incentives as earned ... a 2--employer * KNOWLEDGABLE person c.r.1. year professionally super--· Apprentice in Hi-Fi' component!. Sales e CUS"roM PATIOS e LADY will do housecleaning I-==,...:~,.,.,==~ oot:ICl'eie sawing & removal 5 bra per day. Good ret " GENERAL MAOilNIST -------~--r vised training program, trainee. Call Mr. Van * SECURITY * CrolUl life insurance , and Linotyp.e Machinist betwn. 2-4, 646-8897 State Lic.•MJ..1010 dependable. 548-0396 Class A, jobbing machine ahop. . Cape En&ineering, 27694 Camino Capistrano, Laguna. Niguel. 831-ll&t WANT college boy o r pemioner tor motel night cleric in exchange :for apL OFFICER hospitalization plus lifeti me The DAILY PILOT has an e Assemblers For Patrol Duty income after 20 years -for opening fol' a young man e Night Shift Forem•n $100. A Week + the right candidate. ivith mechanical background. 642-6830 Qwr 40 yrs. "Perm, Radio MU5t be willing to 1vork 1-~RE=w=EF~~B~AR=TEN==o~ER~ '620 Domootlc Holp Contrecton 71135 ADDmONS.REPAIRS REMODELING Designing I: PlannlnC Kitchem-Batbs, etc. 0..... Allen Byland Agency Empoyer Pays Fee l~B E. J6tb, SA 5t7-o395 Cb1bese Uve-lnl. O:iHrlul Permanent. Exporlencod car provided. ~on smoker, Write P.O. ::X 1850 njgbt&. 35 hour week, excel. Huntington Harbour Beach drinker. Uniform all'nce. ~.~~ ~~~ lent company benefits such a b 4121 w A HB 548-9755 Apply: 4 PM • S PM, Rm. ....... ... ornia """"" as pald vacations, sick leave, u amer ve., Lic'd Ir. Bonded. ~ eat. A I: B CONSTRUCTION ll22 Paularino,. CM FarEaitA&encY - ' •545-49U * l=======IHolp W•-· Mon 7200 Drofllng s.rvico 6637 Eleclronlc Project • DESIGN Dndtille, electro ~K:::;.~:,; ...... Engineers Wanted HARDWARE Man for retail sales. Rion Hardware, 1024 Irvine, Newport Be a c h • 642-1133 uk for Phil. <A05na, 325 N. Broadway, Santa Equai Opportunity Employer paid group insurance, credit . _ M &:. F. union, etc. *SALESMEN* 330 W. Bay St.. C.M, 642-4321, ext 3IO, tPart Tunel Larry Miller, 7 AM-3 PM \Vith car. Leads furnished. UNUSUAL MAN, steady, part time job Work any four hours and BOOKKEEPER • COST tor reliable adult Xlnt LA average SlOO. per week & CLERK. Experienced, for Time1 route open Corona up, call art. s PM for int OppOrlUn"ily expanding plastic manutac-del Mar. Top pay, 962-4633 544-0594 lurer. Duties include: labor FRY COOK: G c.a v e yard di!ltribution & cost analysis, Jbift. Start ;t.00 week. 2 DRIU. PRESS OPERATOR.. The Independent Order o( some posting, no tax work, GircMnlnt 66IO yean exper. nee. Apply -In Lite, close tolerance work. Foresters have opened a thru trial balance. May • ____ ..;.. _____ w are a small compPy (t()Q w .. ,. c Small, clean shop. new oUice in Orange Coun. traib, for purchasing assis- •• e ' .!penon::::::;,,562:;;;;;,·;:~;;"';::·~·M::::., -DfSC INSTRUMENTS INC G . people), located in Orange1· PAINT ••au ly, Require intelligent man tant. rowth position . AWN BR.OS. G1rdener1 Students wotkiD& way thru colle1e. Exp. Lie. Reuorlablel Phone 646-4203 or 546-2Sll County near Newport Beach. ITil"WI 7701 S. Halladay 25 -59. College not nee. Prefer energetic, ambitious Our electronic project en. Experienced preferred, Kenn San la Ana 549-0345 essary, s h 0 u 1 d have ex-person seeking career in CiDeen are given tun re-Rima Hardware; Contact Service Station Mgr perience In meeting public, management slaU. Apply in aponslbility and support. We l "D~l;.ck"'W~ol~•~f•~l~F,"546-"':~70!0~-c: l-Int&: Beach area, Substan-Oign~ied life time ~lt:lon. person, 1916 Placentia Ave., have many cballencinc pro. PLUMBER; Capable, ag-tial salary + profit shar-Earnmg commences unmed.. 1 _c~o-•t~a~M='~"'~·~==~- grams that m111t be started srenive, p 1 u m bin r & ing. Call 842-4906, iately, Should be in execess MOTOR HOME immediately, Should have at heating repair, Comm. & of $250 \\'eekly. A bl /8 'Id SERV IC E STA TION ssem ers UI ers ANTHONY'S least 3 )'J"I. experience tn benefits. 494-7525 I _ __, trol SALESMAN. Apply: 3100 E. Tol•phone belw"n 10 am • 2 Immediate openings for m~ ~--,·n SoNI deslgnin&' IOI c .,,... con ENTERPn'01NG Young IM lib ·e ' lumb. .... .--ce eircutta or audio recording ~ S2 C~11t Hwy. Corona de ar, pm, Mon. thru lri.: 10 am. w expen nee 1n p 646-1941 ircult man, part time per hr. Cahf. 1 pm Sa .. ·~da" for appo;,., ing, electrical, walls, cabin. The be.• -ta --rel and pll.yback c· 1• * 545-1686 * '"' 3 "''"' •ts and finish • or we will .. ........, """ ...., Kennel man, over 35. Musi ment. Monthly Malntena.noe Phone Ernie F1ecky, Person-CONCRETE or block mason. Jive in Laguna Beach, Apply 492-8700 534-1701 = ~.M: ~~~.so;~ B~."u~-plngl nel Manaatt for detail!. Exp necessary. AIM> exp'd in person, SPCA, 20612 La-,.,,.,..,...,.,..,...,..,.,., I Canyon Drive, Costa Mesa I ~--;;:!""'O'~;;..,·•c:..;~=c....-1 D A Y S: (TI4J 642-2427. 1 .;';;:abore~;:•:.,· ;:,54:;:!hl;iiil07~, -,,--, guna Canyon Road. I! 642-975S e EXPER. J Ppan•se NIGHTS: (n4) 542-1304. MECHANICS-Outboard YOUNG MAN interested in Clerk Typist ::,;""""=----- Gardeoer Complete lel'Vtoe. C •mR Call 644-4545 btwn 9-5 learning trade. Must have Able to type 60+ and handle ASSISTANT Free estimate. Call St0-13.12 " OFFSET PRINTER gd. ref's. Gd. pay & hen's phones. Like people and this Part Time Eves. Cot A D.:lge Lawn OPPORTUNITY! Full or part time. Steady emplmt. 646-7711 job is yours. Salary to Must be dependable, lS.2.5, Maintenaoce, lJcenaed Joln tod•-fastest O'O'W1n& Call 714: 642-4567 Hixson ll.1eta.I Finishing $476.67, Employer will pay sharp in mind & appearance, 54Ml(l8J~2310 aft 4 pro1..;'M:utuai Fund salet .-fee. Beach area. + many area resident 6 mo's., have AL'S Garden1na Set v i c e No~ neceau'1-i;H;;•l;p;;W;;;;•;n;ttd;;;;,;;Mon;;;;;;7;;2;;00:;:H:•:'";;;;W;;•;;n;;l;ed;,;"";;:~"~7:2;;00;;I more jobs. Alm tee jobs, auto, and money motivated. Lawn main-. garden. Wo1nin· lllllor-limo Op<m on Salurdoy 910 12,30 $3.50 PER .HR. In&" clw> upo. 646-31129. Mutvol Fund Advi...., IEC MERCHANTS Call"'"" depl. "47-77112 5 pm CLEAN-UP Spocialilti Mow-Inc. PERSONNEL Jo 8 pm, Mon. 1hru Fri, .... odgin&, oc!d l6b1. NptB.l<mW.,lclltt64Ul22 ELECTRONIC Agency MEN lo wock full time in R.ea.aonable. SCS-6955 S.A. 1212 N. BtoadwtJr 204.3 Westclilf Drive rental yard. Must be neat JAPANESE Gardener, o:im.. ___ _;;54~7~-lm='----Corner 17th & Irvine -in appearance, no long halr, pkte yard HIVkle, fr'9l!t * 64.>2770 _ 54>56S5 and have neat handwriting. ..uma..._SD-1333 HOTEL DOORMAN TECHNICIAN *SNACK BAR ~;~.;::;'.;.iw~.~~ .. ';;';: MOW A Weed. Labor by Experiera nect1JUy MANAGER preferred. $475 mo, 6 days. -Coliego s ........ 'Reu. Daya. 675-1185 Apply 1930 Newport, Cosla APPLY IN PERSON OVer 21, experienced. Mesa. Help W1ntecl, Women EXPERIENCED TELLER 7400 UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK #6 Monarch Bay Pl1u South Lagun1 49~1273 Equal opportunity employer EXPERrENCED Part Time TELLER UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 222 Oce1n Ave. Laguna Beach 494-6546 Equal opportunity emplayer Radio· Telephone Dispatch Girl 25' or over. Must know local area. Apply In peraon. YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E, 16th St. Costa Mesa DEHTAl ASSISTANT Excellent position. Must have front desk experience, Co II 546-5613 Houll"I 6730 GENERAL HAULING .. & CLEANUP THE NEWPORTER INN For our OceanicS Division. Benefits. Salary open FRY COOK • reUd shift, VN ·-' ' ~ • E:xperie,.._~, Conva1eL 11117 Jamboree Road $12 per )oad. ~ aft. 3 A wkenda. Ne"WpOl'I. Beach, ClllL. • HAULING, General, Top, Temporary ..Employmeot ~ •. :;c:r.:., ~ " UIGENTlY llfDED HAULING, p aint l nc .... _ odd jobs. You name tt .. we do it! ~ • LABORERS 1n1-.. Mon thrv Fri., 8..$ P .M. YAJW/pr, ~0..p. "'"'°"" INTIRIM tna, ivy~ dirt, tractor back Per..,..I Servlee boo, -· ~45 145 E. ITU.. CM 042-1523 Cl-Up anol Haullna "° ... """· 6'&"528 flbtrglm Molders H-IMnl"' 6735 1 '-'====;:..-..;;.;.;,;IElt~rienetd only, top pay, CARPET& W1ndowt. flrs. i.rae custom work. ""' l1a ar Cumc:'J. Xint Wiiiard -Worl<1 wortt Reaal Refs. 5t8-4l1l 129& Baker St.. CM ·1~J...,•• ..... 11 ..... or1 ..... a1_,..-.... ~-~_m_90_1 ARC WELDERS SPARKLE JIFllion.i Sir¥. Wt -2 all -wt'Jd. wmcto..... ftlld,. c • •· c I , erw. MUii. hivt s6Ui!i\iil i: comt. clie&Dup. nee .. fabric experience and know -Ch•Hengl"t 111lgnm·ent for S C u-s A- tralned~tronlc technjcian to perform m•fntena • and operation of speci11i1ed teleme equipment on field locatlon in H•wai , Require1 experlenc1 In th1 above •re1, and accredited ellilctronics education and/ or mlllt1ry tr•ining in electronics APPLY 708 E. Vermont, Anaheim, Calif. OR CALL ( 213) MA b.9422 (714) 722 -2811 INTERSTATE ELECTRONICS CORPORATION APPLY 9 to S P.M. HUNTINGTON SEA CLIFF Country Club 3000 Palm Ave •• H.B. Ancient Mariner 18 or over. e."}X'rienoed.. cent Hospital, Costa Mesa. Start $2.00 hr. No phone Excellent worki ng eon- 11lease. Apply in person. ditions. 3-ll pm shift. Call Cottage CoUee Shop. ~ 642-0387 for appt. \V, 19th St. Costa ~lesa _. ShlAllt FRIENDLY COM· SPEC"tA&-MACHINE PANY, YOUNG MAN, light OPERATOR • Top ~. nlfg, $2.10 start, reg. in-Steady. Garment Mt Ir. creases. medical &: other "'42-~;2666==.------­ benellt plans.. Kl ~7101 EXPERIENCED 01a1nkk SERVICE man, delivery, assistant fol' gene.rat pn.c- $120 base salary, a\.-erage" Uee office, Laguna Beach, 5 Now Hlrint $132 a fter training period at daya/wk. 494--9737 SLIO. Hard \\>ork. Scrvisoft, BABYSmER. T u e s d a ,y NIGHT DISHWASHER 506 31st Si.; Newport Beach. lhro•gb SaturdlJ'. 1'3°'10:80 · E XPERIENCEO flbet'glas l>M. One chtld, 1 ~ar old. Call 646-0201 bonders &; boat earpenten.1~'=97=·1:,:,800'1~----­ Accountants Crodlt Mone,.,. Adminlttrltlve TmNS LOOA1. JOBS CALL BOB, 54fl, 7796 ARGUS AGENCIES 1869 C Newpor1 Blvd., C.P.f. V11J.A ROMA ftto.staUl'IUlt P/tfme dishwasher wantOO, evenings.~ Cail MI 6-4929 Islander Yachts, 171h 4 MEDICAL secretary, op. PIAcentia, Costa Mesa. tbalmologi!:t, requirtl ex- • ors~nVASILER. KrrCHEN per. in irunirance, billirta HELPER. Full t.ltoo days, t'!tc. Prefl'f over 30. 645--0tliO 7-5, Sc"" Ten')' 495 E. J7th. S fl IP P JNG/INVENTORY- C.~I. 54&-9314 $80, wk. Steady, N.B. Gar. PART TlME HELP. 3 nite:1: p _m_en_t_M_l"ltl''-·-64_'-__ a __ _ Fri & Sat 6-12. Sun 3'12. Hi DENTAL ASSISTANT Time Dcll. 543-9314. 495 E . Nt\\'JIOrt Beach 646-Mll 17th St .. C.f\1., ste ~rry. e fil&s Part Time. $2.00 af~er 2 pm. --low·-nld!IW. Start A SUBSIDIARY OF EXP'O S.rvlco Slation man. wUPLE S'pec1allltrw m oi. $142. wk. "Automatic'' Sprinkle r Corp. of Am•ric• llourty \\'Qt' + commis~lon. ALLEN BROS. per hour to tta.rf. Over 21. GARDENERS S'ruDENTS Call 5tlk5"7G working way thru colle:e. PART TIME Gcrwtral Ottlct. ~p. ·Lie. ReA'! &16--4203 Good with r 11 u r e 11 • \Vh1te t\e-tlf'Wltsf Dtm!jt·Hne Sh:lrlhand btJpfut. 675-SS33 tloet • apartmeats. dt.1 or Call Mr. ~. 5«5-ntt I AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Ovtrtimt Pfl.Y after 40 hr. --l Diii -b ft.ESULTS l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~l:"°~E~',~C...~~· H~">~· ~N!!R·c__ ' l 6 4 2 -5 6 7 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 - 5 6 1 : r LEGAL NOTICE ·-ClillTIPICATE OP •Utllt .. FICTITIOUt. NMU TM undltnlll*I dlllts cwllty M t. Wl- ducl1119 • bvllnt•l ., Tmt ..,.... Sl!YJolrt: Circle, ,...,,,,., C.llfontl•. ~ ._ fie> tl!IOllS flrrn -.. "'MXUltATI! JANITOll.IAL SERVICE" n ll'lll ..... llrm 11 (-•ec:I el "* .........,. _..., ,.,,,,.. ,..,,,. in tull .... .a.a" ....... 11 •s fallo¥t's: Ltovi! J, 0-. 15* lt•I QIVPt, 'ltlveri l<M, C•llf9t"'lll•. D•led &prll 29, lff,, LIM J. 0-tl ..... C.llfOl"fti.. ~ CWtltv: Ort ,_.tr ft. lM, .._... -. • . ......,. ,.,,blk In ~ ,_. .. Id S,.,lw, --.Sr •-rtd li.w.t J. °"""" ~ ..... MU*'-------· Kf'lbH "" the wllhlll '-"'-... 1dnowi.clted he tlleWMod tlle - COFFICIAL $E.f.LI - J-'I E. Drib Not.,-, Public • C.rlforllt. PrlnclNI OtrQ 111 0.-.nM Covnty My awnmlulOl'I llUIM Jun& Jl, lt7' "ubllS!Wil Or•llM C-' D.-11y Pl .... APl'll !JI Ind Me<f 1, l4 JI, lW .,.... '· LEGAL NCYrICE l ! NOTICe OP fNTl'NTIOM TO l!NOA•I! IN THe SALi CN1 , AL.COMOLIC ••VIU.lt I . ,,,., NOTICI OP OlllCK.UTION OF ,.AltTNaasHIP P'ublk not!~ 11 he .. by 1IY11t h t STANLEY M. SUltLOW, ...... M>1 G RUDO, holr.lofor1 dol119 Min.a ~ 1111 flClltlOVl firm n.rne •M 1trk o1 SASSY LA$SY, •I 2'111 H•rbcw IMt., Clh of CO$ll Mft•, COlllll'f of Or•-· $!_,. of C1lllol'tll1, did 011 tht l:tlh d•r of Mir, 1f6t, 11'1' mutual ~I. dluotw !ht "411d '•rtner•lll~ •rid l'trmlrt1t. flltlr ni.tlon~ 11 "'lntrl thtrtln. ' kid bvslna.1 Iii 1111 ft.rhm wm Ill -· dudlCl to,-STANLEY M. SU&LOW, Wfl& Wiii NY •!'IC dlw.t"" •II lilbllltlm •1111 d.tts of the firm •rid ~ •" ""°""' N Ylbl9 to IM firm, Furt~r l'IOtk • Is "'""1 •'-fhllt tf11 Ufldt~l•Md wUI "" 119 thee 41111e, frt1t1 !tilt daY Oii fOr •llY -'>!IN"°"' il'lal!Ttd llV 1011 G, JIUOO lfi 1111 n-n Mmt Of' In lllt n•IM of "'-firm. CfA TED-A't C61111-Mlo; C•ltfillmlll, ·tllQ l!ffl day of ,,,.,. '"'· STANLEY 1' SUltlOW "ubll1..... Of"lllM CM:t 0.11)' Plljl!, M1y 14. ltilt ,..,.. LEGAL N<mCE - PENETRATION N••rly •"•'Y•ft• t•ttlt lh• OAILY rlLOT, ll.111•lowt1 I ft ..... ,., •• ,., .... '•"· 1... OJ ... ,. c..11. --·~·'------------· ........... ________ ---:;,. -\... --' ------~--·---------------------·---- l . • ' • . ' i I I f i ! I f ! ' ! ' I ' ' • i l I I 1 .. • • ' , ' I ' ' l l I • ' ' i l • • • • • • . • • . • • . ' '1 ' I i i l • . fl I ! : Wed.,.!day, M'1 14, 1969 Wtdntsda11 May 14, ltff l. Joas l EMP[OYMINTJOBS .. EMPEOYME a IMl'LOYMINT JOIS a IMPLOYMI T JOIS a IMPLOYMINT ~ a IMl'LOYMINT JOIS I IMPLO >ALI D rRAOI MCllCNA .. Dll Help Wonted Help Wonted ' 7400 Holp..!:,nlod Help Wonlod , 'Holp Wonlod Help Wonted 7400 w-Je.. -· w-. 7500 MERCHANDIS& l'OR SALi AND TllAlll i Woman 7400 Women W• 7400 Wimon 7400 w-j ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;~ 7400 Fumltvno IOOOFumlture IOlt !· . .. l KEYPUNCH OPERATORS PERSONNEL CLERK DISNEYLAND * J.C.-Oo. *~ ::::;w . ~- . STE~O DISNEYLAND lwtht Mlnvf•du,.,..1 I · DISNEYLAND GOOD TYPING SKILLS AN~ PUILIC CONTACT, AVAILABLE FOR SATURDAY WORK. 0000 TYPING AND SHORTHAND, I Y O'PICI IXPIR!INCE ESSINTIAL PART TIME SHOE SALES PEOPLE '69 Showroom Sarnplet ""'----~ 8' Wood carved arm dl•an, lg. man 1 chair EXl'ERIENCED WITH 029 AND 059 !SSENTIAL. CALL 10 AM to 4 PM Monday thru Friday (7141 533-4456 Ext. 671 CALL 10 AM to 4 PM Monday tllru Friday Rtoen.t 1UCCfflf\IJ o:perlt~ tn tlttlna and ttlllna ot child. rens ahoea. or loYe 1eol 5 Pc OcUgOD"'dark oat din let w/bl&ck or avi>c1do !ramed chairs; 8 Po BR set &-dr Mr. le. Mrs. dresser, lg mJ«or, 2 j commode'!. decor11ive headboard In SpaDllb Olk design with matching boa sprinp, m1t-I CALL 10 AM to 4 PM Mondciy thrv Friday (7141 533-4456 Ext. 671 An equ1I opportunity •mplo.,.,. 141 533-4456 Ext. 671 An .,...1 opportunity employ.,.. Excellent worldnc cond.ltionl, treas & frame. ., 1 competitive wqea, outatand. ltMts Saki Individually ~ kw .,. ... ., lncludhw ..._ Shop Aniund -Before t°" buy -USI An 9e1u•I opportunity employer. pllpl!Jation and profit ,..,_ VALUE SIOfS.95 -FUL PRICE SS29.9l q. or le""' .. 16w as $4:66 per -k ------~-------------- 7400 u.e Our Store Charge Plan or Bank l'inancl.a / .Help Wonted Help Won1ed W 7•~ Women 7400 HelpWenlod w-n Help Wontod 7400 Women ADVERTISING 7400 li:;-------1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;I Apply In P"'0 " No Fancy Front -BUT Quality Valueo 1na1-..1 Otftcti 10 A.M. to 9 P.l'it. Setretaries * "c .... _ eo. * Mond')' '""' .. ,_, l ·i.-----n ___ ..... _ .;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; MISS EXEC AGEllCY Secretary/ Bookkeeper Typists = =. J. c. WY co. • ' t • f ilnewpmt . personnel agency 833 DOVER DR IVE NEWPORT BEACH 642"870 1 relory to $520 EPF• ol'k for Dept Head of es- tablished local firn1 . Top con1pany benefits, sh 80, ! ,,... so. Jr Socty lo $455 EPF l·I Sharp girl wllh oUlgokw ~r. ........ Sh. 811, lype 55. • Acctg Clk to $400 APF 1 10-:key by lotifh. U&ht typ,lnc, "&'OOd figure aptitude. Oppor. ,tu.nit; Wt. rlebt ski to learn odvanct. , , Clk T¥pltllo $450 APF ~ • ::r'ype 60 ··accurately, mini- • ,mum 2 yn work experience. : euant phone per.ionality. ! /C Bkkpr to $600 APF Obie entry, billing on NCR. Excellent opportunity and bene(ita. Repro Typist to $500 EPF V2 Ty p e technical manuals, ready packaging for printer i & do ink headings. . Exec Sec to $600 EPF (' . arketln1 background with , · "kno~iedge of computers. ' - • EPF, emploY,er p•y• '" ' • APP, appllc•nt poys fee • CRF, comp.eny reimburH1 fff JOIN US TODAY ~ Join the ~ &rOUP of f women \\'ho wol'lc now and I ·then on temporaey jobs. A • day, a w!ek or lonaer. ! ~ t IMMEDIATE t OPENINGS FOR f • TYPISTS -i. • SECRETARIES •· • KEYPUNCH ! . OPERA TORS i -• DEMONSTRATORS I, ,e LEGAL I c SECRETARIES i:. lu.ttrA~-l!ie· lnternational Temporary Help Service ASSEMILER TRAINEES lor SUaMINIATURE ASSEMBLY OPERATIONS Must have IOOd ef.etiabt and .dnger dexterlt,, ~ a valid C.lllomia drivers Ji. cense and be able to pass a rigid physical ex4Ill. Please appJ¥ in person lo HUCiHES NEWPORT'-BEACH 500 Superior Avenue Newport Bet.ch, calif. ExecuUve ~ta.ry . . S600 SectJ'/Etcrow •.•••••••• l:i75 Ole Mcr/1kill1 •••••••• $530 Secrelary_/Lesal .••••••• = Sect,y/Coiitracta ••• , •• .$500 Secretary/Sales ..•••• lo $500 SecreWy/Enar ...... $500 Secretary/R.E, ....... , $500 Exec Sectttary •••••• $500Up Secty!Mrkll ........ l500up Sookkce~r/P.A ••.•... $475 Girl Friday • • • • . • . • lo $450 Stct;y/Jite 1bthd ...... $4S3 Receptlonbt • . • .. •• • • • $425 auk 'l)'p1st • • • • • • • • • • $400 New Aectl/SAL •• , . , • $400 Genl Ofc/Recpt • • .. • . S'IOO Order Oe9k • .. • • • • • to $350 E:scrow Trainee • • • • • • $350 Medi.cal Secretary ......... . P.T. Genl omce .... S2.sfhr Equal opportunity employer 410 W. Coast Hl&hway hf & F Newport Beach 646-3939 Trmpora>y _Employmeol * TELETYPE URGENTLY NEEDfD.. OPERATOR • Sr. Typists Work when & where you wantl INnRlM PWONNEI. SERVKE 445 E. 17th St. Two yea!"! expcricntt, prlv1te l{1 n e teletype. Knowledge of PBX mul- tiple board. Swing shift. COLLINS RADIO CO. RHponalble, lop level position for lhorp, tolce- chorp girl. Must hne excelltnt 1icHl1 Incl. lhorthon4; hondlo Ht. bltkpg; bllllng. Under 30. Coll Boiboro. 1n41 642-3910. NURSE AIDE If you are intl!l'l!sted In: * Progreuive patient ~ * Service education * Excell, worktn& C:Oftd't. Call Orange CountJn larpst extended care hoiipital., ~50 ALL oi'flCI SKILLS EARN MORE WITH US ChlmP1Qne !et11porary. Help ANAHEIM nJ W. Le Polmo NIWPORT BEACH 3'41 Birch Street SANTA ANA 1616-F, E. 'ourth 540-7:145 Has openlnp for 24 F•1hlon Island An equal opportwlit,y employer PART TIME * PBX/RECEPTIONIST l!!!'""'"""""""""""""'*"'iJOBS I EMPLOYMINt ;~rnltvre IOOO Some experience on a •lnrle Production helpers Sc><:,!hOo!!!-!l!!":!l!t;lllt~ru!!!d~l!!o:!!n..!7'.!600~1 Fiffi>iiTiru::~jJ-;;;i; poiltlon 550 Cord preferred. to work In menu---· FURNITURE .. All newly Mornln& and &ft,,rnooD factur in" depirt· .. ; upholatered. Sofas, hide-a· acheduJes. • The "ewport beds, chain, love aeata. an, ment, small elec.. School of Business tiqucs, dining tab 1 e , Excellent working i:orx.UUon·s, compe.titlve Wille•, outstand. tronlc •Slembly. FEATURES: Polaroid camera. 5'6-Q95T, • Electric Typewriters 3281 Colorado Ln, CM. in&: benelita including hos. PREVIOUS ASSEMBLY OR pltallz.a.tkiD and profit shar· SOLDERING EXPERIENCE · PREFERRED .... Apply in penon 10 .Ut to 9 Pl\f Monday lhro Saturday J. C. PB1NEY CO. MACHINISTS RECj>UIRED • General M•chinlst • Dlctatlnr equipment COMPLETE llving room .et; • Bniah up Gregg Sh. couch, coUee table, chair, • Modem OUice procedure end tables " walnut detk, e Letter writing skills ~~ Your goals can be achiev· ed in a minimum o1 3 FOR Sale: Pi1no, weeks. maximwn 6 dishwasher, TV. hair p~s weeks. Ask for Nona & misc furniture. ~ Hofiman at 642-3870 for 2 GOLD textured naueab.Yde full particulars. dlvans, like new, $35 .. eech. * CONV ALESCE!l.'T AIDE. Assist lady during recupera. An Equa..I Opportunity tion. Live in 5 days. To $300 ___ Em~pl_o~y-"---I Tl-IE NEWPORT C4ll 962-0091 • Chucker Oper•tor e Miii Operator 24 f•shion lsl•nd SCHOOL OF BUSINESS SOFA &. Chair, new, newr mo. •HOUSEKEEPER -COM· P.ANION tor older couple .. Live in, long or ahort term. Apply llOMEMAKERS 547-6681 FASTIDIOUS SEAMSTRESS Sought by )DWlg proettaift sallmaker in N. B. area. Top waga pakJ for 8peed·li: accuracy, Prevous ex- perience prelerred. Apply Rick Taylor, Cout Catamaran Sails. tl7 W. 17th St., C.~1. 66-02!0 Tha Pirates' Inn An equal opportunity Must be 111e tC1 close tolcr-833 Dover Dr., Newport Bch. wied. ?.take oller. 548-«125 emploYtr ance stainless slffl. or 962.-Jll59 eve11 only. CITY OF * *Excellent trina:e benent1, 2 ACCREDITED awim in-.=,::;:,;:;:,::=2==:1 NEWPORT BEACH !!!!!!!.,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I atructon will teach Jeuons Office Furniture I010 CALL 642-2400 for 5 yr olds & up starting: • STENO CLERK II NEW ACCOUNTS uk lor Jim Hyamo, May 19tb al Poli.ad" Ttn-STE INWAY Plano, (L11•I) Servonlc Division 01 nls Club. cau 540-1626 or Roeewood, Squa.re-. S ~111 $416. $5tl per Month. OFFICER GULTON INDUSTRIES 646-1222! Pl&yable. $500 or Oller. ($510.$620 ,.....,.mtnffcl INCORPORATED Educational VacaUon ·'itll 0"":=7;:4;:31;;· ===== July l, lMf) SI.vines and Loan experienee 1644 Whittler Ave. graders ... Sr C\thens Olli.. Office Equlprne,nt IOI l preJm<ed, Contact Mrs. Cost.a Mesa, Callf. coat 10 Jeuon typlna: Sehl. STENO CLERK I Bray tor appointment. Fm"'1 opportunity employer Trial Les&0n. 113 Del Mar ADDRESSOGRAPH (Per-I OHi.. MARINER SAVINGS 1~c •. M •.• 54S-.,."59==,...=-IMod. ""'· grapbolype Mod. $152. $S4t Por Month. AND LOAN * COOKS * MERCHANDISE fOR 350. Frameo ~ o:ab. nwioo ($510-$620 recommended 642-SALE AND TRADE July 1, 1969 1---------Store Esulpmont I012 Furniture vvvu Cost• MIH, Celif, 642·7523 EXPERIENCED and T Dell-Dairy cut. 1,.,00 J.mbo R d Both ""'"°"' -SEAMSTRESSES NON-EXPERIENCED SPANISH Rolurntd """' 1100. "" Mam SI .. Balboa '" Oii Needs attractive girl, mU!l H.S. It'd. 2 yrs, of 1ten-poaltions open 1.todel Hotnes on uie al * 61~2>40 * Newport Be1ch be n. Experience not nece~ Oll'Phil! and aenera.I le• th&D wholesale! Group ======°"'= Interviewing· sary. Apply in person ait!r clerical experience, 100 Exp'd power machine oper· Apply in person ini:ludff bn.utlful 96 '' G1r1ge Sile - Mon. thru Fri. Equal opportunity employer 5 PM. w.p.m. 1horthand. 50 alol"ll to srw naugahyde tw>at quilled 9Dfa It Jove seat. 8. a.m. to S p.m. * * WAITRESS * w.p.m. typina:. Apply be-cushions It canvau pro: REUBEN'S 3 Spenlab, oU deoarator NEW tape reoorder, IOlld F.qual opportunity employer MAIDS 61'5-2C61 fore 5 p.m. Ma.v 16, U69 duets. Top wqes, pd boll· iftblel, nrq: or tab~-lampt, ~state record player, oec. ASSEMBLER to the Ptnc>Mel Ofllce, dlYJ, v1catlont, ins, Xlnt wall pla.cque, kiJv, quee.n. tables, pole lamp, carpet, TRAINEES Ni&ht &hilt XLNT OS ON 3300 Newp:rt. Blvd., New· working condiUont. APPb COCO'S or run me bedJ'oom suite Thlnr-Maker wJ KOOP • Experience nectUl.r)' P ITI port Beach _ f13..f.633, Jack c.oie Co., 1763 P2aoeo. comp!ete incl boor spr1np. molda, HO raclna 1et. BoY• Pol:yoptics, a rapidly growing F/C Bookkeeper, fee paid. · CM 2461 mattress lintru A boudoir & womeD'• clothes, a 3-16. company with manufactures Apply ln pet'IOll to NJ;uel Ptt10nnel Ageney, "MALi:-N:;;;;;;:;-e;.lcli~;: l•ii"iiaiiAiiveii.'iiiiii';;i .... ;iiiiiii;;;;;;;i51 1555 W. Adams lamPI. .'....,. .. 1.h oak , Pc Mi 1 c ch 1 1 rs. 17g6 flberoptlcs, has s e v e r a I Mlnu' "'""" 26081 Geny Road 1 ... -..... SMALL Newport Beach Pitta. Cosio u-10 ·~-w ~-•-·•-A CM openinp for a as e m b I e r ·~ Niguel 831·147{, 9 tO ;---Corp bu immedlai! openinr I•=•<-'-.. ... ~-;;--..=: dlnlna: aet priced elsewhere . e .. uuu .. u::r ve.. . =~n:~ \~~fit~~ THE ::e ~;!..'T=; T -.11 J SCRAM-LETS ~fta~Y s::S: do";;, ~~;£Ki~~~~ ~~!:: ducts, prtrnarlly ·for. co~ NEWPORTER INN' *SPARE TIME mu at have broad .J: -'. NSW $4.99 per .... m ' out of aquarium, beds, furnitiare, dis "buti Ex Neetl 2 ladies lot special bacQround In secretarlal A "-" A ERS state credit •OK. Wtll bicycles, many other items. ~~,:,~ r oppo~~niti:~1• f 0 ; 1107 Jamboree Road work. 12 Houra weekly, $55. reneral oUlce procedures. r.n HINDUS. ,.~A · 1epan.te for quick ale. 20th Cor Lake & Ac a c I a Ne11.'PQrt Beach, Calif. per wk. Call Mn:. Nelsc:in ._..___ _,_ In .. _,_ 4"' c...,.5,11-K:: Cent...... Furniture, 9 7 7 2 <downtown), Hunt Sch. creative and productive in----'---'-'-="'--~""' expe1·..,nce INUlli· .. ,,.. i-· • c;;:;;·,......., Lackey -BAked -CoAcb -.... r dlvtduals. Apply at at 6'12-8560 be~n 2 and 4 keepins desired. Forward r.._ 46.llJI Joclrey _ BLACKJACK Garden Grove BI v d ., MANY Bargains !ncludln& POLYOPJ'ICS INC. • WAITRESS e for permnal interview. resume to: 866 W. 16tb st.. Detlnltlon ol a violent stu.. Garden Grove Dt.ib' 10.9, Lapidary. May 17 I: 18th. 1518 E. Camegle, S.A. JAMAICA INN H 0 TEL Newport Beacb or call Pleue Call For dent riot-~: "He carrlea Sat 1(1.6, Sun 1J.5 Came Bids on entire stock Friday. ~ual op_portunlty employer. needt 2 more maida, full or 540-0Ul tor appolnbMnt. An Appointment. a BLACKJACK tn his pencil In OJ' call (714) 500-5240 1589 San Bernardino Pl, Apply in person part tim•. Ago 25 or over. Exec Secretory *SALESLADIES l>ox." RETURNED FROM eo.ia Meoa. 54&-3993 PROOF OPERATOR EXPERIENCED United Collfornl1 Bank Apply '" ..,.., :1101 E. SIOO. $10I Full """-~ time -•t1ons1-.N"U"R"S"E"S'"A=1D"E"'S.---MODEL HOME ALL Hou .. bold """I""""' Cooast Hwy., Conlna del Mar ~ 1ocaJ Co. Our avall&btef~r ~need And SAVE $l'l5 • Spanish Din'g Tools, car parts, gla.uware, MALLli'S api:iey tte l'limbuntd. aalealadiei to work 1n LANZ ORDERLIES Rm; octagon tbl, 4 side chrs Chriltmu tree. 101B w. Vie- l SI E. P•clfic Cst Hwy Wig&: Beauty Salon hu .-Superior Afency NE \V FASHION ISLAND Experienced or Trainees 7 + 2 host chrs, buffet 4 toria, CM Ne.wport le•ch eftl.ngs fer Mudcwi.lt A/or Eltahlbbed 19t& Sl'ORE, OPENING JUNE AM to 3:30 PM and 11:00 china $495. SAVE $l00-King ~LIV~. °'RM.,-,-,..,.,.,,-.dinin&"' "·':'."::rm.::-,.=~ GIRL FRID Ay Pedicurist, auarantee A/or 1157 Harbor Bl, O>lta Mesa 1SI'. cau co 11 e ct (213) PM to 7:30 AM. aiz.e BR, Incl triple dreuer, rollaway bed. 570 Joann SI., " commissK>n, 548-Mt& · Call 11rst ICZ-UU IU-1325 or .end resume to PARK LIDO mimlr, hdboard, 2 commod-Apt. A., Costa Mesa Typing, fllina:, rood phone llOUSEKEEPER. live • in; e TllAiNEF.S e 6150 Wilahlre Blvd., Los An-Convalescent Centr:r ei, mattress, box springs 1 RfUBEN E •. Uf voice. Good wilh figures, ,,_ frame $295. SAVE $100.Sofa, Ap II 1100 Steady. Opportunity for ad-motherless home, be&eb WAIT'RES93 OR geles, ...... ur. !0>4ll 466 Fla11Chlp, N.B. Jove seat, chair, hex com-1 :.;!:!p=o;.;n°"-'-'---- ' · .jj25 ~facArthur Blvd. V" ........ mool. Com....,..., ......... area, 2 teenage ,chldm. CAR HOSTESSES ORDER TAKERS, women-642-81W4 mode ,. •ommode NEW F 1 Id Ir Watch for our billboards. 5-10-4424 ""'"'" ,........ .....,,... WDman w/ 1 small child Must bfll DBal, attra.cUve and ..i .. 11 __ •• d ve • · • r I a e Anaheim l?M w. Lincoln !its including health lnsur. • .. v v .. r ..... ays ore n· a' b1"L1"t1'es m1tch'g coif~ !bl. fl98, dishwashers. special trac,tl 1 Santa Ana Ph. 540.0325 ance, pajd vacations, etc. OK. Pttr u/4S. 5(2...'7223 have happy dlspoclUon. Full lnp, part or full tirM. R &:. E FtJRNITIJRE, 208 N. surpl1111, $148. De 11 v ere d ' C'.oata h1csa 270CI Harbor Equal opportunity employer Write ~ P-485 Dally Pilot, • Seatnstrtu needed to l9W orCoupartt H time •. TIMl~ ... ~· Pleuant work, no ex. an Li miteb Mai.II, S.A. 0 pen Sun. W/&erVice or awapped out j,, An Equal Opportunity Newport Beach. in cheertu.I SWTOUndin&s In wy B.-auiUI', perlence necesaary. Salary ~1311 Sl73. Aft 5 pm 646--1588 ,.. E 1 EXPERIENCED •••rn COVENTRY ••• LagunaBoach.Mustbt!aJI N.B. $1.65 per l>our. Call Kl ageTlC'\/ 8. COUCH •-• 1 C bl ti j mp oyer ~ •1-U 7 l'"' ~r 4 " , mau;uing ove AMANA o rn n a on 01"'"•--for Ml ., part and accuni.te and ace 18 to G~, 19-25, lo work in boat -.--. uc ore pm. Qwlly Po.tlltlona for • STENOGRAPHER "'5" seat. Barker Bros. table, 6 refrigerator • f r e e a e r. 1 '1 L•-e ESCROW e time sales. Mio. ag• U. S5. 494-8719 upbollltry .Mp. WW tr&Ln. $ WOMEN·LADIES S Qualified Appllcarits "hn. v•·-•I--bed com-"'--'.•~. r~ -nd. •~., • •• Jlllll is an excellent op. A pl In -Johartltn 6 ~oo " ~....,~ ""' r '"'"' u""' vvuu .. ,.. ..,.. SECRETARY Plcaaan! work, no inve11t, no MR DONUT needs · women P >' ..--• Parenti In1tltute bas open-'IOO E. 17th St., Suite 22-4 plcte; ,_ g drawer solid .,.o """'7 aft 6 portunlty 'vilh a amall, d 11 . F 1 ·-"-~ •; Nlghl Christen.en, 191 W. 16th Sl, ln"s for 3. No exp nee. Work Costa Me1a 642-1470 "• ~ rapidly growlnk flberoptici e verie1. or ntc.avn:'Y .,,....... • no eXJI nee. s. nrovl. ... wood dresser, lrg mirror; m4:". co. in their marketing UNITED CALIFORNIA call M0-0614/ 837-4149/ Apply in pert0n 135 E. 17th. N.B. Comer of Mo a" 5 days 9:30 to 1:30. Must * DRIVERS * matching 3 drawer chest. 17 CU F"1' Copper t one Rem.aerator Freezer. $11)(1. Xlnt cond. 536-9964 aft 6 BANK 847-8950 C.t.t. 16th. have car &. p I ea 1 an I Dbl bed ~t & dre•••r. dept. This opportunity will \ --& M E I , ' be partlculat•ly desirable to HO us E KEEPER/ com· DENTAL Asst, part time. * WAITRISSIS * personality. 540-4654 pm ~,O xper ence Maple cocktail & end tbsl. pm. l those who enjoy variety In 3141 E. Co.st Hwy panlon. Share 1ovely home Exper ch skte. Wed Aftnoon, Must be 2L Apply to 1 pm only. N I CoJor TV, Ir&: irreg, shape 1-'""---~~-=- I . M~·ca1 ... ---~ ---ry ff lbl All . • G.E. w .. ·-r. "-condition, ~ . ; heir jobs. Good education Corona ftt Mar w/employed lady. Room " EYe a: Sal 613-9169 1tter 6 tn perwn 'C\lJ ~ ... tant -·-co ee . nice nr u.i"" l ;and excellent clerical~ 1 board In exchanp far lite p.m. IALIOA PAVILION Mature-Pedi1tric ex· P.1ust have clean Calilomla reuonab!e. DIS-A Garden $50. G.E. Electric dryer, ' ·-a mu•t ExC'l!ll ad· 6 ~9240 bo"·-keepi .... "'A",.. • ., .fC» Main, Balboa perieDC'I! prtfured, Front l ~ ttcord, Ap~ Ln, CM ott E. 21.tt., 646-3344 needs lbermOltat $10 • l ....... • . ~ ..... .....,.......... BABYSrrTER 7:30 am-4:30 N ck oWce. Send resume: YELLOW CAB CO. 644-4265 l vancmienl opportUnlly. Ap-Eq I rtwrlt)' plO)'U BUl!:t')' l&les, older woman pm, S dQ"t m.y home C.M. PART time Real Eltalt OUR Son's been transfet"ftd • .,,:.,:,;_;:.:;;..-~-,---,,- ' • ply at u• oppo em preferred. See "Mr, RJch-1 Pl"NChler, 54&-0981 Salea. new homel. M\llt bt = ~etc to Dail)' Pilot U&iec.~ i:::· must aell hit nearly new G!~_;m '.".u:r:,~ tlr'Ubtt, xlnt ;~ POLYOPI'lCS INC. ardson, Trotttr'a Bakery, MAIO over -, -'-• IHBicenwd. 847-2:111. 961-3454. M ll dlterTanean furniture; ~~ •J 1!15E.Carne1ie * -•r A •·· •-o. ""~ .. u,_. \VAITRESSESWantedaU AVONCALLINOI includeal'BOtilowaeat. •147-8115* ' Sant.a Ana. OT~ ~ ornt ve., .._. ""' time, 6 du/wk, Lai Belt . -L.• .. -Ex . t H cl BABYs~·H·~ U In molel, ~15 hr.-......... BARMAID.~attrle ......... pe.nence no pe.}d.S50Q.eUS2SO.Alaoldn1 Hamilton G11 Dryer : 1 opportunl~ enlployer, •• ,....,., -r ve •L __,_.... ini llcirt, PPb' 1n Je"o n e c e 11 a r y , Apply at Reprettnt world'• leadiJie size BR H:t. c:offtt A end $75. 549-Mil l P.ART WM office girl, INSPECT"RESS ~~;;..~mother. • CASl-lIER * ,,:, F«:a_! Room, 16M Belle.my'• Restaurant, 1400 cosmetic company in your tbles, larnpa. dinette le ''5 Nor•• Wtsher $25. bookkeeplng exp. 2-3 days (Experience necessary) P~.64~ ........ wuh. Newport 81\ld., Colta Jk-. PacWc Cout H 1 r b w a Y, neta"bborhood, You can Hm Mfdll. .cbe.in. Cll 826--9416 After •6 pm, 962-56'16 : ' per ~:eek. Knowledge of real BEA.trrlCIAN w/clientele, ...,..., 1"VUn.1T£R,.._ GliiL ,, I l.b N.B. whJle. you leam! 540-70U or 6 PC Walnut BR set S8!i Dec I;==='===== I f: -emte-&:. ·.t>ldg r+.u t In e Apply in penon to-very pod let.lion-& shop-irJ. L ""A D"Y-----w&1rt ell for _....... MEDICAL ASSISTANT ~ "chair $15. Couch $25. 10'4" ll20 ~ .pre:fC!lftd but not nee. Con-lillmi Kin& Lagunt. Beach. 494-9975 bwiework' 1 or 2 day week alfm'l.Uon npfrilnce ·tor {Ba.ck otnoe), •ble to type, MANAGER; db, api., Cotta couch $195. 70" coUee table: Sewing Machlnet t ,_ Houn 9 to S Can EXPERIENCED ,., .... -.. ,..,,_ --·, 0 ·1s. _, ·-. cleanlnl "8DCIY· lS313 Bola pl I 11~ • I ••• Co"' f bl SlO 2 lawn • 1 .. j "~~"rinto !\Ill ttm11' job. THE -&-ciiftei't aniitahl ~ ;;~~~ •'"~ 45 -Ch~ H.B. .,;-~n:= ~ ::ce c: ::i:i:.~ e m.m-~ S::a.1 B~h d1n'1 rm 1:~=.1~~: '1 1..=S38-::..:2S:::79"cc...,..,"°"'=,,.--NEWPORTER INN Reva'• F&ahkn. tm-6'191 day or nllbt lhlft. S AL~ SW 0 MAN • El~ than experience. Write D&I· Callfonlil. Manqcment aet, Sl'l(I, 64)...1819 ton holes, designs etc .. $5.Z ,.. RN OR l YN White Eleph&Jlts T * l4Ul30 * perlenctd In ready to ~ ly Pflot Box M 412. 826-o9940 (213) 114-IIIWJ Fumlhlrl!' returned from dis-mo. or $36.00 cuh. MM.llt ; •1 • · 1107 Jamboree Road . ~~-:;' ttme. 'SANDER, part time, ex-e TEACHERS Sm a I I play thxHos, model homt'S. KENMORE Sewirtr machine, . 1 . ~-nent .;.i ....... lK>Ul"I 4 Newport Beach, C8llt Heit Wented Help WantM --· · ,_... perltnced. Newport Bet.cb Private Jr Hlt;h-1-ll&:h Sehl. _dqra.lan cancellation. c"';:;;;blnet."°";';;";""':;$50;;.·;"'=-'°" ,,..,,,..... _, SECRE"TARY For Laguna w..,,... 7400 Women 7• EXP~CED part ,l,11n: aru. Older ttachers lftfcmd. ~A Medl!ttrlnean e:lc ,. :· ..,,,., "°"'"''· DoclOr'• olf. HW• law omct. _.. ~ ~ lull Uma. -Box M !SM !>_ally Pilot . RD FURNITURE Mutlc1I llllt. f12S · let, Wntmirister. CU b.o.'"1 or probate e X per I e. n c e -•11 Experienced lnltallmtnt : DtoJ<or. ml3'1 • prelemd but r.ol "'IU!ttd. GROUP INS. URAN CE s=ARY I Boolda!epor, loan cl rkA platlonn •-ncl .. -:;.;,; & IM4 NtWport Blvd., CM DRUMS, SparldeBlue. Sllnc· 1 Good akllla. salary ~ 'd bmDd la ~ e ....,. every night tU 9 erl&nd Complete : l-~.~W~A~l~T~R~E~S~S~E~S~ mellilll'lte with ability, age ::- 1 • ' ~::n.i ~ = Women 7550 ,_,,..w_td~··c..s.,..c.,,..•,..Slm...,..'.,.til,._'-. """==· *=-=""'=·=*==;! I WANTl!D • 25 lo <O. Ttlepbone UJ..<!ISO CLERK w"1ffiiil , .....,, In...... u.,, Slyllsl ..,, ........ clJoq table,""' • : ,1 f £}..'PERIENCEO for appt. MES4 LAN I: s I 1703 ,.... Men, Wem. 7500 '"' dawn. SoUd mapM dlnine Planet & °'P• • tao J' Contact Mr. or itrt. Zimmer. • NEED •~· 11 -time I ..,~.,.Aft ~ i...., table w/4 leaves, Brown pa.rt-ttme ,"";per I e n c e dpwr ......... "9. OOUPLES • not set rich plan With followlrw nMded try nauaah)ode couch. White owl WE'RE badt iD our new • Fly':!,.'ifler ca•h"" A ~. for DISNEYLAND 1i01JibCiiPi!i Gond but mmetlme oludy A "' Busy Ntw)1oC1 Shop, •oWz· w~ktr """"" table A •!Oft. Blr Ctltbn.tlon • 1111 croovY Laguna DH.ch atoft. cook. AD lhHI. ltiatlve equala money le trw • l'Omplelely ftdecorat. chllr. Fttnch Provlnclal s.Je . • ,: ~~-MEJ•~pplew..,.,./ r• ff'o•r· Se-e P.fn. Thorpe, 2 21 * ~ * securlty. &M-Ol96 1rw. ----11.11.11.1••5 double bed. a2213 a.osEOUTt ~~rn..._ ~ """"'. ~ ~l"Olldway PITJKE nWd. 5 dQI wt. OOUNTER HELP pmn 36 rrft11P9 _. -m a aa.u._ ·····• ..-• SUporvtaa I JR. ll l.1.,,o"°",-.,.7---.,.--..,...,. ACCURATE TYPING, ABLE TO PROCllS -'""' In -UCI hr...._~--,.:..,. TAr. HAVE-IO slUdt or pbont CLOSEOl1fof BaldWln .,.. ~ chlldren. my homt ll).3c:)O, PLAY Job w I p o ~ 11b1 e AND PAY CLAIMS. ..,._ Bhd. OL u...,.•· .....,...., School•tftttrvctl 7 dtlkl with chain. S10. In-ace pianos at •v11Wt to SM1 I· '"Mon.f'rl. Mb& dt1 Mir adV1'ntu.re for lnexperit.fteed BOX. 2S58 Hatbor, c . . on cludn .. " chair. bar • a.osEOUT ol 1988 ()rpm I " ..... --a!ttr 6 """'"" to writtr Eu1 CALL 10 AM to 4 .. M Ea>'~~-,,,..1,311 PM VOICE prtpanllon lor 4 s-!40, Lee -SJll, " ....... lo .......... a ,, PM Wllik>n. t2l 81h i' Pf.can Av. ..,,......., HAIR S'l'YUSf -with 1ome popular or~dultcal atnclrw. 54()..<f6M No down Ole, 5 ... yn to P1bf: W':f ;wn=. 0':.i z~·~~~ ~~:"1• ff.a. (71~-4~ :.~71 iiolii...:U'P:' ~-In ' ~= :.ir. =Call = ~-~ ~.~~~. ~~~~::.h ~~~~~ = SUn only. ~Ii:,,_ V11J"(k' Coun· BEAUTY OPERATOR flet'd. dt,yt:, prlvalt room , T.V. 2 WANTED: Gt.lley Cook, tot PIANO 1.tuQns: The. vtry $250. Aft 5 or wkndl. 141~ 11~ OllGAH 1 lry Club, '49-0371, no stu-ed. apply in penOn. Call tor An equal opportunity empl-r chtldftn. N.B. ~ , part-time, on •port &bJ.nr befit '" inrtnlctJqna. Call Need a Gard«11lall&Ja t Spinet model. .. -dtnt.a. app1. 54s-cmi9 11!!!!! _______ !!!!!! ______ ' -!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! J DAn.Y Plibi' WANT ADS! bcl.t. 968-3220 844-331 Find It with a want adl 96U6JI fH.O:J ' • • ..... \ .............................................................................................. ..,..., .......... ...,....._.._....,..:>.....::..-:~...,~...,""'·~~""L•'-"•'•'-"~-'l.~•~·,_...• ••c"'-"'U....._,LA_... .. ._.., .......... ~.:.....~~J... WedMldoJ, lilt 16.1969 W"'-. 1111 ).4.1969 • . . ~ :m;c...,.,..-..,HJr.HA;n;i\C1iff'-W MliRC:HA.NDISI 'Oil ·TllANS~JlTATIOll 1Uljll'ORTif.T.10N , TUNSPOllTATION TRANSPOltf~Tl,ol! ' rAANSPOiTATioN I TRANS~ORTA~ ._. SALi.AND TtADI SALi AND TRAD! SALE AND T1IADW Ill-ls 9010 j~po ·1 / 951~ ~n 9520 CMopon 9520 lml"'rta.• A•-9600 lmporttd Autos f6~, ~ ' • I • -. • o.,... "'° Mi•19ll•-. , -~ .... ~ . ~ _!SK bull~·~ Vlijafi ........ :wA•••• e ~ QIEV ll T _ •• <>', DATSUN FCRIARI 'fiiAlllll I OllOAMS ' ' • • ., n alllooo "°' • " -Rlal>w(JI en.i.;;. $wll ~ ' .._ .. dbl new I: med --~RIC ,q. ' s .,, AQt' 'j • ~ ~ ....-.: ~ •'• camper. Cood eoad.. ,69 DATSUN. "'~ .Fff.ldl o Gru<ll OolDe> StiM.. * * ~, ..... do......., om. :iaf' 119 ....,,. lk # 1*Je,. ...WT Big -._ 9' hp °""""""' Newport !.,.... .. l,io. 0. UES --lofo -.. -. l'ltllit.jjfe br'Wlmlo .... FORD /impet' Von. ' dlo, qt c.uJiry't ""1 autJool, OllGANVAL • flllDAY-Jitl l'~ llqoot, dlolq[ hbl•. wattSlm-SS.. lit.0 '$211'.At -·,Bamocuda ··~<.Xl•toond. cam• .... dlr,lopd,n ' l'""d«I<•· ' 11 90te ptri •.•• $11'3 PalaroJd camera. ~; ~ warm. • ; n~ d ...._.,. heater, WIW tires, loaded. 'SAU!S·.SERVJC&-PARTS lii~i( Lnlle/perc •• =a . MAY 1'1'H 3281·Cob'ido LG. Clf. ' bffutlM .._ Wll-.U M ;--, ~ ~ I'' 4 41;."'-' Aa ( * l13$13 * 2200 Mlle., undt~·J fat~ 3100 w. cout Hwy. . a.»di <>r&uonk •••• $39:S ~VP'ltt.ES A: REPOS---.Lit or without ISIOdlc. ~ lt ~· ~£Vo I _, 9525 "'"""'''· Bal lh fU>C. 11T;;. Ncw\>oct -' -1'69 mod<! • , -SESSfOl<'S' 'Colot TV tel• •• DIAMOND &>l)1aln ~ ......... oflc fl" fi.,...... . IOO ~. ~If!! Tili 115 .... <!<ta, o< oti1er 642-9-~ llj(>.J76l Coaa chureb mdel., QI $1M5. lk!dreom ~ .. ~ roQii1 .ct. baW ~t ., Plalnda.. Ww J,uir ntWe1 . ~ EM:rl SPO"RTSTER. Co1va1r car. LB YNW Grl', Call BW Authorized MG tliealirr PIANOVAl,UES --~,bohl<•'. l2"0~· / 1'~ A cam~ or ··JS IQlllilS RD j\owtftd.,,,,.."" M,yon Ol-9!TS.,.._. NewWUrll ..... -ta .. $565 .,, .... , ... dl ... ttit,~i'!i"'' I . •\Vi-..:...:.. 1.; .. 141 ' ~:·""'°Jt~ ' . r-... ~-:. 1.~ ... l".ide ·-top '68 DATSUN 1600 Falrlady FIAT ~,.-tl.c.'onlol'9 -m.aoblfS,-TV.,f · • ~ ~ ! 0·1 ·1 ~tall $5\ ... Vo ~~~ 4 • ~to ap.ld, $985. 645-2076 Sport.: 10,000 mil~s. On& ~·~·"rw.~·-n1a1...-, . ·w1'· .1-1. I '· ~~ .... w .a11or.f!& -~ 4 ,, ,. ............. ,.l>l ..... n.r. '67Fl••ISe~ <' StildJO ~~ .......... 1'!'j 19"\.•I"."". ~.~\ -' • ' '•••""'"' 'l J'.(H ,l\I, , __ 15 D '.IEN' ya1 -. ,llftl!'l'fe!I, A-9600 $1750.Co•>taot67>"30!Btt5 B18ck "'"'°' & tot..-..... ~ P9r(k:t '. U}c_,, Jri ~~ · mercial ¥ '<li&Jltnler~,pep., ' } '' ~ l .~ --· ~~ "'" PM alk:kermge Aeoliane Knabe si cooler bllr sink, cash reg. we need qua11ty [no junk MCNUTE1'!.AN -* LHH.., Rent * ' DA 'ISUN ;,,:;;...,==::o-=,.-,= ~'cls,~~~;'~ 5~~ "MANY, MANY MORE 1ster, 14 °bai;-stools k MUO! pleaBC). FUt'rlltuni, co Io r :;:~ t3'U!8 ~ wb~ .. Ti~~p Vane, c~. ptclc1.1P1 .&. ·-, liWi8 DATSUN, ~600 Corw. caslldelsorolder tnde. WW • TERMS lJKE RENT . 1'10RE! . 1'V's. 1tereos, appll~. n•..-~ ~ ~--; r ,....FamU~'W~eon· cosy cnlilerslmotor bomn. DATSUN °~ drlvm ,21Xl rnilH. fu:!c prlv prty • .LB VHE 143; Open ~1on It 'Fri ~. COME> BROWSE AROUND tool• and o!Oce equipment. $595. ~ AtCA.M?ERS DE;l.JGJJT Slide Int, waij[ Uuw, ~Ua, ''8:PJCKU'l $l,tS must sell $)lf5. 96MO'l8 Call Btu. 49f.9mt9" ~ Gduld Music Company WINDY'S All"ION TOP CAS» "' 30 MlhUt .. 1 p' -c•'I . --by Jbt ............... " avaUablo·at ,......,.., !""":'-' ' -~ L'-V\'".~' ENtl,JSH .. FOID -~ N ....... SA 5:17-0681 U\I ,, .. ,1·""" * ~ ower .-u Hrs TV"1 ~th. reuonable rate•,. Aak .~ ... 0 .... r .. -11.;.., nav. ~ .., ••-.i. _ i ~ --~ u~ ...,.. -__,_v. "•1 •EDAN •1• . JAGUAK GULBRANSEN ~,·11 NowpM Blvd. s· WE BUY $ '67 OWENS 'xi,. .. : ,.r ~ ) ~Mldlebock DodiO m••• ..... . '' -• • ;;.•· ORGANS £,'" lnboard Mll18.bout. 2'.zs'hp v.a. J.~.l"'. Tuslin'" Ave. $..,._ Baiilr -............_..: , Near new, Lie 1111 TY,T3ll8 , ,5 , S.hihd Toey's Bldg, Maf't.. u7 M>J -'66 WAGON $13'S ORANGE COUNTY '65 XKE eou.,, • ..... WURLITZER Costa ~1esa • 646-8686 $ FURNITURE Used 36 hn. 673-9100 -~ ~ _Jl'9 -1'-1401 N. TU!til) ftw. VOLUME ENGLISH AMJF~1. wire wMt1a. •• c.c -547-Hll 4 dr. All extras -'-la . PIANOS & ORGANS OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 AfPLIA~1u1....: 20' CABIN cru~. t~ (:, n t520 -1-'.T· Lie # SQ\1553 FORD DEALER jll6t reblt. Spanl.., mo.a c- Planoa i 01'1l&n. Rented c.i.,. TV'1-iti.1Ro'1-St•r••'1 Gray.. 2 ~. ~·radio lftpl · Rent A 'tamper '65 PICKUP $l1tS . SALE$. SERVICE qUer finish.. $2900. &G-sm· EvERYTHING IN MUSfC Rl14MA6f "SALE 1 t "-t• •r H•ut• Fi.ti A: bMt tank. $1950: Sl&-5!:6 COAOt ~ ~R' ! * OOR¥ CJWJ.&!kS * -~tbt Wor:t!;tmsf: • '69 MODELS '62 XKE Rds. Jmmae oond.· _ CASH IN Jt MINutlS :. . REfrrtll.'J.' Rent by the ~ ~k., or • tic # t}lf;li452 I~~delivery New top1 tires .. .S-t oUert • 541 --i-531 • Boat·Yecht • ti's none too iility 1o make . mon.th. R.easoa.~~ratef LIJN ' LARGE s:i:i.f:cnoN' over $DXJ, Dl-:arted!! lllch Music Center Factory Sales le Service Daily U. noon 'Lil 9. Sat 9-5 1T40t Beach Blvd., (H"·y 39) t.tay 15th. 10 to 9. ?.fay 16th, lll to 5. St Anil.ttws Presbyterii.n Church, cor St Andrews Rd &: 15th Sl N,B. 1 lli, mi. So. San. DIC?l'o Fv.'Y. J-'ULL P.1arquette tune-up Huntington Beach 8~7-8539 cqulit 6 mo's old $1100, Ch•rtert 9039 reservations for Sprinr Hot SW.. , '1 ~ · ; ~-th1lllON , ·~Dr;. 84&-U!IO WANTED • used 6' lo I' bar · :Sdil.Yt! ~ , 1401. N. 'Nfltin('Ave: RQBINS FORD OQN"f &I it -iet '"' homo. 67>-1345 "" • BLUEWATER CHARTERS 'WEEK-END OR ~ v "'-'-• -· l A . "' c .,.,. . " ,,~... ,..,""""""' ~ IHPORTS .... ' ' · · • quick cash for ~~th a• \VkcndS. 27' 'frojan, Power ua: MQI • -~ , ~ Harbor mvtt. 0a"" PiJo I •• • -;;""=====o;== 26' Thl,ll1derbird. Sail _...._....._ · • · For, Dally P~ ;Wut Adi\ . · TOIOT ... ,woi.fo ' COS!ll ~-642-0010 "'J t wan ,...,.. . I B.AMlt10ND • Steinway • ·· Snap-on air chi!de & impact" m&ha • ne11 & used pianos "TCnch $235, Con1pl. Jet or all makes. ~t bl.lYS l.n air-cond'ing equip & stock So-. Calil. right here. Sl!JO. Olher miscell. Call aft. SCHMIDT ?ilUSIC ro., I o'5~P~'~'~89~7~-4~8.1~7--cC""-= 1907 N. ?!lain, OZARK 'S Hickory chips for Stora~ 1775 Skipper avail.. ~9000 OIARGE ·fl! Dlal" 642-5618 iCir.aESUL~ 1 '.llJI!; iarbor,: C.M, • ~l~~!l'l~JJ!'~'i!!l~'·::!!!!!!::!!::!!~·~===;;642~-56711;;;;:~}~·~1 =- S20 MO. st?p sgle. a:an,1.ge,. oor. Aircraft . ,9100 Jrlll~-~·C;•~-,.~·iii!i;i. ~·~.!~toll~~· N~ow~aa~·~,.~·~~~~-t~IOll~·~~'.J.:Ne~~·~· W~-.ili~."~:iiiii·~.,.~~O-~O~N~ew>~~C~1niiiiiiiii~9~,aa~·~~''.~"-~w~C~1~niii;iiiiiiij~·9liiiOO~ 23rd It Oran&e."C.M. Petitte. ' , 543-0522 SUPER. Cruiser TA 12. .new ~ " .. I ' . . i , •. .., ,.. ~ t i L . cover, complete en g 1 n e • • • ~ , P01S end LIVESTOCK ......... Co>mid« P. Cat ,'r,'11. EY'RE \' Cats .1820 as trade, 673-490 r. -~ ~ ~ Snnla Ana smoking & B-8-Que. 3 trg.J • lb hags $2. Includes partial t"" T•Sewi1ion l205 dellvery. Seod check . or ?i!.O. to II.A. Komulalne, 1 Yr. service contract on 209 \V. Carlton, Ontario, your color 1V, regardless ol Cal. 91761 age but n1ust be in worklng order. . . .$45. Blade & white. , .. $35. C.Ontract in- cludes free adjustment -ii parts are I n s talled, (including plclure tube etc I, you only pay flat charge or $12.50 lor call. Special - UHF VHF i;olor anlenna $23.25 including installation. KNITTED f ABRKS 1'fAL£ Siamese kitten, trained, 8~v."f!f!ks old. $15. M8-671J 8125 GER?i.tAN Shepherd puppies. AKC. Imported slre, scien- tlrJcally raised, large boned. 4""'184 ~'I:-ROLLING Our repair man has 31 years eii:perienoe. MADISON ELECTRONICS INSURERS 8732 Weal.minster, Suite 1 Westminster 897-7090 51!rtlng Goodt 8500 "'FOR SALE Remnants, samples It f.fill ends Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. 929 Baker. Costa 1'ft?!la . ?'(;i;iv 35 mm SLR camera, Basselt Pups, AKC, cha.1np. stock. $65. 6 \\·eeks. * 545-1098 • -OR- $35,000 HOUSE! GREAT DANE PUPS, AKC, Come in toda)' and see tux· Argus 35 m'm projeetrr & U "'eeks old. ury living at down to earth strobe flash 1125. Psych. ede.lk kale!doSC'Ope projeCt. * 893-0953 * price~ Especially now dur- f nlOROUGHBRED BoXcr • ing'j oU:r 1-c»~-:;'sale on or $25. New iCt' cream rte.~ fe~. 1 Months old'. Call ·all -djspl&y miXt:ea:..~bey're er $15. 497-1601 545-l259 after 5:30 PM priced to sell Jmmed1ately. 4 'TIS Tropical Fli,;h .• . Park! available in all areas Opening 'bout ?.lay 15th AKC Toy Pood!Q .fuPPJC~ .\0, >.·.. Bay+tarbor Fountain Valley 8424530 weeks, tralnN'I. Mobil . H 5 I • 393.37&1 * • ome. 1 •• · 1 GOLF Culbs -n1ntchcd sci H le B Grand Slam. Extra RETRACT ABLE c Io I h e s I ~~======:--1 1'125 Baker St. line, user! \'ery short time, TRANSPORTAT~ON \~block East or Harlxlr Blvd. $15. * 646-7803 on~ on &kcr ==~-'.c...~-~-.1 Boats & Y~.c: ~--1a ""1a.r..·· , ........ ,1 ·.,~~9410 · ., lef11'.th (1 inch tonger ·than NE\V Singer por1able se.v.;inl{ , ....m; .. J ... .,.. ''~ "''u-~;.c:3~us~~~-~st of-. FR(,!·., .. \ ~~:J:~~)B.~ • rea:War) 4 11·oods. stainless steel irons $75. 545-0006 . " ' ,_ '' ,, 12 GAUGE " automatic Wlnchest@r. niodcl 59. prime condition, $130. Call Dan 646-!StJ9 FUU. membl!i:stuP Ne'wport Bisic ao.fldt aasM•· f'OO!"• · 1Je.th,-. bUilt-8';" laq;• Bee.el'I· Tenrils 'Club, $tj() + Oil ed t ,,., ill" ~t10 .l prage. Owner Mov. transfer free. 673-7019 er 0 w •e1 pu IC rd! Mu.si sell! Wru calT)' 'fili OOOOE Sll)J by the Bal~ Po1'er balabce alter down Jiayme1;1t ir;•;wotid Boat. glassed '50.. Squadrop s41itiog· 7 ~Or !ftS.'f342 ·· * &G-09.u * P.M. ¥"onday June GREAT ~e• 10x50;, Oba 2, NewpOrliHa r bo.r. ,Expah<lo. ·2. "'· carpoirt. 1600 M11cellaneous lid OVAL rug, h\•in bro ~~~80. Nc"'wfrig2: •• f~.:!:;, ... X1, nl Yacht Club, 720 West cooler, s••-•·-. acr.een frame,Califotn,la~ Lvuu .. ._.""''!""" ......... '5 pytrail &. Blue Danube • 6TJ.7.ia2~ * :... Bay Ave., Newport _ .porCh, util ~· Adult l!8l'Js dishes, ·throw pillows, twin ""====="===' Beach. E D"·r o l 1 a t ,W\furn. dl'P9 &: c r P t.•,. w bod spread, plostic FREE TO YOU class. For additional 1,.:,645-"""161'"8:,...,,~· ~-~~ chaise lounge. ~lH:{uc. un1-information p h on e '64, 10x50, 2 BR in quiet adult brella table, picnic table, ol-TORTOISE Stiel! mother cat 675-0487 or 673-1855 park, crptS. drps, semi·furn, tlce desk, 4 din rm chairs Ii. & cute 7-v.·k. old kittens l ~~~~~::~~-;j-:--'"\d$3~T50~. ~·~54~.....,~~==== upholstered chair. 8 6 j rll'Cd good home. 309t DAVID L •. FRASER 9300 Sandcastle Dr., Cd M • ?ii o Io k a i PI . Mes a 27· Kill& Cruiser Sloop Motorcycles 644-0054 Verde 5/15 Immaculate C.OndlHon! ZiO HONDA Scram bl e..r, EXQUISITE Cappa Shell AOORABLE calico kitten Asking $7400. Harmon &: C.Ollins racing' bedroom set. $1."iO. Couch free to good home, \\'Caned· Call : Oluck Avery cam & Barnett racing, $20. Pool table as Is $5. & trained. Call e v e s . 3t!4 Via Oporto, Newport clutch, new tings & trans. Ele<:. hospital bed, xlnt ~!JJ.38 5/15 673-5252 • ~16 Evt's. Competition auspension, hi, cond.. flOO. (Cost S500. nev.·. i free to good home. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'""'""'""""~I wtag ..,,.tern Xlnt dirt De-sir., ehest of dra\vers, \VliALEBOAT Hull, 2 6' '. e ."'3 " • • • Housebroken. 201 3 0 l h bikt' $2:iiO AJik lor Mike trplc sel, v.11tt'r ski-., gas NB 5115 li.tahog. Pla_nked $250. Petter MS-7e3s · · rang!!, assorted baby equip. 7~ HP D1eseJ $250. ll:t'v. --·""'""""°'"'"--Playhouse S2i fiOO St. "\VALOO"' needs a good Gear. Shaft & Sha.ft Log in· 1961 SUZUKI Andrews Road, rf.e. home. 6 mo. old. part Doxie. cl. Frt'e. C.Ould Make Dan-XS. INVADER VERONA Artislc beginner's Vrry affect. H s b r kn · dy Little Motor s a i I c r . Street n1achlne, llte blue In accordian, xlnt cond $150, ~l.16(1 5/15 673-7431 color, CU!tom street haadle. paid $300. 2 arm chairs, $10 FE. Ger. Shep. alxlut 6 mos. 30· CHRIS Craft, lapstrake, bah. t'a. Sectional comer pc &. old, needs l~ yard. See hvin sere"'·· lly bridge, dual XLNT COND 642-SSSl table $15. StauHer table $211. \Ved. at 423 Fullerton Ave. controls, elcc refrigeration, "69 KAWASAK 120 desert 4 uphols bar stools $20. Elec NB 5/15 Great 1'tarlin fishing boat. ready, $4-15. '64 Yiu°naha :so, clothes dryer $30, 642-0058 '"DUCHESS" Lab. Relrlever Sr. u I h w Ind tot a r In a $175. dirt only, both with 19;!6 CADILLAC -Tow it 9 f\.to. Old Black Fem. Very Te.t'Tllinal Island, No. G 32. many extras. 494-6940 av.'8,y! Was in ruMing con-Lovable, w/dog ho u ~ e. 213: HUJ-3434 YAf.tAHA 250 SCRAMBLER dltion but needs some \\'Ork. 962-0756 5/16 1958 25' ESSA N ES S lnimac. cond. 5 speed. Lo. New Battery. $14.95. 24·151 1 DARK Mame killen left, Sportflsher -ovemighlcr. miles. ?I.lust sclJ S 3 9 5 . C.Orta Crc!!ta Dr., El Toro. "·ailing for good home. ll5 hp ctirsyler Crown. 642-2104 837-4239 646-1909 art 4 "'kdays, all Fathometer. ship to sllOn·l~~~~~~.,.,.-- d "A radio, 5 """'' bait tank. '68 Honda 300, like l"lt'W, COUCH $lJ. labte & 4 chrs ay ~t & Sun 5/16 11 MG-54 900 miles, make olter! S25. TV set no. 1 Double \VHITE Kittens, ·6 \Vks. Old Asking S2S50. Ca l 5 * Call 962-3113 * ~· $15. Ho' ha• stool $5. Days & 646-4994 eves. • "'""°.::,,;=.~::-=:;;,,-..,,., '""' Trained. 11•eaned, f urry. I: J2) cc Ironing board SJ. Hl-ehnlr 546-1570 5/16 23• c .c. Good hull, glnss 1968 SUZUKI . $10. Baby"s sc1tlc 5 0 c. overpl,y. Not running needs Bcarcat. 2,000 .miles. Ex- 96S-567!1 CUTE kill.ens, mostly \Yhite >NOrk. Hd & bail tnnk. Good cellenl cond. $3'15. 5J6.7816 male, l ong hair . bl ~loving-string txw r.m. S42-2l76. 5116 fishing boat. Finl $300 HONDA 160 cc scram er. l~lbachl, $20. \Vollt'rusak tape takes. 675-2205 Reblt-eng. ne'v over-sized recorder. $l50. Encylopt'(.iias S\\'EET 5 yr. o!d fem. dog to 1963 30. TROJAN. Radio, tires, make otter. ~ u;,. Desk $30. C.Oflee 1able older or l"'t'lired person. Xlnt fa.lhomeler, equip for '69 HONDA CL-450, less than m. Full length mirror. watclK!og.. r>i&-9all 5115 fishlna. St1)I 6. Xlnt cond 1000 ml. Excel shape. $9;30, 642-4676 LOUIE Nl't'dll a home. 9 $8500. 3412 t.larcus, NB. or best ofler. 548-5444 tL-1 K_E_N_t_w-.~F-a_m_o_u_s I weeks old, puppy, small & 615-«142, SM-3710 '&t NORTON T:iO "StroU-0-Chair"' 0 u 11 it nuuy. 540-0718 5116 25' BERTRAM '65 Hard top Excellent condition complete. 2 yrs old. Pnid ADORABLE Kittens to lov· twin Mere 120 IO. Oea.n $5Zi. * 6$0829 $322 new, scU for $175 ing home. 8 wks. old, house bilge, CO!ltly exlJ'as. Offen- nRM. 6*2180 broken. 548-3782 min $9400. TI4 :548-5979 Auto S.t'11icaa NE\\'PORT Beach Tenrils 4 CUTE playtuJ ktttens, 1 '59 FORD, 2 Dr. HT. Pia, I. Parts 9400 Oub Mt'mbenhlp lor sale. "''lul. old. blk/&ilvcr tabby, braJn~s. RIH. Xlnt trans. $1~ B_U..;CKET::...;..;;;."Se:,.a_•_·f-.,.-C...V--'-.., Save $200. Call II arr y n1ales. 548-0179 5/15 644-1437 Morua. ~ ~ a pair, Buller, 80&-482-3S82. LIVELY 8 yr Cockei;, ne@dl 12' GRECO!\ Boal & Teel\)' 545-0lOS ·1 2 SETS dacron Priscilla cur· homt'. Flne waldldog. Leav-trailer. ~ 20 ~rs. Sac! 1,;~======""' 1alns for doublP. v.indo·N. ing. can't take, 968-1801 6'1~2008 TralW, Tr•vef _ 9425 Uecdllttlf!;Pd$65.sellSt~. FREE -K-ITTENS 14' ALUMINU~l K -Crafl , ' Gt&-7803 8.13-076.1 $100. 8' sailing Optimist LUXlfl,\Y 30' Travel ~tr. 'fl' POOL TABLES 1t 5/14, , Pram $100. Ml-6486 Equip d w I i:wtyUu,.; .. Cu&tom -antique -mod!!rn Muat sec to ·appreciate. ••• -.. SPORTS ,100 .. , STOVE. Works. lnquire 90IO 531-81!32 _.._, 847-7335 1934 Gleocoe, Hta:. S1llbolh 1,;;::..;;~==--;;0-=cc. (TI4) liSG.2730 lU pm Beach.. 5/l4 "69 PROWLER. 1!'. Fully BARGAIN! Membership in Fl"\'e humus top sou Price Cul $10,000 self-cont. Xlnt cond. moo Newport Btac:h TeMis Club.. Laguna Beach 1-=:•~====.==== 1700 )'OU pay transfer fee, •l9i·l849 5113 OCEAN RACER 1· L-9500 ' 642--J.U7 aft 3 pm. 39• -kman-Stephens Truc-3 f't.UFFY IOttens. 1 black. l ;.;.;=:;...-----'--I GE R e I t I a: e r a I o r sr.,, gry w/blk •tripes. 6 ,.,its, \Vhetl. A1»il:Ot, 10 sa.Uii '66 CHEVY % T. 4 spd traN. woman"• bowlliw ball, ha& o.ld. 646-4629 sn6 e PAotIC Y:A'b:i'l'·SALESe with power take ~off. a1r I: sboe:a ti! for all, CX· Uta Via Oporto, Newport cond .• split nm .. 30,IXXJ mi, cellcnt. 6G-OJ64 Too maJU' friendly rats! 213: 591-5568 714: rtl-1510 good cond. Stt it aft 5 PM; 1 tPETS ONLY} DIAMOND .. 'edcflng !iitl 2 m~ SIU caJ 28, full,y equipped. 25M F&lrwa.Y Dr, C. M. ClL T.W .• pcrkct, fla"'·~. rare or cruiBr. Make olfer. ·59 JNTERNATJQNA.L rtar. FOBD I ' -; QY,T THE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • . • • I .. -• • '· It ;,·ow poi:Cy to ch1rtqt 01H' 1t1ff 'c.11'1'4Y•r\. 6-fno11tk1 '.<or •.OOO 111il•1l iR ord.1r Jo, p.111 01 cl.1.111 ''••" c.1n to •• 11r C.ljltOJl'l•r1 1t . , ,.. 10NAF10E· -·11v·1tias . ·.If You f.1..av•~'t ·~.!9'"''.: . Able To Find The Color," Etc. That You Want On Offer ftMltM '-ten •• NH! FULL '(ALUE JOI YOUR TltADl•tN I • Your NEW MAVERICK ••• ALL REMAINING 1961 SHELBY ,.GTa "IOW ,AT. ACTUAL FACTORY01NVOl'CE. -. ' ' :.. TR:Y US! 'J'.ltANSPOliTATION SPECIALS New ......... 1S ces ,..-.... tW ._ M ""91W ., w~ .. tM , ... Mc. het ni. ~ .. dine el4ft ,.,._ SAV,E!! 1966 BUICK LE SABRE · F11tl pow.1r, f1clary .1ir. 2 Dr. H.T. IRPMl601 2Q1. dow11 'or,tr1d1. $1595 :~~~. $56 ':.':..:! 1961 CHEVROLET MACIBU- 2 Or. H.T. \II, 11110,, 20~ c:lowR or lt•c:I•. Ps.1 R&H. tWPC Ill) $2195 ::~. $59 :°;;.:! 1967 MUST~A-N_G,_.cHARDToP Cp1. Full¥ equipped, .111tcmi1lic. ITXU ISJI 20 % down or tr11d•. ' $1595 fULL $46 '" Jt ' l'l:ICI M•lftlS 1961 CHEVROLET 'h·TON ,;c~up. 6, 1t.111d.1r4 tr.1nt,, 411 1 20 'f, dow11 or tr.de. $6. 95 FULl -PllCI $29 ~-;..: Almost a do10n 1968 Ford Cus- ' tom Coste Me sa Piitrol cars to choose from 1t fanta stic savings . lnt1rceptor performance! 1961 FORD V-1 4 dr., 111,lo,. pO'!f'tr ll•1rin9, r.1dio I h.11l•r. IEn9. No. IJSl2141i70!. $17-95 ::~. $49 ~':..!: 1966 DoDGE CHARGER \II, 111larn1lic, P.S., lo•d1d. CXUM5J41 20,, dow11 or tr1c:I•. $1695 ~~ •. 1967 CHEVROLET HARDTOP lmp•l1. 4 Dr. V1, .11110.,',,s., •ir, RIH. IUKU IS 1) lO '-down •t lr.1d•. $1 ·795 ~=~· 1964 FORD GALAXIE 'SOO S•d. VI, •wlo., R&H, ,,.S .. .1ir c.111d. IOMM ]Jfl 20% dow11 or tr•d•. $696 fULL PRICI $31 ~-:.:.:. 1964 CONTINENTAL TAX REFUND-DUE? Fwll ,,._,, • .,,, low Milti. l l1 ck ·~•••iar. WHY WAIT? IULF11t1 20'-,.clown 01 tr1d1. 8UY NOW -PAY LATER $159.5 .HILL , $55 Pt< II WY flNANCI .. 'A•AILAIU 1 ,. "'tc,I \ M- USID CAl SALi NIC!S lfflCT1YI 41 HOU .. ·INUU NRIOUlll SOLD AU. PAY MIN.TS P••UllD OM A.mom CIDIT Pl.US Tll a!UCINll QPEN SUNDAYS . =~· MNZH IRUCK • CAMPER SUPER • CEllTfR PICKUPS TO HEAVY DUTY TRUCK SPECIAL NEW 1969 F·I 00 PICKUP Fl1r,,ld1. 11 S" W.I ., ] 1pd. 1yncro. tr.1 n., , IOSS F-iprin9t, 995 R·tprin!1 ,.1lf. 52099 'I .. .,. • ORDER TODAY I • CAMPER SPECIAL! BRAND NEW'19691 F-250 PICKUP .... BARRACUDA CAMPER ~: s34,95 lhf, N•. '2Slll1ffJIJ l •n1cud1 t .1fllptr i1 <Ofllpl•t•ly f11r11i1Ji•I with ;,, box,· 1to••, •fc:, Sl•.1p1 4, f.2$0 pickup k.11 .JOO .1119., .1mp & oil 9i119•1 ltSO lb. r••r 1pri1191 ISi l .00xl6.S l·pl~ t11btl•t1 titM, c:ll11. h••t•r .111c:I d•fro1t.r, •fc. M•11y ht c.hoo1 t from •I thi1 pr!s•I St•• 011 Elc:l.1rtdo, Fo11rwl!Ml1,' 8otdliN l.1rr1c11d.1 . C>t.tr lO •.1riM flMr Pl.1• M dl1Jl•v .1N r•llly f•r 1,,.i.i· .. 1• .. d•ll~rv· ~ homes. 66-1&15'-5/l3 ll'iii' FLYING t>utehman JR. PM, &4UiSS: l9IM Maple No. f~;;;;;~ PRDTO Alf coo1tt $3), 9xl2 :i LONG-.fWred kittens. 6 .Fbgi•Dac u..U... trtr, tvr. 2 C.M. ,4.ppr mso. u.c: $650 . 4 LOVABLE kiltt.ns to good .. 8Q.m61 * \'00.tr Van S300 alter Sr cotton Wimda Weve nq; $75. 11.·ecks old. Call 548-CSS7 S/15 Xlnt cond. $89:5. ~ ,.~vANTED""'=~,~tll09-Q==""i-:....-~-., 8TS-TA& BASE drum -good rond. 28' CAT, OMJ)' de a• n. dump truck in pi><t coo-• QuatttJ kfnr bed, quHtat.-3'W...-. 5116 En.!lf.nar1a \o'tl. ~-SllOOO dlliol\ prt!iiilify '1-ith jOb. eomplele, unmed $98: 'A-'Ol'th )'REE Kltlt!ns IO' goo<I hDmfl. va .. anc S5991. n{J89.1-J019 * 837-1153 * I SZ50. Aft $ or wknds 141~ ~1222 511' 13' Gh'a wf19' ~ 'SS GMC"'9 PU, l ""bod, $16$. E )"OUr nnt ad now. BEAUTlF'UL. Ftij((y m&lt ll<'t l Offer. Good condition. Dlal &G4611 for RESULTS kittens. 962-ml S/11 * »510'1 • • IQ..flBI * .. I .1.111. '-t p.1n.-M•11·Fri ~ Sit I 1.111 ..... I'•"'• ' I•• fO •·"'· t• 6 ,,...,, PA~TS & SERVICE HOURS 7 •·"'· tot I'·"'· M•n e 1 •·""· to 6 '·"'· T1t•1-Frl PARTS ONLY • .1 ,)11. •• 6 ''"'· S..t I •• • • • s 7 7 2 72 g·ppz snaotrtnta·e·s a 7 sn .. ·tteh 's a p(j c Ob··=··-........ ,pp.= .... l ........................... llllllllll .... 11 ..... llill ... illilolllillilO ....... ,. ..... ,. ............ .., .... ._ .... ....,iloo...O. ... ..;;c:;.:;.,;..:.:,;;.:;;o;..;;;;;.;.,;;;;;~;;,,;:;:::.--• r ,,..., ___________ " - i :• , . • I ' . : . ' ,, • 1 " . ,, " ,. ,_ :· ' !1 · ' .,. '' I . :t • ' ' '. I ' : J:;JUS spectacular ··sprifl41 S.A. ~·on-1iNG 1s at:- • •"'G SALE,, ~ · · UR G\ANl 5p,.., ~y • '·NOW' DUl\ING KO ORASllC Rt:DUCtlONS ~RY$URS, I • -\NG HELO 8AC ,-· v PL'l'MOUlHS, ICED 10 :. UR HUGE .\NVENlOl!.i... . ~·aLO¢\(, ALL PR . ·t~i<: . IN 0 · Y'RE ALL ON lfl• ii,S CHRYS!r." I PERIALS -lHGNoREDS OF OOLLAR~._~i~ -BEST PRICE • s AV E YOU H YS lHE BESl SELEC . PLYMQUTH_-ALWA -. • . _BEST SERVIC(E. J1rlllp0 I'[ 31 111port~; 3100 W. Coast 1-IwY: Ne\Vpoli Be~ &U-9405 540-1764 Authorized MG Dealer ' J1rtuport 311np o ri '' 3100 W. -CC.St HW)', Newport·&ach 642-94(5 641).1764. Authorizea MG Dealer 'SI MGTD '68 PORSCHE 912 EUropean, All black, inlq;lot, exterior I.. 5 spd. 8. yellow, extras, top!! Has 'side curtains. ,Ex. Eves or wknds' 67>-5568, ctipdona) condition, ~ust sec 642.-mn & <f,rive. w$i';;'s"" '"''" I ===S=U=l"A='R"U=, ="" J1rlul1ort JI 11illll11 ~' SUI.RU · Rettll Division , ..... "$1197,1!91£ vpt equip $30. Freight S14.SO Delivered Sl34Ut • + tu ~ Ile:. 1000 W. Coast Hitflwoy • lil«wPort llHch '4s4o5t * 5'0-27Jl TOYOTA TOYOTA ltEAOQUARTERS ELMORE WOO BHdl Blvd .• W'lt:llWU • .... f91.!m.J 4 DAILY PD.Dr WANT ADS! .'61 PLY~ • FUl!Y 111 4 DR HARDTOP V.t , •ulom.lic, Y,c.tory .. ir, ii•w•r '1tt.ri"nt,• po.:•r hr••••· red/., he•ltr, • wliit• w1llt. YOP OlJ.,,. ~2495 ''67 DATSUN ~DAN ' ~ 4 •P~•. fllJ} f.•~!•f'( ICJ'!iPP,•d. TUP ' . 945. ·~ : .. f~l 295 ( f • .. ' ' + . •,. ,. \, ,') ,s 't'I .. " • '68 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 COUPE V.I, 1uiom•fic, f1cfoty •ii, pOW•I 1+ .. riri9, pow1r br1k11, r•dio, hT•l•r. '61.UNCOLN C~TINENTAL 4 DOOR V-t , •~fomttlc, f1ctory ;1r, powtr 1lttd119, powtr 'llrek11, pow•r '"(!rt• tlow1, powt r 1tih, rtlflo, h•tl•r, w1w, wi11yl lop, 11111.0 gltu,-'Lotcltd witf\ •.tr•• I ••hem.ly cl.t11. T6Z 751 . $3495 .. ,, .. , .. , ., -· '64 M~CURY ' COM!T CALIENTE "V.1, 4 1pe•d, power 1te•1i~9. ·r.dlo, li••Mr, whit• w•ll1. OOL M6, ' ' " $89.5 '66 PLYMOUTH 'BARRACUDA !~·· •11tom•lic. -r1dio, h11l•r. EJ1c1I · . . ltnt condition. low mil••· ITIZ 59 6) $1495 ' ' . ' W•h11.Ur, liq 14, 1969 ' '64 FORD FALCON WAGON Auto11'11 tlc. tr1111111 i11ion, rtclio I h11t• 1t. I YPS 705 I '66 CHEVROLET ..... ., CHEVILLE WAGON A11tomiti~ fr •i11mJ1tlon, t•dio & he•t· er, whlt•1elde .... ,11 tire1. !STI 1011 $1295 '66 DODGE CORONET WAGON v.1, •ulom1!Jc, r•dio, h •••••• pow•r 1t••rin9. ITGN 0511 $1595 . TRAHSPOITATION '66 CHRYSLER ' ''NEW YORKER 2 Door h1rdto,.. V-1, t"10•1tic, heel•~ , 1r, pow1r 1lt1rl119, power llr1k11, f•c· tory •Ir. lo•d•4. IVZl' 6461' " '64 PLYMOUTH FURY WAGON • v.1, •11tom•lic lr•ri1mi11io11, ,,,;. & h••ter. tOOT 92 1 J $g:95 '66 PLYMOUTH VIP 2 DOOR v.1, 1utom1tic, r1dio, .... ter, 'ow•r 1te•ri119, pow•f br•kei, •i1r~I top. tSI R 06 1 I $_139,5 .lh,1wimple• abovelare but i .:irMl .~of our huge •election of top quality-troublo free used ,.,,_ Ali i''Cl'Vertised cars c•rry a free 5 dey free trial..exchenge privil19e. ' WE ~RE 'ONLY '#2 ·SO WE '!'1.Y ' HAltDlll fOll YOUtl !i9' '10TOTA ,,..:, $1770 4~% Im fiAiOG~ ' Wmt-15\ DOWN . Oe ""''tMI-' c..-' 41 MO. IANK , FINANCING ~VAILAILi ~ NEID YOUlt TltADI INI .A . LIAJtN• AYAR.AU • DEAN LEWIS TJ=Jt6;9JOJ ~ 1966 HARBOR, C.M. ~ • llL 10,00 P.M .. SUNDAY,,M>.Y NEW 16' & NEW llOO NOW ON DISPLAY " tu1t Letoi6 IHPORTS fOYOTA..ai.YO 1988 Harbor, CM, MS-9303 VO&.VO P1800 2 to choose 1963 Ouaicl. St>ort Coupes. The llllljN.lt. lZ~'83· Low ... . $1695 ·~IJmu ·TO~~VO "" Hubor, C.M. 64-9ll3 'G VOLVO 122S '-Dr. Sedan. Auto. tram, Radio, .-le'r, Mint mnd. • • Jl,195 ~ for used cars &: trucks just caU us for tree estimale. GROTH CHEVROLET Aak for Sales Man:iaer J82ll Beach "1vd. 9110 '66 BUICK Riviera, Like newt All'-<.'Ond, fully eqii1p. ped. $:4350. • 644-2448 CADILLAC Kuntb:wton Beach 1965 CAD Cou..,. de VU!e. Kl o.3331 ~ --~~~~~-.Full power, alr ,cond.i~s. WE PAY CASJI • xlnt oond. "'"" sale, I owner. $2600. 536-3!~ FOR VOUR' t &ft '68 CADILLAC COQwrtibl.e, I UUI PERFECT, lea ... r<-r. CONNELL 12,IKll ml. M..t ..U. Best oller. 494-0660 CHEVROLET '64 CAD C-.rtible El 28'28 Hartxr Blvi:t Don.do. Xlnt ooDd.~ Prv pr· .coata Mesa 546-1200 ty. 646-4961 eves 5;30-~:30 Will Buy Cft~C?L!T Your Volkrwqm « Pondlt l9N ·IMPALA Waaon. l A pay top dollars. Pa.kl for o~. low ml, tufi.y equip. or DOt. c,aµ Rali* $1595 or bcsl ' 968-1797, 673·1190 644--0llll ~IMPO=~a~rs~•~w~ANTEO=~-1966 Chevy 2 Dr. llT. V-i auto. Xlnt cond. De,yg '!;O't", ~ &Q..4930, eV('I 646-1225 ask v•~ tor Tom, " " 8ll.L MAXEY TOYOTA FOR Sllle -'58 n.-~,) Good 1111111 ... ch 81'11. -~-, H. S.dt. -Pb. an 41155 CondlUoo. $200. , Call aft 6, 9fi3..3123 WANTED -late model I ---'--,.1864""'~,MPo=ALA~=-I Toyota or VW. Raw cub. '800 No dealers. Ml5-lU3l ~· Call aft 5. 673-CTJ 9110 FIRST TIME! Ltast a New '69 !or 6 Months I n!tum wilb_rio obligation. Call Mt. -Reid tor Fl.Ill Oelailt Now 6GOOI.O Ford Authorized ..._ Syslem Thoodoro ROllNS FORD • Harbor Blvd. O.ta 'Mesa 642-0010 1962 OfEV Btl Air. dr1 v..s. pwz ~-..,. btt1:es ' tireo.$450.""'1l30 1956· OIEV e.t Air 2 ~ hord top,Ex..ilont-.lhsidO and out. IQ..2342 aft 5 l 1960 OlEVROLET. 2 dr. V-8 Hanltop, Re bu 11 t nstne. >464i13 alter 3 PM '63 CHEVY bn"11.o . New IDOIOfmq w~. SklO. * 549.(J$71 * ' ' 'Iii C>IEVY Sllper Spor\, &11 ena. Map, Steroo tape. ~ 1 PLAGJ )'OUr''WMt ad ~re tf'll!7 at't'·M*bi: --tDAlLY Pn.ql' <¥lilied 00.$11 :-~~~~~~~~~~~ M2.60U DAILY PILOT \VANT ADS! ·-· -··~ --~ • • ' I , 11, MILT PUT w-...,, Mor14, IM w_,, Mu 14, 1969 ~"!!5!!t • • .... .., ,,. , A"°" i'rlildliORr ATIOH ~l'OllTA1lON'--'TUHS==l'Oll="'r""'r.:..:10N=-.:.TlANS=~"r10N n1.NsPOn1. r10N r11AN=s:..PO::;;R::cf:.:.A:.:r.:c10:.:M~--r"-n=N"'s-'-PO"'--RT_A_t_1o_N-=· -Con -· .!!GO __ _!!!-_s..ro ____ ~Now Coro . ,_,~~--=.:-.::::....NGO.-Con · ftllO -C,ro;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::"°'::::.::::""::•=Co="===="°°=="'=""=Ca=n=··:..=:__:''°°="°="==C.;:::"::::=='='°°:=.j . ' • , • NINETEEN SIXTY -NINE . . . -ON. DISPLAY AND READY FOR: DELIVERY TODAY! • 1967 OLDSMOBILE SALE 1966 CADILLAC Sedan DtVille,, Shlmrnerln&' silver with silver cloth and Je9ther interior, full power, factory air condltlonlng, AM-FM radio, crulst control. 1_1 .... -r. vent-windows, pwr. door l0j,ks· IRRN297J OVER 80 · QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM Custom Della 4 Door Han!top. Silver blue $2444 'vilh dark blue vinyl top and dark blue cloth and vinyl lnterlor. Strato Dench seat, poWer steering, power-brakel, power windows, fao-PRICE tory air condlUonng. (TYY744) SALE 1967 CPI. DE VILLE SALE Olymplc ·broftR f.lrrmilt with saddle leathtr uphol1tery. Full power, factory air condition- ing, Ult .,,hee:I, door locks, etc. Drive It -and )'OU will buy it. (ULC321) $3777 PRICE • 1966 TORONADO $ .222 Cus~. Forest ll'ffn with dark arttn cloth and vinyl Interior, ful power, factory atr con- ditionJng, tilt 1tttrlng wheel. (SVXl.201 PRl~E 1967 EL DORADO SALE • 1966 CADILLAC SALE Coupe DtVtlle. [)('urt beige wfsaddle leather Interior. Full Cadlllac power equipment plus factory air cond!Uonfng. (YWR383) $2777 PRICE NABERS CADILLAC, Finished in phantom &rttn with green cloth $4666 and leather Interior. Fully-equipped with pow- er steering, power dilc brakes, ·power 1eat. power windows, Ult and tele&CCJ.Cc 1teerin1 wheel, wonderbar radio, factory condJtion. PRICE lng plua many more cadlllac optional fet.tures. SALE SALE 1965 CADILLAC Sedan DtVllle. Grttlan gold with matchlni cloth and leather lnttrlor. Full powtr, factory air condlUQtlln&, i.linal .ee:kinz .radio. etc. (YPS14l) $1999. PRICE 1 .·: Where Used Cars Are More Than Transportation 1967 RIVllRA $3222 Forest green exterlor with black vinyl ln~ . terior. Hu full power eq~pment plus factorY air condltlonlna:,:. Ult 1tffring wheel. (TSD498) PRICE 1963 CA.,ILLAC · SALE Coupe DeVIUe. Blue ' exterior with matchlnl blue cloth and leather Interior. Hu full pow- er equipment plus· Ca&llac factory air con- dltlonin1. CRDV309) ••• THEY'RE :.A GOOD INVESTMENT! 1968 IL DORADO ' BeautifultChet:tnut brown wJth beige roof and - beige do h and leather interior, Full powtr and factory air condlUonlng., Stereo -AM-Fl\f, tilt & telHcopic atee1{ng wheel, P-Ooor locka, $5888 ' etc. Lovely car. Localk>De owner, CU?jM66) . . ,~ PRICE SALE SALE 1965 CADILLAC Cou~ DtVllle. Royal blue ext.trier wi th mat· cb.lng cloth and ltather Interior. Full power. factory air, tilt and tele1coplc 1teerlng, Bhows e11:ceptiona1 low rnlleaae. CPGN663) $2111 ~ 965 Mercecles Benz $2999 2'20 S Sedan. Automatic transmission, radio and hPater, power 1tetring, air condlLionln&. Snow white e11:t.erlor \\•Ith black vinyl Interior. This one has very low miles and ii Jn out,; PRICE standing condition. (O'IV9()9) ~RICE ---------.'_. -··-SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN---------- • I 'SALE PRICES EFFECJWE THROUGH TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1969 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY Your Factory Aulh0rlzecl-Cacllllac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Harbor Area NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa _ 540-9100 UIOd Cars 9900 u .... ca .. 9900 UIOd Cars 9900 UIOd Ca,. 9900 UIOd c.,. 9900 UIOd ca,. 9900 Used C•r11 9900 UIOd Cars 9900 UIOd C1rs 9900 ------1 CHEVROLET /We Can Help You • If other1 have turned you down • U YoU have no dov.n payment • If you are em. .. .,,... * * MANY ?.10DELS TO CHOOSE FRO?.!• * . . . Call ~tr. Ulm.r * 893-503 * '66 l.tALmu 2 Dr. , v.,. atlck. blk bucket a.ts. l owner, must eel! lea.v'i country. S149S. 494-2730 aft COllYAIR DODGE --------·I 'SS <DRONET 2 Or. \Var. '62 C'ORVAIR Spy de r I ranty. P/a, Radio, New Conwrt. enc. Ex. •hape. tires, chnn whl•. Xlnt cond. Su~r ,charsir. Co n1 p I $1295. 892-3422 olhaulfd. New br a k e • , shocka. Nttd• TLC, $450. -FORD ·s.c CORVAIR MONZA, 4 'M FORD WAGON spttd,. atlck, lmmaculate! 9 PAS• Ctty. Squire. Aoto., Xlnt m~ical condition. Power 1tttr & Brakes. S1795 . Seo to al>Pfecllile. $495. RPL 237 * ~4 or S4i-6829 * '66 l\10NZA, rd· cond., new I tlre11, 1hocka, mutnera. Ask· 1111 $1<Dl. 6~ OLDSMOllLE OLDSMOllLE ___ FO __ R_D ____ 1 ·67 OLDS, Delmont 88, 4 dr, '66 FORD c.ountry Squire Air cond. Auto trans. P/B. '68 OLDS 98 t door, HT. full)' white, 10 pus, ps, pb, 396 $2195. Prv Pty 545-7873 equip. 16,<Dl ml. 714 : eua. Great car! $2295. '60 OLDS. Power Blr'g, pwr =·=-~=~7~alt'=7..;p.cm,:.. --- MG-2204 brake1. G 0 0 0 CON· '68 CUTLASS, 2 dr h.l., bkts, DITION. S.150. 675-4829 4 ·~· 12,0CQ ml. $2295. OLDSMOllLE llllYBISRY SALES & SERVICE OLDSMOBILE OLDSMOllLE '63 OLDS HT, Pia. P/b, R/H. '4,200 miles $700. Call Steve at 96~ aft 6 pm. PLYMOUTH LINCOLN '62 F-85 SPRT Cpc. Auto, V·1,.-=7G93=,.....---,,--285iO Harbor Blvd. 'SJ Plymouth $125 . --------8. Radio. Pis, w/1/•.. CHARGE your want ad now. ,.__ 11! A·" f p I. ... T '65 LINOOLN Continental. ~47 aft 6 pm. BRJNG RESULTS! ...uata eaa "" or a u u.o opaz i.o.ded! IAndau top. weul====;:;:::~~=========::-===U=""~Cara~~-~!! ·BaJboa Island . cved tor. $2700. ~.I '63 PLY. Valiant station 5<&-7515•""'· ST' nt.R G.A:,.·E'D"1<.W: wqon: n.w Ureo: d•an. .c1 .~ ~ ... $400. 548-1006 Alter 5 PM ClAY~l'OlLU<----,--..,~c'-..j ..... MAUIU PONTIAC RA MILER '66 CLASSIC 770 4. dr llE'd. auto trans, power steer., radio, heater, SUC937 lll!!S '65 CLASSIC 170 6 cyl, auto trans, power slet!r, radio, beater. NPl'Oll 1100; '6.l Cl.ASSIC 4 OOOR FACTORY AIR COND., V8. auto tnns. Low mileage. 11.295 ·54 CLASSIC WAGON Overdrive, power stetr. osr. 331. •• CHRYSLD ·114 C'ORVAIR ~. RJH~ 2 OOOR Htr V" automatic. 4 Spd, muat .-. excellent R&H. excepUonally clean ~11on •.err· 5M-2fl:_ -=.,.-=~~-==----I ~~~r·:~P:_r:'~ om;u m ocr.n~ 4-.s. 1.1 ,,...., '65 GTO Convertible · .... ..:.CAN l30 19S8 CHRYSLER Ne w Yorker, TM-11 & Country. Oomplel' ill ~ det.all. Xlnl c:ond. \\'ill consider ol· fft'. 548--1457 CONTINENTAL A RARt Flndt Grab thi• 195e Mll'k 11 Continental Cuaic. A·l condition Em· pr.-white. $3495 Mallet YoU a one Jn • mWh>n O'll>'ner. ~ 11)..51111:2: a.ft I PM , 'Ill C6NTiiiENTAL C..po. Fulty lf*led + ttereo t1pe: deck. 9tW andfr •'lrranty. Make oaa-or bit tor Jal' model sia waa. -•· -OWIGEm COUGAR HT, ract alr, xlnt condition MU1t be Ren lo be ap-prttiattod. Call &U-6943 8 --------ln•kSe A. out. $75 Cuh dela, AM lo 8 PM. Aft 6: 30 i61 COUGAR dlr. take low pymnts. \VW 646-l22S Owned by Utt.le 'ole banlcier fihc priv prty. OBM 395. 1-=========f from San JIWI. Canary Y•I· caU Bill. 4M-!m or ~­ tow eJllerior, plUlll bllck in-'83 FORD Country Squ.ltt, 10 terlor, fact air, pwr 1trg, pa.11. waaon, full pwT., fact dlr, $125 casb dels or l&k• •tr. Sl69S. Paci"Uc O:..St forela;n trade. WU! tine prvt Motor11, 14061 Beach Blvd, prty, VllE 743, Call Ken. WHtmlnsttr. 893-5038 6f.!'173 or M>0$34. ''2 GALAXY 500 XL; ~1om- '68 (l)UGAR. RI.It, air, ma'1 on.owner .convert. MERC.URY 1006 lofERCURY Co1ony Park Station Wqon. t pu1. fully ~ulpd. 646-.3493 MUSTANG l'/S, P/B. JX'fv•le party. Auto., pwr. ateer, brkl. A: '66 MUS'I'ANG V-8 HT, Pia. Xlnt CIOIJd. m..ZIJ8 top. T..Oln:I .,. .. &8.<Dl P.11. R/lt Auto. SparkllJw Nayy '6( CXIUGAR X1l T. Fully • S&50. 5f6.S'l10: 833-00U e"~-Blue. Win: v.·tll'f:I&. tinted equip, air. Oun · lllnt new! '49 f'ORD e,.lne ' body 11t11, dual 90 Utta. Stallion Df:iO. I~ -.nYttru ptl'b'. S125 or make offer, bom. Ort1 owner. $1175. DAJL'Y PlLOT DIM&A-5'WOll 6ff.485 , WNES. You can u.e &Mm 1~ ro"R"o.....,.w'".,.-,-. -R~.-., 1 '·=,.~ll!UST==AN=c=-.-v~-1~.-nld~~·.1 for just peMlu a dq. D!.&J p>d. SIOO. pwr atr1. 1uto tf'Bns, clean. ~ 642-<1821 aft fi pm. Mual M!ll. fi44..4.127 -----'---'·---~---·---- Full pwr, xlnt a:indltlon, top like new, dlr. $15 Cash dels or take foreJcn car In trade. NRC 2CI, Ca.Ji Ken 494.9773 .......... ~-.. ~-.......... ..., •. .., ................. M ...................... ._.-~-... ~-............................ ...,._. .... ~ .... ~~"-'..C..<.....,~&..' -• - - -- -• - - -• • • • 7 T •·' • « ' 7 7 *stC 1:1' 14 + '++' £ £ p-c C ... .b.:t,'-4 # ··~~·~""-'""'"'·~~~&~r~d.-•"-C:"C>-=to...:• . .;:"":'"="'-'''-""-'"_:.'· ....:_ .:....___ ! _• 2 door sedan. · Auto trt.ns, radio, heatrr. OSR088 1799 '63 Cl.ASSIC 4 DOOR Sedan. 6 cyl, JBK4o.; 1'95 'Gl AMEJUCAN 2 door hardtop, PL.BUIS I"' '42~3 T·llRD 'M T·BIRD Good condiOon. $1125 Cnll after 5. 673-9168 11lE QUICKER YOU CALL. THE QUICKER Y<;>U SELL .. -... • • . . ' .... .,.,,_, .., 14, 1'69 • DAil Y 1'11.111 • • • • ••• ·an.•1IEW11l YAC.\TIOll Al) TUYI 111, so S9 UP TO A 11111 CAR, ~W OR USED. IT'S THAT Tl~£ Of YWJ • ' -·-· --..... USED CAR DEPT. 540.5635 1968 CONTINENTALS J f_o choo11 frorn. All cornp11t1ly luxury equipped. Auto. tr1111. I r1dio, h11l1r, F1ctory Air Cond., pow1r 1t11ri119, powor br••••· pow1r wi11dow1, 6-w1y 1011, l1nd111 roof1, olc. Vory low rnilo1 ond li11utifuUy frloh1tol11ed, l11y1r · r1c1iwo1 tl'11 b1l1nc1 of tho new cir Feclory Worr1nty. AHr1cliwo color1, your choice. No. 6301, No 6301, No. 1683. s5295 1968 MERCURY 1•61 Mercury P1r• L111e co11Y1rlible. le1utiful J1m1ic1 Yellow fini1h with bl1c• il'll1rior ind bl1ck top. Auto. tr1n1., r1dio 1rtd ho1t1r, f1ctory Air Con..!., powor •IMri!l.t, pow•r b.r1 ko1, powor wil!id1w1,.olc. CkiY1n only 10,000 "'il11. '1\i1 ovht•ncil119 c:or cou14 bo •atily 111l1t1k11t for brand naw. Buyar rt c•iwo1 tha b1l•11c1 of th• naw car Factory W1rranly. WPC s3595 MONTIGO ' ' . MANY Oii 'lltl Fl"I llSAU CAlS AT JOttllSO" A SON WERE OllljlNAUY SOLD AND . ' HA YI lllN SERVICED IY THEM • , • •NOT HU llASON WHY THIY AH "SAFI 1111Y1. • 1967 CONTINENTAL CONV!RTIBLE BMvtlful Gold B•ige wwt.mc fllllM Wftll P'•rtll"*1t IHll'tef" l11i.o-10r Mii .... lit toao. LlllU<l' ltlroo,igtiou!, of tourMo. A""'9, ,,..,._, rMIO &. hMlw, l'Kfory All' CON., PGW'tf' 1~ ..,_. ..,.._, .....,. ..,...._ ~,..... -L -.. nii. ettrt<tl\19 u r NI lllllfl dr"-Ollly 7.JIDD mll-. I.Mb NM llllif' IMWlll -. ..,,. ,__ IN btlt!!a of fM MW ar P'.c;!Ory W1N'111ry, UOC a.u. • $4195 1967 CORVETTE STING RAY A llHu!llul origl111I Brllhll rtelng "'"" nMNlllc 11!11111 with wtlltt tppl~ ift.. ltrlor, '27 """'(JM, ' 11)eed tr1n~ .• po-1fffrlflo, AM-l'M '''"'' llteltt, fK""' H , j>o"lvero onlv U,000 ml. by -oWMr. I~ .. ,. condlllon. UXV "'· h ie Ill'~ · 53795 ' 1961 COUGAR' XR7 COUPE ellvt ... tc.tm 111rQOUIM -J.tlflc: lllllllr-"'lth Ptrc11"*"1 IMtller bucl<tt -II tnd .. 1111-.:~. '.5 Lll1'9: V4. q!M with tllto. .......... rMlle· •• Miier~ PllW.,. ,._... lpowtr d!oc brakts, l'Ktory Air CMct .. Th-'*utlful dt' •hiln "'I l.UOO 1 ml. tnd buy1r rect lvn th• bfllttlcl: of 1111 -ur l'klW'f W1r,....1y, WOW SQ. ., 53295 .J ·11 1967 COUGAR GT . A111e1n br0<1ie 111'11~ -~hmtftt comoo _,,, '"'' a. blKk 111111111 -. Attto. lr1n.., r.clkl &. •l1r-o t1po1, l'l11ter, f1clory •Ir. 4 MW E·1bl4 tlrn. P!o, Po-dlw: bfeku, con~lt. A beeullful 15,(ll)O mll• u r. jTltH 115). ' $2595 . 1966 CONTIN!NTALS (4 "' ci-w froml. Attrectlw Mrdtop. COUpU .. 4 dloo!' HOMnt. BMUlllUI .. lldlon ol color. I. lt!terlor1. AH ire l\lleury 9'1'UIJll*f N llldl,.. fectory 1lr. c.trlfulty nvl~ l1Jned !off. No . .anll2. Prlc:• 1lirt II • s2595 - * . '1 ' ~ . 1961 VOLKSWAGEN FASTBACK Altrldt'lll ..... flnltfl wlll'I nvldll11111 iflt9'11r, flcto!'y 1lr, rllOt, *-~ HU-· vn 117. $1795 1966 THUNDERBIRD HARDTOP COUPE BHut. !IClld brwl11 111. w contr. be)t9 Int .• lvlf. 911u(pt, 111.._1. fllll pWI', lflcl. 1. tr1n$., lt&H, i.t. 11r., 1 OWl'I., C1r9!'11rty drl""'. Lie. $IN 129 $2395 • ~ % IM1 FORD GALAXIE SOD 2 door H•l'd~o. AtlrKtlve loh1r1 ••Jot txflrlo!' Wlll'I '-!Me ~1"11 lntwlol''. Auto. ,,........_ ltl.H. f'S. Pl, drlVlll only 21.000 rnll" by or1tl111I _,._ Lookl llld lilr~ llb new. IVZI ..UI ' $1895 . ,, • • 1964 CONTIN!NT AL , . 4 Or. 9Mllllfu abony blacll flnlall w-IMktll,.. lntfflor, flllly "-f OllUWed. Auto. IMl lc lt'af\$., rldio, 11e1111r, P!, Pe, P·Wlndowl, .. _., ... ,. fl(tory •Ir cond., plut nvny rnor1. DMM lM ' . 51695. • Holds more than 92 cubic feet of cargo! The clual.aetion tailgete is 1.tandarcf" •• i&. the big t 250 "6" and all syncro transmi11.ion. Options? Montego hes them all like • lu9919• rack, yeChl deck paneling ind Select-Shift tr1n1mi11ion. Colony Park WAGON ORDER TODAY! MontegoMX WAGON If CONTININTA( MADI A WAGON, THIS WOULD 11 IT. COLONY PAIK Never a wagon so rich in styling ••• 39.0 v.1 engine is standard •• is the elegent p1nelln9 and hide0 1°w1y headlights. Options to 1p1clfy are many'. , • luggage r1ck1, lou1t91 reclining 1e1t1, power 11si1t1 and many moral • • 1969 Continentals, Lincolns, Mercurys and Congars are waiting for you ••• today ••• at Johnson and Son, great cars, great prices, great te1·ms -and great people lo buy from! • • .... ~/A\00~ fil,0• ltm~lRr©lUJrniW a.mJ@UD@&m I • 2626 HARBOR IOOLEVARD, .COSTA ESA ' " • • ' " ' -· ! ' ' ~ < • l • ! l l, j . l ' ' ! ' l ' ' ' • • . • • • • . .. ·I · 1 . I ' ' I I • ., ' i I • ' ' ' ' ' ' • " ' • ............. ~ .... ..,,__ ' -~ • ~· We're SouJl4ini . Gt•:.!:. O_n Our Big Spring ·' . Station Wagon:., .. <Sale!. This Yeir ,:;, -·--·· ----·· .. , E~l~Y . v ~c~tio~ . lo The -G~.a.,a,~ . Wagon OJ Them .An!·· .. . . ·-- . i -· .. ... . . -.. \ '65 CHEYROLET IMPAl.A • '. -. . .·~ ' -· .~ . ' ' . . $17' '77"'". H•hltop eou,,.. Radio, ·hHter, •. ._ _ . .. eut~ic, power-s.f••ri1t9; ~·~ -· -. , .. ,fwy olr. ·1_., ·IPI~ 2471 • ~ '68 CHEVY CAMARO -' . ' Y-t, 1utom1t;c, ~~" 1teor;n9, $2B'l.7 r•dio, h••fer, white side w•ll 't ir•s, .' '".\. , f•cfory •ir, w.rwick blu• with ' ..... whit~Vinylt~. (f-il2A~ , · ••. ;, ,r.J 1 •• , . ' "68 -MUST-ANG .. : -_:·.-'. ' . . . ' I" . . / · <. . ,' ' ' .. ~~up._ l\•<Uo, 11 .. 1.,, outom11;,, $i·· .,·_-n77 . ,..,l :.,e.ring, fectory •ir (WIP 1 f'~· ' > · • .., .., 56t) ' .... ""' ,, :;, ·. ~ , .,,. •• . , I . .. • .. c..tt .··~·. ~ -. ' T • .,· '' ;'J ' .. \ .. '. • l t I ' .. 1968 PONTIACS } •.. lest of our .outstanding cars •. Ad fully 9uai'ant.•ed. Large se1ection. Most with power equipment and air concHtioning • ..,,, un ctradl•. caJly rMuc:tcf. -• SAVE Wodnt!day, Moy 14, 1969 .. ' 2 Ooor Hardtop. V-8, automatic, power 1taarin9, radie, heater, ..-hite Mela waJL tite1, .factory air ;c:oftditioiit19. fU.Jb.56tJ,,·, • ,. Co!'vel'tible. V-1, aytomatic, pow- er steering, radio, heater, white 1ide well tires, factory air condi- tiohlng. fSKL 8241 , .. ···"·· 1 • ' ..... t .!!; • ... ' \ ! -, . t ' 6 p111ift9or 1liHon w19on. V-1; $2877 '• Br0ji9h1m 4:0.or. Hydro,molf<. $227' 7 J • • • • •, p~•r 1teer1n9, pow•r Wa~es,. -\-~yur•rh•t1c, power 1teer1n.9, re-'· •· power windows, , • d i.o,\·he•ter, -· ' · d10, h.«ter, wsw, f•ctory i11r con-_ · White sicle w•ll tires, lectory ·air · ditioniftt ITJX 6041 . . j, co6ditioning. (UOC 1431 ' -. '67 PONTIAC L'E MAllS · A~L PRICES ARE, O~ COURSE, PLUS ·LICENSE AND T4 -' .. 1 . '66PONTIAC .. v II'\ • -... .-· IOrinevill~ 4-0r. A•ratop. Hydr•· mt:!t•·~·" ~fomn9, rodlo. "'I" . er,\whit• • .ci. well tir•s, fec\ory •.~condition ing. ISBW 296) -. • • :::::.:::.~~--_::.:_~~~.;..:..~ ..... ~-_:· : -.......... -------·c.·~--~ ....__,_....._ ___ ~~-----~---~---•--·-· ~-~· ~·-·~--:.~~--~~~·~· .... ·~~-· _ ...... _,,,._. .. _.~·~""'~------;..;;:. :... :;.~-~-c.:;~;,;;;= ..