HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
1 I
ore • e
Troops in Laos Getting
Conabat Pay Since 1966 TUESIMY AFTERNOON, MARCH :10, 1970
--Four Counts
I . Newport~s Frizzelle
In Assembly Ra~e
BIDS FDR UTT'S SEAT
St'ate Senator Schmit&
Sc hmitz to Seek
Seat in Con g res s
Vacated by Vtt
The long.assumed fact Lhat State
Senator John G. Schmitz (R·Tuslin) will
attempt to succeed the late Congressman
James B. lltt in Congress was confirmed
h-1onday.
A special eleclion to be set by Gov.
Ronald Reagan some time prior to the
June 2 primary \l!'ill allow 3·5 th
Congressional District voters to pick
Utrs successor in the House of Represen·
talivcs.
Early May is the anlicipated time. . ,
Schmitz, the only avowed John Birch
Society member in the State Senale. is
cast in much the same mold as was the
late Mr. Utt. who died March l at age 70
in Washington.
The l9-year-Old Schmitz is acknowledg.
eel 'tO be the -front runner in the race !or
the \Vashington vacancy, whlle Assembly-
man Robert H. Badham (R-Newport
Beach) may be just on his heels .-
Badham Is expected to announce any
day whelher he will alao campaign for
the seat the conservative Orange, County
Republican held for nearly 20 years.
The uncertainty is the !lS'Ult of his plan
to attend a dinner in Washington and
Badllam'a announcement is expected
Thursday or Friday.
Speculation o••er the political upheaval
posed by Utt 's death has a number of
Republicans mentioned as possible can-
didates ror his seat, or vacancies created
In Sacramento.
Republicans William Wilcoxen and
. John O. Reterce , both of Laguna Beach.
hove entered the race, along with
Ocmocrat Thomas B Lenhart or Tustin.
I .en hart ws beaten once before by Utt
.1 a landslide vl~klry and slnce
(Seo SCHMITZ, Pase I)
(SEE PAGE 2)
Warrants Issued
In CSF Incident
Study or videotapes shot seven days
ago in a bloody police-student con·
front.alion on the Cal State Fullerton
campus led Monday to issuance of arrest
warrants naming four a 11 e &· e d
ringleaders.
Investigators said late Monday that on-
ly one had been taken into custody, but
the cases are being handled gingerly and
s!Jll more warrants are ezpected to be
issued.
One ringJeader marked !or arrest, J im
Cleair, chaJrman of the CSF Student
Mobilization Committee, ta u n t e d
plainclothes poltce officers at another
campu's rally Monday. ·
He demanded that they arrest him and
told a reporter afterward that Fullerton
Police Capt. Fred King said he was not to
be taken inlo custody in front of a crowd.
Fullerton Police De pa r t m e n l
spokesmen wou1d not verify either the
videotape use for evidence, or their alleg-
ed desire to c11pture Cleair without
witnesses.
Charges against him and three other
defendants, totaling six counts, include
assembling to commit an unlawful act,
remaining present at an unlawful act,
trespassing and asSault and battery.
The others are senior ph.ilosophy major
Valley School
Drops Athletes;
Pot Use Charged
Fountain Valley High School ha s
suspended two vars.ity baseball players
for alleged use of marijuana, Principal
Paul Berger disclosed today.
The students -one a startlng pitcher
for the Barot11 -have been taken from
their regular classes and must now at·
tend extended day courses al the Wln-
tersburg campus, a ~ntinuation school,
until they graduate, Berger said.
Police sakl bcith youths were arrested,
One is out on bail and the other was
released to custody o( his parents.
"It's bound to have some effect on the
team," Berger predicted. He said the
pitcher "is one of the two the coach
really counts on."
Chances for the boya' reinstatement on
the Fountain Valley team are. just about
nil, accordin1 to Berger.
"If . students are ~aught smoking or
drinking they lose: their eligibility for lhe
season," he said.
"We thought this was going to be one bf
our be.st seasons," Berger lamented. He
said the Barons have never won the
Irvine League baseball championship but
added1 "We would have had a good run at
ii."
Baseball Coach John Cole could not be
reached for commrnt.
Ted Scboneberger, freshman political
science major Neil Hendricks, and John
Marlenthal, but VJey are not all charged
with the same offenses.
f\.1arienthal, 24, of Anaheim, was ar-
rested Monday and Deputy District At-
torney Del Wright said today he believed
one of the other suspects had been ar-
rested.
Violence erupted on the CSF campuii
seven days ago when a force of more
than 100 lawmen swept through the
. -quadrangle after a protest demonstration
disrupted a disciplinary bearing.
My Lai Captain
Charged With 4
Mm·der Counts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The com·
mander of the company that led an
assault on My Lai two years ago was
charged with four counts of murder today
by the Anny in connection with an allep;-
ed massacre of South Vietnamese
civilians.
Capt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, or Pico
Rivera, . caur.. was accused or two
unspecified counfs of murder "on or
about" March 16, 1968, plus the murder
of twG Communist prisoners during in-
terrogation subsequent to the alleged 1t1y
Lai mass killing.
Four other persons also were newly
ch.arged in the case by the army, in-
clwling another captain involved In ques-
tioning of prisoners. He was accused of
two murder charges.
Three more enlisted men also were
charged, bringing to 10 lhe number of
men so far charged in the alleged s1'Ying
by American soldiers.
ft was not clear at flrst how many
murder counts were made against
Medina. but the Pentagon early this
a!ternoon ·said the number was foui".
P.fedlna and other military men under
investigation in the case are stationed at
Fort McPherson, Ga.
The Anny's announcement or charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about 16
March, 1968, maiming and murder of one
suspected enemy person and murder of
another during their Interrogation late in
the day of 16 tttarch , 1968, and assault
with a deadly weapon on a third In-
dividual \Vhile Interrogating him on or
about 17 March, 1968."
All those charged , with the exceQtlon of
an intelligence officer &et!used today as a
result or Interrogation of prisoners, and
another captain prevlous1y charged, were
connected with Medina's ouUit. Besides
10 military men charged so far, rive
other mllllary men and 22 ctvlllant wert
said to be under invest1gaUon.
-
VOL 6J. MO ... , saCTIONlt ,. P'A81S
of Murder -
,
Slant Drilling Charged
. I
Newport Will Sue
l(adane Oil ·Firm
His Nat1ae's Not Sue
Singer Johnny Cash and his wife June leave Nashville hospital with
their ne\v son John Oarter. Cash, who gained fame by singing 0 A
Boy Named Sue," chose a more rnasCuline moniker for' his own
o!fspring.
Troops in Lao s Receiving
Comhat-l!ay, p.s. Admits
WASHINGTON (UPI) -1llc Pentagon
disclosed today for the first time that
U.S. military men stationed In Laos have
been receiving combat pay of SGS a
month since Jan. I, 1966 .
Also without any previous publlC an·
nounccmcnt, the Silver Star for gallantry
v.·as, awn.rd d posthumously lo Capl.
Joseph K. Bush Jr. of Temple, Tex., f'or
the action In Laos in which he was killed
' '' .
Feb. to, 1969, ,
Bush was among 27 persons reported
by the administration to have ~n killed
or listed as missing as a result of enemy
action In Laos over lhe past six years,
A Pentagon spokesman said the whlle
receiving combat pay, men stationed In
Lno~ have not received the Income tax
benefits granted th.ose In Soutli Vletnam.
(See LAOS, r.,. II
Newport. Beach city couneUrnen served
notice Monday night Ibey are planning a
Jawsu.it against G. E. Kadane and Com-
pany for allegedly slant drilling an oil
well beneath city territory.
City Attorney TuJly Seymour was
directed to prepare the -lawsuit for Clty
Council action Jn two weeks.
Councilmen did not lip their hand as to
what evidence they might have.
The Newport city charter prohibits otl
drilling within or beneath the boundaries
of the city of Newport Beach.
Jim Gilstrap, manager of the Kadane
oil field. said lie had "no comment,
whatsoever."
The oilfield lies in unincorporated coun-
ty territory just north of Newport Shores
at the western city limlt5. Kadane has in
oil lease running until 1994 on the pro-
perty owned by Beeco Limited, a!Jo
known as the Banning property after the
family owners.
Vice Mayor Lindsk!y Parsons said city
officials have suspected fGr some time
that oil shafts from wells along. the
perimeter of the Banning property slant
under the city.
Parsons said it is his opinion "donkey"
pump machines should be placed un-
derground.as the Signal Oil Company did
at Bolsa Chica so the property "can be
developed to lhe highest and be.st we
_whi ch is now resii:lentllil rather lhan oil."
He said he and Councilman Donald
Mcinnis had met with Gilstrap and Han.
cock "'Bill" Banning ill without notable
&uccess.
Anti.insult Mea sure
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sen. George
Deukmejian today inh:oduced a bill to
make it a crime to call a police offted' a
pig or any other insulting or threatening
name.
Orange Coast
1''eaCher
Jfs been If ll>lrg weekend for
Old Sol, but he'll be around on
Wedneiday. Te.inperatures a1ong
the coast will stick to U.e lower
60's, however.
INS IDE TOD(V
Good 11tJ01 for all 11ou Dick
Tracy and Lt'L A.bntr /an.s -
t'treu-'te taking lip rtsfdtnct' fn
the DAILY PILOT .soon. See
Paoe J.
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I J DA.llV PILOT ~ lllt~ay, !11•rtll 10, 1970
Hearings on E dison Plant Expansion Conclude
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•
By JACK BROBACK
Of ""' Dtllr ,.11111 l1•tt
ftrolooged hearings on the proposed u-
i*ulmi Ot tbe H1111tlng(on Beach plant of
SoUtbern California Edison Company
uded Monday in Los Angeles before
Pu lie UUllUes Commission (PUC).
5--s:ny from three rebuttal \Vit-
19ses called by Edison and cro.\5-ex·
"'11nation by Edward C a m a r en a , tNtneer ~oclate with the Orange Coun-~
arco A gents ,
!/ab 5 Teens ,
~
$ay Price Up
After raiding a home in a rather ex.
elusive Laguna Beach area Monday
afternoon, state Bureau of Narcotics
agents alleged they had been "gouged" a
little on the · price of a marijuana
purchase but added, ;,maybe It's because
of the high rent area."
An agent'a claim Lo have purchased l l
''lid!" (11 ounces) of the dn.tf at 92.a Van
Dyke Drive led to the arrest or four 19-
year-old youths and apprehension of a 16-
year-old girl who was turned over to her pa'tents. ·
!>rice or the purchase, agents claimed,
was $100, a Uttle higher thaD the current
going rate of si:1 lids tor $50.
"We felt we should have got 12 lids for
thet price," he explained, noUng that lhe
price normally goes down as the amowit
purchased increases. "But it's preUy nice
up there," he reflected, "a lot or nice
houses."
Acting on Information received earlier,
an agent claimed lo have made the
pQrcbase late in lhe afternoon , at which
time, he said, there were "about 15 ~O-
pie In the house." ·
When state o(Ucers, assisted·bY Laguna
Beach narCotics officers Norman Bab-
ccX:t and Neil Purcell, returned to the
house at 4:50 p.m. the four men and
juvenile girl were taken inlo custody. The
oU>er occupants of lhe dwelling were
allowed to leave.
Charged with sale of marijuana are
Jay Edward Brechtel, 19, and R9~rt
pulder, also 19, of the Van Dyke Dnve
~ddress.
Booked on charges ol pMSession of
marijuana were John Salva lore Buglione,
19, of the same address and Randolph
Earl Holland, 19, who 1ave no address.
From PC.fie l
SCHMITZ ..•
Democrats are outnumbered 2 to 1 In the
diatrk:t by GOP members, his chances
n'l mu~ better. . e campaign announcement b Y
mit.z. Monday included praise for the
Mr Utt's principles and ideals, an
of eulogies last week in Orange
nty.
'The passing of Congressman Utt has
a void which must be filled by a suc·
r who is complelely and outspokenly
to all that he stood for ," Schmilz
in Sacramenlo. •
said the American way Qf life is
ujler open a.ttack -like never before in
~ttory -and that responsible, moral
ershlp 1n govunment Is imperative.
or this reason above all, 1 will be a
date to sue<:eed Congressman Ull as
representaUve of the 3Sth District,"
ht declared.
'f'Nea rly all those who know my record.
\lllether they support or oppose me. will
aaree ·that the people I represent know
ef!ctly where I stand,'' Schmitz con·
tldued.
iorhey know I give the same answers to
e.Jeryo ne instead of tailoring them to flt
thf pollUcal 11ltuation," sald Schmilz, a
~itical science instructor at Santa Ana
~lege . .. They know 1 'level' with my con-
sqt.uents," he added.
I
' l DAILY PILOT
l"Newport ktKI! H11.ti1ttto1 Inch
l\.0911111 h«.h fMstofl Vefley
!Co1t111 Mae • Sa11 Clfftffte
f OllANGE COA5T PVl!ILISH INCi CON.PA.NY
\ Robert N. Weed
) Prttkll<IT Ind P\Otl05Mr
1 J•cli R. C11rley
~ V1c1 Prul!lent •rid G«>t,11 M1n191'
4 Tho10111 Ke..,11
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J 'Oio10111 A. M11rphine
l M•n~lno Edl!or
1 Ri ~h1nl P. Nill
I $oulh 0•1'111• Ca..mty Editor • Offkn " Cotti Mal! .U) Wttl l1y $1f"ffl
lt<ieWpOrl llH,~: 2'711 well 11•1-acv1~.,•rd
' UIOunl encn: nz fOA$1 AYlflUf H1.111Hl'IO""' BNci'I: 1111) eur~ eoule~•rd
• SM! ci-11: a» NOf'lfl El C..l'!'llno ll:HI ..
I
I
ty Air PolluLion Control DI st r I c t
(OCAPCD) v.·ound up the marathon hear·
in gs.
PUC examJner Arch E. ~1aln called for
proposed findings or fact and conclusions
of law (legal briefs) to be sub1nllted by
attorneys f o r Edi.son, PUC and the
OCAPCD by April JI.
r-.1ain will then lake the 22 days or
testimony which began in mid-December .
in Fountain Valley under conslderallon.
He said he will render a decision within
two to six mon ths.
l\tain's findings will go before the PUC
comn1issioncrs for final decision.
Testifying J\tonday we.re Falk Kantor,
engineer wllh the NUS Corporation, a
private consulting finn hired by Edison ;
Or. \V. L. Faith, a consulting chemical
engineer and John A. Stowe, president
and manager of Weather Centrals Inc. or
Santa Ana.
The three Edison witnesses con-
tradicted previous testimany of OCAPCD
UPI TfJe!IMll
E~d of the Rainbow
MGM Studios employe Judy Carroll puts an auctioneer's tag on the
dress worn by J udy Garland in 1'The \V izard of Oz." The vast col·
lection of MGM set decorations, antique furniture, props, vintage
cars and other treasures used in over 2,200 movies and coUected
over a period of 56 years will go on sale 1\1ay 3.
Jury Still Deliberating
In M11rd er Trial of Hovdal
An Orange Count,J Superior Court jury
\Vhich was urged late f.fonday to retum a
guil ty verdict in the murde r trial or r-.-!ilo
Hovdal retumed to the jury room today
to resume its deliberations.
The panel lefl the courtroom shorlly
afler 3 p.m. and \VJS advised by Judge
Bruce Sumner two hours later that its
members could go home ror the night.
They resumed their discussions al 9 a.m.
today.
Hovda!, 52, ls accused or the slaying
last Jan. 1 of his wire, Georgia
Genevieve, 47. He is charged with firing
three shots into his wife at the climax of
a ~uarrel which began in the ·living roon1
and ended out on the sidewalk in front of
th~ couple's Santa Ana home.
Deputy District Attorney Ed Freema n
ended hls prosei:ution chores Monday
'''ilh the remainder thal he was not seek·
ing the death penalty for Hovda!.
' -·
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Rooste1·'s Not Cliicl~eH
\\'ho's afraid of !he hig. balil~on7 Not this rooster, \\'ho stands
no!u? to nose '''ilh the huge an al . 11olh bird and beost are re.:.iderrts
of the Vilas I1ark Zoo iJ1 r..Ja on, \Vis.
'• \.
•
wJLnesses Or. A. J, Haagen-Smll,
chairman, of UM! California Air Resources
Board and Erwinn, Kauper, a
rneteorolqglst.
Principal areas of dJsngreement \vere
over alleged gi'ound level concentrations
or air pollutants emitted from the Hun·
tlngton Beach plant.
The Edison experts contend that
nllrogen ox.Ide and other ecnlaminants
emitted by the plant will be greatly
dispersed by air currents before reaching
Found level and mJx.ing with emissions
from automobiles.
The APCD witnesses argued that the
pollutants would lose little slren1th
through dlspe ral.
Although Maln's final decision cannot
be anticipated statements by t w o PUC
officials indlc1te.d that the 1overnlng
body may be in favor or allowing the
Huntlna:ton Beach plant expansion.
Commission Engjncer Norman R.
Johnson testi!led that emissions of smog.
'Bonnie and Clyde'
Other States \
Qu·iz 2 Suspects
Authorities from out or state flew to
Orange County Airport Monday night and
today were questioning a suspected Bon·
nie and Clyde-style couple captured in
Costa Mesa Friday.
Police were secretive about what the
young couple are suspected of elsewhere
in addition to a variety ol charges
brought against them here.
Jack and Patricia Jackson, 25, and 24,
were caught Friday mornig at 514 ~
Bernard St., along wil.b two other men
linked to a $285 market robbery.
Complaints charging Jackson, Howard
R. Tschirhart. 31. or the Bemard Street
address and Jack C. f\.1atney, 32, of
Denver, Colo., with armed robbery were
issued Monday.
They were arraigned in Harbor Judicial
District Court, wbere f\.1rs. Jackson was
arraigned on a. separate count charging
her with burglary.
Detective Sgt. John Regan said today
the men are suspected of the March 4
holdup of a Tic Toe Market, ln which $285
was taken.
A team of 12 Cosla Mesa police officers
surrounded the Bernard Street home Fri·
day morning and captured them without
incident, although they were heavily arm·
ed.
Frotn Page l
LAOS ...
The benetlts are complete exemption for
enlisted men and a $500 aemplion for of-
fi ce rs.
Airmen stationed in Thailand who fly
missions over Laos have been receiving
hazardous duty pay, wi lh Lao! routinely
lumped with other Southeast Asia areas
as hosti le territory.
Mea nwhile weslern sources said today
the North Vietnamese had established a
command headquarters inside Laos -
the first of the war -~ seek bigger
military gains that would be consolidated
by any peace negotiations.
The report v.•as made public as
neutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma, the
premier, awaited the arrival of an
emissary from his hall brother, "Red"
Prince Souphanouvong, leader of the pro-
Communist Pathet Lao, vt'ith new peace
proposals th at call for a cease-fire and an
end to U.S. bombing.
Souvanna told the Pathet Lao Monday
the sooner he received the detailed five-
point peace plan the better. The Pathet
Lao plans came as various nations of the
\Vestern world taJked openly of recon~
vening the 1962 Geneva Convention to
see k an end to the war in Laos.
\Veil informed Western sources said
they learned of the North Vietnamese
headquarters from intelligence sources
and thal they thought it might be part of
A mas ter strategy to strive for bigger
gains and then make them permanent
through the peace conference.
Spruce Up
s~~ ~~8r~e,~e~~~1!1o~~d w~ths~::~.~~~
legal drug pills and valuables believed
taken in a wave of holdups an d
burglaries.
Teletype descriptions of the quartet
and the evidence confi.scated were sent
across the country, leading to interest
among a number of law enforcement
agencies.
The Jacksons had also been named in
arrest warrants issued by Independence,
Mo. authorities l:harging them with rob-
bery and forgery while a car slolen in
Kansas City was Impounded here.
Sgt. Regan said the suspects, transfer
red to Orange County Jail following ar-
raignment, were brought to Costa Mesa
today to be questioned about other
crimes in western states.
$10,000 Cocaine
Haul Captured
In Newport Raid
Newport Beach poli ce revealed today
that they confiscaled a pound of cocaine
\\1orth about $10 ,000 on the illicit drug ·
market during the arrest of six persons
lasl Friday on dfug charges.
Narcotics investigator Al Epstein said
cocaine is a relatively rare commodity in
local drug traffic.
"This is only the second time we have
come acros s cocaine that I can
remember," said Eps~in, •·and the first
time, only about an ounce was involved."
Cocaine is classed as a narcotic, but
actually i11 a stimulant. It is extracted
from the South American coca plant.
Arrested last Friday at 215 35lh St. on
suspicion of possessing drugs for sale
were Jennifer Louise Tye, 19, John Dale
Skaggs, 23, and Christine Ann Schmid, 22,
ol that address. Victoria Ann Lawson, 22,
an d Thomas Rithle Bergh, 19, both ol
New York and Jamie Harlan Cane, 21, of
Santa Barbara.
Miss Tye, Skaggs, Miss Schmid and
111iss Lawson were scheduled for ar·
raignment in Harbor Area ~1unicipa l
Court today. Cane and Bergh were
released from Newport jail Saturday
after posting $1,250 bail. Their ar·
raignmenl is set for l\.tarch 17 in
municipal court.
Investigators said the arrests came as
the result or a routine Investigation.
French Shoot Rocket
KOUROU. French Guyana (UPI) -
Scientists successfully launched a French
Diamant B rocket carrying a West
German satellile from the Kourou Space
Center today, National Space Study
Center officials announced.
Your Home for ••.
contributing nitrogen oxides will be leBlS
in lbe Soolh Coast Alf Basin with the ad·
dition of two new units at the plant than
without them.
•le said although the probability or pro-
longed systen1wide power failure is slight
if the additional units are not construct·
ed, the risk should nol be taken.
Leonard L. Snaider, PUC counsel, ruled
early in th e hearings that local air pollu.
lion control districls do not have velo
power of comn1ission decisions.
EYES ASS EMB LY SE AT
Optometrist F ri11elle
Nolan F rizzelle
Se eks Ba<lhom' s
Assembly Se at
Newport Beach optometrist on d
longtime Republican leader Dr. J'\olan
Frizzelle today announced he \\'ill run
against Assemblyman Robert H. Badham
(R-Newport Beach) in the 7lst Dis trict.
He made it clear he will oppose him
even if Badham chooses not to fight Sen.
John G. Schmitz (R·Tustin) for the
Washington post left vacant by the recent
death of Congressman James B. Utt.
Frizzelle, 48, former pres.ident of the
California Republican Assembly. said
many problems of coastal Orange County
need more vigorous attention I n
Sacramento.
He went on to list four of top priority:
-Protection of C'<lastal communities
from oil and refuse pollution plus private
development that excludes public use and
beaches and recrealional areas.
-Difficulties Yo'ith property lai:alion
and assessment.
--Controversies surroundin( sc h o o 1
systems and the resultant disruption of
the educational process.
-lnadequate state planning concerning
commercial aircraft regulations.
"[ believe there are solutions to these
problems if we vigorously seek them ...
and still encoura)Ze broad growth and ex·
pansion." he decla red in announcing his
candidacy.
A native Californian. Dr. Frizzelle has
been in practice in Newport Beach for 15
years and heavil y involved in GOP
political circles plu s community ac·
tivities.
He is a former member of the
California Stale Central Commillee and
i!i turrently chairman of the Ne11'port
lfarbor Ch.'lmber of Comme rce's Educa·
lion Committee.
He and his wife of 26 years, h1ary, have
four children.
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Dnnti1igton Beat!h
EDIJION
-Today's Final
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N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 63, NO. 58, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH I 0, 1970 TEN CENTS
.Civic Projects Held Up
Council to Wait Until After April Election
His Nonie's Not Sue ..
Singer Johnny Cash and his wife June leave Na shville hosPital with
their new son John Carter. Cash, who gained fame by singing "A
Boy Named Sue ," chose a more masculine moniker for his own
offspring. ·
Estuary Lane Residents
Asl{ Field Drainage Halt
Ankle-deep mud Is a bit more than
residenls o( Estuary Lane in Huntington
Beach feel they should suffer, name of
the street notwithstanding.
Robert Dingwall of 19791 Estuary Lane,
esked the city council Monday night to
stop fanners on nearby land from using
the public st reets to drain their irrigation
ditche s,
The land in question is about 300 acres
v.·est of Newland School and Sea Haven
homes.
"Sometimes we have to wade in ankle-
deep mud and water to get to our cars,"
Dingwall complained. "ll's because the
farmers are allo1ving their irrigation
ditches lo drain onto Dolphin Drive,
which runs in front of .r.Jew land School
and by our 'street."
"ll has been wet all this week,'' said
Earl Kellen, 19801 Estuary Lane. early
thi s morning.
"I don't know exactly how it happens.
bul J know it has beetl thi s way before,"
Kellen added .
The princi pal of New land School, Miss
Patricia Szakalun, however, was not
aware or the problem. "It hasn't been
brought to my atlention." she replied this
morning when contacted.
City officials Indicated today they
would check out the complaints, but no
one is exactly sure who is fanning the
land because it is a sub-lease from the W.
T. Newland estate.
"This year · they are letting the water
<1ut during the night because I asked
them to stop last year," Dingwall said.
"It only happens during irrigation season,
then it occurrs two or three times a
week."
He said they have even erected a city
barricade and converted it into a dam for
their irrigation ditches. ''1 just want it
stopped," be said.
Charges Filed
In Oil Spillage
It is now up to the court to decide \vho
was guilty in the spillage Feb. 22·23 of oil
into Huntington Harbour.
Huntington Beach City Attorney Don
Bonfa has filed crimina l misdemeanor
complaints against Grover.Collins Corp.
of Beverly Hills under city fire
ordinances which prohibit spilling oil on
public roadwa ys.
A penalty of $500 is possible under the
misdemeanor complaint.
City officials said the oil Yl'hich soiled
roadways ·and channels in Huntington
Harbour came from a Grover-Colllns well
near Harbour View School.
~y ALAN DIRKIN
01 11!1 O•llr flllM Sti ff
The City of Huntington Beach will not
see a start on its program to build new
civic facilities until after the April J4
coonCil election.
The question or an oil tax and methods
of financing the $13.3 million im-
provements clearly became a campaign
issue at a stormy study session of the ci·
ty council Monday night.
With two members charging that the
New My Lai
Massacre
Charge Filed
W Af>HINGTON (UPI) -The com·
mander of the company that led an
·' assault on My Lai two years ago was
charged with four counts of murder today .
by the Army in connection with an alleg.
ed massacre of South Vietnamese
civilians.
Capt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, or Pico
Rivera, Calif., was accused of two
unspecified counts of murder "on or
about" March 16, 1968, plus the murder
of two Communist prisoners during in.
terrogation subsequent to the alleged My
Lai mass killing.
Four other persons also were newly
charged in the case by the anny, in·
eluding another captain involved in ques-
tioning of prisoners. He was accused of
two murder charges.
1'hree more enlisted me.n also were
charged, brln(IJ>1 to 10 the number of
men so far charged in the alleged slayina
b;1 American soldiers ..
It wu not clear at first how many
murder counts were made against
f\.1edina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was four.
Medina and other military men under
investigation in the case are stationed at
Fort McPherson, Ga.
The Army's announcement of charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about 16
March, 1968, !!!aiming and murder or one
suspected enemy person and murder of
another during their interrogation late in
the day of 16 March, 1968, and assaul t
with a deadly weapon on a third in-
dividual while interrogating h.im on or
about 17 March, 1968."
All those charg&i, with the e.xception of
an intelligence officer accused today as a
result of intetrogation of prisoners, and
another captain previously charged , were
connected with Medina's outfit. Besides
10 military men charged so far, five
other military men and 22 civilians were
said to be under investigation'.
Medina wa s commander of Company C
of the 1st Battalion of the 20th Infantry
\Vhich made a sweep of My Lai 4 Hamlet
in search of suspected Viet Cong snipers.
The commander of one of the Company
C platoons directly involved In the opera·
tion, Lt. William L. Calley, has been ac·
cused of 102 deaths and is scheduled to be
tried at Fort Benning, Ga ., ln the spring.
Anti.insult Measure
SACRM1ENTO (UPI) -Sen. CC<1rge
Deukmejian today introduced a bill to
make it a crime to call a police officer a
pig or any other insulting or threatening
name.
others were stalling .. the council decllne.d
to act on an impassioned plea by City
Administrator Do)lle Miller for the 1<>-
ahead to embark on the capital program.
Claiming the citizens "will not tolerate
Indecision and delay," the administrator
urged the council to adopt a joint plan of
extra taxation, mainly through an oil levy
and a change in the business license fee,
and short-term bonds to pay for the civic
projects.
After heated discussion, lhe councilmen
Miller • Ill
voted 5-2, with Mayor Jack Green and
Councilman Henry Kaufman dissenting,
to order a 6(k:lay study of financing
methOOs and examination of a 15-year
bond program .
Those requesting the study, Coun.
cilman Al Coen, Jerry Matney, George
McCracken, Ted Bartlett and Don
Shipley. denied that they were stalling
and insisted they were only seeking ad·
ditional projecUons and mo r e in-
formation.
Plea
For Taxing Plan
In a dramatic move, apparently design-
ed lo sires,., the importance be attached
to his recommendation, Huntington
Beach City Administrator Doyle Miller
left his usual se at in the council chamber
Monday night to read a three.page state-
ment to the council from the rostrum.
The mild-mannered administrator has
been working for the City of Huntington
Beach for 10 years but no council
observers could recall his having taken
this action before.
He read slowly and passion ately as he
urged the councllmen to adopt his prcr
posal for pay-a~you-go and short-term
financing for the Capital improvements
program.
He gave a wry smile to business
Ieadecs and chamber of commerce
repreeentativts u he made bil pikb for
taxation that would affect mainly
basin~ and oU companies.
Here are uerpts:
"In a vuy real and J>O.!IUve aense. the
direcUon that our city takes from this
point forward relies on what you
gentlemen dO here tonight. We have
studied these basic problems for five
years and some initial decisions have
been made.
"As a result of continued citizen
participation in study and designing the
goals and aims of their city government.
a responsive civic pride has developed
which will not tolerate indecision and
delay.
''All studies Indicate that California's
popula tion will double by 1990 and that
Jiuntlngton Beach will total 250,000 people
comprising 65,000 families. The recrea--
tional and cultural needs of these af·
fluent, leisure oriented young families
wi.11 challenge the flacal capacity\ Of the
community. Our five ear capital pro-
gram will demand uJHlaUng and amen.
ding yearly, making delays now more
and more costly,
"In the past, when general obligation
bonds returned 31/4 percent interest and
non-profit corporation revenue bonds
returned 3.75 to 4 percent interest, long
term (25 to 30 year) amortltation periods
were economically acceptable .
"With current interest rates for general
obllgation bonds demanding e to 61h: per·
cent Interest and revenue bonds returning
7 to 71Ja percent interest, we find that the
total cost of mtmicipal nnancing over a
2.S-year term more than doubles the cost
of the project to the taxpayers.
"I aeema fundaflllOlal aod imperaUve
then, that to be fiacally -respons1ble1 ·the
city must exert "fJff effort to ac-.
C11r11pllab capital project.I under Pl1..,..
you-go and short tenn flnanclnf. ·
Referring to his _propoSal for an in-
crease to 5 percent In the hotel bed tax, a
gross receipts business fee, and an oil tax
of 3 cents a barrel, Miller said:
.. These three bold steps on the part of .
the council to meet the challenge of the
seventies wiU ha ve the BupJ>Ort of the
vast majority of homeowner taxpayers in
our city. In my judgement, to do Jess
would incur the dlspleasure or many and
the wrath of some."
The administrator concluded that a
non-profit corvoration should be con-
tracted to handle constructim and finan-
cing and he should be. instructed to work
with the council Civic Center Committee
to negollate such a contract to be brought
back for approval witbln 30 day!,
Huntington Policeman
In Close Brush With Death
Death peered over his shoulder Monday
when a Huntington Beach detective stood
-frozen with a gun against hls chest-
as his partner waited to blow the assail-
ant's own brains out.
The tense confrontalion occurred at the
home of an oil worker named In an arrest
warrant charging hJm with passing bad
checks.
Charges of assault with a deadly wea-
pon against a polite officer were added
to the cheek charge when Billy Ray
Witherspoon, 40, of 14892 Sabre Lane was
booked into jail.
Detectives Christian Schneider and
Martin O'Reilly said the near-fatal drama
unfolded at the Witherspoon home as they
tried to convince the struggling smpect
to leave peacefully.
Suddenly, they said, he snatched Schnei·
der's .38 caliber revolver from under his
sport coat and shoved lt against the law·
man's chest.
''Turn loose of me or rn shoot," they
quoted Witherspoon as saying.
Valley School
Drops Atliletes;
Pot Use Cha1·ged
Fountain Valley High School has
Guspe nded two varsily baseball players
for alleged use of marijuana, Principal
Paul Berger disclosed today.
;Long Edison Hearing Ends
Suddenly, he felt the cold muule of
Del tt:live O'Rellly's service revolver
against his own temple.
"Drop the weapon," he znapped. "Or
I'll shoot."
Witherspoon dropped the gun and
O'Reilly kicked it across the floor out of
reach. at which time the suspect was
wrestled down . The students -one a starting pitcher
for the Barons -have been taken from
their regular classe& and must now al·
tend extended day cou rses at the Win·
tersburg campus, a continuation school,
until they graduate. Berger said.
Police said both youths were arrested .
One is out on bail and the other was
released to custody of his parent&.
"It's bound to have some effect on the
team." Berger predicted. He said the
pitcher ''is one of the two the coach
really counts on."
Chances for the boys' relnslalemenl on
the Fountain Valley team are just about
nil, according to Berger.
"If students are caught smoking or
drinking they lose their cllgibility for the
season." he said.
"\Ve thought this was going to be one of
our best seaM>ns," Berger lamented. He
11ald the Bnrons have never won lhe
Jr\'ine l.c.aguc baseball championship but
added. "\Ve would have had u good run al
it."
Bascbhll Coach John Cole could not bo
reached for comment.
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PUC Examiner Must Study Briefs on Smog Issue
By J•A.CI( BROBACK
Of IMO.HY ~Ott s .. o
Prolonged hearings on the proposed ex·
pan1io11 of the Huntington Beach plant of
the Southern California Edlson Company
concluded Monday in Los Angeles before
the Public UtUitles; Commission (PUC).
Testimony from three rebuttal wit·
nesses called by Edison and cross-ex-
amination by Edward C a m a r e n a ,
engineer associate with the Orange Coun-
ty Air Pollution Control D i s tr i c t
(OCAPCD) wound up the marathon hear·
in gs.
PUC examiner Arch E. Main called for
proposed findings of ract and OOhclusions
of law (legal briefs) to be submitted by
attorneys f o r Edison, PUC a n d the
OCAPCO by April 13.
Main will then take Ille 22 days (If
testimony whi ch began in mid·Decem ber
in Fountain Valley under c:nnslderatlon.
He said he will render a dccblon ~·ithin
tY•O to six month6.
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f\.1ain's findings wi.JI go before the PUC
commissioners for final decision.
Testifying htonday were Falk Ka ntor,
e.iginee r with the NUS Corporation, a
private consulting firm hired by Edlson;
Dr. W. L. Faith, a comulting chemical
engineer and John A. Stowt:, ·presldf:nt
and manager of Weather Centrals Inc. of
Sanla Ana.
The three Edison wltne.'\SCs con-
tradicted previous testimmy of OCAPCD
witnesses Dr. A. J . Haagen-Smit,
chairman of the CaUforoia Air Resources
Board and Erwlnn, Kauper, a
meteorologist.
Principal area5 of disagreement were
over alleged ground level concentrations
. of air pollutants emitted fr1nn the Hun-
tington Beach plant,
Th e Edl!on expert.s contend I.hat
nitrogen oxide and other contaqiinanta
emitted by the planl wlll be areatly
dispersed by air currents before reach.Ing
ground level and mixing with emissions
from automobiles.
The APCD witnesses argued that the
pollutants would lose little strength
through dl!peral.
Although Main's final decision cannot
be: af!Uclpated state~nts by t w o PUC
officials . Indicated that ,the governing
body . may .be in favor or allowing the
HonUngton Beach pla.nt expansion.
Comm tssion Engineer Norman R.
John!IOll testified that emissions ol smog·
contributing nitrogen oxides will be lesa
In the Sooth Coatt Air Ba!ln with the ·ad·
dltlon of two new units at the plant than
without them.
lie said although th e probability of pro-
longed systemwide power failure is slight
If the add!Uonal units are not construct...
td. the risk ahould not be taken.
Leonard I .. Sna.ictcr, PUC counsel, ruled
t.arly in the hea rings J.hRt local 3Jr pollU•
lion control districts do not have vcio '
power or co~slon decisions.
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Pollce said Witherspoon was served
the warrant inue from West Orange Coun-
ty Judicial Court, but said he couJdn't
leave because his wife and five children
were sick.
They offered to wait while he telephoned
a family friend lo come and care for
them.
"I don't have a telephone,1' he replied.
"Then Y04.1'll have to pl)9ne from the
potl'Ce station," Schneider told Wither·
spoon, an employe of Pacific Drilling
Company In Sienpl Hill.
lie was told ·bl! 1$-year-ojd son could
remain In chaf'ge.
Violence erupted at that point, lnvesU-
gaton said, leading to .the brush with
dea th before Witherspoon was handeuffed
and hauled away .
Stock i"arkets ·
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
contlnued to move \vlthln 'a narrow r-ange
late this afternoon. ,(Set qUotaUona, .
Pages 1&-17),
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Mayor Green was not convinced. "I
think it is a st.all and the only reason lt's
been suggested .by business is that some
business leaders and members of the
council woold like to see the program
dropped altogether."
Green added, "I think every person
running for city council should be re-
quested to make some statement on an
oil tax and financing .''
Matney objected to the program "being
(S.. IMPROVEMENTS, Pa10 l)
* * * City Pledges
To Get Park
Architect
The cily'z administ rative staff prcr
mised to make "a supreme effort" Mon·
day night to sign Richard &: Dion Neutra
& Associates as archlttt:t for the pro-
posed $2 million library in the Central
Park.
The pledge to try to retain Neutra by
the council's Marcil 16 meeting was given
by City Administrator Doyle Mlller after
Councilman Jerry Matney said he was "a
little perturbed" at the delay.
Development coordinator T h o m a s
Severns said there had been two points of
dispute with Neutra but these had been
corrected.
The city had been anxious to make sure
that a letter of intent, if signed, would
also bind Neutra lo a non-profit cor·
poralion i£ such an agency is formed to
oversee. library construcUon and that
Neuka no longer wu lnsisUna that the
full cOntract be agreed by April I ,
A retainer fee of $7,500 has been ap-
proved by the council for N'eutra.
"If yOO rca11Y. want to get us off the
dime on the capital improvements prcr
gram, one way might be to 1lgn the
library architect and we would have to
coine up with the money for the library,"
Matney said. "I hate to see us moving
ahead on the central park without a
library architect."
Council Hopefuls
In Seal Beach
To Voice Plans
Candidates for the March 31 Seal
Beach City Council election have been ln·
vited to air their pcisitions about the
city's future at 7:30 p.m. Thursday In toe
McGaugh School auditorium.
Among the topics to be discussed are
what is to be done with open space in the
downtown area, the future of the former
Pacific Electric right 'of way, t.he pr~
posed natural park in the Bullet Hill area
and the question of a youth program for
the city.
The session is sponsored by Seal
Beach's Committee for Environmental
Concern.
Ten candidates hav~ fiJled nom ination
papers for two seats slaled to become va·
cant. They are John Hamilton, in--
cumbent; Morton A. Baum, pharmacist;
ri1rs. Marilyn Millstein, housewife: Char·
Jes F. Knapp, teacher;
Gary A. Strangeland, fireman ; Charlot·
le L. Crowley, housewif'; A. Tracy
Burton. businessman, and Harold K.
Holden, president of Seal Beach Leisure
World's Golden Rain Foundation.
Orange Coast
Weather
It's been a long weekend for
Old Sol. but he'll be around on
Wednesday. Temperatures along
the coast will stick to the lower
60's, however.
INSIDE TODi\ l'
Good news for alt 11ou Dick
Tracy and Li'l Abner Ja1u ,-,
i.1t.e11're takina up retidrncc fft.
th• DAILY PILOT 100"' S••
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2 DAILY Pll01 H lueso11, WTll't'n 10, 1'1 10
Jul'JI Selectio1i
··Panther Lawyer Ot· er Official's
· Renews Attacks Quiz 2 Suspects ~
By TOM BARLEY
OI ftlt Oll•Y .. !ltt 1!1H
Trial 111wyer Robert Green today
renewed his attack on Ora~e Cowity's
jury selection system in pr e t r i a I
arguments that are expected to delay the
murder trial of Arthur De\Vitt~ League
for at leart a v.1eek.
Grttn's target for much of lhe morning
Beach Hoping
For U.S. Fund .
To Add Land
Huntington Beach city officials are cur-
rently crossing lbeir fingers In the hope
of receiving federal fund!! which would
allow them to add another 50 acres to the
liunt.mgton Central Park.
And, if their bid proves successful. they
plan to let the birM have most of It.
Thousands of them -including
mallards, seagulls, grebes, cormorants
and turkey vultures -currently use the
otllerwise useless marshland as a nesting
arid playground.
At the suggestion of Councilman
Donald Shipley, professor of biology at
Cal-Suite Long Beach, the city staff is
looking to the 4-0 acres west or Golden
West Street al)d south of Slater Avenue
as a future bird refuge.
Floyd "Bud" Belsito, ci t y ad·
ministrative aide, has already forwarded
an application to the .federal government
Ui provide financing for the property.
Addition of the swamps plus a 10-acre
parcel west of Lake Huntington would
bring· the total park acreage from its
present 147 acres to nearly 200 acres.
Thej cost of adding the property Is
estimated to be $1.17 mlllion, with the ci·
ty and federaJ government sharing the
expenses on a SO.SO basis, according to
Belsito.
• 1'Jf the $582,816 grant is approved, it
wilL bring the federaJ government's in·
vestment to a total of $1.3 million. The ci·
ty or course, is investing that amount of
money, too. in buying this facility,"
Belsito pointed out.
The land and swamps used for the
nesting areas will be left just as they are
now, according lo the park plaMers,
Solid ground in the SO.-acre addiUon will
be used for court and JaWn games, picnic
facilities, and passive park uses, the:
plannen said.
session was again Superior Court
Administrator Leslie r.tcCartney. And
Green drew from the \'eteran court of·
ficilll the admission that present jury
selection procedures in Orange County
are strictly limited to the names of
persons contained in the voters registra-
tion list.
McCartney agreed that his office did
not draw upon \Yhat Green called
"available supplemental data''
1elephone directories service club lists.
assessment rolls, union membership
listings and cJty directories.
League, 21, Santa Ana, is accused of
the murdtor of Santa Ana police officer
Nelson Sasscer. The prosecution will
argue when the triaJ starts that the young
member of lhe Black Panther organiza·
tion shot and killed the 24-year-<ild
patrolman in a downtown confrontation
Jast June 4.
... Green's pretrial contention is that
orange County jury selection systems
preclude the possibility of League getting
a fair trial. Elimination ot many county
residents who have not registered to vote,
he states, also eliminates many members
of minority groups and many county
residents who >ctentify with League's
modest economic stature.
Rooste1·'s Not Chicken
\Vho's afraid of the big. bad bison? Not tltis rooster, who stands
nose to nose with the huge animal. Both bird and beast are residen1s
of the Vilas Park Zoo in Madison. \Vis.
Green argued this morning that
statistics compiled on a national basis i11· .•
dicate that jury selection procedures Oil.-
the lines employed by Orange County
eliminate 30 percent of eligible residents
from jury service. IMPROVE MENTS DELAYED • • •
League is a Negro and Green conlends
lhat there is very little chance that a
member of his race will be impaneled on
the jury to be sworn in before Judge
Samuel Drelzen.
Judge Dreizen opened the proceedings
tQday with a stern warning that he will
nOt allow repetition of an incident which
occurred late Monday.
Severa] spectators at that time offered
loud comments on the progress and
nature of the trial as Judge Dreizen left
the bench for the afternoon recess. They
were admonished by court bailiffs for the
breach of etiquette.
"If it happens again," Judge Dreizen
said today, '"1 will clear the courtroom. I
will have no disrespect towards the law
and this court and J am not going to offer
any further warnings on this topic. If you
sil in this courtroom you will abide by its
rules."
There were em pty seats in the
courtroom today and little evJdence of
the tension that marked the opening day
or the trial. There was no distribution of
Black Panther literature and .no appuenL
need for the heavy security measures
that were aliU in force.
nut1le a can1paign issue·· and l\1cCracken
countered by saying. "Slxty days won't
make any damned difference."
The mayor was referring to reports
that the chan1ber of commerce wi shed to
see an add1t1onal st udy on lhe progra1n
and f1nanc1ng 1ncthods.
The issue before the council. as
presented by the administrative stafr,
was whether to pay for the new civic
center, library, fire stations, city yard
and civic auditorium Y,'ith a joint pay·aS·
~·ou-go !.)'stem and JS.year bond program
or to bond the entire project over 25
years.
Some business groups ln the city, in·
eluding I.he Huntington Beach Company.
an affiliate of Standard Oil and the city 's
largest land-holder, are known to favor
the 25-year bond program.
Finance director Ben Arguello told the
council that in the joint cash and bond
program the administration was recom·
mending the cost of the $13.3 million im·
P.rovements would be $18.9 million, To
bond the ptojec(s over. 25 ye!l:rs, Arguello
claimed , woUld cost $28.7 million, the dif·
fcrence being ll)e greater interest, $9.7
million.
the can for a study, said that if a com·
mittee is appointed every segment of the
community should be represented on it -
"because what we are deciding is whose
ox is going to get gored. That's the ques-
-lion here. H you don 't make these
decisions, you have to make alternatives
as to \\'ho will foot the bill."
McCracken claimed that there may be
no need for extra taxes. Kaufman, who is
not running for re-election and who y,·ill
not be on the council when the matter
t'Qmes up again, countered: "If you do
not. go . for the administration's proposal
yo u will put 7.5 cents on the property
tax."
Bartlett sided with McCracken. saying
most homeowners have 2>year loans.
.. ft"s important that people in lhe future
pariclpate in our capital improvement
program." _
Shipley felt the cooncil was being rush.
ed i~to spending $19 million in a one-night
session.
Green thought the library was a symbol
l.o the community and should be built
. within two years at the most. and that
the civic ·auditorium was "desperately"
needed.
Authorities from out of slate ne\V to
Orange County Airport f\1onday night and
today were questioning a suspected Bon·
nie and Clyde·slyle couple captured in
Costa Mesa Friday.
Police were secretive about what the
young couple are suspected of ·elsewhere
in s.ddition to a variety of charges
brought agaimt them here.
Jack and Patricia Jackson , 25, and 24,
\vere caught Friday morning at 514 1,~·
Bernard St.. along witb two other men
linked to a $285 market robbery.
Complaints charging Jackson, Howard
R. Tschirhart, 31, of the Bernard Street
address aiid Jack C. Matney, 32, of
Denver, Colo., witb armed robbery were
issued Monday. -
They were arraigned in Harbor Judicial
District Court, where Mrs. Jackscin was
arraigned on a separate count charging
her with burglary .
Detective Sgt. John Regan said today
the men are suspected of the March 4
holdup ol a Tic Toe P..farket, in which ~
Workers Sought
To Ai.d Census
On Orange Coast
An appeal to residents' of Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa
to apply for census taker jobs, has been
issued by Roy Gordon, district manager
of the 1970 census.
Gordon said applicants must be 18
years old or over and U.S. citizens.
"They will be require,.: to pass a selection
test demonstrating their ability to un·
derstand printed instructions and do
si mple arithmetic," he said.
According to Gordon census takers will
be paid on a piece basis designed to
average $2 per hour and mileage will be
paid to \\'orkers who use their cars.
"\Veekly earnings for a full 41).hour
week might range from $00 to more than
$100," he explained . The average assign#
ment for a census taker will last from
three to five weeks beginning l\1arch 30.
Gordon said anyone interested in ap.
plying should contact the census office at
1310, Suite K, E. Edinger, Santa Ana, 547·
7639.
"
\\'as taken . 1
A team of 12 Costa Mesa police officers
surtounded the Bernard Stl'eet home Fri.,,~·
day rnorning and captured them without
incident. although they were heavily ann-
ed.
Three loaded pistols and a sawed-offt.1
shotgun were seized. along with cash, ii
legal drug pills and valuables believ
taken in a wave of holdups andb"
burglaries. I
Teletype descriptions of the quarte~
and the evidence confiscated were sent ~
across the country, leading lo in~rest
among a niµnl!e r of Jaw •enforcement ·
agencies. •
The Jacksons had also been named In "
arrest warrant.s issued by Independence,~
f\1o. authorities charging them with rob;•.:
bery and forgery while a car stolen in ; .
Kansas City v.·as impounded here. .
Sgt. Regan said the suspects, tran.5fer :
red to drange County Jail following If··,
raignment, were brougb1 to Costa M_e,a 't
today to be questioned about other
crimes in western states.
Trustees to Eye Finance
Problems of Electio11 Loss
Under Arguello's system, $4.6 million
\VOuld be raised in additional taxes and
$8.7 million would be bonded,
The additional revenue would be raised
in the following manner:
-Using the $1.50 a 1nonth tra~h tol·
lcclion fee.
-Using 5 percent of the property lax.
-Changing the business license lax to
Coen said he did not feel equipped at
this time to make a decision and favored
!he study.
The city administrator pledged to
cooperate with the study group, which
would report back lo the council at its
first meeting in May.
Kaufman. however, pushing the
husiness tax, oil levy and hike in hotel
bed lax, proposed that, in the meantime,
the cily attorney be instructed to draw up
ordinances on these laxes and called for
a vote on this.
Burke Planning
To Riu1 Again
Assemblyman Robert ~I. Burke (R·
Huntington Beach) today reaffirmed his
candidacy for the office of assemblyman.
, UPI T1itP~t"'
R eady for 1'10011
Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union
High School District will focus on fiscal
problems generated by the failure of a
bond issue and tax override.
Students Ask Parents
To Beach Drug Study
About 2,000 invitations are currently
being sent to parents of Huntington
Beach High School students In an effort
to enlist community support far a f\1arch
16 drug symposium.
Under examination at the 7:30 p.m.
meeting will be the drug problems as
seen from the police point of view and a
summary of campus actlvi~ies by Prin·
cipal Woodrow Smith. The session will be
held in the school cafeteria, 1905 Main St.
DAILY PILOT
'
0111:4NGE COAST PV!ILl$HING COMP.ANY
Robert N. W•ed
Presld..t 1!'1G l>vbUIMr
J1ck R. C11r1ev
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Ttio11H11 K1el"il
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They will meet al 7:30 p.m. at district
headquarters, 1902 17th St.
Among the suggestions already brought
before them is a proposal by the Distri<:t
Educators Association (DEA) which
would establish a fi ve.period day and re·
move all athletics and extracurricular
activities.
Others have offered flexible-modular
!cheduling and elimination of ce rtain ad.
ministrative positions as a potential solu·
tion of meeting the financial crisis.
"\Ve·ve got to find the money some·
where," said Trustee Joseph Ribal l!>da}'.
He champions a11 effort to elin1inate th7ee
administrative positions because he
claims. they are SUIJE'rfluous.
These include jobs currently held by Dr.
John Venable, director or curriculum : J·I.
\V. Standard, coordinator of chi ld welfare
and attendancl', and Lee Mosteller, direc-
tor of special serv ices and recreation.
When asked for his reaction to the Riha!
proposal, Standard repliffi, "I wouldn't
have any reason to do that r "''ouldn't
ca re. to even make a comment."
J\1osteller. v.•hose main responsibility is
to provide driver training. said. "It was
poinled out to Dr. Rlbal that my salary
CQmes from the Civic Center Act and the
f\folor Vehicle Department. They v.·ouldil't
save any money by eliminating me."
Dr. Venable was out of town today and
could not be reached for comment.
Harbor District
Hearings Slated
State hearings on two bills affecting the
Orange County Harbor Dis tr ict have be.en
sv.·itched from Thursday lo l\1arch J9 in
Sacramento, at the request of the Orange
County League of Cities.
One bill, introduced by Assemblyman
J ohn V. Briggs (R-fullerton), ca lls ror a
vote of the people to decide if the Harbor
District should be retained, expanded or
di!solvtd.
.Another bill, authored by ASSl'mbl;man
Ken Cory {0.Anaheim ), simply requests
the !late Legislature to expand I.he dut1e.~
of the liarbor Districl without a vote: of
1he people.·
"We asked tor the: change In he11ring
datts beca use lhe l.en@ue of Cities
already has a mttUng this Thursday,"
said Huntington Belch l\1ayor Jack
Grten, ~·ho ls prtsldent at the League.
·rhe Orange County ~ague of Cities is
on record la\•orina: the Briggs bill ind let·
ting the peopl1 decide the Harbor
DilLrict's future.
I
a gross receipts tax , namely changing the
emphasis from the nwnber of employes a
business has to judging it by its turnover.
-An oiJ production tax ol 3 cents a
barrel, calculated to raise $4~7,000 a
year.
Alter Miller's presentation, in which he
said the pay-as-you.go and short term
financing proposal was "imperative" and
'"fiscally responsible", lhc hot debate
broke out.
l\~atney asked. ··why not a long-term
bonding option? \Ve are building faciliti es
to 1990 projections. Why are ~·e afraid of
25 ye:irs' amortization? -$9 million {the
difference bctv.•een the alternati\'es)
doesn't fri ghten n1e. I \vould like to sec
some of lhe people coming here later
paying for the facililies they "''ill be us·
ing."
Coen, an attorney, com1nented lhat !he
program was con1plex and he \vished to
see a full explanation of the issues.
~1cCracken called Miller's presentation
''a sales program," and sa id he disagreed
completely with the administration.
.. All il showed us was the cost of the
linancing charges. \Ve disguise the tax by
putting lt on business. but the citizens
themselves "'i ll pay (or this. lt \\1111 make
the cost of doing business in Huntington
Beach higher than in neighboring cities."
f>.1cCracken said he would like to see a
~ystems committee. which was fanned
six n1onths ago to study the city·s data
processi11g. study !iifferent \vays of fiuan·
cing and whether financing Is needed .
This angered Dr. Ka ufman .
Kaufman: .. Are you \villing to let the
library go another four or five years?''
J\1cCracken : "'No, possibly ano1hrr
~tudy ,,·HJ sho\\' financing 1s not needed."
Kauf1nan: "I don't think pri-Orities :i re
~ question any more. \\1e are ~hind five
or six years on C\'ery one of them. The
gross receipts business tax \1·ould noL be
highrr than Lhc business license; most
cltles have gone Lo gross recclpi.s, \\'e are
the exc:eplion:• ·
Dr. Kaufm an said :i .study would be a
\\·11y of delaying the program and in·
creasing costs.
··1 hate to say thi!, but If \l'e had
lldopted the oil tax three years ago as I
had suggested v.·e woul d have SI .S million
in revenue now," Kaufman added.
Milter said lhe only thing sacred to him
wns the $9.7 n1illion diUcrence in cost.
Or. Kaufman, conlinuing h.is attack on
Ti"er Has Cubs " \VASH IN(;TQN 1VPI) -The NaUon11l
Zoo's farn ous white tiger ~1ohini has
given birt11 lo four cubs, two of them
white like hrr. They "''ere reported doing
well.
The motion failed 5--2 with Green and
Kaufman providing the only "Yes" votes.
The committee that will make the
study is called U1e Systems and Data
Processing Committee. Ils members in·
elude Councilman Coen, Bob Fisler who
"'orks for Atlantic Richfield, city Finance
Director Arguello, Richard Belyea. a
~1cDonnell-Douglas executive, Mike
Bokor, member of the planning cum·
mission, John Robbins. a data systems
analyst. and Richard \Vaidzunas, bank
manager.
The group also was instructed to study
wheU1er the council should entrust the
program to a non·profit corporation.
Spruce Up
A spokesznan for •the Assemblyman
said he made lhe announcement because
"there has been speculation that the 70th
District legislator was going to seek the
se at held by Senator John G. Schmitz (R·
Tustin)."
"I \Vant to reassure my constituents
that I will not be a candidate for the 341h
Se nate District even ir Sen. Schmitz
chooses to run for the 35th congressional
seal "'hich wa s held by the lat!?
Congressman James B. Utt," Burke sa id.
Burke also proposed a resolution which
\Yill ask the legislature to approve a
study of problems associated \vilh vacan·
cies in public elective offices which occur
between the time of opening day for filing
nomination papers and the general elec·
lion.
Your Home for .••
Apollo 13 commander James
Lovell briefs newsmen after a
training flight Monday in the
Lunar Landing Training Ve·
hi cle. The LLTV flight was a
practice for the Apollo 13 lu-
nar landing mission scheduled
for April 11.
lfospila l Honor ed
Next wee k. !11arch 15 lo 21, Is
''Childrcn·s Home Society \Veek'' in
Fountain Valley by proclan1ation of
J\.1ayor Edward Just who called on
ci!izens to su pport the work of the Los
Angeles orphans' home.
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End of the Rainbow
MGM Studios ernploye Judy Carroll puts an auctioneer1s tag on the
dress worn by Judy Garland in "The Wizard of Oz." The vast col·
lection of MGM set decorations, antique furniture, props1 vintage
cars and other treasures used in over 2,200 movies an d collected
over a period of 56 years will go on saJe May 3.
Senator Schmitz iI1 Race
For Utt's Co11gress Seat
The long-assumed fact that Stale
lleeator Jolin G. Schmitz JR-Tustin) will
attempt to l5llCCe<d the tali Coogr__.n
James B. UU in Congress was conftnned
Monday.
A rpecial election lo be i;ct by Gov.
Ronald Reagan some time prior to the
June 2 primary wiJI allow 3·5 th
Congressional District voters to pick
Utt's successor in the House of Represen-
tatives.
Early ?\-fay is the anticipated time.•
Schmitz, the only avowed John Birch
Society member in the Stale Senate, is
cast in much the same mold as was the
tate P.fr. Utt. who died March I at age 70
in Washington.
The 39-year-old Schmitz. is ackoowledg.
ed. to be the front runner in the race for
the Washington vacancy. while Assembly·
man Robert ll. Badham (R-Newport
Beach) may be just on his het-\s,
Badham is expected to announce any
day whether he v.'ill also campaign for
the seat the conservative Orange County
Re.publican held for nearly 20 years.
The uncertainty is lhe result of his plan
to ·attend a dinner in \Vashington and
Badham 's announcement is expected
Thursday or Friday.
Speculation over lhc political upheaval
posed by Utt's death has a number of
Republicans mentioned as possible can·
didates for bis seat, or vacancies created
In Sacramento.
Republicans William Wilcoxen and
BIDS FDR UTT'S SEAT
State Senator Schmitz:
John D. Rateree, both of Laguna Beach,
have entered the race, along with
Democrat Thomas B. Lenhart of Tu:iLin.
To Draw for D AILY PILOT
:\1 Capp (lefl) crca1or of "Li'l Abner," and Chester Gould, creator ~f "Dick TracY " will be displaying their talents in the DAILY Pl·
LOT beginning ' March 30 when both comic strips become regular
features on the ne\vspaper's comics page. Capp ~d Gould, two of
the world 's top comic strip artists, both began their popular strips
in the 1930's.
•
TueMfat, March 10, 1970 H DAIL V PILOT :t
CSF Names 4 as Ringleaders~
Investigators Expect More Warrants Out Soon .
Study o( videotapes shot seven days
ago in a bloody police-student con·
frontation on the Cal Slate Fullerton
campus Jed Monday to issuance or arrest
warrants narnJng four a 11 e g e d
ringleaders.
Investigatora said late Monday that on·
ly one had been taken into custody, but
the cases are being bandied gingerly and ·
still more warrants are expected to be
issued.
One ringleader marked for arrest, Jim
Cleair, chairman of the CSF Student
1'-fobilization Committee, t ,. u n l e d
plainclothes police officers at another
campus rally Monday.
U.S. Troop s
In Laos Get
Combat Pay
Hovdal Murder
Jury Resuming
Deliberations
An Orange County Superior Court jury
which was urged late Monday to return a
guilly verdict in the murder trial of Milo
Hovda! returned 00 the jury room today
to resume its deliberations.
The panel left the courtroom shortly
after 3 p.m. and was advised by Judge
Bruce Sumner two hours later that its
members could go home for the night.
They resumed their discussions at 9 a.m.
today.
Hovda!, ~2. is accused or tilt slaying
last Jan. I of his \\'ife, Georgia
Genevieve, 47. fie is charged with firing
three shots into his wife at the climax of
a tiuarre1 which began in the living room
and ended out on tbe sidewalk In front of
the couple's Santa Ana borne.
Deputy District Attorney Ed Freeman
ended his prosecution chores Monday
with the remainder that he was not seek·
Ing the death penalty for Hovda!.
Panetta Blasts
Nixon on Rigl1ts
WASHINGTON (AP) -Leon Panella,
fired last month as 1be government's top
school desegregation eoforcer, charged
t o d a y the Nixon administration has
deliberately encouraged defiaoct: <If the
Supreme Court decision to end dual
school systems immediately.
"The lid has been opened by sym-
p a t h e t l c administration statements,"
PaneUa told the Leadership Conference
. on Civil 0Rifhls.
Panetta, former head of the Civil
Rights Division of the Department of
l~ealth, Education and Welfare. stepped
down from his job last month, saying he
had been fired for attempting to enlotce
too vlgorousty last fall's Supreme Court
decision barring further dela;y or school
d...,gregalloo in the South.
He demanded that they arrest him and
told a reporter afterward that Fullerton
Police Capt. Fred King said he was not to
be taken into cusJ.ody in front of a crowd.
Fullerton Police De p a 'r t m e n t
spokesmen would not verify either the
videotape use for evidence, or their alleg·
ed de:iire to capture Cleair without
witnesses,
Charges agalnst hlm and three other
defendants, totaling six counts, include
assembling to commit an unlawful act,
remaining present at an unlawful act,
trespassing and assault and battery.
The others are senior philosophy major
Ted Scboneberger, freshman political
science major l'leil Hendricks, and John
Martenthal, tiut they are not all charged
with the same offenses. ., ...
MarlentbaJ, 24, of Anaheim, was ar-
rested Monday and Deputy District At-
torney Del Wright said today he believed
one of the other suspect.s had been ar·
rested.
Violence erupled'on the CSF campus
seven days ago wh~rce of mort
than 100 lawmen swept through the
quadrangle after a protest demonstration
disrupted a disciplinary hearing.
By the Ume It was over, 19 persons: had
been arrested and five injured. including
three lawmen, and the CSF Faculty
Council rensured the way it was handled
at a subsequent meeting.
Newport's Dr. Fr~zelle
To Seek Badham's Seat
The chief issue underlying the recent
turmoil is the. arrest and concurrent
school disciplinary action against two
older CSP' sl.udents who heckled Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
Bruce Church, 31, and Dav Id
MacKowiak, 25, w.ere arrested on war·
rants charging them with obscene com·
ments in public.
Campus dissidents charge the dual ac·
Uon constitutes double jeopardy -which
the administration denies -and are peti-
tioning to have boUr processes dropped.
Another raUy was held Monday in the
quadrangle, but no incidenU: were
reported, although. plainclothes policemen
were present to observe and take notes.
Cyclists Face
100 Charges
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: IN~ TODAY'S NEWS
l •. ~ ·--(C"""''" 1W t11t Ot llY ,llM l!tfO
The "Crown" pub of South Ben-
fleet, England, v.1ll be r.onamM
the "Half-Crown'', It seems the
drinking establishment was half
demolished recently \vhen a truck
rammed into it. •
···-~~~':"'.'~-..-,,-~-~---.,.... ~---.-..... ,. .. .. .. .. . ...
Red Attack
011 Saigo11
hnminent?
SAIGON (UPfJ -South Vietnam warn-
ed tonight over government· television
lhat Con1muni.sts are altempting to buy
Soulh Vietnamese Army uniforms to in-
/titrate Saigon for a surprise attack on
the capital. U.S. military sourct:s Monday
v.'arned of new terrorist attacks this
n1onth.
The v.·aming came as score~ of
American jets flew bombing mi ssions in·
lo Laos again today and Uie· U.S. com-
mand in a major change of poHcy an-
nounced it v.·ould report if any of them
v.·ere shot down. Such figures previQUSly
v.·erc part of the ''secret war" in I..aos.
•
The fire chief of Hanvorth, Eng.
land, approved his men's plans
for a dinner dance \Vilh one stipu~
tation; that they take the fire truck
along in case of fire and "stay
completely ·sober."
On f\1onday the U.S. com1uand reported
that captured documents indicated guer·
rillas planned attacks on the palace or
President Nguyen Van Thieu, the
residence of U.S. Ambassador Ellsworlh
Bunker, on U.S. AID headquarter~ and
(lfl national and pollce headquarters.
REMAINS OF CAR EXPLOSION VIEWEO BY MARYLAND TROOPERS
Two Bl•ck.s Killed in S.I Air, Md. Ble 1t; Was On• Vic tim H. Rap Brown? •
C<lmmenting on the recent •
f'
teruUncy of Americans to move
into the cities, Secretary of Com-
merce ltfo.urice Stana said, "Tt'1 1
ru though we owned o. vast man-
rion with hundreds of rooms but
most of us have decided to live
ill the closet."
"The Viel Cong are trying to collect
and buy our types of military uniforms
and stores in order to camouflage
themselves as soldiers or the Republic of
Vietnam," the broadcast said, quoting
the Interior (police) Ministry.
Car Blast? Rap Brown • Ill
The broadcast said the Communist aim
was to "easily infiltrate into the capital
to launch a surprise offensive ."
Trial Recessed After Bo1nb 'Victim' Question Raised
• Follo"''ing a speech by Vice-Pres-
ident Agnew in which he deplored
colleges \vhicb admit underprivi-
leged students who are below nor-
mal requirements, Sen Walter F.
Mondale , {0.Minn.) said, ''I don't
think we've ever had a vice-presi-
dent who every night could think
of something ne\\I to attack. ln-
st.ead of bringing us together,
Vice-President Agnew •.• seems to
be !pending full time tearing us
apart." •
U.S. Navy pilots flying off carriers in
the Gulf o·f Topkin made most of I.he
latest raids against North Vietnamese
·supply routes and troops in Laos,
military sources said.
The estimated 125 Navy F4 Phantom,
F8 Crusader, A6 Intruder and A4
Skyhawk pilots on the carriers have car-
r ied out no raids in South Vietnam since
Saturday. All their raids have been into
Laos. Air Force planes from Thailand
joined them .
The U.S. military command announced
1hat effective immecliately, U.S. aircraft
losses and the number of airmen shot
riown in Laos will be reported daily. No
information will be re.leased <ln losses in·
curred before today.
BEl, AIR, ~td. lUPt) -The trial of
Black milltant H. Rap Brown was recess-
ed on Its second day today in confusion
ove r whether Brown may have been one
of two Negroes killed when an explosion
ripped through thei r car just south of
here fi.1onday night.
Harford County Circuit Court Judge
llarry E. Dyer said Brown's attorney,
\Vllliam Kunstler, had raised the question
that the body might be that of the defen-
dant when the trial resumed at 7:30 a.m.
PST. Dyer recessed the court so that he;
prosecutor William Yates and Kunstler
could view the wreckage of the car.
Dr. \Verner Spit, assistant medical ex·
am iner of Baltimore, said if Ule body
v.·cre Brov.1l's it would have to be iden-
lified by S<lmeone wbo knew him and be
confinned by dental records. State police
\\ho examined the body said they did not
think it was that of the black militanL
The other body was identified as Ralph
J--eatherslonc, 30. a close friend of
Bro1vn's and a long lime activist in the
Student National Coordinating Com·
mittee. The unidentified body was
reported to have carried three sets of
identification but police would not release
the names.
State Police LL Cot. Thomas S. Smith
said it had been determined that the ex·
plosive or explosives were being carried
on the front noor of the car, not planted
under the floor.
Yates indicated his belief that the ex-
plosives were meant lo do a"•ay 1vith
him. Cambridge Police Chief Brice Kin·
namon, and :;pecial investigator Donald
Cox.
'''They v.·ere not going to blow up the
judge; they weren 't going to blov,o up
l\unsl!er; and there were only three or us
up from Cambridge-so you figure it out,''
he said.
Brov.•n, 26, was charged wilh inciting a
not in Cambridge, ~1d., in July. 1967,
v.·hen he delivered a speech urging blacks
t!l "bum America down" if "whites don·t
rome around." Two square blocks of
<.:ambridge were burned following the
:;peech. The trial venue was changed lo
Del Air.
Brown's whereabouts were unknov.'Tl.
Kun s!ler said he c;illed Broy,11's v.·Hc and
brother in Nev,o York this morning just
before 100 prospccti\'e jurors filed into
rhe courthouse and that neither had
heard fro1n Bro"'" since r-.tonday. U.S. spokesmen said lhe order to report
aircraft losses in Lao.s came from
Defense Secretary 1.1elvin R. Laird •'in
order to provide additional infonnation to
lhe public." He got bi.s orders from
Presidenl Ni1on. Ex-Kennedy Aide
Backs Sm·charge;
Sees Recession
UMW's Boyle Swears
States to Guide
City Cri1ne Fu11ds
Election 'Fair, Square'
Comedian Red Skelton l'llld his wife,
Gtorgia, 9ot lf)!1ether "1onday for
1.lteir 25th uieddin.g auniueTsory. Tl1c
couple observed 1/Jeir si/vt.r a11niver-
i10.r11 with men1bers of lhe family nfl·
r.r Skelton j-i.nis hed tapi ng n11oll1cr
~hoiv. T hey met rn 1944 and ,rere
morr1ed one yea r later. • Victor Cammidge, 10, his \\1r1st
and elbow broken, saw an ambu-
lance pulling up to his house and
ran. 11e thought they \vere going
to cut his arm off. Victor v.•as
eventually discovered hiding in a
half-full barrel o( beer at a near-
by public house. • J erry W. Friedheim, asked about
a Navy vessel banging into a sec·
1ion of 'I.he Chesapeake Bay Bridge·
Tunnel connecting \."irginiet and
Maryland, replied that the acci-
rlent was an instance "\vhen the
ship hit the span."
WASHINGTON (UPl) -The Nixon ad·
mLllistration has told the na tion's cities it
wants to channel anticrime funds to them
through f.:late governments -not directly
to the cities themselves.
Attorney Genera l John N. l\1itche11
Jislened Monday to two mayors v.·ho com-
plained they were getting far less than
thei r share of the federal funds. But he
told thtm thal lo establish a direct !inf
bCtv..·een the federal and Io ca I
gove rnments v.·ould "1nake \Vashington a
dictator over every anticrimc project in
·the country."
J\1itchell appeared al a n1ceting of 1hc
National League or Cities. He heard coin·
pliants from Mayor George C. Sicbcls ,Jr .
of Birmingham, Ala .. and J\1ayor Jarnc•
H. J. Tate of Philaclelphi:1.
Tate, noting he had a 7.000·mcn1be1'
Police department. said Philadelphia ha~
received only $50,!Xlfl to buy walkie
talkie~ in two years. Siebels said B1rn1.
ingllam has 10 percent of the population
in Alabama, but gets only five percent ol
the antic:rime funds allocated lo hte state,
llayakawa 'Bombed '
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Molotov
cocktail was throv.'TI th rough the officf'
v.:indow of San Francisco State College
President ~. T. lt::iyalia"·a during the
night or early morning but did not ignite,
<ollege officials said today.
WASHINGTON (UPf~ - The chief
economist or the Kennedy adrninistralion
loday urged retention or the five percenl
income la1". surcharge because the na·
!ion's economy "is teetering on the brink
of a recession,"
Dr. Walter W. Heller , former chainnan
of the Council of Economic Ad visers, said
the su rcharge scheduled to end June 30,
is needed to pay for a progra1n
i;uaranteeing •·a Job at the end of the
line" for all \l.'ho are thrown out of v.•ork
in the slump he said is coming.
Sen. \V;ill er F. J\1ondale tD-\11nn.).
chainnan of the banking and currency
~ubcomn1lttec on production a n d
stabilization, opened hearings today v.·ith
a charge that the Nixon administ ration is
(os1cring an ''inflationary recession.''
I feller testified at the hearings, called
to consider pressuring the administ ralion
into using its influence to control prices,
11:age settlements and intertst rates.
Heller said the time has come for th~
FNieral Reserve to relax its light money
policies which have sent interest rates lo
historic highs and tor the administrati~n
to take antirecession steps.
"If we under-react to this very evidenl
soft ness in the economy \\'e may v:?ry
well head into a recession or a lone
period of continued softness ...
He advocate d guaranteed trainins for
public service jobs such as fighting pollu·
uon and government-subsidiied industrial
JObJ>. l\taintaining the surtax would pay
for this. he said.
Winter Isn't Over Yet
Wide Band of Freezin g Roi1i Sivee ps Over Midwest
C•lifot'lllCI
iOUTHEltN C:ALl,.OltNIA-lroc:rwl'
If>• CIOlllh "'itll 11!awti•1 llt•r-.-T!lfoJ.S.'f,
C:lMr!"4 TuesO•r "loll• 1'111 W~n150~•.
'"""' 1r.<~t .5000 let! c;..,,, .. wind•. (Olli·
Ir T1111d1v •"'1 Tu•...i'r n;on•. f> llot!t
w1rmtr c"""'•' otcllO'I' W"'nt j.(ftv
Temperatures
,llt-\o•Ut"l\11
""'~0!'~9• All•nl•
e1~~·1•·•1~
~i•mtrtk
flol1t
hllo"
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\VASHINGTON (UPl) -W. A. ''Tony''
Boyle has sworn before almighty Goel his
re-election in December as presiden t of
the United Mine Worker~ was fair and
l'quare and that he had nothing to do with
the murder of his opponent.
Striking back at his attackers in a rare
ncv.·s conference, Boyle told reporters
f.1onday he had been the victim of
''dastardly charges" by union opponent~,
\·ilification by the press, collusion
between the Labor Department and his
enemies and unfa ir treatment by ::i
Senate subcoinmittce \\'hich heard his
crilics but has not called hin1 lo testify.
·'~'or more than a monlh, I have
desired a proper judicia l forum to re-
spond to the outrageous charges in the
press and before the subcommlttee,"
Boyle said. ''J ani here today to set the
record straighL"
"I hereby solemnly S\\'ear to almighty
r.oo to tell the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth," said the handpick·
ed succe:;so r of the late John L. Lewis.
In a 14·page prepared statemenl read
\1•ith C":vangelica l fervor, Bo y I e
.. categorically de nied'' accu sations union
fWld s and personnel \•;ere used to "steal ..
the f'leclion for him from insurgent can.
didate Joseph A. ''Jock" Yablonski, '"ho
\\·as slain v.·ith his v.·ife and daughter less
than a n1onth after the election.
The Ui\-1\V presid ent also <lenicd any
complicity in Yablonski's murder. Hr.
~pecifically denied kno\ving Sin1on tlud·
dleston. father-in-law of one or the ac-
cused Yablon.!!ki killers and a U?o.1\V of-
ficial in Tennessee. and denied charges
he ga,·e Huddleston a pistol as reported
by a national magazine.
Gulf Oil Leak
Still V 1iabated l OS .A!lGf'LES .A~tA -Clot••~~
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-1 or oil spurting skyv;ard gave a grim 17 p~iew of pollulion that could result
\l'h<'n the largest oil fire in the history o(
the GuU of Mexico is finally extinguishf'd. "
SOUTMfltN NfV40.t.-(""11!1t••h't
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FireUghters snuffed the 28-day-old plat·
form fire with a 400-pound dynamite blast
tllonday. but six minutes later gushing oil
hit a hol spot on the structure and !he
blaze boomed back to life.
Another attempt lo f'xtinguish -the ftre
" v.·as planned for today. ·" Drtng the six-minute. hiatus. glistenlns
•01 brown oil !IJ>l!Wed as high as 250 feel
lll'>o\·e gulf v.·a1ers.
The Coast Guard said tlve barrtls of oil
f'SCaped "'hlle the ffre \\'IS out. ·~ U.S. Geological Survey engineers
,111 estimated the rate of flow al bttwe~n 600
,u and 1.000 barrels a day. Onec the fire 1s
out. lhat now would continue unlil the
"' eight leaking \.\•ells invol\'ed in the fire
Rrc capped -a procl!:ss that could take
RS Iona a.s tllree "'ct ks.
DENIES 'DASTARDLY' STORIES
UMW Pre5ident Tony Boyle
Fighting Erupts
Over Refugees
In Lebanon Cit y
By United Press lu ttrnadonat
fighting broke oul today near Beirut
between palice and Lebanese refugees
v. ho fled to the capital from the southern
border region following a series or
clashes with Israeli troops. One person
Y.as killed and 20 v.'Ounded.
Arab guerrilla S<lurces said the
rt'fugees went to Beirut from the border
:1reas or Jtroun and Blnt Jbeil and began
erecting makeshift shanlies at the Al
t\lokalless area, site or a rerugee camp
three miles from Beirut.
The t'lash started when Lebanese gen·
dormes brought bulldozers to knock down
lhe houses which had been put up on
private property. In a brief burst of
~hooll.ng I refugee v.•as killed and 13
1\ot.1nded and 7 policemen were injured.
It v.·a.~ the second disturbance in Beirut
loday. Earlier, police broke up a v.1omen's
~nti-American de.nwnstralion near the
U.S. embasry and seized their banneni.
About JO y,·omen, mainly Arab students
from the Ameri can Unl\•trsily or Beirut,
but including some Americans. g.1therrd
nC'ar ll1c rmbaSSY and ..-·aved placards
pro!ttsting the sale or U.S. Phantom iti:ts
10 lsratl. One banner said: "American
\l (tnlen against Phantoms to Israel·•
The Lebanese situation also can1r up for
dl~C'us~ion in Jerusalem v.·hfre French
An1b11.~sador Francl~ Hure conferl'('d to-
day with Foreign 1'Unlster Abba Eban.
Southern
Vote Rights
Biel Fails
WASHINGTON IUPI) -The Senate to.
day rejected an amendment that would
free. all Southern states except Georgia
and South Carolina from an extension af
the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
The amendment, offered by Sen. Sam
J. Ervin, Jr. (D-N.C. l. would have ch8J1i·
ed the act lo use 1968 registration and
voHng figures instead ot the 1964
statistics.
The provisions or the 1965 act are now
In effect in any state or county where
Jess than SO percent of the voting age
population was registered or voting in the
1964 elections. It now covers six southern
states and 39 counties in a seventh.
By using the 1968 st8tistics all states
except Georgia and Sooth Carolina would
be freed because they raised the voting
or registralion percenlage above the ~
ptrcent mark .
Ervin argued that if the 1964 record
\\'as suffi cient to "justify guilt" then
compliance in 1968 "should justify the
conclusion that in 1968, 1969. and 1970
these states are not guilty of violating the
prohibition of the J5lh amendment."
He said, "If thi! legislative body
believes in fair play and justice, it should
be consistent"
But Sen. Philip A. Hart (9-~tich.).
said the gains in black voting are not
"so solid they could not be und6ne by
ne"' practices and procedures."
He added states with "a history of rather
persistent offense" would not be covered
under the F.r\•in amendment.
By 5 to 3 rnarglns, three other Ervin
proposals v•ere defeated in Jl.1onday's
debate, leading the v.·hite-haired North
Carolinian to deC'lare:
··r-.1y state has been trying to gel back
into the Union for 105 years! The Civil
, \Var is over! I wish I could say the same
thing for Reconstruction!"
Shouting Whites
Stopped; School
Opens at Lamar
LAi\1AR. S.C. <UPI) -Nation al
Guards1nen and state troope rs turned
back two groups of shouting whites today
;iJ; children returned to the Lamar School
for the first liine since school buses \Ver e
overturned there by mobs las! week.
The whites disbanded after officer!:
refused to let them onto the campus of
the combined elementary and high
school. Inside the red brick building
teachers kepl the 76 students busy "lo
take their minds off v.·hal has been going <ln ..•
The 52 Negro and 24 \\·hite children
\vho showed up for classes today con-
stituted only a fra ction of the normal
school population of 900.
The Negroes arrived al . the newly
desegregated school aboard fi,·e buses
shortly after 8 a.m. and v.•alked quickly
inside. A short ''·hile later hvo groups of
angry \•;hiles con\'erged on the campus
from different direc!ions.
Despite the shouting outside. classes
v.·ere held in the red brick building. Prin·
cipal Gordon Cole cancelled recesses and
instructed the teachers to k e e p the
students "occupied and supervised."
Outside, a group of 3ii \vhite men.
\\'omen and teenagers stormed up lo a
Highy,•ay Patrol roadblock.
"f\Iy child ain't going lo no nigger
school,'' :-creamed a woman. Another
,1·oman yelled "\Ve \1•;int our freedom •••
v.·e v.·anl sch:>al for our children."
~folding their rifles high, state troopers
turned back the cro,vd. About 10 persons
tried to run around the roadblock, but
they were shoved away by troopers and
guard#icn.
Another group of 17 v.·hitrs v.•as stopped
on another J>trect. \Vh1tes also con-
gregated in about 20 cars at a restaurant
five blocks from the sC'hool but they
made no mo\·e to go near the campus.
Clieck by FBI
For I ntervieiv?
WASHINGTON (AP) -A bearded·.
11?J1~·hai~ed George Wa s hington
Un1vers1ly sophomore says a Justke
Department spokesman told him an
FBI check v.'ould be required before he
could interview t-.1artha Jl.1itchell.
Jan Bridge, a journalism major from
Richmond. Va .. said he paid $100 at a
campus charl!y au ction for lhe in-
terview v.·ith the '"ife o( the attorney
general . Ht:' said he hoped to .sell an ac-
C'OUnt of the interview to help launch
his journalistic career.
After submilling lhe high bid. be.
said. he wa s summoned tu the Justice
Department and told by an official that
an FBI check y,·ould be required . tn ad-
<lilion. he said. lhe ofricial said no tapt.
recorder could be used and that Mrs.
fltifchell 's sla lements V.'OUkl have to be
inc.pectcd befo re publication.
A Justice l:>e'partment spollesman
denied the charges. saying only that
u~e of a !ape recorder \l"'O!Jld be pre.
hibitcd. lhe Pm;t s:11d.
Tht 19-~·<'ar-old BrldJ!e ('Xpres~ed th P.
belief that h1J1; fn1cr\·1t1~· m1Rht gi\·e
~Ir~. ?llllchcll "credibility," the Post
,;aid. '
The chnrity auction is an annoal
C'Ampus 11ff::iir in v;h1ch various itemlJ
dona ttd by celcbrlties RO to the highes t
bidder.
I
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1.
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FoQntain~ Val-ley Today's Final
N.Y. S'8cks'
VOL. 63, NO. 58, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1970 TEN CENTS
C ..
IVIC Projects Held Up
Council to Wait Until After April Election
By ALAN OIRKIN
01 t!ie 01lty Plitt Sl1tt
The City of Huntington Beach ·will not
see a start on Jts program to build new
civic facilltles until after the April 14
council election.
The question or an oil tax and methods
of financing the $13.3 million im·
provements clearly beeame a campaign
issue at a stormy study session of the ci·
ty council Monday night.
With two members charging that the
others were stalling, the cou11eil declined
to act on an impassioned plea by City
Adminislrat~ Doyle Miller for the go-.
ahead to embark on tbe capital program.
Claiming the citizens "will not tolerate
indecision and delay," the administrator
urged the coun<:il to adopt a joint plan or
extra taiation, mainly through an oil levy
and a change in the busi ness license fee,
and short·lerm bonds to pay for the civic
projects.
After heated discussion, the councilmen
Miller • Ill
voted s.i. with 1'.1ayor Jack: Green and
Councilman Henry Kaufman dissenting,
to order ·a 60-day study or financing
methods and examination of a 2:>-year
bond program.
Those requesting the study, C.oun-
cilman Al Coen, Jerry Matney, George
McCracken, Ted Bartlett and Don
Shipley. denied that they were stalling
and insisted they were only seeking ad·
ditional projections and m ore in·
formation.
·ti
Plea Neiv My Lai
Massacre
Charge Filed For Taxing Plan
1.11"1 Ttlt Phot•
Bis Nanie's Not Sue
Singer Johnny Cash and his \vi!e June lea~e Nashville hos.pi~l wf~h
their new son John Garter. Cash, who gained fame by s1ng1ng A
Boy Named Sue," chose a -more 1nasculine moniker for his own
offspring.
Estuary Lane Residents
Ask Field Drainage Halt •
Ankle·deep mud is a bil more than
residents of Estuary Lane in Huntington
Beach feel thev should suffer, name of
the street notwithstanding.
Robert Dingwall of 19791 Estuary Lane.
asked the city council Monday night to
stop farmers on nearby land from using
the public streets to drain their irrigation
ditches.
The land in question is about 300 acres
west of Newland School and Sea Haven
homes.
City officials indicated today they
would check out the complaints, but no
one is exactly sure who is farming the
land because it is a sub.lease from the W.
T. Newland estate.
"This year they are letting the water
out during the night because I asked
them to stop last year," Dingwall said.
''It only happens during irrigation season,
then it occurrs two or three times a
\veek."
He said they have even erected a city
barricade and converted it into a dam for
their irrigation ditches. "I just want it
stopped," be said.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The com·
mander of the company that led au
assauU on My Lai two years ago was
charged with four e<>unts o{ murder today
by the Army in connection with an alleg·
cd massacre of South Vietnamese
civilians.
Capt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, of Pico
Rivera, Calif., was accused of two
unspecified counts or murder "on or
about" March 16, 1968, plus the murder
of two Communist prisoners during in-
terrogation subsequent to the alle~ed My
Lai mass killing.
Four other persons also were newly
charged in the case by the army, in·
eluding another captain involved in ques·
tioning of prisoners. He was accused of
two~urder Charges.
~ee more enlisted men also were
charged, bringing to JO the number of
men so far charged in the alleged slaying
by American soldiers.
It was not clear at first how many
murder counts were made against
f\.fedina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was four.
Medina and other military men under
investigation in the case are stationed at
Fort MePherson, Ga.
The Army 's announcement of charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about 16
March, 1963, maiming and murder of one
suspected enemy person and murder of
another during their interrogation late in
the day of 16 March, 1968, and assault
with a deadly weapon on a third in·
dividual while interrogating him on or
about 17 March, 1968."
In a dramatic move, apparently design·
ed to stress the importance he attached
to his recommendation, Huntington
Beach City Administrator Doyle Miller
left his usual seat in the council chamber
Monday night to read a three-page state-
ment to the council from the rostrum.
The mild·mannered administrator has
been working for the City o! Huntington
Beach for 10 years but no council
observers could recall his having taken
this action before.
He read slowly and passionately as he
urged the councilmen to adopt his pro-
posal for pay·as·you-go and sbort-tenn
financing for the Capital improvements
program.
He gave a wry smile to business
leaders and chamber of commerce
representatives as he made his pitch for
taxation that would affect mainly
bu&inesses and .oil companiea.
Here are exerpt.s:
"In a very real and p.ositlve sense, the
direction that our city takes from this
point forward relies on what you
gentlemen do here tonight. We have
studied these basic problems for five
years and some initial decisions have
been made.
"As a result of conUnued citizen
participation in study and designing the
goals and aJms of their city governme nt,
a responsive civic pride has developed
which will not tolerate indecision and
delay.
"All studies indicate that California's
population will double by 1990 and that
Huntington Beach will total 250,000 people
comprising 65,000 families. The recrea-
tional and cultural needs of these af-
fluent, leisure oriented young families
will challenge the fiscal capacity or the
community. Our five ear capital pro-
gram will demand up-dating and amen--
ding yearly, making delays now more
and more costly.
"In the past, \\'hen general obligation
bonds returned 3V. Rfrcent inte rest and
non-profit corporation revenue bonds
returned 3.75 to 4 percent interest, long
term l2~ to 30 year) amortization periods
were economically acceptable.
"With current intereSt rates for general
obligation bongs demanding 6 to 61h per-
cent interest and revenue bonds returning
7 to 7\1:1 percent interest, we find that the
total cost of municipal financing ove r a
2:>-year term more than doubles the cost
ol the project ,to the ta:1payers.
"l seems fundamental and imperative
then, that to be fiscally responsible, the
city must exert every effort to ac-
complish cap.ital projects under pay.as·
you.go and short term financing.
Referring to his proposal for an in-
crease to 5 percent in the hotel bed tax, a
gross receipts business fee, and an oil tax
of 3 cer.ts a barrel, Miller said :
"These three bold steps on the part of
the council to meet the challenge of the
seventies will have the support of the
vast majority of homeowner taxpayers in
our city. In my judgement. to do les.s
would incur the displeasure of many aod
the wrath of some."
The administrator concluded that a
non·profit corvoraUon should be con.
tracted to handle constructian and fina"'°
clng and he should be iMtructed to work
with the aiuncil Civic Center Committee
to· negotiate such a contract to be brought
back for approval within 30 days. "Sometimes we have to \Vade in ankh'•.
deep mud and water to get to our cars."
Dingwall complained. "It's because the
farmers are allowing their irrigation
ditches to drain onto Dolphin Drive.
which runs in front of Newland School
and by our street"
"It has been wet all this week," said
Earl Kellen. 19801 Estuary Lane . early
this morning ,
"I don't know exactly how it happens.
but I know it has been this way before,"
Kellen addeCI.
Charges Filed
In Oil Spillage
Jt is now up to lhe court to decide whu
was guilt}'. in the spillage Feb. 22·23· of oil
into Huntingtm1 Harbour.
All those charged, with the exception or
an intelligence officer accused today as a
result of interrogation of prisoners, and
another captain previously charged, were
connected with Medina's outfit. Besides
IO military men charged so far , five
other military men and 22 civilians were
said to be under investigation.
Medina was co1nmander of Company C
of the !st Battalion of the 20th Infantry
which made a sweep of My Lai 4 Hamlet
in search of suspected Viet Cong snipers.
Huntington Policeman
In Close Brush With Death
The principal of Newland School, f\1iss
Patricia Siakalun, however. was not
aware of the problem. "It hasn't been
brought to my attention," she replied this
morning when contacted.
Valley School
J)1·ops Athletes;
Pot Use Charged
Fountain Valley High School has
suspended two varsity baseball players
for alleged use· of marijuana, Principal
Paul Berger disclosed today.
The students -one a starting pitcher
for the Barons -have been taken from
their regular classes and must now at~
lend extended day courses at the \Vin--
tersburg campus, a conUnuaUon school,
until·they graduate. Berger said ..
Police said both youths were arrested.
One is out on bail and the other was
released to custody of his parent.s.
"ll's bound to have some erfect on the
team," Berger predicted. He said the
pitcher "is one of the two the coach
really counts on."
Chances for the boys' reinstatement on
the Fountain Valley team are just about
nil, according to Berger.
"II students are. caught s.rookjng or
drink.Ing they lose their eUglbility for the
sen son." he said.
"We thought this was-going to be one or
our best seasons," Berger lamented. He
said the Barons have never won the
Irvine League b&seball championship but
added, "We would have had a good run at
IL.'
Baseball Coach John Cole cQUld not be
reached for comment
Huntington Beach City Attorney Don
Bonfa has filed criminal misdemeanor
complaints against Grover..Collins C~rp.
of Beverly Hills under city fire
ordinances which prohibit spilling oil on
public roadways.
A penalty of $500 is possible under the
misdemeanor complaint.
City officials said the oil which soiled
roadways and channels in Huntington
Harbour came from a Grover.Collins well
near Harbour View School.
The commander of one of the Company
C platoons directly involved in the opera·
lion , Lt. \Villiam L. Calley, has been ac·
cused of 102 deaths and is scheduled to be
tried at Fort Benning , Ga., in the. spring.
Anti-insult · Meas ure
SACR.AiVJENTO (UPI) -Sen. George
Deukmejian today introduced a bill to
make it a crime to call a police officer a
pig or any <Jther insulting or threatening
name.
.
Death peerOO over his shoulder Monday
when a Huntington Beach detective stood
-frozen with a gun against his chest-
as his partner waited to blow the assail-
ant's own brains out.
The tense confrontation occurred .at the
home ot an oll worker named in an arrest
warrant charging him with passing bad
checks.
Charges of assault wlth a deadly wea-
pon agai nst a police officer were added
to the check charge when Billy Ray
Wilberspoon, 40, of 14892 Sabre Lane was
Long .Edison Hearing Ends
PVC Examiner Must Stud y Briefs on Srnog Issue
By JACK BROBACK 1'.1ain's flndings ~·ill go before the PUC ground level and mixing with emissions
ot·t11t1 IMIJIJ 1"011 l111t commissioners for final decision . from automobiles.
Prolonged hearings on the proposed ex. Testifying J\londay were Falk Kantor, The APCD witnesses argued that the
pansia.i·of the Huntington Beach planl of pollutants would lose little strength the Southern California Edison Company e,1gi neer with the NUS CorporaUon, a through disperal.
coocluded Monday in Los Angeles before private consulting firm hired by ~dlson: Although Maln's final decision cannot
the PUblic Ulllities Commission (PUC). Dr . \V. L. Faith, a con.o;ulUng chemical be anticipated statements by two PUC
Testimony from three rebuttal ""it· engineer and John A. Stowe, president officials indicated that the governing
nesses called by Edison o.nd cross-ex· and manager of \Vealher Centrals Inc. of body may be in favor of allowing the
aminallon by Edward Camarena, Santa Ana. HunUngton Beach plant expansion.
engineer associate with the Orange Coun· the three Edison witnesses con· Com1nission Engineer Norman R.
1y Air Pollution Control O is tr i ct lradicled previous tertimony of OCAPCD Johnson testified that emissions or smog·
iOCAPCD) wound up the marathon hear· witnesses Dr. A. J. Haagcn..Smlt. contributing nitrogen oxides will be less
lngs. chairman of the Calilornla Alr Resourcts in the South Coast Air Basin with tht ad--
PUC examiner Arch E. Main called ror Board and Erwinn, Kauper, a di ti on of two new units at the plant than
proposed Undings of fact and con<:luslom: meteorologist. ~·11hout them.
of law (legal briefs) to be submitte~4._.bLY-~P~rain,.cWJ,l are&S..or disa&reero1oenrutc.wW<Jerre•-~He>ee.•il•wid11.illU!wah the probability of pro-
attomer r o r l!:ai.fo"if. PU?! an d the over atleged ground level concentrations longed ayst!mwl<i power failure is slight
OCAPCD by April 13. or nir p0Ilutanls emitted from the Hun-• U the additional units ere not construct.-
Main will then take the 22 days of tington Beach plant. ed the risk should not be taken.
testimony which began in mid·Dccember The Edl1Jon eKperts cO'lltend thal lcOnnrd L. S11alder, PUC counsel1 ruled~
In Fountain Valley under consideration, nitrogen oxide and . oth!:r aintan1inant3 e9rly in the hearings that local air pollu·
He said be will render a decision within e1nitled by the plant will be 1reatly tion control dlstrlcta do not have veto
two to siJ: months. dispersed by air currents bclore reaching power of. commi.Sslon decisions.
booked into jail.
Detectives Christian Schneider and
Martin O'Reilly sald the near·fatal drama
unfolded at the Witherspoon home as they
tried to convince the struggling suspect
to leave peacefully.
Suddenly, they said, he.snatched Schnei.
der's .38 taliber revolver from under his
sport coat and shoved it against the law·
man's chest.
"Tum loose of me or I'll shoot." they
quoted Witherspoon as saying.
Suddenly, he felt the cold muzzle of
Detective O'Reilly's service revolver
against his own temple.
"Drop the weapon," he snapped. "Or
I'll shoot."
Witherspoon dropped the gun and
O'Reilly kicked it across tbe floor out of
reach. at which time the suspect was
wrestled down .
l>ollce said Witherspoon was served
the warrant Issue from West Orange Coun-
ty Judicial Court, but said he aiuldn1t
leave because his wife and five children
were sick.
They oUered to wait while he telephoned
a fam'ily friend to come and care for
them.
"l don't have a telephone," he replied .
"Then you'll have to phone from the
police station," Schneider told \Vlther·
apoon. an employe of Pacifk Drllling
Ct'Jmpany In Signal Hill.
He wa s told his !~year-old son could
remain in charge.
Violence erupted at that point. lnve~ll
gators said, leadjng to the brush WHh
death before Witherspoon WM handcuffed
and hauled a~·ay,
Stoel< ltfarl<e l s
NlfW YORK (AP) -The stock market continued to move within a narrow range
late this afternoon. (See quotatJons,
Pages 16-17). ,
I
MaY<>r Green 'was not convinced. "I
think it is.a stall and the only reason it's
been suggested by ·business is that some
business leaders and members of the
council would Hke to s~ the program
dropped altogether."
Green added, ''I think every person
running for city council should be re·
quesled to make some statement on an
oil tax and financing."
Matney objected to the program "being
IStt IMPROVEMENTS, Page %)
* * * City Pledges
To Get Park
Architect
The city's administrative staff pro-
mised to make "a supreme effort" Mon·
day night to sign Richard & Dion Neutra
& Associates as architect for the pro-
posed $2 million library in the Central
Park.
The pledge to try to retain Neutra by
the council's March 16 meeting was given
by City Administrator Doyle Miller after
Councilman Jerry Matney said he was "a
little perturbed" at the delay.
Development coordinator T h o m a s
Severns said there had been two points of
dispute with Neutra but these had been
corrected.
The city had been anxious to make sure
that a l~tter of intent, if signed, would
also bind Neutra to a non.profit cor·
poratlon if such an agency is formed .tt>
ovef6ee library construction and that
Neutra no longer was insisting that the
full contract be agreed by April I,
A retainer fee of $7 ,500 has · been ap-
proved by the council for Neutra.
. "If you really want to get us off the
dime on the capital improvements pr<>-
gram, one way might be to sign the
library architect and we would have to
come up with the money for the librBf)',"
Matney said. "I hate to see us moving
ahead on the central park without a
library architect."
Council Hopefuls
In Seal Beach
To Voice Plans
Candidates for the M;irch 31 Seal
Beach City Council election have been in·
vited to air their positions about the
city's Iuture at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in lnt
McGaugh School auditorium.
Among the topics to be discussed are
what is to be done with open space in the
downtown area, the future of the former
Pacific Electric right o( way, the prG-
posed natural park in the Bullet Hill area
and the question of a youth program for
the city .
The session is sponsored by Seal
Beach's Committee for Environmental
Concern.
Ten candidates hav.! filled nomination
papers for two seats slated to become va.
cant. They are John flamilton, in·
cumbent; Mqrton A. Baum, pharmaclst;
Mrs. Marilyn Mi llstein, housewife: Char-
les F'. Knapp, teacher;
Gary A. Strangeland, fireman; Charlot~
te L. Crowley, house-Wife; A. Tracy
Burton, businessman, and Harold K.
Holden, president of Seal Beach Leisure
World's Golden Rain Foundation.
Orange Coast
lt'eather
1 -it's been a Jong weekend for
Old Sol, but he'll be around on
Wednesday. Te1nperatures along
the coast vdll stick to the lower
60's, however.
INSIDE TODA V
Good ntWI for au JIO!t Dick
Tracy a11d Lf t Abner /aria -
rlity'rt taking up residence 1n
tlie DAILY PILOT soon. See
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.Jur1 Selectio1a
r Lawyer
Renews Attacks
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of fl1t CMlrJ l'lltl Sletf
Trial Jay,·ytr Robert Green today
renewed his attack on Orange Caunty's
Jury selection system in pre tr i a I
arguments that Me expected to delay the
murder trial ol Arthur De\l.'itte Ltatue
for at least a ~·eek.
GreeD'.S t.arget for much of the morning
BeacliHoping
For U.S. Fund
To Add Land
l·luntington Beach city officials are cur-
n.nUy crossing their fingers in the hope
of receiving federal funds which l\'ould
allow them to add another 50 acres to the
Huntmgton Central Park.
And, if their bid proves successful, they
plan to let the blrd.5 have most of IL
Thous.ands of them -including
mallards. seagulls, grebes. cormorants
and turkey vultures -curreoUy use the
otherwise useless marshland as a nesting
and playground.
.At the sugge5tion of CounclJman
l)(lnaJd Shiplt>y, professor of biology· at
Cal-State Long Beach, lhe city staff is
looking to the 40 acres y,·est or Golden
\\'est Street and south or Slater Avenue
as a future bird refuge.
Floyd "Bud'' Belsito, c i t y ad-
ministrative aide, has already forwarded
an applicaUon to the federal government
lo provide financing for the property.
Addition of the swamps plus a 10-acre
parcel west of Lake Huntington would
bring the total park acreage from il:I
present 147 acres to nearly 200 acru.
The CQSt of adding the property is
estimated to be. $1.17 million, with the ci·
ty and federal government sharing the
upenses on a Sl).Ml basis, according to
Belsito.
"If the $582,816 grant is approved, it
will bring the federal government's in-
vestment lo a total of $1.3 million. The ci-
ty of course, is investing that amount of
money, tieo. in buying this facility,"
Belsito pointed out.
The land and swamps used for the
msUng anas will be left jU5t as they are
now, according to the pari planners.
SoUd grwnd in the 50-acre addition will
be used for court and lawn games, picnic
facilitiea, and passive park uae.11, the.
planners .said.
session was again Superior Court
Administrator Lealle McCartney. And
Green drew from the \'eteran court of-
ficial the 11dm!Jsion that present jury
selection procedures in Orange County
are slrlctly Um.It.eel to the names of
persona contaiMd in the volen registra-
tion list.
McCartney agreed thal his office did
not draw upon ~·hat Green called
"available supplemental data"
telephone directories service club lists,
assessment rolls. union membership
listings and city dlreclories.
League, 21. Santa Ana, is accused ol
the murder or Santa Ana police officer
Nelson Sasscer. The prose<:Ution will
argue when the trial starts that the young
member ol the Black PanLher organiza-
tion shot and killed Lhe 24-year~ld
patrolman in a downtown coofrontatlon
last June ~.
Green's pretrial C1>nlenllon is that
Orange County jury selection systems
preclud e the possibility of League getting
a fair trial. Elimination of many county
residents who have not rtglstered to vote,
he states, also eliminates many members
of minority groups and many CQUnly
residents who identify with League 's
modest economic stature.
Green argued this morning that
statistics compiled on a national basis in·
dicatc that jury selection procedures on
the lines employed by Orange County
eliminate 30 percent of eligible residents
from jury service.
League is a Negro and Green contends
that there is very ll!Ue chance that a
member of his race will be impaneled on
the jury to be sworn in before Judge
Samuel Dreizen.
Judge Dreizen opened the proceed ings
today with a stern warning that he will
not allow repetition of an lricident which
oceurred late Monday.
Several spectaton el that time offered
loud comments on the progress and
nature of the trial as Judge Dreizen left
the bench for the afternoon rect3s. The y
were admonished .by CQUrt bailiffs for the
breach or etiquetlt.
"If It happens again," Judge Dreizen
said today, "I will clear the courtroom. I
will have no disrespect towards the law
and this court and 1 am not going to offer
any further warnings on thls topic. If you
sit in this courtroom you will abide by Its
rules."
There were empty seats in the
courtroom today and little evidence of
the tension that marked the opening day
of the trial. There was no distribution of
Black Panther literature and no apparent
need for the heavy security measures
that were sllll in force .
'
Trustees to Eye Finance
Problems of Election Loss
Trusttts of the Huntington Beach Union
High School District will focus on fiscal
problems generated by the failure of a
bond iS!Ue and tax override.
Studen ts Ask Parents
To Beach Drug Study
About 2.000 invitations are currently
be.Ing sent to parents of Huntington
Beach High School students in an effort
to enlist community support for a ~farch
16 dnig symposium,
Under examination at the 7:30 p.m.
meeUng will be the drug problems as
seen from the police point of view and a
summary or campus scllvlUes by Prin-
cipal Woodrow Smilh. The session will be.
held in the school cafeteria, 190S ~lain St.
DAILY PILOT
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They will meet at 7:30 p.m. at district
headquarters, 1902 17th St.
Among the suggestions already brought
befort them ls a proposal by the District
Educators Associatio n (DEA) which
would establish a five-period day and re-
move all athletics and extracurricular
activities.
Others have orrertd nexible-modular
scheduling and e\lminalion of certain ad-
ministrative positions as a potential solu-
tion or meeting the finan<:Jal crisis.
"\\1e've got to find the money some-
"'here." said Trustee Jose ph Ribal toda~.
He champions an effort to eliminate three
administrative positions because he
claims, they are supernuou~.
These Include jobs currently held by Dr.
John Venable. director of curriculum: H.
\V. Standard, coordinator of child welfare
and attendance. and Lee l\1osteller. direc.
tor of special services and recreation.
When asked for his reaction to I.he Rlbal
proposal, Standard replled. "I wouldn't
ha\'e any reason to do that. I \\-°OUldn 't
care to even maKe a comment."
l\1~\eller, whose main rl!Sponsibillty is
to provide driver training, said. "II was
pointed out to Dr. Rlbal that my salary
comes from the Civic Center Act and the
~fotor Vehicle Department . They wouldn't
save any monty by eliminating me."
Dt. Venable was out of town today and
could not be reached for comment.
Harbor District
Hearings Slated
State hearings on two bills affecting I.he
Orange COWity Harbor District have been
S'A'ltched from Thursday to ?i.larch 19 in ·
Sacramento . at the request of the Orange
County League of Cllles.
One bill, introductd by Assemblyman
John V. Briggs (R-F'ullerton), calls for a
,·ote of Uie people to decide lf the. Harbor
District should be retaJntd, expanded or
d!ssolved.
Another blll. authortd by Assemblyman
Ken Cory (0.Anaheim), simply requests
the state Ltgislature lo expand the duUea
of the Harbor District without a vote or
lhe people .
"We asked for the change tn hearing
datea because lhe. Learue of Cilles
already has 1 meeting this Thuf'lday.''
said Huntington Beach Mayor Jack
Green , ""'ho It prtsldent of the Leaaue.
The Orange County League of·Cllles Is
on record favoring the Brlgg1 bill and let-
ting the people decide lhe Harbor
Di!trict'1 future.
'Bontaie a11d Clyde'
Otber-o icial's .
Quiz 2 Suspects
Authorlties from oul of slate new to
Orange County Airport Monday night and
today were questioning a suspected Bon-
nie and Clyde-style couple captured in
Coata Mesa Friday.
Police were secretive about what the
young couple are suspected of elsewhere
in addition to a variety of charaes
brought against them here.
Jack aad Patricia Jack.sctl, 25, and 24,
were caught Friday mqming at 514\i,
Bernard St., along with two other men
!Inked to a $285 market robbery.
Complalnts charging Jackson, Howard
R. Tschirhart, 31, of the Bernard Street
address and Jack C. Matney, 32, of
Denver, Colo., with armed robbery wert
issued ·Monday. •
They were arraigned in Harbor Judicial
DI.strict Court, where l\1rs. Jac.Uon was
arraigned on a separate count charging
her with burglary.
"·as taken.
A team ol 12 Costa l\1esa police 0Uicu1
5urro4nded the Bernard Street home Fri-
day morning and captured them without
incident, although they were heavily arm-
ed.
Three loaded pistols and a sawed-orr
shotgun were seized, aloag with cash, ll·
legal drug pllls and valuables believed
taken in a wave of holdups and
burglaries.
Teletype descriptions of the quartr:t
and the evidence confiscated were sent
across the country, leading to interest
among a nwnber o! law enforcement
agencies. •
The Jacksons had also been named In
arrest warrants issued by Independence,
~10 .. authorities charging them with rob-
bery and forgery while a car stolen ln
Kansas City was impounded here.
Rooster's Not Cliicketi
Detective Sgt. John Regan said today
lhe men are suspected of the March 4
holdup of a Tic Toe Market, in which $285
Sgt. Regan said the suspects, tramfer
red to Orange County Jail following ar-
raignment, were brought to Costa Mesa
today to be questioned about other
crimes in western states.
\Vh o's alraid of the big, bad bison? Nol this rooster, who st.ands
nose to nose with the huge animal. Both bird and beast are residents
of the Vilas Park Zoo in l\1adison, 'Vi s. Workers Sought
To Aid Census
On Orange Coast
Fram Page 1
IMPROVEME NTS DELAYED •••
made a campaign issue·• and Mt-Cracken
countered by saying. "Sixty days \vtin 't
make any damned difference."
The mayor was referring to reports
that the chamber of commerce wished to
see an additional study on the prrigra1n
and finan<:ing methods.
The issue before the council, as
presented by the administrative staff,
was "'hether to pay for the new civic
center, library, fire stations, city yard
and civic auditorium with a joint pay-as-
you-go system and IS-year bond program
or to bond the entire project over 25
years.
Some business groups in U1e clty, in·
eluding the Huntington Beach Company,
an affillate of Standard Oil and the city's
largest land-holder. are IU1own to favor
the 25-year bond program.
Finance director Ben Arguello told the
council that ln the joint cash and bond
program the administration was recom-
mending the cost of the $13.3 million im-
provements would be $18.9 million. To
bond the projects over 2S years, Arguello
claimed, would cost $28.7 millioo, the dif-
ference being the greater interest, $9.7
million.
Under Arguello's system. $4.!i million
w·ould be raised in additional taxes and
$8.7 million would be bonded.
The additional revenue would be raised
ia the following manner :
-Using the '1.SO a month trash col·
Jeclion fee.
-Using 5 percent of the property tax.
--Changing the business license tax to
a gross receipts tax, namely changing the
emphasis from the number of employes a
busineas has to judging it by its turnover.
-An oil production tax of 3 cents a
barrel, calculated to raise $457,000 a
year.
Aft.er J\1lller's presentation, in which he
said the pay-as-you-go and short term
financin g proposal was "imperative" and
"fiscally respoli.sible", the hot debate
broke out.
l\latney asked. ''\Vhy not a long-term
bonding option? We are building facilllles
to 1990 projections. Whr are we afraid of
25 years' amortization'.' -$9 million tlhc
differen~ between the alternatives)
doe sn't frighten me. I y,·ould like to see
some of the people coming here later
paying for the facil ities they will be us-
ing."
Coen. an attorney. commented that the
program was compltx and he wished to
see a full explanation of the issues.
l\tcCracken called Miller's presentation
"a sales program," and said he disagreed
completely with the administration.
"All it showed us was the cost of the
fina~in~ charges. We disguise the tax by
pulling 1t on business, but the citizens
themselves u•ill pay fo r this. It \'lill make
the cost of doing business In HunUngton
Beach higher' than in neighboring cities."
l\fcCracken said he would like to see a
systems committee, which ~·as formed
six months ago to study the ci1y·s data
P.rocesslng, study different \\lays of finan·
c1ng and v.·hcthcr rinanclng is needed.
This 1ngered Dr. Kaufn1an .
Kaufman : "Are you willing to Jet the
library go another four or five vears!"
l\1cCrackcn : "No, possibly another
study will show financing is not needed."
Kaufman : "I don ·t think izriorlties are
a question any more. We are behind five
or six ye ars on every one of them. The
gross rtceipts business tax v:ould not be
higher than the business license: most
cltl~s have gone to gross receipts, we are
the. exception."
Dr. Kaufman said a study would be a
'A'BY of delaying the program and in·
cr~uing costs.
"I hale to say thl5, but H we had
adopted the oil taJ three )'ears ago 111 1
had suggested we \\'ould have $1.5 mlllloo
in rev,nue now ," Kaufman added.
~1lller said the only thing !l!Cred to him
was the f9.7 million difference in coa:t.
Dr. Kaufman. conUnulng his auack on
T iger Has Culn1
\\!ASHINGTON (UPJ) -'Ille National
zoo·s famous white tiger Mohlnl his
given birth to four cubs, two Of them
while like her. Thty wtre reported doing
wtll.
•
the call for a study, said that if a com·
mitlee is appointed every segment of the
community should be reprtsented on It -
"because wh at we are deciding is whose
ox is going to get gored. That's the ques-
tion here. If you don't make these
decisions, you have lo make alternatives
as to who will foot the blll."
l\fcCracken claimed that there may be
no need for extra taxes. Kaufman, who is
not running for re-electlon and who will
not be on the council when the matter
comes up again. countered: "If you do
not go for the administration's proposal
you will put 7.5 cents on the property
tax." ·
Bartlett sided with McCracken. saying
most homeowners have i>year loans.
"It's important that people in the future
paricipate in our capital improvement
program."
Shipley felt the council was being rush-ro i~to spending $19 million in a one-night
session.
Green thought the library y,·as a symbol
lo the community and should be built
within two years at IJ\e most, and that
the civic auditorium was "desperately"
needed.
Coen said he did not feel equipped at
th.is time to make a decision and favored
the study.
The city administrator pledge<! to
cooperate with the study group, which
would report back to the council al its
first meeting ln May.
Kaufman, however, pushing 11) e
business tax, oil levy and hike in hotel
bed tax, proposed that. in the meantime.
the city attorney be instructed to draw up
ordinances on tilese taxes and called for
a vote on this.
The motion failed ~2 with Green and
Kaufman providing the only "Yes" votes.
The commlttee that will make the
study is called the Systems and Data
Processing Committee. Its members in-
clude Councilman Coen, Bob Fisler who
works for Atlantic Richfield, city Finance
Director Arguello, RJchard Belyea, a
fl.1c0onnell-Douglas executive, MI k e
Bokor, member of the planning com·
mission, John Robbins, a data systenu
analyst, and Richard Waidzunas, bank
manager.
The group also was Instructed to study
whether the cooncll should enLrust the
program to a non-profit corporation.
An appeal to residents or Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa
to apply !or census taker jobs, has be.en
issued by Roy Gordon, district manager or the 1970 census.
Gordon said applicants must be 18
years o.ld or over and U.S. ciUiens.
"They will be require..: to pass a selection
test demonstrating their ability to un-
derstand printed instructions and do
simple arithmetic," he said.
According to Gordon census takers will
be paid on a piece basis designed to
average $2 per hour and mileage will be
paid to workers who use their cars.
•·weekly earnings for a full 4G-hour
"'eek might range from '60 to more than
$t00," he explain~. The average assign·
ment for a census laker will last from
lhree lo five weeks beginning l\tarch 30.
Gordon said anyone interested in ap-
plying should contact the census office at
1310. Suite K, E. Edinger, Santa Ana, ~7-
7639.
Burke Planning
To Run Again
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke <R-
Hunlington Beach) today reaffirmed his
candidacy for the office ol assemblyman.
A spokesman for the Assemblyman
said he made the announcement because
"there has been speculation that the 70th
District legislator was going to seek the
seat held by Senator John G. Schmitz (R·
Tustin)."
"I want lo reassure my constituents
that I will not be a candidate for the 34th
Senate District even if Sen. Schmitz
chooses to run for the 3Sth cungresslonal
seat which was held by the late
Congressman James B. Utt," Burke said.
Burke al.w proposed a resolution which
\\•ill ask the legislature to approve a
study of problems associated with vacan-
cies in public elective offices which occur
between the time l1f opening day for filing
nomination papers and the general elec-
tion.
Spruce Up
Your Home for • • •
U'I Ttl._'9
Reud!J fflr 1'1oon
Apollo 13 ci:>nunander J ames
Lovell briefs ne,vsmen after a
training flight i1onday in the
Lunar Landing Training Ve-
hicle. The LLTV flight was a
practice for the Apollo 13 lu-
nar landing mission scheduled
for April 11.
llos pital Honor ed
Next y,·eek. i\1arch lS to 21, Is
"Children's Home Society \\!eek'' in
Fountain Valley by proclamation of
Mayor Edward Just who called on
citizens to support the work or the Loi
Angeles orphans' home.
WITH FI NE QUALITY -
FAMOUS BRAND NAME
DON 'T MISS OUR DRAPERY DEPT.
CARPETING
*BEATTIE
*CROWN
* IMPERIAL
* SWEETWATER
* BERVEN
*COLUMBUS
* DAN RIVER
*MONARCH
* ROXBURY
*WALTERS
*BIGELOW
* FIRTH
* MONTI CELLO
*SEQUOYAH
WI INVITI YOU TO VISIT OUl HUGI SHOW·
ROOMS-SU THI OUTSTANDING SELECTION OF
CAll'ITING AVAILAILL UNUSUAL INSTALLA·
TION PlOIUMS OUl SPICIALTY.
W• f•afur• • complete s•lection of febrics
i nd color1 to enhance •nd compliment your
carpetih g.
VISIT OU R REMNANT ROO M -
Hundreds of Sm•ll ·to -Room Sizt Rtmn1nts
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPERIES
I
1663 PLACENTIA · COSTA t-4ESA
. 646·4838
1S YIARS llllt.VING THI ORANGE COAST
II
I
.
I
I
7
' •
I •
~N · ·w ·port Beaeh Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks EDITION
VOL. 63, NO . 58, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY , MARCH 10, 1970 TEN CENTS
Commander
Faces Four
Death Raps
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The com·
mander of the company that led an
assault on My Lai two years ago was
charged with four eounts of murder today
by the Army in connection with an alleg.
cd massacre of Soulh. Vietnamese
civilians.
Capt. Ernest L. Medina. 33, or Pico
Rivera, Calif.. was accused of two
unspecified counts of murder "on or
about" March 16, 1963, plus the murder
of two Co1nmunisl prisoners during io·
terrogation subsequent to the alleged l.1y
Lai mass killing.
Four other persons also were newly
charged in the case by the army, in-
cluding another captain involved in ques-
tioning of prisoners. He was accused of
two murder charges.
Three more enlisted men also were
charged, bringing to 10 the number of
men so far charged in lhe alleged slaying
by American soldiers.
It was not clear at first how many
murder counts were made against
Medina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was four.
Med.ina and other military men under
lnvestisatlon in the case are stationed at
Fort McPherson, Ga.
The Army's announcement or charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina has been char~ .J!.ilh
murder of two persons on or about 16
March, 1968, maiming and murder of one
suspected enemy person and murder cf
another during their interrogation late in
the day or 16 ~farch, 1968, and assault
with a deadly weapon on a third in-
dividual while interrogating him on or
about 17 March, 1968."
All fhose charged, with lhe exception of
an intelligence officer accused today as a
rl!sult Clf interrogation of prisoners, and
another captain previously charged, were
connected with.. Medina's outfit Besides
10 military men charged so far, five
other military men and 22 civilians were
liaid to be under investigation.
Medina was commander of Company C
of the tst Battalion of the 20th Infantry
which made a sweep of My Lai 4 Hamlet
in search of suspected Viet Cong snipers.
The commander of one cf the Company
C platoons dlrecUy involved in the opera-
tion, Lt. William L. Calley, has been ac·
cused of 102 deaths and is scheduled to be
tried at Fort BerUJing, Ga., in the spring.
Workers Sought
To Aid Census
On Orange Coast
An appeal to residenls of Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach and CosLa r.1esa
to apply for census taker jobs, has been
issued by Roy Gordon, di strict manager
of the 1970 census.
Gordon said applicants must be 18
years old or over and U.S. citizens.
"They will be requjre..: to pass a selection
test demonstrating their ability to Un·
derstand printed instructions and do
simple arithmetic," he said. .
According to G<irdon census takers will
be paid on a piece basis designed to
average $2 per hour and mileage will be
paid to workers who use their cars.
"\Veekly earnings for a full 40-hour
week might range from $60 to more than
~100." he explained . The average assign·
ment for a census taker wlll last from
three to five weeks beginning r.tarch 30.
Gordon said anyone interested In ap-
plying should contact the census office at
1310, Suite K. E. Edinger. Santa Ana, 547•
7639.
Irvine A venue
Speed Limit Up
A change In spetd limit to 35 miles per
hour for Irvine Avenue from I6Ui Street
to the northerl y city limit ~·as approved
Monday night by Newport Beach city
t'Ouncilinen.
Formerly. lhe speed limit was 30 milet
per hour from 'Vestcliff Ave11ue to .Santa
Isa bel Avenue in the northbound lane,
"·hile the City of Costa l\fesa had posted
a Ja.mile per hour speed limit on the
so11thhound lane .
Now the speed limit. on l\\'O sides of
the street are conslstenl.
A study b)' Newport Beach police
showed that most people drive about 40
miles pe.r hour alo11g Irvine Avenue.
Stork Mnrket•
NE\V YORK fAP) -The stock market
l·ontln utd to move within a narrow range
lrit e this 11fternoon. (Sc>e quotations, r,,., 1~11 1.
I
Oi Suit Planned~
Newport Charges Slant Drilling
His Nu11ie's Not Sue
Si nger J ohnny Cash and hiS "'ife June leave Nashville hospital with
their new son John Carter. Cash, who gained fame by singing "A
Boy Named Sae," chose a more masculine moniker for his own
offspring.
Newport Official Quits
With Council Proviso
?\('\l•port Beach city councilmen 1100-
day night accepted the resignation or
Roger Hardacre from the city Board of
Library Trustees with the proviso they
~·on't replace him for 60 days in hopes
they will get him back.
Councilmen e:tpressed hope that dur-
ing that time the slate Legislature will
change a financial disclosure Jaw. which
is the reason Hardacre resigned.
Hardacre's resignation will be eUee-
tive ApMI \$. the day the law requiring
public officials to submil a statement or
all personal and business assets in ex-
cess of SI0.000 goes into cffeet.
"Thp law requires businessmen to re·
veal their assets to their competilors."
said Cou ncilman Howard Rogers. "\lle\1e
just !o~t one of our finest con1missioners
and I think \\'e resent it.''
Rogers explained to the audience al
the council meeting. "I don 't think any.
Newport Flooded
By Paper,vork
A storm or paper descending on U1e
Newport Beach City ~!all staff has City
Councilman Robert Shelt on concerned .
Shelton pointed r.-tonday lo a yearly
workload report that sho"·ed over 333,000
more pieces of paper duplicated Jurin&
calendar 1969 than the ye<ir before and
ca utioned his council colleagues :
.. rm suggesting you people slaying
on the council try to hold il down . You 'll
be overwhelmed by it."
(Shelton is not running for re-election
in April.
body on the council or in the city objects
to the intent or the Jaw, which is lo
avoid connict of interest. But I think
the state could come up \Vilh a method
of keeping financial statements in file
\\'ith a select committCf. or grand jury
given authorit y to look into the file."
City !\tanager llarvey Hurlburt said
the information he gets from Sacramento
through the League of California Cities
is the law v.'llJ be amended and perhaps
a short time after the April 15 date it
goes into effect.
Hardacre. a tax consu lt ant and book·
keeper. has served on the city library
board since 1966. His four-year term ex·
pire~ July I.
In submitting his res ignation. he ~·rote.
"I have rarely submitted information
on my finances , and then onJy in con·
fidence. so that I don't care to l1avc
dPlails regarding by business and per~
al investments a matter of record avail·
able to the general public."
Italy Bu ys Planes,
Largest Ever Flown
ROME (UPI) -The Ministry of
Defense announced today ii wl\1 purchase
14 Ci30 Hercules aircraft from the U.S .
Lockheed Aircraft Corp, for transport
use.
The planes will be largest ever used by
the ll..,lian Air Force.
A statement said lhe (our-<!ng\ne planes
capable or carrying 20 tons would go into
service next year.
Newport Beach city councilmen served
notice ·Monday night they are planning a
lawsuit again.st G. E. Kadane and Com·
pany for allegedly slant drilling an oil
well beneath city territory.
City Attorney Tully Seymour was
directed to prepare the lawsuit for City
Council action in two weeks.
Councilmen did not tip their hand as to
what evidence they might have.
The New port city charter prohibits oil
drilling within or beneath the boundaries
New port Raid
Nets $10,000
Cocaine Haul
Newport Beach police revealed toda y
that lhey confiscated a pound of cocaine
worth about $10,000 en the illicit drug
market during the arrest of six persons
last Friday on drug charges.
Narcotics investigator Al Epste in said
cocaine is a relatively rare commodity in
local drug traffic.
"This is only the second time \\'e have
come across cocaine that I can
remem ber," said Epstein, "and the Hrst
time, only about an ounce was involved."
Cocaine is classed as a narcotic, but
actually is a stimulant Jt is extracted
from the South American coca p)ant.
Arrested last Friday at 215 35th St. on
suspicion of possessing drugs for 5ale
were Jennifer Louise Tye, 19, John Dale
Skaggs, 23, aod Chrirtine Ann Schmid, 22,
of that addreS!, Victoria Ann Lawson, 22,
and Thomas Rilhie Bergh, 19, t?oth or
New York and Jamie Harlan Cane, 21 , of
Santa Barbara.
J\1iss Tye, Skaggs, J\fiss Schmid and
Miss Lawson were scheduled for ar·
raignment in Harbor Area Municipal
Court today. Cane and Bergh were
released from Newport jail Saturday
after posting $1,250 bail. Their ar-
raignment is set for March 17 in
municipal court.
Investigators said the arresls came as
the result of a routine investigat.ion.
Mr. Henderson's
·Se rvices Pla.nned
~temorial services will be held Thurs·
day at 4 p.m. in Old North Church,
Forest Hiils, North Hollywood , for
Charles E. Henderson. composer and
musica l director, who died Saturday at
his Laguna Beach home at the age of 6.1.
Mr. Henderson wall the father of Peter
Henderson of Newport Beach, of the com·
edy team of Skiles and Henderson.
He also l:oi survived his his wife, Bliss of
the home, 265 Viejo Sl.; a daught er. Sally
Laughlin of Las Vegas; and by nine
grandchildren.
Born in Jamaica Plains, New York,
Mr. Henderson was graduated from
Harvard University In 1928 and for
He veral years was a pian ist with the Fred
War ing band.
A composrer, musical and vocal direc-
tor, he worked on more than 200 feature
films and was for 10 years with the music
department of 20th Century-Fox Studios.
Among the standard song hi ts Hen·
derson composed were "So Beats My
Heart." "Carefree'' and "Deep Nlght,•1
which he wrote with Rudy Vallee.
Newport P:uh Diplomacy
Oiviier 'Me nds Fence' With Griping Neigliborhoocl
Newport Beach city councilmen heard
to their satisfaction f\.1onday night that
the owner of the "Whi te Horse IM" res-
taurant and tavern had won over neigh-
bors.
B1:1t councilmen did not overturn the city
Planning Commission deeislon of three
weeks ago to deny O\¥ner John Ryder's
applicalions for a 2 a.m. instead of mid·
night closing hour and lo con tinue pre.
sentlng live music_
Ryder's appeal was referred back to the
planners so they could hear the new evi-
tlehce. Councilmen felt il would be in·
appropriate to overrule tht planners ht·
c.ause the situation has changed.
Planning commissioners three weeks
ago were presented with a prtllion bea:r·
ing the names or 44 residents. v"ho obj~·
led IO optratJon of tht. "\V~ite Horse Inn,"
3295 Newport Blvd. ~
City councilmen Monday night received
a petition of 88 names. inc.ludlng mosl or
the same residents. supporting Ryder·s
appeal. No protests were. heard.
It "'as apparenl that Ryder Jn the in·
terim had done some real fence mending.
One of those "'ho switched and signed
bntb petitions, John Callahan of 41 0 Club-
hotlJe Ave .. said, "Mr. Ryder has leaned
over backward. He is the firtt owner who
has contacted the neighbor•."
Rydu conceded that the earller obiec·
Uons or neig.bbors "were genuine," whne
noling that no one had called the "While
Horse Inn" to ten him ·of their com plaints.
i.le said he had done the following lo win
nearby residents over to sign his petltlon :
-Movtd the entt.rta.lnme.nl to the fronl
and sound-j>rooled the front.
'
-Turned a ran on the roof around lo
race away from residents and agreed to
turn off lhe fan at 11 :15 p.m.
-Provided a un iformed parking alttn·
dan~ from 9 p.m. until 2 a.m. Wednesday
throu.gh S.aturday to direct customers to
legal parkJng Bpota.
-Agreed to keep the rear door closed
after !! p.m.
- Chained off the City Cenler Rlock
parking lot on Finley Street on Friday
and f'aturday night!: at 1 p.m.
-Agrttd to pick up and clean around
the nearby vacant gaioline stallon on
Saturday and Sunday mornings.
-Entered negotiations to purcha!le the
gas ,talion lo convert ii to a parking lot.
-Moved a rubbish bin aut of sight of
resident-" tnd agreed not lo .empty into
it al night.
of the city of Newport Beach.
Jlm Gilstrap, manager oI (he Kadane
oil field, snid he had "no comment,
whato;oever."
The oillield lies in unincorporated coun-
ty territory just norlh of Newport Shores
al the western city limits. Kadane has an
oil lease running until 1994 on the pro-
perty owned by Beeco Limited, also
known as the Banning property arter the
family owners.
Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons said city
officials have suspected for some time
that oil shafts from well.!1 along the
perimeter of the Banning property 5Jant
under the city.
Parsons said it is his opinion "donkey"
pomp machines shoukl be placed un-
derground as the Signal Oil Company did
at Bolsa Chica so the property "can be
developed to the highes t and best us.
which Js now residential rather than oil ."
He said he and Council man Donald
J\·lclnnis had met with Gilstrap and Han-
cock "Bill" Banning Ill without notable
success.
Paper Sales OK
Even 'Sherwood Fores f Legal
By TH0!\1AS FORTUNE
01 Ill• ~n., ,.1i.t 51•11
It Is now permissible to s e 11
newspapers, including the underground
paper "From Out of Shef\\·ood Forest,''
on the slreels of Newport Beach.
Newport Beach city councilmen voted
unanimou sly Monday night to exempt
newspapers from a city ordinance re-
quiring payment of a $100 annual fee to
solicit or peddle merchandise.
They did so because City Attorney
Tully Seymour advised them they would
have to charge each paperboy who
delivers ne"·spapers door to door $100 a
yea r if they were going to be consistent.
The city several months ago had tried
to require $100 individual solicitor's
lice nses o( persons selling "Sherwood
Foresr• on street comers.
The city has ignored the newsboyli and
in practice already exempted them from
the ordinance, Seymou~ said.
Seymore, who had researched the legal
prededents, also expressed doubt the city
soliciting ordinance could stand up ln
court applied to newspapers.
"This would seem one of the Finl
Amendment (freedom of s pee c b )
freedoms, when passed out to willin&
recipients," he said.
But Seymour advised that the city's re-
quiring a $25 business license to operate a
newspaper, as any other business, ap:-
pears valid.
The city License Bureau in December
altempted without success lo lice:nse
"Sherwood Forest" on the basis that lt
ma intained an office at the "Bird in
Search of a Cage" bookstore, at 2307 W.
Balboa Blvd.
But now the bird lw nown the coop.
with the store owner evicting his tenant
and latest word is the underground paper
"Sherwood Forest." is being pub\lshtd ill
Santa Ana.
Newport Council Refuses
City Funds to Tract Park
Newport Beach city councilmen Monday
refused to put any city money Into a
long, narrow park after some councilmen
grumbled that it was nolhing more than
a glorified green belt for a Harbor View
Hii is develop ment.
The park was to be the second in a strip
park system Irvine Company President
William Mason had ballyhooed earlier in
the day ""'ith dedication or Buffalo lllll.!1
Park.
Meson spoke of a master-planned sys·
!em of parks and greenbelts that will
link Irvine communities.
But city councilmen were dissalisfied
with a proposed city park for the Donald
Bren 520-home development south of Buf.
falo Hills Park.
Harry Merrill. project director fo r
Bren's Harbor View Homes. asked that
the city contribute S!I0.000 or about one·
third, toward the $268,000 total cost of
the park .
He said the $90,000 would be the cost of
Improving the park to ctiy standards
above the cost ot development of a neigh-
borhood com munity association park.
Included in that price would be public
restrooms. wider sidewalks to accom-
modate bicycles, a helter ·sprinkler sys-
lem and the $36.000 cost of two additional
home.sites to widen the park for a large
open play area. -
"We couldn't afford it if we wanted it,''
said Councilman Lindsley Parso ns aft er
hearin~ a report on the deple tion of the
cilv's buildin~ excise tax fund .
Merrill said the park had been designed
to meet city park standards and Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Director Cal
Stewart arRued in favor of a linear park.
"Your idea and mine are far apart.
You're trying to sell this kind of strip park
to us." Councilman Paul Gruber told
s1e1,1•arl. ~frs. Claudia Q\ven or the city Park!,
This 'Mayor'
Not a Madame
"htadanle mayor," City Councilman
Robert She.lton began •s he turned to
address Vice l\1ayor Lindsley Panons.
"Excuse me. madame," Shelton stam-
mered.
Tht' audience at f',1onday night's New.
nort Beach City CouncJT mecling, chuck·
le<'
IJaM;Ons, presidlniz over the meet\nJt
in Pvt~.vor Doreen Marshall's seat. said
nothing.
"For lhost of you who don 't attend
c:ouncll meetings regularly we get Into
hnb\ls ," Shelton hastened 10 e~plaln.
"Our lovely mayor Is in 'Voshington.
D C . tonight repre.sCnling the-cily.,!!-
~lr~. l\larsha ll Is ntt~ndll'lg a National
League of Cities conve.nUon.
I
Beaches and Recreation Commlasion
said there Is .a "desperate need" for a
park in each neighborhood. There are too
many communities In the city where the
need isn't taken care of, she said,
Gruber said he wanted to see more
community parks with full recreational
facilities in preference to neighborhood
parks.
Councilman Parsons said the city
hardly could afford fl00,000 for 1 park
for every 500 homes.
Board to Visit
Co~puter Center
Members of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Board of Education will
tour the district's new data proc:esslnc
cenler prior to the reguJar meeting Tue•
day night.
The tour, scheduled at 7 p.m. at the
center, 1857 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa.
is open to board members, the press and
a limited number of spectators, ac·
cordin11: to a district spokesman.
Visitors will be shown various pieces of
equipment being Integrated Into the. full
data processi ng facilities now under
development in the district.
The regular board meeting will follow
the tour at 8:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
High School Lyceum.
Orange Coast
lt'eather
ll's been a Joog weekend far
Old Sol. but he'll be around on
Wednesday. Temperatures along
the coast will sUck to the lower
60's, however.
INSIDE TODAY
Good new1 for tlU you Dick
Tracy and Li'l Abner fan s ....:.
they're tokfng up r1.tidtnct in
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By TOl\t BARLE\'
01 1M CNllY ~lltt lltH
Trial lawyer Robert Green today
renewed hb: attack on Orange County's
jury selection system in pre t r i a I
ar1uments that are expected to delay the
murder trial of Arthur DeWitte ~ague
CdM Sta1id
To Go Up;
Fight Ove r
Controversy over a second food stand
at Corona de1 Mar afo.fin Beach ended
hfonday night when the Newport Beach
City Council awarded a construction con-
tract to build the stand and signed an
agreement with Gordon Kilmer to operate
it.
The Bernard Syfan Corp. or Laguna
Beach. lowest of two bidders la.st week
was awarded the contract to build the
food stand for $30.991,.
Signing the ope.ration contract with Kil·
mer came after protracted debate at thret
earlier council sessions over whether
the second stand "'as needed and over
bids taken on operation of the new con-
cession. Councilman Paul Gruber, who
had opposed the choice of Kilmer previ-
ously because he felt Kilmer did not
have enough e~perience or financial
backing. vol~ with the other councilmen
lo sign the agreement.
The 1:11.000 Syfan construction bid was
Tiine percenl over the architect's estimate,
bl.It well below the $50,000 bandied about
in earlier council discussion.
In addition to the two major awards, a
$500 conU"act was given to the architec·
tura) firm of William Blurock and Asso-
ciates, of Corona del Mar, to oversee the
construction.
Greelu' Fele
Vice President Spiro . .\gne•r.
attending the 19th National
Congressional Dinner of the
Order of Ahepa. \vas presented
the Greek organization's So-
cratic award in \Vashington
Monday.
DAILY PILOT
OIU.HC.E COAST PUBLISHING COMl'ANY
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Lawyer
Attacks
ror al leas t a week.
Green's target for much or the morning
sess ion was again Superior Court
Administrator Leslie fo.1cCartney. And
Green drew from the veteran court of-
ficial the admission that present Jury
selection procedures in Orange County
are strictly limited to the names of
persons contained in the voters registra-
tion list.
fo.1cCar\ney agreed that his office did
not draw upon v.•hat Greea ca lled
"available supplemental data"
telephone directories service club lists.
assessmenl rolls. union. membership
listings and city directories.
League, 21, Santa kna, is accused or
the murder of Santa. Ana police oUicer
Nelson Sasscer. The prosecution will
argue when the trial sta rts that the young
member of the Black Panther organita·
tion sh ot and killed the 24-year<ild
patrolman ln a downtown confrontation
last June 4.
Green's pretrial contention Is that
Orange Counly jury selection systems
preclude the possibility of League getting
a fair trial. Ellmlnatlon of many county
residents who have not registered to vote,
he states. also eliminatEs many mernbers
of minority groups and many county
residents who identify with League's
modest economic stature.
Green argued this morn ing that
statistics compiled on a national bas.is in·
dicale that jury seleclion procedures on
the lines employed by Orange County
eliminate 30 percent of eligible residents
from jury service.
League is a Negro and Green contends
that there is very little chance that a
member of his race will be impaneled on
lhe jury to be sworn in before Judge
Samuel Dreizen.
Judge Dreizen opened the proceedings
today with a stern warning that he will
not allow repetition of an incident which
occurred late J\1onday.
several spectators at that time offered
loud comments on the progress and
nature of the trial as Judge Dreizen left
Ille bench for the afternoon recess. They
were admonished by court bailiffs for the
breach of etiquette.
"If it happens again," Judge Dreizen
said today, ''I will clear the courtroom. I
will have no disrespect towards the Jaw
and this court and I am not going to offer
any furthJr warnings on this topic. lf you
sit in th.is ct>urtroom you will abide by its
rules."
There v.·ere empty seats in the
courtroom today and lltUe evide~ of
the tension th at marked the opening day
of the trial. There was no distribution of
Black Panther literature and no apparent
need for the heavy security measures
that were still in force.
Harbor District
Hearings Slated
For March 19
State hearings on two bills affecting the
Orange County Harbor District have been
1.witched from Thur:sday to March 19 in
Sacramento, at the request of the Orange
County League of Cities.
One bill, introduced by Assemblyman
John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton), calls for a
vote ol the people to decide if the Harbor
Dislrict should be retained, expanded or
dissolved.
Another bill. authored by Assemblyman
Ken Cory (D·AnaheimJ, simply rcqu,esls
lhe state Legislature to expand the duties
of the Harbor District withou t a vote of
the people.
"\Ve asked for the change in hearing
dates because the League of Cltles
al ready has a meeting this Thursday,"
said Huntington Beach ~1ayor Jack
Green, who is president of the League.
The Orange County League of Cities is
on record fa\'Oring the Briggs bill and ltl·
ting the people decide the Harbor
District 's futu re.
Briggs said anyone interested in the
Harbor District question is invited to the
hearing at I :45 p.m., fo.1arch 19, room
2133, State Capitol.
Pentagon Aiding
Lockheed Firn1
• \\'ASHINGTON CAPJ . ....., D e p u t y
Secre tary of Defense David Packard says
Lockhrcd Aircra!t Corp. will be given in·
terim financing to keep the giant CS
cargo plane and other military projects
going.
"\Ve've been helping them out and we·n
continue ltl help them out until we get a
final solution," Packard told newsmen
'-fonday.
He said the. payment5 "''Ill be made
pending a decision on Lockhctd's urgent
appc;i\ last v.•eek for S641.2 million. Dul
the interim aid will be ".very small" by
comparison, he "aid.
Packard told the llouse Armtd
Service~ Comm!tt'e there are lwo m1Jor
altemati\leS for a final solullon to
Lockheed's "St\'erc financiaJ crisis'' -
award substantial interim flnanclng or
negotiate a final over-all settlement of
Lockhetd-Pentagon disputes over con·
tract prlees (or tht o and three other
weapons programs.
'Bon.nle nnd Clyde'
Otlier Officials/
Quiz 2 Suspects ;'.,
Authorities from out of state new to
Orange County Airport Monday night and
today \Vere questioning a suspected Bon·
nie and Clyde-style couple captured in
Costa Mesa Friday.
Police were secretive about what the
young couple are suspected or elsewhere
in addition to a variety of charges
brought against them here.
Jack and Patricia Jackson, 25, and 24,
were caught Friday morning at 514'ti
Bernard St .. along with two other men
linked to a $285 market robbery.
Complaints: charg1ng Jackson, Howard
R. Tschirhart, 31, of the Bernard Street
address and Jack C. Matney, 32, of
Denver, Colo., with armed robbery were
issued Monday.
They were arraigned in Harbor Judicial
District Court, where 'Mrs. J ackson wa's
arraigned an a separate count charging
her with burglary.
....
1vas taken.
A tea1n ot 12 Costa Mesa police officers
surro unded the Bernard Street home Fri·
day morning and captu rro them without
incident, although they were heavily arm·
ed.
Three loaded pistols and a sawed-0r~t'
shotgun were seized, along with ca~h, ~·t .
legal drug pills and valuables be11ev
taken in a v.•ave or holdups an
burglaries. •
Teletype dc~criptiOl)S ol lhe quartet
and the evidence conflscated were senL
across the country, leading to interest
among a number of law enforcement-
agencies.
The Jacksons had also been named in'":. ~arrest v.•arrants issued by lndependence,1
r-.-10. authorities charging them with rob·"'
bery and forgery while a car stolen in;
Kansas City was impounded here. .
Rooster's Not Chicken
Detective Sgt. John Regan said today
the men are SU(!Jpected of the March 4
holdup of a Tic Toe Market, ln which pas
Sgt. Regan said the suspects. transfer :
red to Orange County Jail following ar·
raignmenl, were broug ht to Costa Mesa
today to be questioned about other.'
crimes in western states.
\Vho's afraid of the big, bad bison? Not this rooster, who stands
nose to nose with the huge animal. Both bird and beast are residents
of the \'ilas Park Zoo in l\1adi son, \Vis. Youths Collect
Papers to Help
Injured Friend Beach Edison Plant Case
Concludes Long Hearings Old newspapers are not worthless.
They bring Sit per ton and students in
the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
hope to collect 100 tons Saturday, in a
special area-wide collection drive to help
a !riend. By JACK BROBACK
01 tfM DillY Pllft Sltft
Prolonged hearings on the proposed ex-
pansion of the Huntihgton Beach plant of
the Southern California Edi son Company
concluded Monday in Los Angeles before
the Public Utilities Commission (PUC).
Testimony from three rebuttal wJt.
nesses called by Edison and cross-ex·
aminati on by Edward C a m a r e n a ,
engineer associate with the Orange Coun·
ty Air Pollution Control D i s t r i c t
(CX:APCD) wound up the marathon hear·
in gs .
PUC examiner Arch E. Main called for
proposed findings ot tact and conclusions
or law (legal br iefs) to be submitted by
attorneys l o r Edison, PUC an d Lhe
OCAPCD by April 13.
J\1ain will then lake the 22 days of
testimony which began in. mid-December
in Fountain Valley under consideration.
He said he will r'end~r. a· decision within
two to six months.
Main"s findings will go before the PUC
commissioners for final decision.
Testifying Monday were Falk Kantor,
CT1gineer with the NUS Corporation, a
private consulting firm hired by Edison;
Dr. \V, L. Faith. a consulting chemical
engineer and J ohn A. Stowe, president
and manager of Weather Centrals Inc. of
Santa Ana .
The three Edi son witnesses con·
tradicted previous testi mony of OCAPCD
witnesses Dr. A. J . flaagen-S mit,
chairman of the California Air Resources
Boa rd and Erwinn . Ka upe r, a
meteorologist.
Narcotics Men
'Gouged' on Pot,
Arrest 5 Teens
After raiding a home in a rather ex-
clusi\le L;aguna Beach area ~fonday
afternoon, state Bureau of Narcotics
agents alleged they had been "gouged" a
lillle on the price of a marijuana
purchase but added, "maybe il's because
of the high rent area."
An agent's claim to have purchased It
"lids" (II ounces} of the drug at 926 Van
Dyke Dri\1e led to the arrest of four 19-
year-old youths and apprehension of a 16-
year"ld girl who was turned over lo her
parents.
Price of the purchase, agents claimed.
\('as $100, a little higher than the current
going rate of six lids for $50.
·;we felt we should have got 12 lids for
that price," he explained. noting that the
price normally goes down as the amounL
purchased ir:creases. "But it's pretty nice
up there," he reflected, "a lot of nice
houses.''
Acting on infornlation received earlier,
an agent claimed to 'have made the
purchase late in the afternoon, at which
time, he said, there were "about Ja peer
ple in the house ."
\Vben state officers, ass.isled by Laguna
Beach narcotics officers Nonnan Bab-
cock and Neil Purcell. returned to the
house at 4:50 p.m. the four men and
juvenile girl !''ere taken into custody. The
other oceupants: of the dwelling v.·ere
allowed to leave.
. Newport Wo111an llurt
lu Auto Rollover
A Nev.·port \\"Oman is listed in fair con-
dition today in Hoag Hospital with a con·
cusslon after her car rolled over ~tooday
ntght on Bayside Orlve.
Connie A. Howie. 33. of 1412 Serenade
"terrace was eastbound on Bayside when
she lost control of her auto, causing it lo
roll on tho curve near ilarbor Island
Road, police said. •
Principal areas of disagreement were
over alleged ground level concentrations
of air pollutaats emitted from the Hun-
tington Beach plant.
The Edison experts contend that
nitrogen oxide and other contaminants
emitted by the plant will be greaUy
dispersed by air currents before reaching
ground le vel and mixing with emissions
rrom automobiles.
The APCD witnesses argued that the
pollutants would lose little strength
through disperal .
Alt.hough ~Iain's final decision cannot
be anticipated statemenl.s by t w o PUC
officials indicated that the governing
body may be in favor or allowing tbe
Huntington Beach plant expansion.
Commission Engineer Norman R.
Johnson testified that emissions of smog·
contribuling nitrogen oxides "'ill be less
in the South Coast Air Basin with the ad·
dition of two new units at the plant than
v.·Jthout them.
He said although the probability of pro-
longed systemwlde power fai lure is slight
if the additiona l units are not construct.
ed, the ri sk should not be taken.
Leonard L.. Snaider, PUC counsel, ruled
early in the hearings that local air pollu-
tion control districts do not have veto
power of commission decisions.
2 Councilmen
Gibe at Allen
During ~fonday's meeting two Newport
Beach city councilmen got off a couple of
gibes at county Supervisor Alton . Allen.
Councilmen v.'ere discussing their ear-
lier decision to have the city staff study
the Upper Newport Bay land swap and
the meaning of county supervisors post-
poning any reaction to Newport's involve-
n1ent.
"ti 's an e:ictremely difficull type of
decision for Alton Allen to make," said
Council man Howard Rogers.
"Any decision is difficult." scofled
Counciln1Rn Lindsley Parsons.
Spruce Up
Proceeds from the day-long event at
the Costa Mesa High Sc}lool campus will
go into the Justin Ogata Fund, named for
the paralyzed Mustang wrestler it ts
destined W help.
"We're shooting for 100 tons," said
Richard Priest. public relations chairman
for the Costa Mesa High School student
body .
Old papers may be taken to the campus
from 8 a.m.·to 5:30 p.m., and will then be
trucked to Los Angeles, where a
reclamation plant promises $14 per ton.
The paper drive is the latest among
dozens of projects to help collect money
for the Ogata boy, 16, wbo is a patient at
Los Angeles Orlhopafdic Hospital.
His neck was broken early last
December in a tragic accident dur ing
wrestling practice, leaving him paralyzed
From the neck down with little hope of
recovery.
The Justin Ogata Fund Is held by the
Bank of Tokyo, 510 N. Main St., Santa
Ana, where voluntary contributions may
be mailed.
2nd Body Found
111 Bombed Ruins
NEW YORK (UPI } -In vestigators
!ound a second body today in the ex·
plosives-blas\ed ruins or a Greenv,.ich
Village townhouse which police believe
may have been turned into a ''bomb fac·
tory" by young radicals while the
wealthy owners were vacationing.
1'10 details as lo the sex or identity of
the body 1vere made known im·
111ediately,
r-.1ean1vhile, police searthed for five
people whom eyewitnesses saw nee from
the home of the ov.·ner of a cha in of In-
diana radio stations shortly after the first
of a series of blasts last Friday. The tv"o
female.<; and three malrs were believed
part of a group who had a disastrous ac·
cident while making dynamite bombs.
Your Home for • • •
UPI l11t1htto
Bendu tor ~loon
Apollo 13 com1nander J ames
Lovell briefs ne,vsmen after a
training flight J\.·Jonday in the
Lunar Landing Training Ve-
hicle. The LLTV flight was a
practice £or the Apollo 13 lu·
nar landing mission scheduled
for April 11.
Hospital Honored
Next v.·eek. March 15 to 21 , is
"Children's Ho111e Society Werk '' in
Fountain Valley by proclamation or
~tayor Edward Just who called on
citizens to supJl()rt the work of the Los
Angeles orphans' home.
WITH FIN E QUALITY -
FAMOUS BRAND NAME
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CARPEJl·NG
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ROOM$-SIE THI OUTSTANDING SRICTION Of
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Wo foeture • complote selectio n of febrics
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cerpoting.
VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM -
Hundreds of Smell· to. Room Si11 Remna nts
ALDEN 'S
CARPETS e DRAPERIES
\
1663 PLACENTIA· COSTA MESA
646-4838
11 YIARS SllllVING Tttl OlllANOI CO.UT
•
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7
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l;-osta -Mesa~
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Today's Fhaal
N.Y. Stocks
voi.:. 63, NO. 58, 2 SECTION S, 2<4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,' C>,LIFORNJ;( TUESDAY, MARCH 010, 1970 TEN CENTS
Mesa Okays
Plaza Plan
For Growth
Plans for a new six-st.ory office building
and a second, 7~seat movie theater al
South Coast Plaza and To111on CenleT were
approved Monday by the Costa Mesa
Planning Comnti~on.
The project by C. J . Segerstrom &
Sons, developert of the thriving center is
part or a package approved by one con-
ditionaJ use permit in 1967, but each ad-
dition must be reviewed.
A tower of six, 10,000-square-foot floors
Will be built at Bristol Street and
Sunflower Avenue, while the new Foir
South Coast Theater is adjacent to the
fll"St one.
,
My Lai Raps Told
Captain Faces 4 Counts ~f Murder
WASHINGTON (UPI)• -The com-
mander oI the company that led an
assault on My Lal two yea.rs ago was
charged with four counts of murder today
by the Army in connection with an alleg·
ed massacre Of South Vietnamese
civilians.
Capt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, of Pico
Rivera, Calif.. wa.s aceused or two
unspecified counts of murder "on or
about" March 16, 1968, plus the murder
of two Communist prisoners during in-
terrogation subsequent to the alleged My
Lai mass killing.
Four other persons also were newly
charged in the case by the army, in·
cludin,11: another captain Involved in quu-
tioning of prisoners. He was accused of
two murder charges.
Three more enlisted men also were
charged, bringing to IO the number of
men so far charged in the alleged slaytna:
by American soldiers.
It was not clear at first how many
murder counts were made a1ainst
ltfedina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was four.
A1edina and other military men under
investigation in the case are staUoned at
Fort. McPherson, Ga.
The Arm y's announcement of charges
against A1edina said in part :
"Capt. f.1edina has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about IS
March, 1968, maiming and murder of one
suspected enemy person end murder of
another during their inlen"ogatiou late in
lbe day or 15 ?tfarch, 1968, and uu.ult
with a deadly weapon on 1 third In-
dividual while. interrogallng him on or
about 17 !\larch, 1968."
All those charged, with the eicepLion of
an intelUgence officer accused today as a
result of Interrogation of prisoners, and
another captain previoqs.ly charged, were
connected wlth Medina's. outfit.
Moving quick.Jy through what wa.!l a
longer agenda than usuaJ, commissioners
also recommended approval for the ftfth
phase of the city's Master Plan of
Drainage.
·Bonnie, Clyde
• Title De~ider
In other action, commissioners:
-Approved a zone ei:ception permit for
the Fuller-Smith Company's 30-unit
apartment complex on the south side of
21st Street in ao R-2 wne backed by Buoy
Street.
-Approved an ll-unit apartment pro-
ject planned by the Richards and Bishop
Company at 120 Albert Place, in an R-2
zone curreoUy used for storage of cement
mixers.
-Held over a request by Wonhington
Dodge, Z!ll8 Harbor BJvd~, to amend the
advertising sign ordinance and allow a ~
foot pole holding.up baMers to achieve a
canopy-like effect.
-Approved two Pacilic 0 u t d o o r
Advert1slng Company requests, one an
appeal of city council denial of continued
operation of a billboard at lSM Newport
Blvd., and the other replacement of fi~
poster ad panels on Bristol Street south
of Bakt:r Street with two regular
blllboords.
-Apptoved a zone ~zceptim permit
•llowtn& developer S. V. Hunsaker Jr. to
-lute parkilla •truc:lutto without
doora for complete garages in a lit-unit
apartment complex oo s.a acre! near
Baker Street and Paularino Avenue,
-Denied a zone uception permit for
Oscar Robinson' to build a duplex at 235
E. 22nd St.1 in an R·l, single family home
zooe area.
-Approved a zone exception permit
allowing Carolyn M. Simonson lo operate
a beauty shop in her home at 197
Magnolia St., provided she works alone.
-Deleted a zone exceptioo perm.it
50llght for an open storage area for
campers and boats at 2755 BristoJ St., as
requested vy the applicant.
The planning commission decisions are
si.Jbject to final approval by the city coun-
cil.
llm·ke Planning
To Run Again
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R·
Hpntington Beach) today reaffirmed his
candidacy for the office of assemblyman .
A spokesman for the Assemblyn'Jan
said he made the announcement because
"there h8J been speculation that the 7oth
District legislator was going to seek the
seat held by Senator John G. Schmit.i (R·
Tustin)."
"I want to reassure my constituents
that I will not be a candidate for the 3-tth
senate District even if Sen. Schmjlz
cliooM!:s to run for the 35th congressional
seat which was held by the late
Cqngressman James B. Utt," Burke said.
Ul'I T........,.
His Na1ne's Not Sue
Sin~er J ohnny Ca sh and his wile June leave Nashville hospital with
their new son John Carter. Ca sh, who gained fame by singing ''A
Boy Named Sue," chose a more masculine moniker for his O\vn
offspring.
Panther Lawyer Renew s
Attacl\: on Jury System
By TOJ\f BA RLEV
Of 1111 'Olltr l'lt.1 Stell
Trial lawyer Robert Green tod8y
renewed bis attack on Orange County's
jury selection system in pr e t r i a 1
arguments that are expected to delay the
murder trial of Arthur DeWitte League
for at least a week.
Green's target for much of the morning
session was again Superior Court
Administrator Leslie lt1cCartney. And
Green drew from the veteran court of·
ficial the admission that present jury
selection procedures in Orange County
are .strictly limited to the names of
persons contained in the voters registra-
tion list.
McCartney agreed tha t his office did
not draw upon what Green called
"available supplemental data"
telephone directories service club lists,
assessment rolls, union membershi p
·listings an4 city directories.
League, 21, Santa Ana, is accused of
the murder of Santa Ana police officer
Nelson Sasscer. The prosecution will
argue when the trial starts that the young
member of the Black Panther organiza-
tion shot and killed the 24-yea r-old
patrolman in a downtown con!rontalion
last June 4.
Grcen'J pretrial contention is that
Orange County jury ,-;election systems
preclude the possibility of League gettlng
a fair trial. Elimination of many county
residents who have not registered to vote,
he states. also eliminates many members or mioority grou ps and many county
resi dents who identify with League's
modest economic stature.
Green argued this morning that
statistics compiled on a national bmiis in-
dicate that jury selection procedures on
the lines employed by Orange County
eliminate 30 percent of eligible residents
from jury .service.
League is a Negro and Green contends
that there is very UUle chance that a
member of his race will be impaneled on
the jury to be sworn in before Judge
Samuel Dreizen.
. Judge Dreizen opened the proceedings
tOOay with a stern warning that be will
not allow repetition of an ioc.ident which
occurred late Monday.
Several spectators at that time offered
loud comments on the progress and
nature of the trial as Judge Dreizen left
the bench for the afternoon recess. They
were admonished by court bailiffs for the
breach of etiquette.
''II it happens again." Judge Drei:ien
said tOOay, "1 will clear the courtroom. I
will have no disrespect towards the law
and this CQurt and I am not going to oner
any further warnings on tltis topic. If you
sil in this courtroom you will abide by its
rules."
T'here were empty seats in the
courtroom today and llttle evidence of
tbe tens.Ion that marked the opening day
of the trial. There was no distribution of
Black Panther literature and no apparent
need for the heavy security measures
that were still in force .
l"indings Due April 13
Edison Hearings Wind Up
By JACK BROBACK
01 ftl9 O.ltr l'll1t 111'1'
Prolonged hearings on the propoc;ed ex·
pansion of the Huntington Beach plant or
the Southern Cili!omia Edison Company
concluded Monday ln Los Angele1 be£ore
the Publk: Utilities Commission (PUC).
Testimony from three rebuttal wit·
nesses called by Edison and cross-ex·
lUllination by Edward Ca m a r e n a ,
engineer associate with the Orange Coun·
ty Air Pollution Control Di s t r I c t
(QCAPCD) wound up the marathon hear-
ings.
PUC examiner Arch E. f.fain..ealled for
proposed findings or fact and concluslona
of law {lefll briefs) to be submitted by
attorneys f or Edison. PUC-an d tbt
OCAPCD by April 13.
tifaln will then take the 22 days of
testimony which began In mid-December
in Fountain Valley under conslder1tlon.
He laid ht "'ill render 1 decision wlt.h1n
two to six months.
Main 's findings will go before the PUC
commissioners for final decision.
Testlfylng Monday were Falk Kantor,
engineer with the NUS Corporation, a
private consulting firm hired by EdisOn;
Dr. W. L. Fakh. a consulting chemical
engineer and John A. Stowe:. president
and manager of Weather Centrals Inc. of
Sanla Ana.
The 01r« Ed ison witnesses con·
tradtcted preVious testimony or OCAPCO
witness.es Dr. A. J. Hu.gen-Smit..
chairman of the Californ ia Air Resourc;e,
Board and Erwinn. Kauper , .a
meltorblogist.
Principal areas of dL~agrlX'.ment were
over alleged ground level concentration!!
of 1ir pollutMllS emitted from the Hun·
tington Beach plant.
The Edison e.xpertll con tend that
nitrogen oxJde and other contamlnant&
emitted by the plant wUI be greatly
dispersed by air currents before reaching
. ,
ground level and mixing wilb emissions
from automobiles.
The APCD witnesses argued that the
pollutants would lose little slrenglh
throt;gh disperal.
Although Main's final decision cannot
be anUclpated statement.& by t w o PUC
officials indicated that tbe governing
body may be In favor of aUowing the
HunUngton Beach plant expansion.
Commission Engineer Norman R,
Johnson testified that emissiotu1 of smog-.-
cootributing nitrogen oxides wlll be lesa
l.n -the Soulh Coast AJr Basin with tht ad-
dition of two new untt.r at the ~pan
'without them. • r
lfe 1aid although the probability df. ~
longed syste.mwide J)O'Ner faSlure Lt sllgtit
il the additiQnAI unlla ere not cobltrud·
cd, the risk !hould not ht taken. ·
Leonard L. Snalder, PUC cou11sel, ru led
early In the hearings that k>cal air pollu-
tion control districts do not have veto
power of commission decision, .
Suspects Face
Outside Quiz
Authorities from out or state flew to
Orange County Airport Monday night and
today were questioning a suspected Bon·
nie and Clyde.style couple captured in
Costa A1esa Friday.
Pollce were secretive about what the
young couple are suspected of elsewhere
in addition to a variety of charges
brou,ght against them here.
Jack and Patricia Jackson, 25, and 24,
\\'ere caught Friday morning at Sl4 \!i
Bernard St., along with two other men
linked to a $285 market robbery.
Complaints charging Jackson, Howard
R. Tschirhart, 31, ol llte Bernard Slreei
addreaa and J act c. Matney, 32, of
Denver, COio., With armed robbery were
issued Monday.
They were arraigned in Harbor Judicia l
District Court, where Mn. Jack.ton wu
arraigned on a separate count charging
her with burglary.
Detective Sgt. John Regan said today
the men are suspected of the March 4
hoklu p of a Tic Toe Market, in which $285
was taken.
A team of 12 Costa Mesa police officers
surrounded the Bernard Street home Fri-
day morning and captured them ·without
incident, although they' were heavily ann·
ed.
Three loaded pistols and a sawed<iff
shotgun were seizeG, along with cash, il-
legal drug pills and valuables believed
taken in a wave of holdups and
burglaries.
Teletype descriptions of the quartet
and the evidence confiscated were sent
across the country, leading to interest
among a number of Jaw enforcement
agencies.
The Jacksons had also been named in
arrest warrants issued by Independence,
Mo. authorities charging them with rob-
bery and forgery while a car stolen in
Kansas City was impounded here.
Sgt. Regan said the suspect&, transfer
red to Orange County Jail following ar-
raignment, were brought to Costa Mesa
tod ay to be que!lloned about other
crimes in western states.
Police Discover
Cocaine Cache
Worth $10,000
Newport Beach police revealed today
that they confiscated a pound of cocaine
worth about $10,000 on the illicit drug
market during Ole arrest of six persons
last Friday on drug charges.
NareoUcs investigator Al Epstein said
cocaine is a relaUvely rare commodity in
local drug traffic.
"Thls ts only the second lime we have
come acrou cocaine that t can
remember," said Epstein, "and the first
time, only about an ounce was lnvolved."
Cocaine Ls classed as a narcotic, but
acWally is a stimularit. It is ettracted
from the South American coca plant.
Arrested last Friday at 215 3Sth St. on
suspicion or possessing drugs ror sale
we re Jennifer Louise Tye, 19, John Dale
Skaggs, 23, and Christine Ann Schmid, 22,
of' that address, Victoria Ann Lawson, 22,
Thomas Rllltle BergH, 19, bo\h or
ew York 8Jld Jamie Harlan cane, 21 , of
nta Barbara. -
Mb1 Tye •. Shgp, Mbs Schmfd ind '
"Miss LIWion were ~ultd· for at· '1~c!nl tn Harbor Area Municipal
&urt today. Cane and Bergh were rele~"""t"n>m Newport jaU Saturday altef~josilng $1 ,250 ball. Their ar·
raignment is $et for !\!arch 17 in
munlctpal court.
lnvtstlgo tors uld the 1.rrest.s came as
• Ute resuU of a routine ln vesUgat.lon.
'Goat Hill' Controversy Still Raging
The controversial topic or Costa Mesa's
official history book -whelher it should
be t.iUed "Goat Hill" or something else -
will be taken up again tonight.
Action on the matter was delayed 1
month ago by the Costa Mesa Historica l
Socifilty, which meets at 7:30 p.m. in city
council chambers.
A new note of intrigue has entered the
picture lnvolving the illustrated volume
written by Orange Coast.raised Edrlck
Miller, whose chosen title city fathers
sharply disagree upon .
Somebody else has written a history of
the coast.al plateau that evolved into
Costa Afesa, after a succession of names
ranging Crom Harper lo the more pie~
tur,sque Goat Hill.
Mrs. Dorothy Clinch of 2039-President
Place, has wrilten lo city officilh IUJl-
gestin& her version might be more ap-
pealing on the whole.
A library employe, Mrs. Clinch noted
that she researched blstor1cal files
several years ago when the Idea of a
pamphlet or brochure was first discuss-
ed.
Nothing was ever dooe aod the Costa
Mesa City Council referred her remlnder
to the historical society after it arrived in
the mail.
The basis of the controversy over
Atiller's title ii that city fathers -who
are expected to buy a few copies and con-
tribute to its suceess -don 't all like the
name.
They passed the hot potato on to the
Costa Mesa Historical Society, which
agreed after some more sedate debate to
lea\·e it up to MUler.
He, however, has managed to convey
strong intenllons to leave the. title
unedited while remaining relaUvtly tigh1'
lipped hi public Proctedln&S. ·
The speaker at loalg!>t'1 1-.t
membenhlp -Ung will be Rury
~ •. wJIQ plans to diacu.u womea who
hive been prominent ID C&lllorula's col·
orfi1J history.
Newport Plans Lawsuit
In Slant Drilling Case
Newport Beach city councilmen served
notice Monday night they are planning a
lawsuit against G, E. Kadane and C.Om·
pany for allegedly slant drilling an oil
well beneath city territory.
City Attorney Tully Seymour was
directed to prepare the lawsuit for City
Valley School
Drops Athletes;
Pot Use Cl1a1·ged
Fountain Valley High School bas
suspended two varsi ty baseball players
for alleged use of marijuana, Principa l
Paul Berger disclosed today.
The students -one a starting pitcher
for the Baron,, -have been taken from
their regular classes and mu.st now at-
tend extended day courses at the Wino.
tersburg campus, a continuation school,
until they graduale, Berger sald.
Poli ce said both youths were arrested.
One is out on bail and the other wu
released to custody oI his parents.
"It's bound lo have some effect on the
team," Berger predicted. He said the
pitcher "is one of the two the coach
really counts on."
Chances for the boys' reinstatement on
the Fountain Valley team are just about
nil, accOrding to Berger.
"If !tudents are caught smoking or
drinking they lose their ellglbJUty for U\e
season," he said.
"We thought this was going to be one of
our best seasons," Berger Lamented. He
sald the Barons have never won the
Irvlne League baseball championship but
added, "We would have had a good run at
ll." .
B~ll c.tc.h John Cole could not be '
rea for comment. '
Sto<'k M•rkets
NEW YORK (IJ') -The stock market
continued to move withln a narrow range
l!Je llt~ 11Jemoon.-(See quoteUooa.
Pages 11-17).
The average had not changed more
than 1 fraction of a point from the !tart
or Ille ....ton.
Council adloo in two weeks.
· Coundlmen !lid not lip their band u lo
what evidtnce they mlght have.
The Newport <ny charter pro!Ulitll oil
drilling within or beneath the ~Jes
of the city or Newport Beach.
Jim Gilstrap, manager of. the Kad.ane
oil field, sald be had "no comment ' what<roever."
The o!Uield Iles in unincorporated coun-
ty terrJtory jt111t north of Newport Shores
at the western city llmJts. Kadane has an
oil lease running until 1994 on the pro-
perty owned _by ·Beeco Limited, al!o
know n as the Banning property a!ter the
family owners.
Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons said city
officials have suspected for some time
that oil .shafts from wells along the
perimeter of the Banning property slant
under the city,
Parsons aaid It is his opinion "donkey"
pump machloes lbou.ld be pl.aced urr
derground as the Signal Oil Company did
at Bolsa Chica so the prOperty ·~can be
developed to the ltighest ·and best use
which ls now residential rat.her than oil."
. He said he and Councilman Donald
Mcinnis had met with Gilstrap and Han-
cock "Bill" Banning Ill without nota&le
5Ucei!S.!i,
Orange
Wu tiler
lL's been a long w.kend for
Old , SOI, bul he11 be around on
WedneSday. Temperatures !long
the coast will stlck to the lowtr eo•a, however.
INSIDE TODAY
Good news /01 alt Uoll Dick
Tracy and Li't Abttt'T fam -
thev'n taking up residence in
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Disclosure
Law Hits
Newport
Nnport Beach cny councllmen lttOl>-
day nliht accepttd the rt5ignallon of
R6ttr Hardacre from the city Board of
Library Tn.lstee! ll'ilh the proviso lhe:Y
won't replace him for 60 days in hopes
they will got him baclc.
Councilmen expressed •hope that dur-
ing that time the state kgtslature will
change a financial disc106Ure Jaw, which
l:s the re11son Hardacre resigned.
Hardacre'1 resignation will be effec-
tive April ts. I.be day the law r~
public officials to submJt a stattment of
all personal and business assets in el·
crss of SI0,000 goes into effect.
,;ThP law requires businessmen to r~
\•eal their assets to their competitors.••
said Councltman Howard Rogers. "We've
just l~t one of our finest commiMlimerS
and I thl.nk we resent il"
Rogers ·explained to the audience at
the council meeting, "T don't think any-
body on the council or in the city objects
to the intent of the law, which is to
avoid conllict or interest. But I think
the !Ute could come: up with a method
of keeping rmancial statements in file
with a lleled committee or grand jury
given authority to look into the file."
City ~tanager Harvey Hurlburt said
the information he gel5 from Sacramento
through the League ol CaJUomia Cilie9
is the law will be amended and perhaps
a short time alter the April 15 date it
goes into effect.
Hardacre, a tar cmsultant and book·
keeper, has served on the dty librarY
board sfnce 1968. His four.year tmn et·
pires July J.
In submJttinf bis resignation, he wrote,
"I have rarely submitted tnlonnatlon
nn my finances, and then only in con-
fidence, so that I don 'l care to have
details regarding by bul!inells and person.
aJ investments 1 matter ol record avail·
able lo the geoual public."
Workers .Sought
To Ai.d Census
On Orange Coast
An appeal lo mldenl& of N.-.port
Bw:h, Huntington Beach and Costa Moaa
to apply for census taker jobl, ha1 betn
1-by Ray Gordon, dlltrld manager
of the 1'10 censw.
Gor,lon aaJd 1ppllcan1J muat be 11
ye&ia old or over and U.S. citizens.
"They wiU be requlttt: to pass a selection
test demonstrating their ability ta un-
derstand printed instructions and do
simple arithmetic," .he aaid.
Accordina: to Gordon census lakera will
be paid on a piece basis designed to
average h per hour and mileage will be
pald to workers who use their cars.
"Weekly eaminp for a full 40-hour
week might range from $eO to more than
$100." be erplained. The average usign·
ment for a census laker will last from
three to Uve weeks beginning Marth ~.
Gordon uid anyooe interested in a~
Jllying should contact the ctnSUI afOct at
1310, Suite K, E. Edlnaer, Sant& Ana, 547.
7139.
Newport Woman Hurt
In Au to Rollover
A Newpcirt woman 11 Usted in fair con-
dition today ln Hoag Hospital with a con-
ai.salon after her car rolled over Manday
night on B1y&ide Drive.
C.OnnJe A. Howie, 33, of 1412 Serenade
Terrace wu eutbound on Bay1ide when
she lost control o( her auto, causing it to
roll M the curve near Harbor Island
Road, polic< aald.
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DAILY PILOT Sl•ff "'"''
Ait1iing for a Bit
Age••t• ~Gouged'
•
Lagu·na Raid
Busts 5 Youths
' ~-
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~
After raidln1 a home in a rather ex·
cluslve Laguna Beach area ti.fondiy
af~moon, state Burea1.1 of Narcotics
a1ents allesed ~had been "gouged" <1
little on the piice or a marijuana
purchase but added, "maybe it's because
o( the high rent area."
An agent's claim to have purchased 11
•1Uds" (11 ouneea) of the drug at 925 Van
Dyke Drive led ta the arrest at fGUr 11·
year-<ild yoothl and apprehewlon af a 16-
YW"-Old &irl wbG was turned over to be:-
parents.
Price of the purchase, qeqts claimed.
wos 1100, a lttUe hlghp than !lie cumnt
&olng rate ol lix lids !or !00.
,
"\Ve felt w.e should have got 11 lids for
that price," he explained, noting tbat the~
price normatly gaes do"'JI as the amount ,
purchased increases. "But it's pretty nicti'
up there," ht reflected.""a lot of nice
houses." ,.
Acting on intormalion received earlier,J
an agent claimed to have made the .
purchase late-in the afternoon, at which"!
time, he said, there were "aOOut 1~ peo-'
pie in the hoo.se." ..
When state officers, assisted by Laguna1
Beach narcotics officers Nonnan Bab-•
cock and Neil Pur<.4ell, returned to the
Muse at 4:50 p.m. the four men and '
juvenile girl were taken into custody. 'l'.he I
other occupanls of the dwelling were"'
allowed to leave. •
'
Candidate Opens Office ~
' ~ 1
1
'
Estancia High School thespians Rich Golson, Carol
Cappello and John Childers (fron1 left) rehearse
scene from ''.<\nnie Get Your Gun," \Vhich opens
Thursday night. School production, with a cast of
50 under the direction of drama instructor James
Stauder, will run through Saturday.night. Curtain
time is 8 o'clock each evening in the campus forum.
As Mesa Races Get Hot .
Coala Mesa City CoUllCil cancHd~te
Jack Hammett has opened hia campaign
headquarters, as the race for office
warms up, with e.lection foor weeks and
four days away.
Hammett, administrator of Br!stol 1
Park Medical Center, is one o( seven men
whose names will appear on the April 14
ballot, including the two incumbent coon-
cilmen. Paper Sales OK
Even 'S herwo od For est' Legal
By TIIOMAS FORTUNE
Of t~e 01lly l'ilol lltlf
It is now permissible to s e 11
newspapers, including the underground
paper "From out of Sherwood Forest,"
on the streets of Newport Beach.
Newport Beach city councilmen voted
unanimously Monday night ta enmpt
newspapers from a city ordinance re-
quiring payment of a $100 annual fee to
sollcit or peddle merchaJltllse.
They did :sa becau£ City Attorney
Tully Seymour advised them they would
have to charge each paperboy wha
delivers newspapers door to door $100 a
year if they were gaing to be. consistent.
The city several months age> had tried
ta rt.quire $100 individual aolicitor's
licell!es of persons selling "Sherwood
Forest" on street comers.
The city has ignored the newsboys and
in practice already e1empted them !tom
the ordinance, Seymour said.
-Seymore, who had researched the legal
prededents, also expressed doubt the city
soliciting ordinance could stand up in
court applied to newspapers.
"This would seem one of the First
Ariiendment (frfedom of speech)
freedoms, when passed out to willin&
recipients," he llaid.
But Seymour advised that the city's re-
quiting a $25 business license to operate a
newspaper, as any other business, ap-
pears valid.
The city License Bureau in December
attempted without success to license
"Sherwood Forest" on the basis that it
maintained an office at the "Bird in
Search of a Cage" bookstore, at 2307 W.
BalOOa Blvd.
But now the bird has fiown the coop,
with the store owner evicilng his tenant
and latest ward is \he underground paper
"Sherwood Forest" is being published in
Santa Ana.
HuntiI1gton Policeman
•
In Close Brush With Death
Dealb peered over his shoulder Monday
when a Huntinglan Beach detective stood
-froun with a gun against his chest-
as hia partner waited to blow the assail·
ant's own bra.ins out.
The tense conlrontatian occurred at the
home ol an oil worker named \n an arrest
warrant charging h1m with passing bad
checks.
Charges or assault ll'ilh a deadly ~·ea·
pan against a pallce officer were adried
to the check charge when Biiiy Ray
Witherspoon, 40, of 14892 Sabre Lane wa!
booked into jail.
Detectives Christian Schneider and
!\1artin O'Reilly said the near-fatal drama
unfolded at the Witherspoon hame a! they
tried to convince the struggling i;~pect
ta leave peacefully.
Suddenly, they aaid, he snatched Schne.i·
der's .38 caliber revolver from under his
sport coat and shaved it against the Jav•·
man's chest.
"Turn loose or me or 1'11 shoot," they
quated Witherspoon as sayln1.
Suddenly, he felt the cold muule of
Detective O'Rellly's service revolver
against bis own temple.
"Drop the weapon," he snapped. "Or
J'll shoot."
Witherspoon dropped the gun and
O'Reilly ldcked it across the noor out of
reach, at which Ume the !!uspect "'·as
1,1rrestled down. -· Police said Wlther'JlOC)n wes strved
t~ warrant inue from West Orange Coun-
ty Judicial Court. but gsid he couldn't
Jeave because his wife and five children
were sick. They offered to wait while he telephoned
Irvine Avenue
Speed Limit Up
A change In gpttd limit to 35 miles per
hour for Irvine Avenue from 16Lh Street
to the northerly c.ity limit was approved
~tonday nJght by Ne"'•port Bc;ich city
counc.ilmtn.
Formerly, the speed limit was 30 miles
per hour from \Vestcliff Avenue to Santa
Isabel Avenue In the northbound l11ne.
,,hilt the City of CO!ta fl.fess had pasted
a SS.mile pttr hour speed limit an the
southbound lane .
Now lhe speied lllnl~ an t~·o side! or
the JJlreet are (•on~isten1.
A study by Newport Beach police
1ho~'td thnl mOfit peoJ!le drl,·c about 40
mllu per hour along Irvine Ave nue.
\
a family rriend to come and care for
them.
"1 don't ha,•e a telephone," he replied.
"Then yoo 'll have to phone (ram the
police station," Schneider told Wither·
spoon, an employe of Pacific Drilling
Company in Signal Hill.
1-le was told his 15-year-old son could
remain in charge.
Viale.nee erupted at that point, Investi-
gators said, leading to the brush with
death befare Witherspoon was handcuffed
and hauled away.
Mr. Henderson's
Se rvices Planned
Memorial services will be held Thurs-
day at 4 p.m. in Old North Church,
Fore11t J.hlls, North Ho\!y11i·ood, for
Charles ~. Henderson. composer and
musical director, who died Saturday al
his Laguna Beach home at the age of 63.
f.-1r. Henderson was the father of Peter
Henderson c1' Newport Beach, or the com·
edy team or Skiles and Henderson .
He also is !!Urvlved his his wife. Bli1111 or
the home, 265 Viejo St.: a daughter, Sally
Laughlin o( La11 Vegas i and by nine
grandchildren .
Bom in Jamaica Plains. New York,
r-.1r. Henderson wa! graduated from
Harvard University in 1928 and for
:.evera\ years was a pianist with the Fred
\Varing band.
A coml)OSer. musical and vocal dirtc·
lor, he worked on more than 200 feature
films and was for 10 years Vt'ith the music
department of 20th Century-Fox Studios.
Among the standard song hits Hen·
rlerson comlXl'S'd v.•ere "So Bests My
lleart," "Carefree" and "Deep Nliibt,"
which he wrote with Rudy Vsllee.
Jer'ey l\1ayor Blasts
Opponents, U.S. Rap
NEWARK. N.J. fUPll -Claiming in-
nocenct of federal extortion chargea and
delivering a sUnging rebuke to his tleo-
llon opponents, ~1!lyC)r ttugh J. Addonlzlo
ritond:iy launched his campalsn for a
third term to the city's highest past.
Before an O\'erno"· crowd of t0me 1,600
supfX1rt<'r8. Addot1liio repeated hit 11sstr-
tlo n 1h11 he ~·Ill prove his lnnoetnct of
Ferlt.ral charges in U1e courti. He sharply
rti!iclzt d the six olners bidd lna Jor his
JOb.
Boy, 15, Admits
Bungled Theft
In Doctor Office
A 15-year-<ild boy with a history of
narcotics problems has confessed to the
burglary or a San Clemente doctor's of·
flee where his heist became a comedy or
errors.
In fact, the only thing he did sue·
cessfully wag escape.
The youth, who was arrested ave~ the
weekend by Los Angeles narcatics of·
ficers, was identified as the juvenile who
broke into the offices of Dr. \Villiam W.
Halcamb at 131 W. El Portal aOOut two
\\'eeks ago.
Before he fled he was surprised by tile
physician's nurse, bitten by her dog, then
Clayed by the y,·aman when he began to
fight back at the attacking pet.
Ta top it off, the capsules which the
youth took weren't what be l!IU5J)ected.
And their uncomfortable effects, no
doubt, lingered a while. The capsules
\\'ere potent laxatives.
Police in San Clemente said the nurse,
1\frs. Jea n Boucher, was returning after
hours at the o!Cices to pick up SGme
medication for her sic\.: son. She brought
her Scotch terrior Tammy with her.
As l!lhe entered the door she surprised
the youth and the burglar gped dawn a
corridor or the suite.
Strike Facing
Strip Tonight
LAS VEGAS <UPI) -?1-tass union meet·
ings were called today ta consider an Gf.
fer by major "Slrip" hGtel operators
aimed at heading off a strike threatened
after the present CG!llracts expire tonight.
Al Bramlet, president of the joint board
of the cullnary and bartenders unions,
said ualon leaders would recammend re-
jection of the management affer, which
included a 25 percent wage boost.
The Nevada Resort AS!ocialion, which
represent$ all ''Strip" hatels except the
Riviera, Bonanza and Circus Circus, is
negotiating for the hotels.
Spruce Up
The Hammett camp is headquartered
at 445 E. 17th St, headed by campajgn
manager Bob McNulty and a staff o(
wlunteer workers.
2 Co1mcilmen
Gibe at Allen
During Monday's meeting twa Newport
Beach city councilmen gal off a couple of
gibes at cGUnty Supervisor Alton Allen.
Cauncil men were discussing their ear-
lier decision to have the City ata[f study
the Upper Newport Bay land :swap and
the meaning or county supervisars )>Ol§l·
poning any reaction to Newport's involve-
ment.
''It's an extremely difficult type or
decisian far Alton Allen to make," said
Councilman Howard Rogers.
"Any decision is difricult, '' scoffed
Ccuuncilman Lindsley Parsons.
Board to Visit
Computer Center
ti-fembers af the Newpe>rl-Mesa Unified
School Dislrict Board of Education will
tour the district's new data processing
center prior to the regular meetin1 Tue•
day night.
The tour, scheduled st 7 p.m. at the
center, 1857 Placentia Ave., Costa Ptfesa,
is open to board members, ~ press and
a limited number of spectators, ac·
cordinic ta 1 district spokesman.
Visitors will be shown various pieces af
equipment be.Ing integrated into the full
data processing facilities now under
develapment in the district.
The regular OOard meeUng will follow
the tGUl' st 8:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
High School Lyceum.
Tiger Has Cubs
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The National
Zoo's famous while tige r ti-1ohlni has
given birth to four cubs. two of them
while like her. Th ey were reported doing
well.
Your Home for •••
lttost have begun their campaigns -
from doorbell • ringing to public a~
pearances -and one of the next Is a
March 19 Meet the Candidates break!asl •
session.
Sponsored by the Citizens HarOOr Atta
Research Team (CHART) the 7:30 11 .m.'
event will be patterned on NBC-TV's
~1eet the Press, with selected quest.ions
fielded by the seven candidates.
Ul'I Ttlt•lllM
Greel~.s' f'ete
Vice President Spiro Agnew ,
atlending the 19th National
Congressional Dinner of the
Order of Ahepa. '"as presented
the Greek organization's Ser
era.tic a\vard in \Vashington
Monday.
• ' •
WITH FINE QUALITY -
FAMOUS BRAND NAME
DON'T MISS OU R DRAP ERY DEPT.
CARPETING
*BEATTIE
*CROWN
* IMPERIAL
* SWEETWATER
* BERVEN
*CO LUMBUS
*DAN RIVER
*MONARCH
* ROXBURY
*WALTERS
*BIGELOW
*FIRTH
* MONTI CELLO
*SEQUOYAH
WE IN Yl!E YOU TO VISIT OUR HUGI SHOW·
ROOMS-SU I HI OUTSTAND ING SUICllON 0,
CARPfllNG AYAILAILL UN USUAL INSTALLA·
!ION PROILI MS OUR Sl'llC l4 LTY.
Wa fe1tur11 1 complet• ielactiol'I of f,brics
ind coltirs to enh1nc11 t nd compl iment your
c.1rpating.
-VISIT OUR REMNANT ROOM -
Hundreds of· Small -to. Room Si11 Remnants
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPERIES
• '
1663 l'LAC_ENTIA ·COSTA MESA
646-4838
'' YlARI 11av1lr.o THI ORANOI COAIT
'
...
•
'
P,rep Baseball Rou1adtip
nuntington, Vikes Po st--c
,
'.3rd Straight Victori es
Huntington Buch and 1.farlna's Vik·
Inga swept lO their third atra1ght Hunt·
lngton Beach baseball touman1ent vic-
tories Monday afternoon to h.lghtlght
prtp action in the Orange Coast area.
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t•antage of Mlke"S):m.Ons' four RBis in ra~lng up Foothill, 11-1, while Marina
was coming up with one n.tn In the bot-
tom of the seventh inning to edge Bolla
Grande, 1-0.
-Flliu, "' ' • • • ..... ' ' • • •
"''""'' 10 ' • • •
In other Hunlington tourney affairs,
\Vestmlnster came up wlth its second
win, a 4-1 decision over invading Servite.
and Fountain Valley dropped Pacifica for
a 5-2 count.
f\1ater Dei scored a run in the bottom
Cll the ninth inning to edge Savanna, 1-0,
In the opening round of the Santa Ana
tournlihlent and Costa ?.1esa was shot
down, 4-3, in a non-league game with host
El r-.fodena.
flfarina's 1-0 gem was backed up by
the three-hit pitching of Dave K.lungres-
eter, who struck out 14. enemy batters -
nine in a row.
First baseman Paul Fleming saved the
day ror the Vikings with a leaping stab or
a Bolsa Grande Line drive that was head-
ed for open spaces In right field in the top
of the seventh. There were M1tadors on
second and third at the time with two
out.
Leonard Be:Jler'1 350-foot single vo'ith
the bases loaded provided lhe Yikes "'ith
the winning margin.
Huntington used a 13-hit attack in
dlsposlng of Foothill, collecting aU 11
rulis in the first rive stanzas.
Symons collected his four RBis with
lingles in th'! first and third innings
kn~k.ing iii a pair of runs on eacb. oc-
casion.
Steve Fox led Fountain Valley to its S.2
conquest, allowing five hits and striking .,
out a like number of balsmen.
r.1ike Shima ji led the Barons in the hit-
ting department with a double in the first
fr ame accounting for a pair of tallies.
\Ves tminster used four pitchers in :;ub-
duing Servile. Kurt Dedrick picked up the
win.
Doug lttilne got the big hit for the Lions
with a two-run double in the second in·
nlng.
El ~fodena's Frank Borjoquez smackied
a two-run Oomer in the !lrst inning to
deal Mesa it! defeat.
The Mesans came back with a pair of
ru ns fn the sixth to make it close when El
Modena Jet in both runs on errors after
the 1'-1ust.angs had filled the sacks.
Mater Dei 's victory came when Ron
Muntz led off the bottom of the ninth in·
ning wilh a triple and came in with the
wipning run on Gary Simpson's11y ball lo
left field.
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, How Adams Moulded
Anteaters Into Winner
ytben the season started for UC
Irvine's baseball forces, coach Gary
Adams had no idea ol posting such an
impressive early season record.
Eight victories in 12 decisions is im ·
pre58i ve for any baseball team , lel alone
oae in its first year oI competition.
How did the Anteater mentor go about
moulding such a winning combination ?
First. he scouted lhe top high school
talent with grades good enough to get in·
to .!chool at Irvine. Then he turned to the
juntor colleges to get a bit of depth and
experience.
During the faU semester he had equal
ttOWAAO MANDY
HOWARD
HANDY
balance with seven rreshmen and seven
jaycce transfers and tbe team did as well
as could be erpected in informal com·
petition oo Saturdaya.
Just prior to start of the spring
11emesler, Adams felt the team needed
some added strength up the middle and
was fortunate to get three additklnal
junior college translera into sch"°I.
Roc ky Craig has been installed as the
regu lar center fielder and is the leading
hitter (.444l on the club. P.1.lke Sykora
took ove r 11t second bue and Mike Saska
is a starter in right field.
Of th·e seven f-rtshmen, Chuck Spanski
Al third and Dan Hansen at short are
i tll rlA!rs for the. Anteaters.
A combination that apparenUy Is hard
to beal and one that will give Irvine a
wlnning season the first time around if
the fut ure continues in the Slime vein I'S
carlf games.
* * * Othi ng Into I.be archives at UC lr\•lne,
publicist Bob Btnson eomes up with two
11dd!Hooal baskcthllJ 1ame1 for Jen Cun·
•
nlngham.
It uem1 the two NCAA playOff con.
tests Jefl participated In during bts
sopbomon seoson were rtOt Included In
the team retord&. This mtans lbat Cun·
nlnpam played • total of 8! games in
three 1ea1oa1 and posted a lifetime 13.3
scoring ave rage.
His three-year scoring total is 1,501
points. the highest by an Anteater.
Incidentally, A1ike Barnes bad 149
a&slsl! during the plait campai1n,
undoubtedJy • 1chool record.
* * * Did you know that. ..•..
.•.• The 18th fairway at Pensacola
Country Clu b, site of this week's PGA
l<Nf compclltion , holds a urUque place in
the annals of golf?
The fairway run., perpendicular to a set
of railroad tracka 275 yards from the tee.
If the ball shook! land on the tracks, the
golfer gets a free drOp.
Jn the event a lrain should also bt us-
ing the tracks, lhc train apparently has
th e right ol way, and plays through ac-
cordingly. Channel 9 will bring the action
and the unique hole lo viewers this
weekend.
* * * .Callfornla Angel attendance 111
Anabeim StadJum frtm IMC &o 1969 total-
ed t.,502,373.
Angel attendaace In Ute clab'• laet four
years at Dodier Stadium I o t a I ' d
3,l!l!.%4-4 .
Tlais meani1 1.211,134 more fa.us viewed
Angel games the l11l four yeu1 In
Anaheim than in a com p1rablt. period ln
l>od.ger Stadium.
. •.. Tbe Angels will hypo 1ttendanct.
whh 13 major promoUons d11rtn1 the
comJng SehOn dt1l1ned for every
member of &be family .
In addition lo the 1r11idltional bat night ,
helmet lllgbt and c1mera day, there will
also be a11 auUigr1ph day, cushio11 nlgbt,
diamond nlgbt ud po1Ler night.
Other lavoriles err. lhr oldUmtrl
game, Dlsneyltnd dty, K~tPC.Bunny
game and the return of 1 July 4 fireworks
1how and T-shlrt night,
l .. ln:il .event en lhc amhltious Anicl
calendar I• 1 prize day en Sept. !7.
All·CIF Ca1adidate
\Ve.>l1nlnster High's Dan Broderick (30 ) goes up for a shot against
Monrovia in CIF playoff action. Broderick averaged 30 points per
ganie for three playoff starts and is a solid candidate !or All-CIF
first team laurels.
Stevens Reviews Season,
Looks Ahead to Next Year
By CRAJG SHEFF'
Of tl'lt Olllt l"llot 11•11
··1 was vtry pleased the \\'ay we finish·
ed. Early in the season I did not an·
licipale us doing qu ile as well, but I 111as
happy with Lhe "''ay the kids worked
together as a unit al Lhe en d or the
S<'ason.''
Speaking \\'as Saddlcback College bas·
ketba ll coach Roy Stevens, sumn1ariz-
ing his club's play during the: 1969·70
campaign .
The Gauchos finished strong. winning
se1•en of lhe.ir last nine games and ending
1\'ilh a season record of 17-1 I.
their own back yards while in the Desert
circuit, a lot of out of slate recruiting
takes place in order lo be compelitive .
Smith finished as the team's leading
scorer with 492 points and a 17.6 average.
Christensen tallled 452 poinls (16.1), Noon
had "6 points (16.8) and Lawrence total-
ed 276 (10.2).
Smith was seleetcd to t h e
sportswriter&' all-count y Leam while Noon
was awarded a second unit berth.
Christensen drew All·Dcsert Conference
honors.
,
DAILY '1Lll J 1
Tracie Rotitadup
-~---Estancia, Oilers Win;
•
Hot 880 by Area Duo
Rick Jennings of 1'-fater DeJ and Dave
Hustwick of Laguna Beach turned in the
best pertonnances of the day Monday in
non:.league prep track and field dual
meell in the Orange Coast area with an
t.xcellent 880 dueJ.
Jennin.it turned in a 1:51.3 to nose out
Laguna's Hustwlck', who clocked a 1:!18.) •
Jennings' victory highlighted t h e
1.fonarchs' 6$-53 win over Laguna Beach .
In olher varsity action, Estancia turned
In an imposing perfonnance at Sad·
dleback where the Eagles swept to first
place finishes in every event except the
discus and the shot put.
The Eagles won it handily, 95-32 . l~un
tington Beach turned host Corona de!
Mar away with a 68-50 decision but Costa
Mesa wasn't quite so fortunate, lo.sJng ~
41 to Garde'n Grove. ~
Leading the Estancia crew was Rich
\Vood , who won his hurdling s~cialltits:
in 15.5 and 19.7 "'hile freshman Bruce
Gi ra!Klle was capturing the 220 in 1
creditable 23.4 aga inst the wind.
Dave Johnson won the 100 in 10.0 for
the Eagles.
Maler Del's win came chieny In the
running events as the host Lagunans
swept first place in all four field events.
~iike Abbey leaped 21·1~1. in the long
jump and took another first in the high
jump.
Garth Wilo;e was a triple winner for
Huntington Beach . v"ith a 14.9 in the 120
hi gh hudles along Y.'ith v.ins in the l!IO lo"
hurdles and the long jump.
Gilli s to Coach
Pilot Quh1tet;
Lineups Set
Tandy Gillis, former basketball grtat
al the University of California and cur-
rently head coach at Corona del Mar
High, has agreed lo coach the DAILY
PILOT team Y.'hich will meet The Cops
Wednesda y night al Costa Mesa High.
'l'he 7:15 Ufr Is a benefit with all monies
going to paralyzed wrestler Justin Ogata.
Admission is 35 cents per person and Uie
gym's doors will be oPfn at S:30.
Oddsmakers have established the
DAILY PILOT as IS.point favorite.: and
area bookie.'1 say the cops have dtluged
their outlets with wagers, mostly putting
the ir money on the newspaper quintet.
The addition of Roger Carlson t.o the
team has been largely reeponslble for the
big point spread. Carlson was a doubUul
parUclpant because of aillng knees. How·
ever. he's casting aside his crutch!?! ror
a shot al the ruu.
Monday night the DAILY Pnm had
01 game scrimmage and Gillis Y.'85 im-
pres!ed with the team ·s conditioning and
balance.
Defenses were set and so were the of·
tensi ve patterns.
And, the starting five wall selected
v•ith 6-8 Tom Fortune at center, C.arl
Carstensen (6-2) and Craig Sheff (6-21
at lorward!, Glenn White (5-10) and Phil
Ross (S.10) at guard!.
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(Sff Oll.ERS, Par• 1%)
In Desert Conference action. Sad-
dleback tied for third with Barstow with
a 9-5 mark. Mira Costa and Imperial
Valley were co-cha1npions wi!h I~
records.
• --, Scotch vs:
"froin the lime we played Ora nge
Coast (a 76-61 victory) we bolted together
as a unil. Cam Smith and Erie
Christensen, along with Randy Lawrence.
made the whole thing go. They got the
team together as a unit.
"TI1ey were a tremendou,; group or
kids. J never worked wJth kids that I
have enjoyed more," said the Saddleback
coach.
What about next season?
"\Ve will lose three starters fSmllh,
Lawrence and Bill Noon), along with
re.serves Rick Merrill, Greg S1vcnson and
Jlm Helm.
"But if we can get a couple of bi g men
In the area. we could gi ve people trou-
ble."'
Returning for the 1970-71 season will be
Christensen and Rick Edwards, both
starting guards. Also b<1ck y,•\11 be
reserves Bob Lilley, Ben Mahar, Richard
F.bel and Bill Allen. ·
The Gauchos will be entering the
Mlekln Conference next seuon and UUs
al9o pleam Stevens .
"1 am looking forwa rd to lht new con-
ference." says Stevens. "It para.lle b our
program more closely.''
lle explains that In tht Mission Con-
rerenct, lhe teams recruit basically in
UC I Batting
U(I IATTING AY!ltAGli' Cl·l-11
t •• r 11 ta)lt1r rtol 1v1,
ltot-Y (rl>lt " »ll 1•u 1 1 .. ~
r..r~·~-• ' ! ,,,,,.,.
~' ·:: .. , ' II '·!l' • ' ,, II
I 1 I 1 .'i:J " ~
lom SPlllCt " " • " II"!~! ~i: w.:r-" ~ • 'I I' " I ! le• ~ ... 'I ,
·1'"1 1 ~. -' m •eM••~ ,, • ' UC.\ 3D~R'>I " • ' ' . ill ~-~·" I • ' I I I l · . 1¥t "' • • • om '(on-I ' • • 1V11:f."'11« ' , • • • 1 I • ~ :!!j " "' " " •
' •
'
'1! t·
,I ,
•
•
Say Seligi-am's and Be Sure.
II •
•• ·t
••
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1f • •
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,
J.% DAILY PILOT
, .. ,.n..WfftMral ......... ~ • lWO SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT ON PUTTING
There are two popular _
methods of taking the putter 8
· badi from lhe ball. Tho first
(illustration #1) has the putter
moving straight back wtth the
putterface always looking at
right angles to the putting line.
The second meth<><t has the
putter . moving back ''inside"
the line and.the putterfacelook·
ing at right angles .to the path
on which it is moving (il/ustra·
lion #2). • The 1irst method involves a
slight counterclockwise rotation
of the hands on the ba ckstroke
in order to keep the putterface
looking down the line. Naturally,
this turning of the hands must be
. ~eversed on the through stroke
to return the clubface squarely
to the ball.
The second method, which
seems more natural to me, in·
volves no rotation~_p.utter:_..
face qJerely opens and shuts
like the opening and closing of
a doo r.
I suggest you try both
methods .and use that wh ich
gives you the best results. I
further suggest you also apply
whichever .method You choose
1o your short shots from around
lhe green.
Long Irons from Tht Rough, Pttching From'Woods, UphiR •nd
Downhlll lies-these and other shots •re detailed tor you in
Arnold Palmer's booklet, "Trooble Shol.$," For your copy, send 20cc and~ stamped, self.addressed envelope to Arnold P•lm1r, In
car• of this newsp;1per.
Coast Preps
Te11ni s Roundup
J11n1w V•rilll' IOWPWI (20) It) ~1pOen1
Sl"flts
N1cnoli tNH) won..,., 4-0. Ollinn {NH) -.. !, 6-4. F1rrtll (NH) won H. 6-11.
J1cab1.ol\ (t00 won 6-2, i..o. ......
1-Mid Dw11•n 000 WOii '-4, ._~ ,.,, .. 1. ISbell Mid lt-r INHl WOii ._I, 6•11 ......
OILERS ...
tConti uued from Pa gt I l )
\111 '•'f H11nlillflfll te1dl CHI Ulll Cw111a <ltl Mir' .
100 -1 M\IUet (CdMJ ?. C"• ICdM), J, Miies (COM). Time: 10.l. no -1, MMlltr (CdM), ,_ S!r0\1911
fHBI. S. l it' betWffn Milts (CllM) and
R1100IPh (COM>. Time; "·" UI) -I. S1t011gll (HBj, l, Row tCOMJ, l McOUcwn CHBJ. ime: Sl.3.
BeO -1. MtOuown CHB), 2. R.,.. !CdM), 3, Kltkl)81rlck (MB), Time:
2:01,0. . M•le -1. MollenJ (MB), 2, B11bln
(HBl. 3. Glennon (COMI-T!me: •:~.O.
1-Mllt -l_ M111n lCdML 1, Ml1cl\tll (HBl. 3 Whttle• tHBJ. nme: 10:1'.0. 110 HH -I. WJM CH8), 2. S1ubbln•
(MB ), 3. M, Stvler ICdM). lime: 14.9_
110 LH -1. w•w (HB), 1. SlubO!ns CHB I, 3. M. Sf,vier (C<IML Time: 20.&. uo R.i•v -\ C0<0111 Gel Mar Time: A5.l
Milt Relav -1. 1-<un!lngton Be.Jell. Time: 3;39.6.
HJ -1. Holt (H8), 1. D. Sevier ttdM). J. Hoow (CdM). ~lollt: S-10 LJ -1. Wile !Hill. 1 0'~11! (CdMl, 3 Holl (HBJ. Olstanc~; ll~.
PV -I. Romoev CC:dMJ, 1, ,t..nOrel in 4H8l, 3. Vaugl!n (CdMJ, Heigl\!: 12.0. SP -I. Orelli119 (HBl. 1. 81.-r.e!I ICclM), J, Ayers IHB), Oister1<:t: 50-2«.
'" H11nlint!Oll •11cll U!l Utl C•r0<11 tol MO< 100 -1 Fierro (HBJ, 2-llote1n CCdM), 3. Pi(kl<lrd (HB}. Tlnit: 10 '· no -I. Fierro IHB), 2. 11oie1n ((dM), l . Metc11lf tCdM). l ime! iA.5.
660 -I, McG~ IHB) 2. camllbell fCOM ), 3. MottltV !HB). 'rime: l:ll 0
ll'lO -1. Calzad• tHB\. 2. Clar~ !CdMI, J, Tl\omo>-CHB). Time; l :ll.l.
ll'C HH -1. Hot1m•n tHBl. 7. Georat CC<IMf, J. Jtn~n CCdM f. Time,
14.'-lltl LH -1 Pic~lord iH8l, 1 !l;tnt ((GM), J, t1~in11 (COM), l ime; U.6 .880 llel11V -I. HunlinglM 8tac11,
T•me; 1;47.0. "IJ -1. Kent tC!IM l. 2. Jtn'lfn ((dM), no 11\lrd. HeiQl!I: ~.O. LJ -1. Mtlca11 CC<IM/, 7. l{enr
CCGMJ, l MoreltY (H8). 0 llllrn:t: 11· ". P V -l , H1n•en lHBl. ?. R~n!l!al
tH&I, 3. t111ino CCOMl. Ht!gM; 10-0. SP -1. Pearl (MB), 2. Harbin 4HB ), ~. 111...:.1 tCllM>. Ol111nc:t: ''"'·
'" (lr ... I ell! Mir { .. ) (oll) HMntintt ...
ll•ecll
•
'·
El M-... till (S) Cflll MtH Sl119l11 Endsley {CM) IOSI o-6, t-4. 1·61 won l·
Spe1r (CM), lost 5-1, 1-6, 0-6, 1-6. Purcell (tMJ, loot S-7, ~4, 3-4, 1-4.
tlrtt r CCM), 10$1 l-6, M , 0.~; won 1· .......
Fpr!lhay '""° Clo!U CCMl lost •·•, 4-1;
"""' 1·6, 11-l. Slidtlam '"""Conner ICM) loll 0-6, 0-6;
1-6. :i-•
J Mnlor V1rslty
El Maden• Ul) (11 Cllll MtU
Mlrln• lllVt) lll'VJI EOl.on
Slntll't
M<;0l!Vl1'11 (Ml del. L11<1I \El, 4-0; Ore,,_ t EJ, .. 3; LYnoll (E , 4-1;
Bog1rt !Ei, 4-1. 8yrrie CM) lost to l .,,I, 2°61 Or111ood, t-6; Lynott, :H; B01J1rt, :M. NITDSI CM) lost to Uni, U : Or1huod,
2-6; LYnotl, 1-6; dl!f, B111>1rt, 6-2. A.Nd (Ml IQ!lt to lenl, U ; OrahoOd, t-4; LYl'>Oll .... ,; def. 8ag11rt, 6-1 • ......
51'111fO<d Ind MoOrbedt (M) IP(il
witti Kent 11nd Kirk Oral!OOd (E), '"'• S-1; 1os110 H1rrnon and Bowm11n (El, .,.
'· 1-6. Ev1n~ller and R~IM CM) lotl to Kent 11nd Kirk Or11hoocl (El, M , CM;
Grf, H1rm..n 81\d Bowm1n tEI, M , ....
El o.r..st fU%0 fU\-41 Sin Cl1m111to 51n1tft !Okelllllll !SCI losl 0-6, 1·6, 1-4, 2<6.
Plowden ISCI lotl 04, "'"" .. 3. '-4. 6·
' C~ !SC) 11151 1-6. \-6, U. WPf1 °''· MIOdoc:lt (Stl tot! ~6. U, O·!, won ... Dtllbln Wigner encl Limberg !SCl WOii .. 1, i-
3, 6•1. 6-l.
Kel:lotV and Lember9 (SC) IOI! 1-4, J•
I>. lieod J.], won .. S.
JV ic-r..n C1tmtnte IJ''>l (l'h) El Ocr1do GOLF
M111r 0.1 nu nu ~•cltic.11 Olde Mllt~Pll (M01 do:'I. PtlP Glnozlst CP), .. 2. Bob Irwin (MDl Iota £1r1 LIMllr (Pl, J.J, 01ve ftld IMO) Del. Dive Ollto iP ),
)·I. J~ck C~til1!•""'en {P) Gt!, GtlltGt
&~lt.h CMD), ~1. ICevln Clark (MD) Otl. lcny L!tcld
(Pl, ~I
1'a I'S. , Estancia
Sci Banquets
Ne\':port Harbor and Estan·
cia high schools will honor
their v.'lnte r sports teams with
banque1s Tuesday night at
school cafeterias.
Estancia"s s w i m 1n i n g .
basketball and wrt'st l ing
teams will be feted al 6:30
while Newport's basketball
and wreslling squads will be
honored at 7,
The Newport swim team's
gathering wil l be held in April.
-~ ·-,---. .. • • ' . . .. . . ' . . . . • •
•
:;J~0J1S .-OCC~ Rustler Swimmers Sp~rkle
. Orin&~ c.o.it. and GoJden Jn thle 200 free Doo Li'"po!dl (~'.") inlhe ~ ~ .. w"le Ke'ith 1.000 ,,....tyi.--~1. Sttww 1occ1. lios.11 s.. M1i111111. 1S11111• 1e1i. . , /t' "'.ill tN U II.I I0:5l.2; 2. F,l.11blr1 IC.WC), l0:5'.0: J. .05,11 •· $W~ tGW). 2;0 .I; lo.
B ts
Weel ~· ••. .i--·rs .,. .r~•en Wesl has the ·-d Don. ald&on of Golden Wetit F~"'· jfuUertMI. 1::53.0; '· J1(obtl.;n r11<1wrd ILICCJ.! l0).1. "UUPJI:' UUlU """"'"'' (l'esfKientJ, lO:U.61 5, 11051~ :t!XI llutltflly, -• G~~ (OC('l, . a men very . . iD .• list of best Ume of 1:50.2. Feinber11's raak.1 fourth (23.0). (L8C(J, IQ:S1.5: ti~J.t; t , ~I' ·~1.1t11!), t:•.•i r~ 1...-. • 'L & ((r'• S "° '' ~-1 Lo ,, ,,1,.•-·1 Lvtl! IP•' n1 , t ; ,I/ :.II, $wtn'IOll
-J , lollli;i• ~ w South·e r--n S0.4intheJOOfreerallks him U1 wenson of Golden -L -•11v ..,..,_, ~~lfi!· 21 1.01 5. • u .. accJ,
' Cllifcnla ,j~'--1ltges as third ••bile Lip~ldt's mar• o!' West la fourth in the 200 in-~if~ 1hi"111"X°:l. 1 ~~i1~· r&°JJii.,~ 200 tire1m1rto11.1 -1. MftVi• 1s..n1r. . Orange Coast Colle. g~·~ •Bob CQll'J...-a1-_ ... &i:7wiiii ..,:':.ch "" ,. • dividual.. medley with a time of \\i5~1• •: 1.•i s. '1~ (V•lllY • Mori1c11. 1:11.11 2. '1"" <occ.
Lea t~· the·-· I ~ "' ...... 50,7 is the fifth best time.' 100 ''"r.r."" -I. Pl..., tV1fllY!. V.rU.l i l. F111tkn1• !"'! An1l, vy .. ,... OU<; JU!fllCJrCOr Jack Fulll~.... . 2·0" 1 "·!•' '· ' 'iii ''"'"'""' ... ,,,• 3. 2:11.J; 4,_er-.nl LI /_ :21,A; s, 1 b ball t . hit.ti .-I.VD. Uppoldt and Feinberg also • ~· • .... WllMlll (Nn e•rn1ro no VI 111.,. r,:n.s. e~~ ase earns m ng ~ OCC's 1400 medlevo relay have the second and thitd'" .... t In the 200 butterfly, Chris r;~'ll'!.'j9:x:· <i. 1
1's, ~;,!~~i 1flt~i· 3,~,fr\4:~tece'1~:U.11_1• '· ~e~~ wii.u a .462 average, according ' team bu the ....... ~.. ..A. .,.... Gamroon of orange Coast has fl.•!~ 1 1a111. LIPPOidt lGWC, 3,14"1 4• Cll•fft!r. ,:u.s1 s. kM• AM.
to statis:tics c,ompiled ••·ough mark .... Soulber~n~ CaQUlornla-t marks in the 200 backstroke, he . %) hil so.1. • 3:.l•.o: '· Go10en W•t. 1121.11 1.-•• 2 -•and 2 -t· I •-time (2·~ w e 20e b-"" troll• -1 fl.11c1t1111111911 0 , •• ,, •·-· I st k d ;...,.., :11.7. 1ue top · une -Y .vi. (F1111er~i',_2:t1.1.0; 2, Llppgldl 1•w<1· ~~·~::::":.:;:-=·=·";;;"~·----. a wee en s games. {S:Sl.2)' behind Pasadena's 1., held by Full~·-•s ""roo. ·Swenson is fourth (2:11.0). 2:t11.Ji 3 ... ,1n1w1,. tGWC)' 2: 1.1: • Leavy., a shortst-Op, has col· 3.~ 5 " -.:;1·..uu 11~ ~ohnston h•• the second best flow.er IP•s.aclerlll, 2:11. 1 s. J lldY
I -R•>'denba .. •• ('•05 o) "'1 ..., 1v•ll•y), 2:0 .2. · • Who Cares? ected 18 hits in 39 ap. ' ' ' ~ "'\ · • time · the 200 bre ststr k soo ~'ti' -1. \ovtn IP•s•den•l·
pearances at the plate. Team-Tile Pirates' Steve Schwer Jn the 500!:fy1t, Lippoldt 16
' a 0 e ~~l'.:i, 2·l~C"°j· ~1i:1f~ei,,, s:i~e0ih.ir No othtr ntwspaper In the world
mates Mike Pau. I and Mi•· , has the leadibg time (10 :51.2) has tbe s '-be' st mark (J:2S.1). tFU'1"'"°"' :.li.o; ,. "•' 1 u1 I"' Ilk u; 1 the 1 """ ., d I L•MI~• ;1c swl"' rimes 0~1~~1V1~:1!;!, l. Plll$Oll iv,uevl. cares about )IOUr commun.., • Powell also have impressive n ,VUV"yar reettyle and (5:14.0)"wh~e SChwer is third IA•., M11'1:11 s> n .11 2. JIJlln••°" tocc1. n.'t . your community dally newsNPU
credentials wilh ,390 and .351 Golden West's Grtg Feinberg (5:15.1). BJ:uct Johnson of '°° m«1il!r r•1n -1· P•Kll•n•., Omw"<)'. ,!'.•''.J:·''l11,1J·•1·F·~1-w,""1-;i,,•!.~l. '"'·It's tllt DAILY PILOT, ran•· -·-• (IO ~ O) , J ;ltl,51 2. occ, J:5T.t : s. El c11111no. IG.1 ... • ... , ••
Goi ---marks. liF~i;~~-~~~~~~~:w~.,~·~~iiii~OCC~~ha~s~·the~~sec~~ond~~bes~t~ti~m~e~i;'~,~~~·~,~·~·~'~'~"·~·~·~~·~'~'"~·'~'~'·~''~'~"~~·~,lf~·~";"'~,·~.·~,;~;;~,~l..,~· '~~~·~'~i~:~::~·~"'~;~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~ den West's Wayne Kiefer
tops Rustler regulars in hit· • ? "
ting wilh a .435 mark. Team· l ~
male Rex Snyder has a .545,
but has appeared at bat only
JI times, collecUng sii hits.
The Rustlers' Bill Bowen is
hit.ting at a ~.320 clip. ·
Scott Losignecker ts the
leading Saddleback h i t t e r
among the regulars with a .296
average.
Erie Christensen made his
first appearance in a Gaucho
uniform Saturday, hanging out
five: hits in six trips to the
plate for a .833 mark.
GelM!I Well ( .. JI 1lt r fl rlll •¥1.
ll 4 6J.5<1! 21 111 .SllO l O I 0,500 2l 610 2 • .w 75 1 11.320 10 l l 2 .:JOO
11 31 ,,7 .. Ult0.2U 7•1•3.750
<I I l ti .250 '~~!~:~ 11001.222 19132.lst 100 1 0,100 1101 2.0SJ s 1 0 0
---·~.($ l6 " 27 .,.,
Or1~t1 Colt! U-5)
8ob L!IVY Mike P111I Mlkt Pow~ll Sieve Pl"ter Tom Kltltl Stevt K!1111 0on McN111!Y Mlkr Jol!r»an R<>111r Wllh !ler S!evr Sch!oenler l'~te Piie
orntn
To!els
1b r II rl>I I V.·
l9 • 11 • ."62
41 10 1, 3 .3'0 37 1 13 lj .lll 10 A 3 .211 3l •7•.211 J437 S.206 15353.700 1' l 3 l .Ill 1l 2l O .l:IO no11.on 131 10 .on
13 I 0 0
3)2 d 17 "" .232
S•ddlt61ck 11-41 •b r II flll I Vt,
6 3 51.'33 ~1 3 1 .611G 1 110.500
l15 1J .2"6 •GIG.'UO 17J A 1.1!2 1~2S J .20I
7i 1 5 2 ·* 71 1 A 1 .ltO
'M 4,l .15' 113 43 ,10
1 l l I ,1', ?413'!,125 14 l 0 1
!JO :u " 2l .20fl
Prep, JC,
UCI Golf
Summaries
C.,.IM dtl ~r (U) !•I MlllMlll Free1 CCl!M) del. Thompson (M~. 6-0.
Kl-t (COMI def. Cl11r !M\, » JOl>nson CM) clef. Quttn ICdM S-0. C1rroll !CdM) def. Tllomll'O!! /M), )• • Cox (CdMl de!. Roclne~ (M), S-0. l•wln !CdMI def Oehlftrom (Ml, )·0.
UC lrYiftl fU) (21 ) U, I{ Sin 0 1 .... Ch11mMrlln {U(l)·7S clef. Yar>ltV fUSDl41. 6-0.
Murdl CUSDl-11 Ori. Ht o v I~ I UCl)-19, 6.0.
HoPkln' CUCO-IO o•I. E ! ca !USCJ-ff, .. o.
K•rn' (UCl)-IJ ctel II ' et n t US0)--1'1, 6.0. Htl1lv t\JSOl -7' def. 5 a In IUCll-11. 4-? UCI !ortelll'd 11irn "18~ m•tC!I,
UC lrvint Ull (16) PepperGillll !Ion CNmbl•lln (IJ(l)-11 def, Jim V81trlO tPJ-14. 6-(1.
Terrv Tllui (P)·7' Del. Ron Hooven tUCIJ·ll, 6-0, Bert Kelll (P)~• G•I Du~t HoCll.ins 1uc11-e1, s-1.
Bob Allen !UCll·ll ""'· Ciilo HI!! 11'1· 15. 6-0. Dr•w Towntf CUtl)-11 Ott. Jim lt•llr (PJ-96, 4·2. Stev~ Cutlet !IJCIJ·M clfl. GatdOll llOl'ld !P)-e7, 6-6,
Be$! "'11!!: UCI won, S·I,
..
QUARTERBACK
SRORTS ~ LEISURE
~. .
,
•
INVENTORY REDIJCTION SALE
\ DARKAS .ef li
·-SKIS·___.
BY NORTHLAND
Stien &ickson-
"IE'"-IA.Lt
l 21s ...... $150 .... $89.99
Notional .... $115 .... $69.99
National Jr. .. $90 ..... $53.99
Glass 200's $52.50 ...... $29.99
Cobras .... $42.SO .... $24.99
--SPECIAL VALUE--
MYSTERY SKI
Mn Al-REGUW $10
NOW
$53.99
SUf\I VALLEY
FIBERGLASS
RIGU\AI' $45.00
NOW
$26.99
I
'
... -.... '*"'·"""'I&. OMI Spott'MOtltw
REDUCED
TO
SKI PANTS
Mol'ly ..... , tt..-boot
fnMA $3S to $65
NOV/ $19.99 10 $39.99
SWEATERS
ASSORTED SICI ............. 50% Off
Turtlenecks . 'leo. ''" con ON souDs .... S3.7S .... S2.4'
l/Y\ON Sll"ES ..... $9.00 .... $4.99
UNDERWEAR
bJ Duolo44, t• M"°. Wll""..,, CllUdr ... 'l~gul•' N.,. $3.49 M $4,49 -~ le ff'.,!e
GOGGLES
S1 TO $4.H NOW 49c TO $3.49
BARRCRAFTER SKI CARRIERS (Trunk Styl•I
REDUCED TD 30%
Al.I SKI ACCffSOlll'S-HOUCEO 30%
WOME>rS
APRES SKI WEAR TO 70% OFF
GOLF
BALLS
TOMMYMMOUI
• ... $12 ,., Denn
·SAU
'S.99a-
GOlf SltOtS-M9I & ~
Amold ,.I_ :z&% Olf,
by, Eaton
,., Pol• 30% Off
swmsHOTS PROl'lSSIOHAL
BALL fl:•1· t15 0.1. Now $7.99
(LIMit t 00&. to C11•l-')
OUTDOOR GAMES "" 5pol't1~r•11
REDUCIO 30%
3M BOOKSHELF GAMES-
log. 7.95 & 3.95 Now 5.99 & 2.69
I Limit -.-'"' wno,_)
Au1. Gifts & Gam.s to 30% Off
TENNIS SHOES
Con~1l"I• ....... , Reg, 10.H .... tlllo:' .••• l.M
8 1t1 . , ....•. , .• , • , fl.eQ, •.&O .• , .Slit ••.. 4.t9 Women'• 8•1• ,. '111l· 3.50,, •. $11t .•. _:.111 {A11t. Coiot1)
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
VlT• N,t..8TEl't REQ, -!Al.I: Bike E~trli ............... $2l!i, .••.• 11s1.M
8 lk• St1ndard ............ 11$5 ... , •. M.H Cul!OM 8ell ...... 11e~ •.•. $135 ••.•..• tt.M
St1n01rd Bell M11ll1J1' •.. '90 ••.••• S It.It
Cu1to"' T'1•d Mill ....... ,140,_, ... 74.M
AMF W1imEY-
oe1u~• t lke ............... m ,. .. 1 lot." Sta11d1,.. 9i1Ct .......... -'50 ...... 'lt.ff
All •llt•clM l<lilipment bl' Wl\lt l•l' REDUCED 30% OFF
lOll -I. lo•!! tCdM!, 1, Se1bv ft!IM}, 1, Got>181t1 CCOMl T 1 m ~ ;
11 .t . 111) -1, TO$ll (COM) 1. ~!bv tCdM). l Gonl.<ll<lfcl fCOM l. Tlmt: 1,,L
MAR. d.kl-&-L,,-,.
13 22 EVERY1111NG FROM DINGHIES TO
SKI POLES GOLF
ASSOl11D PUTTERS ................ $4.99 TO $6.99
S,ICIAL-OHE ONLY
ARTIC SEAL COAT
LADllS MID. SIZI
JllGULAI S59S '279
•
66C -1, Wvnnt (CaMl, 2. AIV•rtt
C ... 8). J, Llln!I tHB). Time: 1:)6,9 , • LUXURY SAILBOATS I. OCEAN CRUISERS!
ll'/0 -I. M(Nalr \Hll), 2. Ro. IHBI.
l POUi (HB l, Time: 3:11.5. . .................... -..
116 LH -). Fl!lon~' !H8), 1. Kelter IHlll, 3. Glt<nl>Orl !COM). T!mt; 16.1 UO Re11y -J, Co--dtl Mii<. Time: 54.1
• JN Al#UAL "'IHlOUEBI"-
: WEJTEll IA 1111AL •="
1'1J -I, Trebprt (Hiil, t. Buller (MB). 3. Si\Ju••i• {H8), He!ht: 1-11. . --LJ -1 Oa~ltt ICdM , 2. Selby e
4CdM), J 811tt~r (H81. 01t 1nce: 11·1. e PV-1, HOU"l"'okler IHllJ, 2, S!1knes• •
IHB), l, Ttlbo!tl I Hlll. Htlal!I; ... 6. • SP -l. HUI (COMI, t. 1"0111 ((OM),
:. MeN•rnet ICdM). Olt!lnce: 43-1. • •
Gymnastics
••
••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••
RIDUCB>
TO 30°/o
BOOTS
Raichlo ""· ""'Jet .. d ....... $135 ... $79.9' s.,.._ ........... sas .... ,59.9'
""-............ $60 .... 37.99
Spo<ialt ............ $50.. .. 34, 9'
..... ................ 535 .... 24.9'
Y•uth1 ..•. ,,, ...... $35 , •. , 21.99
Nordito-
Alplna ., .......•... $35 .... $21.H
BINDINGS
llDUCID TO 35""
SOUTH COAST PWA
BEGINNff GOLi SET by CU"Jtom Croft
Mtn I Worn•n-'l Wood•, 5 lront, let. $34.95 Now $23.9'
A Tl.ANTIC GOlf ~G . . . . . . . ..... UDUCB> TO 50'~
• TASCO l lNOCULARI 7XJ5 WIDIE ANOLf: ......... l'llEC. $3t.K .. • , S ALf. """ tH.tt lOXlil> ,,, ................ , .••. ,.AEQ, $34.H .... , .-SAl.E .•.. ,, .. $11.lt
7XSO .............. ., .......... f:llE(l, lft,9$, ....... SALE ...... l ,9,tl ll(:IG ...•..•••• , .•....••...•..•. f:IEG, V4,'5,,, •• ,,,l ... Lf: .••..•. 111." 7Xl5 .... , ... ;............ 'llEG. $2<1.'6 ..... .,.IALl: ........ f t$,ff
~poru Stort f 'or Eoeryone''
ARCHERY
Bows by Bear ·
l'la.. ....
Sul* Ko~l•k ... ,1100., .. ,.tM.M Sup~• M19nu.., , , , , ._, ..•... , .'80 .• , .•.• Sol.ff
Kodl1k Hu,.t~r •..••..•••• , •. .t70 ...... ~.-
Ko<l!•k M1on11rn ............. &ro ...... ta." Po••• ......................... tss ...... $1$.M T it•• Cit ................... '4: .... ,.tzT,11 Al••~'" ............. ,. .... w ...... m .tt
llftli' C1! ................... ~1.90.~ .•• ,ITLM
Cllb ........................ l tt.'° ...... tl.tt
SETS .• -eow, AAl'IOW. AlllM OUAlllD -
P:INGEA TA•, TAAOET <I. 9001( OF' 11'<
STAUGTJON$
30% Off
A111AOW~llllll'IGLA• & Cl.DAiii ~ DFr
WOMf:H'S-
SPl.CTATOlll ll"Ofltn Ail'il'Al'Ull.
SAVINGS TO 711"
SUNGLASSES
ARNOLD PALME"~A V SAiii
AEO. 1l.00 .... ., ........ NOW tS,f" •uic. 11.00 ••••..•.•.••• , NOW 10.M
llEG. l1,'4 .,.,,,, •• ,.,,.NOW 7,fl
'llEQ. 10.00 """ , ..... NOW t .tt
"The Profe.,.ional
Low.,Mall~
Near the Wcrt.,foll Bristol at the San Diego Frwy., Costa Mesa
Open ~onday thrv Fridoy 10 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. -Satur<lcry 9:30 AM. to 6 P.M. -Phone 54().()106
I
I
17
I
I
7
\
I I
"
• • I
I : j
--
VOL. 43, NO. 58,, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH ·10, 1970 TEN CENTS
Capo School Election: Upl1ill F·ight f~r Funds
The Capislraoo \)nified School District
-like most school areas on the
California Coast -has proven a tough
area for passage of school funding
measures.
And to add to the uncertain p.kl w:.t..J!i
today 's override ~and bond interest elec-
lion, school officials said it is the first
tbne in·memory voters have gone to-the
polls on a rainy day on any school money
measure hire. ·
District Superintendent T r 'u m a n ·
Benedict said the area's only real surge
of favorable eleclions came in the first
•
half the 1960s "when condllions were so
obvious that most people knew something
had to be done. We even had students at·
tending class in tents."
• But records showed that sailing was
rough at the ballot box for the major
school districts of the area both before
and after unificaUon in 1965.
The diistrict in its present structure.
has batted 3bout even in lts four elec-
tions.
ln 1965 .its first bond issue passed, then
later that year a 1neasure to receive
state aid for the dislrlct failed.
Troops Ill Laos
Get Combat Pay
W ASHlNGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon
discl~ today for the first time that
U.S. military men stationed in Laos have
been receiving combat pay of $65 a
month since Jan. 1, 1966.
Also without any previous public an-
nouncement, the Silver Star for gallantry
was awarded posthumously to Capt.
Joseph K. Bush Jr. of Temple, Tex., for
the action in Laos in which he was killed
Feb. 10, 1969.
Bush was among 'El persons reported
by the administration to have been killed
or listed as misslng as a result of enemy
action in Laos over the past six years.
• A Pentagon spbkemran said the while
receiving combat pay, men stationed in
More W,orkahle ·
'
Laos have not received the income tar
benefits granted those in South Vietnam.
The benefits are complete exemption for
enlisted men and a $500 uemption for of-
ficers.
Airmen stationed in Thailand who Uy
missions over Laos have been receiving
hal.ardous duty pay, with Laos routinely
lumped with other Southeast Asia areas
as hostile territory.
Meanwhile western sources said today
the North Vietnamese had established a
command headquarters Inside Laos -
the first of the war -to seek bigger
military gains that would be consolidated
by any peace negotiations.
Laguna Planners Okay
Changes in Sign Law
By BARBARA KREIBICll
01 lh• D1ttJ "11111 St1lf
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
agreed Monday night on a series of pro-
posed amendments to make the city's
new sign or~inaoce more workable.
The recommendations will be reviewed
by the City Council at a special adjourned
meeting Wednesday night. The council is
eXpected to instffitflhe Planning Com--
mission .to institute procedures. fQr amen·
ding the ordinance._Ni.cluding public hear-
ings.
In the interim. C<lllncilmen plan to in-
struct Uie building and planning staff to
administer the ordinance as if the
amendments alreatly were in effect. This
procedure was suggested by the city at·
tomey as an alternative to adopting an
urgency interim ordinance.
With the moratorium on nonconforming
signs-scheduled to end April 15, the action
Is being taken to give merchanls time to
b·ring their signs into conformity by th e
deadline date.
The amendments ctiver;
-rtleasurement of signs: now to be deter-
mined by enclosing the sign area in
seven straight connecting lines, instead or
four , as in the original law, t~ avoid
penalizing an owner · by calculating ex-
cessive blank space in his sign area.
When lhe sign consist& of letters mounted
on a panel painted the same color as the
building. only the message area of the
sign "'ill be measured. No re-entrant
lines may be used in calculating the
area.
-Parallel signs: instead of requiring a
minimum of five feet between sign and
side ownership line, the amended law will
provide that no sign can be located closer
to the side than a distance equal to JO
percent of the building site, with a
minimum distance of l'h feet. No .parallel
signs are permitted within three feet of
any other sign on the same building.
-Pole signs: will be permitted to be in-
stalled parallel with or perpendicular to a
right-of-way on a corner site, instead of
ool.y at a .f><tegree angle. as now re-
quired, and will· be permitted the same
projection over right-of-way as allowed
fSee SIGNS, Page !)
Monkey Bites
Feeding Hand
A ·wayward monkey who has a
painful way of showing its gratil.ude
has a new home in San Clemente
toda~.
It's staying with Mrs. Kathy Fifer
at 301 Avenida Del Mar after the
housewife found the small primate
wandering the streets Monday af-
ternoon. • ~1rs. Fifer said she took the waif
in.
A few moments later the monkey
gave its thanks.
It bit her.
ltlrs. 'Fifer, undaunted. told ~
lice she wouJd keep the little guest
unless someone claims it.
Still later that same year voters ap-
prov!:!d the measure.
LaSt year the unified district's first at-
tempt ·at a.; override faJled by 700 votes,
but vo.ter turnouts for an election of its
kind were substantial -40 percent
Previous to unification ~e road toward
voter approval of school f i n a n c e
measures was even tougher.
The old Capistrano Union High School
District passed its first tax override in
the early 1950s, then n i n e consecutive
bond issues fell to defeat.
Finally, in 1962-63 a bond issue was
passed and shortly thereafter a tax over-
ride measure won adoption, too.
"By then It was so apparent that the
schools needed money that we received
more yes voles for a change," Benedict
said.
In the old San Clemente Elementary
School District, where Benedic served as
superintendent before unification, the
record for passage was a little better
tban neighborin(> school districts.
In l!M': and in 1951 bond issues passed.
then another failed in 1963, followed by
its pasaage I.hat same year. Three con-
secutive overrides ancr that failed, then
one passed, followed by permission from
voters to continue the override tax rate.
After that t~·o other bond issues pass-
ed, one failed and an override election
passed.
Soaring pupil populations. hit hard Jn
the San Clemente.Capistrano Valley
areas in the early 1960s.
"Tbe desperation was very apparent.
We had students attending classes in
tents a~d quonset huts," Benedict sakl . -·
Commuhity support througbGut the
dozens of school elections varied.
For a lingering period, community
feuds between San Juan Capistrano and
San Clemente were blamed for the nine
straigh~ defeats of the high school bond
measure.
Community support for last year's fall-
ing override was "good," Benedict
observed, "but this year il seems th.At all
the possible stops have been pulled •.and
the work _by. supporters _is truly .lhe
greatest.
"In fact, I believe if we had this year's
support and activity on that last one, we
wouldn 't have to open the polls today ,"
he said. '
Agents Claim 'Gouging'
In Laguna Narco Bust
1
My Lai Captain
Faces 4 Counts
WASJilNGTON (UPI)··-The com·
m:1-nder of the company that led an
assault on My Lai ·two_ years ago was
charged with four ·~f m-'~
by the Armyo jn,oonPi witJI iib ._.
ed massacre of South Vietnamese
civilians. ·
Capt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, of Pico
Rivera, Calif., was accused of two
u.nspecified counts of murder "on or
about" March 16, 1968, plus the murder
of two Communist prisoners during in-
Boy, 15, Admits
Bimgle~ Theft
In Doctor Office
A 15-year-qgi bOy with a history of
narcotics problems has confessed to the
burglary of a San Clemente doctor's of-
fice where his heist became a comedy of
errors.
In fact, the only thing he did suc-
cessfully was escape.
The youth, who was arresled over the
weekend by Los Angel es narcotics of-
ficers, was identified as the juvenile who
broke into the offices of Dr. William W.
Halccmb at 131 W. El Portal about two
weeks ago.
Before he fled he was surpri sed by the
physician's nurse, bilten by her dog, then
flayed by the woman when he began to
fight back al the attacking pet.
To top it oU, the capsules which the
youth took weren't what he suspected.
And their uncomfortable effects. no
doubt, lingered a while. The capsules
were pot.ent laxatives.
Poli~ in San Clemente said the nurse,
Mrs. Jean Boucher, was returning after
hours at the offices to pick up some
medication for her sick son. She brought
her Scotch terrier Tammy with her.
A! she entered the door she surprised
the youth and the burglar sped down a
corridor or the suite.
terrogation subsequent to the alleged My
Lai mass killing.
F~ other persons also were newly
~· ilt.Lll!l''lf~!· b ... ,..,,~ ... ~~~tain 16ft1Mf~'·~
Uooinl of priSaner!., He was accused of
two mun1er cbarges.
Three more enlisted men also were
charged, bringing to 10 the number of
men so far charged in the alleged slaying
by American soldiers.
It was not clear at first how many
murder counts were made again.!l
Medina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was £our.
Medina and other mllftary men under
Investigation in the case are stationed at
Fort McPherson, Ga.
The Army's announcement of charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina-has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about 16
March, 1968, maiming and murder of one
suspected enemy person and murder or
anolher during lheir interrogation late in
the day of 16 March , 1968, and assau1t
with a deadly weapon on a lthird _in-
dividual while interrogating hlm on or
about 17 March, 1968.''
All those charged, with the excepUon of
an intelligence officer accused today as a
result or interrogation of prisoners, and
another captain pl'{;viously charged, were
connected with Medina's outfit. Besides
10 military men charged so far, five
othe r military men and 22 (!ivilians were
said to be unde r investigation.
MetU na was commander of Company C
of the Isl Battalion of the 2Qth Infantry
which made a sweep of My Lai 4 Hamlet
in search of suspected Viet Cong snipers.
The commander or one of the Company
C platoons directly Involved in lhe opera-
tion, Lt. William L. Calley, has been ac-
cused of 102 deaths and is scheduled to be
tried at Fort Benning, Ga., in the spring,
'
Anti-insult Measure
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sen. G<orge
Deukmejlan today introduced a bill to
make it a crime to call a police officer a
pig or any other insulting or threatening
name.
Five .Teens
In Exclusive
i Area Held '
-BIDS FDR UTT'S SEAf.
St1te Senator Sd1mitz:
..~
Schmitz to Seek
' Seat in Congt~
Vacated by Utt
The long-assumed fact that State
Senator John G. Schmitz (R-Tustin) will
attempt to succeed the late Congressman
James B. Ult in Congress was confirmed
Monday.
A special election to be se t by GO\'.
Ronald Reagan some time prior to the
June 2 primary will allow 3 5th
Congressional District voters to pick
Utt's suCcessor in the House of Represen-
tatives.
Early May is the anticipated time.
Schmitz, the only avowed John Birch
Society member in the State Senate, is
cast In much the same mold as was the
late Mr. Utt, who died March I at age 70
in Washington. 'l"he 39-year-old Schmitz is acknowledg-
ed to be the front runner in the race for
the Washington vacancy, while Assembly.
man Robert II. Badham (ft-Newport
Beech) may be just on his heels.
Badham is expected to announce · any.
day whether he will also campaign for
the seat the conservalJve Orange County
Republican held for' nearly 20 years. ·
...
-After raiding · ir home"" in a ·rather· ex-
clus.ive Laguna Be~ch area Monday
' · afternoon, state Bureau of Narcotics
• a.g~ alleged they bad been "gouced" a • • 1 • • • •
1. Jiltlt rein the price at a· . martJnafti'
purchase but added, ... 'maybe it's becau.st
of the high rent area."
An agent's claim It> have purchased 11
"Ii~" (11 ounces) of the drug at 926 Van
Dyke Drive led to the arr,est of fou.r· 19·
year-old youths and apprehension of a 16-
year-old girl who was turned over to her
parents.
Price of lhe purchase, agents claimed,
was $100, a little higher than the current
going rate of six lids for $50.
"We felt we should have got 12 lids for
that price,'' he explalned, noting that the
price normally goes down as the amount
purchased increases.:-"But it'1 pretty~
up there," he reflested, "a Jot of ruce
houses." --·-
Acting on information received earlier,
an agent claimtd to have ma'de Ute
purchase late in the afternoon, at whlch
time, he said, there were "about 15 peo-
ple in the house."
When·state·offioers, assisted by Laguna
Beach narcotics officers Nonnan Bab-
cock and Neil Purcell, returned to the
house at 4:50 p.m. the four men and
juvenile girl were taken into custody. The
other occupants of the dwelling were
allowed to leave.
Police Seize Pot;
Laguna ~Ian Arrested
Laguna Beach narcotics o f fl c er s
reported they seized two kilos of marl·
juana and about 50 grams of hashish in 1
late afternoon visit to a Laguna Ca~y
home Monday.
Taken into custody at 1195 V
Walk was Stanley Howard Dye, 23. w o is
charged with ~Ion of mariju8Jla
with intent to sell.
Orange Coast
Planners Agree on Laguna's Goals The uncertainty is the· result of his1plan
to attend a ~loner in Washington and
Badham's .announcement ia expected
Thursday or Friday.
1''enlher
The Laguna Beach Plarming Com· his limited analy11is of Laguna's social
mission coocluded its study of the general problems.'' .
pl .goals statement Monday nigfil and -.'f!!.t r~fe!"nce was aimed at project an . . director Aliraam Krushkhov's concluaion
approved for forwarding to the City , t!)al Lagwla'J· hippie · colony offered a
Council the seot.fon of ~ state~enL · ... "creative potential" .and should be "tap-
prepared earlier by the Cituens AdVlSCI')' ped and uUlized on behalf ol preserving
Committee. Laguna Beach's imq:e as a haven for
With minor revisions. the •planners ac-criatfve people, intell~tjials, artist!,
cepte6 tht CAC, statement word roe. word. etc.··
:'in an· acc,mpanying letter. lhe!»lafh. , Sefera~ of the •plannlpg conn11issioners ~ers took is!ue with .the an~lysW:atl'M: htdJta~tr;i.sJiar.p isdt with thlst ltate:!'
CAC statement prepared by the planning ment, dufing goals ts\bdy ae.~, ... ~
firm of Daniel, Mann, Johnson & further crlticl&e:d the omistlon Of
Mendenhall, and specifically avoided 1n-reference: to other socit1I problems In the
eluding any part of this analysis in their community.
recommendallon to the council. The planners. in their letter to lhe
The letter stated, "It should be clearly councJJ, expressed the belief thiiil rccomy
m>led that U1e Planning Commission did mendatlons for priorities t> r Im·
not a.gree with lhe consultant's analysis plement.ation of tht goals should not bf!
of the CAC goals statement, epociflcally considertd until alter a general plan con·
cept had been approved by the council.
The goals as recommended to the coun·
cil, are u follows:
All natUral ana scenic values should be
respected and enhanced.
a. Maintain the integrity of the con·
tour of the hills.
(I) Criteria for hillside development,
including building size and placc-
htent, ~ or t:tlts-~,fills, ~
dealgn Jor roads,. sttauf d3>e establish·
ed 10 aCcomplish. tbis goa(~ 1 .;
•· (1>;ur11e· the e~&llslirh .. 1· or .,...,, tln\lini, long.range. pnigram by the
<lliy Pl>nning Stall al>)iind """ plan.'
. nfng. ' , •
b: .Mailtlain the lntigrlty o! ll(o· beach.
(I) All f>eacb areas sbolfld ~'tieasii~ed
as a primazy scenic and ('eel'eati9tl~I
aSitit' and 8 lofty CornmUriUy attiJ.U<ia
, dc~lgped lo•'ji'd,!!1£m. ;
, ,. •
SpeculaUon ovt!r the ~li.lJ.cal upheaval
posed by Utt's death bas a number of
(2) The Main Beach Park demands a Republicans mentioned as possible 0carl-
most careful and thoughtful design . didates for his scat, or vacancies crea.red
(3) The city lhould embark on a pro-In Sacramcnlo.
gram of acquiring sandy portions of Republicans William Wikoxen an4
beach and easements thereto in sup-John n. Rateree, bolh or Laguna-Beach,
Port of this goal. have entered the ract, along. ,wiUl
(4) The Impact of shoreline zoning on Deniocrat ThOmas B. Lenhart of 'T\l.SUn.
the integrity of the beach must be Lenhart. was beaten once before by Utt
recognized. in a land«ildc victory and since
(S) F<!< .t~ purpq.w, olll.elJ.neat!ni pro-IS.. SCHMITZ, Page I) "per.ty· lines, only• dlalns and -)i<loU •• :::.:-:..-.,·:;;.· _. • .,... _______ _
mil' 11<: permUted sea)'ar~ ..i ,Ille " ;,.1 51;;;;,;L. '-~tir.l<ets '!Cf!t.Bn!ront·bulJdlhs.~ll>aclo~-_._, .<• ,. \ ~'. ..
· (8) rar·prO&ccllon.and•'°"'i~ · ..... 1• ·, • · pa . or llit,marll\O 'prum<t,. , m:w Yll\IK (AP) ...::rfie ~k·ma<J<'t .; ~-s Prestft'e,11Jd"·tnhaece1 b)".' lanC\acape ~ ~nued.,t.o ;me~e\w\i'.irtp-'narrow tpnge. f .
. dcltgn the it•torid #i!derl)ess.~ thus • 'ate thlt , ··af\e~~(~ quotations.
1•PrtServinJi ile.('f19lated Charm" OI tho. ;P•gei,.1&-ll). , 'I:
· A,rt Colorty. -. ~ • l f¥• ave'tfie )WI.di nof1changtd more !· (1) Th · .~util11l C<:\llYDril, such ar1f. t.hallJ• fra.B.!tJn of a. polrl( from the start
(S...GQALS, ~aie<JJ. . · .of \h(Jlel•l'll!. . . •
. • ., . ,
•• . ... . . . .... ..
'.' •••
It's been a long weekend ror
Old Sol, but he'll be around on ·
\Yednesday. Temperatures along
the coast will stiett _to the lower
60's, however. .. . -·---' . . .. ~· .
INSIDE TODAY
Good news f()f'. all you Dick
Troct1 and Li'l AbntT faM -
they're taking up f'tlidtnct in
the DAILY PILOT 1oon. See
Poge 3.
l
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•
t
I
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:;11 :-
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! DAILY PILOT SC TWl14!J, M1tth 10, !91~ •
'1apo Meet A-<l jourrwd
No • Ruling ~-on Rezon~
• •
A lengthy hearing on the rezoning of a
~ofitrovt.rtial 19 acres wllhin San Juan
Capistrano pushed the City Council into
overtime Monday with t-.tayot Ed
Chermak adjourning the meeting to
}Vedne&day before a decision could be
reached .
A packed city hall heard ·arguments in
~favor and against rezoning 19 acre~
between The Casas hpusing development
and the San Diego F:;eway from reslden·
tial to planned development. .
Speaking ln favor ol the rezone which
has already been approved by the plan-
·ning commission was Bob Gall~way, a
·.planning consultant representing the
, views o! the owners, W e s l p o r t
~Enterprises.
F.rom Page 1
SIGNS •..
projecting signs.
A further amendment would permit
develOpers of shopping centers to present
a complete sign program for all struc-
tures and permit the Planning Com-
mission, under these circumstances to
modify individual sign requirements to
achleve a more aesthetic comprehenslve
sign arrangement. Where a complete pro-
gram is not submitted, each structure
will Qt subject to indh•idual regulaUons.
Pursuing the subject of aesthetic signs,
City Planner Al Autry sought and recelv·-
ed permission of the PlaMing Com-
mission to distlibute a Jetter to 10 sigj1
companies and individuals con!>idered ex·
perts in the field asking them lo submit
samples of "good signs."
The purpose, Autry explained , would be
to prepare a guidance manual with il-
lustrations of various types of good, con·
forming signs, for the benefit of sign
permit applicants.
Commissioner Joseph Tomehak noted
that the city of Richmond has such a
manual and suggested that Autry obtain
a copy. .
"The problem," said Autry, "is that
sign firms are interested only in seUlng a
contract for a sign that will rneet the
ordinance requirements, not with aes4
thetics."
Commissioner Charles Johnson said the
guidance manual would be "a wonderful
positive step that does what is necessary
without setting up an 'aesthe;tics board.'
Jr someone wants to put up a terrible
sign he'll sUU be free to do it, but this
ahould help."
Tomehak added, "Trying to legislate
aesthetics ts an Insult to the bus lness
communlty. It's talking as U theY. are a
bunch of Neanderthals. This is much btt4
\er."
Councilman Charlton Boyd, who had
I t1rged that something be daoe to en-
1 courage aesthetic signs, and v.·ho al·
I tended the Monday planners' session as
an observer, said the manual wag "a
good idea,"
Roy Childs. also in the audience. noted
that "the loose language of the ordinance
still leaves several loopholes that people
could take advantage of if they wanted
to."
It was pointed out that UY1der the pro-.
cedure being used, the ordinances could
be made only less, rather than more
reslricUve. The language, however. could
be tightened up during actual public
hearings on the proposed amendment.&.
Chllds suggested that this be done.
From Page J
SCHMITZ ..•
Demoerat! are outnumbered 2 to 1 ln the
district by GOP members, his chances
aren't much better.
The campaign announcemenl b y
Schmitz Monday iucluded praise for the
late f\lr Utt's principl es and ideals. an
echo or eulogies last week in qrange
County.
DAILY PILOT
'
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Lot•fl• hocll
C"t• M .. o
H•11tl,..1•11 IHc:lri
••11111•111 ""''"' S•it c1-t.
ORAHGE COA5T PUllL l~HIHG COMl'AHY
Rob.rt N. w •• d
P1tl!Ot1H tnd Pi*llth"
Jtclr ft Cu1l•v
VI« P'r9$io.t.1 end G1,,.r1I Mfllflltf'
Tho111•1 K111ril
Editor
Thom•• A. ~urphi111 M111eg!"ll EdlTor
Richtrd P. Nett
~Ill Off/101 (Cl.in!~ Edllllr
Offlc ..
(<nit Mt1t l ))Cl Wttl 8t'I' S!t"l Ntwoort e ... ~11· n11 w11• B•llXI~ &1>U•ev1rd
l•llUfYI llttt?I: m FOrfll AVt'tlut
1tu11!1ftGIO!'I lleat ll: 1111) &tt Cll f!OUifVPd
&In Cltmtfl!tl XU Hllflll El Cimino ill.NI
OA IL'I' PILOY, Wilt. -!di ~ umbl...,, Ille """'"-"ritu, i, ""'Dll•l'IMI dl ll'I' u ctpl 1Yn•
_.., In atiNr•tt lllllllloll• for L .. lll't tetcl\.
.,.,,_,. ... ti\, Cati• Mftt, Hlll"ll/lf lo<I
8HCll ... P'tlllllflll Vtlit'I', f lGnf will\ IWll
r'9!tl'Ull ticlltlol'o1. O~llOt Co.at P..0Ut11•110
CornPilllf ... ,11!11'1f ""1111 tf'f fl "" W~d
'"""' 81\00.. Ht~! Bt9C!I. ..... »O Wbl kJ 5•rt .... CO.ti lo\n.t.
1 .. ..,., ... (71•1 ,.1 .. 121
CJ.&llJH A41.,.,,lsllltf 64J·S,71
S.. a ....... All Deportlllfftt:
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~ t~ O•Mlllfi tot11 ""*!lt1111'1C1
C....-t Ht -,..,,,..._ mw1Y1llor1>, "ll,..., """.. Of '""'"l'lf~ft Mr•!ft
'""', ... ""'""""'"' wlri.0111 ll'IC:ltl ..,..
,..__ ..... "'~ -· ~ t'bi ,..,.... Hid I .! "4rw.t1 lttcll
•"" C.N MIA, C•tl~lll.t, Sw.ulptliltl 11'1' u,.,_ U Oii fMllfflli'I 111 -1• 17"' -tM11
mllll!t'f? dillrllftttlot'll, tt.oa "'°"'""·
'Gallowoy '-14 tho coodomli\liiio·\ypil '
development '.pn,poaeil for" the property ·
\Yould not do 311y harm lo exlsttng homes
in the immediate area particularly The
Casas. He said Westport owns lots in The
Casas development and can't afford to do
anything whlch would deYaluate this pro-
perty.
He sald th at what is now permitted by
the old :.one could be detrimental to ~r.
area if not deYeloped properly.
Speakers against the rtione indicate'. ,3
fea'r of higher density than exists in 'The
Casas, a discontinuity or arthltettural
style and hea\•ier traffic flow especially
along Los Pajaros Street which would be
extended to accommodate the con-
domin iums.
'""" tlii ",....... W.r over lilt ftct lbat the former own e r.s
Transamerica Corporatlon·had promised
them a golf course and other recreational
facilities on that 19 acres.
Rod Craig who "'as one of a group of
adjacent homeowners who had met with
'Vestport representatiY~S said he would
be in favor of the rezone if certain
sUpulations could -be met, in· particular
keeping the density to a maxlmwn of
seven units per acre and guaranteeing a
Spanish motif. Westport representatives
lndicated they could comply with these
demands.
The City Council officially closed the
hearing but postponed their decision until
Wednesday.
Capo io Fight?
Railroad Fee Paid Reluctantly
Plucky litll~ San Juan Capistrano
almost went into battle with a giant Mon-
day but time was against the city.
Not wanting to pay a yearly rental fee
of $645 to the Santa Fe Railroad so that a
city sewer line can cross their property,
city officials almost voted to institute
condemnation proceedings. •
They may yet.
But for the time being they'll reluc-
tantly agree to pay the fee so that the
Oso Creek sewer line can be constructed
hopeful)y by July t. The line will proceed
from Oso Road north to the city limits
crossing an a c r e of railroad property
parallel to the track.
The line will provide services for north
city residents and some residents in the
Santa Margarita and Moulton Niguel
\!later clist.ricts, according to a joint
agreement.
City Attorney John Dawson advised the
council that condemnation proceedings
can be instituted at a later date.
From Page 1
LAGUNA GOALS
Aliso, El Toro and Laguna Canyons.
should be retained In their natural
beauty as a greenbelt through and
around the town.
2) The cut and fill slopes or the Laguna
Canyon and Pacific Coast Freeways
and their feeder arterials should be
developed as a greenbelt
(S) Provide that developers or blllside
and Canyon, both wlthJn city Hmils
and annexations, deed land unsuitable
for development to the city. (In ad·
ditlon to the existing requirement to
deed usable recreation land).
(t) Make provisions for the city to ac4
cept wilderness land a1 gifts . Develop
an integrated package of leatslaUon,
· lep l machinery and well-understood
procedures whereby property owners
may dedicate to the city land, visual
euement, recreational easements,
pedestrian accesswayJ, tree pro-
tection right!, etc. Thtse procedures
must be designed with the alms of
mutually protecting the property
owner and lhe city and of supporting
Goal 1.
(~) Encourage pla'nned developments to
preserve as much untouched natural
hlllaide 1s poslible.
(I) Connect hUJ.s.lde wilderness areas
wUh walldng and bridle paths,
gttenbelJe and para, and coonllnale
with county pl&nJ for same.
(7) Trte planting should be encouraged.
d. Maintain a village atmosphere and a
sense of relaxaUon, peace and tran-
quility.
(1) Prese rve a community of in-
dividuality and dive rsity.
(2) Provide an atmosphere which at-
tracts artists and creative people.
(3) Establish the kinds of controls over
new construction that will preserve
the village atmosphere.
(4) Housing should maintain and/or
creale individual identity.
(SJ The placement, height and mas.s or
bulldings should be regulated in ac·
cordance with this goal. Any high rise
should be planned for land use in ad4
vance, and restricted to limited
areas.
(6) Pedestrian paths, and particularly
lheir points of convergence, should be
inventoritd and giYen mall, plaza or
park treatment. Walkways should be
provided roughl y paralleling arterial
and feeder streets.
(7) Landmarks valued by citiiens
should be conser\•ed.
e. Urban aesthe tics should be fully
respected.
(I) Enforce the existing sign ru:dlnance
and encourage aesthetic desl1fn.
{2) All power, telephone and t.elevtsion
services must be underground with a
designate.Y moratorium on above.
grade services.
(3) Architectural review of all above
grade utility Service facilities should
be requlred.
(t ) Daily trash exposure should be
eliminated. Make trash concealment
and collection compulsory. Consider
combining trash and water billing.
(5) Sidewalks and vacant commercial
property should be kept clean tit all
times.
(5) Television cable hook·UP and
remoYal of aU aerials should be re·
quired.
I. Encourage a healthy physical en-
vironment.
(I) Kttp our cil.Y physicilly clean and
encourage ciYlc pride in It 1
cleanlinei.s.
(%)Cooperate with the various .agencies
to control pollution of the air and
water.
(S) Combat exces~ive noise.
Undertake lhe precise planning and
lmple1nent.atlon ot lhc development ' of
speeialty ~hops and business area.s to ex-
pand and dt\'t\op tourist trade and a uni·
que, a r t 1 1 pcde1trian-orientfd en·
vlronment.
-a. Develop a pt'Ogrtim to provide •r:-
proprlale ind surflclent parking to avoid
O\'Crrrowdlng and traffic congestion.
b. Through traffic 1hould be chanfltled
or t.llmln1tfd 110 u to fret the downtOWQ
area for primary pe<.!~trlan use.. A '
•••
viaduct solution to the through traffic
problem is incompatible with Goal l.
c. A pedestrian· oriented village at-
mosphere with the character of the Art
Center should be developed with special
emphasis on downtown.
d. Restrict automobife acess in some
areas, particularly downtown.
e. The limits of the Central Basin
should be defined as including the ad·
jacent slope areas, and the living areas of
the slopes should be intimately integrated
with the commercial areas on floor of the
Basin .
Insure the continued growth of Laguna
Beach at an art and culture oriented
community.
a. Build a library which . meets the
needs of the total community and which
would include adequate rooms for
students and research persons, an area
for the children's reading room : space
for a memorial library; Indoor and out·
door readin"g auas; an audio-visual room
and a small lecture room.
b. Contempla te buUdlng a cultural
center cOmprislng. an auditorium big
enough to accommodate audiences for
the Civic Ballet, the Chamber Music
Society, the Community Concert, lecture
series and seminars, with rooms big
enough for meetings of I.he service
organizaUons of Laguna : a small gallery
for municipal art and craft shows; and a
ballroom suitable for charity balls,
square dancing and honorary occasions
for the City itself. The existing facilities
do not serYe these needs, nor is there
adequate parking for them.
c. Build art and cullural programs into
the achool curriculum, integrated with
community activities.
d. Insure the avaJlabilily of a youth
playhouse and an. gallery in addHion to
lhe traditional facilities in a youth center.
Develop a coordinated city-wide recrea-
tional plan and facilities to best achieve
the followlng activities: swimming and
beach activities, creative activltles, ten·
nli, golf, horseback riding, hiking. bo"·l-
ing and cycling.
a. ReWn and tnhance the natural
beauty of our most priceless resource,
the beaches, by encouraging a more
responsible use and a judicious deYelop-
ment program.
b. Build more public swimming pools.
c. Develop the entire Woodland Drive
area as a sports, recreation and youth
center.
d. Build more tennis courts.
e. Design and develop a system of foot
and bridle paths throughout the city.
f. Establish more neighborhood and
co1nniunily parks.
Improve transportation for people
throughout the community.
a. Encourage expanded bus transporta-
tion service throughout the city, including
shuttle transportation for retail shoppers.
Maintain and support a school system
characterited by efficiency and ex·
cellence.
a. f\'lake knO\\'n lo s choo l ad-
ministrators thr local volunteer human
resourc:es th at can be used to enrich
academic programs.
b. Encourage establishment of a school
of industrial and mechanical arts.
Prtserve equ:i l law en for ce men t
\\'ii.bout fear or favor.
Services Slated
For Ruth Easson
Servlces will be he ld 111 3 p.m. '\led·
nesday in Sherrer Laguna B e a c h
~toriuary Chapel for Ralph B. Easson. of
446 Dllmond St .. Laguna Beach. who died
r-.1onc1ay lilt the 11ge of 78. Tht ncv.
EllJWOrUl Richardson wlll offlclatc.
Mr. Easson. a rellrtd stllle em)>loye, is
~111rvlvtd by hi& daughter!!, M r s .
Margaret t , Reemelin and Mrs. David
Tumct, OOth of f lorldfl ; a sister. Edna
ShR\\' of f\.111ine. and by five grandchildren
ond four nieces.
. Buria l will be at Paclflc View f\1emoriat
Park, Newport Buch.
...--·" --
~· ... . ... ... . v < ..
' ' I
W ai;lants Issued
I .
Iµ 1C~l-neitlent
EYES ASSEMBLY SEAT
Optometrist Fri u elle
Nol.an Frizzelle
Seeks Badham' s
As se 1nbly Seat
Newport Beach optometrist a n d
longtime Republican leader Dr. Nolan
Frizze\le today announced he will run
against Assemblyman Robert H. Badha1n
(R·Newport Beach) in the 7lst District.
He made it clear he y;ill oppose him
even if Badham chooses not to fight Sen.
John G. Schmitz (R·Tustin) for the
'\'ashington post Jefl vacant by the recent
death of Congressman James B. Utt.
Friuelle, 48, former president of the
California Republican Assembly. said
many problems of coastal Orange County
need more vigorous attention I n
Sacramento.
J{e v.'ent on to list four or top priority:
-Protection of coastal communities
from oil and refu se pollution plus private
development that excludes public use and
beaches and recreational areas.
-Difficulties with property taxation
and assessment. .
-Controversies surroundin~ sc h o o 1
systems 11nd the resultant disruption of
the educational process.
-Inadequate state planning concerning
commercial ai rcraft regulations.
"I helieve there are i;olutions to these
problems if we vigorously seek thcn1 ...
and still encoura,ge broad growth and ex·
pansion ." he declared in announcing his
candidacy.
A native Californian, Dr. Frizzelle has
been in pi'actice in Newport Bea& for 15
years and heavily involved in GOP
political circles plus community ac·
tivities.
~le is a former member of the
California State Central Committee anrl
i.~ currently chairman or the Ne\Yport
Harbor Chamber or Commerce's Educa·
tion Committee.
He and his wife of 26 years, 111ary. have
fou r children.
Vegas Teens Held
In Mu sic Theft s
Two teenage boys fro1n Las \'eg~s
were taken into custody by Laguna Beach
police officers Monday afternoon, along
with a large assortment of musical equip-
ment found in their car and bclleved to
be .stolen property.
Stopping to check a car parked at Clifr
Drive and \\'ave Street al 7:35 p.m., or.
ficcrs found one boy sorting items in the
trunk. the olher pas.sed oul on th e back
seat of the vehicle .
The boys. aged 16 and 17. \\'ere booked
as lransie.nt.s and turned over to J uvenile
Hall .
Spruce Up
Study or videotapes :Jhot seven day:J
ago in a bloody police-student con-
frontaUon orl th e Cal State 1'~ullerton
campus led .f\tonda)' to issuance of arresl
warrants naming four a 11 e g c d
ringleaders. 1
Investigators sai!f late M!)nday that on-
ly one had been t8k~n~to custody, -but
the cases are being h8ildled gingerly and
still more warrants are expected to be
issued.
One rlngleader marked for arrest, J im
Cle air, chairman o( the CSF Student
Mobilization Committee, t a u n t e d
plainclothes police officers at another
campus rally Monday.
He demanded that they arrest him and
told a reporler afterward that Fullerton
Police Ca pt. Fred King said he was not to
be taken into custody in front of a crowd,
Fullerton Police D e p a r t m e n t
spokesmen would n!)t verily either the
videotape use for evidence , or their alleg-
ed desire to capture Clealr without
witnesges. ..
Charges against . him and three other:
defendants, totaling six counts, include
assembling to commit an unlawful act,
remaining present at an unlawful act,
trespassing and assault and battery.
The others are senior philosophy major
Ted Schonebe rger, freshman politi cal
science major tTeil Hendricks, and John
f\1arientha!, but they are not all charged
with the sa me offenses .
Marientha!, 24, of Anaheiin , was ar·
rested Monday and Deputy District Al-
tnrncy Del \Vrighl said today he beUeved
one or the other suspects had been ar·
rested.
Violence erupted on the ·CSF campus
seven days ago \\'hen a force of more
than 100 lawmen swept through the
quadrangle after a protest demonstration
disrupted a di sciplinary hearing.
By the time it was over. 19 persons had
been arrested and five injured. including
three lawmen, and the CSF Facuh:r
Council censured the way it was handled
al a subsequent meeting.
The chief issue underly ing the recent
turmoil is the arrest and concurrent
Harbor District
Hearings Slated
For Marcl1 19
Stale hearings on two bills affecting the
Orange County Harbor District have been
switched from Thursday to f\farch 19 in
Sacramento, at the req uest of the Ora nge
County League of Cities.
One bill, introduced by Assemblyman
John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton), calls for a
vote of the people to decide if the Harbor
District should be retained, expanded or
dissolved.
Another bill. authored by Assemblyman
K<'n Cory {D·Anaheim), simply requests
the slate Legislature to expand th·e duties
or Lhe Harbor District without a vote o!
the people.
"\\'e asked for the change in hearing
dates because the League of Cities
already has a 1neeling this Thursday."
said Huntington Beach Mayor Jack
Grern. who is president of the League.
The Orange County League of Cities is
on record favoring the Briggs bill and lei·
ting the people decide the Harbor
Di strict's future.
Briggs said anyone interested Jn the
Harbor District questi on is invited to the
hearing at 1:45 p.m .. March 19, room
2133, Stale Capitol.
T icrc r Has Cuhs "" . \Vi\S/llNGTON <UPI) -The National
Zoo's ramous whi te tiger Mohlnl has
given birth to rour cubs. two of the1n
white like he r. They "'ere reported doing
·well.
Your Home for .•.
. .
• school disciplinary action against two
older CSF students wll.o heckled Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
Bru ce Church. 31. and Dav Id
f\.1aeKowlak. 25, "'ere arrested on war-
rants charging them with obscene com·
ments in public.
Campus dissidents charge the-dual ac·
Hon constitutes double jeopardy ...I. 1vhich
the administration denies -and are peti-
tioning to have both processes dropped.
Another rally was held Monday in the
quadrangle. but no incidents v.·ere
reported, although plainclothes policemen
were present to observe and take notes.
Cyclists Face
100 Charges
111 Roundup
A blizzard of paperwork -more than
100 individual criminal complaints -
emanated from the Orange County
District Attorney's Office f\.1ond ay in the
'vake or a mass n1otorcycJe gang roun·
do p.
Representatives of The Outlaws. The
Gents. The Nuggets and The Hessians
were among 108 men and "·omen taken
into custody early Sunday in Holy Jim
Canyon.
· Three buses were required lo transport
the tTOWd -drunk and disorderly among
other things -from the normally
peaceful canyon in O'N eill Park, 20 miles
east of El Toro.
Deputy District Attorney Stuart Grand
said 106 were charged with drunkenness
and disturbing the peace, while two face
charges of carrying concealed weapons.
Eight were still held at Orange County
Jail Monday, while the other 100 ha d
posted $65 bail each while authoritie!
studied "'eapons, drugs and other
evidence confiscated at the scene.
Additional charges could be brought ff
ownership of the marijuana. drug pills,
an array of illegal weapons, and allegedly
stolen cars and motorcycles is establish-
e1L
The weaponry included three !hotguns,
a rifle, five pistols, a ·homemade
handgun, ltngths of heavy chain, a
longshoreman 's baling hook and dozens of
knives.
One of the confisca ted items v.·as a ball~
and~haln device modeled after a
medieval mace.
Mr. Henderson's
Ser vices Puinned
~1emorial services will be held Thurs.
day at 4 p.1n. in Old North Church,
Forest Hills, North Holly\l.'ood, for
Charles E. llenderson, composer and
1nusical director. who died Saturday at
his Laguna Beach home at the age of 63.
ri..1r. Henderson was the father of Peter
Henderson of Ne wport Beach, of the com-
edy team of Skiles and Henderson.
He also is survived his his wife, Bliss nf
the home, 1.65 Viejo St.: a daµghter , Sally
Laughlin o( Las Vegas; and by nine
grandchildren .
Born in Jamaica Plains, New York.
Mr. Henderson was graduated from
Harvard University in 1928 and for
several years was a pianist with the Fred
\Varing band.
A composrer , musical and vocal direc·
tor. he '"'orked on more than 200 feature
O!ms and wa s for 10 years with the music
depa rtment of 20th Century-Fox Studios.
Among the standard song hits Hen4
derson composed were "So Beats f\ty
Heart," "Carefree'' and "Deep Night,"
which he wrote \Yith Rudy Vallee.
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1
San (;Jemen-te
.Capis_t~aao
VOL. 63 , NO. 58, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
·r"\ ..
EDITION
. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA:
•
Today's Final
• N.Y. Stoeks
TUESDAY, MARCH '10, 1970 TEN CENTS
Capo School Election: Uphill Fight for Funds
The Capistrano Unilied School District
-like most school areas on the
Calif<vnia Coast -has proven a tough
area· for passage of school funding
measures.
And to add to the uncertain picture or
today's override and bond interest eJec.
tion, school officials said it is the fir st
iime in memory-vofers have gone to the
polls on a rainy day on any school money
measure here.
District Superintendent T r u m a n
Benedict said the area's only real surge
of favorable elections came in tbe first
half the 1960s "when CQnditions were so
obvious that most people knew something
had to be done. We even had students .,.
te nding class in tents." "
But ·records showed that sailing was
rough at the ballot box for the major
school districts of the area both before
and after unification jn 1965.
The district in its present stru cture,
has balled about even in its four elec~
tions.
ln 1965 its first bond issue passed, then
later that year a measure to receive
state aid lor the district failed.
Turnout Good
In Capo Vote
Despite tod ay 's gloomy weather, more than 1,000 voters in
the Capistrano Unified School District went 'lo the polls early to-
day to cast ballots on the tax override and bond interest issue.
Still later that same year voters ap-
. pr~ved the measure.
Last year the unified district's first at·
tempt at an override fa'iled by 700 votes,
but voter turnouts for an election of its
kind we re substantial -40 percent.
Previous to unification the road toward
voter approval of school f i n a n c e
n1easures was even tougher.
The old Capistrano Union High School
District passed its rirst tax override in
the early 1950s, then n i n e consecutive
bond issues fell to defeat.
Finally, in 1962·63 a bond issue was
passed and shortly thereafter a tax ove~·
ride measure won adoption, too.
"By then it was so apparent that the
schools needed money that we received
more yes votes for a cha nge," Benedict
said. ,
In the old San Clemente Elementary
School District, where Benedic served as
superintendent before unification, the
rt?C{)rd for passage was a little better
than neighboring school districts.
In 1947 and in 1951 bond issues passed,
then another failed in 1953, followed .by
its passage that same year. Three con·
secutive overrides after that failed, then
one passed, followed by permission from
voters to continue the override tax rate.
After that two other bond issues pas.5-
ed, one fail ed and an override.election
passed.
Soaring pupil populations hit hard ln
the San Clemente-Capistrano Valley
areas in the early 19605.
"The des~ration was very at>parent.
We had students attending classes in
tents and quonset huts," Bened ict said.
Community support throughout the
dozens of school elections varied.
For a lingering period, e<1mmunlty
feiids between San Juan Capistrano and
San Clemente · were blamed for the nine
straight defeats of the high school bond
measure.
Community support for last year's fail·
ing overrid e was "gOod," Benedict
observed, "but this year it seems that all
the possible stops have been pulled and
the work by supporters is truly the
greatest.
"In fact, I believe if we had this year's
support and activity on that last one, we
wouldn 't have to open the polls today,"
he said.
Agents Claim 'Gouging'
In Laguna Narco Bust The DAILY PILOT will open its San Clemente offi ce switch·
board from 9 to 11 tonight to provide latest election returns as soon
as they are available. The number is 492-4420. ' • · The percentage of voter turnout in the election, which school
officials term crucial, averaged 13.6 percent among six precincts
throughout the district checked at mid-day.
Out of 7,360 registered voters in the six polling districts, a
total of 1,004 had cast their ballots.
In Crown Va11ey, 175 voted out of 1,525 registered . At San
Juan Elementary School it wa s 174-1,268 ; at Palisades School it
was 172-1,029 ; at Ole Hansen School, 225-1,838, and at Concordia
School, 258-1 ,700 .
Polls will close at 8 p.rn .
More Workable
Laguna Planners Okay
Changes in Sign Law
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 "'' o.ur f'11o1 s11!f
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
agreed Monday night on a series of pro-
posed amendments to make the city 's
new sign ordinance more workable.
The rerommendations will be reviewed
by the City Council at a special adjourned
meeting Wednesday night. The council is
expected to instruct the Planning Com--
mission to institute procedures for amen-
ding the ordinance, including public hear-
ings. ·
In the interim, councilmen plan to in-
struct the building and planning staff to
administer the ordinance as if the
amendments already were in effect. This
procedure was suggested by .the city at-
torney as an alternative to adopting an
urgency interim ordinance.
With the moratorium on nonconforming
signs scheduled to end April 15, the action
is being taken to give merchants time to
bring their signs into conformity by the
deadline date.
The amendments cover:
-1\.feasurement o( signs: now lo be deter-
mined by enclosing the sign area in
seven straight connecting liiies, instead of
fou r. as in the original law, lo avoid
penalizing an owner by calculating ex·
cessive blank space in his sign area.
When the sign consists of letters mounted
on a panel painted the same color as the
building, only the message area of the
sign will be measured. No re-entrant
lines may be used in calculating the
area.
-Parallel.signs: instead of requiring a
minimum of flve feet between sign and
side ownership Urie, the amended law will
provide that no sign can be located closer
to the side than a distance equa1 tb 10
percent of the building site, with a
minimum distance of 1 Yz feet. No parallel
signs are permitted within three feet of
any other sign on the same building.
-Pole signs: will be permitted to be in-
stalled parallel with or perpendicular to a
right-of-way on a corner site. instead of
O'f11y at a 45-degree angle, as now re·
quired, and will be permitted the same
projection over right-of·way as allowed
(See SIGNS, Page %)
Monkey Bites
Feeding Hand
A wayward monkey who has a
painful way of showing its gratitude
has a new home in San Clemente
toda~.
It's slaying with Mrs. Kathy Fifer
at 301 Avenida Del Mar after the
housewife found the small primate
wandering the st reets Monday af-
ternoon.
~1rs. Fifer said she took the waif
in.
A !eY.' moments later the monkey
gave its thanks.
It bit hrr.
Mrs. Filer, undaunted, told po-·
lice she would keep the little guest
unless someone claims it.
My Lai Captain
Faces 4 Counts
WASHING TON >UPI) -The com.
ma{lder ol lbe ~ Ill¥ !!!!I~"" assau1l on My t;O ears ago was
·charged with four counts of murder today
by the Atmy in corfnection with an alleg.
ed massacre of · South Vietnamese
civilians.
Ca pt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, of Pico
Rivera, Cali!., was accused of two
unspecified counts of murder"on or
about" March 16, 1968, plus the murder
of two Communist prisoners during· in-
Bo y, 15, Admits
Bungled Tl1eft
In Doctor Office
A JS-year.aid boy wilh a history of
narcotics problems has confessed to the
burglary of a San Clemente doctor's of.
fice where his heist became a comedy or
errors.
In (act, the only thing he did suc-
cesslully was escape.
The youth, who was arrested over the
weekend by Los Angeles narcolics of·
ficers, was identified as the juvenile who
broke into the offices of Dr. William W.
Halcomb at 131 W. El Portal about two
weeks ago.
Before he fled he was surprised by the
physician's nurse, bitten by her dog. then
flayed by the woman when he began to
fight back at the attacking pet.
To top it off, the capsules which the
youth took weren't what be suspected.
And their uncomfortable effects. no
doubt, lingered a while. The capsules
\\'ere potent laxatives.
Police in San Clemente said the nurse.
Mrs. Jean Boucher, was returning after
hours al the offices lo pick up . some
medication for her sick son. She brought
her Scotch terrior Tammy with her.
As she entered the door she surprised
the youth and the burglar sped down a
corridor or the suite.
terrogation su~uent to!lhe alleged My
·~~ ,. E~, other persons also were newly
ch&rgOO"lillhe case by the anny, in·
eluding anoU:ler.captain involved In ques-
tioning of prisoners. He was accused of
two murder charges.
Three more enlisted men also were
charged, bringing to JO the number of
men so lar charged in the alleged slaying
by American soldiers.
It was not clear at first how many
murder counts were made against
Medina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was four.
Medina and other military meo under
investiga tion in the case are stationed at
Fort McPherson, Ga.
The Army's announcement of charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about 16
March , 1968, maiming and murder ol one
suspected enemy person and murder of
another during their interrogation tale in
the day of 16 March, 1968, and assault
with a deadly weapon on a third in·
dividual while Interrogating him on or
about 17 March, 1963."
All those charged, with the exception of
an intelligence o(ficer accused today as a
result or interrogation o{ prisoners, and
another captain j.)reviously charged , were
connected with Medina's outfit. Besides
10 military men charged so far, five
other military men and 22 civilians were
said to be under investigation.
Medina was e<1mmander of Company C
of the: 1st Battalion of the 20th Infantry
which made a sweep or My Lal 4 Hamlet
in search of suspected Viet Cong snipers.
The commander Of one of the Com pany
C platoons directly involved in the opera·
tion. Lt. William L. Calley , has been ac-
cused of 102 dea ths and is scheduled to be
tried at Forl Benning, Ga., in the spring.
Anti-insult Measure
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sen. George
Deukmcjian today introduced a bllJ to
make it a crime to call a police officer a
pig or any other insulting or threatening
name.
BIDS FOR UTT'S SEAT
State Senator Schmitz
Sclimitz to Seek
Seat in Congress
Vacated by Utt
The long-assumed fact that State
Senalor John G. Schmitz (R·Tustin ) will
attempt lo succeed the late Cj>ngressman
James 8. Utt in Congress was confirmed
Monday.
A special election to be set by Gov,
Ronald Reagan some time prior_to the
June 2 primary will allow 3 5th
Congressional District voters lo pick
Ult's successor in the House of Represen-
tatives.
Early May is the anticipated time.
Schmitz, the only avowed John Birch
Society member in the State Senate, is
cast in much the same mold as was the
late Mr. Utt, who died March l at age 70
in Washington . .
The 39-year-old Schmitz is acknowledg-
ed to be .the front runner in the race for
the Washington vacancy, while Assembly-
man Robert H. Badham (R-Newport
Beach) may be just on this heels.
Badham is expected to anooun'Ce any
day whether he will also campaign for
the seat the conservative Orange County
Re publican held for nearly 20 years.
Five Teens
In Exclusive
Area Held
After raiding a home-in a rather· n;.
ch1~ve Laguna Beach area Monday
afternoon, state Bureau of Narcotics
agents alleged they had been "gouged" a
JitUe on the price of a marijuana
purchase but added, "maybe it's because
of the high rent area."
An agen t's claim to have purchased 11
"llds" {11 ounces) or the drug at 926 Van
Dyke Drive led to the arrest of .four 19·
year.aid youths and apprehension or a 16-
year-old girl who was turned over to her
parents.
Price of the purchase, agents claimed,
was $100, a little higher than the current
going rate of six lids for $50.
"We Celt we should have got 12 lids for
that price," he explained, noting that the
price norm ally goes down as the amount
purchased increases. "But it's pretty nice
up there," be reflected, "a lot or nice
houses."
Acting on information received earlier,
an agent claimed to have made the
purchase late in the afternoon, at which
time, he said, there were "about 15 pet>
pie in the house."
When slate officers, assisted by Laguna
Beach narcotics officers Noonan Bab-
cock and Neil Purcell, returned to the
house at 4:50 p.m. the four men and
juvenile girl were taken into custody. The
other occupants of the dwelling were
allowed to leave.
Police Seize Pot;
Laguna Man Arrested
Laguna Beach narcotics o f r i c er s
repOrted they seized two kilos of marl·
juana and about 50 grams of hashish in a
late arternoon visit to a Laguna Canyon
home Mooney. ~
Taken into custody at 1195 Victory
\Valk was Stanley Howard Dye, 28, who is
charged wi th possession of marijuana
with intent to sell. '
Orange Const
Planners Agree on L ' G I The uncertainty is th e result of his plan aguna S Oa S to atlend a dinner In Washington and
Badham's announce1nent is expected
Thursday or Friday.
Weather
1'he Lagunl!I Beach Planning Com-
mission concluded its study of the general
plan goals statement Monday night and
approved for forwardJng to the City
Council the seer.ion of the statement
prepared earlier by the Citizens Advisory
Committee.
With minor revlslonS:'the planner.rt ac·
cepted the CAC statemenl word for word.
his limlttd analysis or Laguna's social
problems."
The refere nce was aimed at project
director Abraam Krushkhov's conclusion
that Laguna's hippie colony offered a
"creative potential" and should be "lap-
ped and utili zed on bt!half or preserving
\,aguna Beach's image as a haven for
creative people, lntel'rectuals, artists.
etc."
Specu lation over the political upheaval
cept had been approved by the uncil. t2J The ~taln Beach Park deman..a· a posed by Utrs death has a number of ~ Republicans mentioned as possible can· The goals as recommended. the coun-1nost careful.and thoughtful design. didates ror his scat, or va~ocies created
cil. are as follows: (3 ) The city should embark on a pro-in Sacramento.
All natural and scenic va lues should be gram of acquiring sandy portions of Republicans Wiiiiam Wiicoxen and
respected and enhanced. beach and casements thereto in sup-John D. Rateree, both 'of Laguna Beach.
lrs been a Jong weekend for
Old Sol. hut he'll be around on
Wednesday. Temperatures along
the coast will slick to the lower
60's, however.
INSIDE TODA. Y
a. Maintain the integrity of the con-port of this goal. have entered the race, along with
tour of the hills. (4) The impact of sho-li'ne zon·ong on ~ h Good news for all you Dick "' U\;.mocrat T omas B. t,.enhart or Tustin. T nd "'l Ab t (I) Criteria for hillside dev:elopJllent1 . the in'"arlty. o/ ,tbe. beach -u·• be rocy a Ml ner ans -pl ~e .... " Lenhart was beaten once berore-by UU th 'l'i t kl 'd · including building slze and ace·, rerogrlh:ed. ##ti t? a ng up res1 enc.e in in • landtiiide. vfctoty and since h DAILY PILOT S ment. size or culs and fills, and (5) For the·puriwe of dellncatlng.pro-(See SCllMJTZ,,Paie J> I e soon. ee
desi$n for roa~s,. should be establish· pcfty' lines, only chains and postl 1 Page 3. ,-' · 1
cd t-0 accomplish thfs goal. mat be }>ehnltted Sb!.ward of the · c1t11111'f111 , ' M.wilh ,, " •
\
•
•'
' • •
•
.·I :~ " . • •
In an accompanying Jelter. the plan-
ners ·tOok"issue wlul the analtsis' ..(If' the
CAC•stalemenf'pr$ared by 'ttie planning \
firm of Daniel, Mann. Johnson
i1endenhall, and EipcciOc111ly avoided in-
cluding any part of lhls analysis in their
recommendation to the council
Sevcra1 .,o1.·thc pJBMing 1CQT'(l.mlssioners
had taken · sharp issue with' th.is stat•
ment. durlnt ~g0n1s s1Uay ~ssfons, ~amt
lurUicL..CJ:lllc:J omiss t_
(2) Urge· Uie establishment of a con-oceanfront building setback line. S{o~k ·1'Jarkets c1t«1tl'lf "' 1 Mii,.,., "111141• 1• Cl•Hilltcl 1 ... 24 frl11\9flt1 Hft't 4•S. -jl---llnulng_long.r.ang _ program by_t.he. (6.,.Enforce protection {l.nd consider"lx· -------------~-1-c.m ,,_°"""'~WlllY-,-
Th e. letter Rtated, "It 5h0uld be clearly
noted that the Planning Commission did
not agree with Ole consultant's nnalysis
of the CAC goals statement, spe<:ificalty
reference to other social problems in tho
e<1mmunity.
The planners, in their letter to lhe
council , ex pressed the belief that recom·
mcndatlons for priorities or im·
plmentatlon or tho goals !hould not he
considered until after a general plan cori-
Clty Planning Start of land use plan-_pnnsion -0r the marine.preserves. __ NEW.-YORK (AP.)...=..I'hc stock rnarkal ~~~w.~11,11 •: ::~ l"wrttr , .. ~~
nlng . c. P;eserve and enhance by 'rndscape continued to move wllhln a narrow rango 111o•r1t1 ,.... ' s1te11 MMht• , .. 1,
b. ~1ainlain the integrity or the beach. 1 design the natural wilderne$S, tbus late this afternoon. (See quotations, ::~inm•• u.:: 1:.:,~~" , ;:
( 11 All beach areas Should be treasuroo preserv\ng the "Isolated charm'' of Lhc Pages 16-17). .......co•• u •••''* ,
as a primary !cenic-and recreational Art Colony. The average had not ch•nged more ~ ..... , ... _ u wllli. W•"' 1• ..,. I Wtfl'ltfl't "'"" IJ.1• asset and a l-0 ty corrimunlty attitudo . (J) T~e ~auti!ul canyons,, aucb, as than a•frac.Uon of. a poi11l from the start Mfff111tt t w.,.. frlhl'• +•
developed toward Oiem. \ (Ste 'GO.U...S, raae 1> of the session. L------------l
'\ • • I .-t 1'-_,.J~ ~ t' --.-.• 9'IW: ,!..\11 "' • I ).
I
SC T-. -10, l!iO
Ca po Meet Adjourned
No Rulin on .Rezo
A l~gthy 1'earlng on the Tttonlng or a
controversial 19 acres within San Juan
Capistrano pushed the City Council Jnto
overtime Monday \vllh Mayor Ed
Chermak adjourning the meeting to
Wednesday bt!ore a decision could be
reached.
A packed city hall heard arguments in
fa vor and against rezon ing 19 acres
between The Casas housing development
aod the San Diea:o Freeway from resldeo-
llal to planned development.
Speaklng in favor ol the rezone which
has already ~n appro\'ed by the plan-
ning commission was Bob Gal~ay, a
planning consultant representing: the
\'lews of the owners, We 1 t port
Enterprises.
Ganoway said tbe condorn*'IYl>O
develoJIOlMI propoood for Ille properly
woula not do iny hann to el'.l1Ung hOmes
in tbe immediate: area. parUeuJarly The
Casas. He said Westport owns lots Jn The
Casis development and can't &Uord to do
anythin& which would devah.1ate thh1 pro-
Jl'rly.
Re said that wh11t ls now permitted by
the old zone could be detrimental to the
area if not developed properly.
Speakers again.st the rezooe indicated a
fear of higher density thin txista in The
Casas, a discoptinuity ot architectural
style ind hes.vier trafllc now especially
along Log Pajaros Strti:t which would be
exknded to accommodate the con-
clominiwns. .
'n\t1 •la aprr-sn ~ l"lfr over lhe
fact that I.tie former o " n e. r 1
Transarnerica Corporation had promised
them a goU course and other recreational
facll!Ues on that 19 acres.
Rod Craig who was one of a group of
adjacent homeowners who had met 'Nith
Westport rep~sentatlves said he would
be tn favor of the rezone if certain
stipulations could be met, in particular
keeping the density to a maximum of
seven units per acre and guaranteeing a
Spanish motif. We~port representatives
indicated they could comply with these
demand!.
The City Council officially closed the
hearing but postponed their decision until
Y.'edne.sday.
From Pqe 1
SIG NS . ••
Capo to Fight,?
projecllng signs.
A further an:iendme.nt would permit
developers of shopping centers to preaent
a complete sign program for all struc-
tu~s and permit the Planning Com-
mission, ugder these circumstances to
modify individual sign requirements to
achleve a more aesthetic comprehensive
sign arrangement. Where a complete prcr
gram is not submitted, each structure
will be subject to Individual rtgulaUon$.
Railroad Fee Paid Reluctantly
Pursuing the subject of aesthetic signs,
City Planner Al Autry sought and receiv-
ed permission of the Planning Com--
mission to distribute a letter to 10 &ign.
companies and individuals considered e~·
perts in the field asking them to submit
£amples of •;good signs."
The purpose, Autry explained. would be
to prepare a guidance manual with il·
Just.rations of various types of good, con-
forming s.igns, for the benefit of sign
permit applicants .
Commissioner Joseph Tomehak noted
that the city of Richmond has such a
manual and suggested that Autry obtain
a copy.
"The problem," said Autry, "is that
sign firms are interested only in tellina a
contract for a sign that will meet the
ordinance req uirements, not with aes-
thetics. ''
Commi:s.sloner Charles Johnson said the
guidance manual would be "1 wonderful
positive step that does what is necessary
without setting up an 'aesthetics board.'
lf someone wants to put up 1 terrible
sign he'll still be free to do it, but this
should h<lp."
Tomehak added, "Trying to legislate
· aeslhelics ls an insult to the busU)e.ss
community. It's talking as if they are •
bunch U NeanderthaJs. This is much bet-
ter."
Councilman Charlton Boyd, who bad
urged that something be done to en-
courage aesthellc signs, and who at-
tended the Monday planners' session as
an observer, said the manual was "a
good idea."
Roy Childs, also in the audience, noted
that "the loose language of the ordinance
still leaves several loopholes that people
could take advantage of If they wanted
to."
ll was pointed out that llldtr the prcr
cedure being used, the ordinances could
be made only leu, rather than more
reabictive. The Janguagt. however, coold
be tightened up during actual public
hearings on the proposed amendments.
Olilds suggested that this be done.
From Page 1
SCH MITZ .•.
Democrats are outnumbered 2 to 1 ln the
distri ct by GOP members, his chances
aren't much better.
The campaign announcement b Y
Schmitz ri1ond11iy Included praise for the
late Mr Utt's principles and ideals, an
echo of eulogies la!t v.<eek in Orange
County.
DAILY PILOT
HntlllllftMa..11
FHlltlll• Y.tky
1n c1 ...... ,
OltAHG( COAST PUllt.1$H ltHt C()Ml'Nn'
~•li•tt N. W1M
Ptes"*" 1M Puellllllf
J1ck It Curl•j Y.c:t Ptnldenl Inc! 04Mr• MllltlW
Tko"'•• K11...!I
Edl!O•
Tho,,,11 A. Murphit1•
Mlntllfttil •OllDr
llic.1'11,d P. N•ll
Si>~th Or•nc" Coun1y Edi,.,
°""" Catll M••• ue wnt e1y Str"'
Nf'Nl'e•I lt8(~~ 7'11 Wt1t 1111-IOulntrlt
~· llH C'I; rn Forni A¥Mvt
1-!llftll"''°" llffd>: 1111~ lltC~ 8oliltVl•d
k " Cimll"lf: :IOl Not111 l l C1"'I"° ltt1I
Plucky llttl! San Juan Capistrano
almost went into battle with a giant Mon-
day but Ume was against the city.
Not wanting to pay a yearly rental fee
of $645 to the Santa Fe Railroad so that a
city sewer line can cross their properly,
city officials almost voted to institute
condemnation proceedings.
They rftay yet.
But f1:1r the time being they 'n reluc·
lantly agree to pay the fee so that tht:
Oso Creek sewer line can be conslructed
LAGUNA GOALS
Aliso, El Toro and Laguna Canyons,
should be retained in their natu ral
beauty as a greenbelt through and
around the town.
2) The cut and fill slopes or the Laguna
Canyon and Pacllic Coast Freeways
and their feeder arterial• lhould be
«kvt:loped as a ereenbelt.
'3J Provide that developers of hlll1lcle
and Canyon, both within dty limits
and annes:aUons, deed land unsuitable
for development to the dty. (In ad·
dition to the existing requirement to
deed uaable recreation llild).
(4) Make provisions ror the city to ac·
cept wilderness land u glftt. Develop
an inte&rated packa~ of legialltion,
!<gal machloery and well"1!1deratood
procedure• whereby property owners
may -to Ille dty laDd. vtaual euement, ft<:f't&tiona.l ea9':nlents,
pedestrtaD acceuway,, tree pro-
tectlCll rtghtl, etc. Thea _..run,.
m\Jll be delJinod with th< alms of
mutuaUy pnitedlng th< property
owner and Ille cit)' and of supporting
Goal I.
(5) Encour•ce planned devt:lopments to
presene as much untouched natural
hUlslde IS potalblt.
(I} Connect hillside wilderneu artas
with · walking and br:ld.11 paths,
,,..nbelts 11\d parks, and coordinate
with county plans for same .
11) Tm plantln& should be en<011r1ged.
d. Maint.aln a village almosphere and a
sense of relaxation, pt:ace and tran-
quilily.
(1) Prestn.'e a community of in-
dividuality aod diversity.
(1) Provide: an atmosphere which at·
tracts artists and creative people.
(3) E&tablish the kinds of controls ovt;r
new construcUon that will preserve
the villa1e atmosphere.
(4) Houslng should maintain and/or
create individual identity. (~)The placement, height and mass of
buildings should be regulated in ac·
cordance \\"ilh this goal. Any high rise
should be planned for land use In ads
van<.'e, and restricted to Umlted
areas.
(I) Pt:destrlan paths, and parUcula rly
their points of convergence, lhoold be
inventoried and given mall, plaza or
park trt:atment. Walkwa)'J should be
provided roughly parallellna: arterial
and feeder streets.
(7) Landmarks valued by citiiens
should be conserved.
e. Urban autbelics should be fully
respected .
(I) Enforce the e1istlna: sign ordinance
and encourage aesthetic dtslgn .
(1) AU power, telephone and television
servicts must be underground with a
desi11:1ated moratorium on above.-
grade servlcea.
(S) Archltectural review of all above
grade uUUty ae.rvlce facll!Ues should
be required.
(4) Daily trash exposure should be
eliminated. Make trash concealment
and collection compulsory. Consider
combining trash and waler bllling.
($) Sidewalks and vacant commercia l
property 1hould be kept clean at all
Um es.
(I) Tel evision cable hook·up 1nd
remaval of all aerials should be re-
quired.
f, Encourage I healthy physicaJ ens
vironmenL
(I) Keep our city phylically cit an ind
encourage civic pride in it •
cltanlineu. 041l'I' l'ILOT, wltrt ""'ldl It GllMIMf lfM •I.• r\ --~-... _,.rim, II putlll,,,. HI.., ·~'"' Ill"" (2) Cooperate With urr: VI ous llmcn!S
.. , tot ..,. .. 11 •nlMI "' L'9YM ,_,.,, to control pollution of the air and H...-t IMdl, C.111 #.9t, HWllllll!tfl ltiKfl .,... ~1.111 ..,,,,.,., '"""' wt111 ,.. water. ,..._, •*.__ 0no1119 co.11 ~..,,...., f3) Combat e.1ce1sive noise.
"""""" """''"" ~ .,. .. ttll Wtll 111-. '""'~ H"'-' affdl. ,,.. *" Undertake the pret:be. planning and
W.I air f;lrffl, CMll MCM. lmpJtmtnla.UOn or lbl devtlopment Of T•'"'''' f71•J "1""121 spttialty shops and business areas to exs
Cl•lft.4 AINfttM111 "1"1'71 pand and develop tourist trlde. and a un i·
._ a....t• All hw .. •w_ .. _'_~,-~~t. art s, pedestrian-oriented en· T1t1pll1111•4tl-44J ~ '""''If"'· 1m. °''"" '"" """'lllltllt vlronmtnl. ,.......,..,. Ho ntw1 ,..,...._ """""'-. a. l)tvelop a program to provide ap-i::~,w.~ ·~ ~~ .. 1-= p!Wrillt and suffklent parkln1 to avoid
,,,1111toi ., l9Prf'l9ht •-· o\'ercrowdlng and traffic eongtsllon. ~~~~-.O:u:!i.~i :::.;.:,.~ b. Through traffic ahoukt be channeled
flt/II' IJM -"""' ~ IMH .... ll'lllfllNYI OI' tllmlnated to IS to free tht do""town
lftlut1,., .. ,~,..., u.• -111'>'· aru for prlm.ar)' pede1t.r:ian UM. A
I
hopefully by July 1. The line will proceed
from Oso Road north to the city limits
crossing an acre of railroad properly
parallel to the track.
The line will provide services for nortlt
city residents and some residents in the
Santa Margarita and Moulton Niguel
\Valer district3, according to a j o In t
agreemt:nt.
Cily Attorney John Dawson ad\•ised the
council that conderilnation proceedings
can be instituted at a later date.
•••
viaduct solution lo the through traffic
problem is incompatible with Goal l.
c. A pedestrian • oriented village at·
mosphere with the character of the Art
Center should be developed Yr'ith special
emphasis on downtown.
d. Restrict automobile acess in some
areas, particularly downtown.
e. The limits of the Central Basi n
should be defined as including the ads
jacenl slope areas, and the living areas of
the slopes should be intimately integrated
with the commercial areas on floor of the
Basin.
Insure the continued growth of Laguna
Beach a~ an art and culture oriented
community.
a. Build a library which meets the
needs of the total commun.l{y and which
would Include adequate rooms for
atudentt and research persons, an area
ff)f' the: children's reading room; e:pace
for a memorial library; Jndoor and out·
door reading areas; an audio-visual room
and a smaH lecture room.
b. Contemplate building a cultural
ctnter comprising. an auditorium big
enough to accommodate audlencell' for
the Civic Ballet, the Chamber Mu sic
Society, the Community Concert, leclu re
series and seminars. with rooms big
enough for meetings of the service
organiu.tions of Laguna; a small gallery
for mun icipal art and craft shows; and a
ballroom suitable for charity balls,
square dancing and honorary occasions
for the City itself. The existing facilities
do not serve these needs, nor is there
adequate parking for them.
c. Build art and cultural programs into
the school curriculum, integrated witlt
community activities.
d. Jnsure the availabillty or a youth
playhouse and art gallery in addltlon to
the traditional facilities in a youth center.
Develop a coordinated city-wide recrea·
tional plan and facilities to best achieve
the following activiUes : swimming and
beach activities, cre ative activities, ten·
nts, golf. horseback riding, hiking, bowl·
ing and cycllng.
a. Retain and enhance the natural
beauty of our most priceless resource,
the beaches, by encouraging a more
responsible use and a jud icious develop-
ment program.
b. Build more public swimming pools.
c. Develop the entire Woodland Dr ive
area as a sports, recreation and youth
ctnt.er.
d. Build more tennis courts.
e. Dt:sign and develop • system or fool
and bridle paths throughout the city.
f. Establish more neighborhood and
community parks.
Improve ·transportation for people
throughout the community.
a. Encourage expanded bus transporta·
lion service throughout the city, including
shullle transportation for retail shoppers.
Maintain and support a school system
characterized by efficiency and ex·
etllence.
a. Make known to s chool ad·
ministrators the local volunteer human
resources that can be used to enrich
ar.Ademlc programs.
b. Encourage esl<lbllshment of a school
of Industrial and mechanical arts.
Preserve equal law en for cc inc n t
~·llhout fear or favor.
Services Slated
For Ruth Easson
ServlC'eS v.111 be held at 3 p.m. \Ved·
nesday in Sheffer Lagun3 Be a ch
fl.fortuary Chapel for Ralph B. Eassan, of
446 Daimond St., Utguna Beach, who died
~fonday at the age or 78, The Ile\·.
Ellrworth Richardson will orJlclale •
_ f\fr. E~t_~ a ~etj_rtd stat!_.eme_love, ls
survh•ed l>Y ri1.s daughters. 1'\ r s .
f<.targaret L. Rtcmelln and l\1.rs. David
Turner, bolh Of Florlda: a sister. Edna
Shaw of ro.taine, IJnd by five grandchildren
and four nieces.
Burial will be 1t Pacilic View J\1emoria1
Park, Newport Bearh.
' . " .
W arcr ants Issued
In CSF Incident
E Y E~ ASSEMBLY SEAT
Optometrist Friuelle
Nola.n Frizzellc
Seeks Badha 111' s
'Assembly Seat
Newport Beach oplo1netrist a n d
lon gtime Republican leader Dr. Nolan
F'rll:ze lle today announced he ·will run
against Assemblyman Robert H. Badham
CR -Newport Beach) in the 7lst District.
lie n1adc it clenr he \\'ill oppo!'e "him
('ven if Badham chOOSC'S nut lo fight St•n.
John G. Schmitz (R·Tustinl lor the
\Vashington post left vacant by the recent
death of Congressman James B. Utl.
Frizzelle, 48, former president of the
California Republican Assembly. said
many proble1ns of coast11I Orange County
need 1nore \'igorous atlenllon in
Sacramento.
lie went on to list four of top prloritv:
-Protection or coastal communities
from oil and refuse pollution plus privatr
development thal excludes public use and
beaches and recreational areas.
-Difficultie~ Ydth property taxation
and assessment.
-Controversies surroundin~ sch o o 1
systems and the resultant disruption of
the educational process.
. -Inadequate stale planning concerning
commercial aircraft regulations.
"I belirve there are solutions lo these
problems if we vigorouslv seek them . , .
and still encoura.lle broad ,growth and ex·
panslon," he declared in announcing his
candidacy.
A naUve Californian, Dr. Frinelle has
been .in practice In Newport Beach for 15
years and heavily involved in GOP
poli~cal circles plus community ac-
tivities.
He is a former member or the
California State Central Commillee and
is cur rently chai rman or the NC\.\'JXlrl
lfarbor Chamber of Com1ncrce's Educ<1·
lion Commll\ef'
He and his wife nf 26 ,\·rur~. ~1::iry h<l \'C
four children.
Vegas Teens Held
In Music Tl1ef ts
Two teenage boys from La s Vegas
were taken Into custody by Laguna Beach
police officers ~1onday afternoon, a:ong
\\'ith a large assortment of musical equip-
ment found in their car and believed to
be stolen property.
Slopping to check a car parked at Cliff
Dri ve and \Vave S!reet at 7:35 p n1 .. (11-
ficers found one boy sorting items in the
trunk. the other passed out on the back
scat of the vehicle.
The boys, aged 16 and 17, \\·ere booked
a~ transients and turned over to Juvenile
Hall .
Spruce Up
Study of videotapes shot seven days
ngu ln a bloody pohce-sludent con-
front atlon on the Cal State Fullerton
can1pus led f<.londay to issuance of arrest
\\'arra11ts nan1ing four a I J e g c d
ringleaders.
Investigators said late Monday that o~
ly one had been taken in lo custody, but
the casts are being handled gingerly and
sUll more warrants are expected to be
issued .
One ringleader marked for arrest. Jim
Cle:ur, chairman of the CSF Student
1'iobi11zatlon Committee, l a u n t e d
plainclothes police officers at another
can1pus rally i\tonday.
He demanded that they arrest hlm and
told a reporter afterward that Fullerton
Police Capt. Fred King said he was not to
be taken Into custody in fron t of a crowd.
Fullerton Police Depart me n l
spokes men would not verify either the
vitll•otape use for evidence. or their alleg-
ed desire to capture Clealr v!'ithout
\\1ilnesst-s.
Cha rges against him and three other
defendants. totaling six counts, include
asscmb\Jng to commit an unlawful act,
rc1na ining present at an unh1\\'ful act,
trespassing and assault and battery.
'l'he others <1re senior philosophy major
'fed Schonc!H<rger, freshman political
i;t1ence n1ajor tleil Hendricks, and John
1'1ar1enthal, but they are not all charged
witn the same offenses.
i\laricn lhul, 24, of Anaheim . \vas ar·
r~s!cd i'ol onday and Deputy District Al-
torncy Del Wright said today he believed
one ol the other suspects had been ar-
rested.
\'1olence t>rupted on the CSF campus
se\'en days ago when a force of more
than 100 la\\'men S\\'ept tltrough the
quadrangle after a protest demonslratioa
disrupted a disciplinary !tearing.
By the time it was over, 19 persons had
been arrested and five .injured, including
three lawrnen, and the CSF Faculty
Council censured the way it was handled
at a sub!equent meeting.
The chief is sue unde rlying the recent
turn1uil is the arrest and co ncu rrent
Harbor District
Hearit1gs Slated
For Marcl1 19
State hearings on l\vo bills affecting the
Orange·County !!arbor District have been
switched from Thursday to ~1arch 19 in
Sacramento, al the request of the Orange
County Lellgue of Cilies.
One bill. introduced by Assembl yman
John V. Briggs (R-~'ullerton ), calls for a
\·ote of the people lo decide if the Harbor
J)1strict should be retained, expanded or
dissolved.
1\nothcr bill. autho red by Assemblyman
Ken Cory fD·AnahcimJ. simply requests
the state LA'g1slature to expand the duties
of the Harbor District \.\.'ithout a vote of
the peopl~.
"\\'c asked for the change in !tearing
dales because the League of Cities
al readv has a meeting tills Thursday ."
sald Huntington Beach Mayor Jack
Green, who is president of the League.
The Orange County League of Cities Is
on record favoring the Briggs bill and let·
ting the people decide the Harbor
District's future.
Briggs said anyone interested in I~
!{arbor District question is invited to lhe
hearing at 1:45 p.m., t¥larch 19, room
2133 . State Capitol.
Ti~c1· llas Cuhs
\'t1f\$111NfiTON !UPll -'The National
zoo·s fa1nou~ white tiger 1'1ohini has
given birth to four cubs, two or thern
"'hl\e like her . They were reported doing
\l'CI!,
Your Home for ...
school discipllnary action against two
older CSF students who heckled Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
Bruce Church, 31, and Dav t d
f<.1t1eKowiak , 25, were arrested on war-
rants charging U1e1n with obscene com·
n1ents ln public.
Campus dissidents charg e the dual ac-
tion constllutes double jeopardy -which
the 1tdmini.Stration denies -and are pcti-
Uoning to have both processes dropped.
Another rally was he ld Monday in the
quadrangle, but no incidents were
reported. although plainclothes police1nen
were present to observe and take notes.
Cyc lists Face
100 Charges
l1i Roundup
A blizzard of paperwork -more ·than
100 individual criminal complaints -
cmana!ed from the Orange County
District Attorney's Office Monday in the
\\'ake of a mass mulorcycle gang roun-
dup.
Representatives of The Outlaws. The
Gents, The Nuggets and The Hessians
\.\'e re among 108 men and women taken
into custody early Sunday in Holy Jim
Canyon.
Three buses \\'ere required to transport
the cro"'d -drunk and disorderly among
other things -from the normally
peaceful canyon in O'Neill Park, 20 mile3
east of El Toro.
Deputy District Attorney Stuart Grand
said 106 were charged with drunkenness
and disturbing the peace, while two face
charges of carrying concealt:d weapons.
Eight were still held at Orange County
J ail Monday, while the other 100 had
posted $65 bail each while autltorities
studied weapon s, drugs and other
e\'idence confiscated at the scene.
Additional charges could be brought lf
ownership of the marijuana, drug pills,
an array of illegal weapon s, and al!egedly
stolen cars and motorcycles is esU!blish-
od .
The weaponry included three shotgu ns ,
a rifle, five pistols, a homemade
handgun, lenglhs of heavy chain. a
longshoreman 's baling hook and dozens of
knives.
One of the confiscated items was a ball-
and-chain device mcxleled after a
medieval mace.
Mr. Henderson's
Se rvice s Pl.anned
Memorial servi ces will be held Thurs-
day at 4 p.m. in Old North Church ,
Forest Hills, North Hollywood. for
Charles E. Henderson. composer and
musical director. who died Saturday at
his Laguna Beach home al the age of 63.
Mr. Henderson was the father of Peter
Henderson of Newport Beach, of the com-
edy team of Skiles and Henderson .
He also is su rvived his his wife, Bliss of
the home, 1.65 Viejo St.: a daughter, Sally
Laughlin of Las Vegas; and by nin e
grandchildren.
Dom in Jamaica Plains. New York,
f\.ir. Jienderson was graduated from
Harvard University in 1928 and for
several years was a pianist with the Fred
\Varing band.
A composrer. musical and vocal direc-
tor. he worked on more than 200 feature
films and was for 10 years with the music
departm ent of 20th Century-Fox Stud ios.
Among the standard song hits Hen-
derson composed \\'ere "So Beals My
Heart," "Carefree" and •·Deep Night,''
which he wrote with Rudy Vallee.
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CHAAPCTER1511CS.
:1-10
L .I~ DAILY LO~
TUESDAY
MARCH 10
fVENING
5:00 m PUTNAM-1 Report~r'$ * Opinion-5 PM on KITV
5:45
0 An important address * to all Californians.
GOVERNOR REAGAN
Speaks to the People
0 Polltk:1I Addteu by Go~. Rt•·
1•n (CJ Paid poht1c1I announu·
)llent.
6:00 §811 News (Cl !GO) Jefry Dunphy.
· @n Hunl!t1·Btinkle1 (C) (30)
Ca" You Top This? (CJ (30)
Ernest 8oraninr. Jes!.r Wh11e and
Morey Amsterdam 11~est.
0 MARILYN MONROE! * "NIAGARA"-COLOR! 0 Sil O'Clotll Mn 1e; (C) "Nil·
a•r•M (mystery) '!13-Muolyft Mon·
rot, Joseph Collen. Jean Peteu. A
1wo·limin1 w1te brings her husband
to Nit11r1 falls and plots with hei
lover lo have him pushed over.
I Diet Yan Dytt (30)
Tht FllntstoMS (C) (JO)
Star T1ek (C) (60)
m-7) (j) ABC Hews (C) (30)
Stock M•rket Summary (R)
: Wlwit'• Ne~ (JO) "American•
ti : Paul Reve1e."
~@ CBS Newt (C) (30) €I'I Pasion Gilani !30) GI) Newt in the Round (C) (60)
C:l5 fE 11'1¥Ul!lti ShoWUM (3 0) (R)
1:30 8 llf'tBC Newtef\'ict (C) (60)
Strie Allen Sho:Y (CJ (90) H1I
fr11ie1, P" Henry, Jack11 Gayle, JOI!
McGinnis and Ken 81rgu 11ue!ol:.
§The Ca mt G1m1 (C) (30)
~favorite Martian (C) (30)
(3J Ptrry Mason 160)
JIClt fOI' 11w lime wht11 Corey Is
GUI of lown W!UI rel1tiwt1. Terry
Carttf i nd Mel S!twart runt. 0 Ont-Ma n $how (C) (30) let
Allen guests. ·
Q @(j)G)ABC Mowi1 of Ille
• Wnt (C) '1ht low War" (SC•·ril
'70--lloyd Bndges, Angie Dit~in~n.
A man Ind woman who meet accl·
dent1lty and 1111 tn IOV!. then !ind
themselves . en gulled 10 1 s!ranRt
tern!yina cl•sh betfl'HO two forces.
m SAMMY DAVIS JR. SOLO * GUEST 8:30 TONIGHT
THE FROST SHOW KTIV! m David Frost Show (Cl (90) Sam·
my Da~is Jr. 1uests.
ID Thi Bi1 Valley {Cl (60)
1:45 EE G10rg1 Imel Show Businns
9:00 0 ID (l) [ONBC Tuesday Movie:
"Liiies of !ht ntld .. (drama) '6J-
SidntJ Poitier, Lili• Sk1l1. In his
Academy · Award · winninir; perfoi m·
aoce, Poit ier stars as an ei-G1 wllo
helps 1 grouD of nuns budd a
cha pel in thf biuen ArtZon1 desert 0 Pl17boJ After D11k (C) (GO) Hosr
Hd ntf welcomes The Checkmalei,
lid. 8111 Dana, Don A'hms. C1d1
Thomas. Bill Rose and llreskin ED lnt!ff&te (C) (JO) "Apol lo Is 1
Californian." A !oak into 1he 10\e
11laytd by California aetos.pact in·
dostnes in the execulion and de-
velopment of the Apollo program.
g) Cbutl'lo Avetl1ntt (C) {30)
9:15 f.E How lo Many 1 Millionaire
9:30 IO ~ (j) Tiit GOVlfllGf Ind J.J.
(C) (30) J.J. finds a new way or
meeting an tlig1ble b&ehtlo1 'llh•n
she Is hit by a runa..,ay olf1ce cliau.
Jed Allan HUf slS.
I) Nrws (C) (30) Ba~t~ Waid, ID BIH .lllhn News (C) (30) ffi NO festi'lal (C) (£0) "Melfnt
Mercou1i -I Was Boin Creek."'
Gtetll act1e~s MeU111 Mercouri lours
the upit1l1 of ttie world, enh~t·
in g suppor1 for the CIUH of Greek
freedom from 111r milit~ry ju"\1, €I1 Mlllk1 1 Eltnll•t (C) (30)
!:45 EE f'SA n1111
61 @ ffuntlry·BnnkltJ (C) (JO)
~ Yop fol Everyone (30J .
1'91@ nu Muns1us (30)
€I) Nolidtfo 34 {C) (60) in KMIR News (C) (30)
6:45 EE This 11 llrbl!I (R)
· Wllat'1 My line? (CJ (30)
I lo.e lUC'f (30)
7;00 I CBS Evening Net11 (C) (30)
10:00 e QJ. (I) Who, Whit, Wlltn,
Wlle1~ Wiiy? (C) (30) A study ot
!ht liibUnr and tontuwersy slintd
by "L1os; Amtric1·s Hidden Wu." 0 Nws (C) (60) 0 (]T.I (])CD Maicus Welby, M.D. !CJ (60) "Sea ol Secu r1\y ' Pt1~r
8uton. 111 aceu101raphy studenl
sulterint lram the btnd!. d15re·
gatds Dr. Welby"s advice and ain-
!1nut s lo dive. John Er1aon. Kath·
erlne Criwlord 1uesl.
But the.Clock (Cl (30)
Commodity/Miitual fund (30) a:t r;6) 8f1n11fjj (Cl {30) fIJ llMra! (30)
)9 .JJ T11llh or Conlequenus (CJ ID bland• in th1 Su11 (C) (30) <.:iJ TMI 'irl (CJ \JD)
i() IO ~ (j) ltncer IC! f60) MUf·
doch tekes 1 pervm~ interest in
the su~s.l of a sl!v~gllng young
school le1ttie1 when tie betomes
rewonsible !or ttirte lnd1en orphans!
who hope to enroll In 1h1 s:hoo1.
Pippa Sc.oil and M1ch1el Ansara l
guts!.
1 SEARS PRESENTS A
• FAMILY TV SPECIAL
WALT DISNEY 'S
D Delli! (C) (60
"WINNIE THE POOH " 0 ~}~~ m I \,(CIA~ I Winnit
!ht l'ooll and the Honey TrH (Cl
(JOl Sebastian Cabot narfates this lll·lO O llNXT Rrports (C) (JD) "Cll11
an!ma1ed mus1t1I based on A. A. They Be Turned Oil!" Newsm1n
t.lilne·s tl1~1c th11dre n's late. Pooh. Paul Udell repons on an exptfi·
"the bur of l1hle br1in:· see~.s to mental dtUK l!CO~ery p101r1m If
satisfy his 1ppd1te for hone~. Ster· M!nd1cino Stale Hosp1111
hnr Holloway is the voice of Pooh. ffi SpKullli'lll (Cl {60) "'A Con· 0 @ @ m I iP1(iAli UndtrWI ltrSlllOl'I wit h leslte fielder ..
World ol Jacques Cousteeu (C) (60) 'il (I) Fe1tur1 (30)
"Those Incredible Diving Machinu."'1 g) C1nthl1 (30)
This documentary recounts the m~ny 1.00 ~ O O cr.i ,,.,,. ~ N (CJ
w111 USl!d by man 1n his d11ve l · ~ . ~ t1:.110L1 rws
for mastery of the depl hs. I 0 H1a;h,•1~, Patrol " c:J Miiiion $ M0¥1t: "Aaou the Pl· P Mtvlt: Private Potttf (drama)
cit\c." (adventur~) '42 _ Humphrey ~ -Tom Courtenay. Mogeni
Bo11rt Mary Astor. Sydney Gre,n· W1eth. James Max'l'tlt
•• I 81 A <-t "· · m P1y\on l'tact street. one ue. ...ere ,,..rv1ce1 m H Slid Sh Sl"d (C)
11enl ptelends to ull out lo the\ ,.~r:.,,,,.M ,~o'8 1 ,,,. (CJ bpanese in 1 plot tn blow up The IW ~ ".#-~ 1-6J ~
Panama Cllnal. 11:15 !ft; (fl Cinema Stventetn: "'Web or
M1jo1 Ad1m1 (60)
-·
PLAIN JANE
PERKINS
JUDGE PARKER
...
l WAS BE61NN!lllG TO
THI NK YOU HAD
FORGOTTEN OUR
APPOINTMENT.
Ml55 l<LEFFT/
MOON MULLINS
MUTT AND JEFF
ITfuth If Consequenca (C) (JO)J EYide riee"
Tttbnlul Comer (30) (R) 1 l:JO i) ~(I' Mtf'I Grittin (CJ ll•IC1;A~l WllJ You Smoke: A O @(i)ln.lohnn1 C11son IC) 1µ_.JL
Sell·Tt'll (C) 130) tn the wood oil O Tht Chelfars
a fiYe·plrt series. v1f'llilers join pro. 0 a) Diet Cavel! (C) M~h11i1
,ram 1e111!1rs In lakln1 a 11$1 th1I ! kso If ho! Hoffman revt1 ls ...mat smo~e11 th!"k 1boul 1' st 11• It as 'IOn
the eltects of their habit. . 2ut ·
€l) C..uz dt AlllOf (JO)
1:00 Q QJ (6)€DDtbbleRrynotd1(t) m WIDMARK AND DARNELL
(30) "Otbble Gets Jim fired." Dab· * STAR AT 11 :30-KITV! bi1'1 sdleme 10 1et Jim 1 salary ,:;·. ·-·... ~ raise backfires. m M0¥1t; "Sl11t1r(1 Hunlc tne" ,,......,~ • •·
I MOlllt G1111t (Cl (30) (drama) '49-Ritllard Widmark. I'--=----------'
TD Tell !ht Truth {C) (JO) m Movit: "Tiit Man Is Afmtd" GORDO
W11t11t11 and tilt Marktt {R) (drama) '56--0tnt Cl1rt
Tht CitJ Watchm (C) (60) (R) ED Rug111 Prus Conltre!Kt Men and Dtmons " John 1nd
Faith Hubley's Acadelll)' Award nom !12:00 O Co111m11nitr 8ullet!n Bo1rd (CJ
lnated 1n1m11ed short subject Is
'
shown 1 :00 0 Mnlt: (Cl "Tht Thltf 11 Ill• €E Olicolhoqut A Go.Go {C) (GO) 1111scus" (1dven!ur!) '!IZ -P1"1 Henreld, l!ll Oonntll.
OONIWS (C) 1~1s EE Olllct of l~t l'r11fdent (30) (Rl
1:30 0 -3 ({) Rtd S~elton (C) (601 Q) Action The1t1t: "Ride 1 Violent
Vifltent Pritt ind Tht first Edi!lan Mlle."
J!Utl1 I 9 oj"j 'T €D Julia (Cl 130) "'1'111 1:JO m AJt.Nizllt Show: ''The lnva\•On
81 Youis." lwo at lulia's boy· of the \lam pite$." 1 h! C&l~nd1r,"
lritnds afld Earl J. Wa1a;ed0fn c:om· "Tht ntmts and Iha Swo rd.'"
WEDNESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
m (C) "lullu ~ tt11 Aftt1noon"
(wH1ein) '52-Rly Mlll~nd. Farrtil
TU(~H.
1:30 m ''Ttle Glf Divoru•"' (comtdy)
'34-Frtd Astairt, Ginpr Ropr$.
9:00 O "Cllht I" lftt Ha1111" (d11m1) 2:00 0 '"Cuc-In lht Mittor" (d r11111)
'14--Annt Ba-!er, ll1!ph Bellamy. I '60--0r50~ Wllltt J~hetlt Grtt0.
0 (C) "'Tht LtdJ from Tu11" (D "£tc1p1 in tht SunH (tdvtn•
(wuttrn) '51-ti(!wu~ Ou!! Mona luit) '51-loll!'I BeMfiy. Vffl fu
1 fret.min, M~
I I
1 9:30 O "Tiit Wtb1t11 Bor" (dr1ma) "62 4:10 ()(CJ "The St11na11 Wo1• • Cun"
-.lotin taU1~t1t11. [lf11btth s111 / lwultrn) '53 -Fhndotph Sr.on,
en. Cl11rt trll'llll'.
MISS PEACH
Al<TMUR MAS Df!IDEO WMAr
0 Do AFTEJ< GRADUATIOH?
SALLY BANANAS
Gu.,iM "~ ~···
•
By Harold Le Doux
'fES, I CAH SEE THATi )
SHALL WE GET ~
601WG ?'···MY CAR
IS DOWN /M THE
PAAKIWG LOT.'
By ~Ferd
• r' OU, l:>E).~, IF IT'S ABOUT THE (j "" I1M CHECK I SfNT HIM>
'' SO!i!li!Y, 'THL HIM MY GOUT l,t' JX>CTOR-/';=::;1 C,O.ME B,O.C!(,
11LL 700.
< il?ZLL
r b.
MY POOR.SELL JUST lANG
.. AWD I k'WOW IT~ OM!lLE
WIWTER'.5! 6ET OVER: HERE
RIGMT ;..w;..v!
By Al Smith
HE RAN INTO ME
W IT;.\ MALICE
AFORETHOUGHT.'
I D<D
NOT/
I WAS
"!'HEN YOU ADMIT,
YoU DELI BER"'1'ELY'
RAN YbURCAR
INTO H<S .... WllY?
BECAUSE MY eoss
+lERE COULDN'T 'THINK.
o;= ANYT~ING
>'UNNY F'OR ME
'fO DO Al.L
ALONE!
YES ,
MISS PEAC.M ,
"E'S DEC.IDED
ON A
JOI!>!
~E6<SNEl:l.5 SA'/
'THIS \lf:At<.'S
SKIR:"TS 'f\JJU. SE-
AT MID-CALF f
'/E5, I MAVE ,
11·15 A liZEL.IEF
'fO «><OW
MY FUTU!ll!'S'
BE~
SETTl..EC>.'
\ ' •• l:t.
I ' . ,
"TODAY!
.;~~;f?/L
By Mell
J..ATEll: ON, !\.L
GET INTO TME
OUE>T10!"S O!=
W1-4AT ~1,..iO OF.JOB,
WMICH COMPl'INV,
~Nt> FOR MOW MUCM .
. .-. ·-
DAil Y PllOT J 5
By Charles Bar5ottl
~~~~~~~~
PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz
ONCE I MOW, l'M NOl'MING !
ll)AS 'HEAD
BEAGLE"
TELEVISION VIEWS
Sheba's Mask
Real Junk
...
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -An example of the junk
coming out of Hollywood studios these days labeled
"movies !or TV" was "The Mask of Sheba" on NBC
Monday ni ght. At the base of the two-hour prograrn
was another variation of the youth-team format
'vhich will spread all over network television by
next season.
THE FILM, bearing all the earmarks of a pilot
for a series, \vas hung on a group of youn g anthro-
pologists \vho went ripping off through the Ethio-
pian jun gles in search of a golden mask or a queen
dead for 3,000 years and, almost coincidentally, a
lost party of explorers.
The plot was so implausible and cliche-filled
the viewer was inclined at times lo believe that it
had to be camp.
The anthropologists -two men and a girl doc·
tor -joined by the \vile of one of the missing men
and an Ethiopian colonel. eventually arrived at a
monastery atop a rock mountain and reached only
by a rope ladder. Up there was a high pri est with
leprosy and. as it turned out, a secret cavern that
held the golden mask.
THEN THE \Vife turned out to be a phony - a
dreadful creature. played by the nice Inger Stevens.
There was a lot of shooting and death at the end.
and, or course, only the good people survived. The
yo_ung u.nknown performers did their best in a pretty
grisly situation.
Reuven Frank. NBC president for ne\vs. an·
nounced J\1onday that retiring Chet 1-luntley \YOuld
be replaced by two of the network's senior staff
men. John Chancellor and Frank McGee.
lluntley and David Brinkley, after more than
14 years in tandem. are a television Institution and.
for NBC_. a very profitable team. Their evening half
hour. \\'Ith tin1e for fi ve minutes of commercials,
is usually fully sponsored. It is reputed to cost spon·
so rs in excess of $25. 000 per minute.
CHANCELLOR and l'vlcGee. while lacking some
of the glamor of NBC 's lop team, have been around
for a Jon g time, are \vell-kno,vn by the public and
respected as broadcast journalists.
Frank said that with Huntley's departure Aug.
1. the program \vould be broadcast seven nights a
'veek and ~e renamed "NBC Evening News."
By having lhree anchormen -Brinkley \Vork ·
ing out of \Va shington and Chancell or and McGee
in Ne'v York . each man \Viii be able to spend more
li1Tic developing stories.
lluntley·Brinkley report has been seen ~1onday
through Saturday nights for 14 months. "The Frank
McGee Report." which \\1ill be absorbed into the
news series, has been on Sunday nights.
CBS' "Q.UNSMOKE," NBC's "Laugh.In" and
ABC's "J\olarcus \Velby, M.D." \Vere. in that order.
the most . popular programs .broadcast during the
week ending March 1. according to a national Niel~
sen report released ~1onday.
Den11is the Menace
!
•
I
\
• • • • ••
'
" •
•
• •
•
l : •' • •
I
,J
•
I
... ---
DAllY PILOT SC 16
Your Mo11ey's \Vortl1 ..
OVE THE COUNTER
Hou sehold Help Tips Given -D U•t lngs for~nday, M"ch 9, 1970
Complete-Nelv Yorli Stock List
By Sl'LVl• ronrElt 1;u1de!1ncs for }OU abo; e 4.8 hours a week .,, .. loe~ll.Yt looter ... 1 .. IUl!•lililt II IPP .. d~''''' • 111 ,,..,, Hll.iD P1 ;c,, clo ne1 ind~clt ,.11b ., m1rkw mt111 .. .,11., rM11'111ul111
It II be a long long 11n1t
before \\C find sat1Sf<1ttorv
solutions to Ille problcn1 or
household help -.ind 1nnybe
there aren t any Dut 10 the
meantime. \.\hal can ~ou, the
person \1bo desperately needs
this type of help, do to im-
prove your chances of finding
and keeping these employes"
Cooptratc with a n d
pritronu:e locul agencies nnd
pri1 ate sci v1c.-e orga111zallons
11h1ch .ire nov.• o ffe r ing
.spcc1ahzed I r a 1 n 1 n g for
household workers In fields
r a ng1ng fron1 cooking to care
of the elder!)' Call on them
abide by their rules, pay the
\\ages asked probably
betv.een $2 and $3 50 an hour
Abl(:111 .ft! 11.btllLlfl I It -GIVE TWO week~ of paid "'w vo•• 1,,, 0 ,,,,_ ,, 1 ACF Ind 1 .o ,. -· n. II l!rl'(f 1l1' .,.~ ··11. Ho )I I~ )I .t.c/llf(IV I «I \ acat1on afler unc years -11\CO •o110"'1,... Dia Fz P11n1 " n~. 11t•• It ,, • td • & • 11 , Acnw Mk1 10 •lld ·~~('<! OUG1 .. EHi( W1 ljVt fl \.'> i1 Co ltii ~ pnln E ••1 s \ ll.OmE¥ 1 !Mt !lerv1ce to a full t1n1e v;orkcr 11llfl~ '""Plle<t by '=•~1 si. 11 lh Nal ~111 ,, 1 11ou 1" 11• 110 M MHl l 10 11\t Nat on•• A.\'4(1· (Oii Lio JO 31 .... .Q lift 'll'i I (Oii 3,~ jlt 11.ddrt•• I •O plus five paid nation a J 111on or Secur 1 •• di.It s1• J,,_, ' NII LJb • "" 1 Ind ' • Adrnlr•• Oe11e~ Inc tre I P11 1 l1Vt l~N1ll M«d Jl> 2{1• ~I~~," 'i}t 31'14 11.e1nal.tl 1 lD holidays For day workers, ll'o'•"::i'"t• ,',','",',"• "i '',,,s. t Vt iQ14 N11 Ptt 11 ii ,1;;r0 A 2 il 'jUi..; A.etr.atit llf 1 I da r d I r ' 1'!l' ,"', ... ••,•, l"'• ''· >~ i•>• o• '!'' I •r,lrrt Co g ve one y o pa1 eave or ••Hnt11 v1 11111• Nuc: ,.., .. N "°
h dro!er Prke11 ~s oJ ltltP• '• ' Not Sii~ '"" I ~ t Cmo 1 ~ l II. r Prod :Ob tvery SIX m ont s based on the .,.,.,,,~,m•••I• l ll•IO:YI s•. Nln G 19 1"'° ,.,. l!\lr 16 Air 11.toe1 '°"
be r d k p m •• w~ ui l~tl• 1 c SYJ l 1 ~ N N•! • ",'-'I\' •< Grn f II) AJ lndu1t•le' num r O ays per wee your Mcurl!lt\ <ou1a 1 o1u 1u 160 N cn1n F ll 11'> •<'n uo ~2\o iJl~ Al• G•• t 10 r h•~ bft" 0 I .. A .. I ,, l'" 'f"• " 31. 39i., h~ NII ... 33 A.lt>9rJo(: n employe works or you -plus mi!ed 1.-11.t0i "o'.r ..c·cu,, ,.I), 1't "'111~ a 3'l' ,.., c11 W•• >ot:i 1 u•1 A~""1" 110 a cash bonus (or any work on ::i1, (Di.,) m~:'~',[, @~s.,g,11 '° ' ~~M 11~ '~I ii"" ; l:' ifi• ~ Al<osru•<t 16
·• "• • "••• '•'•'•' 01! 3 J\:o w G•Co 1t'4 1"" 11.le-nllrt JO. a national holiday di•""° tt .. .,.,,,.. E.,.,, lie .. .,. c:-~. 11 n ... EISvc ''Vt 11~ AlltoQ Cp 20.I CUI ""' ~y Prict1 EM!• a 10" 111.'j NW N1tG "• 1~ ,... 10\\ 1114 All111 60f <Ill CHANGE YOUR o"n at-
litudc to"ard thest 11 orken~
and really sho" }0111 \1111.
1ngness to upgrade this oc
cupallon This 1s the m ust
basic need of all according ta
the l-3bor Dept :s \\ on1cn :s
Bureau aod the National Con1
n11ltee on Household Emplo11
1ncnt 10 Washmglon -and
-BE BUSINESSLIJ\£ 10
'our arrangements v.hcn you
cn1p!oy a hou sehold 11orker
d1rcc lly and pny r ealistic
11 age:-; 111 terms of actual 111
1ng costs In your a1 ca Do not
<:ount cast off clothes as any
pay you can't buy food or pay
rent with used clothes
P r II l I 0o r'>Ot lfl.C:~ fnrw,,1 11'• ll..., NW PuSw :!(I', ' 10 ll:H 1 n,,, ?fl4 Al~L!X! 2.40 -ay a U • 1me emp oye rt11U mart.u..: on c,,.n 1,,, J ~1 1111: 21 •\ 1• td s.;,.... ll , "~) AH19lucl DI J
'Ip to rive days, year of stck ""'•••",,'!!!"" or corn <1,1•011 ~~l 11 • 1 1~ h'O Ari 11<. 1;~ "" HPd , n•, 11.111-g Pw 1 :n ...,, • -•I> 10 la Wit 11 l ttrla S!r II 11.,. 11.Hll<IC~ I M lea ve after one years service 11.,•,•, ,~~!' ,", '• 'l"'c'",,0 31 31 • S<1n M lt !''' ... c1 • v. ~1 11.111GMnr -,... ~ • • •l.li rmont I • 9 ub>C 1~ j , AllladM1ll Ti a nd reward day w orkers ac .. ,',,A,P•,_ "•, ",,, •,•,•,,, •0eti,. ft '• 1•. uer TP 11 • 1~·· Suad•• F 1•, 10.. Allltcl Po u ., ·-, 6\'t t•t, tr NA S • S S11be Fd ,..... 1 11.lllrd51r t ~ cording to arrangemenls you AVM CD 11\, n •1 F•rrln<1 u 11.,. •~C" 19 , .,,. ,, r1mnx 2'IO ?2j A i1<1Si•P HP II.cm~ El ~ 91, FC!dtl Ml l~~ 161 EC 11'1 10 II < Ttnot-r t ~ "°'All!• Chaim n1a ke at the l1n1c you hire her 11.tme viii l8 ,. • Fln•ll•v 15, 16. P1ti..1 Br 51'> Jl 1111•" 111• l2l1 AIPhtP C 10e Ari H,.,;p 71 \. 2l F\I Bil'.! •9 ll Pee Auto l ) llV Or W l'l111 A OO (or h1n1) Al~ lt1C111~ • ~ •\1 F!!G RE ?J>, 1614 Ptc FIE 3) J Ttnrwinr 2•t~ 'l.... l(N ' Alrb•l' F 1• , ll F\IM Inv 1~ , ~ Pekco Ca 610 '~ l••tl A! l\'1 AMBll.C SO Ir d r d llbt11 H II \ 11 F~t R 2'• J\li Pancal ' '""' r~ ... .,, II. ~ lo AmerE1 1 'IO -yovrnee ora ayll.lbe'rt~ 1~ •,F,twrF"~ ·~"""'PkwvOl1 u u•,T111nvco1•o,;,1~~Am~euo1• household worker s services Alica Lnd un 11 1 r1cw."° 11. ,,.,. Portw H 3j" I" jlf!nw In t Vr 10 .. A""H D!J)() A.119 &tv a, "' F--' FP I , "'-Ptult~ P 1 • I'• Jr1n GD ?•1 I ) ... A!rF1Ur IO """" 7 P...,ell!l 1t1, l'CI ~ T•1c (OD '• , .. 11.m 11.••lln .IO both of these arc n o w -Reward overtime work
\1 1th premium pay The NCHE
recommends lhat you pay
11me and a hall for hours
:iOO\C 40 h ou1s a \~eek and
d ouble lht> 1'fgular rate for
changes or ceases give at ~l\?M!Pl"., ~~! 1i , ~:~1<1°11 ~ ~~Petr~ r ;1 1• 1 Trncn• c; 11 If. 11.m ••~er ~pearhead1og a nollon"1dc
eam pa1gn for lhl' re-education
of household employers and
rmployes to :spur precisely
thls change. Here .are :spt"cif1c
]eaSl One WCCk S advance 11.l"n G~ I , ''• F~t (;rnt l9 o10 Pen ••L 1 I t~ T•r>Cnl 0 I •' All••nds 1 10 •m·•c ., '• ,01 ••• , > 0 > Pt "°'~ J ~ I TrlMato H 11a 1~> Am8dcst l l'CI ,.... " ""' Po f,.W 7• ll ''Ira Pd JI 31 •• C•• > -nOliCe A.m 8111n ll'• II , Fole>m ll , u > ' •• A Ell•l) s1, s1.oF1Jo.J• S•• l~ 17 Penni:rac •• rll•!r IG~ll .ACanpf\1~
-M a ke sur e she1s nol sulJ.11.m E'111• n 1l Fr,,..1 cn 1 711::~iw~ ll 1 u '1•001<1 361411, il.JT1C11"' Ml Arn Furn 1 , ''· Fr~~I" l 11 , n Pe,,n! ;,: ;t i~lfl:'c Fd 1r• !f,.: A c1111n 1 60
1ected lo 1nsulls or raciaJ slurs A. Gre.i '1 ""'< Fu!vtw ,' '•" Pe!ro111 11! , '° un DDllr 1& ,, AmC .. ed•t 90 I'm !n~(t 30 JI fuau• 71 l Pl\Rd<I nl 51 ~' Un Ilium 11 ~ 79 ACrvSUQ l Mt from your children doormen A. Mea1c11 2•'•l5...,~u11~1" , .. OPhll s...11 ,,,,,,,.Un Mcc;u 101,.11 AmCvtn 121 A Sr Gab 4 , 1, c;~rffl~I l• , ll Pharon n•, n>, I llknoo l J'rt u Am 01,111 1
t '
'
'
•
Wersbow
Real Estate Auction
OISSOLUTION OF TJIUST
U11dtr' p1111 of nq111d1t1on bytl'lr Dom1n111u E$taltColnp1ny
(now a dissolved Corpo1111on)
ACRES
OF PRIME ~
IND"L LAND
1J
PlltOOMltwm.T ZQll[O M 2
S.E. Comer of Victoria St. & Wilmington Ave.,
(NEARAIAMEOA ST, ANO ARTESIA BLVD.)
Dominguez Hills, Los Angeles County, Calif. ~ METBllPOUTAI AREA OF lOS AIRES. CAlf.
Tiils ,n-..... will ... itffl1MI h1 Thi• n the Int llr,. f111t111 of L' 3.J:rt•I• hdlv1f1111r 1M/v knd ru111l•uw. •• U.. ""•••• c .,c:1,..1y 11:1111! ,.. Ille •idderi s,.,. ...... ,.. c .. at flf ..... b • l'AA<:aA-61.l AC~!S $11 1'1111..-.it lftl h•I ••• • l'AICU. ..._.,., Ii AC11l$ h 11tst Spoolsli Lo• c;,.111: 11 rl>t
• l'AICU C-.S' 1 Aears Uiw!M Sb i..
J«ti111 S.le Tel U. l'lilu Al MONDAY BILTMORE HOTEL l (ROIDlfl Room) MAR.23 fifth & Olive Sts. l Los Angeles, Calif. '12P.M.
Call «wnte Jordesaiptive aaction IMochurt.
BROKtl PARTIQPATION IS ENCOURAGED ~ i-;!~~.!~ •'
7!1l MEIJOSr, LOS MGrus, CAUF. "'°" (213) SIU541
SAN oiEGO COUlfJY omcc
1012 $.Hill. Ocu nside, c;,111. 921l54 01') 722 1306
¥
o ther thoughtless peoplr AS1 G pr 6. 7 01 Svt 11 15" P, Pd l , n. En11e1 11 19 i, J.Ols1T~1 1~e 11.m Ttlv ?1471 G Ar(tl ~ 1 Plnkr!n 7 11•,u S11a•r ~~ oJ ,11.0u•!V! 11<J
-PltOVIDE !JEil "'1th tlC· :~~:::~ c_8 7f'. 1:: g11f Eir' r· i. ~~~1tc~1f ~1. '~,{ ~. ~~~~ ~J.: ;;·: ~~'M'1p!' r~~.
t ent attractive s 1 C e p i n g Arts Ir><! 1 • G!ol•I • , J Proa ... ~. :1 . • , U•~" SLd s1• '" Am Enke la ' A.r<!fn M 11 o !\ 1 Q !!tn 11 1! 1 Pru<! M" I •'~ Ulll Ina 76 , 71 I'm E,,. 1"" quarters if she lives 111 or Aratn 111 J~ l1 c1aT1t11 :.l 3t r>ubs NH ,, , 1s ~ v~1 LO ••~ 9 A.E••na DIA.6 Ar~ MoP IJ , I)• Gl~~•n W Sil, SS PubS NM , .. 16 , ~ance ~a !9 10 11.t:.en!n1 SO quarlers 10 \\hlch to chnnge ... ,row H .,,~ 41 8:11>11 Ruto J • Pubs NC. 'I• u~. 111e1ran 111 '.!O Ac;~1n Dll IO .. ,,,;,;. II ''' • ,,, ,~ 16 Publ11<r l • 11'1 NllllW p l& ;a .11.mH••• • clothes rest and freshen up Jf A1cc: eot 1~1: ,,...; GOO<! LS 10'• 10 .. Pu''°" 1 , ~ •Hr Bd n 11 A Home 150
h d k A.u1a St! 11 11~ Go0wv C 7•, 1•, P Ben"'"! 1t~~ '9'h Re•~ 1 • 111 A Home pl 1 s e IS a ay wor er 11.v...,<a 11~ •~ Gr•Oll en 11 , u . Purl!" s1 1' ,, w1r~11w '. 1 Arn How )i
, a11r<1 Al 1, l\o G•a"" S< '~'• 1~1.. PO\oa ra 6';1. fl.I. •ill N('; Ul o l~:'t 11.mlnvir 1 10 -IC \Vo r km en s com B1ktr ;it1, ;v, Gr"'n Ml 11•. 11• 0ua1 CM n ' '" "'" ll:E ,. n» AmMFdv 90 •t h f!.11 Pa1n! ~·· 1 Grnn lll E u, 11 • R:ao o~n n • 1l • W•I Tr 16'l 161.. ,t.MtrCI~ l II) pensalion docsn CQ\Cr er, ll•n 1rr c ,,, '• rave Pr 10. 11 ~•ti 1rn 10 11\Nebl> lie ll u AMf!CI~ o•~
k ho Birwc>; l \ , 11 rnn '" 11 , n , a11\I) El 111, 79\1 WolO!rn tft • ll Am Mol"'I ma e sure }Our meov.'Tler s ll•sln P 910 10 , Gu•ra en 1 8, 11••<'> Co 11~ ll1 Wtllllft M '' • ;J,, AmNair.41 ,
d B rl '.II• JI Gui• ! ti 10' IQ'' ll:ev"' Co :n 1• ell1R C. 11>o 1''1. Am Pl>o!a 11
l1ab1hty insuraoc:e oes protect 11!~~n 11 ~ 13,; GY'""'"n 1 1,; :~oa,....i;-0 a ~~1: ~~ •• ~~:~'w~ : ,, 9;_; ... 111 •• 0. ~ IC fi II 'n the evenJ f 8-ed>m 11 • ])> lilr>OV• $ )0 > ?"/ 1 Iller C•ed •Po d~ iN$1!1 M1<> /,1., 1'1> 11.m ~I! I l r 1nanc1a Y O 11e11e 1si, ti 11...: H•rl"" J 1'1'• lO\o 111<1<1, p11 11 u~ l'n PwD 1n~ 11 , A.m SM1P to
a n a CCJdenl On the ""b In your ll•lm Ind ~ 9 >l~~en In l •• "' R l~v ~ta '' ,. W "n WI! 9>t 9 0 A 5mol! l 90 J V 8•rl< H~ •P , 4J 'Kfnfed F ,, 21 'l ll:Oll<i £• 11. , •• Wlnllao ,, 1~ ArnScA!r 10 hon1c eu~ l~b ~• , ~ , Ho• 1 Cn A •, Rehn M 1r 2' w1,c Pt 111, 1l'• AmSAtr In ro 811!Vll' W &•1 l •o Hldoc In! ~, e , Ila tl~n I , s 1 Wrdlw £ J , n, Am 51<! I Arrange, ~\here. )OU f1rsl 8 .. 1 San ll, J1, H llhvn n 1, u, ~av C•" •, •, w.i~no w :nt 2l, 11.mSld r.t• 11 8!•11i:h~ 7•0 • Halm EP !I 11 Sl\IS SIQ\I 19 :Ml YrOn• E 8\o t\o Am ~ttrol <a d iscuss the tern1s and t'On Bi.a.;~ Ht 37« ll Honvor :nt, l' , A suvar 1 '°
b h BOllut El 1~; ' Hawrd GI U•1) 16 w -~ i c '"NJL = Aiu9 pfA l 6S dlflOOS Of the JO U at rest Ball Btr 11 11'11 Hue~ Ml t 9, ~ -_ _._ 11.rnSu! • "
od I I I l!onl ..... C ll>74 1 Hud PP lJ 35 11."'T "f lbll per1 s, mea limes, le ep 1one eon, 11.11 )J~ 111, ~ua G81 u rs MUTUAL 1unww~~ ~ r Oo~ CID 11 I• Hur1t P 16. ll'o A.WWSDI I lS Pr1v1lcges. trmc of for chur ch ,, •• ,,, ., ,, '"''" co lll , 11.w et 1 is -• ul~ 1l I'm ~~"!: she 'll be able to count on l~s.c:~ ~:~ ~~ r,v.it,~~1 11 11 A.m1ron '°
-Review your verbal con arwn A• 11 • 121~ :~ i:1.c:1 ~.; ~: FUNDS ~?~ :"
II Bru ... 81 11 21"" 1~1·1 d ~ ' t . AMK Co 30 tracl ' per1od1ca Y and en-L~~: s 2:..., ~~ ni' ~'r.' 10,. 11 11.MP inc sa
courage your cmploye to c1c Lt11 714 s ~ :flf.•I 'j"' ! ~. ~:;;~ Jca.r C•! W Sv 'll\t 71\.o ntrm n I , 1,, Am!el
discuss any grievances 1v1th ~:;;:,o M ~:"' ri"" I~: ~~r.~, ,,,, n , ~ LZ.1 __.....__ AMeona 1"
Y (·-•• O , IM Ntlr 9-< ''• 11.ncll HO<;jll I OU ..,......, 0 71 ~\ 76~1 M•rth t Imp C~D t 01 f 1' A.ncO•QNSv I OF COURSE de 'h C•nr...:l S J_.,l~I ~·• f p i 1 19 NEW YOllM: {11.f")l"'o (;th 7 1t 711And C:l•Y l l'CI -prov1 e b.": ~ '~~ 1~~ \~\ {1~ ,l, l'• -The tonawlno <11uo. tn( F118 6 6) 1~1 AN,~eCP .2s
most baste of fringe benefits ~••TCl'I ~ i • I"'",•' v•. tt 1, 1.11on1 $UP<>I ect ttr. /"""""" • ,, t.ll "~o011 1 "' ..., ~ '" 1 0 an<• 1t 79 • "'" Na!lonel 11.!ISOO: no Ttnd 11111141 APL Co•a -Social Security cove rage -"1r 1n. 1,,~ 11 s~utn JO\, l• '>~·on 01 Secyr11oe~ 1..a•1•• 5,32 '1111.PL Pl c1 °' ) " J1<:a~• ,: J\o f"' Oe•lllrs Inc: 1re INT(;!< 3Un1v11 ii.PL DI 8 50 not only because it's the law Jf '* 111~ 11 \1..,~1n c 1~. 1n tne Df'lt•s ,., ""°''~~ 1nw Cc.l 12 u 13 oo 11.,.,•,• ,cM• t<llP ..... ». Im W•I 6 '-1. "'ti' se(~rllllli lllV Guld I 91 • 91 Ye ., You pay any 1nd1V1dual worker .,•,", "•"",~June• F 11 .» 111 " tiff" 1nv '""le 1~ao1!111 ll.rt1r1N o.>t ' 0 j .. J~nutn "'• l•'• ~~ Ibid )•: ballthl lnvei 8a. 1116 I ,IS 11.r(JlaN Pl 1
as little as $S0 per calendar 11tn"l•• 11,,.l~~~~~~.f"S', ,! .• 7~1(aa.a 1 M~nd•Y 1"r0\'°"~1 cr,oi;r,°'!~f•P~v~ lti quarter bul also because ttUs , u'"',,, ,•,'• 1e 1C~11s1 .,, 11 ~ ,..,, 111, 11.~~ Mut 'Y 1019 11.r ans os !II
II ::r , ''•ICll••• JO )' •Mrdn 10 l Prca •'S ,9.Armca$r 160 lax assures vita v important £" 8rt.1 '' , 6•1l M:A•f C.rn ,• • 1 A.am •ally Fund• srox~ u :11 '° 07 11.clnC'D 1112 10 ~n11u ~ H t7 IC••I"' s s Gn•" I ll 19:, S•1ec1 119 9 •6 A.rmoo;r l 60 financial benefits both before c11• ,1 "' 100 1GJ K•ar r 1r , 111, 1n<:Ol"l 1 t2 • n V•r P~ , J1 111 "'"'' a• •is
I C•b<itl 6'~ 6•,l(elltfl ~ •• 0 In'~' 711 !'.tiln" lll>ft •61 i01A.•motCk IO and after the emp oye rclircs ~11 u 1 ,s ,1,, 1Ce11wo ,. ,.,, A.d•lf" ~ s• 'of 11ie1 1e u 11,. 11.rrnRul) 1 6'
F II b k I b C11! US 71 )S"oKe~fl f::: l• 11-ll,ll.fhlald l~C '' "v 111 71)11.r'ltCn<O 911 -ma Y a C 0 3Sl~Ctv Inv 16 i ll i''e Flb 11~1 1•,Afutre 1,1 lt•J Hneodt Tl.II !J1Arvln Ind I
num•-one your own •• 1• ',',',',',,."' ',','. ",,·, ,',",, c,~\ '' 7~1.., A.11 Am F 11 t9 Jo1tf!.in 10 •1 l'O ,2 A•llld 011 1 'IO =• " c \'• t'1 II.lb! E11t 9.!7 911 Kavsiane f, ndi A•lll l'lrew
ltd Do r th Clln1Mt•l1o!J,lno lM ,1>,Alph1 Fd lll111..A0Aoollo l:OI09i>A~•d0G\JO I U es you r e er 0 er as c_1 <'!Ton 0 •" 9 Klna1 El '" 1 , ... mcao s " 6" c11~ e1 11111t 11 And srni 110 K•W. Co 9 ~101~1'.I'! ffu' J 09 31\ C\I• B7 1'16 115'ASSdTr•~ 10 'My Minnie' and bousl lhal ?~r er; '~ 'n,_ KnaD Vol l"'· 11 , Arn ov•n 99llOtS Cui fq 115 t6t AllC:tvE! 1 l• -., I( els! J 6•, 11.E< \DI tM Cus Kl 11• ... All R cMIO 7 she's a 'member of the ,'0~,i:. C.,0 '! •,• . Mc r011 ,,, l , Am c;"n s n , 1& cu• ic2 , !19 , 1s "'11 11:1ch ni J """ L~ct 1 t,:rl •• , ... mJnv 6l0'30 Cu\Sl 17]111 1!9 Alll:c~ol710 fam1Jy' '> ff SO get il Stratght Callln• F It•, 7'l Lt::O Rei. t , f>, Am Mui I •I t 1• !°' l' 9 H 1n JI II.II~! C~un I " Colon Sir ~s ' ,6 L~~ Wd •.11 11 ~ A.mN (;1ft , " ) II U• ) 1" 7 !"•'"o' COl't> that "Minn re IS M r S Ce>m,e1 JT • 3'''> La,.l>fl s• 1 , , 11.m Pac 111 111 "' s.t 010 3 •" '"' ~
So bod h Com C•r "''• 0 '• Lff n M 11•, 10 Anc~OI' Grauo ol•r lit •2S A.ur11r• Pit • me y, that Se does not com 11111 7>• 2>1Le~"'11,,,, 11 15 C;,cill 13' t T~rnlc~b et• 1 dA11tooo!t11 Ind
belong to you and that she ~:: ~:r J: !;" tL!~dc~r '!'' 1:; f;:;,:~ 'l r, 1ilt ;!<kG,y~ '..{: l2~ :~~: ~r1 ~'°
d t ('be b Com 1.i11n t•,1o ~e11wc; 11,1111 Fainv 1 10 ,s1••rl1<nl•Ul61IAYe•y ," M oesno wan o a mcm ercomP1¥ 11.11 lt vl"Tn .~, .,,,.,11oF<1 111111 Lftoer1v j "'o•A,•~,"',,~ f r I th ComD A ••• Lewi• BF ' 11'·' 113-a 1 11 1Jt Lfe j lll 206 lJ y~ D o your am1 Y any more an cma em Jo JJ l!!ll eu 101 •'-' • 11.~rron 5 50 , 01 t lfe nv .., 11 t Avon P""" 1
You WRO( (O be a membc f t_rnp !n\I ' 10 l~b IW I '1 A~t Hou9Mon lflf. Nol lOOll lO tj All« 0 I Gs r o cm .. lrt 1 , •'·I.Git cdv ~ l ,! • i=una .., s s1 , os !.:r,1, s.tY~r ~ 1
hers E:r:''~~k ~r~ ~ • t~,11E1cn ~1 It 28 ; Fvnd 11 1..61 • 21 C•noa 36 6136 61 l'lal>t:• w 116 Cl S!ra!ll o 1 •~Mid GE i 11'• U" j>«•C 'o o '! '> ',J C:oall 10 SO 1~ 50 8a~'O IT 61
'',. '' o• M 1 ''' 101.10~. ' 0 Mu! 1ll31l1l Flol• GF l•l onr • • • • 611..,10 81bi.on Iii l1iMa,gn• In Ill 18tllal(; DffU .\11 C~nl r~n '• J1 0 M1ll~fl lii 3,1 Beoc"" lll91J l•Maf;h1!1 6 ?8 186 8anoPunl 61)
t::i:ers L ~j ; ~~ ; ~:::?~ ~ l • • •• 8!•9 l(nt I 9l '9J MIU td lG.!iS ! I $1 A•11<>P "''
-want some sound
invest111ent infonnation?
C0>m V• '''•]! Monor C 71, 1 1 Blalr Fd 107tl llfMI•~ lh 11691!71 P.~olC..-1 101
(rw!•d 1~ 1' >Ma• Mia H , I~'• ll001d~lk ~ '1 6 1' Ml" lr IJ,361 ~ Bonk o• NV j
M" Gr 11 11 f!o1lon $1 175 I IT Male< Ill Slit l'lon\ Tr>• Crel! " s1, 1•, •rm ••. ,1 Bost Fdn 10.SSllWMei"'~ 1170 11" ,,,-,,IOI• Cr••' Fa 51, 1 , Brc,.r .... 0 '00 0 " _ •• 0 711:i,. nl.', Mlon l~A Mu I 01 1.:i l!ard Cit 1< Cr0>5 Ca 11 ' •1' • &; 31 J.l 8raa<I SI ll 92 13 ti Macdv C11 U 1• ll '7 llaslc lnr ID f~i~~~ ~ 1:~• l~1, M~dlcv w 1u , ll 'Bullac-C:arv111 Mj11v • n 66 ll ti Ila!•• ,..,0 O•n•v M 1•, 11 "'"° Mia ?I ?&"' llulkk ll 11 U Oj Ml Ft! 119 11! 11•1~1 Ml pl 1 l'<!lrn Yl SI C1>r>lln 18 .. 711, MIF '"" S •1 !.lo! "'-••h Ind 0111 0><J 11 ll'o I 10'• 11'• Olv>d 3 11 l t lMU OmG •9~ !.!lS l'l•thlll Ill>• 0 1t11n P 6 1 111,M<lld C• •• s, N•IW S '"IOStMu 01"1n t1•10-'9 llitJ<t~lb on Oav1• Fd •' 1', ~:~l•x GT 11' t 11 NY Vnl 17 &119 $1 Mui Sh" U ll U JI fladrL•b 10 01• Ml• I• • 711•, .... DI w Ga• lQ • \! Bu>.'.A I'd I ll t 07 Mui T.-1 ) 1~ '1ll P~vul<Cl<1 SO ~·.•,,11: !", ',,'", MIU VIG 11 .. nai.cc Fa 1 11 ,,.HCA Mui 10.-<llD~! A•~·nn~, \Xe know a man you
can call who is bacI<ed
by specialists in the
maior financial centers
of the country
I !us n1an has anS\\CTs-or can ~et them for
)Ou-because he knO\\'S he can draw on a 'rast
store of know lcdi.,rc a\ a1lablc to him from experts
Jn 111s (1~n11at1on He can rccomn1rnd invcst-
1ncnl !-lral ('l,'V \\Jth spcc1.d conhdcncc because l1c
l~ bac\..e<l bv lllll.t·COl11pany IC<llll,VOrk \\1h1ch IS
a 111a1or fa r101 1n s11ccrssful money 111an.1gcn1cnt.
C,111 hi1n 10 iln<l Olli \\ hal S h:.tppCQlllg Ill tll&
111arkct1 th e rca::ions bclund the act1V1ty, the
outlook for trend-. and performance. Call him for
1rtfon11auon on <l1,1dcnds and :;:phts, tncrgers,
obsolete sccur1ucs .•• ( n11gh1y handy information
tn help )Oll file yriur 1969 1nco1nc tax ).
Call h1111 abo11t 1}r1cr quotations, large block
t radc~1 p rofit-,.har1ng and 1ct1rc1ncnt funcls.
Call hin1 .1\H'111t 11111t11al funtls1 bond s,
cn111n1od1trc o::, npt111ns, 111 ,.,.. c)ffcrin gs, or atty other
a)pt'ct of 1n\c,t111cnt'i
I he man 1~ • c 111 ' He's nnc uf our n10..;;t 'aluablc.
a~rt,, the llc,111 \\1\tcr .Account Excc11t1\r
J le" ..1nr>thrr rril .. On '''h) t\Cry th1r cl
Dean \\ ittrr rhcnt L" referred to 11~-by a
Dean \Vinrr cli~nl Contact )Our ucarc~t
Dean \\ 1t1<r office toda).
Yott' re tloJr, lo men wlio ~now
iuhttr )'OU invrst WJ.1h •• ,
DEAN WITTER. «Co.
INCORPORATED
San Francisco • Lo< Ani:t:lts • Chicago • \cw ) urk
Brcnlon n C)(J!l ,,
sso Newport Cent l'1' Dri t•t, T!I lllt r 111o uc1ar Plc.n
Ncwporl Beach -Trlr 1il1tJ11,. 64.f 221'12
'-' " ""a ll1ht \ ~ , Cac•rnr I 'l I 61 NII Ind f 91 '91 Aept F<!t 1 0fl\IX Ch ~' ' 50 ... MOd s I ~ • 10 • Coon '"" 3 ,, ii JS !'!" 1,~v11 I 6] • :ZS Aet~,,,~~ s~ Del C~nf I~'• !l''>i,\nMWl<Cll 10 )! •("~DI Shr 6 11 1 •3 "11 ~""Cur Sor Att101c\ '0 0•1 18• 19 l 70\< Monm l"I:, ll • 1•~• Cent Sftr 11 n 1164 B&!&n M '7 1117 ll~o;:hll.r 75~ Otv Am 11 ' \AV, .... anrt P 10'< 11 C~~11nlo111 F11ndJ ll._fnll 535 Sit l'leleoP•t 'II Oewtv E !O•, 1 ! '> a<1•I S ,•,•, •,0• ~ Sal•" 10 &1 ll 11 r,,~~" : li ~ ~~ 'leldnoH 61"' nl~n (r 1 • 11 V.lnt T•A • 1,• Com SI lJI ltl pf Sii< OO )09 Apll How 60 0 ~( lnt l'' St, Mol<n M >'> > II • (;rwtn S ~J S 96 l"Cllm 5" ! 70 l'lell tnl••C~n D .. ~, CM ...... er Club ,,. ,, l'KO'TI 7 11 ')I 51QC~ 1 •! 10 II~' c_., I 0«'.vl•I IS' I 11\\ Mutllor • '" 4'~ Srotcl t " '6) Ntl Grhl 0 I 9 9J fl~I( I 60 0000~Y J~g .~. J,~ =ut~I t/. 15 i•» C'1~•e (;rou11 Ntuw•n 11).o11 i. 'le<>dl~ at J •Yt 1,• I' (•1111 1tJ 1 ~1 Nfw Wld 11l11J•5 fl&n-!l'ln 1 "'1 Oovl• 08 ''•21\HCC Lt~ _,i,,,,• F u~d 10711 117Nowton U'91S9Sl'l~lll' o!J ""
',o_••.•--"-'--'-'.•-'.'.'.'.'.'."-'-·--"-· l'rnt SI •l "•l NOl'eA•I U tf litf 8e'lft,: all JO snrM 101.<111110.: .... 011 690 )~ ll•nF So'1so
H ead • Jlleet
Robert I•' Jlo)'t, vice
prcs 1dcnL o f f''trsl
.1\mcr1ca11 T itlr Jn:slH·
ancc Co Sa nla .1\na
\vil l ser ve as general
cha1r1nan for the state
<onvenl1011 of the Ca l1-
forn 1a l\lortg:agc Bnnk.
ers \ssoc1at1on 1 hr
n1<'cl I:) sla ted fo1 1\pr1J
ll-25 1n Palin Springs
1 he lloyts reside in
Tn,.t1 n
Jtoutc Asked
S11ttl I 0 t 4 O"'""'" I ?I I ;Ill 11-utl C~emi:t 11Wltl11DO I'<! ll9'11S:1'1 "-""'"''In Caklnl&I 101 Fd 9 •110 lO llerkPlla 111 c:""'' • '' 11 u o"" vims 1'.S• us• ll••me• c~·• Fynd 10 II 1110 O'Nt I un6v~ I ll•!h ''' I 110 c,,....,~ A lD 111 Or>oen~ 1 i. 1 !O Blac'C~ 110 'VtM 6 01 6 IJ OTC Sec II 00 !I 91 11!.>!rJnlt~ d Col Cir ~ 1l •I I?'~ f>~ce r',;d I~ 15 1 l 1n 1111 .. t~"" 1 C,timm< 11~ 9 n P~nn ~<> I Rl 1 3' P.•ock HR 1i Co•"S Bd ·i~ snP~ Mui JIQ 11Q n1 ~11~1·110 Commo.,wn~ Fd• rinu~ l!Mlll" llol>b• fl•-• c~a Fd !Bl 91.;f" "rm oo~ t9~ !IO)!!lnnco 4~ lncom I ff t 1) Pila! i )II') 1 1 llol,Ca• 15a 1n11e I 8 A' t 1R P ne SI 10 ~& 10 l>6 Bon~Mth Ill SICK~ I SO t tt f'lon En> 111 I 11 8~dtn I 10 Cwl!h AO\ I •O I 11 Pion Fnd 11! n 11 SI f!croW1t ! lS (Wiii\ CO lAl 1)~ Pl~n Inv 10 JS till Borrnon• ! O C:nmo Ai 11 ,. U 11 Prl<" F<1fl<I! Ba. E<!IJ 1 C11t
com"'1 111 111 ~"1:'~. 1~ U '~ ~ ::";~rtA :nc Como lld un8V811 N tior ;~ b1 '~fl? BrlooS! I ' i~ Comp Fd ~"'v•ll Prn l'ulld 9 oo 9 9' Br 11 Mv I 111 Cono11~ • 91 111 Prc•llnt , !9 ! 01 Brls1Mv 011 CDMatd lJ SI IJ 'I Punl•n t Ii 10 U 1awv Hale r Car~<>I ! 11 un1v~I Pu•n•111 Fund! WYHI DI A.1 Ca111u In 4 11 •.. Fau 1 I 1' 9 11 l'l~lv"uc; 1 n C1tnll Ml I 0 I '1 G!<lra 1l •1 l' U 8•awn c_0 Con! c;1n t 1l •:ti r.r111 t 6a n ~ B•awn cc al Corn LO 1• n 1160 lncom 1 fli! I ,, !"'" s~1~ 1 Cnt~ Cl" U 36 ll ll l•v•1t 6 RR 1 S7 wnS!lof 1 so C•n Wl'.llv ~'" ~ 1~ VISTa lt1 9WI t11n•W11 O.St Cr~ WOal IQ 31 1111 Vav~e 1 lf If .. OuC•Er l :10 'eV111 M 6l II ~1 \1 lf•o Tttft • ~• .o 9u<'d Cn to OK81 Inc 11711?16 lleve•~ 11571?.S• Bulk> ~ DI oo
Oetl!Wt• 11 o• 1J n 111oun1~ ~ 06 7 Ml IVdQel In j.O Oell8 Tr 7t0 1 s1•••lm "" S•J !•& uftFcra I la Oovm1 F ~~I 6' ~(~U1lr 11 U 16 SI Bulovt w ~ 0••••1 l• !'IA!• icv<'orr FuM!s l'lun~ ll tmo Orevr rd 1AA111~ Int In• ''"~·~!! B~"'-11: 011 ~ Or@•I LY 111lll10 Sn•l J1 t ll"9!l f!u•llnd ljO E~•on&How~rd Pal 1•M l • M A~rlNc•'ft wf 1!1l~n t 1J 1Q !l C""' St Ill !. 10 U BurlNor n•w G•wlh I' 7t 11 •• t"' ""u I J JI J 611 1urn<1v 10 tn{om 'DO 6 Ill ~r Inv I·~ I U urra~' U ~at<! • •1 1~ "'I~'"" 11,.., • •o 10 n Bu>hUnv Jll
S!O(-1111 U 0 ~~I 5~:~5 J: ~~ :: ~ E~>'I ll •ll~ln\"' 99010.M
!"•rtt 12 )0 lj 31 ~lei 1 10 ~1 !Iba! Ca '°
'•"''' $c >>I n II r. ~111 m1'n., ,: J 11 S1 ::11~'"b1 ,...,q, ....... ~1....,1 Tr 156 9lli e o!tL 5
"'•"• 1 n ~n1n11 a •ff ':n ca m:is., 1~1: EQullv 8Al t •l ~wn Inv I 101 c "; ~au! G!I'! 11 5' lt 21 swinw GI 1 JI 1 •T f~g,~ ~J
Es•ew U 11 ~°"'' Inv 1J" u 10 "" p1 l 10 Fvt r-it '" 11~11)1•~01/Clrl •n tO? dPI ,c,,llO Falrld 10611160 Slf rm Gt SOI sq11•n11\d 110 l'~d Grin 1, fJ H ll ~!alt S! \l"•Ylll 10 c_ Bdcil ,:1d C1c 11 Ill T' It Slf•d..tt~ Funit\ 1r0rv" l cO 0::111 Fund no• 16 •• J.rn Ind 1000 ~ o.. erllil• 60 F1n T•"d '1l1''17 l"ln1' '.., I I! ••o c&Oh s Fl"~"( ~I l'r<!O Stien ·~~ Ci !lrcPLI 1 "6 Ovnm ~ 11 6 17 ~l~ n Rot "~• ••Plch 1 60 lnlt •I •ll •.fll ~•I l'•il\11 t•r!t rC!" t•cO"'l 1 ;c • n (..., n o 11" 1l ,, ••rGn 1f);.: lun! •IO ~ t \ 310-:~ ll '1J 1' •r!trly <• FstF v~ !O lt \I IA \ua t~c;1 ~ 'i 1..rtl !"'~ ~\II• O t 11 911.1 \wnl~t •~I,,,, ~,11 -r .M "''' 1~r.1~ 1n 0511 ~~ .... , r.r 1~•1111' ~Ir•, 110 o::o 1~s1~ t ,\ • ''l'Mll AP l• 1• H 1' Ct C.,.-o
"" 1>1111 au tOI '"'~" tn •~1 Ctro C,,.Q ~ "''' t.~t i 1" I Ir' Tt•ll...:I <" A" (e!A~flt(a ) i:st ~t'• 11'16 .. ttTK~'>OI '~•Ill 1·•~11 ntA.I ~ l'l•I CIO I II fl""ll (;I )! '1 ?11' t~a 1"1 Sii
l'll>t ~ .. d /?I D"'r Mtt , •• ""•"I l'<IY "It C.!~ 79 10T•A~ r~a ''~ l •lctn•Jud l •I
l'nd "'°' SIO ~·1l~'l;,r Ef111/!~\~~l (f!llllll 1.LI •ou'"<!rs ii• •6 Twnt" (it )Ill 3,, C 11\Lt DU~ fau.... • fl(! !O" Tw•C ·~( • II 'II c~nlllPS I n l'r•ft111" Cr""'o Un" 1,0.wt t•l)lft~ CeMla Ef I DNTC t ll> \~ 71 Unllll p '~ 1~ ,, C•nMPw \ • C'•w!!I 64 110un C•a 11 ltl ti$ C(n1 $W 911 ui 1 6 • 1 01 uni"'o ri:u'"" cent s.oy' •
E.rec!!IJ l" I -1111 T~ Ct~ro ~ ln(Cc.., '11 i l! ~~ ~ 7~ I~ Ct11Jtl _ ,N,
F6-1iN.JI U till\ 5CI" 1'(11"°' Ct•ltted lO
DALLAS (UPt) -Branlff ;f~G s~r' : :; ;~ u~3n~1n I ~ ; t~ ~Vts~,~ :,'
lntcm11t1onal Alrw"r-; hns ask 2.~~11r$•( 116111 " v\.~ ~~"" 7~~ 1,, ~~:"..,!';~ ,'"J.
I C I I Bod 11.r•c " /<I ''I ln<DI"' •f' ''t '~ cdt1e 1v\ AeronAu1cs :ir c.,.., \1 """1j1' :se• !• ~·' , .. ,c,~~rt!•'<V •
I ,:vr "" J • ~ V11Cf\ •ol 1 lj ~" n~1~,..ft ! to nr a new nnn stop route ,.,,n,11 "" •1 V•ndrtu 1" , •1 Cl'ltt••r """'' •· I d lh r; • .,, Ind ""Jfl "'911 •'~ 1~• C~''"'trn 111 111,.:l\1een Alilnta ;"In e ... .,yol-ft l•MUM:V\'"'" 1 ~j5 •1 C"-ftnNY )fl(I Dallall·~~on Worlh <irra. ~~1:~~~ 1•oo fi v .I~~ ,n ,:;:,~r, ~'77'i~ i'a
Hl-'1 ,,, 446"1~0\ Mw \T ~SUF)ICl't• o~o .
AntNTION TO LITTLE
COURTISllS , SUCH .AS
AN AMSWIRED l'HONI
IUILDS IU'filNlS!.
835 . 7777
C 1~ 1 ~f ! t1 • l"'ltn G•W<t C~·"~'~" 1 H~ft·v• 1:1 ~ r·~•r fl'''' C~crA,, 111 .,••ht-• .M iv~1r • 11 l~ ~1 C111•,o.~•PJ1 d
"!••JI'< I 1' ~'I l l'•r• • '! 10 Jt (M~PP ,.., ct HA.!; l •\I 1!1 ' I l T~c~" 11' (~l'n•1 T • M•~l>Got •o 01 '""" 1~'•11t•c~R•"cr VP 11ra~· l I Ct W~il!• 11 0) 11 I~ Cftltl t!NoN Hirn~ '' tJ WllllJ• •)<ll"""c:•oc~r~o -o
CM f "' 41> Wifl<• T'd I°" I n °'"""~!l M
H Monn 1• H 1 ll '!' Ind ''' I 11 Cn .. 1C!1 JI"! 11\Jb'\mn I" I -\l~tellf' 1171 l•u c:~r1 t"'',.,
ISi G!l'I SH J.I ~ "fifi,, A' j" (~•••le• 4'1 ············••liJ\~~·t I' i 11 = :::i..~ "~ ; ;: ~ ~ OIWI Cli I Ill
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itlat•ket
Syu1bols
I
T111sd1y Matt11 10 1970
Tuesday's Clos· g Prices-Complete Nelv ·York Stock Ex:ehange List
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Prices D1·op Down
As Glamours Rise
NEW YORK !UPI) -Prices c'osed slightly
lower 1n hght trading on the Ne\v ) ork Stock Ex
change today although glamor!i attracted good
demand follow1ng heavy losses l\1onday
IBM and Telex each down 1no1e than 8 points
1n the previous session Jumped several points
\Yfth !11emorex and Motorola also 1n the plus col
umn lBf\1 closed at 326 1/2 up 9 314
.J~ = ! As for t.hc hst s general behavior analysts ~t ... ,l\ said \Vall St1eet appeared to be marking time 1n :f~ = ~: the absence of pos1t1vc economic nC\\ s l'OYt • "41 ~ ~ ~ The UPI nahonw1dc indicator \\as eff 0 19 per
n cent on I 563 issues trad ed Of ~hcsc 699 declined I 1•1 II d 11(1 ••· " , an d 576 gained r~ co 1~ a !~ ! ~ J i:,::. Eno 1' "• The Dow Jones industrial averarie the blue T•""" '°"P t \o -'° T1-nCo •O 1• ch1p barome1 er \1as up 1 39 al 799 70 near the Ttc111N1 1J1 "• I To<hnkot1 C.11 3'.. c ose ~~.',;.,~ • 1 1)91 .. ff~ t Turnover of around 9 5 m1l/1on shares coin ~:~~YCor;'
''"" ~ pared \11th 9760000 sha1es tyJonday ~~:'~0"1?1' 1: • _ TtMH pJ!CI
l• • .. I \J lh d ( ( ( k z 1•>\l tO 160 lS ,. _ ~ nong c 3) s mos ac 1ve :'\ oc s \\ere a Tt•ET•" , '° ff-..:? pa ta Noress and Tenneco Inc The former pointed ~::&:·~/.: 'i1
" + 1011 er and Tenneco traded 1n fractions t:~~ ""~"
30,. -l•••l "'' 10 " • k l z N d h 1••0 G~ OS ''-:. -1 " spo esman or a pa ta orncss sa1 e \Vas Tt•PLd .,.
9l2t 1n tifedb'" k d i dd T1xut1 110 'l"--.., mys 1 y u1e stoc s ec 1ne a ing that his Tt.i C1I "
'" [ ( ] Te~lrft Pn 01 1J. 1rn1 is no p ann1ng any announcement possibly r~ o11o ""
lUa .; ' n h h d 11iomllrl ! O• ,,,. 1n uenc1ng l e cavy Ira 1ng 1""" P'lll 'II
31" 1 f 111(1,,,JW ft;~ ~~ ! ': Prices 1\eakened on lhe \n1c11ciln :.>tock Ex ~" ~oy~ :§
13' Change In light turno1 el r mt n '°" N ' -'• 1\"'••Mlr SC I) TMkltl l lD '" -••:i '"'"'"':r"'"~~:;-:,-,"'"'"""":-r.-::--,,,,..,,....,,r:;o--,..,,.,.,l t11n 111tv 10 loo 7 ToddSll• 11fl ~C)I,: ~ ls~~~ -:-:! ]: , J: • 11:. :'.. .. j):~r~:~ *',~ "1l : . ~ : • -~::,~~r ~
llo -\• l>~IW' I •l U ~:lo J I •'lt1M l lO 1 1'\o J6 :16 T1~tC1 t0
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J 8 DAILY PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE
su,.t•t0• COU1tT""O...-nir-
1TATI 011 CAllllOIUllA ,0. !l!I COUNTY Of' fllYEfl$10l
U.SI NUMal!ll f7'1f SU~ONI
UNlTiO CALIFOllJH• llANK, 1 (Or· -•lloft. P .. 1111111-~ 0 F, .._ l f
MEflCUA.V CENTltf.. INC, 1 C1tlfllrn11
""""'ilan1 WILFJIEO E. MOFFATI 11111 MAllllON MOFFATT, Dttt1!d.,,t1
PEOPLE OI' TH E STATE 0 II
CA.1..IFOllNIA lo Ille IOCIVI n1mH1
Dttend1n'1:
You 1•1 dlfKI~ to Ille whll Tiie C~'k ti IM1 Court In ,;,Met> tM IOClvt tnll!!od
tc!lon lt brouthl t wrl!tirn 11flHlln9 on
•t•POflft lo 11\e vtrll!l!d ComPltln1 wltMn
Ip .• IPI 1ft9f' -Mt'VICt 011 Y"" 91 th!•
-111, II ltrvtd wfllllo1 ~I 1>ff•
1111'1'11<1 r_r, er wllllln ltl!ttr '"'' 11 Hl"VH 1l11W/ltf'11, ftX<tOI 11\11 II 11\t I~·
•Ion I• •t•ln•I r •1u1n! to 5"1:· ne., oc t oM ot Civil ProtM~••
w 1111 1,) You l•t ncr111-o 11111
\1"if>t Ill• 1 w rlltf.fl n!•1oru.l~t
D'-•111 .... lhf. llL.lln!ll! Will i.~t f!,l<lgmenJ
to< 1nv money or dt..Yg .. dt~-I" ~ C°""'r.lft!, It 1rl1i ... llOOll ~Mir•<!,
11~ wltl ..,.,..,. to ~ c-1 IOI' '"' o!h•r
rell•f cltmtllded In 11'>1' Cotnoltln!
Yeu ll'Mlf ....... "" Hwlct ., t R tlWM'
.., '"" "'tlllr <-KIN wit~ II>• Ull'I\•
,r.1"' ., 11111 111m..,.M. Suell '""'"'' •'*'Ml ... CtltWI,.,. wUlllR ""' ,; .... llm1! lltlwd Ill lftit llj"! ...... I far llll ltt t wrl!ltR
tltMliflt It .... CMltllllt!.
!SEAi I DONA.LO 0 . ~VLL1V.t.N
COii"" Cl!-r~ '""Cle'•' o1 1i..
S.U...rlot Coutt ol "'" 5111• or C.1lllt1ri•l1 •Dr 1~r County of Jtl~rtKlt e,, J. PtlrtlO<I. O~ty
Dt•M DK. 31. 1,.t
GENDEL, lt,l,lltOl'I', SH,1,ttllO
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•
Tutsday, March 10, 1970
Ora11ge Co111aty Co11cert
.LA Philhai~monic Orchestra
Shines Witl1 Bartok, Ravel
By TOr.f BARLEY
01 '" 01\lp PllGI Sl1JI
1L was good to :;ee 1he Los
Philharmonit~ Or ches t r a
slep out or the Germanic rut it
has so painslak1ng ly dug in
Orange County and turn
Saturday night to Bartok and
Ravel as the ingredients of an
exciting and stimulating con·
cert.
r
'
r.
I
ENTERTAINMENT . -
.... mockery and JSalire -l'A'O
qualities capably exploited In
1nuch of Bartok's work -and
~1ehta·s close di r e c liu n
1 ensured a faithful reproduc-
tio.1 of the great 1-lungarian 's
message:
Our conductor was no less
devoted toJl_avel 's swi rling .
sensuous "l"a Valse" which is
second to none, including
Bartok. in the af o re s aid
mockery and satire depart·
men!. Its qualities have,
perhap s , been b es t
demonstrated in d11 nce form
but ~fehta reminded us anew
..,. ' '
I
Let tlie 'S1inslii11e'
I • ' I ,,,
.. .~ .. . . '
<\.ctor Foster
Sla les 'falk
ti1otion pie.lure <1ctor Ron
Foster, v:ho doubles as an
Orange County playwright,
y.•ill address .a general meeting
of the Ana-l\Iodjcska P1<1yers
tonight at 7:30 \l.m. in tho
Anaheim Public Library.
Foster 'A·ill discuss his ye ars
tn Hollywood and his ex-
periences in fi hn and stage ac·
ting. The public is lnvited lo
the meeting.
4.IM WHthilt a1111tv1r4, $ijllf 100
I.JN "'""1 ... C.lllOrftlt fOll41
"Ttl: Olli 11i.-
.,1,1to.,1tJJ far Plllf1.tlll
This is not to say that we
ha ve had enough of the
Beethoven. Mozart m1d Haydn
\1·hich so often pro\te to be the
cornerstone of our Orange
County Philharmonic Society
concerts; but ii was time for a
change and we gol it with
par Ii cu I at l y brilliant
performances of l'A'O major
works of our featured com·
posers.
Bartok's superb second move.
ment - a brilliantly handled
n1oto adagio .
of the glory to be found by the
capabl e director in the work's
original orchestra structure.
llere again we have abrupt ' Mary Sulli van as .''Li\tle l\1ar~ Sunshine" serenades forest rangers (from
cha nges of pace and theme left) Don Ca stle, Blll P owell. Richard \Vood and Bill Berls in a scene from the Publllll.cl o.~,,,. COii• Ot!!f Piiot.
l'eb<~1r~ 24 t rocf M1ttl! 3. tO, 11 t"O
"'"'°
LEGAL NOTICE Pride of place narrowly goes
lo BartolC$ Diverti mento for
SUtf:RIOR COURT 01' TNE St . 0 h . d . STATE 0 11 cAL1Fo11N1• Foll nng re estra an some in·
TNE COUNT'I' OF OllANGI spired direction by Zubin No. ,1,-SllU
NOTICE 0 1' l,l,ll OF llE,l,L ANO r.tehta probably tipped the
tlltSON,1,L tltOf'IRT'I' AT tRIVATE scales in its favor. This S.t.LI[ ,1,S II UMIT
Es•••• o1 M. M. McCALLEN. OectaseG. magniricenl work is well nam·
NOTICE 15 HEii.Eii'!' GIVEN lh1I 1111 d d • · h h \ll'ldfr11e_,, ,, co-E~K11111rs or 1111 w111 e an 1t rings t e c anges
ol M. M . M(C,1,LLEN, OfctHtd. wlll Pll from gTOle""Ue \<ariatiOnS Of Al l>l'IY•le ul11 ••• llflll •o "" hill~... "'1 .. rod bftt bl-• ,_,,, """ 1eo-m1 •nd <Oft" gypsy themes to sublime '"'ion• ~,,1.,.u ... Mr1 •11r'"· •nd •ublKI symphonic passages that are lo contlr"ltliOll ol 1ald s.....,,i.,-Courl, on
Mehta controlled what is
olten a bewildering change of
pace and theme 'vitb authority
and ao obvious famHiarity
v•ith this complex a n d
chanllcnging score. This \Yas a
I re m endous improvement
from the last li1ne we l1eard
his orchestra play this \1•ork
and lhere was. Saturlay night,
a constant fidelity from the
strings that was not apparenl
at the earlier performance.
1llC work is rich \vith Mon<Uv. M1rch 1,, 1tll!, 11 1r.. hour 01 particularly effective l n
10 00 o'clock A.M, or 11\t'tNl!ff, wl!Mn•--------------------------"" time 1UoweG bV l1w, •I ll'le olllca et1 l
H.t.ltWOOO. 500EN J1nd AOKINION 11
5lo0 NrwP01'1 Ctnle!" OrlYt. Suitt ~:M.
N,..._I B~1m. C1lllor1'll •• u •It h!. 111~.
'""'''' •n<r esl•ff ol wld M. M. McC,1,LLEN. dKtased. •t fttl! llme of hll
oj•tlt., J1nd 111 righl, Ullo•"" lnte•HI 11'111
uicl esttle h1s 1<<1ulrl!d, by ""'"""" Ct! I&., et OlhfrwM, otl'ler rl'lln or l" """ltlon
1"11 lh•I or !ht uld /lo. M. McC,1,LLE N If "'e 11..,e cl his CIN!h, I" •nil to 1111 re11
"nd Pll"ll!<l•I P•0"19r"' 1ltu•ted In ftls Counh ol Ort ftllf, St11e Ct! Cllltornll,
Clf!•t<rlbfd ~·· ,1,n o! tnt ln1'••sl ol '~' dt <ed!"I •nd
I~• ln•~•t•• ol !hi• '111te In end lo lh•I
011 ~"" GP$ Let•~ bt!•wtf1> tho itnantt
In Commcn ~! 8c!11 Luld~. "' let_,,
~nd $lgn1I 011 •nd C.&• Co!T'Plny, I t
•"1M-e. c11te.:r December 1. 1'4l, 1...i
•e(Ofdl'd Febr~1rv 11. H4oL !n Book
11:11. P19e IOI, Olflclll Record• o1
Or.r1111 CounlY, C1 llforf!l1, A• •mtf\Clf!CI
l!y All•ffmlnl •~"<lint oil Ind Ill
1'.t.'" ~1..,.,en llclu Lind Cotn11en"i
'"" Ttnt l'IS In Common ol llo~
t•rocfs, •• le•-•· ind SltnJ11 011 end
G•1 CIM"l"'IM"Y, 11 IHIH , cl1tl!d Apr\I 2G.
ltSl, ll'ld recOl'dM A"91111 2', U)l, l"
llooll ?Jn. P19e 192, 0111<.ltt Aecotds Ct! o,,...,, Cl>llflly, Ct1llc>rn11 tloffeln
"Sou"' L••P"l, 1~111dl1111 .,11 or 9olit
Ten.t.nll ri,ht, llllt -lnlertsl '" Ind IO ll'le JS... n+!"1 Profits ln ... Ht 11
lkKrl""" In ~••nr•Ph ll, PHI JS or
w lcl Soull'I t tJl>t
,1,11 Ct! l'le lnltt11I ol l'M dec!dtl'I 1r.d
'"' lntr•HI ol !I'll• "'''" ;,, lh! LetH <l•n<I Ju"' n. ltlO, recorded Uec:cmber
11. no. '" e"°"' 1u11, P1qe ru. Oftlci•I 11.tcO«ls ol 0•1nire County, C1lltornl1.
t s 1tr>f'nelt'd by "'"-~mtndln1 o!I
1nd ''' "',,.. <l•ltd o.c~mber n . 1t'1, '"" <Kor-OKetntlet ?3, lt4!. &I
lloci( 111', l'J111t 14, Ind II f\tr\htf ,.......,<!<I ll"f .t.tr<'t"mrnt betw..., Bolu
Line! Com111ny 1'111 tenants In ComiiiM
111 llols• LJlnCI,, "' lnso<s. •n<I Slen11 on tnd C.11 Como1nY. •• "nee, d1t~
A..Prll 70, ltSl. '"" r•Ctl'Oed ll1111u•I 2'. ltJI, In llooll ?171, P11,, 1n, O!llf l1t
11'.-cords or Or1nwe CounlY, Ctlllornl•
t11t•eln "N.,,.tll Lt•~•"), inwl1r 1s ~•111
Horll'I Lt1se ,...,t•lM to and !CW...• •
1t•lP of lend Which !1 more Ptrll<ulariY
deoc•lbfod •• l\t~rn bf.tow 111 fortll,
lotell>er with !hos. oil t l'ld t•• .,.,11,
•"" olll•• ltcllltlu loct!l!'d lh•rao"'
"Tn11 cert1ln Pltttl ol l1f'ICI In fhe
C:Ollnty ol Or•n1t. Slat• of C1lllornll
be'lftV POrllOM ol SfCl10!' ft, '9. JJ tf'ICI
3,, Townthl1> s Sooth, 1{1nv~ n w~t.
S.11.11. an<r M. cle1crlbf<I •• • Wl'lo14-I•
loT~· 8fGlnn1n~ ,t I!\• tlorlll•r\V termlnus
of '"•I t•rl••n 1,,.,, Clftc•lbfd '" lnden· tu•e ot ltl!tl botwtrn Bol~ Land r: ......
Sub11iersible 'Doavb'
The unique 'Dov.1b' scours the ocean botto1n lonight
at 7:30 on Channel 4 when J acques Cousteau's
"Those Incredible Divi ng J\1achines" is aired.
Films show tests of early aq ua.Jung. the 1948 ver-
sion of bathyscath and the latest divi ng saucer.
Seven varie1ies of minis subs will dive at Costcau·s
command.
01ny •nd Bol•t Cl\ltt Gu" Club,1--------------------------) Ln>Of"1, enll 5111'1dl•d OU ComP11nv,
Ln1ff, llaled Julv 1. lt?O tntt •~conlrd
In llo'lk l•. Pl•• 1611 of LtlM'S. llt'<O•<'•
OI Ori,,..• Coun•y 11 "•~In~ • be1rln<1 ol
~·h "'"" • 1....,1,, ol ''50 !,el; 1 .... nc:~ 1I011• w ld tin• SGul!\, '150 fftl to th.•
'"'• oalnl ol Df'IJln"I"" ct th•• dt.M:rla-hon, s1ld paln1 11o1..., "'1r Soulhwnl <II'· n•• ol PIQI C l$t111C1AtCI llol\.I L•1u lt 11'1...c, '10' If ~!' W , lhtntf 1631' N
1 .. :IO' w. tnt11t• ,SJO' N. u • w w ,
1htna 1110' N, .U' XI' W .• 1-t 1i0'
J>IUJ or m1fllll \. u • 00' W. to ll'>e In·
ter"cllor! with !he .,..1,1n1I tommoft
tin• Detwtt" !!it Norin 8olu Le11e
•fld the ~ou!h !10111 Leise, '"'n<•
soutlll11!1rlv follcwinv 11rJ1!n1I ccmmtl!l
le.111 lint Dlt' lo I~ r>0lnt o! ""91".
l'f"'· The .,\lav• lletc•lbl-d l llr'l<lt ind
ltll\U II•• ~fre!n !le1«lbfd 11 ",t.ul9n·
ed l•no'"· tw•ll>tt Witt. •II of Ill• rl .. 1>!, •Ill•
.. ,.,, lnt.rn• ol lht ll<'ttO•nl •nd JIH n!
lh• •lol>I, llllt and •n••r~t of lhl\ ••Ill•
tn 1n<r lo 8nc! 1>1'1de• 11• derlv•d tf'l'lm ftll o• m• n•eM'ntlw t•l1!1np arnl v•ll!I tl•t
'"' '"" c•••...,htld e~· ••if•. our(~"'' t nd o•ocnsln9 con!rath 1 n cl
'"'•"""'"'' .. nd a ll ot"•r (<l"l•dth. At•ffm'"'' tnd ln''"'"''"'' COllnttll'(I
wl!h or .,lllth 1111ec1 •••d "'"lo""" tallds ln.ot1r 11s Ill@• cfrt•ln therf!o.
Tooell'ler wlt~ 1\1 or th• lnl•<e1I ol "''
d"<:P<lfnl t nd 11>e ln l•<e>t cl !his t1••I•
In t l'ld IO 111 P•r-11 P•OJ>erlY, lfll·
pr~""'°""· tll••mt"f\. p,. rm I I 1 , lit•""''· 1"fYlll!Cle• Ind •lthll-Ol·WIY
111..-l•cl uoon er 11...i or llPh•I or "•"'
for tulurt u•t ln tl!'lne<llo<'t with tr
wMth •'feet lht e~oLcratlof>, dtvtkll>· '"'"t o• 0Mr111on of t~ Ault"""
L1...t1. "'ocrutlioft. 1•••1!,,,., ttorino "'
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B,y Tho DAILY PILOT
Ju•t for 1Peanufs1
Ct·oss\vord Puzzle
ACRO SS
1 """ S T111k lsh tillr
lD And others:
L atin: 2 words
14 City on
\ht Arno
l s Sy11thet1c.
fibtl
lEr lotrinationa1
all\;lnce
17 Gtokttt·
s piel, e g.
19 US Go~\.
tmp!oy~es :
h1formal
20 Rrstra1ri
Willi a
cha111
21 Born
22 Busy as . ... .
2 words
""23 •••• brar 25 Litt: Prenic
2b Possessive .,,,
30 Ftinale
animal
31 Re ier
1nd.,ttt!y
34 P1 incipll'
)Er Suspe11s100
of lu~hling
38 Traditional
RCMP
color
39 Full
41 Renting by
agreemeot
..-3 Prior to
44 Architec·
h1raJ orde1
46 Under
emolio11al
st1ai11
l
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"
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49 --81un-
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52 Varn ish
i11qrtdirnt
53 Praistworthy
qua lity
SS Tea.st 51 Rocky pinna~ le
SB Cuddlt bl Roof
ovrrhan9
b4 ··-·-····· hlazes:
2 word~
bb Gland:
Comb. form
b7 Willow
08 Ory
b9 Pause
70 All !.et
to go
71 lastt ·••·
OO'liN
1 Barbtc.urr's
ilCCtSSOIY l Fruit
product 3 Htl!J'r;
-'bbr.
4 Household
l1xlurt
5 R1 intd
'f.tl_ -
b Pait of
tht body 7 Spare in
fra me
8 Term ol
tndea1men1
9 Poke r
players'
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1
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a ntcess.ar/ result
11 Small
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18 Soa~ nax
24 Footish!v
fond pf!ISOll 25 farm
!>Ound
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28 Crrla1n
taoape~ Z words
29 Pe1uvi.1n
monetary
uni!
31 One·spot
32 Oull
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border
35 Physlci<1B:
Informa l
•
15
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m~nifesl
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p•otess •nq plaol
53 L11r9r rum1n11nl
anima l
54 Throe.":
Pref!i
55 Rip
Sb Move forward
will!
dilf1culty
57 us
miss lie 5Q Pierce
bO Preposition: I/"'. bl Put dow n
b2 Remoanl~
b5 Sp-tild lor
drying
" " "
" ll
"
,
with heavy demands on the musical res uming tonight at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
strings. particu larly in those --------"----''-------'"--------C.::--'--'--'-------1...::'
lempcstuous rina l passages.
But all came th rough with
flying colors and a splendid
airing of the evening 's closi ng
\\'Ork,
Ravel 's utterly deligh tful
··~1a ~1ere L'Oye" IMolher
Coose J suite opened o ur
Havel-Bartok evening a n d
here again the shimmering.
impressionism or the grea t
f'renchman was carefully con-
veyed in this touching, ap-
pealing work.
Its final pa ssage the
lustrous. drea1n-like "Fai ry
Garden" -has long been a
favorite or the write r and is.
in our opinion, without equal
i11 its field of music. ?i·lehta
and hi s orchestra caugh t the
spirit of the work in every
detail and added a little
enchantn1ent or their O\vn to
this glorious "Mother Goose.''
Barlok 's "Miraculous Man·
cirain" suite brought us to the
intermission stage or the
Universily of Califo rnia at
Irvine concert and th is clever
\\"Ork -based on a particul·
arly bloodcurdling and gory
·ale -enjoyed a careful
;cading.
Bartok again rings the
changes "' i l h astonishing
rapidity in this swirling \York
but ?-.lehla and his orchestra
\rere more than capable of
1necting "the demands of an ex-
acting and exciting score.
Take equal parts of Bartek
and Ravel. add a fiery d"ash of
Zubin ~1ehta, leave the shak•
ing to a disciplined and
dedicated Los A n g t I e s
Philharmonic Orchestra and
you have a musical cocktail
par excellence. •
It .was chilled. of course, as
all Orange County concerts
are: by the tradition al
apathy of an audience that
simply doesn·l kno\v how to
applaud. Mehta should ha ve
been brought back a doien
times for the Divertimento
a·nd very little less (or !hat
final Ravel.
He came back to llic stage
exactly three times. Jt just
isn't good enough.
Children's
Guild Sets
Workshop
The Children 's Th e a If! r
Guild or Newport Harbor vdll
offer a new c re ative
dramatics Y:orkshop f 0 r
adults. scheduled to begin
April I.
Pat Hu1ne, a graduate of the
Pasadena Playhouse a n d
former member of the 18
Actors. Repertory Company,
\\•ill be the workshop director.
The classes v>'ill run ror 10
\\'etks and tuition is $15.
Further informalion n1ay be
obtained by calling ~0-2484 or
968-5632.
Also in the \'torks !~a drama
v:orkshop for high school
s1udents. directed by Tom
Lag11, an assistant profe~sorof
theater. This class is l'=chcdul-
<'d for June \l"ilh a
performance planned for la1e
July,
Fosse Direcls
l!OLLY\VOOD fUP J)
Hobert Fosse will d1reet
Lay,•rence Tur m an' s pro-
duction of ''Burnt Offerings."
,,....,ft
IUllKll't ·totOll • '-,llWl)\lljf lrtlfAK ·-Poi'~! Plltvtes Pr&nl~
.AbiJR:hlo·n;1len1e
CudiC>i '"' l«"'i<cklt 'A f'l)'O'fQlnl Picll.rrl 89
Di1·ty Man Weds •
'L 1 I ' Z . V .. . a 11 g t· 11 anies niting
By VERNON scorr Julie Andrews so he changed I
his name. IJ ~!!!!!!!;;!i!i;i;;! llOLLY\\1000 (UPI) -Not I "If viewers choose to see Ui.Wlmll J•ldJ12 fo1 1NfQ111UlQ1
since Tiny Tim and Miss Vicki him as wicked or lecherous, HELO OVER
married on the J ohnny Ca r59n 'then il is they y,·ho have a 9. ACADEMY
Show will a television nuplial warped point of view. Not
rite touch as n101 ny heart s as Julius .•. I mean, er, Tyrone." NOMINATIONS
lhe \\•eliding of G J ad y s The versatile Johnson also INCLUDES
plays the Russian, Rosmanko, BEST PICTURE Ormphby to Tyrone Horneigh. on the show in addition to the BEST ACTRESS
These cuckoos \\•ill pledge Nazi. \\'olrgang. and Rabbi
ihcir troth fl-larch 16 on Shanke r the Indian guru. But
.. Ho"·a11 and ~1 art in '~ his favorite is Tyrone.
Laugh-J·,1," the highest rated •·t concei ved Tyrone In 1958.
series of th e year. ba ~ing hin1 on 11 caricature of
It is a lriun1ph for dirty old a lillle E"ilglish barrister. I'd
n1en. do.ne him al parties and on a
Tyrone. as playl'd by com-TV commercial, bul never as
edl an Arte .lohnson. is the a full-fledged character before
white-hai red amorous old goat Laugh-In," Johnson says.
11·h,o has been m o I e s t i n g Once he assu mes the iden-
Gladys on a park bench for tity of Tyrone it is oflen dif-
aln1os1 l1Yo years nov.'. ficull to shake him oul of the
Gladys, a frump in baggy characterization.
s"·eatcr and stockings, in· Asked why Tyrone \\'aS mar·
1·ariably has socked Tyrone rying 8 ha g like Gladys.
"·1t h her purse in response lo Tyrone na rrowed his eyes in
his advances. regret.
Both Gladys. portrayed by 'I r d · · b Huth Buzzi. and '"''rai1c. il ' \\'as orce into 11 Y an
'J e:11:-bartC'l1der and an ex·used 11·ould appear. could do better car salesman.'' he explained
in 1he 1narriage market than _ the former occupations of
they have. By comparison Dick ~'fartin and Dan Rowan .
Tiny Tim and l\1iss Vicki are ''They \\'anted Tyrone to be
li1r. and ~1rs. A1neric<1. part of "?ilake Amer l ca
Johnson is one of the world's Beautiful' by getting him off
great put-0n artists and feigns 1he strerts and away from
indignancc \Yhcn Tyrone is park benches.
described as a Jech. .. Actually Tyrone Is not a
I 'liie,jtime Q/'-l I
~ti§s:fetm"Ilrodie
J.~r.gii;Smith I ;
BARGAIN '
MATINEE
WED., 1 p.m.
fREl REFlfSHMINTS
MAT. ADMISSION 51 .00
"Tyrone is not a dirty old man to be tied down to any
man ,'' he bristled. "He may one woman. J can 't guarantee!;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::::::~::::::;::::::;!I
be a health haiard and a th ere'll be n marriage March BALBOA
eyesore. But a dirty old man? 16. 'fhere arc three possible •
Never. I take umbrage al that. endings: (I ) the sna ke ending 673-4048
"'The truth is T Y r one f2) the molten lava ending (3) o,EN
1 lorne.igh is no! his real name. the space ship crashing into 6:45
He \\'as born Julius Andre\vS. the temple ending." 70t r. lalltN
As a boy he \\'as called J ulie.1------------a.11tN Pt11ln1ula
\\!hen he entered s h o "' 1•--------'
business the re already
HELD OVER
TWO ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
~man \•:ent !noJ,ins for America
And cou 11ri t t•nd 11 i!nywhere ..•
....-ric,,..,.~·~. " .........
••111.,~•IO•,..-"
:i.1t;~11'1,-.;11(\.
,\,, .. ,,rl>u• 1',.J . .._,,r., l'11•!1•·•1u11
Peter'O'Toole
Petula Clark
"Goodbye,
Mr. Chips"
' ... ,,~"'""
LIZA MINNELLI
WENDELL BURTON
n.Jlen1e (uc:liQO -, ..., ~£11.' T""'°*" (!!Jo
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE
lfST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
-GOLDlE HAWN-
"THE NIGHT THfY
J:AIDfD MINSKY'S"
St11rrlftt Elliot Gould
.. .. • •111.t.Co-1 •\.YO ... T OLLIS • t
••T. COAIY ......,., I l•N DllOO f'W¥,
•47·8008 k• NUNTINGTON OR.toe;H
ACADE MY AWARD
NOMINATIONS 2 e BE ST SUPPOllTJNG ,A,CTOA;
-RUPERT CROSSE-
I Sc eve Mc Queen
lhe Reiver s"
7 ACADIMY AWARD HOMS.
il1cl11dlnt lfST PICTURE
BEST ,A,CTA:ESS NOMINATION
-MAGGIE SMITH
'liie,jtime Qf
'MiM!fean'iJrodie .. _
6MaggieSmith
o!h1 r newip1ptr 11111 you 1 mo•n, I Yt r'I' da~. tbout whtt't 1 9oin9 ti" in the Greafer Or1n9a
Ct111t l h1" lh1 DAILY PILOT.
YOU ARE THERE
Al 1111 HUNIU
SI Allll lff(
MOST RIOOOUS
ANIMAts ON IUTH
HELD OVER 2nd WEEK
AT THESE THEATRES
w,,1 Ct••' l'"•Jt $1Vtt1 C••U l"llu. f'•• Anaf!.tl"' l~M• AcJ..t1Wll--"•bl&..NllM..ltW41U NMMt
W ..... dlft •1»-J: oo,,, 11
Jgf\. 1:U41)0.J,OO·t :U
'"'· lJ1ot.l111•41)0.11M·t:ll
Adults SZ.50 Under 12 75c
-~,,. .. ~f ·
-~ 67l·6260
.2905 Ecut Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
EXCLUSIYE AREA
PERFORMANCE
FOR ADULTS
7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
IEST ACTOR~ -D11tth1 Hoff111011 • Je111 Yolt ht
l!ST ,ICTUIE
IEST SU,PORTING ACTIUS -Syl•i• Milt•
lfST DIRlCTOI -Joh Schlflfllf•r
I ElT !.CRIENPLA T
IEST FILM IDITING
Shawl11t• et 7:00 e114 f :lO -Mllff .... S.l!doy
I
l
'
17
' 17
•
• •
a ·Beaeh
N.Y. Stoeks
• VOL. 63, NO. 58 , 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1970 TEN CENTS
Capo School Election: ·uphill .Fight for Funds
The Capistrano UniHed School District
-like mosl school areas on the
C~ifornia Coast -has proven a tough
area for passage of school funding
measures.
And to add to lhe uncertain picture of '
today 's override and blind interest elee·
lion, school officials said it is the first
time in memory voters have gone to the
polls on a rainy day on any school money
measure here.
District Superintendent T r u m a n
Benedict said the area's only real surge
of favorable elections came in the first
•
half the 1960s 11when conditions were so
obvious that most people knew something
had to be done. We even had students at·
tencting class in tents."
But records showed that sailing was
rough at the ballot box for the major
school dislricls or lhe area both beJore
and after unification in l~.
The district in its present structure,
has batted about even in its four elec·
lions.
In 1965 its first bond issue passed, then
later that year a measure to receive
state aid for the district failed.
Troops Ill Laos
Get Combat Pay
WASHING TON (UPI) -The Pentagon
disclosed today for the first time that
U.S. military men stationed in Laos have
been receiving combat pay of ~ a
month since Jan. I, 1966.
Also Without any previous public an-
nouncement, t)le Silver Star for gallantry
was awarded posthumously lo Capt.
Joseph K. Bush Jr. of Temple. Tex., for
the action in Laos in which he was killed
Feb. IO, 1969.
Bush was among 27 persons reported
by the administration to have been killed
or listed as missing as a result o( enemy
action in Laos over the past six years.
A Pentagon spokesman said the while
receiving combat pay, men stationed in
More Workable
Laos have not received the income W
benefits granted those in South Vietnam.
The benefits are complete exemption for
enlisted men and a $500 exemption for of·
ficers.
Airmen stationed in Thailand who fly
missions over Laos have been receiving
hazardous duty pay. with Laos routinely
lumped with other Southeast Asia area:;
as hostile territory.
~1eanwhile western sources said today
the North Vietnamese had established a
command headquarters inside Laos -
the first of the war -to seek bigger
wilitary gains that would be consolidated
by any peace negotiations. •
Laguna Planners Okay
Changes in Sign Law
By BARBARA KREIBICll
01 tM oail'Y Pl"! Sl•lf
Laguna Beach planning corrunissioners
agreed Monday night on a series of pro-
posed amendments to make the city's
new sign ordinance mort workable.
The recommendations will be reviewed
by the City Council at a special adjourned
meeting Wednesday night. The council is
expected to instruct the Planning Com·
mission to institute procedures for amen-
ding the ordinance, including public hear·
in gs. . .
In the interim. councilmen plan to in-
struct the building and planning staff to
administer !he ordinance as if the
amendments already were In effect. This
procedure was suggested by the city at-
torney as an alternative to adopting an
urgency interim ordinance. .
With the moratorium on nonconforming
signs scheduled to end April 15, the action
is being taken to give merchants time to
bring their signs into conformity by the
deadline date.
The amendments cover :
-1\feasurement or signs : now to be deter-
mined by enclosing the sign area in
seven straight connecting lines, instead of
four as in the original Jaw, to avoid pen~lizing an owner ~y c~lcu~ating ex·
cessive blank space 1n hts sign area.
When the sign consists or letters mounted
on a panel painted the same color as the
building, only t.he message area of the
sign will be measured. No re-entrant
lines may be used in calculating the
area.
-Parallel signs : instead of requiring a
minimum of five feet between sign and
side ownership line, the amended law will
provide that no sign can be located closer
to the side than a distance equal to JO
percent of the building site, with a
minimum distance of I Y.i: feet. No parallel
signs are permitted within three feet of
any other sign on the same building.
-Pole signs: will be permitted to be in·
stalled parallel with or perpendicular to a
right-0f·way on a corner site, instead of
anly at a 4~egree angle, as now re·
quired. and ":i ll be permitted the same
projection over right-0f-way as al!O\,ed
tStt SIGNS, Page ZJ
Monkey Bites
Feeding Hand
A wayward monkey who has a
painful way of showing its gratitude
has a new home in San Clemente
loday.
It's slaying \\'ilh Mrs. Kathy Fifer
at 301 Avenida Del Mar after the
housewife found the small primate
wandering the streets Monday af.
ternoon . Mrs. Fifer said she took the ·waif
in.
A few moments later the monkey
gave its thank!.
lt bit her.
Mrs. Fifer, undaunted, told po-
lice she would keep the little guest
unless someone claims it.
Still later thal same year voters ap-
proved th~ measure.
Lasl0 year the unified district's first at-
tempt at an override fa !}ed by 70Q votes,
but voter turnouts for an election or its
kind were substantial -40 percent.
Previolls to unification the road toward
voter approval ·or school f i n a n c e
measures was even tougher.
The old Capistrano Un.ion High School
District passed its first tax override in
the early 1950s, then n I n e consecutive
bond Issues fell to defeat.
Finally, in 1962-63 a bond issue was
passed and shortly thereafter a ta1 over-
ride measure won adoption, too.
.. By then it was so apparent thst the
schools needed money that we received
more yes votes for a change," Benedict
said.
-In the old San Cfemente Elementary
School District, where Benedic served as
superintendent before unification. lhe
record for passage was a litUe better
than neighboring school districts.
In 1947 and In 1951 bond issues passed.
then another failed in 1953, followed by
its passage that same year. Three con-
secutive overrides after that railed, then
one passed, followed by permission from
voters to continue the override tax rale .
After that two other bond issues pass-
ed, one failed and an override election
passed.
Soaring pupil populations hit hard in
the San Clemente-Capistrano Valley
areas in the early 1960s.
"The desperation was very apparent.
\Ve had students attending classes in
tents and quonset huts," Benedict said.
Community support throughout the
dozens of school elections varied.
For a lingering period; cmnmunlty
feuds between San Juan Capistrano and
San Clemente were blamed for the nine
straight defeats or the high school bond
n1easure.
Community support for last year's fall -
ing override was "good," Benedict
observed, "but this year i_t seems that all
!he possible stops have been pulled and
the \vork by supporters is truly the
greatest.
"In fact, 1 believe if we had this year's
support and activity on that last one, we
wouldn't have to open the polls today ,"
he said.
Agents Claim 'Gouging'
In Laguna Narco
My Lai Capta.in
Faces 4 Counts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The com·
mander of the company that led an
assault on My Lai two yearii ago was
charged with four counts of murder today
by the Army in connection with an alleg-
ed massacre of SOu.th Vietnamese
civilians.
Capt. Ernest L. Medlna, 33, of Pico
Rivera, Calif., was accused of two
unspecified counts of murder "on or
about" Marth 16, 1968, plus the murder
of lwo Communist prisoners during in·
Boy,: 15, Admits
Bungled Theft
In Doctor Office
A I5-year-0ld boy with a history of
narcotics problems has confessed to the
burglary of a San Clemente doctor's of·
fice where his heist became a comedy of
errors.
In fact, the only thing he did suc-
cessfully was escape.
The youth , who was arrested over the
weekend by Los Angeles narcotics of·
ficers, was identified as the juvenile who
broke inlo the ofrices of Dr. William W.
Halcomb at 131 W. El Portal about two
weeks ago.
Before he. fled he was surprised by the
physician's nurse, bitten by her dog, then
flayed by the woman when he began to
ight back at the attacking pet.
To top it off, the capsules which lhe
auth took weren't what he suspected.
And their uncomfortable effeets, no
·oub t, lingered a while. The capsules
.t'cre potent laxatives.
Police in San Clemente sa id the nurse ,
Mrs. Jean Boucher. was returning after
hours at the offices to pick up some
1nedlcation for her sick son. She brought
her Scotch terrier Tammy with her.
As she entered the door she surprised
the youth and the burglar sped down a
corridor of the suite.
terrogation subsequent to the alleged My
Lai mass killing.
Four .other penons also were newly
charged in tht case by the army, in-
cluding another captain involved in ques-
tioning of prllooers. He wu accused of
two murder dlarCes.
Three more enlisted men also were
marged, bringing to 10 the number of
men so far charged In the alleged slaying
by American soldiers.
It was not clear at first how many
murder counts were made against
Medina, but the Pentagon early this
afternoon said the number was four.
Medina and other military men under
lnvestigaUon in the case are stationed at
Fort McPherson, Ga.
The Army 's announcement of charges
against Medina said in part:
"Capt. Medina has been charged with
murder of two persons on or about 16
March. 1968, maiming and murder of one
suspected enemy person and murder of
another during their Interrogation late in
the day of 16 March, 1968, and assault
~·i ti1 a deadly weapon on a third in-
dividual while Interrogating him on or
about 17 March, 1968."
All those chafged, with the exception of
an inteUigence officer aceused today as a
result of interrogation of prisoners, and
another captain previously charged, we.re
connected with Medina's outfit. Besides
IO military men charged so far, five
other military men and 22 civilians were
said to be under Investigation.
Medina was commander of Company C
of the lst Battalion of the 20th Infantry
which made a sweep of My Lai 4 Hamlet
in search of suspected Viet Cong snipers.
The commander of one of the Company
C platoons directly involved in the opera-
tion, Lt. William L. Calley, has been ac-
cused of 102 deaths and is scheduled to be
tried at Fort Benning, Ga., in the spring.
Anti-insult Measure
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sen. George
Deukmejlan today tntroduced a bill lo
make it a crime to call a police officer a
pig or any other insulting or threatening
name.
• BIDS FOR UTT'S SEAT
State Senator Schmitz
Sc hmitz to Seek
Seat in Congress
Vacated by Utt
The long·assumed fact that Slate
Senator John G. Schmitz (R~Tustln) will
attempt to succeed the late Congressman
James B. Utt in Congress was confirmed
Monday.
A special election to be set by Gov.
Ronald Reagan some time prior lo the
June Z primary will allow 3 5th
Congressional District voters lo pick
Utt 's successor in the House ol Represen-
tatives.
Early May is the anticipated time.
Schmitz, the only avowed John Birch
Society member in tbe State Senate, is
cast in much the same mold as was the
late Mr. Utt, who died March 1 at age 70
in Washington.
The 39-year-Old Schmitz is acknowledg-
ed to be the front runner In the race for
the Washington vaCl\llCY, while Assembly-
man Robert H. Badham (R-Newport
Beach) may be jus\ on his heels.
Badham is expected to announce any
day whether he will also campaign for
the seat the conservative Orange County
Republica n held for nearly 20 years.
Bust
Five Teens
In Exclusive
Area Held
After raldlng a borne tn a rather ex-
clusive Laguna Beac'1 area Mooday
afternoon, state Bureau of Narcotics
agents alleged they had been "goQ&ed" 1
little on the prict of a mariju&n1
purchase but added, '"maybe it's because
of the bJ&h rent area.·•
An agent's claim to have purchased 11
"lids" (11 ounces ) of the drug at 926 Van
I)yke Drive led to the arrest of /Our 19·
_year-old youths and apprehension of a 16-
year-old girl who was turned c.vcr to her
parents.
Price of the purchase, agents clalmed,
was $100, a lltlle higher than the current
going rate of six lids for $50.
"We felt we should ha ve got IZ lids for
that price," he explained, noting that the
price normally goes down as the amount
purchased Increases. "But it's pretty nice
up there," he reflected, "a lot of nice
houses."
Acting on Information received earlier,
an agent claimed lo have made trle
purchase late In the aflemoon, at which
time, he said, the.re were "about 15 peo-
ple in the house."
When state officers, assisted by Laguna
Beach' narcotics officers Norman Bab-
cock and Neil Purcell, returned to the
house at 4:50 p.m. the four men and
juvenile girl were taken into custody. The
other occupants of the dwelling were
allowed to leave.
Police Seize Pot;
Laguna ~Ian Arrested
Laguna Beach narcotics o f f I c er 1
reported they seized two kilos of mari·
juana and about 50 grams of hashish In a
la!e afternoon visit to a Laguna Canybn
home Monday.
Taken into custody at 1195 Victory
Walk was Stanley fl o\, J Dye, 28, who is
charged with possession of marijuana
wilH intent to sell.
Orange Coast
Planners Agree on Laguna's Goals The uncertainty is the result of his plan
lo attend a di~ner in Washington and
Badham 's announcement is expected
1'hursday or Friday.
"'ealher
The Laguna Beach Planning Com-
mission concluded its study of the general
p13n goals statement Monday night and
approved for forwarding to the City
Council the section of the statement
prepared earlier by the Citltens Advisory
Committee.
With minor revisions, the planners ac·
ccpted the CAC statement word for word.
In 11.n accompanying lcuer . the plan.
ne:rs took issue with the anslysir of the cAc statement prepared by the planning
firm of Oanltl, Menn. John'°'1 &
M@ndenha". end specif~l)l..avokled-ln
cludlng any part of this analysis in their
rttomme.ndatlon to the council,
The Jetter 1l$ted, "It should be clearly
noted that t~e Planning Commission did
not agree with tht cons111tant1s 11n11lys!s
or lhc CAC goals stalcment, specillcally
his limited analysis of Laguna's social
problems."
The reference was aimed at project
director Abraam Krushkhov's conclusion
that Laguna's hippie colony offered a
.. creative potential " and should be "tap-
ped and utilized on behalf of preserving
Laguna Beach's image as a haven for •
creative people, intellectuals, arttsts,
etc."
Several of the planning commis.sioncrs
had taken sharp Issue with this stale·
n1ent. during goals study sessions, and
further c.rillclsed the omission of
reference to olher social problems in the
community.
The planners, In their letter lo the
council, expressed the belief that recom·
mendallons for priorities o r Im·
plementatinn or the goals should not be
coosidered unUI aft.er a general plan con-
'
cept had been approved by the councl.1.
The goals as recommended to lhe coon·
cll, are as follows :
All natural and scenic values should be
respected and enhanced.
a. Maintain the integrity or the con-
lour of the hills.
(I) Criteria for hillside development,
lncludlng building site and place-
ment. size or cuts and fills, and
design for roads, should be establish-
ed to accomplish this goal.
(21 Urge the establl$hment of a coo-
llnulng, long-ranp program by the
City Planning SWLol land ust.pl.,..
ning.
b. Maintain the .Integrity or U1e belch.
(I) All beach areas should be U'easu,-ed .
as a primary scenic and rttrcnUonal
RMet and a lofty community atUtude
deveJoped toward lhem.
I
(Z) The Main Beach Park demands a
most careful and thou.ghtful design.
(3) The city should embark on a pro-
gram ol acquiring sandy portions of
beach and easements lhereto in sup-
port of this goal.
(4) The Im pact of shoreline zoning on
the integrity or I.he beach must be
rerognited.
(S) For the purpose of delineatina pro-
perty lines. only chains and posts
may be permJtted seaward of the
~eanrront building setback line.
(6) Enforce protccUon and consider ex-
• pamikm of-the mrrine-pre~~''"'~•.-
c. Preserve a.nd enhance by landscape
design the natural wilderness, thUJ
preserving tht j'lsolated charm" of Lhe
Art Colony.
(I) The-beautltul cisnyons, aucb 1s
(S.. GOALS, Pa1e I)
Speculation over the political upheaval
posed by Utt's death has a number of
Republicans mentioned as posaible can-
didaLes ror his seat, or vacancies creat~
In Sacramento.
Republicans William Wilcoxen and
John D. Rat.tree, both of Laguna Beach,
have entered the race, along with
Oemocr1tl Thomas B. Lenhart of Tustin.
Lenhart was beaten once before by Utt
in a landSl\de vl.CWry and since
(Ste SCHMrl'Z, Page %)
S tork 1Uarkels
NEW Y.OllK...{Al!I -The stock market
continued to move within a narrow range
late this artemoon. (Set quoliUon1,
Page.• 16-17).
The averagt had not changed more
than a fraction or a point Crom the 1tart
of ·the HUtoo.
'
It's been a. long weekend for
Okt""Sol. but he'll be ainund oa
Wednesday. Temperatures along
the coast will 1Uck to the lower
60's, however,
INSIDE TODAY
Good neic1 for all you Diclc
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•
I Q~LY fll~l s~. Tvtk'flY, March 10 1Q10 . --
Capo Meet Adjourne<l
No Ruling on Rezone
A lengthy hearing on the rezoning of a
c:Ontroversial 19 acres "'ilhin San Juan
Ca'pistra110 pushed the City Council into
overtime ?-.1onday ll'ith ~fayor Ed
Chermak adjourning the meeUng W
Wednesday before a decision c<>uld be
reached. A packed city hall heard arg\lment.s in
f3\IOr and against rezoning 19 acres
between The Casas housing development
and tbe San 01ego l'Tee"·ay from residen-
tial to pl&.nned development.
Spelklng in faY<>r or the rezone which
has already been approved by the plan--
ning commission was Bob Ga1\oway, a
planning consultant representing the
views of the owners, W c s t p o r t
Enterprises.
From Page 1
SIGNS. ••
projecUng sigris.
A fUrther amendment would permit
devek>pers of shopping cenl.ers t.o present
a complete :sign program for all struc~
iures and permit the Plannlng Con1·
mission, under these circumstances to
rnodi£y: individual sign requiremerits to
achieve a more aesthetlc comprehensi ve
slgn arrangement. \Y}lere a complete pr~
gram is 11ot submitted, each structure
\\.'ill be subject to· Individual regulations.
Pursuing the subject of aesthetic signs,
City Planner Al Autry sought and receiv·
cd ·permission of the Planning O>ffi..
mission to distribute a letter to 10 sign
companies and individuals considered ex·
perts in the field asking· them to submit
liamples of "good signs."
The purpose, Autry explaintd. wQUld be
to prepare a guidance manual with ii·
lustrations of various types of good, con·
forming signs, for the benefit or sign
permit applicanl!.-
Commissioner Joseph Tomehak noted
that the city of Richmond has such a
manual and suggested that Autry obtain
a copy.
"The problem," said Autry, "is that
sign-firms are interested only in selling a
contract for a .sign I.hat will meet the
ordi11ance requirements, oot with aes-
theUci;."
Commissioner Charles Johnson said the
guidance manual would be "a wonderful
positive step that does what js necessary
without setting up an 'aesthetics board.'
l f someone wants to put up a terrible
aign he'll still be free to do it, but I.his
iho<ild holp."
Tomehak added, "Trying to legi~lalt.
aesthetics is an· insult 'lo the~·business
community. ·IL's talking u if they are a
bunch of Neanderthals. This i5 mucli bet·
ter."
Councilman Charlton Boyd, . \\'bo had
urged that something be done to en·
cout"age aesthetic liigns, and who at·
tended the Monday planners' session as
an observer, !iaid the manual was "a
good idea."
Roy Childs, also in the audience, noted
that "the loose language of the ordinance
still leaves several loopholes that people
could take advantage of if they wanted
to."
It was pointed out that under the prrr
cedure being used, the ordina nces could
be made only less, rather than more
restrictive. The language, however, coold
be tightened up during actual public
bearings on the proposed amendment.s.
Child.5 suggested that this be done.
From Page 1
SCHMITZ •..
Oemoc:rals are outnumbered Z to 1 In the
district by GOP members, his chances
·1 aren't much better.
The campaign announcement b y
Schmitz Monday included praise for the
late f\1r Utfs principles and ideals. an
1 echo of eulogies last v•eek in Orange
County.
'.--~~~~~~~~~~~
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Galloway 1ald th• condomlnl~m·IYl!t
development proposed for the property
would not do any harm to existing honles
in the Immediate area particularly The
Casas. He said \Vest'port owns lots in The'
Casas development and can't afford to do
an~thing \.\'hicb would devaluate lhls pro-
perty,
He said that "'hat is no\V permitted ·by
the old zone could be detrimentaJ to the
area if not <le\·eloped properly.
Speakers against the rezone indicated a
tear or higher density tha n exists in The
Casas, a disC<>nlinuity of archite<:tural
style and heavier traffic fiOY" especially
along Los Pajaros Street \.\'hich would be
extehded to accommodate the con·
domlnlums,
Thu a11'0 t<prt1'!<1 •1'1" over th• fact that the former o w n e r s
Transamerica Corporation had promised
them a golf course and other recreational
facilities on that 19 acres.
!{od Craig who was one of a group ol
adjacent homeowners \\'ho had met wl1h
\\ie.stport repre~entatives said he would
be · in favor of the rezone if certain
stlpulaliOns could be met, in particular
keeping the density to a maximum of
seven units J)er acre and guaranteeing a
Spanish motif. Westport representatives
·indicated they could comply wllh 1hese
demands .
The City Counoil officially closed the
hearing but postponed their decision until
\Vednesday.
Capo to Fight~
Railroad Fee Paid Reluctantly
Plucky little San Juan Capistrano
almott went into battle \\'ith a giant Mon·
day but Ume was against the clty.
Not wanting to pay a yearl y rental fee
of $645 to the San ta Fe Railroad so that a
city sewer line can· cross their property,
city Gf£icials almost voted lo institute
coodemnation proceedings,
They may yet.
But Tor the time being_ they'll reluc·
tantly agree to pay the fee so that the
Oso Creek sewer line can be constructed
hopefully by July 1. The line will proceed
from Oso Road north to the city limits
crossing an ac r e of ratlroad property
parallel to the track.
The line will provide services for north
city residents and some residents in the
Santa Margarita and Moulton Niguel
\Vatcr districts, according to a j o in t
agreemerit.
City Attorney John Dawson advised the
council that condemnation proceedings
can be instituted at a later dale.
From Page 1
LAGUNA GOALS •••
Allso, El Toro and Laguna Canyons.
should be retained in their natural
beauty as a greenbelt through and
around the town.
2) The cut and fill slopes of the Laguna
Canyon and Pacific Coast Freeways
and their feeder arterials should be
developed as a greenbelt.
(g) Provide that developers of hillside
and Canyon, both within city limits
and aMexations , deed land unsuitable
for development to the city. (lft ad-
dition to the existing requirem:eht to
deed usable recreaUon land}:
(4) Make provlslons for the d \y tc ac-
cept-wildemtss land as gifts. Develop
an Integrated pack.age of legislation.
legal machinery and well-understood
procedures whereby property owners
may dedicate to the city land, visua l
euement, recr~ation,1 easements,
pedestrian aoceuwayt, tree pro--
ttction rights, etc. These procedures
must J>e ~~gned wlUl the Nms of 1t1""*1li' jJn>te<tlng the property
owfter and the city and of supporting
GOal I.
(5) Encourage planned dtvelopments lo
preserve as much untouched natural
hillside as possible.
(6) Connect hillside wildtmess artas
with walking and bridle paths,
greenbelts and parks, and coordinate
with county.plans for same.
(7) Tree planting should be encouraged.
d. Maintain a village atmosphere and a
sense· of relaxation, peace and tran·
quillty.
ll) Preserve a community of in·
dividuali ty and diversity.
(2) Provide an atmosphere which at·
tracts artists and creative people.
(3) Establish the kinds of controls over
new construction that will preserve
the vlllaje atmosphere.
(4) Housing should maintain and/or
create individual identity.
(5) The placement, height and mass of
buildings should be regulated in ac-
cordance with this goal. Any high rise
should be planned for land use in ad·
vance , and restricted to limited
areas.
(6l Pedestrian paths, and particularly
their points of convergence, should be
inventoried and given mall, pla;a or
park treatment. Walkways should be
provided roughly paralleling arterial
and feeder streets.
(7) Landmarks valued by citizens
should be conserved.
c. Urban aesthetics should be fully
respected.
(!) EnforCil the exisUng sign ordinance
and encourage aestheUc design.
(2) All power. telephone and television
services must be underground with a
designated moratorium on abo\'e·
grade services.
(3) Archlttctural review of all above
grade uUllty service facilities should
be requiied.
(4) Dally trash exposure should be
eliminated. Make trash concealmrnt
and collection compulsory.. Consider
combining trash and water b\lling.
(51 Sidewalks and vacant commercial
property should be kept clean at all
times.
(6) Television cable hook·up and
removal of all aerials should be re·
quired. r. Encourage a healthy physical en-
vironment
(1) Keep our city physically clean and
encourage civic pride in it t
cleanliness.
(l) Cooperate with the various age.ncles
to control pollution ol the air and
water .
(3) Combal exc,sslve noise.
Undertake the precise pJ3nninA and
Implementation or lhe developmtnl of
specialty shGps and business areas lo ex-
pand and develop tourist trade and a uni·
que. a r t 1 , pedestrian-oriented en·
vironment.
a. Develop a program to prov ide ;ip-
propri11te and su!ficl tnt parking io avoid
overcrowding and traffjc congestion.
b, Through traffic should bt channeled
or eliminated JO as to free the downtown
aru. for primary pedc.slrian use. A
viaduct solution to the through traffic
problem is incompatible with Goal I.
c. A pedestrian -oriented village at-
mosphere with the character of the Art
Center should be developed with special
emphasis on downtown.
d~ Restrict automobile acess in some
areas, particularly downtown.
e. The limits of the Central Basin
~hould be defined as including the ad-
jacent slope areas, and the Jiving areas of
the slopes should be intimately integrated
with the commercial areas on floor of the
Basin.
. Insure the continued growth 0£ Laguna
Beach a! an art and culture oriented
community.
a. Build a library which meel<; the
needs or the total community and which
would include adequate rooms fo r
s_ludenli and rtseateh persons, an area
for \he children's reading room; space
for ,a ~~rriorial library; indoor and out·
door reading areas; an audio-visual room
and a small lecture room.
b. Contemplate building a cultural
center comprising. an auditorium big
enough to accommodate audiences for
the Civic Ballet, the Oiamber Music
Society, the Community Concert, lecture
series and seminars. with rooms big
enough for meetings of the service
organizations of Laguna; a small gallery
for municipal art and craft shows; and a
ballroom suitable for charity balls,
square dancing and honorary occasions
for the City itself. The existing facilities
do not serve these needs, nor is there
adequate parking for them.
c. Build art and cultural programs into
the school curriculum, integrated wll h
community aclivlties.
d. Insure the availabUlty or a youth
playhouse and art gallery ln addition lo
the tradilional facil!Ues in a youth center.
Develop a coordinated city-wide recrea·
tional plan and facilities to best achieve
the following activities: swimming and
beach activities, creative activities, ten·
nls , golf, horseback riding, hiking, bowl-
ing and cycling.
a. Retain and enhance the natural
beauty of our most priceless resource,
the beaches. by encouraging a more
responsible use and a judicious develop-
ment program.
b. Build more public swimming pools.
c. Develop the entire \Voodland Drive
area as a sports, recreation and youth
center. •
d. Build more tennis courts.
e. Design and de velop a system of foot
and bridle paths ll1roughoul the city.
f. Establish more neighborhood and
comn1unity parks.
linprove transportation for people
throughout the co1nmunity.
a. Encourage expanded bus transport&·
lion sen:ice throughout the city, including
shuttle transportation for retail shoppers.
~1alntain and support a school system
characterized by effi ciency and ex·
cellencc.
a. ~take known to sch o o 1 ad·
ministrators the local volunteer human
resourc:es !hat can be used to enrich
academic programs.
b. Encourage establishment of a school
of industrial and mechanical art s.
Prtserve equal law enforcement
without fear or favor.
Services Slated
For Rutl1 Eass on
Servicts will be h'td at S p.m. 'Ved·
ne~dsiy in Sheffer Laguna 8 c a c h
ri,fortuary Chapel for Ralph B. Easson. or
446 Dalmond St., Laguna Beach. who died
ri,1onday &t t11e age of 78, The Rev .
Ellsworth lUchardson will officiate.
f\.tr . Easson, a retired state employc, is
survived by his daughters. ~1 rs .
Margaret 14. ReemeUn and Mrs. David
Tu mer. both ol Florida: a sister 1 E.dna
Shaw of Maine, and by five grandchildren
and four nltc~s,
Burial will be al Pacific View Memorlal
Park, Newport Beach.
-~
-# J •
"
•
In CSF l 'ncident
EYES ASSEMBLY SEAT
Optometrist Frlz111l1
Nolan Frizzelle
Seeks Badham' s
Assernbly Seat _
Newport Beach optoinetrist a n d
longlime Republican leader Dr. Nol:1n
Fri:u:elle today announced he will run
against Assemblyman Robert H. Badhan1
(R-Newport Beach) in the 71 st District.
lie made it clear he will oppose him
even if Badham chooses not to fight Sen.
John G. Schmilz CR-Tustin) for the
\Vashington post lefl vacant by the recent
death of Congressman James B. Utt .
Frizielle, 48, former president of the
Callfomia Republican Assembl y, said
many problems of coastal Orange County
need more vigorous attention i n
Sacramento.
He "'ent on to list four of top prioritr:
-Protection of coastal communities
from oil and refuse pollution plus private
development that excludes public use and
beaches and recreational areas.
-Difficulties with properly taxation
and assessment.
-Controversies surroundinti sch o o f
systems and the resultant di sruption or
the educational process.
-Inadequate state planning concerning
com mercial aircraft regulations.
"T he1ieve there are solutions to these
problems if we vigorously seek them ...
and still encouraae broad growth and ex·
pansion." he declared in announcing his
candidacy.
-A native Calitornian, Dr. f'~ri1.zelle has
been in practice in Newport Beach for l!l
years and heavily Invol ved in GOP
political circles plu s community ac·
tivities.
He is a former membt.r at' !he
Cali fornia State Central Committee and
is currently chainnan of the Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce's Educa-
tion Committee.
He and his wife of 26 vears. ?.1ar\'. ha ve
four children. · ·
Vegas Teens Held
In Music Thefts
T\\'O teenage boys from Las Vegas
were taken into custody by Laguna Beach
police officers Monday aflernoon, along
"'ith a large assortment of musical equip·
ment found in their car and believed to
be stolen property.
Stopping to check a car parked al Cliff
Drive and \Vave Street at 7:35 p.m .• of.
ficers found one .boy sorting items in the
trunk , the other passed out on the back
seat of the vehicle.
The boys, aged 16 and 17, \\.'ere booked
as Lransienls and turned over to Ju venile
Ha.II.
S~udy of videotapes shol seven days
ago in a bloody police-student con:
frontation on the Cal Slate Fullertcin
campus led. fo.1onday to issuance: of arrest
warrants naming four a I J e g e d
ringleaders.
Investigators said late Monday that on·
ly one had been taken into custody, but
the cases are being handled gingerly and
~till more warrants are expected to be
Issued.
. One rlfigleadcr marked tor arrest, Jim
Cleair, chairman of the CSF Student
Mobilization Committee;, t 9 u n t e d
plainclothes pGlict officers at another
campus rally Monday.
He demanded that they arrest him and
!old a reporter aftUward !hat Fullerton
Police Capt. Fred King said he was not to
be t~ken Into custody in fronl of a crOwd.
Fullerton Police D e p a rt m e n t
spokesmen would not verify either the
videotape use for evidence, or their alleg-
ed desire to capture Cleair witHout
\vltnesses.
Chafges against him and three other
defendants, totaling six counts, include
assembllng to commit an ·unlawful act,
remaining present at an unlav.·ful act,
tr<'spassing and assault and battery.
The, others are senior philosophy major
Ted Schoneberger. freshman political
science major r!eil Hendricks, and John
Marlenthal. but they are not all charged
with the same offenses.
~larienthal. 2-1. oE Anaheim, was ar-
rested ~1onday and 'Deputy District At-
torney Del \Vright said today he believed
one of the other suspects had been ar-
rested.
Violence erupted ,on the CSF campus
seven days ago when a force of more
than JOO lawmen swept through the
quadrangle after a protest demonstration
disrupted a disciplinary hearing.
By Lhe time it v.·as over, 19 persons had
been arrested and five injured, including
three lawmen. and the CSF Facun.y
Council censured the way lt was handled
at a subsequent meeting.
The r.:hief issue underlying the recent
turmoil is the arrest and concurrent
Harbor District
Hearings Slated
For March 19
State hearings on two bills affecting tht.
Orange County Harbor District have been
sv..Jtched fron1 Thursday to l\1arch 19 in
Sacramento. at the reqtiest of the Orange
County League of Cities.
One bill, introduced by Assemblyman
John V. Briggs (R·Fullerton), calls for a
vote of the people to decide if the HarbGr
District should be retained, expanded or
dissolved.
Another bill, authored by Assemblyman
Ken Cory tD·Anaheim). simply requests
the state U!gislalure to expand the duties
of the Harbor District without a vote o(
the people. _
"We asked for the change in hearing
dates because the League of Cities
already has a meeting this Thursday,''
said Huntington Beach Mayor .Jack
Gr een, who is president of the League.
The Orange County League of Cities is
vn record favoring the Briggs bill and let·
ting the people dec ide the Harbor
District's future.
Briggs said anyone interested in the
Harbor District question is invited to the
hearing al I :45 p.m., March 19, room
2133, State Capitol.
Tiger Has Cubs
\\'.~SHINGTON (U PI J -The National
.Zoo's famous white tiger ~tohini has
given birth to four cubs. t\1 o of them
white like her. They \Vere reported doing
"'ell.
Spruce Up
Your Home for • • •
-.
school disciplinary a~1ion against two~
older CSF students Who heckled Gov .·
Ronald Reagan.
Bru~e Church, 31, al)d Dav I d
A1acKowiak, 25, were airested on war-
rants eflarging them with obscene coin· 1
ments in public.
Campus dissidents charge the dual ac-
tion constitutes double jeopardy -:-which .
the. administration denies -and ate peU·
tionlng to have both processes dropped.
Another rally was held Monday in the
quadrangle, but no incldent s were
reported , although plainclothes policcinen
were pre.sent to observe and take notes.
Cyclists Face
100 Charges
In Roundup
A blizzard oi paperwork -more than
100 individual criminal complaints -
cman_ated from the Orange C01Jnly
D!str1cl Attorney 's Office Monday in the
wake of a mass 1notorcyclc gang roo n·
dup.
Representatives of The Outla',j,·s The
Gents, The Nuggets and The He~sians
were among 108 men and women taken
into custody early Sunday in Holy Jim
Canyon.
Three buses were required to transport
the crowd -drunk and dls:Orderly among
other things -from the normally
peaceful canyon in O'Neill Park, 20 miles
east of El Toro.
~puty District Attorney Stuart Grand
said 106 were charged with drunkenness
and disturbing the peace, while two fact
charges of carrying concealed weapons.
Eight were still held at Orange County
Jail Monday, v.•hile the other JOO had
posted $65 bail each while authorities
studied weapons. drugs and other
evidence confiscated at the scene.
Addit!?nal charges could be brought lf
ownership of the marijuana, drug pills,
an array of illegal weapons, and allegedly
stolen cars and motorcycles is establish-
ed.
The weaponry included three shotguns,
a rifle, five pistols, a homemade
handgun, lengths or heavy chain a
longshoreman's baling hook and dozen's of
knives.
One of the confiscated items was a ball·
and-chain device modeled after a
medieval mace.
Mr. Henderson's
Services Puinned
Memorial services will be held Thurs-
day at 4 p.m. in Old North Church
Forest Hills, North Hollywood, fo;
Cha~les ~· ltenderson. composer and
musical director, who died Saturday at
his Laguna Beach home at the age of 63.
f\1r . Henderson \\'as the father of Peter
Henderson of Newport Beach, of the com.
edy team of Sklles and Henderson.
He also is survived his his wlfe. Bliss of
the hoi:ie. 265 Viejo St.: a daughter; Sally
Laughlin of Las Vegas; and by niri.,e
grandchildren .
Born in Jamaica Plains, New York,
l\tr. }lenderson was graduated from
Harvard University !n 1928 and for
several years was a pianist with the Fred
\Varing band.
A composrer, musical and vocal direc-
t.or. he worked on more than 200 feature
films and was for 10 years with the music
department of 20th Century-Fox Studios.
Among the standard song hits Hen-
derson compooed were "So Beat& My
Heart." "Carefree" and "Deep Night,"
which he wrote with Rudy Vallee.
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·I I Tllf1dll', M"'h 10, 1970 L DAILY PILOT I ,
School R·eserve·s .Eyed
Lagulia District Feeling Tax Loss Pinch
By moMAS MIJRPJIDIB
Of 11i1 o.i1Y '41M St•" ,
To offset a Feb. 24. tu elecUon defeat,
the Laguna Beach Unified School District
would have to use $1m_,ooo in reserve
funds Jf current levels ol. education are
maintained next year, Superintendent
William Ullum reported Monday night.
Dr. Ullum aa1d CWTent resenes now
!<>lat $150,000.
The Laguna school chief's remarks
came: durtng a briefing and discusston
session at school district headquarters in
which 1 group of 20 parent. participated.
"Many people have characterized bur
elecUon loss as •a packetbook vote',"
Ullum suggested. "I'm human, so of
course l'm upset about the financial loss
in many respects.
•·rn face of this, we've been meeting
with our staU for a review of budget
needs. Our aim Is to maintain as much of
the edµcation program is possible."
because of downtrends In the 1eneral
economy.
-The · district must give specific
answers on why Laguna has a com-
paratively hiJh per-pupil cost for educa-
tion.
-Newspaper coverage ol school .ac-
tivities is Jnsufnclent.
-Retired people should be Invited to
become involved In support of. the
schools.
-An effective sports program at all
school levels becomes a a:oocl tool for in-
volv!ng lhe <0mmunltJ ln llChool ll!aln.
-Mort pmato lhould become Involved
In Ille toon ollertd It the new 1lluraton
lntermedille School to develop a belier
undentancllng ot llJe educatlooal pro-cram at Thur1ton.
-Pamital partlctpall111 II lactinl Ill
the PTA -particularly at the -lll&b
school level -and m<n e11or1 thould. be
madt to get a,turoout at meeunp.
Peto Fulmer, dlr<dor ol acbool-eom-.
munilY relations, llld the parenta' IP""P
will -i again 10< additional dbculllojl
1n about one month.
THIS IS EXTERIOR VIEW OF NEW SOUTH COUNTY COURTHOUSE IN LAGUNA NIGUEL The superintendent told assembled
parents that di.strict personnel are now
Laguna OKs Ordinance
Of Mobile X-ray Units
studying the financial implications in
New Courthouse Rites Set
such areas u pupil-teacher ratios, the
special skills program, transportation
costs and Laguna's summer echool pro-
gram.
•· lI we must make cuts, we want to
make them where they will hurt the
least," he declared.
At the requeJt of Ora111e County Health
Orrtcer John R. Philp, the Laguna Beadl
City Council has adopted an ordinance
eslabl.!shlng regulations for mobile 1-ray
units operating in the community.
.-That no person under 15 yean o1 qe
be s-rayed lDllmi he his had • positive / tubereullo okln tut and praents a doc-
tor's certificate to this effect.
Gardner to Dedicate South Coast Facility Ullum said teachers are also surveying·
within their own staffs to detennine
areas where cuts ml!!ht bt accomplished.
The county, Dr. Philp said, Is e~
deavoring to achieve unifonn. county.
wide regulations and is asking each
municipality to adopt an appropriate
ordinance.
-No pregnant woman lhaD ht s-n:yed
except upon written order of a pbJalcian.
-All r-ray films to be .. taJned .by the
operator' for at least 10 years. Reports on
1.ray findings provided to the patient
within 30 days. Monthly reports on
number of films laken submitted to
Health Offict!r.
By RICHARD P. NALL
or ni. 0.11, Pl"1 '''"
Officialdom wiU turn out in force
Thursday to dedicate the newest halls of
Justice in Orange County.
Justice Robert Gardner of lhe Fourth
District Court ol Appeals will be guest
speaker at the 2 p.m. ceremony
d e d i c a ti n g lhe 32,0QO..square-foot
courthouse that will serve IOUlhern
Orange County.
Located at the Intersection of Crown
Valley Parkway and Alicia Parkway in
Laguna Niguel, the gleaming structure
replaced the leased city hall facilities in
Laguna Beach and San Clemente where
municipal court bas been held for years.
It is the first of three such similar
buildings plaMed for the south coa~t
Orange County Regional Civic r.enter
Construct.ion cost was about '885,000.
There is also a six or seven story coun·
ty oftief: bulding in the supervisors
~tal ball A fire station ls already on
the site. The total complex, to be built in
increments dictated by p o p u I at i o n
growth, is probably more than a $10
million package.
ltis expected eventually to duplicate
the county services that area residents
now must travel to Santa Ana to obtain.
Communitie."i served will include San
Clemente, San Juan Capislrano, Dana
Point, Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel and
the sprawling Saddleback Valley area.
The first increment will include three
municipal courtrooms, an office £or the
court clerk, a building and safety depart·
nient, a marshal's office, a dislrict at·
torney's office, law and library offices
and a sheriff's substation.
AJton E. Allen, board of supervisors
chairman, will preside over tbe ded ica-
tion. Other dignitaries i n c I u d e
supervisors, state legislalors and Richard
D. Hamilton, presiding judge or the new
courthouse.
A band concert will be performed by
the Mission Viejo High School. A Navy
ROTC unit from San Clemente High
School will present state and national
flags. Miss Laura Shernaman, who
designed Orange County's new flag , will
be honored during the ceremony.
He warned, however, that action on the
local level mi!!ht not be the end to the
district's financial ~·oes.
Several bills are pending ii) the state
Legislature, Ullum noted. including one
that has bee.n characterized as the so.
called "Robin Hood Bill." This measure
strikes for equalization of financing
between "rich" and "poor" school
distrie{., across the state.
Laguna, despite the tax election Joss, ls
considered one or the state's "rich"
districts on the basis or Its taxable valua-
tions compared to number of student:..
The model ordlnaDCC, upon which the
city law will be based, provides, among
other things, that:
-The person operating tht s-ray wllt
be licensed by the coonty health officer
after Investigation of his qualifications
and equipment.
Laguna Cyclist
Struck by Auto
"This bill hasn't been computed down
so that we have an estimate on bow much
money La!!una would lose," Ullum ex-
plained, "but it has been calculated that
Beverly Hills schools would lose about
SJ.5 million. Laguna would lGSe con· A 14--year..old Laguna Be:ach boy
siderable." escaped major injuries Saturday evening
-Operator to make x-ray films
available for ust by tht phyPdau of the
pat.ient provided consent Is glwn lD
wrlting. A reuooable chute may be
made ror this service.
--Operator to give the health olllcer at
least 14 days .notice of all proposed thnes.
dats and pla«s where unit ts to be med.
Lecture Planned
On African Art
Bursting Pipe .
Social Occasion
Residents of San Joaquin Street in
Laguna Beach staged an lll13Cbeduled
mktnlght kaffee klatch Saturday when a
15-fnch water main erupted shortly before
11 :30 p.m., bringing a water district crew
to the area armed witlt jack hammers. '
Laguna Hillsides Future
Leads Panel Issues Talk
Later, the session broke up Into two when he was knocked from bta bicycle by Ancient and modem African art will
discussion groups to probe ways in which a car turning i~to a &ervtce ltaUon be discuMed in an illustrated lecture by
the distrlct might improve school rela· driveway. Dr Vincent Mart Wedneaday, Marth JI
lions with the community. Ed Jerome Chllvera o( 212, N. Coast at 7:~ p.m. ln the Laguna Federal build-The discussion wasn't gupposed to be ing, Laguna Beach.
an agonizing reappraisal of the Feb. 24 Highway Wu re.leased from South Coast Dr. Mark, a Garden Grove physidan.
tax election l06S but in much or the talk, Community HOISpital art.er treatment for is the founder al the African Art Center
it dev.eloped into that. laceraUons or the left knee and left elbow at 508 Forest Ave. In Laguna Beech. He
Some parental observations t b a t and a shoulder injury. has studied and collected Afrk:la art.
Roosed from their s'urnber by the
racket as repairmen dug down. five feet
In reach the break, neighbors gave up on
sleep and broke out the coffee cups for
their visitors.
Rerouting water supplies from the
diatrlbutor line that runs from High
Drive to N'. Coan Highway, the repair
crew worked through the night and all
day Sanday to replace the cracked pipe
section. Next task will be replacing
undermined pavlng on the streeL
2nd Laguna Fire
Destroys House
The second pre-dawn fire in an old
residential area of Laguna Canyon in less
than a week totally destroyed a house
and storage shed early Sunday.
Summoned to 447 Canyon Acres Drive
aL •:45 a.m., firemen were at the scene
for almost four hours, but were unable to
save the strucb.Lres, which were unoc·
cupied. They are owned by Wayne Moore,
who· lives In an adjoining home.
No estimate of damage has yet been
'T'lade.
Last Wednesday, al almost the same
·~our, an old home on nearby Woodland
')rive was burned to the ground.
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of "-Olll,., P1i.t Sti ff
PopuJation density and the fub.Lre of
Laguna hillside development occupied
panelists discussing "Laguna issues" at
the Friday night meeting sponsored by
the South Coast Democratic Peace Club.
Abraam Krushkhov, Laguna Beach
project director for the planning firm o(
Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall,
was joined on the panel by James Dilley,
vict president of the CitizeM' Town PJan·
ning Association; writer Arnold Hano,
board member of the sponsoring club;
and Mark Gumblner, chairman of the
Citize.ns Advisory Qimmittee on the
general plan.
Krushkhov told listeners that the
present population of 15,000 in Laguna's
five-square-mile area will have grown by
1990 to 24,000 to :M ,000, There will be, by
that time, 60,000 people in the 21).square·
mile planning area under consideration,
he said.
Since most of Laguna's 66 percent of
vacan t land is "unbttlldable," Krushkhov
said, the general planners will present
alternative plans for the city from which
Laguna will have to choose.
One alternative, he said, would be to
zone all areu ror single-family dwellings,
which would automatically result in low
density and limit growth.
"However," said the planner, .. popula·
lion pressures and other factors may
make it difiicult lo hold to a very low
density policy." The city, he said, must
To Draw for DAILY PILOT
Al Capp (left), creator of uu•1 Abner:• and Chester Gould , creator
of "Dick Tracy," will be displaying their talents Jn the DAILY PI-
LOT beginning March 30 when both comic strips become regular
features on the newspaper 's comics page. Capp and Gould, two of
the world's top comic strip artists, both began their popular strips
in the 1930's.
developed during discussion including: Poli~ said ChUven was ridl"" his bike wort on 5evera1 tri'PI to Africa and will --Orange County's compiled com· ·• show slides 1nd art objects durinC his have a planned density policy, wlth a~ parisons of gchool district costs served as on the sidewalk of S. Coast JU&hway talk.
propriate zoning. "a massive indictment" of Laguna's south of the Broadway Intersection whe.n 1"f Friends of the Laguna Be.th
"Th<? baSic question is whether it is lhe school costs within the busintst com· he war atruck by a vehicle driven by Library invite the puhUc to attend tbil
policy of the city to accept a reasonable munlly, even though the '""' cOmparl!Ons Stevtn Bruce Creek, 11, of 1238 Starlit program.
share of the population Increase or to may not ht va·Jid. The district must Drive. Creek was ltu'ning lnto the comer The program, spomored by th t
limit the increase. The best way to ac· counter this impression with facts. service station when the aecldent oc· Friend! of the Laguna Beach Libl'lr)',
ce pt more people with minimum damage -The election was poorly timed curred, police reported. will be open to the public.
to the hillsides, is to use a cluster-type of lfi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
development."
Gumbiner, who recently presented a
proposal for hillside cluster development
which was rejected by the Planning Com-
mission, questioned Khrushkhor's refer·
ence to "unbuildable land."
Krushkhov replied that geologically
unstable land is regarded as truly un~
buildable, but added that Laguna has
relatively few areas of such instability.
Land with a 25 percent slope ls best for
single-family dwellings, be said, while a
25 to 50 percent slope is suitable for
multi-unit development and any gJope
over 50 percent generally should be
developed only with custom housing.
"Thererore," said Gumbiner, "anything
is buildable that you can get a road to,
provided it is not geologically unstable."
Hano expressed the belief that the city
should ''leave the hills alone, as we have
agreed to do the beach." He suggested
the city should begin purchasing open
areas.
Dilley suggested that nel!!hborhood
associations could be fonned to buy land
or accept gifts, since the city feels it is
unable even to maintain land received as
gifts.
"You are a man who lives in a house on
a hill that somebody developed,"
Krushkhov told Hano. "The city nee~ to
accommodate a certain number of people
who want to li ve here for the same
reasons you do."
Said Gumbiner, "The city cannot sim~
ly zone out all development because It
could be sued by the landholders. tr you
want a green area you can buy it .• or, .as
an alternative, use a planned res1denhal
zone which offers a developer the op-
portunity for clustered housin!! with a
planned area reserved for greenbe1t.."
Speaking from the floor, A. E. "P~t"
Worthington said Laguna c_an detenn1ne
its "fair share" of population. and zone
accordingly.
Heckler Joins
Pals in Arrest
Attempting to arrest two oul-of·town
youths late Friday, Laguna Beach
narcotics or0ctt1 Norman Babcock and
Neil Purcell extended their endeavor to
Include a partygoer wbo s h o u t e d
obscenities to discourage them.
The two officers followed Ronald
William McAdoo, 20, of Inglewood, and
Dennis I. Trembl3y, 20, of Anaheim,
from the Taco Be:U to the 100 block of
Sunset Terrace, where the arrests were
made.
\\'hen a group or guests al a party in
the: area emerged to watch the action, the
oftlctrs atso 1i00keif Charles Carl
Coleman, 251 of 155 Sunset Terrace, on a
IF SHE'S YOUR LITTLE LADY
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McAdoo i• charged with possession of 30 FASHION ISLAND 1051 IRVINI • WISTCLIFF PLAZA
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IN TODAY'S NEWS
it ..;;-. • ...-..& ;
«""'pit.I ff lflf O•llJ P litt Si.HI
The "Crown" pub o! Soulh Ben·
fleet, England, Y.1ill be renamed
the "Half·Cro,vn'', It seems the
drinking establishment \\'85 half
drmolished recently "hen a truck
rammed into it. •
Tutsd.i_y, Mlftb 10, 1970
Red Attack
On Saigo11
hnmii1ent?
SAIGON (UPI) -So~th Vietnam warn·
ed tonight over government television
that Communists are auemptMg to buy
Soolh·Vietoamcse Army uniforms to in-
filtrate Saigon for a surprise atlack on
the capital. U.S. military sourcts Manday
warned of n e w terrGrist attacks UUs
month.
11\e v.·arning came as scores of
American jell flew bombing missions in·
to Laos agaln today and the U.S: com·
mand ·i!l a major change of j>olicy an·
nounced it would report if any or them
,.,,ere shot down. Such figures previously.
\\'ere part of the "secret war" In Laos.
The fire chief of liar,vorth. Eng·
land, approved hi~ 1nen's plans
for a dinner dance v.'ilh one stipu·
latton~ that they take the fire truck
along in case of fire and ''slay
completely sober."
On Monday the U.S. command reported
that captured documents indicated guer·
rillas planned attacks on the palace of
P~sldent Nguyen Van Thieu, the
residence of U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker, on U.S. AID headquarters and
(JO national and police headquarters.
REMAINS OF CAR EXPLOSION VIEWED BY MARYLANO TROOPERS
Two Bl•ck1 Kill.cl in Bel Air, Md. Blast; Wa~ On• Victim H. Rap Brown? •
Commenting on tlte recent
'
tt11denc11 of Americans to move
into tile citits. Secretaru of Co1tt· ~
merce Maurice Stan.s said, •·1c1 ff
C$ tlwuoh we owned a vast man· ~ f si<m with hundreds of rooms but
·'The Vie~ Cong are trying to collect
and buy <iur types of military uniforms
and stores In order tG camouflage
themselves as soldiers of the Republic of
Vietnam," the broadcast said, quGting
the Interior (police) Ministry.
Rap Brown • Ill Car Blast?
t j most of its have decided to live
~,:::~l:s:t.:::C:.-lG · & I "•
The broadcast said the Communist aim
\\'BS to "easily infiltrate into the capital
t.o launch a surprise offensive."
Trial Recessed After Bo1nb 'Victim' Question Raised
• Following a speech by Vice-Pres·
ident Agnew in which he deplored
colleges which admit underprivi·
Jeged students 'vho are below nor-
mal requirements, Sen Walt•r F.
Mond•I•, (0-Minn.) said, "I don't
think we've ever had a vice-presi-
dent who every night could think
of something ne\v to attack. In·
stead or bringing us together,
Vice-President Agnew ••• seems to
be spending fuJI time tearing us
apart." •
U.S. Navy pilots flying off carriers in
the Guli of Tonkin made! mGst of the
latest raids against NGrlh Vietnamese
supply routes and troops in Laos,
military sources said.
The estimated 125 Navy F4 Phantom,
FS Crusader, A6 Intruder and A4
Skyhav.·k pilots on the carriers have car-
ried out no raids in South Vietnam since
Saturday. All their raids have been into
Laos'. Air Force planes from Thailand
joined them.
The U.S. military command announced
1hat effec tive immediately. U.S. aircraft
losses and the number of airmen shot
down in Laos will be reported daily. No
information will be released on losse, in·
curred before today.
BEL AIR. Md. (UPI) -The lrlal ol
Black militant H. Rap Brown was recess-
ed on its second day today in confusion
over whether Brown may have been one
or two Negroes killed when an explosion
ripped through their car just south of
here Monday night.
Harford County Circuit Court Judge
llarry E. Dyer said Brown's attorney,
\\'itliam Kunstler, had raised the question
!hat the body might be that of the defen-
dant when the trial resumed at 7:30 a.m.
PST. Dyer recessed the court so that he,
prosecutor William Yates and Kunstler
could view the wreckage of the car.
Dr. Werner Spit, assistant medical ex-
aminer or Baltimore, said if the body
\1'ere Brown's it v.·ould have tG be iden·
I ified by someone who knew him and be
confirmed by dental record!. State police
"''h~ned the body said they did not
lhink il was that of the black militant.
The other body was Identified as Ralph
1-'eatherstone, 30, a close friend of
Brown's and a long lime activist in the
Student Nattonal Coordinating Com-
mittee. The unidentified bodY-wa~
reported tG have carried three sets of
identification but police would not release
the names.
State Police LL Col. Thomas S. Smith
said it had been determined that the ex-
plosive or explosi ves were being ca rried
on the front floor of !he car, not planted
under the floor.
Yates indicated his belief that the ex-
plosives \\'ere meant tG do away wi!h
hin1. Cambridge Police Chier Brice Kin·
namon, and special inve.sligator Donald
Cox.
''They y,·ere not gGing to blov.• up the
judge ; they ....,·eren't going to blow up
Kunstler; and there were Gnly three of us
up from Cambridge-so yGu figure it out,"
he said.
Brov.·n, 26. was charged "'ith inciting 11
riot in Cambridge, ~Id., in July, 1967,
\\·hen he delivered a speech urging black:io
lo "burn An1erica do.,.,·n·• if "'whites don 't
come around.'' Tu•o square blacks of
Cambridge \\1Crc burned 'f"O!lowing the
speech. The trial venue \\'SS changed to
Br! Air.
Bro\vn's v.·hercabouts \\'ere unknown.
Kunstler said he called Bro""11's wife and
brother in New York this n1oming just
before 100 prospec tive jurors filed into
the courthouse and that neilher liad
heard ftom Brown since Mondi:ly. U.S. spokesmen said the order to report
aircraft losses in Laos came from
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird '"in
order tG provide additional information to
1he public." He got his orders from
President Ni.Ion. Ex-Kennedy Aide
Backs Surcharge;
Sees Recession
UMW's Boyle Swears
States to Guide
City Cri1ne Fu1ids
Election 'Fair, Square'
Com.tdian Red Skelton and his wift,
Georgia, got together fltondlly for
th~ir 2.5th weddi11g anniversary. The
cot1ple observed their .~i/ve r a1111ivfr-
sory 1oith members of the family afl·
,.r Skelton fi11is!1ed t.apit1Q anotlit r
.~Mw. They met rn 1944 and 1uere
marned oiu year Later. • Victor Cammidge, 10, his wrist
and elbow broken, sa\v an ambu-
l3Jlce pulling up to his house and
ran. He thought they were going
to cut his ann off. Victor \vas
eventually discovered hiding in a
half.full barrel of beer at a near-
by public house. • Jerry W. Fri.dheim, asked aboul
a Navy vessel banging into a sec·
tion of 1he Chesapeake Bay Bridge-
Tunnel connecting Virginia and
l\faryland, replied that the acci·
dent ~'as an instance •·,vh en the
ship bit the span."
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Nixon ad·
ministration has told the nation's cities it
wants to chaMcl anticrime fund s to them
throogh state governments -not directly
IG the cities themselves.
Attorney General John N. 1-.·litchell
listened Monday to two mayors who com-
plained they were getting far less than
their share of the federal funds. But he
told them that to establish a direct line
betv.·een the federal and Io ca I
govemmenlS would "make \Va.shington a
dictator over every anticrime prGject in
the country."
Mitchell appeared at a meeting of lht>
National League of Cities. He heard C<ltn-
pliants frGm Mayor George C. Siebels Jr
of Birmingham. Ala., and 1'1ayor Jamr~
H.J. Tate Gf Philadelphia.
Tate. noting he had a 7,000·member
police department. said Philadelphia ha•
received only $50,000 ta buy walkie
talkies in two years. Siebel!! said Birm-
ingham has 10 percent of the population
in Alabama, but gets only five percent of
the anticrime funds allocated ta hte state.
Hayakawa 'Bo1nbed'
SAN FRA NCISCO (UPI) -A Molotov
cocktail was thrGWTl 1hro11gh the office
y,·indow of San Francisco State College
President S. I. llayaka\\"8 during the
night or early morning but did not ignite,
<-<>liege officials said today.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The chie(
economist of the Kennedy administralion
today urged retention of the five percent
income tax surcharge because the na·
tion's economy "is teetering on the brink
or a recession."
Dr. Walter W. Heller, former chairman
or !he Counc il of Economic Advisers, said
the surcharge scheduled to end June 30,
is needed to pay for a progra1n
guaranteeing "a job at the end of the
line" for all who are thrown out of ~·Grk
ln the s!ump he said is coming.
S:?n. \Valier F. llfondaJe (D-~1\nn.),
chairman of the banking and currenc~
suOCommiltee on production and
stabiliution. opened hearings today v.·ith
a charge that the Nixon administration is
fG~tcring an "inflationary recessiGn.''
Heller testified at the bearings, called
tn consider pressuring the administration
into using its influence to control prices,
wage settlements and interest rates.
Heller said the time bas come for the
Ftderal Reserve to relax-its tight money
policies wh ich have sent interest r;ites ta
historic highs and for the administration
to take antirecession steps.
"If we under·react to this very evident
softnei;s in the economy \1·e may V{'ry
well head into a recession or a Jong
periad or continued sortncs!'.''
He advocated guaranteed training for
public service jobs such as righting pollu·
tion al'KI government-subsidited industrial
jobs. ~1aintaining t.he surtax would pay
for this, he s11id.
Winter lsn 't Over Yet
Wide Ba1id of Freezing Rai1t Sivee ps Ove r Midivest
CalifOt"ftl•
50UTHl!ll:N CALlf'OltNIA -l'IC,..t-
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WASHJNGTON (UPIJ -IV. A. "Tony"
Boyle has sworn before almighty God his
re-election in December as president of
the United ~line \Vorkers was fair and
square and that he had nothing to do with
lhe murder of his opJ)Gnent.
Striking bac k al his attackers in a rare
news conference, Boyle told reporters
li·londay he had been the victim of
"dastardly char.ges" by Wlion opponents,
\'ililication by the press, collusion
between the Labor Department and his
enemies and unfair treatment by a
Senate subcommittee which heard his
critics but has nof called him to testify.
"For more than a month, I ha\'e
desired a proper judicial forum to re-
spond lo the outrageous charges in the
press and before the subcommittee,"
Boyle said ... I am here today to set the
record straight."
"I hereby solemnly swear to almighty
GOO ta tell the lruth, the ~·hole truth. and
nothing but the truth,'' said the. handpick-
ed successor or the late John L. Lewis.
In a 14·page prepared statement read
\\'ith erangelical fervor, Boy I e
"categorically denied" accusations union
funds and personnel were used to .. steal"
lhc election for him from insurgent can -
didate JGSeph A. "Jock'' Yablonski, ...,,ho
was slain v.·ith bis v.·ife and daughter less
than a month arter the election.
The ur.1w president also denied any
complicity in Yablonski's murder. He
&pecificaJly denied knowing Simon Hud·
dleston, father-in-law of one of the ac·
cused Yablonski killers and a Ufl.1W of·
f1clal in Tennessee, and denied charges
he gave Huddleston a pistol as reported
by a national magazine.
Gulf Oil Leak
Still Vnaba.ted LOS. ANGfll::S AJ!l!A -Ciel""'
,.utld<I" 1f1t•noo" 1"4 l1•r Wtc1'llld1 ..
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' VEi'i!CE. l.t1. (UPI) -Amber clouds
•1 of oil spurting skyward gare a grin1
.c: preview r.f pollution that could result
when the largest oil fire in the history of
lhe Gulf o! Mexico is finally extinguished. " ·"
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Firefighters snuffed the 28-<tay-old plat·
form fire with a 400-pound dynamite blast
r.tonday. bul six minutes later gushing oil
hit a hot spol on lhe structure and the
blaze hoomed back to life.
Another attempt lo extinguish the fire ~et 11'flli plannl'd for today •
Drtng the .sbo·minule hiatus. gllstenlng
QI hro\\'n oil spe"·ed as high as 250 feet
above gull \l.'aters.
The Coast Guard said five. barrels of oil
escaped while lhe Are \vl'ls out.
" u !ij .S. Gt>ological Surl'ey englnetrs
.o.o rstimated lhe rate or now at. bet\li·een 600
·" <1nd 1,000 barrels a day. Once the fire is .. out. lhitt flow would continue unlit the
eight leaking \\'Clls lnvolvtd in the fire
are c11ppc!d -11 process that coold take
as long as three weeks.
DENIES 'DASTARDLY ' STORIES
UMW President Tony Boyle
Fighting Erupts
Over Refugees
In Lebanon City
By United Press lnlernatioaal
Fighting broke ou t today near Beirut
between police a n d Lebanese refugees
v.•ho fled to the capital from the southern
border region follov.·ing a series or
clashes wilh Israeli troops. One person
\\'8S killed and 20 y,'()unded.
Arab guerrilla sources soid lhc
refugees y,•enl to Beirut from the border
areas of ltroun and Bint Jbcil and began
erecting makeshift shanties at the Al
1'1Gkalless area, site of a refugee camp
lhree miles from Beirut.
The clash started when Lebanese gen·
darmes brought bulldozers to knock do\\'Tl
the houses \l.'hich had been put up on
private property. Jn a brief burst of
shooting 1 refugee was killed and 13
v.·ounded and 7 police.men were injurtd.
It v.·a~ the second disturbance In Beinit
today. Earlier, police broke up a women·s
11ntl-American demonstration near the
U.S. embassy and selzrd their banners.
About 30 \\'Omen. mainly Arab .studenu
~ fro1n lhe Aznerican University of Brlrut,
but including some Americans. galhercd
lfear ttfli rtnba. a Wllved plnear3!1
protesting the sale of U.S. Phantom jets
lo lsra t'I. One banner said; •·An1crican
"'Omt!n against Phantoms lo lsrael."
111c_ Lebanese situation "l!<l came up fGr
rliscusslon In Jerusalc.m "·here F'rench
1\n1ba~~ador fo"'rancls Mure confc.rrt>d lo--
day "'Ith f'orelgn 1'11nistcr Abba Eb11.n.
' '
'
Southern
Vote Rights
Bid Fails •
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The S<nal< !O-
day rejected an amendment that would
free all Southern slates except GeorgiA
and Soulh carouna from an extension o!
the 1965 Voting Rlghls Act.
The amendment, o!fered by Sen. Sam
J. Ervin, Jr. (0-N.C.), would have chang.
ed Uie act to use 1968 registration and
voting figures instead of the 1964
statistics.
The provisions of the 1965 a~ are now
In effect in any slate or county where
less than SO percent of the voting age
population was registered or voting in the
1964 elections. It now covers six routhero
states Mcl39 counties in a seventh.
By using the 1968 statistics all states
e:itcept Georgia and South Carolina would
be freed because they raised the voting
or registration JJercentage above the SO
percent mark .
Ervin argued that if !he 1964 record
"'as sufficient to "justify guilt" then
compliance in 1968 .. should justify the
conclusion that in 1968, 1969, and 19i0
these states are not g(Jilty of violating the
prohibition of the 15th amendment."
He said, "lf this legislative body
belie"es in fair play and justice, it should
be consistent"
But Sen. Philip A. llarl ID·~lich.),
said the gains in black voting are nol
"so solid they could not be undone by
new practices and procedures."
J.le added states with .. a hisiGry of rather
persistent offense" "'ould not be covered
under the Ervin amendment.
By 5 to 3 margins. three other Ervin
prGposals ·were defeated in ~1onday's
debate. leading the white-haired, North
Carolinian to declare:
"~1y state has been trying lo get back
into the Union for 105 years! The Civil
\Var is over! I v.·ish I could say the same
thing far Reconstruction !"
Shouting Whites
Stopped; School
Opens at Lamar
LA~·IAR. S.C. fUPJ) -National
Guardsmen and state troopers turned
back ty,•o grGUps or shouting \l.'hiles today
as children returned to the Lamar School
for the first time since school buses were
overturned there by mobs last week .
The whites disbanded after officer~
refused to let them onto the campus Gf
!he combined elementary and high
school. Inside the red brick building
teachers kept the 76 students busy ''to
take their minds off v.·hat has been going
()ll .''
The 52 Negro and 24 '\\'hile chlldren
who show ed up for classes .today con-
sti tuted only a fraction of the normal
school population of 900.
The Negroes arrived at the newly
desegregated school aboard ri\'e buses
shortly after 8 a.m. and walked quickly
inside. A short 'vhile later lv.'o groups of
angry v.•hites converged on the campus
from different directions.
Despite the shouting outside. clasSt:s
1,1·cre held in. the red brick building. Prin·
cijlal Gnrdon Cole cancelled recesses and
instructed the teachers lo keep the.
.students "occupied and supervised."
Outside, a group or 35 y,•hite men .
women and teenagers stormed up to a
Highway Patrol roadblock.
··~1y child ain"t going lo no nigger
school." screamed a woman. Another
v.·oman yelled "\Ve \Vant our freedom • , ,
\1·e want scl1001 for our children.''
Holding their rifles high, state troopers
turned back the crowd. About 10 persons
trie d to run around the roadblock, but
they y.·ere shoved away by troopers and
gu;:i.rdsnien.
Another group of 17 \1·h ites was stQpped
on another street. \Vhitcs al sG can-
gregated in about 20 cars at a restaurant
five blocks from the school but they
made no move lo go near the campus.
Clieck by FBI
For lntervieiv?.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A bearded.
Jong-haired George W a s h i n g to n
University sophomore says a Justice
Department spokesman told him an
FBr check would be required before he
could interview ~fartha Mitchell.
Jan Bridge, a journalis1n maJor from
Richmond. Va .. said he paid $100 al a
cam pus charity auction for the in·
terview with the wife of the altomcy
general . He said he hoped to St:IJ an ac·
count of lhe intervie.,. to help launch
his journalistic career.
Aft~r submitting tht hlgh bid, 'he
said, he v.•as summoned to the Justice
Department and lold by an official that
an FBI check \\'GUld be required. Jn ad-
dition. he said, the official said no tape
recorder could be used and th•t f\frs.
1.fitchell's statements woold have ta ht
inspected before publication.
A Justice Department spokesman
den ied the charges. saying only th11t
use of a tape recorder v.-ould be pro.
hibi ted. the Posi sRid.
The 19-year-<>ld Bridge expressed tne
l'it>!lef th:it hi~ fn!ervtew mhzhl gn·e
~Ir~. ~litchell "credibility," Ule PMt
said.
The charity auclion ls an anno11 l
campus 3ffair In Y•li lch various item11
donated by celcbrit1eii go to the highest
bidder.
r:,w; -I ~c:.. 0
I
'
I
.j
I
INTERIOR VIEW REVEALS NEW COURT FACILITY AS CLEAN, WELL-LIGHTED PLACE
Do1v11 tfte
Missio11
1·ail
Dana-Capo Incorporation
Gets Los Alamitos' Help
Hypnotist Due
At School l\ieet
SAN CLEll1ENTE -Former night club
and lelevision hypnotisl George Sharp
will bring his mesmerism lo San
Clemente High School Friday for a stu·
denl asscinb!y .
Sharp, a \'Cleran !lerformer al more
than 100 schools in recent years. has been
termed 1 he youngest hypnotist to be
selected for entertaining in schonls.
The asst"mbly \rill include a lecture and
hypnosis de1no nstralion.
e 1'1111 1 Tourney Sel
J\t!SSION VTEJO -A pool tournament
will be pro\·iding en tertainment for
~1ission Vfejo teenage recreation center
members starting Wednesday.
Registration for league play will start
at 7 p.m. For more information cont.act
the,;enter at 837·4084.
e Derot•t1l111•.< 1lleel
MISSION VJE.JO -Home decorating
Ideas will be ai red Thursday at a meeting
or the ~·l1i::sio11 VJe]o Recreation Center's
nev.•ly formed women's group, Las
Margaritas.
The ldca session 1\'ill begi n at 7:45 p.m.
at the recreation center.
Decorators from Cannell and Chaffin of
Corona d!\!,h1ar will direct the program.
Greeting guests v.1ill be 11rs. Anita
Griffeth : program chainnan is Mrs.
Shirlry McCurry. Refreshments wiU be
provide:! by ~!rs. Gery Budrewig and
Mrs. Diane Lom&ardi
e •f)oll11 ' Hus One
J\llSSIO~ \'I F.JO -~lovie buffs will
rise earl y Saturday lor a bus trip lo sec
"Hello. Do\l y" 1n Hollywood.
i\l1ss1on Viejo res idents arc 1velco1nc lo
join· a group leaving the recreation center
al 7:30 a.n1. to head for Gr auman's
Chi nese Theater.
Tickets arc $1.25 for studcnlS and $1.50
for ad ults. Transpo1·tation wil\ be SI.SO
addit!on:.i l. Rcser1·ations ca n be made by
calling the center al 837-6050, extension
205.
Pledges by the city of Los Alamitos lo
hel p in efforts to incorporate Dana Point
and Capistrano Beach into a cl!y were
described today as "a strong effort to in-
sure local control over the communiti~'
destiny."
"ht fact, we have infor1nally adopted
the two communities as Los Alamitos'
sister city on the south coast," Los
Alamitos City Manager William H. Kraus
said.
Kraus said the promise for staff help
and support of the incorporati on dr ive
came about a month ago and have pro-
gressed to the stages of drafting of revis·
ed reports supporting cityhood made by
Los Alamitos city staff members.
But the staff time, Kra us stressed, is
2nd Lag11na Fire
Destroys House
The secood pre-Oaw n fire in an old
residential area of Laguna Canyon in less
than a week totally destroyed a house
and storage shed early Sunday.
Summoned to 447 Canyon Acr~ Drive
al 4:45 a.m., firemen were at the scene
fof almost four hours, but were unable to
save the structures, which were unoc·
cupiecl . They are owned by \Vayne li1oore,
who live s in an adjoining home.
Np estimate nf damage has yet been
made.
Last Wednesda y, at almost the same
hour, an old home on nearby Woodland
Drive was burned to the ground.
Girls. Dads Gather '
For Cleu1ente Dinner
A catered roast beef dinner will be in
store for San Clemente High School Girl's
League members and their dads at a
special banquet on campus Wednesday
night.
The annual father-d.11u ghtcr event will
begin at 6:30 and after-dinner en-
tertainment will Include a "newlywed
game ," -television style -played by
rathcrs and their daughters. Tickets at $2
per person are available through the stu-
dent activities office.
To Dra1v for DAILY PILOT
Al Capp (left ), creator Of 1'Li'I Abner," and Chester Gould, c reator
of "Dick Tracy.'' will be displaying their talents in the DAILY PI-
LOT beginning rviar<.:h 30 when both-comic-strips become regula r
features on the nc\vspapc.r's co1nics page. Capp and Gould, two of
the "'orld 's top comic strip artists-both began their popuJ ar strips
in lhe 1930'<.
•
not done on the city of Los Alamitos'
time.
•'[l's done on our own for lhe primary
reason of insuring local control for a
fellow coastal community,"
Kraus said 1nuch motivation for the
assistance has come from his city's fight
to keep contro l of Los Alamitos Naval Air
Station from falling into county hands.
The loca l commi ttee pushing for in-
corporation i::> retrenching this month
afler the Local Agency Formation Com·
mission to!d the group to return home
with their proposals fo r incorporation for
so me revision.
On J an . 28. the LAfC ad vised the
group to restudy proposed city boun-
daries and prepare a more accurate
study of the financial pic ture of the pro-
posed new city.
Before the incorporation group's nexl
appearance before the LAFC later this
mont h or early in April. the committee
y.•ill meet with Los Alamitos officials to
draft the revisions.
One such meeting is scheduled for this
Thursday, under the direction of com-
mittee President Dr. Roger Sanderson ol
Dana Point.
"We are well aware of the problems or
incorporaLion and the difficulty of ar-
riving. at clear information to present to
the LAFC. We had to do it in 1960. so our
e:ltpcrience could be helpful to the com-
mittee in Dana Point and Capistrano
Beach," Kraus said.
The initiation for the aid Irom the
NorU1 Or11ngc Coast ci~y came {rom one
of its councilmen. J oseph H. Hyde.
"\Ve bel ieve slrongly in the right of
local governments to determine their own
future in planning and development," he
said,
Included in the ~sent effort for
cityhood. the committee has sent letters
to residents appealing for funds and sup-
port of the incorporation ideas.
Already the officers of the Dana Point
Local of the Carpenter's Union have
pledged their support and aid.
Bursting Pipe
Social Occasion
Residents of San Joaquin Street in
Laguna Beach staged an unscheduled
midnight kaffee kla tch Saturday v.•hen a
16-inch water ma in erupted shortly before
ll.:30 p.m .. bringi.llg a v.1ater district c-ew
to the area armed with jack hammers.
Roused from their s1umber by the
racket as repairmen dug down rive feet
to reach the break, neighbors gave up on
s'eep and broke out the coffee cups for
their visitors.
Rerouting water supplies from ~he
distributor Une that runs from High
Drive tG N. Coast Highway, the repair
crew worked through the night and all
day Sunday to replace the cracked pipe
sectio n. Next task will be replacing
underm ined pav ing on the street
Heckler Joins
Pals in Arrest
Attempting to arrest two out-or-town
youths late Friday, Laguna Beach
narcotics officers Norman Babcock and
Neil Purcell extended their endeavor to
include a partygoer who s h o u t e d
obscenities to discourage them.
The two officers followed Ronald
Willia m McAdoo, 20, of Inglewood, and
Dennis I. Tremblay, 20, of Anaheim,
rrom the Taco Bell to the 100 block or
Sunset Terrace, where the arrests were
mnde. '
\Vhcn a group_ of guesbi a~ • J!Ff;y ln
the area emerged to watch the action, the
orlicf:!rs 11lso bOo ked ChnrlC! Carl
Coleman, 25, of 155 Sunset Terrace, on a
r.h:irge or disturbing the ~ace.
f\1cl\d<>o is ch:irged with po~sston of
marijuena, TrCmblay with possession and
sale of ui. drug.
•
s
DAILY PILOT Si.tr ,.,.._
' THIS IS EXTERIOR VIEW OF NEW SOUTH COUNTY COURTHOUSE IN LAGUNA NIGUEL .,
New Courthouse Rites Set ,:
' ~
. Gardner to Dedicate South Coast Facility
'ey RICHARD P. NALL
.Ol.tllt ~Uy Plltt Si.ft
Officialdon1 will turn ou_t in forC(?
Thursday to dedicate the newest halls of
justice in Or11nge County.
Justice Robert Gardner of the Fourth
District Court of Appeals will be guest
speaker at the 2 p.m. ceremony
d e d i c a ti n g the 32,00Q..square-foot
courthouse that will serve southern
Orange County.
Scout Leaders
Being Sought
Persons wishing to become leaders In
Cub Scout groups In the El Camino Real
District are welcome to an all-day
work.shop on scout leadership Saturday at
Marro Forster Junior High School.
Registration for the day's workshops .
wtll begin at 9 a.m, The activity will end
at 3:30 p.m.
A fee charged to registrants will cover
cost of lunch In the school cafeteria.
Parents wishing to become cubmasters,
den mothers, assistant den mothers or
webelos le11ders are asked to call Bob
Beker 11t 496-9572 or Sylvia Perez et 493-
1276 before Friday.
Located at the intersection of Crown
Valley Parkway and Alicia Parkway in
Laguna Nlguej, the gleaming structure
replaced the leased city baU facilities In
Laguna Beach and San Clemente where
municipal court has been held for years.
It is the first of three such similar
buildings planned for the south coa&t
Orange County Regional Civic Center.
Construction cost was about $885,000.
There is also a six or seven story coun-
ty office bu1ding in the supervisors
crystal ball. A fire station Is afr.eady on
the site. The "total complex, to be built in
increments dictated by p o p u I at I o n
growth , is probably more tban a $10
million package. :t is expected eventually to duplicate
the county services that area resident.s
now must travel to Santa Ana to obtain.
Communities served will include San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Dana
Point, Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel and
the ~rawling Saddleback Valley area. ,.
The first increment will include three •
municipal courtrooms, an ofiict for the '
court clerk, a building and safety depart..
ment, a marshal's office, a district at·
torney 's office, law and library offices r.
and a sheriff's substaUon.
Alton E. All en, board of supervison .
chairman, will preside over the dedica-
tion. Other dignitaries I n c I u d e f
supervisors, stale legislators and Richarct r
D. Hamilton, presiding judge of the new ·
courthouse.
A band concert will be performed by
the Mission .Vl~jo High School. A Navyl.
ROTG unit trom Sa~ Clemente High
School wlll present state and naUonal
flags . Miss Laura Shernaman, · who
designed Orange County'• new flag, wi.11'
be honored dur ing the ceremony.
Auto Hits Boy Cyclist
A 1t-year-okt Laguna Beach boy
escaped major injuries Saturday evening
when he was ~ked from hill bicycle by
a car turning into a service station
driveway.
Ed Jerome Chllvort of Ill N. Coost
Highway wu ·released Frum South Coa!l
Community Hoopital alter treatment for
lacerations or lbe left knee and Jeft elbow
and a shoulder Injury.
Polict said Chilvers wu riding his bike
on the sidewalk of S. Coast Highway
south of the. Broadway lntenection when
he was struck by a vehicle driven by
Steven Bruce Creek, 11, of 1231 Starlit·
Drive, Creek was turning Into the comer
aervfCe staUon when the accldent oc-
curred; police reported.
' IF SHE'S YOUR LITTLE LADY,
BUSTER
9ROWN.
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vast "•rr•y of
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"W/iere S/iopping • /ea/ Pfeajure " tj a • •
~IOOTERT-
30 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER e 644-24'4
--~~!~f~oms
1052 IRVINE e WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEACH e 5411114 •
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,~ DAI\. V PILOT
-llM Otl!'t 'lltt Jltffl
I The '*"Crown" pub of South Ben ..
eel, England, will be renamed
e ''Hall.Crown". Jl seems the
liriilki·n g · establishment was half
e.molis~hed recentJy \Vhcn e truck
ammeO into it. •
lutSdl:y, M.vcl 10, 1970
lfed Attack
I
On Saigon
Imminent?
SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnam warn·
ed tonight over goverMlent television
that CommunLsts are attempting to buy
South Vietnamese Army unifonns to in-
filtrate Saigon for a surprise attack on
the capital. U.S. millta.ry sources Monday
warned of n e " terrorist attacks um
month.
The warning came as scores of
American jets flew bombing missions in·
to Laos again today and the U.S. com·
mand ·in a major change of policy an.
The fire chief of Harwortb, Eng-i nouneed it would report if any of them
and, approved his men's plans were shot down. Such figures previously
or a dinner dance with one' slipU· \\'ere part of the "secret war" in Laos.
ation: that they take the fire truck On Monday the U.S. command reported
~liong in case of !ire and i•stay that captured documents indicated guer·
Completely sober." r illas planned attacks on the palace of 1 -preslde-nt Nguye n Van Thieu, the
REMAINS OF CAR EXPLOSION VI EWED BY MARYLAND TROOPERS
Two Blacks Killed in Bel Air, Md. Blast; W•t OM Victim H. Ri p Brown?
~ e residence ot U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth
, m;o:~_;::;: •ti:,:~:;;
\ tendency of Americans to move ~
~ in to the cities. Secretar y oj Com-
n1erce Afaurice Stans said, "It 's
as though we owned a vas t an·
sion with hundreds of ro but
I most of us h11ve cUcide o live
in the closet."
Bunker, on U.S. AID headquarters and
on nationa l and police headquarters.
"The Viet Cong arc trying to collect
and buy our types of military uniforms
and 5tores In order to camouflage
themselves as soldiers of the Republic of
Vietnam," the broadcast said, quoting
lhe Interior {police) Mini.!try.
Rap Brown • Ill Car Blast?
The broadca!t saJd the Communist aim
was to "easily Infiltrate into the capital
to launch a surprise offensive."
Trial Recessed A fte r Bomb 'Victim' Question Raised
• Following a speech by Vice.Pres-
ident Agne'v in which he deplored
colleges \vhich admit underprivi-
leged students who are below nor-
mal requirements, Sen Walter F.
Monda le. {0-Minn .) said. •it don 't
think we've ever had a vice-presi ..
dent who every night could think
of something ne\v to attack. Jn ..
stead of bringing us together,
Vice-Pre!;ident Agnew ••• seem s to
be spending full time tearing us
apart." •
U.S. Navy pilot! !lying o[f carriers in
the Gulf of Tonkin made most o! the
latest raids against North Vietnamese
supply routes and troops in Laos,
military sources said.
The estimated 125 Navy F4 Phantom,
F8 Crusader, A6 Intruder and A4
Skyhawk pilots on the carriers have car·
ried out no raids in South Viel.flam since
Saturday. All their raids have been into
Laos. Air Force planes from Thailand
joined them.
The U.S. military ct1mmand announced
that effective immediately, U.S. aircraft
losses and the number of airmen shot
down in Laos will be reported daily. No
information will be rele~ on losses in-
' curred berore today.
BEL AIR, Md. (UPI) -The trial o(
Black militant H. Rap Brown was recess-
ed on its second day today in confusion
over whether Brown may have been one
of two Negroes killed when an explosion
ripped through their ca r just south or
here Monday night.
Harford County Circui~ Court Judge
1-larry E. Oyer said B(own's attorney,
\\'illiam Kunstler, had raised the question
!hat the body might be that of the delen-
dant "'hen the trial resumed ar7:30 a.m.
PST. Oyer recessed the court so that he,
prosecu tor William Yates and Kunstler
could view the wreckage of the car.
Dr, Werner Spit, assistant medical ex·
aminer of Baltimore , said if the___bqdy
were Brown's it would have to be iden-
tified by someone who knew him and be
confirmed by dental records. State police
who examined the body said they did not
lhlnk it was that of the black militant.
The other body was Identified as Ralph
Featherstone, 30, a close friend of
Brown's and a long time activist in the
Student National Coordlnating Com·
mittee. The unidentified body was
reported lo have carried three sets of
identifi cation but police y,·ould not release
the names.
State Police Lt. Col. Thomas S. Smith
~aid it had been determined that the eii·
plosive or explosives were being carried
on the rront floor of the car, not planted
under the floor.
Yates indicated his belle£ that the ex-
plosives were meant to do away \\'ith
him. Cambridge Police Chief Brice Kin·
namon, and special investigator Donald
Cox.
''They were not go ing to blow up the
judge; they weren't going to blow up
Kunstler ; and there were only three of u:ii
up from Cambridge-so you figure it out,"
he said.
Broy,•n. 26. y,·as charged y,·ith inciting a.
riot in Cambridge, r>.1d., in July, 1967,
when he. delivered a speech urging blacks
ln "burn America down" if "\\•hites don'l
come around." Two square blocks o!
Cambridge y,·ere burned following the
speech. The lrial venue 1vas changed to
Bel Air.
Brown's whereabouts were unknown.
Kunstler said ht: called Brown's wife and
brolher in New York this morning just
before JOO prospective jurors filed into
the courthouse. and that neither had
heard from Brown since Monday. U.S. spokesmen said the order to report
aircralt losses in Laos came rrom
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird "1n
order to provide additional information to
the public."' He got his orders from
President Nixon. Ex-Kennedy Aid e
Backs Surcharge;
Sees Recession ·
UMW's Boyle Swears
States to Guide
Cit y Crime FundS Election 'Fair, Square'
Comedian Red SkeLton and his wife.
Georgia. oot l.ofjether fl1onday jor
their 25th wedding anniversary. T he
couple observed t lLei r silver nnniver·
sary wi th mem bers oj tile Ja1ni/y alt-
er Skelton f inished toping anothe r
shoiv. They tnA!t in 1944 an d were
married one year later. • Victor Cam midge, 10, his \vrist
and elbo\v broken. saw an ambu·
lance pulling up to his house and
ran. lie thought they were going
to cut his arm orr. Victor \Vas
eventually discovered hiding in a
h alf-full barrel o{ beer at a near-
by public house. • Jprry W. Friedheim, asked about
a Navy vessel bangin g into a sec ..
lion of 1,he Chesapeake Bay Bridge·
Turulel connecting \'irginia and
]\1aryland, replied that the acci-
dent was an insta nce "\vhen the
ship hit the span."
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Niroo ad·
ministration has told the nation's cities it
want.!I to channel anticrime funds to them
throu gh state governments -not direclly
to the cities themselves.
Attorney General John N. 1'-1itchell
listened Monday to two mayors who com·
plained they were getUng far less than
their share of the federal funds. But he
told them that to establish a direct line
between the federal and to ca I
governments would "make Washington a
dictator over every anticrime project in
the country."
Mitchell appeared al a meeling of J_hr
National League of Cities. He heard com·
pliants from Mayor George C. Siebels Jr,
of Birmingham, Ala ., and ~layor James
H.J. Tate of Philadelphi a.
Tate, noting he had a 7,000-mcm ber
police department. said l'hiladelphia ha"
rCCf-ived only $50,000 to buy walkie
talkies In two years. Siebe.ls said Birn1.
ingham has 10 percent of the population
in Alabama. but gets only five percent of
the anticrime funds allocate.d to hte state.
Hayakawa 'Bombed'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Molotov
cocktail was thrown through the office
window of San Francisco State College
President S. I. Ha yakawa during the
night or early morning but did not ignile,
c.-ollege officials said today.
WASHINGTON (UPJl -The chic(
economist or the Kennedy adminia:tralion
today urged retention of the five percent
inct1me tax surcharge because the na·
lion's economy "is teetefing on the brink
or a recession."
Dr. Walter W. Heller, former <:hairn1an
of the Council of Economic Advisers-, said
the surcharge scheduled to end June 30,
is needed to pay [or a program
guaranteeing "a job at the end of the
line" for all who are thrown out of \\'Ork
in the slump he said is coming.
Sen. \\'alter F. Mondale (0-!\1inn.),
chairman of the banking and currency
subcomm ittee on production and
slabilizaLion, opened hearings today wilh
a charge that the Nixon administration is
fostering an ''inflationary recession."
l·le\ler testified at the hearings. called
to consider pressuring the administration
into using its influence to control prices,
~·age settlements and Interest rates.
Heller said the time has c<1me for the
Federal Reserve to relax its tight money
policies which have sent interest rat.es to
historic highs and for the administration
to take antirecession step~ .
"If we under-react to this \'Cry cvld enl
sortness in !he economy we may very
well head into a recession or a Jong
period of continued softness."
He ad vocated guaranteed training for
public se rvice jobs such as fighting pollu·
tinn and government-subsidized industrial
jobs. ?\talntaining the surtax would pay
for this, he said.
WASHlNGTON (UPI) -W. A. "Tony"'
Boyle has sworn before almighty God his
re-election in December as president of
the United ~line Workers was fair and
square and that he had nothing to do wit h
the murder of his oppone nt
Striking back at his attackers in a rare
new s conference, Boyle told reporterii;
f\fonday he had been the victim of
"dastardly charges" by union opponents,
"iliricalion by the prese, collusion
between , lhe Labor Department and his
enemie3 and unfair lreatment by a
Senate subcommittee which hea rd his
critiC3 but has not called him lo testify.
.. for more than a month, I have
desired a proper judicial forum to re-
::.pond to lhe outrageous charges in the·
press and before the subcommittee,"'
Boyle said. •· 1 am here today to set lhe
record straight."
"I hereby solemnly swear to almighty
God to tell the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the lruth," said the handpick·
ed successo r of the late John L. Lewis.
.. Winter Isn't Over Yet
In a 14-page prepared statement read
\Vilh evangelical rervor, Boy 1 c
"categorically denied" accusations union
funds and personnel were used to .. steal"
the election for him from insurgent can.
didale Joseph A. ''Jock" Yablonski, who
was slain with his wife and daughter less
than a month after the election.
The UMW president also denied any
con1p llcity in Yablonski's murder. He
specifically denied knowing Simon. Hud·
dleston. father-in-law of one of the ac-
cused Yablonski kilters and a UMW of·
ficial in Tennessee, and denied charges
he gave Huddleston a pistol as reported
by a national magazine.
Wide Band of Free zing Rain Sivee ps Over Midivcst
CaUfot"tlfa
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VEN ICE, La. !UPI ) -Amber clouds
:: ot oil spurting skyw ard gave a grim
pre.vie"' of pollution that could result
\\'hen the l3rgest oil fire in the history o[
the Gulf of 1'.1exlco Is finally extinguished.
... ...
Firefighter! snufred the 21.kiay-old plat-
form fire with a 400-pound dynamite bla st
ritonday, but six minutes later gushing oU
hit a hot spot on the structure and the
blaze boome.d back to life.
Another attempt to extinguish the fire ~ was planned tor today •
Dring the six-minute hlatws, glistening ·°' brown oil spewed as high as 250 feet
abo\'e gull waters.
The Coast Guard said Uve barrtls of oil
escaped while the !lre w11s oul
DENIES 'DASTARDLY' STORIES
UMW P r•sident Tony Boyle
Fighting Erupts
Over Refugees
In Lebanon City
By United Press lattrn1tlonal
Fighting broke out today near Beirut
between police and Lebanese rerugees
who fled to the capital from the southern
border region following a series of
clashes wHh Israeli troops . One person
was killed and 20 Y.'Ollnded.
Arab guerrilla sourcts said the
refugees went to Beirut from the border
areas of Ilroun and Bint Jbeil and began
erecting makeshift shanties at the Al
f.1okalless area, site of a rtfugee camp
three mile.s from Beirut.
The clash started when Lebanese ge.n-
danne.s brought bulldozers to knock down
the houses which had been put up on
private property. In a brief bunt of
shooting I refugee was killed and 13
woonded and 7 policemen we.re injured.
It wall the sect1nd disturbance In Beirut
today. Earlier, police broke up 1 women 's
anti-American demonstration near the
U.S. embassy and seized their bannera .
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'' I _50 U.S. Geological Survey eng ne~rl'
-~4 esflmal ed lhe r11te of now at between 600
·'' and J,000 barrels a day. Once the fire 111
About 30 women, mainly Arab students
from the AmeriCan Unlvtrllity of Beirut,
but including some American!'!, gathered
near lhe embassy and waved placard.5
protesting the sale of U.S. Phantom jets
to Israel. One banner said: ''American
women aaalnst Phantoms lO Israel." "'''""'"',""""'"-'-"' ..... •bl:r.lt fllOt l..i G\IJIY ~ C-... TvetH'r 1114
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Wll»llSDAY
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out, that now would continue untll the .~• tight !taking well!! Involved in the fire
are: capped -a proctss that could take
a:ii long as lh!W ~·eeks.
Tht Lebanese situation also came up for
dlscu~slon In Jerusalem where French
Ambassador Francis Hure conferred to-
day •1111 Foreign Minister Abb> Eban.
·outhern
Vote Rights
-Bid Fails
w ASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate lo-
day rejected an amendment that would
free all Southern states exefpt Georgia
and South Carolina from an extension of
tile 1966 Voting RigbLs Act.
The amendment, offered by Sen. Sam
J. Ervin, Jr. (0-N.C.), would have chang-
ed the act to use 1968 registration and
voting figures instead of the 1964
atatlsUcs.
The provisions of tl)e 1965 act are now
II) effect in any :iitate or county where
less than 50 percent of the voling agt
population was registered or voting in the
1964 elections. It-now c<1vers alx southern
states and 39 counties in a seventh.
By using the 1968 statistics all states
except Georgia and South Carolina would
be frttd because they r1ised the voting
or registration percentage abo"ve the ~
percent m·ark.
Ervin ara:ued that If the 1964 record
was sufficient to "justi fy guilt" then
compliance in 1968 "should justify the
conclusion lhat in 1968, 1969, and 1970
these states are not guilty or violating tht
prohibition of the JSlh amendment."
He said, "If thi.s legislative body
believes in lair play and justice, it should
be consistent.''
But Sen. Philip A. Hart (0-Mich.).
said the gains in black voting are not
"so solid they could not be undone by
new practices and procedures."
He added states with "a histGry of rather
persistent offense" would not be covered
under the Ervin amendment.
By 5 to 3 margins. three other Ervin
proposals were defeated in f\fonday's
debale, leading the y,·hite-haired North
Carolinian to decla re :
"Jl.1y slate ha:ii been trying lo get back
into the Union for 105 years! The Civil
\Var is over! I wish t could say the same
thing for Reconstruction l"
Shouting Whites
Stopped; School
Opens at Lamar
LAMAR, S.C. (UPl) -National
Guardsmen and state troopers turned
back two groups of shouting whites today
as children returned to the Lamar School
for the first lime since school buses we.rt
overtwned there by mobs last week.
The whltes disbanded after olfl«rt
refused to let them onto the campus of
the combined elementary and high
school. Inside the red brick building
teachers kept the 76 student!'! bu:iiy "to
take their minds off what has been soin1
on.''
The St Negro and 24 white children
who showed up for classes today ct1n·
sli tuted only a fraction of the normal
school popu1ation of 900.
The Negroes arrived at the newly
desegregated school aboard fi ve busts
shortly after 8 a.m. and walked quickly
inside. A short while later two groups of
angry whites c<1nverged on lhe campus
from different directions.
Despite the shouting out.side, classes
were held in th~ red brick building. Prin·
cipal Gordon Cole cancelled recesses and
instructed the teachers to k e e p the
students "occupied and superv ised."
Oulside, a group of 35 white men.
women and teenagers stormed up to a
Highway Patrol roadblock.
"My child ain't going to no nigger
school." screamed a woman. Another
woman yelled "We want our rreedom . , ,
we want school ror our children."
Holding their rifles high. slate troopers
turned ba ck the crowd. About 10 per!'!Ons
tried to run around the roadblock, bu t
they were shoved away by troopers an d
guardsmen.
Another group of 17 whites was stopped
on another strett. Whites also con-
gregated in about 20 car1 at a restaurant
five blocks from the school but they
made no move to go near the campus.
Clieck by FBI
For I n.terview?
WASHINGTON (AP! -A bearded
Jong-haired George W a s h t n g to~
University !'!Ophomore says a Justice
Department spokesman told him an
FBI check would be required before he
could interview Martha Mitchell.
Jan Bridge. a journalism major from
Richmond, Va., said he paid $100 at 1
campus charity auction for the in·
tervl.ew with the wHe of the attomty
general . Ht said he hoped to ACll an ac-
count of the interview to help launch
his journalistic career.
After submitting the high bid, ht
said, he was summoned to the Justice
Department and told by an official that
an FBI check would be required. In ad·
ditlon, he sa id. the official said no "tapt
recorder could be used and that Mn:.
fltitthell's statements would have to be
inspected before publication.
A Justice Department spokesman
d~ied the charges, saying only that
use of a tape recorrtt!r would be p
hlbited . t.he Post said.
The 19--year-old. Bridge. exprts.sed tht
belief that ~is Interview might gtve
Mrs. hUtchtll ''c rtdlblUty," tht: PO!t
said •
The ch1rily auction Is an annaa1
campus affair In which various items
donated by celtbrltles go to the hiahest
bidder.
•
•
•
U~I TtleP ... 11
Sergeant
Charged
In Graft
WASHINGTON (AP) -An
Army master sergeant. who
once was quoted in congr~s·
. slonal teslimony as saying he
couldn't afford lo leave Viet·
nam because )li!5 lour there
was worth $150,000 a year, has
been charged with larceny,
bribery and gralt.
The Anny said It& charges
against M. Sgt.. \V 111 i a m
Higdon stem from his tour of
duty as custodian of llie non·
commissioned officers and
enlisted men's open mess
system at Long Dinh, from
1966 to August 1968.
/
I
QUEENIE / By PhR lnterlancll r-'--:::--'---""""..,.
He is the first !ierviceman
charged Jn connection with an
investigation int6 illicit opera·
lions ol NCO clutli. . "Actually, about all you'll bo apocUd to c!O la danoo
Yi'hether Higdon is court· and leap around whenever we come up with
mart\aled will depend on the a breakthroul'h."
recomme ndation of the com· ---------'-'-"===='--------
mander or the Red ston e
Arsenal iit Huntsvi lle. Ala.,
where Higdon ls now sla·
lioned. The commander y,•1 11
conduct an investigation
before evaluating the case
against the sergeant, the
Army said.
LBJ Progressing
As Notes Pour In
''"""· M1J'Cfl 19; 1970 DAILY PILOT S·
'Netglaborhood' Case
Court W oi,ft Rule on Schools
WASlllNGTON (AP )-The lawytr for lh< Nallonal Ihm for the NAACP Le11I
Supreme Court has turned Aa.soclallon for I.he: Advan· Defense and Educational Fund
down a plea to hold Its first cement of COiored people and for more than two decades.
hearing on racial lmbalanctsJ;''=============:;:=:;;;;=====;
in schools rtsulUn1 from
neighborhood h o u s I n I pat·
terns .
Chief Justice lVarren E.
Burger indicated, however, It
ia an issue the high court v.111
have to race ult imately.
The Supreme Court's refusal
came late Monday in a 7.(1
deci sion in which it called for
the. early desegregation of
public schools In 1'1emphls,
Tenn., under a plan that pro-
mises to "'Ork quickly.
~1emphls school officials
u r g e d a hearing on the
neighborhood school issue.
saying any racial Imbalance
was due to housing· patterns
and not intentional school
segregation.
Instead, the unsigned opi·
nion reversed the judgment of
the U.S. Court of Appeals in
WHAT oon THI lllLI Uf AIOUT
DIYOlllCl7 M•l•chi 2116 ••Yt tlri•t God
"41t1tlrl p11ttll'lt 1w1v-" ID!vorctl.
God, thr.1,1911 Mo111, tol1rtltd dlvorc•
for 1whi11 IM1tt. lt:JI, Mott1' Ltw bt·
1119 t "SCHOOL MASTER to lirin<J ut
u11to Ch1itt"; llut "-Wt •r• II• lo1t9•r
u~tr t 1chool 11111l1r" 1611. 1:24·2$1
encl &otl "11ow co1t11111"41th 111 mtfl 1verphtr1 to ''''"'"
IActl 11:10). NOW, J 11111 1ll11ws ONLY ONE ,.,,,,. fo r di·
vorct trul r111111rrf191, incl th1t r111on 11 FOlllNICATION, Mi tt.
lt:1.
Tho1t who d iv1rc1 for 1tll11 rettel\I 1"'4 re·mtrry 111 911llty of
tdt;llery 111d 1h1ll 1101 111!11 H11v1r1, I C.r. 61f.0 IO.
All of God'1 l1w1 111 for th1 GOOD of m111lrll'ld 1,,J to b hit
l1w 011 DIVOii.CE. F1w divorut would occur If for11lc1tio11 w1r1
l lC.OflliJtd II fht 011ly '>'tllcl r.ttOll,
The wo1 ld it thr11!1111d with ch101 t..l1y Hc1u11 of 1 l»-1ak.
dow11 of !ht ho"'•· kwti• ••p•rll'll•nf•d with EASY DIVOllCE
ond t•w th• dl1•tt•rout co111•ciir•i.c•• 111d now 11 11e•i119 9r1•I·
• •r r•tlrlctio111. Oth1r 11•tio111 thro1r9hoirt hittory h1v• lri1d th•
•llperl111•11t t nd 111ffertd.
Sht ll •• d•ttl'oy our ho111•t t nd 1oci•ly i.y frlvol •irt divorc•
•Ml •lto 101• our 1oul1 •l•r111tlly, or th1U .,... ob•y 6od't ltw1
Writ• or phono for freo bopldot 011 DlVOllCE. Church of Chrirt,
211 W. Wl11011 St., Cot!• M•t•. C.llf, 'hon• !•1·4111 or
646-2441 . VISIT u1 trid cli1ct1u thi• qirntion olld oth1r lllLE
m•ll•ri. Tne TV ClMnlHI t $Hdql 7:30 A.M.
Cincinnati that Me mph t sl!==-~==~-~=-==-==~===' already has dismantled a two.
race school system. The
federal judge who has had
charge or the cal!e. Robf:rt M.
1.fcRae Jr .• wall directed to
over.iee further desegregation
in line with the high court's
standard.
Pa1itlie1• Tlireat
A witness hefore the Senate
s u bcommittee investigatin~
club scandals last. year quoted
Higdon as ,!:aying he couldn 't
afford to lea\·e Vie I n am
because !he assignment y,·as
y,·orth $150,000 a year.
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)
-\Vith get well wishes pour·
ing in from many parts of the
world. lcrmer President Lyn·
don B. Johnson continues to
make progress in his recovery
from c!K'~t pains which set in
tight dnys ago, bis Army doc-
tors say
ha\•e been st.reaming into the
hoe;>ital by the thousaM! from
all 50 1tates and abroad. Set forth last October In a
1.1ississlppi school decision,
that standard is: ''The obllga·
tion of every school district Is
to terminate dual school
systems at once and to
operate now and hereafter on·
Jy unitary schools."
Do your
chifdren
fly kites? Clifford 1-Ieinz Ill, 30. is led a'vay by San Fran
cisco police after allegedly threatcnin~ a Blaci
Panther rall y outside the I-fall of Justice "'ith <
.!ilick of dynamite. No dynamite 'vas discovered
but HC'inze \Vas charged \1.'i th wav ing a knife in :
threatening manner . The rally \\"as held t.o prote·
the extradition of Black Panther Party Chai rmc
Bobby SealP in a n1urder ca se in Connectic ut.
Italia11s Also Shutting
Con sulate in Rhodesia
said, the United States move
v;ould top today's agenda.
The Arm y did nl)t describt
In detail the charges against
l.figdon . Saying only that the
allegations y,·ere based upon
report.~ by iii; criminal in·
1·esti~ative divi~ion and were
brou,l'!ht by Higdon's com·
1nanding officer at Redstone
Ar,!:enal.
The charges do not in\Polve a
corporation "'hich Higdon and
four other service-men~formed
to make money selling sup-
plies to NCO clubs in Vietnam
and Germany, the Army said.
A brief mediral bulletin
reported that Johnson's phf$i·
cians were "satisfied y,·ith his
continued progress ?.1onday."
Ht: has bten able to walk
around his se\'Cnlh f 1 o or
penthouse suite at the Army"s
Brooke ·General Hospital.
Johnson, 61, who was strick·
en by a heart attack in l!r.15,
entered Brooke March 2 with
chest pains which doctors
bl::imed on hardening of the
coronary arteries.
Get·\vell cards, I e t le r s ,
telegrams, even p a c k a g e s
Monday's load ol good
tidings included letters from
a: far away as Hana Kona and
Australia.
Lo,ver Vote
Age Chances
'Doubtful'
Once again, the court swept
aside a contention that It has
not adequately defined "'hat It
meant by "unita ry'' school
systems. Burger, in a con·
curring opinion, saicl last
October'1 ruling ''st ated,
albeit perhaps too cryptically.
that a unitary system was one
WASHINGTON (AP)_ The 'wlUtin which no per&0n Is to
be effectively excluded from Justice Department said today any school because of noe or
it Is "dubious and doublful" color'.''
lhal a congre1aional 6tatute However. Burger said he
lowering the vot.ing age to ta would have favored a he.ar\n1
v.•ould get by the U.S. Supreme on the 1.femphis situation if
Court. the court did not. have one va-
The department, w h i I e cant seat and another jusUce
upholdlng President Nixon's -Thurgood Marshall -was
view that the voting age unable to participate.
should b6 reduced to ta by Marshall excluded himself
J. Don't cro111tretb Of
hJclm1i while flJJna kH11.
2. Don,"'. kH• with lltlal
In the frame DI' t.ff.
3. Don't ... tluel 1tr1n1, wl,.
or any twktt wtth metal In tt. •· Don, flJ • kHo -TY ot rodlo anten••·
5. Don, fly. kHo--
-1-•nddon, ... tD_
a ldtl .ttucht In poww lln&
6. Don't fty a kite In tht rain.
,
SALISBUR.Y, Rhode sia
IUPT ) -The lt111ian govern·
menl today annou nctd it '>''ill
close its consulate general in
Salisbury in line with the
United Na tio ns Security Coun-
cil request for member states
not to recognize the Republic
of Rhodesia.
The announcement in Rome
came es the Rhodesian
cabinet met lo discuss the
unexpected closure of the U.S.
consulate here.
Robin James. leader of the
rlght"'ing Republican Alliance
Party, said the only effect of
Ule consulate's rlosing "is that
"·hat is widely believed to be a
spying agency will be remov-
ed."
Labor Urges
Rail Dispute
Bill Hearing
WASHINGTON (AP)
Announcement of t h e PresidenJ Nixon w a n t s
Cyprus
Called 'Pense
amending the Conmtullon. op-from the C8'e wlthool giving Southern Californlll. Edlaon -~
posed vla:orously Senate bids _:an~y_'.rt~a~so~n~·_'.H~e~w~u~~ch:'.l'.::ef~===================== to do the ume thing by an act 1~
Politica l sources said the
American decis ion caught the
government by surprise. Bri·
tain greeted it with delight
The cabinet meets each
\\'Cek on Tuesday .and, sources
* * ~ Rl1odesian
Recognition
Proposed
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen .
James O. Eastland (D-"-fiss. ),
proposed today a resolution
seeking reversal of the ad·
ministration decision to close
the U.S. consula!e in
Salisbury, Rhodesia .
His measure would have the
Senate recon1mend that the
United Stales grant "full
recognition iind all diplomatic
and consular rights" to
Rhodesia.
';The sooner we recognize
this small. friendly, pro-
western government. t h e
closer we "'iii be to returning
to a sound. rational policy
governing our foreign rela·
lions," Eastland said .
He also said an economic
boycol~ aimed a g a i n st
Rhodesia has made the United
States "almost who 11 y
dependent on the S o v i e t
Union" (or supplies of
chromite ore.
E. Germans
Hold Youth
BERLIN (A Pl -A 21-y,.r.
old American has been held
under arrest in East Berlin
since early January it was
lea.med today.
It broughl to l h r c e
Americans now known to be
h!'ld in Easl German jails.
A U.S. spokesman tn West
Berlin conrinned the late&t ar.
rest and identified t h e
American as Marc Hussey, of
Jericho, Vt. Other details were
lacking. the spo kesman added.
Othtr sources reporttd that
Hussey's ramlly had been in·
formed of hJs arrest by the
East Germans , but thal the In·
vestlgatlon of ht1 case was
continuing.
This Wll!i taken to n1ran that
Hussey had l\(lf yflt been
chsr;ed and wa5 being held I
under "''ha! the t:a~l Germans
call tnve tlga1Jve annt.
closure, ordered by U.S. Congress lo start holding
Secretary of State William P. hearings on his bill to impose NICOSIA, Cyprus CUPJ > _
Rogers. was hailed by British a seUlement in the nationwide A Turkish Cypriot leader said
newspapers as a vi ctory for railroad labor dl11pute. Labor today the attempt t 0 British diplomacy. Secretary George P. Shultz assassinate Arch b i s h 0 p
Thirt y Labor Party says. •1 •-f Cyp members of Parliament sub-"We would like to see some n a-rios, president 0 rus.
mitted a bill congratulating hearings ," Shultr. said of Nix· was the result of anarchy
the United States for its on's proposal !hat Congress among Greek Cypriots.
decision. selUe lhe dispute before lt Rauf Denk.lash, leader of !he
Th · h ad d b · 1· "d t ·k Turkish minority in the islarid e regime e e y erupts 1n a na 1onw1 e s rl e nation, said ithe situa tion in Prrm ier Ian Smith proclajmed again April 11. Cy prus is "very tense" among its independence from Britain "Some in Congress have
in HISS but the United States been complaining they didn't the Greek majority.
re1 ained its consulate i n have time to consider th e Denklash"s reaction lo the
Salisbury on grounds the President's bill. Well. now attack on ?.lakarios came as
Smith regime was accredited they have time," Shultz said in police .sources reported in·
lo Queen Elizabeth's govern· an Interview. vesLigators were ·'v ery
ment and the presence of the Congress last "'eek quirkly hopeful" of arresting the
U.S. consulate did not con· passed a bill ordering a delay assailants soon.
stilute diplomatic recognilion . in any union st rike or indu!itry Ten of the 14 person!i ar·
The U.S. consul general in Jockoul for 37 days, rather rested after the: attack have
Salisbury. Paul O'Neill . said than enacting NI x on' s been ordered held eight days
Monday he would close the measure lo immediately im-without charges. Four other
consulate, occupying the top pose a labOi settlement on suspect11 were released after
of Coogrus.
Asst. Atty. Gen. Willian\ ff.
R:ehnqui.at told a Senate con·
stituUonal amendment sub-
commlttee the department op-
poses Cona:ress lowering the
voting age on it& own for these
three reasons:
-"The constitutional vaUdl·
ty of such a statute would be
open to the most serious
doubt."
-"Doubt .as to the validlty
of the statute could create
confusion and uncertainty &Ii
to the outcome of a presidcn·
tial election,"
The procua of amending the
Con:-~ltulion. which requires a
two-thirds majority of both
houses of Congre!is a n d
ratirication by three-quarters
of the states, Is more likely to
produce the widespread con·
RTISU5 needed if the. change is
to be widely accepted . three noors o( a Salisbury of· wages and working conditions. questioning Monday.
fice building, at the end or the ;--=-::;-iiiiij~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~miiii".::---1 business day next Tuesday. I
He said his staff of three I k
diplomatic and cons u I at• a as a IS ALfVE! representatives and f o u r secretaries would remain in At "The Gr1ndelt Mall Of All"
Salisbury a few days longer to ~ Beginning March 12, 1970
clean up personal business.
A spokesman for the British C' th P. sf 4h
F o re i g n Oflice said, "we CIOU \01 .J Jlll
welcome this move to close
down the consulate."
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626 Wett 17" St.
(7141 US.IJJJ
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"S'4p at Illa BltAIO':, ,_ li/io •lltalll"
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t Di\Il,Y PD,OT EDl'l'ORli\L Pi\Gl.
Acquire Los Alam ito_s ? . -
< C(~'
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..,.he n crense Department's decision to close Los
A os t-.'aval N r Station Is not 1·ust a inllitary nlat-
ter. ,, n· t is the Naval Rescrve's· oss m ::i.y be Orange
County's gnln.
While Ibo land may not be released by the federal
govemment for two years, speculation on the facility's
future iJ widespread.
Civil authorities are interested in the base for ob-
vious reasons, the most obvious being, the basic prol>-
lem of finding a local airport site in an urban area.
As a means of incurring Jocal displeasure, airports
muat rank ahead even of electrical generating stations.
So when one that is already btiilt and lo a degree ac-
cepted becomes available that is a find, indeed. At least
IO goes the· reasoning in some quarters.
·There is genuine need for additional aviation fa-
cilities in this crowded county. Flying of private planes
.11 becoming increasingly popular, bolh for business
and pleasure use.
The closing of the Los Alamitos station will affect
private aircraft more than commercial flights. The Or-
•nge County Airport Commission has recommended
that immediate steps be taken to acquire the facility
Is a generai aviation site, namely for use by light air-
craft. It is not suitable for commercial Oiehts becauo;e
of conflicting patterns with Long Beach Airport, says
the commission.
that the Los Aiamltos decision Is unllkely to slow the
search for a ne'v county airport. They support their
ari:umenl by pointing out that further .. e o! Orange
County Airport by airlines is nol being limited by lbe
number of planes al lhe airport but by its suitabUity.
An additional aspect to the closing 11 where the
Navy will transfer its jets. Tbe official ..:ord is that
they will be based at three stations in San Diego County
but residents of Laguna Beach, Laguna Hills and Mis-
sion Viejo may feel that hearing is believing and they
'vill believe it only when they hear that none of the
jet~ is flying out of El Toro Marina Corps Air Station.
Selling on Sunday
Are departmen t stores, discount houses and other
major retailers opening their doors on 'Sundays in re-
sponse to public demand! Or bas I.here been no special
demand, but a public response to such openings?
The weight of opinion seems to have it that the
r etailers are responding to public demand -although
opposition to Sunday -selling continues to be strong in
large segments of the nation's retail industry.
Blue la"'s prohibiting Sunday sale of anything but
the most vital necessities were once common to rural
socJety, especially in Puritan New England. But in·
depth studies show how times have changed. Author
Warren L. Johns'in 1967 concluded that:
-Blue laws in general run contrary to the principle
of free enterprise.
J.4
~~ <.-;,--,,-(..._"'
County supervisors are expected to press the r e-
quest swiftly. This may lead the county into conflict
with the city of Los Alamitos, within whose limits most
of the base Iles. The city, which f e e 1 s it has zoning
prerogatives, intends to master plan the area and indi·
cations are that this plan would include recreational,
commercial and industrial development -but not an
airport.
-They are not in harmony with modern times.
technology, customs and wishes.
-Their overall social-political context is long gone.
Judging by the public response to Sunday openiny5
by Orange Coast retailers, families shopping together
on that day wi!J follow the national trend toward mak·
~g Sunday the biggest saJes day of the week in many
hnes.
'I Sf/LL 5AV \f\IS \S A µi:t .L Of~ WIN m 111~ A. R'61L~Ql\'D I!"
If private planes are moved to Los Alamitos from
Orallge Count~ Airport, there are those "'ho feel that
this may result in 11n increase in commercial use of
the county airport. Other authorities believe, however,
Ocean R iches
-.~.
SIW uldGo To
Poor Nations
Since the United States already owns a
,,ast disproportion of lhe w or 1 d 's
resources and riches, and since the In-
equity between !he ri<h notions and the poor nations ii Jncreuln1 ralher than
~. ,.. must obviously find 110111• n, \o brin.I .tbe world mQre ln~o
economic balance If we want to avoid
widelprud rebellion and revolution.
'lbere ts one way to do this without
gacriDdng a sin1Je dollar or resource we
already possess. It woukl be a gracious
and 1enerous re~ure, slgnifyina to the.
poor and struggling countries of the
world thal wt art not tht oppressors and
upk>iters as depicted in litarxist
demonology.
rr 15 AGREED by all experts In the
various &eienttfic disciplines that lhe
wealth on and under the floor of the
oceans is many Umes greater than our
reaource1 on land. 1bt 1tabed1 of the
&}obe -which represent tw~lhlrds of the
total area of the world -contain
enormous natural riches we an no"'
technolo&fcally ready to devtlop and
utilize.
Since the international seas bekm.1 to
everybody, tho6e natioru with the most
money and equipment would nonnally be
the first and most successful to lake part
1n this new "gold rush" for underwater
mine.rals and other rtSt'lurces. And the
U.5. would be first of all.
IT 11 MY VIEW that wt have not only
a moral obligation but a practical stake fol 'ftll In relinquishing all claims to this
tubequeoua treasure. We should work
Dear ·
Gloomy
Gus:
Suptr-affluent. over-indulgent p&r·
euts who buy thelr young children
motorized mln1·bikea and then allow
them to Illegally louse up neighbor-
hoods wilh their noise and threat to
life and limb should be sent to jail
-not their innocent, fun-loving kid!.
-B.W.A.
n it ,.•Tutt ntltrtl ,.,,,,... ... 1.... Mt _., ... ,41, '" .. ltf ""• ....,,,_, ~
--.... _.,. ... ........., ...... Del~ ,lltt,
wllh the UN'• Political Commltttt cl the
General Asstmbly to as.surt! that ln--
tematlonal regulation will apportion the
largest lbare1 to the countries in greatest
need.
More than thla.· rather than giving
military and economic 11id to nations,
wbich only foments conflict and ofter
keeps corrupt administrations morr
securely in power. wt should offer equip
ment and technical help (on 11 loan-and
repayment basis) to the under-developei.
lands for working lhe seabed s.
TIIE U.S. ALREADY commands 110mc r:o per~nf of lhe world's renewable an1
non-renewable resou rces. P..1ucb more wil
come In \\'hen we cultivale our owr
coastal waten on the continental 1heU.
Only short-sighted greed would compel u~ to engage ln a new ract of underwatrr
colonialism, and compound the anarchy
we have created on land.
Our generosity (\\'hlch is only a rorm of
common sense) would do more to un·
dercut the Marxist atl.acks on our
hegemony of the world 's riches than
almost any other step we could lake. To
say "We .,..·ant no more, and recog nize
that poverty must be allevia ted if pea«
ts to be. maintain~." would testify most
eloquently to our since re aim of avoiding
a nuclear holocaust in a struggle for
oceanic treasure.
S u permarlie t Pricing
To the Edlt'lr:
Supermarket pricing practices setm to
•be provokln1 serious ethical question s
thtSe days -qutslions and challenges
that art putkuJarly acute for market
anploy ...
One pl'ICHce, for example: The 11rtce of
a jar of pr:1ehe1 goes up from 36c to 44c
-and the &hell tags state "Rea. 49C -
OUR SPECIAL 4'<:."
Now anyofte whose mind Is not com·
pJet.tJ1 ckluded with cynici!m Is un-
comfcrtable wl.tb such i.tse implications.
BUI' IF TOU'R.! • clerk and you art
rctuallJ putting those tags up on tho
shel\-'U -how about your own ethiC5?
You.can -.x. "It's the policy makers who
have to chanp: -I only do what I'm lold..
!kit thrn "'•)'be )'OU start thlnk.in1
aboat tbe Nul murderen who made the
~ cltlm -and you t'.'Ornler. Where
.._ lndlvtdual rr,,pon!'lblllty begin?
When do you f:M tllt strength lo live
eChlcally -to do rig:.1?
RUTHE QUINN
Sez Crim'•
T• !ht Editor:
would separate bad apples from the good
ones Is utter nonsense. However, thi s
does not mean that there are no
parasltea. __.
A YOUNG wo:.tAN took a walk very
ea~ly Ol)t morning and when a aex
deviate finished the young mother wu
dead. This brutal and inhuman act is not
new because it ha ppens all the time.
What J_s so ,discouraging Is that the
parasite that committed such an inhuman
act probably has a rtc0rd of other RX
crimes.
Thert: 11 no doubt In my mind that any
tn~lvldual that commits a violent sex
crime Is a parasite and his rirht of
freedom must be dtnled.
SOCIETY MUST not wait until a R'l
dtvlate has c:ommllted the ultimate aex
<rim•-before dl'llYll\g tho . right of
fl'tt'dom ~but-lhould parate such ID-
Direct Election of President Could B e Disast ro1is
Second_ Thoughts for the Liht;rals
WASHINGTON -A eertifled liberal
arose in lhe Senate Thursday morning to
make a !ltaternent which upsets the
liberal line.
It is well that Tom Eagleton, Missouri's
freshman Democrat, should be the
chosen instrument, !or on everything
from civil rights to defense ap-
propriations Eagleton has t.aken positions
\\'hich libe rals regard as "right." Thus
they cannot fail to accord him a hearing
when he le.Its them that Birch Bayh's
plan for direct election of the President
could letd lo disaster.
In the wake of the election of 1968,
liberals In b:lth parties panicked in lhe
face of the George Wallace challenge and
resolved not to lpend aoother Eledlon
Night wondering whether they'd aoon be
pleading their aiuses in lhe House of
Represenbllv'3. There e,neraed the
Bayb plan, simple and cloaked In one-
man-Ol\e·vote Democrati c raiment. It
~"'iftly passed the House and is now the
"enate's pending business.
TIIE BA YB AMENDMENT provides
-,ply that the man who gets the most
·~s -anywhere in tht country -is
~.ed President, provided he gets at
. I
. 1
least 40 percent of the votes cast. That. it
was thought, would do away with the
specter of Wallace.
But as Eagleton began to examine the
possibilities, be began to reconsider his
earlier support. He will slress, in his
spt«h Thunday, at Jeut two major
drawbocb -both ol whtdl, ho belll!Ves,
would be fatal te the preservation' Of the
system Bayh Intended to save.
1be first ol these 11 that a candidate
could be elet't.ed who carried' only a
handful of states, perhaps only one. In
1968, for example, Hubert Humphrey car-
ried only 13 states. tr he had lost 12 of
these by narrow margins, and increased
his margin in New York to lhe amount by
which Lyndon Johnsen carried that state
in 1964, Humphrey would have led
Richard Nixon in thl!: popular volt,
though J05ing 49 of 50 states. Under the
Bayh amendment. Humphrey would
nevertheless be President.
SURELY, SO EAGLETON reasoned,
unless the Uniled States has beciilne as
homogenous as, say, Costa Rica, it is
unacceptable for a man to be elected
Pre.sident with so limited a geographic
distribution of the popular vote. So much
for drawback No. I.
Drawback No. 2 Hes in the Bayh
amendment's provision for a runoff lf
neither major candidate wins 40 percent
of the vote. Far from eliminating strong
thlrd·party challenges. this provision
would guarantee them.
First, re830111 Eagleton, many voters in
1968 swallowed their natural inclination
to vote for Wallace only because they
knew theirs would be a "wa sted" vote -
lhat Wallace could not carry -for ex-
ample, Illinois, New Jersey, Ohio or
~1ichigan.
BUT IF THE FIRST vole were "free"
-to be followed by a probable runoff
be tween the two major candidates -
\Vallace might easily have received 75
percent more of the popular vote. He
would thus have forced a runoff and he
coold have gone to Humphrey and Nixon
and bargained with them for his support.
Ea gleton thinks the Bayh amendment
would tum a U.S. presidential election in-
to a Southern primary-at-large. If ever/
vote counts equally where cast, an d if
there Is to be a runoff. those with the
special ideology '!''ould form their own
parties for the first election.
U.S. ELECTIONS 'i''OUld be contested
by -for example - a Black Party, an
Anti-Black Party, a SJnall \Vintcr-Wheat
Growers Part y. an Ant i-Income Tax Par-
ty and so on. Each could get its voles in
lhe first election ; then bargain them aff
in the runoff.
Eagleton and his co-spansor, Kansas
Republican Sen. Robert Dole, are basing
their counterproposal on whal they call
the federal system plan. Based on in-
tensive research by \Vashington attamey
Myron Kurian, the Eagleton-Dole amend·
ment would preserve some features o(
the present electoral college while
guaranteeing that !he truly nationa l
popular choice v.·ould always win. It is
not without complications, which Is why
it must be discussed in a futu re essay.
By Frank Mankle wici
and Tom Braden
P i·iorities to Protect Coas tli nes?
WASHINGTON -American coa.sUines,
~ming with sources of pleasure and
;rolit, are also beset with problems.
Vffshore oil spills, such as have occurred
recently from Santa Barbara to Tampa
Bay lo Nova Scotia, are anly lhe most
dramatic of many forces threatening to
make the 12,383 miles cf U.S. coastline
un inviting to man and to marine life.
Ocean resorts are overc'rowded and
fishing grounds sre deteriorating at a
time people art seeking greater r~rea
tiona1 values on the coastline. This quest
intensUies the problem: the growing
mas.s of waterfront homes, amusement
centers and marinas constantly reduces
the remaining marshland, which is es,sen.
tial for shell fish and bird life. And a pr~
liferatjwl or pleasure boats, with their at·
tendanT' dl.sposal of wastes, adds to pollu-
tion of coastal waters.
PRIORITIES ON usage of coastal
areas may well be in order before this
decade Is over. How much ()f the
coastline must ht reserved for wildlife,
for commerct and Industry, for fishing
and reereallon? This question Is being
debated increasingly Jn Washington, state
houses and city halls along the Atlantic
and Pacific littoral. Nolrung has brough t
the question to public attention more than
a · rash of mishaps offshore i n
transporting and drllllng oil.
Editorial . ' Research
life, oyster beds, boats, waterfront prop.
erty, and 'two public beaches.
A WEEK EAR.LIER the tanker Arrtlw,
owned by a company headed by Aristotle
Onauis and chartered by a subskUary of
Standard Oil Co. (N .J.), foundered on a
rock off Nova Scotia and broke in half.
Winds drove the oil splllage ashore. Th~e accldenll stirred memories of
the wreck of lhe tanker Tomy Canyon In
the English Channel in 1967 and the erup.
lion of an oil well being drilled off Sama
Barbara, C&Jif., in January 1961 -
ecological disasters which mobilized con·
servationiat opinion be.rt and abroad. Oii
from the Tomy Canyon damaged 120
rqJles of Britain's southwestern coast and ss' miles of beaches In France. Thoosands
of birds and sea creatures perished.
THE SANTA BARBARA eruption
blackened 30 miles of Southern California
beaches and coated llOO square miles of
lhe Paciftc Ocean with oil. Although tbe
flow of oil from the well blowout soon
ceased, seepage through the ocean floor
continued. In December a new leak, from
a broken pipeline, spilled more oil into
Santa Barbara Channel.
By contrast wilh the suddenness of the
Santa Barbara accident. a gradual deter-
Joratlon bas befallen the Great Lakes,
Chesapeake Bay, and Pugel Sound.
among olher waters. A "dead sea" of 20
so u are miles lits off Sandy Hook, N .J .,
whert the New York metropolitan area
has dumped refuse for years. Factories
and sewage plants drop several hundred
million pounds of sewage and chemicals
into "dyinft" Lake Erie every day. The
Potomac River. which empties into
Chesapeake Bay, has been dscribed as an
"open sewer."
FEDERAL EFFORTS to lessen water
pollution began in tamest with the Weter
Quality Ad of 1965, but resulls have been
meager. The General Accounting Office,
which watches Executive Branch spen -
ding, iuued a rt:por1. Nov. 4 calling the
f'OVernment's anti-pollution e ff o r t s
"inadequately financed, badly organized,
poorly planned, and und ennined by in-
dustrial and municipal pollution..:.__
President Nixon , in a special message
to Congress on Feb. 10, called for ''tolal
The Greek: tanker Delian Apollon,
chartered by Humble Oil Co.. ran
aground in Ta mpa Bay near SL
Petersburg. Fla., Feb. 13, and ruptured
her hull. Some 10,000 gallons of oil seilled
into lht bay, damaging marine and bird
Deterring t1ie Vandals
.----B11 George ---.
Sterllzlg, m .. GazeUe: "School van-
dalis m Is a serious and growing problem
.•. One school, however, reporll that it
has virtually eliminated vandallsm by a
Ot'ar George: simple proctdW'e. The antt-vandallsm
For thrte years 1 have been tell· program al suburban Park Elementary
Pre$! Commen.t.8 J
\
tng this one girl I'm going steady School In AJhambra, Calli., 'invol ves the
,,.I th her. During this lim e I've frequent, random checking IA the t"battabooclaee, Fla., New1: '"The
been dating another girl every premises by parents, usually in husband· Internal Revenu e Service has announ t'ed
weekend, which Is when my steady •nd·wife p3lrs, during wee.keDds. The 20 thet In certain slates and artas, }'OU can
th inks l work. Now l\·e decided I pairs of psrents who 1"' volunta rily now pay your Income tal' with your han·
,,.ould lilte to drop bot.h of them parUclpatlng are not armed snd are not 1 h without hurting them. How can 1 do authorized to make arrests. But the mere dy-dandy cr~t card. That's r i:: l -just
mobilization'' to save the nation'a tn-
vironmenl. He proposed allocation of St t
billion annually to communities over the
next four yea rs to help them build waste
treatment facilities.
THE U.S. AR.l\1Y Corps of Engineers,
which dredges harbors and conducts
other activities in support of navigation
-sometimes to the detriment of coastal
conservation -is joining a move to prD-
mole balanced use or coastline resources.
The Chief of the Corps, Lt. Gen.
Frederick J . Cla rke. favo rs establish-
ment of a commission for reconcili ng dif·
ferenees between recreation seekers. rea l
estate developers. and induslriali sls. on
the one hand, and ccologis!s CQncerned
wilh -conse rvation. on the other.
Bul time Is running out. ~farshes that
dot the coastline are fast disappear ing.
Almost one-half of Connecticut's good
coastal wetlands has been destroyed.
Marine biologists suspecl that the disap-
pearance of unpolluted estuaries is
respor1sib\e for a decline in New
England 's catch O[ haddock from 50,000
tons in 1964 to 10.000 tons last year.
By far the heaviest loss of the nation's
prime estua rine spa{'e, the Interior
Department reports, has occurred in
California . No coast.al state has been
spared entirely. The rf'Trlaining question
for all is \\'helher corrective action \\'ill
come soon enough.
-----~ Tuesday~ Mart:h 10. 1970
The editorial paoe oj the Dcrily
Piloi Sl':tlks to inform and &ttm·
Ulate readers by prcsenri1111 this
fltwspaper's opinion.t and com·
menklru on topics of inttrtst
and sionificance, bl/ prov1dl11g 0;
forton for the expreisiurt of
0!'' rtC1ricr1' opinions. 1n1d by
pr11.ttt1tlng tlit rlivc:rst'! vltw-
M.Y ktt.er on the "VlcioUs Crime
Chdt" ti Ju. U coatslried the following
lltltnDeal, • ••. the <l'lghtl of the crt:1tlve
eitlaa .,.. mucb men tmport.anl lh1n
the [ICl>ll cl the Pmll!et." Bill Bowar ooMil DIO !ilJ~, • , , .W
1<11 to -who lo • creative ""'"" Md who bl a peraslte-hlm?n The Idea
diYlduals from sode after that nm _ this? fact that cheeks are bclna made Is sirv~ th:irge it and pay for it later. Now I'd
--------RCJMEr -lni-•tt deterttnHo-yotmJ!Stert-who...,,,.--.oy---th3t-ole-Ulde-6m s-getttng ,. I! of injunncct-omm:rm--r
and spokesmcii on topics of t/le
dcy.
tha.l anyoae could ttparltt the crtatlvt
~ film the 111uita a act
Crime no ma er w sma ,
They must bt kept separated until
there ill little doubl that they have chang-
ed thtlr outlook on sex.
HARRY B. McDONALD JR.
Otar Romeo:
lntroduce !hem to tl'lch other. ll
won't hurt thrm ... of course, 1
ean't vooch for you.
I
alder an unbroltei\ pone of glau to be a downright modern by allowlnq folks to
personal afrront. The proivam ls cos'lng put the ir t::ixes on the tob. Nnw ii the~•'d
the taxpayers nothing, although it dots Jt•st ~c~ right and start 5r 'lin~ p·~·.,11e
rtq\lire the ootlay of • li!tle time 11n1 el· s'..~m;>s on crtodol, then that"d piO\'e that
fort on the part al concerned citiitnS-" Uncle Sam wa.s a true American!"
Robert N. \Veed, Pu hlisher
T
• .-
• • / . .
. . I· Tue!>day, March 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT 'f .
~'~-~
, «®®®Drll~ ~
PRIC!S EFl'ECTIV!;WEONESDAYTHROUGH TUESDAY
Morch 11, 12,,.13, 14, 15, 16& 17
iscount ll
, ff .. · r r -. . " . . · ~
•
4 stU 51'£C~~ AJE fio1A SAVINGS '
_> "'AP! POSSIBl.l""BY SPECIAl. PUil·
CHASES FR.OM' THE AANVFACtURlR
j ~ , ., \ AND PASSED ON fO YOUI • 1 •
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" • , • IS •'"' ... . . • " .,
.: ~ fEA1URiNG~fNtY~~·@iJ ·,
USDA . GHOICE.BEEF A:T.LOW .: : . ,
. ; "'".>~~····::...~· ( .
. EVERYDAY ' DISCOUNT: PRICES!': . DUBUQUE "ROYAL BUFFET'' r • ' . 6QNEtES~, READYiO EAT . . . ' . ... . . . '!"'. .. r. .•· -~ t ... CANNED HAM •
USDA GRADE A • COUNTRY FRESH e iM:!OtE ~~DY
FRYING CH·ICKEN 33 lb. LB. 98
USDA CHOICE e tEAN ANO MEATY CAN.
39lb. BE.EF SHORT RIBS 27 . FAMILY PACK CHOPS e EASTERN QUALITY, WESTERN AAVOR T-BONE
OR CLUB lb. -SLICED PORK LOIN 89 lb.
usciA CHOICE • 'sONE IN . . -,
ROUND STEAK 87•b.
CORNEDR BEEF~RCHOICE 9 8 •b.
SEAFci!OD SPECIAL
.. Flt~S,H_FILLET of COD
•
~~ APPLE-CINNAMON. BlinER-PECAN . C~NAMON STREUS EL . 43c
.•. PILLSBURY COFFEE CAKE SAVE 9c
. --..
flii'EsT'F~o~s TARTAR sAucE 25c
.;~) NO. 300 CAN• SAVE 4c 29c.
Qlll'· GEBHARDT TAMALES
~ 160 COUNT •A~SORTED COLORS•SAVE Be 27 (
.gJ GALA FAMILY NAPKINS -~ 19-0Z.CAN•SAVEbc 53 •/,.GAllON •FAMll"'1'ACIC!D oSAVl!Oc
''Aili' BOUNTY ~HICKEN STEW 1 FOREMOST ICE CREAM .:.~ 1.41/2-0Z.•HOR SEMEAT CHUNKS •SAVE5c 22( i~ 6-0Z.CAN •SAVElc '9'. THOROFED DOG FOOD q:jp· Treesweet Orange Juice
-
N0.300 CAN •WITH BJTS •SAVE 4c 21 ( !EGULAR OR SOURDOUGH • PACKAGE OF 6 eSAVE10.C
-CONTADINA TOMATO SAUCE ·· :AD ENGLISH MUFFINS
~ si6(;1NsTOANTFDIETOR VARIETY. SAVEJQc 59'. ·~ GLAZED BUTTERMllK 06-PAq . SAVE 7c .Qllll'. ~ . FAD DOUGHN.UTS
59c
24c
29'
36c
n'&6-PACK •VANILLA,CHOCOtATEORCHOC.MAtT •SAVE10c 49 . ~ '. .
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.. FRISKIE CAT FOOD ;·,~-. •
. ~ NOODLES ALMONDINE OR ROMANOFF • SAVE 8t 45·· c _, EXCLU-SIVE HEAVY DUTY E.VER·C.LAO CONSTRU.CTION
Q;lil'~ BEITT CROCKER DINNERS fj 10" CHROME SKILLET 199 .. ~ BEEF,CHICKEN,SPAN15 HORFRI EDCH IN ESE •SAVE6 c 31c ( ' ~. wlthTEFLONll
. .,. .. GOLDEN GRAIN RICE-A -RONI · , . · ~ 6-PACK o 16-0Z. NO QEPOSIT-NO RETURN BOTTLES o SAVE.26c 6 ,,. ·~ Fl\MILY SIZETUBE o SAVE 26c(INCLUDIS 10c OFF) ..
Q:'P ROYAL CROWN COLA . 9~ , · " MACLEAN'S . . 7· 3c _ · · , · , . TOOTHPASTE .
. ... -.
•. t-OZ.BOnLE •SAVEllc .
8-0Z. CAN • SAVE 2c
KERN'S
. 1 GREASRESS .GROOMINGFORMEN f=· -v•'l'.ALIS HAIR 69·c t~ "GROOM ·
TOMATO SAUCE ...
SHOP AND SAVtAifAlr
; 1 ' ••
a.oz. •SAVE6c
·ROD'S CALAVO AVOCADO DIP
All MEAT OR All BEEF • SAY_E 6c
OSCAR ,MAYER WEINERS. .
8-0Z. PAC~GE •SAVE~c 1 ,
PHILADELPHIA CR~AM C.H~ESE
53c:
79'
.36c .
&) 2V>-OZ. PACKAGE • Si\VE 14c ,
9"· BRIDGFORD SLICED SALAMI
8-0UNCE e FR0ZiN9 SAVE·2c •
BANQUET ME.AT PtES
459
19'
' RIO, II Pf, AND lUCIOUS . . , .. · · STRAWBERRIES .. · .·
00 . . ·BOXES
FOR
"'"'"""": · ·. . · 49· .• •
0
•· •· .• '.A. SPAilAG. OS · PINEAPPLE.S· . -
FIRM, WGI SIZE 19 '· '
ARTICl{Ol<,ES. , ~~. .
A1' 1J1ns ·-HAWAII 3 · 1 00 . . PAPAYAS · ~ ··.-~=7-'::-=-:-:~=--'+
19', "" 6 <NAVEL ORANGES WATE.flM~L9.~_,. . rl.: 10.L~.B·AG .9'Jc'.
: . S,A~4D FIXINGS'.' · . · · RUSSET POTATOES ..
• • ROMAIN.!'!-IT'AIC~ .. ! · .: . 20 Lb. BAG 97c .
• RED LEAE.unQCE .. ' .. 1 • ·~~~~~;.;;:;:;;;:;;;~ • 1111ma U'ltua : · : • "· • BUNCH VEGETABLES .:
·. ~ ~I.AD IOWl LITTUCt •. " o SPIN~Clt ; , 1 oc· ;~INOfvl •. '-'.'" oTURNIPS , ' 10 '•-HTS
. ·, auN'c' H • · c oMunA•D • _ ··• • __
• ~ 1 . ,. ~, .:~t~ARD~ BUNCH ... •:
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11 O~ILY PILOT Tuttd.,-, M•rtfl 10. 1~70
Campaign Trails
SACRAMENTO IAPl -Th•
campaian piths of Otmocr1t
Jess Unruh and Republican
GOP Bill
Blocked
By Demos
SACRAMEN. IUPll -
Assembly Democrats ~fonday
nich t refused to appro11e a
flna'ncial disclosure bi 11
Republican Speaker Robert
1ifonagan insists iii equally as
!ough as a new anligraft law
authored by Assemblyman
Jess Unruh.
The measure ~·as eligible
for a vote again today.
Unruh, while leading the op-
J)l)Silion to ~1a.1agan's bill, suf·
fc red a se tback himself when
Republicans united to defeat
his amendtnent proposing that
the campaign advertisin f ex-
penditures of candidates for
statewide office -such as
governor -be limited to $1.S
million.
The hill mu stered only 31
Republican \'oles in favor to lt
Democratic votes a g a i n s t
~londay night. ll needed 54.
The aclual ,·o!e occu rred on
an "urgency'' provlalon thal
11·ould allow it to Lake effect as
500n as the 1overnor sli"'d It.
Several provlsion1 "'ould
'.'l.UbstantJ11ly revise 1ectlon. of
the: !Ht Unruh Act which
btcomn effective for tht first
lime April 6.
Local . off!Cl1l1 throuahooL
the state contend tt would
make them ditclOH too much
nf their private rtnanct1.
h1any have threatened to quit
rather thm1 disclote.
"This bi 11 is a dra1tc
weakening of the present con-
nict of interest law," Unruh. a
candidate for governor.
argued durin& floor debate.
He said it failed lo ade·
quately cover wealthy loca1 of·
ficials and charaed "There is
10 lims as much graft taking
place at that level than there
is in the state legislifurt."
Gov. Rta1an be1an croa1Jnc
today .
Reagan chose this evtnln&
to reveal his rt-election plans.
Unruh, the Assembly
Oemocrallc leader, called a
nrws conference In advance of
1hat to crltlcl1e the
performanee of the GOP
Rtagao administration.
So far, neither has any ma·
j3r primary election opposition
thou&h Los A.nseJes Mayor
Sam Yorty has !lid he might
enter the June 2 Democratic
primary a11lnst Unruh.
Clmpus unrut It e.pecled
to be i. key laue In the cam·
pail!U. Pubtlc optnloo polls
have showtd th1t Reagan's
popul arity was due in large
part to his tough 1t1nd against
campus milit11ats. Ht: said Jail
\\'ttk that campwi trouble will
end only when colltge and
univt:rsity administrators lay
out t o u I h inti-disturbance
rules and enforce them.
An offshoot of tht campaign
came up on lhe Assembly
noor laf.t Mon d a y y:hen
Unruh filled in efforts to limit
politial advertising spending
in a statewide election cam·
paiin to ,l,5 million
Senate Chief
Is Confident
Of Position
SACRAMENTO !APl -
Senate Jt1der Jack Schrade.
expectin1 a srancJ Jut'Y look
toni&ht into hh1 acceptance of
11.000 ,,.., a )obbylal croup
1111 year, lo confldlnl hla
prtd1ctttof', a ftUow
lltpubHcan, la<kl Ille V.W lo
topple him from contnl ol lh• stale .......
Aaktd H ht e;q>tdl Sen.
Howard Way's forces t o
marahal tbt 21 votes to ougt
him from control of the 40-
member Senate, Sehr a de said:
"No."
John ht. Price, district at·
torney of Sacramento County.
h11 confirmed the grand jury
tonicht will consider Schrade's
acctpl.ance of $5,000 from a
lobhy!JI l'OUP lut Y"'·
560"000 Holdup
Radio Robbers Hit Resort
U 1911 haw MW netrhbon
or know al &JlP'Clfl• n10Yln1
to our v... ,..... t•ll qi
10 that W. m&J atend a
--. """ btto _ .. _ _.1 ....
ln tMU-_'httfll IUJ'tOW'dncs.
So. ColSI Vlsllor
fM.OJJt 4"-"61
Hlrhr Yisllor
~0174
.MR.MUM
>
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Manson Lawyer Asks
United Front Fight
LOS ANGELES (UPll-The
lawyer appointed to defend
Charles Man10n, accused lead·
er of a hippie murder cult, 1*
Ueves the best trial strategy
may be for all 1ix defendants
in the Sharon Tate murders
to stick together.
"The over•ll strategy may
be to prtsent a united front as
far as all defendan~ are: con-
cerned." Charles Hollopeter,
S9. said.
Hollopeter, appointed .ois
f.1anson's attor.ney Friday over
the vi goroui obJeetJons or thl':
delllKl1nt, said Mond1y he and
hls clitnt are now 1ett.lng along
fine.
T·he lawyer said he spoke
with Manson for two hour&
Sunday and "it went very
well. He was very cooperative
· . .and we seemed to have a &ood
r .. ppart."
i:r {;: i:r
Tate Murder
Suspect Has
Second Baby
Scores Visit
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F-0.R THE
RECORD
... PS ?••43.-07 i
Meetings
TV•IO.&Y ll;ot•rv Club O! NrwPOrt·B•I~. trvlflt
COYnllY Cl11b. 1600 I!. Co••I Hltllw1v, Corol'i. t!el M1r. t:lO p.m.
(O•'-MtM•N,WJIO•f H1rbor Lkint
Cl11'1, Mt~• Vfrt!e Cou11IN Club,
Ca111 Mt••· ''tl •.m. lll!bo1 ltv Llortt Club, Villo Mtrl111,
l~lS 8•Ytlde Or!vt , Htw.,ort lttth. 1 p.m.
H1111!1"'1°" lt1cll ElkJ Lodtf. Etu Club, 104 Oce1n Avt .• H!,lntlnt!on l t•cll, 7:30 11.m.
$oclf1Y tor 1111 PT"t1bl'lt rl1n ind
EntOY•t otrrwnt ol B1•btr '"°" Qutrt~I $lngl1111 in •merl<•· Cot!I
M••• d11otr•, Cot1"9t Pffk S<ll.ol,
llllO HO!rt Dtmt, Cott• MHt, ,,~
"·"'· • Soul!\ Cot!! •<lf•t »-JO Club, Vlt!11e
Inn, Ut Mt rlnt, B1lbo1 ltltnd, 1:)0 p,m .
l .o.o.M. 0011 No. 11se . .:is £. 171h
SI., Collt Mtst , l :lS o.m.
Ortngt CO.ti l'fltl ll'rltl\ Mffl1 LO<lot-,
TittnPlt $ht r01'. ,,, W1 HUl'lilton. Cosrt M"•· l :U ......
WEDNlfSOAY
8 kor Fl•me To••lmaJ~r~ CI u b
1Cepl1n'1 Rttltur•"'• Sov!ll Co11i Pltfl, Coslt M111, 7 1,m,
Co,11 Mt11.0r1M1t C0411! llo111 C!ub
Odlt 'I (011~ ShOP, 11? E. 1111! $1.:
(0111 Mtlt, 1 1.m.
Hunll'\tlon 8tlch E•<hln•Jn Club, Sh~r~ton ltecl! Inn, Hun!lngton Bt•ch, 11 llt)llft,
Death Notice"
alll;51TT
&frlll• T. 81r1ett. AH s.. o! tt1' N.
Ktlbvni, Soulh San Ctbrlel. 01!t ef
t<~!ll. Mtrc~ 6. Survived by hY,btrM!,
·IEmesi, of t~t ~omt; dauthtH'J. T~eo 8.
Cl\1mpUn, HOf>(lfulu; 1C1ren A, L1t•d ind
Ktlh't' 0 . l'ltr1tlt, bollt of Whittler; ti(
''"•dehl1dren. 5o,.,lce~ wttt no!d !Odn,
Tueo.cltv. ~:lO PM, 11:,,., Hiii~ Ch&11ttl.
'"'••men!, Ro»• Hllh Memorl1! P1rk
"lt1kllft C1>1pd Mcrluary, '-!Miii. 01: rKlors.
81t1TTON
Ed"• It, 8rl!lon. 1!.l~ Su1>erl"' 1>vo,.
'leY.'POrl 8-f•~h. Ollt ot d111h. M1rch i .
Survived bv !Wo d1u1ht1rs. LYdt M,
Allt n, Lttun• !'IU!t; M11. Norm1 Mtl·
<ll1tr. NtwPOrl llt•ch; lour trtndt~11.
d-en; nlnt trta!-1t 1ndcl!Ud,.n, P•lv1l1
m1morl11 11rv!c11. Frld1y, lltl!J Motltl•
lry, (l)tll Mtt•. Olrocr.,r1.
OAVID$0N
ttubY M. O.Vlcllon, AH ''· of !UO Po-"'°"''' Cotl1 MHa. Oart of dtl!h. M1rcll
·1. 5urvlvfd by hu1b1nd, P•ul; fw• '""''
Ooll1ld P .. Adrl"" l .. Frtnk D. 1ttd Ml•lr
G. O&v!d.on. •II ol C""ll Mt111 1ttd lour
11randcnlldrl'I. 5trvlc11. Wfllneldtv, I :lO
PY.. Wtllcllll Ch1otl, ln!trmonl, Httbef
Rell. W11!cllff Cll111ttl Mortu1ry, U6-4N,
Olrt clct1.
l:ASSON
Palpti 8. E••~on, AQe I!, of «a Ol1mand
5! .. L11un1 lle1c~. Ot!t of d••t"· M~•ch
I ,. !~rvlved bv t·No oau1Mt r1, Mrs. M,,. ••rv l. Rttmt lin •nd M•1, Otvld Turt>tr,
bo1h 01 FIOtldt : 1!1ter, M,., Ed+1.11 Shaw.
/Aa!ne; two "11ct1, M•t. Rita sn1w Fo"
~•!er, Hcrltl HOl!vwcod; Mn. Sarth
lawrence, New Yot~; lfvt 1r111dc/llld•u..
Setvke1, Wtd"eldl>v, ] ,.M, SlltNtr lt-
9\!nt 8e11<I! Ch1Ptl. with R~. Ell1-r1n
lltlcn1rc1i.on ofl'kl1lln1. ,.riv1t1 !n111 ... ent
.1,o follow. 51\etflr L11une B-ftcll Mortu• 1rv, Dir.Cori.
GASU
S1moeru G1111. Att 3?. of 167 13•11 $!.,
.c o1t1 Me11. Ottt cl de1!h, Mtrcn '·
S\lrvlvll'd tw 01r1nt1, Mr. t no M,.. T•!1lu G,iw, 01 W1t1ltrn 51mot: I/Ire~ brothtr1.
Mt11t"' T .• of Chi.,. Lakt: T09I s. i nd
Li•;~ T. G11u, bo•h cl C0'18 Mt1a. Strv•
kts ocndlnt 1t Westc!ifl C/11011 Mort11·
·~· McCLOSICf:'(
Pob<lr! L. McClo•ktv. 1916 IC!l!dHr Cl•cle,
CM!t M~ll. Otlt cl dfl!/I, Mtrch f,
Survived Dv wile, fV<arv; fh•tt 1ortt,
Jl!cNord, ll uent P1r~; RObtrl. H11ntln"o<1
6•tc~; Jlll'lfl Mc(ll)tktv, COllt Mtll l
cllutMtr, B1rtw1r1, Cotll Mttt ; llHI two
. t rtndchlldrtn. ll:ot1ary, toni1h1, Tut'61v, I PM. lttQuiern MtH. Wtdn1:1d1v, f :JO
AM. both ti St. Jenn 11\t 61111111 C1thollc
.Lf'lurcll. lnltrmt"'· Good SMl'l>trd Ctm-
•!tfV. 1l1!ll Morruary, 11•1 S\lperitr,
Co1t1 M111, Ol•<e<lor1.
ltlOICAN
CtllY M, ltfdlttn. 16~S 9 lrvlM Avt ..
Co1!t Mttt. Oett of !kiln. Mtrtll I. ~utvlv..i bv bro!htr. lll•ntrd Redlc1n, 'WhltllH'; l'Wo 1l1ttrt, Htltl ll:tdlc111,
Cl)tll Mt!I; Mri. Mtbtl Ushtr, Norlll
":loltvwood. ReQult rn M11s w11 c111brtll'd
!)>11 mornlng. Tutl<llV• II AM, C1!v1rv
Mt11,.;ile11m C/le!li'I, LOI An~tl••· Olrteltd
bv ll1Ul Mor1u1rv. Cost• /Mu. ltlEVERf:
~~ISf 8. Rev"'· Btlo¥td wl•t of Jtct
W. ll:!'Ytre, M.0 .1 mo1htr Of Sulfn l . t !td
'8t11Y A. Rtvorl; 4111Gh!tr ef Mrl. S!tllt
Mtt Btut~ t nd Or. l , A. B•ut/11 s l1t1r
ol Mr1. Mar!llt M•• lt1rd. Strvlc•t,
Wtdneldt v. 3 PM, Church ol Our F•!htr,
·•orint L1w11 Cv1>•t n . Forni Lewn MG«
lu1rv_ F1m\IY IUfttlll tllo•t wls/111111 IO
,.,okt m1mo•l1I <.Of'lflbullcma, oltl" con·
lrlbYtt to 1n1lr ltvorl!t ch•rltv Ill ~tr
memory. WAll:t>
1C11111n n H, Wtrd. 1611 Mln11rc1. (ottt
Mnt. O.tt 01 dttlh, Mtrch !. $~rvlvtd
bY two thl+d,.n, Ktrr! 11\d 8 1tllt Wtrcl,
Dint Point; ,.,o!/ltr, Lutll• M. Gtrv1v,
Coit• Mtll 1bro1111r1, John Gtrvfy,
Co111 M111, end Ptrr!clr (larvtv. Mlnnt-
1011; 1l1t1r, Norm• Worm111. Co1t1 Mt111
"\Ke, Jl!I Andrul. S1rvlu1 were lltld
'!()day, TUtlO•v, 10 AM. P1clll< Vlt"'
OlaPt!. 1"11rment, P1cltlc VI~ Mtrnor·
111 Pt•ll. Family IU9ttlll IP>01t wl1lll11t
lo m1k1 merno111r <onlrlbv!l1>n1, 1>1111•
coMrlbult to flit ftmllv lor 1111 Or1>n1/lld
cMldren cf M•~lco. "aclflc View Morru·
1rv, Ol11c1orl.
YONTZ
(lllbtrl J. Yo"ti. Jr. Att l.ll !ormt r r11·
lclt1tt ol tll s. Co.ti Hl9hw1v, lttun• eeat~. 01!t cf dt•lh, Mtrcll '· Survlvtd bv wife, Mt•v: motner, Mn. ll:ot1t Svm·
<Olli!!, Norwtlll; brother, Ron Yonlt,
}Vhl111t•I 1l1ttr. M•I. A1111tll"• l lrCI!. Whllllt r; trtMlrnQt/11r, Mt1. l•lfrcedel
Sun1, ol Sou!hgtlt. Ro11rv Wtl r11<l!td
Thurso1y, Mire~ S. 7 PM. S~ttllr Lt• ~U"• llHUI cn~ptl. Rtc1~!1m Milt w••
c•ltbrt•ed Frld1v. Ml.Ch •· 10 AM, 1! ~r-c1t11trl"1'1 C11hollc cnurc.,, lltYn•
8Nch, '"'''"""'· A1c1n1lon C1mt!UY· E l Tero, Snetrtr l..eDullt &etch Morlu•ry,
OlrKIOl'I.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WestclUI Mortuary
427 E. 17th St •• Costa i\te11
64&-'8&8 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del l\t1r OR 3-HSO
Co!ta l\tesa l\U U414 • BELL BROADWAY
MOR'MJARY
-110 Broadway, Cosll i\1esa
LI 1-3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Huatinstoa Valley
i\tortuary
J79ll Beaeb Blvd.
Hu.nttngtoa Beacb
W.'1111 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortuary
Cbapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach. California
.141.1111t • PEEK FA~ULV
CO!.ONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7101 Bolsa A'''·
Westminster ttJ..3SlS • SHEFFER MOR'MJARY
Laguna Reath 41f.1535
8111 Clemente 49M109 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
111 Malas~
HunLlntlOft Betel!
13Mm
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\
OAILV l'lt.OT 9
2$0,000 Books Now
Marshal Seeks Re-election
SEEKS RE-ELECTION
Marsho1I Rhte
LAGUNA NIGUEL -·South
Or1n1e-COunly Marshal Doti
E. Rhea hu annouoetd he will
seek re-election in June to the
J post ht has held since his ap.-
polnlment in 1968, when he
replaced r e ti r I n g ?darshal
Dan J .. Rios,
Rhea, a past president ot tht
Orange County ~f a r s b a 1 s '
AsSoclatlon. served in the
North Orange County Judicl1I
Di.strict as a deputy marshal,
sergeant, lieutenant and assis-
tant marshal before his move
·to the South County Distmt.
He has htld offices in a
num~r o f or1a~Uons
related to the fie)d of law en-
forcement, amona them the
office of state direetor and
state \'Ice president of , the
~farshals' Association of·
Califomla. vice president of
the Warrant Officen' Alaocla·
.Uoa f/i Soulhern.Callfomia and
~innaa. or the Sllte
lnduotrlal Aedd<nt C<>mmllee
of the Pe.aet Officer s '
Ruea.rch Asaoclation · o f
California.
JU\ea, 41 , lives in Laauna
Nlgilel with his wife, son · and ·
dau&hter and haa ofticts ln
the new South Ora111e County
Court facility. He heads a
staff of II lull Ume manila!
employes, 12 reJUlar reserve
officers and a 40-man
marshal's Mounted Po s s e ,
orcanlied and traintd last
year for search and rescue
operations in rtmote areu.
He has been a member of
Lions JntemaUonal for 16
Years, wu· a director of the
Placent11 Chamber of Com·
~rce -and served on that
city's Porkl Conimisslon and
Boy,' Club board ol dll<Cton .
Cal State Library Booming
Boys Clubs
Set Seminar
FULLERTON -Wllh the
pas.sin& of the quarttr·milllon
volume mark, the Cal State
Fullerton library now ranks as
the largest in North Orange
County. ·
In making the an·
nounctment, CSCF librarian
Ernest \\'. Toy Jr. recalled
that the collection, no'" housed
In a $4.4 million structure ln
the center or the ~acre
campus, had its beginning s In
a condemned high school
bullding. 1
Symbolically, "The Santa Fe
Tran to California, 1849-1852,''
a rare Grabhorn Press book,
A N A H E J M Five became the 2Ml,000 volume.
representaUves of O r a n a e ;,' Toy has . been c o 11 e g e
Coast Boys' Clubs will meet librarian since Cal State
with representatives or 102 Fullerton. then known as : Orange County State College,
boys clubs 1n the five-state opened its 'doors in Lhe fall of
Southern Pacific region March 1959 to 452 students.
cu pied In 1960, ~·•s a tern·
porary building.
On completion of the letters
and science building in 111&3,
the collection was moved to
COSTA MISA
,,. .-. "'" 11,-44-,511
SU W. 1'1~ st.-Ul :t1U
the basement where It re-
mained for three ye1rs until
its seven-floor building wu
finished In the center ol
the campus.
'Ml Mlrt, llU W. l 1Mlllt-77J·llH
11'' W. LI •11,,.._.U·U"
18 at the Dikneyland Hotel. Flut housed in a condemned Ofllc• ,_,..1 • •. Ill. ,. , •·""· MM ·"'"' ,,1• , 1•111 ... , •·"'· ••t a s11"'
AUending the one.day con-building on the old campus o!1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ference will be Willard c. Fullerton High School, thel'
llJt NtwP9rt e1vf.~Q·"'' I ANAHllM
ml w. Llltfflll •v•.-JN-UM
UCI Book
Contest
A11nounced
. library was next moved to a Courtney, president of Harbor leased wing · of SuMy Hills
Atta Boys' Club; George High: School. Its first home on
Sc«t. president West Oranae ·the pennanent campus, 0<:·
County-Fountain Valley Boys'
235,000 Countians
Get Ex~mption Forni
C-lub; A 11 en Klingensmith,
SANTA ~A -Homeownus ed value exemption," Hirulhaw president rluntington Beach
, es emption claim forms have said n. • Cl b AJ'-rt ~-1 IRVINE -A contest desi'"'· • uuys u ; Ull: .c.\:C es,
D" been mailed to 23$,_()00 Oran1e Anyone elilible who has not ••• ..a n. • Cl b f
County History
l\feeting Set ed to stimulate student in· pt'5&1Vent -..ys U 1 o County Tupoy..,, County As-....,lved a clliml onn, 1hould La •-ch nd W I terest in ·readina and book -1. 1 lllD' Pl:'.8 , a a ter ·-o .. u senor AndreW J, Hlnshaw 11id cootact the homeowners e1-SANTA ANA -"Prospec-lecling is under way at "· UC Hunter• president South Coul-ti 0 C ty' p l" u ..c: todiy, emption dlrialon of the 8 Cl ~-•• • Cl b ng range oun s as lrvlll. e for the f"lh year. ID eme .. ,,.. 1:1VYS u · wi'IJ be lhe Iheme of the
u Deadline for filil'l1 for the .uswor'1 offtoe immed11tely, Fil •·• f Entries are due April 17 for teen wora~uops or Orange County Historical $750 auesstd value e1emption the as5essor. w1rned. The laymen who Hrve •·ys' Clubs ·-~ely's wor"-hop al 1·.30 !he Adolph A. Kroch · un-· · _, """'' 11.:1 is S p.m. Aprll IS. division is located in the new will be held during the day. E. p.m. Thursday at the Bowers
dergraduale student book col· "Any person w~ owns hi.s county courthouse, 700 Civic F. Van Bll,lard, New York, ~fuseum.
leclion contest sponsored by home or Is purchasing it under C.enter Drive West, S111ta Ana , Associate National Director, 'the workshop is designed to
the Friends of the UCJ a sales contract and oceupies phone &34-382.1. BCA \\'Ill be the dlni'ler a s sis t counlians preparing
Library. Prizes of $125, flS that home as his principal HiMhaw emphasized that speaker. A film on Boys' Clubs articles for a new volume of
and SM! are offered. made by Preaident Nixon the Orange County Historical
H.ANi>M.Ai>t
lN HONG KONG
• , • to your end meuunments
T1ilatwd ucl\1$1w:ty tor J'Oll bf Hone Kon1 5UP1"-r.eraftsml!!'l
rrom 'P¥ choice of ~ d the tl!Oftd's rmest f1bric:.
at HONG KONG PllfC£S $42 to $72 __..., __ .........,_......,.....,._ ........
wmtAL fMEorrt'Jt ···• 111111 .... OM .tiilt, _.Im,_."""-_.., "'-~ MledMI ., you. nu Mttt ~ of rw ... ia. ... _...,.,.....,. .. ._ ___ .. _ ......
C1ll Mr. Larry for Appolntmant-9:30 a.m. to I p.m.
L19una Beach-Mar . 11 & l'l-Saddleb1ck Inn
6f6 S.'lltll C••t Hwy, (7141 4f4·fl00
Newport Beach-Mer. 13 & l4-Jam1ic1 Inn Hotel
2111 l•t C••t Hwy. l7141 67)-1120
llt1nt Ollkt: M!llWl'I "'"' Ktttt T•llttl. l( .... o •••• uu. K••IMl'I. ,. ... , I( ....
place ot residence on March 1, the law does not pniVide for before his elecUon \\'ill be Series slatld for publication
Judges for the contest will _1~91~0~,~il~e~l~lll~·b~Je~fo~r~the~~..,.~,..~_!:l•~le~fllinl~!:·:_ ______ _:•~h~o:wn'.:.:_ _______ ~lhl~s_:y~e~ar:. ______ _!:===================== be Dr. Kroch, a Laauna Beach!-
resident wbo is the founder
and board chairman o f
bookstores in Chicago: Sheen
Kassouf, professor of
economics, and Miss Marjorie
A. Reeves, head of the
University Library's technical
processes division.
Each entry will be judged on
the knowledge, scope~and im·
aglnation shown in creating ,.
collection 0£ 35 or more books
and expressed in an annotated
bibliography and a com·
mentary on motivations and
goals for a pe rsonal library •
Winning entries in last
year's contest are on display
in the library lhi.s DlOJ!lh.
Nine Coast
Residents
In Crusade
TUSTIN -Nine Orirlge
coast residents are among 25
coontians appointed c i t y
chairmen ror the 1970 Ca ncer·
Crusade.
Included as ci ty chainnen
will be Mrs. Jack E .
Engelhardt, Corona de! Mar
and Ne.,..·porl Beach; T\.fra.
Mark ~lorrls, 388 Mira Loma
Plact. Costa Mtsa; Mrs.
Roger Belgen, 18684 Santa
Ynet St., Fountain Valley, and
~1rs. George Walton, S682
Nevada D r i v e , Huntlngtm
Beach.
Also listed as city chairmen
are hfrs. Boyd f.fcElhaney , 547
Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach;
Mrs. Steven Gandolfo, 25241
Ericson \\'ay. Laguna Hills :
Mrs. J. Robert Powell, 508 S.
Ola Vi sta, San Clemente; Dr.
John N. Given, Bot 833, San
Juan Capistrano. and Mrs.
Saul Millstein, 171K Catalina
Ave., Seal Beach.
Cemetery
Landmark?
YORBA LINDA -Oranae
Count y Supervisor' are stu·
dying a proposal by Third
Distr ict Super\•lsor William J.
Phillips of F'ullerton lo place
lhe historic Yorba Cemetery
here under the jurisdiction of
U1e rounty Pa rks Department.
Phillips sald the cemetery,
\\'hich contains the remains or
county pioneers dallng back to
the 18th Century, is badly in
need of maintenance, addln1
lhat he hope! the ce metery
eventually \\'ill become a state
historical landmark.
\Vhat litlle care the facility
gets now is providtd by the
Placentia Yorba Heritage
Society. which has UmJted
funds; Phillips said.
Dies in War
GARDEN GROVE -The
Pentagon has announced that
Army Spec. 4 Mark A .
Jene"'tin of Garden Grove bu
been killed tn adio'n ln Viet-
nam. He was the son of ltirs.
Vlrg\nla ~r. Jeneweln, 111U
Barcl1 Drive.
AT
Dependabe and Smart
Ht'WpOtl a.lboe Stvfnts •nd LN" Atsod80on
3361 YJe Udo, Newport Beach, CaNfomi• t*3
PINN se"d lnfonn•tJon on th• Monthly Security Account Pfen.
Get $100 or more -ry mcnth. Newport. Balboa Savings depend·
able, smart account executives can be wiy helpful in setting up a
plan that will do just thaf for you. It's our tested Mon.thly Security
Account plan. It assures you of a regular monthly income every
montl) • , • year after year after year. This plan. has proYl!d itself
for many people-for 1 lone time -the world CHer. Smart Savers
Saw and Eam at Newport Balboa Savings. Come in. write or phone
for information on a plln that can be tailoreC! f~r individual needs.
Str"·~----------------
City Sttt• Zj
Eslabllohed in 1936 ••
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVlNGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Mam Offlee:3366Via Udo, Nlllport lleoeh , C.llifornia 92663 • Phone 714/673-3130
C:O.... del M«Offit« F~I Piia, 550 Newport Cantor Drive, COIOrl• del Mar, C.llfomia 92625 • Phono 714/644-1461
I
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•'
JO D•IL V PILOT Tu~sday. Marth 10, 1~70
Dream Comes _Trne for Cal St_ate (Lnng Be_ach)~
' . ~ '
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 ~ O.jl-~llfl Stiff
Two years ago Cal State's ba sketball
team was just another college club.
But today, the Long Beach school has
realized a dreanl come true -that of na-
1ional recognition as a collegiate ba sktl·
ball power.
And roach Jerry Tarkanlan's club can
add tre1nendously to its rising presUge
with a victory over UCLA Thursday night
in the NCAA \Vestern Regionals at Seat-
11e.
The 49ers (24-3) langle with UCLA !2+
2) 1t 9 p.m. follow, the Utah Slate.San-
ta Clara duel. \\'inners of the t"'O games
then meet Saturday.
Tarkanian , who has compiled a 47.Q
record Jn hii; two years al Cal Stale, !eels
his team is "privileged to be in the
playoffs with UCLA.
"It's going lo be very difricult lo beat
lhe1n. They have great outsi de and Inside
shooting and good board \Vork. They are
1ough in every area. \Ve just hope thal
Bibby (Henry) and Vallely (John) do
not have great games.''
Do Ult 49ers plan lo do anything dif·
fer ent for the UCLA game~
"'\Ve will try to just play our game and
do our job, We do not plan anything new.·
Meeti1a9 Postpo1ted
Pilots Get Execution Stay ·
011 Move to Milwaul{ee
TM1PA. Fla. (AP) -The American
League meeting to consider the problems
of the troubled Scatlle franchise was call-
f!d off 1oday because or the illness of the
Pilots' rhief officer.
Joe Cronin, the American League
pres ident, made the announcement from
nearby Sarasota. Cronin said William
Daley. chairman of the board of the Seat·
lie club, is sick in a hospital in Cleveland.
Cronin said no new date' or site has
been set for the meeting. He said there
\\'as a possibility it might ha ve to be held
in Cleveland.
The league has been secretive over the
meeting. There have been rumors that
the financi ally sick franchise might be
i;hifted to Milwaukee.
Apparently the deci sion to call off the
meeting was made ~1onday night. A num·
ber of the owners did not arrive and Roy
J1amey, th e New York Yankee SCGut who
\\•as named specia l supervisor of the
Seattle situation for the league, already ·
had left for Seat!le.
Jiamey, on lea\·e lro1n lhe Yankees,
was to have made a report lo the 0"11ers.
Asked whether the owne rs had been
ready lo make a decision on the Seattle
franchise, Cronin replied "oh , no. Jrs not
easy to get these people around ."
Daley is the sole \'Oler for S<!atlle and
Cronin said there v.·as "no need to hold a
meeting" without him.
Although the league voted $650,000 as a
temporary loan to tide the Pilots through
spring training as recently as Feb. JI,
there were indi calions that a move to
~1ilwaukee for 1970 "·as getting strong.
cons\de ralinn.
Experienced base ball men pointed out
that the mere fact !hat the league "'as
holding another special meeting less than
a month after announcing a decision to
stay in Seattle "'as taken as a strong hint
that a change was upcoming.
The Na tional League nlO\'ed the Boston
fr anchise to f\iilv.·aukce in ~1 a rch 1953
and il operated there from 1953 to 1965
before the Braves moved on to Allanta
despite a series of court suits by
~filwaukee in terests.
The American League's Chicago \Vhite
Sox have played several home games in
!he f\1ilwaukee park in recent years but
had none scheduled for 1970.
Seattle. saddl<'d \\'ilh an inadequa te
minor league park which y.·as a holdo\·er
from its d<1ys in the Pacific Coast League,
drew only 6TI .9-44 in 1969. its first year in
the majors. Reports of rcudin g between
club officials and local people and losses
estimated al $1 million contributed to an
unsetlled situati on.
However, the o"'ncri; gave prospecti ve
Seattle purchasers severa l extensions of
time to raise the $9.5 1nillion asking
price.
When it secmerl a non·proril group.
headed by Ed\\'ard Carlson, a hole\
owner. Y.'as about 1o get the franchi se in
mid -February. 1hc owne rs suddenly
reversed the1nselvcs and decided to slick
\Vilh current ownershi p.
The loa n of S650.000 ca1ne from the
league treasury and more v.1as plann ed if
LA, JVA RRIORS
COLLIDE TONI GHT
LOS AN'GELES (AP)-The Los Angeles
takers are knocking on the penthouse
door while the San Francisco \Varriors
are fall ing into the cellar. The two le arns,
who once shared the middle of the house,
meet tonight at I.he f orum.
Both Na1Jonal Baskelbal\ Association
clubs wer e sand"·iched in the St'llen-team
Western Division earlier this season be-
fort they began streaking -in opposite
direct.ions.
The L.akers shrugged off injuries to key
players and made a run for first. They
trail Atlanta by one game and ca n climb
into a tie for lhe lop if they win and the
Hawks loSf' to l\1ilwaukee.
the club ran into more financial pro-
blems. Obviously, some have had second
thoughls.
Seattle has passed a $40 million bond
issue lo build a 50,000-seal do1ned
stad ium, starling in December and to be
<'Ompleted April , 1973.
Hzy,.,·ever, the club would ha ve to con-
tinue in Sicks' Stadium for lhree more
years.
A 9-3 \'Ole is needed lo move a fran-
chise under American League rul es.
The possibility of Jaw suits. questioning
baseball 's antitrust exemption. was
believed a factor 1n earlier decisions to
give Seattle at least one more chance.
Both of \Vashington's U.S. Senators. •
Warren Magnuson and Henry Jackson.
have be-en strong backers of tht fran-
chise.
Rupp 's Fok·ces
Best i11 Nation
(It Says Here)
By TltE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kentucky's Adolph Rupp has learned I
take winning in stride during hi s ~
seasons as the \Vildcat basketball men
lor.
But Rupp , who has led his learns to an
amazing SJS..176 record, has an added in·
centi\·e when the \Vildcats face Notre
Dame in lhe first round of the NCAA
Mideast Region tournament in Columbus,
Ohio Thursday night.
The \Vildcals, who fini shed !he regular
season with a 25-1 mark, \Vere named
Monday as lhe nation's No. 1 tca1n in the
final Associated Press weekly 1najor col·
lege basketball poll.
'·Naturally we're delighted al the con·
fidcnce that lhe final ballots placed in the
University of Kentucky ," Rupp said.
"\\'c realize UC (.A is an outstanding
team and that many other teams in the
country could fiave been pla~ in the
same posilion as we are" -that is the
mythical national champions.
for Kentucky it was the si1th time in
the fina l poll's top position. The Wildcats.
Y.'ho drew 18 first place votes and 512
poiflts, were No. I in 1949, 191il, 1952, 1954
and 1966.
UCLA lost last week to Southern
California and ended up in second place
\\'ith three first place \'Oles and 440
points. The Bruins were .the top-ranked
team last year and most of this season.
UCLA. which also topped the poll in
1964 and 1967, ended its regular seasoh at
24·2 and captured tbe PaClfic-8 Con-
ference. ""
Kentucky wrapped up Its third con-
secutive Southeas tern Confer ence crown
to gain its 18th NCAA berth.
Rupp poked a friendl y barb at Bruin
coach John Wooden. who was named la st
"'eek as basketball 's Coach of the Year
by the Associated Press.
"John \Vooclen is a great coach and a
great friend of mine," said the Baron,
"but naturally, I'm delighted that we're
numbe r one."
-{.; * v(;f
Ttufl W•L l'tl. '"" W•l I'll,
I. IC'"'~ky "' m " FIOnd41SI, '" "'
' UCLA. U-1 •• " HO\I\~ '" ••
' 51 B°"'v'1'r1 )J-1 "' " Pp~" 11·1 " • J1ckso,.vl111
S NtwMtX St.
1, IOWf
g Ml•qttet1t
' Notr,0-lme.
,, ' ,. 1'. Ori~t
1• J JOO U Otvld10~
7>1 '1.19 16. Vtl~l!tte
,,. " "' " ,,. •
11-1 "
21 ' 116 It Lon~at1c~S1 1• J IJ
Olf>t•I rtc••vl~g ¥OIH, lblflt 4llf!l'lllllk1l1y,
W<"t (l"<-•""111, °""'· IC•,.111. Kan••• ""'"· lo..<lol&rl $tilt, lou1svlllr, Mort~ C~•otln1. Purd111.
T~~ V•llt""'' 1no W~.r.w.o1on Srtlt,
There is no way you can cut off their
outside and ln11ide games together.:'
As for the 49ers players, Tarkanlan
says they are Joo~lng forward to meeting
the Bruins Tiiursday night.
.. The ga1ne is a big boost for our whole
program and for the conference {Pacific
Coast Athletic Assn.) as well. But we
realize we ha ve to 1nake a good showing
to mea n that much."
He adds that the playoff games have
opened a lot or doors~
"'There 'is no queslion about It," says
Tarkanian, •·they have helped us get
recognition and it will help us in our
recruiting program.."
• Cal State was awarded an NCAA berth
on the basis or its splendid season record
. and jhe 49ers responded with a~92-73 win
over Weber Stale Saturday night in an
at-large NCAA playoff game.
The victory was the 49ers' 19th straight
this Season, the longest current winning
streak Jn the nation.
The win also was Tarkanian's 245lh In
eight years of college basket b a fl
coaching. He has Jost just 19 in those
eight seasons.
Tarkanlan started his c&reer with. five
years or high school coac~ing at San Joa-
quin lt1emorial, Antelope VaUey aild
Jtedlands high schools.
He then went to Riverside City eollege-
and after a 32-3 season, he complied as::--0';-
31-5 and 33·1 records In guiding Riverside'
to three straight state junior college
baske tball chan1pionshlps.
Prior to the 1966~7 campaign he
switched to Pasadena City College and
took a tea1n that had won just three
games Ule previous yeii r to another state
liUe and a.3>1 final record.
The next season (1967·f?ll ), the
Pasaden<!,club complted a 32-3 mark , los·
ing to Cerritos in the• state championship
game by one point in overtime.
1.11"1 T1 ........ 10
Co1•1ie1•i1tg n Tige1·
Bill Stricker (20) of the University of Pacific Ti-
gers. tries to get through Santa Clara's JoJJy Spight
and Bruce Boehle (33) in a \Vest Coast Athletic
Conference playoff game. Broncos won, 65-56) to
gain a spot in the NCAA playoffs Thursday nig ht
\Vilh Utah State in Seattle.
Joh11 so11 Halos'
Hitti11g Hope,
Sa ys Phillips
PHOENIX (APl -"This m11;n,'1
California Angels ~1anager Lefty Phillips
said as he studied Alex John.son, "is in
A-plus hitter and it is my hope that he
can lead us ."
Phillips ex plained that "grading hitters
Is about like making out report cards.
You can rate all hitters in baseball on a
scale from A to F.
"There aren•t many A's around and the
guys v.'ho get A·plusses -well, they 're
just darn rare."
The Angels acq uired the ptl\~erful 27·
year-old outfielder along with utility men
Chico Rui z in a trade with Cincinnati last
November. se nding pitchers J i m
McGJothlin, Ven1 Geishert and Pedro
Borbon to the Reds.
J ohnson. who was the National
1.eaguc·s No. 6 batter last season with a
.315 average and No. 4 at .312 in 1!)68,
sho"'ed no sign of e8sing up on the Op·
PoSltlon flil chers as the Angels brgan
their four-day sv.ing through Ar izona
with today's game against the San Fran-
cisco Giants.
Big Alex s1nashed a pair of fly balls 400
reel or more. singled in a n1n and,
displaying a bit of bat ag ility. moved a
runner ~rom second to third by grou11<Hng
Olll to !he right sicle with none out in Sun-
day's gan1c against Chicago at Palm
Springs.
But explos iveness is Johnson·~ forte ... ,
think having him around lakes the
pressure off a lot of our 01hcr guys -like
J i1n Frcgosi and Rick Reichardt and Jay
Johnstone.'' Phillips said .
"With Alex baiting No, 4 !hose guys
. can jusl take it easy and not have to
figure thal they ha\•e to do it all
themselves.''
\Vith Johnson, a carttr .295 hitter. in
!he lineup. the Angels' anemic offense 1i;
almost a sure bet to impro\'C
The club batted barely .230 last season.
Sports in Brief
Vallely Honored Again;
Whittier Falls in NAIA
J ohn Vallely and UCLA team mate
Sidney \Vicks, \\'Cre named to the third
team United Press International All·
America squad announced today.
Vallely, the former Corona del ~tar
lligh and Orange Coast College star, has
been a nui.irf5tay \1•ith the Bruins this
season as they \-\'on the PacHic-8 title
and was earlier named to The-Associated
Press All-America lhird team.
Pistol Pete fltaravich of Louisiana
State headed the vole g~tting as the na-
tion's No. I cage star. He Is joined on the
first team by Bob Lanier of St . Bonaven·
ture, Dan Iss('l of Kentucky, Rick ~1ount
of Purdue and Cah•in Murphy of Niagara.
•
KANSAS CITY -Defending champion
Eastern New f.iexlco outscored \Vhitt ier
of California 16-4 at the start of the sc·
cond half and went on to claim an 80-06
victory ~1onday night in the first round of
the 33rd NATA basketball toumamenl.
The New Mexico Greyhounds , seeded
sixth this year, trailed most of the first
hal f including a 40-33 deficit which they
\Viped out with a late spurt to gain a 42·12
halftin1e tic .
•
NE\V YORK -Spencer Haywood l!ton
lhe threshold of winning the American
Basketball Association scoring crown a'
a rookie .
Hayv.·ood, \\'ho passed up his final '"'o
seasons at the University or Detroit to
sign a pro contract with the Denl'er
Hocket.s, averaged 41 points in five
J!ames !Bil ~'eek to boost his: season
averagt lo 28.6 points a game, Haywood
is also the league'!I top rebounder v.'ith
an average of 19 a game.
•
LOS ANGELES -Bob \Vilhelm. assis-
tant basketball coach at Uni\'crsity of
Southern California for the past three
seasons, announced that he is leaving the
school to enter private business.
\Vi!hclm \\'ill become 1nanagcr or
recreation and athletics for Colo de Caza,
a private recrcalional ranch in Orange
County.
•
LOS ANGELES -\Vilt Chamberlain
probably will rejoi n the Los Angeles
Lakers ror their game against Boston
f\iarch 18, coach Joe Mullaney said !l·!on·
day.
"\Vllt's set that night as his target
date," f\1ullaney said .
"Knov.•lng \Vi lt the way J do, he will be
available that night. He thinks he can
help us defensively. The other players
feel that hi s presence "·ill mean easier
shots for them." •
STARKVILLE. Miss. -Joe Dan Golj,
~1ississippi State University head basket-
ball coach. resigned ~1onday after fiye
yea rs. according to Charles H. Shira •
director of athletics.
•
PHILADELPHIA -Paul WesUiead. a
freshman coach at rive.I St. Joseph's. was
named l\1onday to succeed Tom Gola as
coach of LaSalte's basketball team.
Gola resigned recently after two yea.rs
to give more altcnlion lo his cily
solicllor job.
Put Sports Above Politi~s--Player
\VhitehePd, 31. \\'ho poi;led the bes!
record In SI. Joseph's history. 21·2, signed
a four year contract. He became the
sixth Explorer coach In seven year!I.
•
SARASOTA. Fla. (AP) -Golfer Gary
Playtr of South Africa, lsrgt>t of crillcs
c,( his country's racial policies, said f\.lon ·
day sport11 should be pul above politi cs.
Player, here: to p]ll)' an exhibition
before entering the Monsanto Open lu
Pensacol•, l~ued a statcn1ent which he
l!ald "·oold be hi• l~st word on South
African racial issues whlle he is In the
United St.l<S.
"One of the greatest regrets In life i~
tluit politict ha1 become so involved "1th
sports." Playt'r said. "I wish there were
some way in "'hlch people nll o\·er the
\\·orld could persuade politlcians and pro-
testors Iha! sJ>()rUI 11hould be ahove
politics:· •
"I deplort. unfortunn lc Incidents like
the refus.<11 or a \'isti to Mr. Arlh ur Ashe
and the refusal 10 nllow Mr. Pap,va
Sewgolum (South African Negro) to play
In the South African Open and many
thousand! ol my fello\v South Africans
t1gree with the objections I lodged,·•
Playe r said.
"I realb:c only loo 11'ell 1hat petty and
unncccsMry things nre beill(l done in the
name of Separate Dcvelop1nen1. Bu t here
again lhousands 0£ Influential South
Africans are working hard to eradlc31C
such areas of irritation," Plnyer said.
··~1canwhlle, I'm most grateful to be
back in the USA to follow my J'.lrofession.
I do not fee) J can offer any further
PQlitlc11l commel)t,11 Player sajd.
Player v.·as In Sara~la to play an tX·
hlbitlon with Arnold Palmer, trcsh fron1
11 seC'ond place finish In the Cilris lnvlto-
tlonal lit Orlando. and two crack high
!'rhool golfers, Gary Koch and Eddie
Pearce, fonner U.S. junior champion.
LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles
Rams announced they have signed their
No. 2 draft choice. wide receive r Charlie
\Vllllams of Prairie Vlt'w fTcx .) A&M.
Williams. 22, slands 6·2 and weighs 207_
}fe caught 30 passes for 481 yard,; and
three touchdowns In 1969.
The Rams also dlsc.loSC(! that th(!y have
signed Al ~1c~fanus, a cornetback trnm
\Vlnston-Satem (NC) college, as a free
agen~ Heb 6-1 11 and190.
-Now· he t-akes his biggest shoU'LI""----'
bigtime .
Asked t.1onday where his team ml11hl
have an edge on Long Beach, UCLA boss
John Wooden told the Sout hern California
Basketball \Vriters, "\Ve are stronger but
they are quicker."
Tarkanian agreed \\'ith \\'ooden's ap:
praisal of the ~lrengths of thei r '"'O teanu::.
"We are qui cker. they're stronge r. We
both ha ve good front lines and g0<>4
shooting from.lhe back Jines," he said.
"We played our finest game of the
season in beating Weber. It will lake even
better to beat UCLA."
_Ogata Tell s
. Of Hospital
Wa y of Life ·
' \Vrestling cbviously meani; a Jot L::i
Justin Ogata, the Costa l\1esa High
youngster who suffered a broken neck ,
during a December practice and ha s beon
parafyzed ever since.
Talking to the 16-ycar-old youngster by
telephone this writer "'as amazed wheq
Justin said that if he ever gets back lq
normal, he'll v.Teslle again.
'"I don't sec w.hy I shouldn't," he quii),.
ped. "\\'hat happened "'as just a freak ac·
cident -I could have been hit whil~
crossing a slreet and the same thing
might have happened.''
Ogata is currently <><..'Cupying a room at
Los Angeles Orthopedic llospita l -at a
cost estimated al $3,000 per month by one
family source.
Justin tells of his daily ri'utine at the
-------
WllITE
WASI-1 ---'
GLENN WHITI
hospital . }le is pul through occupational
and physical Lherapy twice a da y and he
gets a bit of exposure to studies through.
a visitin g teacher.
'·fn physical therapy they·re trying to
teach me balance, 10 roll over and to sit
up longer in !he "'heel chair.
"OccupatlonaJ therapy leaches me how
lo brush my teeth and lo feed myselr.
I'm getting so I can move n1y left arm
pretty good -I can even \\'rile my nani'e
with ii, but not real wel l. They are teach·
ing me to turn pages.
"ll all gets tireson1e. But so does
anything you do.
Justin thinks he has some sorl of feeling
in his right arm. although he c;innot
move it or any of the rest of his body
from the chest down
As soon as hls parents are able to take
care of hi1n he says he'll be permitted to
come home on weekends. He already
camp to Costa ~·Jesa twice--0nce lo see a
wrestling malch and once lo get a let·
lennan's jacket al a sports awards ban·
quet.
He gets a steady stream of visitors plus
letters from his friends and school mates.
He recalls the accident "'hich broke his
neck. saying he lirsl k11ew it was serious
follov.'ing surgery when he couldn 't moue
any part of his body.
Familv so ur ces reveal th;it the
insuranCP "'as completely exhausted
before Justin was transferred lo Los
Angeles nearl y t\\o tnonths e1go.
However, rnany fund raising events
ha ve brought aid for lh!' swiftly n1ounting
medical expenses. The Sa nta Ana branch
of the Bank of Tokyo ls handling all
monies.
\Vedncsday night the DAILY PILOT
will put forth its finest basketbal l players
to mcel 1he potlcc in an Ogata benefit
game at Costa f\lesa High. Tipoff is a.t
7: 15. .
Justin predicts a DAILY PILOT vie·
lory.
But he·n be the real w;nner if any kind
of crowd supports the game ~at 35 cent.s
a nose),
Inks R ich P nct
• • '
• "
Riel< Mount. Purdue's All-Am·
edcan basket.ball "'hiz. be·
came the first college star tn
turn prO '''hen he sign ed a ·
contract 1vith the India na Pac-.
ers or th e 1\B1\ ~1onday . One
report said he had a ~otal pack·
age that could run in excess of
$1 million. "
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Drep Baseball Ro11ndup
Hu11tington , Vilie s Po st
3rd St1·aight Victorie s
l·funtington Beach and Marina's Vlk·
ings swept to their third straight IIunl~
ington Beach baseball tournament vic-
tories Monday afternoon to highlight
prep action in U1e Orange Coast urea.
The lluntington Beach crew took ad-
vantage o( Mike Symons' four RBis in
racking up Foothill, Jl-6, while Marina
was coming up wit h one run in the bot-
tom of the seventh inning to edge Bolsa
Grande, 1-0.
In other lfuntington tourney affairs.
\\'estmlnster came up with its seeond
\\'in, a 4-1 decision over invading Servile.
and Fountain Valley dropped Pacifica fo r
a 5-2 count.
Mater Dei scored a -run in the bottom
<If the ninth inning to edge Savanna, 1-0,
In !he opening round of the Santa An11
tournament and Costa ~1esa was shot
dov.•n. 4-3, in a non-league game \vlth host
El ~1odena.
r.tarina's 1-0 gem was backed up by
the three-hit pitching of Da ve Klungres-
eter. who struck out 14 enemy batters -
nine in a row.
First baseman Paul Fleming saved the
d8y ror the Vikings with a leaping stab or
a Bolsa Grande line drive that was head-
ed ror open spaces in right field in the top
of the seventh. There were Matadors on
second and third at the time with two
out.
l'..eonard Be]ler's :00.foot single with
the bases loaded provided the Vikes with
the winnin g margin.
Huntington used a 13-hit attack in
di~posing of Foothill, collecting all 11
runs in lhe first five stanzas.
Symons collected his four RBis with
singles in th':! first and third innings
knocking in a pair of runs on each oc-
casion.
-Ste\'e Fox led Fountain Valley to it& S-2
conquest, allowing five hits and striking
out a like nwnber of batsmen.
f\lik e Shimaji Jed the Barons in the hit-
ting department with a doub le in the first
frame accounting for a pair of tallies.
\Vestminster used four pitchers in sub-
duing Servile. Kurt Dedrick picked up the
win.
Doug i\1ilne got the big hil for the Lions
with. a two-run double in the second in·
ning. •
El ~1odena's Frank Borjoquez s1nacked
a l\vo-run homer in the first inning to
deal Mesa its defeat
Th:! J\.1esans came back with a pai r or
runs in the sixth to make it close when El
Modena let in both runs on errors after
the Mustangs had filled the sacks.
Mater De.i's victOt)' came ~·hefl Ron
Muniz led o[f the bottom of the ninth in·
ning with a triple and came in with the
\Vinning run on Gary Simpson's fly ball to
left field .
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How Adams Moulded
Anteaters Into Winner
• \\'hen the season started for UC
Irvine's baseball forces, coach Gary
Adams had no idea of posting such an
1n1pressive ea rly season reco rd.
Eight victories in 12 decisions is in1·
pressive for any baseball team. let along
one in its first year of compe Ution.
How did the Anteater mentor go about
1noulding such a winning combination?
First, he scouted the lop high school
talent with grades good enough to get in-
to school at Irvine . Then he turned to the
junior colleges to get a bit of depth and
experience.
During the fall semester he had equal
HOWARD HANDY
, _____ _
HOWAHD
HANDY
balance wiU1 seven freshmen and seven
jaycee transfe rs and the team did as well
as could be expected in in form al com·
pctiUon on Saturdays.
Just prior to start of the spring
semesler, Adams felt the teaf!l needed
.~ome added strength up the middle and
I\ as fortunate lo get three addiUonal
Junior college transfers lnlo school.
Rocky Craig has been inSlalled as tho
regu lar Ci!ntcr fielder and is the leading
hitter (.444) on the club. Mike Sykora
took over al second base and Mike Saska
is a starter in right neld.
Of the seven freshmen, Chuck Spanski
at third and Dan Hansen at short are
starters ror the Anteaters.
A combination that apparenlly is ~ard
lo beat and one that will give lrv!ne a
"'iMing geason the !lrst lime around if
the ru1un--conttn11es In the saml! 'M''1" rs-
l'arly gfln1es.
* * * Delving Into lhe archives at UC Irv ine,
publlcl1t Bob Btnson comet up with two
additk>nll baakelblll came• lor Jeff Cun.
olngbam.
It seems !be two NCAA playofr con·
tests Jeff participated In during hi~
so phomore season were not included lo
the leBm records. This means that Cun-
ni ngha m played a to tal of 8% ga mes in
th ree seasons and posted a lifetime 18.l
scoring average.
His three-year scoring total Is 1,501
points. the highest by an Antcoler.
Incidentally, l\1lke Barnes had 149
assists during lbe past campaign,
undoubtedly a school record.
* * * Did you know that. .....
.... The 18th fairway at Pensacola
Country Club, site of this week 's PGA
tour competition, holds a unique place in
the annals of gQlf?
The !airway runs perpendicular to a set
of railroad tracks 275 yards fro m lhe tee .
lf the baU should land on the tracks, the
golfer gets a free drop.
In the event a train should also be us-
ing the lraeks, the train apparently has
the right or 'fay, and plays through ac-
cordingly. Chan nel 9 will bring the action
and the unique hole to vlewers this
weekend.
* * * .Califomla Angel attendance in
Anaheim Stadium from 1966 to IKt total·
Cd 4,502,3i8.
Angel aUendance in the club'• la•t fonr
years at Dodger Stadium t o l a I e d
UM.211.
This means 1.%10,134 more tans viewed
Angel ga me• the last roar years in
Anaheim than in a comparable pe.rlod In
Dodger Stadium.
..•. The Angels win hypo attend1nce
with 13 major promotions durtng the
coming season designed for every
member of the family.
In addition to th e tnd1Uona1 bat nlghl,
helmet nlghl nnd cam era day. there will
~Jan be an ~u_gtgraph da y. cuiihlon night,
alamond nlgtit and poster night.
Other fa vorites are lhl" r1tllimet'!I
game, Disneyland day, K~tPC-Dunn)'
game and the return of a July f llr&workli
shnw and T-shirt night.
Final event on the amblUou1 Angel
t alendar la 1 prlie 4-y OI Sept. 17.
' ' .
••
Tutsd_.,, Mardi 10, 1970
. Track Ro111adt1 p
. r'
DAILY PILOT J I
Estancia, 10ilers Win;
Hot 880 by Area Duo
Jilek Jennings of Mater Del and Dave
Hustwick of Laguna Beach turned ln the
best performances of the day Monday in
non-league prep track and field dual
meels in the Orunge Coast area with an
excellent 880 duel.
Jennings turned in :i l :58.3 to nose oul
l.aguna's Hust wick, "'ho clocked a J :58.5.
Jennings' victory hi~hllghll'<I th c
1.1onarchs' SS..53 \\'in over Laguna Beach.
In other varsity action, E!lancia turned
In an imposing ptrrormance a l Sad-
dleback where the Eagles swept to first
place finishes in every event ex~pt the
discus and the shot put.
The Eagles v.·on it handily, 95-32. llun-
tlngton Beach turned host Corona de!
f\iar away with a 63-50 decision but Costa
11-fesa wasn't quite so fortunate, losing 86-
41 to Garden Grove.
Leading the EstL1ncia l'rf'w was Ricl1
\Vood. who ~·on his hurdling specialities
in 15.5 and 19 .7 \\'hlle fre!lhman Bruce
Girasole \vas cApturing the 220 in a
creditable 2l.4 against the wind.
Dave Johnson l\'On the 100 in 10.0 {or
the E11gles.
!\1aler Qei's win came chiefly in the
running events as the host Lagunans
S\\leot first place in all four field events.
t11ike Abbey leaped 21 -1~~ in the Ion~
jun11> and took another first in the high
jun1p,
Garth \Vi~ 1vas a triple \1•1nner for
llunlington Beach, 11·ith a 14.9 in lhe 120
high hudles a1onj!, \\'ith wins in the 180 low
hurdles and the long jump.
-V1.,ltv
Ylr111Y
Ell•ll<•• 05) (l!) SMl!lleDact
IC.0-1. Joll11s,;~ o:i 2. Tren•n !SI l. Sn•11911neu~
IE I Tome: 100 ,,o -I, G"t>OI• !El 1. Tr•,..n lSI l. JOllllMlll IEl, 1 ....... 21.• M.itr Del IHI 1111 l •••llf.l ll<R 100 -1 F•HQ.1 IMPl 1. Frll1 IMO! l. (lo'tH Tim• lQI
McK«•n +oCI -1. 01.on CEl 2. Oeromtnoa~ !El J, Alh-llt ISL Tlmt ~.5
210-1. Frlllol !MD) 2 Frill (MD) 1 Conam fl8 1,
l imt . 13.I H~:l'w1C.. c't:a1°'\~~ CMOI J. Jen"\"°' (MO! 1. ""
Gilli s to Coa ch
Pilot Qiti11tet;
MO -1. &111 IEI 1. Smltn CSJ l, S!!to11r !SI. Tim.> 1:06.1 Mooe -I. H~un IE} 2. NHI {E) l , Seva ISl. 1 •"'41. '...51..S 1 11·M,ll~o7Jl\ 110.,1 ~E l 1. Olvod...., !El J. 1<al1tr ISi. ~ liH -I! WOOO !El 1. S!..-r1 !El J. $111,...n !Ei. l•me· 1~, 1 .~"~,lra,-l WOOi! !El? Slu•rl IEl l. D•wioon ISL
... Ref4y -I. El1an<;•a, Time· .. ~ ,..,. ... -.~ ... v -I "'"~•\(of I"""· J JJ.l r./ -I ti••~tll 1C1 ~-lifll•• 1£1 l. "'•llworth 1$). 1-lt•llhl ' .. , LJ -1 f'~"'er (El 2. Ashwo•th ~Sf l. Ulr1>0l1 !El Do>ldllt" lt·5
H:vht7 /;l.,NOH1U•a (() 2. S•lt<'<ll ($) l. H-.r .. fEl, ~~ -1. Taylor !$) l. Ll!Y"k 1El J. Ptnnl• IEl. Obt1~":i::_tl'j~1Ji,.,.... !S) 2. Lou!fl< lEl l . l1vlor lSl. Olst1nc1: 129·511'1 · '" L • s t lh t111el1 IM\ CUI S•dlllthct meups e 100 -I, Moore lE"I • Gtover lEI J. Gr .. nsll1"# ($~. 11me· 10.6 To~:-;,~· Grove~ (El 1 Moo•• I El 1. HM,.., 151.
~ -I Cre1n !El l, 8!1floo \El l. Smllh !Sl.
G ( b k b II Time: 1 11 l. . Tandy illis, orn1er a s ct a grea /ll11 -1, lit••ov <El 2. ~lll'twt!1 1E1 ~. No . I~ rll, Tlmt l Xl.1
ttl the University or Cali fornia and cur-10 11H -1. co1t tE) l . C•rot~ter IEl l . •u•itr "I Time. 't Tt>ntl~· head cooeh al Coronn llrl r.1ar 2o Lo. -• cote tE1 1. a"""" 1E1 1. Arbuc-10 J LC.I r,.,.. l•J
All-Cll<' Catididate lllgh. has agreed lo cooich the DAILY m ~~I~~ p;;d.,.,Ej~"tci.·K~\·~ .. 11if'I Conler IE.I.
PILOT tc::im '.l'hich will meet The Cops Ht~'11.:. t1 0ec-~ 1i.1 1 G•ove• 1ei l. u"rv.n ie1• , D<>hnct l'"i
\\1estminster Hi gh's Dan Broderick 1301 goes up for a shot again:.t
Monrovia in CIF playoff action. Broderick averaged 30 points per
game fo r three playoff starts and is a solid candidate for All·CIF'
first team laurels.
\\:rdnesday night at Custa Mesa High. it{:jni -i'i..oH•vs t~J 2. M•ll<lnfY 1s1 1. Nt111111 1s1.
The 7· t5 tiff is a benefit "'ith all monies Dl !Ince 1 ii7"" LSI J A•bu<:klt tEJ , MillOMY 1~1.
· 1 J · Q t ~'lCC"" -' Ltw" !SI 1. Sl>ulh tSI t khlel-1r gu1ng to paralyzed wrest er u!.l1n ga a. 1Ei p,.1ance. 1s.o
Admission is 35 cents per person and tile e 1.1i11<I• \•1~ '~1 s~llltHl"-
gym's doors will be open at 6:30. Tl::: lo.1'· L•n1e IE . U•Hn t , l. Tru1111c1 1s1.
• llO -. Li!U1 IEI J. Sllt11tr CSl l . GrHn ISi,
Stevens Reviews S eason,
Oddsn1akers have established the Tl'2!'~'i1 wiuon 151 1. J~ cei 3, C•·-~ ce i.
DAIL\' PILOT as IS-point faVocites and 11~ ~Jt;0 11:n"'r cE I 1. c1111151 3. For11Ut• 151•
area bookies say the cops have deluJ?ed Tim::Lt3!:.n1. srieoe• cs1 1. CIWlsh cs1 J. Roui fEJ.
lh . II I 'lh ll 11· Tlmt: 14.J e1r ou es wl wagers, mos y pu 1ng uo R.iav -1. ~dCl/rl>lr;t. l ime: "·' . HJ -I. CerDc!n!er El l. Cr111 'El J. Ho!larld ISl. U1cir 1noney on the newspaper quintet. 11~,h~ ~ ,., le' rEI 1. Rous !El J. ,,,11~11
LooksAheadtoNext Year The addition or Hoger Carlson to lhc (Sf>'v0'.!1"r~'L~: (Sf 1. Ma..-~ !El J. No third.
learn has been largely responsible for the 11\1~~~ l~•me•!lto 1s1 1. Pln11eo 1u J. A••llOfl /$!,
bip. point spread. Carlson was a dou btful 0111•nc•· l>-11.,..
By CRA IG SHEFF
01 1111 01llT Pllclt 51111
'"l was very pleased the way we finish-
ed. Early in the season I did not an-
ticipate us doing qu ite as well, but r 1vas
happy with the way the kids worked
together as a unit at the end of the
season ."
Speaking was Saddleback College bas-
ketball coach Roy Stevens. su mmariz-
ing his club's play during the 1969-iO
carnpaign.
The Gauchos tinishEd strong, ~'inning
se\len of their last nine games and ending
1vith a season record of 17-i I.
their own back yards while in the Desert
circuit, a lot of out of stale recruiting
takes place in order to be competitive.
Sm11h finishe1I as the team's leading
scorer 1\•ilh 492 points and a li.6 average.
Christensen tallied 452 points (16.1), Noon
had :131i points ( 16.BJ And [Anvrenet> Iota l-
ed 276 (10.2).
S1nith was selected 10 t h c
sport11Wrill'rs' all-coun!y teain while Noon
was awarded a second unit berth.
Christensen drew All·Descrl Conference
honors.
parlicipnnt because of ailing knees. HO\\'·
t'ver, he's cnsling aside his crutches for
a shot at lhe fuzz .
!\1onday night the DAILY PILOT had
a game scrimn1age and GJ111s was lm-
pressecl \\'Ith the team 's conditioning and
balance.
Oefeusei-were i-ct and so were the of-
fensive patterns
And. the starting rive v.·as selected
wit h 6-11 To111 Fortune at center, Carl
Carstensen (6-2) and Craig Sheff (li-2l
al forward s, Glenn White (S.10) and Phil
Ross fS.10) at guards.
---------~--.. -
V1ra!l'I
Co.I• Mn• (41) Cl'I G•r4.., c;,.w. 100 -! Welner CGG) 2. Wotd IGUl l. Baat1 !GG). T l~g:~Ol~'Tonv !UGI l. Wlrd /GU> 1. W1hwr IGJI
Tlm•:Jl a. t.tO -I 81~tt !UU) J. GliodJ.Gn !GGJ l . BK~ !GI. Time; 53.4.
hO -I H\11~ CGU) l. Gollnitl( H:Mt J, Kttlll\Q 'GG '\ flme: ;~.o. Ml' -I ~nlllll'IO IGGI 7, MtcLtlll !CMI J, Pelet10l'I fGG). l ime: t :ll.O.
7 Miit -I, Print ICM1 J. Rusi CGOI J, T. Olt*•n<I !(Ml. Time: IO:GJ,Q.
120 lili -It LeF'T!' (CM) J. l•IHNIY iGGl ). Hln.•tn lGGI lone: .1. Ito Lit -l. L.a1eend¥ CGGI J, litlllt" IGGJ l. W~i:k~e• !GG\. Time: U .O.
'440 Rt••v -l. ~'lien Gro.ot. Tl'"'· ... o. Mitt Rel•v -I. ~rdffl Grovt. T1m.: ):J1.S.
HJ -11 •~• ! l J. Mlrcnlorl•lll ICM) l . YDllnll IGGI. Ht an.-6· . U -'I kl'l1lOtOIC CGGI 1. El'CllltY (CMI J, L~IHNIV GG.J ()l1!•Mt " l!.b J.V -1. lia!TMI fGGl t. W1tk1ns CCMI l, Pink.a
I S~l._!it•~nr&:,10:,·" ((Mt J. llelllv ICMI l. l un-
nf'lll CGGJ. Dl.r"tlCt : 4f.10\ft.
OIJ<"' -1. llelllv ICMJ 1. V&9k !GG! J. 81.on (GGJ. P•s1•~••· I'°"''°" !See Oll.ERS, P11ge 1%)
----------
In Desert Conference ac1ion. Sad-
rlleback lied for lhird with Barslo\v with
a 9-5 mark. ~1lra Costa and Imperial
Valley were co-chainpions with 10-4
records.
Scotch vs. vs.7Crown.
"From lhf' time we played Or11n gc
Coast (a 76-67 victory) we bolted together
as a unit. Cam Smith and Eric
Christensen. along \\'ith Raady La\\'rence.
made the whole thing go. They gnt the
team together as a unit.
"They were a tremendous group of
kids. I never worked with kids lha1 I
have enjoyed more.'' said the Saddleback
coach.
\Vhat about next season?
"\Ve will lose three starters !Smith.
Lawrence and Bill Noon ), along with
reserves Rick ~1crrill, Greg Swenson and
Jim Helm.
"But if we can get a couple of big men
in !he area, we could give people lrou·
ble."
Returning: for the 1970·71 season will he
ChrL~tensen and Rick Edwards, boLh
starting guards. Also back will be
reserves Bob Lilley, Ben Mahar, Richard
Ebel and Bill Allen.
1 The Gauchos will be entering l~e
"Pifission Conference next season and this
also pleases Stevens.
"l am looking forward to the new con.
ference.'' nays Stevens. "It parallels our
program more closely."
He explains that in lhe Mission Con-
ference, the learns recruit basically in
UCI Batting
UCI I AnlNG AVER AGES !l-J.11 1 Hr ll tl!Jlt ftrrl!l a't9,
·~ Cr11t I~ J6 ll 1' 11 1 1 t .44<1 °'""' Nlcllol\1111 l t l 1 o j ., .m f~erio., .~,IS& t·~:
1kbb1or:rr1r U JI IS n I I o • ,1tJ ~
1l,'i: ~~~ ,J ~ : I~ ~ g g 'J :'Ill
.~ """" . ! l I • • I ·1!!1
-·
We wan,t to ~tep
makes a greaj..
Canadian.
s7Crown.
We j\ist want to i:emi nd~~t ~pref er t~ taste 9f. nl's
Wh ich is why more peolJle buy It
top Scotch and the to,P <Janailian com
Surpiised? · · 1 Then you have11't ~ted our. whiskey.
•
ay Seagrm11 'sand ae Sure.
• .
ll.!I:~~. ',11' f, '! l l ! ! i ~
lit~ So•11'1,1tl 11 f ft I 6 ·1'f ~ ~~:; j f : d , ! J i 1 ;lid &iqram Di11.lllm Com11•11.1 Ntw York Ci\:1. mmitod \VlllN;ey. U Proof. 8&% Gtt.ln Nt11tn.l 6plrla.. ______ ..., _____ ..., .... _____ ._.
•v.,~1111' ,J 3A .i ,i 11 ~ ~ ,J :m ·---~-----------~-----~------------------
l
• •
• •
•
I I
I
I
I
• i
I
'
l
l
,;
..
lie DAILY PILOT TursdA)', March io, iq10
'
~.A~ .. f.~
TWO SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT ON PUTTING
There are two popular
methods of taki ng the putter
back from the ball The first
(illustration '1) has tho putter
moving straight back with the
putterface always look ing at
right angles to the putting lino.
The second method 'has the
putter moving back "inside"
the line and the putterface look-
ing at r"ight angles to the path
on wh ich it is movirfg (illustra-
tion f2).
The fir st method involves a
slight counterclockwise rotation
of the hands on the backstroke
in order to keep the putterface
looking down the line. Naturally,
t his turning of the hands must be
reversed on the through stroke
to retu rn the ctubface squarely
lo the ball.
The second method, which
seems mo re natural to me, in·
volves no rotation. The putter·
face merely opens and shuts
Ilk• the opening and closing of
a door.
I s uggest you try both
methods .and use that which
gives you the best results. I
further s uggest you also ·a pply
whicheve r method you choose
to your short shots from around
the green.
Long Irons From The RoUgh, Pitc:hlng From Woods, Uphill and Downhill lia5--lhe.s• •nd oth1r shots •ra det.Hld for you In Arnold Palmer's bookJtt, ..,.rouble Shots." FQr your copy, H nd
201 •nd •stamped, Mtf..cldr.sstd envek19ttoAtnold hlmer, In
c1r1 of this newsl)lper.
Coast .Pr!ps
Tennis Roundup
V1rt1ry N...,.,. 011 CH P•ll*""
Slllf .. l Ogle CNH) won ,,_I, •1, ..0, a-2. Crli-{NH) wan •1, H, •I, •I. Perino INH) IGSI .. a; -n A-0. •D, ..
O'ltelllY !NH) won'""·~. l-1. •1. --
l!I ~ CUI UI c .... M"' 1llolles E~leY lCMI io.f H , 1-', l-t: -I-<
>.
s ... 1. ICM). lml J.7. 1-4, M . ,_,_ Purcell !CM), losl S-1, 0-.. l-6, 1·'-C.rlff' (CM), IOl1 24. 04, G-t1 won 1-......
CuMJ.rioti.m 1flCI C~t•lf:l !NH) -l-1, &-1. H • ..0.
For!.h.ilv 111d CiolU !CM! loll .... •·•1 ~DI! •• ,, .. ).
su~.,.. aNI Conni• ICMI 10$1 ... °"'' 24. ).f, e11tma~ Incl Ptt.Y ("I HI -•1, .. •. •t 6-0.
J11n1w V•nl" N1w,...i C!OJ COi P•~tlen1 u.,. ...
Nlcholl (NH! won 6-1, '""· 0...IM tliHI WOil ,,_,, ... .
F•r"ll INH) -K ... . J~ (NHl won ,,_L 6-0. -J_, 1111' Dllro-n (NHI -k ,,_l1 .. 1, .. 2. 1.tlell 111t1 lt0$enu {NHl Wflll t•l, •h •·O. H.
OILERS ...
(Cuntlnned from Page 11 )
V1uit'
Hunllllfltn lt•c~ c11 1 1501 '"'""' ltl ~· 100 -I. Mull•• (COM! ' Co• CCdM), ). Mllet. \(dM). 11,....: 10 . .1.
220 -I. Mulrt• lCdMl. 1. StrW!lh (Hll, l. Ile belween Miies iCdMl ll'ld
AuOOlpll (CdMl. 11me; JJ.6. •60 -1. S!rouqh (H!I ). l . Rov tCdM), l MC.Q\ll>Wn CH!I !. Time: !l.l . MCI -1. McO!,lown 4H8), 2. 110!" CC.OMf, ~. K!rllp,olrldl (H!I). Time;
J:OJ.0. Mlle -1. MOllel'>o (H8), 1. 81bln
IHBl. l. GleMOI'> (COMI. Time: •:Sl.0.
:>-Mlle -I, Mll>tt lCdM), J. Milc!Mll IHBI, l WF!fe~t lH!I). Timi:: JO:lol.O. l?O HH -l. Wise !H!l 1, 1. S!ubblnt IHBI, 3. M. S&vler (CdMI. Tim<" U.t.
180 LH -I. Wl't tHB!, 2. S!ubbln1 IH9), 3. M. Sevier \COM). TllT!lt: :10.6. ~di A!llY -1. CorClnll clel Mir 11 .... , 11.2. Milt Rtl1v -1. Hul'fln!llon 6e1c.11. Tlme; J:Jt.t. HJ -1. H<lll IHB J, 1. D. Sevl•r
!CdMI, J. l"klolf (CdM). Helgnl; J..10. lJ -1. Wiit IHB), 7 o ·t.iell (CdM), J Holt lH!I). Ols!Jn<:f: 17"". PV -I. Rom .... v ((dM!. J. Alld•tll"
!Hiil. J, Vtu!lhn JCdMl. Heignl; 11.0. SP -l Drrll ng IHB I. 1. 81r""n \CdMI, J. AYtrt (H81. Dl1lu1u; )O.J>,,
'" H1111Untt..i 6t•d• USI Utl C«..,. 1t1 ...
lGC -1 Fierro \H8 ). J. R:O•t•n (CdM), J. Pid<f"'d (H8). TllTlf!: 10 .•. 110 -l. Fierra !HS~. J. Ro1~,n ICdM!, J, Metc111 (CclMI. Time: 74.&. 61111 -I. McG" lHB). 1. C1mpCell ICOMI, l. Mort!f• 1H8). Time: 1:1l Cl.
13'0 -J. C~luda fH81. 7. Cl1rk
ICclM), J. ThOITIPSOn !HB I. Ti""'" J.l3.J. I~ HH -I Hotlmln 11-491 J Gtor~ !CdM), J. Jt'IHn (tdMJ. Tf .... : 16. 1. 1~ lH -I P lcklord (HSI, J. Kent ICdM), l . (111"'1 !CdMI. 'rime: 14.6. 110 Relay -l. Hun!l11q!D11 Betch
Time: 1:11.CI,
HJ -I. Ktn! lCdMl. l . J•nlfn tCdM), "'1 lhl<d HeoqM · ~.
LJ -l. Mt1Cllf !(OM!, '· Kent ((dM), J Mortt.Y !HBJ. Ol•ll ntt: It-". PV -1. Hin..., IHBl. J. Ro,..nlllll (Hiil. l. Casino ICdM!. Heloh!; HMI. SP -I. Pe11r1 (H[!I ), 2. H11rbt11 (HSI, J. Rl<u /CdMI. Olt!tM•~ ••·9.
'" C.,•~• ff! Mir 1411 l~I Munll11tl.., ••..:~
,.fa1·s. • Esta ncia
Set Ban11u cls
Newport Harbor and Estan-
cia high schools \\'ill honor
their winter sports teams with
banquets Tuesday night at
school cafeterias.
Estancia 's s wimming.
basketball and w r e s I I i n g
teams will he feted at 6:30
while Newport's basketball
and wrestling squads "'ill be
honored at 7.
The Newport swim leam's
gathering will be held in April .
Leavy Tops
Area JC
Batsn1en
Orange Coast College's Bob
Leavy tops the area jllnior eol·
lege baseball teams in hlWng
with a .462 average, according
to statistics compiled through
last iweekend 's games.
Leavy. a shortstop, haa col·
lected 18 hits in 39 ap.
pearances at the plate. Team·
mates Mike Paul and Mike
Powell also ha ve impressive
credentials \\'ith .390 and .351
marks.
Golden \Vest's Wayne Kiefer
tops Rustler regulars in hit·
ting with a .435 mark. Team-
mate Rex Snyder has a .545,
but has appeared at bat only
11 limes, collecting six hits.
The Rustlers' Bill &wen is
hitting at a .3W clip.
~ Scott Longnecker is the
leading Saddlcback .b i t t e r
a'mong the regulars with a .296
average.
Eric ~hristensen made his
first appearance in a Gaucho
uni£orm Saturday, banging out
five hits in six trips to the
plate for a .833 mark.
O.Wttl Wut U-'1
•II r II r1ll IY •.
11 1 61..!I~
1 1 1 • .SOii 2 010.500 7J 6 10 t A3.5 15 111 .320 10 117 ,300 11316 .'1$~ l•l l0 .tl6 ?•l•l.250
•1 10 .150 • o 1 1 .iso 151 •1 .740 210 62 .m 19212.151
10 G l t ,11)(1 11~00'11113
l.S 36 " 27 .26•
0,.c,"~'o"o,o,c1.J.Jl •1> r h 1"111 1¥1.
3t •116 .ol61
•1 10 1' l ·"° JI 1 ll IJ .j)J 10 1 3 2 .?71 11 11~.n2 l• 3 1 3 .J'IM 15 J s ] ,2(IO r.31 1 .111 212 30 .130 11 011 .0lll
11 l 1 o .on
lJ 1 0 0
3l2 4 11 oc .232 .... =.7 .. ~n~IZ-41 1b r h rbl 1v1. · ''ll .133 $ 1 I .600 2 11 0 .500 273 13 ."6 1110.251 "j •1 .,U 2• $ , .20I 15 1 ! f .200 212 •1 .1'0 76 ••1 .lJ.I 183 13 .lC
I 1 1 I .113 1• 1 l 2 .U.5 l• 1 0 l
2'.lCI J,j ._ 7J ,:IOf
Prep, JC,
UCI Golf
Summaries
O.
F"'11111111 Vtlltr IUJ on Efi ... BOii~ (El·IO Ofl. R1nkl11 IFV)-1<1. l-7. Kn!ghl CEl.fO de!. Brown (FVl•N, S-
Hart IFV 1·t3 del. S~olielO IE f-U, l-2.
Adamt IFV•10CI def KlnMV !El·lll,
l·O. Wlll11mt IFVJ-1°' Ml. S!ettn1 CE l-101, J.J.
Reil1llCI !l"VJ del. Kellv IEI. ).I.
CO!'ffti .. I Mtr Ul) ttl Ml~ftet[•
Frtt$ !CaMl del. Thomp:l<ln (M). b•O. Kluewer lCdMl llel. Cle•• {Ml. 2·1 John'O!I !Ml Ofl. OU<-en ((OM!,~""· C1rrotl CCllMI def. Tt-.om-IMJ, l-o (ox {COM) def. R~ (Ml. !·0.
l•Wln (CdMJ lie! 0111>1strom !Ml, 5-0.
UC Irvin• ClJ) 01 J U. •I S1~ 0 1•" C.haml>erl\n IUCl)·l5 dt!. Y1r.kY
IUSDJ·IJ, 6.0. Mura> tUSDJ·ll del. Hoo• e n I UCl)-tf, 6-0
Hoc*Jn1 CUCl\--tll !lfl. [ I< o
CUSC)-". 6·0 Kern• CUC.II-I• oet. a r •• II CU50)-t7. •o
Hrlrlt C\JSO) -1' Clef. 5 DI n
!UCl)-11. ,.J.
UCI follt!te<r 1!•lh man m1tcn.
UC. lr~IM Ull IUI P1pi-r1IM Ron C.ft1moorlln !UCl1·'1 cltl. Jim V1lerio lP14 1. 6-0. Terry Tllul CPl-n det Ron Hoo-'11 1uc11-a1. t-o. De<! Kf.l!I lPl·I• Ofl DI/kt Hopkl111 (UCU47, S.I. Bob Aliff! CUC0·71 def. Chi~ H\U {Pl-
15, &.o.
Drew TOWMI lUCl)·l7 1'1!1. Jorn Ke~• !Pl-9', •·7 Sttll• CllllP• lUCll·ll <11'1. Gc•don BOllCI tP141. t-0. Btil bill : ucr won, ~1.
, ...... W11! U41 (01 L.-cc
Milo.f f\l\cllCls !GW).TJ dCI. Tim Kim
llA)·ll, 6·0. Oort $101bt <GW)-11 dt!. Tony Outn (LA) ... , 6-0.
IC.en Krlbel IGW )·1l ael Alt~ .Z•tel
lt..>.l-7'. "°· SlfW. H1'"1 CGW)·l7 ~I. Gene KtWfklml tlA)•M, .. 0. L1rrv l!!:ynon ((;W )-16 Oel. lob RCH•awllt ll..A)·9l. •O. M•rll Swtln (GW)·ff dtf. w111er Samolt (LA)-tl, •·O.
100 -I TOlll tC-1, J. :SO.lb• ICdM). J. Gorll1l11 !CdMJ T ! '"t . '" llO -I. TOii! 1(dM\ J. Selt71' !COM). MAR ~,s.-,,L,.-, ..
• EYERmtlNC FROM DINGHIES TO l Gonlaklu ICdM!. T me: It.I. 660 -I. WYnn• l(OMI. L AIY11re1
!>101, l. Lonci !HBl. Time: l::it.•
J 1~-=t;-t~B't"~r~~~~li.l: Roe (HI).
1~ LH -1. FlsllntU CHB). ,, Kelltr IHB), ). G!tllf!On tCllMl. Time: 1•.I ua 11•1•• -I. Corona det Molt. Time: 50.7
HJ -I. Trtbftt IHll~ 1. Buti.r lHB). J. Si~Mn CHll). He hi; 5-CI. LJ -1. 01vlr1 !COM , t. Seib¥ fCOM I\ 3 fl11ller fHll). Dl1i.l'ltlr: U-1 . PV-• Holl!.l'tlokMF fH8). l. Shtnni
CHiii, J. T•tbef! IHI). Helolll1 M. SP -I. Miii ICdMJ, t. f'ortt (COM). I. MC.Nlmtt (C.OMJ. 01Jllllal: 43-1.
Gymnastics
13•22 LUXURY SAILBOATS I. OCEAN CRUISERS!
••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~N AllllAL ..,.Hi!!:OUWJ"-
: WESTEll IATIOIAL tu':!"
• COl.IJllllA . ~ • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
. -
OCC, Rustler Swimmers Sparkle
Orange Coast and Golden In the 200 !rte, Don Lippoldt (22.9) lnlhe 50 free while Keith 1 ooo 1r"'1vi. -' 1 Sctiw.. 1m;>· 1.115.11 i . ~'11" 1s..1111 Mo111UI.
I 0 Id Do I,,_ I C J'--W 10:~1..2; 2, Ftl-rt fGWCl, 10:~. ; l. 2rOJ,1; • s,...noon !GW!, 1.01.11 ~ West Colle11e s.wimmen are o o en West has the second na Wllln u o ucu est ,...._,. 1 uuenon1.11:U.G1 •. J.c e 1oo}Ard 11.acci. ,,o,$. ,, o k f b \P•Sld-), 10~•; J. ltuenbffl 100 bt,lllHllY I G•"l."'on !OC • very prominent in a list of besl time of 1:50.3. Feinbera's ron s ourl (23.0). _,.,, Lacci. 1t:s1.1. 1:01.2. 2 1_,, 1s .,.11s,1111. J.Uil.t." • Kr\ S G "" f,j: )"tn IP1W<1en1 . 1~09.0, 1. 5wtn,on best times for South er 11 50.4 in the 100 free ranks him s wenson (ll 'olden 290 1iw. l1~ -~· '11 IP•$11C1~11•t owc 1, 1:11.01 1, o rm ..... 1L11cc1,
' ii hi d h'I Li . W st . f th . th -I !.,\!ll,I~ 1l•1111"='11 1:ir.~\. li~JJ11t1> 111·"· California junwr co eges, as t r w t e ppoldt's mark or e is our in e ~ n-I' '!j'• 1: 1.,1 • 111,._ !V•!lfiyl, 700 11r1•111,,01<r _ •. .Mak1111 1sft1111 --piled by OCC swim coach 50.7 ls the fifth best time. dividual medley with a timt of :st ~luJ, 1,,3 1, 1 JllhN11111 tocc.1, ,_.. ' ••:,S.1; 3 F111l..,,.r ($1n11 An•, J k Full rton U 2·07 l loo tr.n!I.I!.:: '· P(lllOI\ CV• "'l• 2:17.21 I. llrw-o CLBCCI/· 1.'11, l. ac · e • ppoldt and Fejnberg also · ' • ~·~·, "'reW'C)'. l~~l1ffY1. 50F!' · w.ioon tS•n 11.,.111roino v. ~· J·~ ~.
OCC's 400 medley relay have the second and third best In the 200 butterfly, Chris ,."F".' . ""',·~!'..i!~,•. °"'•'""'•' "•mi.· • 1.-,.,1e re11v -1. u111•ion, Gamm. on o( 0 c -~ b I t tF• ... rlll'! LlpPoldl (I WC l:20.5; I. \.BCC. 3:'3.71 l. Vtlt.v, team has the second best marks in the """' backstroke, · fB,flfJe 04'14 as :11.11 1. CMttll. J.U.J1 J. s1n11 An•, f.W th to u· · (2 ~ 2) hJI :2t,0/ a. Go en We..!, l :V .11 1. mark in Southern California 2:08.3 and 2:11.7. The top tlrne s e P 1m•1 : · w e lm1.,.=r~1~1·o.s.1ti 2. (~":ii-rt~t ~o~ .. ~·~~:,,;;'~;;;;"~· ~··~"~··~· ====•, (3:51.2) behind Pasadena's is held by Fullerton's :Bvron wenson s oorth (2: 11.0). :!Ill.Ji s .... rnber'• tG L ,:n ,11 " "" .,.. Johnston has the irecond best BciwWI" !P1$1'6rnel, 2.:1 .1; !i. JI/Cly 3:~.5. Reklenbaugb (2:05.0).·' .:me ·in \he _ b, •N-\ k 1v~i.r..l:e:it'~.-'~ 1. \'11e" CP•.....,.l· Who Cares 7 The Pirates' Steve Sch wer ( u. -v rtGG\il ro e ~:"-'~ J. l''.ild1 GwtJ. J:1101 .
h h I din . ( 0 • ln·the 500 reestyle, Lippoldt (2:2S.l 1. Sch"""' ~occ . s:u .1, 1. e11c11er No othrr rw:wspaprr in thr world
as t e ea g time I ; 51.") has the second best mark L1111.111, JC S'llilm nm" \':!..111:'.:i.Y. J: ~.~~·'' s. F • r '~ 1 carrs about your community llkt in the 1,000-yard freesl}'le and (5:14.0) while Schwer is third tAs ''""'""SI }(I •r-1v1• -1. Pll>•on tv•11e'l·
C I be ·1 n .11 t. ~noon tocci. 1t.t;. • your community daily ntw~paprr o den West's Greg Fein rg (5 :15.1), Bruce Johnson of 400 fM<ll•Y re11y -1. P.nMHtn•, omo!ht (Lf!ICC1 tt.t · • 0on1111i.on
ks d (Jo u O) OCC h ,._ j:50.!: 1. occ, l :!1.l1 l. El c..-n1no. IGW 1, .21.0r J. lt.i"' IF11ilem.n>, n .!. dor5. It's UI~ OAJL Y PILOT, ran secon :.iv. . as ~~second.best j.ime :Jtt.1 •. Fu1 .... 1on. l:U.21 J, s.1111 '°°&Id. mitd. -l. LO'llen IPP-•, ------------------------'---"..,::::''""'-·o''o""·'c· _______ _!•~="'~·••c_.:•L.·3.'~·"'"!".,._~~-'!'~'~""'~~·!:·.'.=============
QUARTERBACK
SP·OBTS & LE-ISURE
I
INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE
._SKIS--
BY NORTHLAND
Stien Erickson-
F;EC. $•t..E
L 21s .. .$150 . .$89.99
National . $115 . .$69.99
National Jr. .$90 . . $53.99
Gloss 200's $52.50. . $29.99
Cobras .... $42.50 .... $24.99
.---SPECIAL VALUE--..
t-iYSTERY SKI
METAL-REGULAR $80
NO W
$53.99
SUN VALLEY
FIBERGLASS
REGULAR $45.00
N OW
$26.99
SKI POLES
by Scott & Northland
REDUCED
TO
BOOTS
M.n's, Lod i••'. Youths, 5 Budcle
Reichle
Fiber Jfl Rf'd1 ..... ,$135 ... $79.99
Suptem•s .......... $85 •... $59.99
Fle<tra 1 , , _.,.,., .. $60 , .. $)7.99
Specials .. -. , . , ...•. $50 .... 534, 99
A<t'" ............. $JS .... $24.99
Youths .......... , .. $35 .... $21 .99
Nordico-
Alpino ............. $35 .. $21.99
BINDINGS
~EDUCED TO 3 5IO
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
PARKAS
by OberpMyer, G.m, ProliJe, -...--
SKI PANTS
REDUCED
TO
Mony over th•boot
fran1 $35 to $6.S
styles,
N OVI $19.99 TO $39,99
SWEATERS
ASSORTED SKI ............. 50% OFF
Turtle ne cks R111• 5 .. 1,
COTTO N SOLIDS . , .. S3.75 .... $2.49
NYION STRIPES ...• $9.00 ..... $4. 99
UNDERWEAR
by OuofolO, lo• Ill•~. W""''"'· Ch•ltl•e" Aegul~r Now $3 49 ., $4 49 t s 10 M.'IO • ,
llGUlAt
s1 ro s~.so
GOGGLES
NOW 49c ,0 $3.49
BARRCRAFTER SKI CARRIERS
REDUCED TO 30%
All SKI ACCESSORIE~REDUCED 30%
WOMEN'S
APRE S SKI WEAR TO 70% OFF
GOLF
ASSORTED PUTTERS . ... • .. . .. ... $2.49 TO $4.99
BEGINNER GOLF SET by Custom Craft
Men & Women-2 Woods, 5 Irons, Reg. $34.9S Now $23.99
ATLANTIC GOLF BAG ...........•.. REDUCED TO 50%
TASCD BINOCUl.ARS 1X~S WIDE '°'NGLE •. • . REC. 139.!S , , .•. S ALll!: ........ t.26.91
10X5ll ••...•.•..•• , .•••••.••.•• RUG. 134.15 .•...•. SAl.£ ...••.. 11e.99
7X!O ...................... , .. REC. ~l.M •••.•••• SALE .•.. Sl9.lt IX~O ......... , ................. REG. J24.t 5 ....... SALE ••.. 116.ff
7.W.)5 ......................... FIEG. $24.M ••..•••• SALli: • . 515.t•
QU<\RTERRi\CK
SPORTS_f;_.LEISURE
=j)
GOLF
BALLS
TOMMY ARMOUR
Reg. $12 Per 0o'len
SALE
$5.99 o ....
GOlf SHOES-MEN & WOMEN
Arnold Palmer
by Eoton
Par Pals
25% Off
30% Off
SWEETS HOTS
BALL
PROFESSIONAL
Rt11. \15 Doz. Now $7,99
(l.•n11J 2 Doz. to Cu1to1ner)
OUTDOOR GAME5 .,, ..,,.,_,.
REDUCED 30%
3M BOOKSHELF GAMES-
Rag. 7.95 & 3.95 Now 5.99 & 2.69
IL.•'"•t 011e 11•m• ot' tu11ome')
As1't, Gifts & Games to 30% Off
TENNIS SHOES
Conv1rt1 •. ~ell· 10.9~ 8•t• . . •. Reg. 8.!.0 Won1111•1 8al01 •• Reg, 3.SO
Sale .•. 7."
s11e . ·'-'' Silt 2-29 (A111, Color1)
EXERCISE
VITA MASTER
Blk• E!ectr+c Bllee Sl•ndtrd C1ntorn Belt M 1~s•11~r
St1nd1r"d Belt M as11ger
Cu•tOll'I Treid Mill
AMI-WHITLEY-
REC.
s~~-··· S185 .•
,,35 ....
'~ .. . )!40 ..
5Al.£
1159.19 • 99.19
'69.tll . ''·" . $ 1~-"
011uxe &Ike • . 170 , . , I 39.'9 StanO•~d Bike I SG .,. S 211.t9 All ex•rd 11 t(luipmenl lly Whitley
REDUCED 30~'9 OFF
BAG S
SAMPSONnt-
Companlon Totes thc:it Carry
thing big,
. I
E,.•ry·
I
Rt9. 111.f5 ............. , ....... !'lo"" 112.,,.
Anf 517.16 . . ~-... • , ..•. Now 111.ft
ARCHERY
Bows by Bear
R~g . S•le
Suptr Kod!~k ...•...•..•• , I HIO .... \st.ff
Su Pt• Mtonum ••.• ·~--...... S!MI ..... S!i-1.M
Ko,.l1k Hun1er •. .• • ••• s ;o •. , W .tt
Kodl•-M•gnum .••..•.••• $70 .•••• $.42.H Po11r .................... SSS •.•• Sl!,19
Tiger Cit ............ . J-1:? .,. S77.H Al11k•11 ................. \34 ..... $22JI') 8•1r Cit . .. . .. • , •• 126.r.o .••.• $115,!lt
Cub •• ••• ... . .• .S<'2.SO .•• SH•,••
SETS -BOW. ,1.Fll'IOW, AP.M CUAl:fb ._
F INOE.R TA8. TARG~T & BOOK OF" IN· ST RUCTIONS
301. OFF
AFIROW$-FIBEFICt..A5 4. Ct DAR 40• O~F
WOMEN'$-, •'
SPECTATOR SPOFITS .t,PPAAEL
SAVINGS TO 701.
SUNGLASSE5
AFINOLD PALMER-FIA V 8AN
REO. 11.00 • •• .. ., •••• NOW 11,"'
11;1?.G. 14.00 • .. . . .. NOW 10.19 AEG. 12.SO ............. NOW 1.H Reo. 10.00 ... • ~ow a.11
''Tltr i>rofe3.•if1nul
Lower f..\a!I lc,.el
Near the Wol•rfall
.-;por-tt1 Start• f ·or l::vt•r3·onf''' 1 Bristol at the San Diego · Frwy., C11sta Mesa
Open Monday thru Friday 10 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. -Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. -Phone 540.0106
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way~ •.. a gypsy hat
(above I. sophisticated
b~bushka (center) or a
basic ascot I right).
Tu•tc11y, Mtrcll 1t, 1f7f P'llf II
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Designers
Trickery
French
Rely on
By MARIAN CHRISTY
Paris fashion is steeped in
phony-baloney.
The French haute couture scene,
beginning to lose sotne <lf its
steam and piuazi, is savage to
cover.
Paris designers, used lo being
treated like gods and goddesses
operating in a stratosphere ahove
ordinary mortals, deliberately
create an atmosphere of a big·
theater opening during the twice-
yearly collections. If it weren't
such a phys ical liability, it could
be one o'r the world's biggest
jokes.
As any foxy press agent knows,
the oldest trick in the world is to
invite hundreds of editors and
then jam them Into a tiny room
that could comfortably seat 50.
Physical squashing plays tricks
on the psyche.
After a few days of being crush-
ed, shoved and pushed by-desper-
ate fellow editors who left their
Emily Post manners at home,
brainwashing sets in. You get to
thinking vou're the luckiest editor
alive to ·be allowed into such a
"holy" inner sanctum as a name
fashion salon -and that the
privilege of seeing the clothes is
a special blessing from on high.
Usually it isn't.
The truth of the matter is lhat
the Paris fashion world is on
shaky ground for two reasons :
F'irsl, women don't foll~ Jfke a
herd o( sheep lhe dictates of
"name" designers. no matter how
powerful. And, second. women
simply don 't want fashion obsole-
secnce every six months.
Paris simply hasn 'l seen the
light.
The designers treat most of the
press like dirt but manage to garn-
er headlines and prestigiOOJ space.
in lhe.. work.1'1 lop n~.spaper« and
fllickest maga zines -no matter
how ridiculous the fashion.
One or the funny-sad things
:ibout cnvcrlng French couture is
thol the tdltor, ho matter how In-
Ouential, must jet to Paris with-
out the benefit ol schedule and,
worse, ad vance invitations.
A crisis develops immediately,
if only in the head.
Each show requires a separate
invitation and often the poor edi-
tor steps into the confines of the
hotel and is forced to alt around
and wait. Often this puts the edi-
tor in the position of bended knee,
praying that the invites wW come.
They usually do -at the elevenlh oour.
Then comes the grind in the
salons, sometimes jokingly refu-
red to as the SalOOlllll by American
\vriters who manage to retain a
sense of humor in the outrageous
situation. Salons, or saloons, art
smoke-filled because the audience
is nervous and puffs cigarettes
endlessly. Unlortun.c.ly, Che chic
Ching amoog Europe's female edi-
tors is to smoke skJnny clgan and
---the-saloons are more smelly than
ever.
Besides, one of the inside prob-
lems is that there are no air
filters in winter and no aiM:On-
ditioning"'in summer. And design-
ers, S(ared that their competitors
across the street will use bino-
culars to spy, always keep the
windows closed and the curtains
drawn. Editors without aufficient
oxygen sometimes faint and are
put out as quickly u possible,
Chairs are the tiniest of stools
that barely hold an ordinary der-
riere -much Im one 'th.It ls
weighted down.
And the chairs ll'fl arranged so
that they touch the aides of the
chairs next to them. Even before
an editor sits down, she Is nib-
bing sides with her netifibor.
Heaven help you lf you don't make
the front seat. Kneel art crunch-
ed into yoor back. Your view b
blocked.
You can see the model's head
and shoulders but heaven only
knows what sht.'s wearin& and
how long her hemline ls. Fashions
are seen in a blur.
..
SCARF 'KN T'
•
You are going out lonighL
Your first thought, "I've" noth ing to
wear."
Your male or date moans.
But don't worry, you can .still be
fashionable .in yesterday's costume . Just
add a colored scarf.
A scarf around the neckline will frame
the face in color and orfer startling con-
trast to that "old thing" hanging in the
back of the closet.
Clingy printed scarves can · be tucked
In. pulled out, twirled around and lied in
knots. Each new l\\'ist enlivens your
dress or suit.
Scarves are big with the young set.
They are the accessory which comp letes
the gypsy and Indian look.
Wrap a scarJ tightly around your head,
knotted at back with the folds cascading
to your waist. Add another scarf, in dlf-
ferertt colors and print, to your waistline.
'lbere you have the gypsy.
For the western or Indian look tic 11
Wide scarf around your head, as lhe In-
dian chief's daughters did b e r 0 r e
civilization moved westward.
Silky scarves added to the leather and
rruede look of today will make you "with
it."
There are the hints. Your excuse for
nothing to wear is silenced .
May Co. in South Coast Plaza has an
outstanding scarf bar. And Kirsten Pelly-
mount.er bas the scarf clips.
COLORFUl HALF-BOW A TIRACTS THE EYE TO SCARF AND FACE
Scholarship Tied to Fashi on
PICTURE BRIGHTENED -The financial picture
of the World Campus Anoat program of Chap1nan
College will be brightened by the sale ol colorful
silk scarves designed by John Scudder, who Is
showing a sample lo "'lrs. William Mead. The havy
blue , w1lite and paya~a red design features a \Vo.rid
mop In the cerrte.r. w1lh port~ of cal l of the floating
campus outlined i1\ red .
A fashionable way to offer flnanclal
assista nce to Chapman College's SS Ryn-
dam. the World Campus Afloa t has been
proposed by alumnae of Uie floating
classroo111, the sale or an unusual,
custom-designed scarf.
A 36-inch square handscreened print on
Onodaga's pure silk twill, the scarf is
designed in navy blue, white and papaya
red with a world map in the ce nter. Porb
of call for the ship are set off in red and
the map is bordered in red.
The scarf will be sold to students,
parents and friends 0£ the college, with
l\.1rs. Richard M. Nixon receiving lhe first
scarf as a gift.
Also receiving one of the striking new
fashion accessories \\'ill be f\1rs. Ronald
~eagan and ~frs , Robert Hltt, founding
President of Cha pman College's Town
and Qo14•n.
Designs were submilted for the scarf
hy alumnae and the des ign of John Scud-
der. son of the president of the college'1
National Advisoty Council. was chosen.
Scudder was one of the first students to
parlicipate In the inilial voyage of the
University of the Seven Seas five years
ago.
The shi p, a 15.000 ton liner owned by
llolland American Llne of t h e
Netherlnnds, has been converted to ac-
commodate college c I ass rooms.
l~bOratories, a library, student union and
theater. Five hundred college students
travel· aboard the ship each semester
from nearly 200 colleges and uni versities
in almost all the 50 state5.
On its current voyage. which began
Feb. 3 in Los Angeles, the ship will call
al ports in the Orient. India, Africa and
\Vestern Europe, finlsbing the voyage in
New York May 27.
The scarf was presented to Jamew
Farley, vice president of Cha an
ege 1n c 1arge o ve opmen en
rinnnce al a luncheon where newly
elected offic~rs of Town and Gown wer1
guests.
The colorful accessories may be
flrrtefed by calllng A1rs. \Yllllum ~1ced,
G73"34.'l8, or 0Ju1pn,nn College. 633-8821,
ext. $40. Price Is $25.
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4 DAILY PILOT
-clinics
I
Offered
Foot heallh examllll:lllons
\•till be 1tven ln area nursery
schooJJ by the: \Vomen's Aux-
lliaJ)' to the Orange County
Podiatry As&oc:laUon in Its ef·
fort to Identify and correct
fool-gait def o rm ities in
e_reschoolers.
Participating In the clinics
this week \''ill be t he
Westminster Nursery School
:i nd SI. Edward the Conft>ssor
C..'burch. Capistrano Beach.
Doctors donating their tnnt'
\Viii be John Sulzbach, Oa\'id
Jta buu i, Henry Lek aw a .
Charles Stillman and H<irvey
Levin.
Auxiliary members aSiisting
will be the Mnies. Sulzbach,
Levin and Allan Stark.
Anyone wishing information
regarding the organiz.aUon of
a foot he alth examination
clinic for preschoolers may
contact the association at
828--0660 or 633-4404.
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•
~~:::.~;ked Between Mea'
many letters in yOU( column complaining
about smokers wbo annoy their co-
workers in offices. Aod now will you
pJease say something to people who eat
Jill' day long.
My desk is between two garbaa:e trucks
with teetb. The amell of food is
nawieaUng -"onions, garlic, overripe
pears ai¥i bananas. The. sound effects
drive me wild. The woman at-my right
loves apples and has consumed at lea.st
tw() bushels this winter. The crunching
and slobbering is unbearable. She doesn't
use a fruit knife -just chomps Into the
whole a_pple apd devours It, core and aU.
As you have probably guessed, the two
nonstop eaters are skinny a.s sparrows
and I am overweight, dieting and hungry
all the Ume. Please don't tell me to
"Speak up." 1 haven't the nerve. If you
will p"rlnt this letter I will potil It on the
offlce'buletln board. '11lanks, Doll. I lOve
you. -ANDY .
DEAR ANDY : Here It ls and Iota of
luc:!k.
Slx weeks before the baby wu born
Bart learned lhll Sally bid married a
man 11 years her senior. 'lbrougb a
mutual 'frle:nd, Sally got ahold of Bart's
address in Vietnam and bas been wrltlng
lo him and sending him pictures of the
baby, Bart aend.s the pictures to me. The
child 15 an image of Bart.
~1y son wants to Cid. clean trom tt1i1
girl but he rears she ls going to '* thlJ
child to pursue him. He bu not anrwtred
her letters but she contlnues to write.
\Vhat should be done! Bart ba1 uked mt
to go to see Sally and tell her to leave
him alone. Should I-NEWARK
DEAR NEW: No, A mu wlto la ohl e•
ough to falller a chlld ~ llOt sad· blli
mother on errud.t of Wt aatun. Bart
Ahould return Sally'• let&en uepeDtd.
She'll 1et tbe drift -eventuallJ ud
leave b.tm alone -JI i.e wutl te lie left
alone, tut b.
unUI It's time to eo home. He insists the
whole idea of a party ls ao people can
mill around and talk to aomebody other
thah the person they are married to. His
main argument ts, "A man can talk to
b1s wife at home."
Dou anyone ebe have thil problem? -
NEGLECTED
DEAR NEG: Tlloolud1 of poople. I
pt tMJ •ae•Uot at kut five Ume& a wttk. Tbe l.Dlwer I& u follows. Accept
Ule fact that your b111band 11 • "'prloa.' fellow ud lit'• not utely to c!Wice. W-. Y• It oat ftr UM evee1D1.
doa. 't follow ldm aroad ud m.ai:e a pe•C
of yovtelf. Many wtve1 wi.o wrlle 19 me ~
have more terloa& problema tho belnl
lpored at a party -&ucll u bela& left at
b.ome.
Unsure of yourself on dates? Wbat's
right? What's wrong? ShouJd you?
Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Lander1'
booklet, "DaUng Do& and Oon'U:," enclos.
ing with your request 35 cents in coln and
a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Students
Describe
Homelands
American Field S e r v i c e
students Stamatia Tsalta and
Roderi c Q. A. Wallace will be
guest speakers for the Gamma
Tau Garrima Alumnae group
of Alpha Chi Omega Thursday,
March 12.
ADVANCE NOTICE OF 'COCO' -Members of the Balboa Yacht Club antici-
pa te a review of_ Katharine 11epburn's New Y~rk pla?' "Coco" at a lunc.heon
thi s week. Looking at newspaper and magazine articl es are (left lo right)
1'1rs. Don F ranklin. \\•ife of the co1nmodorc; revie\ver \Vil\ian1 FuCik, and Mrs.
Edwin Steen, wife of the vice commodore.
· DEAR ANN LANDERS : Before my
son went to Vietnam he tethered a child.
Bart told me about the alla1r when the
-gitl Was Sii:; months pregnant. He could
nGt bring himself to marry Sally because
he didn 't IGve her. She agreed to put the
baby up for adopUGn. Bart gave her
$2,000 (which he got from me) so she
wouldn't have to work for a few months
before and after the birth.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: How much
lime should a buJband spend with his
own wire when he takes her to a party?
Ed and I have been arguing about this for
nine years.
Whenever we go out, Ed dinppears
after the first dance and I don't aee him
l<iwi Talks
Charitably
Horoscope
Ann Landera will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to her Jn
care of tbe DAILY PILOT, enclosing a
ttlf-addressed, stamped envelope.
Mrs. J . Robe rl r-.1eserve of
Newport Beach "'ill host the
7:30 p.m. meeting \vhere the
students will show slides from
their home countries.
Miss Tsalta is f r o m
Amtt!lon, Greece, and Wallace
is from Auckland, N e w
Zealand. Both attend Corona
del Mar High School .
Valley TOPS
• Lettuce-B-TOPS convene at
7:30 p.m. each Tuesday for
programs in Fountain Valley
Elementary School.
Grower
To Speak
Ferns wil l be the topic Y.'hen
Mrs. Silv ia L e a t he r ma n
speaks at 3 meeting of the
Orange ColJ'l'lty Branch of the
American Begonia Society.
Guests are welcome· to al·
lend lhe meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 12, in the
Grange Hall , Garden Grove.
Mrs. Leatherman, an expert
in the fielcl of begonias and
fe rns. also will · provide the
plant tab le and ans wer ques·
lions. Refreshments will be
served.
Club Focuses
On Students
Newport Harbor Zantians
vdJI focus their attention on
youth when they meet in the
Senior Citizens Recreation
Center at noon Thursday.
March 12.
Honored guests \viii be
American Field Service stu-
dents attending high schools
in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District, two Ameri·
cans Abroad students and
Zonta Girls-of-the-month.
American Field Se rivce is
one of the most gratifying
service projects which the
club has supported since its
inception in 1955 .,."hen Diete r
Noga of Germany was the
rirst AFS student at Newport
!arbor High School.
Mrs. Jack Reiner\, in·
'e rnational rel ations
chairmari. will introduce Piiiss
Lyn Rose ner of !!arbor Hlgh
and 1fark Saunders of Estan-
cia High, Americ ans Abroad.
who will ser,•e as moderators.
Foreign studenlS will be
r..1iss Christi ne Vuillequez of
France and Eduardo Pena-
Carrasco of Equador who are
studyi ng at lfarbor High: Miss
Adriana Solitaldo of Brazil and
r-.1 iss Margrethe Kleist of
Greenland. Estancia: f.1iss
Angela Massmann-Laser of
Chili, Cosla r-..1esa High, 11iss
Vosh a ngy ''Nick i ''
Ramahatarandry of the
"'lalagy Republic and F'abrizio
Schiazon of Italy, Corona de\
f\·lar High. Students \Vi I I
answer questions about their
native countries.
Gi rls-of-the-111onth \11ill be
acco mp anied by their
mGthers.
Spring Styles Shown
In Worldly Setting
Slides taken in ports vlslted
by Chapman World Campus
Afloat the S. S. Ryndam will
provide a background for the
8'11nua l scholarshlp rashion
luncheon Spring Around lhe
\Vorld.
Sponsored by the \Voman's
Campus Club of Chapman
Luncheon
Aids Tots
f.Iembers of the North Hun-
l1ngta.1 Beach Cooperative
Nursery School are planning a
luncheon hlonduy, P.farch 16,
in the Peek F'amily CAllonial
Terrace Room.
n ckets for lhe funding event
n1ay be obtained by cqntacting
~!rs. Gene Allen or J\trs.
Henry l)Jke.
The nursery school alM>
participated f,1 Early Edu ca·
!Ion \Veek observances In Hun·
11ngton Center. and the school
cooducted a dally open house
each rooming. Refreshments
were served to visitors.
College, the eve nt "'ill begin nt
noon on Saturday, ?I.larch 14.
in the Santn Ana Elks Club ,
The public is invited lo al
tend by n1aking r~servation~
before Thursday y;ith .f\lr~
John Breihan. 639-0953.
Fashions wil l be from Sears
of Ora nge undt'r the direction
of general chairman Mrs
Chari~ Severns.
Scholarship recipients will
be introduced to gUt?sts by
1-frs. Durl Winterroth, presi-
dent .
Hair Crowned
By Topknot
Thi!' topknot is an the fl('W!I
in hairdos. The topknot it!'tlf
can laod Bnyplacc, from the
cro\\'n of the head lo the n;tJ>f'
of the neck. act'ording to con-
!rullantif for Se vc n t ctn
m.:igaz.ine.
The bas I c requiremC'llt:
shiny hair thafs shoulder
length or longer.
You twist II Into the knot !or
a small-headed. sleek. look .
_ _..,..aska IS ALIVE!
At "Th • Gr1nd•1t Mi ll Of All"'
Beginnini M1rch 12, 19~
&out h Coast '1111
Current Hits·
Yacht Club Distaff
Books Play
Distaff members of Balboa
Yacht Club are' I oo k l n g
forward to ._i;_eylews of New
York and wW . Angele~ elays
by \Viiliam. 'l'Vci~ .. )loo"° for
his little' Ultl}ter' "'·ork in
Southern ~a .and ·!he
cast. \-1. ''~
Fucik will review Kalh<1rlr1e
Hepburn"s ~e\\' · York plt1Y
'"Coco,"' and the upcuniin~ Lo~
Angeles revil'al of Sbcr\\ood's
"Idiot's Dell!Lhf " 11,ta r ring
Jack l..em1non. 011 Thursday,
.. Reviewer
March 12
A social hour wrH begin at
11 :30 a.m. followed by Jun·
cheon at 12:30 p.m. under the
direction of Mrs. V. ·Almon
Lockabey
The revte·.ver s1udied al the
Pasadena Pla yhouse and has
been ;ictive in the Laguna
Summer Stock and Belfrc y
Su1nmcr The:.11cr in Lake
Ge·ncva. \Vis. lie has worked
as a director. rna-.1ager and
producer.
Historian to Detail
'
State's Role
The part the state of
Georgia played in the Ci vil
\Var and po:ilwar reconslruc-
tion "'ill be dlscus.sed by P.iiss
Christine Brooks "'hen the
Ellllna Sansom Chapter of the
United !laughters of the
Confederacy meets Thursday,
f.1arch 12.
i\-liss Btoob., ch <i pl c r
histor ian, also will detail the
activities of her fGrbears in
the history of tbat state, and
1\'lrs. H. \V. Robbins. chapter
president. vt'ill give a resum t
or the slates or Minnesota
r..1assachusclLS and Arirona .
The general UDC organizR ·
lion's current funds ror \o\1'-
1nterest loans lo stud ents
in various colleges and univer-
sities now totals $616,000 :::n·i
War
1he organization last yea r
qwardcd 52 scholarships total·
ing $10,400. The Individual
chapters together granted 267
scholarships tGtaling $47,000
and divisians gave 1 7 4
scholarships totaUng $3t,OOO.
Students from 21 states at-
tending 47 different colleges
and universitiles are being
sponsored by UOC, making a
grand total of $1,245,000 in fin-
ancial aid to students b<!ing
given by lh e organizaLion.
All women whose fo rbears
served in U1c Confederate
Arn1y are invited to attend the
111eeting, \\'hich "'ill take place
in the S<l'flla Ana home of f\1rs .
(' A. N1sson. i\iiss Brooks and
~!rs. Anthonv I'. Grasso \\'ill ~ dcs~crt h0stcsses.
.Secreta rie s to Learn
After Apollo, What?
Newport Beac h Chapter of
the Ki..,.; Club \viii discuss a
charily for lhe coming year at
a nieeLing on Thursday, March
12, at 8 p.m. in the Santa Ana
residence of Mrs. George G.
Simo r,
Also on the agenda will be
selection of an alternate
delegate to a national con-
vention in ,,_lay, and final ar-
rangements for an April 4
garage sale.
Membership is open to all
former American A i r I i n e s
stewardesses. Those wishb1g
information may call r..1rs.
Fred Betts, memb e r s hip
c:ha lrman, at 642-4817.
Music Duo
'
Sings Out
Comedy-singing · duo P.tiss
Carol.Jean Thomp60n and Ken
Delo will provide a fast mov-
ing program for members of
the f.1esa-Harbor Club on
Thursday, March 12.
Delo. a regular on the
Lawrence Welk show, and his
partner will entertain follow-
ing n 10 :30 a.m. soc ial hour
and luncheon in Mesa Verde
Coun try Club.
The club is an outgrowth of
the Mesa Harbor Newcomer
Club formed in 1961 . .Its
purpose i!I to pro v ide
friendshi p th rough social ac-
tivity and render service to
corrununity agencies.
Parents Club
Pisces: Don't Travel
WEONESDA y mood . This could result in ex-
pensive action. Have fun MA'R.CH 11 \Vithout being careless, ei:-
By SYDNEY O~fARR travagant. You are going to be
very pleasantly surprised. ARIES (March 21·April 19):
Money situation needs review. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. n.
There Is diversity or opinion. Dee. 21 ): Adhere to rules. Be
You may be drawn in t\\'O thorough. You cannot be an in-
d. ctio B "bl ~·t novator without being imbued ire ns. e sensi e, uu with basic infonnaUon. Plain-don 't skimp on giving pleasure to loved ones. Me 1 5 a ge ly, you must learn rules before
clarified by tonight. break.Ing them. Be patient with yaurself.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20): CAPRICO RN (Dec. 22.Jan.
\Vhat appears adve rse ls likely 19): You face some rtaUUes
lo boomerang in your favor. abciut romantic interest... I! Seek hannony. Be ·happy.
definite gains in security area.
You Improve your standard ol
living. You are more secure in·
wardly. People express con-
fidence In your views.
PISCES (Feb. l~!rfarch 20):
Say no to jGUmey wbJch can
Jead you ln clrclea. Your
potential is great. But yo11
have been receiving advice
whJch is Jes& than realistic.
Play waiUng game,
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTIIDA Y yoo are a natural
teacher. You can help others
- now start aiding yourself.
Get dov.11 to basic issues. You
can and will clear awa y emo-
tional debris.
\Veight that seems to oppress yoo e1pect perfection, dlsap-
you Js temporary. Take it pointmen t arrlves. If practical
easy. Make peace gesture to and mature, satisfaction could
family member. make an appearance. Think. ,.I:O~": o~r'T::~:.,~:..:~~'U!,:,.": AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb, bookler1 Tti. Tnilh '"°"' AstrolHv. GEMINI fro.fay 21.June 20): IS): You may oot get your ~ bl'Thd•t• 1nc:1 JO c"'" •o Om•rr
You find great outlet in work, price. But you do make !::"'J'c:i' .. P~l!ii...."~~·v~. 'fl.t
exercise. Th is is no time to1;;;••---------"';."·--------· confine yourself. Thlnt ofll
where you are going rather DUI TO POPULAR DEMAND
than where you have been. Be ••o •Dll TDUll coNv•1111•111c•
P"ceplive. See through a~ llA Y MICH AILS llUUTY SALON
templed sham. WILL II OPIN IVININOS UNTIL 11
CANCE R (June 21.July 22): AND ALL DAY SUNDAY
Some friends seem depressed. 1•u w.icllff °'"' .. •...-rt heel! "'-IMS CAcm• ,,."' w.kfifl' 1'11u1
Don't attempt lo be af~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiii~ backyard psychol ogist. Help
those who want lo a i d
themselves. Steer clear of
emotional entanglements of
others.
l.EO (July 23 ·Aug. 22)'
Realize yGu have some finish-
ing touches to perfonn, Don't
feel you must imprint your
personal desires. What you
want comes to you. You do not
need tG force issues.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)'
You may feel grass is grttner
at a distance. But truth Is you
can create your own destiny.
This is not meant to be
metaphysical. Today -right
now -you have required
asse ts for success.
Orange Coast C h apter . LIBRA (Sept. 23 -Oct. 22):
Parents With out Pa rt n c rs Check financial resources.
sponsors a pancake breakfast Checking account may need
the last Sunday of each mGnth some beefing up -be
in Costa Mesa City Park from realistic. Intuitive intellect is
9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wally sharp. But yoo could also use
Richards, chairman, w 11 1 some practical advice from
answer quesUons regarding knowledgeable person.
Apollo and After will be the tact Mrs. Leslie Jones, 546-the public "rain or shJne" SCORPIO (Oct . 13-Nov. 21):
topic when Robert Jenks 7160 ext. 433 for reservations. event at 542-8700 or 542·9605. You may be in expansive
~j)('a ks during a meeting of1=;;;-------------------------------, Bahia Chapter. N at ion a Jll
Se "re tar i es Associatlon.
International.
·r11e group will gather for a
fj ·JO p.m. social hour in the
Huntington Seacliff Country
Club on Thursday, l\1 arch 12.
0111ner wlll follow at 7 p.m.
Jenks ii; program manase·
1nent coordinator at North
Arneric::in Rockwell Corporn-
11on whe re he maintains t ~c
schC'dulcs for the Apollo ap.
phcalions progam.
I hs firn1 produced t he
Apollo spncecraft command)
and service modules f o r~
i\ASA's m<1nned sp.ictcraft
center :ind the S·l I second
stage of the S11Lurn fi\le moon
rocket for the agency 's
~t:irshall Sp;ire Flight Center.
Anyone 1ntere.stl'd in at-
tending the mee1i11g mny con·
Swe et Ad eline·,
llarborh1t~s C'hnpter. S\1•eet
Adelh1cs L'OO\l.'nes evci;.· ~ton
dny at 8 pm for progratns In
College P~1rk 5';ho0I, Costa
i\1esa.
• IOAM
JUST 4 DAYS!!
Patterns Unlimited, Inc.
is back again in
ANAHEIM
with the
ORIGINAL EUROPEAN"GOLDEN RULf
METHOD OF PATTERN DRAFTING
Acclaimed by Millions throughout tht World I!!
A PalWut CuUUcg S!utw
An o"'cu i.,; "'tlhod ._hith 1ovnd1. v~lalilvobl•. J<tl
chm•<1011, r•of~ of ''udy -j111t ••od • '"""'bet-9fl.J dtow o dol.
ONE HOUR
011J .. , ,..,11 1how JOll I.ow di10gn•" ond -1!111'10•
11(\en\ 110 ... l•t o••d 0 ,.,,.,,.. IO • ..,,bl, ,. .... ho tl•Dll
o•nt1111 w.11\ on1, TWO m1o""r"""" • lo• ,.,11 11,,J ft<'' ~mbe• of your 10 .... 1, ;,. o"'r 111t '
1~" '1"~"' i1 0 P•O•'" 1uc<t1\ !~~ .,,.,1i;1 o••• ond •
AN OPPORTUNITY YOU CAN1 AFFORD TO MISS!
•·sEEING IS BELIEVING" l ! I
All Equipmeitt Available at Class o.,..,..,,,.,:.. I•• SOc
2PM J:JOPM
Tuesd•y. M•rch 10th thru Frid•y, March 13th
.. ---11-1----H OWARtrJOffNSON'~OTOR LODGE
1380 S. Harbor al Santa Ana frffway
Oir.ctly across from Disneyland
(NO l [llPJtONE CAI.LS-Pl.CASE)
• . '
u .
••• your spirits
wi ll go ••• like a
gay kite ••• when
you see Patrioi!"s
co llection or tho
.lat est spring
fashions!.
401 north mai n
santa ana
I
I
' I . .
' I
,,
I j
'
TUMBLEWEEDS ,
:;-10
I C/W Hal''°°' NI( "'71'J i1UT, FIRST, l MUST
HAVE A DESCRll'!l ON OF
lfS OISTINGUISl!IN!T
CHAAPCTCR151t5.
PLAIN JANE
ly Tom K. Ryan
tlON'T" YA MN
WAN NA KNOW Wt\6.T
IT ~OOKS LIKE ?
rv . DAil Y· LOG ~
TUESDAY
MARCH 10
I vrNING ...
ID PUTNAM-I Report.r's * Opinion-5 PM on KTIV
5:45
fJ An important address * to all Ca lifornians.
GOVERNOR REAGAN
Speaks to the People 1J Politlctl Addrtu by ftov, Jltt•
11n (C) Paid poht1C1I 1nnounu· ••"-
5:00 I 'll Nm (C) (60) Jerry Dunph1. · (9.HuntltJ·Brlnl..!er (C) {30)
CIR Tou Top This? IC) (30)
Ernest Bor1nine. Jessi! Whitt 11\d
Morey Amsterd1m guest.
0 MARILYN MONROE! * "NlAGARA"-COLOR! 0 !iJ O'Cloct: Mov;e: IC) "NII·
pr1~ (mystery) '53--M11i!yn MGn·
roe. JG.Stph Co11en. Jean Peltn. A
two-t!min1 wife b1in1s h!r husb1nd
to Nl111ra Fills i nd plots wlth her
loYer lo have him pushed over,
I Dltk Y1" ~r (30)
Thi Flintstone.i (C) (30)
Stir Trtk (C) (60)
Ii rn ABC News (C) (30)
stod M1rtlt SU1ruu1ry (RJ
Wlllr 1 Nrwf (30) "Amtfiunt
II: Paul Revere.~
I CJJ CBS Nen (C) (30)
Pasion Cit.Int (30)
News 111 ttte Rou11d (C) (60)
1:15 @J lnmtars Sl!owu M (30) (R)
,1:30 0 KNBC Ne'll'HJ'llct (C) (60) 0 Stnt Alle.n Show (C) (90) Hit
F11zlt1, Pit Henry, Jtckie G11l1, Joe.
McGinnis ind io;en Barger guest.
Tht C:1me i•mt (C) (30)
~ F•.torite M1r1i1n (C) (30)
(3~ f'tff)' MISOll (6())
6 Hantle.,·B1inkley (C) (30)
Oit for Ewryon1 (JO)
@ TM Munmra (30)
Notkltrl 34 (Cl (60)
• ll:Mlll' Nl'ft (CJ (30)
6.!45 EE Thi• 11 l trilm (RJ
1~00 I CIS (mlina Neon (Cl (30) · WMt't MJ lint? (C} (30)
• I l-LKJ (30)
1111 Ult Clock (C) (30)
• Comrnoclity/Mututl Fund (30)
(i) lflllded (C) {30)
Ahor1! (30)
lt (J.}lrutll Of ConM(IUftlCll (t:) m I .... iii Ute Sun (C) (lO) al T\it Girl (CJ {30)
ID SAMMY DAVIS JR. SOLO * GU EST 9,30 TONIGHT
THE FROST SHOW KTTV! m Onid Frost Show (C) (90) S•m·
m1 Davis Jr. guests. GJ Tht I I& Vtlley (C) (60)
8:45 EE Gtorat JuMt ShGw luslnns
9:00 0 ID (i] g:,NIC Tuadl1 Movie:
"LUin oilhe Fllld" (dr1m1) '6J-
Sldne1 Pt'litier, ll111 Sk1!1. In hil
Academr · Aw1rd · 'll'inni"I perlorm·
•net, Poitier stirs IS Ill ••·GI WhG
helps 1 1roup Gr nuns build 1
chapel in tile bairen Aril:Gnl de511rt,
0 Pllyboy A!ttr Oark (C) (60) Kasi
Hein« 'll'tloomu The Checkm1tes.
L!d .. Bill Deni, Don Adami Cu\1
Thomas. Bill Rose 111<1 IC.re$kin.
fI) lnttfftU (C) (30) ~Apolkt Is 1
C.!i!ornl1n." >. IOGii into lht role
played b1 Califorr(a 1erGsp1ce in·
dustr1n in the 11ecutio11 and de-
v~JGpmenl ol the Apollo PfOiflm. £m Ch1ttht Anll111tt (C) (30)
9:15 EE How T1 ·Mtny 1 MilUontfrt
9:30 e :S (j) The CiD¥tlnor •nd JJ, (C) (30) J.J. rinds 1 new way GI
meetin11 1n elitibl1 b1ch1!or When
she is hi\ by 1 1un1w11 offitt ch1lr.
Jed Allan 1un#s.
I Nm: (C) (JO) B•der W1rd.
fllll John NIWI (C) {30)
NET festivtl (C) (60} "Mtlin1
Mmcuri -I Was 8ot1'I Gretk."
Greek aclrtu Melina ll!ercouri lours
the u pi111s al the w rld', enllst-
lng support fOf the uuse al Gretk
freedom from lht military junt1. iE MllSkt J &trellis (Cl (JG)
9:45 EE f'SA r~rn
10:00 6 ~(1) WINI, What. Wilen,
Wllelt, '#lr1? (C) (30) A itudy GI
the ti1hl!n11 111d tantrOVefSY lllrred
by "l'": Ameriu's Hidd en W11." 0 NIWI (t) (60) 0 (rn (])·aJ M1rt111 Wellly, M.O.
(C) ™) "Sea al Security.' Plier
Berton, 1n oc.e1no11r1ph1 student
suffering trom the b'nds, disr1·
111rd1 Dr. Welby's 1cMce and ton·
tinue1 lo cilve. >ohn Ericson. l'itlll·
erlne Cr1wtord guest 0 Otlla! (C) (60
m PUTNAM NEWl>-Sports * Features-10 PM KTIV!
JUDGE PARKER
J WAS BE61t.INING TO
Tl-t!NK YOU HAD
FORGOTTEN OUR
APPOIMT"1ENT;
MISS KLEFFT/
MOON MULLINS
r: ::i <,OOD HEAVENS ! 1 Al>l>EI>
WHEN I SHOLlU> HAVE
SUBTl!'AC:TEt> ! ®
SALLY BANANAS
By John Miles
.•
By Harold Le Doux
YES, I CAN Sll THAT!")
SAALL WE GET ~
60IN6 r-MYCAA
IS DOWJ.I IN THE
At.IOOWG lOT.'
'O fJ 3i (!) Unu1 (C) (60) Mur·
doch takes 1 per!klnal 1nttrest In
!ht succus of 1 shu~ihn1 )'ltllnrl
school lttthft "hen he becomes/
re590n.sible for lh1ee l"di1n orphans!
'lf1lo llope to enroll in th1 school.
Pl pp1 Scott and Michttl Anur1
1uest.
al rihc!~!•'~ M•rrr? (CJ (&OJ • STEVE ROPER.
Ctlebrilits Alex CG1d, Di1ne 81kt1, ~ I'VE COME ~~~~'-~~~~~.
ON THE OTHER HA.MP, PE~APS VOU'R'E
JUST HAV'IN6 0ElUSION5 OF 6 liMPEUf
•• Tl-l lNKIN6 TH,l.T WOMEN ARE
CMASING YOU .' IT Ml6HT &E
By Saunders and Overgard
MY POOft!IELL JUST RAWG
•• A.WO I KIK>W IT'S CA.MILLE
WI NTERS~ 6ET ov~ HE"e l SEARS PRESENTS A
SlepJ)tnwolf, Josel!h Cimp1r1tllt, WOW, A&SEV •• POtfT VOG LET TO ONE COM-
Pe\11 l'i1stner, Lindi Rond1dt, Che!· ME DOWN : HU~IN' OVER HERE C.LUSIOW,
sea Brown, J1tk M1rl!Olls, P1oducer •• AND WHEN YOtl DO, PRE -. Su.\~ YOU'~E "IGWT AWAY!~~ -FAMILY TV SPECIAL
WALT OISNEY'S
Jlfry BellGll, 1nd llO!l·celebrltle1 TE NO TMAT I DIDtfT A COW,t.RD!
Mv1 1n 1!9pGrt unily IG .tnswer the EXPECT VOil ! WISE FOR. YOU TO CONSU LT
"WINNIE THE POOH" tiJ @ @ m llill(IA{! Wlnnlt
lhe f'ooh i nd the Honf)' TrH (C)
questian, "Why M11JYr' aJ Peny M1so11 {60) m El '"''' c:.n11e1 (301
(30) Seb1sli1n C.bot nar11tes this JO·lO fJ MXT Reports (C) (30) "C.n
1mm1ted mu1ic1t based Oil A, "'I The, Bt Tu1ned ortr· Newsman
Mi!ne'1 cl1ssic children's tilt. Pooh, P1u1 UdtH reports on 1n expefi·
"the be11 GI little b11in," seeks lo ment1I d1u1 recoveiy progr1m 11
satisfJ his 1ppe\ile !Gr honey. Sttt·I Mendicll'IO Stilt HGspilll.
hna HGlklw1y Is the wice GI Pooh. eD Sciecu1atlon (C) (60) "A CGn· 0 (ftj fl) Cl) I SliCC!A~ I U~trwt 1·ersatlon with Leslie Fielder."
Worldol-ilcq11es Coust11u (CJ (60} :5'I (!) f11tu1t (JO)
'Th»t lnc1edible Dr-in1 Mtchlnes.."j €E Cynlllll (30)
This dGCument1iy recounts !~e m1.n1 ll·DO · tiJ O ml m fD N1'11'1 (C)
ways us.eel IJy man 1n his drl'lt · H!ah•IJ' Patrol
for m1ste iy of the depths. • MD'llt· "l'rinle P'otttr" (dr•m•) 0 MH11Dn $ Mwlt: "Acms !ht .... • • eific" (•<l'ilnture) '42 _ Humphr~ ~ -Tnm Courtenl)', Mo1en1
B""art Mt"' Astot Sydn*" Green· W1eth, J1mes Maxwell. w" , ., , ., Ill PtytGn ,,_ street. Monte Blue. A Secret Strvice H Slld Siie Slid (C)
11ent pretends lo sell out to the! ' ' #iill ,... H (C) JaptrieSll In t plot tG blow up The !lll (]) ~ {i) "W i.IJ ews
P1nam1 C.n1! 11:15 @ ffi Ci11t1111 Slvent"n! "Web of
I T1uth tr Conwqutnca (C) (3G) EYlde nce "
M1}tr A.Ums (60)
Ttdlnlu l Com• (30) (R) 11:30 B a (J) Mtn Cirlfl in (C) FiflCl,t.~j W111 YGll Slllok1: A O ~OO tt}.lohnllJ C"1on (C) Selt-l9t (CJ (30) In lh1 second of g The Chltlen
1 fm ·ptrt Jtria. vl~ers )Gin pro-0 tl) Didi: C.vttt (C) M1h1lll
rrt m r1111lus In \1km11 I lest lhtl J bo N'dl<llas wn }l(lllman uve1!s "'11l smGkers think 1boul •c 1 ' '
!ht effects GI l~eir h1bil. I lkleS •
(D Cniz dt AlllOf (30)
MUTI AND JEFF
,.AKE THAT,
Sl..OW?oKE.'
,,.,OQ)@l !!J "''" '""'"' (C) m WIOMARK AN D CARNELL
(30) "0tbbi1 Gels Jim fired:' Otb· * STAR AT 11:30-KTTV!
bie's Kheme IG tel Jlni a sa l1iy ,..:'.!":.',.._',:.., ttise b1tkfirtt. m lll0\'11: "Slltt1r(1 H11nlcl111'" '"" ... ...,..,,.,_
I MO'l1t C:111M1 (C) (30) {dr1m1) '49-Rk.111rd W'Hlm1rtl. I ~'""-==~-------'
T• Tell tht T1ulfl (C) (lO) m Mo¥1t: "llM M111 II Arllltd'" GORDO
WCH11111 tnd 1111 M11be (R) (d11m1) '56-0tne Cl11k.
l\t City Wtlchtn IC) (60) (Rl ED Rnpn Pl'ISS Conflr~ "Of Me" i nd Otmons.tt John 111d1 F11th Hublef t Academy.Awtrd nom·1 tZ:DO O CMrt11nity l1tltlln loanl (C)
!:~ 1nlm1ted sMlrt Hb1ec1 isl' l :C19 1J Movlt: (C) "TIMI Thltl ti 0,.
(tl OIK.tlltqlM A C:.Cio (c) (60) 111sc111" (ldventwe) ·pz -Pt_YI Henreld, Jen Donnell.
1:15 ft) Olllct of t1tt rrtsklel!t (30) (R)I 0 0 Nm. (t)
l ::SO tJ 1fj rt'J Red S'tl!OR (C) (60) ff) Action 'fhMtr1: "Ridt I Violent Vincent Pikt and Tht fltll Edltiotl Milf.tt
l'!fll. D I'll (j) m 111111 (C) (30) "I'll 1:30 m AH·Nlflll ShGw: '1ht llWIS[Gll
Be YOu1s."lwo Gf Julil's boJ· al Ille V1mpi11$," "Tht C.lendl1,"
friends ind Etrl J, W1ue<1on1 eot11· "Tht n1111ts 1fld tht Sword."
WEDNESDAY
m (C) ~tualtt h1 1111 Alt«noonn
/'ll'Uterll) '52-R11 M!lltlld, forr1it
Tuclr.•.
J:1om ''TIMI ,., Difffcet" ftGrntdY)
DAYT IME MOVIES '34-frld Ast1lrt, 6111111 Ra1trL
t~OO 8 "Cllllt ht tt1t Hol.IM" {d1tm1) i:DO 0 "Crt<l 111 tl11 Mirror" (drlrM}
'"-'nnt Btlltr, R1lpll 8411111111. '60---0!1Gn Wtllei. Jut11tt1 G1eeo.
~MEM~E R
>l.0\\1 WC
U5ED
"3~ TO WAil:
FOi<
M AFiC:M
WINPS TO
A\AtcvEL AT
NATUr;.I:1S
S!-10~~
.5wfC
MISS PEACH
ART..UR MAS DECIDEll Wl'AT
TO llO AFTER .GRAllUATlOI'< 7
A PSYCHIATRIST.'
+IE RAN INTo ME
W 11l-J MAL.ICE
ARlRETHOUGHT.'
YES,
MISS Pe!ICH .
HE1S
DE"C.IDEO
ON A • J oe .'
I DID
NOT.'
I WAS
ALL.
AL.ONE!
THEN YOU ADMIT,
You oeuseR~El.Y
RAN '10UR CAR
INTO HIS .... WllY?
YE5,I HAYE.
IT'S A REL.lf.F
TO !<MOW
MY FUTUM!'S
9E~
S!!TTl.EP .'
By Al Smith
BECAUSE MY BOSS
+IERE COULON'!' 11!1Ni<. a: AN Y"li-!ING
l'lJNNY l'"OR ME
TO 00
"TODAY!
L>.TE.ll: ON, LU.
· G,ET INTO TME
QU~<TIONS OF
WMAT \tCINO OF.J08,
Wll lc.M COMPl'INY,
ANP FOll: HOW N<l'M.
·----U .(C)_!.'Iht L•h T1111" IE) "Clupt In 1111 Slrll" (Id"""
wt) '57-JCifin s·iiil1if;-vm-rv
\ \ I I .... , ('f!Ulern) ·s1-ttow1uS Di.ti!, Mona
FrtemM. ••
' t :lO O "Tiie Wtbttfl l of' (dr1tn1) '62 4:30 D {t:) '1111 SU1n1u Wtre 1 Gull"
-Jotirt CISMl'Tttu. OLt1btth S.11· (Wut1tr1) '5l -R1ndo!Oh Scott,
•ti. r.hl!tt 1tt;Mf.
":t: '. -·-
1·/11
•
. ' ' ' ..
• ....,, ....,~ 10, 1970 DAILY PU.OT JS -
By harles larsottl 1
.,_R~ W.W. ....
.~
By Charin M. Schulz
TELEVISION VIEWS
Sheba's Mask
Real Junk
By CYNTH)A LOWRY
·-·
NEW YORK (AP ) -An example of the j unk
co ming out of Hollywood studios th ese days labeled
"movies for TV" was "The Mask of Sheba" on NBC
Monday night. Al the base of the twcrhour program
was another variation of the youth-team format
which will spread all over ne twork television by
next season.
THE FILM, bearing all the earmark s of a pilot
for a series, was hung on a group of youn g anthro-
pologists who went ripping off through the Ethio-
pian jungles in search of a golden mask of a queen
dead for 3,000 years and, almost coincidentally, a
lost party of explorers.
The plot was so implausible and cliche-filled
the viewer was inclined at tiines to believe that it
had to be can1p.
The anthropologis ts - two men and a girl docw
tor -joined by the wife of one of the missing men
and an Ethiopian colonel, eventual ly arrived al a
monastery atop a rock mountain and reached only
by a rope ladder. Up there was a high priest with
leprosy and, as it turned out, a secret cavern that
held the golden mask.
THEN THE \Yi fe turned out lo be a phony -a
dreadful creature. played by the nice Inger Stevens.
There was a lot of shooting an d death at the end ,~
and , or course. only the good people survived. The
young unknown performers did their best in a pretty
grisly situation.
Reuven Frank. NBC president for nev.•s. an-
nounced Monday that reti ring Chet Huntley "'ould
be replaced by two of the network 's senior staff
men, John Chancellor and Frank McGee.
Huntley and David Brinkley, after more than
14 years in tandem , are a television institution and ,
for NBC, a very profitable team. Their evening half
hour, lvith time for five minutes of commercials,
is usually fuJJ y sponsored. It is reputed to cost spon·
sors in excess of $25,000 per minute.
CHANCELLOR and rtlcGee, whil e lacls:ing some
of the glamor of NBC's top team, have been around
for a long time. are wellwknown by the public and r~spected as broadcast journalists.
Frank said that with Huntley's departure Aug .
1, the program \VOuld be broadcast seven nights a
week and ~e renamed "NB~ Evening News."
By having three anchormen - Brinkley work-
ing out of Washington and Chancellor and McGee
in Ne\v York. each man will be able to spend more
time developin g stories.
Huntley-Brinkley report has been seen Mon day
thro ugh Saturday nights for 14 months. "The Frank
McGee Report," which will be a bso rbed into the
ne\vs series, has been on Sunday nights.
CBS' "GUNSMOKE,'' NBC's "I..augh·ln" and
ABC's "Marcus Welby. l\tf:D-" were. in th at order,
the most popular programs broadcast during the
week ending March 1, according to a na tional Niel-
sen report released Monday.
Dennis the ltfenace
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18 DAILY PILOT T11tsd1y, Muell 10, 1970
-Youl! M:oney.!s lfortJ• _ _ _ _ C I t N Y k ~ l L•st
H h ldH l r· G. OVER THE COUNTER J;!::;~.~~!,~~~ e~:!~ .... ~:-,:· 0~:~'1··~·-·i·/ o_use o e p ips iven 1.... ••
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NASO l l1tin91 for Mondey, March 9, 1970 llff. I Mllfl Lot'# CION (llf, ~"·'~p :i ! ~~ :&i. -~.~ii m~,I~ ~· l;f gt !i~: i14 : H
' ' ' -A-1'1;.'£..c ~ 1lf ~• jilo.t fl.,. -1' ~ 1 rJor1111r.i1 61 I n 11', M>, -~, "OllTER d II f above •8 hours • week. ·~··-· l'ff "'"''*'"' -*"""' ., ....... 1..,1111~' • "' ,,.,,, NASO A.bl(UJ Ot 'II u~. l•lt i·~ -"' IS CV s I ff ~ ~MO! lop !J })•. ll'' n• I By SYLVIA 1 g u1 e nts o r you 11r1<11 lit Mt t1KhlH rtltll w "'.,"~· m1tt10tW11 .,. U111m1w.i AbO!Ltt> , 10 ,. n 1, na;, 11.,. -1~ ''• 11111 _, dClil " '•' , ~ 1 Mo• p1J 1 ! 'I'' l) )J • +-h
I I C GIVE Two ks f Id AC.F lllO 2~ i1 ,010 !!It ~l'I -V. Iv] "' ., '• • + u ~P~'"' .to I ; •1 •'• 1~ • ll'll be a ong, ong time oopcrate with a n d -\Vee o pa NEw voAK C,t.P! ourlr011 fl "" ~·' 8,1111 ~'' llli 1,1, 31 M:ma<•v 1 'Cl • 1 ... .,. ~\lo _\lo "' 1ra u \\ o -4 Pvb 1 1 ~ uo 1~. 1•'• 1110 -1,
vacation "ftcr one year's -_.Th1,.•,.11o"'''!!-t>,',",',i•1,"', ••< n,,14 '!E!•cR i 1') 1 u. 611 1w. •<.m1M~1 :lb " 11 •2'14 1-.-11ri fl I .;o 30 '!:,• l)'~ ll>.• + "'%;" ••••<• ' iiv.. 10•, lo•, bcfor' "e find s.11 h sfacLory palron1ze local agencies a nd .. •oo -~ I ... .. \'I c;, ... , " \1 \\ '"' s111 Mm • 1 ook 11 1• \"' I" -\' I'' 11 ., ,tt, ' ,, .. 27'1 -" 1n ~' 1 20 10 ~ •~·· ''" -r • ser vice to .:a full·llme worker 1,1~· .. ,,',:!.~,,11e,!5_..JY '" i",. J• ," ,•,• '~o'' Jl1i '~ Ji-1vo Ad Mou, » u 1111 ' · ! "' 111 111 f1.o • " 11>11 ;p , • :i... n , pf ; , 1 '• 105 JDJ -solutlon.s 10 the problem of private service or"an!z:iuons ... " -· ... ...,..1-Fl ~ l ~ G ' :i • !" "°''•" 1 .o· 10 ,.. •i~ •"' ="" 111 1111 2 ' '1 u•. 3•n 1H• -'"'G ... ~u"" ~ ll • 1~"' 16" 1 • • plw fivt paid natlonal''lon., Sto;11r11lcs 1,1( I'm "LI • ''• Allmlrtl ... u 11'l 1 \.li-~ ltw P w:il2 ~'"!''"" ,.\ ~. l'• :l?'•-'• household help-and maybe ~·hJch are now offering o..1crs, Jnc:, •r• ,.,, 1 1 \Ht 111MP11 111n1. l6'•1i~••!NL 111+11 1-. •t\.1 •'• •11.,_1~ il'OOCI" u U 111E 1>1Ji.o '•, •1• •?11+•1 holidays For day workers not :lir."""1 ,,,_.. la1• 81 011o 11 P•I l'-J '°"'' 1, .. ,,..L1t 11t1 '"'' 3'\• :l'Vo -t 1or0~ ii. St Z? Jl" 1;r-1~ le1F 1>111s ,,jj) 16'o "'• , ... _.,
there aren 1 any Bw! in the specialized I r a I n I n g for d I f • I~ ire ... JI Hll>t • 1· '\ l,.;lt I 12 p:,, ~ ·~"'' Co ,,1 ll\1 UI• 131• + ... ~!u.i:~··pt fO ro r./• 1'~ n' \~ -\'I T11 Pl'll..'.IO <J;O 11•. 11'-JI'• -"
h h h I I k give: ODC day Of pal eave Or r1wn111 'ti' lnTtr HYt 11 I \It. I s""oo w 45 !I'• U'• I .t. Prod 200 II\• ~' 11 -\o Fifi( .30 111 ~ n~ , Gt~Tlmt 10 3a "" 10 11 -• meaohme." at can you, I c ouse1od wor ers 1n fleld1 h d••lt• pr1(1r,i ''°' c1,pw l1, '' vt ''4 n, 1u1 1 " R"' lo. 101, 11 111, 11~-1, A pJ•i.io ,. ,, ,J .... ·~-~~G4'• r1r~ ui 10 io•. t•. ~'•-'•
pe-"n ,, ho des~•ately oiceds r k 1 every SIX months based on t e •DP•O>tlm"' 11 > t•r. " '!"• '•' ',' ,•,•;, .. , .,, '• ,'I AJ 1n11y11r1n 1 '" 10,.. •·~ -vo aaitsr Gai 1,1 " "H ''"" _,.,. GeN1tco \ 10 •1 ,, • f"• 1•'il -J.,, • ..., "~ ranging rorncoo 1ng ocarc k Pm ~1wti1(1o1r,,.. 1 Sn l l'i ; tt •G ) • • "u 51,,si.~\t • .?,11111t 10 11•• 11 11i1o -1. ~15~1 ,,.,1, 4 """ "• ,,:>.-111 Gcntt•r 09' 1 11•, 11 , 11'•-'•
this type Of help' d' 10 im-or the elderly Call on ••-m. numberofdaysperwee youra<u•luei t<Nkl 1 &11 1u '60 ~l~"i'",.F Ui.i;"t! ,.:nN11ri .. -.-oe ll ns 39''> :1111i :u11o-11to oc oi -1 ... 11, •l'• ll 11 _,,Gt~u1~11 J11 1 .,,, 47• 11 -.+. •~ '· ks,_ I ~•v• been P"' II ModW •ll '" H 1 8 ,,..,, " C•I Wll J: 1 f Albtrl.,,t 11 1,0~, t io 1~~ .+-h ~ '" j 20 1'6 311, ~·. 32'> -tl•~ G• Pac aoo U4 .H~• )I; 5~ -'•
P Ve Your cha-s of finding abode by lhei r les pa t"a ernp""ye wor rur you -P us cNMO 11.tecH or 1ec. c.., ''h I.!\'> fl: 'R I" !" , ~" ri' 0 ~1• •k1""111 1 20 1~ "'" 111. 111. ,.11 .10 11 41i,, '+\-. .u~ 1•Pte: 1111 •• J i.1, 1 • ..,, '"'' -•· ro '"'" r u • Y ,,.. a cash boous for any work on ,~,• •• , r11kl1 m•'•"",,", ~·,!.. 0,11 ?2 21 Mj•• tl!. ~) 1 11 1 w ~ •koS!f,,. 1• » l'•"' 20v, 20'n -v. f\t Alk 1 11 ~~ '' ~ _ 1, ePte: "'' 10 1 5J , si·~ ~1'' -'• ~~..i k..,....lng these emplOyeS" V.ilgCS 8 Sked probably '"" ~• -Sl Yf' OTi J4 ~ !"' G1 11 6'• m ,t.WnOrl )Qr I$ 1'lo J$ m 111111 2ilri 11 JJ)1 t)\~ f~ + 1, ttbl' I JO lO ~/... I )1\o -~I <1.11U "'" ' l I h 1 d cn1nfH' throuvn ,,,,.,., Rt ; ~ 4\0 " G 11 It "' El Svc 16\lo \ Aliff C:D 2111 lo Ill> 1 r 1 II' -'• 0111111 lJ.o " 3'11 31\• IQ -h etrvO I 1ltt n; .01> .,.., 43 -·~
CHANGE YO UR own at-between $2 and $3 50 an hour a na piona of
1
11'Y t :' '11~f'' .~/~ ~f.!,'1118 ~~~! ]~~ ~ ~er~ ,:u ,ti• ~"g•~11 1!!Uo1-1 "~ !ll::t::g !/~ 11 ::~ ~'! ~~:-'' e'-r:~1g:. •,~» ~w' 1 5J 21 1 21 '1, _ f~~~Pt11;50e x); l~": 1:~ 1n: .!. :;
litude toward U1ese worktrs -BE BUSINESSLIKE 10 -ay a u ·lime emp oye ~111,•,_ m1rku11 1~, "'•'•'• ,',"I ' •K H'' I' ~" Sc:•w 1 "Y. !/~.:,~ ~';~ ,•,•, !:21~ lf"'•' ,•,11• + ,'7 oi1!" 01• '' ' !oO ,~• + Yi 1w111 F"' ll'l n 20 20,.. -2 up to !tve days a year of sick ..,r,•,, __ " "' com eu,,,' >K ••" w•",, '' 1 t•n MPll ~·;. AllldM t .. -.. j II oil.Ill l v. 22 , iOCI L•w IO xlf •j'• 11;. 12 and really show )our \\Jll· your a rra ngements when you ""' 1o ' tt1r10 srr l! 11• .,., .. .!'111 ,, " ...,i' ""'• ~~ _,.L 1 • 4> os~ .u1; "'" i4 111e111 1 ci t6 '~ •1 d -'•
d th I lea•ealteroneyear'sservtce"""'cEftr ''~ s E~1t,.., '' :11 tx..n lf tr•w c1 ~l'I ' ... 23 .... ••·• ... 1 911 '1N 11v. ""-+""'l""1N111r1 11"°'?1at 10V.-+'• mgneS5 lo upgra e is oc-emp oy a household worker • Ml oro •'•' P'B C«a ''• ~ '"°"' •'·, bl<" rv s 51~A111.a P11 '' .. nu 11" 721.11 -1.4 o1uu1i1 " lH 31 30\I ~'~-"' 1-l"I: ~fl • .11, •H•-'"'
d rd day •orkers .:IC AF/lo.Pt $ 2\ 1l Fib Tt'll ••• , ...... , TP 11~· 11>. ~I F 7t; llJ. Alllft;l$!r 1 "° ., ,.,, 11\>t 211/o + •• ollPkt Xie 111 7l . 1·· !)'41 -.... 1911 Alc:I~ II ' I '• ••• fl, cupatlon This is the most chrectJy and pay reahstJc an re11oa • AHS 111, " '*' Ft1r11d T ''" •Iii , "" •, s· "i•bo Fd 6\"t 1 A111n1s1 Pl • 1o10 S)\"f 5JVt u1» -\\ a! o0~ \.16 '' n '"" 1~• -n 1ob.oi1 Marin 1l 1•41o it u1. _ i ,
b d f II di I I of 11 cording to arrangements you•,•,ff,',', ",'·•,•,•,,F~~[!""•• ,,", ,•,•,• ·~·,",',, ,',.'.','•'-•"•"°•'• m, •• m, .• ,",,",osYi:..,!..11> 16 11)\9 101<> 10~~+"' omt>En "° 211 •1'• "'~' !'"-2'.._G~u~ 10 1• ,,,, 1~, 16•· .. '• asicnee o a ,accor ng :> wages in erms ac!ua JV· ... '''"' ,, ·~ ,, ..,. •Ct.,., .. 111.-. 16\o ''1o1o o:;:Ji~lv0j•~ 1 1 2117,\1/1tl,"""..:.(~Gooarrt111n 19 ;;11,. 3p, 37''>1-'• the Labor Oepl 's \Yomen s l • Do 1 niake at lhe ume you hire her Aunt \IR ll'~ lt'• r.1nc118• U'r l•I• • • Br s1•, Sl T•1.e1• 111, nn "l:~•PC IGe ,. ,, • n 1• n:i,o +"' om~d 36, iJ ,., 3lllo _ '• Goodyur 11 37l 21~, ,,,, 11,,. -'• 1ng co~ s 1n your area n o Alf 1-los" 211. n F,, 10" " s1 .., Au~ 1 • r1w1or w 8Ji.. •' ,., "' 1" i~~ {fi J~~ ~r.• '=to. mwE 011 , • ·~ ,1\• u'' _ ""~',dJ '!!' ,'!.. 11 1~ ,,14 '"'~ + \•
IN A!rbf'n F 1o>,iJ ~llM Inv 1~'·1•\:o tk<P .. -,, 'oT••••AS •• Amtf slit s n·~ 1l ..... 'Jl1't-\t omoul IX Jt7 Uh v.-1·~"'•«0 G QI 2)'• n 1)li-i. Bureau a-..1 the National Com· count c•st .. ff clothes as any ior him) •ir l..OY' '• "'• "''G D£ 1>'' ,..._.Pit "'c "· 'It r,n.,.n• 2j'' 'jl• AM&•,c 50 omwo11 " 11, ml J -~ ~1c1r,n._ ',... 14 lPo :io .. ~ -"
mlllec on Household EmplO)'· pay,youcan'tbuyfoodor pay -If your need for a day A1t1tt H Hl'l n F•• R~pu ,,, 3'A 111•01 • ,.,.l""m 1o 1 ""-'mrE•D11 t0 1 •1 ""' 12 +1 _,, 11 ~ ~-"G•M!b• 160 ,, """ ..-. 39•~+1 'lblrh l'o 8'• l'ot WFln •~• 4l\ k""" 011 11 \•'· IHllY Co 11 .... 1~1.1. Am l'llH 01t 31 26 15>o 15'• -\!ii Mllb I I "lo IS~ ljh G••l'ICICn 10 41 ?l\o 11•• 11'1• -'•
men' In Washington -and rentw11husedclothes household worker's servlces"1'0 lnd 16"'"1'r11u11111 i11~'l'""1•kw' 11•· •1~11\1"" 1" •1•1 '•Am•H 01l 10 JJ 59"" J11 ~:h +~: DM•tCD '° 11 1•-t1•'-1•t•• ""l'e<: su l7 t~. 1s•. u i.. ~•· /lo.Ill ftfv 6\, d11F0011 FP S•o +.D•~ltr. P tnL,Jl)l.<Tl tn Go 7>~ f''>AA!rFlltt to lU j2 il\o -,,\~--w ... , ~1;:cttl J" 'I 2 v• !ril l1 11 rtfl 1~!~ I I !J'' ll'' 151•-'• both of these are n o ,.,. -Reward overtime work changes or ceases, give at 1on! P~11 ~·'t s "o"' ou ?O JO•\ ::;:,',! T ~!111 ,2~,.2 l',',',,,c~ 1 "• ,, .. Am •1•11n .1o 111 1'• 1' .,. -• on dts 1 J ' "'' ,, • ' I ''"1w 1 ~D n1 '"1• .a~. -• AlltdEo t;.1o•~For'lllV 't;(p..;• ~"", '' "'• •Am&•ktr 1114\.lolJ'•1l~•-\.\on orl4•5Jl00 6J '' 6J +1•i rtn1p1j~ tlO~l 3 n 1 spearheading a nallon\\'Jde 1111h premium pay Tiie NCHE least one 1~eek's :advance •IDll Ci.ea ~" '"' F"'' Grnt l9 .-,P.!•L •" .~. Tr11e:nt 0 ,•. •,:z AB''""' fJD eo JJto "• ll,• +"lo °" ood 110 1t7 3th ,.,, 38" _" r1110rq 1 11u " fJ'• ~ i 1•
campaign for the re-educatl:>n recommendll that y ou pay nollce Am 8Y•n 11i.;, '''~ Fo•0tn n·~ H =:.u. i:'t 1:,; 1j ~~j~1,P0 10(; 11,, Am c;.., 110 •• ~ w , ,,~ ,, o..Frtl ' 1 11 !N 1n~ 21i"o _ '• 1, ... ,.Ml"> ' >'• 11, uu -• "m•O< 5'> '" Folbr 2•• 3 I G7a'" .J;o ' lrlMob ll 31 n" Amlkkll XI JI 31"'1. :u .. ll ' -~ !OllFd P:!\,50 1 "' •• .. ..... , ' I UP 1 " 11•, J\o ,, .. + '•
" E1 L1b s~. 3~ Fwr S•<> 16 11 Penn RE ll'" I•'• Troo1ct 34"' 11' ".S•~,,•m 1 Jl •' l6 1s•, -. -• on Le11 na * '"" t \l .,,. -'• Nlll'1D ' " 'Ji' * .u -'• of household employers and time and a halr for hours -~1ake sure she 1s nol s ub· Am £x11r n·~ n Frnkl Cp 1 1i,o, Ptoi1 w1 9,, ,.,, tv Fii 15, u• '" ..... 11 13\'o iJ 11~. Dl'IHl!G 1" " ,.,,, ,~, 1n. -" 1 WH\ 111 <J.1> • 1~•1 1tr,_ '• Am Fut~ t•, H~~rtiktn E lt•,11 Perini n-, 1~.untf:'( 1 ' 7'At;~•ln 160 '2n. J1''o 21\i -•, onlPowr1 SI 1'1~ JS'-lS\o -Yl IWnUnl 90 ~33 •'• ~· 1•"-'• employes to spur prec1srly above 40 hours a week and Jecledto1nsullsorrac1al s lurs"' GrNI s1 ~P.FYlv""" 3 J'•Pe1ro1i1 Jl\l tO un 0o1tr I i91'Amcreo11 111 ~1 1" ~ u. +1'-onPW1111so .:io H 41 '' wun Pill! ·I 1j'• n n -11 /Am lnl.d lO JI Fuo~~ n S~ 6\1 p~~cln ~· SI 61 Un 11!urn ~ o..., 19 loC•1Sug 1 40 •) 11'0 1A'o 711 1 -'"' !°"Pw 11tl l6 iJO .... ll\'t S6'~ -'> 1W•1~ln SO IO 1 '• 1 )1~ 1]11 -11 this change. Here a re specific double the regular r ate for from your child ren doormen, " MecHc11 21"" 2sui Fu""• u t \• o pn,1 s...11 1n. z,i\ u11 Mcun io•. 11 Am v•n 1 2s 113 ~,1, lS/ ts•. -'• on!AlrL o s 41 1~. 1 1,v, -•. ,,..~1£:' ff ' j~'• 111'. 11 ,,._ '•
l "St C..11 1>.,, l'o Girlnlll 1•11 15 P~olon ,..,, llh s flkf'(>I ll\1 14 A0!01lll 10. •I lO'o >O 30~ + V. °"I\/:" 111> 106 1f'• 1 11 1\'o -,., •et ~,J 20, !I 1 ~.!'l ?1 .. ~, othcrthoughtlesspeope .t.$1 G Pl 6'o 1 Gt• Svc u 15•,pic Pd ll'I 211 s E""!I II 19•' 40uel\lt 129 I ''• Q'• ~·~-V. Oii t 70 JI I"' 10•, ID1-'• "~ "" S• i" 6., 16'1-'• 4m ltlv 11l ol'1\ot G Al•(fl 6'' I PIMr!n n ll">US Sul~'~· 1s•,ADu1I ...... 11 ll'• 1J o \l o t;o;in 111 111 'l~ l lV:i 11\\-UJGrolltr 90 't t •1 7•1 171~..i '•
Wershow
Real Estate Auction '-'
DISSOLUTION OF TllUST
l.l~der 1 pltn of1Jqu1d1t1on bytht Domm1w1 Eslatt Comp1ny
(oow 1 dlSSOlved Colporalt0n) •
ACRES
OF PRIME
IND"L LAND
•R£DOMINAlfllY ZOMEO M !
S.E. Corner of Victoria St. & Wilmington Ave.,
(NEAR ALAMEDA ST. AND ART ESIA BLVD.) tl DftIDAl1w· ornfosesMmiS:· WI: r
#lldl• S.11 T1 l•b ri-,I,\.
BILTMORE HOTEL
(Ro1111n Raom)
Fifth & Olive S!s.
Los Angeles, Cali!._
lt>il ll Ito.I loll IHI• •rt.I 11
la"' -lolq •~ tlllt triflul SllOfliH UIOll trait ef llalldo• ' $•~ r,4,_1 ••t II•• l~• f,
lutel S111n11l! U"" trant IR troe \ ,, \1~1l<loll Slatoi.. ~ i
' ' I MONDAY
MAR.23
at Z P.M.
-PROVIDE llER "tlh d~ AMeu• 8 11•, It•~ G ICl""'h' 1•, l Por1r HK 21 1•'~ vs Tr L 1i1. 1"11• AmE!Pw J u !•? '10/ »· JO'. Ct Co ofA2 SO n 1 1, "'• •S•, + ... 1Gli't~111'l(Qxi! 1' n iO'o 1l •
Anktn c I'• .... t.AI Es1 • 1 ' • Pro Gou ,., ••• Uo P!nP ?J•, 2J '• ""' E~k• la 1' )T 3QlJ. .1l • -'lo!' Co ,xr&J.lO ) .u l l l'I 14 HMO 2i ~" ~ ) f'~-;:: ~~ CCO\ attractive s l ccpong-'•($ !n!I t 9 Gf'Olfl 1'. l Proo.t.n• J>o •o ur~h ~d S'-, 6\o 4mE•o Ina 11 IJ • I•~• !l'li -V> on! Ot 6 •'1•t .211'o 1Ji;..-~ "I';,,·,~ ••o ">'• '''' ,, •. _,, ' • "rden M ll 'o 11•1GlH~n JS ls•,Pryd Min 8 ~VI Ulll lfld 76'~71 "E•lnd DIA~ 1?(1 6• 6J •l' oni OU 130 31' 1l~' ·2· 11~-'• II: "' "' ' "' quarters 1f s he hves in or 4rdtn Pl JJ ll Gl1Ut11 :io 11 PvbS "IH 1"• ish v•I LO 1•, 9 AGtnln• JO 11c1 1011 1o ~ • • onr 011 DI i 1 3 '~ 3;..., 3!.,, + \, " 1 e"<~ 11 rn • JO • JI>', +•• Art MoP 13'. ll'I GIH•n W SI , ~b PubS NM '"• '6' • ~1n(t S• H 10 AGnln 011 act ti 31 ~ :io>.. .J,~ = t; •°"l To"o 12 ,.1,u 111, 1Jl.1 2lh W~'!:' Ji' )i ! l~ Ji, 1 l~ 7 1: quarters 1n \Vh1ch to change""""' H 12•1t .u Glob Run l • PYbSNC n"1J1,v1a1ro11 ,~, i2 "1ntio•st 10 ?1 1,,, 11,, ,,, °"'" .,, .. 6! 61\o 61•1 1-r Guus•~ur 96 215 n. 11,, ?JJ•-'•
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h d k Av10 Sc• 11 J 1'4 Goa•v c 7•. Ill. P B~n,,.,1 ,..,., 1''11 N Re•Ot 1• • ''• l\O •7~• 11 '• '1"' + 1• c-.rlfl I olO t 1' 31 !'i J2 Yi~ DH/, ?j "'• ff,• :}!• ... : ' £ e IS a 3Y WOT er Jrwemco .~. 1:\0 Gr1PI'! Cn 11'~ 1J • Pur!!v SI li U e"hw 6>, 7 Afll!nvot l 10 :n 16'> J6'• ,!!;• -..... (QOPO'r TR 1 •IO lho II'< 11\!o -'• ~llon frod 10 f~,; !1': 12'::::. ,:
1 B•!•ll Al ''" ~ Grt ph !c ll-l:o U>. POuo C11 6'• ,,. ,,n Nt; 6Ho 1611 4'fOMl'OY 90 J• JO\.o Wo -.,. • -\ COMlll'ICI I JO S JI J7 17 -If , ... 0 r km e 11 s con1· Bo~e· 11\'o 11h Grefn Ml 11~. II• ')\Jt! CM 11 in~ W~•h RE 11 ll>io AM.e!CI~ l 'Cl 1Jl 31'o J&"4 11 -1 Co1111R~~ Jllb oj(I ,. , ••• 11'• -~. -H·I-' B•I Pfto~I 6 • 1 t.•n!I RE 11•, 11 llt<'I Ovn ?'>•~ 11'• Wat Tr H'o 164 AMe!CI• OI I S fl"> 'I 91 CopwlSU 1 1~ J JI 11'• 11~, -\, ti•c~We! l10 ~ 16 JJ, Jl'~ _ 11, pensalion tloesn t cover her a1n!\lr c 11, •·~ Gn:ive "' 10•. 11 iteu 1rl1 lo 11·.1 ""eoe R• 11 1' Am Ma1o•1 20CI ttt ''' Q \ -"Cor!ftf~B 011 51 l? 11•4 31•, -:1< H•ii "'' 1 ~~ a ll Joi" 36,, _" _,, h , B•rw(I 11 , 11 CHiiio In 11'> 17'o RenW Et 71'• 1'-111 WelOlrn "'• 1' AmN1tG1~ 7 tl 31'.• ~1•o 311~ -'~ 1MGW 7 SO. 'I 2'1 11'1o 2:1''• -Sl;o HI lburl 1 OS 11,1 II ,51, •S\, -? 1n ..... c s ure your om eo\\'Tler s B•••n " ,_ 10,~ GY•rd Ch 1• 1, ll111Cll r,p 21' 2H well"n M 11 • 13·~ Am 111>o10 i~ ~loll 10<'1 10 '> 10•0 -\. Moll!llft 12 ~ 27li 21~. 21\~ -1 H•mW•• Jot 11,1 1e-..o io•. _,, B 1•' » 11 1 I ID' !~ ll1~m O n 11 lftll>ll ~ 12~ 11to ARuD11 06e 2ff lo 111'• @l !o + 'h ow!t1 Corn I f\o ,1, Mio+•, H1mm Ptp 1 67 1 '6 2''t -'• llab1hty insurance does protecl .a:~~;! ~2,; 13.~ ~•oon" 1 11~ =~Mf .. o ~ ~;., w!~"1tA Q ''' Am s,., 1 J1 ,. 1J , '' +1 cooc• &d(11 s1 ,.~. 11•. 2J1o -'• H•m'l'nd 10 31 ,;.: 11•: ,, 1 _
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d t th b Btlm lflll • 9 H•v•n 111 ii 1' "' I ,,. ,, AmSo.Alr IU 2l "~ l-llo ljV• 4-... rl'llllf! Fin I 2 ·11 " + '• H•nt1• CD JO 11 I• 131, ll''o un acc1 en on e JO In your R''~ w~ ,, ,~ •l''I Henrnl F 11 • "': :~:~ ~: ~~ •• ;~ .. ~/~gllO Wh ,,;;; l~: ~:::s~:~ ~~ 10 .t n iii~ ~ + i•: ~=-=~rnd ~ 1~ '1~~ y:,: ~~:~ ~ :: ~:~;~~/ \ 30 ~ 11·~ Sl • ~l : .. ''
home t11L•b "8•jl)'~Heto!Co; "•Ro~·nM 1~ 1• W!s~Pl n•,Jl•AmSldol•7S t1 10 ff"•~ ,,,._cn:iwCol lOll 90 ''•"''•""·-•,HatrlJ nt o 76tl'••' ~f • 81111,10• VI ... l'o HIOoc lnl 51, e • Ro1el1ft 1 1 I o Wt~lw F J'o l .. Am S!trll -I • + ""C "' •v"" H ' ' -'
Arrange, v.here YOU first ~l~~;on 11:: lfi'Hlli::,""i:p ~r· lf' :: s1~ ~· ~1• ~;~~~t "{! 1l\' 1~:z A S"°'"r I 60 19l ~! Y! nr: _ ~ C~:"J~ffor".o Ir. ~1~: b~ ~~~ ~ ~ 1-l:;;~t;D ~ \~ ~~~ ~!'.: l~~ -1'~
discuss 'he ter m s • d CO Bia k HI 3>• ll Hoo,,_r 31'~ ""' t AmStlO Pl 61 1 t \., t \\ !'Ii -'• CTS Corp t) • 141.;. 14\o 11•1 H•rv lol I ;o l! 20'1 7r., 1G'I -1, n n· c • •• • Am"'T&l 160 '° 52'} 51\1 5 '• -'• Cud1hy .. I Jl IJ~ 1)\11 IJ\o -.. "'" C~•p .., ' I •
d1llons of the JOb, w hal rest =~::e~ il~ i!~~ g~r::~q· ~·· ~~. --l_..,f ;c :w~~, I rs tl~O 1r;· 12~! l~~ ::: ~= ~~m-:.n11112~! 1~ :1.1 a .... ::.,, :: :; ~:~~ flr~ 1r ~ ~1: ~: 1r.i -~
per1ods,n1cal tJmes,telephonesoo1•H 11~2J•oHuG G•s '' u MUTUAL ~~'zf'n~ 13 i.$00 »"• 10v, 10 '1, Cum'!'lln IOto 1s 36'• 3'>, 36'\lo -h H••~lllnt i113 , 13r, 11»
ff Bot t;•D u UV, H\ltll P !M, 1'~, 1 16'°> J•li't l61'o (yn110ruQ Ii lJ 11''> Jg•, 11\'i l'IKl•"'"'I 70 101 ~!'. 30 ~n ... 1 privileges. lim e of orchurchBt•d Sv• 1/ ~ H''" c1 30 ,J1 lomt•Oll 1>0 ,f ~!~' 1,1 :~ f"·-~\Curt1uwr11 :>t Ill >"'' 1••·-~•H11nrHJ ,2 ,; H'• :u" :wo -<
h 'fl be bl 6rtwv G 71 nu H~•!l t"t 17>4 lj" "mdlk .0. • ,,,, •Vi-. Curt Wr A 1 1 H\: 11. H'1 Hele<lf Cu•t M 11' 1·•· U'o •
sc a etocounton B'1!•5c.t 1l'""'.,111dG1i 11 ,. ~ttccP'°:io ~\ID~~i~~!~+tz~.·,i~u,i_;o 1,,•t~ 2,•,111•,i.-1•,"'•"c"11" 11,J 19,21 r,
R b I " e rwn .... 11" U •\ "" Mud 41v, .0 ' "1ro\P '"' .Sf tl S2'l0 SI'~ S2V, -... c ¥~• "' ... • J l• Helttr •111 6d JlO 171,, ~1 "'• -'• -ev1cw your ver a con-8rU'l!'I Bt 11 11•, 1ni.irec J'1 • • FUNDS A...,... cara 711 :i.~ .. 31,,. 311~ :;:: ~. YPl'u.IM i 60 100 66...., ... ,,. "'"" -J H,11 •• DI' DI 1 ,, ~· .. _3
t ract' periodically and en-l~~~~!s J,,..~1-;i~f''C!-1 i~·!1f' i Amt'fll''° 11 31 3''1 J1 ,..,, -0-t<..e1n1eP<1s i 5! 10'• 1~'• 20 I l c:tc Le~• 111o IU. ""t Svi • l :;:;11~-111 f!I 1jg ~:; ~(: ~l;: -~ D111~111r 11, :w!I 11i. 11•, 11" _ '• ~=~~~ c1:11 36 If: 't , 1~1 :.
courage your emp oye 0 c1i w sv 16\~ ?6,,.1n1•m In • '' "'"'" flock 1 x76 11~0 +II'• "°'' _ ~ 8!~t 1~ ~ 1~i !:~ ~J:: ~;;· + i• Htmll"c ll!f> , 1 • 1•, 1••
discuss any grie vances with ~= M J:"' ~\~ i::l ~f,~t :11', J~ L?.:-... ~ ~~°Ef!ts~ ~ 16 lfh 11\~ 11111 -.,, g•r' Ind Pl 2 Ill 51,, I'" l31,' -,• Her< inc He ~ 11 11•, ,.
You CinnM 8 10 1l nl Heir •Vo t•~ /lo. K 1 31 31'4 31U -'i •te ProcuJ lOI :15 n o 11? -t' HtrS/'IFO 1 10 ~ 11 '11'• 1l'I Ctnred s s .... lnt ~¥> ?S ?6~ l>\1rcl'1 9 Imo t;ao t 01 •nA=ll~l'IS II 23'• 2l Il -\\ 1~coC11 Jll 1 ?2\1 ~~ n10 +1!Hev"llln 10 Yll "'• ll'o 1Jl1 -~ -OF COURSE provide lhe Ceo Sow 11''• ni.. Int i pf )~~'> I~ NEW YOlllC IAfll [f'np Fr..il~ : i; ~n •"!.:!-•'•"'• :~ ~~ ~!! ~\~ i.v. 8:~H.J''.iis oi? 1~~ l1\k !!!~ -'• =Zi'7tt~n.g: 1-;, !~ ' i'i : n:: =>i: C•p ln!A ~~ 5•i 111 "'' 'lf·~-t~e •oUowTng Qua-ll\t ..-~ Cl.., J 1•~1 "'• ·~-~g•vtnfll 160 61 75 , ,,,;:ii.. Holto~Holfl J 110 •1 • 11
most basic of fringe benef 1ls ~Z~~ch81 ~~ ~;~ ~~';.! ,::..:. 2'11o ;~~1°N".,1~;r1~~~r :~·~"" 1~Jt 1; ~ ~'rl fv~m96 ~! J~'t. ,~:~ 1~;~· -3t "L "'"' l 1s t.» ,1~ 5l'• 5'1'• + 1i , Hobllr1 1 10 , •1·. •1 • ~: .. _ ,:
-Soc1.al Security coverage _ certr Go ''"' 1 ... ; 11 :l:s11u11,• M,~~ Jj"~' .rion o1 Stcurltl•• ,1~s,t,..., s n s 11 Arc•t•H ~ n lt'"'I. :It • -"'° DPL o•8 l 75 120 SCI s,•, .so -t',, Hoernw11 tO 1• 1l 21 , 71'• i ,
1 Cite HG 11\!o l1''> l'C .,. O 0.0«1• In<, ••~ NTv 31t,..11•ll Arci!IN oil l 51, !l j''o • D"l ti1D761 ll! 91 91 Holl EIN:lrn 9 9 7 ''• ?'• -,
not only because 1t s the law 1r f'"'" '''• 50,, i,~,.J "••'• ",'• • 11oe D• cts " """lc.h Inv c;oA00 'o'l"l 'Cl ArO.O•n 1 '° JO ' St 1v. 8:~'1 c;.o ! • •1•.i, 11'1 12•• "'-'• Holklv1nn ?O llD 17, •l •7" ... ••
d d I k -v>> ,.,, ~· '"' ' '' j> tl'lti.e HC:lll'll~ 1n11 G~ 1 t7 a 00,0s-, • '' ~,,•• '\ SI"--~-m1r 111 11 lt>.. I•'~ 10•, '• Hl)!lySuq I !O )t ,,., 11'• u•~ -'• You Pay any 'n I-ua wor er ... .... •mes 1 111 1~ oo 10 oo " ·~ \• "" 21"' ~1 Mn•t 1 10 36 11 '!"' ll -H ~ •A •• Cl'ltrl ""-6\o 6~ Jamtbv 11•, tW could h1vt been ,"v c 1, '' ' A.r llft1 05 11) 16 i51.\; Ullo 15\l !llAlr M 161 Jl'!i 3 ,, ll'I _ '• "~•"'•'•;:: ~ !t JI'• Jf'o I Ill ·~ I d °'''' 0 1 11'1 '''' '' ' ., fold Ctri<fl ot' bouvllt n~.. .. r ., ArmcoSt ''<I 100 21 16\1; )6, ~ llK r I '" ,, ~· ·-.... 1J6 11, IN I 11•' -2 ~ as 1eas.,.,.,percaenarchmL••1 1 v.J7,,.1(11~ •• /, 16,~11 !•Jkt<:1>Mo11<11y 1nrO\~~tG':tfsoi"'"''o"n1o n 11~,21 ~t~ ec:i~t'" i ,; i~ :~-'•HoovB11:10t 11 21 n•.1J>.-,
qua rter but also because this ~~:~ i~~1 111~! 1: •• ~:I~~·. 01 ~~~ ~·n 1o1>P,oft j~1 t~ ~~:.O ~it ·~~ ~~~~1 1,tt5 f :1"" :rt. :t'" +;: .. ~v~~~ : ~~ ~:~ 1':; ,,~~ !11:1 ~~~1 ~i:' A~ 1
;: ·~ ~ "; ! •r:: .: tax assures v1lally omportanl ~! 6 •'' ~ .~~·•K&le Grn • ••·~Aam .. •l'i ~nds ~tock iaiiM102A•m1!Ck to 1n .'.lO'• :JOh lOh -'• ntM1IV 1 101I l? n~~ l9 :19',~ ,1 Mo!el llf 1a • 111, 161. 16'·+, C~rl~tS tt 9) Kiv•m \ !' Grwlh 1171'1> Stlecl 1 ,.,dArmCkDfllS 11~JJ JS SS .;.1.., n1J.~lvwl 116 ,,,, .. ,,,.,,._,,Moud!n<f!O 3'1• 1•'•1•••'•
hnanc1al benefits both beforec'""1 of 100 101 ~·•• r 111.11"1, /n<:om i12,, •,!? v 1r "" 1,51 1 ,,1o,mRub 1;10 '" '°'' "°'"-"'" nRG• 110 1 n 11 17 Mw~M•I! ·~ 6 111, i1't 11>, Cl•ldel 6'~ 6'·"'11•" l'o' "'~' ""In¥ Rein 161 sOIA•oCorP 'D l Jt•, lt 1t•,+•, •ec:11 11f8 I 5t H'~ ll'•-'•Houi-~F 110 &l •11, 11 ••'• -· andaflertheemploy,retn-es c1111 U 4 is 1s10ir::111wd ?9 "~"011lv5 JS.I 'oslilt1 11 11 1!1,A••!111nc11 "10>, JO•\ l'n'• s~o111c ta 117J'o1•• j•'•-1,H0111F,,fl•o J UI 111 lJ! C!l•t U8 lS 1S'!,IC•u11 I' U 1•1~At!ll!t!d JIU '-611111 1.ll 13As.loldOlll~ '! lf1,. l t'• )1>,+•~ t dl1 loo it 1P• 77'1 2'• •,H<N1F Dll5" I'~""•'°''• -finally. back l o ba.s1c (!to; Inv u , I/ ICevt F'ib IS~. l~•Jo Alu!•e I,, I •• J 1-lncock J 66 I.)) •1no11 DfJ 10 1 .a•. ,,., "" -1~. I d 11IS 30 10 17'• 111. 11'• -~. HW•ILP 1 )(! 11 IJ'• .,., .,,, -,,, Clerk Ml 73•~21•,ltPVI Cu• 1• '5t~AllArn F •1 Bt JollMJn ?Q '2J0.4!"ud 8row IO 1~, 1l'o IJ\•-''o I Stetl l5 171t 111> JJ•1 -•,Ht111,ING< IG 15 Sl !l o 51, number one your own al· c1a¥1011 2'• )•,II'.~••• PC ~i, '\'1 •1111 Ent 917 •1111.t11,1on1 Funai •uooG 1 20 •• ~2·~ 1J ~, 12 + ·~ •~r J• ~1J1 ,,._ l~l, 11•, • , HouGt r>1110 , 18°, '! 4'1\, CllntM~o ,,,,,,,<[no Int 1 , 7~o 41Dlle F<f 111111.1() A~Ho tOtMAUCIS119lX1 1 Jl '' 3• • llFlnan 50 II JJ'o 1l ll'o•\~Ho···••• '' '' OO '' ,0 ltludes. Do YOU refer to her as c11 .. 1on o ,,, 9 1(,...,, El 6'~ 114 Am~1> 5'1 '* c:;; Bt 11-37" JI A•~Tr1n 10 1• t \o 1•, 1•, = . ['"'• 1"11 1 IO ., o . •1 •1'• -\• i.r0-:~~1·n 70 !' 13,: 71 : 71., Callorwritefordescnptweauctionbrodltsre •.• 1 '! ·., dbo h c1owca 10•11 IC.Ir-Co 9)1011tmBY• JIP"ll5 Cu•Bllt1'11.56AllyE11 J4 17ll'•1Ho1S•o-\o •ll•ml •O uo11i,11 11•, Hvd..,BJ '"'9 111 1, 14, • n y ,. uui1e an asl lat CO!!ur D A , •• ,Kft~O Vol :Hl'• 2111.Am O•ln tfl!OIS ~ .. ~I Its ..... Al(ryEI DI • JIOO SI SI y ~"' si·r orc2 6 11'• ii~~ 11•. -'1 Hu .... Har Ml f II•• 15~ 13'~ 8llO'EIP'~CIPATIO"IS~U"'"ED h' , be f h C<>11erCp n I! 1Cr1•11r 11' ,.,~.,E~ \OI IM u• 1 11i l4A!IRoctollc:l1 71111'~ H '6h -ll' • DIDl20 7116'1 J6 If'• 1,1111"aPw 160 19 ll 111 :i?'o -" IU\11 n l;n\N IUM,I s es 3 mem r 0 l e Co!'"' F I .). c D•I 1~· 114""' Grin s 11 6 16 Ut 1 • "' " 41lRcto 1>13 75 13111 S• SJ 5' + ..., ~IC!lllltoll " u JP, 11•. I •• -"•ctal Bftl'C I :M 11 • 111, 11'· -
[b r I "' Tl l t I hi Colllnt F 19' 70 L•nce 1~ 6 2 "•' .t.m Inv ''.IO 6 :JO u• I' 11 l! J It A!I Rl(h !fl J 1 Ill 111 l!l _2.,. !M-"'!10 11~A 11 1H; 1'11'• •""• • 7 ~; Jt! cenr 1 11 11 :io 7''• 39,, .,. , i W amiy SO,ge i sra1g Colon $!r 7~'76 l•nd DI\ 9'•i~•Am My! 111tl9 Ut 1 t&f l 51AllRchol1" 111 •1 '8'1 4 !o+l'il Ill"•'"' 11' IS•• +-'•111c~~Pll10 "(IS!'•" 51 , ers OiW !hi ... , " M c-··· ,,.~ ... _L~~~W<f i...iJl'•AmN Gtll Jtllll .. , J 116,,l ... 1~1(;!11!ml 16'''''' ,,.~ ,, Mam 51 2J'l'1'~1J V.10••··' ,,,,,.,, ,, -· a .. 1nn11l IS r s ,;;;.;,~Cir .,;-·~:{'L••i.on 5'1 \•1m Pee 111 IU cut SI 110 sj•Atl•• c;orD ··-• I nc;o 56t> ! '!' 'l !S\ ~· •• ...,,, -1 C. So bod lh I .c d C ' '""'L•rwn M 111~1' Aft~ GrOl.I• p01, JU 1 S,t.TOlnc: 081 'l' 11'" l !o f'.'o-\, I"'" Ch;b 1 I ' l ' 1s' 111 PW 'Dliil •~ '9'1 19, 79•~-•1 , •U<TlO:..'f"', om' ~TINOS me y , a .line oes not ,~ }."1 ,'," ,',~ Lt• Ron 2• 75 C•oll 1 :it , 1, 1Cn1< b 6 12 1 •I lou•ore Pl•• , 1~~ 11•• \ "" -"' tntv .)!lb 119 u1•, 12' 111 •11. Imp CP "'"' ?:J!; 11' • 11 • n1
_., u•t "'lt8<111 Lii 111 71' < '"' ,, 0 '"' 16 is.,. IS 5 -YI 1115111> 21 O 1! Olo 4t ,, -INA C11 J 'Cl 19' JS~o "'• J.,, -• belon" to you and that she Cll"ll Tel 11 15 ,_,, ,• .,• Grwin 11'.IOU:ll n ... " 4ulomtn llKI "11 101, 101~-i.~,.~1,,. 3' s~ '"' 1, ,,, , l<KomtC•rlt ,;, u 13•, 13,_, • -.. ,,, ,, 00 w" ... 111 1 1ocmt 111 '~J t11 ifn~ ''110~ A111:0 Cp !JO 16• ''"" ,,, ,,, •• --• -• 1"'c , , ,, ,, 1 does nol wanl to be .a member c:; Psy 11 • 11 '1 ~'1'1ur TG ~~·~ ~~· FO lllV I )0 ''" L•' JV"h 1' .. 'J:o~ .0.•<0 oil 20 SI' sJ<: 50 • ~·! ':1\t 1.~. ';ii ·n ~:,; ~: J:j•"' ;~ llldll~~d •.g ,,? 11h '°'• ,g,. -: 7213 MO.IO$£, lOS AffGEl.ts, WJf. 90046 (%13) 933.&541 Como A i ' ~ Lev ri a'/: J 1 {, 1 APOiio Fd 11/ 1 ll ! r l* l ~ \ 4 A•tT'/ Pd 20 37 34\'o ll'f Xllo -11'1 tMln 10 10 ~! Jll so•~ ':1,t In.a '1d of; SO ~l 111 80 5ll , ~ 01rao COUNTY Ofncr of your family any more than cm11 cm JI Jl tr1~' eu 1a1 .. ~2·. ~'soc:, " ',l. ,• »,,
1
:: mv 149 1,s, 1~' 1,";.~"°, 111 11 1~1.1 1a•, OomF~d ~ 1~ 1o•. 10...,, Jo.. , ll'lelp••PL 1 so J1 1s 2••~ ,, , _ '• ]012 S. Hiii, Octtr'1$1de, Cali!. 92054 014) 722 1306 t l be be f C"1P ln1! 9 10 cbl•W • 6' 1 .. s •DI' "" _ l nc NII 10 00 1 93 ·-· "" lU 166 l6l\"f !~'I\ -:»o Oon"'ll•11 •• 7~ 11•1o 11 0 11•• ~•, 1 Ind PL pl6 lS 1 91 , 91 fl -1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~'::'.:'.~~~~==~'.:'.:'.~~L~y~o~u~w=an=~:o~~~a~m=e~n~l=~r~o]c""a Tee 6 . '" Lo!I Cot ,,., l\• A~• H-~'T'57 IDS LI"" , J2 n Allee 011 G• 56 11v. II'~ "I• Doric c .. n • 1s .... 1s•, 11•1 lnEIMox S19 l ,,, 1>, 1>. , he r' Comrt• J•, 1'4 loa E1t~ 2) 1•17 F11t'ICI A8 >O> ···•r:;11 !1,ltt 8-Ootr Ollvtr U U"o 1)', i3•1 -1 lno~rQ~"d I SI .i .00 1!1•1 -1 1
\Vcint some sound
investment infonnation?
\Xe know a man you
can call who is bacKed
by specialists in the
maior financial centers
of the country
'-. 'l'hi!j 111an has aru;\,;crs-or can get tl1cm fo r
\Ou-because hcK1lO\VS he can d ra\v o n a \a~l
"!or e o f kno\vlcdgc ;:iv.111ab1 c 10 hin1 fron1 experts
in hi s or~.u1ization. l-le ca n rccoinmend 111,csl~
111c nt strategy '"'th special conhdcncr b~causc he
is backed by 1ntra·co1npany ti::am \1101 k ""h1 cl1 is
a majo r factor in successful 1no ncy managcrncnl.
Call hi m t o find o ut what's happening in the
111arkc1. the reasons.behind the activity, the
riutlook for trends and pcrfom1ai:1ce. Call him for
infornt.ttion on dividends and splats, n 1crg crs,
nbsolct c M:c11r1ucs .. , ( ntighty handy infor1nation
tn hrlp )flU !de )Our 1969 1ncon1c tax)
('all hi111 ;1bont price quotauons, large block
1radcs, pr(1ht-sharing and retiren1cnt funds
Call hin1 :tbout 1nu111al fu11ds, bonds,
oon1n1oc.!it1r s. options, new offerings, or any other
aspect of in\ cstmcnts.
The man to call? He's one of our most valuable
a.~ts, the Dean \Vittcr Acc;,ount Exec\1tivc.
~fc's another reason '"hy every third
Dean \\'111cr cltrn1 is rcfcrrccl t o n s -by a
Dean\\ liter r:l1rnt. Contact your nearest
Dtan ""1ttrr ofiicr today
J'ou'rc closr lo 1ncn who hno~
when )'OU in utst with ...
DEAN WITTER a<: Co.
JNC01t.POR.ATJ:n
-San Francisco • Los 1\ngelcs •Chica.go • Ne,,· \·o rk
Nttcport Beach -Trltphone 044.,292
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Robe1·t I" Tl oyl. vice
p1 es1dcnt of F1rsl
:\n1er1can ·rn lc I nsur-
ance Co Sanla Ana.
\viii servo as general
chairman for the state
convention o! the Cali-
!orn1a Mortgage Bank·
crs Association. The
1nect 1s slated for April
22·25 1n Palin Spr1njts.
The Hoyls reside 1n
T\1stin .
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"let Flld 6K l T'•" r.Q .,,. llt (H;ot(OTP t0 6 111, 21'r ''~-ii FOO!t Pf11tl t 'tl.o :3 7'1, I~ c;.., 6 1' 11 j EO tlJ 1a '' C•llnt•r<• , 101 IO~ JI , 51'. -2', l'atO"'M I Oil i11 o• , '?lo o ltl(f G"' \""' ~1 ~ J't! 11'4 !~ Ctl1n P'l41.!CI ' JO', $1 !t -•~ Fo1M(I{• ·~ •I JI 1J , l!'o --------------1~1'1Undf1 st ~' wn<' 0! J Oi& ) t• (f"'° l~s JO l•I ~'• Jf 1 J"o -~. FM<K l't 5? ~~ , O , r , I T~• lolleW!nt 11 • i.~v lo '""'boJJ tn!d Fou,.<1 •Ml 10 " T....C 1n, • 1~ , St c...,1 Fd'>' • tO • ., •a Fa1! wn1 IQ •s 11 , 11 l' -1 • In l~t s•.x• m•·~~t "Dllr'l. r ••~••I~ G'"'~ l11nl1 Mui tl!'Jl"'<i Ct.,Mwll 14 IQ 1•1~ 1l'• ll'o -'• Fo!!tlriro '° ·~JI', :U't l' ~IP\ 11'U•t• lrt Y'lltll'•ltl ONTC t )I 16 I! U"l!t! 9 ~ 1~ I• C•nlllll ! u !'l ")'' ll 11'• ~ ~ l'r•ft~ !II <Cl ll •; ~ 1 ' "' G•Wlh 6 4 ! 1n \Jn C•oltl ~91 'I~ CinllJP! 111 IJ 1~ It : U : l''f~DSul I I>!) Ji)I ;, ' {o~ • 1 ' ' e-4loo llllra or exlr•1 l>-,l.nflll•I t!•t ~II! t~ ;~u~llell Fund! C•ft1L• f l I rl "JI) 1\• •1.:+. '•ut~Cu 1 111 IJ ••• 1~·· 1: .. DIOI i!ot• dlvlllllld c -lkluldt!fftt dlu•· "CO"' .., l'tcm • 1' 13' CHIMPw l \' IHI I I •1 • fu''" I~ 11! 11 t' ,.; 11 ,• -'0-d-Ot<:!~rtd or 111kl In 1110 pl\" :•~tO•n l 66 I f: r::;:-11 11 U ti Cl!lll sw I'D '°"' f'\o lA•, G ' -• oloc• 111v1~ .._P1kl 11 , t Ytlr 1-F:..!'~ ·= ;u ~: l:: :~ CHllloll• IO JI ,.., 1''~-1'. --Pt1111>1t '" itlldt OY•••• ltTO, nllml! ....
r n?e~;~o~af~r~a;; h~~aa~1~~ g~~f,~t( ,: !t ,: :t t~t 'l;~"' ~~ : ': ~=~:~'l~';; f; ~~: f~~ fi~ ~1!~ 8~~ c:/1•~: 1•H !t~ ~:! ~:: ::',~ ~1~~h ;:,1~ ":-~::;~ar0'p:~1:om~;
d th C II • II 8o d At!'1! k I SJ t 'I 1Mom 1 '' l ~ tn1n•A. !IC!b ti ?llr.i n 20 -,: Gt"' ~o ' 1 !O 1 l~ 1 ,, , ~j '• -;'lo l~r, ¥rt1 h-ll1clt•td ot 110111 tflf~ ~ e IV 11tronnu cs ar Corn S! u a. lJ I lo• Sii 6 ., 01 CFI l!I IO;I 6 1t>% tt" fN -~, G•"'! Dll 15 I 1' :.s1. : ' ~ , I •Todt 1111111111111 or 10111 lrG ~-Ofti.•td
r r • n.W non SIOp I< Fvl }'II 'II J,27 nc:•S ottl I fS •I C"-tOb•n I~ 101 1)10 'o 2t.-lit Gffl\ 1"1 ~ t 41•.., :fi.t 1•1o _ ,; O< oold IM1 ~''' t~ •C<U'llU""liv• IU~t 0 • rou G•fhFy,." J~J.!?Vtlllltt>I 1tt 7~1C~•mnl t,,~ t211• 7 1-~+~Gt""'' 4 ~f 18• t1'4 ,,.,_,,wllhlll111olftlltln t r••1r, 11-H""'"y'·
b@f\\'f!tn Atlanta and the ~~".i.,,,111 ~~tt:il f 1111,. !'~ td ~:;:~~~"',IQ :; 11·~ ff"" l:t~ =l·i &:;0~1 lO ,1 ,f:: J · ~;! ::_ ~ ~,'::1110!' tt;,:: .~~~ ,~1:!'!'':: i!:'~~~~
Dallas· Fort \\'orlh arc11 ~ffl'o.., 1• Clfl t• oo ,/!;~ lft J;j~ ,j 'I ~=::, .. ~~ ,~ ;:~~ ~1'' l!''• _11 &:!!':!t :a 1~ n -, u>! -1.0 "'"'J"" •-Dttl••~ "".,111 111 1,10 .. ~,.
-...... -............ ,\ Hjrl 'l' '" W"h M~ ll '1l l hff!l"Y l.l<t ·11 ~· 6!' , -1 1 Gtml"! C•<> 1 it·: 1!1, 1~' j 110(~ dl111df111f O ~tld If! 1tcclo dlll'I"" GI~ A J I 11 W,ll!Mlfl l'l•lll!e ~~"'"'¥ '°'" 4 ; 11 ' l! 1 -10 Gtm1n!" • • 1,j 11 !O'I 1 ' -• 191n "'"''"ltd (tlh 11•1vt {If! f W..dlvkl""' ... ,,,, .. , Ii! 'Ii ~r•• ,,,,,, .. ~·· Ol\;o I 'Sl'• ~" ll'' ···G"''"" !St• ";i.l'·'. j, _,,o• ~·<flt!tflwllon 41"0 •-S•lt1 I" 1•111. •rTENTION TO LITTLE. "'l•r ' • • ~1 1' •11• u iJse~•Clf'I 1 J r'•"'•• " "1 -1'. O•m011 llOlo ti '7t, lf'l , , _ , tliJ-C•tl"fl ,._f',,,fh•"""'11 Y-£H1vl-., Har'wll U l" ~ • ••1 !tlt h•M\tl'i,. 11 14 ""G•T••~ ~ ''J ···• O t COU"Tt.\llS SUCH AS ·•M' ~-· !~' ti '"~ltt'lll , ,. .... s11 PC! u ' ,, • 'I -G ' JI .., ' ., .........,, •rod "'"-' ~ •uH. •..dli-•'41•!rl· "' """11 (.Of I ot M ,., ' 1• ... , " ~ P.,.uf ' JI ~, * ... : ' ·~ .. : 14 ". ,, • ~"' o~ "-£~ ...... •""-W••lloul WA' AN ANO:..WlltlD P'HONf "I"'<'• ll d l .. w.m,. 11 ~111 10 hll~Prt u11 I _. !t 1 ":11 ~:(:0;' ~t 1~ I• ' '• ••n!1 w-w11~ w•rt•nll wa-Wlo•"
IUILOS IUSINIS'-Ht•fl<I?' )ti'" WI""• • •I .. hillF ~!NW I 'i •• 4 '·~rn tr,~ T'; IJ JI'· x,>, I •d11trll)ul•8 "1-W'tef! fU ...... 1111-N~·· ti .,.~n~ ''" ljAI WMI 11111 ~1 • J J1 1'0l. FYll liO ~ H • -•, .. ~0,.,.0,1 1;1 -1 • Jf'"lo ;, I :• D•• (ltll""'Y .. 1-1" toA~ktlJl'lc• Of' rtcr•I" 835 • 7777 l'11-a''f1in1 J!: I ri ~p~1~d \l1 ~ '1';; ~~''<'!1116.. l :: tt, ff(:='< tftOJ'"•"' I ~ l'• a '. 11 ' -'i '""lf\111 Ill bllne ••t~ftlr~ 111K1•~ l~t
O \ Giii J 11 lB ""lfll!t •f! Ml rt "~' ~ It '• lo -I G•n fl!'<; ) loO '"' ::: fr /j'i t•nkrWt!t• lo(\ Dt uc11•lll'1 bW tut:/\ .···········••II\ fr< I 'f Wl1< '' S lJ ~tn '! l I\\ '• 1 -" GtlFl•t• J.,. ill ~-; ;••1 .. comu,.!•1 11'1-'ott,.,. llwe wtiltd ·~ f!tlllf(I F u prlfl '"' l PO JM E ' " fl• f -t O!tl l'o• l to t.Jh. '• NU -•1 •11Nrttl t{N1i111ttl011 , •••
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Monda 's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange ,List
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) Mlflt WW (Ilse (flt CM1 I Mlfll L.tw t!Mt nt Stoek Leaders
Glamour Stocks 11: :l' 1# 1 I: 'U 'liF' 7ru l~~Sll~ I U fl H!! P.\, H~ ::.'tt ~""CV t! t1 ~ I>~ ' ; • i\tOS'r SHA~ 1:~1':.. ., 3' li\i 'i\\ lii% ~ .: A ..,. -.. l ;j -1 ~.1 11o fl Utt J,u Ji -,,. ,,, 1 t llll.ottl.V.N •tt
.. tll I I ?11 •1 "-'11 ~· (lftU of ll'lt I 1.,,, fMtl I( lfWtJk l 13 "-"
Lead Big Retreat
_, ,~ , 'j • , .-\f f~t 1totkt IT.atd on HM HY l to<k b "'""E 1 n !' Ira\ n~ l ~MfeotO I • I 1! -•l '""' IMtlw (1 I J U•1 SI !t -1\l
,: l(O s~ ., ,l'f ~ • l I l :-" -! lr:•gr, ~I J~i Si ! = ·! ~ ... ~,, '';.11 :: 1t tltl u\ utt •
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·-l:IO U Jll1 jl A Ol'D -""' '!' -k.,t !It 1:1 71 .0\ jll, Jt\'1--o
L 01n • I '71-o -o St"d; I "'-I \.\ ..... +---1 .r~""' "~ J • -1 ~ 5cti ll~lr 1 .0 ,., 11 to10 tolo '
l •t G•t 'II ~ j } ''I R " h ~M ~ 11 1 -Iv, 5c~ ""'" 411 ~ 11 1 7•, i. •
(tm\_n ~UH l ;., n" ,. .., "I ' " iili ,\ ·.~; nl•nt llltl<t Ht • I I' I • -•• t~ntl•• 1 ff • t ~~ t rl -•• ltn !If• ~ ' lllt 11•o 1111 _ ) ·~•ll!I • \'•' ' t Niii .Sm"1 tt •1 t -1 o MC• 40b «I 20U 20~ :IO ~
Llt't('O '!,l I n -\1 ""' r,1 Tot '° 100 ,, -kott'"' IO I 3l. -11 b d d f I I h t \V II c:::~w: )6i, ? ,l jf:' \) _1 : ·~~Ht• lit: 31.: ~ i' S~'&rt AO 6 '°' a~ il1 _! 4o a rOI an a r Y S arp retrea On 8
paced
Street
:.:'tr.~.. !i' H~' \, .. ~ .. : 1: bt~,..~101• ,t1: ~1 = i~, f0~t.t;: ;: ,: l~'· M~ ~i'' -NEW YORK (UPI) -Glamor stock s
1...w1N0t 5 • > 11 • I • • 5'°' ~.... 1 s1 »"' ni; '' • -i , toda y m moderate turnover Le.10€1 "° 1 i :IO l I 1\IOST DOLLARS lc;o• IM l «I 111 '5'' .u .a.I -1 I Ltl'IJI "'.IP. JI S' Ill IS -Sto• I on so l S1 !.1 t) +., Th UPI kt Id di to h ed I L•~ .i r ., r< ~. 7't •• Sc ew 81 "' Jt n ., .. 111, _ , e mar e w e 1n ca r s O\\ a oss ~ell""' , • .. I" I' • NIW YORK IA.~l-lllt' lollow ll'IQ i. • St\IO OueV1 , , ' • • t{l -'lo of 0 88 perce t 0 I "2 es 0 the •·pe or th••• t'.,..'rJ/ 60 ,, 1U• i!!o t .~
1
111 q! le.HY I "'°"'' tttlvt 1rock1 IM"H Sc,.","" of tt t I 1 'o p , n n ""' ISSU n ""' ~F '~ ,• " -, '!WI 11111 dol1t vo!u"" l nd 110 n lt Jt-11 '"" -I 934 declined and 393 advanced Lw lef 7~ ' 11, •• '> • Th<t IGIJ I• 111.1..i on t~t 'l'lf'Cl l~ olct fbdWorlG "' 11 0 1 10 o 'tf c~"' ~I ri' 11' :o -,::: .. 1~• •«~ •••IMcl .... u1t1outd ~ rtit ,••• .... 500 71 " ,, ,, -1\o The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 :ielect Ii: , er 2i y '° 0 "° •O•o '••~•a I •deer 5e• Ito L>O 1'3 •! u • i{ (\ ~tic.'~' ,~ 1)1,, ,.1, "!.., 1 • N""'' 10110001s,...~""·i~11 S::1',n l~ '~ ~{"" f~': f,':=i'' ed blue chips \\18S off 581 at 77831 near the bell
ti t't~o :it to 11· • J ~· " l~:i" .)(I l i.. seoco ot a n• nh 7)>• Turnover of around 10 m1ll1 on shares compared • ,. ~ 11 11 -1 .rt:• 0 0 u 24~2 ~ l !ellon In' 11 $ •I ••-, f l',,~ ~~'I r 11 11 • ~· ouo1:• 1 ~ ~ 1 5•·~,.,,., sob n ,, \ 1i~\ '' 1 -1•1 n 1th 10 980 000 shares on Friday .. M. 0 lt • lt ~ li"'V ll m ;it 1 l~' 0 Ill t • >i • I to -1. >\ it\;,~,,.Y,'!~' 'A'!~!\ if.• •
1
,:,. 1,t. Nr'°C.,il'° u.111i iJ 1l;~ 11;:1i.~G ~ u, ->t,~, ¥.<.1\ ~,t -1._ 1 b kNewton Z1ndde1hr analyst, for the1 t F tHutton · • l 1 c:1 t• w111 i;:"' '~I '11 n• it; pf l' 1 n ~ n -,, , ro era{e sa1 ere \\as no rea ne,vs o spur MTV 11 t \.. • ' .. , •010'<1 'l'" I '' si.~"""'w"' * ••'1 111 11\•, no "" 1111 », l's ',I l's ~ '~~ Pao i ~1. 11 .... '~~ion klb s u11 ,, 1 » 1 _ "' lhe mar et on He added that much of the selling ~•lV oS M•rno•• 'j~ j!I 10 51!'l·~ 1 t i 0 9\o t,. ~
-1 cr:,o J'f ,1: ,: ,: H11~•-v-t 919 .,.; Ht ' s '"•!Go 1,~ it "" " n ; = \\as profit taking follov. 1ng recent big gains U:: ot< I' 6 l't ,. 19 1 ,No r i ... on '•l7 •:. •1 ' S1n• •tfr<> o •l'I .(ll-A th ,-I ''°" 1 • , " • ,;1 • "1 • ... \ •~coe o o i1Jtt J" ~. s •noat 110 '° n )t .,. no er analyst said there appeared to be es!'i .-;~~..."d "' 1~ n' •' u'• ,1,~ C:~o S74l• )I ,,,,5,.,..,,.,,. o 1• '' t'~ .,,,_'
M .... riw 1J •o ii~ Ji ~ , s """"ft "°~ 11f ". Ji,, "' -, , confid ence aboul the prime interest rate being cut '•' • d ~o tOl'!Orltw .. JO ? ,, .• 11 ,, s "1•P~• lie~ ,, 1 I n n th th k 1•11:0 !N I 10 ~.·,~•m, ~1 4 10 1• • 7• • ~ \ll9I ... , S ~or (D 1 f:I ti 11 16 ~ 7t an ere \VaS 8 Wee ago t lleV no -· ·~ !'"' l'C • '" ... '• s .... .. l 50 s OI .. ' .. ~-I R t t lh h d b b t d l d ·-E " t""' 1 , 1 , 1 11, 11.. t ~os 1 N ti! L•w , .. ,. c11 .. s1< •• o , l •. 11 u _ 1 ecen s reng a een atn u e o a re uc t.,•dv t0to
IL "' • 15 •SO Sii~ 5' JI ~ s~v ~~ ~ 11 11 , U•t 7, I _, I h ( h b !•OPtnCo ~ .,. .. 1 c"'. 1"\o no 1\•-r.ivF c" xi ' • ••• s .... ~.1.o '"" 1~ 3 ~ Ji 1 ion 1n t e prime ra e -that c arged 1g corpara !~~.:°"'lo
• L•fld '° ~· " ., .. " -~. o P ~ ... h " 00 n '1 u }<I t o b b r 11 b k Th t • " Lou .o..-1 sa • l.Jf, ii J1 -• --s ... "' io;F ,.. u ~ 17 , ,1 1 ns -v a num er o sma an s e na ion s ,••on • tou N•"' •• 10 1 ' n '7 • • g•• Elec ~• • 1 • • -s ... ucko 10 7 2 , ,I n -' I t l ti h h d d 1:1::~" nr10:0 o'""''I" fll ,112! ,,, n 1 •1 •k/''"~ kl l 1•'• u ?• 1o so•~••c '° 11 n•• 3 ~ u..; arge ins 1 u ons O\vever ave 1n 1cate that ,1• con IL~~/";1 60io 15 ~ ~1, ~ ' ' 2:~c dnt "•' m u n 1u -• soo L "' '" ' JI :ioo.. JO .. : 0: such a mo' e on lhe1r part may be at least 11\ o to •mo lln 1L udow lnl 1 • 1 ;;, -,,....cdl'ol]6l,I 4 6' •I• it -h SO~Con\ •• t !J\ 11 11-frnn9<ojliS
11k,... s1 , s J;i~ ~; ,; ~ _ .. ~~d:c:" J ,: ~.: ~1,a 't~ -1~: ~~. ~ic;1 '' 1~ 11 1• • " ,,., three me>nihs a\\ a) 1~:~ ~ ~'O'c:o"o ~ ~,, ~ ;,-"'~0•n "''' Jl'll 19 2•~t ~cuJrG •6 • 1~1:" ''' ''~ IBJ\I kin g of the glamor groun \\as amono r•~'" ~ ·~•Vn, n n 1 ! ll>• 13 ,, !oEdli I ~ 3 •1 7•\t 71 ~ Sou!~n "" :io 3', l!,,. l$•' _ 1, ,. -. tll nr 111
LY'"'' on so 1:n :M rr.1 »: =" Eo ofl to a 10 56 5' -11 Soutd~ o111~ ' n \ :no 11 \ the hardest hit issues closing dOl\n 8 112 at 316 1/2 !',', \,011·50 -M-Olo:t C.t 1• 11 n n1 n1~-Sc.••'"5 °' ,, l•• • u ridtll !!, OE 01 eo 110 ' ., 1 • 1 ' -1 s.ouc:, E .t11J t • n. 311, 31 , -One view is that big losses ln the glamors mav be r1:::~11~s1 .1: ~ ir; 1: _, ! rui:~~~ 1 J ~ ,:1: ~ ~ :'' + • ~~g~ ~ s; i;.: J;'•, ?? ~ 7 • ,•,•,o,,~,' .~~ , it~ , , \ 0m1.-"" , , 11 in. 11 .. "'souNG•• 1 40 ,1 ,0" .so iO . _ •• an 1nd1calion that the bear market or 196g..i0 Is ,,. u 1 iio
'
", 11, 1• ~ ... on101L 111 •xi •o ••-••Sou •1c 110 1• 11 :i..l\ uo -!tnally burning Jtself out' Some analysts noted l'x'°" to
l 1 o-ltf" ~. 1 6 0 U!o l't -, S!KJl~n lt~ J l" "'" It -~ t"1r~ Jtfl~ '' • • 1 -1• •.ni-11 11'0 ,~, 11 • tt•• n\ sou llv °' 1 • J 111. u .. that glamors tradlt1onallv have been the last to Tot•n !If * 1~ ~~ , J • 11' JfJ :.,,v, 1
1 ;r• ~~: ~\· -~! :::;: ~s "':J 0: ~·: it• ?O>• .. dechne in a bear market l=0~. 4 o• l ., ., ut I Co ., 1: ,., ,. • 16 > S1>1• .... 1S. " 1S 1~1~ 11 • + Tllo .... JW •O!
6 ,, 1• -•• T •n~ ' ''" t9, ' .. ~ s~. ,,,.,, 60 " ,,.0 ,.,.., 1:1: _ S S Kresge Jersey Standard Carter Wal n 1r1rivo t11 '' ~ " Wtn1~, I «I 11 It ~ 181' ti -l~t 51>1 ton -<O 7 11 10 I~_ j T Cbro •O
}II ~~ •;.., : • ~W:;I ,, • ~~ it~ ~~1; j; ~ ~; 1 ,s"" v Hu r • s11,.. !1" , 10 _ ,1 ace and Roa n Selection Trust were among the ~ ~! .. , '"' ' " 'I •• .... ~~1 "' • "'* • • -~,..1t !-D! lt 11'• ~ ~ '' l -• most active stock t t ""' 9 10 ·~ ,. 1 i? -•rd1N1,. 60 1 • ~ 111a lj"'.:: 1, s1>r1cru• '41 11 ti.; •. ,, , _ ,_ s 1n re rea ~O:,RW' "°•
IU I• ' .., • -• •<G.r.· so 11 ll • )I ll -Sp< nalM " l! • IS u•• ~ Jersey Standard closed at 52 118 rr 1/8 ... " S0\ 5• t Pa<!n!xn ,to 6 " "'• l i~ ' S~u• eO IOt 7' )I 10't )01, -0 TOOd5~, 17:0
ft P&cl' 60 50 " • ,. ?6 ~ "' Sou bit 8 I !O ff! ' "4 lf'I ~ to 1Edl 1.a, ~ ... "" -) Pie Prt '~ j] ;•t ,.,, 76. .. IQ\l bb• of 1 1 II• u·~ ···~ •1 l~ • YI " ., .. _,. Pl<Pwl }I ,, 0. l'O,t 10'• = . ~' l r•l'MI I }O ,. n·~ n SI ,_ ... .., ...... ,,. ......... 41!1•••w••'""'""'' .. -............... ,.,, ...... · •,•,M •• u'.'• "·· '' l • P1c lw! ... r IO 7Slt ~ .. 11 ... 1 ----. --.-.,.. -....-
1970
Sl -'~ll'1<T T 126 ~· 10 t r lt i ->o "' J:I , ,, , -~ P•cl l ~ 6 l.!O> tt tt It -1 1~i ': i'ro' • ;,n"'th &f! 11 1~: 11': 1~'; 1 c J CI ' p • Am ' s k E h L' t; ~: ~. ~ -,.. !i~'.::~ ·~ ~§ ij: ~.; ~ :. omp ete os1ng rices -er1can toe xc ange 1st
N.Y.
j;. ?; • ~ :: ~=~·~'~ f( s,' ~,· "' 4'\.l ~ 1 1 NEW YOJtlC 11.,l M-•Y I cemo •'-• "'ft I '° 1• llS, 11~ 1 l , •MIMI IC
J 2 ?1•7) "•kHtnl<O ~rr<l"'-....... c."Sli:x:tE•Cll<lllttD l<H •oPrn 2 •• •'>l•'J "'''""""'!
H '5 '', 'I .. , •• ~ Ptn to t , ,,. n j3')• ' "' P '1 S ./l'C 1 i'O'oo 10!'! -I• '••nk1Nu ' Jr n , ~ n _ ~o Ptnn f.•n " 15 1' > , -"' ''''' Ntl 111 •IQft I"" u I ' , I" 1 + '~ ''f"ChP t •n I ?! 21 ~ )5 + 'I) PennO ~ olO 16 1 4 1,, I~• = ' 1"411 ) Mlt~ ltw CllM (J!t lvll Pl' D 17' I " It'' -'t Fr11"l lo 101 ~d lf ~ ii 4 ~~ .:1~ ;:~'Jc' 1 1J !!~ ~ "< !:~ -: -A·B-·~ "c0 .°G J~ ,;~ 1l~ ,f~ _ \\ ~~::,,7',,F ... 0• • i:~ ~: •1'; .:1~i =:p~t. "1'Ji1 .1 ' t, 11\,' gv.. -~. -'bl•~ftP 3' r I" )" ~ -' : .. s:con;i:ff. ll ,. •sit,~ .s\, ~~ -.;:. ~ , ,tl11.-..~9fwt 7l '1 • 72100 12\, _ P1Pl 11f •SCI uoo ') b * •At""' kJm 10 < '> -\o tnlr•E It 1t~1 71 'I It -1~ 1r..,lnc 3'
J 30:\:o tt JO" • '• 01P~ pf • '° J.0 t. \ ·~:. ff + I A.o•r,• Ruul 11 '" • "' '"'"'T to n ! . ' I -~ '''f'" ~ 14' 2• 2ll ,, P911nwl 11'0• !f 711 • _..,,.Onl r• ln1 •'•'•'• ,•,•,• lffi ~'' 1ntl!i.i, 2• I ~~ '• t'"<i 1teftr.,/ 10 I• ~ s s Pinwt oU!O , • 14 + 11.trodlx nc ~ ttll Co 1 1 I f -1\ ,v1c1Hil lO
1uo 1'14 llJ BJ , Ptt1w 1 ,,..1 JJ 11 ;:.,, :!'• '° +\lo At•or, ow .!O 11 lo>o 10' 1 ~ ~"'°' I O.tJ 1 1 1 ~ I<., -• CA Cor• 1P• 'lh 7l t '~tr>nrUn 10 us .lO • JCI ~~ _ ,, :: :..::, ~ 1 j•V. I• 1• -• 1"'°Hf 1' " tt•• ll"o I' -1• tt ~•rt l•
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• ''""' (.h~ .,, ~ I .. -.. l'ltll I .., _ _. ·~ ... ~ -~ "I '' • Ii Im-> ••· ' , -•I'll II wt 1 1 , 'll -~ ·~· "' ~l.8~1~~ ",1ui~•,.:•:1~1 2'l~=1::~,~~ ~~ '\~\ '~\ ~~:1. ~ "'ln1w1 J~ HO<l'I,, ~ )'° 10 ti-. 1 l -b, .~lfl,fl •1111 ,,,, I'•' ll '• -· '•' ~ •L,'';, II on1ni ,. 1 kl /'~' w o 1 • F1tot1 "' 11 n 'JI' ') , ... d~ ~·•flfl ,,, • 1•'• I 11 ' "'' l•fftv • u 0 11. I.I -" 'QI! JI I • ~ I" 'i;lrC&!J ,, ~ •li ) t • ~. C•• t i l .~. "' l'~ t '"'' 1tc
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•M\I 111'1 t 1t Ill o -'1 eocl•l~I .j8 ) I"-llh ~·· S!i ' ..
•• Nf U• ft I• (I ·-.. 0'''' II :t! i:' ~· N " ~ A•ttt .1.(9" I' I I _, ~ll lit ' ··"rt m t l'IC i.i '' •-•~r Sn~ c ~ 1"'-1 ltvl? ""'"
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J 8 Ol!L V PILOT'"
LEGAL NOTICE Ora119e Coutaty Co1ace1·t
SUP•lltoll COUllT 01' 1KI.
ITilTI OP' C41.l•OIUUA f OA
1Hl COUNTY o• •1vt•S•OI!
CAii. NUM•la tl!Jt
'UMMONS UN!ll!D CALIFQIU<UA W.Ntt;-e 1e«•
-•!loft. Pllh11Ul1 V.. M 0 F F II. T 1 MEltCVllY Cl!NTllE, tNC .. • (1Htornll
COt-1110"1 WILll'l.fO f , MOU'Aff Ind
MARION MOFFATT, 0.lfl'!Cl•llh
PEOPLE OF THE STAlf 0 F
CALIFOllNIA to Ille •l:IOW .._
D4'fe<'CMlll5:
LA Phill1armo1Iic Orchestra I
<\clor Fo lr1·
.Stair · Tall,
Motion plcturr actor lloJ\
Foster, y,·ho doubles ns an
Orange County 11laywrlght,
\\'ill address .1 gen('r al mcetillg
of the Ana·t.1odJe!'ka Players
tonight at 7 30 p.111. 1n lhe
Aoaheim Public Library .
I
You 1'1 Olrtclfcl lo 11i. wilt! llW Clenl
ot lflll Co.Ir! In ....,.le.lo ll'lt •boYI tnll!lfd
K1ioll 11 ~I it .,,u.., Pi..Gil,,. i.,
rt-M! to Ille ~r!!llNI Como!llnl ""lltlifl
fllfl NYI lllH tl>f MfY1Q Oii l'9V it! 1111'
111111-1, II Ml"llH wlll'lll> Ille 11>oY•
111mff <•II"' tr wl11!111 f!llMJ d•,1 II
Mtv ... tlwwllaft, ltlCtPI '"•I II I ... IC·
llot. 11 aflli"'-I !~t t i.ft Pu•l11tnt 10 5•t·
llll'I 1Jl.J of '"" CQdt 01 Clvll PrDC•!lurt, W!l~ln I .. cl~n I You "" tw1tll!t<1 '""'
"""'" JGll w lilt • ''"l!ltll rf-l lVt olf:111itoo, llW pt~lntll! ,.,11 ta•• IVO!lm..,1
•or tnJ ,,..,,,..,. CW' o~"'"ltl. ""m•Nlllll In ffl,o (""'Pl••nl, H trlth>O u°"'" tMlr•cl, er wHI -tv ro ,..... Courl tor 1nv atllf:r
rf lltl 6e.,..,_ In tr.. Compllll11t_
Shines Witl1 Bartol{, Ravel
Yw ,...., ~ '"' •dri<• DI •• •llerM• •• ••• m•lltr c_lt, •ifJI tllt c_.. •111111 er ll•h ..,..,....,... SU<~ ,,,....,..,
1lleuld ~ t•111vlleC willlill ttw tlmt t;mij
1111M "' Ill+. tumm.,.1 tw !IN"' • wrJllP
•'9•dl111 " ,~. , ..... 111111.
{1E,t.l J
DO"IJ.lO 0 ~UlL1VJ.N
COO.OMV (lf'r• Ind Cltrk ol tilt
SUl>tf!Of COU•l of m.
1!•te ol c1nro•nl• •or jl•f
Coun!v of Rl•tr1i<ff
BY J. Pcltrtori, DtPUW
O.tfd o.c. ~1. ttu.
GE"IOIH., R.t.5KOFF. SH.ll'HlO .t. QUITTNER
UM Wlblllrt l fflt• .. 4, 5uo!o !Mii
Ln A~teff1, (.llllol"11l1 to04I
Ttl: U1JI Ul-Jlll
ATlofl .. Jt lor ,.l&l11liff
PuOlhr.eG Ort,,... Cu11 O•IJV P•!ol,
f tbrUll'Y Jj 1nd March 3. 10. 11. ltl'll
lll·IO
LEGAL NOTICE
By TO~I BARLEY
01 llot DlllY Pllllt S .. lf
It v.·3s good lo sec the Lo~
Philharmonic 0 r ch e .s t r a
step out o( the Germanic rut h
has so painstakingly dllg in
Orange County and turn
Saturday night to Bartok and
Ravel as the ingredients of an
exciting and stimulating con-
cert.
This is not to say that \\'t
have had cnoui;h of !he
Beethoven. 1'1oza rt a'lld Haydn
v.•hich so often prove to be the
corne rstone of oor Orange
County Philharmonic Society
i " •
I,. ENnRTAl.NMENT
.• .J
conce-rts; bul it was lime for a llartok's superb second movc-
change and we got il v.•lth , 1ncnt _ a brillianlly handled particu larl y brillianl performa nces "61' tv.·o major 1noto adagio.
works of our featured com-ri1ehta controlled what" is
posers. often a bewildering change of
Pride of place narrowly goe:ii pace and theme wilh authority
to Bartok's Divertimento for arid a11 obvious familia rity
SU,EllOlt COUIT OF THE SI . 0 h t d . with th1's c-mplc• • "d ST"-TI! oF c.-.L1F011N1A l'Olt ring re es ra an some tn· .u "
TN & COUNTY OF 011.t.NGe spired direction by Zubin chanllrnging score. This \\'as a
Nf, A·Ul~I 1 d . t NOTICI! DI' saLE oF •EAL aNo Mehta probably tippet! the re n1 en ous 1mprovemcn
,.111sDNAL ••o•e•TY AT '"'vAT E scales in its ra, ,0 ,. Th is lrom the lasl time we heard SALi! AS A UNIT 1:.1111 ci M. M. McCAlLEN. Dece•~· magnificent work is well nam-hi~ orchestra play this wo rk 1~~:~!o'.5 .~~~~~:C~,E: :\:' V:,~ cd and it rings the changes and there \\'RS, Satu r1a y night.
n1 M M. McCALlEN. c1eu.wc1, wm ... 11 from grotesque variations of a constant fidelity from the
ft! 1>•lv•1t ••le 11 • unit to IN lll11M1t · h ( """ i.e11 blofder -111e tttms ind taA-gypsy themes to sublime strings t at \\'as no apparenl .,,,r.,, ....,..11 • .,,, .. 1 1or1h, •nd 1utilec1 symphonic passages thai are al the earlier performance. "' conf!tm1tlon of .. 1d Su1>trlor Court. on
MOl'Clev. Mlfcll 16. .,,.,, '' '"' ._, 01 particularly effective i n The \\'Ork is rich \\'ilh
10,00 o'clo<ll 1..M .. or 1~1!1tr. wlttll"I-'----'--------------------
"" tlmt ~1-1(1 ll'I' I.ow, 11 lftt olf!u ot HARWOOD. $00EN Ind ADKINSON 11
~SO '""""°" C111!er Drive, S..llt. •l4.
Nt.WPOl"I Se,,M, C1!ltom!1, 111 ri9ht, !Ille,
lnte•e11 •'Ill t.$11k of ~•ld M. M.
MCCALLEN, dt.<:P•INI. ,, ti.e lime of hi•
dNTll. e nd e ll •111111, Tiiie encl ln!tr81 Iha!
'"Id 6 !11e h11 1e<111!•td, tiv OH•lllon ol 11w or otl'lf',.,..;~. Oll°'tl' then or in IC!Clfllon
lo 11111 ol Ille wkl M. M. MCCALLEN 11
!tit Time ol 1111 6'•111, 111 and !o "'" '1!11
""" oel'Mlf1.ll pr-riv 1lh1attd '" Ille Cou"'"' ol Ore1111e, 1!e11 ol C1lrtou1l1, <1e1c•lllNI ,.i
&II ol th• lnt•rfll ol Ille dec~rtl 1nd
11111 lnte•••I ol '"" esl11le In I nd lo Ille!
Oil Ind G11 ltll~ l>efWPfn !tit T~nll
In c~ or ""'" L1nas, •• lesMlt'I,
.. nd Sltn11 011 •nd G•s Com1>1ny, 11
lesfff, dll@d December 1, 1t.0, ftnd
•11<0"'"" Ftbr~t,.. 11, ttl-t in Book
1231. 'e•• IOI, Ollld•I Rtt0rd1 ol o""'" Counlv, C1n1om11, •• •~,..,~ bv 11rf'tlmenl lmPndlll!I •fl ind 111 1•11111 1H11w-en &olu Lind Co"'P1nv
""d Ttn10!1 In Common ol Bolw
L•nd1. 11 if'Uo•!. tnd Sl11nal Oil 8.-.d
GI\ ComPfn,, 11 ln.1ee, d,tttd Al>rll )C,
!tJI, •nd ~ordrd A\l'iull 2t, 1951, In 81JO~ nn. ,.,,.. 1n, Olflcle1 Record! nl
O•fl•lll' County, Cltltornle 111..,tln
"Sotiltl L•I"""), IMlodlflll •!I of 110111
Ttn1n~ ,;.ht, Hilt •nd lnlfl"tll lri •""
to th1 15•0 ,.., profll"! ln~rnl .,
CS•Krlbtd lri 11 .. 9r11>h ll. Pin 75 of
.. Id $ol/ll'I L•I ....
All OI lllt lnl•<fll of tl>e dtt~! Ind
lh• lnt.,e.t <>I lhil •st&!• in 1~ L'1se
Clalt<I June 11. 1'40. rl!<:Orded ~~mber
1', 1t41. In 800~ 11?0, P111t US, Olllcl11
llKOrd1 of Or1not Coun!~, C1!Uo<"ft!1,
85 8mtn<led b, eor•trNnl ~-nd:"1 on 1nd ,., 1e11t d~Md D~ctmber 12. 1t~1 .
end rKo•d..:I Ot(tm~r 23, 1'", 1n
8011~ 112'. PllVt U, and 11 fur!htr
•mended lw llltHmtnl belwPfl> 80111
Lind Camoanw Ind Tenarib In Conunon a• 111111 Larwts, 11 i..1~. 1tld siv ... t
OJI Ind Cit1 Camo1n,, I\ ~. d1ltd
,t.pr!J :10, 1'SI, ""' recorded ,t.119'1!1 n, ltJI, ln !ook 277/. P1t9• H1, Ofllcl1\
R«er<lt ol Or111ff Counw. C1lilo•ni1
ll'lef'f:ln "Norttl L•l$1'"), l!'lsollr 11 11ld
Notlh LNM PNl•iM to Ind -· • s••IP ... l.ond wllldl ll .....,,, Pt•llculft•IY
do:Kr1~ •l lltr1!ln ""low ••I forth.
'°lltll!t• w1tll It.Me oil ~,.., 1111 wellt
11111 olrter t.clltflts itlul"1 l'hf•l!lln: Thtt cU1•1n 01rtt! of llnd in the
Coun!Y nl Oran11P, Sla!f' Of C1lofo1nlo
bel"' PO•lillfll of S.<TIOfl ;>I, ?f, .ll 1<ld ~~. Town1/Up t ~uth, ll~no• 11 W><I,
s.11.1. 1nd M. d11crlbo!d ftl • wl1!!1• 11
lollowt:
S11bn1e1•sible 'Dowb'
The unique 'Do\vb' scours the ocean bollon1 tonigh t
<JI 7:30 on Channel 4 \vhen .Jacques Cousteau's
"'fhos e lncredible Diving itacbines'' is aired.
}'il ms ~h O\V tes ts of early aqua-lung. the 1948 ver-
sion of bath yscath and U1c latest diving saucer.
Seven ''arieties of mi nis subs \viii dive at Costcau's
cornmand.
8t~lnn!n1 •I th• fllorl""r!' l•rm!n111
nl th1I ctr1aln lln• cseo.c•iDPd ln '""""" 1ur11 OI LtftM between 601" Lind rom.
i>env Ind Bo1t;1 C/\lc1 Cill" Club.1-------------------------1 Les-•. N'd Sl•ndara Oil (Oh'lll•"v, tenet, di~ Jut. I, lt?O and ••co•<lod
1 .. Gook 19, p19e l&t ol Lea..,., Rec<H"c;.
d Oreriot Coun!Y 11 /\1";no 1 btf'ih'l of
Soulh IM I lfnll"' 111 'llO IHI; tli'"C• •lont 11kl llnf" S.OUlh, 1no f••r to th•
•rin= pa1..t of btllnnlne ol '"" CSt•c""· lion, seld POl111 btll'I• the Soulhw•1r ~II•·
"'' ol Pio! c fSl•nd•rd Bol•• LN'ol!l:
lhl'l>Ct f?4S' H. "' W,, the<oc•,rUl?' N.
54' JO' W .• lh111<.• 2HO' N. 41' 00' W .•
ll'ten<:I 111'0' ff, •S' XI' W,. lh1ncce 1~'
1>lu1 ,,.. mlnu1 S. u • 00' W, lo !~t In.
ltrllCllon wllh lht o•i11ln1I commo" 11"' l>ei"'"" lh• North 8oha L11n
Ind Ill• Soul/\ Bol11 L""""' 1hentt
t11uTllH•l"lv lollcwi"9 ori11in11 common
lets• 11~ btell lo l h• ""'"' ct tie11ln-
nl"I
The Ibo~-do<Ull!>"d Lindi ~nd
l•I••• "" h•rein ato.cribe<S 11 "•n111n·
rd L•nG•".
T°"''""' "'''" 1!1 nl '"" "oh!, +,H• •nd ln!f'•t1I ot lht lie<""""' incl &II ot Ill• rlfM, !Ill• lnll ln1,ro••t ol Ill)~ ~lat•
I" tnd lo tnd und"' or CSPrt~"<I ''°"" •II of tr.. orn•nll• t~i1tl"~ •nd ""1;., o,t,
si11.1nd c1oingl'te1<1 ''' 11i.1. P\lrcn"p .. nc1 P•otcn!ng cn11lr1cl' t n d "~<e...,tntl •"" •II olll•• c<lfl1r.1ch. 1or~m..,11 ~n<I l11>lr~mtnts tc•ne<l•d
"'l!h or wMcll al!tcl u id 1.MlO"""'
L"nds ""'"'"' ~• tt>tJ P•rl1ln tn~r•to. TO!lother wllh 111 of Tiit f11!t"<I of 1ht
csec~nl tnd !tit ln!f•t•1 o' lhlt fJ!l!t
In Ind ID 111 peri.o"~I pro..,•IY, Im.
'"'llVtmt"h" t~1emrn•s, 11 •rm 1 I•,
lk •nlti. ... rvlfvdt1 aMd r.1hll.of·WIY 'ilOHltd u_, O< u'td Of u,.lul or .,,..,
tor fuh1r• u1f In tonnl!<:!i"" w!lh <•
wllldl •!fret I~ e•11lor1tlor!, dfvek11•-
mtnl or -f#!lon ol IM "'•i1nr<1
Linell. 1>•od..ctlon, 1r,1l!nv. 1111rlng er
lr1.....crl&tlon OI hJOt«••Oons or o•btt
mln"al• 11roduc.rtl ""'"'"'"" lfltludlnv bu! net b·• "''" er! llm1111ic0>, .,..u •.
hnt1, bo11•r\, bulldin111.. ri'dUrQ.
m1(ll!m•v •1111 oth•r ~<1ulomtMI, 11•M line•. !>OW•• lln••· l•l•11bon• 1nd l•lt11••11fl 11.,,,, ro•(I< ~nd o•~tr .,,..
0>11rten~ntH 111<1 t•c+llll•~· ~~Id 111, 111 14!0 ·~•I 4nd 11•rM1ri•I prfl-.
ff•IY ei • 11'111 wrn I>< m1dt 11P011 "'" tollowln• iorm~ 1nn conOll!onJ and not
11t1• .. rwl!t:
T!w PUr<""'' ••ke l~•tl ,,.. PIYlble
'" t•sfl. 11 .. 1111 moM•Y "' tH UMl!Mt Sl1tct. •f'Od 1t11H f)t o•ld v-conll•·
lfttllon nl rr.. '°''" bv !tit Court, T1'ot r,~1
And .,.,'°""t 11'111>tf1Y otfe""' for !lif'
shill bt M!IO •• t un1• •nd nol ol""'
WI .. , •net l\lt [>"'CltlO .. •"1f '"f Ille f!1thl
To rclt<t •"J and 11! t11d1 ,.,,~ ... l•nd·
•t?d wllh or without obll111lion lor "'"'' mtnl of b<okt•t u1mmls1lon. Thi: c.oit ol
~••rnllllltlon 1>1 11111o, •!'CllMll"" or con·
VtVl!'>Cf , 1nct •nv 1>11llcv nl tl!lt lnlut• an« ""'!cb !be ""''(lllltf m•Y tfQul•e
1n•ll be •• ""' to!P cos! ~nct '""'"'" ot !ht 1>111'(.11~'"' All ~oDD!lctblr! i:i•or111on ol I••••· renh, ~·•"""' Incl m11ntt,,.ric. '"~l>fllM "1111 bol CDml"'ltd Ill ol lhf 3111
dtY of J1n11tr¥. 1'10. tn<I !olld Ull, llPOfl
Qltllll'!nlUOllo wlll bt ttl0<!l"t •• el u ld
t.ttter d•tt. l!lldt m 11119<"! IDf l!utel\IH
~ Ul<I ••II end HrtOIMI Cl•-tlY 11 I
llfllf, IN! not ot1WrwJ1t. mw1 bf ln ••II
1..,, IW'd wUI bt r«P1vtd 11 "'" elfk • el HAll'WOOO, $ODEN &-AOl(INSON.
•llv<"'"'I tor uld Cf'E•ecutor-. •• SSll N-' CtrileJ Drlv .. Suflt (),!, H"""""'1
llNdl, (elilom!•, ot m•w W 119'd •1111
1"1! (lort M IM SUH!'..,, Court, or ilklti...
..... ht "'°"' Co.E~ecvton •I "'"Ir •II(~ tof Ml"'" .. , 191)1'1 s.-1-111 r.tr"I.
Hurolf.,.IM lltec~. Cll!foml.. 11 ..,v
tlmt '111tr "'"' .uMi(•I~ of I~·· nllhCI •nd bflort m1lll<11 ,.Id \lllP, DATEO ; 'rbru•rf u, 1110
M. M Mc:CALLEN, Jill WILLIAM M. H. MtCALLEN
Co·E•tc.u!OrJ et llW> WIM of M. M. MtCALLEN ........ HAllWOOO, SODEN I M AC>ICOISON
A~I DI UW
Ut "'--' C1fMI' ~ • hfM Qt
""' Offk• .. ,., , .. ......., 1oor.11, c.~ nus
,.,~ 1no .... 1111
Alt9PIMl1'1 W C•l•tellltn
"OIMllMll Or1-Cot1l 011~ ""'""· .... ..iot~ j , •• 10. lf10 )l•-.Jlo
e,y The DAILY PILOT l Just fo·r 'Peanut•'
Cross word Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Mori
5 Turkish li llt
10 And othe1~:
L.111n:
2 wouls
14 Cily on
lilt Arno
15 Synthe\lt
fiber
l!i lnt~na!icria1
~tll~U{f:
17 (,loken·
s11+tt, t Q.
)9 US C.ov1.
rmployees:
lnfor111a!
20 Restrain
.. lh.
c'ha1n
21 80111
22 Busy as
2 w0..d s
"23 ..... bear
25 LHr; Prrht
Zli Possr ss1vr
·~d 30 Fema lt
animal
31 Rl'ler
ind!rtc.t!y
J~ P1 inco ple
J!i Susfrns ion of I ghlin11
38 Traditional
RC"1P
color 39 Full
~l Rentl11g by
;igrermtnl
.. 3 Prlo1 lo 44 Archltrc·
tural order
4t. Under
emo\101lal
stra in
1 )
"
"
"
\
11 11
•
" .,
'
"
" ..
•
..
"1 hflpassiv~ 49 ..... 611111-
swick
'ii Pl ant
52 Varnish
in9reditnl
53 Pra1srworlhy
11ua1ity
'iS Tease
'i7 Rocky
pinnacle
'i8 Cudd Ir
!il f!ool
O¥l'rhan~
ti~ .......... .
blazes·
2 word~
b!i Gland:
C.omh . form
!i7 Willow
68 Ory
!i'l Pausr
70 Al l set
to 110 71 Taste ····
OO'f.IN
l Sarbecuer's
~cttssori
2 Fruit
l)foduc\
) HtlDtt:
Ahbr.
~ Ho11srhold
fit\ure
5 R~ined
Ytty
h~rd
Ii Pa•I of
the body 7 Spare In frame
8 Ttrm or
endtarmenl
9 Po~er
playt1s'
·~d
,,
JO
" ' "
" ..
" , ..
"
"
"
,, ..
Yrslt1day's Pr•nlt> Solved·
LO Rr n•1"r ~~
a nett>:.:.ary
re s1ill 11 Sm.111
drum
lZ Tn .. -
Lellfr
perfect
2 WOid ·
11 ····wolf 18 so~k
ltJ~ 24 Foolishly
fond pe r~on
25 farm
so1111d
2!i Rahb1\S
21 s~t •·1 nlM.'ralion 28 C.i!llilll'I
ca naDC'•
l Wt'ltd ~
2~ Pr111"lan
n1one ta•y
11111 \ 11 Onr-SDO:
32 Dull
]} Ha"tng J
border
35 Physlci~n :
Informal
'
)I
'
"
' ..
" ' "
"
"
~ ' l c ,. b :.
3 10 70
J.1 '-oncl of
•o Wool
weuil·t
~2 St1 l(h
45 lnd1 s110•
Sl\IOn 10
mo\1011
4~ Nol
"'~riilt s\
SJ Graoe
proc•ssin!J pl~nl 5) lJIQC
''1"1'11.111\
.1111m~I
~~ Thr1CP,
Ptcf1t
~S R111
S!i Mo"c lorward
wo \tl d1lf1t11lt~
~1 us
m1s~1\~
':i~ Pu~r t f'
Ii~ P1cpos1t•o": v.11 .
bl Put do~~
bl RemrianlS
&S Sii e~d for dry11111
" ,,
"
" 60 "
"
"
mockCry and satire -two
qualities capably exploited lit"
much of Bartok's work -and
f\.1ehta 's close d tr e ct ion
ensu red a raithtul reproduc-
tio.1 or the great Hunga rian's
message.
•
'I \
'
'' I Let tlie 'S11nsliin.e' 111
•
FostE'r \\ill t11scus~ his years
ln Molly\1'ood ;111!.I his ex.·
pcrien<'Cs in ri!n1 <.ind ~lage ac-
ling. The publii· 15 uiviled to
the 1necling.
ENDS TUESDAY BA~6RA OMAR ~ ,STREl~~p,,;~~IF 'i'.11~;1
Our conducto r was no less
devoted lo Ravel's swirling,
sensuous "La Valse" which is
second to none. includi ng
Bartok. in the aforesai d
1nockery and satire depart·
1nent. J\s qualities have,
JJerhaps , b een best
dcn1onstratcd ln dance rorrn
but 1'1ehta reminded us anew
or the glory to be found by the
capable director in the wor k's
original orchestra stn1cture,
Here again 'v.·e have abrupt ~lary Sullivan as ... Lillie J\larr Sunshine'' serenades forest rangers (from
changes or pace and theme lcftJ Don Castle, Bill Po\vell, Richard \Vood and Bill Berls in a scene from the
, ,.,.,:~ G 1RL
STARTS WID. -MARC H 11
"Downhill Racer"
\1•ith heavy demands on the musical resuming tonight at the Laguna l\1oulton Playhouse. strings, particularly in those ________ ::_ _ __:;:__ __ :__::__:::.:~=...::::.::::::.:._::::::_.::.:::::_--:::------1 2"~~~
tempestuous final passages.
But all came through with
flying colors and a splendid
airing or the evening's closing
work.
Ravel's utLcrly delightful
''J\1a rilcre L'Oye" /Mother
c:oose) suite opened our
Ravel-Bartok evening and
he.re again the shimmering,
impressionism of the gre,at
Frenchman v.'as carefully con-
l'eyed in this touching. ;ip-
pcating v.'ork.
ll s final passage -the
lustrous. dream-like "fairy
Garden" -has Jong been a
ravorite of the ,.,.riter and is,
in our opi nion, without equal
1.1 i!s field ol 1nusic. f\1ehta
and his orchestra caught the
spirit of the \York in eve ry
detail and added a little
cnehantment of their own to
this glorious ''Mother Goose."
Barlok's ''J\1.iraculous Man·
clrain" suite brought us lo the
inlcrmission stage of the
University O( California a I
!r\'ine concert and thi& clever
11.flrk -based on a particul-
·1r1y bloodcu rdling and gory
1;i lc -e>11joyed a careful
·cading.
Bartok again rings the
changes \Y i t h astonis~ing
rapidity in this swirli ng work
bul l\.lehta and his orchestra
y,·ere n1ore than capable of
n1ee\ing the demands of an ex·
:1cling and exciting score.
Take equal parts or Bartok
and Ravel. add a fiery dash of
Zubin ritehta. leave the shak-
ing to a di sciplined and
rtrdicated Los A n g e I e s
Philharmonic Orcheslra and
you have a musical cocktail
par excellence ..
It '''as chilled, of course, as
all Orange County concerts
are: by the traditiona l
apathy of an audience that
simply doesn't kno\v how to
applaud. Afehta should ha ve
bet>n brought back a dozen
times for the Divertimento
a11d "e ry litlle less (or that
fina l Ravel.
lie cam e back to the stage
exactly three limes. It just
isn't good enough.
Children's
Guild Sets
Worksl1op
Thr Children's The at er
<:uild of Ney,·port llarbor will
(lffer a new c reative
<lramatics \\'Orkshop t Or
adults, scheduled to begin
April I.
Pat lfume, a graduate or the
Pasadena Playhouse a n d
former member of the 18
Actors Repertory Company,
\l'\11 be the \\'<lrkshop director.
Di1·ty Man Wetls
'Lau.g h-1 n' Zanies Uniting
lly VERNON SCOTT Julie Andrews so he changed
his name. llOLLY\VOOD (t;PI I -Nol ''If viewers choose lo see since Tiny Tin1 and Miss Vicki him as \'.'icked or lec herous,
married on the Johnny Carson then it is they who have a
Show ,.,.iJI a television nuplial warped poinl of view. Not
rite touch as 1nany hearts a!) Julius .. .I mean, er, Tyrcme."
the ,.,.edding of (; l a d y i; The versati le Johnson al so
Ormphby to Tyrone J1orncigh. µlays the Russian, Rosmanko. on the shO\\' in add ition to the These l'Utkoos \\•ill pledge Nazi, \VoUgang. and Rabbi
thei r troUi i'i·larl'h 16 un Shanker the Indian guru . But
"Rdwan and ~I a r t 1 n 's his favorite is Tyrone.
Laugh-1'.1," the highest raled "I conceived Tyrone in 19511,
series of the year. basing him on a caricature of
It is a triumph for dirty old a little E;,iglish barrister. I'd
1nen. done him at parties and on a 'l'yrone. as played by cont! TV commercial, but never as
cdian Art<! ,Johnson. is lhe ,1 full-fledged character before
white-haired amorou s old goat Laugh-In," Johnson says.
11•ho has been n1 o 1 es l i n g Once he assurnes the idcn·
Gladys on a park bench lor lily o( Tyrone ii is o(ten dif·
almost t"'O years noiv. ficu lt to shake him out of lhe
Gladys , a frump tn hagAY characterization.
.. , . , , I
l11Utl.t*l $;tl,U)1 '0 l INPQ.llU.tl.Wt
HELD OVER
9 ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
INClUOES
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS
sweater and sto{'kings. in-Asked wh y Tyrone was mar-
variably has socked Tyrone rying 8 hag like Gladys.
1
m _ I
\l'ith her purse 1n response to Tyrone na rro"•ed his eyes jn • .llle4ii1J...:-,,..,-his advances. J,., °°"" W regret a.r.~~ g __ t;D--. ... ! ...
Boll1 Gladys. port rayed h.v "I 1.,.as forced into it by an -..J.'.Dl!il!IJt;OD-,,vcvun;.
lluth Buzzi. and Tyro,ie, it ex-b3rteode r and an ex-used J .a. ... d;:;" ~-:th I \1•ould appear, couhl do better car salesman," he ex plained _J.,~i.7.UU
in the marriage market than _ the forme r occu pations or
lhcy have. By con1p<1rlson J)ick ri.tartin and Dan Rowan. BARGAIN
Tiny Tim and .i\liss Vicki are "They wanted 'fyrone to he MATINEE
Jlilr. and Mrs. America . part of ''11ake Amer I ca
Johnson is one of the world's Reauli(ul' by geUing him off WED., 1 p.m.
great pul·on artists and feigns the st reets and away from FREt: Rf~RESHMENTS
indignance when Tyrone is park benches. l ~~M~A!'!·!•!D!M!!"!i'ii!'O~N~S~lii!.o!io~~ll described as a l<:>ch. "Actually Tyrone is not a[~
"Tyrone is not a dirty old man to be tied down to any
man," he bristled. "l!e rnay Qne woman. I c;m'l guaranteel;::::::::::::::::::::::::~ll
be a health hnzard anrl a there'll be a marriage March BALBOA ~yesore, But a dirl y old inan? 16. There are three possible • I
Never. I take umbra AC at th;it. endings:(\) the snake ending 673-4048 ,
"The truth is T Y r on e 12) the molten lava ending (3) o~EN
lforneigh is nol hi.~ rc:il n:une. the space shi p crashing into 6:45
I le was born Julius Andre\\•S. the temple ending." 70f E. lalffl
As a boy he was called .Julie" r-----------[L~ .. ~llooo=~•:•~n~I•:'"~"~~~ \Yhen he cntrrcd s h o "'
business there already \1•as a
HELD OVER
TWO ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
A man went looking for America
And couldn'! t1nd 1l any1·1hcrc ..•
'""°° '°""""' ... .,. ......... !Siil'"""°""''-·-
~1(; \1 ,.,, .......... ..
,\., .\11i. .. ,·l'..J ..... 1 ... 1', .. ltr1>tM
Peter O'Toole
Petula Clark
'.'Goodbye,
Mr. Chips" .............
EXCLUSIVE
AREA SHOWING
Now Thru Tuesday
r,~
~l
LIZA MINNELLI
WENDELL BURTON
TheJlen'fe (ucli>Q
,,e, "' ,,: ~ ........ :,....!'... r.:r-. ••.• le'~ • ..,..,, ~
.Als•
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
-GOLDIE HAWN-
'Steve McQucc11
"Tile Reivcr,;·
7 ACADE.MY AWA.RD NOMS.
iiKh1dinq BEST PICTURE
, .
-i (.Jr' ~
BEST ACTR ESS NOMINATION
-MAGGIE $MITH
The classes • will run for 10
\\'eeks and tuition is $15. J~urther information 1nay be No ot~ .. r n•"'1P1 P•• lell1 vou Alio "10n1, t ¥••v 01y, 8b~u l ... i,,..f,
To11l9ht ot I
flbl<1ined by caltlng M0-2484. or IURT LANCASTl"R 9oin<1 on in 1~1 Gretl~r Q,,,~9•
968-5632. DEIORAH MERR Co,1t lhftn th., OAILY PILOT.
Also in the work! ls a drama !';:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:;;~~;:~~~~ \\'orkshop for high schoolli!!!"T!HltllliiE!Gtii!!Y!P!SYii!oMltlllijO!!T!H!S~"~-========'.'.::-ll ~tudenls, directed by Tom.I:
Laga. an assistant professor or
theater. This class is schedu1·
rd for June \\'ilh a
pcr1ormancc planned for late
July.
Fosse Di1·ects
HOLLYWOOD fUPI )
llobe.ri Fosse will direct
I .a\\'rence T u r m a n ' s pro-
duction of .. Burnt Offerings."
IJ.\!UtOI£ ·tOlOI •I NWICllMf l(lW(.
"" ~l~lureiPl~rs
/lb1JR:hll'lli:Jlerile
CuclGi v
ltttvi..:olol' !> f'l:l•01¥0J11• Piel"' i!j9
HELD OVER 2nd WEEK
AT THESE THEATRES
Wnt C..,I .... """' (1All ,l.ott , •• ANIMIM
ktlt• ,,.,.. M;M.111 C9'11 MIU l*l7U ,,,_
W"41 .. fl ti.Jt.Jr .... 111
11111. J1ll-•1JO.l1••111
I~~. '11f0.I 1s-e:•l10f.l :1,
Ad~lti Und er 12 7Sc
~,!!;f
~' 471·6260
2905 East Coost Hwy.
Corona del Mar
EXCLU SIVE ARE A
PE RF ORMANCE
FOR ADULTS
7 ACADEMY AWARD NO MINATIONS
IEST ACTOIS -Dwstiit Holfmon. Joit "•lqht IEST PICTUlll
IEST SUPPORTING ACTlllSS -Syl•ics Miln
IEST DIR ECTOR -Johit Sthln lro9er
llST SCltlENPlAY
llST FILM ED ITING
Sh•wl1t91 ol 7:00 Oitd 9:10 -Moti1t1n Sund"~
l
I
' l
HC
Ge
T•
"' " R
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I~
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'" "' cl•
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tr:
in:
_(
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thr
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kl!.
ba
"" ly
No .,.
blc
y•
Yo
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t
MrtlM HM
So9wllilii1~
'I Soau11 5 Wlllft.
' •
HOUSES FOR SALE
DAILY-PILOT
-~ Y P ·t.LOT WA
•
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE _ .... ---
Ganeril 1~ Gener1I 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1~--==~\;~~~~~~1=~;:;;;;;;;;;;.;~~~1 1000 Ntwport Beach 1200 BalbN Peninsula 1300 Huntington Beach 1400
ORANCOE
COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546·8640
Open ~•ni1t9t
tin i :30
$700 Down
Eastside
3 Bedroom
To VC'I~ Thi~ home is in
beautiful move-Jn C01·
dition. Lo\\', low dowTI lo
anyone -stt1ng is belirv-
ing. Seller bring transf"r·
red out of stale, !lX·
trcmf'ly anx10u~. Aslung
$23,800 -make offer.
Secluded Country
Fixer Upper
1t£nJa J j/e
PRESTiGE WATERFRONT HOMES
$HOWN BY APPOINTMENT
~ 15 Linda l•I• Drive
Ne\v & beautiful 4 Bedroom, 5 bath home
\\Ith large sunken living ioom & !am. rm ..
\\et bar. Radiant electric heat. Ca rpeted &
landscaped. Priced ................ $155,000.
45 Linda Isle Drive
Nearing completion. 5 BR. 4 ba hon1e. 80 ~t.
on \\'ater. 3 frplcs.. atrium \Y/founta1n.
Blt·in TV system. \Vi th dock ...... $2251000.
80 Linda Isle Drivt
5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family
room & large rumpus r oom. 3 Fireplaces.
4,246 Sq. Fl. Dock & boat slip ..... $159,300
90 Linda Isle Drive
Beauliful 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath home with ex-
tra large Jiving room & master Bedroom.
Carpets & drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip.
Near tennis court & club ...... now $120,000
Waterfront Lots
Lot number 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle
leasehold lol Consider trade. . . . . $35,000
1,ot number 41 : Long v.'aler vie\v with 76.2
ft. of ffonta ge facing Harbor Ji;J and.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 673·7176
General 1000 Genera l 1000
CHANGEABLE
HOME
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 LIDO NORD
6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility
room, with 85 ft. fronting on excellent S\vim·
ming beach. Units are ne\vly furnished, No\v
$240,000. Excellent terms available.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Or., Suitt 3, N.B. 673-7176 By A'pp't.
Gf!:nera l 1000
4-Bedroom,
TQP.·NOTCH
LOCATION!
TOP-NOTCH
CONDITION!
\Vt1l k1 ng distance lo all g1'8de.
lf'VC'I schools in c lud ing
Orange Coast College; t'asy
acress lo shopping & £rt>C'.
\\';iys. l\lasler bcdroon1 i;u1\C'
in scparal<' area from oche r
bedrooms. N-1.C-E. yard and
palio? S29.450. \Ve'd Jove lo
1ho1v you this Ol'lf'!
Colesworthy & Co.
Gene ral 1000
0TAKE OVER LOAN
On lhis culc ~ bdm1.
Rancher. loadC'f'! "'it h
THICK SHAG CAR.PET-
lNG: Custon1 rl r a p e s,
1~'00d burning lrplc. NI'.SI·
led neatly on a Ire<: slud·
ried lol S23.500 F"ull pri~.
$2.000 Down. Take over
low c.r. payints. of $183
a month.
IMMEO. POSSESSION
On this <I Bdrm. Sol Vis-
ta, featurifll: 1800 sq. fl.
2 Baths. &p. family
rooni; used brick frplc.,
el~. hll -ins, dish11·as.hrr,
carpf'1s & drap<'s. G.l. No
mon~y do\\'11, or take ov·
f'I' I his low 54l % loan,
$144 per n1onlh.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
546-3291
Oprn 7 da~·s lo 8:30 P.\\I.
G.I. RESALE sv.o;. INTEREST
4 laq;:e berlroom.!i. I' -1-a
bonui; 111 bath. Brand new
d1sh1vw;her L'On1plimenls this
beautiful bit-in kitchen. As.
sum€' large loan 1n good }o-
ration. l\1nny extra5 l'iUCh as
t'pl., \\•/1v cpts., drapes, pa.
110, !furry thi11 1\l(ln't IML
Paul-White-Carnahan Really,
10'.lJ Baker, C.J\l, 546-5440
51/• 0/o LOAN
$25,950
4 Bdrm + Family rm
Park like )'Rrd "'\lh BBQ •
hrrplaCT, enlry tiall, rire·
plaCf' 1n huge family rm. 2
bath.s. AS~UlllC 5\l ·~ •apr
loan. 5-$0-1720
TARBELL 2955 Har bor
SEASHORE DRIVE
OCEAN VIEW
1''urn. Duplex. Dbl. i;:a!'age
Immaculate! $4l950
G eorge Williamson
H.EALTOR
673-4350 673-1 $64 Eves.
VTE\V the sunsets Iron\ this
lo,•rly, secludccl. 2 BR. den,
2 balh home $..19,500. Terms.
0-.vnC'r :>is-8007
MESA DEL MAR
of BR. 2 Ba., F'anilly Rm.
Largt': yard. Nr. ghopping &
Fr'11')'. $28.000 Low dn. ov.11/
bkr 499-t!Y.XJ. 49~·51~.
Costa Mesa 1100
Immediate
Possession
F!lA/VA NO 00\VN, terms
availablt:, Ni~ 4 BR, 2 BA
BA YFRONT PENTiiOUSE
Panoramic \'icw. 2 BR, 2 &.
Dotks. ~.500 10% dn 7%
int. lilcKenzlr. Rltr &l&-0732
504 W. BAY AVE .
Charming new 3 bd rm. 2 ba.
Mediterranean style; build·
er'a home. top quality thru-
out. Top loc. (occupied).
Bill Grundy, R•altor
833 Do\•er Or., NB 673-7176
Clos_e Out!
34.S BEDROOMS
Refurbished VA/FHA Fine.
HAFFOAL REALTY
842-4405 Newport H•l9hts 1210
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
$15,500
FIXER.UPPER
4 J\tO'S YOUNG
\ !!!~.~~~~~~~~ \ 3 BR, 2 BA, lr'plc. Plwi:h
crpts. Take e\•er GI loan.
Submit c1o .... ·n. $30.240. Seek
Leadership -842-4466
50 x 140 R-2 lo!. l BR Span
stucro \\•/lrplc, Room Jor
11101"C nnils.
BRASHEAR REALTY
847-8507' Evrs: 642-0-127
Baycr•st 1223
FINE BayCT"f!st Four BR
home for sale or I r a de.
.Secluded Slreel, large yard.
548--0773.
Lido Isle
LIVE I
ON LIDO
1351
3 BR. &: den. Lovt!ly Pallo
~love-in cond. $65,0IXI
(ancl • v.·e have others)
Walker Riiy. 675-5200
33136 Via Lido. NB Open Sun.
SPACIOUS
CUstom built famU)· home
-4 &Inns., den. 3~: baths..
..,..._ --$76,500
REGAL * SPACIOUS LIDO REALTY INC.
Dover Shor•• 1227
COMPLETE VI Ew· I ,",.n~v'"1a!!!!!!u,.•0,... .... ,.•1l-!!!!!!7300""
Bay & i\1tns. 4 Br, 41~ Ba 3 BR, Den, 2~; Ba. Cor..
+ maids. High cciling11. temporary, Arch It e c I
~ ~ II built 11round court. deslgned & hit. Lo Int .
4 car gar, E-Z maint. Im· transferable I o 11. n. By
med occp_ $178,000 furnish-owner, Phone • 673-2854 for
rd. A.ssun1e 6~~% loan. 01vn-appl.
f'r 5~8-iZ49. q ----========0 I Huntington Btach 1400 University Park 1237
LUXURIOUS-
A1str. Br. w/(rpl. Dctp !ihag
carpetlng thruout. 4 BR.,
21, ba. On a gttat corner
toe. in Univ. Park, en your
ovo"n land. Lndscpg. design-
ed for all play & no \\"Ork.
Ideal for lge, family. t".P.
$37.900. •
• Red Hill Realty
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anylime 833-0820
FOREST E'
0 LS 0 N
Inc. Realtors
OLD FARM HOUSE
Fountain Valley 1410
CLEAN 4 BR. :Z BA . Crpls,
drps. bllr't!, cu 1-d e -sac .
S28.000 By Owner. 546-6837
Laguna Hills 1700
LEISURE \\'orld Resale.
End Grenada. Lower
Cadiz. Upper Cadit. Call
Ben Harrold, Bkr. ~15..'iO
Laguna Btach 1705
BEACH
CONDOMINIUM
SPACIOUS 2 BR -
2 BATH
Faclng beautiful larp pool ,
just 100 yds lrom private
beach. Laguna area, per·
feet lol' year round living,
investment or rentals. Will
se)I coinpletely furnished or
unf\,lrnlshed. Tv."C) story plus
lower carport. storage, laun..
dry room, washer / ~r.
Wet bar. Fully maintained
gorgeous irounds including
2 pools, tennis courts, etc.
Close to su~r markel shop.
ping, Coast Hiway. Excd-
lenl buy, niust see to appn!C-
ialf'. Sho\\·n by 11.pp'L call
owner at 4gg..2152 or 835-n791.
Locater! in the Ba· k Bay
area of Newport Beach on
~~ of an acre. Featuring 2
horse t-orrals, '!nclo.!.ed
lanai ove rl ooking
beautiful SY.'imn1,ng pool.
The 2000 sq. It., 3
bcdroon1 l't'S\denci> needs
pa1nl ar.d elbo,v grea.~.
hut what 11. pr1.:c. Owner
v.·ill finance ~t 11·2~ -
Call today.
Executive Home
Pool -Saycres t
Spacious CU!i.lom 4 BR & 31,;
BA residrncr. featuring love·
ty n1as1er suite, wilh lirt'-
place. exciting rormal din-
ini; r m, large family roozn
11.•lth (.'OZY used brirk fire.
place. Gorgeous s"·imming
pool and many other fea -
t~s. $84.500.
This new exclusive hst-
ing could be it 2,3 or 4
Bdrm. home. Take your
pick. o"'ner/builder 11•ill
put back 1valt:c; as you
desire to 1nakl' this the
honic or your r'hoire.
Lots of 11.'00d pam'ling
,t, indirect·ligh!ing. Ewn
has a b\1-in dining room
table. CarpP.ts lhrough-
out. Thi:i;. home l!i. riifl('r-
t'nl! ! SC<' 11 rw:iw, $26,9j(l,
01111rr 1v i 11 ronsider
FHA/VA linanc111;.
REALTOR
Nc\vpor! Bench Office
.102& 13aysidc Drive
BAYfRONT on quiet ('Li l-de-sat', 2 hicks [ '"""'""'~~~~""'""'""' to park, schools & shoflP'g. 2 STORY
2 or 3 Bdrm's. F"ermal din-
ing rm .. giant country kilch-
en, seivlce pott.h. Fantastic
lot. 100' frontai;:e, 240' deep,
over 11': ac~. Zoned Ml. Stor-
age heaven. Trucks, equip.
ment. Minimum On. Owner
w\11 help f\nanef'. Don 't be
late -Call 962-5585.
Laguna Niguel 1707
PANORAMIC Ocean View
cor. lot. Pvt bch. Monarch
Bay. $25,950. 499-13 44 ,
4!6-4519
675-4390 6•12-7777
Pete Barrett l FOREST E.
OLSON
Electr1cally controlled gates
leading lo garden eniry of
1his bc11u1tru1 3 bedroon1
home.. Large living room
\\'J1h marble fif'('pJacc, spac-
ious family roon1 & sunny
breakfast room, all overlook-
ing bay. l.u:.:urious masfl'r
i;ui1e 1\'ith elegant dressing
room & hath. Cus.ton1 carJX't-
1ng & dC'corator 11'allpaper.
Pi<'r & f!ont. $12!1.500.
Beaut landscaped. a ll bit· This Is the ONL'' 2 story
ins, fireplace & dining. Out homr available in the de.
of tfilvn-o\.11ner, priced to s.irahle TURTLE ROCK
1<ell $2.6.950. Ca.II s.t>s.rn area! -4 bdrms • family
South Coast Real Estate. room &: dining room. 3 bath.s.
3 Bedroom
2 Bath
$119. Per Mo.
Includes Taxes
\Vanl Cnst1 r.1 .. sa? Here it
is -l'ipac.ous 3 bl'droom
hon1e \\•1th ma.~sive stone
l1f't'p la ce, l:iutll-in kitchen
c\e:i;.ii;:ncd for •'OnVC'nicnCf',
forced 11ir hl'a1nu.<:, bJg
hackyarri fo1· ch1ldrf'I'! -
close to shorph[J:( iir\fl
schools and Cal ho li('
school -church. As~un1e
existini:: 4 1 ~',0:. annual
pere1!n'age rate VA lo<1 n -
try $2.:,JOO -start pack·
1"5 ~~cl~J!, . NB ~'
642-5200 "" Inc. RC'a.llon;
4 BEDROOM + FAM
IMMEDIATE • COATS WHAT I $21 ,SOO
POSSESSION & Scarce a....: hens !CC'lh! 4 lru·ge
WALK TO THE BEACH WALLACE bedrooms. 2 baths. F"an1ily
You can assume the 5%. gov-REAL TORS room. Deluxe kitchen with
ernmenl Joan 11·hcre $173 -546-4141-all latest built-ins. CallJC'l-
permonlh pays all. Squeaky (Open Ev•nings) 1ng. lfard ro beat a t S21.500
rlean 3 bedroon1 2 hath 1vllh and only 5 )!(!an; young. llur·
ankle deep i;hag carpet. Mo. I "'"'"""""'""'""'""'""'""'""''I cy lo see, DIAL 645-0303.
dern built-in kitchen, dish-5 BEDROOMS
""''"" ""°' }"!REPLACE. $28,500 $28.500 t"ULL PRICE. 645-0303
WE SELL A HOME Eastsidc Co~ta l\1rsa. big at Harbor Centl'r
2299 Harbor Blvd .. C.:'IT. EVERY 31 MINUTES familv bargain! 2 haths,
hullt-in kitchen, B R I C Ki"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""" Walker & Lee FIREPLACE. "'"b1, • .,. IMME01ATE age. NO down VA. LO\\'
dov.n fHA. See H NO\V or POSSESSION
1oe "'""' WALK TO THE BEACH
7682 Edinger
M 12-445.1 540-5140 1-------
MACNAB · IRVINE
Hcn11y Compan,v
(7141 642-8235
!Xll Dover Dnvl', Suite 120
Newport Beach
Small Down Payment
Hert''s a beauty y,•ith 3 huge
bedrooms and 2 b ii I h s.
Gori::cous brick fireplace.
D11ihn1astrr kilt·lien w i I h
fl ish11·ashcr. Beau!iful car-
pets a.nd dral'lf'S. Dicier coup.
'" tetiring, ~ays !;('_JI y,·ilh
$1400 total rio1vn on FHA
tern1s or NO 00\\'N \I .A.
Call for an appointment.
$20,900 Full price
Ju!ll hJ1;\cd 1811!:1' 3 BR home.
quiet s!rttt. closr. to ~hools.
& slw:ipping. Roon1 for boal
&: cani[>('I'. No do""" pymnt
on VA, or low down F"HA.
Total payments incl taxes
& insul'ance only $J89 mo.
Call 540-1151 Heritage Real
Estate {open f'VCS.)
DELUXI:.: TO\VNHOUSE -3
Br. 21r:i balh. Has built-ins &
n1any e11tra!I + pool,
clubhouv. & rec facilities.
N. CM. Cash to 514 ~ loan.
By 0Yi•nr.r. 638-9646.
Newport Beach 1200
ASSUME
63/• 0/o LOAN
ing. I.·---------WE SELL A HOME You can assume lhc 5:1.~ ~v·
EVERY JI MINUTES cn1mcnt loa n 11•hcrt' sin WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Spacious. near new custom
t:iuill homf' on one ot NC'\\'-
port Beach's mOl'il ~sirahle
cul-rle-SRc strcels. 4 bed-
room:i;.. 3 baths. \vl1 h formal
dining roon1, kitchen eating
nook and famlly rootn \\'i\h
wet bar. Too outsUinding lo
overlook •
Dirty Bargain
$22,900 -
$111.00 mo. Total
Tn ,xce!lenl area. ThiK 3
bedroom home needs Jove.
r:vrt)•thing you nl'ed -
built-Lilli. forced air-heat,
doubll" G:R.rage. pool-size
lol \Vilh a price like this,
yoo1 e11n'l miss. Hurry on
Ulls one.
Expanding Family
5 Bedrooms
-Pool i
R-2
W/2 SEP. HOMES
Corona <lei l\lar. La r g r.
ham<'; 4 bl'droomis, nfficr>.
fm . rm., pool; 2nd home 3
Bd's.., dining. new cpt. &
paint. On Lot & '11. i79,500.
l\1ary I.011 Afa.rion
~
Coldwell, Banker & Co.
550 Newport Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Calif.
833-0700 644-2430
per n1onlh pays all. N]uraky
Walker & Lee dcoo3bedroom2barhw;lh
ankle deer shai:: carpet. i\io-Walker & Lee
IDl3 \Vl's.tcJiU Dr. dern bullt-in kitclwn. di.:.h· 2i00 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
&IS.77Jl \\'asher allfl FIRF:PLACE. 545-9-1!}1 Open 'tll 9 PM JiijiiiPifjiiijpjiiij~I $28,51111 FULL PRICE. i ................. ..-.. -..-..-..--.
I 1iim":Y WE SELL A HOME 16 UNITS
,,.-·-,,, EVERY 31 MINUTES COSTA MESA'S BEST
W I k & L $275,8-00
4 BEDROOMS a er ee You m.,, "'"""a !215.000.
MESA VERDE 7682 Edinger 1.st TD at 6.6% int wi th
$28, 950 8.\2-4-i;l;i 5'I0-5140 SJO,OIXI. do111n. Presi?nt in-
Prime oornt>r lot, close lo
schools • c:hurch • library. Vacant
new exl palnr. Bi,t: pal'K'llcd
come $.1.1.120. per .yr. Call
tn M'e this "lop.notch'' shcl·
lcr.
famil y rn1. 4 BR. ~lcsa Ver-L O . Newport
elf'. s28.fl50. ease pt1on at
WATCH This 4 Bedroorn. 2 Bath. harcl-YOUR wood fl oor h0Jn1•. La~ Victorit
!\taster Br.droon1 . Stone F"irc-646-8811 WIFE --;;~~~~~~~~[ place. !lcavy shake rool.
Her eyes will ligh1 up "•hen • riouble car ro?arage • lots of Anytime
she !lee!i. thi,; sparkling clean Big FHA loan living area 1n this one. See!~=======~:::: family home. A 4 Bedroom Stt lhis outstanding "Rancho it and gel a slart.
673-8550
SPECTACULAR VIEW
of HARBOR
& LIDO ISLE
l Bedroom + extra T'OOm.
Hard11•ood floors. Existing
loan 7%. l sl TD. Vacant,
231 Santa Ana Ave.
IS. of O iff Drive)
wi th rormat dining and 1am-i\lesa"' 11ome v.·i•h 4 gooc1 s29,150 Golfer's Paradise·
Lnjoyed your children ily room in exclusive area !"ized bedrooms & family rm 546-2313 Seoul. home on 10th green
J1tcly:' This home is or l\1esa V c r <I e. $41,500 • "''ilh a large f1-fA loan to ot Bermuda Dul'l('s • finest
Immediate POMirssion
BY OWNER
67~3982
rlesignt!d lo bring a family T•rni!I art' fl exlblr.. take over. llouSI' can be de-.. rt /loo 3 BR
I I ... ..e.'IC course! my . PANORAMIC VIEW d05t'r 1ngelhl'1". Bcauli u S4'231' u•7171 scribed Ill" a tn1r. "i'ltr. ~ ~~ C II 1 f 3 Ba .. pool. ful'ni~hed home. 2001 "-y•ld• Dr "-au! 1,..811 to wo.ll carpeting Kleen'" home. a or ur-°" · · u..: · lncL 2 i;olf earls. Club mcm. h •-I I t 3 B 4 "· throughout. Ii pa c ! o u r. !her dc!ails. s aiu,: roo -s y. r. •M. hl'ri;hip avall. Askin" $~,000 t rl I "· I I ' h''ilt-in tilrrl rt r r am ~ o wa e ron 11umr , X n swim-5'6 S!!O • Xlnl terms. · I I kltcht>n ...,·1t h breakfast ' Foreclosure Pending ming bcac 1. New Y rcdcor. fMMtlnema th89h) Bill Grundy, Realtor 1180 000 SIJOWN BY APPT bar. coverrd patio for out· LLEGE REA''TY Big Republic Tri-level. 5 Bd-· ·
I · 11 ·~~~~_,,-,,.,.---.. 833 Dover Dr .. NB 673-7176 B"ll G d R ii doorii:11me~. ls )'OU r am1· l ittl• Lady Alone lSOOAdamsllltlrblr,tM. rrM, 3 bath!, t>xccllent car-,,...,..,..,,.....,,..,....,.,.. I run y, ea or
1 .. v.'Orth $3-l,9:i0? Sf!e it. 1 •-u 1 "!!!!!~!!!!!~""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'"I .,Ung & many extras.. but 1 • 833 Dover Dr., NB 673-7176 v Must sell this. spot ess ""' 1, $27 995 house in lo\·ely ~lesa Ve~. COASTAL VIEW needs some .... 'Ol'k. Best off· '
Wow!
3 Bedrooms
$20,900
No do'''" In vet~ -lo11o·
down to anyonr. \Y1lh
block v•all fencr, tijg, big
yl'U'd. Jo11o', low payments!
You'd better see this one
• oow!
ORANGE
COUNTY'S
LARGiST
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
t'r. Assum• 5;'4•;0 Loan Dover Sheres Ar•a Plush 1lcep pile C8fllCIS ~lit J('vrl 2 & clen cond. :i y o ~-• --• 1hilooghoul. Lovely custom ~ Terrific 51Ji ~{. apr loan to OU "'n '"'' .,.., .. ,
drapes. 3 huge bedrooms. baths, glass encl patio. Cus-I~~~) aMumc>. -Lo1v monthly Beautiful pool size yrd, 3 BR
Gorgeous pullman baths.. 1o~,g~;ic:Z5fh c~~a~,900. LLEGE REALTY paymen1s. Entry hall, huge lhomle \vi elebg11ntklfcatures,
Ideal IOCAtlon. G~al school lSOOAda!MatHaitior,CM. family roon1. a rrhtrn \\'ilh rg nm rm, rca ast aN!a.
sy11te111. Near. Counlry Club. WESLEY N. wo tcrfall. btillf-lm. 540-1720 fonn11J din'g r m. 3 car
>"llA dowo paymcot '' s200J. TAYLOR CO l•H"'0"',~·s"'E"""B"'E"'A"'u"'T"'iF"'u"'L"" iTARBELL 2955 Harbor ''""'· 183 • '° O • BY NO OO\\'N TO Gl's. Call! u O\\INER. &tZ-5.'"183
WE SELL A HOME Realtors NE\V . VJE\V . Dovrr Shores. 4 BR Eastside Cana l Wat•rfront
EVERY 31 MINUTES NE\\'PORT CENTER 4 BR, 3 BA. fam rm w/lrplc. A&...:umc FHA loan on !hill Duplex v.·ith :Z & 3 Br., right
71U Sa Joa · llill Rd \\"t;:t bar. Din nn, kitchen. -E"STSIDE bo Walker & Lee n qtnn · s · he 1< , me on on the canal with own pier 644-4910 liv m1, mastrr bdrm on t I lo I · argc romer t. nle.nor & dock, $74,500. '"'""""""""""""""""""I Vlt'I\". Drcorator crptg. Court complclely rrrlccorated. To-Graham Rlty. 646-2414
2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
5'15-046.1 Oprn "Iii 9 Pf!f
Builders Attention!
LEASE yard pool. 3 car gar. 311m Sq lnl 11:vmn1.s ~-mo. Asking Near Ne,vport Pruit Ofticc
./ Benulllul l~rge home near ft. Ro,y ./, WRrd Rllt, 100 $Z7 !Y'JO
So r--· J p•--.tn• S . Galaxy Dr. 6')6.\S.'i(l PE.RR.ON 642•1771 BLUFFS -3 Br, '% BA. l • .......,.....: ...... a .• ,., · 1Yim1---~~~~~--l evel , corner g r een
pool. " !!pacious ~rmis. $28 950 JUST LISTED lx:lt/vlew. Cov. walled-
$37:'1 (J10$!!lblyS.1JOl. inc l pool d & F' II 11 I VI II U d & h BUILD lJNITS (t;1) b gi.11~ll'l'll'r. rurnishr.cl if l'lc. 4 !3 rrn am y rm. Ill' )Of rw tli s hcauly pa o. cus. rps fi utters
Lnt 100 11 297 1~·Hh iond J gi l"f!'ll. Olfcrt'd at $.'llJ,900 01, Prune l~al\oh. E11try htill, 1\'Jlh v1r1v of Bay, Ocean & 4 extrris. \Valk IO ~ho~.
Bedroom honic. Top loca· mak~ '"your" of/er! Bkr. full dlnlf\R" room, 3 M•parate city light"I. 4 BR., tull din. CdM II\, Ownr $32,500.
I ' "9 ~ 54 .. ~.. bnth.•. f lrepl1t1(-e. Almos! DO rm &. fo.m. rm. Htd. & 644-4265 ton. r ,......,. ~ fl! I XI n •·---~~==~---Wells-Mc(irdlt, Rltrs. "!!~~~~~~~!!!!!!'!down G.J. 01vner desperate. I. poo . nt oor J>UUl. DUPLEX
MO N Blvd C.>I -TRY 1M' OOW-N 540.l120 $65.000. fEves, 6~2986) 3 Bdrms. :Z baths each. Near 1~ .-.port " ' "" TARBE LL 2955 H bo "B/B" Re•lty 67'3000 $43-7729 644-G&M Eves. 4 BR.-$25.0C!O. Spot\~! New ar r " ocean. Excellent rental area.
$25, 900 cpl•., d,...,..., hltiM. Hd. Home & Duplex $27,$00 Like "'w' 159.51111
-ftr... 2.. Sathtf. OJmer let. $ 19 ,950 E-&kle l Br, prlv 6% loan, trd Richardson Realty
4 Bdrm & 3 baths Priv, g1.1•lm cluh. \\'alk t(I R·2 1o1 .. 2 BR. l BA. painted for clear hse. Leaving area., 2443 E. C.OOlll lllghw11y
Bcaullful f•mlly home. entry 'fl.1111Chooli . In & out, nt>w rrpt.s, oov t)(I~ Ownt>r/hkr. 646-3750. a t ~1acArthur, CdM 675-4031
hall, rilnlnJI rm, rear llv1n1t tjo, ncv.· drlVf'l\"ay, Ee!taidc.
Opttt EYtn1n11 rm .. fln.-pt11C'f', rlne quality tU!At.To" L1ichenmyer Realtor
tiA 8:30 bolll·ln:l, MO-lnQ ' CoRlllN·MA'"1Nf S46-39:l8 E\"C'll : 644•1655
DIAL dn'C!cl &12-5618, Chnf'i'
)'t>ll, 111l. 1hetJ sit back and
li(ll('n to thfl phone rillg?
NO m1thcr what li is, yoo
c:in ~II It with a DAILY
nowlll """'""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'l'T;~A~R~B=E~L~L:._:2~95=5~H~e=r=bo~r 1 _1:=:::::!!"~l·~Il~ll====::!.!;:i 1,;;;;;;;;;;..., .... ,;;;;;;;,;;;,;,;;;;;
u-~ than one )'ear eld.
S11.·~ping Vie\V or UCT "
counlrysidc from upstairs.
3 car garage. PriC'e ju~! re·
duced S.1.000 -to $'12,950.
PETTIT REAL TY CO.
"Th• House of Hom•s''
833.QIOI
Corona del Ma,. 1250
For Sal• By Owner
House & ganige apt on 1 lot.
Each 2 br, 2 ha. Rr.ar unit
current income $215 rno.
Charming front unit. Frplc,
bay l\"indo1v, pine paneling.
Vacant & ready lo move in.
Price S-19.500 with $16.000
riown. Call 673-5218.
R-2 LO'!'
\\'ith pleasanl existing house
in good cone!. Bu ilrl a
garage apl.. lel rhe rent
help pay !or your property.
~JORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
3~11 E. Coast Hwy, CdM
ORAMA & FLAIR
One-of-a-kind contemporary
on ocean side. Exciting 2--
slory living room. 2 BR., 2
ha. & den. AU lhis & Income,
too! $59.500
Hal Pinchin & Assoc:.
REALTORS
3900 E. Coa,;I Hwy, 675-4392
CORONA Highlands view
home. Ideal for couple
\V/possiblc guest qtrs. or
mo1-e bdrm:i;..; overlooking
the town. SEE THIS!
0Pt'n Daily 2-J
4J2 i'<lcndoza Terract?
SI.An Smi1h. Rltr. 673-2010
Balboa P•nlnsula 1300
BALBOA
PENINSULA!
tlouse It Apt. Finish the It·
modellng on this 3 br, 1 ha
hoUSI' on Plaz.11. Del Sur. En-
joy lncomP. from apt over
garagf'. "Fixer Upp<?r."
$-14.000. Loul!: \V. Briggs
Realtor -67J..8110, 673-4-037.
DIAL dired 642-5678, Charge
your ad. then sit back and
listen lo the phone ring!
962·5585
19131. Brookhurst
Huntington Beach
CUTE RANCHERO
NewlywNs Ort•mll
This quaint 3 bedroom rancll-
er features extra thick waU-
to.wall carpets throughout.
Open beam California <.-eil-
lng and 2 bathl. Owner will
sacrifice at $22,500 FUU.
PRICE and NO down to G.I.
WE 'SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
7682 Edinger
540-5141'1 842-4455
FOREST E.
0 LS 0 N
Inc. Realton
3 UNITS ON I LOT
1 HouSI? + 2 apts. Fantastic
money makel's. Summer
rents can be raised. 5 Blks.
from beach. Owner will fin.
ance with minimum dO\\<n.
ThiJi> can't last over nigh!.
S21.!m. Better be fint and
call now. Dial 962-5585.
962·5585
19131 Brookhursl
HunUngton Beach
2 BEDROOMS
$18,500. electric bltin range/
oven, washer, riryer, refrlg.,
FI A heat, crpts, drps. ns-
sume exist.Ing FliA loan of
$15,900. \Von't Jut. see Uili;
today!
Mission Vi•jo 1708
BY Owner • Mi!l!lion Ridge 5
BR. 31A, ba, 3 car ianae.
comp! landscaped. Be at
vie1v lot in 10\\11. Low in-
tcrei;t loan assumable. Ph.
837-7643
RENTALS
Houses Furnished
R•ntals to Shar:e 2005
2 Single Working.Girl! wish
to share their apt .&: es-
pensr.s. 1 houset1 from
Ocean. Call 67>-6929 aft.
5:30.
YOUNG Resp. Female
\\'antf'd lo share home
"'/mother & son. Br. ba &
phone. $85 mo. O.C.C. Vic.
548-8902 alt 6: JO
GIRL 22 1vants lo share 4 Br
house C.l\f. with 5atne.
children ok. 642-5106 er
&16-4092
1 or 2 RESPONSlBLE people
to share luxury 5 BR.. 2
stocy Laguna Sch view
home. $60 mo. Call 494-8773
WOMAN Will 11hare Laguna
Niguel home w/re1ponsible
business penon. $100 mo.
<!J>.-0389
YOUNG man to share 2 BR
apt, Santa Ana area. $43.50.
Afl 4 pm. 543-4307
Balboe lslend 2355
FURN. ?>I~. :Z Br, 2 Ba.
Dock. No peU:, Avail to
June 20. $300 mo. 67>7880
RENTALS
Houses UnfurnishMI
General 3000
SUPERSHARPlBEDROOM
2 BATII 110ME for rent at
$185 per month. Double gar-
age, fenced yard, It's in RARE our rental book a.t Walker
OPPORTUNIT'l & Lee, 2790 Harbor Blvd.
Take over 5% loan. $147 mo 1 ~·~t~A~d~•=m-•~· -~-~~~
pays all. 2 Sty 3 BR, 21~ BA VACANT &: Clean, 3 Bli + tam rm, only $31.500. bedrooms, blt\ns, fr pl c ,
The Real E1t1te Mart large fenced yard. Only $210
847..&531 rno. ~nt MG-4141
•
•
• •
·! • ~ ' . '
• .. '
I
•
f
•I
,.
-' '
20 OAtlY PIL.Ol l~tsd~r. f.~a.:, lJ, 1970
.RENTALS
Apts. Furnl1Md -
R E NTALS RENTALS
Apto, Unfurhloilecf Apt1. Unfurnl"'ecl ----R ENTALS
_ Aptt. Unf~nlahed RENTALS 'RENTALS I RENTAL S J:!._~ -~~f~1t~td__ ~.ou~~~~t~ _t.pta. Furnished
Gener•I SOOO Fountain Valley 341 0 Costa Mesa 4100 Coton• dtl Mir 4150 Costa M••• 5100 Cool• MoH 5100 Huntlnpt".!' Baach 5400 -·--tt RENTALS tt
$'92.50 f\tm l BR Apt. nss f\uTJ 2 BR Apt
Sl«I Ul'\furn 2 BR Duplt11
$150 Unfum 2 BR Stud.10
$1J5 Unfum l BR Cottage
ROOl\tMATE SERVICE * MAN\' OTHERS *
Frff to La nd lords
4 BR. 2 BA, blt-lnl, din rm. SUS CASITAS LG, pvt. bachelor, so. of
Hwy, CptJ. Dl1>$. Beam
ee\lirJK! Retr &: Hp. Only
Sl 15. 6'll-69CW
covered flq:1to11e r • 11 o rum. l BR APtl. Adulfs
wfblt-in hbq. Near M:hl&. ortly. no pets. nio Newport
F,.Foontain Valle y, $250 ~lo. Blvd, CM. 6"2·92.16
6<2-2264 MERRIMAC WOODS
4 BR. 1 BA. f'rplc, built-in&.
Cul-<l~sac. $230. Ava..il Im·
11\td. Call 541)..6131
\VANTS To sub-leaR FW'l'I. l
Furn ul'llll 11v1U, ,see ad un. Br. apt Immediately. Leav·
df'r clau 6lil(). (25 r-.·Ieni-Ing 5tate .• Conl'I Breakfast,
mac \Vay. fHS-6.100 Tennis. Pool. 644-5219
SHARP BA.chelor unit. C.IOJ!ie FURNISHED a pa r ~me n t
lo DCC & UCJ. SUS payg \l'ilh garage Sl65.
SEE AWARD W INNING
Gleg ance
ON BEACH
e SINGLES rRO!! $1<0 e I BR 1\0 BA FROM 1225 e :. BR 2 BA FROr.1 $200 e 3 BR 2 BA FROM S360
Carpets-drape1-dllhV(Uh&r
heated pool-auna-trnnla me1·rimac woods
Oro,ioe Co1ou11'1 lrtost Beautiful 1;:tl=:-:·;,~~::.
Apartment Comm11nitu Security guardi
* * * * *
"""
Blue BeAron Rental f1ndl'rs Lagun a Niguel 3701
435 \V, 19th St. CM 6-l~tl1 ATTRACTIVE, l\lodern 4
DtSCRl~llNATING Family BR. 3 BA. decks, bu lli ln
nttdi!:d for 4 Bedroom. J \•acuum: drapes, carpe u,
Bath + ~n Ne Yip or I :.pnnklers, view. S325 mo.
E5tate honte for 0 months 31741 !5le Roya.I Dr. Ca.II for
or 1ona1!r in exchan1:e !or 11pp1. 496-2763
111. Reference' ·required. l----~"~:;.._5553_.,...---=--
Av11J 'l/J/70. 5'\a-4819 2 BR. l\larguer1te, So. of Featuring a club almosp here !or your com-HUNTINGTON rorL and pleasure -just compl eted 1 or 2 Wh1ddy1 W•nt? Wh1ddy1 Got?
tendt'r loving care and I=~========"'
$350/monlh wnh GardenPr (ondom inlum .. ___ 3~9c5c0
iflt'luded. A1ent 546-2313 -· -
sns. OPTI~~. 4 BR, 2 BA J BR. 2 ba. ctpl. 2 car. car~
h do bl 1 pool & clhhse avail. sm ome, u e li:BTBJ:'.,, \I' w, ~0-6339
drps, kid1 k ptls. Bkr. cm~'c.,:c:-~-·-----
,,...,.. RENTALS
$125--NICE 2 BR. 2 BA. Apts. Furnished
garden type triplex. pallo, G I 4000
stO\<e. wfw, drps, family. ~·'------
BkT ~
---~---
Costa Mesa 3100
5 Bdrms, 3 Baths
F'\replace, patio, cpts, drps.
Close lo all schools. $290.
Lease or lease 1v/opbon to
buy.
We lls-Mc:Cardl1, Rltrt.
1810 Newport Blvd., C.tlt
5'1S.TI29 &'4.()684 e\'eS.
Single
Adults
LIOOU'y singlt, l & 2 bed-
room apai·onents, furnish-
ed and unfw'TI\shed, with
ooruplete privacy and land·
s~aped country club atrr"os-
phere includini: S750,000
l~~~~~"'!''l'."~!!!09!'1 11o'Orth of recrtatlonal facil·
3 BEDROO~I. 2 BATH, dou-ifes deaigne..: and operated
ble garage. Blr-ins, r.tone juJt for single veople.
firep lace. Fenced, !.Jde gate REll.'TS FRO!'lt
ft.Ir boat etc. Trllct POOL & $145 to $300
Q,UB. $215 to $245 mo.
642-2221 anytime fi46.96fi6
SPACIOU S Del Cerro homes,
ne.v So. Coas: Plaza S285
mo. Ml-0933, 54:>-033.1
Lo"·ely 3 Br home . $2&1
a mo . Util paid. Call * &16-8707 ..
CUTE 1 BR. v.-/w CTptS, nr
St. Joach!ms. Older cpl
N EW PORT BEACH
880 TR.VINE A VE.
IRVINE AND 16th
(n4>~
GARD EN GROVE
13100 Chapman Ave.
14 blk.s \\'. Santa Ana Fwy.)
1714) 636-3000
P"f. suo mo. '46-8ll5 A N AHEIM
3 Bdrm Kids OK $160. month. NOW LEASING FOR 236 Camellia Lane 646-3570 MARCH OCCUPANCY zn So. Brookhurst
NE\V 3 Bedroom 2 Bath, (1 blk. So. of Lincoln)
Drapes, Double e;arage $183. (TI4l 71'2-4500
Adulll, no pets 646-6280 aft s South Bey Club
LOVELY 2 br. 1"% ba. Condo.
rv1onticello Townhouse1. turn Apartments
or unf. 671-6464 I --T-h-,~GO=R~G~EO=u~s-N~.-,.-,-
VAL O'ISERE
,N_•_w_po_r_t_B_•_•_c_h __ l'l_oo_i Slngle-1 br-2 br. rum.·unl.
• · Sauna. Act'y Rm. Billiards B/8 Therapy &: 45' pool, BBQs
Adults Only 2COO Parsom Rd. &12-8670
J BR 2 ba,h , split level S1631.::======== 2 Bi 2 balhs .......... $225 C M AVAILABLE NO\'V Otta esa 4100
Bay & Beacb Realty, Inc.
901 Dover Ill', Suite 12.6 NB
64>2IX'IO Eves. 54S.C'36
DUPLEX 3 Br. 2 Ba. nr.
ocean .. $235 r.10. No pets.
Richardson Rlty, 2443 E.
Coast H'>l'Y.. Corona del
?-far. 67>-4031
* *
SUNNY
ACRES * * * Motel-Apts *
1 signal So. of 0 .C.
Fairgrounds
St udio & 1 Bedrooms
FRESHI .. Y palntecl 3 Br, 2
Ba Duplex nr bch. Nu cpts.
Bltn11. $250 mo lea se.
540-7573 $32 WK. & UP
COUNTRY Club Living. 3 Br Doy Week Month
2 Ba. 2 pools. gardrns. $325 e Kl h' rv' , . I mo. Back Bay nr. S.A. tc ens . s inc .
country rlub. Bkr. 675-0044 •Phone serv .• htrl pool
• JI.laid service avail.
DELUXE Tov.'llhou&e 2 Br. 2 2176 NF.WPORT BLVD.
Ba. frplc, pool. $250 . 548-9755
Bayfront apl SljQ. Agt. ------~---
64&.-0i32 CASA de ORO
TO\\'NHOUSE. Pool. Sauna. CasuaJ Cali!. Livinr. in warm
1();)5 Do\'er. 2 BR. 2t.; BA. ~fed. atmosp~re. Spaciou!
S240 mo. \V;ish~r/dryer. color co · ordinated apts,
Vacant. Bkr. 6Ta-60-l4 Designed & furn. f o r
"'ESI'CLIFf _ 3 br, 2 ba. style & comfort * Pvt pa.
ho • B·B-Q * 15hag cpts house on quiet st. Av111l on * Gar \I'/ storale * Heated )Tly IM" $3.'il mo. Re fer req. Call j..IS-I69S, :)..iP11i. pool • Kitcheri w/ indirect
1-===o:--~=====I lighting, deluxe ov en &
University Park 32 37 r::inge I BDR~r. $175 inrL ---~~-----ul\l. 2 BDRfli, $19j iricl. uHI.
3 BR. 2 balh11 ......... , $395 Adults, no pets. 365 \\'. \Vll-
3 BR. 2 baths .......... SJ4[l son St. 642-1971.
<BR. 2 bo1ru. .......... $315 CHATEAU LA POINTE
3 BR. 2 ha!hi; ..• · · •... -SJ25 2 BR. Furn or Untum. e RED HILL REAL TV PooL Adults', no pe!s,
Univ. Park Center, Ir"ine $150-$100 all util pd.
Call Anytlme 83l-082{J 19-11 Pomona, C~I. -·-East Bluff 3242 Sl40 illO/DL.\ mob. hm., ----------I comp! lurn. Htd pool ,
BLUITS Adults, no pets. 4 Season's
4 BR. 2~1 BA. 2 story, pool . Jl.1ob. Hm E5t. 2359 N\\'Jlt.
$350 mo. 644-2432. ~S-6332
'*\\'JITTER RA'TES
e NAS.'iAU PALl\1$ e Jiwy. $200 mo. No childr(!:n. Bedroom , 2 Bal h. t'urnished or Unfurnish-PACIFIC SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR ,
1 & '.1 BR. P9QL &12-7898
177 E. 22nd SI . 642-36-''5
$.QO & Up. l & 2 BR. Trlr 133
E. 16th St, Sp 41, Cl\i.
6-12-1265
Lido Is le 4351
ed. Air· cond., soundproofed. self cleaning 111 OC.LAN AVE., H.B.
ovens, be a m ceilings. dish\\'asher, lush £714) 536-1.U;
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spo<l1I R1t1
-----~ landscaping with streams & waterfalls. eleva· * LARGE new 1 er. with
ATTRACTIVELY !urn. Ln: lors, BBQ's, clubhouse with social activities, loads of slorai:;e. drt1s1f\i':
5 Lin1s -5 t imes -5 buck•
l\J~ES -"D MUST IMClUDE ·--~., 1'0u 111\'9 • lrllM. S-Whtl ¥011 _,,, 1JI "-·
Studio, Ba~lront. Pat i 0 · saunas, Jae. uzzi & S\vim pools private gar· roon1. Pullman h •th, a-YOUR ~ •""'°' --~ +-S """ of ""91'11111'1 ..
Sl:l~ &&ut.. furn 2 BR ell·
pando r.toh. Hm. llJ E. 16th
SI. Sp 16, C~I. 642-1265
View. tmmed. occup. Util o· h h · '-NOT/oltNG FOR SAll!' -TR•DES OM~YI
pdf Lease 673-lOOO For enjoyable s urroundin91 c•tering to carpeting, Pvt Patio. I blk
age w/s torage. Fron1 $140·$21 0. ~ is wa.5 er. Bll-1na, Sha.;
eh 00 d iscern ing •dults -come to . • . to shoppina & walking
To Pl•c• Your Tr1der's P•radlM AJA
PHONE 642-5671
I BR furn & unlurn, drps.
'>1'/V.' crpt!, pool, pvt hal
8.3&-579-1, after 3 pm
$120 Beaul. furn , l BR. tx-
pando. Adults only. 133 E.
16th St. sp 4.1. cr.1 6~i.1265
DELU,..'E 1 BR, spacious,
pool. [deal Jor bachelors.
1993 Church. 548-9633.
1 BR apt. Gas & v•ate r pd
SlZO mo. ~o children, no
pi!fS. 54~991 c.~1.
I BR. new, beaut furn mo. lo
n10. $160. Adults (In ly, 2220
Elden, &IB-5302 eves.
Huntington Bia 44 MERRIMAC WOODS. Ba l•nc1d Power distance lo beach. Adults He<tie qainst inflation •
NE\V 1 BR·blk to beach. only. 82'62 Atlanta . H.B. Trd for Inc. or boa!. 5 R-1 Jvv "'' •• 1600 H•rb•t 11•4 .. 11t. N•lttn CMlll• 53&-2800 view lots. Hearl of Orn• $l51l. Pri patio • QUIET! 425 MERRIMAC WA 1----------Gar. !i.ingle ad\ts, couple. Y, COSTA MESA• 54.5-6300 1 BR Townhse pool car Cnty. Eq. $2.lil-1. Be quick
3!2 A 14th. 526-1ll9, 673-1784 l!VIRYTM IHG NI W-MQVI IN NOW! Crpt, drpi,' hlt:lni: on this. 8JO.fi040 772-9920.
LRG Bachelor. Util pd. Nr. 5 v.•ashr/dryer, patio. Sl40. Trade 300l sq fl San f'er-
points. f\1ature, slngle adult Costa M1se 5100 I Cot ta Mes.; 5100 545-1019 nando V111ley home. 5 hr. 3
anly. $91.50. 842-2219, Rel. & ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;i;;;IRool\1Y 2 & 3 br's. Crptd &: ba +.cabana, pool. INorih-
clean'g dep req"d. * GRAND OPENING * drpd, Newly decor. 3 br .. ridge area). fol' Be<1eh
PARTLY furni&hed 2 Br. :i dbl attach gar &: lrplc. 3 1 .o.P"'-'-"'-"-Y~·----'-l_l __ _
I h New and Dram atic a s _b_11<>_1_ .. _m_b<_h._5Jl\-__ 1_11_1 __ 1 t8> 2 "-"-"' u"1·••. sm•ll Ba apt., d shwag er. patio, S · h C U ocu......... " ..,.
brand new. Beach Blvd. & a pan is as e 2 BR, l child under 2 yn; OK. lihopp'g: Cf'nter. house, rlu-Edin~er. 842-7062 EL CORDOVA APTS No pets. 2612 England St. plex, vacant. \\'anl \'ncant
Thi. k o ' t rt I ' S"' mo ""0 """" lor trlr park any area or '? fREE Uti\ turn. 1 & 2 Bdrm -n Y u ve seen g rea a pa men s . ...,.,,. · .,.,.,..JU<!., apt~. Neat beach. $125 up. \Ve have a ll the nice features as follows: 1-Bdrm--.-P-11-,-'"-,-,,-f)'p-l-c, Fannie Price Rltr, 548-3209
fl36-3777 ()r 536--7m * HEAT ED POOL * REC HALL Gar. Pvl yd, Adults, No O\vner moving-Trade $20,000
Newport Beac.h.;__4;.:2;.;.00 ~==z:======I *DISHWASHE RS * BAR·B-QUES pets. Sl45. 842-8773 eq. in 1 centrally Joe older
·-La guna Bea ch 4705 * SHAG CARPET'G * GAR:AGES 2 & 3 BR. 2 BA. pvt. patio, unit~. Whittier. Val. 6 t1m·
N1wport B1ach MANY OTHE RS'. •-lod 1 h • ""-· es Income. \\1ant: property
GRANO $35. WEEK.NEW h·~oo•k up"°. 962° ':!: .. " .-'" " I I 21' ~·s"• 1 & 2 BR:'s--FROM $145 For Adults Only -o""" ,.e;wpor area. · ~ '"°°
LL'XURY HOTEL APTS. 2077 Charla St. * 545-0376 2 BR. 1 Ba . catJ*ll. drapes, Sola 76'', brand new, for OPENING * 494.9435 * (Just 400 ft. W. of Harbor Blvd. off Hamilton) bit-Ins. near beach $135 mo. truck, car, color TV or ?
2 BR 2 BA, pvl patio. 8~2-108.i ~ 548.0850 I I '3 _c.,,:,-=-=-~=== 6:00-7:30 nights,
IMMEDIATE ~aragt'. chofiY ""· I Costa M1sa l lOO C t M 5100 NE\V I BR. CARPETS, All day Sund•y. year round. ;)38-21}95 morns ----------OS a eta DRAPES. __ .:.::cc::::_=.=:.;_ __
0' '11 ~ LUXURIOUS-NEW QUIET AREA -""'"'-lrg 2 Th• Lindbo" Co. 5.l&-2.17'! 4 BR LIDO HOME OCCUPANCY BR •Pl 998 El Camino 0.-.. 3 BA. Sire<! lo """
Hote ls 497$ C~J. 5-11MW51, 637-9585 Santa Ana 5620 for apt. house on Lido.
Luxury a;arden apartments L::id;:,.o_S_h_o_re_s_H_o_t.cel:.;... $150 & $170 I BR. No childtto or .. .,.J.;;;;;;:;;;:,;,;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;:; I ___ *_o".:.;2.c.-6500:..c__• __
offerini: completl' privacy, Bayfront kitchenette suites A ll Utilit l1s Paid Garagr. Hid pool. Crpts, VILLA MARSEILLES \VlLL TRADE 10 irrigated
lrom $255 mo. Suites & 1 & 2 BR. 2 ~w.rn pools drps. 642.S012 BRAND NEW acres in Hemet .,.,;3 rentals beauliful landscapinc-& rooms by day or "'eek. Adu/l s only, no pets. SPLIT Level 2 BR. Crp!s, SPACIOUS for Orange Co. income Pl'OP-
unparalleled recrl'allonal Phor.es, maid, eolfee, ice. 307 Avocado St., C.1\1. rlrps, bltns. No pets. 2885 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. erty.
facilities in a country
club a tmosphe!'e". No'v
leasin&: in Newport Beach.
617 Lirlo Park Dr. 673-8500 See ~!gr ori prem!Sf!I" 11.lt'ndoza. 54S-S:i21 Adult Living _ _:C='"=-'~71~'=1_96:.:::.2·~256:.:.:.1 _ (Behind K-~'!art of1 Harbor R ENTALS 31 comer Ruli:ers & Avocadol SPLIT Level 3 BR. Crpts. Furn. & Unfurn.
Apts. Unfurni!i~~.---Da> 642.J535, eve 645-0'283 dtp~. bllns. No pets. 288j Dishwasher. color coordlnat. ~ r>!endoze. 545-5421 ed applianceg • plush shat
Gentra l 5000 MARTINIQUE DELUXE 2 BR studio. crpts, carpet • choice of 2 color ~lodels optin 10 am lo 8 pm Spa<i'ous gro>l"d ••/ ..... drns. pool. lmmac. 1 child schemeg -2 baths • stall
Furnished or unfurnished VEN DOME I"· · nd'.' s .. 1•~rl•· ok~ Call 646--0496 showers • mim>red ward· "'e su1TOu 1ngs w p • robe doon • indirecl Uaht-
Rents from S13S.$310 vacy. Patios & pools. Nr. ing in kitchen • breakfast
shopping. Ad·:Jts only. V 5 ThlMACULATE AP1'S!
ADULT & F~\1.lLY QUIET DELUXE A.PTS M1s1 erde 110 bar -huge private fenced .;;;; ___ .;...;;;; patio -plush J:t.nuscapinJ; •
18' mBgh. dbl plank util
boat, 140 hp gray. rut restrd
mint cond., val St 795. F'or
lot or ? Marina, Lido Shor-
e11 Hotel, 617 Lido Pk Dr, NB
28' Cabin Croi~r, aU fiber·
glau;, hvin V-S's, SS l'adio,
bait la.nk. \VANT: street
Dune Buggy or ?
67~ days
6-2BR U{Uts & pool $67.\I
w I SU!\I loan auumablf'
6.6 int. Trade $26~( t'fflllt)'
for 4 BR. W.liide Cl\I honie.
A;z:t. a.IS.0218 anytim'
Ha,·e Grunchg stereo ('011·
sole wilh automatic 1t,.rf'O
lape $500 value. \Vant V\V
or molor bike 250c:c 01· hig·
ger. S-l0-9779
S20.000 + $12.00'.l eq111cy 1n
Condo, 1055 Dover. Need 6·
11 units, prefer Co s 1 a
i\Iesa.
Bkr. 675-6044
Have $12,000 invested in V\V
gar, sm parts house t..· m11·
chine shop on Newporl, Cl\f.
T1•ad<> for m! acres. 911
Pon;che. 54S-18l4 Bill Acker
HAVE: 2 BR. 2\~ BA Con·
clo. \Vestcliff area. S.36,500.
Equity $15.500. \\'ant: JI.To·
tor home, desert home, ??
i\f,1·f'ts 673-6To6
·~ Pontiac Grand Prl"(,
t_rade $1000 eqi.nty for olri·
er ca1·.
.. 5'1&277~ •
SAN CLE:'IJENTE Rt lot
43..xlD2 Trade equity for late
model ,1uto, pick-up or 1?
Private 8" flSsumahle loan.
No time hmit. ~92-8078
1st RE TL J\lorlgages in·
surable ll)Cal signer Each
TO pays l2200. Total $42.000
Final pmt 4/71 Trd: car,
boal or 1 67~104.7 or Bolt
1433 NB.
\'Vhat do YoU have to trade 1
Lisi it hew -in Orani:e
CounQ"• lru~st read trad·
ing post -aM make • dea.I,. Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
1700 16th Street
714: 042-81 70
SECTIONS AVAn.ABL.E
Clo•• to shopping, Park * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba
BACH .. 1-:! & ~ BR's 2 &droom. crpts, rlrps, elef' brick Bar-B-Q'r. _ lait;e heat.
1777 S11n1a Ana Ave, C !II. hltin~. Adult!.. S~3209 or ed poob & lanai. ,\, * * * * 11
f\'l;r. Apt 113 616·35-12 51()....j.'f.lg Rltr. 3101 So. Bristol St, I !i!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!~!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!~""!!!!~'!!!'~!!ll!!!!!!!!!'
• 2 Bedrooms ORLEANS APTS.
(l,i i\ti. N. of So. Coa:<tPlszal REAL ESrATE R:EAL ESTATE
• Swlm Pool, Pul/ereen * FTpl. lndivllndry !ac'is N1wport S.ach 5200 Sant• An• Giner•I General ------1 PHONE : 557-1200 -----
Room• for R1nt 5995 Office Rental 6070 1845 Anaheim Ave.
COST A 1'1ESA 642-2824
• RENT • * LO\V \VEEKLY RA TES *
BAY.CLIFF MOTEL l Rooms Furniture
Kitchen, rv·5, ma.rd service. $19.95 & UP
He11ted Pool. 1~nth-To.M1'mth Rental!
6~6-3255 WIDE SELECTION
GARDE' PT NO DEPOSIT O.A.C.
' • A ·• by n1onth. !IrRC rurnlture Rentals
Off !hi' Bay, pool. lovf"ly . S'J7 W. 19th, C\t M8-3,~I grounds. malrl ~rv. h:cn
Nil"" Villa i\'larina, Ca.II;
673-9:i53.
2 &: 3 BR ava.il. Adult.s onlJi.
17(1 Tustin, Co!ta Mesa
~-Mrs. Canon, 642-464:1
Fairway Villa A pis
Ne11r Orange Co. Airport &
UCL Adule"' on!)'. 20122
Sarita ;\n11. Ave. 543-389-1
===:...;.:=_;:.c_;;:_
570l SLEEPING room v.·/priv,
THE NEWPORT
LUXURIOURS
GARDEN API'S. Lagun• Beach
PvL Plltio H t d La -ba.. Priv. entr !or rent. Pref . , s, . ea e 1181 l·BR. Apt. Un!um. older lady or collee;e stu-
pool, 360 Private Beach downtown. Lease; •••• $17S dent. 557-!:1127 or (213) * I Bedr'm S115-$275 2·BR Apt. unlum. -"" lo. "° ~,,..., * 2 Bedr'm $325-$500 · ' """"' 3'°"'"'"'"· location • • ..• • • .... ·.. ~ ROO'I t R I Sn d , f '* 2 Be<lr'f!l & den ,'§695 1-BR furnisMd duplex, frpl,, " 0 en · 1 en pre ·
!119 Bayside Dr, 673-8414 ocean view .......... $l50 Kitchen privil. S60 per mo. Isl &: last mo in advance. DELUXE 1 hr, 2 b11, condo. MISS ION REAL TV 494-0731 646-7&86 all 6.
f'rplr, "'fw .crpl. (!rps, ~ll-100 CLIFF DR:IVE
Ins. Swlmmu~g pool. putting Sl?O-l BR. 11_, BA. $l85-2 Br, ROOr.1 In priv. home. Kitch
i::reen, luxu~rous liindscap-l i.i BA . Crpta drps, bltins. & laundry privil. Larly
Ing, pool m1unt. Ariults pref. v· 1 · WaJki d' only. $<10 mo. Mesa \'erde
No peU;. Near Newport Bay, iew 0 ocrnn. ne; lS· arta. 549-1827
$35. WEEK-NEW HARBOR GREENS
LARGE 2 BR, l 1,'I BA studio
arit. Crpt!', drps, ,;tove,
ratio. Children ok, no pets.
$145. 726 Joann St. See Sun.
$270 L\lonthly Le as e , tanu to 10"·n. Also furn. -1=15~P~u.:..::WIC_:::_,.U~P-w-/lci~."-"-"
"" "ll• Bachelor, Vf'ry large $170. ,...7 N ·~ '. -494-244.'l or 49-1-5.103. $30 \VK UP Apt."I. M> 6 ew-LUXURY HOTEL APTS.
L..i\GUNA 494.7201
\~ b!k to ocean. 3 BR, 2 BA,
S2i.5 )1·1y lse. Avail April S.
i\lr. Gunderson 01\T/bkr
673-QIO
2 BR furn apt. View ol Bay
&. Bch. $18.1. After 6Pi\I,
!!68-1793.
2 BR furn & u n l u r n
si.:io-s1<;;. Cpt~. drps, bllns,
pool, patio. 1525 Placentia.
FURN. 11·( util. Bachelor
apt. Ava[\ April lftl. $137.50.
152.J Placentia. NB
\\'lfR:\'T 3601 Finley, lower,
1 hr, l ha , yrly. $275
"'/util. 833-llJ.~
2 Br, furn, Adult couples.
$165, \.\ater paid. Avail )\far
17. I b!k to beach. 544-6252
OCEANF'RONT J Br. yrly.
(\Vil\ lease unfurn.'
Agenl 642-38j()
I BDRilT apt, l hlk ro bay &
beach. $115 mo-yearly.
• 675-253!1
APARTMENTS Bachelor, 1-2 & 3 BR. Furn/ 1-5 or call 846-1584 eves tor
unf. Yrom $110 & up. Gar-appt. BA YfRONT REAL ESTATE "°" Blw. 54~9155·
d . e "-il VILLA MESA APTS. 2 BR. 2 BA Luxury Apts. Gt n1ral en patlOS i=am ct gs Priv. terrace, elevators, sub-.1 --";::..;;;;.;:.o_ ____ _
PVT. Room. kitch. priv. 1\r.
21st & Santa Ana A\·e. $17
per wk. L\1en only. M3-1294 frplcr. • Rec Rms e 2 Pools 2 BR unfum, pri pat101, hid lerranean pk'g. All elec. Rent•ls Want.cl 5990
Saunas • Nursery School pool. 2 car encl'! gar. Chil· Pool. wit \\'lltl'r, docks. 3l21 -
Fiim R.· Adult secOons. Im· dren .. ~:clcome, no pet 1 \V. Cout Hwy, Newport. COUPLE w/1 C year old boy
med. occup. 2700 Pietcrson please! Sl60 also furn $185. 642_2202 want to rrnt 3 bedroom Motels, Trlr. Crtt. 5997
\\'ay, Ci\! Nr Hrbr & Adams. 719 W. \Vilson 646-1251 house w/yard & garqe. Both \VEEKLY .... tes &a l.al'k ·-"l10 llONEY?>IOON view apt. k' Ch'ld · hool ••
clc£ant carpe!ing. 2 Bdrms, 'I •·-nd · b 1 " "" ...,.,, ··r-i-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I' BR Unfurn. Ne1vly d•c. \\'Or ing. I in sc , ~-101•1, ~•1 Neumnrt Blvd.,
HARBOR
TOWNHOUSE
2'2-17 Harl:Yor n"ar \\'il~n
• 'Z Br 1\i Ba. Studio
To1vnhou~ S135
O HeatPd pool -Adul!!!-only e No pct~ . Arl j tn shoppinJ:
ELEUANCF. a'
Hacienda Harbar
I & 2 BR. $150-$17Cl
Utll rncluded. f"C PSTS
New cr-nis, & d""'*· s,..,. T USUi'l 1ame JO years. r-1, •1,,. · r .. ~ hrepla~. garage S 2 5 0 . ,,.. -, 71 NO 1 -~==-~"="-------grounds. Adlts, oo pet~ $140 ~2394 ;:ige •"'· \.\'I e . more
mo. 2283 Fountain \\'ay E. lh<1n $135 per rt'I(). \Vill lake 1----------
CHarbor, !urn \'I. of CONOO. 2 Br. 11; ba. .• fpl. lease option w/ren l11.I Mite. Rentals 5999
\\'llronl. \Vilsou Gan!en& Ohl. 1:11r Arf11lts. $240 f\lo. payntents applying lo dO\\'Tl ·-------Apt~. f'l'lrt1n. RPal!or f"l2-5000 payment. C411 &1Z-3844 eves Ij,000 ~q It fericed
& wkends Slor11ge yard. Oi.11 -LOVELY " Br, wlw "'Pl•, SPACIOUS 3 Br 1 Be Crpl$, -----·------" • , MS-7027 or 642-1121. tll'JlS, \1·nnd fin;, i; a r , drp~. frplc, hit-ins, 1 blk to PROFESSOR & family of 2
washer /dryer Adult~. no hrarh -~27:i 646-43!11 ch.ildn!n coming to Irvin for
pets. for appt. call 6-16-3160. Sflbhatica.l leave in late; 11um-
2264 Placf'nfta. Open Back Bay 5240 mer deslre3 romfortably
I ----~-----furn. hou~ in Ne'>l'J)()rl or
3 Br, 2 Ba nu s hg VTF.\V, 2 BR. C11rpets, La'1;una Beach an!aS late
c r PI s Id r P Ii· f reshly clrapPs. Built-ins. Pool. Sl65. Aug. thru June. !lfln. of 2 ~~~~i Nr OCC, Up~!l"!:i. • 673-3600 · Br's. pool prel'd. Call
644-2057
JUST Comple!,.d 2 BR. Corona del Mar 5250 ~C..::"'---~---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~il 1 BR. & den or 3 Br. unfurn. Ctpts. drps. blt-1111i. Sl:s:> Close to water. Re!ponsible
mo. 21~1 Elden ,'\ v e . ~2-JCY.lZ ., -adults v.•/one cl aught er.
v Rerrr. Nttd by June 25 or
Income Property 6000
4-PLEX
$59.950
$12.000 ON.
Pride ol O\\'nership -Corner
location. Fenced Patios -
Out.()f·IDwn o"·ner. Live 1n
one &: let rentalli pay ex·
pcnse1, Call loday 646-7171 .
LAGUNA BEACH
A ir Condifion1d
ON FORi:ST AVENUE
Desk space a\'a!Llble in
newest office building at
prime location ln downtown
Laguna Beach. Air cnnd i·
tioned, carpeted, beautiful
entrances: Frontai:e on
Forest Ave., rear Jeed1 10
Muncipa) parking lola. $511
per month for ~•Ce. Desk
and cha.lrs available for SS.
Business hours a.1sv.·ering
Stt\'ltt available Jor SlO.
All utll itier. paid except
telephone.
DAILY PILOT
Z22 FOREST A \TE.VUE
1.AGUNA BEAO{
'"-""
tati\.1EDIATE Occupaic:y. S
fully ca rp,t ed, a.r-con-
ditioned cf flee are 1 s
available now at 2353 E.
Pac. Coast Uwy. in (l)f'l'.lna
del JI.tar. 4,~10 sq lt-ra111nr
fron1 1000 to 1720 511. ft.
from $4j() to STI~ per mo.
Af'l'a can be l!uh-divid<d ,.,
t:Uil !rnant. 6~1-6161 !or in-
forma!lori
OFFICES For le1LM-Li1tit,.d
~pa('I" av11.1lable in beau11!ul
Hunt1r1gton Harbour. Con.
IA('I Ro~.;; Barll~tt,
714/816-1361.
Hun t1n,E;t')n Harhour Corp.
~141 \\'11.rn~r Ave, 118
Corona del Mar 3250 LI tPnant remain5 thru .sum· DAILY PILOT DJ r.t E ·A·
Adul t living in a
i\f!!dllerranean Atmosphere
Blt·lns, shag crpt~. drp~.
garage 11·/storage, POOL
24 1 Avotado 642-2925 NE\V dbc. l t;.. 2 BR. Sh11~
crpr.s, dl'J>!. blr1ris. lmmed
ncrupy. $16').$180, 540-1973,
:>i.J.23!1:.
f1., ort• irnmf'd .• if in Cd~I 1chool
Modern Offices
7J sinGle. $17S 2 rm &uite.
Air cond. Seery liCrlllce,
pa.1.·king, centrally IC>Cated.
So. Calif l !il Nat. Bk. Bldg.
--rtlf'r-no raise in rent!t. l BR LINES. You can use them
LI:ASE OR LEASE OPTION !urn $130 studios $115 2135 for just pennies a day. Dial Gorg~~ & charming 3 Eldrn, C~1. See L\lgr A.pt 6. 642-5678 DAIL'' PILOT \VANT ADS!
Bedroom home -beamed l ~~~~~;;,~~~;:;___:._o=:;~i========--===========
ceilings thruout -sparkling G I 5000 IGonorel 5000 1 Gini ra l SOOO heated &: filtered pool • o,;:•~··~·~•:.;_ ____ ..;.;;,;,:..:.;:..;;.;.;.;...;;.. _____ --'----------
minimum upkeeri ya r d .
rit,;t. P11y S200 or morl' on
ON TEN ACRES lea~e. 675-1358
O,sta :O.lrsa 612-1~
Lea:se $lj(] mo. Ca 11
54Hl24, South Coast Real
Estate S@R~lA-~f..trs~
$150 + !>PC. dt'pos1t. Clesn 2
Bdrm Duplex. Crpts/llrp!I.
.o;h'/l"'I. enc! pa!LO Jnfanl
OK. 2211-A Stille 642-iln.
ATI'R.ACTIVE 2 Br. CrptJ,
drps, GE kitch .. 1·1c"'· f'nCI
g11r. nr huii. $1~0. 11duUs.
120 £.~th SL
1 k 2 BR. Furn & Unfom E:'il.PLOYED, resp m 11 ri
F'ireplaceg I priv, patia; I desires ve ry cle;11n
Pools. Tennis. Contnt'l Bkfst, homrlapr . 2 BR. BA. g11r
000 Sea Lane, Cti'-f 644-2611 }T lse. $160. or lge 1 BR.
(MacAr1h11r nr Co1u;t Hwy) H115 Inca! t'l'I. Pn>f \V. Nwpt,
\\•ill share 6!,>.7406
2 ~R Duplex apt w/ garage, s;i.1,\LL room for u11e a!li
View. Crpts, drps, dsh"·hr. ll!udy. Vic. of r emleal &
laun. fFlc. Call eves I v.·knds Oceari Blvd, Cdi\1. No
C-1 BARGAIN
Duplex on big C·I Bus, lot ..
6.1 x 270 Central location
$32,j()(J t er ., s Sll-6661,
~7·2331,
Butintss Rental 6060
CORONA DEL MAR
Oelu.xe ~uitP.S available, rallf:'.
ing rmm S.iO !<! tt llJ IT.'O
i;q fl. ·~~ per 11q. ft. EO
RID DLE, REALTORS.
6!6-'*111.
SHARP J Br. bo?me; unusual
frpL , din arr.1: built-in
kitchen: n1~ patio.
Scenic ProP'!'rtie~ 675-57'26
Balboa lt land 3355
CHARMING
3 Bdrm. liorue. f)-plc., bH·in
kilchtn. Ju.~t stepr. lrom
South b11y. Available April
1. \'early lease $27:i monlh.
MACNAB • I RVINE
Realty Co.
(7141 642-8235
901 Ocn'er Dnvc. Suite 120
Newport &ach
~tingt°!' &.ac:h 3400
3 BR. 2 BA. O'pts & Drpe.
Throughout. Lra fenctd yd.
Spotlc••· S23S Leue. C.11
-~-
SH~R.P 3 BR. 2 BA. Upll.
drps. bltra. h'plc, fenced .
$2l mo. 96i-m4
1 BOR.'1 house, SIDvti .t
The Punle with the Built-In Ch uckle
~ PtlNT NUMBERED 'O' lfllllf5 IN SQUAIHS
€) .uNSCRAMStE l ElTUS I
fOl ... NSWE t .
ft Conip1&1e "'9 thYclr:1e quoTtd
V by l1tllnj 1n the mW!nQ word.
yOtJ develo9 IOI!! ~"'P No. :J b•low.
2 l ' $, '
1~'!.Adul• .. pel•5!6.1mc:.,__s_c _RA_M_·L_E_TS_A_N_S_W_E_R_IN_C_LA_s_s1_A_C_A_T_IO_N_9_0_0o_
'
DELUXE 2 RR. \\les!cllU
Loe. Pool & bu!lt-Jn!I .
Adults. $200 mo-oo lease .
f..12-6Z74
e OELUXE 1 & 2 BR Garden
Apts. Bit-in~. prlv patkl,
heated pool. frplc. Adults
$1-lil mo . .'>46-5163
YE1\H Olcl &-.,1dc 2 -BR. 2
BA. hl1n~. rllsh'>l·hr. encl
g11r. pnv patio 64~7
2 BR. Crpt.s. drp!I. CllTllQrt,
pool. 1 kids ok. 2214 Collt>gt,
Apl 2, 6-1~27
2 BR. hlfns. crpt1, clo5ed
garage. ~1ature adulls only.
$130 mo. :>oJS-4573 or 548-288'1
$140 2 BR upper. Utll furn
Avail 1rnmed. No kid&. no
Jl:'l!:L5. 642-3375.
I BR $130. 2 Br w/lt:n,..-11
patio SI~. CfTI\~. drps & hi!·
in~ 64?·7719 f't'r~ ~" "l<nd~
$130 2 BP. uppe.r B:tn7,
rrpts t.· rfrps. Nn ;'lf't~ ;;;a
\\', \\'U&an St.. s.Jj..-0761}
•
673-3687 furnltu~ needed. 673-7'923.
2 BR. ;\1arguente, .So. of SINGLE girl \\'ants to 1h11rt:
Bv.y. $180 mo. No ~hildren. homt' \n N.8. Has ,;mall
• 642,..7898 dog. House mus! have lenc-
BAOIELOR Apt .. no cook-f!d yaro. 64Z-7U!2
in£, $100 u6~t:iinduded. e LANDLORDS e
FREE RENTAL SERVICE
Balboa Isla nd 53S5il-=-'B:.,'".=':.:"':....:5.lf.m2::.:..;=------------1 i'ofIDDLE-age exerulive; v.· 'S SPAC 2 Br, lrpl. iar, crpts,
rlrrs. stove. SZTO yrl)' inc
U!LI. 67:,...&117 eVf'S & '>l'knd!i
}T old 10n, '>li.o;hrs ~nch or
t'~tat.e ~ue~t houa,.. Some
dutieg considered. 646-3il6
2 BR I GARAGE
Untumfi;hed. About $130.
• 642-2995 •
~t in51ton 8 1ach 5400
LARGE. C'lt811 2 Br. apt
Adulls. Closed i a rag e '. su;, R:oomt fo r Rent 5995 ---"' 1608 England S! 536-1205 PREFER te1cher or 1tudent,
XE\\' 1 BR-blk tQ. b<'"'ch, lurn!shcd room k bath, prlv
Sl".11 Prl pl.lllO . QUIET' PAllO. rrr Hartxir a-A~am1,
(il!r . .1,lri~lr 11dlts, couple. C:'ll. 7., nl() Incl laundry.
:'O~ A l~th :i.'b.t319. 67l-li~ k1!. ru'l\l. ""'l'l· perr.on on-
sP,\CIOUs l BR, Qi.net 1-'l;Y·:.,:.il·l=0_-4=""~·-----
f rplc. encl &Ar, rrpl.s., dt'!)!i. DON'T gf\'e It &\l..,y, get
xtra ator. Adult.Ii $135. !171 qnlr.k caah !or it with a
Gerlield 961--89()4 Dally Pilot Wal'Tt Ad.
--------'-LEASE. 15x60 stort .. ne ar
19th & HRrbor, Co!'ta .\le$e.
Active ~hopping area. '''TY
£oorl Joc11\Jon. S2:.'} 1110
KERMIT RIGGS
R 1:: Brokror
<AsMx'. l'.·I DavidMin RNiltyl
~ffit'l F.ve~ :.44-?T."il
20c SQUARE FT.
600-120().2400 sq f! Olfic,. l'lf
Rel.all lfOres. 211·21.l b:?rxl
St, Nt11'"flOl'l Beach. f\r)
l\'ail at Tt11\•e1 l,,odgt' ,\Ill>
1,..1. (}'ol·Mr, :ZlJJ 2W-310\
or e\'t'S <213) 246-0700,
BALBOA ISLAND
Lea~ lilore or olllet. 307 r.ta·
r1ne A\'fJ. 6~ or 1ee
your broker.
S!\IALL ahop1 nr. f\ewporl
Pitr. V11:r!ou1 t~Tnquir.
Bayvie1\• Properties
2309 \\1, Balboa. KB 673-7420
STORE FOR LEASB in
P11mrlr BldJ.. ne~1 10
Btrkfthlras R<>~tattrant. In•
qult11 6i~940~ l\frt, Franke
e DELX. EXEC. OFFICE
!'IUlt"s !or lra~e. Xlnt 10t'at1on
on campus Dr. acros~ rrnm
Or.1nl{P Oi. Airporl, fi:111te~
11\·ail. l.rom 5'10 sq ft. !o 10;',;')
!q ft . AIC, r 1rpt led,
dr:.rierl. c~n 546-SROl
CORONA DEL MAR
lmmarulaTr 2 room It1ilt.
Cro'1ni1 finr'lr. Prlv11te batloi
s1:r1 ho. llt1I pci. Parklttr.
673-6757 Q\1-nrr,
Best Location in CdM
SoO to l<JOO l)(J. r .. Oelu"e Off. u·,. Spaet!i;. Ava·: rrnml!il.
f'llOllf' Owner. &12-00:iO
l\IARINER's CENTER
Of!lct or Stoi~ Bldr. Ren1 I'll'
Jiie 149 Ri\lmlide Ave. 1'.'ll
&IG-2 11.\
COSTA ~tesa offlce.1. AIC,
crpis, (I~ Parkinll'. 1m
8"krt. ~OT m.-17~7
N ~;AR C.l\t, Clt.v Hall 3 Rm
Orltf't& P~nelf!d, r11T'pf"t1:
rh'<!pe~, Jjll. Call 6-12-6.'«i
-600 SO FT OFC.
$!lO tllo. C.;>.L 646·21ll
•
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RF.AL ESTATE
General '-'-----Off I c • Rental 6070
HUNTING TON BEACH
Air Conditioned
ON IEACH ILVD.
De:k sptu:e avllilBble In
OC\\'e5t ottice butldlne: at
prime lOCl:lUon 111 lluntlng·
ton Be•ch. Air cond!Uoned,
beautiful entrance. Front·
1LJ;e on ~ach ~vd., rf!at
leads tn prlYate parking
lot $50 per month for
space. Oe!!k 1:1no cn1u1'S
availnhle ror ~5. Busine~s
hovrs a~vering service
a\·nl lable for $10. All utlll·
ti~ paid except tf'lephone.
DAILY PILOT
17175 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON' I EACH
642-'321
S:'o1ALL Office on busy cor-.
nl!r Costa i\fesa. $53/month
utilities included. 00-6560
Industrial
Proper~y __ _
./BUILDER OFFERS NE\V
2l.500 sq. ft. deluxe bldg.
Ll'3Scd, choice 0 r a n g e
County area. Property
clear. Owner wlcarry l.11t
TD 8~~%. Prepd int. ok.
:l..10-3645 am, ~30 pm.
NE\V Bldg., ll,000 sq fl for
sale or lease. For det!l.lls
i111nl11 \lltnlfy
642.65®
Commercial 6085
SHOPPING CENTER • Llm·
ired space available in board-
1valk cenler, localed inside
be a ul i ful Huntington
I lar~, Con tac.I Ro & s
Bartlel\, 71~1846-1361.
Huntington HaJ'bour Corp
••• -it
•
' • ) . t ., ' I ,. BUSINESS ind ANNOUNCEMENTS
_!~~C~~L:.....~~i~•~n~d ~N~O~T=IC~E~S~~~l'!!!!!!I!~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;:~
.• ,,.-.e:,;.:.;,;..,..--im;-.r>=u-.;....-,-,,,.r.1.,.-.D41LV "LOT J j ~oas ~EMPLOY -· _ YMEtlT I JO s r, ro · i .77i :'-NT
Business Lost ____ ;:6401
Opportunities -6300 LO-sr-·8-
' . Job WantM, Men 7000 Jobt--Mtn, Wom. 710 1 o'··-'.'c:1, U orn. 71~
iO YR.-Ex. Vdpper. Enc-. BliiiJ)ER:-l~"taller, r .. ·c ? r ·· r ' '" -f' ·llrig • ;
~talntenance. NeM bolt to gua.ge doors w/tools. r· Cr vr .:rd th'lt. /\p:'IY ln ~ : n10 old female .,..* FAMOUS BRAND Siamese, Sealpolnt on When You
Want it done
right •••
work or dellver. 675-MolS ~rk. Cnll 6'2-S~OO r:•: o· -; n· ':'l'Alln \NT t BUSCOY t fin :-rr! J b W.n'od J • r1. ,. -·t 111·,-.. o , 1hltt. Approx. 35 "~ ll wit, r:~ ,. re~·;,"
NAME '/;r 314/70, abow the Arches.
CANDY & SNACK ROUTE Name "Seela". Rtward!
(PART OR ruu. Tl~1£) 642-26..~ V~RY HICH tNC0~1E w=sr~.-,-c,,-.~,~ .. ~k-.,-.~,7,.-.. ·I Wom•n;_ __ ..;7U20 Apply In person, SS2 \V. 1!':'h
SI. C.A1.
Caf1teri-1~C-ou-nt r a1r1
10 MJ·2 Pl\1 drrlly. Mon f ·n1
Fri. Call 833.(ICOO, ex! r.:".C
We need a distributor in this doza, C?.1. Sml I e m .
area for our candy !Nestles, P/Siamese cat w/ red !lea
Planlers, Tootsie Rol.Js, Milk collar. 5'15--1521
AIDES • lor convaleSl!ence,
elderly care or fani!ly care.
Homemaken. M7 0081
Duds, etc.I. No Aelllng In-REWARD • Wht Standard
valved. ~Ve !ttmish. all ac-Poodle, fen1alr. vie Baker &
counts. \ou niusl have 2 to Fairview, c~1. rlea l
8 hr~. per \Vet!k spare time training collar. 5.l.:r8989,
Call one of
the exports
listed below!!
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 betwn 3 PM & 6 PM only.
(days or eves\. 673-7772
Accounting
Vers•tlle Accounting $1950 TOTAL CASJl I :':~~,.,,~-~--REQUlRED REWARD Foe"" B"nn"e ~ERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY
For more inlonnatlon writ tern. cat Cchoc'.. bm, short •
Clerk Needed
with accounting office eirper.
ience to a1111lst credit man-
ager and handle a variety or
other duties. Requires the
use or a typewriter, ID key
adding machine and the
"D~lribtltor Dlvisio Ne hair) Harbor View llills. Ba by11ttin9 6550 Drywall 6638 Ironing 6755 .r n °· 644-1660 _.;... ___ _
23 : P.O. Box 58, Pomona, . FORJ\IP.::R Nurse \Vill give e DUDDY Dryv.•all Co. IRONING in my borne, $1
Calif. 91769 • Include phone BLACK, Long-haired cat. &ood loving care to your Llc'd Contractor. Large or Hr. Dressmakin& I< aJtera·
no. VIC: Slater/Ed~·ards J....6, child while yau work, shop Small Jobs. Ph. 847-9581 tlons. St5-7641
AUIHate Rev.'al'd. &t7-642G or? No. side C.M. area. Call
CANDY SUPPL y CAT, Gray stripe, male, hlue 540-6947.
ROUTE collar, nr. Victnrin_ Bch,l·B-A_B_Y_S_I T_T_f_N_G_o_C_l,-an
(No selling irrvolved) Laguna Thurs. 49-h5958 home. C.M. area. Fenced
Excellent income for fe1v RED Irish Sett~. female. yd . \\Kdays, \\fknds, eves.
hour5 v.·eekly work. (Days downt°"'11 Hunt Sch. Lost \\'eUare rates. call 545-6215.
and Evenings). RefiUing and 3/3. Reward. 536-3602 VERY Reliable J\1olher of 2
collecting ~Klney ~l coin LOS'J' • small female ca~ wants babysitting, J\1y home.
operated dispensers in Or-mul!i-colored. From Santa Prefer infant to 3 yrs. Call
Flonn 6665
CARPET VINYL TILE
Free estirn~te Lit'. Contr.
540. 7262 5464478
Gardening 66IO
ANTHONY'S
ange Co. and surrounding Ana Jie[ghts. Call S.19--0449 54;,...o223.
area. \Ve establish rou!e . 1---------644 4860 tH nndle n .. mn brand nd · RED Irish Setter, male,' 6 BABYSlTTJNG f\.1y home, ,..._ d l
and nas k)"""$tli25
00
ca Y mo11. old. Vic. \V. Nwpt day or night. Infants OK. u.;pen ab e r.taintenance
ri:•qui;d.c F~~ pei-so~a1 i~::. area. Reward. 642-47~ ~~~~ yd, \\'atm food. E~~d~!(1t~;J11~8~;~ting
view in Orange Co. aJ-ea, Personals 6405 1"°'====~~-~ • Hortlculturh1t O
send nan1e, address and ---BABYSITIING. Nice l'lean
phone number lo MULTI· * F1JLLY LICENSED * home C.i\I. area. Ft!nced yd. NEW la1ms, re -aeed Ing, JI 557 9826 Complete lawn cart. Clean STATE DISI'., I'lC., 1681 \V Renowned H I n du Spirit-· r. day or wk. -up by job or month. Free
Broad\vay, Anaheim, Cali. uallst. Advice on all BABYSmING estimates. For tnro call
fomia 92802 (714) TI8-5060. matters; Love, ?t1arrlage, Adult. Evenings & Weekends. 897-2417 or 846-0!l32
?.!ONEY i\1AKER! BuslneS!', Courtship, l-lealth, Call 540-6654.
L d 6810 usual off!~ sk!Us. This post. ~•n !~!_ping_ _ Uon ollers a good salary
Let Us Talk To Youl with attractive fringe bene-fits including fully paid for
medical and life insurance
cove~. 3 ~ks vacation
alter 3 years, etc. Apply In
per.son al !he:
\\'e do the most wiusuaJ land-
scape creations in the coun-
ty. Our price Is small com·
pared with quality.
DAILY PILOT • M0-9Ei01 0
Pruning, Landscaping &
Plantlni. 330 W. Bay St., Costa ~Jesa,
Ask for Mn. Greenman or
MAID SERVICE 6825 ca\J&t2-432ltoranlnterview.
GLAD-1-IAND Maid Service;
Bonded, Licensed & Exp ..
How·Jy & by spec. ar-
rangement. Transp furn.
49'1-1573
Painting,
Paperhanging 6850 I
AGGRESSIVE Woman
W'\"ted for telephone Mies.
AbOve avg, e arni n gs.
8'17-6473 or 548-2428 eves
only.
ALASKA TRAVEL
AND TRADE FAIR
CASHIER Orive-.In D~'ry
Eves. 5-10Pl\1, Start $1.75
hr. Apply In person Milk
Palace, 840 W. 19th St.,
C.l\1.
CI RCULATION TRAINEE
Recent H.S. or Jr. Colle?
graduate to train u Clrcula-
tlon h1gr. with Sportsmen's
Publlcatlona. Some typing.
F'itt of milltacy. 53&.s506
hlr. Holcomb.
• CLEANING women need.
erl, full or part time. can
15T~7357
COCO'S
Fashion Island
Interviewing
BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
{ovtr 1111
APPLY IN PERSON
No. 78 FASHION lSL., N.B.
*COOKS*
~"'XPERIENCED
Full or part time. 5!Jll
Pacific Coast Hwy, N.B.
Finest ltlw rent location In Happiness & Sllccess. No _A_V_Al_LAB--L-E-,-,-1,-,--1.,,.,,-1 GARDENING
b f!ac h area . Near problems too large or too Fri. Days ?Se-U.OO hr. Ex-Trees, shrubs. ivy removed. AVERAGE 1 story exterior Construction
, e1·erythlng including --small. I CAN HELP YOU. ""'· ~7389 New lawns. Rototilllng. Free $259. 2 story exterior $359. WantM : To hire, at $3.00 per BUYER-ESTIMATER
gl d •-0 •~ '" "'"~1s Bo ~ Bl Ch' hour net, 2 attract!~ and ing. Chicken, pizza, burgers Readings ven 7 nys a _._~ __ ,_____ nus oN\N ue lp$. hlajor builder oUers xln'l
etc., an established money week. W1·9PM 31~ N. El YOUNG 111other ~·ants to JAPANESE Gardening Interior prices &Ya il. ~:~~=·.'~::~~ opportunlly !01· qualUIM
F--·· C "''·-rrr rr ·~ e ... . .. r. · • .. -,1y 11!2
~.: .. F.~1•,. " r.. C ;i e • r
Nl"w-· :·t '' ·1
C '·S, J'•.. ~ :· ~·•e:1 .. "l -;c::i.
ln;:. hl""I be e .. '1'1'. ,.,.. . .,
p t\tte r n,, fast. l
w/re1-,~vcr!oc!<" c::p. J::::h
r.rea. r x t1 7·5 O!ll!y Pilot
G:n "ral r -. Tr.-1!1-:e
$".'~
Lowly ofe-:. F'!•'e"11y 11tmn'"
phcre. \Vo:i:'erf"I o~·y. trr
bl"::;lnr.er whn r~'1 I·•:"· C-11
Mlr.s l:etty 5i7 r.~'!. A.,,,_i·
Ah"olt Pc:-f"" '<'' A ,t'-~ .
~ \V. \7qnier, f ' e 211
s •·:'a A--.
-GEi< L:r.AL'° CF F ICE
S!·r .rr ~. p,ood l"pi!:I. Ccll
Lor..lne, W~tclltt Person-
nel A,~ncy. Ne1vport Beach,
645-2170.
GIRLS. LAOIES
To work In downto'Nn phoM
order dept 5 days week. Sal·
ary + lnee:ntlve. Call 642-1508
for appl Hours open
ttGIRL FRIDAY
Sharp. Apply; Mae Grt!p
Ya'chl Corp. 1631 Placentia,
Costa Mesa.
HANDYMAN
Full Time Employment
Experienced In
all types of repair work,
painting~ -Must have own tooll
and transportation..
We are looking fol' makerlhatshould makeyou C amino Real,• San hab~itinmyhomewkd!!,YS Service; Neat "-'Ork. 637-6119 manw/heavyexperlntract
I"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I over $12,000 plus your [ood C I em en t e · 4 9 2-91 3 6, full time. 673-787S Clean.up & yard malnt. * Palntlng.Paperha.ngin&: hlbit. March 12-2l. 6 hours 1lngJc.famlly housing In So.
llnp1-oved Cornn\ lots Bristol and a vacation. Call Van at 492-0076. LlVE-IN or dey-· care in my 96S-2303 Interior-Exterior per day. Contact: Glen W. C.altf. ?i1ust also have heavy
a matun! lndMdual
InterutM In
4141 \Varner Ave .. HB
Baker area. S2 ()C'r sq ft. "THE REAL ESTATERS'. lovely C.llI. home, !\ton lhru ---------~ · I .,._. Mood at the "Ncwporter bud-t -n-• ex ...... Field AL'S Garoerung & Lawn ..,...,c:a .. ,,ces on Paper Inn " March 9th alter 7 P.M. ..~ "" "UI .,....
646-nn ZIPO DATE Fri. reasonable. 64&-j.)37 hlalntenance. Commercial, CaU Larry 642-4558 or leave messq:e on the exper &: accounting ba.ck-
A permanent job.
Call: Mr. Devhw
1!1a1ti11 fltealty
642.6360
FOR sale, store building.
686-698 \Y. 19th SI. Bethel
To\vct·s area. 5-18-1768 Agt.
CHINOllLLAS, Reas. Are AOUL TS ONLY DEPENDABLE industrial & rcsidentlal. IINT=,..::&==Ex;:::l "P~a:;.ln::ti,.:ng=.:'.:,....,-I 10th or 11th. ground desirable. h!uat be
you interested? $25. 5U~1 You Know The F a cts BABYSITTING. l\fY HO!'i1E. * 646-3629 * ests. Loe rels. 30 yrs exp. Ne1vport Beach. 1107 Jam-capable of lncrea&ed mpon-
or 547-2331. Of Life I I I HOURLY, DAY, \VEEKLY. JIM'S Gardening & lawn Lie. & inml. Call Chuck boree Road. (714) 644-1700. slb\llly in future.
OUTSTANDING opportunity So Learn 'the Facts REASONABLE RATES. maintenance. Res.,& COJtl· 645--0BO'J or Jim S48-tl405 BABYSITTER wanted, my r~ase ~: re=ire~e~t
for recorded inlormalion * Of Love I J I 642-6037· c .r.f. E-side merclal * 540-4837 AVERAGE exterior $127.50 home, 3-11 :30 a.m. Vic. f M •..
HARBOR
Dia 5-0658 24 Hr. Recor d • ,'. Brick, Masonry, JAPANESE Gardener, exp'd. labor only. Interior prices Beach Blvd. & Yorkto .... -n, PERSONNEL MGR.
Industr ial Rental 6090 --12131 862-8519 Orange'Co etc 6560 Comp!. yd. serv. Frft est. avail also. 54S-1546 & H.B. Must be reliable, col· Pardee Constr uction
·--------·I Investment (714) 835-2220. Reliable. 642-4389 646-3185. lege girl ok. Call 536-1679 P.O. Box S4B89
Property Marwigement
Division
673-4400
INDUSTRIAL BLOCS.
11\iO 1500 sq tr. bldgs ll'ilh
air cond. ofJicrs $225 1no.
t'ach. 1 lge a ir cond. office
$100 nw. l lgc> fen<.1!d
stot"age yard s1;;o mo.
847-1820 or 536--06.15.
RE.i'\'l' ~1-1, U 25 sq. It. $120
mo. 1355 Logan, C l\I ,
67~:)115
Opportunities. 6310 ---------I BRICK & CARPENlERY EXP. Ja panese malntennnc:e. APTS & 1110TELS Painted w 0•-ft=l'~'"'==-----Los Ang,(es, 90054
* Men \vork, planters, fireplaces, H.B. & F.V. Area $10. ave.rg. rm., Call BABYSI'ITER NeMed by <No phone cnlla please)
$15,000 SECURED by lnven·
tory, Recreational Product.
15% Return. 714: 838-8683
block \\'Rlls, cement patios, * 842-8442 + anytl~ Pal the Painter, school teacher, my home. 557 ~•0 10 ~ • P'l l hll CREDIT & COLLECTION palio roofs & all types of GEN'L yd. Clean-up, tree · -..u.>o : ,,.,.... " • c d. fl.tRture
repairs. 492-7928 collect. serv. roto-till. Sprlklr re· SURDURBAl'j' painters / lady. Balboa Penl n. Refer . CLERK. Prevklus exper.
FIND YOUR GIRL 1llE BUILD, Remodel, repair pain. Haul. Reason. 646-5848 Decor. We take the pain 6&2l39 aft 4Pl\I req'd. Gd. typing. Dayg.
Invest. Wanted 6315 S?t1ART\VAY! Brick, block. concret!', out of palnting.Expertwork. BABYSITTER\Va.ntlMlfor 19 Personnel Dept Hoag 547-6668 carpentry no job too c;mall EXPER. Japan!'se GRJ'dcner. Free: est. 494-3190 mo. boy, 7:3G-3, my home.1-H_"'..:Pc.;1..:' ... l...:N .... ..:s_. ----
•,o_:otm50eo"t ,;Gisrouwanp. I~~? In+-2.1 hour rerording Lie. Contr ' 962-6945 ;::;nr:;~~~:. ~l!Se~~ Free: ,/ p A IN TING-INT/Ext. ?i1ust have °"''II tnua. Vic DENTAL a s11l1 ta n t •• ~· '1 d J •1 ~1 "" ~•1 Chairslde, exper on 1 y .
paper do"n 642-7482 eves SAUNA . ~Iassagc by Starla, FREE Est. Brick, block, CLEAN-UP SPECIALISf Jack can do that painting "e.sa. e "a.r, "" , ~"'°" P/t\me. S<'nd resume to
HELPER w\th aome
resin & 'color e~.
Call MG-2860
___ · · Denise. Pal, :-0.larlene, carol s!one, planters & entry ~lowing, edging, odd jobs. job-lal'it. clean&: very reas! BABYStrrER I Housekeep-P .O. Boll 5811-t, Daily Pilot,
6100 Money to Loan 6320 Le Salon de TraitmenL~ way!'i. 531-1973. State Lic'd. Reasonable. 548--6955 Est, 894-3895, 847-1358 er, 2 rhildren 5 & 4, O\\'ll Newport Beach.
I---------2930 \V. Cs!. lhvy, j>;p\ Bch.I,·=--'======== e Interior . Exterior e transp. Call 968·1SI after 6.
Lot~
liOSPITALITY HOSTESS
SERVICE. has openings tor
mature women loolclna: for
Interesting, part time work.
9'1!lcomlng newcomers to
your area. SalH • x ll .
deslra.ble. Must have car.
CALL: 551-3686
RECREATION
LOTS
Build your "l.fide-a-\Vay" sec:·
one! home and enjoy life!
*$..'GOO with LO\V down. 53x
l.30 fully 1mprovrd, Desert
11ot Sprint:"s. *S4990 with
LO\V do"·n, !JO x l2J flllly
improved corner. Salton Sen.
•$14,950, j() x 100 FABUL-
OUS OC<"an vir1v, \1·alk to
\'1c1oi;a Beach in Laguna.
Own<'t' "·ill fina nce!
WALKER & LEE
2043 W estcliff Or.
646-7711
Magnificent
View
Large ll'vel sile on a lan~
!ltapctl, 1\'00dcd lot ready to
bllild. Exclusive Emerald
Bay 1n L.iguna Beach wit h
pano · 1n1r vie'\' of coastllnc.
64&.71 71
E'.l lE:RALD BAy -Ready 10
huild. l'ahulo11~ vii'!'" of
l.airi1na and beach er;.
~'li,:xxJ. -'Oit! Real Eslalers
61&-71 71
----------·o II t 1 &12-3154 JOHNSON'S GARDENING Dept. Store a Y noon ° am. Ca binetmaking 6580 Acoustic ceilings ptd, 12 yn BABYSITrER, Live-In, It 1 t TD lo \Ve ac~pt all credit cards. -Yard care, Clean-upg, Prun-* HOSTESSES * (Over 25) s an 1 ti """ 2035 exper. State lie. Pittsburgh housekeeping. Spanish vK.
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous RESIDENTIAL &. Comm. ing, pan ng . ...,_ pnts. 543-1787 642-JCMl aft 6 CM.
Lowest Interest Available Phone 542-7217 or \vrite to Custom ~~l™:t & _rum. * LANDSCAPER *
2 d TD l P.O. Bo:< l22J Cos!a ?oiesa. Furn Re-F1n1shtng. ti-i:>-0991 l2 yrs locaI exp. 536-1225 CUSTOM Painting. Interior-BEAUTY 0 PER AT 0 RS
n Oan Exterior. Llc. Bonded. Jn!!. \Vanted, with cUentele only.
SOUTII American Tan i;c o Carpentering 6590 H a uling 6730 \Von't be underbid! 64&--~ Huntington Beach to Laguna
Term bated on equ·i les!IOns • Your home -Low C:C:::C::L-----'· PAINTING, exper, int. & aN!a. Established business
642-2171 545~11 Introductory fee. Edwards \CARL'S Movtng Haullng & ext. Insured. Free e:Stimat-expanding. 60, 65 and 70% 548-3790 CARPENTRY Cl 1:, T ' p u Re comm and other benefits. Ser\'ing Harbor area 21 yrs. · · l\flNOR REPAIRS. No Job eanup. · on · · u . es. Ralph. 494-3950 Call ?ift1.nager 67l-TI59 for
S attler Mortgage Co, In Memoriam • 6417 TOC' Small. Cabinet in gar. I Free Est. S4s-89lS PAPER HANGING Interview appointment.
3.16 E. 17th Street ages A o I her cabinets. JACK'S 20 yrs exp. Free estimate. BEAUTICIAN. ....__ Beauty
\VE r.tAKE OR BUY IN loving mt'mory of my ~175, U no answer !ea\-e MOVING & llAULJNG CsJl K.M. 642-2509 p.,1"',,. "l9lh "c", 01 ,, 'Y
TRUST DEEDS busb~. 1-'.ernon i\faJ \":hite msg If 646-2372. H. O. Reas. Free est. 536-1091 PAPERHANGING Ei~g~" 655 \V. 19th, C.l\f.
543.,.,"tanytimeBk,. ivho died in Los Alamitos, Ander50n YARD/ Gar. Cleanup. y f ~ ~ California on i\la.rch 10, ------~--ears o experience. 642-7241 or 546-9527
1969, sadly missed. by his QUALITY Any l'i.i:i:e repairs Re.moVe tree&, Ivy, trash. Call Fred, 548--4903 BEAUTY OcP_E_R_A_T_O_R
Mortgages,
T rust Deeds
"'ire. t-lrs. Vernon :'of. \Vhlte or nev.· co~ruction. Res. or Grade, backhoe, 96'2-8745 'R'°'CT=!RE~D~P~a:;l_:olc:":.,.:::;:,.;.....,...,-
6345 Coin. By hour or contract. HAULING $10 LOAD exper. Neat & honest. Non Good guarantee. ~139
---------!Tutoring 6490 Lie. & Bonded. &16-3442 &. Tree Service. 646-2528 drinkt!r. Call 536-6801.
$500) 1st T.D. on Huntington FRENOI Tut Elcper GEN. repair, add., cab. * PAINTING, lnt-Exl. Local
Beach R-2 lot. $50 a month t ch can ~~~49 lf ~ Formica, paneling, marllte, Housecleaning 6735 referel'ICft. Immcd 1ervice.
including 9'/o, 3 >T due. W% eR er. ~ · Anything! Dick, 6i3-4459 "~&-5242 answer 644--4479 '" discount. 4 9 4-S 100 or REPAIR-remodeling.patios BAY &: Beach Janitorial 493-1706 I Ll:.l THE S\YEDE DO IT! Carpets, "'indn\vs, floors, PAINTING • Ext-Int. 18 yrs. etc. Res & com m c • I . ex per. Ins. Lie. Free est.
Money Wanted 6350
ESTABLISliED Bullderi:
ne ed $80,00J serllred w/ lst
TO, on new induslrial bldg.
Val. $120,!XXI. Prime loca-
tio n in Orange C n t y .
826--0:iao, evel'i 528--4088
ANNOUllCEMENTS-
1nd NOTICES
Found (Free Ads ) 6400
* * 494-7853 •• 646--l40l. AccousL Ceilings. 541'r532S
REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS -Ir PAPERHANGING CO~f PLETE qualll y
* CABINETS. Any size job housecleaning. Experienced. & PAINTING. * 968-2425
2S yn exper. 548-tiTil Reasonable. 633-ZJM.
QUALITY \Vocxl.cra.H. Gen·
era! carpenlry, Small Gen.
Constr. Call Ken 548-4235
r-.resa Cleaning Service
Carpet.!i, windows, Doors, etc.
Res. & Commc'I. 548--4111
lncom• Tax 6740 --..;.:;.:__ __ _
Pl111stering, Patch,
3~palr ____ 6880
* PATOf PLASTERING
All types. F'rce estimate&
Call 540-6825
Plumbing 6890
BOB'S
"HOME OF TIIE BIG BOY"
DISH MACHINE
OPERATOR
Neat, steady, reliable.
Free meala & uniforms
Interviews 2 to 4 & 7-8 dally.
154 E. 17th, Cos!a Mesa
BOOKKEEPER
Secretary, good work back-
ground, excellent pay. Call
Loraine, WeslcliU Ptt1J0n-
nel Agency, 2013 We1tclUf
Dr., N.B. &1S.Z770
J. W . ROBINSON
HAS OPENING FOR
AN EXPERIENCED * IANITUR *
Apply In porion
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
155S W. Adem1
Costa Mesa
Xlnl. company benefits
Apply In penon
Fashion Island, N.B.
HarEL CUhW/rellef nllht
Equal opportunity emplO)l'er euditor, Exp'd on!y. NCR
OISIIWASHER. d!!,YS 8-4, $2 4al0. Good pay, trlnp bent·
hr. Apply Chef, Dlllman's fits. Newport.er Inn.
Restaurant, 801 E. Balboa INDEPENDENT Order of
Blvd., Balboa Foresten Is looklna 6:r 3
DISIIWASHER. DBYs. U.1:30 u.les trainees. c:arwr opp.
or 2. fl.teals inc. Dick generous advanc.. Sf.5.«li91
Church's, 2698 Newport, CM 1 _•_am_·_lo_:!O~pm ____ _
DISHWASHER
Experienced
Full Tune
Apply tn peraon only
THE RIGGER
No. 16 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
ITT IABSCO
has an lmmecll•te
openlns for •n
ENGINEERING
-CLERK-
NE\\'POHT OCEAN VIF:\V.
7.oncd 30 Unil'i. 0\1·ner. Call
-J.J~-S106 I---------· f OUl\'D 3 "·eeks ago. large lJ~'">;3CXr E·s•dc, rake 26 black ca!, malr. 11·ht. neek
unit". ~ub. Asking $·14,750. & chest, wht . strrak down
PLUMBING REP AIR
No job too smnll
BOOKKEEPER • lh or full
time. For construction &
develo,iment Co. Exp thru
trial bal. Ph. 642-4210 Btwn.
1~3 * DRIVERS * No Experience
10 work ln Product Sectkm.
Must be good with figures
and detail. Must have lnler-
es' and understandinl of ro-
ta.ting machinery.
A!ir111. 6-16·3/JO ~lomach, <I 1,1hl. !eel. Call
R-4 -Cos!,1 )lc>s.a. Build .11a-nso 2 pm-5:30 o r
10 Un11s. Phil SUllivan, 54:)-0021 Fn only l Pi\1-5:30
Owner/Realtor. ~18-6761. LOST On my rronl doorstep,
Acreage 6200
·10 ACRES. \~ mllc front~e
on La Bresa. $6.iO pt>r acrr,
all or part. Breck Nott
R~;i lt,v &12-901'1
10 1\C:l't"li near l1:11~e IRke.
:'llu:c;t i-rll? $100 dn. lake
(11•er $2:1 ner 010. 8%-17 ~3
Resort Property 6205
CANYON LAKE : Vw lot by
ownr. sroo dn, bal $102 mo.
if'lcl Inter 6%. !'l62·3803 eves.
R.E , Exchang"o __ 6230
4 BR. 3 Bi\ Lido llome.
Street to street fQr apl
hou5e on Lldo. &ii-&iOO
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL -----
Bulin•••
Oeporlun:.:;lt:;.;l"o:.....-:6:.:.300;;.;
COIN taundr1e•F'l18id~lre
From $6,500 to $4 2,SOO.
Anaheim, Calta td11a,
&ie.na Parfl:. Fuller Ion.
Gardin Crove,
.,t' ttlm!nsler. Hunllngton
BcAf'h, Santa Ana, Tustin.
l.R ~lln1.1111.
C111\ Charlie 51\.iR33
PLASTIC PllOTO F'RA~~E
\.Ug. Bu~lnt-A~. N!'IY l!ne.
}.1nt pol~ntl1tl S1R1'1 F/P.
1'..'llsily n10YP.d. 400-2300 .....
pair of prescription glaMe11
in black leather case, (3-2·
701 . !'>18-71().1 ·-------11 i\IALE P\Jppy, vie, San
Felipe, Fntn Valley, Short
hair, blk w/brown mrkgs.
9!i84i217
S!\tALL F't"n1ale bllt...& bro1vn
Cocker-mb: dog. Vic.
\\'oocllarcl School. &12~9247
FOUND Irish Setter, male.
F'ull gro'vn, Older. Vic Cor-
1 nell JoAnn, 54f>-8571.
\'EUJ)\V Parakeet, Sat. 11m
vie. Edlnger & Newbope.
839-5532
BASSET HOUND, vie,
Hartior .l Adams. ~2685 {
before 4 pm.
BLACK and \\'bite terrie:r &
seller. Found in vicinity ol
CostA i\lesa Park. 54~
f OU/l.'D Parakeet Fountain
Valley atta, O\~Tier please
kknllfy, 839-7356
WHITE, Tan I.: black 9 mo
old cat. Vic. Laguna Beach.
Flea collar. Call 494-3520
SMALJ. Fem.I.le brown pup.
py, vie. F ail"Wlly Place It
Oral'$t A\oe .. C.M. &f&-3.'J67 !
LARGE ?o11tll' G!'rman
S h .. pht!rd foul'ld on
Pc>11ln~11la. Cnll :119-1000
\\tATCll Vic 19th & PIAffii:
tin. can io ldtnUfy. f>l().-1530
SP.lALL bl11.ck dog Laguna
Beach. Mo.~4
' '·' ,
I ' I . ,,
I ·~;
•'
.•
./.
' ~
Re•d Cla1s1flcation1
For Expert
Assistance
6500-6900
In tho
DAILY PILOT
CUSTO~\ CONCRETE
Patios. pool decks, etc. Free
est. 675-5516
Child Care,
Licensed. 6610
N U HS~RY School, C.M. 7
d11.y1 wk. 6~30 AM·9:30PM,
Full, p/timri, aft sch! .
Rate• for 2 or more.
TtaMp. rum. So Orange Co.
534-1292
6620
Addlt.lon• • R!'mode.llng
Fred lL Gerwtck. Lit.
673-6041 .. 549-2110
CARPET STEA?.1
ED No IO&P. no
For l!AI. &16-5971
6625
CLEAN·
brushes.
A.-O K Shamf'OO ~cial S"/ .50
rn1/ltu for balls. etc. Aloo
comp. bousecln'g 827-3182
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUiCK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
W~N Y AD
642-5678
• 642-3128 •
PLUMBING, Repairs & Al·
tcraUonll at economy prices.
• MG-1286
Roofing 6950 --~-----NE\\-Roots, Repairs &
Coatlne of all Types. Bnss
works on the job. Free
esUmatet, 64S-1691, ~25.50
2-1 hr.
ALL types rock. wood &
a11phalt shingles. LEAKS
REPAIRED. Worlc IUA!·
847-1136
Sowing 6960
e DreS8maklng • Alterations
Designed to suit you.
Call Jo * 646-&146
Tile. Ceramic 6974 .
• Verne, The Tile Man •
Cusf. work. In.stall &: rtpairs.
No job loo small. Pluter
patio. Le.a.king &hewer
repair.
M7·1957/S46-0'Al& -·---TrM Service 6980 -------TREES, Hedge1, t:1m, dlt,
etumpa, removed, hauled. 30
yn exp. Fully 1ns. 64"-'4030
Upholstery 6990 -'--·-'---C.ZY.KOSKl'S Cu3tm. Uphol.
European Crattamanahlp
100~ fin! 64i.J.4.54
1831 'Newport Blv, CM -----------
BOYS 10 -14
Carrier Route. Open
"'' Laguna Beach, So. Lqunl
DArLY PILOT
W -<171
Necessary!
P.fust have cll!an Ot.ltfomla
drivi ng ~rd. ;\oply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St.
This ia an entry-level posl·
tlon, leading lnto encfneer-
lng. Xlnt. chance fOf' ad·
vant'f'ment. Salary commen-
surate with ability a: expai-
ence. Liberal frinle benetlts.
EqiW oppm1unlf> •m"'°"" BOYS 13-16. Canvau 3 to 5 Costa Mesa
PM & Sat. to 13 !uc. Nttd --E-LECTRONIC-
transp. to oUtce:. 541-9966 TECHNICIAN
1435 Dale Way
Colt.a fl.l:et;a. Calif. 926lS
(nt)~
CHECK THESE
SALES REP. TRAINEE
Ace.lg. knowledge &: some
sales exp. will put you on
the rd. to success w/4A oo.
EX!J, %, J9100. Call Pat
O'Brien.
Strong eolid state theotY
knowledge, h@avy prototype I -~~~====-lhru production experience, J. C. PENNEY CO.
Some QA exper. Good pay. FASHION ISLAND
Apply in person.
TRANSICOM CORP. bu full cr~.ut time open-
851W.18th St., C.M. Inga t or txptrllnoed
F /C Bookkeep 1r salespeople In the tollow·
Heavy coal exp. Able to Mn-1"' poe.IUona:
DELIVERY die complete set of book&. DRAPES
MENS CLOTHING
GARDEN SHOP
SHOES
COSMETICS
CARPETS
Keep rool In a hot job, Th\11 Start $500.
ts tor the guy that t.n't RUTH RYAN AGENCY
alntld of hn.rd ~1ork. $2.25 1793 Newport, CM 64G4854
hr. Call Helen Hayes. 179.11 Beach. HB 847-9617
SECRETARY EXEC.
Gal w/lota of moxy l constr.
bkgni for thl1 terrific pos.
Xlnt oo. Great klcalion. C.all
Jean Brown.
MTST & P.ITSC OPE:RS.
U )'O\! can 111e thc&e machtn-
"· th\& job bi tor )'O\!f Nice
peop!t! To $&l7. Call Salb'
Hort.
TELLER
Ptult l!xp. w/aavin:p A: loe.n
tlnn lnnds lhls plush l'Ml'f·
w/beaullful people. Start
$385. Call J04n Marlin,
COASTAL AGENCY
54~6055
General Office
Good typing skill&, + clerl.
c:a1 duties & P .R. work.
Secret•ry APPLY IN PER.SON
Shf lite + gOOd typing & re-°'No. 24 FuhiOll Island. NB
cept. duties. pl.uM office. Equ&l opportunll)' emprloytt
WestcUH Pcnonnel Agtnc:y JONES TIRE SER.VJQ:
2043 Westclll Dr., N.B. Is expe.ndlrc and Nq\&1rtl '4~""' 5l>56llS ExPER!tNao
FEP.1ALE cook wanted, Pt·! OR~tall Salerrnen
ti.me In your own home. 9 1'tr9 Se.rv1ctmtn
Good eo..mlngs. Call ~2135 Ofronl End and •n"'kt Me-chMtce 1''tm11.le
P OWER MACHI NE Sal"Y plus bonui and company pa.Id htntfttl.
OPERATCR °"'""'""'"tor advanc.,nem Salli By Shot'k. 671).1823 Appl)': »l9 Harbor Blvd. ** F IBERGLASS Costa M ...
Expericnc:fd Ge.lco.'\te:rs. App. "JANI==ro=RS~, ~w"'°'AXER&.""~-.. -
ln pel'llOn, 1943. 8Jda B. Pia· per. Od. pl'ly and wartql
oenU.. C.ttt. corldlUot\I. 50-8383 ,
I I
• 1 ' l
•
I
II DAllY PllOl luHdl)', March 10, 1970
.ioas & £MPLOYMEN 1 I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~~ ~~!.~~Yl:IEN!
Jobi Men, Worn. 7100 Jobi Men, Worn. 7100 ~n, Wom. 7100
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANOISE FOR \MERCHANDISE FOR
---· ·-SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
Jobt-Mtn, Wom. 7100 -----'-'"'-"""'-"--
KEYPUNCH PBX OPf"ralor, exp'd prcfcr-
OPER.ATOR OFFICE r ttel, \\'W train. If qua.lilied
s R
-~ Furniture 1000 Furnltur1 8000
ecy I ec•pt --
Plush 1UJT01.1ndi11gt1 for front
TEMPORARY M<>-2052 F\lll time. Two )'!'an: e:qlf':r. 11c:.::..:.:;:,_ _____ _
with a.lpha ' numeric. ?.lust Proud to be an P.E. Equipment man .
olc a:at who is a top norch
typist, koowt her rrammar.
& makes the right lmptt1-
1ion either In person or on
the p.hone. Vic. Orange Co.
PUBLIC NOT·ICE ~ accurate. Sat. le ' Sun. Knowledge of equipment.
8:30 am to 5:30 pm., ?.ton., maJcrial1 and supplies used
OU\! w~ .. 4:30 lo 1 am. A~ A . m in compellliVi! sporta. Basic
ply bet. S-5 pm. mer1can cleanlnr me1hodl and the
f.1EDICAL • • • use A care. of clcal'\ln1
•;r~~ICE CENTER DECORATOR GETS CANCEUATION
Employment Ag ency OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS DATA SYSTEMS material• & e q u Ip men t. 500 Newport Center Dr .. NB Spanish & Mediterr1n1an Fumitura 17822 Bllach Blvd., Suite 321 Perfonn he11vy, man u a I
Huntington Beach. Glad you're a labor. Apply Claaslfied Suite 200 By appt. 644-4Ml All BRAND NEW
842-6641 ext. 29 Per•onnel olllce.
Newport-?i1esa U n i J i e d SECRET ARY A decorator dream house on display -3
LANDSCAPE Man, exper. to
lead crew. For appt call
644--1714 days MS-1688 eyes
Salary open.
LEGAL TRAINEE
Work at Newport Center,
1tart $425 per mo. Requires
secretarial exp., Type 60
wpm, lite S/lJ. Attorneys
Barcumt .l Kane 644-0023.
Legal Secretary
Start $650.
Salary advanced &00n. Low·
Jy pleasant beach city ofcs.
Call ~1iu Betty. 557-6122.
Abigail Abbot Persont'lfel
Agl!ncy, 230 W. \Va~,
Suite 211, Santa Ana_
LEGAL SECTY
Calif. experience. Bea.ch area.
Call Loraine, WestcliU Per-
aonnel Agency, N.B. &i&.7770
e LVN-Night shift e NURSES AIDES e J-IOUSEKEEPER
Bayvlew Convalescent, :ms Tburln, Costa Men..
6~2-3505
MAID \\°anted, Ken N!lea
Villa l\Jarlna l\19lel. 1021
Bayside Dr., N.B.
f..tAINTENANCE ?-.Ian, also
t.taid for r.1otel. Penn.
642-2670, 2100 Newport.. C.M.
l\TAJOR Appliance Service
!\tan w/knowledge of
Frigidaire & Jlolpoinl Ap-
pliances. Call &lf>.2486. * l\tAKE your spare lbne
ttally pay off. Learn lo
become a Fashion Sales
Col1$Ulla.nt. Call M\11 Poteet
540-5511
MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
$600 start. l\larrled, ~me col-
lege. Call Ann, \\'ei;tclifl
Personnel Agt"ncy, 2043 \\.'cst-
cllff Or.
l\tANAGE:'olENT T r ainee
mu!lt be married, 3-5 yrs.
~'Ork elcp. call Ann,
\Vestcllff Pel'!lOnnel Agency,
201l \\°eslcllff Dr., N.B.
5,i;,...?7i0
l\tFCHANICS -CO marine
gas engines. E!eclrical &
general boat exp. Good pa.y
I: co. benefiti;. Pennancnt iJ
qualified. Apply in person.
Service h1gr, 2751 W. Cout
J{wy, N.B.
~IECHANICAL ENGINEER,
F'ORE~tAN & LEAD l\tEN,
t.tOLDERS & GEL
COATERS. All 3 5h\fts. Top
jobs. 1631 Pl11ccnlla, C./1.1.
l\lEN \Vanled for Morning
t-;e1<"Spapcr dC'!ivery to
homes, 11.B,. F.V. area.
?ilusl live Wes I of
Brookhurst. Cill ~7-8979
fltODEL.S for I u n ch eon
fashion shows, 21 or O\"Cr.
Co.II for appt. 5t0-3-160
NEEDED Ladles to do lite
!\laid 1~·ork al small motel,
JIB. Only a few hours nl?ed·
ed in !he morning. Call
~170
NEED mature \voman to rlt
~·/mothf'r, 7-4 :30. breilfa:st
& lunch. No house~·ork .
SJ.25 hr. s.tS-71 8.l 11fl 5:31}
Kl'r-inc:
•
Part time, l VN
charge nurse
Experienced o1ides
j to 3:30 P .?.-1. Shift
HUNTINGTON VAi.LEY
CONVALESCENT
IIOSPTTAL
842-SSSl
NURSES Hegl!lercd -e~n·
ins & night shills. Ex.
btnel1ts. Apply Personnel
Director. So. Coast Com·
munlty Hosp., 31872 Co115t
Hwy .. So. l...quna.. 4~llll
ext. 356
Ofr!ce
Receptionist /Typist
Fronl oUlc-c appearance.
Opportunity !or 11.d\'&nee-
ment: Apply In J)l!rson.
Huntinglon BeaC'h
&>nvale!N!nt Hospltll.I
18792 Dela"·are, H.B.
OFFSET PRINTER
Orange Co. Airport Are&
ABTLITrES
UNLI~11TEO AGENCY
4S8 E. 17th, Suite 224
Co!!ta 111e11a &12-1470
OPERATORS . Sportswear
f.1fgr. Exp'd. only. Gd. pay,
1teady. 6-12--3-172 N.B.
**PAINTERS needed by
local manufacturer. Need
man familiar with pr~
ducUon on electn»tatlc
palntl.ni. ma1klng ,
Call: MS-7\Si
PAINT STORE CLERK
~t/F, part time. Call
\VALKER PAINT 642--57'76
PATTERN MAKER-
MALE
Wanted expcritnced wood
p11.1tem mak11r for ltlrge NI•
Uona1 tool.Inc COlUpA.11.Y. Ntw
faclliOet. Top v.oa&u. beoe·
flt•. 15925 Tluma Ave. Cer-
rllOI. (213) Mi0-2401 loc111.cd
near 605 f'M\'Y • Alorrlra.
PART-TIME
Sit. and IOM• evct. In Clrcu·
ladon Dept. of Sporta:mcn'•
P\ibUCIHons. $36.ll606 Jo.tr,
Holcomb.
I
GIRLm School District. -1601 16th ~ St., Newport Beach, Calli.
• • • !TI4' &15-00JO
EXPERIENCED rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was
Permanert. 25 Hour, 5 day reg. $1295.
week po•ltlon available New-SACR If ICE • $425
Join up with us 111
AMERICAN
GIRL
ALL NEW
Rod, Wh ite &
Bluo
temp~ary service
Marching along with
TOP RATES
MAJOR
ASSIGNMENTS
TOP BRASS
COMPAN IES
We're recruiting
NOW for:
Newport Beach
Office
& all Orange County
& Beach Cities.
"Master" Stenos
"First Class"·
Typist.
"Private" Sectys.
"R•nk & File"
Clerks
Exp . Insurance
Clerks
Legol Secys.
• Credit Checkers
Medicol Secys.
(Fmt & bk Ole)
Oentol Anis.
Key punch Opers.
NCR Ope.a tors
F/C Boolleepers
Asst. Bookkeepers
Acclg . Cle.ls
PBX Operotors
Statisticol Typists
Repro./Typists
Rocept./Typisls
Manuscript Typists
Assemblers
AMERICAN
GIRL
needs YOU
Call for Appt .. or
inf~rmation.
833-3232
REGISTER NOW!
2172 Dupont,
Suite 12
Newport Beach
(Nr. Orange County
Airport!
PERSONNEL
ANALYST
-CITY OF -
NEWPORT BEACH
$773. to $939 per month
One of three posllion!I in
t~ personnel office. The
Personnel Analyst is i::en-
ernllst In nature. It tt·
quire11 a co\l('ge degree in
public or buslne~ admin·
lstration, or a closely re-
lated major and one year
ot recent professional per-
sonnel experience Includ-
ing any or 1111 o1 the lol·
lo1ving : job anal;.-sis, re-
cn11tment & testing, cla!!-
sificallon & pa,y, employ-
ee relations.
Application" 11nd r esume
must be liled before 5 pm,
Friday. l\tarch 27, 1970, at
the Personnel Office, 3300
Newport Bll·d., N e w po r I
Beach, Calif. C714) 673-663l.
port Beach, hrs. 9-1 pm & • • • • •
1-3 pm. Top ~la~" Write Complete M11diterr•n••n Bedroom Suite in
Bo:oo: p.579, Daily Pilot. Oak. IRe9. $349.001 ....... -~NOW $188.00
SECRETAltY-Steno. Exper G or9eou1 Sp•ni•h Custom Built Sofa with
necess. Send resume 'A'/plc-matching Lov• S.at-Choice of be•utiful
ltu1;;, PSa'"",""•58· P. 0. Box f•bric•. I Reg. $419.9SJ -··-..... NOW f225.00
"""· n a na. S · h D' · S t $7 penis 1n1ng e s ................................... 5.00
SECRETARY
Jn sales & mk1g. dept. Heavy
dictaphone & ~ rapid typist.
To $6j0.
RUTH RYAN AGENCY
1793 Ne~-por1, CM 646-4854
17931 Beach, HB 847-9617
SECRETARY For General
Insurance Agency. ·~lust
have cxper. Call 54S-1512.
SECRETARY
1 Girl Office, exper.
Call Sl().5850
:'.;olid Oek End T6ble• and Coffe• Tables .. $19.50
Ta ll Decorator Table Lamps
I Reg. $49.9! I ................... -...... NOW $18.00
Spani sh H an9in 9 S ... ag •. •mP1
!Reg. $49.951 ............................ NOW $22.50
CREOIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN mm FURNITURE
1844 Newport Blvd. Harbo1:'B1vd.1
Costa Mesa Only
Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed., Set. & Sun. 'Til 6
SEA!\1STRESS -Exper in
ga rment industry on in·
dustrial se1ving maC'hine.
Phone 493--4:i86 or apply In
person at Coast Calamaran. Furniture 8000 Sewing M•chlnet
33012 Calle Perlecto, San 1-------...:.:..:..: 8120
Juan Capislrano LIVING ROOM SINGER auto zig.zag, 6 mos.
. . 7 Piece complett>. Divan & o.!d . No attach needed tor
Service Station -SeJ'Vlce Dept chair 2 decorative lamps zig-zag, . button ho I ea,
18 Neededl 2 l~e end tables lllJ'8'' designs etc. Gua.r. $37 cash * $135 PER WEEK + collee table, Regu la'r prlC:, or small payments. 526--6616
PRACTICAL Nurse-hrs 3 For New lilark C. Bloome $219.95. Now only $169.95.
pm-7 pm ?ifon-Thurs-Fri, C.M. Store and Garden Approved Furn'1t r 8:30 am-6:30 pm Sat le Sun Gro\"e & Anaheim stores. U e
Reliable &id to semi in\'alid. Changt' tires & shocks. lt1ust have refs. 673-3~7 Reier. \\'ill train. !\led. ben-71.59 Jfarbor Blvd.
Musical
Instruments
CONTELLO
ACCORDION
1125
elits & Insur. Pension & Pro! Costa ~1esa ~8-9660
P R 0 DUCT l 0 N Artist Shar Plan. Apply J.tark C. OPEN 9-9
"'/kno"·ledge ol VI s u a I Bloome Co.. 3005 Harbor CONTE!\1PORARY J iv in g ~~~~time days· Ca 11 Blvd .. Costa !\1esa. room chair and malchin
..'-'.:...C~------SERVICE Station AttendMI ottoman. Newly reupholster·
REAL ESTATE Full lime, perm. Salary + ed in light green French im-
SALESPERSONS Comm. l\1ust be able to sell! port fabric. Xln! condition
Unusual opportunity to joln Over 21. Bro1\'ns Shell SGO. Eves & wl1cnd11; 545-6062
tialcs rorcc ol dynamic real Service, 990 E. Coast Hwy., MAPLE Hi-boy chest SIO.
estate company. Jr you arc N.B. !\1aple bunk or t\\•in bed
lii:ensed & \vould like lo join SERVICE Station Salesman, frames (no matt's) ~·/lad·
the rapidly growing staJf ol exp"d, salary & comm. • drr $25. ~19-0507
FaiT0\11 Really, call: 5-16-3291 unilonns. older man tine. 8' Sofa, never used, quil!ed
For confidenti1.d interview. Chev~on, Adams & !!oral. SC'Otch guardrd S120.
REAL Esta\~ Sale11men Magnoha, H.B. l\1alch. Jovesrat $75. (1)
shouldn't you be ~elllng the SERVICE Sta.lion Attendenl, 776-0592
hottest area Huntlng ton full. time, .evening shill L'°'I°'G~HT=&=°";g-,-,-.-,-,,~,;~,-,,
Beach? \Ve will lraln. Call Exp d. Ne~! in appearance. sttghtly used . Approx . 40
Phll l\1cNamee Village Real Stt Jim, 2590 NewpoM C./1.1. yrds. Xlnl cond. 6'16-2962
Estate 962-4471 SERVICE _Station Attendant, ?tfODERN Couch, chair. t'nd
RECEPTIONIST For days, swing &. graveyard. & corf tables, lamp + 23''
General l n.~urance Age.ncy. Apply In person, cor . TV. 642-7469
Call 548-1512 ~1acArthur & Campus Dr .. c..:.:..::.~c707~---N .B. 5' Solid Oak ~ER . Corlee Table. S31l. _ s. • • . Mon-Fl-1. After· Call 968-4903
Restaurant
24 key, 121) bass, with case,
S600 ve 1uie + "easy to
learn" books & sh.aet mw;!c
case.
PERFECT CONofrroNt
S200 or Best Ofler
540-8308 Alter 3 PJ\.f
7 PIECE Yamaha drum set.
new in 1969. Xlnt condition.
Sacrilice! $325. n4: 538-1435
alter 5 P!\1.
~s & Organs 8130
PIANOS & ORGANS
NE\V &. USED e Yamaha Pianos Organs
• Tilomas Organs
• Kimball Pianos
• K9hle.r & Campbell
COAST MUSIC
~'E\VPORT & HARBOR
Costa Mesa • 642-2851
Open l~ Fri 11).9 Sun 12·5
• Day Busboy
• Day Hostess
noon, Eve occasional. (hi.·nl---=-"::...:=--tn.ns, Call be! 9 pm DBL Bcdrrn ael, compl. C.old If you are shopping for a
642-0113 dressr. Niles\nd, like ne~· piano or organ, new or used,
===~~~-~~I $60. 548-8206 aft 4P/l.l. nd •• ,·, t 1-' · -·t
• Ni9ht Cooks TEACHER desires Jovingl -'-, :.::.:.::.=:..::.::...::.;c;__ & ... n e~s "" 111 a '-' u Y
care for 4 & 5 yr old girls, 8 GOl.O couch, brand new. great deal, please shop
p/time. Reis req'd. 842-2£125 Collee tbl & overi;tuffed \YARD 'S BALDWIN srUOJO
APPLY IN PERSON chair. xlnt rond. 5'18-8908 1819 Ne\\·port. C.!\f. 642-8484
Reuben E. Lee
151 E. Coast H\\·'Y·
Ne1vport Beach
VW PARTS MAN DINETTE s<?t. 6 chairs. Gold Open Every Nile
Need good man to work parts & 1vhite, [ormic11. top table l =~&~S~,n~d~•y~A~t~"~"'~°"'~' ~
~=~-~v ~;~rienre pre· $60 cash. 8.19-3826 PIANO RENTALS
H b V W lrom SlO monthly. ar our . • Office Furniture 8010 All re7itals apply
10 purcha~ Restaurant
Ancient Mariner
now Ill.kin~ applications for
Full & i>o1rt lime, day ~hift. e KITCHEN HELP e OISHWASHER
Apply in perron
2fAl7 \\T. Coost llw)'.
Ne\\1lQrt Beach
RESTAURANT. i\1 /F ,
11:30-2 P:\I. days. MALE.
over IR-t'\'C'~. Ar ply at
Tastee Freez 2966 Bristo,
C.!\t. aller 2 P~I.
ROY ALVARADO
Hair Stylist
No111 inlcrv!e1\•lng: Hair styt.
isl~. hnir drc~i;('rs, beaul\c.
inni;, 1u;si11t11.nts, ~hampoo
glrl. manicurists t; hnlr mo-
flel~. N e w p o r l Beach.
642-6:-123 -Anytim('.
~e Betty Bruc-c 11.l mi_jj lxec
Agency for C11reer Girls •
410 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B.
By appoi:it. 6"6·3939
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
18711 BEACH BL ..
HUNTINGTON BEACH
\VAITRESS Wanted: Co!fee
Shop, 1797 Ne"'P<lrt Blvd.
Apply hel\\'JTI 6.A..'1: & .?P~l.
SJS-9284.
AEROSPACE RELEASES
FOR PUBLIC SALE
• 500 stet>\ transfer Cfl!l"'I e
Z72 Steel & 'food desks e S5,
5-Drawer legal lile C'nb1ncts
., f.1isc ehait'fi, tables & cab-
inets.
1-JcMahan Bros De~k lnc.
WAITRESS Wanled. Apply in 1800 Ne1\'pClrt Bl\'fl
GOULD MUSIC
?Oti N. l\fa in. SA
THO!\IAS "Band Box"' &
"Playn1ate" both for SJOO.
Artisan Orcheslra be l I 5
S200 . Add exciting
pe rcussion to any organ.
Newport Organs 6~>-JjJO
person. f.1esa Lanes, 1703 C011ta l\teS11 •642-S~50
S · A CM HA?it~JOND Ste"1way. y.,,,. upenor ve., . . --·~ --a ha. New & used pianos of
\VA IT RESSE~ .. ex_p'd, Store Equipme nt 8012 most makes. Best buys in
wanted Sari & S1tlo1n. 5930 So. Call!. a' Schmidt Music
P11.c\lic Coast H~-y. N.B. --------1 c.o. 1907 N. b[r-in, Santa Ana
\VANTED B b ill I 2 STORE Fi~tures: \\'all fix· a ys er or tun-s-outr1gger l)'Jlt', gon-
yr. ~Id, my home, 5:30 pm dola.s. glass shelv~s. !'anopy
to 2.30 am. 642-4812 w/faeia lii;:htini::. rrcesSl!d * WOMEN * ccitlng ll,1::hls, lormi<'a chrrk
Tl'lephone \\'Ork out stand & wnl! fixtures.
from home. Nearly ne~" 614-235.1
NO SELLING
\Vrite
P.O. Box 5565
Los Angeles. Calif.
Garag• Sale 8022
W0!\1AN 25-45, ritanied prtf. GARAGE SAL E ANO
Lite factory "'·ork . FURNITURE SALE
mechanical exp. but not
necessary. Bulwin ?itfg. Co. Practically ne\\' ~lrlg~ator.
2952 Randolph A11e, C.?it. fl Ou-A-Bed bedroom ~u1te.
blk from \Vhllefronl, oll v.'Orld books, plus nu~llnn-
UPRIGHT .. antiqued a110Cado
Plano, x!nt tone, brand ne~·
keyboflrd, ask'g S3SO .
540-966.1
PIANO lf2" high. Kroeger
S250. Fits most any\\'here.
Anliq. 1890 Squarr piano
stool S35. Call 67:>-2207
JtA!\l~lONO Organ ~iodel ~t·
lll. \Valnut. Marie Pre-set,
hack grill. S1200. 673-5122.
UPRIGHT PIANO $7S
548-2145
SALES Baker SL) eous household 1tl•ms f., furn-
l\1an or \\'oman ~·/sales ex· iture. 2 to 6 i\lon. thnL Thurs.
Television 8205
ZI.. RCA Color Console TV.
Best ol!er. per. to act 11s outside con· day. 3814 Topllide Lane, liar.
tact lo sell the design Schools-Instruction 7600 bor V1e\v Hills. Lusk Homes,
service ol 11 long e~tabl!shcd 1---------Corona del !\tar.
quality interior decorating PIANO lessons Voice coach. FOR sale: Lrg buffet, oa.k
llnn. fu'>fcr. \Vrlte Box 59M, QuaHlied teacher. ell ages. round 1bl. books &. oth<.>r
Daily Pilot, N.B. 546-65M Items, some tools. 53&-4536.
• • SALESMAN. Full tlme. MERCHANDISE FOR 718 \Villiams. Apt C. H.B.
,,.., ...
SILVERTONE Color TV,
Console. l \Ii yrs old.
548-8918
H i-Fl & Stereo 8'210
Experienced. Neat' In ap-SALE AND TRADE
Appliances 8100 GF. s1ereo \\'/AM-Fl\! radio,
8000 1---------23" GE TV, both perfect,
FRJGIDAJRF. rice\. dryf'r, 1 _:':::'::.' .::"':.:':.:i".::e':.:·.:008-0::.;"::34.::9 __
---------1 xlnl cond, 220V. \\'hirlpool '69 l\lRi;:an\'OX console Stereo.
pcarnnre. See Jim, 2590
Newport Blvd., C.l\1 ..
SARAH COVl:."NTRY has
openings for lull or part
time sales. No Investment,
m deliveries. For Interview,
Furniture
• 540-0614 *
Savings & Lonn
BRANCH
MANAGER
S.avin&"5 & Lolln Assocl11tkln,
localed In Nc'A-port &!a.ch
erea, has PO~ll'lor avail. for
1 v.-e\I qu11.Jlflr'1 Savings It.
1..<11\n Br11rJ('h r.tanas:;er. Ex·
ct'!. potentfo.I k hinge hen.
elh~. Only appllc11nt1 wlth
t\ min of 2 yn, S..ivtngs ex-
perlcn<:e nrrd apply. F"or
partieulnrs e1tll ~tr. flcnsley
f2ll! 869.0512.
sf;Cn f:TAltY TO $j20
E.-;cellent Of\Jl(IMUnl!y
ABil.ITIF.S
UNl.l~llTF.O AGENCY
4...\11 E. 11th, Suitt 224
Coi!l11 1\11158 90-1'"'
~10VJNG washer xlnt ronfl. Sl5 t-a. Ai\t-ri\1 radio Pecan-mcdit
New HI-hack chair din. nn 8-17-8115 or !'l46-86n 11;tyle. Besl ofter. 67:>-7709
set $150. Medi!. couch & ='-==-~~~-o,..--love seat S160. Hanging \\'ASHER & El~c. Dn:f'r,
lamp S35. Queen si bed S70 pair . Xtn!. c o nd
dbl bed S·IO. Priv. pt)'. Cali Guar11.ntf'ed. Both only S125
(213) 431-1654 tenns. 61>-2306
MAPLE Bdnn 81!1, bookcase, MOVING:. ~.otvc;~nt RC"fr~
steM>, din. 5el, rit sk. ap-Approx ;, 4 1131 wldt , Sr;t.
p 11 anet:5. encyclopedia's, Call 646-5982
1itlsc. call 34~1768 Plllt.CO 21" colored TV.
T\VIN Beds COmplete. Rclln. $1Xl. Xlnl cond, \\'Orks
lrame-nntlq g'l"ttn. Paid great. 54S-.S727 •
$310. Sacrili~ $100. Like USE'O App\ience A' TV's, All
New. Call 642-fi297 i\]J\01nlced. Ounl11.r·~. 1815
QUALITY king bt'd -quilted Nt"\\'!)Orl, C.~1. 5#-7188
mattrru". ComptP~ ttmJSl!d --...
$120, \\'Orth $260. S12-W36 Antiques
LfKE nt 1\' avnca.do/nntiqun ORIENTAL Black C(lra I
i:Old, quitted d11.vc.>npor1, 8' Cnn'1n('11. Collt"ctor'' Item.
long. RCA color 21" console Av.-.11 for llmlled tltnt.
TV. 54a...161't •vu. Appl. only, 54&-8219
I
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PltOf
WANT AD
JOIN THE
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE
FOR
YOU •••
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
If you sell a service and ·don't odvertise in
the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you 're
doing business the h o rd woy· The Service
Directory ( clossificotions 6500 • 7000 in the
clossified od section doily J give s you an
advantage you get through no other adver·
tising medium. It reaches customers who ore
ready to buy . Be there when your prospects
come into the market look ing for the services
you hove lo sell. If your •ervice isn't
we'll start a category just for you.
your •pace in the "Sellers Circle" •
listed,
Pick up the phone r i 9 ht now and reserve
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
642~5678
DAILY PILOT 1
~Ct:ASSIREI)-AD DEPARTMENT •
I • t
....... -,, I .•. . .
SIYB
£1SHI
. c
L
A
.5
5
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
Read
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
... . . ..
•
_ Tu!Mlay, Match 10, lct70 DAILY PCl,OT 23
Joas & EMPtOYMtNT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT I JOBS 1 EMPLOY(!IENT I Joas & EMPLOYMENT I Joas & EMPLOYMEN r I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
s;-~ls-lnot•uctl.;; 7600 Schools-ln1tructlon 7600 School,.ln;t;.,ctlon 7600 School,.ln1t.uctlon ·;;; School,.ln1t~ij;n160ii School,.lnotructlon 7600 School•lnotructlon 7600 School.:inot;;<tlon 1'iOO
I
Schools 1and
This variety of fine schools -
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow.
Instructions For further il'lformation regarding th• Cally Piiot
Schools •"d ll'l•fructlon Oir•ctory
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
For 8 Weeks Course on the
HAMMOND ORGAN
You do not have to own an instrument.
Free practice time available.""Regi ster
now. Beginners register Tuesday night.
... March 17th at 7 P.t.1. Teacher, Laura
f.1ae Shelor.
Also classes for secondary & inlermedi·
ate organ students, register same time .
Sign up no\v & avoid the rush! 1
FUN • ENTERTAINING -KNOWLEDGABLE
Rent Or9ans
Avoilable
Durin9 Term
of Course.
Register NOW! lnquir• for details
Hammond Organ Studios
2854 E. Cotst Highway, Corona def Mar
61J·lfJO o,.. MHdoy· l Frldqy Ens.
i! •~ei!
'Jfie :JrotJlin';}
J.Jou!Je
Cake Decorating In struction
Art Supplies • Gifts -Rentals
Complete Home Baker
Supplies
Beginning &
Advanced Classes
Phone for FREE Brochure on
"SECRETS OF BEAUTY"
Classes Now Forming
Hours: 9 a.m. to t p.m.
M;=~vr I Course approved C1'1Tldl'l'll'• Acton G~!ld DePI,
by tlle
Calif. Supt. of Public Jnstr. * Modello9 ood Tel<Ylsloo * Charm & Personal Development * Dramatl""Sptedt-L(ttl• Theatre * Speclal Courses f« Homemakers * Career C<lrls
FLORENCE SMALES
Director of Our State L'cen.ted
J\!odeltng Agency
151' N. Malo, Santa An-547-6'71
1'65 Soowy Crest Dr. !Sun•y Hint Ylllctgel
FuRertoo 897·IOOO
To Women •••
• • • Of ALL Ages
If you are entering the business
world or if you are presently em·
ployed and need to improve your
IMAGE and INCOME, the
Newport School of Business
oilers a uniqu• and extremely eilective
Refinement Course
.Confidence and Competence
will be yours in a few short wee~s
Phone
642-3870
newport-·school of business
Ill DOV E• Dl1V f, NlWPO•T IEACH
[)·l'·~·T·T· E·T·~ ·l'·f?
Foreign Language? Gibberish?
NO!
ft mea ns: O[J Y[JU i:iEEO T[J TAl'iE STEPS
T[J lr:lPfl[JUE Y[JUR fUTURE?
If so at no cast to you, you e1n bt testtd to SH wtlethw
ou '<1uallfy for a career In the Comput.r Field-th• ~lrd·1ar1e,t but fastest ·growin1 Industry In th• t world
today. Don 't be saUsfled with second battl Ta your
qualifications FREE at Th• Academy of Computar
Technol08)'.
Glrl1: Out1t•ncllnt
Keypunch Coursa
COMPARE I
FREE OPEN HOUSI
EVERY WED. NIGHT
1 P.M. Phone or Write: 500 So. M1ln
U11I .. ._. Sci11•,.
S.9'11T•-
Sult. 40
Or_,., Collf., fJ:666
547.9471
'O" '"fE IH'O"MATIOlf S[HI) TH/I COUfOH ············-······----·················
Name--------Phone ---
Address Ci!y ----
County ____ Stat•' ---Zip __
m ontessor1Schoolhou1e
Pro•l4et tlw Int Aaswer ,. Te1r C:llllll'• h1ltlletld
• e DID YOU KNOW • •
50~~ Of YOUI CHILD'S INTILLICTUAL AllLITY IS
DEV£LOPID IY THI .&•I Of I
FOR APP~OX. IOc/HR. WE GIVE YOUR CHILD:
e A HIGHLY TRAINED MONTESSORI TEACHER e $2,000 OF SPECIALIZED MONTESSORI EQUIP, IN
EACH CLASSROOM e A BEAUTIFUL MONTESSORI ENVIRONMENT
WHERE YOUR CHILD CAN DEVELOP AT HIS
OWN PACE.
PROGRAMS AVAIL.AILE
pr.,chool from 2'h to Znd G1•cf•
L•••I. El•"'•"t•ry Protr•m to Ith
Gr•cf• l•"•L E1t111d.d D•y C1r1.
2 LOCAT IONS-FREEWAY CLOSE
0r.,...,.._SJ1·16$1 Mol11 Office s.. C:l•111•t1 4f1·lfll
ASTROLOGY CLASSES
NOW FORMING
Complete
Astrological
Services
Everythin9
I Aries to Pi•c••)
OPEN TUES. thru SAT.
11 :00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
(Closed Sun . & Mon.)
THESUNSIGN
712 E. ltlbot Blvd., Balboa Peni"1ule 675-6661
Call now for •••
an Evaluation Conference
• Grades 9-12
• Smoll Classes
• Immediate Attention
• Close. Personal Supervision
• Academics required for
ColietJe Entrance
BRICKER·WARD !"?~
88 Fair Drive, Cost1 Mesa
Phono S40-0420
Since 1963
Introducing
Frog Lovers
To Chopin
Parents, don 't wait until
your child is out of the Frog
Lovers Age before you give
them the gift of music -
You wait and it may be too
late! Children in the Frog
Loving stage (4-8) are the
perfect age for learning
music.
Yamaha, after years of research, designed
the Yamaha Music Course lo assure that all
children can learn music.
You do not have to buy an instrument, there
is no home study -just Jots of fun for your
children while they learn music.
Classes are now enrolling -won't you
please give us a call and let us show you the
whole story of the Yamaha Music Course!
Your biggest reward will be when your
frog lover looks up at you and tells you ...
"I gave my frog a new name, Beethoven."
Yamaha Music School
642-1844
MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
Miscellaneous 8600 Mlsc•ll•neout 8600 Miscellaneous 8600 Mlsc•llaneous 8600 Miscellaneous 1600 1-~~~~--'-.::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;~1-~~~~~
8300 Carpet layer has 1-11 I.o POOL TABLES Equipment nylons Sl.99 yd. Shags CARPET left trom Comm'I. GIVING up hobby g Iv equip-ATTENTION 8Klrd Pool
I---------from $3.SO up+ my labor, contracts. $1.98, $2.88. shag mcnt, osclllo1oope, signal ROCK HOUNDS I BRUNSW lt.'K-AAD"
PHOTO equip; 1 35mm 90c per yard. 847-1519 $3.99 sq yd. Drakes Cltrpcl tracer, audio i en tr a tor' NEW Shop ~.,.. ~--tom Slate Table
l'nlarger, 2 113.felig~tll & QUALITY ktng bed • qullted ~~114~ach Blvd, ltB. 1 i g n a I gtneralor, bar ..,,,., .. " "'""'From $289 fllt~rs, 1 Penta:< ,&hde-~op m11.ttn!11. Contplete unu!M --------generator, voltmeter. bat· 10 a~~-,P~~~4~.days 100% Financlnr
SPRING QUA.RYER
March 30th to_ May 30th
(Enrollment mu st be prior to Mar. 30th}
13 Art Courses Offered
0 Museum Toun
• Children's Art
NEW CLASS : "Symbol, Myth & Ritual"
DWAIN HOUSER, Instructor
ALSO: INSTRUCTORS JAMES ADAMS,
!\OGER ARMSTRONG, WATSON
CROSS, JR.".' THOMAS HOLSTE,
RUTH OSGOOD. TONIA PACH·
ERT, DAVID SCHNABEL, DON·
NA SHARKEY & JON STOKES.
BARY.
Phon• Or Write For FrH Brochur•
LAGUNA BEACH
SCHOOL oi;
ART & DESIGN
630 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD
LAGUNA BEACH, 92611
494-1520
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
e Travel Agent • Reservations
e Tlclcet Sal•• • Air fr1lght Cargo
e Communlc1tion1 • 01>9rations Agent
Day end night cle1se1
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Santa An• 54U596
610 E11t 17th StrHI
Accredited:
National Association Trade&: Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Federally in·
sured Student Loan Program
THE KEY TO
YOUR FUTURE
Housewives, High School &: College Students
train now for highly paid career in Key·
punch and Keytape. Personalized instruc-
tion. Free placement assistance for Cull or
part time work.
6 & 8 WEEK COURSES
IBM & UNIVAC KEYPUNCH
HONEYWELL KEYTAPE
Day and Evening Classes
Tuition Financiqg arranged
(714) 870-0407
or 870-0550
Starnes School of Data ProceS;Sing
175 Freedom Avenue
Anaheim, Calif. 92801
Complete and ma.il for more information
Name ...............•........... ···•• ..
Address ..........•..•...........•••••..
FREE TO YOU I FREE TO YOU
I
LOVING Yng orange tiger FREE Adorable klttent to
atriped cat. H g e b r kn . homes With chlldn!n. Pis
646-1718 3110 e all after ! pm .
962-2359 3/12
oopicr. R.ca10nable . &12-6502 $13), y,-ortb Ja'iO. 842--6536 CARPET Layer has carpel. l!ry eliminator, piclul'I! lube COME i.n & ~1ter for draw. * 5ECARD f'OOLS *
M k I aft 5pm t\'n. Nylon, Kodel, Shai & teslcr, vibrator l!sler, hun.-1: ... 1_ ar etp ace t dred• of rooi•to" '"" l"i f°' FREE Sta< Diamond -~ LADIES nt'M • Mw ltrt In :!~~·~;~~sel al cost lor capacllors, 11evcral picture polishing unit com,plete & 6 m S P.laln St. Ora~
Sporting Goods BSOO llfe? Custom fil bra! & r---------tubet and TV sets, hundredt lb. Covlnglon gem tumbler. * AUCTION *
CEID.1AN Shepherd mlxtd ===-~--pupplet,. 6 weeks o Id . PRE'lTY &: lovable. manx
49-h'.W.22 3/12 female cal, 6 mos. old;
WELLbchavedblackpoodle, ne!d' good home .
fr-ee to good home . 847-2340 3/ll
~2126 3/12 LOVABLE tnY malte1e
P.tlXED Labrador pup nfflh female cal, l yr. old, ff'@t! to
home. Good with children. 4 good home. 847-.2340 3/12
mo. old. 897-4350 3/14 P.tONGREL Ptlps make the
1.959 Gu Whirlpool combo. best pets. lovable J>l.lPPle1
Needs 1Dme repair. ~1346 ftte. CaU 846-4531 l/U
or 67>2616 3/ll SWEET Small size bla.ck
3 PARAKEETS. l wht. 1 puppln, 6 wkl old. Call
)'tllow, 1 gr et n, 2 646-"50S W
reJi8terrd. S-1!}..1418 3n.J NEED good home for 2 part
2 Cute f!male Poinler mixed Pointer female pups, a wkl.
pups, g \\'ks. old, need good old. 5-16-7202 after 2 3/U
home . 546-7202 alter 2 3/10 ONLY 2 Coockapoo puepteg
IT'S Beach house t1111e. Blk· le11. Free to lood home.
REST
-SITS!
BRAND new t!nl, ~ onct,
12 x 14 with. pole S150. let
box cooler, Wlt-d once.
Lantuns, !lOOO enJ Camp
Heattr, 2 Colema.n 11ovt1,
spare Gas tank .l canvu
Top for Je!p wllh pol<!s,
good cond. 2 New hleck
l'e1.1phol11rred Jetp 6~a1'.
64:z...18"J or. 642-3265 _
SURFBOARD 7'4"
GOOD CO~OJTION!
S!O 64.1·2315
swlm'A-ear, 54~2100 tor Rppt. LOCAL ESP \Vholesale from of tub.s new and ul!Cd, c:tr STONECRAFT
"·••h to Ro>l&"-nls & d. ~d "" "" \VUt 8101 Bolsa, A .. '1!. U JOU will ttll or buy ltANO Painted oil portrait of iU1.... .... ra 10s, vu -~ a e a. -'-•• W\...fv a -.
hud Conv ale,e!n l Homes i;acrlllce! ~l--8117 all day ~1 1dway City. 897-1970 ••• •ooq 1 "'
YoU or your e n!n from a ~aft 6 PM Silt. end Sun, and aftu S'l'""'""'"""'"'"""'"'""'"""I Auctions Frida)! :3(1 p.m. ptio1orraph. 646-362i W1·nd•'1 Aucto·on °·rn 9.'ttkdays. SKJERS, F" IS HER ?11 EN, r H
\VHY Pay more? P.1ust move SCH\VINN Vanity 10 1pd. HIKERS l\.fob\Je home & 20'75}~ NewP01't, CM &4MM8
used earpct, Jdnt eoncl. C&ll xlnt eond. $60. 4 P Drum get MOVING: P.luat Sell ! Single eabln far 1111.I! or tradc in Behind Tony'a Bids. Met1,
5J6-..1170 + P!!tl'I 1ulAn!, good mnd. Mrmbershlp in Nl!"''POrt P.tammoth LA.kc. Fully furn,
'60 LJ\?tfDRtTIA P.lo to r $75. 962-1560 Beh Tcnnla Club, S4M or Sips 7, F'lrepl. Sacrifice
&.-Doler S170. Dfnit!to1Jrl S25 Good rubber !Ired hand ~st o!ter. 8 A J\.t. S PJ\.i • $4500. Daya S3la337<1, Eves
lawnmower $30. 546-8854. mower, $j , 1881) P.T!!rrUI &l2--/159Cl. &40-0617
J'r'S WONDERJ"UL tit e Plnt'C, C.M. 6tG-5206 NE\VPORT ~ Beach T!nnf1 E_U_R_O_P_EA_N_IJ_um-,,-,-la-lr,
nuoty buya In appt\1111""" 81\BY furnltut! Sl • SL'i. Club Cha.rttt F' fl ml 1 Y hand lier!, llghl blondl! wl11.
you find In the Oasslllea Dinette $15, Single bed J\fe1nbenlp. Sell or trd. ~l. ~I &14--0139 aft 6:30
Ad!I. Check Them now! fr1n1e $3. 546-4431 &l l--0139. -"'-'·-------
•
Mltc. Wonted NIO
WANTED II
Acetel)'ne IOrch, used with
or wltl'lout ta.nb. 546-1219
after 5 PM.
ge1t 11eleellon ewrt See t~ ~15 :11101---
DAILY PILOT OUllHed J.~REE to sood home t'em~le
aectton NOW! klnen. Co.II 89'T--4M7 !112
. I
I
l
I
I
'
•
•
'
----. --...-.,-----------------------··--~---::-=------------------------------------
•
•
24 Dlll V PllDT
FREE TO YOU
O\VNm De:_oelll'.cd, DOOd new
lov\~ hon1e 1 Sheltle tnix
km. 1 % yr old. also 1
'""""' pnrtl-poodlt. used lo adulta only. ~m2 after
2. 3/10
I am "CURLY" whlte
coi;kapoo. l \S yrs. old, who
"'U\.I to be loved by older
cooplc. Hsbrlm. easy to cnrt
for, !:ld because owner
passC!d a "'"a)'. 962--0180 3/12
PART German Shephen:l,
male 5 monlhs-old, and l
multl-color mixed breed,
need r,ood homes. 516-n<l2
11;fter 2 3/U
NEED Horne for friendly
hu.sk,y pop. 6 mos old, ha.I
all shots, lo\>es kids. Family
go i ng to Europe.
839-5053 3/ 12
l l..Clvable female cockapoo 1
)T old, lubrk, I o v es
children, and 3 cuddly pup-
pies 6 "'ks old need good
homrs. 962--0180 3/10
BEAITT'[Fl.JL loni::-baired
Pcrs13n lem. cat, l~; yr old,
orance/white, & 2 8 month
old kittens need good
homes. 847-2310 3/12
LOVABLE Friendly blonde
co<:ki!.r mix, female, 7 mos.
old, long e3rs, need s
childN!n & fenced yard.
!!68-3776 01" 8-16-3818 3/12
LOVABLE Blonde fen1alc
shaggy cocker mix 1 yr old,
loves children, nds good
home . 84 7-2340 or
962--0180 3/10
-.
TLJHda1, Mlllh 10, 14111.l
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ---Sailboats 9010 Mobil• HomH 9200 -----_;_ --
BOATBUILDERS NEW 24 X 60
Reloclltc ln Peug:ol Sotmd 2 BR., 2 BA, den, carpeting
"1th u:rowinx establt&hcd wa· thi ,1 .out, patio &: carport
ter.front boa.t buildln,g fir111 a"nlnas 28' raiSt.>d Port'h. ~Ing exp'd J>Cf'SC!MCI in P..fany eXll'llll! In CREEN·
all ~s or outfitting Iara· ARK · c ~ --• I LEAF P 1n .• a., <.11u)', er fibera:las sailboats. Rep Y $1.5,SOO. jomu."• a inc.
IO Daily Pitot Box P-921 with 0 642_ 1350 O
name, address & ho m e
phone. A compa11y ttpn!Sen-BAY HARBOR
taUve will be In this ~a Mobile Home Sales
this month 10 interview. YEAR END
lW SLOOP 21' Overall, CL EARANCE SALE
dacron sa.ll&. Aerylon covcr, NOW ON DISPLAY
stain.less r%:ging, com p I 12, 16, 20, 24 & 30 Wide1
cushions, sleeps 2, folding Up To 60 Feet Lona-
mast. $600. Rich's Top Shop. 1425 Raker St., Costa· ?tfep
724 \V. 16\h SI.., C.t.I. CAU ~block F.ast oI Harbor Blvd.
646--0288 Costa hfesa (714) 5-10.9470
p""'"'"" SOLING
TEMPEST
14' PT4ZO OD Cl.ass l5fXXI!
Main. jib, spin, el"' $1374
Pacillc Yacht Sales 673-1570
3446 Via Oporto, Nl'wpt Bch.,
31' l\1ALIBAR Junior Alden
OWNER
TRANSFERRED
r-.Just sacrilice 10x55
Skirts, awnings, coolers
Pct ok. Adul t park
S & K l\1obile Home Brokers
12362 Beach Blvd., G.G .
• 636-0921 0
Sloop, dacron sails, spin-MOBILE home, new 1969
naker, 25hp Grayrnarine." ''Paramount.''2.;pG',
Sleeps 4. Good oond. $8500. reirlg-~zer, dsh1,1,•hr. awn-
Eves. 1714) 968-UI09 Ing & skirting complete. 2
l Of A Kind! 16' 9" Deep
K«l Salling Canoe. $250.
Ca.II OR ~7395.
CAL :ZS, Racing gear, Ship to
shore, Gl\lley, 8 sails, Xlnt
cond. Eves 646-2259
:is· F-Gt 6 berth sloop
O/B, 5 sails. Ask $6495
Pacific Yacht Sales 673-1570
Bdrm, 2 bath. Cbarming
EM:ondido vie-.·-site. Adults.
""""" 1966 DBL \\ide CUstorn bit
mobile home. A\vnings both
sides, lully skirted. 9xl2
outside screened rm, 2
storage lhe<ls.-Set in adult pk
ln heh 11.rea~SlO,OOO. Call
before 9AM, aft 6 P l\1
548-8831
O'VNER Died. Need Power Cruisers 9020
qualified home !Ot 3 adult, FOR Sale twin screw 250 hp,
spayed, female Ca 1 s · 34• Falrliner. Vessel has
MUST sell? '67 Obi wide
Customized, w/many xtra.s.
Redu«d price. New Mobile
Club, C.M. 64~95. 548--0813 3/lO new hull job. May be seen
COUOI And cbair. 842-2426 at Huntington Harbour by 1969 BARRINGTON 24x60
with all deb<. features,
acro!S 1treel from ocean.
536--6478
alter 5 pm 3112 appt. 002-8130
KING size mattress, Call =r,;A'°ST:--,28=-' -,u7,°'lfl"i"1o-=o=ru"1,.=,.
after 4 pm. 6'16-7Ei05 . 3112 Fully equlpd. Excel end.
PETS and LIVESTOCK
~!______ 8825
ADORABLE Toy p Oo"d I e
pups, 14 wks, shots,
wormed. l..Clving home
prime requisite. 545-4522
ADORABLE German
Shepherd Pup. 2 months old,
looking for good home $25.
673-4598
COLLIE & Gcnnan Shepherd
pups, 6 \\"l.""S old. Nttd good
homes. $5 ea. 675--0643
GREAT DANE PUPS
Fil"'"" blnck masks, Will be
BIG! $120 712-0075.. 821-4857
AKC Silver P oodles.
Beautilul 1 Pups, healthy.
After 4 PM. 847-2179.
'v ANTED: lrl~h Setter' pro-
ven stud, AKC.
846--5257
DOBIE male l yr, no papen.
Good pr\ for family. S50.
642-7312 {Keep trying).
NICE ~fa.le (Vlzsla) dog
\\'ants available female.
• 4!»-3950 *
BASENJI "Barklesi" pups,
AKC, 7 \\·cck..~. :i;hots. •
• 9G8-7532 •
AUSTRALIAN Silky Terrier
AKC. ~1a!e puppy, 31,~
n1onths. Shots. $125. 6J5...8l27
BOXER pups, AKC
registered. lawn colored,
show quality. 536-2419
ENGLISH ~kers, 12 \\"ks,
AKC, Line-bred. Tri-rolor,
Show-pet qual. 833-~
AFGJ-fAN PUPS, AKC
Ready for Easter. {Deposit)
Call 845-5452
Horses 8930 -----BEAUTIF'UL Shetland
GC'ldint:. Great \\'/childr<'n,
exct'pllonal saddle. (All for
$135l. Call (7141 842-1358
TRANSPORTATION
Boats & Yachts 9000
CLOSEOUT prices now in af-
fect on 27' l\.1a):num
Demonstn1to r & display
Tl100l'IS -
21· tw i n 2~0 h ,p .
dl'monstrn tor -list price
n4.500, now $691'.Xl.
Z7' Sport l\\i n 210 h.p. -Hsi
prltt Sl-t,500. now! $9!KXI.
27' Sedan 111·111 160 h.p.-list
price $15.500, •m11·! $9900.
Boat tsland Inc., 2244 \V.
Coast J1Y.'Y·· N.B. 642-6630
SCRAM-LETS
Af~SWERS
Ansv.-cr -Crime -Feign
-Q'Jarlz -ANTIQUES
Sign on a ro.i.d'~ide shop:
"\V<' Buy Junk and Sell AN·
TTQUF..S."
CU!ITO:\I BUILT r-.1in1·S[klrt
whaler type, 5 h.p. l\.1erc
Tralll'r, nt'w full CO\'t'l"l'I,
C<Mlll GullJ'd equipped. You'll
rr:ally havc to Set it. Relail
-over $2,SOO l'W'\\'. Jlave new
boat and mwct .sell Jut.
54g..1455
22' (LEE) cui;tom built cabin
crvlser. Gla.ss bottom,
~ncloscd hcnd, d i ne I I c,
alttpa 4-Chrysler inf»Artl.
l..OIJ of new paint. $450. Jn.
quirt at 119 34th St., N.O.
llftcr 5 PM .
RUNA.BOtrr 65 hp Johnson.
Owner leaving town. Takr
owr pymnll. Con1act Bill
\\'Ull.un.on. daya GU-9fTO
Sallboata 9010 ----2.1' T&!o.1PEST S!.p. f)t. Aux
6hJI. Jo;r. oond-:Xtn:J: RC•dl'
tn tlilt $31!i0 ~19
Uoo Jf &tfltioat. No. 2389,
•dth tra.Utr. cau &37-7039
aft 6 PM
$8250. 547-6091 ofc. 67~1901 ..... Mini Bikes 9275
BOSTON \VHALER EAST-1----------
PORT, 65 hp Mere & trlr.
All 1969. Phone 646-2067
GO-KART, good rvnnlng eon·
diUon. $50 or best ofler.
673-3593
S~ed-Ski Boats 9030 I---------
BOSfON Whaler wtth 50
Mere. All new in '68. 2 gas
tank!, elec starter, good
cond. Submit offer over
$&50. 54&--0476.
·~ CHRYSLER 75 on
Corsair hull. Trailer like
Motorcycles 9300
'66 BUL TACO 2SOCC
Brand new S40 carburetor,
new front tire, new seal1,
just had major tune-up. Xlnt
cond! Great Dirt Bike! $450
or best olfcr. 956-30«
250 YAl\tAHA Big Bear
Scrambler. Every thing
Boat Slip Mooring 9036 works. Great rubbtr. 1395.
MS-4757 or 646-483.1
* !J6S..1487 *
40' BOAT Dock for rent In l'-'-'----'o,.0-,~Sa~l,'----
1-lunting1on Harbour. Ph '52 Harley Davidson.
646-9303, ask for Jerry Chopper
Erv,.ln. $1CXJO. &IZ-7175
Aircraft 9100
GYRO COPTER
Near!y complete, $800
•642-7455•
Mobile Hom•• 9200 * JOMICRA INC. *
F1aturing America's fin-
est mobile estate homes
displayed in Orange
County's newest ad1.lt
parks.
1969 750 NORTON COMMAN-
DO. Excellent a :lltion, Call
546-J5.18 alter C p.m.
TRIU?.IP H 650, chrome &
velvet frame. J\lusl see to
believe. 548-9509
'67 305 HONDA * with extras *
545--3586
t.1UST SELL! '68 Honda 350 .
Strcel. Huns good!
• 49-1-5922 *
650 cc BSA. $350 GOO D
COND. CUSTOM. *646--1858
aft 4
SPACES -Yout choit• of 1 ________ _
1p11co i11 •ny of our 11ow
p11r•1.
SALES -Ctiooto your korn•
from ovot I 00 11•w 111od1 l1
r1•dy to inov• in or h•"•
you" culio/I\ built.
SERVICE -Full timo 1•rvico
d1p•rtrno11f 1erving 11ch lo•
c1li11n.
-"ANAHEIM"-
PONDEJl.OSA MOBILE
ESTATES
2300 So. L,.,.;, 713-6]).1601
-"COSTA MESA"-
GREENLEAF PARK
1750 Wllitti1r A"'·p
71-4-642-1350
-"HUNTINGTON
BOACH"-
DRIFTWOOD IEACH CLUB
21462 Poc ilic Coo1I H ... y.
71 -4-536-751)
"YUCAIPA·CALIMESA"
SOUTHWEST MOBILE·
HOME SALES
1065 C1lim11• Bl,,d.
71 4: 795-4512
Al!to _S.O<il:.~-_,,=
& Parts '400
'60 V\V Eng. Recently
overhauled $175 exchange.
Cl\ll &12--0896 alter 6.
Trailer, Travel 9425
ALPINE
VACATION
TRAVEL CENTER
Excel.· Golden Falcon
Olympia -Alpine
Apache· Wheel Camper
Worlds largest most com·
plete RV vehicle shopping
center
8.352 Garden Grove Blvd, CC
534-6686
Closed Sat. Oprn Sunday
FANTASTIC Buys in 4 Star.
'Vesh\'ays & Funtlme
Campers. Scotts, 914 N.
NEW 20 x 56 "'"'°'· S.A,
2 BR, 2 BA, den, carpetini: '67 CHAl\1PTON 18' Sclfront.
thru-0ut, 22' raised porc!1, Sll'eps 6. mnny xtras. $1650.
carpo11 & palio awnings. Call 675-5218
t\lnny extras, $11,600. On rhe '•K-E=N-s=KI=LL~=.~K=lt-. ~s~,,.,.,-,a1·
be a c h al DRIF'IWOOD prices on lot models. Scolts,
B~AClf CLUB, Jt.B. Grttn· 914 N. Harbor. S.A.
leaf 1'1obUe Home Sales, n4-1-=============
536---,1',.13,;,,,,_Jo_,m~i~"~"~'~"'~·~--I Trailers, Utility 9450
1962 SKYLINE UT1UTY Trailer, SxS. SSS.
I 0•55, 2 BEDROOM o •-•-s A Call 14 1 SI. tUl\U >;\\', • • A REAL BUY AT $2995 5<>-0782
SA NT A ANA A REA 1---~IV'°'A"'N'°'T°'E'°'D __ _
5-15-8241 Aincrican • 842-39:l!l • Lite u!llll.)' trailer
PARK LANE r.lobile hon1c * ~159 *
2 0 ' x 5 7 • -awnings, deck.
storage shed. In !amil)'
Park, Coast 11""1)·. acto!i.li
from nf'\\' Dana Po I n I
Pi1arlna. 493-3978
FAMlLY Park. 196.i, 20x57, 2
BR. 2 Ba. skirts, 8\\'nln.a:•·
O\\'ntt mu.st sell. S t; K
~tobile Home Broker!':, U3f'i2
Beach Bh'd., G.G. G36-09Zl
LEAVlNC !or England. r-.fust
~II quickly 20x-13 Lanrer.
Fumii;hed bargain. S & K
Mobile Home Broken, 12362
Be:11.ch Blvd., G.G. 6J&.-09'l1
fifOOILE home aluminum
carport awning, 10x20', llke
~w. Price re.asona ble .
~7..fit1';
~-----~ VI KING Scandia. 10xGO'. 2
bl", 2 ba. A1\'nl~. xin·t
Adu!! Pk. ~t!-41·1~ a.ft 6.
LOVEt.Y 38' t br· Jurn 11·lr.
AIJ tel up, lo rent. 1dlti. no
ptt . $2695 cash. 64-2-2841
Trucks
New International
Pick Up Truck
LIQUIDATION
3 to choo!!e !rom al factory
invoice price.
Kustom Motors
MS Baker, C.~1. S.10.5915
'6! ECONOLINE Van. New
p&lnt, inlc.rlo.r. 8 tric tape,
chromr: whls. and more.
$13XI. ~2861.
J•.!E_• ___ _ 9510
'43 ~lllltary Jttp. SS50 or ol.
ft'r. Hcll:vy <hltY chromr
rlm1 Ii Galf!ll lire$. 613-7192
I '12 JEF.P. NI'.'" 1rrui:smht-
1lon. $72:i. Ask for Olen,
5~8-6523.
TRANSPCRT#TION TRANSPORTATION
C1mper1 9520 lmportff Autos -.-~;.... ____ _ 9600
DATSUN · SAGRJ.FICE By prlvate
puty 1970 Gl\1C % heavy
duty 'Pick Up. Power steer-
Ina:, •utonuatle. V-8, w/
11ew 9' cab over camper.
Interested partiH oontacl
4~2892. 21621 'fJesley Dr,
Apt 3, Soutb Laguna.
CAMPER for Ranchero or El
Camino. Cab over. sleeps 4.
Ice box, dinette, water, xlnt
cond. 3 Yrs old. S400. Rich's
--------DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
ANO
SUNDAYS
18835 &ea.Ji Blvd.
Huntlflilon Beach
842-TlSl or ~G-OM2
ENGLISH FORD
Top Shop, 724 w. 16th st .. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;.;;;;;;;
C.M.
Dune Buggies 9525
Volka 1350 Engine. Near
Ney,•. $600.
•Ca.JI 675-3132*
V\V Metalflake OunebUGY.
Bellt offer takes! r see at 234
Al bert P., C.l\1.
Imported Cars 9600
-~·-----AUSTIN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERICA
.Sales, Se~. Parts
Immediate Dcllvery
All Modoil
J1 rluµort
3\rn Gt:t s
3100 \V. Coast Hwy:; N.B,
642-9~05 540.1764
Au!l:iorlzed MG Dealer
-AUSTIN HEALEY
1960 Austin Healey 3(0},
Xln't eng & good body.
S475. Call 548-0226 eves.
BMW
BMW'S #1
DEALER IN
CALIFORNIA AND
ORANGE COUNTY 'S
LARGEST
1970'1 lmmed. Delivery
25 New & Used in Stock
T&M MOTORS
8081 Garden Grov• Bl, G.G.
53t-2284 Open Sunday 892-55.'il
&16-~055
BAYSIDE MOTORS
1200 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
DATSUN
NEW '70
DATSUN PICKUP
W/camper, 96 hp overhead
cam, 4 spd, dJr. 6 ply tires,
back up lights. You name
II! Seri11.I No. 244009. Full
price $2099. Take small dn
or trade. Call Phil, 49-1-9773
nr 5<15-0CM alter JO am.
THF. ENGLISH
GOING
THING!
AT
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VOLUME
ENGLISll FORD
DEALER
OV!:h. 60
NO\V AT
CLEARANCE
PRICES!
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
2060 Harbor Blvd.
C.osta Mesa 642-0010
FERRARI
FERRARI
Newport Imporb Ltd. Qr.
ant:• Count)''• only author·
lzed dealer.
SALES-SERVICE-PARTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy,
Newport Beach 642-9405 540-1764
Authoriud Femu-1 Dealer
SAT -------#1 e FIATS e
Now 1970 Models in Stock
Sales • Service • Parts
0Vt'l"S('WI Delivery Specialists
C. Bob Autrey Motors
1800 Long Beach Blvd.
J..nng Beach
Phone 213 • 591-8771
OPEN SUNDAYS
HILLMAN
1960 Hllhnan Convt.
Economical Operatlng---Or!g.
01<.·ner. Call 673--5613
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEADQUARTERS
The only authorized JAGUAR
dealer iri_Ulc entire llarbor
""'· Complcle
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
Poole
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
23-1 E. 17th Street
548-7765
'61 XK 150. Dll Conv., mini
condition. True collectors
Item. 830-5976, 4g.;)....4332
"
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORtATJ6N. TRANIPOltTATION TRANSPORTATION .1 "°"' Aut.. 9600 lmpor!M /Wi;,r .HOO UHd Caro ttOO UMd Can 9900
MG CAMARO FALCON VOLKSWAGEN ~MG-TD, rood-;;;-. ~VW-pWJ ~ new '&8 CAMARO •Rally Sprt, 3.21
dltion. new top, rebuilt tnna,. bRJcn, clutch, bat· ,C\l • ..enr, 4 Qd, All gaugts.
engine. 642--3826 lery. 4 " • track ltcrtO .• um.-~. betwn -4:30 It l-~-------1 tapes. Perf.~ cOnd. moo. S:SO.
'64 TAI.CON, 2 dr. 11tk. nu
trtuum .1 tlt"ry, btakes.
S-475-1618 . • 642-ll89.
PEUGEOT &ll-4073 an• FORD ·oo vw au.. Now ro-blt .... CHmOLIT '62 Peugeot 404. 4 dr. Clean, &. tn:nl axle, tapt: dk, edl---------SHARP •63 F'ord Fairlan&
&:ood condition $450. Can be lire, cu.t. inler. Xlot $125, 167 Chevelle 500. Xlnt rubber, new btka
see:n at 1622 S. Broadway, 644-145' e"\'tJ. · 2 Qoor ~fety H •dtop. God· l tune-up. Sharp Wide k
Sarita Ana. 549-0674 VW VAN '63 deu &'Old ext. plush gold out. ~-MS-1594. 380 E. ; * Clean. GU-24783 * int. Air co=Jd, 29,000 .actl.lal 20th. C.M. J.::========:J mllea-.. Take foreign car or '68 FORD Cou11try Squlrt ---------VOLVO amall dn. L.B. dlr. (VAG527) \Vag. Air cond. etc. By prlv. PORSCHE '65 C, xlnt cond.1 __________ 1 $1099. Call Jn. aft 10 am o"•ner. $2100. &i2-ll23 aft 6
PORSCHE
Reblt eng, chrm whh, blue 145 _WAGONS 545.-0634 or 494-9773. P1'.1. 1 '>''/blk Int. Evea & "·k.nds. 6T;,--6360 164 -SEDANS •SJ:J.ARP '69 N~va Vinyl top, 'S7 FORD "''a&0n nu tires II.
---------1 All othe.r modell "°" !n auto,_ r/b, $2195. '57 VW engine $150 "Ken," 646--5789 I
1966 912, -42,000 l\11 's. stock. -4 apecds & .automattcs. Bug. Coad running rre:at aeytime M(}...8308 before 3 I
AM/F!'.1,. radl.als, cbro~e Your Befit Deal• Al! still At ~·· tor student. $300. p.n1.
rims. Xlnt cond. $3850. DEAN LEWIS 982-1'6< -1-,~,~usr--,.,-u-.• -65~Gal_ox_y-.,,-,.,-. I
>18-7673 9AM.Q'M, '67 CH"""'•~ 'laflbu, 2-Ov "" ~ -• 966 Harbor: C.M ........., ....,.. ............... " 3-sp, er...,.. •Vt!, fiUUU conu,
'62 PORSCHE S ooupe. 1 • · 646-~ dr. Vil\)'l roof, VS. AM·FM New paint. $595 or best of·
AM/1'"'M. Mech. perfect. '62 VOLVO 122 S, 4 dr. f].550. fer. 493-3681 ~
Must sacrifice! 642-1260 Newly painted. S500. * 117-1686 * '60 FORD RANCHERO
'59 Porsche, new paint, Call ~7301 '67 Caprice cpe. viizy1 top Air $400
radial tires, AM/FJ\.1 radlo,, __________
1
Cond. poWer Str. kbrks. 396 * 846-0975 •
xlnt cond. 646-lID . 1 v • T • b d =="'::::::=:::="""l'S~po~rt~C~·~·~·--..;;.~'~6~1!01 "'9 ere. urt' o-y _ra,. '61 FORD FAIRLANE con--• tl'ahl. 4n.oo76 or -492..'.9136 vert. Automatic. S l...:i 5 0 , TOYOTA #1 '66 CHEV. Cap,,.._ Fully Konm, 644-<010
• FIATS • equip. Compl tune-up. Ex.· '62 Ford S/W. Runs good,
ITIOIYIOITIAI . "'""· See to appreo! Will ,.u for parts_
.. ~ """""""' ........... Now .1970 r-.todela 111 Stock 842-2646 e 540-2321 e
Mark 11 W1gon1
Hi Lux Pickups
Land Cruisers
Wagons
PLUS OTHER
HARD TO GET MOD~
NOW lN STOCK
DEAN LEWIS
Sales e Service e Parts '56 CJil\VY V-8 3 1peed, 1966 FAlRLANE GTA, 390
Overseas °'llwry Specialists mags. chrome rims. S. W. eng.. auto tran!" p/s, xlnl
C. Bob Autrey Motors Gauges. is.,lCI OR BEST OF· cond. $1200. 968-..7956 after 5
1800 Long Beach Blvd. FER. 646-9076 alter 5 Pl\1
Long B:e&eh '64 Chevelle Sta. Wag, Good
Phone 213 • 591-8721 cone!. New tires, auto trans.
OPEN SUNDAYS Trlr hitch. $Q:K>. Prlv, pty. ..._,,.,
Autos Wanted '700 CHEV. ,65 Imp. SS. 37i,
pm
'68 LTD FORD \\'AGON,
$2500
* 536-&\04 *
l!W Harbor, C.M. 040.9303 WE PAY TOP auto. tr., p/b, p/a, l owner.
TEN 1970 ?.tavericks, loaded.
$2350 each.
"""'80
BILL MAXEY
!TIOIY(OITIA!
1118'1 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt, BHch 147-1555
1 m1 N. or aia.c: Hwy. cm Bell
'69 TOYOTA Corona, 2 door,
4 spe«I, xlnt condition $1SOO.
545-4T"a5.or 545-2647
VOLKSWAGEN
YW BUBt
FROM '
$399
GOOD SELECTION
5-19. 3031 Ext, 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD. rosrA MESA
CASH .~~~~:z: e.: 32'7 STATION Wagon, Fairlane
64. Alr cond. $500. Days eng. 4-spd, radio, healer, 646-9408, evea 147-fi745
nm~·~··~·~·~·~,h~·-$~1350~-:._!968-~~~ll!~Fo;;;fii'&;;;;;n-.;:,.;a.;;;, for used cars & trucks just :::: , 1964 Ford Falcon V-8 i;ta.lion
call us for tree estimate. CHEVELLE 69· Take over Wagon. I owner, R/H, Auto
GROTH CHEVROLET """''':."·~"':""'· .... ,,,_ s4"' 644--04lo '62 Ford GaJ. 4 dr. Real
Ask for Salu fl.fan.ager
182ll Beach Blvd.
Hunlington Beach
Kl ~=
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 54&-1200
IMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP$ BUYER
BILL t\tA.\.'EY TOYOTA
'65 El Camloo. Air, 4. sPeed· clean. full p'm &. A/C. Ask-
New engine. ing $500. 5.all-4667 aft 4 P~f * 675--5516 * 1964 CHEVEU..E, 34,000 '64 FORD Galuie, V-8, pis.
lik xlnt cond., lo mlg. $700. mi's, · e new. $1COI. (21Sl 592-1032 •>IS-<392• .-66~Che~v<ll~-,~M-all~bu-, -vl~ny~l I '68 FORD Country Sedan
tic $1295 w/rudlo, auto, air, p/s, top, air, automa · -. disc brk.~. D.F.R.S. 968-3415 ~!
1959 CHEV. Sta. \Vog. lladlo, MERCURY heater, automaUe trans.
1
__________ 1
l ,O"°"c'-="oi'=b'°".;.,,k"__:~~-~-~· ~!1963 COME"l" Villager. -4 dr.
'60 CH.EV. Sta. \Vagon. Xlnt Station Wagon. Bright reel
nltthanical cond. Kleen in U.'/"''oodlone paneled sides.
a.nd out $250. 548-1610. Radio/heater. Automatic
TEN 1968 Qievy Impalas, transm\Mion. New \\•hite-
pt~ for quick A.le $1450 watl lires. luggag,. rack.
each. 6.»-5480 $395. Sharp! 642--0022 aft 5
PM. Priv. Ply.
1967 J!'.JPALA, 2 door, radio, I~----~--Ph. 847-8555 fact air, p/s, p/b, Jo ml&. 1966 Ml'rcury Colony Park 9 ,
========="! Pvt. pty. $1400. 6~08 pass. \Vagon, Air, full pwr, Pvt. aale aft 5, 644-5274 Auto Leesing '810 '57 CHEVY Wag. 283 eng. l======;==='-1 liiiiiiiiOi;;iiiiOil!I. ---•I Auto. Good oond. $300. Call
FORD AUTIIORIZED 64>242'l aftemoons only. MUSTANG
LEA;5JNG SYSTEM '58 CHEV. 3 spit, r/h, Xlnt '66 Mustant1 H.T . ---,L,_A.,--::R:-:G=E,.---IAmerlca s largest leul.ne nnnbw oond. $175. 173-4075 British racing green. R/R,
system for finance or nt! or 613-ICJ. dlr. Xlnt. cond.lUon, Toke SELECTION Je33lng o! all type can and .,;,;..;...;..;_"------1
"'""'-forel.., oar in """" or $986. e Immediate delivery from CHRYSLER 'Viii financ;e private party, CAMPERS "'"' 300 oars 4"" triicla Call Sid 545--0634, 494-!1773.
of VW
ff b V W • C.ompetitlv'e rates 1961 CHRYSLER 4 dr New ~IUSTANG, '68 Fastback, a r our • • e New c.~r dea~e!;lhip service Yorker, .,..ffy ~ condltiOn Many extras, Jnunaculate.
• Full trade.11 value for $2?5. 648!-lTI3 Dra1ted. Sacrifice! 644--0353
AUTHORIZEP your present car · · aft 6 pm
SALES I SERVICE •All popular makes avau. CONTINEN-TAL '"67,---,>°"ru"sr=AN"G,,-C"o-.,-cvt,-_ -,V""-3,
IW.ll DATSUN tui"l<ll 18711 BEACH BL.. 842--4435 I.. able auto trans, am/fn1, pis.
HUNTINGTON BEACH .ror Complete Details Call -$1500. Call 847-5-147.
'li6 V\V WESTPHALLIA cam· ?lfalcom Reid CLASSIC '65
"Leuder In The Learh 1 .. ies" per, new 1600 eng. brks & Leasing l\1anager Contlnent1I Convert. '67 i\lustang Fastback, VS, ZIMMERMAN Theod A great classic 1965 Contin-slick shift, xlnl condition. ::~ .. s~~~ ~~Ga mBily ROBINS 0f0RD. ental convertible; Black with S1475 or best ofr. 96S-$38
2845 HARBOR BLVD, blac]( top and black leather TopJess Entertainment
540-6410 1964 V'V excel n1ech cond. 2060 Harbor Blvd. Interior. Full pnver, Vibta.· '67 Jl,fUSTANG conv. loaded
DATSUN LATE '67 New paint and tires. $845. Costa l\fesa &U-0010 phonjc FM·M-1 radio, new w/extras. Call 675-JOZl aft 6. 4494~-25~72~---~-~ l""':'7"i'~~'i!" ... ,.."'I tires and in lop condition 1600 Roodsler, .. spd, dlr, MG .~ .~ LEASE .~ Sharp, hdtp. sun red, plusb '65 BUG, sun-roof, needs ~ ~ throuchout. • .repeal, TOP OLDSMOBILE black int. xlnt c.ond. Must paint. $800. Days 67S-0770: 'Uf Cadillac El Dorado rutJ condition. Some lucky, lux-
sacriflce! $1499. Take oldl'r l\fG .~E,_v~",,·,,_54-,""""~-~--~ I pM, air, black wi red ieath-ury loving party is going to '65 OLDS 96, lull pwr, vinyl
American car or small down. Sales, Servic..-, Parts '63 \'\V Van reblt trans. & er int. $139. per mo. buy this je\\·el for only $1800 lop, stereo tape. r-.1ake otter.
UHE&l3. Call Ker. 494-9773 Immediate Delivery, engine. gel cood. $800. 779 '67 T-Bln:I Landau, tnll pwr., from a private party? See it 327 \V. \Vilson, Space 34,
or 545-0634. All l\lodcli Shallimar, Apt. 2 c .r-.1. alr, stereo tape. $79 per mo. today at 1104 Dolphin Ter-C.~1.
race !Irvine Terrace) in Cot· ·70 DATSL'N SEDAN 67 & li6 V\V, X1nt cond. 'GS Cougar XR7, P\\T, air, ona dcl ti.tar or p h 0 n e 1967 OLDS Delta 88, -4 d
Big 4 door 96 hp overheild Sunroof. !'.lust raise taxes! vinyl top. $105 per mo. 673-lBOI . Holiday hrdtp. PIS, P/B,
cam, disc brakes, 4 spd, dlr, 642--0350/64&-1670 SO. COAST LEASING I=~~=~~~--radio, fact air. Orig. mvner.
\\'SW, back Up lights. Sacri-1966 Volk:s Squ b k 300 w. Cst Hlvy., NB 645-2182 .1964 CONT., full power, $1875. S.16--0967. w.~en are ac . clean & mech. rood. Lo flee. Take trade, will finance Good conchllon. $1295 U _..1 miles. $120D. 642-3443 or OLDS 'li6 Cutlass. 2 dr. Spart
private party. Call ' Phill, 3100 \V. Coaat Hwy, N.B. * 548-3455 * Isa Cars 9900 835--ll4S Cpe. Bucket scats, i1tereo.
494-9773 aft 10 am. 642·9-KIS $40.l'i'64 1 ~,-=====-~ Under low book. 642-5046 AuthorW!d l'tfC Dealer '66 VW &.llU'OOL Red. w/w/s. BUICK '66 a>NTJNENTAL, xlntl"'-,-,=-=-=c--,,---~~.1 '61 DATSUN 1600 Xtra ShRrp cat. \\'ell cared d loaded &al '66 OLDS Starlire, bucke
ROADSTER $9.'.IO '64 r-.JGB red, good cond., for. 548--2981 all 6. · l9&1 RIVIERA. air, 3S,OOO ~le party."~ e. .seats. All power. Fact. air.
642-2899 art 7Pr.I \\'\tt whls, r&h. $1050 or '-========== l ou.•ner. 646-5383 -~-best oiler. 548-5479 aftcr 6 '64 VW Camper, good con--mi, xlnt cond. Pvt pty.1•
DIAL direct 642-5678. Charge dltion. !'¥1ust sell. Sl200 or $1300. 870--4520 days : CORY AIR '63 CUTLASS F85
your ad, then sit back aM ?>tGB '64. \Vire \\"hlS. F~f. best olfer. 642-1159 646-0159 after 5 4 Spd trans. 962-0293
listen to the phone ring! new polyglas tires. Priv.
Now! $995 firm. 5,16-0066 eves. 64 V\V BUG. 44.000 mi. 36 l96f BUICK Skyllll'k, Xlnl
==========~'========"'! n10. NEW ballery. NE\V cond. Must sell!
Imported Autos 9600 I Imported Autos 9600
ONLY
129 ACTUAL MILES
1969 JAGUAR XK E
ROADSTER
"\'ou won't be able to find
one like this very often. This
gorgeous XKE Roadster is
full y equipped with chrome
turbo "'heels, AM /FM ra-
dio, 4 w h e e 1 di sc brakes,
leather bucket seats, etc.
(421 ASG)
POOLE
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 E. 171tt Street 548-7765
tune-up S7~. 642-3596 * 5J6.26TI •
f
68 Pontiac GTO Conv, I
t.'lust Sell!
P .S., P .B., Air, 17,000 ml. I
Take over pym'ta 1 494-5739 ·a1t 5
T·BIRD
SACR!FJCE By private. ~
ly 1966 Thunderbird LaDdau.
fully equipped, air-oond
like new $2000. lnletta~
pt1rtics rontact 499-
21621 'Vesl~y Dr., Apl
South LagunR, ,
FOR Sale: '!i7 T·Bird. 2nd
o"''ne~. Vecy clean, Or\i.
w/2 tops. Call eves ~
I