HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-04-09 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa----~-
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J>.IURSDAY ;+.~NOON, APRIL .9, 11 970·
VOL, U. MO. IS. 4 SIECTIOHS, <M P'Aellt
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'iv-Jlddress Slated Tern for·· :the ·· ,Better
. ~ NixJD -t«>;. ·.Bring 1 • • • ·.. • ' • r l · · . . . . ' ••
~;-M«ire1• GI~ .H-~llie I
~INGTON" (UPI) -Pfesident
Nb;oo will inake a natfonally televised
address on ·vtetnam next Thursday night
tbe White House announced today. He b
ezpected Co anoouoce a further u .S. troop
wllhdtJ1wal. •
Prea Secretary Ror.ald L. Ziegler said
Eiipeedl, on radio as well as television,
be at 6 p.~. PST April 16 and
concern Nixon's decisioo on Viet.-nifin. troop levels.
~bie speedl will oome one day after the i.-phase or the gradual troop pW!out
~ started last year by Nixon is to
~ completed.
Previously ordered wilhdrawals will
reduce the ceiling on U.S. forces in Viet-
nam to '34,IOO on April 15.
Zlegl<r told •reporters that the Pres!·
deia wanted to update his report to the
-on condltlOR! iJ\ VleQiam -ampli-fyiqe 'his earlier policy Matement!.
Nixon told newsmen at an informal
neW1 conference March 21 that Viet-
namzation -the administration term' for
~ a larger burden of the war over
to 'h South Vietnamese -was pr~
gftllling well and he saw at that time
mting to slow the rate of U.S.
wtthdrawals.
[!:!Jron has order<d . three phases ol
-..awal so far, reducing the authoriz.
ed,ttrength of U.S. forces in Vietnam by
se1ne 115,000. The actual number of
'"'°"'to be polled out as of a we<k from
Wecloeoday ;. upected to be about
IOl,IOO.
NIIoo • ..,_ the first 25,0IJO.man
Disner;l and Faces . .
Threat of Strike
Management can't just . wave a !Wand
and ccwne up wffh more money to pay
aaluies, <Veil a '!be Magic Kjngdom,
where 11000 ~land employl!s have
rejected' a ~ rahle offer.
•Negotiators f• 23 craft and aervice
unions say the 50 cent.per-hour offer,
spreed over a two-ytar period, is too
amall.
'Jbe question ol. a strike turhing
Amtrica 's moet popular amutement
facility into a pumpkin remains open ..
"I can't really say,'' explained .w. A.
Ferauson. chief negotiatcr Jor tht unions
wblclt "'P'eenl 1,000 Diwyland--kers
•t !he summer anployrnent peek.
."You're dealing with indMduals •nd
lt11 hard to say which way they'll go,''
conUnued Fergmon. .,"'But obviously. most of t1lttn ore
a1Sappointed In the offer."
A 1111 ..,_ for o7 e<nta-per-hour
over a -yq-period expired MU<h I
and the.current negotiatkm cover almoet
all park employts.
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n;du<lion In f!>e ceiling lut June one!'
stibsequently ordered. two moce reduc· tillns. • .
Gen. William1C, Westmoreland, former
v~. =an<ier who 11 . -the Anny dlief of lllaff, and Gen. lhtKl!too
W. Abrams, currentJy the U.S. cOm.
mander in Vietnam, have favored a
slowdown in the withdrawal because of
an increase in Communiat ecitivity.
Services Set
For Cyclist
Killed in Me~a
Services for a yOWlg Costa Mesa
motorcyclist -killed Wednesday in a
collislon .that left his front teeth tlm4
bedded in the roof ol. a car 1-are
8Cbeduled Saturday in Westmlnlter.
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Steven A. Rditing, 19, of m w. Wlllon
St., Coota Mesa, died llhortly before noon
Wednesday, after ramming a station
wagon lnadside with Ills powerful
motorcycle.
The a a.m. crash at Bater and Croltdon
streets in Costa Mesa Jelt the pregnant
wcman motorist bolpkaJized, while her
son and ao Want girl .,..... slfghlly io-
Ruth Kover of Balboa. bids adieu to tern . she
nursed back to health and turned loose Wedne!--
d~y. Her husband found the bird,. wounded with BB
]>fllets, lying on the beach unable to move. She
cut up ·JJellldllin • pills and fed• the bird ·a litUe l!licti
day with a regular fish diet. Only trouble is that
the bird, nicknamed "Pidge," wasn't enthusiastic
about leaving his new home With the Kovers.
Jured. . N p Ii Mr:si Dorod1y Gorman. u, of • Poo1 • ewport o ce Road, Coeta Meea, was listed In fair con. .
ditim at Hoag Memorial Hospital today • -
imder observation c1ue to 11tr ac1v...,.J Ticket Jogger pregnancy._ . •
MJdiael A. G<rolao, 13, of the same Id· Al . , Hi h
.dess, and Tracy A. Love, 2, of '181 Ong g way Sh~ar Drive, Cost.a Mesa, were
treated for abrasions and released
W~y.
YOUJ:ll Rehling died at Costa Mesa
Memorial &spital of multiple in'juries,
1ncluding a skull fracture, smashed face • and _.., bacll.
Police laid his thighs were alao
mutilated by the handlebars of the 'cycle
when hil1body caved in the Gorman It.a·
lion wqon, knocidni tba roof out of line.
Investigation continues into tht ac·
cident, which Mrs. Gorman said was
caused by trees aod a fence which block·
ed ha' vliion u Ibo pWled onto busy
Baker Slteet.
RebliDg ntvtr eveo had a chance to
.br~ or swenre..
Services will be at IO:» a.m. In
Westminster Memorial Park Ollpel, with
interment to follow there.
,..,The victim leaves hi.I mother~ Mrs.
Marilyn !lmJq, of -illloe BOoch,
hb father RIChard lld!llng, and a
brother, Rick, both of Lal\llll Niguel.
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Joggers, according to the Newport
Beach Police Department, are eligible
for moving violalioqs. just like cars.
Huntington Beach resident. Phil Carlon.
found this out the bard way when he ru
afou l of the Jaw on Coast Highway.
He is due in court April 14 on a cltaUon
for running on Coast Highway near Jam-
boree Road,
At the Ume the citation was issued,
Carlon was doing about 10 mph along the
center divider, police said. According to Uwi cKatioo, canon 1)90 jaywalked (Jay.
ran) acroaa the heavily traveled street.
Carlon who Is a mem6er of the Ami·
lair Athktic Union (MU) and the Senior
Track Club of praoge and Los Angel ..
Counties says tie NM an 1ver1ge ol 11
miles dally to keep in shape.
He his to keep running becauae his
muscles tend to tighten up 1f he stops
even for a minute. SOi Carloa. said, ralher
tbon &lop for,a ,;gna, be k~ running, or bis fellow joggers, .. but we re going to
1tay loose.
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Upp.er Bay Trade Pact .
Upheld ·by Cou·nty Boord :
By JACK BR9BACK
01 tlMI OlllY ,lllf SMff
,of Uie.,supervlsors .. For .example:
Supervisor Willlam J. Pblllips (whp
Count'y supervisors and a helring room with, supervbors Alton E. • Allen and
packed with interested Harbor Area William Hirstein cast the three Votes to
residents struggled for almost four hours ~n. 'the •exchange• ·cr~t): uwe
Wednesday· over' the UpPet Ne·wport Bay are really talklng about bret.king a ceri-
land exchange agreement with tbe Irvine ·tract and there is Nt'moral or, le11t basis
Conipany. • !or such IClioo. We 111"31 lllvt the suu•to
The result was 3-2 vote to uP.hokt the stick lo .. our agreement.~· .
agreemen t and 'neither renegotiate it or · Supervbot .. Robert W. Battin (who with
kill 'it. ' • • zupervitor David L. Baker voted to kill
Al the argument stands now with the 3-the a:~nge agreement):."TaJ.tlnc about z stanoorr It wlu be up 1o !he cooits to liitl. we iihou Id lllve the 1011 w ltaod up
determine' the final outcome. 1be cue ,to Mr. Mason and do what ii ri~." _,
cornea up In Superior Court June II but ~ lrvlDe Companf Pri'idtdt • Willllm
coo Id be· seveMI yean before !he 1-b; I.lab> In' a letter lo tba .upem.... doted
linaUy resolved. M<may iald his company would nOt
. There Is the pollibl!Uy ol a ·c11~ iJ, agtft "to .miegotlato the '""~
the board 's J..2 stance, also. Hirlleln ~ agreement." , , .
nol rwmiag for reelection and his auc. a.tun ltirred the aydience at another cesaor will take office next January. point durlna bis polnt.ed quesUoning ot
PunctuaUng the arl\Ul)tats were con-·Keooeth 5-Plon,' dnetor o( har~,
slant fefercnces to "&Uli" -on tbe,parl , (Seel UtPER BAY, J'qe ~)
·-First Cre\vman
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P,uld ~t ·Ill;
Qackup·T '' ·' ·
I \ .... r CAi'J: KENN'!IJY, Fla., (AP) -Doc-tors ~ 1btftd0. tb a(
me1sfir1 paoue 11iomel K. Maittn,Jy ll not Oy to the ,_, on Saturday, one!
backup J>liol·~· L. .S'l'llerti Jr, ..,.
derwenl a Craili·tr•~[)nltr1im to aee
lf he can move lnlo tkApollo 13alol. .
Malilacly's ailm c!l\arice of .maldnf the
fllgbt had hln1ed on whether laboratory
--that ~ b ackup -. !J>arleo Dulce,. _, boo
German measle,t, . The tests, relayed
Tburaday from·the Nalionll ln1t11ut .. al
Health In-_ Md., -.i i1e did.
Dr. •Qiarleo A. 1lerry, !he -
chief pbJ*jan, Mid Wedl-1 that II
Dulce bad the -· he and -mediCal eqierto -1d ...,,_ tbal
~ly notbe allowed to fiy Salurdoy,
Ciinical . tests had indicated Duke had
meaafe& but had left open ooe chanc<i'
lhal he_ had virus ·with llmillr aymfilDmt.;
A space, agency announcemem sald the.
Jab tests "coofinn Duke his Germ~
measles, ot. Rubella • • • He bas shown a
classic rbe bl rubella Ulbodies." It a1sci
said Duke has developed a rash, arthriUs
and a swelling in both fingers. '
Mattipgl)t and the other two pr;ime-
Apollo ,13 cr~wmep, Jam~ A. Lovell Jr~
and Fred W. li>Jse Jr. al"i Swl~er\ •U
.. .,.. upoaed to the -tlirouil! Duke. Blood, teN show Lavell, Ha.ise and
Swigert all are immuoe tO the dlseue.,
but that Mattfnaiy iS nol
Berry said earlier Mattl111!1Y had I my
(ood cbaoce al ........ doom wllh . the diRase. '
m an effort to avoid a IOllli1 ooo-mooih
delay ill .the laundiln1. S"lprt jGin«I
Lovell and ~. aboard a ,~p lin\ulalor 'lburaday. 'Ibey ril>eiiieil op-critical m"""'ven that l-e-
quire close cooperation. ·
Included were Munch, launch abort,
(See· APOLLO; Pap J) ·
l'l'eather ,
·The morning fog will comei In
patches and go in I ' hUITf Friday.
making way for sunny sties ahd 1
temperatures soaring up to the
70'1 along the Orange Coast.
INSIDE TODAY
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s 1-, April •, ltlO ..
-Fre• r.-·-t--·
UPPER BAY LAND EXCHANGE. Offensive Goes On
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-and parts. Kt -$amp011 -than tile propoeed exchanet a.,-ol a poalble <Onfllct ol lnlertst. becaUJt JI would "crea .. mort mllH or
"Do you ha,.. aoy land IQlereota Jn the public thor<line.''
Upper Bay area.'! ~Uin asked Sampeoo.> Supervisor BaUr Jhen po-d that
,"Mo, and I empbaticillt rtltnt the 1m-h1' Su41i!tJOftJoc -aottatloo or tht ""'
pllcalloo," Sampooii ttplled 11tatedl1. chance -should 'bo dlacu....r, "You did have an lnkri'lt in Dana ·•even thoUgh Mt. !\!"°" baa aald the
Point ptoptrty in 1112, didn't yoo?., company will not rtneb(ltiate."
p<nlsted Battin. Aa he had Jn his original <hara" lut
S. Vi~t Troop~ -· '
Enter Cambodia 11
"I prtfer to be tried, if I am to be, in a •eek, Baker repealed tblt the t:Xcbian1e
-of law, not lien," Sampiillloplltd sboukl bt, r'l'\Mllod ·-·-_II ... ba>
gtWlnc "'°n more ..-,. Ht ~ ed oo r;pon. tll'll co• I~ 1, t d ii>
")lul ,....lmpllcaUoo ~ •tn11.' •' • • accuredtl." ,('lk"aald -Sllr Bead!
SEVEN Al,1'11RNATn'Jl i . (11 acrta) md ... ex-ii lladt IV
WahldoTt Jona ;,;;ii.J 11otm! w11ia Drive 1'ert not....,.... II 11io-GrjClaol'
•• -of Ille ...... alleriulUft>)lro: Jl!!IO!!aU.>, -poaala to dtftlopmeot ii tile 'lllfor IV· · Btciwe ol:.!1.-i'a otalaalllll lbat U,.
byJ.,...BalJlacer,projectuop•rlor. compony -!I'!.., ...... Balllt
the Onllge COUllly llarbor llistrk'I. propoood -Iba ~ --tho '!be 1tven plans, made public thrti exchange ~ ,
.,..eeks ago in 1 npon of tbe studies by ,a ~aker .then proceeded to ~t ~ason s
county staff comrnilltt of Sampoott, pointa m the Jettor. II!' principal
Robert E. Thomu, coynty admlnl· ar-ts were that all ....., as to
atrative off1cer· Adrian KiJyper, county future deve~t o! the Upper Bay m
caunsel and Sti.n1e, KraUle dittctor of allY mJmer sbwld be raolved prior to
rtal ~ ...,. ~ beeallSO 1"' ...._~place.
of a nquat tUt Dec. I by Battin that the JISUa cut bl aplD at this point to Upper Bay de~ program he c:barp_. __ ,havethe'guta
rttludltd "bee•""' of ma,... that bad' lo. com: ... bore and appear before the
taken place since Iba ••change agree-~· • ,
m"'t wu aJined in !Ill" Not ltllPONlllLE
'!be rtpart outlined In detail the varied 8upervllor Au. then moved in to
propooals for dtve~ encompwing preaeot· tllt Gther side. "To abandon, ot
BaWn.11 suggestioOI, the cxxmty-lrvine attempt to abandm, our legal com-
Jand swap and three other configuriUons. mitment to carry out the exc:hange would
'-Battin qutstiont4 Ballinger as to wbo ' be -neither courageous, nor 'prudent, nOr
Jniliattd the uchange originally. The mponsible."
e..-r replled thal the Irvine Compony He quoted a report from the slate
made the first -1.o• the subject lo Department of Fish and Game slating
Ille K.-Dlatrict in Mardi, 1163. that "devllapment of the Upper Bay
Ballinger sald the study group reached would transfcrm. tbe eavirorment but it
no conclusicm Or reoonnneodMkn 11 &o woukl: not. datroy ~"
the superiority of ""1 of the ca>cepta, "The land exclwlp agreemen~ u Mt.
NO ADVANTAGE BUer1s report itself note!, would in-
But 'Ibomas told superVisors that, in crease the area under -public juriacUctlon
••--lo ...... _ · ~ d --•-(to from about 400 to 745 acres, or 86 pu· ... apm. n, '1.11:'.io:: lS no a v .. -ge cent Hence, the prospect cf figld en-
OAIL Y PILOT Pi.rt '1 A .... 01111'-
BJ JllB ABsoc!A'rlD' PR!!SS
South Vietnamese "-• -tly ' accom~ by an AmeriCa,o ,actriaer,
haYt:· moved lnto Cambodia to bact up •
.. government forces facinc an advance of
Nortll Vlelnamese and Viet Cooa al°"'
Ille road tbit connects Sflaqp and -P!inom
Penh. .~ 1
Jn Vietnam itself the enemy offensive
continued. In the central highlands South
Vietnamese troops drove within a few
hundred yards of a besieged Special
Forces camp at Oat Seanc, tryJ.na to end .
a nine-day-old eneiklemt,pt of tbe pc11t.
Both the advlllCe of the Nortb . Viet-.
namese and Viet Coo& aloq lllPw•Y I
in Cambodia and the nnr element of
South Vietnamese troops on tbe lide cl
its defenders mark an inteosiflic.tti cC
the fighUng in the Asian kiri~ _..
which has become a wiclel¥g battlefield
* * * GI Death Toll
JUJnps;llighest
In Six Months
tbe county) lo abandoommt ol the land virolunental.C011trol of the Upper Bl¥ by achang• plan atllllstime." -ar...,. •• p%-Propos .. d SAIGOM (UPI) -n.. u.s. command
Battin ~-Rad ~ a n-·ae public ageoctes would be lignillcantly l 'W '<' ..,_ ·..::-•· ..-"d wiaa UVUJ _ .. ~...a on... trade --'~ 11... -· sat today 138 Americans were killed in
memo he offered. Hit prindpll polDtl :1:~wt'altbou, , .... ~~·::=of·~:= Vietnam lasl week m· the operung· days of . _ . .. ......... .-....-~ ....... D....... Giant c:rane trundles along trestle on Huntington Beach side of Santa concerned:! 1 -• ~ the north of publle money." Ana River mouth. Trestle was built to help Jay pipelines for new a spring offensive -the highest death 1. "'Ibe arge llAl areas "" _.1.1i-...i-_.. __ .A k back at Baker's sewer outfall N rt B h I ta b k toll in almost seven months. Another ~o1theU Ba and -'theBigr-~-~1 al;i:iV ;tO.CUI,; • • ewpo eac rea es te ro er Denis L. Lynch is ._. pper Y m· ...,..... argumenb about North Star Beach and g 1h t t U b 1,179 were wounded. yon area that are unrelated to ~ater Back 0r· 'T th t . propos1n a. res ~ . e converted w~en ouUall is completed to a Military spokesmen said number of Gl11
aind bucb Ktlvttiel mq have been (North. BiiYs,:-Bt"•ach, 1• o•-'~t ,.,.a ~~ recreational pier. His idea has met with a cool reception from city slain was the worst weekly death full
desirable in 1965 wbeo the u:change wu ....-..... u:1 .... "C 1""' officials in Huntington Beach.
first ---•·-~ s•--that ~-the tnOWJ (during hearilgs on the exchange) since the week ending Sept. 13 when 143 1.'VQIW\R:l-~ u,,,;c w•., . . be 'ble.. U.S. servicemen died. -·~ baa ..,....,;...A the SO O. ~ c re JI mc«rlprt 1111 • , .. , ...... ,,. """"t......... •'"· 'd "•t B k B Dri 1-.... "--South Vietnamese spOkesmen said 754 UaiftrallY Reglollal Pm jolt two mlla =-Ill "~ -ac ay •• _,.._., 'M
lromll>ellClltbendoftbebay. thetldelandaat..-1Sorl4pointl.Thie. -urder for Hi.re' Fi·gure g~~~~enl troops were killed, 1.716 Iba Ille ~_.... -point ti two Itel in length; the -w=-and 78 reporltd mi5slng in ac·
"lt appears to me t Ulll'f~• Joacelt about ioo feet. Totally, the water lion last week, Marty eqlialing weekly
of Newport Ba}' should be orltnted s--1a -•-• 1-f t ,, ol •t averages durino the May, 1968, fighting, •--~-sh-elme" and•--~ d ... 1-ent ••uu ge 11 auuu~ ,.w ee , none 1 ... -e ""'&OA "" IJll:'"<llU.I ""'"' ba ked "" bl publi land I some of the war's heaviest.
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~ the overthMY'oi Prince NorooOni;~
Slbanook on March 18. ~ ~Ill VI-h•licopter -cuOlbij)I
were nported Wednesday io have kllfe !
some 1&0 enemy troops five miles inlhie
Cambodia. South Vietnamese Si;)'ratdertl'
also have been rtPorted In action, defen:;'
ding both 9'Jnbodlan and South v1e1:.
,...,_ IJ'OW)d forees . • ( 'J'b:e North Vietnamese and Viet Cong,:
mo~1ng through the outcrop of Cam-
bodian territory that juts into South Viet• n~, took the town of Chipou Tuesday.: ~lie they were reported within two~ miles of Prasaut, IO mites to the wee(_~
they Mr< alao said lq he reln!orcJna and '
dig&ing In at Cbipou. •
The 'Cambodians .were expectinc · an ~ult on the proVincial capital of Svay
/ R1q, five milts to the wHt of Praaaut. • '
Three Cambodian battalions were. dua in '
at Pruaut, promising to bWd out unJeu~ 1
ordered to retreat u they did ·from -
Chipou Tuesday. ·
Highway l, which links all these towns,
was .open, though clogged wilh refugees ·
movmg westward ahead of the occupying
enemy.
Befort he was toppled, Sihanouk fotlO,,..
ed. a benign policy of allowing the Viet
Cong and North Vjetnamese border
havens. The contested area -sometimes
called the Parrot's Beak -is a primary
reg:r,ouplng and resting place for the guerrillas. -,
Battlefield communiques in Vietnam
reported today at least nine Americans· "
and !even South Vietnamese killed in a
dozen clashes and f3 enemy rocket and ...
mortar attacks, indicating the e·nemy ,of.··
fensive bad not ·ended. ,
South Vletnamf:!e troopa were on tht ·
offemive on their home terrltory as well .
Jury Selection
Starts in Trial
For UCI Assault
·•-,.,_ 11-the 1-~ wa•-·---'-'-"' .... , ...!.., ... i.:'! .,"'"pareklng· _•• c areas or ........ ~ ~ .... ~--·"'_,,. ..... ~-... ...... UUlll D 1 y s Allied officials said 3,336 North Viet-
ltft in the county." "By com-~~ the B1'g ~--yon -•k raws ear entence namese and Viet C<>ng b"oops were killed Jury selection hegan today •-~-'
Z. "Tbe county .abould acquirt, willl tl!e alle "·'~the~ ·un1y ould.~ I f~rom last week, the coslliesl lor the Com-m ·~ coopora\t: and, hopefully the partlc{pa-, "~ oo w rec.eve Superior Court trial of a LQs Angeles:; _ of •··-• the ed the Irvine Compariy provides 90me l,IOO munists since the week ending Aug. 16 youth who allegedly terrorized the ....... :_ tion ewpori-»CillUl all land own feet of wate;r frontage, with more than when 3,898 were slain. ....,
by public inter~ between Back Bay sufficient supportlna land , behind It," . A ha~~r who was convicted of of-Huntington Beach police investigator for The U.S. losses were nearly double the cupants of three women's dormitories od:
Drive and the water lloe. MOit of this .,,__ I•""'• II~ f •-' d r .,_ · previous week's casualties of 79 U.S. the UC Irvine campus last Feb. 7. .:. area is lesi than JOO feet wide am hu no ~ contended. ..... "<& ,.-er 1.n•c: m ur er o 1~ girl the killing via a staged hit aAd ru11 ac· ·end ha bee sentenced to -"d t r M. dead and 519 wounded. The government Eight. female UCI students are ex· value as buikling sites. This, when added POBIJC BENEFITB 8 n . one year in ci en ° iss Duckett. toll that week was 326 dead and 959 woun-to by fl1llng of county tidelandS would . ADiit eOncJOded: l•Wblit Mr.-lllltr-fe-ge Counf.f !ail 1D1J. placed on three Officer Gene Pool assured Reed there ded, with 2,136 Viet.Cong and North Viet-peeled to testify to the activHies of mat•-a.mlle of new aandy btacll lor quiiili"ii ·that --bolfd'.,,... -up yun probatloo:. • would be 00 problem in ~inl out U,. namese reported liilled. Midlael Anthcny English, II during his ~ UR." . 80lnttblnc tbat i*°'klu p.ibllc bDeflta Superior Court JudJ:e Ray m o n d execution of Miss Duckett ai1d picked a It brought to fl,274 · the total of trial. English is 1occused of rape , assault ~Ats QIAl\GES that are known for IOIDltbinC u.at ml&b\ nomp.:m•a s:entenclng of RJchard David deserted sector of Bushard street in ~ericans killed 1n action • in Vietna~. witb intent to commit rape and foot . =th~:-~= ·~.i:n'=· ~·-pr~. lleed,.a'•. ol ~¥den _Gro~e, means that FOllJltaln Valley lor the scene of the ~ncm~:t. 1
Th':'k;:: ~~~~o~= ~Is.:~ b':.'t::f.d by cam pus polic•
1 tScl of m~,Jjlpt.~ Reed Will _,..,four mo~& the Santa crime. He then bookEia Reed on the toll was listed at 97,538. · 1 after screams and a ~ries of telephone
, ·7 M to apce ID tbii.pOJlticl oJ• Ana Jail. Tbe_Judge Cl'liil~ the defe~·-charges accepted by the jury. Last w~k was the fourtlfthis year tliai reports sent them hurrying from F,.... -P .. fl J ty~' -f" • --,dant with ellbl montha ltready spent in Reed's plan had been, the p'°""cutio• U.S. baUlefield ®•ths have exceeded ltlll, dormitory to dormitory.
1 hft that the: ~ 'aiatocfy successfully argued to arra11g f the In a separate report, the U.S. Com-Sheriff's investigators allege that
APOLW-· ·-aireement would be "fult UR tbe LoWtr · -· ' eo or mand said three U.S. ainnen were English raped a girl in the CielG ~ • • • :811 with moll of the abcirellM beMfit· Judge ntompeon sentenced Reed to one demise of Miss Ducket t and then C01· wound~ in action in~()$ last w~k._$ix donnitory, exposed himself to at least
ttng' private dmkJpme:nt and provkllng to Dve yean in at.ate prilon for his role in lect on a triple indemnity insurance American airmen have been killed an~ 15 two gtrls in the Brisa dormitory and at-
dockinc wltb the moon landinc cntt, ftr., 1~ pubic llCICf*, We can acquir.e llDd solicitlnl the m~ of Kath I e en policy he held in the intended victim's wounded since the United States be&¥ tacked other <>CCUpaots of the Puente ~ iuto lunar orbit Ind delcent to .nthln· on IM eUt'bank llld ftll the tldelindl Jo 1 Duckett, 24, but Immediately !uspended 1_n_am_e'--=:-::=------·---=""::"°::u::nc::in::'.'..g ::'u::ch::.::li::au::r:::es:.:M::arz.::ch::__::lO:::-·_:;~ _ _:•:::lee::po::l~ng,_q:cu::art::::er:_:s:___--------eiaht miles of the moon. denlop pUbllc bnchel, U necwary." that tenn In favor of the jail se.tence. A 1
'!lie deoct,_ maoeuver Is eapecially Supervilor W11ltam Hlrmin backed Superior Court jury convicted Reed last crlUcaJ,becauaeacClderally~tbe Alim.and P_tsllllet:_.'~oday the cowrty Nov. I and ht was ae~t to f.he Depart-
spKeShtp'a encint «te eecmd .too kin< m· water ~ and tbe lrvlne ment of CorrecUona for a _pre.sentencing
<'Oldd amd the astroealM "eraablng into QmiplnJ.-t of !be land. Joint ellorta lludy, tbt moon. to properly dm!Jop the area will be heat That jury ac<epttd testimony that
Oii the Apollo II and ti llighla, the Ian-served by eooperatlon btlw,.. the ...,,, Reed offered ll,500 to a man he believed
dine vehicles were rtleaaed at an altl!U<le. ty, the company and the city ol Mewporl to be a driller but who was actually a
of men than ee mUes. Lovell and Haile Beldl." • .,. to start thiir deoc:ent ll1ll'll eight , N'l'JlO<I ~ raaldenta oppoolng I!><
miles, a mO\'.e which provides additional exchlnlt agreement included ffar'Vey
(uel and greller landing accuracy. · Peue, ~p·P'rtil Jr., fotmtr Fllh and
'!be big quatlon 1, whelhtr Swigert, Game commtlllooer, ud Mn. Frank
wbo has pever nown blspace, can W1J1'k Robimon, one of those intervening in the
amootbly .. wtth -the other two In court caee to det,ermlne the con-
mlneUvera that require cbe and rapid stitutionallty of the exchange qretmelt. coordina!Jon. Battin coocludtd the diaculsloa with an
Lovell, Haise and'~U K. MatUngJy appeal to the con1Utventl of the n ha•• practiced topthtl' .. • team supervlaorx repreaenting inland u:eu o(
mott than two yem, llrlt u backup !he C!Jllllty (hlrno.U, Phillips and llln-
pilota f« ApoDo 11, man's fint m~Ian. W:in). ·
ding misaion, and then M the prime ctt.11' "The excha•gf would only be to the ad-
for Apollo IS. Oblervers say they are a vantq;e of rich residents of the Upper bl ..11_ .......... _ Bay aru. It would aot be ln the belt in. super Y CCJOrwiNM:U· _.... tei'tsts of our constituent.I. It 11 similar
to Salt Creek where the oounty gave .
DAILY PILOT
c ..... .,. ,.. ~··hi••
OlliAHU: COAIT l"UILllHINO OQMP&JCY
l •\;•rt N. w.9'
P'•Uk*ll .......... ltW J.,. L c.,1 ..
Vil• f'fft!.-1 _, 0.-M ~ Tlri~·,....; kff•il
t.iltfr
n...-.1 A. M,.,,ti;,..
M .... "'9 t:dllW
l!thar4 '· Ntll '-'II ONfttl C-lr fOllOr .......
C•N #MNI l» Wu1 .. , SI,.... ,.._1 lftd'l1 nn ,..., ..... ""'k•.,.. """"' ·~I n:I' l"-t A-........... leldli 1N1J hw!I ~ 1111~ -~ llC-.... lli .. I
_...,.._ ''
-
away valuable land to private land·
owners.''
CFS President's
Office Invaded
Six dlaidellt sludents, led by Dav1d R.
MacKowiak., 25, barricaded themselves in
the Cal Staie Fullerton president's office
Wednesday fOI' nearly four hours before
agreeil!( to -meel with tM prtSidtat to-
day.
1be dissidents were to review their
grievances with Dr. William Langsdorf,
college presklent. and his $1.aff at J .p.m.
·MacKowiU. who has betn ami,t.ed
four times In campus dlsorders siftee'laA
Feb. t aata. "GoV~Rla(ari hu salil, 'U Ill
1 blood bath. let it 'be now.' IO we ate
~ "campu disturbances bee an,
II atudenll, noutodents and !acuity
mtmben ba\lt been •rrt"" b 'I F\iDelWn police On a varietjl of cbarcu:
Perot Stymied Again
PAl\IS (AP) -H. Rola Ptrot tried
unsuc<e1afully today to fl•• the North
Vlttnamete and Viet Cong lists ol
prlaonen ·held lo SO.ti\ Vlttiiamue
campa, ind concluded that ",they baVt no
concun" for their .own capUv11. ~
Tuu computar mqncte arri...r aboanl
a chlrttred Botlnc 711'1 1«0ntpanled by
11 .. wlYff ol ml•llnll and Jl'iloner ol war
---· and about 'IO .........
Wayne Greeted
By 'Black Eyes'
On Fil1n Location
Newport Beach actor John Wayne
returned to the location where "Rio
Lobo" is being· shot near Tucaon, Ariz.,
after winning his O!car Wednesday.
First, everyone oo the set turned their
backs. then they gave ·the 62-year-okl
supersl.ar a black eye .
Well, it was really a black eye patch.
Each penon wore one to commemorate
gag·fashlon his first Academy Award.
given 1969's best actor for hi1 portrayal
ol whiskey·IOaked Rooster Cogburn.
Wayne wore the patch as the crotchety
old one-eyed lawman in "True Grit," and
even his horse sported one on the Rio
Lobo set when he returned from Los
Angeles.
So did a Teplica of his Oscar built for
the occasioi:i.
Familiar Pair
Make Police Log
Again in Mesa
A famillar pair could be seen at the
Flretx>use, and not only their faces.
Vice officers Sam Arnold and Da\'e
iHayea dropped into the topless tavern at
177 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. to Issue their
daily cltaUOl\S charging municipal code
violations.
Another familiar pair -Mlss Pamela
Vanessa York, 22, and owner Ray Rohm.
2S, both of Colta Mtsa -were tic keted
for entertainment without a permit.
Mlss York and Rcihm were cited Tues·
day night u the tavern1s intended court
ten of consUtutionality of the city
ordln•nce swung into lta smnd wetk.
She wore a flt1ho<:olortd lace bikini and
sandal1. said police, noUng for the record
that Rohm was cl1d in a j1cktt, white
ahlrt and t111 slacks.
----'---· -~-------'----"'~ ------' __ ---...1, ___ -~J ________ -----·----· ______ ___. __ ·---------· • ------ ----____ .__ _____ • + -·· __, -
Ctik!
Tll11• •t• "'"Y t•mforft\il1 1of• \i14t fo, Sitti~t '"' Slt•pi11t. .
A wid1 1•l1ctio11 of f •btic1 111d Col1t1 t1
,11001• fra'!'•.
Rq.
$400.00
I
'
Now
•
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I
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ii
I
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I
I
I
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ii~gto~~aeh _
. ~DIII O N
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•
voi:. 63, NO. 8!, • SECTIONS, 44 PA(;ES
. . -.
·Meet Candidates
Stt.itn candidatts aTt nnanina
for three seau in tht" Fountain
Valle11 council election April 14.
Councilmn ore elected at large,
with the thrt• top oote geUn1
winning th~ seot.s. The DAILY
PILOT hal ·qvestio"ned each can.-
dldatt on several istues, giving
tM office seeker1 an opporttfn.-
itt1 to ezplain their platforms.
The vi~ of four candidates
were presenteod Wednel day. The
views of the nmaining thf'tt .
condidatt~ ate presented tOdow.
Mangano Cites.Experience
John Mangano says be bas attended
every Foiintaln Valley City CoUICil
meeting held during the past three years.
·."My stand oa public iaalel and my in·
~ in the Millare of our community is
a matter of public record," be says.
·1111 upttieoce includet two campalgns
far city COUDcil In Hu.oUnaton Beach and
more than two yean as legislative
cha1rman for the FountaiJI Va 11 e y
Qwnber of Comaierce.
"Because of my utmalve background ri cmnmunity participation and ei:-
perience In Sou!hem Calilomla m.-pa1
&1>te11m""t I feel I pooaeo1 the neceaary
bowledge, eiperiencf: and ability to give
\o the dtllenl of Fountain Valley the kind
of. effective repremitailola they delerve,"
Manpno llata.
: On specific issue! Mangano expressed
the following ideaa:
:uTo help stabilize our tu base I ad·
v.ocate the retention of a-professional ia-
dustrial coordinator or the formation of a
community economic developme1t com-,
mittee to selectively attract industry to'
settle here.
"In addilion, we shoukt be amenable
(in 11evere hardship cases) to allow in-
(8ee MANGANO, Page %) '
"
JOHN MANGANO '
•
O~NGE't:ouNri; CAtlFORN --JHURSOAY, APlll[ 9, ·1970 . . ... . •
... ·-' ).. .. . . ........ -~ •. -~J ~-.. .. :
Air.port ._.ACtiOn ·c:h1ded
'
State Li~ Mile Square for Planes.' Us~
By TERRY COVllLE
Of .. ..., .........
Several county officials feel the ltlte BoiJ'.d of. AuonauUcs may be HaohJg
hack on its wOrd" wltli ID --elfoct
to keep• Mil~ Square as an airport
plllSihillty ln-.FOWllain Vall~y.
"It's a kind of sarprisi.ng turn of
events. It just mfabt boll down to who
controls Wt\14" was die response of Pete
Moore, executive assistant to Orange
County S~sor Dave Baker. ·
His reaction was typical of apotesmen
for ·the three supervisors who had sup-
ported the plea ci the Fountain Valley
Politicians'
. ,
School Dl*lct to elimlnlte· llile Square
from -.Uon u a future airport.
W-.Y, I spoltesman f..-the
-~ hoard Indicated the state
nil.iit !pin ~ -~ ~ IUj>Orvlaors and Hep llile' 5quore open U I potential
~. ... . -· ..,._ -"It hla pd pot.nltal llld~ we. 'llllllld
hate to ~• Jt lost as an ~.site,'..'
H""11d w-aro. a aloaultan1 . to the
aermauuca board, eald. '
"Wt have "leller fron1tlle atale·hoard p~ to. merae its -on'MUe
Square and the tehool di!ltrtct'a ~uest
f\11" a odlool, H the boon! of•iuperV!s<l'1
l' ear in .Jail
•
dropped pa.to atudy It for · ... .-_;
said !lqlh, stem. ...... u .. uallllnl to
~ llohert. llJl1<0. . -
1lle lu! por..,aph of 1he ·lillat, daled
Feb. f, Ult, and addmaed to 'SUite
AIRmhlyman lloher1 llufu JR-Jlun.
tiqklll.Qead>>, reads: , •
·~u 111e CO)lllly, 1n-~ iq -
plan of a!QJ0111 electl not'.lo .'"'9 tile
alrpbrt"(Mtle Squani In .Ill plma,. aad
the U.S. Marine CorpfJllll dlcWt lhiJ
hive no future fixed ~ aircraft ..,. ci
the field, the departmlOt (ci -utt<s)
would certainly revene i1I decision."
Stern said the loller , w;u ii&necJ by
Nixon Plans
Pol£ Signs Murder-£ or-Hire Mor e Troop ·
'Home Fte,e' Withdrawab :
The city·•talf Is ''winking" .1 the· bu.. Sentence G1• ve·n . WASHINGTON (UP.I) _ -
dred.s of politlcal poaten on trees and NJ:zoo .will mab a nallooally televlaacl
utility poles in Huntlqt:on Beach. address on Vietnam next '111undly,llleb*t
j<We doa't have the manpower to keep the White Hou.e aunouoced today •. He II ._ .... , A hairdresser who was convicted of of-ment of Corrections for a 'prNen'-""" UIAl.ng them down," city eng)oeer BUI study. ..... ... '"Ii expected to innounce a flD"tber·l,l.S. tnGR
Hart ·d· loci , fertng fl,000 for the murder of hit girl ee sll ay. 'We have thia pro-That jury accepted testimony that withdrawal.
bl friend has beeh sentenced to one year in em every election. We and the council Reed offered $1,500 to a man he believed , P.ress Secretary .Ror.ald L. Zlealer said
have to cto.se Our eyes to the situation Orange County Jail and placed on three to be a drifter but who was actually a the apeecb, on r8dio as well 11 televial«lt
and wait until alter the election is over years probation. HunUngton Beach polict inveiti1ator (or ould for the canddates and their support.en to Superior Court Judge R a y mo n d the killing via a ataged hit ud ~ ac-w be at · 1 p.m. PST April 11 aod
pull them down." Thompoon's oentenclng of Richard David cident of Miis Ducketl would·COD<em Niloio's -00 Viet.
. The otfeQders are ~ two laws: Reed 28 of Garden Grove rDe&M that .Officer Gene Pool auured Rttd there nam troop levels.
the state forbids any sip beioa fixed to ' ' . · • would be oo ~blem in carrying out the 1be speech will come one day after • utiltty poles and a dty ordinance pro-Reed will serve four mo'!lhs In the ~ta encuttoo of ioilss Duckett and picked a tatesi ....... of the ~adual troop -·"'-'
hibits the use ci trees.. Ana •Jall. ;r'he jUdp credilod the de/ea-deaen.d sector of Buahard Street In ,.,.... r ,...._ Scott's Key Pllblic Trust
' Puble. eonfidence in-eleded ofDciaJg is
-'" lloo .., ,_ il-Gosao lleolt'i bid to -<be dty aiuncll -he .... during the l)IOdal i'-1n Valley recall
last September.
'
. Nelther 1"". js hetnc enforced allhougb dant with elg)>t months alrudy apeDi In Fountain Valley for the scene of. II\<, :-S·:!=.'1 ~ year by Nme 11 lo
• . the StaU -"'lllpwly1 ealled the ~-, . .,. . ..;-;i;' ' crime. He then booked -w '!I! tllia' . "'!'P . ,:~!::~· ~-;=;.~.mr:-_,r; :Bm1:1.Xl,~·~~~u~~:
BouleY.,I'ond-ay. . ~~~~ ~· •·• ~1rgtied, to ..... • fir 1he namto434,GllOcm April II. • •
"Al WI as we tbam [ , --dl!!IJlt .r Miii -jll( -:.... Zlcler telct ' • m-..,ail. allct 1lleDl up_ II• " ~!:!.!" Ci6'r;;' 11io 1111 .._, 4 ~ 111• .. trip!~ lr..i.,..•ty ~-~ii.qi'.-~:. blatbat ~ ~ ... "sinee that eledJoa my efforts have
been cmceutrated ~ .bringlq: truly
reprftmtatlve 1ovemment to thia city,''
llYI the 37-ytaN>kt councilman.
Scott has beea a teacher nearly idne
years, recenUy worldag at juvenile ha11 in
Orange. Prior to winnm,_elecli011 to the
city council he served on the parks and
recreation commission.
He has also been active in civic a!lairs
serving aa Jlresidelll (lll&M9) of the
Fountaln Vllley 1.,_ llld u """"'1
president of. the Board of Directors of the
Founlllo Valley Boys' Club.
. On .peclfie issues Scott expressed the
following thoughts:
''Durllg the next few years 1 would like
to help • speed-up the development of our
city ,parks and recreational facilities, and
al!O Initiate some exclUng recreation pro-
grams that would appeal to teenagers,
adults and senior ciUzens h addition to
the inany we now have for our children.
"I alJo feel that il the people of FOU>·
fain Valley want our industrial area to
cleYrelop rapidlj, we must pursue the type
• (See ~' P-lp I) GEORGE B. SCOTT
'f aubman Hits ;Small Lats
.
• Burton Taubman Is basing hi! cam-
paip for a Fouataln, Valley City Council
&tat Git large lots for raidential areas.
1''1bere see.ms, unfortunattly, a llrong
trend .developing towml putting more
llld more -into less and laa q>aee until we have the crowded look ol a lhet-
to. TbJa l.s not the atmosphere I had
~ f9f my family," Taubman says.
"ll elected to the couocll I will be bet-
ter able to --the declsiou which will keep Ulla a<'eommunity of prtv,.te
1Hldmcel. A dolelJ -COOlmDlty of ordertj gowth," he conUnued.
0n other 1 ........ 'l'aubmin says:
.,Industry in 'FOl.mtain Valley should, in
my oplnloo, be ltmitod to the -• which ,. .. allocated for It la the d\y master
plan. We should only invite small in-
4.ustries. I ar!l not in favor of large
manufacturing planbl. .
"Tbl.a was O'rlainally a community of ,ri~~ honles1-l··feel-&hat it sboukL~·-·.
m•in so. We have enough shopping •
centers at UM poilat and.I doa't c~
apartnlent compltxes 1 welcome addition
to rilfdenUal afeai.
llaflco llld. "II'• jwrl somelhlnll ••• ...,,...,. -•lctlll ·-palicr bi bald In ... -Ytct8'1 w • ..,.... • w bavetolift-foralewmondQL" Noll. I.,. • .., ..i to t11t Depatt: ...._ . • • I Cllulddlllono•-... ampl!,
The electilln is Tueldl1. · -• i,ilC liJa taliier j.llq llatemenlo. -
NfsOn told new1men al '.. lnlOnnal
news confer-.; Mardi 21 th1t,' Vlet-
nam•ltkn -the adlnlniJtratbi1 term ...
Uuntnc a larger burden of the war owr tit tbe' SOuth v1etnamese -;;;. pro.
greaalng well IDd he aaw at ·111ot time
nothing to slow the ·rate ,of U.S.
Valley Planners
Delay pecision
On Town Ho u8es
Resideota concerned about aowded
schools woo a c1e11y Wednelday night m
the Larwln Companyls request to expand,
Its Tiburon town -development In Fountain Vall<y.
The city's planning commission agreed
to wait until April 22 lO make a deciskln
on Larwln'I request for R-Z (light densi-
ty) zoo.Ing on. lJl'QP!rtf south of its cur-
rent Tiburon development along
Brookhurat Street.
"Gisler School is already overcrowded.
tf you allow more town ·00useg it will be
an impoulble situatiQD," said Sonoy
Bass, 10435 Thrµah Ave.
Town house uni.Lt on R-2 land prod~
about twice .. the number of homes aa
normal ft..1, (!Ingle family homes on ' In-
dividual Ja!s); acamllng to clly plannen.
Joho Tap!dng, ' repmenting Larwln eompuy. argued that statlsl.ics show
town booses producing the same number
1 of children as normal homes, wblle
paying higher taxes.
But the 10 or 15 midents preunt·
refuaed to accept bis flcures and -
that the hearing be ·-yed .. --residents COllld ~ their views.
Both the .,,..,,_, llld Tapllin1
agreed there """1d iie ... problem In
delaying the .... Chute~·
• NEW YORK (AP) -Prloeo on the
stock market were mi>ed late thla after. noon In light trading. (See quotatlolil,
Pages 22-21).
Simon 'lti Step_'
Tycoon
Last Ca,ndidates Forum .
Friday in Huntington
' . Wlth·the·HW>til&lon Btacb oouncll race
now hJ, the •trttch. vo&erl get their las~
chance Friday night to aee aD 11 can-
didata Cllllpalgnlng ~-·
1'e i.e...,. of Womeii Voters will put
on a candldatel' fair at' the 8"ntlngtoo
C...!er M'aD. l!dinger A....,. and <Beadi
Aoulev1rd, from 7 p.m. to 10 P..m.
Mrs. Comella Johnson said· a festive air
will be h1troduced to balance the
seriousness of the occasion. "It won't be
all pallUcs," the said. j<We'tl bve
ballOOM, bunting and mmlc .....
Each calldldate will be ta. a booth from
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.· to answer reaidenl5'
questions. Afterward they will go to a
JM)dhon ·and, give three-mimrte presenta-
tiorui of their policies.
Also available at the fair will be a
Pr oclamation Time
In -Huntington Beach
The city ol Htmttnglon Beach Is doing
• lot ol procJaiming these days.
Thil weflt Mayor Jack Green .lalUed
seven ~«tidal proclamations: .Ownber
of Cont...,... week, April ~11: Life In-
surance !Veek, . April IZ-11; . .Air Force
Week. April IZ-11; Multiple Scleroaia
Month, May "JIH4; Buddy POJlPY Days.
May 22-21; 'Munldpal ClerU Week, May
17·21' llld a proclamation· honoring w,.
Sargent for the vOluntetr organization
the Huntington Beach wolhan bu set up
to help the Dyal: peoplea ci Borneo.
queolionnalr< giving the candidates•
res~ lo clvk: tauea. The lequ1
prilited 3.100 coplea of the q-u..nalre.
Entertainment !or· the nnt part of the
evening will be pf'O\lided by the ••Guns
Md Garters," a folk daf!Ce group, the
''FepJ Four Folk Slaien" and >the
"Madrigal Consort," a group of students
from &:ii.son Hl1h SChool.
.
Beac h Man, 21,
Seriously Burn ed
A·21-year~ld llunUniton Beach man ii
listed Jn "serious" condition at~ orange
~ty Medical Center _today sufferlnc
from beams received while meltini parat-
fin on a kitchen stove.
Ronald Tomes, SUMI Pawtucket Drive,
received first and second degree burns
· over his face, handa, arms and let• as-
he dropped a naming pot ol wax when
trying to carry it ootslde.
Fire Capt, James P. Vincent said
Tomes ran through the fire and ntin-
gulshed the flames cm bis hocly hf• turn-
ing on the shower. '
The 5:50 p.m. fire alto caused IJ>P.l'QI"·
lmalely !550 damage to the ld1chen and
cabinets, investig1ton saJd.
Vincent theorized that Totn" might
have been heating the·wax for applic•
lion to 1 lllll'fhoerd.« perhaps for making
cudles.
' ·--
Discusses · ·Race
wllhdrawala. ..
Nl:roit bao ordeftd -plilael. 01
-al .. fir, rtdudnr the~
ed sln!nllh of U.S. foccea In Vldnam by
!Ollie 111,0llO, The IClual lllDlllilr ol
1"°'ipl to he pulled out U ci a --Wednl!iday la apeded to Iii abold 105,090, . .
Nmoo lilllioun<ed tlle fll'lt 25,IJl&.man
reduction i~ the eelllng Wt J""' and'
subsequenUy ordered two mare rednol
lions. 'I
Gen. Wiiiiam C. Westmonland, formef
Vietnam commander who is now the
Anny chief of Ila!!, and Ga. C<elgiitoif. w. ~ Abrams, cu'rrently· the U.S •. comi•
mander in Vietnamt"' have favored 8·
slowdown in the wlthdr1wal hecal!M ~
Ill) increase in Communlat adu.ily.
·Ziegler said the Preaident'1·dedslon on
• fourth pila,. of the withdrawal la bwcl'..
on "going con1ultitlonl''. !tu[
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker llld Gen;.
Abrams in Saigon and With U.S. plannerl
In the Pentagon· and -Ni...t bad no
plans' to meet peroon111Y. wllh ~ and.
Abrams helm April II. •
Bunker is 8Cheduled to return to tht
United Stalea In Mly lot nlemlve ...,.
IU.ltatioos on Vietnam. •
Four Anny units Iii ICblGiled to ieatf
Vldnam Friday as part of thi ·thirdl
plwe, 50,000 ;,,., Withdrlnl. The Iola(
number in the units ii S,211). Jr ' ,
Oru ge
We•t•er
, , The morning fog will comt In patcl/es and, go In a hurry Frid~y __ _
-making-way-·for sumiy skln..:;n'.d ,
terhperaturet soarine up to the
70'• along the Orqe Coast.
INSIDE TODAY · . ' . . •1u there ii a heed for Q81tn:ett
""-they ahouJd_ be bpi ·.. -thorooolhfarea auch u Brookbunt Stnel Pliidncooenext to thebigblCbool wu a BUltTON TAUBMAN Frem Win llenl<tl Fullerton and oev«alotberllrma,aaid he Simon told~ he cfecldod to run
V"'1 lrresponllhle ocl WAS B INGTON -Multimlllioaalft la au,ned with Prealdeol NI.son on both. against Murphy at the Jut minute ln
. -Th• .ltlOllllhl of lnltli for
Jitd{/• -eanwu .,,,,,. abolil
lhirlt/ -~"' -before the Bffl-ott vottd cmd t/lr rttult mar. be
'11ils issue of lot size Is a grave one. I • . California political candidate Pf"ortGh "Murphy ii much more ota hawk than order to give Califom1ans a choice in the lleJine In the lssuos involved in the ooll • disijipearlllg. Simm aald here today that he 11 much the Pretldenl" he told newamen, adding
elec:tiaa Jan fall The resulla were a clean •tn,. .. no quaml with the plan lo-J!Ul , more In ·step with Presideot NI.son than .lhot_lll.s~.11 c1ointJ a pd~ Wider dU-Republlcan aenalGrial primary. ~te from the voten which the a park near the high 9Chool, but.the need the man he hopes<to beat in 4une. ~ s. · So far, the Wlllte 1HOU11 ud the
prialit cltr •:c•n:ll aeemi determioed to ~I!" 4!<•ler iJ) oth..-areas. Mothers The 63-year<Old hulb-11.0. di~ .vraJMJ · 'S ~hll<:an NaUonal Committee/ aa well
Jgnon. l am 11n1111 ""'vinced ol the witli' ~I dll~ llbqula ilol l!'l'le to · ~1.sopJICfltlao .to lien. «ear1t.Morpli1 CR·• · ·policy, 11 11 Gov. Ronald Reagan. have l'lil1alned
-i, to retain the T,21111 squar.-foot takt'IJ..m ao lar fi;om·lfoo\le In .oder to 'C11!!.) In 'the RtjluhllClm 'P<iml'1 at a . ' 11 V<ry dell • ' 1 'IMUlraJ. ·
IOI size. give them a safe place lo'play." news conf....,,.._ . • • · • ,,,.. added~m tlciclcy »l'J. ·Simon Is a high school dropout who
• "There tbouW be convea1enl. parks for ·· 'faubealn is 35. He Is emp}oyed u • ti.. Vlllnam and •41n ask economy were 1
-in & -• i:, imliaed" a fortune estimated by some Is
each tract., that ehlktttn area't forced Oe tfb with Title lnsuranct and"l'rult-pronrllmQJ CJM...S. • • 11 believe in~-capite~ •hlP as $150 milliOn and la now. head ol
Into the dan1eroo1 practice of playing in CUnpatly. His wife's name is Peggy ¥n Simon, whole enonDOUI fm1nci1l tla· tern' 11 ~ te utionali*mi'' the'Norton Slmon •FoundaUon, whk:b ·col·
tho street. .Land for parks Is rapidly · (5" ~AUBMAN, Pa1e I) plre formerly Included Hunt rooc111nc. ii aald. o' '•' lecfl Ind 'loanl ....-111 ci·arl. •.
ll•• maim-/GU """polgn -· Page ij,
_,.. '11 ....._ n c....,. ... f ..,... ... ,,
C'-0 ... U, , ....... .._..a < ....................... ... c-ia tt or.. c..tr 11 ~ ~ " .,,.,. ,.., ft
G =-~ 11 s-tt ... • • ... • 1 ........... f! . ._ ........ , .. ,.' ,.....,....,. ~· •IMMe n..n ~-· l• ....... , ........... l ~·
.... l ..... ,, ~-· ... .,.... ....... " -.. ' '
•
I
I
r
I
•
Z D4Y l'llot • H • r=-crrarz e ·
•
• JlotJert Terrt#'. · e 'Gordon Batch • Roger D.Slate•
ROBERT C. TERRY: Preoldent ti •te !JORPON R. llATCl!.: President of !he ROGER Q. SLATES: Cbolrmaa of ~ 1'o!I '""1deal ol s..-.. Hualiqloa Hnbour Properly ow.en pllllalag ctm'ltadol, 0 r 1 n I 1 C...
Clab, .ell.ilnDU· ot 1111 .IIi11 ••I I• Anocittion, liu been cha.Irma of •.i:ooe ty Airport C•unl..-.,, ebltnn1a ol
Caralvll. cJaalrman ~ Dowatowl Pieper· cit}'• Uaderp-ound UtlllUe1 Commi11loo,
ty Onen Auocl1dte. Married, &It a. ud vartuee coDUlllU., owns 1 dn&& past preNdtat of Chamlttr of Commer«,
SllGolt f!l-i •elboda fw ult ,...,, Mirr!od Wt• -<lildmt .... PNllidClll ol ..... ol Realion. Roatlor,
capllal •• ..., .. 11 pt111n1m lllcli4o a 41. marrlc4 wt• -cUct. Ap It.
CllJ aet'll 19te tu ud/• ":ct~'lpll Slteald flladllg: for the capital Im· Should fluDcln1 for the capital lm·
""'Al••·&uf Before WI W on • pmemeata )l'OgrU. Include an oU provements proiram hM:1ude an oil tu, wt must deddt lf UM!re-111 need ,OI". eeverance. tu utl/ar iross .nceipts
one, which I feel there Isn't at thll u;ie. 1ev.eruce tJJ and/or I""' udptl buflDeq tu! Over-simplified questlons
Jf then la. a noecl fer acktltlcnll ~· ~ tu? 11'!Q .nc1 make a dacl slco like -quickly _,1110 quottfl<d.can·
than· J>o«11 Luq Jhould be poaad oner a Oil lhil· unW J bave .,.. Iha llClll frcm dldatta from wall eanlns unateuu. Anr.
sptdftc plan of •dmlnlltratton 11· •Flld the Syitems and Data Proceaaieg Com· definitive mpon.se ahead of the couped
upon by a11 partltt. ' · -· mlitee that ·w11s appointed by the council study by financial expel't$ would show a
Topel lie Ptor Dln..,,...t Plu: I do to·~ flnoncinl malhccll.. clONd mind .•n .a_vitat problem. aot oppoee the 0 Top of the Pier Pla" 11,
a bu!c plan for redevelopm.m ·of 'l'oP of Utt Pter ·Develogmeat Plan: Top el t1tt Pier Dlvelopmlat ·PJ111 The
downtown. I do object lo the tUlnJ of Hunllnlion . ·Bneh, wllh 111 · ltt open T-f·lh•·Pler plan la mere lhan • P"rk·
private property for a 1>1rklnc Jot for . space, 1hould ke1p Pitt with th• crowth In& lot I cannot favor ell)' cood1mn1Uon
vtatton to the beach. The property lft of OraftP' County_ Our ctty need.a a for parking until evef)' ,reasonable downt.Dwn. _abould be rtdeveloptd by tll developmeat'proiram almllar to the one .alternative hu been exhausted. However,
ownari. with IUJduCle by Iha city cnly. that II balnc propPIOd by the Top of lh1 Iha dcwnlOwn ""'ho• undeniable major
The condemnaUon of lhe moat ICIDic: ud Pier Plu. However, lndivlduala lhou1d probl1m1; Ind on balance, J believe thll valuahll~" · y in HU.U..tcn !!each net auffar ftnanctllty ncr ahould !up wa ban made 111 uctllant bellz\llinf.
fer u · Junsle la pure fon1U7. Tho compelea bootllt from eondamnotlon. 'l'llo bHdl P"kinf is a well lhoupt«it
-'' dolmlcwn 1r1 movtnc llllad to The catalylt to otlmulato lndualr)' ud and CC11111luctive projec~ I am net car·
dntlnjl the l*W* I)' thamlllvu, wltb.,. -1111111 basin la the downtown Wn that Iha. IUbllquanl llepl bov1 blln
coorapii>eot !rem iho cl\l'. Tllo Rlu -11. • ana. We Dlllll Id now to provldl 1 actu· itvan the 1une thcroulh evllluoUcn.
wry -Ill ml with -~ plan-tLin' !cir \>mllll ud trafflC flew u well u ' 111era 1.s 11111d1 mClft -the clly can -nhlc In CCllljuoctlon with lhe property modify crdJnucel that will allow prlvott Ind mllll -do. But we mllll net nuh In· owoen, ccold -., very -luoblo. de..,.,._! to _.i. lo preclpilltt action wltllout cor&ful ccn-
-
De_.__t e• h •--le& alderallco cl all. faclc!J lllyctvad. ,_,......' ~ec -~ • ltllClll Davlllpalut: HunUnston 11 .. ch » · ·
"*II lbould~ullll ~Ucn. ohculd-Uto c1 !hi' uabla , •'iE: 1 reach to clluup, ud '!lS.::ol I h • Ulll. . -lac mull • v1 · nt I y vtewacn
fadUtlet. ;~not be ~· ~ e ea m 0111 , adv ratlve ~!~ble ."! •• ~ , _d!"lc~!~~li, ... ,..• lhantc Q .:_!i. rlln'fl""but it .s , . copr: ::. thlttrespec~rty rights,
-1111'1". ~1 •-'" ~·...-wi Le-1Ubalantially to the econcm1c base t' fnlllN!R lblt the r151-of lhe com·
vtaw cl pluara111'.'Tl11 bucti I• °"" m•· ol' !lie city. Our beach11 ahculd bt munl\)1-are equally reopected. The rclo er Jor· uat Ind lhcukl be ,lrlattd " 111<h. cultivittd ud prottcttd fer the "" of pvomauml lhould be. IO plan, to en· Air/ ~ for Ult beach lhoWd bt all · eour11e, to sUmulate -and only as a
located at l111t two block• 1n f~~ .. ::; -~ last rescrt, to usurp privat'e rights. This beach aot on the beach. If the Hun~ ... · ''CltaiMIP of OR Well•: The oil lodustry policy has already proven its merit.
lead! co. beach properly LI t3"'1ie has Oien good lor thi cily er HwiUpgton unlike our nal(hborinc belch cltiei, the ~ It lhculd be dol)I by Iha atilt Beach and io atill • very vital indllalr)I eaUra lenstl\ or our ell)''• baoches 11 11ice all pecpla UM It and contrcl :placad for, the future. I cc ..... nd the pro .... ol raedtly •-•Ible lo public 1191 aod en-
in the handl of the City .... · ·:; : ·ittf.operaiorr 'in attempUng to elhnjJlte jafmerlt. I would continue suCh a balanc.-
CllulJI ol OU Wtllai-1 thlok an orderly th4. blighted arus. However, lo _.,P ed policy. I oppooe any additiionat
elNnup cf Iha ell Haldi ID th!• lnNlllcn PICO.with Iha futurw "°"lh cf Iha city, • burdena on our ctty'a tupeyen to pro-
wlocl la very bnportul Mj code that ccnUnue<f oflort la r<qutrecl. Our actutlon vtde. t11l<X11l recrt1U0110I faclllUes. q written bculd be dOOI with Iha heir ol la. net to 1Upr:11 the ell lncluelr)' bu\ to
lhlolltndu1tt1aathattheccd1wtt be MMJre •altlc •""•rc•m••l-ol ·oll -ClalaupolOUW•Ua:Thecleanuplnd
workable. Wt mutt be careful not to evtr ordinlncui. renovaUon of our oilfield ar111 .mu1t be a
penaUui the 1mall owner so lhal he flCll e,idral hit: · w, muil stvt • oUr '-1t.. conilnuln& ma!or effol1 ln qur com·
flnafte1al ruin whU1 others are not af· tentJon·to development of the Ctntr-1 et; muntty. Government mult l~ad lnsettin1
fected at 111. ty Park aa It will -ol de"-t'·lr ~ 1 stand•nSI Jnd en1urtna that lndu1try C..tr.S pan The Centr I p k la ... 1~ 14 uw mntl or uceedl these mlnimum1. As : a ar a highlight oflhe ·e1ty. However. le us not plannlna Nmnlaslon chairman, I have
ireat Idea 1nd now that the bond1 are overlook ·smaller park sites that are an conunual~ (:d 1 cooperaUve efforl ~~~ lhould movt ahead u soon IS integrlll ...... of our nti•l.borhood Uvln1. _...~ ,_. • .... bttwea • pu Uc and private sect.ors to
aiaapa 1 w,.ld i,tka to. lltt: 11 wcutd Chu'" I w.ld Uh to 111: city IP'• abale lhls problem. The respon1tbl1 COlll·
be acund ptonntn1 lo lciatt the civic dillg -l meet corlainly agree with the pant11 hove )een wllllnl to de their part,
center and the llbrll')' irrclose proilmlty (ll!'olreulvo developmut of our ciW but and more. New pollclea are needed that
to the Central Park. There couldn't be a uip cauuon: ~ --recklen atUtuCle of wtll acUvt)1. encouraae thl! type of
more biluUful alUna for th• civic Ctrller Mayor Jack Green can only put Hun-poalUvt "aponae to the community' a
1'1u next to Iha pork, lccktn1 cut over it ~·B .. ch inlo • prosram cf ~fell needs.
to U'll new Bolu Chica dtV1lopment and 3p8ndlnc and lm1ponaibl1 leadt= ~ ·Central Park: F'utu~ generations will
the oceaa beyond. The extend of our capital Improve consider 1he central park their mo!t im-
DAILY PILOT
OIAIMI COAlt 'UILllMIMO COMPAHV
l•~•rt N. W••• '"•1111111 ..... ,,....,.,.
·J1ek L c~ul•Y
Vldl '"'IMM Ml 0-•I ......,
lhlJlll•I A. fll1r1tlliRt
M-._i. Edit.I'
Alhe1I W. ltt ..
AHOCllll f.alt ..
11111 ht41t l1wl1 ~••-'
M1lnR, "''''"' r.o. ••• 1•0. •1•41 or. OffkM
-.
rnuat bt 1overllC( by QUI' ln~me and not pcr\ant harttoae. Our community pride by the tweuonable dmiand1 that Mr. Green would l~e to · lmpo11 on our should tn<!OQJ'&I• u1 to utk out othe:r
butln iu and IJ'KlmtrlaJ c o m m u n t t "I . such lqacte,:.
Buatneu Ind lndullry • Buatneu ond In· Qaapa I Wllllld Lllte to Sia: I WCIUld
d\llU, brine fmploymtnt and tu. f!:Ylaut llke to aee chln1es in the direction of In-
lo our ctly. Thi unCIUJll ol tax11 we mull .,._ parlldpatlco In cit;; scverrunont
pay depend 011 how much lndultr'y wt can by all cltilltil. Wt are a diverte com·
•tlrac;L Tbn>up the llodtrahlp ol Iha cl-MIOlll)'; and ... mull IOlk out oddlllcn•I
ty ""'""'-~ I batln• that 1 ..,... "'" """,to utllllo the talantt and enerctea of Uve rac:rultlns prosrorn lhoutd be 'ln· Iii FOUJ>1 wtio con ccotributt to • com·
stiluted. m«1 So•I;... iblllttr Hunlinlton Bnch.
W'11 •'!I a oaod-: Haviq baln ~I All a ~It• Very_atmpty, I
actJve several yura tn clvlc affaln, I am want 1111 bar lo crow up ln the be•t dty
runniu for ctly council u a ccnctme<I poutblo. My lamtty and m1 .1>Ji,tne11
tox.,_. Bifn( ii loclll bullnaum•n, I hvo proapered moderately with the
know a favorable buJlntta climate 11 crowth of our city. I believe that my ex:-
necessary for the cmmunily to .pro1per perlence a~ •. past clvlc tnvolvements
and develop. The combination (If • ptir have now qua.iy:1ed me lo serve the city
beautiful long coaslline and open spaces lo relum. I am not a refonn candidate:
should challenge and in:splre an open-min· generally, we have been well served by
ded, progress.lvt. City Council and prop.. our past leaders. However, major prob-
erty owners, to work together to develop lem areas remain, and 1 wish to assist
a community·wortby of our ll'Qt beaches in finding the best solutions. Huntiniton
and ever expandin1 populaUon. J pledl' Beach is I good place 1o live -my coal
myseH to.'ll'Ork for thll pl, la IO make It abetlor ploca to Uva ..
-.
YMCA _ to T_each Surfing
..
II llll'eQp July 10, wlll ccvtr 1urltn1
akll11 board cart and repair, 1urf aafety,
wive' ••nse and con1tructkln of boarda.
Jn1lnlctar wlll "be JoM 01bl11 a com·
pe1Jt1v1 aurfer. Hit cltss will be open to
1dult1 111 well u boys end strll over 12.
RltJl1lr1Uon let. which tnctudn the
use of boards, 11 N for Y-membln and
110 lor -1111mbar1.
Inciutrltl moy be d I " e 11 d to Iha YMCA, 17931 Beach Boulevard, M1·"22.
'
A .._. • .,. 1 Narca St1Speet
.~?!~·~--~~-:Valli-v n~~~. -:-..,.--l ·Ht!lil ~
. '
rtvtml ol °""1111 •• the pert ol the
.. It board .
. Alla---tlle ,11 1 #11 ............ ---·1
........ lllJo ..... Illa '*"" -lldlnllal u u ill'l'Orl. He Job>td n
~ IUor ud Batten. , • ' ,) W•'rl not Uou& to forct an airport on · •
lhe people ol Fountaill Volley who boug~l
horriee thert thlnkinl: of Mtl1 ~uare as a
re1tnnat P"rk," lQl!iftr ~ade~ The U.S. MartniP<l'Plhis llsq.-wrltlen ·
lelters to the. boaid 'of aeronautics sUp-
portin& the school ar1trict'1 plea for a
sc hool site, sayl nc there JOUld be no
future confUat betwttn ..,. tchool and M'"'-' .. of the llellql~ fociUty at
H•U _Ml11.J9uare, ... •
Woodward uld the site would bt line
for a 1mall airport with nothing larger
Utan twin engine craft and used by,
"private lndlvkluall, air taxi service and
1 few compante1."
He Wd a final decision h83 not httn
made, but would be within the week .
Mn.· Mary Hil, who organlted ·the
Citluns Acainlt Air Porks lCMPl in
Founwn Valley, uld ber lfOUP thought
everylhlnl wu flnlihecl, but could bt
''rMCUvatlld •&•in if nec111ary." ,
"We lttd •bout IOO member• pualn&
polllloot. 'IN• atiU htv1 thole petltlonl
with 1,000 alplllrtl. Oil them. '!!le
ct!IJona C011id r"llY set up tn. anns
qain,'' lhe old.
City c!Ocl•I• alto lndlcotecl they are
raody to ftp! IJlCllhet blltlll H the atate
board cppc111 the achocl 1ttc. "We'll have
to IH · 'ftai h1pp1n1." Kid Mayor
Edward Juat, 11w1 ctrtl\JllY don'.t want
1n alrpOrt thtrl."
From Pagf! 1
SCOTI ...
. .
A Fountain Va)Jey man who 1De1~ly
altcmpted to ·t,ua dcwn 1 detecU\.e wtlh
hJ.s car dutin/ l!'1.a1una Beach narcotics
raid Tuesday ni1ht, will be cllar1ed wllh
assault with a deadly weapon, police said
tod.,.
~a Beach narcotics of f I ct r s
NCll'l1IAJI Babccck ud Nail ~c,elj;_ ~ccompanled by.-Tuatin Police .,.,........1 de tective Fred Krasco, were COl'lducting
an inve3tigation on Rimrock Road when
the incident occurred, the o f f i c e r s
reporte<f.
Frotn P .. e 1 1
TAUBMAN •••
and they li ve at 18732 RedwoOd St. with
two children qe1 aeven and lii..
Toub...., bu bee• 1· Foantoill Volley
residet1t for four years.
"Rather than institutin& change, my c-q'!I In ~llplns whit "' llavf, (
would Uke1c 111 ua CC111C1nt:ott on 1f0w.
in& down qur ripld erowth uat11 we take
•lock cf fl'!ltt wt're loltnc la neoded
recreationil areas.
"MOit or us moved from hecUc,
J>OllUted CIUea to a qutel, uncrowded, . ' . !amlly community. I'd llkl lo keep It lhat
way," Tau'bman 11yi.
When Kruco approached and ldtntfficd
hlm.11lf as a pollce officer, driver Dawson·,
Eugene Thomp10n, 20, suddenly ac.:.:
ceterated-hil car. then. slopped, police.·
said. Purcell then approached and asked
U1e man to stop his motor. Instead, said
the officer, Thompson again accelerated.,
aimed 11if car at Kra!CCI, wl1c wu 1'~1~.;; 1111 lo !hi ether aide, ud 1..-cad him to'
leap out of the way as the car sped off on
Rimroek, turned south on Temple Hills
Drive and finally ~!lammed loto a
l\llrdrlll.
Coll.ege A wait&
Legal Opinion
Ou Resignation
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Orange Coast Junior College Dlstric( ·
Chancellor Nonnan W1llon 1aid today he
eJ~tl legal opinion within the JM1xi
weet on the resJapatlon ot dlstrlct board.
member Georae .R&lda, Jr. · . . I
Rodda 1ubmltted hl1 re1lenatlon al the '
March tt board meetln1 in order to
become a member of the le1lll1Uvt· ~
couacil. of the American AQOC!atJon of. , ..
JunJor College•.
Dr. Watson said the Ora1t1e County ,,
CoUnsil's office Is reviewin1 Roddt'• ·~ · polntment to the council to see If hJi J
re1lrnaUon la necepary. ·~:
of industry thet la dnlroble tcr our city. Ore Freighter Sinks "I auppoae you cculd 1ay thet hit' •
1 will conUnu• to .upport the tfforta of real,nltjon has not been finalized untU
the industrial commtitee and the staff for GENOA, Jta]v· (UPI) _ A BriUah ore we hear from county COW11tl," Watlon. de veloplne the lndultrlal area. " 111d. 1
"Durlns Iha nva moolhl 1 hove been on froJsbttr, buffettd by neor-lturrtcane Rodda 11ld he originally tendered hit :'
the council we eet 1 mtntmum lot .i.e of w!Qda, auk l\Jclly oll the pert cf a.... re•l101Ucn from the board becoUM be ·'
&,000 aquar1 feet for planned develop-artW.llnl\ICOlllful efforll by Italian tuii feh there would be a conflict between the'•'
monll ud rtlllnad tho CClllCIJJI of 7,100 to ti I Ir two jobt. · : aquart tltt a1 thl standard lot for . JIU t " ~ 1 breakwater. Under ' the sta te Education Code,"·'
nsldenl11l development. . . Author1Uei Aid at ltalt three peraons, trustee3 have 60 days lo appoint Rodda'a _\
"We h•vt alto reduced the total apart· two " them women1 died and anotber replacement. "We expect tht county
ment potential tri the city from 40 percent four Wirt mtulna. At leut 13 men coun11J to Include a ruUn1 on a tlrrie limit"·
to 21 'ptrctnt of the lot1l po11U>le llvinl aboard were w11hed lahorl alive or pick· for a replacement, If he !Inda that Roddi··1
units. ed up from 1tonny se11. • f should teSJgn,'.' the chancellor noted.
"I am alt0 convinced thal we can ob-
tain hl1h qu11Jty ·eommerclal devtlop.
ment. compatJble with our _natdtntlal
are11.11
Some chances Scott 1111 he would like
to 1e1 hi th• city Include:
-Some Iara:• commmlal dtvelop-
menta that would atlttct other people to
the city to ahcp.
-A canlnl city park l•rs• anou&h to
ae<emmodlte boll dlatncnda, foct~•ll
ftetdl, plallc ud btrbaout '""· ;,Cc~~ ~elp 10£ ~ ~,.Juam
-An e1pinded rtcnatlonaJ procram
for older youth.
Scctt ·Uvai with !ill'wlfe, M11<ello, ind I lhetr atx children at 111'11 Spruce Circle.
They have lived 1lx yean In the city.
"I hope my con~ct ln office, my
voting, as well as my efforl!r to establish
two-way communicaUon between myaelf
and the clU1t1t1 of rountaln Valley, ha•e
illustrated my concern.:and have helped
restore contldence in city sovernrnent,"
Scott 1a,y1.
. ' . .
' From Page l
MANGANO ...
lerirn utilization of some IMustrlal
parcels.
"I support any official action that
would subslanlially reduce the develop.
ment dwity 11 wtll u ~ awnbu or
1pertmant IDll!t propdhd' f!W .., -munlty: I am opposed to any 1partanant
comple1 btln• built nett to alncl1 family
rlll<la..., pn1111 ,adoquatt bulfar -
... rllldl, 1..,....i. . ..
"I ·would lnJtlate an official 'Buy Ii
Fountain Valley' campallft to lncreue
our revenl,KI from city •ales tax.
111 alao would maintain strict adherence
to the JI.I 7,lOll aquore-fcct tot and the R·
l PD 7IOO nqulrementa."
Ma?JlaftO, a, ltvtl at MOii La Gruada
St. Hit wtfe'1 11me la Carmelita ind they
have lwo daughter• aBCS 21 and Jt. HI Is 'l atan writer ot Dougta1 Aln:rofl Cc .....
Long Bea.ch.
Mangano listed the following changes ·:
and goala he would like lo set ac-
ccmpUahed If elected lo the councll: .,.
-An acteement with the •Aulomobtle
Club of Southern California to conduct a:.
survey of traffic need1 in the city. -: ,
-Oppoa all airports.
-Utilize all fil~ancln1 pro Ir 1.m •:·•
avallab1t to the city for purchuln&
parka, and maintain 1 well-b1lanctd pro-: ·
aram at all Umes for community ctt1Jen1, ... ,
-Allow cltlie111 to 1pe1k on "°" 111nda.,
Item• at city council meetln11. · .:
-Declare a moratorium on 1partm11t1
and gasoline statlon1 until a subltantlal ·,
population increase dlct,tes their need. ,
SOFA Bi~ Ml-. "···-~,. ....,.,~~..-.,. ,,,, "'· ,,, Sttthtl t fttl Sl11Jh1t~ I , '
A •f 1 1tl1ctl,. ,tf ' •~rl11 1114 C1l111 it .
tltt9M fr•fll· ; 1 · •· ' . -~ •.• ~299'
-.. --
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~----------------------------------------------
l
·-·~~~·~----·------~~ ....... ------------~-----------------...... _..----...... --------..... ,..--------~---------
Thllnd<Y ....... 9, 1'70 H GAILY 'ILOT ·I
Apol.lo · ShQf May Go ·With Substitute·
• .
•
Campaign
For Sheriff
Offetuive 6• On Backup Astro~aut ;
.s. V.iet Tro~ps ---
., C:t:.a-.l·s.~or Launch
. .
. . . . -~ . ... .
•. .. .. • .... .; T
Gets Bitter · Enter .. Cambodia
.. •• . , ' . CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (Al') -.Doc-
tors recommended Thunday t b at
meas~ 'lllomlo K. 11111fna11 n
. .
• ~ • n are 1o .. 11ar1. tllelt dooeenl from lli!ll
mllea, ., move..-provides:-~!
tuei'Hd (l'e•Wr.~ ll'<UflCJ.
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of "" DlllY P1191 lllft •
•
Bietemess ln tbt campaign for Orange
Coanly Sheriff . aurfaced Th'uraciay af-
ternoon when challenger Marshall Npnis
alleged before 1 Capistrano Beach ~U·
dience that Sheriff Jamet Musick bad
refused police aid to President Ni:1u>1\
But thal charge drew a biUer reply
later in the day from both Musick end
San Clf.m.ente -police Chief Clifford 1'ur •
ray.who said the aUegation was "totally
lnco~."
'"lb.at's a typical, irresponsible state·
ment,'' Mwsick said, "and all it shows is
ho~ badly be Wants my job."
Norris charged that at 1 major
demoostraUon in San Clemente last year,
the Sheriff's office refused to render
crowd-control assistance, killing chances
for more than $200,000 in federal aid to
the county Sheriff's Deparlment. The
money later went to San Diego County,
Norris asserted. _
Musick, who did not appear at the in·
vitation of the Capistrano, B e a c h
Chamber of Commerce ("I will not
dignify my opponent by being present at
the same meeting") later said his office
responded once to assistance: calla from·
San CI em en t e . During another
demonslration he said hi! office WU not
a!ked. ''.I must lake the full responaibillty for
the <alls. and response inrolvln( the
lhrir1 office," Murray said.
"'Iben! was one instance where com-
munications were not clear enough and
the .lherilf's men were ready to step in
and.help. We: just didn't make it clear to
them we wanted them in the city."
Norris termed the asserted refusal of
sheriff's help as a "disgrace to the Presi.
dent and to the citizens of our county."
Murray stressed there was "definitely·
no animosity at all between our depart·
ment and the 1heriff's office. Someone
ju.5t doesn't have his facts straight."
In a separate conversation Musick
ogreed.
"If he'll!akes this kind d. l..,..ponslble
statements, then he had better d:leck the
record a liUle better,'" he said.
Norris also flayed UH!~ Sherifri ' ad--
mihistration oo. these other pOfnts:
-That the beat boundarit$ in the
Capistrano Bay area of the county are:
.spread so•thinly that about 45,000 persons
ha\'e but one patrol car on duty to serve
them. 1
-Soaring costs and poOr condition of
Sheriff's cars. It costs the coway 18 cents
I gallon for gasoline, but by ~ time it is
pumped into a patrol car it co8*a 58 cents
1 gallon.
-Deputies are loslnc morale. They ,
-ly THE A880CIATED.·PllE88
South Vietnamese troop.!, apparently
accompanied by an American adviser,
have moved into Cambodia to back up
government forces flcing an achlance of
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong along
the road that OOt'loects Saigon and Phnoin
Penh. •
* * * GI Death Toll
Jumps; Highest
' . In Six Months
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. COmmand
said today 131 Americans were killed ln
Vietnam last week in the opening days of
a sprln( offensive -the highest death
toll In almost aeven months. Another
1,179 were "°'1Dded. ,
MIHtary IPQkmnen said number of Gls
slain was the worst weekly death ton
Moe ·1he week ending Sept. 13 when JU
U.S.' ttmi!emen died. .
South Vielnlmtle 1PD"-"' aaJd 7M
government tlOOpl were killed, 1,711
Wounded and 71 reporled mJS!ing In OC•
tion Jut week, nelriy equaling weekly
av .... ,.. during tho May, llA, figbUng,
aome of lhe w1r's heaviest
Allied olfidais Hid 3,331 North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong troop! were killed
la.st week, the cosWest for the Com-
munists since the week ending Aug. II
when 3,898 were slain. ·
The U.S. losses were ~arly double the
previous week's casualties or· 7t ·U.S.
dead and 519 wounded. The g~.
toll that week Was DI 4eM' ind 951 w ..
ded, with 2,131 Viet Cong and North Viet·
namese re-ported tilled.
It brought lo 41,274 the ~al of
Amuican1 tilltd ln action in Vietnam
since Jan. l, 1961 , and the total wounded
to 272,281. The SOI.Ith Vietnamese death
toll wn listed at f1,NI.
Last week WIS the fGutth this year that ·u.s. battleDe:kl deaths have ezceeded too.
i n a separate report. the U.S. Com·
ntand aaid three U.S. 1innen were
'tJOU.Dded in acuon in Ltoe: la!t .eet. Six
American ainnen hive: been killed and 15
wounded since the United States began
announcing such figures March 10.
U.S. Warns Reds
Of Talk Threats
have to radiO for a tow track from the PARIS (UPI) -Tbe United Statf:ll
county yimb if.their car runs out of gas wanted the Viet Cong and the North Viet-
and they have no cash. namese today their spring offensive
-Some patrol cars are so run down, he which haa pushed U.S. and South Viet·
said that ooe deputy was &topped recently narnese lolses to a seven-month high
by a high school girl who pointed out that t.tweatened. to jeopardize a11y serious
his car was etniting heavy smoke and negoUatlons in Pari!.
was adding to the smog problem. The car The Hanoi and Viet Cong aegotiators
had more than 100,000 miles on it. It was ditregarded the warning by U . S .
1 1917' model. Ambassador Philip C, Habib and said
-Response times are somel!mf:ll BO there will be no peace Jn Southeast Asia
1low that deputies face "a lynch mob of until all of the 500,000 American troops
sorts:" One recent call from two nped are evacuated from South Vietaam.
hou!tW)ves in Silver ado canyon required !Then. ,advertising f,heir lack of faith in
dispaitdting of a unit from South f.aguna tbi deadlocked,~ 15-monUHki pNCt co .. -
wfflcholbok 80 minutes lo azrive. fereoce, the North Vietnamese ~
Muslcl: later refuted the slatements In lhelr chief delogaUon ..,pOrviaor, Q Due
a general way and said ht would need a ThO, a ranking Hanoi party member, had
cloeer ctiect of the records to reply to the been «de.red home. ~ ~ Je~e Frt-_ ~:charges. !8! aboard 'a Rws11an 1eUlner. · •
tu a r 12121Ui 1wl llliiiili z; n••rrs11
..
. .. ~. , ~ not fly t9 th& moon on &aturd1y, Md
. , backup 'pllol John L.. Swlprt Jr. un-
Ih Vietnam iceelf the enemy offenalve derwent 1 cruh tralninc ~to'lee
c<IOIJnuecl. In the -al hllhlanda•&oulh -· · If he can move lnlo Ibo Apollo adol.
Vietnamese troOps <Wove within a few '' Mattingly'• slim Cli:anee Of m1~g the hundred yarda ol a bcsie1ed Special ·
Forcea camp·at Dak Seang, lll'lnc to,end Leif'~~.-.-~ft',' '!~.~~!l'dthaonl ~ lbabor~lory a rihle-day-old encirclemeot. of the post ~k' 1111iv~ .,.u:u~ 1 .. c • u P
ilolh.. the advance ol the Norlh Vie'·• utronaut, Charles Duft, ~-. ..-German measles. The tetts.• rtlaftd
,,.._ and Viet Cong along Highway l Thursday from tho NaUonal llllU~ et
in Cimbodia. and the new elemeof of , H~aJth in Betbesda, , "Md., lhowed •~ 4licL
South VJetnamese troops on the side of J S } • . ~ ~-...._ Its defenders mark an lnta>slflcallon ol ury· e ectJOD Dr. Oilrler A. Berry: the •b~_.,.• tho. figbllng in the Allan ,~...._ _ chief phl'iidan, aaid WedneldlT 'tllal if
hicb h become -..-. Duke had' the mtaalea, he . and allier :I,.,. th:' overtbro: ;~ ~= Sta-.t.Q in Trial medical eapena wo•ll~ -tho) Slhanook on Miich 11. "I"<"' Malllnlly not be allowed lo Dy Salurdloy.
I • CUnli:al 19$ had tnc116atec1 ~· h"" South Vietnamese helicopter · gunships F UC} A } measles but had left open one Chi.nee
were reported Wednesday lo have killed 01' SS8U t that ha had virus with similar l)'Dlploms.
some 150 enemy troops five miles iMide A apace. agency a~eat l&ld the
Cambodia. South Vielnamea Si.yrafders Jury selecUon began today ln 'Ult lab tests "confirm Duke has German
da!s@ bboavlhe beeC n rebodi~ ln 1ction, defen· Superior C:OUrt trial ol a Los Angeles measles, or Rubella ••• He baa shown a
lng am an and South Viel· youth who allececDy terrorized the oc-classic rile in ~bella antibodies." It 1156 namese ground forces . aald Duke has·develoP9Cfa ruh, arthritis The North Vietnamest and Viet Cong, cupanls of three women's dorm itories on and a swelling in both flnier1 ..
The :liia' qudlloo Is wlt<ther Swtfirl, Who: ~ oevtr11own in spec!e, can WoB •moothli. with the otller .two • 1 n
llW!"1itrs Uial r~e clqoe; ailoi·riilid coordinailon. ..,-
Lovell, Halse and Thrun>• K. Mi-n have .Practlced ~ u '• f-.U more than iwo ye"', lli'st · u ~·
pilots for Apollo 11. mail•a•flrst lllOOli:lan-dhl& mission, and then is the prime crw
for Apollo 13. ObscrV'er1 uy they ,ara 1
1uperbly coordinMed team.
Alien Killed
In Cliff Fall
Near Clemente
moving through the outcrop or Cam· the UC Irvine campus last Feb. 7. MatUngly and the other two prt~ The promise of enough wages ta sup-
bodian territory that juta into Soqth Viet· Eight female UCI &tudents are ex~ Apollo IS crewmen, James A. Lovell Jr. part 1 wile and seven children left behind r
nam, took the town of. Otipou 'tuesda,y, peeled to testify to the ad.iviUes of and Fred w: Halse Jr; and Swigert all in Mexico lured 1 min to llJdden death _"
While they were repOrted within two Mi ha~I AntJi E lish 19 url were exposed to the disease through w..r-a... lgh he b miles of Prasaut, 10 miles to the .-. c ony ng ' d ng his Duke. Blood teats Bhow Lovell, Hai.le and """no!IUay n t, w n e walked off 1 ·
they were alto said to be reinforcing and trial. English i! accused of rape, usault Swigert 111 are immune to the dilleue. cll(f south of San Clemente.
digging in at Qlipou. , with intent to commit rape and four bot that Mattingly is not. Tryins to sneak around'a .Border Patrol
The Cambodians were expectinr an counts of bur1lary. Berry said earlier Mattingly had a very checkpoint, the victim .was J~ three,.
usault on the proYincial cap.tat of S.ay lie was arrelted by campus police good chance of coming down with ~ other Mexicans when ht stepped.into the r
Rieng, five miles to the west. of Pruaut. after screams ' and a series of teJephone disease:. darkneu and plunged I) feet, landing on -
'niree Cambodian battalkihs wtn! dug in reports sent them hurrying fr 0 m In an effort to avoid a cosUy one.month his, head.
at Prasaut, promising to hold out unlw dormitory to donnftory. delay in the law:lching, Swigert )oiMd Authorities Jdentilied him q Tomu
ordered to retreat a.s they did from Sherjff'i , investl&ators allege that Lovell and Haise, aboard 1 spaceship Oiipou TUesday. ' English raped a girl in the Cielo simulator Thunday. They rehearsed Gutierrez.Jimenez, 42, of Mun I c Ip I • •
Highway 1, which linb all these towns, donnitory, eiy>Osed himself to at least split-secOnd critical maneuvers th1t rt-Tepalquetetec, MJchoacan, Mexico,
. was open, though clogged with refugees two girls in the Brisa donnitory and at-quire close cooperation. " San Diego County 1heriff'1 deputies
moving westward ahead of the occupying tacked other occupants of the Puente Included were launch, l1unch abort, said the accident occurred about 200
enemy. sleeping quarters. docking with the moon landln, cralt, fir--yards Inland from the beach, three miles ·
Before he was toppled, Sihanouk follow-Ing Into lunar orbit and ducent to within south or the San Onofre . N u c 1 e a r
ed I benign policy of allowing the Viet p • ) R l eight miles of the moon. Generating StaUon. • • Con d N atr1arc l e eased The d""'nt maneuver is espec!all~ lnveadlaton said he and his partners, · I an orth Vietnamese border . critical, because a«.identally bumir!I tM: In the country JUqally, we.re making
haven.. The cont.ested area -sometimes VIENNA (AP) - E c um en I c a I spact!hlp's engine one aecond too Jong their way through heavy bruab welt ot
called the Parrot's Beak -ill a primary Patriarch Athenagorall of Constantino-pie could tend the astronauts cruhin1 into · the Ban Diego Freeway.
regrouping and resting place for the was re.leased today from the University the moon. They summoned help after Gutienu-
guerrillas. Clinic after a medical checkup. His doc-On the Apollo 11 and 12 flight.a, the 1~ Jlmenei fell to hil death and were mbe-...
Battlefield communiques In Vietnam tors sent him to the Semmeiing health ding vehicles were released at an altitude quently taken Into 'custody by the U.S. ,
reported today at least nine Americans resort, 90 miles sou, th or Vienna. or more than &O miles. Lovell and Halae Border Patrol for return to Mezlc:o.
and seven South Vletnamest killed in a miiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi.;ii;i;oi;;;;.;o;oi;;;;;;;;;,;i;;;;;ii;i;;;;;;;;;ioi;;;;ii;~iiiiioii;iiii;;iiiioii;;iii;;i;iiii;i;;;ii;ii;iii;iiio;,, dozen clashes and 43 t'nt!D'lY rocket and i1 ,.
mortar attocks, indicattnc the enemy of·
femWi had not ended.
South Vie~ troop1 wt~ on the
offensive on jhei1',homc territory• well.
" ••
Wayne Greeted .
By '!Jlack Eyes'
On _fil1n Location
'ri.wiXwt Beiidl ~cliir John ivayne
reti.rned to the location where "Rio
Lobo" ii being lhot near Tucton, Atfk.,
after winning his Oscar Wedneaday.
Fir&t, everyone on the set turDed their
backs, then they cave the 62-year-old
superstar a black eye. ·
Well, it was really 1 black eye patch.
Each person wore one to commemorate
gag.fashion his first Academy Award,
given 196t's best actor for his portrayal
of whiskey-soaked Rooster Colburn.
Wayne wore the patch as lhe crotchety
old one-ey«l lawman in "True Grit.'' and
even his hone Sported one on the Rio
Lobo set when he returned from Los
Angeles.
So djd a replica of his Oscar built for
the occasion.
PE lfl?ll 11 771 faB
I • . ' ' '
VI N -G 1\7
ANNOUNCES· OPINING
COMPLETE LIQUOR DEPT·.
FAMOUS
BRANDS
s,,.,,.,,.,,
t;arl!I Th""'s
""""""' sol•
C11tt11 S•rk
\e\• ~~ ,~ 01,, c ... _,
Alcvavlt
Fl~h
INTRODUCTORY SALE
BUY and SAVE
VIKING IV
PRIVATE LABEL LIQUORS
GIN -. ' ....... 3.63 Fifth ......... J.15
C?uarts ........ 4.49 C?uarts . . . . . . . 3.85
l/z Gallons ..... a.as 1/z GaFon1 . . . . 7 .59
SCOTCH CANADIAN
F~MOUS
BRANDS
'I •
..
I ,.
' • • I ,
i
I •
fl OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA
. ' AUTHORIZED FACTQRY SERVICE
pr•"'b"'"'
to1. ~ Fifth ........ . 3.97 Fifth ..•...• , .. 4.Z5
•
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
•rings size d end repaired e diamonds an,j precious stones remounted e pearls restrung ·
WE CCfstOM DESIGN IMANuFACTURE. ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY
HAI-SHOPPIN•
CINTll
noo HAI-&YD.
COSTA Ila.ti M~-
' "The Stora That Confidence Built"
HU1111N•TON ClllTlt
MACH a IDl,..11
HUllTllMTON lllACH
HUIOI
... ,.
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84 B
9UC!rts ....... 4.99
l/z G«_Ron1 . . . . 9 .84
vpDKA
C?uarts ..... , . 5.ZS
11z Gallons . . . 10.40
RUM
Fi~h . . . . . . . . . Z.85 '"Fifth .......... 3.20
9uarts ...... , 3.55 9uarts . . . . . . . 4.15
11z Gallons .... 6. 95 t!z Galleni .•.. 8.ZS
• Gourmet Foods .e Conely • Gifts
56 FASHION ISLAND_ e '-NEWPORT_ CENTER . ~
Store Hours: Mon. & P:rl. 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m.; Tutt., Wed., Thurs. & Sit. 10 a.m. to '130 p.m.
Sundoy, Noon to S p.m.
OPPOSITE BROADWAY • 644·0991
* * WE DELIVER IN AREA * *
-~--------------'-----------------.
I
~
I
I
~-... O.-!Jl't. . ...., , Tbe London Post 0111ce Co~ra
tlon'1 new campalcn to ''Be~ to.
your mellm•n". bu tun into tiou~nm the mailmen. The
clllllpailn '!jg' houlewivel to in-vl!< Ille m en In for some tea
and a chat but acconlliig to Mall
Union Chief Tern Jaclc.son, "lf he ~ popping In for cups of tea, be
woUld land. up In trouble back at
\be O!&e·-he'd be late !or these-
conct delivery." •
Jlfogiltrat< Edward 'Rob•U
fin.td-.J2 member• of the Santa
C!ous Union in London. Eno-:
l<iiid.-124 •••h for ilkgallr ¢<>
keting a ~partmetitAtore lost
Dec~er. The Sat1tol had
m.archtd i• uni/9fm to prott1t
the ezploitation of Christmas.
Thell all paid up and announced
thrir union would be di1bmMUd.
• When two elderly w o m e n
withdrew $11,000 in cash from a
bank ln Erie. Pa., and put it in a·
paper bag, bank officials feared
they were about to be victim• of
con men. PoliCe followed tbem to a
bus stop and when a young man ap-
proached and began fingering the
money, they moved In. The boy hit
one of the..policemen and ended ~p
In jail. He (-out to be one of
the women's ·ion and they were.
going to uM the money to admit his
!IS-year-old ·Jirandfatbar to a con-
valescent liome. ' •
Judy Heath of Woodchuck, Cali/., U
1houm placing a call f rom tM to1ique
phone booth.. outlidt a frontieT-style
mortuarv that seroes as a ma;OT at-
tTCCtion for visitors to thia rugged Old
West f"esort area. The booth. beaf"s a
st.af"tling f"esemblmlce to the old-fas~
foned pine coffin complete with rope
handles. • Five persons were injured Tues·
day ni8hl in a brawl over a 19 cent
fountain pen in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Mrs. Ines Ceped• had purchased
the pen and found it didn't work.
When she returned, store owner
Dingo R1mos refused to refund her
money. She came back again with
her son William and a fight ensued
after a violent argument. Ramos.
his wile and son were stabbed and
~trs. Cepeda and her son were
shot. All were hospitaJized.
---. ----------:--::::;:::::-=:::::::============~==~ .. -·---.-. -.
~.·~prH •. 1'1ll
_ _ . .se~~ri-Ple!f e Support to IY!f.o'ftt
. ... • --->F.!f
' . •
3rd Southern 'Piel{' fo·r Court? Over Carsif)ell
LITI1.E ROCK, Ark. (UPI) -'The
Arkansas Guette reported toda1
Mn. Martha Mitchell, wile of Al·
tomey General John Mitchell, had
urged the newspaper to "crucify"
U.S. Seil. J. Wll!Jam Fulbrllht (0-
Ark.). for hJs vote agalnrt tfie con-
firmation ef Judge G. Harr o Id
\
F'rom Witt Serv5ce1 ·
WASHINGTON -President Nixon wUI
send the name or yet a thlrd "strict. con·
structionlst" to the Senate for cOn·
i.irwaUon .u a Supreme eoun Justice.
'!And no senator wtD 11y he lsn'\ anxious
to vote for the' Prtstdent'1 chioJce.
But Nixon and Attorney General John
·N. Mitchell , their poJltical prestige
damaged by the li<alk'1 SI to · IS r<-
j<c:tlon of 0. Harrold C.rswell, are
rec<ivio& CXlllfllctlnc ldvl<e from Capitol
Hill. •
of Pennsylvania W'ges Nixon to abandon
the idea that the choice is his alone to '
make and cons ult with "all segments,
spectra and levels of public opinion" to
come up with • candidate who would
"'enerate unanlmtty of Senate ap-
proval."
1 The White House, thwugb Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, 11ld Nixon
would send anolber ' ' 1 t r i c t oon-
'structionist'' to the Senate ''in due
course."
-.!lftl. &b<rl J. Dole (JI.KU.), Urges
Nixon to leave the •at v1Ctnt 10 be can
... tbe' blue to the people," Ind \lie it
to elect a Republican Senate i n
November that would app!'O\le a con-·
seryatlve Supreme Court candidate.
In Tallahauee, Fla., Judge Car~ell
said the battle over bis nomination to the
Supreme Court was ••an agonizing ex-
perience for me" but that be is not "bit-
ter or remorstful.
With his wile VircWa _at his side, the
50-year~ld jurist read a SIO-lemnd state-
ment at a oews conference in the board -s.nate Republican Leader HUI!> Scoll •
Hostile Demonstrations
Greet Envoy to Swed.efl,
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -The United
Stata ended a II-month dlplomatlo
boycott d Sweden today when the new
ambassador, Dr. Jerome H. Hollind, ar·
tlved. A demo&trator ran up and
sbollted, "Mr~ Ambassador, you are not
wekome in s~."
'Ille Sf.year-old Negro educsl«, flying
· Kopechne Case
Recor d Denied
To Stenographer
BOSTON (AP) -Tbe M11sacl!uaetts
Supreme Coort todl)' turned down 1 bid
by a court stenographer who claimed he
aloae had the right to make copies and
sell th' inquest record into the death of
Mary Jo Kopechne.
The bigb court also ordered the clerll: of
Suffolk Superior Court, Edward V.
Keating, to punue his plan to release the
truscript and tbe judge's report on the
inquest. expected sometime nm week.
The action ca.me one day after the
Supreme Court bad ordered a temporary
halt to !deue plani, unUI .attorney& for
!he court st<oosrapber, Sindy R. Lipman,
-could argue his caae.
'!'be ccurt also -lochoy 1/l•l the
. ~el ccurt r«Dl'd be made ,.blio al
Iba ....Uelt )iolllble momenL
Lipman, • rrofes.sional court reporter,
claimed he ahouJd have custody of the
document&, and his firm -not the
Superior Cow1 -~as entJUed to mail
copies of the imJ>OUnded records.
Upman .and his associates took the
notes and typed the transcript of the 960
Jfui pages of tesilmony during the illl-
quest al Edgartown Into the death o!
Miss Kopechne, 28. The former secretary
lo the late Robert F. Kennedy drowned
when a car drive• by Sen. Edward 111 .
Kennedy went off a bridge on Chap-
peqlliddic:I< Iolud Jut July 11.
Cornell Clamps Down
ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI) -Corne ! I
University early today obtained a te m-
porary restraining order against any
further violence Oil campus.
The order was obtained from State
Supreme Court Justice Harold E ,
Simpson following a rampage by IO!>
black students, which prompted the
university president to clamp.a 2 a.m. to
7 a.m. curfew on the campus. President
Dale R. Corson, announcing the court ac-
tion, said it was taken on the unanimous
recommendation of the Faculty Council.
in for his first diplomatic asaignment,
bad just stepped rrom a commercial
airliner at Stockholm'• Arlanda Airport
when the demonstrS.tor approached the
aircraft.
The unidentified man sneaked through
scoces of anned police offkers and mix·
ed with the welcoming party of U.S.
Embassy officers and Swedbh protocol
officials. He was quickly seized by plain-
clothesmtn and whisked away.
The ambundor 4id not appear
disturbed by the brief incident.
Outside the airport gates some 100
demonstrat<n waited wlth p 1 a c a r d !I
reacfing: "U.S. out of Vietnam," "'Down
with U.S. hnperia1ism" and "Mr. Holland
go home."
Premier Olof Palme. who haa been
visiUng jn London, new in ahead of
Holland. When he noticed the waJUng
demonstrators be told newsmen, ••t thJnk
demonstrating against the ambassador
like this is incorrect ."
The ambassadorial post in Stockholm
has been vacant since President Nixon
took o{flce last year. Lyndon B. Johnson 's
man, William W. Heath, who had been a
pawn in the diplomatic game, left Sweden
Jan. 13, 1969.
lt has never been said officially but·
SwediM oUk:ials interpreted Nixon's
failure to fill the vacancy as retaliation
for Sweden'• open criticism of U.S.
policiea in Vietnam and elsewhere.
Osaka Gas Leak . ..
Was Reported
Prior to Blast
OSAKA, 'Japan (UPJ ) -Osaka poliec
said today a possible gas leak had been
reported at a subway c.onstruction site
three days before a series of explosions
that kllled 73 penons and injured 282
Wednesday night But they said gas com-
pany employes had not taken action.
The explosion of a 20-inch gas main and
a series of explosions throughout th e
neigbborhood swept ,a bup area with
fires that reminded Japanese of the U.s'.
B29 fire raids in the closing _days of
World War ll.
Police said the initial explosion oc~
curred when a gas company truck was
left with its motor running while a repair
crew went into the subway construction
site to determine whe ther there really
was a gas leak ..
The explosion miles away from the Ex-
po 70 world fair on the outskirts of Osaka
developed Into a political Issue and most
major parties announced they would
The di saster occurred in a busy shop-
ping area near Tenroku (Sixth Heaven)
railway station. 9.3 miles from Japan 's
Expo '70 World's Fair. Thirty buildings
were destroyed.
room or the F1orida Bar BUiiding. He
declined to answer newsmtn'a.quesUons.
Carawel1 said Pre!l.dent Nllon had ask·
ed hJm to stay oo as a judge or the v.s.
5th Circuit Court of Appealf '1and I In-
tend to do ao.11
He said, "I'll alway s be deeply ap-
precialift of the confidence ol the Presi-
dent of the United States 1P making the
nomln'atlon\"
''The maj~rlty of the Senate is anxious
to back the Prtstdent," SCott s.ald after
Wednesday's dramauc vim. He said the
Senate's decision "should serve as a
prelude to the nomination of a great
Suprime Cow1. Justloe and as a lesson
learned .for the future.''
ln the past, SCott has advanced
Philadetphl.a lawyer Btrnard Segal, 63,
president of the American Bar A.ssocia·
Uon, as Ille kllid al man he'd like to ,..
on the court. ~ Sega.1'1 liberal yjews
seemed to rule him out.
• In tbe debate •nd aften11~, liberal
senat'on, one aftlr another, llkl they
hoped Nixon would . find a .. 1tri~ con-
structionist" from the South they could
support.
Sen. ~Ian Crinston (0-Ca1i!.),.,to1if the
Sebal.e he "prayed" be could ~ct Nix·
on't next choice. Sen. Edward M. Ken·
oedy (~laa.), Ald he llOPed !or "a
man of such ·dlstlncilon tha( all or u·s, no
matter what poUUcal poslUon w e
represent, can enthU&iastically 1upport
him." .
"I hope the President doe& not decide
against appointfna a Southern strict con-
st:ruct.ionist," aald Sen. Gale W. McGee
(0,Wyo.)
-Carswell.
"lt makes me so damn mad I can't
stand it, u Mri. MJtchetl, a native of
Pine Blulf, Ark., said. "I could havt
done a great deal for the whole
vote.~·
'11:le is not repr6Senting the peopll!:
of Arkansas. I love Arkansu and I
wa~ everything possible for my
Stat ," Mrs. ~1itchell said.
Arkansas Gazette has been a
sU'oog supporter ol Fulbright's and
endorsed his re-election bid in 1961.
N Gazette editorially opposed the
nomlnation or Carswell.
Sbop Monday tlirongb Satu rday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Sn nda y IZ Noon to S P.M.
Prices
Effectil'e
Bei;inningTGday
$14 .99 Crafi.man
Cart-Type HO!e Rttl
SAYE fl! 12.88
Features 1 flow thru reel, js
remo vable to u se carr.
Holds 200 feel of~!" hose.
Sears
-20-inch Push-Type
l ' Rotary Lawn Mower
e . .\mple power for your mow.ini;
from 3 liP engine
• Lightweight •luminum housing
makes handling eaey
• 1--~olding handle for ea.-y atorage
Sears Law Price
5499
3 Wir e Cor ded Hedge Trimmer
WASl9.99 ·•I 4 77
-" • Hardened alloy ilttl bl.des
e Fised re•r handle wilh
th11mb •lide nritch; •leeve.-
bearing
• :Slll.b-length :Ht-ire cord
' .,.
SAVE '2 Now on Regular '10.99 Nord el® Rubber Hose
SeanG•rden
llosl'! Guar•ntee
•Super pli•hil_ity and ragged
Jigh1weight rubber mark ieverv
t.:nfteman -Gold Line Nord~I
rubber prden hote
SJ .;,49, 75-ft. Hose 2.44
S . .\VE$2!
:>ct-ft. ¥1" DiL 888
Corners of Nation Rainy '7.49 "Gold Line" Plastic Garden Hooe
•Soft. %-i nch Diameter
•Reinforced with tough Cipro~~ nylon
t·ord for burst res ffltantatrenP
St ro ng Wind Gusts Batter Oregon, Washington Coasts
If de-feel occurs dur-
in1 guarantee period,
we wil l cxch.101c
hose, chargin1 only
for the rime owned bp
prorating the regular
prK:e a the time of
• Speci1llypn1pared rinyl forflexihilitr 6~ rr. i
C'allferafa
l"l~'f !Mfll\l'le fot Ind low deuds
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i
I
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l •
• i . 99 Pulaator
La"n Sprinkler
Sensational Value!
Slurdy La.,.n Rake
•6.29 Craftsman
2-Wheel Edger
Craftmtan Pistol
Grip Hoee Nozzle I
:'\n!ll ! 6 88 •
Fingertip cooU'OL (ov.
er~ 65.foot dlarnccc r.
Adjusr.s for partial area..
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:: spring.s1ecl 1inn in
: 9·in. lipread. Enameled.
1$.in. handle.
4.88
Re•el'lible blade double~
cutring life. 3 he1gf~·
ad justmcnu.
A \'ato.: 2.19
No-1Jiip "'inyl srip with ~pray adjust from fittt
mist to full power.
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Thund.,, April'· 1970 DAILY PILOT BBM
I .lVJ.eet your €andidateS .'f or Huntington Council
' • Bo'pe Greer
HOPE GREER: E m ployed a!
Mcretary of &be Chamber of Commer«
f• 11 years uUl September, lMt. la this
pMltlaa Ille worked with many county
ud civic gn111pa Including the UU.
Sbonllne Plamtlng AssoclaUon, Coast
Auodailoa, Comnulb.lty Congress, and
tbe Jayceei.
Sltoald f.luacln1 for the capital im-
prO\'emeatl proeram Include an oil
aneruet tu: and-of gro11 receipts
ltVll"l.DCe Saz ud/or IJ'Oll reeelpls
bldDas tu% No. J don't tblnk you CID
previde tbe 1oludn utll you udustud
Ille ,.-m.
Tap ot ·tft Pkr Plu -A great deal
more ~ght and effort should be given
to the "Top of the Pier Plan" Jn order
to arrive at a !Olulion which ls practical feasi~le and acceptable to property ow,;
ers and planhers alike.
Beach Development -We can be
proud of the beautl.ncation along the
beach front. Now if we can find a way to
increa.!le the income back into the city's
coffers to offset the expenditure
necessary for malnlenance a lot of tax·
payers will be encouraged.
we need • 1trcmger code thlt cu 1«
llOlllOlhftlc -· and fl}l I am la favor and would work on a ~ that abould
have beeo,done a Ione lime qo, and th.It
is to lmpose a 3 cent -per· barrel
serverance tax on aU oil .pumped within
the clty Jimits. l t •
Central Park: This 11 ·~ protram,
and I would work to &tt. \l finl$hfd a.a
soon as possible. lt Is ~. that la
good for all taxpayers.,'."'~ all en-
joy it, and we nted it. ·• · ~ .
Cban1e1 I Woukl LI.kt.\. Ste: l would
like to see the freeway ~ and 1J'Wk
started right now. Wt ... need ll. A
severance tax on all oil1 PWJDped within
the city limits. A $trongef code: on oil
well clean up. ..., •
Why J Am 1 Candida&e: Beijuse or my
experienct in tbe building field, and In-
spection department, 1 feel that my
knowledge in lhi1 area, which I have. My
and members of the city council. Al we
all know approximateJy 75 percent of the
business, at any council mettlng I.a about
zoning, codes, and types of corustrucUon.
Making Ike right decisions requires
knowledge in this arta,which I have. My
goal would be to give the rtskSents of thls
city, good, clean, honest support, bearing
in mind to keep the tas: rate down, and
try to get the people ol this community
more involved in major de<:\slons, inltead
of just a few who are inclined to make
mistakes. 1
Ce1tral Park -Huntington Beach is
!ortunate·in having a nalural lake and a
~table site for a park development.
Besldei providing a -recreaUonal arta lo
b4: cnJoyed. by present and future genera--• W • N • GifJ•OR tm, it should also enhance and upgr3de
the :s\lrrounding area. W1WAM N. GIBSON: Aged 42, father
of two. Disabled veteran and an ei:~il
Chance• I woul~ like te see -More field worker recuperating from opera-~ in~olvement m planning. Mor~ ~ex-tions after an injury that «curred La the
1bWty fil. rtqulrtmenls and restrictions oil field af:{ectlng potential retailess and in· ·
dustHallsts to encourage ~ their in· Should financin1 ftr Uie' t~~lm-
vestment. Unification of all areas. provements Jll'OITam lacladct a , oU
Gre3ter c o m m u n i c a t i o n and un-severance tax and/or II'°" rectlptl
dentanding among our citizens, business tax: l am In favor of the oil tax.
DiverslUed representaUon on the cily Oil companies will automatically pass on
cOuncil. And like everyone else, lower the increase to the consumer. Th.is b: dlf·
taxes. £icult for the city businessman in this
Wb I am a candld1tc: Every day I ask
my!e)f that same question. A woman has
never been elect11.d to the Huntington
Be*<:h City Council. I"have no organized
campaign, no campaign fund. no backing
from l'llny group, just an affinity for the
City of Huntington Beach.
• K. R. Goodwiti
: KENNETH R. GOODWIN: Preaident of
~Iden Slate Mobile Home Owners
e, remodeling contractor. retired
bulldlng inspeetor. former C-Oast
, Married with four children.
'Should financing for the capital Im·
1fOVeme1111 program lnelude an oil
severance tax and/or gn:i1" rtttlpts
bbll.net1 tax? The till producers should be
hit with a three cents a barrel production
tax. Wby not~ Taipayers would be hit
with· a !five cent.I tax already in effect.
One fa ir way ls for all busintss, including
oU producers, and you and I to pay their
share.
'TOf of the 'Pier Dtvtltpment Plan :
A.,1t!)ough the plan as is miaht not mee t
with my 1pprov11I, I murt say that some
dla111U ahoukt be made. It may be: too
lite to stop the action that is under way •.
But any future decisions netd some
Utought. A lot of pt9ple always think tMy at hurt when cities grow. but In the end
ill seems to be for the be:st. if the
decisions wtre hone.IL l lhlnk personally
Uili plan Is In lht rlghl dlr<ctlon.
1Clt1• op et OU Wellt: This ls an area
U..\t netdJ a lot ol changes made. The ~ we have Is too flexible in favor o(
the oil companies, therefore the people
W\ llke to work that 1rea have no control.
whlcb ls bad. AJ a pa•l ln•pcclor, I r .. 1
competitive market.
Top of tbe Pier Development Plaa: 1
see no reason why the City of Huntin,ton
Beach should continue to increase the
value of the Huntington Be11.ch Com-
pany's property, subsidiary or Staodard
Oil. I'm referring to a piece of property
v.'e will be obligated to buy. This is bad
business. Too many citizen! do not
rtalize each time they walk out on the
pier and look to their right that they are
not gazing on city property.
Cleanup of OU WeD1 : I don't believe
a;nd I never wW believe that removing
One oil. well that i.!J producing oil .and prt>-
viding a day's work for an individual
should be eliminated. The word is out to
eliminate lhe independent owner and I
think this is wrong. He's just a small guy
trying to make a buck and trying to exJst.
He'll need time to move out which is true
and he'll need our help as a fellow
clt.izen. But let's not run him out of
business too quickly because he ii part of
opr town and was the beginning of It. If
we run him out now, who do v.·e start on
ne~t?
Beach Development : We have.,already
tied up $1.~ million ln parking •ad not on
the ocean. Only God can chlnge the
oQlan. We have taken aWay -the only
place where our youngsters could roOer
sJfat.e during the day and dance at n!gbt.
We call this incorporated situ&Uon. I feel
that every family, young and oWI, girb
and bQys should be allotted the same
amourlt of time as restaurants, if not all
night, when accomp&Jlied by th e I r
parents lo roast a hot dog, or a
~bmallow and enjoy the beach
wft9out being run off at midnighl
Centra1 Park: l would like to ~ lhe
bank take back the 10 acres of w.orthle1s
water it gave us al '10,000 an acre arid
install a swimming pool that costll th at
amount In Central Park.
Change• I 111·ould llke lo Rt: I would
like to sec a corriplete change of city
council. I don't believe that a man ac. a
woman has to be a member or • real
estate firm or a secured ~mber of a
plannipg commiuion to be a good cltl!e'n
to Won')' about ctty govemmtnt.
Wtiy I am a cndklale: l would like to
represent the man who leaves for work at
1 a.m.; gel.I home at 1 p.m.; has his din-
ner, reads the paper, watches TV, then
(!'.oes ~ bed. This Is ~ m•n thlt Is 1
good c!Uzen, but just hRSn't the time or
the tnergy to attend each Council
meeting, not because he Isn't Interested,
but Mcause be ii tired . 1 would like to
see aU pror:als ~ forth by lht Council published tU ogr local new11papt(S so
that th!$ w 1 enable all partle1 to ha've a
betttr.undtntiodtM o(.lhdr city 1overr>-
ment at all Umel :Wltbou&,leavtna lbe:lr
living rooms. 1 .think this will ~vent
unscruplllouo _PIF!le• from J)lltUng a
bridle •path0 tln'Ollgh youdlllchen,
• IQ1epleS.Fer11•
JOSEPH S. FERM: A·er o1p ace
e.nPneer wl:lo now centen Ma Uvellltood
011 developtac Ills property at 1711
Gotll>rd SI. F-er fll Ille Property
Ownen Protective Leapt ablil pail
pmldent of tM Oran1e County Tar~
payen' A110Clatltn. ~11n1ed wllb two
clllldren.
Should liaaneinr for the capital Jm.
proveme11ta proiram illclude a• oU
severuce tai.r and-or 1101s reetlpts
ba&lne.1 tu? Aggressive pursuit of 1
dlversif.ied industrial tax base will
rlimlnate the need Jor revenue sources
under conskkratioJt that will burdtn the
homeowner and increase the eost of con·
sumer goods.
Top of the Pie~ Development Plan : For
the past seven y!'.rs I have pointed out ·
the dangers In two basic enabling aots1•
namely the Community Redtvelopment
Law and tht .Parki111 Law of 1949. These
two laws, in conjunction wllh
discriminative zoning requirements and
holding ordinanees, have s t r a n g I e d
development. This roadblock to progres.<1
Is what I refer to as " leglslatlve blight."
Even the property owners realize that lhe
speculative phase has pas.wd and the
time ror development is at hand.
However , there is no doubt that they ex·
pect full cooperation from government in
fulfilling thtir plans for "highest and best
use" ol their properly.
Beach Development: For a long time I
have voiced disfavor with development
that encr~ on the natural asset we
enjoy in our ppen beaches. I wili qs~ my
influence in tlJF.O'll,'aginJ tbe state ac-
quisiUon cif. pftvately owned belches
within the city limita. Why should the
citizens of Huntington Beach be indebted
to acquire this natural resource enjoyed
by others as well ?
Cleunip of OU Wells: Since the days
\Vhen oil derricks filled the hoflmn, there
has been a gre1t deal or improvement.
Further improvement that will enhance
land vllues can be achle:ved in two ways:
by government force, or by perauasion
and encouragement. 1 prefer the latter.
Catral Park: Ye.ars ago I said, "Save
natural resources now." We have studied,
planned, and approved and sola bonds.
Now is the time to stop foot-dragging.
Wby I Am a Cudldate: Seeing a
desperate need for change whereby all
the cltiurul will be effectively
rep-esented on the city council, I have
entered tbe c a m p a i g n as their
spokesman. My goal is to assure that the
citizens have a right to know what is
being done in government, a right to vote
on critical issues, a right to enjoy finan-
cial security through economy I n
government, and 1 right to expect a
government free of conflict of intere st.
The citizens need a fearless represen-
tative on controvertial and crltical
iswe1, and support for victims ol misus-
ed government authority.
• Marcus Por.ter
MARCUS M. PORTER: Electronlrs
prodoeUon npervllor, membe.r of pita·
rdn1 eomm.IJ&lo.n, ROME Co u 11 cl I,
cllamber ot commerce. Served o a
Cltl&en1 Cllarkr Revl1I011 Commlltee,
"" ULl Cltitta1 Sieerla1 CommlUtt
aad pre.Weat of Glu Mar Bomeownen
Altoel1tlon.
SllouJd flnanclng for ·u.e c1plt11 Im·
,.. ...... 1a ......... bodude .. ell
-... 1111/t< ............ ......_ tn! If it can be demonstrated
that JrOPf:tlY taxes do not cause the
burdtn to be ahared equlbbl)', lhtn
special Jeviu may be con1idered. AA yet,
comprehen•lve figures haven't b e e n
lorth"""lnl.
Top of tM Pier Devtklpmeat Pl1n: The
"Top of the Pitt Plan" ts imaginative,
responsible and slgnUlcant to redevelop-Ins a blighted area. This condition h111
deprived the .city ol pDtenti1l revtnue,
commercial crowth and a poajUve civic
lmaae. My experience on the Planning
COmml.!Jslon has enabled me to clouly
follow the evolving _,..,. of the
"Plan" to make the downtown area a
plualng, productive and valU1ble auet to
tbe city. We must cet moving on this
vital project to capture the by·producl of
our outst.andln1 beaches and Uf!ique pier
facility -U>e' tourist trade. We shouldn 't settle for less.
le.a t>evelopment: Our magnificent
beachel art 1 major city ~. To
1chieve ma.rimum use o( this· natural
l&sel we should unlty slate, city and
private beachfront under a. single local
department for development, operation
and control. 'l1lls should be accompU.hed
through ltase 1nd purchase as 1p-
proprl1le. Thia effort should Include a
comprehenaJve program for removing oi)
pumpi, improving parking and deve}pp-
lng beachfront associated businesses. We
must never forget that the beaches are
our greatest recreational facility and
largest park. We must develop the!e
btaches to their fullest exlt:nt to lnsure
maximum service, preset .e their natur.:il
beauly and encour.age the greatest com-
mercial benefits.
Cleanup of OU Wells: We have had the
"Oil City" Image too long. tt has acted to
our detriment. Oil blight is stunting the
growth of what CQllld be the richest
coas{line In California, If not t:ie nation.
We must encourage cooperative,
responsible and imaginative teamwork
between the city and the oil industry to
correct uisting problemr. If Olis fails we
JD,ust tab steps for stricter enforcement
and Pros'ecullon of the oil ordinance. To
accomplish this we should expand our
lega l staff by aclding an aUorney. We
can't afford anything less if we are to
permanently resolve thi!l issue.
Central Parle Urge cooperation and
coo rdina1ion bel~'een the archilects for
the library and park to create an
1esthetic and functional city landmuk.
Preserve the uea's natural beauty.
Cbanie1 1 would Like to See : Ac-
celerate uUlity undergrounding; bnprove
landscaping of residential and arterial
greenbelts; Proteet our city a_gainst
further air pollution by all means
available : enhance major city entrances
with aesthetic landmarks; establish an
Jndu.ltrlal coordinator on .the city sWf
and support· his efforts by preservirig met
expandlng existing lndustrial acreage.
' Wby 1 Am a Candidate : 1 believe I can
contribute to more city efficiency by
working as 1 member of the council
team. Tbe total needs of the city and its
ree:idenLI are far more important than
one man's opinion. We require unity of
purpose to accomplish present city goals.
Teamwork is not 1 lUJ:Ul')' -it is man-
datory. I will strive to encourage
teamwork of government, cltir:ens and
business to accomplish our city goals. My
background of civic activity can be in-
valuable toward blending these signifi·
cant fottet. Every councilman :should be
responsible, dedicated and responsive to
the clthent. I will work toward this encl.
• N0rt1m Gibbs
NO~IA BRANDEL GIBBS : Married,
mother of four children; profesi;.or at Cal
State, LOng Beach. Served on Seal Beach
City Council for three years, was m1yor
for two yeair1: currently •·member of
HunUn11on Beach Parks and Recreation
Commlulon.
-ffdaclq '" lilt t1plial Jal. Jfty11111e1ta prolJ'am ledMe •• ell
teYWalCt ta.r ud/er ,..... rectlpt1
ba&teN tu? What better alternatives
are there?
Tip ti Ille Pltr Deve14t>m .. l PIH: The
Economic• Retearch Associates report
1Ufie1i. eiclllng posslbllltles In the top-
of·the pier redevelopmenl, strvJng as a
cai.ly51 for lbe growtb or th• planning
area and ot l.he entire clty, Of major cnn..
sidtralion •}.so Is Its lnlluenct on our ta~
bale. Here, l would augaest careful step-
by-rtep eonslder1tlon of tht plan for lt.9
tolal ilnpacl·Gll the dly. I'm aura thal a
mld·lrouncf of agrttment can be reached
between the vsrlo\.11 factions that hive
uprwed lnler01l.
-~ Dtvelopmtat: Our 1reat"l
naturll auet LI our beach, Jt bu been 1>elrlenlnc la see the palm lit< plantlngs
perilng up our landACape and J hope we
can eontlnue with 1 J>O!.IUve approach in
our upgradl111 and be1utlflc111Jon pro-
gram. A conUnuing good relationship
between the state-owned and city-<iwned
beaches and their cleanup I feel i3
necessary.
Central rark: The Immediate develop-
ment of Uiis park 1 !et! ia vllnl. I wUI en-
courage the most rapid development
J)OS!lble -conslstent with intelligent use
of the land to meet the needs of the ~
pie and nature.
Cleanap of Ol~We 1: The time has come for positive ac n here. E.nftlrce-
ment of the exisU I ordinance should
be mandatory. aUon of some of
the oil ope.rators has been negligible and
there are many legal ramifications but
complet.e coopera£1on between l h e
operators and the city is vital for our im·
prpved Image.
Chan1e1 J woaJd tlke to 1ee:
1. I would like to see t~ establishment
of a sister-city plan to give us the
benefits of an lntel'Dltional reputation
and the accompall)'hiC model-dly pr°'
gram.
2. "nte development of an actl\re pro-
&ram to attr1ct medium slzed non-fouling
Industry.
3. Expansion of tourist-attractive ac·
tlvilles. .
4. Restructuring of the city image. ot
"oll blight" to one of beauty aod concern
for all age groups.
5. The eour.ege to have a well thought
t'IUt maslcr plan for land use and stick lo
il.
Why I tm 1 candidate: W I t h
knowledgeable g u I d a n c e , Huntington
Beach has the potential to become one of
the greet cities of the West Coast. I feel
that my background -both political and
professional -haa provided me with tM
unique preparation needed to help .shape
the future of our city. I am coneerned
about the direction we art gotnc and
would like to help create a city noted for
it.I concern for the human being -from
toddler to senior citizen.
• R. J. Zinngrnbe
ROBERT J. ZINNEGRABE:
Admlalltrator·~n~'ntr o I convalescent
hospltali Ocean View School District
Cltlz.ens Steering: Committee. !\tarried
"1th three children. Ase U.
Sbonld financing: for tbe capita] lm·
provements program Include an oil
severance tax and/or grct11 receipts
baslnns lax? Financing a capital im·
provements program Is at btst com-
plicated. This subject needs calm, ra·
Uonal non-polltical evaluation. Before my
final detenninlltlon is made, all the input
and facts must be available.
Top of lbe Pier Development Plan: As
an original member of the ULJ Steering
Committee., I have been actively involved
Jn solution approaches to the mid·beach
problem for four ye3rs. Every con·
ceivable method of turning this area int>l
an uclling, growlng and progressive
area has been erplored by our com·
mlttee, staff and consultants. it ls my
Hrm convicUon that the "Top of the Pier
Plan'' recommended by our commlttee is
the best answer for our community and
tbe property owners involved.
Beach Development: Our city with one
of the state 's outstanding natural asset1,
our beach, must be ever alert to protect
and maintain our environmental·
qualities. Much work remains to be done
with the public untlllties commission, anti-
pollution control district and the State
dlvllion of lUghways to Insure th~ pro-
tection of our open space, low-denally
community. We should study the ad·
visablltty of establishing a department.
wllhlD the administrative structure of tile
clly, reSj>Onslble for prolecllng the
ecology ol Huntington Beach.
CleUDp ti on Wellt: Perhaps the ma·
Jor challenge to the · aolvlng of the
UDlightly oil well problem Is to first •c-
qulre 1 complete uodersllnd.iDC of this
problem as It relates to the optr1tor1,
ownetl and city f,overnmcnt. Every
rtsponalble citizen. ncludlng the small
Independent oil operator Is concerned
with solving this blight. V1rious melhodt
have been proposed to remove oil blight,
but I believe t.het 11! lnvotvcd should first
sit down toaether with a view toward
developlna the voluntary removal Of
these unsla:htly anl non-productive wells.
CtlWal Park: Our City PArk can well
be, and should be the spark which ln-
ftucinces npld dcivelopment of local
nelil>borboocl parks.
Cllaqet I Wllld Ula ta Sae: All t i·
fecllve, ellldent · apilal Improvement
prO(Tam wblcb <IPl"'s eoonomlct, short
"'"'' budgellns Ideas, llhared program> with other political subdivblons, and Joint
power agreements, must be developed.
Such progrOllll shoold provide a balanced
economic bast assuring I n d u s t r I a I
rrowth, recreational and community
needs, along with max.lmlzln.g the quality
of protection our city enjoys from our
police, fire and lifeguard departments.
Wily 1 Am • CudJdate: Before a man
declares his candidacy for public office, 1
btlieve ht should seriously uamine his
motives and Qu11Jflcations. 1be need for
sound economic and social 1 r o w t h
motivates my candidacy. Currently J am
serving my fifth year as Ocean View
School District Trustee, one term . as
presklent. I have supervised $13 m.llllon
budget, effecting .substantial economies
of operation . I have twice been el~d
president, Orange County Nursing uc.ne
Association, representing me m ht r
facilities before legislative and aaency
bodies. This experience provides fiht·
hand knowledge of the -legislative PfOCtlS
-a vital element in councilmanic ;tr·
tectiveoe1s. :
•
e A. C. Marion :
A. C. MARION: Prtlldeat tf a WI
company, ud twt lllldat:rlal sapplJ etm·
paalea; pn:aldent ol tbe Butb,ple
Be1cll ladepe.n*nt ProciR«n, worked -
the oil ordtauce ad served oe tltie oll
committee. Age 45.
Should lllwcl.ng • for u.e capital Im-
provements prognm lacl11de aa •II
severuce tax udlor 1f011 receJllf.ll
business tai:? Ir new financing is neediPld
let's klok at a grou businesa receipf,s
li<:t!nse similar to the city of l;es
Angeles'. This effectively combines 'pil
severance with grosa receipts. .;:
Top of t.be Pier Devtlopme1t Plu : 'I)le
mo.st important thing about the Top";ol
the Pier Plan iii: that it must be resolved
so the downtown area can be developed. I
am not in favor of this plan in it's presMt
form . The 100 Block represents the mest .
valuable land in the area and under the
present plan it would be removed frdm
the ta.r role. I think future parking Will
and should be three or four blocks lnl1nd
with people moving to and from tbe
beach through a commercial area.
Beach Development: My feelings On
beach development are personal and not
based on facts and figures. I would Ukt:to
know the cost of running and maintainihg
this area along with lhe actual incomt: 1
think our Department of Harbor~,
Beaches and Development is too 1arle,
overlapping or duplicating !!Orne of ttie
functions of the Planning Departmifit.
This rep!'csents an unnecessary burdelt-tc>
the taxpayer. I do not think the city
should compound this problem by l1>e
purchase of additional beach west of Ole
pier. I would favor this area, wert of the
pier, becoming State Park.
Cleanup of Oii Wells: My view on the
ci~y's oil field cleanup could almost be
unprintnb!c. To put it mlldly, it !elves
much to be desired. J think thls ts a
classic example of government getting
bigger, not better. I feel there l.s little1 if
any communii:ation or c o o p e r a t i o n.
between the ail department and the oil ln·
dustry. I am personally convinced tbat
there are people working lor the city w:ho
would elhninate this 100 million dollar fu..
dustry. The minerals within the city limJts
of Huntington Beach are assessed at
$22,417,000,00, over 7 perctnt of our total
assessed value. •:
• Central Park: As a taxpayer, t feel Uie
city's park plans have gotten out of lihc.
Their overall cost projection is not l'i
nlllllon, but more like ID million.
. Changes l would Like to See: More.el·
i'iciericy in city government.· A realistic
and effective on field cleanup program.
More consideration for Individual rights.
Our major goal should be to l!k•
whatever steps necessary to attract new
industry. By creating • favorable en·
vlronment for Industry we wlll hay1
liken a big sltp In the rlghl dl=llon. :
Wb.y I am 1 Ca.adldate : t have 1IWl)'!
had the conviction that government for
tbe people. Lately I have the feeling th11t
!here are those who tttlnk the peoplf
\\'Ork for the government. The city's mo,,t
Import.ant goal should be an aggres.s1"•
program to aittr1ct Industry. Jr we coo-
tlnlK': on our present toorse we will
become 1 bedroom community with a pro-
hibitive tax rate. As a councilman I
would not be able to vote on any ltahla·
tlo.o concerning the oil lnduJt.ry. l{owcver
I do fett with my badlgorund, I could
help the council to effect 1 better and
more rapid cleanup prQ&ram.
---~----~ ..... ~ .... =:..·;:;.. -; 6 "" ----. . -... --.. ··-
•n Dil.ILY PILOT Th11r'ld1y, Aptll CJ, 1'70
YooJ! Huntington Couneil Ca .. didates
•
e Alvi11 M. Coen
ALVIN P.f. COEN: lncumbtnl, served
...e year •• mayor; cbpter president of
• homeowoen• 8110d1liOll; parlia.men·
~ of ~ J~cee1, member of Citizens
Cbrter Revision Commltke. Attorney,
married with two chlldrtn.
Should liunclna: for the capiktl Im·
provemenll program include an oil
sp;erance tax ud/or f"OI• receipts
bOiJ:le11 tax? Yes -il these were the ~ of the alt ernate revenue producing
rrie:'astfr;?S available to fully finance the
capital improvements program.
Tep of the Pier Development Plan:
:A.P uming that the financial feasibility of ff'9 Top of the Pier Oeveklpment Plan L!
~ied by expert appraisals, I favor
~eding with the plan. The mid-beach aiea is the core or the developmeat plan w~h incorporates in excess ot 300 acres
oC:primt: properly. Economic analysis
hU demonstrated Lb,at this area can sup.
part a substantial business community in
additio11 lo a perimeter development of
high rise office-professional and residen-
tial uus. Private development has been
encouraged and the present property
oWoers must be given a reasonable op-
J>Or!.unity to devise a plan for irn-
prO.vemen t of their property within the
C<*Cept of the overall plan.
Beac.11 Devdopmnt: We have 111ri mil es
or :beach within our geographical limits.'
lt •b our responsibility to : A. Presen·e
the beach for public use in perpetuity: B.
Provide the highest quality or service to
those who use the beach; C. Exercise a
higp degree of environmental coHtrol not
only on the beach itself but in areas con-
Ugu ous to the beach.
We can best accomplish this by: A. Ex-
plQring alternatives available lo acquire
that portio11 of the beach prese ntly in
prWatt ownership : B. Continui ng our
prigra1n of landscapi ng Coast Highway
anil beach parking f ac i l ities : C.
Prbviding an atmosphere conducive to
thl! attraction or privalt investment and
thle establishment of a sound eco11omic
climate.
tentral Park : The par k is designed to
serve the active and passive recreational
netds of all age groups a11d still preserve
the natural conditions aod irltegrily of the
area.
Cleanup of 011 Wells: The need to con-
trol existing and future oil operations in
the areas of redrilling, sleaming and
cleanup is essential. Our e1isti ng oil code
ts inadequate in ce rtain areas and mus t
be .amended to enable us lo success fully
pursue cleanup o[ the oil fields without
unduly infringing on the rights of the oil
op6rator. Amendments are presently
under consideration, based on realistic
cril~a and sound coaslitutional grounds,
co\ler1ng cleanup of idle "·ells, conditions
im~sed on redrilling old well~ and
general clean-up of the oil fi elds. Both the
city and the. oil operators must recognize
the responsibility owed to the rest of the
citizenry.
Changes I "·ould like lo See: Over the
past four years. the coW'ICil, on "'hich I
have been privileged to serve, has in-
stituted more changes designed for the
betlerment and protection of the public
health. safely and "'eifare, than any
preceding council. \Vhalevcr changes
may be necessary in the future will be
accomplished with the same degree of
public concer1 and diligence as I have
demonstrated in the past
Wby I am a Cand idatt: As a practicing
8ttorney in Hunti.igton Beach (6 years)
with an undergraduate degree i n
economics, I am trained lo critically and
fairly evaluate issues and have a11 un-
derstand ing of finance. During my seven
year residency in the city. I h.1vc been
active as : Charter preside nt or a
homeowners' association: delc~atr to the
HOME COUNCIL: parllaruentarian of
the. Jaycees; member of Lions Club ;
member of Board of Trustees or \VOC
YMtA; member of Citizens Charter
Re\dsioa Commit let ; and served four
years as cou11cilman, including one yea r
u mayor. l pledge: continued park and
beach improvements : control of en-
vironmental pollution ; and sound plan-
alnl and zoning.
• Ronald Bau.er
RONALD C. BAUER: Cbalrman of tbe.
p a r) 1 alMI Recrealloo C<lmmisslon;
mem'-If dat People for Pirkl Com-
.mHe; c:wptrtte vk.'e preddut of a con-
wuctlcm c:ompuy. Mll'Tttd wtlh rour ·-a..w ftaalcilll for tlte caphal lm-
'1•+awwwll ptolfl.ID btdode ll'l oil
11verute ID ..U.r Ir• 1 a ttttlpb
......, tu? Balanced economic lfilwlh
should be the re.sponsibi lity of all who
share our eommunlty . 1 strongly support
the oil productlon tax and gros11 receipt.a:
license fee as reeommended by the city
administrator.
Top of tbe Pier Deve lopment Plan: The
"Top ol Lhe Pit!r Plan" i$ typical of the
confusion resulting from the lack of a
defined goal. Time, energy, and money
will be wasled uness we are able to see a
clear pi cture ahead. \Vhile convinced thal
something must be done NOW, I can nnt
agree with any plan that might, in 20
years, require the community I P
duplicate the "Top of the Pier Plan".
Rather. a concept witti vision and
or lglnalily must be im plemented now in
order to prevent a sterile community.
BenCh Development : Nat ure has p~
vided us with an asset unavailnble to
most cities throughout the w or Id .
Because of this, we play host to man y
guests each year. The qost of ser\'ices. to
protect and moke our city comforta ble
for both its citizens and guests is ex-
tremely bigh. Quality enterprises. reflec-
ting the a1Jll06phere of the beach but con-
sistent with our environm ental goals,
•
would not ooty encourage v I s it o r s ,
enhance our city but redu ce th e tax
burden on our residents.
Clean of 0 :1 Wella: Pollution. eco-
logy and environment are words fre-
quently used today. ff we, as a com.
munlty, are to take steps that will enrich
the lives of fut ure gene.rations. we must
all aSStJme res ponsibility for that growth.
The citizenry must take the initiative,
and through their representatives, pro-
tect and improve their environment. Thr
oil ordinance ii; a sta rt . It seems, though.
to be bo,1u~ed dOY.'fl in ··Lega lecze". An oil
tax, "'ith production incentives and
cleanu p discou nts, 1vould ;iid the city in
eliminating oil blight and provide priVate
cottJ:prlse with the in1pctus to comply.
Central Park : Rapidly be<;oming a
reality. our Central Park must have a
name -hopefully, one that wiU ha ve
meaning for the many who have made it
possi ble.
Cbangts I would Like to See: hfaster
plan revisions; Improvement in com-
munication bet\\•een the citizens and their
representatives in government:Creative
planning with environmental conservation
as a prime objecli \'e, and a new ima ge
with clearly defined goals.
\\"hy 1 am a Candidate : The demands
(If our community in the 7D's "'ill
necessilate an "Action Council "-a coun-
cil that will face these demands "'ith a
clearly defined GOAL. The future of ou r
city will he hamJ'l('red by confusion if "'e
do not take steps to insure orderly prog-
ress. My reasons for wanting to serve as
a councilman are : A desire for a
culturally rich environment , land use thal
provides quality developments, avenues
of communication open to all our citizens,
and a city government representing the
total communit~·· THe goal of our city, by
subscribing to these objectives. 1\'ou ld be
to create an image in "'hich \\'C could all
share.
e Ron.aid KttoJ•P
RONALD V. Ki~APP: A manufacturing
cost ana lyst wl&i 111cl>on°llt ll Douglas,
married 14·tth rour children. Age 22.
Shou ld fi nanrlng for tbe capital Im·
pro\·ements prou1m Include an oil
1ever1ncr t•x and/or ~· rtttlpts lt~riness tax ? T am against an Increase
oil ta1 and gross receipl.i bu.s.ines& tax,
we don't want to drive out the business
we already have here by jncrease tax
loads. OUr money problems are not
always &Olved by Increase taxes. Taxes
have a definite upward trend just as
prices lncreaes resulting in more taxes.
Let's check our or local government
spending more seriously.
Top of the Pier Redevelopmeat Plu:
Top of the Pier is an excellent plan if Its
primary goals are ca rried out in the best
interest ol the taxpayers. Big parking
lots of cement woo't bring or attract
more industries or Improve tax revenues
to the city. There is a me ss downtown
and a cleanup is overdue. Downtown
redevelopment must be a joint effort
between the city and private owners.
Let's stimulate some new blood and get
the jobs done. No reason why we could·
n't have another Ports of Call with beau-
tiful tandsc,aping, att ractive and profit-
able to commercial establishments.
Dench De\•rlopment : Beach develop-
ment should be developed for familY.
recreation. Required are outside fresh
water facilities, clean restrooms, private
operated snack bars. Landscape the area
into islands o( cultivation spaced so many
yards apart. Play areas away from
beaches for small children, wit h ap-
propriate play equipment should be in-
!tal!ed. Palm trees of greens shoukl be
planted lo dress up beach area .
Cleanup of Oil Welts: Cleanup of oi l
wells should not only be an obligation of
the city but a must for all oil \vell owners
in our ci1y. It's a shame to listen to the
phony excuses on why the oil 1rells ::re
left in their shabby condition. \Ve main-
tain standards in building code~. fire,
electrical >A•hy is an oil \\'ell so difficu lt to
dress up? Long Beach seems to be mak·
Ing progress in making her wells at-
tractive. \Vhy can't Huntington Beach.
paint and remove her scrap? We. tr.e
city. could set up a model oil well if the
oil people forgo how to use their im-
agination. The oil man remembers to
take off tax credits, depreciation allowan-
ces. aod deposit money in the bank.
Ccnb'al Park: A central park would be
utilized by many taxpayers. There's no
doubt the pork bonds displayed the ap-
proval of Ille \'Oters 74 .3 percent voted
for increase parks.
Ch:inges I would like to See : Someda y
\\'hen \\'e have the tax monev. I would
like lo see se\•era l baseball fiflds, public
Olympic outdoor swimming p o o I s .
Problems \\'ilh so1nc of our young people
cnuld have been avoided if enough in-
terested parents kept their sons and
daughters busy with constructive \\'Ork
rather tJ1an idleness. We cannot overlook
our or their futures. If we ever loose the
fight against drugs you might as well set
a match to all our big plans for city im·
provements.
\\lhy I am a Ca ndidate : Ir elected I will
bring 13 years of industrial manogement
experience to city council oombined with
1ny education major al C a l -S t a l e ,
Fullerton in manageme nt accounting
sytems. purchasing. Presently employed
at ~tcDonnell Douglas as cos! ana lyst, l
propose lo bring sound business practice
to help manage city government lo\ver
taxes. In I.he past thre e years my prin-
cipal dut ies have been developing cost
reduction programs, design primarily to
increase production. raise quality of pr~
duct. and lower cost. Cost accounting,
budgeting have been my life· occupation
in the business and mili tary worlrls .
• Phyllis Galkiti
PHVUJS GALKIN : Realtor, president
of Soroplimlst Club, president of aua
~·on1tn's coun cil or NAREB, "·orked on
pnrk bonds commitlte, ronner cbalnnaa
of ~larch or Dimes. rirarrle.d vl'ltb three
children.
Should th e capital Improvements pro-
gra m include an oil se\·t ra nce ta:1 and/or
gross rectlpls business tax ? Neither,
since the burden should not be shouldered
by the existing re.sldcnts for the benefit
of those yet lo come and enjoy thest im·
provements. Our city bas a S?O mllllon
line of crt'dil and can easily use bonding
methods for these Improvements gtvlng
long term amortization for easier payofr.
Top of the Pi er Drvelopment Plu: The
l'OnCCpt or the '"Top of the Pier Plan" is
by fa r and away 1he greatest thi ng to
come to lluntington Beach s ince
sunshine. This is a "'ell thought out plan
to rid us or an element detrimental to oor
young people and our inmai:e to tilt vlsl·
tor. small shops and bollques, more nice
restaurants "'Ith an ocean view and good
food and upgrBded specialty sho ps fro m
around lhe world wlll ~upy leased •lr
space. Private enterprise has proven
more than onct the ability to develop
a rea~ such as thi.s and should be &lven
opportunity' to do 50, I IUbmK we mllll
get oo with the development .. propolt\I,
.ttgardl.., of Ibo melhod choHn. lie... ~ Onlerly '!>each
developmenl abould be oiblll>iot priority
In a city wbldl It lmolta for Ho beaches.
an Idea cumnUrln tile thlnldn( lllqe, a
thrff.way exchange between Ule state,
city and private enterprise to prestrve.
OW' beach from further building on the
water, has great merit. The COit. if not
walched carelulty can be more than we
can afford at a time when other projects
are demanding and lbould receive im-
mediate atteotfon. At this time. Jt doe&n't
appear to be profitable to buJld rigbl on
the wattr, thererore, private development
is lllll off In th• distance.
Cleuup of Oii Wells : The city bas dc>ne.
a commendable job in the attempt to ca~ ttnloval of Idle wells. Becau9e we '
live in a democraey,Jhe: actua1 cleanup
order take a great de810t-~. if the
operator ~ruses to a~ide orders «
disagrees with the orden. Thia lJ his
right and we lhould preserve lblt right.
The offender for the most part appears to
be lbe small ind'tpendent and 1n many
cases be honestly ha11 a real bardlhip in
cleaning up hiS well. Perhaps if a reserve
fund for cleanup purposes were collected
from all owners and held in lnte~st bear-
ing trust, then upon P.roof of real
hardshlp the operator could dr•w from
this fund to do the v.·ork required.
Central P1rk: The central pa rk should
have been completed . already and the
library should have been in use for •I
yeu r. our children "'ill n::>t mind paylng
for the5e nrarl.v as much as they mind
not having them.
Chan ges I would Like lo see : A real at-
tempt to get on with the deve lopment of
our unique assets. Constructive sug-
gestions from an empathetic electorate
rather than sporadic perS()llallty conflicts
from the nonnally apathetic property
owner. Elected officials can not function
"'ithln the frame work of a democracy
unless their constituents do their part.
Why I Am a Cud.idaLe: I am a can-
didate becaust I believe in Huntington
Beach and the role. it plays in California
and the · United States. This city has
grow n up fast and sometimes a little
carelessly and will continue to gro\V. l
believe my background as a Realtor
"'hich has provided me v.ith t h e
knowledge of commuruty aevelopment
and the satisfaction of serving the public,
will serve as a solid base for serv ing the
people of Huntington Be.ach. ll1y goal Is to
be instrumental In proving to the citizens
or th.is town that indeed their elected of-
ficials do care about the needs of those
they are serving.
• He1ary B. Duke
HENRY H. DUKE: Planning com-
missioner, member of UL1 Mlll·Beacb
Development Committee, past pre1ldeol
of Bolsa Chica Hom eowners As1ocl1tioa,
chairman of Citlieas for a Full-Ume Flre
Department and People for ' Parts.
Stockbroker, married "·Ith four cblldren.
Should fioanclng for the capital im·
provtmeats PJ'Oll'UD llclllde u oil
severance. lax and-or gross receipts
bu11De11 tu:? If \Ve must have special
asstssmenls on the oil industry let that
not be to clean our oil blight. Big city in-
vestments, must be klng -lenn financing
to have help froni futurt: industrial and
residential taxpayers to share t h e
burden.
Top of tbt Pier Development Plan : As
a member of the Mid-Beach Develope-·
ment Committee, I support It. The eco·
nO'mic study recommtnds Its impleme ta-
1 ion. \\'e must act on such recommena-
lions if the redevelopment of dOi;\'lltown
Is going to take place. Jf the landowner~
directly involved can·t accomplish their
o\vnredevelopment shortly, then the city
must act to rHstablish a safe and
healthy community. With • little imagina·
tion and foresight the Parking Authority
ran develop subterranean parking with
air rights to be developed in a cloister
metOOd by participating property cwners
affected and stlll preserve open space for
our beaches. This could achieve the goals
to serve all.
Beach Development: Since this Is the
largest asset ol. the city, \\"e $hould tre1t
it as such. One c11n't help but ft-el proud
by the f3ctllfllng given our beach this
past year. We must plan for acquisition
of more beach within our city and
develop It, particularly, since state and
federal agencies Are willing to grant
monies ror such acqu1s1Uon,. Let us look
ahead with objectives and not lo9e sight
or popuJ1llon Influx that could create
open space reductions.
Cleanup or OJI WtU1: ~ a plannin&
commlasloner, I .worked acUvely in the
formulation of tie oil ordlnaDCe, which,
l>opolully will be In «Itel ahortly. Our
pll lot deuiol oll bligbt can be with in
relch, if strict tdbertnce in not allowing
roadlvatioo of ldl~ wells la maintained. 6lnte' Oil ....... part ol this dlY'• ...
vlronmeDI, ..,,tl#Jrs should be wl!lini to com~ "ltb timlromental controls, such
11 beau~ emWions, and sarety.
If en'(QrCtment of exlstng c:Odes continues
to be a ~· bond deposit methods or olbei liosC .u.mauves mUJI be Jn.
Jtitvte.d!
ell~ ~: Now that our Central
Part II boculning a reallly, lei's be
1'f:IPCIP,l{ve 1ofthe Wants and needs of the
~ of_~ cur residents, in I t a
development>
CU.1e1 I would like to see : A balanc-
ed master plan to create a plan for all
usu and avoid a bedroom community.
We must aggressive ly seek out much
nteded industrial development, through
an indwtrial coordJnator and c i t y
coopera tlOn. Financial philosophy must
chailg\' to me.et spectfic objectives and
needs fof present ci Uzens w I t h o u t
ov,rburdening them. · ·
lfty ... Am I a Cudida&e : Civic ae-
tivlUes, educatkln, occupation, plus
• beina: past real estate appraiser serve as
qualifications to become councilman. We
must }co~ for orderly growth by setting
up object1ves and goals for planning,
capital Impro vements and f i n a n c i a I
rsponslbilities. Our city has top credit.
We should use this w resident.'! can look
fo help from future residents, com-
mercial and industrial development.
Responsive government should be achiev·
ed by the city actively pursuing the wish·
es of the majority. I feel that I can help,
achieve an efficient and better com-
munity.
•.Jack Gree1t
JACK GREEN: Current mayor. lictns-
H real estate broktr, seeking masttr'1
degree la public admhtistraHon at Cal
State. Fonner pre1ident of Golden West
Homtowutrs Association and seeretary
of tbe HO~m Council ; Currently presi-
dent of Orange County Division, League
of Cities, executive committee member
ol SCAG. 1'1arrled l\ilh four children.
Should flundng for the capital im-
provements program include an oil
severance tax and/or a gross receipts
buslDe.11 tax? An oil production license
tax and gross receipts tax shculd be in-
cluded in capital improvements financing
and be used exclusively for this purpose.
Together they a v o i d discrimination
against one industry.
Top of the Pier Development Plan: 1
ztm strongly supporting the Top o£ the
Pier program because of the necessity
for changing the downhill trend of recent
years in this are.a and the importance of
not only providing parking for !he beach
area, but for the downtown business sec-
tion. T believe this will open up the
downtown to rede\·eolpmenl by the
private sector, whi ch is the most
desirable way to move ir possib le. The
ago when the ci ty council moved on the
beach acquisition are strangely ,nent now
"'ith Lht Project comp leted and the trans-
formation into a thi ng of beauty.
Btacll Development: Beach develop-
ment Is tied In with the Top of the Pier.
The area north of the pier is privately
owned and it is hoped this area can be
acquired for public use. I do not believe
that the residents of the city should hav e
to shoulder the entire burden of cost ol
th is beach which would run Into many
millions of dollars. But with federal and
possibly state financial assistance "'e can
d~ it. I would likt to see the commercial
section of the beach area oriented toward
the tourist lo bring money back into the
city from visi tors who make use or our
fine beaches.
Cle anup of Oil Wells: We are tightening
existing ordinances and adding new ones
to bring further cleanup. Much has been
done In the past few years, but voluntary
cleanup does nol work. Legal means a~
pear to be lhe only feasible way to get
compliance. Ccntrary to the opinion of
some, it ii not my intention to put oil
optr•tnf's out ol business. But we do in-
sist on obeying I.he law and lhe spiri t or
that law.
Central Park: ~ntral City Park arKt
the bond Issue which will make It possi·
ble art. two _9f the greatest things that
have eVu hafipened to this city.
Oao1es 1 Woald Uke To See : I would
like a serious t ffort made to find ways
ol slowing &wn the population lnOux to
HunUngt.on Beach. This would give the
city more brtaOtlng room to prtp&re for
the eventual she we will aU11ln. Other-
wise, we may lose the envlronmtnt that
drtw a11ny of u& hert oria:inally.
Wby I Am a Candidate: I am an
active partJcipaDt at.local; county, and
state government teve.1s. I bav.e takea the
Ume. acquired lht: education and tx•
perlence to help lead our city toward
areater prosperity wJthin a financial
framework we can afford. 1 ha ve
delivered on promises made four years
ago, but much planning and work, and
many dec!slons Ile ahead. I understand
the need for reinvest ment In our city to
make It a leader in citizen welfare,
business and industry. As ?.-fayor I have
been your V()ice in our government.
Together we are building a great clly for
ourselves and our children. We must con·
Unue to modernize, clean, beaullly, pro-
tect, build, attract business and industry.
Tog~ we must pursue these a:oal.s tor
the benefit ol all who Jive here.
• T e d Bartlett
TEO \\'. BARTLETI': Served ti years
on city council, two ltrms as mayor,
former trustee of Huntington City School
District, rormer president of th c
Chamber of Commerce.
Should financing for lhe capital Im-
provements program include an oil
1e\'erance lax and -or grosa receipts
business tax? Any new lax should be
viewed ll'ith great suspicion by Tes·po11si-
blc councilmen. If curr ent financial
studies show that additional revenue is
vitally needed, then, certainly. these are
possible sources.
Top of the Pier Developmen t Pl an: the
mid -beach area (more specifically, the
top of the pier area) is one of our city's
rr.ajor considerations. The atmosphere or
decay and deterioration has attracted a11
undersi rable element of tr<l'nsient in-
habitants that \ve cannot tolerate. I am
not interested in the negative attitude or
offering blame for a condition to which
many factors have con tributed. I am ,
however. vitally interested in its im-
proven1ent. The cily should encourage
lhe private sector to make eve ry effort to
imp lement a plan for development of this
area compatible \Vilh the city's ob-
jectives. Only as a last resort should the
city's power of condemnation be used.
Stach Development : The present coun-
cil ha.s made excellent strides toward
revitalizing the city-controlled property ill
the follow ing areas: landscaped pa rking
areas: beach improvemen ts : p i e r
beautification and highway land scaping.
\\lilh nu increase in taxes, bautification of
the area betwee n Ma in Street and Beach
Boulevard has been accomplished. IA ac-
cordance \\.'ilh master planning. our next
efforts should be directed in an orderly
manner to the north. Perhaps, since it is
a regional asset. the possibility of
development costs being absor bed by the
county, state, and federal agencies rather
than the city should be considered. Con·
tinued citizen development should be en.
couraged by the city.
Clean up Oil Wells: I have supported oil
fi eld cleanup programs !or the past 18
years and was chairman of the oll com-
miUee responsible for initiatlon or the
first ordinance for the elimination of der-
ricks. ope" sumps and requirement for a:
ceme11t slab al the base of all wells. The
current cleanup prog ram of the city has
accomplished a great deal and shou ld be
continued. Stronge r enforcement of ex·
isling oil field and applicable fire and
zoning legislation is necessary to attain
our ultimate objectives. Ccinlinucd in·
dustry cooperation with city planning and
beautification programs sould be en-
couraged,
CeJtral Park: As a council man I have
mainl ained and supported a positive posi-
tion on the development of a central city
park. A park for all people to enjoy.
Changes I \Vould Like lo See: Now that
\\·e have entered the decade of the seven-
ties, f would like to sec contin4ous efforts
from all our citizens to hel p make Hun.-
tlngton Beach the most beautifu l clea n
and progressive city in the counly and a
nu1nber one contender for the All-
AmeriC'a11 City Awards plaq ue.
\\'hy I Am a Candidate: I ha\'f' li\'ed in
Huntington Beach ror 25 yea rs, raised my
family and operated my own business. I
have served 12 years on the city council
with two terms as mayor. t have helped
initiate m:iny of ()Ur existing rrograms
Including park~ and recreationa develop·
men!. police and fi re pro!ecUon 11nd
substantial beach front lmpro\'emenls. I
Intend ta continue my cUorts to"'ard im-
provement er our total living en-
\'lronment, c1nphasir.ing beautification of
rundown area! and expansion of ou r
youth and recreational programs. I will
continue to work toward t he lm-
plementaLion of a sound capital Im·
provements progra m wilhout i11cre11.sed
laXC$.
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"
voi:. 63, NO. 13, 4 SECTIONS, +f •PA~ES
-.
·Meet f;aD.llidates .. . .
Stvtn candidate!" ore running
for three !tots in the Fountain
Va!U11 council tl;tction April 14.
Councilmen ar1 tltcttd at large,
wit1' U&e three top vo~ otturs
winning tht St9-t.t. Tht DAILY
PILOT ha.s questiaMd each can-
. d~ti;, _on stviral is.sue&, giving
tht office 1eekus an .opportun-.
ity to t:iplain thtif' pl.atf011n$,
.The• view of fOWT' conclidate-s
Wert presented WtdnesdaJ,1. Tht
Views ·Of the remaining thrtt ·
candidaks-ore P"flt'ritld today.
,·.' .
Mangano Cites.Experience
Jot.a Maniano says be hu atterded
every FounWn Valley City Cou:lcl1
meetin& held durinJ tJie past lhree yurs.
"My at.and OI public iuues and my in-tereat inibe .welfare ol. our comtnlnity itt
a-matter of public record," be says.
. iliJ -.ien<e Incl.-two campolps
!or city council in Huolin&1oo Beach and
more than two years u legislative
clWrman for the Foontaia .V 111 e y
Chlmber of. Commerce. ·
"a..:lUw of my extensive background
«( · community participalioo and H· ~lo Southern Cali(ornia mu•'clpal
_..1 I !eel I pouess the neceuuy
bloJr~•. experience and ability lo give
lo the·cltlzens ol Fountain Valley the kind
of'effeetive repraeotatioll they deserve,''
MJm1aoo•states. .
On specific issues Mangano expressed
the following ide8':
~To help ·stabiliie cur tax base I ad-
voeat.I! the retentioo of a professional ia-
dllltrial com;dinator or Ute formation ~ a
COl11}DUDity ecoooullc deveklpme•t com·
mittee to selectively attract industry to
settle here.
"In 8dditkm, we should be amenable
(in severe hardship cases) to a11cw in-
(See MANGANO, Pa1e Z)
' -~
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JOHN MANGANO
S_cott's Key PUJ),lic Trus~·.
one~.:-'~~!!
bid 1o-·the dty council oeat be ·'""'
during the ap<da! Foanlaln '1llf1 ...,.u
lul September. ••sirice that election my efforts hive
been COlletDtrated on brlnglag truly
repraentaUve government to tlPs city,"
111• the J7.year-oJd ~
Scott bu beeft a -nearly lline years, recently worldq al ju-1e hall in
Qrange. Prior to wlrmiag election to the
dty council be served oo the pub and
recreation commission.
He has allO been active ift civic affairs
aerving as pmldeol Ui!IMf) ol the .
Fountain Valley Jaycees and u c:um•t
president ol the Board cf Directon of the
Foun~ Valley Boys' Club.
On specific issues Scott expressed the
following lhoug)lls:
"Duriag the next few years I woold like
to help-speed-Op the development ol cur
city )1181'ks and recreational facilities, and
alsoinitiate some exciUng recreation pro-
gr@llll that wouJd aj>peal to teenagers,
adults and senicr citl1.e03 ill addition to
the 'CDIJTY we now have for our children.
"I also feel that if the people of Fou•·
taln Valley want oor industrial area to
develop rapidly. we must pursue the type
(See scorr, Pa1• 11
'
GEORGE I . SCOTT
•
Taubman Hits"$mall Lots • ..
Burtm Taubman ls basing his eam-
palp f0< a Foiialain Valley City Council
aeat oa large )otl Itc residential areas.
"'lbtre seems, unfortunately, a strong
trend ·developing toward potting more
arid more Muses into less and less 1~
wrtil we have the crowded look of a ghet-
to. This ii not the atmosphere I bad
plamed for my family,'' Taubman says.
"II elected lo the ..-1 I will be bel·
ter able to influence the declsioas which
will keep this a community of private
f'eSiclene<S. A closely mil community ol
ordet)J growth," be cmtinued.
On other issues, Taubman says:
"Industry Jn Fountain Valley should. in
my i>plnioo, be lim!led lo the area whlcll
wu allocated far it ia the city master
plan. We sboald only invite small in-
dustries. I am not ln favor of lar1e
m8"'facturing plants. · . "Thia was originally a community cf
pri-homes. I feel Iha! II should re-
main ao. We have . eoough ahoppin&
c~lon al lhil poiot and I d .. 't -
apartmtnt comJ*:1es a welcome addition
tomldenUal U04'·
"U &here b a need for apartment bd..a, they 1hciold ·be kepi an main •
lhorouihfam such as Brookhunt Street.
~lacinc one ne1~ to the high Khool was a
very ittuponslble act. ~ '•'ftia issue of lot size ls a grave one. I
beUnt in the Issues :invclved in the recall
clecUDn last fall. The l'tslllta were 1· clean
mandate from the voters whk:b the
~ di¥ coundl oeems determined to
1gooro .. r .... r'""1>" OOJlmced .i.u.,.
neceoollJ Ui refel& the· UR\ iqolarHoot
~..:;::;. lhoold be --pin, for each tract IO that chUdren are1'l forted
Jnto the dangerous practice of playinl in
.the slree~ .yaoo for parks Is rapiclly
•
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BURTON TAUIMAN.
di'!!~aring. • ;'I have·m-quairel "Wilh• the plan to pul
a near the hllfh ICbool. bOl the need
aeen\o,areat.r ·lo •If'!' ...... Mothen "'1b\~~ ·~j !W.vqlo
itafM ·tbem:so ifat1lrorl1 home· In order.to: am them a sale place to play.''
T-Is •. lit Is employed 11 a·U·
tie ofllm' with Tiiie !n111rr111Ce llld'Tnnt
~·ms wife's name Is Peggy.Ann
tllee TAUBMAN, p, .. !)
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ORANGE COUNTY, .CJ.IJFOaNIA
. ' ' ' '
' ' :rAURSDA t; J.~11; t, '1970 ..
•
··-· . .
N. V -8'Rfr• • ' •
.T9r CINTS
... ·' ~· -·· 't' • ~ f" ~ "';. .. ~ •
Airpo~t Action, 'Chided· .
Sfa:te Likes 'Mile Square lorf:lanes' Vse
~ ' . ;
By TERRY COV!tLE
Of .. Detty ,.,.. ......
Several county officlals feel the state
Board or A.er9f!.autiq may be "going
baclc on !Is word" with 'I' -t effort
to keep Mile Square as an 'airpiOrt
possibility in Fountain Vall<y.
"It's a kind of surprisilig .tum or
events. It just might boR down tc 'who
controls what,'' was t.he rtsponse cf Pete
Moore, executive assistant to Orange
County Supervisor Dave Baker.
.His reaction was typical.or spokesmen
for the three supervl90fS '\Wlo had sup-
ported the plea ol the Fountain Valley
Politicians'
SchOol Dillrlcl lo. eliminate-Mlle Square dropped plam•lo sludy II !« ~ alrporl. •
'""" cooslderallon as a future airport. said Ralph Siem. executlVe wla'911 Ip Meaday, a spokesman for the Supentaor Robert ·BaU.., • ' , ••"""""lies board indlcated .the stale Tiie lul ......... f!h .cll the lelter, ;i...,.
milbt, i_. the board ol lll(>Orvisors F~. l,~lflO, and ll)ldnaed lo 111,ie
an4 pep lllle·Sq\!are open u a potenUal ~ llol>ert -(llr\!'I>'
air:pod.._. ·---• -~· ti .. B&cb.l, ~:. • ,-f' 1
"II bu IOOCi J>O(enliol and we -.Jd "rtllle~bl<let ....... -.
hate to see It lost as an airport llte,1• pl"n ot ~e~ DDt, • -tbe
Hlll"Oid Woodward, a '°""'l"'M lo the a~ (lllle lquatt) in Ila -;rlao, ""1
aerooa...., board, said. tho tl:S. ,Marine Corpo wlll _,. thly
"We bave a lettu &om tho.lllale board h'" no-future ftxed w1Jr1 aiNNlt • ol
pnmiain(f lo ri...... its decision on Mlle tHe field, the deportmelil (of •a-)'
square and the school district's request would certainJy reverse it.I cleclslon."
!or • acbool, u the board of auperv!Sorl Siem aild Jhe lttW WU """* by
Year in .Jell, . . . • .
Jooepll c..w, diJecto< ol tbe ...,.._
ol IHlrOMulles.
Crotti has not been available fGr mm--
ment ttUs weet. Heb IQ in Sao:•nwnto.
!ndlcatlona Iha! the board m1pt -
the ICbool dbtrlct's reqUUI fer a -9ilt in the fllg!Jt poll<rn of tbe ..,_
airport came from other "'8clil•.
.' loho Klllefer, oecutlve ...tttat te
s_.i.or A1loa Allen, said Alleor-d
brini the maller up at-.thl -ol supervisors' meellni Tueaday JI 110
decjslon •as made by lbe llate.
"Who in hell b running lhla eOwity ,"
(Set· AIRPOllT, ~ ll
Nixon :Plans.·' .
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Pole Signs Mu·rder-f or-Hire More Troop .-• •
'Home Free' W·ithdrawaf,s
The city stall is "winking" al the hun-Sen te·nc· ·e G' •• ven· . . "WASHINGTON (UPI) -~
dreds of poliUcal posters en trees and Nilcn 'will make a nationally tetevmit
ulilily poles in HunUnglon Beach. address on Vietnam -Tbunday niltit.
"We don't have the ~er to.keep ll)e .White Houie amJOuneeci tMM., He II A'hairdrtutr'whcfwaa eodvicted'of{of. ment of Correctlons tor a pr--·~rn· g ....,., taking them down," city engineer Bill ·~1"' expected to annomcer • fui'tber iJ.s. troop Hartge said today. "We have this pro-lering ff,SOO .fir 'tbe,murder ot ~his 'g:iil study. withdrawal. .. .. • friend has been aentenced lo one year in ' .~I .jury accepled lelllmony lhlt
hblem e
1
vedry election. We loand~~ 1t:atrOOI Orange CM••ty Jail :and placed on lhrto Reed offered $1,lOO lo 1 ...., be believed Press Secretary Ropal~ L. Ziesi« aald
ave o OIJe our eyes '"~ s tuaticn ..... .,.. to be a drifter but w'ho w~ actually· t the speech, on rad.10 11 wen'11 televil:icin,
and wait until afttt the election is over years probaUon. HuntlnP,>n Beach pollCe inveltiptor for would be.at a p.ni. ;PST Apr!· I' (i ~ .. ~
for the canddates ~ their supportera to ·Superior COurt Judie R a y;m.o•n d the kllllilg via a Staged hit' U([' rua ac--PJII them down." Thompson's tentendng of Richard David cident of Mlsa Ducketl , .\ . would concern Mllon'1 dedlion 'tn'\'")ft..
1be offenders are breaking two lawi: Reed, 21, cf Garden'Grove, means thar Of!ice:r .Geqe.Pool'assured Reed there nam ~ leyels. • · • ~ _
the state !orblda any otgna being fixed lo · . · would be no.prpblem in cmying out the Tiie ~ will eome one day allet, Ille
utility poles and a city ordinance pr<>-~"will aerv~ four mo•tha inrt!it 8Mt8 eiecuttnn cf Mlas Duckett and plcted a l.11teet"' .......... of tbe ..-.....~ .. , ( · hibits the Ille of trees. , Ap• jail. The judge credi~ the de!e• desertld-secto< ol .llulliard, Street In c ,._ • ..--troqp.pilloul
Neither la• is being ·enforced, although d;mt with. eight months alread~ lpOllt in. f:owilain Valley for '. the, aceoe. of the ~ ~ lul ,year by lf!l!!!!.l• lo
the stale Di~ ol Hi(l!ways called the cul!lodY.. . • • " ~-.He .-~. bool\Od Reed • "' • tpe 1 • """.'l'leledi ~~:::t: ~-:a;ali;r~a-r ,, ..1~ · • ~';} =:r.:~'1.-~r·,,...~ ~'"":1~'!'? tt:rmnV: -an! aod 0. y. -' , . ' • ' . :i:;~ ..... ..-.tu .;;;;;r'"' mliiiii< "' lbO -m 'to 4$1 otio • ...,, u • M fast u · we p1liiil' them down OOckett. "'4 hnnwl!Alely lillpiJDdell *"1ill oh MlU illcMU aJll.~•'c!oilr . .,.,. __ , _ ' "' -..,--. ·
someone would stick thml up aiain,'' thatW.:brfaWof1thejailtutaee.A lect.ail '• triple indemnJtJ,~Dutuc. ,,..... ~ reporten ~t the~
llarl&'! Mid. "11'1 Jilli OOllMljhlof .wi Superlar >.-,_,,-•toled llled1lul pol!cy lie .kid' in !be Intended vlcllm'a denttwnled lo update lill •,.wt, Iii a.
h&ve .IDlmwilhf«aiew_.edays." Nov •. I and be n. -lo !be llePart· nall>t. nallciionCoodllloplln~-ampll-
·.The •lectioa· is Tllelday. f1inl hfi earlier polJey l(afemenll. ·
Valley Planners
Delay Decision
On Town Houses
Resident.. concerned · about crowded
schools won a delay Wednesday night 1on
the Larwin Company's request to expand
its Tiburon town bouae development id ·
Fcuntain Valley.
The city's planning commission agreed
to wait unW April 22 to make a decision
on Larwin'• request for R·2 (light deDli-
ly) wnlng on property ~ or its cur-
rent Tiburon development along
Brookhunt Street.
"Gisler School Js 1lready" overcrowded.
If yoo allow more town houses it will be
an impoulble situation," said Sonny
Bass, 1043& Thrush Ave.
Town hou.1t units on R·2 land prcduce
abcut twice the number of homes as
normal R-1 (single family homes on in-
dividual loll), according to city plarmers.
John Tapking, representing Larwin
Company, argued that statistics show
town Muses producing the same number
o( children as Mrinal homes, while
paying higher taxes.
But lhe 10 or 15 residents present
refused to 1CCt:pt his fJiures and asked
that the ~ be delayed .. morl!
residenb could apreu their views.
Both lhe commission and Tapkill(
agreed there ·would be no problem in
delaying the zone chall&" requell.
Steek Jlfarfcet•
NEW YOJUl (APi ..-' Prices on the·
stock market were miied late this · aftet·
noon In Ugh! trading. (See quotalion!,
Pages 21-23).
Simon 'In Step'
Last Candidates Forum
Friday in Huntington .
With the Huntiqton Beach·coundl race
now in the 1Lretch1 voters get their last
chance Friday night to see all 11 can-
dldales campaigning together.
The League of Womea Voters 1wlll ptJt
On a candidates'' fair at the Hu0Ungto11
Center Mall, E<Unger Avenue and Beach
Boulevard, from 7 p.m. to JO p.m.
Mrs. Comella Johnson said a festive air
will be i11troduced to balance the
seriousness of the occasion. "It won't be
all poll tics," she said. · "We'll hve
balloons, bunUng and music."
Eaclt caltdldate will be i• a booth from
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. to all!Wer iesidents'
questions. Afterward they will gc le a
podium and give three-minute presenta-
tions of their policies.
Also available at the fair will be a
Proclamation T ime
In Huntington Beach
The city cf Huntington Beach is doing
a lot of proclaiming these. daya.
This week Mayor Jack Green i.aued
seven official proclamaUons: Chlmber
of Commerce week, Apr.il 5-11; Lile In-
surance Week, ,April ~ta; AJr Force
Week, April , 12-19; Multiple SrJerosis
Mopth, M•r llHt;.Bu<!<ly Poppy Days, May.22-23; Municipal CJukJ Week,,May
17-23 arid a proclamation hpncring Wyn
Sargent for the volunteer organization
the Huntington Beach woman has set up
lo help the Oyat people5 ol Borneo.
gyesilonnaire giving_ t.h e candidates'
teapOn9eS 'to civic Issues. The league
prtnted 3,500 copies of the questlolmalre.
Entertainment fer the flnt part of the
evening will be provided by the "Guns
a11d Garters," a folk da11ce group, tl)e
'
1F.em .Four-Fclk Singers" and the
"Mad!1gal Consort." a group of students
from Edison High School.
Beach Man, 21,
Seriously Burned
A 21-year~ld Huntington Beach man Is
listed in "serious" condlticn at Orange
County Medical Center today suffering,
from burns received whll.e melting paraf.
fin en a kitchen stove.
Ronald Tomes, 8196 Pawtucket Drive,
received first and second degree burns
over his face , hands, arms and legs 1s
he dropped a naming pot ol wu: when
tryln1 to carry It outside. ,
Fire Capt. James P. Vincent, uid
Tomes ran through the fire and extln-
guhhed the. flames on his bcidy by mm.
ing on the shower. .
The 5:50 p.m. fire . also caused..apprG;I:·
imately $550 damage to the kftchen Ind
cabinet!, inve'.sUg,ators said. ·
Vincent · th~ed that Tomes might
ha.ve been healing the 'wu f0r.'1ppllca.
tion lo a surlboard Gr perhapo for mllln(
caiK!les. • ' .
Ty~_oon · Dise:n:~ses
.. . .
Race ·
' 'I' • ' •• .. •••
Fnm Wire SUvlcea Fuu.rton and several other firms, aajd he • Simon !Old reiiortm be cledded lb iun
W A s H !NGTON -MulUmU!ionalre Is iligned with Prealdent Nison on both. agal111I Murphy at the lasl minule Iii
N~ !old ne"'1"". at an """""I
news cori1......,. Mardi 21 that Viel-
nanuatlon -the admlnlltrldoa farm fGr
lurninC a largtr burden ol ihe -o..r
lo the Soulll Vietnamtoe -WI" pro.
arelling well and be aa11 at ·-lime
nothing to ·slow the fate· fi _TlJ:S.
withdrawals.
Nixon has «dered three pilales ol
withdrawal so far, reduciJW Ille autboriz.
ed llreiglh of U.S. !oroeo Jn Vietnam by
some 115,000, The' actual number or
lroopl•to be palled out aa ol a -ir.m
Wedilnday is expeded to be about
105,000.
Nixon &MOUOC'ed the first i&,ooo.m.n
reducUon in the ceiling last Jtine and
subsequenUy ordered two mon recR-
llons. •
Gen. William C. W-land, lormor
Vietnam commander who ts now the
Army chief of slall, and Gen. Q'dcblaa
W. Abrams, currently Ure U.S. .....,,_
mander in Vietnam, hav.e , (a.wed a
slowdown in ,the wkbdrawal .beca111e.ci
an Increase in Cammunilt acW~ty. _ •
Zie1ler aaid the President's dedlion on
a !ourlb pllaae ol the wilhcrawal ii !iued
en "going consultatio n •"' wHb
Ambaaado< Ellsworth Bunker and Gen.
Abrams in Saigon and l'ifh v.s. planners
in the Penlqon and Aid Nixon had no
plans lo meet pe-.il!y with Bunker and
Abrams before April 1e.
Bunker is schedu'lid1 to return to tbt
United Slates in 1'4&y for extenilve .,,.,.
su!taUcns oo Vietnam.
Four Anny units are !Cheduled to leave
Vietnam Friday u part o! the lhlrd-
pbue, 50,000 man withdrawal. '!be tolal
nmnber in the units ts S,280.
Or ange
•
Weat•er .
The morning fOfl will come In
patchea and go in a hurry ll'rlday,
mating way for sunny aklel and
temperatures aoaring up to lbe
70'• alone the Orang~.~ _
INSm E TOD~Y
Th< '"°"""' of truth fl!' Judge Cariwetl came abotl:t
California poUUcar candidate Norton ''MUJ"P!IY is !11uch ~e of a haw~ than . .order ~~give CaUfm-qians a choice ·tn tbe
Sinlol¥1al<l befe loday Iha! he•ll.~ fla1Pft--.:-·~•ritirliil1M ~ · ~ ··.~·r...s: ,, . , -mQni~ step '!Ith Preai<Uot N~~ / lliafNJUn,:=~~nifii'o«<', ~Hi:an-,'"'!""""l!n~. •
ihirtt1 mtnuh!'s bt/ort tlw~ S,.
ote voted ond the rcntlt mar be
the majo"'r jcJl campcdgn. tu1i11.
Pagt 12,
the mon be hopes to bea,iir!Ju!le. I , ~ . " • •. So · llr. ~ \Wllit', -•! ""'" tho
Tbt U.year..td bail 01n•an dllCUllied · He atlo . · ,the .~'s Repubibn.iNaUlneV.COlnadttM,.u.wen
his opp;altion loS...Alo!: .. 1Miaph)'('!-·ec-lc·piijlt!!;]*iioc;fho ~t \I aa·Gov. Ranald ·ll<-'ba'lO rsnained
Calif.) ln tlie' Repub11C.ft' primary at a . w~l1<ing •'Veri"'ieiteole'~lle. " . net!jrtl• t 1 '· , • ' •
news conltreoce.. -' ,_ ; Slillon llltdedUilat J¥11cli •mon efflcioncy ~l'!rqo II ·:~ high. ""'°Pl• dropout wl\<'
Vietnam and domeltic;;ecooilmy w•re Is needeH" gev~ • I 1 • am!"'!'ll a foriune ~illjid by somo ~s
pnrnilnenlly .....-. ·1 belle•e In a coWolill"" ~ high &1"ltt10•mill.l(ln<antt'is1now'liead .Ol
Simon, whole enormous financial tm--syttem 1& oppOltd ~ htttutk!Mllsm," the Norton SliionfF~. wN;h *'
pire formerly Included Hunt.Food• Inc. of ·he aaldl · · ·1• • '> ,• : lel:la and_. ~o( art. , · •
.. -..... .
' (
• ·' I • I
·.
•
'-
l ~YJ'ILOT .-
' . Ca n dida1tes · ·-·
·•
J
• •
• Rebert Terr11 • Gardon Batch • Roger D. Slate•
ROBERT C. TERllY: fresldenl o( aalo ~:' ti:·~:'i~S:
Ctns!nl, eU!rmu ol llonlOWD l'roper-tJ Onen Auoclatlta. Married, age IL
GORDON R. HATCli: Pnoildeol of Ille
Bwitia&loa Harbour Property Often
Auocladoa, lw beta claalrmu of a zone
and vartuce comm.Ihle, owa a drq
·-· Married wllll ..... ·~· &&• ...
ROGER 1). SLATES: Cbllrman of
pluninr ('Oml!lhlloll, Or a n 1 e Coua·
ty Ah-port CommJuioMr, chalnnan of
city's UadergrGund UUUtiet Comml11ion,
past prtlldeat of Chamber or Commerce,
~ GI Bean fl Realtors. Realtor,
monkd w1111 -ddkl. Ap <t. SHoW fll..,,..I ~lllo!lt fw 1lio
eopltol .,....._,..,....hie-..
oll .ev.-ee tax •ltd/• lf'Oll recelptl Sboold Jluactn1 for the capital iJD.. Sbould flnanclng: for I.be _capital Im·
M•bsR tu? Befort we «ft dtdde on•-. proveiueatl 'program laclude 18 oU provemeats program include an ell
tu, we DIUll dodde U !here It • -' fof'. ,.v--•·· --'/ I •· seva'iutft: tax aDCl/or .--"""'" .... ._e .....,. .au or tros• re« p ... one. which I feel there lm't at thiS time. ...... • ..... .,.. baslaeu tu? Over-simplltied questJons
If lhef< la,• need for addlUonal money, bqolllen io,i I will nq_t moke a decision like thae,qulek!y -ale qualllled can-
that 1»otJt tua ~d be passed filer a on this UDtll I ·bfve aen the facts from didatt1 from well ean1ng amateurs. Any
aiiecllle pltft of .,im1n1strallon la qreed the Systems and Data Proceo.slag Com-definitive response ahead of the council
llpom by all partl•. · mittee that was appointed by the council study by financial experts would show a
·Top'oltlll Pllr Dew"'-1 Plu: I do lo stud .. Y fin. anc'"" methocb. · clOHd mind on a vital problem. Mt OppOle the 11Top of the Pier Plaa" u .. ,.
a bu!C plan for redevelopment of Top or &be. Pier Developraeat Plu: Top ti.~ Pier Dtve)opmtat Piii: The
dowDtown. J do object IO the laklnl of Hlmtlngtoo Beoeh, with all Ila open Top-o(-the·Pler pllO is mort lhao a park-
pr!vatt property for a parklne lot for space, ahould keep pace with the srowth Ina: iot· 1 canoot favor city CODdemnaUon
Vlallon 1D the bu<h. '!'ht property In o! Oraap County. Our city needa 0 for parklpg until every reasooablo
dantown ·abouJd be redeveloped b7 lta development procram almilar to the one alternative has been exhausted. However, .-n wllb suJd .... "1 the city only. thal la btlnr·p.._..t by tho Top of lhe the down\Own aru hu Wldenlable major
The condemn•Uon of the mOlt ICenia ud Pier Pip; However, indlv1duall should problems; and on· balance, I believe that
vahuble pi<>perty in Huntiftlton Btach not suffer financially nor lhould larp we have made an excellent begtnnlne.
for·an aiphol! juncJe la pure ftnlaly. '!'ht companies benefit from eondamnallon. The btach parking !J a well lhousht-oul
people Jn downtown are movlnl ahead to 'lbe catalyst to ltimulate indmtry and and construetlve project I am not cer-
clevelOp !Iii property tbemselv.,, with en--mUJI btJln la the dmilown taln that the 111boequtnl steps have been
courapment from. the city. 1" Pi!n· ~ ·area. We mull act ncnr lo prqvkie a eolu. given the same thorough evaluation.
".'erJ' .-nI and with IOme 1pedflc Plan: tkift for 'Parkin& and trifnc flow u · well u There is much more that the city ·c111 -
,..; In _,_ with the pn>ptrly modlly """""-' thal wlD allow private and mUJI -do. But we must ml rusli in-
_,, could btcome very workable. devtlopmenl to proetOd. IO procfpltole oeUon without c.,.efuJ con-
llllek ne-•-, t: ~ac.1~11evetop. ., sldertUoo of all factors Involved.
monl allould eollllat ol leoUon, 'ibou 0 ~ ~ o1 lbil',D!uoble -Devolopmeol: llY .approach ID . ....,._, .. ~=-1: Hunlinllon Beach< _.; t.
claanup, Ud . ~~ol I h • .-1. lal~!llil<lnr f.,... mu;¢ 4 .~vejO;ilieol parall;li my vlt'" on
facllltJa. ~ ~1 not ·be .;W..,iiiht; The tieach area mi!Bt not oRly. other jlrobtems. I advocate ·a cooperaUve
allowed .. tho uh Iha\.. ""'' the ~. seil-lupporllog, bul It should con-program lhat respects property rights,
Ullble beach or rotrlctl ·the 101nlc tribut.e' ~ubstanUally to Uie economic base but ensures Ulat the rights of the com-
vitw of paaertby. Tht beach ii our ma-or the city. Our beaches should be muntty are equally ~ted. The role of
jar &Net and 1bould be treated u such. cultivated ud protected for the \lie of rovemment should be to plan, to en-
Any parklnl for I.he beach should be. : all. • courage, to stimulate -and cnly as a
located at Jeut two blocks in from · tbt· i last resort, to usurp private rights. This
beach not on the beach. If t.heJ1unUn1to1 Cleanup of Oil WeD1: The oil industry policy has already proven its merit.
Stach Co. t>elCh property ii to be has been good fOf' the city of Huntington Unlike our neighboring beach cities, the
pUrchuad it thould 'be done by the rtate Beach and ii 1t.UJ a very vital induatry entire length or our db''• beaches is
lince all people ua it and control placed ! for the future. I commend the proereu of ·read Uy aeceulble to public -use and en-
in the hands of the city. : the operators in attempUng to elinUnte joyment. J would continue such a balanc-
Cleanp ef OU Welll : I thlRk an orderly ·the blighted areas. However, to keep ed policy. I oppose any additilonal
cleanup of tbe oil field• in this tranaiUon pace wilh the future erowth of the city, a burdens on our city's tupayers to pro-
period ta: very tmportut. Any code that conUnued effort 11 required. Our 10lutton vlde r•alonal recn:aUonal faclUUes. Is wrtU.0 bould bt done with the help of is nol lo.auppr111 the oll lndUJlry but to
the oil Industry '° that the code wtU be auure 1trJct e n for c e m e 1 t of oil
'lforkable. We mfllt be cartful not to over ord.inancea,
pentJiJe the small owner 50 that he facea Central Part: We mu1t give our at-
fiD&odal ruln wlille others are not al-tenUon to development of the Central Cl-
fectld at all. ty Park 11 it wfU mot de~ltely be a
Ct1tral Park: The Central Park is a highlight of Uie city. However, let us not
great Idea and now thsl the bonds are cverlook smaller park sites that are an
IOld wt lhould move •head aa soon as integr:il part Qf our qeighborhood living. poalble.
Qaqt1 I Would Uke to See: Jt would Cbuge1 I would like to tee: city ape•-
bt eound planning to locate the civic ding -I most certainly agree wlth the
center aQ1f the library In close prolimlty jlrogreasiVe · developmt11t of our city but
to tbt CentraJ Park. Thera couldn't be a urge cauUon. The reckleu attitude of
more beauUful 1etUn& for t!le civic center Mayor Jack Green can only put Hun·
tbu out to the park, looking out over it tington Beach into 1 prngram ot deficit to the new Bolll Chica development and spending and irresponsible leadarahlp.
tbe ~a beyond. The extend of our capital lmprovementl
must be govtr"ed by our income and not
by the WU'easonable demand.1 that Mr.
DAILY PILOl
NAJtol (OAIT l"!Ja\AHINO CQMl'AKY «•"•f'f N. WM4
~W..I _, P1*1lfw
•Jilk •· C11rl1y
,,, •••• KH•il
EdOll"
Tlio11111 A. Mvr,dii111
M-._1"1 Eilllw
Alb1rt W. 11!11
A•..S.19 Editor
H•-""t" .._.. Offlc1
11175 kulri l1ul1•1•lll
M1ili11t ,Yllt1N1 P~O. I•• 1f0, tJ•~• --1.. • .-1•••111• m ""'"' A-u• c:.i. M-J 1" Wot llY SlrNI
.......... llidll )ill WHI 11 .. l S .... itv.•• ... °"'*""' 1111 Nerllil II temllll ltttl
Green would like to lmpc»e on our
busin '5S and lndumial c o m m u n l t y .
Buslness and Industry • 8ullneN and in·
du.e:try bring employment and tu reveaut
to our city. Tbe amount of tuu we must
pay depend oa how much lndUltry wt can
allra~t Through the leadmhlp ol lhe el·
ty government, I believe that a more ac·
Uvt recruJUn1 P">il'M> should bt In-
stituted.
Wb)' I am 1 eudld.ola: Havin( been
active several yean ln civic affa1r1, l am
runniag for city council as a conc1med
taxpayer. Be.ing a local bulineaaman, I
bow a favorable bullnes1 climate i1
itecessary for the cmmunlty to pro1per
a11d develop. The combination of our
beautiful Jong coastline and open space:s
should challenge and h1spire an open·mln-
ded, progressive City Council and prop.
e:rt.y ownen, to work together to develop
a community worthy of our lfUl beaches
and ever.e:q>andina: population. 1 pled&e
mysell to ~ for lhll IOll. . ,
Cleuup of OU W1U.: 1be cleanup and
renovation of our oilfield area:i must be a
Continuing major eUort in our com·
muntty. Government mult lead insetting
standards and msurln& that industry
meets or exceeds these mlnlm.ums. As
plaoolng commlaelon chairman, I have
conunually aupported a cooperaUve effort
between the public and private secto111 to
a;bate this problem. The responsible com-
panies have been willing to do thelr part,
and more. New pollcles are needed that
will actively encourage this type of
positive response to the community's
needs.
Central Park: Fub.lre gentraUons will
consider the central park their most im-
portant. heritage. Our community pride
should encourage us to seek out other
such legacies.
CUqet I Woold lae lo Sot: I woold
like to see changes in the dtrecUon of in·
creued puticlpation in dty covernment
by all dtbtn.s. We are a diverse com-
munity: and we must seek out addlUonal
ways to utlllu the talents and energies of
all O'OlJPC who can contribute to a com·
mon goal -a better Huntiqton Beach.
Wby I Am o C.ndldole: Very simply, I
want my boy to grow up in the best city
possible. My family and my bua\ness
have prospered moderately with the
growth of aur city. I believe that my ex-
perience and past civic involvement.I
have now quallfled me to serve the city
in return. 1 am not a rerorm candidate:
generally, we have been well served by
our past leaders. However. major prob-
lem areas remain. and I wish to assist
in finding the best solutions. Huntington
Beach is a 1ood place to live -my aoal
ts 1o 11111<1 II a btlter place io· ll,..
YMCA to Teach Surfing
Teach\ni 111rfin1 In HuntlnlU>n Buch
may bt \Ike etl'l'Ylnl ... 1a IO Newcullt,
bul !hot ii tuctb WMI the IDUI YMCA
plans to do thls Mnmtr.
"We lhou.ght It w11 a shame that no
one. \l'aa te•chlna It IO we dtcldtd to be-
ll• a courae," nplalll<CI lllchard Col\alo,
lhe VMCA'1 txeeuU .. dlr.c10r.
The COW'lf, llaled lo 1U11 from JU11t
-,
15 lhnlulh July 10, will cover 1urflnl
1klll1, board care ind rtpalr, surf aafety,.
wave 1enH •nd ctDIU'UCtion of boardl. ln1tnK:tor will be John G1blt, a com-
peUUvt surfer. Hi• cla11 will be open to
adulis as well u boys and ctrll over 12.
Realttrat.lon fee, which tncludes the
use of boards, ls M for Y·mtmber1 and
•to for r19n-member1.
Jnqulrlff m11 be d I rt c l t d to the
'YMCA, J7931 Beach Boulevard, 847-M?.
•
--. ' -
Pr1• Pqe I
AIRPOR'l'-•..
.... wa KIDt!1r'• npl1' to the appamit
revonal ol tbouPI' oo the part ol the
stato board. '
.,U.O·-... ll*"t -ftlcll ..
•nmortd MUI ~ fJom COUl!\J -
~ u , aq1 al11>0rt. He joined !f!rv!1¥1 ~-ancl Ballen. I
·• We'l-e 'notlbOUt to force an airport on
lhe people of Fountlln Valley who bough!
homes there tblnkinl of Jdil• Square as a
rt!glona l park," Ki11tler added. .
'l1ie U.S. Marine Corps liU a)sii wrUten
letters to the board of aeronautics sup-
porting the school district's plea for a
school site, saying there would be no
future conflict betnen • 1Cbool and
Marliit u., of the hellcOpllr llctlily al
H1H Mile jquare. • . '
Woodwi.rd aakt the lite Would be fine
for a small airport with nothing larger
than twin engine craft and used by,
"private individual.&, air laxi service and
.a few ·companiu."
He aald a flnal decision has not been
made, but would be within the week.
Mrs. Mary }lix, who organized the
Citizens Againll Air Parks (CMP) in
Fountain Valley, said ber group thought
everything waa fbllsbed, but could be
•·reacuvated again U necessary."
"We bad about 300 members passing
petlUons. We still have those petlt.ions
with e,ooo signatures on the_m. The
cilizenl could really aet up in arms
again," she sald. City offlclals also Indicated they are
ready to flght another battle if the state
board opposes the school site. "We'll have
to see what ba~ns," said , Mayor
Ed\'iard Just, "we ceru.inly don t want
an airport there."
l'rotta Page 1
SCOTT ...
or industry that is desirable for our cily.
J will continue to support the efforts of
the industrial committee and the staff for
developing the ·industrial area. ·
"Durinl the fJve months I have been m
the coo11.dl we set a minimum lot size of
6 000 square feet for planned develop-~entl and retained the concept of 7,200
square feet as the standard lot for
residential development
"We have abo reduced the total apart·
ment potential ·in the city from 40 percent
to 21 percent of the total possible living
units.
"I am allo convinced that v;•e can ob-
tain high quality commercial develop-
ment, compatible with our residential
areu."
Some changes Scott says he would like
to see 111. the dly include :
-Some large commercta1 develop-
ments that would attract other people to
the city to shop.
-A central city park large enough to
accommodate ball diamond•, football
fields, picnic and barbecue area!.
-More help :Jor realdf:nta of Juarez.
Colony,
-An eiptnded recreational program
for older youth.
Scott'lives with his wife, Marcella, and
their a1J children at 1Mi75 Spruce Circle.
They have lived six years In the city,
"[ hope my · conduct In office, my
voting, as well as my efforts to establish
two-way commuoication between mysel!
and the cltizena of Fountain Valley, have
illustrated my concern and have helped
restore confidence in city gov(:mrnent,"
Scott say1.
-
Narco Suspect
I
Valle Man Bela--·
A Fo.unt.aln Valley man who allq:edly
attempted &o run dov.u a detective with
his car durin1 a Laguna Beach narcotlca
raid Tueoday nigh!, will bt cbarged \jllh
assault with a deadly weapon, police saJd
loday.
Laguna Beach narcotic,, o ff 1 c e r s
Norman Bobcoel< and Ntll Pureell, ac-
companied by Tustin Pollct.lltparUnent
detective Fred Krasco, were conducting
an invesUgation on Rl.mrock Road when
the incident occurred, the o f f i c e r 1
reported.
Fro'" P .. e 1
TAUBMAN •••
and they live at 11732 Redwood St. with
two children ages aeyen and six.
Taubman has beea a Fountain VaUey
residen t for four years.
"'Rather than instituting change, my
concern lie• in keeping what wt have. I
would liie to see ua concentrate on llow·
ing down our rapid growth UJiUl wt take
stock of what we're lqlinc la needed
recreational areu.
"Most of us moved from hectk,
polluted cities to a quiet, uncrowded,
family community. J'd like to keep it that
\\'ly," Taubman says.
Ore Freighter Sinks
GENOA, llaly (UPI) -A British ore
rrtlghter, buffete4 by near-hurrlcane
winds, sank today off the port of Genoa
arter unsuccessful efforts by Italian tug1
to pull It free from a breakwater.
AutboritJes said at Jeast three perlOn•,
two ol them women, dled and another
four were mJsalnc. At JeaSt lS · men
aboard were washed ashore alive t1t pick-
ed up from stormy s.eas.
When Kruco approached ancl ldenllf\cd
himaelf u a pollce officer, driver Dawson:
Eugene • 'Ibomp.,on, 20, · sudden]3 :10.:
celerate4 his car, thtn stopped, Police'
said. Purcell then approached and asked
the man to stop his motor. In.stead, snld
the o!ficer, Thompson again accelerated,
aimed ·bls..car at Kruoo, who ,..-"flk..:
In( IO the other licle, and for<ocl him ID
leap out of the way as the car sped off on
'Rirr.rock, turned south on Temple Hiiis
Drivt and finally slammed into a
guanfrall. • ·
College Awaits
.Legal Opinion
On Resignation
•
Orange Coast Junior College Distrlcl.
Chancellor Norman Wa'-'on said today he
expecta legal · opJrUon within the next
week on the resJgnaUon of diatrict board~
member Georee Rodda, Jr. -i
Rodda .ubmitted his reslenation at the
March 11 board meet1n1· in ordtr to
become a member of the le,UlaUve ..
cooncll of the American AuociaUoa tr.·
Junior Colleges.
Dr. Wataon said the Orange County.
Counsel '• office is reviewing Rodda'• "'-
pointment to the council to see if bJs..
re1ignation ii neceuary. ;"
"I suppose you could aay that his '
re<rnallon hu DOI been finalized uni!!,,
we bear from county cwnsel," Wat.OD-. said. ,_.
ll<>dda 11id he originally tendered 1111 '
rtslgnaUon from tf1e boai-d because tk!: •
felt there would be a confilct betweai the 1
two jobs.
Under the state Educ11tton Code; :
trustees have 60 days to appoint Rqdda'I ·
replac.ement. "We expect the county
counsel to include a ruling on a time llmJ t:
for a replacement. if he finds th•* Rodda
should resign,'• the chancellor noted. ,
Fro'" Page I
MANGANO ...
terim uti liiation of some industrial
parcels.
"I support any official action 1hat
would substantially reduce the develop-
ment density as well as the 1umber of
apartment1unlts pros:ioled for ourcom-
munlty. I om oppoatd lo any apartment
· complex beinf built nut to slnl)t family
r~dence1 · unleu adequate buffer ionet
are rtlldly 1111_.i.
"I woUld irlltlate an offlclal 'Buy 111
Fountain Valley ' campaign to lncrta1e
our revellue from city 1ale1 tar.
"I alao would maintain strict adherence
to the R-1 7,200 square-foot lot and the R-
I PD 7200 requlreme.nll."
Mangano, 48, lives at' 9llOS La Gr111acla
SL His wife's aame ls Carmelita and they
have two daughters ages 21 and 19. He is
a starf writer at Douglas Aircraft Co~;·
Long Beach. '
Mangano listed the rollowing changes ·
and goals 1le would like to see ac--
compllshed ii elected to the counc:1l:
-An agreement with the Automobile
Ctub of Southern CalUonla to conduct •·
survey of tratfM: needs In the ctty. '
--Oppose all alrporto.
-Utilize all fl11anclng program a~
available to the city for purchasin&
parkl, and maintain a well-balanced pro..+
gram at all Umea for community cltlzen10 ~
·-Allow citizens to speak on·•on agenda-.:
It.ems at city council meetings. .
-Declare a moratorium on apartmeall
and gUollne: 1tat10DJ until a subltanUal;
population increase dicta tea their need.· ;
............ ~
Your Jovorllt fnt£rior dtifgnrr will br hom to c.tsi.st iiou, •• -
PROFESSltt~J.GARRETf ·fURNIT~,~~IOR ILVO INT!RIOR DISl&NlRS o,_ MN. ,,,.,,. a l'rl 1-COSTA MESA, CALIF.
641-0275 646·0271
•
-.. • r • •
•
.·Ne rt Beaeh . T.o6y'a .n..t
....... # • ' ' N.Y. St1di• • ~ • • ~
t "" , ;:
County Reaffirms Back Bay Sw~p -
By JACK BROBACK
Of .... lteltr ~·-"'" County supervisors and a hearing room
packed with interested Harbor Area
residents struggled for almost four hOUJ"S
\Yednesday over the Upper Newport Bay
land exchange agreement with the Irvine
Company. .
The .result was 3-2 vote to upho)d the
agreement and neither renegotiate Jt or
kill.ii.
As the argument stands now with the 3-
2 standoff, I\ 111111 be Up lo the COUrU lo
determine the final outcome. '!be else
comes up in Superior ~ June 18 but it
could be several years before the issue is
finally resolved.
There is the possibility of a change in
the board's 3-2 stance, also. Hirstein is
not running for rte.lecUon and his sue.
cessor will take office next January.
Punctuating the argumentJ were con-
stant references to "tub" -on the part
of the supervisors. For e.1ample:
Meet Candidates
On April 14, NetopOTt Beach voters will elect /OUT mtn to the 1ewn·
member City Council. The four couneilmanic diltricts that will be on the bal·
lof are district& I (Balboa and Newport Pier oreaJ, 3 (Lido Isle, Bayshores
and Newport Heights), 4 (West Bluff and Back Bau area) and 6 (oldtr sections
of Corona del Mar and eastern port of Irvine TeNace), De spite the district
dt.rignatio·ns, voters throughout the city will be able to cast ballots for one
candidate in each race. The DAILY PIWT i.s presenting que1tion-and-answer
articles on all the candidates, district by district. Today is district 6. Some of tM questions were asked of the candidatts bt1 the DAILY PlWT, ot!ttrs
were asked in a League of Wot'!Wi Voters' ql:U'ltionnatre.
Aynes Encouraging· Youth
Candidate James P. Aynes Jr. says
he hi: campaignJng tG get young adults
involved in poJIUcs. He believes his pres-
ence on the city council would encourage
young people to take more interest in
city government. Avnes . a Vietnam vereran, Is %5 years
otd: He is a aophomore at Orana:e Coast
College where he is majoring in political
science. He says he has lived 1n ,New-
part Beach most of his 15 years.
His father, James P. Aynes Sr., was
going to run for the city council but
found out be was toelig!ble because he
hadn't been a regiStered voter ln the
city Jll01'qUired three ,..,., So , .....
Jr. toak a., the nee. ..
Here Is ).,,; Aynes raponded lo ...,,.
supervisor Willlam J. Phillips (who
with 111pervisors Alton E. Allen and
William Hirstein cast the three votes to
sustain the ei:cbange ·agreement): "We
are really talking about breaking a C!lCl-
tract and there is no moral or legal basis
for such action. We must have the guts to
stick to our agreeme.IJt."
Supervilc>r Robert W. BaWn (who with
supervl!or David L. Baker voted to kill
the ei:change agreement): "Talking about
gub, we should haVe the guts to stand up
* * * Ma.son Glad
At County
Vote on Bay
By THOMAS MIJRPIDNE
Of t11t ~ Pli.t II•"
Irvine . COmpany Prealdent William
Muon' was pleased and opponents of
the Upper Newport Bay land swap were
dismayed.
That was reaction today to the coun-
ty Board of Supervisors' S to J Vote en-
dorsing the bay trade.
"Naturally I'm pleased with the out-
come," saJd Irvine's Mason. "It was a
decision that was in the pubUc interest."
"I was incensed," said Mrs. Frank
Robinson or Newport Beach, one of the
interveners in a lawsuit testing the con-
stitutionality of the trade. "The testi..
mony given by Supervisor David· Baker
was completely rational. It wu brilliant
and dGCUmented.
"To have the other U11t;e men com-
pletely ignOre it wu simply unbelieve-
able. lt wu an absolute nadir Jn sov·
ernment respon.Slbility."
lo Mr, -and do -lo·rlchl" Irvine OomponJ l'nlideJJI W111lam
Masol>ill ·-to .. ~ dated ~ llld. 1dl --Id not agree ."to ._illte UM! exchange
ag1 eement."
Battin ltirred tbe audience at another
poiJil during .Ilia polaled questioning of
Kennelh Sampson, cllredor, ol harbors,
beaci>ol aod parks. He -SaJl!pson of· a.paalble colllllct ol inleresl.
"Do JOU have Ml Jud lnienlla lo the
' Upper Bay-area/' Baltbi aalred ..........
:'No, and I tm~ ,_. llOl·lln·
pll<atioo," Sampson'l'll)lied ~
"You did have an taterat In Dana Point iroperty lo 1111, didtJ,, ,.., ..
persisted Battin.
"I prefer lo be lriecf, U I ·om to= court ol. law, not heie," Sarilpeoa•
crowinJ evtd rnott" Nf1· H• ,
"but your impllcatlan ia not true.••
Wednesday's loo& -bolon with
.. O<llline ol the -aJlerull>o in-
' T -
,.
'
• 1 ' ~ DAUY PUT Ptiilll • W ,.,_ Cit• e · ,,...to him:
Ques Wbat do you -as the city•• big~ problem aod what should be clor1<
about it!
Mn. Carl ~...,.rt -reQlea\ rio is e_ ~ o(
the Friends · of NoiwPOi:t Bat. said _,.,
didn't tblrtk it yr as aP:h of... pub lie
hearing. She said the public wasn't civ·
en much lbne to speak and supervisors
by that wn. a{rtady hlld each made
statements of bow they stood on the
issue.
NurseDUlld S•fl• 'GbOdbfle' .. • )._ f
Aanrer-Apathy « the vut silent ma-
jority of the citizens is the city's biggest
problem. The fact that less than SO per~
cent' of the registered voters vote meaM
less than 25 pen:ent can decide the im-
portant issues. Vrry few people attend
City Council meetings or show interest
in it unleim it hits them in the pocket-
book. 'Ibe city government must make
every effort to interest and involve every-
one. Good government is eYeryone'1
businesr.
Q-Do you think city hall should be
relocated to the reserved Newport Cen-
ter site and if so how should the new
facility be financed ?
.\-Yes, Newport Beach has outgrown
the ~t city hall and should relocate
at the site in Newport Cent.er. If the
new city hall cannot be financed on a
pay-as.you-go basis, a bond issue should
be placed before the voters.
Q-What attitude do you think the city
JAMES P • .AYNES JR.
shookl be taking toward youths who
by d~ and actions offend the estab-
lisluPent?
A-As long as youtb.'l do not iOOulge
in, indecent ezposure, .no dress regula-
tioos shoold be Imposed. We cannot regu.
late fashion at city hall. if acts that
offend the establishment, you mean un-
lawful acts, the laws must be enforced,
and run aupport must be given. to our
Cllee .. AYNES, Po .. ll
Maaoii , Jn a statement released today,
said, "People will have their parb,
which they do not now have, and they
will have ample access to the bay, which
they do not now have." He said he is re-
affirming the company's pledge to pro.
tect and enhance marine life without
closing o!I the bay.
"I i,. the court telt ol the exchange
will further clear the way so that. we
may proceed within our lifeUme With
sensible, carefully planned development
of the area," Mason'.s&:id.
Mrs. Robinlon said she believes that
Filth District Supervisor Alton Allen,
up for reelection in June, might uo-
w!Wngly have voted bimsell out of or·
fice. "We simply have to get rid of
this man. He is a dlsaster," she said.
••My own personal feeling is he simply
rewrote in his own wcrd! Irvine Com-
pany presa releases."
Ruth Kover of Balboa bids adieu to tern she cut up penli:Ulin r,ills«an<I led tliebli'd • UW.•Mdl
nursed back to health and turned loose Wedne•· day wi:fh a regu ar lisb diet. Only ·tl<>al!I• ·111 lblll
day. Her busband'found the'bird, wounded with BB the bird, nicknamed, "P idge;: wasn't -~
pellets, lying on the beach unable to move. She about leaving· hi< new home wiU. tJie.K~, · '
College Awaits
Legcil Opinion
On Resignation
Orange Coaot Junior College District
Chancellor Norman Watson 1ald today he
expects Jegal opinion within the ·next
week on the resignation of district board
member George Rodda, Jr.
Nixon to Pull More Troops~
Plans Nationwide TV Talk
•
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will make a nationally televl.ed
'address on Vietnam next 'nlursday night,
the White House announced today. He Is
expected to announce a further U.S. troop
withdrawal
slowdown in the withdrawal tiec.... tl
an iilcr<ue bi c.tiimunlsl ll:!llYllJ;
Croul Wants 'New Blood'
Dr. Grover Stephens, UC Irvine pro-
fessor of organismic biology, said he
was proloundly impressed by tbe arga-
ments of supervisors Baker and Robert
Battin.
Rodda submitted h.il resignation at the
March 18 board meeting in order to
become a member o( the legislaUve
council of the American Association or
Junior Colleges.
Press Secretary Ror.ald L. Ziegler laid
the speech, on radio aa: well as television,
would be at 6 p.m. PST April 16 and
woold concern Nixon's decision oo Viet-
nam troop levels.
Ziegler said the President'1.dec:iu..•
a fourth phate ·of the withdrawal 11 .,...
on "going consultations'' wttlt
Ambusado< Ellswolih Bunm aod Geo.
Ab<ami lo Salgoll and with U.S. p!lllllOl'I
in the Pentagon ·and ·saJd ~ .. hW no
plms lo meet personally wilh s.mar ml
Abrams be!qre t'pril JI. , ,
Bunk.,., is, scheduled. 1o1..i..m fo '1"·
United States in May· for .. Qteml"·aino ',
Richard D. Croul Is ' newcomer to
politics who says new blood is needed.
'!be 41-year-old building contraclot
ha1>1ived in the dty for 15 years. He says
he is interested In preserving the special
qualities of re.'!lklential living that brought
his family and others to Newport tn the
fint place.
Cruul attended Cal Poly at San Luis
Obispo. Like hi.~ younger opponent he
lists no community activities. Heie is how he answered the ques-
tions:
Qaestion -What do you ~ as the
city's biggest problem and what should
be done about it?
Aant:r -The freeway system is the.
biggesl problem lacing Newport Beach
today. I feel there are only two courses
of action left lo the city. Eithe< stop the
freewaY now or accept the proposed
route the state hu decided upon. The
resld!nts should be made aware ol all the
advantages and disadvantages of the pro.
posed freeways and a vote should bt
taken for a. decision. ...
Q-Do you think' city haU should be
relocated tG the reserved Newport Cen·
ter site and If 90 how shoold the new
facUHy be financed?
A-1 do think Newport Beach needs a
new civic center and ttre !lte reserved
is probably the best available. Thi funds
for the new facility should be raised
through municipal bonds. Careful ICf'Ul•
iny should be paid tG UM;: cost& or a new
civic center for It seeJl)f'eo' many of tMse
projects are overbull( and overpriced.
Q-Wllal attitude. do you think.the city
should 6e taking toward yeuths who 6y
dress and' actions offend ·the establish·
mentt
I-Perhaps the establishment needs
ttflending at times and should try ti Us·
u'!n more cloeely to what youth ii lr7ing
to tell them. Howevtt, when youths de.
C'i<le to make up their own laws or con-
duct and action contrary tG est1bll3hcd
·RICHARD D. CROUL
He said·, "Baker, in particular, showed
the poaalbillty wu open lo the coonfy lo
develop the bay as ef!ecUvely, using its
current powers and with the restrictions
of its financial and planning capacities.
The either point he made, both forcefully
and effectively, was the Ume ror detailed
studies of the pattern of bay development
was before the land trade, not after. The
trade decreases the options available to
the county."
NNpO<t · Beach Mayor Mrs. Dor<en
CSee IRVJNE, Pa .. II
Newport Police
Ticket Jogger
Along Hig.ltway
Joggers, . according to the Newport
Beach Pohce Department, are eligible
fClf' moving violations just like cars.
Huntington Beach resldtnt Phil Carlon,
Or. Watson said the. Orange County
Counsel's office I! reviewing Rodda's ap.
pointment to the council to see if hi!
reslpaticn is oeceuary.
"1 IUppo&e you could say that his
resignaUon· bu not been finalized until
we hear from county counsel," Wat.on
said.
Rodd~· said he originally tendered bis
resignation. from the board because he
relt there: would be·• conflict between the
LWG jobs,
Under the state Education Code,
trustees have 60 days to appoint Rodda's
replacenient. "We ' expect the cOunty
counsel to include 'I ruling on a time limit
for a replacmient. if he flnds that Rodda
should re1ign, '' tbe chancellor noted.
Back Bay Drive
Repair Rejected
found this out the bard way when be•ran A request by Supervlsor Robert w. afool of the law on Coast Highway, He is due in court Aprll 14 on a citation Bailin that the·city of Newport Beach be
fGr running on ~st Highway near Jam-asked to impnive back Bay Drive on the boree Road. ea11t side of Upper Newpart Bay bu been
At the Ume the cltaUon was issued rejected by bis• ftllow county supervisors.
Carlon was doing about 10 mph along~ Supe~isor Alton E. Allen. said he bad
law and ordtt, they should be de81t with center divider, police said. According to been infcrmed by the city that tht
very qukklr ind very ef~ectively. the citation, Carlon also--jaywalied_-ijqr .,~.9• recpUy. ~,~to aUow . ~Whot 11 our apprab•I of the work· rat1)' across the heavily 1riveled . .._ ;~ •·-•ftne ' Jll'OJ~ illl•by
Ing relatlons between the lf:itie:s of New-Cation who Is a member ot the-· ~ab. opei:~s in tf1e--UpPer s,a,... · · po~ Be•cl! and Cosll. Mesa! . • lellr,A\11~.lJjli<\o (MU) and the· ,., )!ei r"1<!:!>e ,,;; i!'ured thar l)ie dly ·
A-I think workmg ~elations betJe<n Tilt.~. Qi~ /O(' Oi'anu ~ncl· ""9 · , :,,ii': 'Wf"< ol _the ~ for Improvement
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa have Coum1es tu)'I' ft.. runs an a'm'age-· · ' li UW +oa:dvtay and that 1t WOO!d be done
been Improving over the Jut few years. miles dally to keep in sbape; • ai loon I'S UMnewer add dredging opera-
Newport Beach was very dlsappainted He has tO keep running becau., hif. Uons were CGiTlple~.
that Costa Mesa wouldn't help on the muscles tend to lil!lten up i( ht ~ops I ·!altlltS ~on ~at lhe City b:e 11re-
lrffway quation but there ha1 been good even for 1 minute. SO. Clrlon said, rilher \ qu.,tejff:lo do the wort died for lack o{ 1
cooperation along Olhtt linr auch as city thin stop.for • slcnal. ~ lteeps runqing, . second; :Otbet:'lupdtltora said' they cfid
boundariu, libraries. mutual purchasing even If it means ja,Yrunnlng, in order to not t~he~nty ~rd11hould be te _j
!See CROUL, Po1• ll s1<1)' 100... ·-. IJli '"°ell 11'\illlDl'Dye lla·11rceu;· .. ~7 . ·n : .... ·,
. ).
The speech will come one ,day alter the
latest phase of the gradual troop pullout
process otarted last yeor by Ni>On is I<>
be comple.ted.
Previously ordered withdrawals will
reduce the ceiling on .U.S. forces in. Viet.:
nam lo 434,000 on April 15. ,
Zi!!iler told reporters that the Presi-
dent wanted lo update hls report lo the.
na.lion on conditions in Vietnam -ampli-
fying bis urller policy otatements.
Nixon told newsme11 at an informaL
news conference March 21 that VJet-
namzation -the administratkll. term for
tuml.ng .a larger bd'rden ,of the war over'
to the South Vietnamese -was pro.,
grellling well and he saw at tha' time
nothing to slow the rate of \J.S.
withdrawals. ' '
Nixon has ordered three phatet of
wi\hdrawa,I so far, reducing the authoriz.
ed strength of U.S. forces lo Vietnam by
some ll5,000. The actual number of
troops to be pulled out 1s of a week from
Wednesday is lixpected to be about
105,000. '
Nixon announced the first. 25,000-man
reducUon in the celling last June' and
aabsequently• Ordered two· more reduc-
tions. l
Gen. Wiiliam C. WJStmoreland, former
Vletna"1. commandef who "is now the
Anny chief of staff, and G<n. Crel&hton
W. Abrams, currently the U.S. com--. mudec'...-,v~ ._..·(I"'°";, ., ,·. ~ .. • .. ·/ ..... ~ .. ' " 1 -• ' .. • • •• ' 8~tih aq;;,~ ~P,!.lij;t".
' • d • • .\~ ,. . ..
SACRAMENTO -A bill prol\lbttlng job
dltcrlmlnatloo against wome,n waa ap-
proved Wednesday ~Y the Asiemlily with
Asaemblyman ROM.rt Badham ( ft •
Newport Beach) cdmpla\lling that women:
want rights but aren't Wtlllng to itve up
thelrprotecl1ons in, ercbanp .
• • •
'1)r ' .
9UltaUon1 m 'VietnaDJ. , ,
Four Army·untta art !Cheduled to1leltve
Vietnam· Friifay as pat! o1 ·t11o "tlllnl>
phase, 50,000'mar11wHhdrawal. 'l1lil··WIJ
n\Imber1n' the units ii S;lllO.
StoeJc llf•rrc.P ·
NEW YORK (AP). -Pl:fcm •"Ibo
stock market were ,mlled late thls after· noon in light trading. CSee -~lions,
Pages 22-23). · . 1
Decline! overtook advancea Gn·thi New'
Y.ork Stock Exchange by~a narrow mat•
gin.
Weailler '' ... The morntnc fpg will , CO:rrte _in
patches and go in a hurry F'ridl.f.
m._kJng way , for sµ:nny UJea: arid
temperatures SQBring up to · tJie
70's along the Orqe Cout ..
INSIDE TODAY
. ..
I
-·~----•
J DAIL V "~OT N
¥&
Beach€ool
~
' _.,. -
To River
Pier Pfun -· •
..,....r ... 1 .. ) .
ffiVINE ••.
Manhall. rellectlnl an Bater'• uni• p0int, Mid, "I'm DOl CCllMDctd 711 ··y.
a ... -_, sl .. Ill! cerlllll .liU.
---we .......... OM .. -1-with_...., tilt ....... --arq~llthe.!:! ceuld .. donlaped la I NII plocoo
• .-. .... ft1 that -DOI i. la ~--111-.·
Nnport Bwb"a c:t.":"' and Tlde-Jaiicll Admlnlotntor De-noted thl.t 1upervilor1 on tither side of the J4'd trade I.We ~4 favorable "'11" the coopera~llU llludy be-"l?. wlthln the cl•y. 'I WUllcl uy tH attioo ,,,. the cooper. . 'I..~' ;hu ~ otrqtl>
ty lludy bas to do will! land use
after land ownership has been
y trade or otherwi1e. Altern.tJve ,
recommendaUons will be prtpared, .one
ated on the trade being consum·
and -Ill Its DOl ..... tbroulh, Aid.
(ions Inviting
Harbor Youths · · •
Harbor Ana ,.,..,,..... 1n1m11e<1 i.
lolalni the nowly organhed Lee Club.
)'OUth branch of the Colla Meaa·Newport HJrbor Lkl'll Club, m n:minded of
tcl1igbt'1 organhaUonal meeUng.
_jibe ....ion will be at 7,30 p.m. In the
'"'" Club 'l"e<n Room. 1115 Allahelm Ar.e., Costa Mesa. ·
'.Advbor Lew Simon aays boys and girls
lS to 20 ¥e ellelble and· may call ~9949
1 Jto iO are eligible and may call &46-9949
0( Ml-t45I for tddlUonal Information.
The charitable and public service
..,...,.lion wUI be beavlly Involved In
thil aiual Uons' Fish Fry th.la: summer
aid la tiuttlnc lotlelher a club ooogbook.
DAILY PILOT _,
~ COAST "'9UIMINO COW'ANY
........ N. ""•-'
Pru...., ... hliJIWlw
J.,11: a. c.rt • .,
't'lol ,,. ..... ~.......,
ElllW
""-••A. M""*"" MIOfl~ioll C"dllW
Tiie"'•• ferh111e
Ilk ..... l&fllCti Ol'I' E~llw
~ ..... °'"'.
2?11 Wt1t a.Ske kllltwt'4
M•ni., ui1,..~ r.o.'" 1111. •1,,1
•
--c ... Mftli m w.t .., ""'' L..,.. -..cti1 m l"Wlft .,...._
M,i:;lk4~ ....,., uvs .... ~
.. (.,_..I -,..,._&I~ .....
• ' ••
. ' Ol.ll.Y PILOT "'" ,..._ Flipping Over l'MCA . '
·Preparing for fund-ralslng brealtfast Aprll 18 for Orange Coast YMCA r,re {rear. from left) Hu&ll Mynatt of lliCbard's Market, location of
we event; Jack Zaremba of YMCA Board of Directors and Bill Hus-
crqtt,. breakfast cbalnnlill (in chef's hat). Jn foreground, artist Bruce
Mclnty1e puts finishing touches on one o! drawings that will be 1lv-
en away during 7:30 to 11 a.m. affair and Marilyn Reavie of Coro""
del .Mar High group lhat will provide breaJUast music.
.....,.. r.;. 1
UPPER BAY LAND EXCHANGE ••• ..
Upper Bay development -"m be
restudied' .. because of dl1nge1 that had
liken plac, 1btce the excbanfe a~ mat wu 1lenect 1n 1115. ·• .
The report outlined In detail Ille varied pro~ !or development encompUllng
llOWn's _.u..., Ille county-Imne
Ind"'!'!! !'I"! three othtt con!lguraUom.
-q-loned Ballinger .. to who ln\Uated the exchanr• oriclnally. The
~ ftlllled that the lrvlne Company
made die lint ptopooal .. Ibo. lOlbject to !lje·lfarl!or District In Matti>. 11113.
llililliOr ml Ibo ....,. -rucbed no oonc:llMikm or reeon'lmendatka u io
tbe auperlorll)" ct any ct the ....,. ....
NO-.IDVJNT"OE • ..
~Bui-" .1o111c-eirvboli>-.t, Jn
tiis op~ "There IJ ·no advantqe (to u.i'~) in ab>ndonment ct the Ian<! ~Jplan at this time." ,
Bltttn then read Crom a five--page memo he offered. His principal polnla
concerned:
·. I; "The. large land area., at the north
end of the Upper Bay and in the Blg Can·
yon area that are unrelated to water
and beach activities may have been
de.jrable in 19eS when tbe e:rchanie was
fil'.'St ~considered. Since that time the
coOilty bu acquired the 3 0 0 ·acre
University Regional Park just two miles
from the -ui end o! Ille bay.
"It appears to me that the development -..r ·Newport Bay should be oriented
tOlfards shoreline and ~ach deW:Jopm~nt
sinCt thJs is the last water-oriented area
!ell in Ille -, . "
2 ... The county should acquire. wlth the
rooperaUon and. hopefully the partJcJpa.
lion of Newport-Beach all the land owned
by public jnteresta between Back Bay
Drive and the water line. Most of this
area. is less than 100 reet wide· and has no
value. as building sites. This, when added
to· bY filling of county tidelandl would
nlake over a· mile of new sandy beach for
pubUc use."
REPEATS CHARGES
· Battin continued to npeat previou!
charges that his plan was much better
than the proposed exchange agreement
because il would "create more ml~s of
public shor!:{tne."
Supervisor Baker then proposed that
his suggestion for renegotiation of the e:r~
change agreement should be dl.9cussed.
"eftn though Mr. Mason has said the
company will not rene'°Uate."
. As be h~d in his original charges last
week, Baker repeated that the e1change
should be restudied "because it wa! bas-
ed. on reports that c o n t a i n e d in·
accuracies:'' (He said North Stir Beach
( 16 acres) and the existence of Back Bay
Drivt were not considered in the original
negotiations).
Because of Mason's stateinent that the
company would not renegoliate, Baker
Proposed that the county tennJnate the
exchange agreement.
Baker then p~tded to rebut fi.1a!O'll 's
points in the Jetter. His princi pal
argut"Mnls were that all Issues 11 to
future development of the Upper Bay in
any manntr should be reaolved prior to
Ille exchange taking pllC<!.
Battin cut In again at Ill~ point lo
charge that "Ma~ doesn't have the guts
to come down here and appe-.r before the
f?oard."
NOT RESPONSIBLE
• Supervisor Allrn then moved In to
pr&nt the other side. "To abandon, or
attempt to abandon, out legal com-
mlUntnt to carry out the exchan1e v.'OUld
be nelthtr couraaeoos, nor prudent, nor
ttspc711slblt. ''
He quoted a report from the at.ate
Department of Fish and Game 1tatlng·
lh•t "developme.nt of ihe Upper Bay
would transform lhe environment but Jt
would not "destroy It."
"Thr land exchanac agree.nen t, as Mt,
(
Baker'• report lllelf Mtes, would in·
crtaae ·the area under public juriidlction
f1"om about 400 to 745 acrea, or • per·
ctnt. Hence, the prospect of i'igkl en·
viroomental coatrol of Ille Upper Bly by
public agencies Would bt lilnlftclntly
enhanced. The trade would accomplish
thl1 without Ille e&pendllure of buge aWM ct public money."
AUen al.so struck back at Baker's
arrumenta •bout North star ll<ach and
Back Bay Drive. "To IUQelll that It.
(North Star Beach) -WU not
-(during burlap .. the uchange) b i.ocompreht:nsJble.11
He •aid that Beet Bay Drive touches t~ tidP.~S at some I3~polnb. The
sliort,a,I pojli(il two lee · nglll: the ·Jo .... abdUt 1*I feet. ' , the water fl"entafe is «bout J ,200 feet, "none of It ha~ by usable public 'land artu for
recreaUo• or parking."
"By comparisoa, the Big Canyon park
site, whJch the county would receJve from
the Irvine Company provides 30me J ,800
feet or water frontage, with more than
sufficient suppcrting land behind it "
Allen contended. 1
PUBLIC BENEFITS
Alie• conclu4ed~ .. What Mr. Baker re-
quests 11 that this board give up
something that provides public be11efits
that are known for something that might
or might not provide .any luting, prac-
tical public benefits at all.
''The pollUca of ecology must not com-
pe.I thJs board to engage in the polltlct of
irrespoos.ibUlty."
Baker hit back that the ezchange
agreement would be "just like the Lower
Bay, with most of the 1horellae benefit.
ting private development and providing
little public ·access. We can acquire land
<>n the east bank and till the Udelands to
develop public beaches, U necessary."
Supervisor William Hirstein backed
Allen and Phillips: "Today the cou11ty
has water jurlsdleU01 and the Irvine
Company most of the land. Joint efforLs
to properly develop the area will be best
served by cooperation betw~ the coun-
ty, the company and the city of Newport
Beach."
Newport Beach rtsidenLs opposinc the
exchange agreement included Harvey
Pease, George Freil Jr., former Fish and
Game commissioner, and Mrs. Frank
Robinson, one of tho!e intervening In the
court case to determine the con-
atitutlonallty of the e:rchange agreemeaL
Battin concluded the diSCUMioa with an
appeal to the con1Utuents of the
supervlaors repre9enUng inland ai::eas of
the county Chlmaelf, Phillips and Hlrs--
teln).
"The exchuge would only be l!> tht ad--
vantage of rich residents of the Upper
Bay area. It would J10t be In the best in-
terests of our constituents. It is :similar
lo Sall Creek where the county gave
a\vay valuable land to private land·
owners.''
From Page J
CROUL ••.
and lire and pollce protection. I would
hope the two clUes will contin"" to 1zn.
prove rdatlona bmrMrt themselvu for
the mutual benefit of all concerned.
Q-What unique capabllltlu do you fttl
yow have to off tr that your oppoMnt may
JIOt? '
~.~-l've betn dealing with moat of the
C\IJn in Or1nge County for the last II
years through the construction business.
Much of the city function is conctmtd
with planning, developln&. lettin& con-
tracts and runnln1 a buiiness as effl.
clenUy 11 possible. Those thing! J hive
been doln& for the last eight years in my
own bu siness which I have been quite
1uceeu!ul In runnln&·
I
~.._ ----
Federal Police Defi.ed •
llllW>&NTOl'. P'la. (UPI) -Two of
Qool. QaD Kirk'• aides 1 o c k i d
lhomal-la an olllct wllll 10 state
troopers and refuted to come out today
when federal J'{UIJ'&hab-tried to arrest"
them for interlerina wJth a achoo!
desegregation order. • ... ,. -· ·
ne marlhall arr11ttd the ~fanatee
County sheri ff and five dcpuUel 011
charg_e1 ol obstructj,nc jipUce ?"htn they
stood In frotit of Hie office door and
refused to move.
• The aides were in Bradenton ad-
ministering the county school system on
crdm from Gov. Claude Kiri, who wa:s
trying to block a federal d..._atloa
order.
Kirk blmself was in TallWssee where
hla wife I'"' blrtb lhil -.Jni to llleir
Burglary Ring
Arrests Close
Nine Mesa Cases
A probe of U..e boys' burllary 1pree
tias cleared up nine Co!ta Mesa cases,
with many more to be closed by Newport
Beach detectives, police annoµnced
Wednesday.
One 13-year-old wa1 captured Monday
night at the city library , sought as a
runaway, implicated two older buddles in
1 stries of break-ins Friday and l.londay.
Costa Mes.1 Police Detective C1pt. Bob
Green uki k>tfay the loot -only ca!h.
coin1 and jewelry wa:s taken -amounted
lo more than $2,000, most of it now
recovered.
Many other valuables were leil alone ,
1lnce they had no triMpOriaUon.
The boyt were admitted to Orange
County Juvenile Hall pending court bear-
ings.
Inveet.lgators 1aid the trio, IS, 14 and
15, roamed through Coeta Me!a and
Newport Beach's plush Back Bay area,
Jmocldng on doors and bursting those
where they got no answer.
Watches and rings were given to their
friends and small change and easily·trac·
ed antique coin! simply thrown away, the
wspecta admitted under questioning.
Capt Green uld about $1,700 in stolen
goodl have been recovered since the case
was broken Mondly night by Patrolman
1!<>b Neal.
One woman came home while the three
bays were rlflina: her retideoce but they
fled oul the back door and appamiUy
coallnuad loollnC other homea.
Perot Stymied Again
..I .: • I ' • • • • •
PARIS (APJ -H. Iiosl Perot tried
unsuceeasfully tod1y to 1lve the North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong Usll of
prlaoners held in South" Vietnamese
Cam)>I, aod concluded that "they have no
concern" for their own captives. The
Texas computer magnate lrrlVed aboard
a chartered Boeing 707 actompanied by
five wives of missing and prisoner of war
servioemen and about 70 newsmen.
I I ...
~ . .
I I
' -
' .
second child. I 10-l'O'llld. .......... boy.
"We"re not thlnlda( ·about anything at
the moment ei:cept the baby," Kiri lllcl
when asked about the devtlopmentl at
Bradenton.
The off!Cials locked themselve! ln the
office when fider.i olflclals, Jnclud.lng
three marshal1 and an assistant U.S. at. iornef. tried to ae.rve them papers char1·
Jn& them with Interfering with lchool
desegregaUon. · •
Kirk suspended the county school board
Wednesday night and placed· the schoola
under his own control to avoid a federal
desecrea:ation «der wblch would have
cone into effect otday.
Deprty U.S. Morahal Jobnny Barr wa•
meeUn1 wtth aidu Uoyd Hqaman and
Dick Warner wbtn the two men I°' up,
From P•e I
AYNES •.•
Police force, Otherwise, lt is a family
matt.er.
Q-What is your appraisal or the work-
ing relatlOGB betwteq the cltlee ~ r'•w-
port Beach and Colla Meu!
A-The working relations between the
dties or Newport Beach and Costa f.1esa
appean to be aatisfactory.
Q-What unJque capabilities do you
fetl you offer that your opponent may
nol?
A-t have no commitment to any spec-
ial interest groups. Newport Beach has
always been "home" to me and I ~ant
nothing but the best for it. I have had
experience in administration, under the
most difficult conditions in the Adjutant
General's Offict, tit Air Cavalry Divi·
slon, and J am dedicated to· a caner of
public service and to the 1tudy of politi-
cal scien«.
1:i * *
Three-way R.ace
Really Two Way
The Dlatrlcl I race !or Ille City Council
is not a thrte-way race, even thougtt
three candidates' nama appear on th•
ballot.
James P. Ay11<1 Jr. and Richard D.
Crout are actlva Cllldldata. Biii Tbomas
K. Stadllqer hu dropped oul.
Sta.dllqu withdrew hi& cudldacy sl ' . ' weeki. aco beclute he. realized he
couldn't devote the neceuary Ume to city
council duties. However, It wu too late to
change the printing of the ballots.
Stadlln1er also had filed a ltltement of
qualificaUon malled out with umple
ballou. It COii him 1110 paid to the city
clerl !or prinUn1 '"'1 be bad lo forfeit
th.et amount.
-·
went Into the su perintendent's office 1nd
locked the d"'r. larr told them they.
~.~ ~rrejll bot 11><¥ re!ljlfd 10
The deputy paunded on the door for a
few mlnutes, then left. tie sald he would
return shortly. ' -
The arrest orders were based 'on aller--
ed vioJation of a federal court Order
lasued In Tampa 'l\lesdly !orbi<ldlng In-
terference with' the deseire11Uon pl•n.
Manatee. Cow!ty · SherUf R Io h ar d
Weltenfield and the five depuUes were-
arrested when they refused to move from
the doors to the !Upcrintendent's office,
federal officials said.
About 100 Necroe.1 marched to the
cowity IChool admlnistralion bujldip& to-
day to prolelll Kirk'• action in tatlng.
over \he achool!.
Harbor Resident,
Noted Physician
Bu1ied in Iowa
Gra\'e&Jde services were hefd Tuesday
Jn JOWi for a distJ.nsulahed ' psychologist ·
who died March 28 at his NeWport ~Kh ·
apartment, closing a career that brought
unprecedented hope to the mentally
retarded.
Dr. Harold~. "Storky" Skeel1, U, saW
• revolutionary concept that once brought
down the rldlcule of his profession ac,
cepted a.ud finally honored throughout tbt
world.
Not long after moving to ~IO Fernando
St., Balboa, he was awarded one of five
Joseph P. KeMtdy Jr. Foundation
International Awards for his work.
He was also awarded the American
Psychological AsJOCiation's 1967 G •.
Stanley H11ll Award after bis retirement
five years ago.
The American Psychological . Aa.,cla-
lion was the agency that ostracized Dr.;
Skeels 30 year& before when he developed
the theory of the s<H:alled Wandertni IQ,
and read It at a convention.
Before, psychologists b e 11 e v e d J
person's IQ wa! establlshed at a certain
point and could never rise higher, le•dlng
to the institutionalization of thol1.3ends
who weren't beyond help .
He wa:s a young man just on the job at
Woodward State Hospital in Iowa when
he noticted that infants presumed retard·
ed seemed to brighten a.nd Improve with
attention lavished by older patJenls.
A family-type environment they had
miued after birth -a key to proper
emoUonal and mentll development -
was being re.created ln the hospital to'
a certain degree.
He organil!d an experiment that. w-·
ried on thJ'OU.lh his lifetime. . ~
Professional rld1cule failed to da~ his
belie! in the revolutionary tbeoey .and, .
over the years, faef.I proved he .was rl£ht,
lead1ng to widespread adoption of hi.I
ideas.
One of those expected at his funer11. to-
day in Na!hua, Iowa, was Louis Branca,
rescued once from the mlnd-stifllng
wards of an insUtuUon and now carryinf
on Dr. Sieel's work as a paycholo1m. •
Your fOllOrltt lnttrlor dtllgnn tolll bc liappv to GIN I ~ou •••
PROHSSIH~JaGARREIT fURNl~RE
INTERIOR DESIGNERS O)NI M-n... A 1't1. l•ts. il 15 HARBO R Bl VO, COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646·0275 646·0276
~--~-~----------------------------------------~------~-------------
• --· -----.
. ...
t;osia ·Mesa
:VOl. 63, NO. 83, 3 SECTIONS, 36•PAGES --~~~--. '
Meet l;andidates
..
If pmt histoP.y is R oolid uantstiCk, a~fra.etlon ·of Costa Mesa's· 21.000
registered voUrs wiU go to tht poLl.! nezt Tuesday td elect two dty council·
mtn to fOUT·!leCIT tcnnJ. ' Nixon Slates TV. AdiJ:r~s onMan~r in Vfutna_m
Seven men are sttking the ;obs. . . ~ .
To help wters choose who tDill represent tMm..:Jrom.1M>W until 1914,
the· DAILY PILOT Mr quutiont'd each mon atjlength.
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pruident
Nixon will' make a natkmally W:levlsed
iddress on Vietnam neu' 'l1runday mcht,
tbe White Htuse annouoced today. He js
expected to anooonce a futtber U.S. troop
withdrawal
A strits of profiJes on each candi~ C9~udt1•today.
Ka ser Wants City Ecology !'ms Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler &aid
Ult speech, on radio u llftll as television,
would be al ' p.m. PST April-II and
would concern Nixon's decision on Viet·
nam troop levels.
American philosopher Henry David
'Ihoreau turned his blek oo community
-to a large degree -but Costa Mesa
Qty Council candidate B. Eli Kaser is
ti-)'jng to blend the rustit and urban.
He is 29, next to yomigest on the ballot,
and works as a carpenter while studying
at Orange Coast College, hoping even-
tUally to teach.
Kaser and bis wife Virginia live at 1735
Pomona Ave ., with their infant soo. and
$ughler.
He is 'a newcomer to municipal politics
-displaying much flare for publi.c
speaking -although he bas be<n an DCC
Student Council senator. and president of
Associated Men students.
A five-year Costa Mesa resident, he i.!I
a inember o( the Sierra Club, Whittier
Sch:>ol Pl'A, and a guide for the Wood-
craft Rangef3 youth club.
Oen might suspect that ecology and
preservaUm of environment are two of
his key interests.
Qotttioa -What are Costa Mesa's two
principal problems?
Auwq -.. Rapid, unplanned growth
that doesn't take into consideration
ecological er human needs," says Kaser.
noommending establishment of greenery
areas and recycling of waste materials.
The second primary problem as he :tee!'
it is a lack of dynamic, imaginative
municipal _Jeadet;*~p. leadi]tg to voter
apadly, lllenallon ol lbeywng ind a loss
of the ...... al <ommunity.
He reccmmends begbmin'g a sa'tes or
Town Hall·!tyle meetings 1e ~ QM
situation abd abo hnplementing ,a ~w
beautlficatioo procranr aeared for yoUth
participation.
.Kaser says he does not feet the COl!t.al
Freeway route question is settled either,
cooiplaining that many Coota Mesans are
uninformed about an the issues lln·
~rlying it.
Qo--What would you do about
dowrtown Costa Mesa?
--er.ate a Jllll"k·type mall With trees and landscaping, giving the area a
small-town atmosphere."
Q -Att. you satisfied with present city
tiall adminiScatim?
A -'"lbe .,...-ci1J council Is well·
8. ELI KASER
intentioned but uninformed. We need
dynamjc, creative 'ieadentUp to solve the
pibloms·al • '1lidl!' ~ <i!J.''
Q ~ Do you have unique: qualificatiollS
!or the city council? .
'A -''l have a deep k>Ye 'for the city Of
Costa Mesa and a dream or what it t:an
become, .if we utlliu all our poteRtiaJ,"
says Kaser.
''My utensive background in ecology
and envlroom.ental planning, my energy
and e~ and my ability to oom·
rnullicate with all segment.! of the
population art my unique qualificatiom."
Q -How w o u Id you fit in with. the
three councilmen not up for .re-eltction?
A-"I feel confident that we could all
-it well together to make.~ Mesa a
mOdel city al the 1u11re,:· be eoadudes.
'
The speech will come one day after the
latest phase of the gradual troop pullout
process started lasl year by Nixon is to
be compleled .
Tlaree Arre•ted
' . Final Forum
Questions
Told in Mesa
~esa ltaid :Nets
.. .,, . ---. . .
Pressed by candidates invited to at·
tend,.a lf'OllR staging the 1ut Costa Mesa
Cily Cooncil Meet the Candidates night
Big Dr.ug . Ca.~~~~'-
Friday has revealed seven questions it
may cover.
The ~ion will be in the Estancia
lUgh School Forum at 7 p.m., spon!llOftd
by the Oxnmittee for Government.al
Awareness, in which candidate 'lbeodore
C. "Ted" Bologh bas otrong supporters.
"Jt WIS rumored that the questiODI are
'loaded' with respect to sordid upects al
the campaigns," uys Paul T. Jalbert,
Raiders with a aearch warrant bunt
Jnto a Colla Meu apartment Wednm:t1y
nlghl, selzilll-IO ouncea al marijuana, U suspected-LSD .tablel.! and arrutinfl
threepenooa.
Charges includinc ~11 •m el mari-
juana for Ille, p s ?!lion ~ dqtroul
drup and .... 1v1nr -"'°""' an lactor·them,today. '
They were identified -II'· Ronald·· J.
LaValley, U, hll wile Palricta;ll,·al US
Santa I.label Ave: and Cmnen A: Custer, committee chief and c:oordtnator for the 32, of lOD vaieDcl.i: Drive, Colla Meu..·
. night. .Patice GtU'Md • lemdl ...... tram .
,..;;!:=~~Jt~-~---1 moo 1bat ail candidatill .,_'"' ~·......., betof 'lbw. ~' _., ~b ' · '~ ~~"t-WV.. · ,• • '
m th~."''!"' without-• 1he II.~ · J<mckl• mi t11a -o!:tba 1.av.luiY
tions. home tlleJ *"'"°" ::'f: * llllil Jalbert aaid In inno\IDcing whal will be heard nmollll flat-end ;;a;:i., ......
asked that his conun11t<e ,_.... 1he accordinf tD "'°"' ' ' ' ~:f'i;!::t:~• «drop them enlirtly 11 Detectne Norm iiutAweot in tllroagll
~ ... __ , ....
One candidate, David J. Verna~ ays
he will not attend because be feels IUCh
strict control IUJJlll'?ISU the right cl fret
speech.
'"'Illere: are Wo many no-nos," U)'I
Yamat. .. No campai&n literature. No
talking ol the put. '!bat ls wbat moot al
us are naming for -we are dis$ti!fled
Westminster Rites S'et . '
--bu alnady hoppened." THeoe are the qutlllonl, :aa Jaibert
outlines them, poinUng out that no two
among the seven cahdldates wllfbe ~
to answer the sam~ one : ,
For Dead Mesa Cyclist .
. I ' s.mo.. for a younr Cosla M•
Manu s RaP,S Civic ApathJ
-What would you do to correct the
"revenue gap" which threatens the
ruture rinanclal .situation in Costa Mesa?
-What '&Ctions would you propose to
correct budget deficiencies?
-What would be your plan to correct
local drug abuse?
~ -killed ·-y ta ·.
c:ollltlon that left bis -teeth .....
bedded In the roof ol -.a car -are
scheduled Saturdsy in Westminster.
Steven A. Rehling, 11, al.m w. Wlllon
SJ., Cool& Mesa, died lhodly bel«t noon
Wednesday,. alter ramming . a ttallon
wagon brOlldPde with his powei-ful Costa Mesa City Council candidate
Thomas A. Manus Jr. has taken no part
in community activities for about four
yean, but with very good reason.
He is 24 and has been out of the Marine
Corps less than sjz months.
The you111gest aID011g seven candktates
seeking office next Tuesday ts alngle,
lives· at 267 E. tilt.ti St., and works at
Hoag Memorial Hospital w h I I e also at-
tending college.
"Clvic activities? They've been limited
since I was only released from the
Marine Corps Nov. 17, but I have taken
an active part sbtce," says MaJ1us, who
was a USMC air traffic controller.
nie apathy toward' public affairs that
he obViously does not have is one of
Manus' primary concerns about Costa
Mesa. aloog With the queotion ol e<ology.
He'says an eight percent voter tumoat
at election is deplorabie.
''We ICtd to begil a Vigorous campaign
to get poeple interested in their covern-
ment. A city council • e w s I el te r
distributed to residents woold be one way
this coukt be done."
What about the ecology and en.
vironme atal questioa?
"We should improve our city parks.
provide more recreaUonal racillties and
take what.ever measures necessary to
stop environmental poDution of all types
in COsla ?tfesa."
Manus, whole recent release from the
Corps has alloftd him to attend only
councl1 meetiqs over the past few
moaths, says he doesn't comlder tbe
CoaiWI Freeway question settled.
"It ls not nece'8lr)' and doea not
benefit this area in any way. I don1l
bel.iew it should be constructed," he
says.
Qaettioll -What would yoo do about
dow1n.own Costa Mesa?
AMWer -"Hard to say, at least until
lhe freeway issue is resolved .''
Q -Are you satisfltd with presenl city
hall administration!
A -No. They have lost. touch with the
people they supposedfy are. representing.
The c:ounc1I actually rel""<!JI.! only a
•ery small percenJaae al the ~."
Q -Do you hovt unique qualllicallons
for city couacllt /
IJ
•
-Wbat is your delinlUon of '"ecology"
and how is it related to the normal hmc-
tioo of the city council!
-What WOWd you 'do to make the COrta
Mesa Golf and Cuntry Club a prolit-mak·
ing aperation t
-What development plans would you
introduce far Costa Mesa in keeping with
the expansion. of Orllllle County Airport?
-How would a city charter benefll
the_ .. ?
College Awaits
Legal Opinion
On Resignation
m~cle. · .
The I a.m. crash at later and crattdon
streets In Cosla 111 ... left the -"t
woman -"°"J>!lill"'• ""1le her son and an !Mani 11'1 -...,.. ~la$ly In-
jured. ·
~ Donllhy Gonnaa, 42, ol IN Poet
Rold, Collta MMI, WU listed in fair eon-
dlllon at Hoo, Memorial Hocpllal today,
under oblen<alion clue to her ..tranced
pregnanq.
Mlcllael A. Gormu, IS, al 1he ume ad·
dell, and Troey A. Love, S, al 'ID
Shalimar Drhe, ~ i,i..., w~ . . . .~
. . . .. .
0r81111• Coast Junior College District
Chancellor Norman Wataon laicf today he
ezpects legal opinion within the neJ:t
week on the resignation of di.rtrict bolnl
With Nixon on Econoniles --' ---,
member George Rodda, Jr. --Pre Wirt lenlees
Rodda submitted his resignation tal the W A SH tNGroN -M11JUmiJUe111ite
THOMAS' A. ¥ANUS.J R.
.
couiacil's f inal
March 18 board meeting in order to CaWorni1 poliUc1I c:apdiute Norton
become a member of the legisl1Uve Simm said bett toiday tb.til W ls much
council of the American Association of in ..... wttb ~••-t ~ than A -"Youth. energy, and a fresh ap-more '~~ ,--,_ ,,u.un Junior Colleges. •i.~ -· .. ..._ "'-to ~-t la •-proach lo the city's various problems." w111: .. _ 11111' ~ -,,_,
Q _ How ·WOUid JOU flt in wilh the Dr. Watloo said the Orange County The ~J•.!Old bullnearMn dilCWlled
tbr<e <OW1Cilmen not op far ,.. .. lectlon! Coonael's office Is ,..viewing Rodda'• OJ> his -1J1on to Sn.. a.trio~ (R-
A -"I would lit in very well with Mr. polnlment to the c:ouncll to ,.. H 1111 Calli.) In the llepllbUcaa !llimarJ 1t a
Pinklty and Mr. Wilson. However, there resignation is necessary. news conference .. ... • :u~~bly be much coofilct wllh Mr. "I 1uppoae you could IRY that 1111 Vietnam Ind d..neotlc ~,, • .,.._ M~ting ·short
• resignation has not been finalized unW pioininenUf COtb:w.t. .,,,. For Costa Mesans unaware, ~fanua ,, Simon, whale enarmoua ftaaadal llD-·.. . • •
siped a citation a we<k qo charging w~ hear lrom county CXIWlsel, Watool! .p1,.........., loollldld -"-a: .. ·.,. 4\i·.,~ ~ .airJ_~l "'''lat
Councllm&n SL Clair with po st ng 18 • , •:..d Fuii.r.·~--.;,11111>~ .111-. ~la-tho .......... -
Politlc1l 1igns I• lh• Newport Boulevard Rodda said he originally tei>clem Jiii li •llped.--~Gn.-bi1C!1.:, ~--~ mi rf<CI -' · rigbWr·way,aUegedly.avlol4t1onof staJe ~. ~icnati,n~~U>c bolrd ~~. ! "M'o:nk~uc11·-~or~~~.t!Wi •\• ·~1 f0f ~~· :.,-, ;,.·
law. ·, • ren there-would be a conlll<t bct-alii4 · ilh<·Pr f, 1" told~~ · -~· ·• · ed · In ' · 'al' ·St. Clair faces a jury trial May 5 <in the two jobs -that 11"""1 ls dob!C > Sood ,job;imdor_dlf.,. 1h = • . .i>.1111 o_Jr_: lllO(<
mlsdemeanor charges, efler pleading in-. ' flcult extstJnc clrCulril~ .. ·-· '/. -~ ~ . an ~ wo.,.. of~ ~···rood nocent belore Judge Donald ~ngan in Under the state Ech.ic~Uoa Code, He a1ao )l'..alaid the ~s ; • aad :~at'the C9t'1' Mdl' GOr and
Harbor Judicial District Court . trustea have IO da}'I to apPO!nt Jliidda'• econon1lc poUcy, saJinS l1!0 ~ II. .:,Couatey-"11m. , ' •.
The signs In question supporled Co1111-replocemenl "We expect lhl CllWlty walking a YirJ ~le 1jne: ' • • The maleri11J, wl!O bo\llllV llt/i1
ci-Gtor" A. Tucker. one or two In· COUNel to Include 1 rultal on •b limit Simon added thatlll1l<b "'°" d~ ' ~ I""*· PMW' M.""K)lloll and cuinbent COlldld1te. MlllUt Is attemptiiJ 10< 1 rtplacemon~ JI ho ft~~ /' nftded in to•~· \ · , wlll'\i p11f<11 o'°" to ... ~tqr'~I
to umeat n•1t Tuesday. 1hould resign," lhe cbancellOr -.,i.. • "I bllit .. ill a ~UYI eojol~ ~ lor-euctb' Wllli>e,...,.. · . . . , . . . -• r
•
• Mesa Polite ·
• May:Qriediim ~
,Slocum Kia · ... -. ~ -' .... ~. -..
NEW YORK (AP.),.,. Prlcta m the
----.S lala thll aJter. nooa in Ugbt .~ (Set qnot"' "•· p .... ~). .
.Declines overtook-.., the Now.
Y,..k SJock (JCJiaiiio'by a......, mar·
11ri. ' • ' • ·-. ·-
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____ .£.OU11:ty Git~s_Appro12al 4 .fter.~~Bat.tle'·. ~--
., j.¢g llllQBAC!t • • made lhe flrat propo11I on the subject to \ He quoled a "'port· from tlie elate
. " .. ._. '0•• 111" ,., ~ Itarboi DistrictJn tdarclt.1"3. · Department ol Filla and CIJ'IV staung p1~;:1·::~= a ~:::e r:m-~ B8llinkei'-siid tlii IWdY i foUP re~cnea that ''development 6t the _ \.!ppel' Bar'
rea cl ' d " ldtr reifdtnb s11'fuled for. almost four hours no con usions or reeommen a ... ou u to wou llllform the environment but ii
Wednesday over -~ Upper Ne"!JlOrt Bay · the su~riority or any of the conctJ>!s. would not destroy It."
land exchange agreemm~ with -;he ti:vloe NO ADV ANfAGE "The land etchange agreement, as Mr,
?<>mpany. But ....__._. told ~·perv1>0' rs Iha!, 1-0 Baker'!. reP9J1 it.self note§,. 'YPitld i~·. The result was. 3-2 vote to 'uphold the ••llllu ., .. agreement and neither reneaottate it or his opinion, "There is no advantage (to crease the area under public jurisdiction
kill it. • th'C county) in abandonment of· the iand from about 400 to 745 acres . or 86 per-
As ~argument st.and91Klw ~tb'the 3.· exchange plan at Plls"lhne:o cent. Hen~. the prOlpe~t ol Jig!d "e~
2 standoff, it wilt be up .to .ihe courts to" Battin then rud froin _ 1 ·fi.v~_page ' vironmental control of the UJ>Pti 'Ba1 bf"'
determine the Hnat outo:>me. The case memo he offered. His principal points public agencies would be sigiliflcantly
comes up in Superior Court June 11 but it concerned: enhanced Th 1 d Id 1· h could be Mlyeral years before the issue i.s , e ra e wou accomp is
finally re!IOlved.. 1 I. '"The large land areas at the riorth f!lis Wilhout the expenditure of huge sums
. There iJ. the possibility of 1 change in end Of the Upper Bay and In the Bia can-or public money."
the board's 3-2 stance, also: Hirstein is yon area that are unrelated to ·water Allen also struck back at Bakeris
not running for · reelection and his suc. and beach activities may have · been arguments about North Star Beach a'nd''
ill I k Jf' J desirable in 19&5 when the exchange was cessor w a e....,. Jct neit anuaey. first considered. Since that ·time the Back Bay Drive. "To suggest that ifs Punetua~ the arguments were con-t h · · d lhe 3 • o (North Star Beach) ex'~·nce was not ; slant referfncei to "gutSu ·-on the rur.ri couli Y as acqwre u ~ a c r e ...... of the supervisors. For eJ&mt>le: r-· University Regional Park just two miles know• (during hearbigs on the exchange),
Supervisor Williain . J.' Phillips (Wh() from the north end of the bay. is incompre~nsible." .
with supervi!ors Alton E. ·Allen and "It appears to me that the development. He said that Back Bay Drive touches
William tprstein cast U!e three votes to of Newport Bay should be oriented the tidP.lands at some 13 or 14 points. The
sustain the exchange agreement): "We towards shoreline and tM:aclfdevelopm~nt shortest point is tW() feet in length; the
are really talking about breaking a con-si nce thJs is the Jast·water.()riented area longest about 200 feet Totally, the water '
tract and there is no moral or legal bails left in tbe county.'' frontage is abo4t 1,200 feet, "none of it
. . . Nursemaid· Says 'GO.dhye'
, Ruth Kover of Bai~ bid; adieu ,to , iem ~e
nursed back lo health and turned )oose W,ednes-
day. Her.\~usband found the-bird, wounded with BB pellets; iying on the beach unable . to move. She
·'cut .up· penicillin pills and lei! the )>\rd a little each
.day, with a regular. fish .ditt. Only trouble is that
, the l:iird, nicknamed "Pidge," wasn't ~nthusiastic
about leaving his new home with the Kovers.
for. such action. We mu~ have the guts to 2. "Tht county should acquire. with the backed by usable public land '-areas for :
stick to Ol!r agreem~nt." · c.ooperatlon .and, hopefully the partic.ipa. recreation or parking."
.Superv.lsor Rober\ W. Battin (.who with. tion of Newport Beach all the land owned "By comparlso11., the Big Canyon park . s~vlsor David L. Baker voted to kill by public interests between Back Bay site, which the county would receive from ,
the exchange agreement): "Talking abou,t Drive and the water line. Most or this the Irvine Company provides some l,600··
guts, we. should have the guts to stand up area is lea than 100 feet widt: and has no feet of water frontage, with more than
to Mr. ~fason and do what is right." value aa build1ng sites. nus when added sufficient supporting land behind ii,"
Irvine Company President William to. by· filllng of county ttdtlands would Allen contended. · 1
Mason in a letter to the suPervisors dated make over a µlilt of new san.dy beach for PUBLIC BENEFITS
Win,U,ng OCC De~aters Monday Said his cOriipany w"ould · nOt · public use.'.' ·
T-. d T • ' · Alle11. concluded : "What Mr. Baker re· ~n~ge rlO :::m;:,., renegotiate the exchange REPEATS CHARGES J ques ts is that this board give up·
\."'"-Battin stirred the audience at anpther . Battin continued to repeat prtvious something that provides public beiefik
Hurt ID• . ·Wreck point during his pohUd questioning of charge& that bis plan was much better that are known for something that might •
K lh S d'·ect f "'~-'---than the proposed exchange agreement or might not provide any la.sting, prac-
A k N ' l T enhe ampson, u or 0 uo.i'"""'"• because it'wouJd "create more miles of tical public benefits at all. S' . ·a;tiona ri"p·· Fund N A. beaches and parks. He accused Sampson public shoreline.'' "Th . . . · · . . · . ear · lrp0f.t of.~~~~a~~tl~~~r::!~ In the Supervisor Baker then propose~( that pel th~=~ i:~::~f'm ~t;u~i:~·
· ·" · ' . • , · . Upper Bay area, .. Battin asked Sampson. his suggestion for rene1oUation of the ex-irresponsibility."
·' -;-, Three ~ta ·Mesa teenager& suffered "No, and I tmphatlcally resent the·tm. change ~greement should be dlscussed, Baker hit back that the exchange
·SpokesmairBlll Lauders told the Costa" Injuries Wednesday nicht when their pllcatlon,"·sampson replied htatedly. "even thoUgh Mr.""Mason has said the agreement Would be "just like, the Lower ~I .to be congra!lllaled for its re-
<ent stale <!WnpioM!ip, lhe Orange_
Coast College forensi~$, ~ gently bit
Ute hand.it bad just asked to feed it ~on·
diy nlgbL·
Me$a Cit).•cOwicil that $4,000 is needed to small foreig11 car rammed the rear of a "You "did ha"ve ·an interest in Dana company Will not renebQtiate." Bay, with most of the shoreline beBefit.
send Uie de~ting· team to the national vehicle which had stopped Tiear Orarige Point property in 1962, didn't you"?" AJ he had in hi,s original charges last ting private development and providihg '
championships May 5 at the u.rliv"ersiiy of -County :~· . ·· . -persisted·· Battin. week, Baker repeated that the exci\Jnge little public access. We can a6quite-land
itichijan·, . ~l\'\ld L.·Miller, 16, IJ.iS Sister Pamela, ''I pref~ to be ·trie~.·if Jam to be, in a should be restu<lied ~'because it was 1:)856 · on the e·ast bank and fill the tidelands to
lt h9th of 2327 Colgate Drive, ~ Leroy court 9f "law, not ·here.''· Sampson replied ed on reports. that c.o n ta in e d in· develop public beaches, if necessary.'~ · _OntY· tt°;oiij _~·~It collected so far Burkhart. 16, of 14.fl Deauville Place.. growing even more angry. He add.ed,. accuracies." (He said North star Beach Supervisor William Hirstei n backed
~urglary 'Ring afli::f If all 12 me·mberS can't make it,·lhe were treated at Costa Mesa Memorial "but your implication is oot true." (16 acre,s) and the existence of Back Bay Allen and Phillips: "Today the courrt.y-·
nat\OJ!H1i1 liile wiJJ llieraJ.Jy be given to the Hospital and released. Wednesday's long ieSSion began with Drive.were not considered in tbe ·original has waler jurisdiction and the Irvine'•
l • • •
Odessa, Texas, junior college team. lnvestl(i:atofi•sald young '.Millet wU at" an outline 9,, the seven <erna~ve pr.o--negotiations). , Company most of tht land. Joint effor~··
. the wheel when the car crashed into one po""I• to development ol-the Upper Bay Because 01 M••.-'a ~·tement ••-lhe to properly develop the area will be best"" Arrests Close Lauders and fellow 'ctvakeaman Rita dr' · b Ch 1 D Pirt. I •• o1· Mr. .... ...,., oMll iua' ed b ti •-tw ... · .. ,.... iven y ar es . t, ..,, -. by James Ballinger, prou...t• engineer for Id t oti' I B k serv y coopera on uc een urr:: coun· Wakeley ·expialned that Orange:" Cout loth St Huntington Beach b;'D· company wou no reneg a e, a er ty, the company aiid the city of Newport ... Pirt~· was waiting be~ a' third car the Orange County Har J.Sbict proposed that the county terminate the Beach." •'.'
Nine Mesa Cases Colle~ is .number one in Ca1Uonia ·and t·-~· left to 8 .,~·urant In the ...... 1be seven plans, made public three exchange agreement.
•-•-1o· · o. t ·--• ·1a ......... 111 ~ _,__ t.-• 1 f lhe tudi b Newport Beach residents opposing lhe &ww1wi •. wm L4'1 or ~ p oe n.a. bl • J P·"•·•es n ••• and •-'d be a~· weeAa ago in a repor. o s es Y a Baker then proceeded to rebut Mason's tionally. . . OC• .... ~ "';-'""' ... ... county staff comnuttee of Sampson, points . lb 1--r HI , __ , I exchange agreement included Harvey , . celerated biJt _couldn t get out of the way, Robert E. Thomas, county admini· m e c•~ • s priuupa Pease, George Freil Jr., former Fish antr µ. prObe of three boys'-1m'glary•S!fte Califomla~.top. team..baa .-...lint • .. , ·:'--,Callfotni9 ~WU f~ ,aff~C!f .. stradve. officer ; ,Adrian Ku~, county arguments Wen! that· all is.mes as to Game commissioner, altd Mrs. Frank'.
lis cleared up nine Costa Mesa cas~. secol!.d p1~ce each time for the past eight witneSM!d the ~cc1dent and was the first l counsel, and_ · Slanle<y KraUSe, director.· of future development of. the Upper Bay jn Robinson. one of those intervening in the
with many mere to be closed by Newport years, he explained, shortly before coun· to read:! the v~ who suffered only real properties Wert develaped because any manner should be fffOlved pribr to court case to determine the eon-. . cuts and abra.s1ons. ' · "" -. lh · the exchange. taking place. stftutionalily of· the exchange agreeme1t: tidln-•~y-.. · es..,1• ... _ uce.··aMounced i~Q?."~~'t w: · mi~:~---~ ..... ·· · '-:·~P~.rr1::#18J!.,,~~::t~~~~;~': Batµn cut'tn again at thl! point to Battin·coilcluded1the discussi01with•an · ~ -II .;r"'t~ j, a ''bee "\!::..-lo. qlh:. I b d charge that "Mason doesn't, have the· guts appeal to the constituents of thei .
•0ne 13-year-oid' wu· ca . ~ Monday . "lt'r fmestiqg?f.' Mi"tt Laudit""."noting1-··-!l ;i: ~-• ~ rtstuwe .ause vi'uianges a a to cOme down here and appear before the supervisors representing inland ;u:eas of -'~~tf at the city 1ibrary,'lrou~ as a ihtt .. P!1 :.&rotUt-bJs done . ~nsiv-.· . uQD$~"!JllVllQlg t.aken pla~ sm~ the ~~change agree-board." the county (himself, Phillips and Hin-.
1f8 ' .. &" t~a~b:en tlult topic whictr'S to be'" • --4 + ,· .~·· ment was signed in 1965. tein).
l rtiUWay, implica&ed two oJder bud.dies in de~--:it the national 0champi0nships: ~· .. ·11'"" .:;t. ·L ~..:. :.:. y ··; h The teJ&r.t ou\l;~ in d~il the va~ed NO'Ji ·RESPONSIBLE · "The exchal'lge would only be t0: the ·ad· • .
.laerJesol break·ins Friday and Monday. Vice Mayor Wilson, who i11troduced the 3fDOr Ollt S proposals for devefoPJnent eneornpass~g Supervisor· Allen · .then moved. 1n _to · vantage of rich residents of the Upper~:
tColta Mesa Police Detective Capt. Bob r~v.enue-sharing resolution, bright.ened Battin's suggestions, the . county·Ii:vine present the other side. "To ab.ii.ndon, or Bay area. It would 11ot be in tbe best in~' ... dreen said today the loot -only cun,: v~s1blY. ~nd a,~ed Lauden: U 1!11>' ~_bi& tfpj>Qr. Area youngsters interested ta landswap·and.threeotherconfigurat1on.s. attempt to abandon. our legal com-terests of our corutitueiits. lt is simllar·.o
d:>ilis and jewelry was taken_ amOOn~· . J!la.~9.~J7 jnlg!il ~~r ~ :Md'~~·~ jO~ ·~ newly organized Leo Club, . ~attln questioned Ballfng~r. as to who mitment to·~ out.the exchange would.1 to Salt Creek where the Cllunty gave
t , pos1t1on in favo r. youth branch of the Costa Mesa-Newport m1dated the exchange or1gin~lly. Th~ be neither Courageous, nor pruderif, ·nor away valuable land to private land·
t more than $2,000, most of it now "We!I, irs too bad, but the negative }!arbor Lions Club, are reminded of engineer replied that the Irvine Company responsible." owners." l"fCOVered. ~ .. , ar~ents ~Ve.been f:!te winners," said .. t.anight's org8J1.iza~onal meetijli. _.;:..~_:_ _______ _:_..:__ _ _: _______ -,..-------------------
4M.any other yalQ.ib~~ wer~ left alone, Lauders. 'co~g ~e legislation which r -1be11e$Slon wftl be at-7:30-'pl:n. in the
st.nee: they bad 'no ~tlon. . woul~ _.put flderat tax mo11ey into' local Girls ·clu» Teen' Room, 1815 :A.naheim
1 The boys were admitl~ to Orange hand~. ·I -.' • • Ave.: .Costa Me~a. ~
,J ·· t J enil " 8 11 ndtn rt be The next question was obvlOWly why"! Advisor Lew Simon says boys and girls
yxin Y uv e a pe g cou ar-'· M ~in I y 1tate and local ir, tS to 20 are eligible and may call 646-9949
lJgs. . . . ~. responsibifft.y,'!"said Lauders-, bringiltg a · t•fito ~-are ellgtble and '"-Y call 646-9949
1 Investigators 111d the trio, 13, It and storm of laughter from the audience. or 548-9458 for additional information.
16, roamed .through Costa Mesa and -' ~ ·
Newport Beach's' plush Back Bay area, ~ . ' k)iockJng on ·doors and burgling those
where they got no answer. ·
i. Watches and rings -wete given to their
friends and small change and easily-trac-
e'1 anijq~ coins simply thrown away, the
sUspecta admitted under questioning.
Capt. Green said about $1,700 in stolen
goods have been recovered since the case
was brokea·Mooday night by Patrolman ·
~Neat ·
One woman came borne while the three
boys were rifUng her residence but they
fled out the back. door and apparently
conUnued looting other homes.
DAILY PILOT
OU.NOE COAST PUtl.ISMIH~ t'QMPANY
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ChnllffH AMttlll .. 142·5671 p•-~,,
· c.,..1t111. 1m. or..,.. c .. 11 """•'~"" Preparlng for fund-raising breakfast April 18 for Orange Coast YMCA =r· -~ "';' .;~~~~11: are (rear from left) Hugh Mynatt ot Richard's Market location of :::-•"•':WC...:.'.~~' "*1a1 ,,.-.:· ' ·".the event; Jatk Zareniba of YMCA Boal'~ of Directors a1nd Bill Hus·
._...,. <""_. • .,.Hill .. "'"""" ••ieh croft, breakfast c~ai ~rnan (in chef's hat). In foreground, artist Bruce -et.•• .,,_, c.1119tnie. MKn.ti... ~ . .~1clntyr(! PIJlS flo1sh1 ng touches on one of drawings that will be giv· ~ u,:,::r :,.INf..:.!1~.--1" • • e.J'u a·way dut.ing 7':30 to .. ll~a.m. affair and Mar.jlyn Rea vie of Corona 1.....,.,=:--T.-:-:=-:-=:.---.: .. :;:'. ___ ,_dcl !>far !!!gh_ 11roup that will provide breakfast musl_c_.
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Tht•• ''' wtry c•'"forftbl• (tf• b•41 · fo; • Si~l~r •nd Sl!tpin9, · :·
A w1d1 ttl1ct1011 of F1bric1 trttl Ct!on t. .
choot• f••m.
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Yo ur favoritt Interior designer unlr • ~PPll ~:sist Uf>ll . ~.
PROFESSlll~J' GAR REIT fU_'RNITU RE
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opot1 MIO., TIMo,.. • l'tl. Im. ~b~~AH~REBSOR ILVO.
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646-0275 646-0276
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YOI:. 63 , NO. ll, 4 ~TIONS, 44 PAGES JMUllSOAY, APRIC' ;, '1970 TEN CENTS •
Hundreds Hear Cleniente.-.··CounciI·. Candidates,
•. • • • • ' ' "'I \ • . . .
·: 11J .JOHN VAL TEllL\
• Of .. ...,, .........
• ·An overflow crowd of both city council
t andidates and guests "met at San
Clemeole High School Tuesday. night lo
thraoll out IDWliclpol )Bolies in tbe belt
attended town hall mcetinc ir. years.
Several · hundred San Clemente voters
heard U of the rtCOrd 15 candidat.s
J>reaenl a live-minute plat!Oil'Dl, then
an!W'e!' both written and spobn que&tioM
"""' the floor.
Alien Killed
In Cliff Fall
At Onofre
The p-omi8e or enouch wages to sup-
port a -Ud 11m!O childreJ left behind
in Malcl Jurecl 1 man to Btldden death
w~ lllcbl. when he walked off •.
cliff -ol Ian Clemente. 'n71111 lo ..U around a Border Patrol
dlodpalol, lia -waa leading -~ It I,,. Wiien be llepped into tbe
dar-11111.planced m trot, londlnJ on
hi• l!aad.
Ar 0 ~ f.' ... 1JP. a 1'omas
GutierrmJ'tmmer.. C , el M u n I c I p I e
Tepalquetetee, Mirhorln, Mexico.
Sao Diego County sheriff'• deputies
sald the accident occurred about 200
yards inland !nm the beach, thne miles
80\Jlh of the San Onofn Nu c I e a r
Generating Stat.ion.
Investigators said he and his partners,
In the country illegally, were making
their way through heavy brush west of
tbe San Diego Freeway.
They ......... iolp a1.-Gutierl<Z·
Jimenez ren to Ids death and were sut>.
quen,lly taken Into custody by the U.S.
Border Patrol for return to Mu1co.
The men told deputies their companion
ts l'lll'Vlved by his wife and seven
cbildren, who remained behind.
:tJ .S. Warns Reds
Of .Talk Threats
PARIS (UPI) -Tbe United States
war.ed the Viet Cong andi,he North Viet-
namese today thelr apring offensive
which has pushed U.S. and South Viet·
riamese losses to a seven-month high
threatened to jeopardile . uy serious
negotjations in Paris.
The Hanoi and Viet Cong aegotiators
disregarded the warning by U , S •
Ambassador Philip C. Habib and said
ttiere will be no peace tn Southeast Asia
until all of the 500,000 American troops
are evacuated from South Vietaim.
fTben, advertising their lack of faith in
Ille deadlocked, lf>.month<>ld peace -
!.._.,,the North V-announced
their chief delegation supervisor, Le Due
Tbo, a ranking Hanoi party member, had
beea ordered home ud would leave Fri·
day aboard a Raalan jelllner.
8raage Coast
lfu t•er
The morning fog will e11me In
patches and go in a hurry Friday,
making way for SUMY skies and
i.mperatum IOlring up to the
~ '19'• along the Or1111e Coast. • ,t . •
INSm E TODAY
Th< momenl of truth for
Judge Cdriw<U ...,,,. · allo1it
thirt~. minute1°1bef0!'~ tM ~
ait oottd ancf tht .... rtiJar mav bt
th~ major fall campaign il.Ut,
Page J2.
'5rtM 11 MfttMtt. .,,
c:Mltwllie ' --... ,, CllMU... u, 1 Mnlilll ,_,,.. u ,.......... ~ ............ w
C.l'flk1 ti Or.-c-tr 11 c....-. JI ,,.... ,..,.,.. "
DelMI Net~ II S"'1t tf.H ••"'1tl I"-' Stedt Mlrll ... n.IJ ........... ,. If.II T"""""" II
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. -' 'Tiie --ally ...... lhe .......
-OICh lnlD ,....,. -the polenUal ·new CC]mmunity chdlboule to dialvowal
of support ,from any "special interest"
group.
Tbe Jaytee-tpOGIOl'ed event ran
-y and eodod ooJy when the qu,..
lions from the IUdieoce pe:w thin.
One of the more· provotlng questions
came up for three Canclidatu' answers. It
dealt with g.,ieral 'polley on peace
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llloumbent Du ~ a stnins.
olitlpokfft ~ltWt,' ~ wmed. t tre
Peace Action Council a ommuilt front.
The question~ .. Fl'04 ilaelher
and iBcumbent ,..-11•w T-'iomaa
O'Keefe and Dan Olllloll, -a bnadtll or._.... ..
"flow.. would you votit" on demands·
niade by tho Peoee Adlon Cour>!'ll!" the
query read.
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--rt8l>t4 ol speed! and _.., and the denial of pennlJsloo to the -
lo bold a lawful .....,bly prOYed OOlhl!>c.
be said, because lhe thousands ' cl
demons'traton held their mardl alyway.
"The police were in a seft.e pOwerleU
to 'act becaUle the5e people had Ille -
Jtllutlonal righL U the counc;1J 1lad tum "'ggettidn to give the group another Poft
of the.city to hold their march and if then
the group violated that order, our palJCe
, !See SAN CLEMl!NTE, Pap ll·
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5 Candida•es Campaign
For Sheriff
Give Views
Laguna Voters Get Facts On 'Image'
Of Laguna · Today the DAILY PILOT presents on Page 3 canipaip ,...·
views and brief biographies on all (i,ve candidates se~g thne
open seau on the Laguna Beach City Council. Gets Bitter Citywide voting takes place next Tuesday in one · of the most-
hotly-contested municipal cQntests in recent yeers. Voting is 1t
large. Each voter may cast ballots for three of the five candidates oo the ballot.
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 lilt IMltr Plllt Si.ff
By JORN V ALTERZA In the 10th and final pre-electlon lonim
., .. .., ....., ...... In Laguna Beach Wednesday afternom, . B-In Ille mmpa1p !Gr ~ l~t.ners heard city council candldata
~y 8beriff IUl'f.llcid 1bunldlY If. express opposing views on the effect.on
S • terw1'W'bm c;fw1...., lbnball1Norril Laguna's imilge of Tue~y·1 merchants' ddl h k S Start allqocl --..·Caplalrano -.... marchon<ityhall; ..... tiild-ilmlll a e ac ignups . . . . ·"· ==..s.:~t~:-::.had . . .~-· ~~~1~.:-~~: . ' . ' .................. cnw' a'llfllif _,_ . J!enijve," and beJl!d a lllipatlon that . , . 1 ~.,. = ......... . . ,..,.., · German Shepherd dolt lralnld tcp''oDll!
With Dress Code ·Re~~'.'Ji·~aai'!· IUckJiv .P~~ ·;. ·. ~~o: ::·::=:
? ' -~., ~. ~ .... -.. '1 ~ -:? -•"" a..arch, att.ndelt by more-: tbn 70
~ !Gr the"'""'-"' at Saddietlact Collep _... Wildndday
with the school 's contrtwersial drtsl code
still "ttlazed," pendinc 1 court decialon,
and the f1r.!lt batch of students: sisniJ11 in
Civic League
Backs Tomehak,
Joe O'Sullivan
J~·~ .... ~ ........ cod6 vtolaton,, _ .. ,,_. -.adlll ~~Ji Jn 'Crn .M, Co' u· '"'e' l,qunans, WU co-&poll!Ored by Church ,..,. lioorllWJlllWWmy1Ji*.• . i• "'I.'• "' WOmel, United and the League ol 1 . lo ' Fr.i Jlrem<f, llopirln. Norris !ilm~ tllal ti • .,.._ " w .... n Voters. · . t~..tden!. <iem-iD ~ lart ;, · t. _:: Following flv .. minute rtat<ment.. by
Howover, Ille picture chani!ed wl,J t.. the -· • r.fllled to ....... For M 001' S,..Qt. Candida! .. Pet.r Ostrander, Joteph Tom·
day When......, wu roceJvod that 1 three-cnnr-.-...,,,, ~ -• , , • cbalt, Edward Lon-, Richard Goldberg
jiJdge pone! in the Ninth Dl.wtict'.Coort ol for,,,.... -lltlt,llGO In """al aid to C'i!E KENNI!;QY, l'la. (AP) '-Jioc. and J9sepb O'Sulliva1, wrltt.n Qllllllona
Appeal the t'O~Y . ~r• -Deplf'bnmt. ne tors . recommended '"'uraday th at from the audlence were addrwed io the In Los Anpks, bad ruled in favor money.IOter -lo ·San•DNigo r--, ,.. candidates by moderator Helen·KeellJ.
or the saddleback cfr<IB code, at least for N«ril -· ....., .. , meulet-pniae 'l'bomaa K. Mottincly Il Asked for a "refle<t"'1" on Ille ,effect
the time beinc. Musict, who dld not appear at the ~ not fly to the .. moon .on ~· and o( _the mercbuts' march, O'Sul.Uvu
"Ofllclally we will 11ar1 eolorolna the vilalloft 'ol the Capillnno, B e a < h bockup pilot John I. Swil'rt r. ..,. replied, "Well, it certainly gave .. a Jot --·~•.J.•.,.-, ..... 1 Cllamher DI Coi-("I will not cle!.-.,craahtraln)ngprogramlosee more publlci'ty , We made !lie _., -~ -· cfiinl/Y mr oppanint Jiy'btlnf ~at Ube can move Into the Apollo IS alol. metropolilao pipers a g aln." 'To
the coll<p, "but atudenta will i..11ven a the . ..,. meetinc")' -Mid bit office MaltliJCl1'• aUm dlance <if malilnc the O'Sullivan'• suuestion that sUch·publici-
reasonable opportualty <o comply." . raponded ...,. ·to --..0. <1111 lnml flight hod binged on -laboratory ty was llOt favorable, Goldberg replied,
This.hesaid,\ntean1'thatno-wilr¥ Saa ClemtMt. Durliil '-. 111'.11, -that -backup "ldo.notfindthepubllcll)ldetrlmeotal.
The Laguna lleach Civic League today kept from reglJ1ning tdday or llJndiOW demonitralion be laid !lit alllca''rit not' ..-.ut, Charlel ,l)uko, actuaDy hu It finally showed the outside world that
end<rsed city council candidates JOltph because of dreu code fiolations bQt el~ aated. · · German measles; "I'tie tealso relayed the ciUztns of ~ Beach were co~
A. O'Sullivan, incumbent, and Joseph L. fenders will be "notJflid'·' lfter' ci:..ts "I mutt tab the full nipmaitiillty for 1bursday from the1Nationll lnstitute1 of cerned and did iiite"nd to do somethinc
Tomehak, planning conunissioner, for begin and ad~ised to eomply .wlthln I f.W the calla Ind -• '.lllvol.*'-' ·the Hu.Ith in Bethesda, Md., tbOfta he did. about lheir problems." election to the council April 14. days Continued violation .__. .... A ked h t his int
A ta•· · t . ued b Le ;.1 then coukl sheriff's office," Murn.y sl.id. Dr. 'Charles A. BarY •. thJ! astronauts• s w a seven-po program s .-c:men 1ss Y ague presi· resu" n expulsion. '1bere wu one instance Where com-chief ·physicllll, ·!lid y.r~y that If would involve i.1 the way of cost,
dent ·Anthony Demetriades said, "'11le Princ.lpal bone of contention in the municaticm; were not clear enough and Duke had the measles, be and other Goldberg said emphatically, "I can tell
board recommend.I that the membership dr~ss code has beeri the requirement that the sheriff'a men were ~•dy to atep in medical erperts would reommend that you it will be ~ery expensive. Just how
(of the Civic League) vote for O'Sullivan hair must not cover the ean: or ci>llar. and help. we just d!dn't make it clear to Mattfntly not be allowed to fly Saturday. expensive will depend on the number of
and Tomehak, leaving the decision Preliminary injunctions were granted them we wanted them in t.be city." CUniCal teeta, bad indk:ated Duke hid people we will need to Implement it, but
regarding the third man .to the business In January by Judge Harry PregUIOD of Norris termed the uarted rtfU5al of meules but had left ~ one chance it will be expensive. However, I feel the
community wblch has ch6oen to form i the U.S. Illltrict Coor!. obliging the col· sheriff'• help u a "•'--ace to Ille Pno~ that be bad·"-··.~• "~''··--m-·. people are of a mind to pay that bill •ticket' DI the r10Dainlng three can-lege to permit three long-balred studeetl dent and lo tl'ie citlle";' of our county." A •n~ w~.......,. -·-•-·• now." dida~." '1be9e -are incumbent IUcbard to f'tlilW, Two more atudenta liter Murray~ there wu udefinitely 1))1<.'e agency-announcem,ent said the To the questio•, "How Is 1i ,possible to
Goldtlerg, Peter Ostrander and F.dward were added to the injunctians and sm no animosity at alt between our depart. lab test. "confinn Duke has ,German control narcotics violaUom with 30
Lorr. thenheld. the lehool.'1 draa: code hu bem ment llld the ·~-:, .~ ••. ci-~ rneults, or Rubella' •• He has shown a policemen"? LoOr replied, "Actually
Deci · to end o~··'liv and 1---· · _-q,, ue:u\.~ IJYI•-clusic rile in rubtlla antibodies." It also th I bout 1 u· IKIO one ~ an . men or iem m abeyance pendlq a ju.st doesn't have hll facta stnJgbt." ere are on ya 6 o ac.ers out in tbe
Tomehak was made by unanimous vote final court· hearin1. Jn a ltpf.rate conversation Musick Aid Duke has developed a rash, arthritis field, so they must rely on techniqiae,
of the board of directors following the Hec..oa· de! Mu attorney Pttrkla agreed. -andMalatlnawellln1 gndin botheth ~-"'·tw . rather than numbers."
League.sponsored candidates' forum "?.It represe11Ung the Jtudents, 11id "If he makes this kind of lrrespon1lble g Y a o ..... r 0 prime 1olT said he would favor the purchase
Tuesday night, Demetriades said. ahe wu ready to go to trial jn their stMementa-, ttien he had better dJeck the Apollo 1! crewmen, James A. LoV!ll Jr. of animals1 probably German Shepherd
n>e Civic Wgue was founded .otarly behalf when county counsel John Powell record a little better," he sald. and Fred W. Hai.le Jr. and Swljert all dogs, trained to smell marijuana. Such
10 years ago, . according to the board acting for the board DI trust.ea, appeaJed Norria ~ Dan<!· the Sl\eriff't ad-"""' •IJ>OOO<I to the dbeaae through animals have ellectlvely aided the police
statement, "to preserve Laguna Beach as fot reveraJ ol the iniuncUon. mJ.nistraUoo on t11ele other points: IN.kt.-Blood lats: abow Lovell , H8iJe and at InternaUotial Airport and in other
an outstanding and unique residenUll He wu grantett • iScallecl 4'eipedlted -'lbat the beat boanduies-in the Swigert all are immune to the cliseue, pu1i of Los Angeles, Lorr said ..
community. Once more the fipt ag.-appeal" -·the eollese hoped wwld Capistrano Bay area ol the county are but thal MaUil)gly Is .noL • ~ked how he would contlol the hiPi>i•
intensive hillside and c o·m m er ct a 1 ' }:l'Oduct 1 dedlton In ttqw to enforce the spreaci·ao tbluly that abaOt a ,ooo penons Berry aaJd tar.~r MatUDg!y had a very ptoblem, Tomehak reiterated an earlier
development la at the core ol the current dress code dta1q aprq rqiaeratlon.. . . have.but one patrol car oa d1lty to•..,.. fOOd chance of' coriil!il doWn with the SUllesUon 11\at a committee Including the
city council electioa campaign. llewever, ~ -Judie appeal _, them. . . di,._, · clergy, city olflctals. polic<, s{udent.. and
"Qoucial to this election la whether Ille took the malter -1 u b m i'l a)• n -&>arit11 cootl. and -coadltion ol In an eflort to.aYOid a COttly --..Ude tpeclali.ts he formed to study the
resident..o!Lagunawillcontroltbelrclty W~,maldatrKnecr arytobepl 81reriff'acan •. lt ..... theeouqtyll-., dolay In the ·launc:blnc, Swfprt 'J<Ued reasons for the problem and suggest
oouncll and, Uroogh tt, the plannin& com-(IM DU. ODDI, ,... J) • « .... ucmrr, r.,. J) Lovell and Halle, aboard . • spaceehlp practical solutions. "U we put them on a
mission. For theee are the bodies that • aiqlulator 'I'ti.UI'lda>;. They rehearaed bus to Newport they'll just take a bus
will decide, perhaps irreversibly, bow ~r tplit-teCOnd crltfcal maneuvers tWat re. back/' he said.
hillsides will be bWlt up, where the high· E M • F ~·ire clole cooperation. ' He also sald that his proposal for a
rise ·-cturu will be located on the X· ·arine . aces R·ap Included were . launch. liuncb abort, syst.ms ana)ys~ of clly hall operatk>ns beach, and what will happen to our Main docklD& with tbe moon landlnc craft,' fir· could lead to much more efficie11t use of
Beaµh Park.'' Ing Into lunar orbit 111d·detcent to Within persoanel and 1 moot h er cooperation
Noting that the League board had eliht miles of the moon. bet w e e n police, fire and housing
never before felt IO compelled to ta ke Of s z ·. A z · . ~ descent mao:euver ls especially departmetta to help combat the l>foblem.
such a strong pG!lition in a city election ·mugg ing 'Inns· criUCal,.becaute accidentally bumlDg the One quutioner asked "any candidate'' <>;~ii'j~i.r~COOC::1~~pport . . ..... ·-~. .·,. . . ·~~ij..rlli,;:;~':~; ~7.:':i"~~o°:,:'f.i~~~~~w;r~1:.;,
Tomehak and O'SGDlvan is based on the ~ ~ , , ·~ ~ · t ,· -•• i; • ·' · ·· • , •· , ~ .• ~~ ·-~ '.,+. ,: r · .... i:~ ,·, 1?1janager who seems to~ IJlQSt responli"!1 .
fact_ that th-two candida1<s have coo-A lliferal grand jnry 111\Bait . · ; ~t .0-J ,~ .:n;.I,;:, ··~I!!.' ,Apollp ,·~ ;J;Wi•lltla.,!lli.~, b!!' for the' lolerai>t i ltltilll·-l1" t .'i · 1i.tenlly cbamplooed Ure •cauae of a netilayindlcted mind~ · $i..I' tiiift1L_, .. ;..,''-,rrold '•'-· ; ,lllDJyll\lll:ie,,-~ alan.altltilde', plfa?'" ·•·• • ·: "'> ' .... • ·, ·
· umpoiled La lbat they best ~ I. ~-.•' .;i1;1 • """''."' ,......,.. • ' . ....... •ol'mlift: lliil\;111 Dl!HaJie · lloli!llerg junlpe4 to 'Ill's leet and '?.-•~d!~!!~~~i1t:·; ~~·~~:1 :~· .::;.,.~:.wl~-~~lilo '. ~~~~ ~~piovldft":ii=,: :=Mn~;.0it 111~"°~~~
wm lie~~'tb<;r.prtte11C9 on trusportlng JU.Cal llleni. . ~· <oit,.a-.nr.u:lt ~. Nol llid "'''°' li1\d1ri& ~!<"· , , .c1iv council to set city policy. rr the city
the city council" Gutlerrer and JOOI De .leMa' i la San , Aid hfa olfloa h>d been i. The 'blJ 'qUlltloti: II ,......, Sltiseii, ·liiihagtr fall• to cany out this policy, · Robi ... 15, Sants Barbara, 1 . alleal .mocsJlnr 11nce )_,iry. wbo hai never f1o!m Iii stJa!>e, <tn -k. then It ls ltme to talk about recall. But
lll•r keU as the altmnath of Ure falal ~· I "Wt _._.. to 1it!Jal< Ille !WO llieo • .-bly with U1e ' other tr. I n -~·-blame the city muager If 1 Steck a Mexican· natlonal on o.np -:ai1-' allei)ltlre *'>llnl. may i.'9' _.,.,. IMt ~cl,.. alid ripld council failt to provide policy and
near San Clement. recentb'· I been ~lt for •brit11Jft11~ •• • .~ •-:. , • , , . • , , · ershlp."
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices on the Federal ofllclalt tald ~ ""• -/·~ llltutOn!b of.,...,.,.~ Into · <LOnil,0'11ilae<lifl~·«> llaltlngfy cin1 the candldat.o, Mrs .
slock market were mixed late lhifl after-other alltn1' hi tthe car• ~'J'-', ·.a' ~bf1Jllll ·llC61h· Ar" •· 1 II '""-..~~ .... .as,.a team 1 Keeley, herseU 1 former councilwaman,
noon In lliltt trading. (See quotations, been driving, five Jammed.liill ll*Wwrli 1 iorfldiJS iMlntolt •lliot "9iJllto IJue • rlftte d>an •tWo• ~'tint u tiadup aald, "It •Is a demandlnf job they have
!'ages ~). A. Marloe 11P Ibo\ U., dfto.;J'!l!l 'llo J-•• -lo dt'culil•inl Ure -piiolalfor Apollo u,.mon·1 fl(lt-.lan-volunteered to fill for the ne1t four yoars,
DecU..-advlllCflontheNew -to ::J!'." .. WI &I tire patrolcheclr poi>ton tbe~·-ay •. dlnJ-,and then •thtprkn<mw wUh meetings every -k. l..U., from
Yori< -£Ith..,. by • """"'mar· and, Aid , bft a -·decal , Gut!<ml la a ld,tar -ol tria • for ApoDo ts. OW.rvers 1117 !hay are a two to five hours, akllla with ma117 o1Iler
(in. illuecl to Ou11emL Merlnt Corpa.. ,IUpefb(f coor4loalod team. -· · 1 -· ISeo LAOUliA, Paga II
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J DAILY PIL~l SC Th.....,, Ai>'ll 9, 1970
-.,,.... • .... J:. • • ~AN G.EM~NTE .r,pRUM • ~ •. (
--ltipped In and enforced the ........ equitable ftl' 10 tut-~ fl'Gll
Jaw,• lie -· • out of town can Pl:( foe, our-~ ol
Otbor fllall the Peact Action Coonc1J , IUIDla•nlnt !be beacba. He · Mlll!I
-'!the other """"'"J!r·. plal· ~y.~:::,! .:.~ ~ = ......... twttll ·~ .. ~·-Lio .....
.,. ~from -h can-'. :"..,-,::.· aloi "'"•;,!i~llifJ •
di4&"''• 1alt ID Ille onler In which Ibey -!O -" "::::: piu ""· RI cllW
Wflft made: the ctty~s poor nrt lnNranct: rating. He
•..qtll ~ spoke f~~. he '8ld, so agreed "whole.heaMedly" wttll O'Kfff•'•
tul be '""1ld nol be charged with shirk· '1iews on soil stability matter1.
181 hll du.UH P a planning oommlploner ~•rritfl T. P'•I* called the city's mal.n
fOf pollUCAI pin. He left soon af. road, El Canllno Real, a "carnival. All
terwardJ to attend. a c,OJDm~1,19n we need is a few tattoo .JMU:_lors and H m~. He cl~ his yeart of ·lltvle. as would look U.ke a complete peimy arcade. • llnnlaa ID lndiona, IDllowed b'y wvlce J don't'want to be a polllidan, all want II In.Bao Clemente city ball. He inlllatod Iha four yeen and I would step aatde. I wllll
S., C1emeo1e coundl ~-!Ml-a crack at dwlllns oome ol lbe tilings In ~ poUey and designed the award the city including what yoo see on El wlMfnc hi~top ~aJ ecene. "I ~ke Camino.' I'm not afraJd ta ask Wby." ~ campaign ~ses, because 1 ve .....um Rtvdy also praiRd the Citizen's
heard 1too many m tnY ~Ile~ which Committee for Bttter1Govermpent and
dlAppur when the po0J open. He cited read names of· several of itl leaders. '11sb pri«ity fa< devel~ o1 city cillng .their' achievemenll. "If they are
parka. He asked for suppol"4 but I wUJ spending money from an outside crouP.
need men of it when I am elected lo the then I don't inow about It. He aid he
r• -.council, H he said confidently. was •shamed ol the pier emrance and
-Du QllkNI strtssed that an ir>-claimed that recreation flcllitlea for our
cum bent lhould run on his record. He youth "have been udly nrgkded ....
cited hil own. alq wtlh achJevementl ol -Art Holmes ·-Ille joy ol lffing
Ille tolal council In the put'Iour YMl'I -so many ID the audience tD<I praised Ille
a drop in ·jXVpt:tty taxes from tl.15 to Jayceesfw thefOl'Upl,thtnaaidhlslove
$1.31, purcbuet of beach frontage for the of the city was the prime mdver In his
public, development of Pico Road, the choice of campaign for the council. He
waste water treatment plant, water' said the new clubhouae ~ould have a slora~ facilities, shlftlng from iron· theater room, a muJtl.i>urpose large.
water mains to transite, expansion of the floored room and a smalJer ·area where
police depmiment and settin&.up ol the hlstoricaldispjaysandc o mf o r t a~le
parka ind recreation and perkiQc cam-seating oould be provided for peopl& "to
mlssiom. · just sit down and chat." He called for
"I am VtffY proud of the achievern~ts moving of the railroad. ~ called for pler
and I WQU,kl 11~ aootbef tenn to proJect entr~ improvements and t•eUff, but
San Clemente's future, he said. good wn ing and grading codes. J want a
-Mayor Wade Lower thanked the first,..class city."
residents · for their "wonderful at· -Kaelber said he "definitely" is not a
tendance" and said Chilton had r~lated tool of ~ijll interest grqups, then hit at
Laguna Officers Train
LI Rick Drake· of Orange County Sheriff's Office
(rlght) instructs Laguna Beach Police Lt. Frank
Scfiopen on tbe use of hand guq in launching tear
gas and smoke grenades. Riflemen in background
are Laguna police officers Bob Remillard, Art.bur
Fro1n Pag" 1
LAG UNA BEACH FORUM
DeLuca and William Heiden (from left). Training
in use of speciali.ipment in crowds and in flush·
ing criminal su ts from hiding l;akes place
regularly at she s department facil~es.
Fran• P ag" l
• • • SHERIFF ... ' many of the aclhtvem"1ts of the city. U the lifeguard pay controversy, tenning
you want others, just look at the the city's unwilllngness to pay "a man meeUngs at the city, state aJ1d even na. for economic reuons, Goldberg said, ''I a gallon for gaso~. but by the time it is
po.ragraph with )'OW' ballot. Tersely, he who obviously worked 400 hours wit.bout tional level, where ijley rep~t you." do not say it ii neceuary to overrun the pumped into a ~I car it costs 58 cents
said he had=~~= budgets, pay .. and lts hirina of special le.{8}_ coun-. Council iqembers, she aaid, get, "10me town with tourists, or to block everyone's a gallon.
hone5ty, no m ·.no pro-sel
0
Would probably cost more 1o1uu• pay· complaints, IOme abuse and very little view with a solid wall of hotels on the -Deputies are losing morale. They
miaes and he was the on}J ccuncilman to ing the lifeguard for his work. He said no '"-A..i.. I mov~ here 11 vears ago for the ha t di r t •-· • f om lhe vote~ tbe)ltelt aalmy11><nese for man should sene more than two terms commendation. I· sometimes wonder how :;:~· r~ many "ethers did, the ve o ra o or a ow uuc11 r
councilmel. Dr. Loftr atoutly defended of office and hi tat the city for not pro-we manac• to find cqdldates." delightful surroundtnp, the climate, the county yards if their car runs out of gas
and praised the Committee for Better viding .more beach access routes, road She urged t•reflectlori, cebnnea ud village atmosphere, and I would be the and they have no cash.
Government and said Jts members sought improvements and placin& controversial reason, in these troubled times." la.st to want to ruin It." -Some patrol cars are 50 run down , he
)!Im out for an 'endorsement, not the items late in the meetlng of the coon. · · .... • • .a hi bellel Iha""-h. · said that one depuly was stop""'d recentlv reverse. He prailed ita members aa being cil ~nd keeping speakers waJtJng to speak Ostrander directed his talk to a Lorr repeaLCU s ~ 1.11c: 1pp1e ..-~
commwlity leaden. on the issues. "Avenlda Pico ls a Jong clarificaUon or the Cordoba issue; ex· problem is the most crltlcal one facing by a high school girl who pointed out t.hat
minority oplnlona on the council still need road to nowhere," he added: plainln& the basic concept. of Planned Laguna and blarn«I city co u n c i 1 his car was emlti'11g ~eavy smoke and
more acUon, including an overlay map -Ian Kenntd1 lipped into the a~ resl~ential development, which he said ls tH'penni:Sd•ivheeness" fldor the PA_!t fGoourldybeeair~. was adding to the smog problem. The car
showing IOU stability in the general plan ministration like a bantam rooster and e 181 wou suppo. • r s had more than 100,000 miles on it. Jt was and contingency planning for water said one must fight ''"the batUe again.5t used throughout the world and ls design· seven points and emphuized, ''We need
I H lso ·1ed city t tat t •-"eov 1• H 'ted ed to provide more opea space for each men on the city council with backbone , a 1967 model. •ho r age 1
• e • Cl 0 governmen loaA er. e Cl -ho will take a hard l1'ne ~and. We e1'ther · achievements during his stewardship and many of his suggestions m parking and family unit. .. ... -Response times are sometimes so
p\ed&ed to cmtinue "making waves" on other ismle.s, he said. have been ignored He aald the planning commiulon crack down,or let this element take over. slow that dep.itles face "a lynch mob of
the c:oundl. I'm vociferous and I sbould by the council, he termed the five-year den.led the Cordoba billalde development This is a chance to vote for a change and sorts." One recent call from two raped
be." capital improvement· Procrt;rn as "just a plan on the "technicality" that the city get some real leadership." housewives in Silver ado CIJ),yon required -Alrii Baker stressed that he waa an pleee of paper'' and chlr:..,, that the did ...... have u ordinance for plaruled O'Sullivu, wbo said he waa a little who ~ .... bu ·-·--·'-h' -~~ In n. dispatching of • unit from South Laguna Independent candidate 1-.:i.Ultl cam· council has not lowered the tu rate, t. rnidentlal development. "I uy we nervoua. ~ 11 1UV1U:i-wa , "-'e
patp cblallona and bas no support from "just shlfted It ammd· on apeclaJ use should write such an ordiDance," he Aid. audience, cited the accomplishment of which took 90 minutes to arrive.
t•outlkle lf'OUP'·" He praised swift city fees and OD to the water bill." The "It ta the only way to control future the council on which he has served, refer· Musick later refuted the statements in
plllllllnl for the new co.mm u n 1 t Y Chorak case, he charged "ls a stigma on development of the ~ and if we rina to the inland r~ay. the beach a general way and said he would netd a
Ni xon PlanS_ -~ I •
More Viet
Pllllouts
,•
" WASHIN.GTON (UPl) President ·
Nixon will make a natlonally teteviied,
addrfss On Vietnam next Thursday night,.
the White House announced today. He ls ~
expecte4 to announce a f\Jrther U.S. troop
wjlhdrawal,
Preas St<ie1ary Ronald i . Ziegler sl!lf
lhe ,,...O;on radio u ~q aa ~oct.:
would be at I p.m. PST April 16 an~
would cOOcern Nixon's decision on Viett
nam troop levels. :
The speech will come one day after t~
latest J?hase of the gradual troop pullou(
process started last year, br Nixon · ts ~
be completed. •
Previouslf ordered withdrawa_ls ':Vtfc!
reduce the cejllng oD U.S. forces m Viet:
nam to 434,000 on April 15.
Ziegler told reporters that the Presi·
dent wanted to update his report to the
nation on condiUons 1n Vietnam -ampli·
lying hls earlier policy Ma:tements.
Nixon told newsmen at an Informal
news conference March 21 that Viel·
namzation -the administration term for ',
turning a larger burden of the war over ·
to the South Vietnamese -was pr:o-
gressplc weU and he saw at that ~
nothing to slow the rate of U.S:.
withdrawals.
Nixon has ordered three phases o(
withdrawal so far, reducing the authorit-
ed strength 0£ U.S. forcts in Vietnam by
some 115,000. The actual number o.f
troops to be pulled out as of a ~·eek from
Wednesday is e1pecte<I to be about .
105,000. .
Nixon aMounced the first 25,IJOG.man
reduction in the celling I@st JWie ancto.
subsequenUy ordered two more reduc.
tiob,,,
Gen. William C. Westmoreland, former
Vietnam commander who ls now the ArinJt chief of staff, and Gen. CreliJlltoa
\V." Abrams, currently the U.S. com-
mander in Vietnam, have favored a
slowdown in the withdrawal because of
an increase in Communist acitivity.
Ziegler said the President's decision on
a fourth phase of the withdrawal is base4
on "going cons u It at lo n s '' with
Ambassado r Ellsworth Bunker and Geo.
Abrams in Saigon and with U.S. planners
in the Pentagon and said Nlxon had no
plans to meet pel'30nally with BWlker and
Abrams before April 11.
Btmker is .scheduled to return to the
United States in May for extensive .coo-
sultaUons on Vietnam.
Four Army units are sched\lled to leave
Vietnam Friday as pait ·of the third-
phase, 50,000 man withdrawal. The Cot.al
number in the units is 3,280. clubllouae, then dwelt on Ille dlre neecl,)'e our town." The city's budget baa funds doo'.l •I ...,. ltodanla aooa It wW be purduue,. ¢11• llrary, Iba hlPll of a clooer dleek of the recotds·to reply to lhe "1d, ,fir. a • fll!lltme,,--ndel\ .11111, .ftr 'a·Mlte. 9.,..illooltmtnt and oilMr too tale. Some of our hl1afdea already are recruticlli director, the new p!ay!io<me speclflc dlarges. • d A •
cijpvtment, citing Laguna Beach's three needed projects. "Ali we need ii men to scarred wtth cut and fill development." and other items. "We give adequate coverage In our Perot . Stymie gam sE8uons and n paid firemen. He cal.Jedd implement it." Tomehak· prefaced his remarks by The decisiMI mlde In the next four patrol duties end we ~ye sol.id back up
for nlocation of Ille Santa Fe Rall Roa -Harold Meade also bit on the sayinf .lannjnl oornmlaalon, on I yean ,.w rea14'id*milnt the Mun!of procedur•. een.Jnly W,w;Jld Jlb'.a PARIS (AP) -H. Ross Perot tried'
-Sall .CleJneaY.., c;allld fa< fiiias"'I-' thalE ~. w1+f,.. , tumed .... Cordoba La...;., he W<f, "I :!ecoinllili Uie biggor budget tD<I if ••'could have one unsucteisfully today to give the North I -'ff ~'f'll . . !fllinter , , ts ot · for · ~Y . , inclUdllil question$ necessity of tourIJtn, but feel we mUst obvlously we would Un prove 'o u r Vietnamese and Viet Cong lists or 1
, ;t_:: T CJ. . e been 'severely ,.. · finan--1 abdlt~ce~e and police service, pro-not overbuild with Ia rif commercial servlct,'' he said. ' · · · prisoners held In South Vietnamese 1
Fratta· Pqftif,J cially.'~ '1le O)l).rak case Wlf1 "emo-, Vlaioft' for ls ud ,fnstabWty or the buildings on the Oceanfronl We must He added · jhat deputies have credit cam ps, and concluded that "they have ne. . ;ir'TE Wr~ and dOtsn't merit an the tf'Oli.. land. He poti1ted out ~t ·he had Invited have a C·H zone and redrict hotel!' .. to cards to use tr they run low on fuel. concern" for their own captives. The· DRESS C. OD b(e 1t ~ts cauaeil. He jabbed at-the plam Ostrander to debate the matter, but had tnat zone. The hlllaldes mlllt be protected The sheriff promJsed to reply in person Texas computer magnate arrived aboard
• • foi' expansion or nuclear generatora al been turned down. to preserve their contours and we should to the charges anc1 pruent h ra a chartered Boeing 707 accompanied by
San Onofre and d>arged that their bot Returnlag to his chosen topic, Tomehak havt planned residential developments to department's viewpoint. at the chamber 's five-wives of missing and pri90ntr of war l'fCiltratlon without a dress code.
Asked if relaxatim al. the dress code ,
had produced a large crop of vlolalon,
Btemer said, "To be honest threre were
vtp:_rew m the first day. But the.!e were
m~ retumlng aopbomorts who are ac·
to the. dress code. I don't know
ay and tomorrow will bring. The .
0 s now entirely up to the courts.
l imply have to wait for a decision."
ter In the morning, learning of the
j ges' rull.nr, Bremer said, ' '.Th e
dffision Is in favor ol the prerogative of
a fc;•I board to set reaaonable rules and
reiuJ.atioos."
Since the judicial panel's order that the
tnjllJlciJons be vacated immediately was
is&11ecl "pending Ille filing of a WTitten
opinion," the final word in the matter has
yet to be heard.
Jf the written opinion also upholds the
leg1Uty of the dress code, there will be no
further legal action on the part of the col-
Jegt, a spokesman said. However, Jr the
Jegll ~sentatlves of the students
chcibse, they can "take it on up to the
S e Court," it was noted.
•
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DAILY PILOT
N~ I••• HIMltl._.. .._.
4at•H ... di ,.....,, YlllS.,
re.. MIN S. Cl&: Ml•
' •
~NGE COAST PUll.ISltlNG COMl'ANY
l•'ffrt N. W1..4 ,. .. ,..,.,, ... .o l"ubuu ....
J11li l. c~·l•v
Vk1 ~ -"-•1 ,,.,.,....,
lltolfl•t JC.,,,;i
ldllof'
Th°""•t A. M••,hi111
M-Jnt Eifll.,
•1c~1rd I". Nill
~II Otaft!ll! C°""I' Editor
Offk•
C11t1 NllM t 211 W(>I It' Slrttl
·H~I ''""' 2211 Wttl .,.._, hlilll'tl ...
l Lt-41 1-11: ttf F-t ""-~"" lffcli, inn 111(11 1ar1 ... 1..i 1 ... II (..,._..: Jiii Horlll El (-lfto •"I
• ' i _L.
••
..
water.,4ischarae could kill pi~ Ufe. discussed the impcktanee of environment ).~bl~en~d~lh~•'.'._".houJu~~lnto'.'.'.:.'.'lh::•~hll'.'.'.'.'.ls:.·" ____ .:ne:•:t:'.g:::en:::e:ra:.:1.:m:::ee:::ti:'n:'.g:::M:::a::y:.:1:.:9:.:. ~----"-rv_ice_m_e_n_and __ a
7
bou_1_10_ne_w_sm_en_. __ · -Blli lllllk, lhe )'Ollllfest ti' the can. ..er . ur(ed careful pnterYaUon o f
didateS (23) said he wu lhe m:o.t Lacuna'• natural attracUons by very
quaWied because of his youth and his dlscrlmlnating d eve I o p m en t at a
abillty to relate to youth. Hls appearance rnlnimwn denlity level. An11n1lion, he
wu the ·only one accompanied · by a said, ohot!ld be -restricted to llie coulol
demOoltratlon from· the audience -ban-· area and not move behind ·the hllll.
ner1 and applause. "You saw these kids . Delcrlblng the job ahead as "stag·
out here and you laughed at them ," he eerlng," Goldberg said all eudidates are·
said. "But they're oot rioting, they're in favor of more parks and recreation,
carrying · signs." He hit on~ en· Main Beach park development, upgrading
vlronmental Issues, beautification and the sewers and undergrounding utilities
what be termed "absolutely nothiDg for but, he asked, "Who will pay for all this?
our you ng people' to do in this dty. ~ And •Yho will be left in Laguna to enjoy It
Clemente, if you travtl north to aou1h JS if we cu't get rid of the lawbreaker1 who
an ugly city. If I were elected .some of have descended on us like a plague?"
that type of buildinf would not be bulll" When he speaks of cleveloplng tourism
He said Ille city's yooth• "need dtnce.!
and concerts. That's what they want." He
called for acceptance of only "clean" in-
dustry in the city to eliminate pollution.
"t think if you join with me we c<lUld tru·
Iy light the world."
candidates Eugene Sullivan and James
Lusk did not au.end the forum.
Ser vice Slated
For Mrs. Harr od
Funeral services will be condoota:l Fri·
day f<r" Mrs. Gari H~, fernier MGM
SUldios actress and San Clemente· resi·
dent sinct 1964. Sbe died Tuesday 'at
Soulh Coast Communlty Hoapllol alter a
lengthy illness.
The sister o( Councilman Stanley C.
Northru p, Mrs. Harrod, 1712 S. Ola
Vista, \\•as a charter member or the San
Clemente Arts and Crarts Club .
Rev. Hatel W. Van Dusen, Unity
Church or Son Clemente, will officiate at
the ti a.m. service in Lesneski Mortuary
Chapel.
A native of Portland, Ore., Mrs. Harrod
was active tn HtUe theater in Sin
Clementt: worked with handicapped
ch.iklren ; WIS • VOIW1itt:r at the
Servicemen's Horpillllty Ctntttj a Red
Cross volunteer: and had won honors fot
her art work in oil& and. wattrcolw.
She is also survived by her mOtber,
Betty G. Chapin cl San Clemente. Burial
will be in Fairhaven Memorial Park.
Badham Offers Bill
SACRAMENTO-A bill prohibiting job
dlJCrimination 11alnst women was ap.
provtd Wednesday by tht Altembly with
Assemblyman Robert 81dham ( R •
NewporL Buch) complliniR& that wOmtn
want riiJllta but aren't wtlUng to clve up
lh<lt protecUoos ID exdlanp .
County Refers "
Coa stal Report
Back to Planners
In an abbreviated public heartng on the
South Coast Scenic Improvement project
Wednesday, Orange County Supervisors
quickly cut off debate by merrtng the
n!par! back to Ibo county Planning Com·
mission. •
The move .to delay debm and further
actioo on the year-old study hinged on the
recommendaUon of A. s. Kocf'I , county
road commi!Siooer, that t h e con--
trovtn!al realignment of Pacific Coast
Highway thtough Dana Point not be al·
tempted at this time .
Koch said the state was ready to maKe
Jmp rovemC"Jlts on the highway between
Three Arch Bay and San Juan Creek, but
the improvement.s would l'lot be made If
the reallgnment study was requested.
He said the proposed realignment on
Del Prado ln Dana Point would require at
least three years studY and the complete
job might take six years .
Supe.rvl.t0r David L. Saker injected a
new facet Into tbe discussion by calling
for more viewpoints. "We have a f:2
million Investment tn the Dani Point
Harbor project and the people !lhould be
able to look el it," he said.
Alex Lake, ~ Del Prado, rose to 00.
Ject to the propooed reallpm<nt, but he
"·as qulck1y cut ofI by board Chairman
Alton E. Alim who moved that the mat·
ter be referred to the planning con1·
mission for further $ludy.
James E. O'Connor or South Lasuna,
chairman of the lJ.membtr committee
for the 111,111111 Sludy, said hla IJ'l'IP had
made JS5 1 p e c I f I c recommtndaUona
•j\lch Included n1111auon ol billboltds.
1Andocapln1. and underlJ'l'lndlnl o f
utilities amen,: others.
,
SOFA IED CJ,!
lh•,• •r• "flfy c.1111forf1~1t 11ilt liM1 for
Slttl119 end Sltepf119.
A wlcl1 11IM'tf.t11 •I Ftiric.1 1114 C1l1r' It. th•••• ,,,,,,, .
Rag. Now $400.00
•, • ~ ....... ~. ~1.· .. r . • """ -..--;,i.K • ..-..... Your favorite Interior d"e.sfgner wil! bt happfl to tiasl&t you •••
rRoF!SSl~A~J' GARRETT f U RN IT~1 R~BOR BLVD
INTERIOR DISl~N&RS o ,.. Mao., 1'llln. & Fri. 1'"' COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646.0275 646.0276
r
I
Ti'D)"'a. Fl•al
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:(01:. 63, NO. 13, 4 SECTIONS, "'4 PA&ES JH\IRSOAY., .l)PRIL' 9, ·1970 TEN CENTS •
• • • • j. ,. .. ) ""-' ~ .. _,
Hundreds Hear C.le *1iente-·. ·C9uneil .:.Candidates
' By JORN V .U.TERZA
I CM• ...... f'UltMlfl'
A'tl averflow crowd of both city councll
~aodidates and guests met at San
Cl<inenlo High School Tuelday niiht to
thrash out municipal issues in the best
attended town ball meeting ic years.
Several bandred San Clemente voters
heard ts of tho re<:ord 15 C>lldidates
.,,.....i a fivHDinute platform, then .
answer both written and spoken quest.ions
from the flqor.
Alien Killed
In Cliff Fall
At Onofre
,.
the. promise of enough wages to aup-
p(,rt a wife and seven cbildre.i left behind
In Muico lured a man to sudden death
Wednesday nigh~ when he walked off a
cliff south oC San Clemente.
Trying to sneak around a Border Patrol
checkpoint, the. vlctJm ,. .. leldinl tllret
other --be stepped into the
dar-and~·• laet, ~on his bead. ,--i -
Autborities identified him as Tomas
Gutierr.Wlmen<Z, 4%, ;t M u n le I p la
Tepalqueletec, MlcOOM:an, Muico.
San Die(o County -ill'• depulies
said 1ht accident occta"'1 about 200
yards inland from the beach, 1hr<e miles
:&OUth of the San Onofre N u c 1 e a r
Geoeratiag Station.
lnvesliplon aaid be and hia partnels,
in the country illegally, Wert making
their way through heavy brush west of
the San Diego Freeway.
They ............ ilelp -C<utierm-
Jimenel ten to bis death and were a1i.e.
q~Uy taken into custody by Ill! U.S.
Border Patrol for return to Mexico.
'Ibt men told deputies their companion
Is-survived by his wife and seven
children, who remained behind.
U.S. Warns Reds
Of Talk Threats
PARIS (UP() -The United State.
wGMd the Viet Cong and the North Vi~
namue ibday their spring offensive
which h8' pushed U.S. and South Viet·
namese losses to a seven-month high
threatened to jeopardize ally ltrious
negotiations in Paris.
The Hanoi and Viet Cong megotiators
disregarded the warning by U . S •
AmbessadlX' .Philip C. Habib and said
there will be no peace in Southeast Asia
unW all of the 500,000 American troops
ari evacuated from South Vietaam.
Then, advertising their lack of faith In
the deadlocked, 15--month-old peace coa-rerence, the North Vietnamese announced
their chief de1egatloo supervisor, Le Due
Tho, a ranking Hanoi party member, had
been ordered borne ad would leave Frl·
day .aboard a lluulan jetliner.
. Graage Coast
Weatlle r
TM: morning toe will come ln
pa&ches and go in a hurry Friday,
, making way for sunny .skies and
· temperatures IO&l'ing up to the
• 70'1 along tbt Orange Coast.
' INSIDE TOD~Y
Tht naoment of tr1'th for
Judge Car.notU Ol1M about
thirty mhauttr lxfore the Stn·
au voted and tht tesul& ma11 bt
. tht major /fill campaign it.tut.
l'ag• a. .
•"'" 11 MMtffl99 11 CellfHlll• , Ml'lln 1 .. U
a.tilitt "' r .,_, ,...,.. n ·C-lflM »N H9tllut lffWt f.J c:..kt JI Or-. c.-tY II ~ t1 St'Mt """' ft
.... Mttlftt '' s,.rtt ... ............. t Sltdl ~ n.u ....... ,.,.4 1 .. 11 Tt........ 11 ,...._ tt.U 'fllMttn 14-lt
..__.. 11 ....... •
-. .. l. ....... 'U ............ ,,..
~U-.11 .... , ..... ...
••
"' 1bt 1asues -ally -e Ille ......
wi1ll ~ man r&Dlinc !ram Ille polenllal
new community clubhouse to disavowal
ol support from any "ispecial Interest"
gT<IUp.
The J aycee-.spomored event r a n
smoothly and ended Ollly -the ques-
tiona fl'OQl the auditnce amr thin.
Ont of the more provoting questloos
came up for three caDdidatts' amwers. It
dealt with general policy on peace
• I
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KMlblr. •••kc Ont. llkl that
--... tblt lli'l .. In Vie~ narn la•• "~blo pojlce l!d*l·al!lf
I man 1ht op1n1c tliol we lilaulll ...tu
as 10011 u PG"""'·'' .. •
Ile left It 1bm, •
Bui c ..... u .... Chlllao, firmed the
orpnls..jtm lllil l 'ha.. ·but utfir anti-WU' lfOUll: ..... =fl<iot
conlempt for them. We -d them
out of the city Md prevenl 1hem from
l!avinl outrqeoua and u o•la w I u I
•
creiilintr-.· lnellmbent· O'Keele approodled' the
l.ssue frorfi I m0re definite, and bilt6rkal
vleWpotnt' IOd saJit be dlaa.,..d with the
...,..i COl81Cll's .aclim> 00 the -made befonl · a demonotratloo at' the ...... . ' w-.,, nmte llooJe laat,yev. .
"we hJil 1ht ~imtty, to vote on
1(!elr demands. I. betieve ·In the nlf ol 1he
law and I'm a pretty cooaervaUve
lawyet." He aaJd,
But, he added, the Constlt>ution
In:a" ·----·------<--.--
l\llll'ID1'ea rit!>l! ol apeech and aaembly
and the denial of penn.1ssJon to the IJ'OUP
to bold a lawful asaembly proved nothlng.
he said, because tbe thouaand1 of
demonltraton heJd their march lll)"ff'•Y·
''The police were in a aen.se JJOW•less
Ul ·act.because tbeae people bad'lhe con-
aUlutlonal rigl!L If tho. COO.CU bad 'taken
suuelllan to &Ive tho ·-p another part of the city to hold their march and if then
tbi .,...p violated that order, our pollCe
• (fl<e SAN CLEMENTE, Pip I)
•
·as.
S Candidates Campaign
For Sheriff
Give Views
Laguna Vote rs Get .Facts I On 'Image~
Of .LaguDa Today the DAILY PILOT presents on Pafe 3 cariipetgn r ..
views and brief biographies on all five candidli!tl seekin1 throe
open seats on the Laguna Beach City Council. _ · Gets :Bitter Citywide voting takes place next Tuesday in one of the most
hoUy-eontested municipal contests in recent years. Voting is at
large. Each voter may cast ballots for three of the five candidates
on the ballot. By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tM o.llJ Plllt ..... •
'11111 I -.... -By BAJIBA&4,KRl!IJIICR
ot ,... ~It ..... ,,.,.
In the 10th and finaJ prwlecUon forum
In Laguna Beach wem-tay aftm1ooo,
listeners heard clty council candidates
express oJ>POSing views on the effect on
Laguna's image of TueSday's.merchauts'
march on city hall; were tOJd couricilman
Richard Goldberg's acven-point ~am
to improve that Image will be • very u ·
penatye," and beard a 'auggestloo that
' a-.,in the campa1p tar <>ranp
Saddlehack Signups: .~tart
With Dress Code R•~a
Col8lly • Sberilf our!aced 'llnlndo7 a1:
teroooo -challenger llanball NonU ajlopd 1lefon a Capistrano Beech ....
-lbal llberllf..1-l>!uilct hid rofuaed pol!ce·ald to ~·N-,
'1!ul· 1*>-.:.0 .... '• -.. ri!>l1 .i.·lllf•'•~'. · .......... -~. ... t!iiirliiij. . a.fir eli!lift llur· •
' r11·-~· 'l)Je1-w'u·''li>tallr · Jac:Otlwt.. ... f ....
,.,,,.., io 'iYl>bl. tm.p..,,.,i, -
raoill." ll!!llillaolllj "and ID tt -la
1!oor badl7 lio'Wlids•my Job."
' . ' German Shepherd Clogs trained IO 'lilllf
' '~ t 1 "1!1i11''.\" olilllceJllliiJuaas be pur<hueif 'lo "°"' tho Bdekup. :PJL>t ' .. ~'n!e· torum JA 1ht eoo,,..alloaal
Clmd>. ·-by """' than 'II JtegiltraUon fer the IPl1l!c .....,ter 11
Saddlelll!ck CoUfCe ~ Wedneaday
with the tcboal's.controversial area code
atill "rtlaxed," pending a eourt' decision,
and the lint belch ol atud<lol! olgniog in
Civic League
Backs Tomehak,
' Joe O'Sullivan
The Laguna Bead:I Civic League today
endorsed city council candidates Joseph
A. O'Sullivan, incumbent, and Joseph t..
Tomehak. planning commi.ssiooer, for
eltction to the couoclJ April 14.
A statement i.ssued by League presi·
dent Anthony Demetriades said. ""nle
board recommends ·that the membership
(of the Civjc Leque) vote for O'Sulllvan
and Tomehak, leaving the decision
regarding the third man to the b!Jl.iness
cmununity wl>icli baa cbooeo to form a
'lk:ket' of the remaining three can-
didates." 1bese are incumbent Rlchard
Goldberg, Peter Ostrander and Edward
Lorr.
Ded&ion to endorse O'Sullivan aod
Tomehak was made by unanimous vote
ol the board of dtreclor1 following the
League.spomored candidates' f o r u m
Tuesday nigh~ Dem<lrlades said.
'Ibe Civic League was founded nearly
10 years ago, according to the 'l:loerd
llatement, ''to preserve Laguna Qeach as
an outstanding and unique residential
community. Once more the fight against
intensive hiUskle and c o m m er c I a I
development is at the core of the curnnl
city council election campiign.
"Crucial to thla· eleClioo is whether the
residents of Laguna will cooln>l lhetr city
council and, 1hroogb it, tho planning com-
mission. For these art tbe bodies thBt
wm decide, perbapo irreventbfj, how our
hill.skies will be buUt up, where the hlgh-
riee structures will be located on the
beach, and what ,rill happen to our Main
Beach Park." "
Noting that the Le11ue board had
never before felt 1c> compelled to take
web a strong pO&itloo in a city elecUon
,campalp, the atalomenl COll!'iuded '
'"!be directora' decWon to support
· Tomcb.ak and O'Sullivan Is based on the
fact that theee two candidates have con-
sistently championed the cause of a
acenlc, unspotted Laguna, that they best
ttpreeent the Jdeali and aspirations of
our organization and that these ideals
will be belt upheld by their presence on
the city CQUDCll."
NEW YORK (API -Prices on the
stock market were mlW late thla after·
noon In· light trading. (See quotaUons,
Page.s22-231 .
O.Cllnel overlook ""'"""" on the N.,. Yorlt Stock E1ch-b)' I""'°" mar-
lin.
I
" lndudH '""1 ...... di.as cC!de .tololon,
...O.lflnl to Dr. Fred liremer, aaptrtn-
tendent.pnoident.
lfoftVer, the pidure chured early fo.
day when word Wu received that a three.
judge panel In Iha Ninth Dis1rlct Court of
Appeal In Loi Aqelel, b9d ruled in favor
of tbe Saddlebact drts.s code, at least for
the time being.
"OffJCially we will start enforcing the
dresatode ~" llld a spoblman at
the college, ubut students wiU be atven a
r:easonable opportunity to comp11."
Thia, be said, meooo lhat no one wm be
kept from ,...i.terlng today or tomarrw
because oC dreu code violaUoni but. -· fenders 'will be ''notified" atter' cla.ea
begin and advised to comply within a few
days. Contlhued violation then could
result in ezpuls:lon.
Principal bone of contention in the ~ code has been the requirement that hall' mmt not cover the eara or collar.
Preliminary inJunctions were granted
In January by Judge Harry Pregerson o1 ·
the U.S. Di>trlct Court, obllglng the col-
lege to penoit tllret loog-balred students
to register. Two mott atudenta later
were added to tbe injunctJons and sinCe
then the ICOOol'o dreas code baa been ~Id more or· leu in abeyance pending 1 final court hearing. c.r.na. de! Mar attorney Patricia
Henog, representing the students, said
abe waa ready to go to trial In their
behalf when county counsel John Powell
acting for tho board ol trusteea, appeated
for reversal of :the injunction.
Ke was IJ'antecf a •11>ealled "expedited
appeal" which the college hoped would
produce a d-In time to enforce 1ht
dress code durlnc l!'rlnl<f'lllatration.
However, the -Judie appeal pallet
took the matter under 1 b m l s s l o n
Wedneaday, mU1ots ff to bes1n
• (Sol DUii.COD hp I)
Norris .cblqed that a1 a •major
-.illlonC-·UatyeOJ',
the l Sber111'1 --.. -crowd-<onQOl·oalatance, kllllog -for·._ 1illD '200,000 In federal aid to
the 0>uoty !berllra ~L Tile
"-Y later -to Son Dleio County, Norris aaserted. ._
Mu!ick, who did not -ar al the In·
vitatkln of the Caplltraoo, B e a c b
Olamber fl Commeroo ' r•1 . wlU not
dilinify my oppooent b)' 1lefu ~-at tbe same meetiDg'') 1MeT' afd hia 1df0oe
responded """' to aaoistanc. <Ills from
San C 1 e.m en te . IUint another
demonllll-be Wd his oll!Ce .,. .. not
asked.
"I must take the lull reapomtblltty for
the catls and respmae involving the
sberifrs. office," Murray .said.
"There wu one instance where com-
mwUcatlons were not clear enough and
the sheriff's men were ready to step in
and btlp. We juat didn't.make it clear to
them we wanted them in the city."
Norris termed the asserted refusal of
sherW'a help as a "disgrace to Ute Presi·
dent and to the cltbens ol. our county •11
Murray ltiessed there wa.s "definUely
no animosity at all between our depart-
ment ud the aberiffs offk:e. Someone
just doean't have his ractl atraight."
In a separate conversailon MiWck agreed. • -
" 11 be makes 1hla kind ol irrespomible
statements, then be bad better check the
record a little better," he said.
Norril alao flayed 1ht ·Sberiff's ad-
. minlslraUon on tbeae other ]!Ointa '
-That the,1 beat boundartei; in the
Capiitrano Bay area ol. the county are
spread so thinly that abo!rt 15,llGO per...,.
have but' one paitNI cir on dUty to serve
them •.
-Soaring coat.I and poor condition of
Sberlfl'1 can. It_ the _y 11-.
(Ille SIIBlll11', Pqe·l l . ./
Ex-Mar ne Fnces .Rap
Of Smuggling Aliens
In, 'C"'am . Co'urse' '-"'· wu co-lpolJsorect ~Church I w.,..., Unlted ild the i.eagtie of
Women Voters.
p M Sho Following five-minute 1tatements by r Or 00ft t candidates Peter Ostrander, Jooeph Tom-
ehak, EQward Lorr, Richard, Goldberg·
CAPE KENNEDY, l'la. (AP) -J)oc· and Joseph O'Sullivu, written q-
tcrs recommended Thuraday t b 1 t from lht audience were addressed to the
• 1--• candidates by moderator Helen Keeley. mNS-prone Thomas .K. MattbJgly II Asked for a "reflecUon" on the effect
not fly to tbe moon on SatW'day, .rid of the mUchants' march, O'Sullivan
backup pilot John L. Swigert Jr. mo replJed, "Well, It certalnly gave us a Jot
denrent a crllh tralniq:·program to see more p u b I I c I t y • We made tM
jf he~ moveiioto the Apollo 13 1lot. metropolitan papen a g a In • • • To
1Mattlngly'1 sUm chance•ol making the O'Sulltvan's suggestion that such publlcJ..
flight. hid hinged on whether laboratory ty was JK>t favorable , Goldberg replied,
--that _...,. b a c k u p "[ do ntt find , 1he publicity detrimental.
utroilaut, Charles ·Duk<, aclually haa rt finally abqwe<\ the out.side world that
Germ111 meules. The tests.. rela,td , tqe citizens Of Laguna Beach were con.
Thunday from the NaUOnaJ, lnltilutea •ol c.,,,.d and did Intend to do somelhlntt
Health1n'BttbesdafMd., ahcJwed he did. about their problem!." ~
Dr. qiarle1 A: Berry, the astronauts' Asked what his seven-paint program
~ physician, said Wednesday that lf would involve In the way of cost.
DUke had the measles, he and other Goldberg said emphatically, "I can tell
roedical experts woul<! reommend that you it will be very expensive. Ju.st how
Mft\dngly not be ailowed to fly Saturday. expensive wiU depend. on tbe number of
Clinical tests had indicated Duke had people we will need to implement It, but
J't\eaales but bad lefi open one Chance it will be ezpenslve. However, I feel the
that be had virus with aimilar ayrnp•·-·. people are of a mind to pay that bill .......... now." .
A space agency announcement said the To the questiOlll, "How is it po.sslble to
lab tests ''confirm Dute has German control narcotic!: vlolation.s with 30
meules, or RubeUa • • • He has ~ a policemen"? Loor replied, ''Actually
clusic rile in rubella antibodies." It also there are only about 16 of ficus out in the
said Duke has developed a rash, arthrlUs field, so they mu.st rely on technique,
and a swelling in both fingers. rather than numbers."
Mattingly and the other two ~ Lorr said he would favor the pt.irchase
Apol]o lS c:rewmen,.James A. Lovell Jr. of animals, problbly German Shepherd
and Fred W. Halse Jr. and Swt1ert all dogs, trained to smell marijuana. Such wm eXj>o9ed to the disease 1hrou1h · '· h fl U t 'ded the 1· Duh. Blood tats .now Lovell Halie .ov1 lftlm&Lll ave e ec ve y 11 po ice
'1 ~ at lnl.ernational Airport and in other Swigert all are immune to the diSea.se, ~rts of Loi Angeles, Lorr salil.
but that r,Jlttingly is not. · Asted how he would control the hlpPie
Berry aaJd ear~r Mattingly had a very pt'oblem, Tomehak reiterated an earlier
1ood cbaoce of coming dowtr w1tb the ' sqggestlon.that a commlttee including the
dlaease. cl!rgy, city officials, police, students and m an effort to avoid a costly one.morih ouWde specialists be formed to study the
delay in the launchlna, Sqert Joined rflUOos for lbe problem and suggest
lmell and Haiie, aboard . a apaoesblp Pf'.&eUcal soluUons. "U we put them on a
•i!I!u!ator Tt)unday. They . ~aed b1Js to Newport they'll )Ult lake a buo spll~aecond criUcal maneu~ers that re-back,'' he said .
qalrt dole cooperaUon. He abo said ~t bis propoaat [or 1
Included were Ltunch, launch abort, systems analysis of city hall operations
dockinc wttb the moon lanctqtg craft, fir· cOOld iead to much more efficieat, use of lrw tatO. hlnar; orbit 111d del(ce:Qt to wKhln penoanel and a m o o th e r coope:raUOn
eritit mllea ol the mootl. be t w e e n pollce, fire and housing ™ descent maneuv<r Ls especially dipartmenl! to help combat the problem.
criUCaJ, beca~ accldtrU.lly burning-the One questioner asked "any candidate"
•P.aceshlp's e~' one aeCond too loGg to-I respond to the questio,., ''Would it not
CGUld .end the u\.ronauta cr,mtinJ into be Jn ordtr to ask for recall of the dty
the mooo. manager who seems to be l1106t responai-
A federal grlI!d jury In San Diego Wed-Gutierrez's· aftorney, ho~ever, main-On the Apollo 11 •nd tl lllaf>t.s, tllO ion· ble for the· tolerant attitude toward b1J>.
ne!Clay Indicted retired Marine GW\Ml'Y ta1ned tbat bis client bid. d:I the car dl:na vehicles were re.It~ at an al~t\lde pies ?"
Sgt. Robert L. ouu.rr.z, n, of 10 or more than llO mile.s. Lovell IOd Halse Goldberg jumped to bis feet and
Aven.lda Santa Marprita, Siil CJtmmte earlier ... and it. wu Uted without ·bla art to ·start their descent from elPt answered finnly, "No, l do not believe
on eight counto ol cooaplrocy 8"" knowledge. -miles, a move .which provides additional 1hla would be proper. It ts the job ol the
traMporUng lllepl aliens. · · ; oaai'l'!'I u .s. attorney . fuel oiics areater llndhlf iccuracy. · cttl' council to set cit}' policy. Uthe ctty
Gutterrez and -De J""' Roblll-· , aald hla i/fl!ce boTd boen't. : 1bt big' qoli)lon;ls Wbethet Swlgtrl, · monager fails to carry out lhia JIOIJ<y,
Rob&ec, 35, SW Barbara,·were indiNd .ue_. imuiltinc'llnce Jaly. who has never flown ln apace. can work then it Is time to talk abou' recal.J. BUt
as.the al1ormllh ol tho fatal lhooUJw ol , '.'fir/,· ' mion lo belle"'"" two meb smoothly .·wltl1 Ille .-othet 1'!• In · we cannot biome the city maoager I~ 1
a ·M<xlcan nalf°'!'1 on Camp Pendltlla cnll#!iftor ~ sbb!>Unc .may hovo manelivtra Uiat r<qU!te>'ciole oM npid city council ~alla to; -Ide pollcy ud
near San ctem<n~ ,_n11y, betn 11J(JOilllbli Jor br1qln(· -· coordlnaUon. leidershlp. • , ·' • · 1
Federal olllolalo aald then ..,..., ..... even tliOulOdo o1 Mellcl!Yo1UO..il brto LoV.n; lfalie aM. 'l'homas K. Ma!Ung1y lntroducinf · 1he • candldatG, M r 1 •
other alieno ii fbe ,..,. Uio1 YIC1ll" hid this countm:'~ McC;llt' · II hove. prlcllced toF1h« ,., a team Keeley, lleneU a former councilwoman,
betn driving, flft junmed lolto lho:-11. ' Orflolato ..... lain 11111 "laollte bue more than two. yeora, first U I ba<kup aalcl , "It la a demanding job 1hty -
A MArine MP -1ht drlur ... be ...mW. ...a to clrcumnnt.the border pllot.s 10< Apolio 11, man'1 fin! mooo>tan. volunteered to 1111 for the nut IDIA' yuro,
-to ba1. '1111.., UdJ flat tire potn>f d>tcl1 poinl on tbiCoolt ,.,...,,,, dtnl mission, ond then u Uie pr1me....,. with -Unga every-~. ta.Ung lr'9!ll
II!d, Aid ofl1clolo, bn a -decal ,GuUen'p I• " •yeir veteran of' the lot Apollo IS. Obaerttrs 11y thty an • two to five hours, along with moey .u,r
lsailid to GuUemz. Marino Corpe. ' tuperbi¥ coordlnal4d team. (fl<e LAGUNA, Piii I)
·-f • l '•' ., .[
... -....
·-
J DAILY Pll~l SC I
•
f'ro• p~ J
SAN .{;LEMENTE I FOJtUM . . •••
CCIUld have ltepped In ind enfqrced 1he .. _ equlllblt ...; so tllal people f,..
Jaw "_. adllld. . ~ of 40Wf Cl.l'l pay for aur tcpw 4 '00..,.. than 1he P .. ce Acllon CouncU lllalilalnq Ult -• Ill ....... ~.malt of the other comment&, plat-~ #f.;J~ o! ordinustl -f =.. ~dealt..W. ""~ .,.,...,_ ~ ...... ·--.. ~
<lte<e aro highlights lrom each can-•·-~· lllo at ;n,.~~
d161te's talk Jn the order In which thty talve _:=;: p1u :::::'lit dlod
were made: the city's poor fire insurance ratlnJ. He ~ Myen ,1poke first, he sald, so agreed "whole-heartedly" with Q'~itfe's
tbat he would not be charged with shirk-views on soil stability matten. i~ bls duilu u 1 pluning commlilloner -Jame• T. Filth called the clty'a main fOr political gain. He l'ft soon al-road, El Camino Real, a 0 carnival. All
thwards to attend a c o mm J I 1 lo n we need is a few tattoo plrion and It
meeting. He citld h1s yean of aehl~ as ~c;l 19ok.llke a complete pemy 11cadt.
• 0-.. ID lndlana. lo!lowed by "'"Ice I""'' waat lo be a politician, all w&Dt ii in Sin Clementa city hall. He ln!Uated 1he loufyean and I -1d otep ulde. I waat
Sfin Cltmtote coundl ~mf!oh.. a ~ at changing 10me of the th1'11s 'in ~ p:>llcy and deslll'ed the award the city including what you tee on El
W.lnning hll~top ~as scene. "I m~ke Camloo.' I'm not afraid to ask Why."
1" campa..ign pramtks, because l ve -Jlerh Rlvely also pralltd ~ Cit.1&¥'1 hfanl loo many In my !Uetime which Commlttee for Better Govtmmenl and
dluppear wllal the polll open" He ftted . ,..4 .._ of several of 111 leadlrs,
hip priority for developmt~ ci city citing thtlr achlevemeots. "Ii they are
parks. He asked fer suppmi, but l will speildlng mcmey ff'QID an outside group.
need more of It wben I am tltcted to the tben I don~ mow Ocioit It. He aald be
counc11," be aald confidMtly. waa ashamed ol the pier eilttance aod
-Diii CMll.. stresaed lhlt an In-clalmed jlJ>t rtmalloo fac1lltits for GUI'
cumbent mdd run m hll record. He yoUui ••have been sadJy Deilected."
cited h1I """' aloai wtlh ac1>1e....ent1 ol ~ Holmtt abaaed 1he joy ol 1te1111
1he total counc11 Jn 1he pOllt lour years -so many In the aodlence and prallltd the
a clnip In pr~ tuts Inn fU5 lo Ja)'<e<s for 1he fOfJ1111, thtn llld h1I lovt
$1.31, parcha9!!1 of beech frontage ·for th~ of the clty was the prime mcwer in his
pub1ic, development o( Pico Road, the choice of campaign for the council. He
. .
-··---·~
DAILY I'll.OT Sletl' """
Laguna Officers Train
Ni;x on Plans . .
More Viet
Pullouts
,,
WASHINGTON (lJP lJ -PrUjdent
Nlxoa. will make a nationally televhed
addrW ori Vietnam next Thursday nfght,
the White House announced today. Re ls
expected to announce a further U.S:'ttoop.
Wilhd?fWal. ,
Press Stcr<tary llor.ald I. Zl•1ll! said
the ~. on radio Is well as television,
would be at 6 -p.m. PST April 11 end
would concern Nixon's decision on Viet-
nam troop levels.
The speei:h will C'Ome one day after the
latest phase of the gradual troop pullout
proces,, .started last -year by Ni.Ion is k>
be compltted.
Previously ordered withdrawals •will
reduce the ceiling on U.S. forces in Viet·
nam to 434,000 on AprJI 15.
Ziegler told reporters that the Presi-
dent wanted to update his report to the
nafion on conditions in Vietnam -alhpli-
fying his earlier policy statements.
waste water · treatmtrJt plant, water said the new clubhouse should have a
storage faCWUes, shitting · from iron theater room, a multl..purpose large.-
water mains to. translte, expansion of the Doored room aiid a smaJJer area where
police department and •Wn& up of tM historical dlsplays and c o m f o rt a b I e
parks and recreation and .-rkinl co~ seating could be provided /or people "to
Lt. Rick Di;ake of Orange County s.~eriff's Office
(right) instructs Laguna Beach Police Lt. Frank
Schopen on the use o! hand gun in launching tear
gas and smoke grenades. RiOemen in background
are Laguna police officers Bob Remillard~ Arthur
DeLuca and William Heiden (from Jefl). Training
in use of special equipment in crowds and in flush-
ing criminal susP.!<ls lrom hidlng lakes place
regularly at sheriff's department facilities .
Nixon told newsmen at an informal
news conference March 21 that Viel·
namzation -the administration tenn fqr
turning a larger burden of the war Ovet-
to the South Vietnamese -was pro-
gressing well and he saw at that Utnt
nothing to slow the . rate of U.S ..
withdrawals. missiom. just sit down and chat. .. He called for
"I am Vf!tJ proud of the IC.tievem-:nt. moving ot the railroad. He called for pier
and I wooJd Ul<e another term lo proiect. .-improvement& and "atllf, but •
San Clemente's future, he aaid. good zoning and grading codes. I want a
-Mayor Wide Lower thanked the first-class city." Fro1f1 Page 1 f'ron1 Page 1
Nixon has ordered three phases of
withdrawal so far, reducing the authoriz.
ed strength of U.S. forces in Vietnam by
some 115,000. The adual number of
f.roops to be pulled out as of a week from·-
Wednesday is expected lo be about .
105,000.
LAGU NA BEACH FORUM • • • SHERIF F ... residents for their "wonderful at· -Kaelber said he "definitely" is nol a
tendance'' and said Chilton had related tool of special interest lfOUps, then hit al
many al the 1clhevementa of. the city. U the lHeguard pay controversy, terming
you want ·others, just loot at the the city's unwillingness to pay "a man meetings at the city, state ·a.M even na·
paragraph with your baUoL Tenely, be who obviously worked 400 hours without lion.al level, where they rtpre.sent you ."
said he had a recU'd of balanced budgets, pay" aDd its biri.J:18 of special legal coun· C.ouncil members, sbe said, get, "aome honesty, no conflicts oC interest., no pro-sel "would probably cost more than pay-
mises and he was the only councilman t• ing the lifeguard for his work. He said no complaints, some abuse and very little
vote aiainst the latest salary tncruae for man should iStrvt more than two terms commendation. I sometimes wonder how
councilmen. Dr. Lower stoutly defended of office and hi tat the city for not pro--we mana1e to find cudidate.s."
and praised the Committee for Better vldlng more beach access routes, road She urged "reflection, calmness aid
Government and said Its members sought improvements and placing controversial reason, in these troubled times." him out for an endorsemenlt not the jtems late in the meettna: of the coun-
rever&e: He praised tb members as .beln1 cil and keeping 11>taktrs waiting to speak Ostrander directed his talk to a
commusµty 1~. . on the imles. "Aftnlda Pico is a long clariricaUon of the Cordoba issue, et·
minority opinions on the COUDCll still need road to nowhere," he added. plaining the basic concept of planned
more action. including an overlay map -Ian Kenned1 ripped 1IU the a<> residential developmefl.t, which lle said is showing toll !lablllty 1n the genera] plan ministration like a bantam rOOlter and ·
end contingency planning for water said one must fight ''the battle against used throughout the world and ls des.ign·
shortage 1. He aJ90 cited city total government takeover." He cited ed lo provide more opea space for each
achievements durlng his stewardship and many of his suggestions m parking and family unit
pie.died to conllnue "making waves'' on other issues, he said. have been ignored He said the planning commil!icm
the council. I'm vociferous and I sbou1d by the council, be: termed tbe five-year denied the Cordoba hillside development
be." capital improvement procram as "just a plan on the "technicality" that the city
-Alvia ~ atreued that he was an piece of paper" and charlfld that the did oot have u ordinance for planned
Independent candidate who refutes cam-council has not lowered the W: rate, but resideDUal development "I say we
paign donations and has no support frOm "just shifted it around on special use should write IUCb an otdinlnce," be said.
''outside ·gro\ips." He praised swift city fees and on to tbe water bill." 1be "It is the on!y way to eooln>I future
plam>ilJ& !0< Ille new co 111 mu a 1t Y Cllorak case, he charged "Is a atlgma on ~velopmeal ol Ibo bil1"idill ""'1 U "-'
clnbbotm· -d'lftlt <11 the dire'*'• he 'llOr" town." 'Ille clty'1 budget baa lllnd! dao't RI oome aludardl """' tt will be said~ a full-tlme, upended fire for a better fire ~t and other too late. Some of our bJlsldes already are
department, citing Laguna Beach'• three needed projeda. "All we need ls men to scarred with cut and fill development."
otat1oM and 3Z paid f~"!'''" H~ called implement it." ~ . 'l'omcbak i;n(aced hi9 rqaarl:s by
for ,.location of 1he '-P'jjRill Road r.-11...it.. M'I"'• -,'jjlio hit1 "Ii lhe ' aa)'l!!f that lli;<pianning ~ton. on
through San C1tmt9~c;Jled fer lindsllc!i' ...... and Niii lhlt biolu1t ol which ht se!\'ld, turned down Cordoba
' ·• i impropu engineering some rtaldenu of tor ·many reuons, inc1ad.btg questions
the dtyllave been "9tverely hurt finan-· aPout accesa, fire and pcilice service, pro-cially.~' 'Jbe ChorU: cate wu' "em.· vlalon for schools ud instability of the
DRESS CODE ••
f!Cistratlon without a dre.aa code.
Asked U ,.Juatlon ci 1he elms code
ha'd pn>ductd a luge crop of violators,
Bremer said, "To be ~ threre were
very few on the fltstdQ. But theae were
mosUy returning aophomores who are ac·
cu.stomed to the dress code. 1 don't know
what today and tomorrow will bring. The
matt.er is now entirely up to the ~urb.
We simply have to wait for a decision."
Later in the morning, learning of the
judge' ruling, Bremer u.id, ' ' T h e
decision is in favor ri the prerogative of
a local board to set. reasonable rules and
regulations."
Sha the judicial panel's order that the
Injunctions be vacated Immediately was
issued "P"'dlng the filing of a written
opinion,•• the final word in the matter has
yet lo be beard.
If the written opinion also upholds the
legality l)f the dress code, there will be no
further legal action on the part of the col·
lete, a spokesman sald. However, if Utt:
legal representaUves of the student!
choose, they can "take if 'on up to the
Supreme Court," It was not~.
DAILY PILOT
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OAANOI! COAST PVIUJHIHCI c.OMll'ANY
lli•hrt H. W,M 1"1'11161111 Miii ll'WI..,,..
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111011111 1<., .. a
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T"o11111 A. M•rphh1t
MIMllllt E•llw
ll:lc~•r4 I'. Nill
Muth o.-.-t..ur!ly IW!IOr
""''"
barrasslng and doesn't merit all the trou-Janet He pointed out that he had invited
hie it has caused. He jabbed at the plal'll Ottrander to debate the matter, but had
for 4?'.PanJion ,of nuclear generators at been turned down.
San ' Onofre and charaed thlt \heir· bot .Ret.umiag to his chosen topic, Tomehak
water discharge could kill marine life. discussed the importance of environment
-Bnt Sink, the younpst ()( the car>-at urged careful preservation o f
didates (23) said he was tbe most Laguna's natural attractions by very
qualified because. of hil youth and his ' dllcrimln.aUog d e v e I o p rd ·e n t at a
ability to re.late to youth. His appearance mlnimwn density level. Amexation, he
was the only one accompanied by a .uld, ahould be restricted 1o the coastal
demonstration from the audience -ban-area and not move behind the hills.
ners and applause. "You saw tbe9e: klds Describing the job ahead as "stag-
out here and .you laughed at them," be gerin1 " Goldberg said all cudidates are
said. "But they're not rl«J.ng, they 're in fav~r of more parks and recreation,
carrying signs." He hit oo en-Main Beach park development, upgrading
vtroomental issues, beauti6caUon and the sewers ud undergrou.oding uliliUes
what he termed "absolutely oothln& for but he asked. "Who will pay for all this?
our young people to do in tbis city. San And •yho will be left in Laguna k> enjoy It
Clemente, if you travel north to IOUlh i1 if we cu't get rid of the lawbreakers who
an ugly city. If I were eleottd some of have descended on us like a plague?"
that type or building would not be· built.'' When be speaks of developing tourism
He said the city's youths "need dances
and concerts. That's what they want." Ht
called for acceptance of only "clean" in-
dustry in the city to eliminate pollution.
"I think if you join with me we could tru·
Jy light the world."
Candidates Eugene Sullivan and James
Lusk did not attend 1he forum.
Service Slated
For Mrs. Harrod
Funeral services will be cmducted Fri·
day for Mrs. Gari Harrod, former MGM
Studios actress and San Clemtnte rt.!i-
dent since 196'. She died Tuesday at
South Coast Communtty ~ospital after a
lengthy Illness.
The . sister o( Councllman Stanley C.
Northrup, Mrs. Harrod, 1712 S. Ola
Vista, v.·as a charter member of the San
Clemente Arts and Cl'aftl Club.
Rev. Hazel W. Van Dusen, Unlty
Church of San Clemtnte, will clflcl1te at
the 11 a.m. servi.ce 1n Lesneski Mortuary
Chapel.
A native of Portland, Ore., Mra. Harrod
was adJve in litUe theater In Sin
Clemente: worked wtth handicapped
chikl.ren; was a volunteer at t be
S<rvlctm•n;s Hoopllallty Center: a Red
Cross volunt<tr, and had -honon ror
her art work in otll and watercokr.
She Is allO aurvtved by her mothtr,
llttty G. Cllapin ol San Cltmentt. Burial
wUl be in Falrbaven Memorial Park.
Badharu Offers Bill
SACRAMENTO -A bill prohlbltln( job
dllCrlmlnaUon aalln5l women wu ap-
proved Wtdnesd1y by 1he Al1tmbly with
Assemblyman llobtrt Badham ( R •
Newport Beach) complaining lh1t women
want rigbb bu& aren't wllllnr \o 1lve up
their protections in uchanae.
Count y Refers
Coas tal Repo rt
Back to Planners
ln an abbreviated public bear1n& on the
South c..st Sctnic lmproffillent pn>ject
Wednesday, Orange County Supervilors
quk:kly cut oU debate by ~fmina the
report back to 1he county Planning eom.
mlsston.
The move lo delay debate and rurthtr
action on the year~ld study hinged on the
recommendation oI A. S. Koch, county
road commis.!ioner, that the con-
troversial realignment o( Pacific Coast
Highway through Dana Polnt not be at-
tempted at this lime.
Koch said the state was ready to make
Improvements on the highway between
Three Arch Bay and San Juan Crttk, but
the improvements would not be made 11
the realignment study was requested.
He said the proposed realignment on
Del Prado in Dana Point would require at
least three yean study and the complete
job might lake six years.
Supervisor David L. Baker Injected a
new facet into Ule discussion by c•lllng
for more viewpoint.!. "We have a $22
million investment in the Dana Point
1J1rbor project and 1he peoplt should be
able to look at it," he said.
Alex Lake, 24'32 Del Prado, rose to ob-
ject lo 1he ~ ...UIJ!mt•~ but be
was quickly cut off by bolrd Chairman
A11on E. Allen who moved lhll the mat-
ter be rererred to the plaMlng com~
mlsdon for further study.
Jamts E. O'Connor of Sou~Lquna,
chairman of the 11-membtr rntttee
for tht 116,000 study, said his p had
made 135 1 p e c i f i c recommendaUons
which Included regulation ci bJIJbolrdo,
landacapina. and undergroundln& or
utlUUes among othe rs.
•
for economic reasons, Goldberg said, "I
do not say it is necessary to ovemin the
town with tourists:, or to block everyone's
view with a solid wall of hotels on the
beach. I moved here 11 years ago for the
same reasoris many olhen did, the
delightful surroundings, the climate, the
village atmosphe re, and I would be the
last to want to ruin it."
Lorr repeated his belief that the hippie
problem ls the most critical one facing
Laguna and blamed city co u n c i I
''permissiveness" for the past four years.
He aaid he wouJd support Goldberg's
seven points and emphasized, "We need
men on the city council with backbone,
who will take a'hard line stand. \Ve either
crack down or let this element take over.
This is a chance to vote for a cbange and
get some real leadership."
O'S.ulllvan, who said be was a little
nervou1 because his mothtr was in the
audience, cited the accomplishment of
the council on which he has served, refer-
ring to ~ inland freeway, the beach
purdla .. , Ult library, 1he hiring or a
re.creation dlrector, the n'ew playhouse
and other items.
The decisions made in the ne1t four
years will really determine the future of
Laguna, . he said. "I recotnlpe the
necessity of tourism, but feel we must
not overbuild with large commercial
bulkilngs on the oceanfront. We must
have a C·H zone and restrict hotels to
that zone. The hills.ides must be protected
le> preserve their contours and we should
have planned reskleiiUal developments to
blend the houses into the hills."
a gallon for gasoline, but by the time it is
pumped into a patrol car it costs 5S cents
a gallon.
-Deputi~ are losing morale. They ·
ha ve to radio for a tow tru ck from the
county yards if their car runs out of gas
and they have no cash.
-Some patrol cars are so run down, he
said that one deputy was .stopped recently
by a high school girl who pointed out that
hJs car wa.s emiting hea vy smoke and
was adding to the smog problem. The car
had more than 100,000 miles on it. It was
a 1967 model.
-Response times are sometimes so
slow that deputies face "a lynch mob of
sorts." One rece nt call from two raped
housewives in Silverado canyon required
dispatching of a unit from South Laguna
which took 90 minutes to arrive.
Musick later refuted the statements in
a general way and said he wouki;need a
closer check of the records to reply to the
specilic charges.
"We give adequate coverage in our
patrol duties and we have .solid back up
procedures. Certainly we would like a
bigger budaet, and if we could have one
obviously we would improve o u r
service," he said .
He added that deputies have credit
cards to use If they run low on fuel.
The sherilr promlsed lo reply in person
lo the charges and present h is
department's viewpoint at the chamber's
next general meeting May 19.
Nixoo announced the first 15,£ro.man
reduction in the celling last June and
subsequenUy ordered two more reduc-
tions.
Gen. William C. \Vestmoreland, fonner.,
Vietnam commander who is now the
Amzy chief of staff, and Gen. Creigbtoa
\V. Abrams, currently the U.S. ~
mander in Vietnam, have favored a
slowdown in the withdrawal because of,
an increase in Communist acitivity. •1
Ziegler said the President's decision on
a fourth phase of the withdrawal ls baaed'·
on "going co nsultations'' with'
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen.
Abram s in Saigon and with U.S. planners!
in the Pentagon and said Nllon had· no..
plans to meet persona1ly with Bwiker and
Abrams before April 16.
Bunker is scheduled to return to the'
United States in May for extensive con·
sultations on Vietnam.
Four Army un its are scheduled to leave
Vietnam Friday as part of the third-
phase, S0,000 man withdrawal. The total
nwnber in the units is 3,2.80.
Perot Stymied Again
PARIS (AP) -H. Ross Perot tried
unsuccessfully today to give the North
Vietnamese and Viet C.ong lists of'
prisoners held in South Vietnamese
camps, and concluded that· "they have M
concern'' for their own captives. The
Texas computer magnate arrived aboard
a chartered Boeing 707 accompanied by
five wives of missing and prisoner of war·
servicemen and about 70 newsme.11. ·'
\ .. I
Ml
Th11• •r• ••ry co111fortt'9lo '''' li.Ml1 f•r s;.,;~, i ncl $lf1pi••·
A whl• 1t l•ctl•• •f f•bric.1 oriel Col011 +.
ch•••• '''"'·
Rog. 'No $400.00 w
. ....... -...... Yoiir f4vorite inttrior dc.tfgner wfU be ham to cu.tisl vou •••
PROFESSIHA~J I GARRETT f ~ RN l~l ~~BOR BLVD.
o,.. Moo •• n.... • l'rl. r .... INTERIOR DESIGNERS COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646-0275 646-0276
-' ThLlndaY, April 9, 197,D L DAILY rJLDf #
·"·Meet Your ~aguna · Couneil Candidates ..
JOSEPH A. O'SULLIVAN
Joe O'Sullivan
See_king Second .
Term on Coun cil
Vice Mayor Joseph A. O'Sullivan, 42, is
.eeking re-election lo a second four.year
term on the City Council.
A native Lagunan, O'Sullivan and his
wife. Sandy, make their home at 486
Locust Street, right next door to a parcel
where his parents settled as Laguna
pioneers.
The O'Sullivans have a son. Kevin, and
a daughter. Maureen.
O'Sullivan, a pl'Oduct of L a g u n a
schools, has been associated with a
number of. businesses in town over the
years and ls a long-time member~ of the
yohmteer fire department.
He is presently supervisor of Child
WeHare and Attendance for the Santa
Ana Unified and Junior College Ob,trict.
Jn his campaign statement, O'Sullivan
declared :
"The council aclions of the next four
years will determine the future or our
town. The general plan will be im·
plemeoted aDd decisions made which will
determine how many large commercial
buildings we will have and how many
re.sidents will be living in our cit(.
"We must determini the arnount o~
rommercialism necessary to' help pay the
cost of city needs and not exceed that
amount.
"We must attack the growing drug and
transient problem in our cdthmunity.
·"A Commercial Hotel Ordinance must
be developed to protect our ocean front
and a Planned Reaidential Development
Ordinance to protect our hillsides. •
"T desire our community to have firm
and fair law enforcement, h i 11 s i d e
development or low densitf which pro-
tects the natural topography and a
minimum amoont or hotels·motels on
our ocean front to help re lieve the tax
burden."
Ore F reighter Sinks
'GENOA, Italy (UPI) - A Britis~ ore
freighter, buffeted by near-hurricane
winds, sank today off the port of Genoa
after unsuccessful efforts by Italian tugs
to pull it free from a breakwater.
Authorities said at least three persons,
two of them women, died and another
four were missing. At least 13 men
aboard were washed ashore alive or pick·
ed up from stormy seas.
RICHARD GOLDBERG
Goldberg Seeks
Another Term ;
Active in CofC
Incuihbent Council in.an •• R I c h a r d ·,
Goldberg ls seeking· a §f:C<>nd fOW'·year
tenn on the City Colacil. Goldberg lives
at 37f LedroJt St. An ll·year resident of
Laguna Beach, be owas two clolhifig
stores in the city.
Prior bis council, term, Goldberg served
as president or Uie Laguna Beach
Chamber of Commerce for three terms
and currenUy is the first vice pruident or
the Laguna Beach Art AssociaUon.
He oulliaed his campaign:
"U re-elected, I will dediCatc myself to
the implementaUoo of otir impendi11g
General Plan. Further, I will push for a
precise plan of our downtown basin and
setk out sojutions to the serious. parking
and traffic problems throughout our city.
I will assist in esta.hlishing a, green belt
around ouo community and will en-
courage the-Festival of Arta to purcbise
property in the vicinity of the Boys' Club
for much needed additional recreation
facilities.
"The shocking trends of drur abuse
aad burgeoaing crime can be reversed by
community involvement with determined
leadership.
''Fiscal re.Bponslbllity IS the key to our
future. TncreaseO property taxes are not
the answer. We must tap the tourist
dollar by immediately establishing a
commercial hotel zone that can be com-
patible _with our Art Colony atmosphere
and will serve to enhance our image as a
top quality resort aad resideatial com-
munity. we must investigate the
possibility of annexing such areas as the
proposed Irvine Destination Resort to
further broaden our tax base.
·•we must hot wait to develop our Main
Beach Park and related facilities as a
deliy wiJI only• ~rf.her .add to our finan-
cial buri1e11.
''If re-elected, I pledge myself to COJI·
tinued 24-hour in-town representation."
Evangelist Sla tes
Final Laguna Talks
Visiting evangelist Gene Rogers will
ronclude a week-long series of presen-
tations in Laguna Beach with programs
tonight and tomorrow night Jn the First
Cluistian Church, Glenneyre Street at
Legion Street.
His topic tonight will be "New Found
Fellowship." The Friday evening pro-
gram is entitled "New Allegiance." Both
programs begin at 7:30 p.m.
• nrce o/ fiw cit51 covncil
1tati wUl bt on thf lint ht Tutl·
dov'• dtlftOlde elecffon fJI.
Laguna Beoch. five conaldat<1,
includlna two '1nCvmbe11t.s, a.re
i" the rcce. MOf/O" Glmn VetJ..
d4r ii not lttking re-rlecUma.
Laguna Btacll councilmt11 are
elected ot '°rgfl and the top
three vote oetttrs will be d1·
clmed winners.
To help oottrs reach a decis-
ion about the council majority
they want to 1'tpre1ent Uaem
' •
fqr the . flt%t four '1ear1, the1
DAILY PILOT offers the1t pro-,_..
jiits of the candidate.! •
JOSEPH L. TOMCHAK • PETER H. OSTRANDER • I
EDWARD C. LORR
...
Edward Lorr
Heads Laguna
Taxpay ers Unit
.1
' ,.
••
•
J h T h . k A h• s eks s Edward C. Lorr, 31, Ira& owned Ille · 0 8ep OfilC 3 , re 'itect ' .e · eat beauty shop TwlSI N' Pin for !he pat sir · .,. years "Ind previoosly owned Leguna •. L Pl Seasports for six years, He bas been a,~ aguna anner, Laguna businessman since 1957. ...
r Pete Ostrander, 34 , is a Laguna Beach challenges In our community today. I Lorr and hJs wife, Ellie, have twoJ
--..architect with his practice at 333 Third believe a posJUve answer can only be daughters and make their home at 1020 OCC Prof essOI' St. in. Laguna. Ostrander and his wife, reached through working together as ron-Baja st. ~~
Pat, make their home at 477 Poplar St. cemed citizens, giving' lhe CourtCil and The candidate presenUy serves 15 They have three child ren, Lynette, 11; police our backing, and U'''''"'lding equal ·.i~ l of th La Be ch Ta· Jose..i. L. Tomehak, 42, lives at 330 Ca-ffi )lllV pres1....,-n e guna a ....
JA• Craig 10· and Phi p 9 law enforcement without fear or favor. • .1. •• -.-: t' • -~ lated J'on Terrace with his wife and thret' ' ' ' · II payers ~a ion. u.n.-s : The candidate wa1. born in I inois and "Secondly, implementaUon of t h e "I am tborooghly familiar with our
children. He is vice-chairman of the grew up in Southern California. He al· General Plan, including solutions to traf-local problems, from the view point of ·
Laguna Beach Planning' Commission, a tended high school in South Pasadena and ric and parking problems and precise tJie hard pressed tax paylne property
professor of anlhn>pology at orange earned a degree in arch1tecture at the plans for ~tain Beach Park and owners and the busi'ttess community. ··
Coast College and a Jec;turer in en· University ol Idaho. He is a registered downlown reStoraUan, can only be met "'My only vested interest i.1 our C1lm• .~
vironmental studies .at UC Irvine Ez. California architecl. with a practical eye Ulwards the needs of· munlty and a commitment to action
temion, Ostrander stated, "Since I came to the community. As an architect, I am now. To restore Laguna's beautiful bnage~'
A specialist In coastal environment, Laguna in 1962, I have been active in the well acquainted with the planning process by vfgoroos enforcement of all our Jaws
l'omchak completed his do cJ or a I Chamber of Commerce, Lions Club, and woold approach implementation with to deal with the 'transient hippie' element
dissertation on the lfowth and develop. Cit izens Ad visor Y Committee, the knowledge and professionalism of my with its associated drugs and crime. .,
ment ol Southern California coastal Coordinating Council, Friends of the practice. "I am determined to reduce tax Jn..
tOWM. Library, Laguna 1980 Committee, Sad· "Thirdly, it Is evident that the develop-creases through economy of operation ·
He was alse ' Fullbright Scholarship dleback College General Advisory Com-ment of what Y.'c want and need in and to spread the tax base. I will 1eet ac..
exchanae lecturer t n environmental mittee, the Oo1Wtown Business As6ocia-Laguna depends on · oor e c 0 n 0 m't c tion programs to develop '1d provide':
studies at Cambridge, Enlland. tn 1963-lion, and the OrdJnance Revision.Com· capability. I am committed to en-flnarice' fof the Main Beach, and Improve•
64. mitlee. couraging expansion of our only lnduatry the critical parking and traffic problems.· ' One of his prime concerns Is protection . "1 feel that so\ villi our drug and crime _touris m _ through the development of "Government is a business, my 12
of Laguna's scenic beauty. ''I am for problem is one of the most important a seminar-oriented hotel lrade on a yea!'-years' experience as a 1ocal businessman ~~
minimum density on the h 111 s i de s . round basis. still in keeping with our can provide you with' a strong voice and ..
Laguna's ru11s,cany°"" and beaches are Pa tria r ch Released village atm05phere. good old-fashioned busi...S commoa '
a precious sceilic advantage. They should ''As a local resident and bminessman sense in solving~ problems. !
be safeguarded ." VIENNA CAP) _ E c um en I c 8 I with a long record or community service, "¥ a local businessman, I am able to
"A sys tems analysis of city hall is im-Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople 1 have had the opportunity to irasp the serve you u a Ml tlme'courtC!lman. I will ,
perative. There should be a ·study of the was released today from the University prolems and concerns of the community be available at' my business any time o{
workings in our city government. The co-Clinic after .a medical checkup. His doc-as a whole. and I pledge myself to con-the day. You detenie and need a coon·
ordination, function and efficiency of tors sent him to the Semmering health tinued service as your council repre.sen-cilman responsive to your JrObM'tn1, Ind
various departments should be evaluated. resort. 90 miles south of Vienna. tative." to ihis t pledge myself."
We've lost thousands or dollars because -i;iiiii;i;ii;iiiiiiiiii;ioiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiii ___ _,.iiiii"9;;;;;~;;;;;;;;ii0iiiiiiiiiiiii-;;;piiiii.-ii0;;;;;;;;.--.; .. ;;;;;"!";;;o;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9 I or awkward orgariizati«J. Let's save 11 , 11 ' • '' •
wme money for a chang~. •
"J am for maximum law enforcement
\\•henev'-r laws are broken. I, like many
of yoo, 'bave chilil'ren and' am naturally
concerned about narcotics, health .and
crime. The citizens should be more in-
volved in determining policies in this
regard. We should aeek help and advice
fro m the County, State, and federal
agencies to help Jn this problem.
"I am for ma'lirnum'uSe or Ule tourist
dollai-to helP Laeuna maintain its
present character. Tourists bring in
revenue, but they also clog our streets,
fill our parking spaces, and avail
themselves of our tax supported services.
Laguna Beach should not exclusively
devote itself to being a facility for out-Of·
town visitors at the expera of. its
residents. Our environment i 1 ir·
replaceable. Let's be careful and
discriminating with how it is developed.·•
Bold Shoplifter
A bold shoplifter walked out of the
Laguna Beach Art Center's Indian Room
with a large Navaho rug valued at $400
some time on Tue-\(iay afternoon, police
report.
Several custome rs were. in the store at
the time, police were told, and no oae
noticed the unscheduled departure of the
rug, decorated in shades of beige, tan and
. brown and measuring 431"t by .69 inches.
•
VI ••
•
ANNOUNCES OPENING
COMPLETE LIQUOR DEPT·.
FAMOUS
BRANDS
s,,.,,.,,.,,,
t:orl11 Tbne• 11..,,,,.,,,
9011
INTRODUCTORY SALE
BUY ind SAVE
VIKING IV
PRIVATE LABEL LIQUORS
BOURBON GIN -
FAMOUS
BRANDS
• .,
. '
• '
..
'· .
.1
' .
• . . . . '. . ~ . . ' . . ' . . . . . . ' . ' . . ' C:utty s .,,.k
~e\•
"""
Fihh . . . . . . . . . 3.63 Fihh
0 OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA . '
AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE
COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
e rings sized and repaired e diamonds and precious stones remo unted e pearls restrung •
.
WE CUSTOM DESIGN A MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF. JEWELRY
HA._ SHOPPIN•
CIN'lll
llOO NA-avD.
COSTA MISA 14~'415
"The Store Th•t C011fidonce Built"
, 0poo-.. Tiooon.. fri. Tll t ,....
HUN11HTON CINTll
llACH a IDtNfHI
HUN11N6TON llACH
lt2·ll01
' ' ' . ' , . .. . . . . ' ' . ... . . .. . . . .
' •
J •"'" 01,, c "oro Ak "n"lt
pr•"'b"\e
"''" "~· # .. ,.,,,
*''"'"" o,.so
B&a
Quarts ........ 4.49 Quarts . . . . . . . 3.as
112 Gallons ..... a.as
SCOTCH
Fihh ......... 3.97
Quarts . . . . . . . 4. 99
112 Gallons . . . . 9 .84
VODKA
1/2 Gallons . . . . 7 .59
CANADIAN
Fifth ......... 4.25
Quarts . . . . . . . 5.25
112 Gallons , . . 10.40
RUM
Fihh 2.as Fifth ......... 3.20
Quarts . . . . . . . 3.55 Quarts ....... 4.15
1;~ Gallons . . . . 6. 9 5 112 Gallons . . . . a.25
• Gourmet Foods
lose C:11erll0
9 eefeale1'
PLUS
MANY OTHERS
Gifts
56 FASHION ISLAND •
• Candy •
NEWPORT CENTER
·store Houri: Mon. & Fri. 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m.; Tues., W~"' Thurt. l Sit. 10 1.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Sund1y, Noon to 5 p.m.
OPPOSITE BROADWAY • 644·0991
* * WE DELIVER IN AREA ** • '
Senmors Pledge Support ro N~n Martha i~itfed
Over Carswell
e
' 3rd outhern 'Pick' 'f o Court? LITn.E ROCK, Ar~. (U.Pl) -The
Ark..,.s Gu.tie reported todoy
Mn .• Martha Mitchell, wlle of A~
tomey General John Mllehel~ bad
urged the new&paper to "crucify"
U.S. Sen. J. WUUam Fulbright (!).
Ark.), for his vote against tlle con-
flrmaUon of Judge G. Harr o Id
ClltlW•ll.
·~--o.rtr ............ ' ' The Loudon Post Offi ce Corpora·
U.on's new campaign to "Be kin~ to
your mailman ". bas run mto
trouble-from the mailmen. The
campaign urges housewives to m ..
vite the mailmen in for some tea
and a chat but accoroing to Mail
Uri'lQn Chief Tom J•ckson~ Hif he
keeps popping in fo r cups of tea, be
would land up. in trouble back at
the office -he'd be late.for these-
cond delivery." •
Magistrate Ed10Grd Robet1
fiMd J2 ·tntmber1 of tht Santa
Claus_ Union in London, Eng· land. $24 each for illegalltl pic-
keting 4 department store last
Dectmber. The Santai had
marched in uniform. to protest
the ezploitation of Chritima.s.
Thet1 all paid up and announced
their union would be dis6andtd.
, • When two elderly w o m e n
withdrew $11,000 In cub from a
bank In Erie, Pa., and put it In a
paper bag, bank officials feared
they were about to be victims of
con men. Police followed them to a bus stop and when a young man ·ap-
proached and began fmgering the
money, they moved in. The boy hit
one of the policemen and en!led up
In jajl. He ,turned out to be one o~
the women's aon and they were
going to me the money to admit bis
93-year-old grandfather to· a con·
valeacent home. •
Judy Heath of Woodchuck, Calif., is
1hown plactng a call from the unique
phone booth outside a frontier·siyl.t
mortuary that serves as a major at·
traction for visit.ors to this rugged Old
West resort area. The booth bears a
i tortling rt.!emblanct to the old-fash-
ioned pine coffin complete with rope
handles. • Five persons were injured Tues·
day ni~ht in a brawl over a 19 cent
fountain pen in Brooklyn , N.Y.
Mrs. Ines Cepede bad purchased
the pen and found it didn 't work.
When she returned, store owner
DIRfO' R•mos refused· to refund her
money. She came back again with
her son William and a fight ensued
after a violent argument. Ramos.
his wife and son were stabbed and
Mrs. Cepeda and her son were
shot. All were hospitalized .
J,. WU.. I • ,
WASHINGTON -Pm! DI Nixon will
send the name ol yet a thir\t "•trlct con-
structklnlst" to the Senate for con.-
flnnaUOn as a supreme Court JUltlce.
And no senator will say be lm't anEous
to vote for the Prtsident's choice.
But Nixon and Attorney G<neral JOiin
N. Mllchell, their Political pftl!l(e
damaged by the Senate's 51 to .S ·,..
jectlon of G. Harrold Carswell,, are l-1vinl conflicllng advice from capitol
lUll. • -s.n. Robert J. Dole (II-Kan.), urges
~= ;1: 1:: J:~I:~ Cct beuse~
to eleCt a Republican Senate i n
November that would approve a con-
serTative SUpreme c.ourt candidate.
-&nale Jlepublicn Loader HllP Scott
'
of Pennl)'lvanl• urges Nlloo to •bandon
Ill• ldea that the choice lo .his alone to
make and consult wlth "all segmlnt.s,
speOtra and Jevets of publlc opinion" to
come up with a candidate who · "·ould
"gener1te unan1mlty / of Senate ap-
proval.''
The While House, through Press
Stctt!tary Ronald L. Ziegler, said NiJon
would send another ' • s t r i c t con-
strilct.lonist" to the Senate ''in due
course."
In Tallahassee, Fli., Judge Carswell
said the a>.tUe over his nomination to the
S~me COurt wu Han agonlilng ex-
perience for me" but that h~ Is not "bit·
ter ot remortefuJ.
With his wife Vlr&hlla at his side, the
SO.year-old jurist read a 90-Second s~te·
ment at a news conference in the board
Hostile Demonstratii>ns
Greet Envoy to Sweden
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -The United
SUit.ea: ended a If.month diplomatic
boycott el Sweden today when the new
ambusador, Dr. Jerome lL Holland, ar4
rived.· A demonatrator ran ;,up and
shouted, "Mr. Amhlssador, 'you are not
welcome In Sweden."
The 14-ye&N>ld N-educator, Dying
K,opechne Case
Record Denied
To Stenographer
BOSTON (AP) -The Mwachusetls
Supreme Court today turned down a bid
by a oOurt llenographer who claimed he
aloite had the right to make copies and
sell th" inquest record into the death of
Mary Jo KOJ)echne.
The high court abo ordered the clerk of
Suffolk Superior Court, Edward V.
Keating, to pursue his plan to release the
traascript and the judge's report on the
inquest, exj>ected sometime next week.
Tbt action came one day after the
Suireme Court had onlelod a temporary
halt to release plans, unW attorneys for
the court steJ10grapher, Sindy R. Lipman,
could argue his case.
The court also ordered today ihat the
secret court record be made public at
tbe earliest pculble moment.
J4pman, a professional court reparter,
claimed he should have custody of, the
doc1¥Jlents, and his firm -not the
Superior Court -was entitled to make
copies of the impaunded records.
Lipman and his associate1 took the
notes and typed the transcript of the 960
plus pages of testimony during the In-
quest at Edgartown into the death or
Miss Kopechne, 28. The former secretary
to the late Robert F. Kennedy drowned
when a car driveJll by Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy went off a bridge on Chap-
paquiddick Islaltd last July 18.
Cornell Clamps Down
ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI) -Corne J I
University early today obtained a tem·
porary restraining order against any
further violence on campus.
The order was obtained from State
Supreme Court Justice Harold E .
Simpson following a rampage by 100
black students, which prompted the
university president to clamp a 2 a.m. to
7 a.m. curfew on the cam pus. President
Dale R. Corson, announcing the court ac-
tion, said it wa3 taken on the unanimous
reeommendalion of the Faculty Council.
in for rus first diplomatic assignment,
had just stepped from a commercial
airliner at Stocl:holm's Arlanda Airport
when the demonatrator approached the
aircraft.
'The unidentified man sneaked through
scores of anned police offi cers and mix-
ed with the weJComlng party of U.S.
Embassy officers and Swedish protocol
officials. He was quickly s~lzed by plain;
clothesmen and whisked away.
The ambassador did not a p p e a r
msturbed by the brief incicfent.
Outside the airpOrt gates some JOO
demon1trators waited with p l a c a rd s
reading: "U.S. out of Vi~tnam," 0 Down
with U.S. tmperiali.srn" and "Mr. Holland
go home."
· Premier Olof Palme, who has been
visi ting in London, new in ahead of
Holland. When he noticed the walling
demonstrators he told newsmen, "I think
, demonstrating against the ambassador
like this ls Incorrect."
The ambassadorial post in Stockholm
has been vacant since President Nixon
took office last year. Lyndon B. Johnson 's
man, Willlam W. Heath, who had been a
pawn in the diplomatic game, left Sweden
Jan. 23, 1969.
It has never been said officially but
Swedish officials interpreted Nlxon's
failure· to fill the vacancy as retaliation
for Sweden'• open criticl.sm of U.S.
po!.icie3 in Vietnam and elsewhere.
Osa~a Gas Leak
Was Reported
Prior to Blast
OSAKA, Japan (UPJ) -Osaka poliec
said today a possible gas leak had been
reported at a subway construction site
three days before. a series of explosions
that kllled 73 persons and injured 282
Wednesday night. But they said gas com-
pany employes had not taken action.
The explosion of a 20-inch gas main and
a series of explosions throughout the
neighborhood swept a huge area with
fires that reminded Japanese of the U.S.
B29 fire raids in the closing days of
\Vorld War JI.
Police said the initial explosion oc·
curred when a gas company truck was
left with its motor running while a repair
crew went into the subway construction
site to determine whether there really
was a gas leak.
The explosion miles away from the Ex-
po 70 world fair on the outskirts of Osaka
developed into a politicat issue and most
ma;or llarties announced they would
The disaster oceurred in a busy shop-
ping area near Tenroku (Sixth Heaven)
railway station. 9.3 miles from Japan's
Expo '70 World's Fair. Thirty buildings
were destroyed.
Corners of Nation Rainy
Strong Wind Gusts Batter Oregon, Washington Coasts
P•ltllr rt10r~1nt fet 1M low cl0\111'•
•IOflf -lit cot•tfl 1r11t lurM'd 1nto
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Civic Ctfl!tr wet 71, cwri..-..ci wl!l'I" °" Wtd""'°'l'· Troe iow fO<'ll1llt wlll .. ~.
Tiii Air Polllltlon COl'llrtf Ol1trlct ,._
POrlfMI Hl llf tll'lllt tr. fllt J.,i'1W POrllotii of "'4! LOI Al!ltlH e1t11'1.
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COASTAi. AHO lNTEltMEOIATE
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Sun, Moon. Thie•
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room ol the Florida B1t Bulldlnf. Ht
declined to answer newsmen'• questlom.
C~rswell said Prtsident Nlxon had ask·
ed him to stay on as a judge of the U.S.
5th Circuit court of Appeals "and I in-
tend to do SQ."
He said, "1'11 always be deeply ap.
preclattve of the Confidence of the Presi·
dent ct the United States In maklna: the
nomination.'' "T.be majority of the Senate is anxlou.s
to back the Pres.ident," Scott said after
Wednesday'a dramatic vote. He said the ~senate's decision "should serve as a
prelude to 'ihe nomination of a great
Supreme Court Ju!tlce and a1 a lesson
learned for the luture."
In the past, ·Scott has advanced
Phllidelphla lawyv Bernard Segal, 13,
president of the American Bar Aaeocia·
' lloo, u lhe')dnd el man he'd lift to see
the; court. But Sep)'a liberal views
leemocl to rule him out.
Jn the debate .and lfterward, ~ral
se'nators, one after another, said they
hoped Nix.on would find a "strict con·
strucUonist" from the South they could
support.
Sen. Alan cranston CD-Calli.), told the ~nate hi ''prayed" he couJd ba,Ct Nb·
on's next choice. Sen. Edward M. Ken-
nedy (0.Mass.), sald he hoped for , "a
man of auch distinction that all of us, no
mfttter wbal political position w e
repreS!flt, can enthusiastically support
him."
"I hope· the President does not d~ide
against appointing a Southern strict ton·
slrUcUonist,'' .aaid Sen. Gale W. McGee
CD-Wyo.)
"It Makes me so damn mad I can-'t
stand it," Mrs. Mitchell, a naUve of
Pine Bluff, Ark., sajd. "I could have
=,,a great deal for the w~le
"He ls not representing the people
of Arkansas. I Jove Arkansas and J
want everything possible for my
state," Mrs. Mitchell said.
The Arkansu Gazette has been a
strong supporter of Fulbright's and
endorsed his re-election bid in 1968.
The Gazette editorially opposed the
nomination of Carswell.
Shop Monday through Sahlnlay 9:30 A. M. to 9-.30 P. M. Sunday I Z Noon lo S P. M.
Prices
Effective
Begi nning Today
S.14.99 Craft.man
Cart·TYVC Hooe Reel
SA't£t%: · 12.88
Fcawrcs a flow thru reel, is
r emovab le to use carf.
H olds 200 feet of ~/1" hose-.
Sears
20-inch Push-Type
Rotary Lawn Mower·
Sears Low Price
•Ample power for ,.oor mowing ·5 499 from 3 HP engine
• Llghtweight aluminum boesing:
makes h•ndling el8Y
•Folding handle for •..Y •IDrqe
3 Wire Corded Hedge Trimmer
WAS19.99 } 14 77
•Hardened al1oy :.I.eel blades
•Fixed r ear handle "Wilh
thumb 1Iide switch; 11leeTe
bearing
• Stub-length 3-wire eord
.°i"
SAVE '2 Now on Regular '10.99 Nordel® Rubber Hose
•Su per pliability and rugged
Jiahtweight mbber mark every
Craftsman 'Gold Line Nord~!
Mlhber garden hose
$15.49, 75-fL H0&ec_ _ _.12,44
SAVE$2!
.30-ft. %"Dia. 888
'7.49 "Gold Line" Plastic Garden Hose
•Soft. %·inch Diameter
Jf Jefect occurs dut•
ing guuan1cc period,
,.,.c w ill cs-change
hose, chargi ng only
forrhetimco~by
prorating the regular
price at the time oC
•Rei nforced wid1 tough Caprolan• nylon 666
(:ord for bun tresistant strength
• Speci111y prep1red Tiny! for fle;(ibiJity M ·• n-.
• i . 99 Polsator
Lawn Sprinkler
S.'-VEf l! 6.88
Fi ngertip conuol. eo..
e r., G5-foot diamettr.
.Ad justs for partial arta.
Sensational Value!
Sturdy Lawn Rake
l.owP ...... : C)9e
~Z. spring steel tines in
: 9·in. sprcac:I. Enameled.
:i8·.in. handle.
'6.29 Craftsman
2·Wbee1Edger
5"YE2H.! 4.88
R...nlble blode doubles
cutting life. 3 hei.ith t
adjustment$.
SAVEil%!
Reg. S!O.f9, 75-rt-9 .. H
Craft•man Pistol
Grip HOM! Nozzle
2.19
No-slip viny1 grip wi th
spray adjust from fiM
mist t0 full po"'tr.
-sears --U•-nl"'"Jllt ·-.. -· --•MUI _ ....... ,.. ·-·-•..ii ____ , __ .. ___ ·-·-··--" _........ -..---
--... ""--~-.. tMI -~·I-, -·-.. ,4Jn ---UH ,....,, __ --n _ .. ...,., _..,"'"•"'""' _____ , ,_ .. .-..._
.................................. ,.. .. ~, ........ ii ............ ,,,·-·--····,_......, ...... _ ........ ,
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San Clemente
Cap~raoo
voe. 63, NO. 83, .. SECTIONS, 44 PA'6ES
_EDITION
' N. 'f' •. .Stoelul
JHUASOAY.' APRIC f, '1970 •
TEN CENTS
'
•
Hundreds Hear Clemellte "CouriCil ·Candidates
By JOHN VAi.TERZA
CH ... INllY 'II" Steff
An overflow croWd of both city council
candidates and guests met at San
Clememe High. School Tuesday niaht to
thrash out munidpal issues in the best
attended town ball meeting in years.
Several hundred San Clemente voters
heard 13 « the record ·15 candidltts
present .t five-minute platform, thm
mswer both written and spoken questions
from the floor.
' .
Alien Killed
In Cliff Fall
'.At ·on of re
The promile or~ wages to sup-
port 11wife and seven childre..1 left behind
1n Melico lured a man to sudden death
Wednesday night, when he walked GU a
cliff aciuth ol S.. Clemente.
Trying to sneak around a Border Patrol
checkpoint, the victim wu leading thn<
ot.ber·Mexieans·wben he stepped into the
darlm.,. lllCI pl11Jl8'd Ill fee4 landing on
his head.
Authorities identified him as Tomas
~imenez, 42, of Munlcipio
Tt1"'19'•-· Micboocan, MeJ!co.
C4om'1 -· deputies ' -accumd •bout 200
lilllllCI from the beaeh, -mila ·aouth o£ the San Ooolre N u e I e a r
Generatina StaUon.
Investigators nid he lllCI hi> putners,
In the country illegally, were making
their way through heavy brush weet of
the San Diego Freeway.
They llUIDlllOllOd ·bolp alter Gutierre>
Jime~ fen· t.o bis death and ftl'! subse-
quentlJ taken into custody by the U.S.
Border Patrol for return to Mexico.
'!be men told deputies their companion
is survived by his wife and aeven
children, who remained behind_.
U.S. Warns Reds
Of Talk Threats
PARIS (UPI) -The United States
waned the Viet Cong and the North Vif!t..
namese today their spring offensive
which has pwibed U.S. and South Vlet-
namese losses to a seven-month high
~atened to jeopardize aay serious
negotJations in Paris.
The Hanoi and Viet Cong megOtiators
disregarded the warning by U • S •
Ambassador Phillp C. Habib and said
there will be no peace in Southeast Asia
until au of the 500,000 American. troopl
.re evacuated from South Viet.am.
Then, advertising their lack of faith in
the deadlocked, 15-month-<lld peace coa--
fertnce, the North Vietnamese announced
their chief delegation supervisor, Le Due
Tho, a ranking Hanoi party member, had·
been ordered home ud would leave Fri·
doy aboard ·· Russian jetliner.
Oraage Coast
\fea .. er
The morning fog will come In
patches a.tad go la a hurry Friday,
making way for sunny 1kie1 and
temperaba"el soaring up to the
!V's llong the·Or111ge CollL
INSW E TODAY
Th< mom<nl of truth for
Judge CarsweU earn« obov&
1 thirtt1 mtnute.t before the Se•
ate voted and the result ma11 br
i~ mo;or fall campaign issue.
Pagt 12.
I
•
'lbe 1-ltl pnerany were the ame,
wil> each man ....... frGm the pal<Dllal
""" community ·-to dl ...... a1 ol ;'IUppOrt from any 0 tpeeial 1nten1t••
pp. .
1\le Jl)'Cee 1PQD101'1c1 event ran'
-tllly lllCI ended ..q -the ....... lioDa from ·the llldlence....,. 11"1.
One ol the ...... pro¥Okinc queotlona
came up for three candt.dltes' ln.!Wers. It
dellt with general policy on peace
' • I
Meet Candidates
\
Clem ente Aspirants ,Presented
The DAILY PILOT today on Page S presents a review·oa 12
of the 15 candidates seeking election April 14 lo· three open 1eall on
the San Clemente City Council. All 15 candidata were Invited lo
submit photos and brief biographies, The DAILY PILOT, however,
today presents the 12 who submitted by deadline lime. The balance
submitting will be presented Friday. ,
San Clemente voter& will ca1t ballots at Iarie. Each voter,
in other words, may select three candldatU-from the field of 15
next Tuesday.
Saddlehack Signups Start
With Dress <:ode Relaxed
Civic League
Backs Tomcha~,
Joe O'SUilivan
Th< Laguna Beach Civic Loque tooay
endoned city cooncU clUldidatea Jooeph
A. 0 '.SUllivan, lncumhent, and Jooeph L.
Tomehak,• planning: commiulontr, for
• eleclloo to the cnUncll April II.
A statement issued by. Wiii" jlftli-
dent Anthony Demetriadtl aaid, "The
board ............is thlt the membenblp
(al the Civic Leque) -foe O'Sulllvu
and TomchU, le1vJnc the declaion
repnilng the thin! man to the bulinou
coniinunJty which hu cboeen to form 1
·UeUt· oe the nmammc three can-
didates. 11 1bue are iDcumbent Ncbard
Goldberf, Peter O.trande!" aod F<lwud
Lori.
Dedaioo to mi-O'SUlllvu 111C1
Tomehak wu made by unanh1M11J1 1'ote
ol the board ol -· ~ the LeiguHlpCllllknd candklates' for u m
TueOd.ay night, -llld. Th< Civic Loque WU --iy
10 years ago, la.'Oniing to the hoed
statement, "to preserve Laguna Buch u
an outstandin1 and unique .residential
community. Once mare the lllht agllnat
Intensive hillside _.m c: o m..pt tr cl 1 l
development ii It ibe CCft o( the current
city cooncil eleclloo c&mpallll.
"Cruclal to thil election ii whether the
resident. ol LalUJll will coolnll tlielr city
cooncJl lllCI, llnuP k, the pllmln( com-
. ' •• Ina
Campaign .
For Sheriff
Gets Bitter
-to 1111 cunpMp far Oraoce Oouoty a.tff ... ,_ Thll:adoy al-
--""'"-~ N(rrls lllapl....,. ~ -....
....,. llial -Jmna, Kmlck. bad ,.,..,.. ..... ~-
l!ut .Gut -... -• -nply 1-1«' l•·.lhl 11a1·-both ·Maalck ~
----·-·-
. ' I
i'
\ . t I
Tiit -· "" I
.. ~ ;olJoa Chle!•Cllllord Mur·
'1'11 '• llkltttae ...,., , • ...:._'n..... B . k Pil t ~··, , ..... """"." . ac up o.
. "'11111~ • ~. __,,......._ 'r > ' • • • ,· , ;.,:;:;~= ~·~ · 1>n ""€r.am Ctitirte':
-....... tllal '111 'a . . •. •
doi•ra...-i .. Clomlntelal~ F M SL-a
1111 ...... ·"111oe ~ ·• • or · oon 1w'' e:1wdi 1thil ·sli 'A17'L ~.....,. ·· .. ' far'-----.I· alil w> . CAPE ~Y •. Jl'IA.. (Ap,) -· J:>oo.
the ;eaanly· ...,.., ·~t: 1'1'be m.. . -""--'""' I b 1 I ._ llW ·-wse ........ cam ··-...., Non11.-. --y, m~ 'lbomlr K. M-,iy II
Muakt, ·-·did not -ar '111 the In· llOI fly to the moon :on SllurdlY'.: lllCI vi-o1• .... , Clplab-, Be 1 c b lllckup pllol John L. SWiprt Jr.• un-
a.>Mr ol ~ •("f •will not -I •' crllll> ·trlinlng procrlln to ... dftlUr Ill)' Gl!P!"""I by beln1r ~ II tt be CID move Into the. Apollo JI 11ql
1111.-_ .... ')·la« llld lila ofllce MltlJnc!y'(lllm -·o1 m.t1ni the ~-'*' umtancealla<"-flllht 'had hinl'd OD .whether labor1lo<y
San C1J·e m •.n t e • , Dmtilc ,aoadier ie9t1 lboWed thlt linotber · b a1c k u p ·~ he aaid hit o111ce w11 no1 utnmut, · Ciarles oou; IClu.Uy bu
ubd. . · German , meules. Tbe te.ts: relayed
"1'1111111 tab the full ~)lty-for 1llu"</ly,trom the Natlonal lpalltutea ol
lhl ·colli ud"I-11m>Miic. 1111 Helllli In Betbetda, Md., ai-ed he did .
ilMrlfl'a.olftoe,"·Mliln)'Md. Dr. a.art.a A. Jleny, the,11W.rts' '"lllere·-... 1nR...r. w1iere <Giil-dllef phyllcl ... llld W-y thlt ~
m--not dar .....p ...i Duke had the me ..... , he ...i other
the al!erill'a meo ...,. IUdy to atep In medical uperta would n•onm1'nd lblt
aod llelp. We jual dldn' llllb 11 dnr to Mllllncly DOI be alloftd to fiy Salurdly,
them we .... tod them In the clly." CKolcll teota bod lndlc1ted Dul:e bod
Noma termed the -refual of muales but . had left open· one Chanco
sherlll'a help •• ''dllgrace to the Pnol-thlt be bad.~ -1im1!11r -· denl lllCI to the dtllena ol our county." A Id••· Murray ltretled there WU "deftnlttlv IPflC'f! agency announcement 11 "'111;
-
·'I be ' lab ' teN "confirm Dul:e ·hM · German no. y 11 u tweln our depm. I Rube"· ff •--•-ment and the lherlff's offtce. Someoae mw u, or ua • • • e --n a
juJt-.,'lhi V. hll Ilda atrqbt." clllllc rile.In.rubella-·" It a1i1o
Jn 1 Jeptrate cxnvtr11Uon Mullet uld Duke bu developed 1 ralh, arthritis
agreecl, c lllCI • 1wellin1 In both, nn,.n.
"U be 1111ka ~~ ~~ Mllltlngly ind the. other, n.o, prime
·--ol ltrelpcnible Apollo ii c:rewmen,.JlllllOI A. i...u Jr. ::::::-JUJ.;...,..:=,~be-: ebeick lbe and Fred W. Haist Jr. and Swt1trt alt
-w ... upooed to the -through -fla,..i the -·· ad-Duke,. Blood tall lilOW Lovtll, Hllai ~nd --.. --poinll: u ••. --Thal Ille , boot -In the Swl1ert • are Immune to ·~ , C·-· Bi but thlt -gty II nol. ........ -.... , -ol lhe -Y.,.. BerryllldeulierMlllUnclYbacl1very
tprftd 10 llllltylthal·llioul4l,llllll penon.s ...... h of comln ~ w1··· ••.
have bu~ -polrol car '"' duly to """' •-c ance I -·" "' •~ ~ colll and --of ~":·effort to avoid• COll!y-.-tl '
-del11 In the llunchl... Swil'ft joined • ~-~a .... It -1111 -II ea. Lovell aod JWse. ibom! 1 IPICOlhlp
Clol lllDDT, ,....1) alinulator 1bund1y. They '*med . mission. FM thele are the bodies U:llt
will decide, pcr!Llpi lrmenll>ly, bow our
hillsides will be built up, wbere the high-
rise atructum will be loc.lted no lhl beaCh, lllCI what will happen to our Milli
Beach Park."
NOting thlt the Wiii" board had never before felt '° compelled to take
such 1 stn>ng poottion In • city election
C1111palin, the stat.m<nt concluded :
"'l'be dlrecton' declaloo to sttpport
Tomcbft lllCI O'Sulllva II b11ed no the
fact that tbelt two cmdidltea hive con-
-.Uy championed the CIU" of I
>CCDic, umpniled Lagunl, that they belt
ttpte"nt the ldeall lllCI upirotioos of
our orpa11111DD lllCI thlt U-idt1ls
wlll be belt Ullheld by their _. on
the cky counc1J."
Ex-Marine Faces -8.ap
Of .Smuggling· Aliens
ipUi-eecood critical manel\""' lhll ....
quire clole -1Uon.
Included .... launch, launch lbort,
docldll( with 111e ..... lfndlnc craft, fir.
11111 Into hmlr orbli and deoc:enl to within
elOI mllis ol the --· , 'nMt delcem. maneuver is upeciaUy
crlUcal, bee-accklenlally bu1'11inc .the
aj>lcelb\P'• eriglne ..,. -too long
caiid -the -cruhinf Into thell10Gl1.
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices on the
stodt --· m1'ed lite tllls afl<r. noon In light tr1dlng. (S.. quotatlona,
Pagei 22-11).
Dec--ldv-on the N.,. Vort Stock h:blnge by a norrow mar-
gin,
On I!!< Apolk>,11 •nd lJ f1llbta, the i.,,. dine v«ilclet..,. ttlealod II 1n 1lU1Ude
ol ..... u.n • miles. LoVtll lllCI -.,. to ' ltart their deace!lt lnim ei(hl
nllleo, • move which provldel acldJUODI!
fuel and rreat.r land~ •ccuncy.
'l'be ·big quetllon 11 wllether Swigert,
who bu never flown ln 1pace, can wort
amoothly with the other t't\'O t n
maMUver'I Ullt require cloee and repict
-.!inlUon. ·~, Hli" lhd .'l'lloqila K. MitUn&IY
II have pnictlced toaotlior 11 1 IWll man than two rem, nrtt •· backup
pHOU1lor Apollo U, rnan'1 fil"lt moon-lan-
dMf -· Ind then 11 the prim< cttw for Apollo u . Obterver1 Ny they are 1
auperblf -dlnatod lum.
\
(
guarantees rlghta ol ll"fCh lllCI -bjy
ind the denial of permission to the group
co bold a llwful uoembly proved .,.,uun,,
he sakl, because the tbousandJ. o(
demomtraton held their march anyway
1'1be pollce were In a sense powerless
to 1ct because these peopi, bad the t.a.
atftutiODll right. u the council had taken
suggatJon to give the group another pirl
ol ti!• city to hold the1' march lllCI ll then
the group violated thlt order, our poilco
, (See SAN CLEMEll'l'E, Page II
as
Give Views
On 'Image'
Of Laguna
By BARBARA KREIBICH
ot ... D91tr l"lllt .....
,In the loth and final ,,..:election bum
In Llguna Belch Wedncaday allernooo,
listeners heard city council Cllldldatet
expreM opposing views on the effect on.
Laguna's lmage of Tuesday's mertbanta'
march on city hall; were told councilman
Richard Goldberg's aevu-point program
to improve that lmage will be "very ex-
penalve," lllCI heard 1 .qgestion lllat
German Shepherd dogs tr,tned to tnltt out marijuan1 be purebaaed to ·help the
p:ollee. · ·
The , forupi ill the C?Glgregatlonal
Oiur¢1; •""1ded •by -.. ' u... "
LaP,am, 1'M'~rbf,Quclt,
Womea, United lllCI the Loque ol
Women Voters.
Followina fi....mrte llolament. by
candid•• Pet.tr Ostrander, Ja.eph Tom.
chat, F<lward Lorr, Richard Goldberg
and JoeeplJ O'SuWv11, written questions
from the audience were addressed. to the
candlda\fa by moderator Helen·Keeley.
.Asked f0< a "rellectioo" no the effect
of the mercbaati' march, O'Sullivan
replied, ''Well, It certainly gave 111 a Joi
more publicity . We made the
metropolitan papers1 a g a i n • • • To
O'Sullivan's suaestion that such publJci--
ty was IOt favorable, Goldberg replied,
"I do not find the publicity detrimental.
Jf finally showed tbe •outside world that
the clUzena of Laguna Beach were con-
cenoed 1nd did Intend to do somethinf
about thelr problems."
Al.keel what his aeven-point program
would involve ht the way of coat.
Goldberg said emphatically, "l can teO
you it will be very expensive. Just how
expensive will depend on the nwnber of
people we will need to Implement it, but
it will be e:rpeniilve. Howeyer, I feel the
people are of a mind to pay that bill
now."
To the quesU01, "How ls It possible to
control narcotiC!I violaUou with 30
Policemen"? Loor replied, "Actually
there are only about 18 0Hicer1 out fn the
field, so they must rely on technique,
nther than numbers."
Lorr said he would favor the ptD'Chaae
of animals, probably German Shepherd
dogs, trllned to 1n1eD martjuna. Such
animals have effectively a.ided the police
at latel'JUltlonal Airport and in other
parts of Los Angeles, Lorr said.
Miked haw he would control ~ ~pplt
problem, Tomehak reiterated an earlier
auggestlon that a committee including the
clergy, dty officials, police, students and
out.Ide l!>"'llilst. be formed to study the
reasons for the problem and suggest
practical soluUon1. "If we put them on a
bus to Newport they 'll ju.st take a bus
back," he said.
He also said that hi! proposal for a
systems analysis of city hall operations
could lead to much more efficle1t use of
persoMel and 1 m o o t h e r cooperation
be t w e e n police, fire and housing
departmentii to help combat the problem.
One questioner asked "any candidate"
to respond to the que11Uo11, "Would it not
be in order to ask for recall of the city
manager who seems to be most {esponsi·
ble for the' tolerant attitude toward hip.
pl,.?"
Goldberg Jumped to his 1 .. 1 Ind
answered firmly, "No, I do not believe
thi> would be proper. It Is the Job ol the
city council to !let city policy. If the city
manager falls to carry out this poUcy.
then It is time to talk about recall. But
we cannot blame tbe city maMger If 1
city cooncll fills to provide pnllcy alld
leadership."
lntrodUclng the · candidatel, M"' •
Keeley, herseU a former eountllwomln.
11\d, "It Is a demandin1 job they have
volunteered to fill for the ne1.t four years,
wlih l!l,.tings every week. luting Iron>
two t6 (Ive hours, aloog with many ol.her
IS.. LAGUNA, P ... I)
'
~ DAil y PllCil SC Tllwsda>, April 9, 1970
..,,...,. P,,.e .I
SAN .CLEMENTE -FORUM • • •
could ha .. llepped In ond mfon:ed the
law," he~·
OU. -the J!eeco Action Cowicll
query, molt of the other commenb, plat"'
l«m and •'Iii-questloN dull with
--Joot..-ap -· Rm are hf&tillghta from elcll c1n-
dldote'1 t.lll In the onler In which Ibey
were made:
-all! Myen spoke first, he said, "
thlt he would not be chargt'd with shirk· inc hl1 dutlel as a planning comml.saiQner
for polltJcal gain. He Jelt soon at. t.erwar~ to attend a commt11ton metlln&. He cited his years of RrVlce a•
a flr<man In lndlana, followed by MrV1ce
In San Clemente <ity hall He lnltllted the
Sen Clemenle (Olll1cil ptayel'llelore-the-
meetlng policy and designed the award
winnlng hilltop Christmas scene. ''l make
no campaign promises, because I've
heard too many in my lifetime which
disappear when the polls open." fie cited
high priority fer development ol clty
para. He uked for support, "but I will
Med" more of it when I am elected to the
councll," he said confidently.
-Du Clilltoa stressed that an in-
c:umbent lhou1d run on bis record . He
cited hls own, along with achievement.& cl.
the total c:oun<ll In tho put four years -
a drop In property t.1e1 from IUS ta
$1.38, purcbufll or beach fri;wtta.11:e for the
public, development or Pico Road, the
waste water treatment plant, water
storage facllities, shilling from iron
water mains to transite, erpanslon of the
police department and setting up ol the
parks and recreation and pukin& com-
mlsskn. .r
"I am Vtlt'J proud cl. the achlevemenll
ond I would like another term ta projecl
San Clemente'• future, be aid.
-Mayor Wade Lower thanked the
residerits for their "wonderful at·
tendance" and said Chilton had related
many of the acihevements of the city. Jf
you want others, just k>ok at the
paragraph wi~ your ballot. Tersely, he
said he had a record « balanced budgets,
honesty, no conflicts of interest, no pro-
mises and he was the only couocilm'1J to
vote 1pinrt the latest aalary. incruae for
coondlmen. Dr. Lower stoutly doleoded
:arxl praised the Committee for Better
Government and said its members sought
him out for an endorsement, oot the
reverse. He praised rts mmiben II bein&
community leaders. .
minority opioJons on the council sUll need
more action, including an overlay map
showing soil atability in the 1enenl plan
and cootingeocy planning for water
shortages. He al9o cited city
achlevem<nta during his stewardship and
pledged to ccntloue "maktng waves" on
Che ooundl. I'm vocllernus and I llho\lld
be."
-Al?la Babr straaed that he was an
Independent <anclldat. who r<fUJet cam·
pa!IJI -lom and bu no support from
"outalde group1." He pralJed nvUt city
pl1nning for the new comm u n l ty
clubhouse, then dwelt on the dlre need, be
Slid, for a full.time, erpended fire
department, citing Laguna Beadl's three
1tatlonl ml SI "Plid firemen . He called
for r<locaUoo of the Sa!U Fe Roll 1teM1
throqh San Clemente, then ailed for
FroM Pqe .I... 1
DRESS CODE ••
reglstroUon without • dreu code.
Alked H relaxation of tho dreol code
had produ<ed a large o-op of vlol1tars,
Bremer uld, "To be honest threre were
very few on the fin\ day. But theae were
mostly returning IOpbomores who are ac-
cullomed lo 1lle dma code. I d°" ~ !mow
what teday and lom-OITOW will bring. Tho
matter 11 now entlrtly up to the courts.
We simply have to wait for a decision."
Lattt In the morning, learning of the
Judges• ruling, Bremer said, ' 'The
decision Is In favor d. the prerogaUve of
a kical board to set reasonable rules and
regulations."
Since the judlclal panel'• order that the
tajunct.lons be vacated immediately wu
issued "pending the filing of a wrJtten
optnion," the final word tn the matter has
yet ta be heard.
If the written opinion alt0 upholds the
l91allty of the dress code, there will be no
further legal action on the part of the col·
Jece, a spokesman said. However. Jr the
Jegal representatlVes of the students
choolt, they can "take It on up to the
Suprmle Court," it was noted.
DAILY PILOT
8e\ioert N. W••' l'rulftflf ..,, '111111tW
J•1li 8, C11rl1y
Vb P'ftl!M'll enll 0.-.1 ~
lli•111•1 "••"ii .....
Uo11111 A. M.,,h;,_.
M ...... lftf f:d1Mt
8\1h1ri ,, N11I
1911111 °""""' C-''1' lidllW
"'""' C.ltl M-1 :ut Wttl ••'I' lll'wl H ...... I .. ltfl; '211 W..t •1lilillt ._,...,_ Ufwlt ... ell: m l"-1 A-
...... llll'llletl ~; lNll .. ~ aiwltW,.,
1M C:*"-' .. ' -~ II C-1111 lt•I
IJAILT PILOT. wllll w:ikll It. oonblMd""'
....... ~ .. It .... 111'1111 d•lly ··~-,_ HJ 1J1 _ .. ,. Ill!-ftr U9\0W kcA.
........ 9tKfl,, (•If --· """'""1 ... ~ Miii l"-'11"' Ytlllf, Ill/Of •1111 -........ ......... Ot ...... C.111 l'WIWllftf ~ ,....,,,,. p11rm ''' 11 n11 w.it .. """ .,_,. .. ,.,.,..., Midi. M'JI Pl W..t
.. , I~ C..MI """'·
1ah .. 1• 1714.1 641.CIJI
ClwHie4 ~lla1 641.-•78
S-Clo••••• A• &t,.., .. ,,u
Tola,t .. 4t1-44Jt
01some equitable 'Wly so that PeoP1e from
out of town can pay ror our expenes of
maintaining the beacha. He llVthld
stiff • entorcemtnt of oi'dl.Dances and
•1Vtry few v&rlancea." ,
-ltaMri -.. I retired Loa Allteiol
n .. aptaln, ai.o .-the M!ll ~ a
better fire deparlment and dliil 1hi ...
tensive -k ntedod ta plan one. Ho citod
the <lty'a poor fire lnsurxnco rating. Ha
agreed "whol6-heartldly" wtdl O'Keefe't
views on soil stablllty matters.
...Juntt T, F1Hll: called the ctty'a main
road, El Camino Real, a "carnival. All 1
we need ts a few tattoo parlors and It
would look lLie 1 complete peMY arcade.
I don't want ta be a polltlclan, .n wanl la
four year1 and I would steii aside. I want
a crack at ebanctng 1r1me of Che things in
the city, including what you see on El
Camioo. I'm not afraid to ask Why."
-Herb Rively also praised the Citizen's
Committee for Better Government and
read nimet of several of its leaders,
citing their achlevementa, "Il they are
spending money from an outside group,
then I don't know about It. He aald he
wa1 aebamed . ol the pier entrance and
claimed thlt recreation factUUes for our
youth· "ha•e been sadly neg}eeted."
-Art BolmH 1-.i the joy of seei\ll
so many in the audience Ind prajsed the
Jaycees for the forum, then aald bis love
of the city was the prime mover in his
choice of campaign for the council. He
said the new clubhouse should have a
theater room, a mulU-purpose large·
floored room and a smaller area where
historical displays and c om f o rt a b I e
seating could be provided for people "io
just sit down and chat." He called for
moving of the railroad. B"e called for pier
entrance improvement& and "atlff, but '
good zoning and grading codes. I want a
first-class city."
-KHlbe~ said he ''definitely" is not a
tool of $tcial interest groups, then hit at
the Ufeguard pay conb'oversy, terming
the city's unwillingness to pay "a man
who obviously worked 400 hours without
pay" and its hiring of special legal coun-
sel "would prob1bly cost more than pay·
ing the lifeguard for his work. He said no
man sbouJd serve more than two terms
of office and hi tat the city for not pro-
viding more beach access routes, road
improvements. and placing controversial
items late in the meeUn& of the coun·
cit and keeping speakers waiUng to speak
on the issues. "Avenida Pico is a long
road to nowhere,'' he added.
-Ian Keant.V ripped Into the ad-
ministration like ·a bent.am rooster and
said one must fl&ht ''the battle against
tot.al government takeover." He cited
many of his suggestions on parking and
other issues, he said, have been ignored
by the council, he \ermtd the five-year
capital improvement program as "just a
piece of paper" and charged that the
council has not loftred the tu rate, but
"just shifted it around on special use
fees and on to the water bill." The
Chorak case, he charged "ls a stigma on
our town." The city's budget bas funds
for a better fire department and other
needed projects. "All we need ii men to
implement it."
~Harold Meade also hit on the
land&ll4e bauo and llid that becauoe of
improper englneerlng some residents of
1he city have been "severely hurt finan-
Ctally." The ·Chorak cue wu "em-
barrushtg and doesn 't merit all tht trou-
ble it has caused. He jabbed at the plans
for expansion of nuclear generators at
San C>nofre 'and charged that their hot
water .discharge could kill marine We.
-BDI Sill, the youngest of the <an-
dldates (23) said he wu tbe most
qua!lfied bec1uae of hil youth and his
1billty ~ relate to youth. His appearance wu the only one accompanied by a
demomtratloa from the audience -ban-
nen and applause. "You saw these kids
out here and you laughed at them," he
said. "But they're not rioting, they're
carryin1 sJgns." He hit on en-
vtronmerital issues, beauuncation and
what he termed ''absolutely nothing for
oor young people to do In this city. San
Clemente, if you travel north to south Is
an ugly city. U I were elected some of
that type of building would not be built."
He said the city's youths ''need dancts
and concerts. That'• what they want." He
called for acceptance of only "clean" in-
dustry 1n the city to ellminatfl pollution.
"l think if you join with me we could tru·
ly light the world."
Candidates Eugene Sullivan and James
IAJSk did not •Uend the forum.
Service Slated
For Mrs. Harrod
Funeral servlcet will be conducted FM·
day for Mn. Gari Harrod, former MGM
Studios actress and San Clemente resi·
dent since 1914. She died Tuesday at
South Coast Community Hospital after a
Jmgthy Illness .
The sister of COUnclbnan Stanley C.
Northrup, Mn. Harrod, 1712 S. Ola
Vista, was a charter member of the San
Clemente Arts and Crafts Club.
Rev. Hazel W. Van Dusen, Unity
Church of San Clemente, will officiate at
the l l a.m. service in Lesneski Mortuary
Chopel.
A native of Portland, Ore., Mrs. Harrod
was active In lltue theeter lri San
Clemente; worked with handicaJ:)l)ed
children; was a volunteer at l h e
Servtcemen'1 Horp!tallty Ctnttt; • Red emu vohmteer ; and had won honor• for
her art work in otla and watercolor.
She la alllO survtved by her mother,
Betty G. Chapin of San Clemente. Burial
will be in Fairhaven Memorial Park .
Badham Offers Bill
SACRAMENTO -A bill prolllbltlng job
di1ClimlnaUon acatnst women wu ap-
proved Wedneaday by lhl Aswnbly with
Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R ~
NewpOrt Stach) complaining \hat women
want rlght:s but artn'\ wUUn& to give up
thclr protecUona lo txchaoat.
• • ----
Laguna Officers Train
Nixon Plruis ·
More Viet
' Pullouts
WASlllNGTl>N (UPI) -President ,
Nixon. wlll _~ke a nationally televbed..
address on Vietnam next Thursday night, .
the White House announced today. He ls ·
expected 10 announce a further U.S. troop
withdrawal. ~·
Preoo S.Crotary Ronald L. Ziogler u!d"
the ~. cxi radio u we.ll as televlslQn,
would be at 6 p.m. PST April 16 and
would cooCeJ"n Nixon's decision on Viet-
nam troop levels.
1be speech will OJme one day after ~
latest pbaat of the gradual troop pullout.
procu1 started last year by Nixon ls ~
be cmipleled.
PrtviOUJly ordered withdrawals will
reduce the celling on U.S. forces In Viet-nam to '34,CXX> on Aprll 15.
Ziegler told reporter• that the Presi·
dent wanted to update his report to the
natloo on conditions in Vietnam-ampl.i·
lying his earlier policy statements.
Lt. Rick Drake ·of Orange County Sheriff's Office
(right) instructs I:.aguna Beach Police U. Frank
Schopen on ijle use of hand gun in l~unching tear
gas and smoke grenades. Riflemen in ~ground
are Laguna police officers Bob Remillard, Arthur
DeLuca and William Heiden (from left). Training
in use Qf special equipment in crowds and in flush-
ing criminal suSP.t:.cts from hiding takes place
regularly at sheriff's department facilities.
Nixon told newsmen at an infonnal
news conferenCe March 21 that Viet-
namzation -the administration term for .
turning a larger burden of the war over
to the South Vietnamese -was pro-
gressing well and he saw at that time: ·
nothhig to slow the rate of U.S.
withdrawals.
Fron• P"fle .I From PGfJe .I
Nb:on bu ordered three phases ol
w1thdrawal so far, reducing the authoriz..
ed strength of U.S. forces in Viebtam by
some 115,000. 'The actual number of
troops to be pulled out as of a week from
Wednesday is expected In be about :
105,000.
LAGUNA BEACH FORUM • • • SHERIFF ...
meeUngs at the city, state a11d even na·
tional level, where they reP.resent you."
Council mmtberi, she said, get, ''some
complaints, some abuse and very litUe
commendation. I sometimes wonder how
we manage to find cadidJtes."
She urged "reflect)ob, calmness aad
reason, In these troubled times.''
Ostrander directed his talk to a
clarification of the Cordoba issue, ex·
plainln&. the basic cqncept of' planned
residential development, which he said is
used throughout the world and is design-
ed to provide more opea space for each
family unit.
He said the planning commission
denied the C.Ordoba hillside development
plan on the "technicality" that the city
did not have u ordinance for plaMed
residential di!ve.lopmenL "1 say we
should write such an ordinance," be aaid.
"It is tbe only way to control future
development of the hillsides and if we
don't aet aome stari.dards soon it will be
too late. Some of our hllsldes already are
scarred with cut and fill development "
Tomehak prefaced his remarks by
saying that the planning commissio n, on
which he served, turned down Cordoba
for many reasons, includblg questions
about access, fire and police service, pro-
vision for schools aJld inttability of the
land. He pointed out that he had lnvlted
Ostrander to debate the matter, but had
been turned down.
Relul1llq to his chosen topic, Tomehak
dlscmsed the importance of environment
8Jld urged careful preservation o f
Laguna's natural attractions by very
discriminating d e v e I o p m e n t at a
minimum density level. An11exation, he
said, should be restricted to the cout.a.I
area and not move behind the hills.
Describing the job ahead as "stag-
gering ," Goldberg said all caadldates are
in favor of more parks and recreaUon,
Main Beach park development, upgrading
the sewers and undergroundlng utillUes
but, he asked, "Wbo will pay for all this?
And ''ho will be left in Laguna to enjoy it
if we can't get rid of the lawbreakers wllo
have descended on us like a plague?"
When he speaks of develop ing tourism
County Refers
Coastal Report
Back to Planners
tri an abbreviated public heaMng on the
South Coast Scenic Improvement,. project
Wednesday, Orange County Supervisors
quickly cu t off debate by referring the
report back ta the CO\mty PlaMing Com·
mission.
The move ta delay debate and further
action on the year-old study hinged on the
recommendation of A. S. Koch, county
road commissioner, that the con-
lroverslal realignment of Paclflc Coast
llighway through Dana Point not be at·
tempted at this time.
Koch said ~ state was ready to make
Improvements on the highway between
Three Arch Bay and San Juan'Creek, but
the im provements would not be made tr
the rcaligmnent study v.·as requested.
He 'said the proposed realignment on
Del Prado in Dana Point wouJd require at
least three years study and the complete
job might take six years.
Supervisor David L. Baker injected a
ocw facet into the discussion by calling
for more vlewpnints. "We have a $22
million Investment in the Dana Point
Harbor project and tht people should be
able to look at it," he sa id.
Alex Lake, 2-1632 Del Prado, rose to ob·
Jcct to tltc proposed reali1nment, but he
was quickly cut off by bo&rd Chairman
Alt.on E. Allen who moved that the mat-
ttr be reft rrod t.o the planning com·
mission for further study.
James E. O'Connor of South l..IJUna,
chalrm~n of the l2·member cornmlttte
for the 115,000 study{ said hil group hid
made 135 s p e c i f c recommtndaUona
whl<h Included rerui>UOll of blllboud>,
landscaping, arid undergrou.ndtna of
utlllUes among others.
I
for eronomic reasons, Gold.her& said, "I
do not NY It Is ~ry to <Werrwr the
town with tourists, or io bloCk everyone's
view with a solid wall of hotels on the
beach. I movrct here 11 years ago for the
same reUona 'many othef! did, the
dellghUul summndings, the cUmate, the
village abnospbere, and I would be the
last to want to ruin It."
Lorr repeated his belle( that the hippie
problem is the most critical one facing
Laguna and blamed city co u tic 11
"permissiveness" for the past four years.
He sald he would 11upport Goldberg's
seven poJnta and empha~. "We need
men on the city council with backbone,
who will take a hai-d line stand. We either
crack down or let this element take over.
This is a chance to vote for a change and
get some real leadership."
O'Sullivan. who sa.id ht was a litUe
nervotls becau!e hil ~r, WU in the
auaience, cited \he aC'ctlnpllshme:nt of
the council on which he has served, refer-
ring to the Inland fr.eeway, ~ beach
plh'chase, the library, the hiring of a
recreation diieCtor, the new playhouse
and other Items.
The decisions made In the next four
years will really determine the future or
Laguna, he said. "I recognlJe the
necessity of tourism, but feel we must
not overbuild with large commercial
buildings on the oceanfront. We must
have a CH zone and restrict hotels to
that zone. The hillsides must be proteeted
to preserve their contours and we should
have planned residential developments to.
blend the houses into the 'hills."
a ga1lon fer gasoline, but by the time i.t Is
pUmped Into a pa(t'ot car it costa 58 cents
a gallon. '
-Deputies are losing morale. They
have to radio for a tow truck from the
county yards if their car runs out of gas
and they have no cash.
-Some patrol cars are so run down, he
said that ooe deputy was .stopped recenUy
by a high ochool girl who pointed out that
his car was emiting heavy smoke and
was a~ding to the smog problem. The car
had more than 100,000 miles oo it. It w1s
a 1967 model.
-Response Umes are sometimes 10
slow th.It deputies face "a lynch mob of
sorts." One recent call from two raped
housewives in Sllverado canyon required
dispatching of a unit from South Laguna
which took 90 minutes to arrive.
Musick later refuted the statements Jn
a general way and &aid he would need a
cloler ~eek of the recOldS to rtply to the
1peclflc charges. .
"We give adequate coverage In our
patrol duties and we have solid back up
procedures. Certainly we would like a
blgpr budget, and if we coo1d have one
obviously we would improve o u r
''"i<o," he said.
He add.ed that deputies hive credit
ca rds ta use if they run low on fuel.
The sheriff promised to reply In person
to the charges and preset'(. h i s
department's viewpoint at the chamber's
next general meeting May 19.
Nilion announced the firs t 25,0IJO.man.
reduclion in the celling last June and ·
subsequenUy ordered two more redue-
Uoru.
Gen. William C. Westmoreland, former
Vietnam commander who is now the
Army chief of staU, and Gen. Creighton ·
W. Abrams, currenUy the U.S. com-·
mander in Vietnam, have favored a
slowdown in the withdrawal because d.
an increase in Communist aclUvity.
Ziegler said the President'• decision on
a fourth phase of the withdrawal is based
on "going consultations'' with
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen ••
Abrams in Saigori and wltb U.S. planners
in the Pentagon and sal(i Nixon had no
plana to meet personally with Bunker aDd
Abrams before April 16.
Bunker is scheduled to return to the
United States in ?w1ay for extensive con-
sultations on Vietnam.
Four Anny units are scheduled to leave
Vietnam Friday as part of the third·
phue, 50,000 man withdrawal. The tot.al
number ln the units la 3,280.
Perot Stymied Again
PARIS (AP) -H. Ro.u Perot tried
unsuccessfully today to give the North-
Vietnamese and Vlet Cong Hsts of
prisoners held ln South Vletname~
camps, and concluded that "they have M ·
concern" for their own capUves. The
Texas computer magnate arrived aboard
a chartered Boeing 707 accompanied by
five wivea of missing and prisoner of war
servicemen and about 70 newsmen. ·
Ctik!
n •••••••• ,., "'""fort1it. 1ofa ia•• , ••
Sltt1119 •"" Sl11pi11,. A wlcl• 1•l••tl•11 • ftirl"t a1111f Ctlor1 t•
ch•••• from,
" (~ .............. ..,. -~~.,.......
Your fovorltc lnttrior derfgncr wiU be Mppv to usiit you •••
PRO~SSlli~J. GAl\l\ElT f U RNl~t~~BOR BLVD.
INTERIOR DESllONERS Opeo Moo. Tton. ' Fri. hos. COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646-0275 646-0276
OICK TRACY
~.
MUn AND JEFF
'l)llGENERJc: NAME
Riii "T'MI& SMil..I..
Ill CONCH!
JUDGE PARKER
'«>I POW'r MIWP MY
SITT1 W6 MERE WITM Yell
FOi A FEW MINUTES,
PO YOU, lll:USl
ME~ ltOT SOP•
POSEP lO MA.YE
Vl51 T0«5, PllVP!
Y01 MTT&Jt
LIA.VE! ,
PLAIN JANE
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
l Yount bird
' Fruil
10 Grind -·· 14 Sh1dt of
""'" 15 Kind of
fl l9hl
16 Nimbus
17 8ur1Ungs
lnw1rd
1• Pl lnth
211 ltCMI' and
Ntw Yort''
FIMSI
21 Jewish
holiday
23 Formtr U.S.
Stcty. of tht
lntt ri0t
1 ZS Kind of cloth
2' Plliamenllry vote
27 Ft malt GI
29 Poetry of a ptoplt Jl Ntvaf unit;
lnform1I
33 Turkish
tltlt
34 Mt111tnlo
J6 Tt11s or
Albtrt1
tstabUstwnenl
40 Strip of wood
42 f'ISSt
44 F1t1I 45 t \rt
l11turt
.-17 More
boorish 49 Conjunction
•
•
SD ••• M1 h1I S2 Covtr
llrmly
SJ Ftmalt
animal
S4 Man's
nickname
S7 Wrong :
Prtfhc 59 Compttilor
61 Constituents
L4 Gltss
maktr's raw
m1terl1I
L7 Passport
tnlry
LI Pitt dt folt gra1
ingrtdlent:
2 words
70 At any·
time
71 Slngle 72 Turn
outward
13 Permits
74 Sharpne ss
75 Re laxes
DO WN
I Footbal~
infraction 2 Blood :
Pr1f11
) Conntcl
intlmattly
4 Paroxysm
of pain
5 lttm of door hardwtrt I> Prtssurt
unit: Abbr •
7 Chicago
re1turt
4/9/711
8 Of In 41 Southwester,
armbone for one
• Lichens 43 Invent
10 "Be off!" 41> Fema le :
11 Immature Slang
instct 48 Abusivt
12 Kind of person
thorough· 51 Fe1tu1t or
fart som1 TV ads
13 lr lsh 54 Slope the
Pott edgt of
18 Perco11ted 55 lilirtlni
22 Goad ingredient 24 ·Of tht sun Sf> Attack 27 Mr. Oi1nty repeatedly
28 Rtd algat 58 lillintaintd
extraclivt a postu1t
30 ·-··Ind 60 Hot take nolict : in1nim1tt
2 words 62 Plane! 32 Faulty 6l liluslc al
JS Trtt co111position
37 Myth ical 'II 65 Ltad·plpt
feline cinch
ft1turr : 66 Cr1lts' Z wcrds parlntrl
JS 8i'rd "' l!l lsllop's 39 '·'Present!" 1r1t .,....,,:.:,;,;..,.,...,
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
ONE MUST
ee: """'" DfP\..OMATIC
ly Chester Gould
I "1'MANICS, ED. ANO NOW
FOR 'n« MOST
Cp!iNGCBOU5 A1WMCMT OF OUR L.I S!
.
ly Al Smith
ly Frank laginskl ------
S><&:
MA5AN
UNPIZEOtCTAet.E
N AT~.
TllUE.
SOME 01<-15
5J.lE'IS1""'
U'L AINER
SALLY BANANAS
,.._,.~;:r~~~T
:\ JM :i:'. .I)
-.
GORDO
W//V ./%) J/iJIMIJS //AVE t'Jlli.1116" "Ole
-~NI:?_ °"COMMUN-NAJ.faSf tCATE! .so 7H6Y'U
KNOW WI/AT 71/eY'l<s TtMf!j'
•
ANIMAL CRACKERS
•
HOW M/>JJY
//AVE \QJ
SE.EN. Wi/O K.NOW
WI/AT 'fll<Y'Ri TALK. i/.J&
.).f!SOLJTP •
~c»\ I ~:-~~~N.
' I I W l1E llEl!O 1fil :s !
••. 11
By John Miies
By Men
"'""' MARLlA .• A
FOLJL#NXO.
V0U CAN RE.LAX
THIS IS NOT
ONE OF THOSE
DAVS.
' I l
1 •
STEVE ROPER
WILL -,ou SRIN6 ME THE OUMMY,
PENNY! rD LllC~ TO TAKE A
FINAi. L.00tC AT 1Mi ISSUE
8!FME l S!NO IT
'l<>)ijE PlliNTfRS I
TMAT AIMO CRiEP
IS OUTSIDE, BOSS/
'"SHOULD l T~LL
HIM TO GIT LOST?
"'
Thurui11. A.prll •· 1970 OAIL Y P\LOT &l
\ I , I 61J~K~ /~
I \ ' ''
D
.. ...--• MR.
ly Al Copp
By Ro9er Bollen
• RAllJ C\-0.JD:S
A\11:1.l'r Alli'
TOO :SIUlfT'.
'!kri! Mil., WIL~ IS EVeN CAAeel~ AT NIGllT
1llAN Mli Ii Ill ~ 06.'ITIME ! •
•
' j
!
I
• •
" r.
fi :
I
,
.
)
• -,
r
JI DAILY PILOT lhllf'tday, AJtil 'I, 1970
v ..... Worth
Mexico Divorce Cheaper?
lly SYLVIA PORTER
1J it cheaper lo get A
divorce in Mdlco than lo your
home ata.teT
WHO GE1ll
house?
f am 11 y
'. PLEASE DON EAT
STRAllliE LEA S
•1 Tl.RRY oaAHT. R.Ph
M111y pl111h 1J>d 111d1 "'"
h1 "''Y h1r111h1I if ch1w1d or
1w1llow1d. Childt111 1tp1ci1Uy
.,. p•Olll t1 th i1 .... ,.,, '""
1ho11ld b1 c111tlon1lll to 1w114
th•'"· C11to• b1111a, poin11tti1
l11w11, "'i1tl1to1, d1ffodil1, hy1•
c;i11tll! 1..d 111rc;i11111 111 p1rtic;11°
l1rl., lll11111ro111. So"'• of "''"'
will ct111,11 "'"'ili"9 1"4 di1rrk11
111d 111 of tk1m h1¥1 b1111
•nown to 1>1 f1t1I.
If you 111tp1c;t th1t u1'11111n1
hit c;h1w1d er Iot t 1w1ll1w1d
1 pot1nti1lly h1r111f11I l11f or
111d, 911 th11n to 1 phyalci111
witho11I d11 1y. Timi it ef 91111
lm port111c1 to 1woid • po11ibl1
tr111Mw.
YOU OR YOU~ DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US wh"1 you n1•d
• d1li .. 1ry. W1 will d1li•1r
promptly without 1flr1 ch1tt•·
A 9r11t m111v p1opl1 r1ly 011 111
for their h11Hh 111edt. W1 w1I.
co1111 r1qu••h for d1l1wtry ttlV•
ic1 oJ'HI ch1rl)t 1ccou11tt,
PAIK LIDO PHAR.MACY
251 H..,it•I lteM "--
How are st.ockl. bondl and
other asstts di vtded !
The last column
typlcal rana:e
aUmon,y and ch.ild !UPPort
payments .and typical charats.
being made by divorce
lawyers. Here, from ~ew
York 's Jud ie Morris
Ploscowe, e nationally known
Jegal 1utbority on divorce , are
details on other dlvol'«: coats:
todo.y's
lr•C'd
• r
-m&.FAMILY HOUSE. If
the house is owned by bolh
Jlusband and wile. the divorce
settlement ofte n p r o v i d e s
ownership for the wife. But
olher arrangements are fr e.-
quenUy made too -such as
giving the wife exclu sive
possession of the house until
the children are grc..wn.
Typically, most of t h e
furniture in the family house
stays thet"e, with the husband
taking only items which he
considers ~xclusively h t ! •
(When I asked Ploscowe what
the husband gets in return for
a house in which he may have
sunk $50,000 or more, h.is reply
was "tr~om.")
-THE FAMILY CAR. If
there are two cars, the hus-
band and wife each take one.
If there is only one, the \\'ife
U!il.lally geta il.
-STOCKS, .BONDS AND
CASH. Any securities, savings
accounts and other such assets
which are jointly owned :are
n o r m a 11 y divided 50-50
between divorcing h u s b a n d
and wife. Otherwise. t h e
persoo in whose name they
are held keeps them. With
jointly owned real estate, there
is usually a provision for
division of the proceeds of its
sale.
-INSURANCE POLICIES.
Traditiooally, the h u s band
keePt his wife as beneficiary
of his life insurance policy un-
~, ••Y• 1porhw11•
til 1he remarrle. or until aome
WE NOW PAY
I
Annually on $20,000 Investment Certificates When Held
to M•turlty. Funds in by the 20th E1rn Interest From the
lit. Interest Paid Qu1rterlv.
Califoniia Tl1.rilt & Loa ti
170 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 646-5045
Now
Earn %
lnterut P•ld Quarterly-No Long · Term Requirement•
You can now Hm the ntw, higher rate of 6% yett1y °" Morrl1 Plan $5,000
Investment Certlflc1te1. Funda placed by Aprl l 15th will e1m tromAprll 111
1t th• full 8% rate. Interest It paid by cheek at tht end of each calendar
quarter.
Founded In 1916i. Morrit Pia!\ today ha• as.sets exceeding S1-45 million
and 74 ottice1 lhroughout Calltomia.
Morris Plan
673-3700
Newport Beach -37 00 Newport Boulevard
~·
'
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New ork Stock List
ltlarket
Sgnabols
; • •
• • • •
t • • •
• • • • • •
--· -----~. . ......... . ........ ' 4-• , '
ThW1dll'. A"'I 9, 1970 SC DAILY PILOT 23
Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
~ ""91Lawc.-C::i9••------------------·1 +••
To Earlier. Gains
::·u
.• f@
~. :: ... .....
:f'ij
1 ·
Blue Chip s Hold
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Excha~e List
MIAMI (UPI) -Oe l ta
Corp. of Amttlta 'innounced IL
wW handle finance for up to
5,200 unlta In the -Id's
largest mobile home: com-
munity ll Bamoot B a 1 M a n o r , Fla., which ii
sponaorod by GAC Corp. of
Allentown. Pa. Tbe l,tl)O....acre
project will lnvolv. autla)o1 of
S75 million ror ru.1 utate 1nd improvemcnu.
'
...
I
I
... " ~. -.., .....
"
1399.95 Two Pieces
f011leu Than The Price of QNE!
• You'n love ownl"ll lhl1 • foot klxu~ $0fO ond motthl~ choir;
'custom \lpholater.d in lcJtilhly Q\lilltd fabrics , , • l\IX\lfY feoNrf•
a,. rwenibl. .seat and ~ck cushions for lol'Qet w.or ••• M>h
spring edge conltn.ICOOn 1~ d\lroblhty ••• plus Shepherd casters
for easy mowment, S\lrpi:ltlng.lsn't it, that you con get rtiis ml.l(.h
foshiol'IOble 18CJ!lng ot ~ a modest price? Save at levllz. todoyll
Mk about our eosy credit ""m1ol
lfVITZ WHSE. PllCE $257
h•lll• Lu••~1111 lte~• Pnt•lncl•I Sof•I Deep hQnd-tufted bock"
Uirwd exposed Frulwood tn:ime, Reversible Pillow-Soft foam cushlon1. Uphol·
.. ,..i ;, °""'""' lo ia $142 REG.299.9S lfVITZ WHSE. PRICE
'
-. '
1•"7 A-rlco• ri. .. 1 lelol Early --~Fi;..., l'attom Solo. 8tlgo
\llffh green floral pottem., confl'Oltt~ W9lt ond1buttona. T"'*I wfng tht'M pi.t.
bodt with [)gcron wropptd tr~• foom Nall and rolled onn. P•rlrMter pleoted
aklrt and aoft apri"ll ~.
,lfO. $399.9$ LEV1lZWHSE. PllCE S238
c,..,,..4, Lva•rie•• C..te...,.ttiry Wei H.te'• o G'"' $ofo d.-
:~to complement todov"• tmOd ine,rion. Oil wolmrt flnlihed fraML
looM pillow bocks. Re...enible Pure foam CA.11hlona.
tEG. $349.9~ lMlZ WHSE. PIJCE
S519.95 Plush Velvet
Quilted Contemporary Salb
'188
• • '
. April 1970.
•419.95 Qu'ilted Mediterranean Comfort!
A Jty(lsh, modlllfy prk:.d sofa and lowMOt for horntn'lak•rs who•
hov. more taft than money! How would this Klfo ond IOYlteot
look In your living room ard.n7Wouldn't1t provlde.IMdtamo and
dlsflndlon you' .... olwoya wont.d? Jutt ·encwgh 11tpolld carved
wood ta give lovofy conlroilt with the wandrou1 colon of tfti quitted
u~lsteryl Comfortobl• r~r:sibl' foam seat culhlons put )'OU In ~luxurious comfort I Batl
•co'Sttiri-i)rovide "°'Y movementr. •
-S.f• Uph•l•t•red ht Glev• .. hft,vl•rll No doubt about It, this ~fa ha1
o gift for hospitoUly. Feel th• lnvltlog aoftn11s of the leolher-llk. Vinyl. Deep
Hond-Tuft«l Backs. RllVtlrslble pure foom s;;.cushlona. (Mcrlchlng Loung• Choir
' So'9 Prlc:'.1 al $67) •
REG. $219 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
Preach Prevl•cl•I 11 .. •nt Sofal Thi• beautiful French ProVlnciol Sofa
This sofa· hos o SP,Ki01 elegoftee·. ·'• groceful curved bock and
allghriy angled front • , ."Qui~ 'Gold Velvet tr.ateef with Stotch-
gord to r1taln thot new k>okl Comf0t1abJe reversibl• foam seat
cushions ptit you in l\11turiovs comfort! Boll conn ptOYide 9Q.SY
fl'IOYH'lenfl Ever think of how much time )'01' spend sitting in 'fO\lr
hom97 Come In and try th!~ 1afol II will p1ep .. you In ~ detoil
••• styling, comfort, beauty, durqbllfly and IOtlng1.
LMTIWHSE.l'tla hos deep diamond tufted bock and dectp foam .......,slble seat cushions for top
$ 3 6 7 comfort I Its •x:poSfld fruitwood fro~ and rich, ·1\lx:urlo\ls, decorator fabric
completes the pretty piCl\l!•I Don't mlu thl1 buy , • • hurry to l8Yitz todoyl
REG. $499.95 f LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
DISCON .TINUED ..
TODAYlOAMto 1·0 PM
1279.95 Elegant
Mediterranean Pillow-Bock Sofa
This i1 truly a glpmour 50fo in eYery MMe of th• word I You'll feel LEV1Tlwt1SE. PllCl
like 0 queen every time.you relax on the mol"'lelous cu~ions in rich. $1, 7
rich Custom Quilted fobl'kl This S.foof Sofa features 'k>o1e re-
\'ersible pillow-bock and seat cushions for longer wear! foam filled
and soh-spring edg• con5truction giVe you comfort and durobiliry _
, •• Shepherd casters provide easy movement! Never before hos so much quolity Mating
apace been offer.d at a bargain p<icel Only LEVITZ can provide $UCh wvingsl
C.ato•porary Loo•• Pillow-lack Sofal Reve rsible Pvre foam Seota'!_d
8odt Cushiona. Upholsteretd in Vectro fabric. Bell Costen for easy movement.
tEG. $299.95
LEVITZ WHSE. Pll~E $]82
'299.95 Elegant
Mediterranean Sola
Here's a K)fo destined to become o prized ponession. Deep button
tufted seat and bock,,, filled with pure loam for moll:imum sealing
comfort. Upholstered in colfly Bronze Chenille fabric for longer wear
and added styling.,, Pecon finished front posts, richly CO Ned in the
Spanish tradition , • , plus Shepherd casters for easy movmentl Come
to Levitz today for 1his fontoltil: aolo buy I
lfVITZ WHSt PRICE
$147
Custom Quilted Looi• Pillow-lack Sofal Outstanding Custom Quilted
Sofa with reversible seol and back cushions. Soft spring edge construction.
REG. $269 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
l.et•l1hly Quilted Velwet Pillow lack Traditional Sofa I Here's a lux-
\lrious Sofa, dntined to become a prized po~seuion and priced ol Greol Sov-
ing1. Uphols!ered in costly Velvet fabrics.
REG . 399.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
1182
'287
Coato•per•ry Hl4o A W•r Sleep hf•I Sleek Modern styling, '""n-
ible Pur• foam cu$hions. Instantly converts to a Full-Size Bed for two. Uphol·
stet.cf in Super-Soh ~yl. $
147 REG. $199.95 LEVITz WHSE. PRICE
Kreohler Centompe,..ry "Hillo A W•y lle•tt lofal Upholstered In
ce»tly fabrics. Reversible Pure foam cu1hlons. hides a Que.ell-Size bed. In·
stontly converts to sleep two. ~\ /Ill $247
REG. $3<9.95 l!;;!!j ' LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
. 1469.95 Sofa and Loveseal
LEVITZ WHSE. PllCf
$297
This'ts the Sofa and l.oveseot you've been Osklng for! 8' of styllsh
sophisticated, conte~porory luxury in ~ most sought ofter fobric
ln the market, block and white "HOl.mdstoath"I plus the features that
make this sofa and'.kweseot on• of the most believobl• furniture
valua M hove ever offered. Black vinyl wehs (the fabric Is stitched
to vfnyt and not fubnc for extro strength along all seam1l).Bock and HOt c\lshion• that ore
-not only reversible but lnterchonQeoble for durability and long W'eorl Button" tufted sect
c\lshk>ns "soft edge"t c9nstrucljon fot sllOl extro touch of comfort. Alt seat and bock cushions
r'9 foam filled ••• then dacroii wrapped to hold their original shopel Self decked (th1·some
egant fabric 'that Went into th• sofa and loveseat IJ \lnder the C\lshions). Shepherd CQSfers
"' easy movement. (Matching Choir $88)
Co•tompe Cernor Oreupl Here's a l~urious Corner Group with daring
sly~ Seo.ts five (5), 1leep1 two (2), In fuH length comfort. Greot for ~omily or
livi114 Room. lavishly quilted coverlets. Walnut finish.cl Corner Tobie included.
REG. 1209 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
Fam••• "for" l•rly Amorlc•• Sofol Crohed of Solid Maple. The skill
of the artisan reflected in this $Uperbly finished Solid Maple framed sofo:·Re--
versible Seat and Bock Cushions of Pillow-Sch foam, Upholstered in comb ina-
tion of Scotchgard Pririt and Te1ttured fabrics.
REG. $319
1269.95 LCIVi!h Deep Tufted
Mediterranean Sofa
'127
'158
lEVITl WHSL PlllCE
$18·8
For people who like massive, solid sofas! Here's a l~xurious Kifo that
is destined lo becom• a prized poswsslonl Deep hand tufted seats
and bock are cushiort.d with pure foam , , , Heavy corved Spanish
Oak fin ished e1tpo.sed frame odds to TM elegant beauty of th• pieces I
Proportk>ned for full lounging comfort.,, Th• upholstery, Glove sch
black vinyl Is eosy to clean! Come to Levil:r today for quality, and prices to fit your budget I
(Motching loveseot $1 24)
Lavl1hly-G•lltod Colenlal S.f•I Custom crafted Early American Sofa
upholster.a in costly Quilted Print fabrics. Reversible Pur9 foam Cushions. Solid
maple trimmed Wing-Backs. Sofo Spring .dg• condr\ICfion. '
REG. $299.95 LEVITZ WHS~ PRICE
'
Currently Levitz Warehouse a'nd Showroon1, i• \lnder;olng a
period of change. Our lnv•ntory shows a n\lmber of Sofa• and
lov1s1atl that hov• b•en discontin\led. Due to a space factor, • both on our showroom floor and In our wareho\IWI (all \lnd•r one
roofl) -are off1rlng some of th• most outstanding volu•• yolol
co\lld 9Ylr hop• to find in South•n California I V•lvet1, Vectras,
H1rculon1, Damasks., Mot•loss• ••.• Almost •very styl• ond
fabric you could imagine al pri~s you can't afford to mlssl
Quality for quality, feotur• for feature, and dollar for dollar
we feel confident that if your need is a new sofa·or Sovesaat for
yo\lt livingroom you'll find j\lst wh.at you're looking for crt,
SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS I
Luxurious
Contemporary Sofa
Sweeping modern design blends with any decor! This
sofa is upholst.red Jn periormance lested fobric for long wear!
It features deep hand-tufted bock and rich oiled Walnut finished e1t-LEVITZ WHS!.. Pl!Cf
posed frome. CJshlons a i-1 filled wllh Pur• foam for $110ling comfort! $19 6
An impre.si.,.. sofa like this will set the tone of yoor whole room •.•
Come to Levitz ,OOay and toke advantage of the savings offered!
larly Amerlca11 Sofal Authenlic Colonial styling, upholstered in quilted
print fabrics. Rev.rsible pure loam cushions. bposed solid maple trimmed wing·
bod<. foll box ploot •klrt. $
247 REG.·$349.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE •
Krffhler KJ111-Sl1:0 locbr-Leun9•r·Ylbr•torf Here's the most obedient
piece of furniture you'll ev•r own. Rocks or Reclines. CJshioned with pillow-soft
foam. Upholstered in leather-like vinyl! •97
REG.$139
1269 .00 Sleek Modern Luxury Sofa!
This M>phislicoted Sofa will be the center of ottention in any smart set-
ting I All on• piece. No sections to slide oportl Always looks neat ood
inviting I Exposed Oiled Wolnut frame to give lovely controstwith the
wondrous Green cofor of the deep pile acrylic Fur fabric I .foam filled
for cloud-like comfortl Wolk lhrough our store •• , compare! It's
dromoticl It's gorgeous!
LEVITZ WHSE. l'tlct
$174
Ma9nlflc1ntly C•rvotf s,. .. 1th-Styl1d Decorator Chair, Hand•
Tufted lack1I Elegantly Carved fruitwood finished frome. Deep hond-t\llted
bocks. Reversible Pur• Foam Seat Cushions. Upholstered in costly fabrics. $1 J 8
REG. $179 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
"Tho rtodora" Centemparary Cor.n•r Oroupl Here's a LU1turlous corn-
er Group with doring style. ,Seots five (5) sleeps~ (2) in full length comfort.
Walnut finished Corner Table and Built-in Storage Cabinets. $l SS
REG. Z99.95 LEVJTZ WHSE. PRICE
Hand-Tufted Top1 •
Quality French Provincial Sofa!
OPEN DAILY 10 TO 10, SUNDAY NOON TO 7 If It's heartwarming and gracious elegance you ore
•459.95 8' of Unequaled
Medilerronean Elegance!
The lost word in lull:ury .•• here's o Solo designed to
complement 1oday's MnOrt interiors. You'll love owning lEVrTZ WHSE. PlllCt
this magnificent Mediterranean sofa. Upholstered in $ 2 9 7
el9g0nt qvolity fabric ••• Lo Paz Olive ••• ac-
c.n1'ed by Intricately carved Spanish Oak finished
trim. Unsurpassed dHp seating pleawre on th ick foam seat cushion• wrap-
ped in ICOdel for clood sch comfort-reversible for double wear, •. plu•
the lux:ury to1.1eh of 1elf decking, soft sp<ing edge and boll casters for easy
ll\O'l'fl'nMltl Shop tM Levitz WoreOOuw way and tee how o\lr modern mer-
chondiM?U mel~1 IOYI! you more money thon you ever dreamed possible!
Lua•r'-•• MMllt•rnu•Hn ht. Plv1M•tchln1 Loun1•
C"•lrt ColWd Sponl1h Ook orm posts. Uphobter•d in lavishly
q\lil* fabrics. You get th• a feet long plllow-bock 10!0 plus th1
frtClllchlng loung• 'choir.
tEG. $<>~ lfVITZ WHS~ PRICE 1297 ,,.ec• Prevlacl•I L••ury S•f•I Carefully carved artd
lhapod e1tpowid Fruitwood frome, Deep hand-tufted bock \lphol·
.,.,... , In co1tly Ooma1k fobrie. ReYer~ble pillow-soft foam
cuthions. (Matchin g choir Sal• Pric.d at $8n. $
186 IEG. $299 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
•
-------~-------
FURNITURE WAREHOUSE
AND SHOWROOM
San Diego Freo'.ll(!IY_At leach llvd.
....... ______ ... Easyto
Reach fra111
At Levitz all the ''retail frills" are
token o\ltof th• Worehaus• Sale Pric1.
Taite It hom• yo\lr1elf or haft it d1-
ll¥t1r•d by Levitz , •• There will b• a
smoll dell¥tiry t.hor;• due to thele
!"credibly low War1hou1e Sal• Pric•sl
EASY CREDIT TERMS AVAii.AiU
Anywhtrt
-
LEVITZ WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM• BEACH BLVD., Edinger Ave.,
Next to the Huntinglon Shopping Center!
SHklng for your rooms, then yo\l'H love this French L~TZ WHSE. l'llC!
Provincial Sofa, with its exquisite eye ~ppeot • • • its $16 7
comfort, and Its procticoliiyl Note the caret\llly carved
and shaped •Kposed fruilWood frame, •• Deep hond-
tufted bo(k , , , Upholstered in codly Damask Fabrics , • , for long wear!
The HOt cushions or• rsversible and filled with foam for ex:tro comtortl Toke
advantage of Levitz low, low price today!
Mfflt•rranHn High-lack Chair, Decoratl•• Cane
Arm P•nel•I S.autif\llly carved fn.iitwood finished frome. Up-
hollter.d in Custom Selected fabrics. Cone accented arm ponelL
Revers!ble Pure Foam Seat Cushions. $88
REG. $159 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
Kroe,hlor Doeplr Tufted Tuxedo Sof•I Here's a lu1t\lrio\ls
Solo d•slgned to complem1nt today's smort interiors. Upholstered
In ,,_r/ormonce tested "'VectroH Fobfia. Deep hand-tufted seals
ond bocks cushioned wl'th pur• foam. $
187 REG. 1289 LEVITZ WHSt PRICE
11 .. •Rt lpe•l•h hf• •• P•llulou• Sale S•vln91t ET•
gent b.outy .•• q110Uly constrvction ••.• &uperb seating comfort .••
..,..rytttrng you',.. alwoyi wanted in a 1afo I• youra In this beoutif\ll
Mediterroneon decorator design. To the floor &tyllng, completely
upholstered in costly imported quilted gl)ld velvet. Thick loam filled
rev.rsible bock and MO! c\lshlons, with richly carved Sponilh Oak
e1tpoted froma. $
29 REG.$549.95 LEVITZWHSE. PllCE 7
1:
.
' c
• Ar t Bel-•
' Art llolmff; •~lives, at 21~ Av<l!kla
\Ian 'Pablo. lie Is ,employed ~Y Jolaaa-
~ Steel CorporaUon (15 yean) and
served 11 their Oranjt~ County sales re~ntatlve. He is ~~rried and has
four children. "l served ttte Junior Cham·
bet In manr elected ort1c$ and reot.1Ved
a naUcma1 aware\ Jor work in the field of
, community deve-~ent." Holmes .said.
l 14[ have cbailed'stv·
\
. ei-al community pro-
jetts for the San
Clemente Jun1or
Chamber. 1 hold
membenhlp in the
Triton Booster Club,
San Clement. Elks
and am preaenUy
strvirtg as chairman
of the Cilliens Ml·
vlsory Commitee of
the, Capiatrano Unllied School District.
"I am seeking election to the City Coun-.
cil becau.9e I have an interest and desire
to see that San Clemente becomes a well
balanced community that will give us all
an even better place to live. To ac-
complish this, t. would 1n~olve mere
citizens and civic organizations in civi~
government ; establisli a specific plan for
futunt growth with a priority list for civic
improvements; work with city employes;
establish a more positive approach to·the
city's spend.in& P.l'ogram aQd make ~
citizens aware Ol San Clemente's finan-
cial ass~.
"I pledge that all or my decislorui would
be balled on the best interest of the ma-•
jority of the people of San Clemente and
to be the voice of the people in local
government."
e Datt Chlltott
Dan Chilton. 40. of 21• W. Avenidl
Palizada, is a k:Jcal businessman and an
incumbent councilman seeking re-elec·
tion.
Chilton attended Laguna Beach High
School, Santa Ana College, Oraage CoOJI
College aJ>\l 'linn( Beach State College.
Here ii 1U· 1tetement:
"Al many ot you know, I am a long
cilmen.
time resident and
• businessman in San
Clemente. •
·~tit the past I·
have been a memo
ber ol. your fire de-
partment and local
school board ; and
for the past four
years I have had
the honor of being
one of your coun·
"Jt is my firm belief that a public of.
ficer must run on his past record. To
this. may I restate that I am a fiscal and
poUticaJ cooser+atlve ind ht 1 belieTe
in strict 11Dd literal ~tion 'of el• lsdllfl ·1aw.. ·" . •
•And I hold !he lrusteeshlp of J>Ublic
monies and public law to-be sacred ."
e Clift ltluer •
Clif[ MYers, 68, 1205 Toledo, has ~n a
reskSel:it ot Saa Clemente for {6 years.
''( am married. have a daughter and
son-in-law who are high school teachers
and two teenage grudcbild:ren," said
Myers. "After icrving the Fire Alarm
Department, City or lndianapoliS, 28
years, nine o[ those as a s .s i s t a n l
superintendent, I
estabUsed residence
in San Clemente.
"l .served San Cle-
mente as building
inspector and city
electrician for nine.
· years. I am current·
ly serving on the
planning commis~
sion." ,
The cancUdate U:..
1i1ted in writing the present electrical
code; urged underground utiliUes:
changed city lighting to mercury vapor;
initiated an award winning Christmas
gcenc : and sponsored the openlng of
ci.IUncil meetings with prayer.
An elder of the Presbyterian Church
for 30 years, Myers is a member of many
civic 11111 ooclol -He. ..NI, "I propoll 1 'eamuJOO leflle
apprwb lo the dtJ'• .,...,_ and
' development of all public ruourcea."
Myers allo favors proper ma1DteDanoe
ol street. llld illllallotloa of lldewalkl;
betw relalkmhlp ........ city llld Ill
employu; pd nnmmunlc•liou belwMo
clty,ball llld the Jlllbllo; IDd uUllQllon ol
cltllen esperlile ... 1peclllc fleldt.
• ThMU O'Keefe
'llxlmaS J. O'Keefe, t/lomeY llld In.
cumbent CGUDCilman, llaif lbe followlnfl
statement: •
"1.raciualed lrom,Loyola Unlventty at
Loi Anpla, wt>ere J ncelved a Bacbelor
ol --~ Desree and the Wall Streel Joumal Awanl in
Finance. I --ed law at Stanford Ulli.versity where I receiw.d a Doctor of
Jurilpruckoce degree and the auatandlng
&enior award for 1961.
I am 33 yean al qe, married and have
three chiktren. We have resided in San
Clemen~ since 1962.
I have 9erved the city of San Clemente
as a member of the
Planning Con1Jnis.
·Slon and now as a
member of the City
Council. 1 have
served on the Har·
hors, Beaches, and
Parka: Commitees of
bottl tbe Orange
County League of
Callfornla Qtiea and
the Orange Coast
Assoc:i.alloa. Thae positions allonled Jn.
valuable eiperience la. theae facets of
munitjpal government which pose the
most lignificant annnt challenges botil
to our vflfon and to aur prudence.
"'lbrou(lb tiro terms u pr..tdent of the
Sip'ecfllf1. CGalmllDllI Aaloclation, I derived a U>Orou(lb _, ol lbe
_,. ·and often 'u,nlquo proiJfem> m. dil<Ma lo ... ...,. -.iev.Jopmoilt
-dtlledlY. -. ,·
jj M I pneticlftc a1llQrney, director Of
the o.'an;e Coonly Bar A-.ilon, and
member ol the tu aeclloo o1 the
American Bar Allodation, I consider it
important to ,apply to mtmicipal govern-
ment the prOi:: 11es of legal analysis and
fi11cal respolllibllty derived through my pniellllion ...
e Herbert u1-11
' Herbert L. Hively, 41JI Calle lolaye.
long-time businessman and dvk: leader
in San Clemente, la iaarried with two
grown children and four grandchildren.
He has attended UCLA and Boston
University and it lftSident ot mveJy.
Lilly Corporation, .. 1nsu ....... firm.
He bas served on b board ol. dlrector1
for several Loi• ADp1a 1-d cor-
~; is a ,.,_... of c:mmerce
" l_Dll!\lllr: an Elu Lo<fge member and
a member of Har-
bor Estates Home-
ownt;r'I A.sloclalion.
A president and
charter member of
the San Clemente
E1:change Club, he
is acUve In SL Cle-
ment '1 Church and
Ma.sonic work.
The candidate f~vors:
-Closer communication b e t w e e n
citizens and the council.
-Promotion of city beautification.
-Modernization of recreation facilities
for visitors and citizens.
-lmp~merifation of a mast.er plan for
future development of the city.
-Establish closer relatJo111 with city
employes ft>r better understanding of
personnel problems.
-Increase city involvement in at-
tracting more tourist trade and en-
couraging indU!iey.
e Robert Bou,..
Robert Boorg, 45, lives at 307 San
Cark>a. He has been property owner and
reSident ol San +Clemente 1ince J9M.
"I am a retired fire captain from Los
Angeles. My wUe, Eltanor, and I have
six S()nl and two grandchildren. I am in-. .
•
' . . . . ... . ·.. ' . ' . ,'. '
• ' '
:Jine
Q OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA W
'AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE . {i)
I COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR
e rin gs siz ed end repaired e diamonds anil precious sto nes re mounted e pearl s restrung
WE CUSTOM DESI GN Ir t.lANUFACTURE AL~ TYPES OF. JEWELRY
HAllOI SHOPP•I cnma
2JOO HAllOl II.YD.
.COIT.A M~
"Tho Store Thal Con fodenco Built"
°'-"" -. , ...... l'rt. 'Ill t ......
HUNTI ... TOH CINTll
llACH • DllMD
HUNTiffTOH llACH
• "2·HOI
.
Thund&J, Aprll 9, 1970 OAllY PILOT .f
" . •
ING v
"
ANNOUNCES OPENING
' COMPLETE LIQUOR DEPT·.
FAMOUS
BRANDS
s,,,,,.,.,.,,
t:ortu Ti""'•
a ~ ... ,,,
90'8
Clltt11 S•rk
~e\t
1' ....
'·"" 01,, c . ...._,
A1<11a lllt
pt'•11'~u\e
"'" ~ ""'• ., .. ~ ... ouso
" "' .
INTRODUCToRY SALE
BUY and SAVE
'VIKING IV
PRIVATE LABEL LIQUORS
BOURBON GIN -Fifth ......... 3.63 Fifth 3.15
quarts ........ 4.49 quarts . . . . . . . 3.85
1/z Gallons ..... 8.85
SCOTCH
Fifth ......... 3.97 .
Quarts ...... . 4.99
' t/z Gallons . . . . 9 .84
'YODl(A '
Fl~h ......... 2.85
quarts . . . . . . . 3.55
11z Gallons . . . . 6. 95
1/z Gallons .... 7.59
CANADIAN
Fifth ..•....... 4.25
quarts . . . . . . . 5.25
1/z Gallons . . . 10.40
'
llUM
Fifth ........ . 3.20
q1arts ....... 4.15
11z Gallons 8.25
• Gourmet Foods · • Candy •
! .,
FAllUS
BRANDS
0111 r .. ,.r
·-t " .. ,t..e-·· .
"'114 l'lfrkf!Jf
Gletall""t
Kl"fJ Gf!Ol'f•
1\0 ....
f out'
Ot>erhelt
c;oieet"' .. ...... s u1&llll •-rte.
fk111e,,,.
loseCtiet'ff
"""'11ea •• ;'of> ..
1) Cfff;r•tte
9 eete•ter
PLUS
MANY OTH ERS
Gifts
56 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENnR
Slore "°"'" -· & frl. 10 a.m. lo 9:30 p.m.; Tuot., Wed. Thun. & Sil.
• S ..... oy, Noon lo 5 p.m.
I 0 a.m. lo 6:30 p.m.
' OPPOSITE BROADWAY • 644·0991
* * WE DELIVER IN AREA **
•
l
CAIL V PILOT
I ........ DtlW ... Swtl
The London Post Office Corpor ..
Uon's<bew campaign to "Be ~to
your h)allman", has run into
troubll>-!rom the mailmen. The
campaign urges housewives to in·
vite the mailmen in for some tea
and ~ chat but according to Mail
Union Chief Tom J•cluon, "U be
keeps popping in for cups ol tea, he
would land up in trouble back at
the office -he'd be late for the se-
cdnd delivery." •
Magistrate Edward Robet1
/in£d 12 members of the Santo
Claw-Unia» in London, Eng.
Jarad, $24 each /err illegally pie·
keting a department store la&t
December. The Santai had
marched in uni/Orm to flrottst
the ezploitatiot1 of Chrl.!tmas.
They ali paid up and announced
their union would· be diabanded.
• \Vhen two elderly w o m e n
withdrew $11 ,000 in cash from a
bank ln Erle, Pa., and put it ln a
paper bag, bank officiaJs feared
they were about to be victims o(
con men. Police followed them to a
bus s top and when a young man ap--
proached and began fingering the
money, they mpved i.n1 The bOy bit
one ol the policemen and ended up
In jail. He turned out to be one of
the women's. so,n and they-, were
going to use the money to admit his
93-year-old grandfather to a con-
valescent home. •
Jud y Heath of Woodchuck, Calif., is
shown placing a call ff'om the unique
phone booth out.side o frontier-style
m ortuary that serves as a major at-
traction for vUitors to thi! rugged Old
\Ve st Tesort 0Te11. The booth bears a
1t.artling Tesemblance to the old-Jash·
ioned pine coffin complete wi!h ro~
handles. • Five persons were injured Tues-
day ni~hl in a brawl over a 19 cent
fountam pen in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Mrs. Ines Cepeda had purchased
the pen and found it didn't work.
When she returned, store o~ner
Dingo Ramos refused to refund her
money. She came back again with
her son William and a figfit ensued
after a violent argument. Ramos.
his wife and son were stabbed and
Mrs. Cepeda and· her son were
shot. All were hospitalized.
•
Thursday, April ,, 1'170
• Senat.ora Pledge Support w Nixon.
•
3rd Southern 'Pick' for Cou·rt?
'' I . I
Martha Miff~
Over Carswell .
LITl1.E llOClt, Atk. (UPI) -The
Arkansas Gazette reported today
Mn. Martha Mltcbell, w~e d A~
tomey <l<neral John l\lltcl1ell, had
urged the newspaper to "cruclfy'*
U.S. Sen. J . William FUJbrllbl (!).
Atk.), lot hll vote agalnlt the con-
fbinaUon cl Judie G. H a r r o I d
C~tll.
Plta wi.. Senlce•
W ASlllNGTON 4 Pnoaldtnt Nlmn will
tend tbe name ot y't 1 thlrd "1ttlct con-
slrucUoaist" to the Senate for con-
firmation as a Supreme Court Justice.
And no senator wlll aay he isn't anx1ous
to vote for the President'• chOlct.
But Nixon and Attorney Gener1l John !I· Mltd>tll, their polltlcal prestige
aamaged by the Senate'• It to u re-
jection of G. HJrrold Carswell, are
rectlvln& confllclln& advice from Capitol
11111.
-Sen. Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.), """ Nilon to leave the aeat vacant IO he can
"take the issue to the people," and use it
to elect a Republican Senate i n
November that would approve a con-
aervative Supreme c:ourt candidlte.
-Senate Republican Leader H1Jlll Scott· <
' .
of.Peonsylvula ur1u N!Jon to abandon room or the ll'lorlda Bar BuildlDi. 11• Uori, 11 the kind fl( man bt'd lite to see
the idea that~ dWee ta his alone to decllntdtoJDJWernewsmen'1qdutions. on the court.' But Sepl'1 llberal vlewa '
mate and conaah wtUt "all 1epnent.1, Carswell said President Nlton:bld a1k-seemed· to nJte b1m out
spectra and levell of public oplnlo~"'to td hlm to' atay an as a Judge .of Ule U.S. In ihe ~batt ind afterw~rd. liberal
come up with 4 candidate who woukl 5th Circuit cOurt of Appeals "and I in-aenators, one after another~ said \hey
'\a:entrate UNnlmlty ot Senate \ ap-tend lo do to.'' hope\t Nlron would find a .. strict con-
pi:ovaJ." He st.Id, "I'll alwais be deeply ap-structJonlJt" from the South they could
Tht White H...,., thnMilh · Prm preclaUn of the coofldtnce of * J>reli-1upport.
Seel<tary Ronald L. Z1e11tr, lald Nixon dent fl( tilt United States In mailq lhe Sen. Alan Cra.,ton (l).Calil.), !old the
would send anotber ' ' 1 tr I ct con-nomlnaUoo." Senate he "prayed" he could back NiJ..
struct1onlst" to tbt Senate ".in due ''1be majority-of the Senate is a:nxMlus on'1 next dtOlce. Sen. Edward M. Keno'
course." to back the Prealdeo~" Scotl lald al\ef ntcly (D-1,lw.), said ht hoped fJ>r "a
In TallahaSHt, Fi&., Judie Canwell Wectnemay'1 dramatic vote. Ht aQl'tbe mi n ol IUCh d.Lltinctiol'l that all ol ua, no
said the batUe. over hll nomiDatkln to the Senate's declskln ~·abould auve &1 a matter What political potlUon w e
Supreme COurt was "u, api%lnl ex-prtlude to the nominldan of a lftfl represent, can enthualutlcally aupport
perlence for me" but that be b not "bit-Supreme Court JUllice and as a Jtsscin him."
tu or remorseful. ltarned for the future." "I hope the Presklent does not decide
With his wife Virginia at bis side, the In the pa.st,· Scott has advanced against appointin1 a Southern strict con-
Jt makes me 110 damn mid J can't
, ataDd it," Mrs. Mltehell. a n1tlv1 or
Pine Bluff, Art., 1akl. "I could hive
done a great deal for the whole
vote."
"He is not represenllnl the -1<
of ' Artansu. I )Qve Arkanau and I
want everyt.bin1 pcllljble for my
state,'' Mra. Mitchell said. I
The Arkal'llU Gazette bU been a
lllroog supporter of P'Ulbl1pt'1 and
endoned h~ rHlectloo bid In i..,
The Gazette editorially oppoood llJt
nomination of Carswell. SO..year-old jurbt nad a to-eecond state-Philadelphia lawyer Bernard Segal, U, ltnldJonlat," 1akl Sen. Gale W. McGee
ment at a newa conferenct 1n the bolrd ,!P'~..,~-~dt~n~t~or~tht~Amt~~ri~c~an~B~ar~Aaoc~~la~--~(l).~W~yo~.!_) ----------...!!~!!!!'!!!!!!!!'!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!'!!'!!!!!!!
Hostile Demonstrations
Greet Envoy to Sweden
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Tht United
States ended a 14-month diplomatic
boycott ol Sweden today when the ·new
ambulador, .Dr. Jerome H. HoUIDd , ar-
rived. A demonltrator nn up and
shouted, "Mr. Ambuaador, you are not
welcune in Sweden."
_ 'lbt ff-year-old Nqro educai«, flying
Kopechne Case
Record Denied
To Stenographer
BOSTON (AP) -.Tiit MuaacliuoeUs
Supreme Court today turned down a bid
by a court stenographer who claimed he
aloae had the right to make copies and
sell th'! inquest record into the death of
Mary Jo Kopechne.
The high courl also ordered the clerk of
Suffolk Superior Court, Edward V.
Keating, to pursue his plan to releut the
tnwcrtpi and the Judi!''• report on the
inquest, e1:ptded aometlmt ntxt week.
Th.!: action came one day afte!' the
Su~ Court had ordered a temporary
halt to releue plarui, uotll attorneys for
the courl aleaographer, Sindy R. Lipman,
could argue Illa cue.
The 'court also Ordered todll that the
ucret Court record be made public al
the earUest )Xlllible moment,
Upman, a professional court reporter,
claimed he should have custody of the
documents, and his firm -not the
Superior Court -wu eaUUed to make
copies of the Impoundtd ..-.ll.
I.Jpman and his associates took the
notes and typed the transcript of the 960
plus . pagea of ltttlmooy during the Ia-
quest at F.dprtown ihto the death o£
~tlss Kopechne, 28. The former secretary
to lhe late Robert F. Kennedy drowned
wheo a car drive• by Sen. Edward 111.
Kermedy W!'l'lt off a bridge on Chap-
paquiddick lslaad wt July ia.
Cornell Clamps Down
ITHACA, N.Y. (UPl) -Corne 11
University early today obtained a te m-
porary restraini ng order a1ainst any
further-violence on campus.
The order wu obtained from State
Suireme Court Justice Harold E •
Simpson following a rampage by 100
black students, which prompted lhe
university president to clamp a 1 a.m. to
7 a.m. curlew on the campus. Prtsldent
Dale R. Corson, announcing the court ac-
tion, said it was takea on the unanimous
recommendation of the Faculty Council.
In kJr his lint diplomatic asalgnment,
had jun stepped from a commercial
airliner at stockhobn'1 Arland• Airport
when the demonstrator approached the
aircraft
The unidentified roan sneaked throuJh
1CUe1 of armed police offictrs and m1:w:-
ed with the welcoming party or U.S.
Embassy officers and Swedish protocol
officials. He war quickly seized by plain-
cloth esmen and whisked away.
'Mte ambassador did not a p p t a r
disturbed by the brief Incident.
Oulalde !ht alrprt ..... -100
dt'monltrators waited with pt a ca r d s
reading: "U.S. out of Vietnam," ''Down
wtlh U.S. lmperialiJm" and "Mr. Holland
10 home."
Premier Olof Palme:, who hu been
vtsitlng in Loodon, new In ·ahead of
Holland. Whto be noticed !ht walling
demonstratcra he told newamen, "I think
demoostratlng againlt the ambueador
like thJa 11 lnc«rect."
1be ambl111dorial ~ in Stockholm
has been vacant alnct: President. Nil'on
took <(flee Jut year. Lyndon B. Jolmaon'1
man, WUllam W. Ht.alb, wbo had been a
pawn in the: dlpkmatic pme, left Sweden
Jan. 23, lllt.
It hu never been said officially but
Swedllh olfkials inttrprtted Nl1:on'1
fai!W"t: to fill the vacancy u retaliation
for Swedtn11 open criticlam ti U.S.
pollcift In Vlttnam and -e.
Osaka Gas_ Leak
Was Reported
Prior to Blast
OSAKA, Japan (UPI) -Osaka poliec
said today a possible gas leak had been
reported at a subway constructlpn site
three days before a aeries of explosions
that killed 7J perao111 ancf Injured 282
Wednesday nJght. llut they said 1as com·
pany employes had not taken act.ion.
The explosion of a 20-inch gas main and
a serie.1 of el.-plosions throughout the
nel1hborbood swept a hua:e .area with
fires that reminded Japaneae of the U.S.
929 fire raids in the cloling days of
World War II.
Police said Ute initial explosion oc-
curred when a gas company truck was
left with Its motor running while: a repair
crew went into the aubway construction
site lo determine whether there really
was a gas leak.
The explosion miles away from the Ex-
po 70 world fair on the oul!klrts of 09aka
developed into a political Issue and most
major parties announced they would
The disaster occurred In 1 busy shop-
ping area near Tenroku (Sixth Heaven)
railway station, 9.3 miles from Japan's
Expo '79 Worki.'1 Fair. Thirty buildings
were destroyed.
Shop Monday throasla Satarday 9:30 A.M. te ,.JO P.M. Snday IZ Noon to 5 P.M.
Prices
ECfectin
BeginningToday
S l 4.99 Craftl!man
Cart-Type Hose Reel
12.88
Features s flow thru reel., is
.remoYable to use carr.
Hold • 200 fttc of ~· hos<.
Sears
20..inch Pnsh-TJ??
' Rotary Lawn Mower
•Ample powet ffllf' ,.,.r ZM•i.nc
from J HP ensi11e
•U.-;ght ·-_,.,,
JIUlk.el J.ndlinge.,.
• }~olding handle ror UIJ'! llonge
Sean Low Priee
5499
3 Wire Corded Hedge Trimmer
WAS19.9'J t 14 77
• B...i..ed alloy oteel blades
•Fixed rear handle wit h
th•mb dide IW'itchi 1leet"e
bearins
• :imb-led#h Jrwire .....i
~
SAVE '2 Now on Regular '10.99 Nordel® Rubber Hoee
Se:an Carden
UMe Ga•rantee
•Super pliability •nd ragged
Jighlweisht nabber mark every
Crafuman Gold Line Nordel
t-obbtr,garclen "-
$1S.41J, 75-11. H_,_ _ _.1 ! . .U
SAVE S2!
50-Ct. ~'"Dia. 888
Corners of Nation Rainy Jf defect occun dur.
in& guarao<tt puiod,
we will c:rch•nge
ho~. ch•r1in& only
foe the time owoed bf
proncia& the regulu
price • tbe time d
'7 .49 ''Gold Line" Plutic Garden Boee
• Soft. %-ineh Diameler
• Reinforced wilh tough C.prolure nylon
co rd (or be.nt resistant ICnngl.h
• Specially prep11red yiayl (OC' flexibility 6~
Strong Wind Gusts Batter Oregon, Washington Coasts
ctin1em1a
P•!cll'I' '"°'"Intl lot 1"4 low ciM1
•IC!nt ioulh Cotllll 1rt11 turned lnto
1 .,,,,,.,. w•rm d•'f' 11'1 Sovlhe<1• (111.
1ornl1 wltll 1tl1hllY w1rmM t1mpu1.
lu•n In ln!1nd 1rtt11.
LOI AllHll• llllCI low CkM.IOlll•U ,..,,
the co.1111 1rotJ wllk ll Wlrl l 1•Pklf'd
II Clffr tw mld .. IY, P,...,ltlecl M ... I I
Civic Gtnf9r WIJ 11, COl"IPI ,..., Wiii! 61
Oft WlllMMNY. The klw !on!tfll Wiii .. "· lhe Air POlllll'°" Con!•ol Ol11rld ,.._
POrtl!CI 1i.111 '"'" In t1-l!!l1nd ioortkw11
Ill U•t Lo1 At191ll1 •11ln.
50UTHE•N CALl,OllN_,1 -5•n11y
111d 1 111111 .... .,.,,... Tllurldl' 11111 Frio
dl 'I'.
~OS ANGE LES ANO VICIN ITY -
$<.IMY 11111 111.,,llv w,....., TllurwNr
1nd Frld1'1'. Hl.i-TllurwN' 11 1"4
low TI'IUl'MIY nllhl '4.
P'OI NT CONCEPTION TO MEXICAN S(lllOlll -Llllfll ~lf1eble WINh _,..
1M '*11'11 b1C:°"'lft9 wr11 to llO•lfl w111
... 15 kJIOI• O\lflflt .,,.._ """'"
ltwu9'1 '•kllY. Cltlr !lwwlfl FrlMY, ' ti ll'lllC:h ,_,...,,. ,._ ......
fXTltfME SOUTHElll:N NEVADA -
SilM'f 1111111 I llltllo Wl f ..... f Wiii\ ff!l11t
w1M1 Tllurldn lflll l'rlllt'f', Hlflol
ThyrJfi'I' 0 le ,., l ,..1 Tllur1dlty
ni.111 II II JI,
COi.iTAL ANO INTEllMIOIATI!
VA.LLl"Yl-SwrMt\' 1nO 1lltlltl., Wl'-
tl>lll'Mllr '"' l'rlcllY. Hl9hl T"'-'•ld•Y IO t1 71. Lowt t ""'rllll'I' n!9'TI ,.. le 56.
MOUHTA IH Alll AS -Su""'I' lrif
1lffttonll¥ "''"" tlwrMl•r 1n0 fl•lcU,, INT llllOlt AH O OllllltT llEGIONS
-t.llN'l'I' I nd I 111111 Wl rml' T"'-'t*f
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TllUllt.IOAY ~-hlfh . ., . 10:• ··'"· t.t $l(lllCI law • •HI 1.111, l,I JlllDAV
l"!rtl ti~ •. .. .... . .. . . I :Ja 1.m. t.l
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'7. 99 Pahator
Lawn Sprinkler
... '1:." 6.88
Fiogienip control. Q>,..
crs 65-(ooc di&JOeC~r
Adjusts for pania1 area.
Sensational Vaine!
Stnrdy Lawn Rake
l-P'n-.t! ~
2.'! spring steel rinies in
;9.jn. spread. Enameled.
·i8-in. handle.
'6.29 CraCtmtan
2-WbeelEdger
M'O&Sff,' 4,88
lleoenible blade doobles
cutting life. 3 heigh t
adjusuneac:s.
fT.
SAVEll%!
lleg.SI0.49, 1"..il-9.44
Craftmtan Piit.ol
Grip Boee Nonie
AY-! 2.19
No.slip Tiafl ariP widt
sprsy adju1t from li.e
mist U> full ;owtr.
-Sears -·--·--__ ..... " ___ _,, --. .... 111 -,_...,, ------·-.·-· _____ .._ _ ......... _ ----· --...-, ____ ----· -·~ ---"·-· .................................................... -------__ . .,_ ,__ ...... , .,_ ... ___ , -.. ..-.-... . ............... -......
·-----~-~-
\
\
·Egyptians
Vow Bomb ' . ' •
I Busing Scored
In Court Brief
'RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -
The Justice Department seeks
to persuade ·a federal apPeals
court today that a judge's or-
der for massive busing to de-
segregate a South Carolina
school district was "an abuse
of discretion." A department
brief filed in the 4th U.S. Cir·
cult Court of Appeals em-
braced Ille March 2t deitcrO-
gation policy line laid down by
President Nl:1on, who said
pupils should not be transpor-
ted "beyond normal geogiap.
his school zones."
•
Guatemala
Rightists
Claim Kill
GUAJEMALA CITY (UPI)
- A rightist organization has
claimed .credit for the death
Wedne!day of a former con-
gressman, announcing ''the
reprbals !or the dea(h of
(West Gennan Ambaaador)
Karl Voo Spreti have begtm."
Cesa r Montenegro
Paniagua, in Congress in the
1950s and a labor leader Binet,
was found strangled in an
adobe hut about five miles
from where Von Spreti'a body
was discovered Sunday.
Montenegro's death railed
fears ol a new wave of un-
derground warfare between
leftist and rlthtlll eztmnlai&.
Well-informed sources said
93 persons, m06tly leftists,
have been jailed u suspectl in
Von Spreti's kidnap a n d
murder by members of a
r<volulooary guerrtlla group.
A note that dlred.ed police
to Montenegro's body a"::
olgned bf the Mano Bl
(-. hand), • right wing
organization active between
1961 and 1989 In • coRllct with
leftists that c I a i m e d 111
estimated 4,ooo llvlO.
Musi~al Molars
New Fillings Don't Help
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .
(AP) -A Daytona Beadl
housewife who has b e e n
receiving m u s i c a 1 radio
signals through her teeth has
a mouthful ol new fillings to-
day, but still mf:IY be driven to
extraction.
,; The woman, who agreed to
ialk about it only if her name
wasn't used, said Wednesday
she bad all her fillings but one
replaced bf plastic. She said a
metal filling was left t,eeause
it involved a root and might
have to be pulled.
ThC music stopped for three
days. She had been picking up
the mgnals since the nlgtll of
March 16 and had been sleep-
ing in a motel out of range of
her neighborhood to get peace.
"l thought t was free and
was ready to throw a party,"
she said.
Then her teeth tuned up
again, much WM.ker than
before, but still there.
Electronics erperts say they
believe the music ls being
transmiUed by a peison using
a wireless phonograph to """'
signals to another part of his
house.
A del!tls~ Dr. J. H. Long,
explained that two metals
such as.gold and amalgam f:UJ.
ings, plus aciil·in saliva,.could
set up a potential recdvillg
system such as the woman's
mouth.
She placed an advertisement
in a newspaper ur gi n g
whoever had been playing the
800gS she WU hearing to iden-
tify himself. The numbers in-
clude "Long Way to Ti~
perary" and 11 Rambllng
Rose," she said.
The woman said the ad
bro\ight a flood of call!, "but
nothlng concrete."
YOU HAVE A VOICE IN
COST A MESA'S FUTURE
Let's Keep
Councilman Wll Jordan
• EXPERIENCED e DEDICATED e RELIABLE
14 YEARS OF
P-R-G-Y-E_.
PUBLIC SERVICE
AND CMC
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
LET'S KEEP JORDAN [81
VOTE APRIL 14, 1970
hf!! 1.Mlt1, C•• .. 1111 Nnpett, c._ ....
'
IXlllllW:
VIQORO
llCOTIS '
Mc CUll.ClUGH
Oll1ltO
KEUOQQS
NORTHRUP K1HQ
AAMITRONO
CORONA CUl'Plll
CALIFOANlA --BIACK MAGIC '
AL'S OAAPEN ARTS
BRECHT 011CH1D COllPANY
Cl.ARENCE -ll08ES. INC. HOLU8TER'B NUR&IRY
TUSTIN FLORIST
OUR fl.ORIST
CMOUSEI. FLORJST
DE MUAL TOSH
PARTY Pi.u.z-1118 flDllllT
RICHARO'I LOO FLOWlll lllCP
FLOWlllLAN> JNC.
HILLVllW· FLOWllUI n.owa. llY llOIW
1'1wndlr, A,,,il 9, 1970 . DAILY l'ILOT I . '
Air,. T·rucking, Paper S itikes ~oom
•
· ·WRI'fERS "'"'.,:
N.Y. Boor. FUWUlltt Co'""'-·
To TltU .hea To l111enw A"'1iore
U,... W. •.,....;pt,..~ (or .i-t ....i,) fow pU..
licatioa, ud ...id like to ditcaM it witlt ~ ~ti~ 'Jll.,... le1epboae die aUlber below behfeeo. 8:00 .._ uad
l0.00 p...., ...i 1eo,. ,._ ,,_ ...i ..W.-. Y• will ..
ciot1illeied later.
Telephone: 673°1166
H ytie ~ • ..,... ...... ....,... ...,.,,
Dept,_CA.17, P.O. la 111t,·•.r.o,. ,._ Y .... M.Y. 11111
• :0'" T
Garden.;,. PloUJe.r
an.d Kol Show . . '
FRIDAY & SATURDAY APRIL 10-11
Free Prizes • Eihibits • Demonstrations
Come see what makes your earden erow and win
earden aids from !eadlne suppliers. Free drawlnes
J 1 :00 A.M., 2:00, 4:00, 7 :30 P.M. Friday; 11 :00 A.M.,
2:00, 3:00 and 4:00 P.M. Saturday, plus
+Beautiful Flower Arrangements
+Exotic Koi Fish Show Saturday
+Free Rides on Authentic
San Francisco Cable Car
+ U.S. Air Force Space I Exhibit
(Front Mein Entrenoo Perking ArN)
'
58 Fine Stores and Services
FASHION _:) ISLAND
XllWPOBT CllXTllB
PACIFIC COAST llJHAY lllJllWI JMllOIE£ AllD II.IC UIHUI
-r._ ~-,,_~-~-....... -·----........ ~. ·-----·· -·---
• DAD.Y PD.OT EDITORIAL· PA.GE
·t
'
'
I Carswell's Reje tion
' 'lbel unlled Slalel. Senate's ~JecUon yesterday of
G. Han'old Conwell of ~orlda for a 1eet on the Su·
FMDI Court in., have been a .surprise to many -even
ti> Presidillt Nil<on. But It was no eurpttse for many
olbera who ban llboerved that the old rules ol politics
no loager apply In Supreme Court appointments.
Without queotioa, Judge Canwell'• credentlals for
the netloil's bll!IUI bench were .superior lo those ol
_, •men appolntf\I Ill recent decades -"' some of
Wllom went on IQ distinguish themselves despite lack
ail any judicial' bid< ground much less an ootatanding
recOnl. But times have changed. ' . . The shift from a routine third branch of the 1ov·
.emment lo a focal point of public attention began back
to the 1930s with Franklin D. Roosevelt's attempt lo
pack the court in support of bis Nr# Deal adventureo.
· 'unc1er'.the leadership of Chief Justice Earl Warren,
the court departed .from tradition by interprttlng the
Constitution so 'llberally as lo IJ)ake the Supreme Court,
in the view of many legal minds a.s 'well as the RUblic-
at-large, more a third legislative body than a court
Interpreting the law. •
l'nlldent Nlxon'.has interpreted hit election u a
inandate to return the Supreme Court lo ii! role as
•1atrict constructionist" of the Constitution.
Rejection of Carswell, on top ol the Haynsworth
rejection, is subject to varying inleJl>retation:i, but it
seems reasonable to conclude that it was :
-Not a rejection of the idea that a judge represent·
tog strict construction of the Constitution should be
nation's bl&h<lt court Ult• Ca 1 wlfa -not· Olll1 pure but free ol eva llUlpicloa of taint. ADii, mo19
unportant, a desire lo elevate lo tho SU.,,..... Court
only those of supreme'legal 'q11Allficalion1 for the post.
President Ni•oa's reliance oo the reconuuandatlons
of Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell hat eml>arrasMd him
twice. It· should follow that the President now lhould
penonally produce a nominee ol tuch 1mhnpeacb•ble
character and competence thit be wW lntpire real
enthusiasm on both sides of the political aisle In lhe
Senate and In the 'legal prot.,llon across Iba country.
'!be nation lw many such men on tu blgber ju-
dicial benches. It should be no problem for President
Nixon even within a "sd\ithern strategy'' or Dy other
variety of political etrategy to 1lngle out an outtl...itnt
judlcial mind for this highest of all honors and reopo"'
sibilltles In the profesaioa of law -appointment lo the
United States Supreme Court.
To End an Injustice
Residents of the Dtltrtct ol Columbia coetlnue to
be dilfrsnchlsed, just like thou of Hawaii were before
statehood gave them voting representation In Congress.
They Pl\Y taxes but have no vote.
To end tbia injustice, the League of Women Voters
Is mounting a drive in behalf of the district's 800,000
rmdenl! lo obtain slgnaturos for a petition calling for
a constitutional amendment. '
appointed. .
-Not a rejection of the idea of adding another
Southerner to the court.
More likely it reOecfed a gut feeling In Congress
that the time has come to make new mtmbera of the
The drlve l>ll the Orange Coast bqin1 April 16. It
will be a chance lo help end the last bastion of taxation
without representation, the last 0 colonr.'' under the
American flag. •
'Look, I'm only interesUtl·u. getting a de~ wage, .. not
winnUlg ball games.'_
Do ug.las
Continues His
Improprieties ·
~
WASHINGTON -JUllic:e William 0. Doullas iJ conlinulng to moonUBbl for
addlllnnal Income despite the !set that be
15 getting tll,OOI a year a.s 1 member of
the U.S. Supreme Court.
'lbe four-timel-wed u l tr a-1 lb er at
peacenlk jurltl has recel'"11 '8,800 for
various non-judkial aervices from the
Ctnla' for tho Bluely of Democratic
Institutions, Sonlt Borbara, Colli.t it It
financed by the Fund I« the Rtpubllc,
headed by -Buldlins. .. .. ~ president cl Ille ~y of Chk•IO·
Rep. Louis Wyman, .R-N.H., uncovered
Douglas' moonlight activities for the
center in a letter from Harry Ashmore,
Its bead. Wyman wrol< Hatdllna Inquiring about
Douglas following on llJlllOllJlCOtl thal
the Jail« had been named chairman <t
the center'• 6eCllliYe board. Wyman
had learned that Douglas bad been a
member of the board for a nwnber of
years.
WYMAN SUBMl'M'ED a number of
questions to HuU:blns asking exacUy
what funclioos Douglas performed, how
much time he spent on them, and the
amount of his compensation. Ashmort,
one-time newspaperman, answered for
Hutchins -apparenUy on the basis o£
being president of the center.
Outside of dLtclosing that Douglas has
been paid $6,800 over a period of six
yean for "particlpaUng in conferences or
fiY1%1posia sponsored by the center, or
preparing written material for use In
center publications," Ashmore supplied
no information on the amount of time
Douglas spent on this work, Its nature
and purpose and other perUnent details.
Ashmore's reply has all the earmarks
of being a cagy ploy to avoid the charge
of refusing to answer a congressional in-
quir)', while at the same time saying very
little. For example:
JN ANSWER TO Rep. Wyman's ques-
t.ion "What does Justice Douglas do for
the ' center? What are his duties?"
Ashmore made the following evasive
reply: .
"Justice Douglas has been a meml>V"
of the board of directors of the Fund
since 1962. The board meets twice a year
to determine the general policies of the
center. A list of the membership b at-
tached."
Wyman's question "What are the
prescribed duUes of the dlairman of the
executive committee of tbe center?" got
another wordy brush-off:
'"The proper designation Is chalnnan o(
lhe executive committee of the board.
The execuUVe CC)mm.iltee is empowered to authorize on behall of the board cer •
ta.in prescribed corporate actions tn the
intervals between board meetings. In
practlce the1e. actions are nominal , and
bandied by tel ........... " are ~
.----B11 Georse ---.
Otar George:
We would like to·hatt you ipe1k
11 our Wednesday Nlllhl Gonlan
Qub. Art you available? .
PROGRAM C!IAIRMAN
Dear Program Chairman:
No, obvIOUJly -U I wtre l would
be over helpinc a young lady catch
up on her necking.
(Send your problems lo Geor~o
U he can't eolve lib own he might
II Well pace the floor. W0"1ing
•bciul )'OW' problems, loo.)
•
It's a cause worthy of general 1upport.
near
Gloomy'
Gus:
Se~ t o Vlldermi~ Nixon's Policy ..-He Did L B J's
The Old Fulh"right Debates the New
When netther the media nor the
C...grea noteo the final Irony cl
Sen. Tom Dodd presiding at a con-
gressional investigation into juve-
nile delinquency, I'd say there iJ:
no hope for this nation.
E. B. O'N.·
Tlli. fMfWrw rwn.tts ,........ '"""" _, MC ...... llJ ..... ., Mle ....,.,,.,.. S....
,..... "' ,...,. •• ......., ... •ltJ '""·
ASHMORE LISTED uhonoraria" paid
Douglu a1 follows:
In 11162, $900; IMS, llOO: 11115, lt,000;
196'5, ll,000; 11118, 11,100; 11119, 12,000.
There was no explanatJoa. wblt these
payment& •ere for, and "11y they bt-
.......i from 11,100 In 111111 to 12,llOO last
year -when Douglas was repeatedly
absent from the Supreme Court because
of a cardJac condition.
The 7Z-yellMlld jurisl hu sn eleclrlc
pacemaker Implanted In his side to
regulate bis heart.
WASlllNGTON.-Perllai<t tt It a bit
unfair to call up ·a mu's put words Ind
judge his preaeirt oc11 ... In lhelr.J!lhl .
Comlstency la a poor e1:CW1e f o t
wrongnea.
But in the cue of J. William ~t.
wbo ls now trying to underml·ne
Prealdent Nilon'1 P.Jlicy in-Asia as he
undermined President Johft9on'1, 1
JIUl'PO" Is served. The old Fulbriglil iJ
show" to be debating the new Fulbrichl
U that debate were confJned to the
<;hairman cl the Forel1111Wau ... Com·
miUee alone it probably tniuld be ln-
•lgnlli<:.,.. Bui the debote stondt for
much more because It repraeati the
obondonment by rn.l!I)' lnlolleeluall of
their past eonvictiom ~ ~ now
deny In opposing the Vietnam W'ar.
A llllt lecture bJ Senator Jl'ulbrlPI ot
C«ne11 Univ.nil!' loter-pulilwm lo 1bo
Cornell 1.1.. Quorterly It beill( ...
amined with interest at the Whitt Houle
in thi.! connection. In 11111 Fulbrl.iht
de.polred ol the "taming, or coot.llnlng,
oC today'• aggress.lve and revohltlOnaty
forces" ur.Jese the Prelldent el. the
' United States were vested with un-
checked and unbalanced powers to ~
duel the nalloo'a forelp llflalrs.
lUS ARDENT ADVOCACY of grut.r
power for the President w11 expressed in
thousinds of, words, the principal burdea
of which was that a parochial, unffi..
formed Congresa was bobbling the Pmi·
de!lt In CllT)'in& out a coesltlenl pollcy lo
counter the aqnttlve llld revolullonlly
forees loaee In the ""'1d.
Jl'ulbrighl called up ., wlln<tltS his
like-minded frlendt, Woller Llppm3lU1
1and Prof. Hans J, Mc:rgtntbau of the
'UnlvtrSity of Cb1cqo. They were quoted
In support of Ille Fulbright doctrine of .,..i.r presldestlal power.
"I subml~" uid P'Ullbrlght, "that the .
price"' cle.-U. oumvol in • world of
auresstve totl1ltl:rtanls ii to lfve up
some of the dem•cnllc: llmlriet of the
pol(. We obould do "' with no lllutions as
to the re-lw Ill necesaily. II Is
dlatuteful and danprous to vest• the es:·
ecuUve W,ith powen: unchecked ud un-
balanced. My qaeltlon ii whether we
have ony choice bat lo ·do so." Lyndon
Johneon woulda't even have dared to say
thaL
THE l'ULllRIGBT or 1171, hoftver,
sees no • I r r e 1 1 t • e totalitarianism
threatenlng democratic 1urvtval. There
are no rtVolutlonlry fon:et to be tamed
or contalned ia Alia. The communizaUon
of all Southeast Alla, while not to be ad·
vocated, ii to be accepted beeauae it
doelll't rull7 Uvuld our vit.ll lnteresta.
Stllator Fulbrlghl -llOI Cl'edlt the very real concerns felt by others equally
as learned as he lhat Communist. control
of Southeast Asia would so affect the
stability of Japan, India, Burma, Korea ,
Indonesia, the Phlllppints, and Australia
that communism would have w o n
possibly its greatest victory since the
takeover of China.
Senator Fulbright does recognb:e the
pote11tial or disaster inducing "a wave of
recrimination at home, which in tum
could set off a chain of events
culmill.Ung in a disaster to American
democracy." His remedy, however, is to
let that diJaster start to happen by rapid·
1y terminating the war and letUn1 U>e
Communists take over.
SENATOR FULBRIGHT is thus cngag.
Ing b1 attempll to hJbble, obstruct and
reverse presidential policy ln exactly the
way be so severely condeqmed in 1961 in
his ardent plea for greater wesidenlial
power. This is JtOt confined to his recent
speech but includes a series of actions in
the Foreign Relations Committee since
the beginning of the year, all dtsi.gned to
limit or alter the power of the Pruldent
to conduct the foreign affairs of the na-
tion as they are applied in Southeast-
Asia.
It wou1d be interesting to kllow all the
reasonJ why Senator Fulbright has
changed wbeJi: the work! has changed so
little. U he could make any claim for con.
sistency it would be on the basb: lhat a
Communist take-Over of Southeast Asia ia
of little concern to w and therefore this
President and ·his predece~s have
wroogly exercised the vast pOWen that
must be entrusted to them.
Senator Fullbright, lhen, baa to pit his
judgment or what propei:1y constitutes
taming or containing afigressive and
revolutionary forces against the jud9,.
ment of five presldents over a period Of
more than 20 years.
THE FOaDGN RELATioN$
chairman wouki sound more convincing if
arguments similar to his had not 'been
made prior to American involvement in
World War u .. It was the" said by some ,
very prominent people that what hap..
pened in Europe was no concern oC ours,
We were not threateaed nor in danger of
invasion. Let the Europeans fight it out,
especially if the Germans and Russians
could knock each othir out.
The chairman would sound more eo•
vincing, too, if Americans had not
previously been told t.qat Korea was.of n1
concern to 1.16, and that the incipient
Commwtlst takeover ln China was mere-
ly an agrarian movement.
Considering ·the Ful&right of 1961 and
the Fulbright of 1970, it is quite possible
that he is wrong both times : Too ardent
for presidential power in 1961, too litUe
aware or the disaster he is inviting in
1970.
Last week 1 Washington departmtnt
store published a large ad announcing
that Doug1as woukl be OD hand Saturday
afternoon to autograph copies ol his
latest and most cootroveralal book -
"Point& <t Robelllon." Priced at IU5 and
lesa than 100 pages In length, the opus, in
which Douglu justifies revoluUon as a
mean.t of upressing di~ has btt!1:
widely criticized. In Coogress, It lw been
holly aSIBiled . by both Democrala and
Republicans.
MOR!; Thll'ROPRIE1'Y -R e p •
Wyman, member or the powerful House
Appropriations Committee and long-time
critic of Douglas, tntend.1 1o demand
further information about his connections
with the Santa Barbara Center -which
like Douglas is ultca-llberal a n d
milit.antly peacenik.
Presenting 'Little Miss Lo yal P al '·
The New Hampshire lel!ialalor Is also
looking into reports from authoritative
sources that in 1968 Douglas wu active
in raising campaign funds for fonner
Sen. Ernest GruenJng, D-Alaska.
While such partisan pot1Uca1 activity
may not be Illegal, tt iJ unquestionably
improper and unseemly for a justice of
the U.S. Supreme Court. No other
member of the tribunal has engaged in
this sort of thing, and authorlUes could
not recall any justice doing so.
But the information in Wyman's hands
is explicit as to Douglas' fund-raising ef-
forts for Gruening -like him an ultra·
liberal,. Ind vigorous peacenik. As related
to Wyman, the folloWh'lg ls what hap.
pone<):
Real Life Productiom present1 •••
* * lJTn.E Ml8S LOYAL PAL**
Starring ...
Sklrley Temple Block
With ...
Ronnie Reagan u T1te GoYenor
And " .
George Murphy u 'Ille Saotor
Brought to you bu lavilh Technicolor!
* * * SCENE : A lavish apartment. George,
bleary-eyed with 1 stubble on hls chin, is
seated at a l.ouis Quinze desk, his head in
his arms, a half empty botUe Of
Chateauneuf de Pape '62 beside him.
Ronnie and Shirley stand next to him,
Ronnie frowning, Shirley nev tears.
Slllrley (tugging on George's sleeve):
Oh, please Mr. Murphy. You just gotta
pull yourseU together. You jwit gotta 1et
It there and fight back. y ... just '""'· Geqe~ lt's no use, Jc.kl. I'm jUst a
tired old broken down u -hooler who's
eeen h1s day.
IN THE SPRING of l96a, a fund-raising Roule (angrily ): I just wish I could
aflair was organized for Groening:, seek· get my handJ on the dirty rats who did
ing a third tenn. At 81, he was having a this to him. Revealing his outside in-
tough primary fight against 1 much come I Ia nothing sacrtd?
younger and aggressive opponent-Mike Georce (nodding): They crucified me.
Gravel, 38, who won Gruenlng's seat. The They implied I'd Lake a dive in the Senate
$50-a-bead party was heki l n a for a lousy $20,000 1 year. 1 llttJt plastic
Washington hotel, with a number of airline credit card and this tawdry
prominent Democrats as speakers. apartment, hall reot-free. 11>e fans have
Topping the list was JusUct William 0. ltst faith in me.
Douglas -who was accompanied by hla Shirley (thrusting forth ber lower lip):
22-year-old, blonde fourth wife. Golly whUUktra, Mr. Murphy! Don't you
J>ouclu delivered a rousing fund-rais-remember what you said to mt in Little
Ing harongue, cleclarlng. "We must re-Mia Mufflnchop! "Kld," 100 aald, "the
elect 1!me.rt Gruening. Ht Is • lesdlng allow may be • flop, but llljJ your beorl
champion of humu rilJ>ll, justice and out onyway. •
_._ He Is a courogeouo ond ciorloa -= The kid'• righl, a.or,.. Y• voice In the stru11le qalnst reaction ond aotto IO oa i.e.vee ond ling. Yoo .,ua
the mlll1t'7-lndustrial c:ompkx. We must · !en the IUI just what y00 did lo booollq
do everjthlng we can to enable Ernest tam all that Joot. You gotta name nunet.
Gruenllli to 'keep hla valionl ~ Gewp (bopelul]y llttlng hla -}:.
aloft." . · • GOlh, Ron, you tNnt it would help?
After the spieling, willch produced -= Sure II thootln.' George. i'l.,.,
some SI0,000 for Grueninl'1 campalgn, as an expert consultant to TecMteoJor,
Dougllis' young wife led hlm out~ the Jul what upert advice did you &tv•
dance noor lor •whirl. They were the..,. tllem! (to Shirley) Toke notes, kid.
ly dlllCtl'L Slltrtey (ucll..tly): Leoplng llla<tl
By 'Rebtrt S. Allftt We've got 'tm on \he run now fer SW'!.
ud Job A. GoldlmJ.. Georp (tcr•tcbinl his besd} Well, let's
"
.-..,...-·~c••? ""'""""""IO!I""'-'"'' mini-akitted secretaries around, he ought ·" ' t ~ '\ to stack the files only one~awtr high. ', 'Art ~npne_ ' Roaole (to Shirley): Write down , "Sug-~r r-1ested increasing the warmth o f
management~mploye relations." ls that
all?
aee, Ron. l was la Technicolor'• offices
. only last year. What advice .•• I know!
I told the president, Mr. Pol Frawl<y, he
should WW' a blue tie tnltead of I lfftll
lie with hla blue lllit.
n.ute (to Shlrley): Write down,
44Made. lmprovemetita in corporate im-
age." Anything elte?
GeerJe: y,., I lold him with Ill -
George: No, 1 told Mr. Frawley t didn't
think we could repeal the income tax,
abolish HEW and declare war °" China
thil year. And 1 told him right out he
couldn't buy me.
Roule: That's the ticket, George! Go
on tee-vee and tell the fans a right-wing
millionaire like Mr. Frawley can't buy
you.
George (hesitantly ): I would, but I
don't want him to cancel my six-year
lease. l mean the one on my apartmenl
Shlrley (Stamping her foot): Galloping
gumdrops, folks don't want to hear all
that. Just tell 'em you're h o n e 11 t and
they'll have faith in you. (tears in her
eyes) I do, Mr. Murphy. Honest .
George : You do, kid? (grimly ) Then
I'll show 'em, there's fight ln this old
hoofer yet! (He tries a little dance and
stumbles. Ronnie and Shirley each \ake
an arm and all three, smiling broadly,
do a buck and wing out the door to the
tune of "God Bless America.'';
Cele bratiof!, Dates Are Arbitrary
• Cold fscb ba'" nolhlnc lo do with feel·
lngt, and we Hft fsr mcq by 1Y111bois
thin we do by actml.IU•. Somebody ask-
ed me the oilier day •llY I hadn 't written
1 column on "the IDd of the decade," a.nd
I replied that k bada' --·yel
In point cl fact. the decide of the 'Illa
wlli not end unW Dec. 11, 19'19. 11 did not
be&in unUI Jan. I, 11111. Juat 11 the !Isl
Century wlD not be&in unW Jon. I, OllOI
-olthoogh M will be celebrated • yesr
Olrlltf, wheu llflllO bqlna.
WE OBSEl\VB the numbers In
themoelv .. , not -they stand for. The
yesr 2000 It obrioully the lal yesr ol lbe
IOth C.Otury, eot Ille lint yesr of the 1111
-but this me.ant nothinc ucept to throooloclJlt and llat!tticionl.
· Jn the same •111 ntOll people would
.., that M<!DU1 It the flnl city of the
-, -ollfloaoJy II ii Sunday, u o
qulcl ,_ II 11111 tolmclsr "Iii allow.
J.-, In ""'°'ele, the word lor M.,,. a.,11-t1oy.•
(Tbe wbale Olrillion En, by the w1y,
"" misdoted bJ IJloo71iuo E.tcuus. o
llh Ceotury -and chronoloCiol: •ho bee•• the modon oyllem cl doting from
the Incsrnallon, and mllcalcuialtd by ot
leoll four yeen. »
IVEN oug CILDllAnON al tho
birth of Jesus on Dec. 25 Is purely
aihitrary and sentimental, for both the
day and the month of his. birth are totally
unknown -although the most educated
._, of ' modern Biblical scbolsrs it
someUme in August. At any rate, hls
btrth was bot. observed until 200 years
after his death, and Ouislmas celebr1-
Uon did not become widespresd unW 400
years after his death.
And New Year'• Day, as 1 have .men-
tioned be:fc:re. was not observed. on Jan, l
fU' the f11'3t 11 centurlea c:l the ChrbUan er•. UoW the reform ol the Gre.gorian
caltndar in the J6th eentury, and later,
flve different d1y1 had been con!ildertd
the start ol tht new year -Christma s
D1y, Lady Day, East.r Day, March I and
March 15 rvlalln& the honor.
IN ENGLAND, WHICH ia alowtt to
change anythlnc than mOlt couotr1a. the
civil and H:gal year bes:an on March 2S
unU1 11 la te u l?U, when il waa finally
altered to contspond to tbe hi.stork: year.
Most people, bow!VW, continue: to lm--
ogino that Ill 1bea clala an •anctllle<I
by anUqully or tradition or unyielding .
religious doctrine. And l'd wager Jong
odds that the most YOciferowi patriot ~
among u~ wou1d not kn0w that our n>
tional anthem, "The Star Spangled Ban-'
ner." has been officialllf hallowed on)1
since 1931 -hardly a "tradition" to com-
mand much respect for 1.ts unspeakable :
lyrics and wislngable tu..,,
The edltori41 page of th< Dailf
Pilot seek.s to infonn on4 1tfm..
ulatt readetl by prc1enting thll
newspaper'• opiniom and com-
tne11.ta711 on topicl-of int.rest
and stanificonce, brt protriding·a
f orum for the erprcuion of
our readnt' opinf9'LI, and bV
pre1tnting the dfvtrre vf~
pofnta of ftsfonned ob1rrver1
attd rpoketmen on topfci of thl d4u.
Robert N. Weed, Publlsher
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T:ragi~: Err.*ir KiltSuspect Has C~~~G Record, Says FBl ; ~~~~"~ ... ~;'~
th ciUJ.en ~ . • tos ANGBLES (AP) -'nle Meanwhile, 1he coroner's ot-Amtrlcan . you who was The officers assumed he was \Vi ' ' k Ar ' B FBI 14lYS a idlar~ged wl!ft flee conflr,ned that an 1lleaed deported to Mexico ln what an alien, aftu ht mentioned
I' ,·or or'"' e est the' murder OI. f"ll'C~onua accompUe< in the shooUngs, !mmigi;atlon officials sald was tl\Jot he )1llCl I lil)er in M.ex!co, '1i" O Hi .... way Patrolmen baa ted a Jack W. Twining·, 35, WlMtci~ a "tt•gl rror" was ited and •-wl& taken to Tijuana '"••"of crime daUng':b~_ .... to Salem, N.C., had con\inlttedl· ~,e reun "" ( w · ~ de Wedoesday with his family. and releued the same dly. . J tee~ .Y~S a.nQ OtlJ>t two sui¢de rather 'than slirren r . Feroandq , OnUverof, ta, 8 OnUverQf wa.s "found April ~
I .... w j h' G . d years a(o: aaauMeCt I~· as hundreds of ottlcerc.ctoeed "'Uve of 'Santa Barbara, bad begglng'far food io Me<:allao. J-is ' !t eP OQ . °'~; ... lt·~:~ ... · ... ~f:e~u~r:~~~~:.;;, \I' '.·; ·:o'=;~~~;rb;,~: trl:dM~z:~,~·I ~
i :J ,·, , . ••• • • bMnamii·'8Bclbby ~Ab~:~!~deptJUes,.~~tb.e 'i ·("'·''. ~--:. •mtcration 'ageots near his iister'1 bome 'in nearby
• DaYla _, .,., ~· ~ . ...,.. after a M sle.e. ~· -· 5 AJ · ·'· •,. h<ilne ·lier< Zacabu. · ·
By t. M. BO, winp fast«"".'~ ~j11ee toor •munl<!'f ~!,!jll~ And the pat!llf's ·~·~le r•. · , CS$l0.S : ·, onttveroi, WM his mother Tho Mexlcln .. .........,1
;T A N G E ft t Ng s. A R E or the ,,houae(Jy?!"... A. ~ · .h1m ,.t.::,_)!lk~arr a •:a:~~;J t ; Harold W · SullitJ,an, ~9td ~ · · · said was taking tranquiliters provided mtdlca.Uon and bua
, '-••elly fl !•"'•• °'"" w • ...;.,,,. .,. he had launched a orobe lo G J d" ed · · h' I tioo 1or OnU --"1 ~OWN to contain • natural ~~ IB'. .~ -L"'t'' any • ~.~aignineiit ~ p1;te determine if the s1a1n{,Olfice"ri I ' • et 11-lCt u · mt;<hcation for IS men al transPQrta v~ ~tcalledayfietbrine ~::~~re=~~;-;~fi~~ In .-eonarence room-of ·th~··had·exercisedproperq.reand .. ~-. . . '.coodl~on. apparently was return.-,
wbichclearaupstulfyjnoaes ... 1q 1loes ·it lake a •good Los Angeles Centr~ Men:• procedures. • ... ,· ' · ·s'Aii ·DIEGO jAl'j _Five iiiiiiiiiiiiii
No cWaen-"' German ·deocenl baaeball player' to ~ to firlll Jail hlfltiDIJ'Y"'llo!'e D,avls " 'llle· of6.,.... . were gu~ed Alesiiio fimilly 'm<mbers, In-·WA N T E D I should·~ jl was his an-base aft.er the hit?' ~ ... Ma)l~ reco~'< from a gµnshot .down two at •·time _lak $un-cHcted on a·itwge of evadlng ··
"'IO!)I wtiO «iglnated the flllll' -·A faet lelthandet wound ·inflicted by a vaca. 'dlJ!• night in a co(fee. Jl>oP. '"29·311. in inc..ne taxes alid • e
dpltoin of IMoc anolvenary .m!Ft do K ~;.a. I '"""'' -jolfom be stole • parking lot """' ~ 5 r~ to ·r.port $U8 milliotl Men' And wo·'men Wt"th 'A . "-'re ~ts. . .Did' I· tell you . -COVE AND .'WAR ..:.. What camt>er' trtlck t<r try to get freeway 35 mites nOrtb or Los tO income· teotaOvely will be .,...
redheadl blush mohlj readily seemed like an earthquake away.'·· • · . ·.~eles. They. '!ere re~n-arraigned 1April 27. To Be On Television.
tJian·blon(les and bloocl~·blush recently shook the building in The, Judie . ~d~d . Davis ding to motorists complainl U.S. Atly. Harry Sleward
niore readily than· brunet-Hollywood, Calif., wberi I •aa held without ball, he had been shot at. .. said )'lednesd•Y that notices to ARE YOU OVER 21?
uj;1 .. ; The fancy deotrk: cor· typing, and .for a ~ · · 'Bppe<~ in court wil1'be mailed CAN YOU TAKE DIRECTIONS?
fee J1L8.ker is said fu tank No. there I got seasick." Ember-· · h v Tod to John S. Ale$Slo, 59; his son, T k 1 Prod·•J' 1 I p d
sl.oo lhat list of items which rassing. Then, nobody ...,,.. LAT ers ote . ay Dominic, 28,'and his (John'sl • • -······ nc., • l'OU ·~• "--..i! eac .. u R U To Announc:. Tho Oponlnt Of Ou!' Now btides want most aa gifts • • • gd an ou-e -Oil -• . . b!Olh•rs.· Angelo, _, """ • HOLLYWOOD TALEN't• POOL for ADULTS Ohr language man W9'1d. llte telephooe. No daubt that wis ·· , · · · Sf, and 1Tooy, 50. I
to: paint out that ~ ftd because the teteJiione folk LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ tirely unacceptable." The five yt·ere named In a
"mandarin" is IP n.; ........ , always shut down half tbeir The ora-aniza.u.·on took. the -S~ia,l,Jeder:al gran4 ,jury in· bu P .,....-d t .. ~ " T The 22,000 members of the o· _.,, ed ~·esd t ortugue!e. reulLs a s ..... -., a ue. o position that it!"· would 1'!i~t .wcunent return '' u ay OPEN QUES11.0N-What's prevent an overload. Lr,ter, United Teachers-Los Angeles even 1 JOO pei;cent .pa_y UJ• which charges conspiracy to
the difference beh'tftl Scot-theradioreporteditwas11tan vote today on whether or not creaseifitme.antcuttingback defraud the Uni~ States, in-
ti.Sh bagpipes and Irish bag-earthquake, but an H-bomb to strike the nation's second on educatio.,al llrograms. The come tu e_vasion and filipg
pipes? · blast under Nevada. "'M Y largest school system, . , group also has Sl,lbmitted i ~1-false tncQme tax :retyrns for
CONSIDER. 'IBIS -Ileen fr.ieod, could that ' be An eic.ecuUve board' bf the page list of ',dem~:S kl( fitl~.taxyears ,1963-66: .,.
reading up m the Indian dangerous? 'Ibe. idiots. . group voted overwhelmingly educational reforms. ·
TO AUDiTIDN ON.CAMERA
CALL 714·547-6251
TAKE "1" .PRODUCTIONS, INC.
HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.
areher fish. Quite a creature. SO YOU THOUGHT MORE Wednesday night to autboriie A spokesman for the school
It-knocks flies out(){ the air PEOPLE played hookey from a strike beginning Monday. district. which is in a severe with its own squirt gun. Big-the job on these bright spring t.ITLA, w h j c h represents finaJ1cial bind and has pet!·
gfist of ·this S<lC"l ol fi.dl never days, did you? Likewise. But 22,000 ot the city .. school .tioned the-Stale !or more a.id,
gets more than two ·feet long. that's wrong. The-starilticlans district's 25,000 teachers, re· said he considered a strike
But It can zero in a jet of saylhebettertheweather,the jected as percent pay in· "programmed" no m~tter
water up to 11 feet. With IC· better the attendance at work crease offered A}X'il 3 ,81 .u~ . What tb&..oµtcome ·at tbe .. vote.
LEARN TO . SWIM
curacy, I 1loink Ille llOIP pad ... Don't know pred!dy MW
pec>P.le ought to uae ·an India they found out, but
archer fiS:I in their TV corn-researehers at the University
mercials. To be different. of Michigan insist their studies
Pie~ refer t h.i s recom,; stlo" conclu!lvely .that men
mendation to uJe agency's tend to coopel'.ate mc:n--"'1th
creative direct.or. each other tban do the women.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"What's the difference in life
eipec:toncy ~ ·a ;is.year.old
11)1!1 """' oanolios and ooe who dl)eSnti"i"" anoke?" A. The
smoker .of that age fi~ to liv'e 6S years, the non-smoker
1iyearJ ... Q. "Which fiapo ils
';•
Y OUT qtltlDOnl and com-
ment$ are welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP toMrever possibl.e. Ad·
dress letters to L. M. Bo11d,
P.O.' Box 1875, Newport
Beach, Calif., 92660.
Lawmaker Hits Price
Of New Texaco Gas
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Ataemblyipao Peter F.
Sctilbrum told t e i: a co
Wednesday it chargQ an "eJ·
Trolley Car
Sex Drive
Has Backing
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -
A 1964 cable car accident
caused a forme·r dance in~
structor ands trait 1 aced
churchgoer to become unduly
amorous be ca u~ e she
''re,•erted to th~ age of five
when she craves ·to be close to
another body." '
That was the testimony
given by Dr. Andrew Wat.son,
clinica l professor of
psychiatry at th~ University of
Michigan, Wednesday in the
trial of Gloria Sykes.
ce.ssive" amount for its new
lead.free gasoline and the
price js "not in the public in-
terest." ..
"Costs of manufacture .Plus
marketing :simply do n o t
justify a 41.9-<:ent-per-gallon
charge to the publiC," the
Covina Republican said 1n a
letter to Texaco President
Marion J, Eplef Jr. in New
York. ·
The lawmaker said Texaco's
lead-free "91" octane gasoline
costs two cents per gallon
more than the high octane
leaded premium and slx cents
more than the l~aded regulaT.
He said he hop;ed th.e price
of the gasoline would drop 1'to
within a cent or two of the
current regular."
5 Students
At LA State
On Boa.rd
Ji.1iss Sykes. 29, is suing the LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
city and county of San Fran· CaHfomia State College at Los
cisco tor $500,000, claiming the Angeles faculty has voted to
lnjurie!!i she suffered in the grant five students f u 11
cable car crash gave l)er an membership to the 50-member
ir.satiable desire for sex. Academic Senate.
Watson, the fh;st psychiatric In a secret ballot Wednesday
expert witness for the defense, the faculty voted 183~78 to giVe
sakl the only way Min Sykes the student full v o t Ing
could be close to another body recognition on the decision-
was through ll e :s: u a I in· making body. Onl y 25 other
tercourse. campuses in the United States
He further tesUfied that the have granted students similar
accident made 1 Miss Sykes\ .rights, a spokesman 'Jor the
frigid "because she is getting · senate said.
no pleasure out of he T The student representatives
n um. e r o u 1 sexual rela· are to be elected in campus
uotuhips." ' general eteclloo each spring.
i con• 111SA
Vt .-, 0711 St~ ,. .. .-.rt, Mtl W. Lilldlft-1rl·JJM
jU •• 1'911 N..........ml 116' W. I.I """'-U-11•
lnl Htwtlln ll'f't.-'!""'9 ton W, LIJQM Av..-tM-1111
OMIU I 1,111. • J ,_m., 1 DIJI • WHlr
Soll)ebody Fights Back ; •
Who flfhts city hall? The DAILY PJL'OT clots. Tl\at's• vmo. And
~re elst can JOU1fll>CI cottftl commtnt#'J on )'Our community? ~k tM fdltoNI Pitt ~ YOUR comunlt(s dallJ newspaper,
tM DAIL V PILOT, °' course.
' 1
at your
OltANtloE· COAST YMCA
64~·9990
.PACIFIC
COMPOUNDS IN I EREST ' ' . . ..
.. •
. .
DAILY . .
'
' even on new hi911 ~te ac®unts · '., , :·'-ke your c~oice ·
ANNUAL VIEU> ANNUAL RATE . MIN. BALANCE MIN. '(EARS
' f~. '
l79\ . 'l50°1o $100,000!!!! ONE ·
6.18\ . ·· 6~Dd°lo 5 000!!!! ' TWO .... ..
5.92\ ' ' 5.75°1o , 1,0002!! ONE
' 5.39°1o 5~25\ 500!!!! ~th
5.13°1o . 5.00°lo 1!!!! ONE DAY
Interest from date of deposit to date of withdrawal on
· passbook accounts •
ASK HOW YOU CAN RKCEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE
FREE ~ ' '
!;;
11
t. 1. Saf~ D~posit Box· . 4, Tickets to Sports .;. I ~l'ri· 2 •. Trav!tlet's Ch~ks ·. and Theatre Attractions ~ · ;. 3. CotlecJIQri o.f, Notlls . (Ticketron) ·
"""'sY ~.,. . • · · · . ·· 5., !1>4any other FREE Services
3333 BAISTOL
0
STRE!T ~ COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA .
HOURS:t:IO A.M. To·t:30 P.M. • SAT.: 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. • PHONE 54MOH
" •· ! : ' llAIN .Of'FIQl!;.1411 WIUITI!R BDU1'VAllD, LOS ANQEl,ES, CALlfDllNIA . .
.. .
,.
,.Ill ......... ,W. .. IL s L
· -ElECT-
CARL J.
KYMLA
for
NEWPOO BEACH cm CDm!L
Newport em
NEEDS
PROYfN ABILITY
CARL KYMLA
Has
ProveQ Abi~ty
in
local Government
t .. Y...,l•M .......... .... -•f LMlll ......... ,.
* Al w.-Dlltrict .. ................ ...
~ ···"' .. .... IHll..-,,. .. 111
L.cel Ge"'11,..... wMY
matt.ti la tu un.
* Dft .. .,_,,.. ..... ,., ,,...,, ......... ......
.... 1ni11•1 I , .. . ......... ....
* c,,,.,lft4 .... ,.,., ..... c~.,
Or-.. .......... ..
• Deplfty c...., su,.m-.
Proven Ability
in
Community Service
N~"-"r
ArM ....... llT ...
ICHAITt
S.Cm.rr-Or .... c .. .., Ce9lt ,.._......
...... c...i....-s..ttic.-s.M .. , ....... ""'"' ·c-•...,·-c.-1.aeeletfM._ .. c..t
ketik •••:••••• c ....... .. ............. : 0.-.. C:...., Ct rmter. ; .. c .......
"'-"-Hht9liuil SMlety -"-_ ... _ -· Ni.rt'H-.r
C~efC..... , • ....,. a ..
Proven Abiffty
in
Respo.nding
to
Citizen Needs ....... ,..,.,,, ._
llp11% .. H1_w ... 1
• WfttW Dtmkt .. _
* S....Y_,..t,,....tfN
..n, -"' H•••..., 9IHll ,..,..,... ..... ...-.... . ' '"''' ..... "'"'"..., ........ • WMH 1llllttMfy fer Parts.....__.
lecrfftleMI hclllUes • E1telllhW nult.t
c.-m..icet1 ... wJtti
T11p!"f'MllMIH1MM...,_
* . hlltf-.4 Pf.-,,,
Actfw Cltt..
f'ertklpetl• la &..c.I ··---·· REVIEW -
THE
RECORD
N•"" 1f O,_.. c ... ,, ·--usc ............... 51
A ... -Nnpert,lffdlHl•tWW
. ..... fapll'f'I" ' ,,..,, .. .,..,~ ,.,.,,.,.., ,..,. ........
,._ City _, ....,,_,, .._. ........ ....., ..... ..... 1,., ,,......
M•1lt.itoNI .... w ...
District I• s..n..t o,....c.....,
............. ! .. ,.,.,._.., ,..,. .._, ............ _ ..
,,... Clty.tf.il .. w..w: ..... Attf..tf hrtlC~ hi
N • ...,. .. Chk A•thttlll
Mui,._ hnlMt hr
Ml•l-TaD .. t-
rlOYIN DrllllMCI --'• ,.....,. .....
PIOYIN llPllllNCI
"''" ... cltl .. ·-·••Mi I• I• .. .... ~ .•
NOQN hftntlNCI .... , ....... ••h •••• , _......,_
.........
VOTE .,...... APRIL 14th
CARL J.
KYMLA !81
lltlli'I C. Cltdl, ~ ~
l•I Cliff om., ...............
I
I
,
I
I
•
'
T11jjrsdi11J, A&wil '· 1970
. By Phll lnteHcnll
Yoit!'re Sp.1'ing~
Army Tells Proper Method
W,\SlllNGTON (AP) -
Want to be a spy?
11vn hide those blg ears,
throw away that artificial
nmie, quit creepine behind
trees and clearing your throat.
'lbey're all against the rules
taught jn the of fi c i al
survelllance text boot used
by the Anny's Intelligence
School II\ Fl. Holab!rd, Md.
The Associated Press ob-
tained a copy of Surveillance
Guide.SupRm:I which, in Rule
C ofSUpftstJz which, in Rule
ciples, W8l'D!I !
"The IW'Yei!Jant must avoid
a slinkin(,.sle.Jtblnc, creeping,
'Hawbhaw' manner, jumping
behJnd trees or parked cars,
or ·peeping around comers.
Such a procedure wUI attract
the attention of everyone in
the vicinjty, iDctuding the sub-·ec1 " ' ] . '
On page 13, the manual add!
that apiea thould not have
physical attributes con-
spicuous to the a v e r a g e
observer,
LAllGE EARS
to follow a subject into a
restaurant and adds an
agent's dCninl habit& must
conform to the character he
is portraying and to the decor
of the eatablisbmtnt.
"Ii the re s tau.rant Is
fashionable and e:s:peisive, it
would be just as unwise to
order a hamburger and ·a.-cup
of coffee as ii would be to
order a glass of milk in a
bar."
So Anny agents will knoW
how to talk llkt spies, the
manual provi~ a glouary
of surveillance tenninology:
''Tail Job -Surveillance
assignment."
"Fingem1an -An In-
dividual who can positively
point out the subject."
"Subject -The person or
premises under surveillance&
"Put to bed -When a sub-
ject under surveillance has
returned to hi! quarters, and
apparently retired for the
nl«ht' the surveil lants are said to '"have put him to bed."
"Lost - A subject is lost
when the surveillants do not
,
Baby sits, naps,, rides happily!
i TOT TOTER
~T . ·SUPER· S'AVINGS
2 Days Only:...... 1.91
"Cllaracterittics which may
be clasaifted · ln. this· catecory ' .,. i.,.. and pn>truding ears,
UlllllUal helgbt and welgbl, a mustache «.a limp ...
know his whereabouts. The Take baby on all your jaunts!·Cushion-padded ·tote o(
agtnts are lost ~ tbe.~I> pearlescent white vinyl has 2--position stand for nap or iect bas eluded them.• play. Play.beads, •alety belt.
BE .fN TOUCH Shl'llltf' Tt lli.trtti.
And :o d d ·look l n g spies 1be bo9k says that while
sbooldn't try. to hide 'their cooducting surveillance it is
m.isforttine. usua11y essential that t h e
"oiaguUes tn the u s u a I surveillance teams be in radio
rntanil'll of the word (false communication with e a c b
whiskers, artificial n o! e s , other and with the control
simulated deformities, etc.) point. SO the Army agents
are to be avoided," the book will know how to do this,
cautions. the book provides an jn.
"Even when cleverly a p-triguing code.
plied, disguises usually leave Sierra 53 means the subject
the observer feeling that there is tail conscious. Victor 82
is sometbin« strange about the means out of gas. Victor 80,
wearer, and it is th i s caught in traffic jam. Delta
strqenen whk:h is con-IO, what direction are you
suicuous. traveling? Victor 89, had an
Using diaeranu. the book accldent. Charlie 25, conduct
even teaches bow three agents Wscreet surveillance.
can man1ge to follow someone To make it clearer, the book
around a corner -if they gives an e:s:ampl e o f apply ~1..-"ABC" melbod. lolK transmission : Agent "A" follows the sub-
ject. Aaent ''B" follows aaent "Bull Durham, this ii Satan, • • over." "A". Agent ''C" walks on the
opposite side o( the street and "Satan, this is Bull Durham,
slighUy to the rear of the over."
subject. "Bull Durham, this is Satan,
Sierra 53 over.''
SWITCH POSITIONS "Satan, this is Bull Durham,
When the subject. turns a Charlie 20, Charlie 26, over."
corner, Agent "A" w a 1 k s "Bull Durham, this is Satan,
across the Intersection before Wilco out."
turning, taking the "C" posi· jiijiii~~~~~· Uoo. Agent "B" lakes lhe "A"
position behind the subject. DTITONB
And Agent "C" moves to the NOW PATS
"8 " position. following Agent 5~-,! 5!l..! ''A". I.. , __ _
If the subject suQdealy turns ~ .-• -._
and stares al the people be-
hind him, the book says, a-
gents abaukl never permit eye
contact ••bec1u9e looking into
a person's eyes is Vf!lY likely
to create 1 Jastlng impre!sloo
and image."
The 11UTYellluce guide nole5
that IOIDtllmeJ it ii nece1sary
6~-~ t•--s ---------...... ii\ ----'-¥..-.-. ---............ -------. ·-·-:=.=::" ==--
I See by Today's
Want Ad s
-e MUSIC to many by~ for
Spring Bri<Iaes. delightful
piaoo music at rrcepUon
ar dinner.
e GO NA1tVE! Bcft. Ben
dance t.'09tU.mt, Samoan
-. ..... dam,....,,
more POLYNESIAN con-....._ .
FAMILY .SIZE
11 ~-OZ.* LIQUID
PRELL SHAMPOO
74¢
2 D•ys Only
Get itat savings! Prell ·co~n·
trated shampoo goes a long
way, lathers profusely, gleams
as it cleans!
Llmi1MI "lll!lllly--"Ill '9 •Mien.
•1i.111 '""llC"
MEN'S HOU-UP HAT
2 Days Only 88¢
lll'rf' It i~. at pennies! The hat that rolls to
flt In a pocket, refuses to crush, gOC'S C\'ery·
where. Choice of roloni. Get yours now!
,
• . .
-' ... . .
. ' l
COSTA MEsA, ONLY 10 A:M. to 10 P.M. . ' .Fri., $at. O•lr ,
·GllCS' SPRING ' . '
FASH• FRQCKS
TINY OR TAU )
2~88
2 DAYS ONLY
Savlriga sprtt! A·llnes,
bishop styles, bows 'n ,
bets! Rayons, cot tom.
Pastels, prints. 4-6X;
7-12.
SNEAKERS ' ·FQR ~A~~ FflY
2 Days Only .. . . .. . . ..1 · 441. , I .. , ii , . . ' Cash in on big savings! EasY·¥.Oing ·sneaJ;ers',0;f sturdy a ........... ___ d white cotton canvas, soled w1t4 .Bfoll11d-gr1Ppilig: rub-
BOYS'·NnDN
OXFORD JACKETS
WITH ZIP FRONT
Our R19. 3. 97
2.00
2 DAYS ONLY
'
Our jaunty jacket& have
cadet collars, conceaJed
eylon hood. Drawstrlna:
on hood and bottom.
Green, brau. navy, yel-·
low. 8-18.
ber, cushioned with airy polyfoam,! Children'&,. itoll'
sizes S.12. Get them today!
L ....... --"'Yi -"'!f .. M!-9-I f
SAVE ON REAL tONE 'RA.,10 .
2 Days Only ........... 6. 77
Solid State all-electric AM table radio has efficiency
antenna to pull 1n distance station!! ,., d)'n~~ 1peak-
"s---.. al1C1 .. m:m:=:lll _____ _. er,. direct tuning, pinpoint seloclivlty1: Smart· low-pro. ~ file styling. Get it today! . :i : _ .
10" ALUMINUM
FRYPAN·COATED
WITH TEFLON 11•
1.27
2 DAYS ONLY
-
Fry \\'ilhout fat, clean 'vlthout
SC<IUr\ng! And Teflon 11 finish
ls non-stick, scratch resistanL
A gjft at 1.Z7!
l lrnl ... ,..aftll,.,_ ... ,. .... Mn.
~TM. llf Ollptllt Corp,
GILL£TTE SOPER
STAINLESS STEEL
2-EDGE BLADES
96¢
P•ck of 15
2 DAYS ONLY
Super qU&ity, super sharp GJ.Jr
Jette blades for clean, clou
sh&ves! Get Jb...pak now at tre--mendous savings!
Lllftltm ....,.,..,.__ .... " ... ..,,.
BIG TRASH-CAN LINERS
53 ¢ ·12·
2 Days Only pak
12 super-strong plastic: begs to flt 20 or 30
gal. cans, keep refuse neat, prevent odors!
Twist' Ues. J6xl4x37'', Get them at big 1&v-
lngs!
I
4' INCH
POtrED
·PLANTS
'3. FOR 97¢
l Daisies, tomato plants. marf.
gqld. and man)' more.
SAU! POLAROID
"108" POLACOLOR
LAND FILM PACK
3~66
2 DAYS ONLY
Capture spring tn color! 11-e~
J>Of!Ur~ pack gives g 3%x4 ~
color prints. Get yours now at extra savings! ==~ LlllllMll WMllti 111•1 11111111 '9 .......
.. O'CEDAR SPOtiGE MOP· (
. 2· ~ Only 1.9:7
O'Cedar Powet Strip® wttb big, thlnty 9'"
1ponge Jets yau mop Doon, wuh wan, or
ceUlnp, wring without l\>llChlng .,.,.,, Got
it now!. I
"""-' ...... --.......
• VENTlJRE forth onto the
Pacific in this Venture 17,
~xcellent condition, fW1y
.. ulpped, wilb motor •
tnlkr.
2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~;~~::· 0~1° COST A MESA
Harbor
' I
r
' ' I.
• • • • •
rdy
ul>-
>11'
),
)~
alt-.,;,. -
...
·~ at
~ ~~
I
t
I
I
·I I ~· I
11 1,
!1 II , . . .
..
t CDP Ask~·=.-.···~h·a~.:~ :,v~~( .: :Wr~ng?. .V.se.s . V arieil:
I ;
·For · Carrier
"'
•
•
I •
!
• .. ·
..
f
i .
• -.
' • • . •. --
2'666 HARBOR BLVD.
546~~080 COSTA MESA
· WHDAYS 9 to 9
JRuDAY 9 to 5s30
· ;SUllDAY· 10 to ·SzOO : I
Smoot\,IHcloi, 'ulr lioclied
p•i11t th•t iit•k•• th• effort
worthwhil•.
Hunclr..d1 of fine colors t1
111it •ny d•cor•ti•UJ th•mt.
639
9 INCH ROLLER
j &'TRAY SET
•• GAL.
0 A p•11-•11d roller 11t
that c•rt1:
a lut not ·~ lilluch ..... if
9th in your wty •
0 l 11t •nou9h 10 wt f1 1ture
it in the ad,
.. , ',_ • ..
·1 N•W WALL LIGHT
'
0 Thi1 Wtlt light 11 10 lllW'
I h•••il't t '(•n 11t11 it v••· -0 !No, I don't drtw the
pictur11, wrHi119 thi1 i1
t•l1nt t110119h.I
loolu cute, t•li:1 two,
bltc:k with copptr1.fr'im,
399
...
HARCRAFT ,Aucn
r-;~;::~::::_, 0 l11cH1 h1ndlt1 ,mod1r11 4 pop up dt1i9n.
0 U1t for t1pl11:1mt11f er t new,
'0 , lt1f1 •n old 01~en·
\ b11ck•t •nyd•y.
! 1288
. -
IVORY RECEPTACLE
WITH GROUND
0 H•r•'• • grouncl•d cl11pl•1t
r•C•pt1cl•.
O lnd•ll •11• tonight, t11n1 011 th•
light.
0 Artef yo• will ''I''' it't~
'P•Ci•cl••-
•
I .. ' • • • •
I
' ..
• "
' I ' ·•t',.·1
GLUB-GL
.;, I • I
. '
.MAKESA GREAT
·TAX
coil.ECTOR
•Allffftll.t' IPKl•lt tMd "'"" Aprll 1J, 1'71 '"" • "'-It "' tr mt ..... "" ,,_.,.wflr It II I Clll'I Wiit " ... IMlt 91 ..... ,,
I I I . • '1 I•
GERMAINS SLUG
·sulL AND -, \
INSECT KILLER
119
. _. __ ._
1 LI.
SIZI
MINI SPRAY PAINT
~l'-'!"r~··, O s.,,1·for •m•ll iob1
' • whir• • bit c111 wo11ld
.... _.
{ .bt ll'IOnty w11t.d, ~~·O· Evin better fer th• kid1' u:Jll hobby 1t11ff,
' ' 0 Wide dioict of colon,
in 111•111111.
~-··· l 2
OZ.·
TULIP SWAG LIGHT
I
D Tulip 1w19 In 1pricot
•nd wh it• or t•••n i nd
whito or"whito.
O J111t tur11 tho 1wih:h •nd
you got flow•r pow1r,
O Th111 ••• nic. for
bod100111 or d•n..
911
,. ' l·H
SPONGE PACK &
•
MAGNOIC CATCHES
0 H•r•'1 1 9r1bb•r th•t'll
k111» it .triP•
0 Or 1 gri pper th1t'll•k11p
its gr•b.
0 Might b1 th• hit ctfch
)'011'11 , ••• 11 •••••• ,..
• t ' .. f
••
IN-SINK-ERATOR
GARBAGE DISPOSER
0 Moth1r'1 D1y will be h1r• b,ffr• you •no• If, 10
whf 1101 do it 11ow. lriglll•11 t~intt 11p for ll'lom, • 0 ln-1lnk·1r•lor i. 1 1111111 yo11 c•n trust, lif1tim1
lubtic•lion, •••Y to i11d1tl.
D w,·.,, 1•t the N11. 77 •t •low 47.tl if, hi~h·r
ftu111b1r do11 it for yo;,,.
GERMAINS NEW
KOLORCOAT
DICHONDRA · sEID
0 Co1fM 'f~ pni1r1ot11 f•1for trowth •"° pr1v•11h fUlllJUI cl i111••· D , E•1tor to ••• tM11 f'9ul•r DiCholldra ......
J ,,.
1 LI.
SID
GE~INS
ROSE' GUARD
0 Foed1 ro1•1 with b•l•ncN f1rtili10r,
0 Kil ls •phhh •n.I other ••c•llllJ lrtJMh.
0 Control• mor1 t+i111 24 dlff1ront,
gr•ttll •ncf W•Od1,
2'1 I US.
Refinish it yourself
•• t• _. • '
·QI'On~it-ttque.
"Easy DO.a II" Refinilhing Sy1Je1111
DEMONSTRATION • • TUESDAY,
APRIL 14
FREE
CLASS
' . ..................
• n *,., . ;._•_n IS;
~--·-'!J"
AMERICA'S FINEST ·
-
Th111 NEW 1oll'lpl1t1 "•••Y to cfo" 1v1t111'11,1•n M •P,:llM
over '•"Y ..i1ttitt fl11l.tl. No ""4•t. ,..."...Ml fl11hh -
Sl111pl• _,....Mi¥9-alMlllf'etltM.
' . ' I <
' '
...
' ..
.· .•
DAILY PJi.n /
,AiO POt.rtM:AL AOYl•T 181 ELECT -181
WAL TE.R
.J ..
KOC 'H
. , r •• -..
City .• i af New~1 ~
• . . .
•
13 Y!ll llilllll l~ * * ....... *
e Pro"en CITY EXPER ' " e P•r~1,. Be•c~ & ~rHt~' ~"1mJ~I«!" ..
T)flce ChaLrman , d, •
90!'4· Attend•nce for I .v.Uu '
• Pre""" LEADERSHIP' r; J e Pre1ident-M.riner1 H~rl
Association · · --
• Tr••1ur1r-F•mlly Servi• Auocl1t'9n
of Orange County. • 1 -: ,. • e Bo.I rd of .DINCtor1-~5JrjClub,,
Hoa1 Ho1plt1I
• Board of Dlrector......Cor:ono-.dll Mlf
Youth Center . ' · ·
• Proi>en · COMMUNITY : sElivlCE
e CHART !Citizen• Harbo,...Ar,.
Resurch T'1am) --e YMCA Fund R1IHr . e N9wport Beach Hl1torlca1'1SOClity e Airport Noke Abatemeftt .c;~mmlttff
Mr1. J111ph 1,,J 0 , W.1Dlclt Rlch1rd
Williem C. Ad•rnt Dr. I Mn. R.-L 'Uitdorwo04
A. Yin Jor91111•n P1ul A.' 1'1llft1r
Mr.11 Mr1, Rolly Pul11~i 6. E. J1k11.$1mplo . '
R,1.,, I Mn. J•rn11 6 . ll•i11 6111. Tho"I•• F. Rilty•W.,
Mr, I Mrt. T. Dunc•• St•w•rf P1ul fl IC!liln M.D.
Mn. V1t1 lohr l1•bol P1•1•
Joh11 F. SJl11111r, M.D. lllickard"'C. Y1rnot1
Mr. I Mrs. lyron l•rnuh1r Mr. I Mrs. A1111u1 W, rottw
Mr. I Mr1. Clinton M, Hoo•• Jr. Au1tin D. Sh1rtn1nt
Mr. I Mr1. M•rk /.., Sodon Edw1rd F,,W•rd Jr, ,
Mr_. I\ Ml"I. C. F. Col11•orftly Willioift .C. Riitt 1 Mr. I Mr1. Joh11 M•cltocl Mr. I Mr1. W. S. S11M11lull •
W Eel Cr1n1 D111i1I W,:&nory
M;. I Mn. TotT111c• Dockl1· Hon. ll•~rt ~ IHll•fll
Mr1. H•rl•" Hoyt Mr. I Mn.·Roy C•ptM•r
Cl•lr I. llrnitt M.D. , Ch1rlo1 £, Stilt•11b111or·M,D,.
Mr, I M11• Wllll1m Mor• Mn. leftlt L Tliornto•'
lloy J. Word · ', Fr•nc11 H •. C•rh1rt,
Mr. I Mn. ·lr1nt Otd•" Ch•rl•• Hoo••
NoNnl J. Knill M•nhill lrown M.D.
Mrt. D. f, GUcr11t l1rb•r• Aun• L J , And•rton' M.D. Mr1. H. D. Hlckm•it
Pit Wilu1n Mr. I Mr1. t•wro11c1 !. Klffte
Norto11 H11rnphr1.,. M.D. Don1ld M• Mc&illls M.D .
Mr. I Mn. Ck•rlt• Fr111ldin Mr. I Mr1. J•1111• M. Wllll11n1
C1pt. I Mu. Robert F. l1nn1r Mr1. Robert W, JoHt
Mr. I Mn. Rob.rt Ewint I HI Flood •
Ft.cl1rick M. Gr•1or M.D. Rob•rt F. lon111r Jr.
lorr1ln• A. lynck . Tr•vor 01.,it
Mr. I Mn. Jokn 1Cill1f1r Mr. I Mrt. P•wl J, &r11bar
& .. yn P1rty M.D. Mrt. 6111111 A. P1rrhh
Mr. I Mr1. Robert W, Wilco11 · Robort ~htnih M.O.
Al11 J, Kocllnulr V, E, How•rd ·
Mr I Mr1. Ed M. Conw•v Dottl1 Hutchito11 1 Dr." I .Mrs. Ru111ll '•nt Mr. I Mri. G10r91 D. IC•l11~
Dr I Mrt. Norm111 Von H•n:•n Willi1 D .. L.~y••r •
To;ry W1l1h Dr. I Mr•. C •.rl•1 Sp•r•\!hl
'Mr. I Mrr. W. F. lonn•r Jr. Mr. I' Mr1. . H. Rel-•
Mn. Adr1i11 I, Joyn1r Doro thorM.•R1y M.D.
Den•ld I , M•rfi11 M.D. Mra. R. ,G. Wilcor
Mr. I Mn. J111111 C, Sk,pp•rd Mr1. C•rroll D. Huchoft
Mrt. Rob1rt1 R1 m1•y Mu. Jin P111loy
'Mr: I Mrs. R•y D. Vi1 11 D•n ,R. Kir.h.irh M.D.
M E. f•rrn•r M•rv H, lA•r
J.·,,;,, C. Doyl• M.D. Ed. T. Ch1p1"•ll Ill
Mr. I M'r1. Jolin F. Fl1tch•r Mr•. N•Clin1 Hill ~ohn I. P1r••r Mr. I Mr,, 6 . Wllll•m 6.r11n4y
''Mr. i Mrt. John M, W1b1l•r Mr. I M'n, W•rren' Sflliit •int'
: Micho1l ·P. O'lri111 M.D. Ch•rl11 H •• Tur111t "'-.D·: 'Mr.~ Mr1. G1n1 Ch•rl11 Don1ld R,1W•rd. · b~. I Mn. tkorft11 Do•11 Mr. I Mr1. T,d ~Tlbtr9, ·
'Mr, I Mn. Rpb1rf W •. How1rd Mr. ,I Mr1. ¥/m. L S1Cll.•k:
D A. l'f•ff M.D. llob1rt W, Cr1c,c• M.D. ,
#>.. E, Cr1ych•• Mr. I Mr1: R11•1•ll 6 rlffotli ,, , <t_' A. D1¥i11• ' J •m•. D. t;i~'1k1ll .
.f11'1i11 M. Dedd1 Mr. I Mr1. l••il de lhlo
~hlrl•• T, H•rY1y J1m11. I'. C•11y•
Mn: Joh11 A. 6utt1fton Rlch1rd M•rowlh:
1Mi-1. W.W. l1rtul1it St•ph•n C. Koff11r M.D.
J&r•nt Hewold Mr. I ·Mr,:C•rl I, l't•rl1to.
Dr. I Mrs. W111. Snyd1r L H. Hol1h1t'r
~l11ty'l: H11lhOli ¥ Mrs. H•rold McCue
11. How•td M•rtv11 'E. H, s•1nnor
Hi.90 J . Rh M.D'. .Ethol.C. ~,:6111i•r•Y. M; .• Mn'. c. N. Thi.Jin Hill s •• ly
Oi1rl*9 W, Scott Mr. I Mn. Attho11y I. Mo!••
JJm11 L Rulltl :Jr. Dr. I Mr1. Ricl!1rd f. Cr1111M
G,' H: p,f,.ol, • Mr. I Mrt. Morio·C. P11i11t ot. I Mr1. Fr•nttT ,O'lri111 E1llt H1td4(1 ·
·Mn.<FrW·L ;upr•• , K111 tAll•1t , 1 ,
Mr. I ,Mr1. How•rd A.'M1a111, l1rbor1 Ul'iclci11i1t
l11elU1 S:St•ph•111 , Mr, ·a Mr1: Doti•"' C .NuH111
Mr, a. M,., T1d I. Wittner .Mr. J.!Ull.111.A.£l1111•n ~r. I ~,.; Fo1t1r N: 6•r~ Mr •• Mn. WllU m L ColllM
Joll11 L. Curci · 1 ' ' ' Pllillr,. 6 . /Fltlhll
1.Rlch•rd S,' St1v•111 , .Dr. Alb1rt P11-"t1l11
Coral M. ltl•nd M.D. 1 • A.'I. Dfck:Sh.W j
'Mr-t & Mn:1W•lt1r M. Roya ,,tlbtrt J , Auer•
Mr, I Mr•: J•ck 6or11•111 ••ilh•ll Duffield
·Mr. I Mn •. Don•ld IC. Slop1r •Mn~Foy· l ,"1t,i;.,; '
Mn. WUliofli W. Jo111i · ' 1*"1•-1H1ilry ·Cro"":fo'd
Mrt. lruno· D. Nor111•n ( I M , a~Mr .. ·6•r•lil•H. Khtttfty
Mr, I Mrt. lt1y11touo M'1 .. lt6~.ft·V1N•l1 * * '* * .. REMEMBER , · ·, :
. '. APRIL 14th f!ir!
ALL :YOTERS CA.NJf.oTE
.WALT :~~R · 1J• •N '\" I -• I
: • t
.KOC.ff
C11tNe-.a l'w-17M'M_. ....,,_.._.
.. .. .. ' ..
' ' ·:· •
• . -...... . -... ' ................ _..--
Jf DAILY PILOT
TRADERS' TAPE Marij_uana Effects Still Stu.died · ~' Ntlf mtrt..t -1n1t a. trMl<if ..... lt'r ,...,._.
DMll ti ~ c~V41!1-.-!'lytilole.
Ol'lly tJtl-.1111 Wrl!e IOI' o.it/111
TllNDS I. TIMIN• anutcN
Comprehensive WASHINGTON (AP) -'A • martjuanasm oktng;Those _Q. ls ~any mediCll H..:r,·~C:~
wbo do progreu to heroin arc Justlflcallon Tor the rather\::=========: eovemmeothtalthaaeocy She ·11 H d M aays while there ;. "' ocien-rr. a a essage • tlfic evidence that marijuana ,,
smoking lead• automaUcalty MOUNT VERNON, Wash. (AP) -Sherill John to hard drugs, serious que• Bo Id t d b' · lions remaln about the effects ynton to parents a a rug a use seminar
of its chronic use. about an 18-year-old boy. who planned to go to
• everung programs
usually the molt emotiooaUy prevailing opihlon that mlri-lr
disturbed gJ'OU~ juana use may lead to heroin
Q. Does marijuana u a e addiction! AJdy's Fun
Ask any klc:\: r".,. ArldJ~ Is fun.
Ste It Sat6rdm lo tht DAILY . ' PILOT. toward degrees of
Bachelor of .Science
:and
The National Institute of college. .
Mental Health said In a paper The youth had a "bad trip" on some ampheta-
released Tuesday by a tfouse mine. He took his father's gun, threatened bis
crime committee the question mother, f~ther and younger brother, then left the ·
cf possible braln damage from house carrying the gun. 'The parents called for
cause any orgJnlc b r a I n A. There is no scientific
damage or does it have any · juaUflcatlon for the opinion
toxic effect on the body! . . that •marijuana predisposes to
A. We do not know. In &01;11e -~hero~i~n~a~ddl~ctlo~~··---~~:::;=:::;;::===== countries of the MlddJe East . ,
aM_ Near -East, where can-·•·* * * 1lt' * '* * * * * * * * *'it *' * ·• nubis preparaliom havtt been •
chronic use of strong mari· help. Sheriff's deputies an.d police soon caught-up ·~or the culture, lt;. MERCURY SAVINGS bet~ved chfon1c US< ol the " , ,
Master of Science
juana preparation.! such as with the youth's car.
hashish still is unanswered. "He stopped once, hl s hands ~tipping the
And. any authoritative con· wheel as if in a trance," Boynton said. "Then he
cluslons on long.term mari· zoomed ahead for a few hundred yards, stopped,
Juana effects are premature laid down in the front sltat and shot and killed liim-until present studies are com-self.,.
pleted, hopefully ln two years, the lnsUtute aald. "It was the other fellow 's ehild to everyone
1be quettlonl and key por· but me," he said. .
tlou ol &nlWtrl bued on "He wa1 my aon."
strong preparations, Such as . . .. Ind l~n 8$$0C1ation : ,
hashish, is 3$50ciated .... 1 t h
· psychs>sis and brain damage in
some people.
It is difficult to evaluate
these statementa because ol
the.la.<:k pf l!.l)'.cb~_1tr1-'
aophiatic;aliou or the -.'!"
,. • • • Studiel to validate or
rtpudiate tbete ltltememi
""' needed and are be
NOW OPE N
EVERY SATU RDAY
'1 ,, f\ "1 /) r-' !'. 1 , L_, ,. \. I \. . · _. r . , ~
" . Syst~ dynomlc: IMNcdoft 11 g!Ywl br on ouhtonding
foculty of practicing 1ti.rltist1 ond lf!Ginetrs holding odvonc:ed
degt9ts from top ..,hoen.ltlel ttwoughout tM nctiOn,
=:ean or NIMH-dlreded L------------------l pursued. HUNTINDTDN •Ul!H
Q. Should marijuana be
classified with the danger-
OUI drugs and narcotics?
stimulants and sedatives. ~iarljuana in s u r f l c I e D Mercury Savinp Bldg. ·.. Neraiy SIYino ... More tho'1 12.000 t«hnlclan1, q lnetrl otld odmlnistra•
tcm-both mm ond "'°''*~ continutd full-time efnploy-
ment while working toward thelr ...... • W~ C.OOst Uni-
juana is a mild hallucinogen.
At our present level o f
knowledge it should be in-
cluded in the group o f
danaerous drugs, along with
otler balluci no gens,
Q. Is it meaningful to speak dosage will intoxlcate d Valley Yiew at Uncoln ~.. ' Edinltl'.' al 8"c1' or physical or psychological the period of activity .•. Wf
veislty, ,
A. MarijWllla ls 1 not a
narcollc and was included in
that (federal) s t a t u t O r y
category incorrectly. Mari-
dependency wilh .rea:pect to have no evidence that singl'\~*;;;;ii*;;;;ii*;;;;ii*:.,;*:.,;*i;;;;i*i;;;;i*i;;;;i*iio,~~-~*,.:;*,.:;*:-;*:-;*:-;*j;;;i*ij mariujana! doses produce prolonged ef~
feels except in extremely rar .... _,. ........... _.. . .-..--. .......................
M.S. 4...-a. .,.._ ... ....;.. ... MeH91M111t -W\ll0--"1--.......:. .
WO.I II oa:redfted by tt.. Western AssoclatJon of Schoolt
ond Colt.,. ond II OPPf0¥td for vlttrans.
New term starting
N•w vM•AJrtdutt• cl111•1 b.9ir1 April 27 In lo1 A1t91l11
•"cl M1y 25 in Or1n9• County. N1w 9r1clu1t1 cl1n•t b•9i11
April 27 ill lo1 Ar191l11. For i11for1111tion, c1ll th1 l o1 An91 l11
C.nt1r 1t (:Zll) lll·ll72, E•t. 20, or th• Or1n91 Cou11ty C1n·
••• 1t 17141 !i47-571:Z bt. 20, or fill M t '"" ''"" i11 the COU•
po11 below.
---~------------------' .
A. Physical dependency or instances .
true addiction does not occur. Q. Does marijuana use af.
Soldiers Using Wigs
To Cover Haircuts
Psychological dependency is feet intellectual ability?
well known in this country and A. Here an analogy t<i
abroad. alcohol is appropriate. Small
Q. Does marijuana u s e amounts may produce tiltle
create an attitude that makes disturbance of the intellect ;
il easier or in some cases in· large amounts definitely im·.
~vltable for the UJer to drift pair logical thinking and ra-
into use of other dangerous tiooal functioning.
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) -Hundreds of
soldiers from nearby F t •
Carson are buying and wear·
1nC wigs to hide their close-t.TCPPed GI haircuts when they
go olf the Army post, wig
merchanls report.
ficers conducting inspecUons drugs or "hard narcotlca?'' Q. Does the psychology o~
"never touch them because A. In studies which have the marijuana user have ~
they 're a personal item.·• been done to attempt to relationship to the use of other. answer this question , a third drugs and stimulants?
Mlke Seaton, owner of Hi to a half of all chronic marl· A. The chronic abuser af
Fashion Wigs, said he has sold juana users will a1sa try marijuana is more likely tq
hundreds or women's wigs to amphetamines, barbiturates. became involved in o the JI
the soldiers for $20 to $25. and less than 5 percent will mood-altering chemicals pro.
try narcotics, like be.roin. bably because the excesslvti
COSTA MESA
GOLF, COUNTRY CLUB
ALL FACILITIES
OPEN TO PUBLIC
Haw Ap,..n-,
VIC GARCIA l TD.
Yocah by
GERMAINE
INTEl1AINMlNT e DANCING
Thun;., Ftl., Sert. t p.a. t. I :JO •.111.
NOW SEIYING DINNIR
6 t. t :JI ,.-. -1"'n •• fri., s.t.
l
__ ,._ ---------·
West. Coast University
sso ·so. "Maia st. p.zo
Owners of three wig stores
said the soldiers are trying to
cover up the "whitewall"
haircuts ordered by Maj. Gen.
Bernard W. Rogers, com·
mander of the 5Ul Infantry
Division (Mechanized).
Some prefer straight long About 85 percent of all user has a more distur~
balr, and some want the ends ~he~r~oi!:n_:ad~dlds~__:adml~lt!t~pno~·!r·:.....,~pe~r~so~na~l~ity~stru~clure~~·-=:;;-;:--:;,J~~H!!.,o!""'~·!!!!·o.!!!!•!!o.!!!!l"•!•..,.;•!!""H"oo:,;'•:,;M~ood!;;oy;;,;; .... ;;,;,;"';;;;;'"';;• •;;,;";,;';....-
rolled, he said. AMERICA'S LAftOEST ,. MILY CLOTHING CHAIN
"Some !Jf them tell us they Orange, Calif. 92661
Pleose send catalog and lnformotion on:
D Undergrocluot1 program 0 Gtaduott J:WOgrom are mllfilcians and play in
bands and others say they f
want to wear them among · ,
th e i r civilian contemporar-r
ies," said Bob Greenberg, ow-f•,
ner of Flair Beauty and Im·
ClTY---------~IP•------
-"Most or the soldiers s a y
they want a wig so local g'lrls
wqn't know they're Gl's said
Frances Lacey, manager of
Wig's Boutique. She said the
soldiers say they keep the
wigs In foot lockers and of·
pert Wigs.
"We also get a lot of calls fer long ~~~·" he said. ....... ________________________ _
9u1mNG
iUSINESS
SEWNG OUT
COMPLETELY
LES MAM'SELLE • NEWPORT BEACH
' 2 BLOCKS EAST OF NEWPORT BLVD.
CORNER OF 29tfl & LAFAYmE 2817 LAFAYETTE A·YE.
BANKAMERICARD &
, MASTER CHARGE
WELCOME
LADIES
BETTER DR~SSES
"'OLEG CASSI N I" "'Ml IU.CICWELl"
"CAPRIEL" "CAlllAGI Tit.ADI" "Ml
DINO'" • bit ... tctlOll: ef del1ir19; -.•allfy
4re11e1 fo '°"' occ•lo11. $9111mer •11lt1, *"-' Wftlii coata, hall• dlb, May•
991W llMll, etc. l.._ styl9, ..west
C•lo1'5, 11 M1n ' to 1,, 4 1roups.
reg. to $59.95 $19 88
SALE PRICE .. • . .. o
r911 lo $65.00 $24 88
SALE PRICE .. ,. e
r911. lo $79 .00 $26 88
SALE PRICE ,.,.. o
r911. lo $98.00 $34 88
SALE PRICE .... o
LADIES COATS
"MARC.UERITI lllUll!l" "CARRIAC.I
TRADI" "MAYFAI R" lotltt 1tyl" aflod
c.ilf't I• lhlillell 991••••11, woel•, silk
,;.p11-. <It&. s1 .. ' .. 16. l 9ro1ps.
r911. $33.00 $13 88
SALE PRICE ...... e
r911. $52.00 $22 00
SALE PRICE .... e
'911$1~:~: to $56 88 SALE PRICE .... o
LES MAM'SEllE.
LADIES
AT HOME WEAR
Au ortff c1lors. llltelt 1tylft.
reg. $38.00 to · !-1
$76.00
SALE PR IC E .. . 2
LADIES
DRESSES
OFF
o,.,.,.smet-C.Nl.CoctlteU ,..,....__ tty
"Ollfi CAUINI" "Ml IU.C~Wll'-'
''CAlllACll TU.Dr' "CAPllEL"" "M'R
DlftO" "HOVIS DINNF' ".IULIE Mil·
Ul" "Ml 1011.-r" "LORCH KNITS"
"ALIXANDll" .... "'Y s.tftt colon ..,d
ttyltl .... t.ptlllf _. .,_, ... o.11d "'"'·
W .. k. weo1 ~ U lts, sllk" llnMS.
etc.. Shin ' .. 16, J 1r-•pa.-
r911. lo $38.00 $10 88
SALE PRICE • , • • .. e
reg. lo $33.00 $12 as·
SALE PRICE .. . .. . o
reg. to $39.95 $14 88
SALE PRICE ...... o
LADIES SANDALS
"MMACiDISIAN" ~IRIN" 1old leWllff
....tc.t1 with ftcrt, 919'k "' -4 heeh l'I
Hie "'Y lat.t ttvltiL S... S ._ IO. 0...
fttt,. stick.
r911. $12.00 & $4 88 $13.00
SALE PRICE ...... o
e 2817 Lafayetn Ave. e
CORNIR 011 21 .. I LAllA Yml
STORE HOURS:
DAILY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
CLOSED SUNDAY
SKIR·T SAV!R
SLIPS
"IEYERLY YOGUI" block, whitl ar bi991,
d~lu•• ciuallty 11• tllH 24 fa J:Z.
reg. $5.00 $1 88
SALE PRICE • .. . .. . o
reg. $10.00 $3 88
SALE PRICE ...... o
PLEASE NOTE
Our ent ire stock is on sale at
TERRIFIC PRICE REDUCTIONS
AND
LESS
all ...,,. I'-• Sh., Mrly foto bat wtK•
tlo11. Rnf co~. tint M'"4! 11othl.., r.-
Mnild, it0ttll119 iilJd bock. USE YOUlt
IANKAMERICARD 011: M A S T I It
CHARGI.
HOil PiNS, IAJlll:ING~.
NECKLACES, RINCi5, (TC,
lmllt QUALITY
MOTHER OF THE BRIDE
& COCKTAIL DRESSES
SIZI I TO 14
~. ·::;~~ . . . .. .. .. .. . $34.88
199. Sft.OO
SALi PRICE ••••• , • , ••• ,
11:-.. 5110.00
SAU "ICI •••• , ,, •• , • ,
$38.88
$52.00
.... 5119.ot $62.88 SALi n1c1 ••••• ,, ••.••
NEWPORT BEACH
SEL LING OUT TO THE BARE WALLS
' ' ,,
! ' l
r ' r . I · l
r -' I r ,
I j
I
'
Robert Hall helps
fight infl,ation ...
we reduced our
best-selling suits
to' put $10 back
into your pocket!
ENTIRE STOCK!
WORSTED & SILK
REG. 67.95 SUITS
95
Limited time
only
Take your pick of the
season's most important
two illd three button
single-breasted models.~
superbly tailored with the
nc\Y shaped influence to
make the most of today's
fasbioo trend\ Luxurious
wontedandsi\ksinSpring's .
Jead.ingpattemandcolors .• ~ "~ .,
sizes for regulars, shorts. '
longs. Huny in for the
suit event you've been
wailing for-those $10 will
look better in your pocket!
COMPLm ALTIRATIONS
.INCWDED
OPEN
SUNDAYS
11 TO 5
COSTA MESA, 16,01 Ne'iiport Blvd. at 16th
GARDEN GROVE, 12172 GARDEN GROVE Bl VD.
-
;·t
DAILY PILOT i't1ll PMN
Thursday, Aprll 9, 1970 DAIL v PJLOr JI
Law yers Clash O~er Panther T rial
By TOM BARLEY
Of a. o.ir, Plltf Sltlf
SANTA ANA -A witness'
attorney tangled with Arthur
DeWltte League's law ye r
Wednesday and hotly objected
to defense maneuvers that
were, he a.aid, putling his own
client on trial.
Attorney Keith Muuro's ob-
jections came as the Superior
Court murder trial of the at.'-
cused Black Panther beg:,in its
eleventh day. But his pleas
that Judge Samuel · Dreizen
,haJl the questioning of key
prosecutJon witness Rick Tice,
181 were Just · as repeatedly
o~rruled by the jurist
"My client has been granted
Immunity from proeecutJon so
that he can ofter more com·
piete iestlmony In this trial ,''
Munro protested. "But these
tactics today are not rl!lated
to the charges and i1 mlghl
well be that my client's coo~
tinued responses will not fall
under that same immunity."
Tice told defense attorney
Robert Green tbat he had
posses&on of a gun on the day
follo)'ling the shooting of police
officer ~elson Sasscer but th at
he carried it to protect his
brother from members of US
.._. a militant Negro organiza-
tion which has repeatedly
clashed w:lth Black Panthers.
.was wllll League la8t Jwie 4
when the 21.year-old Negro
shot Sasacer. But the youth
argu~ In court that ~ague's
scUon wa.<1 token in selr
defeD!e and that "everybody
knew" ~at Sasaicer shot a
Mexican in the back about a
month before the League in-
cident.
The proeecotion elaims that •
Leaaue guMed down Saaactr
shortly after the patrolman ,
halted League and the younger
'nee and ordered them to pro.
duce identification.
in the Lea1111e 1r1.i.
0 • p u .t y Diltrlct A!lomey
Everett Dickey and t h e
younger Tlce'I own lawyer,
Tom Keenan, have v~ly
denied lll>I B!lY sucll Uuuts
were mlde at any time,
Marshall Link
Bill Readied ,
SACRAMENTO -Legisla-
tion aimed at coosolldatlnc the
five Orange Cconty Marshals
offjces into one county age~y
has been introduced into the
st ate Assembly il>'
Assemblyman Rober t H.
Burke (R-Huntina:too Beach).
Making a loyful Noise
Sex· Crimes
Bring Jail
Green11 probing, apparently
related to the disappearance
of the gun used to till oUicer
Sasscer, followed the
testimony of Tlce 's brother
Carl Stevie Tice, 16, that be
Stevie nee, who bas of-
ferest varylng testimony at the
trial and earlier Superior
Court hearings and before the
Orange County Grand ·Jury
has also testified. that he was
threatened by the prosecution
with 14 years In prison if be
did not show up as a witness
Burke says his measure (AB
2165) could prov i de for economy of operation and
allow the marshal's offJce to
conduct services at 1 higher
rate of efficiency.
Members Of the Orange Coast College Evening Chor-
ale rehearse Brahms' "Requiem" for a perfonnance
Sunday, April 19, at 4 p.m. in the OCC auditorium.
Les Van Dyke is directing the chorale, \Vhich also
will offer selections from 0 1'1.in of La Mancha"
and "Ki smet."
SANTAANA-ASantaAna -school teacher ,who a·dmitted I
that he semajly molested the __.-::-
12-yeac-old son of the woman "ARK C
For the
Meetings
TMUllOAY
"$!'-·~ ...... "!it' r1l t ton Sftcl Ol/lllnl' C ,
Pl m Av1., ""~"'*' ... , •: D.m.
U.S. H1v1t $ell Cldct c-, nu hrr.lflCI RON. S11111 .....-.-f·D.m.
W•tmlN .. r Mldlal Euillnl'1 P111I,
Westm!n1twr Hllllllltl, Ht I p I I I I
Clrcle, W.lmlnallr. 1 ,;rn.
M11e11lc l 1 d ;e,100P'H•-I" W•lmll't'fw AYlllUI 'Ind Of 'l.r SI•-'· WlltmJNll!r, r:• '·"'·
Coll• Mne Gr"'" Al IOC I Ill Gn. Gr111D1 Hill, 2JW Th11rn Avt .. Collt MHI, 1::11 o.in.
Nc-1 Ht rtlo!' flk1 ~lub, l!:lkl LDCkM. 3$ vi. Oc:>llrto, H-1 B11dl, I O.IJI. Matonlc: Gok1111 Htrt)Or While ShrlM ND. ,., M11C1Alc Temt111. l-101 1511\-S!rn t. N1WDOrt Bffch, I o.in.
Ort,_ c-1 ll'N•I B'llll1, Mtn:~
Slvlnol and U.n A»n., 7112
E=-r, Hunt/~ 'f::Cll.t..I p.m. H•~~I :t'to:irtd ~ 11, $ A~vt,._ ~_,,~ Slnt1 AM l=rv. fi'i: ~
Ron :.~""I' A,.. o.m. "ei: ~< • 31a11111 (QVnlY, IY I~ A " '211 !rvlne
YI .. H P'lf&}"y ::IG o.m. .
Hi"llnalon Buen llot1rv c I v b .
i""'!J.:Oft f••ch l11n. H11nll1111ton M.~I~ 1l~nsG'£liib, Stull Shirt, ZUI w. CHI! HltlhWl'i', N1 .... oor1 Bttcn, 12;1S P.m.
Births
SOUTM COAS~osfrf ... ~ Mu .. I T.,
Mer<h u Mr. tnd Mf'I, Wllll1m S. R1nd1M. Ill.
!1Jll Allclnte Drlv1. Mlulon Viti•.
• rl. IMl\i u Mr. 11'1111 Mn. Div M. P1•!on. lllO? B,....erlon. Dan. olnt. 1lrl. Mr. tnd Mf'I. Ectw1rd R. Smltn. 204 Mlr.,..,r, Al>I. A. Sin Clemlll!I. bcw, Mardi U Mr, •nd Mrs. ltWl'ffCe A.,. 5t1nley, 7lSf1 C•'i'l lltUlh ROid. Et ,., .. boY.
Mr. tnd Mra. LIDY<I 0;) Trottlf, ln:IO v-Stretl, ltnect1, 1 .• 1trl ... ~.
Mr. ""' Mrs. John J, Oonl.,., 11S Del "--· lllo. 1. $all Clemente, boY. M!:,-Ind Mrs,__~-r A. Frost. ln•t '"°""' ltnr.,..,,, DIM Palnl, 1!rt.
Mr. tncll ""'f· Bruct E. Nlll'WUIML 117 Mlrtmt r. Dt. A, San Cltmtnlt. bov.
Death Notiees
SCOTT
""""' M1t :koll. AH '2, et 7700 ltmPSOn, S~• a Gerdl!I ~ 0.11 of 1111111,
APrll 7. Sllnr!Yld •bJ IOlll llm1 frlllld1.
Mr. Ind Mrs. Min.Id Q, McGf'IDGr, ol
Tv1t111, Services. $1hmMy, IO AM, Bell
9 r1111dwt'i' Ch1H!. wlltl l1'i'. Ch1rlt1
lmll!I olffcl1llrt11. Enlofnbmlnl, H1rbor
Jlnt Mlmol'lll P1'11, BIQ Broadw1y
Monu1no, Dlr1Ctor1. •
TAYLOJI
Gttnn K. Teylor. AH .,., ol 13' Can1r1n,
(Pdl Mett. 0.11 ol CH11t!, Aprll 7, Sur·
VIWOI' by wlft, Donllhv1 tiw ....,,, Kin
incl ON11, COllt MHll four tlf'ollllrs,
Elwood, Rome. w .. llf end C1rflon TtY·
lor; 1tv1 1l1!1rs. RClll L-11. Ev1 Bralks.
01111 Wttton, ltlttrl1111 H111Kh111 incl !d'nt Met Cn:iW1tY. tll of Florldt. V!1-
llallon I'll be91n Thv,.,..,., l'lldl"f'. II n
N-. tttnluth Friday, 10 AM, B•U
lln:11d1¥1Y C,,.otl. Prtv111 t1mllv 1r1ve-
1ldl strvlus, Frld1y, 11 AM, H1rbor
Rtil Mamorl1t P1rt,, .,.Ith E!Olr1 LIOll
Chrl1tl1nHn incl Brvc1 JoltnlOll oltlcl-
l llntl. Btll BrClldw1v Morhllrv, Dlractorl.
ARBUCKLE A SON
Weslcllff Mortuary
U7 E. 17th SL, Costa Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR 3.9450
Costa MeA Ml 1-ZUf e
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 B"°""ay, Cotta M,..
LI l-3m • Dil.DAY BRO'nlERS
HDUagloo ValleJ M-..,.
11111 Be ... -· Halhopo Btaell
IG-7111 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel
3580 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach, CaWornla
"4·1'1111 • PEEK F Al\IIl. V
COU)NIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'ilCll Bolu Ave. w .. tmtu .... 11M11S • SREFf ER ft10RTt1AllY
Lapna Btacll 4K-t53S
Su CJemeate U:UlOI • SMITHS' MORTUARY
1%'1 Man SL
Hu lin"°" Beac~ -
THE BEST
R1Henll1, , • I I 1 '"'""
"'••11t1h " 11 efllt ef tll• werlllf'r
111 .. t ,epul•r r.eMle 1trlp1, ·atd
It ... 11., '" tll• DAILY •ILOf. I -
'
he was dating was sentenced m'J..OO'"'E• Monday to 90 days iJ:t Orange B mi •
County Jail and pla~ on pr<r ~ • ·• • _ ,:; ;ii ......... Record Doctor Says Negro
Youth Hardly Hurt
balion for the next two years. ~.... •
Addl!iooal ellsrges filed by FRONT END ALIGNMENT the prosecution against Orville -• • • • •
Lloyd J\11dyell. 37, were drop.. . · $ $7.95
3.00 Dissolutions
of Marriage
pepl~a~ith Ille filing ofthe guilly BA LANCE FRONT WHEEL • • • •
SANTA ANA -A physic ian juvenile hall at the time of the r' 2 00
DISSOLUTION 01' MA••IAOI .... t6tified Wednesday in incident, told Judge ){enneth el!~:~:;~~l~~:ir;~s~e~ h ~h~ ·:S BRAKE ADJUSTMENT • • • • • • • . •
Superior Court that all he Williams that Faust struck ft II di · "C $ 2 9
Kov•~ldl. JclYa L-Md l1'IGmal M"'°" Glllrri.n,, Vtn1 MltthfW ....r P1trtd9
could find on 17-year-old Jesse Gilmore •;12 or 1s limes ""ith .a er a ege Y uncovering a · T t I Value 1 Gilmore shortly alter the long record of sexua_I ~aults 0 Q • all o! his might." on the 12-year-old v1cllm and Mii.. Sfur8"" Tllelmll MlrJe I nd
J•m" Mi'nlti Bradlett, Lor•liM L. Ind Marton w. Mlllnlr, oi.111 Md ll:udittfo 11.-n, R-11 C. Ind OorotlTY 0.
Codlr1n. Rabett W, AND Mlldrtllll V. S'-1rt, Edl1'11 Mid Elble
5hoemakrr. Andree µ • .,_ llldlolrtl I!.
$1trt, Shlrln LaiulM .-nd Ch1rie. ... ..
JollnlOn. 8tfll;wyiln Ntll Miii Adennt
Fltrger1td, Lowell ilnd Riii P.
Grftfl, Ellubetll M. 11111 Revnold G. w1m1m1, wllnwn P. ind Peullne E,
M11son, /'Mrr AM Ind W11ter T. sntts. Ztldna Vadlne 9nd JMPl'I' Oet
G11oYlc, Klltirvn Ind EdWltd Johll
AberHld, C1role A. 11111 ROMlcl I(.
Brown, Wlndll J. AND Liebert G.
Dyt, Rodriey L. Ind LH1 k ,
Jones, Nancv Lou 11\d Freddie G~ne
Lui{, llt-1rk:r A. and Frink Jo11P11
Mool"f, Ch1r!e1 E. and ll1rti1r1 Ltl
Rlue, Marie~ M. uid w1m1m A.
H1v1, Curtis Wiimer 1"'1 Ju1111!1
Negro youth 's alleged beating Ro.ssiter was a ma j 0 r his 14-year-old brother. Their
by a Santa Ana police officer witness in the grand jury in-mother told officers that most were "a few minor abrasions of the offenses occu-ed when kin vesigaUon that led to Faust's •• and a red spot on the s ·" indictment. He has a 1 s 0 Midyett took the boys on
Dr. Eugene Wallace teslified testified that he was fired Y:eekend trips to his house
lo the trial of patrolman from his Superior Court pos! trailer in the J\iojave desert.
Richard E. Faust, 27 • that he because he refused to heed U1c ~1idyett r e s i g n e d his
e1aminOO G i I m o r e im· warning of his supervisors teaching p o s t immediately
mediately alter the alleged that he should not. go to the after the charges were filed
clubbing incident last July 8 grand jury with his story. against him.
that led to the officer's in-!-;;;;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;iiii.miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;illi;Jil.: dictme nt by the 1969 Orange
County Grand Jury. HOURS )
Every Nite 'Til 9 I
SI. On9t, Edwin M, ANO JIU
Re<lwen, Chrrvl M ANO D1rrvl A.
Hiii. Vldorll L. 1nd Rlci..rd L.
Wlllttt, Oon11d EllllCM tnd Joen Marie
&4ornu. Ewl'l'n L. AND Dw1l11 ll, H1rtrr, N"rv;y C. ilnd o.ou.i.s ll,
Heesd'I, James H. AND Ma!"llrll Ann
Dowty, Mll'Y Alkt •nd Tl'>ornq SHnce
TrH.Mtl. SMron D. AND Roblrt 0111
Houslan, Dolartt LH wd H1111h E,
There was nothing, the doc-
tor said, to indicate that the
youth was impaired in any
way by whate-rer restraints
Faust and a fellow officer lm·
posed on him. And the physi-
cian, who regularly examines
young patients at the county's
juvenile hail, confirmed that
he prescribed no further treat·
mmt for Gilmore nor did he
think any was necessary.
·MARKC.
BLOOME
To Fit _,Your Poclcetboolc ••• suNDAY 9-6
INTE•LOCUTOllY oec•et:s
Pace, lrtndol M. Ind Anllt!i. s.
LI"°' C.rrnet E""llll Mod Beverl'r A1111 L.UV, Eull V. Ind ~HE.
FOl'ftter, JD1111 Ind hall L.
K,_lfl, RDllllld M. •nd K1rff! Lt9
Wlllllmt, Lindi K. Ind C1r1 D.
CunnlneMm. Miry Ellrtbeltl t ncl
Alber! RMI
Cohill, C.rol Sue Mod Amald
Lultlerochlll, Jacwetyn Ind A-Id Pl-neer, !ettv Je1n 1nd J9dl Arthur
Riefer, c,nfl'll1 M.. •nd Mll!Oft F.
H1rtlhorn, Donlld Edw1rd ...i Mlxlrie
Ell:ebeln Hiii, Vi111lnl1 E. Incl Ed91r W,
J°'""', Evelin D. •ncl J1ck. Jr. Pe<iukll\01, Drlndl SUI Sll"dllr Ind
Dol!11d Wllll•m
Alsx1nOl!r, Rowm1"1' incl Donolld
Frink. Lindi A. Ind (llnl HJ McCr•cken, C•rol A11n Ind Glr'/'
Jafll, C1ro1 F. Ind D1e L. Coltm1n. J-Lei 1nc1 Jerrv Lee
Horton, J1mes w. 1nd Dolorn McNutt, Evtl¥'11 Narml Ind Rob9rt
Geo111e
Atv!lllr. eettv Anr'I 1nd DtwfY It. Endlc(lff, Edward T. Ind H111I M.
Robinson, Steven H. Ind Judl't:•" PNrt
Cll1Pm1n, Ada P. 1nd Gear~ C.
Merer, Slndr• L. 1/ld Wlllr~ Powy, Ger1kl!nt •nd Cletus G.
8tU, Jayce K•ftlleen Ind Jal'ln "-•rel
Pehrson, l"nd' lee •nd John H111rv
Caln, Reo r ... Ann 1nd J°'""' w1rc1 l<ston, Z!l1 Ind Jen MORE MOfll:
FJl l lf(OIO fftl 2 11 F'INAl. Ot:C•IEt:S
Mason, eOW!n 8Pl'd 111d fldlfCCI
Sur1n11t
Jollntc111. P1mela E. AND Dann R.
Breese, l1111e 111d A1.,,,, L"""
Carter, S111ran l . ANO Roy L.
Joh-. EwlYll LllCllle •nd lllt!lt Haw1rd
W1ltol\, amv J. ANO COtKl1nc:1 Logftr. Esther end Lucien
C11tro, M1rv Ellen tnd Robert Vincent
Smlll!, Oorlllt let Ind Gr_., Tupper
JUOd, M1ur~ tl'llll S11nuel E"9•r Sloon. A\ldrt" J. •nd w11n1m 11.
W11Mr, G!ltdYs E. ANO Ll!'Wit Clv~
lonardo, J1nN E!lzabetll and Thoma~
AMn11r H!n~lt. Anna MIY Ind Errw!ll Frink
Smltn, Linda Love and Michael Ja•@oph
RelHI, Jchn P1ul 1nd 011n1 cn1rlfrw!
Kline, Nila Neomi Ind G1M L1v1me
ervan, John 11. •lld Ctndlde Yvell~
Hofmtnn, P1trk!a H. 11'1111 Robert F,
Ha•lln~u. Wall'r Warr•n ar>d Ellub.·~
SPr!l'llltf, ll\llffflCI and Vtrt
Snl'dw, June Ellt11 11'1111 OoN1d Her1)o •!
St.Jtes, 1111111 Anti end Harold Hrrblirt
Miles. G-.i ~ Stanln'
Mtndoz1, Dote!"" JMn tllcl El'l'ltSl Lff"~•. L-ls Lewrence alMI Elllee~ .....
Dennl1, R0te Ann tnd WU!l1m ltoH
Powell. Jl/fW Atty ..... Ind A. Gllfltl
Sondf!r-. B1rtltr1 Jetnne end Ktllh
Mo~ W1r11tn, WtYl\e W. 11'1111 JUI E.
Dwem. Lll!lln LOlllll t nd MldlHt ... _,
M•~· Wlttl1"' F. 11'1111 O!tnM Jtne s-"· GIMnl Lou 111111 WllH•m -Nodal, Vrl!'llt t nd Slew Miiie
C11blt, ~ KIN end ln!ll 0."'f
Faust ill accused of assault
with a deadly weapon as a
result of what the prosecution
clalm.s was his overzealous
use of a nightstick on Gilmore .
Witnesses have testified, in
conflicting statements, that he
clubbed the youth as he Jay
prostrate on the curb im-
mediately in front of the
Orange County Pro b at Ion
Department b u l I d i n g on
Manchester Avenue.
Two probation officers have
testified that Faust used his
baton to strike Gilmore "two
or three times." But private
investigator Frank Rossiter,
who W&!I a court clerk in
Chi1d Death
Trial Held
SANT A ANA -Kenneth
Lloyd Watkins has b e e n
granted a one-week delay to
prepare his respo n s e to
charges that he beat his 5-
year-old stepson to death in a
Santa Ana motel.
Watkins, 23, was ordered by
Superior Court Judge James
F. Judge to return to his
courtroom April 10 Jor further
action on the murder charges.
He is represented by the
public defender .
He is accused of the murder
last Feb. 9 of Christopher
James Clarke. Jt Is alleged
that he beat the little boy lo
death because the youngster
refused to stop sloshing water
on the bathroom floor.
Glenn Ford Will 'Star'
At Headliners Banquet
SANTA ANA -Acto r cing, provided by the 15-piece
Gletm Ford will head the Society for the Preservation of
celebrity list April 18 when the Big Bands p r o I e s s J o n a 1
Orange County Press Club's orchestra.
annual Headllnera Banquet "1'11s is the one event of the
s a I u t e s achievements by year when those who report
oUtstanding men and women. the news pay tribute to those
Nominated by some !l>O who have made the news in a
members or the w or It In g pasitive manner." says Press
press, winners of the aMual Club President Jim Duncan.
•wards will be named at the Duncan , assistant managing
dinner-dance in the Elks Club editor of the Santa Ana
here. Register, noted that President
Ford, star of Wall Disney Richard M. Nixon was Man of
ProducUoos' "Smith!" w i 11 the Year lut spring.
represent the studio whose other.s bavt included John
late founder was one of the B. Lawm, William Spurgeon
press club's first litan of the Ill, Walter Knott, Dr. Arnold
Year honorees. Beckman and Joan Irvine
Announcement d. the Man Smith.
or Woman of tbe Year ii a Deadline for t lcket
llighlight of Ille Headliners purchases ls April II, and !lley
Banquet, which btgb11 wiLh a I. may be oinatned for •10 per
e::M> p.m. hosted cocklall hour, perton by writing Orange
7:30 dinner and 1:30 P"'ll'""· County p,.,. Club P.O. Sox
Mull• llW follow !or din-91, Huntln&too Beach.
, ... * COffff , •.. * r;,.. l•rtoa. , •.. * Sofety lor,. .... * w•HI lotrrtio" , •..
*TY WHIU rou WAlf
5.60aH 6.951114 7.lS•14 7.75•14 7.7Sx1S
D71/14 111n 4 f 71/1 4 f7t/1 S ,$J4 95 $J695 $J J95
..... 15
llPl/ltl ... ,.,.
1111/IS)
$15 .... ,, 125•JI• s 6 . .SO•l3 7.75•14 J.00•1 3 t .lJ1lJ 7.JS•l.S 7.l5•14 P71/1 4 l .2Sa14 G71/1S f71/1 J 171/1 4 G71n4 $1695 $22 95 $24 95
1.25•14 1.2s.1s 1.ss.14 a.4s.15 , 1.15115 t .oo.1s 5•14 1.ss111.s 1.1sa14 1.15.1s t.~1s
G71/14 G71/1 5 M71/14 N71/1 S J71/1 S l71/1J Jt/14 M71/1S J71/14 J71/1 S l71/1S I $J 995 $2295 $2695 $289$ $2995 $32'~
110 smm a W1U1IWAll 11.t 1 una ~..._ WN ITIWAW S2.tS D TltA
m; .. •'9,11 ,.0-lt "t.U.!b:
"'ASFRJUr•
:-.; a.at 7e Gt Ml .. r & .;,.,
~$20 7~~
•f-~Q , ...... ,.
l'fCIAL NICO ON AU S.ZISI
"i\Wti C. llH•t Tirr G••"""IH "'""' .. 11 .. -• ... -n11.tr_!,... ......
...... i. ...... ""-·i--·-·-lllr ....... ~-...... -............. . ............ ,.,.. .... __ ...., __ ...,..,.... ........... __ ,.,.._ ......... ,.. --...,fit Ulllll llQI "-... -.......... ......... ---·--... ""·"' ............. . --·--s.--.r.1w,_..-1111.,. ,._,., __ ,..,. ___ .. ,...,,,_ ·-· lltw.•fl,M ll--al&S ~ r.m ' . '
•
Allal!o!M ... _ P•k
6'62 LINCOLN II.VD.
ICMtltr II L_. IMI ltllllll 126-H IO
• •
NOW-OPEN in COSTA MESA
3005 HARBOR BL VD.
' I CORNIR OF IAICI R & HAHOR ••• 1 17•1000
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I fl WI. Y I'll.OT
ffe '
T~. ~"9, 1970
:10 ••..ie. Before Vote
Moment . of Truth Came • Ill Carswell Decision Ln'S BE FRIEKDLY
Ir roe blw °"' or~
or m.w ot anrone movlnc
to ouf area. please tell ua
IO that W'll may ntend I
friendly wt.Jconie and help
them lo becoml aCQIJ&lnW
la tbrir new 1um>W1dinP.
9J II. L lll:llW AllTI m
WAllllNOl'ON ( AP ) -
~--•-·1 llepibllcm Whip -rt P. Grillln llleppecl off the Senett fleor,._. up a cJoakroom
.....,. ooo IUld called the Wblte H.,..,
"lt'• bopeleu,'' ht told len-
netn Blllu, an aide ln the ~
.,.. kvW lla1-Glllce.
'II» roll call -o a
Sopwww Cowl -G •. Hamid Camrell WU lllll lO
mfnt111 any.
But there ""' no need lo rulll' the word to l'r<llllltol
Nlaa lhtt 1111 Senile lelder1
D0tr ukl tbe CIUK Wll doom-
ed.
H1~y11rudy lmow.
And -there WU DO need to
loll the -· of --:ho oppOled the Prt:l&dent'• ..
cond nominee from tilt South.
'Ibey, too, •lrudy !mew.
'Ibey hid for d1y1.
ANDOlJll llOMENTll
Bui ......, momenta lly
-· doe In port ... lut-
-Wbltl -trick tlllt boddhed 11111 .......... -~ .. chit with "'!'• Fracl11Dln. Tffttblt' with G r I f f I n • s
pbooe eall -incidents Mood out Wedneld.1y in a
~ interviews u k e y
Daum In the llnlRle '°""" to pinpoint tb.t one mcnent
-they lmow for ctrllln ti.,wwldwlnarlooe.
For Grtflln end oth.!r ad·
-tlaa leaden then had
-lnawtn,i cloobt .....
thl -rejoded • -Moadlor to ....i the embattled
nomlMt"" t.ct to t be
• Judldory CGmmltllt.
'fbol 90le WU U lo «. On
the lllrf~, a 10Ud wte of
coollclmce.Butto-lntht
8-(e who knew, it WU I
lrqile -of reprieve. "We counted on two« three
IWit.c:bes to our 1kle. Perblps
thal'a -.. I mode my
miltab," old Grtfftn. ''1bey
dldn' come. F'lllbrtibt. Spong,
Dodd -their old< beld. They
. jut didn't come."
• ~ It.Ill seemed a chance
; lo pull out • 4M7 victory, aJid
. ~untll-'lflerl
; o'clod< ,_.Y nl&ht.
: (Jllil --lobbyitt • Wll1ilm Tlmmonl caDld Grlf·
oJ>POSltion. there was even a plan to try cX Nevldl had been under
• ID Issue Key Figures
They felt the. d ow n e a s t and block Vice President Spiro bome-atate preaure whtre -
veteran o( 21 years in the T. Agnew from casUng a tie he 11Id -there had been in·
Senate might interpret ttie call breaker if the issue had come <llcaUons he would face no re-
.., pressure, something she to that. . eltctlon opposition if he voted
tetrents. And it allo appeared Brooke said ·he wa.s certain for Carswell. · So. Coast Vlsilor
494-9361
VOTE WAS TIPOFF
Konl\lcky'1 Cook
best we could hope for was a
tie," said Grlttln.
The hope then .. s1ec1 dllefly
with -Republiclnl -Winston Prouty of Vermont,
Mllflmi Owe Sm I t h ol
Maine, Marlow w. Cook of
Kentucky. But Cook wu the
key.
Although Gr~fin declined to
go into specifics, other aoarces
on both aides said thb: was the
sltullloo'
The Independent, but In-
fluential Mn. Smith W a I
believed lo be truly undedded,
tom between "wantin, to be •
1ood Republican" -u she
confided to one friend -and
being 1enuinely opposed to
Carswell.
Prouty, lacing • Iliff ...
election battle a c a i n s t a
liberal Democrat who has
mlde an issue of Carswell.
was agreeable to 10 either
way just u long u be wasn't
the swing vote.
that a move by Mrs. Smith of victory •l3Q m.lnutes after Brooke said he knew this but
might shake the Cook com-Monday's vote." also had COUllt.ed Cannon " Ha b V'sif mttme"t at the last mlnutt. But he also collCeded ·~·t he IOl!dly against Carswell. r or I or
Anxious moment NO. 2 came had anxious morutnt No. S "I was talking to a delega· 646-Gl 74
soon after when word began to shortly after the v o ti n g lion of .even French aviation I~~~~~~~~~~ 1 circulate that Harlow had call-started. . people when the buzzer rang," I; "l was thin,.. .... of C.ook,'' he said cannon. edCookandRepublican .... ,. STARS Richard sc h we j k er of said. "J felt pi'et.ty sure we "[' come ao early in the
Pennsylvania and told them had him. But wben Cannon alphabet theft's USUll!y no Sv'11rt Ort1•rt i• .,.. •f ftlo
••·· Mn. Smllh had d-i'ded didn't answer his name I neat· • way I can aet to the floor in -11111·1 tr••t 01trolot•"· Hr1 --I d columt1 I• •t10' of ttio DAILY to vote for Carswell. Y led." time to answer my naQle on •PILOTS ,.,.t fe•tur••·
An ~armed Cook in tum.~~De~moc::::r:M:._:Ho.:;:w:ard:.:_~CaMon'.'.:::::__..'.tbe~flrsl'.'.'..:~""~'~""~"~~~~..'!::::::;;:::::;;;:;============1
! called Edward W. Broolce of
Massachusetts, tbe Senate's
, only Negro and the leader of
Republican opponents to
Carswell . I VERIFIED FACT
I
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COUNTS 0000
lndl•n.'• 81yh,
HARD DECISION
Moine'• S.n. Smith
Brooke immediately check·
ed the White House, verified I
the fact a ruse had been at· I
tempted and set out to find I
Mrs. Smith. I
F. Haynsworth Jr. lut fall. He cellence from 21 young men
voted for Carswell in the who never really got a chance
Judlciliry Committee add sign-to live tbell, by George, we
ed. • letter eM'litr this week in ought to demand it of someone
which a commJttee majority we're putting on the Supreme
urged the Senate not to send Court."
the oomlnetion back to com-Cook said he c 111 e d
mittet, Presidential couruellor Bryce
He evtn voted a g a i n s t Harlow Wednesday morning to
recommittal, declaring that it tell him.
WM ducking the issue to do "He didn't. He toJd them
otherwise. Tuesday," said one reliable
But he was known to be source who added :
troubled by ctm1ee of racism
and mediocrUy agalmt t b e FIRM COMMITMENT
aomlnee and he was beina "We had his firm com-
carerul to tell no one -or at mitment days ago. We check·
least no one who was talking ed it every day, but we were
-whit he would do. counting on him ."
Whether he told Presidei.1t Cook said he also called
Nixon during a long chat with Mn. Smith Wednesday morn-
_him alone , at the White House ing to tell her what he was
Mooday night ts not koowJi. gotll( to do.
But Griffin still thought "I told Margaret that 'I just
there was 1 chance Wed-wanted you to know I've
netday morning. decided to vote against die
"I· think ·he1J1 be with us " nomination. I just wanted lO
Republican Howard Baker Ot tell you,' " said Cook.
He caught up to her in the
Senate dining room just nine
minutes before the v o t e
started.
"I told her v•hat was haJr
penlng," he aaid, ''I told her
that her name wa s being used
in a manner that was not very
nice. I told htr she had to live
with herself."
Mrs. Smith was unavailable
for comment on why sbe voted
as she did. But a source close
to her said the White House
use or her name was aJr
parenUy a factor.
She also reportedly called
Brooke after the vote to thank·
hlm .
Opi'l'lion on the opposition
camp was divided on just
when they beJieved the strug-•
gle , that most said looked
hopeless on Easter weekend,
appeared to be won.
Sen. Birch Bayh (0-lnd.),
regarded by his staff as a
care ful head counter,
predM:ted a victol'y for the
fi rst time Tuesday night and
hit it right on the nose -51 to
45.
-----,_,, G""''i... Cook said he didn't ask her •••~ -·~-NOT CERTAIN ,..,.,_ how she was going to vote and
••1 and find out," said she didn't say. Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-
Griff1n. B this 11 t h led M'~.). said he .. -. u·~·'" u ca o er promp .... ,, .. ~ "'"'".....,
GRJll'FIN ON .FLOOR anxious moment No. I for the until the vote beg an. He said
I
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; fin at i..ne lo Hy word had
: come tbroarb Illinola.
: llo!•d!l•e• ~ Ila! Sin. a.Ill ff. Psq -. . u
-. be In the ~tlaa
·~ wu the ticker. He
came , earty in the alpllabet,"
llW one: ~ Jn the op-
iQ!tloo dmp. Besides. this
~ added, they only need'
ed Coot end con11dered Mn.
Smith and Pniuty u in-
awe.
LlmFIGllT
Grtffln was on the floorJi"-------------------.1 Ji!!Wnl"C to the final miDUles
ol the last three """" ol
debate when Bem louncl him
at u ,15 p.m. to 111 thet Coot,
too, WM bit.
BIBLE THOUGHTS
* Satisfaction Guaranteed or yotir money refunded .
*For All Ages! l3abies, childmt, adul cs
I I. I .
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-'1 lmow ...., hi the very
I 1'e ~ 'n.i-..
hool lod -·· 'IMtooallful flcM for Clement
* * * * * * High Court Looming
'"Jblt W&I when [ called the
White Houle," said Griffin.
MllACLIS: Som• 1coff •t REAL mir•·
cl•L of th• l ib1, •fld l••k to EXPLAIN
AWAY th•1•, thu1 1howi119 o·WEAKNESS
i11 th•ir bolrof i11 G.d·, POWER. Th•
l iblo portr•v• • God ,..ho i1 ALL·POWER·
FUL. A11y other eo!IC•pt would di1pl•c•
God from hi1 th1011•.
I
* Limiled Off er! One per subject, two per family.
APRIL 5th THROUGH 12th I
The White Howie, however,
apparently already kn e w
although there are conflicting
versions u to how and when
they found out and no ex:
plaoat.ion of why Griffin was
not told . . :· As Campaign Issue Cook said he did not reach
11n unchangeable declsioo unUI
'1'Ibey'vt raised tbe 1nue Tuesday afternoon while driv·
that the peopie don't want ine back from a White Houae
J•1u1 b•liov•d 01111 T•1tamenl MIRACL ES!
-Jo11•h •nlll th• wh•I•, Mott. 12.:40; H•ali119 of Iha l•p•r,
lk. 4:27; Ml1eculou1 food 1vpply •11d ••i1in9 lllotd, Llr. 4:26,
I Kin91 17:f ·24. (Ar• 101na molll•r11i1h wliar tha11 Je1u1, think·
int to •:ipt•l11 '"''Y lh•1• fll l••cle17l.
J.1u1 p•rformod miracl•1! -Rei1•d d•td, Jn. 11 :J9·45; Walk•d
ot1 w•lor, M•tt. 14:24.JI: Tu,11~111 w•t•• it1to wit1•, Jt1. 2:7.1 1:
Many olh•ri, J11. lO:JO.J I. l ib!e mi,1cle1 9i•a us FAITH, Jn,
20:)0.) I: .Ach 1:5·1.
·BUENA PARK INGLEWOOD
CANOG,\. PARK LONG BEACH
COMPTON I s I OLYMPIC & SOTO
SANTA ANA 1·
SANTA ff SPRINGS I
SANTA ¥0NICA I
SOUTH COAST PLAZA I
TORRANCE I
VALLEY
• •
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WASlllNGTON ( A P ) -
,,. -"' the Supreme Comt -and the Joac, bitter *"ale It eymbol1--_,
be the mojar ..... ol the com-tnc o:agr•wGI e It ct lo n .,.,,.,., ....
~ Nbon wm IUpply
the ll<publku lip! ...... he
Mii a -hlo far •llctiog
a new nominee, a third ddce
farhOHtthe-dented
G •. Harrold Clmrell.
Seil. RGlltrt J. Dole (ft,
Kana.), oll'eldy hu wired the
President, and !ollowtd up
wtth a ~ call, utfinl
the llQllponement of any new
court --1 untll -the Nov. S congressional elec~ --Tllot ""Y• Dole said, Nixon
muld tab to the voters the
isaae of a eotrt. shift from •c-
tivism to a IDClft COOlel'Vative .......
"He dkll:!.'t say yes and he
diet't Ny no," Dole llid after
motinc Im --to Nix-on. "But he d&d NY this is
IOinc to taU ane time."
11 K 1W1 unlll cempoign
time, tbot In ltoolf wlll be •
p>ltlical lllgnal, end the Senett
rejection o f Southern
comervatlvu Canwtll and
Clftnont F. H1)'llSW<l[th Jr.,
wtU od!o throu&I> Ille autwnn ..-y,
ceremony at which Prtstdent
CltlWtU," Dole said after the NLl:oo awarded 21 posthumous
Sei!M< vote. "W•II, they're l10I Medali ol Honor.
MOD ERN MIRACLES ''' n•l n••d•cl fo, f•ith, ,.., h•va tho1•
of th• l ibl•, J11. 20:JO.J t -"THESE ••• wr iH1" th at Y• might
L•li••• -". S•tan ''" do SOME rnir1cl•1 lthou9h limit.di lo
doc1i•e th• tuHible, Ea. 7:10·12: E•. 1:1 6·19; I Cor. 11 :13·15;
2 Th•11. 1.12.
If you ht¥• l ibl, qu1lion1, writ• or pho11• Ch urch of Chritl,
217 W .Wil1011 St., Cott• Me1a. Calif. 1926171. Pho11e 541.5711,
646·S76 l. T1N TY ctt.HI f -SINMlcrys 7:JO •.m,
COVINA ea· rs ORANGE
El MONTE PASADENA
GLENDALE m ucx AND co. PICO at Rimpou
HOLLYWOOD .., '00 POMONA VERMONT at Slauson 1.
I
I Pltoto llou.rs All Store• Sunday 1 Z Noon la 5 P.~f.
Pholo Houri 12 to 8 Daily
fOlng to 1et Carswell. But do "'nlis may IOUnd corny to
they want lo cbongt the you," said Cook, "hut I
court!" thousht to myself that if we
"It may be euier to chanl'!\_:d:;emand;;;;:thls::;;;;:degree;:;°':;::;:ex;;·:!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==========================:::::::-
the -than lo chanat the
--------------------------------------_.
Supreme Court,'' Dole said.
"I believe that would back-
fire on the Repubttcans," 11.ld
otlaboma Sen. Fttd R. Har-
ris, former thaimlan of the
D e m ocratic National Com-
mittee. "Are they goin1 to
purge memben of tfleir own
party?"
Thlrlten Republicans joined
31 Dtmocrats In wtlng to ....
ject C•r>nll 51 to 45. Th,...
ti. them, sens. Winston L.
Prouty ol V'"""'t, Oiarles
Goode!J or New York. and
Hiram L. Fq of Hawail, are
up for election thls year.
Canwell'• Sen ate cham-
pion& urJOd Nbon .. press
again for · a ccmenative
jUltlce. Sen. Roman L. Hruska
(ft,Nch.), end a hall-dozen col-
le-, put that In political
terms, too. ''The Amerkan
people"' apob cle8T'ly in 1918 ln
favor of a stricter in-
t.'prttation ol the law1,"
llruota Nid.
Huntington Beach Office:
Located at 91 Huntington Center
at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., . .
adjoining the San Diego Freeway,
1n Huntington Beach.
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C stereo103FM
J the sounds of the harbor
Jd.S~~youve never heard it so good
.... -· -
'--------------------------~--~-~------------~~~---------• .t...
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Oregon to Get ·n·e·a~I:r. _·Gas
• • • •• HEW 'Grdugingly' Clears Transfer From Okinawa
' '
WASHINGTON (AP) -The ment plans, which have been nouncement Mood>y s' Id ' be wried• lbolnl I Ive
Penllaan ii IOinl ahead· wJtb under review by s a f e t y HEW "bu a o recom-cbartertd trwport • h l p 1
a maalve' traufer· of lethal authorities for at least four mendltlon tel make" tn the from Otinlwa to Bangor,
war Pl from Okiuwa 1 to montbs. abtpplrc o&btr than notinl Wuh.
Ol'elon ifter obtalDIDc ·left-Penllgon sources say a,000 Wllhlnft.orl and Orep 11tate From there, the munitions
handed ' approval of thtpment to 10,000 tons of muni\i;9ns will o(flclali ;.lboUJCI be COl'llfllted wW be placed aboard dozens
plaDI by the Depmmmlt of be transported by sea and land aboql tbeJt'· llfety prepara· ol frei&ht can for rail move-
Healtb, Ed u c at I o n and when the stock -GB aDd VX tkn. 1 meat to the Umatilla Army
Wellare. nerve types as well a s s!:CRET PlANI Depot near Hermilton, Ort.
11Grudgln1ly" wu the tenn mustard gas -leavt Okinawa Under prWleM plans, dee.II-HEW'a clearance of lhlpping
used by one officer descrihinl in the near future. ed Jn a ~ ...-lnch tbJck precautiOns wu r e q u I red
HEW's clearance or the ship-A Defense Department an-document, the c:bllnlcall will under • l•w palled-b y i.;. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, Congreu late lut yur. P• .. ~
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GRANT PLAZA
Brookhurst & Adams e Huntington Beach
HOURS: Mon. lttru Sat., 9:30 to 9:30; Sun., 10 till 6
tagon officen say HEW •P-
peared rtluct.nt to act, c•us-
ing the dela)'.
; ni\ey're not saying o~."
a ·Pentagon o ff i c er com-.
mented.
"They're just saying they
have no objections to what
we've ·suaated."
, The Army wu ordered last
July by Secretary of Defense
Melvin R. Laird to transfer
the chemical weapons back to
the states to remain Jn the
acUve chemicaJ warfare in~
ventory.
One reason for the transfer
ls Okinawa's reversion 10
Japanese control in coming
months.
'Mle July movement order
also came only a few days
after disclosure that 23 U.S.
aoldiers and an American
clvtnan had been exposed to
ooitonous GB 1as on Okinawa.
No Ont was terioua!y injured
but the July I incident ·crtated
a diplomatic problem.
SECURITY S'l'IUCT
The Anny is propoging strict
safety •nd security measures,
including armed I u a rd s
travellnl( with the war
chemicals during movtment
and at various points along the
shipping route.
Offlcers say the Anny held
briefing after briefing !or
HEW officials and others In-
volved in tbe pro"poaed ship-
ment to uplain s a f e t y
measures. And hundreds or
questions were answered on
.paper.
· Still. HEW o!ficials Sffmed
uncertain about their role,
military men report.
"1bey never had a problem
like thls before," one officer
said. "Finally, HEW took the
posltlon that the law does not
say it has to approve the plans
-just review them."
So, HEW reviewed them,
and then let the plan1 go with
praclically no comment.
Wahington. and 0 re Ion
state agencies w:1n be caned
upon now to outline their
capabilities for dealing with
1t1ch eventualities u possible
derailment of a munitions
freight car during shipment.
Members of Congrep from
Wuhington and Oregon will
be briefed this week before Iny chemicals are moved, the
P01Jtagon said.
COUPLE READY TO CELEBRATE MARRIAGE
Fr•nk M1jor Shows M•n•l .Hit Stor1 ''" Escondido
lt1itlt1 th• "'i11p1llli1g tnd chiltllik• p•11m1111hip t"9n, the l'i•~r•
H ' L kl G ble d•pl•t• whtt Will Jord•11 hop•• t--1chi•v• wh•11 th. •tter1 reNr11 hin'I e S Uc Y am r • to tffic• i11. th• Apri_I 1<41~ Cott•~••• Clt<f C•11111ll 1l.ct11111 -1t•Wli• • 1 ty 111 the e.ty cor.111c1I.
His Bride Proves · It
Th• -ckildr•11 011 tlte 1kit1 ltotrcl h1vt lt1l111ct, ht""lll'f t W ll'tac•·•f
miJHf, elf., tov1r11m111t r1quir•• tl.111 ··"'· .,., .... hi ih .••'l11cil-•
•114 et1 1 mor• i.V•lltchi1I l1v1/. WiW. fourtt111 "''" 1f c1•l l•1tl1r•
1hip 11 1 1tf1'1111u11it., '1rchit•ct, citv pl11111i119 com111i1alt11 •r, city c11111•
cil1r1•11 •114 ..,.1yor, Wiii Jo1"111111 i1 t~• "''" te t i•• thi1 l11t1lt1ch11I 1t1·
LA MESA, Calif. (AP) -
Frank Najor was IS when he
left Iraq to find his fortune in
America.
. ltllil'f lo the city c11111cll. , .
from their home In Baghdad Will Jorda11'1 toi11 cill ft' r•1•1rclio i11 ~••.•••• '"'''':'•"''~"· tr1ff1.c the day before the Roman 1•fety, P''''' ••ll~llf, 1d.q111t1 Tire a¥! p•l•c• ,,of1ct101t, city ~•altlf1•
Clilholle c eremony waS fl.c1tlo1t, '"•••lep111•11t of tlow11tow11 Co1t1 Me11, control of_ •or ~"4
perfonned March 25 in • w1ter poll11!Je11 i nd 110!11 •lt1tlftl•1tf. A1 th• airthor ol th• cit., cn1t1• Be" t h h ~ p,.v•11ti-.. coll'l"'ltf•• 1NU11111c•, \liill J.rtl.111 will co11tin11• to 1ult111it In ~farch, 26 and weathly, 1ru C urc · 111~.11111.._ ti.furtt..r co•rtlin,tt tur t!tluint' •fforh towa1tl1 tli• r••
he went to Beirut to marry a "Hi." said Mana!. id11ctlo1t>of th•' city cri"'• r•••· •
girl he's never seen. "Hi,'' said Frank. &o•••••r ••••~" ric.11tlv iitdi~1titel hi1 f1ilh In Will J~rd111 i.., •P· "l' lucln• bl T . . . pol11tl11g lit"' to tk• St1I• Sco11ic. HJghw1y Advitory Co1J11111lt1•. m a •3 gam er , On the airliner flight home, Will JOrdt.11 w•lc.orn•• th• choll111t• ol city 9ov•r111J1•11t 1114 i1 • II'••·
guess." he said after returning he telephoned his brother fictioniif ;11,11tillilnt th• •p•cli liit1 011 th• city ol Co•I• Mo11 1t1ff iit
this week wllh Manal , his 17-Antwan. ,11cc•nf1111y io!vl11t citY problem•. .
year-old bride. ''I t's wonderiul." said VOTE WILL JORDAN, A,RIL 1'4111 -VOTE WILL JORDAN APllL 1411i
Najor; a carpenter's son Frank. •'W e 're in love COSTA MESA CITY COUNCiil
with only seven years of already." ,, D• a.ttl, cw,_, 1111 NtWJMrt ll'llll., c .... ,._
schooling, arrived in 1959 wilh,,i;ii;ii,;;ii;i;;;;Oiii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii..i0iii0iii-"'iioiiiiiiiii;;i';iiii~iiiii;~;imiiioii;;;;;Oiii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii;;;;;~ his brother Antwan, IS, from J1
the northern Iraqi town of Teli1ef.
'Ibey settled in San Piego
and bought a tiny grocery
store. They .erpanded it and
bought another in neighboring
El Caion. Today they also own
a 22-unit apartment house.
The boys 6rouattt the l·r
parents over In 1965, the year
Frank became a naturalized
U.S. citl.ien. Mean-. their married
sit&er Najea, living in Beirut, wu worrying that Fr•nk
worked so hard and was a bkhelor.
Najea wrote 1tlat Mana! was
from a 1ooc1 family and with a
~llty much like Frank's.
No. photographs w e re ex·
changed, and N.;ot and Manal
did not write to each other.
An airplane brought Mana!
and her parents to Beirut
HOURS:
9.9 Mon.·Fri.
9-6 Fri.
10-4 Sun.
Something Special
Almon locbbtr on bolting, Tom fltU1 on thtittr, TholYllS Fortune
on fducaUoll, tht DAILY PILOT on tl'lt Oranvt Coa1l lt'1 Ult '!It
of specJallzallon:, And 011r Sptelalty Is bring rtally SOrntlhl119 lpet:lll.
-·-
;·Think you ·can~t afford an
Olds? ·Here are twO reasons
to.think again!
For 9reenness sake • •
Spread new SUPER TURF BUILDER on the next nice weekend
and your lawn will show its gratitude. It contaihs double the green·
ing ·power o( Camous Turf Builder. Maltes both grass and dichon·
dra perk up, green up, and stay that way longer. Turns thin, of(
color turf into a thicker, sturdier, more vibranUy green lawn .
2,soo s9. FT. IAto $SAS s,ooo s9. FT. IAto $9.9S
FOR ALL YOUR
PLUMBING NEEDS
WATER HEATERS
REPUBLIC "GEMINI "
IN-SINK.WTOR
GARBAGE DISPOSALS
Our own survey» indicate Iha! quite a lew people think an Olds costs a IOI more than
it really does. Result? Many people buy an ordinary car and end up with a lot less car and
value lor !heir money.
It's so unnecessary, too, because Oldsmobile has many models that are priced right
down wilh so-called low·priced cars. See your. Olds dealer, ,He'll prove that you're
closer to Olds than you lhink.
CU.... S: Thi' 1porty Olds-priced nghl down will'! 11'1•
iaw•ptictd names. lnclUded es s11nd1rd equtpmenl : Re·
cill'Md wipers. Hidden •nlenn1. O.tuire sleerfng whffl.
W1ll-IO·w1ll ctrpetinQ. Door side·guard btarnc. FIO-Thr11
· Ventilsfion. Rocket v.a_
Bi•s·btned tiru. Fotm•
padded 1eats.'
"
Dtltl II: TM big Olds wllh IM 1Utpri1ing!y moda1r
• priel'. lncklded in lhtt price: Power 11etr1no. Power front
cliSe btakes. Regul1r11a1 Rodttt v-a. Bigger 124-lncl1
"'1'1etlbu• tor 1 1moother: quleler ride'. All the l'OOl'll
and comfort •ncl IUJCury •
,au could Mf ......
•
&O·F08T
All ·PlllllOSE
All ·WEATHER TNwv.i
EXTENSION CORD '
Bic 60-foot iltrlt<futY llfllltJ
"""''"' ~ s,..,.t1 ......... sis1s oil, SUllJIJ)rt, oione, obrl-s~ hut l cold. lo!ll'll•tlnc.
Colcirf\JI °"°" w1t11 Midi molcftd.on ends. S~hen puce,
3-<ontfuetor.
•
20 Gal ••• s46. 99
30 Gal •. '49.99
4Q Gal ••• s54, 99
SO Gal ••• s69.99
1)11 Wll"' .............. ... .... .., ........ " ..,. ........ ......,
I ..... ft ,,_lfW llY lllW, We ....,.
NIM .. , illlllltltlllll lwl ... , I
"" .... All -"""' _..., .. : ll9fft "" ........ Coll .., ......... ... 111,. AIM .,......._, ... .......
1¥1lltltlt. ....... rtr ... " _...,. II~""'"·
l11tfollfti111 A•oll.i.t1
M-8)1Js33• ht. Sit.ti
OUl rtlCI , , •
Mff•I J)J-
1 Yr. 6•1r1flfot
M-. lll 546 • .... '''·'' . OUl rtlCI ,,
Motltl llS-
J Yr, G111r•11I••
:::.~ .• ~ 563. out P•tca ••
"'"-•' 77-1 Yr. a11111ettt.1
i.,. ______________________________________________ ... ___ ;... _____ _.~~..,,;,.j,~~~--~-..... we. ____ ..,. _____ ...__~---
l
I
J4 DAILY PILOT
Music Man
" HOLLYWOOD (U P I ) '-
French composer A r m a n d
Segian will w:rite the musical
score for Arlene Dahl's new
movie, "The Blc Bankrole."
•
•
Thursday, .&tpril 9, 1970
Want to Be a Contestant?
Game Show Tips-Offered
'By VERNON SCOTf
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -If
one of your minor &pals In life
is to become a cQntfl'~Snt in a
quiz or game show. B-Ob
Barker• host of "Truth or
Conseguences1' for 13 yeare.
of!ers the fOllowing advice,.
"Don't, be a parlor com-
edian," )e ·said. '\They make
Ute worst contestanta of all.
When they siart telling jokes
the audience tunes out." ..
-. Barier .warms up hil';slt.ldio
audience by walking thrOt.1gh
the crowd talking to people in-
formally , finding those with
pleasl~i personalities. He likes
to find out-of·towners.
In Rls five-day-a-week show
Barker believes he has chosen
at least 18.000 participants
over the years.
·'My choioe of epntestant
depends on the consequence
part of I show.'' he explained.
"II .may call for 1 little old
lady or a swinging young cou·
pie-.'J'he main thing la to find
people who behave normally,
u1 find out quickly by asking
~tlal particlpanl! to stand
up in_lhe audience-Some lose
their confidence Immediately.
Others merely give t h e l r
names and the rest of the au·
dience likes.. them.
"If the indtviduat draw!
favorable reaction from · the
studio audience, he will have
the same effect on viewers."
Among poor rlsb. Barker
names extraordinarily
beaulifuJ women.
"They rely on their beauty
--and fail to make an effort to
be }>USOnable," he said.
"nie excess1ve1y •wessive Bree••• C_.._-d•• i , person is banned and so is the ,. n V••.-:;: u
terribly ,frightened indivi;ual. Uncontrollable hippies are out. Sandra Dee and George Hamilton star tonight in
J a v o i d professional con-•·Doctor You've Got to 'be ~id ding," ~t ,.9 on. Ch'-nnel
testants. Everybody reienl!i 2. The romantic motion picture also c'05t8rs .Celeste
them. Holm, Bill Bixby, Oiclt Kalman and Mort Saht
"Woman over 30 are the ----------------~~~-
best contestants. Kid s are
great if they'll talk, but if a 5-
ytiar-old answers a question by
saying he doeSn'l know, I pus
him up and go on to the next ....
"All game and quiz show!!
are looking for people with
strong opinions who can ex-
press their thooghU:.
"Teenagers are good, but
not as interestmg as ki ds 4 to
7 years old.
"The best c:ontestant of all
ls an elderly person who
think.5 young. Everyone Iden·
tifies with them."
Barker seldom chooses a
contestant twice.
Original Ski.t Slated
By Newport fheater ·
'>
An original dramatic skit
will be presented by the
Newport,. Community Theater
Wednesday, April 15, at the
PanhellerUc At'lena, "woman
of O>e y~r" award luncheon at
the Newporter Inn.
1't1el skit, entitled "The Gift
of Athena," Li being directed
by Bill Fucik, resident direc·
tor oC the Newport l!'OUP· Cast
members lncltide John ·Hoyt,
Geroge Willi~ J o h n
Rooney, Gino --Gaudio. Jae-'
quelin Clnacb, Olive Rk:hel,
Shi rley R~s ind Carolyn1 Fish. '
Superior Court Juge J.E. T,,
Rutter. former president Of
the Lido Isle Players, will
present the awards al the
11 :30 a.m. luncheon.
Benefit
'
Concert
At Irvine
A concert Joe the bendil of
the mua:ic library at UC Irvine
will be held Saturday, April 18,
under sponsorship of th e
music section of UCI Town
and Gown.
Stu.denj.1 and raCu1ty
membe rs will be' featured in
the prOl!l'am, scheduled for
1:30 p.m. in the Science Lec-
ture Hall.
Perf011Pers will include Ray-
'"""" Dorio, ..-.-1
In medicine; Roger Hickmln
'an<! Kathy Monohan, iuilor
muiic majors; Lawrence
Laing, freshman maJorinc in
computer scienct, uit Paul
7earson, senior music maj(lr.
Faculty m e m b e r 1. jlar.
ticipaUng are H. C o l in
Slim; professor of mlisic -and
chainnan ol the Depart,ment
of Music; Maurce Allard,
as.si.stant professor of music;
William Ho I m e s . associate
proleuor of music ; Carole
Boelter· and Arnold Juda, lec-
turer1 tfn music, and Thomas
Whitney, acting instructor in
niUlic, Mod bi! wife, -Ka
Whitney. •
'Ibe program will inolude
worts by Cha brier, Mozart,
Beethoven, liindemiU. a n d
Ra'(el. ,
Tickets are $3 each and may
be obtained by calling 548-1258
er at the door the night of the
concert.
:Jtdo
fllWPOl1 _fi.ll(M ·-•I """ t lH,.,_ '* t.11.lo" 11410 I.lo --Ol. ~·IJMI
11
Ba~kstage Has Magi~ Too 'MMYISIOlf4' COUit IT DELm ~
l•I~.~~~~ ..
-ALSO-
TENNIS .
· ·:ATKl.UIC GOODS
•• PHONE 64&·1919
I
I
''When the music <.-omes up
-and the lights come up with
it -that's my kick."
Roe Ratner. a 21-year-0\d
Golden West College student.
sits forward in his chair and
grins as he describes the
magic of the theater
-backstage. •
It's a magic' he knows well.
for though Roe is just a
freshman al Golden West -
and a freshman in computer
sciences at that -he's bttn
Invo l ved with theater
backstage activity s i n c e
graduating from S a n t i a go
High School.
Roe currently is hokting a
· full-time job at Dlsneyhmd in
addiUon to attending scbool.
As the amusement park he
bandies theatrical SOUfld, and
lighting for all the smaller
stages, such as those at the
Mine Train or the Tomor-
rowland Terrace.
His theatrical jobs have i~
eluded a. stint. at Pt1elodyland
and the Convention Center,
wher.e he did electrical and
carpentry work_ He did the
electrical set-up for a closed-
. circuit TV channel in Laguna
Hills.
He eve n spent four mooths
traveling with ' R I n g I I n g
Brothers circus.
"I worked as a rigger," says
Roe, "and had a ball. ,J learn-
ed how to walk the tightrope ;
that took me about a mOOth.
It's not as hard as it sounds; !~J.i
there are a couple of tricks. 1
even went on a 35-foot high
rope once without a net.·•
In addition to his schoolwork
and job at Disneyland1 Roe
has taken charge of sound and
lighting for the premiere ot
BACKSTAGE MAGIC
GWC 's Roe Retntr
"Irving," a new play to be of-denl use !ollowing the play. fered at Golden \Vest Friday and Saturday, this weekend Roe used knowledge of ropes
and next. he learned with the circus to
It's meant turning !he .stu-tie up light bars for the college
dent cenler, where the play stage . When so me college of-
will be offered. i n Io a ficials questioned whether the
''com p l ete proscenium theater." says Roe. To do this. ropes could safely hold up the
he's had to arrange f 0 1 ligllts, Roe wen l 'lo the college
lighting. wiring and curtains PE department and borrowed
-doing it all on a •·tern-400 pounds of bar bell weights.
, porary" basis, sirice tbe center Alter proving his point by
must be turned back to stu-• suspending the weights, he
KARA TE HAS MOVED . '
Our Karate .Studio localed on Newport Ave . has
movod to 19th St. & pt-tt• in CQsta Mesa (843
W. 19th St.) in Vista ShoP-ping Cen\er. Classes as
usual for ADULTS & JR s (ages 7 to 14).
We also have a branch in San Clemente at 1911 S. El
Cimino Real, open Tues., Wed., Fri. eves. ·and Sat.
till noon.
Open 6 to 9 P.M. Mon. thru . Frl~Phone 642"8317
Brln9 this od fo r o F R E E UNIFO~M with tho
"bi tic courH."
repl~ced·lhem with 75 pounds 1 '"' Actr ...
J 11 h MAWGll SMITH " g 13. "THE PRIME OF
The usually-c:s:pen!ive job of . MISS JEAN BRODIE"
setting up a stage has cosl a G. "· RATING
wtal of 78 cents so far, says I~~~~~~~~~~~ Roe, "and I anticipate: spen-J;
ding another J'l,"
Roe is gelting a double do.st
of musical comedy these days,
for he: s &I.so helping set up be
stage for a Gleodale Junior
College performance Of
"Oklahoma!''
In spite of hi! computer
science major in school, Roe
expects to remain in theatrical
work. He Utink.s, in fact, that
there ·are some ilhnilarities
between the two fields .
Both, ·he says. require a
creat~e approach.
"l may never use my com-
puter programming," s a y s
Roe, "or J .may make,. it my
life. Right now ·it's security·to
me.'' •
He's sure he 'll never drop
his interest in theater. evai if
he doesn't make his living in
the field.
"An individual knows he"s
found his best field when he
rea lizes he'd work at it
whether or not he got paid,"
says Roe, "and that'.J the way
I feel about the-theater."
1., ,< " -c ".. >
LU/.Ju~z
~ .. : ·~ ..
-a-"..:.
l•rltr• Strelsantl
"Funny Girl"
1TILEPHONI 673-6260
WINNER OF
3 ·
ACAm AWARos
BEST
PICTURE
BEST DIRECTION
John Schlesinger
BEST SCREENPLAY
Weldo Salt
AIM "'•Jlftf
l ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS
•
I
'
I
~
l J
•
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....... -4CI ~"·-··-(Ill) ..... ...,l'lft I C...akll) "
Thursd<t, ~' 1970
'1t1N..i..•t,' .... ....., · -F" ' lo:. ~ . • WALT DJSlllY'I
Oscars Recogmze .I'~~
Both Old and New ~ . ....., .... , ....
-'MANO YOUR HAT ON 1* wt«t'
By BOI Tllo~ l&r1e f&mlly. His lined rac. CINEDOME 20 "'"K•ffl·WAY 39 DriM
HOU.VWOOD (AP) -The" w11 beamlnc. a.oll'Ml'• ..... o1t.s..wirrw.,m-332• o.ni.nar-,r?X-a.ackat.JJ.4.6212
• J.. j,'Jt WU the best part I ever ' IM.T•600·MD·10.00 "fANTAllA' .. 1,iJ;;fi 10.15,.M. old.. Houywood .i the new ha ...__ U."9lr•...,-...._.,_ ....... Wllwf"6'JO&NO
••. "-" -··M'1n .... d," he said of IUC one.eyed!;~~"~'"~·~···~·~-~·-~·~-~·~·-~~· ~~IO~•~ICWICI~~~-~·; ... ~~ -.ve .,..,. •• _,.,_, ••• marlhal ol "True Grit." "I'm
Gnd Acaatmy Awards with damned 1lad it came aloog
~ -I aolng to ... x. -It did." rated "Mldnilht Cowboy" and Gig Yoong also expressed
to J~ w · his iratttude for the award--ayne, ..mo 19 IC--grabbing role tbat arrived late
ceptabM to ieneral audieDces in his career. It was a great
e..;,..i..no. .nitbl for the oldUmers. Cary
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"Mkfnlgbt Cowboy," which Grant was accorded a stan-
tells bow a haodJome )'Otmg din& ovation -the first that
Tuan rnabJ a poor living in lqnct.lme Oscar w1tchers can
, New York U a male ~ rimember -when he was
ltitute, was · ha.Jled the best presented a special award by
1• film •I Tuetd&y nilhl's Frank Sinatra .. "1111 DIS. ..... _ ........ ! " ... ,.,, ...... ,......
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....,, t t &iNl..iiJ, t
Wayne, t!le'cranky, cr•H.r "llM! HJ I~ llltl pill m~ in·~~. o:: ~ :~d· ~··~~/ :3 I ...irt· ti, lr>'IDll• Th' li!fl h@r, 'PP~'t . ,,.,,8! riieie acirtss went it I wu ne¥'er sq •DPY about
. ,.,.... "'*' " """"""'
"'''° WOODY ALLIN
In
"TAK! TM! MONff AND ltUN" Enrland'• Maille ,Smith Iii someone !llrln(, 'f lold you
ll@r mclk:ulolll PQl!i:3flll .vf 8 !Ml ' " l~~=~===~==~:E;:::;::=:==: schoolteitdlti1 tri 0 The Prlme A dl.m~p P!J111 was ar-f: -________,
or Miss Jean Brodie." ranged fin~ aH el her new
, OAtLY l!'ILOT iftft, ~
Touclai"t Jtf omeat ~
Joan Wullsohn letftpU the ardor of Ralfh Richmond
in a romantic s~e from "The ~b Honourable
GenUeman ," opfll!ll>g ,a three-week lwi on Tuesday
at the Laguna Mo\lltlm Playhouse. . •
"Laugh In 's GolcUe Hawn movie,, wfilcft she costars
scored as best supporting ac-with P !f S,lltr!J.
tress for her first movie, Miss. ~ flll•breted her
"C:actu.s Flower." Veteran Gig Oscar tWard trJ appearing
YOWlf!, playing his m "t Wed,., fllliti In !he first
serious role after 1 career in nigbl -f 1 1 The Beau I
mnedy, won as best sup-StratafffP" '.Ill London's Old
,• .
• • tr.. Comedy Backed porting actor for "111ey Shoot Vic Thgter.
H<>rset, Don't They ?" Miss Im Ith , M.year~ld
"MldnJgbt Cowboy" woo two mother tf two , b 11 d r e n ,
other ma;or awards: f 0 r received ~ nnr• of her
BriUsh diredor John Sehl,.. award """1 llM ~lephone
Inger and scenarist Waldo shrilled. jq her Ottella home By 'Julia' Producer
Salt. The award to Salt was early W~ICUJ, •
By VERNON ScqIT
HOLLYWOOD 1urr>
"1V ie the whipping ho)> ol the
Intellectuals," s9)rs Hal
Kanter, producer of 11Julia,''
ahd situaUon ~a are
whipped worst of all aft'! out of
all proportion ."
Kanter defends tflevision
mare articulately thaJ'I most.
"On any siven flight on
televlsioo then! is ini:tre in.
I @ff811¥~Y ~ U·
Chan in an entire
• on Broadway," he said.
;M,lon wily situation ... ·-U!~d is becau5e everybody in the
world knows what's f•J· But
they don't know th4\ much
about drama and delp emo-
tion.
"'YOU Clft •ccuae. a man of
bting a CommUflis\ or a
eoward, but don't tell hlfJI he
doesn't have a sense of hwnor.
"Evefy American tfJinb he
has a sense of humor. and he
will figh t you if )'1lU say
ottierwise -especiallf.. if be
has no sense of bu~,"
Kanter is an enqrinc>l!sJ.Y
hWn<>rou1 man lljnutlr., But
tloo twinkle In hls.r1e lio<omes
A illffl. lllllfi llillilM!fll! gives
th• bick or its hand to .
OD, Ind situation COin•
in p 'cular. I '~ Iii ii tiJeviskm
Is evaluated In the fliJure -
notable for belni • the first Miss fin Mt!, Wwn for her -men like faul Henning will Osca r received by a returnee love of ~ It.fill In ~reference
be regarded ~y scholars as the from lhe film i n d u s t r y • s t filml a.1 ..... .1 .. verybody folklorists of our day," he 0 ~• "VY"! 'd blacklist; he had been banish· seems tt be niylng about the sa~~g ii responsible for ed during.the l950s for alleged Oscar~ I do~ thiflk It will
''The Bever I y HlllbilUes,'' left-wing sympathies. do me ~t mucti soo4.''
"Petticoat /"notion" 8 n d The two actress winners Her ~iric1r1 '"ent, Bobby
"Green Acre•," all of which wen! In England, but Wayne Lantz, \Old her : 'Con11:ratula-
are consist~ high in the Center to accept his long· MIM mlOt 1tld : 1 1 J ' m
ratings. swatted Oscar. He also at-thorou dalistlltd. Ind very
"' was present at the Music tions: ~•ve doni jt •• r
"Television• comedy shows tended the Oscar Ball al the stunned; dfd not. lmafine it
started out IJy photographing Beverly Hilton Hotel with his would l!lppen."
radio s h f w s, ' ' Kanter.;==:;:;"===========i:=:;;;::;====.I continued. ''Then m o v i e
makers drillod lDlo Tl', II
became a cOfiililnltiOn Of Old
ridio guys and old picture
guys. Today's crop of
television producers and direc-
tors are \be result of the two;"
K.anter's "Julia" for Npc if
ooe or the !~w sllcom• wtlfllifi
• laugh l!Kk. 1 o 1 lh t I ·
senolUve aibjidt'. *1111 tlil pfO:
ducer.
"I've alway1 ~. '§'iflll
Jauib tracQ:,,11 ~•Aid. 1 It aJi
audlence erfjqys a show I think
in tenns fl t;fl.ree or four peo-
ple sitting iq a room, not 40
millioo lndivicluals. •
"I'm conettntly assaulted by
roars of Iaupter on a show
tha~ as 1 ....rOlsiona~ I know
is nOt fuMY.1•
'11 111!1 ( ui1 .1 /,',I" 1t•11_1
" r.
"ON,I PUW O~ll ~CUC~-· Niii"'
....... ic. • •• ,., .. y -
* *· l!IEACH l!ILVD. AT •LLl8 * *
HUNTINGTON BEACH t 8'4'7•9808
PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES
4
A Mtlllft l'lcl-.....
"IEN HUI." lqfilf)
"ME NATALIE" 111'1 I°"')
'
Au.l•"'r Aw1~l11t ,~
"MIONIGHT COWIOYH f)I) C.... "ALICE~ llllTAUIANTlf Ill) c.llr'J,•
.u•r1tNH,,.._.....
Al Cll9r ... nw tfllli
'!1(p1M1 AN,aV\llfAM AUIN" ... . "NIGHT 01' THI LIYOll• DIAO'"
ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
BEST SUPPORT ACTOR ILLIOTT ~ULD ... I j!li11IJtlfltl till-_ .. .is· II Me ..... a. lnW (Q ~ 'ff nlinp. ID (J) D (IJ B ([) ._ (C) say a hundred yean f""1 now
-~$ _, -··--•-!Cl -ACADEMY AWAID
WINNER BEST SUPPORT ACTRESS ,:::~
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
frilt" lnl) '46--611')' eo.r. h1srid 'lfllll. A ~ilul wom11111:15 Im ~a.-....._ (C)"Sl'lol·
llflll 1 put rttu1111 ti New IUrt. on-. ,. in it -'.ht llpptl 11:J1 n a(])...,, 111111 fC)
CfUlt 7,:"" wllolt t 1tatiJ ,.. 8 U Cll •...., c... (C)
:::. .... ~ .. motlttr'• •1111111.-... en,...-..
81Tllol • ._,. IC~ i30l D II.,. ._ ICl •""I-<'°> m-..., ,..,,,. 1.,..,>
I Ttctillcll c.w (30) 9-Johi Saxon, UllCl1 Ctistll.
. hit <C> (301 "Jimmy 1!:t18C1••••~ lllllil ._. (C)
urr11 SChltpl'1 pllJ n 1• B MMlr: °'M111....-_..... (dtt-~ lly llM 5tll' Sodtty Ml) •45 ..:.... M.nt Obnt, '-If
TllilUi. lunts lh lttf Todd SUI· S.ndlr1.
11111t 1ijl ,,odllCllf Jm Hinch. 1 • ... (C)
....... -(Ill) ' '*" "'-' -"" 7,i5•-·-...... ,.,,~-~ ·ii=~ .. -.J'l.J.'1 2'"'~'!:'57'";'•.,.~
1 Frl!lk ....... ~~ W II •
ltlr111 ...,_ 111 h1tttrld.. l:ll-9 ,...., .... " nil .., (C)
•
I I I D fl (
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1"18 ....... J ....... (4flN)
'40--.111111 hfitr, ltic:MN c:.i...
.• JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
•. ~EWSPAPERS
Qve lity Prlntlrit anl!t Otpencfaltl• Sarvic•
ftt mor• then a quarter of a century.
•11W8'1WU&"JMWUlll ___ I
T .... tlt et t ...........
Sit. 1 :acl, 4:11 & l :JI
Cfhe"humh'Gaq
in thelf''91lnttMftle!
m-....... 1
ORANGE DRIV1 ·IN
t==~
'
GOLDIE HAWN
BEST SUPPORTING ACTllllS
•;-.1amr
.... t.:;;:' ---·
.,
JOHN W~YNI
WINNlill-
BEIT ACTOR
----~if'--toZl-·WrtdlllMm
hMH>-·--
•
BEST ORICINAL 'SCREENPIJY ~ WilMrtf _-&----AJ ' ... , ...... Crillll • ' ~ .... _ ..... _._ ...... l"M
~ "''"~"~~ ' ' lllJU llX!l/RlllfRT lllP I ellfl &r.NlllljlDllllf BJl11T llllD/D'llll r.11111 aa.,•..,•••·111\unac· ........ ~·'*iii·.,_••·ai---1----.... ""'"'1 OO ~e Ji-G
ALIO-ACAD. NOMINEI ' ' . .,..,u ltll.'"· ..,
HARBOR of ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546-3102 :
ON HAllOI ILVI). • ONE MILE SOUTH Of SAN 11100 rwt. !
' ' NOTHING HAS BEEN LEFT OUT OF :
I i
THE ADVENTURERS ;
To •11• NCh °"*'..., ...... #Ol'ldl,i ·-... -.. --~ ............. ---
....... _._.....,.... .. ...,_
·-----·M.MIMI&·--,_,,_ .... __.._,,_ ........... ..,..,..~.-...... -.................. ..... .... .., ..... · .... 1-.-...e-
~-dnr·
I
I
L :..l
I
'
... "~ . , .. .
~-OOHVIY
o/11.o•uft 6MOP
1051 IRVINE ~NEWPORT IEACH-<
DON'T LOSE ·IT ..• LABEL IT!
PRINT~D. ~,AME TAPES
JC~EP THE CHILDllN'S CLOTHES IDINTIFllD
l~ON.ON·O•~SEW-:()H. IU.CK. ILUL llD-
100 ......... $1.50
200 ........ $2.00
Add 5% Colif. Sola Ta•
STOP IN.OR MAIL COUPON TODAY
.
NAME • ,, , , ,, •• ,_, •••• , , ,,,, ,, ••••. : ... ~ •• ,, ,, .i\
ADDRESS \ •,,,.,,,, ••• , ,. , ••••••• , • , ••••• ,, , , •
CITY •• , •• _,,,., ._,, •• , ••••• , STATE ••• , • , •• , , , ,
PHONE , •••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ZIP ••••• ,,,,,,,
Close-Up
TOOTHPASTE
SMper-W-itt11i11 T11tk·
,aste aid M11thask 11
Ont.
Rec. S1c &.Z II. Sill
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' DRIVE
DETERGENT 49 o.. 59 '
TURKEY
HIND QUARTERS 39~
STRAWBE~RIES 3 for 99¢
Pint s11e
ARKE T BASKET
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
'llr MOTB.ER'I .
'
DAY
ClB•l·A 01na
DOESN'T SHE DESERVE ·
'1THE VERY BEST?"
.
PAPER UNLIMITED
'
548 . 7921
WESTCL!FF PLAZA
' 7 llEAR·.
GUARANru·
" ' LOCKING•
LID
OUYE
GREEN
RION HARDWARE
WESTCUFF PLAZA
642·1133
CLEANING SPECIAL .
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FOR 8 LBS.
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BEDSPREADS .
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MONTGOMERY
CLEANERS & LAUNDRY
OPEN DAILY 1·9 • .
SATURDAY 8. 6
. '
•
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' .
... ...
• ~ ' . I
·~·. sh!opp:tng.
e.t its ·nnes:t! · :
, • , 1 I I .
Ol'EN J~A~ ~ MONDAY E¥ENlt\IGS .. . ' . -' ~I '
I . .. . .. l'. > • .. t·· , "'-' • • , • ~ I • · ·
· · "/.' · .t>:lways ·On Sundciyl
' • .j '.
For your convenience -
we •!• now open 7 a • .,.,
•week.
. HONIT;W,IU ·W~Ol!IC
STROBONAR 770 .,
The ............ ,;,.,k;fluh '°' "· . s109·9s . pbotocrapher ""'.ho wants increased · ONLY
JJP.t output automatically from 2 ·
to 22 feet Uli. $l5~0 . .
BAKER'S • -~.
WUTCLIFF CAMERAS ' • . I ' ' r.., .... ~·
, I • . -,. • f ~
WORLD FAMpUS ~BtEF ' STICK ''
Exclusively At
ff lttdty t-•~.s
Wfttcuff l'lma · 48 Town & C<Puntry
NIWPOIT "IU.CH · OU.NliE ~.,1olf12 . ' 54)·1016
ONN IVININGS l SUNDAYS
'MEN:s F0kMAL WEAR. sPet1~(1srs
dar.rell~s·. tied rick TUX . SHOP
S.l.LES. -DELUXE RENTALS
• t.. H1bre
691,0735
WESTCLIFF ·
PLAZA
1130 Irvine
Newport Beach
646-8891 . .
' I
" I Optometrist
Dr. Lou Roy Elder
• CONTACT LENSES . e REFRAC ING
• EYE WEAR STYLING ·• PRESGRIBING •
1124 IRVINE
WESTCLIFF PLAZA ; ,' ...
NEWPORT ¥ACH · 642.ono . ' .
' ..
'.
• • • ... # ... -' .., ,.. .. 1, ........... r) •.•• "" .. . ~:E.as·te ·r n
r ·' • ,"" :· ·' .
Juniors Gather
On their way to the Edgewater Hyatt House, Long
Beach, where an Eastern Fantasy awaits them are
(left to right) the Mmes. Warren Fix, Bruce Lewiit
and Eugene Williams. They will join other members
of Junior Clubs in the Orange District, California'
'Federation of Women's Clubs for the 14th ~vefl.!
tion frid~Y .. ••,\\-· S~t~~d,ay, ;Apijl' ~ alljj 21j .. .!llgh•
,lighting th~·· nt. will .~e,the ·~111:flde of p~idents, grad~atio remdpyu~"'Wlalipn of ;.tncers,'. le<-
tival of .awarils .aoil ··~~"iianoiin~ of incOrding :Gis-
_c.ers,:The!'Jel_:.if:tbe' !~~clieon,j hlinquet 1111a·
. r@l ~ i!li!I~· ~l.<.MY•Q!ey, ~mt··
~ 'EIGHT OF l'.'EA~'iiG -Members.oi USC's Town and Go;vn Ju!Uor Aiixi-~ ].j_ai:y ·attempt to stretch an interest 1n education through schofarships. Gbapt~r
.. _ memj)ers (left to right) the Mmes. Dou glas Simpson, Oby \Voods and _<;r.o\d,on .•
MorrQw get booked for the annual bel!efit dinner dance in the Bilt1nore Bowl on.
a11a;:u;, ~:~6!J~a. . ~· ·-~--. . . . ·~··\;;".. !" 1.: ~ ,., ."•1 ..-.~1·J .. :l~'. ! ~ ........ (11" ... ~.
• ' .. • ·~ • ...t,, • • ' ' •• ' ' .. , . .. . ' .... _ .
-. '·-~ -
... ~tutday, April 18. The proceeds \li'ill P!OVide funds for \Vomen students .... " . ..
•·
•
..
Town and Gown
' . . . . ' S .. Q~.,. .·::-,ii· ·r -. . '"· ~\(· D t ·1 ,,,,.,, .. ,. '·, ' ~~Q·.-~-. ""'t1~ . , .. · .I
, ,, · · ."'i: .. " "· • · . :rt: .. ~· . o. !Pf" · .s .... • .. -·~ ••. , • .,-,. l~.!'i' ..... . :.L ~ U..'"-./ '1 i
• •
Bloom at Be nefit
' • "' l Garlands of fresh flow ers, many flo\vn in from Ha\vaii, will Iert~-a
b:ri'ght and aromatic back grolol1'ld for more than 1.000 gu~s arriving .irl;if.be
Clergy men Volunteer . • • ... New Counseling Se r¥ice
·Wom en Led • Search for Abor fi,on . . . 1n
By JO OLSON
01 tnt D•llY P'llRI Stiff
Abortion .;..... the word summons visions of cheap $1otel
. .{ooms. ljltfiy instruments, quackery and danger_.
inyestigate after hearing a talk by Mrs. Dorothy Canlfeld,,nOrcll-
nator of the service. · ·
# Subsequently accepted as a member of the se~~,'be
regularly attends meetings and receives up to date .'infoi'nU,ttion
through the mail on procedures and new avenues. · ' . " . ' Biltmore Bowl ·on the eve;m{g of Saturday, .{\.pril 13. , · ;i.
On:te the denizen of the underworld, abortion now has .been
liroµgtt irito the open and is freely discussed.
California's Therapeutic Abortio.n Act of 1967 . has gre~Uy
helped in oitak.ing abortion from the hidden, makeshift o~eratu~g
room to the hospital, but with all i•ts pros and cons, a~rtton still
is a decision that afiects a woman for the rest of her life.
TERMS OF ACT
.
'
• The occasion for the gala affair is a benefit dinner dance co-sponsered·
by members of University of Southern California's Town and Gown Jupi,or
Auxiliary of Orange County and the Los Angeles chapter.
Members and guests from Orange and Lo" Angeles counties ,vuj: ar ... '
l'ive 'at 7 p.m., steppin g into an attractive setting provided by Mrs. Gordon,
M.orrow, decorations chairman . ., ·
,/'" One of ·ttie· nio"stvexCf~if!g ... -ey~nts·,~~ti_rreve?.i.o_g 1·wili.•j1J'~·.a.war~;:•of· a ·
tfip 1to ~waU,-.for. tw,o,.,a fur..,-d~s.~r:{.~o_n)es1te.,.,d1am.9nd·.'and. gp~1e1feiiy·
./ ancllUS:C :~~b~ 1ap~\tr~.s~e.t~ai.1-.~e'~~~ ·ti~~~s~·.· · : : _'; ,,; :.,:' .. ' . .' . , 1 .,
:: Orange County m embers':as.S'?Sting-:Mts.; :Uoagtas· 'iS"J.JilP~ .. : .Chair.; ~ m·an, iriclude the Mm es. Wiltia"m Reed, fi nance; Dale Stihc'hfield;'irivita~ 1•
'tions: Richard Peckham , patronesses: Michael Gibb. program; EdWard
Halligan, prizes j Robert Smith, r eservations , and Bernard A. Lecl£;iet'
publicity. . 1 • • .'
The Orange County chapter, fo~oded last !all, will participate in f,Und·
traising events of the organization. . ·
' The annual dance will raise fund s for· scholarships and graduat~· fel-'
lowships for women scholars at th e univcrslt y. The parent gfoup founded
in. 1933 by Mrs. Elizabeth von Kleins1nid and Dean Pearle Aik~n-Sll:lltb" ·
encompasses an aim of stimulating -women· to pa rticipate in the advahce.'..
ment of education. ·
I
To further this interest, a'll endeavors· of the grou p are directed.. to..
ward providing scholastic assistance tOJ deserving women enrolled iii ,the
university.
At one time advice about the "ropes" of abortion was pas~
ed along by ,vorci of mouth an~ a woman had no one to opetily
turn to if she desired an abortion. Pre.~nant women oft~n w~uld
commit suicide to escape the unwanted pregnancy, knowing there
was no other way out. .
Today, thanks to the efforts ·Of a group .,of ~sters as~
ated with the Clergy~eoup~eli9g. Se~ce ,oh .Prob\em·P!egna.nc1es,
Uiere'is hope and•help fo~ a .w.qma~Jacing an unwanted-child.
• INTE RF.AliTH' SERV ICE' ' .
Formed. in May, i,968 .the'servic~,.~s an 'interfaith, inter-
den9m1nationa.l· IJ,!irtistr)'. ofi ,the Ecumep.icalt F~Uow\s}U~ SitJd: 1s
staffed by· 72·fuirusters .m ·the Soythern,call!o~ 11rea1..inc)udmg
.17 in Orange1County. ' -1 • • " • ·i.. , •
" The .sei'vic~r though 1C~,ifor:nia:<>ii~~,1 -~~e.s ~ inqu.iries
from all 9ver th~ country. antt .has. "'I~ Ji•d·'-!'•~ponses -from
€anada. · . • '' ·" . · . 1ts ptimary purpose is to ti.dvise Women ot their rights· ac-
~corCling to th e Therapeutic Abortion Act and direct them swiftly
to the help they need.
N,ewport Ha rbor's representative is the Rev. Roger T.
Walke, pastor of the Unitarian Universalist Church, Costa Mesa.
The. service had been established'for a year when Mr,_Walke
beard, about it. He already counseled many women who called,, up-
• on him•lor.advice regarding problem pregnancies and decided ~o
Under the Therapeutic Abortion Act, girls under.ts auto-
matically are eligible for an abortion. All other women are. sub-
ject to the act's conditions: if a woman is pregnant due 'to rape
or incest, or if there is a substantial risk that continuation d, her
pregnancy would gravely impair her physical or mental ~health,
,she may be declared eligible. · . :
The abortion, according to the act, must be done .betoi:e· the
'20th week of pregnancy and may be done only with the: consent of
a committee of the medical staff of a hospital. At leas~two.1*Vsic
ians must give consent if the pregnancy· is under ,3.·weeiS ·and
three must deCide il1i(·.jS .rnOteithan.J.3 w.e~ks. . . . . ·
That the -cy~oselJ~·g.service Js.nejid!d"cannol be db.uJ>!edlor a moment , .. \ ' · 11• .~ ' ' • -' · ~ ~· ' I . ' \ I • ) • ,. · lq 'the ,first-tivo<wl!<!ks JOI ·February., Mr: W~~ OJ really. had counsel~ 13 wotnen, 'almost oh~1..R9r· day,· ratigihg'!lt1a:ge·n-o-m 15
to 27. Three 'were'·matl>led'-eiglit ·Single and twd~dfvorced, "I'he
average age.ran~e/of 111~\Wbme))' 4e'se.es'i11.5'. IQ•the late,40s_. .
. .. . • ·... . 1Nt E:i\Xiit;)"·R,EOtui¥i!o; :· i '. ·:· ~ ...
.A persooal. lntehie'l!I' Ii -~Jlit!id(lilld,women, are ·~equeated'lo
go to the doctOt ·fo«a pelvic examination to' coilfirin.the!r.<preg•
. nancy before tlie iilterv:iew. . . ~
• · 1'How many weeks are you pregnant?" is the fir:S!ttjutst;.on
asked when womel) come to Mr. Walke's office at the :~bJ.arclh .They
are requested to bring their parents, if they are young gills-. or
their husbands o.r boyfriends to the interview. · ' .
They discuss the situation and all the possibilities ;open. -
(5" NEW ABORT ION HEL P, Pa119 I ll .
/ ~ ,,. ·.~···-.·•··r•''l',;··;::.. ··~; . II , /..;. ,\ • · • . . • l .
)1aughte·,r's ·a;· Ca·su ·a·lf_y· .~h .e n Home Bec o.~es Battlegrou;r).p
,.'' DEAR ANN: T am not signing my -. ;1 1 can't sign this , 1 hope you can't guess .. -.. to ·.~ .. iJtl. And, hlcfdentally, I do not was of the wile but It wai .lwi;tig fl t!le
· name lo th is letter because we are SAME CIRCLE • have a clue 11 to your identity, I know at bedroom.
j lrieads. J don't th ink you can guess my •• G DEAR s. c.: I suggest you attlcll: tit.la lead a, dozen peopJe who have a problem Great art Is great m aywliere, bat•
, ~.identity. At least I hope nol. problem at tbe source. Tbc real trooble 11 11mllar· &o your1.... '· atudenl'• "very HIHJni.' nde pai1Un1
The letter from the mother of the ~~ '. between you and your husband. Year of her husband does not IOUll'll like great
teenage boy signed "Mrs. Had It" got In / .buiband's pennilslve attitude u COi\-PEAR ANN LANDERS : Our son's wife art to me. , "
--me. (And to millions of other bewildered • &asled lo your Ineffective attempta to Is ·a· talented' art student. She bas painted Censplcuoualy absent fs ~ .-,tloll,
parents, I'll bet.) Our hostile, rebellious least her hnsbnnrl backs her up. Mine . 'My husbanil feels because sht ts maintain disclpUne bas made yo1r tlome a Iai:~r~ai~I ouu ~n in the n;dhe. It "Sboald I aay aomelhlnc?" Tbe •antt•
leen?ger is a girl, nol a boy, but the doesn't. He take" our duughtcr·s side and' • pleasant to 11im that ,they have a won-a battlegrourul. tour daughter ii lJte vie-: now gs UI . r , vmg room. ave If you bad asked, would be-11No.1J 'dt8CJ'iption fi ts her. She isn't pregnant d f I I t·~ h' H . ts I th t h tim. I urge yoa botb io ge& couniellD1. aeen~nudes hanging in other homes, but togclh cr they t•y to ''"Ul me down. Ile er u re a lvus IP· e poin ou a e · 11 · ~' U · g oom d never ol a butt tboug~t she might be, so ~ called a . ' ""' . has no trou bJe with her while she and I Y d b els tslde Itel t· no · n 1,111:: vin r -an How will you know whett the real thing
Jnwycr to find out what ti,1Y rights are. secs nothing wron.g w1lh her staying out . fight constantly. Therefore he insists that one=~~he 8::!8 ~!ne'f'you :1 compteL·fy , 'member o~ the fami~y. The painting is comes alon g? Ask Ann Landera. Send for
Well -1 don't have any. According to till 3 or 4 ir. the mnmlng. Nor tToes he sec what he is doing Is right and I'm the Ofle Her father will not give her decent · very life-like and it . makes me un# her booltlet "Love or Se~ aftd !:iow'\o Tell
Iflinoia law, if a 16-ycar-old .daujhler anything wron w\U1 her enrls who not who ts at fault counsel because be lwll opted la favor ti COO\forta'ble. Have you ever been asked the Dillerence." Send ~ cepts In coin and
w..ts to keep-lief..child,,eyo"'lllf!9Jk'1(l'(.; .. olllnui!>•)liJ<l1 Op> but w~hem.l ·~JP. I ,am becoming bitlel) and frustrated. being • pal lu •'ellorl to-tftp•• pp4 lhltquestlon before! "3 1\1< AT EASE a Joog,aetl·8'ldre5'ed, ot811)ped "'"lopo
c8n't supJIOl'f ~,Ji!:l'oP<\"'(ili!'m~:~ :\ ~ure:..ir.io~ ~ om ea'-.. · fll!lla1 He ••. ll'he &luaUon seems h6piltts;.1've .jllll termj ,.1111 lier.' ' · • Df;AR-. ltli::ntl ""' ~·• J..., W wllh YN·tf4uell. lo< Olte'of,tllo. l'lo\JL Y
"Mrs .. Hlld<l'.'"''lll~'lietltliiiitJ"""'" ' 'llljti~ CiiUJer, -'1 ..tbOu~sJyeo.lijl. Aey sqkgestiono'!.li<l!ey L , A-..... ~ .. -............. ,· .......... ,.,.ltowt-. nt prwill;'. ,1'11.,l)T. : '. •• l /' • 1 •
I
I
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.. .. ..
. . •
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'.• .• ,• -~
.-
• • • . ,. .
•
.
. .. "
It DAJl.Y PILOT
I
0
•• • " ...... •"f -.-...
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
-~-~-...,__ -----
Taurus: Personality Sh .ines "
FRIDAY
APRIL 10
By SYDNEY OMARR
Plltts eftea works best
beblDd the scenes. Tbe Pi.&-
c:eaa 11 subtle, but manages
to &~t feelings across. A
P11ee1 penon can be in love
ud 1Ull talk about ac:hlng
feel.
ARIES (Mardi 21-April 19):
Accent on ability to change
methods, to be versatile and
fielibJe. Keep communication
lines clear; be willing to listen
and learn. Also act on what
you perceive to be neeessary.
TAURUS (April 21.June 20):
never know how much some a good llslfner. But don't year you will be free, happy
and ln Jove. have sacrificed for you. believe everylhing.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): IF TODAY IS y 0 UR T• 1111111 out -.-, "°"'"'" s1111 Stress on how you accept •• 1ro1o1v. '"5tr svc1nev Omlorr<• •
friendly gesture. Be con-BIRTHDAY )'OU are vibrant, , ... 11oo1i:111, n. Trvth AD011 t
slderate and g e nu l n e in independent, an ° r I Ii n a 1 A1tro101w-. a.tid bl~,. 01111 • _.1, thl-•er -ere are ••me to 0-IT llocltltl, .... DAILY PILOT, re'~se. Y-may have to ·~ · '" 1 s ·-• r-• .,.. 11111 :suo. Gr•rod CHtr• '''""" "'"" aid ooe who is ln dire straits. jiriieiistiiriiiciiUiio"'iii' ;;ibuiiii;t ;;ilii;atiieri;.;lniioithiii•..Ovii""ii'ii"ii·Y;;-;ii'ii•ii"·io;;..,..,..,..,iij
But you will be repaid. Know 11
th!~~ ·~:,~ept. =>: BUBBLES T·HE CLOWN
Someone you IOOugbt you CHILDREN'S PARTIES
knew di!plays different MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS
dimens i ons, You le.,-n REASONABLE RATES 644·4290 something of value. You could
also receive promoUon, payl~iiiiiiiiiiii
raise. Cooperale in community II
project.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
1 Top Bananas Slip Into Polyn.esian Mood '.
Cycle high; make new starts
and take initiative. Welcome
challenge. Strive f o r im~
pro'vement. Your personality
shines. Alld people a I s o
pereeive your valuable, irmer
qualities. Can be quite a day.
Your intuition about future is
apt to be close to ast.oundlng.
Trwt hunch, inner feellnl!s.
Very good f<r submitting
rn a nuscripts, Jauncbing ad-
ve11iJ:lng campaign.
SCORPIO (Qct. U-Nov. 21): ' In celebration of National Chamber of Commerce award· are (left to right) Mrs. James Brimble and
Mrs. G. M. Sheldon. The evening includes cocktails,
hors d'oeuvres and dancing, under the direction or
Mrs. E. W. Reed.
Competitive spirit should be
advocated. Not wise to take
persons, 1ituati ons for
granted. Some double check·
ing could prevent monetary
loss. Know this-delve beyond
surface.
Week, Laguna Beach Mermaids will honor their
counterparts at a Polynesian party in the Hotel
Laguna tOQlOrrow at 7:30. Presenting Harry Law·
rence, chamber president, With the top banana
CANCER (June 21.July 22)!
You · gain through individual
who worb quietly in your
behalf. Give respect t.o
parents, elders. You may
Plate Mats From Page 17
• • • New Abortion Hel·p
Mrs. Vail
President
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. U ·
Dec. 21): Accent on public
relaUons, -ships. Legal
acUvity also is stressed. Don't
try to be your own lawyer.
Some detalls need going over .
Key is to be thorough .
CApRICORN (~. 22.Jan.
19): Some changes are in·
Halecrest W om e n ' s Aux~ dicsted, especially w h e r e
having the baby and keeping ning," he explained. main one. illary has elected new officers basic chores are concerned.
it, giving it up for adoption. If a woman wants an abor· "Abortioil meets a speelllc, ln· for the coming year. Yoy may· feel some temJk)rary
marrying the father. keeping lion wit.bout consent of the dividual, one-time need, and is They are the Mmes. Joel discomfort. But you will ad-
the baby but not marrying Jaw , wh a t a re· the not basically hnportant as a Vail, president; Bern a r d just and find that associate
and abortion. possibilities? She may go out population control," be stress.. Mathieson, vice president; is also a friend.
Often the women have of the country, to Japan or ed. John. Cain, r ec ordin g AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb.
already thought out the situa· England where it is l(!:gal, or Mr. Walke, minister of the secretary and Fred Roe, 18): Be creaUve. Express
tioo before ~ing, but need she may go io Tijuana and Costa Mesa church for five treasurer. yourself. Don't create situa-
advice on ho to go through roam the streets until she years, earned his BA degree Others are the M m e s , tion which restricts, binds. Be
the proper p ocedures for finds a midwife or quack. from the University of Rieb-Patrick Cheri, pr 0 gram especially frank with children.
birth or abortion. These illicit border opera-mond, Va ., and is a graduate chairman ; Richard Howells, Many persons are drawn t.o
Why do 4manied women tions are cold, mechanical of the Starr King School of group leader; Robert Hayes, you-and some say u much .
want to have an ,abortion? Tbe procedures done in unclean Ministzy in Portland. c 0 r responding secretary ; PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
reasons are varied -too rooms with a sad lack of pro-Why did he ally himself with Joseph Whitacre, decorations; Emphasis on property, home,
many children already, they per faciliti es. the service? "Partly out of my :Kenneth Ha ze n, publicity; relations with older persons .
\.40%
'\ OF NEW PRICES,
SEVERAL EXCEPTIONAL BUYS IN NEW
FLOOR MODEL PIANOS & RENTAL RETURNS
NEW· ORGANS. . .
AT REDUCm PRICES '
...--PIANO---.
l"lttw Now
CHILDRIN'S PIANO
CWSlS-AGIS I· 1 J
N-$-1• Sl1rl$ WM ff
Allfll lOlll
--. ORGAN-~
lttltttr Now!
FREE! o~~".'~ COURSE
NO OllOA.N 1
WI. WILL llliNT YOU ON•
WallichsMusieCity
,g are too old or they are too The Ct'.lunseling service concern that I felt I couldn't \Va It er Dobriski, children's Some persons tend to make
poor. Single Women often sometimes refers patients to really help." party advisor, and Richard wild promises. Maintain sense
b · g • th Jlnd doctors in MeJU"co -not f b I d h B
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA 540·3165 • . · ecome pre nan'\ .. en GOOD RESOURCES ~W~il~so~•:.· ~SU~P'.£P~ly:_:o~(~(i:'ce".r:... ---~o~~a~an~co;:_:_an~~um~o~r:._. ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tblit t,pey do,noi ireauy love~ border towns but deeper ifl 1. man ~with iwhom.J.bef, are Jn• MexicO, where there are Mr. Walke and his fellow ~, --• .. . . . • !
·' •
1 ed service-approved clinics that counselors ·have at t h e i t vp~irJS get drunk 'al a ~Y or corutantly are checked for fingertips a wealth of ln-
' I hygiene and capability of the formation such as the names . expect to get marr en doctors. of the 18 county obstetricians
have the man.run out oh,the . Th" . d" 1 Jn 1 who replied in response to a
Pregn311:cy is not USUflllY .the · 11 15 one on Y case 0 questionnaire that they/would result of a contracepUve ~mergency, if a woman is
failure, Mr. Walke pointed out, near the 20-week deadline, and be willing to do therapeutic-
because g c n e 1' a 11 y con-cannot wait for the neces~ary abortions, hospitals, homes foi ·tr~ptives are not used. red tape in Ca Ii f or n i a unwed. mo~~f!: 3 d 0 Pt iando n
"'To take the pill, for ex-hospitals. ageooes, ~ agencies clinics. Protect table tops with gay, ample, m~ns that they are l\rHY ABORTIO~? The telephone number of the
·: thrifty, witty mats. planning something, but they \Vhy point 'the way ta abar· Los Angeles service is publish-
:: Don't throw away bottle don't want lo appear as plan-tion? In the eyes of I\1r. ed in the newspaper and once ~.: ~ ~ ~;~rh ~~m ;it~~~~ Walke, the state's abortian the <>ffl ce receives the in·
law shauld be made even more formation, the callers are
... giftworthy mats. Quick , easy Strictly Lego ( liberal. It should be solely referred to the nearest
..: lo make in interesling shapes. ,. between th e woman and her minister in their area.
:
;:: Pattern 7038: directions. -The· Kobe, Japan district doctor, he feels. The Orange Count y
FIFTY CENTS .(coins) for court ha5 ruled that a man ''An unwanted child pr(). ministers hope to have their
.. : each pattern -add lS cenls may not divorce his wife just bably is going to be in trouble own number listed soon so ~-· for each pattern for first-class because her blood type is not the rest of his life," he they can receive calls from
mailing and special handling; to his liking. elaborated. "He is in for ter-women needing help more ·~ otherwise third-class delivery The court ·handed down the rible, rough times. Also, an rapidly.
:-will take three weeks or more. verdict against a nmn with AB unwanted child born in pover· For women who are preg-=· Send to Ali~ Brooks, DAILY type ·blood who claimed that ty generally will continue in nant, frightened, alone and •. PILl:rt, 105 Needlecraft Dept., his wife's O type blood \VOuld poverty." have na one to turn to, help
Bax 163, Old Chelsea Station, make it difficult for tbem to The population explosion is a now is just a phone call away1-..;i._ ..
New Yqrk, N. Y. 10011. Print have normal Children. factor, also, thoug h not the -to (213) 666-1568. 1•
Name, Address, Zip, Pattem'i'iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0•iii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0miii;;;;;i~iii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii0-,I Number; BIG 1970 Needlecraftll
Catalog -40 pages, over 200
designs, 3 free patterns! Knit.
crochet Inst.ants. · a r g y l c
sweater, hat.s, dresses, swim
suit. Quilt. embroider, weave.
Make toys, gifts, afghans.
Send 50 cents.
50 INST ANT Gilts. Make Irr
day -give tomorrow. 50
cenu.
"16 Jiffy Rugs·• to knit ,
crochet, weave, sew, hook. SO •
1
cenlS.
Book of 1% Prl:r:e Afghans. 00
~: cents.
: , Bargain! Quilt Book I has 16
·• beautiful patterns. 50 cents.
~f11Seum Quilt Book 2 -pal·
:· terns for 12 superb quills. 5(1
. · .. ,· -·
cents.
Jobs for Coeds
Malaysian girls can't see
:,, engineering as a woman 's pro-
ression, says Dean Timothy 8 Chin of the Universi ty of
· Ma la ysia 1 s faculty of ~ engineering.
lie said not one girl has
;: taken up the course since the
:_! faculty started in 1958 even
though tn his opinion "there
are jobs in engineering which
• are suitable for women as well
"' as men." ~i======.11
THINK SALE
40·50 % OFF
And A
Surpriie
Reck
WESTCLIFF 'LAZ"A ON.LY
...
LINGERIE
FEMININE G
most Popu/or OWNs in the -
/>d ste/ ny/ sly/es of t' Prettiest NY•o
I on, b ne,0 •NS or dee tr . or lends. E •son in Reg, 7.0o •m. mbro ·d
BA.By Dot ' •ry BlENos
colors •nd LS in • d•zz/' R.e9. $6.$7 399
C 1r1rns ; 1n9 arra 0LORFU , n nylon t . Y of Sil Es s M
flor•/ print L DUSTERS • '«ot. R.09. $6.$,·L 499
li s. Gr in ex ·1· •vo/N/ H 'PPer front co mg SIZEs S
with lo A.LI: SLIPS in '_Pocket, R.eg. 6.cJoM·l 449 Ce trim p no4 eltn
NYLON Blk/~ '•tty P•ste/s. 9 nylon SIZES s.,.,,
•orfed co/ors IS A.ND BRIEF . R.tg. 3.so 199
and fri"1s. S ,,., as4 J Pr. ~or
fashions for R.eg. i.2s Pr. 29'
op,n "•i/'1 IO •.n. .. ,,.,'
P•'ft,; 'ffon
' •rtd lrl 'I'/ f • I !JO ' '''"· -
' '
NOW! • • •
IS THE .TIME TO' ENTER
PLAZA
SPRING ARTS & CRAFTS
FESTIVAL
DEADLINE
FOR ENl'RY
,APRI~ 20
'•
, JOIN YOUR ARTISTIC NEIGHBORS IN. THIS GAlA SHOWiNG
OF LOCAL TALENT ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MAY I, ANb
2, FROM I 0 TO 5 AT WESTCLfFF "PL)t,ZA. . '
Pain~ing, ScUlptur1, W11ving, ,Flower Arrangements, Ceramics ,
Wood CerYing, Handictaft, you hamlli it , .• if one of th1 Arts
·1, your· hobby or vocation, you shoUld be· there.
·,The evarit is b1ing sponiored by the Merchants Atiociation at
We.stc:liff Plata and is designed-to recognixe and encourage tht
' .111ree '.1.multitude ,pf loc.al skills end cra.fts.
All materiel displayed may be priced for sale, including the work
submitted by professionals .
If you would like to enter the festive!, or know someone who you
think should, please fill in the det•il s Of the entry foi-m be'low, and
either l•ev• it et Seve4 0n Drag the n•xf time you're in the Plaza1 Or drop it Jn the mell.
There's no char9e of any kind, no •ge limit·. We know you'll find
Jt lots of fun. When •ntry ii received you will be c~ntacted with
d etails on ,location and time for sett in9 up disP,l._ys. You will also
be expected to furnish your own displey equipment'; s!'ch es eas,11,
t.tbles, etc. We provide the spice, advertisin9, publicity, •+c. Enter
NOW ! · ••
' •••••••••••••••••••••••••
PLEASE ENTIJI IN MAY 1. 2. ART FISllYAL
NAME ••••••• • ••••••• , ••• , , ••••• , ••••• , •• , •••• , •• , •••••••••••••• , • ,
ADDRESS •••••••••••••••••• I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CITY •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' •• I •••••••• PHONI •••••••••••••••••
n•• OF WOll:l ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NO. o• ITIMS •••••••••
S1t.111lt fllffY tt>, S-.01 Drllf', 1021 l"IH Awe., N. I . '1Aprll20
•••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
I
-·" . . ... (.
Fashionable Trio
Wheeling and dealing in fashions are models (left to right), .Mrs. Harold Wil-
lard, Orange; Mrs. John Adrain, Anaheim, and Miss Corliss Rofoli, Fountain
Valley. The trio '"ill parade during a Fashion Show in the Dirt, which will take
place at 1 p.m. Thursday, April 16, on the construction site of The City·, a $200
million development in Orange. About 1,000 clubwomen will view the free event. ·
-... ,.) .. ~aliCraft gives you the mos t f~n with the
least shoe. Summer's go-everywhere sandal is
1ust a strippery of tiny white leather straps. perched
on a higher. faceted heel. From OualiCraft's Funshiner
sanda l collection at 3,99 to 10,99. this one is 7.99
•
FASHION ISLAND
Newport C."ter, Ntw~orl l1ech
HUNTINGTON CENTER
H11nli,,9!01t l1ach
SOUTH COAST Pl.AlA
Co•t• M"'
Thund1f, APfll 9, 1'170
Wi 11 Crime Rate Drop~
With Hemline's Fall?
September
--
Nuptials
In Offing
lly LOUIS CASSEL'! u ...................... ,
'Ille longer skirts which
fashion,makers have decreed
for women are not being
received enthusiastically by
most males.
But there's one group <>l
men. who welcome the pn>
spectJve p a s s i n g of the
miniskirt.
They are police officers
respolllible for dealing with
sex crimes.
According to a nationwide
survey, many of them are con·
vinced !hat ultra·short skirts
have been ooe factor in the
'!lharp rise in forcible rape in
recent years.
The survey was conducted
by a private organization
called Hollywood Social Stu-
dies, based in Los Angeles.
Questionnaires were mailed
to police officials in 128 U.S.
cities. Replies were received
from 63 cities, including 34
of the 56 largest cities in the
country. That is an exception-
ally high rate of response
to an unofficial mail ques.
lioMaire, and suggests in-
tense interest in the subject.
One question asked whether,
in the professional opinion of
the Jaw enforcement officers,
a girl Is "more likely to be a
victim" of rape or some other
sex crime if she -wears a
revealingly short skirt.
Yes, said 91 percent of the
respondents.
, Ttie.Hrat.e'' of for:clble r11pes
-that is, the number of rape
cases per 100,000 populatloii -
decreased slightly In t h e
United States during the five·
year period ending in 1963.
In 19'4, London designer
Mary Quant introduced the
miniskirt, which later beeame
vogue in both England and
the United States.
Since then , the Incidence of
rape has increased tiy 6& Per·
cent in the United States, and
by 90 percent in England.
Miniskirts obviously were
not the only fad.or involved .
The same period witnessed a
general relaxation of public
moral standards, greater
permissiveness in movies and
television, loosening ot con-
trols over pornography and a
trend toward nudity in the
theater and night cl ubs. It also
was a time of social tension
and widespread alienation, of
increasing use or drugs and
alcohol.
Any or all of these things
may have been as Important
as short sklrts In providing the
last straw of stimu111tlon. that
pushes men across the line
between legal 1 u s t and
criminal rape.
But the police officials
participating in the survey
were overwhelrpingly of the
opinion that girls who wear
"provocative clothing" a r e
asking for trouble,
While inany sex crimes are
committed by mentally·
twisted people for motives
that only a psychiatrist can
begin to uitderstand, 98 per·
cer.t of the police officers
agreed that perfectly nonnal
but emotionally i m m a t u r e
boys are sometimes goaded
into criminal attacks by the
sensory arousal resulting from
feminine attire that offers a
tantalizing striptease view or
intimate areas.
The vice squad commander
of a large western city ai;
pended a thoughtful footnote ·
to his response. Fathers and
husbands, he said, are derelict
in their duty when they fail to
warn daughters and wives
against clothing styles that
some males may find pro-
vocative.
Mr. and Mrs. John
Abernathy of Costa Mesa an-
nounced the engagement or
their daughter , Kris
Abernathy ID Eric Wahlberg
ol Newport Beach.
New1 wu revealed during a
party given by the Abernathys
for cloae friends and relaUves.
'Ibe couple are plaMlng a
ceremony Sept. 4 in the
Ga'rden G r o v e Community
Church.
The fUture bride is a
KRIS ABERNATHY
Engaged
graduate qt Estancia High 1;;::=========.
School and attended Orange
Coast College, while h e r
fiance. a graduate Of Palm
Springs High School, attended
the College Of the Desert. His
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Agnar Wahlberg of P a J m
Springs,
Mese Auxiliary
American Legion Hall In
Costa· Mesa is the setting for
the meetings of the Auxiliary
to Barr11cks 1249, VetP~ns or
W«ld War I. The firs~ Tues-
day of e11ch month members
gather for 1, business session
at 7:30 p.m. and the third
Tuesday for a social and
potluck at 6 P .M.
THINK SALE
~0-500/o OFF
A,d A
Surprise
Rack
JtDJotnhl
WESTCLIPF PLAZA ONLY
EDITH
SMITH INTIMATE APPAREL 2711 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
It It N9t A M9tter Of Cklce •• , IUT STUN NICUSrTY • , • 111.t D1111e1 .. Tiie DNlfk Secrlflce Of Tllh .... St.ell Tiie H..tttl Of TH OW'llW.Conetlerre No Lo..,..-
Pennlts o,.,.,i .. Of De 1 .. 1-. C1•111p1111tty, We H.,. c; .... n,,. ... Tiiis Stock Of letter 9ffllty .......... 111 IRttlHte Ap,... , , , Cut AIM! Slalhed Price Te
1\1 .._ ••• 111 Order Te Dh,... Of NI btlN 5tMl 11 Tiit ~rtftt , ...... TIMll • , , al&AIDLISS OP COST. LOU er CONS19UENCll
TERRIFIC EMERGENCY REDUCTIONS
A11il c...tl11"' Ulttfl
INTlll STOCK
IS SOLD
EARLY BIRD SPECIALS!
BRAS
Ah el..:tl4 front ••r r.t•l•r •Hell ef
PAMOUS II.ANDS. lrH: .. 1i1n •lttl
lfytlll. 0.. .... ...,.
SPECIAL GROUP rl 29 RIG. TO $5.95
WHILE THEY LAST e
GIRDLES &
PANJY GIRDLES
TMM -·._ i1i.c.ted '"'"' •" tet• •ler neck ef fAMOUS lltANDS. Ire·
II• 1tyl .. 9N sitn, Ll111ltH 4oollflty,
SPECIAL GROUP rl 99 REG. TO $8. 95
WHILE THEY LAST e
SPECIAL GROUP s3 88 REG. TO $10.95
WHILE THEY LAST e
SPECIAL GROUP s4 88 HG. TO $12.95
WHILE THEY LAST e
II Hiii EARLY FllDAY FOlt IQT
SEll!(:Tlf'\•• I
NYLON TRICOT
SLIPS
sms 32.44
ALL OTHER SLIPS
REG. TO $14.00
PRICE SLASHID TO
CLOSI OUT!
I
SLEEPWEAR
S.lfts ••• Woltt , , , L°'"J ••• latt,
Dolls , , , P • .h. T111lered •rid f•Kf tfYI•
h1 OI 911ortlllllllt ef pretty color. Nylon
Trk9t, or A,_. • Nylo11. ly GOSS.AID
AITEMIS
ONE GROUP
RIG. TO $11 .00
CLOSEOUT ....... .
ONE GROUP
REG. TO $14.00
CLOSE OUT ........ .
ALL OTHER SLEEPWEAR
REG. TO $16.95
PRICE SLASHED
TO CLOSE OUT!
ROBES, LOUNGING
COATS &
PEIGNOIR SETS
I ' BRAS
si ... 12 •• 42 ........... , ...... .
Streplns • , • L..,n.. • , • Stretdi SMf"
• • • Stretch hMcL 1J -IX9UISITI
fOAM ••• YINUS , , • LADY MAILINI
• • • ACCINTUnft ••• MAIJA •••
JmllL • , • GOSUID • , • lllN JOLll
••• etc.
ONE GROUP $1 99 ~~~sl0o3;· ~~ . •
ONI! GROUP s2 99 REG. to $9.0D
CLOSE OUT ............ •
ONE GROUP s3 99 ~~~sl0o3~ ~:5.0....... •
ONE GROUP s4 99 ~~~·sl~3~ '.:~°.... .. o
ALL OTHER IRAS INCLUDING
Custom Fitted LOV~!'s
PRICE SLASHED TO
CLOSE OUT!
Washable Sfippers & Scuffs
By GOSSARD ARTEMIS
..... t1 ....... ., ...
SPECIAL GROUP $1 88 REG. $4.00 '
WHILE THIY LAST e
NYLON TRICOt
PANTIES • ly GOSSAID ARTIMIS , •• KAYSER.
Pl•ll• oltd ,._, ttylts. AuenM color5,
olld wlllte.
ONE GROUP
REG. TO $1.SO
CLOSE OUT ............... .
ONE GROUP s1 31 ~~~sl0o3~·~0
.. . •
AU OTHER PANTIIS
REG. TO $5.00
PRICED TO S!LL FAST
MISC BARGAINS
•
FIXTURES FOR SALE AND/OR
STORE FOR SALE AS A GO·
ING IUSINESS. Stock to suit.
CUS'foM FITTED
FOUNDATION
GARMENTS
YOUTHLIN! coasmE ••• I/EN JO·
Lii ALL IN ONE • , • GO$SARD
n •ppollttmfft for • flttl119 cit ci lo·
COMllNATION •• , LADY MAR·
LIN! COISILmE ••. TORSOLmE
, , , LIMITED 9UANTITY,
~':1~~ ~~;'.'fo $14 88 CLOSE OUT •
ALL OTHER CUSTOM
FITTED FOUNDATION
GARMENTS
REG. TO $32.50
PRICE SLASHED
TO CLOSE OUT!
DM to the dlflcote state ef ftHltfri ef
tlie owaer-col'Mtlerr1, Me h •Die to
wotll • fall doy. CoftSeC111elltly, we 1119•
..,, ftttrt yo• brllWJ tfte lraH N-
1111d ttKlr 11111tllr of yo1r fcnoorlte 9tn'·
1111111t with y1111. If we hove .It 11 yoor
11111, IUY IT AT SALE l'RICE, mfte
tff dete wltlt tti. OWltllr. Then It COii
IN pl1"4 ond fl"ltd for your ..,,,. Df •
1rlltf111 011: oltol"ld by tht ... , ti.
ti,.. ,.,-mlh.
PLEASE NOTE
IN THI FA.Cl OF RISING PRICES , ,
THIS IS A WONDEIFUL OPrOITUNI•
TY TO PILL IN YOUR l'lfSENT AND
FUTUll LI NG-ERll NEEDS WITH FINE
9UALITY MIACHANDISI ••• AT
,11cn YOU MA y NEYIR SIE
AO.AINI
SOlltY NO PHONI OIDIRS.
:~:ti~·~ ~~'rt ·:,~Lt~:~ ~gg
TO SHOP AT THIS GREAT SALi!
TO OUR CUSTOMIRS
THIS IS ALL OUI OWN FINE 9UAL·
ITY MllCHANDISI ••. NOTHINCi
HAI lllN, 01 WILL 11 ADDED FOR
SALi PURPOSIS. e STORE HOURS e
10 A.M. TO S P.M.
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Thursdl1. April 9, 1970
PlOIUltOHAL IPANllK-
,llNCH LlllONI
Con\•eratUonil ""Method ·Homemake r -Bomba r-ds-Business ·with-Concepts
, A.HY HOUl • P'I' DAY
-~llASl'INGI ............... .............. "' ..
-11111 Mn. Lawrace
L. ':f,.":.:: u..-... ol Ill lo lnlroduce
....... """""' ol charm lo
Ill Ill ••'"""' dtportment
store chain.
The homemaker, m o l he r
and active clubwoman
believes that "charm" Is com·
prised o{ 90 percent atUtude '
and JO ptn:ent style. Models
can learn tedmiques but their
attllude builds sueceas. 1he
cl alms.
As an actlve member of
PTA, Junior Woman's Club
and A&slstance L e a & u e ,
Qeverlec -Kelley didn't like
what young glrll were learn·
ing in conventional modeliog
schools m as a hobby she
developed a ne'f ~proach.
'1Charm is avaOable t o anyone," she staunt:hly main-
tains .
Her apJ>l'(Mlch ls noncrltical.
She doesn't Jeach befort and
after or do and don't methods,
which &he feels encourage
snobbery. She prefers lo see
each girl up.grade her Own
personality.
"If they're bouncy -don'r
put them in formals,'' she ii·
lustrate!. She prefers to work
wllh girla with personality and
perserveranct, w h o m s h e
terms "gully girls," stressing
that they can do things pretty
young ladJes can't.
'SHORT LlFE'
Mrs. Kelley laments the
short Ufe of the high-fashion
model. To succeed a girl has
lo have a decided awareness
of the field at 14, some ex-
perience at 16, and become a
prbfesslonal by 18. By the time
she is 23, her big-money days
are over, but typically, Mrs.
Kelley lakes the positive ap·
proach .
"Modeling is a stepping·
stone to otht!r, mare satisfying
carters," she malntaiol, and
1he believ.. In llrb dOVtlopo
Ing a career interest beyood
that ol lllhloo modeli111.
"People Who like fuhkm are
people who like chan1e, and
they c1n hop on the
bandwagon 1t any 1 t a g e
because faahton ts ever-chang-
ing," she suggests.
Her daughter Sheila, 191 ls
an an majcr' at Or~t; Coalt.
College wbt!re currentti she la
manager of the Windjammer,
an on<ampus boutique .
Shelia's main lnterest is
design, aaid lbe IOft-1polc1n,
brown-haired matron w h o
never took a charm course or
atter.ded a modeling school
Although she believes
fa!lhiOn , awareness can be
learned or developed at any
age on an indtvMiual basis, she
lelt juhior high IChool, when
young women are anticlpaUn;
high ICOOol and want lo be ..,.
cepted socially as well as
fa.ahionably, was a great Ume
lo begin. She also wante<I lo
see the ba~cs o[ good pooture
and grooming made acceulble
to girls from lower income
groups.
FORMULATES PROGRAM
After formulaUng her pro-
gram, the attractive woman
(who claims the hippie moVe-
ment is just catching up wtth
her!} persisted until she was
DIFINES CHARM
Mrs. L. L. Kelley
iranted an Interview with
advertllinc leadtrs at Sears.
They JCeptlcally agreed to run
a newspaper advertisement
for aubteens, and were
agreeably surprlled w h e n
more than 240 girls answered
the Initial ad, ~ In 1969 the
Sears Charm and Fuhion
School was launched.
Among 11 points she
streaaes In what she terms
Your Personal Public Rela-
tions are : Stand out 11 an in-
dlvktual ; Be alive, alert and
The Tee
l"l : ... :c....-rmn
Season
launched
By Krewe
attractive; EQJo1 wbat you widen their 1 0 c I a 1 and lSlh year In Newport
do; CGmpete only w It h:l:~per~oona~l~-~~·~·;;~~;'D;U;All~DD~;;;.;: .... ==='='="~ youneU; Know you Can
chance younelf, and Have a
...,. ol humor and enjoy Uv·
iJll.
"U you~ younel!, yoo
will ... that -allp -·t show," tlYI the director for
the Los Anplea Group Slores,
which lncluda Or1n1e County.
"If you raped othera, you
wlll avokt I.be aoclal 1Upa
whk:h ell'O" a woman who
thlnb only ol henell."
Mrs. X.Dey ha• accepted a
1roupofyoun1Se1r1 I I' r a duatel" lntererted In
learnin( more about [ultlon
into her own venture, Beverlee
X.lleyFuhloal'nlduc:llonl.
MeeliJll in Loo Anceln, the
young women from all over
the Southland &at.bet to Jll'IC>
dee modellnc ability and gteu
ideu ix-nted by varloul
speakers.
"An -might opeat lo the group on improvtsing, or a
traveler on trylnc new kleu,:'
Mrs.· Kelley explained. Other
speakers might i n c I u d e
agents, ~es l g n ers or
coonllnalon -people who
develop career interest beyond
modellnc.
In June she will iulde a
group of 30 )'OUfll women on a
tour of New Yort'1 fuhion
centen lo meet people\ in the
varloul lublon Oeldl and
Tattler -
Gra ndmothers Countdown Ume hu arrived for members -of the Myltick At noon every second Thurs-
Krewe of Komus, who will day the Newport Ha r b o r · . blast off tnt.o 1 Pgychedtlic Grandmother1' Club meets in HarMr _Center, 2300 N1rfh Horbor, Cot M•..-..5'5 .. 6524
Journey Into Space Saturday, the Costa Mesa GolC and SouthCoe1tPlaa:a,33331rimt1,.Co1ta ttG -545-0724
April 11. Country Club.
Brtght Invitations hive bld-li"iiiiii;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;iiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiOiiiii;;;;;iiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
den members to the launchina:
pad, the hom.e of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Pina of Brea, at! a p.m.
tor tile lilt-of[.
The astronauts all will ar-
rive In the proper space &arb
and a strolling guitarist will
make the flJght a n ex·
hllarating one. F o 11 ow In a:
prenlght cocktailJ will be a
splash-down, a t p.m. buffet.
and conclucling the flight will
be a re~ntry into the party
stratosphere ror dancing.
Acceptlna reservations for
the flight are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mehrmarm, co-hosts.
'Ille party mark! the start of
the Knwe 's social aealOJI.
Las Vegas
Selected
For Vows
Las Vegas was stlected for
the double ring ceremony
u n I l In 1 Jaequeli,.t Patricia
Kelly and D1nlel Harvey Po~
P• Jr. The bride Is the daughter of
Mrs. r.obtrt Ross Kelly Sr. of
Newport Stach, and t h e
henedlct is the aon of Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel H. Poppa oC Hun-
tington Beach.
1he new Mrs. Poppa Is a
graduate of Colton Union High
School and Skadron Buslnen
College while her husband, a
graduate of HunOncton Beach
High School, attended 0rlll(<
Coast Colleae and presently ia
majorlna In psychology at
California Stitt Colle1e at Lon&
Btach. ·
The: newlyweds will make
their future home in Hun·
linl!OO Beach.
Accessories
For Hair Sty les
FNhlonl comlng up for
summer lnllll that it ii tm-
pol'lanl to keep yoor head
when II eomH lo hair llylel.
Hair lo pttlng sleeker II)
the minute , whether worn
ahorl or lone.
To make up for It. there are
acarvu and kercb!efs t o
match your favorite pour·le-
•ll0i1 outllts, and btr. drippy,
cf&Jllllna earrlnp ror a n 'I
11)'le or Ume ol day.
-DEPENDABILITY
MAKES THE GREAT
MAYTAG WASHER
& Matching DRYER ,
' Your
Best Buy!
!1'1111 ~ W..,, 2 speeds for
•ll·llbrie wasl\lni. AIOmalio fabric
so-d!'Plmar. Pwtr.fln Acllltor for Wlllolnt actloo that's pntla, fllotoua1I.
Spedll soak cycla makes raal~ dirty
clothes 1 cinch to 11t clan.
MaJtar !Joc~tnic Cttl!ll Dry11. Fnl drf
clothes In a~ntle, IOlt t1mper1tures while
electronic sensors constantly ''ft1I ..
rnoistur1 in clothts. Shuts Off wtllll
clothes 110 dnad just rislot Ono llltlni
-oo 1uessln1 !or !Ima and IOlllP. I'll· mwnt press soltfol ,_,, wrin~as.
Sine• 1947
DAVIS -
BROWN
' 411 I. 17th St.
Co1t1 M••t -646-1614
Dall1 9.9 S11. 9·6
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DICK TRACY
• TUMBLEWEEDS
PAJAMAS m::iws
SOME OlllER DO<f
TRICKS, 100! 111\TCH
THIS !' 9E~,
PAJAMAS! 8£6!
-· ~-
MUn AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
Yotl tJONi' MIND MV
SITTING ~EIZE WITM YOd
FOR' A FEW MINUTES,
PO YOU, JtUS?
PLAIN JANE
' _..,,..,.. ·----·----------------·--------------------------------·------
... ~!:~ ;,, ~'..-.. -· -·
. ~AVA'Tlt'JG YO..J~
HE 1-V'C.N'T E\EJt4 L..ooldt:D
AT YOUf'!
By Tom K, Ryan
ATLANTIC
OR
PACIFIC?
By Al Smith
By Horold Le Doux
U'L ~INIR
SALLY IANANAS
"""I.;:. ,. .ell~~ ...
:\ i>'I'~ + .I•
GORDO
WllV .CO f(/JMANS I/AVE .Sur:;lf A ,Ne;O FOR LA6ELS ANO V COMMUN· NAMES? /CATE!
..SO Tl1EV1 L.L
XNOW WllA.T TllEVl/<E TALl<JN' A50/ft; •
MOON MULLINS
JIOW MANY
f(AVE' ;tXi
SEEN,
WHO KNOW
WHAT 1'HE111Rf
TALK /IJ$'
.Al!lOUTJ'
Thursday, Ao/II 9, 1970
' I r / 6~1(~
/~
I \ ' \'
~
DAILY PILOl :{J _ _;
ly Al c.pp
By Gus Arriola
By Ro9er Bollen
-~II) C\..0005
AllEJ.YT AIJ\l
TOO 'SWIFT'.
J
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l ! • •
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Crossword Puzzle PERKINS By John Miles .. ---1r.•, ,.,. ... ,1a1ior J 19>:aa.. H ... 1 ....... ~ ...
ACROSS
l Voung bird
& F1uit
10 Gra"nd •••• 14 Stiade of
yellow
15 Kind or
fligt1i
16 Nimbus
17 Burstings
inw1rd
19 Plinth
20 RCMP and New York's
Finest
21 Jewistl
holiday
2) Former U.S.
Seely. or the
Interior 25 Kind of
cloth
21> Paliame n\ary
vote
27 Female GI
29 Poetry ·of
1 peoplt 31 Nava! unit:
In Formal
3) Turkish
title
)4 Memento ·
)6 Tetas or
A.Iberia
establishmtnl
40 Strip of
wood
.4 2 P&sse .4( Fieta!
.45 Tire
real ure
47 More
boorish
4fl Conjunt Uon , l •
"
"
'"
50 ••• Mahal 52 Covtr
firmly
SJ Female
anim;il
S• Man's
nltknamt
57 Wrong : Prtfix
59 Compttitor bl Constitut nls
b4 Glass
maker's raw
m1lerial
b1 Pa ssport
tntrw
b8 Palt dt
foit 51ras
lngrtditnt:
2 words
70 At any·
lilll'
71 S1ngl'
72 Turn
outward
73 P'rmlts
74 Sharpu,ss
75 Relat's
DOWN
l Footbal'
Infraction
2 Stood:
PrefiJt
) Connect
lntim&te ly
4 Paroxysm
or pt1io
5 Item of door
tlardwar'
fl Pressur'
unll: Abbr.
7 Chicago
feature
·~
18
. "· .
"
21
'#' wi.,
t " lO
~ .. ~
'w " ., 5f ,. \
" ti .. ' "
" ' ..
10 I
" •
,
a Of an
armbone
9 Lichens
10 "B' olf1" J l Immature
ins,ct
12 Kind of
thoroug h·
far' 13 Irish poet
18 P'rco!ated ZZ Goad 24 or the sun
Z7 Mr. Dlsn'y
28 R'd alg~e
e1traclive
30 ·-··Jnd
take notice:
2 words
32 Fau!ty 35 fret
37 Myt hica l
1,11ne
1,ature:
Z words
JI Bird
)9 "Present!"
• IO
I "
ti " ~
2
., ~
.,: I 21 2
J5 I ••
<J ·'-..
••
"
" .. ..
" "
4/'.l/70
41 Southwester,
for oue
43 Invent
.46 Female:
Srang
48 Abus ive
person
51 Feature o!
somt TV ads
54 Slope 111e·
edge or
55 Martini
lngred lent' 56 Aflack repeatedly
58 Maintained
a posture
110 Not"
inanimate
&2 Planet
Ill Musical
composlllon
115 Lead·plpe
cinch
Ill> Crafts'
partne1s
f,9 Bishop's
seat
h .. ,,
"
1,4 i. ' t;I
" " "
..
" ..
MISS PEACH
S><E ONE MUST
SE VEll:Y
D\Pl.CMA TIC
Win<
MA.Re.IA .•
MA.'5 AN
UNF'JtEt>ICT..ti&LE
NA.TUltE.
,
I
i .
STEVE ROPER
Will 'lt>\J BR1M(; ME THE DUMM'/,
PEMN'I ~ rD LIKE TO T~ A
FtMAl LOOK'. AT THE ISSUE
BEFORE I SEMO IT
-:TOTME Pllllrrl'TERS I
" ,. Ii ,I
!I
ti
PEANUTS
TlrUE".
SOME D!NS
51-lE IS IN
A
F'Cl.JL MOOD.
..
By Mell
VOW CAN lil:ELA.\'.
TH15 15 NOT
ONE OF ™"SE
DA'IS.
By Saunders and Over90rd
• ly Charles M. Schulz
'&:11! /AA. WILSO!l IS EVEN~~ AT HIGMT
11W1 HE IS IN ~ 1:16.YTIME ! •
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.. , ... .. . .. ~~-:-:::--::::::--:;:-:;;:;;:::;:;~~.:..:_~-~::~~:::::::::::::::::::4::::::::::::;:::--::-:~.::..:.:..:.:.:.:.:.:..:.~ . .:.:.:.::.:..:..:..:.~.::.::~::.:.:.:.:..:.:.:.::,:::.::.:.:.:.:.:::.:;;::~.~.:;:.:.~.~ .. ~.;,::: .. ::: .. ~.;:.::i~: ... :::~~::7.:.'.:::::::::::::::~1
2J DAllY PU.Of s
Wortla
Mexico Divorce Cheaper?
ly IYL'VIA PORTER ·
11 tt chuper to a:et 1
divorce ln Mexico than In your
h«ne st.lt!
WHO Gl!.TS tht fa m 11 y
00...!
PWSE Drlt'T EAT
STRANGE LEA YES
lit TlllY OltANT. a.Ph
M•111 pl•11h •IHI 1•.41 c•11
"'-¥•ry h•r,,.,1111 if chew•llll or
1w•llow•lll. aiUch•11 •'pecielly
01• p1•11• t• thh d•"t•r ofld
1how11111 It• coutio11•llll to •¥old
ff.1111. C11tor II••"'· p•i111e ltl•
1•1¥11, 1nl1tl.to•, d1ffocUl1, hy•·
cl11tli .nd 11..-ci11u1 11e p1rticu·
l•tly 4•111•rou1. Some of th1'"
will c1ut• ve111!tl119 ond 4i1rrhe1
1111111 111 ef the1n h1•1 ll•en
k11ow11 to t. fet1I.
U yov 1u•P•CI th1t 101111on1
hit ch•w...I or h11 tw1llow1d
o pol111tiolly htrmf11I l11f or
•••"· t•t tft11n t1 , ph.,tlci111
wlttlo•I Mio.,. Tlrn• h of 9rt•t
importt11C. to •w•id I po11illle
tro9.4y.
YOU Ok YOU~ DOCTOR
CAN 'HONE US _..,11 yo11 n11d
• tloli¥My. W• will tl•li¥11
''''"Ptl'f' witho11t '"''' chttf ..
A 1r••t ••11v pooplt rely 011 111
for tholr h1olth 11•od1. W1 w•I·
COMO r-.1101h for tlollw1ry ,_
lee •114 chort• 1cco11nl1,
PAIK LIDO PHARMACY
•t Helplt111-'
Near.wt 9wh '42·1511
,,.. Dtllnry
How are stocks, bonds and
other assets divided?
The last column traced
toch1y's typical rana:e o l
alimony and child 1uppart
payments and typical charges
being made by divorce
lawyef"3. Here, from New
York 's Judge Morr ls
Ploscowe. a nationally known
legal auUtority on divorce, an
details on other divorce coets:
-THE FAMILY HOUSE. tr
the house i.s owned by both
husband and wife, the divorce
settlement often p r o v i d e 1
ownership for the wife. But
Olher arrangements are fte.
quently made too -such as
givi"11g the wife exc I u si v e
possession of tm house unUI
the children are grown.
Typically 1 most of th e
furniture in the family house
stays I.here, with the husband
taking only Hems which he
considers e•clusively h i s •
1When J asked Ploscowe what
the husband gels in return for
a house in which he may have
sunk $SO,OOO or more, his reply
Was "freedom.")
-THE FAMILY CAR. If
there are two cars, the hus-
band and wife each take one.
If there is only one. the wife
usually gets it.
-STOCKS, BONDS AND
CASH. Any .securities, savings
accounts and other such assets
ll'hich are jointly owned are
n o r m a 11 y divided 50-50
between divolcing h u s b a n d
and wife. Otherwise, t h e
person in whose name they
are held keeps them. With
jointly owned rta1 estate, lhere
is usually a provision for
division of the procttdl of its
sale.
-INSURANCE POUCIES.
Traditiona1ly, the husband
keeps; hi! wife as beneficiary
0( his life insurance policy un-
'"'···· li••<h '"'''' ••4-5070
WE NOW PAY
•
Annu11ly on $20,000 Investment C•rtiflcat•• Wh•n H•lcl
to Maturity. Funds in by th• 20th E1rn lnt1r11t From the
11t. lnt1r11t P1id Quarterly.
California Thrift & Loa11
170 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 646-5045
Now
Earn %
lnte-i Paid Quarterly-No long·Term Requl19menta
You can now Hm the new, tllQhlr rate Of 8% yeertyon Mortit Pfan'5,000
fn\ltlltmtnt.Ctrtificatea. Funds placid by April 15th wtll •mtromApr111St
at the tull 9"' nato. lntornt la paid by chtck at lhl end of MCh caltndlr
qu.airttr.
Founded In 191S. Morris Plan tod1y h11 &111l1 txetedino 1145 million
tnd 74 ottic11 ttiroughout CalilomiL
Morris Plan
673-3700
Newport Beach -3700 Newport Boulevard
"'C'-'"''"-<-:::---'-~--------
I
I
OVER THE COUNTER
Joins f'lrtta
Roderick L. Royer has
joined Royer-Tamakl and
Associates, Inc., the Ful·
lerton Landscape con--
struction and mainten-
ance firm, as sales man--
ager. A member of lhe
American In stitute of
Arehile<:ts. Royer served
on lhe Huntington Beach
p 1 a n n i n g commission
from 1966 to 1968. H• and
his family P.resenUy live
in University Park, Ir-
vine.
O••'t let your ph1111
•"'ll'ty r••1n, lit It
coil! rotl1t.-r
·-·-----
••Ol:1""-'••n:--'''W'-·'•·"·'""'"""WW.-U .. O-•~ ............. ,..
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1:
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" '• '• " " ll •• " .. •• "· " .. ..
·:t ..
~ " , .. •• " •• '" .. •• •• I
" ' ..
~ ,, .. ..
" .. • • .. •• • "· •• .. •• '·' •• ••• .. ·'• .. , ...
'" ~-" '" " .. ..
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" ,, •• " '• '• '. " •• '• I
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•
• • • • > • • • • ' ~ • • • ' • • ' ' • ' • • •
•
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W e'dn~y's Closmg Prices-Complete· New Yo~K · StocK Exchange List
DAJLY PILOT
Briefs
PASCAGOULA. Miss (U PI)
-lngal\s Sh1pbu1lrhng dlvlslon
or Litton Industries, Ine, ha!
obtained a $12 5 million ud·
d1t1on to a Navy contract to
overhaul lhc nuclear sub-
marine Gunrdflsh
LAK~ CllARl.ES . L•
{UPI) -Cities Service Corp
has: Jaun"hed a no m1U1on
conservation pro~a.m al 1L!I
1~11.ke Charle! La •
petrochem1cal comple.x to be
c:ompllltcd at the cn1t of 197'l
A closed water circutatlon
$ystcm wilt accoool for the
biggest share of the outlay •
EVERETT. \\1aslL IUPI) -
Scotl Paper Co . o f
Phllndelplt1R 5a1d It 1s well on.
the wny 1n carryinJi: out 11 S3S
million water poUutJon control
projtcl at its E~erelt works In
orde.r 10 meet lite stale of
\Vasltlngton s new Industrial
wnter standa rd s . A
prellmlntlt)' 'ng1nL'CT1ng wnrk
h;i s n c<>n\plrled and actual
construction ls btjtlnnlna •
Q
l
(
I
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--~~-,-.... ----:;;..-., -~.~-~.--~ .. ~.~,~.~.;,~.~ .. -::-~-:-:::--::~-~-~-:::.:-.-.-=-~-:::-.:.:;:::;;::::_:-:;.,;':::"""""" ............................................ ,
1399.95 Two Pieces
' ~•rlY ;-,'"!lit•n fl•"!;I h !•l E°OY!Y A"*1con fld:l;ol P0Hen1 ~fool Beige
with grMn fl~,,ol potterlts, contiasti~ ..wit orJ buttons. Tufted wlng three pie<'e
boek wilh Dacron wrapped fi'lple foam "9011 ot1d rolled arm. Perimeter pleated
~kirt and soft spring edge. $ 3
,REG. $399.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE 2 8
Crossroad• luauriout Contompor•ry l•f•I Hora'1 o Great Solo de--
'sigoed to complement todoy'...s lmort inttrio'1. 011 walnut flnishedJrome . . · Loose pillow backs. Reversible Pure foam cus~.ion.a.
REG. $349.95
.
LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE $188
for Leiss Than The Price of ONE!
·You'll lo .... owning 1hl1 8 foot tu.iuuious .sofa and matching choir:
'cuS1om upholstered in lovishly quilled fabric$ ••.• luxury features
ore reversible M!OI and bock cushio11$ for longer wear , • , $Oh
spring edga construction for durability • , • plus Shepherd casters
for easy movement. Surprising isn't it, tho! you co n get this much
fo.tiionoble seating ot such o modest price? Save al Levitt todoyll
Ask obovt ovr easy credit terms!
LEVITZ WHSE. P~CE r $257 .
' ' ' O.vill,• luxurious Italian Provincial Sofa! Deep hand.wfted bocks,
corved e~Md Ffuitwo~ frame, R~rsibte Pillow-Soft fpo m cu1hions. Uphol·
stered in Oomosk fobria.
REG. 299.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRl tE 1142
S519.95 Plush Velvet
Quilted Contemporary Sofa
This solo'. ho5 a special elegof'Ce , ._ • graceful aiNed bock and
slighrly ongled 'front ••• Quilled Gold Velvet treated wl!h Scotch~
gord to retain that 11ew look! Comfortable reversible foam S!'Oi
cushi'ons put you in luKurious comfort! Boll casters provide easy
movement! Ever-think of how much lim&ii,rou'spend silting in you r
' home? Come-in .o.nd lry this<SOfal It -will'i)leo,e you in every data it'
••• styli~f!· comfort, beauty; d~ro~ility ond-savings. · ·
lE\lllZ·WHSE. PRICE
$367
April 1970·
1419.95 Quilted Mediterranepn Comfort!
A stylish, mode1~y prked sofa ond loveMOt 'for homemakers who
have more tall• than monayl How would this ,tOfo, ond loveseot
look in vaur llvlng room or den? Wovldn't it proviPe the drama ond
distinction you've always wanted? Ju1t ·eno"gh. expoled coNed
wood to g1ve lovely <ontrost with the wondr~us colors al the quihed
' lfV1rz WHSf. PRIC!
$247
uphoht!ryl Comfortable reversib.l~ foom seDJ cush!ons pul you in luKvrious comfarti,Boll
cosler1 provide easy move ment).
Sofo Upholstered in Glov ... Soft Vlnyll No doubt obout it, this Sofo hos
o gift for hospitolrty. Feel the invitin.g sohness of the leother·like Vinyl. Deep
Hand· T ufled Bock.a, Reversible pure loom seat cushions. (Matching lounge Ck.oir
· Sole Prices al $67),
REG. $219 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
French Pravincial Elegant Sofal This beouliful French Provincial Sola
hos deep dfomond tufted bock and deep foam revers ible seol cushions for top
comfort! Its exposed fruitwood fron:ie ond rich, 'luxurious, decor~~~r fal;H ic
completes the pretty .piCturel Don't ITliSS this buy , •• hurry ta lev:itZ todciyl
REG. $499.95 LEVITZ WHSE, PA:ICE
1136
*325
co~sr 10 COflST DISCONTINUED TODAYlOAM tolO PM
S279.95 Elegant
Mediterranean Pillow-Back Sofa
This is truly o glamour sofa in every sense of th,,wordl You'll feel
lika o queen every time you reloK on the moNelous cushions in rich,
rich Custom Quilted fabric! This 8-loof Sofa feo1ures loose re-
versible pillow-bock ond seat cushions for longer weorl foom fi lled
ond soft-spring edge construction give you comfort ond durability
l EVITZ WHS£. Plt1Cf
$177
••• Shepherd casters provide easy movement! Never before hos w much quality seating
space been offered at o bargain price! Only LEVITZ con provide ~uch savings!
Contomporary L~s• Pillow-Back Sofa I Reversible Pure Foam Seat ond
Bock Cushions. Upholstered in Vectro fabric. Boll Coslers for easy movement.
REG. $299.95
Contemporary Hide A Way lleep Sofal Sleek Modern 1tyling, revers.
ible Pure foam cushions. Instantly converts to o full-Size Bed for two. Uphol·
stered In Super-Soh vinyl.
REG. $1 99.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
Kraehl•r Contemporary Hide A Way Sle•p Sofa! Upholstered in
costly fabrics. R:everslble Pure foam cushions, hides o Queen-Size bed. In-
stantly converts lo sleep two.
REG. $349.95
. S469.95 Sola and Loveseat
1147
lhi~·is t'he Sofa ond.Loveseot you've been Osking fort 8' of stylish
wphislica!ed, contempor~ry lux.ury in th~ most sought ofter fabric
in the market, block and white "Houndstooth"I Plus the features that
make lhis sofa and tovesiof. one of the most believable furniture
volues we OOve ever offered. Block.vinyl weln (the.fabric is sritched
LEVITZ WHSE. P~IC£
$297
to vinyl and not fabric for extra stf8n,j1h1olong oU seams!) Bock and seat cushions thol ore
not only reversible 'but interchangeable for durability and long weorl Button. tuhed seat
cushions "soft edge" coristfudion· for that exlro •louch of comfort. All seat and back cushion1
LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE -' 182 ore foam filled .... theP daCron wrGpped to hold their original shopel Self docked (the some
---~====:~~;~~~~i~~~iii~·~~~~:-. elegant fabric that weitf into die wfa on,:I loveseat is under the cushions). Shepherd Casters for easy movement;~'(Matchlri~ Choir $88) •
Contempa Corner Group! Here's o luxurious Corner Group with daring
style. Seats five (5), sleep5 tWo (2), in lull length comfort. Groot for Family or
'299. 95 Elegant
Mediterranean Sofa
Here's o solo dMt ined to become o prized possession. Deep bunon
tufted seat and bock ,,, filled with pure loom for moKimum seating
comfort. Upholstered in costly Bronze Chenille fabric for longer weor
ond added styling,,, Peco11 finish ed front posts, richly carved in lhtt
Spanish traditio n, •• plus Shepherd casters for easy movmef'l!I Come
To Levitt today for lhis fantastic solo buy!
lfVITZ WHS!. PR!CE
$147
Custom Quilted loose Pillow•Back Sofa! Ou~tonding Custom Quilled
Sofa with reversible seat and bock cushions. Soft spring edge construclion.
REG. $269 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
Lavishly Quilted Velvet Pillow Back Traditional Sofa! Here's o luK-
urious Solo, destined lo become o prized possession and priced ot Great Sov.
ine.s. Upholstered in cosily Velvel Fabri cs,
REG. 399.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
1102
1287
Living Room. lavishly quilted coverlets. Walnut finished Corn er Tobie included. $127 REG, $209 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
famous "fox" Early American Sofa! Crafted of Solid Maple. The skill
of the artisan reflected in th is superbly finished Solid Maple framed solo. Re-
versible Seat-and Bock Cushions of Pillow-Soft faom. Upholstered in combine·
ti on of Scolchgord Prinl and T eKtured fabrics.
REG. $319 1158
1269.95 Lavish Deep Tufted
Mediterranean Safa .
far people who like massive, solid sofosl Here's a.luxurious sofa that
is de~tined lo become o· prized posseuionl Deep•hond tufted seats
ond bock Ore cushioned with pure foam ••• Heavy carved Spanish
Ook finished exr)osed fro me odds to the elegant beoYty of the pieces!
Proportioned for full lounging comfort ,., The upholstery, Glove soft
lEVITZ.WtiSE. PRIC[
$188
block. vinyl is easy to cleonl Come to Levitz today for quality, and prices to fit your budget!
(Matching Loveseal $1 24)
lovishly-Qu'llted Colonial Sofal Custom croltea Early American Sofa
upholstered in costly Quilted Print fabrics. Revenible Pure foam Cushio11s. Solid
maple trimmed Wing-Bocks, Sofa Spring edge conslruc~on. *197
REG. $299.95 t£YITZ WHSE. PRICE
' '
Currently Levin Worehou1e ond Showroom ii undergoing a
period of chonge. Our inventory shows o numb er of .Sofas ond
love1eots tho! hove been discont inued , Due to o 1pace factor,
both on our showroom floor and in our warehouse (all ,Under one
raofl) wa ore offering some of the mo~i out1tondin.9 Vo,lue1 yoJ
could ever hope to fin d in Southern Collforniol Velvals, Veclros,
Herculons, Damasks, Matelasse •• , Almost every style 0
1nd
fabric you c~uld imagine at prices y~u can't offord . to miul
Quality for quality, feature for feature, and dollar for dollar
we feel confidenl that if your need is q ~ew 1ofo or loveseat lo!
your livi ngroom you'll find just what you're looking for at.
SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS!
Luxurious
Contemporary Sofa
Sweeping modern design blends wi!h any decor! This
solo is upholstered in perfo rmance tested lo bric.for long wear!
It features deep hand-tufted lxlck and rich oiled Walnut finished ex· _ lEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
posed frame. Cushions ore filled with Pure Foam for seating conifartl $1'9 .6
An impressive solo like this will set the tone of your whale room •.•
Come to Levitt today and lake odvontoge of the sovings .offered!
Early American Sofa! Authentic Colonial styl ing, upholstered in quihed
print fabrics. Reversible pure foam cushions. Exposed solid moplelrimmed wi.ng-
' -M~--$247' REG .. $3.49.95 LEVITZ WHSE.· PRICE .
K,..9h'9r' King.Sise Rocker•Lounger .. Vibratorl Here's the mos! ob~dient
piece of furniture you'll ever own. Rocks. or ,Jleclin~s. Cushioned wirh pil)ow·solt
foam. Upho lstered in learher-like vinyl!
REG, $139
S269.00 Sleek Modern Luxury Sofa!
This sophisticated Solo will be the center of atten tion in any smart set-
ting[ All one piece. No sections to slide oport! AlwoysJaoks n~I and
inviting I Exposed Oiled Walnut frame to give lovely contrast with the
wondrous Green color of the deep pile acrylic Fur fabric! Foom filled
for cloud.like comfort[ Wolk thr.ough ou r store ••• compare! It's
dramatic[ It's gorgeous!
LEVITZ WHSE. PRICi
Magnificently Carv•d Spa,ni.sh;Styled Decorator Chair, Hand-
Tuft•~ lacksl Elegantly CoNed'fruitwood finish ed frame. Deep ha nd.tufted
bocks. Reversible Pure Foam Seal Cushions, Upholstered in cosily fabrics. S 1'.18
REG. $1 79 LEVITZ WHSE. PRlCE-
"The Modero" Co11temporory Corner Group I Here's o luxurious corn·
er Group with daring style. Seats five (5) sleeps two (2) in !ult length comfort,
Wo1nut fipished Corner Tobie and Built-in Sloroge Cabinets. . $] S.S
REG. 299.95 LEVITZ WHS(i PR1~E' ts
Hand-Tufted Top,
OPEN ·o.~dl Y· 10 TO ro, SUNDAY' NOON TO 7
Quality French Provincial Scifa !
If it's heorlworming ond gracious elegance you ore
1459.95 B' of Unequaled
Mediterranean Elegance!
The lost word In !uKury _ .. here's o Solo designed To
complemenl 1odoy'l smart inleroors. You'll love own ing LEVITZ W11S£. PRICf
!his magnificent Mediterro11eon sofa. Upholltered i11 $ 2 9 7
elegant quality fabric; , •• lo Poz Olive ••• OC·
ce~led by intricately carved Sponilh Oak flnllhed
Jrim. Unsurpos~ deep seoting pleasure on thick loom seat cushions wrop·
ped in KOdel for cloud soh co mfort-revers!ble for double weor ••• plus
the luKury touch of self decking, soft spring edge ond boll casters for easy
movement! Shop the levil? Warehouse woy and see how our modern mer-
chandising methods 1ova you more money 1hon you ever dreamed poui~et
luxurious Modit•rran•an Sofa Plu1 Matching Loung•
Ch•lrl Carved Sponilh Oak arm posb. Upholstered in lavishly
quilted fabrics. Yov get the 8 feel long pillow-bock solo plus the
motthlng lounge choir. s29"'
REG. $•5• LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE 1
'r•nith Provinitial luxury Sofa ! Carefully carved and
ahoped ekpOsed Frv!twood frame. Deep hond.111fted back uphol-
.. ,tor-td in costly Damask fobrk. Revertible piUaw·Mlft loom
cushions. (Motthing choir Sole Pr iced at $8 7). Sl 86
REG. 1299 ' LEVITZ WHSE. Pl!ICE
t .
COAST ro COAST
FURNITURE WAREHOUSE
ANI) $HOWROOM
San Diego Fr~way At ·aeach Blvd.
\
•....... _____ ,,. Easy to
Reach from
At levitr oll the' .,retail frills" ore
token autaf the Warehouse Sol• Price.
Tait• it hom• yourtelf or hove it de-
liY•re d by Levitt , .• , There will be a
small delivery charge due lo the 1e
nc~dibly low Warehouse Sole Price1!
'
lASY CREDIT TERMS AVAILABU
Anywhere
--··
LEVITZ WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD., Edinger Ave.,
Next to the Hunt ington Shopping Center!.
1'eeking for your rooms, then you'll love this French l~ITZWHSf.f'IUCE
Provincial Solo, with its exq uisite eye appeal , , • its ' $16 7
comfort, ond its proctico!ityl Note the corelll11y carved .
and shaped exposed Fruitwood Froma ••• Deep hand-..
tufted bock •• , Upholstered in costly Damask Fobrks , • , for long weo!I
The, seal cushions ore reversible ond,filled with loom for eKtro comfort! T o'ke
advantage of Levitz low, low price lodoyt
M•clltorranean High-Bock Chair, D•itorotiv• Cane
Arm Panel1I Beautifully coNed fruitwood finished frame. Up..
holstered in Custom Selected Fabrics. Cone accented arm panels.
Revertible Pure foom Sao! Cushions. $QS
REG. $1 S9 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE
Kroehler De•ply Tuft•d Tuxedo Sofa! Here's o lu Kurious
Solo designed lo complemenr today's smart inter iors, Upholstered
In perfotmonce tested "Vectro" Fabrics. Deep hand.tufted seals
ond backs cushioned with pure loom.
REG. $289 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE $187
11 .. •nt Sp•ni1h Sofa ot lobulous Sale Sowing•! ft.
gorit beauty .•. quality construclio11 , ... svperb Mtaling comfort ,_.
everything you'...e olwoy1 wonted in o tofo is yovrs in !hit beautiful
Medilerroneon decorolor des ign. To the floor atyling, completely
uphohlered in cas!ly imported quilted gold velvel. Thick foam filled
reversible back and seat cushions, with ric.hly carved Spqnisb Oolt
exposed frame,
REG, $549.95 LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE $297
•
··--· -.. ·-----·-·----
' T ..... '1. Ap'1J 9, 1970 OAILV PILOT
A Slight Change--and Voss' Bat E~upts
. .
· (i!pedll lo ... DAIL~l'ILGTI
KANSAI •CITY -F Newport
Hatbor lllP llld Orup Coast Collt1•
1W BUI Vou ls oil to a blublg" start
with ·the Clllfornla ·Angell -and be
crtdlll a slight adjustment In his balilDI
style u one of the main reuons.
voa -In four runa with a triple, t"'° doubles and a linsle In five tripo to
the plllt Weclne!day to apellJ"head a 1-1
tnwnph over the Miiwaukee Brewen ln
Miiwaukee.
Coolacted lo Kanau City today by the
DAILY PllDI', V"" cndlt<d workJn&·
wtth Angel scout Kenny Meyen·u ooe al.
the reuom for the improvement.
11He wcrked wtth me in the wtnter and
1o1 me to look more low.ml the pllcher,"
~v ....
The adj.-.01 ....,. lo hava paid blc
dlvl-. In the Anlels' C)l>OtlinC ....
the M, I !0-pounder lrlpled In "" nm In a
tu victory.
''I've neVtf hid a better dly, •' leul
in the majoni'' aa.id Voa, referriq to
Wednaday'1 pme, addlq. "I feel roll
aood at tloe plate. l )Ult bope l can.keep
tt up." • • ) v .. llld his teanlmi\el bad • day off
before apenlng a teties <Friday In KaMas
City. • •
Lut yeir 'VU h1.s first full sea.son in
the majon. He had originally been ~gned
by the Detroit Tlpn and later UUM!e his
way into the Ch1acao White Sol organlza..
tion • • .. The Angels acquired him in a trade
that oent pltcller Slmmy Ellls. lo
Clllclgo, bat the lllart In Itel bad no
-to that of 1970. Vosa cl14•t rucb the .zoo mark Wiiii June 7.
Then be came on fut to fini* .with a
.2!1 average while alternaUne; betweea
/Uf', II ,.,,, • 11
Hf. It Al>/. 1•
""'· 15 AM.••
AMfel Si.~
Alt .-• llM" lnft,
Mtt:ll 11. KIMlt Clf'I'
"""'"" II ICI.,_ (tty ........ al"-* (lf'I'
....... vt Chic.
""""'' vt. Ml~
"""'' n. M'-toll
S111 1,m,
S1tJ ,.("I.
ll:li 1.m.
11.U 11m.
1:$$ '·""
):.U ··'"·
right and left field . Tlll1 ae-1, loll Ueki
'belongs to Alex Johnsoa, the blc •luaer
lbe Angela got from Cinc!MaU where be
hit Jl5 1811 year.
So right field wu open and the fight ~
eluded V066, Rick Reicbardl Jbn Hldu,
• •
Billy ~ .. and 8-llepoc althouth
lbe lall<r .. -. in-· v... bfDOd la a loOd spring, lood
.....,.. to win the tw1IDI asalpnent
f .... Ralclwdt, bJa prindpal -petltor
al the end of llle~ srJnd.
The ~ hlltlng VOii singled
"'"'e lhe Anpla' ntal Nil Wedneaday,
doubled -a tllll in the third and lrlpl·
«I to drive in a jrun in the elghtb. Then he
had anolber chance lo bot lo the ninth and doubled home a lally.
, ca~ls'1 'P"'duct!Go provided Tom
Mlll1Jhli wltb lhe pllchlni v I c t o r y
altboo&h beJp wu needed in the seventh.
flrll from Rudy May and th.. from Keo
Tatum. Neither allowed a hll
CALl,OlMUI Mll.WAUkll
MrllrM Mrllrlll A~, • S 1 t t Htr-. 71t S I I
.. ,_,..1, u " 1 ' 1 Stll'ffr, Cl ' • 2 YMI, rf S I ( ( Hett<\, It :t t I
A,,.,.__ II 4 t I 1 Gooiu,., p11 11 t t
._.,, Ill 4 t I t KWNif'f, lb t t I
Ill"°" ct 4 t I t Wttloll, II 4 t 1
AKw. c. ' I I t O'°"'°""", P t t t A.llt0drlo11111. a 2 1 • t Ltcktf, p 1 t o T Mt;trlo'f, t S I t t Hovloly, rt 4 t 1
1111.Ma'f, P t t I I ~Ntrl11ey, c I t t
K,T1lvm. • I •• 0 Alvh. • ' ••
KVlli.11, M ' t 1
"•llln. 0 I t t 0
YIW..111<\t, II 2 I 0 0 Tof1!1 )t 6 ll 6 TOIOI~ JO I 1 I
I! -lo(k1t., OP -(llllOtnll l. MltWllikM t. U>a -c1111ot1111 r, Mllw•vk" 1. 28 -A.Jorrll,,
VOM I. Hffptf, Sn)'Otf. J9 -YIU. $9 -H1rJllt'. S -PtH!I'.
" " • .. ,, •• T.Murff\1 (W,l•tl .. ,,, , ' ' • • llt.M1y • • • • ' • IC..T•tum >-112 0 • • ' ' "•tlln t ~ll , , ' • ' ' .. _
111 2 ' ' • • '""~ 14/S I • • • '
Green Coat Lakers, Suns Put It on Line
Chase Opens
At Augusta
AUGUSTA, Ga. (API -Arnold Palmer
1nifDed and snorted with a bad cold and
announctd that his golf game "i.s sounder
lban it has been in five yurs opening the
Mutttt." Coming from a foor·Ume
~pkln, it sounded like a warning to all
the' rut.
Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player
and 10 les,,er-known Mastert lnvitttS
started today In the 34th fight for that
malic green coat awarded winners at
Augusta National Club.
"I fee) physically up to it," said the 4G-
year~1d Pahner. "Although I'm not hit-
ting the ball better than past years, my
overall· game has u much muscle as.
well ••. as it did in the early 1960f."
Palmer won the Masters in 19~"'4
but hun't acratched linct: facing middle
age. His following ii still the largest, his
tfns ihe m~ adoring, his appeal . far
above anybody else's. But, Arnold kno,vs
that .one more green coat and they'll
r emember forever.
"I c.an't think of many things I want
more than a fifth Masters," he said.
"'Sure, I'd like to have a PGA cham-
pionship, too, since I've never won that
one. But I'm eager to see what happens
at Augusta National this week·."
The rolling Augu!f.a National course Is
a subject of controversy. Some, like
Bruce Devlin and Dan Sikea, say it ap-
pears in poorer shape than any of their
past years hen. Nicklaus, on the other
band, says it's not u pretty but is super
for pur< golf.
''The greens are. fast and I'll be the
happiest cat around If they 're lik:t
greased lightning and experience comes
Into play. When experience comes into
play, I think l'llJJe·ir(loniU.O.,,with ae
advantage." ~
· Nlckla111 has gone tluwgh a trying 1'70
ID far because of the death of his father
by cancer. It bad been a rich, close
father-aon relationsi;P aince Jack's pee.
wee golf era. •
"I am u reacty u I could have possibly
been .•• under the perso-nal
cirewnstances," he said.
Nicklaus said the bullet-fast sretr:l:I ol.
Tuesday were not as quick for Wed-
nesday's final tuneup rounds. 0 1br:y wet
them down, I think," be sald. ~·1 hope
they hide those water hoses the rest of
the week. Keep 'em faat."
Young Hurler
Bounces Back;
He's All Heart
SAN DlilGO (AP) -Whoo Kearny
High School'• bueball rans lalk about
Mlldlell Taylor belni ·"a tld -heart," •
they're 11ytnc: qutte 1 )ot.1bout ooarqe.
Mltdl Is cm of his team's pltd>ers for
the flrsl time lo nearl;t Ml yean alnce a
heart munnur aeemlngly ended bis pro-
mising athletJc career.
He wu a three-letter man in his
aophornore ~r -the ltarting defensive
end in football, third Jeadlng acorer in
basketball and a .regular in the baaeball
team'• pltcldnl -· College and pro scouts in all three sports were already
eyeing him. •
Then X-raya disclosed a strained heart
mll9Cle and the hurt munQur.
"I WU abocked -but not scared,"
Taylor uld. "11 waa ,.ally wllOltllng but
I had to Ive with tt." He did, for 20
months, ••tchlhe his teammates from
the aldellnea. .
The murmur finally dJsappeared and
docton 1ave the M, 115-pounder
·P'f11\ISl!oo lo play baoeball 11aln, .. arn-
ing hlm lo be careful.
"'nley thaucht the pllyllcal actlvlty In
baaeball woold be -aod give them
an klea u to how much I could do," be
e~lalned.
He'1 dooe qu!lfl a lot, wlnnlng thrte of
his first four gamea including the f<JUf.
hiller he twirled to celebrate his return.
His· perfonnance has prompted Ne"
\'ork ?tteta ICOtlt Bob O'Regan to say t.1\t·
chell h11 a ..,..i chance to ba clralled by
a pro i.am deapito his heart atraln.
' '
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Having balUed
back from the brink o( etiminition with
two straight triumphs, the Los Angeles
Lak.en collide with Phoenix tonight in
the deciding game of their Nationa1 Bas-
ketball Association playoff series.
Virtually given up for dead after the
Suns rattled off three straight to take a 3-
1 adva11tage, the Lakers finally found
some cohesion and wcm firsl at home and
the11 took a IOt-93 decision at 'Phoenix.
"We've become a team for the first
ti.me since Wilt came back," declared
Keith ErlcklOD after that victory, the ,
fint the Lakers had scored in Phoenix all '
season.
\Vilt Chamberlain, wno suffered a riP-
ped knee ligament in November, ritumed
to the Laker lineup only in the final week
of the season.
With Wilt back, adjustments w e r e
Reeded both on offense and de(ense .
He provides strength on the boards
although the Suns ror the most part have
been outreQciunding the Lakers.
Gail Goodrich, a former Laker, ha!
proved a standout for the young Phoenix
club both as a playmaker and scorer.
CoMie Hawkins, P.aul Silas and Dick
Van Arsdale were all strong ill the early
games but Phoenil shot only 34.4 percent
from the floor In Tuelday night's game.
OUT AT SECOND -Cincinnati second baseman Tommy Helms is able
to hold onto the ball as he rot.ls over on his back after tagging Dodger
pitcher Bill Singer in action Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium. CaJJ ..
In Tight Quarte1·s
Cbica~o Black Hawks goalie Tony Esposito makes a glove save as
Delro1l 's Garry Unger (leli ) lries for goal in first period o1 NHL
Stanley Cup series Wednesday in Chi cago. Hawks' Keith Magnuson
(center) tries to check Un ge r. Chicago won1 4-2.
'-'-------------------------
Jerry West ~while contributed S
point8 to the Laker attack and Cham-
berlain hauled down 26 rebound!. 1
"Wilt dld a fine job of clogging up the
middle in that sixth game," West
aneri<d. "But I think we helped hlm by
playing betttt defense out!ide." '
All the other opening playoff rounds
have been COmpleted whh At 11 n ta
waiUng to find out whether it will host
Los Allgeles or Pboeoir In the
final! of the Western Division.
New Yort and Milwaukee start their
best four-of-aeven series ror the Eastern
tiUe Saturday 'at Madison Square Garden.
Although lbe 8111111 have i..t the throat
grab they had on the Lakers a few days
a,o, Phoenix colch Jerry Colangelo said,
.. I'm proud or the way my team has
played and J considei: It an honor that
we're going to the Forum for the seventh
game."
COach Joe M'ullaney, In his first season
with. the Lakers, has betn switching
personae) frequently in this series seek-
ln1 comblnaUons that could counter the
Phoenix speed.
Hi& key move In keeping the .Laken
alive in the sixth aame could have been
&ending ErJcbon into action in the third quarter. Keith suk five ol hi& six field
1oal attempts and scored JS JX!intl in all.
In~ the play Is umpire Harry Wendelsledl. The Reds captured their
~rd straight, >2. The loss was the Dodgers second in a row.
Dodge1~s Look to Sutton
To Shut Down ~esky Reds
LOS ANGELE.S (AP) -It was before
Wednesday nJght's game with Los
Angeles at Dodier Stadium and Clncin-
naU righthander Jlm McClothlln, nOting
the splendid performMces the previou!
two nJghta by pitching mates Jim Merritt
and Gary Nolan, smiled and remarked:
"These guys really put on the pressure.
It's going to be tough topping their acts."
McClothlln, the former C a 1 i for n i a
Angel miking his first National League
start, didn't top Menitt and Nolan. But
he came ctoee.
The redhead from Southern. California
Dod9~r Slate
•II ••-Ill kPI {Mt)
"'"'· t • 000.en "' Clr•ct-11 A.pr. 10 eoa,e,. ,,. Sen oi-
Af>r. 11 Oodt•n "' s.., oi..o
7:55 ... ....
''" ... rfl.
•:11 "·'"·
allowed the Dodgers just 0111e hit through
five Jnnnlngs, flnaJJy left in the eighth but
sUll posted a ~2 triumph, the Reda' third
stralg!lt victory.
Merritt hurled a three-hitter Monday to
beat Montreal and Nolan came back with
a two bit ahutout Tuesday agalmt the
Dodgers.
"It meat a lot beating the Dodgers,"
McGlolhlln said. smiling.
"11\ere was all the talk about the
Dodgers and all when I waa with the
Angeis. And, of course, I grew up rlgbt
here. But most of all . it was my f!rat Na·
tional League start and I wanted It to be
I good one."
McGlothlln, 1-11 Jasl se ason with
California, gaff way to Clay Carroll in
the eighth after giving up only five
&irJle!.
Carroll had to work out of a tough nlnth
Inning when Lhe Dodgers prOduced back·
lo-back slngles by Steve Garvey and Tom
Haller ror I.heir only aerlou.s threat of I.he
e\lenlng.
The Dodl'fl and Reds conclude their
opening three-game serie! tonight at
Dodger Stadium . Don Sutton, 17-18 last
sea.son, starts for the Dodgers. Rookie
Wa yne Simpson, 7-13 at Indianapolis,
makes his big league debut for Cin-.
cinnati.
Los Angeles manager Walter Alston
praised the pitching of McGlothlin but re·
mahu irked at his OW1I club's Inability to
JCOre runa.
"The whole club isn't hitUng," he said,
noting the fact the Dodger! have scored
only two runs and collected Nne singles
in two games.
"The kids, Steve Garvey and Bill
Buck11er, have hit the ball about as well
as anybody. But we're 1t0l hitting like we
hit Uus spring, I guess you have to give
aome of the credit to the pitching."
Bill Singer, who won 20 games last year
muscle aod the heart mu rm er,
seen him (Singer) better." remarked
Alston when asked about his ace
rlghthandcr. "His control was jU8l a little
off. But you have to remember. Cin-
cinrlati I& a good hitting club.''
-CINCINNATI 101 ANGii.iS
Hr llrM M,111111
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Bill Voss
' Miller Takes
.. Beaver Joh ,
AndPay~ut
CORVALLIS, Ore. -Ralph H. Millet".
University of Iowa basketball coach, was
named head basketball coach at OregOn
State University Wednesday.
Miller, 51, succeeds Paul Valenti, who
retired after air yearS as head coach and
18,years as asmstant coach.
OSU athletic director Jim Barratt sald
Miller withdrew his name as a candidate
SulJ4a~rilght. But Wallace "Bud" GibM,
chalnnan ol the OSU athletic board,
awakened and offered him the job.
Miller had a 20-5 record at Iowa last
season and bu 1 career recofd o( •1
wins and IM lo!s~. He pre•lously coac~
ed at Wichi ta State. ·•
Barratt sakt Miller's salary would be h'I
line with· that of a full professor at OSU
-about $20,000 a year. Counting ·fringe
benelits, Miller would be takJng 1 pay cut
1n corning to Corvallis, Barratt said.
• NEW YORK -The two professional
teqnls groups. denied Wednesday that
they had joined or endorsed. the Grand
Prix ot Tennis.
International Lawn Tennis Federation
president Ben Barnett announced In Lon-
don ·that the IL TF had authorized an ex•
perimenlal grand prix circuit of 13
tournaments for 1970, I n c I u din c
Wimbledon and Forest Hills.
• MANCHE.STER, England -Denis
Law, once Britain's costliest soccer star,
was ' oUered for transfer Tuesday by
Manchester United for $144:,000.
· The 30-year~ld tousle-l:ieaded Inside
forward, who at bis best was one of th&
world '! great match winners. has been
troubled by a knee· injury during the last
three seasons and ha! been in and out of
Manchester's Jinetip.
Manchester . paid Torino of Italy
$276,000 for Law in 1962. That was then a
record transfer fee for a British Club ..• ;
Sir Matt Busby, Manchester geneifl
manager, said: "We ha ve pla ced Deni!
on the transfer Ust £or his own good. Hit
career has been plagued by a successlbn
of injuries and he is no longer e regul3(; . : . • • LOS ANGELES -A judge ru.ied
Wednesday that Bobby Tolan , ce'h-
terfielder for the Clncinnali Re d:s
base ball team, could .not be the fathe r-of
a child born to Miss Patricia Melton. ·-
Superior Court Judge Lester E.~ O!Jqn
said blood tests ruled out the poS!lbillfy.
Miss Melton, 25. a clerk-typist, hid
sued in 1967 to oompel Tolan, 24, to sup-
port her son, Robert. 3. Tolan had said he
could not be the father,
• MEXICO CITY -The organizing com-
mittee for the 19th Olympiad in Mexico I•
1968 had its last formal session Wedne&-
day.
Pedro Ra.mirei Vazquez, the architect
who headed the organiting commi ttee for
the 1968 aames, di!pltyed a memorial
publication of rive volwnes which will ber
put on public sale as the last Olympic
·souvenir.
At the height of plaMing for the Games
the committee employed 12,000 people.
At Wednesday's luncheon, the last of·
ficial meeting of the organizing com-
mittee, only eigtlt employes remained on
the payroll. J
• EDMONTON -Jose Luis Pimentel cl'
Lo1 Angeles knocked out Billy McGrandle
of FArnonton at 2:5i of the Ufth round of
acheduled lG-roond figh t W e d n e s d a y
night ,
PIE TRAYNOR
HOSPl1'ALlZED
Prrt'SBURGH CAPI -All<ndanls It
Mercy Hospital say the condition of 70-
year-Old Harold "Pie" Traynor, one of
the all-time baseball il't!ats, remaln.t
stable today .
Traynor was adm!tted to the hospital
Tuesday night In guarded coodltion wl{b
an undisclosed ailment.
Voted by baseball writers as lht
ugreatett third base maft eve.r," Tr1ynt>r
played for the Pitt.sburgh Pirates from
1920 to 1937. Through a stretch o( a dol:!l'I
years he dipped under the .:1()() hilting
mark only twice .
He succeeded George Glb:;on as Pirate
managtr In 1934 and quit as an acUve
player ln l!m. A year later he resi~
as 1nan1gcr. He and hls wife llav1 maa.
their home in Pittsburgh &Ince.
' )
I ,
I
\
I
I
-
Diil Y PllOT TIMINilJ, Aorlt '· 1970
Anteaters Still Have Chance
'f o Make Baseball Playoffs
, . l)M ef 0.. Pftblen\I lacin& a cooch ol In in-
• ·•1fzm4M)( coDect cllvilkm ttlm 1ppean to be
'ttio camc1 pa111 to tread 1n ge1t1na to th<
NCAA ~ •t seUMl's end.
•. P'tlr a firlt..year tum t.o even be ln con-
Sdlratkm at the midway Point ot the season
is almolt Ullhtanl of but that1a the cue for
.....i. Gary Mims' UC Irvine -ball oquad.
Gary built a SO.game schedule for the
:Antuc.n qlWI all lypes .of colle&• and
• l'Pill'rilY competlUoa but the one team he
diila't .cbeda"° may keep Irvine from a place
,In the NCAA w .. i.m Regioaab In May.
· · The Anteac.n have defuttd UCLA and
ffOWAaD MANDT
HOWARD
HANDY
USC as wtl1 as Brigham Yoong, Wyoming ud
Oregon of the unJven:tty division.
Overall they have posted a 19-&-I record ud
have hU three games canceled, leaving 19 to
play to ionclude the regular season.
cmt'of the four eatranta. j 1~
Chapmu loob Uke a ....00 choice leaving
two olhtr spob open.
Ad&m1 and his players are not convinced
that Cbapma• ls a better team.
"We gave them all they could' handle and
we don't have to hang our heads.'!
"The CCAA winner doesn't automaUcally
qualify for a berth," Adams ·says. "I un-
derstand that a conference should have alx
tea.ms ill order to qualify automaUcaDy ."
This was the case in basketball with Irvine,
San Diep atwl Riverside all vying for a ipot
in tht playoffs. Riverside wu named, woo the
Western Re1iouls and third place naUonally.
If the usual pattern Is followed, a team
from the northwe!t wW be chosen and that
will leave the fourth spot open with San
Fernando, IrviAe and the University ol San.
DiefC!i cunently in contention.
There's still a long season ahead and muy
things can happen to change things around -
a sore-armed pitcher or two, sudden loss of
momentum, an error here and there.
Whatever the outcome, the Aateaters are
very much In contention for the playoff1 at
tbe present time.
* *
Look at the Future
Futuristic "Stanbird" will be one of more than 250
exotic cars to be shown at the 10th annual Custom
Car, Motorcycle and Dune buggy Show, set April
-.. , ' . . .
23-26 at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. The car has
built-in TV, bar, lape deck and lape recorder tele-
phone and 40 coats of paint.
Sea Kings,
-Trample
Magnolia
By ROGER CARU0N
Of IM Dtlfr ..... t•ff
Corooa del Mar H I & h
School's varsity bueball con-
tillgent pulled Into a Ue !or Ibo
Irvine League lead Wednesday
afternoon, capturing an east
S-1 verdict over bolt Magnolia,
The vktoey .. th• Sea KiDp'
fourth against no Iosset in
circult play, enables coach
Tom Trager's Corona dtl Mar
outnt to confront Loara oo
even tenns Friday afternoon
when the latter i n v a de s
Corona with first place at
stake. Both clubs are now 4-0.
Wedneaday's tussle w 1 t h
Magnolia was a makeup game
alter the Sea Kings had Jet the
hosts off the hook last week -
the issue ending in a t.t tie
after Corona Qei Mar blew an
early 1-0 lead.
It was a different story, how·
ever, this time around M
Trager's nine jumped into a
quJck 4-0 lead in the lniUal
stanza and were n e v e r
seriously threatened.
Oiapman College, a perennW entraat in the
playoffs the put seven ydrs, holds two vic-
'.tories over the Anteaters and a 26-7 season ·-n1.
1be. secood will over Irvine came lbe hard
"way, 13 lnnlnp Tuesday, and the decisio111
'could have gone either way right up to the
· flnal out.
Apololla to Ille UC! frelllmaa cmr. Laek
of lands kept tbtm INm compttlng: at
B<rl<eley Salurdly ilat tlley wtll be vety m ...
fa evldeDCe Wt wtffnd qamt Loytla
Unlvenlty t. North lJde C'aael.
Tiie Alteawr ftn:&-yur ll(Ud, 1e 1 m11,
traveled ~ Jut weebld It eHer the
vanity aJMI jayvee eren ta a trtuplar race
wtt• Berl<eley aad Col Stole (IADJ Beacli) ilat
they were aot allowed te nee because they
did 1ot travel with the offldal UCI p1rty.
Dentistry Long Range Goal
Of San Clemente Athlete
Swimming
Sign ups
At SC
Pitcher Mike Adams tet the
Sentinels down with only three
hits while striking oat four .
Corona del Mar, meanwhile,
pummeled. Magnolia pitching
from the outset and in all, col-
lected 10 singles in spank1n&
the Anaheim-based Sentinelll,
San Fernando Valley State, cunutly
leading the CCAA with a 6-1 record and a 21-
I D overall mark. ii the team Adams didn't
llChedule. It leads the CCAA by thrtt games
fjjei-Cal state (Fullerton). 11ie Anteaters
have split two decisions with Fullerton and
have two more games with CSF. · . I!\ projectiq the Irvine schedule aid Dgur· f t11g from previous per!ormance111 it is hard to
vlsualile more than five addiUOnal defeats.
1bis, meam &he Anttaben: could clote out the
~ regti:lar f!U08 with a 33-15-1 remrd-or bet·
j ter.
1'>e NCAA Westem Regionals takes fou r
teapil trOm the far west. Sacramento St.ate
wtI!l>ost the evont th~ ye•r Ind undoobttdty f tbe:'Wlnner of the Far West Conference will be
* * * LltUe League night 1t Aqel Stadium (April
17) could be oae of the noWtst of the year.
Some 30,000 reserved seat tickets bave been
reserved for the Orange County youngsters at
i1 each.
The Anleb ... _.,,six Orlllp Coun-
ty LltUe 1-ie tuma In 1rn. Winnen o1
sponronhipo Will be delmnlned by drlwin& In
Pre-tame ceremboia on April 17.
· Diacouot Ucket. are anlllble to tbe public
at all Little Loque flaJdo In Districts :IO and
4' or may be onlmd by wrlttq to LllUe
Leaaue Nilbt. P. o. Doz llllO, Anlbelm -· Mall orden mDat be roceivecl by Slinday.
Mounties Walk Otf World Cup
At Forum
,-I With 12-6 Victory
l W Al.NUT -Orqe Coast
• CoU.&e dropped detper into
Antonio was the lndint batter
for the wimen, felllnt lhnlro· sartJy t11ret tm1ts,
scoring twice and .knocklo& ia
two~.
By PIIIL ROSS
Of .... ~ """ s .. w
Sal Lombardi has ambitions
of eventually becoming a good
d..Ust.
But, right now Ille only thing
on the San Clemenc. High
-·· mind Is wlnolng tbe Crestview L e a 1 u e butbaIJ
tiUe.
1be Trilona are currertly
Jocked in one of the hoUe,,t
bueball races tn the area
alOOI with Mlllloo Viejo, Villa
Part, Footblll llld Tustin.
Sal's older brotDer Paul was ·
aa All-county buketball aad
bueball ployer back In tbe
Lombardit' netive climes ·on
New York's Len& llllnd.
Paul is now in private dental
pradice iD El Toro. Sol and
lwtil brother Dom -.Id llloe
lo follow tn tbeir o Ider
brother'• footstept,
athletically 111d ~y .
Althougb Sal !eels be thnuld
be doing better at the plate, It
was his home run Tuesday
against Foothill wbic.h pro-
vided Ille Tritoos with the
edge needed for their third
Crestview win in foor tries.
Colnddeotally, Sal'• bigg .. t
basketball tbrllf a1ao occured
against Foothill.
The Tritons knocked oil the
Knlg!Jta 67-&, when Foothill
WU ranked No. 1 in COUDty
cage ratings.
Sal Jed the Triton cagers in
scoring with a 14.3 average
and tamed a second . team
spot on the All.Crestview
team, while 5-9 twin brother
Dom wu ooe of the squad's
key raerves.
Sal bad a couple of taleoted
ruDalng mates at guard in
Cra.if Anderson and Rick
Mason, who alternated as
starters. But. the 5-10, 156-
J)OUDdtr regrets that brother
Dom dJd not see more action. San Clemente A q u a t I c The taller of the two twins says, "Scmethnes I wish Dom Association is holdin,g tryouts
would've gotten into more for new members Saturday
games because we have each from 10 a.m. to noon at the
other's moves down pat and it munlclpal pool.
would 've been interesting to Young swimmers, ages 5
play together more often." through 17, who think they
Admitting he would like to might be inl.trested in com-
play baseball professionally petitlve swimming are invited
someday, SaJ feela punuit d. to try out. Beginning swim-
his planned dentlstry career mers must be able to swim
will come first. one length (35 yards) ol the
He notes, "I've already been pool.
accepted at UC Irvine and More experienced swimmers
would like to play baseball and are invited lo try out for the
basketball there . but, my advanced group. A parent or
studies come first." responsible adult should ac·
'11ie slender whiz has com· company each swimmer.
piled a 3.45 grade po 1 n t 'Ille San Clemente Aquatic
ave-rage in mostly lcience and Association is a member or
math courses at San Clemente the Amateur Athletic Union of
this year. the United States and the
Leading the winners in the
batting department was Stan
Crippen, wbo went four-for-
four at the plate, knocking tn
three runs, scoring once and
stealing a' base.
Bill Mayer collected a pair
of safeties to help the Sea
Kings to their easy win.
The invaders played er-
rorless ball in backing up
righlhander Adams.
Corona's four tallies ln tile
firSt eame on three walks and
a couple of key singles.
Three irulurance tallies were
added in the 1ixth inning on
four straight singles after the
first two batters struck out.
COttONA Dll MAit Il l ''"1111 Ktr!.lb 32 11
P1lmtr, ct J l \ l Snvd1r. c ' 1
Cr!pp-.,, II ' 1 4 EtldlMltl. rf 1 I 0 Gtr,l•I rl I O O t Stmut11,1D I 0 0 I MIVtt.:ZU 40 21
Den111r. 11 l I o • Johns011. u I o ! Adtm•, p l I • To!1l1 lO It T M.1.GMOllA Cll
Dom has applied at UCI and Southern Pacific Association
1s also coa.skiering dentistry as of the Amateur Athletic Union.
I possible future. Its purpose is to foster and W•lktr, 1, ~ ro"' :""4o
As Sal putt it. 11Dom and I improve a m a t e u r athletics ~·1,lZ:\:',; '!. j' ,: ,! ,I the cellar We 6ne sd a y af. t ternooo alter falling-to host i Mt. San A.afmjo, IU, in a
• South .Coast C onference
baseball pme.
Orange CoM outhit the
hooa, 14--10.
c.o.ch Barry Will ace'•
Orqe Coaat outfit returm to
conference action Saturday
with a pair ol games at Salta
!-na Colle,e in a battle to
escape the cellar. Sinta Ana is
t-8.
Negotlatlons have b e e n
fina1ly canclUded for the Uve,
cloled circuit color television
.,,.....,. el the ll70 World
CUp Soccer Matdles to be
played in Mulco.
Four •lect«t World Cup
matmea to be played on four
consecutlve Swtdaya, be1ln-
ning with the Ope nln1
Ctremon.la: and openq game
oo May 31 and endJn& with the
big 1inaJ lllllt June ll, will be
Hen on the giant xreen of the
Fnrum In Inglewood.
The family moved to San
C1antnte tr.in New Yorlt six
years ago ad DOW lifts in.
Lqulla Nl&uel, while papa
Lombardi nw: an Itall40
restaurant in Santa Ana.
an sort of following a one-way throughout its territory and to ~);:;; ~b ! , ,
street taken by our older build individua1 character and J . sm1111 I I •, , I ,,,,1,11, •l'o
S• OK brother Paul, but lta one aheathymindandbody. eo111n11\,d f z:: 1gnup .which we're sure of and which Swimmers practice on week :::.mr."~ , ! I •
we know we 'll enjoy." days from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the 1°'1" kor•" 1~111"" n °
The wimin£ Mountameer1
took advantage of control
. :problema lby Orange Coast
:pttc:hm and ccmblned their
llMlit attack with 14 walks to
deal Or ange Cout it.s ninth loss
in 10 cooference outings.
F T ' Isn't that the way evecybody San Mateo arta pool in Camp Coron• c1t1 M•• •io 001 ~ 1: ~ Of ourney1_w_nu_ld_llk_e_K_! ______ P_e_n_dl_et_on_. ________ ~_•_•M-'-"--"°-'-'°-.,__,_,_,_
The winners pot together
four·run outbursts M th e
seventh and eighth frames to
cOme from behind to post the
wln. Orqe Co a s t led
tl}rougbout untU tbe seventh
when Mt. SAC's quartet of
~es upped the margin to B-
~' Every player in the Moun·
ties' lineup scored.
Bill Powell was tbe brightest
spot for Orange Coast, bang·
·ing out four o! the losers' 14
1ingles.
His efforts raised his batting
average up to .486 on 18 hlts in
:i trips to the plate.
Mikt Paul a1'd Steve King
each coilected a pair of
safetle.! for Orange Coast
but the 14 walks given up by
Orange Coast pitch.Ing proved
to be more than the offense
could make up for.
Mike Pott.er of Mt. San
Muni Cage
Standings
CMlt ........ MMH:•I ~II II•..,_ ·-41111..-11 "Ollml" DIYltlffl
WlllOfl Ford
Jel'lnton •ml Son
Wtsl Fnill
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MT. SAN ANTONIO (It)
•'r~rl!J
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Ml. S•n Antonio tQ 200 u• · 12 JOI
These 1ame1 w1l1 be ex·
hibiled live by satelllte on
Metavision big screen and in
color.
The four matches to be seen
on big screen, closed circuit
television at the Forum are :
Mexico vs. Russia May 31 ; the
giant ·clash between favorites
Brazil (with Pele) and present
World <llampiom, England,
June 7; the best quarter final
match June 14; and the grand
final match June 21.
All game1 w1ll begin at 11
1.m. An advance t I c k e t
"package plan" for all four
games ls now on sale.
Sal Is In his lhlrd ,. .... on
the San Clemente vanity dli-
mood IQUld, having been I
reserve as a IOphomore and
junior. He prettnUy holda the
regular center field spot and
coach Mar!ball Adair is im·
pressed by Sal's defensive
work.
Adair says, "Sal is pretty
mature for his age with good
leadership capabilities, so he's
sort of our leader out on the
field ."
"He's also an excellent base
runner and has stolen five or
six bases already this season."
Sal eliborates, ''I haven't
been doing at well with the
bat as I've liked to so far , so
the defensive: play is my
strongest facet."
"I probably tnjny bue run-
ning more than any other part
of Ute game."
Major League Standings
Applications are now being
accepted for the annual youth
tennis doubles tournament
sponlOrtd by the Adoption
Guild of southern Orange
County.
'Ille tourney is open to all
boys and girls 10-18 years of
age. Play begins May 2-3 with
finals slated in five divisions
on May 9-10.
Applications may be picked
up at all sporting goods stores
or tennis clubs in the area or
by calling 673.J:ISS. Deadline
for seroring an "l>PlicaUon is
April Z2.
1be senior division touma·
ment (for those over 18) will
be&ln May 30-ll with finals
sdleduled June 6-7.
All proceeda lrom Ille two
tournaments will go ·to the
Adoption Guild.
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE IT!O)YIOITIAJ
New York
Philadelphia
St. LouJs
Chicago
Pittsburgh
Montreal
Eat Dlvl1lon
W L Pct.
I 0 1.000
I 0 1.000
l 0 1.000
0 1 .000
0 1 .000
0 z .000
GB
l
I
1~~
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Washington
New York
Cleveland
Ea1t Dfvl1loa
W L Pct.
2 0 l.000
I 0 1.000 z 1 .6&7
I 2 .333
0 l .000
0 2 .ooo
GB
\I
',\
]\I
Ill
2
COROLLA 1970
Weit Dlvllion West Dlvlsloa $1853. +Tax & Uc.
All MODELS IN STOCK
MARK ll~tlUX PICKUP
LAND CRUISER5-epRONA
CinciMali
Houston
San Diego
Atlanta
San Francisco
Dod1er1
3 0 l.000
1 I .500
I I .500
1 1 .500
1 I .500
0 z .000
w .. 111M11r'1 tl:etulh
SI, LOUii 7, Metll,.11 t
ClnclM«ll J, DoO,.en t
Altlnlt I , Sin DI'" 1
~n FrtndKO J, HllUllM 4 °"'' ·-~ltd.
1 .. .,... --
l II
l\\ m
111
2\1
Chw:lnn•" {Slmp-HI 11 Lt) Aflttlft (lul'lcl" 11.111. nkthl
,..._ .,..,_ (l(oollnt" 17·'1 •I ,Ullb<ltlll (ltllt
11•11!, ""l'lt Aflt~ll 1Nt$11 1 .. 1 .. Sin Ditto Cll.lrlw T·lG), ""Ill
Angell
Minnesota
Oakland
Kansas City
Chicago
Milwaukee
z 0 l.000
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I l .MIO
1 l .5t0
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II
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Hou110t1 ltt•v a.11 11 S111 l"•-11eo 111:a,..1r
l·J)
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"' •u IJ,t
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DEAN LEWIS IMPORTS
1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
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Modem hdy Shop for All Coro
Orange County's Largest and MOii Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer
'
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THE FINEST SELECTION
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and SPORT CARS
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'·
Thursd1y, April 9, 1970
Start
Your
Engines!
Four ·Ai-ea ·
Teams Vie .
At Chaffey .
Irvine League to Remain
Anwng CJ:F's Big Sc1wols?1
by Deke Hou/gate
SONOMA Cal. -A ta11, quiet Australian champi<>n is the
latest gift or the cultural interchange to lldianapoli.3 racifl&,
Remember the aame, Kevin Bartlett.
He like his illuslrious countryman, Jack Brabham, doesn't
have ~uch to say. Bartlett's principal means or txp1"e:55ioa is a
bMy. low slung race car built in Cost.a Mesa by Jerry Eisert.
When he showed up to qualify for last week's Golden Gate 150
USAC championship race ~ ran so fast around the 12-tum course
that officlala «ild him to slow down.
Bartlett was 10 seconds a lap faster than aRy other rookie.
'ntey were fearful he was driving over his head to ma.ke the quick
Ume he was recording.
"Some bloody order ta give me," he grumbled. 111 was called
for putting a rock i11 some bloke's radiator, and I told him be got
it for following me too close. He has two pedals, one to go ud one
to siop, and he can use either ane of them."
In other words the other driver should have gone around or
dropped back. earilett could care less what happened to his
rad1ator.
* * *
Four Orange Coast area
schoolJ are expected to have a
full group of entries In 1be ·4lst 1 annual 1(,baffey JnvitaUonal
t.rack and field meet saturday
at Ontario's Chaffey High
SChool. '
Preliminary,lrials are slated
for 10 'a.m. with iinals schedul-
ed at 1:30 p.m.
Costa Mesa of the Irvine
League, plus three area Sun~et
loop teams -Huntington
Beach, Newport Harbor and
Westminster -are entered in -'
Saturday's festivities. I
There will be two separate
divisions at Chaffey -Open I
and Novice.
•
Don't be 1oo surprised if the Irvine Leaiue'1
clusUication continues 1n the AAAA status
next year.
'l'hll's the lmprtulon one gels when chat-
ting wit.b C1F Southern Sectio1 commissioner
Ken Fagw. ·
Fa&ans polnt1 out the followillg information
In regards to size of enrollment regarding the
Jrvlne circuit:
Enrollment, gauged by the number or boys
--=-------ROGER
CARLSON . __ .. ,__ __
The open division w I 11 ""~:~ tn tbe upper three grades (10th, 11th and
showcase some of the top r 12th), shows the Irvine loop the seventh
s enior c I a ss• v a r s j t y . largest i• the Southern Section,
performers from around the / ·The Irvlae circuit, which will include
Id ha Orange Coast area teams Corona del lt1ar, Bartlett ls a rookie In the eyes of USAC just like wor c m-Southland, while lbt novice (',osta Mesa, F.disott, ~tancia and Fountain
* * *
pion Jack Brabham was ln 196Z at the speedway. when be ~s· category is open to all un-Valley along with Santa Ana Valley, Los
tounded everyone by finishing the 500-milt race in the top lO dnv· derclassmeD. Alamitos and Magnolia in September, is Inf an underpowered formula 1 rear-engine car. C ta M !In In r It's the a.amt now. Nobody In USAC authority paid much OS •• esa will enter ii! trave g pretty ast company.
attention i. the world cbamplonsblp then, and nobody today bas best, athletes including high Topping the Ust or leagues ln the enrollmeftt
beard then was an Australia• champion. Bartlett., !9, was the jumper J o·n fi.farehiorlatti, Tace is the Moore League, followed by the
Australian champ in 1961 and 1961. He is the top driver in the cur-Weightman Brad &rden and Citrus Belt, Ccast, Foothill, Sunset a11d Bay
nnt tt71 aerie1, and be thrives on road racing. / hurdler Steve LeFever in the 1 League.
"I tbougbt It rather odd they told me to cool it," Bartlett said open division. Star Mesa miler i After the Irvine loop is accounted for In
later. "Bat ene of the blokes explained that It's their way.'' Doug MacLean is a sophomore 1 seventh place comes the Pacific, Channel and
Good old USAC. In Its unassuming way the nation's leading and will compete in the novice .; ~ Whilmont ,leagues.
profession al nclng auoctatlon does as much good for enr image / 132HO. 1. gto •--r·i-.. , ... , 1 , Overall growth and the addition . or 1..l111
abroad as the CIA. 1 un in n ll-4:> 1 = en ... 1 . AJamitos elevates the Irvine up four notches
for at least 20 cindermen. H ·,.-",.,..-~...,_ from its present status of 11th ia the Southern Among the Oiler hope!i.tls ALIBUT BOATED -Paul Kleinman of Corona Secti
will be open competitor's Jack de! Mar (left) sbows 'o!t the 191h·pound halibut he on.
McQuown (mile), Garth Wise caught recently while fishing aboard a boat out of 'Ille average enrollme11t (total) for schools
(hurdles and long jump), Joe Art's Landing in Newport Beach. Gary Bellinger, In the Irvine League will be 2.432 in the fall.
Millikan tops the II.st with t,800 beys Jn1thf ~I"
per three grades with Redlands and cOti\P n .. folk>wlng. . • • ·~
The largest Jn Orange Coonty 'wUl 'be
Western and Los Alamitos with 1,300 api«t.
* * *
. '· . -.. .. ' Fagans 11 back from a spell In Quln~1 ~··
where be helped advise bl a baskelbaJJ•fllm:ll
regards to rules and regulations. · • f
Fagaas say1 the 1Y1n at Qlllncy ffi&b ldts
C,800. : •
Tbe school ha1 an enrollment of Z,flOO:for •
ihree-year lnstitulion and reporU sayltbe gym
ls packed ei every came. ·
* * * : :
A committee of eight win nleet today to ·
draw up some preliminary recdmme\\i!ations
for the CIF Southern Section counch 'm~ting
May 9 In regard s to releagulng the cli $ for
the 1971-72 seasons. ...,.
Ora11ge County schools will probably be
totally unaffected. • · ~
* * * , ..
Thert! Is still no name yet for hi gh 11e~l
No. 4 In the Tustin School district wbtcb ls
scheduled to ope n Its do0rs In September, .•
Regardless, slI fott have been tenllltiv~y
!lated. so far far vanity football roinpetitioa
in the faU.
Included as home games fprob:tbly .at
Mission Viejo Hi gh) are Boys Republic, Webb,
Yucca Valley and San Dimas. Away · gatl)f:I
include Banning and St. John Bo1co jLlDlor
vanity. '
Jtfore Sports on.2:' Bartlett Is In this cou11try to drive Marv Webster 's lndy car in
the Memorial Day race, and If all goes well he will campai~ the
road facing portioa of the USAC champ trail and take m t!'Je
Ontario 500.
The fact he is here at all is a tribute to the growth of prize
Stubbins (·hurdles) and Dave skipper of the Newporter, looks on. As for individual schools; Lo•g ' Beach
· Andelin (pole vault). Oilerlr;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,;;;;i;_,;;;;i_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,;;;;;_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,;;;;;;;;;;_,;;;;;;;;;"i"_,_,_,_,_,_"!" ______ ;;;;;_,_,_~
coach Paul Wood will most
likely use 5()-0.plus shot puUer
Bob Dreiling in the novice
·.·: '
money and prestige for American racing. .
Not too Jong ago the grand prix drivers talked about racing 011
this side of the Atlantic in terms of the Indianapolis 500. The rest
of it was lumped -in their m.i111ds -into a group or "good local
races" that paid better than local races did in Europe.
Bartlett's immediate plan is to return home for a two-week ·
holiday, theft come back to the U.S. for the month of May at Indy.
His g6al is to pass the rookie speedway test "and then we'll take
things as they come." he said.
"I've talked with Chris Amon and Jack Brabham about In-
dianapolis," Bartlett said. "Jack told me that It is a particulai:Jy
frustrating place. He said just to play it cool and not get dis·
couraged."
American drivers impress Bartlett as being "quite good."
"They go very hard . They've got their foot iA it all the time .
They approach racing professionally, and they are strictJy pro-
fessional."'
He was particularly impressed with Bobby and Al Unser. That
figures.
Lure of $SS Does It
The lure of American dollars was strong enough to bring
another national champion to our shores. And like Bartlett, at a
USAC race he was a non-celebrity.
Carlos Pairetti, 34. reign ing champ of Argentina. "'as here to
fUld an Indianapolis ride . He'll be going home this week. but he'll
be back, with or without that ride, to spend the month of ~1ay at
Indianapolis.
With Pairetti was his advisor a11d interpreter. Dr. Vicente
Alvarez. who comes to America seeking somethb1g in addition to
a ride for his protege.
Dr. AJvarez wants to promote a January, 1971 , speedway race
for Indy cars in Argentina . It would be 500 miles in length and
would be reminisceRt of the now hist-Orie Monza, Italy, races for
11heer speed.
Dr. Alvarez wants to invite the top American drive rs. pay a
USAC-type purse ( 40 percent or the gate) arid all travel expenses.
The 2.7-mUe high banked·oval iJ1 Buenos Aires features turns
•;ith 20-deg. bankings. The small (244 cu . in. cf piston displac~
ment) Argentine formula cars hit speeds of 156 miles an hour . Dr.
Alvarez estimates Indy cars would make at least 180 m.p.h. on the
South Ame;rica11 track.
PairettLwas greeted cordially, but not as if he were a world
figure. He said he has "two er three" possibilities for rides at
Indy, "but not in good cars. I want a good car to drive."
His backgrou11d is solid enough, Starting as a driver eight
years ago, Pairetti has won 26 major races in his country. Besides
being the sports prototype champion , he is the No. 2 man in open
cockpit racing in his cowury.
go~iig Wilh
Arnold Palmer
0
KEEP YOUR TAKEAWAY LOW
By starling the club back low,
you fully extend the left arm.
This assures that your swing will
hove a nice wide arc.
Also, the IO'W' takeaway deloys
the unhinging of the wrists unti l
later in the backswing. This en-
courages a laterunhinging in the l dowrwwing 1etthat power is saved
' until i-ct.
finatfy, the Sow takea woy
CCM• the left shoJlder to prcper-
ly Sower, al'OUld md ..mer th•
chin, on the backswtng. This
holpo koop .... 8Wtl1g .... n1 ..
upright Plane•
division.
Newport plans to have a full
entry on hand, too.
Tars entered in the open
division include s p r i n t e r s
'Dare I Blood and H o w i e
Rogers, distance aces Randy
Stabler, Chris Bentley and
Rick Fleming, high jumpers
Lee Haven and John Kazmer
and shot putter Mark Steveng.
The Tars' other top flight
shot putter, Terry Albritton,
will be entered in the novi ce
class, along wi th teammates
Rick Amies (sprints), Matt
Hogsett and Gary B r a c e
(hurdles), Dan Batson and
Dave Cross.
Westminster will have most
of its regular varsity com-
petitors vying for medals in
the open division with distance
runn ers Don Diston, Steve
Varga. Jerry Hurst, Wayne
Akiyama and John Nldiols
and hurdlers Dan Ames and
Craig Dunlap given the best
chances for points:
Sprinter Chuck W i n k I e s ,
hurdler J im Bigler, vaulter
\Vall Sinner and distance man
Jeff Young, Jim Keathley and
Mike Braunstein head the
Lions novice hopefuls.
Top SoCal
JC Swim
Clockings
(At tf AHll 11
«IQ mtdt.~ tfllY-1. P1~tde,..., 3,,1.11 J. El C.m!no 2·4 .5: 3
B•kertllekl, J:d .S; '· Or•119e C0#11t, J;J1,J; 5. L-Beach. l :5l.I. °"''"' 1. Go1aen Wes•, l:5S.I, 1.000 lrtt •I Yl t -1 . Blld"r (Fu1rertoi1), 10:44.J: J. Ltg"°ldt CGWC) 10:,..,0;J. Ftrll\IS (Full1rlon), 10 : .... I; '·
i&'iwer IOCCJ. 10:"0; J. Felnbf•t I WCJ. i0:5'.1. Oltiero: H, llleu1r Cl, 11 :ot.S. '°° trntlvle-1. AIH11 (P11~tn1 t. 1: ... 1/ 2. Loven '"•SMl•<Yl. !:SIU : l.
Ll-l!lt IGWCJ. 1:$0,J: '· F.,tu• 1Ful!ffi011l. l:S0.6; S. MCMUiien fl...,. '""'I· 1:.SO.t. Othen; u. Ftlnberg (GW( • 1:52.7. I SO freettvlll-1. Thom•\ (LACCI, :n.J: '· Erickson ! o c C • 12.•1 l. PlnJOft tV1llevl. Roblnt0n !Cl'llllltr\
Ourln<ier IE• Cemtnolr n.•. 0111• ... 6,J DOMldi.Ql1 CGWC), u .I; t JohnnM 10,&CJ, :n.t: n. Swe!UOft CGWCI, !l.I. Mon1c1~'."'7:on~·i''L..!~k~~· ••• ~'~ Rtldef>INIU!ll'I IF111t.r11n), J:OJ.I; f. S"""''°" !GW(j, J:G .f/ 5. LI~!
((';W(), l.06.1.
100 bu!l@f'fi..-1. Lovpn !P1s~'Mj• , Ol).O, J. s ..... n10n tGWCl. J·CJ.r.J; .
T~t <B~ker1/Tekl). 2:01.0: f . G1rnmot1 tOCCI. J :Ol.J; !. Coleman «S1nl1 Monlc1) !:09.1 100 !reestyle-1. Pln10n !Vell1~).
... J; !, EriOnon tOCCI, d .1. PHr$0n
1B1~er1rl<1ldJ, d .51 •. ltelsf!
11<11n1rtonl. d .6; 5. A1tvrle1 (S.nte
Monica!. Don&ldson tGWCJ. d .t,
Oltltn: 10. Fflnbeott (GWC) • .50..11 U.
Llopoldl IGWC ), S0.6;
700 badn~e-1. It t 1 d ,_" b 1 "!' !Fullerlon)._J:Of,t ; 2. ll~lat CGW I, :06.1; J ... ernber9 lGWCI. ,,01.I ; f. ·OWi., (Plia<lffll!. 1:11'.01 s. Loven ~tade~111 J:ot.f. Otllert: I. Rees.er (). J:l1.2. fre.tl~le-1. LOYrn tP1sacrrn11 f :St,61 J, Fe<tl>i !Fu~t.flonl, J;OI J; J, llPICl'IPr tF1111er1on1. :O'l.l• f ... 1pcio1<11 iGWC I. S:ot.t; ,. t lllbtrt IGWC/• "j·•· O!lltts: 6, Seliwer !OCCI. J:IS. 1 . ""'"'°" IGWC >. J:UJ1• 100 br11slstro1<e-1 ..... ve1t.w1 !El
Camino/· \' 11.7; 2. Mullll11 ''"''' Monica , 1: 1.1: J. Smflfl !El Camlnot. 1:11.1: f. llrou11nl {L-_flt~). :t3.6; 5. J~sror1 COCCJ. AlllleftbluOll (Fullertl!n), t ::U.I.
a lrrtsh'lt 1t1r-1. Fvllerto!I. 1:111.l' 1, o.-1nn eoeg'· J:n,01 J. L-,_,, l:JJ,71 f , jl!leY. J:Jf...4_:, S_ w':i~~·~\~~~I. ~:is.a. 1111r1: 1. _,d,~
Boosters Meet ·
The Huntington Beach High
Scbool Boosters Club will hold
jLci next meeting tonight for
the purPose of electing of.
!leers.
It'll be held at the school's
faculty dining room beginnlng
at 7 p.m.
F u r l h t r lnform11tlon Is
1v1llable through Len
Bartlmore at 53M756.
" 1
"
LONG MILER
JONES TIRE SERVICE
2049 HARBOR Bl VD. (At B1y)
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OUTDOORS?
~ • Jljt)lif.A Tl Lfi ' ', \'
OrVllft Ball, supt!rli)l.e.inlfnt of the ,Son Oiege UktSi rates El
CaplC.aDLtike besl for bl!~s~f!shlng, a1 many ban t-G seven poond1
are heing bagged ~y flD&le,n rl1blng rubber wonn1 la .the wee&:.
The water U:mpera.ture 111tJll a cool 59 de~,·but the bess •rt ·,beginning to move _toward their spawai.Dg bt~1 The ~biss
sbotabl' nrlicb to ~lttlng s~rface plugs u soon as tlw: water warms
•P a Jew -"egrtts, ac~~ding to'.Ball. . ,. J 'Ott other hikes 1_11 S~n Diego Colin~ att, W to goad! ih
'881 and bluegill giving up the most sport. La.l:e Aensllaw Is now
In ita_ second week of U annual Fishing °'"Y .an4 flsl1in1 Is 1904.
Jack li'otd; manager Ol Uie ljike and ltl b1anj faCilities1 loo~s
for an lac~ased bite on tlie bass as well as for the crappie.
Tbe bass art!'hlttlng·~·on worpis.aod SPrfaet; plugs clOSf ·to
abort, &J:ld the crappie are 'bein'1 caq:ht by drift fi shermen using
Uve worms and Udlt ~r ,r.elg~t«1°.Yt1low and white jigs. For mort
lnt'Of'!Datlon on La~e Ben•baw pbone· f11f·) 749-1361.
$OFT SELL SAM By Mdl'Yin Myers
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•YDi.« 001'-ToPPY mULA TO XILL SfJIJNG-
Cbi.PS .SCtJ~P5 :fERBIEIC !.1 I THIN~ F
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Sleptienlori tE) wm b¥ def'11llt. > Friltler !El Woll W 'dtf.Ult.
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• 1 , •• . M~sa ~ Pr~~nf.s Cup
. .. . . . .
I •Jaek'lowteddeated G<0rp , Emenon.
• ~t er n 11,a • ~ ·~ wbi. the • In. lllOlbor tournament, ! peeldellll• c1111:eom~Utioo •t •I Blocker Jod Wllbur Co · · ·~ Mha'~ CoUne wltJi • combluedloranetof81tow· .' lact .Jiica wliiiliog tho vice-·; .•. :partner)• best ball ••
' ~·1 ·~ ·over• 1Jmo with Phil Weme11 and uis
P-· · · . "• . .. °Evan( nettlng i 13for nd
·,, ~ ~ f\iilaL. wirlnfi'a·. in. "Place.
1·c1iule<1 ,Sor1e· Stascfi\Jcl: ... ,, F V Joe . c' o ,·I·• no lllld . Dick ~llf! S9t1•.r e
'~!11rjite111F•f diil~~. !' a y 1 Gary KrilaJit. ·oi :.· Anabe,;,
Chipman, ' . ' ·. : . • (ln<J • ho! .. ~ ,M the 1117
A member·mimber. t.wHay yard ninth .boli at Fountain
tournament will'!Ue Pl'"" at . Villey Mite Squa.. Go J f Costa Maa on Ajril 11 lllld 19 Course lhls week.
with the flnt da; do~-to
cri!s ...... lllld the ""'1J!id day .M~• Verde • to. biol. !iilL ··; ' . . .
·~~In ladles .e.o,D\ pet l t 1 o.n;. Dave. Spea~ and Bernie Gill
"Martha .. €iampl· ud Mary ~ firecla.ttl1ortwodayatowin
:Evel>'n lJi:Uer .:tied tor · first. lo.w lfO!ll· ~ in a men's
,place ·in a ·moat pan-toama· 'club h1gb-low tournament •t
'. 'ment with 15. Second place' Iii. !desa ':Ude ~try Club.
A flight went to Nad.irwr Maze George Singer and M r •
, wi1t1 lJ Jcilbred by llleiTlllee H°'!'O" had a . 12( low net
' Dunpn •!th ~
I\ tie .fat fir9I plfce !n B LJO ·fficbt -betw..n · Fiaii : N ACES
Lewi! am Bea Regan with 10.
Eli.!e StfpeS wcin C flight with
1,1 follo~ed by Ann Pappas TO BE FETED
.. with 10 wltb .. • Ue for third Westminster High School
.... betwDal een c.lthKeJinl. e<b'.&id Jean will honor its, Winter sports pee •\f • ' Jhl le ,_. ht . th "~ ."·1n .a 1itn WhiStie toufnament: a e 5 -._i1g m e ;,u;iool
Ma•1•Eveiyn ·1m1er !lad a 35 ~~~~· . beginning • t 1
for lmr ~non follow«! by • The kaie.1 We~r (32) ·and a )1e des.sert will toast the bs.sketball, swimming a n d between Vi J{oskins and .lrfna wresUing teams with special
Havins .(31) in A filg~t. . · awards preSented lo individu-
.. Barbara Shepardson w,on .B--al athletes.
flight with 35 followed:' by The l.ions' v•rsity ·basket-
Joyce Caplil (34), Ger r l . bal~ team captured the Sunset
Watson ('!) and Betty·Browd League ·championship and ad-
t32). . vanced to the CIF quarter-
ln C flight,. Jean ctelghton fin•ls.
wa!. the 'if~ -,v!Ql 3Z follow·
ed ·by Elise .Stipes (31), Jerry
. ¥eri\oiSb and E; WI!!<>• .<so> ·, lllld Ruby Holtberg (2'). . . PUBLIC
lccre to win that ·pbue ol Iha
competition.
Banello
Sa n Jo•qtc ln
Virginia Ide won. a ladiet
match vs. par tournameol at
Rancho San Joaquin wltli .
Velma Thomll! second and
Betty Blakemou third.
Musloaa Vie jo
Mission Viejo Golf Course
wlll host the , Allee Avery
O'Neil t.oµrnameot on Aprll 17
with a shotgun starting tlmo
at 9 o'clock for the eq>eeted
120 parUclpant.. .
A fashion show and luncheon
will .follow the day of golf with
parUclpantJ coming from the
siz C'OUfSel! that wm once 1
part of the ranch area that e1·
tends from ESCQndido t o
Mission Viejo.
19th Bole
Southern Calllornla N•tlonal
Golf COW'9es ( t h r e e In
numberY will turn all proceedl
from plaY Friday over to the
Western Specl•t OlymplCs for
mentally handi capped
Childr<n.
Sports w o r I d and en-
tertainment celebrities will be
on hand to play one of the
three courses and the' public i•
invited to participate. Several
outstanding pri1.es are belnc
ottered {or wiMers.
One word oC caution. Call
the course of your choice for a
starting time in advance.
NOTICE
Me ........ hatk. -.. ... If Jou .,. th• ewner ef P9htlac, Ternpnt ., Flnlllnl
autwn.i.11• t:nW.d ~ the ·erl1ln•I new car w•rranty.
Yeur lfrVk:• ld.,.tlflcatlon •n4 Lultrlc•tlen Carda IMJ
M· fft•IMd lly contacting 101 LONGPRE PoNTIAC.
I~ a..ch llvd., Wettmhut•r, 636-2500. 101 LONO..
HI PONTIAC is At.1thorlzld by Pontl..c Mot., Dfvlalon
te urvlce ell P•tlac Warr•nty cl•lms ,..."11 .. .r
wh.,.. your c•r w•• purch•Md •
. ' · · · · , . sW : ·Bitting · -and · GeOrge Trout Plant -..Kovodian ::def~ated t:. P', • . · .Comtasste· and Ben. Burleson· 3 · I . . . . . , · · and 2 'to . wi1f Uie j>ar!ne" s. ag-... .. ~· ollowtng· 26· Soutltem ·· e ate tournament at Hi.Jn-
.· ~-hfqrnJa streattis )Ind.' lakes; ~gtog 0 .Beach CoUntiy Cfub.
M'Duttv (El .=.;::,•·Kl, Jtsted by ~unty,. are: &eh~l.~ The tournament was ·con-
.,.1~11u.11 •nd _H~.~~1e;io. ~El ·'.'"~ '"": 'for s~k1ng thi~ w~k with ducted throughoUt the · tnonth
W•a. •nd Nette• IE>'°" M. s-1. catching-size r:a1nbow", trout of. March and. en~ed Uiis pa st . ·PAN
J•111or'V•rjltJ . from Departm~n~ of Fish and weekend· with t Ii e . cbarii-
"!''• &1N1·1~'i!Z' .. ~!•W1 IM!'ln~ · Game ·hetcher1~s: .ioilshJp match. Ii~~~===~===========~:;~ w1:11r, ,1M1 '°'' w1 w0n -..... •2.~t-3i . • LOS .ANGw -~ .. ·Rock· P El '""gu•l T•I• (Ml lost l .... 1 .... U , M. C k C ~~'6 . . _, l "W W w;;;
Cf•lo c4l1 iost '"'· ''""'· °""'· w · · ree:., rystaJ Jjj:lAe, Jackson · '
D•vl• ~M):loot ~b~' , ..... ~· ... Lake, Legg'Lakes (Middle and Mr. and Mra. William Egan n Yl8G 'FUN!
·wurhmiM •Iii o-srn '""' ..o.. •.J1 South), Little Roe~ ereek, Lit-fired a low net tewe ·of 6l to .b5'..,..!'t~ ~~ ~k:!"'f:.1:"~ .• ;, , Jle Rock .R e-s:erv o l·r -,,Pud-win a muted 'best ba'n lgurn?-~y· WAYNE CHASE
1o11 ,..., • ......,. w ; -"' d .. 11111. • · • dingstone Reservoit; , ' . ment at . El' ·Niguel Country
6 RANGE-Trabuco ·Creek . · Club. · · · Can you pass the physi·
P · · · (jt)lf SA N· lJERNA'R.DiNO-Sig "Four strokes back with a net cal exam !¢" pilot train-rep ·~ "' ·. · . ~ Be!lf Lak,e •. ~P Creek upW cf-65 were Mr.-and MrS. Harry ing? --"" G Vall Lak Y.1$, If you're an aver-. · . , · · ~'UOD, reen ey e, age . person. Thirty years
'" c-... ... 1,.,) 1~; ~~...:. ' Gre(QrY Lake. • . , NHL Pl ff ago a · pilot had to be
sa11 Cl9'Mll~s :='~"'Anavi. 'u, ': S~. DIE~~.ane 4te, · ayo S . pretty rugged But ad-T~~1 tt ser,,.n:1 :•s. 01-'3,, San LUls Rey Riv.er, Santa vanced .flylng techniques ~~~11c:i.,'r~."~~f::,. ~Edi .• ~~i~ila Rivei;;~nta Y.sabel" "'"' -;.~.:".=.111111111 ~~~e i~h:C= ~~~\pm~~
~ (Elil 76. lltf stofltld'IEdJ 15. . . . , Pt!ht1U-v1t :1, Ollkl.lnd 1, Plthbllrth age of the superman-pilot ,.. <ANTA BARBARA ~, 1m1 tlftr~·1 ·u r1H. 1.0. . ..... ., . ' K11k;Jl'll IE1t) il. Ml Kll!Cll (Edin. J· .. -u vey . E111 'Ol•llloft Mfl!lllUll . IS pll!lt. .... ..,one In reuon·
~·
~
need qualify for only a
Third Class medical cer-tiflca.te,
Don't be afraid of the
Initial red tape. Any or
our professional stAfl can
help and advise you .
Como ifl _.._..loft '""'·''"'· R11d (Fl WOii I-Ji 1•3.
"Coklm&n ti') '""111 +J; +.2.
Peol ll'J.-6-1;...,.·
'·Schul'-CE•tJ "7( ·oe·1 ,,_.. -· '''' Brown ·~t, M. anzana Cr~k. · so1l1on •· we .. 'l'twtr. ,, Bo1111n 11..i1 ably good health can learn
·ti s.o. · • · l)anl.a Y-nez River· from Los .' ,b"'~-1 ·ur1e1.: 100. to fly ·today. .
. .• ·~111 ·Ui:11.1 ... dll•Clnlf'911 fEd) •• )>rJ tqs' na St r to·l;;i•----.:.---;;;;;;;; And even .a physical de-
H1Y1 1" ...,ff NII ltll \f!'tt "
fly? Wiii -YM Cl• -II'• .. ,1-
... lflalll YM 11'1111111 Al HAltlOJt AVIATION w. .tier l'.U. ,.,......,.
<;tvnM llo 11)1111. Al ch• nt•, Iott 0-.d •rtd .,.rll ... ., 11 ...
1"'9 ,it.ta ..-c1re 1_. ,...its-
•'-llllll, "&rln1 J.n eur c1...,,.,
.... "' ,...., ,,, """' .. , IM!ly UM,' H•lllOlt AVJAT,Olf, JUI
WI...., Av1 .. l~llM. o..,. 11"1111
lltllrlM le HnHt lfllly.
........
Mlktl10fl n Mlr•n· l'OttPtn• I foil , ... , o.... .
' ~.u_,(E11) .,. :lltf ~~M·(\:d), n . i. ~nd slrt!:~ cr!s~f~. up ln' N, ll'ffdw1y m•l Mt ..... , fret . w 0 n It neCessarily
• ~ NtwPOrt 120 111 .a....im VENTURA M tii ·· Cr k R. N: MEADER . ground you. So don't rule
Y1m1ali• •nd CMrnow (Fl WCl" I l(och IAI ci'.er. Mlller.flilJ, 5•1 . - a lJa ee ' Cla' C lta t. !(Ourself out. If you're in-
•·l. .
Juni., V1,.llY '
Sin Cklm"'' UI 01) FMt~m
z1mmerlTlfl11 111> det. Mcc.n1.1 1..,>, P1ru Lake, Rose V~lley La.kes, am~ onsu ~ terested. have a go et it. s.~wln !Nl .,.,_ ~Gwird i A·I. •·~ ~~ak Paule Crdee
1
k·, .Sespe Tli• lnltn~':~':«~•t c.,11 . 'T'ake the"physlcal from an
K'"t (Nl ~. M•ll•t·t.-.i.·M ...,, .. ~ upper an ower sec-'nit insvrM •n l'lt• •"' •"'""" /"AA-designated physician.
M•v ... IN> oe1. wu'°" 1.-.1. '""' Ventura ·River ·North -Y1111 lt doesn't . take long and
WATCH NEXT
WEEK FOR
WOMEN IN FLl!OHT 11111.111
Ro11 !Sl wilt 6-1, O·l.
Sl•llV IS\ lo!.t ·~l. ·16. •
B•ile !S) lost 7-6.
KIM (5) JOSI l·•· ......
\llcilY •nd KeMv ($) loll] ... , I ... .
Wiry •rid Brown·(U i.st 1 ... , ~ ... .
• • J111'110f' Y1•tllf • · • ....,_,.11..i .1'1 W•""'""'""
M11tltl •• 0.011111 INl 1111. Si>elr .cw1 6-01 ,..,,_
!Intl !WI ...0. lsk!I IN! CN!I, 5-elr. IW) M :
Mertl""r tWI '"°· • • · , Scle1>1l•ir 1N) otet. Cell1h1~ IWI H
51\>dl:IV iWI •I.· .......
•Rotr1er•""<:HIU9irll011 CSl clef. I.VIII·
5mlf!I IW) ...... del. CIMll-McC1ILlllan
(W I~. •
L1wl..-·BHvt• IN) dll. Lv•ll-Smitlt
IW I •2. def. Cl'IOl-Mcc.!11h111 IWJ •l~
· · J•nler V1r11tv u.r1 111 ni 11t111&11
Witt; !El '°'' Ho 1 ...
"MorrltOll U!I loll :Ho U .
tlurrell II!'~ 11111 '""'· 1 ... . S!I Mon (E) lo:!! 1 .... 2 ... .
Baseb all
Sta ndin gs
111v1Ma '(,IA4u• ' w·t: 01
Coron~ del Mlf ' ' ' 4 o toer1 4 o
E1l•11Cll I • ' S1n11 A111 VII... . 2 ~
coo11 Mitt• 1 j I EodllOOI l ' )
Fw111111<1 Wlh' I I J Mffno!I• .. 4 4 W..,_,.Y't kerl , Gln1111 HI MM I, MHl!Olll 1 '"'-''i' 01m.t '--'i;JC~ ell! MP Fiul'hl 'V1lln 11 E1f'MICll CGlll I 11 E""8ft • •
511111 V1lllY 11 ~I ·
SOUTH COAIT COlfl'li1t•MCI • .W \. G.I 1:1:.. . . ! ' "' .. Ml, n i\lllOl>lo • ' ~JM•• ···~· ""' 4 J $ ... S..t• A~ 1 •• Or•-~~.,., '~ ~ ' ~
Mt. 51n AlllVl!lo n, Ori"" CM" ' Jen Oltlo t. Full"ten 1
! ... D .... M_,• 4 51ntl Ant I
t(ttlOI tfw...1v'• 0•,_ °'!""' co.,1 •I Se11t1 A111 .Ol flii tlrton 11 s~ Dleti Mt11 O> $et> OllltO 1! eHllOI (2/
Ml, ,~n An!Oll bvt , , •
II
Tl"\lbo-(NJ def, c.,,.,. 1•1. M cru1 s.11....., i t df)fsn't cost· much. You
6·0. 4-11. 6-0, M .
. INSTAl.lAnoN !Wct!M6. >infft. '"Yy ___ , .... $,., ..
·. rff{ wt"'-11th'. . . • -:-r ....,.._ . ...
-rt.NON,.,,'' I -
4 'HO UI SEIYICE
WlllEL AUGllMEllT &
FRONT WHEEL IAL
tlO. . $400 AHO.INTMENT ;
NEEDED. MOST C4RS •• , ,
·COSTA MESA
2160 HARBOR BOULEVARD
Phone S<IG-0170
..... ,,. c111on TllltMI -ltlff9 II Hew I l'IClw'f ~ c.r s ............. It-Ir ~ 11 .....
PREMIUM NU· TREAD
TIRE SALE
ANY
SIZE 88
llACKWALL
WHJnwALL
All Included
U.YC0 COVllS Alf: M111,.a111~ II --, ..... ""' "' ............ "" ~ ...
,.,.. ••• -"'• 11\ettlea. a.-Mr. •
........ ~., ........... et .......... ,... , ._..a ....... ~ .,ia. -'"-:;~,,.;,.,'=~=~-' ~ ,NO ·~INTMINJ 'lmDID
ou1m 54111 INSTALLATION .......
20 MINI/Tl SllVKL $9 = ~~~-~~?'"~ ••
I,
···-~ .... ·-'-~.
lnc,...tt I!! Clplttl tfld 5u,..1us d\lrl,,.
· INt lP•oe J, LIM 30: IHt mlr'IUI 1Hll
Nlll".11\Ct l~l"OK~: H1tioo\wlcle II'* l5, Line-It. Cel.
• J, plus Line X, eel. ~I
C1t1 ... nl1 IP~ .. LIM n. Cit. ~)
• •
' .
••
'
DAILY rl\.OI' .. :
Heritage T~eatened!
' ,
Expert Thieves Looting Mexican ArtifflCU ; . . s
I
however," he aid.
"They did .. upm job.
'Ille -(believed to lllve
'b6al d ltcov•red Ira the
eoutheltt Meidcen lerrltory ol
Quin~ Roo) .... -..s
Intact. 11len they pllotocr1plt-
e<l It, Clelned It perfectly, eut
ii Into 100 pieces Ille! J>ICked
them in boxes."
The bona were lli>lpped
.,erlancl by truck throup
Mexico City Ind ICfOll the
U.S.•Mnlcen bordet. Dr.
Bernal believes the lalll brll>-
ed bord..-"'"""· "II mll>I hive cost them al lea.st
tt50,000 just 10 ttmOVt the
pieces from Mel!co/'-ht ed-
ded.
Once th t e1traordl.ftary
1r<heolo(i<:al flllcl wu talely
tn the United States, an in-
tennediary' offertd to sell it to
the N"' York MelropoUlaD
Museum ot Art for $500,tOO.
Museum &Utborit.its apoiled
the smuu:Jen' dre9ln by Nti-
fytna: , Jdtzican anthropolol)'
authoritits and ·local police.
The inttrmedJary was ar-
:ruted but the ranc aot away.
After 1 e c re t U.S.-Mellcan
nerotiaUcm:, the Mayan bead
was returned to :P.fexlco.
On Feb. 24, the M1.11ieum of
AnlhropoJoiy announced the
elhlbiUoo of the ......,tructed
piece in its Mayan section.
Despllt any doubt about its
aulhenticity. the museum ad-
mitted that it did not know it!
orlitn or a~. I
'Accordln1 to Dr. Bem1J, Jhe
Mayeo head Is just ooe ol
many plecu illecally removed
from Melico. A JrOUP ot e1-
peits rectnlly calculeteCI ~at
Mt.lkan arch'eolo1icJl
treasures were btin1 dttpoikd
at 1 ralt of $50 million a year.
~ "mafia" to which Dr.
Bernal rtferred. uses 1ow-
flyln1 aricraft to avoid radar
detection, eecrtt landin1 atl'iJ18
In the unchartered' arn.s of.
Mexico'• dtHf1s and juncles,
and modem ccmrnunications
equipment 'that WGUld put
iome intellifenct servitts: to
shame.
The experu, onlhropololisb
Ud hiototl&N from --~~ N111ooal Unlvenlly, ...Wll!.
ded Iba ...-... of ....
MuitlD 'Army, ~ .of
the Nollooal .......... !Joo plrtment (In _,. o( cum:·
lnl tho. treaure) ond tile II~·
llonot Allthropolocy -WUI 0 on the take." '"'
They nld the llllUUJen ·of
archtotocical rt 11 c 1 utlllat-
put " tbflr ~.~~~ .. cover up the Im•
torte lltu by brtblnJ olllclol•
and "aalUnc'' the sites whJI "
coplet of the volulble orlli·
nils.
!Jome •rdltoloelsb. lhe · 11)-
vesti,atora reported, ofte.11
lllve dllflcuhy dllllnJUlshinl
·betweeit the real thine and the
ezpott -loft by tile loot• •n. 'And the equipment uHd
by the -ltl<ra. b el. bettee
q,u'1Jlty than that of th'tt etuulne archeololistl, the}' • ·
111d. Somo of the tri<:k.! u...i b1.
the -11en to ....... Jhel•
JoGI from Mtlrieo -.ntl!l ..
..... copied from lhole UMcl .
by Ille Gtrm1111 durinl Wo<1d .
Wor fl to otrlp F.rYPt of m..,y,
rare 1rtlf1cts. •
Arturo GomK ApJm, ... '
el the esperts, upllined: ·
''It'• very tfmple. 'Ibey covet ·
the paintings trith a finish or
mike the artifacts appear as
1r they w .e re-deformed.
They've achieved such exper•
U• JQ th'5 proceu that evf!fl
aome eiperts are conf\.laed."'-
Mexk.o is an archeololisf.'•
paradlle; lt'a al.lo a paradl.M!I
for a amuater of attheeloti·
cal ptece!.
'lbue tre mtlft. than tt,091;
archeoJoaical sones ~~· out the eounJry. Dr. Bernet ,.
aa1d that It would take at tease •.
the entire Meslcan Anny bl.
guard these tones •CaiMt tlwt.-.
pillaiert. And these guard.I : .
would have to USe mobile pa•
trols and watchtowers.
Afe1lco bu "1rft tenerat
"ordieologic:ll' J,,yera": the
Aldtllc, dltlnt boct to bun• -
dredt or yean before Christ!'~
the Tolt.c period ond thl
Aztec period, in tun bloom
when the Spaniardt-ani.ved in.
the New World in 1500,
No Simple Solution
To Protecting Envoys·"
WASHINGTON (UPI)
U.S. offlciall uy there .. M
ma(ic formula by which the
kldn1p and murder of
diplomats can be prevented.
•The Slate Deputinenl la .in-
t.!nsllyiftl e!forta to Improve
thf'> personal . saf~ty .of U.S.
diplomats, f o I Io win 1 the
murder qi Wut ,German
Ambassador K.arl von Spreti
by Gautemalan rebelJ and the
woUndfn1 of U.S. Consul Curlis
eutter by Brulllan temJriJt&
But dejart.ment ·spokesman.
Robert J~ McCIOlkey told
newsmen "there may be no
mastc by which we could
usurne that henceforth
w~tever rneuurea we put
forward -thort ol not ten· dine dlplometa •brood -thll
you could ·at all times be-
a.uurtd that they would be unharmed." _
• j'lt'a open season In th:e
world, it aeems to me. with
the hljecJdn& of 1ircrafl, Jhe
attempts to assassinate of·
fldals and others."
Seen Holly, the U.S. labor
'GoHiesta'
To Support
Child Unii
The Hollywood Hacker•
Golllest.a sponsored by the
Cryalol Key of the Clllld
Guidance Center of Orange
County. will take place April
12 1t the Costa Mesi Country
Club.
Members ot the Hollywood
Heckers Celebrity Golf Club of
Hollywood will don1l• their
Umt to play with hc1l aotfer1
and pruent a variety show In
conntctlon with the
event~ which will raise moneY
IO< Jhe Chlld Guld.,,.. Center.
Ctlebritiel antidpated to
appear at the ev~ include
aill1er Glen Campbell, Alan
Hale, Ben Hunter end Jimmy
Rod1ers.
Each tlOO 1otf ticket wlll in·
elude creen fees, a JOlf cart
and d1riner for two.
Dlrmer tickets for n o n ..
golf en which lnclu.i. tbt lhow
by the ffoUytrood Haclttrs are
Ill each.
Gallery tlckels are ti.
The Child Guldana Centtr
provides low~.. poycblltrlc
tttatment for children and
edoleec:aita of Or .... County
whole partntl cannot afford
ruch care.
For information on obtain int
tickets , call tht Child
Gulduce Center It 146-7111.
a tlae he kldnaped '"
Guatemala March I b u ti .
relfutd ttveral days lat~
after the iovenunent met the
terrorists' terms, told
newsmen that for dipk>m•l•
"'tllere ls a' certain oe ..
cupaJioOal hazard." ,
Holly advised all kidnapecl ::
envoys to 1'do elactly as )'Oil··
are told. Don 't run." ~;
!ollowlll( JhJs lldvlce does nOC ,'
......... Jhe ...--.i ..r-,;:·
of dlplometa. There Is · :'
:Indication Spreti did not ::\ '.,
his tidnaper · but was aliin ' · ·
when the Guatemalari aovern-
ment rejected bi4 captors'
demands.
Because of the terrorl!t at-·
tacks a1ailm d,iplom1t1
1weepi~ La.Un America I McCloakey 1ald a 1 p e c I a
deperlment commlttoe llld
been workinc for s e v e r 1 l
weeks to deviJe better aecurf ..
ty prectutiona for U.S. env~1.
McClolkey 1'fuiH to ..... i
the .-nmendatlonl bellil ·.
oonJJdendbylhO~·
headed .by Willlarn a:
Macomber Jr., deputy un ...
der1ecretary for 16-·
mlnistraUon. • •
"Common sense ls 1oini lo •
have to diet.alt how people .-·
react under any let. o r :.
c i r cumatancta," M<:Cloltey
aald.
Secretary of Slate WIW1nt
P. ~era, who · called ·the
German arqbusador'1 murder
"a ltnible tra1edy," offered
aome apeclflc ldvlce. He ur1<·
ed Amerlc1n dlplom1ta "~ ..
to do thlncs· the aame wey all . ·
the time."
"If you foUow the aa"9e P.t·
terns ot drlvtnc to and lrori.
plact.1, then the WOJd l~UI·
around that you are alway• at
a etrta.ln pl&ce at a ceriaiA
time."
A number of covemmenl!
crdtnd Increased precauUOn.s
to protect diplom1tlc peraon·
nel Ind ArpnUnl llld it
would take the 1saue o f
poliUc:al kidnaplnts before the
OrpnluUon ol A 111e r I can
Stales (OAS) end tbe United
N1lion1.
Arpntlne Foreip Ministu
Juen B. Mutin llld tbl pro-
blem ahould be turned .... to
botll ~ .........
llons ,... lllldy.
In, JlotoUi, Col. Manuel JOll
Lopez, netlonal ~ ....,.
mander, Wei eCurltr
measures at all fGl"el(n em-
buales hid been UihWned "altlloulh ... do nol esplCI •• Ill)' _.,.,,. .......
1-dec:llnld to 111 wblt.
the mtuurtl Wll'9 tltboalh he llld they ..... '"inlll __ .....
without anyrone'a lpedftc no
q\IMt.
t
I
\
I
I
• . ;
FOR SAi.i I HOUSIS FOR SALE OUSES FOR SAL E I HOUSES ,OR SALE HOUSES ,OR SALE IHOUS I S ,OR SAL i HOUSIS ,OR.SALi
1• G-r•I loot 0-rol lllGO 0-.•I IDIO -r•I loot -r•I ,. ;G;.:•;;; .... ;;.,.,.;;.. ___ .;.1.:.aa.:.• =====-.:.1•= c ..... "" Mor 1250
LAST DAY
REGISTER TO VOTE 2 to .11 P .M.
lat our offlc;el * If you h•ve moved * If you chonge your n•m• * If you are • fir1t t ime voter
Do not fail to r19ister or r•reglste r
We will st•y open tonlte unt il 11 PM
Office Opon S•turd•y• & Sundoya
PETE BARRETT REAL TY
1605 Wtatcllff Dr., N.I .
642-5200
----·------· --------
0....r•I llOO !Gonor•I
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 LIDO NORD
1•
6 Beaulilul units. 6 Car garages & utility room. with 85 ft. fronting on excellent swim-
ming beacb. Units are newly furnished.
Reduced to $200,000. Xlnt terms
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
(Our New Address)
Q3 Dove• Dr., Suitt 3; Nowport S.•eh 642-4620
ofinJa
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
15 Lind11 111• Drive
New & beautlfUI 4 Bedroom, 5 bath home
~itb large sunken living room & lam. rm.,
wet bar. Radiant electric heat. Carpeted &
landscaped. Priced ................ $166,000.
16 Lindo hi• Drlv•
New 5 bedroom, 5 bath home with upstairs
view of Corona de! Mar hills. 3 Fireplaces &
BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panelling. Land·
scaped. With dock .. .. . . . . .. . . . .. . $145,000,
n ,.Llnd11 Isle Drive
New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble
entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Mstr. Br.
has beam cell. & own frplc. Large family ~
room w/fireplace .............. $185,000
80 Linh Isle Driv•
5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family
room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces.
4,246 Sq. Ft. dock & boat slip .... $169,300
Watetfront Lot1
No. 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda ble leaaebold
lot. Plan• avail. Consider tiade .... , ~.000
READ THIS
If you are in the market for a
NEW home, see these outstand·
ing customized homes, built by
Frank H. Ayres and Son, local·
ed in a prime area very close to
Huntington St ate Beach. The
homes are priced from $30,290
to '33,690 and vary in size from
3 to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car gar·
ages and 2 to 3 batbs, with
shake or mission tile roofs, fire-
places, underground uWities,
concrete driveways, built· ins
and carpeting. There is VA and
FHA financing available. There
are 3 homes avaJlable because
of credit rejections. Occu~ancy
by May 1, 1970 in this urut. M
added features these homes in·
elude such additional extras, as
shag carpets, front lawn land-
scaping with sprinklers.
Our next unit is now on sale for No. (1: Long water vieW facing Harbor ls-occupancy in May and June
land w/76.2 ft. of frontage. Plans avail. 1970 and introduces the new
FllRllJ Fan
In Tiii Sin
5 Bells -Paol
Thia beauUful lmne ln prtt-1::1• ate& at Costa M .... bu
5 muteNtsed bedl;ooma. ~
tiled, batha, huh wall to wall
'PP'tlnr -~ -COftnd patio Uld a Cl')'llal
clear bu\ltttully luldlcaped
pool, complete with alkle.
See It to belleve It. Prloed
low at SU.950. Hurry!
262' HARBOR IL VO.
5461640
OPEN EVIS TILL 1:30
c-f~
:Nit """ Del Onl N""°" Beacll
UNEXCELLED VIEW
of Harbor • ocean. Attr.
tpllt ·t.w-1 home on RJ, 5100
,q, ft, lot Ideal for 4 APt
'"""· 1225.000. "'11 °'*" Blvd., OIM. By 191><. only,
Biii Grundy, RHltot
S33 Dowr 0.., NB 6l>ClO
• One of • ldnd
*At tho !toautllltl Bllllla e OPENIOAILY 2·5 e * Sln&le Iewt 221 HAZE L * Newb decorated l Bdrm, .home •bove Llttle * Dloice location C.orona beach. Lovely view. * Neu poo1 DQtl V. FRANKLIN * Immedla!o occupa111:y RE,IQ. TOR * Roduced to e'1I ! 67a;l222 e * All tor 119.950 '"RED PHONE 6U-ll33 ti * DUPLEX PLUS * OF THE
ONE LOT FROM OCEAN • BLAHS? w1th Ocff.n .View. 2 BR. .l
3 BR witb Fam. Rm PLUS If you've .een a whole hOll
1 BR. A be.th sunt na Good o~ DREAR Y'S you'll appre-
rental uu, ~ ciate ou.r bright and
Gr•hom Riiy. 646-2414 O!EERY 3 Bedrooms -
CMt• Mel• 1100 Near Newpcrt: PM e>mce walk to the beach. Onb' $36,-
1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I "'· I 1 BEAUTIP"UL Beach Home
• SUPER SllARP • on Back Bay, N.B. 1 Lr&
bdrm, lrg ba. prlv, bch,
heated pool, boat .Up avail.
Just lilted. rambl~. shake Adults only, no pets, 9 fndt
roof, 4 Bedrm home w/ 23' trffs A patio. $16,000. Call -"======= tamlly rm. Fu 11 feature Mn. Fox, 6"9:133L OPEN Home Daily 1 • S
kitchen. Formal Jiving nn., BA YFRONT: $l8,StX» Mobile Tue .. thru Fri-View Home
fully crptd, p:x>l ••lxe Y8!<1 home. New crpt, drps, prlv. 1038 White Sails Wy. Harbor
w/boat ~ trlr'accep, Pric-beach, dbh!e, adults. A-3 View Hills. Vogel C.o lUtrs.
ed for immediate aale •t Anchorage Way, Lido Park. 2667 E. Coast Hwy, CdM. No . 88 : Point lot with 118 ft. of frontage. Long 3,000 sq. ft. "El Dorado" model
~G~o~no~r~•l~:"JL _ _;.;IDOI:.:: General 1000 water view. Plans available. priced from $34,490. LE As E 10Pti 0 n ;75,000
lllLL UNDY IA TO Rancho la Cuesta Homes ,........ ~ ... , Baycn:1t exec. home. Full EST E. ESTATE SALE 10u~RNow ~ ... ~ R on Brookhurst •t Allont•,~ :!.: ;'i:'.r~w-c~ !150/mo.
$34,500. ean 56G-11Sl <open ~2896. 1..;m.;:l020;:======1 eves.)
lolbN Ponlnaul• 1300
0 L S 0 N OCEAN VIEW 133 Devor Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 ,'U~ntfon ~~ BLUFFS, , er, 2 na, i 1 ... 1.
This home was previoualy ~n j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!"l!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~j choice corn. Jot. walled
the market at $41.500, now -A EASTSIDE tlo/ · M -.. "'
WEST BAY AVE.
Chlnnlng new 3 bdrm. 2 ba.
Medlterranean stYle: B1ock
from ocean & bay. Builder's
home, top quality. tnc. Realtors
COLLEGE PARJI
UNDER PRICED
Here's )'OU!' chance to save
$$$. 3 tara:e bedrooms, 24
~ family room. 2 baths,
family . kitchen with built.
ins. Huge playroom! Fantu.
tlc value al $26,950. Take OV&.
er low int. FHA loan. ·or )'OU
name tbe terms.' Dial now
64>-030.1.
64~-(130~ .
at Harbor' Center
2299 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
FOUR
BEDROOMS
$26.950 FlLVVA. no down,
terms availabllt. Quiet trtt.
lined cul.ode-aac. W a 1 k to
park. scboOls &: shoppina;.
AD blbll, fantily rm, fire.
place, c;arpets &.-In 'excel-
lent condition, Call 545-8424.
""',.,.. 16.500. It's a ... u. Gonor•I llOO Gonor•I 1-pa """· •ny ·-· .
lilul' bodroom, 'both borne ASSUME F u A -Elega--nt-V-aca--.,-FIXER·UPPER HAtruwAn. 132,"°500;~ ·--· overlooki"" the P a c I fl c •f •• • 1 n 1 Ex·-" t .............. -th" 3 v ow __ , ... N Hubor 1 '"'1:llen ....,.....,,,... UJ ll'I B-.yfrunt Condo. Furn. 2 Br, Coast, with a .spectacular ear Hlgb and 'llh Reacly ===:I Bedroom on R-J lot t h at 2 Ba. $fl,SOO xlnt terms. I !!:!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!~I
Bill G•undy, RHllor
1133 Dowr Dr., NB 642.-D
unobstructed view of cata. Strttt Shopplnc. Well kept Spaciou• Westclitf 2 Bed. General 1000 G..,.ral 1000 could be Cl in near future, McKenzie Realtor. M&--0732
1;... located on the Blllffa of Three ~m. two bath 1.;..=-------Die '-·••· dota-•·' ---Q,.la M•sa tt has a oourt. with iamlly room, d<Nblo Townbouso Condo. Bricl< !Jro. CREDIT LOR --l'D,.;;,~ ·----4 BR-FAM. RM
yant entry,' ,;chi> panol.,i '""•1';"· , built • in lri"""n pla<:<. Upgnded C&l'p<~. * TAY 646-7171 UDO ISLE
aod ,.,,,.led, •PP'aling and21Jx24 """'""'lnglau. ""'"''· '1"'· ...... doo• PROBLEM? Upper S.y-4U,500 BAYFRONT built-in kitchen in executive ene paneled alu.minwn oov-opener. Immaculate condi-BAYCREST 2306 Redlandl. 64M393
nelpborhood. Call ~and ered patio. Profeuionally tlon. Owner wanls action. BUY UKE RENT Garden cou rt entrance; BY Owner, the Bluffl. Model R•re Opportunity
atell It! landscaped, Spilt n.il fmce $34,950, Owner will consjder Cl.lie ranchero with separate charming 3 BR. home; tam. K home, .( BR or 3 A .( Br. Home • Or can be uaed'
in front and redwood fenced 1ieue option. den, 2 baths, wall to wall rm., din. nn., 2~ batbl. Ex-1 ~="'=~===:::;:::::;:: den. By appt. 6«-4646 u dupl~.
rear yard. Quiet 1tzttt. ex· e carpeting. Monthly payment! quisite matr. suite. Prof. DELUXE 'JQWNffOUSE • 3 ~;;;;=~===== Priced for quick aaJe 6ellent • neighborhood. AS-Include Tax and ln&Ul'llnce. lndscpd. 3 car pr, Fee Sim-BR, ~~ Bath. Hu bullt·ihl Dover ShoNI 1217 By owner,
SUME $21,fQ'.I. 5%% LOAN $175 mo .. take1 over the 6% plt. $81,500 £: many xtru + pool, $6000 CASH
• $193.00 a month includn govenunent Joan, S23.900 tull ''Our 25th Y•1r" clubhouse A rtt faclllti!1, SCENIC* SPACIOUS CAN HANDLE
ta,xts and ~. TM price. WESLEY N. No C.AiI. Cash to 5%.% Joan. COMPLETE VIEW Full price reduced to $1(1(,000.
!:'i you ha"' °"n wtln( c 1 h JUST MARRIED? TAYLOR CO. By.;>;:,;.; ~IN* "!' ~"."·~.:'"·~~ :,u.:::;:·.';'o.:'~'."'led
0 eswort Y What 1 d II ho tb' Re•ltors 4 BR. Me11. del Mar 500'.l sq ft built uound court. c.an (213) 96U610
' ii fo~ ~~lye ""~• t~:~ NEWPORT CENTER Carpeled and draped 4 car pr~ E-Z maint. Ideal or 96U410 for •info.
3 big bedroom1 with wall to 2lll San Joaquin HillA Rd. Move in co!Xlltion fer enmtalning. $1'1!,000 Ask tor Mr. Joh.rmn
& C all ';"" I ll all . 644-49IO .... Sonora Road*' !Urnhhod. """"" 6113 --D=E~co=R'"'A~T~O~R~'S~-1 o. w carpe_°"' u w su:e •---...._ __ 11:.-. __
Electrically oontrollrd aates REALTOR firepJ ace & ii the groom Is BAYFRONT 3 BR. 2 ba. cul-dwac, bJt· ~-=·=· ;.~;:.:;;=:;,;.-;:;':::;-·=:-:: HOME
leading to garden entry of Ne"-'JlOrt Beach Offia: a Vet, nocuhdo111'JI. $22,SOO LINDA ISLE ins, crpta. drpg, frplc, DOVER SHORES VIEW Beautltully done, S Bdrm&.
this beautiful 3 bedroom l028 •-·-,·de ~,, full price. Won't tut (be Pri . _,1 1 ,_ boat Jandscped. Assume 5".% tm, CORNER GALAXY .l F·-•~ -Xlnt ~ to
home. ~ ltvinr room . ~· .... .,,,vi-• weekeixl. HIIIT)'! v. pier&."" P or ,.e. · IBA $.24 , 750. Owner MARINER. $35,000. 1-3 ::::Vt ,;•
1
"t'
1
t ••~•
with marble fireplace, .,.c-j;;;.;Ev&'"ii"'~''.iCalliiii;.i&l6-iiii22'9a-. ll ••'""'"• ... ·~ .. ~"!"liiiiiliml QuieUy elegant decor, Brick ~ YRS. FINANCING AVAIL. s ....... .., . o ..
Jous family room"'""""' 6% GI LQANI UNBELIEVABLE ontry hall,• BR.,• Baths, \.,!'.Y OWNER 54&-1936 LID·o Rl98EA,500LTY INC. breoldall room, all o .. ,-. CAMEO SHORl!S • 1onnal dlninc nn., lam. nn.,
This sharp 4 bedroom ranch. study l Frplcs walled pa. No Do GI, Lo Down FHA. UnlYar-'ty P•rk 1237 lJ.11 Via Lldo m.7300
ing bay. LwrurioUI muter Overlooking blue Pacific , er In excel.lent conditio" ' ·• ' -4 br 2 ba, '-le fenced I;;;;::;";;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; I ·i. I h I d . . ... tio. Great buy at i140,000, .... ., ' ..._., ' • WE ASK YOU 11w w t e egant remung New listing on Camden May be taken subject to, on Ideally located In a tall Carol Tatum dbl pr. Near 5hoppizl&:.
room&.-bath. Custom carpet. in exclusive Cameo Shott!! this lovely 3 Bednn SHAKE lhad)r, quiet area. ca n be Slj,900. 548-7594 THIS ii not ordinary "Goa. To compare thiJ: beat buy! 4
ing & decorator wallpaper. Acrou the atreet from rool home in a pl'irne Co.-ta you.fl tor just $23,000, G.I, no 3 BR. 2 BA. fam. nn alp" ill "Choice'', we just BR. + conv. den + dlnlnr.
Pier It float. $129,500 Priva~ oommunily beach Mesa neighborhood. Total money down or it can be --......,. w/frplc, •ha&: crpt, hrdwd found out that the OWllll!r 11 Dramatic tile entry. 2800 sq,
MACNAB-IRVINE 3 Bedrooms lr. den payment incl taxes&: tnsur-purchased fllA with just ~~ ttn. 5%.% Joan. $21'."'1. %il2 wtak and wuunr. Seriously !:_.8 yra. old, Must tee at
Lido 11.-1351 ~'"-~~-...;.;"'-I
OliANGE COUNTY'S
, LARGEST ,
26" HAltlQ~ llLVD.
546 1640
OPEN EVES TILL 1:30
BAYFRONT
Realty Company Pool & poo!Jlde lanai ance is only $187 per mo. $700 down, thal lhcludes cl~ --Fordham Dr. 549-3738 consider maJdna an otftt on ww price, $69,500 flnnl WW COUNTRY CLUB (714) 642"'235 $89.500. Owner may finance Don't wait, GRAB THIS ing COllhl. C D BY Owner 4 Bednn, huie· thl& prime 4 hr, 21At ba, + lease/option. Immtd. pones,
Across in. Road 901 Dover Drive, Suite l2J Lilted exclusively with LOAN NOW!! Total priee 550 Newport enter r. tamily rm, xlnt Costa 1.fea tam room townhoute on FEE Walker Rlty, 675-2676
"""" new, built by build" (71 4) 67S.32!0 $211.900. 83N::'pooort BHch;.~•2141130. .,.,. Low down. 549-3283 LAND, lull"""' M1y 137.900 LARGE HOME
tor his own home. 3 big J:led. 1C8:1 BayaXte Drive _,700 -..-and worth every penny ot It LAROE LOT
rooms. spark1ing electric "'!''""'"'N"'owpo ... rt~S.-a<"'h""'!!!'j ~ CO~TS e Red Hiii Re•lty 4 BR. A f.amlly rm Hop Hv
kil<heo and bnnd new hea'Y e • ORANGE COUNTY'S UStSJ•de/Westside Nowf!'?rl S.•ch 1200 Uol•. Parle C.ni.r, Im"' nn. J,OOO Sq. It. 4s Ft. lot. • .... ........ all pl"' 1,.,... Doctors-Attomeys . WALLACE LARGEST BY Tl!ANSFRD ....,., 2 Call -833-0BlO Roducod to $87,500
extra pool table size recrT· Op-un,·1~ abound In ·~ 673 00 REALTORS 194-5313 s-· 1 -old 5 BR 3 BA W•lkor Riiy 67'5200
&tion l'OOftl • $38,500 . 10% ~~·Poi~!-. San Cleme~;:,..,,~~~ .. -44~~~!!!!!!!' -S4M141-15366 Golden West Take your pick of theseBo cute ' .;i:·deaf~. pool ~lze lo~ M~~ .. u.~rltMol .' .. k~!m 3366 Via Lido, NB ~Sun.
down, owner will he1p, area tor an excellent prac·\~ COptn Evtninis) Huntlfltton Beach 2 Bedroom homeJ. th are end of cul-de-aac. 1 Blk ..... .v.... ""'''nu
646-7171 MESA VERDE vacant &: have dble garage, Bay 2700 ~ 1 din NEW. ain&"le level To~ BAYFRONT BARGAIN
O THI: RF:AL
"'-l:3TATJ:RS
lice and leisurely way of )A...,. Jot and excellent loca-Blck , ""' t, houH 3 bdnnl 2 baths Sep. ' bedroom home reduced to
lile. Owner of thlA: unusual $26 950 I t t M t I -·-rm, 1m •wine rm or oftlce, · · $110 ooo r Qulck Sal CUSTOM homo witb OCEAN ' RANCHO MESA ns an 0 e tion and pricod lo "ll al. . • i.m I kit 30 x 14, u, nn tu'llte dlnlnc room. MAny ' or "
VIE\V will make EXCEP· A sweet little old lady& sa.ya, $22, 950 w/beamed ceillngi I: frplc. extru. On I y $3.1,450 IN. Vo~l Co. Rltn. 87 E.
TIONAL TERMS available "1ell." A well kept, 3 Bed· ~ a~ :i::::u: +tio;1!: Sharp 8 units in commercial Mother·in-law suite w/sep CLUOING 1HE LAND! Cout Hwy, CdM. 673-20'J>
Horse Lovera Att.nt ion 10 the professional man. The room, 2 Bath home is wbat Uy OU ~ 1 $33 500 zoning .. .located next to entrance. $!U.OOO. 5f6.'154.f Submit )'W?' tenru. 3 BR, Den, 2% ba. Con-
$52,!KXI VALUE \\'& ...... n" she"• talken 'bout. Add a ~· e a ' and across the street from PEnlT REALTY CO. temorary Atchitl!Ct de1lgn. Just Reduced $21100
Ch\]1cr says sell H! 2 Bedrm
home W/sparkllng 15x30 pool.
J...arge-2 borse 11table-with
tack room. Now only $31.500.
.... with high FHA loan balance. the busiest & best motels in FIVE BEDROOMS, $43,500. .,.....__ u-·--ol u--s" ed I bit. ~% transf~rrable yoor inspection. 1:' .. ._, the comple~ sprinkler system LEASES Qui•t -·'-de-sac 3 bathl •uc ~ IW'-'-"" -~, ~ · d !Dwn. 6.6 A"umablo loan _._ ",.. • -••• •101 loan. $69,500. By owner. samp Zl'P CODE as I be and a cove,~ pallo an .1 v p ~ 2 -.. h · 1.... --
1 U .-Me1a erde acesetter, 3 •"d•al lor lamUy ou;1• mo•-i. 1 .... ,, -lll'e 1wimm .... l-========~ I Phone ~:mf for appl. Western \Vhitt-House! )'OU've got a 1"-'ttt it e ., .. u: pool f -"" "-~--+ tam, avail ~1 for 9 Call Jor details. &elusive -a .. -., rm -DU11Ul' i•u WE SELL A HOME ho~tor$26,950. months only, $250. with HI School district. Just Coron• del Mir ~ ---------1
EVERY 31 MINUTES 546-23U ./ Big s 8'tlnn. M.,. do! · ·'' I '!!!'~~~!!!!~!!!!!!"'"~' lisled -,.. to boUow. Ca11 l-'===..;.c.;o;..._-'-I =B::•;:;lbN=..:l•::l.:;•nd:.::.._...:;135=5I W lk & l Mar, $300. option 137,450. Nowport EASTSIDE C.M.; z.sty, pool 545-M24, SOUth Cout Roal BIGGEST RSH IMMEO
P"IJl.oWBfl'I 8 er ee I L<wely < + i.m. I otory home. Stono "1>1., din. nn., Estalo. IN THE BLUfF'S · ........ Buy ...,.. 4 et d d k 50 Ft =~==~~,.,-~ for your 11ummer vacation. C .1.a v A..BAN ran"h Back Bay View $350. en. ar room. . cov. 11ll: BLUFFS 3 Bdrm, 3 POND I ,..,,. 20U Westclitt Dr. ...., Vi I tlo ......._.. ,.._ .,.,, ..,_ Add a un t & help .,.., the ts I.T Y CO. Mayoptlonat$50,950. ctor 1 pa ....... .in'-At.~ bath, 1pllt level, on First time ottered, 2200 _,,
&16-77!! W IVAN WE S' '46-Ull I S Y 0 UR AD IN greenbelt, Cu 1 tom IQUU'e teet of JllXUl'ioUI llv-7:de=-tinancin.r. Call
* <FBR,31BAd. +ptn•d.,room,. ---(•nylimtl helooklnclorllDlal&o. Lugo lrit<hen. $37,900. ot•··and-nbollTwo -~~GAN REA~!'!.~ UtrJ Baker, C.1'1. ~5440 :=::°"'~n:':••:'::'OO~P::•::·=~I NE LL &5415111 CLAS.SIFlED! Someone will decorated A tmnw:ulate. tnr. PLUS panoramic view * WATERFRONT LIDO ISLE BUYI w~ t ,:;:;;.'t_':.',.~ .0::~~1~-~~!!'.!!!l!!~~~!!!'!:,,:;5618~======:..'...~644-0l~;;,75;,:a1t~e~pm~-;;;;kd~""';:i;. ~. 3'b.lh. torma! "afil'E. eo..t Hwy.,"Cdi.i'
DU PLEX Like. new 2 Bedroom 1: oon. b' crptd. superb view. Pool """!""~~':'.i~:i!'llil"''l~C~os!!!:l•~M~•!,!H!,_ __ _.!l!IOO~G~o~no!!!:r•!!l ____ _!l!•!!,.2Got~~no~ro~l----!1 ~00~-0 din~~ f~ ':I ---------1 p;r.r & slip \1.'ilh nu ...... ~n to-\'f'rtible den home w 1 t h in land1C&ped courtyard. :..~ ttzruui11out. 0 111
y
ca.ted duplex on MarcusA'tt. channlng sunny patio. Jm. Roy J, Ward Rea.lltlr 1430 * TAYLOR $59.~.00 fOr this oulltand-Huntington le•ch 1400
Jn W. Newport Beach. Walk mediate occupancy. Asking GalflXY Dr, 646-1550, Open S@~lA /la"t2f} ing borne. Act fast on·thil LAST ONE LEFT
Pr! .. ~ "' If' at .,...,, · ete arreft 1' t Bdrm, 2'1W b& oor home on p OPEN FOR INSPlXTJ.ON For UU. Spaniah hacienda to ~ ~·1n1 & _:.hooooppinc. pl!iG.500. B \ 1,;;Diiollyiii;;. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I WESTCLIFF a -).J Q.• one .. .it ""n't Jut long .•• $16,500 FULL PRICEI
c . Robo" Na""" R•altot' 5 BEDROOM " POOL """""tao kitchen, i.m nn, Th e Pu:z/e with fhe lui/f./n Chud/e In o Lo HUNTINGTON ·
Costa f\.lesa 642.1485 REALTY 8ayttef!t • complet'ely redeC> patio It pool-size yd. $50,00:l. it.Tvtn~:.':J. BEAOI. Full so x 125 lot
VETS NO DOWN 16C6 Westcli(f Dr., NB =~~Su.~=~H=:aht '1 0ur 25th Ye•r'' 0f::r°::mb~r~s t: ,--, ...... -.... ~-.... PHONE 67J.1550 and zoned Jt.3 for future de.
and ~ aelle rwlll pay your 642·5200 \;. WESLEY N. Jow to fotr11 fovr tirnple wcn:la. wlopment, ldn.1 l!Mltmtnt
eloolnc .,..,, """"° lMlO "'-:Z...~=:=-==:i::=z:j ~ 545-5114 TAYLOR CO. I or newlywed...,...,., sun.
,.. tt. 3 BR, 111 BA homo "' ---RHllon TIECN,ACI I ' i • I MIT YOUR TERMS. on. -~2 lo!. >'ull pri<o Business Building UGE R~TY NEWPORT CENTER WE SELL A HOME
$26.900. -· ,Cl& nu San Joaquin Hills Rd. $69,500 EVERY i1 MINUTES
FULLER REAL TY Good 1"""'"""n" S35.ooo.I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' 644-49IO P•y L•11 For Luxvry W lk & L
54Ul14 R'uonablotlownpaymontA $22,500 I IOSU P I !l Im .. r .... c:e; etdlllW, a er ee $19 750 "'Y ""' ot ""'"' Prosent 5" ~ 4 UNITS I ' I I I specta8y d,....., 11.,,,._ 'Im F.d'·-' income $350 per month. •s1um1 Y4 ,. Loan 2 BR. home w/huge, fOrmal .. 16~
. EASTSIDE Jt.J loC. Belt o1 W1ll1-McC1rdle, Rltrs. Tmitic •Pr. loan to auum~. 1..S Bdrm., 3-2 bdrm•. Xlnt dtn. nn. :ioco Sq, n. Quallbr 842-oMSS 540-51«1 krml. ~ BR, l Ba, cownd l81a Ne"'POf't Blvd., C.M. Entry hall, hup family nn., n!ntal area. 3 ~nanta over 3 ..._
patio, new carpec.s, paitned 548-7729 6"-0684 Ev~•· 2 batru, 3 bdrms.,1.arp mu. )Uta. Ideal propert)' for I S'OTUC I r =t'~tc~ptanbl1f:
In .. OUt. New driwway, J !!!!""!~~'!!'!'~~!!l!!•J ter bedroom, 540.1-. ~ to llvt 11'1 A rent l. ' '~ A k t I I I • I • enterttlning. Vacant • quick Ownerh&Jptll'lance. LIDO SANDS TARBE LL 295.SHi rbor Grouing $6,'80. s nr ~=======~-A fallure: ... 't·osbrok1os po1H11.Low prlceforattal Al:mt M&.J92S Eva. 644-l6S5 3 Bedrooms ~.GOO. For addltlona.1 info. a .. i .. l.-..L-t In a -comn_ ''B/B" R••lly 67S... call owner/Broker ,.,......,......._ ,... $28,950 2 Balha, built-Im· LEISURE li""1c In th• CHILT ROBINETT I HUDLOS I ""' F•mll y Bucio H-"'---$26.SX> Blufls. Beaut Locatkln. 3 REALTOR ~121 h· ~~;;:..::..~~---1 0 Cofr.9W. tt. cftudJe _..., Ftv. Bedroamar Three baths!
·-Bdrm. + .,.., Geor .. Wllli•mson BR. 2 BA, !ft llvtna nn • s I I I I r by fUl11115n the"""""' ~ -Fee land! One block to ~ entrJ hall, 3 bathl, R.EAL1'0R dining a~a. Extra !gt tenc-e STEPS TO OCEAN . . . . -. YoV d•v•lop rom np No. S Wow. R h 1n .a; .. r-ho-living h ocean! uatlc c a r rn
: ...... ~ ~ 67M350 67).15'4 Eves. ~a:~~ded1'h~ir:.m~~ 3 on.. modem bead! borne. • Pl~~~s7~!~~s l!nflS IN I' ,,. Is 1: ,. r I CdM01 beet loc:auon. $49,900
lfOUlldl. 5*J.lT.ll. NEWPORT H EJCl1TS ed 10 S39,500. Accea: to poolJ, tennta cts. • . , • • _ • H•I P lnch1n & Astoe.
TAlllELL 2955 H•rbor rambliQC ranch style 3 Arent 646·3928 'Evf:1: 644-lw.5 It recreat.lofl 31""8· Qnty • I u_ N1sc010
AMET81A!N•swao
1
v,E tf~lfli I I I I I I I JtULTORS
• OWNER Retlrina-2 Br. Bedrm, t hake root. trplc. LAKEFRONT • Le.ke Foreit $25,900 • X' .. it U!nTll • • • • • • • 3100 E. Cout HW)>. nf>.4392 tlo. fnllt ......, M·I CM. p!,950. K ln11ard, ILE. New 2 br,, bl. Cmpare CAYWOOD REALTY Ct....i to $21,950 • .....rut M: 2-2222. Wlcumnl mkl. pric.. • ""' w. Coul Hwy .. NB SCRAM·'.,_ ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 7BOO THE SUN NEVER sm .. , Nl,nt.U Jtet,lty. 675-4fJOO DAILY pllbf WANT ADS! save. O\t11tt: 49-1-M&.1 1 __ ,.:•:....:541-.;.;;..;.;1290 __ .__ Mi 1 • OAJLY PILOT WANT ADS!
,.
--------·------
1st HOME?
New A ready for lmmed oc-
cupancy. 4 Br, 2 bl, blt·ln
ruee a: own, dlahwuhu
w/.,,, erpt, d1111. rear )'d fenc-
ing, """' yd -·~ $23,500 FHA • Min. down .
VA 5400 IOtal down, Call
962.1353.
BY Owner: 2 BR Condo.
Asaumt g~ morg. $5500
down. Sm . 'Monthly pmnta.
l Car pr. pool. quiet
S3&-ll62
'
HOUsis l'OR SALE
Hunlj"lfOll Bea ch 1400
... -.--... ---.. ,,-.-.. " -.
RENTALS RINTALS
HooM• Fumlshod H ..... ,. Unlvml1hod
RENTALS
-Apls. fumls~
R ENTALS
~.J!_nfuml"'td
.. 00 Cuto M -5100 Sum-r Rat!lll1 2910 Hunt!""°" 'S.och 3400 Cool• MolO 1-----..... --
,
n.,,,4o1, ..... '· 19'71> DAILY Pn.llT
Rl!NTALS ' RENTALS RENTALS R EAL PSTliTli
Cl
~·· tlnfum llhod Ai>lo. Unlvml~..!!_ _ Apt..J:.. Unlvmlohtd Gentro!!_I .====
Cosio M H a 5100 Nel\fPOf'f Boach 5200 Newport Bea ch SZOO Rooms for Rant 59'5
CUTE RANCHEROI
NEWLYWEDS SUMMER RENTAL NEAR Now, ' Bdrm, .>'URN. I BR. Qul•l itnl<le,
OREAMI , LAGUNA BEACH """ling, bl!ns, dbl""""'· : IJ.ll;.IJJO. "'"'· Studio, IW PARK AVENUE 'DUI cute 3 bedroom rt,nChero Beaut. Blue Lqoon Villa, 2 $210 *** 544-9506 per_ roo. Adulta, no pets.
fl:atures extra thick wall to BR, 2 BA. w/dryw, we=, $225 Mo-ca.nkrier pd. 3 BR, 2 2133 Elden A~ .. Apt 6. C~t.
wall cupeis ~~ 2 "'"""""' pool<. le BA. crptl, drps. tncd JTd. SUS CASITAS
modem built-in kitchen, •n-court.s. •tePt to private acb Avail April ts. !l&i-2341 J'urn. 1 BR Apta. Adulll . . & EH lbluff Arto Off J omborto Rd.
PRIVATE Room, lovtly sun-
ny. Prime area home. HoiM
privileges available. Yea,
we'll take tnnslents with
referencea. 546--3634
elORd patio, and 2 CUS-$425 month ot June. $250 i • only, no petl. 21.10 Newport
TOMIZED bathe:. GI NO wkJy, July a n d August, l .. UN 8Nch i70s mvd, CM', ~ Beautiful, new • now renUng -22 units of 2
bdrms ., 2 baths, with fine quality color coor--
dinated carpets & drapes. Gold Medallion
all electric kitchens. $300 Month.
t>OWN, $220 a month pays ~-10 AM-2 PM. --$115 NEW Bachelor W/W
all.$25,900FULLPR1CE. RENTALS 3 BDRMS. & DEN qits, marble putirnan, VILLA POMONA WE SELL A HOME HoulOS Unlvmlshod F1rop!ace, cupell. <!rape" Quiel, rellnod. 54S-\091.
EVERY 31 MINUTES bulll-l'l.kltd>en. A Fine fam. 1"'. tac. ·
Call: IN pvt. home H.B. Mattm?d
Walker & Lee Goneral -U.. ';:°>i th U... $135/MO. Dix Mob. bome.
**RENTALS** MISSION ~.j.y '94-0131 Comp!-· hid pool, "'"'"
CQSTA MESA'S FINEST
"NEAR THE BEACH"
BOYD REALTY 675-5930 gentleman. Bedrm/slttinr
mi comb., pvt bath, no kit.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ prlv'a. $65 mo. 962-9666
7682 Edinger
Sj0.!1140 8424455
Country Club
t.Jvlng. Custom 4 bedroom en
&elf course, Walk to ?.farina
High.
The Real Estate Mart
M74531
$24,750 e POOLl7X35 0
4 BR, 1% BA, !rplc, like new
crpt&, Sparkling clean! Lg
patio. boat door, nr bch,
BRASHEAR REALTY
141-8501 Eves. 64UK27
BY OWNER 4 Br, frpl, elect.
blt·ins, beaut. landscaping,
new crpt, nr ocean. Assume
5% '10 loan, will consider
~· $15.) mo. pays all.
W-7622 * * $15,500 by OWNER.
Very nice 2 BR home. Fully
carpeted and draped. Love-
ly landscaping. Good Joca·
tion. $3500 down. fl62..4.118
Courtesy 1oJ!!:91<ers.
l'ountaln Volloy 1'10
•BEDROOMS
3 Baths. big fonnal living rm
w/Palos Verde stone Jifoe..
plact, Upgraded w/.w crpta,
drps, bltin oven/range, 1ge
aervice porch, patlo, dble
pr.. shake roof. Fenced &::
landscaped. All thia f o r
$30 ......
I' 1llage Real Es\Jte
9'2-4471 ( ::::. J 546-1103
Laguna Beach 1705
FOR Sale by owner -aduJt
Condominium, 2 BRs, 2
baths bllns, elevator, CHU
Drive. 494-8126
San Clemente 1710
Triplexes • 1rom $39,995
4 Unit! • from $52,000
View Homes • Xlnt terms
Lota • From $7 .000
Apt. rentals • from $135
GOLDEN TRIANGLE
Rtally e 492-2030
4.32 N. El Camino Real
nXER· UPPER 4 bdrm 2
bth., nr bcb $18,350.
NR Coif Course, 2 bdrm &:
den -Special $24,500. Bill
Williams Realty. 239 Del
Mar S.C. 492-6175
1 BR unfum Tri I S12S no pets. f Se~ Mob. Est. • P ex •• 2359 Newport 548-6.\12
2 BR. Duplex, kids ok ,, $150 SEA View· 2 BR, 2 BA, den, ""~'°"""°'' c._c.7:,,~~1 3 BR. House, toVpet •••• $1TO BU-ins comp! incl washer & $145 & up. At~c. l BR Ir: 2
Bachelor Apt nr bch •••• $85 dryer. Gar. elec eye dr, 2 BR. Pool. Util pd, Gan!en
2 BR. furn. Apt •••••••• $150 trplc's, 49'J..4043. 3 Arch Living, Adulls, No pets, llllO
ROOMMATE SERVICE Bay. Wallace Ave.,.C.M. * MANY OTHERS * 2 Br. Furn. Apt. Pool. no
Fr .. to 'Landlords Lagun1 N iguel 3707 children, m pets. $160.
Blue Beacon Rental Finders NASSAU PALMS. 177 22nd
435 w. 19th St CM 645-0lll ~EASE • new, never lived .S;.:'·:_64~2-.164:;:,=5~---~ =-"'c;::,::,.;::_• ,::::-.:c:.:= in 2 BR home; 2 ba, 2 -= RENT OR LEASE. $185.00. 3 car gar. Beaut. view, CUI· SMALL 1 BR furn, apt. AU
bedrooms. Costa Me s a de-sac st. Bltns, new crpts util paid. 998 El Camino
Home. 2 baths, Double Car. & drps. Access to priv park, Dr .. C.M. 546-<Mil
age, Fenced Yard. Drop in pool & beach. Agt 492-5529, I BR. Pool. Shuffie board.
and Browse through the olc 496-5791 Garg. Adults. Util pd. 1884
Rental Book at , 1flonrovia.. 5'&-0336
WALKER & LEE Ml1s!on Viti• ' :r70I NICE 1 BR. DUPLEX. 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams .,~1: --------.-. 4 BEDRM beauey, wonderful Adults . .......,,
3 Br + d~n or 4 Br, Ding fan)ily loCatk>i Avail April ~;;*,;P:cho=ne:....;54:,:0-0833:,.:;=.,;c*~c I
nn, Family nn w/wet ~~ 18, !235 mo. Agt: 546-4141 To sublease mid June-Sept 1.
cpta, drps, pooh:, tennlsj..=;:=;::::::;:=:=,:::;::;;;;;:;:;;;. 1 Br apt., patio, 1 or 2
courts, parkt: Close to &ho~ ,. ndo . . ,..0 •du1ts $120 mo. 548-2326.
pJ.n¢U,.universlty, !::!.. .... __ mc;.1.;.nc.1";.;m"---·_,_•• 1 BR furn, $U.S. Quiet.
scOOols & San Diego Fwy. FOR Lease. New 3BR·2 BA. aduJts. 382 Cost& Mesa St. ~t 5 pm weekdays or &DY Ea5tbluU. Nr school, pool, 54.5-6328 eves.
Bachelor, 1 & 2 Bedrooms
Completely Furnished from $140
(also unfurnisbed available I
e Luxuriously Furnished
• All Electric Ap11 rtments
• Private Garages e 2 Swimming Pools (he•ted)
• Individual P1tios
....•... PLUS ••..•••• * NO RAT E INCREASE for Summtr * Generous MOVE-IN Allow1nce * Sptcle l -1 Mont~'s FREE RENT
...... COME SEE ..... .
1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa
(Wost of Newport, between 17th & 18th St.)
·~ ROOM w/kltchen priv, Priv '
Costa Mesa 5ll0 Coron• Ml M8r 5250 ba. Priv home. Nr Bea~. 1
--· Fem. pref. 963-3051. H.B; I ORtEANS APJS. . . LARGE ROOM, Pr Iv at• • • ·bath, working woman. Call 1
ADULTS ONLY
2 &:: 3 BR. Avail, Private pa.
tlo, pool •. indlv. laundry tac.
CNr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus-
tin at 17th St; nr. Westcliff).
f:l.: after I, 615--1917
1. Si'5 per \W'k yp w/ kitcl;>en.
. $30 wk up apt.. 2.116
,ON TEN Aau:s Newport Blvd. CM. 54S.-!1'155
1 6,2 BR. Furn • ~ Re ' ha. J'\replaces / prtv, ,Patios / ROOM For _nt: Priv. ~ Ttnnls. Contnt'l Bk.fat. '-le ~,ntr. ;cm Orange Ave.,
17U 'I'Ustif!, Costa Mesa 900 Sea We CdM ~I C.M. ~
Mgr. Mrs, Caraoo. 642-464! CMacJ.rthlll" ~ Colt! Hwyl CO.,;;tJLEG;:, '=~E,_,,p_r_w_•_rkl~ng-a'"~.,-1.I
QUIET & LUXURJOUS
ADULT LIVING AT .• ,
HACIENDA HARBOR
Brand New 1 • 2 BR.
$150 & $110 per mo w/
all utilities 1nct
Blln!, shag crpb, dJps, gar,
beaut. landscpg, Sorry no
peta. Inq at Ofc. by pool or
apt No. 9. 241 Avocado.
642-2925, Eves. 64&-0979
---------· BaJ. Ille. Kit. & TV rm,
Incl. $55 mo & up. 675-361!
Balboa 5300 FURNIS!!ED, Ulll. pa Id • I -'"~0:..-----"-;;:, $55-75 mo. Girls only, 388
1 BR. partly fUrn. AduJts·CJb. W. Bay, C.M. 642--8520
ly, no pets. Yrly lse, wkl)' --
or monlbly. 644--0753 aft.6. I Motels, Trlr. cm. 5997
Huntington Boach 5400 HOLIDAY B~CH MOTEL • Rooms • kitchenettes, 100' to ON BEACH! :e;:tasf r;;ai°n~~n~
time weekend!, ~202'1 tennis courts. 644-4834 =========I
$HARP,apac2story,3or4j:i::;::=:::=;:;;:=:;:::::::= ~~~~~~-~~:l~~~~~~~======~~::~~~5~1~00 Bednm, tam nn, all bltna, Duplexes Uhfurn. 3975 t'ewport Be•ch
11ewly decorated. $275/mo. -
EL CORDOVA
Brand new dclux apti, tpac-
ious, l & 2 Br, swimming
pool, b-bque, rec hall. These
are the best In the area, See
them at ro'71 Charle, maMI'·
er John & Loulse Sellen,
64S-2ll8.
e SINGLES FRCM $140 Camino Real SC. 492-3582
• 2BR11Ai BA FROM $225 I WEEKLY 1ratea. SEA e 2 BR 2 BA FROM $200 I LARK M9TEL, '2301
• 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 Newport Blvd, Costa Mesa.
Avail 5/1. Heritage R.E. 2 BR, 1 BA near H.B. Com. Newport ·Belch
540-1151 (open eves.} Hosp. Child OK. No pets.
$130. 847-4M9.
<ff ,\'NARD W INNING
lZ .<1<111ce
c::rted~-==r ree room«ean vie• Misc. R•ntals 5999
Cooto MtH 3100 RENTALS
--------Apts. Furnished
NE\V 2 Story 4 Br, 3 ba --.
home, fabulous farm kit· Ge!"eraJ 4000
chen w ffrplc, lrg fenced yd.
Ready for immed. oc-
cupancy. Lt:ase w/optlon
$350. Broker 540-1667
2 BR unlum hse, w/w erpts,
gar attached, 2 small chldrn.
$148 mo. can fDr appt.
642-8531
3 BDRM, 2 Bath. Cpt1,
drapes, built-im. fen cc d ,
$235 Dys ~2286 eves
5.51-8968.
SHARP 3 Br, 2 Ba Condo.
Avail May 1st. S200 lse. Pat
O'Toole Agt. 540-1720 or
545-3658
3 BR, dbl car garg attch.d.
Lrg encl patio. $210 mo.
No children. 642-8520
I 3 BR. 2 BA. $295 mo. Xl.nt
rec. facil.
Call 642-0300.
Mesa Verde 3110
LUXURIOUS Tri-Level 4 Br,
3 Ba w/ 2 frplcs, Jg fam
rm., sep din rm, front &
rear patio. Rear has gas
fire pit., gardener. $375.
00-1364
Single
Adults
Luxury single, l & :z bed-
room apartments, f\lrnlsh-
ed a,nd unfurnished, with
complete privacy and land-
scaped country club atmos-
phere including $750,000
worth of recreational faciJ.
ities designed anc; operated
just fDr aingle people.
Rents From
$145 to $300
Immediate Occupancy
Mo. to Mo. Lea!:e Avail.
ANAHEIM
271 So. Brookhurst
(1 blk. So. of Une<>ln)'
(714) 772-4500
GARDEN GROYE
Newport Beach 3200 13100 Cliapman Ave. -· B/B
(4 blks \V. Santa Ana Fwy.)
(714) 636-3030
GRAND
OPENING
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
lllt'l'l'itll
1
4lt' '\'O()tfs
HARBOR VILLA APTS
10 min. to beach. a.dolts only.
1 & 2 BR, l* Bath. Carpets,
drps, bltns. Prlv patio.
Orange County'• Most Beautiful swimm.inc pool, laundry nn.
Apartment Community .1 From' $115. 26n Harbor
patios-ample parlli4 GARAGE for rent, new.
Security guardi.' Storage only. Ea1tslde
FURN. also Avail. Costa Mesa. $20. 642-2657
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC•
nt OCEAN AVE.: H.B.
(714) 536-lC
SINGLE Garage for rent $20. * 642-3645 *
lncom• Propeirty 6000
Featuring a c 1 u b atmosphere for your Blvd. Ph s-5, 534-1971. aft 5
comfort and pleasure-just completed 1or.2 pm. ~ OCEAN View sun deck , 5
Bedroom, 2 Bath. Furnished or Unfurnished. Harbor Heights Apts. beoch, new •psd.'dlx 2 BR, SEPARATE
L.uxury gan1en apartments Air-Cond ., soundproofed, self cleanioi ovens,"' Roomy.Deluxe 2 &: 3 BR. bltns, crpts, .frPs, lndry,
b ilin. d. hwashe lush Ian caplng Home a-~-Incl --. BBQ, nr ahoP,I & pier . Sl75. HOUSES offerin&: complete privacy, earn ce gs, JS r, •,,;,.. ..-.. Ad I b ~. k •••2131 "th t & t rfall el t BBQ' frcd air big, bl .... ~-lo u ts, a.,,., 0 ·"""' on specious 'i1i acre neu S.A. beauWul landscaping 1 w1 s reruns wa e s, eva ors, s, ......,. un~ .. -11 .. 1ed recreational clubhouse with social activities, saunas, S.D. frwy, shopg, schl, park. CHEZta NOR01A2p~. 8234BR Allan-Country Club. 2 3 Bdrms,~ ~-J · · I · t 'th (B~ Baker & Glsler, W. ot ew · ..... , priv. baths and 3 2 Bdrms. -$7Q.> 1
facilities in a country acuzz1 & SWUTl poo s, pr1va e garage WI Harbor) Rental Ofc, 3117 garagea. Pool, Utility per month income, $69,500-
club atmosphere. Now storage. From $140-210. Cinna,rnon Ave. 54s.l034 roorm. Owner will trade for small
leasing 1n Newport Beach. For en!:J:• surroulcllnts caterfnt to dis~ 5J6..1138 or 536-2127 hom or will help "----QUIET new l Br. NightUght e, · Lll...,•~. ctrt1I-lltts, come to MERRIMAC WOODS • • • ATrRACT 2 Br N il "'7171 ?i!odels open 10 am to 8 pm J.;;t "''of 2600 Harbor llvcl., nr. Naber• Cadlllac view. Lrg 2 car gar. No . . ow ava· " -
Renu trom $!35-$310 •25 MERRIMAC WAY, COSTA MESA e 545-6300 pe~. 54G-0240, 64&-6835 sll all "tras. Pool. Kida OK. 5:30. $1W mo. 17401-A Keelson 1.-0 THE REAL
\"\.. ESTATERS Furnished or unfurnished '"!'~::!"l·'!v!':E~R .. YTH!!!!!!!l!!N!!G!!N!!E!!W!!!!!~'!!·'!!AO'!!V~E~l'!!N""!!N'!!O~W~I~~~ * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR Ln. H.B. 968-1510, 847..()325
0 k d 1RENTAt:.S -,___ Garden Apts. ·m t-lns, priv, NEW 1 'B~ blk to beach. 1 a woo Apts. Fumlshtd I Costa Mtsa 5100 patio. hea!M pool. lrplc. Priv pstio. NICE!, QU!l:T! DUPLEX
Adulta. $145 mo. ~163 Gar, angle adq,Jts, ·~pl. $135. PLUS large & livable home
' , T I
Garden HU..tington Be ach 4400 HARBOR GREENS DELUXE 2 Br. 2. Ba . ltl2-A l4th 5.16-W9, 6'3-l'14 on 50xll7" R-3 lot Four l
APARTMENTS ATRIUM. CID. Bltns encl 2 Br., 1* bath,,~ .• wfd. blocks from ocean. Better
Apartments BEA
2
CHB. LOCAT
1
lOANd •
1
Lrg
219
1 Bachelor, 1·2 & 3 BR. Fum/ gar. Adlts, no R!ts. ;190 ae. tna., ca~t; drapri, patio, than new, $45,500. '
& r. Poo · u ts. unt. From $110 & up. Car-548-3108 pool priv., i1'5 mo. 968-2413 The Real Estate M•rt
15th St., HB. den patios • Beam cellgs ' '2~B~R-.~A-pt-. _N_e_w_crp_lg_& after 4 p,m. 847..S531
:r 700 16th Street }l'plcs • Rec Rm!! • 2. Pool.I drps Fenced psllo HCA 2 JIB,. Redec. Dupll!X'-w/gar, !
Sant• Ana 4620 Saunas e Nursery School 2658 .Orange Ave. cM. _....., Crpts, drps, stove. No pets. NEW Deluxe Duplex. 1-3 Br. t 714: 642-8170 l~='-'-=---...CC:;;; Fam & AduJt sections. Im· Refer req. S140. 715-B 1·2. Br .. Also 4*9-12 new , $140. Lrg cheerfuJ newly med. occup. 2700 Peterson SHARP! Lrg 2 Br. Drps, California St. 540-4925 eves. units. Llndborg Co. 536-2579 , crplll, bltns. Quiet bldg. In· °'H"'°O"T=E.,.L~R.,OO=M=s-F=o.,Rc I furn. 1 BR. apt Ctriplexl ~~~7CMO Nr Hrbr & Adams. fant ok. Sl5Cl. 547-2682 . 2 Bclnns, 2 bath. Priv patio, Business Rent ii 6060 Bltns, garg. 1 child ok. Nr .,.,.,..,., 2 BR 1~ BA Crp d heated pool, washer & dryer I
VIP'S EXPENSIVE? schls. 2'230 s. Center st. S.A. · · ts. rps, hook up. 962-8994 JUST LISTED
Ideal For Combination rNr. Warner) 545--0989 LUXURIOUS NEW stove, dlahwhr, gar. 766 w. OFFICE-APT. 1..c.c.cc==..;.;occcc.._ • Wlloon. Apt L. 00-7958 NEW 1 BR. CARPET~ 6 Shsrp E-•lde uni~ w/pool.
SEPARATE Unit 2 Br. crpts, DRAPES. Avail April 15th. on quiet secluded st. 2 BR 1> rr.. stige private Bayfront La una Beach •705 A Li The Lindbo-Co •••2579 •och gar'!! d...... crpta pe
View, 2 BR. apt, completel)'l·~g~·------·1 Quiet dult ·ving :t.~~~.xin~~l55, , •a '.,_. ~. ·~im. i;;"t wali! . !
many extras, ocean view. Adults Only
LOVELY 4 bedrm, 2 hath
Finest location, South Coast 2 BR. 2 bath split level $225 NEWPORT BEACH Realty, 493-4346 AVAILABLE NO\V
1-"""'""'°'°""''=-===.i Bay 4 Beach Realty, Inc.
Capistrano Beach 1730 901 Dover Dr .. Suite 126 NB
l --'---N-O-TOIJR-.--1-SfS_! __ . 645-2000 Eves. 548-0066
8fll mvINE AVE.
IRVINE AND 16tb
CTI4J 64l>0550
turn. with linens, el<:. Se•·ll Sun.stl.IN __ ch 5455 BOBO .. ~S.,OONN~ ALTOR ,
aonal or yearly rental. La~ $35 WEEK 1 & 2 BR. 2 nrim PQ01s 1 BR, single adult. Stove, ~1
dry facilities & boat slip AduJts only, ro peti. refrtl, aome turn. No 'Jlell. BEAOI ap~ ul\funL View ot , ··
avail, 546-7002 or 6424641. 301 A·-do SI CM call 545--0876. ..._ .. • h-~-·. $1!0 .•• 1 & SPACE For. barber.t,1hop in
NO TRAFFIC! LEASE S75.000 Baycrest ex-
11' mi Bch, Stable, Marina ec. home. Full view of :lack Soutfl Bay Club
Apartments
~._,c=~-=~="-1 Luvo•'"" Apts. Year-round res-• .,.,... " ' · ............. , « ..... ....,,. ...., I -11., I t d
" ~-, 0 •• Mgr on preml" LARGE 2 Br I" Ba slud1"0 l•sl ONLY stable peo I P au cen .... J oca e CHANNEL • 3601 , Finley. idence, rate guarante<.>d. The ~ s ' n · Pe. among the 1302 luxury parlc Yearly lease. 2 Br. s, 1 ba. New Village Inn. 494-9436 (Behind K·Mart off Harbor apt, Children ok, No pets. Please call (2131 592-2425 Newport Apts being built
Cuslm 3 Bath 3 Bd +den Bay. SSOOfmo. Owner
$36,975. Owner 496-3377 S42-4TIS
Fr pl c. pat to , gar· 'i!l!!!!!!i!iii!!!!i!i!!l!!i!!!!!!!!!' iat corner Rutgers & Avocado) $150. 726 Joann St. 846-1584 & 1 I! D 54• ··-64"........, Santa Ana 5620 at Jamboree San Joaqu n
Condominium -1950
MUST sell Leisure World
I.quna Hill! nearly new 2
Br, 2 Ba. · terms. Owner
830-.1121
2 BR Townhouse, S 1. 0 0 0
below nlkt. 5% % Int. rate,
Must sell. 544-2689
Duplexu for Sale 1975
CdM. 2 houges, garden,
$55,0CKJ. S7lXXI down.
Bkr 675-6044, 642-3223
RENTALS
Houiet Furni.tled
Rent.31S to Share 2005
4 Br + fam C+D 2005 REMARKABLY Do""'.nstairs, $275 w/ util. 1 BR Apt; also sleeping rms. ay ~. eve ,,..,.ow LARGE Bachelor. BltJu;, .'.::.:;:::.. ___ .:::::::: Hills Rd., N.B. 644-1900
Port Albans. Cir. itarbor UNBELIEVABLY Avail now .• Weekly July Util, pd. Free TV & radio. refrlg, crplll, drp11, $110 per $115. LARGE Cheerful newly HILLGREN SQUARE
View Homes NB ( 213) EXTRAORDINARILY $250, Aug. $275. 833-ll34 2200 So. Coast Hwy. • MARTINICi)UE O mo. 545-S270 or 833-3S40 furn. or· unf. 1 BR apts. 2 stores avail. for lmmed .
292-7507 eves. • BEAUTIF1JL BACHELOR. 1 & 2 BR. ror Park-Like S:.irroundlngs Crpts, drps, bltns, garg. l lease in one of city's busiest
GARDEN HOUSE. 3 BR 2 Va l D'isere Ga rden Aptl unfurn), Crpts, drps, .Patio, San Clemente 4710 DELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR APTS. _N_o_wpo.;.__rl_Bo __ a_ch ___ 52_00_ child OK. Nr schls. 2230 S. shopping centers. App, 850
Putting green waterfall & pool, l:iltns. $140-$185. --Prv r e Hid p 1 Center SI S A CNr BA. 2 pools. Back Bay $325 ' Seaclift 1'.fanor Apts, 1525 SPARKLING 1 bdnn. pool pa 108 00 8 ' · ' · sq, ft. ea. mo Lease option. stream, Dowers everywhere, Placentia. NB. bu.ill·ins 2 blocks from Nr shop'g • Ad ults only BA YFRONT Warner). 54.5-0989 250 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
..,,_· 6'15-604il 642-8""" 45' pool, rec. room, billiards, be b · 1777 Santa Ana Ave., CM 2 BR, 2 BA 1 .. -·-· Apts. Call Mr. Bram (2131OL1·2700
-· • -BBQ' Sa !u ·-•·-BAYCLIFF MOTEL ac ' ocean v>ew, year M 0 '0 __ , S I An 5620 a, una, m .............. lease. No children or pels. gr Apt l1J • VN-5542 Priv. terrace, elevators, sub-;;;an;;;a;;;;;a.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1sruDIO •rnlh gallery •-cilit. FANTASTIC view of harbor singles, 1-2 Br. 1rom S135. J_ -~ ... "" & L'd 3 Bedroo + * LOW WEEKLY RATE.5 * $140 mo. terranean pk'g, All elec. ies, near Laguna Festival 1 0• ms See it! 2000 Parsons Rd.. TV' 'd · "·" 4M "'° •M '388 or for Santa Ana area Pool. soft ,Yater. docks. 3121 VILLA "•RSEILLES grou·"·. ~•• mo. ·~ ~o, $315 Month 675-3982 642-8670, Between Harbor &:: K1tche,n, 1' Jll&l &el"Vlce, """" ;i ...... ....., or .:i...... COCO PALMS. "' ~ ·~ •~ "'"""';i.w
GARDEN House . 3 Br. 2 Ba. NcWport. 2 Blk N. 19th. Heated Pool. GORGEOUS new 3 bdnn 2 SANDALWOOD APTS. w. Coast Hwy, Newport. ' BRAND NEW 494-5269, 194·5175. p~t, Back Bay. $32::i. HOLIDAY PLAZA 646-326.5 bath home apt. S250 mo. 2101 Ponderosn, Santa Ana 642-ml SPACIOUS
67:>-6044 • 642-8223 _ DELUXE, Spacious l Bdnn 2 BR. -Oceanfront; to June 101 Dominquez, Apt A, INr. 171h & Tustin) 542-6000 SPACIOUS Apt. avail for 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Office Rental 6070
HUNTINGTON BEACH ....._ . Furn apt $135 plus utU. 2Clth. Othen available! Owner 492-0002 or 492-1314. lease, 2 b r , 2 ba Adult Living
Newport HetV',fs 3210 Heated pool, ample parking. ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 FAIRWAY w/gorgeous vw of bay. For Furn. & Unfurn.
hlld 2 BR. Avail immed tor 2l;Ge;:;n;;e;;r;;ol;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;5;;000;;. appt call 6 7 3-714 2 or Dishwasher. color coordlnat. Air Conditioned 514 BOL&\. 2 Br + den Noc • ren ·no pets. 613-8414 ed appliances • plush shag ON BEACH ILVD.
$245 mo. Open House Sun-1965 Pomona, C.M. mo'ii-lease Sl60 mo, uW ipd , VILLA APJS. YEARLY 3 b De::k spac.-e available In (213) 330-3211 VENDOME : r, 2 ba, beam-carpet • choice of 2 color newcst office buUdJng at
day. Call 544-2380 aft 6 $145 All u1;1 paid. Lovely 2 BAYFRONT Luxury 2 Br. ed ~!lings, nr bch. 1osin schemes ~ 2 baths • stall prime locaUori in Hunting·
BEAUTIFUJ,. Mesa North BR. Duplex, family ""pet Privale patio, pool • lndiv. Grant St. (Corner Grant &: showers • mirrored ward· ton Beach. Air condiUoned,
home .• Prlvate bedroom . ~U;.;nc;l.:.•::•";.:;.lty"-:..P;:;•:.:rk:;.__;;32:;:17::.\~0~K;."'B:Okr".-'53+<"'=="°==== 2 Ba. Boat sllp avaU. $350, IMMACULATI!: API'SI laund""' fac. Seashore) 645-2748 eves or robe doors. indirect light. beautiful entranct. Front·
Hom 'vii Sh McKenzie Realtor. 646-0732 AD'" 'T , FAMILY ., e prt eges. are 3 d 4 •IOO v ... • Near Orange Co. Airport & 716-7015 days. tng tn kitchen. breakfast age on Beach Blvd., rear
kitchen. BeautifuJ yard, r!: :am~;·~ w~::etDi:::.1.C;..o_.s .. ta_M_•;..1;.;a _____ DELUXE 2 Br. WestcllH ll'>C. SECl'IONS AVAILABLE UCT. Adults or.ly, DELUXE 2 BR. Westcllll bar . huge private fenced leads to private parking
bit-Im, coJor TV, w/w cpts, cp'". drps. -'-, tenno·s * SUNNY * Pool & bltns. Adultlli $2'Z5 Close to shopping, Park Loe Pool & built 1,,. patio • plu•h 1 ...... scaplnr • lot. $50 per month tor d Pri .... ...,.,.., mo--no lse. 642-6274 * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba · • · ck , "'"" 1pace. l'>e3k ano chairs custom rps. me area, courts, parks. Close to shop-20122 Santa Ana Ave. Adu1lll. S180 mo • no lease. bri Bar-B.Q s. tarae heat· available for $5. Business
one person, couple or parent . 1 · . 1 • OCEANFRONT • * 2 Bedrooma M'"'. Mrs. Bruce 545-3894 fi42..6214 ' cd """la le lanai. houn ·---ring servl-4 chi J d. Ch i Id care ping cen er, u n 1ver11 Y · Weekly until summer * Swim Pool, Put/green ... 31~01 S B I fol St b -··· "'
available alt school, nites & schools & San Diego fwy. * ACRES * Call 642--1265 * Frpl, lndivllndr)' fac'ls 2 BR. Unturn. Newly dee. UNFURN Apt Best location °· r 1 ' avalla le tor $l0. All utili· wknds. 546-3&34 Aft 5 pm weekdays or any TUS An h I A New crpts & drps. Spac 10ll w. Bay Ave. Yrly Lse (%Ml. N. of So. O>a.1 Pl!U&) ties paid except telepOOne.
WOM • Shr Bluffs home time 'veekends, 831-2027 * Motel-Ap!S * Lido 1,"1, ·-l 4351 OOSTA ~ e m ~~2s24 grounds. Adil!, no pets. Sl40 613-7582 or KI 2-5752 PHOSNanEt~ 5A5n7a-oo ,.,J,A~~~l~L~[va.
w/mother & daughter. Non-Irvine 3238 mo. 2'283 Fount.sin Way E. LOVELY TWNHSE w/vtew ot • 99
" HUNTINGTON llACH
smoker. Daily Pilot Box M· ""-'"' O SUMMER Rental On Bay. e RENT e (Harbor, turn, W. on pool 2 Bdrm 2 Ba frplc, ire, . '42-4321 l '"'4>,_, So. of.. .C. Compl turn. 2 Br, 1 ba. Wilaonl. \VUeon Gar.den• patlo $250 Apnt 646-0732 1 L n-ch 5'705 M d Offi
27;;:_·===-.c=-;:::;;o.,-1 3 Br+ dm or 4. Br, Dln'g Fatrgl"OW'ld1 pa&, trplc. 615-2328 3 Rooms Furnltur• AP'fs · . . .. aguna -• 0 em Cft
SHARE beAUL home In CdM. rm. Faml\Y nn,w/wet bsr, Sf9tllo & 1 a-. wtrends. (~IJ) 654 -3016 $19.95 & UP ~:;..,,,.,,..=...,.==,-~' llodrm. 2 Ill. crpls, des;',.-·· 175 sing! 1175 2 " Non -smok er . Man or cpts, ,drps •. pool• •. tennil ', ... WK. & UP k"··-•WALK TO SI'ORESe 1 , near Hoag Hospital, Ailu'lta. OCEAN FRONT new luxury e, , nn suite. kl Cl to ......... ...,... w Wl.J'" Eastllde-Larp, ~t, cleati. $170 mo. 60-4387 . ~ apb.-2 BR. 2 8A.'AdulU, no Air cond, Sect Y servtce, woman. $1.DO. Re t 11 n g courts, par , OI<' a.~, Day Weelr Mottth _:::s=:..-:: Month-To-Month Rentals 2BR 1;9 Ba Studk>. Mature pets 497-18ll\ '\ . parking, centmlly located,
5'.W300 :~:O~n:"·~~1;1~~if~'. • Kiteh~ns .. TV·a tnd. Balboa Island 4355 N~~~~~~. taduJls. Bil-Ins, cpt~. drps, E ast Bluff 5242 • · So. Calif lat Nat. Bk. Bldg.
21 Year old re11pon1. male t
1
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Aft 5 pm weekdays or any • Phone serv., hid pool BOAT Slip & 2 Bdrm. Custom Furniture Rental gA.r/Patio cover. 26l Ogle --Dan• Point 5740 230 E. 17th Street
sfiltt 2 br apt. S80 mo. ca 1 k nd 833-102'7 •Maid service avail , 1 st. Al!I c. PRESTIGE LOCATION --Costa Mesa 642-1485 613--2542. t me wee e s, _ 2376 NEWPORT ILVD. garage·apt. l balh. S350 51 W, 19th, CM 548-348]. ™ F I "-' 1888 I DELUXE NEW 5'&-
9755
Bill Grundy Real!O« 642-<620 lllS-Clean 2 BR. 4-pl"'. * 1 uWNHOUSE 'It or ease, ~ux• sq. I. OFFICE OR STORE
MAN will share home v.ith Corona del Mar 32.50 Stove wfw drp! gar fami· 2 BR. 1~ BA, C'lltt, drP•. 4 BR, 2~ BA apt. Frplc, 2 Bedroom, 1~ bath, split lS x 35' or 30 x 35'
nice couple· References. LIKE New 3 Br 2 ba all VILLA MESA APTS. Huntington Be1dl 4400 Jy ok. 8kr~ 5J4-69so ' patio. Adu1ta, $160. lS4 E. drapes, crpl1, wet bar. prl level with all appliances eU It pkl111 &:: util furn
5'8-0879 after 6 . • , 2 Bit Furn. Priv patio, htd Melody Lane. balconies, dbl gar off kitchen sara.Be. view. $200 mo. ' Newport A Bay Center, CM
BACHELOR will share: home blt-w Ma.int, pool, Ocean pool 2 car I'd Child S PTS APARTMENTS $125--Nlee 2 BR front Duplcx. 642-6812, 548-1768 dahwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv Lingo Real Esl&te 2052 NeWpOrt Blvd 646-1252
in Nwpt Hghts. Must see to vw, Adults. $110. 673-6635. ff?n ~-elcom:~ ~Please; tmmed. occup. $165 good Fenced ynl & patio. Nice SP AC I 0 US Ji om e-1\ke to ahop'g schla &:: recreatiOn. lnvestmenll CORONA DEL MAR app~c. 646--lilU XI.NT Sboreclilla loc. l.rg 3 Sl85 mo. loeatlon. 1 Blk to Beach area. Bkr. ~ townhouse 2 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, Only $350 mo. 499-1397 Immaculate 2 room, Private
GIRL 21 or OVtlr to share BR, 2 BA. fam nn. Priv. mW. Wllson * 646-1251 Blvd, stores, theater f!tc. C M 5100 crpts, drps, patio, encl. gat, 835 Amigos Way, NB R&AL ESTATE office. Ground floor. Private =~h.3Ca~~~ !itws.pt bch. Lse $400. 673--0910 $30 P E R ~K. & UP ~El!~ 6~~ld n l ly. ::•::s::;ta:..:.:.:e::•::a __ ~;;.;;;i Clubhse & pool . 5'10-4179 Mgr. next door 865 Amip. ~ral bath. Sl3.5 mo . Utll pct
Lid I I ••51 BachelorA1 BR hid ~1 * LOLITA GARDENS 'lBORM< 2 baths .• Ntar 2)1R Studio. 2 Both."°""" Parking. 613.rnT Owner.
o S e -mskl ·-"-. Kl".-be,_..--~ MOBILE. Home • Adj. beach. EXCEPTIONAL. y • "D "< .._,_ p1 .. ..i. -i.• bl' ~""" ~ • ti ~· w .. lcllU Sh>pR!nl. Gu. ~~ --•·I· • lltnlol1 Wonttd 5990 Beat Location In CclM
BF.AUTJFUL 5 BR. 3 BA.. TV avail, 4!i(I Victoria tNr ~~.rm~ u l lncl. 2 ea., blt·ins. minored wall, ~~~t!;...,. $17$. f•O·ffS1, =.mo. ~2 car Pl'I· WC)v.1.u ..._pt. HB area 4 800 to 1f00 aq, tt. DellJXt Of!.
4 BR. 3 BA. Frplc, 2 patlol. AvAU now en l't'arl.Y lti.se. Ha.rbolj) · bt .... / ""'t-~L., '!'~ Vf:lour wall Pl~r. tnfAnt i1'tU""\111u -..uu.., ~.. ice Spaoot Avail I med.
Avail 4/12 'ti! 6113. $600 per rnn -· wn,,.,,pm.or-..-.. t 0l5.Ca1Awatttpaid.12192 2 BR.·~~· apt. r:4/J· ..... 'l'OWICllOUe:. New '-, J yrs:.~1ge.lbdrm.apt. p ~ m
0 w" e , 16 7 3-2259.· Eves, DLX, 1 Br., . Spee. tum. All 6 pm. Edinger, (Nr. Harbor. ....,_. ~ ._,, eu · "'."• w/1ar l laundry facllltlf!s. hOnc • 642<9950
875-3111. 673--tml eves. &14-5972 elec .. t:Tost·ftee retrfg. w/w 1 Blt. di.tplex. 3 btka bcb. 1.odys) Cu, tltc, It water turn, No BR. .-.nt.loBa~f.ontzj!e,'dd Jlav. well-mannered an-MEO, Dental aultes aVd',
™ ---· ._
2910
,;:.:=;:;,======I cpt. FuU Gar. w/i1tor. Quiet Prefet married cpl. $130 GRACICJUS Adult Living pets. AduJts only, 189 gar, pa • clent poodle and occ:. 725 Ir 1215 scr. h. aSc a aq,
1:S;;um::.:;;;mo:::.r..:R:·.•:;n;;t.:;•;;I•;._.:;.._ Huntin..tOI\ Btach 3400 Adull$ nnly, "fo/mo. $1.60. mot Avail April 15. 5*-1925 2 BR. w/crptl, drps, bll-ln \Va.lnut, Apt E. Call 548-6954 college-age IJOn, Pref, furn . fl. 59ll Heil Avt HB.
UDO 1 s 1 e Rescrvatiom. ---0•:...'-2220 Elden. &fG.9278 Eves. wkay cvn. R/O, tplrnl ttrca.U', trpl, NE\V Dix 1 & 2 Br. Sha: crpl, ~!..'!"8• ci.8.!._ ~ar 5150 but will consider unfurn. 846-3221
Home or apt. Ju1y thru VACANT 3 Br. 2 &. \Valk to NE\VLY decorated 1 Br furn. 2 lJEDRM en bea~h. ulll. 145 E. 18th St. 645-0092. dl'fl'!, bltns, lmmed . occp. BAalELOR Apt .. no cook· 54M3SO 1.tlernoona, 430-0T42·1·m=-.:10--:1500=°""Sq~.~ll-.,~Furn-
Labor Day Week.~ bftach. Family only. $2-to apt. v.'ilh an xtra rooni for Huntington Pacific •pt c . $190. From $l!JO. !S40-UJ73> 54$.2321 ing. $100 utllltle1 Included. tvts. .. or unfurn, crpts, drps, "1'lt·
DIAL direct 642-56'18, ~ mo. Lease or lcaso opuan. hobbles or atongt. $US, 523 Top Joe. Jul)i/Aug o,r JUiy. 2 BR oVerlOokS golf course, DELUXE J & 3 BR unf\im 6~2581 e LANDLORDS 0 lng. Rea.sontlble. fi.46..2414 ~ ad, then alt back and Agt. St0.1'720 or 546-9652, !Smlant Sl. 64WM9 536-QST $1.10. 578 Joann Sl. Apt. o. apts. 938 El, Ctt,mlno Orivt, TUI': stffl NaVER SETS on FR£'E RENTAL SERVICE 2l30 Avon SI., Newport Sch. 11~ .. tho -..... Dial _,""RESULTS 9XK rr TO 'EM! Pnm WANT ADii ... MMm -C.M. Ph.-1 DAILY PIWl' Wffll' ADS! --PltCir WAlfl' ADll-ea.'619 •
B1lboo Isla nd 2355
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SO YOUR LITTLE RED WAGON .
I ' IS I REALtY DRAGGIN' . . •
SILL
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ADD ,HORSEPOWER TO ·rHE FAMILY BUDGET .
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You can handle those bills. All you need are the dol·
lars you'll get for all the still-good, but· nobody •.uses·
them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list
of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar·
ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you ; ; ~ it'll pay
you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell
iust about any.thing with a DAILY PILOT classified ad.
Try it today. Every day is a good day to use
D·AILY PILOT WANT ADS
(And . You Can Charge Them)
642-567
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11owtd.ot, ~II 9, 1970
RIAL ISTATE RIAL' llTATI 1•--1!111--.--.£.lpll-llllf--l!!.,!"1ANNOUN~IMINTS
•.....:o:;;;,.;;.;;•;;.••;;1 ____ 1.-~0•!:!!•~·~•l!_ ___ ,-.t 1t: 1c -" * .,. ond NOTICll
0,,,.. -•I 601t 1.it:mrr.1 ~ F.0:111•f<F-Mi) ai _ "'' 1-------...!....~ -l'O\INo smoll .....,, • When You uousEworuc 110 1or • i.... ,~
LAOUNA llACH HEW Bldr ll.000 I\ tor wbl,. temaJe dof. Haa black d R<l,.ble. O>lta Meaa elty
Air Condit""'"" -. .. ~. "".:... nw1dnp on race. m... Wont it one ......... ,,.. llDt Gab'· ON l'OREST AVEHUI: ftea collar. SUn. vtc. t01JDoo h _.,,,_ , }
D'* -OftllAlllo In ...... 1l1talfv lain Valley• Sta"' 4 Elder fig f 0 0 0 GIRL Friday. bf. ta Jiii ~• --bolldtoc •• ' -Sia. _, ........ ·l'ull .. --. r.:;. .... a!:. ... k.= c ··-1 -· rou~;.~'"' prNCrlp,tton Coll one of ~':ndabl" -. w1-1m ·, &nod.-~ --ommorc~ . ·-"'"..-• • .,.... '"" h ~ . . -.. ·-tortojae thdl..Jipe, -.. t e perts AIATURE Woman. E1q). ..
-. l'loatqO ., .ltJR• Ale,• -'bulldlor· Near jetty, llalbca. 613-:1514 <, I ecJ f all ply• ol-ol&e,... '• ! ,._Aft., nu loW .. ' -W. 19th 81. Belhll ~ ·' after 4 PM. .. iSf OW!I cedum.,548----M>mcll"I pal1doc ..... 11111 T~ ...... 54M'181 Ast. -VERY Young, black. male PRAcnCAL NURQ:
... 111GDtb fl>r """'· DMlt ' , W=• Wontt ~Clot? puppy. WJi .. ttp'd paWB A •. . GOOD ltEFERENCES :s..:::-:~ Commerclol ·~ S':_l.\IAu••CLLASSlfl~!1 IPORSR wb. ...-, undtt fhln. SIRVICI DIRICTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICI DIUCTORY yrtva,. duty 546-MC
-.-to. Siii, MAJUNA Ia Nowp!'l'l Bfteh. !"" "" IORN .,.~, ' . !!'t.':'!"' ctn:., HW>t. ~ch. b ' • • AIDES • tor convaJHce-,
All 111!Udeo pald -Prim< 1cc. FM 1315,000 · • Spoclal RIN • ~ Ba y1lltln9 WO. ~~I CINnl"I 6635 !!/t.,."'!-_!!1< "" 6740 •lder)Y ear. or family care. ~. Exel. Kin I• 1 rd, R.E. S L1MI -S tllMI -S bucb BROWN Puppy w/fiea col· RELIA. Exper My Home CARPET STEAM CLEANED Sm'f '1. s 'Ilk' Homemalcen. 547~ . MI 2-2222. • ~ •ULll -Al) MUlf ""°-UOI tar, found Sunday Oil • . ' I ey ax e • DAILY PD.Or -,_ .._ ,. ..._ ......., reu ...., '" ...., Miaalon Vlejo Golf O>une Good , rates, Rtfer. $12.50 10c Per Sq. ft, J · Job M W 7100.
:m FORESr AVl:NlJZ lnduttrl1I Rent1I '°90 a-you~ c:n-=: :::":.:-1.1-t~~t'v:--*"• ClAbn t.t 36031 Via Vienlto. per child. Marcaret .• ?-lo IOQ -No bnlahel. Upbol-~ Ptb :nwt·t.ri&ii~·e I 49n, em.
LAGUNA BEAQI To Ploco Your Traclor'1 Paradlao All. MV ' 548-711ll stery cleanlna & !loon ocnib-I "·~ , Rt hie~• Ac-1 Poyollle
4N-9t&6 FOR. Leue New .., aq ft PHONE 642..S671 MALE Dachshund/Beaa;le AREA of Brookhunt I-bed ",.waxed. Guar&nteed \'t-Ar(PilJ)~i~ ' . -· -··' to ... ~tri&l bldg. S1000 per Mobllehome-1l'alleNabana. 82 Canlen Aptl 2 hr 2 ba mixture v t t dJ Atlanta. Feneed yd, «quip, rellllts. 646..5971. Certllied PubU Account'r C'O'IJ•fi:;·1l.ctlon ~
DELUXE3rm.aulteinnew mo. C.azrbe-eeen at 182 ~t,LldoTrailerPrk. a/c,patlos.C.,;ra~renb Leathtr·coJ!i1:~e~n~: playmates.Hotluncncs, DIAMOND Carpet~ 642-2221 -· ._ :ll'Ol&qd.~ania.eallW..
bl de., adjacent to Prodocdon P1. N.B. 8n-!l500 Newly dee, many extras. $13. Want income prop., on Bal Penin. cannot keep ref.s. 968-m.9• • Spring Oeanlng: $pedal·• · ' · aiM<· Wes~ Ptrillllmll "Airporter Inn'• a: Orange at 0) »'l'S.lf Trade-house, duplex or ?! r.D.'s to tst or ? Strieby dog,~ (2U) 861_7940 VERY reliable motner of 2 3 aver. 1ize~~ma ~ ' .~THni..IB·T·~AX~Dc-VllORS• Acefqt, 2K3 Wtttdilf Dr .. Cn~ ••-rt ••---nc1 $14,900 val. 675-0250, 548-0811 &: Assoc, 546-2011, FOUND A 1 be' wants b ab Y 1 l t t Ing , my ·645.UlT, .rree F.lt,. , n-• --·· ~ N.Q. 645-2710
.,. _.l'V • ~v .. cue puppy, l&i! home. Prefer Infant to 3 . .., ..... ...,.uu.u.~Reu Rattt ""::;:rrr==----
cpta.. le drapes, music I; Lott 6100 16' cab cruiser, aleeps 2, 30 Dover Shores view lot, <.'Of• w/whlte pawt at National . Call S45--02'l3. DISCOUNT Carpet ~eaners. 32!fNo:Newport BIVC!.• AW~:~\lf'.ltl'IK.
janitorial service, Avail. -hp outbrd, elect start, w/ ,..ner Galaxy & Mariner &: Oak st.. C.M. Call yrs Expert-Latest F.qu1p. IJA(d. Opposite' Hoag Hospl1'i lf~~R .
May i.t. Call bir. Val. $1!i(IO Trade for $35,<W value, Trade for in-LI 8-592l BABYSIT in my house, 1'1)-4 Credit cards $6. Rm.6t&-J234 Eot Alliil Call 645-0400 ~·:p-efemd. •
BOB PE"ITlT IMPROVED LOTS 10' eabover camper eql val. come property or home. LARGE Black Gel' man ~·14F73enced yd, toys, C.M. REMARC Services. 3 rooms !~~ ot!".°";r. ~? Lqana
or •"'"J ....._......... Shepherd mix male dog. Vic MOTHER will babysit my · •0 guaran. , Ironing 67», (n ~-~ 833-0144 Eves F Sala g •.n.. •--~ 541).2058 548-1936 ' · ~ 121 '° Fall er.di! •• BeachlN"-~IJIC-
RAC 5 Jot. in prime loc of Cmitol. 18 Acres in city of Grants BEAUTIFUL. ENGUSH 6 48tb St. Newport Beach. cards K. 841~ " , ~--;c=~-:;;..;:.:.:••:.,...._
An TIVE UITE Cloee to ArUaia Fwy~ Car-Pau;Oregon. Houe;e, barn, Rm. Home near Pasadena 613-5817 or ~7886 · =::bi! ~· Mon-Fri. -\ ffiONINq In 111¥ home, $J Andi Marfw
3 carpeted office1, air cond., manita. Also, 3 improved it'rig. SUbdlv. potential. Equ. for N.B., CdM, C.M. Duplex lN Front of C.Osta Mesa , . Carpet Laying I , Hr. Drenmaking • alter.· • ' ~~:::::!::SO ii,!: =~=in.:!!:~ :, :ror local pt'Oper. or units. Home value $29,500 Hospital, g mos. old Calico ~~~~Sn :1~ ~: Re,. Ir . 6626 tlons. 56-7641 · _ mJ:os _
bor, CM, M8-t6.12 per lot terms. By Owner clear, Call Sf8.8532. Cat wearing flea collar. 6'13--0568, CdM. EXPERT CARPET INSTAL-Painting < • D~"'V • DELUXE ~--Spac•t C 11.;,_ G-•·-114• Wanted:Npt.Bayfron.tunl.ts Great Dane Pup ,6 wks, 54~19?5or542-7096 LATION &: ReP8l·r No ""b '' •••• DISHW''SHER.
V l,lJ\,.' a '...... ......,.. : Ha\ie: -Rustic. Juxurlous shots, male;· sable brindle, WHITE Poodle. female , Brick Masonty too small. 646-59'll. ,,., Paperhantlnt -,... ' = 1::!::: ~~rlO ~ !162-l353. mountain cabin/Bass Lake; trade for transportation car Laguna Bch, Identify col-etc:' ' 6560 CARPET LAYING CUSTOM• Painttrii·'-,. ''The
sq ft. Located In Nwpt Bch.. BUll.DERSAttelltkm'l5xl'l91n pine aunounded seclusion or misc furniture or??'??? lars, ,i;.how-cut. 891-6305 aft 6 Exterlor•lntaier. Spedaliat ..
$900 a mo incl utiL Mr. R-2 lot with older 2 Bdrm w/yr rnd accesa. 548-32.62. of $125 value. 646-6942 pm. BUILD, !temodel, repair C.A. PAGE ~ Residential ~ ~. . APPLY IN PERS0K
1001 W, CX>ABr HWY.
NEWPORT BEAal Gallup, 6U-8470 • rental $15,000. 5f3.5&'.l3 2 Newer duplexes, aide by HA VE: Commercial mea:t ALL white male cat, nearly Brick, :;ock, ;: ~ r~ • 'u3r No job too large or too ~
OFFICE Sp•CE WEST .,,..,.,.." ....,;,. ..,2 side, 3 Br. 2 Ba. ea., Iplcs; slicer. TRADE FOR amall full grown, vie of Albert.sons Ll~..,,.Con tr• no ,,, .. , .,n.15· Dryw•ll Lie. Bond. Ins. Woo't be un.. l'A"'. 'i'l'T ....... ,. .......... GE.,.RS••I
"' .. ~ "r"'''t ......-n-freezer or electric &ir mnot. Mkt. CdM, Ha, flea collar. C. n o:JIM·''"" for lease. World Savings , 30'x85' clOR to bay, beach & nr. beach. Equity approx. tier r-· 6-14--058l , e DUDDY Drywall C.O. lJ<:'d, derbld! 646-3619
BJda, Pacific Coast Hwy A lhoPf. m.ooo. &d-3188, $21,000. Trade for land or • "-ll •••'1881 '"HITE ca• -·•-but !h'm, Ca-nterlng 6590 Contractor. Large or Srnall lln'ER or Ext. PAINTING, Couplebe a~'-.:..,.;-~~~ Forftst. Laguna B e a c b. indll5t. Realtor 673-4350 ....,. O"IM' " .. ,,._ .... ., ',..... Jobs. Ph. 847-9581 ~.~VICE. LJcaI uoo: _....... ..........-.... _ ..
494-9481. •-
6200
Rave '64 Pontiac Tempest Smogless • Trd eq./beaut. fem!!!, in Baycre*t '&lea. CARPENTRY ref. FR.EE ·iit:~·.:.. .. -wnte"IlaU,y Pilot Bax »a.
EXECUTIVE OttiCe __ .... ,. LeMans, hrdtop, ·console, Oceanfront 4 Br, 4 ba, 2 sty 6<16-.>UUI> MINOR REPAIRS. No .Job Floors ' 6665 . PAPER HANGING .'
Harbor fr 0 n tag e near Multtple zoned acreage bucket seats. Trade for sail-hm, Oceanside fer vac tand, Too SmlD.. Cabtnet iU Pfl' 20 yn eQ. Free estlmatc1 Newport Blvd. for lease. * eo.ta Mesa * boat QP to 30'. income or smlr hm, Orange Lost 6401 aps 6: o t be r cabtneta. CAlU'ET VINtL TILE Call Ke•Ot anytime 642-2509
1000 + sq ft. Ph. 642-4644 6'13-7469 Cnty. 531-0651, 546-0428 ~'15. U no answer lea.YI Free estimate IJ:c, Contr. p A I·NT I NG-Int' A: Eit.
for appt. llanfa &ealfg: 3 BR. 2~ BA Townhouse, '62 ~ mtr hotrie com. LOsr: Male Collie 4171·70 '1nllg at 646-2372. H. o. 540-'1262 : *"4478 Highest Quality. Lowe1 t
N 8 Pri f I I pletely rework~ $6 OOo val Sable & white, 2 yrs old, Anderton ., 66IO Pri , Fully lnl John ~/:s~~-~~ ~i~: 642-6560 1citchen.,S:.-~: ~~ fo~ for 4 wheeler I: tlr. 0
comb0, ~~~j~ F~ewvm: ~~~ QUAIJTY Any me repairs Gardening ~:i~ exp. •
Call att 'l pm wk d y 1 2% Acres by Owner, Utilltie1-down, late model car, T.D. resort cabin or ?? , Mr. or 64~ e ' o~ new construction. Res. Ol'i NEW Law~, re-ettdtng; API'S I: MOTELS Pa!Jtted _
6!:>-4644 near rwmina: water & Golf or !? OWner 646-6654. Peterson 847-0215, COm. By hour or contract Complete; ·lawn care, Clean $10 averg rm ca 11
3 Lrg offices: 2 restrooms, Course. $95U dn. $14,900. Want up to 30 units in Qr.. •57 Ford Ranehero val $350. Bl.A~ & white mixed Lie. A: Bonded. 646-MU ' i ·UP by. ,Ob or month. !'ree anfttme P.i the' Painter,
all util incl, ail' cond. $250 (213) 782-272'1 ange Coun~, have $40,000 '57 Plymouth val $175 Both Sheltie dog, male, name CA'.RPENTRY -CABINETS esdfnates. For lnlo call 557-8638
InCMJl 3. 2400 w. Cout BUSINESS •nd equity in commercial zone good cond. Trade 1or. ! ar ;:1au·• 8 r~g Pa: L~!; Remodeling-repairs. 'No job ,8!7-2417 or 846-0932. SURBURBAN pa t,14 te r a/
Hwy, No. 9, N.B. 642-2813 FINANCIAL in Long Beach. car. Ask for Dale· 615-75:13 H "w 4, .. ..;,,,., b:i 1mall. call 6f6..4224• -:-··-GARDENING n...~. we take' the pain '114 496-1300 546-5.551 OSpl . :>'1-1.,.,., ~VI NEAR C.M. City Hall. 3 Rm. • or · _ kLO~ST=,°'na;~·sy=.c,type=~dog-, ~m"ix"ed PATIO CO~,.,,,_ DEQ{S Trees, lhrvbs, Ivy removed. out of pe.intizJC. Expert work.
Of.fices. Paneled, carpets, Business HA VE 4 Units in Tustin • 15 Have land, will trade acres breed, long haired grey & Remod_ellng ... Ger.. Repair 'New lawns. Rotot111.lna'. Free Free est. ' 494-3190
drapes. $150. Call 642-6560 Opporfunltln 6300 Acres in Nevada; approx. Rome, Oregon._ Clean, quiet, white. Female. Re~! Vic. Any size j_ob'6'f3.1166 Mike est. 548-8918 PAINT NOW SAVE $$
CM OFFICE $90 $23-M equity. Want larger ~ear, green, fish, hunt, fiy, Newport Blvd. 4:: Santa Isa· 01!f,OW°arld Craftsmanship J APANESE Gardener, Call,J'ack NOW!!
Call 646-4833 COIN LAUNDRIES units. Nancy J. Moore hike, boat. Ask Ior Dale bella 646-0356 or 642-5853 Finish work my Specialty exp'd, Q>mpl. yard aervlce. S94-38!a,. or 847-1358
3 RM. Ofc, $85. Crpted. Fro!~d=r~7,500 Realtor 673-3101 6Th-7513E,, 54S.55fil.C LGE .Navy bag cont.U:ing Call Dan 613-1166 b Free es~te. 5e8255 '"";, "ro"'1"'•"'"'"G"E"s"tud=en-.t-. 2=,...=-=ex·-
Ground fir., pkng, 1 Rm. e Bu Park • Fullerton • View lot-1* miles to Lake TRAD '65 VW AMPER, child'• sweater, doU, ete. GEN. repair, add., ca. . AL'S GaromlD&: & Lawa 'rier:if!nce. Low prices. .
Ofc.$50. 646-1724, N.B. eypre";: • Westniinster e Arrowhead; $3500 value-CLEAN, ALL NEW NAU-Abo Doral lunch kit . Formica, paneling, marhte. tilaintenance. -~ ·Steve. 548-4St9 •'
. clear. Swap for property or GAHYDE INSIDE, W/ICE-,. • .., • .,.,.. Anything! Dick, 673-4459 ind trial A: reft.bntiaL FOR rent offices or stores Hun-on Beach • Garden vu.-ow•.. us ~"' -JIETJ"~ri Painter~ -..-
130 E. 17th St., CM. $85 Grove e Tustin e Santa ~g.2698 eves, days BOX, WATER. FOR: PEARL Earring, grapeREPAJRS •ALTERATIONS *64&--3629* ·Upe~eat t-6: bo'1est'N~~
& up. 646-81-81 Ana e Costa Mea e Ana· • Cl.EAN PICKUP. 54S4553 deslgl1. Vic. Heliotrope & * CABmEI'S. Any size job EXP. Japanese , ~mplete dlin)cer. Call 5'5-6sot'
OFTICE SPACE helm e La Mirada. $17,300 eq, GARDEN Trade Small Appliance Re-Goldenrod, CdM. Reward 25 yrs exper. S48-6T13 Yard Servic;e. Reu. NB I: * PAPERHANGING
on COAsr lUGHWAY CALL CHARLIE 525-1833 HOUSE, NB. $10,<W CLEAR pair, 11 .yrs same location 644-4-176 9-5 QUALITY Woodcraft, &ml CM area. 540-7373 PAINTlNG. * -242$ *&45-{)SJ.D* ASSOCIATE wanted .. active LAND. Trade up for house Io:., ~obile home, boat or 2 Yr old Beagle, male, tan gen'I cona1r. &:: carpentry, CLEAN·UP 'SPECIALIST . •;:.,:.;::;,;::;;,:;;.....,....,.~"-
I OFTICE or store opposite or inactive far p\ibliahing (NB or CdM), TO's or ??_. :r. . . &: wht. Silv. choke Chain, Call Ken 645-0044, 548-4235. Mowing, edging, odd jobL. -'M•!i~IOU1 Peinti\\9
BalQoa. Bay Club. 1610 w. busineu. $25 M ftqU.ired. Bkr. 615-6044. 646-3626 or B39-604G eves. Sa1 attn vie Sun View Sehl Reasonable. 54&:6955 pit student ~. 675-5812
eoqt Hwy, NB. 646-4881 Write 5512 River Ave,. NB NEWPORT DUPLEX Lbt It here -tn Orange HB. Reward. 847-&'1l5 Cement, Concre.tti 6600 JOHNSON'S GARDEN~G PAIN'J'lNG .I: Rf!>O.:.alrs.
or pb. &U-2178 FUU..Y LEASED. $24.500 What~ you have to tradef LOST: Blk Lab fem&le pup, CONCRETE work all types. Yard care, Oea.n-ups, PruDo Re &so nable. Satlsflctlon
BUSIEST marketplace In EQUITY. TR A DE FOR County I largest read trad· 3 mo's Old. Vic. E. Santa Sawing, breakini. hauling, ing, planting. 962-2035 'GU,IWUlteed. Call 54'1-1441 ' ..
town. Tht DAILY PILOT PLANNING to nlOVtT You'll TD'S OR '? 548-0891 wkdays ID&' polt-&D'J make a deal. Ana Ave, C.M. Needs Vet. SkiploadJng; Uc. Service & JAPANESE Gardening
Cl••s'"ed 11tetlon. Sa •e find an amazing number 'Jf 'I\ .*. *' * * * 548-0941 or 546-0010 QuaJity. S42-1DlO Service. Neat work. Cleanup Platterlng, Patch, -·-, ttme A effort. Look homes In today't Clusifled 1 k all h ~·2303 R I ,,_ ;;ij'J Ada. Check them now. .,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!l!!!!~!!!!!!!'IJ!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)BROWN &: B ac sm a ag. * C 0 N CRETE Work• yd, maint. ,;roo-•JN r --
WHAT
IT IS •••
YOU
SELL ,IT
WITH A
DAILY PILOT
WAN:T AD. -
'
For Fast S.rvico &
&port Auistonce
~ BUSINESS and gy ~· 2 coll.an. Mbc~d Licensed. Patios I drvwy1, JAPANESE Gardener, exp'd. * PA'tal PLASTERING BUSIPliESS •ncl Temer breed. Vie, Begonia etc PhllllPI Cement Comp!, yd. serv. Free eat. All ...... ,. Free estimates FINANCIAL FINANCIAL Av., CdM. Rowan!. 6r.;.2369 54~ ' Rtllable. w.<389 vCaJI ,..,.._
Buslnul lnve1tment ~miniature shag.gy •CONCRETE floors, patios, LAWN MOWING SERVICE
01m0rtunltle1 '300 Onaortunltles '310 white poodle . lost vtc; masonry. Any 1z job. Reas. Neat, depend;,,ble, ttuon-1 .~~-~~~iiiiiiiii --"=,,..------1 Baycrest &. Irvine • .Rewd • Don 642-8514 aft 4. · able. Free M; ·&46-0955 ·
11 ~ Hardware Mlg. 642-:w . . MORE Con<:ttte patio !or JIM'S Gardeiung & la~
DISTRIBUTOR WANTED wt~·many patented & pro-MENS Readmg glasset lll Jess money, Artistic settirig maintenance. Res . .\: com.
pnetary items needs ex-case. Balboa Is1and. & finishing. 644--0687 · mercilil '* 54M837 '
pansion capital. Xlnt tax e 646-5117 • ' .
and write-off possibilities LOST· Falcon has jease1. CEMENT .WORK. 00 JOb too boa Bo Mln~ ' ' Ad Small, rtasonable. Free Local tenitory, will not in. for t owner, x ..., Vlc Brookhurst le: amt, Es . H Stu1lick MS-86IS
JAPANESE Gardener terv·
Ing F, Valley, H. '&J!, C.OSta
Mesa, Npt Bch. 645-0345 'tertere with present job. De-Daily Pl1ot. RB. Reward! Ph. 962-7382 1;:::"::'"':::_:::.·,=.:::;':;:'""=
votf!' spatt time, f!'Vf!'ningw or ---------iBLK German Shepherd, S Expert cem~nt work. Patios, G I•-•--6682
weekends. You can make up Money to LHn 6320 'rnos, maJe "Ttto••. vie 23rd ·walks, brick & block walls. ener• .nrv-1
to $20 per hour. Age no bar-1----------1 & S.A. Ave. 646-2547 35 yrs, exp, Yancey. 642-l403 CURBING -Home Address.
rier, but automobile essen-1st TD Loan BLACK cut velvet bag con-CLild C•r• Guaranteed. Call co ll ec t
tial. You do no selling as you tainlng knitting. Westclltt nr 'Licensed' 6610 (213)436--3463 before noon
take over accounts we have Lowest Interest Available Dover last Thurs. 642-2458 --------
already contracted for, CUb 2 d TD L LI'ITLE Black kitten. vie. Pre School serving So. Or·
l'equirement is $1500-part. n ·oan . . 6 311 I 9 311 Time and $6£0} _ Full Clay & Westmin1ter. ange Co. : am o .:
Time which is secured. Our Newport Beach. 642-0022 pm 1 days wk. Fttll·P/time-
new and unique method of Terms based on equity, SIAMESE Cat with short Alt. schl. Rates for 2 & up.
selling color pogt cards 642-2171 54S-0611 tall, Legion &: Coast Hwy, 646-3706 or 534-1292.
Health Clubs 6720
SAUNA· MASSAGE
WHIRLPOOL -GYM
Le Salon d• Tra itment1
2930 W. Cst, Hwy, Npt. Bch.
Plu,.bl,!'I'... ~ 6"0 PLUMBnfo . Am
No job too~
_,_ --· &a::al28 • !
Pool S.rvlCe 6910
ACID Bath Your Poot S55
& Up. A A: M Pool Servict.
Free Est. Call MG-68.1'1.
Ramodeling &
Rtp•lr -6940
THE
REMODELERS
COMPLETE
REMODELING * 642-3660 * through automatic merchan-Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. Laguna. 494-'1354 MY Home, 18 mos up,
disen: hat proven a big win-Sattler Morfg•g• Co. 2 GERMAN Shep. Pups, 2',l hot meals, nap. supervised
ner, Your duties will consist ~ E. 17th Street mos, blk-brown. mrkgs. ,Nr play, Mon-Fri. 646-0352
o1 only makjng collections WE MAKE OR BuY Victoria, C.M. 645-2526 eve1 C.M.
Daily 10 am·l am 642-3154 ROOM additions-remodeling.
We accept all crtdit cards For the lowest prices Ir:
and keeping Inventory in the TRUST DEEDS SILVER Beige Fem., Shep., Cont ~
equipment. .Immediate cash 543-8381 anytime' Bkr. recently spade. Vic. Hunt. re .. ,. .. rs 6620 Haull"I
quality work call ( 1)
•730 82&-7120; after 6 pm, -.1888. Limited offer-free
fireplace w/every family tnoome. Th Is opportunity I -=======•I P", Apts .. Reward ~! W. M. FEROf available only for a limited M9rlfage1,
ttme as there are only a few ::T:""-:':D_MCl-=::-'--6:34_5i!P::•:.'.'!'°":!':::•:::l•:._ __ _:·640::::::5I BUILDER @ terrltorya: open. There is ne
limit .. the potential of l5000 bl TO 0 n Hun-Tom Gawn•, Jr. 675-1830 "' this buai.nel!ll. tington Beach apt zoned lot. 644-~
For'fUrthei"detailawrHeBar-$50 a month Including 9%, Sells·
on Induitrie1, 17171 Beach 3 yr due. 15% di.Seount. New & used cars &. trucks
Blvd., Suite G, Huntington 494-8100 or 49:J-1706 at Connell Chevrolet
Beach, Calif. 92641 <Please ANNOUNCEMENTS 2828 Harbor, C.M. 546-1200
give your telephone number) and NOTICES The preceedlng was a paid
or call 8f7-fiO'l9. ---'--'-"'---~I &alesman survival advertise.
Additions * Remodeling
Fred H. GerwlnJc, _Lie.
673-60t1 * 54~2170
BEFORE YOU HAUL TO
TIIE DUMP -CALL
64&--6200. Save $$
HAULING $10 A LOAD
Clean up, Tree Serv. Gen.
Pruning 646-~. su-8043
CARL'S Moving, H,aullng It
Cleanup. 'ii Ton P .U, Reas.
Free Est. 548-8918
YARD/ Gar. Clean·up. Remove trees, lvy, trash. 9rade; backhoe, 962-8745
room.
Tiie, Ceramic 6974
* Verne, Th& Tile Man •
CUst. work. Install .\: repairs.
No job too small. Plaster
patio. Lealdng abower
repaJr.
847-l!S!/84&-02116
TOPSOIL 6ffl Found (Frff Ads) 6400 .;.m_'="'~· ~-===,_,... . * FULLY LICENSED * PAIR ~ Gluse1, Bayside n.. ned H'nd S . ·1 al'-L H I I 6735 TOPSOIL. Nt-lortllled MANAGER Dr 4/6 ~now • u pm u q OUllC ''Jl "I .. . , ·-·• . • Call 6'75-S582 Advice on all matt~ ' , . ... . :. ~. added. 131452. OWNER Love.Marrloge,Busm•" BAY & ~:Janitort,i , '30-:1050ot,'9$-4632 •
KEY Ring w/I keys. So. of Rell.dings given T days a •Carpcte, windows, floors.; r •
National. corporation, no ... fn. .Newport Pier, 548-«iOO a.ft ·week. !AM-SPM 312 N, El etc. Res & ~com me ' 11 -. ,•--·•.!-' :•J·, 6..o
tervleWing, fol' owner ,man. • 4PM. Cammo Re&!, SaJ'I !.&l&-1401 :... -.. -Vl'H ,........ • ,~
ager of complete famiey rec-FOUND: Male Siamese cat; Oemente. 492-9136 49Z-00'76 Me&a ~ea.nlng Service • TREES. Hedges, trim, cut,
reational sport center, Ex-has littnse; vie. Eastblutf. Slngle-Wldowed-Dlwrced Carpets, windows, floors, etc. itumps, rem~. h.altted . 30
tremel,y high ttturn on ~ Call & klentlJ,y 6#-6299 * WOMEN * Res. 4 Commc'l. 548-4lll yrs exp. Fully ins. 642-4030
SAYB
~lllI
Read
The
DAILYi
PILOT c
L
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5
5
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ORANGE
COAST'S v.atment ol $12,500. S.CUred. FOUND· Sal Bto baggy NOW'S T'UE W.U.Fl"°"'Wlndows & R\li1 = i!:~~=emi::ed& · female. puppy, :.~ l>el Everyone'• n~h for the : JJ '. Clear Vu Window Strvtcc Televl11on, ··~-Mar 546-5282 ,right one. ne ave a wty·to Re• & Commc'l. ~-R I Etc 6915 lecul" PR ability. Reply to Box sso . · call us " begin to uvei ... .,,. rs, • Ilg
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DIAL
642-5678
DIRECT
the Daily Pilot or call .Mr. FUUND: Silver Min. Poodle, 547-6667 TIME FOR Housecleaning
'
Mark Rice (714) 774-7050. !~·._..,1!!11 A: Busha.rd. F .V. 27 hr. reeordlng Fut 1: ttftclent Economy TV Service , ~ _ l•l!Od••-ou .. , eo1or TV Marketplace , ·:.\ *BEAUTYSALON;ln SPRING Brid"! Oellghttul , • Smrn:ec.Jlf'98pluaparl>.
best loc•tion In New .. SMALL Gry/wht male cat, piano music at ttceptlon + QUICK CASH COMPLETE quality HB 8M-l135 CM 648-41!0 port Beach. Xlnt 1Nrk.. found In Mesa Verde area; dinner music. 645-1376 hou11ecleanln(. Experienced.
1,... Almasi naw. froth, mQlt llnd ownar. 5'6-tm UP TIGHT ""d som!'J"" to t · • IR<UClJ&~.633-~ . UphOrifit'Y·' 69'0 .
1
BIT , .l:,j
-
colorful ,cfoslgn. 7 Ila-FOIJNO' M°"e K"ld• Collie ·talk to! DJALoA.FIUENO, THROUGH A pJAt.i'.ai:...• t'ba.., >"' =;..;.;.-..:----
tions, 7 alr-cond dry.. C: J.::" &c Bristol. 847-U93° ~ .-, , ~ ~ ,,.U• ad, t1w1·11t1"9.c:k'ud ~l(fS (l1atom. Upbol.
.... <off. ..... pvt pa-ALCOHOUCS --' ll.Oli 1-.. tllo-;ritw! ' ~ ~ tlo. Low rint and ul11'1. FOUND Oranp ·Kitty, ap. PhOne '542-1117 or -·JI> DAll ·Y· p ~ ~ 1909';,llal 60-14$1 ;
V I & ~lo -1 yr old. N•wpcrt w .. t p 0 Box 1223 Ooota M-Ii . l ·Bu~~..:...... .. 1,lB!l N~ Blvd., C.M. 11' I! ' . 1ryc un c•..-r. tract In trB. 96$.1360 ' · • ' • ~ • ·1 Plaaao coll 662-0MI or . lown. Tha DAILY PILOT DIA!. dlftct M)W. Olotae • ffl...4622 FOUND: &nail grey poodle, Cemetery Lots '411 WANT AD Cl1a'fled w1lon. S&Ye )'OUr 9d, then tit~ and 1 1
1 , • female. 8e.)'Cftlt are a.. -· money, time A effort. Look· befen 10 tbl phOrM rq:r
OWN 646-6057 . 2 LOTS We1tmtn11er now!!! Now! ···!
A SHIFT SHACK FOUND Small black bunny, Memorial Park, Gosptla
ORESS SHOP. tame. Vic. Clifl Or. by G11.rdena. $670 tor both orol·
CALL LA JOLLA Ill -church. 64l-339'1 Irr, ~ '
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K._ IWlY'mOT T-., Ap<U 9 1970 jj!IUl·IMPCCIYMINT JOiSilMPLOYMIHT '. JOIS& IMPLOYMENT •JOIS&IMP'l.OYMINT MERCHAN~lil l POlt ·, MERCHANDISE , FOR MIRCHANDISI 'OR MERCHANDISE FOR I'-"'----.,;:.;· '---"; . SALE AND lRADI· ' s.\LE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE ilolll -.. -._ 7100 Jobe Mor1, Wom. 7100 Jobe Moo, Wom. 7100 Jobi Mon, Wom.. 7100 , ...... --
FREE TO ,:YOU ,
. ·fumliuro• -I -Furnlhlro ' • IOOO A(IPllanmi. 1100 Ml1<1ll<tnMU1 ' " -FREE.TO ...a·-•: I aiilO I ..__. u ....... -<t.1.-1 u-EXECIJTIVE Se<:rttary, .... MANAGER, wcek~t'ld. SECRETARY: lot 1mall, ' Id "IAb "•~ ~ _,__., __ -.. -· ~... ·~-CdM Iii PIUJ..CO ··-"'· •· co~ • 1 · ' ···• 0 ' ~ • " ~ _.,. •••• ... DA'4Wl\l'i'lL 2>-40, Rlaid • quallllcaU... Mature.woman,llllolllaml-....,. ........ 0 .,.. ru1•·1c l NOTICE aulo ·-~r. Yll .. ~.Vilt ao UJllll-•very lnteill&••~ ahola t •"' • ~ 193-)lllO{ lncl. apptaranee, Xlnt .op. l,y type rtcttation club. Ali' Pkuant A mature. Good .: · • Jl\odd, xlnt cond. Fl'igldalrc rockt;hop that \Vill intltrttl r hlbrkn. &oo4 '-,t/ I chlldri'n'. AmWrb§ hr porhmlty;. NeWJIQl't Ce.Iller. ply betw. u A~ pm Pacll1c ahoi'thand abUltlea. C..J>&ble · , I U:ct dryer, xlnt cond. $55 every<1 ne from tb, ™428 • "~" hdon -c:anwtr Call 64t.1403 aft 7 PM -on Sandi Cabana Club, 814.l of thomlabneu In kttplna: All •• Brend New Furniture ·r•turned romi..-Model eL 147-8115' or se&-8672 rockhourul, to the jewtlty · , t:'
'6t vt. U:,1:'1J.t.111~· Aprils or 9 , • , ' Atlanta, H.B. Jeu.Inc ~1. A1 s Is t 'Homai, d•cot1tor c~nc•ll•tiont end dlspley studios. wXSiit:It. Dr)'ef'l "Unclatm. loYu. flf.J'ldcrafled 0 icyx 5 ADORABLE; miJCtd bntd · E>fEX:. Secretary poa!tlon MEDICAL ASSJ!n'ANT anawerln1 te lephone&, Spanl1h I ~ltef.ranean Furniture f!d" aelJ for repait chargti canring1. eu1tom rings. aq. Sbep. pul)I, 1 wkl old, 2 ~.'l!ll'JT.ER .fqr 15 child. avail. lmmed. Ap plicant Front office. z to 35 yn. 5a1V)' $515. Call Mr1. 9 Pc'M'•ditt.B•dtoo!'l'l.•ulte, r•g. $3.ff, r.ow $111.00 Balle.vs Sales· 4 Service: UlUrta.rine eret w/dlamondl. malt, 3 Jemale, netd ·eood 1 1=ben!'eptnt1~ ihould ,be skilled, educated, Internist otflce.attn.ctl\lfl, ltube:r,tTJ..4i:2Uaftcr6. GorCJ•~u• Sp•nlsh C~stom aof•"w/matchg'lov• '"t SSS-7548 nib¥', blue star w/dla· hom••• fenced yeard.
)"OUfs. ~. ·', • aelt.moUvalt'd •• R.E. back· peraonablt, must have JOme SECY TO, $500 Choi~• di b.••uftfi)»~lcs, regt '4 19.95~now f22S.00 RFRIGERlTOR $i3. Near ~Jade earrinp, brace-~l ' 419
iAliYSJTI'~ Nff!SI¢ lite gruul'ld helpful. Newpt. loc. exp. w/medical iNLZRnct, ~ FEE REIMBURS£D Sp•n11h ·Din1n9 11et1 ................................. _ $ ?,.5.00 new. Klt, ranee. Mayta,( lets. Full line o1 cutlllg.eup. LOV!UJLE Wh1te Duff)' kit·
hlt'Wt'k. E-cide c.M.' 6.45 644.0000 • • boi>AA~ptna. typing,1Wary Sharp, well groomtd doll to Solid Oak End Tables & Coff•e.Tabl•1 _,__,$ 11.00 ·wisher 2114 Conllnental, ~n, tnatltinH, gold, 1Uvtr, ,ten 3 mos . old; ntedJ good
AM· 'tll SPM. Cal\ att' 6 EXPERIENCED D ln ne r co~ me.n1u rat• w/exp. Wt. group ot Diat. Man. • Tall 1Decor Tabl• L1,mp11 reg. 49.9S..11ow -··' .11.00 C.M. utveStment. waxes. Rough&: •home. vtry fr le nd ly.
645--'il.82 • 1 Waitttss, ·over 21. Spagbetti 548-37.U xlnt typilll ~ acc. SH. Call Spanish Hang. ·Swag lamp•, re9. 49.95 n•w $ 22.50 KENMORE auto. washer. cut etol'lf! Ii: lapldtry equip. 836-M93 da)'I' 645-092& aft * ~ ._; J-vount s sender, N.B. Ms.G651 MOTEL MAIDS ~t,~~Gigf~ ~ •· 3. Roo~• ~f G'or9eo~1 Sp1ni1~"-furni!ur• Whtrlpool ps dryer, bot!\ iI::o~~ Ci~J_y '6 • t/lO ~ •k. ~·pay:. AJl,11ly FACl'ORY Work~ pd . * 646-7445 • S. Mal s A • l'w11 r•CJ· $12951 S1crlf1c•I tit2S, ttnM \ xlnt cond. $45 ea. MT4115 Rf!!. of College Center · BEAUTIFUL Mixtd · brffd
!or c•ll : CUPCAgE vu., holidays, lt'inl. WUl NW"lling n,.. RD FURNITURE , , ' or54s-8612 Shopping Ctnter tfena.lepuppy.8mtbold. ·~~y 271 '1=-. ~7th SL. n~c .. 32112 C~ Perfecto, REGISTERED NURSE s~,;~ :, :~~::.:. 114C·Newpo':f Bl~d •. (at Her~r) ~oit• Mesa Only WHITE kitchen stove, in gd ~·~= ~~~ ~:ai;;r:the=n· ~
' ' 1.M!ISOll · · ' F./C BKKPR 1550 EXpandi .. ~C~~j~·~e .. .n--Must hs.ve preylol}• business Ev,ery Night . tll t-WH •• Sat. I Sun, 'tll 6 :encl~~=~· 646-4063 to gets. 548-3634 4/}0
BEAVJ1 Ope[, female, , · ·-e. ''6"'6 exp, No phone calls. WONDERFUL ?tlolher cat '& ~U .des d: Takit owr E, m?loyer pd ftt. Well ea-opportunities, continuing ed· Crocker Citize~ ,. N at •1• · JOBS & EMPLOYMENT -SMALL refrigerator, good
cllentelf:, ~1110 tbl d co. 1n new bldg. ucaUon ptogram. Contact &nk 2859 E . Coast Hwy Fumltur• 8000 condition $30 boy kitten both nee'cl a BOA'i'CAfiPENTE~ EXP~ , JASO" BEST , •permnnet So. Coast Com· CdM' • . . ' ~obs-Men, Wom.' 7100 646-4102 home, would like to ltay G-~-, Empl...,.,....nt "-ney nlunl"'" HOfiP. 31872 Coast ---Rtturns·from'IttnW. RCA h' .toge:tber. Both are beaut, i:.~•c.n.;:i ... ,.,._ '"6" •;, r . I 500 & Mod I II ' ... was ing machine, ex· •· ""o ~""" ~ 4/10 MECHAmc · , 2201 So. Main. Santa Ana Hwy, So, Laguna cn4J 499-~ere ary • WAITRESS. exper, full Umt. e ome1 ce.llent conditipn, $50.. • ca ... _._,,
TOtdl'UP-'Mll4 I: . 9264 w. Katella., Anaheim llq Ext. 356 . Young •. sharp. appe~nce, 1 References. · Beautiful walnut, like new 5 , * 54Q..59l3 * , l•HUS="BAN""'"o...,..c.::a:::.,.;:·ng:::"'.;"1"'d"o",,:J
' BONPERS , 546.5410 • or· · 821-1220 """"""'" It ,.1._.. good skills, beach area, call Benton's CoUee Shop ' piece · &droom group $99. U doesn't! Nttd gOod home J,v~ eg.., ""'"" -e\·e~ · · w cl It · 1 · DoubJ •-twi box SEO Appliances&: TV's, &ll WAREHOQSJ: STOCK CLK. FEMALE , F t p le. inl' & nl h lblftf Ex Lorauie, est I Pe~nne · 133 S. Coast, Laguna Bch e ~ n springs guaranteed. Dunlap's, ,l8l5 • • I I for 10 mos. old lemale '* uonnnRYA~ * 5•6 .. acory &e ..... ,,~ Agpll Pnonnel. ' Agency, 2CM3 WeslclW ,Dr.,.WAITRESS Apply El &•mattresses, $12.!ill each. v~~!!~~~!!~~I Germall short hair . ! nAnOV _....-.~.. a&E:l'I or over. 1111:neu.... P Y e NB 645-2770 · · j ' ·Beautiful walnut fke · 962-5359 ' 419 .~ Goldenwtal Clrc, Sl.65 hr to, start. Fm groi,lp Director, So, Coast .Com· · · Matador, l 68• Newport com le 1 new Sewing MachlnH 1120 (we,:tni~ttt. qal\t. 89M747 . 111.1.' & merit ra!ies. MS..5125 muntty H_o!p.', SU72 Coast * SECR~Aft:Y •. lnttre1t;ing Blvd., Costa Me~, 642-6417 .$!39~,,te, ~~~: . POLYNESIA FREE To aood h ome
BOYS 11 • 14 . , FffiERGLAS Hand Lay Up Hwy •• So. Lapna. 4!&-lJU work with nice Pe o PI e , WAITRESS: 6 nigh ti a wk. 1885 Harbor Bl d CM SINGER Auto Tig-zag, 6 6' Tiki $40, Sora Bora dance poodle/mixed puppy tatty,
1 Can1er ROlltlel ()pd exper not nece ss bui ext. 356· · Shorthand req'd, 136 7PM-2AM. Some cooking. 548-9457 v '' • mos. ~Id. No attach needed costume $65, silk folding Ja-3 mos, female. ~939§ aft
I . IDr helptul. cai. I .. .._. • General Office ._._ Rochester St., C,M. 54.g..7723 THE AT'fJC, 642-MU aft 6. for . tig..zag,· button hl?l;es, ·panese screeD $30. Japanese 5 . ~ 4/9 ~ S EA l\tSTRESSES/Sailmak DINsi:'f'E ·set $30, chest of designs etc. Guar, $37 cash iron divider screen •An lrg . .
li.;w. '1Jeac6. So. tcum• FRY C'OUK. ExJ>tr It WL Accnts pa.JtabJe. bk3rft, typing ' , • School .. lnttruction 7600 drawers, mirror & nit e or small paym~nll. 5~6 ·Samoan drum Sl35 ~Ciani LARGE Bird of Paradi1t, I DAILY PILOT Sal a ry open. Co. tact skills, Beach am .. CaIJ Lor-frs/exp ~; X1~~: wor~ •land . $40, ' stctk.na1 bus. • mature, 18' tall, free. to hi!
L .'6C-021 ~ Mana&er, '91~ . Beach raine, Westcllft . Personnel, ;1g d co~ :· · F ank e;;:' De&k ~ 2 chrs $45, (Lill bed ~l~ ' f'• .SaJ:oan mats, transplanted at )'OW' ex--i' BUSBOY .-Gra vey '~rd Housel ln!1• 619 ,S leepy 2043 WeslcliU Dr:, N.B. Sa~~ake~·6~' tee -Ir AIRLINE*· comp! $50, bxsprngs $5. Musical nves pain gs on bark, pense 548-n56 ·4110
fBhUt. A,ppnxr. 35 hr wk. Ap. Holl<?W t.n:,,L.B. &tS.2770. · TRAVEL CAREERS washer $15, desk $10, Other 1 Instruments 1125 ~ ~Pi>Ol\8. H.B. L-OvAfJLE &11 white lem.
rPIY in perwn 562 W. l9th -ORDER taken, wotnen over 1 • furn ·& 'misc. 1528 COrnwall kUten 5 mos. med. lona: ;}Ir,
I 0 TAIN'-• ~ SERVICE Statton needs '.n--tton1 ·.1. ..... fttt Ln NB 646--4048 CLEVELAND Trumpet &: • h ·• I SL, C.M. FO N "'VALLEY 19, days .or. evts. pleasant , d d ...,........ ~"' • · • · * AUCTION * greenliS eyJ!S, very· autt •
SCHOOL.DISTRICT rk ~ 11· . exp man. •Y" ' TkketSales R "M'ODELING SALE Cue,$4S.lS2SContwollLn, ·' •·'kl "3-<181.'l 4nl ¢ARi:l'AKER -~ple Ii~· 1 • wo ""'m cur 0 ice,. no permanent. Good1 working Reserva.tioM 1:: N.B. cair646-4048 • •=-~~· =-~~-=-'in. Must have refer I:: be ex· exp. nee.: Salary $1.65 hr. oond'i,• Union OU 393 E. 17th Beau. ,Lculs isth din 1bl 68x U yo~will·sell or buy: KITTEN'S: 6 wks, ·Tiger
per 893-JB80 PURCMASIN._ Call 547-1323 before 5 pm St, Costa•Mesl. Ali' Fttight • Cergo 44 \v/2 leaves $650; 9• loose give Windy a try paws, l\farbles, Louie,· et al.
• ' · · \Ill.. ComnlUtiica.tions .back 'CU&h 'blue velvet oola "'lonos & Or•ons · 8130 Auc~ns Friday 7:30 p.m. , Waiting for )'OU. ~Siamese. CARPET a.aner ~/or -C'"'RK'-' .~ ..... I .. • w· d' A .•. B helper. Stea.in M9ster .. s ' '.our24thyear ~n• 06'" $500,·llteorange'uphol.a.rrn · in 'II U"110n· 1rn 642-~7 4/9
CarpeiC,lea.rten 147 E. l7tb $5511to $661 p;e'r'mo.. PERSONNEL i SERVICE staqon Attendant. chr $1.5. CUst..kng s.t quUt Organ .Shoppen! 2075% Newport, CM 646-86116 50 YARDS Sl.. ~uguat~
I Tu "M SERVICE Full ·time,. eve. Shlft. Ex· .. 'AIRLINE blue s.1.read ~<;fl. ~6'--it"...... Be"-• T • mdg M t't Grass 11' yard w1d• sttip &ED CAJiiPA~~~ lad)'
1 Requi~~entl:~'.knciw· LOCAL; OFFICE JOBS ::=~· ~:at3t!~ · ~ 'SCHOOLS 673-~.. .,...,_"""" ~.., r:::vi;,:u ~~E~.at ;:G~ 'TO ·;;~y:lor .Tv ~e you 're;ov• It hau·i:
to cue for well-mannered 4 ledge •exam,· math • apti. • N rt Bl d c M PA IFIC Retdms from Rentals CLASSES and that' you ...... over pm ts bal $600. '69 RCA 6P-1746 • 419
' •·•· Ii I •-···.. ' ewpo v' . ' C ' -· Good ho I S •.,r old boy, 6 mo girl, in new' · l._,, ~ •e )d 1U1UW1~ge. P!ea11t· ca.II for appl. 1 · , &: Model Homes rent a Baldwin' Organ &: gel refrig 14 cu ft $200. Maraiitz NEED m~s · or
.home, .Mon-Fri 9-7, Sat 9-5. Type apJkox, ss·wpm, use Superior Ag.ency 642-n4t SERVICE ·Statton; Part time-· Day & Night Classes Complete-like new 7 piece in on the flln? It's true. but s I e reo Sony PS 2000 adorable ldllens, 7 wk&. old,
$250 mo. MUST ~ reliable . office ,machines .. 4•.yra .ex· 18!;7 HarOOr, · Costa Mesa graveyard & ~~ng. Apply: 543-6596 Spartish living room group, only at turntable Al tee Lansing 2 white, ~ b!k(whl. 893-4827 ,
A have own b'a115p. 494-5834' . perlence tn pUJ'Chaaine or in 'Jl'rson,.Lcnn 11Arco, 320~· l 610 E. 17th St.,'Sa.nta Ana , $299 .. •THE .FACTORY, 1885 WARD'S BALDWIN sruDIO spkrs cost ;.3000 sell UGOO aft 3 pm. U9
'aft 1\pm. " \ · 1 material.coiitrol. . ·PART TIME Harbor Blvd, C.M. ' 'Harbot Blvd., CM. 548-9457 1819 Newport, C.M.' 642-3484 ba1 $1200. 2544 Newport 2 PART Ger/Dobr mix 1
CHILF> catt. Jteiiiibie woman· For lnfonnation phone' MraJ Trainee in Malling & Addren. SERVICE · Station. .Ex P 'd T.he' New~rt . ' 1 HlDEA?ED. & chair, tan · Open 'Every Nite Blvd Cl'tf mos. 1 male" 1. fem. &d
e'Ver:Y Thlll'I a.m. tlu.'U Fri : Workmaf!, · (n4) 1 ~l ing Dept of ,Nal'J .Pllbllca· Help. 3·12 shift. Salary +, School of Buslnell • naug; ·2443 E. Coast Hwy., , &: Sunday Afb!rnoon CARPET Left from Comm'l. w/childrent will be wal·
nooft. OwA traMportation: ! ext\ 225
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between 2 It 5 P;m• ,tion, •Some• typing· necesa. comm. A~ply in person .. 4678 CdM , PIANOS & ORGANS coritracts. $1.98, $2.88, s~ chdogs, to gd hm w/fenced
fRetettricee. 491.1330 ·F\JlL 'time-&:part.time belp. Ph. Mt, Holcomb days or. Campus Dr, .NB. ' Features '\\'eekly • 'refresher ,6754t2? • or 675--4031 NEW &: USED $3.99 sq. ·yd. Drakes Carpet yrd. 546-73)2 4/U
atiNING,~ lJght,. model' 1wa.nted. NO eqM!:r. oo:. Ap-eves &t2-4748. : SERYJCE Station Sale&rnan, courses· tn the skills ycu HIDE·A~BEO $50 •Yamaha Pianos Organs 17206 Beach Blvd,, Jf.B, NEED good. home for part ~biimff.' pvt-time, for OO?)o, IP.IY In pen;on, M;obll Station, . * PART TIME * eXP.d. Salary &-comm.. need · to get the ,job you · • 5464569 e Thomas Organs . 842-5114 <;:ollie/Shep loves children,. sc~tlous ladies, 541-2fll6 1corner, Harbor Ii .Glasier, TRAINEE to learn layout It Older man fine. ,Chevron,• wan!. •Kimball Pianos LATE 21" RCA color TV $175 5 mos. malt. 546-7202 . 4(ll
"'-ERIC" w 0 r • -•· iC.M. M·te-up On national publics-Adams lt.Magnolla, H.B. • BKCASE Hdbrd set, uncJ.er e Kohler & Campbell New din tbl & red nylon TIGER k I t ten looking for -· -.. ... ""'" ,,.... SITTER f hil drawer slorage'. King Beau· , manent part time. Sub-• GARDENER TRA~E tion. Ph.: Mr. Holcomb, day . le dren 7 &: 9, . 833 Dover Dr., N.1'. ty Rest. $200 All A-f 548-8878 ; COAST MUSIC • suede chrs. lronrlte mangle home. Fem,, 8, wks .. J;;;ii appltcatkln to P. O. Box No exper. nee. Xlnt opp, or eve. 642-4748, . my home 2-5. •5 days wk> 642-3870 , NEWPORT &: HARBOR ~·,new modem dresser & Hsbroken. 540-3151 4/11 !4000, Laguna Hills: 9$53 or 1 .-• .(U4) 5'16-~ f~ll dys 1 s~e~. College· KARATE DROP-LeaJ' table, 4' chairs, ·Ccsta Mesa ·* 642-28Sl ~te sta.nds $75. 8122 In· 3 Fen;iale Cocker mixed l?UP-
'call 831-0661 :for ap. GE.NERA~ Houseel~aning ' PRODUCTION ~~~~~n Mesdows ~;fu (walnut)', $75, Open.10-6 Fri 11).9 Sun·ll-5 dialltlpobs, H.B. 536-6697 pies, 6 wks old. Free to
polntment. 1for teac~91S6· No. C.~!~··r.?78wn -WORKERS_ ·SPITER&. lit~ hskpg, 2 &chi SAN CLEMENTE _ DOUBLE ·~-bo~pring & good home. 962-5973 4/10
COASTAL AGENCY transp.,,...... or .mrv~ Offl F I · PIANO RENTALS matt. w/.u..,ne ~ .. .,. Slrigle FREE '"''"'··med. size,
be 1 * . GUARDS . * of I lllge chiltlren. 8:30-5:30. Mon .. ·Men. Women . Children ce urn fUN IOIO ' .New and uSed 1 bed box sprin~, matt. & part Cockel', 1 wks, old.' She~ m.:~ne[i~ Inc. , . nterest to women 1 ~:d;n1Tb7 e""v••',.' Own' transp; · Family ntes, · fm tria:I. USED steel desks· $39.SO 1• All monies paid apply to pur. frame $20. Both 1n xJnt cond. 646-4042 4/9
Tho W 'Id' L I . ' . 0 .... -.iv Japan Karate Fed. Fumio Posture chairs SI2.50' &: lip ~~· 2831 Bristol, apt. 8, C.M. MIXED Ccll ie, male. small o.-I 1rge1 FULL OR PART TIME. Prt· THE HARTLEY C • St.ructurol Demura, Sensei. Free FIREWOOD ! 1 p of lon.I · • Used. 2 &: 4 draWer tiling GOULD MUSIC . or ~ .' at s~m-breed, 7 mos. old, to good; r, es• I fer 55 or older.· Work any Steel heavy-detalling eoordin' unilorms, 3 mo Course. cabinet! e Used wood de*s ..;...5 N M . S mer prices. L1m1ted time home. 646-3185 4/9
Employment S.rv c• shifL Unlfonna furnished. 1987 Placentia ator • call ·Ann, 'Westclitf 492-2867 ' M M h 8 · ..,.. • a1n, .A. 547--0681 call now! $45 cord, $22.SO J,!i .~~~~.~-~-~~•
27!!0 Harbor Bl, CM 54().6()55 ?bl~ Cb';1k Siter, 19700 Costa Mesa ' Personnel Agency, 2043 West. PIANO LESSONS • c~ ~e~~ ~~~net co(llrd~0~~8461iv. & stack'd·free. 2:':C:a~\~';~· ~~~s. ;~~
• llarbar Blvd. at Adams ' :ach. ~~t. ~~~ Quite middle aged couple, de-cliff Dr.,, ~.B. 64f>.2TIO · Beginners, intermediates • ' Costa 'Mesa * 642-MOO : ItAMMOND Steinway Yam-~ . HJIS. 4110
COOKS * * * * sire genera.I cleaning woman; all ages. THEORY: • IM· aha N t' FBGLS snowbird $250 2 . . ', . EXPERIENCED 9:30 AM,. Wed, thrtl Fri. 2 morni ...... week. Own lians ~ SPfJRTS' WCAR *·. PROVIZATION Reasonable Off' ~ I I •••I . ew & used Panos o1 15" 42" Se . 1·•1 . . Piece ,Sectional, in alley: .. _ ;]'{ ~ • · ice 1;:qu pmen ..,., tn t mak Best b in x an por....., e 1wim beh. d 431 R · · d
· · part time HAIR Styli.It lor men, pref. 673-2618. MANUFACTURER Call after 5 p.m 5'&.1548 -1 os es. uys pool sso New boat trailer 111 i versi e.
with following. R.E. TRACT SALES . TYPEWRITER, Adler elect, I ~ cam. at Schmidt Music tor Cat itiO. 546-9453 ,NB 4/$ ' I
j SURF A SIRLOIN
1 59.10 ·Paclfic Cea.st Hwy.,
, NewPort Bea.ch
'*COOKS*
' Call or Apply
PARKHURST RE'llREMENT
RESIDENCE IJ92S IA Alameda, F.V.
962-5531
*•494-5054 ** Largesu~lv.Coa:taMesa. NEWMA,NAG,EMENT· Job Preparation ·7800 $195., SC!'tf printing!, .190TN.MPln,~t&AnaCRIB$25 I $12 h.SOLIO black male part: H ·w i::alculator $695. Both perfect chair · ' Pay rt~n . ' 1, Siamese cat 7 mo1. old.,
"'" • PHYSICAL Good comm. & hrs. 540-S7o2 ' · E:XPANDJNG SCR·AM-L·EJS cond. 2 \\'alnut 30''x50'' GULBRANSEN l\lodel 2400 . edl7, "1 ._,-<:rib d120
1 ' very friendly. 673-7506 4/9
RECE-ONIST Ty · • . overs1z co orucu c r a e -· • THERAPIST r • • • p1st. desks. $110. ea. 546-3013 Organ, 6 i:no, cld. Piano ef-$2S. 962_7591. · 2 Kittens. l orange male, 1
Apply PerfJnnel Director Sharp, attract. 1or leading e Sinale Needle feet, Leshe, auto. rhythm C 11 h H' calico female, 6 wks old.·
So. Coast Community HOBpl. ITIV'tslment companie1, New • Special'Machine . ANSWERS C f section. dbl manual $925. arpc ayer as t Lo 646-2739 419
tal, 31872 Chait Hwy., South lrvine Office. Salary open· e .a-ttsen iAU. Depts. ' _!..!!. R.~t•urant 8014 675-224.1 nylons $1.99 yd. Shags PUPPIES, 4 all black Ter-.
4.guna. Cal.II. Ph: 49S-l3ll w/benefits. Call Steve Accent -Pious -Scout -ASSORTED Booths&: lounge PlANO TUNING & Repair from $3·50 up + my la~r. rler mother. To a good
E?'l 356. Gravei, 833-2950 ' Vacation pay, steady. Sbou.ld -NUDIST settees, co ck ta i J area Expert, reasonable! ·r-.lr. 90c per yard. 841•1519 home. 495-4437 4/IO
HOTEL v • ., Full "-•. Reoept/PBX ·A failure: He's as broke as ·chairs. Sf!e:DOclana.ster 333.1 ·A~ess 615-6967 or 613-8930 WlL~ pay $2fl. 10 take over SHEEP Do 8 k Id v · ·-~" T u76 67 Ask for Alice r a · "-"'k · NUDIST • Hohday Health Spa contract g, w. 5 0 : try COOKS with broiler exp. 1 Permanent re·aldent prefer· 0 ..,.. • * 642-3472 * ·pic ... ...,.. et in . a . W. Coast HW)'., ·Newport 4 PC .. Beginners drum .set for 2 per90ns. Must sell, S\l,'eel &: good with children.
Also waltreue,, lull or part· t red. 494-1196 • Employer pd fee. Well & Costa Mesa camp. . Bch. , • ' $85. V1011n962$50~~"" going in service. 675-3807 &45-2541 4/9
t. r.u 837 -tbl'd co. In new bldg, ' ME"CHANDISE ·FOR ~ TO poodl tme, ccua •;rwu HOSTESS/CASHIER JASON BEST • I\ FOR sale Boy's ~ike y -e puppies, cute&:
COMPONENT Exp'd., age 21•35, iood wag. , Employment A ..... ncy TACO BELL · 1SALE AND TRADE ' Garage 'S•I• , 1022 PI~O •. Baldwin Acrosonic Stingray style, candy appl~. adorable. 1'fu1t be placed In
ASSEMBLERS Do J , 0093 Ad ~· D•Y• Pref Male St·-'-nt wf; Spinet, hke new. $800 or best ........,. d .1. 124 loving homes. 536-4T47 4/9 es, n ose, ams, 2207 So. Main, Santa Ana. , ......, • FurnLlure • ·~ Pi . H o~~"""" !:>""'" con I ion. . "-='--===='-""-..C. c--. in a5sembly & solder. He ""'" ~ · · night classes. Good .'start .sal-. _•1 ease help .me get rid or · 0 er. OJJ-"""" 64"5~3 ~t""• • • """""""" 9264·W. Katcll. a, Anaheim 35 · · · · . .,... "" · PETS and LIVESTOCK ;.,,. of miniature PC boards -,=======c-""" N r 818 · Ye a rs of collecting! I -• · HOUSEKE£DER 546-5410 or 821-1220 -... 0 expe necess, ·Returns from Rentals 1 Television 1205 REFRIGERATORS: 11----------1
VALOR·
ELECTRONICS
54().9261
3100 Pullman St., C.M.
DESMOND'S
Fo•hion l•land
Full Time
• CASHIER •
APPLY
#3 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACl-!
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Ch11ir side, experience pre.
ferred, X·rll)'. Hours 8·5
Mon.1'ri, 4fl9..1352.
ljOr ' Ocean Ave. H.B. s:JG.7800. • & A1odel Home1, SAT· SUN ° n y,·9 to 5 · Gibson & l Cold!ipot, $35 Cats •-o
C·" or A I ' R-eptionist Oriental things·from lge s~ -4 ..uJ· PPY -TALL young man, over 18,' Bea!ltUul like new j . piec~ RENT Color TV S7 mo with each. Dinette table $8 . ---------
PARKHURSTRETmEMENT $450 Jiving wipe.rents for: dining room ~up, ,$79.95. Ji room dlvidet1d a !imall .option to BUY. 545-3564. ~11. H.B. SIA1\1ESE kitten, Bluepoint
RESIDENCE Lov l ! Be h rice bowl. American ·"what 1 L · e Y new o cs. ac area. p/Ume work. No long hair. Mapy used 5 piece dinette have ycu" early p'ress & or South Coast Magnavox, 2133 I NEWPORT Stach Tennis ma. e • wo ~de r :f u aJ.
9925 La. Alameda, F.V. Very pleasant working All day Sat &. ·Sun & poss. set.a from $15 a .set. lo $59 a Laguna Caoycn Rd, La"'""' Ci"h family m•m'·-h•'p tectmnate d!Sposltion $35. * 962-553l · * nd T be f Call r.r .1 molded glass, 100 pieces. ..-... " .U<:.I,. • 67s-7817
P" 1 s55. 1 ~-nA~: .1 Abi:~ an sc:hl wkdays. Full ttnie \ set .. 1 Phi co black ·&. white Carmel Slag, berry set. Eng Beach $350. Dys 54P-2286, eves · .
H o u SEKEEPER: Mature. P!~nneJ14:· .. encyig•ai 230 W. in summer. Bayside Fish TV console, $35. THE F AC· floned china w /L.A. yacht GE 'IV needs work $20. 557-8968. SlAM~SE, Abyss i n 1 an &
for (.'(IOk'g & lite Hskpg for Warner, s:ille 2l1, Santa ~.~~ 2800 Newport Blvd.: ~~,~:; ~ar!>°r" ~lvd, club Bergie design, serv lor Conoole w/remote control. CARPET Installer has one fernan cats for s_ale,,Very ~~rl~ ·= 0
•" &1~ 1::: ---·-------TELEPHONE .Sal•s •. F'-BRAND NEW 12. Gennan steins: Tobi' PHil..COk $S ~,,n~561•9 TV needs roll avocado ,carpet. double ~tt5'1'°A~l•EbiSEe. ~11 2 al -""' mugs, milTors, port oven & \\/Or · .....,..., jute back, will sell all or " . 1' ,.., • ens. se · ,"c,"'3"5~703"===-=~-I RESPONSIBLE, experienced Deal, Paid daily. Call Mr.-3 ·.~00M GROUP rotisserie, heavy duty wltl ,70 SYLVANIA Color. TV parl.$3 per yd. 546-7'.MS point. 3 !ro!t'?°1nt, ?$30.18072
HOUSEKEEPER -Mothers salesgirl to manage and Ryan, 8J6..4367 • $2971 • bam;I, ~ks, womens' walnut tbl model $295. days POOL TABLES l\>lann St, Irvine. 833-0158
Helper, Live-In. Room & cperale swinging: boutique TOP EXECUTIVE Sells regular $529 cloth1ng S!Ze 8 & 10, shoes, 642-8274. eves 534-7678. , .. .
board + $125 mo. Spanish shop In Laguna Beach. Manage Acoounting, Adminls. We-n.rry our own contracts n 1 & 7~. Old mesh hand 8 • 7/8 ~tal1an Slate. Intro Dogs 1825
OK. 3 children . Call l-..iCiiol"i"(;i;21.,3io)ii7i0281i·0,.144""-'I trative systems, operations Van's Discount Furn. b~s + others. 01.d sq. Cam•r•• & offer. l49~. 547--0933 ~AN Sheph e rd obe-
962-8936. for national hdquarters ol 417 W. 4th St, S.A: 547-2412 piano desk. Excepllooally Equipm•nf 8300 llAND Painted oil portra1t of d ' 1 1'>! . 1 H 0 U SEKEEPER, Live-In, See Betty Bti.1ce at wholesale distrlbulor, 1{) yrs Open Daily 10.S * Sat 10-6 fine mans' \vrist watches you or your children ll'om a iencro c ass, artincres
must like children & pets, m 6 ex per min. incl 5 yn w/Data Sunday 12·5 solid brass valet. No. :i MOVIE CAME RA photograph, 646-3629 ~~9e 1 s • 6 4 2 -o 7 3 9 0 r
Ref. t• A A vnc Processing. Returns from Rentals Westcliff Villa, N.B. Cor SS. 546-4569 WHEELCHAffi, good con· . . . * 624-3444 * ..,., ""'o & l\1odel Homes \Ve stcllf! &. Buckingham, dit!on $7D, Tape recorder SSO, PULIS, .intelhgent, Io v 1 n g
HOUSEKEEPER. Compan-Agency for Career Girls Send confidential resume to Complete-like new-3 com· 2nd garagt" from corner . MlsC•llanHus 8600 perfed oonditlon. 642--0795 Hungarian sheep dogs,
· 410 \V Coast Hwy NB A •1 k 1002 .-~ San MOVING I ~. d' . AKC, shots. (213) ·693--0487 1"DISH\VASHER* Day&, 8 10n, own transportation, live · ., ' ' . "ase , •~11 .. vaw, · plefe rooms of furniture, o v1~gon • 1n1ng La 'd Cl WHITE kitchen stove, in gd or (213) 69"';,-9870
to 4 Pt.f. $2 per hr. Apply to in. 494-3944 By appoint. 64&-393.9 la Ana, Calif. 92705. was $450-sll of this for only set, couch, tbls, hardware, . p1 ary GSS eond · & clean. 646-4063 to .
Chef, Dillman's Restaurant, HOUSEKEEPER . Live ln e TOUCHUP r.10LOERS &_ $189.50. THE FACTORY, elec appli anc@s, bldg Tues. Eves. 7:3Q.9:30 see anytime. RARElongcoatChihuahua.s.
SDI E. Balboa Blvd., for elderly <OUpit. Mat ...... SALES BONDERS NEEDED e 1885 Harbor Blvd, CM. materials, B~Q: chrs, roll Starting lofay 6th SCREENED Alum, enclosure ~75s~~~~0•,t~!·~~· A "'"' Man with sales exper. lo aw'"' bed F h n •-u of ~~...,...... .,.,,.....,, .. Balboa. .,.,·oman pref. Call &12-6661. Exper. only, Apply: •548-!M57 ..,, · 15 1 g K cam· En:ro noiv 7' widl! 2{1' 4" Jong Asking .~=·~~~~-~-
DJSH\VASHER. PART-TJr-.fE hc==~--"~.;...c=-act as outside contact to W D SCHOCK CO MAPLE Bdtm set, &prings & ping equip. 878 W. l~th St STONECRAFT $75. You remove. 646..soo. AKC Airedale Pups, Burglar Insurance sell the design seniice of • • • (Btwn Placentia & 8101 Bolsa Ave. . . alarm w/Jove, Pet~how, I S\\iss Chalet. tl4 N. New. CLAIMS TYPIST a long established quality 3502 S. Greenville, S.A. ma It re s s $80, frame, r.tonrovial CM Thur1 til' 1'1'd CJt .. • 897 1970 SEWING mach., chair. elect wks shots. 638-5155
port, N.B. Position open for heavy typ. interior decorating ·f irm . UPHOLSTERER TRAINEE springs, mattres~. chest of · • 1 way '" · tan. stroller&: baby things. ' · DMV ist, 70+ elect., moderate die. Refer. Write Box 59r-,1, Dally drawers i3S. J\taple end ENGL~ Brass bed $65, '64 i,~ T, Ford P .U. Gd cond. Call after 6, 64~1224 " YORKSHIRE TERRIERS,
taphone exper, Hunt, Bch. Pil t NB. Some exper. with staple gun table, wooden lamp $10. Wedgewd bowls $20 & $40, Thoro 3 yr old gelding I)JR1:1B·k lOOCC S-JO . • 8 wks, AKC, lop drawer:
CONTRACT GIRL
MUST BE EXP'D
MUST BE SHARP
$,ALARY OPEN
CALL MR. ERWIN 64&-9303
area, Xlnt. benetHs, salary SA~;;.Servi~ Eslab. Fuller req'd. 642-903.1 540-4912 shadow ';>ox ~asel ,$25, play se-ll /trade for gentle saddl~ Go (;~ ;HP raclng.'tr~1:· 646-5226
commensurate w\lh ability. Brush route, $125 a wk . * WANTED * GIBSON del uxe 2 door clothes, ev~n1ng_ su1ts. all un· pony, Boston . Billi Terrier slicks $85 S45-6foo ' WELSH Corgi Ca rd i gs n
147 3517 Experienced Saleswoman relrig-frt!'ezer on b ot Io m, der $lO, Misc. }5:2(),ffighland pups. Horse trlni, util trlrs, · · pops, AKC, 9 wks old. Show
PERSONNEL ~;~~eed 10 start, Call in quality bakery. coppertone, l.ike new $150. Dr. N.B. (Westcllff) !!addle~ & tacks, JO gal port · · · Quality. 644--0341 ,
UNI GARD INS. Apply in pe MIOn 10 8 foot cushion FT'ench Prov. GARAGE ~le: ff •eh o Id fly sprayer on w h Is. fREE TO ' .YOU BOXER pup1. AKC, J male,
G O SALES Lady, curt a In, MR. ROBERT ANDERSON couch. 2 matching cl!airs, furn.' lrg & smaU, Incl 894-6297. , 4 females, 6 wks. old, bad * DRIVERS * R UP drapery & gllll!. Udoff'1 good condition. S.18-2939 ' refrig, desk, po"·.er mo~er, LADIES Diamond Dinner ONE b.laek [luffy. ~·Siamese shot.9. 492-40M. No Enwiiience An equal opportunity Home F u rnishlng1, So. Snack Shop B•kery Rcturn1t from Rentals lounge. J\tuch misc. Fri & Ring, set with l~i kar&.t kltlen. female,~ wks. old. TINY toy poodles. AKC,
-... -.. employer Coasl Plaza. 3444 E. Coa8t Hwy., IL ~todel 11ome!l Sat, 944 Congress, C.l\f. center diamond, 2 dia.moMs 545-5978 4/10 Champion stock, 7 wits Necauary! LADIES! Spare tlme \\-Ork SALES ORDER CLERK Corona <lei Mllr 4 like nl'W Spanigh ~rAs 'ln NEIGHBORHOOD Garage • l l karat on each sldc. FE?.\ALE, blsct poodle/fer-$100. 962-9763 '
Mast have cJean CalUotnll avail. Good t,;0rnmission. Experienced in sales onicr WANTED: man over 60 to benutltul fabrics, '$89 .9S . ~le ,-Ev~rythlng. from Brilliant cut. Sacril i c~! r ler. 3 mpntN;. Adorable! SHELTIE PUPt, beaut. little
drivlnc record. Apply Csll Mrs. Carter 96S-4625 processing. J\fsintaining or· work part-time, Must like e11.ch. 3 t.Ofa bedr & chall' ~erto s fu~llUl'l', lo clothes R~ply to Box: P360, Daily 546-7887 . 4/ll Lassies, AKC, champ. sired.
YEl:LOW CAB CO. * LAZY SAL,ESMAN der logs and tteords, Type R"ardening. Approx. 16 hrs se ls-. In c;icctllcnt ~dition. fo-.le~~rc~~~in~~ C~ Sun Pilot COCK·A·POO Puppy female, 837-mS4
JM E.16tb St. If YOU can rec;nilt A train, 60 wpm on electric. Y.'k. 6'16-5.3:>'1 $49,50 each. O cc as ional • · CARPET Installer wlll aell 4 mo. old. Call only 'Sat. or WELSH Corgi P e mbro k i
Costa Mesa there ~ be a . for1U1W' in CALt. (714) 494-9401 • WAITRESSES Wanted, eve. chairs, Hkt N'\\'; a&sort.cd ·GARAGE Sales; 3 blg·salcs his Jsst l rolls cf carlltt. All Sun. 492-1806 4/11 Ptips. Ch~mp. sired, AKC,
oruv,e:as Wal'tted In t,aguna our husineU. MOOK MOOD. TELONIC k graveyard shills open. color1. $14.95 e!cO. THE ln ODt ':'°1"'1• lots of good or part. Double ju1el back. POTTED cactus & sue-Penn. ,hots. 1213) ~73 '
Bea.ch ana tor l'ltWIPftper M4-2302 ' I ndustrles Apply tn person. Ff\~RY. 1885 Ha F b or : b¥Ys, Fri,, .Sitt. Sun.· 9-S. 186 Sl .99 per yard. 540-1245 culents., Clay eou . assorted GREAT Dane: ma1e brindle
deUvtry. Mlllt have 2ood * 3-11 LVN'S * laiuna · B•ich ODtES, RESTAURANT Bhd., Cfl.l. S4&-MS7 · 'E. 2l•t S '' C.M. VAU.EY Pool Table Coln 5lt.ts, 646-2712 alt 6 pm 4/10 5 \\•ttlu old. Shots SlOO.
car and be over a. Coritact Full or p/Umt,, top u.1. A Ari Eq al Op....,._,.,;t:y 1400 W. Coast Hwy. N.B. ~llSCL. house~lf:f Jw;nilh-. O~RAGE ·.i sle, Ev' re 11 ~ted new clllh. '4" TI-IREE CUte Kittens Need or oUet 646-6942
Joe NoblH, DAILY PILOT, ~~~!'· Sanll Ana Bristol '. I ~~·-.. *.. w A 1 TR Es s .. Ex· 1ng5; bed$, Ibis, cfin,.c;htsls, P ia.no $450. Davenport, " slale S39Scfellv '646-3002 good homes. 540-2030 4/ll GERi\1AN She 1 rd Pu
64M321 ....,nvaie1etnt .f.losp., S.W, perlenced, ovtr 21. Apply In lamps bc<!Sprdg "etC. t\3-2731 · mlk-.. .• . 548-99o9 • ' 11 di 6~7730 AKC 337 p ie pi,
t;:XCEU.. Oppty. for mature S.A., Call M!"IJ Faulha.btr SALES PEOPLE, full,•part· pel'BOll, to Coffee S b n p J>rtced to seJlt' < · * li'f5.'7203 * · SOD & SO, )'OU g, • • t.lagnolia Avt,
Jl..$5 yr oJd male to i up-for appt. 1209 w. Hemlock. time: Slim-Oym .. Le~d • hoste11, l:lottl Laguna. 425 HOUSEFUL -Of MW .model GAR,AGE(slle: PAC:kard Beil SCUBA TANK CdM 4/11 C.M. 642-8310 ar1 S.
plentti1l biJ prtttnt income 546-1966. • available. Ca.11 '897·1986 s. Qout Hwy, La(Una Bch. &m furniture' Rl-R'. S683. TV .• desk, ch.rs. etc. Sat & J .Valve S40. ~MS25 7 MO old white lemale cat to SPRINGER Spaniel Puppy,
wfaputtimejob,nlthls. MANAG E MENT .Op-SECRETARY /,f¥&'ptionlstwAITRE S S Wanted~ now $197. ~7· or sun."9Congress,C.M. GEIGER COUNTER $35 . goodbome.567-8986 4/10 AKCregis,
C •I I Ncl>onald'1 MS.990 portunUy. Full or Part time. Constrbcilon, ('.lt'pl'.r pret J1Unalca tnn Coffte Sh:lp. 637~ • 1 ' • • • "" CLO'Il'~ l l Oddll It. Ends. 546-4569 PUPPIES. mixed Lab & . Call 673-4081
Contact...AJi', Mc.OMA~. Car nee. ,20 Jin, ,wk. SJJ.,& ryptng. 6;42-3430 7AM...,:30PM. .Apply tn 2 S'MJDIO .coucm~ l double . Sat. Ii-&,in, 9-6, .2171 Vilta BUSIEST marke(Jllace In Shepherd, ~S-.7306 4/9 AFGHAN P0PS-AKC
DAILY Pribf' DJ M £.A. 836--4302 SEC R ETAfiY, Xecoun~ pmion. 2101 Con.at H\\'Y,, 1 1tli'lgl e, !JO Mei ~ beM( 0(. Entrads , N.B.' (Bluffs). town. The: DAILY PILOT TERRlER/Beaglt' puppy to Sl50..$200. 8>15-54!'!2
LD1ES. 'r.o cu u."""' MAnJ, Social Studies It Dept. l.quNI HUll .tnL Cd!kl. fer. &f&-0391 ' :GARAGE Sllf:'Man)I' misc. Clauifled section. S1tve good home. 646-6996 4/9 ll,.fALTESE Papp!,.!<., AKC
11.., Jllll pemdel' a dq. Dia.I French Teachers. Sm a 11 837-2020. Eir1 46 •• Tiit1QU1oa;R YOU C'AU.. • .Items .&\p11,ln1lng:1. 8J22 l~ l'l\Ol'ley, time A eUort. Look FREE N!d\''OOd bark. Alust re11 .• 1 \\·k olcl maleil, t ho\\t
fU,M?I ptlv. tchoot, m..t1610 CHARG:f m THE QUICKER YOU 8£LL Ola.I 642.fl619 for'Jtl'.SULTS . din.napolis, HA 536-6697. Now! take all. ~I956 ~/11 qusllty, 545-6938
_________ ._..__ .... ____________ ............ ---~---.:...-!.. ___ _._.1,_..;;;
-,.. ..., ,,-----.------o , • oF ,__.., __ ...,.....,,,--·•1~< ~·~· ~• • .....,.,....,7 ---.-.-~. >M>~"?¢1""'".,.,'"· .....,, ..... ...,,~--,...,...,..,--"""::---r: .. -..J ~. -...,. ... , ..... --....... """ .... .,-;"":"P~--..... ,---~~'l!'-"!"""11
""'""'' A,.n '· 1970 DAILY PILOT 'R
PITS incl LIVISTOCK TRANSPORTATION TllANS!!C?'l!~TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION rRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION~"7.T'-RAHSiiOR~rii;;;.;;.;, ... A~T"'ION"°'......, ... T,.RAN=s"PC.;;;;R;;T,;T.;;ICIN;;.;.,,!i!!!
o;;--1125 loot SUp -Ing tiii Motwcycln fM J-'510 lmporfod Autoo -Imported Autoo -lmportod Cari -1..,.rtoc1 Aulw
,I_ WHITE 'hy 1'liodle Stud :IJ.27' SI.IP DOCK '69 HONDA CL91), xlnl oon-JEtl' '46., CMiJa1, • 283
s.n.iot-, Al<C. * m.m * dltion • extraa $1» tim1. IAIUw. poll-ftar .,id, Oat. AUSTIN AMERICA DATSUN DATSUN JA•UAR
&e1-n• Mt-IOS3 ttitt, 11' Inell tnktt, mn '69 Datsun Sedan JAGUAR MINI -. Ionr • amoolb Mollllo -t2llO '711 Y>maha lJ5 1'vln bu, 2 -"'"" nick and coats. Must reduce •tock. XL.NT! Uader 1500 mt. caN, back aeat etc, SU95 ~. 531~. 5SL-40'12 Colla M'e1a • Newport $G5. 60-«m 56-2083
AUSTIN AMERICA
SAJtt. Servk:t, Part•
lmme:dlatt Dc!:llvtey
DOT DATSUN
OP EN DAILY
AND Lil<• "'"· ' t1oo" 911 h.p • ....,.. HEAD9QARTERS head cam, automatic trans., -...... .... i ..
Harbor "'""i""'i"--I · .
Hor--a ... n1 .. 1 Parl< ~ an adult ..... Smtlce ~-rn Vlilld11 9$15
.. All-SUNDAYS ·
188311 a.w. Blvd. Hull-Beaoh au. rm or 6fO.(MG
dilC brake1. U,000 miles. dlr ,,. "'"' auu.on..d JAGUAR
Metlculoual.Y IOl'Vlced CXWY dealer In Ibo ..... Harbor
ro} $1599. Call 545.0S34 or ArtL
49<m3.. 10 ... t. pvt. club high on a blulf & Pull MOO . •
GELOINO, 5 yn. A.Q.H.A. one mile from tbfl Pacllie. -'67 Ford CIU\. W•gon
GenU., but 1plrlt@d. $500 Modern living in America'• '57 11UJCK. Sel1l.q all part! 'Big 6' eftllllt, aulonli.tic, ra·
J ~ L'lll p Ll l'I
~I 111 p ll rl ~. incl tack, ~ aft 5, finest mobile homes. at reu:. price. Get in touch dJo, heater. Idlal tor ~
11tANSP.ORTATION MOl~Wbl~:_!>ISPLAY with ~-~ ""S~~ or see er Ol' i:oadaerdal or use u !100 vt. COUt Hwy., N.B.
ENGLISH FORD -,..., ,..,..~ Aw. Gftl ....,. .......... _ ..... SWn.u a Wl&Oft. • tuz., tunlly' &e-9WS 540-l'lh
loafs & y Kht1 9000 Colta Meu 60-1350 Lant A.¥lm. This will New 11Na,:1flr. Xltrt rwm1ni Aulborbed MG Dealtt ...... J AD New ErWUsb
Tal<o -Blvd 10 19th '"" "" 2 woeka. BEST OF· cond. -<l&ht <YLT!65l AUSTIN HEALEY "Loa~"MtnMTbeERM 'C!Ntlol" F~ In OUr Bii 2T', lONGS Crut Sloop, lm• St tben west to Whittler F!'.fl.. Call Kirk aft 10 am 545-0034 Zll Stodc N'ow At
mac., 4 cyl inbrd, n.dlo, Ave. suN'BEAM A1plne, xrnt or 494-9773: 2145 HARBOR ILVD. l'ACTORY
bow pulplt, lite lines. Orig, Jomlcn 111c; parta, not wrecked, Eng.,J:::::::::::::i:==:;:::=::. 1961 AUSTIN Hfaley Mark U ••• 1.•10 '• INVOICE!
thnM>ut. BR 6"13-S252; eves BAY HARBOR tnna, top, wire Whls with '"•m'po-t!20 .--fmittwty No ;Added ·~ -s ,.. • • 3000. 6 cyl. Conv. lJme llcht 1---------~·-~--:;""'FT' Mobllo H«M S.111 new ~--·~-,c~ndmpll--'------.,.. •. Xtnt oond. s1000. '70 Datsun .,_ ... _ft -· ~-·~•
•• • Dn..k~t cabin l" YEAR END drlvtable cu-, uvu ~"' en RIN't:IME, 4 STAR flll) 596-5950 Big 4 door 96 h •• ~.o·-~·ad °""" ,_
~ SALIS
SERVICE
PARTS ......
IUICI
CdSTA MESA
~ i;. 17tll Street
548-TNll
------:--1
'67 Mercedea Benz, Blaclc.
Radio, 4 qieed. Must tell_
l.1800. 646-5695.
'66 4 DR. Mnttdes, Air and
auto. tr'anl. $2100, blue book. ...._
cru11e .. 275 H.P • .,,..,.,... CLEARANCE SALE ... moved. WO ... In! "" a WESTWAYS ~ ~ Seduis, Sta Wrna.
Hmti., 4zt, long crul&lnr , NOW ON DISPLAY Oievy 4 rpd. 49.1-.'rm. EXCITING NE\V Bttf\¥ i:; c:!a~km:;~~ts:'Sa:'. ~eA~C: Chrome wire wheels, tint. MG ~5 radio, etc, $3500. l2, 16, XI, U A 30 WJde1 Wm~ tnspood.~ woycondb,.~e", • I "1'0 MODELS flee Take trade, wUl 11.nance Last, l13glaaA,CfUamf_1:;tMIL• . wESaw, Ndh-. --------
'69 .b)uar
XKE 4.2
Up To 60 :reet Loac -~ ""'" uuu "" • o' 1 de dlnttte gtpg 6 i1145 · , Theodore ......, · ev. YG i:ip~o~so~be~~lfJ~ ~~~8j:~ ~~~Sp~. E.s.o. ii"·~11~~0i::e~z:~~ BMW'S #1 S:(:a1u;;E ROllNS FORD ~~~~~: ~~~
new. Ollly SO hrs. Xtru -Costa Mna (ll4) 540-IC70 BRAND new Bronco SJ2 cu. 11· selt-contalned $229.J DEALER IN 2!60 Harber mvd. Call Pblll aft 11 am 5f0..3101 All ·Models
Mu.st see to apprec. 968-70U *RARE 0~ * in. 205H.P. e.ngvalue $750., Scotts, 914 N. Harbor, S.A. CALIFORNIA AND '67 Datsun lSOO. Lo ml. c.o.ta,Mesa 642-0010 ,o,,.•..:....,...;,::=:;,::·~,..,_-.,,..._
'67 TROJAN 2i', fly bJid&e. Mobile living on the beach. mUe otter. Sf9.llXJ. '61. W&STWAYS 11' Camper Chrome rlm1, tuned 'u-'6s Ja.r 3.8 S lux. Sedan.
Dual controls, atee111 6. wtthtou t •67 a.e ORANGE COUNTY'S haust. t •»d. Like Pwr1aJr/1thr/chrm W1w.
I ) ·'·1 • -[ l~ I ~I
Load.,, ~~ •••9000 Limited no. ot ,...., tn Tr1ll1r, Tr1v1I ~u • on • '"""'· ne 54"3986 " FERRARI Lo =· ........... V'll.J-• new addition to Driftwood ~ 31,000 mi. '3400, 900 Darrell w. "'"· ml. Make aUer. 61~. LARGEST ------.11 i I I (I L : I ,
Beach Club. ALPINE · -St. C.M. 646-7615 '69 2000 ROADSTER J AG. XKE Rd1tr '65 4.2 9010 MODELS ON DISPLAY 191ll" lmm.O. DoU•-130 h • ~ -•-FERRARI :17,000 act. ml. Xlnt. Now MOO W. Qui H-. H.B. NEW GEM-TOP Hi·Llne ·~·~ p, "lip<--..-..., 1uut cond, .... , .
1----Pl-uTre--nd---21462 PacUic Coast Hwy. (h.11 Camper) fo r ·~·69 25 New & Used In Stock $1995. Pvt. ply, 536-2153 or Newport Imparta Ltd. Qr. ta.p. M1.11t Re to believe! ~ Y>-11M
HunUncton Bea~ 536-7513 El Camlno. $115. Equalil:er TAM MOTORS 536-7697. an1e County'• only autbor-:6#-4152;;;;;:::;:::==:=== Autbartl:ed MG OW.
Solfbooti
n. e, 14• PT/4.21? !_,_ JOMICRA lnc. VACA"nON trlr hitch $15. 548-6953 eve1. 8081 Garden Gl'OVI Bl, G.G. 'fn Datsun Roadster, g ood i;e!1. c::i:ER· '"~'p•-'&2 MGA, red. New top. BodJ' ·m~~te~~..,.: oWNER LEAVING ARY.A TRAVEL CENTER 8 IT CAMPER 534-2'2M Open Sunday 89'J..s551 cone!, must sell, i 13 5 O, ~-Q;;tH;;:j~ KARMANN GHIA In xlnt cond. Bnt affer. Can
Olympic Cla.u 10x55 Expaodo Excel ... Gelden Falcon $100 or Beat o!ferl 499-4066, 6-10 eves. Newport Beach ~ ~n =Blvd N 8 su-o-!&ot. Koot~·t• Skirts, a~. shed, Ol~mpfa -Alpine 540-3803 aft 4:30PM '68 oa•·un 4 d• •'h Jo "2·9405 540-1764 '67 K Gh• · • · · ~ ~ Ad"'! -·.1. u .. -..1 "" • • ·• • lll() r Autho..i-.a F-~ n-aJ-armann NI ·-MG • GT -n, AM • 26' SOLING ii "" .,.... ........... 5 .... n? Apac e ·Wheel Camper like new. xlnt cond. $1575. •u.o:iu .,., ... , ...,,. '" v• ..... -Hi-Door Mk 11 SA K MOBILE Worlds Jarsm: mort com-Dune. Buggie• 9525 ~2393 or 547-3820 -ExceJ.lent running cand. Ra-radio, ad· cor.I. M u st
Pacific Yacht Sale• 673--1570 HOME BRQKERS plete RV vehl.Cl.a sbopplnll---------FIAT dio, heater, a1r cond., 4 spd, u.crttlte • IOlns ~
12362 Beach Blvd G G SLALOM ·~· B TIME FOR --------1 di<, Sacriftoe price $1299. 4""9119 allor 6 P.M. 25' SLOOP-Channel MCIOT'ing, ·• · • center. '"'"' c.~ u 11 Y ·
NB DI h k • -• 1351 Guden G-mvd GG ""''".i' '"'°"" Malloey ... "'UICK CASH '68 Fiat 850 Splde" "(UQV<95) Call -... BUSIEST -In _;.,; hn g yd' ~inna °'4• ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 5JA ~6686 ' nltion, M .... SeU °' tnde .... Sl400 494-"7'13, 10 fD 8. ....._ n. DAILY PILOT
·-" • • · ~ .. ., · • ..-"' "''' ott". ........ THROUGH A --0
--· a .. o1w -s a•• Owner transferred a 1 k1 n1 1969 • 24x60 v ... ,....,,~, v•,,..,.,-" 1962 KARMANN Ghia. Oean
$2995. Call 847-6(27. Owner transferred Oosed Sat. Open SUnday VW Dune Buggy-St. &: dirt. ~ 646-50!'i5 . iDAILY PILOT '68 FIAT 850 Coopc. Low exterior. Interior needs at-m<>my, tfJM 6 .tat. LGok
KITE N ~· ldo ..... ~ •• wet bar, 2 B'. 2 Ba. Roll bar, wd tires, new top. BAYSIDE MOTORS WANT A mile .. c Xlnt cond ,. mP< tootlon •.:1:n or nAst 00•• 1.;""',;,;,,1,;,11;,..,,===--=-
new· ~t '&• :n~m ~ j.Ot: Up to 10 yr, ~ ~ 537-40ll l~l500~/b;;•;.' =o"=·:-';.';.' ;,••="~='-'="1'00"'=iwi. =:Coa::;:":;";,wy:::;··:N:.B:·=..:=======D'==-'1195. &ia..-Oa41 ·"" ' 548-3042 _..... uc •· DAILY PilDI' wA?h AD6t r;:.e[a~~induded. A.M~~ -New Can 9800 \NewC1n 9800 fNewC1r1 9IOO INewCan 9IOO INewC.r1 tlOO JNewC.n MOO
CAL 15-6 SAI LS .'!VE!'R!'Y'!!'N!l!!l""""~'!!'x""so'!!'"1w"'o Stream Line '70
AJI race equip. 9 HP elec. Bdrm. Located In beautiful Terry•Nomad•0.111 ·•tart outbrd. Dinette & aduJt park _ Man-Frl Explorer Mof91' Homes _
galley, $6750. 548-2635 893-2179 Sat & SUn by ap. Fourwincl1'*WHkender
. DEL REY 24 Complete pointment only. TRATEL
Sleepe 4, head, sink. Xlnt 20x60' VIKING SCANDIA. 2 ..e &IL£R SALES
condition. $4500 °' chart«. BR, 2 BA. 5 Stu Adolt , ..,..
644-0735 atttt 5 pm. Park. Owner 548-4142 aft 13172 Harbor Blvd. G.G.
'21' VEN'nJRE-No. 176. ·"~-~-----1~ Blocb No. of ltiany extras! All rigaing 2 BR, ba Nashua + cabana. Carden Grove Freeway 537-4011 , ·upgraded. Xlnt cond. ;2150. Furn., patlo. Rosertta Bcb,
64>-<l603 ,,..., Moxloo. 151.16. 968-7830 KENSKILL
· '26 Thunderbird. Com pl MUST Seil! Sparkling clean NEW '70 MODEL S2'J95
equip, sleeps 4, needs paint 10x:40 in quiet C.M. Park. 18' Fully Self..COntalned
: Asking $3500. 9S-8572. New awnings. $3650. 646.3557 Scotta, 914 N, Harbor, S.A.
, VENTURE 17 Xlnt D:lnd. , WANTED: l&-.21'.l' travel ' Fully equip. Incl lll()tOl' &-Mini Bikes 9275 trailer· nllned in&ide, for
; trlr. $2250. 96Z-4.53l. SACRIFICE. •69 Customized storqe. 642-6336
. SCHOCK Snipe No. 14679• Bonanza . Mo torcycle WAN T E D : SmaJI Tent
com.w/trlr,xlntcond,must shocks, m ud p la te , Trailer.Sleep4,ta1Jgateen-
Rll. $'195. 546-037C, 962-0t&O. Jacks hat t, beavy duty tr'. Nat over $200. 536-2449.
CAL Z> No. 747. clutch, l&:e knobby dirt tire1, 24• TERRY SIPll 4, Shwr,
$3000 4 hp $225. 646-4519 Ba ~-•• 962--0448 . "'•'6• stove, 1n:ater, w.
GO-KART, bu Mac 7 engine cooler. Fully tum. 1 owner
16' Catamaran, planing hulls, &-expansion chamber. $110 $1250, 60-2098
' main & Genoa. $550. Call or beat affer. 675-598 I=;:;;;::;:;;===.:=. I
. aftu 4, 673-1162 2\9 HP Bored out engine. Trucks ·9500
I" CAL 20-No. 515 Xlnt cond. Many xtru. iss.
: M-;Exb'u! 644-1156 -'!J62..40::::="'=·=====:. SABOT $125 -* 646-0081 * Motorcycle•.
========= 1964 TRUIMPH Tiger Cub, Power Cruisers 9020 excellent condition. 1964
1967 32• CHRI.o.;..S.;...._c_,-,,-t Triumph, Ti1er Cub, aemI
Corinthian twin screw, xlnt basket case. 1961 Triumpb
.cond. $1500 down. Alk for 500 cc, Plrdli tires. 1uper . lot enzine, needs finishing
Harvey, An:hes Marina, touch. J.AJ"fel 500 &ingle 3333 W, c.out Hwy, N.B. eriames including 1 rare
BY Owner, for u.le or trade Red Hunter model, many
anything of $3500 value, 22' extra partl. See and make
Outbaard cabin c r u I s e r . offer on any of above.
M!>-3283 54~2
Spffd....skl Bo1t1 9030
it FT. Bristol aid boat 40
HP elec.; Ip. whl. trlr.
Xtra sharp. $595. 962--2938
Marine Equip. ,9035
./ 20 HP Johnson Elec, long
abaft~.
Call ~I '66 HONDA SCRAMBLER
2,400 litlLES. All ClIROME
.G.MC TRUCKS
Here now.
lmmediall: DeUvery ..
Southern On.nge County's
only Authorized GMC Dealer
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa ~9640
*VANS*
*VANS*
Luge S.lactlon Al
Kustom Moton
845 Baker, C.M.
M Chev Traller Hauler l *
Ton. 58 motor, 4 1peed with
2 '"""· !650, '711 ..... 531-88.18
'68 GMC Van, 2 new
radial tires. $1595. * 548-2885 *
SACRIFICE 1968 F·lOO Ford
Pick Up. 27,000 ml. XlnL
Call ~1802 aft. 5 CHRYSLER 50 hp, all elec-
tric, fresh water only, xlnt
oond. $495. 646-4519 $375 OR BEST OFFER 1965 Ford Econollne. For
BILL HAROLD ~5630 1aJe or trade. Xlnt oond.
BENDDC 12 Volt non-hunting '!i6 650 cc TRIUMPH TR 6 646-2698 after 6 PM.
automatic pilot. $450 com· mWJt sac., been used as a MUST Sef! Chevy Step Van,
plele. 673-6945 dirt bike, $495. 842-2154 real good condition, $550, 1:.!t ~vy MARK II Sex-1965 YAMAHA 125. Dirt or 847-34115 *646-0efil * street, $100 firm. 962-7972 ~ ~· P. U. Chevy, 6 mo's
Boot Sllp Mooring 9036
1.tooring w/25" Sloop
12500.
67:h1833
aft 2 pm. old. U,000 mi'a. Xlnt cond.
'67 YAMAHA ~ $1500. 836-6611 days.
VERY CLEAN WANT: '68, '69 or '70 Ford
&16-3445 or Chtyy Van, lo mta. Cub.
&42-3490 anytime '55 HARLEY o .r .L.H. Chop-==========~I
per. S950. Call after 5;
WANTED: Slip or side tie ~84;;;&--0224:,;.o"""~~-~-
' fm' 27' sail. Honda 305 Scrambler
'510
SACRIFICE! 1989 Brano>
10,cm ml. Xlnt cond. Blue A
wh l. 64~1802 aft 5.
Call 548-5259 $350.
DAILY PILOr \VANT ADS! 536-8451 after 6
25TH
We hove boen an authorind Pontiac Cl .. lor for 25
years . • . the name Longpre has been 1uociated
with Pontiac 1ince 1926.
BRAND NEW 1970
FIRIBIRD
108 LONGPRE
FOR SERVICE
BRAND NEW '70 FIREBIRD
$585 DISCOUNT FROM STICKIR
Bucket seats, power disc brakes, B/U .lite•, wind •hield washers , wide oval tires, day & nite
mirror, emergency flashers, seat belts & shoulder harne ss, bowma seal, lifetime lubrication ,
JO gals. gas. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -$585 DISCOUNT FROM STICKER PRICE.
BOB LOfiGPRE PONTIAC IS AUTHORIZED BY PONTIAC MOTOR
DIVISION TO PERFORM ALL WARRANTY SERVICE REGARDLESS OF
WHERE YOU ORIGINALLY PURCHASED YOUR PONTIAC
LET US HELP YOU ARRANGE
YOUR FINANCING !
• SHOWROOM HOURS •
Mond1y th ru S.turd1y, 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Sund•y 10 A.M. to 7 P.M.
· 13600 Beach Blvd. · Westminster (Beach Blvd. al Garden Grove Fwy .) · Call 892 -6651 or 636-2500
' .
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~AJLY Pilot Thur!oda)', Aprll 9, 1970
TSPOilTlTION I TRANSPORtATION I TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION
...., c.19 98GG Now Coro ' -Now Cora fllo Now C1rw 9100 lmPortod Cort HOO
TllANll'OllTljTION TllANll'OllTATIOH TllANSl'OllTATION TllANSl'ORrATIOH
I~"!! Cort -~-~ t11t UIM Cart ·-u...i Coro tM
g§I go-c
1=1 0 ;Ei: o ....
'al < 0 0
. ; ii
n
Cl z a • -
,
I
--= "°
•
n 0
I: m
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-< -<
8~ z ::a < mm ::a 0 .... z
ii > ,..
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IC' -"' n
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"' ,.. -:ill: m ...
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-I
0
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•
.M6
·n~ MG"it n..ct.n. s fn•t
Nied. onlall•bod; A illlfr
work. $MIO. MWll6 or
642-9546: .................
POISC ..
VOWWA•IN
"11111$ •
WI PAY TOP IUICK
'56 BUICK • FORD"""'"" Squirt Sta. CASH ... __ _. ____ .__ Wqon. Ma.to tranl. P/I. ~ 4 dr. Rani like R / H. whlte w l t b bl'O'Nb I
Jor ultd CUI • llUGb ,.a new. $1(1), Call 60-3Mf l!\191 pUei, , Olrorne rll, Goo4-
oell 111 lllr frrlll ........... , or wknds, )'Mr Double F.aale t J rt a. llOJH CfflMa' . LEAVING for Germany , S2T5. &40-1* Eve• I:
• ¥ ;JnUt tell '&I Skyiirk coupe, wkndL ~
'61 PORliCHE, -q . Aik""' S1Jn ~ • xlnl. l'M. 536--2611 or 1963 FORD Sta. w ... LtD 1
Radials, new ~ ~. .. 18211 Bncb m+d. ' : &:.2030 Country Squire. 10 pua. Best otter OYit SltlOD. Call H··-~ lb I / bl •u •-.,.,,,,,. M I ---BMdl C"DIL1 "C p/I. p ' p w, p IH • ~ or ~·11 U1 KI ~ _ " ~ TM stereo nd. 390 e•· j
"'" by •112 . .;. . \ PAY .... d a.ooo '"'··· -Prlv. P17. ''2 pol<icHI -... CAD El Dorodo. NI Clll '4>1%18
Excellent conit'~~ S-. . cdl 1, pWr, vinyl rf. leather inter,,b,60-l-;F°'ALCON""'"'"'•'°'ta'""."'w:::":::--. 7lD•
S.. al ~ ~ Blvd., fO YOUR • ""'°· Prlv. ply. $l9B$. WW new robbe•, iunl "'°" PJO. C.M. afterl.3:30 PM. · 1 ·~ , accept trade ln. Wkday1 on-Allo •n raJcon •ta. .......
'67 PO~ ·912 . No 5'9-*llll'llJor \ • O .~ · • · ly6"-JM.2orC:U)G5-76l'T, Nffd1workJ5Q.Atterlpm.
cleaner cu ~.wh!re! All lJ'lO HARBOR · NNEU.: •.' ext 23. 8*--2772
xtzu. 36.000 mt Muoi..... CQSl'A .,.;:;.VD. CHMOLET 'ff c ... SOilOli oe VIiie . .,='"'r"°ALCO;;....~N~w"'....,,=-,,dlx"".1
believe. 675-4659 ff! 6_. _\ 1.,..---'-"-'-'...;;;,=.--For Immedl4te SUe Inter.. auto., MR. tood
\
"GS FORSCH~. Int Cond. '68 VW llCJ c:: ~:-·:~ ALL •t PARTS road. 14SO or belt ottor.
AM/FM B ... ;..__ ......___ Call alter!: P.u 5f2.3l20 !~~======I · • \ .. ,... '-JUUme .,.hll, radial tires, ....
ter. Call &tZ..1031. honey beip: &iah. 4 apd, U.= ~ •iil; CADILLAC Sedan
--:-r dlr,Hlthllltan" wwnnan. . TOP I BUYER· DeVW.. """"'· xlnt '°""·· JAVEUN
SUBARU &'?;;!!':· ,t2!'~' ~ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ~ "' "'°·--aft • ·," Jawlln ·ssT . ; * '70 S.'!IARU t96'977l. 11111 _,, i:'':i1-'8' CAD,• <p. Dvl. by•OWnr. GrHn m•"11loi#llh blaok ln-
H"" Now • ' '6.7 VW Fastback u. llacb. , pc .• pb., ' ..,. •I. aftr. ,,., terior, VI; alr oond..•ulb-I~te DelivelJ , p.m. nt: ,495,SU maUc, power 1tftrirw, 1000
e 90 MPH C.pabllity 2 I>r.' 4 spd, .dlr. MkinJaht Autt L•n1"8 MIO '68 EL DORADO, fully actual ~.Fadary WUT.
e 35 Miles Per Gallon black u:t. Take pickup truck equlpt, private party $5600. See at .
• Beautiful Styling in traj;kgr small down'. Full FORD AUTHORIZED 67>5187 or 6C-O!!OO. Kustom Motfrt
Test Drive T"""" At price' $1?187. (XIH836). Call LEASING SY......,... 1968 SEo.o.u ....... Vilt -~11 145 Baker 'CM St0-5915 _,, Phill alt JD AM 494-1029 or ~ac.i.u "'' ......., • "'" e, • · . Kustom Motors 540-31 America's 1arsfft 1eU'lng xlnt cond, full pwr, air,
145 Bol<oc. CM 540-591S Ol. """"" kw ..._ or "'' .:J"'n"'.OO.:'Pvf:=;:,pJy:''::'":m.4165:=:':::·::==1--!MER~~C:!U:!:R:!Y:__f '--------VW Van, camper wilt, reblt leuir:ic ol all type can and --
--------trans, '" .... oompt.i. trucliL c-01,JT ~ Colony Pari<, 10 -TOYOTA h•ke o"rhoul A now tilu e Immod!ate dellvory from 1 ••~R ;wog, all xtzu. PrJv, ply.
.$800. 5J0.1108 ..., 300.,.,. and -z. 28 IU60 (213) ,,,..23'4 '70 TOYOT"'S '69·Volks-..n. AM-FM ta· •Com11et1Jlvo ntet .· Camoro t ,~ full .,11;,========I
... dlo. Cartridge-oU ti.Her, tm. • New cu du.lenbip l9lYiee ~ MUSTANG
maoulale· rondltion! $1650. • NI ''""""'" Yalu. ior Amorloln -"• yollow fin. In sloclc. Immediate de.livery,
Authorized Dealer Call -• 4 ~· -~·· P"oent ..... Wt. Uc, No. XWYIM. , 1--------.. , pm., ~•. J"-....... . · $U9'.IO 1965 ltfuatang Conv. V.8, !
VW Vrn '60 '63 •--15 •All populor -•Ylil-pd low mil ••.n · .,..per able 11---m ·Moton :......:"'one. ~n~' ell'!· Porsche eng. zero ml'1, l\llanll •~ ,.,.. .. ,.,o
Real sleeper. <n4) f16.-2406 For Co~=:.:~':'-Call MS Baker, CM · 5t0-5.915 19&6 MUSTANG, 6 eylindtr,
65 VW. Su.moor Leulna Manager '67 CHEV. Imp. SIS, ~ dr, very clean $995.
1st Owner $795 hdtp, new 396-325, turbo. ' * 6'5-0lll(I *
900 So. Cst: Highway 642-0350 or 646-7670 ThMclere hydro,. A/C, P/S, radio, 1965 MU5rANG H.T. v-1,
Lagun• Beach 1988 "VW BUG" Xln't ROBINS FOID new tires, excl. cond., 1 auto Vlbruonic radio Top
494-7503 * 540-3100 Cond, Extras. $.1595. 2060 Harbor Blvd. owner. 644-4289 aha~! $1095. 646-5165 •
830-0556 Cos.ta Me11. i &d.oo:io '65 CHEV. Impala 2· dr FOR aale: 1969 Mach I · 1TIOIYIOITIAI: 1961 Volk& Squareb.ack · hnltp. Craiger wh1&. rlh, Muatang. Xlnt cond. PriY.
• --· _ 11"1!-,.;.m1 0 .,. •-'* ; "'·• '°E •-'* p/1. 40.000 Ori&-m;·L Xlnl Owner. Call m.19'9. . "'"' ••gs NI hts ..,...-~~ ..,...-cond. $1100. 833-2383 •-V-1 Mark II Wagons .. ,"'"'" I '68 rA..i l'l..o • ..:.. .u. Vil '66 CHEV 11 Su ...,,,... J...oo Mustgnz, ll'ffTI, ' HI Lux IPlekupi '67 VW, Xlnl cond. Muat tell, .......... ~ "'"-' le, full ' • per D.,....., auto, air con<!, full. pwr.
L.nd Crvl .. ,1-bouJ'ht 3td car. pwr, air. Wt per mo. 6. Cyl. 1 Owner. Low 111. Phone 9624100 e'Vts-wknd.s. SOU·TH COAST 1995. 541...,-,, lt2-161t\========J Wogons · l1DI ' * 962-.1029 CAii ·LEASING "'/wkndo
DEAN ·LEWIS ·i;:.~ .,.'i::'.'':1 •~,'°~-300 IV. C.t Hwy, NB. 645-2182 "66 Chovoll• ss, 421, Hum t OLDSMOBILE
196t Harbor, C.}(.j 64$.930! S700. 54~. spd, Jardine beadus, Hayes '67 OLDS CUtlau Supreme .
BTT.. M"A"'"'Y '62 vw_;?!_E.!,!>!., WOllK lkod c-n. "°' cluloh, _,_ ...... Xlnt Very .. cond. Auto "'"'· .11..iL Ar.. •"-"'->"_,., 'I" cond. Sell or trade. 613-4231 r/1, r/h, wire wh1 cown.
.. TRANSPORTATION '66 IMPALA ' dr, alr-cond. URI l"l!g. au. $1500. By ITIQIVIQITIAJ 1 ;:;bac~ O ~~ s:,;_ .. G ~ . CARS Ir TRUCKS ' R&H, PS/PB, gd. t:itt1. orig. owner. Call 673-3145 = ---~ -=-.$9' ANO UP Make ~ffer. Days 6":-ll'l6 '64 Olds Starlin, aD power,
18181 BEACH BLVO. 968-~l btwn -4-6 pm. . is.oo DELIVERS <oa.c) aft a:» Pl\.t 5"(),..839l auto, air, tilt st.mg whl,
Hunt, Beach 147-1555 64 VW BU$· ' \Vi: ~Af1-RY OU,R '48 CHEV. 4 dr Secl. All ·orlg'. tack, new tires. Immac ;
1 mJ N. or O>&d Rwy. 1111 Bda Xln't cond. &fG.8163 OWN CQNTRACTS 1 Owner ear. XJ.nt ruanlna cOnd. $850. 968-3465 ·
EVEN IF cond.. S250: 96&--75Z. '61 ·OLDS 442..P/s, P/b, '67 Toyota Crown VOLVO our OF STATE '68·CHEV ss P/w, air cond. All Extru.
Cust6m Del uxe. 3 spd, dlr,. ---BANKRUPTCY· P.fany extras, aood engine' S1850 ... MUST SE.LL!
Arctic white, one owner, ~ 145 -WAGONS DIVORCED, ETC. $6.50. * .5J6'..812T 6?~ arter 5:30
cal car. $786 full price. Taite 164 -SEDANS BtUE CHIP 1955 Chevy 2 dr sedan, verj + '62 · O'L DSM OB I L E
smal l down. Will flnan. pvt. VOLVO AUTO SALES clean S175. Startlre, clean, xlnt titts,
ply. Call Phill aft 10 am Now in i tock! 2145 HARBOR BLVD. !543-!528 good condition. 646-2633
494-1029 or 540-3101 fTFY264) Imme-dtate Delivery (at Victoria) '65 442 OLDS. auto &: loe.dedt
1969 Toyota
Land CruiHr
llOOE Sport c ... .,. S4JJ.43ffl COIITA MESA "2-9100 C0!'4T1NENTf.L :.. ~ call a1lu :
DEAN LEWIS FLEET SALE 1961. FULLY •qu;ppod $225. ·65 oLDs·diuuo, 2 dr. air.
Mint condition. One owner. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64&-9303 . 646-3192. 25,;.1 Vi!ta Baya, radio powtr xJnt cond. '69 Volvo Muat aell th11 week, (5) 1970 Newport Beach. 53 ooO ml $1295 642-Cm Kustom Motors Custom Impalas, I o a d e d ' • · ·
'1Joor Sodan. ·~ """'· dlr, 13100-(2l 1970 .......... CORVAIR PLYMOUTH disc brake-s, automatic. Lo. loaded $3000. (2) 1910 Ford
8t5 &ker, CM 540-5915
VOLKSWAGEN cal car one owner. Honey alaxles, loaded $3125. --------1---------1 tan. $1199 (VIL891J Call Phlll 6J5..S480 '6:> CORVAJ~ Monza. Xlnt '70 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner .
aft 11 am 540-3101or494-1029 cond. Lo m i ' & • Days Full p'ltT, tape dk. Tranlt to
1959 BUS, new valves, bunk. I ~======== 1968 LeMANS f Dr. Hrtitp. 642-8274, eves 534--7678. Germany. Price rlaht.
lee box &: more. Ready for $2345. 1966 Imperial 4 Dr. 1962 Corvair P.1onia f dr, $2995. 962-8650
camping $700. 646-56!2 Antiq".!.!.6 Classics 9615 Hnitp, $2145. Both have r/h, 4 s,pd, ad tirts, id
'66 VW Good Cond. 1937 'FORD V-8 2 dr. All orig. power_ &: alr/cond. Owntt. cond. S250. 347-8115. 64~645 aft 5 pm Show cond. New paint &. 673-2259. Efttl 644-5912 PONTIAC
•6~,~vw=~CAM==p=E=R-xl-nl-.,,-.. 0 1 tires. Must sell. Best ofter. WANTED; Good tra.nsporta. CORVEnE '&I FIREBIRD 400
Best oHe.r/trd f/lale mod Call 846-4177. tion car, must be reai. ---------1\78, pwr. steerinr. low mlln,
VW & cash, 1209 'w. Balboa. •utos Wan-• f700 Call &12-2931 1958 CORVE'l'J'E. Need s R/H, dlr, all de.luxe equtp. "" ,_ crank Jell Ne-w paint. $400. Xlnt shape in and out. Blue ,
'66 VIV Model llOO. Vuy BUICK 64&-1506 Book 1241JO •• Mw o!ln • good cond. gel tires, 1 * JUNK CARS + ""' Take t, 1,.,. • trad
Own"'· Call "" •4~. To d .,__ •..., FSTBCK 32'1, f 1pd. ol"I!,. .. ear in e. " .,.._,..., we away S'•""' Hunt, new rtd paint, map, Wlll finance pvt. pty. !WGL.
'69 V\Y Squarebaek. Stick. Ed Stone Sf.3..8913 '62 Buick Special, needs eng. + xtra., Sharp. 4!M-«M& 212) Call Hal aft 10 am
0000 mi. \\'hite/blk int. Before 8:00 AM or after 3:30 work, good brakes, tiret I: ===: 545-0634 or 494-9773.
Privale party. 646-3179 pm. trans. S'm. MZ-S866
Enjoy your drivin9 with • car that 9ive1 you both economy end d•pencl·
ability. Eech of th••• can will do ju1t th1t ••• com• in end take • good
look •f them today!
'69 CAMPER ...... $3499
,.,..,_ u~. Ollt. ltlT AU
'&l CAMPER ....... $2496
'o•ttt, .. ,. '"I. fttl '14)
'64 VW BUG $996
'6& YW , •• , .... Cl( $1286
ltH19 a HMtV. fVlll:lll: nn
'61 DATSUI .... -s1• """"'"° wlw ..,_, ('IWJ M71
$1196
Jt ..... ,.....,, --,, •• 111'1
'6& vw aua
'&& VW BUS
ltM19,l!Mtw.\.-.
.,...., ...... 1111'"' •11
$1&9&
'81 VW BUG $J416
11111119, HNlft'. 4VTW Ml)
168 VW BUG $1696
ll'tcJfrf Alf, 11111119 &
Htt ..... CYC\. llJI
'68 OPEL ""°'"' $11111
111: ..... llMlft' • ...,. .. "" ""· cwu. ff7) • •
·&a 111B s1•
11 .............. .,.. .......
(Wl'"T 1111
'66 VW BUG
lt .. le, ,....,. CTAIC Mil
$1291
-·''llVWBUI $181& ................. tieldl.
, fMI. '""' (VCY HU
,
DODGE
1968 GTO Pontiac, air cond, ,
a; DODGE Dart Conv. (Prlv. am/fm radlo, stereo deck,
Pty)"' V-8. Auto or shlfl bueke-t seals. vinyl top. Mu1t
Good tires. Light blue sell • transferred overseas.
w/drk blue 1op. \V/W. $2298. 494-T.BI. Evenma:
Radio, etc. Bucket seats. 494-6.120.
Mmt Sell Cl.n Finance. 628''·•=-=..,~,~tl~ac~Co~nw-rt~c=ro
Malabar •cross from Irvlne alt cond, p/s, p/b, itereo: c.c. uldng $1200. am/fm, MW til"l!I, I 0 w .
'69 DODGE Custom 2 dr, mi's, >.1n 't cond. 6'15-3812
auto tranl!I, p/s, p/b, rlh. '59 Pontiac
Must sell. 546-4320 $125 or best otter
:66 DODGE Dart, 273 V8 eng, 64&-Jlgj
auto. r/h, aood cond. $995. PONTIAC 1961, good running
673-7291 car, $175 or best olfer. •
•
151 DOCJtO $150 54&-3767
""""" ro""R's.i.=,'"·e<"'c"'ro"'p.,"°,"u"'ac"".1
Gd cond, clean, Best otter '.
get& it. 548-5939 FORD '98 GTO Beautiful condition. !
------. --Red, Hurst 4 lpd, p/1, p/b, ~
'64 CORTINA, f spd, new radio. QWck Sale! 645-0307 i
brks, trans, front end, tapeJ~~-=====:J
dk. .,., palot job. many •"MILER
xtru. Be1t offer ow.r $550. ft"'-·
, &12-9280 d~, 962-7*2 eVH. '65 RAMBLER, 2 dr hrdtp. l ;
63 COUNTRY . Squll"t 9 Owner, lo mi's, auto, p/a, '
radio, Mater, &II'. ~2718 r /h. S690. 64f.4m. l
~.. p/b. Pl.s. p/Mat, '61 RAMBLER Amer. Sta. '
ndKI, hea ler, air. 8~7718 W t d lh, 1 ·-, JIB ag. r, r auo. -· , . . cau 546-ms ,
'59 FORD Slick 1 h I t l. :
Cnnlllhalt out Good for TollRD ' part>. Good u ..... ~ .,,,,. 1 ~-------··· dltioner ~ 151 E. 21st, CM IL"O T-BlRD bl k I ad : srw , -,ac aau, A.. ag. Ford 68 .Country leather, full pwr, fact 1ir, '
Squire. 10 pau, air cond, new tll"l!a, bnke8. tra n1., ~
r/h. 646-8394 art 5. valve job. Xlnt appearance.
'57 RANCHERO, good cond. Alter 6 pi:n, 673-6478
N~ uphbl.r Motcr ft !f.4 T·Bml)) wtU~-rt'd Inter,
$43:1. O.U ~. nHlt '*>klr, new btka, air. :
1966 FORD t pus. Country S harp. Best ofr. ?03 j
SquJtt. 1 01''1'1e:r, xlnt cond. Luttapur,tCdM. l'lf>-4397 •
$1550. 673!-11593 ' -'1
.-., Ford "'"'· c.iax~ "'°· ; VAUANT p/1, p/b, auto. Ir a n.a . , 1· )
ndk1. ·Barpln $395, 673-6806 1986 VsHant 100 Auto, ?itust • "¥rtrlC..'t. 'Good cond. $793. !
DAILY PD.Dr WANT ADSt 5'<1617, '
!l111o....:..~ ....... •••=•·mm ..... m ... nMn.,.d.._nnswn..,d~m,._n•••·.,.m•·==•d""'"••~ri .... d._.~ . .,. ••• ~ .. -.. .. ._ ••• w·=~=·-~·~·~-~-·-·-•~-·~-~~~~~·~·-~~~~-~-~ -
---.--·--------·---------·-~-----~--::--------------...... ,.----'"'.':'----,.--~-------~
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7 -,,A.ID l'OLITtcAL ADYl!ll:TlllMfHTI ..-. -• •
~ ,.-.. ,_;,I l .. HUNTINGTON BE ~CH • ' • •
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MAYOR JACK GREEN
True Rep resent•tive of P~ople
-HUNDREDS · ENDORSE -
A i;:roup of Huntington Beach resl~enis today claimed that Mayor Jack Green wu
not onl.Y the people's rePrescntati've who l istened, but who aftac:ked problems .and
>found AOlutlons quickly, They said that as·tax paying residents of the city they-had
found the most responsive Jegislator in city government was the Mayor, and they
offered unqualified endo.rsement. of the Mayar!1 record over the p&1;t.. four years.
and his candidacy ror re-election 011 April J.f.· ·
• ~ome of ;he residents e~doising \~re.re: ' Count!lmtn Ind Mrs. JI•'.' M1triiov
II!!! 11\d 1':011111 ai'11nev
. Tl>d Incl M•rv SPVl'll•r
Carl ind J111nn1111 Wlldf!"nwn
I. Mr1. Marn1tt1 Pl'tlr;
Mr. Tom WtlCll I Mr. 1nd Mrl. cr..rles M11ttnwrn
Mr. Ind M,._ Tom C~r
Mrs. Prim Knvlt
Mr. Ind M••· M1urv NetlO!I
Frid ind ••-Edw1rd•
Mrl. Hlldt N~lll!lln
Mr. 1nd Mr1. Ltrrv Currin
Mr. I ncl Mrs. Rad c""*"
Mr. 111(1 Mrs. H1rrv, H1mmer1
Mr. Ind Mrs. GtMlM Ooltsl>ll
Mr. •r>d Mrl. It'. M. o.GulH
Mn. Bonnie Gregory
Mr. l lo)'CI Notk1r
• · Mr. Ind Mn. John l .ckltl
Mr. 1r>d Mr1. JamH 01nrwlttl
Jatk 111(1 Lorrtlne M1llbt"
Mr. Ind Mn. J1tk R1Yr1C1ld1
Mr. 1nd Mfl. Gtorot 5talitl
Ttd 1nd Lorr1!111 Fa~r
Mr. Ind Mrl. Jo. (O!itl
• Mr. and Mr1. L1rrv Olli•
OoMld tni:I R~tll1 Rtl!llllO
'JOiin 1ni:I Rllblr'ta wa11rm1n
Mra. llart11r1 GllllQOS
Gllbt•I tnd BtllV Arm1111t
;,. Cllar!ts tnd Jov Ollnlltll
•Bob ind Juanita W1llo1r
Mr. tl'ICI Mr.. Wllllam How1rd
Mr. t l'ICI Mrs. Edward Otklvlc
Gtorae Ind ~mona COllllloll
Mf1. lltrblrt Mllkot11lcll
Mr. •!Id Mr.. Gent Pollen
Mr. and M f1. Tlll!t V1rlo
Mr. 1r>d Mr1. Robtrt llr•lM¥
.i Mr. tl'ICI Mr1. tMn Murr•v
G.oroe I ncl 5111rlev Wl'llGll
"'"· arn a.11 II~ tnd Ritt lond.r-N
Mr. 111(1 Mf1. Ed ll1rr1notr
CllarlH Incl M..-cil SPl!dt
R111tv ind INflftW W111111!
Mr. John C«*•
Mr. Al Ellan
IN. Oon Loeffltl'
.J.),.1v 1r>d DDnnf Rtl111$
Joe 111d Bell~ K1rtla
Mr. S.m Jl)l'IMOn
~·· Ml\ flo4I Stetlrffll!
Mr. 1ncllMl'l,fE1rl 0.brlel
Mr.""' Mn.!E'll '9-rlm
-Mr. crl1 c'. Crl1
Mr. Ind M!"I. Jot lloyle
Mr. Incl Mrl. 0.Vt Stone
Mr, 11\d Mfl. Don lewis
Mr. incl MrL 0.VI llllnd
Mr. Incl Mrt.. ,nod Secltlkl
Mr. tl'ICI Mrs.l\.lll!Mt H1rrbon·
Mr1. Fr.nil W•rd ,
Mr. ll'ICI Mrl. ~llrt! T. R""11 Mr. tl'ICI Mr1. t n ,r,t1r1•0..' Mr. ""' Mrs.R. I • "&ob~ 1J11111wtli Mr. ''~ Mr1," O.v. ,,,. Mr.HI a.~ Mr, 1 M!'f. Ht!l.Jllll . Mr. 1 Mrt. 111.t)M Dl'#lllr1t 'If" Ind CllrT.JtA.l'L ~" lOI..~·· . -· -\ 1rJ" I Cllllkl • • • O.vt ·tn111m
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l lH 1fld a1r11Ar1 K1llv
Mr. ll. J. W1kh.wiw1
Mr. C. E. "1111" Woods
Mr. Jl'ITV Shu
Mr. 1rd Mrs. CKll C•wY aiu 1116 Vlralnl• Li!'Wl1
Rtv. Jollnltt Cn1mlller
ROlllkl Ind $hlri.y Co.ir
5tw1 fnd 0.IOrft Coc!'ir111
Mrs. 111111 OivlMll
M ... Oonlld ANlrt1.en
Mr. Henrv 5hlos1k1
Mr; WlCI Mfl. '3r~1n ket"l'l"I
llM. 1not Mrs. Jlm L-Miclfirr
I Mr ..... Mri. Roti.rl ~herrlcll
Mr. 1nd Mrs. ,Rkh..-d C-v
Mr. 1not M<1. R. E. c11...er1n11s
Philip I nd Grace Elmer. .
Mr. G•rv o.eo1 ..
J1dr. Ind Etltn lr1ndl
Mt'I Incl Mlrv Clerk
Cl1r1"'9 ind M11111r1t armwiler
JOHilh F. encl B'tYl•lv Woodlord
M~ -1nd Mr1. Henrt llniiltrlln
Mr. 1..i Mrl. G1rv VIII
Mr. tnd Mrs. O.vld Cow111 '
Cllrl1 1nd JwnUt C1rr
M r. end Mrs. Vicki• llrotrr.n
Mr. 1nd Mr.. Cllvln Dtnlltm Sr,
Mr. K1llh kroll
Mr. 11'111 Mr1. Bob PllChlll '
J1tk Ind Marl-llotl>ll
Mr. Ind M .... JI"'" ... If" I
Mr. 1r.1 M,... 11111 ller't:tO '
.ntk Ind H1ncv RIV
Mr.1r.c!Mri.Jt« . I
Mr. Ind Mrl. Cl1111 M-c~ '
Mr1. PilqQy 81lrd I '
Mr. Ind Mrl. Jldt~•" , Mr. iltld M!'f. Pllllllil
RI¥-Ind Olllt LI '
Mrs. DDnnl Ho<ton ~ ind JMn ¥ertlnlkllf1
Gewa. _1rid Mlr111ti Wll'1\!
, Mr. Herold &oulrr
Mri. Flort 11 .. 111
JHI 1..i Mtcl 1'rct1rsln.er
Frtnk t!ld Eull C0tnYN
11n ..,,. llln·l A lberi
Her1htY Ind Mlllll Gthrh
Andv 1nd Jot1n Ytl'llr
Jolln Ind Rulh K-
Mr, Frtd Wnl
R)cl11rd incl ll1rt11r1 C.mllblll
Ltrrv 1nct C1rolt Riki
John Ind Pt! Mtndrell
Boll •rid Jatkltl Hin,,..,
Mr. 1rld Mf1. Wtl! lwonllltr Mr. Incl Mfl. q~~ (wdt ~~~~~~·,~~&\\:'~Id H1m111kl
Mr, '::I Mr1. l!IOb Kiili • Mr. a Mra. RlttrdO L-1
al. •NI "'a'·mJ" 5••m~"· r. •rid ra. !m Min
O. ar Cl mtrll Mt. 1 "· l(lllrd Jl•annlno MI. 11 Mrs. ftl~li:ll<Ml!
Mt. M~rd if.alhenY J Mr. I Mrs. ~ntY r-~ Mf. ~ Mrs. al1I H1ll1rn Mt. t Mn. 1rry o,.,-
Mr, 1 · Mrl. E ll1be0Cll Mr. tond Mri. rvr/lt~""' Mr. 1..i Mrl. 1111 M"-Ind Mrt. l'lhl .
M1ri."'°'n'lfM==-· O\rff¥ ~'?, ,,:,"1.1,~Mlir• ark'..
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''·TIME. FOR POSITIVE .
ACTION TO CRE~ATE IDEAL CITY''
M~yor Jack Green today outlined a
positive p'an t o continu• progress and
develop.,,ent of . Huntington Beach. He
said theit the second important phase
was now abAut to begin, to · bring the
city unheralded prosperity.
Citing · the rec0rd of the past four
years, the popular M a yo r pledged to
continue beautification similar to the
beachfront, in all city are a s. He also
went on record for total support of a
top grade expanded police and fire de·
partment to protect the residents of
fhls city.
Mayor Green said he envisioned a beau-
tiflil recreational city, second to none
the nation, where property values • 1n
•. l
and finest educational facilities were
guaranteed.
All this was totally possible s aid th•
mayor, as he actively began campaign•
ing fo~ his second term in office.
He pledged his continued i~ve~tment of
energy-and talents into the city's · de•
velopment programs. He · said · ~he citj
should have much more industry, which,
properly planned, could b~ . of tremen•
dous value to the economics of mas•
sive development.
Promising to continue working to achieve
these aims, Mayor Green said he would
hope to ensure Huntington Beach would
be the finest city in the neitictn to live,
and raise our families.
VOTE APRIL 14th x ·N. J. (JACK) GREEN
LOONY
LES
SAYS
Some candidates tell u11 oil made
this \o,vn what It ls today. \Ve
agree: And th1t'1 what we're trying
to change.
L.A. F.
MAYOR'S ACHIEVEMENTS CITED
Recognized in county,
state and n1tlon
Mayor Jack Green is recognized
outside the city of. Huntington Beach
by county state and n a t i o n a 1
authorities, as a man or stature and
integrity. Listed among his
achievements while in office:
P re si dent, Orange County
Division, League of California cities.
Statewide Public Representative,
Joint Assembly-Senate committee on
Seismic I a f e t y , post.earthquake
recovery and redevelopment.
Member, Executive Committee,
Southern California Association of
Governments.
Member, Lt. Governor's local
Government lask force on coastline
preservation.
·HARDWORKING POPULAR
• t· • • • • ' • • . ,
--MAYOR
To aay Mayor Jack Green hu been busy since he was elected to _ the city
council four years ago ill an ul14entatement -at times he has bee~ frantic.
The popular mil.yor who h¥ been a pacesetter on the _councJI . from the be·
i:innJng or hill' term, bu however, never been too busy for hl.S constituents.
Whether his help has been requ@lted by a worried paren~ ~~owi about the narcotics problem or a group ol women interested In city beautlf1cauon, Green has 'a!W.Ys made the ·time to hear thl!m out and act on their problems in a l'"BY that
would benefit the entire community. .
Bringing attention to the "good works" or area youth and women's groups
has been anottler penonal project of the Mayor who haa made personal commenda·
tions to manY'inllividuaJs in the city and to such groups as the local <:-"drtns Home Society auxiliary, the community cheat, TB Assoclatlon, Boy and Gi:.1 Scouts, Uttle
League and others. . . . Appearlrtg at (unctions of local 1ervlce organizations and assisting them In
rivic program11, the Jl.1ayor has become a familiar ll&Ure at bencflt events; partic~·
larly those designed to ald the cl ty'1 youth.
· ' ··The PfimC! fl aure behind formation of the city's Youth Coalition Committee,
he Is adored by 'the young people or Ule community and has been their "champion"
in such projects as 1ponso~hlJl' or a summer youth theater, rock concerts, Easter
Week Teen Center and teen art forum .
, For bis 'fY.Pntlnulng support the Youth Coalition awarded him the "Order or 1 the \\ritlte Hat.• U "one of the' ill time a:ood KUY•·" ln a world that echos with vibrations about the generation·pp that honor ls a.kjn to knighthood.
COMMIMI TO ll·IUCT MAYOi •lllM
1111 .,_, -C9tel,._. 19126 lr ... lllnt1 H111fl .. IH lw&ll
Portrait of Green
Jack Green has his Ceet on the ground
and hill head in the clouds and he'll tell
you so wilh a smile.
Knowledgeable in all phases of city,
cou11ty and state gover11ment, Green
takes the light approach to handling pro-
blems of the day but by no means takes
the problems lightly.
Ask him about parks, recreation and
beautification and he'll ten you-my mot~
to is "Kee p the City Green,'' but
elaborating on this quip his thorough
research on lhese issues comll;S through
clearly.
Hts quick wit and warm sense of humor
combine i11 his sha rp punc;:hy speeches to
make hint a sought after speaker at
meetings and conferences throughout the
state. These same qualities have earned
him a wide circle of friends in all walks
of life.
H1s quest for enllghterunenl on behalf
ol the people of Huntington Beach and his
sincere appreciatloJ11 of education takes
him to many seminars and workshops OJll
civic airairs, all with an eye to applying
the latest technology to aolving the pro-
blems at home.
It even took him back to school
-making him truly one of the big
men on campus at Long Beach State last
year.
Working for a masters degree in
polillcal science while serving ns mayor
and council chairman would be too much
fO!' many men to handle but Green's
seemingly boundless energy and will·
ingness to "make time " for things that
are really important, have allowed him to
do both expertly and sllll manage to
serve on many boards and committees
effecti vely.
Working around the clock more days
than not, Green seeks out the people of
his community and lends his personal
touch to solving their dilemmas. His door
is always open, his handshake sincere and
his smile genuinely warm and friendly.
Mrs. Green mother or 5 children, 1 pro-
fess ional woman in her own right, (serv·
ing as children's librariu for the
Orange County Library), sighs when
recalling the countless re-heated dinners,
uneaten breakfasts and hurried luncheons
her husband bas had since his term as
cou11cilman and mayor began.
"He thrives on it though," she says ad·
ding that somehow in spite or it all , he
manages to hold his own in the w.eieht
department. 1'lf there's a choice between
a jelly donut with some troubled citizens
·or a hearty breakfast at home with me in
my curlers. J ack will take the donut
every time," she relates wlth a grin.
As mayor of the city Green has !Ogged
more hours at city hall than any ten of
his predecessors put together, bringing the
run range of talents 011 the city staff into
harmony and putting them to work· as a
team under his arUul command, when
approaching issues of the day.
Closeness and respect of the staCf have
given Green an edge over others In whose
footsteps be follows. His wlllillgneas to
work with rather thaJ11 in spite of non·
elected city officlals has made him a
welcome rigure in aJl departments ol city
hall.
Constantly amazed by his futuristic
thinking, his careful consideration of all
sides of each issue and his ability to
come to concise decisions based on (act
rather than speculation, members Of the
staff look forward to each new challenge
with excitement rather th8JI: fear. They
speak out on issues freely knowing that
Green will weigh their words along with
the opposite point .of view and act Jn the
best 'interest or the city everytime,
without personal animosity.
Things have certabdy been looking up
In Hu11tington Be1ch over the past fc•1r
years and with voters electing to "Keep
the City Green," for anolher term-the
sty's the limit.
I
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DAllV PILOT
IPA.JO .... ITtCAL ADY.I
··ELECT
JOE
.TOMCHAk
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LAGUNA
BEACH
CITY .
COUNCIL
Dedicated to:
...., Efficiency in City government.
J;I Protect · and preserve our
hiUsides and beaches.
"' Fair and effective law
enforcement.
"' Responsible expenditure cf
city funds.
JI' Citizen' participation in implemen·
ting Laguna's new General Plan.
"' Maintaining tho integrity cf cur
town's uni(tue char1c~r. ·
NOMINATORS
Willi•m Wilcox•n
Alic• King
Dr. C.rl Johnson
D••n w.stg••rd
Dr. A. E. ''P•t" Worthington
Or. Rob•rt Ftoneh
Donn• D•m•fri•des
Morgen Cuthb•rtson
G•offr•y Riker
loui1 J, Zitnik
CITIZEHS FOR JOE TOMCHAll
Helen A. lllund:: C1""'1ne It. Iowa
Mr, Ind Ml'$. T"°"'91 C. Wood RD!l ROii
Mr. Ind Mni, RObtrt HM'ftJ Johfl WllkHIOrl
Frint P. Sllm~ Jr. 1!11rb9r1 MllHJ
Mary Htwltndl or. Emrn111Yt1 C11fm1r•
Lolf. E, ChllOI 0811 FOiier
M l'$. Rtvin.111 A. l!l.kll"' Sr. 0..rln Rtldl
Mr. Ind Mn. Lorirn w. s .. 11 T11tl9 II, ,. • ..,.
WIUllm E, Pll'T'kh Fr1ncn Kii .....
Mr. end Mrs. Mr. Ind Mn, P1<.1I Grifin
L. E. Cz1rn~ Mr. 1nd Mrs. Ray Holm
Or. Ind Mrs, ~ Brot!llr'1lrl Mr. Ind MrL WIHl•m Mortimer
Mr. Mid Mrs. Edmund Vlfl Mrs. C.IMl'lnl Cll9mben
0...... Mr. end Mn. L1rry H\11'11
Mr, Ind Mn ••. L. Pll'kl Mr. Ind Mn, JI'""*·-
Rft. "'· P1trlck C1lllnln Jes11e Gibb
tllr, Ind Mni. H. llrldfon:I Atwood Mr1. D. L, 8111111
Mr. Ind Mni. Arlflur Wiley J!MI K. T11mer
Or. Ind Mfl. H1rold ton..... Or, Ind Mr1. Fr•nll. Mt}'11rt
Mr. Ind Mn. "'" Wtlll
Mr. Ind Mn. Borll B1111n
Mr, ind Mn. O..rlel Morrn11
Martt-. Tr~
Mr. Ind Mn. Ln ElllW>lnlt Mr . tnd Mn. Amolll KINo
Or, 1nG Mrs. R....., Sitt! Cini! 8'"'"
M•<T ~ lloll Hvftl!wln
$111rley it.mold• Mr. Ind Mni. Mln'ltt t .... K
Mr. 11111 Mn. "'' IW"n Cll•rlH MCC:i. ... 111n °'. ~Id l.Mllrmtn
Mt'. "1d Mn: H1fl'Old w. a111 RoDlrT S, Henc.11
Mt'I. J-1111\'d Gill Wl'llltltw
Or. Ind Mrt. VHMll lllleli;m.n Ml<T 21\11
E. H, fir..... ,. "'II M fl-'-A 11111 ... T eecllCIWt inf· 1 ri, _.' ' ·--Mr, INI Mn. J...,. I". Andr'CWI
Mr. _. Ml'$. !kid SdlHf.,. J-C.Ulnl
E .... )'l'I M. ~ Or, Md ,,,,,.., H-BrlWftf
'
Mr • .,,. Mn. c;_,. Nrr!tlftNn
VOTE
.IOI
APRIL 14
H•milfon Mcinerny C•mpai9n Chelrmen
1010 E•1tm•n W•y, l•9un• leec:h.
Posters Talki•g for Listenin·g
OY kctuter Ai~s at Attention Gap '.
'Debate' Ole • Md out ... tbe. ....... :-. hJiproveU>tml•s· . ' kl•~. • problem or
Polltioal piota\os on utility -IT I I Im It I Ip g l'OIM Ill Hunu.,Mo Beach pr\>' :_..,.,,._ U1i1r pupils Is
-a bk <ii tm!ng by Hun· ·flt -IMll'm,I, according
• eqtlD. BtlCil councilmen tltls , to La 1:-&'nlat. ID ~ral com-
••"-. . , m~ons -r\ ·who '1111 ,• At a press confermce before leCture at Octa. View ScboOls
~ nmodf . t1181 sltua,lion 11!1
teaddna students and teachn·
i-. to listen.
'"'Wt pay lip servlce to
tll!d!Jnl U..tenlng," he COD• ~ "But we don't really
• teadl ft. It is an area that bu
-ajlnost tatalty neglected,
We.IMnd.more time teacbJna
a·* ·how to run relays .tbu
iboW tO bnprove his Ustenlq."
Stop talaliig, empathlu with
the OU.-person, ask quu-klll. llDlle and crun t ap. llrOCll'lllely, react to Ideas, IDd ;n1mte facts and evidence_
,• IA lddlllon to his acheduled
~ with Ocean VleW
Sd1bol Dlotti<t tea<hen and
adminlllr-., Lasnlcll 'will appear ill a lj)Odal _..
program for realdentl at 7:•
p.m. April 29 In t be Circle
View Sc b o ol mulU-purpoiie
room. There wW be no ad-
miss!On charge.
the councll meetial. Mayor April 29 and ao. 1
......_
' Jack Green, himself a cap-• He contend,I people usually
didate foi'· re-elfktion said he listen only with half an ear. Or
was "concemect·.at ill: nwnber not at all;
of signs being tacked to poles During his Hu n t I n g to n
and trees around Main Street Beach appearance, the Contra ~fi!I Lake Park. "I think the Colla Coqnly edU<ator will try
Lasnick, Who employs a bat~
tery of tape-recorded tests to
show listening skills before
and after bis program, sug·
gests the following Ideas to
~andidates are showing very poor A:ti.scretion, .. he said. 77~ Limit Rapped . ' ' ' Impact .Schools Cry for Aid
Later at the countll
·meeting, Pouncilman Do n
Shipley in vOting for approvsl
of a poster ·shop in the
downtown area commented, "I
don't see how any or these
posters could be any worse
than all of this P.;.litical jazz I see all ovt!t ilie city right 1 WASHINGTON (AP) -rece.ive 100 per cent ol their blunted just such an emergen·
now." \ , Schocol d1strlcts with high formula allotment. cy fund proposed earlier by
Shipley is. not .a candidate .con~ntraUons:ot feder al Congress upped the money the President.
for re-election. employes are fminng Congress to. $505 million but inserted Nixon, in vetoing an lnJUal
The pennit for the poster the ·Ti ·per cent restriction. version of the expanded aid
sbop, to be ruo by Kathy did them no favor, in rai&iog 1be three districts with Air bill, pledged that no achoo!
Fowler and Linda Philhart at Prelident Nilon's budget for Force installatioiis that have would be closed bec:auae of
123 Main St., was granted with , aid• 1ailored to meet ~lt threaten¢ to ·charge federal his Plans to cut back on hn~
the qualification that t h e financial problems. youngsters tuition are Grand pact aid.
posters be subject to In fact, three districts In :~~v'ue~N~~gdon, N.D., and But Congress refused to vote
ceDoll!OrShn Bonlipa. by city attorney the M:i<f'ftst are so Incensed . Defense Secret ...... Melvin R. hlm a special discretionary
.... 3 fund of between flO million
The police had giv61l the ap-by the pa.rado1ical;~ of bn-Laird noted the threat Wed-and $15 million for troubled
plicants a favorable report. .._ pact aid this year Ibey have nesday in making public a dlstricls such as Bellevue,
threatened to bar the dlildren letter expressing his concern Grand Forks and Langdon.
City's Pier
Gets Touch
Of Meri.Co
A Mexican flavor is being
added to the Fisher man
restaurant al the ead cf Hun-
tington B e a c h • s municipa l
pier.
The facility, on land leased
from the city, is going to be
remodeled to include a Mei·
ican restaurant.
"It will be a sitd own
restaurant and not a fast-food
operation." Vince Moorhouse,
harbor and beaches director,
told city couodlmen Monday.
Moorh1ou1 e said .the
restaurants would have
separate kitchens and
separate entrances. 'llle Ct>Un-
cil approved the project.
Trailer Park
Law Underway
With no discussion on the
Jssue, Humington Beach coun-
cilmen took a step Monday
night toward banning "closed"
mobile home parks in the city.
1be council pa!Sed 6-1 , witV
Dr. Henry Kaufman diuen-
ting, a motion by Councilman
Jerry Matney to instruct the
city attorney to draw up such
legislatkln. In a "closed" park,
the park operator .sells trailers
in addition to renting the
spaces.
Presbyterian
Rolls Down
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -The
Presbyterian Church in the
U.S. lost more than 4,000
members in 1969 -the first
!oss in membership s.ince ii!
origin in 1961, the church says.
There were 953,174 com·
municants on church rolls at
the end of 1969, compared with
957,430 in 1968.
ANl19UE
ANTICS
--·-·-.............. _
Tony T ovatt Sez
If lt'i Ml Ht le *'*' YN 1:111 •tll
eH 11 Ill .,._ wtl~I Mlllw111M1'
·-TOY.r.n•s INI 11"11 ... .,.... llltfl" ''""111H ... nl TlllA'I -HI wtrll I iOlll•WI,_ ... h .... IYtry!lllllt wlrm ,......, • _..I
Dell'! ........ "' ... • -.. TOVATT'S. '
TOVATT'S
APPLIAllCES ,
401 Mela St .. Hwll•• ...... ,, .. ,.,,
lre.ait111tr1t & W•l'Mf,
Fo•n.i. v.11..,
t61.J:416
-----------
to HEW Secretary Robert H. ;:::;;========;JI ol federal employes unless the Finch. Tl)e two are esplorlng
goverIU11ent or the parents possible em er g e n c y roun· Buy· Tho DAILY PILOT
pay extra tuition.· dationa for the most severely Just for 'Punufs'
At least 150 district.. ai:e. ;;a;;U~e~ct~ed~d~is~tr~ict~s.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ adversely affected, including Ii ·Congress, it . d e v e Io p s ,
20. or ~ facing severe budget
deficits, became of an. atnend-
ment to the ed~ money . > bill, officials of the Depart-
ment of Health, 'Education and
Weltare estimate.
The amendment, a d d e d
white Congress waa overcom·
ing White House resistance
to a doubll'bi of t~
President's budget fer impact
aid, provides no diltrict shall
receive more than 71 percent
or its authori:ed special ald
for educating the children of
federal employts. •
'Ibis baa melllt.1 an aid cut
fi>r llreas with 1irge fedetal
iJ'lsta)lations', such as military
bases, where children live on
the grounds. These districts
normally are reimburse<!:
between go aod 100 per cent
of local educa.Uon costs per
youngster.
Districts where children of
federal empk)yes live 1 n
private homes -moe:t notably
the Washington 1Uburbs -wiU
receive a net increase in im·
pact aid. The reason : ~y
have rarely received as much
as 77 per cent of a lesser
formula allotment in 10 years.
The Nilon administration
had asked only mi:z million
in impact aid for this fiscal
year. But the President
wanted all districts w i t h
children living on federal in-
stallations, which are excluded
from local school tu:atlon, to
WHY FRY
THIS SUMMER?
KEEP COOL ••. let us install an air
conflitioning .unit this very day. Call
or come visit us in person.
PACIFIC HEATING co; INC.
6 gas
AIR CONDITIONING SPECIALISTS
FREE ESTIMATES
egun• Hlll ... VJeJ•
8J7·2000
air conditioning i11s ....... c, .. ••·
PAIO POLITICAL A,OVERTISEMl!NTJ
WE ENDORSE
ALBER·T B. HOlllNDEN .
FOR
FOUNTAIN VALLEY CITY COUNCIL
Because of • • •
• HIS EDUCATION
• HIS· EXPERIENCE
• HIS COMMUNITY INTEREST
• HIS' PLANS FOR THE CITY
a.oger I Evie l t lteR
leb I J11n1tte lo1w1ll
Ti"' l l1tty lov•r
Ed I J1111e loy•in
01wld I Sh1ro11 l 11ffl119toft
Andv I Jo111 C1m1r1!1
Miki & S1ndv C1pi11i
Ro11 I Dtrlt111 Cl1r~
G1or91 I S11• Cre1by
J :"' I V1l1111 Ebl•R
Jehft I Je111 6i11ot
Chuck I ly_nR Hitt
JohR I J1111 HiriloR
C1rl1to11 I Ev1 Hi111
H1nry I Miry Horton
1114 I To•i l1nc11f1r
E J . "l1w" I Jo Ltwi1
Ji"' I Ev1 Ully
Joi I Al1111 L11,01 ilt
Gino l M1ri1 M1ri11elli
K1~ M1humoto
J ohn I lvnn1 McKnight
' .
Ho1111r I F1v1 011n9h1r
J1rr1 I T1r"f' Pi1rio11
Dr. Roy I Mr1. Rich1rd1
Chri1 I M1 r91 Schn1id•r
l ill I Jo Sch11lh
Roy I E1ilo1r Shim1li
J immi1 I Mtlodi1 So1111
l1r11i1 I l1v1rlv Sv1l1i1d
lond I P.tt; Tho"'p1on
0111 I Dt1 Tr1vor
Gen1 I Arn1ll V1R D11k
Fr•d I Silly Vot1
l ob I Jw111 Wilch
Read the Statement of Qualification• mailed with your . ~
samiile ballot -then compare! Then vote for Albert B.
• •
Hollinden for Fount•in Valley City Council· on April 14,
1970.
COMMln11 TO ILICT ALllRT I . HOLLINDIN
Ge•rt• C~ -Cll1d""•"• t110 H .... , fe•11t.l11 Y.tllf
,,
..
I
HUNTINGTON BEACH
$HOULD RE· ELECT
TED W.
BARTLETT
Councilman
"YOUR MAH ON THE JOB"
Huntington Boach Mlffllclpol Elocllon April 14
e SoRd EXP*rience
e Responsive to the Voters
e A Record of Achievement
e Economy in City
Govemment
PARTIAL LIST OF ENDORSEIS
Mr. & Mrs. Allen Sisl•r
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Giller
Mr. I Mrs. Ed P. Sh•w
Mr. I Mrs. H•rry Hibler
Mr. I Mrs. Noble W•ite
Mr. Gom•r Sims
Mr. & Mn. St•n Smith
Mr. & Mr1. Robert B•zil
Mr. & Mn. Robert McAd1m1
Mr. & Mrs. H. B. C.rr
Mr. & Mrs. Woodrow B. Weidouk
Mr. F. D. Plunkett
Mr. & Mrs. l•rn•y Reisc:her
Mr. & Mn. Andr•w Yeiser
Mrs. M_•ym• Seltzer
Mr. I Mn. Tom Welc:h
Mr. Ch•rles 9. Colst•dt
Mr. I Mrs. D•rrell W•rd
Mr. I Mrs. Lois le81rd
Mr, Arnold J. Pods•d•
Mrs. Ver• Pocls•d•
Mr. Don Minnie
Mr. I: Mrs. Robert.Bel!'
Mr. W. L Sc:hryer
Mr. R1y K. Smith
Mr. H•rry Letson
Mrs. Jo•n Moiol•
Mr. & Mrs. Art Gillespie
Mr. & Mrs. Mix Bern1rd
Mr. & Mrs. Osc1r Myhre
Mrs. Alice M-eem•n
Mrs. Neome W•lkins
Mr. I: Mrs. M•rk Downing
Mr. & Mn. P•t•r Y•mei:eki
Mr. & Mrs. Jo• Wiggington
Mrs. Alice H1milton
Mr. & Mrs. J•ke St•w•rt
Mr. & Mrs. Ed Sulliv•n
Mr. &·Mrs . N•t• R•mpfon
Mr. & Mrs. lv•n Hooker
Mr. & Mrs. Rey Lamouree ~x
Mr. & Mrs. Wayne Fl•nnery
Mrs. Soph i• Bell
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony T ov1tt
Mr. J.•c:k Groth
Mrs. 111 D•bney
Mr. & Mrs. How•rd Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Willi•m Reg1n
Dr. & Mrs. L. E. Dubov
Mr. & Mrs. Phil ip N1ylor
Mr. & Mrs. Bernerd Meso"
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wilkin
Mr. Don Byrnes
Dr. Sem Kowitt
Mr, & Mrs. Don Blossom
Mr. I: Mrs. Orville K•fer
Mr. Tommy Propes
Mr. & Mrs. 0 . R. S11l1nders
Mr. & Mrs. R•lph Riggs
Mr. & Mrs. Gr•y Mille r
Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Penhell
Mr. & Mrs. Lowell Spingler
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Seybtrt
Mr. & Mrs. Ju li en Lec:riv1n
Mrs. D•rlen• B•uer
Mrs. Gussie Kettler
Mr. & Mrs. Ger•ld L•nce
Mr. & Mrs. Vic:tor Terry
Mr. & Mrs. George R•ed
Mr. & Mrs. Wiley Bowman
Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Stebbings
Mr. & Mrs. L1urence Boudre•ux
Mr. & Mrs. Berrell Ries
Mr. & Mrs. Ch•rl•s Meshbu rn
Mr. & Mrs. Dive M•lseed
Mr. & Mrs. Lelend Velantine
Mr. & Mrs. John Overmyer
Mr. & Mrs. Fr•nk Biondi
Mis• Judy Feutz ·
Mr. Richerd l. Huston
OTE
APRIL 14, 1970
TED W.
BARTLETI
INCUMBENT
c1t1 .... t. ...... , ,_. w. IDftt.tt
Allff lll .. ...._lt\, CMlnNM
17791 .._. llfvd., H19"1tftM ......
,.. ___ ,_ ....... -.... ""~ .... ~~~...,....,~~---·~"~"""""----~-----·-p..,.__.-~---~· - . -. -' -------p~----
Consultant Gives Views
'Human~ Scho~ls Dis~us~ed . :
Teachers in the Saddleback
Vall ey learned how ,to
.. humanize" schools while at
the same time elevating ste.nd·
ards during an information
meeting at La P a t iD-
termediate school In Mi1siOn
Viejo Tuesday.
Therapy" and ••schools
Without Failure."
Classer explained his views
of education aaying t h a t
schools abould \ be relevant,
lbat Ulm shou'lf be more in·
Volvement or stUdents aod a 111<1~ meanlnlfu\ curriculum.
in wlll<h he coadueled, with
the nm< cloa, a..,....., Of
fuathemaUcs.· Re ilted tMm
to define artthmttle and
attempted to dlapote t
knowl¢ge ol It 1 by
questi0ll$ such as "You
Guest speaker duriilg lhe
•1· all-day session was Dr •
\Villiam Glas~er one of I.be
m o s t promirent educatiap
consultants in America. today
and author of ''Real ity
He lalli~ tbe fact that
lO? much 'W:~lon today ls
memorlutlon and not lhlnklng
and be demonstrated some or
the ways to corrtet the situa·
tion. ·
Uling a IOCOlld ar1Cfe clw
lie de.-lrated an oi>e• tod-
ed dlacuaslcin In which be Uk•
eel ltudentl it they were in an
alrpfaot cruh and stranded
on an illand how ;,.ould they
aet off Ille Island and what in
their educaUonal experience
could, help t b e m solve the
J>l'Ob\em.
He alao demonstrated an
edcuatlonal dla-1ic pr~ss
add .two , numbers, but Cal\ y
add a tab\,e and a chalrf'.'
He also di.scusaed the pro
tern solving approach b U
said 1t is not used very mucll. . . Dr. Glasser, who tw been
criticized as an advocate .-of
sen.sitivlty training, made .i
clear and definite statement
that he is in no way connected
with stnsillvity training, that
he does not be11eve I n
sensitivity training, and P«)p)e
that claim to use his tech=-
iilques for that ·J>W'POff· a r.e
Christine
Frederick
Dies at 87
Huntington Planners
Provide Own 'Drama'
Two <;al Stale Long Beach
Services will be . held at z profesaon Jooklng for a little
p.m. today in S~. Francis theater in HunUngton Beach
Chapel, 430 Park Ave ., Laguna Tuesday une1pectedly found it
Beach. for Mrs. Christine in the planning commission
Frederick, pioneer crusader 'chamben.
for women's rights, who died Their' request prompted an
Monday at the age of 87. ~mpromptu morality p I a y
A native of' Boston, Mrs. among plaMm and members
Frederick was graduated from of the audience.
Northwestern University and At le1!5t 9ne piannlng com·
was an early membel' or the missioner and two people in
' suffragette movement. the audience had some doubts
Later she moved into the about the thtater and worried
fi eld of home economics and about the posslbllity of nude
interior decorating. seeking to and pornographic shows.
'"liberate" housewives through "Just what do you expect to
more efficient design o I have then?" • s k e d Com-
furniture and household equip-missioner C. R. Mi 11 er
ment. quiu.ically. "We don't want
She wrote three books on the any plays which art ob-
subject, founded a household jectionable to the people and
equipment testing lab and was the public."
for maryy years a contributing "From Sophocles to the
editor to the Ladies' Home present,'' was the answer of
J ournal. Dr. George V. Betar, wh o
,,_loving to Laguna Beach in asked the p I a n n i n g com·
1950. she continued to work in mission for pennission to park
home deeorating and gave lee· automobiles on a lot close to
l ures at Orange Coast College. the theater, near Olive Avenue
She made her home at 320 Los and Main Street, in t h e
· Olivos. downtown section.
Mrs. Frederick was the Still unsure, Miller replied,
: widow of advertising executive "I didn't hear that."
J . qeorge Frederick, who died Raising his voice, Betar
in 1962. answered, "From Sophocles,
She Is survived by three a bout SOO O B .C.1 to
daughters. J ean Joyce, or Strindberg."
misusing his theory. '
enforcement there. W e ' v e The paychiatrist and educl~
been haring . a lot of trouble · tion «insult ant has done er·
with the co 11 e c e s , ' ' she tensive work in schools Of Cbr·
larriented. rection and ls currently 1 cOO.
And, alluding to the former sultant · to Los An11eles ci(y
Syndicate 3000 teen club, she schools and Palo Alto schqolJ
added, "I'd hate to have where some of his . Ideas all
another Srd and Ocean there." being implemented.
Bill Regan, a Realtor who "Tht crux cf his theory on
owns ad1oWni property said schools is that schools should
he would favor "some type of be set up so children· can't
control over the type of plays fail," said Arnold Berman,
and the audience." principal of Gates school .
Betar breathed 1 sigh or "This doesn't mean lower
re.lief when the commission standard!. Actually it would
approved the parking request require more rigorous stand-
by a 6-.o vote and asaured the ards. Jt merely means that if
audience that the theater you go to San Diego and have
would be Jnvestigated by the a Oat Ure you haven't faiJe(f,io
city council before a business get k> San Diego, you've just
liceose i5 granted. had a set back.
~ s N K ·u ff "If a child doesn't reach a ..... . • ow1 , a un-.
tington Beach physician who certain level of knowledge, he
owns the parking lot, added hasn't failed. he must merely
•·zf there's any shenanigans or go back and correct the dif·
obscene plays, J will cetrainly ficulty and then proceed again
see that the lease is can· until be gets there."
celed." ----
Following the m e e t I n g ,
Betar C<luld only shal!;e his
head about the obstacles he
has encountef'lod to s t a g e
legitimate theater in Hun·
tington Beach.
"It's incredible what we've
already had to go through to
satisfy people. We originally
wanted to start in January
and here it's April already,"
he said.
Washington. D.C, Phy 11 is Miiier appeared satisfied,
Frederick of Plainfield, N.J . but not Mrs. Sylvia Shandrick,
and Mrs. Carol Frederick who hinted at possible Jaw en·~·==========,!
, Hennan of Bay Shore. Long rorcement problems. GJo G I
(l'A.10 l'OLITICA1. A.OVEltTl3EMENTI
: lsland. A son. David, died in "I don't see how it's big omy us 1 247 Brotclway
; 1952· enough for all the people. It Your Kinda Guy Hours: 11 a,m. to 10 p.m.
Follo1vl:og the La g-u n a \vould be terrible to have law ·&..t-•• .... •--4f4-t174 ,
: services, Mrs . Frederick's •-.;;;i;ii;i;;;i;i;;,iii;i;iii;i,;;i;i,;;iii;i;ii;;ii~;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::ii;;;;;;;;;;;~~;i;;;;i;i;;iiio;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
; body will be cremated at II
; Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
Glendale. WE'RE CONCERNED---ARE YOU?
Congress Panel ,
· OK's Park Pass VOTE
WASHINGTON !UPI) -
The House Interior Committee
has approved legislation to
continue through 1971 sales of
the "Golden Eagle Passport"
-the annual pass good for all
national parks and federal
recreation lands.
The legislation has previous-
ly been pa,ssed by the Senate.
~ Under the bill the pass would
~ cost $10 instead of the present
$7.
SOUTH COHST
' " I • "" "''""~'"'" .,,,
Opeti Nl9lttly, 't41 P·"'·
Mcrtlllff Su11day ,1 :45 '""·
ACADEMY AWARD
FEATURE
THfl' MIOOT
iioR&&,
DON'T JH[l'~
c>!!J
.JANE FONDA
M•11 .• TIMI"·· _,.. 71JO o .. Petforr11aKI CfJ 1:00
Fri." Set. OfN" 't45
Su11. COlltf•••n fr-J
ACADEMY AWARD
SHOWS
BUTCH CASSIDY
ANO THE
SUNDANCE KIO
PAUL NBIJMAN
ROBERT REDFORD
!NE ROSS ·
-AL
.........
~Oii if Of:lUll
.i!! 2o.
MAffll SMITH
"THE PRIME OF MISS
JEAN BRODIE"
X Art HOLMES
XWade LOWER
X Herb HIVELY
SAN CLEMENTE
CITIZENS COMMITTEE
FOR BEnER GOVERNMENT
S..pport These Candidates
For City Council
EACH CANDIDATE IS RUNNING ON HIS OWN MIRIT.
NOT AS A SU.TL THEY AU COMMITTED TO NO 5'1CIAL
INTIHST GROUP, IUT AU COMMlmD TO SIRYING ALL
THI CIT!ZINS Of SAN CLEMENTI WITH INTEGRITY.
AU vorus OF SAN CLIMINTI AH CORDIALLY INVITED
TO Min THUi CANDIDATJS AT AN "OPEN HOUSI" ANY
MONDAY IYINING, 41JO • 6:JO P.M .. OR 7:JO • tiOO P.M ..
AT THE SAN CLIMINTI INN, IN ORDIR TO l'ORMULA Tl
YOUR OWN OPINION.
l wrl• & J•vt• Cet~r•fl
Or, W1ll•c• • Jevt• k•ll••flt
Jim & f.th1I Celltur11
Johfl I Mil4r-4 'hilli,1
lloy Werth .
Or. Tom I l if!CI• lll•ltnidt
Ew9tn• Str.c111r
J•clt C1mJ11b1 ll
101111!• '•lm•r
Alb.ti V. S111•t•111
Mil4t•ll '''"'" Cl•r• Cli11lri11ltt1r4
S1mw1l I . Ar11•I'
Rolt1rl O•ltl1y
Al 'llt•t
P1ul ,r111•y
l1tih• H•nry
Or. &1r•rol V1hofl'l1l1
G•ott• I O•r1i1 '•ff•FIOll
E•1rtt l 11• lhl1r
Or, Rich•r4 & l•ttv l1lt1r
l ilt McK1y
llelt•rt $, h wl1t
H1rry lr•ok1
M•rrllf l fdh•t E11t1y
How•rd M111 i• o,,, Atm1front
Or• l•ll• Th111rich
ll•b•rl I Jo•ll Lloyd
Wee4y Wl11ltl1t
Oer1thv Gre•n•r
llich•t4 I e1yl1 McNichel1
k•y .. ,,.,
0•11114 & Sflli• Smi!lt
Mt1. ''"'' Rott"''" Mn , Lwcv lriclt'1Ufl o .... .,.. ••• ,..,
'''''I Gr•ll li11fl•b1ch
ll•b•rt M. Wih•11
·~ Oelf'9y -,.,.., ....
Joh11 l A11111 1,,,
Phil l H1l•11 Perl•t
Sti r love•
Or. Trvt•• Tolti•111n
A. 1191\ini
L1ny E119li1h
'•'•r Rew•
N1ld1 Sh•rJll
Rullt W, Therflto11
Joh11 I Lucil• Hull
H1l111 f.. l~•11•
M•f'f' f. Zi•tl•r
Al1Mod1 V, Writlll
Cert I Hll4tt•r4 Pi•hk11 z,n. w.11.,.
s1i.1e.,. D1 hl
Cu1tl1 & H1I•~ H1y
lolt I Gl1dy1 &1r1nt
fdw•r4 lr•ttilt
I
~ ......,,.,1•l•u
'
Thursdq, AprU t, 1970
FOR
PAIL Y PILOT #f
tlGUNA'S SAKE!
For the p~rpose of echievi~g a better quality of life · for t~e actual residents
of Laguna Bee~.h a large number of our townspeople h~ve carefully considered
the iuuet end candidates in the election of City Councilmen on 14 April. Br,ceuse
of their stand on vital issues end their qualifications, we e re supportin .!Joseph
O'Sullivan end Joseph Tomehak for ele~lion to City Council.
• •
VOT·E FOR
JOE TOMC :HAK
-AND-
JOE O'SU.LLIV AN
" . .
CITY COUNCIL, TUESDAY, APRIL 14 ' . ·. .. .. ::
*
MINIMUM DENSITY DEVELOPMENT. The DMJM report on · Lhe Master Plan for Laguuii
Beach presents three different density leVels for the hillsides of otir community. We fee1
that the minimum ,density level is mandatory to the preservation of aesthetic beauty and ~
quality of life in our City. We feel that Mr. O'Sullivan and Mr. Tomehak are, in close s~
pathy with this view. ::
*
EXCESSIVE EXPLOITATION OF TOURISM. While acknowled ging the importance of tourism
to the economy of our City, we feel that it is vital ·lo the well being of permanent residen~
that problems df traffic flow, parking, recreatio~al facilities, etc. for Lagunans be resolved
before further emphasis is placed on attracting more tourists. If we can not move freely ancl
enjoy the assets of our town, \ve can not hope to attract a better quality of tourist trade. ~ .
*
DRUGS AND HIPPIES. We fully support our local Police and other community action ~ou"'·
in their efforts to control the use of drugs within our community. We recognize that this is ,:
national problem and not a situation peculiar to Laguna. Enforcement of health and housinl
standards throughout Laguna will have a positive effect on the \Veil being of all our residen~:
()'Sullivan and Tomehak are for strict enforcement of local, state and federal laws and woulct
give positive leadership· for· a total community eff'ort. :;
VESTED INTEREST. We feel that Mr. O'Sullivan and Mr. Tomehak \Vill represent 111 the resf.::
dent.c; o'f Laguna and that th ey have a better understanding of the needs and desires of out'
* community as a whole. They are beholden to no particular organization either within Lagunl
Beach or outside our City limits. We believe that these men are dedicated to the best intef!i
ests of the permanent residen ts of o~r town and that they ate emminently qualified to act oo-
our behalf to achieve a better quality of life in Laguna -the reason \vhy we have all comi
to love our City and why we all chose to live here. ·:
Below is e partial list of our neighbors who support end will vole for
TOMCHAK & O'SULLIVAN
G. Ford Allingham
r.tr. &t Mrs. John L. Andel'l!On
!\fr, & Mn. Tim Adams
Mr. & 1'.tra. E. E. Auman
Helen Ayer
'Vllliam F . Allen
!\fr&. Ruth Aiken
Jlenry A. Anderson
Dr. & l\fn. J . H. Atkinson Jr, f.tr . & !\1rs. Brad Ah,·ood
•
Dr. I.: Mrs . Robert
Brotherton
t.lra. Beverly W Baron
Chuck Bowers
Craig Ward Bo\\·era
Stanley Byron
Marian Brotzman
Barbara Barne~
r.1rs. Willlam Bielefeld
Dr. & Mrs. Vernon H.
Blackman
!\Ir. & !\1rs. Robert Beck
J\lr. & 1'lr1. flt ic h a e l
Beardsley
Mr. & Mn:. Sidney Bateman
Fl'edonia Barnum
r.fr. & Mrs. Tf· N. Brown
!\farjorle Beach
Jon Brand
Pamela Bur!
l\lr. & 1'trs. Boris Suzan
v
Jane Cra\\10rd
:l\.lr, & Mrs. Rober! Childs
1\1\chael William Cravl':n
Stepltanie CUnningham
r.lr. It. Mrs. Jerome Collins
John 8 . Cunningham
Mrs. Cyrus James Ch1.mbe1·s
f\.tarae Chalaupka
ti.fr. & l\fn. E~ley E ,
C-Owmao
KaTI!n Joyce Conyerg
Edna Coldren
Nola Chari
Charles D. Clark
Dr. Emanuel caiamaro
Janet C. Cory
Cllrto~ Cave ·
l\1r. & Mrs. James Causey Jr.
n
J ames Dilley
l\fr. & Mrs. Leonard G.
Davis
Dr. & l\tts. Anthony
Demetrlade11
Theodore C. Demetriadr~
l\fr. & !\frs. Lavern Ougaer
Flor De\Vltte
J im Davi•
r.tr. & l\ln. Earl Daniel~
Florence Dysina;er
Ph111p Daughtry
Sand1·a Davis
1 f.fr. &: 1'1ra . Ar t hur
. ou'Se"nbem
Craig Dusenberry
Mrs. Carl Darnell
Mr. Ii Mrs. J. W~Ue KctJcr
?i1ra. Diana S. Dirkln
1'>1erlene Devol'e •• .l ame~ Fanelli
John Forkner
!I.fr. lt tifn. Gene F1ory
r.tr. It r.trs. Roy N. Fran!IOn
!\fr, k Ml'll. FilMimmons
r.tr. & J\ln. Quinn Farne1
J\fr. &. Ml'll. Dan Foster
Joye Fromona
Ann Fall
(i
'\lllliam R. Graydon
John D. Glenn
John J. Gabriel~
i\tr&. Jack 1'11. Gill
?.fr. & J\lrs. Joseph H,
Giltner
Charlotte Graham
r.fr. &t r.trs. George Goodall
Dean C. Grimes
J\tr. I.: !\Ira. Richard Jl
George
P. N. Garrard
Barbara G. Goulette
I\lr. & l\lrs. Paul O. Griem
R
J\1r. & !\Ir!!. Albert V. Haven
r.tr. & Mrs. Paul Bia.int
Henrie
Bert R. Hulsebus
r.tr. & Mn. Bob Heavy
Gladys A. Haass
Don Haught
Mr. & t.lrs. Raymond
Haggard
Shelia Hellman
Dr. & !\In. Thomas Hubble
;'.1ary Jan Hill
Helen Hess
r.tn. Gabriell!': S. llansen
Elsi!': C. Harrington
?.fr. & l\1rs. Arnold llano
\\'lUlam Hare
Roy·Hamma \
r.tn, Jeanne Hamillon
Mr. & J\.frs. Dixie HaU
?.Ir. & ?t1r1. Kenneth Ham·
moo
Dr. & Mr1. Paul C. Hance
I
l\fr. & r.trs. Frank lnterlandl
Adele Ipsen
Phil lnterlandl
Photbe Interlandl
' Rayomd D. Jones
1'tr. It 1'fn. Jack L. Jensen
l\1r. & Mn. Deny1 0.
Jacobsen
Jen-y Jones
Gilbert Johnaon
Barbara Jones
Dr&: Mrs Carl E. Johnson Jr.
P.fr, It Mrs. Douala& James
Beryl Jolmaon
K
Alice B. Kint
Bill Rentie
l\.lr. It Mh. FeJTall 8, Kine
P.lr. &: P.frt. Kaminski
1\Tr. & Ml'll. Ian S. Kenn!dy
Samuel Koora.jian
Margaret Kolar
Virginia Kennedy
L
Dr. & Mr3 Aroold Laderman
Kenneth Lane
Richard Linder
Al Li('(ln
Tom Lyster
Nylma L. Lindbtade
Parrlcia Lackner
Barba1·a Lewis
?.f r . & I\lrs. Lamont
Langworthy
l\lr. k l\fn. Bernard Luskin
i'\fr. &. M.rs. Jack Larivee
Barbara Lara
" Edith Moss
J\lr. & Mrs. Carl i'\tanus
l\fr. & l\trs. T, \V. Mathev.r
J\lll lon 1\foore
Brennan i'\fcClelland
Tracey Moscaritolo
l\lr. & l\frs. Dan !lfcfarlAnd
l\fr. &. 1\1rs. Robert i'\1otten
l\fr. &. 1\-ln .. Charle-s l\forreale
Jeanette l\fcRell
r.1r. & lo.fr&. Tom l\lassey
Joann Malone
Evelyn B. Moorr
Jl,.fr. & lo.fr&. Ham i l ton
i\lcinerny
Gloria Mander~
i\fr. & l\fr11. Jack l\1iller
r.tr. & ti.trs. Jean J\.1usick
?lfr, & Mrs. \V l lli am
i\fortimer
Dennis i\fadison
i'\1arta i\fltrovlch
Ro bert i\farkus
" Clifton T. Nichol.~
l\fr. & l\ln. Edward C.
Nofziger
t.tr. & 1\trs. Clarence
Ne\\.man
l\fr. &: l\lrs, Georre Net·
Ueman
Dr. &t Mrs Nel!!On C. Nie.s
?tliui Valarie Nevius
t.far1lyn J. Nell!On
\Yllllam K. Nelson
0
... ~elicla o ·cont\C'll
Stanton Oner
Gil Orr
r
llomer i\f. Parsons
?-tr. & Atrs. David Paul
,Judy Pendleton
l\fa.ry Parker
Edward G. Po'vell .
Judith 8. Powell
li.{1'11. Jackie Porttr
L. Paulus
Q
Pauline Queanet
" t.fr . &. 1\-ln. Davkl Rosen
FOR
flfarjorle Randall
John Reynolds,' Jr.
Charle& Reich
Glenda G. Razor
Alice Roose
Dr. It ilfrs. Nat Rynn
l\fr. &t l\frs. IAn Ridd,.r
Sandor & Doren Richmond
?ifr. & l\frs. \Y. P. Robinson
l\fr. & Mrs. Sam Ross
Beth Rosengard
i'\frs. Elizabeth Rock\~·cll
l\1r. GeoUtty Riker • Ruth Forbes Sherry
..
l\fr. & Mrs. R. Bruce Stevena
l\trs. Evelyn Stevens
!\Ir. & Mr1. Jack
Swartzbaugh
ltfr. & r.trs. Herman H.
Simms
Doris Shield!!
Walter C. Strohm
l\fr. & Mn. Echvard Sturm
Jo Hannah Sisson
1\fr. &t l\frs. Lan-y St!dnitz
l\fr. & Mrs. James S\\·eeney
JOSf!phine Selby
Douala• C. Smith
l\1r. & r.trs. Richard E.
Stryker
!\fr. & r.1rs. Bud Scltaefer
Jaml'!s F. Smlth
Arnold G. Strauss
A. \V. Sinisgalli •
Dr. & J\frs. Fred Slcffgen
?>Ir. & Mrs. Ulrt1:n \V. Slentz
Jane Schnabel
Dr. & Mrs. Forrest Strayer
T
~1r. & i\frs. Don Tobin
Dr. & l\1rs. ltarold Toliver
Mrs. Julia Thorne
Dr. & Mrs. Raymon d
Thornton
Elizabeth 'Ngert
r.territt Treuc
1'1r. & Mrs. Keith A. Trimble
r.1r. I.: Mrs. James Taylor
Dr. It l\ln . Paul 'Thiene
v
lii:>len Vedder
!\fr. & l\frs. H. Vartercsi&n
1-lelen Van Deusen
w
l\tr & titrs. Wiiiiam WUcoxen
Bt'a \VhitUesey
?.ft, & Mra. Dean Whitaker
l\1r. & Mrs. John \Vilktrson
!\tr. I.: ~1rs. Art Wahl
?ifn1. El izabeth Whipple
Andy \Vina
Janet Wing
t.frs. VOiney Williams y.z
flt'r. I Mr~.
Dtv!d lJudyl Younr
r.fr. A !\fr1. R&lph Yatt1
l\lr. 'Mn. Joseph Zamudio
l\t r. I.: Mn. Louis Zitnik
Dr. & Mrs. A. E. Worthlnaton
BUI WkjQff
LAGUNA'S SAKE!
Sponsored by The Commltttt to Eltct Joe O'Sulllvan & Joe To mch•k to the Cily Council of Laguna Btach.
Louts Zltnlk & Paul Griem. Co-chairmen. 2017 Ocean Way, Laguna Beach
I
• ! •• ;.
-----·-----~-------------------------~~-----------------~
--··. --. -. ------------~·-~~---~ ~~-....--,--,-c-~----~~-------------~-·---~~ --....-·----
• DAllY '11.Df
Graphi~s Grab Students
'
.flome De.ign Used as Cltus Projec& in Huntington
.
Official Notice
Il toot 13-year-old B o b itoorwtQ'• mi 1'tlh all Pl"tl •
Gorney ooJy one maolll to lallolld," 8enrtlo .,.. • ....,,
dOllgn his flnt home. "Once the plu II C(Jlapleted,
• I • It known to elt th.t
: i h • HunfiAgton l••ch
Homt Owntrs Mu tu • I
: • n d E1ttt;.ufive Council
Now he pJan4 to like pieces tbe ·-ot 1111 the choice o1
of ba1aa wood, plaattr or paris doina lour eltv1Uoas of It, or
all() construction PIP" to bulldln& scale model," he aid.
form a model of it. \ Drawing• range from "L"
Bob is one of the students ln sbape, t.o "U" ahlpe to oval
pbi \art cla •t deliJl'S. Such e 1 tr a 1 u
a new grai cs \ 11 Mrtums~immlnc poolJi and CHQMI> enclor1e1 th•
: follewing c•ndidetes for
\City Council: Lamb S c h o o 1 , Hi.milngton bllllud ' hive been ad·
Beach. taqbt by Richlrd Bar-• clod lo ino¥.a· ·I CANDIDATE Of
, YOUI CHOICE1
2. MAYOi JACK GUIN ;.i. HINIY H. DUKI
retto. · Bamtlo add<i4 that the
"The ~ca art cl• has archltecturll skllll alto aid beco~e the hlghilght of my students wtth malh, letlerin&,
week.\l Barretto says. "The an and crlti Md creativity.
kidl .j,jQy it. 11'1 • ~ \A paphlc 11\t ctau become
not to 'baV. to siruulO lo pill -Ible this year when \he
tbe.ir attention.'' F o u I'll a I D 'Valley ScbOol
:4. MAICUS M. 1-1
: . POITU
: For no 1•11 th•n 6 yeers
:-these men h•v• proven
:1he'mselves to r.os1e11 a
: luperior know ed9e df
: community problems and
:.11Qor9 than just "" ord i·
: "fry "'t'illingness lo do
: lOinethi"t about them.
' Pl.IASI VOTI ON APllL
BamUo admita to cme Jll'Ob-Dlltrict &et up a system of
lem in the newly formed elective counea for sixth,
class "Some students art seventh and ei1hth grade
· working too fast. They take atudetlta.
their projects home and com· "We hope to get same real
plete them before I can tell detail on the interiors and e1·
them bow." • tsion of the homes. If
Under Barretto's watchful studentl develop tbelr models
eye the graphic artJ -II sulltdenUy "" m!g!lt build a meet .Qro bOlln eacb week. model city with bridges and
Beginning the ~ witb otberbuUdinp,"Ba"rrr tt o
simple exercila in Jetteriog, sakl.
' • 14, 1'70
• Pl.IASI' VOTI FOi .JHE
•. AIOVI NAMED :· . CANDIDATIS
~·The HOME Council be-
;li•V•s that th• election of
:t..h • a b ov• cendidetes
:•oUfd be in the best in-
:hrest of the entire city.
•, H~ COUNCIL -&Ob 01"0••11•
the students have now ad· Students themselves a r e
vance to drawing p).ans for a enlhusiastJc about deaigning a
one-story home and bUildiDg a home.
model or doing four elevations ·~ like the way mine looks.
of lhe proposed home. It's U-shaped," said Gorney.
"They have to draw a Door Another 13-year~ld, D a n
• p,_14eoi,
:• 1".Q. 9oa: Ull, Hunllnghlft 8ffdl
plan , c omplete with Trachy, put a bUUard room in
dimensions, separate roorm, h1I houae. "Why not -I have
Re-elect O'SULLIVAN
to
lAGUNA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
• Lifetime RHlclont
• Admlnl1tntt .. llock9iwnd
• Community Experience
JOI O'SULLIVAN
Councilman Joe O'Sullivan
Thoroughly Underlt•ncl• Lagun•
Beach-His Home Town
NOMINATORS'
WISU-D ... ....._ f•,,.... Meyor, "-·
F.triMI ef Am '-41
Dkk J•-lell-
l•ey CMI._._,_ • ,.,..~w..,
NfMC-• C..,._..._... •.n Ur•• Artbt klteel
et.Am& ... ~
Jw llllldfa ,.,_ .. ., ...
Ueyt!Wlw ...... _
Or • ......, ......... t1. -· PNl.Cl•kLeetM Df.N..-••--o.tlst, ,,..... lat• .. _.....,_
JOE FERM
Candidate for City Council
HUNTINGTON BEACH
"Spokesman for the SHent Majority"
ACTION
,ROTECTI YOUI RIGHT TO KNOW
On January 20, 1969 the city council
votl"d lo allow planning commission
meetings lo be called on only thrtt·
hour notice to members and no notice
10 the press. Aller J~ challenged this
violation nf the Brown Act. the plan-
ni ng commi.s:Slon rules were changed to
;i.gain prnvide for 24-hour notice to all
iitterested parties.
DEll'ENDS PIO,ERTY RIGHTS
Long before the controv&"Sy over con-
demnl\tlon of the downtown area, Joe.
pointed out the dangeni lo indlvl duaJ
properly ri~hts contained in the Com·
1nuni ty Redevelopment Law and the
Parkiniot Law of 1949. by which the city
can declare anyone'1 property "blight-
r>d" and then condemn It. He was a k~y witness before Senator John
Schmit"z'1 Local Government Commit·
1f't' which investigated possible mlsuS<'
of I hcsi: la\.\·5.
.. GOES TO IAT' ,OR HOMEOWNERS
lie said two years ago th&t the "Oan-
J:t'fOUS Buildi ngs" section of the build· lng codr \.\1Ui an unconstitutional threat
to homeou•ners. When demolition of
homrs, at owne:rs' expense, wu or·
dered lo ~in within 30 days, the
prOl:ierty owne~ asked Joe to prest!nl
lhrlr case hero~ the council. To further
Aid them In their cause, he invited twn nbjrctivr TV nr\.\'I stations to cover lhe
Jilory. City l·[!!..11 Invited just one "eut-
r rn establishment" nf'twork. Tht' c&Sff
came before thr "'kangaroo court."
ll'AYOIS LOWIR TAXES
Tiie t.'Ouncll hall pennltted the widl!'·
~pl't'ad eroi;\on of the! tax base \.\•hich
s upportll our achools, while ne~lccting
the t>OSit.lvt' gOl\l of industr lal develop· menl which would strengthen the tax
basr and IO\.\'Cr taxf!Z. J~ ha:' emph11.·
lli:trd 1hi~ polnl for scverel years. Now
iii lhr timt' for action.
J(I(' J .. rnn belie~ In thr complete
r fly -one in which \lt'f' can livf', work.
Jtrow and play with personal and ti·
nanclaJ St'CUrlty.
JOI PllM SAID: ror tav. .. to be Jlllll. I.he)• must hllw a moral hue. Our country'• foundil\l'
documenta have 1uch a basti. Hence.
unjust la"''I are both unconstitutional
and lmmor1J.
The t\.\:o 11*!parahle elernenl!I or a t~ aodet,y •re: aa Individual 's rl&ht
tn properf¥ •n4 liberty. When ll0\11'1"11·
ment dism_pecU either, )'OU will evtn·
luall7 lote both.
THE MAN
Joe Ferm wu on hll own from the
age of 15, acquiring his wide-ranging
t.echnical background In Swedlah
Schools and through disciplined stU· study, while his miulonary parenb
were dodging, and finally eSCllpln1. the
Chinese Communists during and after
World War Il.
Born In Los Angeles, Joe had befon around the world before returning to
his birthplace at thf' age of 22 to join
his family, and found himse.lf having to
learn his native lana:uage from scratch.
Despite this temporary handicap, hi~
solid technical training, ambition and
imagination soon made him one of the
youngest senior engineers in the aero·
.space industry.
Then, a half-dozen years ago, on thf'
advice of his doctor who prescribed
la rge doses of fresh air for his tension•
sapped health, Joe ttntered his llveli-
hood on developing his property at
17581 Gothard Strttt, now earmarked
as a part of the Central City Park.
Since Joe became active ln 1olving
Huntington Beach'1 problems, there
has been much ribbing about hla being
a "S"'ede"; but he also hll a strong American he.rltage. He takes pride in
the fact that his maternal creat-grand·
father, Prof. T. S. C. Lowe, ii ROmc·
timn referred to u '1'he Daddy of thf'
Air Corps'' for his Civil War ploneerinJt
of the aerial observation bl.lloon. Mt.
Lowe ln the Sierra Madre Mountains
is named for him.
A holder of several patents for hi~
Inventions, J~ pllJ\I tn turn his imagi·
nation toward "O't'ative Legislation"
on behall' of the Huntington Beach lax·
pe.yer.
With h11 engineering background, Joe
Is oriented to"'·ard problem aolvln1 aod,
more important, problem prevention.
lie Is convlnef!d that an engtnffr'll dis·
cipllntd mind Is 11 appllc11blf' to the
cha11f'nge ot political soluµons 111 to
putting a man on the moon.
The fatlwr of tv.•o bor,11, Lan~. 13.
and lAne, ll, Joe l\nd h 1 wife Jeanne
have been married since 1950. The fam-
ily i1 active in church aff&!n and enjoy
camplftl' and ot.her outdoor actlvltll"I
togethtr. HJs constant desire to hfOlld· en hl1 horlzon1 hu also Jed him Into
flying, and ht expects to become a
rated pilot in the near future.
Joe saw the plight of local homf"
OV.'DH'I tn their atrunle l.Plnlt rising
taxet and threats to the.Ir pr-operty, 11.nd
conceived tht MN. of the Property
Owners ProtectJw Leaaue. which wu
organized In the Spring of ]967.
Now. to turtht.t bl1 dfe.ctiv~ on
your btba.lf, ~ ls tttktnc election to
the City Council Your wtltare is hil
concern.
Y•r fllli~'s SICllity Depena an YOU -VOTE!
J .. '""' .... HUNTINGTON llACH cttr Ceuncll
CJTIZIHI '°" JOI PIRM, Mlll. llllNAl.D OACll-ChalnMR JCl2 CllllT AVI-. HUNTINGTON llAQt e IM4572
... • """lahla,"}>e nplained. '
However, tie dtdn 't add a
1wlnµning pool becaute, "they
are ioo hard to take care of."
-boya loll they\ ......
leunlng something a b ,o u t
homes which m!glU be useful
when Ibey want to buy one.
l 'J've le1med about using
brkka aad wood on the outside
of a home," O~ said.
Bob said be would not like to
be anarchitect, but really en-
joytd ''putting things t o
scaJe."
Station OK,
But Prompts
Style Debate
A ranch-style gas station
proposed for Hunt in gt on
Beach was ,l!JIW'OVed arter
touching '!If a lively debate
among plaMers over t h e
relative merits of various
repair facility layouts.
"We've finally come up with.
a design that would be com·
patlble wilb the Big Boy ham-
burger restaurant," Shell Oil
Co. representative M a r t I n
Za1do told them , cn-
thualuUcally showing off a
brick and a chunk or red tile
roof.
COmmiasioners Henry Duke
and Marcus Port.u conceded
that was nice. But they
wanted to change the deJign to
put the repair bays in the back
rather than in the front.
"In your rendering I don't
see the tool! and the tires a:id
all the oiber equipment lying
around," said D u k e , sug-
geatlng that people driving in·
to the station at Brookhurst
Street anr:I Adams Avenue ,, OAIL Y l"ILOT lhlff ,.,....
might not be tpated the sight HUNY.INGTON STUDENTS PLAN HOMES
of clutter. Bob Gor~y~ 1S, Spent One Month on Design Project
Don Brown, a service sla· ------------------------11
tion operator who runs a
"back-bay" or "hidden bay"
station, replied that these sta~
tions require more personnel
than regular stations .-id that
they use up valuable dis play
space .
''I think this ll 1 fine looking
building," said Commissioner
Richard Tom defending the
$100,000 project. "I see nothing
wrong with the bays out front.
Let's face it, this is a service
st.atk>o. It doesn't mean that It
has to be messy. It d eptnds on
the station."
With Porter and D u k e
casting the "no" vol.el, the
commission approved a
building permit for the station
by 5-2 vote.
President May
Attend Event
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)
President Nixon is expected to
attend the official dedication
of a Confederate memorial
carving on Stone Mountain
May 9 if he can fit it into his
schedule.
Stat!!' Republican officials
said Monday the visit was
definite. ln Washington, White
House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler described it as a
•'good J)OS6ibility."
Apartment Zoning
Plea Nixed in Beach
Developer Pancho Hunt fail·
ed Tuesday to warm up Hun·
!Jngton Beach Planning Com·
missioners lo a rone change
for apartmenl purposes in the
Huntington Harbollr area.
Pleading his case before the
commission with a smile and
.a drawl, the Linc o ln
Properties representative said
lhe zo ne change w o u Id
upgrade the property from its
present commercial use which
as it stands could allow the'in·
trusion or trailer parks.
''I resent your Comment
that it would improve lhe
area," Commissioner Richard
Tom r apped back. "1 Jive
there and I can't see it.''
A 4·2 vote by the eom·
mission then sealed the proj~
ect's rate, with Robert Bazil
and C. R. Miller casting the
dissenting voles.
Hunt earlier said about 50
percent or the 732·unit apart-
ment complex was already un-
der construction at Algonquin
Street and Boardwalk Drive.
The zone change request
would have only involved IO
percent ol the total property
owned by Lincoln, or about 2.1
acres.
He said he would appeal the
, decision to the city cauncil
Billboard
Panel Set
Beach For
A new commtttee has been
formed to work on rktding
highways in Huntington Beaeb
of Outdoor advertising signs.
The panel that will study tt.
billboard p r o b I e m includea
councilman J err 1 Matney,
planning commissioner Henry
Duke. Frank While of the
Design Review Board, Jer·
ry Shea of the Chamber of
Commerce a nd Bob Sutake, a
member of several c I v i c
organiJations.
Beach Boys Club Bid
•
• The city's present 1 I g n
ordinant:i! designed to remove
billboards from Pacific Coast
Highway and lower Beach
Boulevard is currently facing
a long court battle.
On Land Buy Delayed
Sign companies have In.
rlicated that they intend lo
fight the anti -b il Ib o a rd
ordinance o n collllitutlonal
grounds, citing encroachment
of free speech. The Huntington Beach Boys said. "Wt are going to get a -::;========= Club must wait until May 4 to Jot of groups ;,isking for t11e 1r
learo whether it will be able to same thing."
buy an 'acre of land from the The club presently has a
city for a new clubhouse for facility on Yorktown Avenue
boys in the north area of lht in tht central area of the city.
city. Pat Downey, club director,
The Parts and Recreation said that UM! club hopes to get
Commission has approved sale $200,000 in grants for the J'lew
of one acre in a ptfk site at facility at Springdale and Heil
Springdale Street ind Heil but the grenl<t depend on the
For Advertising
In WEEKENDER • • •
Phone 642-4321
Avenue for $17,000. clu b owning the land.
But the council decllned 101-....:.......:.......:...::..:....:...:=:.:._ __ .::,=========
act on the application Monday
and instead set a public hear·
ing for May 4 to establish
general policies on the sale of
city land to private groups.
"This is 1 wide s pread
policy," Mayor: Jack Green
Opportunity
Service Station
Att.ndentl
Tire & Lwbe Men
8r4e & Front End Min
Air Conditioning Man
MARINE CORPS
EXCHANGE
Marin. Cerpt Air Station
Phone 1324433
LAGUNA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
PETE
for
PEOPLE
Aob•rl J. H11li"t'· Coordi"elor
011r111d1r Cemp•i9n Ce111111itl1•
lJJ.Jrd SI. L•t~"• '4t4.0711
I
'---~--------------------------.. ------------------------------~----~
\
. , ..... ,.... •••Ill •• ,,,
RE·ELECT
HUNTIJIGTON •IACH
COUNCllMY
ALVIN M.
GOEN
-a .. · noRNn..;_
-PROVIN A•ILITY-
AN INCUMllENT'S RECORD IS HIS MOST HON-
l!ST STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATIONS :
e Dwring Councilmen Coen'• term of office the
city hes:
--a;cqwirecl an,., 11 .ere central library 1lte (Tai·
bert •nd GOldenwe1t) encl ·heve hlrN the 1,,..
.. rnat'-nally known firm of Richard and Dion
Neutra to design the building.
-been ln1trurnentel In the pa11ege of e $6 mil·
lion bond i11ue to finence the purchaae end
development of e 130 acre centrel city 1Nrk,
d•velopment of edditional perks througheut
the city and the construction of 4 youth activ-
ity centers.
-undertaken an extensive pregram de1ginecl to
enceure1e investment of private capiti1I in the
downtown ere•.
-taken ·affirmative 1tep1 to ''cle1n-up'' the oll
field• and impoM re1trlctlon1 on rHlrilling
exi1tl"1 wells.
-undertook and completed e $3.2 mllllen pro-
ject on end elong e one mile stretch ef tt.ach
betwun the pier and Highway 39. The project
included acqulation of a portion of the beach,
providing 2200 parking 1pace1 end he1vlly
land1capino not only the parking erea but elao
Paclfk: Coeat Highway.
• With 11h miles of beach within our beundarit1,
it is our re1pon1lbility to:
-''piaMrv• the bnch for public u .. In per.,.
tuity.
-previde the h .. he1t quality of t•rvice t• beach
vi1itor1
--exercise • high degrff of environmentlll con-
trol not only on the beach itHlf bvt elao in aree
contint1uou1 to the beech" contends Council·
man Coen.
-increese our pol ice •nd fire fi9htins per1.,,..
nel end facilities.
--encourege tha perticipatien of youth In local
government.'
Your vote on-APRIL 14 is an endorsement of hit
Hrvlce for the past 4 yhr1 anc1 encour•gement
to continue to repre1ent your interests.
•
Al COIN'S ..._, • H1•fl..,.... ..... City c .... 11......., ..
cl•tlt .. • '"' • INY•,_• • """"' cellf'lllHtl" ef •••
.....,. _.... ..... whe llc ••'" ,. ftlh cltr "'" ,...... . -le •Is Rnt yHr ..,_, I 96J, c ... INc_., • ,._..., .........
aH ,...,.... ~ .t Paclfk S... ...... ,,..,. AlfNJatiH. ............. _
He ._ .... ....._ le ~ U... Chi~, Wl'ff felSfltl ...
C ....... Mty C....,,.. C:....... (aatl Mn9tl " Its .. .,.. ef <Ill•
rectenJ, Is ,,..etltly • '"tel•i ............ .q Hartl .....-., ~ tile YMCA -4 Mneef, i.y .,,...,_. _, t1!e city cec•ll
•• I t6S, • • '"'"'-ef "'-Cltl-. CIMtrtet l.,itlee C•• ...... ....
c ... WM o,..,. Co•11ty'1 111•1• ........ ...._ .. .._
eltctetl le 1961. Srtll ...., J2 '"'9 .W .. P••• ..... .....
... ~-. ............ aN .,...., .. ,. .... ...., • ..., ...... ...
.... ef ,.. "ct11t11ty's. f•tMt ,,.., .. cWy,
c ... i.. f•1IMI tih effecri..._. • • cewllw ..... ,e41
.. • Mc.•.,....i Iii ec.•••111lc1 eetl 1-. He •elllh • "9Wen .. ,.. 111 ... ..,._,,..111 rtle State Uclvemry ef N-,.,. ...,
• law 4119'" fre• Hie U1d'9flffy ef Art-. c ..... '"9 -
•llfff le ttie '''"°" proctlce ., 1-le He1t1 ......... ,,., th .... ,' year..
PARTIAL LIST OF ENDOSERS
Mr. & Mr5. Alvi" Abr1h1,,.1•~
Mr. & Mr5. R1ymo"d AMleuon
Mr.' & Mrs. Ro11•• l1il•y
Mr. & Mn . Rich1rd lev••
, Dr. & Mrs. D1ni•I Ar"h1i111
Mr. & Mr5. Olck l•rt
Mrs. J11M l leir
Mr. a Mrt. J:41 1.,..,;.,
Mr. Willi elR C. C1rl1on
Mr1. Cor•v Corcor•"
Mr. I Mr1. Gl1n11 Cor
Mr , & Mfl. Rod CnH•
Mr. I.Mrs. L1rry C11rre11
Mr. I Mr5, W. D••••11 IV
Mr. I Mrt. J1111•1 D1&111l1 1
Mrs. J••n Dt111v
Mr. I M11. Mich11I A. 011111 11
,Mr, I Mr1, Oil• 01111"
Mr. Fr111• D1111•11h
Mr, Atb1rf Dur••ir
Mr. & Mn. Wllfr•d D11v11
Mr. J1!fl•I f•rin•
Mr. Roh•rt H, f i114'l•v
Mr, I Mr1. kic .. 1rtl Fur"•Y
Mr, 111d Mn . J•rry J . &.l!cl.
Mr. & Mrs. J•••,h Gre•111l•r11 Mr, I Mn . E4w ht Hert
Mr, lutl H;99i111
Mr. J e11k Hi1l•v
Mn. A11if• Hill•ltr•IMlt
Or. & Mn. S•M11•I Hirt. ODS
Rev. I Mrs. R•lt•rf W. l1ri111
Dr. I Mn . J eck l.el41r. DDS
Mr. 111d Mn. Wiiiy UH•r1th
Or. l M". T. L1119hli11. DDS
Mr, I Mn , l•ntl'f' M•h111•y
Dr. l Mfi.. M111nc1 Me lin
Mr, l1h M•11dic, Jr,
M11. lit Mc6vi11111t
Mr. IMrt. R. C. M1l vi11
Mn. Dorthy Metl•y
Mr. Bohhi• M11ri-hv
Mr. M1 uric• N•l1e11
M•. I Mr,. R1t.•rt '•1t111tl
Mr. M•rfi11 ,,.ttyln•ll
Mr. I Mn. Wllll1111 A't•11
Mr. I Mn. a.\ Riv••
Mr. R1!My Reb•rf1•11
Mr. lMrt. AeMrf l .. 1r1
Mi1t TIMI Sch•111r
Mr. Willi•"' S. Sh, ..
Mr, G•ort• Slt l•r
. Mr, J1hr1 Si111er1
Mr. I Mr1, W1l11.t1 S1111tlrl
Mr. I Mr1. M. So11thw•rtl, s,.
Mr. I Mrt. Cl 1114'• T1lltlrt
Mr. l M,., Jim V•11 ll1111r111
Mr. I Mn. 0. J, W1c11ll•
Mr. I Mn. K. W19fl1r, Sr.
Mr. •· J, w.;''"'"'' Mr. D•rr•ll W•r4
H<r. lobhi• Wit•""'" Mr. Virgil Wll1111
Mr. I Mn. Gefy Werthh19t111,
DDS
Miu loi1 l lm""'""•" Mr. I Mn.. J,,.,,., 1111'11
Dr. I Mn. 6 . hli111•t.
Mr. E•rl Cl•11Cy, Jr.
Mr. l Mn, Joh11 D. li~lty
Mr. Id Meth efl'(
Mt1 C•rff S. K11e111•
Mr. Art W1lf
VOTE APRIL 14·
HUN11NGTON BEACH
CITY COUNCIL
AL!~.~,. ~:CT .~!!~I x I
Jwe!fle M. ••~ ltsn hid! •l'lf .. .._...,.. tMCll
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Gals Storm
Protest Hurricane Names
WASHINGTON (AP) -No on there in 1918 but no stason
matter what women's liber• flas ever had enough tiur ..
t.ion groups think, the Weather ricartes to get past Martha.
Bureau says the first bur-Dr. Robert M. White of the
ricane this year is aoina: to Sommeree 0 e p a r t m ·e n t
be called Alma, not Ambrose, branch that incluCles t h e
Alpha Aardvark or anything Weather Bureau said the sub-
el.se. ' jeet oJ hurricane names will
The !1-.i> started Jut Friday be considered oroulinely nerl
when le Bolton of the N•-January when all the govern-1 tiona l Or anizaUon of Women ment hurricane rts~meet 1
-NOW, a women's rilbll \ a&"!"· ~t•a all IVhlte olild ouUit, s into the N.. SIY a~ tt. .
tional Hurricane ~ in _ several u f!clalS llld .
Miami · " . the prese ay , In ellect
"W • ~ di ...... ~ since · 1~ is a ood one. EXCHANGE STUDENT
~rank Tongsaval
ASB TREASURER
Kathe Meade ~n are ~ -ers, The names are 'e y to un-
destz:oymg life and com-, defltand over radl~. for in-
munities, and leaving a l~stlng stance. ,No one volunteered a~ devuta~ effect, she wfiat would be ill. the way
said, demand.in& hurricanes be of such names as Amt>iOse.
c:aued something else. The military presently uses
U NOW's demand was not a phonetic alphabet for radio
met in a week or 10 days, clarity which goes Alpha,
she said, the women would . Bravo, Cbarlie, Delta, Echo.
move on Weather J1urea11 · As a matter of fact a
headquarters in Wasttmston. bureau official. said, they' get
Valwy High Names
Boy, Girl of Month
Bureau spokt!men · .s a i d mail all the time from women
Tuesd~y tbe 1970 list reads approving the system. Some
Alma, Beckey, Celia, Dor9\by, ·even ask to have one named
Ella and so oo. Rolie was after thefJl.
~~ LOOKY~~ --~. ON ;..1?::.~!~~L.J
Specialixing In: ~
e STYLING
e CHILDREN'S HAIRCUTTING
CALL US AIOUT IARLY·Wlll SNCIALS
.J/owe o/ ~fraJa
"DEDICATED TO MORE IEAUT1FUL WOMEN ..
174JOllACH IAt st.t.J HUNTIN•TON IUCH
IYININ•S IY APPOINTMINT 147·9164
''Artistry in Moving''
Si!niors Kathe Meade and
Prasit, ( F r a n.k ) Tongsavai
have been chosen Boy and Girl
of the Month for March by
Fountain Valley High School.
Kathe, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold W. Meade, 9853
Toucan Circle, is a member of
the Art Club, the class council
and is the current student
body treasurer.
She intends to enroll at
Golden West College after
graduation and later attend
the University of California,
Santa Barbara.
Frank iS this year's
American Field Service stu-
dent from Thailand. Jfis host
family is Mr. and Mrs. Robert
J . Moss.._ 17454 Santa Lucia.
In Tha1Jand, he is in the sec-
ond year of completing h i s
education major. Frank is an
hooorary member of the stu-
for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-1025
580 Broadway
\ 11 l'\. H ,( • l'I I ~\
WARD HEARING AID DEPT.
' FREE DRAWING .·· APRIL 18
WIN e CUSTOM FITTED HEARING AID (329.50 VALUE)
e $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE (TOWARD HEARING AID)
ACT NOWI
NO OBLIGATION
-.................. .
I COME IN -PHONE -OR WRITE
I
1. NAME .............................. .
I ADDRESS ......•. , ...•......•....•...
I
7777 Edinger Ave •
Huntington Beach
892-6611 1 CITY ·················•·····•····••··
1 PHONE .................•.............
Ltt-INCll P•llll "-Hlicll ACI
VOTE APRIL 14th
FOR LAGUNA CITY COUNCIL
ACTION NOW
ED LORR •
IS DET·ERMINED
To restore and preserve Laguna's beautiful
. image.
To provide r11pon1lbl1 fiscal p»licitt
To provide conscientious leadership •nd •ctlen
programs.
To be r~1ponsiv1 to all our citizens' problem•
ond needs.
At • local busine11man he Is able to Hrve you
41 •
FULL TIME COUNCILMAN
HE NEEDS YOUR VOTE AND YOU NEED
ED LORR FOR LAGUNA
CITY COUNCIL
Mr. & M,.. Vic McDtlll\.011
Mr .H1rold Colt
Mr, & Mr1. l iU M1rrintt
Dr. & Mr1. Oon1ld D1i111D1r
Mr, Tht•••• Ytlt E19l••
Mr. & Mrs. Rob1rt loU1
Mr. Sill Thtm11
Mr, Mt• 6. Lotfftl
lttth fr-t11t '•optrtitt iu•O¢.
Mr. H1roMI O'l ri1n
Mr, & Mrs. JtPfltf D. \.twltt
Mr. E•rl Stcor
Mr. l ill E1chb1ch
M;. Otit Hor11Dtcl'.
M,.. Jt11 Adon
Mr. Joh11 6 . Whitlttk
Mr. A Mr1. Ctrl $chr111'11'1'1
Mrt. Fr111ci11t Kt1tl1r
Mr. Mtrl1 R1rt1••v
Mr. I Mrs. J1ck Wilhoff
Mr, John Mtroort
Mr1. Jun• Sh•rrv
Mr. E1thtr Loc•w•v
Mr, & Mr1 . Ch1rltt <9oodll'ltn
Mr. Egon Atith
Mr. E. R. Sh1td
Mrs. Ion• C. Ktnf
Mr. I: M,.. Jill'I St."'"'
Mrs. Svl,,enit St e.or
Mr. Hor••• '"""''"' Mr. A11tho11y J, M1tt11•
Mr. Mowt rll Lotk••v M,., Miry Lo111111Hitty Mr, Gtnt E1glt1
TAX,AYERS COMMlnEE FOR RESPONSllLE GOVERNMENT
E1t..-Loc•w•v, Clitirll'l•1-t7S Mt11ttnlt~ Dr., Lt9unt lttth
dent council and the
Photography <;:Iub.
GWTeacher
Slates Talk
On 'Audio'
Hayden R. Williams, Golden
West College biology teacher,
will speak at ..Jite National
Society for Programmed
Instruction e i g h t h national
convention. April 29-May 2, at
the Disneyland Hotel.
He will talk nn the audio •
tutorial approach tn biology
instruction, a system the
pioneered at . Golden Wes t in
1966 with faculty cnlleague
Norman Rich.
Williams will appear on a
program with Dr. Robert
Mager, author of "Preparing
lnslructional Objectives." and
speakers from the New York
Institute of Technology,
University of Michigan, the
teachers' college at Columbia
University, and U.S. Naval
Academy.
Smog Class
Scheduled
Golden West College is again
offering a three-week class in
smog control for service sta-
tion and auto mechanic s.'
The course is designed to
prepare students to lake the
state smog coatrol licensing
examination.
Class sessions are from 7 to
10 p.m. Wednesdays in the
trade and industry building,
starting April 15. Two subse-
qUent classes will start later
in the semester, all taught by
Edward Snyder.
Registratiori is now in pro-
gress in the admi~ation
building from 6:15 to 9:15
p.m., and will continue
through April )7. The charge
is $5, plus textbooks.
Maddox Wants
Things P1·e tty
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -
Gov. Lesler Maddox says he
wants everything to be "soun-
ding pretty and looking pret-
ty'' when he leaves offi ce.
As a result, he announced
Tuesday. a $35,000 carillon
will be Installed on the state
capitol grounds In June to go
with the new $60,000 lighting
system.
,,
ST!YI. DAN l IYRON PINLIY
Tot IMnV cttlt• IPfll llM "'"' 111111
'" mllllV k'tftlr•M• ttanh CIPI cllllll
Voll· II'• .. Ill toolllll llHI llllllffwt
IO IPl'tftl '1'1111' ,,.,rtm ,_, ltt
m•nv •1t11h.
Wlltll f'l'tf'/'lltllY ti.1 • pltct If .,...,r
1<111111. "' tn• .,.,,, hll '"' tppor.
lunlly. 61' Hf'lillllf '"'" 1111 tnt.tut,
lo clleck IO• ll•nt""• 1•P1 111 YoUr
e~tr•ll pretectl911.
TIM IMtt "lk'f tft JIOlkltf Is It 111'111
•n ••lltl'ltMlll 1n11rr•nc• •fYIMT
WM wlN Mll't'll yo11r '9111 rlsll 11""
11kul •lld ncom"""" c1¥tt•1t wlfllo
our ov1r1•P tr letJiMltl, ltnltl ""
lmptu1t It "''"' 'lff" prwmi."" 11
I 1'1!lvl'llttl ll"'T tr It NmmtlllY'I
rt1afl¥t, "' ml tl11' llew <1ntn1lnt ht ""'' ....
II YtO< pl'fH!ll lgtnl II lltlnp lfH
Cll't of Voll• llkt Wtllt hfl!I. ff ""9
IWlptcl """ mf9hl .. Im'"'""""'·
kl "" <lltck wt 'fOlll' lllwr•M• '"" t••m .,,d Pfllll• JPtC.fflc ,_m_
Ptlfftt tor 'fOll• Ht •~lfta!IM. If,
CMrM,
IYllON 'IHLIY INSUllAHCI, "2
Mloln, Mt11111ftf!H INCi!. t II t II I ... , ....
I
I
Thursday, April 'I, 1970 DAILY PILOT ll
''AID POLITl"-L ADVlllTISeMIENTI
•
GIVE HUNTINGTON BEACH
THE LEADERSHIP IT NEEDS
ROBERT J. ZINNGRABE
Bob Zinngrabe knows there are an1wers to the problems
Huntington Beach foces in the 70'1.
• OIL WELL BLIGHT ;
• APARTMENTS
• SOUND FINANCIAL PLANNING
• RECREATIONAL NEEDS -• DRUG ABUSE
• DOWNTOWN
• ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL
I
Bob . Zinngrabe's record of community action speaks for
itself.
• ln•trumental in establishment of joint powers (city-school)
parks agree ment
• Chaired city subcommittee which recommended the ordi·
nance removing unproductive and blighted oil land from
oil 1oning
• Served on the Urban land Institute Committee which
recommended the present "TOP OF THE PIER" improve-
ment plan
Bob Zinngrabe offers the city a distinguished record of
service.
• TRUSTEE, Ocean View School District
' e PAST PRESIDENT, Orange Co. Nursing Homes Aun •
e VICE CHAIRMAN, Urban Land Institute Steering Com.
• ME~1BER, California School Boards Association
e CHAIRMAN, Public Health Conf. Calif. Assn.
of Nursing Homes
,
e ORIGINAL DIRECTOR, Huntington BHch Boys Club
ELECT
ROBERT J .. .
ZINNCiRABE
CITY COUNCIL TUESDAY, APRIL 14th
ltNNGaAll POl COUNCIL COMMlnll
• Tttomu J, l'*"'kk-C:hllrm•n 11742 Mlln It. N• 1 Huntlnttefl letdl
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DAILY PILOT Thurfday, Aprll 9, 1979
Mrs. Nixon became First lady of the land on Janu-
ary 20, 1969. She wore this mimosa yellow gown at
the Presidential inaugural ball In Washlnglon lhal
night.
1960, Mrs. Nixon fa ced with biller disappointment
as her husband, Vice Presidenl Nixon, concedes
the presidential election to his Democratic rlval,
Sen. John F. Kennedy.
The '"a{ to the 'Vhite House is never easy, or even e~cted.
Th.is has certair\Jy been so for rat Nixon. lier Jife, from its
ear1iest yekrs, has been characterized b)I c1uiet tenacity i~ the ' -face ~f di~culties. She has \\'Orked J1ard and devotedly for
those thing~ which n1ea11t 1nosl to her: fa1nily, husbarid and
children, ruM! th~n the public duties consequent on the entry
into political life: Love, unseUishness and detern1ination have
been evidellt in her t.ireless loyalty.
She was born Thelma Catherine Ryan on ~lurch 16, 1913, in
Ely, Nev. }ler lrish father, then a 1niner, gave her the nickname
"'Pat" because she \\'RS born ~n the e\·e of St. Patrick's Day. She
grew up on a ranch which her father bought in . .\rtcsia, Calif.,
'"hen he ga,·e up n1ining. Her n1othcr died '''hen she was 12,
and she looked aFlcr her t'vo brothers and father. She nurse<!
her father through hi.~ last illness; after hi.~ death, .she \vent to
Ne'v York, a 17-year-old, and \Vorked for l\\"O years as an X-ray
technician to earn the 1none.y for college.
After working her way through the Unh·crsity of Southern
Ca1ifornia, she taught high .school in 'Vhitticr, Calif., ,,·here
she met Richard Nixon; he proposed the first nigh!. 'fhey \Vere
rnanied in June 21, 1940, but ~lrs. Nixon (."Ontinued to \\'Ork up
to and through the \Var to help \\'ilh their join! finances.
The first political ca1npaign ,,·as in 1946, \\"hen Nixon '''as
elected to· Congress. Since then, ut his side, she l111s fought
through seven other can1paigns, l\l'O of the1n p11rlicularly bitter
defeats. As the \vife of the \•ice president (1953-1961), she
\'isited some 60 foreign countries ~ith her husband. 111 1957,
she \'l'On one of -lhe rnany dislinctions
0
0f he~ O\vn: the Honie·
makers Forun1 a'varded her a silver bo\\") a.~ "the nation's ideal
\Vjfe.•
)frs.}\ixon could justifiably feel proud of the fact that her
husband is President of the United Stales, since he hin1self says
of her, in one of his frequent tributes, "She is my greatest asset ...
.... ;c
A photograph signed on the back
"Patricia Ryan, A ril 7, 1937."
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• ':\% "'i ~ -;;..':.;.;_ 4%~ 'if~~ '
It was said of Mrs. Nixon, during !he las! campaign, that Nixon still won his
loudest round of applause simply by mentionjng Pal.
•
l' "" ~' .. 1· ~ ... _ -: ... ~--~ ~ • , NIXON
In 1955, traveling through Soulh America with the then
Vice President Nixon, Mrs. Nixon is greeted by a litlle
boy in Honduras.
• i~~!~j(IA f.At'.~ _J~ -,~
1960, Mrs. Nixon at a meeting of the Sen-
ate ladies Red Cross Un it.
1968, a twentieth birthday party tor Julie Nixon, cutting her cake
as her mother watches; beside Julie is her fiance, David Eisen·
hower, behind are her father and her sister1 Tricia.
I
January 20, 1969, a proud and joyful Mrs. Nixon, just after he~ husband had
taken the oath as 37th President of the United States.
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Vatican to Revert?
Theologian Fears 'Secret' Document
NEW YORK (AP) -A
group of Roman cat h 0'11 c
ICholars said Sunday that a
seem VaUcan document pro-
poses 1 basJc church code that
would bring progr~ in the
church to a standstill.\'
and p r o d u c e consequences
that would make the crisis
over birth control took like a
''Good Humor man" outing.
E.rlsteance of the document.
recommending over-all pro-
vlsioM for governing t h e
church, was reported at a
~mposium Dere sponBOred by
the Canon Law Society of
Amer lea.
recenUy among s e I e ct e d
bishops for their reaction.
The Rev. Hans Kung, noted
Catholic theoloa;ian of the
University of Tublngen Jn
Gennany, said the proposed
code would mate "legalisms
of dogma and dogmatize law."
As descrlb.ed by the
scholars, the document
specifies 94 broad provisions
to apply throughout the church
75 BIKES
.FOR SALE
Seventy.five bicycles IO on
the auction block at 10 1.m.
S.lurday lo tbe parking lot of
the Huntlngton Beach Police
Department, 5th Street and
Orange Avenue.
Chief Earle llobltalle today
urged parenta Ito attend wllh
their chlldren and pointed out
that all sales are for cash.
Mo'\tY from the sale31 Js
retulned to the a:eneral fund of
the city.
Bond Sale N.ow OK
Library Financing Moves ~ead ... ~
I '":!
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'!be flrsl st.po have bttn serving that PoPUlaUon, It approved by the c o u n c 11 ,
taken toward financing the would also have to serve a Construction is expected to
$2..1 mUllon central library regional ~latlon ol more begin within a year or two,
proposed for Hunt i D gt on than 251,370, be explained. Severns said.
Beach. Severns c u r r e n t 1 y la City Librarian W a 1 le r
52S Main St. and two .jriiii
library brancbel. The ~
pose<j Ub,rary J'OUld have abOut
!0,000 square feet of ~
r;pace.. I • • • t •. pa~ ~o~io~~:_~ negotlating with Los Angeles \~~=!:::':!~~83h~O:
expressing Its Intent to enter archltec18 Richard and Dion 1-EJ JO LOl•1·,· a point powers agreem1t with Neutra for design or the U~ ~
tile city for coMrucUon of the building, which Is to overlook Breakfast Se~ P~WN SH~ •c
new llbrarr. Lake Talbert. . I ._ e ••••• • J .. ·"
Such a Joint powers agr... . Just when the library Is to The Westm!Ml<r NaU nal ... cm••
ment between the city and be built atlll bas; not been, Little League hu ael Us an· a
county will enable RuntingtOa determined by the council _ nual pancake breakfast far
• U bnplemented, it would
cause "a crisis of major pro--
porUons," said the R e v • .ww1am 8-tt, Washington,
D. C., a canon. lawyer of the
Catholic University of
America.
He said it would mean "a'.
quite wk>us atep backward"
Participants said the docu·
ment, prepared by the
Vatican's Commission for the
Revision of Canon Law, has
been circulated confidenUally
as its constitution and foun-DE:m••••,,.,:m:a:•,.
dalion for the rest of its
Beach to aeU bonds for the ~ bas turned the capital Saturday morning in t h e JIWIUT Ir LO~
library, to be built atop a hill unprovements program over Albertson's Market parking 111 .. It. 1164111 :
at Golden West Street andl;~to~a~co~mm~1~·1tee~~for~st~u~ily~. ~The~Jlo~t~, ~635~l~W~estm~~in~ste~r~A~v~e,~~D~o~o~o~le~w~o~N~""~ ... ~-i•~-;~:~
LA'9UNA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
P,ETE
detailed legislation.
The Vatican Commission,
headed by Cardinal Perlcle
Fellci, has been working since
the mld·1960s on the canonical
revisions, with ald from about
16 subcommission!.
Falher Bassett said that if
the new document were im~
plemented, it would "roll us
bact to the pre-Vatican U and
bring everything it started to
a stop."
He said the document was
"deceptive in that it uses
Vatican II phraseo1ogy to
reassert all that was done by
Vatican I," the council of 1570
when the cburch's highly cen·
tralized structure was
codified.
' Hunt:ngton Talbert Avenue, at a l..,.r In· financing method also must be DonaUon Is so cents. • temt rate than ll the city had
to use a non-profit corporation
Tourr.s. ts aslhebondingvehlcle. TH E ·wA·Y City development
coordinator Tmn Severns took T nd S the library financing problem . e w t.ay .~~~~~·d~! ·'
PROflSSIONAL I STOP SERVICE
CARPm & FLOOR. CLEANING .
P.C.S.
492.2993 CAl,I;
COUICT
All tboee visitors that Hun-shn!lar requeot for a lilirl'>' lo
tington Beach draws every · Fu11erton. The board agreed to
year aren't ju,,t pas a in 1 a joint powers agreement with
through -many decide to set· both Huntington Beach and
WALL Te WALL
FLOOI Te CllLIMS
COMllNID IXPl:lllNCl FREE PICK·UP IN THI INDUmY
tie here. Fullerton.
New figur<I releued today Sevtrna commented today,
GENllAL HOUSI OYll lO YIAltS & DELIVERY CLIANIN• FREE ESTIMATES
by the population • researth ''This agreement will leave
stall of the State Finance Huntington Beach In the pos1.
Department indicate the city'a tion of being able to save more growth ls cootinulng. than one percent on the future A.-latod S.rvl<M of LANGL'Y JANITOR SERVICE
'!be latest population tolal financing packag<." and REUKEMA RUG & CARPET CLEANERS
tor HunUngton Beach as of Severm told t11e supervisors SERVICING ·SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY ... . for
PEOPLE The second Vatican COuncil
stressed that the laity and
clergy have a share with the
bishops and Pope in the
church's decision-making pro-
cess.
March 1, 1970 is 115,400. Thls that the population of the city PLANT LOCATION: 152A Los Mollnos, San Clemente
compares with the federaJ1;~i~s~ei~pect~~e~d~t~o~be~26~9,~31~3~b~y~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ nosecount taken at the end of 1995. In addition to the library
September of 111,800.
Roliert J. H•1th19s, Coordi111lot
Ostr•llod•r C•111p•i9n Col'l'l!'l'lill••
The document c I ear I y
defines the powers of the
Pope, but leaves ambiguous
the powers granted to other
members of the church.
JJJ.Jrd St. l•911"1 494°0751
RE· ELECT
DICK
to the
LAGUNA BEACH
11:.:G":... CITY COUNCIL
WE SUPPORT RICHARD GOLDBERG, WHO PLANS TO:
Combat the increase of drug abuse and crime
Implement the general plan
Insure fiscal r11pon1lbility
Mr. I Mr•. Mtrrill Joh"1011
Mr, I Mrs. W. l1mbour"'
Mr. Don Willi•rruon
F1thtr Moich•I t.a. :z.1;
Mr, Totn Joh111ton
Mr. Herold Cow•rd
Mi. Willi•l'l'I M1rtin
Mr, Htrold Arm1lron9
Mr. Willi•rn A11lint Jr,
Mr. I Mr•. l ill l1clc
Mr, & Mrs. W. E. l•11k•r
Mr. V•r11er leek
Mr. I: Mrs, George lov•
Mr, l Mrs. R11dy l11rlo11
Mr. Cliff C•.,.e
Mr. I Mn. J•m•s c ... ;tt
Mr. R1y Collini
louist Cox
Mr, I Mn. J•m•s Dilley
Mr, I Mr1. ltobtrt Girdner
Mr. I Mrs, Eric Engl11nd
Gtottl• Gill M;. Tiiom•s Glidden
Eli1•b1th Gr••11wold
Mr. John Gilbert
Mr. & Mr1. M•rk G11mb i11er
Mr. & Mri. lore!\ H1ntli"'
Mr. l Mrs. Willi •m T. H•n111t
Mr. I Mrs. Rob1rt H•sli119s
Dr, l Mrs, Thom•• Htndtrton
Emm E. Hym•11
Mr. Rob•rt l119h1m
Mr. l Mrs. E. M. Johnston
Mr. Eil•r l•r1•11
Mr. Ir Mrs. Jim l•w1•t
Mr. c1,,,, l1w1011
Mr. l Mrs. Stu Lewi•
Mr. &Mr1. z.c.ltary M•ll•by
Mr. Homer D. M11111
Lucy Mirra
Mary M1~ell
Mr. I Mrs. Ch•rl11 Mc.C•ll•
Mr. Walter E. Mc.Oui1111
Mr. l Mrs. Lloyd Miln,
Donn• Mondor
Louis• My1rs
P•t Neodorl'l'la"
Mr, I Mrs. Ph il Norr is
Ed111 Norton
Mr. I Mrs. Cv N119enf
Lois 011terbrid9e
Mr. I Mn. Ch1rl11 Peck
Mr. l Mrs, F. G. P•t•r1011
Mr. I Mrs, Rob•rt P1yfon
Mr. l Mrs. H•rry Pis•911•
:Jos•phi"' Pros1
Mr. I Mrs. l ill lt•dc.liff•
l•rnic.• R•pp1port
Mr. I Mrt. Cerl Runo
Mr. I Mrs. P1t•r S•lfill'l'l•thio
A9n•s Sc.h•nk
Mr. I Mrs. Lloyd S,il1•t •
Mr, I Mrs. To111 Sk•lton
Mr. l Mrs. Vet1'1o.Spital•ri
l1rbar1 St11•rt
Mr. l Mr1 . B•rn•rd Svf111
Mr. I Mrs. W•llv Taff
Mr. & Mrs. V•r11 T•1tk111r
P•99Y T 1ylor
Mrs. J•m•s Thom••
Eli11b•th To'fn11nd
Mr. I Mrs. Wilbur W•911•r
Mr. I Mrs. H•rry Will•h
M,ri. Do11•ld Wood
Mr. I Mrs. 1!11 Wi1cor111
PROVEN COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP
SllNAllD SYl'Alf, C:NAlllMAH...OOLDSlllO f"UNOS, 2IJ IMl!ULD IAY-UGUHA lllAC:N
{Paid Political Advertlsemeot)
BE A BAUER BOOSTER
Elect
"<Nr city has been growing
so fast that we have two
poptlat.ion surveys t a k e n
!!Very year," Jere Mµrphy ,
associated planner, explained.
"It means quite a bit in ex-
tra revenue from tbe atate
gasoline tu to have our
figures updated every si.x
months."
One year ago the state's
estimate for Huntington Beach
was 109,600, and in 1968 the
figure was 98,980.
Population figures for Hun-
tington Beach were started In
1962 when the city's bis
growth pusb got under way.
From 1962 when the popula·
lion was 24,700 to 1965 the dty
grew bY 4%,200 to 68,900.
Dates Set
By Academy
California Maritime
Academy officials have an-
nounc<d that lat< r<g!straUoo
for College Entrance E1-
amination Board tests will be
ext.ended to April 15.
Young men between 17 and
22 ye;i.rs of age, seeking a~
pointment to the August 1970
class must have registered for
May entrance exams by April
15.
T h e California Maritime
Academy is operated by the
State of California to prepare
young men for service as of-
ficers of the American
Merchant Marines. For
further information write to
the Director or Admistions,
California Maritime Academy,
P.O. Bo1 1392, Vallejo,
Calirornla 94590.
RON BAUER
to
HUNTINGTON llACH CITY COUNCIL
April 14th
•·COMMUNICATION e ACTION e RIPRISENTATION
Help Ut Prnaot Pole-lltion We're Pottl"'J In Tlla "-"ot Oo Pol"
COMMITTEE TO ILECT ION IAUll.
David \Vllson, ChaJrman 19832 Gloucester, Huntington Beach
lf"AID POLITICAL ADVl!ltTISVtllNTJ e DO YOU WA.NT intelligent, creative government?
• DO YOU WANT PROVEN leadership?
e DO YOU WANT a progressive community?
Then Vote With Us For
NORMA BRANDEL GIBBS
on April 14th
For Huntington Beach City Council
ENDORSEES FOR NORMA BRANDEL GIBBS
...... ...., Lan. Mn.. o .... l•rtml Miu DI•" ltMft
• ..,.J_De ...... Mn.. Jos. P. Merrie Mr. •d Mn. Cort H_.e .... ~ .... Mrs.Art.sec• Mn. Men .. ••rtelle•
Mr • ...i Mr1. l.eMMI U... Mn..J ... PeeM ..... Mrs. h"'Y Wiltl._
Mr. eH Mn. N.,_ L Mr. -Mn.. N.,.,.. Darreot• Mr1. Allu Obert
wti1,,ie Dr. ~ Mrs. D..W,c.tNtt Mra.; •lerle ......_,
,Mr. nd Mrs. lniest aepe1• Mr. •ltd Mfl, ...... lflfnl .. Mr, ad Mrs. Id Woellett
Mr. CtlHI Mrs. loNrt 11101 Dr, •d Mrs. Alfred Wreltel M,..HMllll~ .
Dr • ...i Mn.. l.tpll leeer Mr. Giid Mrs. .l«oll'IO :Z.Ck MN.hy:WUlefte
Mr. elld Mrs. WM. J, McC.9" Mrs. HNtt Letody Mr. -4 Mrs. he Kn.
Mr. elld Mrs. 0.., Hof .. Mr ·-' Mn. 1111 lel""" Mr. nd Mn.. leHl4 Cepe
Mr. -4 Mn. AIMlrew McCI.,. Mrs. M•ulle H11et Dr. 0..old Dlpley
Mn. IMby M1rplry Mr. olMI Mrs. J"'°' D, M• .. Mr. olHI Mn. kHt McCU ..
Miu h!Mr "ift Mr. n4 Mn. l•..th 5. Melt .. Mn • ...,_.y DohhMf
Miu...,._:......, Mn. Lecy Ho,.., Mrs. Corolya MftcWI
_ Mn. Modfe N ..... ow Mn.. c.,.lyit WHdHrw Mr. •11d Mn.. W.W. TaytOf'
Mr, elMlll Mn. Dick Miiier Dr. 9H Mrs. J. a ... 11 UMci1l1t M1, nd Mrs. Jflf MmtNl..r
Mr. ••4 Mr-. Jerry Pedfet Mn. Zoe ttolpll Dr. oltd Mn. Woltot' J-
Mr. n4 Mn. Wllllo• G. Mrs. kore11 MtGonltle Mr. eM Mn. lob C-.jtMll
Wolter111• Mr. ""4 Mn. I , Y. Pet'9n.otl Mn. Terry .. ,..
Mr. fllHll Mt1. 0.-h .. lr4 Mn.. Meny lee S.. Mr1. s-Di'rll•
Mr._. Mn. W .. eye A. O.Yol Mr. nd Mn.. C.t p.,_ Mr1.J ... T.,....
Mr. olMI Mrs. Joh• Zl11111"M1rma11 Mr. ud Mn. 1 .. Friou Mr. olld Mn., OWe MHl'9
Mr. ncll Mrs. Mike Ne1H9!011 M r1. Dcmelfl!I St.ckett Mr. alld Mn.. Dneh w-..
Mr • ..cl Mn.. WlcWewte11 M,.. lfflp Cll-b9n Mr. elld Mrs. Tem c..,.,
Mr. GIHll M,., 0-ltl Merk Mr . .,.d Mn.. Id Kerl• Mr. nd Mn. lol>eft C..,W
Mrs. Dorh lefe'S Mn. M.nly11 ltewe Mr. end Mrs. Johe H ...... i..t
Mn..KelGllS..... Mn., Dot Y• E"*'• Mn.. La•rle Hlft
Mr ,Giid Mrs. H.i I.Mt Mn. C'iatmelle FreM• Mn. O. I. !toot
Mr. llll4il Mrs. Wiiii-I. OltM Mr. Giid Mrs. Jock Mlt10f Mrs. Chor! ... Sellfnll
!NORMA BRANDE~ GIBBS XI
Cltl .... hi ltect Mor.. ....... GI*
lofty & All• ~r. C..CltobftlOll, 7472 AlllN ...... Hdtlaittoo hocfl
•,
stereo103F'1
the sounds of the harbor ' .
~d.~~71 youYe never heard it so good
• l ' l
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iy
ID-
lip
~· I'S
Id-
!>-..
ill
~ ll ¥1
t .,.
1;
ilr
~· ...
'l1f"
m
l's
to
K.
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• • ,
•
• •
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•
If O~ll V PILOT
Valley
"It'• I shame' lhlt I man
who lw tradltlonllly ow>led
~ In this ctty l! Ignored
Just becauae be doesn't have
any muscle!"
nuit wu one of several
charges.faced by the Fountain
V1lley City Council before
BOY OF MONTH
Jim H1nn1
GIRL OF MONTH
Marci Dodson
Marina Tabs
Top Students
Of January
Marci Dodson and Jim Han-
na, both seniors at Marina
High School, have been chosen
Boy and Girl of the Month for
January,
Miss Dodson, a V I k I n g
bandsman !or the past four
years, is the editor of the
• • Volsun g a'' studen t
newspaper. In addition, she ia
G~k'Leaguesecretary,
chairman o{ homecoming pre.
game and half-time activities,
and a member of the Council
of Student Representatives.
Hanna served as student
body vice-president during the
first semester of the current
school year. A sportsminded
individual, he was active in
tennis compeUtlon as a junior
and senior. This year he has
alse served on the District At-
torney'• Youth Advisory Com-
mittee.
Three Local
Girls Cited
By Center
Three local senior girls are
among nine high s c h o o I
students to capture Student of
the Month awards from the
Huntington Center Merchants
Association.
They a.re Karen Bogue,
Fountain Valley lligh School ;
Debbie Dornick, Huntlngton
Beach High School, and Diane
Clausen. Marina High School.
The gir Is were selected on
the basis of academic achieve-
m e n t , attitude, cilizcnship,
personal appearance and sales
penonalily.
._ -~ montllly winners they
oecome eUgtble for a $5fK1
scholarshlp to be. awarded by
the merchanta at the end or
the school year.
Little Lots
Talk Topic
Women reallors from Hun-
Ungton Beach and Fountain
Valley will hear o( the dl!-
fkulUes involved in t I t I e
tearches of postage stamp lot.s
dtu1nc a noon luncheon, April
M, at Franco!s Restaurant,
·~Beach. Guell opoUer wtll be Lu.
"-W-aaoiltanl city at· -· 1111 .. 11 spot1IO!'Od by
the loc:al Womeo '• Coonctl of
the N-Alloclotloo el ---do.
• • I
Thursd11, A,prll 9, 1970
Citizens Opp,ose Master ;E>l~n Changes . ' . . .
M~ertl~
General Telephone
Opon1 New
Business Office
finally approving amtndmenu
to the city master p l a n
ooUining areas for apartment
con.rtructiOI!! ~
Several clUzens stood Up
Tuesday night to oPJ>o,se the
masffr plan change, primarily
because their ~ropcrUes bad been Ignored aa apartrpenl
sites. ~
The quoted ment came
from Henry Lapp, who
owns property in the city's
proposed industrlalarea along
Euclid Sn.et.
A fonner Colleae cla~te
or DeLapp's, Robert F. the only way be can tlod out
Palmer, or Capital City Equi-what will happen to his pro~
ty, angrily accused the council erty!"
of Ignoring DeLapp's plea to "This amendment to the
allow apartments on his PToSr mas t e r plan has reduced
erty because he didn 't, "have potential a p a r t m e n t con-
8ny muscle outside the·city." struclidn' .in the city. B~t it is
After severa l minutes of . o!llY a ~u.1~~: w,. can. still con-Slder mdividuat. parcels· of argmuent, Mayor E d .w. a ~ d property-00 their merit," con-
Just sharply rep 11 e d lo Unued the may'or.
Palmer's claims, "We've all In ano~ challen"ge to the
talked to Henry Del.app about-council's action, Robert Smith
hl9 property, but never once in of Newport Beach objected to
the last four years has be tbe deletion of property north
come before the city council to of Warner Avenue between
ask for a z.one change. That's Bushard and Br o o k h u r s t
1JONDED"
Streets, from apartment con-
s.lderalion.
The city decided not to
recommend changes ol'I that
area, because the Fountain
Valley School Di s trict in.!
dlcated Jt wants a school site
for a combined orthopedic and
elementary school.
j!Look, we've been trying ~
build apartments there sin e
Ju'ly," proclaimed an e •
asperated Smith. 1'tf th
school district wants a 12-acre
site we will seU il -for the
full 17~acre price."
City Attorney Th o m a s
Woodnlff finally ruled that the
;u-ea wu not even a part of
the public bearing becaUJe it
had been deleted from the
apartment study.
Councilmen promlsed Smith
that the planning commission
would make a final recom·
mendation on the property
May 13. '
Alter about 30 mlnu.tes of
testimony, the . counci.J alt'
proved the master p I a n
changes '4-1. Only Councilman
Bernie Svalstad opposed it,
saying, "I 1like the overall
plan, but there are still three
areas.where I think
apa rt ments should be
eliminated,"
Svalltad was serving his last
council meeting since he ill not
a candidate for reelection
April 14.
Youth Named
·To Dean's List
Robert F. l\yland, 19 0 7
Tradewlods Lane,' . .Newport
Beach, tias been nanld to the
dean's list at Colby College in
Watervwe; Me.
fJl«tl"" AjM'M 1~ o-rtl T•
....,, -'"''-' Oii ..... .... 11 ... lottnllllf wlll .... fw _.,
nns. Tiie CUJ"'11 oflk 1 IOcattcl 11
m GllftMY'I wlM (llM AprN IOI!
01/lcl '*'" 11 flMI lltW *'"' will IM from I :• 1.rn. to J:m p.rn., .V.O..
dl'f !PIN F,ldly, Far 1'lw ('fl'°"*•
Cfll'IYlflleflcf, • nlOhl °'90Sllory -
llal """ lflllllllld IOI' 1f!tt • .._
haurl p11vrn1nt1, Off lfrMI HrlClflo
11e1 1110 l>len pravldld tor thf CV.
tomers.
The DAILY PILOT-
The One That Cares
Prices ore Di5COUnled Except on
fair· T roded and Government
Controlled Items.
GROUND BEEF
RISI
TlNDll
lUCkY
IOlllDID
~:M11155c IONDID ·'
l l lf u.
ROUND
STEAK
Cl~J~:~UT 9 3 c
IONDlD IE ff 11.
I-BONE
STEAK
T~:}'~f $) 3 7
IOlllDlD
llEF 18.
STANDING
lARGflND RIB
ROAST
LUCKY a7c IONDED
llEf Lia
FRESH
FRY~RS
.~:g:. 28c WH0l£
IODY
CHICllENS LI..
YOUNG TOM TURKEYS .... ~.'.~~.~.~~.~'..~ .. 43~ LUCKY
BACON 55L~ YOUNG HEN TURKEYS ..... ~.·.~~~.~~.~~-~ .... 48~. SllCD 69C 1-11. PKG. ,
CROSS RIB ROAST ......... ~~;~;,~o.~!~.~~~ ....... 88f .. ~~~~011At•-wcn1.LL•"--77c
~a .. o~.~q.~f11EL..... . .... 79c CUT -UP FRYERS ........ ~~~~~~~~!~~'.~~'..~ ....... 33~. 2~~R-~}!~~~~.~~~ ........ 88 c
PORTERHOUSE= .0.::: .~.~I~ UNK SAUSAGE'.~.~'.'..~:.1ss~':.'..'.~:37• !?!J'i~!~J~ .. C~M.-.......... 89•
HUNT'S PEACHES :l':!.m ...... -~28'
·Y·I APPLESAUCE'"""·--18'
FRUIT COCKTAIL ::rn:~.~ ........ 34(
SUPREMA CHERRIES lr.i.u1 .... 29'
PEARS •mmm 35• 2tOLCAll .................. ,. .. .,.,_
KERN'S NECTARS \~~T..:::'.' ....... 1 II'
GREEN BEANS ~!~.~~~~-~!' .. 24e • ... 16f&yt.--.
CHIFFON TISSUE
TOILrT 25C 2/SOO COUNT .
IOllS
~. _ ... ~a.,t.~
PITIED OUVES
lAIG£ 29C EAILY CAUf,
6 OUlllCE CAN
!. lillMf!~l"'f' 'j ~.u !i:C.t\.Vlf .Li ~~ ,
o-,r COFFEE MATl i:::.1,~: ......... ss c
WHIP-0-TOPPING ~ ............ 39'
SOUR CREAM ~:ll\:.,_, .............. 27'
FRUIT DRINKS ::!::."...,., ........... 25'
; .,,. --JlT~~-~ .
~'l . r·, ~. . , . \
-•. ,..I ; ,,# ... ~'
EASY OFF ~~ ..................... 53'
.,.. FABRIC SOFTENER:.~69'
IVORY' SNOW ::~..'~ ............... 82'
CASCADE ~'::!:~.~~-... -. 40(
GAIN DITTRGENT "'L"'---82'
DOWNY SOFTENER l.':.'.'nc ........ 78'
CAMAY TOILET SOAP .. n•u ... 17' KRISPY CRACKERS::~i;:J ......... 36(
MR. CLEAN ~:~~~~.'.~ ................. 93( BREAD ~!:~~:~::~.~.~'.~.~-~~-~~~! ....... 25(
COMET CLEANSER,., .............. l8' RAISIN BREAD ~!:1~~:,·.~ ............. 33(
ZEST TOILET SOAP ,..,. ......... 40' FRENCH BREAD f!~~:·:r .............. 38c
LIFE CEREAL~::~:~ ...................... 54(
RUSKET FLAKES ~=.1,~:~ ........ _ .. 39c
KRAFT MUSTARD ~~n. ............ 25'
CAT FOOD ::~J:~.~~.~.~ ......... 16c
CALO CAT FOOD ~~::::C~'t! ........ 17'
~· ... K8f&,-~
SANDWICH BAGS DINNER ~::::~';~::~~~.~~.~~ .............. SS(
DRY BEANS !~~~~::.~'.~-~~~.~~~~~ .... 35c U.S.D.I. FOOD STAMP
NESTLE'S COCOA MIX ::'o':."~~ .. 57'
PEANUT BUTTER l:'o'\'.,., ............. '.l"
SYRUP ::t:~.~~ .............. -.. 68(
MARY ELLEN JAM :if.',:,, __ 58'
ACCENT ;~~~~~~ .......................... _29 c
BLACK PEPPER :<:,~·:.~~~.~-.... 43(
TOMATO SOUP ::~v,~~~~~ ....... _ 10'
SWEET PICKLES ~~~~~!'r.~~ .. -..... 63'
CHILI BEANS ~::Ci':I~'.~ .. -........ 18(
~. -· .. K8ffkt!--.
MUG ROOT BEER
6PACK 63C NO lOURN
11 OUNCE ITL
HUNT'S TOMATOES """"·-· 32'
PORK AND BEANS f:':.'IJ:: .. _ .. J 6'
DEL MONTE PEAS "'"'""·---22'
PICKLED BEETS ~~a~.0J~~·-~~~~ ....... 32c
TOMATO JUICE ~~~.':!: ............. 34c
HILLS BROS ~:':~1u •.. 83c
HILLS BROS ~r:lr<,. •. ~1"
HILLS BROS ~:~:.'u•.~2'0
HILLS BROS """" 'I" ffllf•llfCOllU
TASTER'S CHOICE 'I"
tlllflll<OlfU •OJ.IAI
MAXIM ~~a:~~~~.~ ....................... '1 ''
MAXWELL HOUSE !11~t·:.1.<.~::.~~ .... 99•
swtn DINNERS ~~;~~~~-········ ... 18'
BABY MEATSIW'"(lllAlllltOltNlllOI) "5 ' thOl.JAI ......... _,_,. • .£
BEEF STEW:!~t't'!. ........................ 65'
MIRACLE WHIP ::l'l':: ................ 85'
DRESSING ::t7it~~~~.~~~~~ ........... 42c
"
THOROFED ::;:::_'tl;~.~~ ............ 25'
HI CLASS DOG FOOD ........... 'l"
... K8(&yf.--.
JANITOR IN A DRUM
J~.C:u~~1. 75c
CAN
ZEE NAPKINS ::~.~~.~~~ ........... 11 (
MODESS ~~~~~.-................ 77c
JOY LIQUID:~~'::rrru .................... 57c er BRUCE WAX ;~~~~':.·.~: ...... 69c
SIMONIZ ;:::;c::~~~ ..................... 89(
.,.. AJAX CLEANSER ,.,.,., ... 14'
VANO LIQUID STARCH uou"27 '
WA nit sonENER ~!~z~:i.~~~.~ ... 61 c
Our LOW Everyday Price!
LADY LEE BUTIER
lST OUAU" 79( 16 OUNCE
CAI TON
WINDEX .UUUll•lt 43' o-"-••1.tn. ................. ..
OLD ENGLISH :C:£~\t~~.~~.~~·.~~ ..... 31 •
I
150G~~NT 4 7 C
·PKG.
. . " AIOtEN . . FJODS •
ORANGE JUICE ~;~~~·: ............... 47c
CREAM PIES i:~~'.~~~~.~~.~'.~~~~~~ ........ 271
BURRITOS IMAllTAlUDOl$1llllClllUI 49'
Jl1 0LrlG .•••• .,.,,,, ... M•'"""
BEEF TACOS ·~·"""°' 49' lt OI.,15 • ., .••• , .. , ....... ,..
MRSa SMITH l~':t·.~.~~.~.~~.~~.~89(
TOTINOS PIZZA\!~l:~~~~ ........... 79'
APPLE JUICE :;~1~~•~ .................. 37(
OCEAN PERCH ~!~'t':::~ ..... -......... 63'
Fl S HS TICKS l~l'.~~ ... -............... 39•
BEEF STEW :4:~:~:_·~··········· .. ········36(
BEEF STEAKS ~:'o~~:.'.~~~~~.~.~~.'.~·~ ... 73c
TURKEY ROAST ::::'.:::1:.~~~ 13"
TOP QUALITY DISCOUNT PRICED
FRESH FRUITS & YEGEUBUS
BANANAS
CHIQUITA BRAND
Central America's
Finest Quality
Golden Ripe
12~.
POTATOES """ I 0 .. 44c u.s.110.1 <nlo
GIAOE IA&
I
JELLO PUDDING ,., ................. 16'
DRAFT BEER ~1101~~~:~ ................... 51 (
VODK A :~.1:,~~~.l.~~.~~~~ ........... -.... s3••
LUC ICY GIN ~.'::::u ...................... s431
• , • lh~ le" i1~11,. li·•~.J "" lhi!1 l'"'"'""•l•lul• ju.I • ,,.,.u ·••u1ili11J .,f the 1loou>1111.J• uf lu~. ,i,., ... ,.,u
1111<:~ jn •lG't fur '"" •I Luc~•.
COUPONS
Gladly Accepted •
~ ..... ~~!
KEN-L-RATION
SrECIAL<UT $) 39 Cl g:::Eo~:li. '
f.!:;;;:J!io~ WW m~COVNT PRICES .ON HOUSEWARES e BEAUTY AIDo
WOMAN'S DAY
ENCYCLOPEDIA of CO i<Ei<Y
. l11 111• t1 w1it fer weetl7 wll·
-·· 11111s ••• 11112 ••l•mts 111111•1e
nw. Or, start ynr c1llceli11
11w ••• a•• at ynr £t11n1it1ce.
VOL YOU. COMPLfTl r 1110.1 2·12 SET
i 69• $]29 $]3 99
CUTEX POLISH REMOVER
Quick ectin9. lo1y to apply. 32<
OUl lVllYDAY LOW PllCI ••••••• , ••
IDE&lllN' ~ DESITIN • '··'"' ..... -.:.-.., ..... OINTMENT
ltlltwts pain fro• di1p1r rash, 1nl minor
c•h 01ul t.ums, 2V4 ou1ct tu••· 86 ,
OUR EYIRYDAY LOW PRICE ...
WHITE PETROUUM JELLY
Ptrftct for •urn lllrts1i1111 od to 56<
prtVtRt ilit,er rash. l·OZ. JAi ••••••
VASEUNE HAIR TONIC
Eco""'' Si11 ••• fort-""''' a,.. $)OS ,.9"Mt. S'{!·Ol. IOTTU •••••••••
,
BRECK HAIR SET MIST -,
Perfect contnl for 111y style with. ! '
out hoir.•prrr i.1illl•P• $1 l B ::.:.;. REGULAR or SUPEI j~j
7-0UNCE CAN........ !2
IRECK CREME RINSE
leaves hair beautifully mon111·
able ••• '''" a~er sh1mpooh19. llGULAI, WITH BODY,
OR FOR BLONDES. I·
OU"CI BTL 79c OUR lVllYDA Y lOW
PRICE ••••••••••••••••
J • ..: "'"
BRECK CONCENTRATE
I Shampoo for bt•utlhil ••ir .... •
little 1ot1 t 10111 wtyl DIY,
NORMA~ OILY.
• EVIRYD~r LOW Pata. 79'
FDS DEODORANT
Ge1ttlt, soothint sprty for
tht ftminine womtfl.
S OZ .. SIU $) 57 OUR LOW PRICl •••••
•