HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-09 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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.<9Unholy Bev
_Of 108 Cyelists
BlisJetl hy ·Law1nen
MONDAY AFTERNOON . MARCH 9, ·1970
VOL. U, NO, u. I SICTIONS. JI l'AGll
Sli~k Solution?
I
•
cr·1ne Susp~ets~
Fingerprin-t
Tes-ing, Ur_g~
_.JI
County Woman, 22, Dies
In Parachute Jump Try·
SLICK WAY TO CURTAIL SPREAD OF OIL ON COAST
B1rri1r af 6errels, Plywood, C1nv1s Re1dled for Loul1l1n1
Offshore Oil Well Blmt
May Cause 'W o~st' Spill
VENICE. La. {U PI } -Firefighter!!
prepared today lo blow out a 27-day-old
blaze on an offshore platform with •
rlynamite charge that could cause the na·
lion's worst oil spill.
Calm sea!! and gentle breezes greeted
workmen early toda y and they began
Crime Suspects
Testing Urged
\YASHrNGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministration proposed legislalion Monday
to subject suspects in federa l crimes to
fingerpringting and other detective tesll'i
~uch as saliva and blood checks even
before being formally charged.
The Supreme Court has held lhat such
Jdentltication procedures do not violate
lhe consittutional guarantee against self-
incrimination hut only in cases involving
1uspects already charged.
The administration proposal would ex·
tend such tests lo persom suspected or
crimes tn cases where there Is no prOJ
bable cause to arrest. The tests would be
administered only upon issuance of a
court order.
If enacted by Congre ss. a Ccderal
judge, commissioner or mag istrate could
order a suspect in a federal criminal
case lo 111bmi~ to idenUflcation by
"fingerprints, palm prints. Coot prints.
measurements, blood specimens, urine
1pecimens, saliva samples, hair samples,
handwriting e1emplars, voice samples,
photographs and lineups.''
Attorney General John N. Mitchell said
Jn a lc!tlcr or tran.smiUal to the House and
Senate that the propo.st:d law "will pro-
vide federal law enforcement ofrlcers
with a useful new tool for the In·
''tsUgaUon of criminal activity and the
11pprcllcnsion of criminal$."
preparing the 200-pound e1ploslve chari;ie
to cap what has been called the worst
offshore oil fire in hi.!!tory,
Putting out the blaie 30 miles oUshore
was only I.ht first problem. The most dif·
ficult will be controlling an expected
deluge of crude oil pollution after the fire
is CM.IL •
An lnterior Department spokesman
said Chevron Oil Company's "Charlie''
i;lruciure was believed capable of spew-
ing anywhere from 900 to 8,000 barrels or
oil a day until ·us eight damaged wells
are capped -an operation that may take
up lo three weeks.
By comparison, the Santa Barbara
Channel oil spill in California amounted
to about 8,000 barrels of oil that leaked to
the surface and stained beaches over a
ijlonth-long period.
~The recent oil slick that gummed Tam·
pa Bay, Fla .. was only 350 barrels.
Texas wild well firefighters working for
Paul "Red" Adair have been ready for
more than a week to detonate an ex-
plosion to put out the fire and begin the
1 ricky process or Installing shutoff valve.'\
10 the ruptured V.'ell !leads. But small
craft warnings, high winds and seas up t<t
11 feet postponed the shot for the past
few days.
Once the fireball that has been con·
JJuming the high prcssUre natural gas and
oil from the wells Is doosed federal and
state officials and Chevron crews will
make the fln1t rough estimate on the
\'Olume of oil being spi lled.
.At that point, Chevro n will activate the
world's first oil pollution control system
designed to runctJon in the open sea.
It wllf be the first test to .see if hun-
dreds or men working with barges.
specially designed floaUng booms, newly
developed oil ski mmers 11nd other equip·
ment can contain A large spill aod
vacuum ii OUf of the Water before It
reaches shore.
Teen Youth
Faces SA
Kill Charge
•
Police will seek a murder complaint to-
day aga inst Paul A. Ruiz. 18, or Santa
Ana, in the shooting death early Saturday
of a 12·year..old girl, the innocent victim
of a gang fight.
OHicers allege Ruiz was one of sev,ral
youths who drove to the Hernandez home
and engaged in a fight with one of the
victim's brothers, Pete lferna ndez. 20.
Police said during the fracas Ruiz and
his oompanlons got back into their car
and a shot was fired through a window of
the vehicle striking the girl who Wt.!!
standing In the driveway.
A preliminary autopsy report by the
coroner'.!! office indicated that the girl
bled to death from a gunshot wound in
the chest. Services will be held tonight
and Tuesday for Gloria V. Hernandez of
4901 8th Street
Grunion Hit
Beach Tonight
The elusive grunion may slide In
on the tide lo spawn on beaches
tonight.
It is always problematical when
the slippery silversides wlll find
conditions to their liking but those
who chart the Udes say any of the
next four nights could bring a gru ·
nlon hunter's payoff.
The small fish come in at high
Ude. Peak tide tonight is 10:24 p.m.
Tuesday night it will be 11 p.m.,
Wednesday night 11 :36 p.m. and
early Friday morning 12:24 a.m.
The ne1l possible dates for gru·
nion spawning are March ZS to 28.
Two laws apply to grunion hun-
Ung. One is the fish may not be
netted ot trapped but mu.!!t be
caught with lhe hands. The 1tcond
law Is that anyone over 16 years of
t1ge must lleve a fishing license to
catch grunion as any other fi.!h.
Cyclists' Party Raided
Police Arrest 108 in Holy Jim Canyon Revelry
Orange County ta1payer s provided the
hangover brunch fo r 108 partying
motorcycle gang members Sunday, after
lay.•men raided an unholy revel in Holy
Jim Canyon, 20 miles east of El Toro.
Most of the 73 men and l5 women were
booked into Orange County Jail for in-
vestigation of di1turbing the peace, and
immedia tely posted bail on the misdt·
meanor.
A haul of marijuana and other drug.,.
plus an assortment of 22 illegal weapons
-including shotguns , swords and a
medieval tnace -plus allegedly stolen
vehicles led to 29 addltional bookings.
··Everybody was pretty well drunk ."
observed one sheriff's deputy who
participated In the massive raid after
dozens of complaints by campers and
cabin dwellers in the rustie. wooded can·
yon.
Woman Tries Chute Jump
From Crippled Plane, Dies
Never before aloft In a small plane, a
young Tustin woman photographer died
Saturday when sh~ tried to parachute
from the disintegrating skydivers' special
over Perris, in Riverside County.
Her husband watched in horror from
the ground as the 22·year-old victim, her
ch ute snagged on the tail, plunged to
earth.
The pilot, who also bailed out. was hit
by the falling plane on the way down and
crilically injured, while four sky diving
enthusiasts had already parachuted
routinely.
Madeline M. fi1atlhews, an insurance
company employe. was killed instanlly,
and William R. Scherer, 26, of Santa Ana.
was llsted today in guarded oondiUon at
Ri verside Community Hospital.
He suf(ered severe head injuries when
sLruck by debris, or the plane itself, ac·
cording to authorities probing the
tragedy.
Mrs. Matthews' husband David. a
fitarine aS.!!lgned to El Toro MCAS ,
watched the tragedy unfold.
The single-engi ne Stinson, specially out·
fitted for parachuting sport, took-off
earlier In the day with four skydivt:rs
aboard.
Mrs. Matthew!! h111d never betn up, but
went along to photograph their dramatic
leaps. her grlef-1tricken husband reveal·
ed afterward.
Structural difllculty developed after the
four di\·era had jumped and Mrs. Met.·
lbew• ltled to ball oul, but opened her
parachute prematurely.
The tail o( the plane t1nagged it, tipping
a gaping hole In the silk.
County Worker
Sixth in Race
The list or candidate.!! seeking tht' post
of Fifth District supervisor grew to she
Sa turday. when Ted Crise II, a county pro·
bation department. employe from Costa
Mesa, entered the race.
Crlsell, 23, of 1723 Samar Drive, said he
feels there i.!! "a great need for young
people to become a part. of the dtcislon-
maklng process.··
He was student body president at
Orange Coast College, student president
of the Chapman College world campus
anoat and a Freedom Foundation award
win.ier.
Only two other candidates have
formally feild for the !)Ost held by Alton
E. Allen, but three others ha ve indicated
their Intention to do so,
Filed 10 lar 8re (he incumbent can-
didate and Cris C. Cris, 0£ Huntington
Beach. Others who are expected to enter
the race are Robert M. Wilson, COela
~1esa vice mayor, Ronald Caspers
Newport Beach financier and Anthony
TaranUno, San Clt~nte businessman.
TArantlno hAs spearheaded a rcc1Jl
campaign against Allen, filing more than
10.000 llgnatures last. week on pcUth>n•
requlred for the oction.
First lawmen on i.he scene called in
reinforcements, including 17 .sheriff'•
deputies and Califoriiia· Highway Patrol
officers, plus three buses to transport the
suspects.
Sheriffs Lt. Ted Dwyer said ~
groups of residents who live in the usurt
sanctity of Holy Jim Canyon iled in fear
for their lives and safety.
Representatives gathered in a remot.&
corner of scenic O'Neill Park for thft
revelry included the Outlaws, the Gents,
the Nuggets and the Hessians, in•
vestigators .!!aid. . .--'
Despite the low bail set for disturbing
the peace and being drunk in public, a
large number of cyclists and hangers-on
round themselves st.randed after release
by impounding of vehicles.
A number of cars and motorcycles are
being checked out as possibly stolen,
authorities said today.
Possession of pistols, shotguns, knives
and other deadly weapons classed a.!! 11·
legal led to stiffer charges against 22
persons, while another seven fac:t
charges for drugs and marijuana.
Orange Coast
Weather
1'hose clouds rolling In tonight
won't have a silver lining, so grab
your raincoat. Clearing skies and
c o o I c r temperatures ar' lhe
"'atchwords for Tuesday.
INSIDE TODAY
Tht U.S . .!tand.t an t.ictitent
chance of captt.iTing a gold
mtdal in the JQ72 Kiel Jl(lcht·
inJI Olympics beca use Ame:Ti-
ca.ns are be•t llt ioiling the
Tempest. Boating Ptt.ge 23.
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•
Mond<y, Ml/th 9, 1970
Quiet Tina.e by the Sea
~hain Beaetio
Motorist Has Smashing Time
A funny thing happened to Jerry O.
Aimwotth on the way to Colta Mw
po!lce headquarters early !iund'!Y lo
report several traffic accl.denb.
l:le had another one, invesUgators said.
The ~year,old · Downey man, Who
races a variety of charges today, knocked
down a street light ltiod'ard in front· of
the station as helpless officers watched
from inside.
Officer Don Cuey -into whose
waiting anns lbe suspect finally col·
Japsed -said several penom who
preceded Ainsworth to repart the series
of mishaps also witnessed his firth Or
,sixth.
Known casualties of his meandering
drive so far include two One-Way aigm, a
traffic signal,· a telepbme pole and the
su..t light at It Fair Drive.
Police, are not overlookJng the posa!bi\1-
ty al addlUOrial damaie reports yel lo
come from vart~ points on Fairview
Road between the San Diego Freeway
and heaclquartm.
Officer Casey said Arnsworth had par-
ked his by-then beavl11 .damaged camper
truck adjaceit to police headquarters at
1:25 a.m. and was trying to lock the rear
door when apptoat'hed.
•re tell backwards. right into the long
arms of the law, l!CCOrding to the rather
detailed rtPort covering several pages.
'Die patrolman sald his ;partner&, Dick
DeFranclsco and Rudy Malik, told him
severaJ citizens waiting in. the lobby had
additional inlormalion aboUt the case.
Some bad followed Aimwortb's truck.
keeping a healthy distance .!... while
others preceded him to the stationhouse,
investigators said.
By the. time lhe booklng process was
completed, Ainsworth raced. charges i~
eluding J>Qssession or dangerous drugs,
possession or ma,rijuana, drunken dri\I•
inf, drunk in public and M.·and -run.
'nle camper he was allegedly taini to
Jock up cootained a quanUty or suspected
marijuana ii,nd :assorted drug pills, plus a
drunken companion wbo wasn't charged
with anything.
"We thought he was dead,'' marveled
one officer.
Sanitary District Meets
On 'Cease, Desist' 01·der
Sunset Beach Sanitary Oi!llrict will call
a spetiaJ meeting to decide whether or
not to comply with a state order to
eliminate noxious odors from the Sunset
Beach sewage treatment plant, Plant
Superintendent Richard Harrison saJd to-
day.
Although the dale and time has not
yet been fixed, he said it would probably
take place this ~·eek.
"This decisio n has a definite bearing on
all treatment plants," declared Harrison.
'.'There is one in Fountain Valley and one
In Newport Beac.h who have the same
problem with odor due to lhe nature of
the product.,.
general nu isance.
The board also heard testimony from
county waler pollution and air pollution
inspectors who said light to moderate
odors came from the plact during certain
times o( the day.
Harrison, however, contends that the
hoard is without authority to act on mat-
ters pertaining to odor.
"This is a far reaching decision that
...,·ould give the water quality control
board aulhority to act on matters in the
ai r when there are already state and
c.ounty agencies governing air pollution."
Rhodesian
Consulaw
W ASHJNCTON (AP) -Tile United
Stat.es, refusing to recognize the new
regime in Rhodesia, has instructed its
consul in Salisbury to clQSe the consulate
on March 17, the State Department an~
nounced Pt1onday.
The Rhodesian regime broke with the
British crown on .r.1arch 2. The new
Rh o d e s i an constitution trarulormlng
Rhodesia into, a republic "constitutes tht
final and formal break with the United
Kingdom," Lhe State Department said.
It added that lhe Un ited Slate.3 con-
tinues to regard Britain as the lawful
&0veri!ign there. · •
''In the above circumstances, we have
instructed our consul In Salisbury lo
begin arrangements for closing as oC
~1arch 17 and for the depadure ol the
staff."
Consul Paul O'Neill and a staff or sb;:
will return to Washington for reassign-
ment, officials said.
Consular services for the early 1,000
American citizens will be handled in
neighboring counlries by U.S. consultates
in Johannesburg, South Africa, or Blan·
tyre in Malawi.
Copter Makes
Hasty Landing
A descending National Guard helicopter
produced a short-lived crash scare in San
Clemente Sunday, but fortunately its has-
ty landing on a goU course green was on-
ly due to a minor emergency.
Like a magnet. a;unset over tranquil sea draws Or·
ange Coast family to cliff overlooking beach to
l!itroll. to watch nature's work. to feel the afternoon
breeze, to listen to the su rf and, maybe, to burl a
stone or two at a receding \Vave.
The order to eliminate the smell
emanating from the Pacific Coast
Highway and Warner Avenue facility was
iu ued Friday by the California Regional
W1ter Quality Control Board, Santa Ana
Region.
The odors n the Huntington Harbour
area, he claims, are not so much
generated by the sewage treatment plant
as by the reclaimed marshland on which
the tract was built.
Poliet. saitl they received calls al 11 :30
a.m. about the cho~r landing on the
11th green of the Munfcipal Golf Course.
Patrolmen investigating the reports in·
deed found a helicopter there, but the
craft seemed intact. ·
The crew of the helicopter, flying out of
Long Beach . told officers a sliding win·
dow blew off the machine in flight and
struCk a rotor.
35 Truckloads of Rock
Save Threawned Homes
Two b<mes and a lol on en troslon
plagued section or Beach Road In
CapisO-ano Beach survived the weekend
well. reSidents said tOOay. but it took 35
t.rueldoads of granite to do the job.
.John Reynard, 35787 Beach Road.
owner of two of the endangered parcels,
~id tons of granite boulders which he
ordered "are working just fine."
Late last week Reynard's two homes
and a lot owned by a neighbor next to
them near the Poche beach were hit hard
by hea\'y surf borne on high tides.
A large gection of nearly new i;ea wall
fell under the battering seas and
CTI\ergency crews worked throughout
Thursday staving off erosion with hun4
dreds of 53.ndbags.
Reynard then hired a contractor and
ordered truckloads of granite from a
Noted Artist Dies
NEWBURYPORT. Y..1ass. <APl
Waldo Peirce. ~·hose paintings have been
displayed in many of the world's major
galleries. died in a hospital here Sunday
after suffering a heart attack. He wa s 84.
Peirce, a one-time traveling companion
of the late Ernest Hemi ngway, excelled
in the school of painting of Cezanne,
Y..1atlsse and Renoir.
DAILY PILOT
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OUNff: COAST PUBllSlf!NG COMPANY
Rob•rl N. Wied
l'rnldtlll trld Pllblbl'Hlr
J1d1 It Curley
Vie. ,.,~ld~I Incl Oftltrel Mtlll 'ei'
Thom1t k11vil
l!dllo•
Tlto..,11 A. M11rpkin1
M11>19lrog Edllar
Ric.k1rd I', Nill '°""" or'"" County Edltw
OfflcOI
Carli M-; S3G W1t1 8ev $!!'~
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$111 C1er1Wnhi: a NDrTh El c.t"'litl R.NI
DAILY ,llOT, wtl!'I -ldl 111 cotnDlllld 1!'11
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l'llllot'°" "' c;ociyrltfll Mnw,
west Riveniide quarTy.
The la st loads are due to arrive
through today.
The weekend surf and tide conditions
• worked in favor of the beachfront
homeowners. with only light surf and
moderately high tides reported.
The original estimates of damage \n
the erGSion incident have not yet been
tabula ted, because the total cost for the
expensive boulders has not been receil'ed .
"They startl'd dumping them in lront of
the three spots before the weekend <ind
they just work great -like a small jetty,
and they soften the wave."; really well."
Reynard said this morning.
"l don't know how much it's going to
cost but il will be w<rth it if the work sav~ the homes. It's not really that
much when you figure it," he added.
Air-sea Search
Being Conducted
For Lost Vessel
A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter and
su rface craft out of Oceanside Harbor to-
day are searching an area off San Onofre
tor a 22-foot outboard boat repor tedly in
trouble.
A se11:rch or the area 1 ~S mil es
southwest of the atomic power plant Sun-
day night turned up no si gn of the
distressed boat. Coast Guard officials said tlie Harbor
PoliCf at Oceamlde monitored a
"mayday" call from a Citi1.l'ns Band
radh> al 6:52 p.m. but the call "'as not
from the distressed boat.
A Coast Guard helicopter was sent aloft
at 6:50 p.m. and Oceanside surface crnft
searched the area untll nea rly midn ight.
Authorities this morning were trying to
locate the originator of the citizens band
report.
Heckler Gets
In on Arrests
·Attempting to arrest two oulrof·too'n
youths late Friday, Laguna Beach
narootics officers Norman Babock and
1':eu Purcell extended their endeavor to
Jncl ude a partygoer who allegedly shout-
ed obscenities to discouraae them .
The two officers followed Rona ld
\Vllliam McAdoo, 20, of lnglel'-ood. and
Dennis I. Tremblay, 20, ot Anaheim,
from the Taco Bell lo the 100 block of
Sun.";Ct Terrace1 where lhe arrest.$ were
made.
\Vhen a group or 1Uf5ls at a party In
the. area emerged to waleh Ult action, the
officers also booked Charles Ca r I
COl~lflan, 25, of t5S SUnRt'Terrace. on a
chirgt. of disturbing the peace.
~lcAdoo iii charged "'ilh possesskln o(
marijuana. Tremblay with possession and
aale of the drug.
2 Girls Admit
$8,000 Spree
Of Vandalism
ll acted on the basis of complaints by
numerous Htmtington Harbour resident s
who claimed the fumes were em-
barrassing to guests and created a
The board"s order stipulates that the
Sunset Beach Sanitary District comply
''forthwith," which is interpreted by Its
legal stalf to mean "immediate cor·
rection within physical and supply limita..
tiol)S."
They landed the chopper to make sure
the damage was not severe. the crewmen
said.
Minutes after the landing, t h t:
helicopter left the green for the wild blue
yonder.
JeaJous of the ••pretty 'things," a
Garden Grnve school secretary's Children
bragged of having. t"·o girl!! aged 8 and
13 ha\lc confessed an $8,000 vandalism
~pree at the [amily's home.
The school principal traced down the
s.uspecls by studying absentee lists or
schools serving the neighborhood on Feb.
25, the date of the destruction.
Orange County Probation Department
employes will question the girls f\larch 18
about the case, to determine just what
charges will be lodged against them.
They confessed under questioning to
the \landalism committed at the home of
Mrs. Marian Ryan, a secretary at Violet-
te Elementary School in Garden Grove.
Firemen sent tothe home found a play
l:1ble burning. plus rooms flooded by
water, furni ture slashed and food scat-
lered on floors and walls.
Violette Elementary School Principal
Kenneth Boyce said the girls admitted
playing hooky a~d going to f\1rs. Ryan's
home for the senseless rampage.
They-told him the Ryan children brag-
ged or ··ha ving pretty things.''
1'alk Scheduled
By Mrs. llanson
Mrs. Carole llanson, wife of Vietnam
POW Marine Capt Steve Hanson, will be
featured speaker at the Constructiv e Ac-
tion Council 1nceLini; of Laguna Hills
March 18 at 7:30 p.m. in the Royal Sav-
ings and Loan Association, El Toro.
P.1rs. tlanson of 24112 Birdrock Dr., El
'Toro and three other PO\V wives reCf.ntly
con1pleted a world tour in an effort to
focus world attention on the plight of
American POWs and bring pressure on
Hanoi to conform to the Geneva Con·
,·ention calling for humane treatment of
prisoners .
Council presidenL Earl P.1. Rees 1aid all
residents of the Laguna Hills area are In-
vited to attend. For further information
call 837-4123.
Utt Field Office
Will Close Soon
Conrad Epley, field representative to
the late Congressman James B. Ult, 5ald
today the 35th congreulonal district field
office will close •ithin the month.
Pending matters will be referred to
Robert A. Ge.ier, administrative assistant
1o the !ale Republican congressman in
the Washington, O.C. office. Epley said
Geier and the Washington staff will co~
linue to handle '5th district business until
fl successor Is elected and se·ated in the
Iloose of Represents
~cw bU&lnciuhould be dltoct.d lo Ulo--
at1entlon of Mr. Geier, 2346 Rayburn
J{ouse Ortice BuUdlng, Washlnaf.on. D.C.,
lOlti.
•
,.
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iillll lun aa11dalin 11 you .,. • Mutu11 Siver. now Is the time to lnvut ackfttlonaJ funds in lhese ~w ~-"'°
l\lgh-1'11le 1ceotJn\L (Insurance h111 been Increased lo $20,000.) II you ara not a CORONA D~L ~1'n
Mutual sw.r, now 11 lhe time to open your account at Th• Btg M-Mutua SavlngL 211t1 11 .. ea..1 HJol!1..,, -tile~ •11-60
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001
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Huntington Bea~h
EDITION
Today's Flnal ·
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL bl, NO . 57, 3 SEC,TIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1970 TEN CENTS
Los Alamitos
l
Station
Scheduled ror phase· out ~'lthin IS
months, Las Alamitos Na val Air Stallon
could be gi ven away free if transformed
into a publlc use facility such as a
civilian air;port. or college ca mpus.
Congressm1'n Craig Hosmer (R-Long
Beach) made the announcement today on
the status of the sprawling station,
largest in the Naval Air Reserve pro-
gram.
Odor Order
Sewage
Secretary of De!ense.1'1elvin Laird con·
finned lasl week that Los Alt1milos will
be eliminated from military use by J.!Jm
30. 1971, opening its eventual fate to
widespread speculation .
Federal ag~ncies will retain first righ ts
lo the property, but state, county and city
governments in the SWTOUnding area
may be able to acquire some of ii,
Hosmer said todtly.
District
To Decide Steps
Sun.set Beach Sanitary District will call
a speci1l meeting to decide whether or
not to comply with a state order to
eliminate no:dous odors from the Sunset
Beach .sewage treatment plant, Plant
Superintendent Richard Harrison said to-
day.
Although the dale and ti me has no t
Beach Res id ent
Die s in Crash,
Wife Injured
A Huntington Beiich man \11as killed
and hi1 wife injured in a two-car crash
Sunday near 1..osl Hills in western Kern
County.
Clarence F'. Halverson. 6.'i, or 16562
Sabol Lane, was dead on arrival at Kern
General Hospital. Mrs. Jlal verson was
undergoing lesls at the hospital thi!ll
morning to determjne whether she should
be detained for treatment.
A passenger in Halverson'• car,
T·ruman J. Lortz. 72, of Williamsburg,
Iowa, also was killed.
1'he accident occurred on State Route
46 near the California aqueduct Highway
Patrol officers reported that another ca r
fitruck Halverson's from behind causing
it to run off the roadway and roll over.
The driver or the second car, Arthur M.
Simpson , 41 , of San Luis Obispo, was not
inju red. His "'ife received minor injuries.
!:tut she \•;a.c; released from Kern (;eneral
~losp1tal this morning.
Zone Viola tion
Sentence Given
Suspended sente nces totalling 30 dayi
1n jail ancl $100 in fines were issued fri·
day against ;i Huntington Beach service
.~tation operator who had violated city
1.oning codes by maintaining large 1igns
rind ousidc slorge of t-:tes ll n d
automobiles.
Municipal Courl Judge Kenneth Lae
i;uspendcd lhe seven counts against
Richard Parry provided he -comply with
!he code. lfe also placed him on one year's
summary probation.
Parry operates the B&W Texaco and
the Five Points Texaco service stations,
bolh on Beach Boulevard .
Parry has maintained thr. zoning la "·s
a re unconstitutional. lie C-Outd nol be
r eached for comment thi s morning.
Grunion l/i.t
Beac h Toni g ht
yet been fixed, he said it would probably
take place this wlek.
';Thia decision has a definite bearing on
all treatment plants," declared Har1"son.
'"There is one in Fotmtain Valley and Oil?
in Newport Beach "·ho ha\'e the same
problem with odor due to the nature of
the product."
The order to eliminate the smell
emanating from lhe Pacific Coast
llighw;iy and Warner Avenue facility was
issued Friday by the Californ ia Regiona l
\Valer Quality Coot rol Board, Santa Ana
Region:
1t acted nn the basis of comp1<1in1J; hy
numerous Huntington Harbour re!iidents
"'ho claimed the fume s were em ·
barrassing lo guests and crea ted a
general nuisince.
The board also heard t.e.sti1nony from
county water pollution and air pollution
inspectors who said light to moderate
odors came from the plant during certain
limes of the day.
Harrison. however, conte.nds that the
board is without authority to act on mat·
ters pertaining to odor.
Bills Affecting
Harbor District
Heard Marcl1 13
State hearings on two bills affecting the
Orange County Harbor District have been
switched from Thursday to March 13 in
Sacramento. al the request of the Orangr
County League of Cities.
One bill, introduced by Assemblyman
.John V. Briggs IR·Fullerton), calls for~
vole of !he people lo decide ii lhe Harbor
District should be retained , expanded or
dis.wived.
Another bill, .aulhored by Assemblyman
Ken Cory (D·Anaheim). simply reques~
the it.ate Legislature to expand the duties
nf the Harbor District without a vote of
the people.
·'we asked for the change In hearing
dates because the League of Citles al-
ready has a meeting this Thursday." said
Huntington Beach Mayor Jack Green, who
is president of thf' League.
The Orange County League of Cities is
on reco rd favoring the Briggs bill and let-
ting the people decide he Harbor
District's fulure.
Briggs said anyone interested in the
Harbor District question is Invited to the
hearing at l :4~ p.m., March 19, room
2133, State Capitol.
Sloc k Jtlnrk.et•
NEW YORK (AP}-Prices on the stock
market remained depressed late this af·
ternoon. (St'e quotations. Pages IS.17 ).
Losses v.•ere widespread. with declines
nn the New York Stock Exchange exceed·
ing advances by more than 211 10 l.
But other military servk:es and variou!I
br.ancheS of the government gel first
claim!, he pointed out with strong
emphasis. ·
hThere isn't going to be any Cherokee
Strip land grab," he added.
The Defense Department must still
determine after deadline set for closure
of the base wbelher it should be kept
within the realm of military control.
U not, it will be released to the Gener.al
HONORED BY COLLEAGUES
Fountain Valley'• E•rlt
Sc hoo l Official
Rece ive s A·wa.rd
For Mu sic Work
f.tarlow l.o;arle, director or musj c
t'ducat.Jon for the Fountain Valley School
District, has been named 1970 winner or
the }fene Schoepflc Award r or
distinguished contributions in the field of
music education.
He has betn presented with 8 plaque
from the Orange County litusic Educators
Association.
Among hii; accomplishmenL~. I ht
association listed the development of an
exceptional music program in the school
district, leadership in music projects
i;ponsored by Orange Count y music ('{lo·
sultants and publication nf nu1nerous
articles in the association 's 1ournal.
A resident or Lakewood. Earle received
his bachelor's dcgret from USC anrl hi.~
master 's degree from Cal ·State Long
Beach~
E x-Hunting ton
City Attorney
Plunkett Better
Former Huntington Beach city attorney
Jerry Plunkett is reported to be in good
condiUon today at \Vestminster Com·
munity Hospital following a fall Friday
morning in which he suffered a fractured
skull and concussion.
The 47-year old lawyer fell backward
onto the concrete sidewalk while rushing
to West Orange County f.tunicipal Court,
according to LL John Mcintyre of the
Orange County Marshal'& Oft~ce.
Plunkett and his wife, Marian. ope.rate
.I'll private law firm al 412 Olive Ave.,
Huntington Beach, 11nd make the ir hnml!
in Tt.J11tin.
!It. served as Hunt1n~lnn Brach city at·
tornty from 1961 to 1966.
..
Could Be a Giveaway
Services Administration.
"At that point. the property Is up for
grabs by other federal departments and
agencies," Congressman Hosmer ei~
plained . 111.
"And in land..sbort Southern California.
we must reckon with the possibility that
part or all of it will be claimed for other
federa l requirements."
Hosmer said the GSA would then
dele:rmlnt the best u&e of the land and
establish its val ue to guide setting the:
price for disposal -which could be quite
law.
~al public agencies ar~ allowed 11 SO
, percent cut if the surplus land is used for
parks and recreation, or 100 percent if it
is used for public health, education or an
airport.
The Long Beach legi slator has aaid he
wiU eupport Ult con,ver1ion or Lo5
Alamito.<1 to parks and recreational use.
but would fight its use as a commercial
airport.
The facility ha~ ~ suggested In re·
cent months as a conunm:ia1 airport
supplementing Orange County an d
nearby Long Beach Airport, drawb1g
much protest. from citizens and public of.
ficials.
Panther Rips Jury
Roster Syswm Blast Dekiys Trial
By TOM BARI.EV
Of t1M EMl!r l'lltf Sti ll
Arthur DeWiUe League's lawyer today
branded California 's jury s e Jee t Io n
system as unconstitutional and impostd
what is e!rpected to be at least a three·
day delay in the murder trial of the ac:·
cused Black Panther.
League, 20, of Santa Ana, is accused of
lhe shooting last June 4 o[ Sant.a A111a
police officer Nelson Sasscer. It is alleged
that the Negro militant gunned down the
patrolman after he was ordered to pro·
duce identification.
Altomey Robert Greene asked Judg"
~a1nuel Dreizen to rule that the pickin~
of 11 jury from the roster of name.Iii
assigned lo lhe court ror the League trial
would amount to denial or a fair trial for
his client.
Those riames . Greene said. are selectf'.d
froru Orange County'! voter registra tion
lists and do not reflect a true cross-~·
lion or the community.
Greene wants a Jury picked trom ''the
community as a whole and not under a
!lystem which denies my client a fair trial
under any of the provisions envisaged by
our law -among them ecooomlc, racial
and polilicaJ factor!."
Greene's motion en~d a t"·o-hour
delay in opening of the trial and was
being debated at press time. Judge
Transit District
Turns Down Plea
For Beach Route
Automobile·lw residents who had
hoped for a cily bu~ service that could
c~rry them to shopping fa cilities in north
Huntington Beach may have to wail .a Ill·
Ill' longer.
That. in essence. was the determination
nr the Southern California Rapid Transit
J)istrlc:t IRTDl which ruled th a L
establishment or a line would not have
itufficient passenger patronare "to justify
the. costs."
C.J. Holzer. associate transportation
mgineer for the RTD, Informed Hun·
t ington &ach Planning Director Ken
Reynolds by letter that the cost for pro-
vision of service would be in eXCi!SS of
$330 per day and would require more
than l,100 daily rides to meet expenses.
The decision was reached following an
RTD study or lhe proposed route begin-
ning al Pacific Coast, Highway and ~fain
Street, running along Main Street and up
Beach Boulevard lo Warner Avenue,
Springdale Street, 1'fcF.adden Avenue.
Golden West Street, Edinger Avenue and
back onto Beach Boulevard to Balsa
Avenue.
.Jerry Murphy, associate planner for
the City of Huntington Beach. said the rt·
qucsl was generated by requests from
"people who wanted to gel to Huntington
C<'nter from the downtown area ."
lie said that many of the downtown
residcnt.s cilher don't drive. or own car!i.
A bus line would ha\•e afforded them the
opportunity to shop there , he said.
Oreizen delayed summoning of the first
panel of prospective jurors until the mo-
Uon is decided.
Greene indicated that he would havt
further motions to offer following set·
llement of his challenge of the Jury
system.
Among 11pectalors In the courtroom to-
day was Daniel Michael Lynem, 21, also
a member of the Black Panther organiz·
~lion and the man who v.•as cleared of the
murder charges now raced by League.
A hea vily reinforced detachment of
sheriff's ofricer!i turned awa y mor~ than
100 persons from the C-OUrtroom door
after tile 75 seats In Judge Drei!n's
courtroom were quickty occupied this
morning.
All persons entering the court.room,
with the exception of witnesses and tM
preu, were carefully :searched before
they were allowed to like their seals.
There were no incidents other than loud
complaints from several pe.rsons who
wished lo view the murder trial.
Black Panther lilerature "ll s
distributed in the courthouse corridor· tO
all pe:rwns entering Judge Dreizen's
courtroom.
U.S. Admits 27
Laos . Casualties
WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The ,Whlto
l~ouse has conceded 27 .Americans. In·
eluding a U.S. Army captain cul down by
North Vietnamese machine gun flre, have
been killed in Laos by Communi11t ground
acti on sines June, 1962.
The casualties are among \he almost
~00 Americans, most of lhem airmen,
who have been officially reported killed
during the eighl years of America's
semisecret Involveme nt in the Laotian
confllct .
Dis::Josure of the casualties was made
Sunday by a White House official follow·
ing a news report thal Capt. Joseph K.
Bush Jr. was killed during a North Viet·
namcse guerrilla attack on 11 Laotian
military headquarters Feb.11 , 1969.
The disclosure brought into question
the accuracy o[ a key portion of Pre.si·
rlcnt Nixon's report to the nation Friday
on lhe limits of U.S. activities in Laos.
In lhe report . Nixon confirmed of.
flc1ally ror the first time wh.al already
was widely known -U.S. warplanes
were making bombing raids in support of
Prince Souvanna Phouma's Royal Lao-
llan Army and along the Ho Chi 1'11nh
Trail which funnels men and supplies
fmm North Vietnam through East Laos
into war zones in South Vietnam.
Beach 01amber
To Ur ge Delay
On Buildings
The Chamber of Commerce tonight will
ask Huntington Beach councilmen to hold
up on the civil improvements program.
The $13.3 million program for a new
civi c center. library , fire stations and
<:ol'JXlration yard will be reviewed ln a
l'OUoCil study session tonight, beginning
Al 7:30.
The council men will ponder the priority or each project and then consider ways or
Jlaying for lt.
But in ... kinl to all•r feor• tlJt United
St.ates ii drifting into another Southeut
Asian land war, Nixon also aaid there
were no American ground combat troopt
in Laos beyond 643 Americans, both
military and civilian, who help train,
equip and advise the Laotian army. He
added:
"No American stationed In Laos bas
ever been killed in ground combat opera·
lions.'' •
AMist.ant Press Secretary Gerald War-
ren told reporters at Ni.Jion's vacation
home in Key Biscayne, Fla., the Presi·
dent was not aware of Bush's death when
he made the report.
A White House olficial sald, however.
Nixon was aware of the o\,btr 28
casualties suffered from !UCh ho6Ule &e•
lions as ambushes. booby traps, Jon~
range shelling and ground fire at
helicopters.
Fairy R. Orens
Succ umbs at 77
Mrs. Fairy R. Orem. a resident of Hun.
tington Beach for half a century, died
F'riday .at Huntington • Intercommunity
Hospital. She was 77 ,
Funeral servia!s for Mrs. Orens wlll be
held Tuesday at I p.m. at SmUb'3
Mortuary Chapel. Buria l will follow at
Westminster Memorial Park.
Mrs. Orens, who lived al 81 t California
St .. is survived by her husband, William,
a daughter. Wanda Hanson and a lister
Violet White of Huntington Beach. Sh•
11lso ·leaves two other sisters, Leon11
Haslem of Santa Maria and Ivy Burt.on flf
Taft.
Ornnge Coas t
'M'eather
Tht clusivr grun ion m11y slide In
on lhe lide to spawn on beaches
tonight.
It is al\1•ays problema tical "·hen
lhe slippery fiilversides will find
conditions to their liking but those
who chart the tides say any of the
next four nights could bring a gru-
nion hunter's payoff.
Cyclists' Party Raided
Ralph Kiser, cham~r or commerce
manager. said the chamber's executive
commitlee had decided to ask the council
for a 60 or 90-day delay on the proje:cl.
"We'll recommend that -a study be made
on whtther the program should be im·
plemented and if so how it should be
financed," Kiser said.
Those clouds rolling in tonliht
won 't have a silver lining, so grab
your raincoat. Clearing skies and
c o o 1 e r temperatures are the
watchwords for Tuesday.
The small fish come in at high
tide. Peak tide tonight is 10:24 p.m.
Tuesda y night it will be l 1 p.m.,
Wednesday night 11 :36 p.m. nnd
cnrly Friday morning 12:24 a.m.
The next possible dates for gru-
nion spawning ate March ~ to 28.
T"'O laws apply to grunion hun·
ti ng One i.s the , fish may not be
nctled or trapped but must be
gau&lJt with tilt hands. The set.'Ond
la.w i.s that anyone over 16 years nr
Police Arrest 108 • in Holy }int .Can yon Revelr y
Orange County taxpayers provkled the
hangover bruncll for JOB partying
motorcycle gang members Sunday, after
lav.·men raided an unholy reve l in •1oly
J im Canyon, 20 miles east or .£1 Toro.
Most or the·73 men and 35 women were
bool<ed ln10 Orange County Jail for in·
vesllgaUon of dfslutbing the peace. •nd
im med iately posttd bail on lhc misde.·
meanor.
.,bserved one sheriff's deputy who
participated in the massive raid after
doiens of complaints by campers and
cabin dweners in the NStlc, wooded can·
yon.
First lawmen on ihe scene ca lied ln
relnforcementi. iocludlng 17 sheriff's
deputies and Cllifornlo Highway Patrol
orticers. plus three buses to transport the
!fUSJ)eCU.
revelry included the Ou\la-vs. the Gents,
the Nugget! and the tlessians. ln-
\"Cstigators said .
Despite the low ball aet for djsturblng
lhe peace and being drunk in public, 11
large number of cyclists and hanger!l-ort
found themselves stranded after relea se
by impounding ol vehicles.
A number of cars and motorcycles art
being checked ou t as possibly stolen ,
:u.1thoritics said todal-_
The rommlttee decided to seek a delay
after the 300-odd members or the
chamber were l!Q!l!dJ~r .lhCIL.Y.itws 00...-1-
lheffiiprovemenl~.
K11er adqed tha t his e.:<ecutlve rom·
mlUee would meet late this .afternoon to
decide on names of those it will recom-
mend for the study group.
Two plan~ h11ve bttn suggesled for
finatK:in,g the improvements. The ad·
mlnistratJve st.afr wan!& to see • Joint
cuh and bond procram over a 1>ye1r
pt:riod. Cost of this scheme ls estlma(t!d
al IJIJ million.
INS IDE TODA V
Tltc U.S. 1tanda on e.tceUent
c/Joncc fl/ cap,.uring a gold
mtdal in Lhe l91l Kfel l/(l(hf..
ing Olym pics bteaitst A1Tur1f.
cotrs are btst ot 1oillt1g the
Tc ;npe.st. Boating Poot 23.
IN!lfll C•Hlt'"'-(~tt~l"t u, ,,.,....
CMl>kl -·-0.•n. HlllCf\
£•1tt,l.ll , ...
.-~1.rt•l111'M!'tt
" ' ' .....
" " ' • " , .. ,,
1---1_.agc...m.wLhA11£...&Jlshing license ln -
calch grunion as any other fl!ih.
A haul of marijuana and other dru g!i.
plus an 11u ortment of 22 illegal weapons
~ IDCJudi111:.....shol&IW WJ>td.IJrnL.
medir.v1! mace -plus 11legedly sloki.n
vchielea led to 29 additional bookings.
Sheriffs LI. T~ Dwyer said three
Rroups of resi<lents who live In the. u!iual ~11nclit,y o.Ll:JoJ.LJim_Canyon fled in fear
for their lives 11nd safely.
Rtpresentalives gathered ln a rt mote
cornu of aeenie O'Neill Park Jor the
Possession of pistdl, ahotgun.s, knlvu
and other de1dly weapons classed 1111 I\.
)('gal led lo sutrer charges aigainst 22
persclns. while 1nothr:r seven hu:t
Another rroposal th11l has been dl~C\IS~
rd is. a ful bond program over 2$ years.
The cost of this plan hAs been' figured 11
128.7 mUlloo.
·-· -~" Alltl L•llfWI ' ~lllltll " u •
"Everybody was pretly well drunk," · chatitl for drQ&s 11<1 moryuana.
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U.S. Shuts
Rhodesian
Consulate
'WASHINGTON r AP) -The United
Spte.s, rdusing to recognize the new
r~gime ln Rhodesia, hes instructed its
cen~I In Salisbury' to close: 1he consulate
01 t.tarch 17, the State Department an-
n9t1nced Monday.
The .Rhodesian rtgime broke with the
ail.ish crown on March 2. The new
Rh o d e s I a n constitution transforming
Rhodl'.8i.a into a republic "constitutes the
finel and formal break with the United
Kingdom." the State Department said.
It added that the United St.ates con·
t.i,iues .to regard' Britain u: the lawful
se>vueign there.
"In the above circumstances, we haV*
Instructed OUT conauJ in Salisbury 14
begin arrangements for closing u ot
March 17 and for the departure of the
5taff."
CoMul Paul O'Neill and a staff or sir
"1U return to Washington for reassign·
ment. officials uld.
Consular services for tht. early 1.000
'Amerlcen citizens will be handled in
neighboring countries by U.S. consullala
in Johannesburg, SouP\ Africa, ar Blan-
tyre in r.talawi.
Youth Named
First Boys Club
'Boy of the Year'
A IS-year-old boy who ,., .. Jl" off the
ba!kelball court. clew the stairway '11<1
ht.lpl on special projects without utlna.
"what do l get for it?" deserves &Orne
kind or award.
Friday night he got it. Ralph
Palomares wa.s named "Boy of the Ytar"
at the first annual awards dinner of the
Huntington Beach Boys' Club, 319
Yorktown st..
"Ralph has been one of our 1teadiest
members. He worb: willingly without
being asked and he participates in alm06t
all act.ivilies," 'Pat Downey, director of
the club, said today.
Ralph'8 award wa1 the top Mt of
uveral given oot at the Boys' Club to
out.standing young men.
Jon SamJ*On, 101 wa• 111other award
winner u he n1 named Citizen of the
Yur for "always smiling."
Other winners included W a y n c
Peabody, 12, games room boy of I.he year
who shoots a good game of billiard!;
John l'alomarts, 11, craftsman of the
year who turns exctllent wood Klad
bowls 011 the club lathe; Patrick L.
Downey, 9, sportsman of the year and a
fine wrestler ; John Drake, 15, who won
honors in judo for his detennination. and
Larry Espitia, 14, most improved boy.
Three volunt.ef:r judo instructors. tvor
Gitsham, Takesie Kawahara and Dusty
Moore, received plaques for their efforts.
· Art Gillespie, who helped found the
Boys' Club in 1967, wu given the man·
boy award for giving the most to the
Boys' Club effort.
The Key Club from Huntlngton Beatb
High School served the lipaghetti dinner
lo more than ~ gue.sb at the Boys' Club
banquet. The dinner was cooked by ~
Villa Swede n Restaurant with desert and
drinks provided by Jay Mas:Lroiannl.
New officers inst.ailed Friday night ln·
eluded Al Klingensmith, prelident; Bill
Woods. vice president: Ray Beam,
r;ecretary and Polly Tolson, treasurer,
for th~ board of directors.
Guests of honor were Mllyor J act
Green and Police Chief Earl Robitaille.
DAILY PILOT
OIUNO• COAST l"UILl$1ilNG COMl"ANY
RoiMrt N. We.d
, ... 111en1 tnd l"ubll.,,.,
Jtc.li R. C url...,
\lk.e ,.tleldWll •nd Gtinert l Mt111911'
Thom•• Keevil
Ed!IO<
The"''' A. Mu1rihin•
M1n19"'1 Ed1!0<
A!bt d W. 81111
Auot1111 Ed!IOI
H1fttl"°'"" heel! OHie.•
11175 lte'h loult •t•d
M1i1ing "ddrtos: P.O. 8011 7,0, ''b~I
O"-t Offlc"
L_,.,. 8uefl: 222 F«•I ·-c..t!t Mete: DO W•I 81y I~
N.wDOft a..dlr nn wu1 B•lbae ac...i.v.n1 .. ,. C1-ntt ; a.lS Nortll l l C.1111.,. ._.
'
DAILY l"ILOT ..... ,.. by 1"11 0 1Donnt!I
Qufft Time by the Sea
'Firebug' Firemen
Pla-nned Blazes
Provi,de Practice
.. tt's much harder to burn 1 house
down intentionally than to do it ac·
cidentally."
That's the opinion of Capt. Jim Vin·
cent, of the Huntington Beach Fire
Department, 1"bo la.st year lined up more
Lban 25 homes for firemen to bum down.
Friday. crews ·from four Huntington
Beach fire companies fought .a blaze they
set at 17071 ·'8° St. after the owner had
asked them to demolish it.
"It's hard to fight a fire if you don't
know ila behavior," explained Battalion
Chief Frank Kelly. ,
Kelly directed Friday'• liri TighUng .,
Blood Tests,
Prints Asked
For Suspects
\\'ASlilNGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministration proposed legislation Monday
to subject suspects in federal crimes to
fingerpringtins and other detective lest!I:
such as saliva and blood checks even
before being formally charged.
The Supreme Court has held that such
Identification procedures do not violate
the consittutional guarantet against seU·
im:rimination but only in cases involvin g
suspects already charged.
The administration proposal would ex·
tend such tests to person,, suspected of
crimes in cases where there is no pro-
bable cause to arrest. The testa would be
administered orily upon issuallCe of a
court order.
new firemen -and old -studied v1rloo!
. patterns of a blaze in an old frame alruc·
lure.
Igniting the blaze is a Wk given to
cider hands who first study a house that
the owner wants destroyed, decide if it
has traini ng value for the fire depart·
ment -just any house won't do -then
prepare the house so it \.\'iii burn 1 cer·
lain way.· -
''\Ve have to knock a few boles in tht
roof to make it burn rapidly. Then we
might stack some ·old furnitu~ in one
pile and throw kerosene on it to launch
the blaze," Vincent explained.
''Sometimes we have dumm ies we bide
In the houM!. Tht!'n we tell lhe ifremen
there are ~ in.slde -:-go get them.
Some of our dummies are lost when they
bum up," Kelly added.
When bright red names begin licking at
the sides of the home, firemen are sent
into action.
''First the.y have to knock down lhf.fire
by throwing a fine spray of waleNm ft."
Kelly said . The fine spr11y creates l!ltearn
v.•hich .smothers the names. In a real fire
~hey use this method to avoid heavy
smoke and waler damgc.
"But in tht training fire we rlon 'I cnn-
llnue the steam trc at men \. We lrol the
flames erupt again to i:ive the men prac·
tier.'' Kell y said.
\Vhat the firemen walch for are smok~
patterns (where it 11oes) and how the fire
burns. They also learn that difierent
smoke colors indicate how hot the blaze is.
Rescuj? patterns are practiced when the
fire coo.ls down a little. "We always Jtick
the heaviest man to be a vicUm for the
men to carry out," Vincent said.
\\'hen the building is burned lo the
ground it is up to the owner to haul the:
ashes away -which is considerably
cheaper than the cost of destroyine a
home.
Like a magnet, sunset over tranquil sea draws Qr.
ange Coast family to clilf overlooking beach to
stroU, to \Vatch nalure'li work, to feel t.he afternoon
breeze. to listen to the surf and, maybe, to hurl a
1tone or l\\10 al a receding wave.
If enacted by Congress, a federal
judge. commissioner or magistrate could
vrder a suspect in a federal criminal
case to submit to identification by
"fingerprints, palm prints. fool prints,
1neasurements. blood specimens, urine
specimens, saliva samples. hair samples,
handwriting exemplars. voice samples,
photographs and lineups."
Protection in the form of a line lli•aler
spray is provided for nearby homes and
plants not being burned.
"About 15 minutes of hprd !ire fighting
equals eight hours of activity," Kelly
said, as he wiped the SY:eat from his
brow.
John WayneHostsEnvoy;
.
Congo Mine Deal Looms?
Cango'a ambusador to tb4 Unjted
St.ales was enltrlaincd in the Newport
Beach homes of actor John Wayne and
Emtst Saftig over the weekend 1n a
business deal court.ship that has poten-
lfally millions of dollars hanging on the
outcome.
Wayne and Saftig are principals In the
Newport Beach-based Statesman f\1ining
Company which is seeking mineral ex·
ploration rights to alJ of the Congu.
Congolese AmbaS!.ador Justin Bomboko
made the visit to gather facts for a
report to Congo President Joseph
1.1obutu.
College Theater
Tour Helped Out
By Jr. Women
Golden \Vest College's ch 11 d re n • s
theater group \\'ent 'Ill the ro.id for the
first time this v.•cekend with special
performances in Anaheim and San Diego.
The trip was made possible by 11 $i5
gift to I.he college drama deparlment by
the Huntington Beach Junior Wo1nen '1
Club.
The ;gtudent.s performed an original
children 's pl.ay, "The Case of the Golden
Bagel." at Baden Powell School in
Anaheim, and the 8Rn Diego Public
Library and San Diego Children's
Theater.
The play was written by Peter Conway,
a former Golden \Vest student now stu·
dying at Fresno State College.
Drama instructor Charles Mitchell v.·as
accompanied hy Kris \Vil~n. J~enata
Florin, Roland Barajas, Barbara Shores.
t>.tarion Christie, L8rry Goldberg and
Laurel Burne, all of the children's troupe.
Los ers Eat Beans
Jn, Club Contest
A Friday the 13th banquet of beans
will be served up to half the members of
I.be Fountain \'alley Exchange Club wbo
loot 11.n eigbt·wtek membershlp drivt con·
te~ to the otbet half.
Be&ides eaUng beans And hwnble pie
Friday night at Francois in Huntfngton
Beech lhe 1*1'& must pay ror steak and
all the trimmings for tht win nina: team.
1ccord1ng l9 club secretary Bernie
Beau!ang.
T~ lostna team was appropriately call·
e(f "The Pea Pickers" v.·hile lho Winners
were kno-.n as "The llarvesters."
fountain Valley's Exchange Club hflS
27 member~. Seven new men Yi't!.re drawn
to the club during the recent membership
drJv
"I thJllltlli! was imp}tJe/v.·e'ial-e OUt
friendship and good feeling toward him.
Certainly he was relaxed with us," Safllg
said.
lie rema rted that "from everything
Bomboko indicated, I think we will hear
lrom him very soon."
The principals in the Statesman Mining
venture had beard last October they wert;
awarded a Congolese license for ex·
p!oring mineral rights and they thought
lhey 1.vere in. Since lhen ihey have learn·
ed Congo la\v differs from U.S. law and
the.re is a second phase after awarding of
1he righL'i. They are now av•aiting a go ·
ah rad from President ?o.lobutu.
In \Vinning the license a w a rd .
Statesman prit1<.'ipals figured they had
won out in competition with represen-
tatives of the Soviet Union, Red China
and f"rantc. ·
Japanese, Belgian and French com·
panies ha\'e small mineral concessions in
!he Congo but essentially the vast coun-
try, larger than the slate of Alaska, is
untapped.
"ll may be the treasure housr of the
\1orld," said Ed Smart. Aspen, Colo. resi-
dent \\'ho is president of Statesman
~fining and 1\·as in Newport for the
"'C'ekend talks. He said 1he Congo basin
f'Onlains more mineral possibilities than
anV\vhere else in the ~·orld. it the firm gel! the exploration go
:i.hc3d the entire Congo will be surveyed
by air. \\'hen geological equipmen t indi·
car.es a likely mining area a ground crew
will be dispatched tn the site.
AmbassadO"r Bomboko, his F i r s t
Counselot Charles Sumbu, and t\\·o
Congolese 8ecrelaries stayed at the
Newporter Inn. Saturday night they had
dinner at .John \Yayne's home in
Rayshores, Sunday they were taken on a
hoat tour of the harbor and coast bv
\Vayne·s friend Clement lfirsch. SundaY
.1ftcrnoon there \vas a busints1 mttlins.
stnd Sunda~· e"ening a buffet dinner al
sartig's Lido Isle home \\'hich 35 at·
tended.
Pay-as-you-go
Trustees Topic
Trustees wil\ tackle the touchy ii:.~uo.
t1f pay-as-you·go school construction when
the Huntin'gton Beach City School Olstricl
Boord meets at 7:30 p.m. 1\1esday in the
Dwyer School library.
Two wee.ks ago the board decided nol
to ask for a $1.50 inc rease in the tax rate
on Aprll 14" U> support scboe>l construction
for fiYe years. Now lrosten will consider
pllldng the fialfie issue On a ~une ballot
11loog with a request. In Jncr,a!ic the in·
lc.r~t rate on $4.75 million in already a~
proved l!<hOOI bonds.
The two b;auea are allern1tives. and U
the liChool bonds ~•n be sold A pay ......
you.go gystc.m will not. be ncc,ssary, IC·
cordirli 14 dlstticl o!JiclaJI. .,. -
Rlunmage Sale Sla ted Attorney General John N. Mitchell said
in a letter of transmittal to the House and
Senate lhal the proposed law ·'will pro-
vide federal law enforcement officers
with a useful new tool for the in·
\•estigation of criminal activity and the
;ipprchension or criminals."
After Friday's fire curious neighbors
were shown the fi re engines and their
operation wa s explained to th 8
youngsters by Vincent, who handles much
o( lhe public relatiOns work for the
department.
A rummage sale. i;ponsored by
mcm bt>rs o( St. Anne·l'i P11rish. &!al
Beach. will be conducted from 9 a.m. lo 4
pm .. ~1arch 12-14. at the parish ha.JI. 340
tOlh St., Seal Beach .
..
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows thllt NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings,
In offering the most In earnings to aavel'L
a% 2 y11r lerm 1coount, with $5,000 minimum
5V. '% 1 yi1r term account. with $1 ,000 minimum
s«i % 3-monlht borntt account, with S500 minimum
7Ya% certificate ot deposit 1v1!11bl1, with $100,000 minimum
I
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
and laan ullldalian If you ttl • Mutuel Siver. now la the time to Invest 1dd1Uon1I tunda in lhne new
hlgh·r•l• eecounta. (lnsurence ha• been Increased lo $20,000.) II yoU are l'IOl a CORONA DEL MAR
Mulual Sawir now 11 the tlma to open ywr account at Tha Big M-Mutu1I Savln;a. ,.., El.i co.11 HiQ!lw•t ' T1tto!'>ent t75·~i;l10
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,ooOI
Wl•T A,.CADIA
MOWettDu•rtt "°'d Tt!~ "4--0111
COVINA
:00 Hortfl Cltrw A..-llf
T~U14'11
OLl'NDALI »t Nortll lral'lll lolllMll:I T•....,..2'ltt-'t
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S.iturday, Marcf\ T, 1970
' H DAILY PILOT !J
Seve1•al 0111aces of Preven tio1a
The mothers of Cyndee Howe, 5. Buena Park (left)
and Ruth Reisman. 6, La Palma, took the girls
fi shing this weekend at San Clemente's Municipal
Pier. They al so look lengths of rope. \Vhat they
didn 't take were any chances that the girls might
go overboard.
Air-sea Search
Being Conducted
For Lost Vessel
A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter and
surface craft out of Oceanside Harbor t~
day are searching an area off San Onofre
for a 22-foot outboard boat reportedly in
trouble.
A search ()r the area l 'i miles
south\\•est of the atomic fMJ\\'er plant Sun-
day nighl turned up no sign of the
distressed boat
Coast Guard ornci als said the Harbor
Police at Oceanside monitored a
"mayday" call from a Citizens Band
radiG -at 6:52 p.m. but the caU \\'35 not
from the distressed boat.
U.S. Laos Bombing Raids
Said Causing Red Pullback
VIENTIANE (UPI) -Jntelligerle<
sources said today there are indications
the North Vietnamese are pull ing away
from two U.S. support bases because of
supply problems caused by American
bombing.
The guerrilla troops who took the Plain
of Jars three weejc:s ago ad vanced
south\•:ard to within striking distanre of
the bases al Long Cheng and Sam Thong
and were expected to attack.
leading south from the Plain o( Jars.
Long Cheng and nearby Sam Thong lie
about 30 miles south or the plain, Long
Cheng serving as Vang Pao's head-
quarters and as the site of a vital U.S.
support and advisory base for Laotian
government troops.
Oil Blaze _ Battlea
' ' ' ' ·! . Blast May Cause Worst U.S: Slick
VENICE1 La. (UPll - Fireflghlers
prepared today to blow out a 27-day-old
blaze on an offshore platform with a
dynamite chars:e that could cause the na-
tion 's worst oll sp\11,
Calm seaa and gentle breeze~ greeted
workmen early "today and they began
p~eparingJhe 21JO..pound eiu~Josive charge
to cap what has been called tt1le worst
offshore oil fire in history. ~
Putting out the blate 30 miles offshore
'.\'as only the first problem. T·he most Qlf·
fic:ult wiU be controlling an expec~
deluge o( crude oil pollution after the fire
is out.
'An Interior Depart1nent spokesman
said Chevron Oil Company's ''Charlie'•
structure was believed capable of spew-
ing anywhere from 900 to 8,000 barrels of
oil a day un til its eight damaged wells
are capped -an oper:ation that may take
up to three weeks.
By comparison. the Santa Barbara
Channel oil spill in CaJifomia amounted
to about 8,000 barrels of oil tttat leaked to
the surtace and stained beaches over a
monf.b..Jo~ period.
The recent oil slick that gummed Tam-
pa Bay, Fla., was only 350 barrels. r Texas wild well UreCighters working for
Paul "Red" Adair have been ready for
more than a week to detonate an ex-
plosion to put out the fire and begin the
tricky process of installing shu toff valves
to the ruptured well heads. But small
craft warnings, high winds and seas up to
11 feet postponed the shot for !he past
[ew days,
Once the fireball that has been con-
suming the hlgh pressure natural gas and
oil from the wells is doused federal and
s!Jlte officials and Chevron crews will
make the first rough estimate on the
volume of oH being spilled.
Al that point. Olevron will activate the
world's first oil pollution control syslem
designed, to !unction in the open sea.
It will be the first test to see if hun-
dreds or men working with barges,
specially designed floating booms, newly
developed oil skimmers and other equi~
ment can contain a large spill and
vacuum it out of the water before it
reaches shore.
The Interior Department has said it
thinks Chevron has done all it possibly
could to control the anticipated spill. A
spokesman said Chevron has the capabili-
ty to scoop up as many as 20 ,000 barrels
of oil a day .
Vl'I Te .....
SLICK WAY TO CURTAIL SPREAD OF OIL ON COAST
Barrier of Barrels, Plywood~ Canva1 Readied for Loul1ian1
President Plans Change
In Foreign Aid Program
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -President year period.
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A Coast Guard helicopter was sent aloft
at 5:50 p.m. and Oceanside surface· craft
:searched the area until nearly midnight.
Instead, according to these sources,
\.en. \'"ang Pao, the commander of Lao-
tian troops in the area, has received re-
ports they are pulling back because they
cannot get enough rice or munitions.
Despite the pullback reports, U.S. em-
bassy officials canceled a scheduled visit
by newsmen today to Sam Thong, citing
"bad security." Newsmen said il wa~
because the o(ficials did not want them to
:;ee what is going on there.
The Communist Pathet Lao commenttd
_ on one of the secrecy-shrouded 11pects or
the U.S. operation, claiming th1t 12,000
Thal troops now are fighting in La.Oii, 1l
least 5,000 of them in the Plain of Jlf's
The question was wheth<:r wave action
would toss the oil over the barriers set up
to contain it. Ni).:on plans to propose a new foreign aid Nixon. in a statement lasued al the ·
plan based on a report which reeom-t~lorida Wh!1.t flouse Sllflday.ju!t before
Authorities this morning were trying to
Jocate the originator of the citizens band
r.porl
Self -immolation
Victim Critical
The reason given ·for this is the U .~.
boni!Sing campaign agalnst Highway 7,
lhe North Vietnamese supply lifeline
·frow, Hanoi, and qain!t 1upply routes region. ;
-
Utt Field Office
Will Close Soon
mends scrapping tradilional foreign he retumed to Washington, did rtOt etl• dorse •peci!ic:s ill ~ne task fQ,rct .rt:port. assistance programs and eslablishlng a But he said:
multibillion dollar lending fund for developing nations. "A new approach to foreign assistance, ~ased',on the proposals of the ta.sk force. The !und,.as outlined by a.J6·Jtlln .task wlll be one· of our major foreJgn policy i111.-• •zoo~ in Trailer force appointed by tbe President in illatives in the coming years. J believe 1·ts Conrad Epley, field representative to September wo Id I lud • u n e: ideas are fresh and exciting_,,
the late Congressman James" B. Utt, said --$2 billion for a new U.S. development Nixon said the United States . "has I
tOOay the 35lh eongressiooal district field bank. The money would be appropriated profound national interest in cooperating
.An Anaheim woman remains in critical Pol: "e Say 82 Pets Too Mai•y office will close within the month. by Congress and the txlnk would have the with deveJoping countries in their effort$ ·
condition today in the burn unit of Orange .,._, " Pending matters will be referred to power to borrow $2 billion Jrom the to improve conditions or lire in thelf
County ~fedical Center where she was ., Robert A. Geier, administrative assistant public if needed. societ~s." He said he would send a pro·
taken Saturday night after setting fire to Johnny Whiteriver, an unemployed three peacocks. 13 dogs, four cats, six to ttte late Republican congressman In -$1 billion for a new U.S. lnlemalion31 posal based on the recommendations tO
herself with paint thinner, po I i c e clo'o\'n Jiving in Santa Ana, fold police he pigeons, fi ve doves, three rabbits, five !he Washington, O.C. o(fice. Epley said development institute which would try lo Congtess next January. -~
reported. ' and hts wife were used to sharing their guinea pigs, nine chickens, two gttse, 16 Geier and the \Vashington sta[f will con-make progress in usjng scientific and The task force was headed by Rudolph :
Mrs. Margaret E. Houston, 46, o( 9532 quail. two desert turtles and a duck. tinue lo handle 3Sth district business until technical know-how lo build up develop-A. Peterso n, board chalnnan of the Bank ·
Rosebay Drive, is sufferirl;: from third JS-foot house trailer with their pets -all Whileriver, 35. was held today on traf-a successo r is elected and seated in the ing nation s. of Am erica. It urged that the Agency for
degree burns over moot o(he.r body. 82 of Uiem. fie warrant violations as authorities House of Representatives. -An increRse from $500 million to $1 Internationa l Development be gradually •
Officers said she poured ttie paint thin-Police decided it was cruelty to the prepared charges against him for cruelly New business should be direcled to the billion in the amount of money the United dismantled and its duties absorbed by
ner over the upper part of her body and pets which include three 200-pound bears, lo animals, possession or wild animals attention of Mr. Geier, 23~ Rayburn States spends each year contributing to various new organizations which would'
set it afire. The blaze was pl.it out by her a burro, • wallaby. an ocelot, a bobcat, within ·the city limits and ownlhg flouse Office Building, Washington, D.C., international finance institutions. The be under the supervision or the State
daus:hter Ellen, 14. three goets, two opossums, a monkey, unlicensed dogs. 20515. amount would be spread over a three-Department. ' • ~-"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~--"~~~~~~~~,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~--''--~~~~~~~~~~~· ..
El Rancho has the hottest p=ri~ce~in town!
•••••••••••
EI Rancho brings back old time v&1uest Sixteen ounce loaf, white or wheat, at this budget saving special price!'
'
Welch's Jelly ................ , ......... 49¢
Grape Jelly or Preserves .•. 2 lb. jar!
Scott Place Mats ...... . . . . ... 29¢
Set a pretty place ... package of 24 !
Pork and Beans ·-· . .. ...... 4 1o1 $1
CRmpbell's I-Jome Strle ... big 28 oz. cans !
Scott Towels ................................ 29¢
Thirsty to,,·els •.. jumbo rolls'. Colors. prints.
b~arly-in-1 hr-1veek 111 c nu values at E.'l Ramho .1
Beef Liver ........ v.~~~,.~~~R! ...... 69~
For nutrition, for ,·ariety ••• serve liver l f'or tenderness, freshness, value. ..• look to El Rancho !
Veal Birds.:. ..... s.~~.~1~~~u.~ ...... 39~
Tender Yea! .•. perfecl serving portions! Eat it all goodness In & delightful-and "·elcome-taste Ll'eat!
Veal Cutlets ................. _ ............. $1~
Breaded ••• ready to cook and serve !
El Rancho Delicateuen.
!,~~~!h~~~li~,~~!~n yoQr 3 ORF $1.
choice of favorite varietica \
Rcir. 39c ............... ..
Sliced Bacon ............................. 89~
El Rancho's ranch style ... ~o lean!
Super~fresh Produc~
Roman Beauty Apples
Large site ... just right to serve
baked, with bro,vn suga r and cin-
namon ! .........•...•.....•...
Price& in. effect afon,., T11.u., Wed.,
/tlar . 9, JO, 11. No 1aie1 to dcalera.
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ARCADIA: Sunlit and Hunlin;itcn Dr. (El Rintho Clnt11l
PASADENA:
320 WOil Colorido Blvd.
:SOUTH PASADENA: ~rtmont and · Huntin&tcin D(.
HUNTINGTON BEACH: warner and Al1onquin (Botrdwa lk r I
HEWPORT BEACH:
i721 Newport Bl•d. and
2SSS'Eostblull Dr. (E11tbl\if!'Vlll111 C.o~r)
•
DAILY, l'ILOT
cc......" .. .....,, •• ...,,.
Capl. Koyo 's.ronoon of the Al-
bany, N.Y. Police Department
talked and showed a movie on bur-
glary ..to ..a women's civic group.~
~be delivered the talk on crime
prevention, someone walked off
with $1,145 worth of ladies coats in
the same restaurant. The captain,
a communlty relations specialist.
was ••signed to the case. •
U.S. troop1 in Vietnam mu..t takt
precai.tion m ltarchi'na for trace.s
of the niemu. Here, the men are not
&earching for the proverbial 11eedle
in a hay.ttack but for arms and sup-
plies or camouflaged air ve-nts lead-
ing to underground comple:es. • State Sen. H•rry J, McGuirk o!
Baltimore, Md., has i n tr o -
duced a resolution Into the General
Assembly to create a study com-
mUsion to recommend standards
for light bulbs. Said the senator,
"'People are often unprepared to
replace a burned out bulb al-the
time of its expira~ion.'' •
San Franct1co topless dancer
Lola: Raquel has Pleaded no
con~1t to di&turbing th.e pta.ce
of the financial district Dec. 23
when 1he paraded down the
1
street wearing a sign reading
1 "'Merry Xmas" acros1 her bare
4'·inch bust. SI~ .said she wat
.sorTt1 1he couldn't Ott the word
''Christmas" 1n but 1aid there
tomn't any raom. Tht judge
fined htr $65 or $32.50 per
prominent display.
--"""""'"""""=__j • Th• Huddersfield, England Chor-
a1 Society bas announced that it
will no longer sing to the accom:
paniment of t he Royal Llverpool
Philharmortic because it.he orches-
tra members chew gum while the
chorus sings. • 73 members of the Leflhanded
Students Union at the University
of Kansas marched on the chancel·
lor's office recently with a list of
demands. The ultimatum includ-
ed : Left handed doors, lt!thanded
desks, lefthanded homecoming
queens. letthanded cheerleaders
and lefthanded professors.
---IAnked to Rights
Barry, T ed Back
·Low er Vote Age
WASHINGTON. (AP) -Wllh lhe
Senate maneuvering over Negro voling
rights legislation, the issue or Jowerini
the voting age to 18, was raised anew tcr
da).' by two senators poles a pa r t
poJitlcally. •
A senate judiciary subcommittee called
a hearing to give Sena. Barry Goldwater
'R·Arlz.), and Edward M. KtMedy ([).
Mass.), a ohance -to advance thtir
argument.s that Congress can give the
vote to 18-year-olds.
Although Goldwater anti Kennedy agree
on thlJ,.they difrer on whether it should
be made pa.rt or leglslation to prevent
denial of voUng rigbts because of race.
~ legislation is embroilf.d in a
dispute between senators who want td
continue the I9&5 ·Votlng Rights Act, ap-
plying to seven Southern states, and a na·
tionwide bill urged by President NJ.xon
and already passed by the House.
An amendment to lower tbe voting age
to ta already has been of!tred by
Democratic Leader Mike Mans.field. One
of the co-1t>onsor.s ls Kennedy, the assis-
tant Democratic leader.
But Goldwater says the proposal should
be handled as a separate me8.5Ure rather
than eutangled in the ali'eady sharp con~
troversy over the voting rights legisla·
tion.
Many senators maintain the voting age
can be lowered to 18 only by a con-
stitutional amendment.
A proposed consUtuUonal amendment
lilts 17 senators u co-sponsors and bear· tngs on it a~ady have been held by the
Judiciary subcommittee, headed by Sen.
Blrcl! S.yh, O.lnd.
However, Bayb signed up lut. week u
one or 10 co-sponson of Mansfield 's
amendment to the voUng rights bill. An
aide to Sen. ?i.farlow W. Cook (R·Ky.), a
Kidnap Victim
Says Guerrillas
Eying Hostages
GUATEMALA CITY (UPI) -Sean
Michae l Holly's kidnapers told them they
have other American diplomats ln mind
for use as hoslagts to exchange for im·
prisoned Commwtist terrorists.
Holly, the labor attache and second
secretary at the U.S. embassy, y.·as Cretd
at 5 a.m. Sunday in exchange for two
jailed guenifias, Jose Manuel Aguirre
Monzon and Vidalina A1onzon Soto.
His abductors had demanded the
reltase of four jaHed comrades by 2:30
p.m. Sunday or said Holly would be kill·
ed. It turned out one of the four already
had fled to Mexico and another was freed
earlier in tbe week and bad taken refugt
in the Costa Rican embassy.
AgulITe and Miss llfonzon joined Lionel
El Cid in the Costa Rican diplomatic
enclave and all thret Y.'t rt granted safe
conduct passes lo A1exit:t1.
Holly, 39, told an impromptu news con·
ference he would not rtcognize the men
who seized him from his car Friday at
an inlerstclion because they wore hats
and masks throughout tht ordeal.
"They said they had their eye on other
officers in the embassy and that they
would havt killed me if I had tried to
run," he said.
He saJd they took his glasses and
blindfoldtd him before beginning the
journey to a mountain hideout by car. on
foot and on horseback. The abductors
carried machint guns.
Once Aguirre and ~1iss Monzon were
freed, the kidnapers brought Holly back
to Guatemala City early Sunday and left
him in the Church of tht Divine
Providence with instructions not to call
anyone for an hour.
The hour up, "The first thing I did wa s
to ca ll my wire, Rebecca." Holly said.
The couple has five children. He spoke to
newsmen at the U.S. embassy following a
tearful reunion with the family.
subcommlttee member, said he also bas
concluded the voUng age can be lowered
by statute and · plans to introduce a
separate bill.
In the Senate, where debate on the
votfng rlghta legislation began a week
ago, supporters of a straight-out ex-
tension of the 1965 act have kept the up-
per hand so far.
A mot.ion to labi. lhe extension bill was
rejected, as were two amendment.s of-
fered by Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr., D-N.C.,
to ease the law's impact on the South.
The 1956 act suspended voter literacy
tests and authorized the use of federal
registrars in six Southern satates and
parts of a seventh, It also requi res these
states to obtain ad vance apprcival for
voting law changes from tbe U.S. at·
tomey general. ·· ·---
se~~~~f~~a~:" ~~11 '1~1!~b ~u~~1~·
drops this pre<learance requi rement and
provides for unifonn nationwide ap-
plication of other parts of the 1965 act.
Peace Plan
Ignores Arab·
Land De1nand
PARIS (UPI) -Foreign Minister
Maw-ice Schwnann aaid today the Big
Four were wOrt.lng on a ne" Middle East
peace formula that no longer calls for un-
conditional Israeli evacueUon of ter·
ritories it seized from the Arabt In the
1967 war. ·
Schumann, addressing a foreign press
luncheon, aaid he hoped the Big Four
would agree on the formula, which also
\1•ould send 1:1nited Nations troops into
the area again and create a demilitarized
zone between Israeli and Arab forces.
In the past, tht Soviet Union and
France have demanded totaJ withdrawal
of Israeli forces Crom occupied territories
before thert can be any negotiations -
the poslUon the Arabs have taken. Israel
maintaill5 it cannot withdraw until there
are negotiations.
Authoritative diplomatic sources in
Cairo said today France had propo&ed a
plan which called for Israeli withdrawal
l!nked with a pledge by the Arab nations
to maintain peace, A second part of the
plan deals wlth the Palestinian refugee
problem and with setting up recogniud
fron tiers, the sources said.
Schumann made a sweeping review of
l'.'Orld problems and resulti of the visit ht
and President Georges Pompidou made
to the United States. In the review he
said President Nison admitted that
France might play a specific role in belJ>-
ing to bridge differeoces ovtr the Viet-
namese conflict.
* * * 5 Russ Advisers
Killed in Egypt
By UNITED PRESS lljTERNATIONAL
A reliable Beirut pubUcaUon reported
during a weekend or Arab-Israeli clashes
on three fronls that fi ve Russian advisers
serving "''ilh Egyptian troops have been
killed in Israel air strikes .
In Cairo today, memorial services
v.·ere held for Gen. Abdel Moneim Rlad
v.·ho was killed exactly one year ago by
Israeli mortar fire on the secood day of
Egypt's •·war of attrition" against Israel.
The steady increase in air and ground
actions since has brought the ~1iddle East
to the brink of a new all-out war. The
situation was worsened recenUy by ac-
celerated Arab gueniJla activiUes from
Lebanon.
Cold Air Follows Warmth
Temperatures Over Plains Range From 30 to 40
Cfiflornia
SOU"n41Elll:N Collll'OllN IA -Vtd·
l bll t i ... but lt'!Olli., ftlr MO'ldt Y.
lnc,..1&. c:!wdto wlll! c1t1n<1 of ••!"
MlnN'f' 11'1111 TUftdil'f'. Wlnct( Ind lll9M· I 1.-coolW "TlltMllY.
lOS A.NOEl..l!I AllEA-1"1•1!1 cloud• ~•'I'· Ckl.ld'I' wltlt cNnc1 OI' r1r" ~ rilll'll Ind TUiJ.dll'. \..OWi Mir
to. Hltlt Mo.•'f' U . Wind• 11>11 1li.hl•
IY aiolW' TUfldtY. Ct>ift<CI ol r1ln !ft.
c:rNl/1-.. Jll ptf'Qtl! b• Mondi• nlfM.
l'OIHT COHCEl'TION TO MEXICA"I
IOllDl.-L.111'11 ¥1rl.ol1 wlMh MOll-
dlY ~ bioc:omlnt Wttl 10 IOUlh·
...,... I '9 11 mpfl Motldli' 11!•r1100n
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MirlR'f' "'9llt •I'd TUAder, '"'"IY dMy MDMt'f'. ClevctY w1lfl dlUICI cf
'1!11,,,..,.., ni.111 11111 Tu.cllr, l l"l•
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1..9w1 11 " 41, Hlttli Mondli'f' 4! 19 n.
(Q.UTAl AHO IHTEllM!'OIATE
VAl..L•YJ -l"lrll'f' c:!ouch' Monc1er. CIWll'f' wl'!fl d\lllC:I ., r1!11 MfncllW
lllfht Mlf Tuttd••· lllthtl\t noo1tr ~. UM IO" A Hltollt. Mol!Mr .....
MOUWTAIN Alll:.l.AI -Motll'f' l1lr
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• 9' # ..... w"""° 10 to • so.tr
.,....... """' Mand4l'f' u to n """" l'I .. n II R IOWW Ylllft.. •
P~EVIEW Of
COUI . ,,,,~, ..
SHOW.as \,I ..
co .. tal
'"•~tr cl!Mw tcff•. Li.tit .... ,r,bl,
""',,,.,, bK8fllln• well I• MUI/I""'' I
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Cottlll lwn11tr1Wru r•ntt trom JI ~ "· In!.,~ t-rllurM ••-troni 'II I• M, Wli." .._tlure Jf,
SMn, Moon. Tldes
MONDAY
$teotld 111•11 ..• • 10.t' ,. ..... , ,
s.tellll I-1;0. pm, 0 I
TUllOAY
,.lrlf Jlltfrl ll·Sl 1,111, 1 I
'l"I low I ~ IJl'I. 0 I Stclfld Iii.it . 11 GO p,I!>, I.I
hcond 10W • •• , , , , l :Jol 1.111. 0.1
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~Ill 0.lOll, ci.-r 1111 d•• ,,,...!ti... ~•!IH
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Diii "'"llUrM -11111 II flvM 1111"' ttn ol lt'I IM.fl d\lrlllt I llK iMllrr Hftod.
Tetnperettrres
Hltlt L1w l"rtc .
AT""UIP1IUI • ..
Ancller191 ~ " A!l1n11 .. " 81~1raf11ld " " 811"'41rtk • • 8ollt •• " ·" •0.1 ... .. " l rown1 ... 1111 " ..
Cl\1(1" ~ " .. C'nc1Mtl1 • " ...~, " " Ott MofttlS ~ " Ottrolt " " F1lr1Mn•1 • ·• ..
Fort WOl111 " ..
"'""' " " Htl1n1 ,. " ·-· u " K...,M, CllY n " l11 V"ts " • let An"I'' " " i\lltml n " "' MlnM1POfl1 " " Ntw O•lffnt. " .. N..,. Vtrlc " " NOl'ltl ,l1ft9 " ..
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" " •M-.. " "''"'Cl"' • " ...
ktd lhrtt .. " ""' .. " laCl"llNiltt " .. san la1!1 City .. ~ ... ... .._ .. • Stt'I Fr111<1M1 " " lf•llll " " -·M • " "-" n 11 w ... _ .. ..
~
TMQI PIKIS lfflCTIYI I I• ALL IALIM STOIU I
-TVD.&WID. MAl(ll t, 11 & 11, 1971
ADI JAX TO TAIAIU nlMS 1 1
meantfo e
~~~-. .~ .
MONTEREY JACK,_
MILD CHEDDAR
OR COLBY
CHEESE
c
C011AGE
CHEES-
KRAFT PHILADELPHIA
Cream ~heese
BUKO ASSORTED .DANISH
LB.
a.oz. 35c
PKG.
4 31/:z.$1 c Cheese Spreads oz.
PINT ~ lfGUL.Alt fl..A.VOflED 011: FRUIT ON THE BOTIOM
YOGURT S ~~\~ $]00
I QUART 55' ... REAL ORANGE JUICE OT, 39c G'ZL. 6.9•
HEAT 'N EAT
FISH
STICKS
39L~
TOPS REMOVED
?ud U.S. Z>. A·· t!4otu
SQUARE CUT SHOULDER
LAMB
ROAST
SHOULDER
LAMB 98~. CHOPS
MfATY LAlGf LOIN OR $1~.? ROUND BONE
LAMB CHOPS
3TO
4-LBS.
~TEW OR BRAISE
LAMB NECK
LAMB BREAST
c
49f..
29~
SLICED 'N TIED SHOULD ER 6 5 PRE-CARVED C
LAMB ROAST LB.
S"""4t
DESERT GROWN VALENCIA
ORANGES •
C.
FRESH CARROTS 10~.
SWEET MILD
BROWN ONIONS 10 ~ LB .
DEL MONTE CATSUP 19c 14-0Z.
BO TILE
lf9 REGULAR '
ICE MILK 2Plm29C 49c v.
GAL.
31c BUTTER BREAD 1-LB.
LOAF
Yo ur Nearest Ralphs Store Is Located at 9907 Adams Blvd., Huntington Beadi '
Store Houn 9 a.m . ·to I 0 p.m; Daily
•
I
l
I
11
I
,
' J
-
,
·6men
JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-43'11
Mlftd•'f, MWclr f, 111' " .. _ U
Greenbacks Raised
Box Social
A green scene is being pla nned by members of Las
Flores Wo1nen 's Club when th ey invite their husbands
to_the club's first social event of the year.
A box social will take place in th e 1·Iunlington
Beach home of ~1rs. Virgil Komara at 8 p.m. Satur·
day, March 14.
St. Patrick's Da y theme will be carried out in dee·
orations and the unique box lunches Which will be auc·
tioned . Proceeds from the sales will be used to finance
vario us programs throughout the year.
Assisting ?i.1rs. Komara \Yith preparations wiJI be
1'.1rs. Harry Winchell and Mrs .. Ja ck Johnston, and in
addition to surprise entertainment, members "'ill be
taught the Irish jig.
~-•
I
-Mrs. Roi White, secretary, recently presented a.
check to \.Val ter J obnson of the Huntington Beach
Library to purchase children's books for the library's 1
bookmobile. The clu b also makes an annual scholarship
contribution.
IN JIG TIME -\Vhippi ng up box su ~pe rs \vhich \vill be auction-
ed during a Saturday, March 14, social party are (left to right)
Mrs. Frank Pellkofer, president; Mrs. Joseph Valinsky, secre-
lary, and l\frs. Virgil Komara, treasurer of Las Flores Women'•
Club. Proceeds from the auction will be used to finance the club 's
many projec.ts for the coming year.
LUCKY STEPS -r..fembers of the Sou th Coast Junior \Voman 's Club will fol-
low the shamrocks when th ey conduct a door-to-door campaign for new mem-
bers Tuesday, March 17. Joining the search are (left lo right) Mrs. Carl Cleary
and Mrs. D1ck Trodick, membership director.
~
1
Junia.rs
Expand
' Shamrocks will shiAe along
lhe way \Yhen members or the
South Coast Junior Woman's
Club of Fountain Va 11 c y
ci rculate SL Patrick's Day
j greetings during a door-to.
door campaign for n e w
members.
The good luck encountered
hi past endeavors will be
described to all w o m e n
between the ages of 18 and 35
as the Juniors explain their
purpose, major activitiCJ and
philanthropies.
Jn addilion, an Invitation to
attend the group's general
-· meeting-at 7:30 p.m. Wedn es-
day, f\tarch 25. in the co1n-
munify center will be lssll«f
by f\trs. Dick Trodick, mem·
bership director.
The meetrng will ce'le brate
the club's fourth birthday and
all past presidents a n d
coordinators wlll be honored.
Also in conjun ction with Oie
mehlbershl p drive, Mrs .
Trodick is planning a tea at
7:30 p.m. Monday, April 6, In
the community center.
All 11·omen Interested In at-
tending either of the functions
are inv ited to c a 11 her at
m-6753,
Serving as president of the
organization is Mrs. Jon
McKibben. The Juniors were
organized In 1966 with f\1rs.
William B. Hayes serving as
charter president, and in 1967
were accepted in the Los Cer·
ritos Distr ict. Ca Ii for n i a
Federation of Women's Clubs,
Juni or Membership.
' Register's Rin g Provides Reason for Celebration
IJittle Mernlaid Gu ild members 1\•frs. William
Thomas. Mrs. A. A. Dowers and J\1rs. T. W. \Vel sh
(left to right) have every reason to be jubilant. 'T'hc
l~untington Beach Guild presented Children's 1-lo.~
pital of Orange County \vith a check for $10,000,
proceeds fron1 their year's fund ing acU vities. The
next meeting of the Little Mermaids takes place
Tuesday. ~larch 17, in the \Vclsh'home when plan!!
for R .June home and garden show in Anaheim Con-
vc nlion ('enter \Viii be discussed. "
Dog Gone. Laziness Replaces Bonnie's True Pupp·y Love
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our !&.year.
old daughter begged us !ot a puppy for
her birthday. Bonnie promised .to train
him, walk him, feed him and be totally
responsible for all his needs. So wt
bought Bonnie a Boxer puppy. She named
him Plato.
Plato cnews everything in sight and
( vomlts I.II over. He has spotted the sofa, the living room chairs and ruined every
rug in the house. The place smells like
11 kennel and no amount of airing seems
to help.
· Plato cries all nlght and no one can
1leep -no one except Bonnie, that is.
Nothina bothers her. She is in school all
day so I'm the "" wbo walk.I Plato ond
--
ANN LANDERS ~
cleans up after him. When Bonnie does
come home she is IQO busy on the tele·
phone to feed her puppy so I have to do
that, loo.
Last nighl we had a heated argument
and I told Bonnie l was giving Plato
away. She became hysterical and made
me feel like a murderer . I love my
daughter and l don't want · to break her
heart. Please tell me what to do.
-NERVIS RECK
DEAR RECK : Do yourself, Plato and
Boftnle • ravor and give the puppy to
PtoPle Wbo will cli'rt for It properly.
Boanle has not kepl her word. If you let
ber hy1 lerlcs trap you Into ktf:plng: the
p11p, you've g:ot 1 geranium In your era·
nium, Lady.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : i\1y husband's
bookkeeper quit last May aher working tor him fer five yeara. I waa not unha!>!>Y
,
about her leaving because she was such
a trouble-maker and I never liked her.
Two weeks after Jennie quit, her hus-
band came to the house on hls lunch
hour to tell me "something important.''
I almost died ot shock when he told me
Jennie was pregnant by ·my husband-
and he was thrilled because he always
had wanted a lamlly and was physically
unable to lather a child. He then admitted
It was IDS idea-lhat he had talked his
wife into seducing my husband and he
lhoughf r ought to know the racts.
The baby is four months old now and
Irom what I hear· she Is a very beautiful child.
I told my husband about the visit that
verv niaht.. He denied evei:ythin&-called -'
the guy "nuts," and said Jennie was
involved with another m8rf In 'the com-
pany and that he had lathered the child.
The whole thing has made me phys-
ically ill. I belleve my husband, but I
k~p wonderi ng how much gossip there
is. I want to leave town but my hus-
band has a goOd job and it would mean
starting over. We have lhree young
children aod I don't want them hurt by
I.his. What ahould we do?-RICHi\fOND
l>EA R RIClli\IONO: II you don 't feel
bttter In 18 day1, I suggest you and your
hu1band strlou11ly eonsldtr movln"-to
another city. Whnlever he lostll 1f/niin·
chtlly wlll be worth It in lerms of your
health and peace 0: mJnd for your
family.
CONFIDENTIAL TO WHAT TO DO!:
lt'11 tiine your neighbor found an unmar-
ried '1humanitarian" to cry on. Jland
your husband the names ol a counselor,
a ciergsmafl and a therapist. and sug-
gest that he glve the list lo the la dy .
If )'00 ha\'t lrOoble g:eUhlg •along l\'10.
your parents ... If yon can't get tbcnt
lo let you live )'OUr own life, 1end fOf
Ana Landers' bookltl, 11Bu1gcd bv Par-
ents'! How to Get !\tort freedom." Send
$0 cents In C1:1ia with your reqaest and
1 long, slumped, 11elf-addrt11ed covelopt.
Aoa Landers will bt glnd lo help yo11
wil h your problems. Send them to Mt
In care of Ille DAILY PILOT, H<lom1
• seU•ddr<lffd, ...,.J'l •isA. .
•
OA.llV PILOT
Scottish Schottische Entertains
Drug Abuse Topil I
..
Meeti g Lu res
Top Panelists ~
A blanket Invitation to at-Following the noon lunch :J' ,_
tend a narcotics symposium break Dr. Ralph Bauer, trus· ,.-t,...;,
has been issued by the Hun-tee of Ocean View and Hunt· 1·~,
tington Beach Junior Woman 's ing ton Beach High SchoOI. dis. .,
Club, J tricts, will moderate a panel ,.
The publit:! Is Invited to al-discussion of Narcotic Abuse
tend lbe meeting which will be-and Schools.
gin wil,h a 9 a.in. regfstratioo Panelists will inc I u de
in the Golden \Vest College Superintendent Clare~ Hall,
forum Saturday. Pt1arch 14. Ocean View School District:
LeUers from the Huntington Glenn DysMger, Marina High
Beach Juniors ha ve been mail-School principal, and s. Rick
cd lo all junior womeri 's clubs fl.1ork, honor student from
and California Federation of Marina High School.
\Voman's Clubs in the Orange Assisting during the sym·
District by 1'1rs. Douglas poslum will be members of lhc
Moscrip and Mrs. Stanley Het· Tri-teens, the club's junior
tinga, chairman. auxiliary, and contributing
In addition, in\'itatiolls have financial ·assistance is the
been issued to Mayor Jack Woman's Club of J-funl.Mgton •
•
Gr~en and other city officials, Beach.
all schools, churches and civic Anyone wishing additional
organizaUoru. information or reservations
Cooperating in the sym· may call Mrs. Ray Hopkins.
posium will be the Huntington 8.u.3172, or ~1rs. Hettinga, 893-
Be:acb Police Department. 0317.
There will be a $1.50 fee
NARCOTICS ABUSE -A. day\on g sy mposi um on narcotics abuse \viii tak e
place Saturday, Marc~ 14, Jn G?!den \Ve st College .. Coo pe ra ting in the event
are l\l rs. Slanley Hetlinga. chairman of the Junior \Voman's Club of Huntin~
lon Beach, and Ja1nes l\lahan, sergean t, ll untington Beach Police Depa rt·
mcnl.
charged for registration. and
the Juniors will serve free
noon lunch In the studenL
center.
Following a welcome by
Mrs. Eugene \V il liams,
Juniors presi dent, and Earl
ltobitaille, chief of policr.
panel discussions will begin at
JO a.m.
Narcotics Abuse and
'
Your Horoscope Tomorro w
Sag itta ri us: Forces Scattered
TUESDAY regard as pcacetnakcr. Pl;iy SCORP IO (Oct. 23-No\', 21 ): PISCES (Feb. J9.ri.1arch 20\:
Scottish country dancing will provide the rntertainment du ring a potluck sup·
per sponsored by ~dy Buchanan Lodge of 1-luntington Beach at 7 p.m, Sat-
u ~ay, March 14, 1n Lake Park Clubhouse. Miss Laura Llppett (left) and
~fiss • .i\udrey l\1ahler join Edward Goller to lead ofi the dance Tickets at Sl .2~ for adults an~ 75 cents for children may be obtained by' calling Mrs.
Orvdle Stoner, chairman, at 847-4121. The public is inVited.
l\tedicine. will be discussed by
Dr .. Arthur 1'-1. Dostrow.
chairman of Orange County
l\fed.ical A!sociation D r u g
Abuse Committee, moderator :
Dr. lrwiri Kempler, member
of the drug abuse committee;
Dr. Donald Fisher, resident in
psychiatry, OC Medic a I
Center, and Saul Slolzberg,
psychiatric social w o r k e r ,
C.Ommunity ~1ental Health
MARCH 10
By SYDNEY 0~1ARR
Scerplo ls called the sexiest
nf the zodiacal signs. But if
that Is true, Leo runs a close
second.
that itnporlant role. Break indicated in rel ationshi p
CANCER <June 21-Ju\y 22): th<.1t previously s u r vive d
Some friends appear hot· severe bumps. Key is to
tempered. llealize clash of realize fatigue 1night ha\'e
ideas is exciling but maintain much lo do with emotions.
self-control. Important issue t.1easure words, actions . Study
can be settled without hurling Libra message:
Please do nol rush -not in
v.•rlting. dri ving. ~i v in g
answers to important ques·
lions. You exhibit tendency lD
be careless. Seek ~teadying in-
fluence -comes fro1n fam ily
member.
Se Ina-Egan
Couple Repeat Vows
St. llilla ry·s Church
"riburon was I.he setting for
!ht marriage or Naocylee
Egan, daughter of t.1r. and
Mrs. \Villiam R. Egan Sr. or
Laguna Niguel and Lawrence
R. Selna.
The Rev. Edward Mullen ol-
fici~ted.. .af the 1fternoon
lefl'~.,
The bride was 1tlended by
Mrr.lvan Ollverle a:s m·atron
t.f honor and bridesmaids were
hfrs. William R. Egan Jr., her
sister-in-law, and Miss Judy
Cramer.
The bridegroom. soo of Mrs.
Guido Albertaui of ~! 111
Valley. chose his brother,
Robert Selna, as best man
with ushc.,.s U. William R."
Egan Jr. and Donald Bicen·
iu,. L The new Mrs. Sema at-
tended Christian College in
Columbia, ~to. currently she
Iii • ho6tw for Braniff
lntmiational Airways. Her
MRS. SELNA
March Bride
husband b a graduate of
Marin High School in Green-
brea.
Professor Examines
Politics of Africa
Area Chef
Honored ·
~1edal of Honor winn er .Jim
Dcl~h~ry was among the
part1c1panls in the chefs de
cuisine culina ry art display in
the Anaheim Con v t n I ion
Center today.
'fhe medal, one or six
awarded during the year, was
presented by the American
Academy d. Chefs for services
rendered the prolession for
culinary achiev.ements... _ -·
Deluhery, e1.ecutive chef or
the convention center, learned
to cook while working on
passenger ships.
Secretary of the chefs dr
cuisine, he resides with his
family in Anaheim.
Newcomers
Seat Board
Services.
At 11 a.i:n . Jatncs 1'1ahan,
sergeant \\'Ith the }!unlington
Beach Police Department. '~·ill
moderate a discussion or
Narcotics Abuse and the Law.
Serving as panellsts will be
Justice Robert G a r d n er.
District Attorney Cecil fficks
and Dalton Newland. office
director of the Santa Ana
Branch, State N a r c o t i c
Bureau,
Moms Hea r
Narcotics
Discussed
The problem of narcotics
addiction among children will
be discussed when the Orange
Coast ~1others of Twins Club
meets Wednesday, l\1arch 11.
in the Galaxy restaurant, San-
ta Ana .
An Installation luncheon for Following the 7 p.m. social
the Saddleback Va 11 e y hour and a p.m. dinner James
Newcomers Club in Gordon 's l\fahan. detective sergeant
restaurant, Laguna Niguel is from the Htmtington Beach
being planned for Wednesday. Police Department, will be the
:\farch 11. guest speaker.
Newly elected officers are He has been a polkeman In
the Mmes. Robert Pelletti~ri. Los Angeles and Orange coun -
presiderrt ; John Vogt vice lies for the past seven years
president : Donald S~ingle anq in the field of narcotics in -
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): of insul1 s. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· To llnd aul w~o·s lutkv !ar vau 111
LEO 'July 23-A lg 22) Y D 21 1 F moru.v •ml lov•" oroer 5v~~rv o..,.r•'• Money areas activated. Pa y t • : ou cc. : orces are seal· f»Ok~•. "SKree Hin•s 1or M~r1 •nd
and collect debts. But not wise get action through v.·riling, lered . People you depend upon ~~·r: ~01!!~'~~~1~"",,,. ~Irr'.:
to lend. One who 1·, aggres•;vc publishing, ad\' er ti s in g . could be absent. Son1c details PILOT. ao~ 12~ Gr11t10 cen1r•I '1•·
-p . ---~-makes numerous promises but resllge rises: Ar I es in· are better left for another day.l--~;c..c'-2.cc;_c..c=---
may be covering up un-dividual c;1n prove valuable Watch diet. Take care of
favo rable points. Act ac-a I I Y to <I a Y. Ac c e p l yoursel f: Pacing is important.
cord ingly. responsibility and vou '''ill CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
TA URUS fApril 20.May 20\: gain reward . . 19 1: Llood lunar aspect today
You asked for action _ toda y \'JRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22 \: t.:olncides \1•ith intense e1no-
you gel plenty or it. There is Some idea.~ concerning V<1C<1· t1onal reactions. Soine young
change. variety, at tent j 0 n tion. long journey need further persons could make unjust ac-
from others. You are in development. Give logic equa l l'Usa tlons -has nothing lo do
1'potlight an~ cycle i ~ high. space l\'ilh impulse. Then you 11·ith chronologi cal age . t>on ·l
!)rtve forwarO. But lake care avotd entanglement in em-compound error.
in traffic. barrassing situation. A(lUARIUS (J;111. 20·Fcb.
GE~IJNI (:O.tay 21.June 20); LIBRA (Sept. 2.3-0ct. 22): \SJ; Friction indicated at
Can you eat
all day and
still lose jl
weight? ~
One who is usually shy speaks Avoid argument ~·itb mate, J1ome baSt>. Be ready to con-
up. Be cooperative. Reali ze partner over finances. Neither tribute ideas. But also express •
.some tJ:.mpers _are oa edge. of you may have authority to willingness to listen. Member Some t1lking, some lisltnin; and
You may be the individual in do a thing. Realize this and be of opposite sex may be false-• progr1m lh•t works. 1
•
the middle -one others civil. Set example o! maturity. flattering you v.·ith definite .s flfl lltOCHUftl"-0.U 135.5505 _:i:Th~e~n~y=o~u~w~l ~ll ~be~ha~p~p~y.~~iiij~m~o~liiv~e~in~m~in~d~.~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~==~
WEIGHT@.
WATCHERS.
Contingent
To Travef
Bare Essentials
alaska IS ALIVE!
At "The Gra ndeit Me ll Of All"
Beginning March 12, 1970
Souf h Coast ?taza
Dr. J\1ary ~pper. assislant
professor of political science
al California State Col lege at
~'ullerton. 11·i\I di~ss hrr
sum mer in Africa in 1969 for
!he Newpo rt· Costa J\lesa
Rranch of An1erican Associ~
tion of University \\/omen
\\'e<lnesday, l\1arch 11.
reeilrding secretary,· Norma~ 1· 1· r A past pret1ident of the Seo ves 1ga ion or the past six tt. c orre s p o nd i n g i·ca s He 111 · 1 h Foundation for ch j n 1· 1 , d r · w in orm mot ers
'Vhen it cotnrs to sportsv.•ear
for spring. bare essentials
rounL
Open niidriffs. peekaboo cu\.
outs. lie-fronl hlouse~ -all
\\'ith 11 light and 01>en look.
OC Single Bees
The second and fourth Fri-
day or the month Orange
County Single Bees gather in
Pioneer Town, Santa Ana.
Activities begin at I p.m.
secretary; Rei B u s h on g . .,.,.hat they should know and
Nyeri/Districl Kenya Self-help treasurer, and David \\'vatt 11·hat can be done aboiit
Schools. Or. Lepper spent last section coord inator . · ' na rcotics,
summer in Africa under a A social hour "·ill follow the All mother~ of lv.•ins in thr-Choral Group
postdoctoral fellowship grant. noon luncheon and inslallation Orange Coast area a r, c• •1
Sil' I. d ·lh th cercm r.\'ery " onday at 7:30 p.m • s conceme w1 e ony. we lcome to allend t h , rnl I bl . · f · Res 1· I d men1bers of the Prosprctivc e o pu IC groups 1n ore1gn crva ions o ay may be rneeting. For reservalio°' Al. I policy making and In the made wlth t.lrs.. t.1arshalt M N. k 1 ISO Va Icy Chapter of S1\·eet
politics ol developing areas. Bloom, 830-6507. ca~f~d. IC'· Bart c<t may be Arlelincs convenr in l\llssio11
rspeci ally Afr I c a andj----------~:'.'.:::".'.:. _________ V~i'.:eJ~·o'.:H'.'_i~g.".h_'Se':'."hoo"":l __ _
Sou theast Asia.
The meeting will take place
al 7:30 p.m. in the Newport
Riviera Pavilion. Any women
college graduates interested
may call the president, Mrs.
Ronald K. Arnold, 545-5214.
JUST 4 DAYS!!
Pattern s Unlimited, In c.
is back again in
ANAHEIM
with th e I
ORIGINAL EUROPEAN .. GOLDEN RULE'
METHOD OF PATTERN DRAFTING 1 ~.WOMEN .....
SLIM DOWN
for Summer
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BEAUTY
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loo~ ll!'l••t ;" • n.tt1tin9 f11hion1b!1
1prin9 1tyl•I Go •h11d -l'•mp1r
ye un•lf, 1»11 1lill 1t.1lch vout b11d91I.
MON .• TU!S .. WED. LATllt WElK
SHAMPOO· SET
HAIRCUT
HI STYLE
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SHAMPOO .SET ......... . $2.95
HAIRCUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.00
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all wet?k
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.1 ppointmf'rt/c 1t•rlrnmf' hu1 not 11/ 11 t1 \ -~ 'll"f"C.fJOri
• Swlmmi119 • Per1onall1ed
L.UHI Cour1n
IOAM 2PM 7:lOPM
Tuesday, March 10th thru Frid•y, Morch I lth HOWARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY OPEN EVENINGS
1380 S. Htibor ti Santa Ant Fr11way CROWNING GLORY CROWNlNG GLORY
Directly 1cro1s from Dl1neyl1nd lfo nl'let"I¥ C•prlc1 Celff11r.,1
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------·-------, .
Today's Final
tacks • •
VOL . 63 . NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNl1' MONDAY, MARCH 9; 1970 TEN CENTS
Los Alamitos Station Could Be a Giveaway
Scheduled for phase -out wilhin 15
n1onths, Los Alamitos Naval Air Station
could be given away free if ·lransformed
into a .public use facility such as a
civilian airport or college campus.
Congressman Craig Hosmer tR-Lon~
lleach·J made the announcement today on
the status ()f the sprawling stat ion,
111rgest in the Naval Air Reserve pro-
gram.
Odor Order
Sewage
Secrelary of Defense !\.1elvin Laird con-
firmed last week that Los Alamitos will
be eliminated from military use by .lune
30. 1971, Opening lls eventual rate to
widespread speculati-0n.
Federal agencies will retain first right!
to the property, but state, county and city
governments m· the surrounding area
may be a'ble to acquire some or it,
Hosmer said today.
District
But other military servicts and variou11
hranches of the eovernment get rirsl
clailns, he pointed out with slrong
emphasis.
"There Isn't going to be any Cheroker.
Strip land grab," he added .
The Defense Departmenl must still
Oetermin·e after deadline set for closure
of the base ... '."hether it should be kept
within the realm of military ~ontrpl.
If not, it will be relelled to the General
Services Administration .
"'At lhal point. the property is up for
grabs by other federal departments and
agencies," Congress1nan Hosmer ex·
plained.
•·And in land-short Southern Califor nia .
• "''e must reckon, with the possibility that
part or all of it will be claimed for other
Federal requirements."
Hosmer said the GSA would then
determine the best use of the land and
establish its value to guide settJflt"tht
price for disposal -whlch could be quite
low.
LOca1 pu6lic agencies are allowed a !II)
percent cut ir lhe surplus land Is used for
parks and recreation. or 100 percent if it
is used ror public health, education or an
airport.
The Long Beach legislator has said he
wiU support the conversion of L<ls
Alamitos to park,s and recreational use,
but would Ught its use as a commercial
airport.
The racility has been suggested In re·
cent monlhs as a commercial airport
supplementing Orange County a n d
nearby Long Beach Airport, drawing
much protest from citizens and public of·
licials.
Panther Rips Jury
To Decide Steps Rost~r System Blast Delays Trial
By TO~t BARLEY
ot 1!1t 01J11 Piii! S11tt
Dreizen delayed summoning or lh! fir~l
J?<lnel of prospective jurors until the mo-
tion is decided.
after the 75 seats In Judge Dreizen's
courtroom were quickly occupied~ thia
morning. ~unset Beach Sa11ilary District will call
;i special meeting to decide whether or
not to comply with a state order 10
eliminate noxious odors from the Sunset
Beach sewage treatment plant, Planl
Supe rintendent Richard Harrison sald to-
day.
AJthough the dale and tin1e has not
Beach Resident
Dies in Cra sh,·
Wife Injured
A Huntington Beach man was killed
And his wife injured in a two-car crash
Sunday near Lost Hills in western Kern
County.
Claren<:e ..r·. H.alver:;on, 6.'i, of \'ti562
~abot Lane, was dead on arrival al Kern
C.eneral Hospital. Mrs. Halverson was
undergoing tests at the hospital this
morning to determine whether she should
be detained for treatment.
A passenger in Halverson 's car,
Truman J, Lortz, 72, of Williamsburg,
Iowa, also was killed.
_The accident occurred on State Roule
4fi near the California aqueduct. Highwa y
Patrol officers reported that another car
i;truck Halverson 's from behind causing
iL to run off the roadw ay and roll over.
The driver of the second car, Arthur M.
Simpson, 41, of San Luis Obispo, was not
injured. His wife received minor injuries.
but she was released from Kern General
Hospital this morning.
Zone Violation
Sentence Given
Suspended sentences totalling 30 dayll
in jail and $100 in lines were Issued Fri-
Oay against a Huntington Beach service
station operator \\'ho had violated city
1.oning codes by maintaining large signll
and nuside storge of t~es a n d
automobiles.
Municipal Court Judge Kenneth Lae
llUSpended the seven counts against
Richard Parry provided he comply with
the code. He also placed him on one year 's
summary probation.
Parry operates 1he B&W Texat•o and
the Five Points Texaco service stations,
both on Beach Boulevard.
Parry ha!! maintained the zoning lawll
;ire unconstitutional. He c;:ould not be
reached for comment this morning.
Grunion Hi t
Beac h Tonight
The elusive grunion may slide I"
on the tide ln spawn on beaches
tonight.
It i~ al"''ays problematical ""hen
01e slippery silversides will find
ronditions to their liking bu! those
who chart the lides :iay any of th•
next four nighl s could bring a gru·
nlon hunter 's payoff.
The small fish come in at high
ride. Peak tide tonight is 10 :24 p.m.
Tut?sday night it will be I I p,m ..
Wednesday night 11:3& p.m. and
e:irl y F'riday morning 1.2:24 ti .m.
The next possible dates fo r gn1·
nlnn spawning are ·March 2S to 28.
T~·-0 laws apply to grunion hun-
ting. One is thf! nsh may not bf'
nr.ttt"d or 1rapped but must bf:
ca ught with the hands. The second
Iii\\' is that anyone over I& years or
11gr. must have a fishing lir.en~ ln
catr.h grunion 18 any other fish.
yet been fixed, he said it would probably
take place ~his \\'eek.
'·Thls decision has a definite bearing on
all treatment plants." declared Harrison.
'"There is one in Fountain Valley and one
!n Ne\vporl Beach who have the same
problem \\'ith odor due to the na1ure of
the product."
The order to e!iminale thf' sMeH
E'manating from the Pacific Coasl
Highw;i:; and Warner Avenue racil ity wa ~
Issued Friday by the California Regio11al
\Yater Quality Control Board, Sanla Ana
Region.
It acted on the basis of <:omplaint~ by
numerous Huntington Harbour resident!!
who claimed the fume~ were. em -
barrassing to guests and created a
general nuisance. ·
HONORED BY COLLEAGUES
Fountain Valley's Ea rle
Sc hool Official,
The board also heard ~estimony from •
county water pollu~ion_and s.ir pollution. -Rece ives A:ward inspec;:tcrs who said light to moderate
odors came from the plan! during certa in
limes of the day.
Harrison, however, coot.end! that the
board is without authority lo ad on mat·
ters pertaining to odor.
Bills Affecting
Harbor District
Heard March 13
State hearings on two bills atfetting the-
Orange County Harbor District have been
i;witched from Thursday to March 13 in
Sacramento, at the request of the Or ange
County League of Cities.
One bill, introduced by Assemblyma n
.John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton). calls for 11
vote of the people lo decide if the Harbor
District should be retained, expanded or
dissolved .
Another bill, authored by Assemblyma n
Ken Cory ID-Anaheim ). simply request.s
the sta te Legislature to expand the dulie.'I
nr the Harbor District without a vote or
the people.
"We asked for the change in hearing
da tes because the League of Cities til-
ready has a meeting this Thursday," .~aid
Huntington Beac b Mayor Jack Green , who
is president of the League.
The Orange County League of Cities ill
on record favoring the Briggs bill and let-
ting the people decide he Harbor
Distric t's futur e.
Briggs said anyone interested In the
Harbor District question is invited to the
hearing at I :45 p.m., March 19, room
Z\33. State Capitol .
Stoc k !lfarket s
NEW YORK !AP)-Prices on the 111tock
market remained depressed late this af-
ternoon . (See quotations, Pages J6't7).
Losses were widespread, with decline!!
nn !he New York Stock Exchange e11:ceed·
lng advances by more than 2'h to l.
For Music Work
1\1ar low Earle. director of musi<"
education for the Fountain Valley School
District has been named 1970 winner or
the Irene Schoepflr Award for
dislinguished contributions in the field or
music education.
lie has been presented "''ith ~ plaqut
from the Orange C-Ounty Music Educators
Association.
Among his accomplishments. 1 he
association listed the developtnent of an
exceptional music program in the school
district, leadership in music project~
sponsored by Orange Collnty music con·
-sullants and publication of numerous
articles in the associalion's journal.
A resident of Lakewood, Earle receive.t
hi11 bachelor's degree from USC and hi11
master's degref' from Cal-Stale Long
Beach.
Ex-Htmtin gton
G ty Attorney
Plunkett Better
F'or1ner Huntington Beach city attorney
.Jerry Plunkett is reported to be in good
condition today at \Vestminste.r Coni-
munity Hospital following a fall F'rida y
morning in \vhich he suffered a fractured
skull and concussion.
The 47·year old lawyer tell backward
onto the concrete sidewalk while rushing
l.o West Orange County Municipal Court.
according lo LL John -l\i1cln\yre of the
Orange County Marshal'l! Office.
Plunkett and his wife. l\ifarian. operate
a private law firm at 412 Olive Ave.,
Huntington Beach. and make their hor.;e
in Tuslin.
He served as Huntington Beech cit y 11:1-
torncy from 1961 to 1966.
Arthur DeWille League's lawyer today
branded Cali£omia's jury s e I e ct ion
system as unconsUtutional and imposed
what Is expected to be at least a three-
day delay in the ·murder tMal of the ac-
cused Black Panther.
League, 20, of Santa Ana, is accused or
the shooting last June 4 of Santa Ana
police officer Nelson Sasscer. It is alleged
that the Negro militant gunned down the
patrolman a.her he was ordered tci pro.
duce identification.
Attorney Robert Greene asked Judgt
Samuel Dreizen to rule that the picking
of a jury from the roster of names
assigned to the court for the League trial
\\•ould amount to den ial of a fair trial for
his client
Those names . Greene said, are stlected
from Orange County's voter registration
!lsts and do not renect a true cross-sec·
Lion of the community.
Gree1_1e wants a jµry picked. from "the
;. comrqunity at: •·-•~ole aml llDt''ander 1
'YSlem whiCh denies my client a fair trial
under any or the provisions envisaged by
our -law -among them economic, racial
and political factors."
Greene's motion ended 11 two-hour
delay in opening of the trial and wall
being debated at press lime. Judge
'f ransit District
Turns Do'm Plea
For Beach Route
Automobile-less residents who . had
hoped for 8 city bu~ service that could
carry them to shopping facili ties in north
Huntinglon Beach may have lo wait a lit-
tle longer.
That. in essence. was Lhe determination
{If the Southern California Rapid Transit
Oislrtcr rRTDl Which rule<r"""l h a t
rstablishment of a line would oot have
~ufflcienL passenger patronage ''lo justify
!ht' costs."
c .• f. Holzer. associale transportation
rnginee r for the RTD . informed Hun·
11nglon Beach Planning Director Ken
Reynolds by letter thal the cost for pro-
vision of service would be in excess o(
'-1.'30 per day and would require more
lhan 1,100 daily rides to meet expenses.
The decision was reached following an
RTD study or the proposed route begin·
ning al Pacific Coast Highway and Main
Street, running along Main Street and up
Beach Boulevard to Warner Avenue,
Springdale Street, McFadden Avenue.
Golden West Street. Edinger Avenue a.net
back onto Beach Boulevard to Bolsa
A11enue.
Jerry l\i1urphy, associate planner for
the City of Huntington Beach. said U1 e re·
tll/est was gen era ted by requests from
'·people who wanted to get to Huntington
Center from the downtown area."
He said that many of the down town
residents either don't drive or own cars.
A t)us line would ha11e afforded them the
opportunity to shop there, he said.
Greene indicated that he would have
further motions to offer following set·
Uemenl or his challenge of thf jury
system.
Among spectators in the courtroom to-
day was Daniel Michael Lynem, 21, also
a member or the Black Panther organiz·
11tion and the man who was cleared of tht
murder charges now raced by League.
A heavily rein forced detachment of
~heriff's officers turned away more than
100 persons from the courtroom door
All persons entering the courtroom,
with the exception of ''"itnesses and th«
press, were carefully searched before
they were allowed tq take their seab.
There were no incidents othe r than loud
complain(., from several persons who
wished to view the murder triel.
Black .Panther literature w a ~
distributed in the courthouse corridor to
All persons entering Judge Dreizen·s
courtroom.
U.S. Admits 27
Laos Casualties
-'
W•SHINGTON (UP!l -' ,,,, While
House has conceded 27 Americans, in·
eluding a U.S. Army captain cut down by
North Vietnamese machine gun fire, ha ve
been kiJJed in Laos by Communist ground
action since June, 1962.
The casualties are among lhe ;iJmost
100 Americans.._ most of ~~!Tl airmt;!n.
11•ho have been officially reported killed
during the eig ht years of America's
senlisecret Invol vement in the Laotian
conflict
Dis:losure or the casual!ies was made
Sunday by a White. ~louse officia l follow·
ing a nen's report thal Capt. Joseph K.
Bush Jr. was killed during a North Viet-
namese guerrilla attack on a Laotian
military headquarters Feb. JI , 1969.
The disclosure brought into question
lhe accuracy of a key portion of Presi·
rlent Nixon's report to the nation Friday
tin the limits of U.S. activities in Laoa.
In the report. Nixon confirmed of·
fiCiatiy--ror therti'st-nme what a treaay
was widely known -U.S. warplanes
\\•ere making bombing raids in su pport of
Prince Souvanna Phouma's Royal Lao-
tian Army and along the Ho Chi t<.1inh
Trail which ru nnels men and supplie l'
frnm North Vietnam through East Laos
into war zones in South Vietnam .
Beach 01amber
To Ur ge Delay
On Buildi11 gs
ThP Chamber of Commerce tonight will
11sk Huntington Beach councilmen to hold
up on the civil improve1nents progra m.
The $13.3 niillion program for a new
civic center , library, llre sttttions and
rorporation yard will be reviewed in a
council study session tonight, beginning
at 7:30.
The couacilmen will ponder t.he priority
of each projecl and then consider ways of
paying for it.
But in seeking to allay fear1 the Unlttd
States is drifting into another Southtast
Asian land war, Nixon also said there
were no Amel-ican ground combat troop.,
in Laos beyond 64.3 Americans, both
military and civilian. who help train.
equip and advise the Laotian army. Hr.
added :
-;-,No American stationed in Laos has
ever been kill in ground combat opera·
tion1. ''
Assis Press Secretary Gerald Wal'·
ren told reporters at Nixon's vacation
home in Key Biscayne, Fla., the Presi·
dent was not aware. of Bush's death when
he made the report.
A White House officia l said, however.
Nixo n was aware of the other 26
casualties suffered from such hostile IC•
lions as ambushes, booby traps, long
range shelling and ground fire at
helicopters.
Fairy R. Oren s
Succuml>s at 77
Mrs, Fairy R. Orens, a rcsidenl or Hur
ti ngton Beach for half a century, died
F'riday at Huntington lntercommunity
11ospital. She was 77,
Funeral services for Mrs. Oreos will be
held Tuesday at I p.m. al Smith '1
Mortuary Chapel. Burial will follow at
\Vestminster Memorial Park.
Mrs. Orens, who lived at 811 Ca1ifomi1
SL, is survived by her husband. Willlam,
a daughter, Wanda Hanson and a aister
Violet \Vhite of Huntington Beach. She
also leaves two other siste rs, Le-ona
Haslem or Santa Maria and Jvy Burton of
Taft.
Coast
Weather
Cyclists ' Party Raided
Ralph Kiser, chamber of commerce
n1anager, said the chamber's executive
eon1miUec bad decided to ask the council
for a 60 or 90-day (!elay on the project.
"\Ve:ll recommend that a study be m11de
on v.•hether Ure program' !lhould be im-
plemented and if so how ii should be
fin anced." Kiser stifd.
1'nose clouds rolling In tonight
\von 'l have a silver lining, ao grab
you r ralncoaL Clearing skies and
c o o 1 e r tempera~ures are th•
watch\vords for Tuesday.
Pol ice Arr es t 108 in Holy Ji1n Ca ny on Revelr y The co1nmittce decided to seek a delay After lhe 300-0dd members of the 'rht U.S. statids an t:ceUtnt
INS I Oil TODA l'
Orange Counl y taxpayers provided tht.
hangover brunch for 108 partying
motorcycle gang members Sunday, after
lawmen ralde!:f an unholy J1evel In Holy
.lim Canyon, 20 miles east or El Toro.
Most or the 73 men and 3~ women were
hooked into Orange County Jail for in·
11estigallon of disturbing the pe;ice, aM
inimeditncly posted b;iiJ on the m1sde·
rncaO(lr.
A haul of marijuana and olher drug.-t.
plus an a~orllnent of 22-illcgal weapon(
-lncludlna shotgu ns. S\\'Qrd! and ;i
mt"dltval mace. -pins allegedly Jlo len
vchitl('s ltd tn 2fl 1.1dditionRl booki n13.
"Everybody wa1 pretty well drunk."
observed one sheri!f"1 deputy w_ho
participated in the massi\•e r;iid after
dotens of complaints by campers and
fabin d\vC\lers ,in the l'\IS\ic, woocfed cin·
yon ' ~·1rst lawmen on ihe scene c111led in
re tnrorccmeals. ·induding 17 sheriff'11
deputies a~ California }lighwat Pf!Jrol
nrf1cers, plus three buses to transport the
suspects .
Sheriff 's Lt. Ted Dwyer said lhrce
~roups of resident.' who ll ve in the. ur'JaJ
:iGnclity or Holy Jlm Canyon ilcd in fear
for their live., anq safety.
-Reprc!lcnlatlves Ratht'rcd In a rl"'rrl('ltr
-earner or SCfJlic QtNcJll Park (or thr
revelry included !he Outla"1s. the GenL~. chamber were polled for their views on cha.nee of capturing a gold
the Nuggets and lhe Hessians. In· the improvements, nicda/ in the 1912 Kiel yacht-
vestigator!I said. Kise r added that J1\is executive com· ing Ol111npics btCOU$C Amtri·
Despite the.. low ball ul for -disturbing miltee· would meet late thi s affcrnoon to t.'01a& arc best ot sailh1g the
thi peace and being drunk in public, a decide -0n•names· of those It .will rtcom-Tempe.ft. Boating Page 28 .
largt number or cycUsts ~nd hangers-on rTiend tor.,..lht ,study gr:oup. . •••t111t u Mlrrltt•
found ·u1e01Stl'>1cs straiicted ·after releaSe ' T"'O plans· hiivc ·.been suggesttP ror c•M1t1:111• ·" T'.t.'lriM,n'"" . •
by impoul'.ldlng of vehiCles. financing lhe ·-improvements. 'file 'ati-··-::'.':i ·v• 1;.1! '::••' ..:-r 1!
A nwnber-o! cars and motorcycles are ministratlve staff wa'nts to See a joint c.mk' '" -.,.111911•'1 "'-' •t
d lbl c..-.u-• 11 °"'.,.. c;.,...., ' being checke out as poss y stolen. cash and bond program over a 15·ye11r °''" H.i1,~ ' s""' tt•tt authorities nid today. period . Cost o{ this scheme is estimated ir•1i.r111 ,..,. ' smt ,,..,,.,,, ,.,,, Efll.rfl!ll-1 11 Trlt'fltkft If Possr.i;sion of ~i.i;tols,!. ~hotguns,_ knlv~~ at SIS.a. mllllon. "111e11t• ,.,,, ''"'"" u ~~~~r01t~r ~a:~ftc~e~h:r~c~1a!~~n:: ~ rdA1~0i"~1r::a ~~~~~~~;~:=~ -~~:11ttr* 1: ~::'~:., 1~:~
pcrsoni. while 111no0!e11 seven fate The cost of this pf an has been Ug\U'Cd at W•rlf Htwt M
i:hargc~ far drygs and miflli.juana..._ _.._.. '28.7 million.
• ... • I
j ,_
, .
..,: DAILY PILOT H
U.S. Shuu
.1
RlwtM sian
Gonsulate
...
"1AS!UNGTO~ I AP) -The Unltod
S~s, ref'u3\ng to recogntie the new
r.sJme in Rhodesia, has Jnslructed it.&
ton8UI in Salisbury to'cloise the c<1nsulate
otrMarch 17, the State Department 1n--
nqt.1nced Monday. ~
The Rhode11lan regime broke with the
ltritish crown on March 2. 'Ibe new
J(h n d e s i a n constitution transforming
llllPdesia into 1 republic "eonfl'lttutes ~
flul and rorm11 bru.k with the United
Klf\adom, II the Slate [)q)iftmtnl laid.
'lt ~ that the United States con--
l.QJe.s fu regard Britain u the 11wfuJ
&Ollferelgn there.
• tin the above circumatanCtS, we have
lllll:iJcl<!d our t<>nlul In SIU.bury to
begin arrangements for closing a.a al
March J7 and for the departure of the
~ff.''
. {;onsu] PauJ O'Neill and a 1taII of sit"
will return to Waishlngton for reassign·
tiient, olDcl1t1 NkJ. • ,..,+
'Consular l«\'lcet for lbe early t,OOI)
American citiJIM wilt be hlndled In
neighboring countries by U.S. consullates
in JohannesbJrg, South Africa, or Blan-
tyre in r.1allwi.
Y outlt Named
First Boys Club
'Boy of the Year'
A !~year-old boy who iwe.tpt off the
buketball court. c1ean1 the stairway and
helps on speclo! j>rojec:U wllhoul uklna,
''whal do I cet for It?" deaervea aome
kind of award. •
DAILY PILOT P~ti. ~y ''' 0'0tnn1ll
Quiet Tfnie by the Sea
'Ffreb•!fl' Flrettten
'· Planned Blazes
Provide Practice
"It's much harder to burn a house
down intenUonally than lo do It ac~
cldentally."
That's the opinion of Capt. Jlrii Vin·
cent, of Lhe Huntlnaton Beach fire
Department, who last year lined up more
than 25 home.a for flretnen to bum down.
Friday, crews from four Huntington
Beach fire companies fought a blaze they
set at 170?1 "B" St. after the owner had
asked them to demolish it.
"!l's herd to fi1ht a fire if you· aon't
know Its behavlor," explained Battalion
Chief Frink Kelly.
Kelly d.Jr~ Frxtay'a fire fichUni aJ
Blood T estS ,
Pri1its Asked
For S uspects
\\1ASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad·
ministration proposed legi1latlon ~1onday
lo subject suspects in federal crimes to
fingerpringting and olher detective tests
such as saliva and blood checks even
before being ronnally charged .
The Supreme Court ha1 held that Juch
identification procedures do not violate
the conslttuUonal guarantee against self.
incrimination but only in cases involving
suspecls <1lready charged.
The administration pro~al would ex·
tend such tests: to persons auspected Qf
crimes in cases where there b no prD-
bable.' cause lo arrest. The tests would bt
administered only upon issuance of a
court order.
new firemen -and otd -studied varlous
patterns of a blaze in an old frame struc·
ture.
Igniting the blaze is a task given 'to
older hand1 who first 1ludy a house thal
t;he owner wants destroyed, decide if It
has training value for the fire .depart·
ment -just any house won 't do -then
prepare the house so il will bum a cer·
lain way.
''We hive lo knock a few holes In the
roof to mike it burn rapldly. The.n we
might atack tome old fumlture in one
pile and tbrow kero5ene OJl it to launch
the blaze," Vincent upl1lned.
"Sometimes we havt dummies wt hJde
ln the house. Then we tell the ifmnen
there are people inaide -10 1tt them .
Some of our dummiea are lost When they
burn up," Kelly added,
When brighl red Oames begin licking al
lhe sides of the homt, firemen are senl
inlo action .
''First they have lo knock down the fir•
by throwing a line sway of water on it,''
Kelly said. The fine spray creates steam
which smothers the flame s. In a real fire
they use Otis method to avoid heavy
.smoke and water dam1e.
"But in th.e training fire v.·e don't CC\1'1·
1inue the steam treatment. We let the
flames erupt again to give the men prac·
Uce." Kelly .said.
Whal the firemen watch for are smoke
uallerm (where it goes ) and how the fire
burns. They also learn that dlfftrent
smoke colors indicate how hot the. blaze is.
Rescue patterns arc practiced when the
fire cool! down a little. "We: .alway• pick
the heaviest man to be a victim tor the
men to carry out," Vincent 1aid.
When the: building is burned to the
ground it is up to Lhe owner to haul the
ashes away -which Is considerably
cheaper than lhe cost of deslroyin;: a
home .
Protection in the form of a fine water
spray is provided for nearby homes and
plan!,$ not being burned . P'rlday nllht ho lol il. Ralph
Palomares was named "Boy of I.be Year"
at the first annual awards dinner of the
Huntington Beach Boys' Club, 310
Like a magnet, sunset over tranquil 5ea dra\VS O r~
ange Coast family to cliff overlooking beach to
stroll, to watch nalure's \vork, to !eel the afternoon
breeze, to l11ilen lo lbe surf and, maybe, to hurl a
!lone or two ot a receding wave.
If enacted by Congress, a federal
judge, commissioner or magistrate could
order a 5uspect in a rederal crlmlna l
rase t.o submit to identification by
''fingerprints, palm prJnts:, root print!,
1neasurements, blood 11pecimen1, urine
~pecimens, 1allva 1ample1, hair samplts,
handwriting exemplars, ''oice samples,
photographs and lineups."
"About 15 mlnutea of hard fire fighting
equals eight hours of activity," Kelly
said, as he wiped the sweal from hil
brOll'. .Yorktown SL
"Ralph ha1 been one of our steadiest
members. Hr. works v>'illingly without
tie:ing uked and he part.lcipates in alm06l
all activities," Pal Downey, ~r of
the club, Mid today.
Ralph's award nJ tht top me of
te\·eral given oot al the Boys' Club to
outstanding young men.
Jon S&mpeo11, JO, was another award
winner u he wu named Citiwl of t.he
Yur for "alw1y11milln1.''
Other winner• included W a y 11 •
Peabody, 12, games room boy of the year
who sboota a good a:ame of billiards;
John P.alamare$ .• JJ, crafl!man of the
year who tum1 excellent wood ealad
bowls on the elub iathe: Patrick L.
D::lwney, 9. llporlsman of the year and a
{ine wresller; John Drake, 15, who won
honors in judo for hll determination, and
Larry Espitia, 14, most improved boy.
Three volunteer judo ln1tructor1, Jvor
Gitsham, Takesle Kawahara and Dusty
~toore, received plaques (Gr the ir efforts.
Art Gillespie, who helped found the
Boy1' Club in 1967, wu given the man·
boy a..-·ard for givin1 the most to the
John W ayneHostsEnvo y;
'Congo Mine Deal Looms?
Con&o '1 ambusador to the. Uruted
Stater was enttrtalned 1n I.be Newport
Beach homES of actor. John Wayne al'd
Ernest Saftlg o'l'er the weekend In a
busineas deal courtship that has polen·
tially millicms of dollars hanging on the
outcome..
Wayne and Saftlg art principals ln the
Newport Beach-based Statesman ~lining
Company which is &«ki ng mineral ex·
ploralion rights to all or the Congo.
Congolese Ambassador Justin Bomboko
made the viait to gather racts for a.
report to Congo Presldetll Joseph
Mobutu.
•·I think he waA impressed we gave out
friendship and good feeling tnward hrm .
Certainly ht was relaxed with us ," Saft11
said.
Hr re1narked that "from ever·vlhin~
Bomboko indicated, I think we \Vill hear
from hl m very soon."
TI1e prin('ipals in the S~tel!man Mining
\"enture had heard \asl October they were
awa rded a Congolese license for f!X·
ploring mineral rights 11nd they thought
they 1rere in. Since then they have learn·
cd ConQ:o Jaw differs from U.S. l;iw and
there is a !econd pha!e aft.er awarding of
the rights. They are now awaiting a go
ahead from President fl.fobutu.
Boy.' Club effort. ll Th The Key Club from Huntington Beach Co11e1Je eater
JDgh Scllool M!n>ed the llpaghettl--<lbmer~ __ _
In winning the license aw a rd •
Statesman principal! flgurM they had
won out in compeUUon with repttaen-
tatives of the Soviet. Union, Red China
and france.
Japanese, Belgian and French com-
paniea have sm all mineral concessions 1n
the Congo but essentially the vut coun·
try. larger than the st.ate or Alaska, ill
untapped.
to more than 65 guests at the Boys' Club
banquet. The dinn<r WIS cooked by the Tom· H elped Out \lil\a Sweden Rert.aurant wilh desert and
drink:s pnwided by Jay l\.1astrolanni.
New offlcer1 installed Friday night in· By Jr women ('!udt>d Al Klingensmith, president; Bill •
\\"oods. vice president; Ray Beam,
eecret.ary and Polly Tolson, treaauru,
for the board of directors.
"It may be the treasure house of the
\1·orld, ., sa id Ed Smart. Aspen, Colo. resi.
dent who is president of Stttesman
l\.-fining. and was in Newport for the
weekend talks. He said the Congo basin
cool.Bins more mineral possibilities than
anywhere else in the world. Guests of honor were Mayor Jack
Green and Police Chle.f Eul Robitaille.
DAILY PILOT
tlUNGI CDAl'T l"UllllHING C:OM,.AN'f
'R;•li•rf N. w,,4
P1t~lfffl1 • .,.. l'lltlll•IHlr
J1c\ l . Curlty
Vlcil Jlrn i..,.1 1"'11 c;.,.,,,, M•n.r.ier
Thomtt K11v1I
1111111'
Tltem•t A. M~1phi111
/NMlitlw EOllO<
Alb1fl W . 11111
Auoc;l1l1 i!f llfl•
HntJ""'" ..... OHi••
17171 lttch l oul t •t rd
M1ili1141 Addr111: ,.,0 , l o• 790, •1641
OrMt OHi•• l1t'1M tH<Rl tn 'tttll A-
C.II Mne1 uo W•t ••• *''"' l'olftl!IO" ... CR: ,,, I Wn1 tt!llOt •ovlr.u•
11111 (1-!t; • N ... 1~ El (.em\"' 11.•I
I
Golden West Collea:e's c h l l d r e n ' s
theater group "'enl on the road ror lhe
first time this weekend w\lh special
performan ces In Anaheim and San Diego.
The trip v.·as made possible by a $75
gift to the college drama department by
the Hunttngt.On Beach Junior Women'•
Club.
The student1 performed 1n original
children's play, "The Case of the Golck'n
Bagel," at Baden Poy.·el\ School in
Anaheim, and the San Diego Public
Library and San Diego Children's
Theater.
The play y.•as writte n by Peter Conway,
a fonner Golden \Veat stud ent now stu·
dying at Fresno State Collrge.
Orama instructor Charles Mitchell \\'as
ii.CCOmpanied by Kris \Vilson, Renata
Fk>rtn, Roland Barajas. Bllrbart Shores.
Marion Christie, Larry Goldberg and
Laurel Burnt, all of the children's troupe.
Lose rs Eat Beans
In Club Co ntest
If the rlrm gels the f'Xploratlrm go
ahead the entire Congo will be surveyed
by air. When geol ogical equipment indi·
cates a likely mining area a ground crew
will be dispatched to the site.
Ambaaador Bomboko. his F i rs t
Counselor Charles Sumbu, and two
Congolese secretaries stayed al the
Ne"•porter Inn. Saturday night they had
dinner 1t John \Vayne'1 home in
Bayshore.s, Sunday thtJ were t.aken on a
boat tour oC the harbor and coa1l by
Wayne'1 friend Clement Hirsch , Sunday
a(le.rnoon there \VIS a business mt-etlng-.
and Sunday evening a buf(et dinner at
Saftlg's Lido Isle home whi('h 3!> at-
tended.
Pay·as·you·go
Tru st~ Topi c
Trustees v.•ill tackle the tou('hy 15/iUt:
nf pay-a!-you·go school construction v:hen
A Friday the: 13Lh b.J.nquct of beans U1c lluntington Beach City School District
will be ser\·ed up lo hall I.he memben of Board meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
the fountain Valley Exchan'e Club who n.... Sch 1 rbr lost an ei&ht·v.·eek n1embersh1p dr ive can-....... ,.er 00 1 ary. lest to the other hair. Tu·o v.eeks ago the board decided not
Besides eating beans and humble pie to a8k for a ,1 .50 lncreue lo the tax ralc
Friday night at Francois In Huntington on April t4 to support school construction
Beach the loser1 must pay for steak and for five yurs. Now trust"' will ronsliler
all Ule trimmings for the. wlnnlns team. according to club 1ecretary Bcrnir placing the same issue on a June ballot
Btau1ang. Along with a reque!t to inc,ease the ln·
The loslns team wa1 approprlatrly call· l~resl rate on $4.i5 million In already ap-
ed "The Pea Pickers" while tht. winners proved school bon<fs. ~wm-koow.n aS-'-'.TheJlw·esltr~ ~-~!fhe-lw&-l~uta~arWtu:naU.ves.. fountain Valley's Exchange Club his &OOLJJ....j
27 members. Seven ne"' rnen ~·ere: drllwn the-.tchool bonds Clan be 110ld a PIJ·ll·
tc the club during the. recent hte.mberlhip you·10 sy1ltn1 will Ml bf! necc58a:ry, IC-
dri,·e. tordlng to dlstrlcl offltlal!.
Rununage SaJe Slated
A ruminage sale, spon wred by
1nember:; ol St. A111lt's Parish. Seal
Beach. v.·Lll be conducted from 9 a.m. lo 4
p.n1 .• March 12-14, al the parish hall, 340
10th SL. Seal Beach.
Attorney General John N. Mitchell said
in a letter of transmittal to the House and
~nate that the proposed law .. will pro·
vide federal law enforcement officers
\\'ith a usefu l new tool for the in·
,·estigalion of criminal activity and the
apprehension of crimlnal1."
Afler Friday's fire curious ne.ighborll
were shovtn the fire enaines and their
operation v.•as explained to t h •
youngsters by Vincent. who ha.ndle1 much
of the public relationl!i work for the
department.
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Slvlng1,
in offering the most In earnings to savers.
&% 2 year tenn 1ccount, wHh SS,000 minimum
s~ % 1 y11r tenn account, with $11000 minimum
514 % S..nonthe bonua account, with $500 minimum
71h % certificate of dtpo11t 1vall1bl11wi th1100,000 mll"lmum
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
ad Jen u..taUn II Y" 11'1 a Muf\Jal !>aver now i$ lhe time lo invnt t1ddlllON1l lundl In lh•M MW
hlgh·rit• aeeounta. (ln1~r1nc• hu beeft lncr•aHd tot2(),0DO.) It you •r• not I CORONA Dl!L MAit
Mulull S.V.r, "°w 11c th1 lln'll to open your 1ccoun111 Tha Big M-Mu1u1J S4lving1. 2~:1~:.:-:;;:;;11
AGCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001 •
,,
Newp,.J.t Bea~h Totlay'
• • Stoeks • E-D IT I ON
. * VOL 63, NO . 57, 3 SECTIONS , 30 PAGES
O•ILY PILOT $1ttf l'M!I
TEN CENTS
Panther Rips Jury
Roster System Blast Delays Trial
By TO't BARLEY
Of ltlt 01rt~ 1"1111 Sltll
Arthur Dc\V\Oe heague's lawyer today
branded Califorrtii's jury s e I i: ct ion
system as unconstitutional and imposed
what is expeeled to be at least a three--
day delay in I.he murder trial of the ac-
cused Black Panther.
League, 20, of Santa Ana, Is accused of
the shooting last June 4 of Santa Ana
police officer Nelson Sasscer. ll is alleged
that the Negro militant gunned down the
patrolman after he was ordered to pr1>-
du'* Identification.
AUorney Robert Greene a11ked Judge
Samuel Dreiien Lo rule that the pickinJr::
of a jury from lhe roster nf names
assigned to the court for the League !rial
would amoubt to denial of a fair lriel fo r
his client.
Chute Failure
Those names, Grtcne. said, are selec!ted
from Orange Counly's voter registration
lists and do not reflect a true cross-sec·
lion or the community ..
Grttne wants a jury picked from ';the
community a"s a whole and not under a
system whi ch denies my client a fair trial
under any of the provisions envisaged by
our law -among them economic, racial
and political !actors."
Greene's motion ended a two-hour
delay in opening of lht trial and wa~
being debated at preSl! time. Judge
Drelien delayed summoning of the lir~t
panel of prospective jurors until the mo-
tion is decided.
Greene indicated lhal he would have
rt1rthcr motions to nffcr following set-
tlement of his challenge or the jury
i;ystem .
Among spectators in the courtrooni to-
day was Daniel 1.tichacl Lynem, 21 , J..lso
a mtmber of the Black Panther or1aniz.
ation and the man who was cleared of the
murder charges now faced by League.
A htavily reinforced detachment of
sheriff's officers turned away more than
100 per110ns from the courtroom door
arter lht 7S seats in Judge Dreiun·~
courtroom were quickly occupied this
morning.
All persons entering the courtroom,
with the exception or witnesses and the
press. were carefully se(lrched befor.
they were allowed to take their seats.
There were no Incidents other than loud
mmplalnts from several persons who
"·ished to view the murder trial.
Black Panther literature w 1 s
(See PANTHER, Page %)
Army Captain Slaiti
CHANTING DEMONSTRATORS CRY 'POWER TO THE PEOP LE ' OUTSIDE COUNTY COURTHOUSE
League Murder Tri•I Draws More Than a littl e Interest From Sant• Ana'.f Black Community Kills Woman;
John W ayne HostsEnvoy; Pilot Injured
U.S.-Admits 27
3 Controversial
Matters Faci11 g
Newport Council
1'hret' matter~ that ha\'e provokf·d
rnmmunity controversy y,•i\l be on the
Nt'\\'pOrt Reach Cily Council agenda to·
night. They are:
-An appli cation of the \Vhite llor~e
lnn to stay open after midnight.
-Action on a Corona del Mar r.Iain
Beach food concession stand.
-Lif·E"nsing of lhe underground Ot'\\'S·
prr ··f'rom Dul of Sherv•ood Fort'~!. '
'wners of the White Horst Inn. Dan·
'Rrit. ~nia loc., are appealing a city Plan-:
nfng ":ommission decision 10 days ;igo
that ihl' inn must close at midnight in-
stead of the usual tavern c106ing hoor
nf 1 a.m., because it is adjacent lo a
residential area.
Councilm en wilJ be asked lo award a
S31.000 contract to low bidder B. F. Syfan
Corp. for construction of the Corona del
i\far beach food concession stand. An
agree.ment also is to be executed with
Gordon Kilmer lo run the concession.
Kilmer's ability has been a matter of dis-
pute at three council meetings .
City councilmen also will discuss 8 re-
port from City AUorney Tully Seyniour
re~arding licensinJ! of ne\\'Spapers. in
\vhich Seymour pointi: out erforl~ to li-
r.ense the sellers of '·Fron1 Out of Sh.er·
\\'OOd Fores!'' ha ve been unsuccessful,
The Bircl Jn the Cage bookstore. from
ha~ ~ince been closed and at last reports
the underground paper was being pub-
lished out of Santa Ana.
Tht citv council si?ss ion begin~ 11! 7·30
p.m. in c'ouncil chambers a~ City Hall.
] 4 Fern a le Pr i ,;onc r~
Esca pe in Uruguay
P.10NTEVIDEO. Uruguay (AP )
f<·ollrteen women political prisoner~
broke jail during i\lass Sunday and made
nf rin en ambulance end three waiting
car.!t.
The ambulance , !wo taxicabs and a car
painted to look like a police car passed
unchallenged through the gates of the
women's prison and stopped at the chapel
rfuring t.tass. P.f.en in the cars
nverpowered the h~10 guards 11( the en·
trence to the church and sllppcd inside .
Grunion Hit
B each T onig ht
The etumvc grunion may slid" in
nn the tide lo spawn on beaches
tonight. ,
It is always problematical when
lht slippery silversides will find
conditions to their liking but those
\\'ho chart lhe tides say any of the
next four nights could bring 11 gru·
nion hunter's payoff.
The small nsh come in at high
lide. Peak tide tonight is 10:24 p.m.
Tuesday night ii wilt be II p.m ..
\Vednesday night 11:36 p.m. and
eafly Friday morning 12:24 a.m.
The next possible dates for Rn.J·
nion spa\\·ning are March 2S to :za.
T'A'O laws apply to grunion hun·
ling. One is the fi sh may not be
, netted or lrappcd but n:rust bt-
Cilughl with the hands. The second
law is that a_llYont O\'er 16 years rtf
ai;e must1hAv-e • fi~hing lictn~ tn
-Cit.ch grunion a..s any otbf.tlish.
Congo Mi1 1e Decil Looms?·
Never bef'()re alort in a small plane. a
young Tustin \\'on1an photographer died
Saturday when she tried to parachute
from the disin tegrating skydivers' special
over Prrris, in Riverside County.
Laos Casualties
WASHINGTON !UPI ) -'T'he WhitP. home in Key Biscayne. Fla .• the Presi-
rfent was nol aware of Bush's death when
he made th( report. t:nngo's :unbassa tlor In the· l;nite<l
Stair:'! 1~·as entertained in the :'\ewpor!
Beach home~ of ac!or John \\';ivnt' and
Ernest Saft1i: over the weekr.ricl in a
business deal courts)\1p that has pO\en -
liall.v millions of dollars hanging on the
outcome.
Wayne and Saftig are principal.~ in the
Nf'wport Beach-based S!atesman ~1in111g
t:ompany which is seeking mineral ex-
ploration rights tu all of the Congo.
Congolese Ambassador Justin Bomboko
made the visit lo gather fa t•ts for a
report to Congo President Joseph
fl1obutu.
"I think he was impressed we gave out
friendshi p and good feeling toward bim .
Certainly he was relaxed with us," Saftig
sa id.
He remarked that "from everything
Bomboko indicated. I think we will hear
from him very soon."
1'he principals in the Statesman llilin inJ?,
venture had heard last October lhey \\'Cl'!·
awarded a Congolese license for ex·
ploring mineral rights and they thought
they were in. Since 1hen they have learn -
ed Congo law differs from U.S. law and
th ere is a second phase after awarding or
the rights. They are now awaiting a go
ahead from President Mobutu.
In 11•inning the licensf' a w a r '1 ,
Statesman principals figured they h;ut
wnn oul in compclition wHh represrn-
tativcs of the Soviel Union, Red China
and France.
Japanese, Belgian and F'rench com-
panir~ have s1nall mineral conccssic:is in
1he l'ongo but essentially the vast cnun·
lry. larger than the state nf Alaska , ts
untapped.
"I! n1ay bl' the trrasu re house or the
1vorltl.'' sa id Ed Smart. A.spcn, Colo. resi·
dc_nt who is president of Statesman
~1ining and w11s in Newport for t he
'A'ttkend talks. He said the Congo basi n
t·o ntains more mineral pos.sihilities than
anywhere else in !he world .
Jr the firm gets the exploialion go
ahead the entire Congo will be surveyed
by air. When geological equipment indi·
rates a likcly mining area a ground crew
will be dispatched to lhe site.
Ambassador Bomboko. his F i r s l
Counselor Charles Si.J.1nbu. and hvo
Congolese secrelaries stayed at the
Newporter Inn . Saturday night they had
dinner at John \\'ayne 's home In
Bayshores. Sunday they were taken on a
l>nal tour of the harbor and coast by
\\'ayne's lrfcnd Clement Hirsch, Sunday
:iflernoon there was a busine~s meeting.
;ind Sunday evening a buffet dinner at
Saft1g's Lldo Isle home which Jft Rl-
lcnrled.
I !er husband watched in horror frotn
1hr Rround as the 22-year·old victim, her
rhu!r snagged on the tail. plunged lo
rarth.
House ha..~ conceded 27 Americans, in·
rludini;: a U.S. Army captain cut down by
North Vietnamese machine gun fire, have
been killed in Lao,s by Communisl ground
action sin<;_e June. 1962.
Thr pilot. who also hailed oul, wa~ hit The casualties are an1ong lhe almo~l 400 Americans, most or them airmen. h.v the falling planr on the way.down anrl \vho have been officially reported killed
crltlc:ally tnjtfrtd, while lour •ky dlvinf during the ~ighl years or America's
enthusiasts bad already parachuted semisttrel involvement in Lhe Laotian
routinrty. conflict.
i\fadcline it i\1atthe'A'S, 3n insuranc.ir: Dis:losure ()r the casualties was made Sunday by a White House official follow-
company cmployc. ·was killed instantly, ing a news report I.hat Capt. Joseph K.
;ind \Villiam R. Scherer. 26. of Santa Ana , Bu.sh Jr. was killed during a North Viet·
was llsted today in guardtd condi tion at namese guerrilla attack on a Laotian
Riverside Community liospital. military headquarters Feb. ll. 1969.
He suffered severe head injuriel'i when The disclosure brought into question
slntck by debris, or the plane itself, ac· !he accuracy of a key portion of Presi·
cording to authorities probing lhe dent Nixon's report to the nation Friday
lragcdy. on the limits of U.S. activities in Laos.
f\1rs. f\1allhews ' husband David, a In the report, Nixon confirmed of·
~1arine assigned lo El Toro MCAS, licially for the first time what already
1vatched the tragedy unfold. v.·as widely known -U.S. warplanes
The single-engine Stinson, specially out-were making bombing raids in support of
filled !or parachuting sport, look or{ Prince Souvanna Phouma's Royal Lao-
earHer 1n the day with four :<1kydivcrs lian Army and along the Ho Chi Minh
aboard . Trail which funnels men and supplies
Mr s. ~1atthev.·s had never been up. but frnm North Vietnam through East Laos
\1·cnt along to photograph 1heir dramatic into war zones in South Vietnam.
leaps. hC'r grief.stricken husband revea l-But in seeking to allay rears the Unilcd
f'd atlcrward . States is drifting into another Southea~l
NE\Y YORK (APJ-Price..~ on thr. stock S1ructuraJ difficulty developed alter !ht Asian land war, Nixon also said there
A \Vhite House official said, however .
Nixon was aware of the other 26
casualties suffered from such hostile ac.·
lions as aoibushes, booby traps. Jong
range shelling and ground fire at
helicopters.
Without defining what. in l h •
President's view. constituted participa·
lion In ground combat operation.<;, the of·
ficla l said it was the President's opinion
Bush and tht 26 olhers were not so in·
volved when they were killed.
Don A. Schanche, a newsman who fre·
quently reports from Laos, wrote in 1
dispatch Sunday in lhe Los Angeles
Times that Bush was killed when North
Vietnamese guerrillas attacked a Laotian
army headquarters near Muong Soul, just
south of the Plain of Jars.
According to Schancht'a: reptirt. Bush
killed one Communist soldier berore he
died.
\Varren said another check of records,
prompted by the news dispatch, disclosed
Bush had indetd been killed by North
Vietnamese guerrillas making a predawn
attack on the headquarters compound
situated "approximately IO miles to th!
rear of the expected line of contact with
the enemy."
to Get--
market remained depressed lace this ar-four diver~ had jumped and Mn;. Ma!· \\'ere no Amer ican ground combat troop.~
lcrnoon..-(Sce-quolaliom.-i!age£.-ls.J.7• '' _ _uth0<cws.__tocd_w_baiJ_ouWULopencd...htt__in_ I.a.o.i.......b.eYond §43_ j\mcrjcans,_bollt __ Co il
Losses were widespread. with declines p;irachutc prematurely. military and civilian. who help train. UDC
.on the New Ynrk Slock Exchange exceed-Thr tail or the plane sn;:igged 11, ripping equip and advise the Laotian army. He
ing advances by more than 2''.i lo I. 11 gaping hole in the silk. added : ·•No American stationed in Laos haii
ever been kilted in ground combat opera·
r1ons ."
As:<>istant Press Secretary Gerald War ·
rcn told reporters al Nixon's vacation
T errified· Woman
In Wrecked Car
For Four Hours
A Santa Ana woman sal terrified in
her car, \\'hich had ran off Jami>oref;
Road early this morning, Tor nearly lour
hours befo re being rescued, Newport
Poli cf' said today .
Beverlv Marie Raith. 34 said she wa!li
afraid to" get out or her car in the dark -
ncso;; because she didn't know where il
had come lo rest.
Police said the woman apparently 11·a~
~uthbound on Jamboree between F'ord
And San Joquin Hills Roads about 2 a.nl.
when her car lost a \Vheel.
The \•ehicle wenl out of control. cross·
cd !he center divider and crashed down
an embankment.
Miss Raith said she left the car at day
break and got aid from a passing motor·
isl who CAiied police.
She is listed in satisfactory condiditon
with a neck injury al lioag MenlOrial
Hospital.
Y outl1 Visitors
Student~ rrom Newport Harbor and
Corona de! Mar High Schools will be ob·
servers at the Newport Beach City Coun.
cil meeting tonighl to draw experitnce
for their own city council meeting Thurs-
day' v.·hich is Youth Civic Day.
A total of 51 students from the l'A'O high
schools will act as stand· in.~ for city coun-
cilmen and various city ofliciats in tht
annual mock counc il meeting.
The program is spoMOred by the Lea.
guc of \Vomen Voters of Orange Coast.
~Tr!. Lucy Bauman. Youth Civic Weck
chairman for the League. said, "We feel
st rongly this gives students a chance ltf
see the establishment tn a posilive man·
ner.''
Orange Coast
1''enlher
1'ho.se clouds rolling in lonlght
won'L have a silver lining, 50 gra b
your raincoat. Clea ring skies and
coo 1 er te_m_peralures are tbt
watchwords for Tuesday.
INSIDE TODAY
The U.S. 1ta11ds 011. e:ceUent
chan ce of copturin!1 a gold
ni.edal in the 1972 Kiel yacht-
ino Olympics bttause Amtrl·
Gr aveyard ~IJ•r'k er• ,.,,, oro bc!I •• •ailing •h• • .:i r;;i T~m.pat. Bootrno Paae 23.
OAl\.Y Pl~Ot PM* IW l kll ..... l( .... ltf
To Resu111 e Workin" '""" 11 ""'"" (I N,.rllll I LlcM111 t'
A c c ide1it Alte1•11auth
NEW YORK {AP) -An eight-week ~== U• 1,,1; :::1•1
11 gravediggers' strike that left " n c..,.1u it "•llMl•I H~ "'
estimated 15.000 bodic11 In coffins ant.I ~~·.:,~:,1,11 1: :!.,.U: c~ 11.~ ,
\Vhile the bike he wa!-1 rlding tics forgotten lor the
moment, Ca rl Ploss, 9. i5 prepared for ambuJance
ride , lo c,merge.ncy tr~atmcnt ... The bQY ... \rfsitln·i;
relaUvc~ 1n Newporl Beach, wa~ hil by a car--Saf.
urday morning while riding bike al Vista Cajon
-and Vista dcl Oro in The Bluffs. He sufferea 111•1,n-
erous cu ta and abrasions , but was not .hospltall1cd.
;iccording to Uce-r(!}?O_rtii. The driver of the car.~
olrs. ~farjorio ,ewis~so. oT IM9 Vls1a Cajon, Wa•
n6t cited.
va ults atA•alting burls! has tentaUvcly lt1lf!fri.1 -... • SIMI! I'll~••• 1"11
betn nUled. •~"''...,"""' ,. ,.''-"'''" '' ,11'1fMI 1 .. U Tllt1tw1 11 No detail~ ot the aareement were "•,.H-'' w1•1Mr • diRCIOSfd • unday night after a 33-c,;;hoor~-l-'',.'"'ttiil. ____ ,!_::J~u."",_ __
negot11ting se~1on ~lgnaled the str es w1r1t1 ,...,.. ..,.
apparenl end.
•
r
' . u~s. Shut8 ---
Rhodesmn
Consulate •
,WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
states. refusing to recognize !he new
~}gime in Rhodesia, has ln st.ructed il1l
c~sul ·ln Salisbury to close lhe consulate
OCI Ma:rch 17~ the State Dto:partment an·
1t0Uncecl 1tfonday.
·The Rhodesian regime broke with the
'.!tiU!!h crown on r.tarrh 2. The new S: hod es i an conslJtu lion transforming
nhodesia Into a republic "constitutes the
flna\ and fonnal break vtilh the United
Kjngdom," the State Department s11id.
~It added that the Unlled States con-
tfiuts to rega rd Britain as the lawful
i;overeJan there.
"Jn the above circumstances. we have
histructed our consul In Salisbury to
begin. arrangements for closing as of
March· 17 and for the departure of th!:
lt.qff. •I
;(Consul Paul o·Nelll Jnd a staff of 1ix
Wlll return to Washln&ton for reassigrl·
iftent, officials said .
1lConsular r;ervict!I for the .early 1,000
~l'l'\erican citizens will be handled in
neighboring countries by U.S. consult.ates
ic Johannesburg. South Africa, or Blan·
~I! in Malawi.
Mesa Cyclists
Chased by Man
With Gun, Rocks
A Cost.a l\1esa motorcYclist riding In the
old dirt and gravel pit on the city's wesl
side ~·as chased away Saturday by an
angry homeowner who took the law -
and a gun -into his own hands.
Police. supplied with a car license num-
ber today were checking lhe assault with
a deadly weapon case, witnessed by a sec-
ond teenaged cycle enthusiast.
Qt1iet Time by the Sea
----·~-----------------
P11bllc lf•e Eyed \
Base Giveaw..,.,..,T
At Los Alam-1tos?
Scheduled !or phase • out within 15
months, Lo~ Alamitos Naval Air Station
could be given away free IC trans.formed
into a public use facility such as a
civilian airport or coll~ge campus.
Congressman Craig Hosmer ( R·Long
Beach) made the announcement today on
the status of the sprawling station,
laraest .in the Naval Air Reserve pro-
gram.
Seeretary of DefeMe Melvin Laird con--
finned last week that Los Alamitos will
be eliminated from military use by June
ao, 1971, openlnj its eventual fate to
Blood Tests,
Prints Asked
For Suspects
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad·
ministration proposed legislation Monday
to subject suspects in federal crimes tn
fingerpringting and other detective tests
such as saliva and blood checks even
before being formally charged .
The Supreme Court has held that such
Identification procedures do not violate
the consittulional guarantee against self.
incrimination but only in cases involving
suspects already charged.
The administratio!l proposal would ex·
tend S\lCh tests to per50ns suspected of
crimes in cases where O!_ere .Ls no pro-
bable .cause to erreat. The test.a would be:
administered only uPon isSUance of a
court order.
widespread speculation.
Federal agencies will retain rirtl rla:hu
to lhe property, but state, county and cily
government s in the surrounding are'a
may be able to acquire some 9f JI,
Hosmer said today,
Bµl other military services and variou~
br~nches of the government get flr~t
claims. he pointed out with strona:
emphasis.
"There isn't going to be any Cherokee
'Strip land grab," he added.
The Defense Department must 1lill
determine after deadline sel for closure
of. ~~ base whether .it should be kept
within the realm of military control.
U not, it wj11 be released to thi Gen9ra l
Services Admit).istra tlon.
"At that point, the property 1!!1 up for
grabs by other federal departments and
agencies," Congressman Hosmer tJ·
pla ined.
''And in land·short Southern California.
we must reckon with the. po8.!llbiUty that
part or all o( it will be. claimed for other
federal requirements."
Hosmer said the GSA would then
determirie-tile best use of tht land and
establ ish its value to guide setting thP
pr ice for disposal -~·hich could be quite
low .
Local public agencies are allo'l'·ed a St!
percent cut if lhe surplus land is used for
porks and recreation . or 100 percent if il
is used for public health. education or an
airport.
The Long Beach legislator has said he
wiU supporl the conversion or Los
Alamitos to parks and recreational use .
but would fight its use as a commercial
airport.
The facili(y has been sugged.ed In. re-
cent months as a coinmercial airport
supplementing Orange County and
nearby Long Beach Airport. drawing
much protest from citizens and public of-
ficials. William 0 . Odelle. 18, of 1'1721 Aviemore
'Terrace, ~id the irate man approached
him flrst on the run and tllrew a large
rock. yelling at him to leave.
Odelle and Gary L. Eller, 18, nf !JOO Ar·
bor St, Cost.a Mesa. said the assailant re·
turned In hls car 15 minutes later,
scrttthing to a halt, waved a .45 caliber
pistol. and again ordered them out. -
Like a n1agnet. sun set over tranquil sea draws Or·
ange Coast family to cliff overlooking beach to
stroll, to \Vatch nature's work, to feel the afternoon
breeze, to listen to the surt and , maybe. to hurl a
stone or two at a receding wave.
If enacted by Congress. .a federal
judge, commis sioner or magistrate could
order a suspect in a fedtral criminal
case to submit to identlficalion by
"fingerprints. palm prints. root prints.
measurementli. blood specimens, ur ine
~pecimens. sali va samples, hair sample~.
handwriting exemplars, \'Oice samples,
photograpl1s and lineups."
Custo111s Work Stops
In Chilean Walkout
Asked if the weapon was loaded. the
man .showed tllem it wasn't, al which
time Odelle went to report the incident to
police and tlle J';lll-Wielder left in hit car.
Motorcycle nding on private property
11Jo11g the Santa Ana River and th~,mtN
rim has been the subject of complalnti
and controversy over 11 long period.
Slate .authorities last year po!ted prop-
erty adjacent to Fairview State Hospital
with no tresspassing signs, th us allowing
ctity police lo pa:osecute motorcycle r:ld!rs.
• Residents of the neighborhood overlook-
Jng the dirt and gravtl pit area -a dirt-
blker's paradise -have petl tioned the
c;ity to .;ict., but without much subsequent
SUcteS!.
Nationwide Complaints
Come on Gang SlispectS '
The property i.!l not under one single
ownership, making it dlfflcu!t to establish
a no-ttesspassing policy under which vi-
olators could be cited.
Mrs. Hines, 68, .
Dies on Birthday
Teletypes today were tapping out Jn/or.
mation on four eusptt:ted deaperadoes
caught in Costa Mesa F'riday to detenninl!
where else t.hey are wanted in the nation
and why.
Complain~ charging the three men and
the woman With a variety of local crimts
will be requested Tuesday from the Or·
ange County District Attorney.
Ball was set late Friday at $25,000 each
for the quartet. captured at 514 \4 Bernard
St., in a litUe rented house that yielded
loaded guns. drug pills, cash and other
suspected theft loot .
Detective Sgt. John Regan said tnd11y
Information from other Jaw enforctment
agencies between the Orange Coa.st and ~1rs. Sle.Jla C. fllnes or 1344 \Y. Bay the Illinois-Missouri area may implicate
Ave .. Ne~·port Beach, died Saturday on the four in other cases.
1---her 6&h birthdayr ----T'ne¥ ar.t.~ied~Tocally -wifh'-mned
An ll·year residenl of the -a rea she. wa.~ robbery. burglary, possession of danger·
a member of the Hunters Group of I.he ous drugs for sale among others, wh.ila
tfoag Hospital auxiliary. 1he flarhor Area
Ebe!l Club and the Tuesday Club.
She is survi\'ed by a son. James. or
r orona del Mar. a da ughter Jessie May
Shirar of Newport Beach' and six
grandchildren.
The family :ii;uggests those wishing to
make memorial contri butions. give to the
Hoag Hospital ~femorial Fund !or Stella
Jlines.
DAILY PILOT
Cllt,t..NGE COA~T PUI L1310NG 00M"'-"Y
R .. bert N. We"
Prt""nt e<>d Pu~l•11>for
Jec:tr R. Curley
Voe:! Pl'flld•fl! t fld C.1~~•1 N 1...,1r
Th"m•• K•1~11 Ii"'""
T~o"'•• A. M u•p~i11t
"'·•~••·~• Ea.t.ir
T~""''' f D•lu~t N•"N<>Ort •••ell CU; l • •e•
NowpDrt fMch Offic1
11 1 W11t ltlbD• lo~ltv••c/
M1ili~9Aedr111: P.O. a.,, 1175., 92661
t •I• Me1•: lJI) Wnl lltr Stfttt
l l9""• l!lted1. 717 Fnr11l A\'tflot
HuMln•~" a .. c~· l111J ewc!I 11wi.v1'4 ... n ,1....,,,,, ~ l'fDrl1t El , ....... IO I.Ml
Ne,vport, Irvine
Dedicate Park
Buffalo l:tills Park in the. nev.'ly de"e·
loping Harbor View Hills are.it wali dedi-
cated today by Irvine Comp.any and Ne"'"
port. Bt>ach officials.
The seven·acre park has four baseball
diamonds. a children's play area. picnic
tables and ~·alkways that tventual\y wHI
connect with Irvine's master-planned
bicycle trail network.
Tut park is caJled Buffalo Hills bf...
cause it is located south of ford !toad
on the site of the old lrvine buffalo
ranch .
Home builder Donald Bren developed
the park al a cost of $80.000. He wtl\ be
paid back over 10 years by the City of
Newport BtaC'h wiU'I fund s from 11 build·
Jn~ excise t.ax on ntW conslructio11. Thr
PX'ci~ lax is coUecied to be ll!Wld for
rire stations. lil;>raries and parks .
From Page 1
PANTHER ...
Tndependtnce, ~fo. aulhariJes h*ve ad·
ditional complaints.
The jailed suspects are Jack and Patrl·
cia Jackson. 25 and 24, named in arrest
warrants issued from Independence,
charging anned robbery and forgery , plus
Howard R. Tschirhart, 31, of the Bernard
Strtet address and Jack C. Matney, 32, of
Denver, Colorado.
The men are held at Costa l\1tsa City
Jail. with arraignment scheduled T'ue!!day
afternoon in ·Harbor Judicial Dis trict
Court.
Mrs. JacklOll wa5 booked into Orange
County Jail after the ra.id. during which
~ht tried to flee out the back door and
was caught by nne of a dozen lawmen
surrounding the house.
Mrs. McQQ.ire's
Services Slated
Servicl:!s will be held Wednesday for
~1r11. Elizabeth 0. ~fcQuire. of Newport
Beach. ~·ho died Saturday. Shr was 77.
A rtsident of the Harbor Area for 20
years. Mrs. ~1cQuire \\'as an honorary
life member or Eastern Star .and the pagt
i\.1atron of Harbor Star. She was active In
Girl Scouts ans and crafts and Newport
Beach Senior Citii.ens arts and crafl..!l.
She is survived by daughters, Mrs.
Kathleen Roy and ~frs. Betty Jane Fir·
rtll. both of Ntwport Beach; and a sisttr,
Mrs. Cora Wat.M\.!l of Lapeer, ti.1ich.
Services will be. held at 1 :30 p.m. at
Btll Broadway Chapel followed by in·
tennent .at Harbor Rest Memorial Park.
Services Held
For Lif a Finster
Services were held today for r.-lrs. Lifa
.I. Finster. a so.year resident of New-
port Beach ti.·ho died ;\larch 3 'vhile on
a vacation cruise to Rio de Janei ro. She
WIS 71.
A Tttired nurse. she was the widow
11f Newport restraunteur F. E. Finster.
Sile livid at 316 Anade Ave., Balboa.
Mrs. Finster is survived by a son Ed.
distributed In the tttirthoUM. COTTidm' to ~in H. Finster of Corona d•I r.tar. four
all pen10ns entering Judge Drelzen'1 sisters, Ada Olmsted and Betty Tolley
cou rtroom. of King City, Ore., and Wilma Hoy and
Greene called Superior Court adminis-Jean PtfacKenney of Santa Ana, and a
tralor Leslie ~JC'Cartney to the ~111nd brother John Hoy also of Santa Ana.
t>AtlY "M.ot. witto """IC" 11 _,.,111*,.,. In e:xpl11in the processe!I used by Mc-I ,,,_.,,rft!ll, 11 ,.,.,.lslW t111rr ttt•t '""' r · f" · I t. · -• 111,. .,. _,.,,. ..ritit:fol ,., l ttv!M ••.ui. artney s o 11cc tn !'ii! ec 1ng iurors U!lt".1 N rthbl ff Pr
H .......... ";~ICJI. Co1!1 Mel•· Mu•ll"''""' 1r Ornnge County Supeolior Coun. trials. 0 u OJ. eel e .. c.1o Mii fDllllfl lft V1llflo. •lerl1 w,!11 i.,,. '"fcC f df"-" ''f "' -"rl ,.,re..11 ec1n'Ofl1 Or•ntt ce.11 J1u•ni~1.,. 1• 1r MY te ... 1l<:!u ..., ore-... ~.,.. ---
c.,.., .. ,,,. "'""ti"' e!tfth •• , II 1111 Wtll rose for lunch that the ~.000 namei !Ub· wa·ns Planne ; OK 8••nDI al"11 ' N""-1 11~""' •"'II' JJO milted fO hlJ office by the CO'...t"'a •com-r s: .,,.,,, a.z_ itr"'· C.~•• Mtu .. ,..., pOlerlz~ data S.'i'Stems divis!Olll .. ar8
T.W,ho110 17141 '42·4J21 ju.o;t namts and·1~0 have nn ldta al that ~ A41•1rtish11 642·1671 Ume. jw;l ~·ho lht5e people tnl~l be "
~;-,!! .. ,.,e;·~~~11 11~~!~= ''.Do you k~ow .whert they Jh·e. v.hat "rw~1 "''',., 01 ..,.,..," .. -",, "'"1" lhf-1r ocru pallon 1i;, 1he iiaturt or their
,,..., .,. """:'fvc:td """.''lt!!v' •Ht111 ...,.. en~loymeot or· r.rce.'tu·Grtt 1sked,-mftt;eft .i. a.""'""' -~ __ cc:.. _ .. .;:;; ~ (fi)t ••••• ••"' 11 N•Wflert •••ell • ;Jceif ne n:pt1itl. ~1, -_, Co••• ~ ... C1•11or1111 ~nio,119'! ..., knO\\' 8t th1tl time Ill th11t V.'I! hive 2.500 "'"1"' •eo -"'"'' "1 "''11 •t .IO,.,..,,.,.,, men and " 500 \1omen fron1 y,·hom ~·c ca11 "'fllll"' WiitJ!"'tlON, l ,,Clll lftMIMY, k •· !----"'"'-------'-J>~ our june$,"
A tract m11p for development of rom-
n1unity to be called NorLhbh:rtt. north or
EastbluU, ha~ been approvt<I by lhe
.Ke\i,porl Btaoh PlanninJ~mls&ion.
Tht. m1p altows dtv~f6Prn!nt nt f<atr
""'' ~,outhw.11 ~ vuia-dt1 Oro a"1! Visr& d@T lfolsa with 21 homes and a
~ten 11rea by builders Georat M. liol~·
lli!i ;ind SON. I ' --.
Noted Artist Di es
NEWBURYPORT. 1'.1ass. (AP l
\Valdo Peirce. whose painlings have been
dieplayed in many or the ·world's major
galleries, died in a hospital here Sunday
Attorney General John N. Mitchell said
in a letter of transmittal to the' House and
Senate that the proposed law .. will pro-
vide federa l law enforcement office rs
with a usefu l new tool for th e in·
vestigation of criminal 21ctivity .and the
apprehension or criminals."
SANTIAGO. Chile (AP) -About 1,400
customs employes struck for higher pa y
today. slowing down passtnger and
freight clearance in ports and airportl
1h roughoul the country.
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings, ' In offering the moat In eamlngs to aavera-
Ill 2 y11r lonn aCCOUftl, wllh $1.000 mlnhmlm
114% 1 )'NI term acooun~ wtlh $1,000 minimum
1\4 % Somontba bOnus 1ecount, wllh $IOO minimum
7~% conlfleate of dopoolt av1ll1blo, wlth $100,000 "1lnlmum
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
. ad lu11 a-iatim If YoU 11'9 a M1.1tual S•v•r, now la th4I hm• to lnwial tddlllonal lund1 In ttleM n•w
l'llgh·rate accounlt. (11Uur1nee hu been incrttased to $20,000.) If you era not • CORONA DEL MAR
Mu1ua1 Saver. now Is the time to open your •ccount at Tha Big M-Muluat Sav1ng1-2ae1 Ea11 ei:-1 W>t~ ... , TtltOllOf!I l 7$-S010
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001
W•8T A"CAOIA
MO Wpl Ouette ~T•lt!lflarw ''M !M
GOVINA
t00 Noftt\OHrvt •~T11o~ Ut-611'
Ol..•NOALll ""Nafltl llllll h\li. •• ,4
Tt\lllM/tt f4f·' I''
It
I
'·
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~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
,_..,,..,~, Mll't-'· lf1t .. "''' u
-Shipboard
Fun Fu-nds
All aboard the Mansion Queen!
Responding to thi s cal~· \vill be more than 200 rnem·
hers and gUeSts of the 'NeWport Harbor Spastic League,
'vho will travel 'lo Ports 'o Call, San Pedro on Satur·
day, April 11 , for the league's annual fund-raisi ng
event.
Partygoers \Vill board buses in Ne,vport Beach for
the journey to the harbor, where a Neptune Cruise
a\vaits them.
First on the itinerary \Viii be a cocktail cruise or
the harbor aboard the Mansion Queen. Two exciting
events will enliven the voyage. the crowning of King
Neptune and a drawing for two round-trip tickets to
Hawaii.
The honor of being King Neptune is bestowed each
year on a man se lected for his qualities as an outstand·
1ng citizen of Orange County and for his untiring con-
tribution in his own field of endeavor.
After the Queen docks at Ports 'o Call restaurant,
guests wiU adjourn to the \Vaikiki Room for dinner and
dancing.
All proceeds from the Neptune Cruise v.1ill be used
to as~ist and further the developn1enl of Cerebral Pal-
sied children and young adults in Orange County.
Chairman of. the cruise committee is Mrs. \Villiam
Kitchen. and assisting her are 1he Mmes. Clyde Carl·
ton , invitations: Jack Carney. reservations; \Vi\liam
Fisher. decorations, and Johnnie \Valker, transporta·
tion.
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CREW LINED UP -A!l hands \\'ill be on deck as the r-1an sion
Queen slips into 1he Saia P.edro Harbor Saturday. April 11, for a
coc ktail cruise benefitling the \VOrk of the Newport Harbor Spas-
tic League. 1-lighlighting the voyage will be the cro,vning of King
Neptune. an outstanding Orange County man. Awaiting depar-
ture are (left to right} the Mmes. Sally Subcasky, president,
Richard Pendleton, vice president, and William Kitchen, benefit
chairman.
Annual Benefit
Good Fortune Smiles
On Big Zonta Game
Friday, ?\-1arch 13, will be a lucky day for Harbor Area residents. at-
tending the annual Day or Cards sponsored by the Zonta Club of Newport
Harbor, for th ei r good fortune will be double.
Jn addition to the card games of every variety offered. guests will
be able to san1ple the famous cuisine of the club members, \vho pre·
pare and serve gourmet items for their benefit events. .
The Senior Citizens Recreation Center. Newport Beach \Vill be the
setting for the day-long card game, beginning at noon and continuing on
into the evening.
A .buffet lunch \viii be served at noon and a b4ffet dinner \Viii be offer-
_ed_at_7....p.m. -·-----------
Capitalizing upon the next date of importance on the caJendar, St.
Patrick's Day, the clubhouse will be decorated \\'ith symbols of Irish folk·
Jore and black cats.
Benefitting from the day of cards will be the building expansion fund
!or the recreation center, a Zonta project, and the numerous service proj·
ects of the club.
Zonta each year assists the American Field Service. presents a $500
scholarship to a graduating Orange Coast College st'Udent, selects Zonta
Girls-of·the-month at each of the area high schools, and a\vards a prize
to the Zonta Girl-of-the·year at each school.
It also has made a $5,000 pledge to the teen wing of Hoag ritemorial
Hospital, Presbyterian.
Zonta is a club or executive buslne'ss women dedicated to commun·
ity service. It was · chartered in 1949 and counts as its most successful
project to date tb_t re.creation center, which now has outgrown its facilities.
General chairman of the card event is Mrs. Joe Carlos, who is being
assisted by the Mmes. Robert L. Bacon. luncheon· chairman: Roy Fox,
buffet chairman; Roger Barrow, decorations; Ervin Campbell and Eu-
gene Bergeron, opportunities and door prizes, and Dr. Hilda McCartney,
printini.
STRETCH ING THE IR LUCK -With a black
cat and ladder both, Zontians (left to right) the
i\·11nes. Joe Carlos, Roy Fox and Ervin Camp-
bell really are stretching their luck getting
ready for the club's Day of Cards Friday,
March 13. The all-day game of cards will be in·
terspersed \vith a bullet lunch and dinner fea·
luring the cuisine of the club members.
1 Hostesses will be the Mmes. B. \Valdemar Acker, James G. GaJlaJr·
her. Robert Grizzell. Joseph llamblel. Rober! L. Ja)'Ted, Hobart Loud .
Carleton Mears, DonaJd D. Schoenmehl, George Sctioonover. Charles
\Vinfield. Virginia Attwill, Marie Howes. Laura Lagios. Virginia Luther.
Lucille \Vardle. Karen Margrcla Wood anrl Dr. Helen Trotter.
Anyone wishin~ reservations or further information may call f\.1rs.
Bacon or r..Irs. Jack Reinert at 548-5423 or 641).5466.
Dog Gon~ Laziness Replaces Bonnie's True Pu.ppy Love
DEAR ANN LANDERS' OUr IS.year·
old daughter begged us for a puppy for
her birthday. Bonnie promised to train
him. walk him. feed him and ht totally
ft$ponsible for all his netd5. So _we
6ought Bonnie a Boxer puppy. She pamed
him Plato.
Plato chew5 'verythlng in 5ight and
1vomit!' all over. He ha& spotted the sofa.
1he living room chairs and ruined every
rug In the house. The place smells like
a kennel and no amount of airing 5eem1
to help.
Plato crl's all nlghl and no· one can
s1C1?p -no one except Bonnie, that i!i.
Nothing bot.hers her. She is In school all
day M I'm the one who walk• Plato and
ANN LANDERS
cleans llfl after him. When Bonnie dots
come home she is too busy on ·the tele·
phone to feed her puppy 50 I have to do
that, too.
Last night we had a hea ted argument
and [ told Bonilie r was giving Plato
a·way. She became hysterical and made
me feel like a murderer. I IQVe my
daughter ana-r don't want lo break her
heart. Please ten me wh11t to d1'.
-NERVIS RECK
•
DEAR RECK: Do yourself, Plalo and
Bonnie 1 favor and give tbe puppy ta
~people ~bo will care for it proptrl)'.
Bonnie h,5 not kepl her '!Ord. U yon lei
her hysterit'I trap you Into keeping tht
pup, yoo 've 101 • 1eraohtm lo your era·
aJam, Lady.
AJ\A'NN-LANOERS : My husb11nd'~
bookkeeper quit las1 May after working
for him for [ive years-I was not unhappJ
about her leaving because she 'was such ' a trouble·maker and I never llked her.
Two weekl after Jennie quit. her hus-
band came lo the house on his lunch
hour to tell me "10melhing important."
I .. 1moa&. died ol. lhack when be totd~me
J'nnje was pregnant by my husband-
and he Was thrilled because he always
had wanted a family and was physically
1mable to rather a child. He then admitted
It was IUS idea-that he had talked his
wire Into 5educlng my husband and ht
thought I ought to know the facts. ..
The baby is rour months old now and
from what r hear sliFTs avery beautiful
child.
I told my husband about the visit th.at
very nlaht. He den.led everything-called
the guy "nuts," and said Jenn ie wits
involved with another man in the" com·
pany and that he .had fatbtred the child.
The whole thing has made me plfys--
lcally Ill. r believe my husband, but I
keep wondering bow much goulp there
'3. J want to leave town but my hus-
band has a good job and it would mun
starting over. We have three youhg
children and r don't want them hurt by
lhls. What $hollld we do!-RICHMOND
DEAR mCHMOND: If yoo doa'I r .. 1
better I• It d1ys, I sa1,e1t you·11M( your
hu1bartd seriously consider movto1 lo
another city. Wbatever be lo1es final·
·cilllly vt'lll be wortll It la termf of )l:o'.or
bcallb and peace nf mind lor )'t)Ur
family.
CONFIDENTIAL TO WHAT TO DO?: lt's Lim! your neighbor found an unmar·
ried "humanitarian" to crt on. Hand
your bwiband the names of 1 COUNelor,
a clergyman and a therapist and sug-
gest that he give the list to the Lady.
u ,.. """ -ble ............ wffll ,,.... ,.. ... ' •• If ,.. -·1 pl ....
lo kt )"Oii Uve yoar ow1 Ufe, te9d I•
AD• Landen' boolld, 'jhgred •1 Par·
ntl? How to Get Mere Frttdom." Stlld
H ~·tr tn cola wlOI your ~ aocl
a loaf, stamped, 1elf-eddrt:IMll .. \/dope.
An~ Lndm will bt &lod to lltlp Y•
wltl .,_ prMkm1. S.od U..m le lltr
1t care irtliil>mv-PICOTfuc I
a self-addressed, stamped eavtlope.
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.14 DAILY PILDT Monda1, March 9, 1970
Scottish Schottische Entertains
ScoUish country dancing will provide the entertainment during a potluck sup-
per sponsored by Lady Buchanan Lodge of Huntington Beach at 7 p.m. Sat-
urday, March 14, in Lake Park Clubhouse. Mi ss Laura Lippett <1.eft) and
Miss Audrey Mahler join Edward Goller to lead off 'the dance. Tickets at
Sl.25 for adults and 75 cents for children may be obtained by calling ~frs.
Orville Stoner, chainnan, at 847·4121 . The public is invited.
Se/no-Egan
Couple Repeat Vows
SL 1-lillary's Church in
Tiburon was the setting for
t~ marriage of Nancylee
Egan. daughter of Mr. and
i\1rs. William R. Egan Sr. of
l.aguna Niguel and Lawrence
R. Selna. t"
The Rev. Ed\\'ard i1ullen of-..,.
ficiated al the afternoon
service.
The bride wa s attended by
1'1rl!. JvaTi-Oliverfe as lnatron
of honor and bridesmaids were
Mrs. William R. Egan Jr .. her
11isler-in-law, and '-1iss Judy
Cramer.
The bridegroom. son or Mrs.
c;uido Albertazzi of Af 111
Valley, chose bi.s brother,
Robert Selna. as best man
with ushers Lt. \Yilliam R.
F:gan Jr. and Donald Blcen-
iu~.
The new i\1rs. Selna at.
1ended Christ ian College ln
Columbia. Mo. Currently .she
i' a hosle~ for BranHf
lntemational Airways. Jfe r
~
hu~band is a gradual e or
Marin High School in Green-
brca.
Professor Examines
Politics of Africa
Area Chef
Honored
fltedal of Honor wiMer J im
Deluhery \\'as among the
participants in the chefs de
cuisine culinary art di splay in
the Anahei m Con v en I i on
Center today.
The medal, one of six
awarded during the year, wa.~
presented by the American
Academy of Chefs for services
rendered the pro(esslon for
1.:ulinary achitNements.
Deluhery. executive chef of
the convention center, learned
Lo cook wh ile \\'orking on
paMenger ships.
Secretary of the chefs de
cuisine, he resides v.·ith h1~
family in Anaheim.
. .
Newcomers
Seat Board
An installation luncheon for
tht: Saddleback Va 11 e y
Newcomers Club in Gordon·s
restaurant, Lilguna Niguel, is
being planned for \Vednesday.
March JI.
Ne\vly elected officers art
the !\1mes. Robert PeJlettieri.
presldenl-;-John ogl,-vic
president: Donald s .... ·jngle,
recording secretary; Norman A past president or the ScoU, co r re 5 ponding
Foundation for Ching 1 , secretary; Reid Bu shong.
Nyeri!District Kenya Self-help 1rcasurer, and David \V~·atf.
/
Drug Abuse Topic
/
Meeti n·g Lu r,es
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Top Panelists •
A bl anket Invita tion to at-
tend a narcotics symposium
has been issued by the Hun·
·tington Beach Junior Woman 's
Club.
The public Is invited to al·
tend the meeting which will be-
gin with a 9 a.m. registration
in the Golden West College
forum Saturday, flfarch 14.
Letters from the Huntington
Beach Juniors have been ma il-
ed to all· junior w<11nen 's clubs
and California Federation of
\Voman's Clubs in lhe Orange
District by flfra. Douglas
).foscrip 1nd Mrs. Stanley Hct-
lihga, chairman.
In addition, invil.ations ha ve
been issued to li-1ayor Jack
Green and other city officials,
all schools, churches and civic
organizations.
Cooperating in the .sym·
posium will be the Hunlington
Beach Police Department.
There will be a $I.SO fee
charged for registration, and
the Juniors ""ill serve free
noon lunch in the student
center.
Following a welcome by
Mrs. Eugene \Vi 11 i am s ,
Juniors president, and Earl
Robitaille , chief of policr,
panel discuss.ions \\'ill begin i'lt
10 a.m.
Narcotics Ab use and
1\-iedicine will be discussed by
Or. Arthur ri.t Dos lrow,
chairman of Orange County
lYledical Association D r u g
Abuse Commilltt, moderator ;
Or. lrwin Kempler, member
of the drug abuse commilltt :
'Dr. Donald Fisher, resident in
psychiatry, OC ~1 e di ca I
Cef\ter, and Saul Stolzberg ,
psychiatric social w o r k e r .
CommurUty fltental Health
Services.
At 11 a.in. James ~Iaha'n.
sergeant with the }luntington
Beach Police Department, \\'ill
moderate a discussion of
Narcotics Abuse and the Law .
Serving as panelists "'iii be
Justice Robert G a r d n er .
r>istrict Atlo rncy Cecil lficks
and Dalton Newland. office
director of lhC' Santa An::t
Branch , Sl;ite N a r cot i c
Bureau.
Moms Hear
Narcotics
Discussed
Thr problem of narcotic.~
addiction a1nong child ren \\'ill
bf discu ssed \\'hen the Orange
Coast i\fot.hcrs of T\\·ins Club
meets \\'edncsda y, tylarch II,
in the Galaxy re staurant. San-
ta Ana .
FollO\Ving !he 7 p.nl. social
hour and 8 p.m. dinner Jam es
f\lahan . detective sergeant
from the lluntington Beach
Polke Department. \\'ill be lhe
guest speaker.
He has been a policeman in
FollO\l'ing the noon lunch
break Dr. Ralph Bauer, truit-
tee of Ocean View and Hunt·
ing ton Beach High School dis-
tricts, will moderate a panel
discusskln of Narcotic Abuse
and Schools.
Panelists will I n c I u d e
Superintengent Cla rence Hall ,
Ocean View School District ;
Glenn Dysinger, t.1arina High
School prinCipal, and S. Rick
Mork, hunor student from
Marina High School.
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Assisting during the sym-
posium will be members of the
'Tri·teens, the club's jun ior
auxiliary, and contributing
financial assistance is the
Woman 's Club of Hunti'iigton
Beach.
Anyone wishing additional
infonnation or reservations
may call htrs. Ray Hopkins.
842-3172 , or Mrs. Hettinga, 893·
0317.
NARCOTICS ABUSE - A daylong symposium on narcotics a'busc \viii tak•
place Saturday, March 14, in G?lden \Vest Colle~e. Cooper,atin g in the e~ent
arc f\·fr s. Stanley J{ettinga, chairman of the Ju~1or 'Voman s Club_ or lfunt1ng-
lon R~ac:h, an d James r..Iahan. sergeant, J-luntmgton Beac h Poltce Depart-
1nent.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Sagittarius: Forces . Scattered
TUESDAY
MARCH 10
By SYDNEY 0~1ARR
Scorpio Is called lbe sei:iesl
of the zodiacal signs. But if
that Is true, Leo runs a close
second.
regard as peacemaker. Play SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No\'. 21 ):
that important role. Break indicated in relationship
CANCER (June 21-July 22): that previrn.Jsly s u r vi v rd
soinc friends appear hot-severe bumps. Key is to
tempered. Realize clash of realize fati gue might ha\'c
ideas is exciting but maintain much to do v.·ith emotions.
self-control. Important issue Measure words, ac1ions . Study
can be settled \l:ithout hurling Libra message.
PISCES i Vcb. l!l·J\.larch 201 ·
!'lease do not rush -nol Jn
\Vriting. dri\'ing, g i v ifl~
anS\\'Cts lo important ques-
tions. You cxhibil tendency lo
be careless. Seek ::.teadying in-
fluence -comes from family
n1ember.
I · 'I SAGITTARIUS (NO\' 22 To !ind out wt.~·, t~k• '"' ~ou I~ .1 o 1nsu1 S. · · · · mone• •nd IOI!•. o'"'' S.•dni:v Om•rr'• ARIES fli1arch 21 ·Aprl 19 l : LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): You Der. 21): Forces are scat· tiootlfol, "~crer Hint, ror Mtt .rid
?\foney areas activated . Pay get action through '4"riting, tered. People you depend upon ~~·;~ !:~~~~~~1:."~50olTr'~
and collect debt s. But not wise publishing. adv e r t i s I n g . could be absent. Some details ~~~~~·r!0.:o,i, N.$.'~081 1~"'"'1 11•-
to lend . One \Vho is aggressive Prestige rises: Ar j cs in-arc bcller left for another day.•-==:...:.:=='---'--'----
makes numerous promises bul dividual can pro\'e valuable \Vatch diet. Take care of
may be covering up un· a\ l y 1 0 day . .t1 cc e pt yourself. Pacing is important.
favo rable points. Acl ac-responsibility and you will CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
cordingly. gain reward. 19): Good lu nar aspect today
'fAURUS (April 20-~1ay 201: VIHGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 : coincides \\'ilh intense cmo-
Can you eat
all day and
still lose !~·
weight? 'l "
You asked for action -today Soine ideas conce rning \'aca-tiona ! reactions. Some young
you get plenty of it. There is lion. long journey need rurthcr persons could make unjust ac-
change, variety, ;ill en 1 i 0 n de\ elopment. Give logic eQual cusations -has nothing lo do
from olhers. You are in !;.pace \rith irnpulsc. Then ~·ou \\ilh chronological age. Don't
i<pot!ighl anq C'~'cle is high. a\·oid entanglement 111 cm· co1npound error.
Drive forward. But take care b · ·1 ,. ,\QUAR!US (Jan. 20-F"eb.I WEIGHT & in lraHic. arrass1 ng s1 ua ion. '4!v. ..
GE~llNI (1\-lay zJ .Junc 20): LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: 18 !; Friction indicated at1 \A /A.Ti(HERS.
One v.'tio is usually shy speaks Avoid argument \l'itll rnatc, home base. lie ready to con-VVf'\11 . •
8 ""'r alivc Realize partner over finances. Neither tribute ideas. Bui also CX"prcss 5 1. . , up. f' coar-' · ' of ""U may have authority lo willingness to listen. ~!ember ome lalkln9 , some isttning '"11 ~omc lc1npers are on cdgr. J" a program that works 1,.
h · d. ·d I · do a thing. Rea lize this and be or opposite sex may bt• fa lse-· You mav bet c 111 1v1 ua Ln I f . fla ltcrr'ng you ,,,,.1h dcf,·n,·lc ,fllE£ BROCHUR£-CAll llS·SSOS
the middle _ one others _2ci~v~i~ .Sc~· ~t ;ex~a~m~p~lc~~on~ta~t~ur~•l~y •. ~·~~t~·i·-~~·'~i~·,~,~·~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Contingent
To Travel
Los Angeles Hilton Hotel
"'ill attract an Orange Coast
contingent tomorrow for that
is the opening day of the
California St.ale S o c i c I y •
Daughters of the American
Revolution's .stale conference.
The four-da y session will
continue through F r i d a y •
March 13. \\'hen st.ate officers
give reports.
Bare Essentials
Thr.n-Vou \1•ill be happy.
alaska IS ALIVE!
At "The Grande,t M•ll Of All''
~~=5=~~=i~=;=~===~~=~=l~=.1=~=0·::,:,::::::~ii0j
r:as Angeles and Orange coun-When it comes to sportswear
hcs.Jor-the-paiL.scvcn_years -far-spring;-bare-essential
and .in 11.1e field of narcotics i ~-coun t '
\'est1gat1on _fo~ th e past six Open midriffs. peekaboo cut·
years. Hr \v11l 1nfor1n 1nothers rn.Jts , lie-front blouses -all
what they shrn.Jld know and with a light and open look. wha1 can be done :ibout
Dr. fl1ary l.eppe:r , assistant
professor of political sciencr
at California Slate College at
f'ullerto n. \\'ill discuss her
su mmer in A!rica in 19&.I lnr
!he Ne\\'JXlrt • Ccr.1a l\lci;a
Branch or American Associii·
tion of Uni\'ersity \Von1rn
\\'~nesday, l\farch It.
Schools. Dr. Lepper spent last section coordinator. nareotic.~. . ~umnicr in. Africa under a A social hour will fol!o11· U1e A!I inothcrs of '""'in.~ in lhc C horal Group
postdoctoral fellowship grant. noon luncheon an 1nslallaliol1 Orange Coasl area Ar e Every f\.1onday at 7:30 p.m.
She is concerned \\'ilh the ceremony. welcorne lo attend th e members of the Prospective
role or public groups In foreign Reservations !oday moy be 1necting. 'For reservations Aliso Valley Chapter of Sweet
policy making and in the made ~·ith i\Trs. h1arsh;tll Mrs. Nick Bartlett may be Adelines convene in hlission
pol!llcs or developing areas.,~_B_loo_m.:., _·8Jo.65o __ 1_. _____ _:<::_•:_lle<i_:___. _________ V_ie'-io_H_:ig'-h-'~-hoo_I . __ _ li'specially Arri ca and
OC Sing le Bees
The second and fourth Fri·
tlay or lhe month Orange
Q>unty Single Bees gather in
Pioneer Town, Santa Ana.
Activities begin at 8 p.m.
Southeast Asia.
The meeting will take place
al 7:30 p.m. in the Nev.•port
Riviera Pavilion. Any v.·omen
college graduates interested
may call the president, Mn.
Ronald K. Arnold, ~S214.
WOMEN
SLIM DOWN
for Summe r
NOW!
• A FlliUH SALON
FOR WOMIN
• A HIALTH CLUI for MIN
Phone 547-5410
PROGRAM INCLUDES
• Htctted Pool
• laby Sitting
• Whirl Pool
• SIM loom
• Swlmmh••
leuons
• Sltorn hth
• Sauna lath
• Massata
• Dressl1t9 looths
• Ptrt0nell1tcl
Ceutstt
GAROEH-SQUARE HEALTH CLUB
'562 GARDEN GROVE BLVD .
GAR DEN Gl!OVE JJ7,J410
JUST 4 DAYS!!
Patterns Unlimited, Inc .
is back again in
ANAHEIM
with the
ORIGINAL EUROPEAN"GOLDEN RULE'
METHOD OF PATTERN DRAFTING
Acclaimed by Millions thtoughout the World''!
A" O""'l'"IJ '"'•'hod .. ~.,)\ lOu"dl u~b•lorvoblr, '(ti
.~...;,.o!•I yto•1 ol ~•udr -j111I ~od a ...,...beJ a"d
tho~ o do1,
No nctd !or yto•I ol ~o•"'"9· Giw u•
ONE HOUR
er-I ........ 11 .,ho .. )"" t,.o,. de.;gl't" .,d ....,tlv ... o·
.,,,o~ "8"f' (•t o•sd o 1"1leftl to t""'ble )0. lo drolt
fl'O!l~tll\ -·ih 0 .. 1, TWO ...... o-~it"'•"" • l0ot r-rw o..J
.,,, """'li1• of '°"" lo .... lr ;.. o"y l'lt !
Th.1 \pl'•"' ~ o l"O•t"' i....c<t11 thr ,.o<ld OW'f Of'd •
AN OPPORTUNITY YOU CAN 'T AFFORD TO MISS!
"SEEING IS BEllEVING'' I I I
Alt (quipmrn! Av"~ablc al Class
Otl"O"\tto'•"~ r~• !.0.
01 MC'NSIRA:'IOt~S Tt-ll?(f TltA[S 0/111 Y
IOAM 2PM 7:30PM
Tuesd•y, Much 10th !nru Frid•y, March ll!h
HOWARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE
'3.t· S:--Flar r a n • ~ re•way
Directly 1cro11 from Disneyland
(NO TtLt.PHONC CALLS-Plt.\Sl)
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look 11T11rl !n • fl1tl••ing f•,~ion1blt
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yoYri elf, bvl 1till 1tr11,h yow1 budg1t.
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.4 ppoVr.tm1>11~ rCf'lcomc buJ Mt alu:ayJ MeeJsary
OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY • -CROWNING-GLOR--'t
267 E. 171~ ST., COSTA MESA
PHONE 548·9919
'OPEN EVENINGS
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SOUTH COAST PLAZA
L1wtr ~....t-Herl .. S.•"'
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•
" '
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.... -....... -
Costa Mesa
EDIJION
Today's· Final
N.Y. Stock&
VOL 63, NO . 57, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES • ORANGE C9UNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1970 TEN CENTS
Panther Rips Jury
DAILY ,ILOT SNff l'llele
Roster System Blast Delays Trial
By TOM BARLEY
01 ~ O.IW .. li.t Sll tt
Arthur De\Vitle League'~ lawy« today
branded California 's jury s e I e c l Io n
:;ystem as unconstitutional and imposed
what is expected to be at least a thrrr-
day delay in the murder trial of the ac·
cused Black Panther.
League. 20, of Santa Ana, is accused of
the shooting last June 4 or Santa Ana
police officer Nelson Sasscer. It is alleged
thal the Negro militant gunned do"'" the
patrolmin after he was ordered to pro-
duce identification.
Attorney Robert Greene asked Judge
Saqiucl Dreizcn to rule that the picking
of i" jury from lhe roster of name~
assJgned to lhe court for the League trial
would a.mount to denial of a fair trial for
his client.
Thqse name~. Greene said . are selected
from Orange County':\ voter registration
lists and do not reflcel a true cross-set'· lion of the community.
Greene wants a jury picked from "the
et>mmunity as a \11hole and not under 11
sysle.tn \l'hich denies my client a fair trial
under any (Jf the provisions envisaged by
our law -among them economic. racial
and poJiUcal factors."
Greene's 1notion ended a two·hour
delaY in opening of the trial and \\'a.11
being debated at press time . Judge
Drcizen delayed summoning of lhl'! first
panel of prospective jurors until the mo-
tion is decided.
Greene indicated that. he would have
further motions ~to offer following set-
tlement of his challenge of the jury
11ylltem. •
Among speclators In the courtroom to-
Growing Center
flay was Daniel Mirhael Lynem, 21 , also
a membe? of I.he Black Panther organiz.
ation and the man who \\'as clea"red of tht
murder charges now faced by Leagur..
A heavily reinforced detachment of
sheriff's officers tu rned a"•ay more Ula n
100· pcrson.11 from the courtroom door
after the 7~ !!eats in .J udf!e Oreizen"ll
courtroom were quickly occupied th i.(
morning.
All persons entering the courtroom.
with the elCception of witnesses and th'!
press. were carefully searched before
they we~ allowed to take their sea~.
There were nQ-lncidenls other than loud
complaints from several persons who
wished to·view the murder trial.
Black Panther literaturP. w 1 1
!See PANTHER, Pap Z)
CHANTING DEMONSTRATORS CRY 'POWER TO THE PEOPLE' OUTSIDE COUNTY COURTHOUSE
League Murder Trial Draws More Than a Little Interest From Santa Ana's Black Community
Chute Failure
((ills Woman;
Pilot lnjurecl
Mesa Planners to Review
Accidents Come
In Bunches
l<'or Motorist
A funny thing happened to .Jerry U.
Ain~worth on U1e way lo Costa Mesa
police headquarters early Sunday lo
rrport several traffic accidenls.
Hf' had another one, investigators said.
The 26-year..old Downey man, who
lace~ II variety o[ Chargc.s toda)', knocked
rlown a street light standard in fro nt or
lhe slitlon as helpless officers watched
lrnm insidr.
Officer Don Casey -inlo 'vho$e
"'ailing 11rms. !he suspect finally col-
lapsed -said several persons Y.·ho
preceded Ainsworth to report the series
nf mishaps al so witnessed his fifth or
sixth.
Known casualties of his meandering
rlrive so rar include two One-\Vay signs. a
traffic signal, a telephone. pole and the
street light at 99 Fair Drive.
Police are not overlooking lhe possibili·
1.v or additional damage reports yet In
c()me from various points on f"airviev;
!load between lhe San Diego Freeway
;ind headquarters.
Officer Casey said Ainsworth had par-
ked his by-then heavily damaged camper
truck adjacent to police headquarters a1
2:25 a.m. and \\'SS trying to lock the rear
floor when approached .
He fell b11ckwerds~ right· inlo--the.. \otlfi-
;.irms of the law , according to th e rathe;·
rt('lailed report. covering several pages.
The patrolman said his partners. Dick
!)(>Francisco and Rudy Malik. told hin1
:o:t'veral citizens waiting in the lobby ha d
;additional information about the case.
Some had followed Ains'""·orth's tru ck.
keeping a healthy di sta nce -whi le
others preceded him to the stationhou sc.
investigators said.
By the time lhe booking process wa~
l'ompleted, Ainsworth fa ced charges in-
cluding possession of dangerou s drug~.
possession of marijuana. drunken dri v·
ing. drunk in public and hit-and ·run .
The camper he. was allegedly tryini;: !o
lock up contained a quanlity of sospcctefl
marijuana and assnrtcd drug pills. plu~ a
drunken companion who wasn'l charged
\l'ith anythinr..
"'\Ve though l he was rlrarl," n1arl'rlt:'d
rinr oUicrr.
Grnnion Hit.
Beach Tonight
The elusive grunion may slide In
on the tide t-0 spawn on beaches
tonight.
lt is always problematical u•hen
the slippery silversides will ffnd
condHion s to their liking but those
\\'ho ch:1rt the tides say any of the
next four nights could bring a gru·
n1on hunter's payoff.
The snHtH fish comt In al high
tide. Peak 11de tonight is J0 ·24 p.n1 .
Tucsd~y night it \\"ill ht-1 l p.m ,
\\"ednc.sda.v night l I :36 p.m. and
early fn<lay 1norning 12 :2-i 3.111.
Thr nex! J)()s~ible dates for gnl·
nio n spl'!wning are March 25 to 211.
T1vo law!! apply to grunion l1un·
ling. One is the fi sh may not ~
ncllcd or lrapped bt1t n1usl he
raught with the hands. The second
law is lhal lltnyooc ovtr 16 ycari; o[
11ge must have a fis hing license to
catch 1runlon AS Any other rlsh.
\
Nationwide Complaints Plaza Expansion Plans
Never bcfor.e alorl in A small plane. •
Come on G.ang Suspects
Teletypes today were lapping out. infor.
nuition on rour suspecled desperadoes
caught in Costa lvlesa Frida y to determine
\\/here else they are wanted in the nation
and why,
Complaints charging Uie three men and
the' woman wlth a 11ariety of local crimes
will be requested Tuesday from !he Or-
ange Coun1y District Attorney.
Bail was set lalt fo'riday at $25.000 each
for the quartet, captured at 5J41h Bernard
St ., in a little rented house that yielded
loaded guns, drug p1!1s, .cash and other
suspected theft loot.
Oeteclive Sgt John Regan said loday
informalion from other Jaw enforcement
<1gencies between the Orange Coast and
1he Tllinois-Missouri area may implicate
Lhe four in other cases.
They are charged locally with armed
robbei:_v, burglary. possession of danger ·
ous drugs for sale among others, while
Independence. Mo. authorities have ad-
dilional co1nplain t.s .
The jailed suspects are Jack and Palri-
cla Jackson. 25 and 24, namtXI Jn arresl
warrants issutd from Jndependenet.,
charging armed robbery and forgery, pl.us
Howard R. Tschirhart , 31, of the Bernard
Street addresS and Jack C. Matney, 32. o(
De.n11er. Colorado,
'The n1en are held al Costa 1\1e~a Ci 1y
Jail, with arraign1nent scheduled Tuesday
af ternoon in Harbor Judicial Distric t
Court.
Mrli. Jackso11 wa~ hooked into Orange
County Jail arler the raid. during which
she tried to nee out lhP back door anri
\Yali caught by one of a dozen lawmen
surrounding I.he house.
U.S. Admits 27 Americans
Lost Lives in Laos Fight
~·oung Tu$tin woman photographer died
Saturday when she: lried to parachute Plans (or expansion of South Coast Plaza and ~ Town Center, including from the disintegrating !lkyd!vers' speei~I ;another mol/ie lhealer' and a i;ix-story nf-
nvf'r Perris, in Riverside County, fi ce building, will be ttviewed before the
Her husband watched in horror fron1 Costa 1'-1esa Planning Corn m J l5 s i (l n
the ground as the 22·y&ar-old victim, her tonight
('h utc snagged on the tail , plunged to Tbe agenda for the 7:30 p.m. meeting is
earth. lengthy and includes a public hearing on
the fifth phase or the city's ~taster Plan The pilot, who also bailed oui, was hit of Drainacc, a $5 million project.
by l tie falling pla ne on lhe. way doWTI and A condiUonal use permit issued in l967
critically injured. while four sky diving authorizes the mnyiU2usc and corn ·
enthusiasts ··bad already parachuted mercial tower planned by C. .I.
routinely. ....~ ..-Segersl.rom & Som, developers of the
Madeline M. Mallhews. ;in insurance giant, extremely succ..'t!Ssful cet1tcr.
company cmploye. ,.,.as killed instantly, Under city law, however. lhe variou~ ~dditions must pass lhrough planning and \Villiam R. Scherer, 26, of Santa Ana, commission and city council channels as
'~·as listed today in guarded condition at the expansion progresses.
Riverside Community Hospital. The new theater will be a second Fox
He suffered l!evere head injuries when South Coast Plaza enterprise, adjacent to
ll\ruck by debris, or the plane itself, ac-lht firsl and featuring 700 seets, 464 on
lhe floor-and 236 in the balcony. cording to authorities probing the City planning: experts say more t.han
tragedy. 200 parking spaces will be provided, SUJ>"
Mrs. Matthews' husband David. a plemented by add itional parking not in
I-1arine assigned lo El Toro MCAS, use by shoppers during prime evening
\\'atched th e tragedy unfold. movie time .
The six-story , 60,000·square-foot com-'The single-engine Stinson, specially out -mercial office structure wlll be located eL
filled for parachuting: sport, look off the intersection of Sunflower Avenue and
earlier in the day with four skydivers Bristol Street.
;ihn;ird. Since South Coast Pia~ and 'fo'l\'n
:\1rs. 1\1atthews had never been up. but Center opened .. its dozens of shop~ and
Y;ASHTNGTON ~IUPTr __; Tur WffilC.: -waiCWii!CIY 1fffO\Vrf -US. waTplanCr went along t:oplH'.lf.ograpll-lllel r ClrarnitiC ~lor,cs-hra.veJ.hr.th"'ccd,;,~~r-ap~;n!~grt,11fth1~ -
I h C ded27A · · · b' 'd · 1 h ·r -h worsorano r ouse as con e mer1cans, in· were making born 1ng rat s in support of c.:ips. er gr1e ·stricken usband reveal -more.
tlu ding a U.S. Arn1y captain cut down by Prince Souvanna Phouma 's Royal Lao-ed arterward. Nearly 20 other matters arc on t.h,.
North Vietnamese machine gun fire, have lian Army and along the Ho Chi Minh Stru~tural diffic.ulty developed after thP. .:igenda for consideration by planning
l;een killed in Laos by Communist ground . . . . four divers had Jumped and Mrs. Ma1 · commissioners, few major or of a con-<irtion since June, 1962. Trail which funnels nien and su pplies thews tried to bail out but oruoned her
N th h E t ' ,..~ lroversial nature. The casualties are among the a\m')st ~rnm orth Vi~tnam ro~ig ast aos parachute prematurely. One zone exception permit for an open 400 Americans, most of them airmen, into war zones 1n South Vietnam. The tail of the plane snagged it. npping nd storage area for boats. campers a who have been orric!ally reported killed But in see king to allay fears the United a gaping hole in the silk. trailers at 2755 Bristol St.. howe11er, has
during the eight years tlf America ·s States is drifting into another Southeast d.
h rlrawn sharp criticism rrom surroun 1ng ~emisecrct involvement in t e Laotian Asian land war , Nixon also said there
fl. U d landowners. con 1ct. \Yere no American ground combat troop~ 11a1·111e 'C'usto1ner' f 262 0-I f h I · d Applicant Leonard D. Welch o I 15;:: osure o t e casua hes was ma e. in Laos beyond 643 Americans, both
d b h Palisades Road. Santa Ana, has re· Sun ay y a W ite House officiaJ follow-military and civilian . .,.,.·ho help train,
ing a news report that Capt. .Joseph K. equip and advise the Laolian 1:1rmy. He Bcconles A 1·n1cd Tl1ief quested that it be withdrawn from µie
Bush .Jr. ,11as killed during a North Viel· added: 11genda without consideration, Planning
name.se guerrilla attack on a Laotian "No Am~rican stationed in L;ioli h~s An empty·handed thief brow!!cd arouM Department officials said toclay .
military headquarters Feb. I I, 1969. ever been killed in ground combat opera· a Costa ~1esa sportin~ goods store Sun-Three matters scheduled for acLion.
The. disclosure brought into queslion tions." day and left armed, the owner told police: however. involve billboard!! and ad-
the accuracy of a key portion of Presi· Assistant Press Secretary r.crald \V ar· latrr. Vl·rtising signs, topics on which the city is
den! Nixon's report lo the nation Friday rcn told reporters a! Nixon's vacation Theodore A. Ponting, owner or Pon-t;iking a tough stand.
on the limits or U.S. aclivities in Lao.~. home In Key Biscayne. Fla .. !hf' Presi· tini;'s Rod & Reel. 2470 Newport Blvd .. Pacific Outdoor Advertising Con1pany
ln the reporl. Nixon confirmed of· flent was not aware of Bush's de~th when s;iid whoever it ";as pocketed " .ZZ of Los Angeles is appealing a recenl city
llci;i lly for the first time whal already he made the report. e;iliber revoJ.,.er \\'ith a $70 pricctag. council decision refusing permission to
Congo Envoy Entertained Long Rest Due
For City Manager
~eivport's Wayne Seeks Mineral Exploration Rights
C<ingo·'J ambassador to the United
Sta tes "'as entertained In the Newpor1
Beach homes gf actor John Wayne and
.1-;rncst Sallig over the weekend in ;i
business deal courl.~hip thitl has poten·
fiallr m11lions of dollars hanging on !ht
OUl('Omc.
\\"aync and Saf!ig arc principals in the
NC\\'pnrl Beach-based St.atesman Mininf!
Con1p:iny which is see.king mineral ax·
ploration right s t-0 all of the Congo.
Congolese Ambassador JusUn Boml>okn
11111dc the 11lsit to gather facts for ii
rrporl to Congo President Joseph
r-.1obu1tl.
. "I lh1nk hf' was impressed we gavr tHtl
lriendship anfl goocl feeling toward him.
Certainly he was rcl1u:ed with us," Sa(llg
S&fd.
Ht remarked lhal "from evcrylhln~
Bomboko indicated, l think WP. will hear
..
•
from him very soon."
The prlncipals in the Statesman Mining
\·cnture had heard last October they v.•ere
awarded a Congolese license for ex-
ploring mineral rights and they thought
they were in. Since then they ha ve lea rn·
rd Congo law differs fro1n U.S. law and
there Is a se~ond phase arter 31\'arding ot
1hc rlghls. They are now <1n•atting a go
ah~ad rrosn President ~fobu1u.
Jn \Vinning ll1c llcense n \\/ a rd .
Sl<'J\esman pnnctpals figured !hey had
\\'On oul in compctlllon with reprrscn·
rati vc:o; of the Soviet Union. fltd Chin;i
and France.
Japanese. Belgian •and French com-
panies have small mineral conc-essions in
the Congo but essenli.ally the vast coun·
try. larger than the slate of Alaska. i5
untapped. 1
"It may bt: the treasure house of the
wnrkl ,'' said Ed Smart, Aspen, Col_o. rctl·
• '
rir.nl who Is presidenl o( Statesman
~iining and was in NewporL for the
weekend talks. He said the Congo basin
contains more mineral possibilities than
anywhere else in !he world.
I( the firin gets the exploration go
o:t:1ead !he entire Congo will be surveyed
by air. \Vhen geological equipment lndi·
CRtcs a likely mining area a ground crew
will be dispatched to the site.
Ambassador Bomboko, his F I r ~ t
Coun selor Charles Sumbu, and two
Congolclie secretaries stayed at tht
NC\\'J)Orter Inn. Saturday night they had
dinner al .John Wayne's home in
Buyshores. Sunday they were liken on a
bOat tour of the harbor and coast by
\Vayne's friend Clement ;!irsch, Sunday
<1fternoon there was 1 business mcalln8 ,
a.nd Sunday evening ' buffet dinner al
f\aftig's Lido lsle home which ~ .11t.
tended.
Costa t.1esa City t.1anager Arthur R.
~lcKenzie was released rrom Hoag
Memorial ltospital Saturday and faets
convalescence at home lor slx weeks or
more.
The Sl·year-old adminisLrator WRS ad-
mitted to the facility a week ago for test.~
~nd observation £ollowing a mild stroke
which left him fee ling numbness a.nd
head pains.
Physi c.Jans said McKcntie apparently
i;u(fcred no severe or lasting effects fro1n
tha minor cerebra l nemorrhagt .
Assistant City i\Jonager Fred SOrsabal
will hold down the fort at City Hal l d11r·
lng the six weeks or more his boss must
rest and recuperate.
NE\V VORK (AP )-Prices on the stock
market remained depressed ,late lhU af-
ternoon. (Ste quolations , P•acs l~IJ).
Losse!i were' wldespre,d. wJth dtclh1cs
nn the New York tock Exchana~ exceed·
Ing advances by mort than 2\i lo J,
I ••
continue mainlaining •·billboard at 1Sd4
Newport BlYd., near the Newport Beac.b
city limit line.
The firm may also run into difiiculty In
ils bid lo replace five poster panel-type
signs on Bristol Street near Baker Street,
erecting lwo standard billboards.
A request will also be: considered by of·
ficials of Worthington Dodge, 2888 Harbor
Blvd,. to amend the master plan on
advertising ··signs and hang promotion.al
banners.
Strict rules have been imposed about
such attention-getters along Harbor
Boulevard's sixA.!led Auto Row and city
officials are tough on enforcement.
SA Police Seek
Murder Action
In Gang Killing
Police will seek a murder complaint to.-
day against Paul A. Ruiz, 18. of Santi
Ana, in the shooting death early Saturday
of a 12-year-old girl, the innocent victim
o! a gang fight.
Officers allege Ruiz was one of several
youths who drove to the Hernandez home
and engaged in & fight with one of the
11ict.im't> Drol.hcr.$,-PeteJier.nandez, 20~
Police said during the lraca.') Ruiz and.
his companions gol back into their car
;ind a shot was fired through a window of
the vehicle striking the girl who was
standing in the driveway.
A preliminary autopsy report by the
C(lroner's office indicated that the girl
bled to death from a gunshot wound in
the chest. Services will be held tonight
;ind Tuesday for Gloria V. Hernandez of
~901 6th Street.
Fugitive Captured
PE:ORIA. Ill. (UPI) -An accused
bank robber. one of only five men ever to
be named twice to th.e FBT's IO most
wanted criminal llst, "'as arres.led herf!
Sunday nighL FBI agents said Joseph
Lloyd Thomas, fl8. a native of Terre
Maule . Ind .. offered no resistance whert
apprehended. though he was armed. ·
Orange Coast
l1'eaiher
Those clouds rolling in tonight
won't have a silver tining. M grab
you r raincoat. Clearing skies and
c o o I e r temperatures are the
"'"'atch\11ords for Tuesday.
lNSIDE TODAY
the U.S. stoad3 CH& ezceUtn t
cho1tcc of cnpturin(J n oold
rrieclol i)I. 'he 1972 K iel 11acht. '"!'I Olympic~ because Ameri·
r(l.U$ nrc br.~t at sr:u/i"f1 tht
Tc,npcsi. Booting PagD 23.
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LQAILY PILOT -t
VS.Shuts . . .. ... -~
Rhodesian
'
I Consulate •
11' ASl!l!IGTON r AP) -The United
Si,tes, refusing to recognize the nl'.lw
regime in Rhode~ia, has instructed its
c~sul in Salisbury kl close the consulate
• i\tarch 17, !he Slate Departn1cnt an·
'l!Ounced ~fonday.
'J'he Rhodeslan regime broke vdth the
British crown on T\farch 2. The new
R.h o d e s I a n constitution transforming
Rl'lodesia into a republic ''constitutes the
fi]'al and formal break with the United
Kingdom ," the State Department said .•
11. added that the United Stales con-
tinues to regard Britain a.s the lawful
'°"'ereign there.
.''ln the above circwnstances. 'i1i't have
in;structed our consul in Salisbury to
. begin arrangements for closing as of
ti.tarch 17 and for the deparfure of the
i;l.aff. ..
ConsuJ Paul O'Neill and a staff 0£ six
tvill return to Washington for reasi;ign·
rnent, officials said.
Consular services for the early l ,000
American citizens will be handled in
neighboring countries by U.S. consult.ate1
in Johannesburg, South Africa, or Blan·
tyre in Malawi.
Mesa Cyclist
Chased by Man
With Gun, Rocks
A Costa "'1esa motorcyclist riding in the
old dirt and gra,·eJ pit on the cuy·s west
6ide was chased away Saturday by an
angry homeowner who took the law -
and a gun -into his own hands. Quiet Ti1tae by the Sea OAtl Y .l'ILOT l'tlthl ~, '" O'Dtnnelt
Publlc lJ se E11ed
Base Giveaway
. . .
At Los Alamitos?
Scheduled for pha:ie · out within JS
mohths. Los Alamitos Naval Air St11t1on
could be given away free if lramformed
into a public use fac ility such as a
civilian airport or college cainpus.
Congressman Cralg Hosmer (ft.Long
Beach) made I.he announ~ment today on
the i;tatwi: or the sprawling station,
Jargest in the Naval Air Reserve pro-
gram.
Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird con·
firmed last week that Los Alamitos will
~ eliminated from military use by June
30, 1971, opening ill eventual ,ate to
Blood Tests ,
.Prints Asked
For Suspects
Vi' ASHINGTON (UP.I) -Tbe Nixon Id·
minist raUon proposed legislalloo Monday
to .subject 6uspects in federal crimes to
fingerpringting and other detective tests
such as saliva and blood checks everi
before being formally charged .
The Supreme Court has held that such
Identification procedures do not violate,
the w nsittutional guarantee agalfll!lt selr1·
incrimination but only in .. a.ses U:Jvolvinrt
suspects already cha rged .
The administration proposal would ex·
tend such tests to persons suspected or
crimes in cases where there is no pr<>-
bable cause to arrest. The te&ts would be
administered only upon issuance of a
court order
i,1·1despread speculation.
F'edtral a1e11cies will retain first rights
to lhe property. but state. county and city
governments in the sUJTt1unding ar .. a
may be able to acquire some nf it,
Hosmer said today.
But other military services and varlou11
hra.nches of th~ government get llrst
cla1ms. he pinnted out with strong
emphasis.
"There isn't going to be any Cherokee
S!rip land grab," he added.
The Defense Department must slill
rietermine after deadline set (or closu rr,
nf t~e ba11e whether it should be kei)t
within the realm of mi!)tary cbnt.rol.
If not, it will be released to the Gen!ral
Services Administration.
''At that point. the properl y is up [or
grabs by other fede ral departments anrl
agencies,'' Congre.ssman Hosmer er·
plained.
"And in land·short Southern California.
•·e must reckon with the possibility that
part or all of It will be claimed for other
federal requirements."
Hosmer said the GSA \lo'ou ld then
detennine the best use of the land and
establish it11 value to guide setting the
price for disposal -whlch could be quite-
low .
,Local public agencies are allowed 1 SO
percent cul if the surplus land is Used for
parks and recreation, or JOO percent if it
is used fo r public health, education or an
airport. .
The Long Beach legislator has :i;ald ht
will support the conversion of Los
Alamito·s to parks and recreational UM:,
but ,,..·ould fight its use as a commercial
airporl.
The fa cility has been suggesled ln rf'·
cent months as a c;onunercial airport
su pplementing Orange County a n d
nearby Long Beach Airporl. dra·Ning
much protest from c;11izens and public of·
ficials.
Police supplied with a car license num·
her today were checking the assault with
a deadly weapon case, witnessed by a sec-
ond teenaged cycle enthusiast.
Like a magnet. sunset over tranquil sea draws Or-
ange Coast family to cliff overlooking beach to
stroll, to \Vatch nature's work, to feel the afternoon
breeze. to listen to the surf and. maybe .
stone or two a l a receding wave.
to hurl a
If l!nacted by Congress. a federal
judge. co1nn11ss ioner or n1agistrat2 could
order a suspect in a federal crimin al
<:asc to submit to identification by
•·fingerprints, palm prints. fool prints.
measuremenLs. blood specimens, urine
specimens, saliva samples, hair samples,
handwriting exemplars. voice samples, Custo1n s Work Stops
lu Chilean Walkout William O. Odelle, 11. of 11721 Aviemore
Terrace, u.id the irate man approached
him f1rst on the run and' threw a large
rock. yelling at him to leave.
"Odelle and Gary L. Etter. 18, of 900 Ar·
bdr St., Costa J\1esa. said the usaillnt re·
turned in his car ts minutes later,
K.teechlng to a hal t. waved a .45 caliber
plstot and again ordt'r~ them out.
Asked if the \lo'eapon was loaded. the
man sho,,..·ed them it wasn't, at which
tifl_'le Odelle went to report the incident to
police 'nd the ~n-...,ielder left in his car.
Jtfolorcycle riding on private property
:.long the Sanla Ana Rive r and the mesa
rim · hai; been the subject or complainb
and c;oRtrover sy ove r a long period.
State. authorities last year posttd prop.
t'rty adjacent to Fairvlew State Hospital
with no fresspassing sign:i;, thus al/oWing
city pohc;e to prosecute mot.orcycle riders.
Re slden1s of the neighborhood overlook·
ing the dirt and gravel pit area - a dirt-
biker's paradise -ha ve petitioned the
t'fty to act, but without much subsequent
6\Jccess.
The property ~s no! under one sin gle
O\\llership, making it difficult to establish
11 no--trt!>spnssing policy Under y,·hich vi·
ola tors could be cited.
Construction Office
Rifled by Burglars
Construction company officials today
...,.ere taking inventory to delennine ex·
actly what is missing from a Costa ri.tesa
joh site office burglarized or more th.an
$700 in valuables Saturday.
A yariety of tools and equipment "'ere
kno"''n to be stolen from the AFCCO
building at 211 E. 17th SL, according to
Jess Phill ips, spokesman for lhc Los
Angeles firm.
. . .
DAILY PILOT
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\ •
108 Cyclists Arrested
In 'Holy Jim' Revdlry '
Ora nge County taxpayers provided the
hangover 'brunch for 108 parlying
motorcycle gang members Sunday, after
lawmen raided an unholy revel in Holy
Jim Canyon. 20 miles east of El Toro.
r.lost of the 73 men and 35 women were
booked into Orange County Jall for in-
vestigation of disturbing the peace, and
immediately posted bail on the misde-
meanor.
A haul of marijuana and other drugs.
plus an assortment of 22 illegal weapons
-including shotguns. S\\'ords and a
n1edleva l mace -plus allegedly stolen
vehicles led to 29 additional bookings.
"Everybody was pretty well drunk.''
ohserved one sheriff's. deputy who
participated in the massh·e raid after
Burglar Suspect
Caugl1t in Mesa
On Citizen 's Tip
A ciu zen's lip ·led to the arrest of a
Costa Mesa machinist Sunday night near
a downt own music store someone had
bee., trying to burglarize.
~tichael Cassidy, 2.3. of 1535 Superior
A"e .. was booked for lnvutigatlon of
burglary and suspicion o( possession of
<langE"rous drugs.
Nothing was taken from Coast litusic
rompany. 1839 Newport Blvd .. but a pry
Looi ·was found near a dan1aged air vent
on tJ1e southwest corner of lhe building,
police said.
Officer F_rank Jordan said Cassidy was
:-;Lopped in a rear alley by Lt. John Mo·
qu in and Delc clJ\'f Sg1. John Regan and
couldn't explain his lcgiumate presence
in !he darkened area.
Besides the pry tool taken ~s evidencr,
a bag containing I~ suspected benzedrine
pills was found in a jacket taken lrom
Cassidy':i: parked car, police said.
Front Pfl!Je 1
PANTHER .•.
tl1 stributed In tl1e courthou!e corridor to
all perMins enttring Judge Dreizen'5
cou rt room.
Green(" called S11prnor Cou rl adminh~·
lralN" Le:i;\ic :O.lcCarlnty to 1he 5tand
to explain the processes used by ri.tc·
Cartney·i; office in selecting jurors UEcd
1n Orange County Superior Court trials
M!;(;artoey te.s1lfled -be.fore the court
ros t for lull<'h that the i ,000 nameii sub-
nl1 tled to hl~-ornct by tht countr·s com.
r111erized data 11yglem1 divisions -"Ire
'ju~t n11m cl1 and we have no idet al lh31
llrne juM who lhtse people mighl be ...
''Do you knOw ~htre lhcy live, •hat
tht:ir occupaUen is, th(. n•ture of their.
employment or raee1u Creene 8tked.
"No.'' AtcC&rtne)' repUed ... All we
know at that time Is Lh11l we ha\·e 2,500
~e:n and-2..1., ~men from. whom .we C&A. pick our jtttles."
I,
t\l l ,..i ,.1 ·, ~\-!1
dozens or complaints bY ompers and
c ab1n dwellers in the rustic, wooded can.
yon.
First, lawmen on \he scene called in
r('inforcemenU. including 17 she.riff's
· deputies and California Highway Patrol
officers, plus three buses to transport the
suspect&.
Sheriff's LL Ted Dwyer said three
groups of residents who Jive in the u~ual
sanctity of Holy Jim Canyon iled in fear
for their liv~ and safetv.
Representatives gathered in a remote
corner of scenic O'Neill Park for the
revelry included the Oulla'"ls. !he Gents.
the Nuggets and the Hessians, in-
vesligalors fiaid.
Despite the low bail set for d1~turb1ng
the pea ce and being drunk in public. a
Jarg~ nul'l)~r pf s:yclists a11.d hange,rs;an
roUnd themst!'Ves!trTri<!~ftet reteas~
by im pounding of vehicles.
A numbt'r of cars and motorcycles art.
being checked out as possibly stolen,
authorities said today .
Possession of pistols. shotguns, kni ves
and other deadly weapons classed as ii·
legal Jed to stiffer charges against 22
persons. whlle another seven fac;e
charges for drugs and marijuana .
2 Girls Admit
$8,000 Spree
Of V andalisn1
.Jealous of the "pretty Ui1ngs" 1
G11rden Grove school secretary's children
bragged of having, l\lo'O girls oged 8 and
l:i have confessed an ~.000 ,-andalism
apree at the. lanlily's home.
'T'he school princi pal traced do1\·n thP
~uspects by s!udying absentet h5L<i o[
~chools 6l'tving the neighborhood on Feb.
25. tl'le date of lhe destruction.
nrange County Probation Department
employes \lo'ill question the girls r..1arch 18
abou t the case. to determine just ·wha~
charges will bt lodged against Uiem .
They coofess«I under questioning li:t
the. vandali!m committed al the home of
lilrs. ~1arian Ryan. a i;ecretary at Violet,.
It Elementary School in Ga rden Grove.
F'lttmen sent tothe home found a play
t:1ble burning. plus rooms flooded by
\\'atcr. furniture slashed and food scat-
tertd on !loors and walls.
\"ioleltt Elementary School Princ.ip,111
Kenne th BoyC't. ~aid the girls admitted
playing hoo~y and aoing to ~!rs. Rya n'5
twme for the ~enseless rampag-;:
They t.old bim tht.Ryan children brag.
g~d ~ "having preUy things ."
UMW Trial Recesses
After 5-weeks' Work
CLEVllLAND (UPll ~ After rtve
w~ela of ttsttrnmy, a P'ederat Cral'ld
.Tury tnvestiaatin; the J o s e p h A.
Yablonski murdu .will be in r~ lot
·two v,,•Ef:k&.
I
Noted Artist Dies
NE\VBURYPORT. ri.tass. (AP\
Waldo Peircr, whose paintings have been
displayed in many of the world's major
gal lerie.r;, died in a hospital here Sunday.
photographs and lineups." .._
Attorney General John N. lititcht:ll said
in a letter of transm ittal to the House and
Senate that the proposed law "will pro-
'"ide federal Jaw enforcement officers
v.-ith a useful new tool for the in·
vesligation of criminal activity and lhe
apprehension of criminals."
SANTIAGO, Chile I API -Aboul 1.400
customi; employes struck !or higher pay
today. slowing down passenger and
freight clearance in ports and airport.I
throughout lhe country.
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings,
In offering the most In earnings to savers.
&% 2 ye1r term 1ccounf1 with SS,000 minimum
St'•'~ 1 year term 1ccount, wllh $1 ,000 minimum
si~% :s-monlhs bonu1 account, with SSOO minimum
7 ~ % oeruncatt of depo111 1vall1bJt;, wllh S100,000 minimum
1f you'"• M11tu1J Saver. now 11 th1 tl mt to ln\lesl addltlot'lat lund• in thne new
h1gl'l-ra111 1i;eo1,1nt5. (lf\lura~e haa been lnc:r!&Md to $20,000.} II you art not •
Mutual Saver, now is the time to open your account et The Big M-Mutuel Saving1.
. ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001
COVINA GLDOALI
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
and laan a11aciati111
CORONA DEL MAR
:M7 l..i Co-•! Ht0'°""'f f•'lpl'IMt f,9•3010
W•aT AfltCADIA
MOW.I 0Utl!9 .. OIC TtlttihOM ... 'Oi16'
XIO Nlflll cnnn ,.1111111e
Tell~ 33t-M71
3» NO!frl lr111d hultYl tO rtt1p11-2•r.tt"
P'AaAD•NA
(HMO Of'llcl)
J,s ,,.. Colottdo 9ou'-"'rd
Ttlf'Ol'l-•tf.2M!
,
' I
t ,
,j
·I I
I
-------
VOL 63, NO. 57, l SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
~·st Plunge Fatal
Tustin Woman's Chute Snags
,.,
Never before aloft in a small plane. •
young Tustin womaD photographer died
Saturday when she tried lo parachute
from tbe di$inlegraUng skydivers' special
over Perris, iQ Riverside County.
Her husband watched in horror from
lhe ground as the 22-year.(lld vicµm, her
chute snagged on the tail, 'plunged to
earth.
The pilot, who also bailed oul, was bit
by the falling plane on the way down and
critically lnjured, while four sky diving
enthusiasts had already parachuted
routinely.
Madeline M. Matthews. an insurance
company employe, was killed instanUy,
and William R. Scherer, 26, of Sanla Ana,
was listed today in guarded condition at
Riverside Community Hospital.
He suffered severe head injuries when
atruck by debris, or the plane itseli, ac-!
cording to authorities probing lht
tragedy.
Mrs. Matlhews' husband Davld, a
Marine assigned to El Toro MCAS,
watched the~tragedy unfold .
The single-engine Stinson; specially out-
fitted for parachuting sport, tOOJ<-off
earlier in the day with four skydivers
•board.
Mrs. Matthews had never ~n up, bul
wen.I along to photograph their dramatic
leaps, her grief-stricken husband reveal-
ed afterward.
Structural difficulty developed after tl1e
four divers had jumped and Mrs, Ma t.
thews tried to bail out, but opened her
parachute prematurely,
The tail of the plane snagged it , ripping
a gaping bole in the silk.
Besides the victim's husband, another
chutist, Lowell Roeder, said the plane
went into a tailspin and part of a wing
peeled back and brok'e off as it ten .
An investigation was immediately
begun by the Natiooal Transportat;oR
Safety Board.
' Capo's ~chool Election
Ends Hard Fo .ught Drive
I
I
7
By RICHARD P. NALL
OI flit Oliff 1'11tf Sit!!
The election Tuesday for Capistrano
Unified School District will climax: one
fl the hardest fought support campaigns
ever waged in an area where school
finance -issues have traditional tough
sledding.
' 'l'ruman Benedict. district superin·
t~ndent. has been through 22 elections in
21 years with local schools. most of them
before unification five years ago,
Most of them lost His own daughter al-
t.ended high school in quonset hut!. It
look 10 eltttions to aec:ure funds to build
Planner s Slate
Special Session
On Sign I ssue
The Laguna Beach Planning Com-
mission will hold a special study session
8t 7:30 o'clock tonight in city halJ council
chambers to prepare amendments tG the
sign ordinance for presenlation to the Ci·
ty Council Wednesday.
The commissioners have been asked by
the council to devise precise wording for
five changes in the ordinance whlch have --•·i---;,0:,u°'se"" orare Believed likely to cause en-
forcement problems. They deal with
measurement of sign area, situation of
pole signs and sign setback from building
sidelines. Although the mechanism of amending
the ordinance will require public hearings
and other legal delays, the council has
a,gretd to . instruct ~ city staf£ \0 ad·
minister the law as 1C the amendmenl<1
already were in effect as soon as wording
is. established. ~, Also at tonight's session. the planners
will give a final review to the general
plan goats statement before making their
formal recommendation to the council.
Stock 1Uarket1
NEW YORK (AP)-Pricts on the stock
market remained depressed late this aJ.
ternoon. (See quotations, Pages 16-17).
Losses were widespread. with declines
on the New York Stock Exchange exceed·
ing advances by more than 2!-7 to 1.
Orange C:out
Weather
1'hose clouds rolling in tonight
won't have a silver lining, so grab
your raincoat. Clearing skies and
c o o I e r temperatures art the
watchwords Ior Tuesday.
INSWE TODAY
The V .. f. stands an excellent
chance of topturing a gold
medot in tht J972 Kiel yacht-
ing Olympics because Ameri·
r,o.ns arc best ot soiling tht
Tempest Boating Page 23.
•••lift• u Ct11ttrllit •
Ch1"tfl.lft1 UI ' (l•o1"'41 21.11
Ct'"lc' '' Crtn-.1 II
Dlllft Ntfl<ff I '""rill "'" 4 l!!ltf'l•llWMl\I lt
,lfllMt 1"11 "'°""<•" 11 Al!ll l.•llfln ,,
IMllMJ: •
Mltf'fH•
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Mltllllt• '
Ml•tt• " Htl191\JI HtW\ l·J °''"" c .... ~" • fttm 11\P
Sllcll M•rk•I' 1"1' Ttlotvhltfl lt -.. -WJIM W•ttl 11 W-"t N.,,,. lJ<lf
Wfl'lll HIW'I ...
..
the present Sa11 Oemet1te ftigh School.
The district's most recent school elec·
lion loss was 1ast April when a turnout of
about 40 percent turned down a S!k::enl
ol'erride by about three-t"two,
Supporters of this override are hoping
for a 55 percen.t trunout Tuesday of the
15,270 persons registered to vote in lhe
sprawling 156-square-mile district. .. ·
Election proponents are hoping thal the
bigger turnout will balance what -they
described as a large block of "historically
buiWin no v o t es to ~I finance
measu\-es."
The district ~lectorate Tuesday will bt
voting for two measures.
One is authorization to Increase the in•
lerest maximum from five to seven per-
cent on $4.2 million in prevlously
authorized bonds Ior !Chool site ac-
quisition and construction.
The bonds can't be aold at•the present
rive percent limit. Given approva l of this
by the necessary twe>-thlrds majority,
district officials would expect to sell
about $1.4 million this year and would sell
the rest over a two to three year period.
Vote.rs will also decile a 50-cent over·
ride that district O{ficials say is
nocessary ~maintain the existing educa·
tional program.
Without the override, which would
rl.'present a ·1os.s or about $700,000 in
operating funds, school o{ficials say that
an across the boa.rd JO percent cutback is
necessary. This would range from busin g
and music programs to vocational educa-
tion and larger classes.
The district now has about 7 ,400
students and estimates this will increase
by 10 percent to more than 8,000 next
year.
An organi*d group supporting the
override caUs i~elf ARVY which means
Area Residents -Vote Yes.
It has waged a voluminous grassroots
campaign that included bumper slickers,
talks, advertising, telephone calls and
news releases.
The ARVY effort will climax with a
telephone campaign effort to turnout the
voters tomorrow. Their hope Is tha L the
30 to 35 percent who declared themselve!!I
undecided during a prMampaign poll
will turnout and vote yes.
Polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m.
There are 11 polling places ranging in
size from 1100 to 1900 registered voters.
Deadline Nears
For '70 Festival
Deadline for frtisls and craftsmen who
v.•ish to submit works for jurying in the
1970 Festival of Arts i,, IO a.m_ Saturday,
groun~ chairman Verner Beck uid to-
day.
The jurying will take place between 18
R.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday and artlsls art.
asked to bring three examples of their
work to Irvine Bowl between 7 a.m. and
10 a.m.
An artist wishing to apply in more than
one medium should take three works in
each medium, Beek said.
A combined jury elected by the artists
and appointed by the Festival board win
rate the work! submitted on an establish·
ed polht system. Available space on the
gr00 nds is allocated according to score•
received.
Artists who sbould apply Saturday are
lhose who did not apply last year. those
who applied but were not taken onto the
grounds ind thrise w~ Were on the
K!:PUnds last year but were as_ked to re·
submit for the 1970 system. Those who
e.xhibited last )'t)&r and v.·ert not asked to
re-submit are t!nUtJed to apply for space
Without jurying.
·' '\
. . ... ••
. --·-T"8y's Final
---
OJ{AN$E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • 1 MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1970 TEN CENTS
Panther Lawyer Assails
..
Jury Selecti.on System
Wants Panel
Picked From
CommunitYi
By TO~t BA RLEY
Of ~ O.lf'r P'll" Sltff
Arthur DeWitte League'! lawyer today
branded Cali!ornia's jury s e 1 t ct ion
systell' as unconstitutional and imposed
what is expected to be at least a three-
day delay in the murder trial of the ac-
cused Black Pabther.
League, 20, of Santa Ana, is accused of
the shooting last June 4 of Santa Ana
police officer Nelson Sasscer. ttis alleged
that the Negro militant gunned down the
patrolman after he was ordered to pro-
duce identification.
Attorney Robert Greene asked Judge
Samuel Dreiien to rule that the picking
of a jury from the roster of names
assigned to the court for the League trial
would amount'° denial of a fair trial for
his client
Those names, Greene said, are selected
from Orange County's voter registration
lists and do not reflect a· true cross-sec-
tion of the community.
Greene wants a jW'y .picked from "the
community as a whole-and not under a
·syatem which denieso:.iili cliiint 1 .~ tUL_ f
under any 0£ the Jln!Yl&ni envisqedlJii-)~ ·
our law -among them economic, racial
and political factor"s." . --.. :-. -. . ... ... '" Sevttal ·flunees ·of Prevention . Greene's motion ended 1 twO-:bour
delay in opening of the trial and wa.'!'
being debated al press time . J udge
Dreizen delayed summoning of the first
panel of prospective jurors until the mo-
tion is decided.
The mothers o-f Cyndee Howe, 5, .Buena Park (Jeft)
and Ruth R eisman, 6, La Palma, -took the girls
fi shing this weekend at San Clemente's Municipal
Pier. Tfiey also took JengtJfs °'·rope. What they
didn't take were any chances that the girls might
go overboard.
Greene indicated that he \Yould have
further motions to offer following set-
tlement or his challenge of the jury
system.
Among spectators in the L-ourtroom to-
day was Daniel Michael Lynem, 21, also
a member of the Black Panther organiz-
ation and the man who was cleared of tht
murder charges now faced by League .
A heavily reinforced detachment of
sheriff's officer! turned away more than
100 persons from the courtroom door
after the 75 seat_, in Judge Dreizen's
courtroom were quickly occupied this
morning.
All persons entering the courtroom,
with the exception of witnesses and the
press, were carefully !earched before
they were allowed to take their seats.
There were no incidents other than loud
cqmplaints from several persons who
wished to view the murder trial.
Black Panther literature was
distributed in the courthouse corridor to
all persons entering Judge Oreizen'•
courtroom.
Fren ch Reds Out Poll
Gaullist in Voting
PARTS (UPI) -The Communist Party
wOI'\ more votes than the Gaullists Sun-
day in the first nationwide election since
President GeOrges Pompidou took office.
Partial returps in the Cantonal (c~
ty) Elections today gave the Communisl'!
23 percent of the votes compared with 15
percent for the Gaullists.
City· Council Candidates
l(eeping Busy in Laguna
By BARBA RA KREIB ICH
Of t~• O•HY "tlfl.Sltff
Laguna Beach City Council candldales
are tuning up their vocal chords for a
record-breaking series of "n1ect the·caii-
didates" sessions tha t will carry them to
the eve of lhe April 14 municipal election.
The Laguna Beach Board of Realtor~
will get the ball rolling this week by
presenling all five candidates at an 8
a.m. breakfast meeting Thursday in Ben
Brown's Restaurant.
On hand to air their l'iews and respond
lo questions will be incumbents Richard
Goldberg and Joseph A. O'Sullivan ancf
new candidates Joseph L. Tomehak,
Peter Ostrander and Edward Lorr, The
five are competing for three upcoming
council vacancies.
On Tuesday evening, March 17. the
Laguna Beach Coordinating Council will
present the five candidates at a 7:30 p.m.
meeting in the Laguna Federal building.
Wednesday morning, March 18. will
find the quintet on the program at the
7:30 a.m. Chamber of Commerce
breakfast in the Hotel Laguna. _
At 8 p.m. on Thwsday, March 26, the
South Coast Democratic Peace Club will
present lhe · candidales In 1 public
meeting in cily hall council chambers.
· A final session hAs been scheduled by
the Laguna Beach Civic League on April
7, at a loCation to be announced.
In previous election year~. it bas. been
('Ustomary to schedule no more than twf)
full-scale pre-election sessions for council
candidates.
In addition to the public meetings,' most
of lhe candidates have their engagement
ca lendars well filled with "coffee" dates
for appearances before small organiza-
tions and neighborhood groups.
Goldberg kicked·off his campaign Sun-
day evening at a cocktail p~y hosted by
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Johnson and at-
tended by about 200 guests.
In an informal talk, Goldberg prom.ise<f ·
lo continue his role as a ''24-hour coun·
cilman ," referring lo the fact that his
business keeps him in Lagtina, and
therefore available to constituents, while ,
other councilmen and candidatea are.
.. employed out of town.
Goldberg also introduced architect Pet-
er Ostrander and told guests he is .sup-
porting Ostrander's candidacy.
Worst Oil Fire Attacked
' Dynamite Charge May Cause Louisian<::t-SpilJ: .
VENICE, La. (UPI) -Firefighters
prepared lOday to blow out a 27-day-old
blate on arr otfshore. platform with a.
dynamite charge that could cause the n•·
lion's worst oil spill.
Calm seas and gentle 6N:!ezes greeted
workmen early today and they began
preparing the 200-pound explosive charte
to cap whaL has been ·calltd 'the worst
offshore oil fire in histOpY.
Putting out the blaze 30 miles olfshore
was ooly the first problem. The most dlf·
ficult will be controlling an expected
deluge of crude oil pollution after the fire
is ouL.
An Interior Department 11pokesman
said Chevron Ofl Company '• "Charlie''
structure wu believed capable of spew·
ing .anywhere from 900 to 8,000 barrels of
<1U 1 day until U'.s eight dl'magOO well1
are capped -an opc.raUoo that may take
>
up to three weeks. "
By comparison, the • San,la Barbara
Channel oil spill In Callfo.rpla, a_moupted .
to about 8,000 barrels of«)ll .Ulat 'lellked to
the surface and stained beachei over a
month-long period. . • · · · ' .
· Tht<recent.olltiic~Thal ,ununec1 T>m~
ps BS:,, FIR., was only 350'bamls.
Texas wild Wen firelighters wot.king?for
Paul .,·Red" Adair have ~ '-r.e.ICly for
more than a week to de'tooite.' an ex·
·plosion to put,out tbt Ure yd ~n tpe
Lrlcky process of ins~lling,sh.U\9fl'.,valves;
to U1e n.iptured weU heads11·~t,'S"nall
crafl warning•, high winds anij-aeas:ii!'i'°'
ll fetl poslponed lilt •hol ·IOlllM''P"•l
few days.
Once the firebAll that bu been con·
sumin8: the hii b Pressure natural gas and
oiJ from the weUs Is doused federal ind
•tale o!llclals and Chevron crews wlll
1
make the•.first rougb esUmate on the
.volume of oil .being spilled. ·
Al th8t point; Chevron will:'aciivate the ·
wodd1s first ojl pollution. COl)trol sysietn
designed' ·to 'flinctlon 'i? !the Opeil~ sta.: .
It will· 'be the-first test to' see: It hun-
dreds 0(1 men~•workll)g wjth ·~rtts.:
.;peciaJly deslg~floatlng ·~. •"'Ire
developed oil skitl\men• an<! ~<qulj>-
1)\ent c~· contain. 1'· l'lt< •i>lll" iOO vaou~,.-1 .ut.1o(t&i'i Wit~ 1beforli ft reacbes' • ~ .. · • ., ,, :
· TlieJ Jn · '~rilheilr Has ,.1d 11
, Jhlflkal~ has done all it J>01Slbly
couli:f lo conti'ol the antlClpaled spill. A'
spokesman said Chevr.on bas tbe capa,bili·
ly to scoop up1as many a..,..'20,000'l>arrels or oil. a__ day .. --'
The ql}fMlon W83 whether wave ~ ..... woul'cl tOu the oil over the barrieil ,,,.
to contaln It. • 1 -
r .j
Cyprus Nets 11
In Maka1ios
Shooting Try
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI) -Th< Cypru1
govcmment said today JI persons '\\!er•
arrested during the night as suspects in
the attempted assassination · Sunday or
Archbishop Makarios, the president of
this island nation.
Offic ial sources said these were·in ·ad-
dition to three1m~n.summoned·for que~-,
tioning earlier Sunday,Jwo of them iden-
tified as members of an opf)OSltlon group
demanding unio1t. with Greece.
Witnesses of the atempt on Makarios'
life were called in to view the suspectslin
a lineup later today,
Three gunmen firing a u to m -a l i c
weapons from the roof oI a high school
shot down the president's helicopter at
7:10 a.m . Sunday as it Ufted off from the
palace grounds headed for a memorial
service at Makheras Monastery, 30 mllet
from the capital. .
Makarios escaped unhurt but the pilot,
Zacharias Papadoyiannis, was wounded
crltlcally.
Grunio1i Hit
Bea,~1~· Foi'iight , I . . '
Thfi·e;lus:i,Ve·il"l1l'fon,.~,r.alide1'ln 1 ~
,. ,
on the! tide; to ':.Spawn on~aches: /
; .tonight.. ' • , I ·'-:
Jt 'is alway!-'probh!n'tatlcal·•wberi. ~; 1·:
! • the slippery silversides wilt. rind. \ _,_
conditions to their liking but'those 1 .. v-..
who chaitthe\hlies sat1anyJ0Litbe '-:....~~~
nc
1
xt four nigh~~~d bring a gru .• :-8 ~,: nonhuntef"sp~ ·~~-' ' \i • ·~ T\1e small,{lllJ' came .Jn$ ~ .. "' I , j.:" tldC. P<a<~~li\liilllt.it~ttrp:'lit. • I TU~~ n!lllJf;'k~~~· :t;el 1,1 p.m .. l'/t~iit•diiY, loiiti!if \1 :36 p.m .• and
ear1Y1Fi'lday·mornlng IZ:Z4 a.m.
. tiie neXl pos~ble da!U !or ,,....
nion spawning are March 2$· to 28.
Two laws apply to grunion bun-
Ung. One Is the· llsb may not be
netted or trapped but mus\ be
caucflL. with the hands. The ltCOnd
law ls that anyone over 16 yean: of
age must have a. fishing Uctnle to
catch arunlon ns any olher fish.
, • ' l
• . . --
I
/
/
J DAJl.Y PltoT M..t'1, M"'~ 9, 1970 I
Joint Approach · to Sewage Problems Stu~ ... ed
Bf RICUAllD P. NAU. ., .. ..., .......
8111 Clemenlo city olficllll bad I loolc
at SERRA tut week.
San Juan Capistrano councilmen will
give her the once over tonight.
SER.RA isn't a storm. She's a concepl,
a ftlional approach to sewage and
eeokJcy problems in the huge Sari Juan
Basin of SOQthem Orange County.
The balin, which reaches from the
beach al San Juan Creek 1' milea back
into Santa Ana Mountains, ill served by
MVSI public eoUties. It is estimated the
area wltl b1ve 244,000 rtsklenta by the
YeM 2000.
It ls these entities that would farm
SERRA in a eooperalive approach to
_.,. probloma -a joint powen •I' ...
ment -If tbe,y all ICJ'ff. SERRA m,...
Sooth Eut lleglonai R • c I a·m at lo n
Authority.
As proposed, the involved agencifS in
the joint aPJ1'08Ch to sewage disposal and
reclamation would be ?t1oulton-Nlguel
Water District, San Juan Capistrano,
Capistrano Beach Sanitary Dislrict,
Dana Point sanitary District, San
Clemente, Santa Ana Mountain County
Water District and Santa '-1argarl\a
Waler District.
The purpose of SERRA would be to
eliminate the neces!ity for small agen-
cies to construct and maintain duplicate
Hoines Still Dry
Granite Dump Aids Capo Fight
Two bomea and a Jot <mt an erosion
piqued .ection or Beach Road In
Caplttr..., Belch survived the weekend
.. u. resident& said today, but It took 3S
tnickloada ol t!l'llnlle to do the job.
John Reynard. 35787 Beach R o ad ,
owner of two of the endangered parcels,
llid tons of granite boulders which he
ordel'fJcl "are worltlng just fine."
Late last week Reynard's two homes
and a lot awned by a neighbor nezt to
them near the Poche boacb w"" hlt hard
by heavy our! borne on hlllh tld ...
A larp aec:Uon of nearly new au wall
fell under the battering seas and
emergency crews wofked throughout
Tl>nday staving oil ....... with lnJn.
dttda or aandbaga.
Reynard -hired • contractor and ord«ed tnicklooda ol t!l'llnlle from •
west Riverslde quarry.
The last loads are due to arrive
through today.
The weekend 11ur£ ind tide conditions
worked In favor cl the betchfront
homeowners, with only light aurf and
moderately high tides reported.
The original estimates of dam~ge in
the erosion incident have not yet been
tabulaled, becaUJe the total cost for the:
expensive boulders has not been r~ved.
"They started dumping them in front of
the three spots before the weekend and
they just work great-Ute a small jetty,
and they &Often the waves really well,"
Reynard said this morning.
''I don't know how much it's going to
cost. but it will be worth it If the work
1aves the homes. It's not really that
much when you figure Jtt'' ht added.
Scholarship Fund Group
Seeks Organizations' Aid
An lppeai to organlzaUOlll waa of·
lictelly bei1111 Monday by I h t
Sdlolanhlpa Fund Alaoclatlon aervtni
the Capbtrano Unl!led S<hool Dlttrlct.
Gary SOdlkoll la cbelrman of this
aspecl ol tho communlly·wld• fund drtve
wbldl la ..,ldn( funcla for groduatlni
-of San Clemente High 5dlool.
''Tho IChool baa provided ua with a lllt
of orgal1izaUons wlllcb have donated
acbolarahlpo In the pas~" said Lyn Har·
ria Hicks, head of the u90claUm.
"Organizations Play either contribute to the general fund or finance a
scholarlhJp In the name ol a perlOll or
orgmizatlon," Ille aald.
Air-sea Search
Being Conducted
For Lost Vessel
A U.S. Coast Guard he.J.ICQpter. and
surface craft oot of Oceanside Harbor t~
day are .earchlng an area off San Onofre
for a 22-foot outboard boat reportedly in
trouble.
A search of the area 1 Y: miles
southwe9t. ot the atomic power plant Sun.
day nl1ht turned up no sign of the
distressed boaL
Coast Guard officials said the llarbor
Police at Ocearulide monitored a
"'mayday" call from a Citlzens Band
tad.lo 1t 8:52 p.m. but the call was not
from the distreued boat.
A Coast Guard helicopter was sen t aloft
at S:SO p.m. and Oceanside surface craJt
aearehed the area unUI nearly midnight.
AuthortUes this morning were trying to
locate the originator of the citizens band
report.
DAILY PILOT "--...........
C•NM ..
HIM'tt .. ,..111 a....111
'""'91111 •• o.., ... . .._..
OllAHOI COAST f'U8l1SHING COMil'AflfY
Robort N. Wo.4
,rftldOnt •!'Id Publltl'ltr
Jee .. It Cu11oy
~ ,,.ldaoll .... O-r1t Mint"'
Thtfl'lll 11: .... 11
tdl!•
Tholfttl A. Murpltln1
Maroet ... Editor
"!chord P. Nell
touitl 0!'11191 CClllnlY ldltot
-,dt,._.
Contrlbutlon1 over $100 will be allowed
to bear the donor'• name while other
amounts will be pla~ in the general
fund. Contribution.s may be gpecified for
students answering parUcular fields of
study but they cannot be specified for a
partlc11ler school.
Mr1. Hieb said the usoclatlon works
directly with the school ID determine who
will receive the Kholar&hips. Barbara
Cornwell is in charge of scholarships ap.
plications at the high !Choo! and ha.a en·
couraged students who are coUege bound
to apply for whatever scholarships she
believes they have a chance to get.
"The amount of the scholarships
awarded by our association will be
detennlned by need. but finan<:l al need
will nol neces.sarlly be a prerequisite for
obtaining a scholarship," said Mrs.
Hicks.
Working with Sodiko[f in the organiui.·
tlon's appeal will be Mrs. Wilma Bloom.
Mr!. Dorothy Shank, Phil Ellsworth and
Tl!d Kopp.
The association also Is at.t.empUng lo
obtain scholar5hip money from industries
and by appealing directly to individuals.
Cerebral Attack
Caused Death
Of Mrs . Doran
Mrs. Flor,nce r.1. Doran, 82, San
Clemente suffered a fatal cerebral
hemorrhage at the wheel of her car last
Wednesday afternoon before It collided
with another auto. the County Coroner"&
Office reported today.
Coroner'! aides said an autopsy Thurs-
day confirmed 5Usplclons that the woman
did not die rrom injuries suffered in the
crash In which her car, traveling the
v.TOng way In northbound lane& of El
Camino Real, became Involved in a C(ll·
isl on.
r.1rs. Doran. 140 Avenlda Barcelona,
died before noon Thursday .at South Coast
Community Hospital in South Laguna.
She had been ln crltlcal C(lnd\tion up to
the time of her death. Hospital aide!
Thursday moming inad\•ertently had
given her condition as critical more than
an hour after she died.
Coroner 's investigators said her hemor-
rhage was brought about by "severe
hardenJng of the arteries."
Funeral 1ervtcts are pending for r.1r!.
Doran at Lesneskl Mortuary in San Clemente.
Talk Scl1edu.led
By Mrs. Hanson
ftfrs, Carole HaO!On, wife of Vietnam
POW Marine Capt. Steve Hanson, ~ill be
featured speaker at the Constructi iri Ac-
tion Council meeting of Laguna Hills
March 18 at 7:30 p.m . Jn the Roya~•· inls and IMn AssoclaUon, El Tor1J.
Mn. Hanson of 24112 Blrdrocll: Dr.,
Toro and three olher PO\Y wJvea reecnU
completed a world tour ln an tfrort
rocus world atttnUon OJI the plight of
American POWs and bring pre!lsure Oil
•ranol to confonn to tht Geneva Con·
''ention calllna for humane trtolm,nt of
pr150ners.
CruncU prt.$1dtnt Earl"'· Rtts said an
resldenll of the Lagwia HlUs area are ln-
vlt~ to attend. For rurthtr lnfom1aUon
all 837~123.
facUIU.. for carrylna and purl/yin&
sewage.
~ cue In point II the loc:tl!Oll now • •-'t throw ll'llln each other !JI aeparate treatment plant.I along San Juan
Creek owned by Dena Polnl Saoillry
District, Capistrano Beach Sanitary
District and San Juan Capistrano. ·
ParticipaUng agencies in the future
could buy space in carrying lines, treat-
ment plant and outfall lines based on the
extent of participaUon by each.
A single huge aewer main might be
constructed in the ftifure. This would
eliminate for the partteipating agencies
many cdsla auch as separate rigtts-of·
way acqulsitkln, separate legal fees and
separate engineering fees.
Blood Tests,
Prints Asked
For Suspects
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministraUon proposed legialaUon 1t1onday
to 5Ubject suspects in federal crimes to
fingerpringtlng and other detective test!
such as sallva and blood checks even
before being Connally charged.
'Mle Supume Court ha.s held that such
ldentilicaUon procedures do not violate
the conslttuUonal guarantee again.rt sell·
Jncrlminatlon but only in cases involving
suspects already charged.
The administration proposal would U•
tend auch tests to persons suspected or
crlmes In cases where there is no pro-
bable cause to arrest. The tests would be
administered only upon Luuance of. a
court order.
lf enacted by Congress, a rederal
judge, commia.sioner or magistrate could
order a suspect in a federal criminal
case to aubmlt to idenUflcaUon by
••nngerprlnt.s, palm print!, foot print!,
meuurementa:, blood aped.mens:, urine
specimens, 11allva aamples, halt samples,
handWrltlng exm"Jplara, voice samples,
photographs and lineups."
Attorney General John N. Mltdlell aaid
in a letter of transmlttal to the Hou!e and
Senate that the proposed law "will pro--
vlde federal law enforcement officers
with a useful new tool for the in-
vestlgaUon ol criminal actlvity and the
apprehemion of ,aimlnah."
Congo Diplomat
Hosted by Wayne;
Mining Deal Due?
Congo's ambassador to the United
States was entertained in lhe Newport
Beach homes of actor John \Vayne and
Ernest Sallig over the weekend in a
business deal courtship that has poten-
tially millions of dollars hanging on the
outcome.
\Yayne and Saflig are principals in the
Newport Beach-based Statesman Mining
Company which Is seeking mineral e1-
ploralion rights to all of the Congo.
Congolese Ambassador Justin Bomboko
made tbe vi!lt to gather facls for a
report to Col'lgO President Joseph
Mobutu.
"I think he was Impressed we gave out
friendship and good feeling toward him.
Certainly he was rela1ed with us," Saftig
said.
He remarked that "from everyth.lng
Bomboko indicated, I think we will hear
from h1m very soon."
Capo Council
Eyes Rezoning
A public hearing on the reionlng: of tt
acrts between 11\t Casas development
and the San Diego Freeway will occupy
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen at
their meeting tonight.
The planning commission approved the
rezoning of the property from single
family residences to plaMtd develop-
ment which would permit condominium
type housing.
Opponents of the ione change. prtmar!-
ly from The Casas, contend il would
deva \uate their property and create
nuisance traffic along Los Pajaros Street
which runa through their development.
Preliminary plan! call for the e1tenston or the slreet to make It the main artery
between the proposed condominlumz and
Camino Capistrano.
$165 Bankroll
Taken Off Table
NMl payday James Clope of San
Clemente wlll a.sk for big bills.
The dollar variety, he discovered lhiJ
we~kend, doesn't work 10 well.
Clope, of 208 El Levantt. wenl to a
local donut 1hop late Friday for some
coffee and crullers, hla wages in his
hand.
The mo~y, he told poUce, was mostly
onc-dolh1r bills v.1th a 1matter1n& of fives
anti n lone 20.
But the wad was just too thick to flt In
his v•allet, he lamented, to he Rt the
bRnkroll Rod the wallet on a table while
he went lo 1 t'Ol.lnte.r to order.
\\'hen he returned the bankroTI w1s
gooo -all $165 worth.
1 , _J ~-
A ""l"'la'l<•ted · -•a• PU!'lf~aUon e:. <Ould calob l!lt l!allr and J>U!'lly II
-to tho .... Pr~!& ol SEJ\RA . point ou1 that such an ij:ency
would be! far ID(ln able to prevent pro-
liferation d. po1tution than each going it
alone.
They maintain, as well, that should the
poUUcal and eoclal trend toward en·
vlroomental protection result in future
higher standards of sewage purifJcatlon,
SERRA would be in a better po<lon to
perform than reven ind.ividuaJ aa:encles.
SERRA a designed as aomethlng ol a
limited partnership IO that n o
participating agencies WOL·)d l lVe away
Jocal autonomy.
It would have no power ot taxation or
porer to Issue &eneral obll&allon bolldi
bu would be em,powered to make ap-
plication for and administer federal
loans and grant!, grants such as the type
President Nixon has mentioned to fight
1ewage pollullon.
Each particlpating agency would elect
a member and an alternate to .setve on
the board of SERRA. The financia l
resourtes would come Crom the member
agencies.
~1embers would participate in public
work projects to theatent of the benefit
derived and could withdraw from the
agency by .giving 120 days notice.
SERRA grew out of a study comm.Htee
formed by county ~pervisors in 1968. Jt
is co<halred by Carl Kymla, manager of
h1oulton·Niiuel CountY. Water Di11.tlct,
and J.B. Latham, pruMtnt of Capiatrano
Beach Sanllllry Dillrl<t,
A contract that would get SER RA orr
the ground Is now making the rounds of
the governing bodiel of potential member
agencl,s. If all agree SERRA is go.
ParUcipatlng agencies would have 'tfif.
lerent degrees of need and it would
develop at dlfferent ti mes. San Clemente
for Instance ls building its own large
sewage treatment planL SE RRA , for it,
would be a provl!lon for future growth.
Ag\!ncies fonning SERRA .in.itially
woul<t supply onJy the fundll to keep the
·fledgling entity operating. In San
Clemente it wu estimated lhis rnlght be
$1 ,000 yearly.
Cycl.ists' Party Raided
Police Arrest 108 in Holy Jim Canyon Revelry
Orange County tax payers provided the
hangover brunch for 108 partying
motorcycle gang members Sunday, after
lawmen raided an unholy revel in Holy
Jim Canyon. 20 miles east o( El Toro.
f\.1ost of the 73 men and 35 women were
booked into Orange County Jail for in-
vestigation of disturbing I.be peace, and
immediately posted bail on the misde-
meanor.
A heul of marijuana and olher dnlg11,
plus an assortment of 22 illegal weapons
-including shotgun!, swords and a
medieval mace -plua allegedly stolen
vehicles led to 29 adctitlonal bookings.
"EverybOdy was pretty well drunk,''
observed one sheriff's deputy who
participated in the massive rald after
dozens of colnplalnts by campers and
cabin dwellers in the rustic, wooded can·
yoo.
Special Meeting Scheduled
On Clemente Maste1· Plan
San Clemente plannlng commissioner5
wtll meet In a speclal study session Tues..
day afternoon to delve lnto a new, 31·
page report on the city's revised master
plan.
'Ihe report, submitted by hired con-
sultant.I and planning aides. CO\'ers
general oonce the uture San
Clemente as a bll nity with
considerations for Indus and com-
mercial uses, coupled wi e traditional
residential flavor.
The 4 p.m. meeting will allow the com·
missioners tlme to discuss rev isions to
the supplement.al report before they lake
any official action.
City Associate Planner Gene Schulte
said the date of a public hearing on the
report still has not been decided.
"\\'e still need to consult with the city
.attorney to see if a hearing is needed on
the report. Hearings, obviously, are
necessary for a general plan or an y
amendments to it, but supplemental
reports are something different." he said.
Whether a hearing Is required or not,
commissioners \Vednesday night are ex-
pected to delay any action on the report
until they study It further.
\Vedne5day's meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m.
•
First lawm en on aie scene called in
reinforcements, including 17 sheriff'•
deputies and California Highway Patrol
offlcers, plus three buses to tramport the
suspects.
Sheriff's Lt. Ted Dwyer said three
groups of residents who live in the usual
sanctity of Holy Jim Canyon fled in fear
for their Jives and safety.
Representatives gathered in a remote
corner of scenic O'Neill Park for the
revelry Included the OuUa·.7s, the Gepta,
the Nuggets and the Hessians, in-
vestigators said.
Despite the low bail set for disturbing
the peace and being drunk in public, a
large number of cyclists and hangers«ln
found themselves stranded after release
by impounding of vehicles.
A number of cars and motorcycles are
being cheeked out as possibly stolen,
authorities said today.
Possession of pistols, shotguns, knives
and other deadly wea pons clasaed as il-
legal Jed to stiller charges against 22
persons, while another seveo. face
charges for drugs and marijuana.
Noted Artist Dies
NEWBURYPORT, Mass. (AP)
Waldo Peirce, whose paintings have been
displayed in many of the world's: major
galleries, died in a hospital here Sunday
after suffering a heart attack. He was 84,
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
-Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings,
In offering the most in earnings to savers.
1% 2 year term account, with _D,000 minimum
~% 1 par term account, with $1,000 minimum
114 % s..monthl bonut account, with $500 minimum
7\t" certlflctt• of deposit 1v1l11ble, wlth$100,000 minimum
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
mul laan aumatln If you ,,. a Mutu1l Saver, now la tht Umt to lnwtt add'll1on1l f\lndl In t~ae new
hlgh-ralt accounts. (ln1ur1nce has been Inorea1od IO $20,000.) II you ar• not• CORONA DEL MAR
Mutull llvlr now,, the time 10 open your llCCOUl'll at The Big M-Mutu•I SllVll'lgl. 2•1 u.ic_. HIQll•IJ ' I 11teptiaM 11M01a
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001
Wl8TAftCADIA
MO W9" °"""' Ao.11d Ttllpf\OM 444)1N
COVINA
20()Nl!l'UIClt1UtA-T1,.,,,....,....tt
OL•NDALI
JM N~ 1'1111'11 loliltl't•lf
Tlltp!!Orll 141-*141
•
s DAILY PILOT 3
HARBOR TAKES SHAPE BELOW OANA'S CLIFFS. UP ON TOP, A COMMUNITY ASLEEP SINCE THE OEPRESSION WATCHES AND AWA ITS THE ECONOMIC IMPACT.
Touring Harb.or
Dana Nature Walks Planned
College Choir,
Clemente Band
Dana Harbor Filling Up
Nature-walk-style tours d the Dana
Pcint 1ifarine Refuge and the site for the
new A1arine Studies Institute at Dana
llarbor will begin on a regular basis near
the end of this month, county schools
aides said today.
The students also will tour the refuge and
learn more aboul the ocean and its tidal
zones. Slate Concert Construction Work Be gins Soon on Marina
The tours will be the fir st regular
public opportunity for gukl.ed visitors tG
see the 3.2-acre site which eventually will
become the marine studies center for
thousands of Orange County students.
The formal christening of the institute
will take place at the haroor May l, 2 and
3 with !ICOl'es oI activities for youngsters
and adults.
The tours will be guided by college and
university students ~·ho are majoring in
ocean sciences. The students will take
small groups for walking lectures along
the site near the harbor's pier, then
onward around Dana Point itself where
tM: wildlife refuge lies.
The dedication days will feature three
1pecific activities.
Friday, P.fay I, will mark a massive
workshop day ror county students who
will meet with occupational guidance
counselors to discuss the varied op-
portunities in ocean-related vocaUons.
Stock Talk Set
Southern Orange Counti's only woman
stockbroker will dlSCUBS aecurities and in·
vestments March U for a noon gathering
of the San Clemenle are.a chapter of the
National As90Cialion of Real Estate
Boards. ·
Mrs. Charlene Vance, with the First
California Company in 1.fonarch Bay
Plaza, South Laguna. will address the
group's regular luncheon meeting at
Omar's Restaurant.
All .NAREB members are wele-0me.
Reservatioos are available by calling 4~
5353 no later than next Wednesday.
On Saturday, Ma y 2. the official
ceremcuUes will take place, including al·
tendance by 1tate, county and local
figures and public officials.
The area will take on a festive at·
mosphere on Sunday with varied at·
tractioos, including water ski exhibitions,
a dry-land boat show, a visit by Naval
craft with the possibility of on-board
tours, an art show showing student works
on the sea, displays on the literature of
the sea and a marine hardware di splay.
The institute has been set up as a non-
profit foundation through the auspices of
the County Superintendent of Schools of.
rice.
Ultimately it will have lecture halls, a
Jibrary and labora tory area along 'l''ith
ramps out into the bay and ocea n from
which studi!nt.s may fish or observe the
sea at work. •
The institute, financed through dona.
t.iOQL and fund-raising projects, will
become an educational center for the
county·s 33,000 student.s who will travel
there on field trips.
The Ford Foundation made an original
grant for the institute late last year -
J18,000.
The goal for the inst.itute i! $500,000 by
11171. $1.5 million more by 1973 and $J
million more by 1975.
Despite the years needed for raising ()f
funds for Jhe actual .W.titutet facilities
the site donated by the Orange COunty
Harbor District will be used in the in-
terim for student visits and the nature
loon.
Dr. Andreas Rechnitzer. president or
the committee plaMing the institute. has
termed the proposed facility the only one
in the world where students can trace
their study m the se.a from primary field
trip! to sophisticated research.
Saddleback College's Choir and the San
Clemente J\.funicipal Band ~·ill perfonn in
a free concert \Vednesday at the San
Clemente High School Triton Center
Auditorium.
The 8 p.m. performances will feature
the choir directed by. IUchard Raub. The
singers will appear for the first half of
the evening.
The choir will open the performance
with a Renaissance period offering or "O
!\iagnum Mysterium" by Spanish com·
poser Tomas Luis Vitoria. They also will
sing works including "Three Hungarian
Folk Songs" by Sieber and "Long Time
Ago" with an arrangement by Asron
Copland.
The band will take over the final part
<lf the program.
Its perfonnances will include "First
Suite in E Flat" by Englh~h composer
Gustav Holst and Beethoven's ''Overture
to Egmont Opus 84."
Exchange Students
Due Honors Tonight
Two American Field Service exchange
Students, Brett Bradley of New Zealand
and Barry Clark of South Africa, who
have -been visiting in Mission Vle.jo for
the past week, ~·ill be honored tonight at
an 8 o'clock coffee in the home of Mr.
and ri.trs. Da\rid Weilein, 2fl602 Alicante
Drive.
Adult and youth AFS members and
other interested members of the C'Olll·
munity are invited to attend and meet the
students who are spending the school
year at San Luis Obispo.
By JOllN VALTERZA
01 tlle D1ll1 1'1111 Sl1ff
Huge clamshell cranes ~'ill begin goug·
ing Ellvay at two 80,000-cubic yard coffer
dam., in Dana Harbor in the next two
weeks and the sea 's surge "·ill begin fill·
ing the future haven ror thousands of bo<its. .
Sea water 1vhich ha s been siphoned into
the twin marinas in the new harbor
already is up lo the low-lide line, but
several more feet or depth will be added
when the two coffer dams are punched
through.
Orange County Harbor District Resi-
dent Engineer Jack Rains said the dam-
busting operation will be an extensive,
two or three-~·eek project, "but as soon
as Lile equipment cuts through to let the
\\"ater in, the tides will help clear out the
rest."
The classic and simple method or the
isiphon was put to use to raise the marina
water to Us present minimum level.
The pipes ~·ere put to use about two
weeks ago.
During the tv.'o or three weeks before
the dams burst, crews wiJI finb1h
"'aterprooflng seams in the deep concrete
revelments of the marina, while other
1\•orkmcn will rush to finish the bridge
spanning the channel between the two
boal basins.
The concrete cap on the tQp of the
bridge will be poured within the next·
Je\'en d:iiys or so, Rains said.
The bridge, which will be dedicated lo
ailing Ohio Rep. Robert Ker w a n
linslrumental in federal appropriations
for the harbor projeetl will rise an
average or about 21 feP.t above the
water's .surface, thus allowing some
shorter-masted sailboat.s to pass un·
dcrneath.
As a hint to yachtsmen and lhe.ir pro-
El Rancho has the lzottest price • zn town!
• • • • • • • • • • •
El Rancho brings ha.ck old time values! Sixteen ounct loaf, white or wheat, at this budget saving apecial price I
Scott Place Mats .... .. .. .. . .. ... 29¢
Set a pretty place ••• package of 21 !
Welch's Jelly ............ .. .. .. .. .. . .. ... 49-
crape Jelly or Preserves ••• 2 lb. jar!
i Port and Beans ..................... 4 "' 51
Campbell's Home Style •• , big 28 oz. cans!
I
Scott Tow els ................................ 29¢
Thinity towels ••• jumbo rolls! Color!, prints.
Early-in,.the-week menu iraluea at El Ra,ncho!
Liver ........ v.~~~,.~~R! ...... 69~
For nutrition, for variety ••• sen'e liver! For Lenderness, freshneM, value ••• look to El Ran..ho !
Veal Birds ........ 5.~~·~'~t~u.~ ...... 39~
jections or the h<lrbor's ya c b t Ing
qualitits, Rains sa id most sailboats would
probably be berthed in the east half of
the marina because of the ease at sailing
in and out of the 250-foot entrance w,ays
during prevailing wind conditions.
Some sailors, howeve~. already kno\V
the yachting qualities of the harbor.
On an average. sunny weekend day, he
said, a hundred boaters use the already
operating boat launching ramps at the
harbor.
"Certainly the parking and paving
aren't in yet, but it doesn't seem to cause
any problems.
·•ThoS1! large launching areas are a
dream for boaters and they tell us ~
so1netimes," Rains said.
As soon as the two dams break through
and the marina fills, county supervisors
are expected to let to bid contracts for in-
stallation of utilities and paving of the
giant harbor's land areas.
Soon after that , crews for individu:iit
lease holders will begin moving in with
their equipment and will work throu gh
the year's end building lhe slips, dock
facilities, restaurant.s, boat s e. r v Ic e
facilities, mote.ls and other commercial
ventures master planned ror tbe NO-
million marine compleI.
Rains said the construclion ts pro-
gressing so well that workmen are up to
two mon.J.hs ahead of schedule on the
work.
"Actually the present contract for the
marina construction and the bridge
shouJd be wound up by the end of rum·
mer, but if the work keeps up at--the
present pace the men should be through
by the end of May," the engineer said.
By next sumn1er, the ftrst Increment of
slips will be rilled to capacity with an
estimated 1,500 boal5 bobbing at th&
Jines.
In the meantime visitors still can drive
to lhe westernmost part ()f tile harbor,
down the ileep road along the Oanka oC
Dana Point and fish or sightsee.
The launching ramp is ope n every Satur-
day and Sunday for free boat launchiJl&
-a good compromise, temporarily.
Cleme11te Pupil Expelled
A San Clen1ente High School student
with a record of 20 incidents dating back
to fall of 1967 has been expelled after his
arrest recently on marijuana possession
charges.
The unidentified youth who now is in
juvenile hall after the latest orfense, was
on pfobation before his arrest on charges
of possessing !he forbidden weed.
"Typically no student is expelled
without a series of incidents of problem11
leading up to the expul sion action,"
District Supt Truman Benedict said after
the board of trustees expulsion last week.
But .the youth 's recQl'd ll9w..s_ct't! of
striking a teaCher. vandalism, cut tin&
classes, truancy and fighting on campus,
the superintendent added.
Benedict said the youlh has received
counseling, continuation high school and
has been the 1ubjcct of many con-
versalions between school officials and
his parents, described as "very coopera·
Uve."
Tender veal ••. perfect aerving portions! Eat it all goodne" in a delightful-and welcome-tute treat! I
Veal Cutlets ................ : ............... 51~ Sliced Bacon ................ .. ......... 89~
Prict1 in effect /.Ion.., Tuts., lVtd.,
Ma.r. g, 10, 11. No 1a.lu to dcaJ.1r1.
c
ARCADIA: s.oset ond HunUl!Jlon Or. (El Rancho Centlt)
Breaded ••• ready to cook and 1en·e ~
El Ra.ntho Delicateutn
~'~l~~I~~~li~~~!~n your 3 ORF $1. choice of favorite varietieal
Reg. 39c •.•..•...•..•••••
)
El Rancho's ranch atyle •.• s11 k "II ;
SuP<f'frtBh Produce
Roman Beauty Apples
Larre 1ize ••• just right to 3erve
baked, with brown aogar and cln-
namon! ••.•••.•••.•••••••••••• 10~
--.
PASADENA:
llO W!S! Co10t1do Blvd.
.SOUTH PASADENA:
Fr1mont rnd·Huntiniton Dr.
HUNTINGTOll BEAClll wunu in<I All'nquln (Boardwalk Cenler)
NEWPORT BEACH:
2721 Mowp«t Bli<I. Ind
2555 ·[astblult Dr. (£a1tbluH Ytll111 Contar)
• I I
'
DAILY PILOT
CCltNtilll W lllt DtllY 'lltt It.ff) '
'
Capt. Koyo Sorenson of !he Al·
bany, N.Y. Police Department
Wked and showed a movie on bur-
gla_ry to a women's civic group. As
she delivered the talk on crime
prevention, someone walked oU
\\'ith fl,145 worth of ladies coats in
the same restaurant. The captain,
a community relations specialist,
was assigned to the case. •
V .S. troop• in Vietnam mu.st take
precaution in .starchma for traces
of tht entmy. Here, the men are not
searching for the proverbial 11eedle
in a hay.stock but /OT arms and 111p-
plfe1 OT ccmoufl.aged air vent.I lead-
~ng to underground complexe1. • State Sen. Ha rry J. McGu Trk of
Baltimore, Md., has i n tr o •
duced a resolution lnto the General
Assembly to create a study com·
mission to recommend standards
for Ugh! bulbs. Said the senator,
"'People are often unprepared to
r eplace a· burned out bulb at the
time of it& expiration." •
Sa·n Francisco iopless da11ce r
Lola Raquel has pleaded '10
conttst to di1turbing the peace of tht financial district Dec. 23
when she paraded down I.lie
street wearing a sign readi'i1g
"MeTT11 Xma.T" acro11 her bare
43·inch bU!t. She 1aid she wa.J
1orr11 &he couldn't get the word
.. Chrl.!tma.T" in but &aid there
tocUfl't any room. The judge
fined ~t $65 or $32.50 per
prominent di1p«iy. -----~.d • The Huddersfield, England Chor·
al Society has announced tha t it
will no longer sing to the accom·
paniment of the Royal Liverpool
Ph.ilbarrnonic because the orcbes·
tra members chew gum while the
chorus sings. • 75 members of the Lefthanded
Students Union at the University
of Kansas marched on the chancel·
Jor's office recently with a list of
demands. The u1timatum includ·
ed : Left handed doors, lelthanded
desks. lefthanded homecoming
queens, le!thanded cheerleaders
and lefthanded professors.
Monday, March 9, 1970
linked to Right•
Bary, Ted Back
Lower Vote Age
WASHINGTON (AP) -Willi the
Senate maneuvering over Neyo voting
rights JegislaUon, the Issue o lowerlna:
the v0Un1 age to 18 wa1 ralaed anew to-
day by two senators polea a pa r t
pol!Ucally.
A Senate judlclary aubcommlttee called
a bearin& to give Sena. Barry Goldwater
(R-Ariz.)1 and Edward M. Ke:inedy CD-
Mu1.); a chance to advance their
arguments that Congress can give the
vote to 18-year-olds.
Although Goldwater arvl KeMedy agree
on this, t.bey differ on whether Jt 1hould
be made part of legislation to prevent
denial of voUng rights becaus.e of ract .
The leglslatlon is embrolled in a
dispute between senators who want to
continue the 1965 Votin1 Rlghtl Act, ap-
plying to seven Southern states. and 1 na-
Uonwlde bill urged by President NlJ:on
and already puled by the House.
An amendment to lower the voting age
to 18 already has been offe red by
Democratic Leader P.like P.tansfl~ld. One
of the co-1pan10rs is Kennedy, the assis-
tant Democratic leader.
But Goldwater says the proposa1 should
be handled as a separate measure rather
than entangled in the already sharp con·
troversy over the v0Un1 rlghts Jeglsla·
Uon.
Many senators maintain tttt! voting age
can be low ered to 18 only by a con·
stitutional amendment.
A propoaed constitutklnal amendment
lists 67 senators as c~sponsors and hear-
Jngs en it already have been held by the
Judiciary sub1::9mmlttee, headed by Sen.
Birch Bayh, D-Ind.
However, Bayh signed up last wetk as
one of 10 ~!pOnsors of 1'.tansfleld's
amendment to the voting rights bill. An
aide to Sen. Marlow W. Cook (R·Ky.), a
Kidnap Victim
Says Guerrillas
Eying Hostages
GUATEMALA CITY (UPI) -Sean
Michael l{ol!y's kldnapers told them they
have other American diplomats in mind
for use' as hostages to exchange for im-
prisoned Communlst terrorists.
Holly, the labor,,attache and second
secretary at the U.S. embaSl!ly, was freed
at 5 a.m. Sunday ln exchange for two
jailed guerrillas. Jose Manuel Aguirre
Monzon and Vidallna 1'.lonzon Soto.
His abductors had demanded the
release of four jailed comrades by 2:30
p.m. Sunday or said Holly would be kill·
ed. It turned out one of the four already
had fled to Mexico and another was freed
earlier in the week and had taken refuge
in the Costa Rican embassy.
Aguirre and Miss Monzon joined Lionel
El Cld Jn the Costa Rlcan diplomatic
enclave and all U1ree were granted safe
conduct passes to P..texico.
Holly, 39, told an impromPtu news con-
ference he would not recognize the men
who aelt.ed him from his car Friday at
an intersection because they wore hats
and masks throughout the ordeal .
"They said they had their eye on other
offi~rs in the embassy and that they
would have kllled me if I had tried to
run," he said.
He said they took his glasses and
blindfolded hiln before beginning the
journey to a mountain hideout by car, on
fool and on horseback. The abductors
carried machine guns.
Once Aguirre and ~fiss Monzon \Vere
freed, the kidnapers brought HcJJy back
to Guatemala City early Sunday and left
him in the Church of the Divine
Providence with instructions not to call
anyone for an hour.
The hour up, "The first thing 1 did was
to call my wife, Rebecca," Holly said.
The couple has five children. 11e spoke to
newsmen at the U.S. emba,py following a
tearful reunion with the family ,
subcommittee member, 1ald he also h11
concluded the voting age can be lowered
by 1t1tute and plans to introduce a
separate blU.
Jn the Senate, where debate on the
voUng right.I legtslatJon began a week
ago, supporters of • atralght-out ei-
tenslon of the 19& act have kept the up--
per band IO far.
A motion to tab.i . the e:s:tenslon bill was
rejected, as were two amendments of.
fered by Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr., D-N.C.,
to ease the law '1 impact on the South.
The 19S8 act suspended voter literacy
tests and authorized the use of federal
registrars in six Southern 1at1tes and
parts of a 11eventh. lt also requires tl>tse
statea to obtain advance approval for
voting law changes from the U.S. at·
torney general.
The admlnJstration bill, which Southerrr
senators prefer as the-lessu of evils,
drops this ~-clearance requirement and
provides tor unlfonn nationwide ap--
plicallon of other parts of the 1965 acL
Peace Plan
l g nores Arab
Land De1nand
PARIS (UPI) -Foreign f.finisler
~1aurice Schwnann said today the Big . ' Four were working on a new Middle East
peace fonnula that no longer calls for un-
coodillonal Israeli evacue.Uon of lcr·
ritorles lt seized from lhe Arabs in the
1967 war.
Schumann, addressing a foreign press
luncheon, said he hoped the Big Four
"'ould agree on the formula, which also
\\'OUld send United Nations troops into
the area again and create a demllilariud
zone between Israeli and Arab forces,
In the past, the Soviet Union and
France have demanded total withdrawal
of Isr1tell forces from oceupled territories
before there can be any negotiations -
the position the Arabs have taken. Israel
maintains it cannot wttbdraw unUI the.re
are negotiations.
Authoritative diplomatic 11ource11 In
Cairo s11id today Franc1! had proposed a
plan which called for Israeli withdrawal
linked with a pledge by the Arab natlons
to maintain peace. A second part of the
plan deals with the Pale1tlnJ.1.1n refugee
problem and with setting up recognized
frontiers, the sources saJd.
Schumann made a sweeping revie w of
"'orld problems and results of the visit he
and President Georges Pompldou made
to the United St.ates. In the review he
said President Nixon admitted that
France might play a specific role In help-
ing to bridge dllferences over the Viet·
namese conflict.
* * * 5 Russ Advisers
Killed in Egypt
By_ UNl1ED P.RES!UNTERNATIONAL
A reUable Beirut pubtlcation reported
during a \veekend of Arab-Israeli clashes
on three fronts that five Russian advisers
serving y,•ith Egyptian troops have been
killed In Israel air strikes .
In Cairo today, memorial l!lervices ·
lrere held for Gen. Abdel ~foneim Rlad
\\'ho was killed exactly one year ago by
Israeli mortar fire on the second day of
Egypt's ''y,•ar of atlri!ion rr against Israel.
The steady increase in air and iJ'Ound
actions since has brought the ~·Uddle East
to the brink of a new all-out "''a.r. 'The
situation was worsened recenUy by ac-
celerated Arab guerrilla activities from
Lebanon.
Cold Air Follows Warmth
•
Temperatures Over Plains R ange From 30 to 40
Callfomla
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MONTEREY JACK,
MILD CHEDDAR
OR COLBY
CHEESE
c
---""~ CHUNK
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C011AGl ~
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LB.
8-0 Z. 35c
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Pltn C9 IEGULAR FLAVORED OR FRUIT ON THE eonoM
YOGURT 5 ~~;~$1°0
QUART 55' e. REAL ORANGE JUICE
HEAT 'N EAT
FISH
STICKS
39L~
TOPS REMOVED
~ud U. S, ~. //, ~
SQUARE CUT SHOULDER
LAMB
ROAST
SHOULDER
LAMB
CHOPS
3 TO
4-LBS.
STEW OR. BRAISE
LAMB NECK
LAMB BREAST
c
MEATY LARGE LOIN OR
ROUND-JONE-
LA MB CHOPS
98~.
$1?~ SLICED 'N TlfD SHOUtDfR 6 5 PRE-CARVED . · C
LAMB ROAST LB.
s~
DESERT GROWN VALENCIA
ORANGES
c
FRESH CARROTS 10~ .
SWEET MI LD
BROWN ONIONS 10~. .LB.
DEL MONTE CATSUP 1-4-0Z. 19(
BO TILE
~ .. REGULAR
ICE MILK 2PINT$29( '/, 49c GAL. ....
1-LB. 31c LOAF BUTTER BREAD
Your Nearest Ralphs Store 11 Looaled al 9907 Ad~m• Blvd., Huntington Be acli
Store Houri 9 a.m. lo I 0 p.m. Daily
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•
San Cle1nente . .. -
Capistrano . EDITION
voe. bl, NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. )
•
·---·MONDAY, MA RCH'· 1970
. . ·-------~ -
I
T.oday's Final -----
TEt{ ~NTS
An. ~ditorial
Voters Should Discount
Panther Lawyer Assails
Rumors in School Is sue . . . Jury Selection System
Trustees of Capistrano Unified School District and other sup-
porters of llle Tuesday finance election are frankly concerned. Wants Panel They're trying to reason \vith s u c h obstacles as a ru1nor
campaign. that drug abuse js soaring at the high school and junior
high school. This is not factuaJ. On the contrary, poLicc say, they've
seen a ~ecline in this problem area in recent years. Picked From .
It's also clear that 1ocaJ youngsters wiU take some o( the rap
for college campus disturbances. This is patently unfair. The local
kindergarten student or even the high school senior has little to
do with the S a n t a Barbara uprising or the unrest at Cal State
Fullerton. Community Voters in this school district should decide the two finance
issues strictly on their merits. Leaving out the extraneous issues,
1he school district has made a .good case for the need of 7,400 chil-
dren and those who will !ollo\v, By TOM BARLEY
Of tM ~Uy 1'1 .. 1 llttl
Arthur De\Vitte League's lawyer today
branded Callrornia 's jury s e I e ct ion
Capo's . School Election
Ends Hard Fought Drive
system as unconstitulional and imposed
what is experted to be at lea st a three·
day delay in the murder trial or the ac-
t'Used Black Panther.
League. 20, of Santa Ana. is accused of
the shooting Jasl June 4 or Santa Ana
police officer Nelson Sasscer. It is aUeged
that the Negro militant gunned down the
patrolman after he was ordered to pro-
duce identification.
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 t111 ~lly l"l .. t Sffff
The election Tuesday for Capistrano
Unified School District will climax one
nl the hardest fought support campaign!;
ever waged in an area where school
finance issues have traditional tough
1J&idlng.
Truman Benedict. district superin·
l.endent. has been through 22 elections in
11 years with local schools, most of them
before unification five yeari ago. .,
Most cf them Jost. His· own daughter at-
tended hlgh acbool In: quonset huts, It
took 10 elections to secure fuods to build
Planners Slate
Special Session
On Sign Issue
The Laguna Beach Planning Com·
mission will hold a special study session
Rl 7:30 o'clock tonight in city hall council
chambers to prepare amendments to the
sign ordinan~ for presentation to the Ci·
ty Council Wednesday.
The commissioners have been asked by
the council to devise precise wording for
five changes in the ordinance which have
caused or_are...bl:}iev~d U!leJyJO_guse en-
forcement problems. They deal Ydth
measurement of sign area, situation of
pole signs and sign setback from building
i;idelines.
Although the mechanism of amending
the ordinance v.•ill require public hearings
and ol:her legal delays, the council ha s
agreed to instruct the city staff to ad·
minister the Jaw as it the amendment~
t1lready were in effect as soon as wording
is established.
Also at tonight's session. the planMrs
v.·ill give a final review to the general
plan goals statement before making their
f-ormal recommendation to the council.
Slork 1'1nrkeu
NEW YORK (AP)-Prices on the stock
market remained depressed late this af-
ternoon. (See quotations. Pages 16-17 ).
Losses were widespread, with declines
nn the New York Stock Exchange exceed-
ing advances by more than 2'1.a to I.
Orange Coast
the present San Clemente High School.
The district's most recent school elec·
tion loss was last April when a turnout of
about 40 percent turned down a f>O-.cent
override by about three·to-two.
Supporters or this override are hoping
ror a 55 :percent trunout Tuesday of the
IS,270 person s registered to vote in the
sprawling 156-square-mile district.
Election proponents are hoping that the
bigger turnout will balance what they
described as <t large block of ''historically
bul1t·in no v o t e-t lo school finan«
Attorney Robert Greene asked Judge
Samuel Dreir.en to rule that the picking
of a jury from the roster of names
assigned to the court for the League trial
would amount to denial of a fair trial tor
his client.
Thosr names. Greene said, are selected
from Orange County's voter registration
lists and do not reflect a trut cross-sec-
tion of the community. .
Greene wants a jury. picked from ''the
community as a who!~ and not· under a
.!Ylltel!I which donliin•<~nt a,1'11''111il
under any of the provisions envisaged by measures." · our law -among them economic, racla.l "l'he di.strjct electora~ Tuesday will be llld political ta.ctora ...
voting for two meawre.s. Greene's motion ended a two-hour
One. is authorization to increase the In· delay in opening of the trial and was
lerest maximum from five lo .seven per· being debated at preS! time. Judge
cent on $4.2 million in previously Dreizen delayed summoning of the first
authocized bonds for school iil1 ac. panel of prospective jurors until the mo-
quisition and construction. lion is decidtd,
The bonds can't be sold at the present Greene indicated that he would have
live percent limit. Given approval of this further motions to offer following set·
by the necessary tw~thirds majority. tlement of his challenge of the jury
district offkials would expect to sell system.
about $1.4 million this year and v.•ould sell Among spectalors in the courtroom to--
the rest oy.:er a lWo to three year period. day was Daniel Michael Lynem, 21 , also
Voters will also decile a 50-cent over· a m~mber of the Black Panlher organiz-
ride that district officials say is ation and the man \vh<i was cleared of the
"ecessary to maintain the existing educa-murder charges now faced by League.
t.iooal program. A heavily reinforced detachment nf
Without the override, which would sherifrs officers turned away more than
represent a loss of about $700,000 in 100 persons from the courtroom door
operating funds, school officials say that after the 75 seats in Judge Drelzen's
an across the board 10 percent cutback is courtroom were quickly occupied this
necessary_Thls..would range.1.rom...busing_ -~~
and music programs to vocational educa· All persoriS entering lhe courtroom,
tion and larger classes . with the exception -0f witnesses and the
The district now has about 7,400 press, were carefully searched before
students and estimates this will increase they Were allowed to take their seats.
by 10 percent to more lhan 8,000 next There were no incidents other than loud
year. com pla!nts from several ~rsons who
An organized group supporting the wished to view the murder trial.
override calls itself ARVY which means Black Panther literature wa s
Area Residents -V()te Yes. distribu~ in the courthouse-corridor lo
It has waged a voluminous grassroots: all persons entering Judge Dreizen's
campaign that included bumper stickers. courtroom.
talks, advertising, telephone calls and
news releases.
The ARVY effort will climax with a
telephone campaign effort l() turnout the
voters tomorrow. Their h<lpe is that the
30 to 35 percent who declared lllemselves
undecided during a pre-campaign poll
will turnout and vote yes .
Polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m.
There are I I polling places ranging in
aize from 1100 to 1900 registered vote.rs.
French Reds Out Poll
Gaullist in Voting
PARIS (UPI) -The C::ommunist Party
won more votes than the Gaullists Sun·
day In the first nationwide election since
President Georges Pompidou took office.
Partial returns in the Cantonal (coun·
ly) Elections today gave the Communists
23 percent ()f lhe votes compared with 15
percent.for the Gaullists.
Several Ounces ot Prevention
The mothers of Cyndee Howe, s. Buena Park (left}
and Ruth Reisman, 6, La Palma 1 took the g~rls
fishing this weekend at San Clemente's Municipal
Pier. They ai.o took lengths of rope. What they
didn't take were any chances that tbe girls ml&ht
go overboard.
City Council eantlidates
l{eeping Busy in Laguna
By BARBARA' KRE!BICH
Of tllt O.lly ,lllf Slfff
Laguna Beach City Council candidate~
are tuning u.p their vocal chords for a
record-breaking series of "mttt the can·
didates" sessions that wlll carry them to
the eve of the April 14 municipal elect.ion .
The L.aguna Beach Board of Realtors
will get the ball rolling this week by
presenting all five candidates at an 8
a.m. breakfast meeting Thursday in Ben
Brown's Restaurant.
On hand to air their views and respond
lo questions will be incumbents RJchard
Goldberg and Joseph A. O'Sullivan and
ne~v candidate s Joseph L, Tomehak.
Peter Ostrander and Edward Lorr, The
rive are competing for three upcoming
council vacancies.
On Tuesday evening, March 17. the
Laguna Beach Coordinating Council will
present tt·e five candidates al a 7:30 p.m .
meeting in the Laguna Federal building.
WedneOOay morning,_ March 18, will
find the quintet oo t.he program at the
7:30 a.m. Chamber of Cclmmerc•
breakfast in the Hotel Laguna.
Al 8 p.m. on Thursday, March 26, the ·
South Coast Democratic Peace Club will
present the candidalet ln a public
meeting in city hall council chambers.
A final session has been scheduled by
the Laguna Beach Civic League on April
7, at a location to be announced.
In previous election years, it ,Pas.been
customary to schedule no more than two
full-scale pre.election sessions for council
f:andid-ate.s.
In addition to the public meetings, m<iSt
or the candidates have their engagement
calendars well filled with "coffee" dates
for appearances before small organiza-
tions and neighborhood groups.
Goldberg kicked off his campaign Sun-
ciay eYening al a cocktail party hosted by
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Johnson and at-
tended by about 200 guests.
In an Wonnal talk, Goldberg promised
to continue his role as a "24-hour coun4
cilman," referring to the fact that his
businesii keeps him In. Laguna . an~
therefore available to constituents, while .
other councilmen and canclidales are •
employed oot of town.
Goldberg also introduced architect Pflt-
cr Ostrander and told guests he i1 1up-
porting Ostraoder's candidacy.
Cyprus Nets 11
In Makarios ·
Shooting Try
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI) -The Cyprus
government said today 11 persons we~
arrested during the night as suspects In
the attempted assassination Sunday· of
Archbishop Makarios, the president of
this island nation.
Official source& Mid these wer@: in ad·
dilion to three men summoned for qu"es·
tioning earlier Sunday, two ()f them Iden·
tified as members ()f an oppooition group
demanding union with Greece.
Witnesses of the atempt on Makarios'
life were called in to view the suspects in
a lineup later today,
Three gunmen firing au tom •'lie
weapons from the roof of a high tehool
shot down· the president's • .helloopttr at
7:10 a.m. Sunday is it lifted off from thl!
pa.lace grounds ~ded for 1 memorial
service at Makheras Monastery, 30 mile.1
from the ·capital.
Makarios escaptd unhurt but the pilot,
Zacharias Papadoyianrtis, was wOulfded
critlclilly;
'Grunion Hit
Deadline Nears
For '70 Festival
Deadline for artists and crari.'smen whn
wish to submit works for jurying in thtt
1970 Festival of Arts is 10 a.m. Saturday,
grounds chairman Verner Beck said to-
day.
Worst Oil Fire Attacked ' Beach Tonight
\\'ea th er
Those clouds rolliiig in tonight
won 'l have a i;ilver lining, so grab
your raincoat. Clearing ski es and
co o I e r temperature.<; are thr
watchwords for Tuesday.
INSIDE TODAY
·rhe U.S. stands an excellttit
chance of capturing a gold
medal in the 1972 Kitl yacht·
ing Olympics because Ameri-
-cans art best ot soifinfl I.ht
Tdmpest. Boating Page 23.
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The jurying will take place between 10
~.Jn. and 3 p.m, Saturcl_ay and artists are
asked to bring three examples of their
work to Irvine Bowl between. 7 a.m. and
10 a.m.
An artist wishing to apply in more lhan
nne medium should take three works in
each medium . Beek said.
A com bined jury elected by the artisu
and appainted by the Festival board Will
rate the works submitled on an establish-
ed point system. Availal>te space on the
grounds is allocated according to scores
received.
Ari.Lsts who should apply Saturday are
those who did not apply last year, those
who applied but were not taken onto the
ground!! and those who were on the
grounds last year but were asked to re-
11ubmit for the 1970 system. Those who
exhibited last year and we~not asked to
rC·submlt 11re entitled to apply for !ipace
wittioul jurying.
Dynamite Charge May Cause Louisiana Spill
VENICE, La . (UPr) -Firerighters
prepared tod ay to blow ()lit a 27-day-.ol d
blaze on an offshore platform with a
dynamite charge that could cause the na-
tion 's worst oil spill.
Calm seas and genlle breezes greeted
workmen early today and they beg.en
preparing the •·pound explosive charge
to cap what ha; bttn called the worst>
offshore ()iJ fire.. in hlltoey.
Putting out the blaie 30 miles offshore
was only the first problem. Tile most dlf·
(!cult will be ccmtroll\ng· an expected
deluge of crude ()iJ pollution after the fire
i' out.
An Interior Departmenl spokesman
.said Chevron Oil •Company's "Charlie"
slruclure was believed capable ol spew~
ing an)rwbere from 900 to 8,000 barrels of
oil a day until i~ eight dama1ed wells
11rt-capped -an Opcretlon that may takt
' . •
up to three weeks.
By comparison, lhe Sanla Barbara
Channel oil spill in California amounted
t() about 8.000 barrels of oil that leaked lo
the surface and stained beaches over a
month-lon·g period.
The recent oU slick thal 1ummed Tam·
pa Bay,.Fla., was only 360 barre.ls.
Texas wild well firelighters wor.king f()r
P9u1 "Red" Adair have been ready for
· more than a week to detonate· an 'ex-·
plosion to put out the fire and begin 1he
tricky process of installing shutoff valves
to the ruptured well hea~s~ BUt small
craft wamings, hJgh winds and seas op to
11 feet postponed the shot for the pa5l
few days.
Once the fireball that has been COO·
suming the high pre11sure natural gas and
«>ii from the· we US is dollied federal and
· stale offlcleb and Chevron crews will .··
make lhe first rough estimate on the
vol ume of oil being spilled.
At that p<ilnt, Olevr()n will activate t~
world'• first oil pollution control system
designed to function in the open sea.
It will be the first test to see if hun-
dreds of men •working witll barges.
specially designed floating booms, newly
developed oll' akimmers and•otMr equip-
ment can cootain a large spill and
vacul.im It out ()f the water• before It
reaches short.
T'he Interior Department has said It
thinks Chevron h&s done all lt possibly
could lo control th< anll<lpalod •pill. A
spokesman said Chevron has the tapablll·
ty to-scoop up as many · as 20.000 barrels
or oil a day .
The question was whelhtr wave action
would tosg the oil over the barriers Ht up
to contain it..
),
The elusive grunion may slide ln
on the tide lo 1pawn on beaches
tonight. -
It~il always problemaUc1l when
the slippery silversldea will find
conditions to their llkjng but those
who chart the Ude! say any ot the
ne.xt four nights could bring a aru-
nion hunter's payoff.
The small fish come Jn at high"
Ude. Peak tide to.night Is 10:24 p_..m.
Tuesday night it will be 11 p..m.
Wednesday night . It:~ p1m.,.,~
early,Frlday1mornlnJJ);~ a.m,
''The next posalblt idal.f.a ,for-.U-
nlon sp&wning art March 2$ to. 28.
'J'Y.•o laws apply to irunion bun-
ting. One. is the fish ·mlY not De.
netted ()r tr•pPed but must be
caught.' with the 'hands. 'l'he tecond
law Is that anyone. over 18' yeafi of
•ae moat have 1 fishing HctnSe to
catch rrunton 11 any otht'r flth.
J DAil V PILOT SC M-. M"'h 9, 1970
Joint Appro ch to Sew; ge Prohle1ns Studied
lly RICHARD P. NAU.
... Dlltr .........
San Cllmenk clly .inda11 hid a lo<>I<
al SERRA last weelt.
San Juan CapistranO councilmen will
give her the once over t.onighL
SERRA fm"t .-storm. She's a concept,
a ~1:~1pproach to aewage and
~ problems in the huge San Juan
Basin ot IOU'them Orange County.
The hasln, wtlich ,..ch., from the
beach at San Juan Creq; lS miles back
into saa&a Alla Mouuta.tns, ls served by
seven Public enUlies. It la estimated the.
area wm have 244,000 1"sld•nts by tho
)'ear 2000.
It is these entitles that would form
SER.t\A Jn a cooperative approach to
sewqe problem.I -I joint powers llfte-
m .. t -U Ibey all agree. SEllJI,\ maant
South Eut Regional R e c I a m a ti o n
Authority.
As proposed, the involved agencies in
the joint apiroach to sewage dlaposal and
reclamation would be ,_toulton-Niguel
\Valer Dlstricl, San Juan Capistrano,
capislrano Beach Sanitary District,
Dana Point Sanitary District, San
Clemente, Santa Ana Mountain County
Water District and Santa ?ttargarita
Water District.
, The purpose of SERRA woukl be to
eliminate the necessity for small agen·
cies to construct and maintain duplicale
Ro111es
'
Still Dry
Granite Dump Aids Capo Fig ht
Two bolnes and a kit on an erosion
plagued oectlon of Beach Road In
Capistrano Beach survived the weekend
well, resident.9 said today, but 1t took 35
truckloads of granite to do the job.
John Reynard, 35787 Beach R o ad ,
owner of two of the endangered parcels,
said U>os of granite boulders wbJch he
ordered .. are working just fine."
Loi< 1ut week Reynard's two homes
and a lot owned by a nelihbor next to
them near the Poche beach .. .,,, hit !lard
by heavy IUff bcne on hllh lid ...
A large aection a( nearly new RI wall
fell Wider the hatlerlng aeu Gd
emergency crews worked thz'ouiboul
Thunday staving o!f erosion with Jnm.
dreds rl. aandblgs. .
Reynard then hired a coott ador and
ordered truckload! Of granite from •
west Rlvenide quarry.
The Jast loads are due to arrive
through today.
The weekend surf and tide conditions
worked ln favor of the beachfront
homeowners, with only light surf and
moderately high tides reported .
The original estimates of damage in
the erosion incident have not yet been
tabulated., because the total cost for Ute
ezpenslve boulders has not been received.
"They started dumping.them in front ol
the three spots ~ore the weekend and
they just work great -like a small jetty,
and they soften the waves really well,"
Reynard 11aid th is morning.
"I don't know how much it's going lo
cost, but it will be worth it if the work
saves the hom es. It's not really that
much when you figure it." he added.
Scholarship Fund Group
Seeks Organizations' Aid
An appul to orpnlutiool was of-
• liclally begun Monday by t h •
Scholarships Fund Auoclation aervln&
the Capistrano UoUied School District.
Gary Sodlkoll is chalrman or this
upect of the community·wlde fund drive
wblcb Is ,..ldM funds for graduatlili
IO!llcn o! Sin Clemente High School.
"The ocl>ool hu prOvlded us with a !isl
of organiza.UOlll which have donated
scholanhlp1 In the past," said Lyn Har·
ris HJeks, head of the &Jsociatlon.
"Organizations may either contribute
to the general fund or finance a
scholarahlp tn the name _of. a perm or
organization. .. lhe said.
Air·sea Search
Bein g wnducted
For Lost Vessel
A U.S. Coast Guard belicopter and
surface craft out of Oceanside Harbor to-
day are searching an area off San Onofre
for a 22-foot outboard boat reportedly in
trouble.
A search of the area 1 ~ miles
~uthwest of the atomic p0wer plant Sun-
day night turned up no 1ign ol the
distressed boaL
Coast Guard officialt 1aid the Harbor
Police at Oceanside monitored a
"mayday" call from a Citizens Band
radio at S:S3 p.m. but the call wa1 not.
from the dtslrtutd boat.
A Coast Guard helicopter was sent aloft
at S:SO p.m. and Oceanside wrface craft
searched the area until nearly midnight.
AuthortUes thls morning were trying to
locate the originator or the citizens band
report.
DAILY PILOT
OlftAHGE COAST PUlllSHIN() COMl"AHY
Rob.rt N. W•1d
Pra!01"1 •...S l'ubll,tlff
... J 1c.lr: R. Cvrl•y V'u Pr•IHrll a...s G-ral M1Moer
lllom•• K11ril
Editor
Tho11<111 A. Murphin•
M•,,_g1r4 !dltor
Rlch1rcl '· Ni ll ~ 0ra1199 CC>Utlty Ed'lter 0-c... Mitt: ,. Wftt tty .,......
~ ••di: 2'11 W"t llltioll ......,_,. 1.AoUl'I• e..oi: m ,_, ,,.,._
Munll119IOl'I lte<:I!: 11115 e1.-:11 '°"'""""' 111 Cilmwii.: IQ.I Herlfl 11 '-rflln. lltll
-,a -·
ContrlbuUons over $100 will be ailowed
to bear the donor 's name whlle other
amounta will be placed in the general
fund. Contributions may be specified for
.students answering particular fields of
study but they cannot be specified for a
particular achool.
Mn.. Hicks said the asaocilUon works
dlrectlJ wllh the ochool to determine who
will 1"Celve the acholanhlp1. Barbera
Cornwell is in charge of 1cholanblps ap-.
ptlcaUons at the hlgh 5ChooJ and hu en-
couraged students who are college bound
to app,ly for whatever scholarships 1he
belte~ th~y l!_ave ~ chance to get.
"The amount of the scholanhl!)s award~ by our a.ssociaUon will be
determined by need. but financial need
will not necessarily be a prerequisite for
obtainlng a scholarship." .said Mrs .
Hicks..
Working with Socllkoff in the organiza-
tion's appeal wU! be Mrs. Wilma Bloom,
Mrs. Dorothy Shank, Phil Ellsworth and
Ted Kopp.
The association also is attempting to
obtain acbolanhip money from industries
and by appealing directly to 1nd1viduals.
Cer ebral Attack
Caused Death
Of Mrs. Doran
f\lrs. Florence hf. Doran, 82, San
Clemente suffered a fatal cerebral
hemorrhaae at the wheel of her car last
\Vednesday afternoon before It collided
with anotMr auto, the County Coroner's
Office reported today.
Coroner's aides said an autop1y Thurs-
day confirmed .suspicions that the woman
did not die from Injuries suffered in the
crash in whlch her car, traveling the.
wrong way in northbound lanes of El
Camlno Rell1 became involved in a col-
islon.
Mr!. Doran, 140 Avenida Barcelona,
died before noon Thursday at South Coast
CommunJty HOSJ1ltal ln South Laguna.
She had been in crlUcal condition up to
the time of ber death. HO!pltal aides
ThW1iday morning tnadvertenUy had
given her condWon as crlUcal more than
an hour after she died.
Coroner's inve.stigatm said her hemor·
Thage "as brought about by "severe:
hardening of .. the f,rteries."
Funeral sen!= an pendlnf for Mrs.
Doran at Lesneski Mortuary In San
Clemente.
Talk Scheduled
By Mrs. Hanson
hlrs. C.role Hanson, wife of Vietnam
POW Marine Capt. Steve Hanson, wUI be
featured speaker at the Constructive Ac-
tion Couocll meeting of Laguna Hiiis
Man:h 11 at 7:30 p.m. in the Royal Sa,..
lngs and Loan Assoclsllon. El Toro.
Mn. Hanson of 21112 Blrdrodt or., El
Toto and three other POW wives reCently
completed a world tour ln an effort to
focus .,.,·orld attention on the plight of
American POW1 Ind brtna pressure on
J{1noi to confonn to the Geneva Con-
''ention calling for humane treatment of
prisoners.
COuncil prtsldent Earl M. Ree.1 said all
resldenil of the Laguna Hills 1rea are In·
vited to aucnd. For rurthu wrormauoa
c1il 83Ml23.
(
faciUt.lel for carryii\J Gd purlf ns
-~ <\ ..,. jJI l>Qiol 1$ the looailoft now a
jldlll'' -tli..W """ ~ other " eeparate treatment planta alona San Juan
Creek owned by Dana Poh1t Sanitary
District, Capistrano Beach Sanitary
District aDd San Juan Ca.pl5trano.
Pa rticipating agencies in the future
"OUld buy space in carrying lines, treat·
ment plant and outfall lines based on the
extent of participation by each.
A single huge sewer main might be
coostructed in the future:. This would
eliminate: far the participating agencies
many costs such u: separate rights-of-
way acquisition, separate legal fees and
separate engineering fw.
Blood ·Tests,
Prints Asked
For Suspects
,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministration proposed ieg\5lation Monday
to subject suspects in federal crimes to
fingerpringtlng and other detective tests
such as saliva and blood checks even
before being formally charged.
The Supreme Court has held that such
tdenttficat.ion procedures do not violate
the consittuti'onal guarantee against self-
jncrlmlnatlon but only In cases lllvolving
suspect& already charged.
The administratiO!J proposa] would ex·
tend such tests to persons suspected or
crime& in cases where there is no pro-
bable cause to arresL The tesU would be
administered on1y upon issuance ol a
court order.
If enacted by c:o-n,reu, a federal
judge, commlSlloner or magistrate could
order a suspect 1n a fedt:ral cr1ml.nal
case to 11ubmit to ldenUficaUon by
"flngerprlnto, palm prints, foot prints,
measurements, blood specimens, urine
specimens, saliva samples, haJr umples,
handwr:IUng exemplars, voice samples,
photographs and lineups."
Attorney General John N. Mitchell said
1n a letter ol transmittal to the House and
Senate: that the proposed law "will pro-
vide federal law enforcement officers
with a useful new tool for the in-
vestigation ol criminal activity and the
.apprehenaion of crJ.mlnals."
wngo Diplomat
Hostedhy Wayne;
Mining Deal Due?
Congo·s ambassador to the United
States was entertained in the Neviport
Beach homes of actor John Wayne and
· Eme!t Saftig over the weekend in a
business deal courtship that has poten-
tially millions o( dollars hanging on the
outcome.
\Vayne and Saftig are principals in the
Newport Beach-based Statesman Mining
Company which is aeektng mineral e1·
ploratlon rights to all of the Congo.
Congolese Ambassador Justin Bomboko
made the vlalt to gather facU for a
report to Congo Presklent Joseph
?ttobutu.
"l think he waa Impressed we gave: out
friendship and good feeling toward hlm.
Cerlalnly he was rt I axed with us," Saftig
said.
He remarked that •;frun everything
Bomboko indic ated, 1 think we will hear
from him very IOOrl."
Capo wuncil
Eyes Rezoning
A public hearing on the rezoning of II
acre! between The Cas11s development
and the San Diego Freeway will occupy
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen at
their meeting tonight.
The planning commission approved the
rezoning of the p.roperty from single
famil y residences to planned develop-
ment \Vhich would permit condominium
type housing.
Opponents of the 1one change:, prlmarl·
ly from Tbe Casas. contend il would
devaluate their property and create
nuisance traffic alon g Los Pajaros Street
which runs through their development.
Prelimlnary plans call for the extension
of lhe street lo make it the main artery
between the propo.'ied condominiums and
Camino Capistrano.
$165 Bankroll
Taken Off Table
Nt)rl payd11y James Clope of San
Clemente: wlll ask for big bills.
The dollar variety, he discovertd this
wteJcend, doun't work so well.
Clope, Of 208 El Levante. went to a
local donut shop late Friday for some
coffee and crullers, hla wagea in his
hand.
Tho money , ho told polloe, WU moslly
one-dollar bills with a smattering o( fl,·es
and a lone 20.
Bui the wad was just too thick to (ll in
hls wallet, he lamented. so he set the
bankroll and the walltt on a tlble while
he Wenl to a counltt to order.
WMn he rrturned the bankroll was
gone -oll 116l worUJ.
A IOpb iaUcolad -aa• pur1ilcatlon
plaat could catcll the water Gd pt1rlfy It
before relt• lo the .... "-'' ol ~ point out that auch an agency wOuld be far more able to prevent. pro-
Uferit!on ol poUuUon than each going it
alone.
They maintain, as well , that should the
political and social trend toward en·
virorunental protection restilt in future
higher standards of 5ewage purification,
SERRA would be In a better position to
perfonn than seven individual agencies.
SERRA ls designed as eomethlng ol a
limited partne.rshJp so that no
participating agencies world give away
local autonomy.
It would have no power of taxation or
power to. issue eener.al obllaaUon bonds
but would be empowered to make a,..
• ~ll<aUan /or and admlru-federal oana aOO grantl1 granta such as the type
President Nixon bu mentioned to fight
sewage pollutfon.
Each participating agency would elect
a member and an alternate to serve ·on
the board of SERRA. The financial
resources would ccme from the member
aeencies.
Members would participate in public
work projects to the extent of lhe benefit
derived and could withdraw from the
agency by giving 120 days notice.
SERRA grew out of a study committee
formed by county supervisors Jn 1968. It
Is CCH:hslred by Carl Kymla, manager o!
Moulton·Nla:uel County Water District,
and J.B. Latham, pruldent of caplalrano
Beacb Sanitary Dlalrlcl
A contract that would get SERRA off
the ground is now · making the rounds ot
the governing bodies of potential member
agencies. 1£ all agree SERRA is go.
Participating agencies would have dil·
fe rent degrees of need and it would
develop at different times. San Clemente
for instance is building its own large.
sewage treatment plant. SERRA , for it,
would be a provision for future growth.
Agencies forming SERRA initially
would supply only the furuj:s to keep the
fledgling entity operating. Jn San
Clemente·lt was estimated this mia:ht bt
11,000 yearly.
Cyclists' .. Party Raided.
Police Arrest 108 in Holy Jim Canyon R evelry
Orange County laxpayers provided the
hangover brunch for 108 partying
motorcycle gang mem~rs Sunday, after
lawmen raided an unholy revel in Holy
Jim Canyon, 2tl miles ea.st of El Toro.
J\1ost of the 73 men and 3~ women were
booked into Orange County Jail for in-
vestigation of disturbing the peace, and
immedlately po5ted bail on the misde-
meanor.
A haul of marijuana and other drugs.
plus an assortment of 22 illegal weapons
-including .shotguns, swOrds and a
medieval mace -plus allegedly stolen
vehicles led to 29 additional bookings.
•·Everybody was pretty well drunk,''
observed one sheriff's deputy who
participated in the massive raid after
dozens of complaints by campers and
cabin dwellers in the rustic, wooded can-
yon.
Special Meeting Scheduled
On Clemente Master Plan
san Clemente planning commiM.ioners
will meet 1n a special study sesaioo Tueg.
day afternoon to delve into a new, 31·
page report on I.he city's revised master
plan.
The report, submitted by hJred con-
sultants and planning aides, covers
general concepts of the future San
Clemente u a balanced community v.·ith
considerations for industry and com-
mercial uses, coupled with the traditional
residential flavor.
The 4 p.m. meeting will allow the com-
missioners time to discuss· revisions to
the supplement.al report. before they take
any official action.
City Associate Planner Gene Schulte
said the date of a public hearing on tbe
report still has not been decided.
''\Ve still need to consult with the city
attorney to see if a hearing is needed on
lht; report. Hearings. obviously, .are
necessary for a general plan or any
amendments to it, but supplemental
report.~ are something different," he said. 1 \Vhether a hearing is required or not,
commissioners \Vednesday night are ex-
pected to delay any action on the report
until they study it further .
\Vednesday's i:neeting will begin at 7:30
p.m.
First lawmen on i.he scene called in
reinforcements, including 17 &herilfa
deputies and California Highway Patrol
officers, plus three buses to transport the
suspects.
Sheriff's Lt. Ted Dwyer said tnree
groups of residents who live in the usual
sanctity of Holy Jim Canycm. 11ed in fear
for their li ves and safety.
Representatives gathered in a remote
comer of scenic O'Nt:ill Park for the
revelry included the Outla•.vs, the Gerlt:ii,
the Nuggets and the Hessians, in·
vestigators said.
Despite the low bail set for dis turbing
the peace and being drunk in public, a
large number of cyclists and hangers-on
found themselves stranded after release
by impounding of vehicles.
, A number of cars and motorcycles art:
being checked out as possibly itolen.
authorities said today .
P06session of pisklls, .shotguns, knivH
and other deadly weapons classed as il-
legal led to stiffer charges against 2J
persons. while anothe r seven face
charges for drugs and marijuana.
No ted Artis t Dies
NEWBURYPORT, Mass. (AP)
Waldo Peirce, whose paintings have been
displayed in many of the world'• major
galleries, died in a hospital here Sunday
after suffering a heart attack. He was 84.
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Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings,
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Tunic Turns eads j Performed
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t ' 63379 : j Skirt,Tunic
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The tunic is \vhere it 's at! \Vhether over a short
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This one is enhanced with grosgain ribbon -
simply set into buttonhole type openings on the top.
The pants, with elastic waistband , repeat the same
detail at the pl eat -or can be trim1ned with dec-
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Superb in 1nany fabrics and co!or co1nbinati ons.
63379 and 63399 are cut in Mi sses sizes 8-18. 63379 ;
Skirt and Tunic, size 12, requires approximately
2 3/4 yards of 45" fabric and 1 5/8 yards of ribbon
trim. 63399; Pants, size 12 requires approximately
2 314 yards of 4511 fabric.
These precut, preperforated Spadea Designer
Patterns produce a better fit or money refunded.
Order normal ready-t~wear size and allow one
week for delivery.
To order 63379, Skirt & Tunic; state size, in·
elude name, address and zip code. Send Sl.50 post-
paid for EACH pattern.
To order 63399, Pants: st-ate size. include name,
address and zi p code. Sen'd $1.25 postpaid for E.<\Cll
pattern.
Send orders for books and patterns to SPADEA
Box N, Dept. CX-1>, Milford, N.J. 08848. .
Just Published -Spadea's Skinny Book of Sew·
Ing ,Tips -Vol. A -$1 postpaid.
•
Paperbacks Collected
A paperback library is being
compiled in Fountai n Valley
High School ·with t h e
assistance of South Coast
J unior Woman·s Club.
A section of the regular
library, the paperbacks will be
available to all students and
for use in the remedial
reading classes. Ad visors hope
the smaller books will be more
enticing for poor readers.
Jtmior members have been
collecting books and now are
helping twice a month by ty p-
ing ficti on lists. pocket cards
and setting up !Hing system11.
Assisting arc the Mmes.
Robert Marten, e d u c a t i o n
chairman; Larry Long, Dick
Trodick, Jon McKibben, Larry
Moeller, Ed Borowiec and
Daniel Cahn. Ariyonc " in-
terested in donating suitable
paperback boo ks lo the library
may cal l Mrs. Marten.
Susan Kay Adams, daughter
o( Mrs. Londy M. Adams 0£
Newport Beach, became the
bride or Philip David Hunl
during nuptials per formed by
lhe·Rev. Charles Snyder in the
Church or the Nazarene.
Given in marriage by her
grandfather, George Graham,
the bride was attended by
Miss Becky Langdon, maid of
honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs.
David Ross and M i s s
Elizabeth Dutz.J. Serving as
flower girl was Liza White.
The bridegroom, son of Mr .
and Mrs. Rosi A. Hunt of
Costa Mesa, asked his brother,
Laure n Hunl to be his best
man. Clair and Ted Hunt ,
other brothers of t h e
bridegroom, were ushers.
The bride Is a gtaduate ()f
Estancia liigh School and
received her vocational nurses
traini ng at Orange Coast
College. Her husband is a
graduate of Costa Mesa High
School. They will reside in
Tustin.
Abortion
Film Seen
A film on aborti on will be
shown during the meeting of
St. Bonaventure's Women's
Council, Huntington Beach. at
7 p'.m. tomorrow. in the
J\1eadowview School.
The film , entitled "A Right
to Life," is narrated by Loret-
\<1 Yotmg.
Precrding the program will
be a Bonnie Burfet potluck
supper lo 'W'hich each member
brings a fa vorite dish for six
and the recipe.
Committee repor ts will be
heard and a discussion of
future activities, including a
St. Patrick's-Day dance in
Meadow lark Country C 1 u b
Saturday, March 14, and a
fashion show Saturday. April
IB, Jn the Airporter Inn, will
take place.
A craft show ls being plan·
ned for the April meeting.
B'nai B'rith
Orange Coast Chapter of
B'na i B'rith Women gather the
fi rst Thursdays at 8 p.m. in
Mercury Savings Bank, Hun-
tington Beach.
HAL AlllSCHIR
HEARING AIDS
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For Appol11tl!Mtlt
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SPECIALS FOR MARCH
Now thru March 31st. 1970
VITAMIN "E"~
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100 l.U.-100 (alt"lule$
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20!1 l.U. -IOll Ca1:ts11lei.
'~-..,. 3 59 SPECIAL •
FAMOUS HAIN
SAFFLOWER OIL
I quart rel). 19¢
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For !Mt 11ne1.1 In &00-1"9 ol!. 1-!igh
In 11..,111urlled !11!y 1tld>.
TORUMEL YEAST re9. 1.29 lb.
NATURAL
IRANDS
SEA SALT
From tun tV8DOr1tl'd
ltl Wi!ltr
'elll· 22¢
SPICIAL 1711
A line source Of
uns1tur1t<'d oH l ll!'Oleln
·~· 79~
SPECIAL 65¢
ONE POUND
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FISH LIVER OIL
•elll· 1.00
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Special 98¢
UCITHIN
CAPSULES
l1rg1 lt gr1!n
200 '"''""'' •ii• ,... ,,,,
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14 ounce -Hermeticolly sealed con
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TUSTIN
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to serve you
COSTA MESA
270 E. 17th ST.
In Hillgren Squ"• S48·9537
Mouday, Marc h 9, 1970 OAILY PILOT Jlf
Lectur: r T l,Jrns
'Y I on ou
Major Pans l=====~===
Foe s
Mrs. Lauf I Kimball will
focus the Spotlight on You
during a meeting o!'the Foun-
tain Valley \Vom an's Clilb at 8
tonight, in th e community
center,
Mrs. Kimball is a lecturer
and consultant for J o h n
Robert Powers, To.,-Q and
Country, Orange. She tlaS be_en
a photographer's fas h 10 n
model and appear((t l n
television and little theater
dramas.
She will discuss makeup,
posture and the "70" look for
spring, and she also vdll
present a skit which is a
parody on the HousewUe Look.
Mrs. Kimball will be in·
troduced by J\irs. Clarence
Stewmon, program chairman.
Activities Expand
The nomlnatlnJ committee
will present candidates for of-
fice and nominaUons will be
accepted from th e fioor. Of-
ficers will be elected 't next
month's general meeting,
Mrs. James McCalla, presi-
dent of Orange Di st rict ,
California Federation o f
Women's Clubs, will be ·an
honored guest and serving as
hostesses will be the Mmes.
Chester Venning, chairman;
Arthur Brown, J im Grundy ,
OrvieHigum . Rob ert
Longman, and Norm a n
Nieberllen.
New members pinned during
last mon th's tea include the
Mmes. Jack Taney. Robert
O'Leary, \Vayne Glisson , Gene
Sigl Chris Schnelder a n d
Robert Hime.
Drug Usage
Retired Marine Corps Major
James Dunphy will speak
against drug use to members
of Xi X.I Tau Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phl.
The meeUng will begin at 8
p.m. tomorrow in Doheny Park
Village Clubhouse, D a n a
Point.
Dunphy's son took his life
last year while under U:ie in-
fluence of drugs, and as a
f(JSU\t Dunphy has studied the
problem extensively. He has
spoken before club~, schoo ls
and O'll television.
The talk will be aitned at the
consequences of drug use. and
how to detect symptoms of
U1ose on drugs.
Refreshments will be served
following the program.
Bureau
Gallery Group
Shakes Hands
Head Seated A Gell ing lo Kno\v You cof-
fee will introduce members of
Beverly \Vebb, secretary. and the Arfiliates of the Laguna
~1rs. Bud Scbargilz, treasurer •. Beach Art AssociatiQn on
As incoming president on
!he board or directors of \he
Voluntetr Bureau of West
Orange Co unt y, J\.lrs.
Frederick Ringer will be seek-
ing ways to expand bureau ac-
tivities .
Hosting the luncheon will be Thursday, March 12.
Mrs. Howard Jones, director The JO a.m. meeting v.•ill
of the bureau. be in the home of Mrs. Hovey
At present the b u r e a u Cox, president.
Installed \Vith Mrs. Ringer
following a buffet luncheon
tomorrow, will be l\.1arvin
Reno, vice' president; Miss
recuits, screens and places Programs for the balance of
volunteers in nonprofit agen-the year will be announced
cies in Garden Grove, and a special discussion on a
Westminster, Fountain Valley. June 6 art studio tour is plan-
1'.lidway City and Seal Beach ned.
Xi Mu Mu
Sends Bids
witll extensions in Anaheim Those who cannot attend
and Huntington Beach. It also ·. may call Mrs. William H.
establishes necessary n e w Brugge re, 499·1538.
vetlunteer progra1ns. 1-r;jjji;;;:::;ii~;;:::;~;;;;;;:;iM I Men. \vo1nen and teenagers I
can learn about community
needs and how they can help
by contacting the Garden
Grove bureau, 53t>·2310.
Prospective members will Mrs. Ringer, who has served
be invited to attend a model on the board as chairman of
meeting of Xi Mu ?-.<tu Chapter, the college program, also has
Beta Sigma Phi , tonight. been a past unit president and
I
EYER
DON'T
GIVE
UP
11 yout ~nl111n'i1 prolttl leo~·1 mort
11~" " •1111 rh"" • P""'' 1ult dori't dei.palr -Bring It In to 111 -
we'll Mlfl \'OU OUI DI lht-mtu.
Mrs. Gibb Lynch will host past council president of P'I'A
the event in her Huntington in the Garden Grove Unified
Beach home and assisling will School District. She i s
be Mrs. George Burgess, chairman of the citizen's CQm·
president. who will show films mittee on a family life pro·
or her vacation tour of Europe gram for Gard en Grove and a THE
and N"th Afdca last sum-member of the League or K N I T W I T
mer. Women Voters.
During the business meeting.----------'
a vote will be taken lo select I Gi rl-of-the-year and the Weary, Dearie7
nominating committee wlU Read Bill Leary
report on new officers. · • A Ill .... ...... .,. =-N
South Coast Plata
LOWER MALL
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COSTA MESA f'll, MS-'912
/ ~ Why not pamper yourself with
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Pu Va lue $.10 Per Share
Price $4.00 Per Share
r.,,w,. .. 1 1h .. n//rrin r. .-iff11l1tr .,..,, be
olH•inff /rom lhr andrr&i1tneJ OJ 1f!ittf-
.J il1ttdf'r1 onlr bt 1101r1 l<'Mre tht.M
•«•rltlrt mo1 le f•lly be n//erff.
Gus t, ~ferhah & Co., Inc.
Santa Ana, Calif. 171 4) 835-4343
Fastest in W est
Buy It. Sell iL Try tht fa1tt'l respon1e lri the We1t against your
own clock, Te~t Olme-a-llnt Adi, Mitre the action ls, in Saturday's
DAILY PILOT.
A new Maverick described
by Ford Division £eneral
manager Jotin Naughton as a
"thrifty swifty" is no\Y on sale
at local Font dealers. Joining
the nev.•esl ~1averick, called
the Grabber. is a i;lmilar
t.1ustang pov.·ered by f'ord's
smallest v.a.
''\Ve are ottering these
Grabber offsprings or the '70
Maverick and Mustang for the
buyers who prefer a lot of
show but not so much go in
th eir sport cars," Naughton
said. Advertising s Io g an s
describe the attributes of the
Maveric k Grabber as going
"tero to sixty in under three
cents" and "for $1,995 It 's a
little gas ... For a little more.
it's a crabber."
Distinctive features or the
Grabber are dual racing mir-
rors, bodyside tape stripes,
bl ack painted hood and cowl.
deck lid spoiler. woodgrain
trimmed steering 'vheel. six-
cylinder engine and five lively
exterior colors -Grabber
blue, Grabber orange, Grab-
ber green, vermilion and
bright yellow.
The
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT
offers you this great 120-page book
to help you save time and money
on your Income Tax-
Grabber ~fustang Is ~
SportsRoof model wllh added
features highlighted by Boss
1\tu11tang "'C" tape stripes,
dual racing mirrors, blark·
painted lower back panel, hub
cap and trim rings. F70 while
sidewall t I res, Maverick's
Grabber's five lively colors
and Ford's 302 2V eight..-
cyllnder engine.
Most options available with
the 302-powered M u 1 t a n g
SportsRoof arc available with
flfustang Grabber.
Other dress-up fealures with
1\1averick Grabber inc I u de
bright · drip moldings, bright
window frames: deluxe fuel
c~p: \\'heel trim rings : color
keyed carpets; all vinyl black
interior seat trim ; black-
painled !01ver back panel and
bluck painted grille.
Options available 'v i I h
1\taverick Grabber in c 1 u d l'
f'ord's largest six cylinder
engine -the econornical 250-
cubic-inch version, automatic
transmission. optional axle
ratios, power st.ee:ring, vinyl
roof. convenience group, air
l'Ondlt.ioning, tinted glass and
Af\.1 radio.
• * * LOCAL NEWS !\.1AN NAMED
FOR CHRYSLE R ,
PLYMOt!l'H
Richard S. Bragaw has been
named v.·estcrn news bureau
manager for Ch r y s I er
Plymouth Division. Bragaw.
ba:se.d in Los Angeles, joined
Chrysler Corp. in the prl'ss in-
formation services depart-
menl in 1967. I-le also has
served as L'OOrdinator of
management publications. wa!'
CT>mpetitive events specialist
in Detroit and most recently
was news bureau manager in
New York City. Before joining
Chrysler, Bragaw-\Yas a
reporter with lhe Detroit 1'¥ree
n5J1Tt '-' il to ~lt 1, -'h 6'.-1 MUlo Ii 'JS/ 4 l.I 1 '• -'o • Tl'I/ 1, 1 .., d -~i Miil• 1111.ll I ' 401 + (•
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graduated from Dartmouth ~~"'~r111,.1M,; ~{ \~l'.I \ " 'I"'=\; 1:~~11tt11 1:i 1, , :~ ..e~t •1~: +~ 11 f!!~J;~ '' 1 ~ iti~ 1li'1 :.f •
College and received hls #.dolrKt 1 . .Ni 50 44 'j1• "•.~ -14 l'v~ 111 1·11 JJ ll\lo 3•\• im -v. 'f!Sf1E'I" fi 1~ ~ ~ 1~~ ~ :': Admlr•~ " I) I 'It 1 Vi -"' •V P •Ill ,1 'I ~ ffi l ~J' // ~ J , "U "J + " m .. l••'s degr,. lrom lhe ,t.e1n1L11 i..i~ •~ ,,1, ""ii 'i, -"' ... ,, ,.. j '"' ••::·\I, • ,.• .•• ' '' ' ' u. At!Mlll !>I' I )t>• :lt1t 3f\i -h j HP · '"!' ,0 n.. )'\ t "~ d t ) -t
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Arn Alr!I" ".IO Ill ll'o 2' /''h =1v.i ~r:d1~'" ,,., If IJ ~: i' t \! r1nrw l.:IO •· ,t.m I•••• 11 1''• ll'o l'• -'I "" 01(', 65 rHlO 6l t3 ll l 1v. ••nl of !·~ A8r6ndJ 2.10 &II lJ<t :ti'~ J)'• +' on ood 1·1o Jal l9>0 1'\l 1• _\Ii r1vOr, . Amld~11 l .10 Jl ;u1i ll'• 31'• -4li Of!Fd o!•"so I " ti " +.l t/t t A~ 1! " ~>lo Y!c ·~ '• Am Cl" 710 it )J~ ll'• ;µ,. onF •t!o"i 1 1 11•; 11'~ ,,.__v, 'i~"'p' Ii 4 o 1 ~ P..l -'1
AC111 DI I IJ •6 26 2\;.. u•~ -•• on Lu1.in1 " '" •~•, f\~ -'' ~10\ I' nl cMjl • ~p1 "'f,,,= :: Am Cam .60 ll ll't I Uh . . onN•IG I 1' " 17'o 11-t ll1o -Vo tW Ir. ~ A Chtln 1.60 6 211oo l''' n 11 -·~ Q<OJ Powr. 1 JI .16'• lllo e'• -\'t wlJ n;ll fl • J' !fllo -•' !2;.C$~1 1::: 1~~ r;,, 2!~; Ji,;!,.. ::P::l!.f: :~ 64, ~.1 ,_,,:..:,,.. •W•~Mn ·.10 ;of~ Jl'• W:,.:.::
Amlvan 1.1$ 1ll ?6\~ lJ/ ll'• -n 1)1\r,t.lrl o.s •1 tti.1 13 ""· -'" ~::~r.:i1 1 ·:: l H'" ~r·• ,._ '· ,t.DIJIT•I IC,. •1 JO'o lO J4''o + '4 Q<OI Cl~ f.XI 1116 11 1'o Jl'i 11 '1 -i;, rtV~IJ:r.· I h ·~ ~.(~ .\t :: ',: ADualVt l?g 9 9h t ''; ~'" _ '-" on! C.1111 . e70 ~I 11'• IO't 10'• -\:. ro!ltr ll j llJ 2t>.; 1 ~i -+-'• "Dual Pl.l•t !) ll', lJ"I 11" on! Col \11 •)'°' ~1 \lo •jYr -V. rtimmn· I I H \ ~ 71 AmEIPw 16• ltl JO/ )111, JO'• ICDo!,t.l.)O 17 •S'o 44 '< 1'4+\l !ILfH'4 !Ii J2 4f>.1i ID''> 40 ,:.._,~ ,t.m Erkt 11 ?t JI JOl, JO·o -I\ t Co olB1.50 l •4 4lh •• ·· · llMQrl f I ~ 7, J o ... ,~ ,t.m E•D Ind II U''o "'• 11·. -\~ ""' MIO~ • •l1'4i 1·~ j':" -~· 1111 011 i. "i ' ~·· u·, -" .O.E•lnd pl,l.6 ll?O 64 61"~ 6.J'\ IHI! O!I 1.SD l?I 1J\O ' '·~ -to ull ll~o e I ,0 \o 1&1, ~,, .o.G11nln! so lDl ?O>" ?0<11 '?' · , onlOll o! l l "'" U1'> J5.,., + ~ 111111e1 I I u -'•
A(;nln ~i.!O 11 JP ; 30'1 XPi. = ~~ c,""1 Tito.71 "'t~ 1J11 'J~• 'U~i "+> '"/1 i: ,,! i' ''• Ill~ 12'1•• _+',•, ,t.rnMol1.t 10 1! 1•'' "' ·14~ onlrOI 11111 1-1 6 6 ·• ••·o ult 11 1 " •" , • • · CnD11 111'.}(I 1ao W~ SI S&~l +214 o!!Wln 400 '' 44 1 '"' • ome )0 198 '6' • •J'~ ~11• -'I Cook U"ll ,50 U 11':. •1 d -·~ ullw Dll 17 :n If'~ .u 411~ j: •: Am Hoso '' 110 tl•• ,p, ,,., ... '' Ceootrln 1 o111 ' :J2 jl'1 n u!IW ffil! I) !"i v• 'ti • ..,.,,1,.v•l t.10 n JI\, IS'• t~·,-~,C-r r11"1 x10 11'1& 1-.. 111:0 -"f ,1-· -~ ' •-' .o mMFdw ..i J4 ?0'• ~, ~' -'• CCM1t!11nd 1.10 J JJ JI J7 . "'" "" :IO ~~ 12'1 1 lo -'• AM•tCi. 1 olCI 137 J11o J.6'• 17 -1 Co11oll.51e .~D ~ ,. 11'• ,,,. -\o -H-J-... * • ,t.M,1c1~ pf ' 5 tl•, tl t• . Eoow1s11 1 10 J !I 11<• 1 10 -l, H1ck~t1 110 J r, ll'i? ~! ::-::
CORTINA DEALERS EARN ::;:NZ';~:~·! ~ ,;~ ,r: 11:: = ~, cr.~~B2.N: ~: 1JJ 2~~:: ,~:~ =s~ ~!\11bo~I \~t\ U) ., •5. '''· -l
TRIPS ABROAD A.m i>holo.1 ·~ lGtO 10'> ]~o -•. ,oron•!ln .11 •l 11•1-21'1 11'\ -I H1mWt1 .IOI •'l l'", W,•, il'•'o -!,I Allt.10~ . t llf 11 l"'o t1 O + 11 oWlt!. Com I t>'o 911 t•O + ~' H1mm Pio I 6' 26 -A.,, Seil 1 11 '' 11'' 7l +l o• Bdc1.1 JI 7l•1 7J'o JJ"• -l1H1mmnc1 .10 J l1l'o 11''> ;ri --','• Thrl'c Orange Coasl Ford Am ~MD .Mt ?I 1r' t1-... 1\·:.-•. PCJnu 1.1fl "3••1 ll'• l4'\-~H•ncllmn ·'° ' o.; "'' . ,t. Smc" 1 to 119 34..,, ll't ,..,, t l~ ••rot 1.60D • )ft, ll'o :111·, -•• HU'ICI H~r .n l ~ ii -... dealers all eamed trips lo •mSo•rr .io 11 111.+ .i.1, H\• \lt rt<Jlllt Fin 1 ' 1t 11 11 + 1~ ~111t1 c~ .Jo 1~ u lP,• ll'•
London as the result of their ~:::511~ ~"·10 91 fl ~'\ S01~+·;o,.; ;:i1"~r .... ·•~ 1i Mr: M:~ H:-~ ~ ~ H:~~~I \·JO 50 ;i:4 ;f'~ 11":~ ~ ·1~
· · · Am~td 014.lj " ii 'l" '1 ~114 •ow ol l.Olf '° '''' '''o 76'~ -1;, H1rr l1 nt 1 l• u t; u •t. •• _ ·~ w1nn1ng a national sales con-Amsted! • l '• ; " l"' + ~. rown cork let 16'• 1Jt• 15\1 -'' H1r i.co co 1 11 1l•t 71"• 1!'' ..
Th b. f d · A Sll<I•• 1 . .0 If i '\ l '" J'O -t; rwnZ•11 T.60 ?t l3''• 31U. 33'·~ + "'H1tlSMr• .to It 11-. H~' 16•:. -1'\ test. eo. Ro tn~ or In All'\Soo ol ·" 1 .... ''• , ..... -'•I'S Corp .<IC! ' ,.., '"• 1••· Htr v .. 1 1.to 1J 10\'J :iov. tot;, -·~
C 'I o· k \V'J f' d Am T&T 1.'6 10 !,~., n•, ~;I{ -11 uC11h1 .611 l1 11~, U\1 ll'i -~t H11 Corp . .o ' I'~ t l''o +•~ osta 1• esa, IC' 1 son or AmWW~1 .~ , 1c1, 10•, 1o·~ + 1, .,.,.,¥ on u 1 11 11 u + ., H1wn 1:1 1.:12 3 w~ xivt l9'i _ '•
in Huntington Beach and ~~'1',t'r \:~ ilil8 ~,. ~~; ~i; :--.:1' c~~~I~ :ig., lt u;: ll:: ~;! = !? ~:~~1~!1b I ,: a:: :~;,? lfi: .
S•on ·cL f'ord \VesLm·1nster all Am In' ' 16•, 16'• 14'_,. {un~Druv •t n 11•:. 1a\, 1aVt HKllMna 1~ 101 11•~ l D 31l\ +1 " • ~ · : Ameron .60 l 7!•~ 1111, jl •! ...:.40 11•!1nW•t. I 19 If~• 16''1 1''• -11 Hel~• HJ ;,, Jf ll•o 35~• 341; + ~• attained their sales ob jCCllves ~mrte-ir. 6111 n 16'• U') ~,., -• utt wr A ' ? 11•1r 11•1 21•, He1ene C11r1 '° 15"o 13•; IJ\'I + '' mtc .IO ?6 •1'• '6~• ~,,, + ~luller H !.70 II 2i l''t 21'• -1'1 H•I! Col! Ill 31 11 1t·1o '1 +1•, in Ford Cortina sales and are ~~ f,,';; :~ .11 ;wl ... • ;w.· ~;;: = :\ (~~~~~ 'l~o l/J :::• n~ 1i .... -__,n1 Htlltr Int · . .a x:Jlt '"" 12 ?21'1 -t~
L, · lb ood J f b d •mot• Coro 111 •!o u 10 1'11J + '• · 1 • "• Hrlltr DU.OJ 1 fl t• •• -JI,. 1v1ng: e g 1 e a roa . Arn.ii.ci 2.• 11 31 311,, 37 +\lo -0-. M•lme Pds 1 n 1G1• 11i, 10 _ '•
Th 3 I 'L S lb A"'lrl D 10 H>o lllo lJlio -'• D~ Jt l 75 11 11110 11 II . Me!mrhP .10 ll 11'\ II "" -lo\ ey are 0 OU ern ,t.ntc~nd 1.90 no ?I'• 11'• H'o .. Dt~I C~ ·11i "31 ? '0 l ~·' + ~·' Html11>1'1 C•o Joi J .. S\i !\\ -\'
C I.I · f~ ,, ,, I •h •nch Hoc~ 1 xl6 ""• ._,,, 101, -•1 Otri1 d Jilb ,d 4~~ ~~;,~ ~~· 'l'lemll~ .lOo! • l•o 711 7141 + V. a 1 om1a oru uca ers v. o •nconrNsv 1 16 11•1 11·~ 11,·., _ ,,, D~,1 ,~d p11 ID }l~I j l''• ;3o; = ~ Htrc 1<1<. .2~ " n 11•.;. 11 +·Ii have. won the seven day "lion--And C••v 1.10 l :ie Jn. 31~• -•• D111 Proc111 IOI :u 3~, 1.,,, _" H1r1hFd 1.10 ¥,•, ~~"• ',',','• ,',"•'• _ ... ,,. ADICh~p .1s 17 ll l• n 11 -'io 01,coCp I u I 1)1~ n H I + ' Heubltln .IC ~ -don Fun" 1·unket !::o0,11 i.J11 1• w.. lJ n vco 014.'1 011 H''~ Jj r6•t-I.! HewP1ct1 711 '" •• 'JO'i• ~• -311 ' ~ orp t2 7Uo ''"" 1'1.'t . . ¥lnH11d !O 3 311 3 t<, J?\ NIGh VolltGt 11 11V. ll!4 1Jh -.. APL ol Cll)li I 1••· ltl, lf•o-:1.o vtnPLJ:~ ,1111~ 2••• n'·····H1f1onHolel I )llf "Vil •1 " of.'o •<iu• Ch"" '1 601. """ 591, -~ Pl olA .IJ s2•i SlU S2~• +1~ H.,O,rl 1.10 ,•, flli ~.'.'. •,•,•,•.,:;: .... AllA s., ·'' • lll& I0•\1 in114 -"' l'l o~J 1$ J.70 .so 50 .so -1\., Ho.rnW1I .to •• ., ...-1\r(lft)j .OJt 11 3''\ 39 )ti\ ..... PL or Y.41 ilj ti 97 tT Hoff Eltclrn t tt' '\~ fl/o -19 ArctltN pl' ] 51'l '1 52\IJ .. !" o 1 • .r1'' '\'• n•4 +·~ Holld!;?n11 10 *° 41\IJ '2 n•~ + \~ Ard\Dan l.bO :io SI• !ll'o Jl'i -11 mer l U u !tt; lf , 1'1 ''· H 1' ,·-' '''' 00'1 ,,,. •• ArlrPSvc 1.ot 21 7!•t 11>1 71'~ I Mn!t 1"10 Joi il ll'' n' -"" D 1 ·•~ ' ' ' ., -'-,t.rl1n1. 0S .70 11 lJ" lJ" u 11, :::· 1t•Alr .4<1 l4I "'"'" ,: 1 .:;_ ;· HcmrJI t .'D 50 lf\'J 11~ HV. .. ArmcoSt 1.60 lOD 11 1''tt 1'1~o _ 1; fee /111 Jt ··~ t~O t>{ _ \: H~wl 1.)0 1l6 Ut U<_., lM'' -1'\ A•rnto "12.10 '1 ?lilt H 1U~ + ,, t lec nt In 1 9\t fl'> t \1 H"°" Bl 1.2'0I 11 1• 13'~ 13" -1:. Ar,.,our 1.6C! 6 u •, ••'~ """' + 'll "nMI' .60 11 70•~ 110,, ?0"> :i;j'~ Holl Intl .Joi 1<'11 •1'' et·h •O~i -'' •rmr pl 1.IJ I 61 61 61 .i ,1 nnVllJI cw is 11'l 1" 11•, _ 10 Hol•I Cp ,t.m lt I'~ •'t t•; -'\ llrm5•Ck .IO 191 30'• ll\11 ln'o _ '• nholv J.;/i;. 11 )f'• .?t Jt, t ''> Hottl Df 1.?J 1 1•'< 16'~ 1''t + \\ ArmCk Df3.1! 110 5S j J 51 ..r.1•, "h;lv W1¥ J it\, 16'• ,.,, '• Houd Ind.!'> 36 1•'' 1•"• ll''o +I~ Arml<lub 1.1./J 6 •1 ..,,, ...,,~ _ l~ nl!Gr 110 I 1) 11 o HOV" Miff .l6 ' ;p, 11'1r jl>i Aro CorD '° 1 1''1 19 "'' + ·~ re<o o(& l J.I 31•, 17' • .:.:. ,, H0it~hF I 10 6l '411 U 1411 +1• ,t.rvln Ind I 1t *• ,.,,, :io·, SttlOll\! .t!l " 'l'' 14'1 7•'• -It Hou1F Dfl..ol(I 3 111 lJI 111 A$1\h!Oll 1.7() j; 7••• h 'o l•t, ~ 10 !Edb lj¥1 '' 7 1, !l"' ,, .. _ 1, Hou1F I'll.~ 1 O>\ If''. 41~o Alh01I pf1 •o I .... ""''• •!'· -1'• 'Ed of ·"° 10 I" I ., ·1·· + •• Heu1tL• 1 Y.I ?I 4]\, .,,, IP• -"" Aull' 8rew 10 IJ" IJ•1 ll•o -lo t* Slttl JS ! '• I '• I " -'. HOUllH(;1 .Ml U U JI,,_ 511~ -.... •1so DU I 70 •• '"· in. •7 + '• ,~, .t• xUl 11'• 1·~· , to .. '• HeuG1 Pfl.SO • ••"• •• 4 V. ... '" A•od5n.;i 1.?0 ! J! l l Jl -'• ti lntn .50 1• ll'' j ll'•+''oHow J!tl'tn 10 "!I'• 111 , 11 +'o ,1.ndlttn .)0 16 ''• I'• I'"• , tmln!I l.IO H 47~• • •l''o -~. HowmP! 10 J• 'l''> 1r1 1 1·, _ '• ,l.tlCIVE! l.l• 11 15'1 '"' ?S•a :. ·! 1'!~·~1··,•D 11~ 17't 11 11'• ... H11d1"8 i •ot 1 15 ........ -,., AtCl!vE! pl . !100 JI JI SI ... Ii 1• ,,, ' ,,,, ?Hi ,,,, -I\ Huon Mtl . IO 6 u•i IS'" "'" -....
.. tt lllchfld 1 n1 6l11o H 66i. 1 ,~ • 0• o .>e n U '1 \' lit. -'• ICl•Ml'w 11o11 1t n 32~ ~ _ '• ,l.lllldl PIJ.1S zl20 S• JI J4 ~ 'l /'~""°" .41 If 11'• l '~ 11•0. -•t IC1e11 B11tc' t )6 17~ 11'"" l'"--l·o ,t.U Jt lch Pl l 1 111 11 111 J• I[/ .. •Ill 11 11~a 1fl'• IOI• -'• 111 Cont t u 11 )0 :rt•• "~' +. '"" AHJtd1 111'2.IO " .. -la\~ .;fir;+·~ "'~'° ·= 1 lt 11•• ,, ... 1• l!I (pn oliJoO 4(1 Jl'• " Sl -•• •1111Chtm l 1611.J.iil 21'1 1· 11""c '".56b ~,13'•J1''t 1l +'•111 Pow1r fl 1'1:ll•o 14"JS•'o ,. !i~'I Coro 1111 '" J'o J'1 = ,,t nt~I O(i~b I! a·• j}I< al• .. •• 11 Pw pD..?I 170 19'% '9!> 'J't'~ -"lo A ncp.1111• J1 "'~ 1141 lt~ -''I 11~v .Xlb llf Ull>i !U ll7 .:'.(\~Imo Cio Am U6 11'o n v, U'~ ...
• ~~! :: 6 lJI> IJ lJ -\"1 11tS01~ 11 .t tl •''• ... ,, l,.A Co 1.«t 7" l!I~ 34'~ 3'11 -~ n 4 11 IOll lO'to -1~ Mr1l"4 ti\ !J ltn It 1''4 :.: s,; lnt;orrot C•l'lf 31 II 1_,.. 1'4t -'• :vc.a cri, .,!.;20 i"' 2•1, 111. n•• _ • ., Jy•Mm • "a '"' ff ,1,0+ •• ine c11rn ,oe • 10 10 io _ '" vc.a • .... so J!\.1 !O "'°"• _,,, ·Ptootr • Jl\li 51, ,, 11>111111 Hd .44 1172 H"' l'MO Jt?i -•• ,l.y ..... Pd .?O 17 lll'> "'' nh -1'111 tMln :10-. $1 501 ~ =1•' Jno NII 111.50 ., '° IO -•o !VfH>t !..~·"° 111 II 10•• 10"• . Fncl ·"" 10 IOTo 10·., ll'' -... , ll'IC!o!•PL '-!O J.) J ,,.., in~ -\. von rruu 1 113 lW 16JV, 1'4>1 -lit n11tll~y . .U · '' 7111 22•1 1 tV. lllCI "L 111'.'U l '1'4 9! I -1 •zte< OJI Gs 5' 111'\ u~ 14\4 ... ~le c~ .n j l!\.'I 1s•o J \'. ..• l11E1~11 .J1t J 7\0. 1>\ ''' -•t -8-"Olvtr ! 1''i lj'• lJ!o -1 lnve,r •l'IC! l ••"> •,•,, ~., ,",'•L -P/tl ''Co .10 fl• •:W. 1); .,\, 111 1"9 d •n.3J Jl ~ ..., 1 BabtJc W 1.36 10 n •; xv, nio _ ·~ c~m l .60 -.c 1J n 11•o-= ,1 lnl1nd 511 1 1°' tl:U ll4t 11•\ _ ·~ 81-rOHT .i.J 10 11 .. 1'2'l 111i _ t\ 1••VOC:o l.olCI l 31 l'" l '• _ •, lnmontCp .1' 11 14>1 14'0 U\t -•• 811t GE l.ll all n•; Jl >o 311~ _ ·~ reulnd l.•O I•~ " I'• I"• -•• trtrnonr oll.50 l lO'I Jt''• 59 Jt -1'• lltt111Pun1 .Ml 1' n,0 '"' n•o + \• rrtl.f" "12.70 I J.I\~ J('\ 3.,, lrt.o\lc:o .10ft ll 10c~ 10·~ :HI'~ + ... ll1ngP P'1 1 U 16 U l " rtHr l>IB1 I 31 )0>1 ll .;. •1 ln1lc IPl,t.1.2$ l V•o 21'; 11 .. + 10 B•,,..,~IC~I) 1 (111.0\.i •I•\ i. re'(fysCplb • '5 l•~o 1u1-1•,llllPlr(01>lt XI i.J'l '''·' '''t -•\ Btnk of NY I 2,t ~3\• 11 51,, _ ,, guk•Pw 1.10 U6 1&'\i 1n • -nu +'t lnttrco 1.10 11 11'1 11•.• '''' + '• ht'lk Tr 1,9' 16 'l't 6'\~ 66'> -l>t UktP 1)16.JS i )Oii 100 100 _ \4 tn•trlk$1 .IO "' 11\'I 1' tt•1 of. >1 BtrC>CJll 1.01! 5 , •• ~ "'• ...,,.. ' OunB•d 1.10.. 5S SJI• JJ\lo "'' IBM •.ID IJO m Jlj'lo Jl•>lo ::!" B1rd (II .7! J '1•o ll'o 01,, = ,; Oulllt" CD US Jl ''o 7"'> )0 .:.:,,, lnlFl1F r ,!Ob 3S 61 6 'i 6)1, -ll11ic Inc .IO 11 l4i.. II'~ !4>o dl/Pllf\1 J.1!<t 17J tl>.t 96\t O la -l'o :n:uH.•.'",',·" 101 7'1~ 17•k H t .. 'Btl'' Mlg S I\• l'o I'~· 011Ponl l>l•.!O ll W 41•t U +H~ n..., .Jt 11 1' lJ't 1• •• Biie• Mt ot I lJ l:Mo U•o ll''< + .11 duPont Dll.J4 1 J111 jJV, 3lll _ ~ l~l 1::fu•,'11fl 111 ~·1 u~, 1ri·1 -~~
, ::1~1~":i1.50 SJ 21 'i 70·13 :IOI~ -h guQll l.6' .r ll'o 1•ll ?4~; ··In! Ml..:,• 1l Jl:': rh~ ~1\.'I =I~· ' B hlb I l 50 JO 50 -'• OQ ~j!r.r>!J.Ol lolO 1' 1' " +1 l~I M~, lOt JU 16>o lJ•o lJ~o _ •• • ,•u1' . 0 ' 56'<. S!"• SJ•-, -\') o"q ' J110 2'lt 1lP1 11\1. ..... Int Nltk ·1 7() Hl 4>'1 ,,,,. ,,,, -••. "' llllrlab .10 x25' 31 1'1• lOU _ '\ Ymolnd .•If JI 1'1't 1'Vo H''I -\l 1111 Peo 1 ••
HEADS BUREAU
Richard S. Bragew
a~,ukCIQ 50 ll 10 10 10 _ ~-Cvn.t Am .«t ~lO 1•·, '"' I'< ..... Jnll Jtee11f'" 11' 3''~ 351• 35'\ -" GRABBER SAYS PERFORMANCE AND ECONOMY 1•••i""s 1 1J ~!:. ~·1 •9•:. . -E·F-1"' s11t 1.40 1; !r~ ~:t ll\ +:~ ~~Fd• '·· ll ......... 31Co .:...~ E I " h .. In! T&.T IOS 73t JJ•• W.1 ~Vt -II• Ford Calls Newest Mavtrick Modtl "Thrifty Swift)'' e!ci'C;~~ ".'ii 1.: ;r• ;:~ ;fi0 -·2 E:fc~ lo '90 : ~·~ ~\, Jr•+:? tl'k'r'•'• p1;: • , u1 112 1'1 -• l!lttth,t.r 1)b 11 11·,~ lO;, l6-'!=~E1it,t.lrl ln 111 11 !JU 11 +••iTt Dftl.~H ' lll1' IGl1~1otl't -l l·----------------------------l!ltlco "•1 .JO f6 1''"' li~i< Jlli -U E•ll GF .111" Ill 30'4 ff 7fl• ->; ln!T& T DIJ 4 n 1f!~t I~ 1~1~ -> ' Beidr>;H .6bit 3 10\l :l(lll 10>1 -~ l!all U!ll 1.•0 7 '1h 1G'l lor, -\i lnlT&.T DIK• IJ 1 l!lril flow .00 Jt Jl'; lO'. Jl ,. E1sK0<1ek ·~ 175 7'10 1•1~ .... ~-Hi Inn Dll J )0 HO ;,~?. ·,,'.., •,,•:,•....:: 'I Btll !nterce-n .14.! 11"\0 11 1> ll•i = ~ E'tt11n'lt l.•O I' :161'1 l5•1 JS•: -'I 1,,1 ''IOO >" Bemi• co 1 10 2J 11'• 1J +I ~chllM\f ./2 l1 l~ »'i J3'i _ ,, iniu'i'·r rotii1 10 l!'< 15'• 1J•~ ~ '• ~tlldh 1.60 ~6.\ 19. 'l'I'• 21-1• _ 'It ~~trd 1 ·'° Ill ,..~ 11"°t lt~o -\0 lntt rO..co i 1/ ~::: l~;'; ~;: +;:: ••~',•,of l •J '9 1 o•o 49... d •• ,-0 ••0m0 I 10 17fo 11 21,i +1 tnlttlt(e "'! • 1,,, ,1,, -•·• .,,, ene In 1.60 lG-1 !O.._ 50 50 _ '·~ -· 61 70'• lt•I :IO -'I Int Brt..,"'90 '" ~ ll!ffi!IF otJ !O , 1411, tq•~ 14lh-l i;i E,•,Mu~k .11~ rl ,,,, • ' .. inierD~I• ·60 •• 16 15'• !6 ~ "• ''"!IF p1l30 l:IO li !7 51 J I te l An« ii ,,, t ''" -'" I I p l'> Jt '' '5 u .i ·~ lr!)W' or~.JO 13 '\ l!"' 75,~ E!Mtrn M~o "' 1'•• 11\'0 11•, -2 1~,:~1 ll~ri '' jO 11•• i1·, 11•1 -~t
8rn !Dl2.M iHO J \~ .?1"o 121., .:._: \\ ~:"1M81J Pl I d 11~ '1'o l•l'a + ~ 11 El LP I :i,; xi' n:: n~t ~~!: ·+v. •~:;i~" '" ~ .-. ,, 8i o +i~,,·,nNu Ind JJ t l''t l•1-''a11 1llGE 131 "' 11'"• 2l'L ,, •. ,_,, ,..., 61 I I I l l<ING 1 IJ7 1 .. .Ji lt''t 1111 -\• to pl' o •• ' Atr P~ 171 9! i1;0 11•• n:, EllrtCo 1.ltl J1 IS '''' '"~ -•o ,;:,•,. .~ J 11'1 11>1 ll'i +-'1 ll•rmK Crro 71 ! (>, ,,1 _ \o Em.tr El« 1 'l 63'~ 17 '> 6J', -1 I • ~ ·""' 4 11'< 71 '1'1 -'io neth su IO 139 ,.,,, ,.,, 111,_ _ii £m1.-.,1,1r .'IO 1 t s.1-, w•,; SI', _ ,., ,•,• "• "," ,J,.• 11 JJ" • ll' • Jl' • -* Bl~ ThrH ,641 lt ~ Jtl, 39,1 +\'a E'IY'he•t 1 70 1' '''·O 41 U -t ll m ..... II lQ'.; lO'o JO•; act1valed lhis month \Vhcn Dr. lll•ckOk 1.10 ~J1 7604 15 16" +11, Emco11t 1.1' ' 11•1 11" 11•1 _ ·~ 11t~ Co•o J11 10·0 &1•1 .11•1 -tl\IJ
11 L d I CSCF 91•1rJoll" .18 11 13 2J'1 17•~ _ 10 E"mP<>fC .tO I )41-, 7•'• ?•'• -'' -J·K-\\1i iam B. angs or, 1111n l•uo 1 11 ,. . .., '' "'" +'-'I E"d Jottn•n o 11 ln~ 1~ f l'• J•c-in•t1 ,.
President. pressed a button :J:,\H,,•, •. ~ Jl 67 ~110 ,1._ -.,., EftlllhMl" ·•0 nl "1' '' "h -1'• J1c••11 ii(co ll 1::: 'i~! 'I~ .. .w 11 le•; ll ll'· Ennis B111 n UU Ill• U'1 -'' J•eter :io· J 1011 10 IC _ ...
Cal State Ft1llerto11
Using New Co111puter
lzl Sylvia Porter says:
Instructional, research and
administrative programs lhal
rely on electronic data proc·
esslng have advanced a
generation at California State
College, Fullt'rlon \\lith the in-
stallation or a new co1nputi'r
system.
starli"" the processing of a a~!,',"'• 'I "'• J" 13•;:.:. 11 EQ\llG11 , :io u JJ•o 12•1 :n1• + ·~ Ji nt.111 " '°" , 14,, ,,,., , .. , _ ~ •-e &oelri.. 1 ' 1l 11, 1111 -41 ISi Inc 1.10 Ii j~• i! 1l .. J · '"' ""
series Of SlUdenl-\VriJlcn pr0-1~C:l!tri.ll~ >l:U~ t::: 19;:. t~,. -~) :~:1~4 ·f 70 4, 1''• J ~~ i'i·~~ = ;1 J::~Ffnt~ ,'l, ~;1,' >,'•,•,',: ~lj,,':,· _-,·~\
gram'
'
·n q u" n ti a 11· v c oro~~ 1.20 11 1l'' 22·~ 11•{ -·· . .i.. 1~.-1 c ... i, •1 n•• 11·~ h _ 1~ JtffnJ>!tol .IO "" .. . orow~r l.?J '' 1" 1''' j'lio +-Jo! !h~l Pf1.lll 10 J1'~ ll~ J11~ + \'> J'r:itn1A .J,O 11 '1'0 1J;i 11•1 + 'o melhods p h y s I c s and llo•rn•n• IO •j J 1•, +· 1 urolnd l.J't JO "'• n tt _ ~. J~wel Ce 1.)11 J6 111,, " o -'' '. BoiE<tl• 1Cll I l6 3S'i 35'0-•~Ev3nsJ> 601J U 3.!'i )I•, :Jll'I Jim W•lt .lO J3 1tlo 1' 1t''o -~ engineering. 1~~7Ai 1"'• • 1•"' It\• 1•.,, -'• Fv ... v.•rD .., '~'· 111, ,,,, .:.. t, J1,.,.w D'll.6G u 1111t ll·• J110 ... , "Our JS20. ,·n ''''',once L~'. !'I"'''•, .•. , •?ll 11·~ 10 10 -,, lxc1110 1.15 31 76'9 16 ?•\• -'• JOl'NIM1n 1 '° o n 31•• 3Po ~ ;ro.. ~ I• SI ) ~·• "'' -'• "•l>"rge "1 oJI ll't ll'• ~l -'• JOltnJI>" 40t \f IS.•~ lJll~ 1'6\'+ -1
kh d h r st M~ 110 13' 66'1 6•~• 6410 -1' ~ F1c!orA '.60b s •"• .._.,, •••• _ » J!tl'tn1 Svc" .~b J1J J1'o Ji Ji'~ -·~ \l.'aS a WOr OrSe, <JO Un-nrl$!Mv oh S' •1>~ oll>~• It" -'• F11•t~C .50 lt7 16 1• 14'i -1"' J(lltn5vt pl l ~l '\ 'I 6 -2'i
If you never needed tax help before-you need it now! Dr. Kenneth R. Doane,
The tax form& which you must
1illl out. this year are en..tirely
new, unfamiliar -more com·
:plicated than ever before. •
But with our 1970 Income Tai
Guide, you will be able to:
(1) Fill in your Form 1040 and
its accompanying :schedules
with !ar les.s trouble and far
more confidence than you
now believe poasibJc;
(2) Find dozen& upon dozens of
money.saving hinta which
will help you to avoid co.rtly
mistak,ea in your income tax
return and to slub your
(3)
tax to the absolute legal
minimum;
Save t ime aa well as mone.v
on your 1969 income tax
-quite likely much bigger
amounts of both than you
\vould now gueM.
Everything you need to kn o1\·
about filing your Federal Income
Tax ia in this depenclable, usy~
to.understand book. You need i10
one to help you. Vital tax savings
-all Of the current tax ''breaks,''
many of whi<h may be brand
ne\v to you-are explained as you
fill oat your tax form line by line.
d j rec t 0 r or inslitulional
research. said the ne\\I CDC
:1150 system replaces an 1Bhl
16211 and represents a jump
from a !lecond to third genera-
lion con1putrr.
Valued at approxi1nately
$500.000, the system ,.,,as ac-
quired from Conlrol Data
Corp. nf r.linncapoHs, fvlin n .•
und<'r a \ong-trnn lease agrcc-
n1rnl thnl al~o involves nine.
other rampuses or I he
c~11rnrnia i;itate Colleges.
Considered apprn:tin1ately 25
timl's more po\1'crru1 than the
1620, the new system owes !ls
~uperior performance to a
combination of charac-
teristics.
Featuring a magrietir tapt
capability, the CDC 3150 'o\'as
dredsofsllftlents learnedco1n-n~~3~,.\ 5~ fi·· ~· ~·,_~:i~:1;:~~1·\1• 1: J~ .• 1;:~ 11:~=r:1:~1.71",·~0l : 'u3:l ~i ~\~~-;~t puterlechniqueson il,"Qoooeft~!~UGcJ' 6 ro·~ 100flt r~'1 -:fa Fal1l11tr 11~0 :u1, l'i 11, •1 -•1JontJI.~ oi l:Jll 61''t •l'o -1 l'I c • • -• P1m1J~ "'n 1 11•, 16>, 1 •• T '• JorotMn 1 JO 1 1; Jr• jl'• -•t :-aid. "BUI the increasing COITI-ft:,wnS~t~o "l r If.; U~1 le• .._~t ~1n11ec! Inc 71 11'o 11•• U'I -'• Joittfl .t6 fO 'I I -1''1
Plexlty of computer programs, ~~;i:: .10.t: I 13:• i1 • p·i ... ~:;.~~.' .~ H !~; li11 U~: =,!; l".VI'" "1 1 'i'° ll; ~;: li... ~ =1 ~: ' < ·-"l nU,.i. r.'~ n'"'7 ~FAS IMI .C7! 11 70'> 19''> l''•-1 ~~ ~lfofJ.ll 10 fl'' ·~ n'~ .... coupled with the grov.•ing in-!l.S~ ', " ,, ,• • • ... "Fe«t•ra "° 16 l"' 1111 1 ·~ -1 ·~ K•I• ._ .... 10 n • • . nu:r ~ r'° • ·;J •1f ": ~. 1, f,dMo<! 1· 10 11 ··t .,,, 1•·· _ •• K•~f on..i1 ,1 , .. ,',"~ , .. ; .t .. -' strucllonalandadmtnistrativeR~~t''n°.i.. 7 lj 1 ut.'111,• .. ~Fet1Pac trc 3'3 1310 n n _,,~''Pl""Lt ' <'!: \l"nrkload on a rapidlv CX· 111 tForo '10 11 • .., ,, •:-•• F P~c M1.u n" i111 "'' K~ Sw1~ ~ r!Olj •1'4 ll'• ~~11 -• .;, . ov• W .60 9 jj'• ~ lJt .. + '' Fet1P11tBd I i '1 )Olo N>o K GE I olCt I 1; 1l'i 1jl• -'\ paneling campus, necessitated 11,~!k,,•,•~ llj '-I 1~ !1'' -'• F p.., fl.lJ ,, 71" f p , ?l>o -'' K=~-l 1 j, 11 ¥.. )l>, Jt•. Ft<JllPn .60 a •. 2S u·~ K·•~ ~net . ,J 1, ,,:! ~.,t }l, an advance in hard'll'are ·· 11u,11nc1 1. ·~ ...,. JS'o .Ul, +1• "l'CIDrpts1• 1 i•' 11 :it ll'• -•• K•uf '"" 1! ~" 'r: 1 : ,1 ' 111rNOf t~ w JI •1 1~1, ~1 F!'ll Ml.II Inv J 10•~ IO'o Ill' -V. l(R~ -o > , \\lhitt' the 3150 in i!seH Is uri"'or r>lw 11 •\• ! ••1o :. FPrro CD .1fl l; j; 2l'l , ~ -.. i.;,f, ,·''611 ~s 1 ' l5~! ih +1'0
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11wra1er tighter than lhc ce111 Sow1 '° 11 ll 1''• i't" -1'1o -v-'"•~•ni~ '" 1toc-d11r1"' lt~ •111m1.,, I L'lctoud Is $1.50 ($1..25 plLG 2'~ for polbJt .tl1d lllftd11n•' '°'Ont I Or•n"I! County Chopter of the c.riT11u mi •'•' 21'o 11'· 21"--1·c Co I.JO ,, "'· "" '61.t -1•1 Clill ¥flutl "" •~4tv:~ er ••..Olllr lt>lr·
I ""' " money !illflply caused an In-11 ctrro 1.ofl 11, "'• H\4 + 11 "'"Corp . ..a 1661 1111 11·, 12•. -t, 11o11 111m. 9-0tti.•td •r ,.,Id 11 1 ••
copy 1f Sylrl• Yotter'• 1970 ltteom1 Tn Gulde. P111se m1n to mt : tense sllort-intert'st sltuaUon National Associ11tion of Ac· ~::..:r .if11 ~ ff~ ~" ~3, ::'!t =~ls:'i·1~r 1; J~~) ;r.: ~ = ~ :~ di;i11t:;00~~~~1 :~. :~'tee;!';;;
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I .... I to be • recurrent wann . his Mast.er of Business S:~?!!!tt~11 ,1~ ,ti::,,·.~. n, 1• Hl .. -1"g::"1~t'c'1": ~ 1!}~ 1! .. I • ..,,. 'ICI( dlVldtM. t-J'tlct Ill •Ill<• dvri ... I -11rt$1 ---------------------I \Yl'1'1htr phenomenon In the ~1;;;;; '°" ] 11 1.;: ·-""~I• .Ut 10 n 10\o 1j ' -Of, "llllWO"'Cl Clsto Vllvt ... rr<dlvtot~d
I I nn:ioclal di!llrlrt-a girl with Adm j n is tr at t 0 n from 1·~ .. ~"' . ', 1·.·. ff:~·· J '\ of:'l n,1.lft~ l.J.71 j', !l'I ,, ' - . tJ<fl'llf•lbuttero '"J~· ~-St1t1 Jn tu!!, City--------------------C•illomi'o •, lal" ColLeg• at ~·.",''~,,1 50>.l.-1• 1"'"°11 eee 311, 11·, )'l d-C•llH, ••-1:•· 1vlttnd. ,-f.•'4r ... 1 1 n1('a:i;u rcments to make nny-,, ~ ,,1,,1!1PP j 11 -11o •l•a.. 1 . .0 •.M l't ll Jt • -'Id ""' 111t' 1~ r~11 ,..,1,-t,.d11rr ..
I S!1l1_ ~ •· •·· b IL' h Th' ~11llerton. Ile I< ' Cerltficd ~~11~p1/c1 ,J ·ij'; t ~·"':,: •Trn -17.$(1 i .,., r' ,, , 'on ••-fr rlt~' •w-w11ho .. 1 '"• --------~ • •IJl11v. I 1.11:"r u IS . 1$ one was r , nd , I"'' 1.. j ,, ,, , :-1; :.(''l'IC ~ 1t ,,., 1~ -1~ 11 --w11h ,...,,.~., ,,., ·~
llonnic •·n. 44·24.JS. Puhht Atcounlnnt " a ~ ,. <•l'lw 1 · , 1 '· -•1•, ., H'' ·,·,', '"• ., , 111u1tt1. 1111-w"'" 111 ... ~ ' , I HH·ll l ~ ' l>otlo.f •II .JO 1 ~ tt -10 ~i ...... ~ ~: 1, :~: • .. !l_y_ vi-1., bt...,_•,mff.• '' "NO\V that'll a real con-n1cn11Jer of the Amerlca11 11!11,,r 1'0, lli ': '! -\o l•OIOY~•m ! IO z:;~ ,. ; •. -' •I• Of btlPl:tl rrortt'111.,.' •• I J Jllnmrrnlt'.°' rrmt'rked a lnstllul,. or CPA·~ ll n 1t l~am:.~r·~ 1 ;: .: t. -1, .. ,~ t 1tc 1 .o '" i1 • •l 12•· ·~'ll~•tv ._,., .,. •«11"•••1 hY ·ve "
- -- -•• -• --• -- -• -• --• --- -I "•IUorru'o "-···Ly ol Cl'A's, ',Mm•1 ' ~·· '· -' Qf'll•~· 'M I) 1'•o ''" l,•. 1" ... ,...,rtt. fn-Fortt1n tu111 lllbltcl .. kno\\'ll'dgcabe messens,l'r. ....., .:JV<-" GI '• ·~ -• GenFd1 ''41 11 , 1.1~ u •, •~-~"'""''_.11.uu11111t1M.
-~-------------.------------------.-------------------~. --·---. ~ ........ -..-------~~----
Mondiy Match 9, 1970 SC
'
OAILV PILO T Jl
\
-
• •
•
•
Monday, ,Marth 9, 1CJ70
: South Coast-Repertory
'Spoori River Anthology'
Fine Ensemble Production
By TOM TITUS
Of t111 O.llr PUii Siii!
• I
In Its excellent production of !.
''Spoon R l v er Anthology,"
Sputh Coast Repertory once
again dem o n s trate s its
masterr of ensembl e staging.
bringing Edgar Lee }.lasters'
-collection of fl.fl d w e s I er n
nostalgla full blown lo the
"Sl'OCIN fl.I'll• .ANTHOLOGY"
ENTUTAINMENT
of the public speaker hl
several sequences with ringing
aut!lorlty. J·larbison, an im·
prcssive nc.,.,·comer to the SCR
stage, invokes an nffJnity for
rustic comedy which provides
much or the show's spice.
ti1usically, n1uch of the
evening 's enjoyment Is due to
the melodic lonc s: of Toni
Shearer. who takes over the
more difficult s o Io ar-i
ra11gcn1en1s. tiliss Shearer,
one or the more dynamic of
local muSica\ actresses.
,..,. 1verol1111 ol 1oOM •NI 11•n•ll"1! bv
Et t •r Ltt M.tlllerJ. dlr.-c:ttd b• Ron flil'GNOIL, llfhll"' b• Lt.I Ztli.11, vl1'
.,.1, b' kenMlh SM1rirr, 11ru.ented
Til11'5<MIY1 lhrou9h Sund.lvl Uf>lll M1r'h 22 •' Sou111 ,c ... ar 11-r•orv Jlllr!I 51e• T,,_,,.,., IU1 New-1 811111 .• Cotll
.J makes her debul 0.1 the SCR
5tage a memorable one.
"""· THI' CAST
J-llll<H, Marttwo Mc:Ftrlitnd,
• C*ln H11ld'lln1, TOfll ,Ooo./ell l.l· Ltr<'\I
-H1!11otton. TGftl S,,..,...., M111l(len: RDfl
ThronlOl'I.
stage of the company's Costa
?.1esa theater.
T11ls is no hastily mounted
piece or readers' theater, bul
a fulJ fledged production un-
'Cler the craft.smanl ike di rec-
tion of Ron Thronson who as
onstage guitarist also controls
the tempo of the evening. It
h2.s been staged with tender
:··lftld Joving hands, preserving
; the J)Oelic beauty ol the work.
, 'Ille show's cast or si.J': ei-
: h1bit.s a coordinate style une-
; :ilualed since the com pany's
:~{renzied production of
' .America. Hurrah" l w o
: ~asons ago. an unusual point
: <Jf comparison. but one rele·
r .~ant in the area of ensemble f •8pproach. Intricate lighting er.
. feels and countless mood
~!1ltfes ~·ell documented by
Kenneth Shearer contribute
overwhelmingly to the succe~
al the production.
.Presented as the combined
recollections of the citizens or
one small Illinois community
more than a century ago.
~·Spoon River Anthology·• is
.narrated from the gra veyard.
a sometimes biller, often
hu morous chronology of rural
America. Emptines:. a n d
lonettness are m a j o r in-
gredients. but i~tersperscd
th~oughoul a! e occasional
"'Inks of the eye, a 11entle
comic balance in a mood of
general dejection and resigna-
tion.
It is a show which demands
versatility. and Uiis is served
up in heaping helpings by a
splendid cast of singing actors
and actresses-James Dues,
1'.1artha McFarland, Charles
Hutchins, Toni Douglass, Lar·
ry Harbison and Toni Shearer,
Each is called upon lo
creale a number of unrelated
character vignettes. and none
is more skilled at this art than
is Baxes. who exhibits an
astonishing aptitude for ca!}"
tu ring impres:siOfli. of the
elderly. Bax es J)OSsesses a
strong, rich voice which can
shlft smoothly from the fervor
or a pulpit-pounding preacher
into the creaking uncertainly
of an old codger whom life and
Jove have forsaken.
Another pair of resonant
vocal cords belong to Hut·
chiiis, who handles the chores
Cross \vord Puzzle
AC,P&SS •
.l Kind Cll loM.
9 "Wt111t -'" ·10 lil ~ii onal
·· Lr~9ue ,,.,
]( .. 5t0ftlly
' Weilhe-r "
co111poser
15 C.lost
lb Author IHI·
known: Abbr. 17 Childt!ood
diStilSe
·18 Silent moYir
star
20 Rin~ out 21 Pi o s . oppo sitr .22 Say
23 "Br off!" '2s Survive
11 Dishonest
person
)0 Diliry . '"""'t 31 Makr diffr1rn l
)2 •....
lhr lr1st:
2 words
Jl Pronoun
3& Nourish
37 Scolli'h firth
JB liltrctland isr
39 Lel:1er
.-o Ov trly fussy
people
•I Mr. Palmrr
~2 Liberation
from prison
..
•
• ~ •
44 SiWI
Quentin,
t .9.
4S Massacrrs
47 Nitioaal
Foott>an
'"'"' ....
48 Arn •its
49 Fotti99 -50 Rua at
Ctfill\n
pier
S4 Reptlleod;
2 words
S7 Armadll\o
SB Load S9 Elliptic
&O Comprtilor
t.1 Greenbacks
&2 Exposed
t.3 Death
signal
DOWN
l Malzr
2 "You're
rl9h\I"
3 ···· 111aler
4 Supplanted
5 Naval
ran~·
Abbr.
!. Represe nt-
attvr
7 Unlat
8 Gal in
a song
't Btlorr
10 Rangr
animals
ll Crrtitin
Chrisliilns
"
"
2 •
,,./ .
"
12 Ul na ant!
tibia
13 Kind of
. sound
19•Eccrntrie:
·Slang
Zl Slatr:
Abbr.
24 Slrlf r ZS Rrmovts ,
2b Wtlrir
Zloo
Nat'I
Parle Is
27 Kon Ti~i, for onr
· 28 Pro\rtltd
from th!!
wind
29 l.l otorlnQ
haza1d ;
2 watd ~ JO Comecllitn and pianist
32 Labors
34 Tom, Dick
and Harry
3/9fl ll
JS ObserYtd
37 P1rposition
JS En9int
p,lll
40 Kind of
litrratu1r
41 Watl!r
body
•3 Mounta in
ridgrs
•4 Dwell ing
plact:
S!ang 45 ·-··Casals
4b A1ct1c, "· 47 Wrapon 49 At a great
dis tancr SJ Rant
5210f 111r inouth 53-Hi'fi
SS Hirl
5& Eggs
51 Stitt:
Abbr.
f\1artha McFarland brings
poignancy mixed with an 'oc:·
casional flllip of broad comedy
to her varied assignments.
And Toni Douglass adds a
strong dose of feminine charm
to her convincing in·
lerpretalions.
J\ilusir. ligh1i·,1g and visual
cffccls blend skillfully v<'it.h top
notch ensemble performance
in this skillfully constructed
prescnlalion which will stir a
re~nsive chord in anyone
with a small town background.
Characters and circumstances
are ageless, and a u t h o r •
Masters has penned his work
with indelible ink.
Only two more weekends re·
ma in for "Spoon R ive r
Anthology" at the SCR Third
Step Theater. 1827 Ne\vport
Bl vd. in downtoy,·n Co s ta
ti1esa.
Ca st Listed
For 'Clowns'
In A11aheim
j\ll;M 1•,...._,.1~
,\11 ,\nl1u• I' .. l.iLnl.-l',.,!o .. 11·~•
Peter O'Toole
Petula Clark
"Goodbye,
Mr. Chips"
"' ·' ... ,~.
'
' .
Ba1aned it• Greece
Georges Founda0s turns ·out to be the right man for
J\1clina tvlercouri in "Never on Sunday," the mo-
tion picture which may be seen on Channel 9 to-
night at 7: 30. l\1iss ~1ercouri was picked as be st
actress at Cannes Film Festival for this movie.
Ori~i11al Mttsical Set .....
For Pre111iere at GWC
"1rving,'' an original two·act Wescott, the composer ,
musical comedy about a com· wrote the music and lyrics to
puter with a John \Vayne·soun· "The Golden Knighl'' and the
ding dialect , will be produced highly acclaimed •·Little !\ian
at Golden \\'est College, April in Scorch of His Serious Side.''
JO.II and 16-18. 'l'he latter ran six mooths at
It is the first n1usic<1l on a the Orange Studio Theater <1nd
1naJor scale to be staged at two 1nonlhs in ~lollyv;ood .
Golden \Vest. and to ac· Jtogcrs, a member of the
commodate both props an d Golden \Vest laculty, wrote tht
large audiences it will be held script and is directing. He has
in lhe College Center, with the writlen nine shows and
curtain going up at 8:JO p.m. directed more than 50, in. eluding '.'Calico," his first
General admi ssion tickets musical ,~hich was w c 11
are $1.00. and 1nay b e received in iUI debut at Santa
Pa1ton s~·•tt~~ Ht>rO
General's 'Giga11.tic S~tu,re' ded
By JlAL BOYLE I cloudy eyes and an Imperious
NEW YORK (AP) -It is profile. A~1i.red ~y o_ther ac·
rare for a U.S. Marine to pick to~s for . his ded1cauon and
an anny officer as his hero. ---6k1ll at hui: craft. he says he
But the late Cen. George S. became an 1,l-Clor because "it's
Patton has become something the only thmg I can do sue.
of a personal hero to actor ccssfully.
George O. Scott as the result "Thafs a left-handed th~ng
of playing the titl e role In to say, but Its true. Aeling
"Patton," a $15 mi 111 on has its gra~lfi.calions and
roadshow film by 2 o th rewa rds. But 1l ts rather Uke
CenUJry.Fox gambling luck -you can kill
' it by talking about it.
Scott. who ro.se lo the rank "You can make a mistake
o! ser~eant dur1n~ a rour·ycar by irylng to overanalyze either h1~ 1n the .~Iannes, became n performance or your o~·n
fasc1natcd ,w1th the personality hf£'. ll'll lead vou on the road
of the famed U.S. 3r~ Army to the laughing academy. Bet·
com":'ander who a ch 1. e 11 e d tcr leave it lo t he
notoriety by . slapping a crilics-Lhat 's their job.,,
sbellshockcd private and later The key word in Srolt's
won ss"re;iwn for his march philosophy is distinclion .
aero ranee . "It is unforgivable for a PLAYS PATTON
"I thiilk 1 could write a book man not io aspire to dist inc-George c. Scott
about Palton now," he said. tion inevcrythinghcdoes,"he .-==== ~==-
"My biggest difficulty was lo said . "You also have to prize
avoid the popular cliche of individuality ve ry highly. It's
him -to show him not as a one of lfle things that make
swaggering bull y with a gun man a higher animal -if he
but as he actually was, a com· is."
plex. multifaceted man. Scott feels his own worst
"Patton had giµ:antic stature fault is intellectual laziness.
ns a human being." "I know l cou ld be a better
Like Patton. Scott hus had a person.'' he said. "if I laid on
stormy and controversi<ll the sweat and tears it takes.
career. lie once refused an Jl's like a good marriage: you
Academy Award nomination have to slave at it to get the
and by the time he was 30 he best results."
had been thrice·married and His best trait, he feels is
had his nose br9ken five that he likes people in-
times. But time and a happy dividually, but not in crowds.
third marriage have mellowed "I'm really gregarious," he
his impetuous nature. said, "although some· people
"I don't have a definition of might not think so."
controversiul." he said mildly. Scott's biggest professional
"If it means I like to live my goal is to play ··f\1acbeth'' with
o\vn life, then I suppose I arn . hi.s actress \\'ife, Colleen 1
1
But l'rn not meddlesome , I Dewhurst. as costar.
despise gossip, <1rHI I don·t
1
;::;;::=::;:=::;:;:;:::=:::::::::::;
slick my nose into other BALBOA
people's businf'S." I
Scott is a si•·footer with 673-4048
orEN
• 6:4S '"·· .. , .... l11lltOll P•nlnaula
ACADEMY AWAID NOMINU
IEST SUHOITINti ACTllU
-GOLDIE HAWN-
~~dolJy·~ ?iJifr.,,--,. '!ft_,,
.l;\1\Sllie~
,.~.,--~--·~
l)Urchased in advance through Ana College.
!he college book sto re. ;,:==--:..C======.11 ~;;;,iii JUU~tlOJ'fl $41,JJJl IOI INFO,MflO!I
\\il u1ir IOOrio I 1m1111<1u ooroman, l "Irving" is !he product or HELO OVER
the composer.,vriter team of 9 ACADEMY
Glen \Vescotl arid Stewart
Hogers. two artists who ha" NOMINATIONS
three prior musical comedy
successes to their credit.
l ig l'ol Slrow Today, I :JO
TONllE AT •:OO & ':55
AND AT.f:OO ONLY
~,P.!~f
~. •73-6260
2905 Ea~Ccast Hwy.
Corona del Mir
HELD OVER
TWO ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
A man Y1enl looking for America
And couldn't find it anywhere ..•
EXCLUSIVE AREA
PERFORMANCE
FOR ADULTS
7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
llEST ACTORS -DYtth1 Hoffman · JoR Voi9h t
llEST PICTURE
IEST SUPPO RTI NG ACTRESS -Syl•io Milc1
BEST DIRECTOR -John S~hlnln9•r
IESl SCREENPLAY
IE5T FIL M EDITING> AS THE HUNTER
STAt.KS THE
MOST FEROCIOUS
ANIMALS ON EARTH
ENDS TOMORROW
HURRY!
Wt\I Ce••• ,.,~ 5oulfl Coit! "'••• ro• ""'~'u" S•~•· Aftl iU•ll11 Cotl• Mn• J .. Jlll JU·t<W.0
Wffli;d1'' 1:11-l:llf.t :n
5111'1. ':lj.4:•1:00·f:U
s.i. 11:00-1:1J-4:Jt·l:ot·''''
Adults $2.50 Under
NICTIIS i
I LO\\~r __ .., oorna imn·-
~ tt~ .. 17>1 ._.__oo
"THE NIGHT THEY
U.IDED MINSKY'S''
ShJrri EllJ•t fiffW
Steve McQueen
.. The Reivers"
'Ihe:J'rime 'If ~:J-~
~Smitb
stereo 103FM
'· the sounds of the harbor
: .
' ,. ·• ' .
' • • : ..... . .
• '
JdS~~youve never heard it so good
-.
•
. '
17
I i
• ... ~· -·-··~ .. . ---..
Lag a Beaeh Teday'a ·Fln,.I
N.Y.S~ . --
VO~. 63, ~O. 57, J SECTl9NS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH '· 1970 TEN CENTS
1st Pl'onge Fatal Panther Lawyer Assails
Tustin Woman's Chute Snags
Never before aloft in a small P,lane. a
young Tustin woman photographer died
Saturday when she tried to parachute
!rom the disintegrating skydivers' special
over Perris, In Riverside County.
Her husband watched in horror from
I.he ground as the 22-year-old victim, her
chute snagged on the tail, plunged to
earth.
The pilot. who al.so bailed out. was hit
by the falling plane on' the way down and
critically injured. while rour sky diving
enthu siasts had already parachuted
routinely.
Mtdeline ~1. Matthews. an Insurance
<:ompany employe, wa s killed instantly,
11nd William R. Scherer, 26, of Santa Ana.
was listed loday in giJarded condition at
Riverside Community Hospital.
Ht suffered severe head injurits when
.truck by debfis, or the plane itseU, ac-
cording to authorities probing the
tragedy.
Mrs. Matlhews' husband David. a
Marine assigned to El Toro MCAS,
watched the tragedy unfold.
1'he single-'.engine Stinson , specially out-
fitted . Jor parachuting sport, took orr
earlier in the day with four skydivers
aboard.
Mrs. Matthews had never been up, but
\vent along to photograph their dramatic
leaps, her grief-stricken husband reveii!·
ed afterward.
Structural difficulty developed after the
four djvers had jumped and Mrs. Mal·
thews tried to bail out, but opened her
parachute. prematurely.
The tail or the plane snagged it. ripping
a gaping hole in the silk.
Besides the victim's husband, another
chutist. Lowell Roeder, sa id the plane
went into a lailspin and part of a wing
peeled back and broke off as it fell.
An investigation was immediately
begun by the National Transportation
Safety Board.
Jury Selection System
:Wants Panel
Picked From
Coinmunity
B"y TO~ BARLEY
Of 1111 011/r ,1111 llllf
Capo's School Election
Ends Hard Fought Drive
Arthur OeWitte League's lawyer today
branded California 's jury s e 1 e ct ion
system as unconsli lutional and imposed
whal is expected to be at least a thret-
day delay in the murder trial of lhe ac-
cused Black Panihe r.
League. 20, of Santa Au. is aecused of
the shooting lasl June 4 of Santa Anit
pollc.-e ~fficer Nelson Sasscer. lt is alleged
that the Negro militant gunned down the
patrolman arter he was ordered to pro-
duce identification.
By RICHARD P. NALL
ot .,.._ DlllJ l'llli 1111!
The election Tuesday for Capistrano
Unified School Districl will climax one
ol the hardest fought support campaigns
ever waged in fin area where school
finance issues have traditional tough
aledding.
Truman Benedict, district superin-
tendent. has beeA through 22 elections in
11 years with Meal schools. most of them
befwe uafflt'ation five years ago.
II.to.st of. them l06L JUs own daughter at-
tended blgh 6Chool in quOnset huts . It
l'ook 10 eleetion$ to 1ecure funda to build
Planners Slate
Special Se-sSion
On Sign Issue
Tht Laguna Beach Planning Com-
mission will hold a !pecial study session
JJt 7:30 o'clock tonight in city ball council
chambers to prepare ameodments to the
sign ordinance for presentation to the Ci·
ty Council Wtdnesday.
The commissioners have been asked by
the council to devise precise wording for
five changes 'in the ordinance which have
caused or are believed likely to caust en-
forcement problems , They deal wilh
measurement-of -sign area. situation of
pole sign!'! .and sign setback from building
sidelines.
Although the mechanism of amending
the ordinance v.ill require public hearings
and other legal delays, the council has
Agreed to instruct the city staff to ad·
ministrr the law as if the amendments
already were in errect as soon as wording
is established.
Also aL tonight" s session. the planners
will live a fina l review lo the general
plan goals statement before making their
formal recommendation lo the: council.
S tock /tfarkeU
NEW YORK (AP)-Prices on !ht stock
market remained depressed late this af-
ternoon. (Se. quotations. Pages 16-17).
tosses were widespread, with declints
nn the New York Stock Exchange ezceed·
ing adva ncer. by mor! than 21h. to '~
Coast
1'hose cJojldt rolll11g in tonight
won't have.._a silver lining, so grab
your raincoat.. Clearing skies and
r: o o I e r temperatures are tht
w1tchwords for Tuesday.
INSIDE TODAY
Th.t U.S. sta11ds an t t celltnl
chance of capturing o gold.
medal i11 the 1972 Kiel yoclit-
ing Ol.1/ffl.pics becaust Am.tri·
cans are best at saifin{1 tilt
Tempest. Booti119 Po.ge 23.
•••flltf CI Mflf'llll CJMcltl!>t 1,1,
ci.11lfi.t
C""ltt c,. .. _.
Oftlll Mltlcn
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lllilliftCI -AllR t.9'lftl'1
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Llcwtl"'° t """''"• ' _ .. , ll
Mltltlltt Htwt •·I Or•-("""' • SHrh l1•tt
Sttclt Mtrllt" 1"11
T11nt1• lt
TIMI!"! II
W•lll!tt ' W~!'9 W.lll U
W•-'• Ntwt 1)111
Wt!i41 M-1 •·I
Attorney Robert Greene asked Judge
the present San Clemente High School. Samuel Dreizen to rule that the picking
The district's most recent school elec-or a jury from the roster ot 1:1ames
lion loss was last April when a turnout of assigned to the court for the League trial
about 40 percent turned down a 50-cent would amount to denial of a fair trial for
override by about three-to-two. his 'tlient.
DAii. Y l'ILOT'·PMfil IW "-' O' .....
Su pporters of lhis override are hoping ·rhose names. Greene said, are selecttll
for a 55 percent trunout Tuesday of the from Orange County 's voter registration.
15.270 persons registered to vote In the lists and do not renect a true cross-sec-
llprawliog 156-square-mile district. lion of the community.
Election proponents are hoping that tht Greene wants a jury picked from ''the
bigger turnouL will balance what they community a!'I a whole and not under 1 deacribed as a lar1e b!ock or "historically system which denies my client a fair trill
built-in no v o t e 11 to school finance under any of the provision• envo. .... -..1 .... measures." -.g .... •:r our Jaw -among them economic, racial
The district electorate Tuesday will be and political factors~"
voling for two measures.. Greene's motion ended a two-hodr
One is authoriz.ation to increase the in· delay in opening of the trial and Wall . ' terest maximum from five to .seven per-being debated al pcess time. Judge
cent on $4 .2 million in previously Dreizen delayed summoning of the first
authorized bonds for &ebool site ac-panel or prospective jurors until the mo-
quisition and construction. lion is decided.
The ntothers of Cyndee llowe, 5, Buena Park (left)
and Ruth Reisman, 6, La Palma. took the· girls
fisbJng thls weekend at San Clemente'• Municipal
Pier. T!iey also took lengths o! rope. What they ·
didn't take were any chances that the girl~ might.
go overboaro.
The bonds can't be sold at the present Greene indicated that he would have
five percent limit. Given approval of this Further motions to offer following sel·
by the necessary two-thirds majority. tlement of his challenge of the jury
district official$ would expect to sell system.
about $1.1 million this year and would sell Among spectators in the <.'Ourtroom to-
lhe rest over a two to three year period . day was Daniel Michael Lynem, 21, also
Voters will also decile a 50-cent over-a member of the Black Panther organiz.
ride tllat district officials say is at ion and the man who was cleared of the
necessary to maintain the existing educa· murder charges now faced by League.
tiona1 program. A heavily reinforced detachment or
Without the override. which vrou\d sheriff's officers turned away more than
represent a loss of about $700,000 in 100 persons from the courtroom door
operating funds. school officials say ihat after the 75 seats in Judge Dreiien·a
an across the board 10 percent cutback is court;oom were quickly occupied this
necessary. This would range from busing morning.
and music programs to vocational educa-All persons entering the courtroom.
Uon and larger Classes . --~flh-t e exception o Witnesses anatfit
1'he district now has about 7,400 press, were carefully searched before
students and estimates this will increasr they were allowed to lake their seals.
by 10 percent to more than 8,000 next Ther~ were no incidents other than loud
year. complaints from several persons who
· An organized group supporting the wished lo view the murder trial.
overrkle calls itself ARVY which means Black Panther literature w a s
Arla Residents -Vote Yes. distributed in the courthouse corridor to
It has waged • voluminous grassroots all pt!rsons entering Judge Dreizen'•
ca mpaign that included bumper itickers. courtroom.
talks, advertising. telephone calls and
news releases.
The ARVY effort will climax with R
telephone: campaign effort to turnout the
vot~s tomorrow. Their hope is thal the
30 tt 35 percent who declared thcmselve.,
undecided during a pre-campaign poll
will turnou t and vote yes .
Polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m.
There are II polling places ranging in
size from 1100 lo 1900 registered voters.
French Reds Out Poll
GauJlist in Voting
PARIS (UPI) -The Communist Party
\VOl'I more votes t.han the Gaullists Sun-
day in the first nationwide election aince
President Georges Pompidou took office.
Partial returns in lhe Cantonal (coun-
ty) Election!i today gave the Communist!!
23 percenl of the votes compared with 15
percent for the Gaullists.
City Council Candidates
l{eeping-Hnsy in Laguna
Uy BARBARA KREIBICH present the candidates in a public
01 -. o.il'f' "1w ... ., meeting in city hall council chambers.
Lagu~a Beach C_ity Council candidat~s A fina l ses11ion has been scheduled by
are tu~~g-1;1.e_ Qle1~ voe~! .. cho!'.!ls for _a_ lbe....Laguna...Beac.h-Ci.'l.ic..League..on..Apri
record-t:ireaJC1ng ser1e$()J meet the can-7 al a location to be announced. ·
didates" sessions .that will .c~rry them to 'ln previous eleclion years, it-ha!'l-b«n
the eve or the April 14 municipal election. customary to schedule no more than twn
}'he Laguna Beach ~ard _of R.eoallor~ fu11-scale pre~lection sesslons for council
w1!1 gel the ball rolling this week by c d'dat s
presenting all five candidates al an 8 an 1 ~: . . a.m. breakfast meeting Thursday in Ben In 1dd1t1on to the-public ~bngs, mos!
Brown's Restaurant of the candidates have their engagement
On hand to air thfir views and respond calendars well tilled with ·1'cottet'' d~tes
lo questions will be Incumbents Richard f?r appeara~ces before small organ1ia·
Goldberg and Joseph A. O'Sullivan and t1ons and neighborhood groups.
new candidates Joseph L. Tomehak. Goldberg kicked off his campaign Sun·
Pet.er Ostrander and Edward Lorr. The day evening at a cocktail party hosted by
five are competing for three upcoming Mr. and Mrs. Merrill John~n and at·
council vacancies. tended by about 200 guests.
On Tuesday evening, March 17, the In an Jnfonnal talk, Goldberg promised
Laguna Beach Coordinating Council will to continue his role as a "24-hour couflo'
present the five candidates at a 7:30 p.m. cilman," referring to the fact that hiit
meeting in the Laguna Federal building. business keeps him Jn Laguna and
Wednesday morning, March 18, will therefore available to constituents, while
find the quiotel on the program at the other councilmen and candidates are
7:30 a.m. Chamber of Commerce employed out or town.
breakfast in the Hotel Laguna. Goldberg also introduced architect Pel·
Al 8 p.m. nn Thursday, Marcil 26, the er Ostrander and told guest.s he is aup-
South Coast Democratic Peace Club will porting Ostrander's candidacy. Deadline Nears
For '70 Festival
Deadline ror artists and cra'ftsmen whn
wish to submit works for jurying in thP.
19'10 Festival of Arts is 10 a.m. Saturday,
grounds chairman Verner Beck said to-
day.
Worst Oil Fire Attacked
The jurying will take place belween lfl
a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday and artists are
asked to bring lhrce examples of their
work to Irvine Bowl between 7 a.m. and
10 a.m.
An artist willhing to apply in more than
one medium should take three works in
each medium , Beek said .
A combined jury elected by the artist~
and appointed by the Festival board will
rate the works submitted on an establi11h·
cd point system. Available space oa the
ground! is allocaled according to scores
received.
Artists who should apply Saturday .11re
ttiosl' who did not apply last year, those
who applied but were not taken onto the
ground5 and thos! who .were on the
grounds last year but were aisked lo rfl-
llubmlt for the 1970 sy$lem . Those who
exhibited last year and were not i:lliked to
re-submit are entitled to 11pply for space
without jurylnc.
Dynaniite Charge May Cause Louisiana Spill
VEN ICE. La. (UP I) -Firefighter.s _up to three W~Ck$.
prepared today to blow out a 27-day-old By comparison, the Santa Barbara
blaze on an onshore platform with • Channel oil tpill In California a.mounted
dynamite charge that could cause the nA· to about 8,000 barrels or oil t.hat leaked tn
lion's worst oil !'!pill. the surface and stained beaches over a
Calm seas and gentle breezes greeted month·long period.
workmen early loday and lhey began The recent oil slick lhat gummed Tam-
preparing the 200.pouna e:tp\oi;ive charge pa Bay, Ell~. ••!l only 350 b'aJlrtls. 1
to cap what has been .callCd the woraf _Ttfa~.Wild"o,yl:l~..On:figllte'rs~~lng lor ·
ofrshort oil fire ID-hi11tory. PaUI ~\'~t.d:"·Adttr"b'a\!e· betn rtady fO't
Puttiiig Odt thC Di~z, 30 miles of!shof"t, rrtbi~ ~lb 'a wee~· to 6etonali ~an iex-' ~" onjy the·firsfP1'0bl'11!: TJ(e mO!t di~ lii~l1\li• tO ·!llll,~ thl!~(~ 'O!fd beii'n !he
ficult will be C9ntrolliDg sn expected' tricky Pr:9CtSS ol ·inatallln&Jhutoft valve.'
deluge of crude oil pollution after the fire tq;"ilhe . t\iptured "'*ell hf!td!. But small
is out. crlft warnings', }dJh wlndfl and ae•s up to'
An Interior Department spokesman I), feet l)O!lpo&td tht ~ for the put
said Chevron Oil Company's "Charlie'' few daY,S, · ;' ' • '"
structure wa~ belft:•td...capable or spew-.Once lhe l'l:reball that has been con·
Ing anywhere froln IOffto 8,000 barrels of sc1mlng the high pressure natur.81 gu and
oil a day until ft& efght damaj:ed wel11 1 <tilfrom the·w~llll i:s doused' federal and
are capped -an opf:r•tion 1hat.m11 tat• • •llll bf.lclail( lr>d Chevron cre\Q Will
~ ~--~
••
~ . ' -
make the first rough estimate on the
volume of oil being spilled.
At that point, Chevron will ·activale the
world's first oil pollution control system.
deslgned to function in the open sea. ,
It will be. lhe first test to see if hu(\~
dreds of men working with barge.,,
1pl!ci.allY, ~signe~. floating boo91~. newly
dev.eloped oil s~immers and 'oth'r equip·
nient ean , ~n\ain _a 'larg~ sp~ll !~
wcuum \t_Jl\tl.~of.Jbe ~Water .. before it,
reacliea ihdre'. .~ • ' '
The In Crlor Department has s,Bi.4!~ It
think• Cbovron h,. done_ ~ti It ~ibly
ci>uld lo control Ille anticipated spltl. ·A
•pok.,man atld Cb~\oron has the,c'l!lblli·
ty to $COOp up 3s many as ~.ooo bagels
of oil a dQy... ·
The quest)On WI$ whe.ther w11ve 1cll~
would toss tht oil over Uiil barrier1 set dp
tb conllin 'ft. '
--
Cyprus Nets l~
In Makarios •
Shooting Try
NICOSIA, Cyprus !UPI) -Tho Cyprus
govenunent aaid today ll per90ns Were
arrested during t.he night as auspedJ: in
lbL>ll<ml>t"'-"""'sln.ali•n .. JlJ,IJJllljOLJ"'---
Archbishop Makarios. the president · ol
this island nation.
.Official sources 1aid these were·trt ad·
dition to three men summoned for que&-
tioning earlie-r Sunday, .two of them Iden·
tified as members of an opposition groqp
demanding UJlion with Greece.
Witnesses of the atempt on Makarios•
life were called in to vitw the stispecta ln
a lineup later today,
Three gunmen firing au tom • t I e
weapons from· the roof o! a high school ~
shot down the president's helicopter 1t
7:10 a.m. Sunday as it lilt.ed off from the
palace grounds headed for a memorial
service at Makheras fl.fonistery, 30 mile•
,from the capital.
Makarios escaped unhurt but the· pilot.
Zacharias Papadoyiannls, was wounded
crltlc'ally.
Grunion Hit
Beacli Tonight
The elu!'live grunion may slide·ln
on the tide to spawn on beacht1
tonight.
It is always problematical when
lhe slippery sllversides will find
conditions to their liking but those
who chart the tide,s say any of the
next four nighls could bring a gru·
nion hunter's payoff.
The small fish come in at high
tide. Peak tide tonight Is I0:24'p.m.
Tuesday night It will be 11 p.tii .,
Wednesday night 1-1 :36 p.m. and
early, Friday mo~ni".i 12:24 a.m.
L 'lllin!ii.~bfi dilii!'!ilil'~
nion s~"'1int ~Fo •j\'l}ro!f1$'1tJf . .f Two faws apply to gnniTO!f Mn-
ting. Oil<\ If the fish moy not bt
netted or trapped but mu•t bo
caught with the hando. The se<ond
law is thaL anyone over 16 years ol
itgo must hfvt a ll!hlng 'Ucen11 lo
catch grunion as Inf ~ther fish.
•
.. -
2 OAll.Y PllOT SC
Joint Approach to Sewagr Prohleins ,Studied :
SERRA in a coOperauve apJoach to
sewage problem• -a Joint powut aa:rec-.
ment -if they ill agree. SERRA means
South East Reeiona1 Rec I a ma ti on
By RICHARD P. NALL ~ .. ...,Pu.tSttff
Son Clomont•i clly olllctlll had • loot
at SERRA Jut week.
San Juan Capistrano councilmen will
give her the once over tonight.
SEti.RA lsii't a !lorm. She's a concept ,
a ft8iooa1 appnach to sewage and
~ problems in the huge San Juan
Basin of sciuthem Orange County.
~ basln, which reaches from the
beach at San Ju.an Q-eek lS miles back
into Santa Ana Mountains, i1 aerved by
seven public enUtJes. It bl estimated the
area wil1 have IH,000 rt&idents by the
)'ear 2000.
It ts tbe.se entities that would form
Au)horily.
As proposed, the involved agencies in
the joint apj,roach to 50wage dlsPosal and
reclamation would be fl.1oulton-Niguel
\Vater Dlstrict. San Juan Capistraoo,
Capistrano Beach Sanitary District.
Dana Point Sanitary DlslricL San
Clemente. Santa Ana Mountain Coun!y
\Vater District and Santa Margarita
Water District.
The purpose ol SERRA 'would be to
eliminate the necessity for small agen-
cies to construct and maintain duplicate
Homes Still Dry
Granite Dump Aids Capo Fig ht
Two homes and a lot on an ercsJon
plagued oectloD ol Beach Road tn
Capistrano Beach survived the weekend
well, resldeots sakl today, but It toot SS
tructJoads ci granite to do the job.
John Reynard, 35787 Beach Ro a d ,
owner of two of the endangered pareels,
said tons of granit. boolders wbich be
ordered flare working just fine."
Late Jut week Reynard's two homes
and a lot OWllN by • netgbbor next to
them near lbe Poche beach wm hit hard
by heavy 1111'1 borne on high tides.
A larae section of nearly new aea. wall
fell und<r lbe battering .... and
emergency crews worked throughout
'nlursd1y staving "1 ero61on with bun·
<Ired• of sandbas•·
Reynard then hired a contractor and
ordered truckloads of granite from a
west Rivers.ide quarry.
The last loads are due to arrive
through today.
The weekend IW'f and tide conditions
worked in favor of the beachfront
homeownen, with only light surf and
moc:hrat.ely high Odea report.eel.
1be original estimates of damage in
the erosion incident have not yet been
tabulaled, because the total cost for the
expensive boulders has not been received.
''They started dumping them in front of
the three spots before the weekend and
they jusl work great-like a small jetty,
and they &Often the waves really well,"
Reynard said this momlng.
"J don't know how much It's going to cost. but it will be worth it if the work
saves the homes. It's not really that
much when you figure it," he added.
Scholarship Fund Group
Seeks Organizations' Aid
An appla.1 to organizations was of·
ficlally · begun Mooday by t b e
Scholanbips Fund Aslociation aerving
lbe Caplstrano Unified School Di!lrlct.
Gary Sodlkoff is cbalrman of this
aspect al the mmmunity-wide fund drive
wbich II aeeldnc fundl f0< graduatlq
...i.n ol San Clemeot. High School. ·
"The -bu provided us with a U.t
of organizatlom whlcb have donated
scbolm.blps in the past," said Lyn Har.-
tis Rieb, bead of the association.
''Organizations may either contribute
to the general fund or finanoe a
scholarship in the name of a person or
organization," she &aid.
Air-sea Search
Being Condu cted
For Lost Vessel
A U.S. Coasl Guard bellcopter and
surf act craft out or Oceans.lde Harbor~
day are. searching an area off San Onofre
for a %2-foot outboard boat reportedly in
trouble.
A search or Jhe ;area l 'h mileiJ
seuthwest. of the atomic power plant Sun-
day night turned up no sign cf the
distressed boat.
Coast Guard officials said the Harbor
Police at Oceanside monJtored a
"mayday" call from a Citizens Band
radio at 6:52 p.m. but the call was not
from the distressed boat.
A Coast Guard helicopter was sent aloft
at 6:50 p.m. and Oceanside surface craft
searched the area unUI nearly midnight.
Authorities this morning were trying to
locate the originator of the citizens band
report.
DAILY PILOT
H1111tf!tft*• S-la
f•u11rw11 V.tley s .. c .......
CAA.HO• COAST l"UllLISklNG tOM'ANY
Rob1•t N. W1tJ
l"rnldent •nd l"l.l&lbh..,.
J•elt R. Curl•v
\/Jc• Pr•lllcnl •ncl GtMr11 Mtn1ou
TI.om11 l(.,.,;1
Edlfl)r
Tl'lom1• A. Murphin•
Mtntfine Editor
Rit),•rd '· N1tl leutl'I Or•not counrv Editor
0 .....
a.-M.H: aa w"' kV,,,....
"'"'""' a..dl: 2211 Ww! 11•1-'°"""""' a....-•ll(fll: m ,_, ,.,...,...,.
Himll"9bl •e1d1: 1111.1 lltloth '°""'"'rf '8" Cllifntni.: IOJ HWlll El ttmlno 1 .. 1
Contributlons over $100 will be allowed
to bear the donor's name while other
amounts will be placed in the general
fund. Contributions may be specified for
students answering particular fields of
study bllt they cannot be specified for •
particular·acbool.
Mrs. Hicks 1&id the auoclaUon w«k£
diroctty with the ochool to delmntne who
will receive the tcholarshlps. Barbara
Cornwell ii tn charge of scholarships ap-
plications ·at lbe hig~ school and lw en-
couraged stude:nta: who are college bound
to apply for whatever scbolarshl1>3 she
believes they have a chance to geL
"The amount of the-·· ICbolarsbips
awaided by our association will be
determined by rleed, but financial need
1,11ill not necessarily be a prerequisite for
obtaining a scholarship," said ?ilrs.
Hicks.
Work ing with Sodikoff in the organiza-
tion's appeal will be :r.trs. Wilma Bloom,
?.1rs. Dorothy Shank, Phil Ellswc:rth and
Ted Kopp.
The associalkm also is attempting to
obtain scholarship money from industries
and by appeallifl directly to indlviduals.
Cerebral Attack
Caused Death
Of Mrs. Dora1i
J\.1rs. Florence l\1. Doran . 82, San
Clemente suffered a fatal certbral
hemorrhage al the wheel of her car last
Wednesday afternoon before tt collided
with another auto, the: Counly Coroner's
Office reported today.
Coroner's aides said an autopsy Thurs-
day confirmed suspicions that the woman
did not die from injuries suffered in the
crash in \vhich her car, traveling the
wrong way in northbound Janes of El
Camino Real, became involved in a col-
ision.
~lrs. Doran, 140 Avenida Barcelona,
died before noon Thuraday at South Coast
Community Hospital Jn South Laguna.
She bad been in critical condition up to
the time of her death. Hospital aides
Thursday morning inadvertenUy had
gi ven her condition as critical more than
an hour after she died .
Coroner's invest.igators said her hemor·
rhage was brought about by "severe
hardening ol the arteries.·•
Funeral servlces art pending for Mrs.
Doran at Lesne!ki Mortuary in San
Clemente.
Talk Sch eduled
By Mrs. Hanson
f\frs. Carole Hanson, v.·Jre of Vietnam
PO\Y Marine Capt. Steve Hanson, will be
featured speaker at the Constructive Ac·
lion Coo[l('il meeting of Laguna Hills
J\.[arch 18 at 7:30 p.m. In the Royal Sav·
lngs and Loa11 AssociaUon, El Toro.
Mrs. Hanson ol 21111 Blrdrod Dr .. El
Toro and three other POW wives recently
completed a v.·orld t.oor in an effort to
focus world attention on tM plight of
American POWs and bring prurure on
Jlanol to conform to the Geneva Con·
ventlon calllne for humane treatment of
prisoners.
Council president Earl M. Rees uid all
residents of the Laguna Ifllls area are tn-
vlt.ed to attend. Fot further lnformaUon
coll 337-4123.
facilities foe carrytna •"!! putl/yi"i
sewage.
A case lo point IJ tilt location now a
1ltr10'1 W.W l1U11 Hcl\ other of
5eparate trealment plants along Sin Juan
Creek owned by Dana Point Sanitary
District, Capistrano Beach Sanitary
District and San Juan Capistrano.
Participating agencies In the future
·ould buy space in carrying lines, treat-
n1ent plant and oullaU Jines based on the
extent of partlcipaUon by each.
A single huge sewer main might be
constructed in the future. This would
eliminate for the pa.rt.i.clpating agencies
many costa such a1 separat.e right..s-Of-
way acquisition, separate legal fees and
separate engineering fees.
Blood Test,s,
Prints Asked
For Suspects
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad·
m!nistration proposed legislation. ~1onday
to subject guspects in federal crimes to
f.ingerpringUllj and other det~tive test.s
such as saliva and blood checks even
before being fonnally charged.
The Supreme Court baa held that such
ldenlilication procedures do not violate
the ronsittutional guarantee against aelf·
Jncrimination but only in cases involving
suspects already charged.
The adnUnistraUon proposal would tx·
tend such tests to persons suspected or
crimes in cases where there i.5 no pro.-
bable cause to arresL The tests would be
administered only upon issuance of .a
court order~
If enacted by' Congress, a federal
judge, commJs.sioner or magistrate could
order a suspect 1n a federal". crtminal
case to submit to identification by
"fingerprints, palm prints, foot prints.
measurements, blood specimens, urine
gpeclmens, saliva samples, hair samples,
band'wrtting exemplars, voice samples,
photographs and lineups,"
Attorney General John N. Mitchell said
in a letter of transm!ttal to the House and
Senate that the proposed law "will pro-
vide federal law enforcement officers
with a useful new tool for the in·
vestigation of criminal activity and the
apprehension of criminals."
CoJ!go Diplomat
Hostedhy Wayne;
Mining Deal Due?
Congo·s ambassador to the United
St.ates was entertained in the Newport
Beach homes of actor John Wayne and
Ernest SaftJg over the weekend in a
business deal court.ship that has poten-
tially millions or dollars hanging on the
outcome.
Wayne and Saftig are principals in the
Newport &ach-based Statesman Mining
Company which is seeking mineral ex·
ploration rights to all of the Congo.
Congolese Ambassador Justin Bomboko
made the visit to gather facts for a
report to Congo President Joseph
Mobutu.
"I think he was impressed we gave out
fr iendshJp and good feeling toward him.
Certainly he was relaxed with us," Sartig
said.
He remarked Ulat "from everything
Bomboko indicated, I think we will hear
from him very soon."
Capo Council
Eyes Rezoning
A public hearing on the rezoning of 19
ac rell between The Gasas development
and the San Diego Freeway will occupy
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen at
lhelr meeting toolght.
The planning commission approved the
rezoning or the property from single
ramlly reside nces lo planned develop-
ment which would permit condominium
type housing.
Opponents of Uie zone change, primari·
ly from Th~ Casas, contend it would
devaluate their property and create
nuisance trarnc along Los Pajaros Street
which runs through their development.
Preliminary pl&ns call for the ertension
of the street to make tt the main artery
between the proposed condominiums and
C8mino Capistrano.
$165 Bankroll
Taken Off Table
Ntxl payday James Clope of San
Clemente wlll ask for big bills.
The dollar variety, he discovered this
V.'eekend, doesn't work so well.
Clope, of 206 El Levante, wenl to a
local donut shop late Fnpay for some
cdfftt and crullers, bia wagta ln hls
hand.
The money, he. told poltce. wu moatly
one-dollar bills with a 5Matttl1.ng of flve:a:
and a lone 29.
Sul lhe w.ad w.as just loo thitt to fit Jc
his wA1let. be lame:nted, so he set the
bankroll and lhe wallet on • table whUe-
he went to a countrr to order.
When he returned the bankroll "'as
gmit -all 1111 worth.
A ~gtlcated sewage purification
plant could calth tJIO w•ler and pur1ry It
before nleue lo the .... Proponenta of
SE~ point aut Q!lt such an agency
would be far tDOre: ,able to pre vent pro.-
lireraU.. d poltuttoo thin "'ch going It
1done.
They maintain, as well, that should the
poUUcal andl 50ei-_l trend toward en·
vironmental protection result' in future
higher s,tandard5 o( sewage purification,
SERRA would be In a beUer position to
perform t)lan .seven individual agencies.
SERRA is designed a.a sometbJng of a
limited part.nership ao that n o
participating agencies world give a;way
Joca1 autonomy.
lt would have no JJOWer of taxation or
power to flsue cene.ral obligation botKli~
but woufd be empowered to make ·~
tllcatlon for and administer federal
oans aJld grants, grants suC.h as the Jree
President Nixon has mentioned to flaflt
sewage pollution.
Each participating agency v.·oukS elect
a member and an alternate tO sirve .on
the board ~C SERRA. The flnandal
re:sources would come from t~ member
agencies~
Members wou!d participate In public
work projects to the extent of the benetlt
derived and could withdraw rrom ttie
agency: by giving 120 days notice. 1
SERRA grew out of a study comroitlfe
formed by county supervisors in 11168."lt
is co-chaired by cart K)lmla, manag'er q(
~1oulton-Nij,:uel County \V1ter Dlstrid
and J.B. Latham1 preildent of Capistran~
Beach Sanitary District.
A contract lhat would get SERRA off
the ground is now making the rounds of
the governing bodies or potential member
agencies. U all agree SERRA is so.
Participating agencies would have dir·
ferent degrees or need and it would
develop at different times. Sa n Clemente
for instance is buildi'ng its ov.•n large
sewage treatment piant. SERRA. for it,
would be a provision for ruture growlh.
Agencies fortnihg SERRA initially
would supply only the runds fo ""keep the
fledgllng entity operating. In San"
Clemente it was estimated this' might be
$1 ,0IXI yearly.
Cy~lists' Party Raided
Police Arrest 108 i1t Holy Jim Canyon Revelry
Oran&e. County taxpayers provkled the
hangover brunch for 108 partying
motorcycle gans members Sunday, arter
lawmen raided an unholy re\·el in Holy
Jlm Canyon , 20 miles east of El Toro.
J\.1ost of the 73 men and 35 v.·omen were
booked into Orange County Jail for in·
vcstigation of disturbing the peace, and
immediately posted ball on the misde·
meanor.
A haul of marijuana and other drugs,
plus an assortment of %2 illegal weapons
-including shotguns , swords and a
medieval mace -plus allegedly st.olen
vebides led to 29 additional bookings.
"Everybody was prelty well drunk,"
obsen•ed one sheriff's deputy who
participated in the massive raid after
doiens of complaints by campers and
cabin dwellers in the rustic, wooded can· yoo,
Special Meeting Scheduled
011 Clemente Master Plan
San Clemente planning commissioners
will meet. in a gpeclal study ses&on Tues-
day afternoon to delve into a new, 314
page report on the city's revised master
plan.
The report, submitted by hired con·
sultants and planning aides, rovers
general concepts of the future San
Clemente as a balanced comm unity with
considerations for lnduslry and com-
mercial uses, coupled with the traditional
residential flavor.
The 4 p.m. meeting will allow the com-
miasiooera time to discuss revisions to
the supplemental report berore they take
any official action.
City Associate Planner Gene Schulte
said the date of a public hearing on the
report still has not been declded.
"We still need to consult with the city
altorney to see if a hearing is needed on
the report. Hearings, obviously. are
necessary for a genera l plan or any
amendments lo ii, but supplemental
reports are something difrerent," he said.
\Vhether a hearins is required or not.
commissioners Wednesday night are ex-
pected to delay any action on the report
un1il they study it further .
Wednesday's meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m .
First lawmen on ihe scene called In
reinforcements, including 17 sheriffs
deputiell and Calirornia Highway Patrol
orricers, plus three buses to transport the
suspects,
Sheriff's LL Ted Dwyer said three
groups of residents who live in the usual
sanctity or Holy Jlm Canyon fled in fear
for lheir Jives and safety.
Representatives gathered in a remote
corner or scenic O'Neill Park for the
revelry included the OuUar1s, the Gents,
the Nuggets and the Hessians, in·
vcstigators said.
Despite the lo\v bail se:t for disturbin~
the peace and bf.ing drunk in public. a
large number of cyclists and hangers-on
found themselves stranded after release
by impounding of vehicles.
A number or cars and motorcycles are
being checked out as possih)y stolen,
authorilies said today.
Possession of pistols, shotguns, knive.~
and other deadly weapons classed as iJ.
legal led to stiffer charges against 22
persons, while another seven face
charges for drugs and marijuana.
Noted Artist Dies
NE\VBURYPORT, J\.1ass . (AP )
\Yaldo Peirce, whose paintings have been
displayed in many of the world's major
galleries, died in a hospital here Sunday
after lluffering a heart alt.ack. He was 84.
Get the BIG 6% at the . BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings,
In offering the most in earnings to savers.
8% 2 year term· account, with $5,000 minimum
5~% 1 rt•r term 1ccount, with $1,000 minimum
5~ % S...nonth1 bonus 1ccount1 with $500 minimum
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MUTUAL
SAVINGS
aml man ••-iaU111 ft you 11'9 • Muhlal Saver, now la tht limt to lnvMt 1ddttlonal fundt In lhe&e ntW
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Mutual S.V.r now 11 lhe Umt 10 op111t1 your accovnt •I Thi Slg M-Mututl Savlnga. 2N7 E•'' eo.~1 H•ll'!Wtl.• ' Ttlepl>oftll7S.SO\O
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P.A8 AOINA (Hud otl!Gll)
115 [W'1 ColoflOo lou1..,t'11
tei~••.,n.n
---~ -·----~-----~-.
•
I
Monday, Marth 9, 1970 s DAILY PILOT
• DAILY PILOT Pllttt llr Lff Pt1111
HARBOR TAKES SHAPE BELOW DANA'S CLIFFS. UP ON TOP, A COMMUNITY ASLEEP SINCE THE DEPRESSION WATCHES AND AWAITS THE ECONOMIC IMPACT,
Touring Harbor
Dana Nature Walks Planned
College Choir,
Clemente Band
Dana Harbor Filling Up
Nature-walk.style tours of the Dana
Point Marine Refuge and the 1ilt for the
new Marine Studies Institute at Dana
Harbor will begin on a regular basis near
the end of this month, county schools
aides said today.
The students also will tour the refuge and
learn more about the ocean and it!i tidal
zones. Slate Concert Construction Work Be gins Soo1t on Marina '
The tours will be the first regular
public opportunity for guided visitors to
see the 3.2--acre site which eventually l''ill
become the marine studies center for
thousands of Orange County students.
The formal christening of the institute
will take place at the harbor May 1, 2 and
3 with scores of activities for youngsters
and adults.
The tours will be guided by college and
university students who. are majoring in
ocean sciences. The students will take
small groups for walking lectures along
the site near the harbor's pier, then
onward around Dana Point itself where
the wildlife refuge lies.
The dedication days will feature three
1pecific activities.
Friday, May 1, will mark • massive
workshop day for county students who
will meet with occupational guidance
c<JUDSelcn to discuss the varied op-
portunities in ocean-related vocations.
Stock Talk Set
Southern Orange County's only woman
1tockbroker will dlscu.ss securities and in·
vestment$ March 12 for a noon gathering
of the San Clemente area chapter of the
National Association of Real Estate
Boards.
Mrs. Charlene Vance:, with the First
CaUiomia Company in ?i.lonarch Bay
Plaza, South Laguna, will address the .
group's regular luncheon meeting at
Omar's Restaurant.
All NARES members are welcome.
Reservations are available by calling 496-
53.53 no later than next Wednesday.
On Saturday, May 2, the official
<:eremonies will Lake place, including.at-
tendance by state, county and local
figures and public officials.
The area will take on a festive at-
mosphere on Sunday with varied at·
tract.ioos, including water ski exhibitions.
a dry-land boat show, a visit by Naval
<:raft with the possibility of on-boa rd
tours, an art show sbowtng student works
on ~ sea, displays on the literature of
the sea and a marine hardware display.
The institute has been set up as a non·
profit foundation through the auspices of
the County Superintendent of Schools of-
fice.
Ultimately it will have lecture halls, a
library and laboratory .area along l''ith
ramps out into the bay and 0<:ean from
which students may fish or observe the
tea at \VOJ'k.
The institute, financed. through dona-
tims and fund·r1isin& projects, will
become an educational <:enter for the
county's 38,000 students wbo will travel
there on fttld bips.
The Ford Foundation made an original
grant for the institute late last year -
$18,000.
The goal for the institute is SS00,000 by
1971. $1.S million more by 1973 and $3
million more by 1975.
Despite the years needed for raising or
funds for the actual institute, facilities
the site donated by the Orange County
Harbm' District will be used ln the in·
terim roc student visits and the nature
tours.
Dr. Andreas Rechnitur. president of
the committee planning the institute, has
termed the proposed fac ility the only one
in the world where students can trace
their study of the sea from primary field
trips to sopb.i&tkated research.
Saddleback College's Choir and the San
Clemente Municipal Band will perform in
a free concert Wednesday at the San
Clemente High School Triton Center
Auditorium.
The a p.m. performances will feature
the cholr directf9 by Richard Raub. The
singers will appear for the first half of
the evening.
The choir will open the perfonnan«:
with a Renaissance period offering of "0
Magnum Mysterium" by Spanish com-
poser Tomas Luis Vitoria. They also will
sing wor ks including ''Three Hungarian
f olk Songs" by Sieber and "Long Time
Ago" with an arrangement by. Asron
Copland.
The band will take over the final part
of the program.
Its performances will inelude "First
Suite in E Flat" by English composer
Gustav Holst al)d Beethoven's "Ch·ertµre '° Egmont Opus 84 . ., •
Exchange Students ~
Due Houors Tonigb_t
1'wo American Field Service e~change
Students, Brett Bradley of New Zealand
and Barry Clark of South Africa, who
have been visiting in !\.fission Viejo fur
the past week, wiU be honored tonight at
an 8 o'clock coffee in the home of Mr.
and Mr!. David Weilein, 26602 Alicante
Drive.
Adult and youth AFS members and
other interested members of the com-
munity are invited to attend and meet the
students who are spending the school
year at San Luis Obispo.
Dy JOHN VALTERZA
01 •~• o.nw Plitt si.u
Huge clamshell crane& \\'ill begin goug-
ing 'lway at two 80,000-Cubic yard coffer
dams in Dana Harbor in the next two
weeks and the sea's surge will begi n fill·
ing the future haven for thousands of
bo.i.ts.
Sea water which has been siphoned into
the twin marinas in the new harbor
already is up to the lO\\.'"·tide line, but
several more feet of depth will be added
v:hen the two coffer dams are punched
through.
Orange County Harbor District Resi-
dent Engineer Jack Rains· said the dam·
busting operation \\1il\ be an extensive.
two or three-week project, "but as soon
as the equipment cuts through to let the
water in, the lides will help clear out the
rest."
The classic and simple method of ibe
siphon was put to use lo raise the marina
water to its present minimum level.
The pipes were put to use about two
weeks ago.
During the two or three \\'eeks before
the dams burst, crews will linlsh
waterProofing ~earns in the deep concrete
revetments of the marina, white other
workmen will rush to finish the bridge
spanning lhe channel between the two
boat basins.
The concrete cap on the top of the
bridge will be poured wilhin the next
seven days or so, Rains said.
The bridge, which wilt be dedicated lo
ailing Ohio Rep. Robert K e r w a n
(instrumental in lederal appropriation~
for the harbor project) will rise an
average of about 21 feet above the
waler'a surface, thus allowing some
shorter-masted sailboats to pasi; un·
demeath.
As a hint to yachtsmen and their pro-
El Rancho · has the hottest price • zn town!
• • • • • • • • • • •
El Rancho brings back old time values! Sixteen ounce loaf, white or wheat, at this budget liaving !pecial price!
Scott Place Mats ........ . . . . . . . . .... 29¢
Set a. pretty pla.c.c ••• package of 24 !
Welch's Jelly ..................... . . . . 49•
Grape Jelly or Preserves ••• 2 Tb. jar!
Pork and Beans ..................... 4 "' '1 Scott Towels ................................ 29¢
Campbell'• Home Style ••• bir 28 oz. cans ! Thirsty towels .•• jumbo rolls! Colon, prints.
Earl11-1:n,.the-week menu va.l.-uu a:t El Ra:MM!
1Beef Liver ........ v~~~.~1 ...... 69~
For nutrition, for ,·arlety ••• serve liver! For tendernw, freshnm, value ••• took to El Rancho!
Veal Birds ........ ~~~ .. ~,~~t1U.~ ...... 39~ •
jecllons of the harbor's ya ch l Ing
qualities, Rains said most sailboats woUld
probably be berthed in the eiut haU of
the marina because of the ease at sailing
in and out of the 250-fool entrance ways
during prevailing wind conditions.
Some sailors, ho\vcver , already know
the yachting qualities or the harbor.
On an average, sunny weekeod. day, he
said. a hundred boaters use the already
operating boat laun ching ra1nps al the
harbor.
"Certainly the parking and pa\'ing
aren't in yet, bul it doesn't seem to cause
any problems.
'"Tbose large launching areas are a
tlrcam for ~aters and they tell us so
son1elilncs," Rains said.
As soon as the tw.o tlains break through
and the marina fills, county supervisors
arc expe<:ted to lei to bid contrActs for ln·
sLa!lalion or utUities and paving of the
giant harbor's land areas. •
Soon afler that, Cfe\XS fO( individual
lease holders will begin moving In with
their equipment and will work through
the year's end building the slips, dock
facilities, restaurants, boat B er ' 1 c e
facilities, motels and ot]ter commercial
ventures master planned for the $20--
million marine complex.
Rains said the construction 11 pro-
gressing so well that workmen are up "to
two months ahead of schedule on. the
\\'Ork.
"Actually the present contract for the
marina conslruction and the ·bridge
should be wound up by the end of rum·
mer, but if the work keeps up at tbe
present pace, the men should be through
by the end of Ma y," the engineer said.
By next summer, the first increment of
slips will be filled to capacity with an
esti1nated 1,500 boats bobbing al Uleir
Jines.
In the meantime visitors still can drive
to the westernmost part of the harbor,
down the steep road along the flanks o[
Dana Poinl and fish or sightsee.
The launching ramp is open every Satur·
day and Sunday ror free boat launehi1J&
-a good compromise, temporarUy.
Clemente Pupil Expelled
A San Clemente High School student
with a record of 20 incidents dating back
to fa ll of 1967 has been expelled after his
arrest recently on marijuana possession
charges.
1'he unidentified youth who now is in
juvenile hall after the latest offense, y.·as
on probation before his arrest on charges
or possessing the forbidden weed.
"Typically no student is e:a:pellcd
\1•ithout a series of incident.s of problems
leading up to the expulsion action,"
District Supt. Truman Benedict said after
the board of truslees expulsion last week.
But the youth's record shows cases of ~
slriking a t.eacher, vandalism, cutting
classes, truancy and fighting on campus,
the superintendent added.
Benedict said the youth has received :
counseling, continuation high school and
has been the subject of many con·
versations between school officials and
his parents, described as "very coopera·
tivc."
Tender veal ••• -perfect aervill_i portion!! E&t it all 1oodneu in a delightful-and welcome-taste treat! I
Veal Cutlets ................................ '12:. Sliced Bacon .......... . .................. 89~
Pricu in tffcct 1lfon., Tuu .. ll'ed.,
Ala.r. 9, 10, J l. No salefl to dealers.
ARCADIA: Sunsol and Hun linitcn Dr. (El Rancho Center)
Breaded ••• ready to cook and serve!
El Rancho D•licofui.,.
~~!~~~li~~~!~~yout 3 ORF $1. choice of favorite varieties l
Reg. 39c •••••••.•••••••••
El Rancbo'a ranch style •.. !Cl lc:-.11 '. • Suw-fruh Prod1U!e
Roman Beauty Apples
Large size ••• just right to serve
baked, with brown sugar and cin~
namon ! ., .........•...•......• 10~
• PASADENA: ·
3211 Wt1t Colorado Blvd.
SOUTH PASADENi:
· f:remont and·Huntin&lcn Or.
· HUNTINGTOll BEACH:
Warn« and Alio11<1uin (BOlrdw•li Cini!!)
NEWPORT BEACH:
2727 NlWPott Bl•~ ond •
2555 Ea:lblull Dr. (taliblull ~ll•i• Cen~r)
I
t
..
Capt. K•y• So rtnson o! !he Al·
bany, N.Y. Police Department
talked an.d showed a movie on bur-
glary. to a women's civic group. As
she delivered the talk on crime
prevention, someone walked off
with $1,145 woi'tb o! ladies coats in
the same restaurant. The captain,
a community relations specialist,
was assigned to the case. •
U.S. trooPf in Vietnam must take
precaution in 1earchi'ng for traces
of the entmu. Htre, the mm are nae
.searching for the proverbial needle
in a ha11.stack but for arms and sup-
plie1 or camouflaged air vents lead-
ing to underground compltu1. • State Sen. Harry J. McGuirk of
Baltimore, Md., has intro -
duced a resolution into the General
Assembly to create a study com-
mission to recommend standards
for light bulbs. Said the senator.
••people are often unprepared to
r eplace a' Dumed out bulb at the
time ol its expiration." •
San Francisco topless dancer
Lola Raquel 11as pleadl!'d no
contl!'at to cWturbing the peace
of the financial district Dec. 23
when she paraded down the
street wearing a sign reading
"Merry Xmas" aero.ts her bare
43·inch bust. She said .she was
I01"T'I/ she couldn't get the tcord
"'Chri&~" in but said there
wa.m't an11 room. The judge
1 fined her $65 or $32 .50 per prominent display.
• The Huddersfield, England Chor·
al Society has announced that il
\vill no longer sing Lo the accom-
paniment of the Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic because the orches-
tra members chew gum while the
chorus sings. • 75 members o! the Leftbanded
Students Union at the University
of Kansas marched on the chancel-
Jor's office recenUy with a list of
demands. The ultimatum includ-
ed: Left banded doors, leftbanded
desks, leftbanded homecoming
queens, letthanded cheerJeaders
and lefthanded professors.
Monday, March 9, l97D
linked to Rights
Barry, 'Ted Back
Lower Vote Age
WASHINGTON (AP) -WUh the
Senate maneuvering over Negro ·voUng
rights legislation,· the issue of lowering
the voting age to 18 wu raised anew to-
day by two'"' senators poles a p'• rt
pollUcolly.
A Senate judiciary subcommittee called
a hearing to give Sens. Barry Goldwater
(J\.Arli.), and Edward M. Kenpedy <D-
Mus.), a chance to advance their
arguments that ConartM can give the
vote to l8-year-0lds.
Although Goldwater anlf KeMedy qree
on this, they differ on whether. it should
be made part of · 1eg.t1lation to prevent
denial of voting rlgbtli becaUJe of race.
The legislation is embroiled in a
dispute between senators who want to
continue the 1965 Voting rughts Act, ap.
p!yjng to seven Southern states, and a na-
tionwide bill urged by President Nixon
and alreldy passed by the House.
An amendment to lower tbe voting age
to 18 already hu been .offe'red by
Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield. One
of the (..'(Nlponsors is Kennedy, the assis-
tant Democratic leader.
But Goldwater says the proposal should
be handled as a separate measure rather
than entangled in the already sharp con·
troversy over the voting rights leglsla·
tion. ""
Many senator! maintain th~ voting age
can be lowered to 18 only by a con-
stituUonal !mendment.
A proposed coMtltuUonal amendment
1lsts 67 senators as co-sponsors and hear-
ings on it alreii.dy 'have been held by the
JadJclary subcommittee, headed by Sen.
Birch Bayb, D-lnd,
However, Bayh signed up last week as
one of 10 co-sponsor• of Mansfield's
amendment to the voting rights bill. An
aide to Sen. l\farlow W. Cook CR-Ky.). a
Kidnap Victim
Says Guerrillas
Eying Hostages
GUATEMALA CITY (UPI) -Sean
Michael Holly 's kidnapers told them they
have other American diplomats in mind
for use as hostages to exchange for im·
prisoned CommunJst terrorists.
Holly, the labor attache and MCOnd
secretary at the U.S. embassy, was treed
at S a.m. Sunday in u:cbange for two
jailed guerrillas, Jose Manuel Aguirre
Monzon and Vidalina Monzon Soto.
His abductors had demanded the
release of four jailed comrades by 2:30
p.m. Sunday or said Holly would be kill-
ed. It turned out one of tht four already
had fled to Mexico and another was freed
earlier in lhe week and had taken refuge
in the Costa Rican embassy.
Aguirre and Miss Monzon joined Lionel
El Cid In lhe: Costa Rican diplomatic
enclave and all three "'ere granted safe
conduct passes to lifexico.
Holly, 39, told an impromptu news con-
ference he would not recognize the men
who seized him from his car Friday at
an intersecUon because they wore hats
and masks throughout the ordeal.
"They said they had their eye on other
officers in the embassy and that they
would have killed me U I had tried to
run." he said.
He said they took his glasses and
blindfolded him before beginning the
journey to a mountain hideout by car. on
foot and on h'[seback. The abductors
carried machin guns.
Once Aguirre and Miss 1tfonzon \\'ere
freed, the kidnapers brought Holly back
to Guatemala City early Sunday and left
him in the Chureh of the Divine
Providence with instructions not to call
an yone for an hour.
The hour up, "The first thing I did was
to call my wtfe, Rebecca," Holly said.
'lDe couple has five children. He spoke to
neW5111eD at the U.S. embassy following a
tearful reunion with the family.
subcommittee member, sald he also has
concluded the voting age can be lowered
by 1tatute and plans to introduce a
separate 'bill.
In the Senate, where debate on the
voting rights legislation began a v.'eek
ago, supporters of a atraight--Out e1l·
tension ol the 1965 act have kept the up.
per hand so far.
A motion to la bi . the extension bill was
rejected, as were two amendments of·
fered by Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr., D-N .C.,
to ease the law'! Impact on the South.
The 1956 act suspended voter literacy
tests and authorired the use of federal
regiftrars in six Southern satates arid
parts of a seveath. It also requires these
states to o~in advance approval for
voting law changes from the U.S. at-
torney general.
The administration blll; which Southern
senators prefer as the le.1Ser or evils,
drops this pre-clearance requirement and
providtS for uniform nationwide ap-
plication of other parts of the 1965 act.
Peace Plan
I g·nores Arab
Land Denia ncl
PARIS (UPI) -Foreign l\linister
111aurice Schumann said today the Big
Four ¥-'ere working on a new Middle East
peace fonnula that no longer calls for un-
conditional Israeli evacuelion of ter-
ritories it seiz.ed from the Arabs in lhe
1967 war.
Schumann, addressing a foreign press:
luncheon, said he hOped the Big Four
¥-'ould agree on the formula, which also
would send Uniltd Nations troops into
the area again and create a demilitarized
zone between Israeli and Arab forces.
In the past, the Soviet Union and
France have demanded total withdrawal
of Israeli forces from occupied territories
before there can be any regotiations -
the position the Arabs have taken. Israel
maintains it cannot withdra'v until there
are negotiations.
. Authoritative diplamatlc sources in
Cairo said today France had proposed a
plan which called for IsraeU withdrawal
linked with a pledge by the Arab nations
to maintain peace. A second part of the
plan deals with the Palestinian refugee
problem and with selling up recognized
frontiers, the sources said.
Schumann made a sweeping review of
\\'orld problems and results of the visit be
and President Georges Pompidou made
to the United States. In the review he
said President Nixon admitted that
france might play a specific role in hel1>-
ing to bridge differences over the Viet-
namese conflict.
* * * 5 Russ Advisers
Killed in Egypt
By UNITED PRESS iNTERNATIONAL
A reliable Beirut publication reported
during a \\'eekend of Arab-Israeli clashes
on three fronts that fi ve Russian advisers
serving with Egyptian troops have been
killed in Israel air strikes .
I.n Cairo toda y, n1emoriol services
\rere held for Gen. Abdel l\1oneim Riad
\\'ho \\'as killed exactly one year ago bv
Israeli mortar fire on the second day Of
Egypt's "v.·ar of attrition" against Israel.
The steady increase in air and ground
actions since has broughl the l\1iddle Eas t
to the brink of a ne\Y all-out war. The
situation was worsened recently by ac-
celerated Arab guerrilla activities from
Lebanon.
Cold Air Follows Warmth
• Te mperatures Over Plains Range From 30 to 40
Cnllfot"flin
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meantfor ent
• """ .lll2Mi4 <\<:\oil o..m"'?= . .1112Mi4 'ir.'\ollt -.8' ··~~~~
MONTEREY JACK,
MILD CHEDDAR
OR COLBY
CHEESE
c
CHUNK
LB.
' KRAFT PHILADELPHIA
Cream Cheese 8-0Z. 35c
PKG.
4 31;,.$1
oz.
BUKO ASSORTED DANISH
Cheese Spreads
39 , 'h '69° CT. CAt. _ .
SQUARE CUT SH OULDER
MB
OAST
SHOULDER
LAMB
CHOPS
MEATY lARGE LOIN OR
3TO
4-LBS.
STEW OR: BRAISE
LAMB NECK
LAMB BREAST
c
49~
29~
PRE-CARVED C ROUND BONE
LAMB CHOPS
SLICED 'N TIED SHOULDER 6 5
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Seedia
DESERT GROWN VALENCIA
ORANGES
c
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~RE SH C RROTS 10~.
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ROWN ON IONS 10~. LB •
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REGULAR
MILK
B TER BREAD 1-LB. 31 (
LOAF
Your Neare•I Ralphs Store Is Located at 9907 Adoms Blvd ., Huntington Beacfi
Sto re Hours 9 a.m. to I 0 p.m. Daily
•
. , ___ --~ --·---------·------~--------------,
Tells GOP BacJdns
. J
. •
Scott P~edicts Carswell OK
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Senate Republican I ea d e T
llugh &colt Hy< moll ol the
Senate's 43 Republicans will
vote lo confirm Judge G. Har-
rold Carswell for the Supreme
Court. J-fe predicted the a~
pointment will be a~proved
with fewer than 30 "no ' votes.
"I do not believe l>lm to be •
racist. J btUeve that htJ O•
perlenee as a U.S. attorney
and as a circuit court Judie
qualifies him for lhe bench for
the Supreft'le Court," Scott
said In defense of the 50-eyear.
old appeals court judge from
TaUahas!ee, Fla.
I
Doctors Sav Johnson ~
h1 Excellent Spirits
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)
-Former President Lyndon
B. Johnson was improved and
"in excellent spirits" Sunday,
but doctors gave no word
whtn he might be· released
from Brooke GenerallJospital.
Johnson entered the hospital
a week ago today, suffering
pairu: In his chest and left
arm . Doctors sai~ he had a
form of hardening or the
arteries, but that there were
no signs of a heart attack.
"\Ye are satisfied with the
President's progress and can.
tinued improvement," said
Drs. Robert L. North and Glen
K. Amey in a statement. l t
was the first lime doctors had
used the word "im·
provemenl ."
The medical gtateft'lent said
the former President's vital
signs remain normal and an
electrocardiogram taken Sun-
dev "·as unchanged from one
taken Saturday.
Regular doses of drup have
been administered lo th in
Johnson's blood and smooth
out hls heart beat. which was
erratic when he nm entered
the hospital.
For the past week· the
hospital has issued t w o
bulletins each day on
Johnson's condition. fie was
doing so well Sunday doctors
decided to issue only one
bulletin a day this week.
Another indication of official
confidence in Johnson 's con-
dilion was the fact the forme r
President's executive assis.
tant. Tom Johnson, spent Sun·
day in Austin.
Tom Johnson, no relation,
had been staying near the
fonner President in San
Antonio all last wee.k.
Johnson continued to have a
temperature or 97. gJighily
below normal but about the
Sime ai; he had when he
entered the hospital.
COSTA MESA ONLY .&.~~·
He II.Id ••most or• the
~-·, GOP memhen will
bo behind the -1nallon
wl\tn it ru.cflea UM. Ooor. Aak·
ed about e1tlmate1 that
Canwell opponenll no "
number about 30, S c: o t t
replied:
HI have heard that fifnre. I
my..U lhlnk that tt 1rlll pro-
bably be In the :IOs.''
He said oome ol the op-
po!ftion to Clnwell hu been
"rq:lonal" and some of H
comes from "a {ear of his
deci&lons."
''I would aha~ that fear to
30me extent JI I were not
fllJllllar' with the record of
Mr. Jullllce (Huao) Black, who •
was appOinled to the court
after he we: a mtmber of the
Ku Klux Klan (but) who
became one or the court'•
great liberals."
He added "you can't tell
what a judge is goin& to do
when he getg on the bench. 1
think Judge Carswell, having
undergone the usual traumatic
experience or Senate con·
firmation which is
iiomething equivalent lo a
four-car collision at a busy
street intenection -will
surely benefit and t think the
countrY will benent from his
eq>er1enct."
The Carswell nomination
may reach the Senate thii;
J''etk, if the Senate finishes
\\iork on \·oting rlahts legbla·
tioo.
true-to-life portraits
U,IT ..........
SHOW'S ON ROAD
Lenort Romney
Ro1nney's
Wife Seeks
Senate Post
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -
Lenore Romney, who gave up
an actJng career to gel mar·
ried in 1931, gets to take Per
own sho\v on the road this
year.
Mrs. Romney -wife ol
George Romney, secretary of
Housing and Urban Develop-
ment and former Michigan
governor -has b e e n
designated a.a the: favored c&n·
didate of ~flchigan 's
Republican leadership for the
party's U.S. Senate nomina-
tion. She will spend the neit
eight months campaigning for
the post.
The designation came Satur·
day iD Lansing at a meeting
which had been carefully pro-
grammed by Gov. WU!iam G.
Milliken to assure M r s .
Romney of party backing.
The vote was 278-25. a ma·
jority of 9J. 7 percent. we.II
above the 75 percent required
by the rules governing the
selection of a consensus ca n·
dldate.
But when it appe'ared he:r
husband was more tnterel!lted
in his cabinet post than In run-
ning for the Senate. the GOP
leadership began Lllking about
~fri. Romney as a candidate.
The talk culmlnated i n
Saturday's vote.
Mondly, Mirtlri •. 1970 DAILY PILOT 1J
Cong Call Gls 'Stubborn' .
Captured Document Reports No. Willing Surrenders
SAIGON (UPI) -A cap-'"Wbel\ captured, they refuse ne1ative •ttttude and oon-munlst) forces .
t.ured Vlet Coni documenl, to move and displ•y a tempt against friendly (Com· "They even spit at them ."
released today, reports that ---::;;jjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiil"~-not one Amertcan GI has sut·
rtndered willin1ly to Com· J k
munl•I forces In the Vietnam a as a IS ALIVll
war.
lt describes the typical u.s. At "T h• Gr1nd•1t Mill Of All"
1ervlceman as a stubborn in· "' Beginning Mlrch 12, 1970
dlvklual who has be e n
br1lnwe:hed about the South r.oath (out ... -a Vletoamese 1overmnent and . · 111 ~MIA
who refUJeS, when captured,'--~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: __ to cooperate with his captors.
Yet it adds that. bttause of
"our increasing victories, they
have become demoralized,
thus creating a favorable con.
ditlon for us to capture many
prl$ontrs."
The document was captured
three weeks qo. It said :
"U.S. terVicenien are
basically very stubborn In
combat. There has not been a
single U.S. ee.rvicMtan who
ha s surrenQ.ered (sic) ~
friendly (Viet Cong) fora:s so
far (In South Vietnam).
•1u.s. servicemen now re-
main deaf to our appeals to
them to 11urrender. Sometimes
they re!pond to it wit h fire.
* * * 7,000 More
Ma1ines Set
For Return
SAIGON !UPI) -The U.S.
Marine Corps relinquished
command or South Vietnam's
five northernmost provinces to
the Army today and 7,000
more leathernecks prepared
lo leave for home.
Most of the dep arting
leathernecks have been in
Vietna m at least nlnt months.
All will ha ve departed by
~farch 20 for bases at Camp
Pendleton and Twenly·Nine
Palms.
The troop withdrawal reduc·
ed American strength in Vie~
nam by 2.650 last week. U.S.
military !pokesmen said there
were 464 ,700 American
servicemen in the war zone u
ol March II.
We
could lease you
any new car
for$l0am
But we won't.
IN COLOR Robbery No Tale
Boy, 5, Used as Hostage
The reaaon we won't-benefits )'OU. The lower your monthly pay•
mcntll, the more likely you'll have to pay a big chunk at the end. That'•
because at the end of your lease there's a balance due. If your car•
worth more on the open market than the balance-great-yon get ~
money back. Otherwise you make up the difference. At Ftrat Wcatem
Bani.: we set monthly paymcntll realistically and you benefit. To find ;
out how much we save you, you haveto compare not only thc· IWD of
the monthly paymcntll, but also the amount you may have to pay at the
end of the lea se period.
5x7 PORTRAIT, or a set
OF4 WALLET SIZE PHOTOS ... .... ·1.49
2 CHILDREN PHOTOGRAPHED TOGETHER .•.. 2.98
"Each Add itional S )( 7 or 4 Wallet Size Group $1 .49"
Great colo r portrait~. as only the ''Piiy .. photographers cap·
tu re them. All portraits are delivered to you at our store. You
have your choice of several poses. No mailing, handlina.
or other charges. Age limit, 12 years.
Tue. M•rch 10 thru Sat. M1 rch 14 -9:30 to S:JO
Harbor Shopping Center Cott• Mt••
.
SOLANA BEACH (AP) -photo by nelgllbon. The bank
Why was S·year-old Michael is two blocks frnm his
Karne s an hour late for din· grandmother's home.
ner? The boy told o((lceril he was
He was a hostage in a bank riding his bike in a vacant
robber}'. he t o 1 d big field when two men drove up
grandmother. and forced him into their car.
Two men , he explained. They took him to the bank,
''took me by the hand and ~·e already closed for the day.
wen! into the bank and stealed The men got in by stopping
almost all their dollar!! and two women tellers outside and
put them in a pillow case." saylna: they had the boy's
His grandmother and guar· brothf!r and were going to kill
dian. Petra Stout, 1 en t him U they were not allowed
~llchael to bed with a scolding in.
and told him he couldn't ride Holding on to Michael -
his bike for the next two ''They he.Id my hand real
weeks. That would teach him tight," he. said -the men
to lie, she said. stuffed the money into a pillow
But Michael hadn't told a case and fled in a bank
whopper. tmp\oye's car, d r opp in g
The FBI agenls and San h-11chael off at the field where
Diego County s h t r if f • ii his bike was.
deputies who showed up at "They told me to go right
Mrs. Stout's door late Friday home or they'd kill me ," he
had a picture of the boy. said. The boy picked up hJg
1t was snapped by a hidden bike and pedalled home.
camera as he wa1 towed f.frs. Stoul saJd she regret.
around by two robberg who ted not believing ~fichael's
took $8,800 that day from the l!lory but "he does tell some
Bank of America branch In tall tales sometimes."
this ~aside town 25 miles --
north of San Diego.
The •robbers are st.Ill at
large. 1'le boy'a unwtllln1 part
in the robbery was dlaclosed
Sunday.
Michael wu identified in dJe
We can saw you up to $300. That's because, unlike most car l ... ing
firm s, we're the source of cash-the money factory. And we don't have
to pay sales commissions. Rcmemb~r, if anyone cLUms they can give
yo u a lower payment, be sure to a!k how much you'll owe at the end.
Take a look at our low bank rates. Each car below is loaded with
cxtra.'I. The paymcntll arc reali stic, based on a 36 month lea!e, plus tax. •
Na turally, we can lease you almost any make and model with the
equipment you desire: Ford Maverick. $56, Chevrolet Impala $81
and Buick S~lark $74.
we're interested in helping whether you lease or buy. The lower
interest on our direct bank loans cutll the cost of new (or used) car bny-
i ng as much as $200.
You •ee, as a $950 mil-
lion bank with over 90
offices throughout the
sta te, we want yo u to
get the best deal on
your car, loan or lease. x.1.,.....,.,._i-c..,.n111111
F'U'St Ban car
D!
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--
I DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Reagan's Tax Reform I
Governor Reagan's '1 billion tu reform program
iJ in the Assembly hopper.
It appears to be pretty carefully designed to ac·
comptisb two things; to provide some genuinebJong·
overd.ue shitting of tax burdens and to give the emcr
crats litU.e chance to top it or tear it apart.
Its major thrust would ·be to shift $1 bitlion from
local proj>erty taxes by 1973 to sales, income and busi·
ness-oriented taxes.
Assembly· Speaker Bob Moilagan claims It will pro-
vide tax relief for about twi>tbirds of California's tax·
payers. He calls for bi-partisan support because the
b ills are "carefully drawn. excellent and merit such
~ack:ing." Thal support is likely to be hard to ~ome by
1n an election' year. ·
Monagan reports the average savings for all home.
owners under the property tax rbllef features of the
program will be approximately $154 per household. He
asseru that more than 95 percent of all homeowners
and tbetr dependents will get usubstantial reductions in
their total state and local taxes."
Keys to the package:
-Approximately $150 million will be raised an·
nually through compulsory withholding of state income
taxes. This would end the evasions by workers ·who
leave without paying any income tax.
-The sales tax would be increased one percent.
Another part o! Reagan's lax package, which would
require two-thirds vote support from both houses of the
Legislature, would :
-'Give the homeowner a direct tax break by tn--
creesin~ the present. $750 . homeowners' prop~rty tax
exempUon to $1,000, plus 20 percent oJ l)ie.remainin&
assessed value of the home. • f
4 -Cause the stale to pay ~percent ot pre sent cout>-
ty expenditures for .. categorical aid" welf.are pro-
grams in excess of the amount the county rai1es from
2.5 cents per '100 of assessed value on the county P.ros>-
erty tax rate.
The package bas numerous other features which
apoear to have been well thought out, and to be, if en·
acted a deterrent to both tax initiatives on the June
ballot' and much Democratic Party hay-making in an
election year.
Proposition 7-YES
Just abool everyone is aware of the anti·infl!l.tion
tight money situation. And of the resultant rise in loan
im.erest rates.
Bond issues voted by the required two.thirds of the
voters in school districts in the past have been stymied
by the 5 percent legal ceiling. on interest tQe districts
-Bank and corporation taxes would be increased, · can pay.
and about three percent of the state's income taxpay·
ers will pay higher rates.
Monagan's figures on net reductions' In homeowner
tax reductions are theoretical and not necessarily valid
even in most cases, it should ·be pointed out. Wide var-
iations in property tax rates and to a lesser extent as·
sessment ratios over the state make impossible any
exact figures or even close estimates.
The problem is crucial to the state in its sales of
state water bonds and bonds for other 'late building
needs. The state constitution sets the Jiinit at 5 percenL
The state water project is in jeopardy as a r~ult.
Proposition 7 on the June primary ballot would permit
the Legislature to authorize higher interest payments.
Proposition 7 should receive a strong YES vote jn
June.
Irrelevant to Electioti Prospects 'Forthright,
Conscientious,
Trustworthy' _
Disorganized Democrats
WASHINGTON -'11le c0mmonest -
and loosest -talk In Washington political
circles concerns the disorganized con+
diUon of the Democratic party. The party
is disorganized but that is irrelevant to
Its prospects for gaining more strength in
Congress this fall and challenging Presi·
dent Nixon for reelection in 1972.
This depends on other more important
factors than the state of order or disorder
in the national organization, which is
fam iliar in both parties alter either bu
lost a presidf:z;atial election.
Lawrence F. O'Brien. the late Preal·
dent Kenori¢Y's campaign manager. at
first refused, then accepted t be ·
chairmansbl.p ()f the Democratic party.
He will be good at reducing the party'1 fl
million de'tfclL
If the Democratic party should hn·
prove its majority in Congress this fall,
which is not at all unlikely, lntere.-rt will
be revived in making Richard M. Nixon
the Republican party's fourth one-term
president in this century.
REPUBLICANS HA VE not been too
good in reelecting their president.s. Taft
failed, so did Hoover, Harding died In of.
fice in his first term and Coolidge was
elected oQCe, leaving Eisenhower as the
()nly Republican since ~lcKinley to be
elected to two full tenns, and even
?o.1cKinley fell short of serving two terms
""hen he was assassinated In l!ICJI.
This 70..year record should be the less
heartening to Republicans in such
troublesome and contradictory times as
the present. In addition, in every mid·
term election since the Civil War the
President's party has lost strength in
Congress, except in 1944 when Franklin
D. Roosevelt was at the peak of his
popularity. Five out ol seven house elec-
W t •t-..,,.,.j. .. ,
WlLeOU ' '
-~
lions were won by Democrats since the
1968 pres idential election, increasing
Democratic strength by three seats over
the majority it JlPd when Nixon was
elected.
THE EFFORTS OF Spiro..JJ'heodore
Agnew need ~ examined in this con. tect, for upon h1!'shou1ders has falltm the ·~
difficult task of arreJtlng and reversing
historical political trends. Agnew is doing
fdr aUon what ~ixon tried ,t.o-do for
Eisenhower and failed. Agnew ls also
doing what ~ Goldwater later tried
lo do and suCCeeded, at least to the ea:·
tent that he made himself the Repub!ic'an
nominee.
In general, however, neither Nixon nor
Goldwater was able to project the
RepubllCan p&.rty into a winning position
in congressional elections. and it was not
unlil the anti.Johnson reaction had built
to it.s peak that the Republicans could
come back to power. Even then the
Republican organization was unable to
provide Its: newly el ected president with a
majority in Congress, which Is usually
the ·case in a successful first-tenn
presidential election.
IN PERSPECTIVE, Agnew Is making a
stronger run for the Republicans than
either Nia:on or Goldwater in their time.
That is to say, he has commanded more
continuous public attention nationally but
bis rhetoric is getting a bit repetitious
and he could (ail, too.
ln the process ht is ralslng a good deal
of money for Republican candidates.
They will need it The Republica n
organ!u.Uon is noL in fact structurally
strong and relies too much on the
leadership Of the President and the COO•
tinuing effort of Agnew to rally the silent
majorlly behind candidates who in some
cases (New York, for example) cannot
accept his support. There are numer<>UJ
districts and states in which candidates
for the House and Senate find it ti·
pedient to associate with Agnew at arms
length, or in some cases not at all.
. . ... ..
,A CONQ8ElllONAL electJon ls dlf
ferent from a presidential election.
Congressmen do not find lt wise to run
·111>lely on the IJ"<'Uon o( their "!Pport er
lllck or it for the administ\'alion in pow~.
There will be an added dilemma this fill
because Nixon will not have been able to
live up to his 196& implication that he
"''ou\d wind up lhe Vietnam war before
the end of 1970.
tt is commonly thought in Washington
polltical circles that Republicans will
have a hard time winning cootrol of the
!louse but ml ght capture the Senate. The
first part of this assumption Is easier to
understand than. the second. State.by·
'!tate, there are many reasons why
Republicans may not be able to pick up
'he eight seats they need for Senate con-
trol. Gaining 30 seals needed for House
.:ontrol will be even more difficult.
On balance, therefore, the Republican
orob lem even with a President in the
White House, a Vice President on the
road and against disorganized oppo~ltlon
ls a very large one. If we go into the fall
with the economy at its present standstlll
the siu of the Republican problem will
be increased.
Men Malie Love With Eyes
There's this chap J know who lives In
Santa Barbara. He sells land and the
buildings thereon, \\'bich makes him a
realtor, or something.
He is a handsome duck, and has given
nos.mall amouot of thoughl to the subjcd
of lhe ladles, and or love-making •!rl
general. He has distilled all his wlsdo~
into a theory ·which Is known In some
quarters as Brom.field's Law. It goes Ukt .. ,
"Men make love with their eyes;
women with their ears."
When flrst I heard this, 1 regarded It as
a preUy facile formulation, and ~ave no
more thought to the matter. But I found
it was one of those things that would not
go away.
WHAT THE LAW states, in other
words, is that \\·hen the chase is on a m~n
never hears anything, and a woman
never sees anything.
----
Monday, March 9, 1970
T he editorial pa(Je of tht Dntly
Pilo t 1eeks tO inform and stim-
ulate reader' by presenting this
m10.spaper's opinions and com-
mtrnr.aTJI on topics of hl!ere.s t
and 1foni/ican,ct, by provfdi110 c
/arum for tht trpre.s1IO'n of
our renders' opinions, and b11
presenting tht dl~rst t.'ltw.
point.I of infonntd ob1art1er.1
and spokesmen on topfcs of lht
<1au.
Robert N. \Veed, Publl1br!.r
,--
l Cbarles 1\lcCahe
)
Perhaps these are two necessary
deceptions, as the whole process of
courtship is 'a. necessary deception.
In my b(ief and inconclusive ex·
perience In these matters, I think it .in·
controvertible that the lady cares far less
about how you loo k. thM what you tell
her about how she looks, and how
heavenly she is ID other matters.
You tell her that the sun, the moon and
the stars revolve about her pretty little
head, and no matter who she is,or "''here
she is, you're in like Fl}'fln. tt is only
when you stop making these prCtty little
asse veraUons that you're in trouble.
BLARNEY IS TllE greatest
aphrodi siac ln the world.
\Vilh a woman, you can talk your way
into anylhh;1g. Talking yourself out is
another matter, and not nearly so
interesting or so easy.
One of the QlOSl successful lovers In
English history was a I s o one of t h e
ugliest men of his: Ume, the greot
polltica.I agitator or the 18th century, John
\Vilkes. Johnny Boy usOO to say:
"Give me a holf hour, and J ~Ul
overcome the handsome st face In
Europe.''
And he proved It, over Md over agaln.
with the most benuUCuJ women of his
time. You c:in m1ke a woman forget a
wooden leg, or a most. 1ln!stc:r &spttt by
e few thousand weJJ~hoscn words on the
wonders of her character, and the
distinction of her mfnd.
YOU EJ\.IPIJASIZE her chsracter and
mind, of course, lf ~he has a beautiful
body. tf she doesn't.. emphasize her
beautiful body.
~Ian, conversely, gobbles up the lady's
looks, doubtless for the sound biological
reason that he wishes to improve the
~ies, and that his . wonderful looks
compound~ with those of the lady he is
.serenading at the moment, will result In
a race of supermen.
He is obsessed by her ankles, by the
way she crosses a room, by the way stle
~·riokles her nose, the way she sits into
and rises from a chair, by the way her
breast heaves when he has dellvered a
particularly successful perlod. He is
obsessed, in fact. by every physical nu-
ance ol the woman he has chosen u his
divine prey.
HE NEVER HEARS a word she says,
which too often leads to small bits of
trouble. It leads, for on~ thing, to the
dangerous llluslon that a beauUtul woman
is something like a beauUfu! horse -just
a beautiful animal. This is a mistake.
llorses don't go to lawyers.
Dear
Gloom.-
Gus:
When I• our generous government
going to issue a few programs to
htlp us, the hardworking, taxpay.
Ing mJddle class? The: "poor" are
ettllng sttaks and are he lpe(t lo
buy their ·homes \lt'hile we eat
h~mburgcr nnd rent -and we're
paying !or il
-N. W.
~'""'.""'".l'.:i:'lii"'""'.'~"" r•·1
~" ,, f\f ailbox ...
To the Editor :
ln defense of free speech and the
Americ!-n right to petition, and even pro-
test, I suppose one should sit back and ig·
nore Mr. (Anthony) Tarantino attd Mr.
(Paul) Carpenter in their ridic:.'ulous er~
forts to defame Supervlsor Ab Allen
and Mr. John Klllefer, his asslitant. ·
I have Jried, and I just ~ct. My
temper rises above all my ~lige!lt
determination not to reply fl--; kind.
Perhaps that is Mr. Tarantino'• JKBllOSe:.
• • to insult, and twist fi.cts: beyond
bearability. U so, he may find il back·fir-
ing <>n him.
THAT SO MUCH publicity, newspaper
space, d!SCU!lsion time, and prec ious
"private thought" lime has necessarily
been expended on the issue is eriough to
make my blood boll.
J personally know of no finer, more
honest, forthright, conscientious, trust·
worthy person anywhere than Mr. John
Killefer. It has been obvious since the
outset or this libelous campaign from
Mr. Tarantino, and his ghost writers
and backers, that his atTOW has been
aimed at the Killefer family heart. I
resent tt wilh alt or MY heatt, and
have run out of cheeks to lurn.
IN A WElJ.,.WORN word, we "silent·
majority"-itea make terrible enemies
when we reach the end ol our silent pa-
tience. I am at the end ol mine. 1 am not
sure just what J can do to stop this
nonsense but this Jetter ls a begiMing. [
would lmplore those friends who know·
and respect Mr. AJlen and Mr. Killefer
and hi• family to begin their own loud
majority support of them.
And, in case Mr. Tarantino should in·
quire, this is NOT a solicited opinion.
PATRICIA CREAMER LIJJ..EGRAVEN
Letter• frpm readtrs, are we>lcomt.
Normally writer1 ahoalrd convey thei r
mtssages in 300 words or \les.s. The
right to condtme lttttN to •fit space
or eliminate libel is res.fvtd . .:.iu let·
ttrs must 1nclttde signaiuri and fflllil-
ing addres.t, but namt1 m.o11 be .with,.
held on , reqt.teat i/ 1ufJicient rea1on
Ls apparrl'lt. Poetrv tDiU "Mi be pub-
U.thed.
Make Any Sense?
. .
Pre,s Comments
~ ' ~ "' . ' ;
COM lay, Ore., Empire Builder:
"Smoking and Its huanls are getting lots
of. attention th• day•, not the least from
aovmment. Last year the federal
gove.r:mnent, in addition to subsidies,
spent $7.I mUUon to help tobacco farmers
Improve their product. Of that i;wn,
$240,000 was spent to help sell American
tobacco overseas. At the same time .the
government spent $4.2 million in act.
Vertising and research aimed at gettlng
people to stop smoking. Does this make
any sense -regardless of wb.lch sltle or
the argument you art on?"
Beach Btvee, N.J., 1\me1: "Perhaps
the lcut praiseworthy part or the
American way of life, these days, Is the:
conclu&fon o( psychialrlsU, doctors and
health tlpeJU In all fields, that the fast
pace OlJi\ring In the Unlt:td Stal.ts is one
of our nlD&r aerlous problems."
. -. . -.. · . .
'•·
The Hom·~phone_
Gives Us ·-Trou·hle . . ' -
A "homophone" 1s a word that i• pro-
.nouneed the same as an other, bUt'dlffers
in spelling or meaniDg, like "pair" and
"pear" and "pare." There are many of
these in the English language, and in
mpst cases the wrong word is written for
,.#"M. -.... •T"."'"', ;,=--*f7'.'<f':lr1''<
f • ~~-
' Sydney . .J. Harri~,
\..
the right one. Vair, or ';The Little Fur Slipper," but the
Even so literate a journal as lhe New sound of "vair" was confused with "ver·
York Review of Books, in a large· re." rneaniTI& glass, and the mistake ii
headline offering s~ial holiday subscrip-now ineradkable.
tions, wroJe .''Chr1s'tmlis .~sn't . .P~~~-"· · But-English if·t spcciaUy burdened with Me," when the .word 1~ me~ .• w~ . "fa'ze'" ll ·15 a,,.;..,.,_,.~ ·· , •. ·1 ~" this problem. Some.•50~years Af!O, Robert . • . . .................. n error .. mos., ~v-"· Br'd · the t d h J · •·' Pie think .. ha "· · l th'JJ 1 ges, pe an sc oar, wrou:: .an " ,p. se. IS proper n usa:e, essay an English homophones with a list
:: _fiue is. obly a slang \!~rlan(. ~ l{t · .of 835-entti~s involving nearly 1800 words.
. Y .~.e tot~ty_M(~r~nt ~qrd§~,': .... . · !J'hese Words al',f:;jrolfblesome :aM self·
. .THE NEW rou -mtES; .wJi1clr"iil!o'. • destruct.h't; al~o: because -we a i' e
should know beUer not .long ago reported careless ·in speech and smudge the
·tn a 'Story that er-~ was .. l'H1tlN't1ntO -wwels,----words originally different begin
court." The homophone that should have I~ ~u~d alikt, and we lose important
been used is "haled," which means disti nction.
"drawn by · force." To be "hailed " in to
court ls to be shouted for, which was not
meant. Yet "hailed" has almost driven
out "haled" in this kind of context.
ALAIOST EVERYONE calls II "Welsh
rarebit.'' when it should be "welsh rab-
bit": all children refer to "coleslaw" as
"cold sla\V .'',and I have seen it printed as
such on sorr<e menus; "buttonhold" Jong
ago Jost out to ''buttonhole '';
"sweetheart" hiiS nothing to do with the
"heart," but is a co rruption of
"sweetard," like "d~tard" and "coward."
I
' -
' l
"
Recently I read a story in wh ich one
character was descri.bed as being. "hair·
brained." This Is a.common homopho.nie .
mistake for "hare-brajned,l' wh.lcti__JXl'ans -
glddy or 'nll~ty , be_havior--, .~,ch "\ "l!ls
associated witb lhe.Ma:.cb· hare '8TicN>lher
rabbits that seem to go-wild . in some
seasons. The notion of "hair" bas nothing
whatever to do ~1ith the case.
EVERY LANGU&JJ~ has such prolr
blems. ClndereUa's farn<JQf "glass" slip-
per Is the result of a.homoPbontc mistake
in French. The original tiUe.of:Penaiilt's
"Cinduella" was La Pedt.e Plntoufl1 de
IC I recall my '''Alice" correctly, it was J ~
the Gryphon wbo remarked Iha~ school·
hours in the sea grew shorter every day.
"That's why they 're called 'lessons,!'"you
know," he said to Alice, "because they
lessen each day." .Allee knew there was:
something wrong with this explanation,.
but a 7-year-old girl can hardly handle a
homophone.
Miller to .He ad NL RB • --.. -· WASHINGTON -Tht U.S. &nate wlll
decisively confirm Edward BbonC Miiier
as the new chairman of the National La·
bor Relationa, Board.
~~;'""·\ . ---~ . f,t·'.J~ ·"· ' .. _ .. •J L '
The 48-yeaf-<>ld Chlcago attorney. a
leading specialist in labor law and man-
. ''f.\.lleu~Go lds'rn.illr · .); ..
\.,..t ~.. ::. . •
agemenl·labor relalii:ins, is being ofiposcd compelled to oppose Miller 's appointment
by George P.1eany, bead of the .AFL-CIO. "as a inatter of principle.'' But the uriion
He has assailed J\.1iller's appoiritment as leader added, ··~e's a square. shooter. "unfrie~ly to organized labor." · mod.~rate and f~1r. If the President fe!t
Notwithstanding this diflapproval,,Mll· • he Had to appoint someo~e who "".asn t
ler will ·be confirmed by the Senate h{' 4 • ., froi:n our ranks., lie coul dn ,~ have picked
big niaj(lrlty.. , • a nicer guy lh1'!l·Ed Miiler.
A backstage · poll by adrnini.s).flltldn ,.-~ BORN REARE'b and educated In Wls-
leaders sho!fS the nominee for ~~B consin, Miller liet\'ed in the Navy in
chairmanship has the ~pport Of>all but .. World War 11, and is a member of one of
a few of the 43 Repubbcan senators, a'!d Chicago's mos1i prominent Jaw 11rm~. His
~early on~half of~ ~7 ~mocr~t.s. TJUs wife, Anne, cilso a lawyer. i.s on· the legal
insures him an tmpreSS1ve b1J>!rtisa n staff of the NLRB office in Chicago.
majorJty. --.. ... . . ,,. His appo'ntment to the Labor Board 11
SJGNlFICAN'TLY,'· Whlle -1'1f3nf ' llis ·'his fi~t public office. ltfiller has partici·
criticized Miller's selei:Uon, other labor pat~d in h.undreds of ~abor casesr acting
chiefs are saying nothing. as Ul1part1al referee in many l~ces,
Reason for their ~llence Is the high per. but bas ne\·~r been a_ govf.Tnmen.t off1cl;a,I.
sonal regard ·in which Miller is held in ~hlle prominent In tits borne area, he IS
labor quarters. 1tustraUve Of this· wfdely virtually . unknown notionally.
held private attitude is the laudatory com-A.s chairman of the NLRB, he will ft!!act
ment of Sheldon Charone, .who has repre-a f1.ve-membe r •ge:ncy th!J~ ~e c_reated
sented the mlichiniSts ana 'teaniitera· in during lhe Roosevelt Admini.ll.ration. It
cases involving clients of ~filler'!. has wide powera to tJUper\i;ise Jab!Jr..01an-
"'He is a decent and honora~e crafts-agement relations, incllJding plant and
man," said Char6ne, "aiid very'"reison--lndustrywi~e eleetlons to determtne union
able and praclical·to deal with." mem bership and representation.
A top AFi,<;IO official, who asked not By Robe:rt S. Allen
to be identllied, aafd organized labor felt and John A. Gokhmftll
Ikar q_eorge~ .
I'm pla.nnlng an outdoor l>tlrty.
Do you have any new Jl.laler1al on
rotisseries?
HOSTESS
J)(!nr Hosttss ~ ------·----
No. l 'v~ just got the· aame. old
rollsserle malerial : The one where
Ule drunk comeS81ong a'nd sees tha
guy barbe~ullla. on an oiltdoor ' '
rotisserie and says, "Shaf, Buddy,
your organ'sh busted snd your
monkey'sh on Clre. ''
That usually gets 1 laugh. On the
t>thc-r hand, you may·have meant to
wr1te to the ·eookln& edilOr -rm
just here for lauebs.
(~end your problems Jo. G<orge
and let him 1filsl them beyond all recilgnllfon),
•
B ..
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I
•
Monday, March '1, 1 CJ70,
: ---
.
~
~
' On '!rain .. _ enne~
Egg, Grapefruit
Diet Here at Last :
_. ...:_~t;:\]"'""~~ .-~L~AVS FIR.8~ ~U,ALI~-... ' ..
. ~tu. ':'f~ .. Fr~ 1. . .. : .
• cooperate wttli the_Pol)te, whq • • .. • r: .. , •
don't ~ wh9 they are «
w~ they're golll:(. ~ , ' t •
The yoongsters, Jose Coloa, ~ .'f
10, and hb brother and 11stel's,
AngelO, t, Glady&, 1, and SLEEP - A contemporary
claims the wives-1deep lbout
an hour longer than do their
husbands nationwide. That'•
pretty close. Yearround wives
gel an average of S3 more
minutes sleep. W h a t ' s
noteworthy about this, I think.-
is women actually need Jess
sleep than men.
rr IS KNOWN the divorct
rate is three times higher
among couples who sleep in
twin beds ... COURTS in New
York City have ruled that a
man has legal right to slap a
woman, once, if she slaps him
first ••• CHANCES ARE one
in four that any woman picked
up for shopllfling once will be
picked uP for shoplifting twice.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"Have co.stars ever both won
the top Academy Awards for
the same moving picture?" A.
Not since Clark Gable and
Claudette Colbert did it for "It
Happened One Night" in 1934,
the record shows. If you don't
know who Claudette Colbert
is, yoong fellow, ask yoor dad.
OH, Yµ, THAT egg-and-
Teacher Blasts
Loy_alty Oaths
SAN "FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Kenneth P: Ma<:Kay, assistant
professor of meteorology at
San Jose State College, filed
suit In federal court Tuesday
challenging the con-
stitutionality of CalUomla's
loyalty oath for tea chers .
MacKay filed the suit
against state superintendent of
pu blic instruction Max Raf-
ferty and the state . board or
education In behalf of himself
and others similarly situated.
' The professor said he was
llffered a job at Cabrillo
Junior CoUege.
War Hero Signs
For 9th Tour
FT. BRAGG, N.C. CAP) -
Sgt. Maj. William Waugh has
volunteered for his ninlh toUr
of duty in Vietnam. Waugh, 39,
won a number of medals dur-
ing his previous tours, in-
cluding two Silver Stan, a
Bronze Star and two Viet-
namese Crosses of Gallantry,
and has received seven Purple
Hearts. He is to leave again
for the war r.ooe this month.
Andy's Fun
Ask .any kid. "Ask Andy'' Is fun.
Stt It Satut'11ays In Utt DAILY
PILOT.
J'IHl"illU Thrift
grapefruit menu, billed as the
world's best rtduclng diel -
here it ia :
DIET
Breakfasts att the same
every day. Grapefruit. An egg
or two. Black eoffee.
Monday : .Lunch -two egs,
tomatoes , black coffee.-Dlnner
-two eg'.gs, .. oombinatloti
salad, a pil!C!: of dry toast,
grapefruit, coffee.
Tuelday: Lunch -two
egg,, IJTI!pefrul~ coffee. Din-
ner -steak. tomatoes, celery,
cueumben, olives, coffee.
Wednesday: Lunch -two
eggs, spinach, tomatoes, cof·
fee . Dinner -two ·iamb chops,
celery, cucumbers, toma~s.
coffee. .
Thursday: Lunch -two
eggs, spinach, tomatoes, cof.
fee. Dinner -two eps, cot..
tage cheese, cabbage, a piece
ol dry tout, coffee.
Friday: Lunch ..... two eggs,
spinach, coffee. Dinner -fish,
combination salad, a piece of
dry toast, grapefruit, coffee.
Satur.day: Lunch -fresh
fruit salad, any Jdnd, as much
as you want, and coffee. Din-
ner -plenty cf steak, celery,
cucumber, tomatoes, coffee.
Denise, a, were taken off a ~
New York-bounct. New, Ha ven train Thursdar nigh~ pen-
niless and with ~:tickets, ,
Del.etUve Paul Jeegan said
they W.re neaUy dr..,.i In
winter c.lothlng, and ippe~d
to be iii good physical con-
diUon. Altliough they OjleU
mainly SJ!lllisb, ,they maoaaed
to convey in English aj the
outset ol thelr laterrogaUon
that they were bungr'y. Ham-
butgers and aoft "drinks solved
this problem. ,
Then; •I through an In·
t!lpretU officers zought to
unravel lhe mystery of how
the children . happe'ned into
their predicament. T h e
you ngsters gave their names
and said an older sister put
them on the. train al Stamford,
CoM., about 9 p.m. Wed·
nesday to go to their
grandmother's house.
Uiltortunately, however ,
they didn't know where the
grandmother lived. They gave
a street address, but a cbetk
in the New York metropolitan
area drew a blank.
Meanwhile, the c h 11 d re n
have been temporarily lodged
in ~o private h_pmes here
through the efforts of the
Sunday : IAlnch -cold
chicken, tomatOis, grapefruit,
coffee. Dinner -chicken,
tomatoes, grapefruit, carrots,
cooked. cabbage, coffet: ·
city's Department of Social . •
Services. --_, · ·
. . .
THAT'S IT. No sub!tltu· H .. tions. 'No snacks. No a-tam or ~ 3W8ll
• Opens
sugar In the coffee. No salad
oil. No butter. No booze. No
nothing. .
But eat it all. Don't do
withoul Basis of the diet is
chemical, the e1pert.s say.
You'u supposed to stick to it
two weeks only -after you
get your doctor 's OK to try it.
And if your chemistry is
predictable. you'll drop 20
pounds.
Your quutionr·and cqm-
mnt• are totlcomed and
wiU bt iutd to~iitr po ...
1iblc i7a "Checking Up."
Plea.st addreu your mail
to L. M. Boyd, in care 'O/
Doily Pilo~ N<l.llJ>OTI Beacll,
Calif, 92663.
Ji:unho Jet Port
HONOLULU (AP) -An
$18-million jumbo jet com·
ptex was dedicated Tuesday
at the Honolulu International
Airport, making it ready ror
the Boeing 747s whk:h will
make daily rughts from Los
Angeles to Tokfo beginning
Maid! .10. .
. Gov. John A. Burns and
275 ct8tt dignltarieS, includ-. .
frig p{One.r avlatllr Charles
A. Lill!fbeTgh. lollowOd the
.~t,l wltb a btjef flight'
fn ·a jumbO' jel ptjrchal!<d two :
days ago by Pan American' 1
Airways. -
Thru Saturday only!
Save on our 'Sue Cory'
fashion perm
Reg.171'0, now
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Everglcze Minicare• finish ••• to make into
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with the big news of surface interest ..•
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T
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OAILY PILOf
/
'
•
-•
f DAILY PILOT Mond1y, M&rch '• -1970
CDC Endorses Unruh I
Jesse Ends Feud, Get.s Campaign Support
t"RE SN O (UP I I
Assemblymen Jess Unruh lo-
--..ly dalmed the endorsement
and campaign assistance of
the 10,000-member Ca!Jfomia
Democratic Council in his
challenge to Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
Unruh and Rep. George
; .Brown ol Monterey Park were t the overwhelming choices for
! the CDC's gubernatotia1 and,
: U.S. Senatorial endorsements
• SUnday at its annual con·
venUon.
~ Bro"'n, a ,eU·described
libtral and longtime favorite
of the \'olunteer organization.
'~molhercd fellow Democrt1lic
. congressman John V. Tunney
• i'n endorsement balloting. ~
lo a mere 52. -~
Aides to T'urmey. whom
la tut polls show ruming
ahead of Brown in their
Senate race. said the can·
dldale did not really expect to
get the CDC nod.
Tunney after the convention
is.sued a bittersweet statement
saying "My candidacy abd my
campaign would not have been
affec ted jf I had received the
e.ndorSement "and it js not af.
fed ed by not geUing il "
The son of fonner World
Heavyweight Boxing QJam-
plon Gene Tunney .sded that
he hoped "CDC m<mbera wUI
join my campaign in J u n e
afler I have won the nomina-
tion of the entire party."
Brown, an early critic of the
Vietnam War, which endeared
him to the. CDC, challe.nged
Tunney to a debate. Tunney
* * * * * * Reagan Machine Oiled
For Re-election Fight
SACRAM EN TO 1APJ
conditionally accepted. Brown
.sneered at bis opponent:
"John l! very proud of the
fact that he is the son of a
great figblin& champion and
would like to see him win his
own spurs by being a ·great
fighting politician instead of a
lightweight contender."
Unruh , who feuded bitterly
with the CDC in past yea rs but
buried the hatchet in 1969, was
roundly appla1i1ded by
delegates in his p re · t n-
dorsement speech s e e k i n g
their support.
Unruh. the 'only major
Democratic gubernatori al can·
didale. criticized OOth violent
student militants and Reagan ,
who is expected to announce
his re.election c a n d i d a c y
Tuesday.
The assembly .Democratic
leader said·campus turbulence
was an "tndispelsible element
in the political survival" of the
governor.
"Ir it had not. exisUd, he
would have had to invent it.·•
Unruh said . "The plain and
simple and brutal fact is Iha!,
Ronald Reagan has sponsored
the war on our ca mpuses.
either by deliberate design or
simple stupidity.
.. :;
. ·' Manson's __. ... 1.....::=c: • MR.MUM
Abortion Bill .4 uthor
Asks More Freedo1ns
Records
Sell Fast
CHATSWORTII "!AP) -A
.......i album of 11 "°"" by
Charles Manson, the man ac-
:~:or~ b':0!::~~t.~~
·rate and !lix othus. ls selling
briskly. say members of
Manson's hippie-style "fanli·
Jy.'"
EnUtled 1'The Love and Ter·
ror Cutt." the .album sells for
$4.50 a c op y through a
JMiJonfer boose. ProCetds
will go to a defense fund for
Manson. 35, and five other
'cfefendants · facing trial on
murder and conspiracy
charges. • ,
Six members .of th e
"family'• talked to newsmen
over the weekend at the Spahn
moVie ranch 25 miles north of
Los Angeles, where Monaon
and hJs followers Jived at the
time of the seven murders last
Aug. 9 and 10. Several still live
there among the old movie
locations.
The songs were recorded by
Manson over a three-year
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -legal only w•·n they are not period, said members of the
,
(
.NO NEJDTO
D fJ EL
WITH YOU
INCOME TAX
Th. point...._._ YOlf ho'l'e
_... he .. lrlt fror ttii. IMkh.
the odds a,. ogoiNf ~"-lift
Y04I qfwop ;trin when )'GU let
llOCK da Youf. cfueUng.. YOUt"
prize-o c~ a..d octv--
rote retum. You avoid wwry, fo.,. time, oft..,. taft money.
o.r the Point?
IOTH
flDllAl
AND
STATf
s
UP
HiRl]]~[3"Co.
Arnertc:a'• largest Tux Service with Over 4000 Ofrtcet
Cut• Meu
1175 Harbor
llvd.
ti\ bltdt ..... 1ttlll
Cost• M••• 2750 H•rbor
llvd. flt! ,..., ..
Ct Ctnltrl
Corona clol Mar
2449 !. CMlt
Hwy.
111 M1tArlh11r SI ..... ) (',l()v. Reagan says voters in
1966 "sent us to Sacramento to
do something about that leaky
old barge" of state govern-
ment.
Tue.sday, he embarks on a
re-election campaign which he
says is dedicated. to finish the
job of turning that old barge
into a smoothly running , ef·
fiCl(!nt ship of state.
gave Republicans a probable
preview of his major cam-
paign planks during an ad-
dress to the party's S{lring
convention in San Francisco
last week.
First came l h e IC•
The gr.as.ttoots grou p en·
dorsed state Sen. Alfred E. Al·
quist (0.S8YI J ose) fo r
lieutenant gove rnor, 457 to 161 ,
over Cecilia Padroza, a Los
Angeles travel agent.
IJll\" group, and about 750 albums WllKDAYI ,., SAT. & SUN. f·S Ph. 642..6940
Removal of all re!l:rictions on ,.Jperl;~orm;ed:_~by~a~pll:y:•:lci:·•:n~or:___;h~av~e~bee~n"!.ao:ld;•~ince~~t~t :be<:am:•~~~~~~N~O~A~f'PO~~IN~T~M~l~N~f~N~l~C~US~A~l~Y~~~~~~ abortions waa proj>oaed today SW"geon." available a week ago. by the author of CallfonUa's
present liberalized abortion
The Republican governor
formally is expected to an·
nounce for a second term
Tuesday afternoon In a news
conference at a Sacramento
hotel across the street from
the Capitol. Reagan himself
has declined to acknowledge
Jiis re-election plans but he
already has a campaign
organization oiled and ready
to go and party leaders say
there is no doubt that he is. in
eomplishrnent.ll.
'"We've straightened out
most of !he mess we inherited
•.. instituted economies and
introduced fresh, c re at iv e
thinking so that the wind!i of
change arc clearing thf alr in
the halls in Sacramento."
Reagan said.
Alquist had not yei an·
nounced his candidacy, but 1s
expecled to do so Wednesday.
He won lht> not without at-
tending the convention and
f'arlier endorsed Unruh 's bid
for 1iovernor.
1::( * Demo Group Endorses
Brown Over Tunne)'
Jtl\V.
"\Ve. must stop forcing
v.·omen to have children they
dG not want," said Sen.
Anthony C, Beilenson (0.
Beverly Hills) in a statement
prepared for 'a news <;on·
ference he called for today to
announce a package of bills
Rimed at reducing population
growth.
He tenned Ute having of
large families "a socially ir·
res ponsible a"cl."
fact, already running. FRESNO CAP) -Rep. 1aid his loss didn 't surpri se
Wednesday, he sets off in a George E. Brown Jr. carried him, wouldn't have .:iffected
chartered plane for a two-the endGrsement today of his campaign if he had re·
pronged. two week campaign California's largest lib er a I ceived the endor~menl , "and
tour to: 1. raise money for his Derhocratic group In hi~ uphill it is not ;iffected by my oot
Bellen.son authored the l!Xli
law allowing abortion when a
woman's health is In danger or
v.·hen pregnancy results fro1n
rape or incest. Previous law
allowed :ibortion only when
her life \\·as Lhrcatened.
campaign. and 2. display his fight against Rep. John V. getting Jt."
programs, accomplishments Tunney for the party's U.S. He again emphasi1.ed hi~
His new proposal. similar to
one under consideration by the
New York h~gislature, would
'"'provide that abortions are iJ. and unfmi!hed business for the Senate nomination. f hem e t.b a t 0 n 1 y a
voters. Brown satd be valued the "moderate," as he labels
Reagan Is not ex.peeled lo eoQonement or th& Volunteer himseJf, can hope to be.at
have any opposition in the ~ <?:bfomla ~tic. Counc[._ Repl.abJ:icaq..fSen, Ge 0 e1;e
June 2 primary. &al_.. liOlliS' ~man-' Mutph}t ln'"Novemlier'Tunne;
The only major Democratic power Pllt f~ by its 10,000 had Mted that he is leading
5 Boy Scouts
candidat. ,. far is Assembly •. , rs~ lll~~~if· , Bro'!!' .JI!· pu~I~ _opin!"'1 polJs,_ .. FolHl· d
Democratic leader Jess Unruh , ~'in :"Gd anduid ~~ tiopes'he gets CDC , ·
of Jnglewood, Reagen's chief f; -:. UJI min they et'I· help "after l havt> won the .
antagonist in the ltgi_alature donle. . . . nom ination of the enlire par. PALMDALE (AP) -Five
Safe
lhe past three years. Tunney, in a wntten stale-ty." Boy Scouts were: back home
The 59-yeat-old governor ment after the vote Sunday, Th 3, 1 . . today after spending six hours e .,.yea r.n d R1vers1de Jost in a snow-<:overed area of ff 1J 1:f '1:r • -.f:r {':f congrc55man had 1.old the rhe Angeles National Forest 20
F d nea rly 1.000 dclegl'l!e.-: and mi les east of here. Busl• nri a•101•e alternates Sa lurday night that Sherilf's deputies say the e ,,. t~eJr endorsement meant Vf'.!ry boys ranging In age rrom II to
CDC Likes Integration Idea
South C011t Pier•
COSTA MESA
I 1 I I. 1 e . that the CDC 14 years, we.re found Sunday ~.eprese~led .only a narro1v in good condition aboot one
. porh h~rahsm of the draw· mi le from their campground.
Ing room . The fi ve were identified as
He had angered CDC by Bruce Bauer, 14, Hacienda
refu~ing to support the boycott Height•; CraJg ~1oribato, It,
of California table grapes by Ken Lindauer, 14; David Ar·
orga nized farm worker s . roya:>, 1.2, and Paul Almado,
Brown , a 50-year>0ld con-If, all of Montebellt>.
gressman from M o n t e re Y Pak:I Polltlc•• ~wrll _, Park, supports the boycott andl,. ... -. ... -..-;;;;;r;;;;;;;;,,,-.,1
is admired by the volunteers Robert Shelton S1ys:
because of his long opposition "VOTE FOR
to the Vietnam war and stand TOM CASEY,
with CDC on mosl issues. N.8. CITY COUNCIL''
Brown beat Tunney 644 to 52
in the balloting.
Broadway Center
ANAHEIM
•
Tom CIMY, Chm.
1001 K1w1m.e Dt., CdM
Bullocks F•shion Square
SANTA ANA
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fl"llOn l 1Kll, 1::11 '""· ' '-,ou11l1l11 Vt lltl' Junlof Cll1mber Oil Cllftlrntrtt. •-••I mtmbft'Mi,, en., f Htll. !OHO Sltltr Ave.. F111nltll\
v,1 .. 1, 1:30 "·"'· Ott ntt Co.11 Coln Cl~b. Mt rlners * Llbrt,.,, 20115 Oover Drlvt , NaWJO•I
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ll11Udl111, 1U!2 .Slt /!ford Av1., Gt raen
Grov1.
TUESllAY
Cott• Mtst Senlar Cll1lfns Clult. c-
""""I"" ll1<1'111t1011 C•ntu, Or•n•• County P•lr•tWnclt, (OSI• Milot, II a.m.
EJ:d\11"19" Club of lt\llne tlldu~l•I
Com11le1, Sllll! Snlrl lt"'511ur1nf, n o w. Cc11t Hlt hWIY, "ewl>Orl 8«1cn.
17 rooo:n.
l'orOlll del Mir Ei<tNn~1 Club, Jo.~·1
1tn11ur1nt, 7111 E. cw,1 ~Hthw1v, CorO"~ !kl M~r, )1 llOO!I.
C"Mt1 N.ei1 Exch•nt t Club, Ccr1I llfff.
D.,ath Notices
•EltlETT
l lrdle T. lltr~111 . .t,q1 Soi. of n1~ Nr.rn.
t::tll>urn. Soulh Sin G1brlet. Oale ol
t111111. .'.\•,,h '· Survlveo bv h"!b•~<'.
•rn11t. of !hr hO"'•I d1u1h!ef"I, Tll•a 11 .
Cham•lln, H1>11~hJ1u; K1r1n I, Lord 1nd
ICt!h'I' 0. llt,,~lt. llo!~ ol Whlt'le'I 1lx
t rtndchlldrtn. St rilt•s, Tutt~•~. Morch
lo. 1:JCI PM, •est 1-1m1 Ch1pet. \Yhittltr.
lnltrmtnt, 11111!• fllill MtfT'e•ltl Partc.
Westc!lff Chl Ptl Mortu1rv, "'6-~111. DI·
,lt!Dr~.
aUTL•ll
W11!1r I . a u11w . lltslden! ol Lloo Tr1111r
"•rt, Ntw1111rt l t1cll. Ottw ol 11<11111,
M1rch 7. SUrvtvM •Y d1u1ht.r, e t111t
S•rlckl•lld, CIN •water, Plw ld11 brtolhH,
Ernest, tf Ntw •rvft9w!dl, C1n.d11 11 ..
ler. AM'I' WOOGl1JJ, Ltw11!, M111. S.ru-
lces. Tuffd•'I'· t "M. ltll aro1GW1Y
Ch1HI. "rlw111 !nltrm.,,1. M""blr ol
Ort111rd Leoti ?lS A & PM DI Old Or· ch.lrd IHdl, M1ln1. V11ll1l!on, 11!1
lrNdwl V Ch11MI, from 5 "M lonltlll.
Cl1u..-& Miiier, A~tdt., DlrldtrL
CAUDILL
Jolln fl. Ctud•ll. A•• 11. el :1131 llloy•I
1>11,.,. CO•lt ,Aes•. 0110 et dtolll. M1rch
J. SurvlYeG bu wilt. Mr1. Dot i C:kld~ll;
<'i•Uthler. M•1. Thom11 Jollnuin, St n
01 ... 01 two O•l~dch.ldren. "•m11u 1u•·
oet11 thn!t wl1~inn lo m•~r me,.,orl1l
conlrlbu!ltns, oltl!O eor.rrlt1u•1 '1o tilt
HNr"t Fun:f or ''"''' S:>t.j•!Y. Services W••t l'ltld loO•v. /,\ond•Y· 1 ,.M, Wt•I·
c1111 Cl'l11e!. 1,1er""""'· F1l-1!1v1" Mt-m1>ri1I Parlt. Ylf1t(lltf C1'11pel Mortv1ry, ... ,w. Olreclo,..
DAVIDSON
ltullY M. 01vlds011. I.t i '~ cl IUO llcmc·
"'· Cl>lll MIU . Olle of d••'"· Marcl'I 7. S11rulvtd by l'luJMnd. P~~I; /O<Jr 1cn1.
091'11ld ~ .. Acl•.lofl L .. F'r1nlr. D. 1n<1
Merk C. 01vld10", •II of Cosl1 /~ts•;
end tovr 1r1ndcl'llld""· S1-v!c11 w!!I be lltld \'ltd~flOIW, March I), l:lO ,.M,
W11tclltt C"to•I. IMt,ml"t, H1rtlor lt"I
Mtmo•lt l Ptrl<. W>i!Cllff Ch•ptl 11.0l'IV· ,,.,, '46·4Hf, Oir•r!•••,
GA$U
S1mc1lu r.1w. /loe °"· "' 117 't.lr'CI St .. Cct1• MtSI. 01!• of dti!ll. •\••th •.
Survlul'd by 11r1nl<. M" rnd ~\,,. TJ!·
t h.I G11u, ~f \'lt•'t'" Stl"'""I '"'•~ bnllht•~. 1A111e•e T .• c! Chln1 la~t1
T~I S. 1nd l!1~1 T. l'-l'l" ber~ OI
CCIII MUI. $e"11Cet pendlnt II Wt sl·
ell/I Chapel Mori"~"'· t
GUSTIN
\Vt lttr I . Gusll". 4!t Sl1n1! 1to1d. Ile'»·
llOrt l~1ch. Dile of dt•ll', M1rch t.
survived bY w!l1, H1111, of 1111 hci.mt:
"""11ew1, Dont ld Wt blltr. ef Wl'l l"i1r1
t nd ltobtr'I Wtbtlt!r, Ollkr. St1"Yl(H,
,.ueld•Y. t:lO ,.M, "•clfle V11w Ch1H I,
linlombrnt!ll, 1"1clflc Vlf'M M••11<1rl1t "•rte. Olredl'd bv "•Clllc Vltw MM'·
tv1rv.
NlNl!I
Stlll• C. Hines. 13.U 'N. 11¥. Ne......cr"!
llMCll. Dt!t of deelh. M1rch 1. S.Ur·
ulul'd by 10", J1me1. Ceroni del Mi r;
01111h!tr. Je11Tt l.l~v !n!r1r, N1w11orl
1Se1ch r •lK •••nlkMiildrtn. s..-v1ce1 were
l'>t!d lcd1v, Mc"d11y, II AM, Pt cltlc View
Cl\11>tl. lntermen!, Paclrlt View Mtmer·
lat "••k. O!rettlld b"t "•clllt View /.\c•·
lu1ru. 1'1mllY 5UIO•S!• 111q1t wl1hlnt to
m1k1 m.mor!al c11ntrlbulllc1u. P!tf <t
conlrlbult 111 the HOiie H0111lt1I 1A.mcrl1I
F"und ''" S!tll• HI~!~. Mro. Hint! WI S
~ member er the Hu"ter~ Greu11 ct H~••
Hcscl•at 1nd tilt E~ll CluD cf Neweorf
Bttch.
McOUl lll E
l:lit1b1th 0. l.O.(QUlft. 1.te 7,, ol ilS
Fullerfon. NtWlllO•' •••<h. Df!t ol df•lh,
l.\1rch r. Survlul'd by d111thlt r1, M.,.
ICtlhlttn lllev. of ljlWlllOrf INChl M".
ltltJ' JI"' F1rrel1, of NIWPClrf l tlthl
sl11>tr. Mrt. Core Wt rlr lns. of L•Dtt•·
Mlcht11n. St rvlc.11, \'leGMl !dl V· 1:JO ""'·
!Sell l ro1dw1y Checel. tnttrm.,,1. H1rb:w
1!15! Memod tl ,.,111. ltll lrotd'NIY
Monu1ry, Olrtetor!.
Ml l'OllCI
1-len.Y A. Mri1. All 77. of ~ Pectn,
Hun!lr11•on 8t1C.11. 0.11 of dttll'I, MtrCll
I. Surulul'd bw Wiie, Cltrl: dl111l'>l.rt,
8tvt rlv MtrmlUkld 111d Nine l 111ller;
1bler. Friedt Mtllka. HunllllffOfl a11ch1
f()Ur Br111dchlldr111 I M lllfet 1r••l-t1 r1nd·
c nlldrtf!. Roi.1rv. Tul'!.d•¥• 7:» llM, Smltn1 Cn111I. Rt111Ultm M11s. Y.'t<:lnt•·
blY, 10 AM. SS Simon .. Juli• C1thollc
Church. 1n!erment, Good Sh""81'd Cll"·
etery. Sml•iu Mcrlu1rv. DlnKIOfl.
Ol l!Nf
F11rw II . Orenl. Air 17, of 111 C1lllornf1,
Hun1ln1ton Bt1ch. O.it cf Ot1!ll, M1rcl\
t . Surul~td bw l!u1~1fld, Wllll1M1 d1u11\·
1tr, W1nd1 Hanson; 1111..-1, L..,1 HI"
leM, lw Burkin. Vloltf Wtill11 nlec1,
lon1 Bruce; 1nd tl\rH t rl nd<hlld,.,,.
St rvklfS, Tu11d1y, I PM, Srn!tllt Cl\11MI. •~tt•ment, W11tmlntler M1rnor11I "••k.
Sml1!\1 Mortu1,.y, O!rK!Crl.
ARBUCKLE & SON
\\'es tcllff Mortuary
U7 E. 17th St., Cosll l\lesa
1411-JJU • BALTZ ~IORTUARIES
Corona del i\lar OR i-HM
Costa l\tesa &O f.l4M • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cotta l\lesa
LI "113S • DILDAY BROTHERS
Hu1Unpon Valley
l\tortull')'
11111 Be•clo Blvd.
HuUngtoa Beac•
IC-7'111 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PA!Ut
Ce.-yeM-uy
CNpel
350t Paclllc View Drl \'e
Ne .. port -· Colllonola -• PEEK FAMILY
COi .ONIAL f'UNERAL
ROME
iltl Be1sa A,e,
'\\'estrnh!ter l93-3W • SHEFFER MORTUARY
Llpn1 lluell M 15ll
Sia Cleme1te 4!1UJot • SMITHS' MORTUARY
117 Mofo SI.
H11ntht1ton 8f:1cll
53MSn .
Record
'6IJ H..-W I Mll,, C111i. #1.9).f, ti .....
H11nllflf'°" l tttrl Horii'! Llol\t; CM>. Mffdewlwk CMHl!ry Chlb. 1t1U
Gr!HI-. HlffllltlflO#I lhe(ll, It-·
C.Or-HI M.lr Klw111hl Clllb, VUll Sw~ U3' £. co.ti HlellWIY,
Cw-HI Mer, U:ll II.JI\.
H1tntlMtoll INdl Roltrl Cl\lb-Nol1h,
F011r Wlndt Re•i.uranl, tiM21 k lM
Clllea, Hunrlfltfoll IMd'I, l11U 1.m.
H~llntron Seidl 1Clw1nl1 Cl~. Hun·
l!nt!Gcl Se1clltl C01111lry Club, :t:>m
l"tlm Av.., Hl.lntl1111to11 lttdl. 12;\S
·~ N"'"'' H•roor OJ:it!mlll Ciut. vui.
M.lrt1141, IOU l•Ytlft Drlut, POI-rt
lt•~ll. 12:U 11.m. .
Co111 Me•• Klw1nl1 CluD, co,11 MlfSI
Goll Ind COUMtV Clutl, COfll M91,
12:U p.m.
Mar1•iage
Licenses
PEI. 11 CLEMOENl/ING-CHAAETTE, •olt1>d a., 21 , d J•ll1 Pacific Co11 1-1111!\way,
D1n1 Jlolr.t 1M Cl 'ol A .. 17, of 11100
W Almond, Orana!.
s1MMONS-OANKS. John H., :n. Ind Lfride k., 21, llotl\ .r 10» Mt!n SI .• Wutml,.thlr, M ILMOLL A NO -HA5EMHAUElt,
Herkrt E •• 11'1 of '7'D41~ Ocu11 i~" ~ .ltK>I I nd 1'91rll 21, rrmr'ottnl'O'l"J•" ~-. Ce jL ti VUYST-WATT E, Lftl!I A., ru, !If "1 S. Nlnlll SI., Al!ll,,,.,.I, C\llf· 111d
Anni E., ''· ol' lO&ll Otk I., ..... GNm'A~OCKELL. J~n. F .• 11 , ol'
30I lllh St .• Hunll~tn fle.W. rlld
Vicki L, ''· of 11323 S.nll l1rb1r1. F011n!Jln V1llft'. COll:RIE-JtE!Tt, Sl!Jarl A., 2t, tOI Pt~t Pllt!.t CO,tt Mell 11'1111 l t1lltr• L., a, of 21"1 se .. ldt Lint, Huntlngtcn fle•cn. MANUEL-KEATl~C"i, Jolt" D •. Jl, t nd V(Yll" L., 2'11 bi:otll ~ l)D!J 'l'irml Plt~e, We.ilm ""''· OWEN$--ANOEll:$~N, MlcktY L .. ll. 111d Vivien L., , llolll ot 7~ W. <1u• Htttiw•Jb ...,._, l ttCl'I. Cll El4HEL M. JcllPh J., ?fl, 111d flrt"dl L .• 11, t>Olh o1 7'•21 Ctl'l(lon OtJYt M1Hlon V!t lo. NEEL Y-PFAMATT£R1. GtrOllt I.., 'lJ
IMd J1c~u•l1M ~· ~ 1"' ~ •11~ Stt.sllcrt Or 'If -'*"' IC , t::Wll<-JACIC$0N, ol'llO A.~ J1, 11i•""i Ftrnfttl Aue. Ind Jvctv " '· ot SO. behll1, both llf CMOn• dt ~·.
Mondi!. Man:!\ 9, 1970 DAILY PILD'( 9
County Building --County Sets Limit
Slowdow11 Sought Don't Dig S nd Too Deep
SANTA ANA County point out th1l any chanae ln explained Stuart Bailey the
SANTA ANA -Bulldhll!
projects for the County of
Orange cUJTentty are'averag·
Ing 9.8 percent of lhe annual
budget ror county government.
says W. C. Ennis of the county
administrator's ofritt.
Ennis sai d co u11 t y ad·
minlslrAtors are trying to
lower the tigurt: to fi\'e per-
cent of the total budget. but
are having difficulty reaching
this goal bec::tuse de1uands for
county 11ervices and, thus,
Escape Try
Brings Man
10 Years
SANTA ANA -A man \\•ho
b::ilted for rreedom Y{hile he
\\"US a\raiting arraignment in
Costa f\.1esa municipa\ court
has been sentenced to one to
JO years in state prison for the
unsuccessful attempt and has
received an Identical prison
term for the charges that put
him in the courtroom.
Superior Court J udge James
F. Judge ruled. however, that
James W. Needs, 29, of Azusa
can serve the two terms con
currently.
Needs added t'he eScape
charge to his file last June 2'l
when he broke free fro
bailiffs in the Costa l.te ·
court and §prihled down an
alley at the rear of the
building. lie was thwarted as
he seemed to be in the clear
by a well aimed 'bullet from
deputy,
Needs had been involved ·
a scuflle nine days ear\i
\Vhen he pulled a gun on secur •.
ity guards at. Sear.s Roebuck's
South Coast"J>Jaza dipartment
dare. W.itnesses said Needs
drew the weapon \\•hen a
cashier refused to cash checks
and v.•ns disarmed by
employes and onlookers after
a struggle in \vhich he used
the gun as a club.
That scuffle brought charges
or assault with a deadly
\Yeapon and the prison term
he recei\"ed from Judge Judge .
Votes Cost
$2.28 Each
I. 111t1 jlti.11 ol 10r1, MM1tlv1 ti»wt;
2, flOOt"'-lfld fltOtftb l11111mtd lftl
fotll0Ur11
J, 1t t!l&ume tlmt lt1tlt1n1 ews lllr~
~oota to allow tor t•iltr, •eu 1Tfft1I•
lftf JMIU (t •
tOtll'l'nllllOI01""' [ ·-~ .Wit,,.. iw..
A" l'N' ,,.._i1L
demands for facilities continue
to grow.
riupervlsors are making It hours would not alter the de. county's assistant planning
tougher to lake sand and mane! for sand and gra vel. To director, are co n 1 I der e d
gravel out of the ground in llmit the how's would only misdeme<t nor1 subject to fines
Orange County, mean an IDO'fase In trucking and jail sentences. Vlolallon.1,
'f'or the fir!t lime, for ex-durlna those h<fUrs, industry he aaid, shouJd be ~ported to
antple, the county Boe.rd of spokesmen said. the county Building~ Safety
H~ cited the. county \Ve.Hare
Department.as one whlcl) con-
tinually needs more spact. ·it
had 27,192 sq4are feel of 1pa'Ce
In 1965 and OO\Y occupies
59,336 square reel In JO k>ca·
lions under the counly's
decentraliaztion progrom.
supervisors has plaCl'd • limit , __ v_1_0_1a_tl_on_•_o_r __ 1h_e_o_r<1_1na_nc_e_. _De_part_m __ •n_1. _____ _
/ on how deep pit operators can
Ennis said the department
\VOUld add 30,000 squ11re feet
this year includihg 9,500 reel
Pius Given
For Se1·vice
in the Costa f\-lesa Civic SANTA ANA Nine
Center. rcs!ijents of the Orange Coast
By 1975 \\'elfare \\'ill be OC· area have been &\\'arded
cupying 164,406 square fet"t of serl'iCC pins by the counly
space, Ennis said. Bord of Supcn•isors.
Probation Y.'as cited by En· Receiving IS-year embleins
nis as another department suf· 11i·ere La"•rence "Ted" McCon-
fering from gro\Ying p<Jins. It \'Ille, road department. Balboa
now uses 50.037 square feet Island: Lucile E Price .
and the figure wilt climb • n1edical <"enter. N e 11• p o r I
ultimately to 100,637, he said. Be11ch : Elois \V. Stewart.
The future expansion plllns v.•etfarc. Co~a ~tesa, and
include a 2(1,000 square foot Chester C. Shelden. assessor.
facilitv in the Trabuco Rood Dana Point.
area, Site of n proposed second Those receiving 10-year pins
Juvenile Hall. in cluded Gilbert B. Davis.
Ennis said plans \vere \1•el1-sheri ff. Huntington Beach;
under way for ne'v federal and Esther M. Goodson , rec?rdcr,
state buldings in lhc: civic Hunti ngton Beach; Bernice F.
dig fnr sand and i:ravel.
The · liln it -1IMI ;eet -111
contained in f,!n amendment to
lhc rounty' 8 Sand and Gravel
Extraction Code p a s s e d
unanimously by supervisors.
The new ordinance also pro-
vides.
-That petitions ror zone
changes to pcrm;t pit opera·
lions must be accompaniccl by
a pion for ultimate use or the
propirt y.
-That rehabilitation of ·pits
n1ust begi n \\1ithin !WO yea rs
:iftcr extraction ceases and. if
It dOes n't. the coun ty \Viii
order the \\·ork done and bill
the owners.
-That established sand and
gravel operations must comJ
pl;v \Vith the ne1Y regulations
\\'ilhin five yea rs.
KEYSTONE
NOW PAYS
5~~~
J MONTH
CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS
·~'""
5~~
I YUR TERM ACCOUNTS
WITH MINIMUM BAL.INC[
7~~~
2 YUR TERM ACCOUNTS 1100,000 I YUR TERM
WITH MINI MUtA BALANCE ACCOUNTS (Adj usted riles
tor shorter terms)
Passbook accountrconlinue at 5~t
per 1nnum compounded d3ily.
c;ct your Free lrtarch lforoscope now.
KEYSTONE SAVINGS
AHO LOAN ASSOCIATION
l enot.I W, Cosptu, ''"loit ftl center and that the engineer-Jarrett . recorde r,
ing-finance addition should be \Veshuinster ; George E .
completed by mid·summer Kelley. f l·o o d . Huntington
1971. Beach. and Ronald E .
A proposal to lin1it the hours
of trucking operations lo l'lnd
from sand and gra,·el pits was
dropped from the amendment
after industry representatives
• WESTMINSTER • WHEIM
555 N, £udltl
Phone: 772·7440
Next to be built will be the Seymour, building services,
new law library. Costa Mesa.
Sale! Soft seating
for your fci-mily room
Prices effective thru Saturday!
'Contemporary' sty le furnilure. The kiln dried ha rdwood frames
ore doweled, screwed, gl ued ond nailed. Sleekfy upholstered
in block vinyl. Semi-attached, wedge ~kaped, slob polyfoam seat
and back cushion. No·sog spring base a nd bock cushion.
Siva $22180" Sofa-luxuriously long. Reg. $219 NOW$197
Save $T 31 Swivel rocker--<omfort plus. Reg. $129 NOW $116
S1ve $41 M1t<h ing oltoman. Rog. $40 .................. NOWS 36
Save $121 Mr. Choir-right for him, R"IJ.119 ...... NOW$107
S1ve $111 Mn. Ch•ir-1igh1 for har. R..,.109 .... NOW$ 98
Save $15156" Love seal-graciou1. R09, $149 .... NOW$13.4
S1ve $161 Rock-A·lounger-relaxing. Reg. $T59 NOW$143
•
Use Penneyt Timi l'oyment Plan
Price• inrluda dellv1ry in out lorol d•liv•ry.a raa
I
N0\11! Tl1ESt VALUCS
Af ANY ON( OF
THESE PENNEY STORI:~!
CANOGA PAR K
LA KEWO OD
DOWNEY
MO NTCLAI R
FULL ERTON HUNTINGTON BEA CH
NEWPORT BEACH VE NTURA
SHOP SUNDAY, TOO
12 to 5 P.M:!
•
'
L
'
LO DAILY '"P'
Clean Up
Propose d·
QUEENIE • By Phll lnterlandl Exercise, Ecology Prompt Cyclin~~:
. I
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -lhe late President Eisenbower, So do some lawyers and for parking racks. Jo'ranz said LA\V w 11 1
Blcycle riding is gaining in and other physicians. businessmen, "rolling along in '"l11ey received a quick rci> celebrate lta boom In i
~ult~\ls ~~~~iselh:11:u~ "Now the antlpallution their neat suit~ with their at-ly rrom H. A. Lenske, director membership with a coastal
01' fact that blkes don't preachers have jumped on the \ache cases gripped firmly to or the line's commute, and tour bejiMing in Portland,
pollute the air, 1 cycllna club bandwagon and what used to lhe handle bar:' said Fram. pusenger service, not only Ore., Aug. 16 and enWng a\
director rePorts. be a little exercising of ours, Surveys show that the granting the request but ask· Asilomar, CaJir., for a three-SALT LAKE CITY iAPl -
Not only s":immcrs floot atop
the briny waters on Utah 's
Great Salt Lake. So docs
,;ewagc, millions of gallons of
\\'hich flow daily into the
niassive lake.
Pedallng is "spreading Uke bringlng either frowns or number oC American cycli5ts ing where he might joip a day convention Aug. 28-30 and
u'ild!lre and the increase is bemused s mi I es from "has gone up from 57 million cycling club." the event will attract cyclists
maln1y among adults," says motorists and pedestrians, is to 60 million very recently," A San Franclsco Bay Area from distant points.
Clifford L. Franz, California now a re~I going thing,'1 Fram: he reports. bikeway being developed DO\v "I had a letter today from
director of the reborn League said. Franz told of R a 1 p h exLends from north o f l·loward C h a m b e r s of
of American \Yheelmen. Ray Balter, manager of ~lalvorsei1 of Crystal Lake, Ill. Sausalito in suburban Marin Hampton. Va., asking for
Ttie group , which broke up Ecology Center, coordi nating "He and some other com· County across the Gol<kn Gate maps and cross-county dlrec·
in 1942. was reorganiRd in agency for environmental mtfters began riding bikes lo Bridge: to Lake f\.1e.rced near lions for pedaling all the way
1964 as biking begao making a groups springing up h1 the Bay catch the trains to Chicago San Francisco's southern city to Port~nd,'' he sald.
comeback as a health fad Area, said many of his 300 and they wrote to the Chicago limit. The Bridge path opened '·Yes, it'll a real goinc
How many polluting
organisms survive fn the salty
water, or whethc.r there ls any
danger to swimmers, are
issues the experts are yet to
resolve.
under the encouragement of._•_IB_f_f•_rs_ri_·c1e_b_ic'-yc_1.,._1_o_w_o_rk_. __ N_or_lh_w_est_e_r_n_R_a_il_ro_a_d_as_ki_.n.::g_l_as_1_s_"_""_•_;Y~·-------'h_in_:g::_._"' _______ _
Dr. Paul Dudley White, the1·
But alter r1early 20 years of
se'vage dumping, there is
growing <.'Oncern over the con-
sequences.
··nie cleanup o( the Grrat
Sall Lake n1ust be Utah's No.
1 . environmental priority,"
aays Gov. Calvin L. Rampton.
Th.ree major rivers, the
"Certainly I ca'n take criticism ... u .long as it isn't
directed at me."
cycOng aurgeon who treated
Safety Rulings
Due for Recaps
WASHINGTON (UPfl -
Jordan. Bear and \Veber, ---------------------
bring in sewage from n1any
The Transportation Depart·
ment plans to issue a rule re-
quiring that all ~capped
passenger car tires meet the
same sarety and performance
slandards as new tires.
communilies, including Salt
Lake City. 'Maggie' Tales Mean
Triu1nph for .4.11tl1or
The final rule would not
become effective until Aug. 1,
1971, the department said
\Vednesday.
Dr. Cilrant K. Borg. head of
civil engineering al I h e
University of Utah, esti n1ates
that up to 200 million gallons
of \\'aste--ladcn water pours
daily from the Jordan Rive r
alone, on the lake's eastern SEATTLE (AP) -Twelve activity director at the nursing
Heavy Cruiser
Now 1\1.othhalled
fringe. litlle stories of /.1aggie, the home where Perri lives in
Tests from the estuary Sho\v good witch. have come from suburban Burien, spoke today
colifonn or human intestinal the mind of Perri Re inhart. of Perri's cour age ou s bacteria in numbers "coosis. They have taken three years
tent with that or ra"· seu·age, ·• to produce. determination .
he says. For Perri. each "'ord was a "Perri.'' she said. "can't SAN DIEGO (AP) -'l'he
But most of the swimming personal triumph. even brush a fly off her nose." cruiser Gafveslon has finished
areas are well a"'ay from the Born 26 years ago "'ilh ~1aggie and her friends are her last voy'age and steamed
sewage inlets, and the beaches ce rebral palsy, Perri ne\'er based on bedtime stories Perri into San Diego Bay to join the
ha \'e ;emained open. Still, of· has \\'alked or been able to heard from her lather "'hen mothball Oeet. ficials are uneasy. talk normally. The shi p, the second Navy
L · · 1 she was a child. Her dream " warsh1·p named for the Texas The assistant state director y1ng motion ess on a pad· of environmental health, dedtab!e,shehasdictatedthe that hC'r stories might be Ii-city, enU?red the harbor
HO\\'ard Hurst , says "\Ve just adventures or ~1aggie in luslrated and published some· \Yednesday with most of her
don't have the money or man-sounds hard to understand. day for child ren . 1.000.man crew lining the rall·
power to make the studies \Vith pencil.. paper and pa· In "A Visit from l\1aggie, ings. She is one of 48 ships
needed." tience, Mrs. Lura Colburn has the Wilch," Perri relates that ordered last January to be
And until the studies are takcnJ.lo\£11 the stories word she was silling outsidi; in her -=d=e=a=ct=iv=a=te=d=. =====:;I
made, he says, the state won't after laborious word. Ouf ha\•e \\'heel chair when an old r
advise whether the beaches come Maggie the Co\l'boy. woman 6he didn't know came
should close. Maggie"and Mr. \Vind, 1.1aggie along and said, "My name is
"Fortunately, since i 1 ; s and the Christmas Tree, Mag· Maggie. I have bee n for a
i;:alty, the swimmers aren 't in· gi~!~s~sc~/~~~~g .• : .. ~1t!t~:rr~" walk and cannot find my \\'ay
Make a Sharp
Trade; Use
Dime·A·Lines
<"lined to drink the Yo'ater ,'' 1-__::::.::....:.::::::::::__:::::.:::_:::::::"~:___:•:::a:c k:_::10:_::G:_:ra:::y--M::::ou:n:la:i'.'.n ._ .. _.....!=========='!
not'l?s Hurst.
The rlow of treated SC\\'age
Into the 7S..mile-long Jake
began in the early 1950s. the
result of the Utah \Yater
J>olJution Control Act.
The law prompted many
niunicipalities to construct new
~ewage systems and treat.
n1ent plants, \l'ilh the efOuent
dumped into lhe lhree ma in
ri\·ers \l'hich now into the
lake.
Hurst says the treatrnenl
plants destroy only about 85
percent of the disease-car-
ryi ng organisms in the waSte.
\Vith 400,000 residents in the
area, the raw s ewage
equivalent of 60,000 persons
slill gets through to the lake
each da y.
Of some comfort, says
llurst. is th:it sooner or later
"lhe briney take \I' ate r
destroys the organisms and
pickles the organic matter. It
becomes harmless and in·
offensi\'e."
But "'hat has I lurst and the
others "'orried is the question
or how long it takes for tht.
salt to de5troy the waste.
The problem is that the
sewage "'t1ler is'lighter, and
thus spreads atop the brine,
becoming a dangerous film.
And as 1he layer of lighter
\\•atcr gro\\'S larger. i t
presumably will take longer
and longer for 1he disea.~e
nrganisms to be destroyed by
the salt.
llurst insists Iha! sewage
treatment plant~ "'ill ha \•e to
be converted to 100 percent ef·
ficiency, even lhoogh that
CQU\d cosl double or triple the
present investment in them.
''But ir "'e don't do it , the
pollution will u·ell up lo the
point that it'll be impossible to
reverse.'' he says.
Our lnitl•tlon fH will
lncre1M from $100 to
$125 M•y llr1t.
See us now ind
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'
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In ~ lhan one hour, we put
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You watch the results come
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A sk:illed diagnostician goe=;
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ol any necessary repairs. You'll
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If you prefer, )'00 can take the
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Pretty reasonable tor a doctor, these days.
I I
Penneys Auto
Diagnostic Center
TheSclontlflcT-.
FULLERTON HUNTINGTON 8EAQi
NEWl'Of!T BEACH
SALE!Deluxe 8 track stereo
tape deck with speakers
REG . 69.95, NOW s 9 e 9 s :::~~=~:~~
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THESf STORES OPfN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to S P.M.
CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA DOWNEY
HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH
VENTURA BUENA PARK 1,ic-1 su .. c1oy.) ( ~~~,:;:•')
' t • I
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Ii
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r
I
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" r I (
l Who Listens
To Landers?
-·-·--. ..,
• . --
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
Does
That's Who
You Can 'Liste n' to 'A nn Lan'ders ......_
-
Daily ·~ The DAILY PILOT
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DAILY PILOT J J
LEGAL NOTICE
P!lol,
•11-16
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DAILY 'ILOT
Highwa y D e ~ys
Bring Odd Images
W ASHTNCTON I AP\ -The
protests halting work 1n \ti
major cities on critical links of
lhe nationw ide superhighway
system have produced some
e.s:traordlnary image-mending
efforts by federal road of·
ficials.
Comider this ode, disguised
as a news rcleast from a11
anonymous words1nith in the
Department of Transportation:
"The budding basketball
star of l ornorrow could ~ a
kid who learned to dribble,
pass and shoot because an in-
terstate highway c <t m e
throug h his neighborhood.
"And. this same youth, who
whiled away hours of his life
wondering what to do next.
can oow cavort on a basket·
ball court laid out under a
atructurally modern viaduct."'
~ handout's ostensi ble
purpose was to describe the
federal aid program r 0 r
recreational uses of high"·ay
Group Finds
That Flying
Can Be Ftn1
SAN JUAN. P.R. (AP) -
'·l'U sit next to anyone elS4:'."
the nerv ous gentl eman wear-
ing a carnation, told the
stewardess, "but a bass fidd le
-that's goi ng too far.''
The man. o n e of 2ll carnation-bearing mernbcrs ol
the "'F'ly Without Fear" club,
\\'ou ld probably h<t \'f' likctl a
sympathetic harwl 10 hold or a
iohouldc r to cry on 1f his newly
conquered fea rs of planes got
the best of hitn on his return
trip from Puerto ruco to New
York.
The 20 New York ers had
gathered up courage l~t \Vcd-
nesday for their first airplane
flight and 20 others who had
been frighlened b~e lier
flights returned lo a· ravel
after preparing wit a i;eric$
nf seminars. lectures and
gorup lhcrap~'·
··\Ve dn.'"' ~1rength from
each other.'' said Bill Sherr
whose Puerlo Rican excursion
was his firs! flight in !iix years.
•·Ju st bei ng together has
helped us a great deal. 1r we
Stt someone "'ho is tight we
try to calm them." ,
"Six years ago." he said. ''I
had a rough flight fro m
Acapulco oo New Years Day
and 1 made a Ne\11 Year's
resolution to never fly again."
Those on the trip answered
ne)l-'spaper ads to join F'ly
.,Vithout Fear because. Nathan
Cott, leader or the group. said.
lhey fel t their fear of ai r
travel "'as interfering "'11h
lhtir business and persona!
hvcs.
ri~ht-of.ways.
But it was also beamed at
critics who have roadblocks
s1anding -some temporary,
some permanent -aga inst Jn-
terstate road projects from
New York City in the East to
San FrMcisco in the West.
Their objections? P a r k s
'"·ould be severed, histo rical
buildings and m o n u men l s
destroyed, cities clogged with
more ears creating fur ther
noise and air po l l u tio n .
neighborhoods disrupted. and
poor families -often black -
rendered homeless
A single one of 1hese com-
plaints, a combination, or
sometimes all appl y in the
urban areas where intersta te
linlµ are ln content ion or
.haUed permanently. But the
single most imi)ortant ob-
jection -cited in 11 of lhe 16
cities - is displacement.
-Transportation Secretary
":1ohn· A. V-olpe moved to meet
this recently by decreeing
.-;uitable housing at reasonable
cost must be provided for any
perso n forced lo move by the
ct1nstruction of an in terstate
highway. This amounts lo
50,000 people a year by -official
estimate.
Volpe said.lhe shorl·lcrn1 ef-
fect or lhe new requirement
will be to slow further the
a I ready-dragging program.
But department officials also
bel ieve it will erase a major
criticism and lead lo long-
terrn acceleration for the pro-
jrcted 42.500-inile system.
Angela Roo ney, execu!lve
Sl'<:rClarv of lhe National
t.'o al i iion o n the
·rransportation Crisis. an · an-
t1freeway grou p , isn't
pl<1cated, ho"•ever.
''T h e Tran i portalion
J.>epartment is famous for pro-
rnising everything but giving
only fret\\'ays," she said.
John E. J acob. deputy direc-
tor of the Washington Urban
League , was kinder to Volpe
Hnd his new policy.
"He is recognizing an in·
tolerable problern -having
white men·s roads run through
black men ·s homes," Jacob
said.
The interstate s y s I t rn .
, btguo • in t~ by ! h c
EisenOOwer 11dmini!lf.ration. is
1nore than two-thirds com·
plete.
But delays or cancellations
experi enced on 133.8 miles of
road in major cities have
pushed the completion date
from the original 1971 goal to
1977.
Projccls have been scratch-
ed perm anently from federal
rnaps in Newark, N.J ., Ne"'
Orleans and San Francisco.
State and loca l off icial s have
said thC'y '"·ill ask similar dele-
11ons in Cleveland and New
York City.
Truces
taking too
big a bile?
use our money!
Doo1 wait "il April 15111. Soo Moois Plan ,.,,,
and apply Sor ironey 10 pay your 1axes or an
advance refood on your tax return. On appr<Wa l
you can borrow from SIOO to SS,000, Of more,
wllh payments scheduled kl 11t your income. On
tax refunds arter S300. you can repay when your
cheek co.mes in a few monlhs.
Prompt .sa'\lice, kX>. Yoo rnwr even have your
money the day )'OU appty. That's how tasl we
can Sf1'f "yes"' at J..Aorris Plan.
Morri s Plan
673-3700
Newport Beach-3700 Newport Boulevard
~y
' . I
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AN·NOUNCING OUR •
-
COMPLETE . 'SELECTION .. OF
APPLIANCES BY WES TINGHOUSE
I
Gome see our complete line of Westin9house Appliances; washers, ,dryers, refrigerators, ranges . Save now during our March Introductory Sale. Come
rn 1trly for b~st choice of models and colors.
Co1npare: 1'011'11 B1111 1l'e•l11glw111e.
~:
"
WESTINGHOUSE 2-S PEED
AUTOMATIC AGITATOR · WASHER
199.88
• Deep.ramp, double ag itator action
• Heavy duty transmission handles l.rger loads
• Heavy duty stabili1er lceepS Washer from
"wallcin9 "1 ''banging" or even ''stopping"
• Automatic safety lid Ioele
• l int filter and water circulation system
• Push button control
• Electr ic dry.,, 149.88; g., dryer, I 69.88
WESTINGHOUSE 2-SPEED
FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER
239 .88
• Lod 'n •pin saftey lid
• Exclusive hand wash ag itator, machine we sh
items you formerly wouldn't have dared
• Weigh-to Save !TM} lid, gel the correct amount
of water, bleach', deteregent
• s.button water temperature selector
• 2 position agitation/spin 1peed selector
• Stop n' Soak !TM) enzyme cycle
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I
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179.88
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• Famous double.action washing
• 4·weter fimPeratur8 selections
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• Porc elain enamel wa sh tub
• Electric dryer, 159.88; g., dryer, 179.88
WESTINGHOUSE HEAVY DUTY
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219.88
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• Giant ! b·lb. capacity
• S··position water temperature se!ections
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amount of ~ater , detergent 1 load
• Elect ric dryer , 149.88 ; go• dryer , I 69.88
HUNTINGTON BEACH
""14 N. Euclid 47 F•sh;on lslond 644 -1212 7777 Edi nger Ave . 892.333 1
Mori . th ru Sat . Mon. lhru F-ri. 10 a.m. to q:JO p rn. Mon. thru S~t-
I 0 • m. to ~:J O p ~ Sn!. 10 o n-. to 6 p.m. 10 o.m. lo q:Jo p.m,
I . BARBARA DUARTE , 494-9466
M9!Ml11 • .wore~ t. Int I Pitt ll
Stirring Day ,
Cooks Mix
Food Fair
Girl Scouts and Browni es dressed in costumes of
many lands \Viii conduct an International Food Fair
next \veek.
As a means of acquainting the girJs,.with neighbors
and friends close to home and learning about people
far away, the food fair will be stag~ by troops from
Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel and -Dana Point.
Booths will be set up at t he Festival of Arts grounds
in Laguna Canyon on Saturday, March 14, from 11 a.m.
until 2 p.m.
Each troop will provide a varied displaY. of food
representative of many nations. All is available for
sale to the public.
Lagu na's troop plans German chocolate cakes
French pastries, Mexican tortillas and guacamole, and
J apanese fortune cookies.
Recipes \\'ill be available for those interes ted.
Arranged under th e guidance of the Girl Scout
Council of Orange County, the fa ir \Vill be enlivened by
skits and dances of different countries.
Girls will set up and decorate their own booths and
prqvide for· cleanup followin g closing.
Wea!Jier permitting, between 15 and 25 Scout and
Brownie troops will participate in the three-hour sale.
• •
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·----------------·--·~ -.... ., .. __ .. ... ....___.......,
INTERNATIONAL COOKS WITH GERMAN FLAVOR -Laguna
Beach Girl Scout&. stir up a German chocola te cake for upcoming
International FOO<t-..'Fair. Dressed for the occasion are (left to
right) Julie I-luJt.y fr~nl Germany ; J en ny \Vllcoxen, Japan: Lisa
' Smi th, Mexico, and Jeanette Ku ng, France. The girls are mem-
bers of Troop 504 led by Mrs. Ted Paulson and Mrs. William
Longfield.
• •
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Ballet for Children
•
Toys Come to Life
In Magical Moment
The littJe toymaker arranges a demonstration of hi s toys fo r
'veal lhy people.
As he winds up toy soldiers, ballet dancers and dolls, they come
to life and perform \vith mechanical precision. The audiences leaves
and the toyshop is closed for the night.
Suddenly a fairy doll comes to life and touches her companions
\vi th a magic wa nd. The toys again come to life and dance until the
break of day when the toymaker returns to fin d them lifeless but in
a strange di sarray.
' . Th.is is the story of "1.he Enchanted Toyshop" by Joseph Baye r
\vh1ch will be staged as the second ballet for children by members or
the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet.
Companion ballet \Viii be a bright and happy offering by DelibE!s
the "Delibiana." '
Made possible by a $1.000 grant fro1n the Festival of Arts. the
ballet series for chil dren \Vas launched la st mOnth \Vith a sold-out
performance of Prokofiev's "Peter and the \Voll."
This month's program will be staged on Sunday, March 15, at
2:30 p.m. in the Festival of Arts Forum on the festival grounds.
Tak ing part in the produ ction \vi ii be Kri sti Moorhead. Odil e
de\Vitte. Hope and Joy Sogawa, Dama ra Bennett, Charles Colgan,
l·lal O'Neal. Barbara Byrnes . Kathy Jo Kahn. Billy Sircello. Gregory
Osborne, Louise Frazer and Bonnie Thompson.
According to artistic director Mrs. Lila Zali. the se ries \vas con.
ceived in order to expose children to ballet they can readily under~
stand and instill in them a love o! dance.
The remaini ng programs will be April 26 and June 28 and \\•ill
include "Tubby the Tuba" and the "Festival of Nations ."
Tickets for the March 15 program may be purchased at the
Ballet Center, 1863 S. Coast Highw ay. at a cost of $2 for adults and $l
!or children under 12. '
DANCER ENCHANTS LITTLE GIRLS ·-"The Enchanled Toy·
. shop" v.•ill be offered as part of the children's ballet series on Sun-
day in the Festival of Arts Forum. Helping dancer Damara Ben-
nell wilh her ballel slippers are (left to right) Kally K;ihn and
Michelle Ross who probably will be enchanted by the se ries. The
ballets are presented by the 25(}...member Laguna Beach Civic
Ballel troupe.
There arc no reserved seals. so parents arc advised to purchase
ti ckets early.
In addition to the children's series. youn g people may lake ad·
vantage of the regular ballet season with a junior membership which
entitles the holder to attend all progran1s al a cost of $4 per year.
Dog Gone Laziness Replaces Bonnie's True Puppy Love .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our IS.year·
<lid daughter begged us _for a puppy ror
her birthday. Bonnie pi'omlsed to lraln
hlm, walk him . feed him and be totally
responsible for all his needs. So we
bought Bonnie a Boxer puppy. She named
him Plato.
Plato chews everything In sight and
.. -<1\'nmits all over. He has spotted the aora,
.:the living room chairs and ruined every
rug in the house. The place smell! like
a kennel and no amount of airing seems
to hel p.
Plato cries "II night and no one ca1'
11letp -no one except Bonnie, that ·iit
Nothing bothers her. She h1 In school all
c:la..v so J'm lhe one \\'ho walks Plato and
ANN LANDERS ril
cleans up after him. When Bonnie does
come home she is too bu.sy on the tele·
phone to feed her puppy ao I have lo do
Iha~ loo.
Last night we had a heated argument
and I told Bonnie I was giving-Plato
a\\·ay. She became hysterical and made
me feel like a murderer. I love my
daughter and t don't want to break her
heart. Please tell me what to do.
· -NERVIS RECK
DEAR RECK : Do yourself, Plato and
Bonnie • favor and give the puppy to
people wbt will care (or U properly.
Bonnie 1ta1 oot kept ber word. It you lel
Hr ~y1terica trip you Into keeping 1le
pap, yeu1ve pt~a gtttnlum 111 your cra-
alurn, Lady.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband '•
bookkeeper quit last ~lay afler work ing
for him for five yeara. 1 was no~ uoh2ppy
. -·
about her lea ving because she was such
a trouble-maker and I never liked her.
'J\vo weeks after Jennie quit, her hU!·
barKI came lo the house on his lunch
hour 10 tell me "something important."
I almost died or shock when he told me
Jennie was pregna nt by my husband-
'anrl he was 1hrllled because he always
had wanted a family and was physically
unable to father a child. He then admitted
It was ms Idea-that ht had talked h.ls
wife into seducing my husband anc:I he
lhought I ought to know the facts.
The baby il' four months old now aOO
rrom what I hear she Is a very beautiful
child.
I told my husband about the visit that
very night. lle denied everythlng-called
the guy "nuts,'' and sa id Jennie was
invo lved with another man in the com-
pany and that he had fathered the chlld.
The whole th.Ing has made me phys-
ically ill. I believe my husband, but I
keep wondering how much gossip there
is. I want to leave town but my hus-
band has a good job and it would mean
starting over. We have three young
children and l don't want them hurt by
this. What should we c:lo?-RICHJ\.10ND
DEAR R!Clllt!OND : U Y"' doa 'I ful
better In IG d1y1, I 1uge1t yea ind your
hu1ba..c:t serlou11ly consider movtn• lo
another city. Wbalevcr be I05t5 fhuu1·
elnlly wlll be worth It In te.rms ol' ynur
hcalth and peace of mlod for yn ur
lamlly.
CONFIDENTIAL TO WHAT TO DO!: rrs time your neighbor fouod an unmar-
ried "hum anitarian" to cry on, Hand
your husbaOO the names or a counselor.
a clergyman and a therapist and sug-
gest thal he give the list lo the lady.
U you bave trouble ~Ung atoag wl1'
you r partnta ••• If yoa cu't pt tbem
to let )Ou live your own llfe, lead for
Ann Landers' booklet, "Bigged hy Par.
enl.l? How to Get More Freedom." Sead
58 ttaU In toll wUll your rtq9ftt Ad
• loni, stamped. Wf:.adtfl'Hltd eavdope.
Ann l.aadm will be 1lod to lletp yoa
wltb you r problems. Send them 10 bet
In care or the DAILv'PILOT, encloslDc
a sdf'-addr csatd, 1lamped envelope~
,,_
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J j OAIL Y PILOT r.1onda)', t.larth 9, 1970
Scottish Schottische Entertains
Drug Abuse Topic
Meeting Lu res
Top Panelists
A blanket invitation to Bl·
letid a narcotics symposiun1
has been issued by the Hun·
lington Beach Junior Womun's
Club.
'fhe public ls lnviled to at-
tend the nieeling which wll! be-
gin v.•ith a 9 a.m. regislration
in the Golden \Vest College
forum Saturday. March 14.
Letters from the Huntington
Beach Juniors have been ma il-
ed to all junior womt"l.,.s clubs
and California Federation of
Woman's Clubs in the Orange
District by f\.1rs. Douglas
f\.loscrip and i\1rs. Stanley Het-
tinga, chairman.
In addition, 1nv1lations have
been issued to f\.t ayor Jack
Green and other city officials.
all schools. churches and civic
organizations.
Following U1e noo11 lunch
break Dr. Ralph Bauer, trus·
lee of Ocean View and Hunt·
ing ton Beach 11igh School dis-.
tricts, will moderate a panel
discussion of Narcotic Abuse
and Schools.
Panelists v."ilt i n c I u d e
Superintendent Clarence Hall,
Ocean View School District;
Glenn Dysinger, "fl.111rina High
School principal. and S. Rick
f\.1ork, honor student from
f\.larina High School.
Assisting during the sym-
posiu rn v.·ill be members of the
·rri-teens. lhe club's junior
auxiliary, and contributing
financial assistance is the
\Voffian·s Club of Huntiugtoa
Bea1.:h.
Anyone wishing additional
inrormation or reservations
may call Mrs. Ray Hopkins.
842-:11 72, or f\.lrs Hettinga, 893-
0J l7.
-. . .
-i-· --
I '
•
-~
NARCOTICS ABUSE -A daylong syn1 pos1un1 on narcotics. c.tbt~~c \lllJ lak e
place Saturday. r-.·tarch 14. in Golden \Vcsl CoUegc. Cilopcr,a l111g 111 the t'\:cn t
are fllrs. Stanley 1;ett1nga. chairman of 1.he Junior \\Ionian 'i Cluh of llu n tin ~·
ton Beach, and James Mahan , sergea nt 1-l untin ton Beach Polic.:c Depart·
n1cnl.
Cooperating in the sym-
posium will be the Huntington
Beach Police Department.
'fhcrc v.•ill he a $1.50 fee
charged for registration. and
the Juniors will serve free
noon lunch 111 the student
<:enter.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Following a welco n1c hy
P.1rs. Eugene \V i I l i a m s ,
J uniors president, and Earl
Robitaille, t'htcf or police,
panel discussions \1•ill begin at
10 a.m.
Narcotics Abuse and
Sagittarius: Forces Scattered
regard as peucemaker. Pia) SCORPIO (Oct. 2J-Nov. 2l l:
•
Scottish country dancing \Viii provide the l"nlcrtainment during a potluck !'Up~
per sponsored by Lady Buchanan Lodge o[ ll ~intiiigton Be~ch at 1 p.m. Sat-
urday, f\tarch 14 . in Lake Pa rk ('Jubhousr. i\liss Laura Lippett lleft) and
J\fiss Audrey i\lahler join EdY•ard I.oiler to lead off the da nce. 'rickets at
Sl .25 for adults and 75 cents for children ma~' be obtained by calling J\lrs.
Orville Stoner. chairman. at 847-4 121. The public 1.~ invited.
~ledicine will be di scussed by
Dr. Arthur f\.1. Do s lrow ,
chairman of Orange County
J\tcdical Association Drug
Abuse Committee. moderator:
Dr. Irwin Ke rnpler. me1111.Jer
of the drug abuse cornmittec:
nr. Donald Fisher . resident in
psyt'hiatry, OC 1\1cd1 c a I
Center. and Saul Slo!zberg.
psyt'hiatric social work c r .
Commu ruly J\1ental Health
Services.
TIJESDA Y
MARCH 10
By SYDNEY 0!\1ARR
Scorpio is called 1he sexiest
of the zodiacal signs. Bui If
that is true, Leo runs a close
second.
that important role. Break indicated in relationship
CANCEH (,June 21 -July 22): that previously s u r v 1 v e d
Some friends appear hot-severe bumps. Key is tn
tempered. Healize clash of realize fatigue might ha1c
ideas is cxt'iling but rnaintain rn urh lo do v.ith emotions I
sel f-t·ontrol. Impor tant iss ut' Measure 111ords, action~ Stud~
t•:in be settled 11•i1h out hurling Libra messa~e.
PI SCES (Feb. 19·:\larch 201
Please do not ru~h -nol 1n
,1·riling. dn11ng. g i v i 11 g
ans"'crs 111 1mport;rnt tiues·
!tons. You e."<hib1l tcndent"}' In
he careless Srl'li. stc11dying 1n-
fluenl'r -rumt·:o-fron1 fan11ly
1111.'mber .
Sein a-Egan
Couple
St. JJ1!lary·s Church in
Tiburon \\';J S the setting for
the marnai:e of f\1aocylee
F,:gan, daugh1C'r of ~Ir anrl
~!rs. \\'1tli;1n1 H. Egan Sr of
Laguna Niguel and 1.:111 rCnl'C
fl Sclna
The Rei Ed" ard ?l\ulJPn of-
ric1a led al lhe :itlt•rnoon
scn •1ce.
The bridt> \1:1" altt•ndL'<I by
~·Ir'<. h an Olivcrie <i!i nt<ll ron
nf honor and brillesma1ds \I ere
P.1r,o;. \l.1i\1iarn IL F:g;1n Jr. hr r
si ster·1 n-law, ;ind P.11.<;s .Judy
Cramer.
The. bridcgroo1n, son of P..1rs
r:uidn Albertazzi of i\1 i 11
Valley. chose hi.~ brother.
Hobert Sclna. as hrsl 1nan
11·ith usherfC Ll \VIiii.in\ H.
F.:gan Jr. and Oon11ld Ri1·cn·
iU'i.
Thr new \J rs. Seln:t al-
lrndcd Christian Collcgt 111
rolun1bia. f\1n, ('urrcnll y ~hr
l'i 11 hos1c~s fur Br:1111ll
International A1 rY.ays. ll t'r
Vows
MRS. SE LNA
March Bride
hu.,b:lnd i.:; 11 p:rarlua1r nf
\\ann l/igh SchMI 111 l;rcrn·
brca.
Area Chef
Honored-
:\lrdal o[ Honor 11,•i11nc r .Jun
lJcluhcr~· \1a s among tln·
par1Lc1p;inls in 11u• chef~ (It'
ru1s1ne culi'11ary ar1 di~rilay In
lhl' An:1heirn C 11 n 1 t• n l 1 on
I l'nler 1oday
Thi· 1neda1. Hilt' <)f SI\
iJl1arded dunng lhe yrar. 11:i ~
prt•senh•d by !h(I A1ncr11 an
<\c·ademy of Chcf!1 fo1 St'r1 ltt'~
rt·ndercjr thr prore~~ton /or
l'ul1nary ach1r1·ements.
l>eluhery. cxccul11 e chef ol
lhe convention r ente r. le;irned
ID cook while 11orkmg 011
p;1sst•nger ~h ips
St'cret;l r.~ ilf !he t"hCfs <It'
cuisine, h1• re~idf's 111t l1 his
fan1rly in 1\nuhc1n1.
Newcomers
Seat Board
Al JI a.in. Jaines f\.1ahan.
scrgeSnt \l'llh the Hunt ington
Bcarh Polrc·e Department. will
n1oderatr a discussion of
Narcotics Abuse and the L;111
Servi ng :is panelists v.·1tl IX'
.Ju~t1cc Hober1 f; a rd n er .
IJ1std1·t Altorney Cc<·1I J\1t·li.,.
and IJalton f\e\\·land. ofllc·e
dJrC<'IOr of the Santa Ana
Branch. !>t<ile N a r co 11 c
liureau,
Moms Hear
Narcotics
Discussed
The problc-1n or narcot ic.~
addiclion arnong chi ldren will
he discussed \\'hen the Orange
Coast ~!others of Twins Club
nieel" \\'cd11csday. ~larch 11.
111 the Galaxy rc:->tauran t. San-
ta An;i.
An i11stallation l11n(·h{·1111 fur Following the 7 p.m. social
the Saddlebat'k \' <\I I t•;. hour and 11 p 111. dinner Jan1cs
.\rwro1ners Clull In l;11rdon 's ~lahan. detectil"e sergeanl
SH 'ITI'\l{IUS L'\01 22 lo 1,na ~"' ,..,. ' '' '"' '"" 1" of insults ""' ' · Ii ', · mor.,.• •nd 1~·· Q•a•• ~Yd"•• Om•"·' AHlt:S t l\1arch 21 -April 19 1: l.EO ,,1,,1, 23-Auu. 2'.!~: You nee 2Jl ; Force5 art> seal--1.1. !;./'·"' ..... 1• ·~· M•n ~"d '1 I' t d p y '> wom~n ·• ~···~ ~ ·•~"'" •nd ~ '""" 1' oncy areas ac Jva e · 3 vcl acti on through "-ritin". tcrl'd People you depend upon 1n om~" A,,,~1""' s.,,.,~. '""DAILY
d ti l d bl B l Ol W'.S" " " P•lOl. Oc• ll~O (,rdnd C•nt._I SI•• an co ec e s. u n " publishing. a d v e r I i s i n g . could be absent. Sonie details I-""~~~· 2"=·~'~·~":..::"..:'_..:'"~'..:"---
10 lend. One v.·ho is aggressive Prestige rises: Ar i cs Hl· arc better left for another day.
inukes numerous promises but drvidual can prove valuable \Vatch diet. Take care of
1nuy be <."()vering up un· a 11 y \ 0 da y. A cc c p t yourself. Pacjng is important.
favorable points. Act ac· responsibility and you 1viH ·CAPRICORN tOec. 22-Jan.
co rdingly. gain reward. !9l: Good lunar aspect today
·rAUHUS ~April 20-~1ay 20 l: VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Scpt. 221 : coincides \ri!h intense cmo-
You asked for action -today Sonic idras concerning vactl· t1onal reactions. Some \'oung
.' ou gel plenty or it. There is lion , long journey need further persons could rnake uniUst ac-1
change. va riety. at lent i 0 n il e\'elopment. Give logic equal c·u~a tions -has nothing lo do
fron1 othrr .... You are in space irith unpulsc. Then you 111th chronological age. Don'!
.;po!hghl and <'~'t"le is hi:;h ai·oid t•ntanglernrn1 111 t't11-to111pound error.
l)ri\c tor"·urd. Bu! talie care barrassing situallon. AQUAH IUS IJ 20 F b u1 traffic an. -e ·1 GE!\llNI (~\av 21 .June 20 I: LLBJL-\. 1Sept. 23-0cl. 221 : 18 1: Friction indicated at
• One who is usu:illy shy speaks Avoid argu1nent with ni;lle, home base. Be ready to con-r partner over fin ances. Neither tribute ideas. But also express d up Be cooperative. Rea ize of you may have authority to willingness to listen. f\.1ember Some tilking, some li~ttning an
WEIGHT@,
WATCHERS.
some tempers are on edge. d th. Re 1. th. d"' of opposite sex ma_v be false-,. program lh1t works. T• You may be lhe individual in o a ing. a ize IS an f 5FRE£ IROCHURE-CAll llS·5SOS
the middle _ one others' IJc~iv~il~. ~Se:l;•;'~arn~p~le~of~m~a~lu~r~il~y •. ~f~la~tt~e~r~in~g~y~o~u~w~i~lh~d~e~i~ru~·1~e~~~~~~~~~~~; Then you will be happy. motive in mind. _______ _
Contingent
To Travel alaska IS ALIVE!
At "The Gr.modest Mall Of All"
Beginning March 12, 1970 Los Angeles Hilton Hotel
\\'il l atlracl an Orange Coast ~
cont;ngcnl lomorrow for th•l C'.outh P.oast 'i>faza ' . " , is t.he opening day of the cJ \~ J J / 'G
California Slate Soc i et Y • 1 ... ~:~=~~~~~~~==::::::::::::::::::~-l Dnughlers of the American
Revolution's state conference.
Professor Examines
Politics of Africa
restaurant, Laguna N1i;uel. \) fro1n the llu-.ilinglon Beach
IX'1ng planned for \\'edncSday. Police Department. w11l be the
.\L.1rt·h 11. guest speaker.
Nrwlv elected nf11l·er!' ilre lie has been a police man In
!he f\.lri1e~. Robt:'rL Pellel\Lerr . Los Angeles and Orange coun-
prcs1denl . .l ohn Vogt. \"ll't' trcs for the past seven years
president: Uoo;1ld SI\ Ingle. and in the field of narcotics in-
recnrd1ng serrele:r ry; l\'.orn111n 1·esligation for the p:lsl si x
The four-day session will
contii1ue through F r i d a y.
March 13 . when slate officers
give reports.
Bare Essentials
\Vhen It comes to sportswear
for spring. bare essentials
count.
nr. i\1ary Lepper. a:.:.L~t;1nl
professor of poli11c<1I sc1e1t1·r
at Califon1ia S~tc (;ollcgr ttt
F11llcrton. will d1~cus.; h1-r
surnn1cr 1n Afnt.~ 111 196!1 l•ll'
the Ne11•port -('oslil f'l.lt'~ll
Aranch of 1\rneric;1n As~oc 1:i ·
11on of Un1\'ers1ty \\onl('ll
\\"cdncsda~. ~larch I!.
\ 1)4~1 prl'Sldl•nt t1f lhr .'X·ul t. t' n r r c s p o n d i n g ~cars. lie 11'ill inform mothers
Fnundal1011 lur \' h 1 n ~a. s<'crctar~: Herd li u "h" n g . \\hat thl'y should know and
l\icri n1i:1nct hen\a SrH-lu·\p trrasurer. and Ua1·1d \\'~a l !. whal e<tn be done about
Open midnlfs. peekaboo cut-
outs. lie-front blouses -all !
11•ith a light and open look.
sChools. l)r, Lc•pper ~pent l;i~t !.l'(•!lon lOOrd11111tor n<1rcot 1cs I
,,11111ni t•r 111 1\frlea un d1 ·r a A :.ociul hour 11111 lolln11 1\u• All n1others nr·111 ins in the Chora Group
poi:ltltx·tura l fl'lln\\'.~hip gran1. noon lun("hl·on and 111~!/lllilli<)ll Orangl' Cn:.ist area ;ire Evrry Monday al 7:30 p.m.
Shl' is rQnt"er11rd 11 1\h lht l"t'rrrnony. welco111c to <11lenc1 th e 1ncmbc1s of the Prospective
roll• ul µubl1 t groups in forl'1gn lirscr1at1on., 1nll:iv lll<ll' ht· 1neeting. J•or reservations Aliso Valley Chapter or Sv.•eet pvl1~·~' 1nak1ng and in the 1nade 111!h ,\lrs. · .\l;JrShalt ~!rs. N1t'k Bartlt'tt niey be Adelines convene in ~-l1 ssion
f}Ol llics of devc!up1ni; ;rrc·a~. Rloorn. 830-6507. rallt'd. Viejo High School.
!':-pcciall}' A Ir i ca a11d.,.-----------------------------------
OC Single Bees So11!heas1 Asia .
The meeting will lakr place
al 7 .JO p.m. 1n 1ht> Newporl
Hhieru l'av1hon. An y "·orncn
1·u!lcgr graduates interested
rnay call the presiden t. f\lrs.
Hona !d I\. Arnold. 54[1.{1214.
JUST 4 DAYS!! The second and rourth Fn-
rta\' nl tilt' rnQ11th Oran~e
r·nU nt\' S111~le Bees J!atht·r in
PuinC'cr Tuwn . Sanlil An11.
Ar11v11i('<; bt'g111 ~! 8 p rn.
_,. '• l!-• ,-
' I WOMEN
SLIM DOWN
for Summer
NOW!
• A FIGURE SALON
FOR WOMEN
• A HEALTH CLUB for MEN
Phone 547-5410
PROGRAM INCLUDES
• Heated Pool
e loby Sittin9 e Whl~ ,ool
• Sun Room
• Swlmmfn9
LesJOnJ
• Sleam lath
• Sauno Bath
• Mosw111e
• Dressln9 Booths
• Personalized
Courses
GARDEN SQUARE HEALTH CLUB
9562 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
GARDEN GROVE SJl.)41 0
'
\ '. '
·:\ .. .. . .
!ll l~MI '•'••'"' u..i"•"!ld. !""~.;.. ,..,, "•II••.., U"',..."•1!._i:!._
IOAM
'
Patterns Unlimited, In c.
is back again in
ANAHEIM
with the
ORIGINAL EUROPEAN "GOLDEN RULE'
METHOD OF PATTERN DRAFTING
Acclaimed by Millions throughout the World''!
A PlllWut CufiUc9 Slcow
"" ""'""~q ..,r,~od ""h"h ~o .. MJ1 lJ~beloe.oblr, )'rl
,,,.,.,,,G!•• 1•0•> at >'ud f -,.,,1 1eod 11 ,.u..,ber o"d
d •O,..()(i<''.'
1'.;) "t'~d lo• )~on al ~a'"'"9 (.,""' •
ONE HOUR
' ....... ! ,, ... ~"" i.o ... d• "9"~-· .,....i -~·~·-~
"' · "" • •'•d n "I'•~ '" ·~obi~ '"" •o rr·n•1
I " 1 WO ".,, • '"" . ·~· .. .,, ,, I
' "'• " In•• I ~· " '
.. "•·n n 1••r ·-" •· '"\ ,. ' .. ' !'•~ I"· ' " ... ' . ..
AN OPPORTUNITY YOU CAN 'T AFFOR D TO MI SS!
"SEEING IS BHIEVING" ! ! !
All lqu•pmPnl Avai lable .it Class
n • .,o '""' ~~ Ir• '0.
D£MONSTRATIONS THREE TIMES DAILY
2PM 7:3DPM
Tuesday , M•rch 10th thru Frid•y. M•rch 1 Jth
HOWARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE
1380 S. Harbor •t Sllrrfe Afl• Frecw•y
Directly Across from Disrr cylnnd rr'o lllll /IGl.t (~I L',-l'l[A$()
... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· -
i
BEAUTY
SAVINGS!
Leo~ '"'''' On 1 fl•ll1rinq f•1hien1b!1
'P""9 .tyle! Go 1h11d -P1"'p1r
)'Our11!f, b11+ dill dretdt yc u• bud91+.
SHAMPOO· SET
HAIRCUT
HI STYLE
MON .. TUES .. WED.
'2.45
'I .SO
LATE R W!IK
'2.95
'2.00
SHAMPOO-SET ......... . $2.95
HAIRCUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.00
$3.95
al l week
&;dget PermsS __ 95 WIG SPECIAL
STYLE $5 95
COMPLETE SET •
'I 5 00 WONDER CURL PERM ,H~~~ •• '9.95
Crowrifng Glory
BEAUTY SALONS
A ppoinr:mml.J wekome but not a.lwars nr:ceuory
OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY
CROWNING GLORY
267 E. 171h ST .. COSTA MESA
PHONE S48·9919
.-~--,O~P~E~N~E~V~E~N~IN~G~S...,~-.
CROWNING GLORY
fforlftfltly C<111pric• Celffurt'll
SOUTH COAST PL AZA
lower Level-N11rt +e S""'''
PHONE 546·7! 86
1
-·~--==-~n~-===-===---=--------------------~-------~-·---~---~~----···----~----~-u-· •
13
~I Nuptials
Tunic Turns Heads 1; Performed
'
• • '
. " -' ..
·1 i !"
). '· LL\ 11 ~. v. ·~·
J I , -• " I .. ' -! .;;; .
~
, .
• ~
/f E I' I
r _ -~I\"\
. )
__. ~,,, ;----~--r :_, -
63399 -r ---1, -, !.. I '
1
----"' !-,.\.;,Charles
Montaigne
' .
-.
.,,,1, i(L ( .]l](I)
I 63379
[ Skirt,Tunic
t
The tunic is \Yhere it's al! Whether over a lihorl
flared hipster skirt or narrow pants that flare out.
This one is enhanced with grosgain ribbon -
si mply set into buttonhole type openings on the top.
The pants. \vith elastic \Vaislband, repeat the same
detail at the pleat -or can be trimmed \vith dec-
orative buttons.
Superb in 1nany fabrics and color combinations.
63.179 and 6:1399 CJre cut in Misses sizes 8-18. 63379 ;
Skirt and 1'unic. size 12. requires approximately
2 3/4 yards of 45'' fabric an d 1 5/8 yards of ribbon
tri1n. 63399; f1ants, size 12 requires approximately
2 314 yards of 4.5" fabric.
~hcse precut, prcp~rforaled Spadea Designer
Patterns produce a better fit or money refunded.
Ortt er normal ready-to-wear size and allov,.i one
'veek for delivery.
To order 63379, Skirt & Tunic; state size, in-
clude name. address and zip code. Send $1.50 post-
paid for E.A..Clf pattern. ·
To order 63399, Pants: :-late size. include naml'.
address and zip code. Send $1.25 post.paid for E.l\CJ I
pattern.
Send orders for books rind patterns to SPADI::A.
Box N. Dept. CX-15. ~Iilford. N.J. 08848.
Just Published -Spadea's Skinny Book of Se\\r.
ing Tips -Vol. A -$1 postpaid.
Paperbacks Collected
A paperback library is being
compiled in Fountain Valley
High School "'i!h t he
assistance of South Coast
JunJor Woman's Club.
A section of 1hc regular
library. the paperbacks \viii be
available to all studcnlc; and
for use in the remedial
reading classes. Advisors hope.
lhc smaller books will be more
enticing for poor readers.
Jll'11ior members have br.c.n
collrcting books and now are
helping L1vice a monlh by lyp-
ins ficlion li sts. pocket card.s
and selling up filing systems.
Assisting arc lhe Mrncs.
Robert t-.1arten, education
chairman: Larry Long, Dick
Trodick, Jon McKibben, Larry
Moeller, Ed Borowiec and
Daniel Catm. Anyone in·
!crested in donating suitable
paperback books to the library
y call ~'!rs. fl.1arlcn .
Susan Kay Adams, daughter
ol t..1rs. Landy fl.1. Adams o!
Newport Beach, became the
bride of Phllip David Hunl
iluring nupti als performed by ~e Rev. Charles Snyder in the
hurch of the Nal.lll'ene.
Given in marriage by her
andfathcr, George Graham.
e bride was attended by
~lss Becky Langdon, maid of
ltnor. Bridesmaids were Mrs.
~vld Ross and M Is s
izabelh Dutzi. Serving as
wer girl was Ll:.:a White.
!J'he bridegroom, son of Mr. ai;ct Mrs. Ross A. l{unt of
C~la T\1esa, askt'd his brother.
L.: ren Hunt to be his best
m n. Clair and Ted Runt,
ot~r brothers of t h e
br~egroom. were ushers.
£e bride Is a graduate of
E nci& lligh School and
r ived her vocalional nurses
traning at Orange Coast
Col~se. Her husband is a
gra(uate of Costa Mesa Higtl
Schtol. They will reside in
Tus;n. ·
Abortion
Film Seen
A JiVl1 on abortion will be
i:ho1vn during the meeting of
St. Bmavenlure's Women's
Council, }luntington Beach, at
7 p.m. tomorrow, in the
Meado\\view School.
The film, entitled "A Righl
to Life," is narrated by Loret·
la Youn~. Prec~ng the program will
be a Bmnie Buffet potluck
supper I which each member
brings a favorite dish for six
and the rtcipe.
Committee reports ~·ill br.
heard and a discussion of
future adivities. including a
St. Patri:k·s Day dance In
J\1eadowlwk Country C 1 u b
Saturday. March 14, and a
fashion sJiow Saturday. April
18. in the Airporler Inn, will
take place.
A crafL 5ho1v is being plan·
\led tor the Arril meeting.
B'nai B'rith
Orange Coast Chapter of
D'nai B'rjlh Women gather the
first Thurldays at 8 p.m. in
Mercury f.avings Bank, llun·
tington Beech.
HAL AEllSCHEll
HEARING AIDS
Cullom l 11r11 Ampllllclllon
HO S.t.L ESMEN
3409 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
for Appol11tme11t
675-3933
SPECIALS FOR MARCH
Now thru March 31st. 1970
VITAMIN "E" VITAl.llN •• A. ..
D·Alp~11 or Mi.,d FAMOUS HAIN
IDO l.U -100 Cl!lllllln SAFFLOWER OIL 25.0oWI u.s '"
,.,. 2.45 I q11ort re9. 19e FISH LIVER OIL
SPECIALl • 98 SPEC IAL 69¢ .... 100
100 l.U -100 C~1>1ule• Hogn 79" ..... •.JS 3.59 S,ECl .t.~
srECIAL
TORUMEL YEAST reg. 1.29 lb. •• Special 98¢
NATURAL HULLED LECITHIN
BRANDS
SEA SALT SUNFLOWER SEEDS CAPSULES
76"<11. A fl~ sourc:t f>f L~r11t lt g••l11
un51!11rere<1 110 & pr111,1.,
From sun 1v1tx1•1!td ,,, 200 <1p1ul1 1i11
St4 Wlttr .... .... '" 65¢ re,, l.••
171! SP ECIAL 2.69 S,ECIAI. S,ECIAL
LECITHIN GRANULES
14 ounc:e -Hermetically sealed can
regular 2.98 SPECIAL 2.39
CAMU PLUS
90 T 1bl.1 5<1•
Fii-Cf!tWlblc
Vit•rnin "C"
UO mg~. O!lldl Mblt:I
SPECIAL
2 •• , 3.00
Ont Of !ne !lntsr 1>11111111,, A n~t·
11r~I 11r191n a cornp"K. Olet-ry
•llPf>llmMI,
.. •lit '"'· J 4f
SPECIAL
lO Jill rf!, 1 Jt
SPECIAL 1.49
2.79
~
ONI PL.AH
MULTIPLl YITAMIN
'"' MINERAL TAii.ET
w11n scm1c1~1M olt lOl11bl<1
\OUemlns lar ,....•!m 1b:.Orll-
lfon lev.i•.
SPECIAL 2.39
,. 'lit, ..... 2."
5'ECIAL 4.39
H 1llt, rtt. J.lf
HAIN SAFFLOWER MARGARINE
on e pound requlor 49c. SPECIAL 39¢
11.-'"bcr, •"-" ltuyll19 1uppl1111e11h, ~uellty i1 tlte lllOlt l111porte11t l119reclle11t
COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS
Two stores to
TUSTIN
!'094 IRVINE BLVD.
ne11r Sav-o n 544-7 134
serve yo11
COSTA MESA
270 E. 17th ST.
ii' Hillgren Square 548-953 7
j t.1onday, Marr.II 9, 1970 OAIL v PILOT I G
Maior -Pan sl======== '
Lecturer T·urns
Focus on 'Y I OU
Dryg Usage
Reyred Ma rine Corps l\tajor
Jarµes Dunphy will speak
ap3inst drug use to members
of Xi XI Tau Chapter of Beta 1'1rs. Laurel Kimball wll1
focus the Spotlight on You
during a meeting of the Foun-
tai n Valley \Voman's Club at 8
tonight, in the conununity
center.
Mrs. Kimball is a lecturer
and consultant for J o h n
Robert Powers, Town and
Country, Orange. She has been
a photographer's fashion
1nodel and appeared In
television and little theater
dramas.
She will di.scuss makeup.
posture and the "70" look for
spring, and she 11lso will
present a skit which Is a
parody on the Housewife Look.
Mrs. Kimball will be in-
troduced by Mrs. Clarence
Stewmon, program chairman.
Activities Expo nd
' , The nominating commljttt
wUI present candidates !Or of-
fice and nominations will be
accepted from the floor. Of-
ficers will be elected at next
month's general meeting.
Mrs. James McCalla, presi-
dent of Orange District .
California Federation o f
Womeri 's Clubs, will be an
honored guest and serving as
hostesses wil l be the ~1mes.
Chester Venning, chairman;
Arthur Brown, Jim Grundy,
OrvieHigum, Robert
Longman, and N o r qi a n
Nieberlien.
New members pinned during
last month's tea include tbe
fl.imes. Jack T(Jl'ley, Robert
O'Leary, \Vayne· Glisson, Gene
Sigl Chris Schneider a n d
Robert Hime.
Sigma Phi.
The 1neeting will hegln al 8
p.m. tomorrow in Doheny Park
Village Clubhouse, 0 a n a
Point.
Dunphy 's son took lus llfc
last year y.•hile under lhe in·
fluence of drugs, anrf as a
~esult Dunphy has studied the
problem extensively. He has
spoken before club~. schools
and oo television.
The talk 1vill be aimed at the
CQnsequcnCf:s or drug use, and
liow to detect symptoms of
those on drugs.
RefreshmcntS"\\'ill be scrrcd
following the program.
Gallery_ Grou p
Shakes Hand s
Bureau Head Seated A Gelling tn Know You cof·
fee \\·ill introduce rnember.~ of
Beverly Webb, secretary. and the Affiliates of the Laguna
Mrs. Bud Schargitz, treasurer. Beach Art Association on
As incoming president on
the board of direct.ors of the
Volunteer Bureau 0£ West
Orange County, ti.1rs.
Frederick Ringer will be seek·
ing ways to expand bureau ac-
tivities.
Hosting the luncheon will be Thul'sclay. ~·larch 12.
~trs. }lo\\•ard Jones, director The 10 a.ni. meeting \Viii
of the bureau. be in the home of f\ilrs. Hovey
At present the bureau Cox. president.
reeui\s, screens and places Programs tor I.he balance of
volunteers in nonprofit agen· the year will be announced
cies in Garden G rove , and a special discussion on a
Westminster, Fountain Valley, June 6 art studio tour is plan·
T\1idway City and Seal Beach ned.
Installed \vith Mrs. Rinser
following a buffet luncheon
tomorrow, will be fl.1arvin
Reno, vice president; Miss
Xi Mu Mu
Sends Bids
with extensions in Anaheim Those who cannot attend
and llunlington Beach. It also may call Mrs. \Villiam JI .
establishes necessary new Bruggere, 499-1538.
voh.:nteer programs. 'riii'~:Jiji;;;:::ij~;;:~:;-1 T\1en, women and teenagers I '
can learn about community
needs and how they can help
by contacting the Garden
Grove bureau. 530-2370.
Prospective members will Airs. Ringer, who has served
be invited to attend a model on the board as chairman of
meeting of Xi Mu T\1u Chapter, the college program, also has
Bela Sigma Phi, tonight. been a past unit president and
Mrs. Gibb Lynch will host past council president of PT A
the event in her Huntingto n in the Garden Grove Unified
Beach home and assisti ng will School District: She i s
be Mrs. Ge-0rge Burgess, chairman of the citizen's com-
president, who wi ll show films mittce on a family life pro-
of her vacation tour of Eu rope gram for Garden Grove and a
and North Africa last sum· member of the League of
mer. \Vomen Voters.
During the business mccling ~----------.1
11 vote will be taken to select
pirl-of-the-year and the
nominating committee will
ire-port on new ofricers,
Weary, Dearie?
Read Bill Leary
EVER
DON'T
GIVE
UP
II yl!Ur knlllm(I l'!rllitt! locr~1 more
llkf • •tlll m~n e !)Ont~ 1u1! don't de,tr&lr -tlr'l~g !• 111 !a u~ -
we•J! h!lfl ~ou a11+ ol lht men.
TH E
KNIT WIT
South Coast Pl ai:a
LOWE~ MALI.
A(•OI> ••om Wt>o!Wl!d~'>
COSrA /AESA Ph. 5"5·2112
r \)
/ 7
Why no t pampe r you rsel f with
an Elizabeth Ard~n lace treatment
You're a woman of the '70's. On the go.
Involved. And, wh en you do have time to
1elax • , • make that ti me count Visit
our Elizabeth Arden Red Door Treatment
Room. let our ·expert give your skin a
wonderfully refreshing treatment •••
and a new make-up. You'll not only look
)~ur ve ry best , , . you'll feel marvelous!
Complete treatment wi th mak e-up, 10.DD
Be11uly Studio
r.lanicures •Pedicures • Faci 21.c • E!.::..:l1~IJ'~i::
Buffu111s·
N•wp11d, N11. I. F,.,i.:1111 lil11~d, N•wpod Center • t.•4·'2 200 e
M11"·• Thu r1 .• F•i. 10:00 !ill 9:30: Oth11 Dav' 10:00 till S:JO
---~"~'---------'•""•"';.:;..:!;.,!_.;..G;:·.:~;:•.:.r.:~..;":..C0.:•::•::1'~.:"'::'T::"'n::•::•o.::":::"L'::"::~:.:~:::~::-•:.?:'::~~-'~~~::•:;u-:::::•:.:•::•::•:..•::·:;n:::•::•~":="
NEWPOR T BEACH
430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630
(2 Blocks Easl of Balboa Bay Club\
1840 W. 17th STREET 543-94S7 SANTA ANA
ALSO IN:
Ane heim, Covine, Crenshew, Oo,.,.ney, Glendale, Lek•
wood, Las V~gas, Long Beach, fliav1~-rt Beach, North
Hollywood, Ontario, Pasadena, !an Oi .. -:o. Sa:nltt Ana,
Santa Berbara:, Sunland, T.11r1an.1, Torr<:ntc, Whittler.
COp,rkJM 1'/<. Ct"'11 M~tt~lH M~! Cl, IM.
Salons also 111 Fres110, Sacra1nento, San Jose, Stt·111111i·nlc, \Val1111t Crfelt '
!
i
J6 DAILV PILOT s
Morch .4 , 1970
lit High Gea1• .
iiJ 1h"" t h•'e. Mri"' b«,.,. ,..,/ti, 1/111
.,.n(Jll.IO«lll.-"ft/ .,.,._,.OU • IPl•llt'f •} ,,._,tJrt/ lll!f,, Ford Shows 'Thrifty Swifty'
75,000 Shares
Standard Logic, lnc. -
Common Stock
Par Val ue $.10 Per Share
Price $4.00 Per Share
I opi,.~ ul 1h,. n/J,.1u1:. ror~11l11• "'"'' /,,
<•l•IPin~ /tfJrn 1/,,. 11nlll'r•i;:nrd r>t 1r/-1.
ttof J,.,.z,.,, ,.,.Ir In •1(110'• whrrr 1/,,.<r
~fl'f'llriri"" "'"1 lr1<1ll.• /,,. 1•//t:rrd.
Gu st, i\lerhab & Co., Inc.
Santa Ana, Calif. (71 4) 815 -434 3
Fastest in West
Buy 11. Srll 1t. Try Utt fastt•l 'esrori~t 111 !Ji& WP~! a'jalrnt y~ur
own cloc k. Trst 01111t·a-Une Ads, w11er~ the action 1~ 111 SdtUrdilY 1
DAILY PILOT .
By CARL CARSTENSEN
ot l~t D•llJ l'llel lltff
A ne\I•' ri.1averick described
by Ford Division general
manager John Naughton as a
''thrUty S\\'ifty" is now on sale
nt local F'ord dealers. Joining
the newest l\1averick, called
lhe Grabber. is a simila r
l\1ustang po1rered by l'~ord's
smallest V-8.
"\\le are orfcrlng these
Grabber o/fsprlngs of the '70
,_ltn·eri ck and l\tu~tang ror the
buyrrs who prefer a lot of
~ho1v bul not so much go in
their sport cars." Naughton
.~<+1d. Ad ve11ising s Io g a n s
de <.cribe lhe attributes of the
l\laverick Grabber as J?Oing
··.:eru lo six1v in under three
c<'nls'' and ;~for $1 ,995 it"s a
little gas ... For a little 1nore,
it's a grnbhcr ·•
D1 stinctlve features of the
(;r;,ibber are du<.1 l racing mir·
t"ors, bodysidc tape stripes,
hl<1ck pa lnlcd hood and oov.J.
1l1>ck Hd spoiler, woodgrain
tl'i1nn1cd steeri ng wheel. six·
cylinder engine and five lively
rxterior colors -Grabber
blue, l•rahbcr orange . Grab·
her green. vermilion and
bright yc llo"''·
. .. .
The
Orange Coast , DAILY PILOT
offers you this great 120-page book
to help you save time and money
on your Income Tax-
~·· .--.
• . ' • • • ' • ' S M!.11-TffE RlllRED
, E URMEl\S-ShlAll OUSl~lS F
FOR l •LIRllD p(OPlE-'1110
.~4 Sylvia Porter says:
If you never needed tax help before-you need it now!
Th(" tax forms '"hich you must
11ill out this J'ear are entirely
nc11•, unfamiliar -n1ore com·
plicated than ever before.
But \\'ith ('IUr 1970 Income Tax
Guide, you '''ill be .able to :
(1) Fill in your Form JQ.10 and
its accotnpanyin~ schedules
,,.ith. fa r Jes!! trouble and fa r
more confidence than ~·ou
now bclic\"e possible;
(2) F ind dozens upon dozens of
m oney.saving hints whiclt
'viii help you to avoid costly
mistakes in your income tax
return and to :slal!llI your
tax to the abl!lolu te legal
minimum;
(3 ) Sa\'e tin1e as well as moner
on your 1969 income ta x
-quite likely much bigger
a.mounts of both than you
''"OUld DO,\' guess.
EYerything you need to kno\v
about filing your Federal Income
Tax is in th is dependable, eAS.Y·
to-understand book. You need no
one to he.Ip you. Vil.al tax savin~s
-all of the current tax "breaks,''
many or \vhicl1 may be brnn<l
ne,\· to you-arc ex plained as you
nu out your tax !orm line by line.
USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM
On ly $1.25 ------------------------·
plus 2G¢ for
postage and hftnd ling
SEND FOR YOUR
COPY TODAY
What you spend
for this book will I
Swhi1 P•r1•r'• l•t•m• T•1 ;;!dt I
HO CAeH 11'1..•A•• I ftwetrt P~-lie1tt•111, D1pt. Hit Mi~•'~"~ or Mo!ltJ Or~tr
fl'fl'ttll "tt:• to "S)'l~•• l'crltt Tt1 Cv•de" I C1tcn•kll, Ctnn. DllJQ I
tOPJ ot Syl¥rl l'orttr's 1970 l11tornt T11 Guidt. P!tm m•ll to m•
1s foll.>ws:
-·-··-----
Addrus ----------------
City·-----------
Slfta_...__,,. __ ,ft __ _ 7ip Ho .•
I • I
I
I
return many dollars •
• I HH·ll in tax savings 1 DAILY PILOT
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I --------0 --·-----... ----·
Grabber ~lui;lang \.is ;i
SportsROof model with addtd
features highllghted by Boss
Mustang "C" lape stripes,
dual racing mirrors. black·
painted lower back panel, hub
cap and trim rings , F70 while
sidev.1all t I res, Maverick's
Grabber's five lively colors
and Ford's 302 2V eight·
cylinder engine.
fo.tost options available with
!he 302·powercd ~'lust an g
SportsRoof are available with
J\fustang Grabbtr.
Other dress.up features 'A'ilh
J\taverick Grabber i n c I u de
bright drip moldings. bright
\Vindo1v frames; deluxe fuel
cap : wheel trim rings; color
keyed carpets; all vinyl black
interior seat trim: black-
painted lower back panel and
black painted grille.
Options available ,.,. i t h
ri.taverick Grabber i n c I u de
}''ord's largest six cylindt'r
fll'tinc -the economical 250·
cublc-inch version . au Lon1atic
1ransn1ission , op!ional axle
ratios. power steerin~I
roof. convenience~group, air
conditioning, tinted glass and
A~! radio. • • • LOCAL NEWS :\tAN NA~tED
F'OR CHRYSLER ·
PL\'MOtrrH
Richard S. Bragaw has been
named we stern news bureau
manager for C h r y s I er
Plymouth Division. Bragaw.
based in Los Angeles, joined
Chrysler Corp. in the press in·
formation services depart·
menl in 1967. He also has
ser\•ed a~ coordinator or
n1anagcment publications. wets
competitive events speciahst
in Detroit nnd n1osl recently
'1'as ne.,..·s bureau manager in
New Yor k City. Before j:>ining
Chrysler, Bragaw \1•as a
reporter with the Detroit Free
~ !'" '
Prrss. Origipally r r om
Evanston. Ill., he was
graduated from Dartmouth
Collegr and received his
master's degree from the
University or Mirmesola.
HEADS BUREAU
Richard S. Bragaw
• • •
CORTINA DEALERS EAfli~
TRIPS ABROAD
'fhree Orange Coast Ford
dealers all earned trips lo
London as lhe result or their
\.\'inn ing a national sales con.
lest. Theo. Robins Ford in
Cost:i J\1esa. Dick \\Tilson Ford
1n lluntinRton Beach and
Sunset Ford, \Vestminsl.er. all
;ittainecl lhetr sales objectives
in Ford Cortina sales and are
J1\'ing lhe good life abraad.
They are 3. of 21 Southern
California Ford dealers who
have .,..•on lhe .seven day "l.A>n-
don Fun" junket.
GRABBER SAYS PERFORMANCE ANO ECONOMY
Ford Calls New est Maverick Model "Thrifty Swifty'
Cal State F11llerton
Using New Co1nputer
lnstrucUonal. research <1nd
ad ministrative progra1ns thal
rely on electronic d.'.lla proc·
ess'Jng ha \•e advan ced a
generation at Califon1ia Slate
College. Fullerton \vith the in·
stallalion of a new co mputer
syslcm.
Dr. Kenneth R J)oa ne.
d ire ct or of instih1llonal
research , said the ne.,..· CDC
3150 system replaces an IBM
1620 and represents a jun1p
fro1n a i:;econd lo third gcnerii-
tion com pu ter.
Valued at approximately
$500,000, the. syste1n was ac-
quired frotn Control D21ta
Corp. of tilinncapoHs. ~!inn ..
under a long-tenn lease agrl't·
menl lhal also involves nine
olher catnpuse.." of t he
California State Collegrs.
Considered approximately 2.1
tin1es more pG\\·crful tha n the
162Q, the nc1v sysien1 oweii its
~uperlor pr_rfonnence to a
combination of cha rac·
terlsllcs.
Fea turing a magnetic ta~
capability, the CDC 3150 .,...as
Spring Fever
On \Vall ~I.
NJ.::\\' ,.01\K l AP) -A
<olr1pteai.er w11tl a \l.-h1le
i>\1ra1cr lightrr lhan !h('
moll('y 5UJ'lply caused an 1n·
tense short-interest sit uation
on \Vall Slrret Thursday.
The touch of i:;pnng
brought 'A'hat is no.,.., getting
to be a recurrent \\o'ann •
wealher phenomenon In the
financial district-a girl with
n1rnsnrrmrnts to make anv ~ar bullish. This one w11,"s
Ronnie ~I. 44·2~·l5
"NO\.\' lh111's 11 real rnn-
i;:lomrratr," rc 1narked a
kno11'Jrocc~bh.• n1cssr11~cr.
<1cUvated this mon1h 'vhen Dr .
\Villiam 8. Langsdor f, CSCF
president. pressed a bu1lon
starting the procc.~ing nf a
i:;e ries of studcnl·,\'rillrn pro-
grams in quantiati v e
n1cthod s, phys ics and
engineering.
.. Our J62(l, in use since 1964,
wa~ a workhorse. and hun·
dreds of student s learned co1n-
puter techniques on it." Doane
said . "But the increasi ng com·
plex lty of computer programs,
coupled with the growing in·
s!ructional and administrative
workload on a ra pidly ex-
pantfing campus. necessitated
an advance in hard.,..·a rc. ··
\Vhilc the 3150 in itself is-
~11c-h an advance. another far-
reachini; i15pecl of the in·
sta1latlon is its telephonic link
\1•ilh a ne1v California Slate
Collegrs computer nrtwnrk
that extends from lfumboldt
on the north to San Diego on
lhr south.
Accoimtants
Get PR-n1an
John l\t Briggs, deputy
rt1 r!'clnr or aucl11in~. Dougla s
Airc raft Co. Lon~ Beach. 1vill
hRncl le public rclalionS for the
Ornnge County Chapter of the
Nalional Assoclati11n of Ac-
c:oontants ror 1969-70.
Briggs, a resident of Orange
County for ten years. ~arned
his f.1aster of B u s i n es s
A cl m I n I !1 I r 1 I in n fro1n
Catlrornia State College at
F'111ler1on. lie is $1 Cerlifi l'd
Publlr ArC"11untanl, ;i nd a
•llt'inbt'r 11r thr A1ne rican
lnsth ule of CP1\'ii: Rn rl
talllornlR So<I•\! CPA"s.
' Fina11ce
Briefs
NEW YORK !UPI) -Col .
Henry Crown and Nathan
Cummings, the Chicago finan-
ciers who recently enlarged
substantially their holdings ln
General Dynamics Corp. were
nominated by the company's
manageme'Jlt for election to
the board of directors at the
an nual meting April 21 .
Colonel Crown ~·as on the
General Dynamic board from
1960 lo 1966 and was .chairman
of the executive committee.
Between them Cro .... 'n and
Cumming s , domll\lnt
shareholder oJ Consolida ted
Foods Corp., conlrol abou~ 18
percent of General Dynamics.
NEW YORK (UPI) -
Vemitron Corp. has obta!ned a
SS00,000 contract lo design and
make a d v a n c e d electroolc
equipment .. for the Pacific
roissile range.
I
\VASHINGTON IUPI) -
The Civil Aeronauti cs Board
approved only half of a pro-
posed $10 million loan by
American A i r 11 n es lol
Transcaribbean Air lines pen·
ding lhc CAB's d~ision on !
Amcrican·s applicalion to buy
Transacribbea,1. I
AKRON (UPI) -~loni:;anlo
Co. claimed a breakthrough
Tuesday \.\'ilh a ehemlcal rub-
ber vulcanization ingredient
called Santocure NS.50. The
chemical is an accelerator and
scorch in quantity al Nitro, I
\V.A., It is designed to in·
creasG production significantly
t.1 rubber mixing, calendering,
extruding and curing.
i\lACON, Ga . (UPIJ -Some !
of lhe nation's top-ranking ten-,
nis players are performing
thi s week on a new acrylic 1
carpeted <:curt ca I le d'
Sportsrace. made by J_ P.
Stevens & Co. that could help
to standardize tennis all over
the-world. tfhe carpeting is
being tried at the ri.1acon Open
International invitation Tour·
na1nent.
C HI CAGO iUPll
Pctroleun1 Resource~ Corp .,
has ag reed in principle to buy
Standard Hatcher ies, Inc., oi l
Decatur, 111.. lor stock. Stan·
dard Hatcheries had sales of
$3.2$3,000 lsst year.
TORONTO (UPI I -Hudson
Bay Mining & Smelting Co.
said its Hudson·Yukon mining
subsidiary has conl.racttd lo
sell nickel ore concentrates
from its Wellgreen property in
the Yukon to Sumintomo
Metal !\1ining Co. of Tokyo. A
60(}.ton per day concentrator
will be built on the property
and mining operations start es
soon as feasible. !\I i n in g
operations were suspended al
Wcllgr een after par I i a I
development in the 1950s
because the operation ari·
pc;ire1I to be commercially
unfeasible at the U1nc.
NEW YORK (UPI)
Te1ema;(' Division of Well·
ing1on Co1nputcr Corp. has
sold its com pu!eri zed rcserva.
lion service Budget Rent a
Car Corp., a nat i onwide
subsidiarv of Transamerica
Corp. of ·san Fr a n c i s co .
Budget now has 900 offices.
Minorities'
Business
Aid Granted ,
A national program lo open
bui:;i ncss and man agement op-
porlunities to minorities ,1·ill
be expanded to si x add itional
cities .... ·i th a $314,000 grant an·
nounced today by Robert A.
Podesta. assistant secretary of
commerce for e c o n om i e
deve\opmenl. I
The grant "·as approved in
support of the goal of the Of.
lier of t.linority Business
EnterpriSf in the U.S. Depart-
ment of Comincrce t o
stirnutalc greater participation
by 1nc1nbcrs o: 1ninority races
in-private enterprise.
Funds 1yi\I be used lo help
establish local organization,, to
CQnduct minority business and
job developmenl programs in
Augusta, Ga.; Champaign·
Urbana , Tll.; Dil}'lon . Ohio;
Kansas City, 1'1o.: Trenton.
N .• J.; and \\'ashln g1on. D.C.
The local unit~ y,•ill be
directe1f by thf' Zi11n-Non·nrofil /
Ch;iritablc Trust'l' n:i!1ona l
~lefH:kjuark)r,; -111 Philadclpln~.
where the Tru~·t has developed
mioority-01\'ncd f' r o g r c s~
Pl aza Shopping Crn!er, retail
bu s inesscs. manufacturing
plants, a non-profit housing
program and a training center
to foster businc!s manage·
mcnt ::ind ownership.
Procedure~ and planning
•
,
'·' .. ,. . ' . . -·----" . , •. ,.. .....
' Wlio Reads--the Stars
Fol the Stars?
-( • •
It's Sydney Omarr
And now fhis articulate write r v1ho hes
been called the "a strologer's astrologer"
reads the stars for you. Sydney Omarr,
longtime personal ostrologer to many
of Hollywood s ond the literory
world's most famous star1, is a DAILY
PILOT columnist.
Omarr's record for accuracy of
predic tions based on &strolog ical a naly!i.is
is amazing. Whether you reed
a:;1rologital iorecasts for fun Or a ~ a
serious student of star-gazing, you 'll
enjoy Sydney Omo rr"s do ily column
in lhe
DAILY PILOT
.. • •
..
I
I
C'Ollt'fPlS d c,·rtoried in1
Philadelphia "'ill b<> employed !
by rhr lncn l 11n\1.~ to e~tablish
n1 i 11 o r i I v · or i entf'd en.
I re prrn!'.'11t:tal 1lrvclqpmentj centers and busir.esses. ,,_ ____________________ .J
First Place
FOUR MORE • • •
for excellence
• •
In newspapering
Over the years, the DAILY PILOT has been
among the state's few newspapers consistently
bringing home top awards from the
California Newspaper Publishers Association Better
New'spaper Contest. This yeor, the DAILY PILOT
proudly brought home these awards.
<
The top aw a rd presented to the DAILY PILOT this year was
first plac e in the Best Typography category. It is for excellence
of design and appeorance of the newspaper. The award •pecifi.
colly wos givM for the edition• of January 22 and 23, 1969.
Merz't Awards
Th is Me rit Award I seco nd plac e ) plaqu e in
th e Best Women 's Interest Cove rage cate-
gory sp eci fically honore e! th e DA ILY PILO T
for outstanding women 's •ections published
on two consecutive days la•+ March 19 and 20.
Th e •econd place plaque for Best Sports
Page or Coverage was p re • en t e d to the
DAILY PILOT on the bo si• of the judges fav-
orable re action lo a typ ical •porh •ection.
The winn er wo• published lost September.
•
First-t ime entry in this category. The DAILY
PILOT won for its Win YOUR Share Show,
CommuniCornival, Fotoromo end ASTRO -
SCROLL evenh presented et South Coos+
Plazo , Foshion lslond and Huntington Center.
..
I
I
8 OAILV PILOT Mondny, f\1atdt q, 1970
.·Sooth Const Bepertor~
··:·'Spoon River A I
ho logy'
Fi11e Ensenibl Production
By TO~I TITl1S
(H lht O•l1• Pilot ~till
In Its excellent production of
"Spoon R J v er Anthology,"
South Coast Repertory once
'8galn d r rn on s I r a t t' s its
l"1::1stcry of enscrnb!c staging.
hl;inging Edgar I.ee l\lastcrs'
c00rclion of 1\1 i d we S I t• r 11
nost3Jgl<1 full blo\1'n to thl'
"SPOO/'I •tlllEll ANTHOLOGY~
ENTERTAINMENT
or the public~ speaker In
se1 eral sequences with ringing
authority. Harbison, ao im·
pressivo newcomer to the SCR
slage, invokes an affinit y for
rustic cornedy which provides
1nuch or the show's spice.
~ ••tnl"t at '°"" Ind "•""l•t bv ECW•' lff MoSll••, Oi<«1f<I bf R~n
Tlwi:ni.on, J1onllnt l>V le• Z"lf"-v.-
ut l• l>v 1e,,.,,,.,,. Sfttl'<~•. ••~..,n•tll
'l'P\urlel•v• tn•0119ft !>.l""'"v• unhl M~t<1'
11 •' ~Oii'" COi" Reoeriorv Tl>ira Steo TM•ter. 1111 Ntw..ort B!•a . t ... 1. Mew,
lifusically, n1uch or the
evening's enjoy1nent ls due to
the melodic loncs of Toni
Shearer. who lakes over the
rnorr difficult s o I o ar-·
rangen1cnts. l.1iss Shearer.
one of the more dynamic of
local rnusical a c l re ~ s e s .
rna kes her debut 0,1 the SCR
1 stage a memorable one.
~1rue1 l!l••tl . M1r1n1 McForlonll
Cl.:wlt• !-iult11ln1. r .... 1 Oou111011. Lf'"'
~lnMMI'!. lOlll ~M1rer. M11s1c,1n RCWI
-TI!o-1;1t1~.
• : st.1go of the coinpan)'s Costa
l\lesa theater.
This is no ha sti ly mounted
, piece or readers· theater, but
;1 full fledged produclion un-
der the crartsmanlike dircr-
"llon of Ron Thronson \\"ho 11~
, onstage guitarist also control ~
• the tem po of lhe evening . rr :m been staged with 1ender
and loving hands. preserving
~ ·1he poetic beauly of the \\'ork.
• The. show·s cast of six ex-
: hJbi!s a coordlnate style une-
: .$alcd since th e. company s
::fre nzied production or
; '.:·America, Hurrah" t ...,, o
·-,Sfasons ago. an unusual po1nl
fl( comparison. but one rele-~ 1'anl in the area of ensemble
, ,.;ipproach. Intricate lighting ef-
; 'fee ts and CQUnl less mood
• -shdes 1~·ell docu111cnted by
"Kenneth Shearer contributr
overwhelmingly to the success
of the production.
Presented as the co1nbincd
recollections of the citizens or
one small Illinois community
more than a century ago,
"'Spoon River Anthology" is
narrated from the graveyard.
a son1cti1T1l'S b11trr, often
hun1orous chrC111otogy ol rural
Amerita. Emptines:. and
Jonelin<'ss <ire n1 a Jo r in-
grcdicnls. but interspersed
throughout 11 re occ<1slonal
1\·1nks o/ the eye , a gentle
comic balance in a mood of
~rneral dejeclion and resigna-
tion .
It is a show v.'hich den1<inds
versatility , and this ls se rved
up t.1 heaping helpings by a
:i plendid cast of singing actors
and atlressei--James Baxes,
~lar!ha l-.l cFarland, Charles
llu\chins. Toni Douglass, Lar·
r y Harbison and Toni Shea rer.
-Each is called upon to
create a number of unrelated
character \'1gnettes. and none
is more skilled at this art tha n
is Baxes. v•ho t'Xhibit s an
aslonishing aptitude for cap-
turing impressions of the
elderly, Baxes possesi;c~ a
strnng. rich voice \l'hich can
shift smoothly from the fervor
of a pulpit -i>Ounding preacher
into the creaking uncertainty
of an old codger whom life and
love have forsaken.
Another pa1r of resonant ..
\'OCa l cords belong to llut-
1:hins, who handles 1he chores
Cross\vord Puzzle
t ~Hid n! l?(>i
6o ' Wh 11
.... 1"
lO National
Lra9ur
lram l~ "S!otmy
l ralhrr"
&0111posrr l~ Close
l fi Author till·
known: Abbi,
1.7 Childhood
disease
'18 Sllrnl mov ir
slar
20 R1119 out 21 Pro s
oppos1tr
Z2 Say
23 "Br olfl"
25 Survivr
27 Dishones!
person
JO Dai ry p1oduct
31 Make
diffrrrnt
32 ---··
the least:
l word s
3) Pronoun
36 Nourish J7 Scottish
firth
38 Mrrchand1sr
3~ Lellrr
40 Ovrrly h.1ssy peop1r
•l Mr. Pa1mr r
4Z L1beratlol'I
from pd~on
..
J4 Sa••
011r1H1n, .,.
•5 Mass.1crr~
•7 ~atlonat
Football
Lra9ue
1ram
~ •8 A1ea 1tnit~
49 Forrign --SO Run at
Cet"ta1n
pate
5~ Repe!ltd:
2 words
57 A1madillo
58 Load 59 El liptic
60 Compt'tito '
fi} G1renhack:;
62. Exposed
63 Dea1h
signal
DO W~J
I Maizr
2 "You're
right'"
l ·--· mat'r
4 Suppla nlrr:
5 Nav01l
ral'I~:
Abbi .
6 Rrp1rse nt-
01tivr
7 Unlat
8 Gal in
a soog
9 Before
10 Ranoe
animals l l Certain
Chri stia ns
S~turdJy'~ Puztte Solvrd:
1lU!nil anl.!
t•b1.i
13Kindof
sound I~ Eccent11t:
sr~11g
21 Stair :
Abbr.
24 Str1 fr
25 Rrmovr~
20 Whrrr
Zion
NJt 'I Par!( Is
27 Kon T1k1.
for On!'
28 Protr ctrd
from !hi':
wind
211 Motoring
haz,1rd.
2 wordi. 30 Comedian
an d pianist
32 Labors
3~ To111, Dick
and Harry
Jt 9 70
JS Ob~cr v~l'I
37 Prepo~1l1011
38 Eng1n t
p.1 rt 40 Kind of
I ittrat1Jft' ~1 W~lrt
bod~
43 Mounla•l'I
1 idge~
44 Owel l·~!l
pL1Cf;
Slang
45 --·--Ca~al~ 46 A1t\1c,
t .9. 47 Wrapon
4'J At a grrat
distant.e
51 Rant
52 01 ll1r
mouth
53 High
55 Hilt
5fi Eggs
57 Stale:
Abbr.
~1artha f\1cFarland brings
poignancy mixed v.'ilh an oc-
casional fillip of broad comedy
to her varied assignments.
And Toni Douglass adds a
strong dose of feminine ch;i rrn
to · her co nvin ci ng in·
tcrprelations.
l\1usic, lighti'ng and visual
~rrects bl end skillful1y \Yilh top
notch ensen1ble performance
in 1his skillf11Jl v tonsl ructed
presentation \1•hich will stir a
responsive chord in anyone
"·ilh a small town background ,
Characters and circurnstances
arc ageless, and a u tho r
Masters has penned his work
\vith indelible ink.
Only (\VO more weekends re-
main for "Spoon R i v e r
Anthology" at the SCR Third
Step Theater, 1827 Ne1'fpor~
Bl vd. in downtown Cost a
l-.1esa.
Cast Li sted
For 'Clowns'
;
In Ai1aheim
Ba1i1ied i1t G1•eece
Georges Foundas turns out to be the right man for
?.1elina Mercouri in "Never on Sunday," the mo-
tion picture 'vhich may be seen on Channel 9 to-
night at 7:30. Miss Mercouri was picked as be st
actress at Cannes Film Festival for this movie.
Orie;inal Musical Set
'-'
For Pre111iere at GWC
"Irving,·• an original \v.'o-acl \Vcscott . lhe composer ,
musical comedy about a com· ~·rote th e music and lyrics to
puter with a John \Vaync·soun-"The Golden Knigh t" and the
ding dialect. will be produ ced highly acclaimed "Little Man
at Golden \Vest College, April in Search of His Serious Side."
ID-11and16-18. The latter ran six months at
It is the first musical on a the Orange Studio Theater and
1najor scale to be ;staged al two months in llollywood.
Golden \Vest, and to ac-Rogers, a member of the
commodate bolh props and Gold~n \Vest faculty . \vrote the
large audiences it will be held strip! and is direcling. He has
in the College Center, with the wrilten nine shows· a o d
curtain going up at 8:JO p.in. directed more than 50, in-
cluding '·Calico," his first General admission tickets musical v.•hich was w e·l I
are $1.00, and may b e received in its debut at santa
purchased in advance through Ana College.
Casting ha s been co1nplcted the college book store. ,::;:===========
for "A Thousand Clowns," the "Irving" is the product or first adult prod uction or the Ana-~todjeska ),lay ers of ttie composer-writer Learn of
Annhcinl. (ilen \Vesco\! and Stewart
The coniecli• !Jv II er b Hogers, tv.'o artists who have
Gardn er wil! 9C pesented April three prior musical comedy
10 and 11 only at the Anahei m successes lo their credit.
High School audilorium under ~ COAl'I" IMlfll-" , "'" "'
the dircclion of fl,f a r y ~---" ""'St"
Eastrnan.
Joe Del Rosso y,•ill play the j
leading role of Murray Bums. l."'""'""'~---
Del Rosso recently starred in * HEY KIDS! * •·(;oodbye Charlie'' at the
Costa Mes<1 Civic Playhouse
and "A Smile is a Fro\vn
'!'urned l:pside Down'' at the
Open End Theater.
l i9 Pol Sit• .. Today, 1 :JO
TONITE AT ,:00 ' '9 ;55
AND AT 1:00 ONLY
Others in the cast art Susan
l\<inlpc ns Sandra ; Don
Jontan :1s Albert, Frank
Utzn111nn as Arnold . \Villiam
Verderber as "Chuckles" and
t)cnnis \Vheeler as t h e I
youngster. Nick. Poro1T"QJntP1t11.1re!>Pre~1~
Re s ervation s ror "A Al:TiJR::k.b r,...i"'\.o>'
Thuusand Clo...,·ns" may be n.'<"'IL-.ile
111adc by calling 528-662.i or by '· .,,,j'tf-~I I cnnt.'.lcting the A n a h e i m ~
Chan1ber or Con1mcrcc. '-' 1
Te.:k,, tt/O< 'A Po<Clll"Wr>I P'(To,re ~
~,~-~· ~, 473-6260
2905 £ast Coast Hwy.
Co rona del Mar
HELD OVER
TWO ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
A man vJenl looking for America
And couldn't hnd 1l any..vherc ...
COLOR
Al10
IURT LANCASTER
DEBORAH KERR
"THE GYPSY MOTHS"
EXCLUSIVE AREA
PERFORMANCE
FOR ADULTS
7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
~lCM l'1•~•·n1.
,\,. ,\11l1u1 f' .. ! ,, .. 1 ... 1·,.,J,,.,~,,1
Peter O'Toole
Petula Clark
"Goodbye,
Mr. Chips"
""'"
IEST ACTORS -Dw1tln Hoffman · Jon Yal<Jltl
IEST l'ICTURI!:
lfST SUPl"ORTING ACTRESS -Swl•I• MilP
IEST DIRECTOR -John Scltle1h19er
IEST SCREENPLAY
IEST FILM EDITING
··~-~-.· .. -., .• . '1
Pa .. tton s~ott's
General's 'Gigantic Stature' Lauded
By HAL BOYl.E
NE\V YORK (AP) -ll is
rare for a U.S. ~tarine lo pick
an anny ofrlcer as his hero.
But the late Gen. George S.
Patton has become somelhing
of a personal hero to actor
George 0. Scott as the result
of playing the lille role in
"Palton," a $15 mi 11 Ion
roadshow film by 20th
Century-Fait.
Scott, who rose to the rank
of sergeant during a four-year
hitch in the Marines, bccan1e
fascinated with the personali ty
or the famed U.S. 3rd Army
commander who a c h i c. v e d
notoriety by slapping a
shellshocked private and later
\von renown for his 1narch
across France.
"J think I could write a book
aboul Patton now," he said.
"~fy biggest difficulty was to
avaid the popular cliche of
him -to show him not as a
swaggering bully with a gun
but as he actually was, a com-
plex. multifaceled man.
"Patton had gigantic stature
aS a human being."
Like Patton, Scott has had a
storiny and controversial
career. lie once refused :in
Academy Award nominati on
and by the time he was 30 he
had been thrice-married and
had his nose broken five
times. Bul lime and a happy
third marriage have mellowed
his impetuous nature.
"I don't have a definition of
controversial," he said mildl y.
"If it means f like l-0 Jive. my
own life, then I suppose I am.
.Sul I'm not meddlesome. I ~espise gossip, and I don't
slick my nose into o1hcr
people's business."
Scott is a six-footer with
cloudy eyes and an Imperious
prorile. Admired by other ac-
tors for his dedication and
skill ~lt his trart, he says he
became an llttor because "it's
the only thing I cun do suc-
cessfully.
"That's a left-lurnded thing
to say, but it's true. Acting
has its gratifications and
rc\vards. Dul It is rather like
gambl ing luck -you tan kill
il by talking about it.
''Yuu can make a n1ist.ike
by trying lo overanalyzc cilhcr
a pcr!o1 mancc or your O\I n
hfe, It 'll lead you on lhe road
lo lhe laughing acadenty. Bet-
ter leave it 10 the
trJtics-thal's their job."
1'hl' kry \Yord in Scott's
philosophy is distinction.
..IL is unforgivable ror a
man not l-0 aspire to distinc-
tion in everything he does," he
said ... You also have to prize!
individuality very )Ughly. It's
one or the things that make
1nan a hi gher animal - j f he
is."
:lrolt ferls his 01rn \l"orsl
{;1ull is intcJleclual laziness. I
"l knQw I could be a better
person," he said. ''if I laid on l
lhe sweat and tea rs iL takes.
It 's like a good marl'iage: you
have to slave at it to get the I
best results."
His best trait, he feels is
that he likes people in-
dividually. but not in cro\vd.~. I
"I'm really gregarious." hP
said, "although some people
might not think so."
Scott's biggest profes.,.ional
goal is to play "l\1acbeth '' '"'ith
his actress \vile, Colleen,
Dewhu rsl, as coi;lar. I
•
BALBOA
673-4048 ~~~~~~~~~I! OPEN ii; 6:45
709 'E. BalJ,oa
hlbo11 Prnin1ul11
Wll.J:laJ MldJS:l JOI ""0UIAlLQH
HELD OlfER
9 ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
'lhe:J+ime 'If I
'Miss9e11n'llrodie
I WLalflii;"s,mth I I
LIZA MINNEL LI
WEND ELL BURTON
n..Jlen'le . CudfoO !~-··, ~~
AS THE HUNTER
STALKS THE
. MOST FEROCIOUS
ANIM ALS ON EARTH
ENDS TOMORROVo/
HURRY!
Wt" Co.,1 F~• S.Ulh Ct••t Pl~lf Fo• ""8h~illl
'•nt• Ant S41·tl11 C11I• MHI S4'·Jlll 'li~ll'O
W~O•ys •:»l.llO·t.u
-Sim." t: U·4:l0-l:OO•t:1S
S~I. 11 :fl0.i:IJ•4:l0•l;OCJ.f;IS
Ad•lts $2.50 Under 12 75c:
(~·
PLAYS PATTON
George C, Scott
•• • •• ·: • c.ot~!t ~;:t .._i • ~:ct:t~·u'•' i.~:ci. ·: ~t'lll'O•T ~t~ • ~-· Q/60
ENDS TUESDAY
BARl::lRA O MAR
STREISAND • SHMIF ~p~;;~ ,,,~.~Gia&.
STARTS WED. -MAltCH 11
"Downhill Racer"
"""°" .. -·CO'''..,< .. -l•.-~>111 .... __. ....... __ , .... , ....... -....
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE
IEST SUPPORTING ACTRESI
-GOLDIE HAWN-
lltlllGI'
.1131111UU
c·m·ms;
1 LOllOI'
OOluiU llil\\11 · •
8 ;:;:. " ... ·.~ rr,;\ ··--...... L
''THE NIGHT THEY
RAIDED MINSKY'S"
Storii119 Elliol Gowld
Steve McQueen
"The Reivers
'lhe:J+ime 'If
~llss9etm"Brodie ·"-'MaggieSmith
·-· . . ' . • ~·· -stereo 103FM
--• > . . ..
.;.....
••
. .
"' •
"'-
_r the sounds of the harbor
~d~~7 youve never heard it so good
I
l
. . _:.
Monday, Mardi •. 1970 DAILY PILOT Jit
By Charles Barsotti TUMBLEWEEDS
S:OO
AAAAAA~! I lOST'M'Fl!ATHER!~
l l OST M'Fi:AlliER!
TV DAILY ·toG --
MONDAY
MARCH 9
1:15 fl) Otflct ti th!i l"r.WIWlt (JO) {R)
1:30 (I 5 00 Herr's L11q (C) (JO)
(R) Luer tries lo srie theu ruined
wenln1 by Mltlkini the whol1 l•m·
11, in to u1 .h>hnny C1™1n'1 lV
s!IGW while he's in Hollywood,
~ Bruins ill Action (C) (JO)
ITT) 00 G) AIC MondlJ Movit:
( I "Nicht of ttie 'ent11ls" (dr•·
m1) '67-Peter O'Toole, Omu Shu-
1/, Tom Courtenar. Donald Pl••'·
enu, Joann1 Pettet. PhUipPf Nolret.
By Tom K. Rya SALLY BANANAS
WHO~ WHIMl'ERIN'?
AA"""A AAGH!I '"' a MONST~B_fROM 0'_,!1]B 5pg,e1
PLAIN JANE
WoW~HERE
,... I C.01"\E S, HI :'.AN~. IWILY1'TANLIOY!
PERKINS By John Miles
m PUTNAM NEWS-Special l * Reports & Sports Each
Story aboul 1 str1na• ni,nhunt set ,---------------, ,--------,cc-------, .--------------,
•R•inst the btckiround nl 1he Nan .,:,,":;,:;::. ~='• J,f9>.ta.. J·t
Weekday at 5 PM KTIV
li;OO ·~Ntwl (CJ (60) Jtfry Dunphy. . HuMl11·l ri11kler (C) (30) I
otcupat!On of Wi1$1W i nd, Puis and
1n prrsent·d•J Germ1ny, m 01vid rrost Show (C) (90)
Joh11 Yoii:ht, Pit Coopt1 and Efohe
Laws auesL
t1) Tiit Bit V1tlty (C) (60) til Popa (30)
11 You Top Tlli1? (C) (30)
Wink M1rti™hl1 hoMs. P1n9l11b 11ej
{rnest Bor1nine. Jesst Whil 1 Ind
l.!orey Am~!l!dlm. 1 1:4S fD ;1111t1nnon (30)
0 "BROKEN LANC E"~olorj ':oo O IS OO M•)'bt"l' R.f.D. (t) (lOl A f1mous ~ew 'f'ork sculptor (Rob· * SPENCER TRACY! rn S.mplDnJ 'tisils Ma)'bmy and I 1ika it IO wrll \hit IMI create• 1
0 Sir O'Cl.0: Morit: (C) .. llr&llen ~•I statue for tile toim-.n ab·
Unce.,. (wtSlern) ·~ -Sciencei 1 s!rKlion lhat nobody un undt1· Tracy, Rol:tffl Wagner . lea11 Peteu. $land.
R1d'l1rd Wldm11t, K.lly Jurado. A Q Ql @ eD KBC Mond17 Mwie;
(lttle b1r0t1's powtf bt(ins to dis·j (Cl "fht Mnll .t Slltbi" (adven.
inleirll~ as conthch diMlop be turel '70 -Walter Pidg~. [nc
IYl'etn his lhrer sons by I lust m1r Braeden, strphe11 Younz. Corinne
11111 and a 500 by I s.ecolld m1r Com1eho. l11ger StnenJ. A museu111
n111e lo 1 Com1nc/\e 1111neess. cu111or d1sp1!ches his three ass.isl-
1 Did Yan Oyt1 (30) ants 10 the Ethiopian jungles lo
Thi Flinlltonu (C) (30) search for the Gokl M1sl! ot SheW.
Star Trek fC) (60) 0 Footliztrt F""' (C) (60) "The
117l(j}ABC News (CJ (30) Frankie Av11on /Joanie Sommers ffi Stoc-Mtr-tt Summary (R) Spec1aLH Frankie 1nd JMnie 11e tIJ Whtt'I Ntw? (30) "Af!IHICIAI tointd by 811ddy Greco in an tvl·
11· fort nC011c1eroa1." n!ng ol music. t29J (i) CBS N .. 1 (C) (30) ffi NET Jour111I (C) (60') ''freud:
€I) P11ion Gitln• (JO) Man and His Mind "
<!)Nm in 1111 Round (C) (60) Ill l111pacto1 Muslc1le. (30)
':15 fl) lnveslofS Sllowa11 (30) (R) t :l5 Ei) Kow To M1rry 1 MilliOlllirt (30)
6:30 0 ICllflG Newsmlc. (C) (60) 0 Stewe AJltn Show (C) (90) !>rny
G11!espie, P1ul Winchell, les,,ie Ma·
haney. Jae~ Carter, Ar lene Andre"sl
~nd Don "Mr. W11ud" Herbu!
~uest,
0 T111 ''"'' I01m1 (C) !30) Alan Suts, CfOl'le Ulldsey 111d K1ye St'v
ens 1u1!ol.
t:30
0 TONIGHT'S BEST BET! * TH E OORIS DAY SHOW!
0 ~ (8 , Oori1 Day (C) (30) Dorii'~ .. .,.om1n'1 inlu111on" ~etms
lo be mys!eriousl, PSJ,hk until sht
convinces Mr. Nitholson to la~e 1
pl111e lhat 1s ht11c~ed to Cuba. W MJ F1't0rilt M1rt11n (C) (30)
17J (3) l'trry Mawn (60) · m 1tNS (C) (30) 81rtrr Wird.
,2J: (i) HllftrlfJ·lrinkley (C) (301 l ill ,Jebns N~ (C) (30) ED i lflCllli !1111nd St1 er l•P'n · RMst1 Mlll>Cll (30) ~~he Mlllllm (30) i t:45 EE ™ F"•111 m Noticin 34 CC} (60) 10:00 0 ~ (iJ Carol llllfntrt (C) (bO) ED nu• """ ft) (30'! I Trini Loptt and Ninette Fabrty
~ue!ol. 1nd join Carol tnd t~e gang 1:4S m Tllis is l1itlarl (R) II) I produdion numbfr, "Pita Cum
1:00 f) CIS E'f«li11g Ntw1 (CJ (JO}
B Wh1l'1 My liitt! (C) 130) m I lovt Lucy (JOI m a.11 1111 t1od' <t> 130)
ED Coni11oditJ/Mulu1I F~nd (JO)
Ql (6) MMld•r Show (C) (2 hr)
''I'd Rather Be Rich."
fI:)Mon! (30)
~{))Truth or tof!se<l~t11ct1 (CJ m Cnar'1 World (C) (30)
6) 11111 Cirl (C) (30)
7:l0 0 19 (t ) liw111lllllf (CJ 160) ~yi.,
Thievts " Thrte delinque nt boy~
toudl Ille heart ot b1rte11t1er Sim
(Gl111n St11nr1), who t1\111 cus1oct,
cf OM (Mith1el Bu1ns) ind 1iwes
him I }ob 1t lh1 Lon&: 811nch Sa ..... a m Mr W«1c1 .rn1 wtk:t111• '° It (C) (JO) "'Child's Plly." 1ohn
Monroe h•s 1vllt letlina:s fol' IOI'·
•etl:inr I picnic d1l t WTth hi!
d1u1!1'1ter.
U ~(J)(Dlt Tat.ei 1 Thiel (Cl
{i)b) M Enninr With Alisltr Mun·
Cum-fiesta," or ~rock 'n' roll in
[1p1nGI." 0 HewJ (C) (60\ 0 MNrion S Morie: (C) '1ltt Leop·
11d~ (dr1m1\ '63--Burt l1nu1ter,
Cl1udi1 C1rd1na1e. Al1in Oefon. tn
SrcHy durin1 the 1860'l. !ht Prince
ol Salina is shettt1td by the news
ol Cariba\dl's inY1\ion •nd kllOWs
the 1risl0tr1ts mus! ~ow lo the 11ew
Old",
m HE 'S BEEN MAKING TV * NEWS IN L.A. SINCE
1951-PUTNAM JO PM
I Ntws (C) (60)
!'wry Muon (611)
Firinf Lille (C) tlilll "The M,
• L1i MaSSKCts." Wilh•m r. Budt·
ley's 1uest1 tonirht 1r1 Ch111ies
frankll, profmor of philn0$'lhy et
Col~mbia University, 1nd Or. John
Coleman Benllett, an onflined min·
isl« and presid~l of tht Unian
Theo!otic•I Stmin1ry. (II)
€11 D l'ldrt '•rniu (JO)
1.y." Alister i nd Aluarldfit Mundy, IO;JO €I) Crnltill (30)
POiing as circus clowns upset the
coop d'et1t p\1 nntd b1 Gen. Con· ll:OO IOOillmmKewi (Cl 11111 l'•vin McCloud). Hlgflw•J P11ro1
c:J Best of lol Angllff t: "Niwer l'ey!OI' 1'!1tt ,
on sundl1" (comldy) '60-Mellni Ht S.!d. Slit Said IC!
MtftoUr i, Jules D1uln. An Amtrl 1 fl @ tfi r6J ~ff) N1W1 (C) r.~n tourist attempts 10 r1ltll'm and €tl ~~enturr. 81!1oon lo Sertn·
f'duc:alo a Greff pro1!i!u!1. ttty m T1uth or toftMq11tnea (t) (JO) 11:15 f\1J (31 Cinema S-ntHrt (t) "On· m M•iof Ad1111 (60) I ly I Wom•~."
ti) Trchnlc1I Com" (JO) IR) 11:30 0 ~ (j) Merv 'riflin (C)
I
0 ~\6J eD 1ollnnJ Carson !C)
@)WHY DO YOU SMOKE~ O Tt11 theattn
*SMOKER'S SELF·TEST-o moidi C1wetl tCJ l1mtsS!tw
TONIG HT THRU FRI DAY •rt rueits.
£0 11!1Cl;a;L I Wiiy YH S-U: A Stlt•ftst (C) (30) In tht l1tst pro-
tram of 1 l!Yt-part 1ttiM. viewers
"'-' lhnl hllVJ Ml'K»tll and then
llmiliel ind btcln 1 lour-part 1111
lhll will bli l flflylld Oii !ht Ill,
@m Crw: Ot AlllW ( lO)
m RICH AR D WIDMARK AND * GREGORY PECK 11:30
TONIGHT ON KTIV Ii!
m Maorir. -,111ow Sli;J" (wtsttrn)
·•a -Grq:QtY Peet AllM B••ter,
Richtrd Widmarl.
1:00 0 fD Llllf-.,lrt (C) (Ml) Gllflt @ Mwlt: "'Rid llr~" (mysltry)
MTtton Berle tmCMl • b1chelci1 '49-Geo11e 11111. Y1111Ri• M1yo,
dinl'ttr fol' 1111 l11Tlt Old Man •nd
AIM! ll)l)tllS IS I m11itiln. I po-12:00 0 Com munity Buli.ti11 loerd (C)
11cemtn ind 1 doddwin1 h1pplt O Mo\'ie: "Two WCMM11" (dram1)
0 Mwl11 ''"" (t) (JO) Sonny fn~ '6l-Sophi1 lore11. Jt1n-P1ul Bel-
h°'lt. Gufllts •re James Stl'Klrt.I mon<:to. ~:!~be, *' G1•1 •nd M•1a• l:OO B Movie; "Btushllrt" (drama) '62
... " 1 111 ""I _1 -Joh11 Inland, Jo Mor1ow. mt• T l "' 1" •.JV ctO News (Cl
fl) WOIMll tad Ille Mt~tt (II) I O> Adloll Tlleltrt• "GrMn nn1111." EID Wond Pim (C) {60) ' m ,,. .. ,"'. t3o) z:Jo e HtwiJ,1¥• u. ni. e., (ti
JUDGE PARKER
MOON MULLINS
WE'RE O llfOFTHE
)U:C>, OU> GIRL!
WHAT'l.l. WE DO
iO C~L&Bl?ATI"?
STEVE ROPER
...,--,----. WITMA~N1 MATURALlY.'~
'IOtJ \lotJllJlDN"T BE
All 5ttARPED UP
l tkE A SMOW·~SE !
'IO.I WEYER BOTI.IER
TO ORfSS Lll<E
THATWtfEIJf
lMf ')QJ ClJT.'
By Horold Le Dom:
By Ferd Johnson
By Saunders and Overgard
TME >.M&&U.~E ~OUlt:t !E'
~ERE All'I MOMEWT TO TAl(E
I THE Qt() .IM.N 10 fl-lE M~
PITAL~ INSIST OW RIPJWG
TI-OE ,t..Ml5UL-'HCE 'NITl-I HtM!
O't.AY! Wi ll YOO
00 TO TME MOS-
P1nL AFTE~ VOii~
,1,PPOI MTMENT
'MTH 'SAM
YB'. Ot.IE OF DS MAS TO
STAY WITJ.I CARL CC*STANTL~
row·r FOl!'GET TO TAKE
~EANW\.llLE ... I'~ NOT SURE ver, SA M!
CAMILLE WlNTEIZS SUOOLP A ~RIENP INVITED ME
BE HERE IM A&OtJT "fl.l lfn'Y OOT TO LUNCH~ GIVE ME
GORDO
A1lJVE
OV~R1 COCJ(V
J.OCKY.'
IT'S MV
YEA1' ru
Jl=WL,.'
! DON'T ,
KNOW I/MATS
WRON6! I 'M
SICK! 00
SOMETHIN6!
TI-IE CAPSllLE5 WITM voe:
DRIVER'?
" ,, ,_
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HERES SOME
MEDICINE
YOU CAN
TAKE,MUIT·
1.l •• \....~ \ \I '"'""'""~-·-
IT's 4668 OJ./
THE CJ{/AJE5£-eooc 1UJJAR t.UCK ! CA~NOAR1 THE YEAR
M ii.Ji! WA S
NOTHIN 1
Of' Ti(E 1D C"OW C08_f ,J,Ba)Tf • •
MINUTE5,AB&EV! WMEN ONE 6CX)() fEASON WHY
Wll.L YOU BE OVER? ( I <IiHOtJLP 60 OVER:
AN() COOIC YOURS ~
By Al Smith
WE DON'T KNOW.
GRANDPA iOOK
IT JUST BEFORE
HE WENT TO
-HEAVEN !
. By Gus Arriola
m "T~• forbidden Sllttt" /drrrN) fl-.... M.C.--...1~-lU':a....I
TUESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
'•9-MturMn O'H1r1, Dant An
clre wi.
ll;JO 0 fC) "t'w AIWIJI l1¥ed ''II"
I (l'Olllll'ICt) '46-1'~111-Dorn, C.th-
"IM MtLIOd.
I I :JO m "0111 tol ttM 1'1lt" (1dwtrrturt)
9·00 O "The Sim llty" {lftYS(lf'!'l '3SI '41-K!r-Douglas. Jant G1"1,
-_--GflOfl'I Rlfl, R•1 M!ll•~· "I Sflot %;00 0 ''OpofaUO. !'Kiffe" ('4Yentur1)
'"" Tiii lld" (Waen) .!i()....Dofll '51-Johfl Wl)'l'll. Palrfdt HNI.
Btrry, Tom Pitt!, m "f l'IUI rrem Plfb" (mualc11)
O (t) "11111 .. Ptrl1fl,. .. (11f'vtn 1 ·55 -~hrprel Wll1l1"" rorttsl
11111) 'St -t~uli lourdan, D1br1 lucbr,
rttftl. I 4:00 8 (ti "Wrltttn an I~• Wind"
1 JO D "SWHI and l~o11t"" flflUfj (dllm•l 'S7-Roc~ HudlOn. Ooroth1
cal) '44-L1nd1 D1rn11t, J1c~ 0111.11 MtlGnL
MISS PEACH
M ARC IA
fi\.A S"O N 1S"
J
l PER.~ONALtf~
C LINIC
~
'FC-•c A9vl C.E"-
MY PRO&L.E'M IS ,
NO&oPY TAl<ES ME
se1uou~Lv.
By Mell
YOU'RE
\<.>ODIN&
11 iH.15 15 TO INFORM '1t>U
'])IA T '<00 HAVE BEEN REIWED PS HEAO EIEAGlE II
TELEVISION VIEWS
Viewers Get
Show Preview
By CYNTHIA LDWRY
NE\V YORK (AP ) -"Dial Hot Line," a two--
hour film feature on(ABC Sunday night. gave view-
ers a king-size preview of a series scheduled for
the network nexL season.
Vince Edwards starred as a sort of super social
worker, handling the assignment as if Ben Casey
had switched from neurosurgery to psychiatry. He
operated a telephone service for young people who
needed to talk out their problems.
THE "HOT LINE" was handled by youns vol-
unteers _9J(lhe idea that the young want to talk to
the young. Presumably we met the volunteers a~
s1gned as regulars for the series. The pilot sho\V
encompassed a number of cases -a bo y threaten-
ing suicide and carrying out his threat: a psycho--
tic youth who attacked a Hot Line volunteer; a run-
a\vay boy : and a rebellious l&-year-old gi rl \\•ho
hated everybody, particularly ber mother.
The show, in spite pf all the pl ots and subplots,
crept along at a snail's pace. There were too many
characters to get to know any. and Edwards wa~
aloof. grim and remote wit hout any co mpensating
human qualities.
TELEVISION has nol seen 1nany social work-
ers si nce the d'emise a fe\v se asons back of ~·East
Side. \Vest Side," in which George C. Sco tt played
a social worker. P ost niortems of the series' short
run usuall y included a diagnosis that the social
\Vorke r as hero \va s a 1nistake. He 'vas forced to
be a spectator of other pe6ple's problems instead
of a protagonist. This ABC pilot suggests the same
trouble \viii plague ·'Dial I.Jo t Line."
'fhe three netwo rks tu rned out with a wi.JJ t(\
permit viewers, no matter \Vhere situated, to enjoy
the spectacle of a total eclipse of the sun -the
type event television can cover s uperbly.
They scattered r eporters and cameras from
Mexico to Nova Scotia. They set up animal experi-
ments -most of \vhich did not \Vork. They inter-
viewed scientists and they spent a lot of time warn-
ing the public not to look at the eclipse with un,
protected eyes.
THE MOST effective camera coverae:e came
from Mexico ; the least effective was from a plane.
CBS premiered a new series, •;.A.dve nture," on
Friday night \vilh a sketchy account of a 2.000-mile
voyage on the Pacific from Peru to Central Ameri ..
ca in a primitive craft made of bundles of reeds.
The project, dreamed up by an American ad~
venturer named Gene Savoy, was to lest a theory
that the early Indian civilization of Central Ameri·
ca had its roots further south.
The program was a colorful hour \vith hand-
some mountain and ocean scenery but it seemed:
more of a TV stunt than a real scientific experi-
ment.
De1anis the Menace -:
'
I
•
•
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Mo11d11. Mardi '· 1970 DAILY 'ILOf fl
•
Cal-State 1.~ets Shot at Brui~ns
8y THE ASSOCIATED PRf:SS • And In vo, Uta~I Beoch &how·
For UCLA and Lone Stich State, con-ed why~inished atop the Pacific Coast
fenpce blaketball action la over and the AU\leUc socl11.ion with an unblemished
_l!ll!l!!B &nd~n m.llHffd for a.bell®n _record ~I! boJllbecl Wtbtr State's bi(
crub Tburaday nlgb! In Sealtle. But for S~y Ccinferenc. ~1nPJOii WlldCats, ft.73,
santa Clan and Unlverrity of the in Satunloy ni(ht'• openinl round of the
Padlic, the entire 1euoo depends on NCAA Wellern Regionals.
tonl&ht'1 game. UCLA, 24-2, will be ahnin1 for an un-
The U~ans· Pacilio-I C,Onference play precedented fourth strai&ht national
ended Saturday night on a note of victory champloiuhip when ll opPo&el the t9er1,
-~ revenge -as they managed 24-3 and winnen &I 11 Jtraiabt.
Southern California, 11-71, getting even Balance was tt.e key to tht 49ers'
for Friday night's u,pset by the Trojans. triumph as ctnter Gtorp Trapp ICOttd
17 and ruard Shawn John.10n and forward
Billy Jlllk.ana addtd 16 apiece .
Whether Santa Clara or udP fOe! to
tilt regionall for a Saturday night contest
wlll'be decided in tonl(hl'I playoff, at tlle
University of San Franclsco.
It was necessitated by Pacific'• 71-IO
victory over the Broncos last Saturday
night which threw the two teama into a
deadlock foc the We.st Coast Athletic
Conference crown with 11-l rttc>rds.
UOP'1 BUI Stricker ICortd 15 of hi!
game-hi1h 23 poinb in the flnt h.alf lO
Palmer's Putt In and Out;
Lunn Captures Citrus Open
• .
Ul'I TtlffM'* BODY ENGLISH -Bob Lunn ol Sacramento snaps his fingers as
he watches his ball edge the cup on the 18th green during the final
round of the Florida Citrus lnvitational Sund,Jy. Lunn made hi s
next shot to win the tournament wi\h a 271, 17 under par.
Lure of Outdoors
Former OCC Student
Savors Alaskan Living
There are certainly a number or way1
lo get one's goat, what with the normal
pressures that frequenUy make everyday
living a bit on the hellish side.
However. Walter Ormasen. e former
Orange Coast College student, trekked all
the way to Juneau, Alaska to gel his
goal.
~ a beauty II was .... an old goat
--------
WlllTE
WASH --------
with near-trophy sized 9lh·inch horns and
meat strong enough to make a starving
cannibal turn pale.
Actually Ormasen .went to Alaska as a
permanent resident. accepting a job with
the Ketchikan Police Department in 1967.
The native New Yorker wanted to be
110mewhere where he coukl hunt and fish
without being jostled about by a.million
other people.
So our 49th state was his choice.
Ormasen, now a state trooper, tell~ 11
bit of the great hunting and fishing he's
t!ncounlered in his three years up north.
He tells ot traveling some 70 miles
north of the capital -Juneau -going
moot of the way by boat, up the inland
Pairings Set
For NIT Pla y
• NEW YORK tAP) -Col ltgr
water ways. Two days afler he started
out, he bagged his goat, plodding about in
the glacier country.
··You 've got to be careful up there with
the avalanches, falling rocks and
crevices," he warns. "But most hunten1
can get their goat by working the alpine
meadows around the glaciers."
As for hunting moose. Ormasen says if
you go up river some 15 miles from
.Juneau, you are in good hunting grounds.
"It ca.11 take anywhere from 20 minutes to
rorever to get one," he says, "depending:
on whether you're hunting for meat or
trophy horns."
There's plenty of be11r to be had buf
Ormasen bas not tried that venture. as
yet.
He al.so tells of bagging 1 nice mess o(
trout, ranging from 17-20 inches in size.
"Most people seem to go for ocean
fishing and sa lmon so there is very little
pressure oo fresh water fish ," he ex-
plains.
Hu nting licenses for residents 1r•
cheap -like $13 for anything.
But for non-residents you have a ba~ic
$10 license ree. plus charge.<i for tags on
separate game. For example. goat tags
are $25, moose $50, polar bear $150, iheep
$75, brown bear SIOO.
On top of that, you are reQuired to
employ a guide to hunt bear or sheep.
Non-resident fiShin~ license is •uch
more reasonablt -$5 -says Onn.a.sen.
He points out that w"inter in Juneau is 11
rather mild season since the city is
coastal. There i~ some snow but mostly
it's rain forest atta and tile !e3 waters
•re warmed by a Japanese current.
Obviously ii Ii guy wants to really get
his go.at. Alask1 is the place to do ii.
* * * ·" couple of former Orange Coast artA
prep stars won events In mett record
time SaLurday ls UCLA's track team
topped Arliona State, 91·59.
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -"I tlloughl I
had made the putt," said Arnold Palmer.
"ft was in the cup and out."
"I thought he'd made it:• said Bob
Lunn. "I just oouldn't imagine Arnold
Palmer three-putting from Iha l
djstaoce."
But Palmer did. A national television
audience watched while the golling idol o(
millions blew 1 four-foot putt on the final
bole and let Lunn escape with the $30,000
~ first J!C°il.e Sunday in the weather-plagued
Flnrida Citrus Invitational aolf touma·
ment.
"Well," said an obviously dejected
Palmer, "we had it going for a while. It'!
the way t like to play. Only I don't like to
lose."
Palmer and the bull-strong LliM, IS.
year~ younger and 30 pounds heavie r
than Amie, were locked in a head and
head duel for 30 boles on the gruellin&
final day.
Palmer had a 64, eight under par. in
lhe morning round and moved ·into the
lead. with Lunn just one 1lr0ke back
after a 67.
Palmer had a final 72 and LuM a 70 for
271. 17 under par. The double round was
forced by the rained-out first round
Thursday.
The lead eee-sawed back and fcrth
between Palmer and Lunn all day, 11nd no
more than a single stroke ever separated
•
th,m. And, loinC into the final 11 hoks, it
became a tMHnan race_.
Palmer took the lead \fith a birdie on
tile 13th, then bogeyed the 15th from a
trap and it was all even again. He made
a bad second shot, blasted out strong and
missM • 25 root putt.
·•tf I hadn't made a mimke there. that
might have done it," he said.
But the high drama was uved for the
18th. 'Ibey came to it all even. Lunn put
his drive Jn the trees on the right. Palmer
wa! down the fairway,
Arnie pitched on •boot 35 feet from lM
pin while LuM ~t a beautiful shot
around the-trees but left bimseH a 70-
footer.
"1 thought, 'Bob, if you're going to do
something, now':s the Ume,'" said the
balding, solt-&pOlcm LuM. He missed by
four inches and tapped in for the par.
PaJmer rao his 35-fuot birdie putt !our
reel by the hole, I.hen missed it coming
back and hid lo aettle (or 1 tie for aecond
with Australian Bob Stinton. who had a
final 68 for m.
Dick Lotz bad a final 61 and was alone
at 27S. Tied at 276 were Tom Weiskopf,
Tom Shaw and Dick Crawford, with
Bruce Crampt.on, Bruce Devlin ind
Howie· Johnson at 277. Jack. Nicklaus
ftnilhed well back at 280.
"This was my greatest moment in
golf," uid Luun, who bad won three
previous tour titles 11nd has been on the
Down for a Count of Eight
tour aince 1117.
"I'm jurt ao pleued," be said .
"Arnold Palmer is the king. I was just
fortunate to have aome fans in tht
ga.llery. I didn 't play him. I pl1yed the
coorse. My putting was excellent. That's
probably whal won for me.
"Palmer played just the greatest Ht.
only made two bogeys in 36 hol~. I just
love to watch that man play. You can
learn a lot watchini him."
And It appeared that LuM bid lNrned
enou(b.
j
\·I
u.-1 T1t.Joi.N ·
basketball 's premier attraction, Pistol
Pete l\1aravich, comes to Manhattan this
\l'cek and the 33rd National Invitation
Tourney plans to give the floppy haired
All-American maximum ex-posure.
~aul Wiiiiams, ex-Hunttn,ion Beach,
toured the S8G In 1:50.7 while Neil Sybert,
former We1tmbuiter. iipped over Utt:
J,000.meter steeplechase In 1:08.4.
c:assius Clay, former world · heavyweight boxing
champion, is helped to his feet by ski instructor
Bob Gratton aft.er falling during his lirst Umt on
•kis at Mt. Snow, VL
Tourney oUicials paired LSU, 21}.8, tht-
RCOnd-place team in Ille Southeastern
C'..onference, against i n d e p e n d ti: n t
Georgetown, D.C., 18--7, for next Sunday'~
nationally televised doublcheadci" from
l\fadison Square Garden .
Duquesne, 17.fi, aod Georgia Tech. 17-!J,
open the NlT Friday night. follo111·cd b~
the second game of a doubleheade r pil·
ling St. John's, I8·i , against Mia1ni or
Ohio. 1~7.
Saturday, North Carolina, 18~. balllell
"'anhattan, 17·7, y,•hile Cincinnati, 21.S,
plays Army, I ~. in lhe day games.
Saturday night's pairings pit Duke, 17·
A, vs. Utah, 17·9. and Marquette, 22·3, and
ninlh·ranked nationally against l\1assa-
chussetles, 18-6.
Oklaboma, 1U. engages l<luisville, 11-
1.. Sunday aOer~UM\ 1.SlJ-Ceorgctown
cl~sh.
Independent flfarqucUe. is lhc lo p-rank·
Nt team in the tnurney 11nd the \Varrior11
1Jso have the bc!ll rr<:ord.
Petty Survives Mishap~ for Victory
ROCKINGHAM. N.C. 1AP\ -Rlchant nnt like th\~. you really <.'OOnt your bless.
Pt>Uy. winner or $706.254 in 10 years 3! II ings.°'
stock car racing driver, fays his }ob 1~ Petty tt.d survived two spinout.s and .,
near wreck to rome home more than getting harder each year bul retirement lhree mile. ahead ol close (riend Cal~
has never entered his mind. Yarborough's Mercury in a WTeek·mar-
The 32-year-old son or Lee Petty, a red race th1t drew a record crowd of
famed driver in his own right in the 38,000 to North Carolina Motor Spetdwa)I'.
195Cl's. had just pockeled a check for Petty's blue Plymouth, fitted with • sharp no,,e cone and a 24--ineh hlgh 118.21S after romping home far in front of stabiliier on the rear deck. spun out o(
!ht.field in_Sunday·s Carolina ,ltlO=. ___ ..awill:oloo_lht....s~JY.'.J....ate~p banking
"Sure, driving is getting harder with early in the race and almoet nmmed the
rach r.ice. I don't kno\\.· whether it 1.~ concrete guard rail headon. Only expert
me ," he uld, "or whether everybody else ririvin8' Javed lht c11.r rrom belna
Is gelling bt!ttcr An}'\\lly, when you win nemoliAbed.
The S-3 vctcr•n from Randleman, N.C.,
ktpl the machine in conlentlon during the
midclle stages I S other top drivers fell by
the wayakle,-and charged into the lead ror good at the 406-mile mark.
Then, with aboul 50 mJ\es to ao. he
tangled with Yarborouah'• )fercury com-
ing off lhe fourth turn ind spun wildly
again.
"l thought I w1a 1 aoner," Petty said
later. "Buflhen I got it (tht c•r) pointed
1.traj_ght again ind it ha_ndled o.k. So_I ~t
my foot Into the Ooorboard and kept
going." '
Yarborough , running second •t the
time and in lhc aamc. lap •~ Pe Uy , was
forced to the piL, lo havr. 1 dam actd
fender removed,
The Timmonsville. S.C., resident never
wu a threat qi.in but man11td to hold
on for tee0nd place and a fl0,540 payoff
period.
Richon! BrooQ of Sp&rUnburg; S.C.,
the 1969 NASCAR rookie of tbt year,
came In third In a Plymouth, tight miles
back while fourth place wenl to Bobby
,MU.son ol ~~ .. _!la .1 ln a ~~e.
Petty'a teammate. 27-year-old Pt t'
Himllt.on <>I' Charlotte, N.C.. wiJtntr f>f
tht rk:h Daytona SOO 1:)¥0 wt:eks ago. was
fifth.
lead the Tigers.. Santa Clara was paced
by Ralph Odgen with n . But the Broncos'
brilliant Dennis Awtrey was held to just
13.
The Bruins, J2-J..-dropped tll&-Trojans
into 1 second-plaee Pac~ lie with
Washington State, each at t-5, although
the Cougars' over-au record Js 19-7, one
&ame better than Southern Cal's IU.
FUling out the conference are Oregon,
1-6 and 17-t; W1sh.iilgton, 7-7 and 17-9;
Califomla,.S-1 and 11·1~; Oregon State, "°
10 and 10.11, lJ'ld Stanford, 2-12 and $-1'.1.
Sports
Clipped
' Short
LONG BEACH -)>river Don Garlib
and a spectator, serfously injured Satur.,..
day when the transmission of Garlits'
dragsler blew up, had improved ti
satisfactory condition today at Pacific
Hospital. •
Garli~. 31. a former nalional racing
champion from Seffner. Fla .. u11derwerit
surgery on his right foot alter the Sunday
,accident.
Timothy Ditb, 17, or Garden Grove,
was bit in the upper left arm by 11 piece
of nying mew from the car. • •
LOS ANGELES -The Los Angele~
L.akers, playing without captain Elgin
Baylor, erupted for 71 points in the se-
cond half Sunday night and mnt on to
beat the Ci.ocinnati Royals, 144-111, in a
National Buketball Association game.
Keith Erickson,.who has been unhappy
over not playing,~ replaced the injured.
Baylor ind ICOred Z2 points. • PALM SPRINGS -Newcomer Alex
Johnson crashed a grand-.i;lam homer and
Rudy May added a three-run shot Sunday
a.s the California Angels rocked the
Chicago Cubs with a seven-run first in·
ning and cruised to a LU Cactus League
viotory,
Johnson, who had • run-scoring single
In the fourth inning to give him five RBI•
for the day, drilled a 37S-foot blast ofr
Ron Jones after the nervous Chicago.
rookie opened tht: game by walking the
bases full . • VERO BEACH, Fla . -The suddenly
fierce-bitting Los Angele~ Dodgers. Idle
today, journey to St. Petersburg, Fla .. for
a eactu.• league aame Tuesday against,
the SL. Louis Cardinal.5.
The boy1 from s111ogville unloaded 11
hit! while oollectlng the.ir first win or the
eshlbjtioo trtuon Sunday. beatin1 Atlln·
ta, J.I. • UCLA and Indiana captured swimmin,1t
championshipi for the Pacific-3 and Big
JO over the weekend.
The Bruins ended USC's 10-year title
domination as the latter finished second:
Indiana 's Mark Spitz hi I h Ii g h te d
Saturday'.s meet with a 49.4 in lhe 100-yd.
butterfly while mate Gary Hall of Garden
Grov~ copped Utt: 1.650 freestyle In
11 :14.64 .• • KANSAS CITY -UC Riverside wlft
meet St. Joseph of Indiana Wednesday
night in the N~ small college baske~
ball championships.
The C1lifornia IChool rmde it to the
quarterfinals by slapping Pugel Sound,
13-72. Saturday.
Eight NCAA
Regional Tilts
Set Thursdav ,;
And then there were 16.
Tbat'1 the number of baskelbaU team8
Jeft in the NCAA Regional tourney which!
resumes Thursday night with eigh~
games scheduled in four locations-
tbfoughout tht country. ,
Regional championship lilt.s are slated
Saturday.
Here'• bow the regional games shape
up:
-At Columbia. S.C.: Niagara (~$) v1.
Villanova t21-6): and St. ,Bona venture
(11-1) vs. North Carolina State 122-6).
-Al Lawrence, Kan.: Houston (~)
va. Drake (21-'): and New Mesko Sta te
(14-Sl vs, Kansas State (19-7).
..:..At Columbus, Ohio: Kentucky (2S-ll
vs. Notre Dame (21-6); and Jacksonville
(2f.1) vs. Iowa (19-4).
-At Seattle: Cal State (Long Beach J1 (24-3) VI. UCLA (2~2)> 1nd Ulah Slal<
121..f) vs. Santa Clara (21·5) or Univtrsi·
ty ot the Pacific (21-5).
""Niagara advanced to Thursday'.1 play1 -.·Uh a 79-f9 victory over Penn. while
VIiia.nova trimmed Temple, n-69. St.
Bonaventure. the No. 4 ranked tea m in
the country, defeated Oaviclson. 85-72 and
North Carolina State edged South
.Carolina, 42-39 in a double overtime g~
for tbf: Atlantic Coast Conference tourney1
championship in doub'e overtime.
Houston advanced with 1 7t..f4 deda:ic.
over r>.yton and New Mexico State trip.
ped Rice, tOl-77.
ln the mldeast. regional tourney •t
OaylOn, Saturd1y Notre DI.mt tripped.-
Ohio Unlvtrslt)', 112-11 and Jacksonv\l)t:
routed \\'ertwi Ktntuck,, 109·96.
1n ·the Far West playoffs •t Provn,
Utah, Utah State advanced with a tt-81
win over Te11s {El Paso).
. '
I
'
•
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2J. DAILY PILOf. Monday, Marth 9, 1970 --
What's Left for UCI
After No-hit Win?
By BOWARD L HANDY
Of .,.. ~· ... l'lltl ti•"
'lbere are few encores left
!or the UC Irvine baseball
team this tint se1son.
The Anteaterirbave defeated
two toP Pacilit.a nines, UCLA
and USC.
Complete game victories
and home runs abound and the
season record is 8-3-1 against
all competition.
So what happens Saturday'?
Dave Wollos tums in a
seven-inning perfecto f -0 r
Trvine over Cal Tech of
Pasadena, facing only 21 bat-
ters. He didn't allow a base
hit, didn't walk a baUer and
struck out uven. T h e
Anteaters W(>n, 8-0 in the first
' PlltlT el.Mii
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C.I Tedi UC: ,,.,.,.
WINI~ plld'l9r
~-Tw-.
' .. ooocm11 -• 2'
1Q2 1,1• •-• 7 • Wft$P0 L.in.
game of a doubleheader on the
Irvine campus diamond.
'The Jone Cal Tech base run-
ner reached first oo an error
and was promptly erased on a
double play.
Wollos' pitching mastery
was so complete, the visitors
didn't get a ball out or the in-
field. There were 1 I infield
outs, two popups and seven
"'hiffs as he faced a minimum
of 21 batters.
Taking their cue f r o m
\Yollos, three Irvine hurlers
combined talents for a h\•0+hit·
ter in the nightcap as Irvine
won, 6-0.
Starter Ben Wetzler gave up
. both sale ties in five innings
with Bob Barlow working the
sixth and Tom O'Coonor the
seventh. Barlow struck out
two and O"eonnor retired the
side on strikeouls.
Next action for coach Gary
Adams' high-flying Anteaters
is Saturday when they en-
tertain Cal Poly (Pomona) in
a twin bill .
Rocky Craig and J.1ike
Sykora have been elected co·
captains of the first-ever
base ball team al UC Irvine .
Craig plays ceiiter field for
the Anteaters and is lhe
leading hitt er with a .«4 mar k
in 12 games.
Sykora is ;:i junior college
transfer and starts at second
base. He bats in the second
spot in the lineup and has a
.23 1 average.
The Anteaters, iii their first
season of baseball. have com·
piled an enviable 8-J.J record.
Vlk.es~ Lions Win
Tourney Action
Continues Today
Action continues in the Hun·
tington Beach b a s e b a 11
tourney today with a full
round of four tilts scheduled
following Saturday's pair of
makeup games.in v o Iv i n g
Westminster and Marina.
Marina's Ed AndersOn turn-
ed in a strong on e-hit
performance to lead the Vik-
ings to a 4.0 win over invadin g
Foothill while Westminster got
back on the winning track with
a 3-1 verdict over visiting
Pacifica .
Mater Dei Jost a 7-3 tiff to
Garden Grove in a non-touma-
ment game at Santa Ana
Valley High Saturday lo round
out weekend action for Orange
Coast area nines.
Foothill's only safety orr
Anderson came in the first in-
ning on a ground ball of! an
infielder's glove .
Tbt six-loot. 2 05 -pound
righthander ..struck . out seven
in goinc tbe.route:,f« the win.
Pat Curran led ~ Vik.es in
hitting with a piir of doubles.
Westminster erupted for a
trio of runs in the sixth inning
to pull it out over Pacifica.
Doug Price boomed a double
to centerfield to score the first
Lion tally and Gary Clen·
denning came up \vith the key
hit. a twe>-run single.
It was the only fireworks of
the day for Westminster after
being no-hit by Pacifica junior
J~rry Maras. jhroagh five in·
nings.
The Mariners' ace was pu ll-
ed .at 1 .that poin t and
\Vestmlnster took full ad·
vantage against second-line
pitching.
Steve Buckland was the win·
ning pitcher. He struc;k out the
side in the final enemy frame .
MAlllNA 10 •• ' , (_atnl>btll, ?b ., f
Flf'mlr>t. lb Pemberlon, lb
cur""' c;I Crncl, lO
AnOftrwti. , •
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Miii ... , IS
Witt, c
Be411'1': tf
To1•1s
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' ' ' ' " ISOOTMILt. IOI
t h rbl ' . ' ' ' ' . . ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' . . ' ' ' . , , ' . . ' . ' 4 '! 4
Horpel Honored;
Barons Place Ltth
J•cltlOn, '' Mlllft<'I. ti
Ct r'l'en"ler. II
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' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ' ' ' 0 ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . '
By JOHN CASS
Of .... Oall'f' ,, ... , ., • .,,
Chris Horpel of Newport
Harbor High was acclaimed
the most outstanding wrestler
in Saturday night's ClF cham·
pionships al Cal S t a t e
(Fullerton).
Fowtlaln Valley fin ished
fourth in team standings -
the highest placement by an
Orange Coast area :school, as
Brawley ran away with the
crown.
While on his way to the 148·
pound title, Horpel pinned four
opponents to gain the a'>'•ard
as the outstanding v;restler o(
the yea r for the ClF.
Horpel's record, through-Ou t
the year, was amazing. He
failed to pin only two of 36 op-
ponenls.
Horpel moved
quarter.finals with
Calvin Williams
into the
a pin over
of San
Gorgonio after J:S2 of lie
third wrestling period. Ed
Lopez of Lawndale was {he
nexl grappler to }la ve his
shoulders pushed against the
mat by Horpel.
He fell aside after 20
seconds of the third period .
Horpel moved into the finals
when he pinned .Camarillo's
Mark Spiro in the final second,
then piled up a huge point ad·
vaDtage over Bruce Livingston
of Burroughs, Ridgecrest be-
fore gaining a pin with t w o
seconds left in the match.
Fountain Valley p 1 aced
fourth on the strength of a se·
cond place finish by George
Valbuena and third place
finishes by MJke Holllnden and
Dari Lewis.
Otheh area award winne rs
were sfeve Wade of Corona
del MM. w~ finis~ second
at 98 poundS, •Westminste r's
Dave Wommack, rurmerup at
123 pounds and Estancia's
Tom Foss wi th a fourth place
award in • the 123 pound
division.
There was little doubl as to
the idetitlty of the proud
delendi,ng team champions
from Brawley.
Much or the.Ir erfort ll'as
noticed because thf' tea1n
showed great pr ide In its
-previous championship. l'.:vcry
Brawley contestant \\'ore a T-
·shirt proclaiming that he "'as
a mmnbei of the defending
cllampiomhip team.
JULES GAGE
' ,. ' ' •
ktr• IW '""'* . ". ""'"'m aimo -0 1 i Mtrll'lf Q:lll OH x-4 j 2
WESTMIM$TEll Ul
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l'.;~r!!•n Giiirt
M1!1t .Cit!
' . " ' l •
Gage to Be
NC,\'l)Orl Hnrbor JI i b h
St:hool 's athletic direc tor Jule_,
Gage will be honored In
c:ercmonies at tile CI F bas.ket-
ball championships March 14
at the Los Angeles Sports
Arena for his contributions to
the prep eoaching pl't)fession
and to the game ot basketbnll.
'l'hc Sou th er n Califomh1
I n t e r scholastic basketball
coaches association wilt rnttke
the prei:cntalion or I h C
Coaches f\ieril Award to Gn gc.
one of three recipients of the
honor,
BOTTLED IN -~·Ionrovia 's John Parker feels
the squeeze of three \Vestminster I1igh defenders
during Saturday night CJF playoff batlle at Long
'
OAIL'f' PILOT Pho~ by ltt Parnt
Beach Arena. 1-lcmming in the \ViJdcat are Dan
Broderick (30 ), Terry Meisenheimer (31) and Steve
McLendon (25).
Cops' Team Orange Coast, Saddleback
Set to Tes t
Pilot Five
The Fuzz. also know.1 as lhe
cops, revealed the personnel
w~ich will be thrown at the
undefeated Hl.0) DA I LY
PILOT baskelhall t ca m
\IJedncsday night at Costa
Mesa High when the two
forces collide in a 7: 15 benefit
game !or paralyzed wrestler
J ustin Ogata. Admission is 35
cents.
The Fuzz,· \\'hich figures to
cop out before the DAILY
PILOT onslaught. claims it
will triumph on numbers.
The Fuzz has 17 players (?)
on the roster.
However. reliable ins id e
sources say lhe cops. have
been shi rking wo rkou ts.
!Vttianwhile, lhe unde feated tO.
0) DAILY PILOT has been
bu rning the ha rdv,ioods twice a
week in an all out effort to
avenge the 1nany traffic cita-
tions handed out by \Ved-
nesday's foe,
'T'hc police have two men
\\'llh fairly good size in Dick
f T hc Big Dun1m y)
Frederiksen, 6-5. and !'ilatt
Collett, 6-4. Collett, however.
reputedly has never shot
tinythirig other than his .38
special.
l!elicop Carl l-lackson and
Crazy Owen Kreza are each 6·
2 "'hile Gary Batv.'ig. Phil
Donohue and Al "The Animal"
Muir are 6-1 apiece.
Other cops on the rosier :1rl'
Chun Ca1narillo (5-101. San1
Cordeiro f5·9 l. Tom Lazar (5·
11 \. Roger Neal 15·11 }. Ron
J>almer (5-IOJ. Pal ·Rodgers.
(5-10), Austin Smilh i5·9L Ed
Sutton tS.ll J and ~tax \Vilson
(~Ill.
Ho11ored
t;agl' :ipe"fl l 17 li<'ason~ 111
Nc1vport llnrbor and Cos!:i
~1csa High School guiding the
basketball fortunes before a
heart allack in 1965 ended has
record at six league titles.
Presentations include • ce.rtiflcate and a n..edallion.
Otht!t w1nntr~ are Chu('k
C!u:;tka or flfrvard School and
Dou,las Brov•n of San Jacinto
H1~h.
tlt111tins1011 13rach H1gh 's
Lee JiJos.itf!ller "'on a s1mllar
1ward sevcraJ years ago.
Split Circuit Twin Bills
Area junior college baseball
hits a high pitch this week
with a rash of games schedul·
ed.
In last Saturday·s action.
Orange Coast and Saddleback
colleges split doubleheaders.
OCC trimmed Fullerton, a.-0,
in the first game at FJC on
St~ve Pinter's five·hitter and
then fell. 3·2, in the nightcap.
Both '''ere South C <J a s l
Conference games.
Jn Desert Conference play,
Saddleback lost its opener, 8-4,
to Victor Valley at San
Clemente High and then won
the second game, 6·2, on Greg
Pennington 's tw<>-hitter.
Jn act.ion this week. Golden
\Vest has three Southern
Califomia Conference t i I t. s
slated. traveling to LA Harbor
Tuesday, LACC Thursday and
UC Irvine
Swimmers
Face Dons
tt's tuneup time for the UC
Irvine swimming machine and
driver Ed Newland will test all
parts Tuesday afternoon· as
the Anteaters t.angle \\'ith the
Santa Ana College Dons iJ1 the
latter's pool beginning at 3:30.
Currently boa sting a 1nod('st
7-7 dual meet rect1rd. the
Anteate rs will be heading for
U1c n10tor capital of Ille world
l\1arrh 19-21 to defend their
NCA A College Division chain·
pionship.
Ne\vland looks 011 the dual
1neet season as nothing mor('
th an a tuneup and points his
entire operation for the big
l'ln(' each season . Delroit
Univcrl'-ily \1'ill host the NCAA
c\·cnL
Distance ace ~1ike l\1artin
has b~cn .sw1mn1ing !hr in·
vididual n1cdley and the 500
freestyle in recent weeks.
leaving the longer races to
teammates. In Detroit he will
compete io the 200, 500 wnd
1600 freestyle events along
"'ilh relay races, I-le holds the
n<ttional record In a1J thru
C\'l'.lnts.
Rich Eason \1·111 han<lle 1he
~hotter fret.style race5 in the
na1ionals and bal iince or the
1c3n1 will be dctcrn11ned 1n the
near future by 1''ewland .
hmling Rio Hondo Friday. All
are 2:30 games.
OCC faces unbeaten Cerritos
(U)-{l) on the Falcons' diamond
\Yednesday at 2:30 and hosts
Sa n Diego in a twin bill Satur·
day. The opener is scheduled
(or noon.
Saddleback travels to Mira
Costa Saturday f o r a
doubleheader with the first
game also slated to get under
way at noon.
In OCC's pair of games wilh
Fullerton, Pinter was in com-
plete control in blanking the
J-lornets. He struck out fi ve
and i,1·alked two .
The Pirates got ru·o runs in
the third inning on singles by
Pinie r. Dan Clark and Mike
Powell and I wo FJC errors.
T h e y added a run in the
~event.Ii on a walk, a sacrifice
and Bob Leavy's double.
In the second game. OCC.
trailing 3.0 in the ninth, scored
two runs after one out on a
double by Clark, singles by
Powell and Leavy and an F JC
error. A force out al the plate
and a strikeout ended the
game.
For Saddleback, Pennington
struck out 13 and did not walk
11 batter in leading the
Gauchos lo their first con·
ference win in four outings.
Pennington has now struck out
30 in two games.
Eric Christensen. out jus.t
one \Veek after the completion
of the basketball season. went
five for six in the twin bill and
scored four runs.
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Area Sports
Lions .-.
Praised
ln·-Loss
Bf ROGER CARLSON
Of ,,.. Otl!J' Plitt ... ,.
LONG BEACH -cuually
checldng over Westminster
High School's vars!Jy basket-
ball roster one would aSJUme
the LiOns would be tn good
shape next year, considering
two sophomores have started
for coach Don Leavey's Sunset
League championship quintet
during Sunset warfare and
three CIF AAAA playofC en·
counters •
Howiver, there will be a
ratPer large 'gap to fill when
December rolls around a«ain.
Coach Tony Stillson of
Monrovia H1gb's w Inn Ing
Wildcats perhaps :ummed It
up best Collowing his team's
~9 triumph S.lurday night
at the Long Beach Arena in .
the quarterfinals of the AAAA
elirpinaUons before a aowd of
6,009 .
"We had to gamble 1 liUle
bit tonight because
Westminster's Dan Broderick
is super. Double-teaming and
triple·teaming him d id n' t
seem lo do much good.
"We decided the best thing
to do was to put as much
pressure as possible on the
ball before he gets it.
"Boy, is he a prospect," ex·
claimed the Wildcat boss.
Broderick, the Llons' U
senior player of the year in
Orange County, frnished the:
night with 23 points and over
hi:s three-game perlormance in
the playoffs netted 90 for a
30.0 average .
But Jt wasn't enough Satur·
day night as Leavt!Y's chaps
went down to defeat, ending
the ir school's finest basketball
season.
The Lions came close -
trailing only 51-49 with 51
seconds to go. But Monrovia
came up to a couple Of nice
plays in the fina l moments to
put it out of reach.
An offensive foul o n
Broderick with 25 seconds to
go signaled the end of the
show for Westminster with bi:s
shooting, rebounding strength
and defensive ability to limit
lhe Wildcats' effectiveness in-
side.
Broderick v.·as the whole
Lions' trail.
Earlier, the Keith Wilkes-led
Santa Barbara Dons had litUe
trouble in disposing of Notre
Dame, 74-52. Wilkes scored
2$. The Dons will play Millikan
wh ile Monrovia meets Palos
Verdes in a doubleheader Fri·
day at the LA Sports Arena.
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Tars Win
Invitational
Net Title
Newport Harbor High's ten-
nis aggregation added the 13Ut
annual Orange COast College
Invitational tms tourney ti-
tle to its collection for the
th ird straight year Saturda1 ..
behind the doubles team ol
Bruce Charles and Robbl1
Cunningham , along wit b
overwhelming balance .
The Sailors more than
doubled the nearest com ..
petition with 22 points to run·
nersup Estancia and Fountain
'{allu. '.J'he latter coold pull
into lbwflSputed second depen ..
ding on Wednesday's final
singles match between the
Barons' Joe Shaw and
Ne"rport H a r b o r ' s Tim
O'Reilly.
Art Rosetti ol Estancl1
~ho,vtd good form bi winning
the indi\•idual singles title "'Ith
a 6·1, 6-1 con(!uest o f
Nevtport's Kim Perino.
••
Final :
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Range1·s Rip
Rival, 5-1
The Coasl Rangers kept
alive their slim chances for a
,;Pacific Soccer 1..eague title
·lrepeat by 'slamming LynY.'ood,
"t5-I , Sunday at Torrance. 11 And. the Ranger r'lserves
bl asted Universal, 8-0, Sunday.
The Rangers built up a 4-0
halftime lead ·with Leif
\Vcrncid hitt ing three of the
tnllies v.·hilc f-Tnns Reuther
picked up the other.
Nomi Prendergast ;idded
the second half perfccto for
coach Brian McCaughey's
chaps.
Andre ._Cousin tallied three
times fdt the reserves while
sing le goals went to Jim Mor·
r ison. !·Jans Weyrr. J ohn
Atkinson. Burt Burns and
Jrer.ry h1apakoi.
T!:is Sunday the Rangers
host Sp~rta at N c \V port
Beach·s ~1ariners Park with
.iction beginning at 2:30.
Sparta dumped the Rangers
In first round battle
Tetua Wi11s
Adams Cup
Telua, co.skippered by
o"·ner Art \\"alker and J im
Co,vie of Cabrillo Beach Ya cht
Cluh recaptured the Al Adams
Challenge Trophy from Los
Angeles Yacht Club Sunday in
thrcie racrli sailed in 10·1 8
k not winds In Los
Ani;eles J-Iarbor .
LA YC won the trophy last
year from CBYC.
Standings
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'
' MGndrt, M1rch 9, 1970 DAILY ~ILOT !:J
U.S. Medal Chan~es Good
Tempest Clwice Gives U.S-. Good Olympics Hope
United States chances for a
gold medal in the Tempest
Class ln the 197% Olympics at
Klei, Germany, are e.1cellent,
according to Andrew
Kostaneckl, chairman ol the
U.S. International Tempest
Association.
At the annual meeting of U1e
Tnle:matione1 Yacht Racing
Union last November t h e
Tempest was chosen as the
sixth class in the Olympic
yachllng games.
The TempW, 1 h I g h
perfonnance two-man dinghy,
was designed In 1965 by
British designer Ian Proctor.
Writing in the U.S. Olympic
Committee n ewslette r ,
Kostanecki noted that com-
petition In the Tempest Class
at the moment Is broader in
the U.S. than anywhere else In
the world -desplle mediocre
Bali Regatta
Sloived by
Liglit Winds
U.S fin:ishes In the "'orld
championships held last fall in
Ualy.
"The current ~'Orld cham·
pion, Cliff Norbury o f
England, Is the strongest com-
petitor out.tide of the U.S.,"
said Kostaneckl. Norbury is a
member of the finn of Ian
Proctor 1tletal Masts, the cur-
rent suppliers of all the masts
and rigs for the Tempesls
throughout the worl d.
··Because of the nature of
the boat, the rig is not onl y
sophisticated, but also the
most Important single part af·
fecting the relative speed, and
Norbury has already
demon s trated his un·
derstanding of it," s a i d
Kostaecki.
''Appro1imately 23
Tempests art raced actively
in the U.S., and now \\'Ith
Olympic selecton we expect to
add many new· lop aanors to
the class In the next year or
so," the chw chainnan con·
tinued.
• ~Qsja~ec kl Sa.Id the
stro111eif competition in the
class today lies In t h e
established racing areas on
the East Coast where fleets
exist at ?i.1arblehead, f\1ass.;
Pt1arion, Pt1ass.; Nor o Ion ,
Conn.; Larchmont, N.Y.; and
Annapolis, Md.
J\11d~·esl fleets exist In
Rochester, Detro i t and
Chicago, and West Coast Oeets
are located Jn San Francisco.
Santa Cruz, Fresno and Los
Angeles.
Fleets are expected to
spring up in the Gulf Coasl
states of Fklrida and Texas.
"Despite the Tempest' a
relatively light ·weight, one
can predict that major class
Active Sailor, SportstJUJtt
activity will elist oo the Great
Lakes end coastal bodies of
~·aler where its e1cellent
offshore . rough water
capabilities are used to 1d·
vantage," Kostanecki 1aid .
There have been three na·
Ilona! championships In the
class in the U.S. The first in
t967 wa5 won by Charles
Ulmer , a sail maker and past
national champion Jn the Mob-
jack Class and.. Qlyrn.pic trial
finalist in the Finn Class.
The 1968 natio nal cham·
pionship was won by William
Kelly Jr., of Larchmont, N.Y.
with ace crew Bob Cannell as:
his teammate. Kelly, also an
Olytilpic trial finalist in the
Finn Class, was a member of
the 11-meter Intrepid crew,
a\cng with Connell. during the
1967 America's Cup detense.
Kostaneckl himself won the
1969 Tempest nationals.
Douglas Cl1airs Cup Raef
trophy which has become one
of the most ~coveted in
yachUng.
active yachtsman and Is the
donor of another Important
match race trophy. th e
Douglas Cup, f o r in-
tercollegtate racing.
QUEEN OF THE SHOW -This Columbia-43, newest sailing yacht in the Co-
lumbia line will be the outstanding sailboat exhibit at the annual Western Na·
tional Boat and ~Iarine show which opens Friday at Anaheim Convention Cen·
ter !or a 10-day run. The 8~!oot ceiling at the arena affords ample space for
all models of sailboats to be displayed !ully rigged.
Light winds and h a z y
sunshine made a dreary affair
of Balboa and Lldo Isle Yacht
clubs' annual Ball Regatta
Saturday and Sunday. Only 12
classes showed up on starting
Jines for Inside and outside
courses. Final results.
. Ll[)().14 A -(I) Lo~·ly
Roman, Ro~·Jand Lohman1
BYC; (2) Magic. Dave
Ullman . BYC; (3) Upset. Al
Perez, BYC.
Donald Douglas Sr., a
pioneer leader in the develop.
ment or the 1''orld's com·
merclal and military aviation
industries -and an ardent
West Coast yachlsman -.Jias
accepted Long Beach Yacht
Club's invitation to serve as
honorary chairman of the
sixth annua l Congress.ional
Cup series ~l arch 19·22.
Leading skippers from all
over North America will com·
pete in a series of match race11
in Columbia·SO sloops on a
course outside Long Beach
Harbor for the huge silver
Douglas, founder of Douglas
Airc raft Co. and now honorary
chairman or the board of
McDonnell Douglas Corp., has
long been an active saill)r and
sportsmon. He is a member of
Los Angeles Yacht Club and'
resides in Rolling Hills.
At the helm of his 75-foot
schooner Endymion, Douglas
captured a number or blue-
water sailing honors during
the 1930s. His son, Donald
Douglas Jr., has also betn an
In addition to viewing each
day's racing from the bridge
of his present yacht, the powet1
cruiser Fair Lady. the senior
DQuglas will also take part in
the presentation of the tradi-
tional crimson Congressional
champion's blazer on the final
night cf the series. l fe will
also be the featured speaker
al LBYC's Marc h 20
yachtsman's luncheon. CYC's Lynla
Takes First
l11Pt. Dume
Jackson Scl'lft's Lynla from
California yacht Club was the
overall and Class 8 winner of
CYC's Pt. oume·Santa
Barbara Island race Sunday.
Light winds over the 93-mile
course slowed the race, wi{h
Charles ·Hathaway's Gem
finishing first ln ·2LZ65 hours.
In the fina1 haitdiC-~ scoring
Gem dropped to fourth place.
Final results:
OVERALL -(1) Lynla ; (2)
Yellow Jacket. Terry Greene.
CYC; (3) Madrugador, Bill
Allen, CYC; (<I ) Gem ; 15)
Alsuna II. Allen Puckett, CYC.
CLASS A -No entries.
CLASS B -(I) Lynla; (2)
Yellow Ja c ket : (3 )
h1adrugador; (4) Gem ; (5)
Alsuna II.
CLASS C -(I) Donna J.
John Roberts, CYC; f2l Jano
1!1, Robert Kahn. CYC: (3)
Da1noiscllc . Stevr Dt>skry,
CY C; (4) Xanalyn, Bud Shank,
CYC.
CLASS D -(I) Adventure •
Jirn Foyer, \VYC: (2) Lucero,
Lyle & Jessup, CYC: 13) Blue
Fin. Fred Palmieri, WYC: (4)
J\1eltimi, Pearce & Taylor,
CYC.
PHRF -(1) Shalimar, R.
G. Stephenson. CBYC ; (2)
Agamemnon, Ken B r u n s ,
PVYC: (3) Desiderate. Shel-
don Schreiber. SBYRC: (4)
Aquarius, Thomas Wobbema,
SB YRC.
Coast Guard
Auxiliarv .
Bertl1s Open
Young men In their junior
year in high school inte rested
in entering a .'Jervice academy
have the opportunity to see
one first hand through the U.S.
Coast Gua rd Aux 11 I a r y
Academy I ntroduction
J\lission.
Through thi s program the
CGA sends a limited number
of boys to the Coast Guard
Academy at New London,
Conn . for four days in July,
The students must be recom·
mended by their s c h o o I
counselors and must meet
strict requirements .
The Coast Guard Academy
is unique among service
academies. being the only one
to Which entrance is solely on
per90nal and scholastic
qualiOcatlon, and not by ap-
pointment.
The CGA. which sponsors
lhe AIM program, is the
civilian arm of lhe Coast
Guard, comprised of boalmen
who work ll'ilh the Coast
c:u~rd,to promote..recreaUonal
boating safety.
Interested appllcanl! may
call the U.S. Const G1.111r~
l.oog 81'.!ach (21 3) 432-5771 , eX·
tension 117 for information.
Western Boat Shoiv
To Open in Anaheim
there, including other C-Olum-
bias, Kett·enbergs and
Coronados. will have sails
fully hoisted.
LIOO-t4 B -(I) Upepo, I.
L . Olson, BCYC ; (2) Swallow,
Henry Wagner Jr., NHYC: (3 )
El Cinco, John Holcomb, BYC.
htETCALF -(1) Sea Song,
Bob \Villiamson, BYC; (2)
Scoot, Ed Weber, BYC.
KITE A -(1) Little
I sland Race
Of Whitney
OnMarchl4
The Santa Barbara Island
'Title Drive'
New Motion Picture
On Outboard Racing.
H. Werner Buck's second
annual Western National Boat
and Marine Show opens a Jn.
day run this Friday evening at
Anaheim Convention Center.
"This wHI be the largest in-
door expo of boats in the
west,'' says Buck. "We'll use
some 300,000 sq. ft. of space in
the big complex. The E:rhibit
Hall wi ll be devoted to power
boats\ the arena to sailboats
under full Tiggittg and the
Grand Lobby to marine ac·
cessories and related boating
products."
Everything from dinghies to
luxury sail craft and posh
power boats will be on display .
But there'll also be plenty of
smaller boats to inspect.
Fugitive, Tcrrianne Parker,
NHYC. (2) No. 595, Hugo
Schm idt, LIYC.
KITE B -(I) No. 713, King
Humann, BYC.
Race. second of Los Angeles "Title Drive," a 20--minute v.·orld championship by cover·
Yacht Club·s 'Vhitney "Series, motion picture on the world ing four ~·ell-known events :
Y.'ill sla rl from LAYC on outboard championship, and the Gold Coast Marathcn,
Saturday, "larch l•. racing Internationally, has Miami, Florida ,· the ·Elsinore SABO'l' A (I) Blue
Buck said only one boat will
be displayed outdoors. That's
the big Columbia 50. which
will stand on the Katella Ave.
side of the parking lot. The
mast is too high to clear the
Arena doors. However.
because t.he Arena ceiling is 85
ft. high, all sailboats displayed
"We'll have boats to fit any
pocketbook or need, salt or
fresh water," Buck says. "For
example, the Orange County
Marine Dealers Association
members have taken some
27,000 sq. feet of space. They·ll
show craft running the gamut
of power, from trailered out-
boards to sleek sporlfishers
and family cruising boats .''
Angel. Mark Gaudio. NHYC;
(21 Phil's Pill, Phil Gautschi,
LIYC.
SENIOR SABOT -(t)
Humiliation, Hank Humann,
BYC; (2) Lettuce Head. Doug
\Veber, BYC : (3) Pancho. Bill
Headden, BYC.
SABOT C -(ll Camlin's
Comet, Wendy Camlin. NliYC ;
12) Cherrv Bomb. Gary
Zi!lgilt, BYC; (3) TD Too, T.
D . .Soanglcr. BYC.
been Produced by Evlnrude Immediately after the start Motors. ~1uwaukee. The film ''500," Lake EI si n or e,
of the Santa Barbara Island is available, without cost, for California, and Ule Six Hours
Race, the Midget Ocean RaC· screening by clubs an d of.Paris and the Six Rou'rs or.
ing Fleet will get away on the fraternal organizations. Berlin. The latter are the best·
Ship Rock race, marking the The new motion picture known European "enduro''
second start of the Little Whit-shows Cesare Scotti, Nesso, contests. Srotti competed in
ney Series. Ita ly. captu ring the world out· four out of nve of these races.
board title at Lake Havasu Ci· "Title Drive" is believed the
The show opens Friday al 7
p.m., 2 p.m. olher week days
and noo.1 on weekends. closing
!\1arch 22. Adm ission is SJ.50,
youngsters 75 cents with kids
free.
PHRF -(l) Jean. Carl
Reinhart . VYC.
Eligibility for both races ls ty, Arizona, last November. first motion picture, for '.J.S.
by invitation to members of Scolli drove a Molinari boat dis tribution. showing both the
recognized yacht clubs. Ocean powered with twin 115 hp Paris and Berlin events. The
racing yachts must comply Evinrudes. He set a new Paris race is held on the rive r
record for his eight hour en-'-"-m· e th• Ber11·n ~·tesl on
SANTANA -Shadow, B. P.
Turner. SBYC.
with the minimum racing re-.x • ... .,., durance contest by coveTing Lake Ha vel.
quiremenls of the Southern SM miles at an average speed The film is also believed the
California Ocean Racing of 73 miles·an·hour. first to show e1tenslvely the
Chri s-Craft Dealership
Ope11 in Mari11a del Rey
P·CAT -(1) Black Power,
P:iul Allen, BCYC; (2) No
Way, Tom Omohundro,
BC'(C: (3) Turkish Delight,
T.S. Tsalkowoski, BCYC.
LUDERS-16 -(I) Pre-
E1nnt. L e r oy Southerland,
NHYC.
Fleet. This means essentially Also shown in the world so-ealled Molinari "tunnel"'
that man~verboard p 0 I es: championship ls the single hulls. This is the name appl ied
must be carried. Membership engine. victory of "Jiglbo" lo the design of Molinari race.
in SCORF is not a re-Mt-connell, V i c t 6 r v 111 e , boats in which the under por~
quirement, however. California. McCcilnell covered tion of the hull, between the
The Whitney Serles consists 548 miles at a 11peed of 68.5 sponsons. forms a "tunnel.''
of six races, of which one ca n mph. Air passing through this tunnel
be thrown out for final sror· Unlike man.Y racing films, helps support the weight of the
Chris-Craft Industries, Inc .. co1np!e te as ours. We hope . ing. "Title Drive" puts emphasis boat, giving It more lift than
the nation's largest boat too, lhat we will become a OCC Takes First class In the Santa on the color and human in· usually encountered with tha
Barbara Island Race will be te~t in these: eVents. Scenes c o n v e n tional hydroplane. builder, has opened its first 1najor link between the Class A starting at It a.m. show the frenzy of pit activity, !\1olinari boats are shown rac·
wholly factory-owned a n d boating public and lhe com-C }} • t Classes B, C and 0 will start In the glamour of racing as ing in all events covered by
operated dealership. Named pany's marketing and pro· 0 . egJa C that order at five minute in· personified in the ,vlves and the motion picture.
Chris.Craft Pacific, Inc., il is duction departments." tervals. girl friends of drivers and "Title Drive" Is a ltlmm,
a multi·million--Oollar devclo~ The dealership will be used ResaiJ Race The MORF race will start at their crews and the reaction of color. sound motion picture.
men t al Marina Del Rey and as a testi ng area for Chris· 11 :211. Also receiving a start at spectators to speed on the Prints may be obtained on re·
11:00 a.m. will be catamarans course. quest frcm: Solana Studios,
constitutes one of the largest Craft's marketing, promo lion Orange Coast College sailing affiliated with the Ocean RI<> "Title Drive" leads to the Naples, Florida.
marine sales and service and dealer research pro-~kippers Peter Parker and ing Cata ma ran Association . ------------------------
facilities on the West Coast. grams. according lo company Peter Wilson won the resail of lo••---,;""""""""""""""il p A C.1 ff C (ND O OR
11le dealersh ip offe r s officials. I he Pac If I c C 0 as I EN'JOY ''LOCAL'' • • -
boatmen, in one cf the biggest Chris.Craft Pacific occupies IA11tercolll:gia~~ .YacNht Ras cing pleasure boat complexes in the ssocla ion .,.,ries o. I atur-Sr!RYICE
of yachts, cruisers. house· ~tarina Del Rey, which serves The series was resailed
nation, some $2 million worth a prime spot on Fiji Way 111 dP.v at Vail Lake. ~
boats, sailboats and sport soni c 6,600 boats and reported because fog made the original s
boats In addition lo engine re-ly is the largest man-made series al Newport Beach 1 .. t • AMERICA'S BEST FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT
pair and service plus mooring pleasure boat harbor in the month inconclusive.
and storage facilities. A full co u n Ir y. Started ap-Nine schools were Involved SAFECO
display of Chris-C raft me r-proximately eight years ago, it Jn the Saturday series which INSURANCE
•handi···. from ·•e company·s is being developed as one of was followed Sunday by the f . • ' -"' C llf • h bo f St •Co Will frtn1f•r 'jl'OUf nit ft ne,vest division, is also a part a om1a's " ar rs o scheduled Southern Series No. our offie• •I 110 ,11,,9 •.
of the dealership. refuge," a string ol !lafe ports 5. \Vinner In thi s series was Notkint ,11,,.9,, ... ,,,,th•,.,.
The repair and service spaced every 20 miles along USC "''ith skippers Argyle •on•I ett1,,tlo11 which yo11 c•n
fa cilities or Chris·Craft Pacific the coast. Campbell and Tim Hogan. 110..,. rec•ir•I
include more than '.!O fully The Southern Callforni a Final results: •
trained mechanics direct from area is "potentially the great-Southern Series No. 1 -<1)
the factory, plus all parts and est boating comm.unity in the OCC. Parker & Wilson, 25 pis;
equipment necessary ta serve world," P..fr. Gale said, "with (2) San Diego State, Ed Butler
the hundreds of Chris.Craft 270.000 pleasure boats in & Paul Hunrichs, 33; (3) USC,
owners in the area, The facili· opCration today and with an Campbell&: Hogan, 36.
ty will maintain the largest in· estimated 420.000 by 1975." Southern Series No. 5 -(I)
ventory of Chris.Crall parts Chris.Craft Pacific is now In USC, Campbell & Hogen, 11
and accessories In the country. full ()peration. A fonnal grand pts.: (2) San Diego Slate,
Two Travelifls _ 30-ton and opening celebration v.111 be Butler & Ilunrichs, 16; (3) tie
40-ton _ are capable of held all day on Sunday, March between UCI Jelt Allen & Jeff
launching up to 40 boats a day 8. to which the entire boating JusUce and UCSB Bill Lip-
at the new dealer location. All ii, iiOipu;;;b;;;li;;;e;.l•_ln~v-lte;;;d;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;ln;;;oo;;;;;tt;;;&;;;;;M;;;lk;;;e;;;W;;;;;al;;;k;;;er;;;.;;;;;;;;;;
of its 120 slips are made 0!11
floating concrete to ac-
commodate a variety of tidal
conditions. A large percentage
of Its 7 .2 acres is devoted to
storage capable of holdlng
more than 1000 boats.
"Of great importance to the
company," according to John
A. Gale, president or Chris.
Crall Pacific, and aJ50 the
DELTA SUPER Ql,JALITY
Tires Cost Less
Compl•f• Li11t t f
fil>•rglttl l1lltd Tlr•I A¥tll1ilt
Prlc" Stort et S21.tl pin P:.l .T.
Fib1r9l1u Wldt Ov1l1 -Sup1r Pr.mium -
ll1cli •I -Sporh -S1IHI lu99y -
& 111 Sit•• Trvc• Tir1i
vie. president of ih• parent e~RG!S DE•JA-llRES ~rporl!Uon, "ls that we can ~ &;
provide strong support lo"" 141 E. 17th St, • Costa Mesa • 645-2010 de:ilers whose inventory or
boat, and parts, as well as l1"kA1n11ic1rd to"*""' l •IK llt hyl M••'•r Ch••t•
service facilities, are not as ----•'•'·'·' •w•rs•t-" .... ·.•.•.•.'•.•_••--14·t··'.'."----
Bob Paley
•nd A1socl1te1
INSURANCE
Phone 642-6500 ..
546-3205 from
North Or1nge County
474 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
Only Ont
fl!!!Lt..toclq In all hqmt tdltlons.
That's 1 big dell? It Is lft Cringe
Couniy. The DAIL V PILOT Is the
only dally ntWSPIPfl that dtll•·
trs thf Ntkl9t.
LONG BUCH ARENA
~RCH 13·14·151
Prl. a ,.m.: Set. 2 & I p,.m.; I•"-2 & 6 ,....,. $5.0I thn1 tt.tt.
11 '" & llM• % '"" .u ,.,... .. ,,.. ... ., % """ S.t. Mat. TICKETSi LOllf l1ach Anna; W•lllch't Mnlc City
ltwtt.: All M"1ull Tlcfltet At.ncln. CM1111vTic:ket •NI T1ck ... _tr.en Ovtlet1. MAIL O•Dll:: klt~l44r ..... , tfam ... .,..,..
1.,. aM cMik 11-RODIO:-tONO' •r-AC.H Al:l'tA; LONe
'llACH ... 02.
,
' •
[
' • ' ..
l ·
1· 1 ;.
,,
;,
. •
..
"
' ' ' . ..
' ' ' . • i .. " ' .I .. •l ·-'
Mondly, Muth ~. 1970
. HOUSES FOR SAL~ HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSE.!!_OR $ALE /HOUSES FOR SALE
, Otntr1I 1000 General 1000 General -1000 General 1000
"-ra r r""' ·
OllANCOI
COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
Opett E•••ilH)S
rlU 1:30
$700 Down
Eastside
3 Bedroom
To vet.!I. Thill home 111 In
beautiful movf'-in con-
dition. Law, low down lo
anyone -seeing is believ-
ini:". Seller being trander-
red out of stale, ex-
U'Cmely anxiou£. Askin~
$23,800 -make oUer.
Secluded Country
Fixer Upper
Localed in the Back Ba)I
area ol Ne.,,,-por1 Beach on
~of an acre . Featuring:!
horse corraJs, enclosed
lanai overlook inJ.:
beautiful S\\ 1n1n1in)! pool.
The 2000 sq. IL. :~
bedroom reside11cc nel'C!ll
paint and elbow grrasr.
but what 11. price. O"·ncr
v.i ll finance al 71i 'fi, -
C&ll today.
'/I
General
UNIT VII
RANCHO LA CUESTA
, • , Are you in the mark•t for • new home, • home in a
prime area, very close to Huntington State Beech; 1 home
that you cen cu1,tomi1e while It is being built; a home de-
signed by outstanding architects and constructed by
Frank H. Ayres & Son, • company that has been in busi·
ness since 1905.
If you are:
Come to Rancho La Cuest1 et Brookhurst
end Atlanta in Huntington Beach any day
between 10 a.m. end 1 p.m. end select your·
homt in Our newly OD9ntcl Unit VII. . ,-'-
'
f'rited from $30,290 to $35,100
Occupancy ht June & July
968-2929 968-1338
1000 General 1000 Gener•I
TOTAL LEASES FOREST E.
1000
ENVIRONMENT ./ J l-din r1n + fanl +
pool • ~lrsa Verdr Cam·
hnrl!:"t' t 'lOO mo .• possibly
incl :::ardrne1·. o .... ner says
01\: rn take oVf'r ti% loan.
Listc<I $38,900, tx.rt 1rhe.l's
your birl~
0 LS 0 N
Inc. Realtors
4 BEDROOM + FAM
. . .. -
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSIS l'OR SAlE HOUSIS l'OR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
Gonorol 10000.,,.rol 1000 N-rt Buch UGO Dover Shere• 1227 Lido Isle 1351
JlnJa
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
16 Lindi Isle Drive
New 5 bedroom, 5 bath home with upstairs
view of Corona del Mar hills. --3 Fireplaces &.
BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panolling. Land·
scaped. With dock ............. $145,000
10 Lindo Isle Drive
5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family
room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces.
4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip ..... 0 $159,300
90 Linde Isle Drive
Beautiful 4 BedrOQJll, 4 Bath home with ex·
tra large living room & master Bedfoom.
Carpets & drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip.
Near tennis court & club ...... now $120,000
Weterfront Lots
Lot number 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle
leasehold lot. Co nsider trade. , . . . $35,000
I..ot number 41: Long water view with 76.2
ft. of frontage facing Harbor Island.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 673-7176
1000 General 1000
TAKE OVER LOAN
On this cute 4 bdrm.
Rancher, loaded w i I h
TIIJCK S!-IAG CARPET·
ING. Cu~lom drapes,
11"00d buming lrplc. Nelil·
lffi ncaUy on a tree stud-
ded lot. $23.500 F'ull price.
$2,000 [)oy,·n, Take over
low G.I. payml.!1. o( $183
a month.
Small Down Payment
Here's a beauty with J huge
bedrooms and 2 b • t h 1.
C.orgeoo.!I brick fireplace.
Di..!lhmaatcr kitchen w i th
dishwasher. Beautiful car-
prl.!I and drapes. Older coup.
le retiring, says sell wilh
$1400 total do\vn on fllA
renns or NO DO'VN V .A.
Gall tor an appaintment.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
BEST
OFFER
TAKES
WILL SELL
THI~ WEEKEND * NEW DUPLEX *
112 Block
T6 Weter
Ful~ Leased &
Fi113nced
CALL
MR. MITCHELL
* 673-2455 *
ASSUME
63/4 °/o LOAN
Spacioll& beBJ' new cua:tom
bullt home on one of N"'·
port Beach's most desirable
cul.de-sac streeta. 4 bed·
roonu 3 baths with tormaJ
dining room, kitchen ealift&'
h9°k and family room with
~t bar. Too outstandinz to
overlook • Come
SN For Yourself At
363 VISTA BAYA
IOff Tustin Blvd.)
Or C•ll 673-1550
Open Sat. & Sun.
2 lo 5:30
'O THE REAL \""\.. ESTATERS ' . 2790...Harbor Blvd. at .Adami 54~9491 o,,.n 'ti! 9 PM 1-_-~H~A~R~B~O~R--
REGAL * SPACIOUS
COMPLETE VIEW ·
Bay &. f\lt.ns ... Br, <1\'i Ba + maid.!!, High ceilin_"11.
!"(JOO aq ft built around cou11.
4 cu gar. E-Z mainl lm·
m@d oecp. $118,000 turni!lh-
ed. Aaume 51,S% loan. Own-
er ~'1249.
University Perk 1237
Yon To LIYO Woll?
LIVE!
ON LIOO
3 BR. I: tlen, Lovely Patio
JI.tow-In cond. $65,000
(and • 1ve have othen)
Wolkor Riiy. 675-.5200
3366 Via Lie.lo, NB Open sun.
SPACIOUS
Cu.!ltom built family home
4 Bc1nns., den. JJ,~ baths.
$76.500
LIDO REALTY INC.
3377 Vl& Udo 673-7300 Truly a tranquil suburban
•ttina. Ea 1 y livin' in a ~!!'!~ .. ~-~!!'!!!'!!!'!~~1
"great big way", Stt our
spac. 4 BR. 2~ ba. tov;11-
hou&e, w/closeta plore; frpJ.
In m.sD'. BR. Almost no lawn
can, jU.!11 awimmin', termi.6,
bicycling&: free time for all.
Only 134.750.
e Rod Hill RHlly
Univ. Park Center, lrvlne
Call Anytime 8J3.0820
NEW 4 BDRM.
2 Story, individual home on
lar&e corner lot. Thi.$ .one
ts tt:ally apaciou.sr 3 baths.
l..arie family room. Abun-
dance of cabinet• &: closets.
Beautiful view from HUGE
muter bdrm suite, Pri~
just reduced $2,000 • to
141,750.
PETTIT REAL TY CO.
''The House of Homes''
IJl.0101
A MUST SEE
Lovely J E:drm. le family
rm. Z1i1 Batb.!I. Beaut Jand.
sea.ping I.: patio areas. IM·
MA CUL A TE in l oUt. Near
pools, tennis courts & shop-
ping, Realistically priced at
$29,950.
PETTIT REAL TY CO.
''The House of Homes''
133-11101
J BR. Bonu.!I rm. ·cathedral
ceilings. Priced for quick
&ale by O\\'l'!Cf. 833-2234 '
Huntin9ton leach 1400
FOREST E.
OLSON
Inc. Rtalt.ara
OLD FARM HOUSE
2 or J Btlrm'1. Formal din-
ing nn., ciant country kitch-
en, sf!rvice porch. Fantutic
lot. 100' frontage, 240' del!p,
over 1,.;. acre. Zoned JI.fl. l5tor·
age heaven, Trucks, l!qUip-
ment. ?ltinimum Dn. Owner
\\.ill help finance. Don't be
lat.e -Call 962-5585.
962-5585
19131 Brookhurst
Huntington Beach
Credit A Problem??
Buy Like Rent! I
Cute dream ootta_"e with 3
bedroom.!I and 2 baths, nioely
carpeted a.nd draped. l\tonth-
ly payments include taxes
and insurance. $170 on thi.!I
6% government loan. Only
$4,500 to tak~ over. ANY·
ONE QUALIFIES.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
3 Bedroom
FOUR BEOROO.\IS, lill'f'e
baths. ~ squarr /t'l'I spli1
lrl"rl homr sun'OUndC'd by
11~1! kepi la\\'Tl5, fkw:ers and
shrubs. Upgraded t•iµ-pcts,
Ura)')l's an<! beautifully dl!C·
orated ki!chen givr.s you R
feeling ot speciou=ss and
rl~nt livini:_. &<-and story
patio 1\'llh VIE\\' Of BA.CJ\
BAY AND OCEAN :\l:tny
elosets and lotr of .stora~e
space mWs this ooc of th<.
n1n;:! dei;irablr homr~ In
lhl' Bluffs. Prictd at J:il.500.
I Beautiful lar:;:e homl' near
.SO. Coat.1 Plaz.a .• 40' Swim
pool. •I spaciou11 bcd11ru.
:;:;7:) ipossibly $:lj{ll, incl
110<•\ & gardrnrr. furnish-
fd 1f d<'SU't'd. Offrrt'd :it
s:m.!':x> •>r mak<' ··.\our"
oflr1'
WHAT! $21,500
Scarce as hens teeth! 4 large
bedroon1s. 2 ba!hs. Family
roon1. D<•lu . ...:e kitchen \\•ilh
all lf.lll"SI bulH-ins. Carpel.
i11g. Ha rd lo be-at al $21,500
and only ;i years young. Hur·
ry lo~-DIAL 645-030::.
IMMED. POSSESSION
On thl.!1 4 Bdrm. Sol Vi.5-
ta, featuring 1800 aq. ft.
2 Batlis. Sep. family
room; u~ blick frp!C.,
elec:, blt·ins. dish1va.sher,
carpets & drapes, G.I. No
money down, or take ov-
er U1is lo\Y 5~ % loan,
$144 per month.
S l/4 o;o LOAN HIGHLANDS
$25 950 LA G 7682 Edinger • R E POOL 8-12-+1» 54~"'°
4 Bkdr1'.'.' + nlFamily rm Sparkling beauty \\'llh gleam· Ecologists' Dtli9ht FOREST E. ~
Eastbluff 1242
2 Bath
$119. Per Mo.
Includes Taxes
Par U.e ya "~th BBQ -ing HAR0\\1000 FLOORS, WaJk or bike e\•erywherc. !.'6·~110 firt'place, l!ntry hall, fitt.. massive corner FIREPLACE SUnny apaciou.!I home. . . o L s 0 N
(nurcir.lmlllllltrtl 645·0303 place in huge family rm. 3 and delightful POOL. Ex~!-Central hall plan. 4 Br's, din. UEGE REALTY ORANGE COUNTY'S bath.!!. Assume 5~ '10 apr lent Ne\\-n<lghborhood .. , J51X!Adltnlatt\ITW,tM al Harbor Cenlcr LARGEST loan. 540-llXI _ Ii =--=:-;;:o--~ _ rm. "a.ny xtru. Mortgage
-F:1rr~W -
!.~~===~~~= '>'.:'99 Haa'bor Blvd c ~1 TARBELL 2955 Horbor wit In w1wung ai.!llance lo ~foney aVii.il.~.--'-~f---__ I :::i:::i·~=~~==··~·~· .,, '291 Mariner School and west-I==''=="'==;== Inc. Realtors
---11 Open 7 ,-:;"10 11:30 P.M. SEASHORE DRIVE cliff Pina. REDUCED TO Corona del Mar 1250
w!!l'.1#'.' "'"' 11m ,, • ~ 2 Story Colonial EXCEPTIONAL OCEAN v1Ew ,,."""· w11h ww oo"'"' J UNITS ON 1 LOT
is -apacW>Us J ~roon1 ~~ · BAY VIEW CLOSE l'um, Duplex. Obi. garaae WE SELL A HOME VIEW 1 H~ + 2 apts. Fanta&tic
hO'l'Tr0'1th mas!"ivP s;!onc ·~: ... °"nini;s Call arnllG ldt'iil for lg. family, !I Big Q\la11t)T"?Ustom· built hom~ · Immaculate! $44,950 EVE RV ~1 MINUTES money maken. Summa
fireplace, bllill-tn kitchen 11•-"ii..iiiiii..iiii-"Oii'"';. / Bcdrnis, J bath.~. lam1 din-ovl'rlook1ng Islands, Pl'nin-G.orgt Williamson w lk & L HOME rents can be rajR<J. S B1ks..
designed for convenience, ing rm & family rin, lgc sul:i & B..i.y. 3 Bdrms, den REALTOR a f ee * TIIE JE'M'Y fro1n beach. Ov.'l'!Cr will fin.
forced air ht'!alins:. big DOYER SHORES back yd 1\i lh pa!lo .!!lab, & dining rrn. Beautifully fin-YOUR 673-4350 673-1564 Eves. 2043 \VestcliU Dr. *CATALINA ISLAND a.nee! with minimum down.
backyard for children -VIEW J<;hadc t1~.'I & grai;t;y arra. lshed \\'ilh fine new crp!g, This can't la•! -·•· niJhl
cl I ho · -·' VIE\V the sunset& from thi.!1 64e 7lli * BIG CORONA BEACH ,,. • ose o ll pp1ng 811u Hugr separate garage, room tlrapcril'!; and \Vall paper. ..,. $21 900 Belt be' first and
schools and ca 1h 0 1 i c Qp{'n lhr gales 10 a \rorld or for boa I or trlr In twick yard. Call ror appt 10 .set. lovely, secluded. 2 BR. den, SPECTACULAR VIEW * BALBOA PENINSULA · · er school h h Ass your 0"'11. U-Slial){'d d{'sign, EYES 2 bath home $39,!500. Tenns. Situated between Big & Lit· call now. Dia.I 962-ssa5.
existing -4'.i'ili annu a l wraps around poo & t'OITI· terms. )\Un;'! ========== & LIDO ISLE e rona eac, A .!IJM!C· 962-5585 percentage rate VA loan_ pll.'le rntC'rlai1unt'nt ct'nler, REALTY tacular <t BR family home
-c urc . llmP l Only $35.!l50. Jo'HA & VA Pete Barrett \ Owner 548-8007 of HARBOR tJ Co B h
tiy $25,500 -s1a11 park-\\'alls of glass in living room ~ COATS Costa Mesa 1100 with space to spare, 5'.!! in:: & formal di111ni:: room fC\•l'al & 160.l \Vestclifl Dr., I\B and f'nvision 11. dre»m! N"o1v 3 Bedroom + extra room. balh.!1, the most forma1 of
· eHy lights beyond bay Vi<""''· 642•5200 ~ open lhem and call for 11.11 REACH Hardwood Dooni. Existing dining roonu;, a 27x32 family
D•rty B , P;oncl{'(f family 'rooDf . ..J Bed-~~tLAC! I ;::;::;:::;::::;:::;:::;:;:;:~: appointment! It's a 11·ell-loan 1'/o. 1st TD. Vacant. room PLUS a Z7x32 game I arga1n roo111s. 51:\7,:;(IO. '" •. • 54' •141 TORS Ii localed, \l'ell • decorated, ..... room and an excitin&' vie\!;
MACNAB . IRVINE ( --Foreclosure Pending cl ta n, pride-0!-01\•nership """t Santa Ana /\vr. room i1ith \\'ti bar -A1so <22,900 -Rt>ahy Company Open Eveninl') Big Republic Tri-level. 5 Bd-homt' i1ilh a large lS x 22 FOR THE MOON IS. of Oiff Drivel a big plus in the beoach area
.f (714 ) 642-8235 rn1s, J battis, excellent car-rumpus room. S26,2j(), S%7o -oU slrff:t parking for 1
9:)1 O<ivtr Otivr, Sui!c ]:IQ pcting & many e.xtrru;. bl.JI VA Loan at S220 PTTI per reflecti!d in the shimmering $46,000. BY OWNER. can.
$111.00 mo. Total ~·r11~rt ~~h--'Y'ta1~P ~.!I some ll'Ol'k. Best OU· :~nth. f ir.!lt lin1e ad\"ertis-~:~~ D!.:U~~~~17;:. Dover 6;~:s Area Quality O!AN~tsmanship
Jn excellPnl area. Thi.!1 J 11::::::::::::::::=:::::::=::: I 546-2313 The J bedroom, 2 bath homt You Own The Land throughout that is \vithout a
bf'droom home net'ds lo\·e. R·2 ~(11!11"~~~~ is designed for family· liv-Beautiful pool size yrd. :i BR peer on todays market.
Everything you net'd -W/2 SEP. HOMES CHANCEi LLEGE ing and hm. i\1odern kitch-home v:/ eleganl fcatureK, AND
built-ins, forced air heat, REALTY l!n 1vilh all I.he bllilt-ins. Al· I~ fam rm. breakfast .u-ea, Th~ owner 1vill finance at Coron11 dl'l \lar. l. arc(' Fan11ly home, rslalc size ISOO Adilna lt Harblr,CM tractive front landscaping. fomial din 'g rm. J car 7i;~. To inquirt about tlus ~~~ithg:r:~~t' ~)~~~~ homr; 4 brrtroom"'. nlfit•r. lot: Beautiful l\\"O KID!'}' Sale separate play yard for garagr.. S 8 3, 50 o , BY exceptionl\I home
you can't n1iss. Huriy on fnl . rni .. pool: ?nd honle ~ \\•i!h 1 bdrm.s. dtnhig rm., Estate Sale lhe children. Pancli!d living O\\'NER. 6-12-;}jSJ PHONE 67:J..IS50
this onr room "·lth bnck fireplace. B'UFFS 3 B z B 1 1 Bd',<;,, r!ininc.. nt'w "Jl!. ,t· rtt"n. l1v, rn1. with 11111.'I· $750 DOWN l ===-~~-=-
· p;unt. Ou [,(11 &. 1,, s1:1.~i00. sivr used brick rrplce, .. -r, ' • New gold ca"""'IS. Doublf' , , .• , I
Expanding Family
5 Bedrooms
-Pool
Enjoyed Your children
lately? Thl!!i home Is
d!"ligned to bring a ,lamlly
cJoeer togell:lf'r. •Bea.Utitul
\\'all to "·all carpe\hig
throughoul. s p ll c j 0 \I :s
built-in tiled d re an\
kitchen \\'11h bn-akfa:st
ba.r. covtred patio for out·
door gamr.11. l!!i ,YOUr fttrnl·
ly l''OJ'lh SJ-4.9..iO? See !\,
Wow!
3 Bedrooms
$20,900
No do"A·n 1n \ r\~ -low
rlo\\'ll to enyonr. "A·i th
block wall !enc~. big. big
yard. 101\1, lo\\· parm<'nts!
You'd ~Her Sf'(' lh1s one
-noo!
ORANCH
COUNTY'S
LAlGiST
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
l\lary Lou ,\Iar1on 3 'h;o!hs. All ut IX'!"lt't't L /0 t" ··~ • • corner green l~ind C)ii•ncd hy Corp. ease p IOn ON f HAIVA TERl\IS car garabt' for Dad. Don't bell/\•le1v. Cov. \\'a\ led-
~ Art...:ious iu di$posr of Grrat locallon, walk to \Vci;t. i,vill buy this cute 2 bdrm & make a n1istal«' ... Sec It! patio. cu5. drps & shutters
lll'OP<'l'ty. Challt'e for a cliff shopping. Clean 2 BR df'n 1101ne near city park & $2!J,9j(). -+ extras. \Valk to !!hops,
Coldwell, Banker & Co.
550 Newpor• ·Center Dr.
Newport-Beach, Calif.
133-11700 644-2430
real bargain. A 11 k 1 n g home. hn!wd fioors, dining, do1•·11to1,·n. .fe&tures hard· S46-2313 Cdl\I Iii. Ownr $32,500.
$.l.<!.!lJfl. enrl patio, nicl' yard. As· 11·ood floors, healllator fire. 64·t-42G5
sun1able 6S'i! loan avail. place, !ruit trees etc. Tl's DUPLEX
Lcue S,175 mo. can 545-8424, \'8Canl. Immediate po5Sl!S-•)t~csfi\~·r~~ ')\~11l t'' . Soulh Coast Real Es!ate. sion. 3 Bdrm.!!. 2 baths each. Near ocean. 'Exct'llcnt rental an?a.
Like new! $59,500
Richardson Re•lty
2443 E. Coa.!11 High1\'ay
546-5990
INVESTORS
11 l '1111 prof··~sinnal bld~.
idr,111.v \oc;1\l'{I clOtie to rvrry
n:inf·t•1,·ahlr l11nvenlence All
ut/1('1'<; 111r c·o11d., 11.n1plr
11111'kin::. l.J>f':i lrd Jurt olf
Co1>1<1 ,\Jesa·~ busy 11111 St.
"hopping a1·ca. Call lvr dr·
1,1lls S.· appl. lo inspct·I.
Little Lady Alone
Most ~n (his spotlC$ doll
house Jn 10\'eJ.y t.1csa Vqnie.
Plush deep ptlt· c.arpl'l3
lhrollghou l. l.o,·cly 1.."US!om
dra~. 3 hui;;:o hcdroonis.
Go~ pulln1an U1t!hs.
Ideal • location. GJ1'al school
~)·sll'm. Near Country Ch1h.
~1 1.\ d0\\'11 p.1,•,.n1t'nt is S'l(XK),
NO bmVN 'l'O Cl's. Call '
WE SELL A HOME ~ 1'6·1110
EVERY 31 MINUTES lnt1r tint1111l~Ntrtl LLEGE REALTY Walker & Lee ~ ... '~soo ... • ...... • .. ~'"· ... ""·!!!!!!'Cl4
1190 Harbor Blvd. 111 Adnn1s -COASTAL VIEW-
WOWI $20,SOO $22,950
,\ r('al cutie in ttppte pie or ·
flt'r, o"'ncr going 0\'£!1"8"111
and n1ust '3M'ifire lhi.!I 3 BR
brallfy, Convenient to i;chOOls
& :-ho1iping. Corn pletrly
fenl't'd rear yard. 2 BA plus
bl!·1ns. Paul-White·Carnahan
Rl':ilty, J093 Bakrr, C.M.
j.1().5440. 16 UNITS
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL COSTA MESA'S BEST
NE\V. VIE\V -Oovt'l' Shores. $275,100 . :i You may 11ssumr a S22:1,000. 4. BR., BA, fa in mi 1v/frplc, l I TD G 6,11 . t ·Ith \l"t"I bru·. Din rm, kitchen, ~ al · in · ". )iv nn niastC'r lxJ the. :SZ>0.000. tlo\\·n. Present in·
vir\i· Derorato• cm, 'c" rt coine $1'\,120. per )T. Call . crp g. OU I lh ,., I h0' h I yurll pool, 3 car gar. 3180 Sq o Set' is op-110 c s c .
Immediate
Possession
FHA/VA NO 00\\'N, terms
available. Nice 4 BR. 2 BA
on quiet cul-de-sac:, 2 blcks
to park. schools & shopp·g.
&aut landscaped, all bit·
ins, lireplace I: dining. Out
of town ov.'l'ICJ', priced to
sell $26,950. Call ~4
South CM.st Real Estate.
PRICE BEATER
Large, full size ~ BR on
King Site lot f o r $20,900,
NO DOWN PYi\tNT reqllir-
ed on VA, IO\V d0\\11 FHA.
Roo1n for boat & camptr.
MS-0465 Open 'HI 9 P!\1 :"p!JI l<>vrl "! !:· drn cond. :I
ll:i1h.-. ~lass rncl palio. C11~
lun1 rlra~~ & cpts. S&l,900.
"Our 15th Veer"
WESLEY N.
II. Roy .J. \\'ard !Utr, 1430 tcr,
Ga!11,...:y Dr. 646-1 5.i(l Newport Great family homl.', Hurry
$28,950 \vt have only 011(!? Ca 11 BUILD UN ITS {1[11 •t 540-U5l, Herilage Real .Es.
4 Bdrm & Family rm. Victorl• tat~ (open eves.l Lnt HlO x 291 with goor1 :'.
RMroom hornr. Top Jrw:;1.
l!Oll' $49,500,
W1lls-McCerdle, R1trs.
11110 Ntwport Rivet, C \1.
SIS-772!i 614.()6&.l 1' ~ \ l"C
TAYLOR CO Prime location. Entry hall, DELUXE TO\VNHOUSE • J Realtor~ rull dinin::: room. 3 sepat"ate 64'6-llll Br, 21~ bath, Hu built-in.!!&.
"\J.\\'POltT CENTJ.::n b.itll-~. Fil'f!plare. Almost no Anytime m11ny f' x l r as + pool,
:!111 .' n .lnH'1111n l hll~ Hd llo\vn (i.L (l"r'lt·r lirsf)('nOe.,_,...,...,...,...,..._.,..,../ clubhouse &. rec facilities.
644-4910 5'lO-l710 1-----N C't "-h t 5" ~ loan. TARBELL 2955 Harbor $27 995 . "'...all 0 .,.w $25,900 TR Y 10"/o00W~ • ., Ow"''· 638-96<>.
4 Bdrm & 3 bathi I BR -$2j,!l?tfl. !'1101lt>"-.•! Nrw $19 9SO T As_~~m• 5¥4~• Loin
Bt•uUlul fanuly home", C'nlcy 1·pt~, rlraprs. hlt1ns !Id. t erri ic 5~4 'A. apr loftn lo
hall, dlnrrw rm, roar livina' ur~. :? Bath~. Cornt'r lo!. R·2 lot, 2 BR, J BA. paintl1'd aMumt, -Low monthly
nn r'-p'·-"-q··-•1.,,. Prr\'. ~"·im l'iub. \\.allr to In Ii out, new crpl.!. CO\' pa-paymenta. EnUy hall, hua:e ·• .... ""'-"''' u.... ....., •J !lo d~ laml... 1 · "lh buill·init. MG-ttio 1111 i;chool~. , new n\-t\\·ay. Easts!M, f 1room· a r1un1 .,.,
TARBELL 2955 Hatbor Lachenmyar Realtor water• . bu.Ut.tn~. ~1720
ttCALTOl'I 646-3928 Eves: M4·16:i.l TARBELL 295S Harbor
LOW INTEREST ·Co•••N·M••T!Njl I!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ........ _ ... lSJ.ANO 11,;,,.. 3 BR. J'I "'· w.-hi _......_.__.,,.... Ll== ,,,.,111 'J EST Al'E. SAL ' ' "'· ap1. '""'" i.;1.""'
folio of .f ~rodm flom~ MESA-DEL-MAR-2 Bedrooin. Costu t.fesa, r rn.n11d Exch11t1COl"ll 54.~9..'69
1\llh hi\\' lntrrt_, •s<1un\abJ1· 4 BR. :? Btl .• 1-·"1111\y Rm . Jo:nst~id!'. lt·2 1011('. lr1\'rSI· Home & Duplex $27,SOO
Newport Btach 1200
at l\TacAJ1hur, Cdril 67:)..4001
C•nal Waterfront
Duplex \\•Ith 2 I.: 3 Br .. right
on Uie carual "'ilh 01\'n pier
& dock. $74,500.
Graham Rl t)'. 646-2tl4
Near Ne\\l>Orl ~t OUitt
4 BDRM-DEN
Upper Boy-$35,500
2306 Redlands. 646-4393
Nowe!rt Hoiphta 1210
HOME WITH
GUEST HOUSE
A rare find! Channing l bed-
room home plus separate
l bedroom guest quarters.
Dellghtf\Jl SH:iuded patio
and garden. Nice Ne1\·por1
lleighl-!1 IOCalion. Space for
boa! or 1railer, \\'on'l 111.!lt
long at S..'\3.500,
646-7171
•o THEREAL
\"'-ESTATERS
Beycrett 1223
FINE Baycrest Four BR
home ror 1al~ or t r • d e.
,Sf:Cludtd street, J11rp yard.
54,\-0773.
OpH EYnintJ IM!n" l.11rge )'lll'd. Nr. ~hnpp1n1t I: n1rnt prOPt't'ly, lllt;C loL t::-,irle J Br, JJrl\I 6't lonn, trd
t lll 8 :30 CAUDELL REALTY 1-'r'1\")',$2l1,000I..01vdn.o"n' S:2L~..00. Pl•lnr1palit on ly, fnr clca.r h·r l.1!.1\lt1&arca.
BA YFRONT PEN11l0USE
Panoramic view. 2 Bit. 2 Ba.
Docks. s..5d..SOO lO'ili dn 7"
Int. ?.!cKemi~. RlD' 646-0732
BLUFFS • 3 BJ\, 2 BA, split·
lcvtl coOOo. $29,150 or
IeaA/opUon. 6#-2039
DIAL di~! 642·56'78. Ch&f'KC
your ad, UM!n lit bff.ek 11,nd
1!11cn lo the phone rlna:
OAII.V PILOT 0 l 1\1 E -A ·
LlNES. You cll.l'I U.!141 lh'm
for jU"I pennies 11. day. Dial
642·56'18 lo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O!!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... ;>!!lll'.:•3'00~~-....'.'..'.':!:..:!;!:l;.J.l::::!tO bkr n.l-1!!00. l!'l l-:11~s ll.t8·721l! or ~1-2J7S. • O\Ynct/hkr lillh'!i:Al. Now!
IO THE REAL
\"'-. ESTATERS ' ..
ORIGINAL O\VNERS
Selling their 2 Br Ranch
&tyle home 2 blks. from
oeean. Jolas lge b r i ck
fi1'1!place, beam ceilings, is
delightfully private.
i'o!ORGAN REAL TY
67:J-.66.a2 61~j9
3-tll E. Coost ll\\-y, Cdi\I
2 Houses on 2 Lots
Ripe-for in'>-eslors. So. of
h\\'y., Cdi\I. Zol'K'd R-2. Pric-
ed i;llghtly above land val-
ue. Take a good look -it \\'ill
check out 11·ell a t $67,500.
C Eve.!1. 548. 'i962 t
"B/B" Realty 675-3000
CORONA. Higblands vie\\'
home. ldeal for couple
\\'/pouible guest qtrs. or
more bclnns.: O\'erlookin1
the fo\\·n. SEE TillS!
Open Daily 2-5
412 i\lendoza Te1i.·ace
Stan S1nith, Rltr, 673-2010
BEAMS & BRICK
So. of Hwy. 2 BR. on R-2 kit ,
at last )'tat'• prlct! Add
unit &. live "payment free".
$29,000,
Hal P inchin & Assoc.
REALTORS
3900 E. Cout H\\'Y. Ei5-~::92
Balboa Peninsula 1300
BALBOA
PENINSULA!
Houst le .Apt. Finish the tt-
modelln&: on thl.!1 3 br. 1 ba
house on Plaza Del Sur. En-
joy incon1e tram apt over
g11.ra1tt. "FLxer Up~r."
$.-14,000. Louis \V. Brlgrs
Reallor • 6i3-8t10, ~037.
rr·s B<'ach house time. Big.
ge!'l seleetlon e\'er! ~ the
DA tL \' P1LOT Oa~U~d
~lion NO\V!
19131 Brookhunt
Huntington Beach
4 BEDROOMS
VA no do\vn 2200 'Cl tt, up-
graded ll'/w crpl3, expan-
sive panelled entr)' w/ De.I
Piso tile, custom drps, 2 I~
Btlrm y,·alk In cla1et.!I. form
dining rm, laundry rm, 2 pa-
tios, prestige neighborhood.
~-
TAKE OVER
POOL HOME
This beautiful 5%% r .H.A.
lo11n 11·ith pa,;.ment of $1117
per month pays ALL on this
4 bedroon1 2 bath P 0 0 L
home. Large conlCr lot \\'ilh
no y,·ork decking: and patio
around crystal pool. UNBE-
LIEVABLE.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
1682 Ed1l14:'.er
842-44j,j 54().51'10
UNBELIEVABLE
$650 DOWNll
\\"ill move you into th~
sharp little 3 bedroom col-
lage c I o 1 e to ~pping.
school.!! and fre<!\,.a)•s. Fan·
tastic starter hon1e for new·
lywed!t. $20,350 f U L L
PRICE.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
168l Edina:cr
847...WS3 5f0..5140
TRI-LEVEL
4 BR. tam nn, form DIR,
Z?OO sq ft of gracious livina.
Take over low int. FHA Joan.
Owner \\111 help finance.
The Reil Estate Mert
147.1531
S3500 DOWN
2 Story Spanish .!ltucco. 4 BR.
2\·i BA. beaut ai>ts. drps,
15 l\Ton1h:s ne1\•,
BRASHEAR REALTY
1147-3507 E\-e1. 431-37'3
4 f\tO'S YOUNG
3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, PIU.!lh
CTpl~. Take 0\'er GI !OM.
SUbn1!1 do\\'11. $30,110. Setk
Leadership • 842-4.$66
NO m11 hcr \l"h11I If 15. )-'OU
r.an Stll II \l•llh a DAILY
1101v:11
I
'
.. .
•'
, . ..
'Almost Eve1·-vone •
Beads The
Newspapers deliver massive coverage
of ALL occupation groups each weekday
OCCU PATION OF HOUSEHOLO HE1\D
Professionals
Managers
Clerical, Sales
Craftsmen
Other Manual
Farmers
. ' . . -, ~1<~\~4,. j; •'' .. ' ,~,..,.. ..~ -· ' ....
. • • ' ~ .• ·' _,, .... JJ"" ~.~ .... ·,{'!'
. . . ,, •'"~" ''>." • .., • • •''ff ' . '·.i,J~
..
88%
91
85
80
71
70
Sourct: Opinion Research Corporation
Newspapers reach, in-depth, j.,fo all occupation groups every day, as thi s graph indi.
cates. But what sh ould be even more interesting to ad ve rti sers is the high preeentage
of man119ement, pro fessiontil and other hi9h -salary-earning types who read a newspa-
per every day. They make more money, travel more , buy more, set the standards for
others to follow . If you wa nt -to play "Fo llow The Leader," advertise in some other
medium; if you want to lead the lea der, put your me ssage whore he 'll read it •.. with
us, "the "ewspaper.
. -
.DAILY PILOT
Newspapers Take
Your Message
Where The Money Is
Newspaper readership
increases with income
Under
$3,000
$3,000·
$4,999
$5,000-
$7,999
$8,000·
$9,999
89%
.$10,000
& over
Soorce : Opinion Resetfth Corporation
Almc:~t nine out of 10 affluent Americans-those who e1rn $10,000 or more 1nnu11ly
-read at least on• newspaper. And more than half of those who earn even less than
$3 ,000 also r11d newspapers. And the more money the reader of your ad has to spend,
the more li•ely he is to see the message in a newspaper. If you've got something to tell
somebody (or seU somebody), start with us, the newsp•per.
DAILY PILOT
Newspapers: Nun1ber One
In Advertising!
Newspapers are the primary
advertising medium
1949 !Millions of Dollars) 1969
TELEYISIOll ,-.,..,. .... .... .... .... ..
.,. .. "' MAGAZINES ,, ................. .. ,-,..,»i1;;.r--~~-----KADIO ,.._ OUT"""" ... .., WV" -'"-""toHnotH-•,.•n••-•,.,,.,_.,.,_.,,,,..,,.,,.._
Total 1dverti1ing figures ere in for 1969 end, es the chart ebove shows, newsp1p1r_s
continue to be the nation's number one salesman. The only other medium showing any
dramatic 9rowth in the chart i1 television end -did you notice -the increase in
newsp1p1r 1dvertisin9 investments since TV came on the scene is more then the cur~
rent total television edvertising volume. Shouldn't you "hire" the nation's most power~
ful s•lesm•n7 You c•n sl•rt tod•y by celling 642-4321, the
DAILY PILOT
' •' ' '
' '
' J'
' ,;'
' ' ·:
'
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I • ...; ...................... ,;;;;,;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, ................ .,.. ....... ,J·: .. .. ,,
. :,lL Di.JkV ~ILD) • , •• ,,-• • --· Mondli,.Mi,cn • • .ll/U
H"&iCliS'FOR SALi'.' AllOsis ,Oii SALi RENTA ~•!ITALS --·: RiNTALt'·· • 1!,l!NTA~S-. .!. : RENTAL-$ ' ' , RENTAL' • RENTALS -
l'2t Mlulolt Vloji _ l7al 2!Hou!'!!a1~1~Unlu~~r,,J~11!!W~.j'!~Hoo~•!!!Ml~·~U~ ...... ~n~l11!'°"~~ A,il1. ~nfurnl-Ap11. UnfVrnltlltcf • . _:YI•· l!~'l!.rnl,lhl!I, ~t1. Unfurnlohld
o._.1 -Fount•Jg, 1[11,':!_ 3410 Celt.I! .Mlh 1 -, 5100 Ceo!• Mot s1iii ·to11LMl1t. ' SlllCl11t. Mtt• JllO
21'"· Unfuml"'od
H1111!1""°"· Bu~ 5400
Terrific B,uyi ·'
·4 BR/$23,ttlD .-
1mmlculate homf, nta'!' Pa·
rochial ·'-. public. achooJa.
I' t.o.,..• """""'· h..twd r1n. I Cl-Dr n-1A line:.
., tlAFFDAL' RE'Al?Y
142-44Gl
BY Ownei a Misllon Ridge~ --------1---+-_. ... ..._ __ _
BR, 31. ba. l '" ,,,... .. tt RENTALS** <BR. ,~,_.,,.;,.,,d1,rm, ' /fl:--CilAND Of!ENIN• * -" 1 SEE AWARp WINNINEO
C011pl l\Udlc•Jq, · fJ J: t l rurn. Bacbtldr apt, Adults COVttfd flagstone I pal Io · 1 Nt-_ and DramaUc u ,, ~~ view kit in town.. Low in-close to-shop' I • , , • , • $100 w/bU...ftl "bbq. Ntar K'hls. n· '
lerest )oat) ·usuniable. Pb. Unfum. 3 Br hie. Car. Bia E--FowltaiD Valley. $250 Mo. ' a' • Spanlah CutJe . -I -\ • SfNGL&S FROM Slit'
ll31-16" yrd. ""'' • .._.,. ...... f!>O ~,,..· · n ·-CORDOVA. Am , , . egance •'•sR t\; B• rRQM 122S
RENTALS u,ru...,_ 2 8' d•pl"'-,,_ ThJnl: r'"~~ I ---..1-...J. • • • e·: B~ 2 BA FROM $200
Houses Furnished refrg. Cleen. Ba~ OK $140 la9un• Beach i705 . -you -Hen ~llf-a ~!"~~"'? . • .. . 'd· e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360
ON BEACH ---
-------1* ROOMMATE SERVICE* . *' HWEeA.hTave&D•W.Ulullce....: ... c •-Hu.AL~Lo!!DWJ> ... ' ;'n'.l_e---.'l'n 8C.-'W. 00 8 ~Cupe""1taJ>'o,dlob .... ,,.. Rent el a 'to Share· 200$ MANY OTHERS WOODS COVE ne:\v 2 BR. ~ --llr -~"° ...... ~ r..t"'Il.I.I heated poo1-4una-te'.nnt1
I ------,., --FrH to L•ncUordt Beams. •ha& crpt, bltn1, * DIStfWAIHJff:'S' * .... R:a:oues··.. I • • orange·cou»ttl'• ldo$! Bta.utl/-ul rec room.oeean vitws-
• L•tuna Beach 170S E~IPW\"'ED Jaf!Y ~ to Blue Beacon Re:nl&l .Flndtta frple trees. \Valk to beach. * SHAG -CARPET'O '* GAR~GES .. .' . . Apoitment c'ommu(lity~ • jJ&~mpje 1»1rkina.
1'1---------i.1t11re. 2 br •pt wtpriv bl., 435 \V. 19th SL CM MS-0111 -. 'f1S.3173 or 494-3470 . .MANY OTHERS! Featuring~ club· atmosphere for your com• Security a:uaipa
I
I; · BEACH. · · ;,;:,•m• ~" c.!~·~ ·"°.::· DISCRIMINATING Famlly L N'-•
1 3707 1 I.· 2, BR'...;l\.R,OM $145'.Foi, Adult' Only • , •fort .and pleasure •..L just• completed 1 or 2 HUNTINGTON
CONDOMINIUM · "''""'"""· 557.m6 "'"' •· """"'" '" , Bodroom, 3 1111111 •••• ;20~1 Ch•rfo St. *• ~76 · Bedroom, 2 Balli. Furnished or tJnlurnish· PACIFIC SPACIOUS 2 BR -B•th + °'" N, w P•••I . (Just 400 'ft, \\I. }If Jiarl>cji l![VtJ'.. off Hamilton) __ .ell, .Air.· soID!.,J.OUndproofed,"!elf deaning '111 0<."AN AVE., HA
I 2 BATH·· . . YOUNG Resp. Fem a I e Estate home for 6 montha ATrR:ACITVE. Modem -' -.· ;' o\rens, .b. e'.' .m. -Oe1libg5; ., diShiva.Sher, lush
I Yacing ~beauuful 111.rgr riool, "'anted to :share home -0r longer lll exeiianat Jor _.R, 3 BA. dtclu, built Jn RENTAl'S ,,.,~ ~ ~ ~ I dSC th tr & rfall l (714) 5r36-J481 ·
': just 100 )'d5 ftorn· J*'!Vaft' \l'/mothir· .. m . Br. bi & t~r Iovlni CllJ'f: and "aenum, -~pn:. eatp:eb, Apts. ·Fumilhecl-Geoi~•t. . ." . ' I • • ·-5000 an APl'?f Wt s. earns .. w,•14: s •. e, ~Va· * LARGE" new 1· Br. with ~ch La~ area per-. phone. ~ plo: :o.CiC. Vic. $350/monlh wtth Gardener tprinklen, \11ew. S3Z -·mo. ~ ..... , • . 'i ·.,.; Jars .. B.BQ ~ cltlbho~e wJth sotl!ll activities, loads DI &torag!, ~uinr l. ~t fur '>-ear roolM'~ ii ring. 54~.i.ft.1;:30·.. lncluMd. Aaent.st6..:ill3· 31741 laJ& Royal Dr. CallJor Newport .8!~C~ , 4200· · i'' ; · 1 i: • ·aun·as.-~Jatttttr & ~swim PoQls.-private gar· . nioro. Pullman bath,
in\'!Sfment-or ·rentats. \VIII GIW...1'.wan:ts .to sharr(·Br _suJ>l:ff. SHARP !BEDROOM appt. ~~ ·vENDO'ME . .'age W/stor'bf.e ... From $140-$210. l>Wtwuhtr. Bit-Ina. Shq
11'!11 con1plctely lurnis~-or holisr c .r..1. ~lith same, 2 BATH HOME lor rent al -··New__. leacfi ·-· F,or enjo_y• t 1urnuridlnt1 c.t,rlng to .di"" carpeting, Pvt Pttia.1 blk
unfurnlshf:d. "T\\'O ~·1ory plus t'hildN'n ok. 6(2...$1()6 ·or S18S per month. Double,""·. C~ini.upt1 · '!'1'.no ".""' 'GRAJID .. DCMlCULAT!!iAP'l'ilt ·: ·· cernlng a'diilts --.cOIM to • •. • MERRIMAC ·to shopplna: A walldne
' )o"·er cnrpart, storaj;l'. laun. tH~Cl9t'. ~ ~, ... ~ ·-~ l ba ' ~ .... .,. .. -· .. .no~ \ w~s. . '· . dhrtance to beach. Adult&
h I .).,,.., . . .. ~. ,.._,..,. ~;r....... ta m 3 BR, 2 . erpt, car, IA?'. · vu -•~Joo .. . . . tJ HB dry room, was rr · 11•il'r. I of,2'.kESPoNSlBLE "JI"; our rental book ·at WaUci!:r pool & elbhlie avail. ;%25 Ollrt.llN. G SECnONs· AVAJCABU: l Juit:ust WMll .. ,,.., atw.11., ,..xt,.. Na..,.. CWlll•c only. 826l A anta. · · 1
\Vet bar. full~ mfin:~ned 10 i;hare ltLxury ·s-.BR. 2 &: ·Lee. 7790 Jiarbor Blvd. mo. 5»-6339. rtn CS...-fi iffoliolN, Parle: C25 MERRIMAC WAY. COSTA MESA • SU-6308 _.,._ __ ""'==,....,==;;--
Ktlrt:oous bfO\ll s fW' ing story · t.agUna Bch view at Adam&. RENTA'~,--· _ . _ *.~~.-L~:·22_-: a.:~. '· IYliYf~.iNG ~iW-MQVI IN "OWi FOR RENT 2 popls. tennis l'Ollrts. etc. homr. S60 l'Jl!l. Call ~m CAN · · -· IMutiitlfi' • --~ CIOM to ti llPl'f' nu1rkt'l shop. VA T &:: Clean, l Bia; Apts. Furnished . llltlllft., * S\vlm PoolJ J'\l;t/,p9en • • 2 BR apt, l~ BA. newly dtt-
ping. Coast Ill\\'aY,. ''Exct>l· \\'O~~ \Vill share Laguna_ ,':!""', ,m,_:_ .. b!~~·. o~f! ;:; •. ~-... ·,., ....... OCCUP·ANC·· . ,· * ~ lndfvllndry fac'll · ' CHt• Mei•·· -.· 51~ CO.ta 'Me•.• 5100 ora, .. al ... k . BuCollilt·lns, ~iahs~~r. lent buy. mw;l liCC! ldnpprrc-Niguel home ·w{responsible -• 111%U 3 ..... ..9 .,. .. v. tRllW JM.S Anahtlin·-A~.' , . . . . . ,,. to ege.., ,....,,ping. ~"· Sho"" by •pp'!. CaU b"'~~ .. ~· ·1100 mo. mo, Ai•nl 546-<!41 -s "l coSTA MF;$A · ..,_ BRAND NEW LO.V.ELY 2 Br. w/w ap'3,' BRASHEAR REALTY ' ~:. ::.::!~~~ s:;:~~i:.:; ·:;~ 'i.:~i:t"~:; 'f,'i;; .. ing e ':"'..::.:::-:=. . ·~·11ENT :,• . ·A. •t~H· O·M·E· s . : ;g~;~;~~t l1i:; ~~~.r~~ ~ ~~
dishwasher. c a T P4!'l t rf g. Uk I.or Jtoil, , _$225 • OPTION .• BR. 2 BA. A~J-u-:tts ~utitW landscapJnr· • J ~Oomt Fu~"IM'• .. ' . I;'." .. ' "' . . .~ PlJctnti~. Open Gar. Sil!ile BditA, couple.
$25.!ISO. low dDwn. iS.Swrle ( -M .• 2100 home. doubl1·1arare. v.·/w, U II ~all~~ .~UonaJ $1.9.95 &., UP,: Never before livtd In. Pr!. 202·A 141.h 536-1319, 673-ITM
j 1~ ..... ., loa n. 499-3006 . osta ••• -~;980 kids • peta. Bkr. . • tacllit$ff ·in ·--a ·wuntry ?:Onth-To.·Monttf Rentals · Vate patio ; livtna:: · Near Men '{•r~e 5110 SPACIOUS 1 BR:-QU!et.
MESA VERDEilOM!r .....,........; • · · · -·WIBE~N--,· -lieaeh & &hOpploi: Al'i -new L _ • Frplc, encl gar, crpts, dips,
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Laguna Niguef _ ,:1~07 Beautiful 4 br, J)9(11, ·f~al $125 • NICE J;'Bff:. 2.BA, ~ ~;.11:1~ ·dub atmpsp~, Now llQ DEPOSrr 0.A".~ bullt·ina, di!hWuhers, w/w 2 Bedroom, crpts. drps, elec >.:tra .stor. AduJt3 $135.· 8177
PANORA.:\fIC Oeean . View din. rm. $400. ~ ·~ '1.:tdett iype"trlplex, paHo, ~.,:~ 'Wltb,. Jeasln1 Jb Newport Btaeh. ~·!ifrni~ Re'3til¥ ~tin&' •. ~'· private. ~ A:i~· 548-3209 or Gar11eld, 962-8904
cor. ID!. Pvf bch. M"nafcb' B Ibo I I .nd· · .. -2355 :~w~. ~-s: family. com~ ptiVacy and 1abCl-. 511~19ffi, CM ~-·~. v3l"".sR-2 n_, :hf,,·,· Pl"'. . , lc!,R,, Todw!~se, poobl ,''.1~" •. · Bay. $25,9'.50. 49g-:.ra tt, • • s• ·-:-~ F.apedto1mtr;rCiut>•tJr09.. J.Iod~oP,enlO-.rn.toSpm ""-~t> Newpor.tS.ich 5.200 .,, .,,... ..
495-4.-:11 9 -FURN! 1.fod. .2 Bt. 2 Ba. (Ht• Mes• 3100 phere incllJdPn: ~.«Kt · Fu~~ or wifumlahed Costa Meia.. · · · 5100 • 2 Bft,..2 BA·paijocl · · washr/dryer, palio. $140 . . _,_ . ._ ..... cl·-·...__1 ._...,, . -e 1 8ft.l'B~-deluxe t!ingl.e THE NEWPORT 545-1019 DIAL direct 6-~. OWge DocK. No pets. ·Avail to WVIUI .~ ....... ....,.... ... ....., Rents fMn ~ Co · A t M C.C:.,.:CC:..,.-~-~~,1
you;. ad. the n sit back &nd June~-PJl mo. ~1880 ·t~& dtaJgne<: and operated ri1can · P • · omes LUXURIOURS ROQ:\lY 2 & 3 br'1. Crptd & ""'" '° "" ""°"' """' , ,.. w.,i. --·""" 5 Id 3 lleiths. . J"31-tnr •inil< peopl•. Oakwood u-a.1· •. OR SUNrwwm AVE. GARDEN APTS. • .,.,,. Now1, """''· 3 br .. P1l"<lit' Enough -Give A~ll now ··~'.rw $3..~ rms, . RENTS .FBOM DH . Btwn s. ~fain ~ BNIGI Pvt. PatiOI!, Heated LanaJ dbl altach a:ar &: iWllc. a
You r "Fair Shan!'' mo. 6?J-5109 --=~ :tio~~1!: =: $1~ to $300 • Gcirden T;OiW .. N,HO.U1S.E ·~';J! ~~i~f g:::r ~1~·.:ma1e 8;~~:sm 2b::. ~r:1~:~:; yrs OK.
Lea.se or leUI! w/option to NEWPORT BEACH I 1 '.ft Call J.40.1973 * 2 Bedr'm SJ2S.S500 No pels. 2S12 En&land St. No Matter What It Is b•y.. "" IRVlNE AVE. Apartmen· ts %217 ""'""' """ Wohn" Eves, 545-2321 ·* 2 Bod•'m •• ., 1695 su;. mo. ""11189 w.11 ... McCardle, Rltrs. mVINE AND 16ttl • ·2 Br 1 Ba. ground level LUXURIOU~NEW 919 Bayside Dr, 673-8414 1 Bdrm, Ptly furn, Frplc,
1!10 Newp;Jrt Blvd., C.~f. ln4) ~ 'TownJiou&e $125. ~ O'ELt'.iXE 2 br. 2 ba, condo. Gar, Pvt yd, Adulta. No
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··7729 644.()684 evu. I 100 16th Street •:-Hea.~ ~ -Mui~ only Frplc. w/w apt, drps, blt· pets. l145. 842-8773
GARDEN GROVE· •No"'". AdJ lo ""°PP)"I . $150 & $170 · ""'· Swimmi"g poo~ '"'""• 2 & 3 BR. 2 BA, pvt. patio,
2 BR. den, Jge . front UlOO Qlapman Ave. • 714: 642 .. 817. 0 • ·All Utilities Paid . green, luxurious ianclscap. h d I '··.r.•--· room/din rm comb. Kit· -ff•ARBOR GREENS ing, poolm-alnt. Adults prel. eate poo . wu,'""' .... ,, .... -ch"' w/ .. tini;. '"'';·:2 W blko:W. S..u'.Ana Fwy.) MES• "Q. 'T:EL. ...... '•RTMENTS . 1 & 2 BR. 2 <Wim pool•· h<ook "' '62-89!M
Children ok. A•."'ll Apn·1·1. (1lt) 6.36-3030 , -· -·-L\...D.'I CJ. J!IU".,. . '.((!ulll oriJy, nope~. No.pet&. Near Newport Bay. 2 BR I B. "d "' *LO\V WEEKL 30'l A d f $270 Monthly Le.ale. . a, earpe • rapes,
ll'Tii mo. 642~7, · . . , AN .. AH.· .. ·, c1.M Kl'·h•·· .. TV's, .-Y.1.dRA .. ~~-Bachelor, ·1-2 a:· !'·BR,-Furn/ -· voca. o.S1., C.?r • Ma..-61?9. ~!~!~~,.near beach $135 mo. IP "' " "' '"'"" uht. ·~m· $1lO .rc up. ·Gar-. See 1tfgr OJl._Jlremi.sn. vov-iUOJ SPACIOUS Det·Cem> home~. NC>W.1.EASING FOR ·Rea"!~ Pool~ ' · deri patios 9 n..am ....;.ilgs (Behjnd K-M.art oft Harbor -BAYFRONT near So. Coa.!i\~.J285 •-AR.Ot OCCllPANCY 646--.96SI .. :. · • ....,. ..... lg &: dol ·, NE\V : 1 BR. CARPETS. mO. 5-47~. ~~3 • "'' ===--,,=~---1 Fr,llca; e Jtte·Rms • 2 Pools at·oorner Ru er:s Avoca 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apts. DRAPES.
Lovely 3 Br'homc: ,$260 ·277·So. Brookhurst _GA.RQEN _ An,_._ by_month. SaunU e '· .N~fy School ·Day -'642.353;;, e\-r &lS-0283 -Priv. terrace; elevatora, sub-The Lindbot'a co. 536-2519
.-·(1 blk. So. al: L incoln) Of.I · t~ Bay. pc19J, lowly ~!~Ji AduJ~ ~~. il_!t-MARTINl'f)UE le1Tanean -pk'g. All elee.
· & mo. Util .paid.·C'l!I' * ~6.-8T07~ fn4) 'm-4500 ground11, maMt ·~. Ken m~. occup, 2700 Peterson S Pool. soft water, docks. 3121 Santa An• 5620 South Bay Club Niles Villa Jifarina. ·Call: Way, CM·Nr Hrbr & Adama. i;>acloo.s ~s w/ pa.rk-\V. Coast Hwy, Newport. -;;;;;;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
CHEERFUL 2 BR. 1ar. No . . 673-9m. 5'16-0370 like sunvuncbngs 'v/ prl-642·2202 •
Ad I ~" m \V Apartments ve.cy. Patios &. pools. Nr.' ~=~~-~-~-VILLA MARSEILLES .. t&. uts . .,~mo. ··-=~===~~-·IBEACON BAY· "lod•rn 2 ELEGANCE ' '3 BR 2 b N ~ 1• ., a. lhopplng. Act:tll!; only. , a. ear ..,.;.:an. BRAND NEW \VllJOn. 548-2802 · Tho GORGEOUS N•w BR. '-le, I•-• -.. '-k, H • da H rbo -.. i--• ..... ,..~.. Geren a r QUJET DELUXE APTS luo~~ Grant. !Corner of SPACIOUS
LOVELY 2 br, 1"-ha, Condo. VAL D'ISERE $200 'W JuJy li t. m-5094 or l '= 1 BR . .$150-J170 . B~Of., 1·2 & 3 BR'1 Grant & Seu;hore). S300 ?.to. d A
l'itonticello Townhoust&. turn Si"ICle-J br-1 br. Furn.-unf. (213) TH l).3427 lftif.inelllded. N.O PETS . 1m Santa Ana Ave, C.M. Yl".ly. (1) 776-7015 day1, 1 & 2 8 rm. pts. ·or unf 673-64.&t 2 BR 1 'I A Ill r:i" >:'-'A" "A" ...,A, Adult Lhtfn~ · · Sauna, Act'y Rm. Billiards urn •PL View Df Bay ' Adult living in a ., gr, pt , ~ .....,..,..,, eves.· •
3.BPnn· Kids OK llliO. month. 'J'herapy & 4;.• JJ90l BBQs & ~~· $W . .Mtu 6P1'f, J\fetiiterraoean Atrnosphert JIONEYAfOON view apt. [);sh~~~' ~ co~1.:~dinat·
236 camellia 4,ne 645-3570 ~ 'Pano~ ;Rd: • 64UG70 ,. .... -=!~'-"~· ------Bit-ins, shag erptl 'drpa.. ~ .ORLWI' s·.· APTS. •• ell'J'.ant ca.rpeting. 2 Wnns, ed appliances -p~U!h: .aha..& _ 2 BR tum & ll.Pl11r..n Otaae M~~e/~L . r~lici. ga,rage $2-s·o. N9~po·-·r.t affch . :_mo c-~--. •ioo ·· .... r::KH-1'(:.:.-.:. d. 2'J. ---'· J..l't · ......... ··• ...... :-vu . -• ..• dul···~;;.··· a4&-0~ .· ·-. '.. ciµ'flet-. chot~e of :i·coJor -•• .__ -,. •~.1.1.,, """""·· ~-bll.nl!i, .. --""_...... ----c'H"OI i.. ·..._~u.o" an._,,. ~" -5':hemes .:. ··2. baths !.~ •all -~-_,,.....;,_.:...;-'1-: .. *-: .. --:s-::H.;:".ll ~lly:--'-' -'.,.,.l,·\iO.llo)1~:PJt;>nH~C CLE"AN.C"iri&r,;;/t ;,.:lil\ ~--av • ~ y. :CONDO. 2 B•. 2'.I ba .. fpl. ,,,...,.. -•. mim>red war<f·
8 /B . Ul111 * fUIUi' .. w/ . .uµJ. ~e~or dUplP• ilpt. W/1l'fta.e!ittd ·11.u Tustin Cnsta !Ile . Dbl. gar. Adults. $240 r-.10. 1'9~ doort. indlreCt IJght·
Adults Onlj irpf. Avail,,AprU.lst.1137.50. g.i.rati!r:.· nr'<'PtillRa~i!·s·· &. ~fir. Mrs. ·Ca.Nern ~ ·P'ontn, R.ea!Wr &t2-5000 1ng In kitcben • breakfaat
3,en.. 2 balhl. split level $26.l * ACRES * 1525 P!ac:pua.:.NB · ·\ Newport. 1 chUtt OKr~o · ' ' · · DELUXE-2 Br, \Vestclill loc. bar • huge piivate fenced
2-BR. 2 beth." .......... $225 W/FRNT-3Ml Finley, lower. pet&. -~9691642-:U~f-Pool & bll·ins. Adults. $200 patio -plush lanuscaplng -
. AVAILABLE NOW 2 hr, I ba, :yrly. ;z7j, 2045 Tustin (Bl,.. ·Large 2 F. v·11 At no lse. 642.67'14 brickBar·B·Q's .larpheat.
B•y. llooch "'ally, 1"'· * Motel-Apts * "''"'"· '33'1134. BR-.. Pafo, gu, ''"· doi>o, .ai.rway I a p s SPACIOUS 3 B' 2 Ba C•pl•. od pool• • i.,.1. 90J Dover Dr. SUite 126 NB 1BDRM ·apt,1 blk to ba.y &: blt-ins &-.Ia.unary -irea. drps. trplc, blt·in5, l blk to 3101 So. Bristol St.
645-2000 EYes. 54S-ro66 beach. iu:; mo-yearly: Avail immcd. 64f>..438G Near Ofange Co. Airpori & beach $7T.i. 646-4391 (~~ 1.Il. N. of So. Coa:rt Plaza)
DUPLEX 3 Br. 2 Ba. nr. l signal So. of O.C. 675"2!t39 . NE\V dhr .. 1 A-2 BR. ~Shag UCJ. Adult11 only. 20122 ========= Santa Ana
ocean. lll) r-.10. No pe ts. ShMli:'&TS::...,., crpl.', drps, bttlns. ·.lmmed santa Ana Ave. 545-3894 ~ack Bay. 5240 PHONE : 557-8200
Richardson Rlty, UU E. Coron• d•I M.r 4UO occupy: $160-SlBO, 540-1'73, I ~~~~~~~~~!'I CGut Hwy.; .eorona-.:del ·$l2WKt &.UP 54s:2321. . LARGE2BR,Jl,JBAll'tudio VIE\V. 2 BR. Carpets,
l\far. 67:H031 · 'Dery,~~. , Mowt~ \VANTS To suJ>.leue Furn. 1 apt. Crpllli, d .... s. !ltlve, ·~rapes. BuUt·irus. POOi. $16.5. LUXURIOUS Z Br, 1~2: Ba. '" * 673-3690 rREHSLY painted 3 Br, 2 e Kitchens t. TV's irrcl, Br. apt immedia.tely. Leav. Cri>tS; drJis, 'GE latch., JllL· .patio. Childi-ea ok;. ·no pets.
Ba Duplex nr heh. Nu cpts. •Phone serv .. btd p:iol ing litate. Conl'I Breakfut, tio; -:nel gal-, nr. b~_$15D -ll4j: 726 Joann St. See Sun.
Bltns. l250 ·mo l•a·ge, • r-.ta.id serviee avail. Tenhj1, Pool. 644-:5!19 dul 120 -1..aot call 14i l.:j84 e"~ Jorl iCiioiio~oiiniiaiidiii1iilii.Mm•iiriiiiii5ii25iiiO «• ~n ll" w~T llVD. a ts. E. 20th st. appt. , . ~·.. ,.. ns_..._ LRG. Single Bacrn!lor. So; or
COUNTRY Club LiY\rJ&. 3 Br . 541-'755 H~'>'· Prlv. No cooking. 'llj $:.;: ~l:~~~~~:s: VI tLA MESA APTS.
2 Ba. 2 pool&, 1ardens. $325 CASA de ORO •:0"="='='"'=1=·='=7H004====o= stvmr,,.i:qct ,pano.-wam 2 BR untu~n. pri pa.tios, htd mo. Back Bay nr. S.A. Casual Calif. Livint in wmp I. OK. 22.W.A Slate, 642-7472. pool. 2 car encl1 gar~ OtiJ.
country club. Bia. 675-60« 1.lt'd .. atmosp~. Spacious B•lboa 4300 •DELUXE 1 & l ·BR Garden dren \velcolne, no p el 1 DEL,~r T ~ ... 2 B 2 Jo rd' t·• l plea.Se! $160 also furn S185. "'AL ownuu-.: r, CO r CO • O Ina o:u ap S, l'ilAGNltICENT .VIE\V Apl!. Bll·ill!i, priv patio, n9 \V. \VUson 640-1251
Ba,• frplc, pool •• $250 . Designed ~ turn. f'o:r ·B8.yfront l ··br, pa.lio, gar. heated pool, frplc. Adult!
Baytront apt $Jj(). ~L s~le &:. comfort. * Pvt pa. \}Iii paid. Couple. 'ti! June. $145 mo. 546-5163 2 BR Unh1rn. Newly dee.
-646-41132 llo * :S.B-Q * Shaa:. cpts 27th. 117;) mo. Or avail )Tly. "sP~A~C~l~O~U~S~2~b-,.-b~l-l-o-·.,,-, I New crpls, & drps. Spac.
TOWNHOUSE. Pool. Sauna. * Gar. w/ storage * Huted 673.-fintO. 9:13 E. Balboa \Yfw crpl, drp:s. Priv. patio. ground5. Adlls, no pct.s. $140
1Di> Dover. 2 BR. 21~ BA. pool * Kitchen w/ indirect Blvd. Sl·IO. E\.'es &. wk n .:J s, mo. 2283 Fountain \Vay E.
$240 mo. \\lasher!~. llghti"K, de.luxe oven & ========= 646-6ll2. !Harbor, lnrn \'/. o f
Vacant. Bkr. 675--6044 range. I BDRM. l115 incl. Lido Isle 4351 ==~=~-~~-\\'ilson), \\'ilson Gardens
\VESTI:LIFF _ 3 hr, 2 ba. ulil. 2 BDR?.I. $195 incl. util. DECORATOR Apt.; 2 Br. &: .Ap!~.
house on quiet &t. Av&il on Adu lts, no pets. 365 \V. \Vil· ATTRACTI VELY furn. l Br. sundeck: bll·in Tange & 3 Br. 2 B11. nu Shli:
son St 64Z-19TI 1· b"·" · · refrig. S~ · UllI. paid 1 /d • ·"' • yrly lse$350mo .. Rrfer req. · · pa 10, ...,.ront, VJ!:W, im· . c rp s rp s. rre,,.uy
Cail 548-1698, 5-7PM. *WINTER· RATES med. occup., 'lil June Dr Ba1boa Bay f'n!p. 673-Z4:Z0 painted. Nt CX::C. Upstrs.
raE BLUF"FS 3 Br., l ~t ba .. if tena.nt ~a~~ thru .awn· lease thru '"'aummer & 2 BR. Crpti, drps. carport, . 5S7-6G1
Pools, Nr achls &: &hoR'a. mer-no. raise ~-rents.·.l ,aR ··• '=""='=",,·='=73-JOOO=""==== pool, _2 kids ok. 2Zl4 College, E·SIDE lrg l Br, cpfs. dl'Pf,
ll75. 644-2-432. furn $130, .tudlOS $1l!i. ~ "'!' • Apt 2, 646--0621 bltns, patio, gar. Adults on-;';::;:::::;;::";::;:-:--;:;;;!.!El~"'~n.;.,c.~r.,;s..~~M~gJ"~A~pt!_:6!;_. H~tington· &each +tOO 2 BR. bltns, · ci'pis, closed · lY. ro pets. l 135.646-I162 •
Unlv1r1ify Park 3237 SUS ·cASITAS .NElV _l BR·blk to bellch. garage. Atatun! aduJlll qnly, SHAfiP! Luge 1 BR, crpls. -------1.-FUm. l. &R-::Apts. ~duJ.fJ $1j(I. Pli patio • QUIET! $l30 mo. 54M$73 or 548-2884 . drps, blt·ins. Quiet bldg.
2 ~R. 2 balhs ........ S250 only, no -~· fl.10 Newport G~. single adlta. coup.le. l l.fO 2 BR upper. U!ll furn. Adul\s. ll30. ~7-2682
2 BR. 2 bath5 ,,,,.,., $775 Blvd, CM, ~ _.202.:A. .l.ilh. 536:.13.19. 67:J.:1784 AYall imtnl'd. NO kid.I, no DEWXE 2 BR studio, crpts,
3 BR. 2 bal)Js ........ $29;; MERRIMAC WOODS LRG Bachelor. Util pd, Nr. 5 pets. 6"2-337S drp5, pool. lmmac.. 1 chUd ~J BR + bonus rm · • · • 3340 FUrn ~Its avail,. 5ee Id'~ poln.15. Maturt, single adult 1 BR Sl30. 2 Br wllencr:d <>k. Call 6-16--0496 .
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ON TEN ACRES
1 & 2 BR. Furn &: Ul'lfum
Fireplace& I priY, patics I
Poob. Tennla • Contnt'l Bkfst,
900 Sea Lane, CdM 6ff..26ll
/MacArthur nr. ~st Rwy)
2 BR Oupl~x apt w/ garage.
View. Czi>ls, drps, clsh•11hr,
laun. f11.c. CaJI e\'es I wknds
673-3687
2 BR. ?>Iarguerlte, So. of
Hwy. ll80 mo. No children. * 6"Z-7898 *
"BACHELOR Apt.. no cook·
\lrig. $100 utilities included.
673-2581
Balboa Island 5355
SPAC 2 Br: frpl, gar, crpls.
drps. stove. $270 yrly inc.
utll. 615-6017 eves & \Yknds
Laguh1 Beach 5705
'l·BR. Apt. Unlurn. ·
do"'nlown. Leai;e .... $175
:Z.BR Apt unfurn.1 good lo-
IDCation •..•.......•.•. $:21X>
l·BR tumlshed duplex, frpl..
oct'an view ...... , . • • Sl.50
1'11SfilON REAL TY 49f.0731
100 CLIFF DRIVE
ll7Q..l BR. 11,i BA. $185-2 Br,
1 ~2: BA. Crpts, drps, bltinl!..
View of ocean. \Valking dis·
tanee to town. Also turn.
Bachelor, very larae $170.
4!J4.:Z.t49 or 49~·5303.
Capistrano Beach 5730
3 Bedrm. 2 b a I h deluxe
ocean \'i e-.Y. Pall~;idcl!. $2:25
n10. Davis.'°n Realty 496·9.152
REAL ESTATE
General
Rentals Wanted 59t0
l'iUDDL.E·agc executive w/8
yr old :;on, wishes rancb. a-
cstate guest house. S:Ome
duties considered. 646-371 6
THE QU1CKER YOU CALL,
11 1~ QUICKER YOU SELL : =~ !,,ba~hsh • ····•·• ~~ der di,. .S)OQ. (2j MtJTi. onty. $97.50. 842-2219, Ref. It patio lJ50. Crpts, Jfl'l>S I: bit·
,.1.11 1 5 •••••• -mae ·w.,~568300 -cleAn'i dep rtq'd. ins 6(2....7219 eves A wlmds.
3 BR. 7~) b.aths •....• $323 ,.,,,. """'"'"'"'. ,....."""='--,-·I-:-:-~='==-'-,.-~-B "'
. Qenera1 4000G1neral 4000 Gtner1I 4000
e RED l{lLL REALTY LRG Bae~. ,Opts:, dt;ps, a..BACHELOR Apt, I mi $130. 2 R upper. o.stns,
Univ. Pa.rk Center, Jrvlrie bltns. nicely fl.Im. Nr oec. Imm heh. Gas & wlr pd. crpls &:. drpli; ·No pets. 568
Call Anytime m.o820 $118 incl-vtU; 288S 1.fendoia. $00. \V, \Vil.son.SL 545--0760 =======0:--·1 ~. ~. MS..2957 QUIET AREA • Beaut. lrg l
Coron• d1i Mir 3250 SHARP BachelOI' unit. CIOl!ie PARTLY fprn\1bed 2 Bl'. 2 BR ap.t~ 998 El Camino Dr.,
_ to OCC &: UCI. $133 pays Ba &pt., dlsh~aiher. patio, C~f. -MS-0451, 6.17-9.">8.>
U:ASE OR LEAsE OPTION aU. Refert.J'l:ce& required. brand· new .• Be1.ch Blvd. &: DELUXE, ll U 111 -1n 1.
GQrgeoUg & channJna: 3 AVll.U 211170. 545-4879 · . Jtdingtt, .842-1062 Carpeted. Pa.tio. extras.
Bedroom hOme • beamed .e NASS.W PALMS e F~ Ulll·fum. 1 & 2 Bdrm $155 &: last. 646-4760, n:peat.
ceillngs thruout -sparkll~ 1 Ii 2 BR. POOL apt5. Near bN.ch....$125 up, LARGE l BR. elec built·lns,
healed & flllel'f!d pool -171 E. 22nd St. 641-30(3 5.16-lm or ~7282 ci:-ets! drps. ~r occ. $123.
minimum upkeep ya rd . $90 &: Up. 1 4': 2 BR. Trlr. l33 No pets. 5:40-9680
Le11st $350 mo. C • 11 E. 161h St, Sp 41. cr.t. La gun• Beach 4705 I BR. No childl?n or pels.
545-.8424, Sooth Cout Real 6(26126.j . 111'.E NEW VIU.AGE INN Garage. ~I~ poot Crpts,
.Dilate TRAILER -2 BR. $120 adulls Fonnerly Saddlehack Jon, drps. 642-8042
Sll lARI p ',,Br. home; ubullnusuall only. Bachelor trailer $60. Laguna, from $M. a ~·~k. SPUT ~~I 2 BR. Ct'!)!&,
f'JI .: n. &IT&; I· n Call' 646-1809 642-33i3. Urvtly· •p1s, All utll'• d bt•~ ..,6 """"' kitchen: nice patio. ~-~~--"-· -'-'~,;....-.... rps.. u 11t. p v •pct.&. ..io.i Scenic Prnptrtik 67.>J726 $1M &1111. '.f\lrn 2·BR ex· linens', me.kl, pool, laundry r-.lf'ndou.. ~l
pando lofob. Hm. 13.3 E.1'tti rm. S:eps to be:ach. 696 S. BACHELOR .r-· ,.._ .. 2 BR. 1 Ba. unfurn. houst. St. •-10, ~,.·., ..... ..._.~ Coa11 'Hwy, mM36 · ---5 '_.1,. ...., id_&, .,.. ..... vu uw ' drpg, bltns. No pets. ·28S.5 Redtt. So. of hwy. $175 l\1o. 2 BR 2 BA. t llo 'I ••• .,. u1 BO\'J) REALTY 6~ l BR furn A untam, c1rp1. JW pa , "euuoU. ~ 1 ======='==I w/w crpta, pool, pvt b&l. . pragr, c~ Joe. S185 $125. 2 B~. ?if_?:ie~ -~·
untlngt9" h•ch :MOO ~ atlt.r 3.Pm ~;tt~· 5.18-209.l morns Patlo,:gu ~quiet mA.tul'e
---------FURN. 3 Room. Apt. Adult. adults. No pets .. ~·
3 BR, 2 BA, Crpts l Drps. 'N.o IM'11• S7S a mo. 240 Hotelt . ~ 4975 SPLrr Level I; ~~ CfP_tl.
Th.ftruc:hoot. Lrt fe nced yd. Sitric.s St., C.M. -·drpt1. bltnl. No.--pets. 2S&S
Spotleu. $ZU LeaH. Call 1 BR, new, beaut turn mo. to Lld,o 51,orta Hotel Mertdoia. 54>542.1.
, 84MJ2S6 mo. l160. AdultJ only 22229 Bayfront k1tchenette ~ultes 81JSIESr marjtelplace J n
Pl..ANNJNG to mo\itT You'll Elden, 646-53112 t\'tA. lrom ·$235 mo. Sulttt &. '°'"'ll. The, bAILY PILOT
find an amal.!111 number of LARGE 1 BR in Four-plex, rooms by d'.y or week. mOney, time r. enort. Look
home& trr tod&.y's t11&111Nd 1ara.re. watfr 'Pllid· $12$. Phq"'' maid, cofrt~. ice. Cla.ulf\ed Mction: s a, v i!
Ada, Check them flO'i", s.g..1511 51tUt1o i'tr1c .Dt. ~ now!!!
S@~JUlA-&£tfS&
~ Th.e· l'uutt· wif/r -,,,., Bui/I.Jn Chuckle
~O ~:"".C:m~Pfel!~ =: "';;D;~~5~,_,..-...., low to f°' four · al"'Plit wordt. • ·
.N l"M e:u M
I '
INAYHE ' I t I I
. . ' j. .JlJNT NUMl£1t[0
t -T S 1N': SQll ltES
-~~~~ (
0 '1 I I I I I I I I
SCRAMLETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7900
.... ~~-~-----~-----.......... ......,...,.......,---.. .. ......,...,..,,~=::::~-------;--· &££_ @ 1 g a s ,; ; e < • •e a --...
RIAL ESTAT E RI AL l!STt.TE. , ' Rl!AL EST"TI
0-rol 0.norol -~•t *.
Rontol1 W1ntod .5'90. Oiflc; Rontol illll .. C""""r~iat i1t1.1
--• w••t o __ ... Old tw.. • • -~Olmm )Ot..Br11i:i "'-•~r-, .,~ _, LAGUNA BEACH ~.o..J ·-.• " -· oq tt. want 10 rent 3 bedroom ___ "' ~--~· .. ..-
bou1< w/yaM l ranae BoUI Air Conah'-d ,., I w 1 .. •
"""'""· O\lld In ~bool. ON FOREST AVENUE an a •tt• •tt
Hu.band samfi job _1--~llJ'I, ~ ~ce •= = .. · -' 6'U56Q q:e-38, -wife Tr. NO mor1 location In dowbtow
than m5 pr_r mo. W,!11 take ~-Beach. Air cond~ lncfu1t(&.I Rental 6090 leue option . w/rental ~ ... -+uni
-pa.grMnta t})pl,Ylns to.down -~. qg;ie1'if, beJ.Y~e -=-'"-'"'re.-T.1.'Y BLJ>ds ,. •• 1 ~~·.:.•J:.~. entrances• F)'op~ on •• ~ ... .,...,.,~ ·
pa,ymenL _.1 ~" evea Forest A..:e:. reir lead• to 1WO ~ gq fl bldJ:• with
& \\'kenps.. MunclpaJ parking lob. 150 alr cond. offlce1 $225 1no. 1 .~
PROFESSOR & family <>I 2 pu·<U'IODtb for IJ)llct, Oftdt each. 1 1~ alt cond. oltlce Whaddyl Wint? W~I qo~l
children conlin&: to Jtvln for and cbaln·••illi!.ble for $5. $100 mo. 1 lge fenced · SPECIA.t. ··cLA.SSIFICATION FOR
* ',. .. ---
-=-·-•
When You
Wont it done
right ••
Call one-of
the experts
listed below/!
SabbaUcal lea Ye in late 11um. ,Business hours answcril>i: storage yard $150' mo. 1.1 a •'• L :.pf'•ltS
mer d<1iru "'mtortably 1CMct available f« llO. 847-tm or 536-<655. .,,. Tv!!A5p!?.~Ntt.S:~ "< · S!RVIC "·lilRICf~Y SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRIC. ORY
''""· houoo '" N•WJ>QJ'l or !JI ulllitlec paid .xcepl RENT >M, 1125 oq. lf 1120 5 u-_.5 tlmoo ~·s' bucks Babyalttlnt . _ '55' C'••"'' ~l•onlltfl U2S lnco,,,. Tox 6740 Laguna Beach areas late fFltphone. mo. J355 U>can, CM . •'"•• ,.. u-C<UDI
Aug, thru June. 1'1in. of 2 DAILY Prt.ar 67>sll6 ........, .,.. 11twv';. trM., M ·a.J:. ... yw ...,.. "' .,.._ . ·• . . . TAX SERVICE Jn yiMr.
Br's pool prcfd. Call 2n FOR.Ert AVENUE .:======::::;=;-! l:--'!'.CM,111 ,"°"' •Ml• ...,,.._ •""' .,... . ., .._.... FORMJm ~\ll'Se Will 11~ ·A-OK Shampoo Special $7.50 home J'ut I: eftlclt.nt' &U-2oo1 LAGUNA BEAOf L~s ,100 ~OT_H1teo Foa IAL•-1Tuo11 Pfl~VI •.} \IODll lovinc -ant· to your nn/le.u fer balls. etc. Abo · SU--0502 * ·
49-1-946& -u1 To Pi1c~ . .Y..,.-t radlr 1 Parldf .. ""· child while you work. 111lop comp. itioutecln'g 871.m:I I===*===-====~ 2 WORJ(JN,G girie. lookisw for ' PHONE 642-5671 eau 2 .hr. apartment_ la Newport, IMMEDIATE' Occilpancy. 3 EMERAID 8'1" .. Ready lo -• -'. . . ;ort No. ~·.C.M. ana. ' lronlnt •7S5
YEARLY, prefer furnished. rully carpeted , air-con-buUcf. 'Fabuloul view of H@dre ·agahnt-·inllation Trade dw; ,83 Chevy sia. ~7-•' Dr;Yw•ll 6631.
(Will take UDfurniahed dltioned office areas Laguna anc1 · b~ac.hes. Trd for me ·,or boat 5 ft...1 Wagon. R.IH,•tlnled 1lass. BAB'YSI1:1'.1N,G: .qefn. l·IRO--N-IN_G_l_n_m_y_ ..... --.-.,
w/re:lrig) to $160. Responsi· .&Yailable oow ~ ~ E. $47,500. -The .Rea1 Estaten view :lobf. ·Heart of 'Orne elec. 'Aindow, re:gul.rly aer-~e. CJ.t. area •. Fenced •-DUDDY Drywall Co, Hr. Dttsa:maldn& • altt'ri:
ble, haYe re:Jerel'ICt'fl Pleu.e Pac. Coast Hwy. in Corona 6:}6.-7171 ~tr. ~-'25M.: ~ ®ick vice for 2nd T.D. or ? yd. Wkdayt. Wknda, _ evu IJc'd Contractor. Larp or Uons. M>-1&4l
call after 6 . &1().8J)8. del Mar. 4,410 &Q . ft-ranging NEWBORT OCEAN VlEW. on this. 8J6.6l).tO 712-!l921>. 646-8226 • Wtllan. n.!-eL Cal1 ~5. Small Jo!:lf, Ph. 847-9581 1--'"-'.;...,-----
2 BR. It den or 3 Br. un{utn. from 1000 to 1720 sq. fl. 7,.ontd 30 1Jnit&. OW!ter. Call 18• ~~h. dbl · plank utll , ~ ~T-' VERY Rellabh?w;ttier·of 2 1..1.1..~ Landscaping 6110
Clol'ie to water. Re11ponslble From $450 .to $n4-.per mo. -548-1106 boat I@ t'lp"•grb.;.'FW restrd 68 JetP""i .. •. VJU. hubs, Ric wants bab)'1fltlng. My tlome. FloO,. -..
11.dults w/oite d" u & ht e' r . Area cao be JUb-<ilvided lo 132'x300' ~Kie. tlli 26 m'lni cond.,~ val-1i~. For H, rollbar. a-rtms, pos~ -P.ttrer ln!inl'to 3 fri: Call ·• Lit U1 T•_l_k-:T:-o-Y-ou-. -:-.I· ~uit ten'ant.·644--9. 161 for.in-'""' trac;:. -$2400 ~ Trade tic,...,.,., • . V TILE R'efer. Need by June 25 or ·1otmaHon:. . unill. Sub. Aak!na $U,1SO. kit or-'!' At m&Mna; Lldo $140(! ~ty filttvW Bus or <&.E:V_,· -~ . • • ~-· , CARJ?F;I' INYL We do the meet unusual Lanct-
lmmed ., i1 .\n Oll'ot school ~~~~~~~ri::~ A.gent. 64~00 shorn H<>tel, 617 Udo Pk ?! 642-4826 BABYSITTING J'4Y home1 , l'ree. tstifttate Lie, Contr. 5Cape creations in the coon.
dist. Pay $200 or more on ?JFJo·iCES For. lea.se-Limited R...4 _Costa Mesa. Build pr, NB.. day or nl~. !Jltants OK' .. 540-7262 5'6-4473 ty. OUr price ls small com-
lea5e, 6r:>-'1!58 il bl . ~ ltul 40 Unill..,,Phil Sullivan, 31, •··i. Off •bore llal . ..__ 6-2BR'~UnitS . &: ·poor'$67M Fenced )Id;. wann food. .4!.4!-,.,,_d -"'th'nnaJlty. space ava a e in ..,.auf .-....~m.,;,,,11or . .,_ -DUG ~ W 1: SUM lOish tlMwnable 642-5299 -Ga~~anlng -...-~ .,.1 .,,,. SINGLE girl Wants to share Huntltigton . H"rbour. Con-vw1....-, • ._. ---·1u1:1L Island mooring. inel. -No • Sf0.9601 e ·'
Mme. in N.B. Hu 1mall ta.ct RMS Bartl e t t I ========.=,=200= I rental fee. Valu s19,ooo. ~6, !!'~~ ~ ... ~ .. ~CMM ~z MOTHER 'Of1 2 W.ill bab)'llil ·-~-·----P'nlrfttw. LandlCllpilJI It
<log. 10uSe must have fenc-714/846--1361. Acreage Trad f ., \Vill ·. "'~},·· ~u: .... · wkdays l'J\f ''home. Pre!er · ANTHONrS Plantin1.
ed yard. 642-n82 · •tluntington Harixiur _Corp. flnan~:~2431 :-assume. Agt. M9-0218 anytime, pre-cchooler , ·-'MeSa Verde ____ ..;.,. __ ~
•. LANDLORDS e 4)41 \Varner Ave, HB 'D · mi l~ve 9ru_ndlg ~(ereo Con-.. ~a. Call 519-:l~l
1
• 644 4160 . Painting,.
FREE REl'.l't. . :AL SERvtCE yna C Trade. ·3000 sq ~t tran Yer-sole With •nlomallc stereo BABYSITTING N' ·cloan · De-.... ftbl M 1 P•perhangfnt ··-HUNTINGTON BE 'CH Oran.,·e CoURtvl nando Valley brime 5 ~r. 3 tape .~...vi, vaJue. .\;van( vw . 1 • u;e . . ~. e . a n_te~ -· . J:_J~ker 5.'W-6982 ~ '3 _,,, 1 • · ' .,...,.., b''.:. ·..o,,;_ b. 1 home C.t.f. arta.·Fen~'Yd. Exi>etjenctd·Prilning·
Air Conditioned This 600 acre ,parcel is des-~,;! ~::: i;'~ '= :rm~~., -....;c or , i · Hr. day er wk. 551~· Planting EMPLOYED Genl. Wants
room or apt in N.B. atta.
Will 11Mre. Call 545-0860
ON llACH ILVD. ti~· to appre:!ale comid. property. 3464614 . ·· . · ·. BEST care tor :your::tnta.nt --&diet LandlJcaplng ~'!st '':tifce ·~~k· !~ erabJy from ltJ price or $2500 ,69 . . $20,CNXI + 112.00'.l equity 1n oay or Mlt\L 566 Hamiltoii e Horticulturist e
prime location In Hunting-Per acre. Close proximity N~w F\rebird, only~ Condo, l05.5 DoYer, fl{eed Fr St., No. 8, C.t.1. &U-2764 NE\V Jawns..re-se•dlng . 2 BR & GARAGE.
AVERAGE 1 laiory eiiterlor
$258. 2 ,..,, -$359.
Bomls SOO:J Blue O:ilpa;.
Intmor ~ &.'V &·ll . "1.filllt
• w.m. 1100
ALAS1'1' TRAVEL
AND, TRADE ,AIR
Want.d: rr. blrt, at 13.00 ...
hour "'t, J: attn.dive &lld
i-reonable P,l• to warlc In
the "Kttcblkan", Aluka Dl·
hlblL> -I""-'. ,.,.,,.
per dty. Contact: Glen W.
Mood &t the ~·Newportet
Inn" March 9fh af'tv 1 P:fwf.
or ita.v. mesaap on ~
10th or Uth.
Newport Beach. 1101 Jam~
bore< Rood.· (TIC) 644-11!)0.
Applicants, fem~
URGEN,T~Y
NEEDED : * Socretary * Girl 1'rlday * TypbVSmior * Typla:tJ.Cleric
SERVICE CENTER
Employment Agency
500 Newport CenteT I>t., NJ
Suite ~ By Appt. ~
AUDITOR. re:H~t ,nia:hVcufi.
fer. Exp'd only. NCR -4~.
Good pay. fftnp bene!its.
Ni-wporter 'rnh.' ' •
BABYsmER Needed by
11ehoof ·t~cher, ~ home.
10:30-4 PM. 1 chUd. Matin
laey. Balboa P•nln. ~·
6'Z>23J9'att.4PM
BABYSITI'ER Wanted for U
mo. boy, 7:J0..3, my mn,..
Must havt own trans. VI<:
Meaa de! Mar, CM. 5f9..Bl
ton Be.ch. Air ccnditio~ to freewa,ys le centers ot.ac-m1. p/11, p/b, air, stereo 1 t units, prefet Cos t a _...;,,....._, ......_ 1 1 •·--Cl ~ livlty. FUlJ price U,SOO,CNXI tape deck, low eqty, For fl.Iesa.. · BABYS1111.r1G ......... pee <aWn care. ean :;:u~ Be~~:fVd_;r:; with terms available. f'rin-car, furnltutt, '!' Bkr. 67s:&J.W Adult. Evenings&: Weekends: up ~ job or month.. Free I========== I prl kin ,, .•••• only,~ •••• For more 6f6.3369 CaJI SID-6654, estimates. For lnfo call
Unfurnished. ·About $13ll.
·• 64~2995 .
BABYSmER I Ho~I * Palntina:·Pa~ er, 2 chlldttn ~·A:·-4, own
Rooms for Rent 5995 leads to vate par a _.... n::~ Have SU.000 invested in V\V 897-Ul;T oi: M6-0!l32
Interlor--Exterior tnnsp. Call 968.1'20,Uterft
Sped'.81 , Prices on Paper BABYSfITER, Llft.:.hl, •It
1 __________ 1lot, $50 per month for information., please call (I) 2 Bedroom unit&, small gar, ism parts house&. 1118• DEPEND~LE
PREF.ER te "· r •lud•ot 11pace. Desk ana chatn Eckhoff I.· Asaoc., Inc. ...._, .• -nt•r. bou··. du-chi .... shop on Newnnrt, Clol. BABYSfITING. bf\'. .HOfi!E. . GARDENING . acucr 0 • available for $5. SU&ineM °'"'JI '-"' = ,,... .. ,... O y DAY \"EEKLY "'--.... _ . .._ I -'"
Coil Lui>.~ ......... ,,,.. -box.
YOU supply the paint.-Aplll 6U-.3041 alt 6 CM, turn1shed room It bath. priv .hours aruiwering service 181ll W. Chapman Ave. plex. vacant. Want vacant Trade for mt acres. 911 H URL • • ·• • '''"'s. Snn.i ..... , \IY remO\IC'Q.
patio, nr Harbor &: Adams, aya.ilable for $10. All utlll· _ Ora.DP", Calif. for trlr. park any area or ? PonChe. 548-1814 Bill Acker R~NABLE RATES. New la\\na..Rototilllna. Free
Cl\t. $15 mo Incl laundry, ties paid except telephone. stl-2621, Eves-wlmds S38-59T1 Fannie Prke rutr, 543-3209 642-0037, C.M. &-side e!t. 5t&-89is
&: motels p&inl:ed' -SlO "e~E-.-UTY=-. ~O~P~E=R-.-T=o~R~S
averg. rm. Call-anytime Pal wanted, with cUentele oniJ'.
the Painter, M7--86.13 Hw;atlngton Beach~ Lquna kit. privl. Resp. pen;on on· DAILY PILOT HAVE: 2.BR, ~-BA Con---·---J 'AP=AN"°"E°'SE=-:c'°a"r:-d,-o"n"l"n"'r
ly 540-4187 17175 IEACH ILVD. 10 Acre• ntar large Jake. Owner JtlO\ling-Ttade "$20,000 do. \Vestcliff an!a. $36,500. BNt M1inten..,ce 6555 S• r v ice. •. Nea.t work.
• HUNTINGTON IEACH Must Kill $100 dn. takto eq. In, 7 centrally loc oldtt Equity .$15,500. Want: lofo. -· _ • CleaP-up & yard malnt.
ROOl\1 Jn priv. home. l(itch '42-4121 over S25·P'r mo. 894-47.U units, Whittiin-. Val. 6 tim· 101' ho~. desert home, ?'!' '_Enjoy ·Y~', &o.t . 968-2303
&. '"mdry pnv.il. Lady Modern Offic-. •-~ .... •Coin•'""'Mmne """""' .....,====-,......,.::::: only. $40 mo~ Mesa Verde •• -es income. Want: property ~tyen '»:<''"°' · · echarile&l·De trial '' AL'S '-"G~ • Lawn AVERAGE exterior •$127.50
INT It. E:xt Paintin&. Free area. E11tabJ~ 'buslM:~
est1. Loe refs~ 30 yrs exp. exp.indina. 60, 65 and M"
Llc. II:• insrd. Call Clii.ick comm ahd other benefi~.
645-0809 or Jlm 54s.M05 Call Manager 6~'Tl.59 -~
area. 549--1827 $'15 single, $1'15 2 rm suite. Ruort Property 6205 Newport lll'H. l·2l3-693-Sl8S . , ~toms-in or ou~ w~ter 1 Malrlte~. Co~ labor' only. ~Interior prices
NICE' room -pleu:ant hm, Air cond. Sect'y ~rvi('e, CANYON LAKE: Vw lot by Sofa , 76", brand. ~ •. for '6:1 Pontiac: Grand Prix, Vanl!Sh-Painling I . . :A realdtirtlal. aYall &lao-. 548-1546 &
gd loc. KU. prlv. $50. parking, centrally located. ownr, $Q)() dn, b&l $102 mo. fruck, car, color n: or 1' trade $1000 equity-tor. old-FibergtQJ"~I. ·' .,. · ...-.'*5'.._!629 * · 6'6--3185.
548-5993, wkdys 8 :30-4, So.CaliflstNat Bk,Bldg. lnclinter6'5.9!)l.380leves. 548~ ercar. ··.F'ibt>ri\l:ll{Re~~. i•JAPl\&fSt7Gardener, S1JRBURBANPainters/
673-0289 · Costa Mesa · 642-1485 6:00-7:30 nights. •· 546.p:i( +.· Call .~kn. $@-1021 txll'..~.::.C&.rnpl. yd, ltJ'V· Decor. We~ take " the pain
SIS Per WR UP w/ki1cbe:n CORONA DELMAR ·R.E. Exch1nge ftlO Alld!i.Y .Su.qday. SAN etEMENTE ·ru Jot . C.Ortimt.-"30 yrs exp . outotpa.lntifla:.®'pertwork.
$30 WK UP Apts_ 2376. New-Deluxe 11Uile1 aYailable, rang. 4 'BR l 'IOO HOME 45x102 Trade equity for fat! Brick, Matonty, Relliblt.·MM3&9 Free est. 494-3100
port Blvd. 548-9755. lng from 550 gq ft fo 1720 4 BR, 3 BA Lido lJome. J· BA. Street to 11treet mOOel auto, pick-up· or ?? etc 6560 JlM'S •. Gim:Jenlna: & lawn I p A IN TING-INT/Ext.
PVT. Room, kltch. priY. Nr.
!1st &: Santa Ana A\'e. $17
per \l'k. !\ten only. 64.f>-1294
!IQ tt. 48c per sq. ft. ED Street to 11trttl for apt f 1 bou L'do Pri " 8c-_ •• • bl loan rnalntenance. Rel. tit O'.>D\· J•ck ••• do ... 1 -Mtin( R IDDLE, REALTORS. house on Lido. MJ.-6500 or ap . se <>n 1 • Ya "°'!'~ma e . BR'ICK & CARPENTERY merclal * S14M831 ._.. ...,.. ~· * 64Uooo * N<> time I1m11. 492-S018 ·"-"Ork, pl&nttts. fireplaces, job-fast, clean " very reu!
646-SSll. BUSINESS and 1l * * * * * block wall1, ~ment patio&, JAPANESE Ga r dener, El'if:. SM-3895, 841-1351 .
Corona del Mar FINANCIAL patio roou ~ all .,,.., of ..,. •• ,Comp!. yard '""'"'" • lntorlor. Erurlor • I T I C 5997 !'nle\ettimate. ~ -:u-Iii 12 Mote 1• r r. rtt . Immaculate 2 room suite. Butine11 BUSINESS ind Aflt'NOUNGEMENTS repairs. 492-1928· C()llect. Acoustic ".......,....' P • yn
interview a ppo!Tltment.
BOOKKEEPER • % ar full
time. F~r· construclton A
d~lo~ent QI. Exp thru
trial b&l. Ph. 642-4210 Btwa. 12-3 •
Bt;IY~ 11'-•14 eam.r Rou ... Opaa lnr : •
Lqum s.a.:ti,• So. '-
DAJLY PllDr
142.QZ\
BOYS 13-16. Canvaaa 3 to %
\VEEKL Y rates Sea Lark
Mote.I, 2301 Newport Bl\ld.,
Costa. Misa.
Ground Door. PtiVate bath. _Qpeo_rtunftl11 6_300 FINANCIAL end ~JIC~S ~ BUILD, Remodel, repatt .JAE!-N~E Gard~ne r , exper. State Uc. Pitt.sbura:h
$135 mo. Util pd. Parking. . 'llrick, hk>ck, c!on·crwte, ext>~ COmpl. yard 1m1q. pnll. Ml-1781 BUU.OEJli..lnltalltr, ~·
67U757 Owner. i f~OUS BRAND ~lnHt . . j.._ost _ ·-_ -·· _MDI cirpentry;iio )Ob tooi,nWJ, Free estbtiate. 54&-82:6. CUSTOM Painting. Jntmor. garqe ~ wltool•. ~
PM' A. S&C" to $3 hr •. Need
tranip. lo" etflet:: 541.......__
ltfARINER'a CENTER <·I :HAMii * ~~ OPPortunitf•t .-,,.,6JOO -: .; r 1.: • .,.. :. . DC, "Contr··--··~ --:-962..M ·~. J&plineae maintenance. Exterior. Uc. Bocded. ln!i. work..-..Call 60.-34~
OfficeorStoreBld,:z,.i""' CANDY&SNACKROUTE • ' ' ",;....;...;,;._~· .. )_~;,,:i'-~t(,l "!;"'. " >ti :<i:i...t.. 'H.B.&"F.".'Are:a ''' -~ Won'tbeundet'bid!646-3619 i~~OY * Grawy
.
Guilt ,Homes .;5991 --,,.,_,.,,._,. · · --,.... n~""""'--~"""'~lid<"°"""· e-'• -c. -'"""' 84• ""2 * -7.=:=-:==-<-· :-; "'"' ·•-35 hn 1 ··1se. 149 ltivuside AW. NB. ~~CPXRT'OR rvi...L Tlinc.,. f.~1i~··..-pµ1u tF!tA.i,fE • .iJiatiL°L,)'li.oJd •. N6.eol.Jan 11tone, pl~~n-k entry ·· . ._ U"O't't · i PAINTING ex-per ml 6 aiua""q ... .,. ... ...._ P"RlV""'Ji"'TE""'l<bo"'·"'m.....,.(°'ov"· e"'t°'der""1y 646-2414 . VE~~ Hl~H INCQ!'o1.E ~ J.Hr.~ -aqslntu. · Newr.Jine. •lf'resli)y t;llp~ wlfti ttd wits. 53f-:f913 .. Statt" ~c'd.. GEN'L.-Y'1: ·Clean-up, tree exL r~. ~ nttmat. trl: penon, 562 W. '19
lady. i)1 licensed 1Ue11t borne. COST A r.tesa off:lceS: Ate. We ~ a d111trlbulot In thia:_ xt.m:. e,potei;allal , $1&'1{i" ·F/P •. llOWi · -<ivet" 'each" e ~ r . ---serv. fotO-flll. sPrlkJr~ re-es. Ralph. 49f..3950 i'-"-'-'-,',--,,.-.,....-,rn ~3391 crpts, drp~. Piiking. '1555 ··area for C>ll'r' ca.ndY <Nestle•, -~!Illy rnoyed. 4!J6..2000: N~i1_h~iO<j:r ·s_r0aawa:, .A Cib(netm1kfeJ . 6580 ~ift.'HauJ. Rea90n. 646-~l·REl'l==R"E"o""'Pa=ln°'t•"r-: -,26.,-,.,,yn Cefefw.t. coum.·r Gl1I
Baker, &16-4833 or 548-4757 Pland.t.en., Too1 l>Nte Rolla:11.' .N1llk OUTSTANO~Nd • OJ!??if:u1riity 1'-lagnoflao · Costa M e • a • 0.,.eorn--IAL ,_ Co , J EXPER. Japanese Gardenir. exper. Nut a: honest. Non 10 AM:~2 PM d&ily. Mon thrU Mite. Rentals 5999 Du l!I e c. · o se ing n--, recorded lnformati n * 54~ REWARD''' n.c..:> c.o .. • "' m~ 1 , Yd eo~ I Fre Fri Call 833-0600 ~t XI 1---------NEAR C.M. City Hall. 3 Rm. votYed. We furniAh an ac. or 0 ~ •·• , Cu$tom Ca.binet 1;; Furn. Comp e~e: """""' 9@. e drinker. Call 536-680L · • IY • ,
15.CNXI sq fL Fenced Offices. Paneled, carpet&, counts. You mul'it ha~ 2 to·· .plat 545-0658 Lf?ST: ~ J1!0 old. _le mar~ Furn Re-Flnll'ihing. 64s.:ogg1 . e11t.µnafes. Call 54~1932 . I ~*"'P"AJ=NTIN="'c"'."'i"n>"Ext=-. Loca!O"::~. betwn 3 PM &: 6 PM on •
SI or age yard. Call -drapes. $150. Call 642-6560 8 hrs. per week spare time ·' · \ . , . S1ame11e, Sealpo1nt o n , CLEAN~tJP SPECIALtsr references. lmmed aervlce. CASHIER Driv~ln
(;48-7021 or 642-1121. 600 SQ FT OFC. (daYs er eves). lnv~nMrit. .6,10
3(4170, ~bo\le .!be Arches. Carpentertng '590 Mowing,_~. odd Jo~. MG-5242 EYes. 5-lOPM. Start SJ ..
Garage for Rent: Fully $90 Jloilo. C.M. 646-7130 $1950 TOTAL CASJ~ ;:-opporfun1tle1 " Name Seela • Reward! . . , Rea80nabJe. 548-fi95."i. · E:x 18 hr. Apply ~ person M
·Enclosed. single. Call Sl\.lAU. OU.ice on.busy 00~ REQUIRED $15.000 SECURED by Inwn-M2-2S80 .... CARPEJt.TRY ~ f JO,tlf"ISON:s GARDENING ~~~~· u.!In~ ~ Palact, 84!> \V. 19th Str
OR l-7613 days. n'r: Col'ita Mesa $55/montb _For more Wormatlon . write 1 · Rttttatfona1 Product. LOST· \lie of Bake'r'.t. Men. AUNOR ~AIRS.· Ho Job Yard~ffttt· Clean-ups, Prun-Accouat. G@Ulnp. ~ C.M. ~
utilities inc1u4ed. &42-6560 "Distributor Diviakln No .. J~~· ~turn. 414:·838-8683 dozar . e_r.1. Sl]:tl · f" m. TOC! ~ ,~bioe( ~car-ing, planting. 962-iJJO * PAPERH.AHGING * CLEANING women
ButinMt Rental 6060 23", P.O. Bex 58. Pom<::na, . _· P/Slam@M: ~al wJ. ~flea age1 A .ot o e~ c&Nf!t'-' "*LANDSCAPER* t'd, full or pert Um~ -------2627 NEWPORT BL-VD ., Calif, 91769 . Include.phone ~ .,;. C()nar. 545-752). 51$.&175, It no~ J'a"; . local 5J8..l225 &: PAINTING. * 9&!-2425 ~'1351
lOc SQUARE FT. across from-E1 Rancho no. lnve1t. _wanted 6315 REWARD • Wht Standard nlll at ,~ lL O. U YTI DP· "-'CLE~Rl~~CAL="''l'RAIN==EE=-1 600-~2400 .... ft. OUice or Market. Realtor 613-62IO PoodJ_. •. ,-fe-·'•·· vie Bake. r &: ~: 6 Plastering, Pitch, Women 21.-40 with good I.Q .. -. Affilia te ~to ~_t,Jriits.~ted by rn-u-c H1ullnt. Ripolr 6110 _ .... ..1.
Retail 5tores. zu.:zu 62nd lnduitrlal CANDY SUPPLY -vestment Group. C.uh + Fa~w. 01. )'lea -1 GEN. repair, 41dd.. caD. ::::::;:7;--;--;:-:::;::-:f~;';m:;-;~~~;i; 45 wpm. typ. • 10 by &lKJlll"
St, Newport Beach. ·Key Proporty 6080 ROUTE paperdo'Wn .. 642-l4S2 evu. -ti-alillng .collar.' 545.89s!I, _FC!_z:tnlca, panellng,_tn1r.Jite. CARL'S 111<l\l'i•••" HauJlna & ·* PATCH PLZ)1~ accuracy needed. $1.~ fl
aYail at Travel Lodge Mo-tNo Mllirig. lnwlved) 613-TIJ! · Anythlncl Dk~ 613-4459 ... All types. Fttt eittmate9 11tart. with advance II c:om-
tel Owner. '2-131 244-JlOl -------E;xt;ellent income for few MoftQ tO'LOlh . 6320 RED lrll'ih Setter .. m&l~. 6 REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS , ~:t.~i:·u. Reas. Call S4Qa25 pUter train. oppor. Ull
<>r eves (713) 246-0700. -I BUTLDER OFFERS NEW hours weekly W<>rk. (Days mos. old.~ VJC. \V. Nwpt * CABINETS; 'A.,,Y -site job Birch SL. Suite ' Cnr.
BALBOA ISLAND 21.500 sq. fL deluxe bldg. and Evenings). Refilllnlf ~ 1s· t . TD Loan area.. Reward. 642-4765 ·25 yn: tiptt. 5'3-67ll HAUUNG Cleanup. Iott eic. Plumbing_.:._ ______ =at,_,"'~'°'~"=)"'N".B"" • .,..,.-=::-,1
LeasestoreoroUice.307Ma· Leased, choice Ora.nge co]Jcctlna;.money tram coin CARPENTRY k Lt~,Haul· Haiidyman anytime you ·--CLEANING Lady wlrefu. 4
rine Aye. 675-0486 or see Coupty area. Property operated dispensers in Or-Per1onat1 6405 lng.24hrMrvice.fueE.5L tall.64~.' PLUMBING, Rapaln & Al· hrswklyor8hr1twiCtmo.
your broker. clear. Owner v.:/carry 1st ange Co, and 11urmundlng Loweu !ntert:Kt Available 89'7--0196, Uk ror Vlne:e. ----J°"AC=K"·"s___ teraUonJ at economy prices. $2.Z hr. 646-9008
SMAlL &hOpS nr. Newport ~~~o/:~.T~~~~k. area. We estabUah route. 2nd TD Loan *FULLY L1CENSED * QUALITY \VoodcraU. Gen. ~10VING le HAULING * ~1286 ""c~O~A"S"T"A"L-.A'G"E"N°'C'°Y.,...1
Pier. Variou& 5\1es. Inquire (H3.ndle11 name brand candy · · Renowned lJ I nd u spirit· eraJ carpentry, Small Gen. Reas. FrH est. 536-1091 PLUMBING REPAIR A member of
Bayvle\v Propertlei NEW Bldg., U,OCX> &q ft for and snacks). S162S.OO cuh Tenn1 b&sl!d on equity. uaHst. Advice on an Constr. Call Ken S48-423S YARD/ G¥'· c J~ a.nu p. No job too small snetllni &: Sndllna Inc.
2309 w. Balboa. NB 673-7420 aa.le or leue, For details requited. For personal inter-'42°2171 545-0611 ·malters; ~e. · Marih1.ge, CARPENTRY, Re pa !rs, Remove tree•. lvy, ti'uh. • 642-3128 • Thi World's Lar9elf ,
STORE· FOR LEASE in llattia lt~alfl1 view in Orange Co. a.re•. Serving Harbor area 21 yn. BustnesK; ~~flip._ Rea1th, Remodeling,· cablnetl. No . Grade, backhoe, 962-8745 P.rof1itlon1I
Pamric Bldg., next t<> 64Z.6560 fiend narne, &ddress and Sattl•r Mort9.p Co. Happl_ness &: Succe~&. No job too 11man: can 646-42'24. HAULING $10 LOAD .!!._oof~"'-----ffSD~·-&mplOyment S.rvle9
Berkshires Restaurant. In· P~1le number to MULTI· 336 E .. 17th Street p~lems too large or toof:;;i"'i=.::;::;:=::::::::=:: I "&:'Tift Setvice. 646-2528 2790 Harbor Bl, c....~ 5f0.6055
qutre 673-940~ Mrs. Franke ST TE DIST., J'lC., 1681 W. WE·1\.fAKl: oJt BUY &Jnall. I CAN HELP YOU. ,.._ I 'c -• L~ NEY." Rootl, Repaln' ol Harbor Blvd. at Adama: Commercl1I 60&5 Broadway, Anaheim, Call. TRUST DEEDS Readinp a:lyen 7 da)',. • -m.n , · QnCI••• ~ . . . _
6735
Coatln&: of all Types. Bou
Office Rental 6070 I.:;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;.:;;;;;;;;;,:;;;;. . rorn.1a ~ (TI4l 7'18-5Qi0. sc.&81 inytime Bia. week. 9AM:9PM .3JJ 1'.I'· ~ Cci;iCRE'tE' ,..Wk .a1t tfl,es. .Mou~laanlnp =te~ ~6.'9r.b&.s..~ 1---------SHOPPING CENTER ·· Lim· COIN laundrle1-Priihf.alre . Camt.nd . "Rea!• S~ n .. Sawfui, b~lna:. ~~I}«' MA{P,S OR MAINTENANCE 24 hr. e DELX. EXEC. OFTICE ltedspaceaY&ilablei11boe.rd· Fram S6.!il0 to $4 2,500. M rt Clemente . 492 :9~36, ~ploadlrrg; Lie. ScMce J.' Maid servlca by the day to sultl!~ for lease. Xlnt locallon waJk center, located inside Anaheim, Costa Mesa, O g&get, 492-0076: Quality. 84~1010 ,, ' ' your door. AJ!IO, full malnt. ALL types rock, wCiod. ·le
a~phalt 11hlngle1. LEAKS
REPAIRED. Work cuar.
847-1136
on tampiis"Dr. across from bea uti fut Huntington Buena Park, Fu lle r t oii , Trust Dfftle 6345 * w , CEMENT WORK, 00 jOb_ too far ~-commercial,. etc.
Oranie to. Airport. Suites Harbour. Contact Ross Garde n G r ove, $5000 ht T.O. on Huntington o·men Small, real'iCnible, Frtt , We alto servl~ parties.
avail. [rum 5W l'i<J ft . to 1i)j0 B11.itlett, 714/84&.1361. W • s tmlmtfr, Hunttncton Beach R.-2 lot $50 a month · ~Um. H. Shidtck 548-3615 Bonded &: Insured
!q ft. A/C, ca rp eted, H 11....1 Harbourr ...... &I.ch, Santa Ana. Tustin. I lud' 9% 3 due 1S% · J&R 5S1'1844Uhn
draped. can 546-S!!Ot 4~~1 'W~ Ave., HBt-La Mirada. nc 1
"' "· yr · ' srART YOtJR -NEWYEAR• ~ONCkE.TE aoof!j • · · S.Wlnt ff60
C&UCharlie 525-1833 .d4:?'°,~· 494-8100 or Mn·1~ERIGHTMAN. patios,ma110nty.tu1yn~. 'DAY & Beach J&tlitorW ;;.;;.;;.;.=-,-,..,----Best Location in CdM ;J,)-" niv •n at 4 Carpel Ind fioo RES!Mi"lr'NG •
800 to 1400 sq. n. Deluxe Oif. FOR sale, lifo~ building. CHINCHILLAS, Reu. Are 547""'7 1 Reu. Don, ~4 t ' etc. ~;s .w&: ~·~inc•'°t'. D AL~0Ns ~!paa':~r.A;i.:~mrned. = !e.~s.ig.~~ Be~l ~u54~~;;;;,ted? $25. SA1.Wl Money Wanted 6350 24 hour reconll": rli ~l~~~~-;;;.E;d~: 64&-1~. ~uonable rates. 6'2-0t9'l l ~;;,;;;;;;,;;,,;====.l..:====::::;==:;:.l..=::::;=======, ESTA.t!LJStlEO B ti i 1 de rs SAUNA • l\taasace by ta ' etc. Phillips Cemt.llt 548-63801 COMP.LET E qua 11 t Y e· DreasmakJng ~ Alterationl
. Denise, Pat, r.farlene, Carol housecleaning. Experienced. n-1-.. to '·u • ~ ~,000,.secu~ Yf/ ht Le Salonde·Trallments hlORE co~~ JI~ JDr • R ...... J..\ &J8-.:l354· ... ~,'6·-.. · IU. you, :tr · TO. on ~w industrial bldg. 2930--W.-Cst. Hwy.-: ~pt-~-~lts11. money. Artistic lt!ttini ea"""" ... e.. • Call Jo * 6t6-64fli , 1• S 'TAR. 'G.~:ZER:-~~. Val. $120,000. Prim< toe .. oany no0n ·101 oln.-m3IM •&.flnlohl11g.~&14-<1611; .· 1 : JI!•" Ill""""' S.r.IJ:e. • ,c ___ , ..
CUT.I. tlon In Orange · Clity. we. ·~Pt all cttdlt·t:afde:. , •• cru~r~r-w~~-. ~~ta •. ~~o'V!i' floors, etc. Tiie, 1c;:..-etnlc 1 • ~ '974
7f'I w~.': ··.~ ' ait Dciltt~O.U.-~ ~ ~~ ,!26:-0580;ews ™088' . ALCOAOLrCS_ · Aix>hymous Patios, pool, .decks. ~tc. ~MJ ~ ~,.com~ 1' S4M":1 * vemeo nte' TUe 'Man . .,
:A;,i,, .-r .A.,..Jl.,lolo\0-"' .. 0« n ClllA) ANNOUNCEMINJS Pho ... S0.'217·-•• Wr!ta Jo ut •. 075-5516 -• -. , lnCOIM·T•x •740 CU.I..~ lniWI ,.\ ttJ>a!n.
,; ,,._ · To dM..., n-·f<r-TUllday. · ..b.,, · ••"' ·NOTl~Es: _ P.O, ll6X 1m eo.tj<·M•l;O· . . · · • . ~·Job '"!' ""'"1J. l'!Utor ~.....,.. ~;""~·=:~ .. -. "" Found. (F~H Ado). -souni. Amorican ·r···· cnlld c.... ·' "Smliy Tax Service "'"°· LQ!dno,_ •
COCO'S · FH~lon.li!ond' -BUSBOYS_
lilSHWASHIRS
(over lB)
APPLY IN P!:RSON
No. 18 J'ASHION ISL.. N!B'.'
1Y~ :nv...t • • .-1~ 1----·.. 1@5:99.ns. V914t homt ,· Low _1,_lcen .. ct_ 6.610 , •' ~~ rwafr •. ~~ H:"" ~ft::-wsr On JD)' nUnt aoOrstep, int.roduclory .. 1~. Echy4n:lll NURSERY.·Schoo!, C.M.~ 1 •.12ih VEAR. LOCALLY • M1-I95lJH&.O:Xlf "'NOW'S THE . •.~ •l. ~~ !.t~... ·patr qf prel;(rlptfon gluws S«S-.3700 ~ -daya wk. 6:~ AM..f:30PM: Qualllled -Rea10nable TrM S.rvkl fflO ,,~ 36 ...._ t.SDan't , 111 .bl11.ck ltathor ca.. f3-~ -= • . Full, p/tht1'i all acl'lt. W. A: (8111) SMI~Y _ · ~~· ~~ :~ 701. 541-1104 C1rcf of Thank1 6416 ·~tl!s for 2 or more. C~fil!d ~bile Acc;ount't TREES, lkdJU, trlm, cul, TIME .'f'OR •l.Oo'.' 39~ 691ut FOUND Gmrian' Shepherd W the Don 1. CraWford 'Tramp. furn. So 6taort C:O.. 642-2221 a.l\Ytl'me 64&-9666 atumpe, runoved, Muled. 30 11•1 !~ «i,,!'!-. r,=~· puppy. Apptox l mOI. old. 1' U 1 •-•~-p insul 534-1292 _ Central BuAlness &emoea yn op. nilly tns.'M2:«)30 .... ~J~~~l1 1 lY..nl .ii."""• 71MaU ~we, _No collar or . ID. ~nty ~~IAMl ovrmi mos~ _ e l HE TAX AO~ISO;RS ·
Iii" ·li~ ~~ .... ~lcr::-.., (frvJM~et:r-l ~7113 heartfeJ~iratltudt,~ au.our Contrector• 6'20: 1'mft.'omce.Reu '.R&tea Upholstery '"° QUICK·' .CASH , J:;: ~~ 76~ .LARGE .Ge~ Sbepbtrd. wo~ul . Ule1td1. -·A -~ltiont *-''.tmodelins 328 No. N"'PC!" Blvd~ -CZVK-'--0:-SKl~·-'.5-CU.-.-tm.-"."U'."pboL~·I .',','9'~ ..,•,_Os;i'lbt ~~ Call a: ~nhfY. _. ne11h bors tor .• ~tr fred H. ~Lie. Opposite Hoq ~ Dlro-an ,._H-.. -~ho THROUGH A -·~ -'"64i.9f.13 • hclpfulne.s.. It k,l~n;eu ~ m6<Ml . :It ~2i10. For Appt. Call ...--.. . ....-... ,_,__,_..., ~~ ~~ --:-~· St.tALL.Femal&b&k&'brown tng-Mr1.Cn.wbd1sp~ne• ... '"*' '·' __ · H.g.O!Jk>,TAX~VICE ~~~~~;145tCM ~~ ~=--~~ eotktMtUx '·dog •• v 1-c. -··:---::--caFe!tCli an-rn1 :"~· ... ~.tnan!a · DAILY ·flL·O., 23 .., »• , "f:,. Woodl&nd S<'bool.64M"7 Tutoring '490 • ·· • . · · .~ .. pl. BUSIEST ~ bt 1< ~~ ~&::"' :;r-,• rot.IND Irish Setkr, m"&l~ !: . CARPl!T S'I'EJUI CLEAN· e your home or office e town. 1'le O.\JLY PUDT
16Y-.t '6U. Ma.-'· ..G.14 "111 .............. Older. V1c Cor-F1tE!4CH ""TutaT'tflt. ~. %Q No eoap, no-mui&s. JT'S WONDER1VL t be ""'·-·ftktd ~. S&Y• ' • -s.n sr.1ve "''•"*'"' F=.::;:::;;:; ......... tea1Jhtr: C&ll ~. lf no For est.. &16-6971 • -...... I _,, ·-WAIT AD ~ ,._ ea~ -1r JoAn"' 545-85n .,... ....... • • · many ....,., n &1,....ance1 -Umo • ,~ u... ~~ '9A 19~ "'-!'. ,f,'~7.;t'ft;-,,,:'"-,;;;.,-;:-'-;;;:::= iuiswtr..,....... .. ,: , • ntf: QUICKER YOU CALL. 1}tllf~ fD the Clua1ISed ~"';,{i1' .__-.,
30.s.tM 60GMW '°~$Pf&. H/Ji.lfj WATCH Vie: 19th. It Phtt\.~ 001iT ,JUSf. ~,lYlSH for ntE QUICKER -YOU SELI; Adt. Check them nowJ • ' • " ® ® 4) Jo. j.lJ..tf tit:. Call to kttft!ily. 5f0..Ui30 lltmletbtila lo .tUrntat.,:-142-5171 ..
'' -.!dwm -. ---b -· d ... ~ ••• ··-. find t "' , -!MALL rat.:i OI' ._;.._ 1111m1e • • • • .lft• . • , ~
1---------------------------1,.:,:Be:;:•;:o;,;h·:..;;:Mo.:::;;;112":;,;,,_..,._. ~~·"~!'!.e:!.Mt~c-·z
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TRANSPORTATION FREE .TO YOU MERCHANDISI FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
TRANSPORTATION
Mondi)', Ml/di 9, 1970
TRANSPORTJTIO A
-lmpomdAutot SpHd-Skl Boats '°30 Mobllo Homos '200 lmportod Autos
Furniture 1000 Furnil~lu~r~•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiaoooii;i;i;J:M:i:••~•;ll~•n::oou~~·-:-:-1\t.NOO;
CMNO up hobby I tv equip'..
ment. oscillolcope, zlrMI
tractr. aij(!Jo i: e ne ra tor,
11s:n11 .-;ei¥rator, bar
generator. voltm~ltr, bat·
tery eliminator, picture tube
lester, vibrator te11ter, hun-
dred& C)f resls10r1 and
capacitor1, SCVi!:ral picture
tubes and TV &ets, hundreds
or tubes new and used, car
radios, odds and ends. Will
sacrlti~! M3-8117 all day
Sat. and Sun. and after j
O\VNER Oeee:ued, oetd new 1---------
lovin&: home 1 Shc1tle mix 14' GLASSPAR 1S 11 p
/ern. 1\' yr Old. also 1 Evh1rude. Dec stan. Good
spayed portl-poodlt, used to cond. $ti85. 673--SlSS
190! BARRINGTON 24x'10
with all dcls. tututtt,
acrou 1trett 1mm ocean.
~11
DATSUN MG
NEW ,7J MGB '64. w.. ..tUe, 7M";
PUBLIC NOT·ICE
DECORATOR Gm CANCEUATION
OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS
SPlftish & Modl1'mlltan Funlttn
All BRAND NEW
adult.I only. 546--7202 artu 2. 3110 Boot Slip Moori"ll -
COCKER Spaniel, Buff col· 1---------
40' BOAT Dock for nnt In
VIKING Scandia, 20xfill'. 2
hr, 2 ha. Awnings. Xln't
Adult Pk. 548-Cl42 aft 6. -ored, male. 2 mo'a old. Cute
as & butlDn. Looking for
~ home. 6U-246L or
&12-0100 3/9
Huntll'\ltOn llatbour. Ph Blcyclei 9%25 ~ ask for Jerry .:O:.:.!..:;.;;;.._ ___ .;.::::
Erwin. .....,.
LOVING Yng orange t!ier
i;trlpcd cat. ll 1ebrkn. Bo1t Rent1l1
64&-1178 3/10
9031
BOY'S SchwlM S ttngra.y
bicycle. Blue and wh.ite,
hardly used, ln excellent
condition $30. 537'"3993
9275
·O new polytlu tires. ;riv.
DATSUN PICKUP $99S firm. $l&-O(& ev .
W/camper tp ovtrhu.d 1~ MG-TD, c:o~
cam, 4 ,pd, . 6 ply tin•. dlHon. new top. e bu 11 t
ti.ck up 11 ta. You name engine. Mi..3826/
It! Serla.l No. 244009. run
price $io9'. Take amall <In MGI
or trade. Call Phl.l, 4!M.an3l---'-....:.'--~-~
or 545-06.14 after 10 am. * ''6 MGB HDTOP
A decorator dream hou se on display -3
rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was
reg. $1295.
SACRIFICE ••••• • $4251.iii""iiiiiii"""'..._.. iiiiiiiiiiiiii ....
ATTENTION
ROCK HOUNDS!
NEW Shop Openini;
Sat., March 14.th..
PETS and LIVESTOCK
C1t1 1120
PUREBRED Siam~ kjt.
lens, 7 1o1.'t't'ks old, Sealpoint,
Female. $15 eacn. 536-9866
\VANTED lo ttnt: Exper.
po1o1.-er boat h&ndler desires
to occulonally oent 3340'
~port crutzer from ln·
dividual. Principals only,
please call C. Lewis day1
1714) 54'1'-6001 . Eves
~99.
Mini B ikes
GO·KART, gOOd runntnc con-
dition. $50 or beat offer.
6T>-SS93
-$-··
"Uader In The teat'.b Otle1"
Beaut. orl&. Briti1h ra.clnl
1f'ffn w/ Ml visibility fac-
tory matched bdtop, plush
black ltat~r lnttt., tooneau
cova, R/H, wire whla. ete.
~tost desirable Jad,ys' low
mlleQt! new car trade-in.
Orir. 10ld new &: serviced
by \11, ONLY $179:1! MAR-
QUIS MTRS; OOC So. Cat
Hey.. I.. a gun a Bea.ch,
494-7503, 541)..3100.
Compl•t• Medlt•rr•nean Bedroom Suit• i"
0 1k. IRog. $349.00 1 ........•• NOW $188.00
Gorg•ous Sp•ni1 h Custom Built Sof1 with
m•tching Lov• S•tt-Choice of beautiful
f1b•ic•. !Rog. $419,951. __ NOW $US.00
Sp•nlsh Dining Sets --············-·-······--$75.00 Solid Oak End T•bl•s and Coffee Tables_$1 9.50
Till Oecor•for Tabl• lamps '
9300 Motorcycles
ZIMMERMAN
2US HARBOR BLVD.
540-4410 10 am-8 pm, Open 7 days Dog 1115
COME in il re(iater for draw. ;;;..:='-------=== Alrcr1ft 9100 GREAT DANE PUPS '66 BUL TACO 250CC DOT DATSUN ing tor FREE Star Diamond
pollsbing unil complete & 6
lb. Covington ge1n tumbler.
GYRO COPT~R Brand new $40 carbun!tor, Fa>A·n black mas.ks, \Vill be "' DP A BIG! $170 772-0075, S2l-485l Nearly complete, $800 new front tire. MW 1eab:, EN D IL Y
•642-7455• j1111t had major tune-up. Xlnt AND
'64 MGB. $1100
+ Priv. Pty. 64i..4157 •
IR•g. $49.9SI ....... _...... , NOW $11.00 STONECRAFT
8101 Bolsa Avt'.
~fldway City. 897·l!J70
AKC Silver Poodles, I.======""== cond! Great Dirt B~! $4iJO SUNDAYS
Beautiful Pups, healtey. Mobil• Homes 9200 or bt1t otter. 956-lOi_t 18835 Beach Blvd. OPEL Spanish Hanging Swag i.amps
,!Rog. $49.951 ................... -.NOW $U.SO Aller 4 P~r. 847-2179. =.;...--'--1 250 YAMAHA Bl& Bear Huntington Beach
CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN POOL TABLES --BRUNSWICK-AMF
$75 mini. POODLES g1:1ing *JO. MICRA INC. * Scrambler. Everytbln1 __ •_12-_m_1 _or_>_'°"'-" .. ' __ 1196S OPEL Kadett
Ior 'n price! 4 mo, AKC. \\'Orks. Great rubber. $395. DATSUN LATE ,67 Coupe. Must sell. mm RJRNITURE Custom Slate Table
From $289
642--0326, 67S-2M5 featurin~ Am•ric•'s fin· _o54.::8_4,,-";;.7.::0::'.::64,:.,,...:,..::833c.;..,==-i1600 Roadster, 4 spd, dlr,l,===839-==""'===== BASEN1I "Barkloss" pun•, 1969 ~ NORTUN co~1•• .... est mobi • ••t•+• homes ,..., "...,, ...... ~. Sharp, hdtp, &un rtd, plulh
AKC, 1 1o1.·eeks. shota. displiyad in Orinna 00. Excdlent cc:::lition. Call black Int. xlnt cond. ?ttust PEUGEOT
1844 Newport Blvd.H •• bo
1:'s1vc1.1
Costa Mesa Ohly
100% Financing * SECARD POOL.S * 532--1~2
* ·96$.7532 * "' c•" '"0• alt • County's newest adult .,,..,..kHO er 11 p.m. saertll~I $14.99. Take older
AUSTRALIAN Silky Terrier parks . MUST SELL! '68 Honda 350. Amerlcancaror smalldown. '62 Peugeot-104. 4 dr. Oean,
AKC. f\lale puppy, 3~$ Street. Runs good? $350 URE643. Call J<cr. 4M-9773 eood condition $450. Can be
323 ~. ·~;fain St. Oran:;e months. Shots. $125. 635-SlZ'l SPACES -Yo11r 40"oic o or * 494.5922 * or 545-0ll.34. seen at 1622 S. Broadway, * AUCTION * BOXER pups , AKC •p•C• i" •nv of our niw -T~R~JU-o .. IP~H_...::.:.650,.:::;, '-,-'h-ro_m_•_& '70 DATSUN SEDAN Santa Ana. 549-0674
Eveq Night 'Til 9 -Wed., Set. & Sun. 'Til 6 gi red P•rlu. lf you \~·ill sell or buy re ste . fa\\'11 colored, SALES _ Choo•• yollr "•m• velvet frame. r.t:.ist see to Big 4 door 96 hp overhead PORSCHE
give Windy a try show qua1ity, 53&-2449 from 0..,,, 100 now rnod111 I .::bo.:.l ... ;,:.."".:.·c.54:;;,8-.:.9509~~--cam, disc brakes, 4. spd, dlr,
Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. ENGLISH Cocke1"S, 12 wks, roady to ,,. • .,. i11 er h1l'1 '67 305 HONDA WSV.'. back up lia:hls. Sacrl.1---------.-,-Furnitur• 8000
2 MATCHING green occaJI.
chairs S50. l-~r. Prov. dining
rm set, table, 6 chairs,
hutch & bullet $375. Kg-u
mattress & l box sprn~s
$100. Gold Do1o1.·cred quilted
!l' sofa $100. !\latching tllx
Coppertone washer & dryer
$3XI. Patio furn., umbrcll11
& table, chairs, redwood
table & benches. mis.::.
chaise lounges $50.·847-3176
BEDROOM SPECIAL
!l Piett Complete Bedroom
\\'ilh box spring &, mattress.
Regular price $100.95. This
\\'eek only $ll9.95.
Approved Furniture
2159 ~larbar Blvd.
Costa 1tesa 54&-9660
OPEN S.9
Offlc• Furniture 8010
Musical
Instrum ents 1115 W indy's Auction Bern AKC, Line-bred, Tri.color, .,.ours cuat•rn built. * \\ith extru * fice.. Take trade, will finance 1966 911• 42:000 r.t 1 1
• r Show "'"t qua! -•2883 SERVICE -f1,1lt time 1or,.i co "'-'"-"""''" pn'vate .... -... Call Phill, AM/n.f, ndia.ls, chrom_•
---------W75~ Newport, CM 646-8686 • .,.. ·....,,,.... depo rtment ,,,.,;119 ooc:h lo· ...,.,...,_,., 494-9m :rt'iD am rims. Xlnt cond. $3850.
CONffiLO Behind Tony's Bldg. ~fat'!. AFGHAN· PUPS, AKC c1tio11, 650 tt BSA. $3511 GOOD ,67 DATSUN. l 600 StS..7673 9AM-6P~J.
ACCORDION SKIERS, FlSl'IERMEN Ready for Easter. (Deposit) -".1.N•HllM"-coaltN4D. CUSI'OM. *6'&-1858 ROADSTER -'S6 PORSCHE 912. ~tras.
2t key, 120 basl, with case, HlKERS Mobile home &, call 846-5452 "" "' 64"2899 -~ :::::, new .radiaJI, Needs m1noc
$600 va!uc + "easy to cabin for sale or lrade fn BASSET hound pupple11, AKC. l'ONCE:~~E~OllLE -... , '"" work. S32:X) 675-61'1'7
learn" books & sheet music J\1runmoth Lake. Fully furn, Tan &. 'vhite males &. 2100 So. Liwii 71l·6ll·l601 Auto Service
case. Si ps 7, Flrepl. Sacrlfice females. $25. 5.'>7~66 & Parts 9400 ENGLISH fORD
PERFECT OONDmON'! $4500. Days 531-3374., Evesl"'======== -"COSTA MESA"-
S200 or Best Offer 540-0617 Horses 1830 GREENLEAF rARIC
540-8.108 After 3 P!\I ~.,C,:"'-------1 ;.;.;.;.;.=-----'=: 1750 W"i1ti1r A"''· REFRIGERATOR. Xlnl BEAUTIFUL Shetland 71 4-642-1350
7 PIECE Yamaha drum set, cond $ao f.laple table, 1 Gelding. Creal \v/chiltlren.
new .i~ 1969. ~nt condition. chairs like new $1 o o, exceptional saddle. (All for -"HUNTINGTON
"'""'"'' $325. 114, 538-1435 Upright I'""' 17J. 11351. c,11 nm 8'2-1358 IEACH"-after 5 Pi\!. 549-1096, 642-7&13 CIUFTWOC'IO IEACH CLUI
MOVIN PINTO MARE w/t1ck 214 62 rodfic Co••• Hw,.
P . & 0 Bl 30 'G: ~l usl Sell! Single 12 .. 'WV\ 64.,~0 1anos rgens Membership in Neivport · yrs._,.,. <l""tV"'1 71 4·6l l ·71ilJ
Bell Tennis Club. $450 or TRANSPORTATION "YUCAIPA..CALIMISA"
PIANOS & ORGANS
NE\V & USED
• \'amaha P ianos Organs
• Thomas Organs
• Kimball Pianos
best ofier. 8 A 1\.1·5 P NJ, Boats & Yachts 9000 SOUTHWEST MOllLE 642-8500. HOME .SALES
CARPET left from Comm'!. CLOSEOUT priec5 now In af· 1065 C1liw111• llwil.
contracts. $1.98, $2.88, .shag feet on 27' Magnum 1---''.:."::'c..7:.:'::.5·::1:0.":.:'c....--
ll.99 "I yd. Drnkos Carpet 0.moM\rato' & cfupl8J' NEW 24 X 60
11206 Beach Bl\ld, 11.B. 1nodd5 -2 BR 2 BA d Un 842-5114 21 ' tw•·n 210 h.•. • • en. carpe I =~·=o·~------demonstrator -list pri~ thru .out, patio Ii: carport
·50 VW Ena'· R e cently
O\."erhauled n75 exehanie.
Call 642--0896 after 6.
Tr•ller, Tr•v•I 9425
ALPINE
VACA'nON
TRAVEL CENl'ER
Excol. -Galdon Fol-
TilE ENGUSll
GOING
THING!
AT
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VOLUME
ENGUSll FORD
DEAU:R
OVEh 60
NOW AT
0.EARANCE
PRICES! Dlympl• -Alplno Thoodoro
Apache· WhHI Compo R OllNS fORD
Worlda largut most oom·
plete RV vchlcl• ahopp1ll& 2060 Harbor B.lvd.
TOYOTA
NEW e USED
RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES • 100%
Factory Werr•nty
Avtll•ble on Used
Toy9f••
1000 Miles or 30 Days • •
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
DAILV PILOT
p ---VOLKSWAGEN
YW BUGS
FllOM
$399
GOOD SELECTION
$49-3U31 Ext. 66 or 61
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
LARGE
SELECTION
of vw
CAMPERS
Harbouf V.W.
AtrrHORIZED
SALES k SERVTCE
_JB'IU BEACH BL., ~1
· HUNTINGTON BEACH ' * '65 VW STA. WAG.
Wanted 151JO.S series w/BIG
MTR.. brand new 6.&'i"<l!i"
w/\valls, amp& I pressure
gauges, R/H etc. ''Choice"
low mileage local new car
trade-ln. Sparkllng or I g.
onyx black w/lmmac. red
Inter. ONLY $1295! MAR-
QUIS l\.IOTORS, 900 So. Cst
Hwy., La g una Buch,
494-7503, 540-3100.
'66 VW WESTPHAWA cam·
per, oew 1600 eng. brks &
shocks. Split g,eats, man,y
extraa. $1900. 540--1165
1964. VW excel mech cond.
New pa.int &nd tireL $845.
494-2572
'65 BUG, sun-roof. l'lffd&
paint. $800. Daya 615-0770:
Eves. MS-6960
'63 VW Van ttblt trans. &.
engine. gd cond. $800. 179
Shallimar, Aet. 2 C.f\!.
67 & 66 VW. Xlnt oond.
Sunroof. 11ust raise taxe11
642-0350/646-7670
1966 Volk&wagen Squareback.
Good condition. S1195 * .......... * ·66 Y\V Sunroof. Red. w/w/1.
Xtra Shll.rp car. Well cattd
tor. 548-2981. aft 6.
AEROSPACE RELEASES
FOR PUBLIC SALE
e Kohler & Campbell
COAST MUSIC
NEWPORT & HARBOR
Costa Mesa * 612-2851
Open ID-6 Fri 10-9 Sun 12·5
CARPET Layer has carpet. awnina;s 28' railed porch,
Nylon. Kodel, Shag &. Sl-1,500, now $6900. Many extras? In GREEN·
lb-\01o1.·s. \Vil\ sell at cost for Z7' .5Port114twi500·n 2lO ,h~ list LEAF PARK In C.M., only,
center. Costa Mesa 642-0010 F•ctory Direct O.aler
8352 Oardtn Grave Blvd, GG New C•r• Used Car•
534-6686 FERRARI 194-3312 Mm1
'64 VW Camper, good mn-
dilion. Must &ell. $13» or
best oHer. 64.2-U59 • 500 stet! transfer cases e
Z1'2 Steel & '.l/ood desks • 85,
:>-Drawer legal file cabinets
ta Miac chairs, tables & cab-
inets.
Mclt1ahan Bros: Desk Inc.
l&'lO N~ Blvd
Costa 1{en.*fi42..1450
Gareg• Sale 8022
labor. 523-U88 pnce ' , now. ~· ~" 500 •· t • zr Sedan twin 1£iO h.p.·list ,....,, · ,,vm era inc.
If you are shoppin~ for a NE\V ~~" drll preS1>es, real · 115 500 1 ~ • 642·1350 • . pnce , , now, .,..,JVV.
piano or organ, new or used, nice $135. Savage rifle, Boat Island Inc., 2244 w. BAY HARBOR
and are interested in a truly 1'.f~el 99, 31}.JO hex barrel Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-Qi30 Mobile Home S•le1
great deal, please shop $7;). 548-4$3 y WARD'S BALDWIN STUD ,f,;;~:;;=.=:..,.,..,--~--22' (LEEl custom built cabin EAR END YO PIANO 42'' high, Koregcr, cruiser. Glass bo tto m. CLEARANCE SALE
lB.19 Newport, C.1'.f. &12-8484 $250. Fits most anywhere enclosed bead, d In et t e, NOW ON DISPLAY
Open Ew.ry Nile Antiq. 1390 Square p~ & Sunday Afternoon stool $3.5, Call ST5-220? Sleeps 4. Chrysler inboard. 12, 16, 20, 24 & 30 Wldt1 Lots of new pa.int SG). In-Up To 6o Feet Long
15300 Beach Blvd.
Cosed Sat. Open Sunday Westminster
171>' SELF-O>nt'd. K•naldll. FERRARI * ,61 TOYOTA SPORT
.... c:oodltloo $1495. l8IS4 N..,,,.. lmpa<U Lid. Ol-
B111hard, Space 716, Fntn anae Counb"a ~ author-SEO.
Valley. lud dealer. Popular ••Corona" model w/
ANT SAI.Es..SERVICE·PARTS aid. column lhlft, R/H, w/
F Asn.C Buya in ' star. 3100 W. Cout H-. walll etc. Cllolee low milt· Wet._ ___ .I: Funttme ~~ ... ..,,. Newport Be&ch •ire Jle'W Toyota "trade-in".
Campers. Scotts. 914 N. 642.9405 MO-l?M Sparldins orig. ermine white
64 VW B\JG. 44,000 ml. 36
mo. NE\V battery. NEW
tunl!:-up ST.:lO. ~
MUST sell. Oean '65 VW.
xtnt running c:ond. $895.
64Z-5147
'61 VW XJ.nt Cond. Low mJ. I
Sll50. Priv. pty. Cal l
5'<>-1511 GARAGE SALE ANO
FURNITURE SALE
PIANO RENTALS SEAR'S Compact refrig, qultt at 119 34th St., N.B. 1425 Baker St., C.OSta ~fesa.
trom SlO monthly, \\'ood ;;rain S80. Nr ne1v after 5 PM. 1Ai block East ol l.Jarbor Blvd,
,;H;;""";:,::;,':o· :;:S·::.•:,· -,.~-:--,-. Authori:ed Fm'&rl Dealer w/attractJve silver aable/
KENSKILL & Kit. Special black Inter. "Drive it -'66 VW SU t -••-
prlce1 on lot models. Scotti, HILLMAN You'll newr ltt ao!" ONLY Excell~nt ':iitlo';;l'L
Practically nr.w refrigerator,
Du·A-Bed bedroom 1111ile,
\vorld books, plus miscellan-
eous household Items & furn.
iture. 2 to 6 f\fon. thru Thurs.
rlay. 3814 Topside Lane, Hat·
bor Vicv.• Hills, Lusk liomcs,
Corona dcl f\Tar.
All rentals apply edger $40. Cub. sewing RUNABOUT 65 hp John&on. Costa l\fe11& (714) 540.9470
'
h machine, a'l is SJ o. Owner leaving town, Take OWNER 0 pure ase Porcelain basln $8. 893-9713 GOULD MUSIC over pymnts. Contact Bill TRANSFERRED .
~':":N~·=H;;•;::'.:bo::r.:. • .:S;;..A;:.· -;;;; 1---------·' $1395! MARQUIS MTRS; 900 5-16-3474 Trucks t500 ·So. Cit Hwy, Laguna Beach. '62 Volkswagen $30I 1960 Hillman Convt. 494-7503, 54().3100.
FOR 5!1.lr: l..rg buffet. oak
roul)CI tbl, books & other
items, Mn1e tools. 536-1:;J6.
718 \Villlan\S, Apt c. N;.B.
GARAGE Sale: TV/clock
radio, 1V stand, guitar,
record cab. & toys. 644-0357
8100
LOCAL Eggs Wholesale from W\llia.mson, day& 642-9470 tt1ust sacrifice lOxS5
:l(Wj N. Main, SA 547-0681 Ranch lo Rcstauranti; & ii· 2-man frame KAYAK, Skirts, awnlns:s. coolers
TIIOMAS ''Band Box'' & Conval esce n t Homes Homemade.$ro Petok.Adultpark
•·playmate" boll\ for $300. 548-3T~ afl 6 P~1 * 673--7162 * S &: }( Mobile Home Brokers
Artisan Orchestra bells Carpet layer has Iii Lo 12362 Beach Blvd .. G.G.
$200 . Add exciting nylons Sl.99 yd. Shags Sa ilboa::c;ct•:..·----'90=10 • fi.36.0021 •
percussion to any organ. front .$3.50 up + my labor, MOVE IN MO
Newport Orga.n.s 645-1530 90c ...... >'ard. 347.1519 BOATBUILDERS NDAY r-• $1500 DOWN
QUALITY king bed • quilled Relocate in Peugot Sound O\\'NER ANXIOUS
l:IAWifOND Steinway, Yam· n1attress. Complete unused \vith growing nta.blished "'·a· 20 \VIDE
aha. New & used pianos ol $120, worth $260. s.t2-6536 terfront boat building firm 2 BEDROO~f
most makes, Best buys tn eves. needing exp'd personnel In CORNER wr. SANTA ANA
So. Cali!. at Schmidt Music ~""":--,..---=-all phul's of outfitting larg. \VESf~UNSTER AREA
New lntern•tlon•I
Pick Up Truck
LIQUIDATION
3 to choole from at factory
Invoice price.
Kustom Motors
84.5 Baker. C.M. 540-5915
951D
Co. 1901 N. MP.in Santa Ana L~rES need a ~w lifl 1n er liberglas sailboats. Reply S4S-824l American 842-3939 ' life'? CU.Ston1 fit bras & to Dally Pilot Box p.921 \\ith llW Willys 4 whl dr. Sta. Appliances . &\vim wear. 549-2100 for appt. name, address &: h 0 m e f.10BILE home. new 1969 \Van. Brand new Gates
REAL Estate Develop tr u:i:;i~l~n~~!ue~r!xi:VOC::~ PO'ITER'S WHEEL $30 phone.A companyrepreseD-''Par a.mou n t.''2b50', tltt&, wide chrome rlm1,
disposing of an over lnven-key~. ask•g $ 350 , El;ctric. A Steal! tative will be in this area. refrig·!reezer, dshv.•hr, awn-bui.;;e atovrl e, etbodc., elf,
lory supply or new 12 cu ft . S4()..9G63 64: .. 2'l46 aft 6 P~I Ibis month tG \ntervlew. ing & skirting complete. 2 Mee · pe ect, Y n
refrig. $13;;..St50. 1 yr war· Bdrm. 2 bath. Channing perfect shapt. A buy at
Eoonomlc.a1 Operattne-Or!&-1"~~~~~;;;;;:;;:~ [;;-;u;.,-, .... ~;27l!O~p;.-..;.-
Owner. Call 673-11813 ITIOIYJO!T!AI '61 ~iJ!.E:;J,.E~G0
JAGUAR Mark 11 Wagons '67 VW GOOD CDNDo
JAGUAR HI Lux Pickups =ll~OSO~Fc,:""'c:::..· ..;6J5.4485:.:..::~,,..I·
Lend Cruisers '62 VW BUS, excel cond $0). 1
HEADQUARTERS PL~~ Call botwn 4.S pm. 646<1485
The only authorized JAGUAR HARD TO GET MODELS
dealer in the entire Harbor NOW JN SI'OCX
1ona. DEAN LEWIS Complete
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
Pool•
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
1961! Harbor, c.M.
BILL MAXEY
IT!OJY!§!T!AI
VOLVO
rant)' on patts & service. HAl\IMOND Organ Model M· HAND Painted oU portrait of PlasTrend Escondido view-site. Adulta.1 ,.cS8~2S-·~"~2-J0"-28,--•tt.._,,5,;'30,,...__,
For into. call 7'1tss Hen-111, \Val11ut. i\Taric Pre-set, you or your children .trom a. SOLING 833--0554 '43 Military Jeep. $850 or of.
derson 17141 J57-87fXJ back grill. Sl200. 673--5122. photograph. G4.6-J629 TEMPEST 1966 DBL wide Custom bit fer. H!avy duty chrome 234 E. lTth Street
LADY Kr11n1orc mob i I e -\\'HY Pay more? f\-1ust move. l4' PT120 OD Clas~ 15000! mobile home. Awnin1s bolh rims &. Gates tires. 673-7792 1-~~-"c..~:..7~7"65~--
11111 BEACH BLVD. Hunt, Booch 847-ISlS
lm:I N. otOxst Hwy. on Bch
'69 Toyot• Corolla
Must Sell?! l\.1oving East!!
* (31 1961 VOLVDSI Jua:t tumed in on new 19'1U
Volvos'. Knowledgeable buy.
ers chance to chooee from
these wanted CWTl!nt look
144-S series 4 whl dlsc brakl
models. -2 .with 1td 4 •
speeds, 1 with automatic
tra.ns:., 1 with factory "a.ir
conditioning"! MAR Q u I s
MTRS: !JOO So, Cst Hway,
Laguna Beach, 494-7S03 or
540-3100. flishwa.sher, late tnod(>I, :dnl Television 8205 used carpel, xlnt cone!, Call h'la1n, jib. spin, el ... $1374 sides, fully !klrted. 9x.l2 I '42 JEEP. N!w transmis-'70 JAGUARS
. ----------536-4:;,,~'::.'0:.,..,,....,...._~--Pacific Yacht Sales 673-1570 outsid! screened rm. 'J rond. $15. Also, i'"rigida1re SILVERTONE Color TV .:;; 3446 v · O 1 N t Bch slon. S725. Ask for Olen, dryer $60. 847-8115 or Console. 11,; "'"" old.. • TIRES: 4 Goodyear Polyilll.S ia por o, ewp · .1l!orage sheds. Set In adult pk 548-6523. :'>46-8672 ~·~ G7&-J4, never used. $125. 2 CORONADO 30's; 1 used, in bch areit. $10,000. Call
In &lock. Immediate dellveey. Excellent condit.lon.
Authorized Dealer Sl350. 839-3826
VOLKSWAGEN
145 -WAGONS
164 -SEDANS
5-18-8918 Call 847-8176 loaded, tun race. l lll!w, before 9Al't1, aJt 6P1f Dun• Buggies 9525 ~ \1llio'Q\S•
\VHlRLPDOL Auto. washer SILVERTONE TV special dlscounl. 2912 \'I. 548-8831 1----'=-----I & gu (lrycr, both In xlnl ItANGING Light $10; beige VW Met.alfiak! DuMbllftY. cond. $100. &17-8115 or 23 ... \Vorks well $45. carpet \V/pad $:;1). Regina Coa.stHwy,N.B.&45--0SlO NEW 20 56 BestoUertak!Sl! "'·-at234 m•·-. '63VWBUG 9~C:l\Xlntcond. ~s.8672 ' ===·~•c:•&-0269:.::=..•:;..,=7" fl oor waxer $20. 675-55a.1 31' J\.JALIBAR Junlor Alden X ......., •W•• ...,..,.. 1 'coLOR r,1 navo 5 1.!onth Sloop, dacron 51lils, spin-2 BR, 2 BA, den. carpetlnf Albert P., C.M. lnnde/out. Mech. perfect.
All other modela now ln
stock. 4 speeds & automatics.
Your Best Deals Are Still At
DEAN LEWIS
KENi\lORE \Va sher & Old
18
.. ag rcm:te contro~ 50 yardt \\'001 carpet, $50. t naker, '5hp G'8ymarine. 1hru-out 2'l' ral1td porch, VOi.KS 1350 Efti{ne. Near 900 So. Cst. Highw•y '-====-=====:.!.,,1966:;.,lla;;rbor;:•:,C;:·:;M:;·;=::646-;;;;:"100~I
\Vhirlpool <'lee. rlryer In • · braid &x.10' MJg $25. 1601 N carport' &: patio awnlnp. N $&00 l•gun• Beech 1 · good cond. $180. ~H~ or _s~;,..1:;;)2 Co(l:Q. l-l1o1.-y. Rpt 11. L.B. ' ~::_s,~4~f:· $8500. Many Cltlra.S, $11 .600. On the ew* m'.3132 art 5 * •M-7503 * 540-2100 lmpor1ed Autos 96001mported Autos 9600 ~lg..g768 be a ch at DRl'ITWOOD __ ...;_.:.;;=-"'·...:..---· I l·iii;:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiii~~
Cameras & FREE TO YOU SAOOI'S, new, com plete BEACll CLUB, 11.B. G-n· Imported C•r• 9600 '61 XK 150. DJ{ Conv., mln tll
\\'ASHER k Elr.c.. Dryer, E • t 8300 ''"'" condition. True collect.on
.. _ _,qu_•.;.P_m_•_n ____ ;..: '---------$250. 2911 \V. Coast Je11f r.1obil! H"""A S&ie• 714-pair. Xlnt. cond. 1· 11. h N-·........+ n .. h v .. .,. AUSTIN AMERICA item.~5976.49S-U32 Guarantee<!. Both only $125 PI-taro equip; l 35mm 0 \Y NE R D I c d. Ne! d ig way, ., ... !"',' uo:ac ' 536-7513, :lomlcra Inc. 645--0810 terms. &1 >2306 t>nlarger, 2 safelightg & quRlitied home for 3 adult, VACANT · 1'.tOVE 1N
PHILCO ll" colored TV, filters, 1 Penta.'< slide-lop spayed, female cats. l Of A Kind! 16' 9" Deep 8x40 rttOBlLE H0~1E
$200. Xlnl rond, \\'Orks copier. Reasonable! &12-6502 5'18--0811 3/10 ,Keel Sailing Canoe. $251). \\'ITH JOxJe CABANA
;real. S4S..5i27 aft ;)Jlin I Lovable Jen1alc cockapoo I Call OR 3-?395. 2 BEDRQ0;\1 =='====.====-!"" old, hsbrk. iov•s CAL25,Raclnggear,Shipto SANTA ANA AREA
\VASHER/Gas dt)•c•t'. !)air, H bb S I uoo ,. • XI ~•° CE RE IO
I o Y upp 1es -childnin, aJld 3 cuddly pup-shore, Galley. 8 sails, nt $~. SPA NT $< ;:. '=~ cond1t on, ;45 O.S. !'.tax 3-cliannel Dii;ltal !< pies 6 'vks old need good -""~nd=. =Ev~•~•-64~&-,....225~9~--I 545-8241 American 842-3939
• .,.,., '---t, l"•k• ne••. l'"o. horncs. !!62..{)180 ~/JO 28' F~l 6 berth 5loop PARK LANE Mobile home USED Appliance 5: TV'B, aU -~ IJ<.I-. ~ Q B ti m9• 2 0 ' 5 7 ' In d k lS 1007 E. Balboa. Balboa. WVABLE Blonde fein1tle I :; sa s. A.s.k _.. .1 x -awn gB, ec ,
guaranteed. Ounlap'l!. 15 No. ::. shaggy cocker mix 1 yr old, Pacific 'Yacht Sales 673--1570 stora&e shed, in family j,;;N:;";::'"';:";:·:C::;·';:'·:,548-;:;;77;;88'=:= I========= I loves childttn, rids good 23' TEMPEST Sip. Fg. Aux Park, Cout I-lwy. acros•
S • . Good 8r""" home . 817-2340 or 6h ~-nd x-A ftA ,f., from r.ew Dana Point Antique• 8110 porhn.g s ;ivv p. r...io;. 00 • ...-a.:o. nca...., . 3971 1---;_______ -· 962--0180 3/10 to sail! $3150 839-5419 Marina. 49J..
ORIEl'ITAL Black Coral BRAND new te.nt, use<I ODCe, 2 Year old n1ale Sb Uy UDO 14 Sailboat. No. 2389, FAP.ULY Park. l968, 20x5T, 2
c.arvtnas. Collector'• lttrn. l2 x 14 1o1.itb pole Sfso. Jee Needs good home. ~j wtlh trailer. call 837-7tl39 BR. 2 ~. &ldrtl, awnlnp.
Avail for llmUH:I time. box cOOI~;. used nllCl', 847-2324 eves. 319 aft 6 P;\f Owner musl sel1. S le K
"'
uo 0019 LAnterns, 5000 BTU Carnpl"°~:::;.:;.=---_:;;: =========::.I fo.Toblle Home Brokcrs.12362 ·~·~•;.'·::0~''c-" ::.~::;~.;;.c::,,·...,....,,.,,-1 Heater, 1 Coleman stoves. ONLY 2 Coockapoo puppic1 --Beach Blvd., G.G. 636-0921
n:RY OLD • 1 bed. J chif· spare Ga.i; tank J: canvR.!l lefl Free tn good hom!. Power Crulur1 nr'" tonier, l drcs:.er. Top for Jetp wl!h pol.?s, 541)..3S75 3/l.Oi ~-'-"-....:...;;.;c..____ LEAVING for England. lltust
Call ~,ls.£9:'1.I FOR Sale twin screw 21!0 hp, sell quickly ~43 L&ncer. --==~======I good cond. 2 New black 9 1110. old male Scottie to 34• Fairllner, Veuel has· J"urni1htd bariain. S I: K
;;;;; lllO ttupholste.rro .leep seats. good homr only. MT-'4528 3/9 nc1o1.• hull job. r-.t11y he ~n MobUe Home Brokcr1. 12362
Sowing M1<hln01
SINGER nulo zlg-J:3g, 6 mos.
old. No ath1.ch nctded for
xig·zaa, button ho I e 1 ,
ileslcns <:tc. Gu1i:r. $37 CllSh
or 1m&ll payments. ~IG
Mu1lcal
ln1tr ument1 -8125
f'r.NOP!R illnstaJll: 1o1.·lth ll11rd
Shell t.ue. ~. ~8-3153
111ter 5.
&12-1843 or &12-32:1» FE:iotALE Dachshund 4 yrs. at I-lunUn:ton HarboW' by Be•ch Blvd .. G.G. 636-092l
SURFBOARD 7'4" lo --i home, I av• 1 appt. £S...Sl.30 •-• "":.c,.:.::.-""'-,=~== I AfOBILt llOnte aluminum GOOD CONDmON! children. 546-0005 3/9 BOSTON WHALER EAST· carport awnina;, J()x2)', like
$30. 645-2315 BLACK male cockapoo, 3 PORT. 65 hp lllerc It trlr. new. Price reasonable.
M, II •-'""" years old. Good watch dog. All 1969. Phone MS.Dtt , "!IS'"T~~~~~~~~~ 1Jc:e aneous ioovv ·194-mS 319 ' · rtfUST sell! 'ST Dbl w l de ~~eel-Ski Botti 9030 eu1tomlzed. N/many xtr .... DELI Cue, •fshcl\"t'll
1w/compret1.cir. Call
• 64!N3&l *
:J PARAJO:E:rs. 1 wht, 1
yellow. 1 green 1 2
reglsten!d. 5'1~1418 3111
'liO LAr-.tBRETf A M o to r 2 Cute female Pointer mlxtd
Scooter $170. Dinette M'!t $25 puin, 8 ,..,)t~. nld, need good
lawnmo~r S30. 54~. home. MS-~ sfh1r 2 3/tO
BOSTON \Vhsltr with so Reduced prlct. New ~fobilt ~Jere. All new \n '68. 2 gas Club, C.f\l. 612--8495.
ta.nkt, ~lee starter, good LOVELY 31' I hr rum ti•Jr,
cond. Subrnlt oUcr aver All 1ot up. lo rent, 1dltJ. no
::$850::' ::.· .:;'4A-44:::::::;'::.'·;.... ____ , pell. $2695 ea sh. 64w.&41
•
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sain, Sftvke, Part.
Immeidta1" DeUvft'7
All Models
J}r tup ort
31111 )I)("[•,
3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B,
-~17"' Authotiad MG Dealer
AUSTIN HEALEY
1960 Austin Healey 3000.
Xln 't enc &: good body.
$415. Call 54&-4226 f\~I.
IMW
0~-M
I ' . .
64~5065
BAYSIDE MOTORS
UCO W. Cout H">·• N.B.
•
MERCEDES IENZ
01 .111•.1•· County.,
l.1tq• \I 'l••l<·r.t,011
N1 wR.U "d r11,.,,,.;1 .... p.,.,,,
Jim Si e mon~ Imp,.
'.') ,, "''' /\ fv'l ,1111 ~'
~.1rit.1 Ar1.1 S4t-.111.;
MG
MG
Salet, Servk.:, Put.
Immediate Ddivcry,
All 111odel1
J~rtuport
JI lllPLl I { :,
~ w. Cout llwy, NJt
642-84(11 ~176«
Authorlnd MG Dealtr
'64 MGB red. r:oac1 °""'" wire whls, r&:h. $1050 or
best otter. MA--~7'11 after 6
UAO..Y PILOT DIAIE ·A·
LJNES. You can UH them
for ju11t pennla a t1a1· Dial
64Ul67S •
•
ONLY
129 ACTUAL MILES
19'9 JAGUAR XKE
ROADSTER
You won't be able to find
one like this very often. This
gorgeous XKE Roadster Is
fully equipped with chrome
turbo wheels, AM/FM ra·
dio •. 4 whee I disc brakes,
leather bucket seals, etc.
(421 ASG)
P'OOLE
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 Eo 17fh Street 541-7765
I
' ' I
•
I
I
I
,
•
:JO OAJLY PILOT Mo!Mlay, -9, 191" .
TRANSPOilTATION tllANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION '''llRANSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION iliNSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION • TRANSPORTATION 'fRANSPOR'I' A TION
Spart Co,. HIO UMd C•r• ''900 UMCI Cors tMo UMd Co" -'-~~~~~1-'-""'-"~-~~~i--~~~~-'--
9900 Used C1r1 9900 Used Cars '900 Used C•r•
CHEYROl.Er FORD .,. FORD MUSTANG MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE .PONTIAC PONTIAC
call us for fret" estimatl".
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask lor Sales Mallaeer
J8"211 Beach Bh•d.
Hunting1011 Beach
l<I 9-3331
WE PAY CASH
J
,___~,~~FOR~YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa 111CM 546-1200
l r-.1PORTS WANTED
Orange CounUe:r
TOP$ BUYER
··-aILL i\1AXEY 'IUYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
'j6 CHEVY V:S l spe~.
mag!!-, chrome r lms, S.\V.
Gauge~. ~ OR BEST or.
r~ER. 646-9076 after ~ PM
·~ 1111PALA Sta. \Vag. Air
cond, p/b, p/,, SllOO. Call ,.,..,..,
'65 EL CAMINO «X> hp 327
eng., f.llpd, radio, heater.
mags, tach. $1.350. 968-2200
CHEVROLET 56, siX cyl.
Stick. Good running con-
dition. $100. S49-1096,
642-7643·
l.f. Beach. Ph. 847-&SS.l CHEVELLE '69. Take over
Auto Leasing 9810
payments, or nfi~. * 646-5185 *
roRD A,_,ORIZEO '58 CHEV. 3 spd, d/h. X1nl u 1n • • _.. !' LEASING S\'STEM ~n6;1~~1tu, $1 ;), 673-®75
America's h1.1"1f?Sl Jeuing , _ .
gystem tar financto ar net 63 El ~!no. Air, 4 •peed.
lcasin ... or all ..., __ ........ and Nrw engine. .. .,.~ ......... * 67.>-:i516 + true: ks. -e Immediate delivery tram
nver 300 '"' '"d ""'"' CONTINENTAL e C.Ompelllive rat.f's
• N~"' car dealership 15ervfce 'r.6 CONTINE;r,'TAL, Xlnt e Full "tradein" value far cond, laeded, Tax ule.
your pi<eM"nl car Private party, 673--5655
e AU popular makes avail-1966 2-DR, Full power Ir air,
able L ea.t h e r . Banlt will
For C.OmpJele Df!tAlls Call repossess my car by l\ton-
Malc.run Reid day. \Vill aell for $1636.14
Leasing r.1 afl8gcr * 4!Q.C!MS *
Theodor•
ROBINS FORD
2060 Harbor BIYd. CORVAIR
Costa Jltlc~ 642-0010 * 'fi6 CORVAIR MONZA
--,...,.,,,...,,.,,,_ __ ISP'T' CPE. w I auio, rill.
J;' LEASE J;' · etc. J.o,y mileage, Joca1 .1
'OJ Cadillac ll Dorario. full owner. Sparklihg oriz teal p~T. air , black l\'/n'd leatb-blue w/ beaut pltlllh blue Vinyl i nt . .Prov~ ·economy er int. $µ9. per mo. 1 -·t 1 ~ _,_1 ~
'&T T-Bird Landau, lull pwT .. Jl us u... 4•-= moac """""
air, steTeO lapt. $19-per mo. tinental stylint . the on1y "95. MAllQOIS MTRS1'9IXI ·59 Cougu XR7, pwr, afr, So. Cat H 1 .--.m
vinyl top. SHIS per mo. ht• ~<UIG
$0. COAST LEASING Be...._ <94-T"13, SI0-3l"1.
JOI) w. Cot Hwy .. NB 645-%182 -.,, MONZA
Sport O>upe \vith autOinatic,
Used Cars 9900 One owner, locally owned.
---------"" Goddess 10\d ~erior, plush BUICK cream interior. $199 full price ar small dcw.11. .can J .P.
1966 'Buick Electn. Convt. 49&-9113 Or 56.0634.
Black. l''uO pwr. air.~· l.960 CORVAJ.R, 4 Dr. owner. Good cond. 11595. .A 1 .. __ .. 1 ...: .
0\l'r $400 under bk. 675-1060 u o . ..., .. _ m1 ea.it. V\\'JlM
by eldedy woman. New
1963 BUICK \Vil&'. Special tires, bn.kea. $395. 64frl914
Dix 6 pass, air, rack, xlnt e~s.
tng. ~1,WJ acl. ml. S400. I ,.;,,61c-;c"o"R"v"AIR=.-,Goodo.-,.-.,,-,od,
S16-91;)9 $1.lO.
ID&I BUICK Skylark, Xlnl + 6-16-2085 *
cond. P.Ju,o;;t sell~ !========== * 536-2671 *
"68 CALlF. Special Jae. air, CORVETIE
power 111ecring: auto, vinyl '66 CORVETIE }'stBk, 4iT
lop. $2095. 49'1-5909. cu. 425hp. Black & blk inter.
1968 RIVIERA, all extras. P~rf cond. Priv. pty, Make
$21.JO privale owner. offer. Call 642-6M2
:i92-5136
DODGE '6-1 BUICK Rivif'ra, full p<AT.
make offer. 327 \V. \Vibon,1-----------
S[)-i.ce 34, C.l\'L MUST lie.II! '67 Dorl 1e l"'========'-I Coronet 440 \Vagon, .P\vr CADILLAC steer, Pwr brake!!, Fae. 11.ir,
I----------I Luggage rack Clean. }"'ull
1965 EL DORADO Convt. lj"°pn=·-"'=Sl200==·~54<>-0~=!4~<-~
Owner. Ahllolutcly perfect 19611 OODGE GTS, ye-llow
or1gtnal co1ld, Light brown w/hlk. vinyl lop .I: 1'aci.n1
'" I cream leaf.her I n t e r: s tripes. " 15pd, many
51850. \Viii trade & tenns. xtras. :dnt cond. T.0 .P.
Priv. 01vnl.'r. Ph. 83J.-13a6 646--0953
-~==-~~-1964 CAO Coupe de Ville. '60 DODGE. &tick VS, i.ood
Pw-er/ait. Clean $1500. rubber f12.j.
(;4~2182, &It 6 & \\'kndS 541-&362 .......,., 69 SUPER Btt. 4· spd. run,
1i4 CONV. All f''(trU. Good air, 383 mag. Rl\V blk int.
cond. \\'hite:Jn-d. S 12 25 . Rally whla. T.0 .P. 5.1&-J.llO
($100 down). 496-2ii00
'&t 2 door. runs well
$9.iO
FALCON
:i-15-8424 '64 }.ALCON. 2 cir. 11tk. nu =========! uansm.. battery .. brakes.
S-05-1618 Irvine. 642-1189. CAMARO
'67 CA'.\IAM. Sell or 1radc FORD
~Uihe! for Chevy ol' r·ord .
van. Priv. pty. '60 Forti Sln Wgn, I cyl, r/h,
Call 644-0211 auto trena;, good tires, runs
'68 CA:.\fARO Rally Sprt. 327 -;:'.,°""-=· 7$225,.._. "-64"'>-0ll&-=:==,,.-
t."U. eng; 4 spd. All &a~,. "S2 Ford Stw. R~guod.
$2057. 548-405-1. betwn 4:30 & \VII I sell IO'f' parts.
5:30. • ~~1 .
1908 CAi\tARO. 6 cy I, 1966 1''AJRLANE GTA. :i9i)
automatic lran.<i, lo mlg eng .. :111u.to tTilnlf p/1. xlnl
Sl•OO. 551-&.-169 an~r ~l pm 1~nd. $1200. 968-~ aftc'r ;;
pm
CHEVROLET "' LTO-,.ORO WAGON. moo .
J.964 CIIE:VELLE, J 4 • 0 O 0 • 5J6.8:50.I '*
mi'1, likl' ~w. SlOOO. 1964 Ford Falcon V-8 at.lion
•j.1J..6392 • \Vagon. 1 owntr. R/H, Auto
'66 Chcvcllc J\telibu, \•lnyl trans. $450 ~
top. air. automalic. Sl295. '62 Ford Gal. 4 <Ir. Real
91i8-318T clean, fUJI pv.T It AIC. Alk·
l!f'J9 ClfEV. Sta. \rq. Radio, lni;t $.'.'AX>. ~&-4661 aft-4 P)I
heatl!r, auiomaflc trans. '6t FORD Galuie, v-a, 1'/S,
Po...,-er brake!f. ~. xlnt cond., Jo ml&:;. S700.
'60 CHEV. Sta. \Vagon. Xlnl (2131 5!l'J...J032
l..UICha.o.ic11l eo"'1. JC16'..o.-iA ~ftD Counh'V Sedan
and oui t2:;&, 5.\8-l&lD. , • w/r•<Ho. -uto. iir. p/s.
OAlLY PU.OT WANT ADS! ditc brki. D."Y.R.6. 968-o.l413
196-1 LE f\IANS CONvr. V8.
aulo, coni;olr-. p/1!1., r&h. tur-
quoisr 1¥/hlk rop,~nl rol'll.I .
Cdlrt. 644-1491
T·BIRD
t'OR Salt: '57 T-Bird .. 2nd
0"'.1J!f· Very clean. OriJ:
w/2• top1. Call eves 835-5013
Johnson" on -::::::;:::~ LINCOLN-MERCURY"-~~
NOW IS THE BEST TIME
IN 10 YEARS
TO BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT
AND WHERE ELSE BUT AT YOUR LOCAL LINCOLN MERCURY DEALER, JOHNSON &-SON, WHO GIVES YOU THE
BACKING OF 18 YEARS OF Cj)UALITY AFTER THE PURCHASE SERVICE!!
1970 COUGAR
"The Summit of Sports Car Luxury"
Equ ipA•d with powflr steering , powflr di1 c
brali-•1, white 1ide well tire5 + many other d e-
1ir1bl1. fe1tur•s.
$
#OF91HSl7BH
+ TX l LIC.
HIGH PERFORMANCE CORNER
' 4 1....-""''t:~,... .
1970 MERCURY CYCLON~E
2 DOOR HARDTOl'
COMPETITION ORAN5E
Comes equipped w ith 1!1 thest extrt•: 8'.g :"42~''. 4V
en9ine, emi11ion control. ~ speed tr1 n1m 1111en; h19h·
er ratio rear axl e, white sidewells 678x1 '4, power
front c:lisc br•kes, power steering, redio, remote left
h11nd mirror. Instrumentation 9roup.
No. OH 15 IV52827l
'
GOOD SELECTION s OF MERCURY MARQUIS & MONTEGO
STATION WAGONS
Summ•r Is just around the
(Don 't wait too long)
corner!
JUST
ARRIVED
FROM ,ORD MOTOll CO.
(Specl•l Pvrcha••I
Wide Sele<tlon Of
1969 Mercury Models
Cougara & M1rcury1, COl'IYlrtl·
blea, •tatlon w119on1, 4 dr.
htr4topa, 2 d"r h•rtltep1.
YOU• CHOICI $2995
'6t COUGAR C0NV£RTllLlS
With •ir r.011daioni119, pow•• ll•oi•-
ing, pow•• b••lt1, o1lt.. 4 to 9000
mil••·
'69 MERCURY CONV!RTllLE5
Wi!,h eir &011ditionin9. pow•• d 1t r-
in9, pow•r brektJ, •I•.
'69 MONT!GO SEDANS
Wilh eir to11Ji+.ioni"', po'*'•• ''''"
in9, JIO••• bre k•1, 1lt.
'69 PONTIAC CAT.i.LINA $2895 '.!Dr. Jlardtop. 1\uto1nat ic tran~m1~~1n11.
r(ld.io. hcatrr. 1)0\\Cr :\ll'l'rlnJ;. r>o11er brAkCS.
Lir. XXA-ti~ _
'6B CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE
l3rt1u1irul Qcf'llll Turquni~r '~11h n1ii1rh1n,::
1nlPnnr, landau top. E>t<'f'ptlonall,v rlran.
Fully luxury <'QUlf)Jl('rl inc·I. fartnr.Y air.
Onr <l\\"rl<'r. I.Jr. UGC • 170
'65 T 81RD
r.ich Midnij::h l Blu<' 1nrlt1Hir fini~l1
\1·ith m"1tehini;:-1ntrrior. F'ull po'' rr incl.
f!lclnry a ir. I.tr. OSE-645
'64 T BIRD
B11nut1ful tqrqunl!r 'vilh m:itf'hinf;
in1rrtor, shov.·s cxccplianal earl'.
Li.-. /f:\\'-17i;t
'69 FORD TORINO GT
Conv,.rt. Altr1t1•tlv1• cardinal P.f'cl \1i1h
"Olor 1natchC'd interior, \\"b!l f:' lop. au1.i.
t r;1n~ .• P S., f l'ltlin. hr111rr. I.tr. XXl1·2.1 J
'67 BUICK LE SABRE
Cunv. r ul! p•)\l('I" H;1•J11d1nt: far 1ory olr.
Lii:. T~tH· 17'~
'67 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
Coup!'.'. Full po\1•er including factory &Ir.
Brnutiful BronzP \.\'ith \Vhitr. Landau top.
41,000 actunJ 1niJcs. UC 841
'64 CONTINENTAL $1395 4 door sedan. Vrlvrt blAck finish \\•ilh
black JeaUV'r interior. Fully l uxury equippt'd
includinc run pov.·t::r &. factory air.
Lu·. OYS-525
'67 CONTINENTAL • •I DI'. St'd. Beautiful arctic white finl~h $2995 \\'il h mRtchlng \~11.thl'r intPrior. Landau •
roof, fully luxury equip!)f'd and factory air
1·on<lilioning, Ai\1-f,\1 radio. One-o,vncr car.
BC"aut1fully maintained. Llc. TRK 296
'65 CONTINENTAL $1695 •I door. Midnighl blur finish ~·i!h blond
lralhf'r inlrrlor, landl\U roof. Fully luxury
rquip1>rd it11·ludinJ.:: full po\''"T & factor y air.
t·nusuall,\• 1·lc11 n. Lie. TPC 96~
'67 CONTINENTAL
Con\·crlilllr. Pol;ir \1·hitr ''ith \1hilr
lr,111hf'r & "·hilr lop, full JlO''Cr t'quip~
\\'ilh ract. air. Lie. vcv.252
'66 CHEVROLET IMPALA s1995 SuJX'r Sport. Full po'ver Including po1J:er
\\indo,vi; I.:. factory air. A one o""-ner ~
gem. 28,000 actual miles. U c. TRT 313 ·
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BARGAIN
CORNER
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'1495
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$995
'1675
Johnson.son
•
2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA
NEW CARS
540·5630 642·0981
• r
1 Mile South of the
San Diego Freeway
'
540·S6J!ii
U~ED CARS