HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-12 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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DAILY PILOT Carpenter Enters Race
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THl.IRSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 12, U970
For Sch1Dit~ State · Seat
VOi.. U. NO, ... I l•CTIOf\IL"' t'Aell
I '
•
Bombs Rip New York Skyscrapers •
Recall Needs Help
Clerk Orders 500 More Signatures
By TOM BARLEY
01 tllt D•ll1 .. 1191 S!tlt
Orange County Clerk \Villiam E. St
John tod ity ordered organizers of the
'·Recall Alton Allen " campaign to bring
In wilhin the next 10 days 500 va!id
signatures of Fifth District residents.
St. John's final tally of petitions sub-
mitted by recall spokesman Paul
Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony
Tarantino of San Clemente revealed this
1nomlng that the anti-Allen forces were
exactly 500 names shy of the required
total of 9,748.
Carpenter today reassured St John and
the DAILY PlLOT that the task facing
his recalled recall volunteers presented
··no problem." He predicted that his
force of workers will meet the SO.names-
a-day assignment with "plenty of names
lo spare."
St John's workers dumped 1,274
signatures in their scrutiny of the peti-
tions submitted last week by the recall
organizers. Carpenter placed the blame
for most of those invalidations at lhe
doors of two young Newport Beach
volunteers who had been getting 20 cents
a signature for pages of names that end-
ed up in the wastebasket.
If Carpenter and Tarantino cannot
drum up the ~ signatures demanded by
St John their myster ious candidate -it
seems certain today that it will be Taran-
tino -must face Allen and announced
candidates Robert M. Wilson of Costa
Mesa and savings and loan chief Ron
Caspers on the June 2 primary baJlot.
H1111t:ll1gto11 Man, T1·iangle
Rival Found Shot to Death
Bv ALA N DIRKlN
o·i ll'lt; Otlly Pll91 Sltll
An apparent eternal triangle slaying
claimed the life of a Huntington Beach
man \vhose bullet-riddled body was found
early today by his distraught woman
fr iend.
A second victim ol the shooting, the
\voman's husband. was also found dead.
shol in lhe temple, in the sa me luxury
apartment.
A .38 caliber revolver "'as discovered
by the body ot Navy Lt. James Burton
~1cClure. 38 .. or 2553 Pine Ave., Long
Beach. He ":as killed by a bullet wound
in the head. apparently seU-inllicted.
police reported .
Orange County Coroner·s deputies were
\vithholding .the nnn1e or the n1an ap.
r>arenlly shot by i\1cClure. The deputies
\Vere attempting to trace and infor m the
relatives of the victim. a 46-year-old
relired Navy commander.
The shooting took place al a block of
luxury apartments, the Hunl.ington Capri
-"Where the Living Is Fun··, according
to a billboard -at 6200 Edinger Ave. in
Huntington Beach.
Police reported thal the shooUng oc·
cured at 6:30 p.m. \Vtdne.sday btlt was
not discovered until 1:44 o'clock !his
1norntng when McClure's ~·ire, Grace
~1eredith. called officers.
She apparently had been unable to con·
tact the victim by telepbooe, traveled to
the apartments and discovered the
bodies.
Early inquiries today indicaled that the
A-1c:Clures were ln the process of getting
a divorce. They reportedly had an ap-
pointment with an attorney Wednesday
on instituting divorce proceedings but
McClure did not show up. Mrs.
McClure 's friend was shot four timts,
three times in the left chest and once in
the left shoulder.
Neighbors at the custom apartmenls
which opened early this year had seen lit·
lie of the murder victim.
A student, Bill Strache~, who Jives op.
posite in apartment 707. said he had seen
the victim only once.
"I wa ved to him once," he said, .. but
never spoke to him."
S{racher thought the victim moved into
the apartment at the beginnina: of
February.
The apartments' recreation director,
who declined to be identified, lived In the
apartment immediately below lhe vic-
tim's.
"I heard nothing at all/' she sakl
Stracher said he arrived home at abwt
2 a.m. ju.st as the polloc wtre aniving.
Today tht apartment was seated with a
coroner's notice.
COMING MARCH 30
. to the
DAIL:Y PILOT
'I'he DAILY PILOT learned today that
the stringent screening pl'ocedures ap.
plied by St John to the earlier petitions
will 1be even more rigid when Carpenter
brings in his new bundle or names.
Checke rs have been warned to very
carefully scrutinize all signatu res sub-
mitted in support of the recall movement.
And it has been suggested to Carpenter
and Tarantino that they insure that their
workers produce valid signatures in sup-
port or their second claim.
Bot~ recall organizers were out with
their forces beating the Fifth Dislrict
bushes today. And it was lea med that
representatives of Opinion Research Inc.
-0f Long Beach. the public survey
organization, were waiting to pick up
1ignatures collected by the canvassers.
Three Colorado
Killer Suspects
Awaiting Fate
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1M D-11Y t'llilt SI.ti
Extradition of three Colorado killer
suspects -unarmed for the first lime in
an alleged cross-<:ounty crime spree when
captured in Costa Mesa -formally
began today.
Hearings were set for two members of
lhe suspected Bonnie and Clyde.style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Super ior Court.
The suspected ringleader, who once
reported ly told his mother he would
never be taken alive, goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
In his return to Colorado.
Complaints charging first d e g r e e
murder in the brutal beating death of a
Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb. 19
v.·cre issued Wednesday in the Rocky
Mountain State.
Jack C. Matney, 32, or Denver. Colo ..
and Howard R. Tschirhart, 31. of Kansas
City, Mo., were due in court toda'y,
represented by public defenders.
Extradition hearing for James E.
Jackson. 25, of Independence, Mo., is set
for Friday morning and he too will be
counseled by a public defender.
If lhe.y choose to waive ertradition,
they will be returned swiftly, but the trto
could spend several months in Orange
County Jail if they fight the action.
Jackson, Matney and Tschlr·hart att
formally accused of the rifle-bludgeon
murder of Etling Nielsen, 61, whose
modest jewelry and Joan shop was )ooted
of numerous runs. jewelry and oth~r
goods.
TM victim's body was found crouched
Jn tht blood-splashed restroom of his
bu.siniss, as though seeking refuge from
the rain of heavy blOW!.
Cost'a Mesa Police Detective Capt. Bob
... Green said additional complalnt.s would ._ ___ .;_ _________________ _. Iliff llEAlllNCS, Page I)
.~
U .. I T1lt~ll1t.
Dow11 by tlie Rive1•side
Potice stand a young man on hi s l1ead'during height of demonstra-
tion at UC Riverside \Vednesday during visi t by Governor Reagan.
Two persons were arrested during demonstration. 'vhi~h marked
the first time police have ever been called to the Riverside campus
in force . See story, Page 8.
Newport's Ca1·pe11ter Runs
For Vacant Senate Sp ot
By TllOMAS FORTUNE
Of tl!t Dtllt Plitt Siii!
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach t<r
day aMounctd he Is a candidate tor the
Califom1a Stale Senate seat to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz (R-1\Jstin) who
ls running tor Congress.
His Impending announcement was
nnnored Wednesday.
Carpenter. as chairman of t h e
California Republican State Central Com·
1n!Uee, Is one of Cnliromla 's most
powerful Republicans and close to Cov,
Ronald Reagan •
The caadidatc took out p11pers this
1norn1ng and !hen m ad e his an-
nouncement in Newport Beach berore
about 25 !rlends and RcpubllCDn workers
and the press.
The 34th State Sena te Di s t r I ct
Carpenter is seeking to rcpresenl covers
most ct Oronge County llXctpl for strips
on the north an d northwc4t edge.s. ll is a
district in which 56 percent of the voters
are registered Republican.
Ca ri>cntcr said philosophically ho lits
the distri ct like a glove,
Police Get
Tip, Clear
Buildings
NEW YORK (U PI) -High power«!
bombs which antiestablishrnent revolu·
tionaries claimed to have set devastated
the offices or major corporations in three
f\1anhattan skyscrapers early today and
set off a rash or bomb scares forcing
evacuation of stores. schools and courts.
The bombers inrormed p(,Iice o£ thei r
plot in advance. so that night workers
could be evacuated from the stjscraper.1>
-all within a 15-block area. There was
not enough lime, however, to search Ior
the bombs, which injured no one.
United Press International received 11
special delivery letter several hours later
rrom ·a group calling ilsel[ "Revolu-
tionary Force 9" whi ch took credit for
the bombings. It said the offices of
Socony Mobil Oil, international Business
Jl.1achines, and General Telephone &:
Electronics were chosen because they
profit from war and exploit and degrade
human life.
Following a pattern set in other cor·
porate bombings in lhe past year. bomb
threats harassed police throughout lhe
morning. Among the buildings which hart
to be evacualed for searches were the
Manhattan and Brooklyn f e d er a I
courthouses. B:loomlngdale's department
store, the Consolidated Edison building
and several schools.
The circumstances and resu lts of the
bombings were "very similar'' to another
triple bombing last Nov. II th~t hit o~~er
offices in l\-1anhaltan. a pohce 0£!1c1al
said. ;
Later this morning. police reccivl.'d
another anonymous telephone call with
(See 801\1.BINGS, Page 21
Orange Coast
\\'eather
lntcr1nittenl cloudiness but most·
ly sunny skies is the caulious word
from lhe wenthennan for Friday.
Look for mercury readings of 6S
along the coast and 70 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
DAII.Y PILOT ba.skelban
players holler ··police brutality"
as tlle CoJfa Mesa cops liond
Lhfnn a 63·44 drubbiito. all i n
tlt.e nami: of charity. The grue·
son1e details arc 011 PQgc 26
today.
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2 DAili' PILOl Ttiursday, Much 12, 1910
UPI Telffl!Glo>
Just Clowning Arotind
First Lady Pat Nixon attends a "command per-
formance" of the Ringling Brothers. Barnum and
Bailey Circus Wednesday for over 6,800 underprivi-
leged and handicapped children. Wllh her are clo\vn
Lou Lacobs and F'atima ~larins, 7, of the George-
to .. vn Children's 11ome.
Times Mirror
Talks Merger
With Newsday
NEW YORK (AP) -The Times Mirror
Co .• publisher of the Los Angeles Times.
says it has been holding merger
discussions with Newsday, Inc., publisher
of the nation's largest su burban
newspaper.
A high source in Los Angeles conllrmed
a published report that oCficials of the
Times Mirror Co, had signed a letter of
intent to purchase Newsday, a Long
Jsland newspaper, for $75 million .
The Los Angeles Times, in a brief story
in its financial section. said today: ·
"A spokesman for Times ~1irror said
\Vednesday that Capt. Harry F. Gug-
genheim, president of Newsday, Inc., and
Norman Chandler, chairman of the ex4
eculive committee of Times-Mirror, have
had informal discussions concerning a
possible merger, but no agreement has
been reached."
'Flight Jacket'
Top US. Paper
f\1arine Corps Air Station El Toro'•
u·eekly newspaper, the "Flight Jacket"
received top honors ih the Annual
Thomas Jefferson Awards Cpntest, as
best civilian enterprise newspaper in the
U.S. Armed Forces for 1969, base of·
ficials announced today.
The annual contest was sponsored by
Time, Reader's Digest and Newsv.•eek
magazines. Awards are made to Armed
Forces media "for outstanding achieve-
ment in promoting a f u 11 e r un..
1tcrstanding of the missions or the u.s
Armed Forres."
Gunnery Sergeant Fred L. Davis or
Santa Ana. received an all-expense paid
trip to \Vashington. D.C. to attend the
Thomas Jefferson Awards banquet on
April 24. Davis had been the editor of the
Flight Jacket for two years.
La1nar Pupils Return
LAJ\1AR. S.C. (AP) -Attendance rose
to 251 Wednesday at a Lamar high school
and elementary complex reopened Tues-
<!ay under heavy police guard after a
\\•eek·s closure because of integration
violence.
DAILY PILOT
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Coste Mn•
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F.11111tol11 Vo11•r
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ORANGE COA.lT PUfllt~HING COMPANY
Roh.rt N. Weed
Proia•"! •"" PllOU1ntr
J1<lt R. Curl•v
Viet Prfl<denl .,,., C....1111 M•n~~er
Tho11111 Keevil
Tho"''' A, Murphin•
M•net11l9 Editor
llitherd P. Nill So~1n Or•nG• Counrv Ed11or
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GI Gets 35-Year Se ntence
For Viet Medic Murder
A soldier who used combal ambush
tactics has been sentenced to 35 years at
hard labor for the murder of a Yorba
Linda medic in Vietnam, the U.S. Arnl)'
has disclosed.
Lillie information was announced alter
the Jan. 26 killing of Spec/4 Robert \V.
lleady at a military post in Quang Tri.
The slain soldier's parents and widow
complained weeks afterward lhat they
were still unable to determine how he
died, when even circumstances or combat
casuallies are usually available.
A military court marlial found Spec/t
Alvin T. Taft, 21, of New York City.
guilty of premeditated murder and on
March 4 sentenced him.
The sentence of 35 years. \Vhich Taft is
currently beginning, includes
di shonorable discharge and forfeiture or
<ill rank and pay. but is subjcc! to further
re viev.1•
Sen. George R. Murphy (R-Calif.) pro-
. mised to help establish the ra cls if he
could and recenUy wired the Ready fami·
Jy about the outcome of the court
1n;irtial.
~1Jli!ary authorities in 'Vashington con-
lir111ed that I.he vict.im and his killer had
a fistfighl and said the vengeful Taft
obtained a rillc afterward.
Spec/4 Ready was ambushed beside a
path and killed instantly v.·ith a point-
blank blast in the chest.
Not for Birds.
Swallows Si, Pigeons No iii -Capo
San Juan Capistrano's famed swallows
might find their nests a little shaky when
they return to lhe historic ;nission ~1arch
19.
Although a traditional warm v:elcomc
ls planned for them, their cousin, the
pigeon, isn't faring too well.
Capistrano city councilmen upholding a
planning commission Jecision, said
\\'cdnesday that the keeping vr racing
pigeons in a residential zone isn't a
com?iitlble land use.
The case in particular was a 20.000
square foot lot whose zoning does allow
keeping ane horse.
\Vhy horses and not pigeons? •·Horses
don't fly," said Planning Director Bob
Johns.
The trouble with racing pigeons seems
to be that although kept in cages for
feeding and roosting they are !et out
usually once a day for lO or 15 minutes
for ex,rcise. They continue to circle
above their cages in a wide arta and
eventually drop one by one to their cages.
But theri are other pigeons ln town
that aren't so orderly. Hundreds of fluffy
\Vhile pig~ns who serve as year round
standins for the swallows reside in the
eaves and ruins of the old mission . T!Je-y
occasionally stray from their roosls in({)
neighboring resid ential areas.
And there are the swallows themsel ves
\\'ho suddenly lose their popularity \\-'hen
they start building mud nests under the
eaves of roofs all O\'er Capistrano, \Yhen
accommodations are full at !he mission.
The mayor when asked about the
swallows could on!y shrug and say,
''\VelL I guess we can't do anything about
them .''
But he did agree with the pigeon
decision recallh1g an incident last )'ear
where racing pigeons 'Nere kept in a
much denser rotidenlial area.
..It was a mess," said Chermak.
"\Vomen couldn't even hang up their
laundry . People y:ere even out there with
shotguns trying lo help the owner clean
them up."
Mom of Abandoned Tots
Identified by Police
The mother of two small children aban·
doned in a Fullerton motel March 4 has
been identified, Sgt. Robert Rrauehl.
head of juvenile division or the Fullerton
Police Dept. said today.
She is Mrs. Linda White, 21, of Visalia,
Braucht said. The children are David, 1,
and Sherill, 2.
Identification was made by Visalia
police through the license nun1bcr of the
tar used by the tnother lvhen she stayed
Yiith the children in an Anaheim motel
several days before stopping i11 Fullerton.
Authoriti es have not yet found Mrs.
\\'hile or her husband who is believed to
be in Texas.
The children ,1·ere Positively identified
through pictures and birth ccrtifica lcs
ob tai ned from their grandn1o!her, a
Vi~alia resid,nt.
The boy and girl are still In proteclive
t u£tody at the Orange County Probation
Oeparlment's Albert Sitton Horne in
PlLOT SALUTES
i1'1A RI NE Sl-IOW ,
The DA IL Y PILOT today !ill.lutes th\_
Serond Anttual \\leslern National RnDt
and ft1arine Show, openinR Friday at the
Ana hclm Con\'ention Center.
Three pages of stories. photos .and ads
nffer readers-a guide to the J9i0 boat
1:how. They start on Page 29.
Orange.
Chief Probation Officf'r J\.fargarf'l Grier
said the children \\'ill be the subjf'C~ of a
juvenile courl hearing to determine
\1'here they will be plai;ed,
1'hcy could be returned to their mother
H she is found, placed with a relative or
put in a foster home. Mrs. Whlte faces
child abandonment charges, a felony.
Cotu1ty Approves
Aerial l\1apping
Aerial mapping of Orange Count.v , part
ot tht General Planning Prograin, at a
cost of approximately $25.000. was ap· 1 proved by the Board of Supervisors 1\1t8·
d:iy.
Pla11n1ng IJ!rcclor forest Dick:ison :;aid
ii \Va~ hoped to fly the C'OUnty to coincide
\11;11 the April I Federal census.
The aeri al maps 11•ill be at a scale or
fl1~e inch equals 200 feet for all urban
a1eas and drnlnage cour~s and one inch
eq1•als 1,000 feet for most of the areas
Jhal nrc now in agri cultural preserves,
Dick:.ison said.
l'hotoi;rjpJts v.1lll be repr oduclb le and
r-:'ln he m.'.ldc avnll:ible lo all county
rlr.pt1rt1ncnts. 11nd th~ cities and t11xlng
dl~tricts.
The $25 000 contrac.t y,•111 pay for a®""'
~Hhnnt and the r hotography, Dickason
l8ld.
.
Draft Director Picl{ed
Nixon to Noniinate Pentagon Oi-fiei-al-'fa"
\VASl~INGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on announced today he wilt nominate as
new draft director Curtis W. Tarr. a Pen-
tagon official and former educator who
said he hopes to "serve the young people
of America."
The 4f>.year-old Tarr has been serving
as assistant secretary of the Air Force
for manpower and reserve affairs since
l<ist Jun e 18. Prior to that, Tarr was for
six years the president of La1vrence
University, Appleton, Wis.
As a draft chief, Tarr is to succeed
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey.
Tarr was asked by newsmen al the
\Vhite House i( he intended to follow in
the long-established Hershey pattern.
Declaring that "man has to be an in·
dividual," Tarr said he had no intention
of copying the life style or philosophy of
anyone.
The Air Force official acknowledged
that the While House had approached
--f',.on• Page 1
BOMBINGS ...
the message that fotir bombs \vere set to
explode in the lower level of Grand Cen·
tral Terminal at 5:30 a.m. An emergency
crew of police and firemen v.·aited on the
main level until after 5:30, then searched
lhe dnwnstairs area.
There were no immediate lndications
who placid the bombs. An anonymous
message sent to news media last fall
after the earlier explosions said they
were don' by "white
Americans ••. striking blows for libera-
tion" in opposition to the Vietnam war
and "the giant corporations of America."
The police received today's warning
telephone call at I :06 a.m. EST on the
city's special emergency number -911.
A n1an with a deep voice said bon1bs
were set to go off at 1:40 a.n1. in the
Socony Mobil building al 150 E. 42nd St ..
the lBM building at 425 Park Ave. and
the General Telephone & Electronics
Building at 730 Third Ave.
Emergency units rushed to each loca·
tion and spread the warn ing lo the
maintr.nance and cleanup crews at \\'Ork
-a total of 65 people were in Uie three
buildings.
Al I :40, on schedule. an explosion on
the 34th floor of the ~lobil building \l'ent
off in a public hallway near tv.·o freight
elevators. The elevators were blasted
do\vn to the building 's basement, but
police and firemen said the damage at
th<:! location was not severe.
At I :48 a.m., the second bomb went off
In the 12th-floor men's room of the Park
Avenue building, ripping a is.root hole in
the flcor and causing heavy structural
damage. A large hole was opened in the
·building's interior cinderblock \\'all and
the plu1nbing system was ripped apart,
causing heavy water damage.
IBAf offices are on the 10th through
13th floors or the skyscraper. which also
is the headquarters of Trans 'Vor!d
Airlines and the National Biscuit Co.
James J. Johnson, an IBM spokesman,
said the firm had received a number of
bornb threats by telephone in the past,
but "none for the last 60 to 90 days ."
The third explosion, al I :59 a.m, was
the worst. Police said the 21st floor or lhe
4l·story General Telephone building was
"tota lly demolished."
A1en in a bar across the str~t and
families asleep in their apartments
aroun d the corner heard three loud con-
cussions. A patrolman who went up to the
scene said it was "a catastrophe."
U.i\1W Probe Approved
\VASH.INGTON (UPI) -The Senate
\'Otcd a $265.000 authorization today for
(!TI investigation of last Drcember·s
United f\1ine \\'orkers election and or
operations or the union's pension and
\1clfarr fund .
hhn last December about ta)(ln1 the No. 1
draft job and said his response ~lit the
time was that he preferred to remain a\
the Pentagon.
Tarr said that while this \VOuld remain
his sentimental preference, Nixon last
week told hhn personally that he could be
or greatest service to the country as draft
director. He said that changed his mi~.
Tarr's seleclion ended a long search by
the adminU:tration for a succes$0r to
Hershey, who has become a manpower
consultant to Nixon .
Tar r was president of Lav.•renc'
University from 1963 until his Air Force
appointment in February 1969. He was
also chairman of the Committee on Local
Governmental Finances and Reorganiza4
Uon v.•hich was established by the Wis--
ocnsin legislature to study "''ays of im-
proving the state and municipal govern·
men ts.
Born at Stockton. Calif .• he is 45 years
old. He has degrees from Stanford and
Harvard Universllies.
He ran far Congress in CalUornla'a Se·
cond District in 19S& as a Republican.
'Tarr has been an assistant secretary oC
the Air Force &ince June 18, 1969.
Before going to Wisconsin be was an In-
structor at Harvard and Stanford.
He served in the Anny in World War
JI, got his ba'ccalaureate degree in
economics from Stanford in 1948, his
master's in business admiolstration at
Harvard in 1950 and his doctorate in
American history at Stanford in 1962.
From 1950 to 1952 he \vas a research
assistant and instructor at tlarvard's
graduate school of business. He was vice
president of the Sierra Tractor and
Equipment Co. at Chico, Calif., from 1952
to 1958. He served on the second Hoover
Commission on Government Reorganizaa
lion in 1~54 and 1955.
His wife Is the former Elizabeth May
Myers. They have two daughters, Pamela
and Cynthia.
Pollution Officer Fitehen
Still Figl1ting Edison Plan
Al the conlcuslon of 19 days or hearing
and 2,0PO pages of testimony, Orange
County Air Pollution Control Officer
William Fitchen remains a! resolutely
opposed to expansion of the Southern
California Edison Compar:y's Huntington
Beach steam generating plant as he was
at the beginning.
Filchen. in a report to the Board of
Supervisors, said :
"There are some ~'ho 1 know feel that
our district's presentation and fig h l
before the Public Utilities Commission
represen ted a complete effort in futility
and a waste of time.
"I couldn't disagree more. I have no
\Yay of knowing what the outcome of this
hearing will be. It m1ght well be that we
are much like the fighter who was \vay
ahead on points but lost the battle.
"Regardless of the decision to be made
by the PUC, I sincerely feel that we
1nade tremendous steps forward in our
efforts to control air ,allution.
"Possibly after 20 years of air pollution
control in the county this could be our
si ngle greatest achievement. Recognition
by the PUC or the nece$sity to protect
our env iron1nent, the public health and
safety, air quality and lhe commission's
responsibility to promote the safety.
health, comfort, and convenience of the
public all were stimulated by our op~
sition to the proposed expansion."
Fitchen said Edison's accelerated pro.
grain of emission control and an·
nounced changes in design and practice
Second Men1orial
Tree Approved
\Vhen 9-year-old Jeffrey Dietrich of
Costa ~1esa was killed in an auto accident
al the first of lhe year, his classmates
and members of the Bear Street School
J>FO decided to plant a Monterey pine as
a living monument to his memory.
But one of Jeffrey's playmates, Nick
~lehn, had died last fall from a brain
tumor and his friends decidei they would
Hke a similar monu1nent to Nick's
111emory.
Two instructors at the school, Mrs. Dan
Fisher and ~!rs. J, C. Jasmint, establish·
ed a fund for the me1norial and another
~lonterey pine was planted at the schoo l
in February.
School Principal John 'Vard said the
duplicate trees were fitting memorials to
lhc. boys Y•ho \\'OUtd ha ve been fourth
grade classn1ates.
are "definite steps towards maintainln&
the quality of our atmosphere ."
In a final statement at the hearing
f\1onday, Fitchen said ' 1 T e s t i mo n y
presented has not demonstrated reduc-
tion in emissions Crom the Huntington
Beach facility as a ~esult of the propoaed
expansion, but rather an increase.
"If Edison's application was submitted
lo me today. and I had been given the OP"
portunlty to examine and study all of the
evidence presented .. may action would
still be to deny their autbority to con·
struct. I cannot put the health and
~·elfare or any resident:,, in any area of
Orange County in jeopardy," Fitchen
concluded.
From Pnge 1
HEARING. ••
be issued today charging the trio with Ii·
quor store robberies in Laguna Beach
and Ne~·port Beach.
He said Jackson is suspected as the
bar.dit "'ho brutally pistol-whipped Ralph
H. Ames during a $102 robbery Feb. 6 at
the .Korker Liquor Store in Lagun a
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The victim said there was no reason
tor the beating at all,'' said Capt. Green,
addi ng that 24 stitches were taken in his
scalp.
They are also charged with the $500
gunpoint stickup of clerk Donald E.
Zerl't·ekh Feb. 8 11t the Sportsman's Li·
quor Store, 2615 Newport Blvd., Ne,vport
Beach.
Two men ·with mid\\•estern accents
entered and browsed in e.lch case, while
a third man was believed waiting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they ha\!e also
been linked to fj ve or six additional arm·
eel robberies in r..tissouri, w hi 1 e
authorities in several states want toques·
lion them.
A fourth suspect arrested last Friday
\\•hen police surrou nded a home at 5!41ti
Bernard St., Mrs. Patricia Phipps, 24, of
Independence. Mo. is charged ·with a
local burglary.
She is held at Orange County Jail, pen.
cling arraignment March 18 in Harbor
Judicial District Court, but may be turn·
ed over lo ~lissouri authorities where she
is v.•anted for forgery.
Severa l months pregnant, the young
\\'Oman who left a husband to accompany
Jackson west is expected to be sub·
poenacd when her traveling companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
LAST 3 DAYS
.THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
STORE HOURS; THURS. & FRI. TIL 9--SAT. 'TIL 5:30
jJ.J. {jarrell ONCE-A-YEAR
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
~
\
FURNITURE
Optt Mon., Thur5, & Fri. Evtt. 2215 HARBOR ILVO.
COSTA MESA , CALIF.
,646,0275 646-0216
'
11
l
D11ntington Bea~h Teday's Final
N.Y. Stooks
VOL. 63 , "!0. 60 , J SECTIONS, olO PAGES ORAN~E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH ·12, 1970 TEN CENTS
ea s _ove e
' Air Control
i Officer Still
Hnntington
Man, Rival
Both Slain
·~l· __ , •
041LY "'LOT lltO "he'-
Ju1npi1ag fo1• Joy
Janet Seybert (left) and Barbara Rice , cheerleaders at Fountain
Valley High School, react with characteristic enthusiasm to word
·that their varsity songleader colleagues received superior rating
for third year in a row in Anaheim competition with units from 25
other Orange County hgb schools. Varsity cheerleaders look third
place in their bra~ket.
Newport's Carpenter Runs
For Vacant Senate Spot
By THOi\IAS FORTUNE
01 11•• D•ll\I Pllol '1111
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach to-
day announced he is a candidate for the
California Stale Senate seat to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz (R·Tustin ) \\'hll
Is running for Congress.
His impending announctment \1·;i
rumored \Vednesday
Carpenter, as ehairman of th e
California Republican State Central Com·
mi!tee, is one of California's mo!'!
powerful Republicans and close to Gov
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate took out papers this
morning and then m a de his an·
houncement in Newport Beac h before
about 25 friends and Republican workers
and the press.
The 34lh State Senate Di s tr l ct
Carpenter is seeking to represent covers
most ()f Orange County except for strips
on the north and norlh"•est edges. It is a
district in "'hich 56 percent of Lhe voters
County Denies
Garage, Duplex
Everett Johnson wanted to build a 2Q.
root wide garage and a duplex on his
property in Sunset Beach, but the county
Board of Supervisors s::iid no.
JoJulson argued !hat he needed the wid·
rr g<."T'age 10 provide cenler posts to sup-
port an upper rJoor. He had been granted
a 19-foot·wide garage \\'ilh an 8-foot·wide
carport alongside by the county Planning
Commission. Zoning Comrniss ioner Ra y Reed said
!he proposed 7·foot carport "'as not wide
enough for the average car.
The supervisors agreed. backing the
protesls to lhe varJance lodged by the
Su nsel Beach Chamber of Commerce, the
Sunset Be::ich Fire Department and 26 pe·
titian signing citizens.
Location of the property is South Paci-
rte Avenue. 40 feet s0uth of Broadway on
the oceanfront.
are registered Republican.
Carpenter said philosophically he fits
the district like a glove.
He said Sen. Schmitz is going lo run on·
ly ror the Congressional seat vacated
with the recent de~th or James Utt {R-
Tustin) arid is not going to file for reelec-
tion to the State Senate. He knows. h·
sa id , because he asked Schmitz.
Carpenter said he also louched bas
\\"ith Assemblyman Robert Badham IR·
Newport Beach) and Badham told him he
will probably refile for the Assemby ,
might run for Congress. but is not in-
terested in the race for Stale Senate,
A5semblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun-
lington Beach) has declared again for the
Assembly.
Carpe nter said he has heard rumors
that Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner
of Laguna Beach, a former Assemblyman
"'ho was defeated by Schmilz for the
Senate seat in a Republican primary.
might run again. He said he doesn 't
believe the rumors and has not talked to
Sumner.
Carpenter said he decided lo run after
consultation with Gov. Reagan. He said
some party officials in Sacramento told
him enviously that his is "a solid gold
Senate district."
The 56 percent Republican registration
is the heaviest in California for any
Senate district. There are 18 Senate
districts fn the state with 56 percent or
heavier Democratic registration and the
people have the Democratically CQn-
trolled 1961 reapportionment lo thank for
that, Carpenter said.
He noted he has an unusual opportunity
to achieve rapid seniority In the State
Senate. Jn the first place, shou ld Schmitz
be scccessful. a special free-for-all, no·
party-label election would have to be held
(See CARPENTER, Page 2)
Slack /tlarkets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted ·downward on light trading late
this aflernoon. (See quotations. Pages
)G.11}.
COMING MAR~H 30
to the· ·
DAILY PILOT
____ .._ __ _
----~--
Anti-Edison
At the conlcusion of 19 days of hearing
and 2,000 pages of testimony, Orange
County Air Pollution Control Officer
William Fitchen remains as resolutely
opposed to expansion of the Soutnern
Ca lifornia Edison Compar.y's Huntington
Beach steam generating plant as he was
at the beginning.
Filchen, in a report to the Board o(
Supervisors, said ;
"There are some who I know feel that
our district's presentation and fi g h t
before the Public Utilities Commission
represented a complete erfort in futility
and a waste of time. · .
"l couldn't disagree more. I have no
way of knowing what the outcome of this
hearing will be. 1t might well be that we
are much like the fi ghter ·who was \\'SY
ahead on points but lost the baltle.
"Regardless of the decision to be n1ade
by the PUC, t sincerely feel that we
made tremendous steps forward io our
efforts to control air :x>lhJti(;n. -
"'Possibly after 20 years of air pollution
control in the county this could be our
(See EDISON, Page Z)
Los Alamitos
Studying · Plans
For Air Station
Los Alamitos plaruling commissioners
\Yednesday created a General Plan Study
District to deal with the future deveh>p-
mcnt of the Naval Air Station, which the
Defense Department is closing.
The unanimous decision in effet:t
freezes all zone changes on the property,
most of which is located in Los Alamitos
city limits, until a master plan has been
adopted.
City Manager William H. Kraus noted
that the aclioo was taken before "a near·
ly full chamber" of residents, none of
whom objected to the proposal.
The planning C()mmission action lollow-
rd in the wake <>f a Los Alamitos City
Council resolulion approved Tue5day
1vhich is directly opposed lo turning the
military facility into any kind of alrport.
"Utilization of this site by the County
of Orange for airport usage would be in
rlirect conflict wilh the principles of local
rletermination," the resolution states.
The document further says that the ci-
ty council is "opposed to contro l of the
land by any other agency, state or coun-
ty."
Councilmen believe they reflect the
sentiment of the community in laking
such an anti-airport stand.
Krause said the master-plan which will
now be forged "could" include a balanced
industrial park , a regiona l commercial
center, as well as emphasis on open
space and "green belt" developments.
The city council has scheduled a special
meeting for 1 p.m. March 17, to further
consider the Los Alamitos situation, he
said.
Alamitos Base
Future Discussed
County Supervisor David Ba k er
\Yednesday answered questions about the
possible future of the Lo~ Alamitos Naval
Air Station before a packed house at the
North Seal Beach Con1munity Center.
''I don't know what I could tell them."
the supervisor said toda}. ··1 just
delineated the process of evolution for
them."
Baker said several avenues for disposal
of !he facility colud be taken.
"first, it goes to other agencies In the
Navy and if they dOA'I want it. it goes to
the Geoeral Services Administration." he
r
DAILY l'n,;ot ......... '
DOOR MASKS DEATH IN HUNTING-TON 'llEACH APARTMENT '
E.terMI Tri,ngfe Broken Up by Bullets
'Annoying Call' Answers
By ALAN omKIN
Of ,._ 0 .. 1, Jlllel Sl•fl
An apparent eternal triangle slaying
e:la!med the life of a Huntington Beach
man whose bullet-riddled body was found
early today by his, distraught woman
friend .
A second victim of the shooting, the
woman's husband, wu also found dead,
sh~ hi. the temple, In the same luxury
apartment.
A .38 caliber revolver was discovered
by the body of Navy Lt. James Burton
McClure, 38, or 2553 Pin.: Ave., Long
Beach. He was killed by a bullet wound
in . the head, apparently seU-inflicted,
police rtported.
Coroner's deputies released the name
of the murder victim late this morning.
He was Identified as Glenn Ewing
Williams, 46, retired naval C()mmander.
The deputies infonned Williams' wife,
Janell M. Williams, of Summit Acres.
Arkansas City, Kansas, of her husband's
death. The Williams were legally
separated.
The shooting took place at a block of
luxury apartments, the Huntington Capri
-"Where the Living Is Fun". according
to a billboard -at 6200 Edinger Ave. iD
Huntington Beach .
Police reported that the shooting oc·
e:ured at &:30 p.m. Wednesday but was
not discovered unt!J 1 :« o'clock this
mornial when McClure'• wtfe, Grace
Meredith; called officers.
She apparently had been unable to con-
tact the victim by telephone, traveled to
the' apartments .and discovered the
~. Elrly loquirles today indicated that the
McC'tUreS were in the pi;pcess of getting
1 divorct. They repartedly had an ap-
pointment with an attorney Wednesday
on instltuUng divorce proceedings but
B E M D .M 5 , McClure did not show up. Mrs.
• ~ ~ · three times In the left chest and once in Y X ayor . ue ay· · ·McClure's friend was shot four times,
May 5 has been set as the day a tale of·
trouble between two fonner rivals on the
Fountain Valley City Council -ex-Mayor
Robert SchwerdUeger and CtJrrent Coun-
cilman John Harper -will unfold in
court.
Schwerdtfeger. who has pleaded in-
nocent , :1as requested a jury trial on the
ctsarges that he made some 45 annoying
phone calls to Harper after the special
election la.st September in w h i c h
Schwerdtfeger was recalled from office.
Today was lo have been the trial dale
in West Orange County Municipal Court,
\Vestmin.ster. but Judge W a 1 t e r
Charamza granted a continuance to 8:30
a.m., May 5. at the request of the former
mayor's attorney.
SchwerdUeger was arrested Jan. 19. It
was alleged he was the person making
the phone calls to Harper. Harper signed
the complaint.
It was no secret during the recall cam-
paign that Schwerdtfeger and Harper
"·ere bitter political enemies. The reeall
movement linaJly removed the mayor
and Councilmen Don Fregeau and Joe
Courreges from office, leaving Harper
·and current May'or Edward Just on the
C<lunci l.
Schwerdtfeger has told friends he never
made such calls to Harper, but. bas not
made any publi'c statements ()0 the mat-
ter .
18 Candidates·
Due at Forum
Eighteen candidates in the ~Iuntington
Beach Clty Council race will tangle in the
polllical arena at 8 o'clock tonight, at the
Community Methodist Church, 6662 Heil
Ave., Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Anita ti-1orris, publicity chairman
for the Police Wives Guild, said all 18
candidates have agreed to talk at the
candidates' night.
Four council seats are open in the Aprll
14 election, and 18 pe rsons say they want
them. All candidates will be given a
chance to speak, followed by a question
and an5Wcr period . The public is invited.
Harbor DistrictAutonomy
Supported in Jury ·Actio11
Support for retention or the Orange
Count}' Harbor District as a separate tax~
ing agency is voiced in a resolution pass-
ed by the Grand Jury Wednesday.
The jury urged the State Assembly
Local Government Commiltee to approve
U1e blll authored by Assemblyman Ken.
neth Cory (~Anaheim) and defeat a bill
offered by Assemblyman John Briggs (R·
Fullerton) which would put the harbor
Beal'h, prtsidenl or the Orange County
Le11gue of Cities.
111e league has consistently supported
Briggs' bill which is counter to the action
of the Board of Supervisors which has
voted to retain lhe harbor district as a
separate agency . ·
lhe left shou lder .
NeighbOrs at the custom apartments
which opened early this year had seen lit-
tle of the murder vicUm.
A student, Bill Stracher, who Jives op..
po.site In apartment 707, said he had seen
I.he victim only once.
"I waved to him ona," he said, "but
'lever .spoke to him."
Stracher thought the victim moved into
the apartment at the beginning or
February.
The apartments' recreation director,
who declined to be Identified, lived in the
apartment immediately below the vie--
Urn's.
"I heard nothing at all," she said
Stracher said he arrived home at about
% a.m. just as the police were arriving.
Today the apartment was sealed with 1
coroner's notice.
PILOT SALUTES
MARINE SHOTV
The DAILY PILOT today .salutes the
Second AMual Western National Boat
and Marine Show, opening Friday at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Three pages of .stories, photos and ad!
offer readers a guide to the 1970 boat
show. They start on Page 29.
Orange Coast
Weather
lntermlttent ctoudlness but most-
ly sunny skies Is the cautious word
frorh the weatherman for Friday.
Look for mercury readings of 65
along the coast and 70 Inland.
explained. •~-_,,,,.....,,...."'""~CllmTI!timrnlra \'ote of the-people.-He said it will hen oe up Id 1ne
General Service Administ ration to ask
other agencies if they would like the land. ;rhe county is only ooe or several eligible.
Honold said the jury determined that
the average homeowner Is now paying '5
a year In harbor district taxes ind this
would be Increased to Jl,O a year by in-
cluding regional par'ks and bea.CMS.
He added that this w~ld hO: increast
the total tax bill, however, as funding for
btaches and parks Is now paid frolri the
coonly'I' general fund .
INSIDE TOP,\ Y
DAILY Pf L 0 T ba•kctbalf
player• l10Utr "police bnltaiily"
as the Costa Mesa cops lla11d
Ut«m a 63·44 drubbl11(1. oil tn
the name of charit11. The grHe·
somt-details ore on Page 2a-
today.
The meeting was calltd by the College
fa,rk ttomeowntt• Association whose
memt>trah~ is generally oppo!ed to lurn-
inR the ab-staUon info a county airport .
Tonlgh1, Baker sald .• he woul~ addres!
the Rossmoor Homeowoors Association
or, the same toptc, The metllng Is
acheduled for 8 p:m. In the Nonh Seal
Beach Commu~lty r.enter.
l
Cory's bill would add parks and recrea-
llo11 to the duties of t~e district which
would maintain its separate taxing
status.
The two bills wlll come before the
as~mbly cnmmitlet March tt.
George Uonold, grand jury chairman,
said the body In an Intensive Investigation
Interviewed Kenneth Sampsori, director
of the harbor district; his administrative
assistants: Supervisors David L. Baker
and fl.1nyor Jack Green of Huntington
The Jury said the toonty will reilizc $1
mllllon a year in rtvenue from the new
Dani Pofnl n..,rbor and (his mooey coufd
be used for Ole acquislt1011 &11d con-
strucllon of regional p:1rks.
HolU)l.d noted that preVIOO! grand )urle8
had r~omm1indcd the retention of .the
harbor dlstrlcl as a separate unit.
l
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DAILY PILOT H ' • P o li~e Heli~opters Prove Worth
Huntiiigton, Mesa Police Pr oud of Mac hines
a, TERRY COVILLE
Of 911t o.11'1 f'Jllt SNrf
The fog was lh.ick. The helicopter pilot
and his ob.!Jerver could see oo more than
a quarter of a mile. But they knew a boat
wa.s oul lhcre, desperately In need of help.
Lifeguard boats v.·ere be.Ing launched
from the shore In Huntington Beach, but
they bad no chance of rinding the strand·
ed boat crew In such heavy fog.
Sgt. Roberl Morrison of the Huntinglon
Beach Police Departmenl swung his
chopper back and forth, searching for the
distre.sa signal. Finally, h~ and J Coast
Guard helicopter found the boat.
The Coast Guard copter hovered over lt
Yt'hile Morrison took his chop.per back to
guide the Jifeguard boat! to the di.stress-
ed craft. Five persons were saved. One
drowned.
"We we re low on fuel and one of our
pontoons was flat. I was afraid .,.,.e were
going to take a cold swim, too," ex·
plained Sgt, MorriJOn, talking about one
plained Sgt. ~forrison. talking ,about one
\\'ith lhe city's police helicopter.
This one happened a few months ago,
but similar operaUons occur often, on
land and·in the OCf:an, now that the city
has two police helicopters and five pilots.
·'Two of our pilots have been involved
In gun battles, I haven't yet," Morrison,
the city'• chief pilot, sald.
Morrison is proud of hls machines. He
disagrees wllh receot articles cl~lng
the sky mar become overcrowded' vilth
choppers, police and otherwise: "The only
limit on the use of these machines is the
limit to your imagination,'' he says.
The choppers spend about 7$-BO hour& a
\\'ctk airborne, searching the city for
burglars. other criminals or ready to
n1ake rescues.
''We spend a lot of tin1e warning kids to
slay out of storm drains," Morrison said.
Both helicopters, H.B. Eye I and II,
now have their own home, near lhe police
rifl1-range, oU Gothard Street.
The amalJ heliport. bu ilt by the city and
nearly complete now, wlll save a con·
siderable amount of mo~y. On a con-
tract with a Long Beach firm , the city
was paying $19 per Oighl hour for
maintenance, plus gas for a total of about
$24 per flight hour. With Its own
mechanic and gas reserves, the H.B. Eye
fleet now costs aboot $14 per flight hour.
''These ships requ!re maintenance
about every 50 fl ight hou rs," Morrison
explained.
'Those two machines aren't cheap. The
t'Ilgine has to be replaced about once a
year at a cost of f4,000 . The rotor blades
last slightly longer and they co.st $800
each. \
"But ll ha'll proved lts value as a com-
munications platlorm," tot orris on ukl,
DPin~lna to ne~s clipelna• ol seYerel ex· Ploits 1n whlch one of the ~hoppers was
instrumental in saving a life or stopping
a crime.
"It's deterren t value is the besl part. A
lot of things simply don't happen because
crltninals fear Uie helicopter."
On the lighter side _ of Hying the llun·
tbigton Beach skies, h1orrison related. a
couple or comical incidents he was in·
volved in.
"About two n1onlhs ago an alarm went
off in the Town and Country shopping
center. We Oew over It, si..otted a small
red sports car tear out of the center and
head for Fountain Valley." ~1orrison
related.
''\Ve \vatched him burn tires ar0t.i.1d
corners. You could see the smoil:e he was
moving so fast. We thought we had our
burglar so a ground unit came lo the
home where he· stopped.
"The ground officer wenl in, talked tO
the man, who said he hadn't left the
cer checked his car. The engine was
hot.
"Finally the man admitted that while
his wife entered the shower; he had zip-
ped up to the center to see a girl friend
and was hustling back before the wifo
Kill Suspects Due in Court
Trio Fa ce ColQrado Ex tradition Proceedings
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of I,,_ D .. IJ' 1"1111 l l•tf
Extradition or three Colorado killer
suspects -unarmed for the first time in
an allege<! cross-county crime spree when
c2ptured in Costa Mesa -formally
began today.
Hearings were set fo r two members of
the suspected Bonnie a1id Clyde·style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Superior Court.
The suspected ringleader, who once
reported ly told his mother he would
never be taken allve, goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
in his retum to Colorado,
Complaints charging first deg r e e
murder in the brutal beating death of a
.Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb. 19
were issued Wednesday in the Rocky
Ji1ountain State.
Jack C. Matney, 32, or Denver, Colo.,
and Howard R. Tschirhart, 31, of Kansas
City, Mo., were due In court t.oday,
represented by public defenders.
Extradition hearing for James E.
Jackson, ts, of Jnde}>ende.nce, Mo .• is set
Jor~ Friday mornlng and he too will be
col.!nscled by a public defender.
If they choose to waive e1tradltio n,
they will be returned swiftly, but the trio
could spend several months in Or~ge
County Jail ii they fight the action.
Jackson. Matney and Tschirhart are
formally accused of the rifle-bludgeon
murder of Erling Nielsen, 61. whose
modes t jewelry and Joan shop was looted
of numerous guns, jewelry and othfr
goods.
The victim's body was found crouched
In the blood-splashed restroom ol his
business, as though seeking refuge from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt. Bob
Green iaid additiona l complaints would
be issued today charging the trio with li-
quor store robberies in Laguna Beacb
and Newporl Beach.
11e said J ackson is suspected as the
bandit who brutally pistol-whipped Ralph
}I. Ames during a $102 robbery Feb. 6 at
the Korker Liquor Store in Laguna
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The victim said there was no reason
for the beating at all." said Capt. Green,
adding that 24 stitches were taken in his
scal p.
They are also charged with the $500
sunpolnt stickup of clerk Donald E.
Zerwekh Feb. 8 nt the Sportsman's Li·
quor Store, 2615 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach.
DAILY PILOT
Oll;ANGE: COAST PUI LtSHlfrlG COMPANY
Rober! N. We••
Prnkknl el'IO Pllt>lltl'lff'
Jetk R. Curley
Vic• Prnldlnt Incl GllMfll MIMOU
T1'orn 1t K,,~a
Ed!IOr
Tho"'•' A. Murp~in•
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A\S«••1• Eanor
Al1n Dirkilf
fWn!on,!on 8Ndl City EdoM•
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Two men with mldwestern accent.'!
entered and browsed in each case, while
a third man was believed wai ting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they have also
been linked to live or sl1 additional arm·
ed robberies in Missouri, w h i I e
authorities in several states want to ques.
tion them.
A fourth suspect arrested last Frid ay
when police surrounded a home at 514lh
Bernard St., Mrs. Patricia Phipps, 24, of
Independence, Mo. is charged with a
local burglary.
She is held at Orange County Jail, pen-
ding arraigrunent March 18 in Harbor
Ethel Miller,
W reek Victim,
Funeral Set
Funeral services are scheduled Satu r.
day for Mrs. Ethel 1"1. Miller, 71, who was
killed Tuesday in an auto accident on the
way to a friend 's funeral.
Mrs. Miller, 1403 Delaware St., Hun-
tington Beach, was driving the last car in
the funera l procession for Mrs. Fairy R.
Orens. when her car swerved out or con·
trol, !triking another auto and a light
standard at the intersection of Beach
Boulevard and Bolsa Avenue. The driver
of the second car v.·as not injured.
A 15-year resident of Huntinglon Beach,
h-1rs. ~tiller v.·as active in Eastern Slar.
She is survived by a son. Ernest
Pickelsimer of Westminster. a daughter,
h-fildred Householder of l...()s Altos and
five granclchildrtn.
Services will be held at 3 p.m. al Peek
Family Colonial Funeral Home ,
\Vestminster.
Bomb Scare Hits
Federal Offices
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A police bomb
squ ad searched five Federal buildings to-
day after an anonymous caller said the
Justice Department would be "blown up."
They found no bombs.
Police set up a security net around the
Jus1ice Department and four nearby
buildings, checking the identification or
all persons entering the buildings. None
of the buildings was evacuated.
The fi\'e buildings included the block-
vdde. main justice department building,
the federal trade commission and three
justice department annexes housing parts
of the antitrust, criminal and administra·
live divisions.
A spokesman said the Justice Depart-
ment's chief telephone operator receiver!
a ca ll between 8: 15 and 8:30 a.m. EST
sa.ying "The Justice Department building
v.•ill be blown up today .'' Washi ngton
metropolitan pollce were called in to in·
vcstigate .
Carnival Slated
By Edi son Hi gh
If you've C\·tr been fascinated bv the
loop-o.plane, round-up. till·a-whir'I or
nthr.r ga5lrlc dii;arrangers, come ln
"Scarborough Fair" Friday through Sun·
da y.
That's the Edison lllgh School carnival
to be rponM>red by student clubs on the
school's newly finished parking lot.
Other thrills -perhap~ less spec·
lacular -include dart Eloons, penny
pltches. a dunk tank and prll lhr milk.
The carnival will be o n from 3 p.m.
to 11 p.m. Frld11y, from 3 p.m. to IJ p.m.
Saturday, and from noon to 6 p.m. Sun·
dny.
Most ol the rides and events carry a
ticket price of 25 cents lo 35 cent!.
..
Judicial District Court, but may be ·turn·
ed over to lt1issouri authorities where she
is wanted for forgery.
Several months pregnant, the young
v.•oman who left a husband to accom pany
Jackson west is ex~ed to be sub·
poenaed when her travellng companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
She is held in lieu of $25,IXMl bail.
California Jaw leaves determination of
first, \ecand or third degree homicide to
the court!', but Colorado auth9rllies
charge the severity in the actual com·
plaint itself.
Colorado Springs Chief of Detectives
Carl Petry, who flew out with Deputy
District Attorney Allen S p u r g e o n •
described the pawnbroker 's k i 11 Ing
Wednesday as unusually brutal.
The Colorado Jawm~ conferred today
with Orange County District Attomeyis
men about the case, which takes
precedence over robbery counls lodged
on the Orange Coast.
The suspects ha ve been heavily inter·
rogated-witb a sign language specialist
from Fairvltw State Hospital assisting
police with f\.1atney -a deal-mute.
She described him as rather a bright
individual. r
Police said today the men had left their
loaded weapons in the car \Vhen ca ught
by surprise last Friday and that Jackl!ion
said he would have committed suicide if
he could,
From Page 1
EDISON ...
single greatest acillevement. Recognition
by the PUC of the necessity to protect
our environment, the public health and
safety , air quality and the commission's
res ponsibility to promote the safety,
health, comfort, and convenien«: of the
public all were stimulated by our op~
sition lo the proposed expansion."
Fitchen said Edison's accelerated pro-
gram of emission control a n d an-
nounced changes in de si.17.n and practice
are "definite steps towards maintaining
the quality or our atmosphere."
In a final statement al the hearing
h1onday, Fitchen said ' 1 T t. s t i m o n y
presented has not demonstrated re.due·
Hon in emissions fro1n the Huntington
Beach facility as a :·esult of Lhe proposed
expansion, but rathe r an increase.
"If Edison's applicntion was submitted
to me today , and I hari been given the op-
portunity to examine and study all or the
evidence presented, may action would
still be to deny their authority to con·
struct. I cannot put the health and
welfare of any residenll. in any area of
Orange County in jeopardy," Fitchen
concluded.
Donkey Ca gers
Pla y SatUI·da y
A basketball game conducted from
donkeyback is expected to entertain
student~ and parents of Fountain Valley
I ligh School Saturday night.
·n1e ~:imc is scheduled for 8 p.m. in
the gymnasium. Admission is $1.2.'i
artuHs and 75 crnt~ for children.
The first half \Viii leaturt a team of
;ithletes doing battle against a teom of
agile faculty membcljS. Freshmen com.
binec\ v.'ilh juniors will take on a team
composed of sophomores and seniors
during Ule second part of I.ht show.
Ge1·111aus Will Close
R hodesia n Consul a te
DONN, Gcnnany <AP) -The \Yest
German GO\·ernmcnt di:tided _today to
clnse down Its con.,ulatt in Salisbury,
thu! removing the onl1 offic.ial \Vest Gtr·
man mission In Rhodesia.
The West German move follow~ the
lead taken by the United State!! and
other countries &ince the Ian Smllh re·
time proclnimed Rbodtsla a republic.
left the 5hower. She never .knew.
"We kl1t a booster for. bellcopte.rs on
that one," MorrllOn sa'Jd,
"Sometlmu Utey accuse us of being
peeping toms. One time I circled an area
In south 11untlngton Beach building a
ground unlto to a culvert where kids v.·ere
hiding.
"\Vhen I ca1ne back .J U1c station taler.
the watch commander said he had a
complaint from a residerit.
"The man v.·ns upset because the
helioopler had taken such a close in-
terest in his nude swimming party. l
never saw a thing," Morrison shrugged.
"Sometimes people feel we are spying
on them . but thal isn't the case. Some
people may have a .guilty conscious, even
though we are looking four blocks away ."
r-.1orrison entered the chopper pilot prcr
gram because he liked police work and
liked flying . "What coold be bellcr lhan
doing bo1h and gelling paid for it," he
says.
"We\·e had less complai nts than I ex·
peeled," he said. Sometimes re~idenu
complain about the noise. but not very
often.
''I've found that my neighbors. and
other citizens I talked with, feel safer
\1·ith that bird in the sky. I think we've
been pretty well accepted by the cOm·
n1unity,"
f',.nm Pllfle I
CARPE NTER • •
for the rest of Schmitz' State Senate
term.
Carpenter thus could gain seniority on
all other freshmen state senators elected
in the November general election.
Besides. he pointed out, three senators
\Vilh top seniority are not seeking reelec-
tion. In addition, with· reapportionment in
1971 , under a new law, any legislator ha v·
ing served an aggregate of JO years in
<'ilher the Assembly or Senatr will be
eligible for retirement with full pay,.
So Carpenter expects he could move up
quickly In Senate ranks, although the
State Senate, he said, is not entirely hide·
bound on seniority.
Carpenter said he will take no position
during his campaign on the ,Jack
Sch rade-Howard Way power fight to lead
the Senate Republica n delegation as
president pro tern,
"It Is not just a two-sided animal,"
Carpenter said, "there are three or four
different sides.'' He said ii grated him
Iha\ either one had to form a coalition
with Democrats to ,!!ain leadership.
"\Vith the reorganization of the Senate
in January it will be my opportunity to
put my linger in that pie." t.e said. "But
I'm not going to campaign on thaL"
Carpenter said it is his intent to hold
011\0 the job of State Central Committee
chairman unlll his term expires in
January.
''Since the governor doesn't see any
problem with my holding two posts I am
not going lo find any ," he said.
•·1 obviously won't violate the 11th com-
mandmen t (speak Tl{l evil of fellow
Republicans) in lhe primary, so i don't
see there wou ld be any conflict of in-
terest," he said.
Carpenter, 41. is a partner in the
Newport Beach law firm of Duryea,
(arpcnter and Barnes. He also serves as
chairman of lhe Orange County Airport
Commis.~ion.
A former special agent for the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, 114! moved to
Orange County in 1958. He rose fast in
Hepubllcan politics, becoming chairman
of the County Republican Central Com·
1nittee in 1962, vice chairman of the State
Central Committee in 1967 and chairman
or the State Central Committee this year.
He said he had heard talk about his
running for Congress but none of it came
from him. "I've lived in other parts of
the country and accordingly my roots in
California are more deeply-imbedded
than some other peoples," he said. "''
DAILV l'ILOT 1111/ l'ftlll
SGT. MORR ISON KE EPS AN EYE ON 'HB EYE'
Police Chopper• Find Acceptance, If Not Universal Love
Not for Birds
S1.va.lloivs Si , Pigeons No Ca po • lit
San Juan Capistrano's famed swallows
ntighl find their nests a little shaky when
they return to the historic .nission March
19.
Allhough a traditional warm welcome
is planned for them, their cousin, the
pigeon, isn't faring too wel i.
Capistrano ci ty cotmciln1en upholding a
planning coinmi.~sion Jecision, said
\Vednesday that \he keeping of racing
pigeons 1n a rc.sidentiat zon,. isn't a
compatible land use.
The case in par\Lcular \l'as a 20.000
square root lot "'hose zoning does allO\\'
keeping ooe horse .
\\'hy horses and nol pigeons" •·Horses
don·i fly,'' said Planning Director Bob
Johns.
The trouble "'1th racing pigeons seems
to be that although kept in cages ror
feeding and roosting they are Jet out
usually once a day for 10 or 15 minutes
for exercise. 'they continue to circle
above their cages hi a v.·ide area and
e\·en1ually drop one by one lo their cages.
But there are other pigeons In tow n
that aren·t so orderly. Hundreds of fluUy •
while pigeons who serve as year round
stand.ins for the swallows reside In the
eaves and ruins of lhe old mission. They
occasionally stray from their roosts into
neighboring resldenUal areas.
And there are the swallo"·s themselves
who suddenly lose their popularity when
they start building mud nests under the
eaves of roofs all over Capistrano, \Yhea
accommodations are ru!I at lhe ntisslon .
The mayor \vhen asked abou~ the
swallows could only shrug and say,
"\\1ell , I guess "'e can't do anything about
them.''
But he did agree v.·ith the pigeon
decision recalling an incident last year
"'here racing pigeons were ke pt in a
much denser residential area.
"It v.·as a mess.'' said Chermak.
·~\Vomen couldn't even hang up their I
laundry. People were even out there with
shotguns lr)·ing to help the owner clean ~:
them up ." •
GI Gets 35-Year Sentence
'.·
Fo1· Viet Meclic Murd e1·
A soldier "ho used combat ambush
tactics has been sentenced to 3;) years at
hard labor for the murder of a Yorba
Linda medic in Vietnam. the U.S. Army
has disclosed.
Lillie infor1nati on \\SS an nounced af1 C'r
the Jan. 26 killing of Spcc 14 Robert \\!.
Heady at a military J>OSI in Quan~ Tri
The slain sol dier 's parents and "'idow
complained weeks aftcn1•arrl that they
11·cre still unable lo detenninc how he
died, when even circumstances of cornbal
('asuallies arc usuall~· avai lnble.
A military court martial found Spee/4
Alvin T. Tart. 21 . of NC\\' York Citv,
guilty cf premedilated murder and On
i\1arch 4 sentencrd h1111.
The sentence or 33 years, which Taft Is ·.
cur rent 1 y beginning, includes
dishonorable discharge and forfeiture of
all rank and pay, but is subject to further
fC\'iCW.
Sen. George R. i\1urphy rR.Calif.) pro-
mised to help est;i blish lhe facts H he
ccu ld and reccnlly "'ired the Heady fami-
ly about the outcome or the court
martial.
~'lilitary authorities in Washington con·
finned that the victim and his killer had
a fistfight and said the vengeful Taft
obtained a rille afterward.
Spec/4 Ready 11•as ambushed beside 11
pat h and killed instantly with a point-
·~··1• bla~l in the cl,~~t
LAST 3 DAYS '
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
STORE HOURS; THURS. & FRI. TIL 9--SAT. 'TIL 5:30
JJ.J. <Jarrell ONCE-A· YEAR
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE SALE
H.J.G ARRE1T fLl RNITURE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opetl M orf,, Thurl. & Fri. Evts. 1215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MoSA, CALIF.
616·0275 6'6°0276
' ' .
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_T_h_urs<l~n_._M_"'~h-12_,_1_97~0~~-=H~~~o-~_L_V_P_IL_O_T__,,:J'--
Bombs Rip New York Sl{yscrapers
•
I
,
,,.,~ Police Get
/" 1 Tip, Clea1· ..
Buildings
NE\V YOR K (U PI) -1-ligh powered
bombs which anliestablishmenl re\•olu-
lionaries claimed to have SE'! devastated
the offices of major Corporations Jn three
f\:lanhattan skyscra pers early today and
t;et off s rash of bomb searc5 forcing
evacuation or stores. schools and cou!'ls.
The bombers infonned police of the ir
pl ot in ad vance, so that night workers
could be evacuated from the skyscraper!!
-all \\'ithin a 15-block area. There ¥.·as
not enough time, however, to search for
the bombs. which inju red no one.
• United Press International received a
special delivery letter several hours la ter
from a group ca lling itself "Revolu·
tionary f orce 9" "'hich took credit for
the bombings. It said the cffices of
Socony ~1obil Oil. Inte rnational Business
?o.fachines, and General Telephone &
Electronics \\'ere chosen because they
profi t fro1n ¥.'ar and exploit and degrade
human life.
I
HISTORIC ORANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE IS NOW AN OFFICIAL HISTORIC SITE
Follo\\'ing a pattern set in other cor·
porate bombings in the past year, bomb
threats harassed police throughout the
morning. Among the buildings "''hich had
to be evacuated for searches were the
l\1anhallan and Brookl yn fed er a I
courthouses. Bloomingd~le's department
store. the Consolidated Edison building
and several schools.
Curtis W. Tarr
New Draft Chief
UPI Tt.....,_i.
TAPPED BY PRESIDENT
California Native Tarr
Reag an Selects
Laguna Aide
A pair of Orange Col!nly Republican
leaders were appointed today as key
aides in Gov. Ronald Reagan's campaign
to seek a second term in Sacramento.
Edward Mills. of 2a26 H1vicr:1 Drive, in
rhc Irvine Cove area of Laguna Beach.
\1•ill serve as Reagan's Sou I her n
California linance chairman.
David L. James, a certified public ac·
countant in Anaheim. V<Jt dcsignaled the
izovernor's Southern California campaign
chairman.
James is past chairn1an of the Orange
County Republican Central Committee.
\\IASHJNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on announced today he will nominate as
new drart director Curlis W. Tarr, a Pen-
tagon official and former educator who
said he hopes to "serve the young people
of America."
The 45-year-old Tarr has been serving
as assistant secretary or the Air Force
for manpower 8nd reserve affairs since
last June 18. Prior to that, Tarr was for
six yea rs the president of Lawrence 1 Universi ty, Appleton, Wis.
As a draft chief. Tarr is to succeed
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey.
Tarr was asked by newsmen at the
\Vhite House if he intended to follow in
the Jong-established Hershey pattern.
Declaring that •·man has to be an in-
dividual ," Tarr said he had no intention
of copying the life style or philosophy of
anyone.
The Air Force official ackno'A•ledged
that fhe White House had approached
him last December about taking the No. I
draft job and said his response at thr
time was that he preferred to remain at
the Pentagon.
Tarr said that while this would remain
his sentimental preference. Nixon last
week told him personally that he could be
{lf greatest service to the country as draft
director. He said that changed his mind.
Tarr's selection ended a long search by
the adminislralion for a successor to
Hershey. who has become a manpower
consultant to Ni:icon.
Tarr was president of La\\'rence
University from 1963 until his Air Force
appointment in February 1969. He was
also chairman of the Committee on Local
Governmental Finances and Reorganiza-
tion which 'A'as established by the Wis-
ocnsin legislature to study \vays of im-
proving the state and municipal gove rn-
ments.
Born at Stockton, Ca lif.. he is 45 year!I
old . He has degrees from Stanford and
llarvard Universities.
He ran for Congress in Cal ifo rnia's Se-
cond District in 1958 as a Republican.
Tarr has been an assistant secretary of
the Air Force since June 18, 1969.
Bcl'ore going to \Visconsi n he was an in·
gtruclor at Harvard and Stanford.
CSF Militants Facing
Questions at Hearing
)
A pair of Cal State Fullerton $1udent
militant leaders today arr raced \1·1th a
multiple-choicr quiz adn1int~\ered h~ a
rlisciplinar.v boarrl ('Oll\'CnC'd 10 Judge
Lheir ca.~es.
The five qu('sl1ons v.•ill s:111dc pro-
ceedings against the mrn -charged "''Ith
yelling obscenities at rr(l\ Ron<1ld
Reagan on the CSF campus -and must
he answered in writing by !'I p.m. ~1on
da y.
Simul!aneous camp11ii; and pol1cr pro·
i;ecu lion of Bruce Church. :ll , and Oa vid
f.'iaeKowiak . 25. ha~ IPd to a series nf
campus incident s including a Violent
clash with la"'men.
Turmoil surrounding 1hr "''orst or !hr
disturbances which lef t mm"c lhan 20
persons jailed and mor e arre:.ts ei:pectcd
h;is settled somewha t bu! i!i sllll brewing
The Student·facul!y JudicJal Board
\\"tltn~ in a memorandum 10 thr r»ilr that
further hearings 11·iii !If al lhpir prefer·
red tim~ and c-ondll1ons. but must be
quieL and orderly.
The BlOOdy Tuesday conlronlot1011, in
'IVhlch more than 100 uniformed lawmen
sca!lered dissenters and passersby wilh
l"lightsticks. drawing a hail of dirt clod s in
rch1r11. fo\Jo\\'Cd one hearing.
Charges aguinst the Student ~1obi1iza-
1ion Commillee leaders 1vere being aired
when their supporters rushed a loc ked
rooin and i>tormed in. using a sccurily
gu<ird 's kers.
The Judicial board is allo\\•tng the
defendants.. lo dttlde whether the pro-
ceeding \\'ill be open to the public. I.he
press, both, or closed to all but those
directly concerned.
Queslions aboul whether they will be
re corded by magnetic tape.
st enographers. both or neither will also
be up to Church and MacKowiak .
They are to decide whether legal
cnull$('J ~hould merely be present or
illlO'\\'ed lo cross-txamine "'itnesses and
the rarully.Student Judicial Board.
\\'hether wilnesscs ellal\ ·testify under
oath or simple affirmation lhal they are
telliflg the truth ls another decision left to
lhe men.
Cou,.tliouse
Now Official
Histo,.ic Site
Orang~ County's 70.year-old courthouse
building became "California Registered
HistoTical Landmark No. 837" Wednesday
in ceremonies on the front lawn.
The dedication was led by William H.
Spurgeon Ill as master or ceremonies.
His grandf.ather sel aside the land the
building occupies for a courthoUse in-1869
when he founded Santa Ana.
In the absence· of current members or
the Board of Supervisors, former Board
Chairman C. M. "Cye" Featherly, at·
cepted the plaque and honors for the
county. The board was embroiled in a
zoning argument across the: slreet and
31Tivcd later.
The plaque w~ presented by Gate s \V,
Burro¥.·s. honorary president of LISA
(Let's Improve Santa Ana).
!viemorial sycamore lrees w e r e
presented to the county by Mr. and Mrs.
\Villiam H. Surgeon Jr. and M.r. and Mrs.
William lt Spurgeon Ill.
To Mrs. Weston Walker, executive
secretary or LISA, y.·ent most of the
credit for obtaining the historical
designation for ttle building.
She was presented a framed resolution
commending tler eflorts by Supervisor
Robert W. Batun.
Three famous lrials which took place in
the courthouse are mentioned in wording
on the plaque. They are lhe "Whipstock "
case of 1933 which dealt with slant oil
drilling in Huntington Beach, the case on
interpretation of farm la lxlr law in 1935
and the famous Beulah Overell trial in
1947 in wl1ich she and her boyfriend were
cleared of dynamiting her parents' boat
in Newport Harbor.
Police ldentif y
Missing Motlier
Of 2 Children
The mother of two small children aban·
doned i·n a Fullerton motel ~1arch 4 has
been identified, Sgt. Robert Braucht,
head of juvenile division of the Fullerton
Police Depl. said toda y.
Shi' is r-.1rs. Linda \Vhite, 21. of Visa li11,
Braucht said. The children are Da vid, I,
ai1d She rill, 2.
Identificatio n \Va~ m<ide by Visalia
police through the license number of the
ca r used by the mother when she 5tayed
\l'ith the children in an Anaheim motel
se\'eral days before stopping in Fullerton.
AulhoriUes have not yet found ?o.1r.!I,
\\'hite or her husband who is believea lo
be in Texas.
The childre n were positively identified
through pi ctu re s and birth certificates
obtained from their grandmother. a
Visalia resident.
The boy and girl are still in protective
custody at the Orange County Probation
Depa rtment's Albert Silton Home in
Orm1ge.
Chief Probation Officer f..fargaret Grier
said the children wiU be tile subjttl ol a
juvenile court hearing to determlne
where they will be placed.
They could be returned to their mother
if she is found, placed with a relative or
put in a foster home. Mr.!1. White faces
chlld abandonment cha rges, a felony.
Bill Leyden Dies
HOLtYWOOD (AP) ·-Televl slon
ma5ler of ceremonies Bill Leyden died
Wed~sday In a Hollywood hospiti:il after
1111flerlng 1 cerebra l hemorrhage. •le "'at
<T.
The circumstances and results of the
bombings were "very similar" to another
triple bom~ing last Nov. 11 th~l bit o~h.er
offices in Manhattan, a pohce ofhc1al
said. Later this morning, police received
another anonymous telephone call with
the message that four bombs were .set lo
explode in the lower level of Grand Cen·
tra: Terminal at 5:30 a.m. An emergency
crew of police and firemen waited on the
main level until after 5:30, then searched
the d(l1vnstairs area.
There ¥.'ere no immediate indications
who placed the bombs, An anonymous
message sent to news media last fall
after the earlier explosions said they
we re done by "white:
Americans ... striking_ blow_s f<;ia:, li_bera-
tion" In opposition lo lhe "Vietnam 1var
and "the giant corporations of America.''
Porfirio Yorba,
Land Family
Scion, Succumbs
Porfirio J. Yorba, 93-year-old descen·
dant of the hlstorlc family which once
owned a large part of ·Orange County,
died \Vednesday at th e hOflll of his son ,
Edmund, in Los Angeles.
He was a native of Yorba LiOOa, named
for his family.
~1.r. Yorba was the great.grandson of
Don Jose Antonio Yorba, a Spanish
soldier wbo accompa nied Capt. Gaspar
Portola on the first California expedition
in 1769.
F'or his services Don Jose was later
given a vast land grant stret.ching from
Ne\vport Beach to what is now th e
Orange-Riverside County line.
l\1r . Yorba ranched on the family land
in Santa Ana Canyon for many years and
moved lo Los Angeles in 1924 tc found P.
J. Yorba and Sons, a real estate firm.
He leaves three 5ons. Et.lmund, ~1arco
of San Clemente and Gilbert of Sierra
~ladre. two grandchildren and two great-
grandchildren.
Services will be held at 11 :30 a.m. Fri-
day a~ St. Gregory C8lholic Church in
Los Angeles. Inter ment will be in Holy
Cross Cemetery. • • !Iii ·' ..... _.,_,.: .. · ·-·· ..
Dow1a by tlae Riverside
Police stand a young man on his head during heigh t of demonstra·
lion at UC Ri ve rside \Vcdncsday during visit by Governor Reagan.
Two persons \Vere arrested du ring demonstration which marked
the first time police have ever been called to the Riverside campus
in force. See story, Page 8.
Alle11 Recall Supµorters
Told to .Get Mo1·e Names ·
By T0~1 BARLEY
or tlMI 0111~ ,not st1H
Orange County Clerk \Villiam E. St
John loday ordered organizers of !ht
•·Recall Allon Allen'' campaign to bring
In within the next JO dflys 500 valid
signatures of Fifth Distrtcl residents.
SL .John's fina l tally of petitions sub-
mitted by recall spokesman Paul
Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony
Tarantino of San Clemente revealed this
morning that the anli-Allen forces "'ere
exactly 500 names shy of the required
total of 9,748.
Carpenter today reassured SL J ohn and
the DAILY PILOT that the task facing
his recalled recall volunteers presentt'd
"no problem." lfe predicted that his
force or workers will meet lhe SO.names·
a-day assignment 11·ith ''plenty of nao1es
lo $pare.''
Sl Joh n's "'-0rkers dumped l.274
signatures in their scrutiny or the peti-
tions submitted last week by the recall
organizers. Carpenter placed the blame
for most of thoSe invalidations at the
doors or two y o u n g Newporl Beach
volunteers wllo had been getting 20 cents
a signature for pages of names that end·
ed up in the waslebasket.
If Carpenter and Tarantino cannot
dru 1n up the 500 signatures dcn1anded by
St John their mysterious candid11tc -it
seems certain t~hat it will be Taran-
tino -n1us1 face Alltn and aMounced
candidates Robert ~1. Wilson -of Costa
~lesa and savings and loan chief Ron
Caspers on the June 2 primary ballot.
The DAILY PILOT learned today that
the stringent screening proei!dures ap.
plied by St John to the earlier peUtions
wil\ be even inore rigid when Carpenter
brings in his new bWldle Or names.
Ti1nes Mirror
Talks Merger
NE\V YORK (AP) -The Times Mirror
Co .. pu blisher or the Los Angeles Times,
says it has been hold ing merger
discussions \\'ilh Newsday, Inc .. publisher
of the naUon 's largest e u bu r ban
newspape r.
A high source in Los Angeles confirmed
a published report that officials of the
Ti1nes r-..1irror Co. had signed a Jetter of
intent to purcha~c Newsday, a Long
lsland ne1vspaper, lor $75 million.
n OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE
• COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
e rings sized end repaired e dia monds and precious s'tone s remounted
•pearls restrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY
HAHOR SHO~~ING
CINnR
2100 HARIOR 11. VD.
·COSTA MESA S4S.941S
"The Store Thet Confidenco Built"
Opn MN ., t iun .. , Fri. 1'111 1t p.M.
..• 1 ·;.·.·. ,, ·-·~~(-.• -· .... __ ',-, .. :'\'• ':·-·~
---' . ' ~
' ' I
HUNTINGTON CINTIR
llACH ' IDINGIR
HUNTINGTON HACH
H2·5501
•
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•
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4 DAl\;Y PILOT Tluinday, M11th 12, 1970
'
,~ 11f ._ Ot!IY Plllt Iliff)
BeaUe John Ltnnon and bis Jap-
anese wife, Yoko Ono, have a~qwr ..
ed a white Mercedes-Benz unou·
sine more than 20 feet long to r~
place the psythedellc..:olored Rolls
Royce they used to drive. The new
car cotl ,SS,000 and included ex-
tras such as a radi~telepbone and
a battery of stereo equipment . • The first homecoming :float since
a cow was elected queen 44 years
ago will be built for Ohio State's
centennial homecoming celebra-
tion Ocl 17 .. The last float paraded
was fn 1926, when Maudine Orms-
by, a cow owned by the College of
Agriculture was loaded on a wag·
on and hauled around campus in
a victory celebration. •
Mary France! Crosby, 10-year-old
daughter of actor Bing Crosby, will
upstage her famous father as the star
of "Goldilocks", a combined live ac-
tion-animation special to Gppear soon
on teUvi.sion._Blng_ancLhisJD.iJL.WiLL
appear in cameo role1, bu.C ftf a r I/
Frances is the star. According to her,
"'J want to take up where Af ama and
Daddy leave off." • Dr. Lincoln R•lph1, chief educa·
lion officer for the County of Nor ..
folk, England, has devised an ap-
horism for the dangers of our "per ..
missive society". His slogan is ••pm Power Is no Substitute for
WW Power." • St. Louis County, Mo ., Council·
man Albert Rimm•I has asked for
a Jaw to keep dogs from barking
in their own back yards. His bill
would make continuous barking a
public nuJsance. •
Hawaii State Rep. Joseph Gar·
cia th inks the air-conditioning t
s113tem in U1e State Capitol
makes the air a bit nippy. He
therefore sub mitttd a resolution
to the state ruking that the ap-
paratus be adjusted or hove on
i"n1'es tigation launched to 1tudy
the fea.!ibility of construc!ing
fireplaces in each. 1'oom.
• Pretty Sue Osborne Jost one of
her contact lenses Sunday while
walking along a Southampton,
England, road. Unable to find the
missing lens, she called the fire
department. They responded in
force and located the missing ob.
Jee! alter a half-hour search.
Senate (Favors
\VASHJNGTON (UP I) -The Senate
went on record today ror lowering the
voting age to 13 in time for the 1972
presidential elecUons.
Senators rejected a proposal lo delay
the JS.year-old· vole until Jan. 1, 1973,
leaving intact an amendment to the pen-
ding extension of the 19M Voting Rights
Act.
The amendment would re<luc.e the
voting age in national, &tale, and local
elections at the start or next year.
Sen. James B. Allen ([).Ala.), con·
tlnued today to delay a final vote on the
amendment.
Proposing a change to make the
amendment effective in 1973, Allen warn-
ed that it was possible the Suprtme Court
would rule the bill uncon3tllutional after
the 1972 elect.ions in wh:ch la-year olds
had voted.
"What kirid of confu3lon would reign In
this country?" Allen asked. ';\Vho ·would
be president."
Senate Republican Leader }[ugh Scott
abandoned hls opposition to the proposal
and accused Allen of try ing to make
political hay for George C. Wallaee.
Se-0lt told nei»smcn that Allen, in his
opinion, was trying to "create some
speech material for George Wallace."
"You have to have something new to
sa: even if you are a demagogue," the
Pennsylvaniaa said of \'i'allace.
Woman Suspect Hunted
In Co_urthouse, Bombing
CA/>IBRIDGE, Mo. (UPI) -Federal
and state aulhoriUes searched today for a
young white woman as a prime suspect in
a $100,000 courthouse bombing, -but the
major lead to her Identity collapsed.
Police had hoped to trace the woman
through ownership of a Dodge sedan with
New York Ucense plates spotted near the
courthouse Tuesday before the explosion.
It turned out to be a company car used
by a vice president of the Rob Roy Co., a
shirtmaking firm with a large plant in
Cambridge.
"The car was parked in a company
par.king lot and was not near the
courthouse,'' a company spokesman said.
.. I guess it was suspect because It was
the only out-of-state license around."
The Dorchester County courthouse was
where blaek militant H. Rap Brown w,as
to have been tried before the trial was
moved 85 miles away to Bel Alt, Md., to
escape racial tensions here. It was near
Bel Air early Tuesday that two associates
of Brown'• were killed when an explosive
device they we re transporting demolished
their car.
State police reported Thursday . that
7 000 dynamite blasting caps -contained i~ one box -were missing from a
grenade manufacturer not far from Bel
Air. The robbery, believed to be an
"inside job," took place late Monday or
early Tuesday, they said. They were
[ound missing Wednesday. . . State Trooper Olis T.rost said police
\•:ere investigating the possibility that I.he
theft might be connected to the Cam-
. dge-and -Bel Air uplnsions,_Jlow_tver,
Japanese E1tvoy
Seized in Brazil;
Trade Demanded
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI ) -The kid-
napers of Japanese Consul General
Nobuo Okuchi today demanded the
release of' fi ve polltlcal prisoner! in ex-
change for the Ille of the diplomat.
The kidnapers in a Jetter delivered to a
local newspaper gave authorities until 6
p.m. fl p.m. PST ) to agree to the
release Jet the five go Into exile In J\1eX·
iro and promise not to take reprisals
against political prisoners sUll in jail.
The kidnapers said they would die with
· the consul general if the police search
\\'as not called off.
An anonymous caller told poli~ earlier
the ransom note would be delivered to a
newspaper but It was not found im-
mediately.
Okuchi, 56, was kidnaped \Vednesday
night by nine youthful gunmen and police
believed the gang would seek to exchange
him for all terrorists jailed since the kid-
naping of U.S. Ambassador C. Birke
E!brick last September. Elbrick was ex-
changed for 15 terrorists.
The caller told police the ransom note
v:ould be deli vered to the lobby of the
newspaper Estado De Sao Paulo, but a
sea rch turned up no note and police said
the call might ha ve been a ruse to permit
the kldnapers to send the n o t e
somewhere else.
f\.1aryland Gov. Marvin t.tandel said in a
news confe~nce today that no evidence
had been uncovered linking the two in-
cident.s.
Top Republicans
Say Laos Blasts
Political Ploys
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Jillie war
in Laos has blossomed today into one of
the major issues occupying the Senate,
with critics of President Nixon's policies
in the tiny Asian nation basing their ob-
jections on two grounds :
-Fear of another Vielnam.
-General disagreement with U.S.
policy in Southeast Asia.
TwG leading Republicans -Minority
Leader Hugh Scott and Sen. George
Aiken of Vermont -charge politics plays
a role in the predominantly Democrati c
criticism of the President.
But virtually all Laos critics, Including
some Republicans, are thGSe who have
re peatedly objected to U.S. policies in
Vietnam under both the Johnson and
Nixon administrations.
The President's effort to clear the air
by issuing a detailed statement on U.S.
activities has clearly failed to still Senate
criticism.
Some-senatorS-.llow say. privat.e.ly_Jhat, __
if everything the administration 3ays on
Laos could be believed, their fears would
be substantially lessened.
But their experience on Vietnam, when
they believed the Johnson administration
to their later regret, makes them wary.
''l was a member of Congress as we
slid into Vietnam," Sen. Charles McC.
Mathias Jr. (R·Md.), said recently, "and
I didn"t ask the questions then that I
should have, and I can tell you that I am
going to ask them now."
l\fany see a repetition of the course
that got the United States into Vietnam.
''It is following the same pattern,''
Dem{)cratlc Leader Mike Mansfield said,
.. rirsl, aid, then logisti cs supi)ort, then air
power, and then GJs," adding quickly "I
don't think til e Gls will go into Laos."
Other critics agree on this las t Point.
Aiken, in fact , said that the ad-
ministration would never be able to get
away with it because of the public uproar
it might cause. But they feel it ls
necessary to keep speaking out to make
sure it d<>es not happen.
'Strip' Lights Dim
After Union Walkout
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -The garish
"Las Vegas Strip." mecca of gamblers
for more than two decades, was closed to-
day.
A massive walkout by union bartenders
and kitchen help dimmed the bright
lights of the resort hotels which shut
down their casinos. A small handful of
hotels maintained games for house guests
only but tourists were turned away.
Snow, Rain S wamp South
Lubbock, Tex., Gets Anotlier Spring Snow Surprise
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18-year-o·ld Voteage
Scott said he personally favored the
Nixon admlnistr~Uon's stand that it
\vould be better to lower the voting age
by a constitutional amendment rather
lhan by outright legislation but he said
he had decided to drop open oppo;5ition.
Jn his opposition to the proposal, Allen
raised the question: "What's the rush?"
"'What's the rush?" responded Sen.
Phili p A. Harl (l,l-Mlch.) "U .the 8'nato•
rrom ·Alabama had eight children as does
the senator from'MJchigan, be would not
a1k."
Bul Allen said he meant why did the
Senate want to rush Into lowering the
voting age by law when, in his view. a
constitutional amendment is required to
do it legally.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), agreed.
"The Constitution," he sald, .. was written
to keep impatient senators, congressmen
and judges rrom doing things in a hurry.
When the Constitution Is nollU!ed by im·
patient men, liberty in America has lio
chance to survive."
Nonetheless, by a vote of 62 to 21, the
Senate Wednesday rejected the motion of
Sen. RUJSell B. Lon& (O.La,,), to kill the
propo.W, offered by Democrat Leader
Mlke Mansfield llf 1o1onta.na.
.. It's the current YoUth kick,'' 1ald
Scott.
Scolt aided with the Nixon ad-
ministration in voting to kill tht
Mansfield prcpoeaL The administraUon
argues a constitutional amendment is r•
qUired.
But 2S Republicans deserted their party
position and joined 37 Democrats Jn
voting not to kill the Mansfield plan.
El~n Democrats -all Southemer1 -
and 10 Republicans voted the other way.
So from now on, between 10 p.m.and 6 a.m., Standard
Stations will operate strictly on a no-casb.on·hand basis..
Statlstrcs shov1 that more robberies
occur during the wee hours than at any other time.
Consequently, Standard Stations in Southern California open after
10 p.m. will now accept only the exact change for the amount of purch~e.
Or a valid credit card. Or, in an emergency, a bahk check.
And all currency received after dark will be deposited-posthaste-
in a tamper-proof safe on the premises. In th is way, we hope to protect
not only our st'ation employees, but our customers as well.
As the Comm ission's Report sums it up,", •. society must seek to prevent
crime before it happens ••. and by reducing criminal opportunities ...
And we think that one way to discourage highway robbery is to remove
all temptation.
Standard Oil Company of California
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U.N. Back
In Mideast
Proposed
l1npeach
Dougl~s
Plan Told
LONOOrl !UPI) -Tbe WASHlNGTON (UPI) -A
Soviet Union has proposed that resolution to i m p e a c h
U.N. peace-keelng forces Supreme Court J u s t Ice
return to the Middle East to \Villiam 0 . Douglas Is belng
be removed only with the ap-drafted for lnl roductlon In th e
proval of lhe bJg pow e r 1, House IK'>:t wetk, but il R chie r
diplomatic JOurces said today. ~ponsor ha~ not dPtermlned
Giving the Big F.our a \'elo y~t \1'hat the sperjfic charges
on the withdrawal al the Y,'111 bE-.
lroops would pret·lude U.N. Secretary General Thant from "\Ve will have cosponsor!i
i • and lhf!'y will include in· pulling lhem our as he did just ~ fluenlial. respected, veteran
be.Core the 1967 Middle Ea5l 1 membt>rs. of the House from "'ar, at Egypt'r; request.
d . both sides of the aisle," an The Sqvlet proposal ma e 1n 'II!
big rour talks in New York. .j • aide lo Rtp. Lou is C. 'Vym•n noe8 not mean the Kremlin (R..N.H.l, the sponsor. said.
has given up iL'i demand that The aide \l°OUld not disclose
1~rael return all Arab ter· names. ritory captured in the war, ac~ The reso\ut.lon ~·ould mark
cording to the diplomats. UPI ''"'M•• the second time the con·
UPI TtlftoUi. SUCCUMllS AT IO
Erle St•nlty Gardner
Perry Mason
Creator Dies
What the Soviets wiint to do , GRAMMY GRABBERS POSE trO\'m iat 71-year-old Douglas
lhey said, is &talion the U.N. Peggy LH, Burt Bech•r•ch Scor• w;111 has OOen lh"e ,;uhject or a TEJ\IECULA (UPl) -Erle
l r o o p g a I o n g c e. r t a i n houi;e impeachmeul effort. Sta.nley Gardner, creator of
"senslt/\•e." areas of tbe. Arab-Former Rep. W. ~f. "r.un" Perry ?-.1ason, the fictional
Israeli border either during or G G ah G • \\'hefler \0-Ga.), lnlrOO.U:ced a
after an Israeli withdrawal. roups . f f8Il)fllJes,• r"olutlon in June, I~. fl was lawyer who never lo•t a caoe,
The Soviet m 0 v e un· the subJ ecl of Judiciary Com-is dead at the age or 80.
derscorts Moscow 's de5in'l for mittee hearings bul nvthing Gardner \\'as the author of
a political "holding action'' in p c h c h I tan1e or it. more than 100 detective and
the Middle East to prevent in eggv as as }} Thi'. effort hy Wyman. a western stories. lie wa s all-out war that could require ~ ' lormrr New Ham~•hfre •<· direct Soviet involvement to torney general. ceniers on released from Riverside Com·
68,Ve the Arabs. NE\V '\'ORK (AP) -A nine-named SODi of the yeir and Douglas' new hook •·Poinlti nr munlty Hospital last month
The 60urces ~aid the plan man rock group . a pop song best contemporary song, with Ri;obellion." wlUch discusses "''here he was treated for an
.bas met will1 Jillie enthusiasm and a 1nachine that Joo ks like two grammies going to writer dissent in America, particular· undlsclo5t:d illness, and died
from the United States. Israel d "'· Joe South. Ii• '.·nuthful T'lrotests. a small ·computer di ui::tter p , • fh '· t r \Vednesday at his home here. is kno,,_,•n to dciubt the reliabili· eggy '-"'='e won e. ~s \Vyman said in a House ty of 8 U.N. force as a than any individuals when 44 femile vocal JM!rform ance for speech on Feb. 18, that in hi~ Gardner Orew on 25 years of
guaranttt to her security. Grammies v.•ere awarded for ''Is That All There ls?'' and book o 0 u g 1 8 s "impe11chefl courtroom e;-q>erience to
the best recording of 1969. Nilsson won as best male himself by his own hand.'' create many of his mysteries, 'tr '1.f tf Three Grammie,; apiece \'OCalist Y•ith "E\'erybody's \Yyman's aide i;;ud l h c including the Perry l\lason
y.·ent to the rock group Blood, Talkin'," written by Fred Neil. charges being consilf\.red "will series. and . dictated h l 1
Syl.1•a Clas}I Sweat and Te1rs, th e pop song in the mo\'ie '' r--1 id n i G h l include acts and slalenicnts thrillers kl seven seC'retaries
'·Games People Play,'' 11nri Co'"•boy." Composer .John Ba r· by the JUstil'f'. i n c I u d in g lie nt\'~r spent m~re thin sO
the album ;,Swilched-on Bach" ry'l' instrumental lheme for rema rks in the book." minutes rou&hing out bis plot.
Tl!ursdiy, Marth 12, )970 DAILY PILOT If
Ps;rchlatrlc Tests Eyed
1 Manson 'Erratic' in Court
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
aU.Orl)f)' appolnled to defend
Charles P.f. t.1anson on seven
murder-conspiracy c o u n t s
iays he's thinking or asking
ror A psychiatric examination
for hi1 client based 4'1n
Manson's erratic court
behavior.
The 35·year-0!d Man 1 on ,
long-haired leader of a hippie-
1tyle cult, threw h is
eyeglasse!I and mutttred In·
coherently Wednesday during
a bearing along ·wl!h tv.·o
women mcmber5 of his clan .
Thfy are among his co-Oefen·
daau in last su mmer's
slaying& of actress Sharon
Tate and sb: othera.
~lanson's c o mm en l s In·
eluded theAe to Superior Court
Judge \Villiam B. Keene : "Are
you going to shoot me? ••.
\Vhy are you against me? •..
In height, you're probably
talltr than tam."
Tossing his riml ess glasses
al Deputy Public Defender
Paul Fitzgerald, attorney for
code rfant Patricia Kren· winke · ansoo a aid : "You
take glassea and I'll take
~·ours and you may see tbe
judge in a differen t frame
than I do ,"
Manson 's c:ourt.-ordere.d a(...
tomey, Charles Hollopeter,
told newsmen later t h a t
Manson "sald some very nutty
thlnga. I waa very diaturbtd
and unhappy about It. I
thouiht it was bad behavior."
Hollnpeter added that he was
..,..-eighlng Lhe possibility o( a
psychiatric e1aminalion "bas·
ed only on hla actions today."
The ineidtnta took place ilt a
hearing at whlcb Susan Deni&e
Atklris , 21. re cei ved
permission to hire a ne.w al·
tomey, ~year.old Dave
ShlM, who bas been a fre •
quent adviaer to Manson and
who represents th e cu 1 t
leader's Tecording company,
the Family Jams, Inc.
1. =~~:~:m; ro=.:-iJ=,"· •
2, L.llOl&INSUllATIO•I•CUJDID
3 • MICIO-MWUH AlU Dl-
4, ADD iUKlflUID AS •HDID
5. AIC.flllNDUNING
6. ~~\~ ~~~l:'i.foaw 1AC11111
7. GllAll & PACI< WMlll llAIJllOS
8 ALL CYUNDIRS IHSPICTID JNl;lUDINI
• MASTla CYUNDll
9 • IOTATI WHln5 & ADJUITllAllll
10. IOADTISTVIHJCUTOSTANDAIDS
WI.th Israel which is performed on the .. ~,idnighl eo~·boy" won,1---------------=--=--..:..-' ~loog Synthesizer. a computer· as btst theme tune. ,._J~~!:~~
like. machine that can sound "A Boy Named S11e" won
R l d Jike any instrument in an "be1t country song" for its · epor e orche.9tra. ,,_,,riter, Shel Silvtrsteln, and
Winners of the Grammies, •·bfst country n1ale vocal
By United Pre6s lnternatlon1l statuettes shaped lik e performance" for Joh n ny
Syrian troops clashed twice gramophones,_were a.ruiounced Cash. Ca~h also won that
today with Israeli armored Wednesd ay night. category last year, r or
patrols in the occupied Golan "Blood, Sweat and Tears,'' "Fol&om Prison Blues." This
lleights area and killed or the group's second LP, com· year he won a second Gram·
·"'·ounded 25 Israeli~. Dames· bining rock. jazz and claa~ical my. for btst alhum notes,
cu~ radio reported, At the music. ~·on as lhe best album those he wrote for Bob Dylan's
o!Mr end of the warfront Ts-of the 1969 contest year. Group "Nashville ~kyline."
raeli planes bombed Egyptian member fre<l Lipsius won the Burl Bacha rach won for b~:o
Suez Canal positions for . the arranging award for the sCtlres, best movie or TV
first time in sir days. group's hit "Spinning Wheel.·• special for "Butch Ca:ssidy
Iraq increased the Arab "Variations on a Theme by and the Sundance Kid" and
~ressure. on Israel and Iraqi Eric Sal ie" won for BS&T in best on an original Broadway
President Ahmed Hassan Al· the best contemporary in-casl album for "Promise!,
Bakr pledged the Iraqi army sttwnenlal p e r r or m a n c e Pron1ises." The latter award
will play a ••decisive role" in category. is shared with librettist Hal
the right with Israel. Obser-"Games Pteple Play" was David.
ver s in Beirut believed Al· l.--~iii;i;;;i;ioi;ii,;i;;;;ii;;iOii;;;;;iOii;i;;;;.;.iOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiOjl Bakr would send H,000 more
t.roops to the front opposite
1.!lrael.
Dama scus radio said the
first clash. with an Israeli
patrol of f.y,·o armored vehi·
cles came in the Blkaata area
wes t of the cease.fJre line and
lhcil the vehicles were destroy·
f'd and 15 Isr11elis "killed or
woonded. '' lsrae1 sen t in
another armored patrol and
t.hh; was stopped, the broad·
cast said.
The l'iteond clash wa!I re·
ported in the Al.Jv;eJda area
west of I.he cease-fire line
w h e r e. a spokesman said
Syrian f or c e s wiped out
another armored patrol, kill-tnr or wounding 10 Israeli
troops. Damascus said I.he
Syrians lost two men.
Iraq already has wnewhere
between 10,000 and 20,000 men
in Jordan opposite Israel.
Bible Thoughts
"TU.IN U, A CHIL.D !11 '"• w1y ~.
•k•uld 9e: '"~ w~•n k• ;, .1~. ~. will
no! 4•p•rt fre111 11", Pr. 21 :6. Solol'l'IOl'I,
th• wi1e•+ "'•"· tl1l•d lhl1. Eph. 6:4 ••v•
w1 •re to r•1r ou• ekll<il••n ''..:n the
nurlu•e ind 1d,.,onltio n of tk• lpr<il"; th l1
i1 RIGHT lr1ini119, A thild MUil bt l1u9ht
<etpo111lbill tv lo Go,j, ti net!, wf,111 h1
lJfO"'• up AS l!G AS HIS PA~ENTS, th1i• 1hinki119 will 1101 14li1.
Iv hi..,, They wilt be "old fo91 y", "1qu1rt" "oul of d1t1", ti,,.
H1 will w1nl to 11pt•l111•nf wi lh 1p11d, ''1 p111<il" pllJ1, 4rin~,
9~Mbli119, ind 9•mbol i"9· Thin91 f,;, old Otd tnd Jr,!,,., l1u9kl
hi111 will tt•m "kort• •nd bu9iJy" to hi"!. II r1qui<•t ''"''' ik•n
rul•1, r•qul•tiop1 tfld l•w1 of "lh1 eltl lol~t" for hil'll, Tllit it
nt lu••'· for lh1 lhink ln9 of 01111 t nd Mom m1y b1 '"''ie, !heir
''"•••lion i1 p•1I.
l u!, the Gr•1+ G•cl On Mitk. !ht M1k1r ef lh1 U11i .. 1ne, the
Cr••ior of ut .11, He who i1 the SAME v1tl1rcl•V· tecl'1v 1M
lor1v1r I H•b. I J :I. J11. I: t 71 it on• '" who111 '"• yeulh e•n,
wilf, eo11fitl•ne1, put hi1 l11fin9 tlvit. A yovn9 p•u •n 1111.111 111 ...
1orr,.lhin1J llGGER THAN HE IS. 1lw1yt; 1111+ t•"'•+h1n&J ;, Ci.OD.
VISIT u1 with you• c:hild•t" '"~ 1+utlv 1boul GOD from God '•
word , 1111 118lf. Chure~ ol Ch1i1!, 217 W, WOfton S+., Coil•
M•t•, ,,!if. 92627.
e4ay.c1re •ctive weer ,.,
mtn and boy~
striped flar e'
;,
" t.1hl•11 1,1 ,~4, ~•..,~•rt i,.,(h + •4•·1010
btP1k411111tl&••cl * l'n 11t1t ch•rt•
Tins
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•
l
• D"1LY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Political.
Politi.cal observers In both Washington and Sacra·
mento make "'rY commentary no'v and then on the
representation Orange County bas in those two political
power centers.
The consensus u~ually is that our elected repre-
1entatives have hardly constituted a very potent force.
The death A1arch· 1 of veteran Congressman James
B. Utt set in motion a mad scrambling that could af ..
feet Orange County's legislative strength -negatively
or positively. One thing is certain: the lineup at Sacra-
mento and Wa shinl'(ton is certainly going to be different
come January, 1971.
Here, af~r 11 days of fr antic, behind-the-scenes ne~~tiatio.ns and .speculation, is the way some of those
. pol1t1eal figures line up :
35th Congressional District. Arch-conservative State
Senator John G. Schmitz, distinguished by being the
only acknowledged m ernber of the John Birch Society
in the California Legislature, ha~ declared that he 'viii
resign his state position to seek the seat left vacant by
the death of Representative Utt. In view of the over•
whelming Republican registration edge in thi~ dis~rict,
nomination in the June primary is tantamount to elec·
tio n -and Schmitz' only opponent at this·moment is
William \Vilcoxen, a scrapping but unkno"'n attorney
from Laguna Beach.
Schmitz, Wilcoxen and any others in the race will
COJJlpete in a free-for-all, non-partisan special election
to fill the unexpired part of Utt's term. Candidates also
will face normal primary and general elections in June
and November, but odds are the same m an will win
both races.
34th State Senate District. When Schmitz steps down
from his present office, he throws open a situation
similar to that in the 35th Congressional District. Elec-
tions V.'ill be held both to fill the unexpired part of his
term and the normal four-year term.
Unexpected entry in this race was Dennis Carpen·
'Smell Is Coming
Out of Capitol'
Scrambling.
ter, one of California's p6werful Republican figures,
who undoubtedly was encouraged to. seek office by
Governor Reagan. Carpenter's formJdable political
machine probably will scare oil any Republican candi·
dates of stature and a t tlUs juncture he would appear
lo be an easy winner.
The winner of this race would gain one term of
seniority over other freshman senators by being elected
in the run-oil election -aild with. re-apportionment
coming up could move vary rapidly on the sei:iate's
seniority list.
71st Assembly District. After nearly two weeks of
soul searching, incumbent Robert Badham of Newport
Beach apparently is going to stay ardund and seek
his fourth term in the California Legislature. Badham
has bad no earnest opposition from Republicans in re--
cent years, but the June primary in 1970 will ·See him
facing an energeti~ oppo_nent in N9lan Frizielle. former
chief of the conservative California Republican Assemb-
ly and a familiar 'vorker for GOP causes.
10th Assembly District. Assemblyman Robert Burke
of Huntington Beach, after casting some wishful
thoughts at the seat Schmit.z is abandoning · has decided
he will slay pul. '
All of this activity will take place this summer,
at primary election time. \Vhen fall rolls around Or·
ange County will see Democratic Assemblyman 'Ken·
neth Cory battling an all-out GOP effort to unseat hin1
in the 69th Assembly District. .
At the same time, Congressman Richard T. Hanna
will face another challenge from Republican William
Teague -who came with.in hailing distance of unseat·
ing J.Ian na two years ago.
The game's the same, the players are changing.
\Vhether Orange County voters 'viii be making clear·
cut choices, or whether those choices were already
dra,vn by political chance, the main lineup is shifting
-and better representation~ could be ahead.
Federal Systeni Plati Let's Benignly
Neglect Our
Problems
Sensible Election Reform
r .
Mr. Daniel P. Moynihan
~-:-'.·~·7'·~,--· ~ ~ . ~ . l . ' ..
To the Editor: r -'1: --.... The While House
WASHINGTON -When the Sena te
finishes with the Voting Rights Act and
the nom ina tion of Judge Har r o Id
Carswell, it will have measurably af.
fecled the NU:on Southern strategy for
1970. lt will then tum, as it rarely can, to
a debate on a question of lasting, national
and historic importance.
! Man.kjew.icz
a nd . Braden -
features of the present electoral college
with the popular vole approach of the
Bayh amendment to reach a result which
would at the same time discourage a pro-
!Heration of smaller parties -thus spar.
ing the nation the curse of Ideologica l
politics -and guarantee that a minority
candidate could not emerge as President.
It is fairly safe to say that if Sen. Jack
Schrade were holding public oUice in
Orange County and pulled the stunt
charged against him in the state senate,
he would find himself facing a recall
election here.
And il is also fairly safe to say that if
he were licensed under any of the
business or professional codes of this
slate and was similarly charged, he
wou1d have to forrnulale a good ex·
planation before a bearing against his
license.
The fact is, he received a check for
$5,000 from a firm shortly before a bill
favoring the firm moved out of his com·
mittee. The good people of Fountain
Valley · did not besltate last summer to
deal with irregular instances of this kind.
Btrl' WHAT CAN be done with a state
senator? To whom can we express an ob-
jectioil? Sens. Schmitz· and Whetmore
both chose t.o look the other way in the
Schrade maUer. Are we to think that Sen.
Schmitz and Y.'betmore regard Schtade's
example as a perfectly normal and ac·
ceptable way to conduct the bus:in~ of
government ? It not. why then did they
proceed t.o vote for Schrade for President
Pro Tempore , the third most innuential
office in the slate?
There is a smell coming out of the
capitol in Sacramento which cannot be
v.·aved away. II it \akes voters to correct
the situation, no one should think the
voters of this area do not know what to
do about it.
MRS. JOHN H. DARJINES
Frustrated by ll'hat?
To the Edltor:
Frustration, frustration, frustration. I
am &:ick of hearing the word shouted
from every California c a m p u s .
Frustrated by what and by whom?
Student participation, which on all
campuses was never greater, now
threatens the whole educational proc~s.
Options in cou rses with or without credits
offer a veritable smorgashord of elet·
lives.
FUNDING BY affl uent parents and
overburdened taxpayers was never more
generous: en trance requiremenls now
flexible to the point of compromising
academic standards; job opportunities
never before come to campus seeking out
the applicant: the general quality of
educalion, a model over the country and
even abroad, until student disruption
bli~hted it.
Why not drop this overworked word
from student vocabulary, lay off destruc-
tion of the facilities others ha\'e created,
and use the precious college years in
preparation for a really viable life style.
By George ---
Dear George :
Doesn't it burn you up how so
many people on TV who evidently
don 't do much of anything make
wadi or money and are sought
after simply because. they are
"ctlebrfties"? I've never seen Any
comment on this in your column
and I Wtlnt to know : Isn't this 111
dep!orable state ol. affairs?
BURNED UP
Dear Burned Up:
Yes. And I'm burned up1 loo.
Some guys have all the Juck.
(Don'L let needles• troubl"
bolhtt you. S.nd to George !or a
lilt or netdlU! troubles -he'll give
you problem• you didn't know were
bolherlng )'IJU.)
MaiU>°'x
Letteri from readers are welcome.
Norma.tty writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. Tlte
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All let-
ters must include signature a'nd mail-
ing addres!, but nalMs may be with·
held on request if sufficient reason
is apparent. Poetry will not be pub·
Lish ed.
Old enough for a mea sure or perspec·
tive.
HOLTE. CONDON
Side Effects
To the Editor:
I believe your editorial, "No Reason to
Panic,'' of March 3, was somewhat naive
and too simplistic.
From biblical times to th'e present
responsi ble physiclans have recognized
that every medication or treatment car·
ries wit h it the risk of undesirab le and
even dangerous side effects. Medical
practice is continually characterized by
weighing of pre scri\Jing or not prescrih--
ing. of surgically inlervenlng or not in-
tervening, in any given case. Even
sophomore medical students recogni1.ed
the hazards involved in prescribing so
ubiquitous a medication as aspirin.
SINCE 1962, the medical literature has
been replete with reports of com·
plications of using oral contrace ptives.
Early on. our British colleagues were
warning us of the potential blood clotting
hazards and the occurrence of strokes in
young women taking oral conlraceptives.
Internists, cardiologists. neurologists,
hematologists and immunologists have all
recognized serious life threatening com·
plicat!ons of these medications.
THEIR REPORTS are published.
lndeed, in 1964 Harbor General Hospital
in our neighboring community, began a
large scale investigation of oral con-
traceptives and their effect on clotting
mechanisms. Unfortuna tely, these
reports must compete for space in the
lay press wilh more dramatic accounts of
heart transplants. liver transplants.
kidney transplanls, and pancreas
transplants.
ALL RESPONSIBLE p h y s i c i a n s
operate under the primary die.tum of
"primum non nocere." Just beeause oral
contraceptives are popular and con·
venient, the immutable principle of all
drugs being potentially dangcrou,; is not
abrogated. I personally reject your "in-
diC'lmc.nt'' of the medical profes!!ion and
simply reiterate what we have all kn-0wn
for CC'~luries, i.e., al) drugs &re poten-
tially dangerous.
L.F. STOCK, M.D.
Ef.imlHati11g l'rcj11dlce
To the Editor :
l am one of the white: studenls who is In
favor of Integration in our country, If we
integrate the younger generation now it
will eliminate a great deal of prejudice
because both ra ces will be abl e lo com·
munlcale and develop together. All
students will have An equal opportuntty to
a good education and to recognize the
dignity of each other·s heritage.
I believe that parent! owe the.if
chlldren the opportunity lo discover for
themselves thal: "The Negro bay is 11
am art a.s the redhead," ilr "Tht white
boy rtally does like me.''
MARLENE WELLS
Washington, D.C. !~Moynihan: Tam writing ta 1 pledge my full support for your proposed
policy of applying "benign neglect" to
our racial strife.
I couldn't agree with you more that
benignly neglecting the problems that
beset and divide our society is the only
way to get a little peace and qulet around
here. Have you thought of extending The
Benign Negl«t Doctrine to pollution?
If we Americans could get together and
benignly neglect pollution, it wonl~ go a
I
i .i\rt Hoppe )
c<
long w~y toward silencing the hysterics,
paranoids and boodlers on all sides of lhe
issue.
THE HEART OF the matter, as I ~e
it, is not merely to neglect pollution, but
to look upon il benignly. With a little ef·
fort , we might evtn come to enjoy it.
When one casts aside his i,rrationat
emotional resp:inses, an oil slick on the
water becomes an aesthetic experience;
th~ interplay of ralnbow..Jiued colors dan·
cing in the sun delights the eye. And what
could more soothe the troubled soul than
contemplating a soft coverlet of warm
amber smog on a balmy spring day?
If applled t.o Vietnam, poverty, inflation
and those under 40, The Doctrine of
Benign Neglet.'t would do much to quiet
the extremist.c; who are now tearing our
society asunder. A problem ignored, 1
say. is a problem you don't have to deal
with.
I SPEAK AS A LONG practitioner of
f'enign Neglect myself. At the momeot, I
am benignly neglecting a recurrent
twinge in my left chest. beetles in my
basement and a funny noise in my
lr<'lnsmission.
Thus far, the results have been in keep.
ing with my motto, which J am sure will
appeal to you and the entire Silent Ma·
iorlty -"Everything Will Work Out All
Right."
The only problem I can foresee Is sell·
ing The Doctine of Benign Neglect to
!hose who will be benignly negteCted,
such as militant blacks, conservationists,.
doves, hawks, poor people, investment
hankers and youn)? anarchi sts.
I, myself,-for example. have had a dif·
ficull time selling it to Mr. Hotchkiss of
the Courtesy Collection Agency. Ile keeps
saying "A bill is a bill anti must be.
paid?" 1 suppose the black militants feel
much the same way.
THE GOVERNl\lENT, however, has
one great advantage : the highest desire
of most citizens is lo be benignly
neJ!letled by the government.
The only time the governmen! takes a
personal interest in us Is to send us a
• draft notice. a tax bill or a jury sum·
mons. The government, let's face it, is
bad ne1vs.
So all we need do is convince the
mllitan~ of the advantages of bein~
bentsnly neglected. Jn turn they will
perhaps benignly neglect to bum down
our cities. Perhaps. .
OF COURSE, under the prlnC'l ples of
racial equality. I demand that the
government benignly neglect me, too. To
do my p.irt, l have decide<t lo benignly
n~tect it. J am sure _it will continue to
make progress without me .
Please inform the C<lmmissioner of
lntt:mail Revenue of our agreement
before Aprll 15. And do give him my most
heartfelt and btnlgn good wishes.
Benignly Yours, etcetera .••
•
What is involved ls the way we elect
our Presidents. Specifically, the debate
will concern the constitutional amend-
ment proposed by Sen. Birch Bayh (0·
Ind.), nomin ally supPorted by a majority
ilf the Senate and already passed by a
~ubstantial margin in the House. It Js
also supported by the President, who has
indicated· that he· doesn't like it·much, but
has also indicated that ~e hasn't thought
about it deeply.
THE BAYH AMENDMENT, which
might properly be called 'the anti-Wallace
amendment, is designed to prevent
forever the nighlmare faced by the na-
tion on the night of Nov S, 1968, when it
appeared for a few hours that neither
Richard NU:on nor Hubert Humphrey
would get a majority of the electoral
vote. thus throwing the election -ac·
cording to the Constitution -into the
House of Representatlvt's.
The Bayh amendment has the great
virtue of simplicity. It provides that the
candidate who gets the most popular
votes is the new President, provided only
that his vote is 40 percent of the total
vote cast. If it is not, there is a sub.se-
quent election, between the top two can-
didates only.
LAST WEEK, Sens. Thomas Eagleton
f' \_
(0-Mo.) and Robert Dole (R·Kan.} of·
fered a counterproposal. lt was, for
Eagleton, a step of grave importance. He
had been one of the co-sponsors of Bayh's
8ft'n!ndment, and he is a member of the
Senate's liberal bloc which ha s always
supported the principle of one-man, one-
vote.
But Eagleton, on analysis. had found
serious drawbacks to the Bayh amend-
ment. First, he p:iinted out, a candidate
could win the Presidency with 40 percent
of the vote even though he carried no
states at all. Second, he felt the amend·
ment -by :stressing national poJM'br
vote -would encoorage ra ther than limit
the creation of splinter parties, each hop-
ing for a handful of votes which could
then be traded for power in the runof(
election :
"WHAT WILL YOU give me If I ask
the 2 million people who voted for me to
cast their-votes for you?" is a question
which the Bayh plan conjures up. and
with it all the horrors of the politics of
ideology.
Eaglft-On and Dole proposed a
substi tute. which Uiey have ca lled the
federal 15ystem plan, largely based on
analysis and research by Washington at-
torney f\.fyron Cu rzan.
The federal system plan combines
IT 'VO ULD AWARD the Presidency to
the candidate who led in the popular vot.e
-but only if he v.•on lhe election in more
than half the :states (26) or U he won in
states rontaining more than half the
voting population. If no candidate met
either requiremerlt. the electoral' vote
would be decisive but it would be assign.
ed automatically (thus eliminating the
problem of the "failhleSs elector"). ·
If no candidate, even then, hiid a ma·
jority of the electora l vote', the third·
place cand idate wonld be eliminaled and
his electoral votes dislribu(ed ' pro-
portionately. Thus. a President would
emerge with mathematical certainty -
there would be no national cliff.hanging
for days, either to count outlying returns
or to determine if lh e leader really had 40
percen!, or only 39.99 percent.
THE EAGLETON·OOLE prop p s a 1
pres~es the federal system, requires
candidates to campaign through the en·
tire nalion. retains the power of the
smaller two-party "swing" stales and
diminishes the prospect of a number of
single-issue third parties. It is quite the
most sensible electora l reform package
since the emergence of national political
parties 150 years ago.
By Frank A-fankiewtcz
and Tom Braden
General Tele·phone vs. Bell
On my occasional visits to New York, I
smile with sweet sadness to hear my
Manhattan friends cussing out the Bell
Telephone system there. New Yorkers, in
speech and print, have been giving th~ir
phone company' a terrible beating for the
last year or so, due malnty to lack or
faci Lities and ill-trained personnel in an
expanding field.
But if these spoiled Manhattanites tried
livi ng elsewhere for a while, they mi ght
look upon Mother Bell with wann
nostalgia. Compared .with some other
phone systems, Bell is a model of ef-
ficiency.
I SPEND l'rlY SUTtfl'rtERS in a part of
Wisconsin that I! serviced - and I use
the verb as loosely a! poSsible -by
General Telephone, a public utility that
seems to be run for private perversity.
and makes Bell look as benevolent and
attentive as Father Christma s.
Not only are Generars fates ridiculou~
ly high -until last year, it cost 45 cents
to make a 20-mile call to town, wh ich
costs orily a dime.in New York or Chicago
-but lhe equipment seems t.o have been
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
ll1Jw tlmes have changed! School
used to be a laugh. Now It's a
"r.lot."
P. D.
Tlllt llf.tl~'1 ttf1«11 ro•ll•"' ,,,,_ M'I
llKflMM" fflt" tof ~ ...,..., ... ,. • ....
'"" "' -Ill • .._.., •n. 0.llY l'llet,
/" .--..-.
(S d J 'H' [ Y pey . ari:is
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~ught ~t an auction sale roilowing the
d1smanthng of. tbe Columbian Exposition
(If 1893.
General Telephone, at least in my neck
of the woods. gives the impression of
being .about as interested in the public
welJare as the Arab Chamber of Com·
merce in setting up a kosher delicatessen
In Cairo.
NOT TO GI VE Tlf.E impression that I
am unfair!~ knocking private enter.prise,
let me testify that any Americ an phone
service is far superior to the brand of
teleph~ne frustration in most European
countries, where phone service is owned
and operated by the go\•ernment.
Getting.your party in France or Italy,
even if it is just a call across I.he street,
is a Herculean feat for nalive.s trained in
the devious ways of their indigenous
phone company: for a roreigner. it is an
exercise In lotal bafnement, chagrin and
Quotes
Sidney He o k, pollUcal 15Cltntlst -
"The assumption of a po I It I c ~ I
d~mocracy I! lhat tbere are no experts In
wisdom, that each citizen's vote is as
good as any other's.'' Vemon l. Cheadle,
cbancellor, UC, Santa Barbar• -"The
university 's main business. on the other
h!lnd, is not government but the
discovery and trans1n1!l.~ion of the truth
howevU '"oOe may wish 10 employ ii prn~allcally. This purpose is nol to be
controlled by maj-Orlty rule but hv thl': un-
c:ompromlslni;i npplicoiion of · r!aorou~
pmfessional standards coupled with the
un\\·11vering protection or intellectual
fn~edom."
rage. And, of course, trying to complete a
Jong.distanC'e call in mo s t Euro-
pean countries is something on the order
of skiing down the tvlalterhorn on a cor·
rugated \Yashboard.
~ELL TELEPHONE it. Chicago, whece
1 hve most of the lime, has the fastest
repa ir service I have eve r seen: whereas
in much of Europe. if your equipment
goes on the blink. you might as well take
a course in Cherokee smoke·signals for
the rest of the year. They must import
their replacement parts frorn an un·
derground tool·and-<:lye p Jan t in
Afghanistan.
The British phone system is prettv
goo:<f. even though it is run by the PoSt
Office ~epartment: bu~ can you imagine
the U.S. Post Office taking over
lelephonc service? ll boggles the mind,
and for a blurrtd moment makes OJ\e
grateful for even the casual and surly
ministrations of General Telephone.
Those New 'forkers just don 't know when
they ha\'e it good.
--1\WMI
Thursday, March 12, 1970
T!1e editorial page of tile Dail y
Pilot seeks to info rm and s//,ri.-
ulate reade rs by prescntin!J thi.~
t1CWSPopt'r·s opil1io111 and com-
111c11tary on. t.opit\, of i 11tcrt'.~t
and signi/tcance. by providing a
forum for flle expressi'11t of
ou r rcoriers' opinions. 011d by
prpsctt !h19 f/1e dii:ersr uie11)o
point.' of informed obSl'rvcrs
a11rl spolrl'.,m.f!1~ on topics of the
day,
Rob<?rl N, \Vced, Publisher
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'foday's Final
N.Y. Stocks
. ' • VOL 63, NO, 60, l SECTIONS, 40 PAGES UNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 12, '1970 TEN CENTS
.ea s
•
)unaping for Joy
n
Air Control ·
Officer Still
A11ti-Ediso11
At the conlcusion or 19 days of hearing
and 2,000 pages of testimony, Orange
County Air Pollution Cor1trol Officer
William Fitchen remains as resolutely
opposed to expansion of the Southern
California Edison Compar.y's Huntington
Beach steam generating plant as he was
at the beginning.
Fitchen, in a report to the Board of
Supervisors, said:
"There are some who I know feel that
our district 's presentation and fight
before the Public Utilities Commission
represented a complete effort in fuUllty
and a waste of time.
•· J couldn't disagree more. I have no
way of knowing what the outcome of thia
hearing will be. It might well be that we
are much like the fighter who was way
ahead on points but lost the batUe.
"~gardless or the decision to be made
by the PUC, l sincerely fee l that we
made tremendous steps forward in our
efforts to control air :x>1luUon.
"Possibly after 20 years of air pollution
control in the county this could be Our
(Set EDISON, Page %)
..
e
Huntington
Man, Rival
Both Slain
By ALAN DIRKIN
Of tll9 o.ltr ~llfl' ..... An apparent eternal triangle slaying
claimed the life of a Huntington Beach
man whose bullet-riddled body was found
early today by· his distraught woman
friend.
A $811fnd victim of the shooUng, the
woman's husband, was also found dead,
shot In the temple , in the same lllXUf7
apartment
A .31 caliber revolver was discovered
by the body of Navy U. James Burton
McClure, 38, of 25S3 Pill\! Ave., Long
Beach. He was killed by a bullet wound
In , the head, apparently self-inflicted,
police reported.
Coroner's deputies released the name
of the murder victim late this morning.
He_ was identified as Glenn Ewing
Williams. 46. retired naval commander .
The deputies informed Willlams' wife,
Janell M. Williams, of Summit Acres,
Arkansas City, .Kansas, of her husband '•
death. The Williams were legally
separated .
The shooting took place at a block of
luxury apartments, the HunUngton Caprt
-"Where the Living ls Fun", according
to a billboard - at 6200 Edhiger Ave. tn
Huntington Beach .
Police reported that the shooting oc-
cured ·at 6:30·p.m. Wednesi:tay but wa:s
, 't not discovered untU 1:44 o'clock thls
t1A1L T PtLoT • ,.... -morning wJien McClure's wUe, Grace
. Janel Seybert (left) and Barbara Rice. cheerleaders at Fountain
V.alley . ..High Sfhool, react with characteristjc.-;>-en..Uwsi~~J'.~l-to W.R'r~
that their vars.ity songleader colleagues r~e1ved supenor rating
for third year in a row in Anaheim competition with units from 25
other Orange County bgh schools. Var5ity cheerleaders took third
place in their bracket.
}AJ& Ala~\tos
Studying Plans
For Air Station
DOOR MASKS DEATH ·1N HUNTINGTON llEACH APARTMENT
lternoi Trlontl• Brolcon Up by B•ll•t•
ltfered!Ui; called officer•.
She apparently had been unable to co~
tact. the victim by telephone, lr&Vt!led to
the apartmenls and discovered the
bodies. Newport's Carpenter Runs
For Vacant Senate Spot
Los Alamitos planning C1>mmissioners
Wednesday created a General Plan Study
District to deal with the future develop.
ment of the Naval Air Station, which thq_
Defense Department Is closing.
The unanimous decision in effect
freezes all zone changu on the property,
most of which is located in Los Alamitos
city limits, untU a master plan has been
adopted.
'Annoying Call' Answers
·,By Ex-Mayor Due May 5
Early inquiries today indlcsled that tht!
?dcClurts were in the process of getting
a divofce. They reportedly had an ap-
pointment with an attorney Wednesday
on instituting divorce proceedings but
McClure did nol show up. *'-
McClure's friend was shot four Umu,
three time3 in the left chest and once In
the left :shoulder.
By THOMAS FORTUN!=:
01 I~• o.i" ,11'1 Siii!
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach to-
day announced he is a candidate for the
California State Senate seat to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz (R-Tustin ) who
is running for congress.-. ------
His impending aMouncement was
rumored Wednesday.
Carpenter. as chairman of I h e
California Republican State Central Com·
mittee, is one of California's most
powerful Republican s and close to Gov .
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate took out papers this
morning and then m a d e his an·
nouncemenl in Newport Beach before
about 25 friends and Republican workers
and the press.
The 34lh State Sena le 0 i s• t r i c t
Carpenter is seeking to represent covers
most of Orange County except for strips
on the north and northwest edges. It is a
district in which 56 percent of the voters
are registered Republican .
Carpenter said philosophically he fits
the district like a glove.
He said Sen. Schmitz is going lo run on-
ly for the Congressional seat vacated
with the recent death of James Utt (R·
'Tustin) and i:s not going to file for reelec-
tion to the State Senate. He knows. he
sai d, because he asked Schmilz.
Carpenter said he also touched base
with Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-
Newport Beach) and Badham told him he
will probably refile for the Assemby,
might run for Congress, but is not in-
terested in the race for State Senate.
Assemblyman Robert Burke ( R·flun-
tington Beach) has declared again for the
Assembly.
Carpenter said he has heard rumors
that Superio r Court Judge Bruce Sumner
of Laguna Beach, a fonner Assemblyman
who was defeated by Schmitz for the
Senate seat in a Republican primary,
might run again. He :said he doesn't
believe the rumors and has not t&lked lo
Sumner.
Carpenter said he decided to run after
consultation wilh Gov. Reagan. He said
some party officials in Sacramento told
him enviously that his is "a solid gold
Senate district."
City Manager William H. Kraus noted
that the aclion v.•as taken before "a near·
ly full chamber" of residents, none of
whom objected to the proposal.
The planning commission action follow·
ed in the wake of a Lo:s Alamitos City
Council resolution approved Tuesday
.... ·hich is directly opposed to turning the
military facility into any kind of airport.
"Utilization of this :1ite by the County
of Orange for airport usage would be in
direct conflict with the principles of local
determination," the resolution states.
1'11e dodument further says that the ci·
ty council is "opposed to control of the
land by any other agency, stale or coun-
ty .''_
Councilmen believe they reflect the
sentiment of the community in taking
such an anli·alrport stand.
Krause said the master·plan which will
now be forged "could" Include a balanced
industrial park. a regional commercial
center, as weU as emphasis on open
space and "green belt" de ve lopments.
• The city council has :scheduled a :special
meeting for 7 p.m. March 17, to further
e-0nsider the Los Alamitos situation. ht
said.
May 5 has been set as the day a tale of
trouble between two former rivals on the
Fountain Valley City Council -ex·Mayor
Robert Schwerdtfeger and current Coun-
cilman John Harper -will unfold in
court.
Schwerdtfeger, who has pleaded in-
nocent, :ias requested a jury trial on the
charges that he made some 45 annoying
phone calls to Harper after the special
election last September in w h I c h
Schwerdtfeger was recalled from ofllce.
Today was to have been lhe trial date
in West Orange County Municipal Court,
Westminster, but Judge W a 1 te r
Charamza granted a continuance to 8;30
a.m., May 5, at the request of the former
mayor's attorney.
Schwerdtfeger was arrested Jan. 19. It
was alleged he was the person making
the phone calls to Harper. Harper signed
the complaint.
It was no secret during the recall cam-
paign that ,Schwerdtfeger and Harper
were bitter political enemies. The recall
movement finally removed the mayor
and Councilmen Don Fregeau and Joe
Courreges from office, leaving Harper
and current l¥1ayor Edward Just on the
COtrncll .
Schwerdtfeger has told friends he never
made such calls to Harper, but has not
made any public statements on the mat-
ter.
18 Candidates
Due at Forum
Eighteen candidates In the Huntington
Beach City Council race will tangle in the
political arena at a' o'clock tonight, at the
Community Melhodlst Church, 6662 Heil
Ave., Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Anita Morris, publicity chiirman
for the Police Wives Guild, said all 11
candidates have agreed to talk at the
candidates· night.
Four council :seats are open In the April
14 election, and 18 persons say they want
them . All candidates will be given '
chance to speak, followed by a question
and answer period. The public ls Invited.
Neighbors at the custom apartmenls
WhlCh Opened early this year had seen lit-
tle of the murder victim .
A student, Bill Strache.r, who lives op.
posite in apartment 7f!l, :said he had seen
the victim only once.
"I waved to him once," he said, "but
never spoke to him."
Stracher thought the victim moved into
the apartment at the beginning o!
February.
The apartments' recreation director,
who declined to be Identified, lived in the
apartment immediately below the vie·
tim's.
"I heard nothi ng at all,•· she said
Slracher said he arrived home at abou t
2 a.m. just as the police were arriving.
Today the apartment was sealed with a
coroner's notice.
PILOT SA.LUTES
MA.RINE SHO W
The DAILY PILOT today :salutes the
Second AMual Weslern Nationa l Boat
and Marine Show, opening Friday at the
· Anaheim Convention Center.
Three pages of stories, photos and ads
olfer readers a guide to the 1970 boat
show. Thf'y start on Page 29.
County Denies
Ga r age, Duplex The 56 percent Republican registration
Everett Johnson wanted lo build a 2Q. Is the heaviest in California for any
root wide garage and a duplex on his Senate district. There are 18 Senate
Alamito s Bas e
Futur e Disc ussed
Harbor DistrictAutonomy Orange Coast
property in Sunset Beach, but the county districts in the state with 56 percent or
Board or Supervisors said no. . heavier Democratic registration and the
Johnson argued that he needed the wid· people have the Democratically con-
cr garage to provlde center posts to sup-trolled 1961 reapportionment to thank for County Supervisor David Ba k er
port an upper rloor. He had been granted that, Carpenter said. Wednesday answered questions about the
a l9-foot-wlde garage with an 8-foot-wide He noted he has an unusua l opportunity possible fu ture or the Lo~ Alamitos Naval
Supported in Jury Action \\'e11Che r
Intermittent cloudiness bi.it most-
ly sunny skies is the cautious word
from . the weatherman ror Friday.
Look for mercury readings of 65
a!ong the coast and 70 inland.
carP-C>rt. alongside by the county Planning to achieve rapid ,senlorlt)' in the State Air Station before a packed house at the
Commission. Senate. In the first place, should Schmitz North Seal Beach Community Center. Support ror retention of the Orange
Zoning Commissioner Ray Reed said be successful, a special free-for.all , ~ "l don't know what t could lell them," County llarbor District al a separate t.u-
the proposed 7-foot carport.was not wide party-label elecUon would have to be held the supervisor said toda}. "I just ing agency ill voiced in a resolutien pass-
cnough for the average .car'. ~See CARPENTER, Page %) delineated the process of evolution for ed by the Grand Jury Wednesday.
The supervisors agreed , backing the them."
protests .to the ,_vari.ance l~ed .by the Baker said several avenues for disposal The Jury urged the State Assembly
Sunset Beach Chamber of Commerce, the S tffk " · JtJerlter.s of the facility colud be taken. Local Government committee to approve
Sunset Beach Fire Department ~d 26 pc. -~------:.-----•:FJrst, it goes to olhe-,.. aSentjn the the bill authored bf Assembij'man· Ken~
tition signing citizens. , ·~w YORK (AP) -The stock market Na and if th · to _ Qelh_Qgp-..JD-Anahtim)~(iefeat,a. biU
Location of the prope11)' ik Soulh Paci-drifted downward ""On llghtlral!ln a i . nera ices Adrnilli.ml.tidn. ".he ~r~ered tiy ~D1jinan-:JOffiT1frllls,.(Jl.!
fi e AYenUe-40 Jett south, of Jtroadw.aJ, o.q.. . · -a~noon. JSee ,QL'Ot~ '~8"-Ji t~•:., ~· r · · ~ · •, . J'allcrton) Ydilch <WOUid put ,tha ')llrb6t
the oaanb;ont, • r 1 ."21).: :? , . ·~ · . , 'He.,..S~lt ~YUl 'ttfen 6e up to · the diSl;ic\~e -t.oa-voteofthtpeopl!\ ~i;;iii~E;;iii;~;;;;;;;;;;;;:oil;;;i;:;;i;!:i;:;~ · Genetir setvl~ Adminisk'aflon ro ask C.Ory'sA!lll would add parks .and rter:ta-
COMING MARCH 30
to the
DAILY PILOT
l t
other agencies tf they wotdd like the land. lion to 'the dutiu of the di.Strict Which
The county is orily one of 9everal etigiblc. would malntaln it.I separate \axing
The meeting was called by' the COllege :status. · · '
Park 1iomeawners ADoeiaUon whose The two bills will come befort-"the
membersbtp is generall~'~ed to furn-assem'6fy commitlte Marc& 19.
ing the airst.ation into ,a 1croua~ airport. Ceqrgt Jlo~kl. grind Jury ch&iJ'ma~.
Tonlghl. Baker said ht wou~ a~~s s~ thi'body ,in1an lntensl~e li'\vcstiaa1Uon
the Rossmoor HomeoWJ»tfs Anoclation. 1inlervleftd Kenneth Sil1'pson, dlreftoro
on the same topic. 1'hC meell!IJ ·b of tfie Ntrbor dirtrlcti his adminlitrative
j,CJlcduled for 8 p.m. hi \thc NorlJf&:at 11ss1stahla; Supcti'tsora David L. Baker
Beach Community C'..enter. -and Mayor Jack Green of HunUnston
'f
Bea"h, prEllident of the Orange County
Le,,gue of Cities.
The league ha:s consistently Sl.IPPorted
Briggs' b\U ·which is counter to the action
of the Bolrd ot Super-Visors which bas
voted to retai n the harbor dittrtct. as a INSIDE TODA l'
separat,.51gency .. 1,, . ·: ·, , DAILY PILOT boske!baJl
Hqnokl ..alil' the JU!TdOWmhlod illirt playen holler "police brutali<y" Jhe ·~~hfge hom~Mr,bi.~-Pl>1ila~·: cu Che Costa Jdasa cops hand
!'-Jftrlil't"htrbtt dist f'U:e1-~ -~fll<tn a 63-44 dr11bbil•o...0U-''" w~.~¥·•~IO"{lo •i1e~·r ,~1. 1 the ,uzme of chnrlt11. The arnc.·
cJodfn1·rtiklnll perlll aM Machel. ~ .. 't, some detaill ore on Paae 26
He 'added thit lhlr w.)U.Jd ~ lncr!I# today.
'I.he total l81 blll, h&wtver, 11 'tundina tOr
beac~s and parQ. Is now paid' from UW: count~':s general ftmd. •
The Jury said Ille COWl!y wm rulltAi 11
mllllor, 1 year Jn nvenue from the ne)"
Dona Point Ha~a~ tblll m~ toold
'be U!<d for 11)6 llC<lulltt""' '*ii« -.stru<uon of t1gtojuil p<ru. • ' ·
Aonotd ooled lhat ptevlooa er and juries
had recommended th e retention of the
harbor dlslrlcl .. • .. para!O Wilt.
'
. " ' ... • " " " • " .....
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"
......... ti
Mvtv11 """' ~ ,..11 .... 1 "'"' .... °'"'" c_,, "
1•""9 ~ " -· ..... tttt• Mlftth »J1
Ttl .. lt-IMI tt
-... u "'"*' • W~llt Wiit! 1S
Woll'IW• lftw IJ.li ..,... ....... ...
•
•
-·-
•
.. 2 DAILY PILOT H
, Poli~e Beli~opters Prove W or
•
H untingion , Mesa Police Proud of Machines I
By TEJ\!IY COVILLE
Ol fflt o.ll'f Plltl litft
The fog was thick. The helicoplu pilot
and hls observer could ste no more than
a quarter or a ml!e. Bul they knew a boal
was out there, desperately in need of help.
Lifeguard boats v.1ere being launt·hed
from the shore ln Hunlington 91ach, but
they had no chance of finding the strand-
ed boat crew In such heavy fog.
Sgt. Robert Morrison of the H\l'fltington
Beach Pollce Department S\P,'Ung his
chopper back and forth, searching for the
distress 11ign.al. Finally, ho: and a Coast
Guard helicopter found the OOat.
The CouL Guard copter hovered O\'er it
~·hile Morrbo.n took his chopper back to
guide the ll!eguard 'boat.s to tbt_di~t:~
ed crafl. Fh·e persons were .saved, One
cIJvwned.
"We were low on fuel and one or our
pontoens was flat. I was. afraid .we ~
going '° ta.kt a cold swim, too,"• ex-
plahled Sgt, Moni.son, talk.1ng about one
plained Sgt. Morrison, talk ing about one
with the city's police helicopter.
This one happened a few months qo,
but simUar operatlqns occur often, on
land and in the ocean, now that the city
has two police helicopter, and five pilots.
"Two or our pilots have been involved
ln gun battles. J haven't yet," Morrison,
the city's chief pilot. 1a!d.
Morri.son la proud of hil l)\lablnu: He
disagrees with recent ~· claJmlna:~
the 1ky may become ovrrCU'Ow~ tiU\
choppers, poll« and otlitrwl.lt. "nit ~nly
limit on the use of these machines ls the
limit to your imagination,'' he says.
The choppers spend about 7&-80 hours a
week airborne, searching the city for
burglars, other criminals or ready lo
make rescues.
"\Ve spend a lot of time warning kids lo
slay out of storm dralns,'1 Morrison said.
Both helicopters, H.B. Eye I and IT,
now ha ve their own home, near the police
rlne range , off Gothard Street.
The small heliport, built by lhe city and
nearly complete now, ~·Ill save a ton·
aiderable amount of money. On a con-
tract with a Long Beach firm. the city
"'as paying $19 per flight hour for
maintenance, plus gas for a totaJ of about
$l4 per filght hour. With Its own
mechanic and 111 reserves, the H.B. Eye
fleet now costa about $14 per Olght hour.
"These ships requ.lre maintenance
about evtry 50 fllstit hours," 1'1orrison
explained ..
Thoae two machltJell: aren't cht.ap. The
engine has to be replaced about once a
year at a cost of H,000. The rotor blades
la!t 1ll1htly longer and they cost $800
each.
, .
..-But lt bu proved '1• val1,1t •• a cozn.
m\lrt1caUona plttrOrm." Morrison ala,
polhttn, to new1 cllpptn11 ol eeveral tl·
~II ill W~leb ... 'llf•tlli e~pppen WU
Tnslrotnental ln savlrig 1 Ille Or 1lopj>lng
a crime.
"It's deterrent value is the besl part. A
lot of things simply don't happen because
criminals fear the helicopler."
On the ligh ter side of flying lhe llun·
tington Beach skies, f\torrison related a
couple of comical incidents he was Jn·
vo\ved in.
"About two 1nonths ago an alarm ·went
off in the Town and Country shopping
center. \Ye Hew over ii, s~ted a small
red sports car tear.. out of the center and
head !or Fountain Valley," Morrison
related.
''\Ve watched him burn tires arou11d
corners. You could see the smoke he was
moving so fast. We thought we had our
burglar so a ground unit came to the
home where he stopped.
"The ground officer went in, talked to
the man. who said he hadn't left the
ctr checked his car. The engine was
h<>t. "Finally Ule man admitted lhat while
his wife ente red the shower, he had ti?"
ped up to the center to see a glrl friend
and was hustling back before lhe wife
l(ill Suspects Due in Court
· Trio Face Colorado Ex tradition Proceedings
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot .... O .. lr •1191 lltff
Extradilion of three Colorado killtr
suspects -unarmed for the first tlme in
an alleged cross-county crime 'pree when
captured In Costa Mesa -formally
began today.
Hearings were set for two memben of
the suspecl.ed Bonnie a11d Clyde-style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Su perlor Court.
The suspected ringleade r, who once
rt'por~ly told his mother be would
never be taken allve. goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
in his return to Co}orado.
Complaints charging first d e g r e e
murder in the brutal beating death of a
Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb. 1~
were issued Wednesday in the Rocky
1i1ountain State.
Jack C. Matney. 32, af Denver, Colo.,
and lloward R. Tschirhart., 31, of Kansas
City, ti.lo., were due in court today.
represented by public defender1.
Extradition ~arlng for James E.
Jackson. 25. of Independence, Mo., is att
for Friday morning and he too will be
counseled by a public defender.
If they choose to waive extradition,
they will be retu rned swiftly, but the trio
<.'Ould spend several months in Orange
County Jail ii they fight the action.
Jackllon , Matney and Tschirhart are
formally accused of the rifle-bl udgeon
murder of Erling Nielsen, 61, w]lose
1nodest jewelry and loan shop was looted
of numerous guns, jewelry and other
goods.
The victlm 's body was found crouched
tn the blood.splashed restroom of his
buslneu, as though seeking refuge. from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Police Detective Capl Bob
Green said addlUonal complaints would
be Issued today charging the trio with li-
quor store. robberies in Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach.
Ile said Jackson is suspected as the
bandit who brutally pistol-whipped Ralph
H. Ames during a $102 robbery Feb. 6 at
the Korker Liquor Store in Laguna
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The victim said there was no reason
lor the beating at all," !laid Capt. Green,
adding that 24 st.il.ches wer.e taken in his
gca\p.
They are also charged with the $500
gunpoint stickup of clerk Donald E.
Ze.rwtk h Feb. 8 :iit the Sportsman's Li-
quor Store, 2615 Newport Blvd ., Newport
Beach.
DAILY PILOT
O"l,11NGt COJr,ST PUBLISHING tOMPJr,HY
Rob•r+ N. W,td •rftkltt1I •nd l'utlll•~•r
Jtt;~ It Curley Viet Prt>kfttll t r!d Gfftt rt l Ml"lfll
Thom1t Kt••il
Ed!lo•
lhol'\11 A. M11"1hl11t
M1nt9lf111 EOl"'r
Albert W. Bti••
Auoc:lttt Edl•or
A.len Oir~in
k~nllnQlon 11"<~ City Eon"'
HM11tl11 9to11 IHCh Offk t
17115 111,h low!1w11d
Mt Ui ~9 Acldre111 P.O. lox 1•0, •1641
Other Offlcn
Two men with midwestem accents
entered and browsed in each cue, while
a third man was believed waiting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green Slid today they have also
been linked to fi ve or als additional arm·
ed robberies In Missoo.rl, w h 11 e.
.,authoritle1 inpeveral states want toques-
tion them.
A fourth 1t1spect arrested last Friday
when police surrounded a home at 51411.i
Bernard St., Mrs. Patricia Phi pps, 24, of
Independence, Mo. Js charged with a
local burglary.
She. i.. held at Orange County Jail, pen-
ding arraignment March 11 in Harbor
Ethel Miller,
Wreck Victim,
Funeral Set
Funeral services are scheduled Satur·
day for Mn:. Ethel M. Miller, 71, who was
killed 1\Je!day ln an auto accident on the
way lo a friend 's funeral.
Mrs. Miller, 1403 Delav.•are St., llun-
lington Beach, wu driving the last car in
the funeral procession for Mrs. Fairy R.
Orens, when her car swerved out of con-
trol, striking anolher auto and a light
standard at the. inter1ecllon of Beach
Boulevard aod Bolsa Avenue. The driver
o( the second car was not injured.
A IS-year resident of Huntington Beach,
litrs. Miller was active in Eas~m Star.
She is aurvlved by a son, Ernest
Pickelslmer of Westminster, a daughter.
r.lildred ·Householder of Los Altos and
five grandchildren.
Services will be held at 3 p.m. at Peek
Family Colonial Funeral H o m e ,
\\'estminster.
Bomb Scare Hits
Federal Offices
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A police bomb
squad searched five Federal buildings to--
day after an anonymous caller said the
Justice. Department would be "blown :.ip."
They found no bombs.
Police set up it security net around the
Justice Department and four nearby
buildings. checking the Identification of
all persons entering lhe buildings. None
of the bulldings was evacuated .
The five bulldlngs Included the block-
\\'ide. main justice department building.
the federal trade commission and three
justice department annext>s housing parts
of the antitrust. criminal and administra-
tive di\1islons.
A spoktsman said the Justice Depart·
menl's chief teletthone operator received
.11 Call belween 8:15 and 8:30 a.m. EST
saying "The Justice Department building
'A'ill be blown up today." \Va shington
mer ropolitan po\Jce were called Jn to in·
\'estigate.
Carnival Slated
By Edison High
lf yo•.i',•e e,·er been fasC'inaled hv the
loop-o..plane, round-up, tllt-a.whiil or
other gastric dlsarrangers, come to
''Scarborough Fair" Friday through Sun·
da y.
That's the F.d\son lflgh School cernlval
to be spongored by student clubs on the
school's n~·ly finished parking lot.
Olhtr thrills -perhaps less sptc·
t11cu\ar -lncludt> dart bAlloons, penny
pilches, a dunk lank and splU the mtlK.
Tht carnlvs\ wlll be open from 3 p.m.
lo ll p.m. Frida~, from 3 pm. to 1 t p.m.
S:iiturday, and rrom noon to 6 pm. Sun·
day.
~!ost of U1c rltlt~ and events cal'f)' a
ticket price of za centi to 3~ L"e nls,
·~
Judicial District Court, but may be lum-
ed over to Missouri authorities where she
iJ wanted for forgery.
Several months pregnant, the young
woman who left a husband to a~mpany
Jackson west Is expected to be sub-
poenaed when her traveling companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
She is held in Ueu of $25,000 bail.
California law leaves determinalion of
first, second or thlrd degree homicide to
the court.s, but Colorado authorlUes
charge the se"erity in the actual com-
plaint Itself.
Colorado Springs Chief of Oeleclives
Carl Petry, who new out with Deputy
Dlstrict Attorney Allen S p u r g e. on ,
described the pawnbroker's k 111 i n g
\Vednesday as unusuaUy brutal.
The Colorado lawmen conferred today
v.i lh Orange County District Attorney 's
men about the cue, which takes
precedence over robbery counts lodged
on the Orange Coast.
'l'he suspects have been htavily inter-
rogated-with a sign language speeialist
from Fairview Stale llospital assisting
police with r.tatney -a deaf-mute .
She described him as rather a brighl
individual.
Police said today the men had left their
loaded weapons in the car v.'hen caught
by surprise last Friday and that Jackson
said he wou ld have committed 5Ulclde if
he could.
Fro1n Page 1
EDISON ...
single greatesl achievement. Recognition
by the PUC of the necessity to protect
our envlronment, the public health and
sa fety. air quality and the commission's
responsibility to promote the safety,
health. comfort, and convenience of the
public all were stimulated by ou r oppo-
sition to the proposed expansion.''
Fitchen said Edison's accelerated pro-
gram or emission control a n d an-
nounced changes in deSiRJI and practice.
are "definite steps towards malnlalning
the qualit y of our atmosphere."
In a final statement at the hearing
Monday. Fitchen said ''Testimony
presented has not demonstrated reduc-
tion In emissions from the tluntlngton
Beach facility as a '.·esult ot the proposed
expansion, but rather an in crease.
''If Edison's application was submitl.ed
to me today, and I haci been given the OJ>"
portunity to examine and study all of the.
evidence presented, may action would
still be to den y their authority to con·
struct. I cannot put the health and
\\'elfare of any resident:. in any area of
Orange County in jeopardy,'~ Fltchen
concluded.
Donke y Ca ge1·s
Play Sahrrday
A ba.sketba\1 game t'Onducted from
donkeyback is •expected lo entertain
student.c; and parent.s of Fountain Valley
l~lgh School Saturday night.
The p;3n1e is scheduled for ! p.n1 . In
the gyn1nai;ium. Admission is $1.25
anults and 75 cents for children.
The first halt wilt feature a team or
athletes doing battle against a team of
agi le faculty members. Freshmen com·
bined with juniors will take on a team
composed of sophomores and seniors
during the second part of the show.
Ge rmans 'ViU Close
Rh odes ian Consulate
DONN, Gflnnany (AP) -Tht \Vest
Citrman government drcided today to
close dov.n its con.11ulate in Salisbury,
thus re.moving the only olflclal \Vest Gtr-
man mi~!on In Rhodesia.
The \Vl'sl German move follows U1t
lead Ulkcn. by the United St.ates and
other cou ntrie s slnrt' the Jan Smith re-
'lmt pra<:lolmed Rhodula a republic.
•
Jefl the ahower. Shtmver lme.w •
"We '°'t a ¥oater for htUcopte.n on
that one/' Morrilon &aid.
"Somettme1 ~Y, · lccu.5e: us of being
peeping loma. Ooe time I circled an area
In south HunUngton Beach building a
ground unilo to a, culvert where kii;ls were.
hiding.
"When I came back ~J the station later,
the watch commander said he had a
complaint froin a resident .
"The man was upset because the
helicopter had taken such a close in-
terest in his nude swimming party. 1
never saw a thing ," 1'1orri.son shrugged.
''Sometimes people. feel we art spying
on them, but that lsn't lhe case. Some
people may have a guilty conscioul, even
though \Ye are looking foor bloc.ks away."
Morrison entered the chopper pilot pro-
gram because he liked police work and
liked flying. "\Vhat could be belttr than·
doing both and getling paid fpr it," he
says.
··we've had le!s complaints than I ex-
pected." he said. Somelimes re!idents
romplain about the noise, but not very
often.
"J°ve found th11t my neighbors, and
other citizens I talked with, feel safer
\\'ith that bird in the sky. I think we've
been pretty well accepted by the com·
n1unity."
Fron• Page l
CARPENTER • •
ror the rest of Schmitt' State Senate
le rm.
Carpenter thus could gain seniority on
all other freshmen state senators elected
in the November general election.
Besides. he pointed out, three senators
with top seniority are not seeking reelec·
tion . 111 addition, with reapportionment in
1971, under a new law, any legislator hav·
ing served an aggregate of 10 years in
either the Assembly or Senate will be
eligible for retirement with full pay.
So Carpenter expect.s he could move up
quickly in Senate ranks, although the
State Senate, he said, is not entirely hide-
bound on seniority.
Carpenter sai d he will take no po6ition
during his campaign on the Jack
Schrade-Howard Way po\l!·er fight to lead
the Senate Republican delegation as
president pro tern .
"It is not _just a two.sided animal, ..
Car penter said, "there art> lhree or four
different sides." He said it grated him
that either one had lo form a coalition
with Democrats to gain leadership.
"With the reorganhation of the Senate
in January It wJll be my opportunity to
put my finger in that pie.'' he said. "But
rm nol going to campaign on that."
Carpenter said it ls his intent lo hold
onto the job of State Central Committee
chairman until his term expires in
January.
"Since the governor doesn't see any
problem with my holding two posts I am
not going to fi nd any," he said,
''I obviously won't violate the 11th com -
mandmen t (speak no evil of fellow
Hcpublicaru) In the primary, so T don·t
see there would be any conflict or in-
terest," he. said.
Carpenter, 41 , is a partner in the
Newport Beach law firm of Duryea.
Carpenter and Barnes. He also serves as
chairman of the Orange County Airport
Commission.
A former special agen t for the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, he moved to
Orange County in 1958. He rose fast in
Republican poUtic9, becoming chairman
of the County Republican Central Com·
mittee In 1962, vic e chairman of the State
Central Committee in 1967 and chairman
of the State Central Committee this year.
He said he had heard talk about his
running (or Congress but none of it came
from him. "I've lived in other parts of
the country and accordingly my roots in
CaUfornla are more deeply·imbe<lded
than some other peoples." he said.
DAILY PILCT llttt P~tll
SGT. MORRISON KEEPS AN EYE ON 'HB EYE'
Polle• Choppers Find Acc•ptenct, If Not Univer11I Lov•
Not for Birds
Sivalloivs Si, Pigeons No in Capo
San Juan Capistrano's famed swallows
might find their nests a little shaky when
they ·return to the historic .nisslon 1.1arch
19.
Although a traditional warm welcome
is planned for the.m, their cousin, the
pigeon, isn't faring too well.
Capistrano city co1.n1cilmen UP,holdi ng a
p1annlng commission Jecision. said
\Vednesday that the keeping of racing
pigeons in a residential zone isn't a
compatible land use.
The case in particular was a 20,000
square fool lot whose zoning does allow
keeping ooe horst>.
\Vhy horses and not pigeons? •·Horses
don't fly," said Plan ning Director Bob
Johns.
The trouble with racing pigeons seems
to be that although kept in cages for
feeding and roosting they are let out
11sually once a day for 10 or 15 minutes
for exercise. They continue to circle
above their cages in a wide area and
e\'entually drop one by one to their cages.
But there are other pigeons in town •
that aren't so orderly. Hundreds of fluffy
while pigeons who serve as year round
standins for the swallows reside In the
eaves and ruins of the old mission. They
occasionally stray from their roost.s into
neighboring resldentlal areas.
And there are the swallows themselves
\\'ho suddenly lose their popularity when
they start building mud nests under tha
eaves of roofs all over Capistrano, whe..o. ·
accommodations are full al the mission.
The mayor when asked abollt the
S\\'allows could only shrug and say, ·
"Well. I guess \l!·e can·t do anything about
them.'' ~ ·
But he did agree "'ith lhe pigeon l;
decision retailing an incident last year •.
\\·here racing pigeons "·ere kept In •
much denser residential area.
"lt was a mess," said Chermak.
"Women couldn't even hang 11p their
laundry. People were even out there with
shotguns tl'5'1ng to help the owner clean
them up."
GI Gets 35-Yeai· Sentence
F 01· Viet Medic Mi1rde1·
A soldier \\'ho used combat ambush
tactics ha s been sentenced to 35 years at
hard labor for the murder of a Yorba
Linda medic in Vietnam, the U.S. Army
has dlsclosed.
Little information v.·as announced after
the Jan. 26 killing of Spec/4 Robert \\'.
Ready al a mililary post in Quang Tri.
The slain soldier's parerits and \\'idov.·
complained "'eeks afterward that they
\\'ere still unable to detennine how he
dial, when even circumstances of combat
casualties arc usually availablt>.
A military court martial found Spec/4
Ah·in T. Taft, 21. of 1'"ew York City,
guilty of premeditated murder and on
f\farch 4 Sf'ntenced hin1.
The sentence of 35 years. which Taft 19 -
currently beginning, Jncludes
dishonorable discharge and forfeiture of
all rank and pay, but is subject to further
review.
Se n. George R. 1'turphy (R-Calif.) pro--
mised to he lp establish the facts if he
could and recently wired the Ready fami-
ly about the outcome of the court
martial.
l\lilltary authorities in \Vashington con-
firmed that the victim and his killer had
a fistfight and said the vengeful Taft ~
obtained a rifle afterward.
Spec/4 Ready was ambushed beside 11
pat h and killed instnntly with a point-
·-·'· bl;ist in the rl·•-'. -~-
LAST 3 DAYS
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
STORE HOURS; THURS. & FRI. TIL 9--SAT. 'TIL 5:30
fi.J. (Jarrell ONCE·A· YEAR
FURNITURE
WA·REHOUSE SALE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR O!S IGNERS OptR Mon.. Thurs. &. Fri. IYH.
)
lllS HARBOR BlVO.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646.0211 646.oza
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Newport Bea~lt Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VOl. 63 , NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNl:t. TH URSDAY, MARCH '12, '1970 TEN CEN1'S •
Harbor Issue -Baclied
Jury Voices Sf1Pport for District Autonomy-
support for re1enlion of the OraftBe
County Harbor District as a separate lax·
ing agency is voiced in a resolution pass--
cd by the Grand Jury \Vednesday.
The jury urg<d the State AJsembly
f.ocal Government Committee to approve
the bill authored by Assemblyman Ken·
neth Cory (D-Anaheim) and defeat a bill
offered by Assemblyman John Briggs (R·
Fullerton) which would put the harbor
district issue to a vote of the people.
COry's bill would add parks and recrea· ·
Love Triangle
Ends in Death
At Huntington
By ALAN DlRKIN
Of l~t 01llY 1'1111 S111f
An apparent eternal triangle slaying
claimed the life or a Huntington Beach
man whose bullet-riddled body was found
early today by his distraught woman
friend.
A second victim or the shooting, the
woman's husband, was also found dead,
shot in the temple. in the same luxury
apartn1ent
A .38 caliber revolver was discovered
by the body of Navy Lt. James Burton
• Mt'ClUrt, 38, of 2553 P~ Ave., Long
Beach. He was killed by a bullet wound
in the head, apparently self-inflicted.
police reported.
Coroner's depu ties relf!ised. tht name
of the murder _victim late..thi• morning.
He was Identified as Glenn Ewing
Williams. 46, retired n·aval commander.
The deputies informed Williams' wife,
J anell M. Williams, of Summit Acres .
Arkansas City, Kansas, o( her husband 's
death. The Williams were legally
1eparated.
tion to UM! duties or the district ~'hich
would maintain its separate taxing
status.
Tbe two bills will come before the
assembly cornmiUet March 19.
George Ilooold, grand jury chairman,
said the body in an intensive investiga tion
interviewed Kenneth Sampson, director
of the harbor dlstrict ;·hJs administrative
assistants : Supervisors David L. Baker
and Mayor Jack Green of Huntington
Beaf'h, prt.Sident of the Orange Cow1ty •
Leuiue of Cities.
The league has consistently supparted
Briggs' bill which is counter to the action
of the Board of Supervisors which has
voted to retain the harbor district as a
separate agency.
Honold said the jury determined that
the average homeowner is now paying $&
a year in harbor district taxes and this
would be increased to $10 a year by in·
eluding regional parks and beaches.
The shooting took. place at a block of
luxury apartments, the Huntington Capri • • f y .,,.
-"Where the Living Is Fun", aCC-Ol'ding Thtra·ktrag O ou, ir•OIR
to a billboard - at 6200 Edinger Ave. i~
Huntington Beach. Second grader Neil Ross of Harper School, Costa Mesa, and fiilh
Police reported that the shooting OC· grader Joy Marimon of Ne\vport Elementary are the first to pick up
cured at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday but w~s entry blanks for ''Mother of the Year" contest sponsored annually by
not disCovered unti l 1:44 o'.clock thi s Hoag Memo rial Hospital. Blanks will be sent to 16,000 Newport·Mesa morni~g when M~lure's wife, Grace school children to write why their mother is best. \.Vinner wil.I be an·
l\teredith, called officers. nounced May 9. ·
She apparently had been unable to COP.
tact the victim by telephone, traveled to
lhe apartments and discovered the
bodies.
Early inquiries today indicated that the
f.-trClures were in the process of getting
a divor~e. They-repoi:tedly had an a~
pointment with an attorney W~esday
on instituting divorce proceedings but
l\1cClure did not show up. Mrs.
McClure's friend was shot four times.
three times in the left chest and once in
the left shou lder.
Neighbors at the custom apartments
~·hich opened early lhis year had seen lit·
tie of the murder victim .
A student. Bill Stracher, who lives op.
posile in apartment 707, said he had seen
the victim only once.
··1 wa ved to him once," he said, "but
never spoke to him, ..
Stracher thought the victim moved into
1he apartment at the beginning of
February. ·
The apartments' recreation director,
who declined to be identified , lived in the
apartment immediate ly below the vie·
tiro's.
"I heard nothing at all," she said
Stracher said he arrived home at about
2 a.m. just as lhe police were arriving.
Today the apartment was sealed with a
coroner's notice.
Orange Coas t
\\'eather
tntermittenl cloudiness but most-
ly sunny skies is the cautious word
from the ~·eatherman for Friday.
Look for mercury readings of 65
along the coast and 70 inland.
I NSIDE TODAY
DAILY P 1L0 T ba.!kttboll
ployer.t holler "poUct brutality"
0:1 the Costa ftfeso cops luind
thcrn o 63-44 drubbing, all in
rht 11a111e of charitu. The gTUe·
.somf' details nre on Paae 26 '
todnv.
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Mesa Holdup Gang Trio
Face Newport Beach Rap
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 111t Dally ,1111 ilffl
Extradition of three Colorado killer
suspects -unarmed for the first lime in
an alleged cross-county crime spree when
c2ptured in Costa ftlesa -formally
began today .
Hearings were set for two members of
the suspected Bonnie a11d Clyde-style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Superior Court.
The suspected ringleader, who once
reportedly told his mother he ~·011ld
never be taken alive, goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
in his return to Colorado. .
Complai nts charging first degree
murder in the brutal beating death of a
Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb, 19
were issued Wednesday in the Rock y
Mountain State.
Jack C. f\.1atney, 32, of Denver. Colo.,
and Howard R. Tschirhart, 31, of Kansas
City, Mo .. were due in court today,
represented by public defenders.
Extradition hearing lor James E.
Jackson, 25, of Independence, Mo., is set
ror Friday mon}ing and he too will be
COWlseled by a public defender.
If they choose to waive extradition,
they will be returned swiftly, but the trio
could !pend several months in Orange
Couaty Jail Ii they light the action.
Jackson, ~latney and Tschirhart are
formally accused of the rifle-bludgeon
murder of Erling Nielsen, fl!, whose
modest jewelry and loan shop wa s looled
of numerous guns, Jewelry and oth~?r
good•.
PILOT SAtVTES
MA.RlNE SHO W
The DAILY PILOT today salutes the
Second AMual Western National 80111
end ~farlne Show. operUng F'riday at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Three paaes of stories. photos and ads
ofrer readers 1 guide 10 the 1970 boat
Jhow. They atart on Page 29.
•
The victim's body was found crotlchcd
in the blood·splashed reslroom of his
business. as though seek ing refuge from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt. Boh
Green said additional complaints would
be issued today charging the trio with Ji.
quor store robberies in Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach.
He said Jackson ts suspected as t~
bar.dlt who brutally pistol.whipped Ralph
1-1. Ames during a $102 robbery Feb. 6 at
the Kerker Liqu or Store in Lai:iuna
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The victim sakt there was no reason
for the healing at all ," said Capt. Green.
addi ng that 24 stitches were taken in his
scalp.
They are r1lso charged with the $500
gunpoint stickup of clerk Donald E.
Zerwekh Feb. 3 a.t the Sportsman 's Li·
quor S!ore, 2615 Newport Blvd .. Newport
Bearh.
Two men with midwestem accents
enlere<1 and broy,·sed in each case. while
a third man was believed waiting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they have al.'iO
bt-cn linked to five or six additional arm·
'd robberies in ~1issouri . w h i I c
authorities in SC\'eral slates want toques-
tion them.
A fourth suspect arrested last Friday
when police surrounded a home at 514'i
Bernard St., ~1rs. Patricia Phipps:, 24, of
Independence, Mo. is charge() With a
local burglaty.
She is held at Orange County Jail . pen-
ding arraignment March II In Barbor
Jlltllcial biBltict Court, bur nu1y be tum·
td' o"er •to· MlstoOri mrthorttres where. she
is wanted for forgery.
Several months pregnan t, the young
woman who lert a husband lo aceompnny
Jaek.lon west rs erpec1ed to De sub-·
poenacd wherl her traveling companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado,
She is held In lieu of $25,000 ball
California law leaves dctermln~tkln of
first, seco.id or third dtgrtil homlcl~f! 10
the courts, but CoWrado au thorities
!See ltEAJUNGS, Page I)
----------
He added that this would no: increase
the total tax bill, however, as funding for
beaches and parks is now paid from the
county's general fund.
The jury said the county will realize $1
million a year in revenue from the new
Dana Point H8rbor and this money could
be used for the acquisitio11 and con·
struction of regional parks.
Honold noted that previous grand juries
had recommtnded the retenUon of the
hllrbor district as a separate unit.
County Fights
l\1uddy Water
From Dredge
Orange Colinty Harbor Department of.
tlcials have taken action to satisfy the
State Water Quality Control Board which
complained of silt being stirred up by
dredging of the Upptr Newport Bay,
In action approved this week by the
County Harbor ~mmission, a weir has
been installed at a cost of $5,000 to re·
place a pipe through which water was
shooting from one set~g basin ta an·
other. A weir is a dam over which water
flows ·gently. The pipe al the bottom of
the settling basin sucked silt with the
water .
This was damaging the ecological en·
vironment, the Santa Ana regional office
of the Water Quality Control Board com·
plained.
The additional $5,000 increases the cost
of the county dredging project to $43,000.
lt will be completed in about ~ight days,
said Ken De'th ·Sampson, dl~or of har•
bors. beaches and parks for tht. county.
After that, markers will have to be
Installed ana then the area can be 'bptned
to water skltng again. It his been clOJed
since heavy winier rains washed silt into
the Upptr Bay l'ast winter.
Earller lhe county agreed to place rub-
ble on the bottom or the Upper Bay to
preserve the marine life habi tat. The
rubble prevents scouring ac tion of the
!ides rrom stirring up murky water that
reduces water oxygen. Sampson ex·
plained .
Heights Citizens
Elect Officers
For Community
About 75 residents elected new New-
port Heights Communi ty A.!soclatlon of·
ricers \Vednesday night and hea rd from
two candidates seeking to represent the
area on the City Council,
Candidates Carl Kymla Jr. and Roy
\Voolsey spoke in the Pacific Coast Free-
"'a}'. alley repaving, and some other mat·
ter;i= or less impact on lhe Heights area.
Kenne1h Fowler. manager of Southern
California First National Bank'!! CosUI
~1esa branch. was elected president.
\Voolsey said he Is opposed to the Pa·
cific Co;uit Freeway crossing Newport
Beach. but disa.~socialed himself from
the freeway opposition of Councilman
Paul Gruber and candidate Al Forgit.
lie said he believes the freeway should
tie in lrom the west with the Newport
Freeway so motorists can travel around
the Upper Newport Bay via the New·
port and Corona de! A1ar freeways.
Kymla said tile need is for the city
tn cooperate with the State Dlv~ion of
llighway.11 to itet the quickest settlement
possihle to the lon.'?-disputed routing .
He ~aid working nn design of the adopt·
ed route looks like the quickest way
tn get homeo~·ncrs off the hook of un-
certainty.
Kymla showed samples of pavin.R: used
rnr allevlll in other cities and iiaid the
ci!y of 'Newport Beach was asklni for
"Cadilln<' alleys'' under the recently.de·
fcit ted alley aJ<.ce~smcnl dl!!lrici proo0solo'.
\VOflliiey iiaitl hf' agreed and believes
lhat ii is ahsolutely necessary the alleys
gel reptn·ed.
Jn rcspon.qe to one question, Kymla
said It elected he might run for a second
term while \Voolsey said he probably
would step down after one council tenn
or four years. .
Other nff'icer~ elected, besides Fowler.
were W. S. ·''Steve" Smith. vice presl-
rlent: 1.1.l'S. Fare! \\'a.Iker. sttretary, and
Glrnn Dysart. treasurer.
Cho!ien as· Community A.8.sod•tion di· ~rectors wert! P'orrelt-Fo1trner, John
Tl1tll'ln, John \\1et\tr. Glen Travers, L, Jf,
Mt Rrlde. Rolartd ~ndrlgan. Nelson Rob.
ini!On. and outgoin' president StanltY Le
Lll'vrc ~ ex ofnpo director.
NEW YORK •CAP) -The stock markol ddnM doWnward on light lradlng late
lhl!I' •rternoon. (See quotations, Paget
20-21).
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DAILY ,!LDT S,_ .......
MADINE CARPENTER SIGNS HUSBAND'S NOMINATION PAPERS
Mrs. Will iam Bents P•ssis Petition •t Press Conference
Newport's Carpenter Runs
For Vacant Senate Spot
By 'Ml0~1AS FORTUNE
DI '"'' D•ll' '11•1 Sitlt
Oennis·eari>fliter of New~rt Belch to.
day announced he is a clr!didate' !Or the
California State Senate se&t to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz (ft.Tustin) who
is rDIUl.iDg for Congre.s.s.
His Impending announcement was
rumored Wednesday.
Carpenter, as chairman or t h e
California Republican State Cenlral Com·
mittee. is one of California's most
powerful Republicans and close to Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate took out papers this
morning and then m a d e his an·
nouncement in Newport Beach before
about 25 friends and Republican worker!
and the press.
The 34th Slate Senate Dist r I c t
Carpenter is seeking to represent covers
most of Or ange County exce pt for st rips
on the north and northwest edges. It is a
district In which 56 percent of the voters
are registered Republican. .
Carpenter said philosophically he fils
U1e district like a glove.
He said Sen. Schmitz ls going to run on·
ly for the Congressional seat vacated
with the recent death of James Ult (R·
Tustin) and is not going to file for reelec·
lion to the State Senate. He knows, he
said. because he asked Schmitz.
Carpenter said he also touched base
with Assemhlyman Robert Badham (R·
Newport Beach) an d Badham told hlm he
will probably refile for the Assemby,
might run for Congress, but is nol in·
terested in lhe race ror Slate Senate.
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun·
tington Beach) has declared again for the
Assembly .
Carpenter said he has heard rumors
that Superior C-Ourt Judge Bruce Sumner
of Laguna Beach, a former Assemblyman
who was defeated by Schmitz for the
Senate seal in a Republican primary,
might run again. He said be doesn't
believe the rumors and has not tslkt.d to
Sumner.
Carpenter said he decided to run 1flcr
consultation with Gov. Reagan. He said
sorne party officials io Sacramento told
hlm erivlously that hi s is "a solid gold
Senate district."
The 56 percent Republican registration
ts the heavie!il in California for any
Senate district. There are 18 Senate
distri cts In the. state with 56 percent or
heavier [)(!mocratlc registration and the
pt..'Ople hHve the Democratically con·
trolled 1961 reapportionment to thank for
that, Carpenter said.
He noted he has an unusua l opportunity
lo achieve rapid seniority in the State
Senate~ In the first place, should Schmitz
be l\le<:essful, a special free·for·all OG-
party.Jabel election would have to be1held
for the rest of Schmitz' State Senate
t.erm.
Carpenter thus could gain seniority on
All othec-fr eshmen state senators elected
DAILY 'ILOT ltlff ,....
SEEKING SENATE SEAT
Newpor t's C•rpenter
In the November general eleetlon.
Besides, he pointed out, three Senators
with top seniority are not :seeking reelec-
tion. Jn addition, with reapportionment in
1971, under a new law, any legislator·hav·
ing served an aggregate of 10 yt ats. in
either the Assembly or Senate wlll ·be
eligible for retiremeot with full pay.
~ Car~nle.r expects be couJ4 move up
quickly in senate ranks, althou.ch 1 the
State Senate, he said, is oot entirefy hide-
bound on seniority.
Carpenter said he will take no pogition
during his campaign on the Jack
, Schrade.J-loward Way power fight lo lead
the Senate Republican delegation a! president pro tern.
"It is not just a two-sided anim al,"
Carpenter said, "there are three or four
dirfcrenl sides." He said it grated him
that either one had to form a coalition
with Democrats to gain leadership.
"\Vith the reorganization of.the Senatt
In January ll will be my oppoi:tunitf to
put my linger in that pie," t.e sald. "But
I'm not going lo campaign on that."
Carpenter said It is his Intent to hold
01110 Lit job of State Central Committee
chairm an until his term expires in
January.
"Since the govemor doesn't see any
problem with my holding two pta I am
not going to find any," he sakl. ,
"I obviously won't violate Ule 11th com-
mandment (speak no evil of · fCI~
Rep,ublicans) In the primary, IO l deft't
see there would be any conflict or ;tp-
terest," be said . '
COMING MARCM~30
to the
DAILY PILOT
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2 DAILY PllOT Th11P$dl7, Marth 12, 1970
School Kids Safe
Speeds Retained
Along Easthluff
Speed past.Inga of 35 and 40 miles per said, soon will be justified for youngsters
hour on EastblufJ Driv~ should not be walking to Our Lady QlJeen ol Angels
•--" N "-h · Tr !" Catholic rlen1entary school . Cuangcu, ewport ocac city a uc Presei1tly there are enough gaps in
Eft&inter Robert Jaffe has decided. traffic to cross safely, he claimed. One
Jalfe, in resisting; parent request.I that child \\'ho was hit by a car in the last
the speed be lowered, s1y1 ht has con--two vears wall crossing Eastbluff Drive
eluded tt ls safe. enough for school child-in the 4G-mlle·per·hour zone north of
Blxia Strtet in the middle of a block and ren to croa the Easlbluff community had cleared the street but ran back.
tborouahfare tr they wait for the proper Traffic volume at Bixla and Vi.::tta d.d
• -
b1"k-ln-triltlc. ---..i~re.-Eiitbluff public elementary
Biit the dty traffic engineer expects school Is being built ls 4,000 cars per 1
tomoblle t to 1 k th I "· day -1,000 cars less busy than In front au vo ume Pc up 80 1 1"' of the high school, Jaffe sald. A crossing
prqbably will recommend a school eras· guard or Mgnal would not be. caUed for
sl111 cuard at Alba Street by next ftY next year, he said. In several years.
and a algnal some years hence at the though. he expects there will be need for
Vista del Sol.JUx.la Street crossing. • signal ..
For the preaent, however, no changes
are in order on Eutbluff Drive, Jaffe
told the Newport City Council thla week.
City councilmen agreed to hia recom·
mendatlon a p e e d posUna:s not be
chanced.
TraffJc counts, Jalfe said, show about
5,000 can per day pau by Corona del
Mar Hl&h Sdlool Elgb>!lve percent of
these drfvera drive at less than 43 mllea
prr hour. The poslod 1peed for that part
of Eastbluff Drive la 35 mJlea p;er hour.
Pollet, he slid, are aware of a 25-mlle-
per-hour prima facle speed limit when
children are walking to achoo!. ~ croutng guard at Alba Street, he
From P .. e l
HEARING ...
ch1r1e lhe severlly ln the actual com· plalnt ltselr.
Colorado Sprlnga Chief of Deti!ctlves
Carl Petry, who new out with Deputy
Distri_ct Attorney Allen Spurgeon.
descnbed the pawnbroker's k i l l i n g
Wednesday as unusually brutal.
The Colorado lawmen conferred today
with Orange County District Attorney's
men about the case, which takes
precedence over robbery counts lodged
on lhe Orange Coast.
The suspects have been heavily tnltr·
rogated-wllh a sign language apeclalist
from Fairview St.ate Hospital assisting
police with ~1alney -a deaf-mute.
She described him as rather a bright
individual.
Police said today the men had left their
loaded weapons In the car when caught
by surprise lttt Frlday and that Jacbon
~aJd ht would have committed suicide if
he could.
UCI Sponsors
Flea Market
A nea market, sponsored by the
Library Starr Association or the UC
Trvlne camput, will be held at 11 :30 Lm.
Friday in front of the UCI Library.
Proceeds from the event will go toward
11 project operated and financed by UCI
students which conducls 1 ten-day sum-
mer c1mp for local underprivileged
childttn, called Unlcamp.
The camp project is run by lhe
1.tudents of the college who serve as
coordlnators and counsellors for the two-
"·eek summer c1mps.
Funds l'!Celved by the Flea Market will
help many loc al children enjoy a pro-
fitable summer "away from lhe city.''
The public Is Invited to attend the flea
market, and participate by bringing
small useable articles like books, toys,
jewelry and arh\•11re lo be sold for the
camp fund.
Air Pollution
Aide Opposes
Edison Plan
At the: contcualon of 19 days of hearing
and 2,000 pages of testimony, Orange
County Air PplluUon Control OU!cer
WllUarrt .F.ltc;heti remains as re10lutely
opposed to upanslon of the Southern
Callfornla F.dlson Compar.y'a Hunllnglon
Btach steam geoeraUng plant as he was
at the beginning.
Fltchen, In a report lo the Board of
Supervlsors, saJd :
"There art some who 1 know feel that
our dlttrlcl'a presentation and f l g; h t
before the Public Ullli!lel! Commll!slon
represented a complete effort in futilily
and a waste of time.
"I couldn't disagree more. J have nG
way of knowing what the outcome of this
hearing will be. It might well be that we
are much like the fighter who was way
ahead on polnts but lost the battle.
"Regardless of the decision lo be made
by the PUC. I sincerely feel that v.·e
made tremendous steps forward in our
efforts to control air ,alluti(Jn.
"Possibly after 20 yeara of air pollutlon
control In the county lhJs could be our
single greatest achievement. Recognit\on
by the PUC of the necessity to protect
our environment, the public health and
safety, air quality and the commission's
responsibility to promote lhe safety.
health, comfort, and convenience of the
public all were. stimulated by our opPo-
sltlon to the propased expansion.''
Fitchen said Edison's accelerated pro-
gram of emission control a n d an·
nounced changes In <Jesil{n and practice
are "definite steps toward' ma lntalnlng
the quality of our atmosphere."
In a final statement at the hearing;
Monda y, Fltchen said • 'Te s 11 mo n y
presented has not demonstrated reduc-
tion in emissions from the Huntington
Beach fa cility as a :-esult of the proposed
expansion. but rather an increase.
"If Edison's application was submitted
to me today , and I hao been given the op-
portunity to examine and study all of the
evidence presented, may action \Vould
still be to deny their authority to con-
struct. I cannot .put the health and
\\"elfare of any resldenU. in any area of
Orange County in jeopardy,'' Fitchen
concluded.
Tl1i 11 Bltie Li tae
Costa Mesa police basketball squad surrounds teammate Pat Rog·
ers. who almost lost his pants and his dignity during Wednesday
night's charity tussle with DAIJ.. Y PILOT dribblers. Game was less
than artistic, acoording to impartial observers, but did raise i306
to help pay medical bills of paralyzed Costa ~1esa High wrestler
Justin Ogata. For details. see sports, page 26.
Los Ala mitos Planning
For Air Station Future
Los Alamitos planning commissioners
Wednesday created a General Plan Study
District to deal with the future develop-
ment of the Naval Air Station, which the
Derense Department is closing;.
The unanimous decision in effect
freezes all zone changes on the. property,
most of which is localed in Los Alamitos
city limits, until a mast~r plan ha s been
adopted .
City Manager Wiiiiam H. Kraus noted
that the act.ion was taken before •·a near-
ly full chamber" of residents, none or
\\'horn objected to the proposal.
The planning commission action foJloo,1'-
ed In the wake of a Los Alamitos Clly
Councll resolution approved Tuesday
which is directly oppo!ed to turning the
mllllary facility into any kind or airport.
"Utillzation of this site by the County
of Orange for airport usage would be in
clirect conflict with the principles nr local
determination," the resolulion stales.
The document furth er says that the ci-
ty council i1 "opposed to control of the
land by any other agency, slate or coun·
ly.''
Councilmen belleve they reflect the
sentiment of the community in taking
such an anti.airport stand.
Krause said the master·plan which v.•ill
now be forged "could'' include a balanced
industrlal park, a regional commercial
cent.er, as well as emphasis on open
space and "green belt" developments.
The city councll has scheduled a ~cial
me cling for 7 p.m. ?\tar ch 17. to further
consider the Los Alamitos situation, be
said.
* * * Alamitos Base-
Futur e Dis cussed
County Supervisor Da vid B a k er
\Verlnesday answered questions about the
possible future of the Lo~ Alamitos Naval
Air Station before a packed house at the
J'lorth Seal Beach Community Center.
"I don 't know what I could tell them,"
the 3upervisor sald toda}. "I just
delineated the process of evolution for
the m."
Baker said se\·eral avenues for disposal
of the facility colud be taken.
"First. it goes to olher agencies in the
Navy an1t if they don·1 want it. it goes to
lh~ General Services Administration." he
tic plained .
lie sai cl ii will then be up to the
General Service 1\dn1inistralion to ask
nther agencies if they would like the land.
The county is only one of several ellgtble.
The meeUng; was called by the College
Park Homeowners Association whose
n1embership is generally opposed to turn·
ing the alrstation into a county airport.
Tonight. Baker said he would address
the Rossmoor Homeowners Association
011 the same topic. The meeting is
..,checlu led for 8 p.n1. In the North Seal
Beach Community C:enter.
•
Board Qf E dt1c a t lot1
Mesa's Crisell
• Iri Col)nty ·R8:ce
Costa ~tesan Ted Crisell hat announced
his candidacy for the Fifth Olslrlc\ seat
on the Orange County Board of Educa·
Uon.
The posillon has been vacated by Clay
?\1itchell who \\'as named to the State
Board of Education last month by Gov.
R!ag;an.
Crlsell aaid today he will file for ap.
poinlment to Mitchell's unexpired term
which runs until Juoe 30. The county
boa rd has announced that it will fill the
position possibly by !\tarch 19.
Crl~ell, 23, an accountant with the
county Probation Department, has a long
record of public service in youth coo.nsel-
ing. •
"I bclleve there Is a ireat need for
youni people to be a part of the decision
making proces1. .Belng young myself I
feel I can relate to the pi-oblems of young
adults and their chlldren," ~ said.
He was graduated from Chapman
College and was a Rotary International
Foundadon Fellow and recently returned
from hill t.blrd journey aroUnd the world.
He has been In SO countries and spent the
past year in India doing research In com·
1nunily development and education pro-
jects.
He mmoWK:ed Edward Romeo and
Willard Reese as co-chairmen o f
"Educators for Crisell'' and Dr. James
Fitzgerald and George Barnett as co.
chairman of the "Citizens Committee for
Crlsell."
Not for Birds
Swallo ws Si, Pigeons No in Capo
San Juan Capistrano'• famed swallows But there are other pigeons In town
might find their nest& a little shaky when that aren't so orderly. Hundreds of flufJy
they return to the historic .nis.sion March' \\'hile pigeons who serve as year round
19. standins for the swallows residt in the
Althoush a traditional warm welcome eaves and ruins of the old mission, They
Is planned for them, their cousin, the occasionally stray from their roosts into
pigeon, lan'l farina: too well. neighboring residential areas.
Capistrano city councilmen uphol4ln& a And there are the swallows them,se:lves
planning: commission Jecl1\on, aald \\'ho suddenly lose their popularlty· when
Wednesday that the keepln{ of iacln& they start building mud nests under the
pigeons in a residential zqne: iln't a eaves t>f roofs all over Capistrano. when
compaUble land uae. accommodations are full at the mission.
The cue ln parUcular wa1 a 20,000 The mayor when asked about th~
square. foot lot whose zoning; does allow s\\·allows could only shrug and say,
keeping; one horse. ''\Veil, I guess we can't do anything about
Why horses and not pigeons? "Horses them .''
don't fly," said Plannin1 Dlrector Bob But he did agree wilh the pigeon
Johns. decision recalling an lncident last year
The trouble with racing pigeons seems where racing pigeons were kept ln a
to be that although kept in cages for much denser residential area.
reeding and r005tlng they are let out "It was a mess," said Chermak.
usually once a day for 10 or 15 mlnute1 "Women couldn't even hang up their
for exercise. They conUnue to circle laundry. People l'""tre even out there ,i11lth
above their Cllfl in a wide area and shotguns trylng to help the owner clean
eventually drop one by one to thelr cages. them up.''
' GI Gets 35-Year Sentence ~
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For Viet Medic Murder .
A soldier who uaed combat ambush
tactics has been sentenced to ~ yeara at
hard labor for the murder of a Yorba
Linda medic In Vietnam, the U.S. Army
Nixon Suggests
Domestic Council
WASHINGTON IAP) -President Nix-
on called today for establishment of a
nev.· dom estic council to ronnulate policy
and cre.aUon of an orfice or management
and budget to replace the Budget Bureau.
In a spteial message to Congress. Nix-
on summarized hl s plan for revamping of
the Executive Office of the President :
"The Domestic Council wl\I be primari·
ly concerned with what we do; the Office
of Management and Budget will be
primarily concerned "'ith how "'e do it,
and how v.•ell we rlo ll."
Nixon said he \ves acting because the
machinery available to him to manage
the federal bureaucracy "has not kept
pace" with governmental growth.
has disclosed.
Little lnformaUon was announced after ~
the Jan. 26 killing of Spec/4 Robert W.
Ready at a military post in Quang Tri.
The slain soldier's parenta and widow •
complained weeks afterward that they •
""ere still unable to detennlne how he ·
died, When even circumstances of combat
casua!Uea are u!ually ava ilable.
· A military court marual found Spec/4
Alvin T. Taft, 21. of New York City,
guilty of premeditated murder and on
March 4 sentenced him.
The sentence of 35 years, which Taft is
currently beginning, Includes
dishonorable discharge and forfeiture of
all rank and pay, but is subject Lo further
review.
Sen. George R. !\1urphy (R.Calif.) pro-
mised lo help establish the facta If he
could and recently wired the Ready fami·
ly about the outcome of the court
martial.
!\tllitary authorities in Wa9hington con--
firmed that the victim and his killer had
a listfight and said the vengeful Taft
obtained a rifle afterward.
Spec/4 Re ady was ambushed beside a
path and kllled instantly with a point·
blank" blast in the chest. Donations may be brought to the me~
rllng room on the first rloor or the UCI
library. For further infonnaUon call 1'lrs.
Eileen Andjlis, at 833-6300,
DAILY PILOT LAST 3 DAYS
OllllAHGf COA IT l"USLISMIHO COM!' ANY
kobetl N. w •• d
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lcltJ make U1eir V.'3)' to court accompanied by l\1i'O Los Angeles
County Jail m<l trons. The l\\'O young \VOmcn are among those ac·
cused In the 1nurde r of aclrcs& ShJron Tate and !Ive others last
August. f 'or latest dcvelo pn1c11ts in the case, see page? 5.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
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Bombs Rip New York Skyscrapers
HISTOR IC ORANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE IS NOW AN OFFICIAL HISTORIC SITE
Curtis W. Tarr
New Draft Chief
Ul"I T•i.,Mi.
TAPPED BY PRESIDENT
Celifornia Native Tarr
R ea ga n Selects
Lag una Aide
A pair of Orange CoL:nty Republican
leaders were appointed today as.. key
aides in Gov. Ronald Reagan's campaign
lo seek a second term in Sacramento.
Edward Mills, of 2526 Riviera Drive, in
lhe Irvine Cove area or Laguna Beach,
will serve as Reagan's Southern
Caiilornia finance chairman.
David L. J ames, a certified public ac·
r.ountanl in Anaheim, var designated the
governor's Southern California campaign
i:.hairman.
James is past chairnian of tht Orange
~ounty Republican Central Committee.
'\'ASfDNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on aMounced today he will nominate as
new drafl director Curtis W. Tarr, a Pen-
tagon o[ficial and former educator who
said he hopes to "serve th e young people
or America."
The 45'ye ar-<ild Tarr has been serving
as assistant secretary of the Air force
for manpower and reserve a[fairs since
last June 18. Prior lo that, Tarr was for
six years the president of Lawrence
Universi ty, Appleton, \\'is.
As 1 draft chief, Tarr is to succeed
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey.
Tarr was asked by newsmen at the
White House if he intended to follow in
the long-established Her~hey pattern.
Declaring that "man has to be an in-
di vidual," Tarr said he had no intention
of copying the life style or philosophy of
anyone.
The Air Force official acknowledged
that the White House had approached
him lasL December about taking the No. I
draft job and aaid his response at lhe
time was that he preferred to remain at
the Pentagon.
Tarr said that while this would remain
his sentimental preference, Nixon lasL
y,·eek told him personally that he could be
nf greatest service to the country as draft
director. He said that changed his mind.
Tarr's selection ended a long search by
!he administration for a successor to
Hershey, who has beco me a manpower
consultant to Nixon.
Tarr was president of l~a'>'1rence
University from 1963 until his Air f orce
appoinlment in February 1969. He was
also chai rman of the Committee on Local
Governmental Finances and Reorganiza-
tion \vhich was established by the \Vis·
ocnsin legislature to stud y ways of im-
proving the state and municipal govern-
ments.
Born at Stockton. Calif .. he is 43 years
old. He has degrees from Stanford and
Harva rd Universities.
He ran for Congress In California's Se-
cond District in 1958 as a Republican.
Tarr has been an assistant secretary of
the Air force since June 18, 1!)69.
Before goi ng to \Visconsin he was an in·
structor at Harvard and Stanford.
CSF Militants Facing
Qiiestions a t Hearing-
A pair f'lf Cal Stale r·ullcrll'ln sturlenl
militant leaders today are faced with a
mul tiple-choice riuiz administered by a
disciplinary board convened to Judge
their cases.
The five questions will gutdc prr.-
ceedings against the men -charged wilh
elling obscenities at Gov. Ronald
Reagan on U1e CSF' campus -and must
be answered in \\-'riling by S p.m. ~fon.
day.
1 Simulta neous campu.11 and pohct pro.
,o1ecution of Bruce Church. l J, and David
f',facKowiak, 25, has led to a M'rJCS flf
campll3 tnC'idents including a violent
, tlash with lav•men.
Turmoil 11urrounding the worst nf tllr
disturbances which left more lhan 20
per10011 jallm and mort arrests expected
has se ttled somewhat but is still brewing.
The Student.-Fecultv Judicial Board
u·arns in a mernorandi1m to lfie pair ihal
further hearings '>''ili be at their prere:r·
red !ln1e and conditions, but must be
quitl and orderly.
The Blood,y Tuesday conf.rontauon. in
I
which more lhan 100 uniformed l11w1nen
scattered dissenters and passt'rsby with
nighlslicks, drawing a hail or dirt clods in
return. followed one hea ring.
Charges against th'-Student ft.1obiliza·
lion Committee leaders were being aii'ed
when their supporters rushed a locked
roo1n and stormed in. using a security
guard's keys.
The judicial board is allo~'lng the
defendants to decide whether lhe pro-
ceeding will be open to the puhlic. U\C
press. both. or closed to all but those
directly concerned.
Questions about whether they 11•il1 ~
record e d b y magneti c tapf'.
stenographers, both or nc ilhe! Wi ll ·also
be up In Church and f\1acKowiak.
They are to dt>cidt y,·hether Jegal
counsel !!hould mt:rely be present or
allowed to cross.examine witnesses and
the Faculty-Student Jud iclnl Board.
Whether witnesses shall testify under
O!llh or simple affirit1Rtlon lhat lhey arc
lelling the truth Is nnother decision left to
lhe men.
Courthouse
Noiv Official
Historic Site
Orange County's 7~year-old courthouse
building became "California Registered
Historical Landmark No. 837" \Vednesday
in ceremonies on the front lawn.
The dedication was led by William H.
Spurgeon llt as master of ceremonies.
ll is grandfather set aside the land the
building occupies for a courthouse in 1869
whC'n he founded Santa Ana.
In th:! absen~ of current members of
the Board of Supervisors, former Board
Chairman C. M. "Cye" Featherly, ac-
ccpled the plaque and honors for the
county. The board was embroiled in a
zoning argument across the street and
arrived later.
The plaque was presented by Gates W.
Burrows, honorary president of LISA
(Let'lil Improve Santa Ana ).
lviemorial sycamore trees w e r e
presented lo the county by f\1r. and f\1rs.
\\1i1Uam H. Surgeon Jr. and f\.ir. and Mrs.
William H. Spurgeon III.
To Ptfrs. Weston Walker, executive
~-cretary of LISA, went most of the
credit for obtaining the historical
designation for the bu ilding.
She was presented a fran1ed resolullon
commending her efforts by Su pervisor
Robert W. Battin.
Three famous trials which took place in
the courthouse are mentioned in wording
on the pl aque. They are the "\Vhipstock "
case of 1933 v;hich dealt wi th slant oil
drilling in Huntington Beach, the case on
interpretation or farm l11bor Jaw in 1935
and the famous Beulah Overell trial in
1947 in which she and her boyfriend were
cleared of dynamiting her parents' boat
in Newport Harbor.
Police ldentif y
Missing Mother
Of 2 Children
The mother of Lwo small ch ildren aban-
doned in a Fullerton mole! f\.1arch <I has
been idenUf!ed, Sgt. Robert Braucht ,
head of juvenile division of the Fullerton
Police Dept. said today.
She is l\lrs. Linda \\'hite, 21 , or Visalia ,
Braucht said. The children are Oa\'id, J,
and Sher iU. 2.
ldcntiflcalion was m<1dc by Visalia
police through the license number of the
car used by lhe mother when she stayed
"·ilh the children in an Anaheim molel
se1·rral days before stopping i11 f'ullcrlon.
Authorities have not yet found Pt1r~.
\\"hite or her husband who is believed lo
be In Texas.
The children were positively identified
through pictures and birth ccrliflcatc~
obtained from their grandmolhcr, a
Visalia resident.
The boy and girl are still in protective
custody at the Orange Counly Probation
Dcpartnlent'1 Albert Sltlon Home in
Orange.
Chlet Probation Office r Margaret Grier
J1aid the children \\'ill be the subject of a
ju\•enile court hearing lo delermine
'>''here they '>'111 be place<!.
They could be returned fu lhe:ir mother
ir she h; tou nd, placed with a relative or
put in ~ foster home. Ptlrs. While face!
child abandonment charges. a felony.
Bi II Leyden Dies
HOLL Y\fOOO fAPI -Telev1s1on
master of ctrr.monies Bill Leyden died
\Vednc!<l11y in a Motl yv.•ood hospital after
$Uffcrini 1 cerebral hemorrh<ige. lie was
47.
Police Get
Tip, Clear
Buildings
J-iE\V 'l'ORK (UPI) -l·ligh poy,·ercd
bombs v.·hich antleslablishment revolu·
tionaries clahned to ha ve set devastated l¥e offices of major corporations in three
Pi.hlflt..attan skyscrapers earty-today and
set oM c. rash or bomb scares forcing
evacuation or stores, schools and courts.
The botnbers lnfonn ed police Clf their
plot in adv.ance, so that , night w~rkers
could be evacuated from the ·si..-yscraper!
-all within a· 15'block area. There was
not enough time. however, to search for
the bombs. '>'1hich inj ured no one.
United Press lntematk>nal received a
·special delivery letter several hours later
from a group ca lling itself "'Revotu.
tionary force 9'' which took credit for
the bombings. ll said the offices or
Socony i\1obil Oil. lntcrnalional Business
l\1achines, and General Telephone &
Elel:lronics \.\"ere chosen because they
profit rrom v.·ar and exploit and degrade
human life.
Following a pattern set in other cor·
porate bombings in the past year. bon1D
threats harassed pollce Urroughout U1c
morning. A1nong the buildings which had
to . be evacuated for searches wer'-the
ft.1anhattan and Brooklyn fed e r a I
courthouses, Bloomingdale's department
.store. the Consolidated Edison building
and several i;chools.
Tht> circumstances and results of the
brnnbings were "very similar" to another
triple borobing last Nov. 11 lhat hit other
offices in Pt1anhattan, a police orficial
said.
Later Olis n1oming. police rtcei\'ed
:;.r-olher anonymous telephone call with
lhe message tha L four bombs v.·ere set to
explode in the lower level of Grand Cen·
lra: Terminal at 5:30 a.m. An etnergency
crew of police and firen1en ·waited on the
main level until afte r 5:30, then searched
the dov.·nstair s ;irea.
The re v.·ere no immed iate indications
y,•ho placed the bon1bs. An anonymous
n1essage sent to news media last fall
after the earlier explosions said they
were done by "whi t e
Americans .. , striking blows for libt>ra·
ti oll .. in oppOSition lo the Vietnam .JVar
and "the giant corporations of America.,.
Porfirio Yorba,
Land Faniily
Sc ion, Succ unibs
Porfirio J. Yorba, 93-year-<ild descen·
danl of the historic fan1ily ~·hich once
owned a large part of Orange County,
died \Vednesday at the home of his son,
Edmund. in Los Angeles.
He "·as a native of -Yorba Linda , named
for his family. '
i\lr. Yorba was the great-grandson of
Don Jose Antonio Yorba. a Spanish
soldier ·who acco mpan ied Capt. Gaspar
Porto la on the first Californ ia expedition
in 1769.
For Pis services Don Jose was l11ter
given a vasl land grant stretching from
Newport Beach lo '>''hat is now the
Orange-Riverside Coun ty line.
Mr. Yorba ranc.hed on the fam ily land
in Santa Ana Canyon for m_any years and
1noved to Los Angeles In 1924 to found P.
J. Yo rba ar.d Sons, a real estate firm.
lie leaves three sons. Edmund, !\1arco nr San Clemente and Gilbert of Sierra
!I.Tad.re. t"·o grandchildren and two great·
grandchildren.
Services '>''ill be held al. 11 :30 a.m. F'ri·
day at St. Gregory Catholic Church in
Los Angeles. Interment will be Jn Holy
Cross Cemet.ery.
'
Dow1i by the Riverside
Poli ce stand a young man on his head during height of demonstra·
lion at UC Riverside \Vednesday during visit by Governor Reagan.
T~'O persons \\'ere arrested during demonstration which marked
the fi rst time police have ever been called to the Riverside campus
in force . See story, Page 8.
Alle11 Recall Supporters
Told to Get Mo1·e Names .
By TOM BARLEY
Of tilt 01Ur I'll•! Sl•fl
Orange County Clerk William E. St
,John today ordered organ izers of the
•·Recall Alton Allen" campaign to bring
In within the next 10 days 500 valid
si gnatures of Filth District residen ts .
St. Joho"s final tally of petitions sub.
milled by re call spokesm an Paul
Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony
Tarantino of San Clemente revealed this
morning that the anti-Allen forces were
exaclly 500 names shy of the required
total or 9,748.
Carpenter today reassured St Joh n and
the DAILY PILOT that the task facing
his recalled recall volunteers presented
"no problem." He predicted that his
force of workers will meet the 50-names-
a·day assignment 1vith "plenty or names
to spare."
St John's workers du111ped 1,274
signatures in their scrutiny of the peti-
tions submitted last "'eek by the recall
organizers. Carpenter placed the blame
for most of those invalidations at the
doors of two y oung Newport Beach
volunteers wh:> hnd been getting 20 cents
a signature for pages of names lhat end·
ed up in the wastebasket.
If Carpenter and Tarantino cannot
drum up the 500 signatures demanded by
St John their mysterious candidate -il
stems certain today that it will be Taran-
tino -must race Allen and a.MOUnced
candidates Robert r.t. \Vilson or Costa
Pt-fesa and savi ngs and loan chief Ron
Caspers on the June 2 primary ballot.
TI1e DAILY PILOT learned today that
the stringent screenin_g procedures : ap.
plied by St John lo the earlier petiU:om
will be even more rigid when Carpenter
brings in his new bundle of names.
Times Mirror
Talks Merger
NE\Y YORK (AP) -The Times M.Jror
Co., publisher of the Los Angeles Times,
says it hali been holding merger
discussions with Newsday, Inc .. publisher
of the nation's largest suburb a 11
new;spaper.
A high source in Los Angeles confinned
a published report !fiat officials of the
Times Mirror Co. had signed a Jetter of
in tent to purchase , News'day , a Long
Island new!paper, for $75 million.
0 OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE
COMPLET E JEWELRY REPAIR
•rin g• •ized a nd repaired
• diamon d• and preciou• ston .. remounte d e pearls restrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY
•
HAl lOl SH o r r lNG
CINTIR
2300 HAOOl I LVD.
COSTA MHA
"The Siert That Confidence Butt!"
Opt1t MIHt .. liMtn., llrj. TUI t p.M.
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H ACH ' IDINGll
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DAILY Pl OT Thund&Y, Marth 12, 197()
•
t~ n 1M D.itt Pli.t ll•"'J
Jle4Ue John Lennon and his J~p
anese wife. Yoko Ono, have acqwr-
ed a white Merc.edes-Benz imou-
:1ine more than 20 feet long to re.
place the psychedelic-colored Rolls
Royce they used to drive. The new
car coat $33,000 and included ex-
tras such as a radicrtelephone and
a battery of stereo equipment.
• • • The first bome<:Dl\ling float since
a cow· was elected queen 44 years
ago will be built for Ohio State's
centennlal homecoming celebra-
tion Oct. 17. The 18''1 Ooat paraded
was m· 1~, when Maudine Orm,..
by, a cow owned by the College of
Agriculture was loaded on a wag ..
on and hauled around campus in
• victory celebration. •
1'1a.ry Francts Ciosby, I0-11ear-old
daughter of actor Bing Crosby, wilt
upstage her famous f ather as the star
of "Gold ilocks'', a combined live ac-
tion-animation special to appear soon
on televiiion. Bi'l1g and his wife wilt
appear in cameo roles, but M a 1' fl
Frances is t lie star. According to htr,
"l want to take up where ~1ama and
Daddy leave off.'' • Dr. Lincoln Ralphs, chiel educa-
tion officer for the County of Nor-
folk. England, has devised an ap-o
horism for the dangers of our ''per-
missive society". His slogan is
'"Pill Power Js no Substitute for
\Vil! Power." • St. Louis County, ?.-lo., Council-
man Albert Rimm•I bas asked for
a Jaw to keep dogs from barking
in their own back yards. His bill
would make continuous barking a
public nuisance. ---• 1'""'11"'a"wa""'ii"s"1a"1"';:;~~eph G~;_=,
citl thinks the air·conditzo11i11~ ~
system in !lie State Capitol
makes the air a bit nippy. fie
therefore submitted a resolution
to the state oskino that the ap-
paratus be adjusted or have <Ht
i'noestigation launched to atudy
the fe(l,!ibility of cons!ructino ~ ' firtplacts in each room.
• Pretty Sue 0 5borne lost one of
her contact lenses Sunday while
'\Yalking along a Southampton.
England, road. Unable to find the
missing lens, she called the fire
department. They responded in
force and located the missing ob-
ject after a half-hour search.
Senate ··
WASHINGTON tU PI) -The Senal'
v.·ent on record today for lowering the
\toting age to II in time for the 1972
presidential electiON.
Senators rejected a propcx!lal lo delay
the II-year-old vole untll Jan. 1, 1973,
leaving intact an amendment to the pen-
ding extension of the 1965 Voting Rights
Act. I
The amendment would reduce the
Yotlng age ln national. state, and local
elections at the start of next year.
Sen. Jamea B. Allen (D-Ala.), con-
tinued today to delay a Una! Yole on µit
amendmenL
Proposing a change ta make the
amendment effective in 1973, Allen warn-
Favors
ed that lt was possible the Supreme Court
v.•auld rule the blll WlC011stitutiona1 after
the 1972 e.Jections in wh:ch 18-year olds
had voted.
"What kind or confusion would reign In
this country?" Allen asked, "\Vho v.'ould
be president.,.
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
abandoned his opposition to the proposal
and accused Allen of trying to make
political hay for George C. Wallace.
S<.-ot t told newsmen that Allen, in hi s
opinion, was trying to "create some
~peech materia1 foe George Wallace."
"You have to have something new tG
sa:· even if you are a demagogue," the
f'cMsylvanian said of Wallace.
Woman Suspect Hunted
In Courthouse Bombing
CAMBRIDGE. Mo. (UPI) -Federal
and slate authorities searched today for a
young white woman as a prime suspect bt
a $100,000 courthouse bombing, but {he
major lead to her idenUty collapsed.
Police had hoped to trace the woman
through ownership cf a Dodge sedan wilh
New Yark license plates spotted near the
courthouse Tuesday before the explosii>n.
It turned out to be a company car used
by a vice president of the Rob Roy Co., a
shirtmaking firm with a large plant in
Cambridge.
"The car was parked ln a company
parking lot and was not near the
court.house," & <lOmpaDy spokesman said.
"I guess it was suspect because it was
the only out-of-state license around."
The Dorchester County courthouse was
where black militant H. Rap Brown was
to have been tried before the trial was
moved M miles away to Bel Air, Md., to
escape racial tensions here. It was near
Bel Air early Tuesday that two associates
of Brown's were killed when an explosive
device they were transporting demolished ,
their car.
State police reported Thursday that
7 ,000 dynamite blasting caps -contained
in pne bo1 -were missing from a
grenade manllfacturer not far from Bel
Air. The robbery, believed to be an
''inside job," took place late 1'1onday or
early Tuesday, they said. They y,•ere
found missing Wednesday. . .
Stale Trooper Otis Trost said police
"'ere investigating the possibility that the
-theft mighl be C1>nnected to the Cam·
bridge and Bel Air explosions. However.
Japanese Envoy
Se ized in Brazil;
Trade Demanded
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -The kid-
napers of Japanese Consul Genera.I
Nobuo Okuchi today demanded the
release of five political prisoners in ex-
change for the life of the diplomat.
The kidnapen in a letter deJivered to a
local newspaper gave authorities until 5
p.m. (1 p.m. PST) to agree to the
release, let the five ga Into exile in ~ex
iC'O and promise not to take reprl!lals
again.st political prisoners still In jail. .
The kldnapers said they would die with
the consul general if the police search
v.·as not called cff.
An anonymous caller told police earlier
the ransom note would be delivered to a
newspaper but it 'vas not found im·
mediately.
Okuchi, 56, was kldnaped Wednesday
night by nine youthful gunmen and police
believed the gang would seet to exchange
him for all terrorists jailed since the kid-
naping of U.S. Ambassador C. Birke
Elbr"ick last September. Elbrick was ex-
changed for 15 terrorists.
The caller told police the ransom note
,1·ould be delivered to the lobby cf the
newspaper Estado De Sao Paulo, but a
search turned up no note and police said
the call might have been a ruse to permit
the kldnapers to send the n o t e
somewhere else.
1-laryland Gov. ~1arvin fllandel said in a
news C1>nlerence today that no evidence
had been uncovered linking the two in-
cidents.
1'op Republicans
Sa y Laos Blasts
Political Ploys
WASHrNGTON (AP)"-The little war
in Laos has blossomed today into one of
the major issues cccupying the Senate,
with critics of President Nixon's policies
in the tiny Asian nation basing their ob-
jections on two grounds:
-Fear of another \'ietnam.
-General disagreement with U.S.
palicy in Southeast Asia .
Two leading Republicans -f.finority
Leader Hugh Scott and Sen. George
Ai ken or Vermont -charge politics plays
a ra\e in the predominantly Democratic
criticism of the President.
But virtually all Laos critics, including
some Republicans, are those who have
repeatedly objected to U.s : policies in
Vietnam under both the Johnson and
Nixon administratiorui.
The President's effort to clear the air
by lssu'1ng a detalled statement on U.S.
activities has clearly failed to still Senate
criticism.
Some senators now say privately that,
ir everything the administration says on
Laos could be believed , their fears would
ht' substantially lessened.
But their experience on Vietnam , v.•hen
they believed the Johnson administration
to their later regret, makes them wary.
"I \Vas a member or Congress as we
slid into Vietnam," Sen. Charlea McC.
1-lathias Jr. (R-Md.), said recently. "and
J didn't ask the questions then that I
:ihould have, and I can tell you that I am
going to ask them now."
M,any see a repe tilion of the course
that got the United States into Vietnam .
''It is following the same pattern."
Democratic Leader fl1 ike 1'1ansfield said,
•·first, aid, then logistics suppart, then air
power, and then Gls," adding quickly "I
don't thlnk the Gis will go into Laos."
Other critics agree on this last paint.
Aiken, in fact, said that the ad-
ministration would never be sble to get
a\\'lY with it because of the public uproar
it might cause. But they feel it Is
necessary to keep speaking out to make
sure it does not happen.
'Strip' Lights Dim
After Union Walkout
LAS VEGAS, Nev . (UPI) -The gartsh
"Las Vegas Strip," mecca of gamblers
for more than two decades, was closed to-
da y.
A massive walkout by union bartf!nders
and kJtchen help dimmed the bright
llghts of the resort hotels which shut
• down their casinos. A sma11 handful of
hotels maintained games for house. guests
only but tourists were turned away.
Snow, Rain Swamp South
Lubbock , T ex., Gets Another Spring Snow Surpri.s e
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Scotl said he personally favored the
Nixon admlnistratlon'i stand that it
"'OUld be better to lower the voting age
by a constitutional amendment rather
than by outright legislation but he said
he had decided lo drop open opposlUon.
ln his opposition to the proposal, Allen
rai&ed the question: "\Vhat's the rush?"
"What's the rush?" responded Sen.
Philip A. Hart (D-MiC:h.) "If the senator
from Alabama had eight children as does
the senator from Michigan, he would not
ask."
But Allen said he meant why did the
Senate want to rush lnto !01vering the
voting age by law when, in his view, a
cOnstitutiona.1 amendment is required to
do it legally.
Seo. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N .C.), agreed.
"The Constitution," be said, "wu wrltttn
to keep impatient senators, congressmen
and judges from doing things in a hurry.
When the ConstJtuUon is nolllfled by im-
patient men, liberty in A1nerica has no
cbanee to survive." .
NonethelW, by a vote of 62 lo 21, the
Senate Wednesday rejected the motion of
Sen. Ru...U B. Lang (0.La.), la kill the
' proposal. cffered by Democrat Leader
Mike Manslleld of Montana,
"It's the current youth kick," aald
Scotl
Scoll tided with the NiJon ad-
ministration in voting to kill the
?tfansfield proposal. The adminlstration
argues a constitutional amendment Ls rl"
quired.
But 23 Republicans deserted their party
position and joined 37 Democrats in
voting not to kill the Man.afield plan.
Eleven Democrats -all Soulhemers -
and 10 Republican5 voted the other way.
So from now on, between 10 p.m.and 6 a.m., Standard
Stations will operate strictly on a no-cashon·hand bas~
Statistics show that more robberies
occur during the wee hours than at any other time.
Consequently, Standard Stations in Soutl'lern Ca lifornia open af te r
10 p.m. will now accept only the exact change for the amount of purchast!.
Or a valid credit card. Or, in an t!mergency, a bank check.
And all currency received after dark will be deposited-Posthaste-
in a tamper-proof safe on the premises. In th is way, we hope to protect
not only our stati on employees, but our customers as well .
As the Commission's Report sums It up," •.. society must seek to prevent
cr ime before It happens •.• and by reducing criminal opportunities."
And We think tha t one way to discourage highway robbery is to remove
all temptation.
., . '
Standard Oil Company of California
'
Chevron
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'fh~d17, Marth 12, 1970 DAIL y PILOT f II
'
Maury Green Leads Viewers Behind TV Screen
8)' 'JUDY \UU~T
ot .. ~ ...... Jtlff
The Maury Green who came
to Orange Cowity last week
was not the same Maury
Grttn J'ye setn on television.
He'a underweight. Television
may distort the welght !actor
but 1cCording to this authority
on news production, It doesn't
make an attempt to distort the
oew~
Green may look IS pounds
lighter but he fed his audience
with conversational wit while
apprll\sing his medium. A
member or the original Big
News team for CBS and lG-
year member of that station,
Green introduced his new text-
book, "Television N e w s i •
before members or Pl Beta
Phis annual Celebrity Book
Revtew Series.
his Job and Jed the viewers
behind the camera.
PERSONALITY
"One ot the prob1ema
television (aces in presenting
lhe news is the pe~ality
cult. Cult critics state that
there ls a predominance ol Uie
newscaster's personality and
opinions over and above con-
tent of the news.
"TV is dominated by It. It is
an inexcusabk! thing that the
person who gives you the news
is affixed with the title of
celebrity or salesman.
"Among the n~wsmen who
currenUy flt into this star
category are Walter Cronk.lite,
Olet Huntley, David Brinkley,
Howard K. Smith and Eric
Sevareld."
TV HIS MEDIUM
Maury Green r(attily attired In a green
sweater-jacket and plaid pants
and showing thoSe without col-
or television that his wiry
hair I! greying, he glamorized
Most connoisseurs or the
news hour strongly Identify
with one show, or the pro-
~gram's anchorman. If this is
so_. why is Green often
mistaken for Ralph Story,
another popular brOadcaster.
"One day I was at the
Biltmore Hotel 's coffee llihop
and ·the waitress was ·excited
•
r·
I-'
Mi'. tJ! f,-,. ~ ""'· , ... ,-.. -~ f , .~.~""It -,.J' . ~ t ~.1' . ' ~·\ . ,. .... '
'I;' -~
'
Dual Reasons Double the Fun
h1embers of St. Joachim's parish will have double Ute fun when they celebrate
St. Patrick's Day and the Rev. Thomas Nevin's birth4ay Sunday, tftarch 15, in
the Costa Mesa Country Club. A social hour at 6:30 p.m. wilJ be followed by a
buffet supper and entertainment. Doubling up to coordinate plans for the event
are Mrs. h1ichael Fenchak and !vlrs. William Hartson (left to right).
I
about my being at her table.
:;he, needless to say, was a big
fan of Story•s. I pointed out
that I was not be. She Jell red-
faced and 1n her place came
the hostess who apologized
profusely and explained that
the v.•altress realized her
mistake and would I, Maury
\Vills, accept her apology?"
So, ls it possible that
viewers don't teally "see what
Is before their eyes?"
PERCENTAGES
This may seem strange
when one considers that most
Americans d e p e n d on
television f o r lnformation.
Ninety-five percent have TV
sets, but 34 percent dQn't trust
TV reports and 11 percent
think it should be government
regulated:
"The real problem with TV
Is that people don't understand
it
. "An eminent psychologist at
'
UCLA In a research paper Club answered quesUons from pathlze wlth women In the au.
noted lhat only 7 percent Usten the audience. dleoce who want to see a bet.
to the news reporter• 38 per-lie feels that KCET ls doing ter side portrayed. cent _hang on his vocal in· fiecUon and 5$ percent are a good job considering the foot But he reminded the.-au-
very aware of hb facial e:r-that the station lacls money~ dience, the thousands' or
pression and ~ture. The former writer for the airplanes that fly dally and
''TV, tht.1, ls 93 percent Chicago Tribuae and Los land safely are not news. This
personality when you add It Angeles Times doesn't see pay is usual. It's that one crash out
up. TV for the immediate future. of Z00,000 or so that ls news.
··tt also Is an emotional At lea.st not until the cable Green, an E1nmy award
medium. ll'a like mak1ng love systems are worked out and winner and owner of two
with no reasoning process. It more channels are added. He Golden Mikes, lnoocentJy plug-
goes straJght to the sub-feels today it b not ged his new week]y.show, •·10-
con.scious and works on the economically feasible and ex-quiry" which will air March 15
emotions. It is a psychological periments have not proven at S p.m. on Channel 4. Its
X-ray\ sucress!ul. format will be similar to bis
Sprint
Fashion
Show
J 10 .... 1., .i. .......
•f f11itl•11t #of
lh1 111lir1 f1mil1
ll•Drt--2 ,,,,_... pll'I
S1furd1y. M1rcll l 4
mocl1l• by Mi11 p,;.,.
A'•d•mv ••• fr•• •• th.
1111/l. Hu11til19t•11 C•11t1r
•••cit a11d Edl119tr •t
fti• Si n Di .. o h••••r. "TV news brings real lire to Green admitted that most idol, EdY!'ard R. Murrow's
t.he viewer," he continued.11~n~e~ws~i..~.b~a~d~ne~w~•,~an~d~sym§-~~"~P~er~so~n=to:P:•:r!son~.'~' :~~~~~~:~=~~~, "Such as the Vietnam conflict.
When you s.it back and see the
films from the war zone you
realize that it is not catsup
being used or .an old John
\Vayne movie." ,
QUESTIONS It
The currtnt president of the ft
Greater Los Angeles Press ~
'
THE EFFERVESCENT TALENT OF CARDIN UNFURLS IN HIS
SPRING SEVENTY COLLECTION. SEE THE'SOP'TEST WOOLS,
' JERSEYS , CREPES AND CHIFFONS WITH SHINY VINYL, SPACE-
Benefit for Mission
AGE BELTINGS , TRAPUNTO STITCHING OR P~ET-5IZE
SUTTONS . IT1S LIKE A PREVI EW OF THE TWENTY-FIRST
CENTURY. HERE, HIS 2-f'IECE WOOL PEPLIN OVERBLOUSE
ANO SKIRT , NAVY, 6-12, 250,00 , ONLY ONE FROM OUR
P IERRE CARDIN COLLECTION, IN OUR DES IGNER DRESSES.
Irishmen Share Goal
The 9'Divinskis, O'Mlllers,
O'Birrers, 0 ' La Riv as ,
O'Lunds and O'Bishops will be
celebrating on St. Patrick's
Day.
Although they may not be
truly Irish, ·the members or
Blessed Sacrament Church
The Tee
Tattler
parish in Westminster share a
common goal: raising funds
for the Rev. Jack Jennings
and his mission work in San-
tiago, Chile.
Father Jennings served In
the Westmln~te.r parish for a
year prior to going to Chile.
A benefit dance will take
place in the parish hall from 9
p.m. to 1 a.n1. Saturday, ,
March 14, to raise funds for i
his mission. I
Playing for dancing will be I
the '-Jen of Notes, and tickets .
for the affair will be $2.50 a i
person. Addit.lonal information '·
may be obtained by calling ~
Ed Divinsk1, 893-3030, or Mrs. -
James Miller, 893-5308.
Cards Tell
Party News ~
Crazy Bridge wUI set the ~
mood for a husband and wives' t
social sponsored by the Hun-
tington Beach High School
Faculty Wives.
A St. Patrick's D;iy Iheme
will be carried out when Mrs.
Larry Boston opens her Long
Beach home for the party tak-tng place at 8 p.m. Saturday,
March 14.
Party Plans
Disclosed
DUE TO POPULAR DEMAND
AND "°" YOUlt COHVIHIENCI
KAY MICHAELS lllAUTY SALON
WILL IE OPEN IYENINGS UNTIL 10
AND ALL DAY SUNDAY
Jto Wul<I!" DrlYt . ,,._,.,, l lHll ""I.Ml l"''"' INm Wtskllff l"Ui•I
•
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Bonanza Appealing
A bargain bonanza awaits
shoppers dUTing a garage sale
sponsored by Westminster
Nursery School between 10
a.m. and 4 p.m , Saturday and
Sunday, A1arch 14 and 15, at
10531 Stern, Garden Grove.
•The sale will feature
bargain-priced items from
more than 60 households which
are being donated b y
members of the nonprofit
preschool group. Books, toys,
clothing, children 's
furnishings, small appliances
and furniture are bein g
assembled at the home of h1r.
and Mrs. Gilbert Gomez.
Funds from the sale will be
used to purchase new equi~
ment for the school.
TAKATA
NURSERY
and Landscape -Co.
e FiREE
ESTIMATE
ON RES IDENTIAL
OR COMMERCIAL
Leiindscaping
SALE
FUSHIA
49' ea.
RED
NAvY
IONE
,
RISQUE'S GOING SOF'T
Risqu6 fashions 1 shoe to_, wit~
swlnalna pleated lkllll end blazer Jadcets,
ore skinny ribbed dress.
Toudiebly soft leather,
squared·off 11
the toe and set on
a chunky tie!!
s1700
• • o · •• •• ~.: NEXT TO
FlltE STATION HEMPHILL'S
1831 NEWPORT BLVD. •
COSTA MESA Ph. 549.9744
NIKT TD ,Ut• n.ATION AT lltllTOl
110 BAKER ST., COSTA MESA PHONE 546-0724 ROBINSONS Nt.\i\11-0Rr ·FAS 101'! ISLAND · ,14 4-Lf .~) -
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C 04JLY ,ILOT N Th11rsd11, March 12~1970
MARRIED STUDENTS ·OK
Gloria Vellutini .. 'THOUGHT l'D BE KNIFED'
Mike Long
'
'HAVE TD BE YOURSELF'
Jo11ne Stafford
'NO PLASTIC GAMES'
Gary Frailty
McNally l(ids-lndividualists Not
Bf THOMAS FORTUNE
McNally Continuation High School is
full or youngsters vice principals gave up ...
But the students at Newport-Mesa
Unified's second-<:hance school are not
about to be branded "losers." They have
a positive self image. It is the image that
they are individualists.
They don 't believe that in their former
high schools their behavior was the prOO-
le111. The problem. as they see ii, was
the cqlrthem-out-of·the·same·mold school
gystem.
"At Newport Harbor 1 was number
407410. That was my life. They didn't
want my name on anything," said ~tlke
Hofer.
"You have ta be yourself and there you
couldn't be it. They were going to try to
change you," 11id Jane Stafford of her
former high school.
"Student:! (at the other high schools)
are just sheep. 11ley follow trends for the
week. They're not real people," said
Carole McCall.
"Here, people just flow. They can be
kind."
"At McNall y you do what you fetl Uke
doing," said Gary Frailey. "Others don 't
get on your back ... put you down •••
atart playing plastic ga~."
A look at the Individuals sitting around
Mrs. Betty Shapiro's classroom revealed
al ?\tcNally you can wear a beard and
your hair loog, dress in mod clothe! Or
sloppy clothes -you can even wear your
hair short and drtss as a "straight" if
that's your thing.
"When I came here t found out
everybody doesn't ca re what you do,"
said Roland Poosetle.
}.fcNally Continuation High fs in Its
fourth year In !" old _<;:osta }.!esa elemen-
tary school building, tt had Its beginning
when the state Legislature voted for
6eCOnd-chanct high schools to deal with
the problem of dropoots. At first the local
6Chool board didn 't think much of the
Idea.
Mrs. Marian Bergeson, Newport-}.lesa
school board pre!ident, still seems un·
certain about the merits of having a coo·
tlnualioo school. although she say11 the
McNally start has done an excellent job.
Sht said the board needs to take a look at
objectives of what it wants the !!Choo! to
do.
One thing McNally is doing Is holding
potential dropout.a in school. This school
year 96 students have been added to the
opening enrollment of 102 in September
while only 36 ha ve left.
Suspensions arc generally for lack of
lnterest in school. not for discipline. The
school isn't run on threat of punishmenl
and discipline isn't a problem.
'Ole relaxed, non-pressure, permissive
11tniosphere agrees with most of the
students.
"Since I've been here l've been coming
to IChool every day and I'm going to
graduate, which 1 "'ooldn 'I luive,J>efore,''
aald Don Fredriksen.
He and other students made the point
they want to see McNally given equal
recogrtition as a fifth district blgh school.
"McNally is not just a play pen,'' said
Fredrlksm.
":Over at f.1esa they say f>.IcNa\ly llke
lt'tl four letters," remarked Pouseltc. "I
aslred, 'What 's this McNally?' And t~y
go, "Well, that's ~·here thty srnd all the
kidJ that can't make it.' "
The McNally youngsters are quick to
say that isn't nteessarlly the case. ()11(
doesn't have to get suspcn<led from
another high school to get into McNally.
Jack Coleman, director of the school,
1aJd •bout 35 percent of his students are
1ttendlng McNally be<:1use they are
'N'Cf'klng. 'nley need 1 flalble schedule
that will permit Ultm to go lo &ehool
half·limo.
11lere are other }.lcN11lly :iotudcnts,
Coleman said, who "haven'I been :JCrious lf'Oblemt in terms of a_chieve.rnent or al· .!Pance but 1sked to come hert. '' They .n Ille lndlvldU\llm who '°"Bbl • di!·
flrent 8Chool 1trnosphere and had a
ai»Unatlor who •iretd A!c.~ally w•s best
If!: lhem. • Fredrtkaen ll one who asked to 1Hlt'nd
McN1lly. becauae "I couldn 't take lt
&1\¥moft ot Harbor lllgb. I fell like a
r-obot"
But Coltman admits counselon: don'l
•lw1ys tell o( McNall)' 11 being 11 Jehool
to m lmllvlduall:JI!. Oflen McNally iJ u~
ed as a threat to make individuals con·
form and fit \vhere they are.
"The inl.tresting thing is it isn'l a
threatening place." said Coleman. "Bul
when J loot at It I think the counselor is
saying m· all honesty to the kid, 'You
would be better to stay in rtgular 11chool.
We have to many other kinds of of.
fering!.'
Ironically, he noted, ''\Vhen I talk to
the kids I find they don'I miss athl etics
and student guvernmenl ."
He said lhcre also are some counselors
saying, "Lookit, Uie best place for you
woold be continuation school, You arc
blowing ii here."
Mike Long had heard things that made
hlm not want to come to f>.1cNally when
he was suspended. "I thought \\'hen I
came here I would be knifed a Cew times
the rJnt day," he said.
Gloria Vellutini, who Ls married, said.
until she looked into It, she had heard of
McNaUy only ln undesirable terms.
The Impression of }.fcNally as a !Choo!
for undesirables ls shared by police. the
youths claim.
~fls.s SWford said sht went to the
,Costa Mesa police .station to file an ac-
cident report and the desk officer asked
her, "Arc you a good kid? Then why do
you go to McNa\ly?"
"It's a place to get an education, isn·t
it?'' she lald him angrily.
Long said a Mesa policeman stopped
him because of hJs long hair and asked
where he went to school. Toki McNally,
he said the officer remarked. "What's a
nickle bag selling for ?" (Nickle refers to
!he usual $5 price for a certain quantity
of heroin.)
Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth
said it had never been brought to his at·
tention that his officers might be treating
f.fcNally students dllfettpt than anyone
else.
"We have had prior contacl with many
of the students,'' the police chief said.
"There Is the remote poeslbllily some of-
ficers may be a little more thorough in
their attention because ol prior contact."
He said he knows "there are-some real
good ltids going there."
Drugs at McNally?
"Everybody here knows about drugs,"
said Miss Stafford. "In regular high
School they fail to believe everybody
knows about it. Not their little darlings.~·
One way to get suspended from school,
of course, is to be cnught using drugs. A
number of such students have been
transferred to McNa lly.
Coleman, in a guarded statement, al·
lowed that "a signil1cant percentage of
our students seem to have been involved
in some way or other with narcotics."
He said l he way he treats the drug
problem is to tell the students. "I want to
help with it. I tell them I'm not half
sophisticated I can do it myself, and I'll
try to get parents ln\•olved or police
counseling to help students put it down."
He said he had a student in that morn-
ing a teacher believed was under the In·
fluence. The youngster denied tt and
Coleman said he told him, "The ne1t
time two adults lt'jnk you are under the
influence I'm going to recommend
suspension." He said the student thought
that was fair .
One difference between McNally and
three of the other four high .schools in the
Newport-,.1esa District is learning is in-
dividualized with each student prog·
ressing at his own pace on his own
lessons.
There is a practical reason ~·hy It must
be that way. Student.a are admitted at all
times of the year. The school staff also
believes strongly in the educational worth
of individualized instruction.
Leon Thayer does too. He says he can't
read or write very well and at hi1
previous high school they would just
flunk him. "l told them I needed help but
they didn 't have time lot me," he sald.
MRS. BETTY SHAPIRO GETS INVOLVED WITH STUDENT MOTIVATION; TEACHERS WILLING TO PUT IN EXT~ TIME
Mi·s. Dayan Says E • l } Cl H•t
Is .. aeli Youth xper1men a asses . I
Too Busy to Rebel Critic at VCLA Calls Prograrn 'Overrated, Overcredited'
NEW YORK (AP) -Israel has fcwr.r
youth problems than the United States
btc:ause its young peo ple have a cause to
rally around , says the wife of the Israeli
Defense t\finister f>.1oshc Dayan.
"Israeli youth ha\·e the challenge or
fighting for lhtir counll)•,'' said Ruth
Dayiin. "They are re ady lO give up their
li ves."
On a four.week tour ol lhe United
States, tht wift of l~racl's military hero
observed, "The youth problems here
seem terrible lately •.. particularly the
flghUng In the uni versities and the ·drug
taking."
Israeli youlh, &aid ?i.1rs. Dayan, a
mother m three~ arc ;'civilians and
soldiers ot the samt Umc." And, she ad ·
ded , "No one. tries to get out of their
mili tary service."
In an interview before she addressed a
luncheon of the women 's division of the
United Je"'•lsih Appe11I al the SL. Regis·
Sheraton Hotel Tue~ay, 1\-trs. Dayan said
she htd m:ently teamed her actor son
ADaf had betn 11called up on the
border."
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ The 21111
students attend no lectures, have no text.
books, ta kc no exams. 1(1jtead, they
survey the constline, leach in fl children's
school or write brochures on thr danger
ol' O\'erpopulatlon.
Should they continue to get uni1·r.rsi1y
credit? Some faculty critics of the (''1·
perlmental University of California
course have doubts.
The course. supported by a $7!1,000
Ford Foun_datlon grant, is ca 1 I e d ·
Human istic Educational Needs or an
Academic Community IH~:NACJ and Is
worth 12 units a quarter -the cquiv alenl
Of three rfrmal l'OUrses.
"The whole idea is to give studenta an
QPl)Ortunlty to cope with some of the
most critical problen1s fa cing society."
says Jllla \Volsey, 22. who Js working
toward a psychology degree.
Nick Brestoff, 21. an enginetrlng slu·
dent In the course. u ys: ''Stationary
kno"•ledge Js dead knowledge •.. 'I'hls is •
chance for a student to try on a dlf!crent
hat."
But Lowell Paige, deDn or physical
~iettees and pmldent of the UCLA
Academic Senatt\ which c m b o d 1 e s
rac ully opinion, says the course is over·
rated and overcredlted.
"Tu•elve unlts Ii epproximalely 9 per·
cent of their university career, and I
would want a careful evaluation or what
they are doing," he says. "Full value
doesn't seem forthcoming to me."
Paige has asked the univenlty'1 Coun-
cil on Educational Development to
eva lunte llENAC, now in its aecond
quarter, and report to the Senate. The
Senate could urge the admlni.stration to
reduce or withdraw credit.
Since the controversy arose, coutse
standards have bttn tightened, says
Brestoft, a student coordinator.
Everybody In t he ungraded rourS('
recelved credll to~·erf graduation last
quarter. Bui. say11 Brestoff, "Wt will
have no compunction about failing them
lhl11 lime if 1hey don 't participate."
~t\ss \Volsey and some others are plan-
ning brochures lhat can · be Used in
schools and doctors' offices to discourage
"'omen from contributing to lhe popu Ja.
tlon exploslon.
Brcstoll 's group l~ determlninl<l ho1v
much California coastline Is Avallablt for
public use. The result.I wiU 10 to con·
servaUon grou ps.
Among other projects is teactilng in a
nonpublic, no-tuition school in a rundown
s u b u r b a n neighborhood. encouraging
children to do what Interests them.
Some supporters say the course makes
some UCLA officials nervoos because it
touches on e<1nlroversial subjects.
Dean Paige responds: "I don'l question
\\'hether it is mak ing waves for the
university as much as J question whether
the stu&ents are getting the full v1tue of
their educational commitment"
Nixon Asks Progra1n
To Fight Drug Ahuse
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon hns ordered. a ~3 .5 million trai n·
ing program to educate teachers -and
through them, school children -on lhe
dangers ot drugs.
Noting an alarming increase In drug
addiction an1ong school children. Nixon
also ordrrf'd expended research Into the
effects of nIB rljuana . <1 nd tabllshinent
of a national cltarlnghousc on drug
nbuse infonnaUon. The Prcsldtnt's pro-
.trates on education and public advertis·
ing of lhe dangers of drug abuse.
' '•
' •
'
'WE HAVE SPIRIT'
K•y Homllt"""-
Losers
Al McNally the teachers have more
time for each student -at least a little :
more . .
As elsewhere there ia only one teacher:
for every 20 students, but at McNaUy the :
ratio gets beUer because attendance: on ;
any one day is usually only about 70 or 80 ;
percent of enrollment. ··
'4lf we had everybody here enrolled ln
this school on the same day "e'd have a
problem," Coleinan said.
He noted that "some of these students ·
have not achieved in regular .school a'nd it '.
is very important to keep classes small lo
make up for their l11ek or motivation.'' ~
?o.lrs. Shapiro said she asked to be
assigned to teach at McNally because of .
her Interest in student motivation.
Although the>: have ifeater need of
motivation, she noted, they question more
than the average student. ' ' T h e y
challenge many of the things that erist in ·
the establishment."
Teacher George Knights said he find s
the students sUmul aUng. "There Is no,
question they all are individualistic as
persons," he-said. .
He said he tries to give Ulem all the in·
di vidual attention he can. Mrs. Shapiro·
said most of the McNally teachers are
wilUng to put in extra time with the
5tudents.
"The teachers here don't put on a big
thing of 1hey're superior because they
went to college," married student Mrs.
VellutinJ said.
"The teachers want to do something to
fit you, where you learn just as much ,''
said individualist Long. "You ha\'e to
produce to stay in school here, but not
like at the other schools."
Long said he didn't treasure wtuit hfl
v.•as learning at Costa Mesa lligh. "The
greatest thing they taught is competition
-how to drive other people into the
ground so you can become a rich dude in
society."
"Competition ruins your head." stated
ttiss Stafford.
Too many rules was tht common
grievance of many of the 1.icNaUy
1tudents.
"You had to have a pass key to go to
the bathroom or you were ripped off lO
the office," complained Kay Hamilkln.
Some of the McNally student!: claimed
at their former .schools athletic team
coaches prompted athletes to hassle the
"long hairs."
Thayer told about five 1larbor High
athletes grabbing him and cutting orr his
halt. Fredriksen. formerly on the Harbor
lilgh football team, said. "You don't
kno1v what it was like. The coaches used
to arouse them. They told them. 'If
so1nebody is going lo hit you, hit them
first.' "
Frailey said It wa~ the same thing al
Estanci11. "~ coaches told them to slop
the smoking going on in lhe bathroom.
There were figh ts."
RegimcntaUon is the main thing the
1.teNally youths seemed to see in the
school system.
"If you are a complete idiot and can
rollow directions, then you've got a high
school rllploma," saJd Frailey.
The ~fcNally students say they have 11
good thing going now and they believe it
is the attitude of Coleman and their
teachers that makes the dlffere~.
"I never had a teacher before T could
rap with," said Long.
Coleman summed up his atUtudc lhls
v.·ay :
"We have no problem studmts. We
ha"e students with problems -problems
of achievement, of Interest in school, of
lack of con1municaUon with adults."
He works on liX>Se problems in a relax·
ed atmosphere.
"\Ve can talk to the principal ourselves.
We don 't have to have borne room reps,"
Mrs. Vellutini said. .
One supposed goal of continu<ition
11chool is to prepare students to return to
regular nigh school.
Bul from what the students say thty
aren't terribly interested in going back .
Frailey uld, "Usually the ones thal 19 bacJr. it Is because of their _parenl&."
"I \\-OUI~ doubt if live percent request
n!turn to regular 11Chool. Tha t's proba bly
a high figure ," Coleman said .
"What's so wrong If this school Is l1ap.
py. You don 't hnve to be serious io
leflrn ," remarked Miss Stafford
"Olhtr school• :wy they havf! ;;pirlt. t
th ink we have more,'' said riuu
~lamllton.
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Today's Flnal
Stoeks
VOL 63, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1970 TEN CENTS
Gang Faces Extradition
Me ·mber Charged With Newport, Laguria Holdups
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot Ille D91Jr ,lltt Sttff
Extradition of three Colorado killer
suspects -unarmed for the first time in
an alleged cross-county crime spree when
captured in ·Costa Mesa -formally
began today.
Hearings were set for two members of
the suspected Bonnie arid Clyde-style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Superior Court.
Love Tria11gle
End s in Death
At Huntington
By ALAN DffiKIN
01 tlM Oall'J '11•1 Sl1ff
An apparent eternal triangle slaying
claimed ·the life of a Huntingtcm Beach
man whose bullet-riddled body was round
early loday by his distraught woman
1 friend .
A second victi rn of the shooting, the
\\'Oman's husband, \\•as also found dead,
shot in the temple, in lhe same luwry
apartment .
A .38 caliber revolver was discovered
by the body of Navy Lt. James Bur1oa
McClure. 38, or 25a:I Pin..: Ave., Long
Beach. He was killed by a bullet wound
in the head, apparently self-inflicted,
police reported.
Coroner's deputies relea~ the name
or the murder victim late this morning.
He was Jdtntlfied as Glenn Ewing
\\'illiam£.. 46, retired naval commander.
The deputies informed Williams' wife,
Janell hf. Willi{lms. of Summit Acres,
Arkansas City, Kansas, of her husband's
death. The Williams wert legally
separated.
The shooting took place at a block or
luxury apartments, the Huntington Capri
-"Where the Living ls Fun", accGrding
to a billboard -at 6200 Edinger Ave. in
Huntin gton Beach.
Police reported that the shooting oc·
c:ured at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday but was
not discovered until 1:44 o'clock this
morning when 1o1cClure's wife, Grace
f\leredith. called officers.
She apparently had been unable to con-
tact the victim by telephone, traveled to
the apartments and discovered the
bod ies.
Early inquiries today indicated tha t the
~1C'Clures were in the process of getting
a divorce. They reportedly had an a~
pointment with an attorney \Vednesday
on instituting divorce proceedings but
The suspected ringle8der. ·who once
reportedly told his mother he would
never be taken alive, goes before the t>ench Friday rooming as the first sJep
in his return to Colorado.
Complaints charging first d e g r e e
murder in the brutal heating death of a
Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb. 19
we re issued Wednesday 1D the Rocky
Mountain State.
Jack C. Matney, 32, of Denver, Colo.,
and Howard R. Tschirhart, SI, of Kansas
' .
Thin Blue Line
City. hfo.,. were due in coo.rt today,
represented by putilic defende rs.
Extradition hearing for James E.
Jack~n. 25, of Independence, Mo., is set
for Friday morning and he too will be
counseled by a public defender.
If they choose to waive extradition,
they will be returned swiftly, but the trio
could spend several months in Orange
County Jail ii they fight the action.
Jackson, Matney Md Tschirhart are
formally accused of the rine-bludgeon
OA1LY '°ILOT S11ff Pll•lt
Costa Mesa police basketball squad surrounds teammate Pat Rog·
ers. who almost Jost his pants and his dignity during \Vednesday
night's charity tussle with DAlLY PILOT dribblers. G~me ~as less
than artistic, according to impartial observers. but did raise $306
to help pay medical biUs of paralyzed Costa Mesa High wrestler
Justin Ogata. For details, see sports, page 26.
McClure did not show up. Mrs. -Al sk ' Mill D l d f\icClu re's friend was shat four times , a . a s er e aye three times ;n the left chest and once in
the left shoulder.
Neighbors at the custom apartments
ll"hich opened early this yea r had seen Iii·
tle or the murder victin1 .
,A, student, Bill Stracher, "'ho lives o~
posite in apartment 707, said he had seen
the victim only once.
"I \lo'aved to him once, .. he said. ''but
nrver spoke to him."
Stracher thought the victim moved into
the apartment al the beginr.ing of
r~ebru ary .
The apartn1ents' recreation director.
\1'ho declined to be identified, lived in the
apartment immediately below the vie·
lim's .
"I heard nothing at all." she said
St racher said he arrived home at about
2 a.m. just as the police were arriving.
Today the apartment was sealed with a
coroner's notice.
Orange Coast
ft'encher
Tntern1illcnt cloudiness but most-
ly sunny skies is the cautious word
from lhe "·ealherman for Friday.
Look for mercury readings of 65
along the coast and 70 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
DA IL)' PI L 0 T basketboU
players hdller "police ltruta.Jity"
as lhe Co&ta J.ftsa cops hand
11tem a 63·44 drubbino. aU i1~
tht na1ne of c11aritu. Tht grue·
some dttaiU art on Page 26
toclau.
c111i.r11l1
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C1mk.1
Cr•u-•<11
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O'v.<ct1
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Eftl.,11J11m1n1
'l"t"ft "'"'(-"""' Llllllt" M1lllM,
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•
For Trade Fair l(ickof f
A husky delay· hit Alaska Gov. Keith
Miner's scheduled dogsled cara van to
Orange County toda y for the opening of
the Alaska Trade and Travel Exposition
in c:osta Mesa.
He was to hold a 10 :30 a.m. press con-
ference, but it · Y.'aS . postponed witi l 2
p.m., following a Newporter Inn lwicheon
to li:ick off the 10-day affair.
Ceremonies in the Carousel Court at
South Coast Plaza and Town Center were
to signal the opening of the exposition.
engineered to promote trade and tourism
between the states.
A variety of continuing displays and ex-
hibitions Will be supplemented by
demonstrations in totem pole-carving,
blanket-tossi ng and other Alaskan loi:e.
Expo Eskimo is expected to draw
thousands and Includes special shows
staged by every major city in the 49th
state, one of the most boomine areas in
the world.
Native arts and cr1fl.! as well as the
latest industrial and commvclal en-
terprises will be shown, while more than
IT'S BOOTS,
NOT BOATS
Hopes by anyone who read of
Saturday's Cogla ?tltsa Police. Depart·
ment unclaimed goods actM>n to perhaps
grab a Sabot have been sabotaged.
A clerical error crept into the
department's itemi:r.ed llst of loot going
on the block at ID a.m. behind head-
quarters, property Sgt. Ed Loveln said
today .
It shold have read : Two Boot!. not
T~'O Boats.
700 schools throughout Orange County arc
invited to stage field tr ips.
The affair -one of the first between
states when internatiqnal trade ex·
changes are popular -\lo'ili continue
through P.iardl 21 , throughout the
business day.
A host of Alaskan officials arrived to-
day for the opening of the exposition,
joinUy sponsored by the Alaska Business
COOncil and the Orange County Chamber
of Commerce.
Cyclists Warned
By Mesa Police
• A. new warning was issued today
against Tiding sport motorcycles in th e
old dirt and gravel pit area of west Costa
Mesa .
Costa Mesa police have obtained the
authority to issue, trespassing ~itat~o~$
and have been domg so, wllh slllf fine s
imposed.
Lt. Hal Fischer of the traffic bureua,
said 'more than Z5 cyclists have been
ticketed for trupassing by ofiicers pos-
ing on wee.tendS as just other sport-lov·
ing lawbreakers.
· "W'e don't want enyone to gel lhe-.im·
pression that iCs legal after all," 1ald Lt.
F'ischer, noting Ule property is posted
with NO Trespassina signs.
Right-of-way agent Roy Erickson
researched multiple ownership ol the pro·
perty Involved an~ obtained permission to
prohibit •cycling there as a policy.
S tock 1Uar k et•
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted downward on light liadlng late
this afternoon . (See quota tions, Pagn
20-21).
. .
murd.er of E.'rling Nielsen, 61. whose
modest jewelry and loan shop was looted
of nwnerous guns, jewelry and oth::!r
goods.
The victim's body-wH>-feund·erouched
in the blood-splashed restroom of his
business, as though seeking refuge from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Pollet Detective Capt. Bob
Green said addiUonal complaints would
be Issued today charging the trio with li·
(See HEARINGS, Pace %)
Bologh Sends
Candidates
Tickets Back
DAILY ,II.OT ,..., ,.......
Invitations to a by-ticket-only Mee\ the
Candidates night, plus is free passu
each, have been mailed to seven men in
the 1970 Costa Mesa..City Councll election
campaign.
One has sent hi s bacK by registered
mail.
MADINE CARPENTER SIGNS HUSBAND'S NOMINATION PAPERS
Mrs. Willi•m Bt:nt1 P••••• Petition •t Press Conference
The March 19 Candidates' Speak In will
be i n the Costa Mesa City Council
Chambers and Identical to a 196& event
boycolted ·by the objecting campaigner
Y.'ho sued to have it banned.
Theodore C. "Ted" Bologb declared
this '"''eek he hasn't changed his attitude
toward the Chamber of Commerce-
sponsored forum.
"Elect councilmen with votes, not
tickets," he sakl, charging that lbe
democratic proces1 lliould be lne to d '
citizens. \
Newport's Carpenter Runs
For Vacant Sei:iate Spot
The Chamber of Commerce Legislative ·
Committee, which organized the Speak
In. maintains U Is free, becaUJe the
tickets coat nothing.
Doors open at 7 p.m.1 with debate
beginning at 7:30, while non-ticket-holding
Costa Mesans will be admitted at 7:20
p.m., with a total of 200 seats avallab!e.
Wr itten questions will be submitted to
candidates a day or two beforehand and
each of the seven candidates -if all
se ven show up -given one minute lo
comment on them.
The same policy was followed at the
1968 session, which candidate Bologh
tried to have prohibited. through a
restraining order an astonished Superior
Court judge refused to issue.
Since seating in council chambers ls
limited, the ticket admission syst.em was
utilized to assure that citiuns who are
genuinely interested get a seat.
Only a handful. howe ver turned out two
weeks ago for the first such event, corr
ducted along with the Mesa Verde
•1omCO\lo'ners' Association quarterly
meeting.
Voters go to the poll.s April 14 to decide
whether incumbent councilmen Willard
T. Jordan and George A. Tucker -or
challengers -will get another four years
In office.
The challengers include. Planning Com·
missioner Jack Hammett, Orange Coast
Co\lege student R. Eli Kaser, operating
engjneer David J. Yarnal. college student
and hospital employe Thomas A. Manu s
Jr., and industrial worker Bologh.
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of 1111 Oii,_, 'n.t I""
Dennis carpenter of Newport Beach to-\•
day announced he Ill a candidate for tbe
California Sta~ Senate seat to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz (R·Tu.stin) who
is runn!ng for Congress.
His impending ann ouncement wa.s
rumored Wednesday.
Carpenter, as chalnnan of l he
California Republican State Central Com-
mittee, is one of California's most
powerful Republicans and close to Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate look out papers this
morning and then m a de his an-
nouncement in Newport Beach before
about 25 friends and Republican workers
and the press.
The :Mth State Senate D i s t r I c t
Carpenter is seeking lo represent covers
most or Orange County except for st rips
on the north and northwest edges. It is a
district in which 56 percent of the voters
are registered Republican.
Carpenter saJd philosophically he fits
the district llke a glove.
He said Sen. Schmitz is going to run on·
1y for the Congressional sea t vacated
with the recent death of J ames Utt (R.
Tustin) and is not going to file for reelec-
tion to the State Senate. l{e knows, he
sai d, because he asked Schmitz.
Carpenter said he also touched base
with Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·
Newport Beach) and Badham told him he
will probably refile fo r the Assemby,
might run for Congress, but is not in·
terested in the ra ce for State Senate.
Assemblyman Roberl Burke (R·Hun·
tington Beach ) has declared again for the
Second Mem. orial Asse mbly. Carpenter said he has heard rumors
that Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner
Tr•ee Appi·oved of Laguna Beach, a former Assemblyman who~as reated by Schmitz for the
Sena al in a Republican prl,mary,
\Vben S.ye ar-old Jeffrey Dietrich of mig t run again. He said he doesn't
Costa Mesa was kUled in an auto accident believe the rumors and has oot talked to
at the first of the year, his classmates Sumner.
and members of the Bear Street School Carpenter said he decided to run after
PFO decided to plant a Monterey pine as consullalion with Gov. Reagan. He said some party officia ls in Sacramento told a Jiving monument to his memory. him enviously that his is "a solid gold
But one of Jeffrey's playmates, Nick Senate district."
Hehn. had died last fall from a brain The 56 percent Republican registration
tu mor and hi s friends decidci they would is the heaviest in California for any
like a similar monument to Nick's Senate district. There are 18 Senate
districts in the state with 56 percent or
meinory. heavic.r Democratic registration and the
T"'O instructors at the :school, Mrs. Dan p..'Ople have the Democratically con-
Jo~isher and f\1rs. J.C. Jasmine, establish· trolle'd 1961 reapportionmen t to thank for
ed a fund for the memorial and another that, Carpenter said. ~tontere:y pine was planted .:it the school He noted he has an unusual opporturUty
in February. .,. to achieve rapid seniority in the $tale
. School Principal John Ward Said the Senate. ln the first place, should Schmi\i
duplla.te trees were rltUng memorials 'to' be successful, ·a a:peclal free-for-all, no-
tbe boys who would ha ve been fourth party-label election Would have to be be.Id
irade clwmates. ----~oc. the rest ol Schm.ltJ' State Sena\e
term.
Carpenter thus could gain seniority on an other freshmen state senators elected
OAIL.Y PlL.OT lfllft .......
SEEKING SENATE SEAT
Newport's C•rfMnter
in the November general election.
Besl<jes, he polntrd out, three senators
with top seniority are not seeking reeJec-
lion. In addition, with reapportionmeht in
1971, under a new law, any legislator hav-
ing served an aggregate of 10 years in
either the Assembly or Senate will be
eligible for retirement with full pay.
So Carpenter expects he could move up
quickly in Senate ranks, although the
State Senate, he said, is not entirely hide-
bound on seniority.
Carpenter said he will take no position
during his campaign on the Jack
Schrade-Howard Way power.fight to .lead
the Senate Republican delegation as
president pro tern.
"It is not just a two-aided animal,"
Carpenter said, "there are three or four
diffe rent sides." He said It gr.sled him
that either one had to form a coalition
with Democrats to gain leadc:rshJp .
"With the reorgani:r.atlon or the Senate
In Janu3ry it will be my opportunity to
put my linger in that pie," t.e &aid. "But
I'm not going lo campaign on thaL"
Carpen~er said it is his intent·to hold
onto the job or State Central Commit.tee
chairman until his term expires in
J,anuary.
"Slhct the governor doesn1t 9Ce any
Problem with my holding two posts 1 am
not going to find any," he ukl. •
' "I obv.ioUsly won 't violate the.11th cem-
mandm.ent (speak no evU or feUow
Republicans) In th< primary', '° l don't• see there would be any c:onflict of in-,
terest," he sa.id. PILOT SA LUTES
'MARINE SHOW
The DAILY PILOT today .alutes th<
Second Annual Western "National Boat
and Marine Show. opening Friday at the
Anaheim· Convention Center.
COMING MARCH 30
to the
Three: pages of storiet. photos and ads
offer reader!! a guide to the 1970 boat
'ho)V. They start on Pagt 28 •
•
DAILY PILOT
I .. I
,
·i 2 DAILY PILOl c
Poli~e Heli~opters Prove Worth
Hunting ton Se rgeant R eveals Rescue Operatwns, Grin Battl~ Action
By tElll\Y COVILLE
Of .. Oii~ ,1114 .....
.
The fog was thick . The helicopter pilot
and his observer could see no more than
a quarter of 1 mile. But they knew a boat
\\'as . out there, desperately i11 need of help.
-w l :ifepard boats \\'ere being launched '
from the shoi:e In Huntington Beach, but
they had no chance of finding the strand·
ed boat frew in such heavy fog.
Sgt. RA>bert Morrison or lht HL111tington
Beach Police Department swung his
£hopper back and forth, searchlng for the
distresa iignal. Finally, h~ and a Coast
Guard h<llcopter found lilt boaL
The ~Guard-copter hovered over it
"·bile Morri¥1n took his chopper back to
guide 'the Ufegu1rd boats to the distre&s·
ed craft. Five persons were saved. One
drowned.
"We were low on fuel and 011e of our
pontoons was flat. I Was-afrajd·we were
going to take a cold swim, loo," e:c-
plaloed Sgt. Morrison, talking about one
or the more dramatic rescues he's made
with lhe city's police heUcopter.
This one happened a ifew months ago,
but similar operations occur oflen, on
land and In the ocean, now that the city
has two police helicopters and five pilots.
"Two of our pilots have betn involved
In gun battles, I haven't yet," Morri5on.
From Page 1
HEARING ...
quor store robberie.s in Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach.
He 1ald Jackson is suspected as tbe
bar~lt who brulally p~lol-whippod Ralph
H. Ames during a $102 robbery Feb. 6 at
the Korker· Liquor Store in Laguna
Beach's Boat C&nyon.
"The victim said there was no reason
for lhe beating al all," said C&pt.. Green,
adding that U stitches were taken in hiJ
scalp.
They are also charged with the $500
gunpoint stickup Of clerk Donald E.
Zern'ekh Feb. 8 at the Sportsman's Li·
quor Store, 2615 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach.
Two men with mid~·estern accents
"nttre1l and browsed in each case, while
11 third man was believed wailing outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they have also
been linked to five or six additional arm·
ed robberies in Missouri, w hi I e
authorities in several slates want toques-
tion them.
A fourth suspect amsted last Friday
"'hen police surrounded a home al' $141,~
Bernard St., Mrs. Patricia Phipps, 24, of
Inde pendence, Mo. is charged with •
loca l burg'.lary.
She ls held at ·Orange County Ja!~. pen-
ding arraignment March 18 in t11rbci
llldlclal District Court. but m1y be turn·
t d over to Missouri authorities where she
Is wanted for forgery.
Several months pregnant, the young
woman who left a husband to ac<:ompany
Jackson west is expected to be sub-
poenaed when her traveling companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
She 11 held in lieu of $25,000 bail.
CaWornla law leaves determination of
!Lrst, second or third degree homicide to
the courts. but Colorado alllhorllies
charge the severity Jn the actual com·
plaint it.self.
Colorado Springs Chier of Detectives
Carl Petry, who flew out with Deputy
District Attorney Allen S p u r g e o n •
:lescribed the pawnbroker's k 1111 n g
\Vednesday as unusually brutal.
'l'he Colorado lawmen conferred toda y
with Orange County District Attorney's
men about the case. which takes
precedence ove r robbery counts lodged
on the Orange Coast.
The suspect.o; have been heavily 1.nt~r·
rogated-wlth a sign language spec1ahst
from Fairview State Hospital assisting
police with Matne y -a deaf-mute .
She described him as rather a bright
Individual .
Police said today the men had left their
loaded weapons In the car when caught
by surprise last Friday and that Jacks on
s8.id he would have committed suicide if
he could.
DAILY PILOT
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J1ck k. Curlty
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(•rrlfor U,• -lfllYI wt' ""'II UJO -llltyl "l!INry N IIMI.._ la.DD -lfllJ.
lilt clly's chlof pilot. uld. .
Morrison II proud of his macbinu He
disagrtta with rtc-tnt ut.lcles cltbfllM
the sky may become. overcrowded WhH
chopper1, pollct" and otherwise. "The only
limit on the use of these machines is the:
limit lo your imagination,'' he says.
The choppers spend about 7s.80 hours a
week airborne, searching the city for
burglars, other crimlnals or ready to
'1111~ rescues.
"We spend a lot of time warning kids to
stay out of storm drains," Morrison sald.
Bolh helicopters, H.B. Eye I and II.
now ha\'e thelr .own home, near the police
rifie range, of{ Gothard Street.
The small heliport, built by the city and
nearly complete now, will save a con-
siderable amount of money. On a con·
tract with a Long Beach firm , the city
was paytng $19 per flight hour for
maintenance, plus gas for a total of about
$24 per flight hour. With its own
'mecllank and gas reserves, the H.B. Eye
fleet now costs about $14 per flight hour.
"These ships requirt: maintenance
about every 50 Oighf hours," Morrison
explained.
Those two machines aren't cheap. The
engine has to be replaced about once a.
year at a cost of $4,000. The rotor blades
last slightly longer and they cost $800
each.
"But IT has pro•ed lta' vllqil'f"""a com·
munkalions pl1Uorm." Morrlatn said, eul\I w .. ,, ~11>111~1• o1 °'"'"1 .,.. ts fJl whicfl OBe-,el-tfie choppers WIS
nstrumental in saving a life or stopping
a crime.
"It's deterrent value is the best part. A
lot of things simply dqn't happen be cause
criminals fear the helicopter."
On the lighter side or flying the Hun·
tington Beach skies, Morrison reJated a
couple of comical incidents he was In·
volved in.
"About two months ago an alarm went
off in the Town and Cou ntry shopping
center. \Ve flew over it, s~ted a small
red sports car 1ear out of the center and
head for Fountain Valley," 1'1orrison
related.
"We Y.'alcbecl him bum tires around
corners. You could see the smoke he was
moving ~ fast . We thoughl v.·e had our
burglar so a ground unJt came lo the
home where he stopped.
"The ground officer went in, talked to
the man, who said he hadn't left the
cer checked his car. The engine was
hot.
"Finally the man admitted that while
his Y.'l!e entered the shower, he had zl~
ped up to the center to Re a girl friend
and was hustling back before the wife
Thi11l,i11g of You, /tlo111
Second grader Neil Ro ss ol Harper School, Costa Mesa , and fifth
grader Joy Marimon of Newport Elementary are the first to pick up
entry blanks for "Mothe r of the Year" contest sponsored annually by
lioag l\lemorial Hospital. Blanks will be sent to 16,000 Newport-Mesa
school children to write why their mother is best. Winner will be an-
nounced May 9.
Harbor District Autonomy
Supported in Jury Actio11
S1.1pport for retention of the Orange
County Harbor District as a separate tax·
ing agency is voiced ln a resolution pass-
ed by the Grand Jury \Vedne:sday.
The jury urged the Stale Assembly
Local Govt:rnment Committee to approve
the bill alllhored by Assemblyman Ken-
neth Cory (0.Anaheim) and defeat a bill
offered by Asse mblyman John Briggs <R·
Fullerton) which would put the harbor
district issue to a vote of the: people:,
Cory's bill \\•ould acid parks and recrea·
lion to the duties of the district which
~·ould maintain its separate taxing
&talus.
The 1~·0 bills will come before the
as5embly committee J.tarch 19.
George Honold, grand jury chairman,
gaid the body In an Jnlens!ve Investigation
interviewed Kenneth Sampson, director
UC I Sponsors
Flea Market
A flea market, sponsored by the
Library Staff Assoc1;11ion of lh' UC
Irvine campus, v>'ill be held at 11:30 a.m.
Friday in front of the UCI Library .
Proceeds from lhe e\'ent will go toward
a project operated and rlnanced by UCl
student& which conducts a ten-day sum·
mer C'1TIP for local underprivileged
children, caJled Unicamp.
The camp project . is run by the
students of the t ollege who serv e as
coordinators and counsellors for the t~'O
v.'eek summer c•mps,
funda received by lhe Fle11 r.1ttrket will
help many local children t njoy a pro-
flt11blr i;ummer "away from lhe city'."
The public is invited lo attend the fie~
m3rket. Rnrl parUclp:itr by bringing
Amoll us<'oblc :irticles Hke honks. toys,
jev.·elry and artwore lo ht 50ld for the
camp rund.
DonaUon.s m.'Jy be hr(ni(lht to the men-
dint; room on the first flonr or the UCT
library . For further lnform11tion call 1'-1n.
Eiieen Andjli1, at 833-6300.
of lhe harbor district; his administraU ve
assistants; Supervisors David L, Baker
and Mayor Jack Green of Huntington
Bra,..h, prtsldent of the Orange County
LcttgUe of Cities.
The league has consistently supported
Briggs' blll which Is cou nter lo the action
of the Board of Supervtsors whlch has
voted to retain the harbor district as a
separate agency,
I lonold said the jury determined that
the average homeov.•ncr is no\v paying $~
a year in harbor district taxes and this
\\'ould be increased to $10 a yea r by in·
eluding regional parks and beaches.
lie added Lhal !his w:>uld no: increase
the tolal tax bill, however, as fundin1 fer
beaches and parks Is now paid from the
county's general fund.
The j11ry said the county will reallie $1
million a year in revenue from the new
Dana Point Harbor and this money could
be used for the acquisit.iou and con-
struction of regional parks.
J{onold noted that previous grand juries
had reco mmended the retention of the
h01 rbor district as a separa te uni!.
Hard Waler to Flow,
l\lesa Softener Taken
Angelo A. Darmiento is hard up for •
softener today.
So W88 whoever visited the Los Angeles
man's rentaJ property at 19~ Fullerton
Ave .• Costa Mesa. and disconnected a
water softener unit "·erlh several hun-
dred dollan, police tiald.
Choosy l\lesa Bandit
Stea ls Photo Gear
A burglar pried a "'indow at 4 COL'!ta
l\.tesa home Wedne!od ay and stole: H05 In
valu11.bl1s. including t~·• cameras, 1 pro-
jector and cash.
Lorr3lnc 0. Helley, of 3134 Bray Lane,
~•id the photographic equipment must
ha1·e c.11ught the lntn1der's t )'e, 1inct
nolbinl: els<-•·u dl!llltbed.
Je(t the·lh9wtr. Sbt_nt\'t[ ktlO:!...___· -
"We lost a btoster for helicopters on
that on1,'' Morrison sa.ld.
"SomeUme1 lhey accuse us of being
peeping toms. Ont time I circled an area
in south Huntington Beach building a
ground unito to a culvert where kids were
hid ing. ·
"When I came bat k .J the station later.
the v.·atch commander said he had a
complaint from a resident.
•·The man was upset because the
helicopter had taken such a close in-
terest in his nude swimming party. l
never saw a .thing," fi.1orrlson shrugged.
"Sometimes people feel V.'e are spying
on them, but that isn't the case. Some
people may have a guilty conscious, even
though v.·e are looking four blocks away."
t.1orrison enlered the chopper pilot pro-
gram because he liked police v."Ork and
liked !lying. "\I/hat could be heller than
doi(lg both and getting paid for it," he
says.
"\Ye've had less complaints than I ex·
pected." he said. Sometimes residents
complain about the noise, but not very
often.
"I've found that my neighbors, and
other citl:.ens I talked with. !eel safer
wit h that bird in the sky. I think we'11e
been ·preUy v.•ell accepted by the com-
munity."
Air Pollution
Aide Opposes
Edison Plan
At the conlcusion of 19 days of hearing
and 2,000 pages of testimony, Orange
County Air Pollution Control Officer
William Fltchen remains as resolutely
opposed to expansion of the Southern
California Edison Compar.y's Huntington
Beach steam generating plant as he: was
at the beginning.
Fitchen. in a report to the Board of
Supervisors, said :•
;'The.re are some who I know feel that
our distrlct's presentation and f I g ht
before the Public Ulllities Commission
represented • complete effort in futility
and a waste ol Ume.
"I couldn't disagrtt more. I have no
way of knowing what the outcome of this
hearing will be. It mlgbt well be that we
are much like the fighter who was way
ahead on points but lost the battle.
"Regardless of the decision lo be made
by the PUC, 1 aincerely fetl that we
made trem1oclous steps forward in our
efforts to control air ?Qllutic.in.
•·Possibly after 20 years ol air pollution
conlrol in the county this could be our
single greatest acl\levemenl. ~gnition
by the PUC of the necessity to protect
our environment, the public health and
safety, air quality and the commission's
responsibility to promote the safety,
health, comfort, and convenience of the
public all were stimulated by our op~
sition to the proposed expansion:•
Fitchen said Edison's accelerated pro-
gram of emi ssion co ntrol a n d an·
nounced changes in desif!Jl and practice
are "definite steps towards maintaining
the quality of our atmos phere.''
fn a final statement at the hearing
P..fonday, Fltchen said •'Test Imo n y
presented has not dem:>nstrated reduc-
tion in emi ssions fr om the Huntington
Beach facility as a :-esult of the proposed
expansion, but rather an increase.
"U Edison's application was aubmltled
to me today, and I haci been gi ven the o~
portunity to examine and study all of the
evide~ prese.nted. may action v;ould
still be lo deny thei r authority to con·
struct. I cannot put the health and
\\'elfare of any rtsidenl;.. in any area of
Orange County in jeopardy," Fltchen
concluded.
llAll Y f'llllT 11111 Pholt
SGT. MORRISO N KEEPS AN EY E ON 'HB EYE'
Police Choppers Find Ac·c1pta nce, If Not Unive rsal Lov•
Not fo1· Birds
Sivallows Si, Pigeons No in Capo
San Juan Capistrano's famed sv;a\lows
might fiocl their nests a little shaky v.·hen
they return to the historic .nission March
19.
Although a traditional v.·arm welcome
Is planned for them, their cousin , the
pigeon, isn't faring too y..·eli.
Capistrano city councilmen upholding a
planning commission Jecision, said
\Vednesday that the keeping of racing
pigeons in a residential zone isn't a
compatible land use.
The case in particular was a 20,000
square foot lot whose zoning does allo\v
keeping one horse.
Why horses and not pigeons? "Horses
don't fly," said Planning Director Bob
Johns.
The trouble with racing pigeons seems
to be th at altbou'h kept in cages for
feeding and roosting they are le:t out
usually o~ a day for 10 or 15 minu tes
for exercise. They continue to circle
above tneir cages M a v.·ide arta and
eventually drop one by one to thei r cages.
But there are other pigeons In town
that aren 't so orderly. Hundreds of fluffy
\rhile pigeons who ser\'e as year round
standins for the sv.·allov.·s reside in the
eaves and ruins of the old mission. They
occasi onally stray fron1 their roosts into
r.elgh bori,1g residential areas.
And there are the sv.·allo\1•s themselves
v.·ho suddenly lose lheir popularity when
they start building mud ne,sts under the
caves of roofs all over Capistrano, v.·he11
accommodations are full at tbe mission.
The mayor when asked about the
swallo~'S could only shrug and say,
"\Veil , I guess we can 't do anything about
the m."
But he did agree y..·ith the pigeon
decision recalling an inci dent last year
~·here racing pigeons were kept in a
much denser residential area.
··1t was a mess," said Chermak.
"\Vomen couldn't even hang up their
laundry. People were: even out there with
shotguns trying to help the owner clean
them up." ·
GI Gets 35'.'Year Sentence
F 01· Viet Medic Murder
A soldier who used combat ambu~h
tactics has been sentenced to 35 ye ars at
hard labor for the murder of a Yorba
Linda medic in Vietnam, the U.S. Arn1y
has disclosed .
Little inrormalion wa s announced arter
the Jan . 26 killing of Spec/4 Robert v..1•
Ready at a military post in Quang Tri.
The slain soldier's parents and v.·idow
complaintd wee ks afterward that they
v.·ere still unable to detennine tiow he
died . Y.'hen even circumsta nces of combat
casualties are usually available.
A military court n1artial found Spcct4
Alvin T. Taft, 21, of New York City.
gullty of premeditated murder and on
1'1arch 4 sentenced him.
The sentence of 35 years. which Taft 1s
currentl y beginning. includes
dishonorabl e discharge and forfeiture of
all ra nk and pay, but is subject to further
review.
Sen. George R. ri-turphy (R.Calif.) pro-
mised to help estabiish the facts if he
could and recently wired the Ready faml·
l.v about the outcome of the: court
ma rtial.
~Iilitary authorities in \Vashington con·
li nned thal the victim and his killer had
a ristfight and said the vengefu l Taft
obtained a rifl e afterv.'ard.
Spec/4 Read y was ambush ed beside A
path and killed instantly ~·ith a poinL·
blonk blast in the chest.
LAST 3 DAYS
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
STORE HOUR·S; THURS. & FRI. TIL 9--SAT. 'TIL 5:30
JJ.J. 9 arrell ONCE·A· YEAR
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE ' SALE
PRGFESSIONAL
INTUIOR DES IGNERS
•
2115 HARBOR BLVD.
COST A MESA. CALIF.
6'6-0275 646-0 276
1
~ I
• . . • •
'
~ -,..---,, .... ---· ----· -· -------~---------------r
·-
Saddlehaek
VO(. 63, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE _ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 12, '1970
Laguna Candidates Launch Council
By BARBARA KR EIBICH
0 1 ftl• 0 1111 f>ll•t 11111
Laguna Beach City Council candidates
touched base on malls, hippie:i and A1ai'il
Beach finan cing this morning as lhey
fielded questions from Realtors in \vll al
amounted to a fo rmal opening of the
municipal election campaign.
~!embers of the Board of llealtors
turned out in force for an 8 a.m.
breakfast meeUng in Ben-Brown's
restaurant at which all five council
hopefuls made thelr lirst of several
scheduled group appearances.
A voidin g the customary alphabelical
order procedure, candidates drew lots W
establi~b their speakln$ positions. lncun1-
benl Joseph.A. O'Sullivan drew the .lead
spot~ollowed _by Edward Lorr. Joseph
Tomehak, Richard Goldberg and Peter
Ostrander.
Cont inuing the lottery approach, ea.ch
speaker dl'e\'J two questions out of a list
a 0
Triangle Leaves
2 Dead in Beach
By ALAN DIBKIN
01 l~t 01111 Piie! 11•11
An apparent eternal triangle slaying
claimed the life of a Huntingtmi Beach
man whose bullet-riddled body.was found
early today by his distraught woman
friend.
A· second victim of the shooting. tl1c
woman's husband, was also found dead.
shot in the temple, in the same luxury
apartment.
A .33 caliber revolver was discovered
by the body of Navy Lt. James Burton
McClure, 38, of 2553 Pine Ave., Long
Beach, lte was killed by a·bullet wound
In the head, apparently self-inflicted.
Police reported.
Orange County Coroner's deputies were
\\'ithholding the name of the roan ap-
parently shot by McClure. 1'he deputies
\vere attempting to trace and inform the
relatives of the victim. a 46-yeat-old
retired Navy com1nander.
The shooting took place al a block of
luxury apartments, the Huntington Capri
-"Where the Living Is Fun", according
to a billboard -at 6200 Edinger Ave. ;n
Huntington Beach.
PoLice reported that the shooting OC·
cured at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday bu t was
not discovered until 1:44 o'clock this
mornipg: when 11cClure's wife, Graoo
~feredlth, cllled ofiicers .
Could Claatage Eleetio••
Capo District May Join
Two-tl1irds Bond Battle
Capistrano Unified School District may
join other California school ctistricts in a
suit aimed at over throwing the two-thirds
yes vote requirement for passage of
general obligation bond measure s.
Truman Benedict, district superin·
tendent, said today he has asked the
Orange County Counsel's Office to report
on the advi sab ility or such a course.
The suit initiated in northern California
has already been joined by the Santa Ana
Unified School District. If the suit is sue·
cessful, it would lower the yes-vote re·
quiremenl to a simple majority.
Laguna Approves
Sign Ordinance
Modifications
Laguna B~ach city councilmen at a
specia l n1eeling \Vednesday night ap-
proved modifications of the s I g n
ordinance recommended by the Planning
Com.miss ion and voled ~o instruct the
commission lo initiate procedures to
nm end the ordinance accordingly.
Meanwhile, lhe council agreed, the city
itaff will be instructed to enforce the
ordinance as if the amendments already
were in effect. to enable firms to comply
with a sign moratorium dead line of April
JS. In a minor change, the council changed
the proposal that seven lines be used to
measure sign area and ruled that
"minimum outside perimeter" could be
measured \\'ith wbatever lines necessary,
ex cept for re-entrant lines.
Otber modifications concern pole signs ,
shopping center signs and parallel .signs
on the front of buildings. The modilica·
Uons generally make the ordinance
somewhat less restrictive and remove
problems that have caused enforcement
dUflculties.
-
Benedict said he understands that i! the
Capistrano Unified joins the suil, and it is
successful, it could validate the bond in·
terest rate proposition that lost TuesWiy
with over 61 percent of the voters casting
yes votes.
Benedict sal d the state supreme court
or Idaho has already held th e two thirds
inajority requirement unconstitutional.
California school oHicials are hoping the
California state supreme court will reach
the same concl usion under the U.S.
Supre1ne Court one-man-one-vote ruling.
State Sen. John Schmitz (R·Tustin) Jn
an effort to head such a court ruling off
at the pass, has introduced legislation
which could make passage dependent on
yes votes from the majority of all those
registered In the district.
Reagan Selects
Laguna Aide
A pair of Orange County Republican
leaders were appointed today as key
aides in Gov. Ronald Reagiln's campaign
to seek a second term in Sacramento.
Edward Mills, of 2526 Riviera Drive, in
the Irvine Cove area of Laguna Beach,
will serve -as-Reag:in's Southern
CaiUornia finance chairman .
David L. James. a certified public ac·
countant in Anaheim . -,,ar designated the
governor '.s Southern Callfomia campaign
chairman.
Mills is vice president of Holmes Tuttle
Enterprises, a Los Angeles firm, and has
long been acti ve in GOP political circles,
according to friends.
James is past chairn1an of the Orange
County Republican Central Committee.
San Francisco attorltey Paul R. Haerle,
former appointments secretary r or
Reagan , will head the N or t h e T n
California effort, with Jackquelin H.
Hume, of San Francisco, iU finance
chi et.
COMING, MARCFI '30
to tfle
DAILY PILOT
or 10 previously presented lo real estate
people.
Each was allotted five minutes to res-
poi1d to the questions, followed by a few
minutes of rebuttal al the close of the
talks.
Reading his first question, "Do you
hav~ ·a solution to ·the parking problem?"
O'Sullivan quipped ... If I had the solution
I 1vculdn't have ta be here·-I'd know the
outcome cf the election!"
Parking, he agreed, is one of Laguna's
eac
Bombs Jar
Manhattan
\ Skyscrapers
NEW YORK (UPI) -HJgh pow"ed
bombs which antiestablishment revolu·
tiC'lnaries claimed to have set devastated
the offices of major corporations in three
J\lanhattan skyscrapers early today and
set oft a rash of bomb scares forcing
evacua l~0t1 of stores, schools and courts.
The bombers informed police of their
plot in advance, so that night workers
could be e~acuated'l.trlljl "\he skyJcrapers
-all within a 15-bloCk area. There was •
npt enough time, i,>.wever, to.search for
the bombs, which u:iJured no one.
United Press Intemationa1 received a
special delivery Jetter several hours later
from a group calling itself "Revolu-
tionary Force 9" whlch took credi t for
the bombings. It said the offices of
Socony Mobil Oil, International Business
tifachines, and General Telephone &
Electronics were chosen because they
profit from war and exploit and degrade
human life.
Following a pattern set in other cor-
porate bo1nbings in the past year , bomb
threats harassed police throughout the
morning. Among the buildings whi ch had
to be evacuated for. searches "''ere the
Manhattan and Brooklyn fed er a I
courthouses, Bloomingdale's department
sto re, the Consolidated Ed ison building
and several schools.
The circumstances and results of the
bombings were "very similar" to another
triple bombjng last Nov. 11 that hit other
offices in Manhattan, a police official
said .
Later this morning. police received
another anonymous telephone call with
the message that four bombs \Vere se t to
explode in the lower level of Grand Cen·
:ral Tern1inal al 5:30 a.m. An emergency
crew of police and firemen waited on the
main level until after 5:30, then searched
the downstairs area.
There were no immediate indications
who placed the bombs. An anonymous
message sent to news media last fall
after the earlier explos ions sai d they
wer e do ne by .. white
Americans .•• striking blows for libera-
tion" in opposition to the Vietnam war
and "the giant corporations of Am erica."
The police received today's warning
telephone call at 1:06 a.m. EST on the
city's special emergency number -911.
A man with a deep voice said bornbs
were set to go off at 1 :40 a.m. in the
Socony Mobil building at ISO E. 42nd SL,
the IBM building at 425 Park Ave. and
the Genera l Telephone & Electronics
Bullding at 730 Third Ave .
Emergency units rushed to each loca-
tion and spread the warning to. the
maint~nance. and cleanup crews al work
-a total of 65 people were in the three
buildings.
Triton Capers
To Open F1iday
..
Wednesday's article In the Daily Pilot
detailing the program for the ann ual San
Clemente High ScboOI Triton Capers in·
correctly said the revue would open
\Vednesday night, when, actu11ly, the
two-night show will open FrldaY, evening .
The PT A • sponsored show, featuring
d._oiens of rtudent entertainers, will begin
at l ·p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings,
Tickets a.re available at the door.
St.ock Jtlorkels
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted downward on Ught trading IJte
this afternoon. ·(Set quotations, Pages
20-21 ).
. -...__ ___ _
most serlou.!I problems. "Varieus ap·
proaches will be suggesied in the general
µIan," he said, "but actually much wiU
depend upon development of t h e
doY.nlown area. If we go to the mall con-
cept, wlllcb I favor, we would have to
provide parking, probably in parking
structures outside the r.iall ar.ea to which
occupants of the mall could contribute
financing. We also can finance by
metered parking, as at lite beach lot
which now brings in $8,000 a year in
revenue. This wlll require a total study of
downtown development."
To his second queSlion, "Wh at is your
opiniOn regi:ird!ng an.nexation of more
area to the city, and its development?"
O'Sullivan said the concept ol anne1ati011
for annexation itself ml,\St be avoided.
"Each area mu st be evaluated," h~
sai~ "\Ve must make sure it will bj!.neli t
the community and not be a hardship
econom ically. However, It still may be
appropriate to annex developing areas
ote
Down by the Riverside
Police stand a young man on his head d uring height of demonstra·
lion at UC Riverside Wedn esday during visit by Governor Reagan.
·rwo persons were arrested during demonstration which marked
the first time police have ever been called to the Riverside. campus-
in force. See story. Page 8.
Mesa -Holdup Ga1ig Trio
Face Laguna Beach Rap
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of I~• O•llY l'llol Sllff
Extradition of three Colorado killer
suspects -unarmed for the first time in
an alleged cross.county crime spree when
captured in Costa Mesa -formally
began today.
Hearingli were set for two members of
the suspected Bonnie arid Clyde-style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Superior Court.
The suspected ringleader, who once
reportedly told his mother he would
never be taken alive, goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
in his return to Colorado.
Complaints charging first d e g r e e
murder in the brutal beating death of a
Colorado Sprin gs pawnbroker f'cb. 1n
were IMued Wednesday ln the Rocky
Mountain State.
Jack C. Matney. 32, of Denver, Colo.,
and Howard fl. Tschirhart, 31. of Kan sas
Cily, Mo .. were due ii} court today.
represented by public defenders.
Extradition hearing for James E.
Jackson, 25. of Independence, Mo., is set
for Friday morning and he too will be
cou nseled by a public defender.
If they choose to waive extradition,
they will be re tu med swiftly, but the tr lo
could spend several m6nths In Orange
County Jai1 ii they fight lhe action.
J ack!on, Matney and Tschlrhart are
rormally accused of the rUle·bludgeon
mUrdcr of Erling Nielsen, 61, ·whose
modcsl jewelry and loan shop was l~ed
of numerous guns, jewelry and other
goods.
The victim's body was found crouched
In the blood-splaslled restroom of hi!
husiness, as though seeking refuge from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt. Bob
Green sa id additional oompl alnl5 would
be issued today charging the trJo•with u ..
quor store robberies in Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach.
He said J ackson is suspected as the
bandit who brutally pistol-whipped Ralph
H. Ames durlng a $102 robbery Feb. 6 at
the Korker Liquor Store in Laguna
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The victim said there was no reason
(See HEA RINGS, Ptgt II
South Lagunan Held
. On Weapons Cha~ge
A South Laguna man w11 cited on 1
misdeineanor charge ol carrytni a con-
cealed weapon WedneBdoy night
Laguna Beach police cited Robert
Krlsvoy , 54, qr 21501 Octarj Vista, when
they noticed a .22 caUber revolver ~·
cealed in his waistband . The suspect
reportedly wa!i talldng with the manacer
of the Taco Bell In. Sleepy Hollow when
cited.
I
•
I To0y's t;lnal
N.Y. S'teeks
TEN CENTS
Drives
adjacent to the cit)( even if they are not
seff-11uj)portlng.
"Laguna Be:ach has grown slowly, but
this will no longer be the case with the ar-
rival of the freeway and opening of new
areas. It will be important fo r us to be
able to control some of this adjacent
development. ·but it must be done
-carefully. We also will have to do some
'selling' to convince property ·owners and
the Local Agency Formation Commission
(See CAMPAIGN, Pag• I )
? •
New Parl{
May Absorb
Choice Land
A proposed $29 miJ\ion beachfront hotel
for Capistrano Beach may never leave
the drawing boards.
The choice beach instead may become
part of Doheny Stale Park. _
Wllllam Penn Mott, director of the
State DeparUnent-of Parks and Recrea·
tion, conflrmed today th at his depart-
iilent has been talking with ownership of
the property with an eye to buying it.
A.cquislUon of the hotel site, now owned
by Ca~trano Beach Investment Co.,
ttd., fti.ld add' about 1500 front feet to
the f ,000-feet Doheny .Park ocean front.
-IAcatid At the1-soUth end of the popular '
pl'rk. the property lies between the Santa
Fi RaJlroad rlght.of·way and the ocean •
It Yartes in width between 100 and 200
feet.
Strapped for funds because of the I
percent bond interest ceiling, the stale
would like to buy the site if the owners
will accept bonds bearing five percent in-
tere.!lt In lieu of cash. Also, if proposition
leven passes in lhe June primary this
Wou_ld make additional fund.!! available
for beach acq uisition.
The state is prohibited from ptying
more than appraised value of properly.
If details can be worked out, said Mott,
the acquisition of the property would
have a high priority with the state. All
beach land from Pt. Conception to the
Mexicin border has high prio rity, but
this especially because it is contiguous to
an existi ng park.
"Arly lineal footage we could acquire
ttiere would not gather any dust," said
Mott. "This has the ingredients of an
ideal acquisition." He called it "one of 1
, num~r of projects the planning people
are developing as sort of shopping list"
Loyd V. Steere, chairman of lhe in--
vestment company's board, said in a re-
cent letter to the company's limited
(Set PARKS, Page 2)
PILOT SALUTES
MARINE SHOW
'The DAILY PILOT today salutes the
Second Annual Western National Boat
and Marine Show, opening Friday at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Three pages of stories. photos and ads
offer readers a guide to the 1970 boat
ahow. They start on Page 29.
Orange Coast
Weather
Intermittent cloudiness but most·
ly sunny skies is the cautious word rrom the weatherman ror Friday.
Look for mercury reading.!I of 65
along the coast and 70 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
DAILY Pl L 0 T lxukelball
plcyers holler "police brutality"
,, os tht Costa Me.!la cops ha.nd
tlitm a 63·44 d·rubbing, all 11~
the name: of charltJI. Tile 0114C·
some detoiit are on Page 26
today.
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2 DAil Y PILOT SC
'
, DA ILT ,ILOT Sti ff l'llett
CAPISTRANO BEACH CLUB, WHERE REYE LERS ONCE ROMPED, NOW JUST A SHELL
Strand May Become Part of Doheny State Park, If Prict 11 Right '
Frotta Page 1
CAMPAIGN OPENS . • •
lL1\F'C) that the annexal.ion is valid.''
First question addressed to candjdate
Edward Lorr \\'all, ''How would you
suggest the city find revenue to pay for
Ule beach park?"
CIUTICAL PROBLE:\1
"This Is a critical problem facing the
taxpayers of Laguna Beach," Lorr said.
''1 feel the City Council ignored some
good advice given it by the Chamber of·
Commerce in 1967. In the first place they
paid too much for the beach.
·'They also ignored lhe Chamber or
Commerce recommendation that some
commercial development would be Ole •
only 1~·ay to meet the bond obligation. Vle
mus' develop a commereial-hotel zone on
a portion of the Pi1ain Beach. The first
~tep is setting up a hotel zone. The City
Council has been dragging its feet in this
area."
To the question , ''Do you have a solu·.
tion lo the parking problems of
merchants on the north and south ends of
town?" Lorr replied, •·J would suggest
that a portion of the $1 .000 fee merchants
are required to pay when they cannot
provide on-site parking be set aside for
the north and south sides. Also, the
merchant! could be encouraged to
purchase land for parking 1 ot s
themselves and lease it to the city, which
could provide metering and main-
tenanct. ''
LEADERSIUP LACK
Lorr said he is running, for office
because, ''l am concerned at the direc·
tion the city has taken in past years and I
feel there is a lack of leadership at a bigh
level. T would like to help restore
Laguna's image."
The third speaker, Planning Com·
missioner Joseph Tomehak, was asked,
''What would be your solution lo the pro--
blem or land areas in the city at present
not buildable because of Jack or access?''
The Planning Commission, Tomehak
~plied, had been given a presentation by
the Cordoba Company which he con-
s;dered "woefully unprepared," although.
the basic idea l'br this type of develep-
ment ·was "very good ." The problem, he
said, was Cordoba's attempt to apply "a
flat -land density concept to an area with
25 per cent unstable soils."
"\Ve have been protected by cur
topography so far," Tomch.ak said. •·but
our time i!l running out. \Ve must realize
1hal there will be more and more
sophisticated developer! coming dO\\'n
here and we must be prepared to cope
'''ilh this.
EXPECT rttORE
"Before \Ve accept a pig in a poke \\'e
must consider needs for police, fire,
schools and access rot1ds\ Instead of jum·
ping into something from casual draw·
ings, the city should expect more. Many
people are inleresle!l in de\'eloping
Laguna and \l'e. 1nust be very careful,
especially in the development of in·
accessible areas."
To the question, "Do you think ou{
present parks are adl'qu:ile for recreation
ncl'ds" Tomehak replied that he did not.
Noting Laguna's ave ra ge population
age of 40 years, compared \\•ith the coun-
ty avera~e of 24 , he suggested that
recreal ion should be considered in two
separate areas, for older and for younger
residents.
The idea of developing a recreation
11rea adjacent to the ne'<'' Boys' Club he
described as "excellent." adding that
mini-parks throughout the city also would
be e worth\vhile addition.
Tumchak expressed regret I h a t
"teams" seemed to be forming in the
eouncll race. "l don't believe in 'good
guys and bad guys.'" he 11aid, "Laguna
needs n mosaic of represenlal\on."
HJPPIE PROBLEJ'll
Opening his rirst queslion. Goldberg
grinned, "I got the good one~" fl read,
"\\'hnl is your opinkln about rhc hippies
and what would you propose to do.
assuming you do not approve ?"
"In my mind," said the councilman.
"this issue is the number cne prcblein in
l..aguna Beach today." This drew ap-
plause from lhe R.ealtors.
"The fact that someone has long hair.
or a beard or dresses differently, is not
the problem," he continued. "What con·
ctms me most 1J the tremendous in-
Urges IU ghts Staud
\VASlllNGTON CUPI) -Senat e
1teplibnein Leader llugh Scott urged lhe
\\'hlte House today to issue 11 clear cut
st•tement In gupport of Nt'!gro ci\'1/
Mght>.
"I think ills Ume !er 6ome unequlvoc~I
st<tttment on racial justice f r o m
downtown." he told reporters when askrd
to oomm~l Oil crillclsm of Prtsidenl
N1xon'11 handling or Lhc Issue by Sen.
Edwanl W. Brooke (R·Mass.)
crease in narcotics a1Tests. Only last
\Veek Laguna Beach was hailed in the Los
Angeles press as a center of the narcotics
industry -that could take care of what
we thought wa s our main industry
(tourism)."
Goldberg said he would favor opening
cf a branch of the County Health Center
in Laguna Beach and perhaps a counsel-
ing center to help steer young people
away from drugs.
NOT ENFORCING
"I do not believe we are enforcing all
our laws," he added, citing as examples
lhe leash law, the Ja\v against sleeping on
the beach and health and sanitation laws
relating to housing.
Goldberg said he does not believe the
police force is adequate to cope with the
situation. but urged complete commup.lty
cooperation. "You as Realtors must be
alert," he said, "and make sure that your
rentals are occupied by the persons
specified in the lease."
Asked his vlews on future growth and
development" or the downtown area,
Goldberg noted that the general plan
would not include a 1pecific plan for this
area, but in his v1ew such a plan should
be initiated soon and should inc lude
enhancing the Art Colony jmage and
development of specialty shops, among
other tirings.
Noting his e:lght years of service as
president of the Oiamber of Commerce
and city councllman, he vowed to con·
tinue to serve as "24-hour, local, in·
town represeJ1tative."
CHARTER CITY
Peter Ostr_ander, replying to the ques-
lion, "What is your feeling regarding ef·
ficiency of the pre.sent city ad·
ministration?" said, "It leaves a lot to be
desired.
"I feel we should explore the po!Slbllity
of becoming a charter city. to remove
some ol the present state restrictions. l
also feel we should go back to separating
the jobs of city clerk and city ad-
ministrator because J feel Jim Wheton is
overburdened and should not be asked to
Handle -both jobs."
Asked his opinion ()( the proposed ho tel
zone, Ostrander noted that he had
participated in the preparation of five
tlraft.s of an onilnance for such a zone
and still believed such a mne should be
created, but applied only to the area ad-
jacent to the ocean, and then only as
desired by property owners. "We don't
have to r"°rone," he aid. "just give them
the option of using CH zoning if they
v.·ish." Although one reason for adopling
a hotel zone wculd be to improve the
economic condition of the community,
Ostrander commented, "I also feel
aesthetics wlll improve the e<.'Onomy."
ASSORTED ISSUES
Asked if they wished to re spond to
comments made during the talks, the
candidates picked out an assortn1ent of
issues.
O'Sullivan referred to Lorr's remarks
on co uncil handling of the Main Beach
purchase and listed ste ps being taken lo
set up the necessary con1mercial
development. "\Ve must get t he
necessary money without destroying the
<.·harm that is there ," he said. "\Ye now
are seeking plans for a commercial
development, but y,•e have lo reme1nber
!his building '<''ill be there to &O years and
we must not overbuild in our attempt to
pay the cost."
Lorr reiterated his charge that the
council had ignored the advice of the
Chamber of Commt'rce and said. "If I
y,·ere elected lo the City Council 1 Y.'Ould
seek the ad\•ict of experts we ha,•e right
here in the communi!y."
Tomehak commenting on downto\\·n
redevelopment. said ")'.!alls don't mean
just paving over a street-there has to be
complete redevelopment. l would like to
consider something like San Francisco 's
Ghlrardelli Square \\•here the !Umber yard
is, for example ."
BIG BOONDOGGLE
Tomehak took the City Council to Lask
for not telling the Planning Commission
about the Holscher report (on Ma in
Beach development) until It had been
nrdcred. "This was one of the biggest
boon~ogglcs \l'e've ever had.'' he said.
"They spent $4.000 and thtn gave up on
it." lie s11id he \vould 11gree y,·ilh
Ostrander rejtardlng investigating the
charter city plan.
Noting needs for more recreation
areas, parks and greenbelt5, Goldbfrg
said. "Where is the money going to co111e
from., It wa s for this reason thal I
propo!ed that ttie City Council resume
plans ror a hotel zonr, which wlll be our"
cmly sah-allon."
On do\\'nlO'<''ll drvelopment. ht said . •·1
qutslion whether we c11n afford to wait
ye1rs fo r the de.velopml!nt of mtills. ll
ould be a waste of cily property. Potrking
lot.41 V.'C 11ow ov.n could be de\'r.lopr d as
parking structurc!l ond be an assr1 In·
iitcad of a ll11bll1ry."
From Page 1
PARKS •••
partners that growing concern over
beach acquisition fo r public use has
stimulated possibility of state purchase of
the beach section. ·
He noted that Doheny Slate Park has
recorded more advance reservations l.han
any other park in the stale syste m.
The Orange County Planning Com·
mission last year approved plans for a
hotel and commercial center at Lhe slle.
This included a heighl variance that
would allow structures 100 feet , 65-feet
above the zone limitation.
Original plans of the owners were for
the immediate construction of the first
phase. This was reportedly sidetracked
by the tight money market that stalled
financing.
When a variance renewal was sought
from the county, the <1wners also asked
re.lief from the requirement that they
build a roadway overpass to span the
railroad.
A spokesman for the investment com-
pany said the overpass Is still planned
but that it Is not economically feasible in
the. llrst phase of the development.
A group of property owners on Beach
Road protested lhe request. They claimed
that traffic caused by the hotel would
congest Lhe only access over the tracks.
Each of the four tower structure:s is 200
units.
The original height variance was
granted over the protesLs of homeowners
on the bluff who cpposed loss of their
view or the octan.
A planning commission decision to ex-
tend Lhe variance relates to negolialion
with the owners to provide a secood
street level access to Beach Road.
From Page 1
HEARING ...
for the beati ng at all,'' said Capt. Green,
adding that 24 stitches were taken id hls
scal p.
They are also charged with the $500
gunpoint stickup of clerk Donald E.
Zerwekh Feb. 8 at the Sportsman's Li·
quor Store, 2615 Newport nlvd., Newport
Beach. ·
Two men with mldw estern accents
entere<I and brcwrsed Jn each case, while
a third man was believed waiting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they have also
been. linked to five or six additional arm·
ed robberies in Missouri, w hi I e
authorities in several states y,•ant toques-
Uon them.
A fourth suspect arrested last Friday
when police surrounded a horn' at 5l41'i
Remard St., Mrs. Patricia Phipps, 24, of
Independence, Mo. is charged with a
local burglary.
She is held al Orange County Jail. pen-
ding arraignment March 18 in Harbor
Judicial District Court, but may be turn·
ed ove r to Missouri authorities where she
is wanted for forgery .
Several months pregnant, the young
l\"oman who left a husband to accompany
Jackson ·west is expected to be sub·
poenaed \l'hen her traveling cornpanions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
Youth Faces 2ncl
Marijuana Rap
A to-year-0ld youth on probation for use
of drugs was arrested Wednesday night
on charges of possession of marijuana.
Pitichael Steven Able, 20, of 341 Third
St., Laguna Beach, was apprehended in
his home following a visit by his pr~
bation officer and two Laguna detectives.
Detecti~es Nell Purcell and Norman
Babcock accompanied probation officer
Carl Sanders lo Abie's residence al 10:40
p.m. A search of the premises uncovered
enough marijuana contained in a plastic
bag to roll 10 cigarettes, police said.
The cache \\'as discovered in a dresser
drawer, officers reported.
Able will appear in municipal coort to-
d11y.
Genna us \"\1iH Close
Rhodes ia n Con sulate
BONN, Gennany (AP) -The West
Grrman gorernment decided todiiy to
close dol\'n Its consulate In Salisbury.
thus remov'lng the only official \Veit Ctr·
mau mission in Rhodesia.
Tho \Ves t ~rman move fo\101,11 tht
ll'od l:iken by the Unittd Stli ttg and
other countries since thf J3n Smllh re·
glmc proclaimed Rhodesia a ' republic:
•
Carpenter Enters Race
Will Seek Schmitz Seat i1i Senate
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of lk Diiiy f'lltt Siii!
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach to-
day announced he Is a candidate for lhe
California State Senate seat to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz {R-Tuslin) who
is running for Congress.
His impending announcement was
rumored Wednesday .
Carpenter. as chalnnan of t h e
California Republican State Central Com-
mittee, is one of California's most
powerful Republicans and close to Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate took out papers this
morning and then m a d e his an-
nouncement in Newport Beach before
about 25 friends and Re.publican workers
and the press~ ~
The 34th Stale Senate D l s t r i c t
Carpenter is see king to represenl covers
most of Orange County except for strips
on lhe north and northwest edges. It is a
district in whlc;h 56 percent of the voters
are registered Republican.
Carpenter said. philosopblcally he fils
the dlStrlct like a glove.
He said Sen. Schmitz ill going to run on-
ly for the Congressional seat vacated
with the recent death of James Ult (R·
Tustin) and is not going to file for reelec-.
lion to the State Senate. He kno~·s, he
said, because he asked Schmllz.
Carpenter said he also touched base
with Assemblyman Robert Badham lR·
Newport Beach) and BadhaRi told him he
·Not for Birds
Swallows Si, Pigeons No • in Capo
.San Juan Capistrano's famed swallow•
might find their nests a little shaky when
they return to the historic :nission t.1arch
19.
Although a traditional warm welcome
is plarmed for Lhem, their coUSin the
pigeon, isn't faring too well. '
Capistrano city councilmen upholding a
planning commission Jecision, said
\Vednesday that the keeping of racing
pigeons in a residentia l zvne isn't a
compatible land use.
The case in particular was a 20.000
square foot lot whose zoning does allow
keeping me horse.
\Vhy horses and net pigeons? "Horses
don't fly," said Planning Director Bob
Johns.
The trou,ble with racing pigeons seems
to be that although kept in cages for
feeding and roosting they are Jet out
usually once a day for 10 or 15 minutes
for exercise. They continue to circle
above their cages in a wide area and
eventually drop one by one to their cages.
Bul there are other pigeons in town
that aren 't so orderly. 11undreds of fluffy
\vhile pigeons who serve as year round
standins for the swal19ws reside in the
eaves and ruins of the old mission. They
occasionally stray from their rOOllt.s into
neighboriTig residential areas.
And there are the swallows themselves
\\'ho suddenly lose their popularity when
they start building mud nesls under the
eaves of roofs all over Capistrano. when
accommodations are full at the mission.
The niayor when asked about the
swallows could only sh rug and say,
•·well, I guess"'" can't do anything about
them."
But he did agree with the plgecn
decision recalling an incident last year
\\•here racing pigeons were kep t in a
n1uch denser residential area .
"'It was a mess," said Chermak.
'·\Vomen couldn't even hang up their
laundry. People \Vere even out there \Vith
shot&'llns trying to help the owner clean
them up."
New Developme11t Zone
Approved by Capo Council
San J uan Capistrano city councilmen
Wednesday night paved the way for Lhe
approval of the rezoning cf 19 con·
troversial acres from residential to plan~
ned development.
The planned development zone would
allow developers to build condon1inium
type residences on the prope rty which is
located between The Casas housing
development and the San Diego Freeway.
Pi1ost of I.he residents of The Casas, who
have led an active protest against the
rezone, indicated a willingness to co1n-
promise y,·ith the develoPl?r, \\'estport
Enterprises.
A list of conditions approved by ap-
proximately 75 percent of t h e
homeowners in The Casas was presented
to the city council. The conditions are:
-The dwelling units are to be single
family and will not exceed eight per acre
or 35 feel in height.
-Architectural motif will be Spanish,
simila r to The Casas.
-A greenbelt will serve as a buffer
between the Westport property and The
Casas.
-If the 19 acres is sold before it is
developed It will revert ba ck to the
re sidential zone.
Conditions which Westport represen·
tati\'es agreed to, will be placed into a
special city ordinance which will apply to
thi!l parcel only. The ordinance wiU apply
to the rezone only if Lhe conditions arc
met.
Planning director Bob Johna said the
conditions can be insured during the
building per1nlt phase.
Cily attorney John Dawson said that
zoning land with conditions attached has
only.recently been a.llowed by Jaw.
Woman, 63 , Hit
By Car, In j lt1'ecl
A pedestrian was treated for contusions
and abrasions at South Coast Community
ffospital \Vednesday afternoon after
being struck by a car.
Laguna police said Mrs. Helen E.
!tardy, 63, of 270 Cliff Drive, was at a
crosswalk at the corner of Coast
Highway and Broadway when she was hit
by a car clrh•en by Mrs. Barbara Carson,
:19. of 130 E1nerald Bay.
Mrs. Carson was making a left turn on-
to Broadwa y, police reported when the
<1ccident occurred. '
wlll probably renle for the i\S3emby,
might run for Congress, bul ls nol in-
terested in the race for State Senate.
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun·
tington Beach) has declared again for the
Assembly.
Carpenter said he has heard rumors
that Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner
of Laguna Beach, a former Assem blyma n
who was deleated by Schmitz for the
senate seat in a Republican primary,
rnight run again. He said he doesn't
believe the rumors and has not talked to
Sumner.
Carpenter &aid he d~ded')to run after
consultation ~·ith Gov. ibaian. lie said
some party officials in Sacramento told
him 'nviously lhat his is "a solid gold
Senate district."
Two Cliorales
Blend Voices
Members of Laguna's Festival of Arts
Chorale and the Phiihannonia Ch<lrale oC
North Orange County Junior College
District \\'ill blend their voices in two
special musical
weekends in
Fullerton.
programs on succeuive
Laguna Beach a n d
Accompanied by a 30-piece orchestra
under direction of Kenneth Hch'ey, the
vocal groups will sing "Gloria" by
Poulenc and "Gloria" by Vi'laldi.
The first presentation will be at 4 p.m.
Sunday. March 15, in the Co1nmun.ity
Presbyterian Church, Forest Avenue,
Laguna Beach. On Sunday, March 22, at
a time to be announced, the same pro-
gram will be presented in Recital Hall at
Ful lerton.
Soloists are Marilyn lnlerlandi of
Laguna Beach and Sue Patchell of Santa
Ana .
Admission is $1.(1(1 for adults and $0
cents for students.
DAILY PILOT
H•w,.rt lffch
L•911n• Inch
Co1•• Mn•
H1111tlntton IHC!ri
Fo11~toh1 Y•lley snc1 ..... ,.
OAANGE COA5f PUllLISHING COMPAHf
Rob•rt N. Weed Prnlcltnt •M P11bll1htr
J1ck R. Curl•! Voe• Prniclenr 1...:r G-r• MIMgtr
Thom11 ko1~il
Editor
Tho''"' A, Murphin1
M1n11glnsr fdllor
Rich1rd P. Nill
Sctutll Or•"ll• County Edf!or
Offices
C0\11 M~I: JJ0 WISI lliY Slrnt
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mav be •P11roducl'd wltllolll ·~~111 P1r-
m!u 10n qi tQpyrl9h! ownlf'.
StcGl'lll CllU Pl>U•g• lllOld .i Nlwoorl ll1Hlt
•nd Cct!• Mtil, C1lllDrnl1. S11b1cr!~l'°n tt\'
c~rrier S2.0ll mcnlhlYI by mlll ll.SO monthlVi military dtlHn•tlons, t'.Oll monlh!Y.
LAST 3 DAYS
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
STORE HOURS; THURS. & FRI. TIL 9--SAT. 'TIL 5:30
JJ.J. (}arrell ONCE-A-YEAR
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE SALE
H.J.GARRETf fURNITURE
PROFESSION/\l
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
I
Opt1t Mon., ThvrL Ir Fri. l rn . 2215 HARBOR ILVO.
COSTA ME SA, CALIF.
646-0175 6'6-0276
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San Cle1nenie
Capistrano EDITION
I
\
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 12, ·1970 I vol. 63, NO. 60, J SECTIONS. ~o PAGES .
1 Laguna Candidates ~ By BARB ARA KREIBICH
Launch Council
~ Of IM Dllli'I' P119t Sltlt
hopefuls made their first of several
scheduled group appearances.
•Ii ..
/
I
I ' . ·O
al
•,;(
,,~
0
,,
Laguna Beach City Council candidate!<
t~ched base on malls, hippie:; and 1'.faf,\
Beach fin ancing this morning as they
fielded queslions fro1n Realtors in what
amounted to a formal opening ol the
municipal election campaign.
Members of the Board of Realtors
turned oul in force for an 8 a.m.
breakfasl meeting in Ben Brown's
restaurant at v;hich all live council
Avoiding the customary alphabetical
order procedure, candidates drew lots to
establish their speaking positions. lncum·
bent Joseph A. O'Sulliva.u drew the lead
spot, followed by Edward Lorr, Joseph
Tomehak, Richard 'Goldberg and Peter
Ostrander.
Contilluing the Jottery approach, each
speaker drew two questions out of a list
0
INSIDE TODAY
FEATURED NEWS ALONG THE SOUTHERN ORANGE COAST
e Meter Parking Moratoriut1i?
San Clemente officials are mulling the notion of turning
off its downtown parking meters for six months. Story
Page 3.
e Ft•eetvay Placa1·d Nixed
The San Clemente Planning Commission Wednesday
night took a dim view of placing a new bank sign along
the freeway. Story Page 3.
e His Honor, Pa~t-time
San Clemente's part-w;e city at\omey got another
part.time task the other day with mm• interesting re-
sults. Story, Page 3.
Could Change Electiota
Capo District May Join
Two-thirds Bond Battle
Capistrano Unified School Oislrict may
join other California schoo l districts in a
suit aimed at overthrowing the two-thirds
yes vote requirement for passage of
general obliga lion bond measures.
Truman Benedict. district superin-
tendent, said today he has asked thr
Or ange County Counsel's Office to report
on the advi sability of such a course.
The suit Initiated in northern Californi~
has already been joined by the Santa Ann
Unified School District. If the suit is sue·
cessful, it would lower the yes-vote re·
quirement to a simple majority.
Laguna Approves
Sign Ordinance
Modifications
Laguna Beach city councilmen al a
special meeting Wednesday night ap-
proved modifications of the s i g n
ordinance recommended by the Planning
Commission and voted to instruct the
commiss ion to initiate procedures to
amend the ordinance accordingly.
Meanwhile, the council agreed, the city
litaU V.'ill be instructed to enforce the
ordinance as if the amendments already
were in effect, lo enable firms to comply
v.'ilh a sign moratorium deadline -0f April
15. In a minor change. the council changed
the proposal that seven lines be used to
measure sign are.a and ruled that
•·mini mum outside perimeter'' could be
measured with whatever lines necessa ry,
except for re-entrant lines.
Other modifications concern pole signs .
shopping center signs and parallel signs
00 the front of buUdings. The modilica-
liQM generally make the ordinance
somewhat less re•lrictive and remove
prt'lblems that have caused enforcement
diffi®ltiel.
Benedict said he understands that U the
Capistrano Unified joins the suit, and it is
successfu l, it could validate the bond in·
terest rate proposition that lost Tuesday
with over 61 percent of the voters casting
yes votes.
Benedict said the state supreme court
of Idaho pas already held the two thirds
majority requirement unconstitutional .
California school officials are hoping the
California state supreme court will re::ich
lhe same conclusion under the U.S.
Supreme Court one-man--0ne-vote ruling.
State Sen. John Schmitz (R-Tusti n) in
an effort to head !Uch a court rul ing off
al the pass, ha s introduced legislation
wh ich could make passage dependent on
yes votes from the majority of all those
registered in the district.
Reagan Selects
Laguna Aide
A pair of Orange Col!llty Republican
leaders were appointed today as key
aides in Gov. Ronald Reagan's campaign
to seek a secOnd term in Sacramento.
Edward Mills, of 2.S26 Ri viera Drive, in
the Irvine Cove area of Laguna Beach,
will serve as Reagan's Sou th c r n
California finance chairman.
David L. James, a certified public ac·
coontant in Anaheim, va~ designated the
governor's Southern Ca lifornia campaign
chairman.
Mllls is vice president of flolmes Tuttle
Enterprises, a Los Angeles Urm, and has
long been active in GOP polltical circles,
according to fri ends.
James ls past chairn1an or the Orange
County Republican Central Committee.
San Francilco attorney Paul R. Haerie,
forme r appointments secretary f o r
Reagan, wHI head the-N o rt h·e r n
California tffortL with Jackquelin H.
Humt1 of. San l'Tanclsco, its finance
chief.
•
COMING MARCH 30
to the
DAILY PILOT
of 10 previously presented to real esta1e
people,
Each was allotted five minutes to res·
potld to the questions. fol\ov.·ed by a few
minutes of rebuttal at the close of the
talks.
Reodine his first question. "Do you
have~ solution to the parking problem ?"
O'Sulllyan quipped. "If I had the solution
I wouldn't have to be here -I'd know the
outcome of the election!"
Parking, he agreed, is one of Laguna's
eac
Bombs Jar
Manhattan
S·kyscrapers
NE\V YORK (UP ll -11lgh pcwered
bombs which antiestablishment revolu-
tionaries claimed to have set devastated
the offices of major corporations in three
l\1anhattan skyscrapers early today and
set of{ a rash or bomb scares forcing
evacuation of stores, schools and courts.
The bombers inform~ police oC their
plot in advance, so that night workers
could be evacuated:·ftom the sky1erapers
-a11 within a !>block area. There was
not enough time, however, to search for
the bombs, which jnjured no one.
United Press lnt.emational received a
specW cklivery letter sevual hours later
from a group calling itse lf "Revolu-
tionary Force 9" whlch took credit for
lhe bombings. It said the offices of
Socony Mobil Oil, International Business
Machines. and General Telephone &
Electronics were chosen because they
profit from war and exploit and degrade
human life.
Following a pattern set in other cor·
porate bombings in the past year, bomb
threats harassed police throughout the
morning. Among the buildings which had
to be evacuated for searches were the
Manhattan and Brooklyn f e d e r a I
courthouses, ll.loomingdale's department
store, the Consolidated F..dison building
and several schools.
The ' circumstances and results of the
bombings were "very similar" to another
triple bombing last Nov, 11 that hit other
offices in Manhattan, a police official
said.
Later this morning. police received
another anonymous telephone call y.•ilh
the message that four bombs were set to
explode in the lower level -0f Grand Cen-
tra: Terminal at 5:30 a.m. An emergency
crew of police and firemen waited on the
main level until after 5:30, then searched
the downstairs area. .
There were no immediate indications
who placed the bombS. An anonymous
message sent to news media last fall
after the earlier explosions said they
we r e don e by "white
Americans. , . striking blows for libera·
lion" in opposition to the Vielnam war
and "the giant corparations of America."
The police received today's warning
telephone call at 1:06 a.m. EST on the
ci~ special emergency number -911.
A man with a deep voice said bombs
were set to go off at 1:40 a.m. ln the
Socony Mobil building at 150 E. 42nd Sl.,
!he IBM building at 425 Park Ave. and
the General Telephone &: Electronics
Building at 730 Third Ave.
Emergency units rushed to each loca·
lion and spread the wprning lo the
maint«>nance and cle~nup crews Al work
-a total of 65 people we re in the three
bliildi ngs.
T1·iton Capers
To Open Friday
Wednesday's art.icle In the Dally Pilot
detailing the program for the ann"I San
Clemente High School Triton Capers in-
corrtetly said the revue woukl open
Wednesday night. when, actu•Jly, the
two-night 1bow will open Friday ... evenlng.
The PTA ~ sponsored &how, featuring
douns of student entertainer•; will begin
aL I p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings.
:Tickets are available at the door.
Stock illarket•
NEW YORK !AP) -The stock market
drifted downward on lijht trading la1e
lhl11 afternoon. lSee q\IOtations, Pages
:I0-21).
most serious problems. ''Various ap.
preaches will be suggested in the general
plan," he said, "but actually much will
depend upon development of t h e
dow,1town area. If we go to the mall' con~
cept, y.•hich I favor, we wou ld ha ve to
provide parking, probably in parking
structures outside the raall area to which
occupanls of the mall could contribute
nnanclng. \\'e also can finance by
metered parking, as at the beach Jot
which now brings in $8,0!)0 a year in
revenue. This will require 1 total &ludy or
downtown development."
To his second queslion. "What is your
opinion regarding annexation of more
area to the city, and its development?"
O'Sullivan said the concept of annexation
for annexation Itself must be avoided.
"Eacli area must be .evaluated," he
said. "\Ve must make sure it will benefit
the community and not be a hardship
economically. However, it still may be
appropriate to annex developing areas
ote
UPIT ......
Dowta by the Riverside
Police stand a young man on his head du ring height of demonstra·
lion at UC Riverside Wednesday during visit by Governo r Reagan.
Two persofl s were arrested during demons tration whic h marked
the first time police have ever been called to the Riverside campus
in force. See story, Page 8.
Mesa Holdup Gang Trio
Face Laguna Beach Rap
By ARTIWR R. VINSEL
Of t91e Otll'I' Plltt Sl•lf
Extradition or three Colorado ldller
suspects -unarmc-d for the first time in
an alleged cross-county crime spree when
captured in Costa Mesa -formally
began today.
flearings were set for two members of
the suspecled Bunnie and Clyde·style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Superior Court.
1'he suspected ri ngleader. who once
reportedly told iiis mother he would
never be taken alive, goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
in his return to Colorado.
Complaints charging Orsi d e g r e e
murder in the brutal beating death of a
Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb. 19
wert issued Wednesday in the Rocky
Mountain State.
Jack C. Matney, 32, of Denver. Colo.,
and Howard R. Tschirhart, 31, of Kansas
City, 1'.1o.. were due in court today,
represmted by public defenders.
ExtradlOon bearing for James E.
Jack80n , 25, of Independence, Mo., is set
for Ji'rlday morning tnd he too will--be
counseled by a pobllc defender.
If they chooae to waive extradition,
lhey will be returned swUtly, but Ute lrlo
could spend .several months in Orange
County Jail ii they fl(!:hl the action.
J1tck.'lon. Matney and Tschirhart 3rt
forrnnl!y accused of tlie rlfle·bludi;:eon
murder of Erling Nielsen, 61 , whose
modest jewelry and loan shop was looted
of numerous guns, jewelry .and other
goods.
The victim's body-was found crouched
ln the blood·splashed restroom of his
business , as though seeking refuge. from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Police. Detective CapL Bob
Green said additional comph1inta would
be issued today charging the trio with Ji.
quor store robberies In Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach.
He said Jackson Is suspected as the
bar.dit wh-0 brutally p\slt>l·wbipped Ralph
ll Ames during a $102 robbery Feb. I at
the Korker Liquor Store in Llguna
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The v,Wlm said there was no reason l~i HEARINGS, Pap I)
South Lagunan Held
On Weapom Charge
A South Laguna man was rllt<l on a
misdemeanor charge of-carrying a con--
ccaled weapon Wednesday night.
Laguna l.l<ach i:oUce cl1td Robert
Krlsvoy, S4, or 21501 Octar. Vista, when
they noticed a .22 caliber ttvolve.t con-
cealed In his waistband. The su•pect
reportedly was talking with tht manager
of the Taco Bell In Sleepy Hollow when
cited.
Today's F'8)ll
N.Y. Steeb
I TEN CENTS
Drives
adjacent to the city even 11 they ire not
11:U-supporting.
"Laguna Beach hu grown slowly, but
this will no longer be the. cue with the: ar-
rival of the freeway and opening of new
areas. lt will be important for us to be
able to control some ol this adjacent
development, but it must . be doi:te
carefully. We also will have to do some
'selling' to convince property owners and
the Local Agency Formation Commi5.5ion
(Ste CAMPAJGN, Page %)
? •
New Park
May Absorb
Choice Land
A proposed $29 million beachfront hotel
for Capistrano Beach may never leave
the drawing boards.
The choice beach instead may become
part of Doheny Stale Park.
William Perut f\1ott, director of the:
State Department of Parks and Recrea-
tion, confirmed today that his depart-
ment bas been tali.ing with ownership of
the pNperty with an eye. lo buying it.
Acquisition of the. hotel site, now awned bJ Clpistraoo Beach Investment Co.,
Ltd.. would add about 1500 front f~ to
the. f,000-feet Doheny Park ocean front.
Located al Ille llOU1b end of !he popular
J>ll'lt,, lbe property lies be1ween 1he San la re Railroad rJgbL-of·way and the oetan.
It vade. in width between 100 and 200
feet,
Strapped for funds bec.ause of the 5
percent bond interest ceiling, the state.
wouJd like to buy the site If the owner1
will accept· bonds bearing fiv~ percent ln-
ter:est in lieu ol cash. Also, if proposition
seven passes in the June primary this
would make additional funds available
for beach acquisition .
The state is prohibited from payina:
more than appraised value or property.
U details can be worked out, said Mott.
the acquisition of the property would
have a high priorlty with the state. All
beach land from Pt. Conception to the
Mexican border bu high priority, but
this especially because It Is contiguous to
an existing park.
"Any lineal footage we could acquire.
there would not gather any dust," said
Mott. "This has the ingredients of an
ideal acquisition." He called It "one of a
number of projects the planning people
are developing as sort of shopping list.''
Loyd V, Steere, chairman of the in·
vestment company's board, said In a re-
cent letter to the company's limited
(Set PARKS, Page ! )
PILOT SA.LUTES
iltA.RINE SHOW
The DAILY PILOT today salutes the
Second AMual Western Natlona1 Boat
and Marine Show, opening Friday at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Three pages of stories, photos and ads
offer readers a guide to the 1970 boat
show. They start on Page. 29.
Orange Coast
Weather
Intermittent cloudiness but most-
ly sunny skies is the. cautious word
from the weatherman for Friday.
Look for mercury readings or 65
aJong the coast and 70 Inland.
INSWE TODAY •
DAILY PI L 0 T lmk«l>oll
player• holLfl'r "pollct brutalitu"
a& the Costa Me&a cops hand
them 4 63·« drubbing, au in
the namt of charity, The grut-
somt dcl4ils ore on Page 26
todau.
c.~ .,,, ci.c•* U• r C'"91f!H »<JI
-C""ln n Cfeff.... IJ
Dultl l'Mtlcu l1 o:"""' 11 hllwt.I ,...... ' llllM•'-1 tJ ,1_ )I.ti --" Allll 1.-MM" II
Mlllllt• ' MMlll!tl 11
-
2 DAILY PILOT SC
OAll 't "!LOT Ili ff PMM
CAP IST RANO BEACH CLUB, WH ERE REVELERS ONCE ROMPED, NOW JUST A SHELL
Str•nd M•y Become Part of Doheny Stat• Park~ If Price It Right
F rotta Page 1
CAMPAIGN OP ENS . • •
t LAFC) that the annexation is valld."
First question addressed to candidate
Edward Lorr was, ''Ho1v would you
suggest the city fhld rerenue to pay for
the beach park?"
CIUTICAL PROBLEM
"This ls a critical problem facing the
taxpayers or Laguna Beach,'' Lorr said.
"I feel the City Council Ignored some
good advice givrn it by the Chamber of
Commerce in 1967. In the first place they
paid too much fo r lhe beach.
·'They also ignored the Chamber of
Commerce recommendation that some
commercial development would be the
(Inly v.•ay to meet the bond obligation. Y/e
must develop a commercial·hotel zone on
a portion of the Main Beach. The first
step is setting up a hotel zone. The City
Council baa been dragging its feet in this
area."
To the question, "Do you have a snlu·
lion to the parking problems of
merchants on the , north and south ends of
1oy,·n1" Lorr replied, "T would suggest
!hat a portion of the $1.000 fee merchants
are required to pay when they cannot
provide on-site parking be set aside for
the nor1h and south sides. Also. the
merchants could be encouraged to
purchase land for parking l o t s
themselves and lease it to the city, which
could provide metering and main·
tenance."
LEADERSHIP LACK
Lorr said he is running. for office
because, "I am concerned at the direc·
tion the city ha! taken in past years and I
feel there is a lack of leadtnhip at a high
leY1!.I. l would like to help re.store
Laguna's image."
Tiie third speaker, Planning Com·
missioner Jo&eph Tomehak, w1s asked,
"What would be you r solution to the pro-
blem of land artas in the city at present
not buildable because of lack or access?"
The Planning Commission, Tomehak
r~plled, had been given a presentation by
the Cordoba Company wh ich he con·
sldered "woefully unprepared," although
the basic Idea for this type of develop-
ment was "very good." The problem, he
said, was Cordob a's attempt to apply "a
flat·land density concept to an area with
~ per cent unstable soils."
"We have been protected by our
topography so far,'' Tomehak said, "bul
our time is running out . \Ve must realize
that there will be more and more
sophi~cated developers coming down
here and we must be prepared to cope
\\•ith this.
EXPECT MORE
"Before we accept a pig In a poke \\·e
must consider needs for police. fire,
schools and access roads. Instead of jum·
ping into M>mething from casual draw·
ings, the city should expect more. Many
people are interested In developing
Laguna and we must be very careful,
esptcla\ly in the development of in-
accessible area!.''
To the question. "Do you think our
present parks are adequate for recreation
needs" Tomehak replied that he did not.
Noting Laguna's average population
;ige of 40 years, compared wilh the coun·
ty average or 24, he suggested that
recre.etion should be considered in tv.·o
separate areas, for older and for younger
residents. The idea of developing a recreation
11rea adjaC1?nt to the new Boys' Club he
described as "excellent," adding that
mifli..p11ks throughout the city also would
ba • worthwhile addition.
Tomehak expressed regret t h a l
"teams" seemed to be forming in the
council raet. "I don't believe in 'good
guys and bed guys,"' he said. "Laguna
needs a mosaic of representation."
HIPPIE PROBLE!'tt
Opening his first question. Goldberg
grinned. "! got the good one !" 1t read .
"What Is your opinion about the hippies
and what would you propose to do,
assuming you do not approve?''
"In my mind," said the councilman.
''this issue is the number one problem in
Laguna Beach today ." This drew ap-
plause from the Realtors.
"The fact that Someone has long hair,
or lll beard or dresses dtHerenUy, is not
the-problem," he continued. "What ton·
cems me mo&t ii the tremendous in·
crease in narootlcs arrests. Only last
week Laguna Beach was hailed In the Los
Angeles press as a center of the narcotics
industry -that could take care of what
v;e thought was our main industry
(tourism )."
Goldberg said he would favor opening
of a branch of the County Health Center
in Laguna Beach and perhaps a counstl-
ing center to help steer young people
a1vay from drugs.
f';OT ENFORCJNG
"I do not believe \\'e are enforcing all
our la'A'S," he added, citing as examples
the leash law, the law against sleeping on
the beach and health and sanitation laws
relating to housing.
Goldberg said he does not believe the
police force is adequate to cope with the
situation but ur,ged complete community
cooperation. "You u Realtors must be
alert," he said, "end make sure that your
rentals are occupied by the persons
specified in the lease."
Asked his views on future growth and
development of the downtown area,
Goldber,g noted that the general plan
would not include a specific plan for this
area, but in his view such a plan ahould
be initiated soon and should include
enhancing the Art Colony Jmage and
development of 11peclalty shops, among
other things.
Noting his eight years of service as
presk:lent oC the Qamber of Commerce
and clty councilman, he vowed to con·
tinue to serve 1s "~hour, local. in·
town representaUve."
CHARTER CITY
Peter Ostrander, replying lo the ques--
tion, "Wbat is your feeling regarding ef·
ficiency of the pnsent city ad-
minlslration?" said, "It leaves a lot lo be
desired.
"l reel w~ should e1plore the pos1lblllty
of becoming a charter City, to remove
some of the prt.Sent state reslrictlons. I
also feel we should go back to separating
U1e jobs of city clerk and city ad·
ministrator because I feel J im Wheton is
overburdened and should not be asked to
handle both jobs."
Asked his opinion of the proPosed hotel
zone, Ostrander noted that he had
participated in the preparation ol five
draft! of an ordinance for such a zone
and still believed such a zone: should be
created, but applied only to the area ad·
jacent to the ocean, and then only as
desired by properly ownera. "We don't
have to re.zone," he aid. "just give them
the option of using C.H zoning if they
\\'ish." Alt.hough one reason for adopting
a hotel zone would be to improve the
economic condition of the community,
Ostrander commented. "f also feel
ae!'ilhetics wll\ Improve the eC(lnomy.''
ASSORTED ISSUES
Asked if they wished to respond to
comments made during the talks, the
candidates picked out an assortment of
issues.
O'Sullivan referred to Lorr's remarks
on council handllng of the l\1ain Beach
purchase rind J!sted :;teps being taken to
set up the necessary commercial
development. ''\Ve must get t he
necessa ry money without destroying the
chann that is there," he said. "We now
;1re seeking pl<1ns ror a eommercinl
development, but 1ve have lo remember
this building will be there to SO years and
\\'e must not overbuild In our allempt to
pny the cost."
Lorr reitera ted his charge that the
couneil had ignored the advice of lhe
Chamber of Commerce and said, "II l
were elected to the City Council I would
seek the ad\•ice of experts we have right
here in the community."
Tomehak commenllng on downto,vn
redevelopment, said "Malls don't mean
just paving over a l!itrctt-thert has to be
complete rede\lelopment. l y,•ould like to
cons ider something like San Francisco'~
Ghirardelli Square where the lumbtr ynrd
is, for example.''
BIG BOONDOGGLE
Tomehak took the City Council to ta~k
for not lelUng the Planning Commission
about the Holscher report (on Maln
Beach development) until it had been
ordered. "This was one of the biggest
boondoggles we've tver had,'' he !liaid.
"They. spent $41000 and then g:avt up on
it." He said he would agree with
Os1rander regarding investigating the
cliarter city plan.
Vr"aes Righ ts Stand Noting needs for more reer<alion arras. parks and grtcnhelts, Goldberg
said, "Where Is the money going lo com e.
WASHINGTON CUP ll -Sen al r from? It wits for this rea90n th11t I
Republican Ltader Hugh ~tt urged tht• proposed th1t the City Council resume
White lfouse today to issue: a clear eut plans for a hotel zone , which will be our
st1ttme.nt In support ol Negro ch•ll only sn\vaUon."
rtghtl. ==--c--.,-.-u'IUioy,·ntAwn..deyelfil>mtnt, he aald, "I
"I think it Is Ume for some unequivocal (1ueslien whether we-ctn ,;ror<ffo w11it
statement on raclal jusUce fro m yP.ars for the · development of ma ll~. ll
downtown." he told reporters when asked could be a \\'aste or city proptrty. Parking
to comment on crltlcl!m of President lotJ we now own could be dcveloprd "'
Nixon 's handling of the Issue by Sen. pitrklng ~trur.turp_, tnd be an a:sset in·
EclWard W. Broollt (R·Mass.) siead ol a liability."
From Page l
PARKS • • •
partners that growing concern over
beach acquisition for publlc use has
stimulated possibility or stale purchase or
the beach section.
He noted that Doheny State Park has
recorded more advance reservations than
any other park in the state system.
The Orange County Plan ning Com·
mission last year approved pl1;ns for 1
hotel and commercial center at the site.
This included a heigh! variance that
would allow structures 100 feet, 65-feet
above the zone limitation.
Original plans or the owners were for
the immediate coostructlon of the first
phase. This was reportedly sidetracked
by tJ!e light money market that stalled
financing .
When a variance renewal was aought
from the county, the owners also asked
relief from the requirement lhat they
build a roadway overpass to span the
railroad.
A spokesman for the investment com·
pany said the overpass ls still planned
but that it is not economically feasible In
the flrat phase of the development.
A group of property owners on Beach
Road protested the request They claimed
that traffic caused by the hotel would
congest the only access over the tracks.
Each of the four tower structures ls 200
units.
The original height variance was
granted over the protests of hcmeowners
on the bluff who opposed loss of their
view of the ocean.
A planning ~mmission decision to e1·
.tend the variance relates to negotiation
with the owners to provide 1 second
street level access to Beach Road.
1 From Page 1
HEARING ...
for the beating at all,11 said Capt. Green,
adding that 24 stitches were taken in his
scalp.
They are also charged with the $500
gunpoint sUckup of clerk Donald E.
Zerwekh Feb. 8 at the Sportsman's Li·
quor Store, 2615 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach.
Two men with midwestem accents
entered and browsed in each case, while
a third man was believed waiting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they have also
been linked to five or six additional arm·
eel robberies in Missouri, w h i 1 e
authorities in several states want to ques·
tion them.
A fourth suspect arrested last Friday
\\'hen police surrounded a home at 514 \':
Bernard Sl., ~1rs. Patricia Phipps, 24, or
Independence. Mo. is charged with a
Joc<1I burglary.
She is held at Orange County Jail. pen·
ding arraignment March 18 in Harbor
Judicial District Court. but may be tum·
ed over to Missouri authorities where she
is 1vanted for forgery.
Se,•eral months pregnant. the young
\\'Oman y,•ho left a hu~band to accompany
Jackson west is expected to be sub·
pocnaed \\'hen her traveling companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
Youth Faces 2nd
Marijuana Rap
A 2t).year-0ld youth on probation for use
of drugs was arrested Wednesday night
on charges or possession of marijuana.
f.1ichael Steven Able. 20. of 341 Third
St., Laguna Beach, was apprehended in
his honle follm\'lng a visit by his pro-
bation oflicer and two Laguna detect ives.
l)eleclives Neil Purcell and Norman
Babcock accompanied probation off"lcer
Carl Sanders to Abie's re!'iidence at 10:40
p.m. A :;esrch of the premises uncovered
enough marijuana contained in a plastic
bag lo roll ID cigarettes, police said .
The cache was discovered in a dresser
drawer, officers reported.
Able will 11ppear In municipal court ti>
day.
Gernia n s Wi ll Close
H.hodesian Cons ula te
CONN, Gcrn1any (AP) -The West
Cicrn\an government decided today lO
close do\\'TI its consulate in SAiisbury,
thus re.moving the only oJflcial \Vest Gtr·
m111 mission In Rhodesia.
Tho Wtst German move folloll·s the
tea.ii take n by Ole United State• and
other countrit:\ since lhe Ian Smith re--
glm• pr0<laimed Rhodesia a republic.
J
I
Carpenter Enters Race
Will Seek ~chmitz Seq,t in ~"enate J
By Jl!2r.:.,Jt ,!2~~E and the press. will probably refile-for the A.asemby,
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach to-
day announced he !4 a candidate for the
California State Senate seat to be vncl\ted
by Senator John Schmitz (R·Tustin) who
is running for Congress.
Hi.s impending announcement was
rumored Wednesday.
Carpenter, as chainnan of th e
California Republican State Central Com-
mittee, Is one of California's mo.st
powerful Republicans and close to Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate took out papers this
morning and then m a d e his an·
!Nl,!JICe.ment in Newport Beach before
about 25 friends and Republican workers
The 34th State Senate DI s \ r I ct mf&ht run for Congress, but is not ill·
Carpenter is seeking to represent CO\'ers terested Jn the race for State Senate.
most of Orange County except for strips Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun·
on the north and northwest edges. It is a tlngton Beach ) has declared again for the
district In which !ill percent of the voters Assembly.
are registered Republican , Carpen1er said he has heard rumors
Carpenter said philosophically he fits that Superior Courf Judge Bruce Su1nner
the disb'ict like a glove. of Laguna Beach. a former Assemblyman
H ald · . who was defeated by Schmitz for th• es Sen. Schm1t;z ls going to run on· Senate seat in' a Republican primary,
ly for the Conaress1onal seat vacated might run again He said he doe.sn'l y,•ith the recent death of James Utt (R· · · Tusti"n) and · 1 · 1 f'le 1 1 believe the rumors and has not talked to 1s no going o 1 or ree ec· Sumner
lio.n to the Slate Senate. He. knov.'s, he Carpe.nter said he decided to run after
said, because h~ asked Schnulz. consultation with Gov. Reagan. He said
_Carpenter said he also touched base some party official!! in Sacramento told
with AJsemblyman Robert Badham (R· him enviously that hi.s is •·a solid gold
Newport Beach) and Badham told him he Senate district."
Not for Birds T wo Cliorales
Blend V oices
Sivallows Si, Pigeons No in Capo
San Juan Capistrano's famed !Wallowa
mighl find their nests a little shaky when
they return to the historic :nisslon March
19.
AlthOt.1gh ti traditional wann welcome
is planned for them, their cousin the
pigeon, isn't faring too \\'ell. '
Capistrano city cotrflCilmen upholding a
planning commission Jecision, said
\Vednesday that the kCt!ping of racing
pigeons In a residential uine isn't a
compatible land use.
The case in particular was a 2tl,OOO
square foot lot whose zoning does allow
keepin,g one. horse.
Why horses and not pigeons? "Horses
don 't fly," said Planning Director Bob
Johns.
The trouble wllh racing pigeons seems
to be that although kept in cages for
feeding and roosting they are let out
u5uatly once a day for 10 or 1,5 minutes
for exercise. They continue lo circle
above lheir cages in a wide area and
eventually drop one by one to their cages.
But there are other pigeons in town
thnt aren't so orderly. l!undrcds of fluffy
ll'hile pigeons who serve as year round
standlns for the swallows reside in the
eaves .and ruins of the old mission. They
occasionally st ray from their roosts into
ncighborlilg residential areas.
And there are the swallows themsel\'es
1vho suddenly lose their popularity when
they start building mud nests under the
eaves of roofs all over Capistrano. when
accommodations are full at the mission.
The mayor when asked about the
swallows could only shrug and say.
"Well, I guess we can't do anythin,g about
then."
81.1t he did agree with the pigeon
decision recalling an Incident lasl year
where racing pigeons were kept in a
m1.1ch denser residential area.
"lt was a mess." said Chermak.
''\\'on1en couldn't even hang up their
laundry. Pet1ple \vere even out there with
shotguns trying to help the 01vner clean
them up."
New Develop1nent Zone
Approved by Capo Council
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
Wednesday night paved the way for the
approval of the rezoning of '19 con·
troversial acres from residential to plan-
ned development.
The planned development zone would
allow developers to build condominium
type residences on the property which is
located between The Casas housing
development end the San Diego Freeway.
Most of the residenl5 of The Casas, who
have led an active protest against the
rezone, indicated a willingness to coin·
promise with the de\'eloper, Westport
Enterpri&es.
A list or conditions approved by ap·
proximately 75 percent of th e
homeowners In The Casas was presented
to the city council. The conditions are:
-The dy,·elling units are lo be single
family and will not exceed eight per acre
or.,35 feet in height.
-Architectural motif v.·111 be Spanish.
similar to The Casas.
-A greenbelt v.·ill serve as a bufrer
between the. \Vestport property and The
Casas.
-If the 19 acres Is sold before it is
developed it will revert back to lhe
residential zone.
Conditions which Westporl represcn·
tatives agreed to, will be placed into 1
special cily ordinance which will apply to
this parcel only. The ordinance will apply
lo the rezone only if the conditions are
n1ct.
Planning director Bob Johns said the
conditions cnn be insured during the
building permit phase.
City attorney John Dawson said that
zoning land with conditions attached has
only recently been allowed by la\v.
Woman, 63 , Hit
By Ca r, Injured
A pedestrian W8!'i treated for contusions
and abrasions at South Coast Community
Hospita l \Vednesday afternoon .afte'r
being struck by a c;:ir .
Laguna poUce said t>.1rs. Helen E.
llardy, 6J, of 270 Cliff Drh•e, was al a
cro~swalk At the corner of Coast
Highway and Broadway when she was hit
by a car driven by ~1rs. Barbara Carson,
39, of 130 Emerald Bay.
l\1rs. Carson was making a left turn on·
to Broadway, police reported, when the
accident occurred.
l\fembers of Laguna's Festival of Aris
Chorale and the Philharmonie Chorale of
North Orange County Junior College
District will blend their voices in two
special musical programs on successive
weekentls In Laguna Beach 1 n d-
Fullerlon,
Accompanied by a JO.piece orchestra
under direction of Kenneth Helvey, the
\'OCal groups \\'iii sing •·Gloria" by
Poulene and "Gloria" by Vivaldi .
The first presentation will be at 4 p.m.
Sunday, A-larch 15, in the Community
Presbyterian Church, Forest Avtnut,
Laguna Beach. On Sunday, 1'1arch 22. at
a time to bt announced, the same pro-
gram will be presented in Recital Hall at
Fullerton.
Soloists are Marilyn lnterlandl of
La guna Beach and Sue Patchell of Santa
Ana .
Admission is $1.50 for adults and 50
cents for students.
DAIL
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C"t• Mesa
H11tti ... to11 IHch
f•1111t1ll• • .,,..,
Sa• ClftM!lte
OaANGI CO.UT PUILISH1NG COMPANY
R.obert N. Weed
Pf"I01n1 Ind P11Dll111tr
Jeelr R. C11rl1v
Vt<• PralCltnl Ind OtMrll Mlnl(lff
Tho11111 k•t~il
EdllOr
Thomt1 >.. M11rphin1
M1n11/nt1 Edllor
Ricli1rd P. Nill
5ou!h Oren1• Coun1y EdllOr
Offl~"
Co111 Mnt: J» Wu1.B1r SlrJC1
Ntwporr INcll: 2111 Wn! a1ION 8011l•111N
1.1gun1 Btaa: :rn For111 ,t,111n.-
Mun!lnt111H1 llt8Cll: Hlli ll11ch 80llltV ...
$1n CltmenTe: 30i Norin El Camino R111
OAILT PILOT. wllll Which 1$ comoffltd "'' 1'1tWi·Pre. •• II p.Jlll1nea dtlly ••t •pl Sun·
dly ll't Hl'<'fllt ldlll!tn1 !Or L1111n1 l .. dt,
Hirwr>orl ll•ecn. Coa11 Mn1, Hunu,..1on
lhlth Ind FDVnll ln V1llly, lionl WI"' IWD
r90Jon11 ldltlO<li. Or1nt11 CM1I Pulllshlnt1 Com01n~ printing 11lant1 ,,.. 1! :nr1 WHI
ll1ID01 lllV<I,, N....._.I llt1d\, Ind JJO
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1.1.,11 ... 1714) 642-4J21
CloulfiH Attl'ertkl11t1 642·5671
$1111 Cl1111et111 All D1p11rt1Mttn:
r.,1pllo11e 492·4420
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Comp1ny. No ne~ t!Orlft, IUllOITlllll!I,
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mtukM Of coayr1g111 ownl'r.
S«Ond cl111 p0111gt paid 11 NtwPOrt lltldl
I"" Cosl1 MIU, (llllorni.. $11blc•lpr~ IY'
CJrtlrr J2.00 monlhly1 oy flllil 12.50 monlf'llVI mllll<;rv de1tln1tlon•. ttOO mon1M¥.
LAST 3 DAYS
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DAfL. V PJLC'T • •
Sight Loss
Bla111ed On
_po or Food
Des MOINES, lowa (AP)-
An inadequate diet while c~p
tlves of the North Koreans Is
causing partial loss of sight
among some crew members ot
the Navy Intelligence ship
Pueblo, Cmdr. Lloyd M.
Bllhher sa1d In a copyright ln·
tervlew in the Des ll-foines
Register today.
J,lucher, interviewed by a
member or the paper's
\Vashlngton bureau via
telephone from Pacific Grove,
Calif., said he suffers from
blind spots and s e v e re
headaches v.•hjch d o c t o r s
believe v.'ere caused by the In·
adequate nutritio n the crew
gal from a diet that consisted
mosUy of turnips. The shi p
commander is being treated
as an outpatient in California, -
he said.
"The symptoms hQve shown
up in about one-thi rd of the
crew," Bucher said. [ n
several, the damage ls severe
and probably permanent, he
said.
Charles B. Law Jr., the
ship's quartermaster, "has
had a great deal of difficulty.
He is able to see to get about
but has greatly redu ced vision.
He cannot see straight ahead
and has to use hjs peripheral
vision," Bucher said.
"Two or three others were
affected to a se rlous degree
and some. including myself, to
a somewhat lesser degree," he
Jaid.
Doctors say the men's diets,
which included no Vitamins A,
C and D, apparently caused
damage to part of the optic
nerve, Bucher sa id.
The ailment produces blind
spots in certain areas of the
victim's vision in the rest of
the eye, he said.
"\Ve rl ld not eat very well
for long periods of Ume," he
said. •·Our basic diet was
turnips. After four of five
---mofiffiS we-tiegan to get some
rice.
"There were times when we
got an app le maybe on« a
week or so. For a short lime,
we got them once a day. Then
lhere were times when we
v.'ould go withou t fruit for a
month or more," Bucher said.
There was rio meat, except
some canned quail a few times
and virtually no dairy pro-
ducts, he said.
The men were captured off
the North Korean coast Jan.
23. 1968 and released Dec. U
of that year.
10 Seniors.
Get Honor
Of Center
Ten high school seniors have
been chosen Student.! of the
ll-1anth of February. by the
Huntington Center ll-ferchant.9
Association.
They are: Sandy Mendez,
Pacifica: Rosa ~ La RI Va,
La Quinta; Myrna Murdock,
Huntington Beach; S u 11 a n
Johnson, \Vestminster; Karin
Berry, Fountain Valley; Jo
Ann Spira, fl.farina; Donna
Shattuck. Santiago; Sue Hern,
Garden Grove; Chri.s Manzo,
Edison. and Lorraine Sim·
mons. Los Am igos.
Each of the stu dents
receives a $6 cash award from
the assoclatlon and becomes
eligible ta compete for Its an·
nual $500 scholarship.
Students or the Month are
seleeted on the basis of al·
titude, g r a d e s , citizenship,
person3J appearance and sales
personality.
They are nominated by lhe
business faculty of the In-
dividua l high schools In the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District and lhe Garden
Grove Unified School OlstricL.
BofA Helps
2 at OCC
Two Orange Coast College
students have received S300
awa rds in Bank of America's
Junior College B u & I n e s s
Awards Program.
John R. Maday or Hun-
tington Beach received the
award In bu si ness ad·
mlntstraUon and Christa H.
Hartleb of Costa ll-fes.a was the
winner in the secretarial
dlvi!ion.
The awards will be
presented Friday at a banquet
at the Beverly. flllton Hotel
where the bank will bonor all
Southern Cali!ornla winners.
The progra.m was started in
19$3 to encourage students t<>
prepare for buslness car11r1.
t.forn than 80 Junior co~liges 1n-
thc state participate.
Two winners Are selected
trom each school by a !acuJty
committee on the basis of scholarship, ptr10nallty and
&ehool 1ctivitles.
I
i
l
'
10 OAILV PILOT -SC Tttul'Sdar, Mmh 12. 1970
Your Money's lfortlt
By SYLVIA PORTER
One uUerl y unanl1c1pated -
but to me, deh ghlfully ironic
-side rt'sult of Lhc r1d1culous·
Jy overblown pubhcUy about.
tat reform last year l'l as that
it dramatized to you, the
financially mnocrnt m1ddlc·ln·
come taxpayer. the many
ways through whi ch you too
can legally avoid income tax·
" ,\ND ONt; enormous
loophole left absolutely 110.
!ouched by the tax reform Jaw
t\hJrh you surely found out
;:ibout d1rr1ng the drbates is the
lax-exempt stalus of state and
loca l bonds \Vhat th1~
lnoph<lle means 1s that tf you
1nv-e~t 1n tax-exem)'ll
mun1c1pal M!curihes, the in·
tcrest you recetve will be ex·
f'mcxpt from federal income
111xes -and maybe exempt
from J!ilale and local mcome
taxe~ too 1( you are a resident
of the 1sst11ng local1ty,
Th111 loophole is exceedingly
attrarU\1C today a~ signs
mount that 1nle.rest rates ha\e
passed their historic peaks for
lh1s era and evidence emerges
!hat a Joi of smart money 1s
!lowing into lax-exempts lt'I
'fref'ze" the sleep rates now
available
Th111 is not JU!li\ for the
''calthy1 Tax-exemption can
benefit you to a lesser ettent
1n the Joy.·er tar brackets as
\l'.fll
INTEREST RATE.$ an tax.
AnlN1'10N TO LITILI
COUltTUllS , •• SUCH AS
AN AN SWlllD PHONI
IUILDS IUSINlSS.
835. 7777
Wersbow
REAL ESTATE
AUCTION
PRIE
lAN01BLOCS
22,000 sq. It LAND
20,000 sq. It BLDGS.
CP1fti1\ ?~lll)I
INCL6375sq.1t. LOT
ZOllED fOR UGllT MFG. cu11111r vm.....,,)
llllliHlll BarJr, .....
:a,U: Oft nlE: SITt
201 FRANKfORT ST.
11.LC..fqodMt& Al ..... '"'"
HUNTINGTON BEACK, ..........
WED., MARCH 25
.c lt:»liL
• c..11111, Loot•• 11 tlow1t1111
H~ kodl lul-Olalt>ct 0.. ltodr.: m. CilJo lla1l
• lict~IW1"'-8Ml-lN<k ""-"°' OYabM .,_... tlo SW-... -• lllQ Eni1J U.llld , .. l •11d Nit• C..'l. lktitil ... Wlllla.ll•
• ' u.tt 1-P,of111Ftr· l ltol-Mo-.;tll l 11.,... .ri,-111Khd: J ,_ ISMplciir bdi .. lirlt ....
tlMUIOllS TO .ucllOll Silt: ,..,.
S..-Oiel• ,.,., 11 kKll IW tm.I s.wt~ .,. ICKll ltw.1 ti'n moltl!I te
............. IS" Ro.Pt (Wm) ... 1....u. ...
.-llS" 1 11th ta Alibi• A¥1 Ltlt
tS.111) -,......, "'" s 1111111. .. N.L -ti f .... ltrt St. 11111 AllM1111.-.-
lllO'l• ,AltTJC"lTIOlf UCOUUGCD
Miltao 1 Wershow r...
.AUCTtoNtCl'lS • 11.U.LlORS nu mlOSl A'lt" .. tOS '*nut
UU! 'lJ W t
exempt obl1gal!ons have
declined sharply tn the past
few weeks, and 1f you buy new
,Issues of tax exe mpts now,
you might have lo sit w1lh a
loss for a while But you are
not buying for a quick specula·
tlon· you are buying to get
tax exempt income for a
spec1f1ed period which meets
your needs. and thu s day-to.
day ups and downs should not
bother you
The interest rates you can
get today on exempt bonds
rangtng from the highest·
grade 1o mtd1um offer what
'\Tall Street calls a "hvtng
,.,.age ' -deluxe
The returns 2re far more at
tracU\e than you probably
WE HAVE
NO FAVORITES
tly TERRY GRANT , ft Ph
Aliho~'l h ihtr1 .o r1 1110•1
th111 ofl• 111111uf1,IU••r of wh1f
"'19hl b• th• 11m1 b11•c: drug
w1 try fo ~••P "' sloe\ 1 qu .. 11
I ly fro"' 111ch of +he"' Eve fl
ihou9h th • II •"Plfl1!YI !o th1
ph1rm1tv your phy11t1111 ,., • .,.
hl"I frlor• c:o11f1d1nc:t 111 O~t
sp1trfoc P•oducl by • •:e•+•111
mtke-r W 1 ,.,1111 h1v1 -hit h1
w1rh vou lo ,,,,, .. ,
01 tOUfll Wt -·II only ''o'~
1¥11d •c:+ne1 m1d1 bv the .no.+ ••
l11bl1 lir1111 11\d your phv11t 111
w oll nthlftlly 011lv pr11c .. ~11
1uc-;h Anvl1 m1 0111 ol th1r1 11111\f
111111'-• 1 "'-"' dru9 tll•I h11
b1111 prove11 1111 lo• publ1t uu1
th.iv wdl 11ulo1111l1c1llv 11nd 11
fo u1, W, ~eep ,11form1d tboul
111w produtl1
YOU OR YOU!t DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US wh1" you 1111d
t del1v1rv W 1 w1U d1Hv11
pu1mplly wolho~I 1rir• ehltlJI
A 9r11I ,,..,.., p11opl1 r•lv e 11 u1
for lh1or h11!th 1111d1 W1 ..... 1 •
eoll'i. r•HIU••'• io• 4,1,.,,,., ,,,.,
"' 111d '~'"i• "'cou"h
PAR.K LIDO PHAltMACY
351 Ho11p1t1I Ro•d
Ntwport l111h 642·1f~O
Fr" O.llv•rY
OPEN TONIGHT
DON'T
CLOWN
AROUND
w ith your
INCOME TAX
Apnl 15 i1 1losing ;"!
Why .,.,orry ond 1t1w
whlJ'I BlOCI( w•ll do
yO'.Jt tox 0 1 such o
1moll cottf Get Y°"'
tox f1t NOWI 5tte
$
YOUf ri«H•~,_M::.:OC.:._:~_.lOl.l.a.;L_~ oHiu lOOAY
•U~NTtf .... F' .. "!'ill .. i!IE\il We ovoro1UM ec:Ulf'ol• p111porotlo11 of t¥ery tu• ''"""· If •• MOke O""f .rrOl'I thot c..otJ you ""Y p111olty er
l"lerett. -w1n pay th11 penol1y ot i111er1t.t
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
with Sylvi1:t Porter's New Booh
MAIL THIS HANDY ORDER FORM TODAY
Only $1.25
Srttla Pertw'1 l1et•t Ti.-l .Ue
rnc1tt MlkatitM. •••f fl"
plus 25e for
h1ndhng and po1t1g•
HOCAM~Uaa
!Mk• (tltet • ....., Orlftr
ti ~$pl~ hfltr-fN GrMI"
CncSostd 11 St.SO ($1.2.5 pl14 2~ for posbp Ind h1ndl1ncJ for one
con ol ~· Porter's 1970 Income Ta: GuidL ri••s• m11I lo fM
IS followll
""'• --------------
Addrtu
Com
'
or i Stock List
S.ln tltt
lh• I H1tl t.tw ti.. (II•
l elM H•
(JI .. I l44lfl L.IW C'-V.
Mnrket
Syntbols
~\t Ulll 1 SI KtrrMc TJO Ktr•tConln 1 1<.lddl'(o 1 tot •jmKlk till! I( 1'111.051 .IQ k n1-YN5 15 l(lnrlfi' pU,)5
ic Mer p11 u
I(" .. ., "''° It rKil Co 1 10.M A 1 Ila
KniQhl N i.
IC01>1111ri &O ICo l~rp f'ICI
K t lfCll I 10 K t ... $5 .ti> K""'h'9 to K oetr 1 )0
LK G•t l «I L•m~n Se1• 1 ,..,,r. ,.
l1nv fl: '' if Lt off$1 '° L1a ·Slf9 SO l.ttSCO Otlt '-•••0 1111.M '-""W'I $0b Leed1Nor 50
LMtooa .0 Le!)P~m '° Lril Va llld Lehf'ln 5!f Ll'<>nt dfl: Mt Lev&rFd Cto L1vF nc 1S.
LFC F ntncl LFE Cop
LbOFn:r 21(1
Cjt>OF 11i. 15 Lbb fkN L L~ IYCp 'lO L brlYln 50e l bYln Pl 1S
C/t11MY1S0 lfltMV Jl"f 1 ltMY PU1S lncnNI I() L M;Na pfJ l n11 TV 33
l "9 AA 111 ln1TVof S l O!'lei Corp
l tton 1 t?I L on pk pf L Item CVP1 J Lii!~ Pl 81 loclthfflll Ar loewsTne 1 Londnlwn .JI)
l o""s C•m LontSGt I It Lang tlt 1 ;;o Lor• Corp l1 Land l to LobGE 1 SI l o N1sn ~ L')Wtnt n tO t' ~ • rtY SI to ld ow Of Lktn• SI l Lmi nt LVO Coro l~~~Yl'IQ ~ LvkYCI 1111 SO
lh11rulay March 12 1C>70 c DAil Y PILOT 21
Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchan ge List
11ltl •ot'•------------CMJ.I Nitti l.tWCloM Ott
• 'f " '" '
• ' ~· " " " "j,
' ~
"" " ' "' " l " 'll
r,
'l '" '" " ' " ' " " ,j • " " ' ~· ' .
" ' r. :1•0 M ·~ in~
•i
'" '" l 1'i:i " " .. "' "' " ·~ .. '" .~ '~ ' ~ ' "
" • • •• ' ' ' . ..
"" ~ ,,
M .. ,. . • ~" • , ..
"" " "' 37~~ '" " '" '" D >
"' •• '" ~!. ' . ~r-
" " . "
t1 l -l
Stoek Leaders
MOST SHARES
l'tl t tine iJp ! 7 I t~tllf!KOl'I UP 1)$ 1 E~IMl!t Ill' V• It lSmtft n vo0 0 01 4 Ct lttd IJ! U 6 5 Ur>0ftl'l'I v
l)p i I 6 T11ehll> fl:a Ull !11f>llfli(fll'
U_o ! 1 1 ran(f'f (Ofll \Ill J l (to\ l'"fY VII 510 Lll'IOTV /4Ji UoJO!SttotGD U11 'OU L"E C1110 Vt t l\i ta!
UP '': 01>4~11 ~= : 11 : .. 1"1.~~ \JP ' 1 11\oJ:.lfe'G
Up ' °':"~et \JP '' ftP~/./+11
UP '' ~~h I I ~: l'1 "M'»f AT c
\Jp llllf •fl .,.,
S•••• fll"l••··························•••I lllft I Hit-ltw (It• Cllf,
Prices Back Off
h1 Slow Tradi11g
NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices backed ofJ slowly
1n another slow session of the Ne\v Yory St~k Ex
chllnge today
Turnover of around nine m11\1on shares ''as
about 1n line v.1 b Wednesday s
The UPr marketw1de indicator sho\\ ed a loss
of 0 59 percent on l 564 issues on the tape Of these
853 dechned and 414 advanced
The Oo\V Jones 1ndustrral average the blue
chip ba101nete1 was dovvn l 6;i at 776 47 near the
close
Analysts said th e nlarket "as "a1t1ng for a lll
tie n1ore conc rete evidence there wa s no big rush
to buy and the Do\v could drift into the 75S..76;;i
range before support develops
One analyst said the list s s1de\vays movement
111 recent Jess1ons indicated that the n1arket 1s tak
1ng the economic slo\\ do\vn 1n stride and 1s no\V
searching !or good news to get a rally going
Most point sized swingers 1n the electronics
''ere 1n retreat \vh1l e oils traded 111 both d1rect1ons
Texaco closed at 27 1)4 up 1/2 and Jersey Stand
ard lost 1/4 closing at 54-5/8
Steels motors and chen11cal s gene1ally 1no\ed
In fractions and tv1thout definite d1reclion
P rice softened on the An1er1ran St ock I
1n light turnover
• 21~ " .. "' " "!
xch u1g c
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
S•i.1 M1I
(PtfJ ) H 111 l.tw Clo1f Cll1
-AB-
' " ,• •
"' • J ll!O • ~!
' • " •
.. ' ' ' > • •• ... " Ii! ·~ •• ~: "' ,/ •
" '"' ?l " >t :
,i.,
"' " ~· •• u. "' . ' '" "" ... ti ~
.~ ·.~ 1· '" " '" ,J. ' . Ji:
l' ' •• • l '"' • "' .. .. ' . '1 ' .l
1f ~
"' "\ .. •• ... \~~ • ... l!~ ' .. ' '. '" " '" " • " • ,!
I : ,l\i
'"' ·~:
' " • l
1il . 1l'i ~ "
J 1 If • ,~ rf: ~~:
'l ltt w' I l j fl ~ .,: , Ii,
' H 11
'! • "' ~ ' '
·~· " .. " ' " " .. •,.: ' .. • , .
" ' • ' . ' ,,,
' '" ' . . , .. " . " ' •• 1~
"
Final Stocks
In All Homo
Edmons
. • -~
•
I
'
1
l
•
•
Dlil Y PILOT • lhll~J. MMch 12, 1fi70
..f TUMBLEWEEDS .. .. .----'114 :r . -f 'EATH'£R"
: " M~BCHANT: .. • . . . ' .. . ~
;f • .
• • . • . ..,
' ;
By Charles M. Schulz
lllml~-;--:-=l·-· PEANUTS
'" Iii~
'" "" "'' ·• !':
"
iHAT STv'P!O fl!RD !5 WRITWG
A 600< TEU.IN6 E\fR;':><E ILl<AT
rT WAS UKE ~IN6Rl{ME
tlJIEN I w.45 T).{f 1-itAD f!.EAQ.f ..
• •
J'O SUf HIM eur All t'o
f'ROM8l!( 6£t W0Lto BC A
BIJNOl OF 6REAO CRtl-\\B5 !
I !,,. e lf,
'
TELEVISION VIEWS
:;;. .. Doctor Sho,vs
D1rrable
:.l:'"· By CYNTHIA LOWRY
: ~ NE\V YORK (AP) -Doctor se.ri~s have, one~
: again . proven to be durable telev1s~on, co1nmod1·
: ·ties. Three ne\v ones 'vere la~nched 1n September,
-: and all of them wi ll return for a ·second seaso~.
ABC 's "Marcus \Velby, M.D." did so \vell that it
\Vas among the first series of the season to be re·
t signed. ~ Among the three -actually it is 2·1/3 because ~ ·the medical segment of NBC's "The Bold. Ones''
''s'hilres the sc reen 'vith t"·o other story Imes ~
Robert Young's Dr. \Velby is the on\)'. one that ca:n
• be counted as a solld hit. Much of 1\s success 1s
due to Young's sympathetic portrait or a '"ise an d
. dedicated family doctor.
''MEDICAL CENTER " on CBS follo,l's the form
and, pretty much, Lhe trad!tional su~st ance o~ ~he
·trenre. There is some un\\1r1tten rule 1n TV \Y r11lng
·: .fhel medical series must have an old doctor and a
:: yQung doctor w.ho are oft~n in a conflict of idea.s.
:· Dr. \Velby JS unquesllona bl y the head man 1n
' J)ls series wilh James Brolin pl aying his S\Vingin g :~ung asSistant. E. G. Marshall and David 1-l art· l'iao of the "The Bold Ones" play, respectively, diB .. mature and young doctors, but both of them ~""u sually are supporting players to the medical in-
• *iitions and develop1nents around \vhich plots arc
! b'U!lt. : :·~
. "MEDICAL CE NTER " pla ys it safe and do,vn
! the middle. The star is the yo ung doctor. played
,Jn sober, dedicated style by Chad Everett. Its
: emphasis is on hu1nan dran1a related to illness.
l \Vednesday ni ght's hour \Vas the story of an
: .:cging former football star racing surgery to correct
~a vascular condition affecting his legs. The point
? of ~the story \\•as that it was not so niuch his legs
: tbat '"ere bothering him as the fact that life \Ya:>
: empty with the glory days behind hi1n. It \ras a
: 1fl:ildly interesting treatment in a series notable for
: i~ polished production and professional perform·
:ances.
• NBC'S "ll al l of Fame'' series \\'ill prcsenl an
·Easter drama F'riday night, an original play called
''Neither Are \Ve Ene1nies.'1 It is set in the time
of Christ.
J·lenry Denker, lhe playwright. is a specialist
)n the period. As a boy he studied to be a rabbi.
.and later had his initial success \Vl'iting radio's
:biblical series. "The Greatest Story Ever Tol d."
The play is based on t\vo men's different inter-
lJretations of the words of Jesus. Denker maintains
'that, because it deals frankly '''ith animosity be-
~,,·ee n Christians and Je\\'S. the the1ne \vould not
!have been acceptable for television a fe,v years ago.
"I COULD not have dra1natized this story until
• the ecumenical movement and spirit came along."
"he said. "I've been thinking about the story for
·vears." .. . ,.
. .
'
Deiatais tlie Menace
• By Tam K. Ryan I . SALLY BANANAS ____ _
~---
PERKINS
STEVE ROPER
!¥JN.I lEfS
TALK A BIT
OF SHOP
WHILE WE
WAIT,'
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
I O.NT STAND THE
THOU(;MT OS: POOR
CAll:L 601M6 TO TWE
MOSPIT-'L. SAM !
&UT T'°'E DOCTOR
FEELS IT"S THE
!EST PLACE !=OR
MIM, CAM ILLE ••
HERES~UR
GRLlB !
Al-~ YES!
BRING
ANOT~E:R
PLATE FOR MY
'FRIEND!
GORDO
lHANKS A MILLION
AND A H.AL.F, 60RDDr
'
•
A RfrlUR. S'11<1MNl'S'
APVl(E
Sc ~\/I <.£ ...._...,_....
i..ow ~ATEr F"o1~
CH!:AP ADVICc
··---
O.t.:tJ.. ~ _.. .-~ ... :!Au.. ...•
• H rf
By Jahn Miles
< •
By Saunders and Over9ard
~~~~~~~~~.,--....,.,
t KNOW! IT'S JIJST
TM AT I PllOMJSED
I 'D l(EEP MIM
AT HOME!
•
•
GUEST?
WE
DON'T
SERVE
IF YOU""E GONG TO
Gl\/E ADV!Ce, A~1"~,
I THINK YOU SHOUL.J)
T~'I TO M/¥.E A
MO~E ~E:LIA6LIO
APPE'AIOIANCE ...
By Harold Le Doux
I FEEL COM.PlETELY l-IELP·
LESS, SAM! WILL YOll TALK
WITH TI-IE oocror ANP TELL
MIM t PO WANT CARL !ACX
HOME JUST AS 500#
AS F'OSSI 5LE ?'
l 'U TALK WITH
HIM, CAM.lllE'. El·
CUSE ME'. THEli?E
SOMEONE AT THE
By Al Smith
NEVER MIND! coN'r
B01HER!
By Gus Arriola
-
By Men
MOLD 11' ! MOLD IT!
IF 'fOU WANT Me
lll TAKE YOUR AOV,E,
TllEIOIE'LL BE A SL14HT
e~i:gA CHARal< ...
j•l1.
TV .. DAILY LOG
THU RSDhY
MARCH 12
rvr r.1'•L
5:00 0 Bli Hew1 (CJ (60) Jer~ Dunphy.
0 m HunUey-8rlnkl1y (Cl (JO)
O tan You Top This? (C) (30)
Wink M1r1lndal1 hosts. Panelists u e
Ernest Bo1inln1, Jesse While ind
Morey Amsterd1m.
O ·"GENTLEMEN PREFER * BLONDES"! MARILYN
MON ROE -COLOR!
0 Sb: O'Qock Mcmt; (C) "fit11tl•
mtn hef1r Blo!lclu" (m11lluJ) ·53
-J1n1 R1111tll, Marilyn Monrot,
Ch1rle1 Cobu1n, [lfi(ll Rtid, Tommy
rloonan, Two Eirls seek wealtbJ
m1l1 companions 1mon1 tilt pas-
senaers on 1 Piris·boUGd h11u1J
l!nti.
0 Oick Vin Drtt (30) m Tl11 Hintsto1111 (C) (3m
(D Sbr ll'fk (CJ (60)
(Jj ) Ci) ABC Mews (C) (JO)
fl) St11<k M11-1t SMmmll)' (R)
ED What'1 Nf'll'? (30) "Amtric1n1
II . S1uiUS Iron Wo1~s."
IS (j) CBS Hews (C) (30) ro At11ec11 (30)
al Ntws In the Round (C) (60)
1:15 EE lnvnto11 SltowWI (30) (R) 1
1:30 0 KHBC Jllmmice (C) (60)
0 Slr11 Alltn Show (C) (90) Da't'id
Sou!, C1rt Rt1ner, the team of Tam .
P1tcheu ind Jay Tarses, 1nd Ken l
Barger iUest.
D Tiie liamt 1i1m1 (t) (JO) Jim
f.lacKiell hosts. Alan Sues, Kaye Sl~ven1 Ind Geor11 Lindsey i Utsl l m MJ Favorite Martia11 (CJ (30)
01) m """ lol1so11 (60) ~ fi) HuntleJ·B1i11kler (C) (30)
ED I SF1tl1l I Musk en TV (C) {30)
W1lll1m Sarot•n lliK:UsstS NITS
new opera ha.std on bis pllJ, ''MJ
Hear1's in the Hilfllands."
~Cl) Tiit MUlllltrl (JO)
ID Hotidtlf lt (C) (60)
ID lMIR Nns (C) (30)
5:45 EE This Is ltrblrt (R)
mw....,.,....,. • ..._"1
(30) Dr. Mu K.lmpelm1nn. m ,.....,.. (C) (2 hr) '"Rlfifl ..
II Conv11rlo." a:1s m Offa ,, th P'rnidnt <JO> <RJ
1:.10 o ~ oo m 11011sidt <C> 1w1
"Uttlt Jtrry Jessup." A convitttd
burglar's witt is kll1ed, le1vl111 hl1
motherless boy in shO!:k. Willl111
Sl!atner ind Miich Vtlael 1uesl. ft 81uina l'i.·G1m1 Show (C) (30)
0 @ (3) Cl) IMlkhtd (C) (JO)
"Okty, Who's the Wise Wilchr
Under 1 str1n1e Sp!!!!, S1m1nth1
and Darrin diSCOYlr ther tft prls-
oner1 Ill their own house. Allee
Ghostley 1uests 1s Umer1ld1. m Dlvtd Frost Show (C) (90) Alm-
prodk1Cer Ned Sllorrin, IClress Tsai
Chin. lorme< Gtrman U·Boat Cap.
llin Herbert-Werne1 ind sin1ert
Mid!ael Allen and Helen S111pir1
l!llest. m Tht I ii VJlltJ (C) (601 t!fl H£T P'tlftlollM (90) "A GtMr._
lion of le1ve1: 'Wills'." Thi hll·
rier dividing Be1lin brines tr111dJ
la 1 pair ol leudtnt Et~t Gtrmt•
families.
l:.tS EE 1ito1"11 ltual Show Busi11611
130)
t :OO
El WORLD PREMIERE OF * A GREAT ADVENTURE
FILM: "HUNTERS ARE
FOR KILLIN G"
0 :9. (]) CBS Thl!Dd1' Mowft:
(C) "Hanlf'fs Art ftr KllUn(" (dll·
ma) '70-Burt Reynolds, Mtl't)'lt
Dou< s. M1itin Btlsam, Stiz1n11t
Plesllette, l111y Storch. A lormtr
football $!1r, wron1full1 convicted ti
manslau11hter, returns home to tlallll
his righttul shire of hi$ t1te moth·
e(s esl1t11 ind to see his former
sweethe1rt. 0 NCAA Wesltrn Re1ion1I luktl•
b1U Plty.Olb (CJ (90) The UClA
81uins lace opl)Cnen!s (Jtl to be
d~te<m1ned) In 1 sem1!in1l 11me ol
Ille NCAA Champ1onY11ps. Dick [n-
bei1 u !!s the Klion liYe lron1
Srtlt!t..
O Corning Glass Presents * THE YOUNG AMERICANS
0 lfi) (ii C:D I Sfl(@>' I T ~ 1
Youn1 Am1rit1ns (CJ (60) Muslc-
IO'ltly, ll'OOV)' music-is the key-
llO\t of IG11ight 's sllaw. Joinin1 the
,roup of 36 )'OUnt ~n11r1 1r1
·guests Lorne Greene, TinJ Tim 1~
The Committee.
7:00 ft CBS Ev1nin1 Ntwi (t) (30) 9:15 EE H<rw Te Mtl'TJ 1 Miiiionaire (JO)
0 w1uor1 MJ Unt? (t) (30) 9:30 0 tij (I) ED Draptt (C) (30)
W I lovt Liit)' (30) "Forsery-The R1nae1." rnday ind
(D 811t 1111 Clock (C) (30) Gannon question a suspect In a ffi Commod!tf/Mutu1I fund (30) buneo·!ofielY scheme invo!vin1cned·
.21· (i) The Ame1iun Wist (C) (30) it cards. Slacr H1rris 11uesls. O Jllews (C) (30) Biller Ward.
(]) Ahorat (30) li) BIU Johns ""' (Cl (30)
~ (.[) Trvth Of Con.equenus (C) 9:t5 fl) f'SA fil111
ID Tr1111 Adventure (C) (30) 10:00 0 Qj @ €?;) tkan Martift (C)
al Th1t ;irl (C) (30) (60) Dean's 11uests 1r1 Shirler
7:30 e IS 00 f1mily Allair (C) (30)1 Booth. Vikki Calf and Paul lyndt, fr~nch asks Bill to Sllfl\ to 1' 0 (fij (}) fD PA1ii 7000 (CJ (60)
p1Dducer about an aid tamily lritnd "[Jep for Edwud Shelby.'' Br!ll•
liom [neland who is try!n& 10 brta~ nan becomn im"Olved 'll'hen an 11>-
inlo the !hta1t1. Jill TD'll'nstnd parent suici de lrigcers a d1u1hter'1 iuuts. 1 hat1ed IOI" llt1 stepmothe1. £11ube111
Nlen. Warren S!ev1ns and Bt!ind1 0 ~@ m ttanitl Botnt (C) Monl10mtry 1uest.
(60) "R11din'. 'Ritin' and Revolt." 'Boonesbo1ough school children sla8e 0 Df:Oa! (C) Georie Carlin. Earl
a revoll patterned 1f1er the Bostoo Grant lit: C.upentei.
Tea P1r1y. W1Jli1m O'Com1l!ll and I Jlll'W5 (C) (60)
Tony 01Yis 1uest. I Ptrl)' Mason (60)
0 (1!l (}) CD P'at P'1ulstn'1 H1tt1 The Advoutn. IC) (60) lR)
I ComtdJ Hour (C) (lO) Oonl El PIClr• ;1rnica {JO)
Ricki et. Wilt Ch1mberlain guest. 10:30 0 News. (C) (60)
D Million $ Movie: "A Bell 101 m Cyntlrii tJOJ
AdanD'' {dr1ma) '47-John HDdi1k, 11:00 tJ 0 0 al mm Jlltw1 (C)
l'lilli•m Bend1~. Gene Tierney. Rkh -O NCAA Weshrn Rerilin1l B11kff·
11d Conte. Alt American otticer in b•ll Play.Otfl {C) A t1ped tllec:1st
ch111e of 1~ occupied l!alian town • of the p1elimln1rr a1m1 pl1}'9ll in
wins the heuts of the lown's pea-Sta"le earl i!r lonliht. Oppontnb
pie when ~· finds a bell IOI thei1 are undetermined at press lime.
church. O Movie: "Now VOJ111r (d11m1) m Trull! ar Con•11uenctl (CJ (30) '42-BeU• Dnls. Claude Rtin.s..
W Maiof Ad1m1 (60) Paul Henreld. ID Peyton P'llct £E Ttthnlul Comtr (30) (R) '1J Ht Slid. Sht Slid (C)
ED I IFICIIL I WhJ TOii Smalt: A (U)@ @ (i) ~Cl) Ntws (C)
Sell-Tat (C) (JO) Part IV. V'iewt1s ED Washtnston W1et; in Rl'tiN (C)
ioin rt1ul1r1 in lak ing a fest !hit 111:15 @ (J) Cl'n1m1 Sfttnteti: "Mr.
rev11ls how l~t world. •round ll'ltml Peabody and tl\e Me1m11d."
can 1f!ecl their smo~1n1. ll:30 tJ ~[i)Mm li rillin {C) Ta11t-ED Cruz dt Am« (30) my Gri11es. Orwn Bean .
1:00 0 9 (iJ Ji11 Nabo11 (C) {60) 0 @ (!i) m lohnnr tanon (t)
Opera stir Muy Costa lings the Al Hi1t, Peu• C11s.
"Sempre Ubertff aria llOl!I Vudi"s 0 rn ttltk C.ntt (CJ Pete Sffrer,
"l• Tr1vi1l1" and ioin1 /'labors for Don Md.e1n .
I r.:iedler of Jeromt ~ern SOllRS, The m WIDMARK a nd PALANCE
1nt1r1 cast performs'" a productlon II JO TONIGHT KTTV' number ul\1t!n1 lht lolk son11 of * : ·
tllt wo1td. m Movlt : "Plnlc h1 11!1 strttb4
O MOYM '""' (t) (JO) J1mes (drim1) 'SO -Richard Wldm11'°
Stew1rt. Anita Louis•. .loll Gr1y Paul Do.u1!n. B1rti1r1 8!1 Geddu.
and Mtrp Chtmpian 1ued. aJ Mov11: "Tllt Fq Pink Nldit.
0 @ CD ca Tluit ;1r1 (C) (30) pwn" (comedr) '57-J1111 RusMll,
•'fbe, ShOot Pictures. Don't They!" Ralph Meeker.
Vil'll'inl tttnll OI I li!m &ht made 12:]0 0 Cofllmunlty lu!lltilr IOlf'd (C)
w!lh Don and ntlRllbor Jtriy Bau· 1:00 tJ Movie: "Min Af11ld'' (drama)
m'11. Ann i1 11\ocked to "' Jerry's 'S7-6~rp Neder, rhy!Hs Th11t1r,
wilt Ruth klssin1 1 min. Berni• Tlm Hovey.
l'ioPll1 I UlslS IS Jef!J 8aumln. Q 0 Ntlrn {C)
Alict Borden IS R\1111 81um1n 1nd' Q) Action TIIMl!I! "Rtbel 111 Town,•
Bobo lewis 11 I swilchbotrd op· 1:30 m All /'litfll Sllor. ',\n lnlfltclof
1r1tcr. Calls:· "Tiie Lone R1rt1 and U\1 m T1 Ttl1 lhi T1•th (t) (JO) Tomahaw~." "Mr. lmm1n1111t."
tl) Wo1111n and lllt M11ktl (R) 2:30 0 Jllt1111/QlM U1 This DtJ (C)
FRIDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
m "Jolln117 Cfflt l.ltttr" (dtlmt)
't3-J1mt1 C.rntf, Grace G@ofae.
ll:lO 0 "k_,."f Hol'ldtr' (d11m1) '4!1
-WU1!1m Bend!~, Ho•n car.
m1c.~1e1.
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:VOL 63, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORN IA THURSDAY, MARCH 12, '1970
Laguna , Candidates Launch Council
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Ot tM o.11'1' '"'' lll lf
Laguna 'Beach City Council candidates
touched base on malls, hippie~ and lf1ah1
Beach financing this morning as they
fielded queslions from Realtors in what
amounted to a formal opening of the
municipal election campaign.
Members of the Board of Realtors
tur~ out in force for an 3 a.m.
breakfast meeting In Ben Brown 's
re staurant at which all five council
. hopefuls made the~r first of several
sched uled group appearances.
Avoiding the customary alphabetical
order procedure, candidates drew lots to
establish .their speaking positions. Incum-
bent Joseph A. O'Sullivan drew the lead
spot, followed by Edward Lorr. Joseph
Tomehak, Richard Goldberg and Peter
Ostrander.
Continuing the lottery approach, each
speaker drew two questions out of a list
0
Triangle Leaves
2 Dead in Beach
By ALAN OIRKIN
Of tht OellY "lie! $1111
An apparent eternal triangle slaying
claimed the life of a Huntington Beach
man whose bullet-riddled body was found
early today by his distraught \\'Oman
friend.
A second victim of the shooting, the
\fOman's husband, was also found dead ,
!hot in the temple, in the same luxury
apartment.
A .38 caliber revolver was discovered
by the body or Navy Lt. J ames Burton
McClure, 38, of 2553 Pine Ave., Long
Beach. He was killed by a bullet wound
in the head, apparently self-inflicted.
police reported.
Orange County Coroner 's deputies were
\Vilhholding the name of. the man ap-
parently shot by P.icClure. The deputies
were attempting to trace and inform the
relaiives of the victim, a 46-year-old
retired Navy commander.
The shooting took place at a block of
luxury apartments, the Hunt.ington Capri
-"Where the Living ls Fun". according
to a billboard -at 6200 Edinger Ave. in
lluntington Beach.
Poli~ reported that the shooting oc-
cured at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday but was
not discovered unlll J.:4{ o'clock this.
morning when McCl~e's wile, Grace
~1eredilh, called officers.
Could Cha1age Electio1a
Capo District May Join
Two-tl1irds Bond Battle
Capistrano Unified School District may
join other California schocil districts in a
suit aimed al overthrowing the two-third s
yes vote requirement for passage of
aeneral obligation bond measures.
Truman Benedict, district superin-
tendent, said today he has asked the
Orange County Counsel's Office to reporl
on the advisability of such a course.
The suit initiated in northern Californ ia
)las already been joined by the Santa Ana
Unified School District. If the suit is suc-
cessful, it would lower the yes-vote re-
quirement to a simple majority .
Lagu1ia Approves
Sign Ordinance
M odificutions
Laguna Beach city councilmen at 1
special meeting \Yednesday night ap-
proval modifi cations of the s i g n
ordinance recommended by the Planning
Commission and \'oled to in struct the
commission to initiate procedures to
amend the ordinance accordingly.
t-.1eanwhile. the council agreed, the city
.staff will be instrucled to enforce the
ordinance as if the amendments already
were in effect, to enable firms to comply
\vith a sign moratorium deadline ol April
IS. In a minor change. the council changed
the proposal that seven lines be used to
measure sign area aod ruled that
"minimum out.side perimeter" could be
measured with whatever lines necessary,
except (or re-entrant lines. .
Other modifications concern pole signs.
shopping center signs and parallel ~1.gn.s
on the front of buildings. The modif1ca·
lions generally make the ordinance
somewhat les! re.strk:tive and remO\'e
problems that have caused enforcement
dlfrlculties.
Benedict sa id he understands that U the
Capistrano Unified joins the suit, and it is
successful, it could valtdate the bond in-
terest rate proposition that Josl Tuesday
with over 61 percent of the voters casting
yes voles.
Benedict said lhe slate supreme court
of Idaho has already held the two thirds
majority requirement unconstitutional.
California school officials are hoping the
California state supreme court will reach
the same conclusion under the U.S.
Supreme Court one-man--0ne-vole ruling.
State Sen . John Schmitz CR-Tustin} in
an effort to head such a c0urt ruling off
at the pass, has introduced legislation
which could make passage dependent on
yes votes from the majorify of all those
registered in the district.
Reagan Selects
Lagt1na Aide
A pair of Orange Col!Jlty Republican
leaders were appointed today as key
aides in Gov . Ronald Reagan's campaign
to seek a second term in Sacramento.
Edward Mills, of 2526 Riviera Drive, in
the lrvine Cove area of Laguna Beach,
will serve as Reagan's Souther n
Cailfornia finance chairman.
David L. James, a certified public ac·
countant in Anaheim, ·•at designated the
governor's Southern California campaign
chairman.
Miiis is vlce president of Holmes Tuttle
Enterprises. a Los Angeles rirm. and has
long been acli\'e in GOP political circles,
according to friends.
James is past chairn1an of the Orange
County Republican Central Commilltt.
San Francisco attorney Paul R. Haerlc.
former appointment.! secretary Io r
Reagan, will head the N o r t h e r n
California effort, with Jackquelin lf.
Hume, or San Francisco, Its finance
chief.
COMING .MAllCK 30
to the
DAILY PILOT
•
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or 10 previously presented to n!al estate
people.
Each was allotted five minutes to ris-
POlld to the questions, rolloy,·ed by a few
minutes or rebuttal at the close of the
talks.
Reading his first quesUon, ''Do you
have a solution to the parking problem?"
O'Sullivan quipped. "If I had the soluUon
I wouldn't have to be here -I'd know the
outcome of the election~"
Parking, he agreed, is one of Laguna 's
eac
Bombs ]at
Manhattan
Skyscrapers
NE\Y YORK (UP!l -High pawered
bombs which anliestablishment revolu·
tionaries claimed to have set devastated
the offices of major corporations in three
~1anhattan skyscrapers early today and
set off a rash of bomb scares forcing
e\•acualion of stores, schools and courts.
The bombers informed police o{ their
plot in advance, so that night workers
cOuld be evacuated.from the skyscrapera
-1JJ within a 15'-block area. There was
not enough time. however, to search for
the bombs. which injured no one.
United Press International received a
special delivery letter several hours later
from a group calling llself "Revolu-
tionary Force 9" which took credit for
the bombings. Tl said the offices or
Socony Mobil Oil , International Business
J\fachines, and General Telephone &
Electronics were chosen because they
profit from war and exploit and degrade
human li.fe.
Following a pattern set in olher cor-
porate bombings in the past year. bomb
threats harassed police throughout the
morning . Among the buildings which had
to be evacuated for searches were the
Manhattan arid Brooklyn f e d e r a I
courthouSes, Bloomingdale's department
store, lhe Consolidated Edison building
and several schools.
The circumstances and results of the
hvmbings were "very similar" to anotiler
triple bombing last Nov. 11 thal hit other
officts in ~1anhatlan, a police official
said.
Later this mor!ling, police receiv ed
another anonymous telephone call with
the message that four bombs were set to
explode in the lower level of Grand Cen.
tral Terminal at 5:30 a.m. An emergency
crew of police and riremen waited on the
main level until after 5:30, then searched
the dciwnstairs area.
There were no immediate indica tions
who placed the bombs. An anonymous
message senl to news media last fall
after the earlier explosions sa id they
were don e by "white
Americans .•• striking blows for libera-
tion" in opposition to the Vietnam war
and "the giant corporations of America."
The police received today 's warning
telephone call at I :06 a.m. EST on the
city's specia l emergency number -911.
A man with a deep voice said bombs
were seL to go off at 1: 40 a. m. in the
Socony Mobil building at 150 E. 42nd St ..
the IBM building al 425 Park Ave. and
the General Telephone & Electronics
Building at 730 Third Ave.
Emergency units rushed to each loca-
tion and spread the \\'arning to the
mainlPnanee and cleanup crews al "'ork
-a total of 65 people 'A'ere in the three
buildings.
Triton Capers
To Open Friday
\Vednesda)''s article In the Dally Pilot
detaJUng the program for the annual San
Clemente High School Triton Capers in·
correctly said the revue would open
Wednesday nlghl. when. actually, the
two-night show will open Friday evening.
The PTA~ sponsored show, featuring
dozens of student entert.aine.r.s. wlll begin
at a p.m. Friday and Saturday evenfngs.
1'idtcu...re..available at lhe door.
Stock Jtfnrkeo
most serious problems. "Various 1p-
proaches will be suggested In the general
plan," he said, "but actually much wi ll
depend upon deve\opmen,t of t h e
downtown area. If we go to the mall con-
cept, which I favor, we would have to
provide parking, probably in parking
structures outside the r.iall area to which
occupants of the maJI could contribute
financing. \Ye also can finance by
mete.red parking,. as at the beach lot
y,·hich now brings in $8.000 a year in
revenue. This wjll require a tolal study of
downtown development."
To trls seeond quesllon, "Wb&t l$ your
opinion regarding annexation of more
area to the city. and its development·?"
O'Sullivan saJd the concept ol anne1allon
for annexatJon itself must be avoided.
"Each ar:e"a must be evaluated,'; be
said. ''We must make sure U WI.II, benent
the community and not be a hardshi p
economically. However, it still may be
appropriete to anneii::~ developing areas
ote
Dow11 by the Riverside
Police stand a young man on his head during height of 'demonstra·
tion at UC Riverside Wednesday during visit by Governor Reagan.
Two persons were arrested during demonstration which marked
the first time police have ever been called to the Riverside campus
in force. See story, Page 8.
Mesa Holdup Gang Trio
Face Laguna Beacl1 Rap
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 llM Otll'r r1i.t Sift!
Extradition of three Colo1·ado killer
sus pects -unarmed for the first time in
an alleged cross-county crime spree when
captured in Costa Mesa -formally
began today .
Hearings were set for two members of
the suspected Bonnie at1d Cly~·style
gang this afternoon in Orange County
Superior Court.
The suspected ringleader, who once
reportedly told hls mother he wo11\d
never be taken alive, goes before the
bench Friday morning as the first step
in his return lo Colorado.
ComplainlS charging first d e g r e e
murder in the brutal beating death of a
Colorado Springs pawnbroker Feb. 19
were Issued Wednesday in the RocKy
Mountain ~tale.
Jack C. Matney, 32. of Denver, Colo ..
Sod iloward R. Tschirhart, 31, of Kansas
City, Mo., were due In court today,
represented by public defenders.
1'.:ii::tradition hearing for James E.
Jackson, ~. or Independence. Mo .• ts ael
ftt" Frldi)' morning and hi too wiD be
counseled by a publk: de{ender. ..
modest jewelry and loan shop was looted
of numerous guns, jewelry and other
goods.
The victim's body was found crouched
in the blood-splashed restroom of his
business, as though seeking refuge from
the rain of heavy blows.
Costa Mesa Police Detectlve Capt. Bob
Green said additional C()mplalnL! would
be Issued today charging the trk> with li-
quor store robberies In Laguna Beach
and. Newport ~ach.
He said Jackson ls suspected as the
bari<lil who brutally plstol·wtrlpped Ralph
ll. Ames' during a $102 robbery Feb. I at
the Korker Liquor Store in Laguna
Beach's Boat Canyon.
"The victim said there was no rea!On
(See HEA RINGS, Page. i1
South LagWian Held
Ou Weapons Charge
A South ~na man was cited on 1
m!sdemeanOr charge or earryin1 a con-
..... ~ •eapon w~'ll' night.
NEW YORK (AP) -The stnck m,rket.
dr ifted downward on light 1r1dlng, lat~
this aflernoon. (See quotallons, Pages .
21).21 ).
If they choose to" waive. e,traditiol'I,
the)' will be rewrned swlflt)', but the1 trio
could spend several montM In Oran3e
County JaO ll they fight thedictlon.
Jackson, Ptlatney and 'htblrhart are ror~l!y accused or the rme-bludgeo9
murder or Erling Nielsen 61, -Whose
U.guna BeocH police cil<d Robert
Krlivoy~ 54·, ·or· 21501 Qcear •• Vista. whtn OW.y noticed. a .22 caliber revoJver con--
cealed In his . waistband. The ausped
reportedly was talking with the m1n11fer
or the Taco Be.D Jn Sleepy Hollow when
cllcd.
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Today's Final
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TEN CENTS .
Drives
adjacent to the city even U they are not
self·1Ypportlng. "La.run• Beaeh has grown slowly, but
thJs will no longer be the case with the ar-
rival of the freeway and opening or new
are.as. It will be important for us to be
able· to control some of this adjacent
development, but it must be done
carttully. We also will have to do some
'seilln1' to convince property owners and
the Local Agency Formation Commission
(See CAMPAIGN, Poge ll
ea ? •
New Park
May Absorb
Choice Land
A proposed $29 million beachfronl hotel
for Capistrano Beach mayr never leave
'he drawing boards.
The choice beach Instead may become
part of Doheny State Park.
Wtlliam Penn Mott, director of the
State Department of Parks and Recrea-
tion, confirmed today thal his depart·
ment haS been talking with ownership of
the property with an eye to buying it.
Acqutsltion of the hotel site, now owned
by Cap_l!trano Beach lnvestment Co .•
Ltd., would add about 1500 front feel to
the 1,ooo.leet Doheny Park ocean front.
Located al the south end or the popular
pa~ the pmperty lies between the Sanla
Fe Rlllrold r!1ht-of·way and the ocean.
Jt nrtei in width be lween 100 and 200
1 .. 1.
Strapped for funds because of lhe S
percint bond in terest ceiling, the stale
would llke to buy the site ii the owners
will aecep\ bonds bearing five percent in-
terest in lieu of cash. Also, JI proposition
1even pasm in the June primary thts
would mate additional funds available
for beach acquisition.
The state is prohibited from paying
more than appraised value of property.
If details can be worked out, said Mott.
the acquls!Uon of the property ·would
have a !Ugh priority with lhe state. All
beaeh land from Pt. Conception to lhe
Mell can border has high priority, but
this especially because It is contiguous to
an exi.sUn1 park.
"An)' lineal footage we could acquirl'!
U\tre woul d not sather any dust,'' said
Mott. "Th is has the ingredients of an
ideal acqulsttion." He called it "one or 1
number of projects the planning people
are developing as sort of shoppin~ list."
Loyd V. Steere, chairman of We In-
vestment company's board , said in a re-
cent letter to the C()mpany's limited
(See PARKS, Page %)
PILOT SALUTES
MARINE SHOW
The DAILY PILOT toda)' salutes the
Secor,cf AMual Western National Boat
and Marine Show, opening Friday at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Three pages ol stories, photos and ads
offer readers a guide to lhe 1970 boat
show. They start on Page 29.
Orange Coas t
Weat•cr
Intermltt.ent cloudiness bul most·
ly sunny skies is the cautious word
from the weathuman for Friday.
Look for mercury readings of 65
along the C()ast and 70 ialand.
INSIDE TODAY
DAILY PI L 0 T basketball
playtrs holler "polict brutolitv"
as ihe Cotta ~ftsa eop:i hand
tl1tm a 63·44 drubbing, all in
tlit non1e of chority. Tilt grut·
1ome del.aill art on Paat 26
today.
Ctllftrl!• L " IMVltt ..
Cll«al1!9 llf ' MlllNI ,~ " c .. n111.t ... N1,..,..,I ·-•• c-•u • OrMt,. C-IY " ,..._ " ·~"''• ... ,,., " 0..1111 "911r .. " '""' "'" .,,......,.., " Slt<ti Mt!tttl Jt..21
••lttrl .. ,. • Tlk'lllitll • a..ttitt•"""9ftt " 'tMth"' • ,.IMM11 ,.,, Wt .. Jltf ' ... ........ .. Wlllft Wit\~ n ... ,_, " ·-·1 Ntw lJ<lf ...... ' -· ·-... -· "
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! DAILY PILOT SC Thum!11, M1tth l~ 1970
CAPISTRANO BEACH CLUB, WHERE REVELERS ONCE ROMPED, NOW Jusl' .A'S'Hi1L:L'""
Strand May Become Part of Doheny St•t• P1rk, If Price Is Right
t'rom Page 1
CAMPAIGN OPENS ...
1 \,AFC) that the annexation is valid."
F'irst qucslion addressed to candidate
Ed"'ard Lorr \l:as, "llO\V y,·ould you
suggest the city ff,1d re\'enue to pay for
!he beach park?''
CRITICAL PROBLE~I
"This is a critical problem facing the
taxpayers of Laguna Beach," Lorr said.
•·1 feel the City CouncjJ ignored soine
good advice given it by the Chamber of
Commerce in 1967. In the first place they
paid too much for the beach.
.. They also ignored the Chamber or
<..:oinmer~ recommendation that some
commercial development would be the
only way to meel the bond obligation. We
must develop a commercial·holel zone on
a portion of the f\iain Beach . The first
step is setting up a hotel zone. The City
Council has been dragging ils feel in this
area."
To !he question, '·Do you have a solu·
lion to the parking problems of
mercha nts on the north and 50uth ends of
town?" Lorr replied, "I would suggest
that a portion of the $1,000 fee merchants
are required to pa y when they cannot
provide on-site parking be set aside for
the north and south sides. Also. the
merchants could be encouraged to
purchase land for parking J o ts
themselves and lease it to the city, v.·hich
could provide metering and main-
tenance."
LEADERSIDP LACK
Lorr said he is running for office
because, "I am t'Oncemed al the direc~
lion lhe city has taken in past years and r
feel there is a lack of leadership at a high
le vel. 1 would like to help restore
L.iguna"s image.''
The third speaker, Planning Com·
missioner Joseph Tomehak. was asked,
"What v.·ould be you r solution to the pro--
blem of land areas in the city at present
not buildable because of lack of access?"
The Planning Commission, Tomehak
replied, had been given a presentation by
the Cordoba Company which he con·
sidered "woefully unprepared ," although
the basic idea for this type or develop-
1nent was "very good." The problem, he
said. v.·as Cordoba's attempt to apply "a
flat-land density concept to an area with
25 per cent unslable soils."
''\\le have been protected by our
topography so far." Tomehak said, "but
our tim e is running ou t. \\le must realize
that there "'ill bt more and more
sophisticated develope rs coming down
here and we must be prepared to cope
with this.
EXPECT MORE
''Before we accept a pig in a poke we
must consider needs for police, fire,
schools and access roads. Instead of jum·
ping into something from casua1 draw.
ings. the city should expect more. t.1any
peopl e are interested in developing
Laguna and we must be very careful,
c>special!y in the development of in·
accessible areas."
To the question, "Do you think our
present parks are adequate for recreation
needs" Tomehak replied that he did not.
Noting Laguna's average population
age of 40 years, compared with the coun·
ly a1'erage of 24, he suggesttd that
recreation should be considered in two
separate areas, lor older and for younger
residents.
The idea of developing a recreation
area adjacent to the new Boys' Club he
described as "excellenl," adding that
mini-parks throughout the city also would
be a wor1hv•hile addition.
Tomehak exprtssed regret th at
••teams" seemed to be lorming in the
council race. •'J don't bt'lie\'e in 'good
guys and bad guys,'" he uld, "Laguna
needs a mosaic of representation."
HIPPlE PROBLEM
Opening his first <1utstion. Goldberg
grinned, "I got the good one~" It read.
"\Vbat is your opinion about the hippies
and what would you propose to do.
assuming you do not 11pprove?"
"In my mind ," said the councilman.
"this Issue is the number one problem in
Laguna Beech toda)'." This drew ap-
plause from Lhe Rea ltors.
"The h1ct lh•t someone has long hair,
or a beard or dresses dlUeren tly, is nol
the problem," ht continued. "What con·
cerns me most Is the tremendous in-
Urges Rights Stand
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen 11 t f'
Republican Leader l·fugh Sco!l ur.1ed the
White J1ouse loday to Issue a clear cut
staltment ln support of Negro ch•1I
rlghll.
"1 thlnll' It 11 time ror some? unequivocal
sta~cnt on racinl jusllce from
downtown," he told reporters when ,11sked
to comment on crltlci.sm of PrC?sidf.nt
Ni1on·s hand ling of the bi.sue by Sen.
Edward W. Drooke (R-Ma.ss.)
crease in narcotics arrests. Only la st
v.·eek Laguna Beach was hailed in the Los
Angeles press as a center of the narcotics
industry -that could take care <>f whet
\\'e thought was our main industry
(tourism)."
Goldberg said he would favor opening
of a branch of the County Health Center
in Laguna Beach and perhaµ! a counsel·
ing center to help steer young people
.i11vay from drugs .
NOT ENFORCING
"I do not believe we are enforcing all
our Jaws."' he added. citing as examples
the leash Jaw, the law againl!it sleeping on
the beach and health and sanitation laws
relating to housing.
Goldberg said he does not believe the
p<>tice force is adequate to cope with the
situation but urged complete community
cooperation. "You as .Realtors must be
alert," he said, "and make sure that your
r~.n~s are occupied by lhe persons
specified in the lease."
Asked his views on future growth and
development of the downtown area,
Goldberg noted that the general plan
would not include a specific plan for this
area, but in his view such a plan should
be in.itlated soon and should Include
enhancing the Art Colony image and
development of specialty shops, among
other things.
Noting his eJght years of service as
president ol the Chamber of Commtrc:e
and city councilman, he vowed to con·
tin ue to serve as "2f..hour, local, in-
town representaUve."
CHARTER CITY
Peter Ostrander, replying to the <1ue.s-
Hon, "What is yoor feeling regarding ef-
ficiency ol the present city ad-
ministraUon?" said, "It leaves a lot to be
desired.
"I feel we should explore the possibilit,
of becoming a charter city, to remove
some of the present stale reatrictions. I
also feel we shou ld go back to separating
the jobs ol city clerk and city ad-
ministrator because J feel Jim Wheton is
overburdened and sh<>uld not be asked to
handle both jobs."
Asked his opinion of the proposed hotel
zone, Ostrander noted that he bad
participated in the preparation of five
drafts of an ordinance for such a tone
and still believed such a zone should be
created, but applied only to the area ad·
jacent to the ocean, and then only as
desired by property owners. "\Ve don't
hal'e to re-zone," he aid, "just give them
the option <>f using CH zoning if they
v.·ish." Although one reason for adopting
a hotel ione would be to improve the
economic condition of the community,
Ostrander commented. "I also let:!
aesthetics will improve the economy.''
ASSORTE D ISSUES
Asked if they \\'ished to respond to
comments made during the talk!, the
candidates picked out an assortmenl of
issues.
O'Sullivan referred to Lorr's remark:\
on council handling of the t.1ain Beach
purchase and listed steps being take n to
set up the necessary commercial
development. "\Ve must get I he
necessary money without destroyi ng the
charm that is there," he said. "\Ve now
arc seeking plans for a commercial
development. but we have to remember
this building v.·i\I be there to SO years and
y,·e must not overbuild in our attempt to
pay the cost." •
Lorr reiterated his charge that the
C\'.luncil had ignored the ad\'ice of thr
Chamber or Co1nmerce and said. "If 1
were elected to the City Council I y,·ould
seek the advice of experts v.•e have right
here in the communily."
Tomehak commenting on do1\'Tllown
redevelopment. said "Malls don't mean
just paving over a street-there has to be
complete redevelopment. I v.·ou\d like to
consider something like San Francl!CO'!
Gblrardelli Square v.·bere the lumber yard
is, for example."
BIG BOONDOGGLE
Tomehak took the City Council lo task
(or not telling the Planning Commls~lon
about the •lolscher report (on Main
Beach devel opment) until \t had been
ordered. "This \\'BS one of the blgge~t
boondoggles \\'e 've ever had," he said .
"They spent $4,000 and then 111ve up on
it " He said he 1vould agree wilh
Ostrander regarding in\•esUgaUng the
charter city plan.
Noting needs for more recreation
areas, parks and greenbelts, Goldberg
said , "Where Is lhe money going to come
from? It was for this reason that I
proposed that the City Council resume
pl11ns for a hotel zont, which will be our
only ~alvallon. ''
On downtov.·n deveklpment, he 1aid , "I
qursOon whether we c11n afford to v.•11ll
years for the development oC mall s. It
could be a waste of city property. Parkin g
loL~ we now OV.'n could be de veloped as
parking s1ructurcs and be an asset In·
stead of a Unbillty,"
From Page J
PARKS • • •
partners that growing concern over
beach acquisition for public use has
stimulated possibility (If state purchase or
the beach section. ·
He no~eiJ that Doheny State Park has
recorded more advance reservalionli than
any other park in the state system.
'.fh~ Orange County Planning Com-
m1ss1on last year approved plans for a
hotel and commercial center at the site.
This included a height variance that
would allow structures 100 feet, 65--feet
above the zone limitation.
Original plans of the owners were for
the immediate constfuction of the first
phase. This was reportedly sidetracked
by the tight money market that stalled
financing .
\Vhen a variance renewal was sought
from the county, the owners also asked
relief from the requirement that they
build a roadway overpass to span the
railroad.
A spokesman for the investment com·
pany said the overpass is sUll planned
but that it is not economically feasible In
the f11st phase of the: development.
A group (If property owners on Beach
Road protested the request. They claimed
that traffic caused by the hotel would
congest the only access over the tracks.
Each of the four tower structures i! 200
units.
The original hejght variance was
granted over the protests of homeowners
on the bluff who opposed loss of their
view <>f the ocean.
A planning commission decision to u -
tend the variance relates to negotiation
with the owriers to provide a second
street level access to Beach Road.
Fro111 Page 1
HEARING1 ...
for the beating at all, .. said Capt. Green,
adding that 2f stitches were taken in his
scalp.
Tbey are also charged with the $500
gunpoint stickup Of clerk D<>nald E.
Zerwekh Feb. 8 at the Sportsman's Li·
quor Store, 2615 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach.
Two men with midwestern accents
entered and browsed in each case. while
a third man was believed waiting outside
in a getaway car.
Capt. Green said today they have also
been linked to five or six additional arm·
ed robberies in MisS()uri, w h i I e
authorities in several states want toques·
tion them.'
A fourth suspect arrested last Frida y
\\'hen police surrounded a home at 5141,l
Bernard St.. 1.1rs. Patricia Phipps, 24, <>f
Independence, Mo. is charged with a
local burglary.
She is held at Orange County Jal\, pen-
ding arraignment ?\larch 18 in Harbor
Judicial District Court, but may be turn-
ed over 00 f\.1issouri authorities where she
is wanted for forgery.
Several months pregnant, the young
v.·on1an \\'ho left a husband to accompany
.Jackson \vest is expected to be sub·
poenned \vhen her traveling companions
eventually go on trial in Colorado.
Youth Faces 2nd
Marijuana Rap
A 20..ycar-Old youth on pl"9bation for use
of drugs .,..,as arrested Wednesday night
on charges of possession of marijuana.
i\1ichael Ste\•en Able, 20, of 341 Third
St., Laguna Beach, was apprehended in
his home following a visit by his pro-
b.ilion officer and two Laguna detectives.
Detectives Neil Purcell and Norman
Babcock acc ompanied probation officer
C11rl Sanders to Abie's residence at 10:40
p,m. /I search or the pre1ni!es unco\•ered
enough marijuana c<>ntained in a plastic
beg to roU 10 cigarettes. police said.
The cache 1vas discovered in a dresstr
drawer , officers reported.
Able will appear in muiUclpal court to-
dJy.
Germans Will Close
Rhodesian Consulate
BONN. Germany (AP) -The Wat
C.ermnn · go\'ernment d(!(ided today to
close dov.•n its consulate In S.11 tlsbury.
thus removing tht. only off lclsl \Ve!l Ger·
ma11 mission in Rhodesia.
The \\lest CC'nnan move follov.·s !he
lead taken by thf' Unl t('d Stfl:tt's and
other countrie11 since the l11n Smith rt·
glme procJalmed Ithodesla • rtpubJlc.
.. .....
Carpenter Enters R_ace
Will Seek Schniitz Seat i1i Senate
By THOMAS FORTUN~
Of ... o.llY .. illf"St•ff
Dennis Carptnter of Newport Beach to.
day announced he is a candidate for the
California Slate Senate seat to be vacated
by Senator John Schmitz (R·TustlnJ who
is running for Congress.
liis·. impellding aMouncement was
rumo'red Wednesday.
Carpenter. as chairman or t h e
California Republican State Central Com-
mittee. Is one of California 's most
po1o1-·erful Republicans and close to Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
The candidate look out papers this
morning and then m a d e his an-
nounetment in Newport Beach before
about 25 friends and Repu~lican workers
lln.d the p.rcss.
The 34th Stele Senate DI s Ir 1 c t
Carpenter Is seeking to represent C()\'ers
most of Orange County ex cept for strips
on the north and northwest edges. It is a
district in which 56 percent of the voters
are registered Republican .
carpenter said philosophically he lits
the district like a glove.
He said Sen. Schmitz Is going to run on·
ly for the Congressional seat ·vacated
with the recent death of James Ult (R·
Tustin) and is not going to file for reelec-
tion to the State Senate. lie knows, he
sai d, because he asked Schmitz.
Carpenter said he also touched base
\vith Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·
Newport Beach) and Badham told him he
Not for Birds
Swallo·ws Si, Pigeons No • Lil Capo
San Juan Capistrano's famed swallows
might find their nests a little shaky when
they return to the historic .nission t.-1arcb
19.
Although a traditional warm welcome
is planned for them, their cousin, the
pigeon, isn't faring too wel l.
Capistrano city councilmen upholding a
planning commission ,Jecision said
\\'edrlesday that the keeping of' racing
pigeons in a residential zone isn't a
compatible 111nd use.
The case in particular was a 20 .000
square foot lot whose zoning does allow
keeping one horse.
Why horses and not pigeons? "Horses
don 't fly,'' said Planning Director Bob
Johns.
The trouble with racing pigeons seems
lo be that although kept in cages for
feeding and roosting they are let out
usually once a day for 10 or 15 minutes
for exercise. They conUnue to circle
abo ve lheir cages in a wide area and
eventually drop one by one to their cages.
Bul there are other pigeons in town
that aren't so orderly. }lundreds of fluffy
while pigeons who serve as year round
stand.ins for the swallows reside in the
eaves and ruins of the old mission. They
occasionally stray from their roosts into
neighboring residential areas.
And there are the swallows themselves
who suddenly lose their popularity \\•hen
they start building mud nests under the
ea\'es of roors all over Capistrano, \\'hen
accommodations are full at the mission.
The rnayor when asked about the
swallov.•s could only shrug and say,
"\Veil. t guess .,...e can't do anything about
them."
But he did agree with the pigeon
decision recallhig an incident last year
v.·here racing pigeons were kept in a
1nuch denser residential area.
;;IL was a mess," said Chermak.
"\\!omen couldn't even hang up their
laundry. People v.'ere even out there "'ilh
~hotguns trying to help the owner clean
them up."
New Develop1nent Zo11e
Approved by Capo Council
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
\\!edl'leiday night paved the way for the
approval of the rezoning of 19 con-
lroversial acres from residential to plan-
ned development
The pla nned development zone would
allow developers to build condominium
type residences on the property which is
localed between The Casas housing
development and the San Diego Freeway.
Most of the residents of The Casas, who
have led an active protest against the
rezone, indicated a v.·i!lingness to com-
promise with the developer. \\'estport
Enterprises.
A list of conditions approved by ap-
proximately 75 percent of th e
homeowners in The Casas was presented
lo the.city council. The conditions are:
-The dwellin g unils are to be single
family and will not exceed eight per acre
or 35 feet In height.
-Architectural motif v.'ill be Spanish,
similar to The Casas.
-A greenbelt will serve as a buffer
between the \Veslport property and The
Casas.
-If the 19 acres is sold before it is
developed It will re vert back to the
residential zone.
Conditions \\'hich Westport represen-
latives agreed to, will be placed into a
special city ordinance which will apply to
this parcel only. The ordinance will apply
lo the rezone only ir the conditions arc
1nct.
Pla nning director Bob Johns said the
conditions can be insured during Che
building permit phase.
City attorney John Daw son said that
~oning land with conditions altached Jias
only recently been allowed by Jaw.
Woman, 63, Hit
By Car, Injured
A pedestrian was treated for contusions
and abrasions at South Coast Communi ty
Hospital \\'cdnesday afternoon after
being struck by a car.
Laguna police sai d r..1rs. Helen E.
Hardy, 63, of 2i0 Cliff Dri ve, v.·as at a
cross1\•alk at the corne r of Coast
Highv.•ay and Broadway when she was hil
by a car driven by ~frs. Barbara Carso n,
39. of 130 E1nerald Bay.
Mrs. Ca rson was making a left turn on·
to Broadway, police reported, \\'hen the
accident occurred.
~ill probably · refile ror the Assemby,
might run for Congress. but is nol In·
terested in the rnce for State Senate.
Assemblyman Robe rt Burke (R·Hun·
tington Beach) has declared again for the
Assembly.
Carpenter said he has heard n1mors
that Superior Court Judge Bruce Sun1ner
of Laguna Beach, a former Assemblyman
v.·ho was defeated by Schmitz for tht
Senate seat in a Republican primary,
might run again. •le said he doesn't
belie\•e !he rumors and bas not talked to
Sumner.
Carpenter said he decided to run after
consulta.t.ioa \1·1th Gov. Reagan. He said
some party officials in Sacramento told
him enviously that his is 1'a solid gold
Senate district."
T1vo Cliorales
Blend Voices
~!embers of Laguna's Festival of Arts
Chorale and the Philh.ermonia Chorale ol
North Orange County Junior College
District will blend their voi ces in two.
specia l musical programs on successive
"·eeke nds in Laguna Beach a n d
Fullerton.
Accompanied by a ~piece <>rchestr3.
under direc tion of Kenneth Helvey, the
vocal groups \\1ilt sing "Gloria" by
Poulenc and "Gloria " by Viva ldi.
The first presentation will be at 4 p.m.
Sunday. ~iarch 15. in the Community
Presbyterian Church, Forest Avenue,
Laguna Beach. On Sunday. Jo.larch 22, at
a time to be announced, the same pro-
gram will be presented in Recital Hall at
Fullerton.
Soloists are Marilyn lnter\andi of
Laguna Beach and Sue Patchell of Sanll
Ana. ·
Admission is SI.SO for adults and so
ren!s for students.
DAILY PILOT
New,art IHc:ll
l•9•h •••c:ll
Co1t11 M"°
H•1lli"fto11 hnll
fo•11toia Yalley
Sot Cl1111a11te
Oii.ANGE co-.sr PUaLISMING COM,AN'f
lt obe•I N. Weed
PreslGenr Ind Pvblbfler
J1c:~ R. C urley
Vkt PrulG"'r 1ro:r Gm11"1! M111a1•r
Thom•t K11•il Eoltor
Thom•1 A . M urphi111
M1n1gl!!v Eclhor
Rich1rd P. Nill
Soum 0••1>9• CO\lnt y Eclllor
Offices
Co1!1 Mf11: JlO Wtil 81y $!rid
Ntwpon B11c11: Jn I Wt11 DolbOe 8oulov1ra
L•gUN 8Nt11: tn FOrffl Avenue
Hun1t11111on B11ch: 1111! 8t1Ch Boulfvlfcl
Sin CltM1nt1: :Ila North El C1ml1111 11.tlf
OAILY PILOI, woll! Which I,. comll(ntd 1111 !'<,.,,.p,e~~. " pUOlb ht'd OIHy e•t tPI 511n-
doy In 111>1•llt lld!Uont !or Lttunt 811c11,
NWWPOl'I 8tlU!, Cotll Me,.. Hun!lr.glon
8ffCll Ind FO\llllltn V1llay. lfllntl will! two
r~lonal edl!l11n1. Or11191 Cot1t Puo11,i.1na
Com!Mlny Pf'•llll"9 p11ni. ••• II 2211 Wesl
8lltl01 81..... NWWPOr/ 811cll, i nd lJl:I
Wtll ll1y Street, Cotti Mt11.
Tel1plla .. 17t4J 642-4121
ClailfiM Ath-ml1l"f 642-5671
Sa• Clem011te All Departntetlh:
Tefeplloq 492.+420
Copyrlgl!!, 1'70, 0•1na1 Cotll PuDtllhlna
Com1>111y. No ntwt l!Grltt. Hluilr11len1
t'Oltorlel .nnner or ..OV.rllnml"!i ,..,1+~
mev tit •tPrl>llU«d wlrl!Ovl •Pt<lt l ,,.,.
mln!Oll 01 copyrlghr OWl\l"I',
S9(0f\d CllH POUtgt pelt! ti NtWPOl1 811c1'1
t <ld Co111 Mtu, C111fornf1. Subscrip!lon by
ca"!" U.00 mon1n1v; 11v mi ll n so monr111v·
mlllt1ry Clt1!1111tl0!'1, 11.00 mcwiThly '
LAST 3 DAYS
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
STORE HOURS; THURS. & FRI. TIL 9--SAT. 'TIL 5:30
JJ.J. (Jarrell ONCE·A~ YEAR
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE SALE
H.J.GARRETf fllRNITLIRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Optft Moft,, Thurs. l Fri. l vn. 221 S HARBOR IL VO.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646-0275 6'6.0276
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11
HISTORIC ORANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE IS NOW AN OFFICIAL HISTORIC SITE
Laguna 'S' Club to Host
Big Regional ~tference
By FRED SCROEMEllL
ot tf1t D•ll'f l'ilel Sl1ff
,PEGGY HOLf\1 and her pals in the high
5chool "S" Club, the junior wing of the
Soroptimist Club, are busy as this
v.•tekend approaches. The club will be
hOstess club ror the Southwestern United
Stp.les "S" Club conference, thi'ii Satur·
d~'y at the Newporter Inn.
One Laguna dignitary, attorney Bill
\Vilcoxen, i.vUJ be on hand, in a panel
dl::scussio n on conservation.
He is seeking the 35th Congressional
siat. Also :slated nn the panel is author
\Vesley Marx, whose recent book The
Frail Ocean, has been hailed by con-
servationists as a "must'1 ror the begin·
nlng student in environment.
1n addition to the conservation panel.
moderated by Peggy, several other panel
discussions will take place.
·JA.t~ SIZELOVE Lisa Syfan, Linda
Peden. Edith Roeson . Debbie Zeug. and
Pam Favour are among the "S" Clubbers
Y.iio will also have their chance to bold
sPeakers at bay, while moderating.
The Tritons of San Clemente H.igh, just
down the coast. and our home base
Artists, are going to "come together"
vlilh a repeat of last year's successful
"Dating Game." The game and dance
will be held at the SCHS gym, Frlday
April 3, from 7:30 till whenever things
start to slip.
·The game will be Oased on the ABC
vt:rsion, with the 11ix "'inning student
cOuples and one faculty couple being
awarded dinners, tickets lo leading
musical and theatrical productions, arid a
trip to San Francisco.
Of course, the idea of the game will be
Mrs. Errasmupe
Services Slated
Rosary \\'ii! be said at a o'clock tonight
ror l\.1rs. l\.1ar i~ Errasmupe, a resident of
El Toro for 65 years v.·ho died Tuesday.
She was 88.
Mrs. Errasmupc and her 1a1c husband
filrmed in the El Toro are11 for more than
half a century before retiring several
years ago.
She is survi ved by a son. Dominic and
;i daughter Grace \\lh istler, both of El
Toro.
Requiem mass "•ill be celebra ted at 10
;i.m. Friday. Both 1he mass and rosary
will be held in St. Nicholas Calholic
C.'hurch. Laguna Hills.
Interment will be in A~ c e n s i o n
Cemetery, El Toro.
Laguna
Teen
Corner
lo match up some young Lagunan with a
member of the opposite sex from San
Clemenle. It's t~e type of date that just
might work, but then again, just might
not.
I HA VE TO RAND IT to the acting that
the Thurston kids put on last week, wilh
their spring musical "On With The
Show ." The play. which finds three con-
fidence people winding up in a circtU to
escape the sheriff, made a delightful
evening.
Dave Lloyd , principal at Thurston told
me shortly before the final per!ormance
Saturday that all of the f i v e
perfonnances had been packed, And
Saturday night was no exception.
Speaking of spring musicals -one
wonders what's up al the high school. So
far, says script director for th e musical
St.uart Rabinowitsh, the production will
be here late next month.
A TITLE HAS BEEN given the play,
though -"Maid in USA~". It will cover
the adventures of a girl trying le find out
y,·hafs happening in the st raight. the hip.
and all lbe other "·orlds that are around
"'· I ~ is being rated by lhe writers as "bet-
lr.r than the old, muridane, American
tribal lo\·e rock musical. 'Hair'.''
lligh school elections are really going
lo go all the way this year, as an elec-
tions procedures rommillee has adopt!'d
a plan that will include a "total" election
day.
On !hat day speeches will be heard,
I.hen lhe classes will vote. then everyont
will congregate for the resulls that "'iii
be openly labulaterl the winners named.
and perhaps a dinner for all the incoming
officials with all lhe outgoing ones.
Tbe boys' gym will be election "cen-.
tra\'' where all the results will be
tabulated, the winners named, and the
speeches heard . The gym will be
decorated wlth all lhe lrappings of a na-
tional election. Delegate signs, red, white.
and blue banners. balloons, poster~. a!lfl
noisemakers v.·ill be availablt to make it
a total da y that all can enj oy,
Tustin Market Okayed
By County Supervisors
Rir·hard'!i Lido ~1 :ir k€'1 nf :\1r\';porl
Ue ach y,•itl have a counterparl Jn lhe
north Tu sti11 ;irea.
Orange County superv isors \\'crlne.~day
~pprovrd zoning changes fo r JU acres on
East 171h Sire.cl sought by the French
Develo11n1enl Cornpany 10 cnnl'itruct the
market. several ~ho~ <ind four pro-
feS!ional office buildinf!;s.
Abotll a year ago, French and O. \V.
"Dick" Richard were lumccl down on a
s1m1lar proposal for !he same general
area.
Residents of the arra packed the
hUpervisors 1'enring room. most in pro-
test but the board voted unanimously 10
gupport the Planning Commi~sion's rec-
on1mendations for the rone changes.
llighllght of the hearinA ~·as Ulc
t.,:;;timony of r..1r1. WllliRm Allen who said
i;h lived l\\10 miles from the proposed
locallon of t1'r markc1.
Holding a smt1!1 c.hlld under each arm.
Pifrs. Allen proclalmed, "\Ve don'l nel'll
II\)'. more markcl1. foreigntrs, people
fro1n other stairs. come inlo our area
and ruin i! "
Before she had linisht<I hf'r tirade
ag;iinst commercial development her IY.'O
c-hildrcr1 had squirmed loose and \\·ere
runr1ing around !ht hearing ro0m, much
lo the amusemenl or the supervisors and
audience.
Al one point, she asked the board mem-
brrs how many were born in California.
None held up their hands. "Now, you see
"'hat I mean," sht proclaimed.
Arter ~!rs. Allen's testimony. the board
\'otctl to close the. public hearing. but
rrscinrled the motion after SuperviJJOr
\Villiam •Tirstein protested !hat there
were many others in lhl' audience w1'o
y,·anted to be heard.
The reason for the closing "'as thal the
11uper\•isors were scheduled lo ap~ar in
lronl of the old courthouse building for a
<lcdic;1lon teremony naming the ~tructure
a Cahfornia Historical Landmark.
They arrived 1atc alter hearing all con-
cerned.
Courthouse
Now Official
I
Historic Site
Orange County 's 70-year-old courthouse
building became .. California Registered
Historical Landmark No. 837" Wednesday
in ceremonies on the front lawn.
The dedication was led by \Villlam H.
Spurgeon III as master of cer1::mcnie&
His grandfather set aside the. land the
building occupies for a courthouse in 1869
when he founded Santa Ana.
In !he absence of current members or
the Board of Supervisors, former Board
Chairman C. M. "CY'" Featherly, ac-
cepted the plaque and honors for the
county. The board was embroiled in a
zoning argument across the street and
arrived later.
The plaque ~·as presented by Gates W.
Burrows, honorary president of LISA
(Let's Improve Santa Ana).
~itmorial sycamore trees w e r e
presented to the cou.nty by Mr. and l\.1rs.
\Villiam H. Surgeon Jr. and Mr. and Mrs.
\Villiam H. Spurgeon JU .
To ~1rs. Weston Walker, executive
seCJ-etary of LISA, went most of the
credit for obtaln1ng the hlstorlcal
designation for the building.
She was presented a framed resoluUon
CQmmending her efforts by Supervisor
Robert W. Battin.
Three famous trials wh..ich took plact Jn
the courthouse 11re mentioned in wording
on the plaque. They are the "Whipstock"
case of 1933 which dealt with slant oil
drilling in Hunlingtoa Beach, the case on
interpretation of farm labor law in 193S
and the famous Beulah Overell trial in
1947 in which she and her boyfriend were -
convicted of dyr.amiting her parents' boat
in Newport Harbor.
Unwanted Guest
Clothed, Jailed
A nude stroller who wants to be free
discovered nudity isn't where it's at -
not in Laguna Beach.
A startled resident of 1199 Llewellyn
Drive watched an unclothed Rlch11rd
"'ayne Aguirre, 19, of La Puente, walk
through his front door and out the back
door Into the patio.
\Vhen homeowner Thomas Duckworth
asked the youth what he v.·as doing,
Aguirrt replied, "Man. likt today Is the
day of judgment and we're all going to be
free,"
Aguirre, whose Tuesday morning stroll
was interrupted by police, found himself
behind bars, facing a hearing loday on .t
charge of indecent exposure.
Edgar Bartlett
Funeral Held
Private services were held at 11 a.m.
today in Pacific Vitw Chapel for
Edgar James Bartlett, 57, of 790 Summit
Drive, Laguna Beach, who dled Monday
at South Coast Community Hospita l.
He is su rvived by his widow , Adelyn, or
lhe hom e.
Mr. Bartlett was a first lieutenant in
the U.S. ArmY Corps of Engineers In
World \Var U and was for 30 years an un-
dcr\l'riter for the Hartford Insurance
Group.
The Rev. James Kirk officiated at the
"ervict.<1. which were followed by burial
at Pacific View Memorial Park.
Spelling Champs
Meet in Laguna
Top .spellers from 37 Orange County
schools will meet al Laguna's Thura:ton
Intermediate school tonight for tht annual
county spelUng bee.
Laguna Beach is host lo the !Pf!ltina:
bee !hi!': year bccaust l11M year's county
~hamplon WI$ Sandra WinieskJ or
Thurston School.
Candidates
To Discuss
City Plan
Laguna Beach City Council candidatts
\I'll! be asked to give their views on im-
plementation of genera l plan goals outlin·
ed by the Citizens' Advisory Con1millee
w~en they appear before a meeting or the
Laguna Beach Coordinating Council
Tuesday nlght.
The public is Jnvited to attrnd Ule 7: 30
p.m. session In the Laguna Federal Sav·
ings and Loan building %60 Ocean Ave.
Candidates scheduled to appear are in-
cumbents Richard Goldberg and Joseph
o·sulliva!! and Joseph Tomehak , Peter
Ostrander and Edward Lorr .
A question and answer p e r i (I d ,
moderated by council vice president Tom
l\.lurphlne, will follow 10.minute presto·
lations by the speakers.
Topics to be discussl!'d include enhance·
men! of natural and scenic values,
development of specialty shops to expand
tourist trade, insurance of Laguna 's
growth as an art and culture-oriented
community , development o( park and
recreation facil lties. improvement of
traffic circulation and parking and
( preservation of equ al law enforcement.
Tree to Grace
Front Entrance .
To Irvine Bowl
A $700 tree will be added to the ntwly
beautified entrance to Irvine Bmvl,
Festival of Arts directors have decided.
\Vilh construction of the new bowl en-
trance almost complete, the city is ready
to do its bit by putting in new stone work
and drinking fountains and planting a
tree to replace one that had to be remo\P·
ed. director Stuart Durkee told the board,
adding,
"They would like us to buy lhe tree and
the one they have in mind would cost
somethig over $600."
Directors expressed concern that the
coral tree being considered for the spot
might grow too low to the ground. but
v.·ere told the parks supervisor could buy
and maintain a tree that would be
decorative without impeding passagt
underneath: They agreed lo allocate $700
and lea ve choice of the tree up to tht city
Parks Departmtnt.
Directors Okay
Funds for Neiv
Exhibit Bootlis
Laguna Beach Festival of Arts direc-
tors voted Tuesday to allocate $19,000 for
construction of two new "groupings" of
exhibit booths, especially designed for the
grounds by architect lb Christian Abel.
Having agreed last month to accept
Abcl'.11 design for the hexagonal struc·
lures, the board accepted B e a c h
Construction's low bid of $14,858 for the
project and agreed that work should start
Immediately so the booths will be ready
by summer.
Designed to provide permanent con·
gtruction for two areas or the grourids in
~'hich temporary booths have been
erected annually, the structures will be of
"·ealher·resistant concrele and stained
y,·ood. with snap-on colored nylon covers.
The covers, Abel sa id,, y,·111 cost ap-
proximately $950. He also rCC1:1mmended
that metal parts be galvanized at a cost
of about $100. After adding on the
architect's 15 percent commission, direc-
tors decided to allocate $19,000 for the
project y,•hich will provide ap to 28
booths, an increase of 10 over last year.
Tb.ursdf1, M1rch 12, 1970 L D4ll V PILOT S
La11111ta1rht1 By Phil lnltrl1ndl
-~ Afl:r fR::/ ___,,
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' ilG~~ !L l[ '
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' ~ DUTY J: -""-~ '-..,. .. -
Laguna-created Display
Wins Expo '70 Honors
And "environmental happ en Ing ''
created in Laguna Beach was acclaimed
as the ''best exhibit in the U.S. Pavilion "
at the press preview opening of Expo 'iO
in Osaka, Japan, according to \\'Ord
reaching the Art Colony .
Laguna Beach artist and physicist John
Forkner, \Vho su pervised construction of
the art work in the Old Country Boys
Mark'Ct on Thella Street during !he
month of January, sent the message to
men1bers of the Laguna Be11ch Unitarian
Fellowship w1'o helped on the project.
A telegram recei1red Tuesday rrom
Forkner, who accompanied .the work to
Osaka, read, ''Congratulat1ons lo all.
Festival Urged
To Acquire Land
For Recreation
The Laguna Beach Festival of Arts
board can expect some pressure from at
least c.ine Clly Council candidate \\.'ho
y,·ould like to see . the Festival carry
through on a proposal to purchase
\Voodland Drive property for recreational
use. Verner Beek told fello\V directors
Tursday.
Some months ago, builder Bernard
Sy!an proposed that the Fe! ti v a I
purchase land adjacent to the new Boys'
Club, now occupied by old houses and
kno\vn as a "hippie colony." It could be
used, he suggested to relocate the tennis
cuurts now occupying part of the Festival
grounds, for additional city park develop-
ment and as a possible site for a new
School of Art and Design facility,
"'hen director Da\1id Young, who has
been charged with the task of in-
vestigating the purchase, said he had
nothing new to report in the maller, Beek
commented :
"Richard Goldberg said the other night
th at getting rid of the hippies will be one
of the main parts of his plaLform, and he
also stated publicly that he will work on
the Festival to buy that hippie land out
on Woodland Drive as part of his cam-
paign."
"That," said Board Chairman \Villiam
Martin, "is his prerogative."
Critics acelaim exhibit best In U.S.
Pavilion. Everyone excited."
The "happening," designed by New
York artist Robert Whitman, is a room in
v.•hich visitors discover "new way1 to t:J•
perience light, sound. objects, time_
space and personal image." The project
was initiated by the L9s Angeles County
l\1useum, selected for the U.S. Pavilion,
put together by volunteers in Laguna
Beach and flown ln sections to Osaka .
Teenager Joins
Friend in Jail
A teenaged transient from Washington
joined his companion In Laguna Beach
Jail Tuesday, after hurling abuse on Of.
fi«r Robert Remillard and his squad
car.
Jamrs Timothy Smith. 19, of Richland
·was arrtsted in the 100 block of Cleo
Strtet shortly before noon, as he COO<>
linued to tnsull the ofncer who was mak·
ing a drug arrrst.
Remillard was In lhe proctss of ar·
resting Donald Alexander Vellese, 19, a
cave-dweller at Top of the World, on
ch:irges of possession of marijuana and
smoking paraphernalia, when Smith ap-
proached the police unit.
The youth was warned to "move along''
after he made an obscene remark about
the car. \Vhen he continued bis abuse of
both the car and the officer, he was ar-
rested on a charge of using obscen e
language.
A search of Vallese. who has forfeittd
his rights of search and seizurt on the.
basis or previous arrests, wos carrying a
pipe and pouch containing fragments of
marijuana and paper for rolling cigaret·
tcs. police said.
Vallese was htld on $1 ,000 bail and wilt
appear in municipal court today, Smith
"'as released on his own recogn.iiance
and was ordered to appear Marchr'20.
. Bill Leyden Dies
HOLLY\VOOD (AP) --Television
master of ce remonies Bill Leyden died
\Vednesday in a llollywoocl hospital after
suffe ring a cerebral hemorrhage. He was
41.
Jine
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1
4 DAl~Y Pl~OT Thul"Sdu, Marcil 12, 1970
Sena e Favors 18•year-old Vot.eage
Cc:-.!... W tlM 0.11'1' Plttf Stt'D
WASHINGTON ( ) -The Senate
went on record today for lowering the
voting age to 18 In time for the tm
presi<k!ntiel electioM.
Senators rejected a proposal to delay
the 18-year-old vote unUl Jan. 1, 1973,
leaving intact an amtndmenl to the pen·
ding ext~nslon of the 1965 Voting Rights
Act. The amendment would reduce the
voting age In national, state, and local
ele<:Uons at the start of next year.
Sen. James B. Allen (O-AJ a.), con·
UnUed today to delay a final vote on the
amendmenl ·
Proposing a change to ma11:e the
amendment effective in 19731 Allen warn·
ed that It wu pcsslble the Supreme Court
would rule the bill unconstltuUonal after
Ole 1972 elections in wh:ch 18-year olds
had voted.
· "Wha~ kind of confusion would reign In
thls"""COuntry?11 Allt.a asked. "Who would
be president."
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
abandoned his opposition lo the proposal
and aceused Allen of trying to make
political hay for Ge<>rge C. Wallace.
Scott told newsmen that Allen, In his
cpinlon, was trying to "create some
speech material for George Wallace."
11You have to have something new lo
sa: even If you are a demagogue," the
PeMsylvanian said of Wallace.
Scott uld he penonally favored the
Nixon admlnistraUon's stand that it
would be beUer to lawer the voling age
by a constltuUonal amendment rather
than by out.right legislation but be said
he had decided to drop open cppo_,Jtion.
In his oppo.sltlon to the proposa), Allen
ral!ied the question : '1What.'1 the rush?"
"What'a the rush?" responded Sen.
Philip A. Hart (0.Mlch.) "ll the aenator
from Alabama had e.ight children as does
the senator from Mlc&Jgan: he would not
ask."
But Allen aa.ld he meant why did the Bealle John Lennon and bls J~P'
anese wife, Yoko Ono, have a~wt•
ed a white Mercedes-Benz JIDOU-
sine more than 20 feet long to re-
place the psychedellc-eolored Rolls
Royce they used to drive. The new
car cost $33,000 a~d included ex·
tras such as a radt~telephone and
a battery of stereo equipment. • The first homeco1ning float since
a cow 'vas elected queen 44 years
ago will be built for Ohio State's
centennial homecoming celebra-
tion Oct. 17. The last float paraded
\Vas in 1926, when Maudln• Orms-
by, a cow O\Vned by the College of
Agriculture 'vas loaded on a \Va~
on and hauled around campus in
a victory celebration.
Woman Suspect Hunted
In Courthouse Bombing.
•
CAMBRIDGE. Mo. !UPI) -Federal
and state authorities searched today for a
young white \\'oman as a prime suspect in
a $100.000 courthouse bombing, but the
major lead to her identity collapsed.
Police had hoped to trace the woman
through ow nership o( a Dodge sedan with
New York license plates spotted near the
courthouse Tuesday before the explosion.
It turned out to be a company car used
by a vice president of the Rob Roy Co., a
shirbnaking fmn with a large plant in
Cambridge. "The car was parked in a company
parking lot and was not near the
courthouse," a company spokesman said.
"! guess lt was suspect because it was
the only out-of-state license around ."
The Dorchester County courthouse was
where black militant H. Rap Brown was
to have been .tried before the trial was
moved·85 miles away to Bel Air, Md., to
escape racial tensions here. It was near
Bel Air early Tuesday that two associates
cf Brown's were killed when an explosive
/ device I.hey were transporting demolished
their car. State police reported Thursday that
7 ,000 dynamite blasting caps -contained
in one box -were missing from a
grenade manufacturer not far f"rom Bel
Air. The robbery, believed to be an
"inside job " took place late Monday or
early Tue;day, they said. They were
found missing Wednesday.
?tfary f'rances Cro&by, JO.year-old
daughter of actor Bing Crosbt1, wi!L
upstage her famous foth.er as tl1e l!Ulr
of "Goldilocks", a combined live ac·
tion-a11imation special to appear &0011
on television. Brno and his wife will
opJ)far in cameo roles, but ft( a r y
Frances i& the star. According to her,
"'l want io take up where Mama and
Dadd11 leave off," • Dr. Lincoln R1lphs, chief educa·
lion officer for the County of Nor·
folk, England, has devised an ap.
horism for the dangers of our "per·
missive society". His slogan is
•·Pill Power Is no Substitute for
Will Power." • St. Louis County, Mo., Council-
man Albert Rlmm•I has asked for
a Jaw to keep dogs from barking
in their own back yards. His bill
would make continuous barking a
public nuJsance. •
Hawaii State Rep. Joseph Car·
cia thinks the air-conditioning
sustem in the St.ate Capitol
makes the air a bit nippy. He
1 thtrefore submitted a resolution
to the state asking that t~ ap-
paratus be adjusted or have an
I i'nvtstigGtion la"nched to study
1
tht feasibility of con structing
fireplacti in each room.
• Pretty Su• Osborne lost one of
her contact lenses Sunday \vhile
walking along a Southampton,
England, road. Unable to find the
missing lens, she called the fire
department. They responded in
force and located the missing ob-
ject after a ball-hour search.
State Trooper Otis T.ro~ . said police
\Vere investigating the poss1bUl!y that the
theft might be connected to the Cam·
bridge and Bel Air erplosions. Howe\!er.
Japanese Envoy
Seized in Brazil;
Trad e Demanded
SAO PAULO, Brain (UPI) -The kld-
napers of Japanese Consul General
Nobuo Okuchi today demanded the
release of five political prisoners in ex·
change for the life of the diplomat.
The kidnapers in a letter delivered to a
local newspaper ga\!e authorltle1 until 8
p.m. (l p.m. PST) to agree to the
release let the flve go into ex.Ile In ~1ex·
ico and promise not to take reprisals
against political prl_soners still In j~ll.
The kidnapers &atd they would die with
the consul general If the pollct search
was oot called cff.
An anonymous caller told pollce earlier
the ransom note would be delivered lo a
newspaper but it wa:s not found im·
mediately. Olruchi, 56, was lddnaped Wednesday
night by nine youthful gunmen and police
believed the gang would l'ieek to exchange
him for all terroclsts jailed since tbe kid·
naping of U.S. Ambassador C. Blrke
Elbrick last September. Elbrlck was ex·
changed for IS terrorists.
The caller told police the ransom note
,\'ould be delivered to the lobby of the
newspaper Estado De Sao Paulo, but a
seareh turned up no note and police said
the call might have been a ru se to permit
the kldnapers to send the no t c
somewhere else.
Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel said in a
news conftrence today that no evidence
had been uncovered linking the two Ur
cidents. '
Top Republicans
Say Laos Blasts
Political Ploys
\YASHINGTON {AP) -The little war
in Laos has blossomed today into one of
the major issues occupying the Senate,
\vilh critics of President NiXon'1 policies
in the Uny Asian nation basing their ob-
ject.ions on two grounds:
-Fear of another Vietnam .
-General disagreemenl with U.S.
policy in Southeast Asia.
Two leading Republicans -Minority
Leader Hugh Scott and Sen. George .
Alken of Vermont-charge polltlcs plays
a role in the predominantly DemocraUc:
crillclsm of the President.
But virtua11y all Laos critics, including
some Republicans, are those who have
repeatedly objected to U.S. policies In
Vietnam under both the Johnson and
Nixon administrations.
The President's effort to clear the air
by Issuing a detailed statement on U.S.
activities has clearly failed to sUll Senate
criticism.
Some senators now say privately that.
if everything the administration 1ays on
Laos coo.Id be believed, their fean would
be substantially lessened.
But their experience on Vietnam, when
they believed the Johnson administration
to their later regret, makes them wary.
"f was a member of Congreu aa we
slid into Vietnam," Sen. Charles McC.
Mathias Jr. (R·Md.), said recently, "and---
I didn't ask the questions then that I
should have, and I can tell you that I am
going to ask them now."
Many see a repeUtion of the course
that got the United States into Vietnam.
"It is following the same pattern,"
Democratic Lead"er Mike Mansfield said,
"first, aid, then logistics support, then air
power, and then Gls." adding quickly''(
don't think the Gls will 10 Into Laos."
Other critics agree on this last point.
Aiken, in fact , said that the ad-
ministration would never be able to 1et
away with it because of the publlc uproar
il might cause. But they feel it ts
necessary to keep speaking out to make
sure It does not happen.
'Strip' Lights Dim
After Union Walkout
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -The garish
"Les Vegas Strip," mecca of 1ambler1
for more; than two decades, was closed to-
day. A mas sive walkout by union bartender1
and kitchen help dlmmed the bright
lights of the resort hotels which shut
down their casinos. A small handful of
hotels maintained games for house guests
only but touri.sU were turned away. ·
Snow, Rain Swamp South
Senate wanl to f\1Sh 1nto lowerlna the
voting age by law when. in his view, a
constitutional amendment is required to
do It legally.
Sen, Sam J . Ervin Jr. (D-N .C.), agreed. ·
''The ConsUtuUon," he said, •·wu written
to keep lmp.allent senators, congressmen
and judges from doing things in a hurry.
When the Constitution ts nollified by itn·
patient men, Jiberty in America has no
chance to survive."
Nonetheleu, by a vote of 62 to 21, the
Senate Wednesday rejed.ed the motion of
Sen. Ruuell B. Long (0.La.), to kill the
proposal, offer<d by Democrat Leader
Mike MIUl!lleld of Montana.
''lt's the current youth &k,,. 11ld ·
Seoll
Scott sided with the Nlxo.n ad-
ministraUon Jn voling to kill the
Mansfield proposal. The adm1nlstration
argues a cqnstltutlonal amendment ls re-
quired.
But 25 Republicans deoerted their party
position and joined 37 Democrall in
voting not to kill the Mansfield plan.
Eleven Democrats -all Southerners -
and 10 Republlcans voled the othe.r way.
1 l
;
I
Lubbock, Tex., Gets Ano t her Spring Snoiv Surprise
Callfornla Temper•t11re•
So from now on, between 10 p.m.and 6 a.m., Standard
Stations will operate strictly on a no-cash-on·hand basis.\
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Statistic s show that more robberies
occur during the wee hours than at any other tfme.
Consequently, Standard Stations in Southern California open after
JO p.m. will now accept only the exact change for the amount of purcliase.
Or a valid credit card. Or, in an emergency, a bank check.
And all currency re ceived after dark will be deposited-posthaste-
in a tamper-proof safe on the premises. In this way, we hope to protect
not only our station employee!1 but our customers as well.
As the Commission's Report sums it up, ", •. society must seek lo prevent
crime before It happens ••• and by reducing criminal opportunities.••
And wo think that one way to discourage highway robbery Is to remove
all temp tation.
Standard Oil Company of California
. • •
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Tht1!1day, Marett 2, 1970 5
Six-month Moratorium for Parl{in Meters? I
By JOUN VALTERZA
OI 11 .. ~II~ ,llCll Sl•ff
In a recommendation desLlned to have
strong Jmpact on business districts of San
Clemente, the city's parking C(lmmis.sion
has recommended that all business area
parking meters be removed for six
months.
Jn the meters' place, the one-year~ld
advisory commission to the City Councll
sug'ges led. strictly enforced time limits
and beefed-up fi nes, would be imposed.
Tht> three-point recommendalion by the
commission will be forwarded to city coun-
cilmen next Wednesday at the council's regular meeting.
Dowri the
Mission
Trail
City Hall Use
Still a Mys tery
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Construc-
tion on the city's shiny new temporary ci-
ty hall is moving right along. But who
wiJJ be using it still remains a puzzle.
City Attorney John Dawson reported
Monday thal attempts to obtain the right
of way to get to the new fa cility are still
i;nagged.
He reported to the City Council that
property owners want to kno\v exactly
what ' their future obligations \\'ould be
r ega rding curbs, side"·alks and other im-
provements.
Councilmen say they cannot answer
!hat question because they don 't know
\.\'hat the future uses of the property
along the 40-foot easement would be.
In the meantime work is progressing
on the corrugated metal building which
wilt someday permanenlly house the
pu~lic works department, if they can get
to 1t.
• College Talk Slated ·
MISSION VIEJO -Saddleback College
president Dr. Fred H: Bremer will
present a comprehensive report on the
progress of the college when he addresses
the J\1ission Viejo Kiwanis Club on
Tuesday.
Tbe talk will be presented at a
breakfast meeting in the Mission Viejo
Inn.
·• Dea .. Dlsr11s1es 'Gap'
EL TORO -The "Generation Gap"
\\•ill be discussed by Saddleback College
Dean of Students John J. Flood \vhen he
sq eaks to members of the El Toro Of·
ficers' Wives Club Tuesday.
The luncheon meeting will be held in
the Newporter Inn at Newport Beach.
e llaseball Tryo111S Set
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Tryo1,1ts
for the newly formed Saddleback Valley
Pony-Coll League will take place
Saturday.
The pony division will select players
6larting at 9:30 a.m. al the Mission Viejo
High School baseball <liamond. Colts will
begin tryouls at I :30 a.m ,
Players are asked to bring gloves. but
those without n1ay borrow one. Judging
will be on fielding. throv"ing and batting
ability.
Late registration will take place for
ponies {13 and 14 year olds) and colts (15
and 16 year olds).
e Clwir in c ,,11cer t
LAGUNA l!ILLS -'Mle 44-membcr
Mm1nds-Mid way Nurses Choir from St.
Paul, Minn. "'ill present a public concert
Friday, March 13 at the First Baptist
Church, 24621 Moulton Parkway, Laguna
Hills.
Both traditional and contemporary
music will be included in the repertoire.
The concert, conducted by J ames P.
Davies of the first l\1ission Covenant
Church o{ l\linneapolis, will begin at 7:30 • p.m.
The group Is currently on tour in
Southern California.
Tbe commlssion has 1ludied the dilem·
ma o! metered parking in the central
business district for at least two months.
The study and rePort were requestr:d·
by lhe council last Dec. 17.
The three points the conlmission sug.
ges ts are:
-Removal of aJI parking meters in the
business and C-Ommercial districts of the
city (excluding the beach and pier
recreation-commercial zones) on a six·
month lrial basis with retention of ex.
isling parking tinle limits.
-The pressing for strict Police en-
forcement of the parking time limits in
the trial area -which would cover the
length or El Camino Real and most of
Avenida Del Mar, along with side streets
adjacent to the main avenues.
~ Requests that the ?i1unicipal Court
raise the present bail structure in the
new meterless areas to a minimum bail
amount of $3, instead of the $1 and $2
amount! ~t presently.
The existing time limit on Avenida Del
fi1ar Is two hours with a SI bail amount
sel. Parking violation bail amounts are
generally forfeited by violators, instead
of cont~sted in court.
City Manager Ken Carr said the ques·
Lion of lhe meter removal arose before
· the council after discussion on the
economics of the issue.
On Dec. 17 the council discussed the
merits ot comparison between the
1111isance of policing and repair of meters.
contrasted with PoSsible benefits derived
from revenue$ ilnd control of the parking
spaces.
The e$timated annual revenue lost to
the city fro1n the eli1ninalion of the
meters is from $12,000 to $15,000 a year,
but Carr said-the commission agreed 1hat
incrr:ased fines and higher sales tax in·
comes from businesses experiencing
more customers could possibly make up
for the lost amount.
The obvious prime reason for the
removal of the meters, Carr said, was
They're the Winners l'.IAILY P'ILOT Sll lt P'lltll
Sharing congratulations over the approval by vot·
ers Tuesday of a 5()..cent tax override for the Cap-
istrbno Unified School District are (from left) Tru-
1nan Benedict, district superintendent; Charles
Dargan, chairman of ARVY (Area Residents
Vote Yes), and Trustee Thomas Winget.
Phone Company
Seeking $1.85
Rate Increase
California phone users may be paying
from $1.85 to '3.80 a month morr: for
their phones in the near future -if the
Pacific Telephone Company receives ap-
proval frolfl the California Public Utili-
ties Commlssjon for a rate increase.
ff approved. rates for basic one-party
residential service would be increased
by about $1.85 per month in most cities
and business customers would see an
increase of $3.80 per month, according
to telephone officials.
The company said its current low level
of earnings is inadequate to Unance con·
structions programs totaling more than
$1.S billion for 1970 and 1971. The in-
crease is also needed for large quanti·
ties of equipment. and improved \\-·ages
for its work force, all of which are es-
sential to maintaining and improving
service.
'Vith ''a substantial improvement" in
earnings, the company said, e:ii:i$!ing OV·
erali satislactory levels of service could
be impaired.
Spelling Champs
Meet in Laguna
'.fop spellers from 37 Orange County
schools will meet at Laguna's Thurston
Intermediate School Thursday night for
the annual county spelling bee.
CSF Militants Facing
Questions at Hearing
.A pair of Cal State Fullerton student
militant leaders today are faced with a
multiple.choice quiz administered by a
disciplinary • board convened to judge
their cases.
The five questions will guide pro-
ceedings against the men -charged with
yelling obscenities at Gov. Ronald
Reagan on the CSF campus -and must
be answered in writing by 5 p.m. Mon·
day.
Simultaneous campus and police pro.
secu lion of Bruce Church, 31, and David
MacKowiak, 25, has led to a series or
campus incidents including a violent
clash with lawmen.
TunnoiJ surrounding the worst of the
disturbances which left more than 20
persons jailed and more arrests expected
has setUed somewhat but is still brewing.
The Student-Faculty Judicial Board
warns in a memorandum to the pair that
further hearings will be at their prefer·
red lime and conditiflns, but must be
quiet and orderly.
The Bloody Tuesday confrontation, in
which more than 100 uniformed lawmen
scattered dissenters and pa ssersby with
nightsticks, drawing a bail of dirt clods in
return, followe d one bearing.
press, both, or closed to all but those
directly concerned.
Questions about whether they will be
recorded by magnetic tape,
stenographers. both or neithe; "'ill also
be up lo Church ;ind MacKowiak.
They are to decide whether legal
counsel should mere ly be. present or
allowed to cross-examine witnesses and
the Faculty.Student Judi cia l Board.
\\'helher witnesses shall testify under
oath or simple aHlrmation-1hat they are
telling the truth is anoth er decision left to
the men.
Schedule or the hearings may come
before the ir criminal trial set for June I,
or within fi ve days after 1t verdict is
reached, disregarding any delay for
possible appeals.
That question lOO is to be answered by
Church and MacKov;iak,
They have been ordered to submil their
decisions to Dean of Students Ernest
Becker by 5 p.m. fifond ay, so the matter
may be settled.
Arrest warrants charging lhem with
obscene statements in public were issued
by the Orange County District Attorney 's
Office after the Feb.~ campus speech by
Reagan.
;I
the dluatl!racUon of pote.ntlal cusmm«rs
of small busine·~s Jn San Clemente who
po&tbly take their patronage out or town
after receiving parking citations.
He said that cooperation still will be
needed from the city's businewnen to In-
sure. that tbe.ir employes do not use the
street--slde parking areas.
From the manpowtr .standpoiot, the ci·
ty manager sald the city's full-tima
meter maintenance man cou ld work on
other duties If lhe meters "-ere removed.
The police department's meter ofifcer
would remain on full-time to devote time
to enforcing the new regulations where
the meters once were.
Capo l' alle1l_
The action by the commWion wn
unanimous.
'1'1'1ree members or the five-man group
were pm:ent at the 1uesday night
-pas.uge ..... Vice ChaJrman 1'om Bro:id·
bent, who presided, Sam Tiberi, who
moved to approve the idea, and Charle•
IJunt Jr., who made a second lo the mo-
tion.
Chairman Leon Riley and com-
missioner Bill Walker were not present.
\Vhether the proposal will meet with
council concurrence is a toss up, Carr
said today.
. "We'll jwt have to wait and see. There
ts no way of predicting," he said.
Joint Fun_d Gains
Chamber Study
Proposals for support ot a newly
created United Fund for the Capistrano
Valley drew some support Wtdnesday
from members of the Capistrano Beach
Chamber of Commerce, but the group
agreed it needed more information on the
plan.
The members declined lo cast a vote on
tht support, but agreed to find a speaker
from the fund to explain its posslble role
in the Capistrano area.
The idea for creating the local fund
came through chamber vice president
Lyn Hicks, who said many charitablt
Carnival Planned
For Cle1nente' s
Easter Festival
1'ht Easter bunnies that hop lnto San
Clemente for the lraditional youthful
rites of spring will find a carnival
\\'ailing.
Council men have granted the request
of the Boys' Club of the South Coast Area
to stage the fund-raising event March Z5
through March 29.
City Manager Kenneth Carr noted !he
possibility that rain in conjunction with
the flve~ay event could cause damage to
the grounds of Las Palmas Park.
Councilman agreed to require in-
surance against possible p roper ty
damage as well as $500,000 liability In·
surancr: that is to be furnished. Tht Boys•
Club also guarantees cleanup.
A leUer to the councll from Walter
Hunter. club board president, said the
carnival, "Atlas Greater Shows", will in-
clude t I to 13 rides plus a midway with
20 to 30 booths.
Carr noted that it would be held during
the period when many students are on
spring vacation.
groups in the Capistrano and Capistrano
Beach area wish that a United Fund did
exist so that their individual fund drivet
could be eliminated and the one United
Fund Campaign be substituted.
The members said they hoped to have
a speaker to explain the. new role of the
(und.
One matter drew a negative response
fro1n the chamber -the issue of salaries
for United Fund staff members.
The group agreed that it would possibly>
support the move if it were agreed that
no donated funds be used for salaries.
In othr:r actio n at the noon luncheon tn
San Juan Capistrano the group heard ideas
for a joint meeting with a possible panel.
<liscussion format with the Dana Point
Chamber or Commerce.
f\.1embers of both chambers agreed that
an occasional liaison function would be
beneficial.
Plans for lht meeting will be announced
later.
The day's program involved a slide
presentation-and talk on physical ritnes..o;
by the manager oi a health spa in Costa
Mesa.
Edgar Bartlett
Services Slated
Private services were held at t 1 a.m.
Today in Pacific View Chapel for
Ed gar James Bartlett, 57, of 790 Summit
Iajve, Laguna Beach, who . died Monday
!!"South Coast Community Hospital,
He is survived by his widow, Adelyn, o!
the home.
Mr. Bartlett was a first lieutenant in
the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers in
World War II and was for 30 years an u~
derwriter for the Hartford Insurance
Group.
The Rev. James Kirk officiated at the ,
services, which were followed by burial ,
at Pacific Vir:w Memorial Park.
\Tour Honor~
Part-time Judge Nonplussed
Man :
San Clemente's part-lime city attor·
ney Carl Kegley heard himself calltd
"Your honor" for the first time the oth--
er day.
A few minutes later he heard himself
addressed by "Hey man."
It all occurred when Kegley, 73, of
Corona del Mar, donned a judge's robe
to sit as a judge pro tem (temporary
judge) of Harbor Judicial Dislrict Muni·
cipal Court in Costa Mesa.
Kegley sentenced an offender to traf-
fic school and a $5 fi ne, then saw him
later in the court corridor. "Hey man,"
he said the defendant challenged him, ~
"you told me i~ was five bucks. How
come it was $1~ bucks?"
Kegley had to admit his first time on
tht bench he wasn't too familiar wilh the
court's fine structure.
Kegley has been employed on a con-
tract basis by the city of San Clemente
for five years. He commutes rrom hit
Corona del Mar home on Wednesday '
nights to supply legal advice alternately
to city councilmen and city plaMin&
commissioners.
··''·.''·,.-···.,:. Laguna Beach is host to the spell ing
bee this year because last year's county
champion was Sandra Winiesk.i of
Thurston School.
The two-hour contesl wltl begin at 7
f).m. Because parents of all school
representativs and their alternates are
e.xpected to attend, there will not be room
for the public, according to Miss Joanne
Knowles, English tead1er in charge of Lhe
spelling bee.
Charges against the Studr:nt Mobiliza.
lion Commitlee leaders were being aired
when their supporters rushtd a locked
room and stormed in , using a security
guard"s keys.
:Jine I
The judicial board is allowing the
defendants to decide whether the pro-
ceeding will be open to thP.. public, th~ Q OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA
Bank Loses Freeway Sign
· AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
But Existing Sign, Pol e Still Pose Problem
'
Security Pacific Bank lost Its bid to
put a ne\v sign on an existing pole near
the San Diego Freeway in San Clemente
, \Vednesday when the planning commis-
sion decided a bank doesn't need free-
way advertising.
But one problems remains in the ap--
pliciilidn to exceed the sign size and
height limitations -whal should• be
done wltb the existing sign and pole
which the bank wanted to alter?
The sign in question. a carryover from
a restaurant business which [ailetl, is
in a leasltd parking lot for the new bank
branch at 117 Avenida de la Estrella.
tt rises above the rreeway level . and
displays its empty frome to motorist~.
The only word l5 sun visible arr: "San
Clen1ente."
Security Pacific spokesmen told com·
missioners the bPnk wished lo restote
lhe sl_go, remove tbe frame aod rt.place
ft with a ''conservatively designed'' sig-
nature sign in blue, white and charcoal
which neither Oasbed not revol ved.
But commissioners, acting on recom·
mendation or Associate Planner Gene
Schulle, unanimously denied the appll·
cation, then discussed ways to have the
existing structure removed .
They agreed io turn the problem ovt.r
to the clfy stalf. Schulte will write to
both the bank and the owner of the
leased land to see if the nonconforming
standard and frame could be removed.
Bill Le yden Dies
HOU YWOOD (AP) . -Televlgion
m~ter or ceremonies Bill Leyden dle<t
\Vednesday in a J~ollywood hospital after
suffering a cerebral hemorrhage. Jle was
47.
But that idea. Commission Chairman
George Bowles conceded, might prove
expensive.
"One business in town had to move
their tall freeway sign a few feel and
It cost more than $5,000," he said.
lf the letters don't work. the commis·
sion learned from City Attorney Carl
Kegley, the sign could be declared a
public nuisance and its removal could
be ordered by tht city.
Commissioners Jndicated that they
will probably require the Poslfng of !C·
curlty bonds on any approvals of otbt.r
future sign variance applications. The
bonas would Insure that the sigTis e-:ii:.
ceeding the code *ould be removed lf
the business no longer erl.$100.
The cornmissionts aetlon·on--tht-b1nk-
s.ign 11 final. unless the finn applies In
writing within seven days for appeal o?
!ht decl.sion to ,Ille City Council
e rings sited and repaired e diamonds and prec;_ious stones remounted
•pearls restrung
WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE All TYPES OF JEWELRY
HARIOR SHOl'l'ING
CINTIR
2300 NARIOl ILVD.
·COSTA MESA S4S.t48S
"The Store Thal Conf1denco Buflt"
Opeo M•., T ...... Fri. Tll t P·'"·
MUNT1N.TON CINTll • llACH & EDINGER
HUNTINGTON., HACH
19z.5501
•• ' '• • "'L' , I "• • ~ • (" •' • "'-', •" • • :"\ • (" I • ',• ~' ' 'I -:/ ,
! ;·
f DAILY PILOT
111 . TODA c.----~~~ tC..Ulll W ... o.!lr Pi9M ltafQ
Thursdl)', March 12, 1970
Senate
WASHING'lllN (UPI) -The S.nate
went on record today for lowerlng the
voting aae t.o 18 lo time for the 1972
presi.denUal elecUons.
Senators rejected a proposal to delay
the 11-year-<>ld vote unUI Jan. 1, 1973,
leaving intact an amendment t.o the pen-
ding extension of the 1965 VoUng Rlghls
Act. The amendment would reduce tile
vnUng age in naUonal, state, and local
elecUoru at the start of neJt year.
Sen. James B. Allen ([).Ala.), con-
tinued today to delay a final vote on the
amendment.
Proposing a change to make the
amendment effective in 1973, Allen warn-
Favors
ed that It was possible the Supreme Court
would rule the bill unconstitutional after
the 19'12 elections in wlli.ch 18-year Olds
had voted.
0 Whet kind of confusion would reign in
lhl.s country ?" Allen uked. "Who would
be president."
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
abandoned h1s opposition lo the proposal
and accused Allen of trying to make
political hay fot George C. Wallace.
Scott told newsmen that Allen, in his
opinion, was trying to "create some
speech material for George Wallace."
"You have to have something new to
sa· even if you are a demagogue,'' the
Piruisytvanian said of Wallace.
Bealle John Lennon and bis Jap-
anese wife Yoko Ono, have acqwr-
ed a white Mercedes-Benz imou-
s'i.ne more than 20 feet Jong to re-
place the psychedelic-colored Rolls
Royce they used to drive. The new
car cost $33,000 and included ex·
tras such as a radio-telephone and
a battery of stereo equipment .
Woman Suspect .Hunted
• The first homecoming float since
a cow was elected queen 44 years
ago will be built for Ohio Slate's
centennial homecoming celebra·
tion Ocl. 17. The laS'l float paraded
\vas in 1926, when Maudlne Orms.
byr a CO"' owned by the College of
Agriculture was loaded on a wa~
on and hauled around campus 10
a victory celebration.
In Courthouse Bombing
•
'ltta ry Frances Crosby, 10-year-oLd
daughter of actor Bing Crosby, will
ttpstage her famous father as the 1tar
of "Goldilocks", a combined live ac·
tion-anima:tion special to appear soon
or' television. Btng and his wife wilL
appear in cameo 'roles. but Mar 11
France& is the star. Accordihg to her,
"'l want to take up where i\fama and
Daddy leave off." • or:-Lincoln Ralphs, chie! educa-
tion officer for the County o! Nor-
folk, England, has devised an ap.
horism for the dangers of our 0 per-
missive society". His slogan is
••Pill Power 15 no Substitute for
Will Power." • Sl. Louis County, ~10., Council-
man Albert Rlmm•I has asked for
a Jaw to keep dogs from barking
in their own back yards. His bill
would make continuous barking a
public nuisance. •
Hawaii St.ale Rep. Josep/L Car·
cia thinks the air·co11ditioning
system in the State Capitol
makes the air a bit nippy. I-le
the-re/ore submitted a resolution
to the state asking that the ap-
paratus be adjusted or have an
tnvestigation launched to study
the feasibility of constructing
fireplaces in each room.
~ • Pretty Suti Osborne lost one of
her contact lenses Sunday while
walking along a Southampton,
England, road. Unable to find the
missing Jens, she called the fire
department. They responded. in
force and located the missing ob-
ject after a balf~hour search.
CAMBRIDGE, Mo. (UPI) -Federal
and atale authorities searched today for a
young white woman as a prime suspect in
• a $100,000 courthouse bombing, but the
major lead to her Identity collapsed.
Police had hoped to trace the y,·oman
through ownership of a Dodge sedan with
New York license plates spotted n.ear the
courthouse Tuesday before the explosion.
Tt turned out to be a company car used
by a vice president of the Rob Roy Co., a
shirtmaking firm with a large plant in
Cambridge.
"The car was parked jn a company
parking lot and was not near the
courthouse," a company spokesma~ said.
"I guess It was suspect becau_se 1t v.·as
the only out-of-state license around."
The Dorchester County courthouse was
where black militant H. Rap Brown \\'as
to have been tried before the trial was
moved 85 miles away to Bel Air, Md .. to
escape racial tensions here. It was near
Bel Air early Tuesday that two associates
of Brown's were killed ";hen an explosive
device they were transporting demolished
their car.
State police reported Thursday .that
7 000 dynamite blasting caps -cont.a1ned i~ one box -were missing from a
grenade manufacturer not far from Bel
Air. 'Ille robbery, believed to be an
"inside job," took place late Monday or
early Tuesday, they said. They were
found missing Wednesday.
State Trooper Olis Trost said police
\Vere Investigating the possibility that the
theft might ·be connected to the Cam·
bridge and Bel Air explosions. However,
Japanese Envoy
Seized in Brazil;
Trade Demanded
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -The kid-
napers of Japanese Consul General
Nobuo Okuchi today demanded the
release ot five political prisoners in ex-
change for lhe life of the diplomat.
The kidnapers in a letter de1 ivered to a
local newspaper gave authorities until 6
p.m. (1 p.m. PST) ~o agr~e . to the
release let the five go 1nlo exile 1n Mex-
ico and promi se not to take reprisals
against political prisoners 1Ul\ In j~il. .
The kidnapers said they would die w1t11
the consul general if the police search
was not called off.
An anonymous caller told police earlier
the ransom note would be delivered to a
newspaper but it. was not found im·
mediately.
Okuch!, 56, was kidnaped Wednesday
night by nine youthful gunmen and police
believed the gang would seek to exchange
him for all terrorists jailed since the kid-
naping of U.S. Ambassador C. Birke
Elbrick last September. Elbrick was ex-
changed for JS terrorlsU.
The caller told police the ransom note
would be delivered to the lobby of the
newspaper Estado De Sao Paulo, but a
search turned up no note end police said
the call might have been a ru se to permit
the kklnapers to send the n o t e
somewhere else.
f\1aryland Gov. ~1arvin Mandel said In a
news COl)ference today that no evlden.ce
had been uncovered linking the two in·
cidents •
Top Republicans
Say Laos Blasts
Political Ploys
WASHINGTON (AP) -The tittle war
in Laos has blossomed today into one of
the major issues occupying the Senate,
with critics of President Nixon's policies
in the tiny Asian nation basing their ob-
jections on two grounds :
-Fear of another Vietnam .
-General disagreement with U.S.
policy in Southeast Asia.
Two leading Republicans -fl.1inorily
Leader Hugh Scott 'and Sen. George
Aiken of Vennont-charge politics plays
a role in the predominantly Democratic
criticism of the President.
But virtually all Laos critics. including
some Republicans, are those who have
repeatedly objected to U.S. policies in
Vietnam under both the Johnson and
Nixon administrations.
The Presi dent's erfort lo clear the air
by issuiRg a detailed statement on U.S.
activities has clearly fa iled to still Senate
criticism.
Some senators now say privately that,
if everylhing the administration says on
Laos could be believed, their fears v.·ould
be substantially lessened.
But their experience on Vietnam, when
they believed the Joh nson administration
lo their later regret, makes them wary.
"1 was a member of Congress as we
slid into Vietnam," Sen. Charles ~1cC.
f.1athlas Jr. (R·Md .), said recently, "and
I didn't ask the questions then that I
should have, and I can tell you that I am
going to ask them now."
~fany see a repetition of the course
that gol the United States into Vietnam.
.. It is following the same pattern,''
Democratic Leader r-.like Mansfield said,
"first, aid, then logistics support . then air
power, and then Gls," adding quickly "I
don't think the Gls will go into Laos."
Other critics agree on this last poinl
Aiken. in fact. said that the ad·
ministration would never be able to get
away with It because of the public uproar
it might cause. But they feel it is
necessary to keep speaking out to make
sure il does not happen .
'S trip' Lights Diiu
After Un ion Walkout
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (U PI) -The gari sh
"Las \1egas Strip." mecca of gamblers
for more Oian two decade~. was closed to-
day.
A massi ve y,·alkout by union bartenders
and kitchen help dimmed the bright
lights of the resort hotels \vhich shut
doY:n their casinos. A small hand ful of
hotels maintained games for house guests
only but tourists were turned away.
Snow, Rain S wamp South
Lubbock, Tex., Gets Another Spring Snoiv Sur prise
Callfornla
klM "" Soufhltn C1!1fornlt ~"'
!tOmtlY l1lf f06aY wllll 1ti9h!JY w1rmer
IM'IPM'llvrff fflll IOfM ¥1rl1ble C!wcli.
Lot AnNln had tom• clOudV 1tle1
but 1l'IOlllY Min"" dfY&. wllll 1 hlth
""' 1' tWP«Nd ti Clwlc C"'l1r SOU1'H EltPf CALIFORNI,\ -Mftl!J'
ft!r Wiit! y1rl1bl1 clo!Hll-ThllrMllY
1ncf l"rld1r. SF!th"r '11'9T1Nr Thvrtd..,., Lo$ ANGELES Altl!A -Mein.,
f1lr wltll -¥trt1blt d ouCl!MH TllvncSIY ~ l'rkllY, Sffthtly w1tmfr
T"""61Y. Hltl'I i.m ..... 11\!r. 7', L-
Thll~r ftlt!I! '9.
l'OIHT COHCll'TION TO MIXICAN
l!Olt.DElt -Llfllt nril"-wll'ld1 Ill
nltfll end "'°""'"' holJrs bKomlnt
tc1111f!wfll fO '#flt • fO '' "'"" "' •fl--Tl'lun41r Miii FrldlY, MOslly r11r
. :• .. ..... ,~,l:~ )'~o~i.-::'.f;~--
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SHOWERS
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L11 V"11 LIH AM•l11
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ftl9/lt Ind morTll... hou,_ bt«flllnl
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v.s. S11mmarq
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01 lllto kutll 191f,, lodlY. l l9'11tr
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01-l1nd
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Plto ROD1t.I
11 )II .Ol
l? 11
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it !• " . Jj " • ••
18-year-ol
,
Scott said he personally favored the
Nixon .. administration's stand that It
\\'OU!d be better to lower Ule voling age
by a constitutional amendment rathc>r
than by outright legislation but he said
he had decided to drop open opposition.
In his opposition to the proposal, Allen
raised the question: "What's the rush~"
"Wbat 's the rush~··. responded Sen.
Philip A. Hart (0.lw1ich.) "If the seoalor
from Alabama had eight children as does
the senator from lwfit:higan, he would not .
ask."
But Allen said he meant why did the
Senate want lo rush lnt~ ln1• 11r!r:'? 11"
voting age by Jaw whi!n, tn tits '1t•1 1:1
oonstilullonal amendn1L"nl J..:. rl•(111u,.1
do It legally. .,,...
Sen. SamJ . Ervin JI'". (D·'.\ C.) ... ~~
"The Co.nslitution," he :.aid. "wa:> •·, •
to keep impatient sen~tors. c.~ 1:.,<r•
and judges frorn doing lhio(;~ tn a L:
\Vhcn the Constitut ion ls no111,. 11 1
pati<'nt men, liberty in Am<.:r1 ·i.I. 1
chance to sur\·ive."
Non~thelcss, by a \Ote tif r2 \u '.'! 1
Senate \Vedne&!ay rcjcct~u l ~a.. ·• 1
Sen. llus.sell B. Long (D·l..u ), !'~-
So from now on, between 10 p,
Stations will operate strictly c
Statistics show that more robber.cs
occur durin g the wee hours !!)an at any oth·~r tlrre.
Consequently, Standard Stations in Sou thern Cal•for.i 1 c~ ~
10 p.m. will now accept onl y the exa ct chani;e lor the aricL t •
Or a valld cred it card. Or, in a n e mergency, a bank ch eck.
And all currency received af ter da rk wil l be deposited-oor't->~
in a tamper-proof safe on the prer;n ises. In this way, wt-hope t.J r,.,, •
not only our station employees, but OlJ r customers as vJc,I
As the Commlss1on·s Re port sums 1t up, ..... soc ie ty rrust ~r.e~ ,., r
crime before it happens ..• and by reducing criminal opporlt
And we th ink that one way to d iscourage highway ro bber• i!. .. r"
all temptation.
..
COASTAL ANO INTEltMEOIATIE
YALLEYS-Motll' ftlr ¥1lffl \<lrl1bl1
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S.cr1.,..~1n
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Sin l'•1nd 1to
Sl•t!I•
SPct.•rw Tlltr-mtl
W11t11nton
.. .,
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" • •
.~I {
"' Standard Oil Co mpa ny o ~NTAIN Allf.4J -__Motl!f f1lr
wltll r1rttiw. tlltlft dlllO• ~"'-" trlf ,,..,,, lllthfl' Wllmtf' ..,..._
INTEll/011 ANQ oe-1111r lll!GIONS
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d1r Mid l'lrld1Y. Mltl!llY 11Nr'"" di,., Hltll T'*"dll' 62 fO M llfthft' w1Jlln
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Sun, llloon, Tide•
' THOllOAY
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DI tMW trll ..,. Lubbod<, Tt• .• 1rmo1I
k<9l'ld tfiil' . .
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we1111tr *"""'''· L111 Mlrcll u the
Ptfflc;!lofl Wfl f'or tl .. r ~lti 11'111 1~1¥
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ttotm IMYtd lltll If COl«Hll WtdM ..
c11r •
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~
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51 ~' •I .,
11 Jl » ~
T
•
t
•
•
' r 1 ~.,, fli•m'lCrat Le11dcr
•I ' 111/H·''l'J,
l ff• 11t )uu~h kick," said
1.ith !he Nlxon ad-
\.:i1u,~ lo ki ll the
~t_ 'fl. nr!mlnlstratlon
l ,,;.rucad rncnt is re-
n• th i·, led their p<:rly
11 :1? Denu>Crats in
1 11 1 , I! 11 .. ?tlaustield plan.
•
•• 1~ -L:ll Southerners -
1 l•lrll I tie olher way.
d
basis.
•
•
•
U.N. Back
In Mideast
Proposed
LONDON !UPI) -The
Soviet Union has proposed that
U.N. peace-keeing fore e 1
return lo the Middle East to
be removed only with the ap-
proval of the big power s ,
diplomatic JOU rces said today.
Giving .the Big Four a vtto
on the withdrawal or the
troops would prN!lude U.N.
Secrelary General Tha nt fron1
pulllng them out as he did just
bt'fore the 1967 Middle East
war. at Egypfs requ~st.
The Soviet ))roposal made in
big four talks in New York,
does not mean the Kremlin
has given up its demand that
Israel return all Arab ter-
ritory captured in the war, ac-
cording to the diplomats.
What the Soviets want to do,
they said, is station the U.N.
troops a l ong certain
.. sensitive" areas of lhe Arab-
J10raeli border either during or
after an Israeli withdrawal.
Tht' Soviet m o v e un-
dr rsC'Ores Moseilw's desire for
a political '"holding action" in
th<' 1\liddle l~asl lo prevent an
all-out \Var that could require
direct So\·iel involven1cnt lo
save the Arabs.
The sources !'aid the pl an
has met with little enthusiasm
from the United St11\eo:. l!'rarl
is kno"·n to doubt the reliabili·
ty of a U.N. force as a
guarantee to her security.
-'-
,
Impeach
Do uglas
Pla11 Told
\VASUI NG TON (UPI! -A
resolution to i m p e a c: h
Supreme Court J u s t Ic e
Willinm 0 . Dougln~ is hcins
dra(led for introduction in lhe
House next week, but Its chiP!
sponsor has not determined
yet whal the sprcifir charges
wUI br
"\\'r wilt ha\'t cosponsors
and they \vill include in-
rluential, respecter!, ve1eran
members of the House ffom
both sides of the aisle," an
aide lo Rep~ Louis C. \Yyman
IR-N .ff .), the sponsor. said.
The 1udr would not disclose
names.
UPI Tfi91'111119
SUCCUMBS AT 80
Erle Stanley Gardner
Perry Ma son\
Creator Dies
GRAMMY GRABBERS POSE
Peggy Lff, Burr Bacharach Score Wins
'Thi' resolutio n would mark
the· !'econd tin1e 1l1e Con-
troversial 71-year-old Douglas
h;is been the st1bJccl nf ~ TEf.IECiJLA (UPI ) -Erle
house lmpeachn1enl effort. Stun!cy Gardner, cft!ator of
Former Rep. \V . :\I. "Don" Wheeler rD-Ga.J. introduced a Perry l\lason. the fictional
resolution in J une. 1953. It i\·as la1,ycr who never lost a case.
the subject of Judiciary Com-is dead at the age of 80.
mltlee-hea rings but nothing Gardner 1\·as the author of
came or iL n1orc. than JOO detective and
Thr cffnn !iv \Yyman, R 11cstPrn stories. He was forme r Ne w Hampshire at· torney gl.'neral. rentrr~ nn rrlr:1°ed fco1n Riverside Com·
na1ned song of lhe yea r and DQ11glns' nr\\• book "Points or mun11v Hospital last mont h
best contemporary song, with Reht'Hi0n ... 11 h1ch dlscu~..c~ 11hrr•' hr 11·3s treated for an
t1va grammies going to writer cl.i~senl in America. p11nicu!ar-undi:>t!n"ed ilJncs:-. and died
Gro11ps Grab Grammies;
Peggy, Cash Cash In
:\!E\V l'Of.K (AP) -A ni ne·
n1an rock group. a pop song
and a m:tch.ne that looks like ·
a s1nall con1puter did better
than any Individuals \vhen 1·1
Grammies were awurdcd for
lhe best recording of 1969.
Three Grammie:i; a pi e c e
Joe South. ly youthful protests. Peggy Lee "'on the be::.t \\'yman said in ,. JloU"e \\'rrln.-~day at hls hon1e here.
female \'OCa l ~rfarmance for sprcch on Feh IO. lhnl in hi" Gard,1rr tlrt\I' on 2S yea rs of
"ls Tha t All There Is?'' and book D 0 u g I 11 s ··1mpenched rn11r1rnom rxrcncnce t o
Nlls!on 11011 as best male h1n1self by Ii i~ o"'n hancl " r·rr·1tr n1111.r nl his 1nys1er1es,
went to the rock group Blood,
Syl•ia Cla sli Sweat and Tears, the pop song
''Games People Play." anrl
the album "Switched-on Bach"
1oc<ili~1 11ith "Everybody'~ \Vyman's aidr :>:tJd t he 111rlud1ng lhr Perry f\la son
Talkin'," written by Fred Neil. charges being cors1dcred "11·1\J "cries. and dictated h Is
in lhe movie '' ~1 i d n i Sh l \ncl11de ar/<: and st:i!l'rnrnts 1hnllrr:; lei ~CVt'n secrr!aries.
Cowboy." Composer John B:ir-by lhr Justice. ; n cl u d 1 n g J Ir nr1r1 ~P"nl more than 30
• • Tllorsd•y, M1r'Ch 12, 1970 DAIL V PILOT S
Psychiatric Tests Eyed ;
. .
Manson 'Erratic' in Court
Uls ANGELES (AP\ -An
attorney appointed to defend
Charles M. ~l an!On on seven
murder-con!lpiracy co u n ts
says he's thinking of asking
for a psychiatric examination
for his clienl bliscd on
f.lanson's erratic court
behavior.
The 35-year-old M a n s on ,
long·halred leader of a hippie·
style cult. threw h is
eyeglasses and muttered in·
coherently \\'ednesday during
a hearing along with two
1\·omen me.milers of his clan.
They are among his co-defen-
dant s in last s ummer's
slayi ng:i of actress Sharon
Tate and six others.
~ranson1s comm en t 1 in-
cluded these to Superior Court
J udge William B. Keene: "Arc
you going to shoot me ? •..
\Yhy are you against me? ..•
tn height, you're probably
taller than I am."
Tossing his rlmle!S glasses
at Deputy Publ!c Defender
Paul Fitzgerald. attorney for
cOOefendant Patricia Kren-
~'inkel, f\!anson s a Id : ··You
take my glasses and I'll take
yours and you may see the
judge In a di fferent frame
lhan I do."
Manson's courl-ordered al-
torncy , Charles Hollopeter,
told newsmen later l h a t
f\1anson "said some very nutty
things. r was very disturbed
and unhappy about 1l. I
thought It was bad behavior,"
H9Jlopeter added thal he wa'\
~eighing the possi bility of a
psychiatric exan1ination "bas·
ed only on his actions today."
The Incident.-; took place at 2
bearing at which Susan Deni5f"
Atkins, 21 , re cei v e d
permission to hire a new al-
1orney, 53-year-old Dav P
Shinn, "·ho has been a fr~·
quent adviser lo J\fanson and
\\'ho represents the c u I l
leader's recording company,
fhe family Jams, Inc.
1 BRAND NEW ' 20,000 Mill
' GUARANTEED BONDED LININI
2. LABOR & INSTAllATIDN INCLUDED
3 1 MICRO·MfASURE AU 4 DIUMS
4, ADD IRAK!flUID AS NIEDID
5, ARC-GRIND LINING
6 BtEID SYSTEM & CllAN BACKING
'PLATEASNEfDED
7 , GRfASf & PACK WHfU lfARINGS 8 All CYllNDlRS INSPECTED INCLUDING
' MASTER CYLI NDEt
9 • ROTATE WHIW & ADJUST ~RAXIS
10, ROAD TISI YIHICLITO STANDARDS
W "th Js } \\'hieh is performed on the. I rae Moog Synth'5itcr, a computer·
like machine that can sound
Reported like any inslru1nent in an
ry's instrumental theme for remarks in !he book." rn1n1Jlc:. roughing out his plot. ··~tidnlght C.Owboy., 1v o n ,----------------'----"---_-_-_·~~!:!.::::::: as be:o:;t theme tune.
"A Boy Namrll SuC'" ~·~n
"he~t <'OUntrv son~" for ,t:<;
11 riter. Shel 0 Sih·fn;lein, anrl
'·best country n1a!e vocal
performa nce '' for J oh n n y
Cash. Ca~h a lso \\'On that
category la st year, fo r
"Folsom Prison Blues." This
year he \\'On a se cond Gram-
my. for best album notes,
those he wrote for Bob Dylan's
"Nashville Skyline.''
archestra.
Winners of the Grammies.
By United Pre11 lnttmatlonal statuettes s h a p e d like
Syrian troops clashed twice gramophones, were announced
today with Israeli armored \Vednesday night.
patrol11 in the occupied Golan "Blood, Sweat and Tears."
Heights area and kllled or the group's :se<.'1lnd LP, com-
wounded 25 tsraelis, Damas-bining rock, jaz-i and classical
cus radio reported. At the music. won as the best album
ether end or the warfront ls· o( the 1969 contest year. Group
raeli planes bombed Egyptian member Fred Llpsius won the
Suez Canal positions for the arranging award for the
first time in six days . group's hit "Spin11ing \\'heel."
Iraq increased the Arab ··variations on a Theme by
pressure en Israel and Iraqi Eric Satie" won for BS&T in
President Ahmed Hassan Al-the be.cit contenu1oriuy in-
Bakr pledged the Iraqi army 11trumenta1 p e r f o rm a n c e
Burt Bacharach ~·on for two
scores , best movie or TV
special for "Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid" and
best on an original Broadway
cast album for "Promises,
Promises." The latter award
is shared with librettist !·Jal will play a "decisive role" in cat.egory.
the fight with Israel. Obser-''Games People la y" was David.
vers in Beirut believed Al-L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.1 Bakr would send 20,000 more 11
troops to the front oppo15ite
Israel.
Damascus radio said the
first clash with an Israeli
patrol o( two annored vehi·
cles came in the Bikaata area
west ot the cease-fire line and
that the vehicles were destroy-
ed and l:i Israelis "killed or
•wounded." IsraeJ s en t ir1 1 another armortd patrol and
this was stopped, the broad-[
cast said.
The sec11nd clash '''as re-j
ported in the Al.Jweida area
wrst of the cease-fire line I
w h e r e a spokesma n said I
Syrian force!" ~'iped out [
another armored patrol. kill·
ing or wounding 10 lsraeli 1 troops. Damascus said the [
S.vrlans lost two men.
Iraq already has somewhere I
bet\veen 10,000 and 20,000 men
in Jordan oppositt Israel.
Bible Thoughts
'1lAIN UP A CHILD in tit• w•v ht.
'ltould 90· •nd wh111 h• ;, old, he ... itl
no! d1J11trt from ii", Pr. 21 •6. SolOITIOfl;,
the w it1 1t m11t. 1t1!1cl thi1. fph. 6 :~ llYI
we 1r1 fo r11r 0111 <hilc/r1n " .. ;" th•
n11rt11tt. 1tttd td!Tlonition of fht lord'"; lhi1
i1 RIGHT tr1inin9. A d1i!d mu1t bt t1u9ht
r11pon1iblll tv lo God. !I nol, wl.~n ht.
cro..,, up AS BIG AS HIS l'AllENTS. th1i1 thinkin9 will 1101 111'1·
f~ H"'. T~ey will b1 "old fo91y". "1q111•1" "out of c/111". t lG.
Ht ..,;u w1nl lo 1>:J!trirn1nf witli 1p11d, "1p1td" pill1, drink,
9'"'blin9 , end q1rnbolln9, Thin91 .,;, old Otd tnd Morn l•119hl
hi.., wil! '"'"' .. .,one ind bu9qv" lo .,;..,, II r•qui•e1 ITIO•f +h111
1ul11, re9ul 1ti e"1 '"d l•w1 of ••the e!d fo lkt" for him. Thi1 ;,
n•tur11I. 101 lh• thin~i "t of O•d t"d Mo"' "'~Y 111 •r••lic, lhrit
q1111relion i1 p11t.
eu1. tht G r11t Ged On Hiqh, !h, M1k1r of 1h, Uni¥t•1•, +h1
C111for .,f 111 1 U, He who i1 th1 SAME v11+11d1y, lod1y i nd
fore¥e• !Heb. ll:I , J11. !:17 ) it one in whom ll\1 yeuth ce1•,
with cenfid•nt1, put hh !11tin9 fruit. A yeun9 p1rion "'1111 l.1¥1
1ol'rleihin9 BIGGER. THA~ HE IS. 1lwey1; lh1! 101!'elhi119 is GOO.
VISIT 111 .... ith yo u• ,~114,,., e11d 1tudv 1h-:oul GOD ftcrn G,,d'1
word, the BIBLE. Church cf C~ri1! 2!7 W, Wihon SI., Co1!1
Mr 11. C1lif. '11627.
••sy·c•r• •c.tive w•tr
1 ..
men end boyi
strip•d llartl
;n
rtd, white o1nd blue
• 11111i1t ch1191
DUNLOP
NEW $500,000 COST A MESA
TIRI
CINTIR
30 05 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA
(
CO ltNll OF !AKElt ) AND MAltBOI BlVD.
557-8000
~~~·=--
S.20,u ....... 1295 7.00•ll ....... 2395
6.So11:s ••••••• 19'5
7.35114 19••
1(11/l 4) .••• ··--
7.75114 19':;
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~·l.~·~~,····--· 1995
8.2Srl4 23" ,,,.,,., ......... .
1.2"15 23 .. ICi71/lSt .... ,_,.,
'""" 2695
11111fl 4J .•••••• _.
l .SSrlS 2695
fll71/1 Jj ' .•••••••• ... ,, ... ,,,. 29 ..
U71/l4).,,., •••••
1~·,!~:;~~~ .... 2995
WHITIWAllS $2.95 IXTAA
Garde" Grove
-14040 BROOKHURST
IC.0..,.... or l ,._f'lllfll Incl W•tmlntt.rl
5JQ.J200
Anaheim -Buena Park
6962 LINCOLN BLVD.
rcotw ot L1nai1n •!Id K"°'" . 826-lSSO
NOW OPEN • In
Brand New
1st Quality Tires
7.7Sx14
(f7t.T4)
7.15x15
{F71/1 SI
'.JOrl 3
s995
M~.~\ $1 295 l.1SxlS
(171/151 7.J5rll
(f71{14)
1Jth1J
(H11ftl) ,_,,,,. s 15 95
IJ.blS
(H7VllJ
(l71/15J · ..... ,, sl 7'5 IJ5rl5
'171/15)
COSTA MES A
3005 HARBOR BLVD.
CORNER OF-BAKER & HARBOR ... 557-8000
I
•
• l • l
r
..
8 DA.D.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Political
Political observers in both Washington and Sacra·
mento make wry commentary now and then on the
representation Orange County has in those two poUtical
power cerrters. .
The consensus usually ls that our eiected repr~
aentatives have hardly constituted a very potent force.
The death March l of veteran Congressman James
B. Utt set in motion a mad scrambling that could af·
feet Orange County's le~islative stfength -negatively
or positively. One thing ts certain: the lineup at Sacra-
mento and \Vashington is certainly going to be different
come January, 1971.
Here, after 11 days of frantic, behind-the-scenes
negotiations and speculation, is the way some of those
pohtlcaI figures line up :
lSth Congressional District. Arch-conservative State
Senator John G. Schmitz, di stinguished by being the
only acknowledged m ember of t~e John Birch Society
in the. California Legislature, has declared that he will
resign his state position to seek the seat left 11'acant by
the death of Representative Utt. In view of the ~ver:o
whelming Republican registration edge in this district,
nomination in the June primary ls tantamount to elec-
tion -and Schmitz' only' o~ponent at this rrioment is
William \Vilcoxen, a scrappmg ·but unknown attorney
from Laguna Beach. ·
Schmitz, Wilcoxen and any ol~ers in the race will
compete in a free-for-all, non-partisan special election
to fill the unexpired part of Utt's te·rm. Candidates also
will face normal primary and general elections in June
and November, but odds are the same man will win
both races.
34th State Senate District. \Vhen Schmfz steps down
from his present office, he throws open a situation
similar to that in the 35th Congressional District. Elec-
tions will be held both to fill the unexpired part of his
term and Ute normal four-year term.
Unexpected entry in this race was Dennis Carpen·
Scramhlin
ter, one of California's powerful Republican figures,
who undoubtedly was encouraged to seek ofiice by
Governor Reagan. Carpenter's formldable poUtie:al
machine probably will scare off any Republican candi·
dates of stature and at this juncture he would appear
to be an easy winner,
The winner of this race would gain one term or
seniority over other freshman senators by being· elected
in the run-off election -and with re-apportionment
coming up could move very rapidly on the senate's
seniority list. ·
71st Assembly Distrfc:t, After nearly two weeks of
soul searching, incumbent Robert Badham of Newport
Beach apparently is goin~ to sfay around and seek
his fourth term in the California Legislature. Badham
has had no iarnest opposition from Republicans in re-
cent years, but the June primary in 1970 will see him
fa~ing an energetic opponent in Nolan FrizzeUe, former
chief of the conservative California Republican Assemb-
ly and a familiar worker· for GOP causes.
70th Assembly District. Assemblyman Robert Burke
of Huntington Beach, after casting some wishful
thoughts at the seat Schmitz is abandoning, has decided
he will stay put.
All of this activity will take place this summer,
at primary election time. When fall rolls ai:ound, Or·
ange County will see Democratic Assemblyman Ken-
~eth Cory battling an all-out GOP effort to unseat him
ID the 69th Assembly District.
. At the same time, Congr:essman Richard T. Hanna
will face another challenge from Republican William
';l'eague -who came within hailing distance of unseat·
mg I-Tanna two years ago.
The game's the same, the players are changing. Whethe~ Orange County voters will be making clear·
cut choices, or whether those choices were already
drawn by political chance, the main lineup is shifting
-and better representations could be ahead.
•
'Smell Is Coming
Out of Capitol'
Let's Benignly
Ne glect Our
Problems
Federal S ystent Plati
To the Editor:
It is ralrly .safe to say that ii Sen. Jack
Schrade were holding public office in
Orange County and pulled the stunt
charged against him in the state senate,
he would find himself facing a recall
election here.
And it is also falrly safe to say that If
he were licemed under any of the
buslneu or professional codes of this
stale and was similarly charged, he
would have to formul ate a good u ..
planation be!ort a bearing against bis
license.
The !act is, he received a check for
$5,000 from a firm shortly before a bill
favoring the firm moved out of his com-
mittee. The good people of Fountain
Valley did not hesitate last summer to
dea1 with irregular Instances of this kind.
BUf WHAT CAN be done with a atate
M:nator? To whom can we express an ob-
jection? Sens. Schmitz and Whetmore
both chose to look the other way in the
Schrade matter. Are we to think that Sen. •
Schmitz and Whetmore regard Schrade's
example as a perfectly normal and ac·
ceptable way to conduct the business of
government? If oot, why then did they
proceed to \"Ole for Schrade for President
Pro Tempore, the third most influenlial
office in the slate?
There is a smell coming out or the
capitol In Sacramento which cannot be
waved away. If it takes "'oters to correct
the situation, no one should think the
voters of this area do not know \\'hat to
do about It.
MRS. JOHN H. DARJINES
Ft'uslrn ted b y l f laa t:>
To the Editor:
Frustration, frustration, frustration. I
am sick of hearing the word shouted
from every California c t1 m p u s •
Frustrated by what and by wh om?
Student participation, which on all
campuses was ""TICVe>r greater, now
threatens the whole educational process.
Options in courses with or without credits
offer a veritable smorgasbord of elec·
tives,
FUNDING BY afnuent parents and
overburdened taxpayers was never more
generous; entrance requirements now
flexible to the point of compromising
academic slandards; job opportunilies
never before come to campus l!lttking out
the applicant : the general quality of
education, 11 model over the country end
even abroad, until student disruption
bli!<l>ted IL
'Vhy not drop this oveN·orked word
from student vocabulary, lay off destruc·
lion of the facilities others have created,
and use the precious college years in
preparation for a really viable life style.
B11 George ---.
Dear George :
~n't It burn you up how so
m8ny people on TV who evidently
don 't do much of anything make
wadJ of money and are aought
after simply bccau3e they are
"celtbriUes"! I've .oever seen any
oxnment on this ln your column
aad J want to know: tsn'l lhis a
deplorable ttate of alflllra?
BURNED UP
Om Burned Up :
Yu. And I'm burned up, too.
bit airy• have •II the Juck.
(Don't let needless lroJ"ilrs
bocber you. send ta C'.C?t "e ! . a
Utt of. needful troubl!!t! -ht· .1 ;: '\ c
,oa problem• you dldo't know were
boO><rfq )IOU.)
.. ,.
Mr. Daniel P. :fl.1oyniha.n
The White House.
~ \Vashington, D.C.
MaiUJox Dear fl.tr. Moynihan: l am writing to
pledge my full support for your proposed
1 policy o! applying "benign neglect" to
our racial strife.
Letters from ,-eaders are welcome.
Normally writers ihould convey their
message& in 300 words or less. The
right to conde·me letters to fit space
or elimina!e libel is reserved. All let-
ters miut include signature and mail-
ing address, but names may bt with-
held on request if 111.ffi.cient reason
U apparent Boetry wlll not be pub-
liah<d.
Old enough for a measure of pen;pec-
tive.
HOLT E. CONDON
~Ide Effects
'l'_p the Editor :
I believe your editorial, "No Reason lo
P2nlc," of March 3, was somewhat n.alve
and loo simplistic.
From biblical timts lo the present
responsible physicians have recognized
that every medication or treatment car·
ries with it the risk of undesirable and
even dang_erOtls side effecls. fl.fedlcal
practice is continually characterized by
weighing of prescribing or not prescri~
ing, of surgically intervening or not In·
tervening, In any given case. Even
sophomore medical students recognii.ed
tbe hazards Involved in prescribing so
ubiqui tous a medication as aspirin.
SINCE 196!, the medical literature lias
been replete with reports of com·
plications of using oral contraceptives.
Early on, our British colleagues were
warning us of the potential blood clotting
hazards and the occurrence or strokes in
young v;omen taking oral contraceptl\"es.
Internists. cardiologists, ne uiologists,
hematologists and immunologlsts have all
recognized seri ous life threatening com·
pllcatlons of these medications.
THEIR REPORTS are published.
Ind eed, in 1964 flarbor General Hospital
in our neighboring community, began a
large scale investigation of ar3.I .con·
tracCptives and their effect on clotting
mechanisms. Unfortunately, the se
reports must compete for space in the
lay press with more dramatic accounts of
heart transplants, liver transplants,
kidney transplanb. and pancreas
transplants.
ALL RESPONSIBLE physician s
operate under the . primary dictum of
"primum non nocere." Just because ornl
contraceptives are pOpular and con·
· ''cnicnt, the Immutable principle of all
drugs being potentially dangerous is not
abrogated. 1 personally reject your "in·
dictment" or the medical profession and
simply reite-rate what we have all known
for centuries, i.e., all drugs are poten-
tiall)' dangerous.
L.F. STOCK, M.D.
EUn1h1 n l.h111 Prejudice
To the Editor:
I am one of the white students Vi1io la In
f11vor or inlegratton in our country. Ir we
integral~ Ul<! younger generation now. It
will ellmlnate 1 grtal deal or prejudice
because both races will be 11ble to ct:im·
munlc:ile 3Jld deve.Jop together. AH
students will have an equal opportunity to
a good education and to recognize the
dignity of each other·s heritage.
I bcllere that parents owe the.I r
""lldren the opportunity to discover for
thems:rlves that: "The Negro boy Is as
smart 11s the redhead," or "The while
boy really docs like me."
MARLENE WELLS
I couldn't agree with you more that
benignly neglecting the problems that
beset and divide our society ls the only
wa)' to get a little peace and quiet around
here. Have you thought of extending The
Benign Neglect Doctrine to pollution?
I! we Americans could get together and
benignly neglect pollution, it would go a
r
I ,.
(
Jong w~y toward silencing the hysterics,
paranoids and boodlers on all sides of the
issue.
THE HEART OF the matter, as I see
it, is not merely to neglect pollution, but
to look upon it benignly. With a little ef.
fort we might even come to enjoy It.
When one casts aside his irrational
emotional resJXlnses, an oil slick on the
water becomes. an aesthetic experience·
the inte rplay of rainbow-hued colors dan:
cing in the. sun dellghts the eye. And what
could more soothe the troubled soul than
contemplating a .soft coverlet <lf warm
amber smog on a balmy spring day?
If applied to Vietnam, poyerty, inflation
and those under 40 The Doctrine of
Benign Neglect would do inuch to quiet
the. extremists who are now tearing our
soc1e~y asunder. A problem ignored, I
say, IS a probtem you don't have to deal
Vt'ith.
I SPEAK AS A LONG practitioner of
Benign Neglect myself. At the moment, I
am benignly neglecting 1 recurrent
twinge in my left chest. beetles in my
basement and a funn)' noise Jn my
transmlss:.ion.
Thu~ far, the results havt! been In keep-
ing with my motto, which I am sure will
appeal to you and the entire Silent Ma·
iorlty -"Everything Will Work Out All
Right."
The only problem I can foresee ls sell·
Ing The Doctine or Benign Neglect to
those who _will be benignly ncglecied,
~uch as militant blacks, conservationisl.s,
doves, hawks, poor people, Investment
bankers and young anarchists.
. I, m~self, for. example, have had a dif-
ficult lime selling It to Mr. Hotchkiss of
the ,Courtesy Collection Agency. He keeps
saying "A bill ls a bill and must be
paid!" I suppose the black militants feel
much the same way,
TllE GOVERNMENT, however, has
one great advantage : the highest desire
of most citlzena Is to be benignly
ne,l?lected by the government.
The only time the government takes a
personal lnlerest ln us ls to send us a
draft notice, a tu bill or a jury sum·
mons. The government, Jet's face It. ls
bnd news.
So all we need do is convince the
milil3.nls of the ad vantages of bein~
benignly neglected. In turn thty will
perhaps benignly neglect lo bum down
our citlea. Perhaps.
OF COURSE, under the principles of
r3clol equality, I demand that the
govcmmcnt benignly nef{lect mt, too. To
do my part, 1 have d~idcd to benignly
net1lcct it. I aim surt II will continue to
make progress without me.
Ph'.!ASe Inform the Commiuloner of
lntemal Revcnut of <lur Bf!reement
before Aprll 15. And do give him m)' most
htnrtrcl t .11nd benign goOO wl&hl\lf
Dtn1111ly Yours, ttcclerL , ,,f
Sensible Election Reform
W ASl-llNGTON -When the Sena le
finishes with the Voting Righta Act and
the nomination of Judge H a r r o Id
Carswell, It will have measurably af.
fected the Nixon Southern strategy for
1970. II will then tum, as It rarely can, to
a debate on a question of lasting, natronal
and historic importance.
What Is Involved ia the way we elect
our Presidents. SpecUically, the debate
will concern the constlb.Jtional amend-
ment proposed by Sen._ Birch B3yh (0.
Ind.), nomJnally supported by a majority
of the Senate and already passed by a
substantial margin in the House. It is
also supported by the President, who has
indicated th1t he doesn't like it much, but
has also Indicated I.hat he hasn't thought
a bout II d"'ply.
THE BAYH AMENDMENT, which
might properly be called the anti·Wallace
amendment, Is designed to prevent
forever the nightmare faced by the na-
tion on the night of Nov 5, 1968, when it
appeared for a few hours that neither
Richard Niton nor Hubert Humphrey
would get a majority of the electoral
vote, thua throwing the election -ac-
cording to the ConsJ.jtutlon -Into the
House of Representatives.
The. Bayh amendment has the great
virtue of simplicity. It provides that the
candidate who gets the most popular
votes is the new President. provided only
that his vote is 40 percent of the total
vote cast. If It ia not, there ls a subse·
quent election, between the top two can·
didates only.
LAST WEEK, Sens. 'Ibomas Eagleton
I
f '
Mankiewicz
and Braden '
(0.Mo.) and Robert Dole rn-Kan.) of.
fered a counterproposal. It wa~. for
Eagleton. a sl.ep of grave importance. He
had been one of the ro-sponsars of Bayh's
amendment. and he is a member 'if the
Senate's liberal bloc which has .Jl\vays
supported lhe principle or one.mah. one·
vote.
But Eagleton, on analysis. had found
serious drawbacks to the Bayh amend·
ment. First. he JXJinted out, a cdndidalc
coold win the Presidency wilh 4-0~rcent
of the vote even though he carried no
states at all, Second, he felt thc.an1end·
ment -by stressing na tional popular
vote -\\'Ould encourag~ rather t~an limiL
the creation of splinter parties, roch hop.
ing for a handful of votes "'hich cou!rl
then be traded for power in the runoff
election:
"WJIAT WILL YOU give me if I ask
the 2 million people who voted for me to
cast their votes !or you?" is ii question
whi ch the Bayh plan conjures up, and
with it all the horrors of the politics of
ideology,
Eagleton and Dole proposed a
substitut.e. which they have called n1c
federal system pl an, largely based on
analysis and research by \Vashlngton at-
torney Myron Curzan.
The federal system plan combines
fe aturi><1 of IJTP pre.~ent electoral college
\\1ith !he popular \'Ole ;ipproach of the
Ba}"h anu-.ndmcnt to reach a result '~:hich
would at the same time di<icot.tragc a pr!>o
h"rration of smaller parties -thus spar·
inn the nation lhe curse of ideological
polH1cs -and gu;iranlcc that a minority
candidate l'OUlrl nor emerge a~ President.
rr 'VOULn A\\' A RD the Presidency to
the cand1dalc '"ho led ln the popular vote
-but oii!y if he ""Otl lhc rlcrtion 1n more
than half tht states 1261 or if he won in
sl:.;tc'i ron1a•n1ng mure Olan half the
voting popul;ition. If no <:andidate met
ei1her requi rrment. !he. clccloral vole
'''OUld be decisne but it would be assign-
ed automatically tlhus eliminating the
problem of the "faithless elector"). 1r no candidate, even then, had a ma-
jorlty or the electoral vote, the lhird-
plnce candidate \'t'Ould be eliminated and
his clecfnral \.Oles distributed pro-
portionately , Thus, a Prl'.!sidenl would
cn1crgc with mathematical cerlainty -
tr.ere \vould he no n;Jlional cliff-hanging
for day~. either to counl outlying returns
or to d{'lcrm 1ne it th!' lendrr really had 4D
percent, or only 39.99 percent.
THE EAGLETON ·DOLE pr op o s a I
presrr\·rs Ille fe<lerRl -syste.1n, requires
candidates lo ca1npa1gn through the en·
tire nation, rc!ains !he po\ver or the
s1nallc r l1\0·P<1rly "swing" slates anrt
d.irninishcs the prospect of a number of
single·issue U1irrl parties. It is quite the
most sensible e!cctoial rcfr1rm package
since the cmergentc of na lion:il politica l
parties 150 years <1~0.
By t·ran k r.Jankiewici
and Tom Braden
General Telephone vs . Bell
On my occasiona1 visits to New York, l
smJle with sweet sadness to hear my
Manhattan friends cussing out the Bell
Telephone system there. New Yorkers, in
speech and print, have been giving their
phone company a terrible beating for lhe
last year or so, due mainly to lack of
facilities and ill-trained personnel in an
expanding fi eld.
But if these spoiled Manhattanites tried
living elsewhere for a while, they might
look upon Mother Bell with warm
nostalgia. Compared with some other
phone systems, Bell is a model of ef·
ficlency.
I SPEND MY SlfmtERS in a part of
Wisconsin that ls serviced -and I use
the verb a.a loosely as possible -by
General Telephone, a public utility that
seenu to be run for private perversity,
and makes Bell look as benevolent and
attentive as Father Christmas.
Not only are General 's rates ridiculou~
Jy high -until last year, it cosl 45 cents
to make 1 20-mile call to town, which
CO!ts only a 'dlme in New York or Chicago
-but the. equipment l!leems to have been
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
flllw limes have changed r School
used to be a laugh. Naw lt'a 1
"riot."
P. D.
Tith .... _ ...,,,..,. ,......,.. ...... ""
!Ott .... ,.,. ...,. .. .. --· .....
,_ -.t -.. OlteMf .... Otllr rlltl.
(
s):dney J. Hai·t·is
bought at an auction sale follo"'ing the
dismantling of the lA>lumbian Exposition
of 1893.
General Telephone, at least in my neck
of the woods. gives the itnpression or
being about as interesled in the publil'
welfare as the Arab Chamber of Com·
merce in setting up a kosher delicatessen
in Cairo.
NOT TO GIVE THE impression that I
am unfairly knocking pri vate enterprise.
Jet me testify that aoy Arneri can phone
service is far superior to the brand of
telephone frustration in most European
coµnlries. where phone service is 0"11cd
and operated by the government.
Getting your party in Fr11nce or Italy,
even If it is jusl a call across the street,
ls a Herculean feat for natives trained in
the devious ways o! the.it indigeno11<1
phone company; for a foreigner. ii 1s an
exercise in lotal bafflement, chagrin and
Q11otes
Sidney H o o k. pollUcal 1cltnUst -
"The assumption of a p o 1 i t i c a J
democracy is that there are no ~xpcrts in
wisdom, that e<ich citizen '! vote Is n!'i
good as any other 's." Vernon I. Chrudle,
cltanetllor, UC, Santa llarbara -"The
unlverslly's main buslntss. on 1he othi-r
hand , is not government b~1\ !he.
discovery and tr11nsmlsslon of the tnilh
however one may wish to employ ii
pragmalically. Thls purpo!!t Is not to ~
controlled by majority n1le but by the un·
compromising application of rinorou~
proft~lona.I standard1 coup\('(! with thr
UnW3Vttlng protectJOn Of ln\l!IJl'ClUQJ freedom.''•
1age And. of co111·fc, 1rying to compl~lc a
JQng-<listant·c r~ll tn n1 o s l Eur1>-
pe3n t·ountrir~ i~ ~01ncthing on !he orde r
of skiing do\vn tllr ~lattcrhorn <in a cor-
rugated \\";1shboarrl.
~ELL TELEPllO: E ir, Chicago, \\"here
J h\"C' 1no!'t of the t1n1r, h;1o;; the fastest
rcp:ilr scr\icr I ha1'L' 1'1·cr ;.:ccn: \Yhcreu:i1
in n1uch of 1'1Jr<!J>1'. 1r ''uar cq_u1pmcnt
~oos nn Ill<! blink. \"1>11 1nr,;:l1t :1<: 1rel\ take
a cour.,c 111 :Oerol:t>~ smokC'·S1Rn;i\s for
lhc 1·c~I nf tli(' yr·1r. Thcv m11s1 imj){lrt
lhl'ir rC'pl;1rt~1rcn1 p:1r!s' ft(lnJ till un·
dcrr.rn11nt1 tool-.1nd tly,· p ! a n 1 in
Afgh11r.i'itJn.
The l.;r1J1c;h phon~. :.)sttm i" prel\y
gno(t, c1 en !1:01,pl1 ll 1s run bv the Post
Offit:C' rl ~parl1nrnt · bul (';tn 3011 11nagirf
!hr l' S. J>l'~t t)ff1c{' !;1f-irn:: (Iver
tt:'lcphonc SC'!"\·1rt>" ll brr.;,!rs the mind
a nil for o bl:'1Trrl 111fl·111,1l rn;.o.Jic.~ 011~
grnt rful lr>r c1·cn !\I" ctt<:n:il .10~ surl y
n1ln1str;1tiono;; nl 1,rucr;i! Tr!l'phone.
1 ho~r i/e1v Y,irktr~ JU~l rion't kno"v \vhen
U1ry h<'\e JI ~('{Id.
Tlturi-:d:iy. ~larc:h I:?. 1970
Tlir rd1tnnal pn1r o' ff f lffl·l1J
P1lo ' src/;s to 111101 m n11d 61 ,,,.
11lot11 ITtTdf'r.~ 111j nr1•.~r11t111u 1/11$
flt"lt>t~ancr\ n•1 '•lU.t onr( t:Om·
rn· .. :•~,,, rP1 1 ' -~, ll( l•lfcrest
ni•rl s.'~, •/1rc•·r,., li11 nrCJ•·irJ1,zg n
/Ori 111 h•r lhe ".rnrcs~1011 of
uHr r,.,.,rcr1· 111n11it)11t, nnd hy
prr.trnl""'1 r r rtr~rr~r ,. t'll•·
/J1Ji·1t~ ttf r· (nrn,,." flb,rr1•rr.~
&t'lfl ~pol:,· ..,, n u1; I •;"l'U of f/1r
&:w.
Robert :-! \\"t11d, Puhlt ~llrr
CHECKING .
•UP•
Odds Run 2 to I
For One Proposal
AFTER AN EXTENSIVE
study o( the surveys, our Love
and Wa r man calcula tes the
odds run two to oiie that a girl
\viii never get more than one
matrimonial proposal . . . IF
YOU GET a charley horse
fairly often, you could be
fighti ng some inner urge to
run away. Or so says the
psychologists.
HO\V WOULD YOU llke a
nice boiled banana? That's
\\·hat the Puritans did with the
bananas they obtained. That's
righl, the Puritans did indeed
gel ahold or some bananas.
Historical records prove that
•.. WllY YOU WEIGH Jess
aloft in an airplane than you
\vejgh on the ground, that's
easy to understand, fairly.
What's not so easy to un4
dersland is vlhy you also
\veigh Jess undersea in a sub-
marine than you weigh on the
ground.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q,
"Can ~·ou 'name a girl with a
bell.er figure than Linda l-lar-
rison of 'Bracken's World'?''
A. Am not qual!fied to judge
such matters, sir. Howeve r,
the Jadyfriend, who is so
qualified , contends the most
beautiful rigure in lhe world
belongs to a girl named
Laoura. She's fro m Greece.
She hangs around a place in
New York Ctty called Molfetas
Greenroon1. She eats shish·ke·
bah, and talks funny, and
whe n she gets up to wal k
somewhere, the tables fall
silent. Young men with bottles
of ouzo freeze in the pouring
and old men with beards sto p
fingering their komboloi.
WH I CH DO MORE
households in thls country
have, telev ision sets or
telephones? Say TV sets.
That's right , • • AT HIS
STAND, says a Las Vegas
blackj ack dealer, the wom en
consistently outnumbered the
men by three to one •.• TIJE
LAND MEN report the price
of acreage has ~one up from
10 to 2S percent m the last 12
mon(hs • • , TWELVE
J\.ULLJON TONS of steel pins1
that's what the women of the
world stick. into their hair
every day. \
OPEN QUESTIONS -L
What do yoU call a female
beaver7 2. Can you name even
one great Russian painter? 3.
Where did we gel the ex-
pression "b:V& and bye."
ACCORDING TO a diction
specialist. those S\ates along
the Canadian border turn out
this country's best radio and
TV annotmcers . • . !\10ST
FORTUNATE that COWS don't
go around biting people. They
spend 18 hours a day, chewing.
The ir jaws are exceedingly
strong • . • REO.-BLOODED
HE·MAN is right With 10 per·
cent more red corpuscles, the
blood of a man ts redder than
the blood of a woman.
R..\PID REPLY -No. sir,
almost but not quite half the
wor king people in New York
make clothes.
Your questi011s and com-
ments are welcomed and
will be used whenever pos· 1
sible in "Checking Up."
Please address your mail to
L.~f. Boyd in care of Daily
Pilot, Bo:t 1875, Newport
Beach, Calif. 92663.
Ru ssian Cleaning Gals
Also in Short Supply
MOSCOW (AP) -American jacked up the ir price
housewlves who have trouble rubl e.!! per building.
finding cleaning women are "Young and mlddle-aged
not alone in their plight. people spurn a bucket _,nd
Moscow's apa rt ment dwellers mop with indignation," the
who can a!ford them are feel-paper said. "The work is left
ing the pinch, too. So is to pensioners. And in 10 years
Russian industry. when they are gone there "i ll
Snobbery is one reason. The be none left to take their
t raditional ''urborschitsa'' place."
with her dark c o v e r a 11 s . Trud reported on a round-
buckct and mop is looked table conference in Len ingrad
do~11 on by other classes of where factory e x e c u t I v e
So\'iet workers. \Vomen prefer "confirmed -the sharpness and
driving steamrollers, cranes urgency or the c I e a n in
and tractors. woman shortage." A meat
As a resu!l, most cleaning plant director, M. Ivanoff,
\vomeri are old. nearing retire-said he Qad 120 unfllled vacan-
ment and in great c!emand. A cies for cleaning women.
50rt of reverse snobbery has S. U. Pavlov, representa live I
sel in with the uborschitsas or a research institute for
picking their own jobs and, municipa l n1achi ne building, 1
very often, their .;iwn salaries. reported thal scientlst.s were
"ll is easie r to fil,1 two va. slill having trouble ironing out
cancies with engineers than to all the bugs in Soviet vacuwn
find a cleaning woman," com· cleaners and floo·r polishers.
plained the labor newspaper He said 10 models of cleaning
Trud. machines had been developed, '
"We know of a certain but only four were Jound ·
director of enterprises who suitable for widespread pro-1
\vas compelled to en\isl clean-duCUon. 1
ing women on the salary of The failure cited by Pavlov
engineers in his p r o j e c t Included the MPM2, a huge
bUrcau." machine tha t required "mod·
"Five years ago families emization" aft e r one trial
sharing an apartn1ent used to run in the Leningrad sub"'•ay
take turns paying a "'oman system. The POil vacuum
two or three rubles to clean cleaners has "only a very nar· 1
the place." said one ro1v sphe re of use."
Muscovite. TI1e ruble is worl_h 1 -tlPX'MC@t24'3:D"?1"""-J I
$1.11. "No1v they do it .......
1hemselvcs. It's impossible to • O
nnd an uborschit~a who would Poison ak
\Vork for that kind of mor,cy. ''
To overcome the shortage in
unpopular jobs. the Kremlin Big Hazard
recently decreed that worker.'!: ·
in several lo1v-paid. menial
categories could "'·ork ru.11·
time after retirc1ncnt and still
draw 100 percent pensions.
Under the old la~· they lost
their pensions if they worked
more than one month a year:
A cleaning woman used l.o
earn 35 lo 40 rubles a month
for servicing one building. By
doing three. she could up I.his
to the average Soviet monthly
wage of 120 rubles or $133.
Trud claimed pensioners.
bes ides the pensions. "earn
200 rubles a month by working
in three places." This in-
dicates cleaning women have
Seniors Sla te
·Fashion Show
Senior citizens o( fluntington
Beach will be treated to a
fashion .lihow al their next
meeting 'm1 ~larch 16. Thrct
i;t.ores In the city will !urn.sh
clothes for The show.
Othe r events scheduled by
t11e group Include a luncheon
tor J\tarch 23. an Ea ster bon-
net parade Morch 30 and a
Las Vtgas toor from April 14·
BERKELEY (UPI) -
The biggest on·the-job hea lth
hazard in Ca lifornia is
poison oak.
The State Department o(
PubUc Health reports the
number of job-related cases
of the irritating skin disease
has passed 4,000 a year -
about 1,000 more than acid
injuries. the No. 2 hazard .
The poison oak sufferers,
who receive stale ct>m·
pensation for thei r itchy
ailment. include f ar m
workers, game \\1ardens,
lumbermen, fire fighters,
utility i n s la 11 er s and
repairmen, and others work·
ing in open eountry.
The department s a i d
most of the poison oak pa-
tients visited a doctor th.rte
or Cour Umes, but less than ,
a gua rter ol them Jost time
from work.
Other l ea d i n g oc·
cupaUonal diSeases reported
In Uto department by pbysi·
clans Included Injuries from
solvents, p I a s t I cs , heat
~lress, clllorlne, and cement,
mortar and plaster.
JG. O::::lS:IQC::Z:X"""'-=::.
.. .,-""".,..,.-,-..,_....,..,,..~,_-...,.,,--------..-------------------·-----·
•
Br,.i·(is ·h. Teens V ot~ f pr First Time
BRIDGl\'ATER, Engl~nd.
(AP) -Christine Triggol,'t9,
and Sue Heal,' 20, are voting Thursday ~ for a member ' o(
Parliament George Duggan.
19, isn't, even though jl would
give him the dislinction of
being ainong ·the £ i:.r•S t
teenagers.in.British history to
vote.
"I don'l tno'v much about
pOlitics,1' said Christine. "but
we could do with a change."
She explained she will vote
conservalive like her parents.
Sue ls v o t i n g labor, liki?
her parenls.
, "I like to think J'vimadt up·.
my own mind .because 1·,
believe in socialism," she said ·
"But obviously family in·
fluence plays a part."
, George D~ggan, SOD o[ ·a
munleil)al employe, said he
ha.dn 't everi bothered t D
register to vole.
The issue or teen-age voling
is. now In debal~ In lhe United
States. In Was hin g t on
Wednesday, the Senale was
cilnsidertng • measure that
wo.uld lower-the voling age in
.(ederal elections to 18.
ne ar-shambles wllh taunts
hurled at the fonn foreign
secretary.
All three candidates ap-
pcttred convinced the majority
v.·tll vote like their parents.
ursday .. Matc.h 12, 1970 DAIL V PJLDt f,
~AXl}MAl}t
~X lo*OXG l<OXG
••• to )OIW exact menurement1
l t •lottd t11c.lulMJy for )'Cit' by Hons Kon& SVpet<rattsmen
from )'CIUI' choq of thousa!1d$ of tho .ortd'I tinnt fabrits.
. at HOltG KONG ~ $'4Z ·to $72 ...... .....,,.-:~--""' .......... _ ... ,_ ..
SPEOAL ntu; OF'FEJI' ••• • lllif tr;p ~ -sltlrt, mlde ~ y-rne.t-
a 1t, floOlll fMWlll a"9cteC bf you, fREt ~ pl#CllHI of t-~. --t..wt!IUI ,...,. .. __ -"""' .... P'OI ... ~ .....
Ctll Mr. L~rry for Appointmtn!-9:30 •.m. to 8 p.m.
Lagun• Bt1c~t r. 11 & 12-Saddlebt ck Inn
6t6 S.lttfl C••t Hwy. f714) 4f4·"00
Ntwport hach-#Mr. 13 & l~am1ict Inn Hotel
2111 l•t CIMll' Hwy. C714) 61.1·1120
About 3,000 youths in the 18
to 21 .age group are eligible in
the ballpting f9r a new
lawmaker for this southwest
England fa1:ming district~ but
alntost everybody else seemed ,
more interested in their: firs t
vote than the t ee n a g ers.
themselves.
"That w~ld be playing the
game of the cstablishmenl,"
rn England. you ngsters v.•ere
consplcuo\ls .by their absence
.at politi cal rallies during the
. campaign except ror the
specific bid Monday nigh( by
George Brqwn, peppery depu-
ty leader of Ule~ Labor party .
Th e rally was aim e d
specifically at youth and a.bout
6QO. showed up.
How 'many teen-agers ac·
tually will take the trouble or
vqting is a key question that
goes far beyond tile quiet con-
f i n e s of Bridwater-Britain
has an e$1mated three ~lllion
po ten tial new voters in the 18
to 21-age bracket, and their
ballots cou1d help change the
government in the next . na-
tional election, sometime in
the next 14 montits.
H•IM Offk •I Mii""'• H .... l( ..... Talll'S. K .... O .... 11641. ktwl_, Kfllt IC"'I
he contended. · · ~But the ineetlnj elided in a
SCOTTY
'{Ci.J . SAY
· YoO'Re Ql!JC
Tu MAl<E A
REAL 'SALE R:lR
MY CUSToMERS .. I
l?ICJ-IT?
2666 HARBOR BLV~
546-7080 · COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to S:30
SUNDAY 10 t.o S:OO
~~'111iiiioME ERnlTAJRMEllT CEllTl
SCOTTS-F~EE LAWN.
CLINIC
Th• bi9 11'1\lc•v·'"uck fr o111 Scoth will b1 lt1r•. No .... ,d e1n d1'fy th• 119le •Y• of Mr. H1rry Bith,11, Wh1n h1 ·9•h th1u ... nit yo\I, yo11'U h•Y• • iup•t
t"r••n 11 ... n 1nJ • thinn1r .... u.t. H he t1lki you into ltvyi19 10,.,.thin9
vo11 won't r•9r•t it.
SAT., MARCH 14, 10 AM ro 2 PM
Bring Your Weeds In .For Identification
W•ed1 ... ;1hout idenlifit1tiott feel v1ry 1011. Giv• th•"' 1 "'m' ·111d Sc oth
... ;11 tell you ho ... to g•t rid cf tfl.•1"• . · scorn NO • 9UliBLE GUARANTEE
If fo1 1ny r•11c" you •••not 11ti.li1d with retult1 •fl•r u1it19 thi1 product,
vou •r• •ntitl,d to 911 your mon•y b1ck. Simply 1end 11• 1vid1nce of
purclt111 ind w• ... ;II m1il you • r•fuod ch•ck, promptly.
SCOnS, 1810 Pl1111nl V1lley, Olltl1nl9461 I
.. scons SUPER TURF
BUILDER
F11d ill• l1wn doubt, tlt1 9r•1nl119 powtir ef
f.11nou• lurf buil~1r. An 111 d1y job 1 '
Notinet Bob l!ob71 On 1 p•1 1 Witlt !hit .!1111
it •fl. You ''" 1p1nd the r•1I of lht div <jlo1lit19
0~11 th• l1w n •nd n199in9 your .,.if ••
2500 s9. FT.
REG. S.45
40s
SCOTTS
PLUS 2
2500 59, FT.
COVERAGE
RfG. 7.95
5000 59. FT.
COVERAGE
REG. 14.95
6'5
1295
w .11, II fin1!1v ltepp•n•d, th• mi11d .,..,;1 ~omple telv de1d. AU fu1e1 bl•"" •nd
my m•mcry b1nk dr1in•d .... ...,. I li:no ... il'1 401 9r111 •nd doe1 1up1r ""011de11.
T1uit me, ••• •bout it, Alt1t ¥••ts of t•lkit19 wilh you, would I '••cl you •tft1v?.
.
scons
LAWN
SPREADER
TRADE· IN
I 901 on• •nd ii do•t th• job 10 •11ily. N• mor1
... ith th e 1t1ndi119 i11 th• wind thro""!"g th 1 1lulf
1round, tco ""••l•ful. You p•y fot this ... a h
m1i•ri1I 1av•d,
NO. 35
REG. lt.95
12.95
AUTOMATIC
REG. 14.ts
10.95
McLANE
FRONT
THROW
MOWER
Thi1 i1 lht big boc9er th• 11orof111ion•I 91rdtl\1t1
Utt. All Up.top confrol1, • 9rowl•r of • four cycle
1n9in,, •utb r1wind il•rter, rubb., wlte•l1. !You1ll
in t••I t,oubl•, bo1h, op•r•linq • '''i"9 tvp• 1110 ... •r
in tit• city liinlh , Tlt1h 1 vlo!1 tiot1 of city ordil\11\C•
42-131.
SCOTTS
MAKES
TH.E
DEAL
<Ft-eely,
without
coercion of
any kind)
SCOTTS
SUPE!t BONUS
If vo11 111Tlv .... ,,t • 9r''" l111h
J icho"d'• le ... ,. 'thi1 veer
.,.;tho..,t •lot of 9r11t ht it,
tll•n you'll ""•nf to 1pr••'
tltl1 ttulf <io ... 11. Kn•ck1 out .,.,,J, •nil cl'tl tfu etiv• lt11tch,
end '•1d1, 111 ... ah on• p•••·
(Tit• ••cond p••• 1t1d ;t t••••i
it ell ,bec•I.
COVERS 2500 SQ. FT.
REG. 12.9$ 1095
Scoff• Deluxe
\ SILENT
\ MOWER
~ :,~~54'5
lf you't• I qQi1I 11rt of • p•ncll end Ii•• I• h11t
th• 9r111 f•Jling to th, 9ro11nd, t•t th i1 on•. 11'1 ••
C1dill 11 of mo ... •n. Di1I th • h•ioltt, ••tl•1t p111hit19
mo ... er, bl,de1 do not 9ri11d 19•in1t the b•dpl•t•.
McLANE
POWER
EDGER
~ 749s
scons PURE
DICHONDRA SEED
WHAT DOES A 100 LB.
FREE
1.·.; Ahno1t pure, th•I 11. Mot• r1•I 111d fo r th•
cloll•t thin •nv olh•r br1nd ""' C•n buy, l!etl•r
,,.d rn••n1 v•1v Jhtle w11t• 111. bay b•tt•r end
9tf mor• for your dough, IR•dii11d111I h1r .. ),
COVERS
500 s9. FIET 1'J
GIANT scons
GARDEN BAG
WAftRMELON LOOK LIKE?
How •1iout 1 p11rnpiri11 u, I• 150 pott nd11 Or 9i111f tornelo••· •r
••ntel11tp•1 Uk1 b1 ... ji119 D•llt, er yerd /•119 b••111, or • lb. cuc1t111b1r1.
All tru•, •II t 11y I• 4,, i nd 11/ her• In I~• SUPER: SEED peck1, You ••11
h1 v1 fu11 f•r yo1.r who!• 91119. Jut! think, •~•rvo11• 90•• lllown to th•
1upt rrn1rk1f •"" 90•1, "l'hhktttt". Tlt1 1tulf 11 9ood 11tl119 ·to•. <H•f•
Whtt h•pp1nM ,fo th, UHi• bolft l fh i1 .,.,,.?)'
FIND
OUTI
•
..
..
(
'
t 1-'
•
I OAILV ,ILOT 1hu"61f, Mllth 12, 1970
Violent First Day
~eagan Meets Pr.otest at UC Riverside
LOS ANGELES (UPll -
Gov. Ronald Reagan's cam-
paign for reelection toda y was
off to one or thr most
tumultuous ~tarls in Cnliforni11
history .
The 59-year-old Republi can
faced two angr y con·
frontaUons on hi.s first day on
the campaign trail \Vednesday
-one at the University or
California at Riverside and the
ether at tht National Orange
ShO\\' &,rounds 1n S a n
Brrnardino.
rtcaaan accused the younK
milllants of Hitler-like tactics.
"Thrsc kids are not sym-
lx>lic of our youth Joday," he
told ZOO contributors who paid
$50 apiece Wednes'day night to
attend a cocktail fund -raising
event. '1'hese are cowardly
little fascist bands."
B o t h demonstrations in-
vplwed\ 4ema.nd s for more
Stole education mon ey .
Reagan has said schools arc
his administration's top priori-
ty.
Veteran polilical observers
who h'ave watched every
California campaign for lour
decades said it was the most
violent first day oul of any
candidate in memory.
Rea&an e:ncountered mQre
than 300 booing. c u r s I n g
sludenls at UC Ri verside.
They accused him of being a
"hypocrite" and a "parasite"
who was "using the University
of California and Its facilities
a.s a political tool."
f\.1ost were biller because
UC Regents recently ad opted
a student tuition system sup-
ported by Rea11an.
Six persons were booked on
charges of resisting aM'est and
failure lo disperse after al·
tempting to block the Reagan
motorcade by lying on thl'
paveme nt In front of a press
.bus. They were dragged of!
and handcuffed.
Girl's Skeleton F 011nd;
May Solve 1953 Murder
Later, an eslimaterl ~
te1cher1 and )'(lung mllltanl•
paraded In front or a fund
raiser at the National Orange
Show. They demanded more
state school money. In the
process. they broke a plate
glaiis vdndow and flattened 10
car tires, according to of·
ricers.
Security w a s ultratight
throughout the day. Law en-
forcement officers wtre plac·
ed along the off ramps or
freeways where the governor's
motorcade pa ssed in San
Bern11rdino and Riverside
Counties.
NORWALK (UP I) -A high-
way crew working under a
freeway unearthed a skeleton
Wednesday believed to be that
or an &-year--old girt who dis-
appeared from an auction cen-
ter nearly 17 yea rs ago.
Sheriff's depulies said direc-
tions lo the grave beneath the.
Santa Ana free~·ay were pr~
Drilling Ban
Passes Test
In Assembly
SACRAMENTO I AP) -A
permanent ban on all oil dril·
ing in stale waters of the San-
ta Barbara Channel -even
where oil companies already
have state leases -have
passed its Urst legislativ'e test.
The Assembly Natur a I
Re.sources and Conservation
Committee approved the pro-
posal by Assemblyman Jess
Unruh (D·lnglewood ),
\\'ednesd ay after an oil in·
dustry spokesman said there
was no doubt drilling would
resume if the State Lands Com.
mission lift.s its present drill·
ing moratorium .
The bill now goes to the
Assembly ways and Means
Committee. A similar bill was
approved by the Auembly last
year but was killed in· the
Senate Flnance Committee.
vided by Mack Ray Edwards.
51, Sylmar, who has been ar·
reigned on two counts of mur·
der and three of kidna ping in
cases involving five other chil·
dren.
Deputies believe the skcltton
Is that of Stella Darlene Nolan.
who wai~lhe object of a widr·
spread search aft.er her dis·
appearance June 2, 1953.
Edwards. who was employed
as a construction v.·orli:er ~·hite
the freeway was being bu ll!
and at the time of the girl's
disappearance. was charged
with two counts of murder in
the disappearances of Donald
Allen Todd. 15, in ~fay 1969.
and Gary Rocha. 17, in Novem·
ber HIM.
Deputies said another mur·
der complaint would be sought
against Edwards in the Nol an
case today.
Since Edwards turned hin1·
self in at the Foothill Division
They lined the rool\ops or
buildings where he spoke .
Sixty steel-helmeted police,
sheriff's deputies and campus
officers -holding clubs -
were needed to control the
disturbance at UC Riverside.
Chancellor Ivan Hinder;icker
apologized lo Rea gan for 1hr
•·instabilit y.''
"!l's prelly bad,' he said. •·1r
the governor of the state of
California can't come on a
campus.·•
Police Seize
LSD Cache,
Arrest Made
po_lice st~on last Friday , dep.._..,.LOS ANG ELES l UPI) -uties believe he may be respon·
si ble for a total of six mur· Nearly $250.000 worth or LSD
ders in the Los AngelC'5 area tablets were seize<! by slate
in the past 17 years. narcotics agents \Vednesday
Panther Trial
Sentence Due
LOS ANGELES tUPI) -
Romaine Fitzgerald, a Black
Panther~ will be sentenced
April 20 by a Superior Court
judge on his murder con·
viction In the death of a shop-
ping center security guard.
who arrested 1\1.0 college
students on chnrgcs of suspi·
cion of sale and possession of
narcotics.
Thames Gundy, 20. "'as ar.
rested in a S111din City motel
\\'hen he allcgedl}' attem pted
to make a large delivery to an
agent, aulhorilics said.
A spokesman for the State
Narcotics Bureau said Gundy
had in his possession more
than 41,000 LSD lab lets and a
loaded pistol.
RAND
TRASH CAN
LINERS
ALL SIZl5
R1HJ4Jed Plostlc: with
Sttap Hook L1d
....
5.9' 3 89 Openin9
Price e A'9. 98c 49' Solt Price
;<7000 v .. "
SIZE
· By Phn fnttlfaiicli
Police Sccitter 300
In School Protest
LOS ANGE LES IUPIJ -
Police arrested :>a p<'rson!'> <it
Roosevelt Hi gh Schoo I
\Vednesday in the fourth day
of demonstrations as helmeted
polict' with batons dispersed
300 persons from a street in
front of the campus.
The demonstration by about
l~ll persons demandin g im·
pro •ed education for ~texican ·
American students a n d
amnesty for those arrested in
previo us demonstrations "'US
peaceful throughout much of
!hi' day.
Th~n. shortly after noon a
bottle was hurled at a p<1s~ini;:
police car from a crowd which
had gRthcred on a i;! reel i'lrl·
jacenl lo thr cam pu s.
110 If. 17111 5t.-54t-U11
SO W. lftll St.-IQ·9111
Int N .. .-11 tlW.-40·1"0 I
\Vhen more bottle! were
thrown, about a dozen patrol
cArs converged on the scene
and police delcared t h e
gathering an unlawf ul
ast;Cmbly and ordered
dispersal. Helmeted police
charged the group and the
crowd dispersed. There Wtre
no re ports or injuries.
Police said 1nost of those ar.
re sted were booked on suspi·
cion of failure lo di sperse.
School officials said students
at the school. of which about
82 percent are ~1exican ·
American, have presented
demand s which include inore
participation by the United
1\1 exican-American Students
ori;anizalion in political issues.
ANAHEIM
l'H M•rl, 1111 w. Llnn'"-717·1110
llH W. LI P1lm....US•l"I
l'lln w. Llnc:t ln A111.-tU-1lff Off°'' Mvru f 1.m. IG f ,,,.., Mt~ .lll•Y l'rl. t 1.m. le ' •-m. Stl. & Sun.
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DRILLS w/Chuck Key
COENERAL PURPOSE DRILLS. COM·
FORTABLE TO us•. WITH SEPARATE
ACCESSORIES IT CAN IE THE HAN·
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R,.. 14.81 8 88 ~r:;ing • ••
S.T.P. SALE TREASURE
TONES • SU,ll CONClNTRATID
1to% PUl.I PITIOLIUM
OIL
TREATMENT
REG. $1.3S
5pt, ....... 8.8, 0,..1.,
ftrfce ea.
A111tMr ill'rlllfd.t• H.,11 ... ,., Spec.
t4x25 x1" 10x20xl"
16x25Jr1" 10x25xl u
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PAINTS
& t INCH ROLLER &
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5~'.! 5~~ '"°"" ........ _ UllrDll ~ ---6!> _ T!:'!:.
t'lU !t9Clllim -1-----, ........ ---~"" __ .,.-..,
,...~"'-'l .. legislator told ntYt'Smen arter SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A
Sacramento grand jury in·
vestigaUng tht acceptance o(
a $5,000 campaign contribution
by Senate leader Jack Schrade
recessed early today after the
lawmaker t.esUfied,.
----nearly four hours with the .a:nnonuvmw
panel. ~.!'!'«.:'°"~ ·~I ,_. But lhe 67 -year .o l d :::!!t':~ ~·~""
Republican declined to sayl ~~;i~~~~~~~~ what he told the 19 jurors. I.:
"I came here voluntaril y
and ln£ormed the DA J would
cooperate," the San Diego
Wheti asked if he thought the
probe woold clear him of any
wrongdoing, he replied : "l
W e4ry, Oe'arie?.
Reed Bill Leery
certainly do,·•
INFLATION FIGHTER
LE
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SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR
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dnd it's 100%~ Frost~Proof!
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• • •
• Frost·Prool means juat that. No mes&y $4 7 sss defrosting ..• eve r.' ,
• Fully adjustabi; shelves in refrigoralor'
section ad just from turkey-size to plua·
slze.r
~---. -• Smooth-glide nyfon rollers make cl ean-
ing behind, beneath easy.
13 AD 61 I j &iii] ;1 j' ·
You can"add an Automatic Ice Maker now or later!
• Replaces th~ prssent ioe ser·
vice In this refrigerator.
• Makes up lo 120 cubes a day•
11 utomallc1lly.
a Cube Level Cont rol !els you dial
.1moun1 of iee you w.1nt to kee p
II.Indy.'
*optional at sli9ht •J:fra c ost
cu11om Deluxe
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, •• with powerful Super..SU rgt Wuhing Action
tha l really ean cut the Ktvatl fd, baked bean' •nd
th• fdad egg, toot
LOOK AT lltl!St OUTSTANDINCI ,-U.TUftEI • • •
e R1 duc1s hi nd ""'ing ••• w httd·worlcing v.·ae>t
and rfnM eyrclt don I.
e lpot..-Awey r ln••
dlspenet:r. l f rigldol ..
bo-.to
buHd In
m<>ftMlp
411 ' E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
646 • 1684 -Daily 9.9, Sat. 9·6
I
• Thursd1.y, Mardi 12. 1~70 DAILY PILOT •• -Aj
Resear~hers Fighting Naval Base Pollutants
PORT HUENEME (APl-A
rour·man research team at the
rort Huenen1e Naval CivU
Engineering Laboratory is
dedicated solely to lessening
smog al Navy installation.$
across tbe nation.
The team of \Vil\iam
Watson, John King. Richard
Blbbens and George Byrd uses
at least 100 different tools .and
Instruments on ilS job. T.he
project is known as Source
Emlss.ion Testing -SET.
One of the devicee em·
ployed is a ''particulate sam.
pier '• wh ich pulls solids
from gaseous emissions and
enables engineers to measure
the quantity.
Porl tluencmc i ll a
m u l l i p urpose installation
slightly ll)ore than 50 miles
north of Los Angeles.
The four technicians are
able to detect, measure and
a n a l yze smoke stack
emisslans for comparison with
federal and local regulations.
The team recently establ ish·
ed lhat the waste fuel steam
plant at Norfolk. Va.. fell
short of federal code re-
quirements. S E T recom·
mended that additional
emission control equipment be
installed.
The :arge. old coal·fired
steam planl at the \Vashington
Navy Yard turned out lo be
producing excessive s lack
emission. The Navy n·ow is
considering conversion l o
either gas or ell.
sti ll another problem arose
on Treasure Island in San
Francisco Bay where the
Navy has a Fire School Smoke
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wear. Model 9261 has tourextended·ranoe speak·
ers-two In uch matching encloaure-plus
hlghett solid-slate roll1blllly.
Abatement Facility. Fires of
some magnitude are scl on
purpose for trairung exercises.
But each lime an exercise
"'as held, there were com·
plaints of excessive smoke.
To combat the situation. the
Navy ordered a series of
ducts, fans and afterburners.
But alUwugh the prototype
pro\led baalcally sound, it
didn 'l live up to expectations.
SET Wa! ca lled In to lake Philadelphi a, Great Lakes and
c x a c:: t Ing mcasuremcnh;. Orlando, Fla.
Det.ailcd data "·ere co1npiled
and rtadjustrnen~ now are
under consideration. ll's ex-
pected.· says the Navy, thal
thr school soon will be able to
comply ~·ith local pollution
~tandards.
SET'ii emission control data
also will serve as guideline
~·hen the Nav y builds simila r
fire schools in San Diego,
On Dean't1 List
Tanis Chapman , daughter of
ritr. and Jl.1rs. R. L. Cha pman,
17651 Iron Bark Way, Trvlnc
has been named to the Dean's
List at the UC Santa Barbara
for fall quarter, 1969. Jn order
to be nam ed to the list, a stu·
dent must achieve a B-plw:
grade point average.
COME .IN ••• BUY NOW!
247 Broadway
Houri: 11 e.m. to 10 p.m.
L .. 11111• .._Iii -494-9174
on each of these four CREDENZA styles
D
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up to 70 minutes or uninterrupted music! And, wllh
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lapel On/on controlled bycorwenienl snap-up 11d.
It also has ltlumlnated program Indicator plu3
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TOVATT~S
MAGNAVOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
Factory Direct Dealer
IROOKHURST & WARNER 401 MAIN ST.
tONJ tOl'ATf Fountain Valley Downtown Huntin9ton Beach
962°2456 536-7561
'
•
r l • ' l
'
I
------, ----
~B DAILY PILOT fhurtd.tiy, Mmh 12, 1'170
History Looks Ahead ANIMAlllk~--Altadena Operates ·'Coyote Transplant'
'Fireside Cliat' Fortells Co urt Furor ALTADENA ( AP) Now a local gun club Is culinary delight>. ~
Residents of thl1 li>s Angeles checking. traps dally and One sm.all oote of dissent on
Joothill suburb are howling transwrting animals c11ugbt to the operation comes rrom
"It tells us," says one, ''that we have not yet been swallow·
ed' by civilization . . . that
there is sWI some wildness out
there." WASHINGTON ,(UPI) -
The Prtsldent said: ) "The
coo.rt. In addition to the proper
use of !ta judicial functions,
bas tmproperl,y set it.sell up as
a third house ol the Congress
•.• reading into the Constitu-
tion words and Implications
whkh an not there, and which
were never intended to be
there.
"We t)ave, there.fore, reach-
ed the point as a nation where
we mu st lake action to save
the Constitution from the
court and the court from
itself. We must find a way to
take an appeal from the
Supreme Court to t h e
Constitution ii.sell. We want a
Supreme Court which will do
justice under the Constitution,
not over it. In our courts, we
want a government oC laws
and not of men."
These wards bad noU'!ing to
do wtlh the recent Senate bat-
tle over Judge Clement
Haynsworth or the current
debate over Judge G. Harrold
Carswell, President Nixon's
choice for the Supreme Court.
They were spoken by Franklin
Delano Roosevelt 33 years
ago.
The occasion was one of
FDR's famous radio fireside
chats, the means by which the
MOllEY TO LOAll
PAWN SHOP
RACITl'S
JEWELRY l LOAN
J22 M• St. U '°Jl1t
o.-totnH911ti ..... IHc.ll
IN LAGU NA
FROM THE PET SHOP
Pett ~ s~u ..
Professional
Grooming
A~•••hrtlK -T,_,k•I 'hll
l lnl• ....r 1..,_11 M l!Mh
•
,ltllM MORS•MIAT
'ET F0005
l OZ •LINHI Yll
494-1111
President bad been able to R.11
himself and his New Deal pro-
gram to an American public
that had been driven close to
despaJr and panic by the
Depression. Roosevelt h a d
:steadily built up political sup-
port for himself during his
first term, and on March 9.
193'7, fre.sh from a smashing
reelection victory, was fm·
mersed in the toughest
political fight of his carttr.
In the first four years of the
Rooseveh admtnistrirtion, the
White House got just about
anything it wanted from the
heavily Democratic congress.
But the Supreme C o u r t •
dominated by conservatives
appointed by previou s
Republican presidents,
repeatedly struck down key
New ~al Jaws. Roosevelt
wanted to remove the only
obslacle that se!med to block
his programs.
On Feb. 5, 1937, Roosevelt
announced the proposal that
becaqie known as the "Court·
packing Plan." FDR wanted
to add one new justice to the
Supreme Court for each cur-
rent member age '10 ot older.
Sil' of the ''n1ne Old Men" in
GWCOpen
In Summer
First Time
Golden West Junior College
wiU offer mummer education
for the first time beglMing in
Jwie.
UnW MW, the Orange Coast
Junior Collq• District's only
summer session bas been at
Orange Coast College.
The session at Golden West
will run from JWJe 15 through
Aug. '1, with 6'1 courses
avaHable.
Open registration will be
held beginning June 8, from 6
p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; June JO, 9
a.m. lo 3 p.m., and IS pm. to I
p.m:. June 12. a a.m. to 4
p.m: June 15-16, 9 1.m. to 4
p.m., and S p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
• • !! $5 DISCOUNT • I PllSOllAUDD INCOMI Til Sll'flCI • • • Doti't ... 111i1leJ .., ... _,,. "•-P'l••rf•ed.'" • • °"ly P'•ople con 01k -i•..tieft& o...I think. • S Coll 96•·1 111 for fr•• ••tl111olo, iftfor111otioA • ._ or oppoi11""''"'· • • ~ !EXPIRES MARCH 2t, 19701 • • :S l.C.I. TAX SERVICE • • :Ji 11544 ·1UCH ILYD. fAT lllllJ • TOWN &o COUNTIY CINTll • • ....
UNDER NEW OWNERSH I P
ArmanJ~· Coi//ure
H1ircuts .... $2.00
Color Rinses . . $1 .00
Shampoo & Set .. $3.50
SP EC IALS
MON. Thr u THURS,
(i,.clud1l H•ircul, Sh11'1poo
•"" Seti Breck Perm .... $12.50
Two La 9una Salons .To Serve You -
211 BROADWAY
ARCADE CENTER
LAGUNA
494-6139
1148 NORTH
COAST HIGHWA'.
LAGUNA
494-9519
We'll Wash it ...
FREE
. I
on Tuesday, .March 17th! .,.,,,.
~ '\> ·~~
GLENNEYRE
l.afuoa Car Wa.sh
~S.COASTHWT. W UNAIW:R·414-1822
LAGUNA
HOTEL
0 -'if.O. COAST HIGHWAY I
z
Q
Cl w ....
1937 were over 70 an d
'Roosev.elt would have been
able to appoint that many new
justices, assuring his program
of majorily support.
..,_ "° .. ~ .. --·
A lot of liberals had been
critical of the Supreme Court
under Cblef Justice Charles
Evans Hughes for several
years, boL "':hen Roosevelt
deelded to m o v e , con.
servatives raised a mlghly cry
and many liberals who had 'llliAT•S A Nl't GIK\. \.l'Cl 'l'bO
been demand l n g thal ti6W4 UJ .&. GUU..P l.UCt 1\ll6?'•
something be done about the
hig h court ran for cover.
\\'hen Roosevelt spoke to the
people, his proposal already
was in trouble. The chairmen
or both the Senare and Hoose
Judiciary committees opposed
it. So did liberals like Sen.
Burton K. Wheeler (D-Mont.}.
and admirllstration men like
Vice President John Narice
Gamer. Even Associate
Justice Louis D. Brandeis, a
man highly critical of his col-
leagues' refusal to accept
change, opposed the Roosevelt
plan privately.
But FDR thought he could
do it. His Senate Democratic
leader, Joseph Robinson of
Arkansas, said he had the
votes to win. And a month
after the fireside chat, a
young Democrat in Texas won
a special election for a vacant
House seat campaigning in
favor of the court packing
plan. Roosevelt took It as a
sign of public support and
showed bis gratitude lo Lyn·
don B. Johnson.
On May 18, the first blow
fell. Assoclale Justice Willis
Van Devanter, 76, a member
of the court since 1911 and
unable to write opinions,
resigned. The argument that
Roosevelt should wait for
death and rttirement to let
him choo&e judges more to his
liking wa! given • big boost by
the Van Devanter resignation.
On June 4, the Senate
Judiciary Committee adopted
a report opposing the plan.
The vote was JO to 8. Most
bills die Without committee
support. But Roosevelt wanted
a showdown.
Senate debate began July 6.
By July 13, matters bad gone
so that Rep. Hatton Sumners
(I). Tex.), who was bottling the
bin up In his House Judiciary
HB Library
Seeks Film
Directors
The Huntington 8 each
public library is hunting for
budding film directors.again.
The library is conducting its
second annual bunt for film
latent to enter the 1970
original film competition it
sponsor s.
The competition is open to
all residents ol Orange Couo-
ty. Any original Bmm, super
8mm or 16mm film on any
su bject may be entered. There
are no entry fee s.
There will be t h r e e
categories: l. Up to age 14 ; 2.
Age 14-19 ; and 3. Age 19 and
over. Films may be the work
of one individual or of a group.
Prizes will consist . of a
Totem Award to first prize
winners in each category and
merit certificates for
honorable mention.
The rules stipulate that
maximum running is 30
minutes. Films may be black
and white or color, silent or
sound.
Entry forms and films must
be submitted to the library,
S25 Main St., Huntington
Beach, by 9 p.m., June 1.
The library will appoint a
jury to judge entries. Films
will be judged on the basis of
origina1ity, content and
camera technique.
Committee
Committee , suggested M k Pl Roosevelt •imply wilhdraw it a es ans
-~---~------Result: Operation Coyote Leon ·Fisher, w J Id 11 re those nightly yipl aOO howlJ.
Transplant. biolog~t for Angeles Nationallr-ii~i!!~~jijiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiifii!ii~~i"''""i
The folks who Uve on the Forest, says he doesn't know
lower Oanks of the San how many coyotes the just.-
Gabriel Mountains, which soar begun program will move.
more than a mile high, are RO "I don't think the pack ls
strangers to creatures of the quite as large as we heard,"
wi!p. he said, "buL we know there is
~r drift down to munch a problem. There are in·
ga rden greenery.Rat t 1 er s dlcations the. coyotes were
wriggle in during the summer. being starved into settled
Raceoons, possums a n d areas. They have even been
sku nks are regular vlsitora. eating pyracantha berries,"
This winter, it's coyotes. Tbe pyracantha Is a garden
KCr~ f UT a ~-c:LLVU •
IN
DECORATED FONDUE SETS •••• R•g. Sl l .00 NOW St.9t
ICE CUBE TllAYS ••••••••••••• , R•g. S 1.lt NOW S1 .t 7
SWING AWAY CAN OPENER •••• R•9. S 3.tl NOW $2.tt
IW•ll M-ledl
ELECTRIC HO 'JPOT • P• ••••••• R•g. $ l.00 NOW SZ.41
CA'-mlfMlm & '•rttcl Mr Ctlltt, T•• •r Sou11I
l CUP COFEEMAKEll •••••••••• Rog. S I.It NOW $ .II
UGUNA BEACH HARDWARE
2.55 FOREST A'VE. -4t4.)011 LAGUNA IEACH And they're hungry. No one's shrub whose red, seedy her·
sure just why. ries are not renowned as
Russ r.turphy, a telephone\p;_,_,_,_,_,;;;;;;_,~;;;iiii;iiii
worker, says he saw eight on
the prowl in his Eaton Canyon
neighborhood one night.
"1bey took one of our cats,"
he said. "They have taken at
least two otheri. cats iq the
neighborhood and a 11mall
Yorkshire terrier. They were
on their way to cleaning out
the domestic animals around
here."
Coyotes, cousins of the wolf,
normally are man·shy. Some
say they don't travel in packs,
only Ln family groups.
''Artistry in Moving'' for the
BEST MOVE
·of
YOUR LIF.E
Call:
494-1025
580 Broadway Regardless of their social
habits, foothill folk got fed up
and called the state trapper.
Nonnally, the trapper kills•I:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ his catch. But In this case, hell
had an idea.
Twenty-five miles nort.hwest
on the other side of the moun·
tains, there's an overabun-
dance or rodents, mostly
ground squirrels -so many
they're. interfering with
erosion control work by eating
ground cover.
Lo • • . Operation Coyote
Transplant.
Book Out
In Valley
Officia ls ot lhe Fountain
Valley School District have
published a 73·page book
listing names and addresses of
several hundred community
service agencies.
The publicaUon i n c I u d e s
agencies relating to school
welfare, sports. health
services and economic aid.
sports .
Copies ha\'e already been
passed an to PTA presidents,
school principals and other
The
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT
from Congres.s. The next day,
Robinson, exhausted by the
battle, dropped dead in his
apartment Whatever chance
the bill had died with him.
Walll to ha ve a hand in the staff members.
future of Huntington Beach? IC Parents Interested in receiY..
so, then apply for membership ing a copy may ask for one at
to the Citizens Steering Com· Fountain Valley Schoo I
mittee or the Urban Land District Headquarters, One After Robinson's funeral .
Roosevelt asked ' ' C a c t u s
Jack'' Gamer, "How do you
find the court si tuat i on,
Institute. Lighthouse Lane.
Residents interested in serv·IP'_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,Oiiij
Jack?"
"Do you want \ with the
bark off or on, Cap'n?" asked
Gamer.
"The rough way," FDR
answered. #
"All right. You are beat.
You haven't got the voles.".
On July 22, by a vote of 70 to
20, the Senate sent the court-
packing bill back to its
Judiciary Committee. There it
died.
ing on the ULI committee. a
group involved in detail plao-
ning of Huntington Beach's
future, can send resumes to
P.O. Box: 190, Huntington
Beach. Two openings exist but
lhern are vacancies on other
volunteer city committees.
Names submitted will be ad·
ded to the master lists of
citizens volunteering to serve.
The city council will interview
candidates and make the aP'
new thinking from
Bell & Howe ll ,.._ ,.
SLIDE CUBE
PROJECTOR pointments. 1r='===========ll • nnl.tiUlfT ... ..... ,. . """"'• SOUTH COAST '~ 0 •'QI A• ••AO!<(" ••• ,4
Hike Expected
SAN FRANCISCO (AP! -
Pacific Telephone Co. is ex· o,... Nith,ly, 6:45 p:111.
pected to ask next week for Mo11-Sudsy, 1:45 P·"'·
rate increases totalling close
to $200 million aMually, a·
California Public U l i 11 t I e s
Commission source disclosed
today.
It was reported that the re·
quest probably will be filed
next Tuesday.
•
ANTICj)UE
ANTICS
....,_p ''•_,-
_.... .. ttw..t..W • -.....
Tony ToYatt Sez
1ffiectlo• ,,, 1/i/1 ltOfll•
"""'~"" """""' "'""' -lnnowetlv9 clnlanl Sild9 C\lbe btps slides In -.ct onW. Stores 640 alldn In u me ~
as ane bulkY round tTly ••• It
a frKtion of the cost.
oth« tuturn: 1on1 llf• QUlrt:Z-h•lopn limp, allde r11e11~ i nd
••Y acceu. to 1llde chln&1n1 mectllnlsm. Sonw models In-
clude AUTOMATIC FOCUSING.
.... 112.50 89" SALE
SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY OFFER/
YM pt II Iii• C•-1/lll "'*'
"' ,mint ., • llm C.h ,,,,,.,,.. ....... ,. .,.,; ...
,,,,., u./rlll ti• ,.,,.
I
I
I
TOVATT'S
APPLIANCES
.,
401 Mel•.ft., H•htff" IHc~
JJ6·7Hl
1 ... .ii1r111nt & W•r11•r '•"'-'" ·~1e., f6J·J411
'
ft -
VANIMAN
CAMERA
1931 Ad1m1 Boulev1rd
Huntington Beach
961-5'59
• •
1 Sylvia Porter says:
If you never needed tax help before-you need it now!
The tax forms which you mu•t
fi.ill out. thia year are entircl11
nt:101 unfamiliar -more com~
plic.ated than ever before.
But with our 1970 Income Tax
Guide, you will be able to:
(1) Fill In your Form 1040 and
its accompanying schedules
with far leM trouble and far
more confidence than you
now believe possible;
(2) Find dozens upon dozen• of
money.saving hints which
will help you to avoid costly
mistak~ in your income t.ax
return and to 1dasb your
tox to the absolute legal
minimum;
(3) Save time as well as money
on your 1969 income tax
-quite likely much bigger
amounts of both than you
'\VOuld now guess.
E verything you need to know
· about filing your Federal Income
Tax is in this dependable, easy.
to-underat.and book. You need no
one to help you. Vital tax savings
-all of the current tax "breaks,"
many of lvhich may be brand
new to you-are explained as you.
fill out your tax form line byline .
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I DAILY PILOT
Newspaper J'lrl t _.
Wheel s,.Camping
Coiumn in Pilot
The DAILY PILOT expe<L!
to make some newspaper hlsa
tory on Friday. That's the day
a new column-WHEELS and
CAMPING, by Jack
Kneass-wlll first appear in
the WEEKENDER.
It is believed to be the first
column of its type ever
published on a regular basis in
a dally new1paper anywhere
in the \~Orld.
The fact that the column
will be ''born" in Orange
County s e e m :s appropriate
&Ince this area, along with
other parts or· So uthern
'California, is "'here a good
portion of the now.booming
recreational. vehicle industry
firs: rtarted more than a
genera!ion ago. '
\Vhat 'ras '>UC'e a backyard
hobby later became a sheet
metal . and l\'eldlng shop
Eideline. It OO\\' has become a
mulli·billion-Oollar national in·
dustry.
It hus been t"limaled there
are I , £ S 0 . 0 O O recreational
vehicles (travel trallers), tent
trailers, slid~n campers and
pickup trucks, n1olorhomcs,
etc.) on the roads of the
United States today.
(And some So ut hern
California weekend campers
would probably swear that it
seems all l.6 million of them
arP on Southland freeways on
any given weekend.)
In addition to this fact, it is
e.stima ted at another 500.000
recreational vehicle ( R V )
units will eb built this year at
a wholesale value of $700
million.
11 is the vasl and growing
audience or families who take
IG wheels, pitch tents, scram-
ble on mini-bikes a n d
motorcycles or bomb their
way across rough terrain in
dune buggies each
weekend-and s a v e up
holidays c1.nd vacation time for
the "big trip" each year-that
WHEELS and CAMPING will
serve, according to Thomaa
Keevil, DAILY PILOT editor.
"\Ve have long (elt the
readership for such 1 coiumn
existed," Keevil said. "And we
are proud to announce no\v
that we feel )Ve have found the
man to \\'rite it."
Ke.evil added. "You could
accurately say that Jlck
Kneliss wrote the book. In
fact, in the past several years,
he has written several books
on mobile homes, travel
trailers, recreational vehicles
and camping."
Kneass, himsel£ an avid
travel trailerlst for more
years than he likes t o
remember. he says, now lives
in a mobile home in Hun-
tington Beach.
He has rectntly com pleted
the text for fl Pepperdine
College correspondence course
on mobile home and recrea·
tional vehicle parks.
Prior to that he wrote two
books considered to be among
the most authoritative in their
fields-"How to Select a Car
or Truck for Trailer Towing"
and "How to Buy Recreationa1
vehicles.
With a p ucklsh sense of
humor which he rarely tries to
hide, Kneass described the se-
cond book as "what every RV
dealer should know before he
starts trying to a n s w e r
customers' questions."
Currently a free lance
writer a n d photographer.
Kneass is technical editor of
Camping Guide magazine and
a columnist and feature writer
for Trailer Life magazine.
He was editor of Trail·R·
News when that consumer
Trailer Clubs of America ;
editor of Western r.1obllf
News; and a feature writer
for fl,1obile Home Dealer.
Kneass was the first RV
writer ever to attempt to tut
vehicles for towing on an
equal basis.
He ran them through field
tests in which each vehicle
pulled tbe same trailer-his-a
specially outfitted t~·lon
rig. (His record, by the way.
for "dragging" that trailer
was 0-60 miles per hour in 19\'4
seconds.)
Kneass will write L h e
WHEELS and CAMP I NG
column on a weekly basis for
the DAILY PILOT. U ~ill
cover thr" broad field of out·
door £amity recreation.
Under "WHEELS'' the col·
umn will cover ~vuythlnJ
from m r ni -bike s to
motorbomes (including oc·
ca.!lio nal '-rti c le s on
1nolorbikes. n1otorcycles, dune
buggies. amphibians, etc,, in
addition to more conventional
·•campers. "I
Reader inquiries a b o u t
either ··\VHEELS" or "CAM·
PING" will be encouraged. •
6 Transplant
Patients
Shift Moods
HOUSTON (UPI) -Six of
14 heart transplant patients
"'ho survived longer than 18
da}'ssho\vedpe r son a Ii I y
changes, behavior e 1 pert s
reported.
Dr. lrvin A. Kraft , a
psychiatriil, and Dr. H. Barry
Ptl o 11 s h • a psychologist.
described the result of tests on
Dr. Denton A. Cooley's pa.
tlents at the first internalional
symposium on the soc\o-
medlcal aspect! of organ
transplantation in h u.m a n
beings.
The personality c h a n g e s
cou ld be a side effect of the
most importan1 antirejection
drugs or brain damage that
may have occurred wben the
heart failed and the brain did
not have enough oxygen, the
Baylor College of Medicine
researchers said.
Alteralions or mood were at·
tributed to cortisone and
related antirejection drugs
they said.
,; A patient \Viii be talking
and break in to tears when
there's no sad situation,"
Kraft e1plained. "Some have
become euphoric. Sometimes
a patient can be a1most
catatonic."
Kraft described suspicious
and paranoid behavior in some
patients and even one patient
who denied he bad the opera·
lion even when he was shown
the scar.
Dr. Don Lundt , a
psychiatric consultant to the
transplant team at Stanford
~fedical Center. said ht came
to similar concluslons about
the 20 patients who received
heart transplants there.
He said mass media reports
of his studies put too much
emphasis on behavior prob-
lems ari si ng from
psychological 1tre:; alone.
Nothing much can be done
about mood chan1es caused by
antirejection drugs 1lnce they
are presently essential to
traruiplant survival, Lunde
said.
magazine \Yas described as r===========.I the "most powerful voice in
the industry."
Latt'!r lie became sa les
mana.e;cr nf R natlona1 trailer
manufacturing lirm now
owned, through a successton of
managements, by the Boise
Cascade Co.
He was onclime editor of
American Trailer New1, otfi·
cial publication of the Travel
I
t "OR ADVERTISING
IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHONE
142-4321
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Need tomethlng to Cm')'
tta own Mlaht? There are
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up to 500 po1.11w:ls. That
could ~ a Jot of bull, or
a mint In aold.
• RSVP automalic af\l\\·er· ,
Ina: teltophone. . .makc1
no mi1take1, $225,
• Out of the Je\\·cJ box onto I
a dirty hlghy,«1.y, , .Black 1 ClWlC 1965 Coriftneritaf
coni"trtl!M. completely
equipped, in top condition,
tt&dy to roll.
• ThuNd'f, M11th IZ 1970 OAI( V PI LOT ••
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469.88
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299.88
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239.88
• 14-cu. ft. c1p1city, compl1t1ly
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• Fr1111r ho lds I 21 -lbi.
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• Full-wi dth, full-depth 1he1.,.,\
• Porc1!1in-011.1teel crh ptr
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299.88
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239.88
e Exclu1i'f'1 hand w11h 19iftfot,
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16 AUTOMATIC WASHER
219.88
• Doubl1 19it1tor for rn1thine w11hin9
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• l ·po1ltion w1fer ftmtpt1f11r1
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• Welgh·to S1.,.• ITMJ Ud, 9tt the
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ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEAGH~-----.--1
#I N. Euclid 535-8121 +7 Foshion lslond 64-4-12 12 ·1777 Ed inQor Ave. 892-333 I
Mon. lhru Sot. MGn. thru Fri. 10 o.m. to 9:30 p.m. Mon. thru ,Sot.
I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m:. Sot. ro o.m. lo 6 p.m. I 0 o.m. lo 9:30 p.m.
t
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DAil Y P1LOT I lhu'1dar. MMch 12, 1970
Man wer Shorta e
Was Treatment
WASHINGTON (AP! -The
Jnlertor Department h a s
pltdpd to unleash a nood of
money to build mwUcipal
wast.e treatment plants, but
says a manpower shortage
could delay eonstniction of the
important an tipol lu t I on
facilities.
Nearly three-quarters of a
billion dollars needs to be
dlsltibuted before the end of
the year to help cities rid I.be
nntion·s waterways of
munici pal wastes, said Tom
Ferry, a director of the
departmenrs grant progra1n.
The funds are part of the
SONY
CASSElTE PLAYER-FM STEREO
STEREO PHONO-FM·AM TUNER
f Pledged
$SXl million authorized by
Congress and President Nixon
to help bulld sewage treat·
ment plants. Of the total, Fer·
ry said, about fll.5 million bas
been allocated.
"We will &ive priority to
making the grants," Ferry
said, but a personnel shortage
could "possibly result in
delays in construcUon."
The unprecedented ~mount
of money kl fight pollution,
Ferry explained, has created a 1
serious problem for the star! !I
that must process a n d i!
evaluate the scores of ap-"OI
plications. iJ
The Budget Bureau
authorized the department to
•
. ~
M-0on Rocks Differ in Age
WASHINGTON (UP I) -
Scientists said today rocks
brought home by lbe Apollo
11 and 12 astronauts show the
moon's Ocean or Storms is
about one billion years young.
er than its Sea of Tranquility.
Thls was the main finding
of the first scientific report on
the Apony 12 1Unar .samples.
APollo f2 landed Nov. 19 in
the great flat plalii known as
the Ocean of Stonns. The
Apollo II astronauts, the first
men on the moon, in July
visited another lunar plain,
the Sea or TranquUJty.
Previous reports on the
Apollo II rocks-had put their-
age at 4.5 billion to 4.7 billion
years old. This would make
the Ocean of Storms rocks a
mere 3.5 billion years old -
as old as the oldest known
rocks on earth.
Tranquility. They are guess. l n the main, the report said,
Ing its age at about five bi!-the two landi(lgs sites are
lion years, f(X.tg.hly that of the chemically similar although
sun itself. the Ocean of Storms is "less
The scientlsts who studied mature." ,
the Apollo 12 rocks found a A! In the case or the Apollo
number of chemical dlfferen-II samples, the scientists re-1
ces between them and the ported, no signs of life have
Apollo 11 samples, but the been found so far in the Apollo
greatest difference was that 12 rocks, ''and there is no evi-
of age as detenniRed by radio-denee of previously living or
logical analyses. fossil materal.1' iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
WHY PAY MORE?
lll"S
TY.LE NOL ·alS. SZ.15
MASSINGIL
Deodorant Spray
JOHNSON'S
•ABY SHAMPOO
ONLY $1.90
121/.1
OL
hire an additional 90
employes, and at least 50 have
signed on the agency, Ferry
said. But the department
needs another 95 trained men
ta handle. the rollow..up investj..:
gations, he said.
"In addition to ad-
ministrative evaluation of ap-
plications, we have to have
reports on the te c hnical
aspects of the engineering pro-
posals, and we have to inspect
the projects and review them
in operation," Ferry stated.
Navy to end Bellbottom
The report, prepared by
m a n y scientists after a
preliminary eiamination of
Apollo 12 samples at Houston,
was published in Science,
weekly journal or the Amer·
lean Association for the Ad·
vancement of Science. < OL 2 FOR$1 51LLml DIODOlANT
RIGHT GUARD
Hne a M111ical htrcMMJClnzo
With a Truly Versatile Stereo System
LONDON (AP) -The
British navy may abandon the
25-ioch bell-bottoms of the
Do g, Cat Flood
Enters Britain
Adm. Nelson era i£ trials of
the new, slim·Hne uniforms
turn out well ln 1971.
Racilo Operator Ste p h e n
Thomas, 19, said Tuesday,
"You feel daft wearing bell-
bottoms. They're old-fashion-
ed."
The bell-botloms are 103
Scientists believe the F ra
Mauro regon. a rugged up.
land to be visited by Apollo
14 in April. will turn out to be
older even than the Sea of
BOAT BUFFS
LONDON (UPI) _ More years old. Almon loc•1bey 11 the 011ly David Owen, undersecretary full-time ho.ti119 H itor worki119 than 100 dogs and cats arrived · o for the navy, told the House or 0" '"" 11•w•p•p•r 1n r•nge
HAil srll:AY
AQUA NET ll oz.
12 D..OSUlH
KODA · COLOR .
K·MAC
x 12• 95c
DRUG &
DISCOUNT STORE
.•. •II p•e••9•cl in conl•rnpor•rY .+yl.d oilecl w•lnut c:t•••
with m1tchin9 dutf co .. ar. A fu11ctio11 t•l1ctio11 twitch l•h you
choott 111y t ou11d IOt,lrC• from c•111tt1, fo FM 1ler•o, FM, A~.
Phono or l•p•. Thi1 c:omp•ct 1y1t1rn truly offen 1 mutic1I ll·
h 1v•91nt• for vout lill111i119 enjovm•...+. 5129.95. See 1..d h11r
II tocl1y 1t ...
By giving priority lo alloca·
lion of grants, Ferry said, "we
expeet , lo have about $650
million obligated under the
formula by Dec. 31. Then it
will take two or three months
to get the remainder back and
reallocate it to states that can
use it."
in Britain Tuesday in a rush Cou11 tv. Hi1 e•c1u1iv1 cover•9•
to beat new quarantine regu-Commons the probable demise of bo•lini; encl v•chti11g 11,,.,1 lalions. of traditional unifo rm was set I•• cl1lly f11tur1 of th• DAILY 3333 Newport 81Yd., Newport Beach
The figure was about five up by a survey last year I PILOT. (Acrot• From Newport City H•ll) 675-6611 The grants must be matched
by state and local funds , with
the federal government paying
30 to 55 percent of the total
construction costs.
times the normal number of ..:_a~m~on~g~2~,000~!B~ri~tis~h~s~BJ~·10'.'.rs:·_!~· =========~~~!!'!!!
animal arrivals. Beginning
Thursday, all animals entering
The $800 million Is part of a
nve-year $4 billion federal pro-
gram designed to raise a total
of $10 billion for coostruction
of municipal wastes treatment
facilit.ies. This program is a
key part of President Nixon's
drive to improve the nation's
environment.
the country will have lo remain
in quarantine a year instead oJ
the present eight months.
AMI! 1'!0ICA'$. L A R l9 E ST irAMILV . CLOTHING CH-A IN
411 E. 17th St. -Dail f .f,Sat. f·6
Costa Mesa
646· 1611-4
As part of the campaign
against rabies, authorities
have announced a complete
ban on the import of all types
of animals will be put into
effect, but have not yet an·
nounced a dale.
Get a FREE 'File Cabinet'
And open only a $250 Account
Simpty pNMnt coupon
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THE CABINET is S Vz inches wide,
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To get yours ••. no obligation •.•
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Member Federol W-6m• loan ~nk/Federol Sovln91 an.J loan Insurance Corp.
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12172 Gord•~ Gr••• ll•d.
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For The
Record
Meetings
Dissolutions
of Jff arriage
"J~AL 01c1e:1s
.. tfll, !dW•f'lll I . lfl<I LIU1111
M11'•111111, J•Jlll tnd MlllUtl
GUI, Vk!O!'f4 J, 111<1 Pttrlck S.
lllc1, T1r111 Ann •ncl R1y Aut1ll11
Mr<ful,1, ll'l!ll D1rl1 i nd H1!1l~ Wit·
'" OtYOr1, JIHJllrfl AN!t Ind llklllrd
Merth'
C-11. EVt!Vn .I.. I nd Cll1r1H Wlbon
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lentldWtl:, Fr11111 H. 11111 A.1111111, A. Comtlbtt, Stuhenle Alu11& 111'11 Rou
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str11111, ltaNlll Mtl'Wtl"l'I Ind l!flll -.~
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Cllrlllllft, I 1", 1rld RIV W,
S..u"'°"' LI' Stilt 111<1 ll!tly Le, llt1mlrrr, Ht 11 G11vln 1nd Al1llonso .. ~~
l11!tl1, Ltrtflt L. t r><! Rlcl,.rd J.
Jl:l!H, 9trblf1 L. Uld Davlll T.
lr1d11\1W, J~ltll A, and Flovcl A. Jr.
Sll81ri:I, ci..,...1 Ann 1nc1 Ganlan r.
Sdlfl11, ll19li,. Jtv 11111 Ronald Clltrt~• Htnd. "•m•1t J. Ind JBmt• II. Wlllltmt. Cl.Id c. I nd G1vl l .
,. .... 1111, E~•r• 1nc1 Ar•c•ll a . Orr, Sl1trr1 !,.fl 1nd RlcNrd E1rl
.. rHti.v, Gfwfttlt 1nd Ronni'
Fr1M, H1rolf 1nd lhl!v J.
'"orc1ro. M•rr F""''' 1nd Vlnanf J. Hv ti...., Auth J'. t nd Ylt l1er S.
Hfl,,.c.k, l l1'1111 Pltne 1nd Wll!!tm
Hldle!11
'"llllllpt, Hl~'I A. Ind H1rold D. llom••o. l!d"frd J, •rid Elln1 rt. L•wlt, Ltthl lmottne 1nd Ed,.,1rd Victor '"'"''"'°"' Jttn JoeMe •rill Alen """"' Hoffmtn, l eul1 J1•e end John Terrv
Wwn , S!Mrr!U Ann 11111 llobert ..,~11'11. """E. tnll MtiYln F, Jr.
Fer• ndtJ, Ttrtui L, IM J..Wt Edw1rd1. ltr1111 ltlm1 1"41 W1lrtr ...
N11 .... .ier. E I ·bllli""li. 1nd Ht~ld c. $1!tw, l1ldl~ ''"'"
V.,non,. Dun. ltutll Ind Wlt1!1m
lort•'-Gwe tvn Sv!vlt 1nd K-m "''" Df'atll /\'otlees
JAllL.1111:
'thom11 H. C1rll111. 3?1 '~ Crtll '°'""·• Hun!Jnt!Oft ltldl. Su!"Y!Vld bv IH"Oll•u,
J t l'MI T, (1rJllM1 1lllt r, Vt1!1 Chubb.
Strvkn , S111t1H v. 1 PM, Pttk Ftmlly
Colenlt l Funtril Hom•. • t AMl•llS
Kl"' l . Cll11'1! rs. ln!1nt d1u0Mtr cl
Mr. 1nd Mn. wn CNmDtra. Grtvuklt ~HVICtt Fr11!t,, JG AM, Wttlm!n1l1r
Mtrl'IOrlll "'rlr. /llMIUl<Y IM Ct mtrery, O.t.SU
Stmotlu Gttu. Avt 32, ol 161 t.lrd St .. c..,1, MIN. p411 ot 611111. M•rch •-
$urv!vtd DY 111rtnl1, Mr. tml M .... T1l-
11\1 G11u, of Wt tltrn Sima.ti tllrtt bnitn-
•rl. M1t1t" 1',. of Cllln1 L1ktl Tovl S.
Ind Llltl T. lt•U, !loll\ ol Cotti Mta•.
S1trvlc11 Ptndrr. 11 Wl '1Clllf ClltPfl
Mortu1ry, ~ .•
WllNC•
£111nor l . LIWHllCI . Jll t7ncl SI .• New•
-' lludl. D1lt cil lllfflll. Mlrcll II. Sur·
vlvtd bY lluitNnd, Ttdl mol...,., MIU~t
Hoffmtn. New.Ort •••tl'I/ br.it1tr, Al
Mof!tMn, Slnt• A1111 11,..,.1, ,(Miit
Mlll111, Obtrll,, K1nu 11 Tl\todor1 Jl l--
100!. F011nl1ln \i111ty. l'uneral st•vko•
w1r1 condlleltd l'td•v. Tnundav. 2:XI l"M,
ll1!1t ClltPll, 11~1 Superior, Cos!• Mt$1.
ll1lll M1rtu1rr, O!rtc:lort.
MILLl:ll
Etl>t! M. Mll11r. 1.0J DtJ1w1rt SI~ H11111-
ln1lon Inell. lu"'lvtd by ..,.., !rMll
P lcktltkMri lll•~lllt•. M!ldrtd Hou ...
holden flv. •••lldcl•l1drm . SarvlC•'· Sii•
11r•1y, J "M, l'ttlt FtmllY Colo!l111 Fu·
"'"' HlfM. WH1TI"
W11111m C, Wlllll . A.01 I~. ti 256~ EIOtn
Vt .• Cotll M•I•· Survlvtd by '°'1• Kt !•
ffl deu1httr, "'°"""' Anke""' llolh <1' 0111 M1111 twf broll\eri, Err>HI Ind .,.,111 Wl\1111 five 1r1ndciillclr1n 1~d
1vtn 1r11t-1r111dchltdr1~. $trvf(tl will
nlld 11tunlv, 11 A.M. cnurcll of Cllrl11,
1 'ii, WlltOfl St., Co1T1 M111. lnltn'l'ltn1,
1rbllf' Rt1I Mtl'l'IQ•l1! P1rM. 11111 11..,.llo
,.., MOrtu•rv• Olrtc:lon.
ARBUCllLIJ A ION
WtskWf Mertall')'
C7 E. 17tll St., Cotta Men -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
o.a dtl Mar OR 3-'450
osta Mn• riu f.z.t!t • BELL BROADWAY
MOllTUARY
~It BroadJ~ta M.,.
• DILDAY BROTHERS
Ha1ttapoa Vallty
Mor111ary
t7tll ltach Blvd.
HunU..rtoo Beach uz.m1 • PACIFICVIEW
MEMORIAL PARI
c.metary e MOl1aar1
:uttPl~~~;,t.i Blacll. California
lf'.1100 • PEEK FA~llLV
COl.ONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
i10l lol1a Ave.
t1tm.luitr 193-3Ui • Ell MORTUARY
• Beteh .fM-1535
Cle.meate cn.e100 • DTHS' MORTUARY
111 M1ln St.
Uuiti=a.Be•c~
' I
••
FllLLERTON -The Board
of Su~rvlsora wlll face up to
the Iona running battle over
the location ol a Supe.rior
Court branch In Fullerton at a
pubUc hearing Apr11 1.
Supe:rlor Court judges, afttr
a study by the Judicial Coun-
cil, havt. recommmded that
the branch be aboUshed.
But the city of Fulluton and
Supervisor WUUam Phl!Ups
who represents that area, do
not agree.
Fullerton City A t t o r n e y
Reginald Gustavson told the
supervisors Tuesday t h a t
termination of the court would
be .. ,. brtach ol faith and
I
possibly a breach or contract''
of an agreement with the city.
The judges sa.y the "single
judge branch court does not
and cannot ecooomically, ef-
ficitnUy nor effectively serve"
north Orange County.
Phillips asked that the Coun-
ty Counsel study the alleged
DAIL V PILOT l J
••********•******** MEAJ:UAY SAVINGS
1nd loin associ1tion
NOW OPEN
EVERY SATURDAY
10A.M.-4 F1 M.
Open Mon.·Thun. 9un.-4 pm.; Fri. 91m.-6pm.
8UINA ~ARK ~UNTINDTDN 8EACH
Mercury Savings Bld1. • Mercury Savings Bkl1.
V11Jey View at Lincoln ~ ' . Edina:er at Beach
********* *******
breach of contract and report I;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ back to the supervisors before
April I.
Gustavson pointed out th.at
the Fourth Appellate Court
had bP.en eipandcd to San
Diego County and that Orange
County Municipal Court are
being e1panded throughout the
county.
Introducing
Fro9 Lovers
To Chopin!
S!Al!CH AND l!llCIJ! TIAM AllllTI INJURED CLIFF CLIMBER
Sg1. Gary Aspengren, Deputies Al Cook, Fred Roberts M.ke Re scue
School Bus
Accidents
"The courls' attitude Is not
credible," he protested . 11Wh)'
this double conceplT The
Fullerton court can b e
operated 1t e lower cort than
a similar racHily In Santi An•·
They h•v• 1 better sy1t1m In
LQI Ana•I•• County.''
PAllNTSI DOH't WAIT UNTIL.
YOUl IHll.I II OUT eJ THI
PIO• LOYllS A•I IUOll
YOU •IYI THIM THI •IFT OP
MUSIC -YOU WAIT AND IT
MAY II TOO l.ATll Decl'easing
Durln1 lh• 118Mf •cht>o1
year. bUS!! carrylni st.ud1nts School Eyes in Orange County were in·
ClllllfM 11 Hie f'9f lit""
. -, ... , ... '" """' ... fer ._,.i .... 11•K.
Y.....-M, .tt« """ et ~rcll
Searcli, Rescue Unit Five Years Old volvtd In 1~1 eocild1nta, Of thi•
tot•I 11. " su percent w.... Budaet Cuts caused by the ntg!igence of e
WlltllM t1!e: ., ...... MMlt ,,._ .,. ... ..,..11, .. _
C111M te -11r1 tht .. , c•ll· wii't YM pl .... tM • 1 c.il
_,,... c11 ll1t11 1111.ic. •11d let • lkw Y•• ttM wM!.
By JACK BROBACK
01 IM 01ilJ "illtt Sltll
get lost during w e e k e n d
outings.
Two liftle girls decided that The Senrch and Rescue
they had had enough of school Unit's first job proved the
and dispppeared into the den&:e ne@d for a hi&Jlly trained unit
brush-covered hills of El and marked the beglMing of
Morro Canyon, near Laguna the development or equlpmenl
Do ch Bild techniques for Specialized ~11 • funcUon1.
Several hours later they Jn 1964 , the then novice unit
were returned to their parents \Vas asked to help find a Jost
through the efforts of the hunter. The sea rch waJ con-
Search and Rescue Unit o! 1he ducted !or a fu ll day without
Orange County s her i r f • s rt"sult and began ago ln the
Departnlent. next day as soon as the su n
was up.
The unit has just celebrated 'J'he rew members or the
Its fifth anniversary and is the un i! were aided by three
subject of lavish praise by Marine Corps helicopters that
Sherif[ James Musick. dropped water to t he ex-
Formed in 19&t, the Search hausted and dirty searchers.
feet during the first day or lhe
search in the Sitton Peak
area.
The ne1t day the body was
found, the unit had earned its
spurs.
The disastrous P a s e o
Grande fire of 1968 :Jnd the
Silverado area flood th e
foll owing year resulted in new
expe riences and heroic v.·ork
by the unit.
Today tbe volunteers are
equipped with first a id
equipment, portable electrical
power units, cutting tools and
scuba gear. A con1plele field
kil.chen accompanies the men
as well as a mobile com-
munications v1.n.
The unit al50 boasts the
posse ss ion
bloodhounds.
of three
the driver. LOS ALAMITOS -School An improvement in the in-administr1tor1 Mrt are slu· cidence or school bus •c· cidcnts is shown in com· d}•ing poSllblc budaet cul! in lne \\'ake of Tueld1y'1 defeat paratlve figures ror the period at the polls of 1 7kenl over-
July l, through Nov. 30, 1969. ride tax.
lhe county Department of voters In the IA• AlamitO!
Education reports. elemenlar)' district turned
During U1t f l v e • m o n t h down the propo1ed t11 in-
period there were '8 accidents ~reast l,7U to l,QI.
of which 21. or 43.7 percent The dittricl'• current tax
wtre attributed lo driver rate to operate. Jt1 seven
negliJ!:ence. school s I• f.1.55 pe.r $100
Additional ngures show that assessed valuation. The over-
1t1ty 11 Hie TAMAH.1 MUSIC Mllll11t1 •f Y•M••• t rM1i•fn COUllll
fr1 .. ell •-ttll w1rltl fntlfy • -YOUl tlG-&UT llWAID WIL.L 11 ttii ticcftl i f flM YAMAHA II WHIN YOUl FIOa LOYll
MUSIC COUISE. LOO.KS UP AT YOU ~NI TILLS
Y111 d• 11et ·-t• i.11y •• I•· YOU .• , "I GA'fl MT PIOG
.... '· ' A NEW NAMl. lllTHOYIN.'"
lh"ll..... • .. Ill ·-
1h14y -J•t l1t1 •f fl• f•r Y''' NOW IN COST A MESA
c•114,_ ~I• tNy i.w. 111uslc.
DON'T DENY TOU• CHILD
THI CHAHCI YOU MAY HA'fl
MISSID IN YOUl CHILD-
HOOD.
YAMAHA
Music School
Call 642· 1144
\\'hile two or every three. pupils11~ri~d~c~w~o~ukl~'~h:•:"~'~'~lllOd:~t:hc~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in the nntion were transported rate to $3,80.
to and from school. in Orange
County only one of 6.2 students
v.•ere carried by school bus.
The department reparts that
an intensive proiram of driver
training has been Instituted to
incretr;e the safety record of
HOURS:
drivers. and Rescue Reserve Unit is ~:iin~is~~l~~e b~~!n~ ~~ made up entirely of volunteer fi" _________________ iii _____ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;OiO;;;;;;;;;;;;
citizens \vith skills and in-
9.9 Mon.·Fri.
tere1ll in mountain climbing,
cliff scaling, searching terrain
for lost persons and evidence
of crimes, first aid and
emergency medical techniques
and scuba di ving.
LA·Z • aov® 9-6 Fri.
10-4 Sun.
Today there are about 20
members of the unit but
to keep up \\'itb ocunty growth
it is planned to double the
membership.
The safe return of the lillle
girls was just one of many
adventures the unll ha s
parlicipated in in lhe pa st five
years.
Among the more notable
was a search of the Carbon
Canyon Dam area for possible
evidence in the murder of a
wheelchair patient. a n d
removing tht bodies of several
persons killed In a li&hl plane
that cra shed and ignited a
1erloo1 fore1t fire In the Sa1t-
Uago Pt11k rsaddleback) area .
Other searches ha ve in-
cluded finding elderly, am-
oesia-s truck persons who have
wandered from their homes,
finding young children who
st ray into hazardous areas,
and locating sportsmen who
PAT WHO?
ANAHElr-.t -The Orange
County Jewish Singles Club
has scheduled a St. Patrick's
Day party Saturday night at
the Recreation Room, 1670 W.
Broadway. The 41nner menu
will feature spaghetti and
meat balls.
P'w AM• •• Sl,000, , ... ,... "'" '•" '" ..... ""-'
Tit'*' C•l'ttfic-.., •IMll lttl4
i. ...,lfy. I Y1'V1 ,.14 •
,....._. M11111t1 •f _,. ......... , .. -1~· ...... ,., , ........ ,,. .....
•-'· 1 .... ~ rh JM:
-,,_ tltt ltt.
170 I.17th St. CotU1 M ...
646·1045.
M"M•I~ AMIEltlCAJll dJ
INOUITltlAI. aAHKtUtt II
ASSOCIATIOH. CAl.ll"OJUlllA
ANOCIATION Of' INOUSTMAL.
LOAN COM~Q
RECLINA-ROCKER.
SAVE $36.50 DURING OUR
LA· Z ·BOY RECLINER -SALE I
-..... -
Model Shown
Reqular $256.00
Sale Price
s219so
OTHE~ MODELS
SALE PRICED FROM
$149.50
---
This new Spanish style •• , so irresistibly comfortable ••• io
t•slofully 1tyled, will odd to the 9roeiou1 living of your home. lh smooth
rocking will relax you and, when you want to stretch out to nap, simply
rol10 tho Comfort Selector that provides • choice of l leg·rost comfort
positions ... then, lean back to any reclinin9 position, even to full bed.
Come in today and en joy a new experience in rela1in9 comfort
but, let us warn you, you'll n1yer be sotisfied until you hive •
La • Z • Boy Recline • Rocker® of your own.
Costa ~Jes•'•
Olde•t ff<>me..01vned
f'11rnlt11re Store!
1865 HARBOR BLVD •
Downtown Coste Mesa
l'hont 548·5131
I
!
I
I
c·
l{eep household deanup problems in the bag
with
ies1J\7a!·r1as11c Baus' Liners l
'
I
• Strong
• Lukproof
• Sanitary
• In calor-
eoded
boxes for
accurate
selection
5 pop11lar slltS in
handy one-1t·a-time
dispenser pecks
•
YOUR
CHOICI!
FO• ALL YOUR
PLUMllNO NllDS
WATIR HEATIRS
•IPUILIC "OIMINI"
20 Gal ••. '46. 99
30 Gal ••• '49. 99
40 Gal ••• s54, 99
50 Gal •.• s69.99
Tl'llt •ualll'f' autrtn!eed ~llloi tined
Wl ltr hqlff' Ii. tqulPJIH with 1aft1v
l•mt. 11 •ttulrN Dy l1w. Wt llflw• ..!'If dfy lil11111111tn t wll1bt., If "'l With, Al lnorlNll 1n1111r.tl0ft S' I lncluflll. CAii by -lnsl•H ti dty. ~110 1mtr0111CY l"tltlllllit<I 111.Dlt. All WOrlc dcHlt •Y ,,,.,,.,
1rumii.r1.
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
.~ l
...
II •. SI.fl
Sale SJ.59 -MISSION
BATH·
ROOM
SEAT
SALE $119
REG. $3.49
WHITI
ENAMELED
GARBAGE DISl'OSALS
IN·SINK·IRATOR ::.-.r..::• s33aa OUI PllCI ,,
Moclt l JJl-
, I Yr, W11•ttnl1t M-#"•s46aa • ... $69.95
· OUI PllCE ••
Model SSS-
l y,_ Gu1r1nt11
::."."sf..i: $6388 OUI r11c1 • • '
M1cl•I 71-
S Yr. Gu1r1nl11 ·
INSTALLATION AVAILAILE
Town Ir Country
By CHU•CH
Molded 1e1t Is virtually ln•1tru~
llble. No nud to worry 1bout ftdln•
or peeling. Hidden hinge• ... y to
_ clean. M1ny 1tyl11, color1.
NOW
ONLY
I R ... ,, ..... tl2.H ,, 1 --~--------------------------l ·-
'
••
32 GAL. TRASH CAN
7 YEAR
GUARANTEE
LOCKING
LID
OLIVE
GREEN
$6.19 VALUE
RION HARDWARE
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
642-1133
LET YOUR TASTEBUDS
DO THE BUYING
Hiclory Fa rms makes you taste BEFORE
you buy . Nibble your way through all 126
provocative cheeses, if necessary, then
t ake home the on e that pleases you mo st.
Free tasting sessions held daily.
• W ESTCLIFf !'LA.IA. 48 TOWN & COUNTRY
Newport leach 442·0,72 O range -543-8014
OPE N EVE NIN GS & SUNDAYS
Mini
Miracle Brush
Mtr.,t. Nylon F•brit fh•! r.,'1'10 .. 11
li11t. d!.11, cl•ndr11ll & pet he in l•offl
cJolh11 •"i:l 11phol1l••W• 1.69
PROJECTOR
SALE!
30% OFF
Movie & Slide Projectors
Example: Honeywell 640
REG. S19'.SO-NOW $149.50
BAKER'S
WESTCLIFF CAMERAS r
You'll Love
The Romantic
Looi Of Th;s
New Upswept
Ha;r Style.
OPEN SUN DAYS
WESTCLIFF PLA2A
SPECIALS!
l\MERICAN B~AUTY 1s~
SPAGHETTI 112 01.) Reg. 24c
CRYOVAC (St. Patricks. Day Special)
CORNED BEEF 89~
BRISKET.··········
TEXAS -RUBY RED
GRAPEFRUIT
MARKET BASKET
WESTtLIFF PLAZA
•one-ste>p' sho pping
a.t i ts fin e s t!
OPEN THURSD~)' & MONDAY EVENINGS
'lit' ~
"For c;.il.
"Sptlng "Fteslt "Easter
You'll find o~r Ea1t1r·rific H • I l m • r k
c•rd1, p•rly 1eh , 9ifh, gift wr 1p •nd hom1
d1cor1lion1 m1k1 E11!11 • li1 U1 h1 ppi11 .• ,
Spring 11 lifil1 11 rlier.
PAPER UNLIMITED
541-7921
NOW SHOWI NG
SPRING FAS HION S
.byGf-C, .• ~!..e: ~.~~ D~PTY , ~esty•
1058 IRVINE-NEWPORT BEA CH cl 0 v
CLEANING SPECIALS
DRAPERIES, BLANKETS, RUGS, And
BEDSPREADS CLEAN ONL y . . . . . . . . . . . so~ LB.
DRAPERIES (Cl,.n & F•n Fold )..... . 95~ Panel
Montgomery Cleaners & Laundry
OPEN DAILY 8 A.M.-9 P.M., SAT.8 A.M.·6 P.M.
MEN'S FORMAL WEAR SPECIALISTS
da rrell's dedr ic k TUX SHO P
FASHIO N
SQUARE
Santa Ana
547-6341
WESTC LIFF
PLAZA
1130 Irvine
~~
COBBLERS BENCH
NEW SPRIN G
STYLES
Zl119 Into
Sprin9 • • •
Let '" Re-Style
Now!
5 CONVENIENT SHOl'S
Optonietrist
Or. Lou Roy Elder
e CONTACT LENSES • REFRACTING
e EYE WEAR STYLING • PRESCRIBING
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
1124 IRVINE NEWPORT BEA CH 642-0 720
-·
f
.,, • .., ... ,.., ___ ..,. ___ .,._..,..,..,,._ .. ffi\ICU:DQµp-5 ....... .....,_........__., ... _..,_..,,,.._
Finanti a Market , '-:Women Take Stock •
BY BARBARA DUARTE
DI Ille Diii~ Piie! lt1H
Charlene Vance, Susan Schfsler and Lee l\lac Gregor have
: .. o tilings in co1nmon.
They're stockbrokers, and they love their profession.
\Vhile th e idea of becoming a stoc~brokei-might see1n as re-.
1ote as tossing a bonnet into tile presidential ring to most wo1nen,
· apparently comes quite naturally i! one eases into it gently.
This trio is part or·a srn-all nucleus of female stockbrokers in .
1 irange County \vho have the e·nviable position of being surrounded
.iy 1nen five days a \11cek .
They don't \Vear business suit.s, and they aren't looked upon
as an oddity. To the contrary, they deal in the \Yorl d or finance ef~
liciently, earning the right to be Jookcd upon as one of the boys.
CHARLENE VANCE LOVES CHALLENGE
Success in her field was a matter of "following (hrough" for
f\lrs. Vance.
The attractive mOlher or three children has follO\Yed through
since high school days in 1-lunlingtbn Park \vhen she supported her-
seU by holding dO\l'n two jobs and holding up top grades.
Since those years, she has leaned on a background in busi·
!less and journalisin to follo'"' hrough, already having made an
impact on the \vorld of stocks. Llcensed since last Nove1nber. she
feels she j~ Y.1ell on the road to a successful career, a road calling
for a considerable amount of determination.
One could guess she 1Yas at one time a professional 1nodel ;
h~r charm and ease with people n1ake her a natural. \Vhile still in
high school, she followed this trade and <~oordin ated fa shion sho11's.
In later years. she 111as to leach n1odeling, as weU .
. M~ving ~ron1 fa shion to 1vriting, she worked in the public re-
lations field \VJth the e1ecutive department of Southern Californ.ia
Edison Co. Later, in a diJferent public relations job , she beca1ne
associated with stock brokerage houses, and the road took a nC\\'
turn.
. "I've alway~ been stimulated by a challenge," she said. an·
S\venng the ques,llon of "'hy a woman would be interested in fin·
ance. "l also kne1v it 1vould lake lot s of hard 1vork, and not luck,''
she added.
, . Five montb.s of intense traitung \Vere required along 11•ith the
ability to mai~ta1n a ho1ne for her hu sband Lee and young child-
ren; She st!-1d1ed 1vhenever a spare 1noment presented itsel f -
~bile her little daughter 1vas taking a bubble bath. or at nigh~
when the house was quiet.
Exams. \11ere another challenge but she passed them 1viU1
Clying colors. '
. Alth~u.gh she spend s rive days a week in a Lagu na Niguel
office, add1t1onal hours are required for resea rch study a nd eval-
uation of market trends. '
Jn addition, she appears on Leis ure \Vorld televi sion in a
weekly r~ap of the fina~cial 1vorld. \vo rking 'vithout a scrip'l in a
10 to 15--rrunute presentation. As a means of insuring continual im·
prove~ent, she tap~s her s.ho\11 cind li stens to replays.
Since the ma1or portion of stockholders in th e United States
a.re women, she feels a woman's tou ch is an asset in n1any way s.
She has encountered little condescension from fellow \vorkcrs: con-
versely. she finds a helping hand readily extended.
"Succe ssful people alway s have lime for other people " she
explained. '
Her routine would presuppose she 'vould lean heavily on TV
dinners, but not so. She is a gourmet cook and loves 'lo surprise
Criends with ne\v dishes. A decorator as welli she wlll havo an op-
portunity to exploit Uils talent. soon as-she and her family move. in-
to their new Mission Viejo hoi:ne.
SUSAN SCH ISLE R BRIGHTENS THE OFFICE
Miss Schisler is young , pretty and engaged.
Born in Los Angeles . she attended schoo l ln 'I.he Ne1vporl
11arbor area, graduating from high school in Corona del Mar. For
two years. she studied bu siness at Orange Coast College and took
ber first ta ste of the !inri~ial world as a receptio.pist for a New·
port Beach 'office.
Tbe world she entered '"as an exciting one, so it 111as no sur-
prise her next job \11as with a Corona de\ l\1ar brokerage ~s secre--
tary to the associate manager. \Vith encouragement from her em-
ployer, she combined studies 1vith on·the-job training in Septem-
ber. working toward a license. ·
"The test wasn't as difficuJt as . I thought it wouJd be," she
declared. But, she admitted , the prospect of a month-long wait lo
find out the results"was nerve wracking.
"I received a letter in t1vo weeks and "-'as sure I'd failed,"
she said breathlessly. "But the news was good; I hadn't ~"
Although the market has bee n down Si~ce she has been li·
censed. she handles her accounts and optimistically looks forward
to better days. As for clients, 1'When the market's good, they find
you. But 'vhen it's bad, you have to look for them."
Problems are fe1v and the job always is exciting.
Away Crom the office. her favori te means or relaxation I!!
pl aying chess in the Dover Shores home whe re she lives 111ilh her
parents. Other pastimes are \vater skiing, swimming, bridge and
volleyball. And, making the total outd oor scene, she naturally
lov es sailing .
• Are men shocked to wa lk into the. office and discover she
is a stockbroker?
"No, she replied. "Sometimes they're surprised, but ll)CY
~et used to it."
LEE MAC GREGOR TAKES LIFE IN STRIDE
If f\Irs. ~1ac Gregor had her life to live over again . she 1vould
live it ju.st as she ha s the first time. "I can think or no finer busi·
ncss to be in," she said. "Every day is different and interesting.
)'ou Jenrn to take it in your stride."
l\•trs. Mac Gregor has been 1vilh her firm £or the past 16
yea rs. since 'I.he day they opened a hvo-man office on Lido Isle.
Sul introduction to the market came at an early age \vhen
sh<• acco1npanied her father to brokerage houses. She decided
ri ght th en sh e 1vanted to be part of \vhat she sa1\'.
Literally starting at rock bottom in 1929 after laking busi·
nc.ss courses at the University of Pennsylvania, she became a sec·
rctary for a Cleveland firm and 'vent through th e various phases
or the business -cashiering, margin department and on up to
executive sec retary.
Keeping her ears open, she learned how sales managers
~a\.k to clients and a few tricks of the trade ; basically she earned
a rounded cduci.ltion by observation.
In 19-14. she 1noved to Los An gel es where she worked for
another brokerage firm as a Secretary in the bond department.
After 10 ye<.Jrs, she and her husband moved to Ne1vport Beach
!See STOCK BROKERS, Pogo 141
PRETTY ADDITION TD THE STOCK MAR KET
Susan Schisler
Better Make the Grade If There' re Changes to Be Made
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Shortly afte r
our 25th wedding anniversary my htb·
band informed me there 1v0lild be some
changes made. He an!lOUnced thal
starting now he is going to do all the
things he has "''anted Lo dt>-with or wilh·
out rne. f.1orever, he made it clear that 11
riuarter (I( a century or complete fidelity
Js more than n1ost women get and a heck
or a Jot beUer than l deserve. Accordin1~ ~
{o ~him, f -nrn shallow, fndl ffB"Cnt.
unresponsive and totally wHhou~ in·
itiaUve or Imagination.
He plans to travel, eat out. go lo the
''C.llestcr and spend lime with fr iends. Ht'
said, "You can df'Vote U1e rest of your
Jlte 14 ~k. russinR aboUt lhe kid s.
:. ANN'f'i.ANl1ERS : . ~ ... A ~M
•
rulii-.hlng silver and slceplnR sioce that ~1)' advice is ~ make surt ht itoe!i all
srt•ms to be what )OU 1·n1oy niost ·• these things \Ymr you. Or you aen bet
.\fy. husba~I ls attractive. charm1n_&._ your boots hetlldn them with somcborly
and r1nanc1all y ,,._.IJ orf. lie wun"fliiivc --els~.
{ll'ly trvublc flndlng 1'01npan} i\l~ny of
!he f10ints he h:is made arc v.uhd. I nm In DEAR ANN , NDERS : I had lunch lo-
a state of shock. An y .idvlce? -ADA d1tY In a little Gyp~-y te11roo1n . A fortune
O£AR ADA: ~nap out fJt It and 'rtRd tellCT who works there o(fcred lo tell my
the ttCGnd 11cntcnte of )'l)tft lt:'tltr. Ap-inl'tune for $5.
11arenlb be bas alve.('I YOd a few options. l do not be!Jcve in fortune tellers, but l
thought It would bt interesting, so 1
agreed , 11\e won1an had never seen me
be/ore yet she spoke or many lhings lhat
floored me. She al¥> mentioned a
ph vsical problem I have had since birth.
\Vhen she said. ''The operation your doc·
tor wants to porform is not necessa ry," I
was amazed. When I asked her how she
knew or the operation she ~aid she has
supernatural powers which enable her to
rectlvc vlbrallons which she translates
Into racls.
I now am considcr1ni:: canceling !he
operation but I d<>n'l wnnl to do anythin~
foolish. Advlat me, please. -St!OOK
COOKIE
DEAR COOKl'E: Does It make stnse to
)IOV lhat a person with •·supcrn11tural
powers" v.•ould be solicUlng customers in
a tearoom·:
If you let i. rortunc leller lalk you out
of surgery !iiUlllilested by your doctor you
need ANOTHEll tlocJ.or-ror your head.
DEAR ANN LAr4DERS : t don't know
ho1v to say th is but I'll do my best~ My
husb:ind nnd I hove been married for 12
yeani and our marrittge ls heller 1 than
1nost. Our sex lire always hn:J been very
good, at lenst I thoughl so. Lately he Is
interested in things I consider rar out.
Plc3SC le.II n1e ~·hat is right and what is
wrong' \Ve live In a smnll town and l
can't talk to anyooc else abOllt th~'-D.
C. DILEMMA
DEAR O.C.: There ii no rlgbl or Wrong:
In married love, So tong as there Is
matual agreemtnl :1nd no pain lnflleled,
whatever two ~pit a~r« on It "right."
~Ott, J said TWO pt-Opie.
I-tow will you know when the real thlnr
emnes along? Ask Ann Lander~. Send for
her booklet '·Love or Sex and Aow to TeJl
1he DlffercncC..:' by Ann Landers.
Enclose 11 long, stamped , seU·addre!Sed
envelope witb your rt.'qucst.
Ann Lanrltn1 will ~ glad lo help yoo
wiU1 your problems. Send them lo her In
care of o .. DAILY PIWl', <Ticl0<1lng •
S{!:Jr-addtta5ed • .stamped envelope.
I
--------------..-------··----T7---·----·-------------· .
•
J.j DAILY PILOT Thursday, Marth 12, 1970
roscope
Taurus: Protect Self
A VERY GOOD YEAR -Las Madrinas members (left to right) Mrs. Norman
Borucki and ?\1rs. Phil Griffin study vintage wines to go with a b~ffet supper.
The hospital group will serve gourmet cheeses, wines and supper in the Rosan
ranch in San Juan Capistrano tomOf!OW ev~ning. ~i~kets at ~ may be pur-
chased at the South Coast Community Hospital auxiliary o f f 1 c e before the
event.
Honor Holder
Karen Ross, daughter
o[ Mrs. Bradley
Schwarz of Newport
Beach, is one of five
senior women at UCl
honored for service and
scholarship. A student
of American culture,
Miss Ross bas been ac-
tive in Phrateres and
served on a UCI fact-
finding committee sent
to report on the Peo-
ple's Park controversy
tn Berkeley. She plans
to enter graduate
school.
Hospital Hospitality
Vintage Wines
Flavor Supper
Gourmet cheeses and vin·
tage wines will be featured
during a social hour preceding
a party planned by members
of the Las Madrinas Chapter
of South Coast Community
Hospital tomorrow evening.
'!be event, which includes
buffet supper at II p.m. in the
Jose Rosan ranch in San Juan
Capistrano, is open to the
public al a cost of $5 per
person.
Alumnoe
Join Fete
Founders Day will b e
celebrated by Delta Gamma
Alumnae in Orange County
Saturday. March J4. in Los
Coyotes Country Club, Buena
Park.
Among alumnae traveling to
the event will be members of
the Santa Ana·N e w port
Chapter. headed by Mrs.
Norman Canfield, president.
Plans for the festive evening
have been coordinated by the
Mmes. Terry Chastain,
chainnan; and committee
members Stanley A 11 e n ,
tickets; Douglas George, food ;
Stanley llemmen. door prizes ;
Terry Balliet and FI o y d
Parsons, arrangementJ, and
\Vllliam Tracy, hostess.
\Velcoming guests will be
~1iss Lillian Emhoff and the
Mmes. H. R. Alrlck, Arthur
Briggs, Gertrude Carroll, Tan·
dy Coleman, Jack" Lyons,
Freeman Perrin, 0. V .
Johnson and Don Seal.
Those Interested in reserva~
tions may phone the auxiliary
ofrice al the hospital or call
~1rs. Chastain, 494-1220. or
r..1rs. Allen. 495-55.211.
Mission Vie jo
Women Gather
FRIDAY
MARCH ll
By SYDNEY OJ\1ARR
AJUF.S (Marcil 21-AprU 19)'
lf travel you must, get
numbers straight. T he r e is
tendency today for you to .be
absent-minded. C a I J s , ap-
pointments, dates could suffer
as result or confusion. Double
check directions.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Financial dealings r e q u i r e
scrutiny or specialist, expert.
Don't ran for tall story. Get
the facts and let lhe flattery
go. You have a right to protect
yourself In the clinches,
GEft.llNI (May 21.June 20):
C)icle remaJns on tcp. But
Headdress Ball
Ready to Swing
L a skninute preparations
are in full swing for the Bal
Masque Carnaval of Damas de
Caridad, and mamequins are
in the last stages of rehearsal
for the promenade of floral
masques.
The Saturday, March 14. af·
fair, a benefit for St. Jude
1-lospital, Fullerton, will take
place in the Anaheim Conven-
tion Center, which will be
transformed into a colorful
carnival atmosphere.
A popcorn wagon will lend
authenticity, and the ceiling of
the ballroom will be draped
with mullicalored streamers.
Centerpieces of F r e n c h
baskets of spring flowers and
colorlul balloons will adorn the
tables.
Jataster or ceremonies will
be Stan Chambers, news
director for KTLA, according
to f.trs. Calvin P. Schmidt,
ball chairman.
Judges for the parade of
headdresses will be Lee
Miller, Pasadena florist who
has been active with the
Tournament of Roses. artist
Joyce Clark and Eugene Lor·
ing of the department of fine
Auxiliary
Collects
For Shop
Thrift and plans for their
annual fund-raising benefit
will highlight the agenda when
the Orange County Chapter,
Town and Gown Junior Aux·
iliary of the University of
Southern California meets at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday, March 17.
Mrs. Robert Smith will host
the meeting in her Huntington
Beach home, and members
will bring hoosehold goods,
furniture and clothing to be
donated to the use Thrift
Shop in Los Angeles.
The shop helps support the
university by giving
scho larships to d e s e r v i n g
students, and this is the sec-
ond and final thrift drive or
the year for the Town and
Gown Juniors.
Assisting Mrs. Smith v.·ith
luncheon following the
business meeting will be the
1.1mes. Joseph 1.1. Rose. Rene
Caron, Edward Halligan and
f.1ichael Glbb.
.arts, UCL
Barny Sorkin and h i s
orchestra ~·ill provide music
for the event, which will begin
with a 6 p.m. cocktail hour.
Guests are encouraged to
wear masques, which will be
judged during the cocktail
hour. A prize of three days
and two nights at the Interna-
tionnl Jfotel, Las Vegas, will
be awarded to th' winner.
Proceeds from the annual
ball will be used to purchase a
linear aceelerator for the
hospital for use in the treat-
ment of cancer patients.
CODEE CRUTTENDEN
Engaged
June Day
Selected
Codee Cheryl Cruttenden
and Dennis 1\l ichael Lanham
will exchange wedding vows
June 27 in St. James Episcopal
Church.
News of the forthcoming
event was announced by the
bride-elect"s parents, :f.1r. and
Mrs. \Valter \V. Cruttenden Jr.
during a champagne dinner
party givei1 in their Corona del
f.far home.
The betrothed couple are
graduates of Corona del 1i1ar
Hi!h School . She attended
Co orado State University and
he is a junior at California
Stale College at Long Beach.
Dr. and r-.1rs. Donald M.
Enameling
At Gallery
Speaker will be Mrs. Russell
Walter. province collegiate
chairman.
Lanham of Newport Beach are
parents of the benedicl-elect.
Newly·formtd Las A1argar-
itas Women's Club or Mission
Viejo has scheduled a presen·
tation on home decor by Cban-
n e JI a n d Ch a rt i n of Coro na d el' [ p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. !
r-.tar for tonight's meeting.
Chapter members w i 11
gather in the home of Mrs. Artist Nelly Allan w i 11 Canfield, Tuesday, March 24.
present a demonslration on for a demonstration o f
enameling for members or U1e Christmas boutique items by
Affiliates of the Laguna Beach Miss Ann Struck.
Art Gallery or; Monday, :r.1arch The chapter is preparing for its 1970 Serendipity Boutique in
The activity meeting will
begin al 7:45 in the recreation
center. lnlere sted women are
invited to attend the meeting.
Buy The DAILY PILOT
Just for 'Peanut~· 16. at 2 p.m. November.
J\trs. Hovey Co1, president.Ii=,;;;;;:;;::,======~==========
will open the business meeting
in the gallery, followed by in-
troduction of the artist by
Mrs. William Gieschen, pre;
gram chairman.
GRANDS
f.trs. Allan was born ln
Prague, Czechoslovakia. and
receh•ed a BA degree at the
Fine Arts School. She studied
enamel i ng a t the
Kunstge~·erbeschule in Vienna
and has been a teacher since
1962.
Her works includes oil.
v.•atercolor. acrylic. etching,
lithography and sc ulpture.
Tea will be served by Mrs.
\Valier Larson and her com·
mittee.
WEEK END
SPECIALS
SAVE $ $ $ $ S
s2699 Stt>l11woy
6', lbony
Kloboll-L.,;, XIV Sl 499 '':S", Wotn111t
Wl,MWr
5 '2", Eboflf
Chlcleri11t lrff.
s• MGh09a11y
s1499
s1399
G ... StK• $1449 Hot1 ... o .. 1, s1099 5'7", Woh1.,t 5'2", M•h .. ••Y
Half
Jersey-
world tra•eler
Wt11shable
as your
skin, it
drips dry
t11nd packt
in nothing
flat. Start
your trip •* ~.If Site
Shop.
F<om $16
Sizes
LET'S Bf FRIENDLY
It YoU have new ntlthboni
or know ot an.yone movtn1
to our IJ'ft.. please tell us '° that we may l!'Xte:nd •
hie:nd.ty welcome and help
thMi to become acqualntt'd I
in their n~ IUrTOUndlnp. I
H1rd-11 $1199 Srorr sn49 5'2", Wefnt <4'10", ltt.ny ~7
Aht>....,... NW flfff 111.del• ••• •1 lew, low ,,1c .. 1
TWO DECORATOR'S DELIGHTS $699 "\Ve did the Insidr -
You do the Out!-idf' -rat h
SIZES
121/i-261/z I _,, :-.
, °\
f~~~'s HALF. SIZE SHOP
So. Coast Visitor ,
494-11579 494-9361 I
Harbor Visilor '·
~174
NEW ORGANS ~~:,~~~·
U5ED ORGAN S AND RENTAL RETURNS
AT SUISTANTIAL SAYINGS
CREDIT TERMS
Wallichs Music City
SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA 5411-3165
I
..
1805 N ~WPORT BLVD. CS
Co1t1 Me11 (1/J Block N. 11th St.) ,,,. ,.-
' "'-' 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER ~".)Li
H1111tl11tf" .._,. INellt t• l•i\er Ir••· P:11r11h11reJ
AIMt l1t O•ANOll'All~ MALL, 1'1tll9rl..,
your public relations could use
an overbaullN. You mean ooe
thing -but itve impression ol
something different Clarify
situation with mate, partner.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
A new resolution is one that
you can and will keep -af.
feels work and health.
Promote your own cause . You
can do this without being
selfish. Strive for self.-estetm,
not arrogance.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)'
Some friends try to aid in
fulfillment of desires. But it
turns out that you do the help-
ing rather than vice versa.
This is fine. You feel bett.e:r.
You are a better host than a
gUest. Ridt along.
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white f!]ossy r.hotcr
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received following the wedding
will not be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accom.panied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories, forms ar1
available in all of I.be DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section staff members at 642-4321
or 494-9466.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' 1..----------------Your judgment of property
From Page 13
values could leave something
to be desired today. You may
be Jetting imagination run
away -without re.!lrainls.
Look ahead, but al.so get
money's wortb now.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): • • • Stockbrokers
You get chance to break Crom
routine. Can be exciting but
also costly. Accent on
joumeys, writing, publlshlng.
ere.alive urge put to practical
use. Play game according to
rules.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You found out things yester·
day. Now, today, have cour-
age to utilize information.
iieans don't backtrack. Go to
source. Then you will find that
crimps, entanglements van-
ish.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22--
Dec. 21 ): Best to let others do
the asserting. You are at your
best today gathering rather
than dispensing information.
Family member can prove a
wonderful ally. Respond ac·
cardingly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Your illusions can be
beautiful. But today you can
be a victim of sell-deception -
if you so permit. Strive to see
people. pr o po s ition s in
realistic light.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): You will find that it is dif·
ficult to hold emotional reins.
All the way or nothing -that
is the key. Strive to fulfill
commitments. But also make
room for logic.
PISCES (Feb. 1g..March 20):
Spread influence. Strive to
build public image. Analyze
"'hat it is you really desire.
Then take steps to reach goal.
Finish what you started in re-
cent past.
where she agreed to stall the
office on Lido Isle.
Sixteen years ago. she ap-
plied for a license Md was on
her way to becoming an invest~
ment executive. Today she
works with 29 fellow execu-
tives and an office staff of 14
in the firm's modern office in
Newport Center.
After 49 years, she is still in
love with her job. She cites the
Portraits
Displayed
Portraits and seascapes by
r-.1rs. John Jackson will hang
in th e l\-lesa Verde Library
Monday, March 16, through
Wednesday , April 15.
The artist's original method
of painting portraits and
seascapes In oil utilizes glazes,
and she paints color upon col~
or to achieve the desired ef-
fect.
f.1ore than 300 of her pain·
tings hang in private coJ.
lections and her works have
b e e n displayed throughout
California.
Mrs. Jackson. a member of
Costa A1esa, Huntington
Beach, San C lemen te,
Anaheim and Alission Viejo
art leagues, attended
\Vashington School of Art and
Laguna Beach School ol Art
and Design.
DEPARTMENT STORE
1111 NEWl'OU ILVD. AT
HA•IO• INTEUICTJOH
IN COSTA MESA
• .,
Good looks don't make it
a good no.iron. A aood
blend like 50% Dacro!I!>
Polyester, 50% Cottort.
Good thread. A good zip-
per that stays flat.
Seams that don't pucker
up in the washing ma·
chine. A no-iron thst
doesn't stop being no-
iron after a while. All
that makes Koratrons
Francisca by KORET OF
CALIFORNIA • i ood no-
iron .
s :z:
Sl ee~l 111 J.I. S1S.OO
Slick •• Sit te Sl6
daily challenge, even thou1h
the market Is a poor one. "I've
seen it turn around and pa!he
back before," she dedared,
and predicts an upswing by
early fall.
Happy In her work, she also
is happy in her home in Bay·
side Village where she lives
with her husband, Ronald, vice
president of the Mac Gregor
Yacht Corporation establiahed
by their son Roger.
Her approach to life Ir a
practical one, one woman
would do well to emulate. "As
long as you produce, you are
an asset to your firm . 1t brings
back to )'OU exactly what you
put into it. I wish more women
would take advantage or the
opportunity 1hat lies within
the field."
Westward Ho
Westward Ho Chapter of the
Daughters of the British
Empire will galher in the
home of Mrs. llarold Kleckner
of Laguna Beach on Monday,
itarch 16.
Those interested in the 12 :30
meeting may phone t h e
hostess at 494·9518.
Blue Star Moms
Huntington Beach Blue Star
A1others, Chapter 2 stage
meetings every Monday at
I :30 p.m. ii. Lake Park
Clubhouse.
'
' ' .
.
}
'
' ..
Tteftday, MarGh 12, lt70 DAIL V PILOT Iii
/Maury Green Leads Viewer Behind TV Screen
By JUDY HURST
01 Jht 0.111 '1191 Sl1H
The 11aury Green "'ho came
to Orange County Inst week
was not the same l\1aury
Gree n I've seen on tele\•ision.
He's underweight. Television
may distort the weight factor
but accordirfg to this authorily
on n~·s production, il doesn "t
make an attempt to distort the
news.
Green may look 15 pounds
lighter but he fed hls audience
with conversalional wit while
appraising his med ium. A
member or the original Big
News team for CBS and HJ.·
year member of that station.
Green introduced his new text-
book, '·Television N e w s ' '
before members of Pi Bela
Phis annual Celebrity Book
Review Series.
his job and led the viewers
behind the camera.
PERSONALITY
··one of the p r oblem!
television faces in presenting
U1e news is the personality
cult. Cult critics state that
therl' is a predominance or the
newsc::ister 's personafily and
opinions over and above con-
lent or the news.
"TV is domin<1tcd by it. ll Is
an inexcusable thing thnl Ute
person who gives you the news
is affixed \vith the Litle of
celebrity or salesn1an .
··Among the newsmen 'A'ho
currently fit into Lhis star
l'a !egory are \'{alter Cronkilte,
Chet Hunt ley, David Br1nk\ey,
lfoy;ard K. Smith and Eric
Scvareid ." ,
'
TV HIS MEDIUM
Maury Green Nattily atureq in a gr~n
swea ter·jacket and plaid pants
and showing those without col-
or television that his wiry
hair is greying, he glamo rized
l\fost~nnoisseurs or the Ul'Ws hou · strongly identify
with o show, or the pro-
gran1 's anchorman. If Lhis is
so. w y ls Green often
mis take for Ralph Story,
<inother popular broadcaster.
"One day I was at the
Biltmore Hotel's coffee shop
and the 1-11aitress was excited
•
-.........
Dual Reasons Dou ble
!Ylembers of SL J oachim's parish \Vil\ have doµble the fun \vhcn they celebrate
St. Patrick 's Day and the Rev. Thomas Nevin's bi rthday Sunday, J\1arch 15, in
the Costa l\1esa Country Club. A social hour at 6:30 p.m. v.•ill be followed by a
buffet supper and. entertainment. Doub ling up 'lo coordinate plans fo r the event
a re Mrs. ?\'Iichael Fenchak and Jl:lrs. \Villiam Hartson (left to right).
Bonan za Appeali ng
A bsrgai n bonanza awaits
shoppers during a garage sa!e
sponsored b y \Vf'slminste r
Nu rsery School between 10
a.m. and 4 p.m. Satu rday and
Sunday, ~tarch 14 and 15. al
10531 Stem, Garden Grove.
The sale will feature
ba rgain-priced items from
more than 60 households which
are being donated b y
members of lhe nonprofit
preschool group. Books, toys,
clot hing, c h i ld r en 's
furnishi ngs, small appliances
and furniture arc being
assembled at 1he home of l\1r ...
and fl1rs. Gilbert Gomez.
Funds from ·the sale will be
used to purchase new equip·
mcnt for the school.
TAK ATA
NURSE RY
and Landscape Co.
e f.REE
ESTIMATE
ON RESIDENTIAL
OR COMMERC IAL
Landscaping
SALE
FUSHIA
49' ea.
RED
NAVY
BONE
I
l
l
about my being at her -tsbl •
She, needless to say, waa a big
fan oC Story's. I pointed out
that I was not he. She left red-
faced and in her place came
the hostess who apologized
profusely and explained that
the wallress realized her
mistake and would I, Maury
Wills, accept her apology?"
So, Is it possible that
viewers don't really "see what
is before their eyes?"
PERCENTAGES
UCLA In 1o1 research paper Club answered questions from pathlze with women In th e au·
noled that only 7 percent listen the audience. die.nee who \li'ant to aee a bet-
to the :-.ews reporter, 38 per-}le feels that KCET is doing ter side portrayed. cent hang on his vocal in· flecllon and 55 percent are a good job considerlng lhe fact But he reminded the au·
very aware of his faclaJ ex· that the station lacks money. die.nee, the thousands o r
pression and posture. The former writer for the airplanes that fly daily and
''TV, then. Is 93 percen t Olicago Tribune and Los land safely are not news. This
personality when you add it Angeles Times doesn't see pay is usua l. ll's Lhat one crash oul
up. TV· for the immediate future. or 200,000 or so that ls news.
"It. also Is an emotional At least not un til "the cable Green, an E1nmy award
medium. It's like making love systems are worked Out and winner and 01-1·ne r of two
with no reasoning process. It more channels are added. •le Golden Mikes, innocently plug·
goes straight to the sub-feels today it is no t ged his new weekly sho\v, "In·
conscious and works on the economically feasible and ex-quiry" whi ch will air March 15
emotions. It Is a psychological periments have not prove n at 5 p.m. on Channel .i. Its
X-ray. succt!ssful. formal will be simHar to his
Spring
Fashion
Show
) lovely 1kow1
of f11hlo"1 f or
tk1 1nfir1 f1"'il'I"
1100-2 p~ P""
S•t11rcl1y, M1r,k 14
mod1l1 by Min Pr i""
>.~1d1my . , , fr11 011 th1
mill. H1111li"9to11 Cent1t
l11ch incl EdiJ191r •I
th1 5111 Di190 Fr11w11
This may seem strange
when one considers that most
Americans d e p e n d on
televis ion r 0 r information.
Ninety.five percent have TV
sets, but 34 percent don't trust
TV reports and 11 percent
thin k il should be government
regul~ted.
"TV news brings real life to Green admi tted that most idol. Edward R. l\1urrow's
the viewer," he continued. ~n~e~w~s'__i:is~ba~d~ne~w~s~, ~a~nd~s~y~m~-w;"~P:er~so~n~to~P~e~rso~n~.'~' ____ _:::====~~~~~~~' •·such as the Vielnam conflict. Ii <v "' ~~
When you sit back and see the ...-.,. /"' -, l
"The real problem with TV
1s that people don't understand
it.
--~--~ l realize that it is not catsup THE EFFERVESCENT T·AL ENT OF CAROIN UNFURLS IN HIS
being '.lsed or an old John ! SPRING SEVENTY COLLECT ION. SEE T HE SOFTEST WOOLS , , Wayne movie." • •
QU~ONS JERSEYS • CR EPES AND CHIFFONS W ITH SHINY V INYL, SPACE-
The current president of the ~:
"An eminent psychologist at Greater Los Angeles Press ~ AGE BELTINGS , TAAPUNTO ST ITCHING OR P\-ANET-SI ZE
SUTTONS, IT1S L IKE A PREVI EW OF THE TWENT Y-FIRST
Benefit for M iss ion
Irishmen Share Goal
The O'Dlvinskis, O'Millers,
O'Birrers, 0' La Riv a s ,
O'Lunds and O'Bishops will be
celebrating on St. Patrick's
Day.
Although they may not be
tru ly Irish, the members or
Blessed Sacrament Church
The Tee
Tattler
parish in Westmlnst.er share a
common goal: raising funds
for the Re\•. J~k Jennings
and hl3 mission work In San-
tiago, Chile.
Father Jennings served in ,,
the Westminster parish for a
year prior to going to Chile.
A benefit dance will take
pla ce in the parish hall from 9 t
p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, !
March 14, to raise funds for
his mission.
Playing for dancing will be ~
the Men of Notes, and tickets r.
for Lhe affair will be $2.50 a
person . Additional information
may be obtained by .calling
Ed Divinskl, 893·3030. or Mrs.
James Miller, 893-5308.
Cards Tell
Party News
Crazy Bridge will set the ~
mood for a husband and wives'
social sponsored by the Hun-
tington Beach High School t
Faculty Wives.
A St. Palrick·s Day theme ,
will be carried ou t when Mrs. ·
Larry Boston opem her Long
Beach home fo r the party tak·
ing place at 8 p.m. Saturday,
1i1arch 14,
Party Plans
Disclosed
A get.acquainted night Is
being planned for students.
faculty, wives and friends of
\Vestem S t a t e University
College of Law, Anaheim. '
The gatheri ng will take
place Saturday, fl.farch 14, in
thf' Charter House, Anaheim.
The evening will Include
danci ng, award prese ntations,
cocktails and hors d'oeuvres.
Tickets, at $3 per person, may
be obtained In the school lobby
or from Student Bar Associa-
tion officers.
'
DUE TD POPULAR DEMAND
ANO 1'011 YO Ull CON\l.NIENCI
KAY MICHAELS IEAUTY SALON
WILL IE OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 10
AND ALL DAY SUNDAY
KU Wn ld lff Ori••· "-"" I Pdl '*-l MI lAcre11 '"'"' Wt1fcllff .... ,,,
-
RISQUE'S GOING SOFT
Risqu6fashions •shoe to wur wfth
swfnglng pleated lkltls end blezer Jackets,
or• skinny ribbed dress.
Touchatl)' soft hnther,
squan!d·off at
the toe and set on
•chunk)' h~1
,.
~.
CENTURY. HERE, ljl S 2 -PI ECE WOOL P EP:LI N OVERBLOUS E
ANO SKIRT, NAVY , 6-12, 250 .00. ONLY ONE FROM OUR
PIERRE CAROIN COLLECTION , IN OUR DESIGNER DRESSES.
I
ROBN
• l
'
• • o · •• •• .~
%
.S4"' 01r;o 'Wr,
Ni!X,"T Tl') '°IP[ SfA11QN
~ 0 ~ • • HEMPHILL'S •
1831 NEWPORT BLVD.
IAICl R COSTA MESA Ph. 549.9744
NliJICT TO ,.1111' 5TAflON olf allllTO~
780 BAKER ST,. COSTA MESA PHONE 54~724 .... """"" .. -· . 044-2800
'
I
I
I
"""'.---...-----~----~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~ . ...--~~~~~--~-~-' /
O,A.JlV PILOT s
Enter
Tt1ursda1, Marth 12, 1970
Why Do Yo1:1 Steal? Fence Up
011 Pier
~. Old Time Movies Offered ,/
lilore old-time comedies and Africa Wld New Guioe<i. minutes. biography.
docuo1e ntaries arc being of· April 17 _ "The Hiding !\lay IS -"Cassandra Cat",
\Vorkmen hnve be• u n fered by liuntington Beach P\ac•." black and wl••'te, 17 I 87 · t 1·1 t·• I LAS VEGAS (AP ) -Why and aggressive impulses that HJt ls evidently so profound reeonstructlon of part o! the public library. co or, m1nu es, 1 m .... e o
do people steal? find no other outlet. an answer to a need that it seaward end o! the Huntington The films are scrttned at inlnutes. a study of solitude. 1,.';;;m;;;ag;;i;;ca;;l;;ca;;;l;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
Profit, Necessity Not Reasons
Not for prollt and seldom The efforts of the pr~ must spring from inherent Beich municipal pier and 3 the library, 525 Main St. There ''Wiodsor4:'', black an d11
E from noccssity, s>iyi; the lcssional security ml"l'l Banay qwrks in human oalure." fence hns been set up to keep is no charge. Films in the white, 25 minutes, a film in
"nlree entries have already President or the 1.1edical cor~ nddressell ln Las Vegas in "Stealing ls an exciting ac-the public rroi:n the dang~ series are: counte rpoint -symbolic iinages
.reeetved for lluntlngton lnrln" to elhninalc lhievery zone unlll c:ons tructlon is com-!'11arcb 20 -"Old ti1ne of nature again.st the story of ~ J · , 1 JI rectional Association, and ·~ e tivlty," he s::iid, ,;Especially D h d A II ut' aycees annua u Y arc a \vastc of-timl', he said, plelc. n10vies, black .and white. 70 ap ne an po o.
n1osi often they don't eve n ti h h'st. led for the male thief. the n1oment I 1 "B · "S'I " I ~ 'th Parade. no n1a er ow sop 1 tea Spokesman for the con· 1n nu es. eh1nd the Screen 1 l'nce , co or, 10 m111utes.
: Long Beach Elks 88 have know themselve$. and expensive the devices they of taking something is equated lri1ctor, Ye Dock Master, said -Chaplin ; "Easy Street -filn1 rendering ot Edgar Allen COLLEN'S .
: entered a novelty gr'Oup, and Dr. Ralph Banay, former use. \\•ilh sexual fervor." the c.-onstructlon will last until Chaplin; ''The Black Pita.le" J•oe's fable . I ,
• the Klngsmen Orum and director of the psychiatric "The Fifth Commandmant Stealing can also be the ex· at least l.1ay 15. -Douglas Fairbanks. "\\1acky \\1orld of Num-CARPET
. Bugle Cocps and th e Los cllnic al California's San might ns \\'Cll be dropped," he presson of a man's desire to (F'lshing and sight.seei ng \\'ill April 3 -"Flame and bers", color, seven n1inules .1 '"°°' •nd w1noow C•v•rlftl'
, Angeles Chinese Orum and Quentin prison, said Tuesday said. "After 2,000 years or put one over or gel even with continue as usual on the rest Fire", color, 80 minutes, humorous tr eat 1n en t ol ~1=~;;:~~~~·~:::,r•
'Bugle Corps have also in· th at most people who steal do trying, \VC must admit that we the unkno""'" establishment of the pier, acl!4)rdlng to primitive cultures and rituals numbers. I Sll•o-r1>11oor a owtd .. r C•rfl*t111t
d1cated they will take part. so as an act of bostility Inward have nol cradicale'd stealing that seems to dominate his Director of 11arbors and <lf tribes living in remote Atay 1 -"Gilbert and j 465 for"' An .. L9f11
"
This year's parade will have -""=i::•l::_Y_'::"::d::.•::•::.'::''::is::.IY'....:"::'::"::.' l_•::.•::d::.<::•::.• "°.:::._l ::.d•_:_••::.· ____ _cd::.ai:::ly_l::.if e::.·::.•_•i.:.d _B_••::.•:_Y_-____ s_e_•c::.h_es::.V::.l::.•""::.:.::"::.l M:::::oo::rh::•::"::"::.· )~_:i:un~gc:l•::•_•::f_:B:,:r az:i:::l,~A:u':"'.'.''.'.'.li'.'.:''::._:S:u:ll:,:i •,::•n::_'::.', .'.'.b'.:'.la:,:ck:.:an~d_c•:·h:ite::·..'.1~12:'1' ~~~"4"9"4".6"7"0"1 ~~~
••A chi ev emrnls<l!Our
American Youth" as Its
I.heme. A highlight will be an
blut·long fireworks display.
The Jaycees also announeflf
that they are making ar-
rangements for more free
parking , parking maps and
possil>Je free shuttle service
from distant parking spols to
tbe parade area.
Ocean View
Pen, Art
Oass Set .
Ocean View School District
pupils are sharpening their
pencils and readying their
paintbrushes In an effort to
produce 13,400 examples of art
and creative writing.
Their works will be on
displ ay April 20-23 during
"Edu' 70," a show to be held
at the Huntinglon Center in
conjunction with P u b I i c
Schools Week.
Present plans call for the
displ ay · to include a creative
project by every child in th e
spr.awling 22-school district
Demonstrations on the use
o{ puppetry in elementary
education and demonstration
lessons by district teachers
are scheduled as well during
the observance.
Slim, Trim
Meet Set
11Slim 'n Trim" ls a new
class offered to women in the
Huntington Beach area. The
class will meet on Monday and
Wednesdays at the city gym
from 9:30 a.m. to 11:l0 a.m.
The first hour or class will
be devoted to exercise and lhe
11econd hour 1o volleyball.
Class sessions will begin On
April 6. Registration fees may
be paid in the Recreation
Center, al 7th Street and
Orange Avenue, beginning
March 30.
For further information call
5.16-2513.
Signup Famine
Stl"ikes ROTC
WASHINGTON (AP )
Reserve Offk.'f:r T r a I n in g
Corps enrollment dropped
more than 25 percent in 1969.
aP,PMently r ef l ecting in·
creased hostility toward ROTC
OQ· some college campuses.
'fhe Pentagon said Monday
tDll the drop of 56,471 from
l!\e 1968 enrollment or 212,417
w4s chieny caused by the fact
thll 49 col l eges and
uQivel'3ities no longer require
CO)llpulsory ROTC training.
. ,
sml', DAN & IYRON FENLEY
W• 1W1e>e<:I in.r m.nv l'tllDI• o.i:lu••
1JOWl,-1ulft •"• •• croklMllY cld c•,..
II•,.,,... '""" pert.; In pl\nll clubo Wl!ll
tine• horldaotd 1001 ftftllll'!Q D•~llY on
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Church •!tin l'llft DOV! 15 r11tty 1
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It ptlllle -hi"°' ,OVI, 19\ld 'trt'I.'"
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ov im-peln -lie"" contrlllU!IO ..,,..""lnl , .. 1ty ,,..,,... ,.. Ill+
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""' Of*I, ,,.. -11 .. ~ 11111 '1'9~
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itdH Fl!HLIY INSUltANCE, to2
""11~ $t,tef In HIM!llnf!Ot'I l tolC'fl,
"'-l»-IS)I, ••• yow l"wrttot• Mto1. ll_...,,,.,..., -·w tlet!I ,,,..,..
I"' Ill .. Ul?lmllnilf 11'1 l"1ll!"ente me!•
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CHUCK
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ROUND\
STEAK
CfNTlll CUT
lUCltT
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ROAST
STAHDING
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lUCIY
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HA~~~~"cf GNEVER. '• ,,,. ooo Nof . • • • so ,,.,, . . • • • d i ••"re ittillt ••too.,.•' 'ol~•ct 1,..,,, lhe f Prodvc11 .;,; •o cfe/icrov1
foshio"•d' or"' hoy_. •• cfefivered.
::•dvct1, luclt 9°odrie1s 0 ,":.,.•,..ior•d th•
••• hi h .>' •lore1 ° .>' '•• d · Ofhe,. re 9 "'IU 11lfty lod 0 '• Proud 10 .,,.,..
ot lurky!o•on fo r •hoppr,. '•• Products.o:•r
9 ••• 011d . "'" 10,,.,,,.
:A~~~G~:1zco MILK ' .. , '' ''
Low FA LF .... .,...... . . ., ··'•UI '•'a "TM/ .......... '' NON F lK ...................... ····· 1'!"':11 2 for 55 AT MILK ........ ' CHUR · · ........ . ....... e.,,,,..25 NEO BuncRMILK ................ tuu1c111.2 , c
CHOCOLATE ORIN .................... Or4Jc
COnAGE CHEE K........................ ·····llllU1cr, 2Dc
SOUR CREAM SE ....................... " ......... ·.110u1,,_ 23c
REAL CREAM TO -· .. ,...................... . ..... ,1#1cr11, Jlc
BUrrER -I PP/Hr; .............. ··-.... 'l"7t1•.49t
ICE CREAM st DUALrrt ............... ~ ............. ~l,l.CA• 43c
. . ......... ""···· ··········"•l.,,.. 79c
............... i.u1 tr•.SSc
Pdces ore Discounted E.11cepl 0 ,.
Foir-Troded ond G0Yernrn1nt
Controlled Items.
3-17.70
s.,u~.~~ .,!.l! ... ~~~S..! ....... "' " 85.~
r.ul!~J.'-!!",P,~~ .. S.!~~.l<S.. $ J 3~
!~!!,~~uc~!!,!.!<.S.......... , $Jl! 48~.
GROUND BEEF
flUM • lLIClT IOMDID ............... . SS.~
69.~
88~-
TAsrr iENTEH sEAFooos BONELESS HAMS $J ~.s LUCKY BACON CUT ·U6P9!R!!~!""""" .. -... -... 35~
swoRoF1sH sTEAKs ~n~ ......... •1 ~.~ •uu , cOOllD,OK.lilM.lTl• .......... suc•D.1.t•.,l,......................... RIB STEAK lUClT 95•
88~. S!IUll £110 ... tic t~ 83~
LEAN GROUND BEEF TURBOT FILLETS l lCMl(f sac IONDfD lflF •••••••••. 11.
FRESH OYSTERS ;;,:;~:::::~::::· 79~" ~~~~~!~~ .. ~~~~:... . 35 c f,~,~~!.~l°.H.~ .. 8.~~~~ 77c SIRLOIN STEAK l~~~otur ... _ $J lt fllSM, CMUCI QU.IUTT ............... .
DUNG !NESS CRABS ::\\~ .......... 69f.. SLICED BAco•1 79 osc R UNCH
HALIB UT STEAKS ~~:,',~'~:r·.: .. : ..... 99:L '"'"· lWlfT'S, MOllMl~~-ll. '''····• C !THIN J~ts. ~o~!-~~cl~~~,~~-8 8 C ~1tt1o1,011 ... ~1~1~!.~,::~1~~~:::•,"'"' 35 c
=.;y;==, =-=-·=·-=0""'.'~-00-DS--...c-.--::~~~~ .. -k:.;-~&t1:.:..-_------,,,;;,,,.;,FROZEN...;;;..·,;;,,FOO...;IOS--· ,-,..-··:__.::,;;,,~;.;;;;;;;•;,;,;•;;:,:,;,;;··.;.;;·k:.;;:.;;;;;.&t;.;;1~~;.; ...... ;....._11 :?~.o.~.~~E.o.AM. cH.E~~·E···· 63 <
::::• GROUND BEEF
ft UH, IOUHD QUALITY ............. ,,.
,,...""'~~=~;ATOES \\"it~ .. 29' APPLE JUICE HALIB UT :~i.·:i:-~"';'.'.;'.':'.'.'.~.~~ 89' W ZEE . TISSUE ~.~!.~~~'N"~'~'~,!~f.... · .. $239
GREEN GIANT CORN ::\'!'.'!..'.:''. .... 23' !Zi~u1~; 39c SOLE FILLETS ::~::·::r ................... 96' TOILET 34c ~.m1L.~s •• s.u.~vn.~1.s.c,,u .. n,s 9< MACARONI & CHEESE ~1°!~0:~~ ... 42c 4/650 CT. w, " · ......... .
NIBLETS CORN ::~i:~~~ ............... 23< CAN ,cs••11• ROLLS L,,E,,o .. ·s •. s,,L,,!!E,o.,M,,E,,A.r.s ... ~.· •. L.· .... 35c
GREEN BEANS:t~:: ~!•:z': ~~~.~~ ....... 24< M~1!~~~!.9.~Pc~1tili:.'iit~tliii'ii'i.0~9c _,
GREEN GIANT PEAS noL <" -· .. 23 ' ' BEEF-0~~~~.'.~~'.~.~~:_35' ORA NGE JUICE ::~;·,!~ ........ 47 ' -llOUSEHOib .ITEMS . ~~~.~!~~ .. M,~~!~. $4 49
~~~~!Ea~~f:i~~s.:·~:~::;-·--·~~: STAR KIST TUNA !~.':f ............. 32' ~~:~;l~~~r:!:;;;;· ..... """' !~: sos PADS ::w•~~·-··'''''''''''""'"'' 29' ~.~.!t.~.~~EESE ' 37< UOLUJt .... ,,.... TOMATO SAUCE ~~:~Ju.• ... -.... _ 19• •or.1•f......... ........... WHITE KING 11011 ~:~1:'.':i ............ 68 t ~"
LEMON JUICE :~llfi;:;_ ... ~ .. ·---·_ ... ~2~1 • TOMATO PASTE ~~::~.. ....... 28, ~!~~~~o;:;;:;;~i~i''.'.~''. _ ~~'. Il~E iET~R~~~!.:;•L ..... ·-.. ,1,. ~.s.~~~~~Y,E,~. ~JE.~ERS _ 7 5 c ST~~i~ TOMATOES ~Th~~~~l~~;~;;:~:t;;;··" ··~~: ~M.OR.EH_O, -UK6tSE&tM·U;~ ~~~~~ \~!~~~;:.~:;.:: .: : :::::: i!: ~~~;i·~·~r;s '$~~:
14Y2-0UNCi 20 C L ,:,..m .................... 7l' ST ARD ! CHEER DETERGENT·'"·-............ 82 ""'~'" '"<• ....... ..
CAN OLIVE Oil :::~!~." · · ....... 47' 27c FABRIC SOFTENER '~;:;"'·-...... 8, 1 ~(Vrn.A ... ;.·(--S!D.fRl'f .. _!1!:.¥(".'..· '.I KERN'S PRESERVES ~;';;',W,';:'..'. ..... 75 ' 24-0UNCE T"''"~ .......... 7 ' ~MU !I: '!:;J,..}
HUNT'S PEACHES ~~':t,,1 ............ 27' PEANUT BUTTER ',",',','.••• ............. 'l 1' JAR BIZ PREwSOAK i111.10J ................ '1 02
PEPSI COLA ~~~,r~~~~~.~~: ......... , . .,_. 92c
PEARS ~!;~:~:~.~ ............................. 33( SWEET PICKLE CHIPS ~:~~)~~' .... 62' CAULIFLOWER ~i~11~:~~~.' ............... 41 t CA MAY SOAP ~T:f'••• ................. 17~. GOLDEN CRCWN BEER ~~~,~~:1.•2•• FRUIT COCKTAIL r:~~.{IM .•.. ,.,,,.,, 25 ' ~ • k:.;&t' (W'(MIUl,AUtl O•ll JUIU t llS .. /IUftltl•:tCll LUCKY fEATURfS,VAN De KAM P'S r~ · · · . ---RICE PILAF '111""•M10111" 37' GOLD SEAL VODKA o",.',',~0.' .•.•.•.•• 13'' GRAPEFRU IT SECTIONS "'""" 31 ' ~ ...... .... .................. FINI QUALITY BA~ERY PROOUCTS " STRAINED BABY FOOD !.~:;~:~:: 9< STUFFED OLIVES SARA LEE COF FEE CAKES :~~::r. 79c !AV.AtlAll( AT jf.OSr STO~fS) llP1Un.&v1tUtt1111Mos11uctf!T01Ut
J Nlo · EARLY AUNT JEMIMA WAFFLES""~" 39' ; ,F!:!.J/iif·11 lDW OISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEwARES & BEAUTY AIOS u R BABY FOOD ~t::~~: ....... 121 CALIFOR NIA 49c tctl.•(G.
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CHEF Boy AR DEE "·'u" 37• PET RITZ CREAM PIES ::,·~.· ....... 27'
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BANANAS PILLSBURY FLOUR .................. 60' 6.oz. CANS
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lro!A ce~tral Ame1lc1. FROSTING ;~~~~~!;11::~~11· :i!~1~~,~~~ •• 39 '
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GRAVY DINNER ;~~1:.'.o ................ 4S c
·-MIRTPROOUCTS RUSSET POTATOES IMO DRESSING f:~~~\0 .... , .......... 37 '
SOUR CREAM l!~\~~~~~~~~~~~ ......... 29'
SOFT MARGARINE ::~'.'"' . 31 '
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I
" I
Thundf_y, Marth 12, 1q10 DAILY PILOT Jl 1
Russ Claim Cleaner Ecology South Pole's Made of Wood
MOSCOW (APl The
Volga may be p:>Uuted but the
Communist environment is
still cleaner than the \Yest,
Soviet oUkials claim.
'Valer and air can best be
purified by Commun i s I s
becallSe 0 rthe natural
superiority of their syslem. a
Soviet scientist says.
"The advantage s of
socialism -public property.
planning, and othen -are
shown in this .irea, too," ac·
cording t o Literatumaya
Gazela -Literary G1utte.
It said pollution-righters are
more oplimlstic here than In ,
the West. where "private pro-
perty and the egoUsUc in-
terests ol the monopolies are a
seri.ous Dbst.acle."
Yel even under communism.
humans and Dthcr Hvlng
Coming March 14 in
Family weekly
Goal I or the '70s:
To Improve Your
Child's Reading
0.-. Jomes E. Alle11, Jr~ U.S. Commissioner of
Education, outlines a campaign doJignod to
el~minate reading Pfoblems. One in four Amer·
ic.on children have clifficu.lties in their readlng
ability. Jn this story Dr. Allen explains why he
pidced this target and what can be done to help.
• LET IT RAIN -Cover feature explores new
fashions in rain ge ar. The cover photo features
new cape pantsuit.
e WHO'S ReTJRJNG? -Though she has talked
about retiring for years. Helen Hayes. at 69, is
busier -and happier -today than she ever
\\las. She says so in this profile of the First Lady
of American Theater.
e HYPNOSIS AND HABITS -Article presents
various success stories in \Vhich hypnosis has
been helpful in medicine and psychiatry. But can
it cure bad habits?
All Couiing Saturday in the
I DAILY PILOT I
thlnga are threatened by the WASHINGTON IUPJ) -
polaonotll and blightln1 wastes The location of lhe Sou th Polt
or modern ioclety, it admitted. In the driftlrig Antarctic ice
''ln the majority or reatans has been precisely marked ror
or the U.S..S.R. the: litu1UOl'I is the Um Ume ln 12 years.
better thin ln the West." Soviet sclentllt D. Armand The new marker, a six-fool
.,1rrote In tbe paper. . 'A'ooden post, was planted by
"But we, too, already have Larry L. Amos and Thomas E.
sighting their lnslruments Dn
18 bright stars that sppear fix·
cd in the sky In rela tion to 1hel
earth's axis.
because or lhe thickness of lhc
ice cap, cannot be permanent .
There is no way to anchor
lhem to bedrock.
But lhty do provide gauges
of the Anlarctic ice !low,
\\'hich amounts to about 6S
feet a Ycar.
rivers that are cesspools. Spring of the U.S. Geological
"And Jn certain of our cities Su rvey at the request of the sea. J(eep' s PR Job
lhe concentraUon or exhaust Naliooa l Science Foundalion. The new n1arkcr was rt:·
It is necessary to change
South Pole. markP.rs fnnn time
to time because the ice in
which they are planted i~
steadily drifting toward tilt
gases exceeds health 1tan-The previous marker had quired fOr a new Sou th Pole \VASH JNGTON (AP)
d8ft~·:aid Soviet and other :.:i~l?.,~~~£~~~;;,:~~~~~i:~~l· ~\~~d ~eut :S1~~:~1 f~~~thi~ ~~ii~~t~cr=:t'Cw~~C: :~s~~ ~=;~n~~p:id ~~~'air:~~ LOCAL
Communists were •' c 111 e d '°'!-•---·--• 'A'as placed in the 9.~foot being crushed under Jl\llOY ti01111I chairman, will continue
upon" to lead a worldwide bat· thick Ice Cilp in 1957. feet of accumulated Ice and 10 operate his public relations
N• •Iii•• 11••1P•P•' lt lh 'r•~ 191•'•• •"''V id1v, 1boul wh1+',
t•l119 011 111 lh• G•••'•' Or•1191
C•11t th111 th• DAILY 'ILOT. le for a 1''hOle50~ env· ----------Amos and Spring calculated sno"'· and management consulting
Uonmenl _lll_•_J>O_le_'•_•_x_ac_1_1oc_a_1_io_n_by __ So_ut_h_P_o_l• __ m_a_r_k_e_r~'·-~l~ir~m~tn~N~e~w~Y~or~k~.---~==::=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=::=
"What i,, hJPpenine in the Id
West indlcatea the da111cr 102 ·year•O
which we can and mUJt pre-
vent." the eeograpber said. ll1~11l1~~nd ~1~t ~ Work$ HaI"d,
here came not only from air
and .water polluUon but also Runs Harde1· from sail erosion ind the wan·
ton·slaughter of wildlife.
He said only the United
St.ates a.nd China e:s:ceeded
Rus!ia in ermion, and charged
thst a 1967 soil conservation
decree here was not being
fully mforeed.
Armand hailed animal pro-
tectioa: measures that have
savecfRussian elk, beavtr and
sable from eJtinction, but ad·
ded: ·"Unfortunately, the
frighttnin& development of
poaching un ermines this, our
legitlmate pride."
The beauty of Rus sian birch
fOffiil! •nd fields is beginning
to suffer the fate of Western
scenic areas Lllghted by liUer,
mostly frDm the proliferation
of tbrowa.JVay pj1cka1es, he
said.
"If you burn them, clouds of
choking s t i n k will hang
eternally over the cities."
While praising progress 50
far, Annand said RUS-'ian:s
needed to do more, especially
about water and air pollution.
His mention of poiso..1ous
wastes in the air conflicted
"it) ctaim.s by other Soviet of·
ficials Utat thL<i is not 1 pro-
b!~ here.
And rus stress on the need to
dD more about water was
stronger than that Df one con·
serval.ion official who said last
fall : "We are successfully
solving this problem. Water
pollution is not increasing in
the Sovie! C'.1ion."
No Kosygin,
I ~ixon Meeting
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
'i'Jbite House has poured cold
wJ1er on rumors that Pre:11i-
defit Nixon -might meet Soviet
~er Alext:i N. Kosygin In
Vienna at lhe April resump-
tion of the strategic arms
limitaliOJO talk.. -SALT.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Every morning when the
weather penn.lts, Larry Lewis
gels up and jogs tJ)e e. ?-mile
perimeter ot nearby Golden
Gate Park.
Then Larry walks the five
miles to the St. Francis Hotel,
where he is a banquet waiter,
and puts in a full day hus\li ng
food-filled trays around .
His work finished, Larry
hoofs the five miles home and
does the chores for hi:s ailing
wive Bessie, 72.
All this ill not bad for a man
who will never see 100 again.
Moreover, Larry, who is 102
and can prove it, seems to be
getting: better with age. Each
June 25, his birthday, he runs
the t~yard dash against a
stopwatch. He did It last year
in 17.3 seconds. which was half
a second faster than he
managed in 1"8.
~at makes Larry tick? Not
even his doctor knows.
Part of the answer may be
that Larry doesn't smoke,
drinks nothing but three
gallons of water a day and
lives solely Dn meal, baked or
broiled.
His ruddy face is only slight-
ly lined. he has a strong:
hm1dclasp and his :speech is
lively.
"He·s incrCdible," says his
physician, Dr. S. Barre Paul.
•·Larry could easily pags for a
man of 65 or 70."
Larry's age is allestcd by
the records of the 'Masonic
lodge, of which he has been a
member for 75 years.
His memory is keen. Born in
Phoenix, Ariz., in 1867, he
recalls that his childhood
playmates were mosUy Na-
vajo and Apache Indians.
To Larry it seems like only
yesterday -it was 1882 -
when he joined P. T •
Barnum's circus, eventually
becoming a wire walker and
straitjacket escape. arfut.
;•
Orth• ''"•rtis•' a t1p ·q11alit1 i•ttt11 tuft•• Kin( Site
sl11p .set for h1cr1diblJ little mon1r. OnlJ S129 -outht an
Orth• Kint Slit Mattress 1 111 Sprint ••• ,1us tht 111w
f1mous Ortho·f'lk and Ortht's c1l1brated Dou~le lon11s,
Hl"E'S WHAT YOU GET: .;;;;;;;::;j!
OvlftH MlttrHI & 2 lo1: Sprlng1
M.U.t O"THO·~AK; f1•lclct11t _,,.,.. Kll'IQ S"• .._t·
• Fl•to!ct-.t .,..1rcm K1119 Site liltltd ~ltol'll &Ntll • 2 Ki11t
8111 llollte!' "llow• • 2 pt11-~-• 1("'9 Sri. -~
,..i • 1!:1111 Sire "'-' f,_ wil.h •••Y ' r ofll~g· et•t•••· .lNO DO U8l£"
&!NUS: tt111e $ii• ~u•ltto! btdaPf••d
t M k1111 S•r• ~•~01rd (~ot n
111uWl!eo!),
..afttr st~ta,years 1f inllat11 ,rices,
Or~1·s •1r1ct·t•yo11 .mints m1k1 it possible t1 11ter ,.,
tht 1i111r ~u•litJ' tf 1 Quiltell Mattress 11111 2 lox Spril&11t
t~t lllllt In price It Ult 19'3 set. And Jiit still tit tfll
OrUl•P1k an• D1uble IOftUS!
The Regal King
Hert's w-1t JN pl! A Quilted l<Jnt Siz1 mattress and 2 box sprinss! 7 laacl!ld
6' wldel DITHO·PAlt • Filkfcrest no.iron Kinf sile top sheet • filldcre:st
2i.iin~o·~iron Kfn1 size fitted bottom sheet • 2 l<in& size bolstw pillows:
' . • 2 Kina size pillow cases • ll'fnr size m1ttress pad
• I< inf si1e metal frame with easy-1oll eaten.
: DDUIL( IOHUS .Kini siz1 quilted bedS9f'ud
Maybe its time
you invested in a little
real estate.
Larry has outlived a sister
and 11 brothers. His mother
survived lo the age of 97.
A bachelor until he was 78,
he finally got married in 1946.
•Iis first wife died in 1950 at
57.
A car hit Larry in June 1965,
fracturing bis skull a.nd seven
ribs and severely injuring: his
back.
.. \Vith the help of the good
!Ard," says Larry, ''I was
back on my feet in 23 days."
'x~ PL us ~1 1ize hudboard (not " itluslrlttd)
., .f with lhe purchase of any Kmr Size sleep at.
~ $168
.,._ going .. lodf
high-ays. to iiapwww schitnla.
!odmrinuoobum the
thl"l<' that nood doOlg .. bop
.Amerk.t grmt.
Dor.e ~ in•eal&td,.,. ti«?
y Oil bet it doe&.
1 mt nd mi~e{ ~
\.ftiC'i ........ Nllp ...
ix"'*'""
lake stock in America
Buy us. Savings S...wlr.
ffl'°'-;Ui1A<+"i:~
•11>211241
17 at GWC
Get Loans
Se\.'eat.een Golden W e s I
College students have received
$11.941 in educational loans
from the U.S. Department of
JUstice to pursue Jaw en·
forcement careers.
The loans were made to
ergb t student cadets and nine
officers Df area p o 11 c e
departmenta who art taking
in-service t:rainlng al G<>lden
Wtst.
"This depletrs the loan
money availab" al Golden
West this year t.hrou1h the
Law Enforcement Education
Program (LEEP), but we es:·
peel to make application for
funding: for 1970-71," said
Donald L. RandDI, college
financial aids officer.
Tbt loan program provides
up to ,1,IOO per year for
educaUonal e:xpeneees lo filll·
Ume 'l u dent 1, Applicants
must be either rull·tlme
e:mplDyet of publicly funded
taw enforcement agencies or
pr"°11ervke studenta In law en·
lorcelTlf:nt.
Inquiries c:oncernln1 t h e
Im fund should be directed to
Randol at Golden W e s t
College.
Mesan Nan1ed
The Quilted Queen
Mira's •h•t ,1111t! Queen size quilled mattress with pattem ticking PLUS metchint
bo.r sprin&I flTHD·f'll( • Fieldcrest no· iron Queen si?e top sheet • fieldtrest
no· Iron Quee1 size filled bottom sheet • 2 Queen size bolsler pillows · ~ ·"
• ZQueensilepillowcases •Queen size mattress pad ~~~
• Queen size metal rrame with easy.roll c1slers. ;-
OOUIU. IDIUS Ooeen size quilted bedspre•d
PLUS Queen si11 headboard (not a:s iHustral!d)
with the purthtse of lflY Queen Size Sleep Sat.
$109
'" Ntr1'1 whit JM flt Twin sll1 quilted mattrm
and print. DOUltE IONOS • Pfast ic h11d·
board ( t 1s lllustret1d) Ind metal fr1m1 with
e1sy.r~ ctste1sl
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN
H1te'1·wt11t flt pt!
AIL lllHHIC!S!
2 TWfl Sin uttm11~
21'<~ Size 1'tx "'ilt&I • IDOUlll IUUlllr
2 pill tic htodlloards (not .. 111u.tr1tod),
2 met1I fr1mH with 11sy·roll cat1rs.
OF MATIRESS SPECIALISTS.I
Coot> Mesa re!ldenl, G<orge EOJI fO'AJ N ~A_L.LEY LAKEWOOD ANAHEIM
4433 Candlewooci Dr. 1811 W. Lincoln Ave. R. Nackoe, a graduate. student 161 ~ H b Bl d at BrlsJlain Young University .11 Gr Or V •
in Utah l\'AS named to I.he ~ (Not ,. t.4(•1
11nivf'rsity'1 honor list for the tfo
IOU .. mesl<r. Ji!ll, In order to p ne: 839-4570 Phone: 634-4134 be named to tlle list, • 1UidCnt ,
10,,..1te .... "'""'
. Phone: 776°2590
~~~ ~~:~~e.'1 teasl ~ 3·5• 111a1:11,.ua:!'1111:Q>illlltll!Qjt~1111011tJ11p1:•mtq1011111z;w741e:1111:raft1111n1£1I!IDrf!l.111:11:1aap
"
--""!!"9""----------:--:----:--::--:----r-::--~------· --.. --. . . . -.. •• • .. ·,--• • •
J• DAILY PILOT Thursd.ly, Mmh 12, 1970
Plastic
Decay
Fig~ter
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI)
-CoaU111 teelll will! plastk
may tUminate tooth decay,
dlatal nsearchers report.
Dr. MI eh a el Buooocore.
research coordinator at the
Eutm.an Dental Center, said
cavity-Cree teeth or 00 pat·
it:nts, ranging In age rro1n four
to 15 were treated with 11 liq·
ukl ~dhe11ive \\'hlch wa!I har-d~ed wtlh ultra\'lolel light.
A similar 1roup went un·
treated. Buonocore reported
after 12 months. only one of
the 200 teeth treated with the
adhesive showed a partial loss
el coaling.
The untreated youngsters
developed cavities In 42.per·
ctnt of their teeth.
Buonocore said another yea r
of testing with the adhesive.
which u.ses inexpensive
materi111ls and takes only a few
minutes to apply, is needed
befo~ It could be recom·
mended for general use.
"\Ve are plaMing to test ll
In cooperation '''Ith other
1roups in the country,''
Buonocore said .
The key to the experiment's
success Is the ultraviolet light
used to harden the adhesive.
Prtvlowly, Buonocore
reported, the plasUc ctiaUng
cut decay but began to wear
o(f after only six months and
had to be. repaired or replac·
ed. Teeth to be sealed \\'Ith the
mixture are first cleaned and
polished. The area to be
treated is then conditioned
1'.'lth a mixutre of 50 percent
phosphoric acid and dried with
a blast of air.
'The adhesive, a relatively
stable, thick liquid. Is painted
on the grinding surface of the
teeth "'ilh a fine brush and the
ullraviolet light Ulen turns the
coaling Into a smooth nearly .
lnvislble film .
In half of the teeth treated a
compound containing calcium
flourlde v.·as added to lhe mix·
ture, ruulting in an opaque
material.
Buonocore said the previous
use of fluoride Indicates that It
Js more effective In fighting
decay between lhe teeth than
It is on the biting surface
whlle the plasllc controls
decay on the mrfact.
Pilot W titer
Takes Third
In Co11tesl
DAILY PILOT newsman
Bill Schreiber, a r e c e n t
graduate of Cal St• t e
Fullerton, \\'as a\\·arded third
plact honors for ne\vswrltlng
at the recent Ca Ii fo r n i a
• Jnlercollegiate Pren Associa·
tion convention In L o s
Angeles.
Schrtlber wu graduated
from CSF in January of this
year. and hu been employed
by the DAILY PlLOT since
February. He \via the editor
of the Dally Titan, Cal State's
school niwspaptr during the
fall semesttr.
The Los Angeles chapter of
Si11nua Delta Chi professional
journalis m society judacd the
compeUlion. ~
School OK's
48 Courses
For 1970-71
Trustcts n r Saddleb1ck
College have approved 48 new cour~ offerings for the 1970.71
academic year.
Included are a nwnber of
new real estate courses for the
exttndtd day pro1ram at the
college and a ••streamllned"
paliet M:ience program lh11l
"'ill parallel four-year colle1e
offerlr111. The newly approved courses
'tt'lli lncrtate offerings in
hilt.or)'. physical education,
bus iness. science.
mathematics, music and most
other tctdemlc dlvlslons.
' '
Added to the mathematics
dh•lslon wlll bt an advanced
computer pro& ram n1in8
---.,,.rriw-iamndd;,-ito"41ht buslnes1 --
dhrislon. a computer datt pro-
ce!?Sln& clalS. ..__
· Approvtd real e s t 11. l e
coutsea for tht e v e n I n ll
classcs 1tartln1 in ran art
••fttal E 1l1 t e Principles:'
"Ltaal Aspects of Rt• I
&state.," "Real t:a~ale 1'1>·
pralul," "Real E •t at e
Finance," "Rell Eatatr: Pr•c·
Uct'' ind "Real E 1l1 t e
Economics."
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Th1 Ono Tho+ Cor"
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bread & butter plates, dinner 397 -A~ \___~~I!<'.:·, "'-.._ \';~
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Sat. 10 to 9 p.m.
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..J
• < , v, 1 h <nd spin spe~I you des11e-lor sheer deli-
hPdVY v.ork clothes • Exclir.;ive Mini-wash system
v. •-~' \ rvclc • Automahc extra rinse and permanent.
I Y' :~i . r111er flo~ system traps lint
DlllV IRY & NORMAL INSTALLATION INCLUDED
-~ d .-.,
.I / ·"' /
e
'
rt ..... -12, 1970
•
• 10 programmed washing cycles -wash heavy
work clothes or delicate lingerie • Infinite water
level control • Heavy duty \12-hp motor AmMATI
DELIVERY & NORMAL
~ INSTALLATION I INCLUDED
WEBCOR
HAIR DRYBI
WBCDR BlfNDER
STEAM COOKER
Steam cook com plete meals in minutes. Sepa-
rate containers so you can cook more than one
food at once. Atfrac-8 9 7 live style appliance:... .
easy to clean. UCSO san
FORMIRLY 11.tS 2:.tl
o -
I I I OSTER CAN M'IRE I G.l · .COFFH
I . OPENER. I COFFEE URN I MAIER
• Hand wash action • Weigh-to:.save lid • SIOfl and so&ll timer
Adjuslable hood, 5.
way heal control,
storage compartment
for cord in base. 1
yr. over" the counter
replacement warranty.
#HD700
'Solid state 8 push· I Zip open all household I Makes 11 to 31 cups I Makes coff ee to the
. button bleJ"(!er with I ~1e cans quickly a"1 I of coffee a~omatic· exact strength you
51-01: container. New I easily; magnet holds I ally. Keeps it at serv-I tike & keeps ii serv·
low silhouette design; I lids. In white, av~ I rng temperature. Sig-I ing hot 'Iii the last
comes with recipe I cado a"1 harvesl gold. I nal light. no drip spi-I cup is poured. 3 to i
book. #5058 I #504/03/04/05 I got. Model no. 1031 I cup 111-0del. #CM·!
I I 1597 1 997 I 997 I 597 • 5 push button water temp. selector • lock 'n spin sa1ely hd
• 2 position agitation/spin speed selector •Automatic bleach
dispenser • 13!!
PllCI lS,t7
STEREO TAPE PLAYER
Mayfair 8 track stereo cartridge tape player can be used
anywhere. Solid state amplifi er, twin speakers with 6'
extensions, pushbutton track change, aud io balance control.L
SAVE 89
OUR REGULAR
PRICE 59.97
. I . •
WEBCOR ::!~~ l G. E • LIGHT D AL
POCKET RADIO I AM CLOCK RADIO
Custom deluxe style radio -long I Top . qua lity long range AM !e·
distance reception and outstanding I cepllon attractive compact de~ign
tone. With ear· • I with clock 1497 phone, carrying 7' 7 I lighted dial.
case &battery I coM,ARE
IOMP ...... ; I AT 19.97
AMAZllle LOW
DISCGUllT PRICll
. .
New freshwater·
"King Fisher"
·.el. Per1ect
tor trout and
all other fresh·
water lishing.
Mod~ #K15
WITH LIFT.our
TRAY
CREDIT RIMS!
DAILY ,U.OT ·~
Sight Loss
BJa1ned 011 ............
Poor Food
Dea MOINES, Iowa (AP )-
An lnadequate diet whlle cap-
tives of the North Koreans i•
causing partial bl or 1lght
among some crew members ot
the Navy lntelU10n<e 1hlp
Pueblo, Cmdr. Lloyd M,
Buhher aald in a copyrtghl }n ..
tervlew in the Des Molne1
Regl!ter loday.
Bucher, Interviewed by a
member of lbe paper '•
Wuhington bureau via
telephone from Pacific Grove.
Calif., said he suUer1 from
blind spots and 1 e v e re
headaches whJch d o c t o r 1
~lleve were caused by the in-
adequate nutritiQn the crew
got from a diet that consisted
mostly of turnlpt .. The lhlp
commander is being treated
as ail outpaUent In Call!ornla,
'he said.
"The symptoms have shown
up Jn about one-third of the
crew," Bucher said. In
several, the damage is severe
and probably permanent, ho
said.
Charles B. Law Jr., the
ship's quartermaster, "has
had a great deal of difficulty.
He Is able to see to aet about
but has greatly reduced vision.
He cannot see straight ahead
and has to use his peripheral
vision," Bucher said.
"Two or three others were
affected to a serious degree
and some, Including myself, to
a ~ome\that lesser degree," he
said.
Doctors 8ay the men's diets,
whJch included no Vllamln! A1 C and D, appar'tnUy cauaea
damage to part of the optic
nerve, Bucher said.
The ailment produces blind
spots In certain areu of the
victim's vision in the rest ot
the eye, he said.
"\Ve did not eat very well
for long periods of Ume," he
said . "Our basic diet waa
turni ps. After four of five
months we began to get aome
rice.
"There were Ume1 when we
got an apple maybe once a
week or so. For a short Ume,
we got them once a day. Then
there were Ume1 when we
would go without frult for a
monlh or more," Bucher laid.
There wu no meat, e1cept
some caMed quail a fe" tlmea
and virtually no dairy ~
ducts, he said.
The men were captured off
the North Korean coast Jan .
23, t9611 and rtleued Ile<. :za
of that year •
10 Seniors
Get Honor
Of Center
Ten high school 1enion have
been chosen Students of the
P.fonth of February, by the
Huntington Center Merchanta
Assoclalion.
They are: Sandy Mendez.
Pacifica; Rosa L>e La Riva,
La Quinta; Myrna Murdock.
Huntington Beach; Su 11 n
Johnson, Westmin1ter; Kartn
Berry, Fountain Valley; Jo
· AM Spiro, ?I-farina ; Donna
Shattuck, Santiago ; Sue He114
Garden Grove; Chris: Manio,
Edison, and Lorraine Sim·
mons, Los Amigos.
Each of the 1tu dent1
receives a $6 cash award from
the assoclaUon and becomes
eligible to compete for Jts an-
nual $500 scholanhlp.
Student& of the Month are
selected on the bull of at·
tltude, g r a d e s , clllzenshJp,
personal appearance and sales
personality.
They are nominated by the
business fJculty of the in-
dlvidual hlgh schools Jn the
Huntington Beach Union Hi1b
School District and the Garde n
Grove Unilled School Dbtrlc~
BofA Helps
2 at OCC
Two Orange Coast College
students have rtcelved POI)
awards in Bank of America's
Junior College Business
Awards Program.
John R. Maday of Hun·
Ungton Beach received the
award In bu1tnes1 ad·
minlstraUon and Chrtsta H.
Hartleb.of Costa Mesa waa the
winner ln the aecretarlal
dlvWon.
The awards will be
preaentedhtdf¥.al a banquet
at the Beverly HIJioo Hotel
where the banlt will honor all
Southern California wlnM:n,
The program wu 1ta.rted In
· 1953 to encour1ge students tG
prepare ror businus careers •
More ll11n llO junior c:dlle~ In
lhe state partlclpate.
Two winners are aelecttd
from each 1cbool by a f1culty
commlUee on the bub al
scholarshlp. PC!l'10nallty aad
lchool ICliYllles.
-
-
•
• !
' ;
•
!f) OAIL ~ PILOT s
Your lflone y 's l l'o1•t J1
lly SYLVIA PORTER
One utterly unantu:1pated
but tG me. delightfully ironic
-&Ide l"f'sult of the r1d1colous·
ly overblown pubhclly 11bo11l
tax refonn \ai;l ytar waii: 1h.1t
1t dramaUiod to l'OU, lhe
f1nanclally Innocent muldlr·in·
come t.ax})8ycr thc-many
wa}'5 through wtlich ~OU too
can legally avoid income t JtX·
es.
. .\ND ONE tnnrmnu~
loophole left aMolulely un-
tnuched by the tax reform law
which you i;ourely found (lU\
about durlni;: thf debate.-; 1s thl'
las-exempt status of state and
Joe-al b o nd 11. \\'hat lhn:
loophole mean~ I" !hat 1f vnu
lnVHt In tax -cxtn1pt
munlc1pal 11ecurlt1r5, lht 1n·
t.erest you receive will he ex·
emexpt from fl"Clcral income
taxes -and mi:lybr e:11emrl
from state and loral mcomc
laxes too If you are a res1den!
of the issuing locality.
This loophole Is exccecl1ngly
attractive today as i;l ~ns
mount t h;it Int erest rates havr.:
passed lhe1r historic peaks for
thi s era and evidence emerges
that a Jot o( i;mart n1oncy 1x
rlo"•lng Into tax-exempts In
' freeze'' the ~tet.p rates now
available.
This IS oot JUSt for the
wealth ' 7 a).-exempllon can
benefit you to a les.~flr e:irtent
1n the lo"•er lax brackets as
well
INT EREST RA TES <m lax.
AttlNTION TO LITILI
COURTISllS , . , SUCH AS
AN ANSWl•fD ,HOHi
IU ILOS IUSINISS.
835. 7777
Wershow
REAL ESTATE
AUCTION
PRIME
lAND1BLDGS
22,000 sq. ft LAND
20,000 sq. fl BLDGS.
,,.. .. ,,i 2.$tlrlt
INCL 6375sq. ft. LOT
ZONED IOR UGH! MIG.
lll"4tr Ywdt-1
llnlinlllln Bm.
C.thf.
Pl£ ON Tl![ Sl'Tt:
201 FRANKFORT ST.
" L tff. fr.tlort 6 &llllt"'I ,,._,
HUNTINGTON BEAClf, u uro1011a
WED, MARCH 25
.tllJOA•.
1 Ct'ttrolly l ocuci 111 tleWflf'l"'ll
"""""'-S-~ lkal-Dtll'IU °"'" 61ow.k ff'llfl Cli, ltoll
I l.luJl-IVillt'*' .. !Id( -l tmt' ............. o,v,_u D-lo ~lat"·
1pAn1
• l ite. U•llf ll<d ,,.. l •1ht ~IS , t-I R1t11n .... Whol1:..oi.
I 2 U••t I•-rrt11111t 3 Bl''""
ltD<M '""' 1 ·-.lo! •llM.""4 J ~ lufopt""' kti<N fin.t ~NI
b!JlltYIOJllS TO AtlC'TtOM !In : r ......
S.. D;tao '"' u 9acl> !llod trnal
Soul)i "" beoc!o Ill"', ~~ • .,,1 .. ""
ll'lluiiq!ll>k1 ll1rtrt <"ISO •~ '""''" •Poln. I l>lh IA ,ll1i..1"t ~... lrft
fs.o.rth) oa Altb ... • .1.. S 111i.., 19
H l -el rrmfiut ~1 1~4 .. -..... no«a r.1-TICIPAnOM UICOURAtlO
Mmon 1 Wershow eo. I
.AUCTIONURS • RE'.AlTORS.
ttU lUlJOSt ll'C., lOl lHUU:S 'XI04 IZl319)l.ISO
,.~empt obhsalions have.
declmtd s.httrpty in thf pa5t
ft1v "etks, and 1[ yo1.1 buy new
1sgues t1I t:ix exem pl $ no""
'ou mt.i;ht ha~c to sit w1U1 a
Joss for a while But voo are
nol bt1~ tni; for a quick specula
lion you arc bu)'lng to get
1ax-c~en1pl 1n~o1ne for a
<o:fM'r1r1crl period wh1cb n1eets
\flllr nl>Cds. and thus day to-
cta1 ll lJS and down5 ghould rnrt
ho1hrr yoo,
Thr 1nte1est rates you tan
J:t l 1oday on exenipt bonrls
1ang1ng from the h1ghesl·
_crade to medium offer v.hlill
\Vall Street call.;; a "living
11a;e • -deluxe.
The returns zre far mortal·
tractJ\•e lhan you probably
th• Boo r d
}lenry L. Roth, rne1n·
her of Balboa Bay
Club's hoard of d1re c·
tors. has been elected
to the Boa1d of D1rec·
tors of Benefictal
:-itandard Co1 p of Los
Angeles Roth resides
Jn Toluca Lake.
WE HAYE
NO FAVORITES
by TERRY CiR ANT, R Ph
Ahho119li +h••• ••t "'"'•
•"•" ., ... "'e"v'•'*v••• ol .. hit
m 9h l b• th• '""'' b••' •hu<J,
'"• tiv 10 le•p ,,. .toe~ " ""~"
I Iv l•o"' ••ch af lhe"' E~e11
theu19~ !~11 11 11ri•n1,.1 la !ht
ph'"'"'"CY VOil• phyl•C•t'I fn l V
l>1ve "'0'• can!+!lt nt• '" en1
1p•c f c preducl hy 1 cetl••"
"'"~"" 'w, ..,..,,; h1~• whtt ht
Wftllh 'fOll ill ftttlWll
QI r1111P<• w1 w.11 onlv 1!er.~
,..nd•t ne1 m,.d, bv !ht ,.,.,,, ••·
h,o hle '""" ,,.a .... e1ir phvutot n
will ""'"'"lly onlv pr11crtbt
i11clo Anv+•m t ont el th111 '"'"'
,,le1u11 " """" tl•ug thtl h11 br •n p1awr~ 11h f11• p ubl.c UI•
l~ey w otl t ulom•l•C•llv •tnd 11
la u1 w. ~•ap 111formtd 1baul
"''"' p•otl11c•1
VOlJ OR. YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US whtn vo11 ~t•d
, ..i,.1, .. ,,.,. W1 ,.. II d,i, ... ,
p•o'!'ptlv ,.,,,),.,111 ••'•• ch.uq•
~ g•••I rn•~v p1apl• •1lw o" 111
fa• 1h.:r l>•1l•h "''"" w, ..... 1 ~orn~ r11q1111•h ior dtl """f '''"
!ti tnd ~hlt<Jt I CCllU""
PARK LIDO PHAJIMA(.Y
351 Hotpitat Jt o•d
Nt wport taac:tii 642·1580
'r•• o.n •• ,,.
OPEN TONIGHT
DON'T
CLOWN
AROUND
w it h your
INCOME TAX
Apt1! 1 ~ is ,lo~•"'J lr1t
\Vhy .,..011)' n M,oJ tttw
... ~t" 6l0CI( ... 111 di!
your toll: Cl UI("' «
l"'nl/ coo.ti Cit1 .,,.,or
to• 111 NOWJ :(•••
your f'l!Qresr BL OC~
off1c• lOOAYI
BOTH
f lOllAl
ANO
STATI m
$
UP
o u•••Ntfl .i5!;!55EE! w. qua1011te. OttU•OI• Dt•IW)tol111 .. e l f Y"-'Y let• '''"''" Ir ""• 1m1\,e "'"Y • .,.,... 1ho1 co$1 -ycv a ny peftOhY •r
ifll"''"''· wf '"'" DOY !h~ penoft,. or 1nt .. •1u1
C.t1 M•
1111 H•tltw
,, ... 1 ,,, ~ ... ,,, ftl!ll
Cost .. Met•
1150 H.1rMt
11¥d.
~ ,.,,. " c • (!'Jiff;•\
Co,..n• ;._1 M•r
244t E. Cea•f
Hwy.
nit tri1 ... a.th11• &tvt 1
WllKD,AYI f ·t SAT. I $U'' •·J. Ph. 641·•940
HO A,,OINfMfNf HlC.lll All Y
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Put t/i c 'A .\'' Ill TAXES
with Sy lvia Porl.er's New Bool.·
MAIL THIS HANDY ORDER FORM TODAY
Only $1.25 p/u1 25< lor
h1ndtin111nd pos/1g1
••••••••••• . . . . . . . . . ..
Srht• hrttt't 1 .... T•r &Iii••
Fm:1tl PaMlc:.IU.., h •l Nit
fwcttt ""' """"''c .... 111•
NO C A ... ~'-lie•
MIU <tMU ef MoMy Ord«
'9 "$rfvit l"Wtw Tn r..t1t•
lntlDHd Is 11.50 ISl.2$ Dh1s 25t for put111 md htndlillll fat tnc
'09Y 1r S)l•I• Porttt'1 1970 l11COm.1 Tax '-ridt. '1u.M N II ti 1111
'' tollowsi
""'"--------------
M<rtu ----------------
C•~ ---------------
So~---------21,lfo. __ _
DAI LY PILOT
I
I
•••••••••••••••••••••
Completr-Nelv York Stock List
111-1 "" 111 ... I Hl1ll Ln C. ... Cllf ,
!Jlnrli et
Syttabols
! • i • • • • • • •
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' l
' ' ' ! ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '
' • ' ' ' i • • ' ' ' ' .,,
' ' ,
' ,
' \ ' ' ' • ' • ,
! t
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • .. • • • • • • • • • ~ • • ' • ' • • • ' ' • • ~ ' ' ~ ' ' ' : • ' ' • • • • ' • ' f • ' ~ ~ ' ' '
• • " i
l
I ·I
1111111 ............. '!'~ .. .,, ...... ,.. .... ..,. .......... ~~ .. ..,, .. ..,,.. .. ., .. .,. .. ~..,~ ... ,., .. ,..,.,...,.,..,,.. .. ..,..,.,,,,.,,.,, •• ,.,~~,.,...,,, • .,,.....,, •• ,., •• ~,•••••••"'~'"'''""''""''r''''-.,..,.,.'''""~~~~~,...,..~~~ ....... , ........ ~,.~, .. ~ .. ~'"~ .. ~r•.-........... ~, .... ,,.~ ... ,,,, .. ~ ....... ,~ ........ , .. , .. , .......... ,~ .. ~";!"' .... ,.
-
j
I March
Wednesday's Oosing Prices-Complete Nelf York Stoel\. Exchange List
..... . ..... ~~~~~~~~~~-.
lW.I ..... t..w CleM Cllf,
ij , l + ' Stoek Leaders ! ~j~~U " ~!; ~flU jf.:l~ '.': ~ MOST SHARES ~'"" ' " ;;~ "" '"' + " y oil l \l I I +1;i,;, IJffLe•O t lit''"' t11 21Vlt" • ~' I !Jo.LP 04 • 1'\\ "" ,,.. .. < -· ~I f ~ 'h
00
\ NeW VOltlC (AP)-Sf K. t!Otlng rice ll$1n1' 1 Cl I Ullo '' u \ <~ o I l o!S'o ~ )1 IM,._, ch1nge Cit ltw II-""1f K-Tll"JtP 161 1111 J:l&I n~ D \o -l A. do 11 M:-> I -~ llwe llotb I toOH on '"" N'I' $k0. E• nOGaa I Oii JI 2Uo l ~
n IN 15 n lll• -\OC"'-llOI nAn .ll ,, It\ II~ ,•1•-M ~ I > "'l ~ AnKalclf 111 * 11'lt -,, s."'-.. • n1. t3 ICQl'PUt U U 1 l lilt-I~ Sl(I OI NJ lU,100 W \ +I S.Ftlncl 1 to 101 U 1 1J 2S -\.o ICotlt;«P Ind SI t I t i-II. TRW Inc IUJ 000 $<1 -~t SF1 hW lff~ 10 l\t ~ ti,\ ... "'
ICrttlCO I l'O 91 llh l1.. .. .. f " ICttlO'a '' 1n too 46111 ~ S.nFe Ill )0 .. 1J TJA'i 7 u -~· K '"''$$ 'ii IOJf •11l " 46\ \lo Gui 01 91000 15 -'-' S.rWtSd 5C1 1~ ll l:Jllo 1•
I( oel'lltr IO ' 70~ ?Olli .201; I,\ Int Tel Tel 15 toO ~ l -·~ StVto'lhE 112 IT "'l ,,, .. 11\, IC Qftr l :IO tt lll'I ll\\ n..., "' T111co tS 100 26 Scl'IHltr Co .I!) 1'" JS\1 "~ -l -L-CBS It 100 44"' + \ii Scttt111t1 I olO 1<0 ~ 11 , j• • It• Corp 1' SOCI U -1\<t !ci\tl'll "11 00 .,. ?O , w LIC G•• 1.. ' 21'11 ''" ,,. -"' Icon Ptp .. 11» JJli ci'ltl'!l'f pf.JG 1 ,.,., 1\o\ 1V. L~mt.11$.U l l 1'\oo ?!" u1o11 8 lat M~.,. "* ,, -tli~lftl .IO ,,, JI. Y"li $1~-. NEii' YORK (UPI) -Stocks pulled back late Lt~IH~ 1.21'.1 It ll ... ... Tr111t.am 4l 1CIO loo Sdildc l llh ~ l -~
L111v 11:1n .., ' f,m JT\lo n11o -u, 01 w ,...... 11 "° '°" _ ~ kh in.er 1 o 111 """ 11111 11 -1 lod I k I d catol s m the m• L11ro1tts1 ~ 1s ,, ... ,,._ _ , 1°'11 6111, 61 ,.. •i. ScMn111r 1.., u 7H.,, 74 ''" + 1 ay eavtng major mar e 10 t
L11r sJn !O 2s 11 ., 11to 1~ + ~ Am t11 t11 11..00 U\\ + 1 Sc1tt11 lltorc 20 tto • • -10 nus column in light turnov(!r Lii SI Ff:.1S t11 -~ ... ... -\.I Js11lff l)f 41-~ ;t li~ ~Vt -ft L::;si r:r:'l1 41) ~11 n:; ,~ +" AtOST DOLLARS ~Z',.~~ "°: " u,t: ll" ,, .... +" The UPI market rnd1cator measunng all stocks L••~twY SOb t 2ru ,,\.'t '' \ -1 S<oiLaciF )t s I ·~ " traded show ed a Joss of o 14 percent on 1 SGl issues Lttt:ltNor 50 2j ill 23\l 'J' -\• N.I!;{' VORI( (A.P/-Tht lo 10wln11 • ~ ~;n~:t~ : 1• 11~; U"" li?t = ~ t:~:,.. .o'° 1 ?r,t it 7111 , + 11 o• 1oc11v s mos 1c11ve s ot1<1 ~'"" ou Piper 1 6-17 331111 ~~ '211\ on the tape Of the se 627 dechned and 624 advanced
L.tl .... 1 .. ,, ~ 1'\4 '"' 11 ~ °" '111
dol •• voiume 11 M 1 "° 1d """ ~· u i. + •• 111 o J d t 1 f 30 1 1 LV nc1 pt .so , st st )• _1 ,,,. "''• 1, tie•• on ,.,. .....a tn oric• fl'/ u Pn..so I"' I to """ -'~ e ow ones 1n us r1a average o se ec
L"'m"' i '~ 1, ,1, 1M1i '"' o1 ,,,. • ot:l tr-.:itd mu111o 1ec1 ov tn. ~~'•' n. 2", •,~-. 11" -h ed blue chlps was off 1 58 al 778 12 near the bell Ltve Fd C•~ u O\o 'IO*o 101.\ 1-'' .,._,K ' ~ ~ueoru~~l! ~ ~ ''--'-
L..,.Flnc is. 1 n • i • 1n . + "" N•"" To11s1mi ?,"',...'""'' ~·•t s1>eL11ol'1 ~ I Jl'J :.t ~ .. t ~ A turnover of around nine mtlhon shares com t~~ t!~Kl 2~ ,r...., ~ ~ = lt h~~~:'\ 1U~ ftt f~~ =~Ab' ~ ~YI }f~ ~ + 14 pared with 9 450 000 shares Tuesday
L llOFrlf 2.-0 51 4'1\io ~ " ... Nf ... U.& 2 19: I ... ru I GO 1 lO I"° .1..1 'I <Ufo ... -~ c I b B d s d s s K L1ooic Pl4 's ~ 11 • 1t·~ r.r~ -v. int l 11 u:m ~ 11"" ••rill 11il• lf .n. ,0 ., u , _ , o um ta roa casting ystem an res
',L ~..! M[{: 1'2_ ~ :,: ,:~ 1:n -,,. ~~~s"s l!;1J 10Jt :t" s '&8611 kil,... 1 M 11~! ~~ ! = ~ ge were among the day s most heavily traded 1s L/i~"MY 250 ,,
3l6~~3'111 ·~'1 -~fat' v•' il'~\~ 19~ ~" Es~.~lt1"<so~ 1; ,~ ~ ri~ ,j1: = U sues CBS moved narrowly whil e Kresge tended t :t~vpl1'1~ 1'~ ~ :i ;} ~2~ L~~~ ~r. ll 1 ~ ~ :::l~~G 2: 1?~ •:tt~" ~ ;1l\ + u higher The latter had dropped sharply last week
I. 11< nNr IO 13 ~ 1111 l!OI.\ 80 Je •oclf 91 U ~tllG "'Ill 1' 1'1• lfi: '-l rled II lh led I LncN111>11 4110~110,.ll')l,+i~x.,0.c0 »n• tj\.\~MlG•P3\ 111 nv.m1 wuen 1 repo a smaer ancxpec nse n
lln<J TV 113 ~' 2' • 74'/I s 3h M--.. U-'11 II Sh-l'IWm 2 " ..aw "3*i ~ -I\ f 1969 L"" M ;u 1 ,,.... n 13 \ _,,,., si.e w Plt «1 110 n 16 16 _, earnings or
l ~v TV Pf > lt JJl'J Jt nv. -l ~~""" llOll • """ ,,.., "°' -ft Olh ctl t k I ded TRIV I ti~ f~r 11 • t ' -• 5,... .,,1 ~~~,.'::, 72 : 1;"" ,:~ ,;i. + r.; er a ve s oc s inc u nc
L1tor1 ""pt "5: i:l.'t ~ i:~=~ tM•1Httr11L•w c1tM ai1 [unaico 1 20 .. n :1 nu. t!'llo+ ,, Oil Jersey Standard Scott Paper Great \Vestern
Ltton c:vl>IJ I 6?~ 6~ 611{. !•ntl pf! 1 11~ lf\li 11~ +•, F a] Lb I C dC t t IM I L 1to!t pf 1!1? 12 '9 ?1\1 '9 + If> ~WSI A r1 '/o 11• 2ll4 It r\ii-'9 511rioc1; 1 l~O I le'• JI 31 -'• ln8flCI U rl ZO Orp an On lnen a Or gage
Lockheed A r 434 +11.i 1• 14t~+11o~:a~1 ~01t"(,.33 F 14.,,,-:.. s~:::n~.-i .. 70 4,, J~: ,J""+ •1 Investors t::l!: J 1~ if<\!, ~~ :U~ + ~-Nw!lnlf PIA] I ii !ll.'t ~~ -~ srn:cPtt lflb M rl 'I 71 1 V. -
Lon•S c•m 1 ,',' ,"," ,''.:' ,'"'•~ + , ~:'!'~ ip1~c10 ,: ,::; .~~~ ,;~\ ~ 1s ~:: c~,ltto •i ,:• 1~ ,~I~ +1•: One analyst said he believed the market sttll
LO!'tSGi I l? " .. s•m•St W l 16 n ~ II 111411 kellv 0 1 t U•• 33 ll'-' -•I had 8 Jittle ]OWer tO go befort'.' mak ing 3 SUSta1ned L~ •LI l JD ,, 'UU ni. 71 + .. or 50 • l'I~ lt'lo l111 .. Sil Corp ,., 1 3111• 31'"' lilt \\
t. L pl' 1515 1 ,, " " +1 Drl ,.. 1 n1 106 ''"" ., • tl. \; S1cv1" 1, J1 ,4, 1• .. ''"' move on lhe upside J-Ie noted that \V all Street s tort Corf 71 N 7'1 1 ~ No$ m oll ti! lt Q ~1."-~, l"' IM.O 1 tO t ll/o lJl.~ 35\'o + ~'o
L• L•~o to •1 n i1 "''> n"" NVF co 11 11 1M1' 1 .. ~. m 1~ 1n • "' n » j' , \(,, -l. n1a1n interest centered around the prime rate iss ue ~::1~;"' 1.C: ,d0 n" .. n""'" ~,,,,""+,~: -0-P-~:;_,i.;."' .R, 36~ \1 ~ ,v. \\~:: i, Recent strength had been attributed to a reduc lowe1111n tO 1 21'\o 211\ fi14i _ 1 •8•slc ,, U J , JU 3~
luO 110 ~ 511 M > 64la 6tlt -21\ m EIKt 6' S 11 l 1\ ~ ~M l• 4 >0 30 JCI... tiOll !fl the prime Interest rate -~hat Charged big l1Kk¥ $tr to UI )2l 31~'o 311'> _ ~, kl!~ Po Ml 1 U~ 2• 'o S 0111 U l 1,1.lo UU U1' -\'-
Lud ow 10I 7 14 1 1t"' 241'J+'fl cf,~lrtl I .Ut 2lV. n"' t .~ 1 16 U8 lt"' 7t 11 1,41" C01'p0r8tlODS-bySOffieOflhenBIJOnSSffial)bankS Luke~I SI 1 I,, .... 1• ... 24<r ! ~·pf~1J 2; u~ ?~~ ;00G1 ~ 1 1 ~·~ lt"" i~n+'" d I d ed b f I t~'&'c:r~ ,~ ;~ m f~-~~r:~,Jr:l~ ~1 ·~:~ M'. OU ;rlj'Oi 'u~ iii~ ~"+,~ an ra ers appear {Q e \\18Jlifl~ OT arge JIJS!J
LYktY1111 1Se 31 lJ~ 13 11 _, k, ee , 16 N 72,,. v, e E , "' u 1 j"' ii~ 1 "_ tut1ons to make a s1m1Jar mo\ e !I OI.\ ever spokes
Ll'kV1r pn50 ~ 31u 12~ -" k1,i'f.l'0fr2 1 507 \1 • U'>.! \1).t t ;.i, 1...fl \lS 't: ~; B~i.: Jt"' =;,.: men for the large banks recently 1nd1cated that anv
n Con:i u 56 ,, .. lt\• if! \ Mc::.. "' 11 511" 50 -~ ....I I b th t II I th rr M..:•nF 201> • ?tu 74, 24u .;. .... 1nc 1nc1 11 1 11~ '"1• 1 \l \ ou Pie 1111 :io 1sv. " 1" 1 _ ,, prime rtsie cu y em s 1 was Se\ era mon s o
Mtc01111 d 60 35 1 '1 I II!.-\• 11tl"6LI 70 ~ JO.,.. ~ -\o u~ "•¥ j lf 'f\/ tt\.'o ff\ -' SI k I ed I lh • ""'"dtCo » 10 16 l&l 1'1a -\ofilitl~a 1 1 l#t 'lfh 161'o Rv Pl •, il!l n'" l:M1 -t, 0C S 850 ffiO\ narrO\\ V On e ~1ner1can Mtc,RH 1 12 3'>'J Joli l.t\1 -•0 tnPtR 120 ,, 22 ?t.i n -1,Sw ... 1 A~ 10 St k E h I ht I
,,,d Fd • 5<e n n. 21,, ''" _ 111 Eley 2 ,, sa '11• ,,, +1 'IWM' PS .10 "' 12 1 u -" oc xc ange 1n 1g urno\ er
M•d $<1 ~r 67 1\o S 'I y.0 D<llbd M• 6 U... 1•'111 2'\l. -., IM'11M. 'IS. J6 ••i U'.t UV, • .•••• , ,~ ... ..., ....... .,.'.""',..."''""'•'":"-""""'"''""""""'-,"""'"' M011cCM ~ 1• 1tJ i1~. 1 1 +\1 our~• co "'' 1 1'"' 'Id~• 111" OArttnA~~ ,• Ir,' I '•i'~'. '•m"! Mt11"YOll 110 :100 lt\o lJ , 34 • +I.\ 0 Yt T Anl I l 21~ ?tl'!a 1 %, +I partbl! •
Millar,180 l'l~t40 o ~-~1 0Wfn!Ctlt0 '"\It" ff~+,,o.,irul l~h •~l1U f 1:-•:.i~i"'i ltlt):lil1t +v.\l"u tb S1f\ M•nh !lld i6 11 2J lJ"4 n~ -"'Owtn!UI 1" 95 }& • 51. \S"li -~R ~J 1'2 Jt l ~ Ji~+ h, Dlllrt'M I ' 11t1 ,rri \~ uv..-,'. j,',,'M'• •'• Ml~llOW 7! 'II "'~· 4). 4Jh + \.> Owen! p" u & I'll. 90 1 ti). +... 0 tlM 20t.. M&"H.,, flO 10 61~t 61\/o 6111 t i PKGEI 1 JO 7t .JJlro JI> l1\ -11 MAPCO 70 '' 11:\i O:i;. l~+-.P•cnEJ;p to I U1 11~ l'o ->
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Stocks Pull Bacl\:
Gulf
1970 DAIL'/ PJLOT
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MAPC ~1 !2 l D~ 21\i 1)t.1 t"' Pkll';I 60 21 2•!'1 UY, 2'•t -1 M• tlhll I 60 t.t ?!.~ 21\'I 211' -I PK Pel .251 6l ,, t 26\IJ 26\l. t • M• cw Inc 1 ., ~.. 51 so~ PKPWL 1 J• 72 ,.,.., '°lo l'O'i /It cor /' A1 !I JSV. Sl'lio 15 + V, Pac: SW! Ar 3• 2~\lo 21~ U ... t ~ M• 'm" lit S \DI.\ 10\.11 llM + l\ P•cTI. T 11?0 25 Jt 1 .. \ 'It 't -1\ M• Mid I 6D II )t\.\o :it 3t -1 Pac: Tl"' -VI IJft S\I) ISUJ t ,_' lont.O H l'I •l~ 4l • Cl~ t I P•lmScll l! 1•$ )1 1' ,U, -I V•Ar lfll!lln I 10] 1l+. S1''t $1'0 -J P1nAS11! ~ '17 •<. 1• 't , ....
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
MArQUll Cem 14 lli'I 11r;1 l ;1 -n PtnAm WA r 1JI '12<o 12 i nlo _ ~ Nl:W Y01'!1( <AP) Wtdnucter I comP1tlt s··~-Pl cl' 5 M~ rlen Uf 31' ll ~ 13 33 P•M l:P '° fl 35 , 5 , 31 ) _ \.4 Ame c•n l!ock E1cht11<1r otlt•' ~·~\"i:AM eo
M• lhFd 110 II 21\.:. 211 .. :It~ "' l'O P,•P c It 5()b l'I/ :lj•· nh -511 ' Not ~·~1,,~':{' c;4 A~'tnM '1 '10 '11 '11'h ll 'o 17{o •9~• ltl •1 '1111 0 61 1 -, 0"' o"°'"' C• C "< M•YCllp .iOb 20 311\ 17. 37 ~ -IP• 9•• """' J •7 " f7 ti h•h " •w " rw 8 A~ II" lll>ee CD U U 42.. • .._ t?I• .+ ~ P1r~e01~ i I 1 • >Oti ~' ll 'o + 0 ~ C ~~ 50
MIWI Ill JI '7 :M .. 33 \ 33y, -'1\of P1rk P•n to 5 11 4 , l'I~ -~ -A-8--lr11P&l11 Pl I MllJeY F' 1 " Ul.lo l'"' llV,, P1111n Ct11I 121 1~ 1$ '~. + l• AM lfnP .IJ~ a 111 n . H. +Yo .... soc: 2 'ISP M•IMYF "'I ,. ,.~ 14\ ". Penn0 1• .HI I 11 '17 . 'II Acme H•mll 1 S:-1 !"' 5\1 + l "" 1te1 u M.n_. 20 ll I to 1'I + • p..,,. Fru I :ill lit• 'IO'h I ->1 Ac,.,. Prtc 1 " , ~· + ~' t nlf}"t Nib
M•vOSI I lO ns ,~. ,. • '"" + \ p..,"'1 JC I ,, so "~ 50 + I Adll!I\ lh•JI t.I ' ••• " -fl1Hr.d (p M,'", ,,'", • ""•• ??~ ,n,i,., 13'11 + \1 P1Pw 1 lAO 11 16-. n 21 -~ .. Adml•tl '"' ,l 1~1 no:o 1 +v. llNMr 1 a~ "" vi ...,.. 2$ -lo P1PL " ( M llK'I 62\< •l~ 12'4 -Aereoou; lllf l l 1 10\lo l o -\Ii lltm•IW 14 MC ll In< Ml jl :n 1 ll ' 221\ t >o PtPl pf 4 IO l 50 5t\4 S'I St -A.,oFlow .IO 1' 'I l 10\'o ! 1 -' hirln lt>d 1~cc orv I ~ 6 2s 0 lJ•• 15~ 1% •n11W1 I 1'1 n ?Pio 1m 2n• + • "''o e1 50l\! n • lt l• , t i haft G1s -"' McOt mo! I st 3'l. ""' Joi + V, Penw I pf1 $Ct 1 45 45 4S"4 -o.;. iltrOllCll 3 11 • 1' li' t'l\lo h• ttt 14 McDCHl•ld (p 10! ''"° .O•o •l1-P1nw PllU 7• 111 1tl ]tV. + .... AerllloOT (.Sl J li' ·~ '• C~RVI l ~O. Mt~nD •O t n 2l 'h 11v. -Pennzun to 8Q 291'> 211>) 2!Y. _ 1; ~fc0vp~. P ~ t' '• , f h JT •n o "'&Ed I tO !1 l~Vt 31 j \\ P""1U I'll 3J J •114 t'I 41 -1 ~ '"' o ~ ~ lne •m•
Mc Ml I IOI 163 ,, J'll J\11 -!to P~D'9 10 1 91/j l l'V• 1t ~ + \(, !1~'.".. 11fdnc 5 ti 1!'1. '111 ·~1 -• 1•cW K '°
Mc"'"" t 1 l2llO lSI 1 'ISi t J PePllCo , ' ""' u .. St .. _, ... , "' /"I l J 11' .. .. lb:fll, F l1 M<Ktt 1 ~ 5 1:1'41 2l ~ 2µjo -.l', Ptrlttt F Im t Jtt !l\lo '1>14 .t. ,,,_. t 20 4 10'; 'IO, 'I ~ \la lhGoF • 50
Mc P110on 5 S\'o S PeoPG1t1ff •f73,\IJS •s;+/AIMCo• «r p,•1, ~i !rculF'l}tf
Mel.en ~ • ~; 40•1 ~. + :r.., Pmn Elm ;rt J7 l6 .. !7 tu.• wnt lM .,, no ~ '\i.on 1nc1
MC/'ft 10 u U lb U +'Pf! hw; Pi t 1 ll ?J n .,.t.inwo 1.0 1 /1' :!2• ?t' _, l1rr CP"' Mcloulh I 60 1• 21 11to1 1~ -• f'fl Inc 110 J .is1 1 \It , U. I .t. Ill Mii 10. J 1~0 ,~ 1 _... \! !lltOllU
~·." .. ',r,•, .!. •1 ~. ~ :r, -'' Pe1 •nc Df 1111 5 11, ,.,,,. n·~ + ~A ••k• Alr1 JI ~. 101; 1~ _ i :r,,_.,, -M-.. ··c '-. 1 .Q ::;:..,_ _..._ Pe111P .... 1 I lO J 2J>.4 lR> 17'\o -\o A1•·-" ... • .. l' 1fl'. 11'-+ l'o .... -· ""~-' XI" ........ ,...... Pt ro 111• oa " u ,, "o.wa d -'' 1 10,. TOi: _ 1~ n JO MEI CorD 10 U Ill 1lh -•t Pflrlm I,,,_ 1 '11\o 11"1 11\11 _ 'o Aldon Ind 21 1 6 1 I > -I l':C>tl E« " Me vSl'lo 1 50 7t 14t. l•l'I 14\.1 -" Pl I<:'( I 61lt 11(1 llP Oii'! lot.. l\/o Alf Am Eno • '"' 4 l ~ -\o ol'KJ t c 'IJ Mtmor•l CP 21j U?lt 111 "! -21;1; Phtll'S O 1 o 170 .M 0 SJU !.I\+ 1~ A if.llh Air! U O, 0\1 O 1 -"I' rue ,S
MM•"''ns,,''° l>l 6 \~ 61'>-•Ph•EI M 11 '"o" 24 4 ~ "llt<o"•lw ! 6•' ··-' oeN•" ck 1)6 16' • '103 1D4 -... Ph 8EI DI 1 ZIOCI f7 fl 91 -~A tQ(orp w I t. 9J t. + ' 01Kelnd °'
Mt 1!111111 l lll 11 31 JO.., Xl'lo -1 .. Ph El "" 61 J160 '5 A4 65 -! '•11<1n Et 7tl 2J 'l' 'l ,3 , -\ 0 •mi· ~ Me•• Pet 0 15J 50. ,,~. 4t•'i + \~ Ph E Dl4 )a 1l0 59 ~· !t ~ A u.n "T ,.. I I 0 I {' 'i. -"" Olon !!WI .)0 Mn II" Dll 20 1 9l '2\~ '2\IJ + I P~ El p!J ID %110 5J Jj\.4 !J ,,: Alli.of Art 10 1.:, I ' ~ ll ombulln Ea
M•ltP pl2 :10 11 '21'• '21/o n ,., + "" Phil 0 Mar 1 '124 33'h J ~ 31 I ... ..,. (Cini 1 ir~ u • u ... -11 on111M;o I "' Mt1alllT J1e' SO ti., t•o tft + \ PhllM Pll fO lO » 5' 55 + A lovUnf 10t #t • 2f<• ll 1 -1, oml " ll•nc ~pMt Md! 2 ] ?l • 21 1 2•l• +\Iii Ph p rid 16 177 1' 1)" lJ +·~ Al·lohl ... 11 !.I 1 II t 'IS o om~" ... •• "' lo 14-!• ,,, ll\:o-\\Ptlll Ind pf ''°""Ml :10' AloN lndu•I , ,,, ,,., •• OI" O?e '""r<;d .JO 122 lift l!~"o ll'Mo-~PhlflPel IJO 215 :13'4 13'11 ,Jloi-1•Attm1Co 10 '1 't T ... JV,-(om 5w 150 MPI d cfl 90 J60 SJ .5 !J 1. Ph YH 1 tof I ll' ~ ll"o \Alter Fdl ..511 I 'I'' 1'1• llllo -\\ llmllClnd l2
M(c~G,•VI I 1 • • 1, p llsbliry I l6 1 J 51 " Jn mco us ' I t • -' omPUOvn~ MC h.., 20 l'I 52 511'1 !'ll'o + IO P 1<1MG1 'I o J 1t1: it•t ltU tZ: litftSP«0~ H l > •. t ..+. \ !""'"°" 70
Mch ubc l 211&1 •·~··+~-PMNGoillCI l81~:u1out 3,.~~PC~nc:ic 9'10 9to to-~omPUIAPP ~ ~c~:. 1:: ~ H • 1nt ,}:: -• ~ ,"",r:; t: i ~ ~j • ~!~ t t· :1rir~ lloo ~! '! .. ,1, 1f I = .t !::::::.':, En~ Mjd~eUfJ ., Uf 11\IJ l l I"'-. p tF ·W r• 1 f!fl M H .. -1 "(entM • It 70 ,~: 20~ ..+.\lo g::::w1 nv
/:1110 Rt"~ ~ li~ 'nl\lt H -tl~~l!ls o, .. 50 ]99 tsl< lJ &4 -.1,,AmF".t. IQ I 1• 4~ Ho-\~ omguC.\rw "1''*5r~ 00 JI ?j ~ p!.~ ,.,Ch 27 .Ill ~ "" lt>:. _, A •• ~! I 'll• 6 4 . I . ••• Onl;h1mco M n 1 1S I~ 10 1 i'A 1 ~ ..... t11t11C H JO "'~ 11 n 11+ .... Ml IA ~ • I .... ,.,. -\ oncrctF Oe
M "" LI I XI •2 tt:: ~ t I + ... ~~~J'1d, .n ~', '~, •. _ '•'•·~ ''"-'I~ A Ml lS C)e I I Ill. ltO l ~ OllO•c Corp "ln nco 2 lS JXIO !! ll -'4 v, .. 11 ~ •m Mod 11 St )0 , 791, ,., , ~i vcl °"
$1 "!: •'. • !"" "' 11'' Par tr pU 50 I 0 ~ .... lf>i -Am Mor '""' .S6 72 '°"' 11 'i OllM ' Con P-5 2 • II ' 61 l +1 !:~IG E1 \..la 6 20'-• 10\;o 101; -........ Ptlr 159 '3 ~J lo :u. n~ -\' onn .... » '':'f 1 llO :i8 2t 1"' ;1~1 + ' ru llkl\F 7] U o ll • ].I~~ -'• Am p fC:I~" l S• 5 ~ Mroy 11C l,~P~O IOb S It Ill• 'lo -\lo ~elOmE El llO U !J • ,.. 17 1 -l AR IVTr J~ I tt, t1-9~, -~ Oii COii F~r Mebl 1111 m •1 1h 00'•' 'Plu 31~ ll'\t l1'>-\ .o.ms11 EQV 1• 1q 1 ,.~ +~• onN11S~ A Moh••<o I 10 I u.:r.., 1' '"I -~. PPG Ind "' 42 l»• n 3f.1 -~I •mTtn. Ck •1 11 ll l It on i I a •• AA~:+choal1/o 116 !tu~ ll11 ~j,,. _, ~ :ri:~~nd,., :8 11 7'~ 1, • ~J\t + v. AMo<. w1 11 ~o 1i,; 1 ,+-I\ =:.um:fts" "'1 /\I DftOll!"' rid It •o 14(1 + ~· Proc·Oa 1MI 'lli IO !OfO) lOt • ~":rep Cof •l 111\ 27 11 onr ttr
-MQn 11 .25Q 1 2 'Ii< 72\i 0Pr1111Jlsch 21 1' 16 , 14 1,,_-+ " /\~a'~'°••'• '> ',l, 11 • 11,'. , 1 "* •,•K • -MonroEq 60 4l " DSC• 116 3' 21 1 ,,. , ~I 6 • ... PPk nd Moruan '1.10 1' w; ~ 34111-I, PS~EG '" '120 26 . 15io '' -lt v .t.tttJy G•r 11 ., l ~ ,. t \Ii OOll;PIV ''° MM~I' •,'\',j j .1..11 u~ "•-oPSEC cflto zto .,,,.., u at _1 Ariorlc• f s H 1 '' 211 -~ J1r ~
M" OU JD~ i!, it'"-.. PSEG cfJ'11 a10 6&1~ 41 I 61 • Ant1lo L~ ' 2" ~~ 1'1• + h rrllck u lk>"Pw\" 'flO 1 ~P~EGPU18 1 ..05s>•n'l5!,-fl\•n•u1Co l'lt>'\111.411~1 + ""nca1"'' Moor Mc or 21 \so., P o • -'Ii PSEG. pt QI aoo 511 .S6 J6 Anlho11v 1111= 1 1 ~ 1.. 1 ~ + ._.. rt 'I /I"'" M"'otnJ«r 1tl65 ~6t1t -\PSEi!.p111f1 '1t1,1t ~t >-AOlnc1111r ~I• )jl\-eol• 1" Mo lf.5ho IO I ' n 2'1; jl) Pub5vln 1 QI l IQ :Miio :itl~ -l'ti API 1151 tl 11 t7 o 21 2 \lo -\9 :.:.~I 1 ~l~roN:"lao 16i1fJ1<11ffi•11J ... =~1:~:::!:/1~ :~;~,:~fl t~•-:,:~1'18~ :, '•i :!: ::'=1~ ~~'ftt017o n_tt~t~ \~ 1J" l f -Publl<nd 451 '6 I\ I I Al>Pfel! Dt I I 17 1 +"" ubf, Coo M5Llnd 4o ''lf:\O ;.,,,+1 Pvtb5uP11 i4 1l•o1'1 7'l•+ •Quant 520 lt o ••+'turtiM.i!h
Mu"J"'IW I 6 ~· !l' 11~'t PRCtm'I 0 'I 16~ 6 'l'\4 A9u1 nc •o I •.-.t>.i. ult A 4• lloup~y 11(1 l 1 ·~ t .. ,+ P,uQSPL " s ]1h Y' n A 1Co0Ld 1 lt ~ .,. 1•h+i, tleh ~ M~ Phy nd 4 fll ~ \ -II mtn 'IQ S l6 lj • .(.!\• -/\ ~lGts 1 IJ lO ,, .. 30 -'o '"'en Coo Mopt,OI &Q 1l 2'11~ ,,, 2 ·-Pu•~•(Q ~IJ Uli t5~ 1'1 I + A row Ett 0 1 I ll'o '1 h-14 nftl" , ...
1<11DO afs'lO •hr'> 69"• 70V.-1Puol1I 160 l 6'1'\.'J 6t\ 6t t A1tmtt O< 11 IS~ no I~~-·~ rwl ,.,,.,. Mu,.,O~ tCI i 11"' 14\lo l•\.o-1 -Q.R-ASP'IO 50 7 '11~ 12 1' -~ •• ~' N l)u~~O•" ..._1 AHd8•bY ~ 1''11"111•\l~+f,; o'P U"1 - -11 O•• 11 01..,, ~ .t.1S<tt'd5 .., 1 "• 41 0 ,~ + t C· • " ll i· -1 .g u.ics1011 to .G 1, 15•\ ,Slit -1.t.ndM9 t~ l " ,,c; ?I +It YMn 11";
1 3'1 l • ! ·-. R~i:i:p $116(! ! "~ 17 1 'l)'t -"••WP od I .. I "\ 44 ~-"'I" 11
I •1~ .0 ~ 40 -Ho 1111 p Pll 10 l 18"• : : • + 'Ill .t.Jlrt• n1; :!.f J 1 s.. 5 + .. ~rvJT"'ri~ A
'9 11;• ;f:! rn~ -' li'lam"'11 lt 40 i2 : 2,1•• l6 + ~ A5!rccla • S1J 01• 0 Ir " bo ~ ( 0~ 12'0 5 ,_. St + , llanco Inc tJ I, 11~ + Alce (he"' l '• 1 ' It •1 L.ibl r,j , 1 ,, 1j , + •• R~c .,,.,m 11 ~ 1'•to 11j 11"' ' A ~ ont llld 1J ,,.~ 22"i 'l t ~ 1011~ Cor~ •' !4"1 6 -)l;l~ymln en M ), ! 1 ft-, ACLCG 1'1' GJ 'I'll• 1?• :rl't-\\ IO*ft Fii>. ... 2 nll'I , 9 ~ 1n1. -:i 'I R~v k•on ~o 1• u , n 1 11 -' "' R c~1 ., ' 11 ~ 1 , ., + "" o•roR1ch °" 1 61 , ~1 -\ li'l1'¥1h Pll n I .,. 71 • ll, -I At •1 M ) 0} "D !5 fo 23\0 I 1 -lO 0.te et r~
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""
In All Home
Editions
•
j?2 DAILY PILOT .• Tllul1day. March 12, 1970 •
-: lUMILEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan
• • . , FIVE SKIN~?! ..-----SALLY BANANAS
0-1..,:tl...~;...~-··~···· HOW COME1HE'/'S
. SO Hl~H ?!'
:~
:~ . . .
PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz
Slll'illll:r~~-·
-I.yr•
L>I" -i. y~e
trr~ ,.,,
~.!·""--_,
µf f
"" ....
"" ""
1HA.T STtlf'ID 8!RD 15 WR!TIN6
A fl()Oj( TEU.IN6 ~ ld<AT
IT WAS LIKE WORKING FOR ME
(1)4EN I WAS n.tE ~EAO 5CA6:..E' ..
••
i'O :5\IE HIM , BUT ALL !'O PROM61..C( 6ET {.IJO'.W ec_ A BUN~ OF 6READ aUMSS!
TELEVISION VIE WS
Doctor Sho,vs
··· Dm·a blc
., By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NE\V YORK (.t\P) -Doctor series have. once
again. proven to be durable televis!on commodi-
Iies. 'rh ree ne'v one s \Vere launched in September,
and all of them \\'ill return for a second sea so~.
. .o\BC's "r..tlarcus \Vel by. M.D." did so well tha t it
,vas among the fir st series of the season to be re~
signed.
Among the three -actually it is 2-1/3 because
th.e medical segment or NBC 's "The Bold. Ones"
shares the screen \\·ith t\\'O other story hnes -
Robe rt Young's Dr. \Velby is Lhe only one that ca.11
be counted as a solid hit. Much of its success 1s
due to \'oung's sympathetic par.trait of a wise and
dedicated fan1ily doctor.
"MEDICAL CE NTER" on CBS follows the form
and. pretty much. the trad~tional su~stance o~ ~he
genre. There is some unwritten rule 1n TV \vr1t1ng
\·hat medical series must have an old doctor and a
young doc tor who are often in a conflict of idea~.
Dr. \Velby is unquestionably t~e h~ad n;ian. 111
hi s series. "'ilh Jan1es llrolin playing h1s S\Ymg1ng
Young assistant. E. G. ?t1arshall and David Flart·
"man o[ the "The Bold Ones" pl ay, respectively.
.-the mature and yo ung doctors, but both of them
usuall y are supporting pl ayers to the medical in-
.. yentions and developments around \vhich plots are
: liuilt.
, : .. "MEDICAL CENTER" plays it safe and do\vn
the n1iddle. 1'he star is the young doctor, played
in sober. dedicated style by Chad Everett. Its
: c1nphasis is on hu1nan drama related to illness.
' \Vednesday night's hour \Vas the story of an
. aging former football star facing surgery to correct
: a vasrular cond ition affecting his legs. The point : Of1.the story \\•as that it 'vas not so 1nuch his legs
: (fiat \verc bothering him as the fact that life \Vas
: empty \Yith the glory days behind him. ll ,,·as a
· (hildly interesting lrcat1nent in a series notable for
, its polished production and professional perfor1n-
, anccs.
NBC'S "!Tall of Fame" series '''ill present an
Easter dra ma Friday night , an originaJ play called
: '·Neither Arc \Ve Enen1ies." It is set in the time
of Christ.
• llenry Denker. the. pl ay,vright. is a specialist ! in the period. As n bo~' he studied to be a rabbi,
: a nd later had his initial success \Vriting radio's
: bibli cal series. "'rhe Greatest Story Ever Told."
: T~e play is based on t.\vo men's different inter-
: prcla tions of the \vords of .Jesus. Denker maintains
. that. because it deals frankly with animosity be-
• t\\'Cen Christians and J e\vs, the theme would not
have been acceptable for television a fe\v years ago.
''I COULD not have dra1natized this storv until
. the ec11n1cnical movemen t and spirit came aiong."
he said. "I've been thinking about the story for
. )'ears."
·-D e1111is t ire Jffe11ace
PERKINS
MOON MULLINS
'511E1S GOING TO
Bo f\Ai'D TO
P~E.AS!?' ... '3.A'/S
SHo1S BEEN
STANDING ON
HER Fcf'T
Al-I-PAY·
JUDGE PARKER
J CAN'T ST.A.WO TME
TI-IOUC1MT OF POOi:
CAll:L C101W5 TO THE
MOSPIT.AL, SAM '.
&CIT THE POCTOl1:
FEELS IT'S THE
&EST PLACE FOii:
MIM, C.u\ILLE ••
r K~W! IT'S JUST
THAT I ~0Ml5ED
I"P KEEP MIM.
AT MOlri\E !
MUTT AND JEFF
HERES 'l't>UR
GRUB!
GORDO
ANOTH ER.
PLATE? ARE.
'l't>U K>DOIN'?
HE'S NO
PRISONER'
l~ANKS
A MILLION
AND A ~ALF, r GORDO,.
1 SHOULD
SAY NOT.'
>!E'S MY
GUEST? we DON'T
SERVE
GUESTS!
, • lF ")t'.)U'RE GONG TO
GIVE ADVICE, A~"fl<IJ~.
By Frank Baginski
By John Miles
By Ferd Johnson ...... ....,._,,----,
By Harold Le Daux
T FEEL COMPlfTEL't' MELP·
LESS, SAM! Will YOU TA.UC
WITH ™E POCTOI: ANO TELL
Mt M I PO WAMT WL !W:K
HOM.E JOST AS 50011
AS POSSl&LE -!""_....1£.>QI:::
I 'LL TAL K WITH
~I I.\ C.t.M.ll tE! EX·
(USE M.E~ THEl1:E
SOl.\EOf.I E AT nlE
00011:!
By Al Smith
NEVER MIND! DON'T
l!O"IHER!
By Gus Arriola
M0\..0 IT ! M0\.0 IT!
IF 'YOU WANT M~ A R1\\UR. S°Tfa\MM '> I T_,INK YCU SHOUW> 10 TAKE 'l'OUR wva,
TJ.IERE"LL BE A SLIG~T APVl(E
SER.\/l <.£ ........--....-
L.-O W fl.ATE:f ~01<.
CHE A P AD VIC IO
• ..... ---
--------
T ~Y TO MAKE A
MOll:E RELIABLO.
APPi:Ar<:ANCE ..•
E~TFl!A C_,AR~O: .••
' \ I I c'.-·. ; .,_ .. -.. -
TV · DAllJ LOG
THURID~Y
• MARCH 12
1:00 0 111 News IC) (60) Jerry Dunphy.
D m ffu ntl.,.lrlnU•J (C) (JO)
Q can Yo• Top Th is? (CJ (30)
Wink M1rtlndalt hosts. P1nelists ire
Ernest Borrnlnr, Jwt White end
Morry Am1te1d1m.
0 "GENTLEMEN PREFER * BLONDE S"! MARILYN
MON ROE -COLOR! 0 Sli O'Cod: MMW: (t) ''111111•
111en '•tf•r l tonon" (m11sic.t1) '53
-lint lluuell, Marilyn Monroe,
Chults Ccibum, Elliot lleid, Tomm7
Noonan. TMI 1irl1 aeet •ealthy
11t1lt companions 1rnon1 the pas-
sen1efl on 1 P1ris-bovnd hnury linllf,
0 ~ V111 Dyle (30) m TN n intstoHs (C) (JO) m Star TrH (C) (60)
@mu c -cci <JOJ
fl) Rid: lil1Rtt S1111111try (R)
fii) Wlllf1 New! (30) "Amt1iun.1
II; S1ucus Iron Works."
Qj (I) CBS Nnn (C) (30) m Acwd• t30>
a'I Ntwt ill tflt ltiiand (C) (60)
1:15 fl) lnYntDIS Shawu11 (30) (R)
1:30 0 KHIC N1WW1Yiu CC) (60)
0 Stwt Allen Shllw (C) (90) David
Soul, Cart lleiner, tht tea m of Tom
P•tclless 1nd Jay T1rses. i nd Ken
8ar1er 1uest. '
0 Thi G1111t G111t1 (C) (JO) Jim
lll1tkr1ll hosts. A11n Sues, Kayt
Ste~ens •~d Georae Lindsey r:utsL m MJ FIYIM'ite Muti1a (t) (30)
(ft)(}) "1ry M11011 (60)
tl_J@ Hwf11117·Bril1klty (C) (JO)
fD I IJIC•!' I Male 11 ?Y (C) (30)
William Saroyan dis::uuts HITs
new opera b1S1d 1111 his play, "My
He1r1's in Ute H!ihl•ncb."
S (j) Tiit lilwnst1n (JO)
@I) Metldtrt 34 (C) (60)
@!'l lMIR Ntw1 (CJ (Jill
5:45 fE Thll Is l a.lwir1 (II)
7:00 I) CIS ffllin& Mews (C) (30) o Whir• MJ li11t? (tl (JOI m I lo¥1 LIH:J' (30)
(£) ltll tltt Clock (C) (JD)
fl) Ce1111110dllJ/Mlll111I fand (JD)
i2.)@ Titl Alnt1icln Wnt (C) (JI))
ED Altort! (30)
tD Wnlli1rto1 WtM Ill lttwilw (C)
(30) Dr. Mu kampell'nlnn. m P'rt11lt1t (C) (2 hr) "llififl •
el Convtnto,H
1:15 fl) Offict If U.t '1'tsidt91 (30) CRl
a;:so a in oo m 11111JWt 1t> 1601
"Little J11ry Jess~p." A con¥idM
burrla r's wift is k!lled, le1Vln1 hi1
motherless boy hi lhock. Wllli111
Sll1tne1 i nd Milch Yogd ruu.l
8 l ruiris P1 .. G11111 Show (C) (JO)
@ 00 m ltwltchtd (t} (XI)
"Ok11. Who's the Wise Witth?"'
Under 1 str1ng1 spell, S1m1nth1
ind Darrin discover they 111 pri~ ont11 In their own house. Aliet
Ghostley 101sls 11 r.smeni!da. m David Frust Sllow (C) (90) Film-
prodocer Ntd Shorrin, 1ctr1u Tsai
Chin. lo1me1 Cerm1n U·Boat Cap-
ltin HetbHt Werner t nd sin11r1
Mich1et Allen Ind HetM Shlpir-
guest.
ID n. l ir; Yeller (C) (60)
tl) Na P'll,tlollM (90) "A Gllllt>
tion of lints: 'Witts'." Tiit blr·
ritr dividln1 Berlin brings t1111d1
to 1 pair of feudiftl [1$1 Germa1
11mmes.
1:45 fl) Gtorlt JtS5tl Show l usin•
(30)
';00
0 WORLD PREMIERE OF * A GREAT ADVENTURE FILM : "HUNTERS ARE
FOR KILLING"
D ·S (jJ CBS Tlu1r1Cl'1 Mnit: if) "'Hunlr.1 Alt IOI' ~llinr:" (dra-
ma) '1D-8urt Reynolds, Me!"Jn
Doucl1s. M1r1in Salum, Soz1nn1
Ples~ette, l1rry Storch. A fo1mtr
football star. wroncfully convicted of
rnanslau11:hte1, 1tlum1 home to delrw
his rlcflUul share of his late moth·
tr's estate and to Ht hil tormw
Stfeethear1.
0 NCAA Wntn Rqio111I lnklf·
bill 1"11y-Olls (C) (90) The UCLA
81uins lice opponrnts {ytl lo be
d!lermlned) in 1 semUlnal 11me l)f
the NCAA Ch1mpionships. Oi<;k En·
berc calls the 1tlion live lrom
Se1tUe.
O Corning Glass Present' * TH E YOUNG AMERICANS
o @rn m ''"'<'•'' 1 ~. Youn1 Anleriun1 (C) (60) Muslo-
lovely, gl'OOvy music-fl Ille key·
note ol tonicfl!'s show . .loinln1 the
2roup ol J6 rouna iin1e11 ere
1utsts LCH'nt G1eene, TmJ Tim 1n•
T~e Committtt.
9:15 EE Kow To M1rrr I liliRitHirt (30)
':30 e QJ oo m oni111t1 <t> (Jo> "For21ry-Tht R111aer." Frid'1 and
G1nnon question • suspect In a
bunco·lor1ery schemt involvlnr; tl'9CI·
it cards. St1c1 Harris 1u1sls. 0 NIW1 (C) (30) B1xttr Wud.
(£) Biii Johns News (C) (JO)
@Cl) Trlltll or Con1tqu1ncu (t) 9:45 fl) PSA film
ID Tru. Mnnturt (Cl (30) 10:00 0 fD 00 @!'l De1n M1rti11 (t)
tl) 111.t Cirt (C) {JO) (60) Dean's 1uests ire Shlrler
7:30 I) 5 (!) ra•ily Altair (C) {JO) • Booth, Vikki ~rr 1nd Ptul Lynde.
Frt/lCll •sb 8ill Iii spe•k to a O @ Cil m ,Aris 7000 (C) (60) prod~tf about 111 old family lritndl "Elegy for [dward Shelby." B1erto
horn £111!1nd who is trying to brta•I ntn becomes inYOlved when In ·~
into the theitir. Jill Townsend parent suicide tri11ers 1 daughter'•
iuests. I haired for her stepmothtf. £lit1b1tll Allen, Warren Stevens and 8tlind1 D Q)·@ m 0111itl 800111 (C) Mo~taomery guest.
(60) "llr1din', 'llilin' and Rimlt."I 0 Dtlltl (C) GIOl'lt Carlin, Ui1 8oone.sborou1h school thildrftl stage • ftwll patttrned after the Boston Grant, lii ~rpenttr.
Te• P1r1y. Will!am D'Co11nelt i nd I Ntw1 (C) (60)
Tony Divis 1uut. j Peny M1so11 (60)
0 fi1J rn tl) ht ,IMIHn'S KaJI . The Ac!Yocltn (C) (60) (Rj
1 C.medy HCIUr (t) (30) Don · D rldt1 S1rnkl (JO)
Rickln. W~I Ch1mberl1in pst. 10:30 0 """. (t) (60)
0 Milllon S Ml'l'it: "A Btn for iE Cyirthia (30)
Ad•llO" (d11m1) '47-John Hodl1k, 11:00 e B 0 a> mm Nm ~C)
Wi1111m B1ndli, Gene Tierney. Rich· O NCAA Wrdtfn Rl(iontl ltslet·
ard Conte. An American 0H1cer in blll P1•J·Olls (C) A l1ped tel1e1st .._.
thar21 ol 1n occupied lt1!i•n townl cf the prellmin1ry 11m1 played lni
wins the he1r1s ol the tcwn'1 peo. Seattle earl/et toni1ht. Oppontntl •,
pl• when he finds 1 bell for their , are undetermined 11 press time.
church. f O Movie: .,Now Yop atl" (dr1m1)
ID Truth 1r Con11q1141na:s (C) (30) '42-Bette Dtvls, Cl111de R1lns,
ID M•jl)f Ad1m1 (60) Paul Henrtld.
Ei) Ttdlnlol Cer111 (30) (II) Hi Said. Slit S•ld (C) I Pf'ttan l"l•ct
tII I l!tCIAl I WhJ Yn Srnok1: A m ~ (i) ® (JJ Hnrs (C')
S.ll·ltsl (C.) (30) Par1 IV. Y-11wers Wllhln~n Wtft in Rl'rilw (C)
join regulars in llkin1 I le:rt th1t 11:15@ (II Cint ma Stm1t.1~; "Mr.
reveals how t~t wo1ld. around them PeaDody and the Mrrm1hJ.w
un 11frct lhrtr srnokrn1. ll:30 0 ~1 (]) Mtiv Crlffin (C} Ti m-m Cr11t cit ~ (30) my Grl mu. Orl!ln Bean .
l :GCI 1J QJ Ci) JiN N•blni (CJ (60) 0 ~ (6) l?:) Jobn117 C.rlOfl (C)
Oper• Jllir Mary 1Aist1 sinp the Al Hlr1. Pt11:1Y C1u .
''Sempre Libera~ 1ri1 Imm Yerd!'1 0 aJ Diet c.mt (CJ Pt11 S..pr,
't 1 TrlVl1l1~ and join1 N1bon !Of Don Md..e.an.
• mtd!1y or Jtfomt Kern songs. The m WIDMARK and PALANCE
1nUr1 ust pertOfms in 1 production * l l :JO TONIGHT KTIV! number u tuUn1 lht folk aonp ofl
th1 wo1!d. m Movie: ..,lnic iR UM Streeb• O MO'rit 811111 (C) (30) J1mts (d11m1) 'SO-Richard Widma rll.
St1war1, Anita Louise, .lot! l:r•rl Paul Dou1hs, B1rt>1r1 Bel Clddn.
1nd M1r11 Ch1mplon r:uett. m Mavit: "Tiit fllUf !"Int Nlfht· 0 @(I) 6) Tllat Clfl (C) (30) 1owa" (comedy) '57-Jlne Ruutl~
''They Stioot Pii:turu, Don't Theyr• Ralph Mrektr.
Viewin1 scenes of 1 film sht m1d1 12:30 0 Contmunltr llFllttln loenl (t)
w!lh Don and neighbor J1rry 8111· 1:00 I) MO¥it: "M•~ Afr1id"' (drama)
man, Ann 11 shocktd to '" Jlfl}''s '57--Georgt N1dt1, Phyllis Th1xt1r,
wilt lluth kissing t min. 8e1nie Tim Hovey.
Kopell IUHh IS Jeiry B1um1n, 0 0 Ntwt (C)
Allct 801den IS lluth B1111111n 1nd ft) Action ThHllr. ~Rebel in Town, ..
8obo lewis IS I Slrl"hbo•rd OP· 1:30 ID All·Nl1ht SllOW: "An 1nsptc:IOf
1r1lor. Cills." '1ht Loni RUlt and the m le 1.it Utt TrlUI (Cl (301 Tomah1wk." ''Mr. [mm1nutl."
IE We1Mn 111d tltt M1Btt (II) 2:30 I) Ntws/Gl\le Ut Thi.I Day (C)
FRIDA Y
DAYTIME MOVIES
';00 0 .. ..._ lt111pn" (wlltern) 'SO
-Daft "'Rtd" 81"1, Punt11 Bl•tt.
"ftl1M It '*'Mrt" (m)1te17} '4G
-Altn Curtia, (vtlyn Ankett.
0 (C) "St Thlt It loft" 111111•
11cat1 '53-Kllhl'Jll Crtyson, M~n
G11t11n.
t:JO 0 "'f•nler• lo.. t DMth Scent"
(mrat•ry) '&l-llltherd [Jan, viv.u
Undlcna.
m "Jtllllnr ""'' llttlJ" (drtma)
'(:J.-Jamu C,1ney. Graci Gtor11.
1%:30 0 "Jollnn1 ffo!ldty" (dr•ma) '4!
-\'IJIHem 81nd!1, Ho•&J c11•
11\ith•tl,
1:30 m "TOlllOITIW It My 11111" (dre•
mt) '62-Charln k naYOur, r.tifra.
11 T,.ntow.
2:0D ID ..,.,.. G1z1bl" (mytltry.comtd1)
'60-Cltnn ford, O.bbo• Reynolds •
m "Lt1lo11 .. "" Doomtd'" (•If.
Vl!'llllft) 'M-81H W1lll1rns. oa .. 11
llldt11d.
4:30 B {CJ "Odonro" f1dv1nl11rt) '!I
-Rllondl fitm1nc. Mttdontld Clrq.
•
I
• '
• •
,
-
Thu rsday, March 12, 1q10
Ch~pmail Opening
One-act Festival
TheJtter Notes
• h's 'Spoon River' Again,
A one-act play festival Y.'ill
be presented by the Chapman
College Drama Department
tonight U1rough Saturday at
8:30 p.m. each evening in the
college auditorium.
This Time at Golden West
Three Plays
Carded a.t
Saddle back
Saddleback College w i 1 I
present three one.act dramas
two nights, March 20-21 at 8
p.m. at the campus theater.
The student productions,
under the direction of drama
instructor Boonie Cogbill, will
be "A Phoenix Too Frequent"
by Christopher Fry, "The
Case of the Crushed
Petunias,'' by T e n nessee
Wi111ams, and ''The Sandbox"
by Edward Albee.
'Ille evening's p r o g r a m ,
"Four on the Aisle," will in-
clude four student-directed
one-act plays, two of them
also written by students.
L a w r en c e Ferlinghetti's
''The Alligation" is being
directed by Craig Fields, a
junklr drama major from
Buena Park. Tim Dice, a
junior English major from
Lawndale, is directing Charles
Miller's "The Waiting Room. '
"Carlo the Magnificent" is
written and directed by Wayne Bereaved Boy
Beauvais, a graduate student •
from Garden Grove. Gene Mi lch-Vogel-of-€ost-a-~1esa guest stars tonight at
Jackson, a graduate student 8:30 on Channel 4 in "Ironside." The youngster
from Compton, is directing his \Vho \vas featured in the motion picture, "The
own play, "The Adventures of Reivers," plays the role of a 13-year-old '''hose Norman Brown: A Black hil · I · Fairy Tale for Grownups." 1nother is slain by an intruder w · e his ather ts
supe r vi 6 in g and _s_e_rv_in-"g'-a_t_enn __ i_n_;pc_r_i_so_n_. __________ _
coordinating the festival is
Mrs. Edith M. Schwartz of
Laguna Beach, an assistant
professor or speech and drama
at Chapman.
An alternate year offering at
~ffilpman, .the one-act play ·1val ![J!Vides ! p oi>-lfHnity fqr· ~tu~til to gain ~ ·3f.nc£ JP. 9fr~~ng as welt
a.. a .. Cf!flg.
Brass Not Disbanding,
Herb A1pert Declares
110LbVWOOD (AP) "Emotionally I wasn't
By 1'0M TITUS
01 tM D•l1Y f'lltl Slllf
"Spoon River Anthology"
seems to be a popular piece of
theater these days with two
produclions apening five d1;1ys
apart on the Orange Coast.
But, as Golden West College
"'ill set· out lo prove tonight,
there's more than one way to
skln the prove.rbial cat.
Following on the heels of
South Coast Reper l ory' s
version -which reatured six:
actors and a n1usician -the
Huntington Beach school will
offer the same script with a
casl of 33 -30 drama
students and three singers.· ,
Tiie dr!!.ma department, bas
dividM the anthology into
eight groups, each. set off by a
musical number. for its ren-
dition o( Edgar Lee Masters'
vignettes of lire in a small
Mid1vesterf'I town reOeetro by
voices from the grave. The
singers will be Harold Keeny,
\Vefldy Friedman and Lia
Guscman .
Curtain time for the three
performances, tonight through
Saturday, is 8 p.m, in the
Actor's Playbox on ca1npus.
Ad1n ission is 50 cents.
* Meanwhile. back al South
Members o: the casts in-· ft h
c1ude: • : LQJta .peac
"Sandbox" -Thelma J!t
Trum~ter Her.b Alpert says prepared lo go on tour," said
pe an~ his Tijtµ.nt Bi:~s are Alpert , bui it took hitn to Lon·
slill in ~ iness-:just 14king a don to perform for Queen
break fr~ the figors (If the Elizabeth, to Aus l r a Ii a.
road. · Gennany, Holland and IO
Coo st Repertory. four more
p,lrforniances of "Spoon River
AiffllOlcijY" will be given
tonight through Sunday al U](!
Oosta Mesa theater. Zarember, Glenn Daniels. Cid-'llO Shade' ny McKinley, Bryan Colbert
and Larry Smith.
"Crushed Petunias" -Kit M • } S
McDonough, Bill Hoy~ Mark USICa · et
1t1onroe and Sue Pacek.
"Phoenix Too Frequent" -
Diane Lysiak. Pam Downs and
Eric Van Deustn.
Admission will be $1 to the
public and free for Saddleback
students with Associated Stu~
dent Body Cards. Reserved
seats are available by calling
the college at 837-9700 or 495--
6940, extension 61.
I ..
ACADEMY AWAllD HOMIMEli
0.ldl• HIWll
plus
Wtltw M.nll..-l"'rtd S""'JITMll
"CACTUS fLOWEI"
The next production of the
Long Beach Civic Light Ovcra
Association will be "110 in tbe
Shade," the musical version of
"The Rainmaker."
The third musical of the
CLO season will be presen ted
April 3-S and 10-1! in the
Jordan High Schoo l
auditorium. J~~~ Ritsc!ie! is
general directgi' ~ith Mattie
Lascoe in ch111r1ie or the
choreography.
Richar~ Jphnson ~kFs U!~
leading rqle pf Star~4c• wilh.
Ruth J ohn~n (no relation}
cast as Liiii~ C4fry! The
music and lyrics 4ft? J)y Tom
Jones and Harvey Schmidt,
who also collaborated on ~•The
Fanlasticks."
··110 in the Shade" will be
11We're nOt disb3ndina," the us ·1· q , . . . c1 1es. 34·year~ld millionaire musi-
cian told an int c r vie We r. Upon returriing. he sa id,
"We're just on a temporary "we decided we were shutting
recess. down for a bil, to recharge our
"It's qvite possible in the batteries. But it got oul -by
next five months, six months word of mouth, initially -that
or a year "'e'IJ get back on the we were disbanding, that A&M road and try to pick up where
we left off." Records was suffering finan-
Alpert said the decision to ciilU)'. }ictually we're in a bet.
recess has been "brewing te.r positlop now than we've
about a year"' \\1hen he and h.is ~een in (he last lflree years."
aji a/·gemen finished taping a A&;P.1 Records Is the recording je:lev, s!pn special at 3 a.m. ]~st Qc\. 9 anµ, left, al 7 a.m. company he o Yf !1 ;> in
op p !iVe~w~k 't.Our. partnership with Jerry Moss.
~~~ii!i!iii~[~i!iil--~>~11~;M~l'o~·,~~.,:.,.~;;;;;;~1
All Ar1h011· 1' .. 1 • .._..i,,. l'u•IU:i1kul
Peter O'Toole
PJtula Clark
Jlon Thronson doubles as
<Urector and guitarist for the
sliow, which features Tooi
Shearer, Charles · Hutchins,
J.1ariha McFarland, James
Ba"XeS, Toni Douglass and Lar·
ry liarbison. Each of the cast
members plays 15 to 20 dif-
ferent roles.
"°Spoon River," backed
visuals by Kenneth Shearer, Is
on stage at SCR'!i Third Step
Theater, 11127 Ne\\'POrl Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Tickets may be
reserved by calling 646-1363.
* "Little M~fY Sunshine" I' tn
its second qf fpur weeks a lhe
Laguna MpullDn Playhouse,
with Kent Jphhson ~ireelln(
•_,_
BER ONE"
f .. IH H.slon
C1 lvn. 1:30 ~.M.
~··~~
Gl,~y Gus Is
Your klpda GllJ';·
performed at S:30 p.m. Apriil11iiiiiii~ii1 3, 4, JO and 11 with Sunday
matinees April 5 and 12
scheduled for 2:30 p ' m:
Advance reservations may ~e
!11!~~ by calling (2 II )
· "Goo~by11 Mr.Chips" ... ""'""~
ALL N"'f~f.,OM j,,,. DEN
"FAN11Y HILL'
ldGM~~cro ~~s,...,.
David Hemmings
Joanna Pettet
ACROSS
l Stin
irr!Ution
5 lrresponsiblt
le I low
lo Plne1pplt
14 Flower
lS Ability
to act 16 "Thanks
--··!"; 2 word s 17 Enoli sll
river
l! Ufper sla9t
0 1 us roctiet
l, Coin of
Europr
20 1,38, for
e•araple 22 lmmtrst
24 Solhtr
ZS Locations
27 Oamageto rtpulalion ~' Makes as good
is ntw ~2 T irnt ptrlod
J3 Biblicil
lion 3" Ctrtain
candies
JI, Restrict
40 Roadhouses
4Z Julius
-: PGA
me111ber
44 Part of
the ear 45 On tht
squa1t:
1nr0tmal
47 Czar
~9 US IOl"l
•
'
JJ
•O ,,
•
'
"
l
·~·~f th•US · ·.
or Can. .
govtrruaen t:
Abbr. 52: Plain
54 P atVrlltll'
SB Rotating
part
5'i Sll0tt
drink.
60 Fat
62: Gradt an~
65 Not rtli:irtd 67 "Down
Undtr"
nitivt
69 "It wtighs
-··!": 2 words 10 Japanese
rectptacl t
71 Useful quality
72 DesHt
73 Yearn
74 Quten of
75 Formerly: Arch1lc
OOIN
1 Craw
2 Time
period J Appraising
4 The lap·
wing: Var.
5 Meal cut:
2 words 6 Kind of
IOOlh 1 Overwhelmtd
with
reverence
,.,181!6.
Yes terdM'~ Puff!! ~lvtd :.
• • T S • Q
8 Bills
of !are
9 Cavort
10 Chum
11 Grtelt tplc
poem 12. Oriental
wattr whttl
13 •• -costs: 2 word~
21 Pirtlclt
23AMarx
26 European ti tit 28 Hand
ftatt11t 2' Plecr o1
shal)!d steel
JO '" eagl e
31 Pl ay an instrument 35 Of the sun 37 Quiz
st\ow
ch11tacter
38 Wad.
ing
bird
' ' •
J112no
3'J lltt1ary
substance
41 Usie a sieve
43 Spanish
Hilt
4!. Bird
48 Liturgy 51 Certain
stagt pres·
en!atio11s 53 Callie food
54 Up lei the
time thal 55 Oscar
Peterson's
instrument
56 Rt Jtcl with disdain
51 Nonstnse
til G!Yt mtdlclnt
63 Jack, in
cribbage
E.4 Un ltr
6b Dress up
68 Conledtrate
soldier:
Informal
J/12170
INfQl.IJU.UQJ6
HELD (IVJR
f ACAD•MY
NOt.llNAflONS
'"c;~uo~s BEST PIGTU~E
BEST ACTRESS
2 ACADEMY
AWARD
NOMINATIONS
A man wen! looking for America.
And couldn't find 1t anywhere ...
eiJ5!I RideR @
• ACADEMY
NOMINEI SHOltl
"PEOPLE'S SOUP"
YOU ARE THERE
Al THI HUHTll
SlAW T1tf
MOST llR000\11
ANIMALJ ON IUIH
NOW SHOWING
2nd lpectacu•ar Week
W•Jf CDlft ·-~ f~ Ctftl fl'lita Ftt
1
~~"! .. 1111 S•nt• An• s~~•i11 Cttl• Mnt fiN-ttfl U-.Nf
Wttt;d1y1 t :JO.t:IM:U
Slll'I. 2:11-t:,.7ttM:15
Jf!, U:ot-J:U-t•J0-1:00.t:lf
<\dult• u.19 ~oder 12 75<
ALL (OLOlt SHOW
"THE HON EYMOON IOLLl!ll5" lll)
"TO COMMIT A MURDllll" Cit}
Shows Start at Du5'c •Children under 12 free!
ltdVtiYI Or•ntt C•. OtlY .. 111
f S!Mwlnt
"THI! MONf!YMOOH Kll.LEllS"
llll COll>r "TO COMMIT ill MUllOlll" Clll
C:•IO•
UnCltr 11 Mn! M will! l"•rt"'
All Ctltr SIMW
"OOWNM!LL l[lllCl!ll" iGl'I ...
Ottn M.,"tifl
"AMIU$MEll5" UP
I ill<•ftl"'I' Awtnl N•mlntlJont
"MIONIOHT COWllO"f"" 00
"OOOOll'tl COLUMllUl" llll
U!lftt It Ht! Admllltd
illntflony 01tlnft In
"OlllillM OF IC INGS" (llJ COiet
"MAIL HlltO'' 101"1 Coltr
UMtr 11 Mwtl tM wlfn ""•nl
All Ctlf• Snow
"f.ANNY HILi." iltl
"01 SAOI'' OU
UM1r U l'ttt Mlntlllttl
the musical comedy. Doris
Shields is musical director,
wiU1 Joan \Vulfsohn handling
the choreography.
Beach's Kathy Ladd arc
featured in the d r a m a •
Reservations may be secured
by calling (213) 433-0536.
ti1ary SulH""'.an 1nd Don 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~11
1'-1iUer head the cast, with Ken
Kor nw eibel , Blanche
~lickelson and Alan Hart tak·
ing the featured supporting
roles. Others in the company
are Constance Crane, Sonny
Budd, Steve Schwaer and Jim
Paskel. -
Performan~s wiU be given'
to1righl through Sunday at the
playhouse, 606 Laguna Capyon
Road, Laguna Beach. The bOi:
office number I~ 494-0743.
* Something different in the
way o( theater is being
presented this weekend at
Newport Beach's Open End
Theater. an improvisational
piece called ''The Do-Do
1',amily Albumen." ~
The lwt><:haracter. mu It i·
media entertainment is being
staged by a group called Pr ax.
is Theater and features David
Goggin and Greg Hofmann.
Performances will be giyen
Friday. Saturday and Sunday_
with admission free.
The theater is located at
2815 Villa \Vay in Newport,
with further information being
dispensed al 675--1421.
* fyo more perfarmanres of
I' A Far C!ounlrJ1!' dramaizlng
the earlf life ,Pf SiJ.rni. d
Freud, w!q be prf.eh~d · ~eckend at Jhe ni Bea Jfj~yhouse. ~l , Anallei , S~., Long Beach. Be_rttam
T.ii!J!well ls -~~cliQf th!_ play.
R'ilph Bowrria,n and, N-rt
~,,.,,~t
-~ .,, .....
29DS East Coa>t H•r·
Corona del Mar
EXCLUSIVE AREA
PERFORMANCE
FOJt ADULTS
7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMll'IATIONS
IEST ACTORS -Oiitln Hoff-11 •, •• Voight
.. m· ·~nu ... II 11 . TINe 1tRESS -Sylri• ¥Ues
I . "'" y .
I D 1· ~ Schlo&h•t•r
It flLM , 1.\f H. .
11iowl.P !f 7:'9 ~ 1f!«-M!ttfl!lll S.IMr , . .
The generation gap
ls more than just long
hairand loud music! .•.
MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW
SATURDAY ONLY! 8:45 p.m.
' I.. " ·-.. I ' 1' ; -"'"""="-..,..
ENDS TUESDAY
ltOllltt lllOFOllD IN ....... _._,,,,,. ......... .,
gQllCXlt,_Oft•A ........ 1f(Tllflf ~
-ALSO-
Jo11C1tfi.,. Wh~t•n
"VIVA MAX"
STARTS WEDNISDAY
"The freshest
L film of 11 tne yearl
A F"RANKO\'ICH ,RODUCTl()N
FOR COLUM81A RELEASE
[!]~ o~
Pl11t M099le Smith I•
"THE PRIME OF
MISS JEAN BRODIE"
STARTS WEDNESDAY,
An earthquake
of En.t•rtainm~nt/'
™iltDi. .llt.Q·1.i'IC,~~ -"' . .... ,,.,.,.i.!llS
CDID]
• '
•
'
.
•• ·-~~~.~~~~~~--;--:-::;:;-::::-:~"!":":~----~---------------------------..II" ••• • ...
\
' l ......
I •
I
SAYINGS
Her.'1 a onc.ln-o-tifetlm• hanct to tokt
9d'f0nlogt of close-out prices on famous
hrnilurt lrond1. Hurry to Levru and 10Ytl
·LEVITZ CLASS·IFIED .FLAS·H
CLEARANCE BULLETIN EDITION
•
Huntington Beach, Califor11ia March 1970
I • •
lorgoin hutttors , : • This is ill Tho 1111 you'vt w1ited forl $1 ,000,000 worth of tho notion's finest n1m1 brand lurniturol
, Offered t0~ov 1t11vings you must Sff to bolievol Thou11nds of itoms, somo 11·is, some brand new factory fresh but cer·
toinly 111 af'IJNHEARD OF SAVINGS TO YOUI This is truly 1 borg1in hunter's por1di11I No molter whore you live in South-
em C1Ufomi.:Wo beliove your time will be woll spent when you como to levitr. Come-i n, compore •.• th1t's •II we 11k.
W1 know~~-'Won't go home dis1ppointtdJ This is the most exciting s1l1 we've ever offered to prove to you, the home-
mekers ol?;iuthern·C1lifomi1, just whit Levflt m11ns In quolity ind 11vings. Levitr Worehouse ond showroom ls the folk
of the futiiliure industry! (250,000 squire f11t, 13 1cres ond 5 mllfoon doll1rs in inventory prob1bly mikes us the lorg8'1
single fumil..ro outlet in the world» You bo the judge ••• but don't deloy. This 1110 must be strictly first come first
served.
TODAY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
YOUR KEY
·10 YALUI
1 lttlroo• Sets
~llDnfttrl
3 'Mllttressps;
4-lll9ht s
S-01111 Chests
,-Odd leds
7-MIHtllllll
I Desks
f-4lwl19
lo-chairs
11-1111111 Room
12-«tellHrs
13 Occ. Tablt1
14-DIHHes
15-SIHptrs
1-letlroont Sets
kvfQ1~nt1 91 .. thl1ll.tnttt moid· tm 1 tl1at1, l1ut1 ltct I• glvt
1tur lrot*-1 -11111 1lrl TliQ
1-lffroo• Sets
Tht bt111ty 11111 dlHtbU'1V ef 111\d .. l
11,..iii..11 rhl• ,_rittblt 5par1;111 btd-"'°"' 1!,11111 Tiit 11)-dri""'I TriPI• d,.1. 11r ,_, tomolelt with I ,,......, pl1tt
1J1u "'!'"'' pl111 1 lino •irt llttdbotnl
... I buv !hi! 11111 Ctn'I bf bttll ~EG. 419.95 . . .. .. . . . . • .. . 1300
Soll ~·· tnh•ntol tht t11llltnlk of lhll [trly ~mt•iuft btd-for undtr 1200, yow ltlt doubl1 d111ur, ,.,_ Ir.....:! pit!
m1Hlf, I !win Of full 1iH hi.
Wflh foolbOlnl tf'>d !hf 'Wfff1
dt1w ... t (I•"""' priced
IE6 • .u9,05 .. ·-··
lUIUrious rnodtm 1trli"' I 1.t11e11 ..• .._ 11 1 lovilI
Pfkll '111i1 1.,..,1, will I 9-411w11, lriplt d,.1s.r w
daot, 2 twin 1.-.mtd pl.ii non PIUI I fuU Df ~YI ' botfd!
l EG. o169.9S , •
3-MaltrtsstS 5-0dd Chests
STS
Yi OFF I
......... $48
11<111 clolhlng be1u-
lely In you, cholt1 of
Colanltl m1p1t lingerie
11 .. , 5 roomv dr•""'" 1111.prooftd and flnhhtd
lo n lmOltlhnell IO !h1y'll
""'' ft your c!o1hlng l You 11•1
11\rU \'r lodl1 II l 1Yi1Z.l
33 ASSORTED CHESTS
At·h $47
YOllr t ntryw1y w111!
tnllh 71 .. crodtnt•I It
n 'lch Pttln •nd htl 4 dcon with htnd1ornt grl1!1d 1 .... 111
loll or 1loflge 1p1e1t Woy°"'' \'r off I
I EG. 219.95 ............... , .• ,97
70°/o OFF
41 ASSORTED MIRRORS
LEFT FROM
DROOM SUITES
m n'°ril cttlln1I •I
ti 1111 Wtlnut llni1h
!dl"t doon tor 1111 11 100 rKonh.
l EG. J.<1.9.S ......... .
61111 ~lldint Ooor l oo
'"'n 11n111! 9l•lnt t""' tit ya.ur bltokl. low, low
IEG. 19.95 ......... ..
ttai:k W<0119ht Iron l 1ku
allecto1'1 l11m Ytl u11I hit n11d1 1 p!t<t for
1 lltm1 ,ou whh ro dl1pl1y. A
t--Uwl•1 loom t--Uwl .. lffnl 11-lllnl•I loolli
Ttt11 bHu!lful Fr.-w:h llnwl11<ltl 1<1f• Kro.1111'1 ,,_ ill fltlr for Spln!lll Tiii• ll!Odtm w1111111 llull.r wili 1dd (1ptu11 111 eflCj\lonllnt MldlhfrlnH•
1111 I dtfp dl1-4 luhe<I Htk i nd wllll Tiii• d,_llc wilt . ti Is '"tnlod lob of 1~111 f!Of'1tf room lo your mood with tti.'4 &~It $p&n!1h !tlb!tt. dffll lo.am ,....trt.lbt1 •Nt tuM'lloil1 dlni"O 1111 ••• l1tutltul l tutU Thi• h1~1 c1nolil l"""'I .1110 "-'"f ftr top comforll tts ••POucl lrvltwood by •~poltll 11k PMl• .n4 litrurti lh1d 11u11lty it buUI Inti 1hl1 ~ly p!tct. 1tg1 , , , 111 "-P ~· Oloic1 of :~t~ ::!.ir!~~i ~~"'~:iv ~::::i ~~m.,, •,•""'lbl• ... , '"'"'IOll•I s.t1 1 ;'~':':· ;·~·~··~':';;;";·~-~·:· ~-·~-~-~· :· ·:·~·:· ~-·~·~"~ 1 ~··~~·:·~ .. ~·~i~·~·...:.·~·~·~·~·...:.·::.:'~""::.::.::~~· Dan't mru 11111 buy , • , hurry tot '""' "9 • · · • •• • • • • • • •• · "· • ¥. • ·" • • • ·"' • • • • • • • • •
lt•iU to.Hy! lEG. 49'.9.S ··•·•·•••••··•···$291 l1111tt'1 tOlllritM.111911 10 lnOdolm 4ili· tfi;. "52'9.95 ............ ., •. $32' 1110 , , , I stur\111111 t lrttfliliQI\ tel>lt SH t ,...,, .. IKtloa otf ft-ltlltllj
Thomth'U!t 1114 tllltr "'"°"" ltr11• 11ttlff. All 11yl11 tnd .ti d111tn1.
Y911'r1 1ur1 lo find 11111 Whal yo;i'rt
looking IN 11 hugt WliflVl.
f ,------------~I w!th llllff 12'" 11""'1 Ind I ''"' 11'1d '------------~ :S 11dt W in With tomf-r!tbll. UP. CUSTOM QUIL TEO 11tt11tni1 11111, lh• rn1ir1 111111 h
33 ASSORTED
DECORATOR SOFAS
VAlUES 10 ll9.9S. '153
No rntl1tr ..nu 1ly!e YOll pr1ltr
, , , ~P•nilh , , , t1riy•Alnlr~n
••. Modtm ••. (onJllll'ollOrlly tit ftfdllion1I.,. ya.u•,. wr1 IO'flnd
iw•I wl111 yow wtnl If you·r1 II
tllht,.. lt'illi loeation wh111 tlloi
doc>n o"". All ft~riu from •111'11 IO •1lv11 •.•• e'ltfl '°"'" cullom QUllllldl Tllut "''odd lot, floor Mm~• Mid diKO•l!invtd sofHI
Finl comt , •• tint lltvt~ , ••
TM1 <htrmino Eu!r Amtr!~1n 1of1 i1 oo c0111lot1•bl1 11 •ttml to ln•llt you ro 1lr down ind 1rl1d II his 1
11m!·•lltched plllotw bid ind dttP fo•m 1n1r1lbl1 1111 cu1h!ont tl'ld Ii
t'OY"td In I tUllG<n •o:iUU"1d ltbric i nd
hH I boJ plNltd tkirt. S..lt MYlllgll
I EG. 269.95 ................ -S175
f11hior1 ~r°"u ill tr1;, for Colonl•1
design wllh !Ms ciltrming soft . '1 ii
lt l)o,.d in I QUiltl'd Ptil'l1 tnd folluru
1 1t1ni..tttai:htd pillow beck tnd Die· '°" w11P0111, deto '°'"" tt•I cusl!!on1 thll lro rtv1njbJ1 lor douOl1 Wttr. Bill
~lt•t1d llirl.
llEG. 439.95 ................ S
ind 1l1tkl Thi1 Krotbl
I• h gov1rod in • kot lid IWle4 le 1t1y ht11t t int II hil Dtcron-wtl
1111 clllohlon• tnd
lt n. """' "'-11~1..,.
Sp.onllh >al• tnd lcrveitt tlon •• , ti
htrd to 1>1n... . Kh
r In • "11rom ttUllttd
or110r ftb<ic tnd lln dHp t .. m
r"tn!blt ull •nd beck clllhion1 lhll 1r. WrlPPtd In D~ro" for m.t~lrnum
Mlllnt u1mlotll Nulfy lo ll'flli lod~yl RlG. ~29.95 ................ »JJ
•ROEHLER SOF.. 111111hed In r1c:~1, 9•1lned wainut tor
I\ I'\ I look lhll'I JOPlllH]~lt4 ll\CI llllltlV
$175 ... hurTYI 1 ,----------~
l!G. 299,f5...... tfG. :m.95 .............. ~·1197 BRANO NAME
Not mtlfllr whit your clKorf rhit Mt!>dlomt wlid blrdi hetdllnH 11111 OCCASIONAL.
h1ndl.omt >aft by Kroehltr I !ht ltntll Colonltl dining ,_, Will. II S ptrfKt >alt tor ya.ut II 11 c..<trtd ,..,.1 wltti 1 llrte trurll Ubl• with TABLE
on t cu1IOM ~ulll1d ftbrk lhll'I I 12" •~ffn•h•n ltef plut 6 sl~t ch•lr> YOUl $33 E h Scotch~"I pn!IKled It •1rt h tlls lot ~t !he Wllol• f':l'ly. AH 1 "" . QC tnd ntw1 Md, 11 lt6111r11 1~11 CHOICE." lllh ..., inel~d Jn lht low "t prlu, pill-btck arid Mii C 11111 tf ,llU:O, 699.95-.-; ......... • ..... $3'11 l\UOf 11Wr1mtfll of otefd lol 0 ... -cJoud.IOft folrn for cornpl1t1 ""1t'-ol..t.itlnd 1111111 11 ont low ptk t.
lor1 , •• '"'"lblt IN doubt. w.111 S,.nllh, f1t1! A....,rc1n and C11n-
S.1 11111 kld1y. 111191 Cln"nc.t f.1tg1nt foiwitl dlnlnt roorn 1u;11 • , • '""'""" Inc: ""'d. Mfil!V c111n1>lll9 tavln91 I from l~r Oii• mast dilt<imln· 1111, 1wn 101111popir!tr1111rtll1 lop
t llng 1llop r, Thi1 lllndlO!nt tlletty 11bli1, wMI be u qllktd ti lhlt Ht lneluO.i t 11t1t11lon ltblt with ""'httrd ti prict. lt 1u ly tnd y1111
SIYt V, 01'1 lhl1 ll1nd1omt Sp1nt1h
1011 ind chtlt In t ht••Y dttorttor
ft brk. IGth tit t tt1n11d by tlpoltd
o•k 1rm1 1"11 bo!h ht•t foem Hit
cu1~lon• thll tr• mu1lbl1 for dollb!t
w11rl Don't mill lhtll HYln91l
lllG. 299.95 •• " ............ $2.so
l11f pl111 • 1hl1 ch1lt1 wi1h ~pholllt,.d "" wrt to find 1•1<tly whtt y1t11
JNll. E•HY plttt 1111 tint, ff.Ctf•I w•n!, lncludfl !Ultl wllh up 10 lints. 1119.9.S •1lu11. I EG. '29.95 .... , , ... , ...... $197
r dloict of
by l11klin1,
r hmou1 n1 ....
tllis UIOr1-I
14-DIMttts
Sturd'fl tvblll1r 1111! c011ctNdlon t iYtl
ihil dlMltt Thi llurlOIHty ID Int !hrouglt y1u1 '"d y11r1 ot hard weir,
II ht1 I h .. 1 ind mot l'lllltlnl plnliC
IOl!flld u bi. plu1 " wnMblt vinyl t111!1S ••• dooo1 mlu 1h!1 IMlyl ttc;. 69.9S ..... , .......•...•. i..l
• tlOll..tUI$ l<ld dis-
lttl It hut 11rty. , ,
c1111n of 1h1 crop. Doft't Ml• lflnt M91 MY!"fl. II ,-----------~
ASSORTED
5-PC. DIN
hm1 t5t , ,_..,. doutllt d11111r with I r-----
''"' '1!111ttM top, tht fr11ntd, plllt 11n 1 "1lm1 ll'ld 1 lull or Qlltltl 1111 , ... lion item lllat will bri119 Thi• th•rmll'lg Colonltl >aft 11 tovtAd
umlh to ;our hornt. In 1 <U•lom quil!td (trly Amtrictn
13-0cc. Tables
httdbo.atd fol Otll low Hit ptktl
aEG. 19'9.95 ................ tl 26
{o!CllO/tl clllmi , • , ti I 1111 Uy H it
1•k1t Thl1 honey.lonod l mtplt wll1
lnclu4t1 1 do.iblt drtsitr with 1 Woll·
lno1'owlt /lllc..r11 tOfll A l11""d p!11t
11111 "11rnu, t full 1111 IM1dbo"d
tn~ t irurdv 11111 bod fl'lmo. Don'I
111111 1hi1 buy , •• llulfy lo L.tvit1 lo-clllon t.Uyl
I EIO. 229.95 ................ $147
16 BED"OOM SUITES
AT TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS
"""' for r11t11 ! Wt on ,, lllflt ftfl'IOlll 1111111
,_ wl1n , •• 1U
"11 ii." All l"'tl>dt
ror -' llt•dbolrd .
ki"f 1111 M16bolnl
lnllChtd l~ilH IV
chu t ol d11wt11.. ftlind t l!lqhl IC
you'll find r!lf bu hon •htn tht
bt linl 10 thOOlt I
tf yo11 tlwlyf w1nt1d ,_, 1ul1t, thl1 11 fo, y
''°"lne\•I Ml Jn rich tlit
With 110ld 11 gr1r1fulll ol
llmaUI '"'"" illJlllly, nc!udtd trl1tl1 drllllf with doYtlll!td, d I·
110o0ftoi. """''"•ll flnlrtltd dftwtn, 1 ••tntd pl111 11111 mi110t tnd 1 lull or ..,..n 1!u h1tdbotrdl llu'rf'f 101 tlilt!
l !G. Jl9.9.S ................ $112
l 11utilul Mtcljtt111n11n hn11 In •II· li'l'Je Wllltt . , • lhll lltdrooln IUltt i•
!lfrlKI lor lht 111111 girl lo l'tlll• llhl
Ylll .. .._ o•11 YI .., tht roomy '*"'" with Mlut11 mtr•rulrlflll lop, 1 fttnwtl 11\olt gln1 mlfftf nd 1 lull
I f t"''" ol1t lltldboff4. $tt lhll IO· :a. m.n ................. s1so
..-------~
H"G. 7'19.9$. ••••
Mignllkont ••• d ln91 ttctnt thll 11 'ult1kl
btdtoom 1ull1 in dHP Ptt•n. hind
f!lbbtd IO 1 1111~ pitln~I ltvilt
clHrtnct prin indudt1 ' 11unnl"9 pl1<11 • , • tht tp1tl..i1 trio!•
llnu.tr. hllntd pl1!1 t l111 mirron ol~ • kin httdbcwud •rod two nllt u M• !hh • t . I tltglnl
Cl>l"'i1I cl\um ln>m IHst!t to you
•.• " I l1•lh Int dty Hll prict.
Thl1 loomf drtllff In ..,,.,tY·lontd
m1pl1 hu du1l-9rooftd. do'ltllllod
drt"'*n 11111 "" l!~iihtd 10 11\oy ...,.,•t t•t1 1n19 y-dtlicll1 chtlhi"O. TUI· ~nlc."~;;11~1.'.''~.'~ .~ ... ~ :~''.".'::1
An 1lt01nt1 grtetful '""'h Pl'O\rlmftl nltht 1t1<1<11 . , • n-It huo;t Hit 11•-lnt1l "fhll ~ nlohl 1t1nd 11 !Jnllll·
td In ....,,11, with 'f'ld .occtnl1 tnd hn 1 mtr·•Hlttl!ll M<c1rf1 IOI'. Rf(;, fl9.'1S ...
Kn1thl1r cflltod thll btto.rll'11
l!tr11n111'1 nio;iht 1t1ntl I ~r1ln1d pttln ind tdded t (onutlo loo lo ..-iii!
111ini! Two dr1w1r1I ~YI 't.i
l"°IU1 REG. 119.95 ••.
.......... $45
2l ,.,..,,11d Nighl $tond1
,.,.1.
$J5
5-0dd Chests
BASSffi 5-PC. f11111111 l111e11 Qllt111v 11 wn1 into Thi• tltt•nt fl'f"tCh '"'"ll'lcltl clltll bv !hi• lovely rroodtm doutilt d~Ull In lllHll II llfltd In 111111111"9 arillQllt MODERN BEDROOM tkh!r 9r1l~td w1lnu!. II futuru t whi1t wlth ,old lr!m1 11 l11tutt1
$2 Wull1'ghoull M•t•tlt IGP •llit" 111\" roomy, du1t0f00ftd, llO\relolled drtW·
l'G
'" '' 97 incl bum •nflltnl ind comn c0fllll\t1t trl .•• llnilh1d lo I 11on.sn19 vnooth-
• ' • • • ·• • ""'h 1 htmed plt11 91111 mi1r111. nu1I
4 full -el ... tulifllf l11Mtt l lG. 139,95 .................. 1117 REG, 139.95 ....•.•.•..•.. SUI fllt~itllftl II tnl ltn!Hlltttlt low 11-------------.C.C.:.:CC:. I cC-C-."C"-,-_,--,_--.,----
Ult .,!Ht This l1vt!Jf rkh w1!nut 'llli• h•Miomt Sptnllh t1!plt dm1u $j>ll'li1h Armol,. by lohnlOtl.CU"Pff .• , Wt 11 turnttd by it'" dllmotnd II ai:11n1tc1 b1 htndoomt grOlod dttwf( lilt lop kl Sotn\1h lly!int bo•I Thll "'"'ln9i .,,d lf\Cludtl lht spcloui fr.,..h l!'d ct1fltd In f•cl! Olk, II hf! t l1'1j1 ci.111 hH' drt"'*" tnd 2 doonl 12" dollb1t drtntr !ht """"' m11 111d bum rn!l•1n1 pli"lc IOlt ond 1!'1 IM Pttlocl Of91nl11r lor t ll yowr
chi1t of llr•wor>, 1 nltM 111~d w comtt C01n11l1t1 with a twtn lr•mtd. hull>lnd'o clotlli"g. i httdbotrd fllt 111111 S:l'971 lou'U pl1lt 91111 mlrronl REG .• 279,11' .••... ,, .••• ,,.,,$125
illtnr ?Nlch lht ••lr.11 ol·l~li otter R[6. 219.11.S ................ SIU
etfkl .fnG ltdty 11 ywr 4'f 10
..... t'-tllllgt Ol l .. il1 Miiii l)o!l•t
Authtntlc {OICl!Oltl •• ,11 ... 9lv•1 lhil
IHstll ml~t luMlor chtl! 1 look
Yll'Y'll lowtl JI hll I mtl•Qllll•nt Ml·
o mtl!et whit ya.u'" loo~l"j I"
•• -row· .. 11111 IO fj11d I If y1u'tt lltrt when !ht doon optnl
W1 h""• 1 l1rge 11ltclioa of hl•d
botrd1 •.• $11•-ish •• , M .. m
• , • tfonttmpor1ry •. , {olonltl
, , •. rtn<:h in tll wood finlllln. otk, p.ctn, chury, walnut ind
m1pl1J All 1l!t1 ..• lwln , , • full
, .. 0Utt~. Don'I min this chtM•
10 M•I ti f'RICll II 1115 Oft th ~11dbo1td of vour (l\oiul
~
in d~ll Ir••
HltlY ••• righl 11 your flnge• 1tp1.
Thil cht'"'lllf Colonl1I d•GP·hO~I Gt·
lltn In w11m mtple mt~tl I Ptrltcl
l a t. '"' 0Yt1 VJ: now. £G. 120.9J .................. $63
R.eG, 169.9 •· · · • · · · · · · · · · ·• •• S3l print 1nd 1<;etnled by t KpoMd 11111t!e
Welttm Slkk1ty crtlltd thll Sptn• trim, II ht• itml·Wrlpped, lt'<enlblt,
l1h book,11t In tMiqut l'lllow. fl fu· detp lo•m 1111 cu1Mon1J Autlu!nllctlly
lures • 1h•l•ts. t driwer ind 11 1tvl1d fr~m 111 •hoped back 10 UJ ba
trirnmod wllh wro1J9hl lion ind K• Pltlltd 1klrtl 11\rrry for lh11 l
ton!1d by h•ndtomt t1Nln91. You I-'-'-'-·-"'--'-'------mull .. , lhl1 t 1£G. 239.9.S .. . ..... Sl3J
for lh• 1nan ol tho hou11 •.• 1!1bot·
•It G4lll C1blntl with 9t1111l!ding doon
thll lock, Hotd1 11~ {6) gur.1 wllh •m-
munlllon dr1wtr btlow which locks for
Ml 'nbh•d kl 'ai:•n. ' ..
•EG. $19 ............ , $9
lht PtrlKI lrtm for 111Gwlnl "' ~our/mi11u1 ll1m1 . , , will ring
1dd1 dflmtl!c 11ylin~ ro vour
$i!tnhh dtcorl le1uttlu1 llnPGtl rd
wrought Iron wllh lh•t'f dttl otk
woodtn 1htlYt'-Hu1ry for fhll ontl
11loa wo· ooft l Yolf'll
10 -· ftell119 nil fOf" dMo Nllt"I pletlU!"I lllii
1011 tlllll'tl I dttp !Olm. rt•enlblt
l -<ullll11n Mii 1nd ht1 u11tfl for your
con•tnlen<el Join !ht ctrthH world
t•y ••• lff IMI 11 lt•llt tnd Stvil
llG. 4'9.'15 ............ , ... , .SV 5
-SPANISH
DECORATOR CHAIR
O!G. S99,9$ .......... $55
11111 htndlOfl\t Spt11!sll cl!1lr 11 K·
Unll'd by I 1lch t lk frtmt t nd I
Alllttd c-Nd: I II hl1 • !hid: fott11 NII cuillloft u,llol1lt r1d in
(•ttll'f'f vlnyl Ind 11 -.nttd on .,,_,h NI Uno c11tui.. Tho porlott
•ccll'll fol" your <itcor , •• • perltd 9ifl. Nllr,., to l"iti ltdtyl
l hll lltfl9 low
ltbll htl lNIJI
doon In U.. bl1t tor i!Ortgt ~..,.
llG. 1•9.9$ ••..•.....•......•• 175
fl lhfl modtni
t•Ptt by t. 11'• long tlld '°"" r11 IO I f\111 llf9 btd Wilh I llPl<lll
fotm '"'"""I YOll< choir.. ol i.ola"-lt•trslblt IHI clllhlonl. REG. 299.9.S ................. S19t
.. Srm,,_1 .. Ou .. n-lut Hldo..t.&td, Ul)o
~olJ11r1d in conly Gold tobrk. ~EG. S39.9.S ................. $297
l1.11tlt modtm l•blu wlth tl'9c1nl in·
lt id IOjll. Tht perfect acetnl for your
homt. 0-• fn>m tnd or too;l!tll ltbln , , , 111 orit low prlct. £1rty Amt1ie1n Out1n-Sl11 Soft 114. IEG. 99.115 .. , • , • , .• , , S.tS Hert•1 t lu•u•l,,.,,1 1ofl fn l1ulllt" .-------------1 ;cod 11111. uohol11trtd in co1llj flo••t pflnl wllh SWHlll••" bKk '" Wt""' DHll !lute Pt<•n 11b111 with ht•"" 1111olt trim, 1lso Kotdl9trdtd for lont
pltn' topl.tnd m111iYt Ct,.,,td ll9'-weu ti'<! 1011 rui111nc1I
lnull q!Jlllily. ll>eir lltfty lilt wlll -EG. 319.95 , . . .•...•. Slt7 Olttit lht mtn In 1our homt ind ..,lf'f
WClll'lfft will IC¥t lktir kiQh . llyl1.
(hoo11 cockltll or ind designs.
l(li. 99.95 ...••.... ' •.•..•.• '.$(>•
Hll'ldctlfttd htndsomo Ubl~• il'I •lch.
g1ow1no p1un. Thtlr S11tni1h l!Ylt 11
Ml off by inl1ld tool 1<1d ~1nd
UNt d lt f'-Cholct ol llylts. O.u \.'.i
off.
~EG. 199.9.S ......•...••.. S97
SPf11ilh rtyld!g II i!1 bt1t •• , thtll
111111iv1, h•ffy t1bl11. in dffo oe~ 1,.
crtflod b1 Krwllt1r wO!h hof.., clNtd
ltg1. S..t "" Y.1 on your thoiu of
cockllll or end 11b!e1. liurry for 11\tw
, , • don't mi-. DUI •
1£6. 139.9.S .................. '60
lltll 1111g11lfittnl oct19on.ol toe~l1ll
lttlll "' 1111111 h11 10 .idlod lll tt lap. lttutlflll Sotnllh il)'tin9,
REG. 149.95 ................ 11 25
A h1nd•omt cll1nnt! b1ck rnt.1nc11 tht
11t1k mod1m llnu of lhll lltto oaf•. 11 i• co~trtd Jn t ·S.Coldigud prottcltd
lwgrd lo 1t1y ht1ll tor .ftln ind
com1; !n I ckoit1 o! colon. 011t ns
!D 1lup 2 on I 4otrn 11111trn1 In
qut1n· 1iu '"""lorll Hurry for thl1
tltlflPl(t orlctl
IE6 • .U9.95 .,.,.,, 12"15
TABLE LAMPS .\.
DI SCONTINUED STYLES
'°"'' ,ai11 ••• '°""" on• ol o kind.
35°/o OFF
Mlnf 1i.,1u . , . 1111ny colon,,_
In 111\y. ontl '11 to ch«tit lroml
Vt(uu from 23 to SJ2.
FURNITURE WAREHOUSE
AND SHOWROOM .
.ii~ oull
A<Cfflt your I finch dttot perftttll "''" l~I• 9•K•lul. •lf<l••I dm11rl If 1 lln· llhed In 1nl\Qut whit~ with gold "Im
anij hu 1 \\'ull""1i>eu"' Mic•nt top lo
n1lll ICfll(hH 1~d mtr>I Corn~ltlt
wl!ll I h•m'd '•Tt•b\119h pt111 11111
ml•f(U •I ht>gt tl••r.nu H•lngl
ctrll rool lhl1 rhttl 11 Pftfttl lo, 1.-------------••Y room tllll n11d'1 ulrt .ior191
IPICI . , • Ml It todlyl
San Diego Freeway
At Beach Blvd. '*"ftllctltd 1111'1P1klty •• .,t lnlln1
i;.,;.irn1,111 . l" 1G011 1111tl Yh1t rlt!o
wtjfllfl """""' >Uott tr, I Ullll In· tl\141• !ht 'Mrtwtrl trllllt d1n1tt with
Mlaltt top, '"-"""" tltlt 9ln1 """'°' .i ... • tun or ..,..., 11u ht•d-~ (lttrfl'(.t plktd toMy II ltW• ... tG. m .ff ................ S16'
RlV. 199.9.S ............. S117
.. llnl.fl\'IOr" 6-0<1wor TrlOlt Dttl~I.
2-doon plu• lwln (7) Mirror>. Flnill!td
11'1 w1mi """ with •"1~1nt!c b<u1 ~trGwtl'I. Outll!y r1111m cor>~!<vetlon,
t1t111,..ltly ®11oroof. Ont onlrl -----------! •rV.6711.95 ............. S111
REG. 114.11.S ....... , •...•.••. 170
ASK ABOUT OUR
REVOLVING
CHARGE PLAN
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At Levitz all the "retail fri lls" ore
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LEVITZ WAREHOUSE AN'o SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD., Ed inger Ave.,
Nut to th• Huntington Shopping Center! '
r
'
Thursd1y, Marth 12, lq10 OAll y PILOT ZG
David(49er ' Goliath (UC~A) Collide Tonight
SEATIU: (AP) -John Wood<n's
UCLA Bruins try to make It four straight
5tartlng torllgbt whUe Jerry Tarkanian's
Cal State (Lon« Beach) 49ers try to see ir 1t1a all for real.
The Bruins and lhe 49ers meet in the
second game of the NCAA \Yestern ,
Regional Basketball Tournament tonight.
The Utah Slate Aggies and Santa Clara
tangle in the opening game.
The winners meet ·Saturday to declde
who gi)E!S to lhe nationals.
UCLA, three straight titles and Lew
Alclndor behind them, go Into action with
a 24-2 record.
The 49ers, just weaned from the college
division and their mark mu to be made,
enters with a 23-3 rte0rd.
Many observers are calling the UCLA·
Sports
Clipped
S1wrt
PN• tM wt.... .t AP/UPI
ST. PETERSBURG -Richie Allen,
toid to show up or sit out, headed today
for the St. Loui.s Cardinals' Spring camp
"with a winning atti tude."
The Cardinals announced late Wed·
nesday night that Allen, one of baseball's
stormy petrels, had agreed to terms and
would fly here immediately to join the
club.
•
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. J o h n
Newcombe started out as the goat, but
came back with a clutch performance to
lead his Australian team to victory and
gain top individual honors in the $20,<KX>
"World Title" tennis competition.
The 1967 Wimbledon and U.S. cham-
pion, now a contract pro, blew an early
lead in the opening match or the three-
day competition Monday and wound up
being upset by Cliff Richey in three sets.
He surged back Tuesday and Wed-
oesday, however, winning his other two
singles matches and teaming with Fred
stolle {or a pair of doubles triumphs as
the Aussies took the best-of-seven event,
i-2. •
EVANSVILLE, lnd. -UC Riversid e
pulled away in lhe final five minutes to
upend St. Joseph's of Indiana, SZ-77, in
the final first round game Wednesday
night of the NCAA College Division bas-
ketball championships.
Tonight Riverside meets Philadelphia
Tettile &Dd Buffalo State duels Tennessee
State It the semifinals.
Rivetildt and · St. Joseph's made it
dooe tJ;niiiib the lint ball and mO<t <11
the ~ haH until the final five
minutef~~:i>lay.
How~~~ paced Riverside with 29
points. · • \'·'. , ...
' •. _.,l •
"' TEMPE:~. -The Callfomla Angels
are looking'fOf-a way to wake up their of-
fense but, as .far as the pitching staff is
concerned, a ~-up blseball is not
the way.
That's because the Angel mOundsmen
would have to thro'v the same;ball as the
rest of the club '4'ould be hitting,
Callfornia"s hurlers didn't have muc h
sue«ss with the 5-X baseball, as it js
now known, when they f~ the Oakland
Athletics on Wednesday.
The A's jumped all over the lively ex-
perimental spheroid for 15 hi~ including
three home runs while California manag-
ed but five bits aa Oakland routed the
Angels 8-3.
The Angels, 2-2. wrapped up their four-
game swing throug h Arizona today
against Seattle.
•
VERO BEACH, Fla. -W 111 1 e
Crawford's two-run home run in the ninth
IMing climaxed a four-run Los Angeles
uprising and gave the Dodgers a 15-14.
\'ictory Wednesday over the Houston
A!tros.
The clubs used the souped-up 5-X
baseball and, combined with a 20-mlle an
hour wind, there were 38 base hits. The
Dodgers had 21.
Houston had an 8-2 lead after three in-
nings but the Dodgers poured across
aeven runs in their half of the third. Bill
Sudakis homered and Andy Kosco, \\'ho
had five hib: in the. game, and We!
Parker each tripled in the big Inning.
Love Milwa ukee,
But Pilots Open
Play in Seattle
Long Beach hassle , reaJ champioMh:ip
game. Washington coach Tex Winter for
one thinks the 4.9ers are the real sleepers
of the tourney.
\Vilh thelr woe defense and their good
running game, Winter says the 4.9ers are
the team to watch.
Tarkanian certainly ls •·atching his
team. He frankly ~ts he's worried
about his aquad having Sf age frigh t in its
first m'ajor tournament appearance.
"My wile asked me il I thought we
could win," Tarkanlan said at a oews
gathering \Vednesday night. 1
"I told ber we could win by as many
as three points or lose by as much u 40.
That's how wide the margin is.
"U we don't get blitzed early, we can
make it a real close game. But UCLA has
blitzed three-quarters of the teams
they've faced.
··1 don 't know how good a learn y,•e
have," he added, "but we're certainly
going to find out."
Wooden doesn't have any doubts about
the 4.9ers.
"Jerry &aid he doesn't know how good
Ou TV To11ighf
9 p .111., Channe l 5
a team he has. \Ve II. I do." Woode n said.
,:.,.He has a real fine team in almost
every respect. ln fact, I don't see why I
have to qualify it by saylng almost. He
has a fine team in eVery respect."
Almost forgoUen in the David and ,
Goliath glamor of the later matchup are
the Aggies aod the Broncos. Naturally
they're underdogs .
Any team in the same field with UCLA
is an underdog. But the Aggies. with a 21·
6 record, and lhe n.s Broncos are preU-y
strong uoderdogs.
Ln tonight's NCAA basketball regionals,
here's the lineup of games:
EAS'l' at Columbia. S.C.-Niagara t22·
5) vs. Vll lanov.i (21·5); St. Bonaventure
(Zl-3) vs. North Carolina State (22~.
~tJDEAST at Columbus, Ohio -Ke""'
lucky (25-1 ) vs. Notre Dame (211);
Jacksonville (14-1) vs. Iowa (I..._).
MIDWEST at Lawrence, Kan. -
Houston (2>3) vs. Drake (21-6) New
~fexico State (2f..2) vs. Kaqsas Stale (19-
71.
Pistol Pete R ev ie-ivs Ca ree r
Maravich's Last Big Target:
.
Winning NIT for His Father
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -There's
one big target left for Pete Maravlc tl
before college basketball's all-lime scor-
ing champ closes his career at Louisiana
State.
He wants the Bayou Tigers to win the
National Invitation Tournament for his
dad.
This isn't merely the wish of a son for
"his father. "Pistol Pete" rewrites the
major college record book every time one
of his jumping one-handers swishes the
basket.
Pete looked back on a headlioe-marked
career in an exclusive interview with The
Associated Press in an office beneath
LSU 's big football stadium.
He touched on its bright moments, and
some dart. ones, but the thought of the
prestigious NIT in New York brought a
burled feeling to the surface.
His father, Press Maravich, coaches
the LSU team. He and Pete came lo
Baton Rouge four years ago and lhis year
gave the Tigers their finest record in 16
years, 21>-8.
"He's given hi s life to basketball."
you ag Maravich said of his father in a
rare expression of emotion for the 21-
year-old shooting star.
"That's not because he's my dad but
rve seen him run g:ime films into the
night, until 2 or 3 o'clock. We really want
to wia this one for him . lt would really
mean something."
That's a tall order wilh the likes of
such powers as Marquette and St. John 's
in the New York tournament opening
next Saturday. I.SU plays Georgetown,
New Pro Football Loop
Plans Stock Issuance
CHICAGO (AP) -Plans for a pro-
posed new pro footbalJ circuit, the
Transamerlcan Football League, which
plans a $10 mllllon stock issue, were an-
nounced Wednesday.
Arlhnr Arkush, of Chicago, spokesman
for the new group said, "Our lawyers are
looking into lhe delicate matter of stock
Jssuance.
"We realize tha t securities and ex-
change commission approval is needed,
but we hope to be able to incorporate,
probably in Delaware."
Arkush said the stock would be sold at
$1 per share If SEC approval is obtained
and the money used to assist each
franchise with management, public rela-
Jjons and promotions.
Four franchises, at a $50,000 fee each,
already have been approved, Arkush
said, for San Antonio, Tex., Hershey, Pa.,
Chicago and a city to be named in
Southern California.
Fort Worth, Tex. and Memphis are -
under consideration for a d d i t i o n a I
franchises by the league which hopes to
begin play this fall.
Arkush said present fra nchise backers
include Henry Hight at San Antonio: Don
O'Shaughncssey of Midland, Tex., at the
Soll"l.hern California site, and Donald
Mowrey, 1-Iarrisburg, Pa ., at Hershey.
Interested in a Fort Worth frallChise is
Tommy 1.-tercer, an official with the
Dallas-Fort Worth baseball club.
D.C., In the opening round Sunday af.
ternoon.
Pete looked back on the three years
which saw him win !he national scoring
title three limes and break the NCAA
major college career scoring reeord for
the three sensons wilh 3,590 points. Hi~
1.304 points this year also set a season
scoring record .
"It's funny but when you look back, on·
ly the bad games really stand out," he
said. "Like the Tennessee game a couple
of y,·eeks ago. We lost it in the last 15
second!: by one point. We shouldn't have
lost that gamr.
"I can't get that game out of my
system," he added. "I didn't have a good
night (he had 30 points) but we had them
beat until that last shot. I thought sure it
would knock us out of the NIT.
"I thought we were going to beat Ken-
tucky," he said or the Feb. 21 game in
Baton Rouge. his last showing before the
home folks. when he scored 64. points.
"They had us all the way but when we
got to within two points late in the game,
I thought we could take them. Dirt we
couldn't get over that bump, we just
couldn't catch them."
Kentucky vaulted into the No. 1 spot
nationally after beating the Tigers 121-
105.
"I really felt good when we got on the
noor for Kentucky," he said. "I felt like I
could hil everything I threw at the
basket. 11lere were. a couple of shots J
know I shouldn't have taken.
"That game meant so much to us. We
were on national television and a chance
to beat the best team in lhe country. It
hurts when you Jose those kind and f
thought for a long time in the dressing
room about what we did wrong.
''Yep, the re are nights when I know I
haven't got it. like against Ole 1'1iss
<Mississippi) last ""eek. I still felt bad
about losing to Tennessee and I hadn't
slept in two nights. I know 1 couldn 't hit
the' Jake ii twas standing on the shore."
1,11'1 Ttlt,i..tto
Tlais Is Docl,ey? ..
Jim i1cKenzie (19\ of the Boston Bruins and Chicago's Dennis Hull
engage in a fist fight after ti.1cKenzie's hard body check on tlie
boards sent Hull sprawling on the ice. Both participants received
£iv e minute penalties for fighting. The game ended in a scoreless tie.
Benefit Game f 01~ Ogata
Shows World Is 01{ Place
The world isn't such a bad place ar.
terall.
That \Vas certainly brought home
\Vednesdny night at Costa Mesa High
School when you looked about the gym
and saw all the people who were giving
up their time to watch a basketball 111me
between the Costa Mesa Police Dept. and
the DAILY PILOT.
Some 874 or them braved the long lines
to buy tickets, not really because they
y.•ere going to see any basketball
virtuosos, but because they wanted to
contribute to the Justin Ogata fund.
Ogata is the 16-year-old Costa Mesa
High wrestler paralyzed f r o m the
-------
WHITE
WASH --
GllilNN WKITll
neck down, except for oome use of his
left arm, following a freak v.•restling ac-
cident in December.
A turnout or fans like the one we saw
Wednesday made you realile that people
aren't really as selfish as you sometimes
believe they are. There were also con·
trlbutions from interested people who
simply couldn't turn out for the gome .
Also, guys like Mesa Mayor Al Pinkley,
who took time to announce the gan1e,
Dllto for scorekeeper Bob Halley, timer
Bill Wettengel, Manuel Mancebo and all
the others who gave up television and
family life to help raise a few bucks for a
family riddled by medical expenses.
And how about the cop.<1'? They took a
generous helping of ribbing m pre.game
stories. Obviously Ibey put In plenty of
practice lime. They also boughl speci~I
T-shirU with the slogan "Support Your
Local Fuzz" to wear as game jerseys.
They were good sports and had the bet-
ter team . Thry deserved to win. But we 'd
certainly welcome a rematch ...
and sister were guests of honor , and their
presence was a steady reminder of why it
was all taking place.
They shoy,·ed me pictures of U1eir son
st LA Orthopaedic hospilal and they
found enough english to tell how much
the y appreciated the many kindnesses
people have bestowed upon them follow·
ing ~jr:,so1fs tragic injury.
They a,i;ked ~ give a big public thank
you to everr~ who has been 10
thoughtful arlf· ~'Wul.
After· chaffin11~tQ them the gashed
nose, lorn tod n'ii11· ·assorted body bat-
terings were all ~. · bile.
•
' {:( > I * .; ~ Aro1111d r Be a t I ·~..i ·, For:mer Newport' .tbor Hip athlete
Craig Riiler ls baeig' .%00 for the UC
Sant• Barbara ~baU team. 1be
form eit ~Uc.be(:· ,t 'been converted le
first base. . -
San Diego State gets Big Eight foe
lowa State as an 1 llh football game thi.s
November in the Border City.
!\1.lke Dunn of Newport Beath Is on thr:
\\-'hJttier College tennis ieam.
And e:i:·Huntington Beach High ace
Mike Contreras averaged 17.7 points per
game with the Arltona State freshman
basketball team thi s season. The froSh
boasted a 15-3 record.
Vall ely Makes
All-Pacifi c 8
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Forward
Sidney \\'icks of champion UCLA was
the "•only unomlnous choice for the av-
conlerence basketba ll team selected by
Pacific·8 coaches.
ST. Petersburg, Fla . (AP) _ Joe AN EXCHANGE OF RI GHTS -Carlos Mark of so receipted for a right to the head. apparenty Radio st.alion.!I KOCM and KWIZ helped
Cronin, American League president, says Trinidad (left) thro\VS a Tight at former world mid-doing more damage than the one he bas just promote the game and they surely
UCLA also placed 6-6 Junior forward
Curtis Rowe and 6-2 senior guard John
Vallely on the second team.
"we love Milwaukee" but be pledged dleweight champion Emile, Gri!filh at New York's thro,vn . deserve a large share or credit fQI" their
Wednesday to "do everything possible'' to Madison Square Garden Wednesday night. Mark aJ-as!flistance in bringing out that crowd.
see that the' financially troubled PIJotsi-~----.:...--------~...;:~=============:==============--~J:•:•l:;n~·•:parents and a younger brother open the baseball season In SeaWe.
There at.Ill were persistent reports,
however, that Milwaukee, w It bou t
baseball aince the National League yank·
ed the Brave1 away just before the 1967
season began, would get the Pilot.I'
franchise before 19'10'1 first. games.
"We still art.Jn SeatUe and.. we._ will d9
everything J>OSS.ible to resolve Seattle's
financial problem" Cronin told an Im-
promptu news conference.
Amid threats ol. anUtn1st leglslatlon,
and multimllllOll' do 11 a r court suits,
Cronin abruptly called off a special
leagu~ meeting on the Seattle situation at
1'1mpa on Tuesday. It has not been
ttschedu.?.t!'J.
Griffith Comes Ali:ve • Ill 9th to Win
NEW YORK (AP) -Emile Griffith, a
five-time world cham~ion hopjng to hOJd
a lite again, us fi s vast experience
Wednesday night to pound out' a
unanimous derision over yooug Carlos
Mark Jn a 12·round middleweight fight at
1t1ttdlson Square Garden .
1lle 3f-year-old Grtfrith, three times
welterweight champ and twice mid-
dleweight king. came allve In the ninth
round lO take charge of the fighl.
In the ninth the New York veteran
caught lhe. 23-)'ear-old 1ttark, from
1'rlnldod, with a good right and two good
left hooks early and !ICOred well to the
body late in the round. Griffith was In
command the rest of the way .
Judge Tony Castellano scored It 8-.4,
Judge Al Berl had it 6-5--1 •nd referee
Arthur Mercante had it »an for Grir-
llib. 1be As&ociatod Pre.a J<Ored ll 1-5
fOr Girfrilh. who Is look.Ing for another
middleweight Ulle bout with N I n o
Benvenuti.
Grilfllh y.•elghed JS6YJ In scoring his
62nd vlclory against 11 losses and no
dr:iws. f\lark, 157, now 11"18=3-l.
Mark kept the fight very close In the
first eight rounds by using a 11napping left
jnb and a good left to the body. His OC·
caslonal rlghlll alao were mainly lo th•
body.
But he could not COJ>e wllh Griffith's
combfnatlons, his better punching power
and his over·all ring generalship,
especially in the c.loslng rounds.
There were no knockdowns and neither
nghter was marterl.
The. victory was lht 18th against three
~losses fqr GrUfith ln Onrden maln events.
A crowd of about 4,000 paJd an
J51lmalc<I gal• ol !30,000.
There y.·ere no repeate.r.s on the Urst
team from Inst year. Joining Wicks on
the Hrst teom announced Wednesday
were forwarrl George Irvine · o t
\Vashington. center Stan Love of Oregon
and guards Rick Erickson of Washington
State and Paul \Vcstphal of Soulhem
California.
Wicks, a 6..ft Junior, led the conference
in rebounding an average or 12.9 a gome.
Love, a 6-9 junJor. was the scoring leader
at 20.8 and rooked lhlrd In rebounds wltn
10.2.
lrvlnt, 6-6, and £rlekson, M . are
seniors. \Vestphal. M. was the only
sophomore on the tlrsl 1eam.
Other second team selections "·ere
Jnckle RJdgle , 6·4 junior forWard from
Citllfomlo: Steve Hawes, &-9 sophomore
cenler from \Vashlngton, and Claude Tct..
ry , 6-5 sophomore guard rrom Stanford.
•
•
•
. .. 'I .--a.
JC DAIL V PILOT •• ihll!'.Sdiy, March 12, 1970
BREAKING AWAY -Jim Wood (25) of the DAILY
PILOT breaks away from police defender Phil
Donohue in \Vednesday night's benefit game. Roger
Car1son breaks ahead oi \Vood while Craig Sheff
Santa Ana
Home Run
Rips Mesa
By ROGER CARLSON
ot .,,. 0.111 1'1111 Sl•lf
Santa Ana lligh 's invading
Saints exploded /or '"'O ho1ne
runs in the fourth inning and
wenl on t.o down Costa :f\1esa
\\'cdnesday afternoon, 10-4, in
a non-league baseball game.
f\1csa appeared to be breez-
ing in the early goings behind
the pitching of Mark Lindner,
"'ho reti red the side in order
for the first three innings.
The Mustangs had a 2-0 lead
artcr a quick sortee in the se-
cond frame netted coach Jim
Hagey's forces a pair o{ runs.
Tom Neth and T o m
Sampson got aboard on infield
hits and scored ·on a Saint
throwing error at second base.
However, f\1tsa's success
Vi'as throttled in the fourth
rrame when Afikc Pope of San-
ta Ana smacked a three-run
homer just inside the left field
fool line with mates Bob Ben-
jamin and Bob lt1cGuckin
aboard.
Saint Jeff Jiles followed that
act v.ilh a solo homer to left
and the visitors were off and
running.
The "'inners added three
1nore runs the following frame
to salt ii av.•ay and then
repeated that act i11 the
seventh for the runa\\•ay final
lally.
f\-tesa·s other l\\'O scores
came in the fifth on Dale
Kuh<'ska's single, bringing in
Rich Fielder and Dave Barton .
Fielder led the. hosts in hit·
ling \\'ilh three safeties.
?>.1esa returns to non-league
action Friday night :it 8
\\'ith a game i1gainst Ne\\'porl
llarbor at Cosla f\l('sa Park.
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Co,ps V ancJ:uish Pilot.
Jf By' ART VINSEL
ot 1M C.Ol" Plllt flllt
Taking a fast and last lead -on Glenn
White 's nrrt and la.st basket -the DAI·
~'f::C:~~;c!;...;..,..,~ LY PILOT blew a %-0 margin over the
l Costa Mesa Cop Shop cagers Wednesday,
with only 47 minute.! left to play.
ed Banner and before it was over, a lot or
stars were setn -by fans in the
bleachers -and also the gladiators down
there on the boards.
Whtte, DAILY PlLOT Sports Editor.
made the tlrst two point!, four fouls •nd
ttu'ee falls, ~lng his gla55es twice and
suffering a gashed nose .
waistline measurements -Sfl..31, and
one patrolman was losing his shorts.
Action heated up, with officers Tom
Lazar and Chven KreUI driving in Umc
and time again, as bOth racked up 19
each, while the DAILY PILOT's Tom
rortune bucketed 17.
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Good .thing the quarters weren't any
.. 2 longer.
The rest or the clash involved come-
from-behind play and the cops did all of
lt, 1noving the ball to a 63-« victory like
It had red light.! and a siren.
Midway in the third quarter, Costa
~tesa Mayor Alvin L. P i n k l e y ,
sportscaiiter, announced that no matter
who scored highest the basketball game
"His percentage sort of went down the
lqbe~,'' said the scorekeeper.
Loyal lo their warring hoopsters, Costa
1'1esa Police Department athletic sup-
porters lined one side of the 1'1ustang
gym, while DAILY PILOT people oc-
cupied the other.
A lot of people didn't care either way.
"Thls Isn't es:actly like the G\obetrot-was a success. An esUmated 874 per.sons crammed the le.rs do it, maybe 'Sweet Georgia Brown'
Costa rtfe.sa High School gym, with $306 in the, background would help," muttered
collec ted for the Justin Ogata Fund, to ... one gtrl.
benefit the paralyzed ltf1;1stang wrestler. By lhe end of lhe third . quarler, lh~
The game started with the Star Spang!-score balanced out like respecUve
Just like Bill Ru3sel1 and Wilt
Charriberlain -well, a lot like them -
Editor Thomas Keevll and Lt. Austin
Smith, the two senior adversarle1,
sparkplugged their younger men.
Diiiy flllll 140 ,.,. !'JI
C1rsli!'1Utn
Sl\t.U
Fo•1-
Whlle ....
"rldrr-. Sl•Vfl"l)On
TO!tl1
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L1i•r Pt!mer
Krttl Jtck1<1n
(Olltll
WUr.on
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$11'1111'1
Roo•'t
11 U 1' U lottl1
Sc•rt ty Qw1rttn " u 21 I I IL '
It II pl I' '/ S O It
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Coast Area Prep Cagers
Had Outstanding Season
Unearned
Runs Ruin
OCC, 3-0 By ROGER CAIU.SON past, but it was still a 17-9 year and a third
' ,... By HOWARD L. HANDY ot 1•1 01u1 P11111 Sl•ft place finish in the tough Sunset League.
The 1969-70 basketball scene in prep ac· Laguna Beach., -The Artists suffered Ill l~t 01111 Pllll Sllff tion around the Orange Coast area has to through an 0-14 Crestview League season.
NOR\VALK -Two uneam-go down as one of the finest ever campaigns Despite the poor record, the Artists 3:fe o~
ed runs and a streak 0{ for the area. timistic about next year's chances 111 the
wildness ·were costly for To start with, six of the area's 13 schools Orange League. Several returning lettermen made il to lhe CIF playoffs. are expected to be in the !old .
Orange Coast pitcher Steve But more than that. nearly every school f\Iarina -The Vlkes made it back to the
Pinter \Vednesday afternoon had a successful year regardless or its rin· CIF AAAA playoffs and lost the Sunset ~ L ! as the Cerritos Falcons kept ish in league play. League championship by lhe margin of one
their South Coast Conferen~ Here's a capsule rundown on each team point, that coming on an 18-foot field goal
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!;l,\ll'I' PILOT P ... 19J by P•I O'Donlltll
"" record unblemished with a 3-0 and what it accomplished: by \Yestminster with no time remaining . Corona del Mar -The Sea Kings, under a Included among the victories for f\farina
(51) steps on Donohue's heel. Other police (from
left) are Bill Bechtel, Gary Earwig and Q\ven
Kreza. 1·he latter hit 19 as the cops outclassed ~heir
foe, 63-44.
victory on the winners' new coach and with no returning varsity was lhe 74-70 win over Compton, ending the
diamond. squadmen, captured their third consecutive latter's CIF record 66-game winning streak.
Cerrito.! is no'v .f-0 in con-Jrvine League title. And Huntington Beach High's «-game
feren ce action while the And things look pretty good for lhe fu-loop win streak was snapped by Marlna, 58·
lure Y:ith standouts Don Killian (junior) 51
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Pirates are 1-3. and Mike Sevier (sophomore) due to return ~later Dei -The l\1onarchs made it to the
Pinter opened the game by for next season. CIF playoffs ror the rirst time in five years
hilting Falcon Jeadoff batter Costa Mesa -The Mustangs won nine as third place finishe.rs in the tough Ange·
Steve Staggs. He advanced to games during the campaign -which is lus League. Among Mater Del's 20 victim! about three times better than \11hat some were Rancho Alamitos, Los Alamitos, West•
second on a passed ball and observers expected at the outset. They clip-mlnsler, Arcadia and L<lyola.
too k third on a wild pitch ped league champion Corona del Mar t'''ice Mission Viejo -The Diablos got to the
while Ron Diggle was striking and should be much improved next year. CIF playoffs for the first time and ·their
out. Edison -Coach Dave l\1ohs' Chargers had highly-successful Jightv.·eight teams give ev·
Carlo.! Hernandez then hit a a most successful campaign, winning eight ery indication of even better lhings to come
times despite playing the entire season with--in the future.
Oy ball lo center field to bring out a home court. Newport Harbor -The Sailors might have
the run across and Cerritos \I/hat 's more, the Chargers did it with only had their best team in years, but heartbreak·
held the lead all the way with {our seniors on the squad. ing losses -four of six league defeats by
the final tv.·o markers being Estancia -The Eagle.! made lt to L he the margin or t\\'O points or less -kept the
scored in the eighth. CIF playoffs as a third-place entry from the Tars out of the playotrs.
D a v e Brunell gained a Irvine League, And, they had the league's San Clemente -An up and down year for
shutout but not without the ac-most valuable player in Skip \Yill iams, a the Tritons. However, despite an 11-15 over·
curate throwing arm of center 6-6 college prospect. all mark, the Trilons disposed of Anaheim,
fielder Dlggle. In the third. Fountain Valley -The Barons showed ex-Lakewood, St. Anthony, Huntington Beach
Orange Coast first sacker cellent promise for the future, v.•inning six and Foothill among others.
Mike Paul singled to left and of their final 11 league outings. Included in \Vestminsler -The best year in th•
took second on an error. that string were wins over Corona de! Mar school's history with its first-fver Sunset
\Yllh two away, Bob Leavy and Estancia, two playoff entrants. League championship. The Llom came 011
singled lo center and Paul at-Huntington Beach -It wasn't the champ-strong after a slow start to nab the litre
templed to score from second. fonshlp campaign at Huntington Beach lhat with a 12-2 mark. Their Dan Broderick wa9
Diggle threw him out and no Oiler fon.s have been accustomed to in the named player of the year in Orange County.
other Pirate runner was able tol---'---'-----------'------'----"-"--'-::...'..:::.....:._::._::.::.c:.:.::...:::...:::.:::::.:::.:::::::::;
reach third base despite a
seven-hit attack.
Pinter appeared to tire In
the eighth inning arter striking
out leadorf batter Hernandez.
A fielder's choice forced a
man at second but Frank
Davies came in with a double
to score the second Falcon
tally.
Bad luck continued to plague
him after he hit another batter
to load the bases. He struck out
opposing pitcher Brunell but
the ball got away from cat-
cher Tom King and the third
run scored.
Each pitcher allowed seven
hits. Pinter struck out seven
while Brunell whiffed six.
Leading hitter for Orange
Coast was Bill Powell with a
double and single in four trips.
The Pirates will attempt to
get back in the race with a
doubleheader Saturday. San
Diego will visil the Costa
Mesa campus for the twin bill
beginning at U o'clock. The
Border City team played San
Diego Mesa \Vedne.!day after
losing Its opener.
'''"'!ti 5!_,.n. •11 0
Olool•. et •, o1 t o
Its an Old Forester
kind of day.
Andinthe~q
100~ tliere's
, been a lot of them.
For 100 years, people who enjoy the taste of a
great Kentucky Bourbon have turned to Old Forester.
(~)
86 proof.
I 0 0 0
l 0 ' 7 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 I 1 0 1 ! 1 n ~ g g g
PILOT'S BIG GUN -•ron1 Fortune 145 ) \I' h e c 1 s and deals for t1vo of his 17
points \\·hiJc D:\IL'' l'IL01' lcan1n1;i te Jeff Stevenson looks on during \Vedncs·
da y ni ght 's benefit ba~kcthall {?) g;:une \1·il h !he police. 'fhc cops handcuffed
lhe hacks. 6;.J-44.
~trn1n0ei. 11 1
1 .. 1 •• ID j I E':c~,l' • I j' Mu11tl. c J, o I 8•untf1. o O "'v~r:i, '' ]f 1 1 ,
ktr• ~' '""'"" • • • o,.,,,. coe11 ooo aoo OllCl-O 1 I
-Oto
f Olll1lESTI •• $6.29 ' fifth
s.1,,11 ""' oce no 1 10 11 C.11 Mtu G111 ~1D 0-• ID
JC Baseball
IOUTH (0"5T COftFlilll!HCl
•lTflcl.G& c,m1,,. ~ t 1 1 ooe
Mt $111 AMlll>IO J D t I l!OCI ,.lllle~ffln ' ' I SGO ' Eii...,.. ,,o ,•l'• ~~-... l f : ·n: f i.ocr 0 l ' 000 1 ••llltt4MI•'/ ,,.,.n c,,rllM :s. Orlftll'I 1N1t e
Ml, ""' Muanlo 10, Fu!l"IO" I U~ OlftO /M'fl lG, 6lfln D't'QO I
GWC
Goldl'n \\t'SI C1>lll'J:I' hn~~{'I·
b:ill forltrnl ~ arc l'\pc'llt'tl lo
br \a.!i:I~ 11npru1l"d ne~1
:.rason. .u:rord1n" 10 ··0;1rh
Die~ Str1ckl111. pr i n1 a r 1 I \
bt'c:.aU~it' lh1· Hu~lll·r~ '1111 hr
playing 111 lheir ov.11 g)nl
nas1un1.
Ctrrltos Hxl 000 O:!ll~ 1
Outlook Improved
hrlp ;1 ~real d('i1I 111 recru111111.
'<l\l:> Strirkl1n
Le;1dln@ the Hst o1 returnees
nl"\\ seaii.011 \\' 11 1 be Chris
Th11rn11!!0\l. who set :i r.'.l!!h of
'<·or1n~ rel·ords th•s pnst ~ear
'rhon1pson totaled 70i po1nl'I
du ring tlll' 196!J.i0 c:impalgn to
11.1pe out l\1ch Van D<'r Pol's
lottr-~1·ar-old sin11l1' season
n1:irk nl ~
TI1c11np~on 1\•ill 1\ork at 11
~uanl or fo~ard spot nrxt
i-eason, "It depends on oor
Jk'rsonnel." sa~·s !he Ru!ttcr
coach.
llnan Ambroz1ch. Golden
l\'csrs leathng scor<'r during
the 1968-69 season, also is ex·
fll'Clt>d lo retu rn . lie sat oul
lhe p:isl season "'Ith grade
problems.
"I \Vas plensed wilh the lm-
pro\'ement v,·e made at t he
t'rtd of the season. \Ve ne\'er
gave up. \\re had no exper-
ience lo start "'ith. We prob-
ably v.ould hal'e v.·on eight or
nine more games wilh the im-
provement that we made al
tht' end of the year."
At 86 or 100 proof "There is noth ing better in the market:'
I
'''""°'''• 011!1ff "-" 011110 11 or~• C011! It· Ml, Ufl !<11'9fllo II c.,,1101 11
FwllelfOll I! &llot• Aft.I 11J
Nii Olftl """" OH•
The Hustlers h;1v1• h:id i11
pracllcl· and play lh('tr tu1n)P'i
a1 Ornn&c l'oa,1 CullrJ11' tl"K'
pa,1 four yl'ar... Con~truC'tU111
on lhc UC'\.\ f'rfflllrn \\C'~( l:1r1h-
ty 111 l'XJ)(X'lt'd tn be <'l.l1nrilrted
In St'p:1,mbi·r
111· al~o h:1d ;i 50-polnl uut1i.1t
ln the nu ... tlcr~· (lnnl g11mc to
~l·t Hr1otl1<"r r('corcl. eclips1n11.
\'11n 0<"r l'ul's rnark nf 46.
Gold(n \\'r\"t 11as able to win
onl,v fl\'C l!<lnlCs In 27 tries
du rinit tht' ptlsl seaso11 and
:Stricklin ad1n lls 1l "'as 11
tllsappo1ntf11 g year.
Golden \Vest played two of
ii! be tter games to concludt'
the senson, holding Southern
C11llfornie Confere nce co-
champlon LA Harbor to a 79-
77 win and defeating East LA, 1:11<1\IO' u•~o;HI tOU•ION •• u .. ,tN -·· ........ l9011.UOlll' _II,,_ l\JO~~ Do.llW#""''°""''°""•l •OUllo~ll.lt ... .-.... 1uc.., • .,,,.
Hn1•1nr 11 g;i n1n.1:.1u111 will ~trlrklui 15 not sure v,·hcther 118-101. ----------------------------
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Thunday, Marth 12, l~iO DAILY PILOT %1
Lon g Beach Ace
State's Top Star
{Ang Beaeh City College's
Chuck Terry lops the 1970 All·
Caillornla junior c o 11 e g e
basketball team, announced
today.
Terry, a&.& sophomore, wa!
named player or the year.
Selected to the lirst team
were James Speed (Imperial
Valley), Mik e Re id
(Compton), Mike Hamm0ck
(Merritt), John Safford
(Merced) and Dwight Holiday
(Uartnell).
ln addition to second and
third units or the all-slate
team, the best players in the
six Southern California con--
ferences are recognized on the
afl-SoCal squad.
Jolni.ng Terry, Speed and
Reid on the AU-Southern
·californlll first team are state
rebounding leader Sam Cash
of San Berna~dino Valley and
Reid's frosh teammate at
Compton, Larry Hollyfield.
Swen Langeberg of Cypress
and Jerry Brucks of Fullerton
were named to the second
teams of both the slate and
Southern California squadS.
College of the Desert's Al
Winfield, who outpolled Speed
in the balloting for lhe Desert
Conference player of the year,
was named to the third team
state squad and the second
All-Southern California team.
A pair of Southern
California Conference players
John Dearman ( LA
Harbor) and Don Strong
(LACC ) -were selected to
the SoCal second team while
Ev Fopma of Cerritos and the
South Coast Conference was
named to the thirt! unit.
All.c1tff9r.l1
'11ver Fl"I TMm ColttM ••• T ..
Sotl'd, tmiw.rltl Vl11tY •• .. Reid, Comoton ... '" HMnfl\Odl, M~•!ll .. , !:: Sifford. MerctCI .,
+folid1y, HilrtneJI ... .. kaM TM m J1ckSQO'I. H&ricodl; •• "· c ...... $111 8.,,,lnllno .. ... W(!llY!ltld, C<l'TlPIOll •• ''· Jon11son, CCSF •• .. L1"9~r!I, CYll•H1 '" .. 8rllek1, Ful~rton •• .. Tlllrd THiii ~!,.'11eJ,',111~1P111tdel'l4I .. ... tl ... klttle, Comoton ... Jllson. Conlr• Cest• ., .. Wl11fl91d, Or..ert ... ... Oo1tm111, LA H1rbor •• ... 811ndl11~. Bul!t. ,. ... Al~~::O:t"t~::.:'•mlt
'llYtr Ctllll'M ... T" Terry, 1.-Bt•Cfl •• !:: S!>N!<l, 1m~r11 V•llev •• Reid. ~omo1on ... ... C••l'I. an 6.e.rn11rdino ... "· HollYlleld, Corn11ron .. '" SKenll Tiii!\ l.1119e~, CYr,•u=. '" .. Brue~~ uller on •• .. McWll 11m1, Pai..dtllll ... !:: LUii~. C"'"oton •• Wlnflelcf, Oner! ... li Otllrman, LA Harbor .. Strong, 1.ACC .,
T11tr• Tetm ~~·b~~~~l1os •• '" ., "· Hiii, 8•kt,,ll11cf ., !:: Adant1, AnlflOllt VlllfY ., if.,-· Vfffllrt ... ... uml!kH, cnrvs ... ...
Golden West Golfers
Vikings
Bag 2-1
Triri1nph
By PHJL ROSS
Of 1111 O.J~ 1'1111 Siii!
Tony Cresci, Marina's all·
Sunset League third baseman,
gets more than a lair share of·
walks during Lbe average prep
baseball season.
But, the one he nceived in
the elghlh. inning of Wed·
nesday's extra·innlng affair
against visiting Estancia paid
dividends for the Vikings.
A! it turned out. Cresci
scored the decisive run ln a 2-1
tiff when an Eagle drifted lnto
right field and dropped what
appeared to be a routine po~
up off the bat of Jim Frank.
The Vike junior raced borne
from second base v.•lth_· the
WiMing tally.
The victory gave Marina a
5--1 non-league mark as the
Sunset season moved one
game closer to reality.
Burly Ed Anderson, who
caught Tuesday's win over
Pacifica in the final round of
the Huntington Beach tourney,
we.nt the route on the mound
for Ray Allen's Vikings.
The determined senior used
an assortment of breaking
pitches and fastballs and
struck out 11 Eagles, wb.ile
walking only one and giving up
a mere four safeties.
Ru stler Spike Ho11or Roll
JC CLASSIC
'{JNDER W .4 Y
Top.....sed Complon faces
Contra Costa a.od Long Beach
CC meets Hartnell in ion!ght'1
opening round action in the
state junior college ba1ketball
tournamenl at LBCC.
Swimmers
Win,69-30
FV Ace Makes List
The Compton game gels
under way at 1 with the Long
Beach tilt at t .
ln this afternoon's pair of
games, LACC niet C I t y
College of Sao Francisco and
Fullerton played San Joaquin
Delta.
On Friday, the w1Mer of the
LACC game tangles with the
Compton-Contra Costa victor
at 4 with the Fullerton-San
Joaquin Delta winner facing
tlhe Hartnell·LBCC victor at 9.
Consolation games are set for
2 and 7.
Monarchs ·
Suffer 74
Sethacl{.
By CRIJG SHEFF
01 lltt O•llY 1'1191 Sl•fl
Don Lippoldt and Keith
Donaldson each won a pair or
events to lead Golden West
College's swim team to a 6~
victory over Cerritos Wed·
nesday in the Rustlers' pool.
Uppoldt captured the 100
free with a time of 51.5 and
had a clocking of 1:52.2 ln the
200 free. Donaldson had a lime
of 2.22.1 in the 200 butterfly
and a season best of 22.9 ln the
5" ~ree.
Other winners for Golden
West included. Greg Feinberg
in lhe 200 backstroke il:U.2)
and Kris Swenson In the 200
individual.medley (Z: 10.6).
Coach Tom Hermstad·s
team returns to action a week
from Friday, hosting Rio Hon-
do.
Fountain Valley «O ace
Steve Christiano ls the only
Orange_ Coast area athlete
gracing the cu rrent list of CJF
Southern Section track bests
for 1970.
Christ iano breezed to a One
49.I mark in the quarter
against Newport Feb. 24 to
place him in a fifth.place tie
with Pasadena's Paul Moses
on the sectional list behlad the
leader, Centennial's Terr y
Ta ylor. Taylor has clocked
49.0.
Other Orange County cinder
stars listed in the lop five in
their e\'ents include Sunny
Hills' Luis Castle and Jackie
White of Santa Ana , third and
Fullert.oa'a Ktn Paget Js
fifth on the shot put list with a
57·10Y.a mark recorded last
Sunset
Standings
fourth in the 100 at t . 7 sv11M11 L-•••k•tt.all
\Vhite is also third in the 220 Jv11:1~!~11'1
and Loa"ra 's Steve Elkins is w.. ....1 Hun!I"''°" fl~atl'I 10 J the 220 leader at 22.0. "'~"" H•rllllr 10 ,
Chris ~1acker of La Habra is ~"·;~... 't '
third in the mile at 4:25.3, ~;:::;~~iir : 1~
Sunny Hills' Wa rd Kinsman, S•n!• An• ' 1l ... second in the 120 highs at 14.3 won LH t w1014 ~UMI'
Q ...... W11t Utl Ofl Cltfl'lln d Hu11tl"gl011 ... Kii 11 l F 1• l > ' 400 ,,... •• i. ... -•• Golcllrl W•$1. an Keith Denson or Santa Wt l!trn J t K~,1~~11f~.~ I Tl;;:11~~~li1rok• _ 1. Smllh (Cl. 1. Ana Valley. fifth In the 180 ~::,'mt~;,, ' 1 2P,.:.,,j:~~~1•1on
TIYllll' IC), l. 811111 tGW), Tifl'lf: lows at 19.3. Anal'ltlm ' 6 11'.~1. 't'rd111 9.jOY• ''~'frte -1. LIPCtDldt (GWl, '· Rol11 Santa Ana and Loara are 1--4 :f:~ H•rtior g i~ Pr ct, •m11'Jo'(~ VAULT (GW)1 J, lfMMI IC) Tlmt: 51.~. , h CM Whitt, Domlfl-1 1011 ...,11,.11., -1. 00ri11doon cGw1. 2. 1n t e 440 relay with 42.2 and w.. Ln1 ~111, M•s'••t ~;t,T.l, CGW), S. MarllH CC). Tlfl'lf: 42.7 marks. Lowelfs 3:26 to s .... ~.~n~.~ ,,.... :g ~ Rr{O:~iJ. a~~=~~l!ot
50 ''" -I. DoNtd-fGW ), '· th ·1 I I r rth nil . .,.¥•• ~ I • "''"' lncil1WOOd Jol'lnMIOI IGWJ. l. Smlrh CCI. Time: e ml ere ay paces OU . 'ltWPOrl Htrbor ' ' • LON• JUMI"
S ta A V 11 ' 11 ". D R r G d G Wetlml"IHt ~ 7 M(AttlU••r. 81•1• an na a ey s 61 50t ''"' -1. Mar•"J 1c1• 1 Swenson ave uss o ar en rove ""lh~!rn 1 io )l•ll•"· MO ~olden batted in three runs (G;:,l.iJck~~~~G~\. TF-~~s.~it'Gwi. is in a four-~·ay tie for third in wn1"1111111111 L••9'1t wrnrn111 1 11 l~~'\wn, t:l~ 'th 1. w1rd 1Gw>, s. Ollw•• cc1. t 1m1: the high ju1np at 6--4 while v1r11~ ~od"'h co;;Pi':"
WJ a tw1>11.1n triple and a 21~'· ''" -1, Ll_.cll rGw 1. 2. Rancho Alamitos astronaut w111u~ "4:1: ;~: ,.,':.!i~~T l'VT
single lo lead his club lo a 7--4 ~1~2~1 ici. 1. H119~ IGWI Time: Rich Richard has flown 13·9 ~:1~"1"' 1r~ f'u~W~th~~111(•r,11t1
win over Mater Dei ln the ... ~t!;·cG:..1·. i &1~;'1rr:' 118rl· 2. for fourth in the pole vault. ~~~1!nci,.i: •'K" ~ ~~"l:''~""''' no
'"I lt1 111
111 ~,j
ll .. , •• •• ~-~ ••• ' .. I 0.1 ' 1·· l ::;
•• ••• ...
ti
Among Best • State
The pair of moundsmen us-
ed by Estancla's Ed Wynkoop
were also impressive.
Starter Jim Watson, a tall,
rangy i:nuci.leballer, relin·
quished only four hits to
Marina , while reliefer Clay
Mahoney absorbed the loss.
although he did not allow a
single enemy batter to reach
base via the hit route.
third round cf the Santa Anal ljjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ baseball tournament Wednes-1 ~
Golden West CoUege golf
has come a long way since the
college opened four years ago.
The Rustlers went through
two winless seasons before
recording a respectable ll·ll
mark last year.
But this yea r Is a different
story. Golden West may have
one of the finest teams in the
state with a 5-1 record, and
golf coach Ray Shackleford is
the first to admit it.
•·\Ve do have on e of the best
teams in the state and the
Jr. Golfer s
In Easter
To11rnev
" Junfor golfers in the Orange
Coast area are invited to
participate in <1n Ea st er
J unior Invitational tournament
at Costa P.1esa Golf and Coun·
try Club on Thursday, March
26.
~tlke Evinger, head pro--
ressional at the course, has of·
fici al entry blanks available
for the J8·hole medal play
tourrreyllrt.
Competition is for both boys
and girls and is divided into
age groups.
Girls competition Is in three
categories, JS-17, IZ.14 and II
and under,
The boys v•ill compete In
four groups. Ohlest is lhe 15-17
category ~·ith IJ..14, 10·12 and
9 and under.
The entry fee or $4.50 in·
eludes green fees, lunch and
participation ii) the prize
awards.
I OI N lg1lf!I
Richard Hall and Harry
1-lilkc have been elected presi·
dent and vice president of the
El Niguel Country Club men 's
golf association for 1970.
Eugene Elliott and A. H.
Smith were selected a s
secretary and treasurer.
Board members will in·
elude: Dr. Walter R. Hen·
derson, Lamar Hart, Lou
Evans, Rick Gouin, Thomas
Peden, Lowell Heacock, Frank
Binney, Donald Dundas,
Gordon Greene, ?tforris Porter
and William Thomas.
19111 Uule
The \Vestnunsler Parks and
Recreation Department will be
offering t\\'O golf instructional
classes for six con5ecutive
Saturdays beginning April ll
at 9 a.m.
Regisll'allon fee is $3 pet
persoo and further in·
formaUon can be obtained by
contaclin" the department at
8200 \Vestminster Ave. In the
Civic Center or by phoning
893~511.
Cage Scores
MC.U. C9''-DM1l911 TIUl"l'WI'
O...tflf' f'IMl1
&llH•lf St•!• 7J. J!tt-1' P'tlllt . Talll• IOI. AIMl'lull 11111, 5i
T-. '2, klutP! C.ko'I• I. tt
UC 1llvtr11* 12. St."-"'"'• 11111. 11
NAIA T..,.....,
.. llUIMI ""'"' St•eMtl I'. AVll/fl 11, A11-!1 Gtl.11
K.,.1\ldlY I . 7f. E•u (1•1,.., Wl1. 4111
J11Ck11;111ll•" tO, N011!111$1,la. U
Mf...,lt..O 5!. N , Mo<"r11 H•l"'ifW rt
ftlli'l'll N. Mn. It, Ar1t•111•t Ttcfl II
Gu!Hord If. Et""'" M~. U
C111lr•I S!~Olllo, 1.t. Wlt.T 11
c.,,•r•I Wf>fl, 16. w111&vr• •
in
reason is balance.1 That's
where you win your matches.
You've got to have six good
ones if you're going to win ,"
says Shackleford.
The word balance might be
an understatement. The
Rustlers' six golfers are all
averaging under 80 strokes per
outing.
The top two Golden West
golfers at th is moment are
Mike Nichols and Dare Stolba,
both of whom are ·averaging
75. Ken Kr ibel and Steve
Hayes are hitting at a 76 clip,
followed by Larry Eynon (77)
and Mark Swain (79).
Nichols and Kribel are
returnees from last year's
team v;hile Stolba is a transfer
from Citrus. The other thrtt
are freshmen.
Stolba placed th ird in the
Eastern Conference J a st
season and ninth in the state •
Nichols finished seventh in the
conference last season .
Shackleford frankly admit!I
he hasn 'I had anything to do
with recruiting any of the
golfe rs. adding that Kribel and
Nichols did most of the
recruiting themselves.
"That 's the way it is "'ith
golf and tennis," !I a y s
Shackleford, "most of the
players belong to clubs and
are good friends with one
another. Once you g e t
something started, it just con·
tinues."
To dale. Golden West has
split with Santa Ana, beaten
Orange ·Coast twice a n d
defeated Fullerton and LACC,
lh<' latter win com ing Monday
in the first Southern Cal iforn ia
Conferen~e outing of th·e year.
Shackleford figures his
toughest competition in con-
ference play will come from
Rio Hondo and LA Harbor, but
he says that the Rustlers
should fini sh first or second.
Friday Marina travels to
Loara in search of its sixth
straight victory, while the
Eagles venture into the San
Gabriel Valley to take on
Rowland of La Puente.
•1!1MLI {\)
M1rl"' UI
1o t 11n1 ' • I • ' . . J 0 0 0 I 0 0 0
> ! ' . 1 : 0
J 0 i ' l g • g
21 I 1 o ... t" rtll C•mDbell, :tll ' 0 0 o
Mllltr.11 f'ol'o l(lun11rntl.,, flll
S.tmlfl, 11 I 0 I 0
curr111 cl 1 1 1 1 ~~;~ l'j! e•mber1ori. ,.. J g • ~~r.t.. 1-. : o ! g
Murlllo. rl j 0 I 0 Wllt.t 110 A-rton. p 0 I I loltl• 21 2 4 1 kffe h" lftnlft111 It M E
ma 010 01-1 4 1
DllCI 010 02-2 4 I
Prep Tennis
day at Memorial Park in San·
ta Ana.
Bolden banged his triple to
deep right with two outs and
two mates aboard in the open-
ing inning to give Valley a 2.0
lead.
But the Mona rchs came
right back wilh thret tallies In
the home hair of the iMlng to
take a 3·2 advantage.
Singles by Ray Salazar. Ron
Muniz, and Gary Simpson and
a crucial error that allowed
two of the runs lo score with
two outs gave the Monarchs
the advantage.
Valley rebounded to lie the
score in the third frame when
Bolden singled home a team·
mate. The winners then took a
6-3 margin with a three·run
outburst in the fourth frame
on a hit batsman, an error, a
single and a triple b y
leftfielder Charlie Gip!On.
lttater Dei cut the margin to
6-4 with a nm ilL_ lhe fourth en
a single by Jay Hasler, a wali:
and two outfield cuts.
Valley added ii! final run in
the fifth.
Salazar, Muniz and Simpsbn
each had two hits for coach
Bob Wigmore's losers-all
singles.
The loss ran Mater Del's
season record to 3-2, after
three straight victories.
''""' Oii 10 •• r II nl
S1l11tr. II • I ' .
~ver, 3b
Mu1111 lo •
Htulle'l'I. (f J, •
1
,·
SlmtllOll, rl~ •, 01 g co11.-;e. ( A<1am1, 211 l 0 01 0o H11ler. II I
M•rm•ud. •rf I 0 D 0
Win.oh o.o ;'I APOlelOll, rt I 0 To!t~ ,., 4 $•11'• .. ~ v111n en •• , 11 n1 Marll~.u 'lj' Whllf, d 4 0 ~ll!>d. c 4 I i ~r!e;!.l~ ~1 i, I gi j !1~~~'.~11 rf Reooe\I· 11 .J. o o TGlll ,. 1 S
St-'' 1"1111111 • • • 2!11 llO 0-7 1 I
300 100 11--4 I 5
SNOW
3 n . IN LOCAL MOUNTAINS
• If you'v• ever want.t
to ski NOW1S
THl TIMll
CIOSS CWWWllf •W
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lOll Wl!IS , •••••• , • ,,...,. t4.•t 1970 llAD SllS ....
KIUT IOO .. 200.00
720 . . . .. 185.00
klllf 606 .. 165.00
360 ....... 155.00
120 I ... , . 140,00
320 w .. "'. 125.00 240 ' •••••• 100.00
.. u
150.00
lM.75
l2S.7S
116.25
lOS.00
t S.75
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flllKIASS SllS
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SKIS FREE
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DOWN MU. ---.....let.J185 's ........ ~· ... •tt· $175
120 ................. $14$
SlAlOM .... , • r• Rtt. S170
DE:U ..owoa ... •tt. $tts
.::i.. 57 5
CHllDIEll'S C611B
.. " '"'" 4"41... -s........ ~on . ,.,." ..•. ~
IDllwttSS • 19.tS 11 00
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SKI RfPOftT-ICI 1·2545
SAHTA ANA I FASHIOll ISlNIO J FUWITON 21t t. 4th ST. NfWIJOl:T mm1 601 S. IUQ.11
IC1 7·5721 644-2111 171·5'11
1110N lOl'it •••• , •• , .iot.•1 M.H
IOI LWUIS • , , •••.•• •t .M >4.H
fAMOUS llANO ,.MOS
fCANNOT
MENflON
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Ml'lll: mMl • , •••• ff ... 21.IJ
1970 MOl'otCA
IONll P\.AtllC ••••• "... '"·" "''°' """''°' . •• • ...... .. M"NA UAnct • , , .M.N 'lll.H
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Your · Orange County Exclusive Distributor
YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. Inc.
Introduces THE ALL NEW
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Come In and See It Now At Special lntrodudory
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Puncturs Resist1nt
Grip-S11/ Construction
••. Four plle1 plll1 two bel!11hn111 off m•ny punr.•
lurina obfec!s, but H I n~il 1hould g•l throuah
, •• Goodye1r puncture re•l1!1nt Gr;lp·Se•I Con·
11ruction 1dd1 • mr.1111re of prorr.r.t!on by
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Nature uses layers oI muscle fibers that nex, bunch,··
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Pot,.1t1r Cord
• , • four l!lln, •ct Hkt muscl• fib1n th1t nn,
tlretcb, ud r1lnfrnu t11 deliver power
10 the ro•d.
Adr1ne1d Trs1d D11ign NEVER
8_.EFORE. , •• forw•rd·1rippln1 and 1lde·srlppl111 rlb1
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A GOODYEAR TIRE
'
all of Southern Calif.or11iu
YOUNCi & LANE TIRE CO. Inc.
COSTA MESA LAGUNA IEACH
1596 NEWPORT BL VO. e Ph. 548-9313 412 OCEAN AVE. e Ph. 494-6666
. -·
• •
•
••• • • •
DAILV l'ILOI T-.i, M"'h 12, 1970
1WHAT'S IN-
OUTDOORI?
The Southern CalltQm.ia Ba.mnaslers will ho1d their postponed
bbl fishing clinic this weekend at Laite Cachuma. The expert
flahennen wjll be on hend lo iratruct fello\v anglers on how to
catch· bass in Lake ,cachuma. along with man.v pointers on how
to use bass flahlilg tackle.
RepGrls from Cichuma indicate bass are. still very active Jn
nbout JO fee-\ ot waler and many anglers are returning lo the
docks \\'llh limits. The lake has risen more tlian a feet since the
heavy rains of last week, but lht angling prospects for trout and
bass are excdltnt.
Lake Cachwna and the adjoining camp grounds are designed to
give the entirt family all that they require in ouldoor recreation.
The camp-sites are clean and the camping facilities are second to
none.
Boats and motors are available for reru and private boat
launching is permitted. For latrsl fishing reports and boat
reservations phone (905) 68M040.
Good Catrhe• nt Lake S1'ertcood
'we Sberwtod opeDed Its 1t70 ~aaoa on a 1ood DOie, 11
fldlermen scored on 1ood catches of bus and crappie. n11 writer
fi.a.td wlib Alec Ates:andre of Costa Mesa and found good bas1 ac-
Uoa t. about eight feet or water.
F'Wlla1 wltb Smithwick "Water-Gattrs" and ltad htad jigs.
111·e ·managflll In bag 11 ba11 to 5% pounds and a haDd.fld of crap-
pie to I Ve pounds laktn· ·near submerged lrees ju5t off t II e
1bottllne.
Other Ql~rli OD tbe lake fou nd fish in similar Spot!.
SllerWood Is open tcvtn days a week ad ba1 a fleet of more
tllaa 188 nnta1 boats. For rtttnatlons phone (80$1 495-!51%.
Fishing 6ood Id Vail Lake
Vail Lake came back 10 life again and is producing some nice
catches of bass, crappie and trout.
None of the species or fish found in tht-lake can be rated 85
red·hot, but look for increased activity as soon as the water
warms up a bit.
The bass in Vail are moving into the shallows in the early
morning hours, but most of the fishermen are scoring on the
brot1Ztbacks to four J>OUnds in about 25 feet of water. The crappie
are hitting yellow and white weighted jigs drifted past the island
in about 15 feel of water.
Besl Tro1't f'isl1i119 at lrci~1e Lake
Jnbte Lakt still has the best trout fishing locally. Russ
Cleary, operator or the lake, reports tbat tbe trout are really
11tartlng to bite on cheese and m111hm1Uow1, b11t that an11tr1
fi1Mn1 with bardware are not doin& too well.
TH best trout action Is in about 28 feel of water off Troul
Jsland, but Cleary feels the trout will be showi111 up almo1t
uywhere for the resl of the season.
1'be heavy r11D1 of last week 11owed down bass an1Ua1, wlslcb
was just getting 1tarted.
But a few Irvine bas1 anglers art finding fair action on
bigmouths to llve pou.adt near the drop-offs. As soon as the wattr
warms up a few degrea the bass will be movtnc Into shallow
"'aler, to start tbelr spa•nlng activities.
An increase in the water t.emperatare will also induct the
crappie. catfish and bluegill lo start biting better.
Co,.,rado Ril'er Lakes ln1pro.,.,d
The word is out that bass fishing in the lakes formed by dam·
ming the Colorado River is good. Officials at Black ~feadow Lan.
ding on Lake Havasu report the bass art moving out of the deep
water and into the coves.
Good catches ranging from 1 ~~ to five pounds, are being
taken on lures, large minnows and waterdogs. Waterdogs are, by
all odds, a good mt-thod for taking the big bass and the most
bass.
The slripers of Lake Havasu are still stealing the show, as oc·
casional fish lo 25 pounds are being caught by patient anglers
drifting in deep "'al.er.
Bono 10 Be A•si911ed at Crowley Lake
The Los An1ele1 City Recreation and Parks Department will
assign boats for the opening or Crowley Lake sta~nc Mooday at I
a.m. The boats will be assigned on 1 nrsl come, lint served basis.
Anglers deslring rt1la.I boats for the opening weekend should
be in Hae at the Elyslu Lodce. %111 Stadium Way, Elyllan Part
"·ell before Ute I o'clock starUn1 time.
Appllcatioa1 lor dock and buoy 1torage will be late.a al Ws
lime. -l1'enll1er Sl"w• .Soll. Wnler Artivity
The measu rable weather t-arly this week kept most or the
1porUishing boats al our local landing tied to the docks. A few or
the boats managed to get out with light loads and found surface
a c~on slow, but rock·fl1h very cooperative.
On the calmer days or last week fishing for bass. barracuda
and bonito was good and officials at Art's Landing, Davey·s
Locker and San Clemente Sportflshing look for a return or the
surface fishing as soon as th(' weatherman cooperates.
Bay fishing is good for sand and bay bass. \vith a re"' nice
halibut being gaffed by drift fishermen. The back bay is good for
croaker, as are the dcrper channels on the change of the Lide.
A Dollflr 111ell .Spe111
Tbert-Is now before lht State Legislaturt, a bill introduced h}'
E . Mobley of Fresoo. "'·hich would call for • watertowl bunter In
California lo pay a SI duck slump in addition to bls $.' rederal
st.amp.
Thi1 exlra dollar ""Ould bt put to 'fl'Ork by lbe iilate to help
prolect and propagate lht ducks and geeH or tbt Pacific fly•ay.
The extra Income would ht used to fight the botulism wbh:h
kills many lbousnnds of ducks when It bil5 our central valleys and
part of it would be donated to the Ducks U11Umlted for tltelr WM'k
in Canada .,.·here mort than g percent or tht North American
docks are hatchrd.
It is tbt opinion ur lht writer that all or U!> duck a114 gttae,
hunters would profit, hy this r:xlra stamp. and thl~ writer weald be
ol'M! of the On:t in line lo purchase such a stamp.
INSTALLED
CHAIN-LINK
FENCING
WARDS DOES IT ALL!
\ ', I • , • • \ ' I I \
1 PHONE 892-6411
\f\~1\f{U 1 FOR FREE EST IM ATE
•.
Violators
Cough Up
I
$477 ,026
Game law violators chipped
In H7'1,0'ltl for California fish
and wildlife conse•vatlon pro-
grams last year, the Depart·
ment of Fish and Game
reported today.
That was the amount or
tines levied on persons con·
vlcted of fish and game Jaw
violations during 1969. Under
slate law, fines art divided
evenly between the state's
Fish and Game Preservation
Fund and lht county in which
the vldlatlon occurs, with the
money earmarked ror fish and
game consei;vation.
l\'ardens a?Tested 16,199
persons during the year, com·
pared with 16,073 the previous
year, and 662 cases were
dis missed.
A total or 16,366 violations
was reported during ~ year.
The number or violations is
higher than the number of ar.
res!.s because some violators
were cited for more than ooe
offense.
Fines were suspended in 596
cases.
As-usual, the number one
violation was angling without
a license, loUowed b y
possession of a loaded firearm
in a vehicle. Wardens cited
6,360 unlicensed anglers and
1,372 toters of loaded guns.
Angling with more than one
line accounted for 1,139 cita-
tions and clam and sheWish
violations totaled 1,136.
Other violations included :
trout 763, deer 643, other in-
• , . . ' I
land fish 616, waterrov;I 573, FULL STRINGERS -Alec Alexandre of Costa Mesa hefts a nice stringer of
litter 553, pheasant 362, public bass a nd crappie he and his fi s.hing partner caug~t . at La~e ~herwood «;:a~ly
shoot ing area trespass 271, no thi s week. Bass \Vere active 1n shallow \vater h1tt1n g S1ruthw1ck lures, while
inland fish stamp 246, ocean the crappie \Vere taken on yellow and white weighted jigs. sportflsh 232, and hunting ....::::...::.:::!'.!:::.....::.:::__:::::.:::_:::..:.:.:.:.::.::.....:::.::.....:.:::_::.........::.:-"=.-'---.:..O'---------
without a lice-nse 1$8.
Outdoor Brief I
I
Colorado River
Heavily Planted
The Colorado River from over and above Hemet Lake's
Needles upstream tor 10 miles regular allotment o~ catching•
will be stocked with more than size rainbows. The f1ngerllngs,
six tons of catching-size rain· \Vhich should reach catching
bow trout In a combined size within the year. were put
~ federal·state hatchery planting into Hemet to take advantage
program to begin March 18 of the lake's abundance of
and wind up next October. natural fish food.
Five tons of rainbows will be DFG Regional 1if a n a C e r
stoc ked in separate 2,000-Robert D. Montgomery not~
pound planls on 1.farch 18 and . that n1any of the larger rain·
20 May 28 and 29 and Sept. 3. bows now being taken at ' . ' Hemet La.kt are the rt.suit of An . addit1on~I 12,400 poun~s fingerling plants made there
of rambows will be stocked m in prior years.
October. Pleasant Valley Reservoir
The trout "'ill be sloc~e<i on the Q\vens River upstream
just . prior ~ three m~1or from Bishop will be stocked
public use pen<>?s on the river witll 10,000 catching·siu rain.
-Easter vacation (March 21-bow troqt. each month during
29 ). Memorial Day (May 30) -the spring and fall under the
and Labor Day (~pt. 7). year around tr'out season
The rainbows will be stocked which opened there March 1.
to take advantage o~ !he This year the Department of
area's excellent fall hsh.ing Fish aud Game has already
weather, stocked Pleasant Valley with
During March alone, the 20 ooo catchables and 600
federal hat chery at Willow su°rplus rainbow brood flab
Beach is stocking nearly 7% weighing two to four pounds
tons of rainbows in Lake apiece. An additional 250 to
J\.fohave and the Nevada· 500 surplus brood fish wUI be
Arizona section of I h e stocked in the reservoir durlnt
Colorado River. the remainder of March.
Those plants will distribute Pleasant Valley will receive
2.000 pounds from t ~ e l\\•o plants of 5,000 catching·
Ca I i f or n ia·Nevada Line site ra inbows each month until
upstream to Davis Dam, hot weatfler hits the canyon.
12 ,000 pounds throughout Lake probably in June. Planting will ~fohave, and 400 pounds in tht be resumed in the cooler
\Villow Beach seclion of the "·eather of fall.
river.
•
Califomia's 1970 abalone
sportfislling season o p en s
state\\'i~ on Monday, l<.1arch
16.
The Department of Fish and
Game reports the season will
continue through January 14,
1970.
•
A federal depredation order
allowing shooting of coots will
expire Sunday in seven San
Joaquin Valley counties, the
Department of Fish and Game
reported today.
It will be the final day cools
may be taken in the counties
of Fresno. Kern. Kings, Mad·
era, ~~reed, Stanislaus, and
• Tulare under the depredation Courts revoked 10 hunting
licenses and JO sportfishing
lietnses and suspended 9 bun·
ting licenses and 5 fishing
licenses.
Top Cowboys, Broncos
Featured in Indoor Rodeo
Fishing hours for the prized order issued by tht U.S.#.
ocean delicacy are one-hall Bureau of Sport Fisheries and
hour before sunrise to one-hale \Vildlife.
Violators served a total of
2,034 days in jail, and 4,118
days were suspended by
court.!!.
Rain Threat
Meniyjng
Trout Plant
With the threat of more rain
on the heels of last week's
stream·floodi11g storm, the
Department of Fish and Game
is havlng to play its Southern
California trout stocking pro·
gram by ear. '
For this "'eek the OFG has
!>Cheduled the stoc king of
catching·size rainbows in 26
Southland lakes and streams.
subject to weathtr, water and
road conditions.
Last week muddy streams
and low water temperatures,
along with a foot or new snow
in the high country, tem·
porarily wiped out lhe stock·
ing of 14 streams and lakes.
Following, listed by county,
are the Southern California
waters the DFG hopes to stock
this week:
LOS ANGELES -Big Rock
Creek, Big Tujunga Creek up.
per section, Jackson Lake.
Legg Lake, Little Rock Creek.
Little Rock Reservoir, Pud·
dingstone Reservoir. S a n
Gabriel River East. North and
\Vest Forks.
SAN BERNARDINO -Big
Bear Lake. City C r e e k ,
Gregory Lake, Santa Ana
Rlvt-r, South Fork Santa Ana
River.
SAN DIEGO -Doane Lake.
San IAlis Rey River . Santa
i\largarita River. S a n I a
Ysabel Cretk.
SANTA BARBARA -
Cachuma Lake.
VENTURA -Casitas Lake,
r-.1atillja Creek, Piru Lake.
Santa Paula Creek, Sespe
Creek upper and lO\\'er sec·
lions, Ventura River North
Fork.
FLYING FUN!
by WAYNE CHASE
Long Beach's Pacific lndoor
Rodeo has always dr awn lhe
cream of the crop or touring
rodeo cowboys, and each of
the seven years the event has
been held at the Long Beach
Arena these rodeo pros have
been tested by alJ..star lineup~
of equally professional broncs
and bulls.
The eighth edition, Friday
through Sunday, will be no ex·
ception.
The rod eo, Sou t hern
California's largest, will con1·
bine the best ani1nals from
both of the slate·s pro rodeo
strings, the Flying U or
1'1arysville and the Jay Spear
at Newhall.
The two sent a total of 17
head to tht-1969 Naliooal
Finals. No single ·rodeo com·
pany in the United States or
Canada bad so many selected
for the sport's season-ending
pla)'offs.
Sixty broncs and Jfl bulls
will be brought to the Long
Beach Arena for the fi ve
performances Friday night,
Saturday and Sunday. Tickets
are available at the arena box
office and at all area ticket
outlets.
In Lhe past. world chain·
pions Cnsey Tibbs, Marty
\Vood, Jim Houston and Paul
P..taye have all tasted the Long
Beach Arena soil, and the cur·
rent king of the cowboys, all-
round champion Larry Mahan ,
has three times picked himself
up before the eight-second
qualifying ·whislle.
Human stars like 1ifahan,
"'ho last yeai set a new money
~·irt11ing reeord o( $61,500 for
the season, get most of the
glory and attention, but the
broncs and bulls are fully as
much individu al personalities.
And they lt:ad a far softer life
than do the cowboys.
Contestants drive all night
to compete -most top hands
"'ill be commuting bel\\'eeen
hour alter sunset. and the The closure of tile seven
limit is five abalone in com· counties will halt coot shootine
bination of all species. on the DFG's Los Banos, Men·
~tinimum size Jim its, dota. and San Luis Wasteway
measured In greatest shell v.•ildlife areas.
diameter are : red abalone 7 The Bureau and the DFG
inches ; grtt-n abalone 614 in-said crop depredation by coots
Long Beach and the Phoenix Finals 10 years, including the ches: pink abalone 6 Inches; has been brought under con.
rodeos this week -while the last seven in succession -IYhite abalone 6 inches : black tro1 in the San Juaquin Vil·
abalone and all other species 5 ley. but 1% other counties anirnals are always brought lo more than any horse in rodeo. o"penro by the order will re-
l inches. a town se\'eral days before the In 1969, he flattened 10 o main open for coot shooting
rodeo. the 18 bronc ride rs who e until t.lay 17 unless the Bureau
The humans grab a meal on mounted him, including his op-f 1.: tenninates the order earlier. The 1969-70 sport isuing The other counties are: the fly. The livestock ill ponent in the las! heal at the season for lobster ends Alameda , Butte, c 0 I u s 1 •
regularly fed hvice a day, a National Finals. \Vednesday, the Department GleM. Placer, Sacramento •. •
specially prepared diet of Each animal has his own of Fish and Game reports. San Joaquin, Santa Clara,
story, but there 's a u!Uque one TI1e season on s Pin Y Solano, Sutter. Yolo, and " pellets containing eight dif· · d b th d in the family background of lobsters. prize Y ousan s Yuba.
ferent ingredients, measurid three Flying u broncs, all half of skin divers who seek them-;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
out to each animal. brothers from the s a m c annually in Southern, . •
Do the broncs and bulfs like Nevada ranch . Callforri.ia, runs from the first I. :
their \i'fe? Record s show the Sons of a well-bred but unru-Wednesday in October through •
good ones often outlast a ly thoroughbred stallion, the the first Wednesday after the • .• --~.
generation or conte slants. three have all been selected 15th of ~1arch each yea r.
senior citizen of the string is for the national 'finals each of Hemet Lake in the San All•1111t•Mt.rmr ~.
the little buckskin bronc \\lhiz the three years they have been Jacinto Mount a i o s or """...,.-u
Bang, probably the most in rodeo. Riverside County ha.s just 1912 HAllOI ILYD.
fam ous bronc in rodeo. He Though It ls well recognized received a bonus stocking of COSTA MISA
made his debut in professional that di.spositict1 characteristics 34,200 fingerling rainbow trout . D.11, 10.t • s.t. t.&
rodeo lhe same month and breed strongly in horses, 21h to 31h: inches in length.1~~·~·"'~4~-~··~·~'"="~M="~"'="""'=~ d -• ne\•er •-rore has there been a fr~m the Department of Fish year ihat ~1aha~ gra uatC\.I i.n; a·
from the third grade in brolher-c<imbination so sue-and Game·s Mojave 1ver
Brooks, Ore . cessful. All three, bareback Hatchery.
This will be \\lhiz Bang's broncs Slingshot, Southern The young rainbows, which
Gloomy Gus Is
Your Kindo Guy !~th rodeo season. I-le has , Pride and lligh Tide , will be in were surplus to lbe DFG's
ibeieinipilickieidilio~r ~t!heiiNiaitii"'1iailiiaicitii0<1iiatiLoiinigiBie~ach~.~~==~c~a~tc:h~ab~l~et~rou:t ~p~ro~g=ra:m:,::•r:e~~~~ii~
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, _.SP~EC~IAL~_...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_._.~:----~Wh~it~e~St~ag~W~a~m~up~S~ui~ts_. __ l i
Laguna Swim Trunks Nylon Sleeping Bags-$14.95 sea Suits_ Surf Suits
Mess Kits-$1.79 Tennis Dresses-$13.95 to $26.95
Folding Shovel-$1.79 Dunlop Tennis Rackets-$14.95
Tube Tents-$1.79 up Wilson-Bancroft-Davis Rackets
T2000 Steel Rackets-$30.DD
Mountain King Pack & Bag-$19.95 (frame on~) . ~. ,
Universal Pack & Bag-$39.95 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls-Dozen $7.50
,....,..w,...,,,-,.1;-,,-,,,-.,-,;,-•• -•• -;, -•• -.-•• ;-,;,.,-,,-;,-;;;.-;;-;,;; Duck Feet Fins Blemish..:...$6.95 Wilson Tennis Balls-Dozen $8.35
111c1111r'f' for 11f• f!yin9 7 h1ndv ii yo11r p!11n1 i1 r1n91.
A ••
11
""'''"''"' ,,,. '" " ........... r... Converse Skid Grip Tennis Shoes cr1h, 1f co11'11. Ho ... 1v1r, t11r1, in111tl rol1li"t b11co111. D k F j F•lnS Rotr $8 93 ""';, ,, .... ,, .,,;, •• -. " ... ,, ..... ,....... .... uc ee ••. -· Mens-$7.75 1r1 l11di1p11101hl1 on 1 phn1 t1b!t .. ;tibilit, to other piloh.
,,,, .. "" ........... ;, ·•· '""'' ,,,, '" ....... ;, Cress1· Full Foot F1·ns-t5.88 Ladi'es-$7.25 air. ltu l1•1ly to h•pp111. f
Qo1il ov11·l~t·llllt ";,;. Al HAIUIO!! AYIATIOJf Wt ollft' ~
''"'• " ·'
1
·" .. ··" •• •• ,., .. , "~ '"0
'" , .. _ Masks-Snorkles J k Purcell Tenn1·s Shoes ta 95 ' •• ,,,.,. ..,,., ""'''"""" ,~, .. " ........ '~"· .,,.. ac -.,... • I I I I CfflM UO OlllY $t 50 •~ tioy,. •.'• t!ttl IRlrt I ff t 111 li ft '• Cllf'rokff lto Otlly 11•.JO, !'fllll .,o. ff dball 61
l111tr11l'llflll p1111 I 1ho11h4 b1 ,,..,. ...,..™ ,,. '" .._ ..... O!'•• Champion an oves ·~
"'1' '"..'~ ''
4
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1
• ;,.h '•,•;!"· !~'":'H!~1'J~· ... ':i~~~ ;r:; $3 95-$4 5G-$5 95-$6 50 >. o;. I .... 9111911 I 0111 b. Wtrntr Aw ' l<+llOO. °""' from Rawl1'ngs Baseball M1'tts .• 111d•bl1. A11 111!1fr!tlic d l11c· 1\llWIM to Mw1 d111y, "8 •1"' 1n • • ' ' ;.
tioit f!t14•r, • •o •mp 9 ,,..,.. ow coh,111111 11111 ttr ,_ hr fllohl ~
'"· ....... '"' ....... , "' ~'· "~·.. Ad'1rondak Bats Speedo Swim Suits & Trunks ~ (•blr1 •P••~tl ••• nof or1ly T '
v11f11I, bvt i1111t••l1~t lor 1l1tr WATCH NEX T be ~
.... '"'"';., '"' '''"""· wEEK FOR Spot Bill Baseball Shoes Bike parts-Tires-u s ~ Yow c1r1 "•"•'lit¥• lo• "'uth STATISTICS ~ _::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.._~ __________ ll....'.'.'':':'·....::··:·~,~··~'·~·~·i•:·:·'~·:;':"...'.....'.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::....J I!. ................................................................................... ~
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It's Boat Show Time
Here Are The Facts
\\'HAT: Second annual Western National Bo.at and fl.1arine
Show, produced by H. Werner Buck In his 251h
year of staging outdoor recreatlon Expos.
\\'HERE: Anaheim Convention Center, 800 West Katella
Aye., Anaheim, just across the street from
Disneyland.
WHEN: Friday, fl.1arch 13~ through Saturday, ~-!arch 22.
Show hours -7 to It p.m. March 13; 2 to 10
to p.m. other weekdays ; noon to 10 :30 p.m.
Saturdays; noon to 8 p.n1. Sundays.
WHY: To present some 500 or the newest mode.LS in
sailing craft and pow.er cruisers, plus marine
accessories. This is a family show with boats
ranging from those for youngsters and adults or
modest means to luxury yachts and cruisers
for the most affluent.
ADflflSSION: Adults $1.50; youngsters 6 lo 12 years, 75c;
klds free; parking, 50c.
Armadai4 waits
Show Visitors
The largest indoor armada
Jn the west goes on display
tomorrow night at t Ii e
Anaheim Convention Center,
when veteran producer H.
\Verner Buck unveils his se-
cond annual Westem National
Boat and Jlilarine Show.
The show opens at 7 p.m.
Friday, al % p.m. other
weekdays and at noon on
weekends. It will cose at 7
p.m. Sunday, March 22.
Several hundred boats ,
ranging from dinghies to lux·
ury sailboats and plush power
cruisers,. will cover some
300,000 square feet or space in
the Convention Center Cilm-
plex. •
"King" or the show will be a
$300,000 Chris Craft cruiser, 60
feet long and weighing 40 tons.
It'll dohlinate the 100,000-
square-foot Exhibit H a I J ,
devoted entirely to the wide
variety ol power b o at s
available. This marks the only
Indoor expo at which the lux.
ury Chris will be shown this
year.
"Queen" or the show will be
the new Columbia 43, latest
addition to the fleet or craft
manufactured by the Costa
~lesa·based company.
the big Bail crafl will be
Shock.
Bound to be an eye<:atche.r
in the boat show ill a concrete
powerboat b y Lam.Crete.
lnYentor Ray Duff of Santa
Ana, who owns the patents on
I.he aew concrete formula, will
display an J8-foot powerboat.
The hull is constructed of Che
new material which requires
no m e t a I i c reinforcement,
Dun says. This will be its first
public appearance.
Besides the big Chris Craft,
other familiar po!A·er boat
names in the Elhibit Hal wW
inciude Hatteras, T r o j a n ,
Uniflite, Bertram, Glastron,
Luhrs, Larson, C h r y s I e r ,
Dorsett. Slickcrart, Starfire,
Tahiti, Harbour and ohers.
Orange County M a r i n e
Dealers Association members ·11?~~
have taken some Tl ,000 square j['il'"-i...,i'{j feet of space to display their
":uiety or power boats. Most
or them offer models for
trailering to fresh as well as
salt water.
Another first in the show is
the }loliday Resorter, a trl-hull
hoi.::;e boat offered by Of-
fenhau.ser ~farine. It is a new,
low profile house boat equally
at home on Uie ocean as on
•
Thu11day, MMch 12, 1970 DAILY PILOT 29
Only boat to be disp layed
outside the l.:onvention Center
"'ill be a Columbia 50, which
will be silting on I.he Katella
Avenue side of the big parking
lot.
The 8.5-foot-high ceiling of
the Arena makes it an f.'"·
cellent showcase for sailing
craft, all of which will have
sails hoisted. Besides the
Columbia 43, other sleek
\Vhilaker Corp. sailing crtiit in
the Arena will be t h e
Coronado a n d Kettenburg.
Another familiar name among
fresh \Yater.
In the Grand Lobby con-
necting the Arena and Exhibit
Hall, lhere·u be marine ac--
cessaries displayed in a
carpeted showcase.
SHAPE, AHOY! -With film starlet Lenore Stevens at the helm, who cares if
the boat is on dry land and going nowhere -excwt maybe by trailer to inland
Anaheim? The message is that Lenore, 8Jong \vith some other shiply shapes.
'viii be on display fcom Friday right on through March 22 at 'lhe Second Annual
\Vestern National Boat and Marine Sho\v at the Anaheim Convention Center.
.. ,
BUCK AWARD -H. \Varner Buck (left), veteran boat and trade show produ-
cer, poses with starlet Lenore Stevens, 13th District U.S. Po\ver Squadron Com-
mander \Villiam Grant and the H. Werner Buck Award trophy to be given a-
way at Buck's show which opens Friday in Anaheim. A\vard 'viii be given to
memb er of so1ne power squadron in 13th di strict who has "done the most dur-
ing the year to conlrib~te to the lasting benefit of all pleasure bo aters."
Extra attractions Jn the lob-
by wil l be a display ·by Tri·
County Lakes (inc lud Ing
Camanche, Hogan and Pardee
reservoirs) which offer ex-
cellent boating in the Mother
Lode country some 40 miles
northeast oC Stockton : and a
Siskiyou County booth.
:Jiber/orm
See "US" at the Show!
NIEL'S BOAT SALES
• Boats • Motors
• Trailer & Marine Access's
11 034 Sepulved1 Blvd,,
AT THE BOAT SHOW
SEE THE
HEATHKIT ELECTRONIC CENTER DISPLAY
Kit Ml·19
$79.95
MWW-18
$535.00
lt•••mbl..cl wtih ch..,rteltt • 11)
NEW HEATHKIT
FISH SPOT·
TER •• , An lnv•lueble Aid
TO Fl1hermen , , • Solid-
St•te .• , Self-Cont1ined .,.
Kit Ml-lt
$92.50
Completelv Port•ble
••• Extra Wide Tran•-
ducer Sending Pit•
tern For Better Cov-
erage Of Fithlng Are•
, • , Compares With
Similar Units Selllrig
For UpToThrHTimn
Its Price.
NEW MEATH KIT 5 FUNCTION MARINE ACCESSORY·
••. Foghorri. Hall•r. Bo1thorn, Li1tener &: Inter-
com , , , All Solld·Stet•
~ ·~
Construction fol' Mexl•
mum Rellablllty •• , OP•
er•t•• On 1Z voe Ship•
Power ••• The Simple.
Low-Cost W11y To Add
Five Ship-board Saf•tY
Convenlencet.
OTHER MONEY SAVING HEATHKIT MARINE GEAR
NEW HEATHKIT DEPTH SOUNDER••• Adv11nced Solid-
St11te Dnign With Exclusive Heath Noia• Rajection
Circuitry .,, Thru-Hull Transduc•r Or High Spffd Trantom Mount
Tr11n1ducer,,. A Remerk11ble D11pth Sounder At A Remerkable Price
NEW HEATHKIT MARINER 4-BAND RADIO DIR ECTION
FINDER ••, An Accur1ta Solld·Stete RDF And Ex·
tended CoY•age Recelwr In A Sing I•~ ComJ)>9ct PKbg• , •• Tun••
AM, CW, And SSI Stetlona ,,. A Truly ExC11>tionel Velue'" Merine
Electronic•
••• , .. '4t'lll '"·
NEW! Heathkit Solid-State
Auto T une·Up Meter • • .
Met1ure1 Ow1ll, RPM end DC Volt1 On
3, 4, 6 & 8 Cylinder 4-Cycla E"gines ..
o.~ $359~
NEW HEATH VHF fFM RADIO ·
TELEPHONE ••, Com-
pletety Factory Assembled •• , FCC Typ.-
.Accepted , , , Truii f..Ch11nnel Capability
. , • Owner Installation Capability When
Ordered With Crystals •• , Plus Option•!
Full Remote Control for Only f22.95 With
Unique Plug-la Remot• Control AcCM·
aory P1ck•R• , •• Th• Finest VH F·fh-i
Radlotel1phon• Aveileble -Anywhw• -
At Ariy Pric•
SKI OP.TIONAL
•
e Hetthkit Solid.Stt l• fu•I Vtpor D•leclor
e H•tlhkil ln"'''•r D•li~en AC Pow1r Anywh•••
e H•ethlit low·Cott M•ri n• Power Con~•rt•r
e A Wid• Choic• of R•d iol•f•phon •• & Ant•nn1•
e Hetthlit R.•tDmfl'lend•d U11i~•ri ity O,ck Sp11~1• e H•1tl1k lt Solid.Stet• Techo~el•r ., .For Ally lot!
e H•1thkit "loonl •·l lk•" , •• ld11I Tr•n1port1tion
Whtr•"•' Yo11 Ti,.Up
Te r .. ch Heethklt Electronlc Center, t1ka Harlter lhtd. te 1•11 Aw•., .. st on lall • few 1hert lllocka to J30 l•1t
hll er t•k• S•nt• Ana l'r .. w•y to H1rbor llwd., H•rllor llwd. te lall, • few 1hort llloclt1 and yev'r• here .
SALIS & ,ARTS
776·,420
STOU HOURS: Mon.-i'rf, '·'· Sot. t.s
HEATHKIT
330 U.ST lo\LL, ANAHllM
SHVICI
77 .. ,42J
LOOK WHATS NEW
FROM HEATH! • ~
NEW Heathkit" 8-Track
Stereo Tape Player ,
With Stereo , Cartridge
"' ( PllYI 4D minu111 .,, f11lms 1f
inltlufritnttb playid by WorW fa••
C1pitDI records rtc0rditl1 artistll
'6495
Entertaining fun , •. to build and to ase
HEATHKIT 8i ClJ;z,
, ''"", .-••' l ~l>•"'''Q '~'"'l l l"M.,h\Al~A! I
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Th1.1rsclay, March 12. 1970
Fantasy I
Fits on
Trailer I ·
The newest Ji'antasy Is a
compact, ocea n.going cabin
cruiser which is slill small
enough to be trailerable. The
line will be shown at the ~
Anaheim boat show opening
Friday.
Fantasy. made In Hun·
•
tington Beach, has long had an ·~•"1"'"'"""'
excellent reputation as a pro-
ducer of very high-quality
runabouts and ski boats. Their
16 footer, of semi·hydro bot·
tom confonnation, is a fast,
stable, very well·built beat
wihch can handle far rougher
water in safety ~than her ap-
pearance would indicate.
• •
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The new 24-foot cruiser is an
entirely different breed of
anlmal. She is an a J J.
fiberglass, twln-screw cruiser
with flying bridge and a deep-
vee, longitudinally straked
botlom which will handle a
vicious chop wilh ease.
BOAT SHOW 'KING ' ARRIVES VIA TRAILER AT ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
Super Chris Craft Dwarfs Even Giant Pylon in Front of Exposition Arena
Standard equipment includes
a built-in opening for a bait
tank, fully-equipped galley
with a lot cf counter space,
. bunks, head, controls. and
everything except your fishing
tackle to put to sea.
SHOW 'QUEEN' - A Columbia 50 like the one shown here under fun sail will
be "queen" of the 1970 boat show and will be the onl y boat shown outside th e
Anaheim Co nvention Center. Oth er Columbia models, Jncluding the new 43,
plus the 22, 26, 28 and 36, will be shown inside the Arena. The Columbia display.
exhibited by the Costa Mesa-based boat building firm, 'viii be the largest sin-
gle display of sailing boats in the big show. All sailboats will be shown \v ith
sails hoisted.
Livin g accommodations are
adeq uate for weekends or
vacations and about as ample
as you can get in a 24-footer
and slill have a good fishing
cockpit. Her maximum beam
or eight feet makes her legally
trailerable, and a 24 footer is
to pull down the highway.
about all you're going to want
Uniflites 'Hunt', Fish
One of three Unifllle power
cruisen on display is bound to
create a great deal of lnlerest
amoog visitors to the boat and
marine show.
It's a 31·foot hardtop six-
sleeper cruiser typical of its
line of all figerglass pleasure
cruisers. But this one is a
"gunboat'' without guns.
For the technically minded
visitors concerned with hull
construclion, this is the sister
shi p of a fleet of 386 PBRs
(Rive r Patrol Boats) the Bell-
ingham, Wash., boat builders
recently constructed for the
U.S. Navy for action iD Viel·
nam.
Delivered in full fighting
trim, right down to machetes
for the four-man crew s
operating them, these com·
pact. hard-hitting 11 t t I e
fighting machines are now in
Vietnam helping to stop the
Viet Cong from moving sup-
plies along the network of
waterways making up the
lrlekong Della area.
The 31-foot Uniflit.e in the
Anaheim boat show, of course.
is complete with cabin and
flying bridge for pleasure
cruising. For the sister "ugly
ducking" in Vieblam, these
have been replaced with such
items as grenade launchers.
machine guns fore and alt ;
high.powered infra.red detec·
lion devices, radar and other
navagational aids to pennit
night and bad weather opera·
tions.
'!'he Unifliles are thC' first
water-jel propulsions boats
ever used in Navy opcralions,
aJloy,·ing them to skim over
shallow \Yater and ay,•ay from
mud banks and other hot spolS
in a hurry.
THIS SLEEK FISHER 'S SISTER IS HUNTING BIGGER GAME IN VIETNAM
Unlflite Cruiser is Same as Gunboats Company Built for Asian River Pat rols
It's Teen Time Everywhere
Shooting the Colorado fli ver Teens and its staff will exhibit 1\naheim Convention Center. may v111it lhe 6how booth or
rapids down through the at the \Ve.stern National Boat Parents and teenagers in· write Travel Teens, Box 4002,)
Grand Canyon. and r..tarine Show, spa ce 173, !crested in obtaining more in· Anaheim 92803 or call (714.)
1 Diving o{f the lreasur~laden j"i.;;n,_th;;e,_G~rand~;;-Lob;;;;;;b~y~of_;lhOie;..iOfo~r'"m'"o•Li•on,_a~bouioi;il~th~e~p~r~o~gr~a~m=s-1~1~2·~3~12~1.-------. coast of Yucatan. 11
Surfing on sea safaris to 24' SPORT Mexico and Ha"·aii.
An exciting house bo at FISHERMAN adventure on the Sacramento
Delta.
Sailing beneath the grandeur
of the Grand Tetons on
Jackson Lake in Wyoming.
Fighting a 300-pound marlin
nea r the tropical paradise of
MauUan.
All just dreams? No I
necessarily. These ;i re &>me
of tilt out-of·lhc <lrdinary <'X·
perienees which are available
to Orange County young peo-
ple, ages JO to 18, according to
Travel Teens' teacher-director
Church Lippincott of Anaheim.
During Easler and summer
vacations he offers lours to
Mexico, Jlawati, Yucatan,
United States and Eastern
Canida, Colorado. R 1 v e r ,
Southwest Indian Country,
Vellowstone-Orand Tetons and
y o&em.it.e.
•louaeboel ldveotW'tl In the sacra.memo Delta, Ew-ope, an tour1 IWllDltt camps and gkl
trlpo allo on liJted by Up.
plncott. who pemmally hu
directed more than 10 million
tour member m.Ucr or educa·
AVAILABLE IN 3 MOOELS
\I.bottom cl•1ign•d for ••I•, ,,,.ooth rid e
in tough W•l•r. Tr•ilereble •nywh•re
me~ing it •e1ily towed to remote fi1hin4
1polt •nd b••u+lful crui1itu~ or111 1ny.
whi r• in th• n•lion or M111icen i nd C1·
n1di1n W•l•FW•Y•-F1clory ino!1 ll td rl •
cl101, d1pth 1ound1tt, dir•clion findt t1,
b,it pulTlpJ •nd l1n~a.
•
27' SPORT
FISHERMAN
Tht cu1lom g1ll•Y f•1fur11 • 1l1inl111
11111 1i n~. •h•"'•• r•frig1r1!or, di111tl1, 1n•
clo1ed h11d •'Id cloth11 cl o11t ; 1rr1ntj11d
11 th1 Cu1 10,.,,~ wi1h11.
THE f lSHERMAN'S DAt,t,M 10,i,T
FOA OCEAN, LA l(ES ,i,NO
INLAND WATERW,t,YS
&•idgt , Hi rd Top, Op•" •nd Spoil Cruiit • in t ... o m11cl•h .
Tht L•r9est Most Completo Tr•il•r•bl1 Beets Built On Thi Wtst Co1st
I l19ally treiloreble without • p1rmit I
Chris
of
Big
'King'
A $300,000 Chris Craft Co1n-
mander, only one of its kind in
tl1e west. will be "king" of II.
Werner Buc k's Western Na-
lional Boat and Marine Show.
'"This is an ultra-deluxe
power cruiser. Our show will
mark the only display of the
craft indoors during 1970,"
said H. · Werner Buck. pro-
ducer of the Anaheim Show.
The cruiser is 60 feet Jong
and wei ghs 40 tons. It i~
Ameri ca's largest production
riberglass yacht, built at a
ne\v plant of Chris Craft in
Pompano Beach, Fla.
II sleeps 12 and is powered
by twin diesel engines, v:ith
top speed of 25 mph. A 1.000
gallon fuel capacity provides a
466-mile cniising range.
The new Commander model
has extensive standard equip-
ment including a i r con·
dilloning, bullt·in stereo and
color TV, a lwG-door \•ertical
opening refrigerator \11ith deep
Craft
Show
freeze and automatic
icemaker, and two 15 KW light
plants.
Decor is elegant with satins.
brocades and velvets used
throughout.
There 's complete electronic
equipment, including radar,
for extended cruising. Other
gear includes 150 watt.-3-ehan·
ne l AM radio-telephcne. VHF I
FM radiG-telephone, d u a I .
range depth so under,
automatic direction finder,
radio ground, antennas, elec·
Iri e loud hailer, and automatic
pilot. All are cantrolled from a
space-age Command Console .
.The Chris Commander will
dominale the 100,000-square-
foot Exhibit Hall of the
Anaheim Convention Center~
which will be devoted to power
boats of all models and sizes.
Sailboats, under full rigging,
will be displayed in the high-
ceiling Arena, and marine ac-
cessories in the carpeted
Grand Lobby.
WHEELHOUSE
COMPASS
COMPASS ADJUSTING, ~ SAW, CLEANING
AND REPAIRS ~·~
Let Wh11lhous1 Compass Give
you the benefit of over 100
years of seagoing 1xperitnc•
NEWl"ORT
'42-5605
SAN DIEGO
410 ... lS
LONG llACH "'"'"7 MARINA DEL REY
lf0.)114
MAIN OFFICE
2701 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
642-5605
--,,, ... -;:-Columbia 22
defies comparison
at $4,2 7 5* sail-away price!
'"-,... /.:I ·-
1 r11phy collt<:tlon ..,,., by • Columbt1 22 •~•DIM• I "' ""''Y / I 1 1.l
I I
Compare space. Compare comfort. Com·
pare equipment. Then compare price. No
other 22-foo t racer/cruiser afloat comes
close to a Columbia 22-now al so avail-
able In keel-centerboard model with 2'6 ..
draft for easy trailering and ahoaJ draft
performance I
By ··sail-away" prlce, we roler to such
features as:
D Dacron sails, main and Jib
D Dinette and galley
D 4 lull·leng1h berths with :l" cushions
D Largest forward sta teroom ol any 22
D Smoolh fiberglass headliner
D Teak galore above and below
O Self·balllng cockpit with outboard well
D Plus many other big boat fealurts
Finally, just to convince yourself, com·
pare performance. Columbi a 22 la a win-
ner. She's reaponaiV9 and fast on any point
of sail because of her long waterline, low
welled surface, large saltpran, fin keel and
spade rudder. And ahe'a atlff, dry and aala.
Shop around and ycu'll know for aure-
Columbla 22 comes equipped, not stripped,
making JI your best buy among 22·1ooters.
Without optio nal dlneue end ga lley,
Cotumbla 22's standard saU·awey price la
$3750" (keel model). For lull Inform ation
mall coupon today Or SH your Columb ia
dealar.
SPECIFICATIONS: LOA 22'0"; LWL 20'1";
Beam rs~: Drah :l"2• (keel model)-2'6 ..
(centerboard up )-s·a· (centerboard
down): Di splacement 2200 lbs. (kee l
model)-2385 lbs. (keel ·centerboard
model): Sall Area 232 sq. II.; Head optional;
Vertical clearan ce :l0'4•,
•s•n-11 price It F.O.B, •1111-tr pltnt •l!d dot111ot
Inell.ICM lrtlght wid commlulonln~ r----------------..,
1 lw."'~·· !
~,. Yfftll CO.,...!IOft I
111 McCo1111lck """·· Co1t1 Ma.t, Ctl)f. mn I TtltphOM tTl4) 540-1070
I •m ln!•,.tttd In: I a l ·P•O• lllu1lrlltd color brothut• Oft I Co111mbl1 22. D F,... c:l•m0<11tr1!1on on 1 Co!1,1111bll 21. I
.Allll 1t1tom11tlon on Otl!IT Colu,...bl1 YKhta.: II
O ~tt. 0211t. 0 3en.
O .tJ 11. o~n. oarn. I .• I Nim•-----------I
Strt•I I
c,., _______ s11i.-I
"""""'----T•~ I --------_______ ..
SEE THE COLUMBIA 22. 26, 28, 36 ind ~3 11 tho ANAHEIM BOAT SHOW
MAR CH 13 • 22 Gt the Anaheim Convention C1nt1r.
• tional ye>Utb laJri durin& the DUMCAtt '4cl"4T01M IA!LIOATJ 1'0011 AltNOLD IAILIOATS COLUMllA Ol" OIL ltlY AltNOLO ADfUNS SAILIOATI -fl 10 -..,.. '· 0 . I•• 101 • 1601 lllflMtt A"'lff , .. MerfH °'"'' Jllfl Wt1! CNll Mlt~w•r 4Ut kovtfil Alm+rllf'I' '#If lU "'""'° Drl~•
-,.__. .,. H11•tfn1t•ft IM<h, Colifof11I• ,2641 e '--l•.tc~. C•llf . ..S Htwowt '"'"· C•l1'. tl4"M Mll1MI a.I 111..,, CtlW. ""1 ".....,.. lflell, Ctllf, t11n For I.he second year Trave1 1._ __________________ ;.._..,•~-... ~c~,.~· ... 7~14~/~U~•~·~n~•~>----.J L ____ '_"'"_'_"_"_"'_'_"_' ______ '"_-_'_"~":":'·~'"~':._ ______ -:.....:'~':":m:•~"":..._ _____ :._':'""::::'~':'":":":•:•~·---..J
;
/
CEMENT CRUISER CUTS CAf'ERS ON FINAL TESTS
Rey Duff, lnventer of Concrete Boat Material, Handltl Whtcl
New Boat Building Material:
(ement··Antl it Really Floats
The lat.est discovery h1 lhl'
boating industry-a cemenl
boat made by a new proccs!'i
-\.l.'lll be IJll public display lor
the fi rst time during the 2nrf
Annual \Vestern National Boal
AGE , 10 TO 18 COEO
Houseboat Adventure
9 FABULOUS DAYS ON
THE SACRAMENTO DELTA $139
EASTER & SUMMER VACATIONS
Also: U.S.A. & Canada, Mexico, Utah Ski Tri p5.
Colorado River Trips. Hawaii Vacation. Europe,
Yosemite, Yellowstone, Tetons, South West India.,
Country, Summer Camps.
and ~larine Show at the
Anahehn Convention Center.
A Lnn1.Crete hull, con-
slrucled of a ncv.r concrete
fornu1Ja "'hich requires no
metallic reinforcing. will be
shov,rn by Raymond A. Duff ,
who rece nlly secured patent
rights for the new cemenl
material.
Because 110 stec-1 framework
is required, a l...a1n-Cretc hull
c;in be produced in a slandard
mold. The show n1odel is an
18-foot outboard .
··Lam-Crete is cheaper than
fiberglass, and will take much
more punish ment ," says Duff.
who has been a ccmenl con·
tractor in San ta Ana for a
nuinber of years. He has pro-
.ved the sta1.en1enl by beating
on one of his hulls \)'ith a
sledge hammei , and by boun-
l'ing .45-caliber bullets off the
nu~tcria l RI a range of 25 yards. ~
Duff says his hulls arc
totally fireproof and that they
have fine handling. riding and
seagoi'.1g characterislics. The
n1alerial, he says, can be
drtlled. nailed <1nd riveted.
But the biggest surprise to
1hr vie"·cr may well be the
finish of the Larn-Crete hulls.
Duff's IS-foot display mock!J
"'tll be one of the prettiest in
!he show
Un-partners
They , Share Boat Lot
By ALMON LOCKABEY a.11, .......... ,,.. •• , ....
Riddle: \Vbtn is a boat
dealer not a boat dealer.
In Nev.·port Beach, al a
unique dealers~ip on Pacific
Coast Highway, the answer
might be "when he is flying
airplanes or putting out fires."
The majori ty of b o a I
dealers, of course, devotes full
Ume lo deallna in boats.
But there's an American
AJrllnes· pilot and a Hunllng·
ton Beach fireman .... 110 sh11.re
the same sale_, lot at 2200 \Vet
Pacific Coast Highway. in
Newport Beach and both art
doing YerY. we.II moonlighti ng.
The pilot is Capt. Ed
P.1cNeil , a veteran of 20 years
of flying co01 m ~rci 1I
passenger p I a n e s for
American. The fireman is Bltl
Swan, a fire engineer for nine
years, sl.arUng in Costa Mesa
then transfcrMng lo Hun-
tingtan Beach.
McNeil , of Corona de! Mar ,
runs his paM or the sales kit
under "Cap'n Ed s", V.'hilc
Sv.·an uses his ov.'!l name.
'-1cNeil deals primarily in
sailboat!: Swan is partia l to
trailered powerboats.
Both men will display their
wares in I.he Second Annua l
Western National Boat and
f.larine Show. Swan v.·JU ahQw
his Formula and Hurricane
boats ; f.1cNeil the Balboa 20
and Aquarius. "I'm not show·
ing the Hobie Cal or sOling."
ti.1cNeil says, "because other
dealers or the factories will
have them on display."
"We share the same lot, but
aren't r.artners," e x p I a i n s
McNei , "slthoogh we do
casually explore the pros and
eons of a partnership now and
then. We 11nd our s1Jes staffs
sell any boal! on Lhe lot -~ail
or power."
When asked why a fireman
and airline pilot would become
boat dealers, S"·an a n d
McNeil exclaimed in unistr:1
'·to make money, of course."
Swan said he did about
$100.000 gross business last
yea r and ell:pected that to in-
crease SO pe rcent. ti.fcNeil
figured around $160,000 gross
\\'ilh a good increase exptttl!d ,
because of the current boating
boont.
r.tcNeil sctys. "f'd gucs~
abou t half my sales are lo
pr ofessional men -doctors
and denlisls. And a goodly
nu mber of my buyers have
other boats, too.
·•J make quite a few 'lwo-
family' sales these days, too, a
new lrend in boat buying."
chimes in Swan.
have much run wllh my first
boat before It was cone. So I
just kept on buytn1 and sell·
ing. I've been doing It t vcr
since in rny spare time."
Swam, too. also has been ln--
teresttd in boating much of
his life, Several years ago he
took a month off work, traJI.
ered a small boat from here
to Florida and sailed the Carri-
bean Islands.
"But my bag really is power
boating. J llke rough water
raci11g or cruisina:. It's realty
the reason J handle the
Thunderbjrd Formula boal.!i. ''
he says.
Hobie's
Cat Has
Sister
The popular Hobie Cat 14-
footer now has been jojned by
a new 16-foo t model. Both will
:ie among a 1o1·i<ie v1riety of
power and sall boats to be
displayed durin1 the boat
show a) !ht A\1aheim Con·
ventlon Cente r.
The Hobie catamarans are ·"
the brainchildren of Hobie
Alter of San Juan Capistrano
who, prior to deslgnin, the
Hobie C a t s . waa ln-
ternationslly famous for his
Hobie surfboards.
Alter says the Hobie .Ca\ 14
became popular so quickly
because of its versatility and
ease in handling (more than
1,000 werl! sold in the first II
months of production ).
Alter. who manufacturers
them under the name Coast
Calamaran Corp.. says he
spent two year~ testing four
prototypes before coming: up
with the 14-footer. He Salli
devetopment cf I.he new 16·
foote r by comparison was
simple.
It's just an enlarged edition
of the original Cat. answl!ring
a i ro\ving demmid for a bit >
larger boat with the same
capabilitie! and desi in. he
ssid.
Hatteras
Exhibits 2
'Big Ones'
McNeil and Swan l.ioth Two dt!luxe Hatteras power
pointed out they can suc· cruisers. one 36 and the other
ccssfully c o n d u c t both 38 feet long, will be amon1 the
dea lerships because of lhe odd hundreds of boats on dl!pla y
\\'orking schedules of their during the \Vestem National
regular jobs. Swan is on 24 Boal and Marine Show.
hours and off 24, etc: McNei l The luxury yachts are
flies twD days and is off one or designed to appeal to husband
!\l'O. etc. and wife. For her it's a
A USC graduate who grew delightful cruising boat v.•ith ..._
up in Los Angeles and al· many extra comforts. For him
tended Belmont Hlgh as a installation or his fishing gear
classmate lo TV personality in the well prop or ti on e d
\
DAILY PILOT U
I,
HOBIE CAT 1~ RIDES CURL OFF ORANGE COAST SHORE
Hobie Surfbo•rd (Foreground) Was Forerunner of Sailing Vessel
'. •
. " THIS IS THE HATTERAS 16-FOOT SPORTFISHER
New Flying Bridga Model to D1but at Bo•t Show in Anaheim
•
•
••
• >
[7141 772-3121 .,
Cflorles Y. Lippl"~ott
Dllll C TOR
774-3121 Other use of !hr material.
particularly in I he coo-
strucl ion rield. would be
unlimited, accord ing to Duff,
Jack woo:,, ro.lcNeil took up cockpit makes ii a fine --------------------------------~{~~g~~;u~:~~i~ir r!n;~~ ::~~~~:s ~:~s~~~~: ic~n~ (~1,~9 '""1:--0~~B, .... ~~O .. ':A~T~S-H,:"'\"."O; W.
OPEN S
7 P.M.
'· 0 . lot 4002 Anoh•l111, Calif. 92 1D3
planes all around I.he wo rld. bridges with dual controls,
ai~~Pfi~~h~w~:i:ri:r a:f~~ ~~s;:ii;edla.:f~ ~:;:n~ov!~!~ ~
leavh1g lhe navy because he polyfoam (• couldn't get a pilot job, tht!n The Hatteras fibergta s.o; con· ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER, MARCH 13-22
TOMORROW
dkJ~&~presents
EVERYTHING FROM DINGHIES TO
LUXURY SAILBOATS & OCEAN CRUISERS!
started 1o1•ith An1eric!ln tn 1950.' struction requ ire s a minimum ~~· F SEE.THE FfORMULAf2~F h•
lie now P'irna'11y flies Los of beams and ribs, thus pro-'/',. ormu a or IS 1ng Angeles tll Ottawa or Boston. \'\ding more usable interior \'4
McNeil gol into the bo11t spacP-for people or slorage. Ii. t The Formula 233 hull contains th• latest refinements in hi de1drl1e ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 2nd ANNUAL "THE auEEN"-
: WESTERN NATIONAL • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "THEKING"-
1300,000 LUXURIOUS 60' CHRIS CflAFT
PLUS ACCESSORIES & EDUCAT IONAL DISPLAYS!
~····· • • • • •
dea ler business v.1hile based in A hot and cold water sho•.ver ~ '. hulls ~ • redical improvement over all existing "V" hull d•1ign1.
Nashville. in 1963. flaving reatures a man-siud staU with (~: IXCl!"IOHAL
11lways enjoyed sailing . he door. The aletk craft Offer '"'fJ s,110.
wanled lo buy a boat: Sharp many luxury items as stan-~ 'lllfOlMANCl
pencil work revealed that if he dard equipment plus having 1 AHD CONntOL · \' IH ALL SIAS was a dealer he could buy numerous oSKlons for even , ' uu11,, ... e11 ,1111t111ry I•
three boaL~ for little more more confortable livi ng at sea. (/i ,1111111111 ettlr11;.,
• than the retail cost of one. So The Hattera11 cruisers "'ill / e s11,.,i. ,,.~,.,.i.111ry -4
• 1 he did. He sold one to a buddy be among many pov.·er boats · "" r11r11l11t cll•roc~l1ric1,
• immediately and the others lo or all sizes a·,1<1 s ty I e s • ••'•"-" •'"''"' ,., ..... ,.,.
• pt>0ple a.~king to buy. "I didn't displayed, ~f , c•11tr•I . . --:~oz~~z~;;~;%~t:i:ZZ:~~~ ( , . ,,.i.111., _ '"I ,.u. """' rtellt-':/ ' # l1tt 111 .... -.
•• I ~ I • Cnlll9Htl ri• ... 1911111141"' 111 "9.i
• I A j ~-;,-· 1 • Jtr•ltflt •"' -=~ c•tlff•I, •• ,.,.1111 111 .0 , .. 11 •• 1,.. ...... . y • THEii! • "'•'"''• .,..., Nlt.-4ry, ••lttf•rt•lll1 114• • et a11y -.,.ff .
• 71 BILL SWAN 2200 Weit CoHI H;ghwoy : DON'T BE A ~ Newport 8e1ch, C11ifornia • ,r. BALBOA 20 • LANDLUBBER 1
' · : ~ • let Us Put You 9n Thi .Waler! I,;,
e WE CARRY-
: EVENRUOE BOATS l MO~ORS
fr•ll with hie to Dl1t•t Wettn e No Mnr•
l"t Fus to Pay • L•u..ch et A11y lllamp e Store
I• Your Gar09e
lTAMDA-D PiATU~IS : lltrti tlrklr a..1H11 l•flttil fl.
hftt•t lr•ll • lhll11lna tfMhtwNll,.. flftl.. •
U19f19' e11d lewer •lk••• • ,.,. -4 hd tt_,.
• le,l'lltf llfr • IMUf1"41 rlttJ#f • el-/1111r11 '~~ • ARENA CRAFT "'"' IMI heat e "''• fill; lr•l,•rd e r•lled ,..,... • .,ltlllitt ,.,. llctkll • '•··~
•t•r ... e ceclr,tt 11 ... 11 e 4"rH r•1111l11t "'r ..• lwl .. I ,_ ffll lhHt blHlr I
OPENS 7 P,M.
TOMORROW
THIN THllU MA RCH 22
STARFI RE
OUACH ITA
AND THE HOLIDAY RESO-TIR ~J '#I IU'f' A"e Ill.I. -~ UflO IO•TI
"' •· ••• ;;-;--Olf enhawier
SANtA A."A. u
IN12'0 MAllll"f
• '• ..
Ml *eilllitt CMlr!Nt • Mii .. Jd ...
Mfety ... ~· • ,... trl• • "" "'""' lftf e r...wt ,.,.,It e 1.,... clMll
• .,. .. , ,., 4 •ff+' tfa , ... ie .. e
f•r111lt• ••1111'-' 41HttW t•lll• •
lett ef thlr... tflM• • "'Y
,... ••11 •10 lb. ,.,, .. , ....
.... WI .. C.Mlr19it wl11tlr.
CAP'N IDS
2200 W. CMll Hwy,
Nwpt. Sch .. Col.
,h. 644-1135
,,
•
'
f
l 3%. DAil Y l'ilOI T""'°'1, ll""h 12, l 970 • }
I "Ll':GAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL ~OTIC!
SIYB
~ASHI
~
Read
The
DAILY
PILOT
c
' L
'
A
5
5
I
F
I •
E
D .
BEST
llY.SI .
(~~
•
WANT
TO
CLEAN
UP
OH
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
FDR
FAST!
FAST!
HOUSES POR SALE HOUSES POR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! I HOUSl!.S FOR SALi!.
r•I 1000.. GeMral , 1000 General 1000 General 1000 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;=;;.
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 LIDO HORD
6 Beautiful units .. a Car garages & utility
room, with 85 ft. frbnting on excellent swim·
ming beach. Units are newly furnished. Now
$240,000. Excellent terms available.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
(Our "•• Addre11) tSJ Dover Dr., Suite 3, Newport Bll•ch • '41-4620
Gener•I 1000 General 1000
Bit FHA Loan
Seq thil outstanding "Rancho
Z..feu." home v.·ilh 4 good
sized· bedrooms & family rm
with a large FJIA loan to
take ovu, House can be de-
scribed u a true ''Mr.
Kleen" home. caJ.I for fur.
ther details. ·
5'1·$110 ---OLUGE REALTY -·-
LEASE
I Beautiful large home near
So. Coast Plaza. 40' Swim
pool, 4. spaciou11 bedrms.
$375 (possibly $350), incl pool
& gardener. Furnished Ude.
slrtd. OUered at $39,900 or
make ")'OOI'" oUer! Bkr.
2 SlllfY Colonial
Ideal for lg. family, 5 Big
Bedrms, 3 baths, fann dif>..
ing: nn & ,familY rm, lge
back )'d with patio slab,
shade trees &: grassy area.
Huge separate gange, room
for boat al trir in ha.ck yard.
Only ~950. FllA & VA
term.111. HllrII)'!
• /fSJJJJJJ,,,., co: TS
~WALLACI
RIAL TORS
--S5'41o!M"4141-
(0poot -·
5 BEDROOMS
ofinJa J jfe
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN-BY APPOINTMENT
15 Lln.u. hlo Drlvt
New & beautiful f Bedroom, 5 bath home
with large sunken living room & fam. nn .•
weL btsr. Radiant electric heat. Cal·petcd &
landscaped: Priced ................ $155,000.
45 Linda Isle Drive
Nearing completion. 5 BR. 4 ba home. 80 Fl.
on water. 3 frplcs., atriwn \V /fountain.
Bit-lo TV system. With dock ...... $225,000.
80 Linda Isle Drlv•
5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family
room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces.
4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip, . , . , $159,300
90 Linda 1111 Drive
Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath home 'vilh ex·
tra large living room & master Bedroom.
Carpets & drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip,
Near tennis court & club ...... now $120,000
Weterfr.ont lots
Ult number 4: E.10ellent 51 ft. Linda Isle
leasehold lot. Consider trade. . . . . $35,000
Lot number 41 : Long \Yater view \Vilh 76.2
ft. of frontage facing Harbor Island.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
(Our New Addre11)
833 Dovor Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
1000
ACTION! 1 ,,"~~""'=· ==""""' TRY 10% DOWN
528,500 Goner;.-lOOO General
Eastside Costa Alesa, big 1.=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I
family l>arii\n! 2 baths,
built-in kitchen, B R IC K
FIREPLACE, double gar.
age, NO dov.n VA, LO\V
do\•rn FHA. See it NOW or
FOREST E. $700 Down
Eastside
3 Bedroom
CALL
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFIED
DEPT.
D
I
A
L
D
I
R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -s
6
7
8
1 BR.·$25,950. Spotless? New
cpll'., drapes, bltins. Hd.
firs. 2 Baths. Corner k>t.
Priv. swim dub. \Valk to
all schools.
tllEALTC1'
C:O-N·MAftTl>ln
11i ·llU
SEASHORE DRIVE
OCEAN VIEW
Furn. Duplex. Dbl. garage
Jmmaculate! $44,950
George Willi•m.on .
REAL'JUR
673-4350 673-1564 Evu.
4 BR Eastside
As11un1e FlfA loan on this
sharp EASTSIDE home on
large corner lot. Interior
completely redecorated. To-
tal pymnts $3'.>6. mo. Asking
f!7,9"'.
PERRON
FHA or
642-1771
VA
3 Br .. l~ ba .. North Costa
!\1esa. Close 10 all schools.
Cul-dc·S8C.
DAVIDSON Realty
546-5460 Eves. 544· 1833
be 800")'!
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2043 WestcliU Dr.
.MS.1711
51/4 °/o LOAN
$25,950
4 Bdrm + Fa mily rm
Park like yard with BBQ •
!ireplace, entry hall, fire·
place In huge family rm, 2
bath!. Assume 5\{ ck apr
loan. 50.l'l'lO'
TARBELL 2955 Herbor
Builders Attention!
BUILD UNITS (15)
Lot 100 x 297 wilh good J
Bedroom home. Top loca·
lion! $19.fm.
Wells-McC•rdle, Rltr1.
1810 Ne1vport Blvd .. C.i\I.
548-1729 644-0684 Eves.
$28,950
525, 900 4 Bdrm & Family rm.
4 Bdrm & 3 baths Prime location. Entry hall,
Beautiful famUy home, entry full dining room, 3 i;ep&.rate
hall, dining rm, rear livin&: baths. Fireplace. Al most no
rm., fireplace, fine quality down G.I. Owner desporate.
bullt·lm. !)oID-1720 540-112{1
TARBELL 2955 Harbor TARBELL 2955 Harbor
Need
re111odeling?
See
want ad
classifications:
6500-6900
in the
DAILY PILOT
FOR EXPERT HELP
0 LS 0 N
lnc. Realtors
4 BEDROOM+
FAM. WHAT!
$21 ,500
Scarce as hens teeth? 4 large
bedrooms. 2 baths. ramily
roon1. Deluxe kitchen "·ilh
all latest built·ins. carpet-
ing. Hard to beat al $21 .500
and only 5 years young. Hur-
ry lo Sl?l'. DJAL 64:>-0303.
645-0303
at Harbor Center
229'J Harbor Blvd., C.t.r.
BAY & OCEAN
Vie\\·s both day & night
from this fabulous home
in lovely ll"\•ine Ten-ace.
3 Large bcdroon1s, 3 bethK
Formal, vie1v dining room
Poolside family room
Spacious yard with pool.
A beautiful home in
ift!Bl location
$124,600
Listed Exclusively with
DOVER SHORES
BAYFRONT
Bankruptcy Receiver hu in·
structed us to accept oUen
for this 11ronderful Norman
Grant bullt 2-story hOrne on
60 ft. Jot 1vith pier & Ooat. 4
Bedrooms, large formal !iv·
Ing room & fonnaJ dinini;
room. Open daily. 333 !\for1t-
ing Star Lane.
MACNAB . IRVINE
Rt'ally Company
1714) 642-8235
901 Dover Dti\"C. Suite 120
1714 ) 675-3210
lil80 8ay8ide Drive
Newport Beach
RETIRING SOON?
Breathe fresh air, enjoy end.
less vie w or the Vallry from
21.~ acre hilltop home in Yu·
caipa. Uively lrH"S, possible
to subdivide or just enjoy all
the elbcnY room. $ZJ,500.
Pete Barrett l
1605 ~V:~cl~~. NB J
642·5200 ~
PLANNING to move! You'll
f.ind l!ln aml!lzing number or
home11 In (od ay'a Classified
Ads. Check them no1v.
To \•els. This home Is in
beautiful move·in condition.
Lc1v, IOI'•' down lo anyone •
seeing is believtng. SeUer
being lraMferred out of
slatr., extremely anxious.
Aski~ $23,800 • make oiler.
-Farr •
ORANGE COUNTY 'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
OPEN EVES TILL 1:30
CUSTOM BUILT
Sturdy, at.lraclh'f', !Mee: bed-
rooms. tv.ll bath home with
DINING ROOl\I, hreakful
bar and covered patio. Large
Op:"n bean1 ceiling living
room 1vilh new brick angle
fireplace and planters. Fenc:·
ed. ceml'!nled in rear yard
with beautiful landscaping -
double garage. Walk to 1hop.
ping and public tra~porta.
lion. WILL SELL AT F.H.A.
APPRATSAL OF $26,400. On.
ly $1 ,7';:iO Down. BETI'ER
HURRY !!
Evenings 646-4579
LINDA ISLE
Rich, colorful decor in NE\V
4 Br. 2-sty. l\leditt. by Jines!
bldr. H~ fam. rm, w/~·et
bar: 4 ba. + elegant py,-der
rm. Spacious entry, .$ll5,{Q)
NEWPORT DUPLEX
l·Tu"O bdrm. Ir: fam. rm., 1-
0ne bedrn1. t.:. lanai + good
inc. Corner lot, 1 block to
beach, $43,500
"Our 25th Year"
WESLEY N.
TAYLOR CO
Realtors
NE\\IPORT CENTER
2111 San J 011.q11!n Hills Rd.
644-4910
A REAL
TREAT
\Vhen you !lee th~ beautlful
Meredith Garden Home. A
4 Bedroom. 3 Bath, custom
draped and carpeted, 2600
ISQ'. ft White Beauty. rot'·
mal Dining Room . Break-
fast Eating Area in large
Kitchen • paneled Family
Room • water softener •
sprinkler'!! fronl & rear.
~luc~ mol't' to see and ap-
preciate . .$·14.~50
546-2313
Golfer's Paradise
Bea111. hol11i! on 10th green
of Jkrn1uda Dunelli -finest
desert COUl"lM!! Roomy 3 BR.
3 Ba .• pool, rumished home.
Ind. 2 l:l)lf carts. Club mem-
benhip avail Askin£ $9.5.IXll
-Xlnl 1mns.
Bill Grundy, Rteltor
833 DoY;r Or., NB----&U-4620
HOUSE-BEAUTIFUL
NE\V. VlE\V . Oo\'t.r ShoreL
4 BR. 3 BA, fam nn w/frplc,
\\"el bar. Din rm. ldtchcn.
liv rn1, tna.~t,.r bdnn on the
vff!\9, Decorator crp!g. Court
~'tln:I l)O(M, 3 car 111.r. !11$0 Sq
ft, Roy J. \Vard Ritt, 1"30
Gnlaxy Dr, 646-lSOO
DAILY PILOT Ut l\1E ·A·
LINES. You "" use fhem ror Ju~t p1:nnle1 a. d8,y. Dl&J
.. '-'618
,_
•
Thursdat. Mat'h 12, l q70 DAILY PILOT J3
HOUSES FOR SALE -· HOUSE S FOR SALE HOUSES F!)R SALE RENTA S HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
Gt neral 1000 Gen.ral 1000 Univer$l~'t' Park 1237
·..;.;;""";..:;.'--'.,.;...o.,,~-~--1 ~~.~---Huntldgt~n Be•ch 1400 L•guna Beach 1705 .2J'.~ F~hed--
, 3 Bedroom
2 Bath
$119. Per Mo.
Includes Taxes
\Vant Costa r.1esa '!' Here it Is
• spacious l bedroom hme
,v!th mMSlve atone l.ireplace,
built-in kitchen designed for
converUence. lort«i a1r heat-
ing, big baclcyat:d tor child-
ren • clotie to shopping and
schools and Catholic school.-
church. Assume existing
!1 ~% annual percentage rate
VA loan -try $2),500 -start
packing.
.
arr~w--
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR Bl VD,
546-8640
OPEN EVES Till 8:30
Westc:liff-$41, 900
\Vhere else in \\'estclilf al
this price? 3 huge bedrooms,
large living roon1 with v:aUs
of glass, exposed beant ceil-
ing and fireplace. Clx!ery
kitchen •Nith delightful break·
fast area. Low interest as-
sumable loan. , .Bcttl'r be
quick.
Colesworthy & Co.
REALTOR
Ne\\wrt Beach Ofllct
1028 Bayside Drive
615-49.'Jl &tZ. rm
16 UNITS
COSTA MESA'S BEST
$275,800
You may assun1e a $225.000.
1st TD at 6.6r£""" int. \Vilh
$50.IDl. do\vn. Prest!nt in-
come $.33,120. per yr. Call
to see thi~ "top-notch" shel-
ter.
Newpo rt
•I
Vietoria
646-8811
Anytime
R·2
W/2 SEP. HOMES
C.Orona del l-!ar. L a r g P.
home: 4 bedrooms, orrice.
Im. nn .. pool; 2nd home 3
Bd's .• dinin;;:, new cpl. &
paint. On Lot & \2. Si9,500.
:'ilary Lou i\1aiion
~
Coldwell. Banker & Co.
550 Newport Center Or.
Newport Beach, Calif,
833-0700 644-2430
3 bdm1, spic ·n· span.
C'harming skylighl er-
fcct, 11n!rr11(' potin, ran·
tastic home ror entertain-
ing, great for everyday
living. See lo bcheve!
Price just reduced 11000
to $26,500. Anxious to sell
to app1-ccia live buyer.
•)1 ~:,:::11\~r~.--~\,1 ·:~1
546-5990 '·
OPEN HOUSE
FRI • SAT • SUN
2010 VISTA CAJON ·
3 Bedroon1, 2 bath, ,ii on one
lf'vel. Prime locallon al the
BluUs. Enjoy the wide open
space.
Lachenmyer
Re:tltor
J860 Newporl Blvd .• CM
CA LL 646-3928 Eves. 644-165.ri
N Eli LISTING
The P®ut..r "Maniuette"
Costa Meta 4100
FO __ R_ES..;;.....T_E---I HANDYMAN ...
. • SPECIAL .Fl".male roomma1t 1vent1.'d'~IO ; B/B
TO SETTLE £$late, nlu1t be
mid. S BR. l l!f. ·BA. llv rm,
dlnln;: rm , kit., dble "ar.,
fclltild. Wnt \V l I 'on
SU.nahlne lk>me. $23,500.
l..eorl Vibert, Reallar
548-0583 Wlin1e
Costa Mesa 1100
Immediate
Possession
Fl-IA/VA NO 00\VN, lerm1.
available. Nice 4 BR. 2 BA
on qu iet cul-de-&ac. 2 hick&
to park, 11ehools &. sbopp'g,
Beaut landscaped, all blt·
ins, fl,replace & dining. Out
ot town owner, priced to
sell $26.~. Call 545-3424
&oulh Coast Real Estalc.
plan • 3 bdmu., famll)' room o
& formal di.$& room; i
rrph.'11., 2"" baths. Many,
m1u1y eiclt-as & In abf!olutely
11potJH& cood. lhruout. lle«U·
istieally priced at j u l!i l
$36.9'4 ' .
PETTlt REAL TY CO.
"The HouH of Homes"
133-0101
l S 0 N Herr's a rta1 buy. C'hflrming shfl~ 4 br apt., N.B. "dults Only
ranch i>b'le hOl'Qe, SITUAT· $62.50 mo. Call .6.'rl>-6374. 3 BR. 2!.t baths, 2 CIU' aara:e.
ED ON LCE. LQ1\ NESTI,; YOUNG. nl.B.I\ to &har,C .f BH. facing pool •.•.••••.. S275
~~t> 8ENEATII TO\V ERING 11.pt, Santa Ana ar~a. $'13.50. 1 BR. 2 Baths .••••••• $2'25 Jne. Realtors
AUTO FIXERS!! -.
SECLUDm
S~lADE. TREES. \V,H!:RE Alt 4 pn1, 54l-i30'1' AV.A II.:ASLE NOW
THE a:>OL GREEN OF NA· · ------Rn.,y & &!ach Really, hw;.
TURE ABOUNDS IN A Cos t a Mesa 2100 001 Dover Dr. Suire 126 NB
QUI ET AIR OF SECLUS. ---------IHS.2000 . Eves. 543-6966
JON. A pleasant Y:a.lk from Sl40. 2 BR, gar, IC!oce,d yard. No pel5. Near 171.h &. Sant11 \\'E:~,-CL!n' ~ Large 2000
Ille beal'h. .Ana Ave . 5~ sq. ft ., 3 bedroo111, 2 bath,
Coron• d•I Mar 1250
· , Olde fashioned ...._.,rlor t Y P e I"''' •.• •t . Just what )"OU vc been look-llv. ~ .. ,. II A':"'s . n...._KEN 3 BR: pool: yearly. Clllnelllli u Y )'a•u -'' ariners ( N I I I ''' "" gehool di$L $390 per mo. i~ 01·? , o oontp an n~ PLANK t-•LOORS, '\VOOD • J..n. Al Kini:. Jones. Really. ~·riu·ty. JG()? KcnUllpC. O!K'l'I
neighbors., Corner lol. 140 J~ANELW \VALL. COZ :k" Ph. 673-6l.IO. Eve, ... 675-09!)8. daily lrorn 3:30 p.m. or call
Ulla Pomona
COSTA MESA'S
NEW APARTMENT
COMPLEX
VIEW
HOME
rleep, l &eparate Yttrd8. Pt>r-L:OG BURN I NG F IRE-l · BEDROOi\I older house owner 64,2-2$3;; UNIT II
* TifE J E'TT'l * CATALINA ISLAND NOW OPEN • • • • • •••••
fttl aCt't!ss to strfft. Nl"wly PLACE JN ANT IQ li E .D !~rgc fenced' lot, $1'.j) mo: -"T"E'°N=N'°IS"&o;P'-OO""'L-
palnled In and out. ~ bed· 'DESfGN. Cenlcr han opens Phone LI &.6'13
room home goe.5 with II. 10 !hr 2 bdrms .. lj('rviced .by ========= 460 6'lnd STREET * BJG CORONA BEAOt
WALK TB SH6PPING
* BALBOA PENINSULA
Situated between Big & Lit·
Ue C.Orona Beach, A spec-.
tacular 4 BR family home
wi!h space to spare, 5~
baths. lhe lllOl5t formal of
dining roon11, a 27:<32 family
room PLUS a 27x32 game
room and an exciting view
room ·wi'th wet bar -Also
a big plus in the beach ai;:ea
• on street parking for 7
Low._ klw down tak? over ttnlral 4 FIXTlJHE BATH. N H 22111 \\lalerfrnt. 3 B'R ., 2 Ba. &
exl.s11ng FHA loan. ~No~ 11ual· KOPPER Kf:l'TLE. l•:JTdl· e wport gts. "' farn. nn. facing W!l.ler. Avail
!tying. Inquire 962-5..;85. 1:--:N \VITii F.t EC. Ri\NGE i\IESA VERD"f. 1 f0'-11'.: now. $325 LSt'. Stl-0666 962·5585 & OVEN, CERA!\1JC TU .. E,' BeRutiful 4 br. pt)ll'. !orninl COUNTR Y Club Living. 3 Br
FEATURIN(; All MOD ERN AMENITIES
e LUXURIOU SLY FURNISHED
Bea11tllul Eastsirll' 3 BR
home \\•ith large fain ily
roon1. Oversized p!lrk like
yard iv/camper or boat 11tor.
age. Ju5l listed at $25,!SI .
submit lerms. Call 54(}.1J51,
Heritage Real Estate (open
1!1131 Brookhurst
J1unlington Beacti
ETC. OPENS TO SEPAR· din. rin. $400. 5-16-0!'..::1 2 Ba. ~ pools, gardeM. ~
ATE BRKFST. Ri\·I. mo. Back Bay nr. S.A.
The spacroos rear grounds Ne wport S eadi 2200 rounlry club. Bier. ITTS-fiO.H
e AL L ELECTRIC HOTPOINT
APPl lANCES
TAKE OVER
POOi.. HOME
This bt!:aulilul 5'iJt % F.H.A.
loan \\'Ith ·payment. ot '$187
pe r month pay1 ALL on lf'lls
4 bedroom 2 ~h PO 0 L
hon1e. Large C'Orner lot \\'ith
oo WOl'k decklrcg and patio
around crystal pool. UNB&
l~I EVABLE.
have slwltel't'd arbor type fi1U2'23.
palio. lertacecl prden, pick· ·2 BR, 1~ SA . Ttrrtt .Ju11t: DUPLEX 3 Br. 2 Ba, nr,
et fence. 111AT LOOKS TO 30th. S193. util incl. Chllii oceari . $23;) i\1o. No pets.
TH E \\IOODS «.·OLD \\00[). ok. 61;>-{)6.IZ or I Z 13 l HichardllOll fUl._v, 2~tl E.
F.N BRIDGE BELO\V. This' 35.)-3690 Coast Hll")'., 'corona del
cha.rrning older home needs ========:;c I !\lar. 61~1{)31
e ENCLOSED GARA ~ES
e 2 SWIMMIN G POOLS
eves.I
DELUXE TO\\INiiOUSE • 3
BR. 212 Bath. Has bulll·ihs
& many extr.i.s . . poo!,
clubhouse & rec fac:ilitic~
No. C.J\1. Cash to ~lo\;i %
loan. By 01vner. 638-9&16
AND
a little touch up here & there. Ba lboa Isla nd 2355 ===~~~~~-,c t It's an,Ol,lt;;tanding buy foi· FREfilllY pain11'fi .~ Br. 'J.
Boc:helor, 1 & 2 Bedrooms
Adults -No Pets
Quality of crafl smansfilp
throughoot that Ur; without a
peer on todays m.arket.
$29,950 FULL PRICE 2 BR unrurn house. f'rplc ha Duplex nr bell. Nu cpl!r.
Avail noy,•Jil June 13. Slt'l Bllns. $250 mo l ease . LO\VER ON. PYl\tT. O.K, "t". 67,, S?O!I, :HD-7j73
l.llSSION REALTY "v '" ===--0---,,.,,..-,., 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa
. 1~NO WE SELL 4 HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
!J85 So. Coast H\1')' .. Laguna FURN. J\lod. 2 Br. 2 na. 0 1:-:LUXE Townhouse 2 Br, 2 (Wast of Newport~ between 17th & 11th St.)
Mesa Verde 1110
The OIVOCt'~ \VIII finance 11!
7%. To inquire about lhis
c.'<ceptiona.I home Walker & Lee Phone {71'41 494-0731 Dock. No !X'IS. Avo1L to · TJ<1• irplc, pool. $2$11 .f '!!!!"'!!lJll!!!l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
BEACH _ J une 20. $300 mo. 67;)..7880 ~'j~~~t apt $350. Agt.l~EN.TALS .
BY O\VNER: 51~ 1lMUmable
loon 3 br, 2 ba, heated pool.
Call 510-1863.
~port Beach 1200 •
SPECTACULAR VIEW
of HARBOR
& LIDO ISLE
3 Bedroom + extra room.
1-lard,,..·ood Doors. Existil1l:'.
Joan 7~~. 1st TD. Vacant.
2:Jt Sant.a Ana Ave.
IS. of Qill Drive)
ln1mt'diate ~ssion
BY OWNER
61">-3982
e DUPLEX e
4 BR. & 2 BR. $42,500
20'/c Down • O\\IC Balance
CALL
CAL FOSS, Realtor
642-3850
e DUPLEX e
NEAR OCEAN
J Btlrm. &. 2 Bdrm.
Plus i;::uest roo1n
ONLY $51.500
Gra ham Rlty. ~2414
Near Ne\1•part Post Otflce
PHONE 673-1550
\-0 THE REAL
··~ E!OTATE~S
For Sale By Owner
l ouse & garage apt on l lot.
Each 2 br. 2 ha. Rear unit
CUJTE"nl income S215 mo.
Charming front uniL Frple,
bay wtndo\\" pine paneling.
Vacant &· ready to move in.
Pricfi: $.J9,500 \V\th $16,000
do111n. can 673-5218.
CORONA Highlands vie1v
horn~:. Ideal 101· couple
"'/possible guest q tn;. or
more lxlrms.: ll'Vt?rlookins
the to1vn. SEE TI-US!
OfSe~Oally 2-S
412 l\.lendoza Ten·ace
Stan S1nith, Rllr. 673-2{110
PERl\fANENT vie\\' ol cx.-ean
&. Cct.lalina. Gracious 2 Br,
2 Ba home. Ea.!iy care land·
i:caping. l't1ay we show YoU
this.
MORGAN REAL TY
673--6642 675-&159
3~U f;, Coa11t H1vy, Cdl\1
7682 Edinger
842-4455 5.J0.5140
RARE
OPPORTUNl:TY
Take over 5~ loan, $147 mo
pays all. 2 Sty 3 BR, 21.~ BA
+ fam 1in, only $31,500.
The Re al Estate Mart
847-8531
Close Out! .
3·4~5 BEDROOJ\IS
Refurbished. VA/FHA fine.
HAFF DAL REAL TY·
842-4405
CON.DOMINIUM Duplexes Furn. 297S Houses Unfurnished
SPACIOUS 2 BR -Newport He ights 3210 La.guna Niguel 3707 2 BATH Sll5-Alt util ·JXI. 2 BR'!!~
i-~acing bcautliul lru-ge rioot. yard, Ii blk to · ocr11n. 4 BR. 2 .~· Poot. Adults, no .ATTIµ.CTIVE, !'.lodern 4
jutil 100 yds from private rhfldren & . pel!i. Bk r · Jl('ls. i,;;111 short 1enn by BR. ~ BA. decks, built In
beach. Lni;::una arra, per· ~i.14-6980 inonth. ~iOJ Kings PI , vacuum. drapes, car~ts,
fed for )'t!ar round llving. 'NICEL'i fo~urnizhed duple)( & 612..g()?.I 1<prlnkl~ts, vie1v. $325 mo.
3'50
investment 01· rentals. \\'ill gaJ:age. Corotljl de! Mar. .31141 Isle Royal Dr. Call for
eell completely lumished or 673-0946 Unive r.5ity Par.k 3237 appt. 49&-176.1 unfurnlslled."~\O ,.,,_ plu•
'3 RENTALS 3 un. ~ ll{llhs .......... S.195 TIIREE Arch Bay. 2 BR. din
lolver C'arpor1 . storage, laun. Houses Unfurnished ·3 BR. 2 baths , •......• , 3340 rm h 0 me. C~ry kil. ·
dry room, \\'fisher I dryer. 4 BR. 2 balli.'I .......... s.~15 brr,akfasl area. Secluded
\\'C!l bar. Fully maintaine<l Gtneral 3000 3 BR. 2 barh~ .......... $3:!5 aft 2 pn1., 673--0097
gorgeous gt'ou nds including --------.,-,--• RED 1-IJ LL REAL'!"!' patio. View. Priv bch. Call
2 pools, tennis courts; etc. *1fr·RENTAlS ** Univ. Park Cent l'r, lri·ill(!
Close kl super market Shop. m .sb ~~ul'n t BR Apt. ca n AnYtinic 8:1.1-0S'.lO Condominium
ping. Coast llhl'ay. Excel· $15..1 r·urn 2 BR Apl. ...,----
lent buy, n1us1 Stt to appree.-$140 Unfurn 2 BR Dupl ex Corona de t Mar 3250 l BR.':? ba. erpt: 2 ear, gar, -C~u=s=T~O~M~H~o=M~E~l7N~' iate. &Po"'fl by app't. Olli $150 Unfurn 2 BR Shi.dip pool & C'lbhse avail. $225
CUSTOM A~EAI I 01\lfll'r at 4!rl-2152 or &15-07!H. SllS Un lurn l BR Collage Lt:ASF. OR LEASE OPTION nio. 5.J!)..6l.'l9 •.
BLUE LAGOON flOOf.l i\tATS ~ERVIC~ C.o-• h I 3 Plush ankle deep shaJ: c11r-.,, ..... us '" c a l'tll ""
pct r\lns lhrough .this 2300 CONDOMINIUM "" r-.1ANY OTHERS '* &droom -home • bearried Duplexes Unfurn. 3975
sq. ft . 4 bedroom. 3 hath Beautiful 2 BR, 2 BA. jusi Free to La ndlord' ('eilings th1i1ou1 • ~parkllng
Blue B'eacon Renial Finders lir.111.ed & filtered p00i • $1Z:-r l BR. Ocean Breeze. with separate family room. steps lo bC!ach. 2 sWin1ming \VI Child k
\Vet ba.J' for enlertaining and pools and tennis courts. Ptic. 4~ \\I. 19th St, CM &15-01 IJ minlmtnn· upkeC'p ya.rd . "'· o · 'Lease. S.'5il n10. Call Bkr. 5.14-6980 formal dining room 1how lux· cd to sell at $49.&00. Call SUPER SHARP 3 BElI)ROOM
ury taste. You can assume Turne r Associates 49~·1177. 2 RATil JtOi\IE for rent al fl.l;;..oo.I, South Coast Real RENTALS
this 6iJ.i';D governmenl loan SOARING VIEW S18J per month. •Double 1;ar-Esta\e Apts. Furnished
with $8000 down D p N 1 A 1 age, ft>n~d yard. Tl's ill VIE\V0 Qf l3liy. 3 br, :? h11.J . .....c..o:.:.::._:...;.:.c_ __ _
WE SELL A. HOME ana I. ort i .. , BR., am. '''" -••••·' book 11t Walker hon1e for lcasf'. Frplc. $300 Ge neral 4000 & rlinlng, b,y rcno\1,ned ;irchi·· • .... u
EVERY 31 MINUTES lel'L North encl. Favorable $.· Lee. 2700 ~larbor Blvd . mo. 1st & last. $50 clC'aning.1 ---------w I k & Lee terms. •1•v ,, •••• ,.. al Ad11n1s. Avii11 April 18. can Ix-fore s· I CAMEO SHORES a er " -·~ .. ' 8PM 61:h;:n1. 1ng e Custom bu ilt 4 Bdrm., 4 Hal Pinchin & Assoc. 1 ~c-c=-o:-:;,,-c,--,---..,-
RE LTO S Cos ta Mes• 3100 SllARP J Br. hon1e ; unusu;J baths . ocean view, pool, un. 7682 F.dinger ~A I{ -;;;;;;;;,;-;;·,;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;; / der market at $76,500. S424.<0;; 39CXI E. Cbflsl Hwy. 61>439f • frpl.; din. area: built.in
64.J.-ll33 For a pri'L to vie1v -"=~='="-'------5 Bd 3 Baths k!tchrn: nice patio. Ad Its PANORAMIC VIEW Eastbluff Realty AfUST n1ove & sell! Lovely L19un1 Niguel 1707 rms, &enir. Properttrs 61:>-5126 u
2001 Bayside Dr. Beaut. I ~""'~""'""'~~':"'~' I gartleTJ. l:K>me, 3 br, S\u.dy, • t1rcplace, patio, cpls, drps.
i;hakC' roof 1-sty. 3 Br. 4 .ba. OPEN 1-IOUSE FRIDAY LR. fam.lly room&. kitchen . · • Close l.o all schools. $290.
walerlront home, xlnl swlm-1 5 combo. Dltiing & liv41g PANOR.U:flC Ocean View Lea!IC or lease w/option to
ming beach. Newly redcor. 1038 While Saiis \Vay Harbor room. Qpcjl b(:ani ceili ngs, 2 ::· Jo:z~: ~h9 9frt~~~h buy. _11_r.o_i..-.,-,··,-.-R-.-,-.,-,d-yd,
$180.lm SlIO\VN BY APfT. View Hills. 4 bdnns. Pool. a,th, Crpts, D;;:,s. Air~~· 4~,9 ' ' -' Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. flhl gM., J~! & last & dep ..
B·11 G d R It r V I C RH 2667 E ~~en~ ylird nt "ae ' 1810 Newport Blvd., c .ril. "·tr pd. li660 Van Buren.
t run y, ea o oge 0 rs · Jo:Xtra large Jot, Lllts or Ex-RENTALS 5-IS-7729 &UOOSf c\'C!'!.
8?.3 Dover Dr .. NB 642·~620 Coast H.,.,y , Cd~!. 673-2020 tras. Owner "•Ill carry 2nd, Houses Furno'shed Nr. SlalC!r & Beach Blvcl. Nu orpts/drp!i & rf'dC!cor. DUPLEX: 1 hr & 2 br. Hu~ principals only. Reduced to•1---------·3 BEDROOi\>t, 2 Bath. double 84 2-826.1
BLUFFS -3 Br, 2 BA, 1 yard. ocean sic!C!. 6'/~ note $3T.'950. Shown by ap-General 2000 garage. Blt·lns. f loor to
le vel, corner g r een assumable 615-5.125 po•'"ltnc"lo"IY.962-2356 11. 1 1. 1 8, :fBR .. l ~11 BA .. corn.~1i\y.
Co 11 _.. " ce 1ng s one irep acc. hel!./vlc\v, v. w a cu· ~ ..... ;-;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;-;;;;i;;;;-;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;.-.;;;;I;;-;;;-~:;;-;;::::;:::::--:::= 1 all 1 d rd Townhse. Patio, 2 car gar.,
patJo, cus. drps & shutters Balboa Peninsula 1300 NO~ $IJ5.. 2 BR Tnpl_e:11:, upper t~r ~t i1·ilhe~~~ Ra;ealo~ pool!!, tennis. No P£!ls. '$235
-t exlnu. \VaJk to shops, VA terms or minimum fllA "'''· deck, avail now. boat etc. Tract POOL & mo. Least. 96Z..1!181
Cd!\! Hi. Owner $33.500. BALBOA do,,..·11 &: owner pays poin!5 Children & pets welcomed. c·LUB. $2.15 lo $245 n10. CONDO. 3 br. JI : llll,
644-4265 PENINSULA! on spac. 3 Bi-. 2·Ba home in ,.,8,,"',.·--,_~-,,.""",,--~~ 6'12-2221 anytime. 616-!!(i61J \~·llliher. dl")'er, pool, clbh~.
4 BDRM D EN top location. Only $23.!J!Q. SIOO-Lo\'t'ly 2 BR. renttd Adlts $190 mo. Ill~ all • }.louse & Apt. Finish lhe. re-Pacific Shore~ Really yard, h-plc, many e:11:tras! AVAIL. Now l hr. In: din l'tll 4:30
HUntington Beach 3400 Luxury sln&Je, 1 & 2 bed·
room apart1nC!nl5, furnish-
ed and unfurnished, wHh
comiilete privacy and land·
s~aped counu'Y club alrros-
phere including S750.000
1vorth of recttaUonal faciJ-
1t:ea designei: and operated
juJI for single 1>eopl<i.
J'lENTS FRbrtl
S14S to $300
NEWPORT BEACH
880 IRVINE ·AVE.
IRV INE AND 16th
1n4} 6-15-ffi50 Upper Bay-$35,500 rnoc!C!ling on lht'l 3 br, 1 ha 536-BSM or 847-~ Bkr. 534-6980 -ran1 rm rombo. Sp11c.inus
2306 Redland8. 646-4:-.'93 house on PllUB. Del Sur. En. l •:;:-;-::;;:-:=-:~-~-;;;:-~-;;;:-~-;;-::;~-;;1 1::~:::~~::==;';~ liv. rn1, kllchen. ba, 1v/w \\'ALI' to l>carh hv1n this GARDEN GROVE
BAYSIDE VILLAGE joy income front arit ove.r1 1 Rentals to Shere 2005 erp\, drp~. gar w/launrl rn1. delightful 3 Bednn hoine. ga~. ".FL'ler Upper." FOREST E fenced yd, nC'\1•ly rlr.oor. 15.Jl stla mo. Aviiilable April 1st. 13100 Olaprnan Ave.
2 Br. 2 Ba, pool, pvt. beach, B · • 0rn, ...... 8A;\·l-8P~I Fri. & Agent :;.JG-41~1 (4 W.ks \V. Sanla Ana Fwy.)
boa I. .1 S«.000. Louis \V. nggs ·-.~
l'iubhousc. I s •p avat · Realtor . '673-8110, 673-4037 o L s o N 2 Single \Verking Girls wish Sal. SHARP :) BR, 2 BA. crpts. (714) 636..3030 Adulls only, no pets. Owner to sharf !heir apl & ex· d bl 3 BEDROO:'ll home, tidwd rpi!i, Ins, frplc, fenced. ANAHEIM
s7w 27. 504 W. BAY AVE. bc~~~· ·c!u 1~7u~;29 h~;, rirs. ;idults. SlT.l month . 1215 mo, 962-7591
I h 1210 Channing new 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Inc. Rf'allors. S.·31). . Aval!Qbl c "°""" 548-2£103 NOW LEASlNG FOR
Newport_!:!_e_,g_ti___ Meditrrranc11.rl !lyle; build· erokt r. Fountain Va lley 341(1 fl.IA H.CH OCCUPANCY
HOME WITH er's home. top quali1y lhru· 3 UNITS ON 1 LOT BUSINE.55 Couple' "'ill share J-.~,~.-.~,-,-. -W-,W-'8-,-,,.-,~1,-.-.' m So. Brookhurst
out. Tor loc. <occupied). 1'llssion Vir.)o ,,lcw home 2 childrf'n ok, m pc11i. 1125 4 BR. 2 BA. blt-lns, din rm, (l blk. So. of Lincoln}
GUEST HOUSE Bill Grundy, Rea ltor 900 w';,lder ~~Z'>or P£!?'50115. nlll. Bkr. 6~2-1~T.? ~/~~i~ ~=st~~ar P:C~:~. ITih4) 772-CiOOCI b
Ara.re find! Charmirnt 3 bPcf. 833 Dover Dr .. NB 6424620 $21, Sl mo. 1'1
· ROOMY 3 Br h~ In court. £..Fountain Valley. $250 !\lo. Sout Ba y u
ho I 'rat.. GIRL 22 wiints to 11ht1re 4 Br A room n1c Pus scp " •$1•IJ, Garage, tiny frnced &12-226'1 partments
1 bedroom guC'sl quarters. OLDER 2 BR. on 2-R-3 lots. l llousP rilus 2 apts. Fanla~· ho~se c,.J\t. 'vlth Mmt', yrd. 2 kids ok. 642-~3 I 1mc2iU-ltii;;;:--;;:;;;:;:1.~~..;,===,-,,--Delightful ~eluded pnlio Nr. Nwpt llartwr Yacht tic mOll<'Y inakers. Only 5 children ok. 642-:5106 or 3 Bit 2 BA. Bllns, crpU;, The GORGEOUS New
!ind garden. Nice Neii•port club. Sj2,500. fa.111·k Mar-Blks. from beach . .Summer 616--1092 SPi\CJOUS Ori Cerro hon1e!'!, rfrps, ll'lctl. Pnl'I p111lo. $235 VAL D'ISERE · • 1 •lt•ll Rlty 67«0 -f,.---,,====:-:-o~-, l'IP.ar So. Coas: Pla:i:a $285 mo. 54~2286 wktlys, eve.ii Heights loca11on .. ~pace or =====~=·=-=· ==::. ren•-c•n be raised. Owner 1 or 2 RESPONSIBLE J>POpl• ~ mo Soll ""~" 5.ij.-0333 S~O-;,gfl Single·! bc·2 In·. Furn.-unf. boat or I-railer. \\'on'l last wlll finance wiUi· minimum to share luxury j BR. 2 -==·==~='·"=·=·====
Costa Meta 4100
* *
SUNNY *
ACRES * * Motel-Apts *
l signal So. of 0 .C.
Fa!""""""
5tud10•11..ir-
$32 WK. & .UP
Day.Wffk,M-e Kltchens . TV's incl.
• Phone serv., httl pool e Maid service avail.
2376 Nl!WPORT II.YD.
548-9755
PALM MESA APTS
Next to Santa Ana Cntry
Club. E. of Santa Ana Ave.
on J\1esa Drive. Bachelor, J
&. 2 ~roon1. Featuring all
elec. Hotpolnt appJ~.
Furn & unfurn. Adults. No
pets. 546.!&iO.
CHATEAU LA POINTE
2 BR, Furn or Unfurn.
Pool. Aclulls, no pets.
$150·$165 all utll pd.
1941 Pomona, CJ\f.
$140 1\10/Dl.X mob. hm .,
comp! furn. 11td pool .
AduJl.5, no pet11. 4 Season's
J\Tob. Hm Est. 2359 Nwpt.
548-<332
*WINTER RATES
lf lc1111nt remains thru 1Urn-
n1er-no raise in rentt. l BR
furn $130, studios $ll5. 2135
Elden, at. ~ Mgr Apt 6.
SUS CASITAS
Furn. l BR Apts, Adult.s
only, no pe~. ZUO Newport
Blvd, C.'1. 642·9286
MOD. Furn .. 2 BR In newer
lriple)(. Quiet, cle11n. Adults
768 Scoll Pl 64&-2323
Newport Beach
NewpotTBeach
GRAND
OPENING
IMMEDIATE
6CCUPANCY
4200
Luxury garden aparbnenb
oflerlng romp]ete privacy,
beautiful landscaping &
unparalleled rea-eaUonaJ
facilities Jn a country
club atmosphere. Now
leasini: in Newport Beach. • long at $3.1.500. Lido lt le 1351 down. This ·can't las! over story Laguna Bch vit>\V -4 BJt. 2 BA. Frplc, built-ins. Sauna, Act'y Rm. Billiards ~7171 night. $21,900. Better be first home. $60 mo. Call 494-8773 Newport Beach 3200 Cul-de-sac. $230. AvaiJ Im· ThC!rapy & 45' pool, BBQ! Models open 10 am to S pm
med. Cati ~l 1200Qo==p='"";""::,""=·=="='="""=' I
NEWPORT H1'1GHTS
$15,500
FIXER-UPPER
LIVE I
ON LIDO
and call now. Dial 962-5.585. \VOr.tAN \Viii t1ha re Laguna \VESTCL!ff' ~ 3 br, 2 ba. ========= 1. _ Furnished or unfurnl.shed 962-5585 Nl~el home '"'/respansible houM on quiel st. Avail on Laguna Niguel 3707 Costa Mesa 4100 Renl!r from $135.$310
Garden
3 BR. & lien. Lovely Patio busJrleli.S~ person. $100 mo. )Tl,Y lse $3j(I n10. Refer l'l!q.
r.tove·ln cond. ~.ooo 19131 Brookhurlil l="~;;.-0389~-~==-=-eau '5.i&-J6!l8. ~7PM. r on Rent: 3 tir. hou5e. MERRIMAC WOODS Oakwood
(knd • wr have otbt>rs) }.funlington Beach DlAL direct 642-5678. Charge 3 BR-: 1 BA. ft>ne«i yd. Cliff Crrits, rlrps, 'blt·ins. \\'lltt>r FUm u11l111 Avail. see ad un.
Walker Rlty. 67S.S200 ~~~~~~~~~I your ad, 1tM!n s.J t beck and llaven vie. 3 !\Choo!~. R,,r~. pa id. $275 m<l. lnqulrc der class SlOO. 425 P.1eJTi.
1".66 Via Lido, NB Open ~un. ;.: • listen to the phone rtng! req'd. 3.U Pirate Rd. SZ'l.'.i. 4n.73!l7 or Owner (213) mac Way. 54s.6300
Fountain Valley 1410 Now! moll~e. 64!Y.t.Yl:I :T.t8-1079
SPACIOUS
2 Berlroon\, 2 balh. con1·
t pletcly fu1'llili~d. private 50 x 140 R·2 lot. l BR Span
stucco w/frplc. Room . for more units Custom built famil» home l$AN 4 BR. 2 BA. Crpts, G 1 2000Go .,..1 2000 G •neral 2000 1· I hlld drp1,bltns.cul-de-11ac. enera n paio, gar11.ge, poo . c
$28.000 By Owner. S40.68.17 ------------------··----------. OK. $2L'i. Phone 6T.H930 BRASHEAR REAL TY 4 Bdrms., den, 3~: baths. 1~N~Ew"""PO~'!R~T~!!!!!!!!!!•l s47"1''11 ""'" 6<>-0J.~ llbO R$~6A'fTY INC.
SHORES =B.::•,_Y<:c•.::.H:.;1 ____ 122_l !377 Via L~o 673:7300 ---:------
Westm'inster iili
SJ-IARP Ba.chelor onll. CioSC!
lo OCC & UCJ. $135 pays
all. Releren~es required.
Apartments
1700 16th Str .. t
714: 642-8170
$25 SQQ FINE Bayen!st Four BR 3 BR. ·0en, l\i Ba. Con-Si/••!. VA
1 home for sale or trade. tcmiioraf')'. • Arch l le·ct 3 Bdrm .. 1°" Ba., LgP.. !iv.
2 Blocks lo lhe OC!tan ~,block ,Seclurled sln!et, large yard. designed & hit. Lo Int. rm. WI Tlixas Mnd.atonC'
to ~im3.Bcclrecreatlon2 ~".~~.r 548-0TIJ. transferablf', I 0 an. By fire
1
p
1
J. Ta11tefhull
1
y
1
doroCra!cd
& ,.......... moms ""'"'· o11o·ner. Ph0111.! . 673-iSa:I lor wa parier ·A-·s u en;. rpt~ ..
fireplace, double gat"llgC. · Dover Shor es 1227 appl. d.l'p!l. Jl,Jodern blt·in kltch.
Lo\\-est pa·il'rd honJi? '" lhis Plenty ol 11foragr spa.ct'.
Jo . .IA BY 0\\-'NER ... BR &. den. 4 fine area. Try '11 .,,,wn. REGAL * SPACIOUS Dbl. Gar .. •~nc'd & ldSt'pd.
646-7171 COMP"ETE VIEW BA. A lol of blt~ins &; "' hirnlshlngi;, low:ly patio.
Bay&: r.1jns. •Br, .t12 Ba $75,000 .-call day r;:
+ maid • High tellings. ~ .. nights: 673--1805 1-oTHEREAL
\"'-ESTATERS . . . " . . ""
'$27,995
A1sume S~ '/• Loan
Terrific 5~ ~ t1pr loan to
SWJ sq It buil t around court.
4 ce.r gar, &Z malnt. Im·
n1cd occp. $178,(0) furnl•h·
flfl. Assum<"' 6~7t. IQl!l.n. Own·
er 5'18-7219.
assume, -Lrnv nionlhty University Par!C 1237 pa,yrnen11. Enlry hall, huge
family room. atriwn "1th Everything It Right
\l'lllC?rftlll. bullt.IM. ~1720 At111UmAble: lnlC!ml\'t rate
TARBELL 2955 Ha rbor The loc111 ion
WOWI $20,500 Tl\e '°""itioo
A real cutle In 11ppk: p1r or. and • lhc price
der. °"''flCr mml sacrifK:t On lhis lovcly 4 BR. •Ingle
lhlit 3 BR bi!auty com.<tn\enl famib' llOfl'le nr. JMU'k, pool,
lo &eboolJ & thopl. 3 BA + abOppl~ & AChool! •• $38,:ol
blllm. e R•d Hiii Realty
PauJ.\Vhltt>Carna.bln Realty Univ. Park Center, Irvine
1093 S;lker, C.f\f. ~"° --'°'-"-•-".;.Y_llme_. ____ _
'
Huntl"lton Beach 1400 Santa Arwt Hg~1• 1630
UNBELIEVABLE'
$650 DOWN 11 3 BR home w/marry extru.
\Vill mm:e you Into this VA 1tppralsed SZ,,!IXI. Vets
sharp little 3 brdroom cot· no down. FHA low down.
tage e 1o1 e to 11ho!)l)lng, Brina money l SAVE 5$SS
:w.:h001!1 and (reewayt. Fan-f1JLLER JiEALTt MG-0814
tMTic t11tartcr home for new·
1,,....,.. $211,300 F u LL lopun• Hiiis
l'R.tCE.
1700
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY l l MINUTES
Walker & Lee
u;rsunE World , Rclllle.
End Grtnada.. L ower
Cadiz. Upptt C..dl7.. Call
Be.n llarrold, Bkr. P'.)-1550
NO malt.tr Whal,. ·tt t&. you
1682 F.dinaer • can &ell tt with a , DAILY
"24-f» M0-5140 now.I I I ....;;..;... ____ _
'
•
•
0 Reono"9fl' lott•t_a\ ~f the
lour scrombled ~ds be· Sow to form lout ilm word5,
NAYRO C
L .... v_J ..... u_.c._1 ~;~· I ~ .111'-1.J
I LEKEN Ii
I I II I I A politicol ocrobo• ·He ·d~
. . • _ vide1 his time between "'"'"
.---------, nlng for office and running
I VOCYON I'"'-· l •lt
I I I• r I o ~tri:~; :~h:1'=" ~ . • . . _ • ~ dmJop trom at.1> No. 3 Wlow. ' i '111NJis~o~![1~sun£RS 5N I' r !1 1· Is )
6 YNSCl>.Mllf A!OVE UTTtRS
• TO GET Am'Wll I I I I I I
SCRAMLm ~NiWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7900
. (
Ava.ii 211/70. :)4~79 '"i>~b~lk~to-...,-.,,-.~,~B~R-.-,-.. -.1
e NASSAU PALMS e S275 yrly I~. Ava.II April 5.
1 & 2 BR. POOL P.lr. Gunderson owr/b
1.77 £. 22nd St. 642-3645 67H210
$1.5.'i Beau!. (urn 2 BR c:11:· 2 BH. furn apt. View of Bay
pando tlTob. Hm. U3 E, l6U1 & Sch, $183. After 6PM,
SI. Sp 16, Cr-.t. 642-1265 OOS-1793.
l BR lum &. unlum, drp11, 2 BR furn & u n tu r n
vilw crpls, IXIOI, pvt be.I. S15D-$175. Cpts, drpl, bltna.
~79-1 1fter 3 pm poot, pe.lio. 1525 Placentia..
$120 Beaut. futn,, 1 BR. ex-2 Br, furn, Adull couplu.
pando. Adults only. 133 E. Sl65. waler paid. Av&U Mar
16th St, sp 41. CM &4Z-l26S 17 . .1 blk to btaeh. 5'4-42'2
\ BR apt. G~11 & water pd. nJRN. w/ uUI. Bl<:htlor
S-UO mo NG cblldren, no apt. Avai1 April 111. $137.50.
pets. $1~ C.M. 1325 Placentia. NB
1 BR. new, bc11u1 furn mo. to OCEANFRONT 3 Br. Yl'l1.
mo. $160. Adulrs only, 2D> (Will lease unfurn. l
Elden, 646-5302 e~s. Agent 642-JSSO
DELUXE 1 BR. spaeiou1, S.\fALL. coiy llJ)I for one
pool. Ideal for bachelors. pto.raon, m ld d I• a.~ e ot
$\». 1!113 Church. &48-9633. retired. $10 Month, f73..4468
t an. rum. Nr shoppJ.n;. sruo10, 1 room. beach. aun-
ccnle.r. 820 Cenlet•SI. apt 8, dcclt. 1 employed ltmale.
C.\I. $1 3:5 mo. $M1 mo. 673-2979
BACHELOR APT. U t l l $15 A Mo. Furnl&hed At The
(umii hed. East 18th. $.'¥!. Beach 'til J uno 15th. cau
MIJ.-4431 613-4TIT ,_..;... _____ _
•
., •
'
•
. • • I
,
' IJ!f DAILY PILOT -· M11<h 12, 1970
k"-NTALS I RENTALS j RENTALS . ...... RENTALS
Apll. Unfumloltod Apt1. Unfumiohod Aph. Unfurn1.n,.i Apll. Unfumloltod
6350 Personals 6405 Huntington S..ch 5400 Costa Mew 5100 Coit• Meta 5100 Coit• Me1a 5100
ESTABLIS1iED 8 u 11dtr11 + F1JLLY LICENSED '*
IK'ed $.'l0,000 securtd w/ 1st Rt>nown~ Hindu Spirit-
TD. on new lndusnial bldg. uali!'lt Advlct: on all
Val. $120,000. Pnme loca-matt.era; Love. · ~1aniage.
don in Orvi;e C n t y. Business, Couruhlp, Health.
826--0580. evr11 ~ Jlapplness &: Succe.s. No
PARTNER, acth·e/inactive, problems too large or loo
Recreallon produ<'I. Split 5mall. I CAN HELP YOU.
Oranae County's 1\fost Bea1itif u!
1\partn1ent Co1111nunity
Featuring a club at1nosphere for your corn-
fort and pleasure -just co1npleled I or 2
Bedroo1n. 2 l~alh. Furnished or Unfurnished.
Air-Cond., soundproofed. self cleaning ovens,
beam ceilings. dish"•asher, lush landscaping
with streams & \Vater!alls. c/evaLors, BBQ's,
clubhouse \vith social activities. saunas, Ja·
cuzzi & swim pools, private garage w/stor·
age. From $140-$210.
For enfoyabl~ Mlrroundlnqs coterf119 to dis·
G.«111119 adults, come to MERRIMAC WOODS •••
Just ... t of 2600 Harbor Blvd., nr. Nabers Cadllt1c
425 MERRIMAC W.AY, COSTA MESA e 545-6300
EVERYTHING NEW-MOVE IN NOWI •
Costa Me11 5100 I Costa Mes•
* GRAND OPENING
New and Dramatic as
a Sf!~Sh Castle
EL CORfJOVA APTS
SIDD
*
Think you've seen great apartments?
\Ve have all t he nice features as follows: * HEATED POOL * REC HALL * DISHWASHERS * BAR-B-QUES * SHAG CARPET'G * GARAGES
MANY OTHERS!
LUXURIOUS-NEW
$150 & $170
All Utllltl11 Pold
1 &: 2 BR. 2 <M".m pools
Adults only, no pets,
307 Al'ocado St., C.M.
See Mgr on prerr.it;es
{Behind K-Mart oH Harbor
at comer Rutgen &: Avocado)
Da.y 612-3535, eve &15-0'l83
MART1Nl9UE
Spacious £rounds \V/ park·
like gurroundinv w/ pri-
v11('y. Patios & pools. Nr.
r;hopping. l\dul!s only. Quiet.
l, 2 & 3 BR. Deluxe Aptl>.
ALSO f1JRN. BACH .
tm Santa Ana Ave. C.M.
tltgr. Apl 113 646-~
ORLEANS APTS.
2 & 3 BR avail. Adults only,
17~1 Tustin, CJsta Mesa
?-.1gr. Mn. Canon, 642-46(1
Fairway Villa Apts
Near Orange Co. Airport &.
UC!. Adults only. 20122
Santa Ana Ave. 545-3894
ON BEACH SHARE beaut. home, tum
rm prlv ba " patio Wlklt.
e SINGLES FROM Sl40 prlv. t.t~u Verde area. e ~BR l\i BA FROf.l S22S Resp. working woman (wit e :: BR 2 BA FROM S2.60 child OKl 540-4181
• S BR 2 BA FROM S360 LRG nn y:/riant close!. pri
rrofH!I. 714: S38-.86&1 Readings i:iven 7 days 111
AN.NOUNCEMENTS v.·cek. 9A?v1·9Pt.T 312 N. El
Carpets-drapes-dlshwashtt enl/bath. plllio. Nr bc.h A:
heated pool-sauna-tt:nnls 1>hop'1:. Yrly, 673-1023 7-8
rec room..ocea.n views-anl 6 pm
patios·ample pal'ki"'". KITCHEN Pr1\lilegep;, r.1an
Security gua!'t111 only. 803 C'.overoor St. ,C.M. ~ ...
Ca1nino Rea l , San
and NOTICES Cle mente. 492~9ll6.
HUNTINGTON 616-5289 Wh•ddv• Wont? Wheddya Got? PACIFIC 'w .. 1 '°' wock;og """ SPECIAL <;LASSIFICATION FOR
Found IFrM Ads) 6400 ~•92--0CJ'-'.:.7.:.6·------
o\'f'r 311. prlvat' rntrance. NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS ru 0<..LAN AVE., H.B. C~1 . f5.16..j689 $ I I R fOUNO ~ wttks ago. lart:;r f7l·O 53frJ48;-__ pee a at• black cat, rnale, 'YhL ne<:k 5 Lln•s -5 times -.S bucks & chest, '>''ht. streak do'''n
• LARGE new I Br. w1th Motels, Trlr. Crts. 5997 1tULES -AD MU&T INCLUO'E stomach, -i 14·ht. lee!. Call
loads of storagf', drtli5ing •-wtwt ""' l'levt to "'°'· ~" "°" ••M Ill l•atlol. j \j..7260 2 nni-:>:30 0 r
Pull b th \VEEKLY rates Sea Lark ._vou11 PMrll t<Olill ot ltOd~ •-5 lllWI o1 M.,.."1,1,... ,. room, man a . 1-MOTHING FOR SALE -TU.Olia ONl VI ~9021 Fri only 1 P~1-5::xl
Dish\vasher, Bit-ins, Shag r.To!el. 2301 Ne.,.'JXlrt Blvd.. To Ploco Yo T 1d ' p di Ad cmt M ur r er• •r• H i'o1ALE PUppy. vi e:. ·San
carpeting. Pvt Patio. l blk a · ei;a PHONE 642 5671 • Fcl1"". f''ntn V!l.11...,, Shorl
t.o 5hopp1ng l Y.11!1ting T d -··-"
ZIPO OATE
ADULTS ONLY
You Know The Fact1
Of Life I I I
So l•arn The Facts
Of love I I I
24 Hr. Record •.•
(213) 862-8519 ()ran&e Co
l TI4J 835-2220. d:ista))('i': 10 beach. Adults Guest Homes 5998 ra I!. .,.,,.,,., sq fl San f'"er· Have $12,000 Invested in V\V hair. hlk w/brov.·n mrkgs.
------nanclo Valley home. 5 br. 3 gar, sm parts house i, ma-966-6211 ~isoo 8262 Atlanta. li.B. PRIVATE Room !or elderly ha + cabana. pool. (North· ehine shop on Newport, Cr.t. ~~l~A;LL;::._,M~al~,--,-.-,-d~l ,-1=========
lady 1n 11ce~ ruest home. nd~e areal. for Beach Tuade for ml acres. 911 h 1 & h" .··I '
1 BR To11·nh.sf', pool, gar. 646-3391 Pl'O[l('I~ 84&-4614 Po~hc,5'18-1814 Bill Acker ~~~~l\ton·a;e:~:~;;~1~ A'--n~n~o~u~n~c~•m;;;;•~n~l•;...._64;.;.;.;IO
Crpt. drp"s, b[t.\n l\'., ========= B v.·ashr/dryer. patio. $l40. I 4 R LIDO HOME HAVE : 2 BR, 2a BA Con· Harbor. 6.16-3614 LAGUNA
5i5--lOl
9
Misc •. R._o_n_l•_• ___ s_m_ 3 BA. Street to glrcrt do. \Vestcliff area. S36.500. FOUND Irish Seller Vir.. COIN CLUB
=o==~~--~-~ I GARAGES Ext I 10 for apL house on Lido. Equ!ly $15,SOO. \Van1: r.10-Cliff n..1,,.c: & "·vors,·d•. FREE ROO?llY 2 & 3 br's. Crptd & • · ra ong. x 64"6500 ho v < ~ JO 1~ N o c A. 1 * &.-• tor me. dt:M!rt home, !1 Call &1.2-3056. r.t~ls 4th \Ve<ls. ot the month
drpd. Newly decor. 3 br.. Pal ,.w,,,m,,•·Rd·.r ,.~ ;,,_,,,1rpor ' 'IL DE . . 1\lvrt-s 613-6756 t • -f-.. raJ S dbl attach gar & frplc. 3 ...,.....,..,., \\ L TRA lO llTlg11.ted · DARK Presn-ip. i;lassr-s COi'· a ~guna '"'"'e avtlljS
blks lrom bch. 536-17ll 15,000 sq ft. t~enced acres in Hemet 'l'/3 renlals 1 • ner Alta Laguna & Tyro! bldg. Start 'l pm. Visitoni:
"t d "·II for Oi-ange Co. income prop· '6~ Pon!\oc t.mnd Pt-ix. LB. <"-2359 ' we.lcome.
NE\V j HR-blk to beach. "' or age yar · ...,. • · / "'"' !==========I
5107027 &I" 121 er1y. l1'ad11 $1000 equity for old· . $130. Pri patio • QUIET! .,..-flr ..-1 . . Call (714'1 962-2561 er car "\'ELLO\V Parakeet. Sat. am Leg I N fc 6•50
G11.r. r;ingle adlls. couple. * 5'16.2?7~ + VJc. Edinger & Nel'r·hope.
1 0 1
es
202 A 14th 5.16-1319. 61l-17SI Income Properly 6000 18' ma15h. dbl plank util ;;.,li:Ufr>iEi'iTI:iuioiJ~8.1~._';:'553~2~--cc~~= I \Vlll not be respon!ible for ~--''---boal, 140 hp gray. Fu! restrd SAN CLEt-.IENTE Rl lot d '
VILLA MESA APTS.
1 Bdrm. Ptly furn. Fll)lc, c.J BARGAIN • . SKIN Olvera: \\111:tch. Vic. any eul5 o1her than my mini cond., val Sl795. For 4.i.-.:102 Trade P~uity for late Paularino School. Ca 11 oy,•n. Ruth A. Zerr.
2 BR unfurn, pri patiot, htd Gar, P\ll yd, AdulU, No Duple.-.: on big Cl Bus. lot., lo! or 1 r.larina. Lido Shor· n1odel auto, p1ck·11p or ?? • .
pool. 2 ca.r encl'! car. Chil-pets. Sl4:i. 8~2-8713 63 x ZTO Central location e11 Ho1el, 617 Lido Pk Dr, NB Private 8% assumable loan. ~ &. Identify. SERVICE DIRECTORY
dren welcome, no pets 2 BR, erp1s, drps, bltn5. $32,500 t e r i s 5-tl-&161, 28. Cabin Cruiser, all fiber-No llme limit. 49UI078 BLK & \\'hi pigeon has Id B b • .
please! $160 allso furn $115. Patio. $130. mo. Ll!ll s S.17·23.11. 1 . V SS " 1 t RE TD M,,,..... . band. Vic 22nd & Irvine, I ys1tt1ng 6550
719 W Wu
.,
0
~ Al b ""'!IO =-=-~-----g ass, t11·1n .s·s. r.-\nio. s .,.'6ages ll\ISUr· N.B. 6,.,, TJ2S
· son ~1, .. u ~~'='~m~·~· ~-.:.:.,=:....--TAX SHELTER? Costa l\fesa bail tank. 'Vl\NT: :street able IOC111 signer Ea. TD "' . · E-SIDE lrg l Br. cpl.:5, drps. 2 & 3 BR, 2 BA, pvt. patio, (81 2 Bedroom units in top Dune BUKGY or ? pays $2200. Total $~2.00J LONG Haittd puppy. Vic. ol R~LJABLE t.1.of~r of 1
RENTALS
bltns. pilllio, ~r. A<lults on· heated pool. l'r'llher &. dryer notch ~hape. Gross $14.500. 67f>..16&1 da)S Final pmt 4/71 TT<I : car B11kr-r &. Grant. C.M. blak. ;;;nts baby Bllllng In my
ly. no pets. Qll'i. 646-1762 hook up . 962-8994 Price m.ooo. libers.1 terms. I =...,---~-="-~-boat ? 57; .. 10-11, Box 143.l NB ~1:>-112:) me. Pref. Infant to z yrs.
Apts. Furnish•d Costa Mesi 5100 ~======"===== F"ll"r 0 _ It •1 .. 0 1 , Deluxe rorn lol, Oovrr Shor-""""':_.:.,c:;~:.::::::_:;:::.::1 B•1.:1.·ET 110,. _ 11.B. ana 842-36!1 -'-';;.:;.;_;:;c;:;c:;.:;c;.. __ I -'-----SHARP! Large l BR. crpts, .. 1-'-'-~·~~=•_c:,Y_·•~~:...:;:.:.;.' __ rs. Galaxy ! ['.!a.ril"ll'r5, 31' Boal OU shore Balboo ''··" . vNO. vii·.1~=~"'°"'°';,.:.:::,---
I & 2 BR'1-FROM $145 For Adults Only
2077 Charle St. * 545-0376
{Just 400 ft. \V. of Harbor Blvd. off Hamilton)
tcN=ewe.!:po.:.r:.;t_;;;B.:•::.•<::;h.;__4:.:2::00: I HARBOR GREENS drps. hl!·ins. Quiet bldg. Santi Anl 5620 9 l·BR. Apt~. S3.l.OOJ \'al. Trd Ior 20-:.11' Island mooring incl. No Harbor & Adams. ~268.'i BABYSI~NG t.1y homr,
1· APARTMENTS Adull & $130. M7-1682 Near shops. Sl0,700 Inc. po11oi>r boat, up to $10,000 renlal fee. Valu $10,000. ix'fol't" 4 pni. ~~~::; n~~ht. ~=ts 1~·
Bachelor, 1·2 & 3 BR. Furn/ 2 BR. Sl35 mo. Crpls, drps. S81.IXXI. $17.000 do .,.,. n · ,-1:11. Consid li ne bal. 5'18-1936 1:radc for ? \Vil! assume. BLACK and wh_ite ~e~er & 6'l 2-j291J • · BA YCLIFF MOTEL
* 1.0\V WEEKLY RATES *
Kitchen, TV'1, maul service.
Healed Pool.
"'~"" GARDEN Al'T.. by month.
Ott the Ba,y, pool, loVf' \y
ground~. n1aid serv. Ken
Niles V!Ua 1\Iarina. CaU:
673-955.1.
$35. WEEK-NEW
LUXURY llOTEL AP1'S.
LAGUNA •194·7201
Corona del Mar 4150
BACHELOR quarters. ha):
\"ie\\', gare. frplr. nul pd
?>lalure adulU $14:>. 6i3-6298
2 BR. 1'fa.rguer1te, So. ol
J.IY.')'. $200 mo. No chLidn.>n.
642-7898
Lido 1111 4351
ATIR.ACI1VE1..Y !um. Lrg'
Studio, Bayfronl. Pal i o .
View. Immcd. occup. Util
pd. Lea~e 673-JOOO
Huntington Beach 4400
NE\V 1 BR·blk to beach.
$150. Pri patio • QUIET!
Gar, 5ingle adl!s, couplP..
202 A 14th. 536-1319. 673-1784
FREE Util furn. I & 2 Bdrm
apls. Near beach. SITJ up.
536-3777 or 563-7282
pool. no-~ or children. 325 VILLA MARSEILLES Ownc:r. 6-12-8579 T•ade i-• Olds St••l•·-. ltnanee. 67J..24:n. setter. Foond in \'tc1n1ty of =c====----~ I unf. From $110 & up. Gar-... ~ BRAND NEW " ~ ... •• Costa f\1esa Park 54:.--0906 BABYSITTING v.·antttl by
rlen palios e Beam cellgs E. 17lh Pl . 646-6895 Business Rent•I 6060 ln xlnt cone!. orig. 0'11ner Tran~lerr1ng to Pasa/LA? ~ · . che v.·eek, mature woman,
f'rplcs e Rec Rms e 2 Poob 2 Br. 1 ~ Ba, w/w carpeting. SPACIOUS -~ _ _ tor 14' or 16" alumlnum or ~nghsh view, beaut. 6 rms, FOUND Parakeet Fountain refs. no trans. Ms-4503. CM.
Saunas e Nursery School forced air heat. blt-ins. Sli15 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. 20c SQUARE FT. glass fi~hing lxlat with good Ille entry, pat, bbq, dog run, Valley area. o,1·ner please ----------
Fam &.· Adult "C"oos. Im· mo. Bkr. 642-4~22 Adult Living 2 motor. 548-3106 $29,9j(} clear. Tracle NB/Cl'fl identify. ·839-il.56 BAB"\' S IT 'f ING : Oran u 600-1200-400 sq. ft. Office or :;:;:=.:..:.=.::.:.:;:____ ho C 1'1 F ced med. occ1Jp. 2700 Peterson _L_A_R~G~E-2_B_R_.-c-,-.--.-dc-ps, Furn. & Unfurn. Retail stores. 2!!·213 62od Beautiful 43' YachL !l'.000 unils/duplex/house 548.8532 \\'lllTE Tan & black 9 mo me. . . area.. en
\V•y, C?ll Nr Hrbr & Ad·-·'· blt-i·os. G•t·a•"· Ad",,1,,, ...,.. Dbhwasher. oolor ci>ordinat. ~ -~~:.::.=c==.·.:.::c== ' · yd. \Vkdays. \Vknds, n-es . ..,,.. •. ,.., SL, Newport Beach. Key· clear for smaller boar. A-franie cabin, 3 Brs, 2 Ba, o!d cat. Vic. Laguna ~acb. \lie!fa.re ratei. Call M!>-6215.
546-0370 pels. $Lt). ~6-5209 eves. eel appliances • plush shag ttv;u! at T1"avel Lodge f\TD-house. small units. build· r:il'pcled bll-lns. Equ\1y ~JP.a collar. Call 4M-3.i20
C!U'I>et • choice of 2 color lei. Owner. ·2131 2·H-3101 able lots, T.0. or stock. Sl'i 000 Tr de for "lboat "'I \LL F" I b BABYSITIJNG
HARBOR
TOWNHOUSE
2'117 Harbor ne11.r \\'i!IJOn e 2 Br 11; Ba. Studio
Townhouse $13J
• Heated pool . Adults only e NI) prts . Adj to .o;hnpp1n~
M••• Verde 5110 __ .:..;:. __ ..;:..:.:..:
2 Bedroom, rrpts. drr1'. elec
bltins. Adults. MS-l209 or
S.IB-5.~89 Rl tr.
schemes • 2 baths • stall · · · · · a 5111 • .:>J• / ema e ro,...-n pup· Adult Evening & \Vee"k d
, showers • mirrored v.·ard· or r.ves (?13) 246-0iOO. Call 894-4ro4. or units 1n beRch area. py, vie. fainl'ay Place & C 11 ·•1~1 1
en
11
•
BAL OA Is
~-~-=---~ 644-0539 Orange Avr-., C.M. 6-16-::.361 .=:'::....~>::...:::::;~· -----
l'Obe doors • indirect light-B LAND Brand new 90cc nioton;yel· YOUNG t.lotner wants to
i"&" In kltcben . breakfast Lease store or oUicP.. 307 ~Ia· es. Trade for gunl'I. jef'>ps 0 1' \Vhat do you have to trade? L~RGE t.I11Je Ge r ma 11 babrsil In my home wkdays
bar • hUge private fenced rlne A11e. 675-0-ISG or see ? Value $350 each. Sfarnp List II here -in Orani;e S h~ p Ii I' rd found on full time. 6l3-187S
patio . plush l'!.J'IOscaping • your brokC'r. collection, value $2500 for County"• laoi;est read trad· Perunsula. Call 549-1000
brick Ba.r·B-Q"s. laJie beat-SMALL shops nr. Nei11port guns or ! ~-4981 lng post -a r1 make a deal \\"1\TCH Vic 19th & Plac~n-DEPE~DABLE ~ 1 & 1 L p · V 1 c II t ·d ,.,., "'·'"<~""BABYSITTING. f\lY HOME.
""poos ana ier. arious sizes. Inquire 'll * * * * '* ia .. a 0 1 en1.J. Jn,-_., HOURLY. DAY. \VEEKLY.
THE NEWPORT 3101 So. Bri5tol St. Sa)'Vie11· Properties 1 ;!!!!!!!!!~;!J!!!!!!~~~~;IJ!!!!IJ!!!!~"'!ll!!~:1i".:~=====°=~~1 REASONABLE RATES. (1j l\li. N. of So. Coa;t Pl1za) :.'30!! \\'. Ball)l)a, NB 673-7~20 Lost 6401 642-6037, C.l\I. &side
Newport B1ach S!Oll
LlJXURIOURS Santa Ana roRE REAL ESTATE RF.AL ESTATE GARDEN APTS. S ~ FOR LEASE in General General --• . DAY & NITE care, or day
El..EC..ANCE a· Pvt. Pa tios, Hl.'alt"d Lanai J ~~P~H~O~N~E~'~lS~7~./1~2~00~!'! J Pam11!' B!rlg.. nex1 10 -------EARR!to:G At Fash 1 on rare for your chlld in my Hacienda Harbor pool, :iro· Private Beach Berk."ihireit RrslauranL In· Office Rental 6070 Acreage 6200 Island, N.B. ~old scre11o· on lo1·ely home. 6'16-5537 _ * t BC'dl'"m Sli:>-S275 L B h 5705 quire 1>73-9-105 fllri1. f'"ranke type 11o·/redd1sh s ! one . ~~="=~,,;.::,==:.,--I
1 & :? BR. $1~U70 * 2 Bcdr'm $325-$500 agun• eic: HUNTI NGTON BEACH 40 ACRES, ~ mile frontage Cherished gift lrom de.etas· BABYSIITING. clean home,
Util included. NC PETS J * 2 Bedr'm & d ~ Office Rental 6070 Air Conditioned on La Bres.a. $6.iO per acre, ed hu~hand. Call collect mother or 2, twil lunch. pre.
Adult living 1n a 919 Bayside Dren6'1'3-Ml~ 100 CLIFF DRIVE ON llEACH llLVD. all or part. Breck Nott (7141 629-EilSR. school.
64
2-
7968
J\fed1te1-ra.nean Atmosphere . ' $110-1 BR, 11,: BA. :nB:>-2 Br, Dc:k ilabl • Rell.I! 642 !K>44 Blt.iru:, shag c-~. d""s. DELUXE 2 br, 2 ha, condo. 1 · ... ~ c d LAGUNA BEACH -$pal:e ava e in Y -. ~sr: 8 m? o!rt. feml'lle Boat M1int•n•nce 41555 .,.. .,. F I I d hi I , DI"\, rpls, rps, bltin&. newl?st oUlce building at 10 Acres near la,..,.e Jake. Siamese, Sealpou1t on
gange w/storage POOL rp c. w w crpr. rp5, l· View of ocean. IValki.ng dis-Air Conditioned rr1me location ln Hunting-• .., 1----------24' I Avocado 64 2.2q25 in&. Swiinn1inR pool. putting lance 10 lown. Also furn. ton Beach. Air conditioned, ?l'lust sell! SIOO dn. take. 314170. abo\le the Arches. green. luxurious land~ca~ ON FOR.EST AVENUE bcoautlrul "entrance. Front-o\ll?r $25 per mo. 894-17~3 Na.ml" "Seela", Reward! Enjoy your Bo•t
2 BR unlurn. Newly dee. ing. pool main!. Adu Hi. prer. Bachelor, very large S170. Desk space avail.tble ln 8.$!t' on Beach Bl\ld., rear J =========~c.J 642-2Sro Com plete l\1arine Service
New crpts. & drps. Spar. No pcU. Nesu· Ne'>'·porl Bay. 49.t.Ul!J or .fl.1.5303. nc\1•r.st office huUdlng 1.11 lea.cl! to privale parking Resort Property 6205 RE\VARD • \Vht , Stanrlard il!echanlcal·Electrical
grounds. Adlts. no pets. $140 $270 l\lonlhly Le a s e , REAL ESTATE prime l0<·11tion In down1own lol $50 Pf:f month for Poodl f 1 Jc Bak & Bollu1\\s·ln or out V.'lller mo. 22ll3 Fountain \Vay E. .;. 8-6l~ General Laguna Beach. Air cond i· space. Desk ana cnaJrs rAN\'ON LAKE: V\v lot by ~· enia "· v ~ er · F'iberglll&S Bufltng,
t Harbor, furn \'I.
0
r .;;.1=.::.:.c"~·------tinned, carpeted, be11.ullful available for $5. Business ~wnr. S600 ,dn, bal $102 n10. ~~i~~~...,., 1..-o~I:~. ~;~8~ ~ ibl'rglaM Refinishing.
'\lilron). \Vilson Gardens BA YFRONT entrances: Frontai:e on houUrs ansv.•ering servire -'~~l inter 6 IC. 962.Jm3 eves. 673.-7712 Call_ Jim, 548-7021
Aplb. Rentals Wanted 5990 1'~ores1 Ave., rear Jead5 to a\'a able for $10. All ntili-_ 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apfs. ~I · lies paid except telephone. BLACK & Id k * TOWNHOUSE * Pnv. rerraC't'. elevators, sub-I -----------• uncipaJ parkini; lols. $5'1 DAILY PILOT R.E. E xchange 6230 go part coc er Brick, M1sonry.,
" 1erranean pk 'g. All e!ec. COUPLE w/I G year old boy per month for space. Drsk 17175 llEACH BLVD. -sraniel. Vit· Harbor & etc 6560
• _",",· lA'di,
1
8, A.
1
""'
1
= ~-, .. ~l"J!.~· Pool, soft wa.tcr, dock!. 31zi v.·ant to ren! 3 l>Pdroom and chairs av11.UabJe for $5. HUNTINGTON IEACH 4 BR. 3 BA Lido Horne. Adams on i\lar 4. has been,----------I
1-• 1 s. ON. '" ..... Business hours answering 642-4321 Streel 10 stre<-1 lor apt lul by car, JUSf HAD 1·
t.!elody Lan e, 6!f2..6872 \V C'.oast lh\')', Ne11·port. house v.·/yllrd & garage. Bolh M"rvlce available lor $10. CORONA DEL MAR house on Lido. 6~2-6JOO PUPS! Rev.•ard. 64Z-2jJ!i BRICK & CARPENTER.\'
$35 WEEK NEW 5-18 1168. 64'l 22(1'l \l.'Orking. Ch1ld in school. k la t • • ~-·~-~-~----1 ~-.. Husband same job 7 yea.n. All uUlfues pa.id eXcept Immaculate :? room suite. BUSINE:,oS and LITTLE Ero"·n & black pup--\l'Or ' P n ers. fireplacei . Lu~·uR\" ciOTEL APTS Harbor He•·ghts Apts. HONEYl\IOON view Apt. telephone. 1 11 . G t < block ,.,-alls. cement patios, '·"' • · elegant carpeUna;. 2 Bdrms, age 39. v .. ife rr. f"O more D.\IL"\' PILOT (;round floor. Pri\l&te bath FINANCIAL PY .,.,. co ar \ic. ran · patio roof~ & all fypf'a of
Laguna Beach 4705
* ~!M-9-136 * Roomy·Dehu;:e 2 & 3 BR. lirrplace, garage $ 2 5 0 , than $135 per mo. 'Viii lake m 1''0RESf AVc"NUE S\3:1 00. t:1ll pd. Parking. Baker. C.;\I . Re"' a rd . re . 492.;res II cl
: BR 2 BA. p\11 palin, Home atmosphere.incl garg. 5'1S-2394 lea5e option w/renta l i..J\GUNABE'C 6iJ.67570\\nrr. Business :.46-5374 pa.in. ·'· ooe · ga.ra~. choiL'e loc. SIN frrtl cur hlg, bltns. Os to payments a.pplying to down A H Opportunities 6300 S:\1ALL Gold watch, Pen· BU ~LD, Rem<>del, repair
yelir round. 538-:!095 morns S.D. fl'""Y· shopg, ~chi. park. 3 BR, 2 BA, nr ocean. !rplc. pa.vmtnt. Gall &12-3844 eves 49+-9466 600 SQ FT OFC. -.:.!..'-'--'""~'--.:.:;.:.; ney·~ fa~hlQn ll<land or 333.1 Bnck. block. con c re I e.
or aft
5
. IB!"n Baker & Gisler, \\I. of d~hv.·br, $23.i mo yrly. No &. \lo'kends. l~ti\lEDll\TE Occupancy. 3 ==""='='=•·=C.=\\·=f.=&t~~="='°~,;: COIN laundnes-F'rlgidairc C<Wit HiY.'aV. NB. Reward ~arpentry, no job too small.
Harbor) Rental . Ole. 3lli pet&. 5-m-0897 y,·kdys 9-5 PROrESSOR & fam ily of 2 fully r ~ rp t 1 e d, air-con· • From $6,:00 to S 4 2, 500. 673-4899 · Lie. Contr 96UMS
l BR Apt. It cookg, beau Cinnamin Ave. 546.1034 DELUXE Feature&. l hr. 2 r!ilionrrl oHicc a r e as Industrial Anc.heim, Costa fl.1 e g a . . . FREE Est. Brick. block,
ocean vu, Lag 1~\llr.. UtiI pd. '1v=1NT=E~D=--~~~~~~ b• •pl. foe •duH ~ .. ""-·tbl,ff chlldl'en rom1ng to ln:in for l!\'a1lnhl1" no"' al 286j E . Property 6080 Buena Park Fu 11 e r ton GRAY )lalr \~r1m11.rancr ' ne I te & I Sngl ~r ~~"". 4~9&13 ' 1 : 1 nicl' fan1ily. 2 ........, Sahbalical leave in lair sum· ' · \\'Ilic vi l!'lth & Irvine s
0
· P a.n rs en ry ,~ . ...,... Br. 114 BA. Neiv crpfl' & al't!a. Call 644-4293 mer de!lires comfortably Pac. C'oast H\\'y. in Co1'0na Ga rd e 'I G r o 1• e. A •1 c;.D ·k .. R d. 1111\yi;. 531-'1973. Stale Llr'd. di·p.~. \"ID hook-"P· G••· C
0
rlPI i'llar. 1.410 sq. ft -ranging ·'BL.!LDER O"FERS ""\\' \Ve s tminster, Hun!lngtan . ns o u e ei\·ar ··!=---~-~-=========
Y SPA I US 3 Br 2 Ba Crpts, !urn. hou~t: in Ne1A'P')rl or • r '""' 612 1416 aft 6 Altc:r J &. '>'·k-ends 968-7272 drps, frplc. bll·1ns, J blk to Lllguna Beaeh l:lreas \ate 1111111 Jnno to l7'20 sq. fl. 21,:"11 sri.. ft . delu..o,:c hlr!~. Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin, . -Cabinetmaking 6510 497S
Lido Shores Hot•I
Bayiront kitchenetle suites
from $255 n10. SuHcs &
rooms by day or 11·1'ek.
Phor.es, maid, coUee, lee.
617 L1tlo Park Dr. 673-8800
RENTALS
Apts. Unfurnished_
General 5000
VEN DOME
ll\lbtACUl.ATE AP'I'S!
ADULT & FAMILY
SECTIONS AVAILABLE
Close to shopping, Park
• ~paclous 3 Br"s, :2 Ba * 2 Bedrooms * Swim Pool, Putlgreic.n * Frpl, tnrlh,flndry fac:'ls
1845 Anah1im Ave.
00ST A MESA &12·1R24
!!££ • RENT •
3 Rooms Furniture
$19.95 & UP
l:ontb-T~l\looth Rl'11lab
\VIOE SE'LECTION
lfO OEPOsrf 0 .A.C.
Hl'RC FUrnlturc RentaJs
511 W. 19th, Of 548-3181
Costa M••• 5100
NE\V Dix 1 & 2 Br Shg c•pt beach S275. 6'16-4391 Aug. thru J une. tifin. ol 2 f rnrn s4:;o to $774 pl?r mo. Ll'il~e<l, ehoice O \'an i:: r La i'l'llt'ilda. LOST: Small gray cn
1
\"iC. · · . • • . Area cnn be ~11b-<li\llded to C&.11 Charllr. 52:>-7333 Elm & Roynl P:1lm. C.i-1. R"'Sl ·-AL
drps, bltqs. i111med. occp. P.r's. pool pl'l'f'd. CaU M111 lenant. 614-SlSl lot• in· County area. P r o p e rly J lj..7642 ""'DEn1.i &: Comm. s1 ro -stso. 5 40-1973. Corona d1I Mer 5250 fi-14-20;.7 furnia!tnn. r·lear. 01,·ner "'/cany Jst \\'A!'l.'T!':D: Par tner on a~'/, 1 Custom Cabinet &. Furn. 5-la-2321
2
\VORI.:.JNG <>irl~ looki ng for
1
,..._..., ___ ... ,..,.... 1"0 F1 2<:~. Pre[)d int. ok. nr 6:.i ,, basis. \Voorl !In sh \\'HITE i\lalc Toy Pood e, Furn Re-Finishing. 645-0091
" 530-361~ am, 828--5430 pm. rr111ovin,i:-~rtviC't'. Rt>mO\I· Ans "Kini"'. Sal vie !'<lcsal-==========:J
LOVELY 2 Br. l''/W rrpti,:, 2 hr. ::\partrnent 1n Ne,11por1, Off!CES For \e1111e-L11nitrd · I · rl ~ j63 I· drps, 1\-ood Hrs. ga r. ~ ... ; Yt~ARLY. pre.ler furnished . .-pace availablf' In beauliful NE\V Bldg., 11.000 SQ ft for ini::: orl hni!h froin furn. & Vel' e. Reward . :'H5-•t" Carpentering
\\'a!hl'r/dryer. Adults, no ~ !'Viii takr u n furn is hed Hunt1ni;:tC1n lilirbour. Con-r;ale or lc:ase, For details Int. & f.o,:t. wood '
1
-Prks. LOST · Mnall fen1ale cat,
6590
~ts. f'o• appt. c•ll 646-31""· Ort• 11·/-fng.1, To $16 O. 1 R B I "' • .., ff Sl50t'l. I.Alls n{ 1''0 r k · 1nulti--rolored Fron1 San!al ---C.~A-R_P_E_N_T_R_Y __ ··~ • "" ·~ acr oss art ett, 1t11lttta 'S\eU tt ill -689-9373. l-6P;\I. Ana.lie"• hts .. Call 54""~'1~
2264 Placentia. Open ON TEN ACRES Resp on s i bl r. ha V" 714/S~&-1361. '"" '"'-'"' ~ Thut·!<-Sal. g '1""'r' r.nNOR REPAIRS. No Job
2 B ll
•o ,,._ ~feren('('~, Plea~e call after Hun!1ngton Marbo"' Corn. ..,...,......,,... . , , RED Irlsh Setter, malt!, 6 T-Sm-". ~bl-I •--· r ~ .. ....,parate unit at-1 &. 2 BJt Furn & Unfurn .,.. OUTSf \NDIN G t ...,.. .... ..,. '"'" ..,, •-,,-•rd ~"'''· ,,.,.,, •• 6 -5-l0-8.lOS 11~1 \Varner 1\ve. HB ' . orpoi1.uni Y mos. old . Vic. \V. N11o'pt 'It! 6 0 th er cab'-.-•· . ..,, ... ~ • "' t"'l~pl11.ces I priv, ruotiGs I ~='c=c~~~--~~ C · I 6085 for -co•"-' •olonn•<too • ·~~
d d
•-ROO,l.\IATE \"aol"', G•··1 ommerc1a '"" u= area Reward 64?-476.i c.•:: "1~ u no I rapes. g a r e n 11 r . No Pools. Tennis . C.Ontnrl Bkfst. ~ cu • 0; 1 5-15-0('i58 • · : ......,..... '"'• answer eave
rhilrll'f'n or rrt1'. 646-2'Uli ~ Sea La.ne, CrlM &14-2611 \lo'Rn110: to mo\,, to c .!\1 .• S.A.. Modern Offices " ANNOUNCEMENTS nisg •
1
646-2372. ll O.
IM ·•-h ~--II l Tust in. or N.R. 10 be elo!>e l d NOTICES Andef'IOn 3 Br. 2 Ba nl1 ~ h ~ &u..•• ur nr .......... , IVY ~ sinJil'.lf! S\75 2 rm s1111e. [~HOPPING ~"TER . Lim· Investment •n =c,,c.::cc..~-----1 I I d F" hi Ill "Ork. Ga~ proh lbitl\11! Air cortrl, ~·l'y scrvlct". 0 I •t• 6310 QUALITY' Any !ize repaint c r fl ~ r Pl'. res Y SEE THIS ONE I nnw . Rc:ply to Box i\125. n.,•·k10•. ·-"t-·11.·· 1-··t·•. ited !pace available In board· ppor uni i•s P ersonals 6405 or new constructto" n .... ,. -rainteri. Nr occ. Upstn. o.;1y p,·1,11 onu ......... •u y "'-U"" I \\lllk cenlt'r, loca ted inside Co ~ •• 557-61~1 Ni<.'f' I-bdrm. ant., lrcshly ~~c.;:..:.:..~·-----So. Cal if I'! N11t. Bk . Bid,. UNIQUE ....,._ m. By hour or rontracL 1·. -:: he aul i ful Huntinglon
JtiST Completed
2
BR. pa inted. New cal'pets. Lars:t S;'11ALL room fnr usr a6 C..n~t11 :\T1·sa 642-1485 Harbour. Contact R 0 s 6 INVESTMENT PROBLE711 CleRring Houi.e. Lie. & Boodt"d. 646-3442
Crp!s, d ..... <-. bit-ins. $l?>l l1v1ng rtn. Brcakf11st area. :-.htdy. V1r. I)[ Frrnleal & e o ~~LX. EXEC'. OFFICE 81irtlett. 714/8t6-l36l. OPPORTUNITY \\'t specialize in f1ndini GEN. repair, add., cab. ',~ st·~, fllnnth Ocean Bl\ld, Crl\11 . r\o I 1lO • ·d· h I F mo 2'151 Elden A,. e ' Sllitt"!<> frir lf!AS<'. Xln! Joc:i tinn Hun!i.ngton Harbour Corp Get In on AntP.IO!'M' Valley so l1 ru; "' ptTII"! 1ng e P orm!ca. paneling. marllte.
Sc.nl·c Prope rt"ttl furnlh1.re nctded. 673-7923. to I 1· I I A h. DI k 6 642-30!!2 nn Can1p11!> Dr. acrohs fro111 .fl~! \\'arner Ave .. HB Land Boom "''no tnvest· r your pe1'!0nl!. · inane a· ny1 1ng~ c . 73-4459
$1
. 675-5726 • LANDLORDS • 01·11ngt I n i\u ""l"I. Su!frc.. J ............ ~ ............... ! men!~ CAii a·18-3196. estatr t ... bu sir1cs<. p1'0ble1n.o;, nop \IR--~ 11 , __ ;.o + Stt. rlepo5ll, Clean 2 ----------·-z=========' 11 6-16-J.4 ~ r ,., I ., ... '"""(' nK·pat ...... rktrni Duplex. Caitsltlrp~. 2 Rn Duple., ap! \\'/garage. F11.EE RE'.i'ITAL SERVICE nva11 from '."110 s11 IL to 1o:i0 l111proved Comm lots Bri~lol ~ Ca ~a & t
5
ten 1° our LET THE S\VEDE DO IT'
!!>lv/rt>f, enrl Pillo. Tnfnnt Virw. t 'rp!~. r\rps, dsh\vhr. Broker 534-6982 ~fl f!. AIC, l" 11 rI'e1 ed. Bakor are11.. $2 per sq fl. lnve~t , Wanted 6315 recorded n1e·sage. Be surr * • 191.~i.l * * ·
0 1.-. ~'2 14·A Stair. 642-747:1. 1111111. l11i. Call rvr.li I '1kn<ls \VANTED: Unl11m. Cd ;.,1 rlral)f'd. Ct11l 5.11>-SSUI ----------lo leave your ruune &>i=="°"=-~"==-=-f,73-3&i7 ii an in ltralftr ~o tn 50 unit~ ,1·anted hy In· crlephonr number. \"our call REPAIRS • ALTERATIONS
AT'TR.ACTIVE 2 Br. Crp~. I =-=~~~=~---homr. R('lln>:d rouf!l t'. no OfrTCf: OR Sl'IJP.b :J \'t~tment Group. Cash + "·ill bt 1'!'1urnM p1'0n1pt1y. * CABINETS. Any ~Ill!: JOb
rlrp!>, Gt; ktlch .. vil'w, t>nr l NF.\~' 2 Br.'.! s,, r.nrage apt. pttts. S1JO or under, yrly Jse. 15 s 3j' or :~1 \ :'..J fi.12-fi.%0 "ll""r do\vn. 642.74B2eve~. 2.) ~ exper. 5'18-6713 \\'!l~hrr / d ....... r. Cd;..!. 613-4;i<O~------llff st pk1nr.;:: & ulll turn ,. ·~ * M ~11r. nr bu....,. $140. adulls '·'" ::c N c FOR sale, !lore bu1 ldin{". --· en QUALITY \Voodera.ft. Ge.n-
f'r11I carpenlry, Small Gen.
Conl'!lr. C111l Ken 5*4235 ]·~ E ~ h 61}-249~ or li7:-...267i SINGLE Bsuim:ss111a?1 rn'l'dS e11o·port & Ba,v i0nle1' '"'' " 6320 •v d• ~ul St. ,,,, • ., N 1 81 d 2•2 ~°"',,,,... \\I. 19th <. t 0 -thol Mont• to Loon
2 l BR nHfurn aot or hM?. C.\I "'.>.! r'>''pot \' liltl-1 " wa-u.,., 00
• 11 DELUXE 2 BR. '\'eslcllff Hit. \larg11c:rl1e, So. ot To"I'~ arta. 54~·1768 Ast. ---------1 w roo1 & b ll 11 t-1 n s. Il l\")'. SlSO 1110 No child nm. -'="'='=· ="~"~'=·=·=l>-0="'=·====-I ;,(!(I ~q. II . 14 ~111 trc.1 L'Ol1'· 1st TD Loan FIND YOUR (';[Rt, TllE Allulls. $200 JTlO"l'IO lease. • 6-12-i89S • ~ plctety turn1 sh1•d m;; pt'r Lots 6100 fu\IART \VAY!
6
•
2
..o
274
B ~IELO Rooms for Rent 5995 n10. Stt a1 300 \\'. Coa~r =.::..:.. _____ _:.:.:; 547 .. 68 A .. , I! Apt., no t'OOk· flw~·-· S111 tr A. N a or ca ll Lo-A'tlSl Jnteretl Available "'"
CARPENTRY, Repairs,
Remodelln1, cablne!1. No
job too small. CAii 646-024.
e lJE:l.UXE 1 &: 2 BR Garden
ApL'l. Bit-ins, prlv 1'3tio.
tiealffl }l"Ol. h'Jl]c. Adults
Sl4j mn. 5'16--S\63
in~. $100 ut1H11c.s includrd. --------64,....21~1 Ma9nificent d TD l 14 tiour 1'tCOrd1~ fi73-2.'IRI ROOi\t to Rent. Student pret. n oa n SAUNA. i\tas,,.,ge by Sla.rla. Cement, Concret• 6600
Kitchell pr1,·U. S60 rer mo. Best Location in CdM V'1ew Dcni$1', Pat, P.larh•nf:. Carol
B•lboa Island 5355 l•I & l~~t mo 1n !tidV3nce. 800 to t..00 SIJ. !,. Ol>IU:o<t' Off. Tums based on e_qu1!y. ~ Salon de 'I'raitmenls t'ONCRl:.IE v.'Otk &II types,
64&-7886 all 6. IC" SPf'rt'~-A,·;11: lmintd. Utm level site on • larY.· '42·2171 54$..0611 2930 \\!, CAt. 11,,-y. Npt Sch. Sa~ing, break~ni::. haulit11,
SPLIT 1'"\'t!l 2 BR. Crptf.. drps. !)Um.. No pe lS. 2885 2 BR. Crpta, drps, carport.
?.le.ndou.. ~:n pool. 2 kk1A ak. 2214 Collert.
A pl 2. &IG-0627
SP1'C 2 Br. lrpl, ;11r. crpts,
dt"W. fl!O\'f', l25fl )Tly inc
ulll liTh-6Uli rvt• & 1vknd5
KITCH & Indy priv ~mo. Phnnt" Ownrr. lil:?-!l'JiO sc:i.p-d, "~ k:it ready lo StJ"V'!tlf l-f1rbor l'lrtl '11 :TS, PaOy noon to l &m. 612.31s,1 Skipl~dinl:; L1~. Sel"\lict! A
l.st & last mo's in ntl\lanC'f!. fltA RINF.R"s CE:\'TfR h\uld. Excll.1$i'"e Emerald S•ttltr Mortg1ge Co. \V,. illCC'l"pl all rredl! ctirrls. Quahty. 842-1010
, I I Bay 1n t..agi1na Beach \\•Ith ~ .. ., ~ 11 h st \\ork1n1t i•r or -.tudrn . Ofl!cr or S1ore Rlrlg R('nt or ......, u , t l"lt:t SHERRYL CDlENT \\"ORt-:, no Job too •.• 1 • .,... panoramic view of ooutline. Sm·" ~ _,.,., 1.-1~9 Ri\CJ'Sir!e ;\\r, NB. 646-Tl1l \VE i\l;\KE OR DUY OON'T DESTROY LiS ALL. , IUI, reuonable. rrtt
Huntington Beech 5400 t"URi'l"ISHEO mom for !11.dy 646-2414 TRUST DEED~ PLEASE JUST CALL t:illm, H. Stull1ek S-l&-851.5
SPLIT Le.vel 1 BR. Crpts, 2 BR $ll:J Carpets II.
drp11, bllN. No pe:ta. 2383 d Cl mo. 1 • \ftrwlo 543-5421 rapr,;. o~e to «'t•'ll..Y
2 BR. I Ba. ('Arptl&. drape11, tlnly, Kitchen privile(f:t. COS'rA ~!c:sa nH1tt11. A/l, ~1 aJ'l)'lime Bkr. ELLEN COLLECT * CONCRETE Joo?'!l,
l BR Sl.10. 2 Br W/fenctd bll·ln11. n!'ar bt11ch f llj n'IO. ..cl"'_cc~°":.c:"~"'cc.· :::C~-':::':::· ~--crpts. 1!rps. Parklni;: 1.\\> 12131 375-a!93 patio&. mllJOnry . Any 11 job.
M. So. Coas! Plat.a. SJS-2132
Ol!:LUXE l BR studio, crp11,
drpg, pool. lmmac.. I chlld
ok. cau 646-04!Ji
paitlo $1.SO. Crpll!, dll'S & bl!· !·ll•IOS:i $15 Pnr '"" UP wikl!t'IH'n 811ktr, 646-483.:l nr j.\\..17:,7 Mortgage1, Reas. Doll. 642-A514 alt 4 in& &U-7419 eves I: wknda. ~;;.:::.;:.~,=-~=== Tr 11 D d o 6345 ALCOHOLICS Anonymaus" -~~--~----1 Nf.\V I BR.. ARPETS. S30 \VK UP Ap11. 2376 N<l~'· NEAR C.~I. City H111I 1 Rm . 132'x300' &side, tah ~ u •• ----Phone W2·7217 or wrfte to *.CONCRETE \Vork,
QUIET AREA • Beaut. Ir~ 2 ORAP E..t. ""rl Bhvl. !MS.9T:>S. Offlcei;. Pane\rr!. ··r-t•, A $" = •~ O •·· -Co •t Licensed. PatlOI I dR-•,
BR .'l 09ll El
•-mlno Or 'T1 L ~ Co -.~., .,~ •'"" d
1
...., .. ~ 11ntt11. Sub. skina: '"·'""· __..,.,Isl T.D. on tlunllngton r .. Q<.L'( l"-1 st•" esa. t ~,111 C 1 5-,;~:.,,
1..41 " ,.. 1nih11.11·; ,....,... ... .,;"9 con.ONA DEL i'otAR _ nr. rape!!. 150. C111l 6~~'60 A.ir111, &16·3130 BrAt·h n.2 Jot, $j() • rnonth e "· 1·11 ns l!m~n . IQ"WOU
.C:;>::;t...;5"::6-&:;.;;'51::::.·.:"':::7.:-9;:'&;:.·_ L G" l f hi I ~-I MORE tlo BACHELOR APr Crpt!I, -1 AR ..., c ean 2 Br. apt. II!. on 1. , .... ,. rm/ha.. S?otALL Office on bll(f oor-R-4 -Cosio ?llts11.. Build ncludlng 9~. 3 ~T d1 1e. J.:i~ DON'T rive ii fl..,...Y , &el • concrete pa for
drp&, tiltN Nt1 r-tt. 2885 OJ\ll.Y PtLOT \\'ANT ADS! I Artults Clos.-d ; • r A e e '. pAllo. 1:41-afie, $Pot I lllo. tier Costa ;\le AA $5?1/monlb 40 lJnjts, Phll SUUl''&n, rl\~cnunt. • 9 4 -8 1 0 0 <1r quick Cft~h for II 1vlth a le11 money. Artistic Kltinz
M•MM•. ~5'21 100.~ J::na:I•"" St !1)6.1203 -'-~.:..:...;I_':::°'-•;..•;..·--'!--11hlllll's lr":lude<I &11.&iOO 0..'ri«r/Reallor. 548..$761. 4M-17CH5 Daily Pllo~ \\'llllt Ad. & f!n11hltl(, 64+.o637
LARGE 2 Br. l~ Ba studio
11pi. !':o J"f'IS. $1SI. n& Joann
SL Mfrt."iM
j
I
l
l
b
' '·
' • l
'·
,.
" lo ..
•• " ~
" ;
•,
b.
ii. ..
60 -" ,,
•
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Jobs-Mon, Wom. 7100 Job.....Mon, Wom. 7100
Thu'ld4y, M°"" 12, 1970 _ • DAILY PllOT 3$
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT J OBS & EMP LOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT'"
When You
Want it done
right •••
Call one of
the experts ~ ~CJ.,....., ______ _.._.._lis.te~d~b~e~lo~w~!~!~
\ ~ERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY
itnent, CO'ncr9te 6600 HouMcleaning 6735 P lumbing 6890
cu CONCRETE
I decks, etc. tree
16
Child Care,
Licensed 6610
\\'ANT A Sunny & bright PLUt.IBING REPAIR
home! Call the OUTCll No job too 'mall
1-IAINTENANCE t-fAN for 0 642-3128 e
your wind0\\'5, noon & Pl.lThffiING, Repairs & Al·
carprl clean.ma:. No crew, terations at economy prices.
537-1508 aft. 3. • 64G-12S6
** ASPllALT **
R &. J exp. \V<!ek ends. $5:5<1
hr. 1\.1r. Arnold 646-5266
AUTOMOTIVE Serv
f\techanic. twlf>.up, align-
ment , bl'llkes. Hi vol Shell
Station. Top pay lor right
man. 2!Kll E. Cat Hwy.
Cdt.t. 675-0533 Dick
\l.'illlamr.
BABYSlTrER wanted my
hon1e or )'QUr& 5.X: an hr. 2~l
days a. week. Fri, eves 'til 9
P.1\1. 2 !Pris 5&6. Hopevlew
area. Call 842-1888.
BABYSITrER 5 day wk. 2
schl childttn. Wesl side of
Beach Blvd, H.B. Fi\•e Pt&.
area. 847~984
BABYSl'ITER ~ Daya Mon.
thnl F'rt. :I bys 3 & 2.
Rel\ah\e mature \\'Qm&n,
Ca.II 536-7951 aft 5:30.
Construcbon
BUYER-ESTIMATER
bfajor builder otfen xtn'I
opportunity f or qualifJcd
man w/beavy exper in tract
slngle-lamU)' hous.lng ln So.
Calif. Must aliio hAve heavy
budget control exper. 1111!.ld
exper .l accounting back·
ifO\lnd desirable. blust be
capable of Increased respon.
albllity In future.
Plea&e 111!.nd ruume lnclud.
llli: salary requirements
to ...
PERSONNEL MGR.
P ardee Construction
P .O. Box 54089
Los An9eles, 90054
(No phone calls pleue)
Oll!.ntaJ As.!iatant.
Chairslde. Exper. Only. * Call 54}8844 *
liA VE a fy.n job 1.n your !pD.1'1!
ltmll!. Good earnlna:s &
pr\ies u Fashion Show
D!reelor. No Investment
"'W train, For lnttrview
appt. call 847--0846
l!OTEJ . Cashier";'",,,"'u.-,~, -.~ •• ~,.
auditor. Exp'd only. NCR
4200. Good pay, fringe bene-
1\ts. Newporter Jnn,
INDEPENDENT Order of
Fott1tera la lookina for 3
u.les tra.lnees. Career opp,
generous advancll!. 645--0591
9 am-1:30 pm
INSPECTRESS wanted for
1st class hotel. Experience
pref'rl. 644-1700 ext 575
JONES TIRE SERVICE
ts 6:pandlng and requltts
EXPERIENCED
ORetall Salesmen
•Tire Servicemen
e F'ront End and
•Brake Mll!.l'hanlcs NURSERY School, C.r.1. 7
days wk. 6:30 AM·9:30PM.
Full, p/time, a lt schl.
Rates for 2 or more.
TTansp. turn. So Orange CO.
64&3706 or 534-1.%12.
l\fcsa Cleaning St>rvlt.'e
Carpets, windows, Ooors, etc.
Res. & c.ommc'I. 548-411 t
BABYSITI'ER: Days my
home. CN"n transp. No. C.!\1.
Remodeling & area. Live-in considered.
DISH\VASHER. di13"S 8-4, S2
hr. Apply Chef, DiUman'a
Restaurant, 801 E. Balboa
Blvd., Balboa
Salary plus bonus and
company pa.id benefit4. Repair 6940 549--0800 ;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I BABYSITTER I Housekeep. Opportuni1y for arlvanl"t.ment
Apply: 2049 Harbor Blvd. Income Tax 6740
Central Business Serv1ces
1c .:coc.nc.tr_•_ct_o_r_• ___ 66_2_0 e THE TAX ADVISORS
Prrm. office-Reas Ra•es
J2_(j No. Ne"'JXlrt Blvd.
Opposite ltoag Hospital
For Appl. Call 645-0400
Addition11 * Remodt-1\ng
Fred H. Gerwlck, L!c.
673-6041 * MS.2170
Carpet Cleaning 6625
PROFES&ON AL Carpet &
window cleaning. Any h~·.
rm-hall $11. Winda~·s ;10.
821-3182
CARPET srEA.i\I
ED No goap, no
For est. 646--59n
Drywall
CLEAN·
brushes,
6638
1-f.K. Clark TAX SERVICE
23 yrs. in arcfl
&4S-S285 appl.
• you1· home or oillre e
TAX SERVICE ln your
borne. Fast & efficient!
* 531--0502 *
Ironing 67SS
rn.oNING in my homP. $1
J-lr. Dressmaking & allcra-
llons. 55-7&11 e DUDDY Drywall Co.
Lic'd Contractor. Lar;::e or -=========
Small Jobs. Ph. 847-9581 !::_a ndscap_i~g 6810
Fencing 6660
REPAIR Wind damaged
fences. Free estimates.. No
job tDO mu1.IL 64~2343
Floors 6665
CARPET VINYL Til..E
Free eatimata Lie, Contr.
540-1'262 546-4478
Let Us Talk To Youl
\Ve do the most tutusual land·
scape creations in lhc coun-
ty. Our price is small com·
pared wilh quallty.
• 5-11)...9601 •
Pruning, Landscaplng &
Planting.
MAID SERVICE 682S
GLAD-flAND fo,Taid . Sel'\lice:
Garden ing 6680 Bonded, Licensed & Exp ..
Jiourly & by spec. iir·
GEN'L )''d, Clean.up, tree rangement. Tran.sp furn.
serv. roto-till Sprlklr re-49'1-1573
pairs. Haut. Rea30n . 64&-58"8 =========
P ainting,
P aperhanging 6850
PAINTING . "THE
E>.'TER IOR SPECIALIST''
T H E
REMODELERS
Quality
Horn• Improvement
Contractors
ADDA
• f amily room * Rumpus room * s.droom
Kitchen Remodeling
Complete Remodeling
Garages • Carports
F REE ESTIMATES
100% FINANCING
CALL NO\V! ! ! * 642-3 660 *
Roofing 69SO
NE\\. Roofs, Repairs &
Coa1lng of all Types. Bo!s
v:orks on lhe job. Free
estlmates,£~!i91, 645-2550
24 hr.
ALL types rock. \\"Ood &
11sphalt shingles. LEAKS
REPAIRED. \Vork i:IJBr.
847-ll36
Sewing 6960
JAPANESE Gardene r ,
exp'rl. Campi. yard st>rvice.
Free estimate. 548-8255
EXPER. Japanese Gardener.
Complete Yd Servicr. Free
estimates. Ca.II 540-1332
CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST
1\.iowing, edging, orld jobs.
$2851 story, stucco & trlin, 2 ---------
coats, labor & painL All • Dre!lsmaking • Alterations
\\"Ork guaranteed. Lie, bond, Designed lo suit )'OU,
Tile, Ceramic 6974 PAINTING: Father & Son.
Reasonable. 548-6955
Ins. \\lon't be underbid! Call Jo * 646---6446
64~36i9
JOHNSON'S GARDENING
Ya.rd CIU't', Clean-ups, Prun·
ing, planting. 962-2035 Quality \Vorkmanship & I---------
* LANDSCAPER *
12 yrs local exp. 536-1225
?.1aterialr Guaranteed.
Reliable. 27 Yrs Local.
Refer. Emenon, 54~3587 or
548-2034.
~~".9, ____ 668_0_ 1 lllGll Cost of Painting Turn
-You OU? College ~tudcnt ANTHONY'S •'"' do """' polnthog •• re11sonab!e price, Steve
644-4860
Dependable l\1ainlenanre
Exp •• Pnming • PlanUng
Budget Landscapin;:: e Horticulturist •
NE\V lawns, r e-seeding.
Complete lawn care. Oean
up by job ol' month. Ftte
estimates. For info call
897-2417 or 84&-0932
GARDENING
Tl'ees, shrubs, ivy n:moved.
New Ja"'fls. Rototillini. }~ree
est. 548-8918
JAPANESE G a rden ing
Se r vice. Neat work.
CleaJH1p & yard n1aint.
968-2303
AL'S Garoenlng & Lawn
fllalntena.nce. Commercia.l,
lnduatrlaJ & resldentiaL • _..,,, *
JIM'S Gardening & lawn
maintenance. Res. & com-
mercial * 540-48.37
JAPANESE Gardenf'r. exp'd,
Comp), yd. M"rv. Tm esl
Reliable. 642-4389
EXP. Japanese maintenance.
H.B.&: F.V. Area * 842-8442 •
General Service• 6682
5-18-4.).19
AVERAGE l story cxlerior
$259. 2 story exterior $359.
Bonus 5()00 Blue Chips.
Interior priees av 11. I I.
637-6119 * Pa.inung.Paperhangina:
t nterior-Exterior
Special Prices on Paper
Call Larcy 642-45511
lNT & Ext Painhng, 1-~rce
est..,, Loe rels. 30 yr.; exp.
Lie. &: ins.rd. Call Chuck
64:>--0809 or Jim 548--040~
AVERAGE exlelior $127.50
lahor only. Interior price~
avail also. ~8-1:>46 It
646-318S.
APTS & l\10TELS Painter! -
$10. averi;:. rm. Ca 11
anytime Pal the Painter,
5.17-86.1S
SURBU RBAN P a i nters I
Decor. \Ve take the pain
out of painti ng. Expert "'urk.
fur est. 494-3100
,/ PA IN TING-INT/Ext.
Jack can do that pal.nllni;::
job-fn~J. clt>an & ,,.ry reas!
Ei;t. 89-t-3895, 84'1'-1358
• Interior • E xterior •
/l.co\l5tiC ceilings ptd, 12 yrs
expcr, State lie. Pittsb\lf"ib
pnls. 543-1787
AL'S PAINTING, eirpe.r, int. k
\\'ood Finls.h Removing and ext. Insuf'M. Frte estimo.l·
\Voocl Bleaching Service. \Ve cs. Ralph. 494-3$0
remove all lype1 of \\"Ood -~~=~==~-
finisher from furniture and PAPER HANGING
Interior and exterior homll!i, :JO yr.;; exp. Free esllmate,
buslMM buildings. marine Call K.i\il, 64Z.r~
vegge\s, etc. U Paint 11.nd PAPERJIANGING
Refinish. Lice.med snd 10-Ycan of experien(:(',
* Verne, The Tile to.Ian *
Cust. \\"Ork. In.stall & repairs,
No job too small. Plasler
patio, Leaking shower
repair.
8'17-1957 /!146-0JJ&
Tree Service 6980
TREES, Hedges. trim, cut,
stumps, remo ... ed, hauled. 30
yn exp. Fully ins. 642-4030
Upholstory 6990
CZYKOSh.,'S Cuslm, Uphol.
European Craftsmanship
100 '/Q fin! &IZ-1454
1831 Ne,\·port Blv, C,..f
Job W•nted, Men 7000
ARTIST EX[ll'r. 1 ,.._Ian art
dt'pt .• Roughs to finish · ac-
curate & fa.st mechanicals.
I lerm.a..1 Simms. 232 La
Brea St., Laguna Beach.
494-0557 or 494-6594
10 YR. Ex. skipper, Eng.
f\-1aintcnanre, Need boat to
\\'Ork or delive r. 675--0445
Job Wanted,
Women 7U20
GAL FRIDAY, Gen e r11.I
lnsuran~ agency nllll\&8l'-
ment experience.
.. 6"13-{)897 *
J~OUSE\VORK. By Day.
Experienced. Re.Hable
531-4001 a!ter 5
TYPIST. Gen. off.ice. Lt.
shorthand. t.lRlure, exp. 4·
hr1 per day. 646-1536
AIDES • for oonvalescer'ICll!..
eld~ly care or family e&rll!..
Homemakers. &17.fQl
gUT'l!d. 19 yean experien~ Call f'red, 548-4903
71,...._.,,., Ext "· °""P~A~P~E~R~H~A~N"G=I N7.G,--I Job.....Mon, Wom. 7100
Hauling Ca.11 l\lac 6730 S~!J.OHg 648-1444
CARL'S ?oJovmg, 1-lau!Jng &: RJ:."MRED Painf\"r: 26 yrs
Cleanup, ~Ton P.U. Reu. vtpe.r. Neat &: hont"5t. Non
f'ref! Est ~18 drink.er. Call ~l
.;...;.--~J"A""CK"=so----l pAJ1''TING & Rep a !rs.
MOVING & HAULING Reason11ble. Sallslactton
tteu. f'ree est. 536-1091 GuMMtttd, Call ~7-I441
YARD/ Gar. Clll!anup. '*PAINTING, Int-Ext. Loc31
Remove trees. ivy, truh. f't'.fe:rencea. lmml!d aen"iee..
Grade, M.cldloe. Q62.8745 &16-!J242
HAULING $1 0 LOAD PAINTING · Ext,lnL Ji '""
& Trell!. Servi~. ~ ex~r. Ins. Uc. nee t'l'.it.
Arcousl Ciillngg. s;,s.s:m
Houseclunlng 673l * P.APERHANGING
& PAlNTINC. • 968-2425 BAY &: Btl'Ch Ja.n1loria1
Carpea, wtndon. Ooots. Plastering, Patch,
elc. R.cr & Com mc'l, Repair 6880
646-1.aot. -------
CO f\-1 PL ET E quality
houaecleanlng. ExperitllCf'd.
R.tuona)>Je. 638-235t. ----
• PA'IOl PLASTERING
All types.. F'ref. e!t1m.ate1
Call 540-6325
Aeco11ntlni:
Ver1atile Accountinv
Clerk Nndod
wllh accounting oUlce 11!.X{M'.r-
lence to 11MJisl credit men-
11ger and handlf. a ve.Mty of
other rlutiea. Requires the
uat: ol a typewriter, 10 key
adding machine anrl lhe
usual oWce skills. Tb.ls pagl.
non offers a good 111.lary
wilh i.t!Nlcti\•e frtnce btne-
lita incluill.n,Q. full,y j>aid Jor
m~lcal and life iMtJra.nce
CO\-~rsge, 3 9.-'ef:b vacation
after 3 )'11!.fln.. etc. Apply In
penon •t tht:
DAILY PILOT
330 w. Bay St.. Col!ta Meu.
Ask for Mn. Gretnman or
call fiU.432l for an intttV!ew.
ACCOUNTING Ottk 3 hn
(ll?r '1ay, ~1e.h1re v.'Ornan.
CAU 673-6S52. N.B. •rta.
'
er. 2 children 5 & -t, own
tramp. C.all 968-1620 after 6.
• BARl'lAlD *
for niee bar. Call 642-4882 or
577-8697
BEAUTY OPERATORS
\Vanled, \\'it.h cllentele only,
Jluntinglon Beach to Laguna
area. Establlsherl business
expanding. 60, 65 and 70%
comm and other benelita.
Ca.II ~lanage.r 673-TI59 for
Interview appointment.
BEAUTY OPERA TOR
Good guarantee, 4!J.l..6139
BELL MAN
Sheraton Beach
Inn
DISH\VASHER. Oa.ys, 12-1:30
or 2. r.teals lnc. Dick
Church's, 2698 Ne\\'POrt, CM
DISHWASHER
E..(perlenced
Full Ti{ne
Apply tn person only
THE RIGGER
No. 16 Fashion Isla.nrl
Newport Beach
DtSH\VASl-IER, Sm .
restaurant. Cdil1, Ea 1 y
\\"Ork! 4pm-ntidni&ht, 6
clays. fiTI.-7722 . i~ !10\v &l'!t't'pting applications
Jor part or full lime bell l --*--D-R_VE_R_S __
man, J\1ust be able to \\·ork I *
dayg, during v.'Cll!.k 1t. be ov-No Experience
"' 21. N I APPLY IN PERSON ecessary.
2lll2 Ocean P.furt have clean Calllomla
RuntJngton Bea.ch driving record. Apply
BOOKKEEPER YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St. Secty, good work background; Ct.eta fo.tesa
excellent pay. Call Loraine, 1--=====~--
\VestcliU Personr.el Agency; ELECTRONIC
2043 \\i'eslcliU Or., N.B. TECHNICIAN
645-7770 Slrong solid stall! theory
B 0 0 K KEE P J N G-Lighl jgpwledge-, Mavy prototype
Sal~. Full bme woman. thru production experience,
\Veiner! Clark Fine Jewel,, Some QA exper. Good pa.y.
Ph. 644-2040, :\tr. ~tan;h. Ap ply in person.
TR.ANSICOl\.f CORP.
BOYS 10 -TC 851 \V. 18th SL, C.t.t.
Carrier Routes Open for EXPERIENCED h1old sl"x!p
~a Beach, So. Le.fWlll & Wood shop. A r I h u r DAILY pn.or r.tarine 1:;65 Babcock, Costa
6424321 !lteM
BOYS 13-16. Canvass 3 to 5 FE1\.1ALE HELP. over 21 -
pr,.1 & Sat. to $3 hr. Neerl lo work from 2 Pl\t to 9;30 Pl\I . Neat and dependable. tra.nsp. lo office. 541-99G6 Apply in peri;on before 10
BURGER KING Restaurant A !II , A DA t.I S A V E •
"}lome of the Whopper" has DONUTS. 9089 Aclama Ave,
pan &: full time employ· Hunt. Sch.
ment opportunities at 6331
Beach Blvd, Hun t In gt on
Beach
CLERICAL. Exp er, cor-
porate bank reconcillatlon,
group insurance and general
report preparation. 8.37-2020,
Ext 46 for appl
COASTAL AGENCY
A member of
Snelling & Snelling Inc.
The World's L1rgest
Professional
Employment Service
1790 Harbor Bl, (., , 540-6055
fla.rbor Blvrl. at Adams
COMPOS ITION ad markup
man ""·anted. E >.:p. helpful
cold type. Apply in person
\Vl!d .. Thurs & Frl. Pen-
nygaver. 1M5 Newport
Sl\'d., C.J\i.
* COOK * (daya and n ight•}
Broiler exper.lence
preferred
APPLY IN PERSON
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
Fema le
POWER MACHINE
OPERATOR
Salls By Shock. 675-1823
Fiberglass Molder
?.!ale or female
Full or p/timl?, any shift
Fleet Products Co., Inc.
1922 E. Pomona, Santa Ana
835-Sm
** FIBERGLASS
Experienced Gelcoaters. App.
In person, 1943, Bldg B, Pia·
ccn1in. C.~1-
FRY COOK -Swing or
Gr:i.veyar~ ahilt. A1>ply In
person.
ODIES RESTAURANT
1400 \V . Coast Hwy
Newport Beach.
FR'i COOK
Full or part bme. Dick
Church's, 1.698 Newport. CM.
GALS, For production &e\\"·
~g. f\.1u.st be exp'd, with
patte rn s . fa,l. l
w/se .... "Qverlock E'Xp. Ilch
area. Box M-766 Daily Ptlot
GENERAL OFFICE
Sharp gal, good typist. Call
Loraine, \\'eslclill Personnel
Agency, N.B. &45-mD
* GlRL FRIDAY *
Sharp gal to be the one &.
only tor a very pleuant boss.
Sec, duties &: bkkrg, Xlnt
loc. C".ood co. bents. Start
Costa Z..lesa
J. C. PENNEY CO.
FASH.ION lSLAND
ha.I full or • .art time open-
lngs I o r experienced
slllespeople In the folio\\'•
ini:'. positions:
DRAPES
MENS CLOTHING
GARDEN SHOP
SHOES
COSMETICS
CARPETS
APPLY tN PERSON
No. 24 Fuhlon 1£1and, NB
Equal opportunity employer
JANITORS, \VA.\.f:RS, ex·
per. Gd. pay and working
conditions. 5-13-9393
J . C, PENNEY CO.
1'"ASl1ION lSI...AND
hu 1mmll!.diate
ope.ningl In our
CoffH Shop
'"'
UTILITY MAN
WAITRESSES
COOK
APPLY IN PERSON
No. 24 Fashion Island, NB
Equal opportunity employer
LADY over 40, relined v.ith
personality, no 5mokin1t.
Kno\\·ledge ol bookkeeping
& typing. Steady position
v.·lth one or the fint"st
decorator studios in N.B.
Good uJacy &. future . Give
refs. Write Daily Pilot Box
M·922
LANDSCAPE r-.tan, exper, lo
lead crew. for appt ca.JI
644-1784 da.yl 549-1688 evll!.I
Salary open.
i LVN-Night shift
e NURSES AIDES
Bayview C.Onvalll!scenl,
2055 Thurln, C.o~ta Mesa.
64Z-J505
Legal Secretary
Start $6SO.
Salary advanced 1100n. Love-
ly pleMllfll beach city otcs.
Call P.fiM Betty. 557~122.
Abigail Ahbot Personnel
Agency, Zl() \V. Warner,
Suite 211, Santa Ana.
MACHINISTS
A progre~s!ve manufnc·
turing company, with ex-
ceUenl \\-orklng condlliona:
and fringe benefils has
immediate opening~ for
* Day & N;ght Shift
Treub and B row n &
S h a r p • automatic
screw machin• setup
operators.
Apply al
STA-FAST , INC.
926 So. L:yon
(Enter at Chestnut A Lyon)
Santa Ana USS W. Adams, C.M .
*COOKS*
EXPERIENCED
1525. r .. paid. Hony?! Call -------
Full or 1'3-rt Time. S930
Pacific COii.st lfwy, N.B.
CONTROLLER
Require at leasl a Bachelor&
Degree & several yrs expcr.
In hospital financial manage-
ment. To supervise aecount..
Ing, admitting Ir buslne:u
olliccs, prepare tqUip. facil.
& fina.ncia.I budget&, It. per-
fect Internal financial & pro.
cedural controls for thl1 728
bed bea\lh ~nter. Work w/
3rrl J'IATfY It. i'O\f'l agency,
EDP systema. CASH HAS
olhe.r COii control methodg,
us\.&I dept heads w/til"lilnC-
lal ma.lltrs & Interpret fin-
ancial statemenll &. state/
federal lrglslaOon affecting
hospital operation. Send re--
11ume to personnel o!tlce.
SM Jose J;ospital, 675 E.
Santa Clara Sl., San Jose,
Calif. 95ll4.
COUNTf,R Grrt. ex{Mr for
dryclt!a11lng plant Ai>t>IY l
Hour 1'1artlntrlng, 2 2 O O
Harbor, Unil A-2. C.M.
CLEANING wman. ttllsble,
1 day • ftdl:, o•n
tnu~portation. 6n.«i67
DENTAL 1.s1l1tant
Ch111lnlde. t'"Xpl!T" only .
P/time. Stnd re1nnne to
P.O. Box MJ\f, DAUy PUot,
f\'e\\1port &ach.
Jean Brown. 54()..$)55, Other
fl~ &; lee job9 avail.
COASTAL AGENCY
7700 Harbor Blvd., C.t.1.
GIRL FRIDAY
Sign Company Needs ext>ll!.r
all around glrl lo handle
books k other dulies. 1',yp-
lng help (ul, Call 54&-5655 for
appl.
GIRLS· LADIES
To work In rlov.TJtown phone
order dept 5 d8)11 week. Sa.I·
sry + Incentive. Call &tZ.1.508
for a ppt Houn open
••GIRL FRfDAY
Sharp. Apply; lilac Gregor
Yacht Corp. 16lt Pl•~nt\a,
Costa MeM.
Machlnl5ta
DRILL PRESS
OPERA TORS SR.
Three or more ye:an: re-
ttnl experif!nce on close
tolerance 'irill work. M'uat
do own setups, r ~ a d
print& and have own
tools,
APPLY
CADILLAC
CONTROLS
DTVJSION OF
EX-CELLO CORP.
1866 WHITTIER AVE. -GU~AR~D-
&-curllle1 Officer to fiU post· COSTA MESA
lion locally, Must be bond. 646-2491
abll!, able to p&M phyilcnl An equal opportunity
a.;.uu,v teat &:. d~ u 1---.,...:;•m~plofi><8'=,--""I"'""· S.!aey to l3lO mo. MACHINISTS
to ala.rt dt>pending on exper. Experlenctd In machl11lna
For turther Into. &. lntervtew ama.11 precision parts. cap.
call 642-1069. able of runnlna \.'tttk:al mill·
HOSPlTAUTY HOST E SS Ing machlnc1, engf11t lt1thet,
SERVICE. baa openings for chuekcn, etc. Exp'd. on
mn!Ul"fl women looking lt>r tape control milling m.nchln-
lntcn:sflna, part time. work, e5 de&lmble.
•'11!.lcomlng newr.omen 10 TELONIC
your area. S&le1 e.itp. INDUSTRIES INC.
deslMble . l'1ust bave car. Ltlguna. Be11:cti ("1J.4) &i·940l
CAU.: s,,-,~ EquA I OJ)portonlty t mplOYtt
-*SALES CAREER* WA ITRESSES, exp'd.
)fAIDS. Fu.II or part Um~. E>..'ECUTIVE. Swtlng salary wanted Sltrf " Sirloin, 5930
aleo 1'tALES to a1sla:t. Ap-DIUI comm First yea.r eftl'D-PAcltle Cnast Hwy, N.BT ply Bon Brown'• Motor .,.; ,_ -Holl:!, 31106 s. Cout H • lrigr or ._u,........,.plU5 possible WOMAN 5-45, ,.1arrtll!d pttl.
Soulh t..aguna wy 2 yr tnJnlng program by J..I te f&c tory work .
t.tAINTENANCE t.lan, also
Malrl for f.folel . Perm.
&u.2670, 2100 Newpor', C.1'f.
century old natlonal co. Bus-mechanical np, but, not
lneu or sales backgrnund ricccuary. BWwlrl •tfg .. C.0-
helptul. No travelh.fgmt op-2952 Randolph Ave, C.M. n
portunltles. bllr from Whftetront, oU
*MAKE yoUr spare time R. Earl Bittlngtt Baktr St.)
really pay otf. Learn to 835-45-15 ext. 293 1==========1
bccorne a Fashion Sales An equal opportunil:y School .. lnstruction 7600 ~nn~~llllllDI. Call Miu Poteet __ n •<m'iploye:fi,.'o.'iAlo/F"ii:--l====:.::=====I ~ 0 SALESMEN.
Management. TralnH e ATTENTION * AIRLINE *
-$600 Start Looking for a job with a bet-TRAVEL CAREERS
Married, eome coUege. CaJI te.r than an a\'e.ra , fut11tt!
Ann, WestcliH Personnel Join one of the fasteirt grow.
Age.ncy, 2043 WestclJU Dr., lng oompanles tn Southern
N.8. 645-2770, CaHf. We are looking for
?o1ANAGEl\l ENT Op.
portunlly. Full or Part time.
Car nee. 20 hn. wk. 836"1302
fJ\tallfied salesmen. lnlen!sl·
eel ln thll!.lr future, in the
1-ta.rbor area. Over 25, xlnt
job record, happily manied,
MECHANICAL ENGINEER.. financially stable. Sales ex.
FOREMAN & LEAD 1'1EN, per. desirable. We will train.
l'fOL DERS & GEL Call lor llJ>pl: 642-0811 .
COATERS. AU 3 1hift1. Top i"'"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""!
jobs. 1631 Place.ntla, C.bl. SALES
NEED mature \\'Oman to 1\1 r.tan or \Voman w/u.le1 ex·
Opentlona AgimU
Ticket Sales
Reservatlona
Mr Freight • Cargo
Communica.Uons
Tn.vd Agent
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS
PACIFIC
Day & Night 0Use1 ..,..,,.
810 E. 17th St., Santa Ana \\'/mother, 7-1:30, brealn.at
& lunch. No hou.~..wrk.
Sl.25 hr. 548-7185 alt 5:30
newport .
personn~
_agency
per. to act u outside oon-
tact to &ell the design
service of a tong esta!>llahed I ==;P"'I~AN~O.,.,~J ."&"'sso"""N~S~ •
quality lntertor decorating Beginners, Int rmed" let •
Jirm. Refer, \Vrite Box 59~1. 11 nt~RY 14 ™·
Daily Pilot, N.B. ;Ro~f~TION, 1teaso~le.
Professlon•I Service
for the employer
end the applicant
133 Dover Or •• N.8 .
642-3870 549-2741
* SALES-CAR-fER * Call anu 5 p.m. S«>lMS
EXECUTIVE. Starting llll· LEARN To Fly 1FR'68
ary plus comm. First year Cessna. $8.50 per hr. wet.
earnings of $12,()00.plus pos-Uce.rued pilots chl!clced out
slblll! 2 )'T training program free. Call 842-38'76.
by ce.ntury old n11tlonal co.
Bl.LSine.ss or aalec back-Theatrlcel
ground he:lptul. No travd/
N l TE PORTER to clean Mgmt opportunltiu. l·sc--R-·A_M_•_L_E_T_S_
restaurant 6 ~nings, 48 TED ALEXANDER .
hrs per Y>"ttk. Please apply BJS..4545 Exl 'J'J7
Burger King, 16331 Beach An equal opportunity ANSWERS Blvd, Hunting ton Beach employer ~f/F
NURSES Hcgi stered -even-SALES Ladles 2(l...45, Full Cfa3.'on -Juicy -Kneel -
Ina: &-night shills. Ex. time, needed for Tustin & Convoy _ COVER
benefits. Apply Personnel C 0 1 t 8 1'1 e 11 a · A PP I Y A political acrobat: He di·
Director So. Coast Com· Bergstroms Baby New a vldes hla time be~ ~
munlty Hosp., 31872 Coast Store, 6.50 "D" St, Tustin. nlng for office and runn1f11
J-lwy., So. Laguna. 499-UU '* * SALESMAN. FUll time. for COVER.
ex!. 356 Experienced. Neal in ap-M ;;;;E"R"C"H°'A"N"o=1s"E.-..F""O~R-I
OUT Of Work! Need More pearance. See Jim, 2500 SALE AND TRADE Incomll!? Full or p/time. Newport Blvd., c.~I. __ _
Call 962-1393 for an appt SALF.S, m or r, retail leather Furniture 8000
that will fulfill your needs &: shop, p/Ume 10 am • 2 pm. ---------
more. No obligation. Balboa. Ill. 84&-4m WE Have 9 new ventllatin;
op ERATORS-Exp'd. Gar-SARAH COVENTRY haa stove hoods 111 various eoJ.
men! mfgl'. Pc. work. up 10 openings for full or part ors. yoUr choice S9 each. 3
$3.00 hr. Steady, 642-3472 Ume Mies. No lnvet1lmen t, nearly new 30" gas ranges
N.B. m dellverles. For Interview, in good corxl!Uon S49 each. 1 * 54(M)614 * new 30" aY'OCtldo gu ~
QA INSPECTOR Sa. ... 1~1 & Lo11.n m. 6 used portable 19"
TECH. ''B" BRANCH black &: white TV'1 In ex·
2 to 3 yrs electro-mechanlcal MANAGER cellenl condition, $39 each.
exper, such M production S3vtngs & Loan Assoclatlon. U1'o.J"1~ctory, 1885 Harbor,
&: test microwave compon. located ln Newport Beach --.==~==~
ents. Milnary or Tech. area has pogltloi avail, for LIVING ROOM-·I
&c:hool rles!rable. Able to a v.·~ll quallflr-1 Savings 1: 7 Piece complete. Divan A:
read and interpret drawings Loan Branch ?Aanager. Ex· chair, 2 decoratJft lamps,
& spe<:iflcaUon.it. eel. potential & lringe ben.. 2 large end tableg, large
TELONIC ell!& Only applicant• with coffee table. Regular price
INDUSTRIES INC. a min ot 2 yrs. Savings ex· $219.95. Now only U69.95
Legona S.a<h. (714) •M·!>IOl P<rl~n"' -apply. For Approved furniture Equal opportunity employer particulars caJ1 Mr. Hensley
**PAINTERS nttded by l21l) 86S-05l2. 2159 Jfarbor Blvd.
local manufacturer. Need SECRETARY-Steno. Exper C-Nta Mesa 543-96m
man familiar with pro-necess. Send resume w/plc-OPEN 9-9
ducllon on electro-static lure. Ponderou, P. 0 . Box 2 U&ed tchlng ho
painting, ma 11 k Ing , ll.383, Santa Ana. chairs m~ good up ~tr: red
Ca.JI: 545-71..54 SECRETARY bo th for $49. f u1~
PAINT STORE CLEIU< 1 Girl Office, exper. upholstered chairs, a"°rted
M/F, part time. Cal I Call 54Q.5850 colors, excellent oondlt1on,
WALKER PAINT 64M776 SECURITY GUARD In $19.95 each, t.tany miaceJ.
PBX Opera.tor age 2.J..45 for Laguna, 6 o_r 7 hours on laneoua o d d chairs, S2
ansWll!.flng service. After. graveyard 1h1fl, own equip-each. The Factory, 1885
noonf, evenings and some ment. 633-3677 llarbor, 540-0842 _
"~k -ends. Tab, 336 E. SEAA1STRESS • wi!h lnd\15-3 used massive 2Zx32 antique
17th, C.1'1. l\1ni. Kelly, Of. trial sewing machlnll!. 11!.Xper-white pedestal end tables
flee Mgr, 673-1Hi6. lence. Phone 49:J..4586 or ap-with IJ"l ld leaf tops, $25
p E Equipment man. ply In per80n al Coast Ca!a· each. 1 used maulve 32x50 K~wlcdge of equipment, maran. 3301.2 Calle Perteclo, antique wh ite p e de 1 ta I
materials and suppliea Ull(!d San Juan Capistrano. cocktail I.able with rold leaf
In competltlve sports. Ba.s ic Service Station . Service Dept top, $35. 2 used 36" 2 drawer credenzas 1 cleaning method.~ and the (8 Ncededl •
use & care ol cleaning * $135 PER WEEK+ ;~~-~an~a~ white,
m11.1erle.ls & e q u I p m en I . For New Mark C. Bloome Harbor, 540-9842 tory, 1885
Perfonn heavy, man u a I c P.1 Store and Garden ;;cc=,-,,,.---~-
Jabor. Apply Cla1sl f ted G~~e & Anaheim stores. 8' Sola, never used, quilted
P e rs o n n e J o t f Ic e , Changt tires &: shocla. floral, K'Olch guarded $120.
Newporl-l.1esa Uni JI e d Refer. WUI traln. bfed. ben· Match. loveseat $75. (1)
School District. 1601 16th efils &: Insur, Pension & Prof ;c77;;.....,==c----~
St., Newport Beach, Callf. Shar Plan. Apply Mark C. LIGHT 811!.lge carpet l_n_r".1
<TI.fl &1S--0600 Bloome Co., 3005 Harbor 11llghUy used. Appmx 40
P/TIME. Snack Shop work. Blvd .. Costa ?flesa. yrd.1. Xlnt conrl. 646-2962 __ ,
mature v.-oman. Sat & Sun. SERVICE STATION, rnrl lofODERN Couch, chair, end
&1Z..2lll9 time week ends, Sat & Sun. &: ooU tablea, lamp + 23"
PRODUCT IO N Artist Some exp. 21 or over. Must TV. 64Z..74G9
w/knowll!dge of V 11 u al be neat & have a halrcut. D=sL"8'd=nn=-'".,7t.-com--p.-L~Go~ld
AidB, p/time d a ya. Ca 11 490 E, 17th st., C.M. dressr. Nlfestnd, like new
&l:>-0333. SERVICE Station Altendent, $60. 54S-3206 aft 4.PM.
Real Estate Salesmen full time, evening ahift 8' GOLD couch brand new
Xlnt Opportunity Exp'd. Neal in appearance. CoUee tbl &1 overatutted
For 2 experlenced real est.a.le See J im, 2590 Newport C.M. chair, iclnt cond. 548-8908
&R.ieJ people. Long est.. high-SERVICE Station Attendant. DlNETTE set. 6 chairs. Gold
ly regarded flnn, serving the dRy1 , swing & graveyard. A while formlca top table
harbor area since 1949. Apply In person, co r . $60 cash'.. 839-3826
Plensant, lrlenrlly atmos-MacArthur &: campus Dr., STO""''-P'°J-";3;"';F;,::=:=,.-,,..,--I
phere. Interviews confident· N.B. ~ rt!nch Prov . lal. Ca.II chairs; 3 white antlqull!d
LEONARD fu'flTI-1 SUNDAY Nu r 9e ry Al· tables. Changtng: furniture
B ._ DAR A .. DAal lt'ndanb Needed at Nev.'J)Ort ityle. Nlct. cheap. After 6, ay • U<;OU• """ ty llarbor Lutheran Church. caU 638-5804
GT.).3000 548-8868 Eves. Call 968-6554. I;;;==--=:--=..,.-.,-,
REAL ESTATE QUA!JTY f»m' Sola-bed, TELEPHONE Receptionist green naug SIOO C U tbl.,
SALESPERSONS for Service Co. In C.M. ?t1edlt. $75." So~ ;, ~n
Unusual opportunity to join area. Age 25-35. Apply In lont"s on Belgtan Unen $300.
sales ~ of dynamic f'l!'al penon 231 {E) N. Euclid, Heckman coHee tbl a: lamp"
estate comt-any. If ~ are Ana.helm tbl, glau top $200. Table
ll0<n...d • -Id Ilk• to Join vw PARTS MAN lamp. oU pelndng, •le. the napldly growing ataft of 644-5983
f'am::rN Realty, call: 54~3291 Need good man to V.'Ork por1lll;;;-=-.;-==c--.-.--.--
For confidential Interview. counter. V\V experience. !>r@-MA1 PLE Bddlnrm aet, ~kcu!., '°"======-:~I f•-' •--!! .. -'-a ereo, . set, 'IK'lk, ap. RECEPTIONIST For ~ . .,.,-i= ... ,v, pllanct"s, encyclopedla'1.
G'"""'' [""""""" ... ncy. Harbour V;W. """" Calt M>-ma
Call 548-lSU QUAL1TY king bed • quUted
RES TAURA NT, ~1/F, AtrrnORIZED m11flttss. Ccmplll!t~ unute.d
ll: J0.2 Pt.1, days. 1'1ALE. SALES & SERVICE $120, worth $260. 842-6536
over 18-e:ve•. Ai>ply al 18711 BEACH BL., eves.
Taalee Freez 2966 Brl&lo, HUNTINGTON BEAot L"IKE'":;;--::n=ow:-a=wca="do"""ta=n"llque,-1
C.M. atter 2 PM. WANTED: R.E Uable live-In golrl, quitted daV1!npor1, 8'
allter lo care tor I school 6: long. RCA color 21" coneole
Sell!.. Betty Bruce at 1 4-yr old for 2 l'-'etk't. \Vlth TV. Ms-3674 evea. m 6-RtJll!™'Cell.' call m.wl 1 only-Used 8' Sp&nlgh
• \VAITRESS Wanted: CoUce avocado .,ra I: chair •t tjj ,XeC Shop, !'1'37 N•wport Blvd. 139. J o"'1 oofa A cllalr
Agency for Catter Glrla Apply btlwm 6.AM A lPM. ae1....,.1n by popular
410 \V, Cout Hwy., N.B. ~l8-9:28t · dem!lnd, Sl9.95 each set. 1
By appol:)t, 646-393!1 * WOMEN tr On'y-tl111!d g· J110f11. $25. The
T~ler>hont ,,'Ork Fnrtory, 1835 H & r b or,
SALEsGnu..s needed, full
time. APflly In pe.rron,
J9ckle11'11thton Cll!.nttr. No.
75 lfunttnaton Cf:nU,r, Hunt
Deh.
trom home. Y.~ 68-:2
NO SELl..lNG 2 '•A. Pl.P.0• '"bn"'r""e7h-.l,-n.-,taD"""","'"tn
Wrlle ~ shllflll!. 2 pc. mta.
P.O. Bo\ 5,'.iGS I -tcalea up to 5(0 Jbl.
Loll Angt>les, CaJU. 673-1108 --------<
• ~.-...-..-~-··~-~~.~-;::::::-:~-;;:;.;:.;:.;;,·;:.:.·.:j;,.."~·:.~-==:-:~-;:;~:-::;:~.::--~ ... ~~":"'"::::::::::::~::::::'.:::"~~~~~~~~!!!!~~.'!"!~!!111!""!'!'!!~'!'1!'!11 .. 1111 ........................ "' ..
' ..
' I DA1LY PJLOT Th11rsdly, March 12, 1970 I
RC IS MERC A OISE OR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR
~ALE AND TRADE
PETS end LIVEStOCK TRANSPORT#TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
SALE A'ND· TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE 1 -~~~~~~~1
. !!!i! U2S S•llboot1 9010 Trell1r, Tr•vel 9415 Imported Autol 9600 imported Autos, HOO
l'umlture 8000 Furniture 8000
PUBLIC NOTICE
DKOIATOI GETS CANCEUATION
OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS
Sp111isll & Medlterr11111n FumilUrl
All BRAND NEW
A decorator dream hou se on display - 3
rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was
reg. $1295.
S425 SACRIFICE ••••••
Complete MedlterT•nean Bedroom Suife in
Ook. I Rog . $349.001 -----····NOW $188.00
Gorgeous Spanish Custom Bui lt Sof1 with
m•tchin9 Love Seet-Choic:e of beeutifuf
lobr;"· IRog. $419.951 NOW f225.00
Spa nis h Dining Sets --····-·······--·-···$75.00
Solid Oelt End Tables end Coffee Tables . .$19.50
Tell Decorator l'eble limps
!Rog. $49.9 51 --··-·-·-NOW $18.00
Sp•nish Hanging Swag ~mp•
IR•g. $49.951 -'-·--· ... -.. NOW $22.50
CREDIT (<VAIL. NO MONEY DOWN mm FURNITURE
1844 Newport Blvd.Harbo~··Blvd.>
Costa Mesa Only
Every Night 'Til 9 -W.d.1 Sat. & Sun. 'Tll 6
P ianos & OrgaM 81~
FllEE Plano ;essons, ~
yrs.. C.all for rese.rva~na.
Goulds 547-0081
Television 8205
MAGNAVOX Color TV, 21",
3 yrs old, perle<:t condition
$125. '673-5042
21" RCA Color Console TV. 4
yrs. old Best of!e.r.
536-1&'4
HI-F i & Stereo 8210
htUN'fZ 4 track 11tereo tape
deck vo'/2 lge speakers. Ex-
cel. cond. $65 complete.
646--0836 alter 6pm o r
~8-t249 days.
GE atereo 11•/A.~-Fr.f radio,
23" GE TV, both perfect,
can deliver. ~9
'69 f.fai::anvol!: console Stereo,
AM-FM radio Pecan-medit
style. Bes! ofter. ~T109
Tap.!_ Recorders 8220
ROBERTS "720" stereo tape
recorder, prof~ssional 5tyle.
Sound on sound, sound over
S{)und. Xlnt cond. $195.
518--8562
M lacell•neou1 1600
ATTENTION
ROCK HOUNDSI
NEW Shop Opening
Sat., March 14th.
10 am.S pm, Open 7 days
COME in .t register for draw·
Ing tor FREE Star Diamond
pollshirw unit complele & B
lb. Covington gem tumbler.
STONECRAFT
8101 Bolsa Ave.
.111dway City. 897·1970
R.S.V.P. At1tomatlc answer-
ing phone $225. Anttq l&rnp
$125. Bell & tlowell l'illde
proj. $35. Antiq pullup chalr
$-Kl. Sml rocker $25. Elect
rypewriter $35. Port •
typev.Titer $20. 002-5056
CARPET Jell lrom Comm'!.
coQ!racts. $1.98, $2.88. shag
$3.99 sq yd. Drakes Carpet·
17206 Beach Blvd, H.B.
842-5U4.
P.11NK stole Sl.25. Size 9
clothes. Blonde wiglet $4.
Porl. typeWTiter $20. 6.1C6
decor cement blocks $ 2.
f?42-5.l73
TAPPAN Buill-ih oven &
range, gas $40. Power
mo11·er $25. &12-5666
Sporting Goods BSOO M isc. Wanted 8610
BO\VLING ball, 8'-h-9 lb $10.
Girls shoe skates. $7.50. All
good condltlon. 642--0176
SUr[l)()ard
7'5" Russell, $90.
WANTED!!
Acele1yne torch, used with
or \l'ithout tank!ii: 546-7219
offer 5 Pl\I.
ADORABLE Toy poodle
pupa, 14 wks, 1bol111,
v .. ormed. Loving home
prime requisite. 545--1522
1'ERRIFIC f..aster GUt: Min.
Poodleg-, 1 wks, blacks I:
champagnes .$50. Champion
bkgmd. Call 968-5127 all 3.
COUJE & German s:tiepherd
pup1, 6 y,•k& old. Need iood
hon1e1. $5 ea. GT.>-O&IJ
GREAT DANE PUPS
FaWJ1 black masks, \Vil! be
BIG! $120 772-0075, 621-4857
DOBIE male 1 yr, no papers.
Good pet for !amUy. · $50.
642-73U (Keep trying),
NICE P.1ale (Vizsla) dog
\\'anti available female. * 4!M-3950 *
1969 BALsoA 20 W/trailer. -S!pa 4. Dinette, head, s.lnk, .
running tiles, cabin Ute,
anebor lite, speedo,
bow-vwv11 • me '""· Im· TRAILER SALES
mac. S3295. Pvt P ty • Streem Liu e Ideal &12-9500 days; 6'15--0962 eve1
&: wknds Terr yeNomad•O•sls
18;-.,--.,,SLOO="P=-~21~.~~0v-erall~~. I Explorer Motor Home•
dacron sa.Us, Acrylon cover, Cempert •nd Shells
stainleu riggitig, com r 1 13ln Harbor Blvd. G.G.
cushions, sleeps 2, folding lW Blocks No of
mast. $!i00. Rich's Top Shop, Carden Gro,•e Ftteway
Tl< W. 16th St., C.M. Call 537-41111
646-0288 ·ALPINE
' AUSTIN HEALEY JAGU4R
'66 AusUn Healey Sprite. Ex. JAGUAR 1964 3.8 Sed1.n.
cond. Racing ex l r as! 0/0, wire v.itls, compJ re-~uitable for 1lalont.11. bit, 'ta.mily nceda wagon.
963-8051 S.19--2455
1960 Au1Un Healey 3000.
Xln'I ere; I: good bocly.
S475. Call 548-0226 eves.
IMW
BMW'S #1
DEALER IN
CALIFORNIA AND
MERCEDES BENZ
Or .111'J•' Count~· s
L.119l'~I Select.un
f-./••w & u~ .. d
M(•rct,tJ ;·~ B,.111
Jim Siemens Imps
WJ• n{'r & M.1in St
31' Af.ALIBAR J unior Alden
Sloop, 611.cron sail.!!, spln-
na.ker, 25bp Graymarine.
Sleeps 4. C.ood cond. $8500.
Eves. Cil4J 968-1809 VACATION ORANGE COUNTY'S TRAVEL CENTER
Sant.i An.t S46·41 14
Excel.· Golden Falcon LARGEST MG
BASENJI '"Barkless"
AKC, 7 \\>eeks, shot.s, * 963-T~ *
pups, Power Cruisers 9020 Olympia -Alpitle 1!170'1 Immed. Oelivtry
A1Mch1 -Whffl Camper 25 New &. Used ln Stock MG
AUSTRALIAN Silky Terrier
AKC. l\1ale puppy, J'h
months. Shots. $125. 635-8127
MINI dox.les, long & limooth
coals. Must reduce stock.
$3.J..$75. 531-3424, 531-4072
RARE long coat Chihuahuu.
ti1ust reduce lilock. $50. &:
S75. 53l-8424 or 531-4072
FAsr 28' UnilUte cruiser .
Fully equipcl. Ex:ceJ end.
$8250. M7--6Q!ll ofc. 673-1001
""-
Speed-Ski Boats 9030
15~)' Dorset. , 50 hp.
Evinrude, big wheel trailer.
fully equip. $600. 673-5043 aft
5:30
Horses 8830 Boat Trailers 9032
Wol"lds laJVst most com-T&M MOTORS
plete RV vehlde shopping 8081 Garden Gro"" Bl, G.C.
center S.'W-2284 Open Sunday 892-55.'>,
8352 Gard~ Grove Blvd, GG
534-6686
C osed Sat. Open Sunday
Sales, Servic.!, Parts
Immediate Delivecy,
All Models
J1rtuport
Jlinports
FWANTASTIC Beys in 4 Star. 3100 \V. eout Hwy • N.B.
estway1 &. Funt l me lH2-9405 Ml).1764
Campers. Scotts, 91~ N. Authorized MG Dealer
Harbor, S.A. .:a'f MGA. ng, ll dutth ft'o
KENSKJLL & Kil. Special bit. Roll bar, tog ligbla,
prl"'' oo lot modol•. &oti., 646-5005 """· m'8• & "d f o .
WANT Boat trailer for 13' 914 N. Harbor, S.A. BAYSIDE MOTORS Sllcrilice $500. 84~3238.
PINTO MARE Whaler. large wheels, good APACHE tent trailer, gas111200~~\~V.~Coa~~"~H~wy~.,~N~-~·~· ,1~===~~~===-1
w/TACK ='°="='=· =C=all=64="-="="'=-===I 11tove, ice box, 51eeps 8 MGB u ,.,... $115. 64&-4095 $1050. 841-1900 CORTINA
PARIANI Saddle, almost Boat Slip Mooring 9036 ;:==:==:=======o l--__:~~_!!!~~-* '66 MGB HDTOP
Furniture 8000 Appliances * 548-!mG * 8100 1=======
CASH! Furniture \Van!ed.
Need appliances, antiques,
etc. No junk! 968-6833, 24 hrs.
new $175. \VANTED: Boat slip for Trailers, Utility 9450 TAKE ~Yer pa.ymenls 1968 Beaut. orig. Briti!lh racing
644-5637_ brand new 29' sailboat. trrlLITY Trailer, Cortina GT. Balance $13n. green w/ full visibility lac-
Half Regislered Arabian
titare In Foal.
•Call &14-1158 •
54.f>.-2487 1401 St. "K"-w, s""··· Cali>;., 1.lonthly ~.60. lnupac! torv matched hdtop. •'""'
USED Spanish sofa & love
seat, in excellent condition,
$99. Used Spanish 5 piece
aJrtique avocado Bedroom
set-consists of: 2-2 dray,·er
nlte atands, l double head-
bonrd, 9 dra\\·er dresser &
mirror, $139. Used ]Rvishly
def&iled 9 piece Spanish
pecan Bedroom set w/ king
headboard, 9 d rawer
dresser & mirror, 2-2
drawer nl~ st .. ncb;, king
size bed frame & king 151ze
box springs & mattress,
$289. The factory, 1885
Harbor, S.111-6842
CANOPY Bed, dbl foam
matt. dbl cOOst w/mirror,
commode, maple $100. Rat·
tan ~ chair, 2 pc. sectional
·>1:/new foam cushions ,
blueprint covers, 2 end thls
&: cotfee tbl. All for .$75.
New rattan swivel rock~.
blue $75. E."ercycte & t
massage S25 ea. 2 9
Amhurst Road, C.~t. G I
545-4032
SELLING heau1iful Spanish
furniture almost new. r.1usl
sell. 6T;7065
NEW S' $500 striped sofa.
Sacrifice $300. Grttn Sl.50
area rug $75. 6#-1650
Office Furniture 8010
AEROSPACE RELEASES
FOR PUBLIC SALE
O 500 ateel transfer cases • m Stt!el & · >'ood desk11 • 85.
S.Drawe legal file cabinel!I
,,. Misc chairs, tabJes & cab.
!nets. '
AicMahan Bros Desk Inc.
1800 N<!Yrport Blvd
Costa P.tesa•G-12-&150
Store Equipment 8012
FRIGIDAffiE ~ dryer,
late model, :dnt cone!. $10.
Also l\.la,ytag auto \Vasher,
xlnt cond, $40. 847-8ll5 or
S.1~72
FRIGIDAIRE elect. dryer,
xlnt cond, 220V, \YhirlJXlOI
washer xlnt cond. $45 ea.
847-8115 or ~JG-8672
WASHER & Elec. Dryer,
pair , Xlnt. cond,
Guaranleed. Both only SUS
terms. 645-2306
SERVEL refrigerator, good
$50. \\'estingbouse y,•asher &
dryer $50 each. 673--2892
O'KEEFE &U·lemlrRange-
l!ght, timer, clock. Very
good condition. $35. 5'18-9-161
AIAGIC Chef Combo Elec.
range, refrig., sink. Good
cond. ]\fake oner. 673""635
PHILCO 21" colored TV,
$200. Xlnt cone!, \\'Orks
great. 548-5727
USED Appliance & TV's. all
guaranleed, Dunlap'!!, 1815
Newport, C.At 5411-7788
Sewing Machines 8120
SINGER auto :zig.zag, 6 mos.
old. No attach needed for
:dg-zag, button ho I e & ,
desigru; etc. Guar. $37 cash
-0r amall payment&. 526--6616
M usical
Instruments 1125
CONTELLO
ACCORDION
24 key, 110 bass, with' case,
S600 va1.ue + "easy to
learn" books & &ho!et music
case.
PERFECT CONDmON! m or Best orter
5~0-8308 Alte1· 3 Pl\1
STORE Fixtures: \Vall fix· ~os & Organs 8130
tureM>utrigger type, gon-
dolas, glass shelves. canopy BeginnerS
w/facia lighting, recessed O Cl
celling 1\ght.s, fonnica check rgan ass
out stand & \\'all hxtures. $16 for 8 \Veeks Course
Nearly ne1v. &M-2353 plus materials. Registration:
=="========'l-°'""'"•"'V..ol'lnlarcll'ffin 171h at 7
Garage Sale 8022
GARAGE SALE AND
FURNITURE SALE
Beautiful ladies dre!!Ses size
8 to 10. Du-A·Bcd bedroom
suite, \\'Orld books, plus ml!!·
ce.llnneous household item~ &
furnilltre, 2 to 6 r.1on. thru
Thursday. 3814 Tqpsidc Lane,
Harbor Vle\v Hills, Lusk
Homes, Corona del l\lar.
BOAT finished, sailing in 2
wks. :!\lust sell everything
..,,, ca.n't.otake. Pov.oer tools,
many marine bd\\'e ilems,
Jan LP's, stereo, various
houu-hold items. Too much
to !!st, so come & see. Also
m1111y free ltema. 2026
p.m. 1\!so Serondary & In-
termediate students register
lhl'n also. Call & inquire fot
de!ails;
HA~L\tOND
In CORONA DEL lli1AR
2S.>I E, Coast Hwy. 673-8930
Open l\1on & Fri evep;,
Sunday 12-4
PIANOS & ORGANS
NE\V & USED e Yamaha Pianos Organs
• Thomas Organs
• Kln1ball Pianos e Kohler & Campbell
COAST MUSIC
NEWPORT & HARBOR
Cmita f.!csa * 642-2851
Open 10-6 Fri Jt).9 Sun 12-5
Orange, Costa i\1esa. If you are shopping for a
FRI, Sal, & Sun. &aJJUful pia.no or organ, new or used,
items., no junk. TV's lncl and are intercsled in a truly
combo TV & record player, great deal. please shop
coffC'e this, dinetle, bed· \\'ARD·s BALD\VlN STUDJO
compl. China. crystal & ar1 1819 !liCY.lXlrt, C.r.t. &12-84M
obj, mi!IC. 1528 Comwall Ln Open Every Nile
IWeatcliff are a) NB. 1 ~~·~-~8"'!!!!!od~•~y""A~ll~o~roon...,~o """ 646-4048 , • TifO~IAS "Band Box" &
BJG-BJG Garage Sa I e • "Plnym,ate•• bolh for $."00.
Thurs-Sun 10-5. Bathroom Art!.11an Orehestrn ht: 11.!I
fixtures, bed frame 5, $200. Ad d exciting
dresM?r! & house hold furn., percusslon to any organ.
bike. lamps, &: many 0U1er N~wport Orgam 645--l5.10
ltems )'OU would lo~. 273
Monte Vista Ave., CM.
NEIGHBORHOOD G a ra ge
Sale: Thurs. Fri. I: Sat.
13911 Lipkin, \Veslmlnster.
(2 bl.ks We!!t of Beach Blvd.,
l bile no. of \\-'e!!tmlnster Blvd.)89>-634<.
MAR. 14 -15. 10-4. Liv rm
furn.. chlldrens d e 1 k ,
c l.o i h 1 s, mbc. 1136
Goldoorod. CdM
EAR.LY Bird Sale 8 At.I -4
Pl\l S.turday. Moving. furn.
Ir miactL 2068 Ncwpor1
rn\ld .• Costa lofesa.
RUl.lMAGE Sale: !\larch
21st 9AM-4PM, SL John the
Blptl•l. Parrish R&ll, 1015
B&ktt, C.M.
YMCA G&rage Se.le
S.~. Mardi 14, 9-ll
453 t . 191h St ., C.M.
HAJ\U.IOND Ste-:n\\'ftY. Yam-
aha. New & useJ pianos ol
mos! makes. Best bu)'I In
So. Calif. a• Schrnldl l\iuslc
Co. 1907 N. l\l:lt1, Santa Ana
\\'URLITZER 4!i00 Antpllfied
Recd Organ. 25 pediil, \11.rge
l.A!1Ue Included. As ill SG9~.
GOULD~ MUSIC
2045 N, l\1&1n, S.A. r,..i1-00S1
BALDWIN Upright piano,
idnt eond. Rea11o nabl e.
Come ancr 6 Pl\!, 1(15
Oran~e. No. l. 11.B.
ELECT R 0 NI C~~°"'-a-n,
rllrf1u, Combo Compact.
Oe5t Offtl. Olli 54H21S
ONE Only, New C ab I ti
NftllOn Splntl $595.
Goulds Ml..()6$1
Miscellaneous
,;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;:I M achinery, Etc. 8700
TRANSPORTATION
\\'ANT slip or Ue at Newport
for 20' s.ail boaL Phone col-
lect 4964850.
IUJO..U<:: • • Mu.\.! ha,·e verified . good ., 545-0782 black lea I her Inter., tonneau ==========! credit. See at 1963 Newport cover, R/JI, \Vire whls. etc. * AUCTION *
FRIDAY 7,30 PM
MARCH 13th
Unclain1ed storage from Don
Marlin J\1oving & Storage.
Sealed boxes & cartoru1,
i\tUST sacri fi ce this
weekend! 4,0IXI lb. Clark
forklift. $750. t213l 432--8537 Boa ts & Yachts
· 40' SUP F-0r Rent, NeWpOrt 9000 Beach. Call 642-5221 days or
5'18-3684 eves.
T1!ru~c~k~•!._ ____ _29~5~00~1'=Bl=v=d= .. ~C='~1~· :":""::'::71~7====-i r.tost desirable ladys' low -DATSUN mileage new car trade.in. LOOK * llilg. '°" ~w & ,.,.,,;.,.., ---------1 by us. ONLY $1795! MAR,..
'&I Chevy 60 with brand new NEW '70 QUIS MTRS; 90C So. Cst
16' fl•l ""'· V-8, 4 opeod, 2 DATSUN PICKUP H".~.. Log""" 8'0<h,
*
FREE TO YOU CLOSEOUT pric.-es no\v in af-
fect on 'rl' j\fagnum Mobile Homes 9200 494-7503, 540-3100.
Bedroom sets, Divans, Sec-I am "CURLY" w hi I e
tionals, l\lattreMes, Mirrors, cockapoo, 1 ~ yrs. old, who
Oinelles, Ches!!!, Color 'IV'S. wants to be loved by -Older
stereos, Upright piano, .l\la· couple. llsbrkn, easy to care
pie desk chests, Commodes, for, sad because oy,•ner
Credenza's, Hutches, Coffee passed away. 962--0180 3112
Demonstrator & display I----------speed axle, 825x20 tires. New W/camper 96 hp overhead I -========:::::::::cl
corxiition. Llc. X68987. cam, 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply tires. PEUGEOT
tables, Lantps, Pictures, Ra-
dios. Refrigerators, Stoves,
r.Iatched sets washen & gas
dl')'t'rs & J\1UCH l\10RE~ !
WINDY'S AUCTION
C0i'o1E BRO\VSE AROUND
2075~i Newport Bl\'d.
Bt>hind Tony·s Bldg i\Ial'ls
Costa f.lesa * &1&8686
OPEN DAILY 9 lo 4
GIVING up hobby 8 'IV equip-
n1en!, 011cl1Joscope, llgnal
tracC"r, audio generato r,
i; l ,t: n a I generator, b:lr
generator, voltmeter, bal-
lcry eliminator, picture lube
tester, vibrator teste1·, hun-
dreds or resistors and
capacitors, several picture
lubes and TV sets, hundreds
ol tubes new and used, car
radios, odds and ends. \Vill
i;acrlfice! 543-8ll7 all day
Sat. and Sun. and after S
\\'t'ekdayi;.
\VA N T E D; EXTREMELY
Rt'asonable used carpeting.
Preler darker color. Please
call 642-1724 alter 6 Pl\1 or
\\"eekenda.
MOVING: i\lust Sell! Single
P.Icmbcrship In Newport
Bch Tennis Club, $450 or
best oiler. 8Al\f-5Pl\1,
6'12-8500.
CARPET Layer has carpet.
Nylon, J(cxlel, Shag &
HI-lows. \Viii seU at cost !or
labor . 523-1188
LOCAL Eggs \Vbo!esale from
Ranch lo Restaurants &
Con v a I es cent ll-0mes
548-3758 aft 6 PJ\i
Carpet layer has Hi Lo
nylons $1.99 yd. Shags
lrom S.1.50 up + my Jabot,
OOc per yard. 847-1519
I NI<:\VPORT Beach Tennis
Club family membership.
$450. Days 5'19-2286, eves
540-58·14
QUALITY king bed • quilted
mattress. Complete unui;ed
$12tl. \\'orth $260. M2-6536
.eves.
GOOD llearlng aids. Zenith,
Bellone. Audiotone S50. 1
monlh'11 battery Ire t,
642-3228
NE\VPORT Beach Tennis
Club Charter r a·m t l y
i\fembersip. Sell or !rd.
644~139.
EUROPEAN Jiuman Hnir,
hand tied, light blonde wig,
$3.i. Call 644--0139 aft 6: 30
Pl\t.
GROLIERS Int'l. Encyclope-
din. Book of KTIO\\'ledgt',
Mod. &ienct>-Ency., 50 vol.
67;,.75.'tS
50 ytls ust'd oU-\.\'hite nylon
pile cat•pctlng, Good con·
dltkin! S.'iO. 6Ta-0866
3 GREEN banfools $25 each.
tnble \i\mps, pumpkin pair
$10 each; Gold S5D & sro.
&14-1650
DELI Case, 4 ehel\'eS
\\'/compre9;!10r. Call • * &16-538.1 •
SltOP&\lITH, xlrtt ear I y
model. Jl.teny ;oiclr11 a.c~s.~.
SHiO compll'tC. Call 673-1736
SKJLSA \VS 71 & 361 models.
$5.l & $60 t'tl.. S17-2684 l'>kndi
or A!tl!:r 5:30 \.\0kdny11
JIAND Painted oil porlralt of
you or your ehildrtn from a
plxllQJ?rapb. 646-3629
70RJG. \\'aler colar p.1fn-
luVts-. Apl. size relrlg. $10.
ft1illct'll . Items. ;,18--7061
PO'ITF.R'S \\1·1EEL
Centrlfu~111l , eltclrlc dr!v~
5-46-l729 aft 6
1,
111 YR. Large Labrador
Retrie~r mixed. Needs Big
Home, Big Yard, & Lots Of
Love! Good w/ehildren.
675-1952 eves. 3/13
PART German Shepherd,
m11lt 5 months old, and l
multi-color mixed breed,
need good homes. 546-7202
after 2 3112
NEED Home tor friendly
husky pup, 6 mos old, has
all shots. loves kids. Family
i;toing to Eu r ope.
839-5053 3/12
BEAUTIFUL long hnired
Persian !em. cat, l~ii yr old,
orange/white, & 2 8 month
old kl Hens need good
homes. &17-2340 3/12
LOVABLE Friendly blonde
cocker mix, female, 1 mos.
old, long ears, need a
r.hitdren & fenced yard.
968-.1776 or J!..1fr3818 3112
LOVABLE Bla¢k Cockapoo,
female, 7 rno·s has 15hots.
Loves children. Needs good
home. 842-3779. 3/14
PERFECT Easter gift! 9
Bunnies, 3 black &: rest
brown. 2 mo. Please call
Af'IER 2 pm: r,..ig..3917 3116
FREE Adorable kittens lo
homes \\'ilh children. Pis
call after S p m.
962-2359 3/12
PRETTY & lovable, man.IC
feo1na!e cal, 6 mos. old,
need11 good J1 omr.
817-23·10 3112
0\VNER dif'd. Need qualilied
adult borne for 2 adult,
sp.1yed fem a I e cars.
S.IS--0813 3~13
models -
27' twin 2JO h .p.
derr.onstrator .... Ii.st price
$14,500, now $&.XXI.
27' Sport twin 210 h.p. -list
price $14,500, TIO\.\'! $9900.
27' Sedan twin 160 h.p.·list
price $15,500, rnn\'! $9900.
Boat Island Inc., 22'14 \V.
Coast Hwy., N.B. 6'12-6630
18' lNBOARD. genuine Cen-
lury Lapstrake bay & ocean
boat. N-0!ed for safety &
comfort. Top condition, new
paint in & -0ut. convt. top,
canvas cover, bait lank, f'!C,
60 hp, gray marine eng.
SacrlUcc S1285. See at Bal
Boat Docks. next to 811.lboa
Pavilion. 675-6953 or
673-4070 for !est ride.
CUSfOl\I BUILT J\1ini·Sporl
whaler type. 50 h.p. J'vlerc
Trailer, ne1v full covers,
Coast Guard equipped. You'll
really hnve to see ii. Rctall
-over S2.500 new. Have ne\v
boat and must sci! fast.
$1675. 548·1~55
22' (LEEl custom built cabin
cruls<?r. Gl&M bottom ,
enclosed head, d i n e I I e ,
~Jeeps 4. Chrysler inboard.
Lots of new paint. $450. In-
quire at 119 34lh St., N.B.
a l!er 5 Pfi'i.
BOSTON \\'baler 1 3 • 3 ,
Johnson l1 hp, trailPr. Used
less than 50 hrs. Xlnl cond.
$1300. 646-6866
l•I ft Lone Star aluminum
hoat \\'ilh tile trailer & 10
hrs niotor. $500. f>.W-3080
aft 4:30 Pr>!.
RUNABOlIT 65 hp Johnson.
Owner leaving to\vn. Take
over pymnts. Contact Bill
\Villiainson, days 642-9470
i\IUST sacri l ice! 32'
Jivenboard, shaf1)! Offer
O\'Cr $3000. (213) 432-8537
1963 CRESfLINER -18'. 115
HP. $1200. Exel. 25· slip
avail. 642-'1&1'1
NEW 20x56
2 BR, 2 BA, den, carpeting
thru-out, 22' raised porch,
carport & patio awnings.
ti1any el!:tras, $11.600. On !he
be a c h at DRJFI'WdoD
BEAC1 £ CLUB, J-1.B. Green-
\caIMobile Home Sales, n4-
536-75l3, jomicra inc.
BAY HARBOR
Mobile Home Sales
YEAR END
CLEARANCE SALE
NO\V ON DISPLAY
11, 16, 20, 24 & 30 Widea
Up To 60 Feet Long
1'125 Baker St., Ccista l\fesa
~ii block Ea5t of Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa ln4) 540-9470
NEW 24x60
* $2199 * ~c~~fa,u~.~~·2.~~.~1----------1
Kustom Motors price $2099. Take small dn '62 Peugeot 404. 4 dr. C:lean,
or trade. Call Phil, 494-9n3 good condition $450. can be 84_5~Bak=-'~'·,,_c_.>_1._~54-Chl9_15 or 54~ after JO am. .seen at 1622 S. Broadway,
'67 Super Van $ &rnta Ana.'"'"'"
Ford. Big 240 sb:, auto. dlr, us "'•TSUN .. vlC9 PORSCHE 8 ply !ires. Xlnt. oond. in t A -
and out Tike foreign car -0r
small dn. No. V44062. Call "Leader in The Lear.h ciue.s" PORSCHE '6.) c, xlnt cond.
Ken aft 10 am 494-9n3 or ZIMMERMAN Re~lt e_ng, chrm w~s. blue
545-06.14. 2845 HARBOR BLVD. \v/l:llk int. Eves "-'l\'knds.
New Inte rnational S40-64JO ~6"~"'""'~=-~~~~-I
Pick Up Truck 1966 912, 42.000 P.1 i's .
LIQUIDATION
DATSUN LATE '67 A:\1/Fi'ol. radials, chrome
1600 Roadster, 4 spd, dlr. rims. Xlnt cond. $3850.
Sharp, hd!p, sun red, plush 5-iS-7673 9Ail1-6PJ\t.
3 to choose from at factory black :nt. :dnt c.ond. Must '60 Porsche $2050
I . . sacrili1..-e! $14X Take older 5 00 1o-•'c b M n\1{)1ce pnce. Am<?rlcan car or small down, upcr res. '""' a :, . any Kustom Motors URE&l3. Call f.{er. 494-9773 extras. beige ,,wlblk int. 2 BR, 2 BA, den, carpeting 545-0634 83•1..5220 days, 545-1022 eve!.
thru .out, patio & carport 845 Baker, C.tit 540-5915 or .
awnings 28' raised porch. WANT A NEW '70 DATSUN SEDAN SPEEDSTER '56, Must sell
J\fany f'l!:tras! In GREEN· TRUCK AT COST? Big 4 door 96 hp overhead =1:; best oUer! 525-8577,
LEAF PARK in C.M., only, Tty Kw;tom l\lotors, 845 Bak-cam, disc brakes. 4 spd, dlr,
$15,500. jomlcra tne. er, Cl\f. Authorized l nlema· wsw, back up lights. Sacri-'62 PORSCHE S coupe.
• 642 1350 • !;,..,_ T-i..e trade, will finance Ai\l lfi\1. i\tech. pe.11ect, ~ lional Harvester. "No trade ..... "" private pa.r!y. Call Phill, fitusl ucrilice! 642--1260
Let us sell your mobile IM please on this offer". 494-9TI3 aJl 10 am. 1963 Super. red w/black int
home. . '69 Chevy Carryall DOT DATSUN Perfec! car S25.l0. Pvt. pt;y.
Absolutely no co't to you Loaded. 30 actual miles. Save &12-91:)..1 11.Her 5 pm
S & K MOBILE No. 898826. OPEN DAILY '" -
HOME BROKE Rs AND ·:;,, Porsche, new pain!,
$1300.00 radial 1ires. AJ\1/FM radio,
12362 Beach 3lvd .. G.G. Bank repo, see at SUNDAYS xlnt cond. 646-1421
• 636-0921 • K M JSS35 Dea<..h Blvd.
1962 SKYLINE ustom otors Huntington Beach
845 Baker, C.i\1. 540-591~ 842-7781 or s.J0-{)442 SUBARU I 0,55, 2 BEDROOM
A REAL BUY AT $2995 SANTA ANA AREA
545-824 I American SIZ.3939
'69 Skyline. 24 x 60 '3 Br, 2
ba, crpt, drps, Iaund. area,
cooler, awnings, skirting.
Fan1lly Pk. 83~128
VIKING Scandia, 20x60'. 2
hr. 2 ba. Av.·nings. Xln't
Adult Pk. 548-4142 aft 6.
CUSTO:l.11ZED 20'\V. '67.
New crpt. All xtras. Beau.
new AdJI Pk, C.M. 642--6495
ALUMINIUM carport awn-
ing, 10x20', like ne11l. Price
reasonable. 557-6138
'63 ECONOLlNE Van. New '66 Da1sun 1600
paint, intl"rior. 8 trk !ape, Roadslrr. Xln't cond. '70 Subaru Star
cbron1c \\·his. and more. + 64+-0016 *
$1200. 6'15-286.1. !===="'=='==== li11 here. 90+ mph, 35 mpg.
Plush Interior, lowest priCI!: '58 Ford. VS, ha lf-ton, ENGLISH FORD of any comparable auto.
overload~. long bed, good l;;;;;,;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Free radio this v•eek only. t ires. ~5. S.1&-0869 Kustom Motors
Je1ps 9510 TIIB ENGLISH
GOL'\IG 8~5 Baker. r"l\I 540-5915
TOYOTA
'10 TOYOTA'S
In 11tock. lmme<liate delivery.
Authol"ized Dealer
GEP.l\IAN Shepherd, male 9
n1o's old. Tan &,, black. Ca!I
6·15--0292 3/13
3 l\IALE Guinea Pigs 7 \~·ks.
1~ Siamese kit1<?n, 6 \\'ks.
5'15-4.~l 3/14
Sailboats 9010 M ini Bikes 9275
LOVABLF. grf'y maltcse BOATBUILDERS
ft'maleo C!\l. 1 yr. old, free to Relocate in Pugel &lund
i,:ood home . .,847-2340 3/12 \\·ith grov.·ing established wa-
MONGREL Pup.~ make the lcrf1"0nt boat building firm
hest J)('ls, lovable pupples needing l'xp'd personnel in
free. Call 846-4531 3/12 all pha.ses or outfitting larg-
er hbe.rglru; sa.ilbOR.ls. Reply
A D 0 RABLE black/whlte to Daily Pilot Box P-921 v.•ith
long haired male cat, love!! name, address & ho in e
chUclrcn. 847~23·10 3113 phone. A company represtn·
S\VEET Sntall size black lative \\•ill be in this area
pupp1rs, 6 \\'ks old, Call lhls month to intf'rvie\v,
64&--3JOS 3/12 PlasTrend
NEED good borne for 2 pnrl S I" e T t Poinlf'r female pups, 8 \.\'k~. 0 1n g empes
old. M&-7202 alter 2 3112 14' PT420 Cla.ss of lJOOOI
-P.111.ln, jib. spin. etc. $1374 GERi\-IAN Shepherd niixed Pacllic Yacht Sales 673-1~70 puppie~. 6 11·eeks o Id .
4S4-342l 3112 3'146 Via Oporto, Ne1111t Bch.
\\'ELL behaved black poodle, LAP\VORTII 3&-sloop. X1nt rond. Loaded. 10 salt!!.
rl't'e to good ho ni"' Reducf'd $1.28 JK'r J b,
536-2726 3/12 673-280~
TO iroocl hon1e darling black
&. \Vhlte kitten house trnh1-1 K';!l A S:1i1~~! b~: ~~
ed. Call S.'ID-1679 3·14 Call OR 3-7395.
1!*'9 Gas \\'blrlpool coinbo. c ,u. 2j, Racing gt"ar. Shir to
Nttds 110me repair. 536-l~46 shore. Galic)', 8 sails, Xlnt
or 67!>-2616 J/12 cond. E\'eS 6~&-22J9
COUCH And chalr. 842-2-126 23' TE~IPEST ~Ip. f'g. Aux nl!t>r 5 pm 3112 6hp. Ex. rond, Xtras. Ready
KTNG size m11t1rcss:, Call 10 sail! $3150 839-5479
after 4 pin. 64~7005 3/12 LIDO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389.
FREE to good kon11• Femn!e with trailer. Call 837-7039
k!tl<'n. Ca]J 897-45.'17 3/12 ntt 6 Pill
PETS 1nd LIVEsiOCK1 __ _,,P..,.C"°AT,,...'68~+~T~,.~u~.,
Dog!_ _____ u_2_5
ENGLISH Cockers, 12 \\'ks,
AKC, L1ne·bred. Tri-color,
Sho~·-pct qual, 833-2883
AJ.~llAN PUPS. AKC .
Rendy f9r En.sler. CDepO!dl)
Call 8•1&-M52
BE1\Gl.E PUPPJF.S .... AKC -
show hn!d, vtry reuonahle.
1 wks at Easter. 494-5972
$U95. SharJI?
r.tr. t.lorse 673-1."i70
28' F-Glass 6 berth ii.loop
OIB. 5 q.Us. Ask St>t!J.>
P11.cir1c Yncht Sale' 673-1570
LIDO l·I. Ra.ecU)'flC) hull &
1rnllcr. $695
• m:m03 • n.e.
2r AURORA fiberg\.&l!,, fixed
keel. head. &11)$ 4. sharp.
A'ktng stm. Si3-5ttG
POWELL 5hp $150.
Aft 6 644-2585
GO-KART, good running
<'Ondition. S:.O or hf>st oUer.
673-8593 ·FERRARI
Motorcycles 9300 SACRIFICE By pr iv a I el---------
party 1970 Gl\IC ~.f. heavy FERRARI M ark II Wagons
'66 BULTACO 250CC
Brand ne1v $40 carburetor,
nc1v fronl tire, new M?als,
just hnd major tune-up. Xlnt
corn!! Great Dirt Bike! $<150
or best offt'r. 9:6-3().14
1969 T;iO NORTON CO~IMAN-
00. Excellent a. 1ition. Call
&46-1548 a.Iler .,; p.m.
'67 305 HONDA * y,•ith extras *
54f>.-ris6
'6S Suzuki 120 2,000 m~. S275.
·57 Honda S90. exlras $225.
llilint cond. '70 lie. 847-9977
J-londa Trail 90, 1967
1150
... 548-6731 *
A uto Service
~uty Pick Up .. Po'''er stet'r-Newpor1 Imports Ltd. Qr. H i Lux Pickups
1ng, automatic. V-8, 1\•/ ange County'• pn1y 1utbor-Land Cruisers
new 9' cab O\'~r camper. !zed dealer.
Interested parl1e11 cont11cl SALES-SERVICE-PARTS Wagons
499-2892, 21621 \\1esley Dr. 3100 W. Coast Hwy. PLUS OTHER
Apt 3, South Laguna. Newport Beach llARO TO GET MODELS
642-9405 540-1164 NO\V lN SI'OCK
CAl\1PER for Ranchero or El Author!Ud Ferrari Dealer DEAN LEWIS
Camino. Cab over, sleep:i; 4.1:===''-======
let box, dinette, y,·ater. :dnl HILLMAN 1961' Harbor, C.?11. &IG-9303
cond. 3 \'rs old. S400. Rich'g *'68 Toyote Sport Sed.
Top Shop, 724 \\'. 16th St..1 __________ Popular "Corona" .model w/
C.l\t. 1960 Hillman Con\•!. 11td. colu1nn shift, R1H. 11•/
8 IT CAi\TPF:R Econon1fcaJ Operating-Orig. wall~ etc. Choice loo· mile-
SlOO or Bt-i;t offe.r! Owner. Call 673-5613 age 11{'"' ToYQt.e. "trade-In". ==="='0-=-="°~'=''='='=''°=p="== 1'==========1 Sparklln~-0rig. ermine \\•hile
Dune Buggies 952S
\'olk!! 1350 Enj::'lne. Near
Ne1,·. $600.
•Call 6r~32*
JAGUAR w/a!lractive i::ilvcr sable/
black inter. "Drive it -
JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS
'You'll 00\'t'r lei j,'O!" ONLY
$1395! til;\RQUJS ?11TRS: 900
SO. Csl llwy, Laguna Beach.
494.r:m. 540-3100.
_&_P_••."---...c..'4""00 AUSTIN AMERICA The ortly !lUtOOrizcd JAGUAR ----------
d,.l<r '" lhc .on .. ""'"'' Bill l\IAXEY
BUGCY & Jeep Pans:
Shortened VW pan, comp.
\\'/engine, 1ral'I$ & tr1ns ax·
)t, on \\•heels. Plu11 ml11c
pa.rLS Sl50 for ell. 4-1100 x
16 groo1'td sllcks on 1,f•
11·idr 1vhctl~. for jeep $175.
Sre al J\lesa Union, corner
Nev.-port & Fairview, da.)'•
or MS--0072 nites.
'611 V\V Eaxine complete
$3i5. P\'I pty. WUI consider
lrade. 642-9300 days;
645--0962 niles & wknds.
'60 V\V Eng. Recently
ovtrl'lauled $115 e:xctionae.
Call 642-0896 alter S.
----------1 Area.
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sales, Servicil, Part•
Immediate Oel!v~
All Moddl
J1rtuµort
3\ fll G'r t 5
Complelt-
SAL ES
SERVICE
PARTS
Poole
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
l!JOlv(OIT!AI
11811 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt, Beach 147-8555
I ml N'.of ())&.at H1>.-y. on Bell
'68"1 Toyota Corona 2 dr, 4
on nr. air, am/Im, c1u1om
slereo, 18,000 ml. $16.iO.
526-77'79 or an 5: 30 84l-7136. 3100 \V. C.OUt Hwy., N 8 . 234 E. 17th Stre<!t
642-9405 5'0-1764 S.1S-n6.'l '69 TOYOTA Corona, 2 door.
-4,ulhorlttd MG Deal1r BUSIEST nwketpla~ In ·I speed, xln• cohdl!ion $1!iCXl.
IO\Yn. The DAJLY Pll..01' 545-4T;:i.l or ~7
TJIE SUN NEVER SETS on Cla,•lflcd lleCOOn. SA v e '69 T'oyota Col'Orta hardtop.
PATLY Pll.oT WANT ADSI monay, tlmo & tfforf. Look llUIO trans. radio & he11ter.
Now! 6~7585 -------·
I
•
•
h
"
• '· d
,,
••
••
' " . .
I.
' ••
• ).
y
'· ll
'·
"
-t
'·
I,
"
15
'·
IO
)3
I.
,;
,; ·-
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y
00
h.
7
I • • '" 0. ••
'· 0.
p,
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·----··-
'
Tbu"Jl11, ~.,g_ l?, 1970 DAIL~.PltOT 37, ~.
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
VOLVO
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR rATION TRANSPORTATION : "•
VOLKSWAGEN
* 1964 VW Sedan. Nttds '67 V\V l:iOO Squareback.
pa int & brake lining, $700. Tape deck, A:\1-fl\1 ntdio.1 :A;;;";;';•;;;L;;;•~•;;•;;;ln;;g;;;;;;:;;:;9;;8;;.1D 54:>-6403 29,000 rni. $1600. 6!;r.73W,l;---
'68 V\V Squareback, low 6~2-7607 FORD AUTilOR IZED
mileage. AM-Fl\f, $1!!00. LEASING SYSTE?-.1
Phone. 673-1.::.68 VOLVO America's largest leulng
MUsr SEW '65 V\V, Ex-system for finance or nf!l
ceUent C.Ondition. $850. Call 1---------leasing of all type cars and
646-4632 145 -WAGONS trucks.
164 -SEDANS e Immediate delivery from '66 V\V Sunroof. Red. w/1/v.•. Xtra Sharp car. \Veil cared All other model'& now ln over 300 cars and truckJ
stock. 4 speeds & automatics. • Competitive rates
lot. $1095. 548--2981 aft 6. Your Best Deals Are Still At • New car dealership 5ervict
'69 Ghia auto. Beaut. con-DEAN LEWIS • Full "tradein" value for
dition. Like new. ynur present car
1_1:01995='.=====675=;.-00=2'-1-1.=966==""'="""=·=C=.M=. =""'==103=I •All popular makes avail. I able
Imported Autos 9600 I Imported Autos 9600 For Complete Details Call 11;;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;:~ 11-talcom Reid
HARBOUR
VOLKSWAGEN
'61 SQUARE BACK ~:::·'""'· $1395 (TSZ 000
'68 OPEL KADETTE ::::: ":::."'· $1295 mt. tWIL tin
'63 YW BUG
'64 YW BUG
'64 YW BUG
llffi., H••ter.
IVFM 4JIJ
Jl1cl .. , H•llff',
INMP' 7J11
111.ttllt, H11ttr,
IN!:V Utt
$896
$995
$995
'66 YW BUG ~,-:~ .~;;"" -"~ $1196
'67 WESTFALIA CAMPER $2496
,.,..,, ""' 1111. (lfl 6141
'65 YW BUS •N•, .... ff. CHO ... wtlllt Wt !lt, CltPA U IJ
'61YW BUG
'68YWBl!G
••die, Htll.,,
tllTW >41)
,lotl9r"Y "''· llMllt &
""'"· ('ICL IUJ
$1595
$1495
$1696
'68 WESTFALIA CAMPER $3196
'68 MGB ..... """'· Wino wllffll IWl'Tllll $1896
'89 WESTFALIA CAMPER $3499
'61 YW CAMPER ,";.'!!'." ::-.::;; $2596
HARBOUR V.W.
AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE
11711 &tech Blvd., Huntington Beech
Ml-44.:IS
Leasing M811ager
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
2(l)O Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 642-0010
v LEASE v
'67 CadiUac El Dorndo, full
pv.T. air, black wi red lealh·
er int. Sl39 per mo.
'69 Ford LTD. 2 dr hrdtop,
vinyL roof, air, Brougham
lnt.,1' Mt/FM !iloreo, 6 way
p1\T. seat, p11·r 11•indov.'S,
w/s/w, l)V.T disc brakes.
S99.50 per mo.
SO COAST LEASING
300 \V. Cst Hwy., NB 645-2182
Used Cars 9900
Transportation
SpP.Cials
'59 Buick .. • • .. • • • • • • $99.00
'62 Olds . . . . . . • • • • • • $199.00
'62 Rambler S. W • , •• $399.00
'64 Rambler S. \V •••• $~99.00
'65 Impala •••••••••• $899.00
'67 Datrun P.U ..... $!199.00
Kustom Motors
845 Baker, cr-.t 54{)..5915
BUICK
l!l66 BUICK Electra Convt.
Black, Full pwr, air. Orig.
owner, Good cond. $1595.
Over $400 under book.
615-1000
CADILLAC
19.>9 CADILLAC Convcrtlblf',
Good for i;econd car. $223.
·Call 642-1198.
'52 Cadillac \vith ·62 n1otor.
Good second car. Lo mlfl,
good tire!!. $3.iO. 546--0198
'64 2 door, rurus 10o'eU
$9iiO -CA MARO * '69 CAMARO "SS"
"3!)6".V8. 375 hp, 110lid Blll?rs,
4 5peetl, power d~ b'rks,
11'\dc lreitd S-70XJ4 Good)''f'~r
tll"t's, R/JI, etc, S!lll undr:r
factory warranty. JUAI 17.227
local mtles! Sparkllna: NM-
MU blue betl.u~ Showroom
cond.! On!y S2&9S! MAR-
QUIS l\fOTORS. oo:l So.
Colt-lla.')I 1..1 • ...,_. ... cretl
49.J..i;i(l.l. S40-3100.
'61 CAMARO. Sell or trade
~ultlrs tor Chevy or 1',ord
van. Prlv. pcy.
, Call &l4-0lt1
9900 Ustd Cart 9900 ~ ! -----" DODGE MERCURY PONTIAC RAMBLER
'62 RAMBLER Claulc 400,
'6.'> l"ONTCAC Calalina, 2 dr Cully eqp'd, auto lrat\41, air.
hrdtop, 27,000 aclu•I ml. Rtetto tape, 1 owner, xlnl
R&ll , pis, p/b, a ~aly flrle =-=·=""=·=·=· =-=2326===
car. $995. Pvt piy. 64%-9500
days: 64>-0962 nltes &:·
wknds. ---
IT'S TIME NOW! TIME FOR THE BEST BUYS!
BUY NOW.,,
SAVE NOW!
Demo 1969 GTO
H. l , Cp1, Air tt111d., pow1r di1c br1~11,
powtr 1!11rin9, C on1ol1, tvrbo hydr1m11ic,
1lc. 242J 79ZI09067
Demo 1969 LE MANS
2 Dr. H. T, CordoY• top, VI, 11110., t ir
corid .. pow1r al11rin9 l br1•11, con1ol1. 12
to c.hoo11 from! 2J7]79ZllOlll
New 1969 GTO
Air cond., pow11 di1c b11k11, pow1r ll11r·
in9, turbo ~ydr11111tic. 242J79I t26l01
'68 FORD TORINO
R1dlo, h11t1r, 1uto1111tic. powt r 1l•t1in9,
f1ctorv 1ir. IXO E2021
'67 BONNEVILLE
4 Or. H.T. Hydr•m•tic, pow1• tl111in9 , pow.
•r b11k11, 11dio. h11l11, WSW, f1clory 1ir.
ITXS94Sl
'66 OLDS WAGON
9 p111. Vi1t1 Crui111. A11lo1111tic, r1(li•,
h11t1r, powtr tltttl 1MJ, f1ctory 1lr. IS M
S~ll
Now's The
Time To Buy
One Of Our
First '70
Oemon1tr1tor1. Great
Buys .. , Low Mlle1g1l
~
$1777
$3877
$3727
$3977
$2577
$1277
$2377
Now's The Time To
Buy One Of The 9
, Remaining 1969
Flrebird1 , . , Brand ,A
Now And Ready To Go!
1969 DEMOS I
GREAT BUYS ON GREAT
LOW· M:LEAGE HOU SE CARSI
'67 CAPRICE
2 ci r. H.T. R1dio, h11!1•, 1ulom1tic, pow1r
ll11rin•;i. vinyl fop, f1 i;lory 1ir. ITYW071)
'68 FIREBIRD 400
24,475 MILES
VI, turbo hydr1rnefic, powtr 1!11rin9 &
br1•11, rtdio, h11!1r, WSW. l1clory ,;,,
con1ol1. IXSP4891
'68 CAMARO
ll,156 MILIS
Con•trliblt. \18, 111lom1lic, pow•r tl••1in 9,
t1dlo, h11l1r, WSW, f1ctory 1i1, !VSY l75l
'67 FALCON
26,426 MILES
Econo111 ic1I 6 cylind•r, 1t1nd1rd b 1n1111i1·
1ion, r1dio ind h11!tt. IT129A)
'68 LIMOUSINE
1J,t67 MILD
CtdiU1c Fo11111I. Ait condtllo11ln9, l11th1r
intt ri•r, t ic, 1lc, I XWY 154 l
'68 "YOLKSVAIR"
l111m1c11l1!1 conYtt1iof1, 4 1pel., R•H. com·
pl1t1ly ov•rh111l1d prof1nio11 1lly ln1!1 ll1d
Co1Y1ir 1n9in1 !WX6'956 1
'66 LE MANS
Awlol'ltllc, pow1r 1t1•rl"t· r•dlo, h11t1r,
f1clory 1ir. ISDl6J91
$2477
[ $2777
$2677
$1377
$8777
$1777
ROY CARVER PONTIAC
2925 HARBOR BLVD I COSTA .MESA
!v i ~ I
-•• ..,,!
EIJ •
Kl-64444
I
·. . -:
' • • •
.
! • •
..
-.
-
fhllf'Sdl1, Mll'tll 12, 1970
!Jttlotu ,Open
No Clear Course
SAIGON (AP) -Nearly six
montha: after the death of
~ident Ho Chi Minh, North
V1etnam'1 ohter leaders have
•l'P""'nlly stlll not decided on
a clearcut course or action on
conduct or ~ war In the
South.
This, in the opinion of
persons Vibo deal daily with
Buch aasessments, may be the
reason why the Vietnam War
has seUled into a period of in-
decisiveness, marked b y
rapidly levdlng "highpolnts"
and olfens.l.ves which exist. on-
ly in c:patur<d documents.
'Ibis In tum has led lo
privately expressed optimism
among some American and
South Vietnamese officials,
akln to that current prior to
the rpectacular Tet offensive
in February 1968.
Hanoi is believed to be keep-
ing; open a long list of options
while · holding firm to the doc-
trine of the subjugation of
South Vietnam.
When Ho died last Sept. 3,
four men took the reins of
power : Le Duan. first
!ecrelary of the Communist
Party Central Committee;
Truong ChJnh , chairman of the
National Assembly Standing
Committee : Premier Pham
Van Dong and Gen. Vo
Nguyen Clap, the defense
ntlnb'ler.
., The four continue to run the
country as a committee, ac-
cording to the assessment
here, and none has surfaced as ..
r;trong enough to lay down
policy lines alone.
ln the series of seven essays
which were his most recent
OCC Dance
To Benefit
Dime March
Orange Coast College is
.. doing its thing" for the
1.tarch of Dimes this year in
the form of a dance to be held
lt1arch 20 featuring three big
Dame rock bands.
Featured In t h e all-day
event are Eric Burdon and
War, Bonnle Delaney and
Friends, and the James Cotten
Blues Band who will appear at
J p.m. to 5 p.m. and later at 8
p.m. in the college's g}'fll·
nasium.
Jn addition , student~ will
stage a carnival in the OCC
Student Center with booths,
games and o l h e r en·
tertalnment. All proceeds will
go to the: f\.tarch of Dimes.
Admission to the E r i c
Burdon coocert al 1 p.m. is $2
without student body card and
the I p.m. concert with James
Cotton and Boonie Delaney
'I.ill be '2.50 Vi·ith card or $3
witboot.
major formulation of military
doctrine for the war, Glap
11ve an unusually sobering
view of the conflict and told
the North Vietnamese the war
could be expected to continue
indefinitely.
One current theory is that
the North Vietnamese are
holding back their punch,
wltile busily building up sup-
plies, and will unleash a body
blow when President Nixon's
withdrawal program has suf-
ficiently thinned U.S. fo'rces to
promise Hanoi and the Viet
Cong at least a spes:tacular
psychological success. This
may come in mid-summer.
Another version is that
Hanoi ls waiting for the
American Congressional elec·
tiqns and the South Viet-
nimese Senate elections In
November. This, It is reason-
ed, would be a prime period
for a show ot streng th,
aJthough those who try to keep
a finger on Hanoi's pulse find
nothing to support this reason-
ing.
Another prospect. may be an
effort to capture a provincial
capital in the Mekong Della,
such as Rach Gia or Chau
Doc, and declare it the capital
of the Viet Cong's Provisional
Revolutionary Government.
The PRG was announei!d
last June and since then has bttn o!ficiaJly I o c a t e d
"somewhere in South Viet·
nam," which many suspect · YI\•~ actually_ be in a Cam· Colorful viscose rayon loop pile! bod1an frontier area. The
North Vietnamese have sent
an estimated five regiments ROOM SIZE 8l/2Xl l l/2' into the Delta since last sum-•
mer, and one of the reasons
may be to support a PRG NASSAU TWEED RUG "capital" in an area only
tenuously controlled by the
Saigon government.
Still another theory -one 1 88 !hat Henry Cabot l.<Klge used
to favor when he was am · 2 DA l 'S ONL'I'
bassador -is that the war
will fade away into s o m e
accommodation or comprom-
ise between the Saigon gov-
ernment and the Viet Coog. For a new decor at little cost, charming Nassau rug
backed with anti-skid polyfoam, colored for spring in
H ·b . H'h l\veed tones of avocado. blue/green, candystripe, gold
81 01 1g or pumpkin. Big in beauty, \l'ear, and savings! Charge
Grads Meet
A reunion of 1960 graduates
of Harbor High School ls plan·
ned for early sum1ner, ac-
cording to Mrs. Roberta
Slickler, spokesnian for the
reunion commilttt.
"There are many class
members we are unable to
locate,'' she said. "Members
of the class of 1960 should send
their name and address to 1960
Grads, 600 Acacia A v e . ,
Corona de! ~tar. Calif."
Mrs. Stickler said they have
located about 250 former
classmates out of the 6.50
it.
graduates. •1\Ve have a long".!:::=::!~"°"~"'=,,.;;,; vt'a)' to go yet," she added. 1 •
TERRIFIC VALUE!
VERSATILE 18"
TABLETOP GRILL
OUR REG. 1.97
177
2 DAYS ONLY
Cook at thr picnic table \\'Ith
roomy B\'Ol'adn-finish metal
Rrill. ~on·scor1·h 11.'g trianglr.
Takr it on}·11•nc rr?
Dusty Dolla1·s
Silve r Coins Held Up
WASHINGTON (o{JPI) -
About 2.9 million silver dollars
-worth perhaps as much as
$75 ml Ilion to co.in collectors -
are lathering dust in the
Treasury Department's vault
because or a congressional
stalemate on leg i 1 lat ion
authoriz.ing their sale.
The coins are virtually
v."Orthless to the government.
as working money because
their distribution has been
frozen since ti.1arch 25, 11164,
when the Treasury stopped
redeeming paper money in
rilver dollars.
On the other hand, the
cartwheels would be highly
prized by the nation's more
than 10 million coin collectors.
The Treasu ry Department
wants to se\1 the sl11·er dollars
11t auction v .. 1th a limit of JO
coins to a customer ; but
legislation authoriting the sale
ls blocked by a di spute over
whether a proposed new dollar
coin should contain ailvtr.
Both the Senate aod House
have passed versions of a
coinage bill authorizing the
mint to produce dollar ccinS,
bearing the likeness of former
Pres i dent Dwight D.
Eisenhov.'f.r and l'pprovlng
dispogal of the Treasury 's
hoard of diver dollars.
The Senate veraion of the
bJIJ requlres lhe new dollar to
conta.ln silver while the ltouse
version calls for the use or the
a • m e nlckel~pper com-
blnaUon now used for dlmtl
and quarters.
The two bouses h11ve been
unable to compromise thclr
dlfftrtneet on the silver iuue.
I
-' -
EVERYBODY LOVES
FOIL-WRAPPED
HERSHEY KISSES
OUR REG. 89c 67c
·~· 2 D AYS ONLl '
S8.vc Z2c on bi}: 15-oz. hag bill'· !ilzr rhocolatr kiss{'!' individua l-
ly \vrappt.'(f lo k<'t'p 1hcir rich
fl avor!
..... WI.
PERMANENT PRESS
IVY PANTS
FOR MEN
2.57 EA.
2 D AYS ONLY
I'
llnndsome slacks ln cot-ton and polyester blends stay neat all day. Solid I
colors. Ivy: 29-40.
____ ,
WOMEN'S LONG
CULOTTES IN
SLINKY TRICOT
REG. 3.78-3.97
300
2 DAl 'S ONLY
Clinging, color-rused ace-
tate tricot \\ilh empire
\\'Rist, Ions, full slecv.cs.
Solids,
S·ll1·l..
print ~. Sizes
OIL-RESISTANT OXFORDS
1'1 011r Reg. 3.33
2 Days 6'11ly
A complete joy for the practical working man. Leather-
like vinyl oxfords can be wiped clean. Even the crepe
soles are oil-resistant. Cushioned innersoles for com·
fort. Bro\1•n, sizes 6V2 to 12.
50 INSULATED 7-0Z. CUPS
2 D AYS ONLY 32C
Save 16c on every pack of 50~ Smart poly cups keep
drinks hot or cold, can be thro\vn away or re-used over
and over! Get them for picnics, parties, everyday
j meals, kiddies' drinks too!
MEN! KING SIZE
4 l1·0Z. * BRYLCREAM•
KEEPS ff.AIR NEAT
OUR REG. 1.04
2 DAYS 0 1,LY
Grooms nat urally! lllassRJ;!e t!
in ror heallhy scalp, stron~
hai r ~rowth. Tube is easy to us1\ nackable ~
'"'' wf.
3 SHELF-STEEL
UTILITY CABINET
2DA.YS ·1200 ONLY
Reg. 23 .17 baked \vhite enamel sturdy steel cabi-
nets. Ideal for n1an)· uses around tbe home. \Vhile
quantity lasts !
~~=;;=ni RICHER COFFEE
"~'""'11 BY WEST BE"D IS
TRULY AUTOMATIC
OUR REG. 6.57
514
2 DAYS ONLY
'