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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-04-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• • ' • . . . . •' . . -. .· ·:: Engl•nd •Pot~ B~p Hits· . .. , , , ' ' • .. , . . ' • I 1. '· I 'I MONDAY. AFTERNOON; :APRIL ·27; '197~ - Gypsy Dies at 56 Cancm-T,i'kes Entertainer's Life By AJmllJR R. VINSEL Of .. DllJJ ........... G)'l)3Y Raie Lee, an lnt.lleduaJ burl.,. que queen who made a icrtune out ol ber mind as well u ber li>dy di<d &mday '!light, loslnC a b1' l>atlle to cancer. . , .1111 -:;I and .... o61orlul -._.five_ Mia Lee -.... ~. Jolm lloricll <l ISH• Diil ·"""' Newpn JJ<:":& ~Pr .... ~ 4\f ~-;·-.-~ -. ad a-. Bric Klrtlalid. No ...... &ii J , ... tia4 been 1111 todl:r •. -.... le .... lathe!-, a JoogUmO ~ad ........... and --"' the °"""' Counly Press Club. "'.lllil bu' been coming for • Jq time. ·)On: mow, but it'• ltill too recent/' beremarnd. Miss Lee, who betlan In "8udevllle al age 5, lived In Beverly Hill!! and was recently --to UCLA Medkal Center, where lhe · was treated last Jan.wy m;I four years earlier. Htr 900, an aide to ·mm producer otw Premillger, said be -ber oaly lifte months ago and found ber feeling well alte!' the two earlier bouts - the malignancy. "'!be lltUdlo had a fit when I Insisted on telling the truth" (about her Illness), she said in • recent interview. "But I don't thini: It is fair for anyone in the public eye .. keep sod! a lllnc a secret." "My mother died of cancer, 1rhich taught me a les90n,11 she added .. "Clleotups, checkups and cllectups. If I ooold fooce jwt one peraoo to have a checkup on account of my example, I would feel more 1ilan justlfi<d in having. made it public." Miss Lee tumed to other eodeavcra when her days u a stripper -she perfected it as an art form -were over, becoming a best«lllng autbotas and television talk show host. Her life llltory was produced and ran two years on Broadway, with Ethel M<rman starring as Gypsy's mother, then waa made into the film ''Gypsy" otaning Rosalind Rusaell and NaWie Wood. Born in Seattle, Wash., she and her (See GYPSY,. P11e I) J Behl, .2 EsNpe. ·' -. -. / -... * ve ' . ' .. .. '"' ' • ' ' . .. .. , . Gunmen • ·• e1s * :.:i . After Wild Chase By RUDI NIBDZIE1SKI Of "" .,...,, "'"" • ..., A pair <l ~ who allegedly told poHee of 1aklng -two boora earlier led a dOlen lawmen on a wild chaoe fhnluP Well Orange Coooty SaturOly -uslog a baby boy as a shield -before being caplur<d al a roadblock. 'Ibey were booked M a variety of criminal charges after the punui~ -t· ed. by a llhootiDg io Costa Mesa, ran through tin~ ,Other commli)lles and ended ,._ -Injury. . Veteran lawmen aald that fact - W&I a m1ncle. . Dooglas M. Cummings, 27, o1 Garden Grove, and Ollrlea Zatezalo, ie; a trmslent, were captured in Fountain Valley after exchonglng volleys of guollre with lawmen from three departments. '!bet we in HwXlngton Beach City Jail, awaiting arraignment on charges of kidnaping, attempted murder and 8ISIU.lt with a deadly weapon on a police officer. 'lbelr alleged victims, Alvin F. Link, 29, hiJ wife Helen, 21, and the aix·month-- old infant are· back at theJr home in La Puente today, thankful they were not oeriollSly banned by·llie ordeol. 'lbe rampace, ~ to police r.ports, began around l ::IO p.m. Soturday at Willoo Street and P.laceotia . Aveoue In Calta M .... as the pair lhot George A. Bersbaw, 35, fl 'JJ1l Baltlmore Ave., Huntington Beach, In Ile fon>arm. Ber9\aw, wb> war not 1erioUlly Jn. jtred, was accused by the men ol steaJ. Ing the money they had left on the cowUr of a Costa Mesa tavern for I0!1le drinks they had ordered. '!be shooting .... witnessed by oil-duty Costa Mesa pollceman RDn Palmer who jumped Do Bershaw's car and cNeed c..nmings and Zatezalo through Cos1a Me•• Newport Beach and Huntiqjtm Beach, where be slol'P<d them and engaged them in a gumight o n Brookhurst Street, about a half-mile north of Pacilic Coast Highway. As Palmer aA>roached to within &O feet of them and identified himself' as a police officer, they answered with four or five allots, while Palmer said he placed nine shot! from his .25 cal. . automatic pistol into the back of their car, disabling the vehicle. The bandi~ fled on foot '9ward Pacific COast Highway, where they com· mandetred Link's car, stuck in heavy traffic. ~ a plstol against Lint's temple, they ·told him, "WIMiher you people realize it or not~ you have just been kldnaped. D6n't ~. we're: not goin1 (See GUNMEN, Page I) '.,._ TAKES THE PIPE IN •COURT N~1mok1r Curtt1 'IQ' Campaigner Tony Curtis Hit With 'Pot Rap UXBl\lflGE, ,Enal>ild (AP) American movie at..r Tony Curtis, who quit 'llDOkili&• -....n1 y<On' ago, was fltK lllO ioday for brlillinl'mart. juanadnto Ent!lll)d. 'lbe' ~y-<>14 ador erriv.d at the Beach Postal Theft Foil·ed 1 " • ' U•brldg~ lllalistrale'• Court In a maroon Bentley ~. but his lawyer uted for° thne'to 'raise. the Jllle. ' "You. ~mult· not Oink that .beca~se · 'Mr. Curtis is a leadlnf bit<!rnatlooal IUln star UMit he has plenty of money MORI TEASE THAN STRIP Tito Lm Gypsy R-LM Lennon Litho Case Principals Cleared LONDON (AP) -A Londo1 art gallery and ita American director were·cleared In cow1 today ol ~rgea that they staged an ubibltion of "indeoent" litl10l'•pha by Beatie John Lennon. The case arme from a raid on the London Art Gallery earlier this yur when detecUves took away some ot the l.eMon prints showing him in love poses wltb bla Japaneae wile Yoko. ~ -' 4 • By 'tgRRY COVILLE OI .. D9ftJ "*' hlff Postal Inspector> early Sunday cap- .tured a Cloolmatt man 'llllo they claim was trying to torch a safe containi~ 1100,000 'WOrth ol ~ In the main brand! of the Huolingtoo Beach'Pott Office. 1nspectcn aaid they srabbed the IUSpeCt before he could ICIJ1 a wall to escape. Tbey fired warnln( oholl . at two -r suspecta wbo did mate good their escape through tall Weeda l!UlTOUndlng the posl olflce building at 6711 Warner Avenue. Held In a>atody today II Sol Kaye, 55, of Cincinnad, Ohio. '!be postal au!Mrllies IOI<! they aurp1 .. ed the trio shortly afl<r midnlglit while they were allegedly attempting to cut open the sale With a blowtordl. "We're dlectlJI& file pooslblllty that Kaye ml«ht be lnnllvecl In a netlomride . po*>ffk:e rvbbery Mtwvrt," So· H.· Jenl!leD1 assistant "poiel' inipector •fu charge of the iAe Anteles region, l8ld thla morning. Kaye w11 ldleduled for arralgmnent belor. a U.S. COmmisslOOO!' today In Sanla"Ana. Hens charged di! burglary Of I pool office, a fed<nlollente. l'o'*al aud>or!U.. Aid .Kaye is alto a auapect In the Feb. 11.tbeft <l $14U33 in atampl from tlfe poet office In Buena Part and the .-ry Jan. 20 ol 113,309 In stamps from the poet omc. In Fullenoo. '"ll>e mell>od .t. operation in these three robberies is llmllar. 'Ibey mllf>t have been dcme by the •me men," Jensen said. '!be Buena Pall< robi>ery•wao .lmned the "bluest post oflke burgllry In the nallon's history." Jenaea uplalned tho pmaice of postal available/' the lawyer told the court. inspect.on ~yd Manes, Dewayne Strader 0 He like any ether member of his pro- ,arld J~~ <;., SJ!llth in ,HunUngtoo Beam . fesislon has enormous taxes to pay' whicb as pai't ol ·''an. overelf· concenfrauon . can create ftnaneiai problems for'hhn." on Oranie County," 1be three magbb;ates , gave CUrtis a A complete 1<t of burJlary tools, In-• week to raise the .-y. clOdlng acetylene tanu and torches, was" '!be fine was hall the one levied by . found nm to the safe in the Huntington · a BritiS .. ~ 111-~~;m; ~ · BMdt poet office. arfoitiit.~~J~ Postal authoriU.., with the help ol : M~ro;.~•:m .~· ~ Huntington Beach polJce and the lice ~ !lli'Jllni~miimii °"' ,, IO helicopter, seard'aed teveral ro.J: for ~ ~~·ol l".lt• .1. · ~-: the two men 'llllo escaped, but failed '. iud3"1,•'1il!ually· · ·kl' · · •;. tolJndthe . -··· ' '' .... , ' "We're :iu ·1eardiiiig the local area • c~ in a neat grly illltl..,.;1111t."' for thtm," Jeneen aaid today. · alld.r ellow lhirt. Curtls )ooftd llildued '1 "stamp thefll have lncreaaed quite as lie pleeaed suUtJ to tbe · dlerre. . a bit RCTOll the notion receolly," J-. His ijiwyer asked the· &;to added. "The loa tome yean hM added iake>ldto,~atlqn "Cl" llp to as mQCb u $: millkm." • strafl'.ll and ·pi'euwtt'~ to 'Whkft·•'• ( : He · aplaloed ..tllot ·-, llh<et9 -of• ol Curilt' calllier wu llUbJed~ci: Re ' 1tainpo are atolen, they are mold to also l<>ld the coult the 'aoior ·was a . companies who might use them in ven--man of prevloua u n I mp e a c h • b J e dbl( modlilles or for business ptllll09es. character. I .# l . ' I lnRhubarlJ Br TllOMil J'OllTl1NB ... D*l'Mltlt8fl 'Phe Police -were . only a m a 1 • d byataadera this time .. the "&hello pOople" got In a aboutlilg match ..ttb ~ "Free Us" people Su.day at Balboa Pier Part In Newport Beach. . · A week before four policemen ,W · been lnjured -a dlalocatad •amla, a . broken finger, cuts -in .• meleertbat . followed arNt of a speaker for .u*>tl · ob8cene language. So plainclothea al!lcen 85.!lgned to eover the weekly "Frei Us" picnic aad rally -ared· t.m. surveying the 400 slttlq on the port: lawn. But police-brnte Into IJlllles wllen one of the angry ghetto people tO!d ' the "F!ee Us"· pe.rUCipant.s; "We pay them with our· taxes and we'll beat tbem , up. They'~ our officers; not youra," '!be glietto people, u they called themselves, live in the che•p rent A~ frame aparlmento facing on the ilowpoo:t Pier parting lot. lbrougb their frequent · enCOUllters with the law they have . developed rapport with aome ol the pollct officers. (Tbey eveb take cndlt for Patrolman Charles Willdiaxt'1 1'ofDcer:Gf the year•• award ~use of , all the ,Ctee:tr .. hei mad~ on )Heir bloct.) · ' Before the gbOtlo peojile atartecl ' II\ '. (See RllUBARll ..,_ ll' ·' , ...... Ill>' ' ·OrUle W••dler The rainy 1eason lin't over yet. The fearleu foreculer ealll' for scattered s!JoWen ionlgbt tbn>uiti Tuesday, with temPenituns ~ ping Into the lower 60'1, INSmE TODAY ' ·I • • • I NIU' I'll.OT. S .......... ] G1'PSY • ... cliJdlM ..... ...m.1rs -..... a' llleY. "'lbe'illlod<leilius," ,.hlcb _Joan ~.· • -------------------~ -. ' ' For CQmehack . .. ·-' . -.. ·' l'Y Tile A110Ctatod Preti governmeOt fell lhit conleren'~; '.J~Prlnce~.~N~orodom=~S~llianoUl<;:·;:~~w-..... Id he llmi~ to the-'Ji\' -d ""-and lllUtraliaa" ol ;~ be starting moves toward a ccrneback. a, '" . · AaJan dispalches reported ba had Uvation ol lbe lnternaUonal COn!rol'com. !'Birt llelh bores !pen,~ ft· OflCI I r:eturued to Indochioeoe loll Ire exile mission. ·i' in Peking for a conference of leaders Foreip Minister .Tbaoat ..... J(boman' « of North. Vietnam, the Pathet Lao of Thailand said in Bangkok bis gov~t 'remamd, but her style ol boredom -uUli&ing _black silk stockings an even. me dresl, lcq &loves aod J..i,-jla de-~ --btr ff,000 .... -IOI!--.· • Bir acl WU mon tuM lUn llr!p and ..... ....... a ftllUtalloo ... lbal mlttt. .• "I ....,. try to aut up ~ llllmal tn 11m,•~·;.,told writer J.P. McBvoy. . "Did )'Oil -hold a piece ol Cllldy or a toy 1!t froal ol a bib)' -~ ~of Jdi relab?,," fll;tttxplalned. '1N~ ..... 'ha ....,., '1'1>41'• ,..... ~ au-dienoe." ' ' . Jllll IJft )'tan ... -. .UU .. ., .. --Mfsl Lee had -pinup phoioo produced aod leDI a oet to her ..,, who was lhen •OO•-duty wilh the Army in Europe: . . • . . . . .. Dear Mom," he wrote back. ~·1 pasted your new photos to my locker but my commandl.ng officer made me take lhem all down. •. I kept telling him these are pictures of my J'Q?ther. lt did no good." • Gypsy reoponded in IYl>ical style. "I could tiu that oltlcer. I've never hid such a compliment. And I'm old · _,.., DOW lo relll)' appreciate II." From Pagel GUNMEN.,. to hurt you." With Link u the driver, the family wllid> had been dtivln( along looking for a snack, 'WU 1ben told to drive . on, while tile baMltl bad lbeir Infant ... In the baet -. · Wllh Officer Yalmtt again giving · dlue, the car roared oortb on Pacific <lout Hlgbway to Main Sl where Hun- tington Beadl motorcycle offlcer Gil Coerper joined tllem, having been In- formed of the wanted vehicle over the radio. Swlldllng "" hla red llibl lllld siren, he Mopped the vdi!cle al Lake Street. A pwerby shouted to blm, "Look w4 these guys have guns .'' eoe.,.e.-, leaning hla bilce over to hear -WU said, heard a ping 10, by · bis ean whoa me of 1he men find • """' ii him which -Aided by a city truck wbld1 puoed • the Geeing ca: aod slowed to a halt • In front of II. Coerper ll<>pped Iha· car again .. 17th -,. ' One ol the .... jumped from lhe car and tried to get Into Iha Pl-I"' aide of Iha pickup truck, which was 'locked. eo;rper jumped from bis lllOtor<Ycle, ordtring .the man to 11freeze or be lhot." He said the man momentarily lowered bis weapon but then jumped back in the car when Iha other man. who held the baby boy In the back window, --.. kill !he child. To prove tbat his threat wu retJ, he held Ille baby up to lhe rear window with a plllol to bls bead, ~ roported later. "I decided lbal It wasn'I worth taking a ehtnce." Aid ooerper, who "as only ooe ci about a dOlen officers btvolved In Ille cbaM. Radio f ersonality Jarvis Recovering llldlo and lelevlalan peraonallty Al Jlrvis wai ·reported Improving today In Hoag H-.i lb Newport Beach foDowlni hoipllailzatloa 'lbunda;y fer a heart a!Uck. Hospital offlct.11 oald the Newport realdeat'• cmditlon wu stlll conatdered aerlooa, lholJl)t Improving. DAILY PILOT . .....,llrt .... H•li.,till .... ' ....... a.-11 ....... ,....., ·c.... 111... s.c1 ...... OlllAHOa cOASf PUILISHIHG CCIMl'AMY ~•'o•rt N. Wt.d P'N-a.'ld~ J.c\ ... c ... 1 • ., Vici~ 111M11 Grllfr•I"""""' Tho"'•• K11wil lflllOf Tholfl" A. Mur,hi-. MMlll"-ltUllN' llchar4 '· Nell """" °""" C...illlY l•Jtw Oflk• C. .... Mall D WfJl llY St!'MI ,...,..., a.«ft1 nu w..1 1.111e, •~ ! Lloflll'MI -.di: Jn....._, A- Mll!'l\flOIOll a.di: 17111 lttdl •:iui.wil"ll ~ ""' (IWllll!IU »I ..... Ill IEI (.,,,Ille lt•I l < DAii. Y PILOT P!Wtif Irr "ltl'kt O'lMllllMll Laos and the Viet .Cong to issue a call believe& diplomatic and political aid Jo for lhe deleal of lbe Uni~ Slates and Cambodit will !>¢ rnor1 effective tJiOri the govirnments of Cambodia, SQuth mll.ltu1 ald tn putting prellUre on lbe :Vietnam and Laos. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong tMopl 'lbe conference on tlie Vietnam~Lao-to quit Cambodia territory. -. tian-Cbtnese border U expected to be ln1 Phnom Penh, a South VJetMmot !ollowed by 1be eslablislunent of a pro. official announced Cambodian aareemen~ vlsl0oal 1overnment by SlhlllQUI: in lo lit 5"'lh Vietnam ellend ua~ northeast Cambodian territory controlled to Vietnamese nationals who want: .te. by the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, return to Vietnam. A South Vlentnam·eie according to Western diplomats in .Vien-repatriation misSion will arrive in Phnom. tiane, the .Laotian capital. Penh shorUy, the announcement said. ' Diplomatic effort.I aimed at neutraliz.. In the ground war, North Vletname,'6' Ing Cambodia's involvement in the troops have surrourided a ,mounta~p • MIMll!R 01' THE 'GHETTO GANG' CONFRONTS OR. SHAPIRO (WIT.H, llEAROI ANO FRI ENOS · In Newport S..ch a Shouti119 Mitch Dtvt'9ps llttw-Waterfront Factions ' lnc!ochlna conflict, meanwhile, moved c:iutpost north of tile Plain oC Jars lJl 1 forward, with Ind~ian For e 11 n Laos, informed 80W'ces said Moncta:y. Mirilater Adam Malik declaring today 'I'hey said the enemy was ·slowly drawing that an Asian meeting will be held closer to tbe Bouam Long outpost, ·• From .Page 1 RHUBARB ... fired UC Irvine professor Dr. Stephen Shapiro was aaying that it ts good to see the people getting it together. U.S. Gunship, Copter Lost in Laotian Action despite ~'• refuaal to attend. miles north of the plain. ·, Malik, who wants a conference early The garrison <A. several hundrtd '1(eo, next month, said in Jakarta: "We will tribesmen and their families have beta\ go a~ad with , the meeting because we under siege for several weeks, receiving are seeking peace. The aim of the supplies by Air America parachute dropS. meeting la to maintain Cambodia's ·' 'Ille tribesmen are the backbone of .~ neutrality." Laotian governmen1' forces. But there wasn't much getting anything together after the ghetto crl.tica lit into those of "Free Ui." It was all shoufulg ud feuding with long-haired youths set against each other. "Much ado about nothing,'' elderly Balboa resident Harry Nye commented after listening to the whole affair. He Wd be was there to see h o w safe his houae is going to be in the future and with the ghetto youths Lai.king wbat sounded to him like good. sense he flgures be la in pretty fair shape. Also observing, tl1e rally were city COU!!dlmen Howard Rogm and Donald Mclnnls. Remarked Rogers, "It's sure going to be interesting when we get both groups in city council chambers." The people at "Free Us" are due to pack the gallery of the City Council meeting at 7:30 tonight. The rallies of the Jut four Sundays have been bu.ildlng up to this appearance at which they were to uk fer an end to .alleged police harassment, a public meeting room and a spot to hold rock concerts on the beach, Now they also will try to speak about lhe melee last week J])ey claim lbe police provoked • A container waa passed Sunday to collect money to pay J>.¥k \he 1175 ball for the 10 arrested the week before. Niel:-Licari, of ~lFree Us," iia1d '850 had been ·coUecte<I prevtoosly lncl1ding_ $350 at a heneltt.concert Saturday night at UC!. Jdin Vaughn said police aren't needed to provide security at the weekly "Free Us" plcnlca. ''We'd like to get the j>ower back wltb the people" he said. "What commissar is going to control the people?" one of the ghetto people needled. The ghetto group said they aren't Uvlng In Ru3sla and lhey should work through lh• system. 1'Why do you want to drag Rusila in here?" Dr. Shapiro asked. "Beeauae last week you guys acted like a bunch of COmmunlsts with your bull-headed moves," was the retcrt. "How ccme you people stomped that cop ln tbe bead?'' Jack Amador, of the ghetto, said, "We 811pporl lbe police department uoW lhey abule our rights." SAIGON (AP) -'!be U.S. Command_ today announced the loss or a four-engine American gunship over southern Laos and a U.S. Army helicopter near the besieged Dak Seang Special Forces camp. Ten Americans were killed, four were missing and one was rescued. It was the first AC130 gunship reported shot down in the war. 'l'tle U.S. Command said it was hit by enemy ground fire last Wednesday in the lower panhandle of Laos, apparenUy wblle on a mission over the Ho Ohl Minh Trail. SiJ of tfle crewmen were,, killed, four were missing and one was rescued with minor injuries, and spokesman said. The AC130 ts the gunship version of the Cl30 cargo and transport plane used to haul troops and war materials. The A: 130 carries fOur miniguns and four 20mm cannon. The plane can make eilective strikes despite condlUons of poor visibility that often prevail in Laos. It uses high in- tensity lights and flares plus advanced top.sectet detedion de.vices. A UHi Army helicopter WU shot do:w" Kathleen Welch ' .... -service Slai'ed " Rosary will be recited tonight · at Pacific View Chapel for Kathleen Ann Welch of Balboa Island who died Friday in Hoag Hospital following an 11-day battle for her life. Miss Welch, 23, of 125 Apolena Ave., suffered extensive head injuries April 6 when the car in which she ·was riding slammed into a brick: wall · Mar the corner of Riverside Drive and Coast Hlghway in Newport Beach. She Is survived by her parent!, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J . Welch of Vancouver, Wash.; a brother RQJ>ert J. Welch, Jr., Oregon; a sister, Margaret M. Welch, Vancouver, and a grandmother, Mrs. P. H. W.lch, Minoesota. . Requiem Mass will be celebrated Tues- day, 9 a.m., Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic Church, Newport Beach. AFS Honor Slated Thursday Program Set for 20 Twenty American Field S e r v I c e students now a\lendlng high schools along · the Orange Coast from Huntington Besch to San Clemente will be guests o{ the International Club of Laguna's 'I'burston IntermedJate School at the school's se- cond lnternatiollal Day, Mbndiy, May •• Eight. American returnees of the AFS Americans Abroad program also wUl be present for the .day·long program. deiianed for <Jchange of knowledge between the American students and the Visitors from 1& foreign lands. Festivities will begin Sunday, May 3, when the students arrive at the homes· of junior high studenb who have volunteered as hOst.s. All will join in a reccpUon and supper at the home of the Bill Thomase3 in south Laguna Sunday evening. On Monday, the foreign students will arrive at Thurston at 9 o'clock. ln groups of three they will talk to students, show slides and answer questions, then visit 'Ibunton'1 unique classroom!. At noon the home economics depart. ment will serve an International lunch. '11th menus from several countries, prepared and served by cortumed seventh and elgblh graders. Group meetings will continue during ~ allemoon and parents .and friends of the tchool are Invited to attend. Jennifer Marulre, prelklent of the International Club, ii In charge of ar- rangemeDU, aided· by Nancy Porter and Doreen Ha11ard. Al Licon Is faculty adviser. Brain leads the list of vlsl&on wllh four students In Orange Coast schools th.is year : Paulo Roberto Caron.. living in Wep.iminster: Adriana Sch m Id t Tagl.iara, Costa Mesa; Ricardo Pereira, South Laguna; and Fauato Macedo, Newport Beach. Also frotn the southern continent are Angela Massman-Leser from Chile, living in Costa Mesa and Eduardo Pena-Carrasco, of Ecuador, at school In Newport Beach. From Southeastern Asia comes Prasit T011gsaval of Thailand, who is living in Fountain Valley. Students· from Europe will include Ingrid Wesemann of Germany (Hun- tington Beach); Stamatia Kon Tsalta from Greece (Corona del Mar ); Fabrizio Schiavon (rom.Jtaly (Cori>na del Mar ); ChriaUne Vuillequez from F r a 11 c e (Newport Beach); Manfred Heine from Germany (Laguna Beach); Fernando Ga· ja from Spaift (Laguna Beach); and Ingrid Lundgren from Sweden (San Clemente), Students from Africa I 1 c I u d e Azenegasb HaUu from Ethiopia (Hun-: tington Beach) and Margaret Le Roux of Soulh Africa (Laguna Beach). From islands come Margrethe Dorothe Kristlane Kleist of GreeoJand and Voahangy Ram ah at a fan dry from Malagasy, both Uvin1 in Costa Mesa. Americans Abroad parUclpating in the International Day at Thurston will be Lynn Rosener of Newport Harbor High, who spen t a summer in Turkey; Kirk Gres.ham, Marina High, who went to Venezuela ; ChrlsUne Weaver, Fountain Valley High, India ; and Paula Nuschke, \Vestminster lfiBh, Germany. Americans who were abroad for a full school year Include Kristin Whelan, Huntington Beach High, .Argentina ; IAr· ralne Sekera, Founlala Valley High, Brazil; Mark. 5aundera, Estancia High, Australia; and Kath1een Collins, ~ Beach l:Ugh,.New Zealand. .~ ~) Australian Foreign Minister William · There js no evidence, however, of. Saturday near Dai., Seanc, eeven miles from t:he Laotian ·border, and all four crewmen were killed, the coounand said. MeMahon said in Canbena that Com~ a new North Vietnamese offensfve munist command atlacks in Cambodia against Sam 'lbong, and J.ong Cbi!li had produced a crisis C<lnCf!'ning the bases, southeast of the enemy-held Plaio whole world. McMahon added that his oC Jars. ~ .. • , " ' XEROX COPIES .C EACH -- B· 1 /2 x 11 Unbound ' Introducing GOODWR4 g~~~er " Where printing is done instantly-we solve your . copying and duplicating problem~! EXPANPING TO IETIIR SIRVE NEWPORT llEACH-Htlp uo ~tbralt ,,, 2131 SAN JOAQUIN Hl"S RD. • • • NEWPORT CIN1ER .;... Phone 64'·6454 SPEED -often on a while-you-wait basis \ QUALITY -trained technicians and the finest equipment assure tap quality ECONOMY -under $4.00 !Or first 100 copies (P<r original) and less than 1 ¢ each thereafter VERSATILITY -gathering, binding, folding, padding and cutting . OTHER SOUTHERN c;AUFORNIA CENTERS . . An1h1lm 1640 W. Lincoln Ave. 776-3270 Gltndalt 4106 San Farnan do ltd. 247-5001 Inglewood 10404 Lt Clen91a llvd. 671·7577 I ·• Loi An .. ltt 623 So, Ollvt St. 627·1371 : 6~ SO. V'"'""'t SI. 313-1391 . 1415 SunMl llvd. 65t..2997 Newport lletch 3141 Campv1 Drlvo 54().9611 2131 San Joeqvln Hiiis itd. 644-4454 .. " ' Shtnnan Oab 15113 Veturt llvd. 713-5172 Van Nuys. 1121 Van Nuys ll•d. 716-7430 " I • • I ii I • • ,. . . \ . . -' •I ' • .. -t> \ VO( 63; NO. 100,. 3 SetTIONS, 36 PAGES -. . - --__.., ORANGE '.CQUNTY, QilFORNIA ...... . t: :.;:-.. . ' • MORE TEASE THAN $ R'IP · The ~~i! Gypsy Riise ·" ~. . ~ . I 1.. , 4 ., t Famed Stripp~r Gypsy Rose Lee , ' Dies of weer. By ARTHUR R.-VINSEL Of ""-Dilly Pfltr lllff Gypsy Rose Lee, an intellectual burles- que queen who ·made .a fOriune out of her mind as well as her body died Sunday night, losing a long battle to cancer, She was 56 iand,-lier colqtfu1 career spanned five decades. MiSs Lee leaves 'her · father, ·:fohn Hovick or 2516 ~Cliff . Drive, Newport Beach~ ,.a brother, .Dr. ·Jack' Hovick of Huntington Bei ch ; 8 siSter, arjnsS June Havoc, and a son, Eric Kirkhrnd. No funeral arrangements had -'"'n set tod,y, according 'to her Callie!; a Jongtim:e newspaper advertiaing man•and active memw of the Orange c.mity Prta .chlb; . . •"1'111. "" been comhil fe< a J't,n, tirftr,you k{low, but it's still WC»~" he remarked. ·Miss Lee, who began in vaudeville a! age 5, Uved in Beverly 'Hill~ and was recently admitted to UCLA Medical CenterJ where she was treated" last January and four years earlier. · ·~ Her aon, an,. aide to , filn:i ~ucer Otto Preminger .~aid he visited her only tliree months aco ind !OW!d 0hU feeling well after the twit «!allier 'bouls '1ilh the malignaoC)". ' "The studio 'had a fit When I insisted on telling the tr)Jth"".. (about her illness), she said in a recenl intervJew. "But I don't think it is fair' far anyone jn the public eye to keep sUCh ' a thing a secret." ' • "My mother died of cancer, wh ich taught me a lesson," she added . 11Cbeckups. checkups and checkups. II 1 ·could. force just one person lo have JIM GYPSY,J' ... ·11.. \ , . - f woCaught, In Beach After Chase By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lilt 0.11¥' PU1! "Stiff . A pair of desperadoes who allegedly told police Ot. taking heroin two hours earlier led a dozen lawmen on a Wild chase through West Orange County Saturday -using a baby boy as a shield -before being captured 11t a roadblock. They were booked on a va:riety <Jf criminal ·~arges after the pursuit, .1rpark~ ed by a shooting in Costa Mesa, ran through three other comn1unities and ended without further injury. Veteran lawmen said lhat fact alone was a miracle. Douglas M. Cupimings, 'l7, <1( Garden Grove, and Charles Zatezalo, 26, a transient, were captured in Fountain Valley after exchanging volleys of gunfire- witb lawmen from three departments. They are in Huntington Beach City Jail, awaiting arraignment on charges <Jf k.idnaping, attempted murder and - assa¥1L with a deadly weapon on a 1>0lice officer. Their alleged victims, Alvin F. Link:, 29, his wife Helen, 21, and the ai1-month-- ·Old infant are back at their home DAILY PILOT S1'ff PMM ' DERRICK DISMANTLED Tipsy Tower In HB ~:Suspect . ' . •• • Held,:But 2 Escape By TERRY, COVILLE Of.lllt 0.11¥' !'iltt Slaff . . Postal inspectors early Sunday cap- tured a Cincitmati man who they claim was trying to torch a SJfe containing $100,000 worth of stamps in the maln branch of the Huntington Beach Post Office. Inspectors said they grabbed the suspect before he could scale a wall to escape. They fired warning shots at two other suspects who did make good their escape through tall weeds surrounding the post office building at 6771 Warner Avenue. ~- Held in t".Ustod7 today is Sol Kaye", ~. of Cincinnati, Ohio. The postal authorities said they surpis. ed lhe trio shortly after midnight while lhey were allegedly attempting to cut open the safe with a bkiwtorch. "We're cJtecking the .~sibility that Kaye might be involved bla nationwide postoffice robbery network," S. H. J~~n. assistant~postal inspector in charge of the Los Angeles region, said this morning. . in La Puente today,__ thankful they were not seriously harmeq;by the ordeal. The rampaee;-Meordia& ~ to' police ,_w.~u' .... '~Uh .. tutda? at Wilson Street ~llcentia Avenue in~-Meu u t_,..4...oot. George A. 191ntmwL._Jli, ol ilaltimore Ave .• Huntington ... di, In tl{e l«Mtm. · Kaye was .scheduled for arraigru1ient before a U.S. Coinmlssioner todaf in Santa Ana. }ie waa Charged with burglary' of a post office, aifederal offeoae. • 11,,,.,..jB' z .1• d nu , p~ .lllboritlei said l<ay• ii a1 .. _ .. ~ ~ """· 1 't!"&-~..!'t-~ . B . ·n·z r · ' Park and (be robliery Jin.~ orl13,101. ~ vi ower ~ rrom 1h~ ~-?".1~ _1n 1 Bershaw, who w~s Mt seriously In- jured, was accused by the men of steal· ing the money they bad left on the Counter of a Costa: Mesa tavern for 10me drinks they had ordered. I H . •'l'bO metllaii 'or operiiloir In ·iw . n Un tington 1.1iree robberies i. lfmilar. T)>e1 mJi!lt t have. been d<lle by the same men," The shooting was witnisle4 by olf-<luty Costa Mesa poli<:e!I)an ROn Palmer who jumped into Bershaw'.s car and chased CUmmings and Zatezalo thl'<Jugh Costa Mesa. Newport Beach at'ld Huntington Beach.. where he stopped them and engaged them in a gqnfight o n Brookburst Street, about a hali-mile (See GUNMEN, Pap !) ' Suspect',s Same; Name's Different . A young burglary suspect who gave C<Jsta Mesa police the name of an old clamnate without a Criminal record when captured last week has been re· booked under his proper identity. 'nlomas H. Dales, 21, bas been im· pllcated in several Mesa Verde areii. burglaries and has a long prior record of·offenses, according to investigators. 'lbe Santa Ana man falsely gave the name Dane H. Till, of 2509 Raitt St., when apprehended last 'nlursday, &Jr parently stranded by companions in the Mesa Verde area. Till bas nothing to do with the case. Dales was begging a ride back to Santa Ana, which led area homeowners to call police, who discovered items in his possession bearing the identity or a Mesa Verde resident. ·Police Saturday sealed off a portion of Huntington Beach's Maln Street to protect motorists from a 200-foot high oil tower leaning over the roadway at a precarious angle. The t o w e r , located near Garfield Avenue, was almost toppled as workmen were trying to remove,a ,wooden walkway from the •abandoned oil well around 2:30 p.rh. As fire trucks 18id hose to prepare for the possibility of fire from a gas pocket, a welder was Called in to cut the steel pillars supporting the derrick. A steel rope, attached 60-feet up the derrick by a fire department snorkel truck, was then used to yank it to tbe ground. Boat Located By Beach Copter A police helicopter was used Sunday to search for the parents of a 4--year-old Huntingtoo Beach boy who nearly dt<Jwn- ed in a swltnming pool while his parents were saillhg id the ocean. Fire Capt. Jim Vincent said the youngster, Darrin Levis, had been pulled from .the pool at lhe Huntington Harb<Jur Beach · Club. · · Whit~ Darrin was at Huntington tntercommunity Hospital, the helicopter flew along the coast, .5P<ltted the boat, an9 _alerted the parents to the emergency through f~ pub1fc address system, Vin- cent said, Jensen said. 'lbe Biiena Park robbery was termed the "biggest post offlce bur1lary ;.n the nation's history." · Jlinsen explained the presence of postal inspectors Boyd Manes, Dewayne Stradet and James C. Smith in Hutitlngtoo Beach as part of "an overall concentra~lon <Jn Orange County." A complete set ot burglary tools, In· eluding acetylene tanks and torches , wa1 found next to the safe in the Huntl.Dgton Beach post office. Postal authorities, with the help of Huntington Beach ·police and the police helicopter, searched sev,eral hours for the two men who escaped, but failed to find them, "We're still searching the local area for them," Jensen said today. . "Stamp thefta havi' increased quite a bit across the nation recently," Jensen added. "The loss some years has added up to as m4ch as '2 mUHon.'' He explained that when sheets <Jf stamps are stolen, ,they are resold to companies who might use them in ven· ding machines or for business pu~s. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -the 1toCk markel contintied its downward plullfe in light trading this afternoon, remalnmg several points below the 1970 cloalng, low. (See quotations, Pages 22-23). Analysts say there .1rimply hak been no support at the supposed test .Jev.els'. of the Dow Jones average, pointing Out tHat pessimism dominates iriVestor thinking. Alternate for· Freeway? Widening of Eritl~1. Br~kh~rst Under Stu~y ~ ~ . ; . . ' . ... State englneers are c on s I d e r I n g Huntington Beach group were Sid gUcks, alternatives, to extending the proposed senior project engineer for the• Orange Oratlge l'ri!ieWay loUth thl'Ouib Foulltain Freeway, and Courtland Burrell; also Valley, Huntington Beadl, Newport of the state Division of Highways. Beach and Costa. Mesa. They confirmed that the c.orrldor for All the cities hav~ iftdic~ted lhey would the freeway Is one .mile on, either side like to see flle freeway end, ·at the of the Santa Ana ·River. San Diego Ft:eeway. The .freeway would ae.nerally run south A meeting ~een. a Huntington Beach from the Garderi Grove Freeway to citizens committee and two state the adopted route of Uie Pacific Coast engineers brought out two possible Rlghw8y. In Huntington B!ach the route alternatives -ertending Euclid Street, could be. as far west as Bushard Street which pres~tly ends at the San Diego and south from Garfield Avenue. Freeway, south or widening and im-The engine.era said there were three proving Brookburst Streeti posslbWtleS : · , Cril C. Cris, chairman <Jf the citizens -The lreeway might be built on dykes committee, said, "The engineers made on either side of the river witfi traffic it clear th.at they haven't detennined running in one direction on each side. °1t need for a freeway and that it -The freeway might be elevated was possible that a.n<Jher major artery directly over the river. might take care or traffic needs.'' -The Creeway may be built on just The ll(lte olllclal1 who addreued 1be • .., lid! of'the river. , "The other point Is th.I\ the freeway may not be built at all if traffic studies . show that it would cause more problems than it would .ease/' Cris .said. Cris . said (that BroOkbursl ' Street Is already scheduled to be <X>iiverted irKo a six-Jane highway. "I· suggested that if they M col,l]d puf overpas.ses at the main . ln1ersecU011J tills .il!!rhl Ile all that's requited,,'' ~iJ sai~. '"' · . Tile state e11,111ne,ers said they would look i~to It ond also .. tbe po1SibUily _ or extending ·EucUd stntt or 1 similar highway south· to the :ooul . , T)>e slale ,plans to. hire. 1 firm ol · COMultants to atudy tjie economk and ecological upe0to of the Deed for a freeway. The 1111111il1119n Beach l""'P will Jiold · another meetiilg May f and' give a progress report to the cily,cooncil M•y JI. ' ' . ' I ' Do~nta .We:JJ ·Oiled . ' ' .. . . Grandma. Has:;Batkyard . ;;·~~~r. ~ By ALAN 'DIRKIN · ' casihg•wbicb' llarti the -i!tlng pro. •' · o•,tti•oa1w;:~, .. .,' 1 ' Mbtfoi.-e'ttieUquldrei.~tM.surfice "(ts. "llonRa, Hlldtbr~, 58.<ed~ed , . ~ .1, , • . ari<f';fritit':·;r' '. ema.n; iti "31\,oltnlan1.... thtn . safl heats'. the liquid ill: the 'storage worllikf:/l~.,. .·t''jl i ,f, l \ • . ·· tank w_here. ~ iWater .set,tles, .,to,'.lba · tm•lftany;-;iiq.~·fn! d'oWhtoWi{ boiion\ aruH• dralnell oll;into ~aim, Huilt(ngloo•BeitJ!,~'•e'epll•~ •H well · "•kB. ' · · •.· · , , . in het .back: -yard." • But uollke other An ;~u ~pAnv cO~ the~o11· eve;ri· pum~s •• sti,e'a. a grandfllother .. · , . , · 21 d • "I h"':l>' · · · 1 ' ' • 1 At ~a.se wlth ;gr,~pe;"fWl .or g,eaae . • ays. .ave to 'be ,st15e ·tbe',ol cloth, ¥1' . lfi.Jd~r8!MiihU~IRel'atf&l .tl\t. is· clean( or they fiOO't . tate:"it ln(I well ·-Donna i No. 1--~~hef it ajsq ~,to .~ heaiect. to t'°·jlegrff!:/' home at '3d2 Se eh\h st:· On the-·cPrnef st)e saK;t. . . · '. of Lake 'AVenue,·stnee J~y;_196S. .. ... . · . .'For ev~ry barrel .of lf· or 15 p-avlty "I bad no Jdea bow ·to· w.Ork It ·at 011, Mrs. Hildebrand Is ~kl' ~~ ah<l II 10· ·cents. "It has to be hOt lo; It wi11 rst, but I soon learned," ,she said:-now,'' she slid. ''Wh. en it's cold' 1·1"s Why woold a -worQan, a• ·mother of like glue." • ~~001f~n~~ot!ler ~ "five, '*1ate · · Problems that 'ah oil ·operator· has "~ause it was there .. o,ver .~ years· tll . watch incl~e insuring "it\at _i!ien It. hits provided m~ .. with the· ·tind <J[I the water ls drained Off and run into Income I WPUld g'et from · an· apartment the city's sewer lines no oil· aoes with and· with Jess wony.· , . . It and that no· air-· 1ets IQ· the gas The · 11 • '· c1rm·•" Mr' lines. Both can bring heavy fiMa. ~ , ~ w~ •• WU · •. .,.~. on · •.. M I " ' Hl~~r&ntt:s Jot.I~ ~eb(U~:.J"9$5~durfug rs, HI debrand s well site ~s'"Well the ihort·1lved do;Mttown~ oy . boom. She kept, with a 3lh:·f0ot ;block wall ·~ lease<!' the ·'lo,nd lo. ,a san ,fi-ancisco ' the 11 -loot 'high stl>rage tank and the syndk:1!4tJW~iCb:' • .1.i11,.,. .. ;1ii:.. ; s,900 'fool.., separating tan1cs.i. , . • · -. hl_.1.tlf.i:1!..;,.11 ,'Y:';i "7i -... • ' .. --'----""' "-' __ .:....._..J.....:..-~ W ~J[•"c )•' . ,..,. '-'• ~ ,.·•~ • -uoj.j '.llUi.Jll tl~t+, .. i~~ ;cf.\1JledA1 1 IQO.,blfrp~ay ·~·~h .,,e bloc~· •1 Or~n!le · c;east I". from .fiii' h,..eO:' ~ri. Hiiiefn'Bild recfll· · ed. 1!Tbat i·~t ~ollnier\.. ht!:~ .. frqrta : all over· tM · plac'e. 'Ther.~ 'were. rli!. all over down~."~S . crews huriied ,· • ' I ' 1 '~ IQ drill' Into ·the· ]1!>01 .. 'l:heie. ~ere. ,ao · Weatlier many tlgS and' lights .that '.this $lreet J . . • 1 , , wa~ ~kfl a Chrlt~Bslt;ee at night." 1 1 > 1 The 'riinY seaion isn't oVer )'it.' The boom eued off in'.mld·I9$5. "They r The fearless forecaster call:s l tor simply , pl!t ·too , m"any 11rawa tnto one · ., scatteied ohow. m ' tOnlght lbniu ... pi>ol." · Ttle.s<tay, 'Will> teipl!"'aturel\11!p: 1n drilling the well QD "Mrs,, ffil· · , ping into the Jaw.er eo•s. • debrand'• P!"P<l'iY.}lhe ~lcate Pol~ . down the patin ·a·n& ~I ol>tbe ·garagt... .1 INSIDE. TODA:'W- "They 6,i,iied the ~ over· l•"my ~ · 1 , • ,-i0 · Bel~'~' ·.i.maiea '~ ,.i,.-· ) . ·Fronk cfolUn ,OOl!td, hil ·tath'Or optratedJl 'ver ·st~:',' · .• · «if•'. ~l. ~·t a :'.lid!:'. RU ~hi~r tlahn,. ~'~ ~· Tbe . w~U Cosf. ljtllOO . lo ;drlUi. ~-'. 1f 4-.Je!D, Fhlnl<. say• ·he 11 ••' Mrs. Hil<lmanl t'.~~ 'it; over ,)t~·~ · "4rum1,.., .r1e ts importa~ _to1 producln• iJ'~·o.@y~now It .~·' Frank, beC.111t 1« is 14 Mid· seven blrrels,iJaUy:' ' • • ' we1t l.tadir of .. the Amuican .. n.e erew:".~"'ed ~ bo'w to lo9k I NG:i Panw. ·Pege '!:!..-:_ 'I ~t~ .Jt :aid .!:. juSt took .it .pVet;• 1al'le ' .. ,.., ·14 Ml,,....,......_, sQJ(I, . ,_ • , ' ... ~ • " , Clltwllll I ,._ W l 'Mrs. Hllde6r~n4. ezplained ~ 1work C11tc111nt' U• 1 .......,. ,...... 4'" Involved .. i=r.-11'1: :;:r :::r:' '" 11 •' • • ' I J ~ \'If ~ ... •'...,, ''n}e main iob> ta to clw\M: the oil. =. Miltktt '' -.. --. .. fiWhenltcoro,up,,tbm'll'mortsalt • ...,..,P,.. : ·="· l w~ than oil.'. , : ,. 1 ......... ..:. ~ -· • flow ii the water aeparated.1 ~ , ::::..' · "c =:.,r-.... ~ are t'Wo steps. ,Fint, llhe ·f'OUtl ... • · A111 ~ 11 _.. -.a. chemical. cloaD&fn&, 1aa1: 111. Ill" .~u . ~ ' • I ·~ ' • ' • A .. • / I* ~' l'ILOI " -B _lice r·Bystanders. • .as ' ~L,oiigha1rs' -Debate . , -.1 . . . !':f -By .TH.,OlllAS-fOITUfil• • :· He said he was there to see h o w """""' .. -111/t bll blulO ll .oin. to be In tbe .. Twi pallet .,,. only • m lll id ni-and with the ghetto yculba talkinl byltaDdin uu. .. time u the "jhetto what sounded to hlm llke..-p>d sense • peoplll' ifi1 In • 'llM>tlUng match wllb be !lgureo he is Jq Jll'tltl fair llulpe. : the "Fret! Us" people Sunday it Balboa Also ob!ervlng 'th.e rarl'y were city P)er Park ln Newport Beach. councilmen Howard Roger1 and Donald A · week before four police.men had Mcinnis. Remarked Rof:ert, "It's sure • ·I been, injured -a dJstocated ankle·, a going to be lntereatlng when • get rnr~~'l:-}f"bi~e!!r..,..cu"'il'-:'=:!:in":;'a'::m"7,'el:'ee':::;lba;::-t ~l>olh-troups In· eity-iouncil ehamtba. /l totlbwed arrest of a speaker for . using The people of "Fret Us" are due "' --" ' · • ' ·• .J DAILY PILOT Pllei. h° Plll1dl O'Dtl\"91 ; . MEMIER OF THE 'GHliTTO GANG',CONl'RONTS DR. SHAPIRO (WITH BEARD) AND FR IENDS .. In Newport haC/i • $11outl,. Mitch Dovolopa --W1to rtront F•ctlons GIJNMEN .•. Jr; Lil egunrd Program • . ' ; -. . lion!{ of 'Padltc eo..i Hipwar. p J ;_ d • H • . A> P&lmor ipp,:o.Cb<d to -80 tnnRe · Jn untington !oet -·~ tlpl ,11111 -ed ~ .. a polloe ~officer. ·they IDIWered wMh • ,..,,;., 'llve 111o11;· wtiile Palmer' Aid HUl)llnJlon Beoch'1 junior lifepard he Meed nine llliota }torn hll .21 cal. Pi'oiram. will P.I underway for the ll70 iiul<laio!ic ',.,l.Jol lnJO lbl ·back of uidr aeasoa ""Moy :ZS •t Edllon Hip Scbool tar, dlubllng the vebJcle. · · when boys ·~ tbroUlh fit teen wUl try , 'l'Jie llondlll Dedon foot towardP•cUlc out for the elihl--Jralnlng .oellion. Cout · l!Jgi>w•y, Where • thty ""'1· Tiie junlcr llleguord program lo de-m~ Lint'• cir; otiict: In lleavr. •lll>ed to ocqua!nt young boys wllb tho ffalllc •. _ • .. ' , · lWarm of .CU. swimming while ••)>O!· , ~~.plstol lgal&fLint'1 temple, inf lbem to an envtronment which wlll ~lol4 -hjm, "Whetbtr you peojile-~-dllClpline-llllWld ~ Jt or. not, you hive just 1>ffn morals lftd good ~P 'iccord-~~~~1t "°"?'• we're not ll>hl& Inc to liftgllll'd Clptlin nou,~ D'Am- . Wiih I:k as lbe driver, the ·family alL 'fhldl. i)ld been driving llong ~king He aald lbe (ll'(lll'llD la opon to boys fOf' • ~t. wu then told to drive Wbo live ta the cit.y, and who have a oa, wbllo Ibo bondJls llld tilalr lnfanl --..,. ability. Boys mlllt be 10D • daecb.lct • ·~rr fta · ~r • v Ihle to IWim at leut 100 yards undit _ Wilb oillcer Palmer qaln glvlq ' cl:we the car roared north on.. PiClfic water for 10 yards and tread wit.er for CoiiltHigbwl\Y to Main., •1"11ino !lun, five mlnutu. ' unniir.~!"2 ~~ o!Ji11t 'i)Jj "i 1 ,;i ' I , , Coe!lllr. Jolrild. IJltql •. h&Vjng ..... ' Jn. - . :!e.t'.of Ille wllltf4 v!lilc1e over !he Denver A. Hyder ... Swttching on his red 11ght and alren, lie stopped the vehicle at Lake Slreet, Rites w ednesda y A passerby shouted to him, "Look out, these guys have guns." , -~1 leanlne _His bike over lO ~ Colla Mesa resident Denver A. (DUde) what was said, lieard a ping ~o by Hyder, a native of HunUngton Beach hiS e~ when one ,of the men fired and life.Jong Southfrn Californian, died a shot al him which missed. -Friday at Costa Mesa Memorial H~lt.al. Aided ,by a city tru<:k which paaled He was ~7. the fieelng car and 11owed to a hall in front of Jt, Coerpet stOpped the car Funeral servkts will be cooducted uain on 17th Street. , Wednesday at 11 1.m. at Bell roadway One-·of lbe men jumped from . the Clu!pel In Cosio Mesa. car ISMl tried to get into the pultqer He leaves his wife Ruby of the family side -o( the pickup truck, which. wu home at lfl E. Wilson Street; three locked. --Wllll J De Coerper jumped rrom his motorcycle, 9MS, am -'Lo&e, Anaheim, ordering the man to "freeze or be .&el»· .. Eelw.rd ·lfl'{>e't4t, Oregon, and F.dwln He said the-man .tfiomenlJ.Mly lowered L. Hyder, Corona; a dau&titer. Mn. hi.I weapo.n .. luL then jumped back in Jeanette Fullerton Escondido · a mother the car Wilen life ~~ man , who held Mrs. Callie Hyder,1Co«ta Mesa'; a brottie; the babT ·boy in the. Jtlck wlhdaW, Jess Hyder, Costa Mesa ; three listers ~ to kt~ Jhe child. · . -Mrs. Sylvia Schaffer, Coot& Mfta, Mrs'. To prove that his .threat was real, Bessie Mt1dow1 Perris, Calif., and Mrs. he held 'the 'baby up to the rear wintktw Wilma ~' l.os Angeles, ind 2J wllh a pistol to bll bead, Cooper grandclllldrf!I. repOiteil· jale•. . . "I decldtd tha~.lt wasn't worth taking ~ a ch~."~said Goerper, who wu ott1' H' ·~"C'1 _ J Off one "" -abQut • dQZen officers inv•l•ed e."'~_rep t t in the'..chaJe. ·, . -•• ,J DAILY PILOT Oi>,NGr: COAIT PUILISHING C()MP.1.11'1' if R•il•rf N. w.,. '· Pu1ldwll ...... P"*'blWr .. . J•c~ R. Cv•lty Vkt l"rtt:d ... I .-111 CO-r1I '-1.!lltH• Tl.•11111 K•t •il £tlllor Tt.0..,11 A. Mvrpt.i,.• .MaN""' Etlll ... Albt rl W. &1111 An-.:11 .. l:G lltr ;' Mptt ..... lewcll Offlc• • 17175 l•1ct. l •u!.•114 M4iti"il Arldrt11: P.O. l1r 7•0, •164& •• Otller OHie" -· L••-lltC": Uf llortsl ........ ve -Celli MeN: QI) Wl1I It~ Strftl ...... ltK~: ,,,. Wnl lt1M• BWltwtrtl SI.I Ckm...M: lH Hfrl~ El Ct"'I"' llttl !;. . ;. -. • ' • A HUntington Bead! man who decided to .sleep it .~ didn't plan. on. stly1n& at lbr~ quite so ton&, llut ho was still 1btrt sometime afterward. James R: Deleon, 2S, cl 8401 Tern Circle, pa!M!G"Cklt Fl'tdl)I night In lbe lobby of lhe C<iila M.,. Police Depll'l- ment. .Officer Gene N"°den said he ~htcll:ed Delton early SundaJ to see lf he was all.right and found him ln I detp stupor, leading to hls arre~. · He was cbargec:I ~ly with being drunk Jri ·public, unUI pallet, oald a 11).Jnch daager was dl9covered In his packet and he was l'Hlooked on charges ol possessloo of a deadly '!e•pon. Fire Destroys Auto in Newport Newport Beach rlrtmen sakl today a ahort tn 1 wlre under the dashboard led to the nre saturday night whkh complett!y destroyed a Founlain Vflley mu's car. · "Ille Cill'oOtt beloflllnl to Reibert E. Silttg of .iono Peony Circle caugl)t fin as he WIJI drivln( It neor lhe lnlerlecllon of We1tnifne£'1' Avenue and BtQad 'Slrtet in Newport 11 .. ch. P'Jremen said the car was completely coosumtd l.il l¥mu · when they reacbtd the ICeM 1t ·1:11 p.'in. "The fiberglass body of the car bUmed very rapidly," firemen erplalned. -·-• Try outs begin at 9 a.m. and run until 1 p.m. at the Edison High School pool at Magnolia Street and Hamilton Avenue. Try outs will 'be held on June & during the same hours. Enrollment fee is $5. It covers awards, supplies and lesson manuals. Red trunks are $5 more and the shirt is $2.50. Reg. lstratlon Js June 13 ind June 20 from 9-a,m.-to-5---p.m.....aLI.be__beadguartus oL the Harbors and Beaches Department, 103 Ocean Ave. A progrom of water and beach safely, first aid, lifesaving techniques, surfing, swimming, volleyball, comptl.itive races and other beach act.lyjtles will be taught lrom June 'lt lbrough AUllJll II. The morning session will be from l :JJ to noon and afternoon sessions from 12:30 to I p.m. Fridays will be compalJUon cf.afa wilb 1e11loR.! f11>m l o!IJ a.m. to U!lli p.m. Boys who have participated in the pro. gram In past years need not aUend try out.a: and may bring the entolhnent fee · direct to headqull'!m during lbe regis- traUon period. Award ceremonies will be held on Aua- ust 28 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rec- re.Uon Center, 17th Street and Oran1e Ave. From p .. ,, 1 GYPSY ••• a checkup on account of my e1ample I would feel more than justified ~ having made it public." Miss. Let: Mined tO other tndnvon· when her days as a stripper -she perfected It as an art form -were over. becornlnr a best...selling authoress and television talk show host. Her life story was produced and ran two ye~s on ~roadway, with Ethel Merman starring a1 Gypsy's mother, tllen was made into the fllm "Gypsy" starring Rosalind l\usseU and Natalie Wood. Born 'In Seattle, Wasb., she and her sister· played the aid ... Pantages and Orpheum theater Circulls, th r o u g b · burlesque and the Zfelfeld. Follies. She appeared with such personalities as Ffnn)' Brice, Bert Llhr) Lupe Velez and lt<>bby Clark, then appeared In films under hel''own name, Louise Hovick. Mias Lee wrote the best-sellin1 novel 0 The G-Strlng Murders," which was m~ fnto a Barbara Stanwyclt Ulm titled "The LodY of Blldeoque." She. "1'0te 'three other books -In· duding her memoirs _. plus a play, "The. Naked Geniwi," whkh starred Joan Blondell. • "Bare Oesh bores men," she once remarked, but her style .of bortdom -uUllilng black silk stockings an even· Jng 'dress, long gloves and lady-like de- meanor -earned her $4,000 per week and more. · . Her act wu more tease than strip and she earned a reputation on that merit. "I nevet' try to stit up the anintal In 'em," she ttikl Writer J.P. McEvoy. "Old YO\I tVfl:f' bold a piece of Cindy er a toy Jn front or a baby -just out ot tUa reach 1,'' she explained. "Notice how he lau&hs? That's your strip au· dlenct." . Just five yean ago -stlll an eye. catcher -Misa Leti hai1, 1ome Pllilp photos produced and Mnt a set to b;tr son,,. who W'5 then oo duty with the Arra)' bf !:Ur'Ope. • ••near Mom,'' he wrot.kt. ••t putea your oew »to1 In my Jock• but m'y oomlhandl~ officer made me folte them all dow1. , .t kept Jellillf ~Int' Jhe,. 1te· ptcturts ol-my molhtr. 1\ did no soocJ." Gypey ,...,...ie<t In l.vtllcol style. '11 could tin that offioer. I've nevt-r had 8UCh a compliment. And I'm old enough now to really appreciate ii." . . . oblcene language. So plainclothes offlcers to pack the gallery of the City 1~uncil ~ .. Jo cover the weekly "Pree meeting at 7:30 tonight. The rlllle. cf ~·Slli:itk an( ranY appeared ~ the Last four Suodays have been building -)llD(i the loo titting on the. part up to thlJ appearance 1t which they. J&n,. "!.: . ' were to aak for an end to alltged t><>Uce ~ · brii:• lnto smiles Wben harass ment, a public meeting room and one~~ at. angry ghetto people-told a spot to hold rock concerts on the the "Fret. Vs"· participant&, "We pay beach. Now they also will try to speak .them with.our tai:es and we'll beat them about the melee la st week they claim up. They're our officers, not yours.'' the police provoked. The gbeUo pet;>ple, as they called A container was passed Sunday to thtmlelves, live in the cheap rtnt A· ~llect money to pay back the $775 frame 1partmenta facing on the Newport ball.for the 10 arrested Ule week before. Pier parking lot. Through their frequent Nick Licari, of "Free Us," sakl $650 eDOOWIMn with the law. they ,hive had been collected previously including ' developed raj>pcirt with tome of the police $350 at a benefit concert Saturday ntght officers. at UCI. (11l~y evtf'J take credit for Patrolman John Vaughn saJd pollee aren't needed Charles Willdnson'1·•1o1nCtr of the year'' to orovide security at the weekly ''Free a_ward because Lall the arre1ta he Us" picnics. "We'd like to get the power made on their block.) • ; ! back with the people" he said. Before the &hetto people started• In "What commissar is going to control ~j.. • \l'.lf' l fired UC Irvine professor Dr. Stephen the people?" one o! the ghetto people Shapiro was saying that !t ill good needled. DAILY P ILOT Sllff l'Mll ~ lo see the people getilng it together. The gh,etto group said they aren~ living But lbere wasn't much getting anyllqng in Russia· and they should work through MAKIN,G HIS POINT i 'FrM U1' Spe1k1r V1u9hn · together after the ghetto critics lit ibto the system . those of "Free Us." It wu all shouting "Why do you want to drag Russia and reudlng with long·balred youths set in here?" Dr. Shapiro asked. cop In the head?'' l , . against each other. "Because last week you guys acted "Much ado about nothing," elderly like · a bunch o( Communists with-your Balboa resident Harry Nye commented bull-headed moves,.. was the retort. after listening to the whole affair. "How come you people stomped that Jack Amad«, of the ghetto, akl, 11Wi support the polioe c1epa.-1IOtil ~ abuse our rights." • XEROX COPIES C . ' .. ·' '1 . t ' ' Introducing _ GOOOWFl4' g~g~er Where printing is done instantly-we solve your • copy{ng qnd d,.1.1plicating probl~ms! .. .. . -- I XPANDING TO BETTER SIRVE NIWl'ORT BEACH-l!•ip uo ~oler,,.!tt : •• :-. l ' . ~ . ' . J. . 2 .131 ~N · JOAQUll'!I ttU.LS iD. NIWPO•T CINTIR -Phone 644 .. 6•s• FEATURI NG-Ofl'SET PRI NTING OF YOUR CAMERA ·READY ORIGINALS SPEED -often on a while·you·wait basis QU ALITY -trained technicians and the finest equipment assure top quality ECONOM Y -under $4.00 fur first 100 copies (per 0<igina<) and less than 1 ¢ each thereafter VE RSATILI TY -gathering, binding , folding, padding and cutting I memo~s during ~1nlng • week OTHER SOUTHERN CAUPORNIA CEWits Artah1I"' 1640 W. Linc11" Ave. 77(;-3270 Gft ndolo 4106 Son Forn1ndo ltd. 247-5001 lnflowoo4 • t 0404 L• Clon ... l lvd. 671 -7577 Los An,.ra 623 So. Oliva St. 627-1378 . - 670 S.. Vof'olin t St. 313-1391 ,. uas Sun11t i 1\.d. 656-2"7 Newport Btach t 3Mt Carnp u1 Drlyre 540.9611 213 1 Son JM~uln Hiii• Ad. 644-6454 So n Di19" 1251-411\Avo. ~-214' -;~.-Ml~GorfoltL . 281-6611' $h.,.m•n Otka 15113Vontura11..i. 713-Stn Ven Nuy1 -, Ill! Von Nuys lfvd. 716-7430 . . • . . . " • • . • . • . . • . • ! ! . • ; . ! l ... I J ' I ( • • '· • • ' . • • • I \ • , I . • • I 11 I -----·-·-· • .. A\!• pitaph for.· Gypsy; • !'" -•• ·Ske{Left W~arm Memory ,'f: ' ' l ";>:- . ' 'I • • . . ;, ,,, NORMAN R. ANDERSON + 9t """o.i" r11tt '"" . • · GVPSl[ ROSE ·LEE; Ille lliiled stripper with clau who never really look ' II lill,ilff, .coi14 Jel'iier. hair~dowD'wlth eaae. She did that literally and figura- tively .,,.,b tery night In JlllUIO' of 1966 and ~e troupers out ol my wile tnd:i mi ~ .. ~, .-. ..... . ' . . ' ' "she' a ' Jeff 111·.wltll IOiie~&rm and human .memories. · ,, '~''1'f _ ......... Gjply:at that1 time wu the Ital' of her own show, · . )IOiDa .lllmOil In San Francisco, but &be had agreed to take ·ljine i>Ut to lllt...t the .awards ni(ht of the 0.ange County Prtss'\Club Ii Santa Ana. I ' -:sbe,Wno transportation so because I knew how to fin!! ~ home, atop a hill off the Su...i Strip In Beverly Jlill8,~~y -wile .and I were her chauffeurs. , IT WA!l1A PLEAIURE, we Wert thrilled to do it But a star ls a star .Ind not ·even blase, cynical newsmen ·can quite ignore the aura that surrounds a personality like · GYJ!llY Rose L<e., Dressed i~ .1'ti tradelJlMk. the long gown, the long 'while gloves, .hair piled on tOp of her head, She sat In ~ back ~at on the war down. She put us quJctly at eale, chatterin.( away, asking questions. , SHE WAS THE 1UIT of the banquet. Her sharp repartee, not quite off. color comments, kept a receptive audience in a laughing mood. TAKES TH& PIPE IN COURT Non-1moktr Curtis 'IQ' Campaigner Tony Curtis Hit .,, Witli 'Pot' Rap UXBRIDGE, England (AP) Mondai, April 27, 1970 . H DAIL V Pll:O> 3 J Gunship, Copter Downed 01)~s SAIGON (AP.)-'-'lbt U.S. Command -loday annollni:td lhe'1ou o( a four-engiJ>e .American gl.lDlhlp over aoqthern Laos and a U ,s_. Anny helJcopter near the besieged Oak Seana Spi!<:Jal Forces camp. Ten Americins were · killed , four were missing and one was ~fd· It was the nrrt ACI30 gunship reported shot down In the war. 'Ille u .s. command sald 'lt wu hit~by enemy ground· fire last W~ay· in the l<>wer panh~dle' of Laos, a~ently-whlle on a minion d)'118111lte bombc Into -.and fitjnC rocket grenades, tlley ldll<d · four mtn from the 2Sth lnflnlrY Division and wounded 11 othen. lieadquarter1 u1d the ati-...ck did •imocterate" damase to the base, and o6e enemy sapper wu illlled and 51 wouodel. A newly capl1¥'d directive dlacl°""' Flnt Moves Noted over !!!@.'"il<>_J;l!LMJnh TraiL Six of _ he ' ~ f .. a.111_.. lo t crew1aien ~'ere ~f u.r-were mJsslnri'and olie'lfas reoctiiil wllh;mJnor lnjuriil, and lij>okesmao wl. ... "' ' ' !!'4 : . r. '!iie: AC~ I& the gunshlj, ~on . of ~c~,re.,,,tta~ traJ:\llporl'Plitle uaed to baul."tloops l.'l' war 'nlaterli!a. The A; 130 carries (our minfguns aod tour · ,... · · · • · · · · -.-20m By '111e tAaaeclatod PrUI ! ~ and Laoll. . . . ' ~ ni':· :=~ltl·,m~te effectiVe strikes Prince N!)fOdom Siha1'0Qk,·h ~ · ~eren:d': U: !=~ ~ despite cond!U~ of poor Vl!ibiiily that leader of Cambodia, appeared today to fo~.by ·~ ~bilaliment ·o1 1 pro. often pr~vall .1n ha.cs. It uses high m--. be .starting moves !ow¢ a comeback. vlatmal govenune;it by sO:ulnolii lh tensity li8hts and flares plus advanced ' . Asian ' dispatches reported he...:.Jlad iK.rihnst Cambodian teriitor1 ·Controlled top-sectet de~!iOf\ devices. returned to Indochinese soil~ ellle by ,the \tlet Cong-and Norin Vietnamele A .UH1 Army b~Ucopter,,was shot do\Jft ·irl Peking for a conference : of !\aders according to Western dlplomats in Vien: Saturday near Dak Seltllg, seven nilles of North -Vietnam,' the Pathet Ulo of tiane, the Laotian capltaJ. . It was a)I off the cuff for Gypsy. She knew no one, she wasn't even sure what she was doing, but she knew what she was to be: Gypsy Rose Lee. She sat next to me and I remember that she drank only tea and was grateful when I speeded up the service for her so that she could have it often \ and~ . ohn American m<>vie star T<>ny Curtis, wh<> quit smoking tobacco several years ag<>, was fined $120 today for bringing mari- juana into England. from the Laotian border, and all four Laos and the . Viet Cong to issue a call , DiplomaUc efforts aimed at neuftallz. crewmen were killed, the comm'and said. for the defeat <>f the United States and fng Cambodia's involvemei\t in· the. Spokesmen said it was the 14th American the governments 1 of Cambc>dia, South lndoclilna conflict, meanwhile, moved aircraft shot down supportiii.g the Soy.lb ftrWard, with Indonesian F o r·e 1 g n Vietnamese and their American Green M1nlster Adam Malik declaring today Ber"!t advisers wbo have been under H ' tt Keavy that an Asian m~Ung, will be' held Gypsy had a soft spot for the Orange County Press Club. Her father J Hovick had frequently handled advertising for the club's annual booklet. BE AND GYPSY'S stepmother lived In Newport Beach and it was there that we teok her later that evening so she could e1change Christmas gifts with her family, whom she hadn't seen since before the holidays. It was a warm family evening and Gypsy mlJ!de .. my wire and ~e a part ol it. It was almost with reluctance that 1.remind,ec,t ~-that·tt was time to go, an hour and a half's trip up the freeway awaited its and that she had a plane to catch the next morning. ' We sat three in the front seat on the way baclt to Beverly Hill!, Gypsy with her shoes <>ff but now wearing warm. wool socks. She removed her hair piece · and let her long, flowing hair hang down. and chatte<t with u~ o/>?Ut her son Eric then stati<>ned in Germany, bits and pieces about her fanuly life, her sister. June, her early years growing up in Seatil!, and 'the m<>vie •'Gypsy'' (which she cauld take or leave, sbe said.) · DF.sPITE THE CHIU., it was a cozy evening. . But then we had a Oat tire, at the Santa Monica Freeway ihterchange. It was a terrible experience, one I'll never forget. . . . One o'clock in the m<>rning, stranded on a freeway with a movie star 1n the car, the rain begi.ning to fall, and I couldn't get the jack to 'f"Ork so I could change the tire. , ~ OFF I WENT for help, leaVing my wife to cope as best ~ couJ.rWitb a now slightly chilled, tired, and concemt.el Gypsy who wan~ .to get borne. The 44-year-old actor arrived at the U1bridge Magistrate's Court in a '1aroon Bentley lim<>usine, but his lawyer asked for time to raise the fine, "You must not think that because Mr. Curtis is a leading international film star that he has plenty of m<>neY available," the lawyer told the court. ''He like any other member of his pro- ·fession has enormous taxes to pay which can create financial problems f<>r him." The ,three magistrates gave Curtis a week to raise the money, The iine was half the one levied by a BritiSh court in February against arother movie headliner, llalian director Michelangelo , Antonioni, <>n the same charge. The mazimum penalty-Is 10 years in jail <>r a $2,400 fine, but British judges are 'usual~y lenient in marijuana ~ses. But she was a trouper. She and my Wife: got out on the\freeway ands~· ed trying to flag dchm cars. Jt was a futile try. No one pamed, no. police car ; , Dressed· in a neat gray business suit came by. Eventually 1 yoang motorcyclist stopped, found out::ethmg l didn't ~ 8qd yellow $irt. Curtis looked subdued know: arid changed the Ure. He did that and ignored my "!f~' \des~te l'fWUl· -.-U he n)Jeaaed,.' guilty to the charge. for why she needed !\!lo:, . 'H ' · :W··i . f '· • .Lo.. siege since April I. In all, 17 American arne deepite Hanoi's refu..I to alt<nd. . crewmen have been killed a'nd 14 wound-· Malik, who wants a conferesice ·ear1y ed in aircraft supporting Oak Seang. Succ111nhs at 66·, next month, said In' J~: "we 1'111· The U.S. Command said announcement -go ahead with the meeting becaWJe we of the two aircraft losses was delayed are seeking peace. 'lbe aim of ~ while se"ardl missions were under way. ~ ServI'ces Held meeting Is to milntain Cambodia'• neutrality." · U.S. headquarters also reported 17 Australian Foreign MJnister 'Wllllam enemy rocket and mortar attacks during Mass was celebrated this m91'fting in McMahon said in Canberia. that.'Com-the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m. today, Ch el with two Americans killed arid 14 woi.tnd-St. Brendan 's urch, Los ~ng es, for munilll command attacks in Catabodta ed f.farriett McGraw Keavy, 68,"" of 32266 bad produced a crisis cone~ ttie · Vista de Catalina, Sauth La.RUna, who whole world. McMahon .added ~t his In a ground action, 10 to IS North r'ed Friday at ' South Coast Community goVernment felt that co· n f e r~~n c 'e Vietnamese sappers moving under the Hos pital after a lonp, illness. discussion should be limited ~ ~ W: cover of a mortar barrage blasted their Mrs. Keavy 1vas the wife of Hubbard dependence and· neutralization of eam- way into an American artillery base Keavy, execulive editor of the Laguna boclia, nonintervenUon and the reac· 46 miles northwest of Saigon. Hurling News-Post. Uvation of the InternaUonal Control'()Jm~ Since coming to Laguna Beach Iii 1968. mission. _ ~he had been active in the South Coast Foreign Minister Thanat ~ of Garden Club and the Laguna Beach Thailand said in Bangkok his ~ovi!mmen.t Garden_Cluh_and ser.vfd_with_the...Silvu__.~lle-Ves-diplomatic-and-poliUcalrtii--to'- and Gold Chapter of the South Coast Cambodia will be more effective than~ Community Hospital's auxiliary. · military aid in· putting pressure on ~ following maj<>r surgery on'e year ago, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong ttoopi Mrs. Keavy was gravely inju~' In an to quit Cambodia territory. Court Declines Juvenile Hearing automobile accident. Resu!Un'g 1 com· In Phnom Penh, a South Vlelnafnele p)lcations made it necessary • for her offlcla1 anoounced Cam~an agreqtent to return to the hospital · IOme weeks to let South Vletnam e'ltend UsiNnCe . age. 1 to Vietnamese naUC11.ala who Want, to "I've got ·Gypsy1i0Sel·tft tn the cat!' · '. f 1>, :. ,,. ·· ' .<.,.,.~ .. , f#i 1a.l?"I'' .~ed the magistrates to Who would have~-that ~·tfrl time of the ·1· take irliJ'ICOtlsideration "the tremend<>us ~ ~ ' • str~-yssures" to which a star l RETURNED wi -no HeMed, and rii n, with no (If _ · ·allber was 1ubjected. He I spare and the rain pOUrin ~ ~ .'We got Gypsy home and ttlen she sto~~ us al ' 1 ihe caurt the actor w.is a WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court declined today to settle disputes over right& df • juveniles. ·With its 5-3 action, tne court turned away a Chicago Negro sentenced to 55 years' in prison at ~.e age of 14 . in the murder of· ~~~cbfrt'1 ;1,, ·'""·''''" .,. . Tile case o Artnur i.ee Hester · nad She Is survived by her husband; two return to Vietnam. A South VleOtnlptestt sons, Timothy af Blythe and Michael repatriation misa1~·u arrive bi Plinom of Costa Mesa; four b·rother1 Penh 1h9,rtly,_U.e , C"1~=·,.. Robert McGtaw, former mayor et In UIJ. groilritti war,1 oft!\1V Bloomiogtoq, 111.; ,lMeph, 'Mioma11 and b'Oosis· have · s'urroond«f a tn talntop· cold. · rilan 10f previous u nim pea cha b I e ''Now I want you to stay he~ at my house f<>r the nh~ht. l can't. have you ,. "eb,aracte~. going all the way ba ck to Newoort in. this weather without a spare." She was serious, as was ber miid. "° But t was embarrassed and the fiat tire1 Incident had left me in I state. of near nervous collapse. Somehow, protesttng that 1 bad to-#;t I. Jactc-baCk to the service station, we were able to decline a sincere and generdml jnvitatlon. SO WE LEFT GYPSY and other than a nice note latP.r abolli a column t wrote on the incident. that was the last we saw or heard of her. . But I'll remember that rU~t : Statuesoue and regal at the banauet, re. taxed and at ease in bet father's home, kind of rommon u an <>Id shoe with them <>ff and her hair down, and anally, In the. royer of her livinl.room, hold· lng one of her dogs In her ~s, while the rain jKldred down outside, saying<, "Thank you so much for everything andtdon't you dare ilr1"e home tc>o night." • Thank you, Gypsy, f<r that memorable night . Radio Personality Jarvis Recovering Radio and television personality Al Jarvis \was -reported-'improving today · in Hoag 'Hospital in Newport Beach following llbspitaUzation Thursday for a heart attack. . ~ Hospital officials 11aid the Newport resident's c9nditlori was stUl considered serious, though improving . Sure, you'll find berries advertised at lower prices •.. but compare I El Rancho strawbenies are pJump, juiey, red·ripe-ripe enough to use the day you t.ake 'em holt)ef There ia a difference? E•iov tM delight of frea1& 1tmwberriu in 10 ma.n.v different wa.vs.t been heard by .the court in November but today it was disml~. The five- month delay, until today, in anoouncing the appeal had been "impr<>vidently granted" in the first place indicated a deep dispute among the justices. · Their reasons did not surface publicly, however. The five-man majority gave no reason for Its action to dismiss .and the three dissenters said no more than that they dissented. Hester was sentenced nine years ago In the fatal stabbing of. Josephine Keane at the Lewis-Champlain Elementary School where he was a fifth-trade stu· derit. The teacher had been seXuaily assaulted. Bisquick .. ····' ...... 40 ouJICE Pl!;. ............ 43' Johnston Pie Shells ..... P!IG. or z ..... 33' Enjoy shortcak~iseuita, piled high with berries I Heap with berry filling, topped with Cool Whip! Cool Whip ............. QUUI s1ZE ............ 49' Shredded Wheat ....... KEUOGG'S •••••••. 29' Top a shortake, o~pie, <>! aa~dae ! F~ • . s .. t.art th~~· '!t.~.:.~~ud ri~~f~W, berries! · Br.a'"""'...,,."""t" .. ~:;,;,~ e...~fei R~1io'l) ~. · ·-. : . ~ ·. · H ·; ·;Boneless , .. -·la ;r:ea~ts~.:• . .wr.~fi.~:~~· -Plump tender b.....U, from fresh California birds, atuffed with dreaaing. $13 ... 9 T~sty white meat, stuffed $14t9I. with ham and cheese a la Cordon Bleu. H~rold· McGraw, all of· ·Bloomington; 01,Jtpost north of the Plain of Jai:s Jn and by six grandchildr~q. Laos, Informed sour~es siJ<t MQl'Kfay. A native of Bloomington, Mrs. Keavy They ·said the enemy was slowly drawing moved .to .Los .Angeles 1n 1928, shortlY cloSer· Jo the Bouam Long outpost; 40 : after her marriage to Hubbard Keavy, mil~ north of the plain. Hollywood cori-espondent 9f T.h e The garrison of_ several hundred ·veo AssQCiated Press and .later chh:r ,of the' tribesmen and their families have .been A: P. Los Al'fgeles bureau. · . under, siege f~ several wee~, ~vine. She was activli! in Cathollc c:haritles; supplies by Air America parachute d.\'OPI ... holding office in St. Brendan's Altar 'Ibe trlbeanen are the backbone of tbt. Soc iety and . managing a. Thrllt Shop Laotian government forces. · for the Immaculate Heart College ~ is no ·evidence, howevef\-, of , Sch<>larship Fund. . ' · a new North Vietnamese <>ffef'fslve The family bas suggested me111orlal against Sam '!bong .m, Long a.me, donations may be made to the American bases!~·southeast qf the enemf-hel~ Plain Cancer Society. of Jan:· .. Spring b rl not forth-4 b<1>11 of fruits amt berries , •• flavor• to delight the 'palate ••. color 1 "o tempting. And El Ramho o/fera t~e b"t of the crops , • all ti.rough the leaB01t. ' ' !' El Rancho's .Veal Birds .. ~'"~~;:~ .. 39! I Prices i-n ~fleet Mon., Tue,,, ·wea.., April 17, 18, 29. No 1.Us to·dealera. ARCADIA: s. ... t 1nd Hantlniton Dr. ·(El Rlncha C.nm) PASADENA: Tender veal ••• perfect .. rvlnr portioM I Eot-iwll goodness in a <lelightfu~nd welcome-taste treat I at El Ra .. ho'• Su~tu • .,..1 Gallo Salame Chubs ................... ~~~~ .. ~~ ................... ~.49 .. Enjoy &n old world mock ••• a chunk or oallUlli, a piece of Fn?nch bread a~d 1 crisp ripe apple! I , · 320 Wn\ COlar1do Bl'ld. .SOUTH PASADENA: fromonr and ·Huntloatan Or. HUllTINGTON BEACH: WllMI . aol Al~ (llolnfnll Cottlw) NEWPO«T BEACll: 2127 NIW9Gll Blft. aM • ' 2555 ·tntt>tvff OJ. ~1111 Y~ap Co*) ' .... •• _, , ~--.--.. -- ,, • • • ~--• • • .. • • . . ' --· ' f ~ .f:oatrol 'Finn' Duvalier Quells l 1 ~aitla~ -pprising .i; 1• . ' ... PORT· Ajj-,p~ Halli (~f -r1t\all\l'ars to me Pruldent Duvalier's • Haltlan P...-PNii!oii lluVal!F t... pooiliOn ls solid," U.S. Amba"""°' Clln· day appeared to btl ftrmty in control ton ~}Knox told newsmen. le : •: t • .. ..,.., ,.. '!'"I . • .teer a weekend ~·llW'd teVOJ• failed. ' "Papa Doc" Duvalier, survivor of more • to touch oft rollellji)n aabon!. !fut the ·than a dozen plols against his l:J.ye&Mk! ,.~ were on ' lllelr. IOIBY lo , Puerto dlctitorshlp, proclaimed the slluatlon !1J<O wt lb ball cl the ~flltlla "cionipletely under C<llllroL" He uld the > A sean:h. crew plucked s,m Smith and blJ wife from a tree on 1a tiio<•llland In the Buffalo River ear Y,,Uvllle, Ark. early Monday. •'lb• mlcldlNged couple from Coll, •Art. were atnmded In the tree 12 '"houri earner when the river ·swoJ .. • 1en by lieavy ~alns, swamped their camp. Snilth said his wife, Cath- -.. -..,-14 not •l!'ii!> ~ey de-adllJ 1o dlmb • 1ne ail. .. . . --. . • Potrldi N..i,,;, 2$.,of P!ymouth, 1 ~·-.u~onballfrnm ' ~tly IO he co1lld attend his !".ed41iif; Be hl!l 'been : jailed on :~~ of malicloo.i 1'.0DDdiitg and ii · · u a>?11ult Cl a ~jilt at his -'"'"""'!'lt·•tag party;' .. . ' UP'IT....,_ . -.... ~ .'iPi~~ America .. wjlf ,..,ti ;,i~,· l~tice's Rest Stop Miu man of t1atfi:: tighl-hot<r . • k&r to ,,,.ti thtir'tazer 'than S111>reme court Justice Willi"'!' 0 . Douglas gels a •thi11~diil"Wl~t/tM; iatii Tu Found4-Sip of water from bis youi:ig wife.' Cathleen, as they canal outside of Washington. Douglas, 71, is facing possible Impeachment proceedings in Congress. ~ ln.c. Ttoo )&our• and 43 minutf'.t take a luncheon break dunng a hike along the C & O wiU be required a1 ~t two houri, ~:;i,~~JflUJk.~: Ni :! ·;r ·w· bin. -.-s.~ .... ' '.,r~; 1Xon ' ate . ·g ~ •. iW.'ftijW dem.-· ' ·. " . ~ . ' ra::!,5:t~Ji!i1!1ri.!1. : . :;:;, 'lil'~~"..:'C"_~"i! -See .. --~~. , .... ,. ~ ne, ~ -~ .. . 7. ;~J--1 ' . • .. !-.;-~..-::--. ...::1 ..... "' -''·~C:f!tt -~eighs Aid Plea : a' l'ellh~•~ • baal for "~ASiJJNGTON (UPl) -The Whit• "! lll!tich ,ll/tdUlll his ~b 'llooae said today the United states has :irhere he· ¥lives. The 57. "an _......,,_ lntere 1,, tn . . leal'~· Conyon ula'he biiJ :not ··-·-• ' presetvlng' -1 bagp!Pa~ iii years, ·-)he j:!Jllbodlan neutrality btcaU$< ol the ~ : . e ·;, , 'effect4 a Communist takeover , would ..:o_,flollllcen ~-bed, LI have oo file U.S. war effort tn South ~ .: m,--...=err Han: zor .. VWnam · • =-w111n!;d'.~1,1~greJ:~1 ~v,~ ~.' Se<reliry Rooaid 1.. :tlegJer t::~-. .,_ Joe . • 1a1d:'-Preo!deat ii deeply concernecl . __ ""!"re nn Y , ating her. She abollt ~ """'"8 .i."events. tn Cambodia , II, foliDd in a hotel bathroom, en-llld lo c!oMiy rollOw!Jig developmmla " ;Joying a warm bath and having fun · • · iunmg a soap rack in the water. , ~e a.id Nixon •wanted to· Pf'9elft : . , , llJJ! 4enitlJlla1 Integrity cl Cambodia and "t' --wll,h -vlolatlons o1·c.m-'nh 4 • -R :..11 . . bodlu_lerrfi«T by North -""' totu; uuy.':;:: ~~~-disreprd" " ~ f ', · ;,,'7;.fi. I ' '' <:-;..~ ~ 1 ~-from 20,uuu· ears 'Ga. 'IAI! M9f. premier of the tmblttled . . · • "'r· , ~ rec!m!i ~ ronm· beyond ·Ho.foe Speart OU;t" ·~~1'.tt:!.C~ I' government's forces. BOln'ON (UPI)' -A Fourth of July Ziegler could give no lndlcallon of abmlpbere pervaded BosCoo'i New City when a decision would be: made by Hall plaza Sunday aa IO,IJOO p e"' n s .N:~~ off I 1hlnf "-lod gathered to hear Bob Hop& and' other . 01: • .wiue ay celebrities urge them to "W k U Am a Sdleduled meeting of the NaUonal erica " , a e P •. Security c:ouncil, )mt Ziegler said the The, -" ~-~ I ; • . sesskll: ""' not Intended to deal with w~KU, c ean· shaven aowd the Cambodian situation waved. American flasa and listened to · patriotic music from brB!S bands and fH""1Xklrum corps u they expressed their faith and hopes In the counlry's values and tradlUons .. Bob Hope, the comedian billed u Am- erica'• Ambassador to the World, told the crowd,_''Thls ls what the kids 1n Viet- nam are fighting for -our privilege to do thla.'.. • Only a handful cl dlaaldents could tie heard, aild 'they loo ..... goo.i...tured. Hope napondecl to their occuiooil beck· ling by !JWDDing, "Thoi'1 quite an echo I'm 1etttn&":'; "Ninely elgJ>t percent of the people think the .way you all do," Hope told the crowd wbote rankr were neDed becau&e of beaudful sunny weather with tempera. tures In the ?Os. He "u annm PY sppr.dlc ahOuts or "HlD'T~" ~.·1~n ~ein. Bob." Hope 1'U J~ on ,!ht ro11lnlm by cartooftbtt Al ,Capp,.fuDbaCll: Jim Nance of the 1!Qoloa ~alrlola and Navy football greot Joe Belliao. Moynihan Scolds · Nixon Plan Foes WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presidentir ' A~ Doniel P, Moynlban today !ICOk! ed the U.S. Chamber of Commerce lo Its ·:~ill ~ition" to the N l x o Administration s welfare reform legisl: lion. Moynihan also warned 1fle Cbambe1 ~ annual meeting that a "coUei ~lite" is growing to "hate our guts." An estimated 3,000 persons who a· tended tqe session at the Daughter. of the American Revolution's Constltutkm Hall . J>Olltely applauded Moynihan' s deftme of the adminlstra tlon 's ·~abs!>)utely spleodld piece of leglslallon" lo guarantee at least fl,IOO a year to each famll)' cl lour, R~.etirchers Offer Help for ·l{angups NEW YORK (AP) ,-1'Wo ·J>loi1eerl· 'IUl!<l'.'"llUblisbed ~.Little, Brown In ... '~ say they ·belleVe ihty' ld:O, $12~. ' ' . have deveiQped a JileUild to prevent 'Furtbermore, about trus same pro- ••--·•-of _ _.__ ~ )iorjlon of beneficial mulls has b e •• many 1.1~ ~ .. '96es !.IVlU ~ maintained amOng 'people who were kept breaking up Oft!' sexual· problems. track of for five ye8n or more. Among It involves a lf.day intensive course 155 of these couples, tru,e were divorced of counae.ling concerning ·a couple's sex· and four had flied for legal separation ual difOculUes, with suggestions fre-when tney came for treatment, but five quent1y given concerning specific seiual years later all 1even couples were back bchavJor. Problems inclQde impotence together. in men and women's failure to reach After the counse~ three other orgasm... couples had dlvcrced ·8nd one had filed 'Ibe fee for the two-weet JX'Oll'lm. for separation five'..)'ear'l later. Bul "the now ts 12,IOO wruch lnclud" """*llnl low dlvorce inclct.i>c~ In the sexually during the five-year followup period •• bUt reconstituted marital units is or real about 25 percent ol the pajtenla poy, intemt, particularly ·1rhen nationally noth1ng because they ~ afford It. reported levels orf divatte Incidence are and anaCher 25 ·permit' p1;1 •· ,pM11al COll.lemplated," Dr, M16ten and Mrs. fee. 'lbe-tnoome b1lpl llJlljJilrt U.' J-say, .. " t!OO,~ . blidf!t ol lie 'loJm., .Sex probltllll! alt a., inaj0< factor in dlllOm.' •l ~ • ·•. J· • lie ·.;idlmlc lit ~ dlvorces - Over the !all 11 ;.an, •Ill couplel with ooe fn tmee inarriages winding have -.flldl·~.i!i-, up In ell--aad )'lf;some estimates out...o! It l!ll&iand ·-""7\11.llalf of,~ nwmges are their 11!11Jal cllf!l~. •!Jr, n ... ' .,., a1ieadf •'io!zUJ!Y d1sfuntional" Muten and VJrglnla E. Johnson write or will be In the near future, the author& 1n a new boot, "Human Sexual lnade-eay. Egypt Raiders Strike, -Attack Israeli Positio~ B1 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Egyptian commandos made two raids across the Suez Canal Sunday, but as usual Egypt and Israel disputed the results. Cairo said JOO ~ made the !int ittack before dawn, and it was the 'argest Egyptian raid across the canal in nearly five months. Egypt claimed the raiders stormed El Shat and took the .Israeli defenders "by complete surprise," overrunning their positions, killing or wounding 3S troops, and destroying four antiaircraft guns, two tanks, two halftracks, two trucks and two bulldozers. Cairo reported Utree Egyptian soldiers killed. Israel said there were no Inell casualties, five Egyptians were killed, and the El)'ptian report was "a fable out ol 'A Thousand and One Nights' ''. Later Sunday, Cairo reported, more Egyptian commandos <roosed the canal. attacked two Israeli patrols an d destroyed three halfttacks and two tanks. A spokesman said one Egyptian and the members of an Israeli tank crew were killed. Israel said the Egyptians ambushed a motorized palrol north « El Qantara. It claimed that its JO!diers rwEed the aUackers, drove them back to the canal, and sank a boat carrying eight soldiers. Tel Aviv s.a.id five Israelis and nine Egyptiam were wounded but that all the commandos escapdd to the Egyptian side of the canal. Snow Falls Over the West The Israeli military command al!O reported the third air strllle against guerrilla outposts in JordaD hi three days. Israeli jets struck near,. Ma'oz in the Belsan VaDey and near the Israeli town of 'Neve Or, spokesmen said. Tel Aviv claimed the two bases were staging posts for gueJTilla raids against Israeli civilian setUements. All the planes returned safely, the Israelis said. Midwest, NQrtheast Finally Have Good Weather I Tel Aviv said Inell ground forces came under firt from Jorda!Hn territory In the northern Jordan Velley Sunday and that one Israeli soldier was injured. On the political froot, Egyptian Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser announced that he had appointed Hassanein Heikal, his close friend and editor of the semiof- ficial Cairo newspaper Al Ahram, as minister of Information . Heikal speaks for NaMer in his newspaper so often that his weekly editorials are interpreted as slatemetil o( Ille EiYJ>llaa president's views. Justice Gets Kopechne Files BOSTON (AP) -The chief justice of the M....aiu..U. Superlor Qiurt le» day ordettd and re<elved cuslodJ cl all the documents pertaining to tfie ln- pedme. They· will be made public-w.d- nesday. Cllief Justice G. Joseph Tauro by his order received the documents from Edward V. Keating. clerk of the:-court, and told Keatlna: be, was "relieved of all responsibility as custodian of seid documents." The transcript of the inquest and the judge:1 report on Jt bave been Impounded despite a slate Sopiome Qiurt opn!on that they should be made public without delay, ,,.vy, llttklng Poiiibi .,11lm the 'rebell would be tried ''when they are United states. ' ·~ captured." ' • Knox said there wu no popular upri&- :\.. Ing_~ no J>Bnic -when the coast SovUiis · £ 't guarg 1i,agsbip-Jean ~ and two~ fl J; of 1hO otller '!Oven small ahlpo in Haiti'• ' 'navy began ·shelling P<rt au Prince Fri· • 8 Sate.lli With 'l R ' dsy morning. . The sporadic firing, aimed at the presidential palace, arched <Wfr the. U.S. ,Embassy and damaged a bakery near Duvalier's beavlly !llJIUl)ed rnldellc:<. Two allgbtJy injured Haiilanl were Ille · only reported casualties. Airline flights and ~pbooe com- MOSCOW (UPI) -Tti! Soviets an-munications were stopped temporarily, llOWlCed loday they Jaun~ed <lgl)t un-but otherwise Ille continued undisturbed mamed satellites into earth orbit with in the impoverished Caribbean nation. one rocket Saturday, an unprecedented Informants said severaJ.' Haitian of. space feat. -licials had· been arrested, among them The eight unmanned craft, U s a Id.: Justice Minister Rameau Esllme. It was all eight satellites "are l"ovlng alon·g uncertain if Estime and 'others had been close to calculated orbits." rounded up before or after the !helling The eight unmanned craft, ls s;Ud, began Friday. ' carried "scientific apparatus designed Armed units loyal to Duvaller were for space research in accordance with In control or the coast guard's Bizonto the previously·announced program." base six miles from Port au Prince. The satellites were designated Cosmos U.S. Embassy officials reported 'no in· 336 through Mt, uOOer the mual catchall dications of support by land forces for term for Soviet spy, research and the naval rebels. weather satellites. Knox said bad Port au Prince been The muJUple launch came ,one day ready (or .revolt, "it · certalnly Would after China booSted its fir!t earth have come out" when the shelling began, satellite into orbit -and while Soviet "I never saw anything lite ·It in my and American negoUaton: were meeting experience," said the diplomat, com .. 1rt VJenna for Strategic Arms [JnUtation meeting ont he calm 1 of the pop:ilace. talks (SALT) on such weaPons as the He contrasted its placidity with rebellions multiple-headed MIRV (multiple in-he had witnessed In Honduras and dependenUy targeted re-entry vehicle). Dahomey, in West Africa. The initial orbit, Tass said, took the On Friday afternoon the rebels fired cluster of satellites around the earth on and boarded the Miami tugboat at heights ranging from 870 to 931 miles "Denise,!' which was entering the harbor every 115 minutes, at an angle of towing a barge loaded with conci'ete 74 degrees to the equator. pilings. The rebels seized some food The orbit was not one of the familiar but injured no one. They also stopped sky-palhs of the Cosmos series. It was a German freighter and took more food.· thought possible the initial orbit was a "parking" one, from which individual satellites would be put into varying tracks later. The few previous Cosmos shots put Imo roughly similar orbits,. in the past have been etimated by Western experts to · have an apectable lifespan as long as_ 3,000 years. No interpretation of the function of such SputnJks u CofJtnos 256 or 272 has been_publis~ either by Jbe Soviet or Western specl.alists. The launch WI! the first Soviet space spectac1'laf sizfe three m a n n e d ,.acecralt went.I\) ·at once last ·October. Tass "said the' eight aateUltes ''are equipped with scientific apparatus desighated tor space · research ·in ac· cordan& with the ' program announced earlier" - a standard phrase in all Cosmos launchings -and "the equip- ment on 'board the . aatellites .functions normally .. ~ ·~ Prayer and Fear DOUGLA S' OUT OF T'll8.EE CASE~ WASHINGTON (AP) -J u st I< t William 0. Dooglas stepped oot cl two obsceoil)' i;ases .and a µbet diopute in the sUpieh]e ,d>Uri today and gave no reasbo for liiS' selJ°-exclUsion. The 71·Year~ld justice, the target of an impeachment move by a group of House comervatives, announced his ac- t.ion in a routine way -with notations in the court's mimeographed list ol orders. He gave no e:r.planatlon, his office would give none and ftie court's press offic~, when queried , said: "He won't say." An old Vietnamese wom an whose family has been taken away by Cambb<!Can' Anny troop; prays in front ol her house In Cambodia whUe a lltUe girl cowers ln the background. Vietnamese face increa .. Ing oppression in Cambodia. I ' I I I I I I I I ~·-----~-~-·--~----=-~~~;:.r~--~ ------' . ' • I ! : ' . ' ' .. J OD EAN HASTINGS, 642-43'11 '/ MM*\'. Ml u. '"' " ..... 11 / ' 8-uses T or:n· j Back New residents will be invited to join oldtimers for a daylong pioneer picnic and bus tour of the city which will climBi: .Fountain Valley Cultural Arts Week Sunday, May_17. . , ' Beginning· at noon , residents and guests in pioneer ·garb will bring picnic lunches and gather at tables assembled on the Civic ce~ ter parking lot, and between 1 and 3 p.m. free bus tours of 'tbe city will be offered' under the sponsorship of the city's Historical Society. A speaker on the bus will point out highlights and historical sites, to adults and children (who must be accompanied.l>y parents) taking tQe tour. While the tours are being conducted waiting travelers will be -" entertained by a musicaf program. Talented Winners from the city's school district contests, the ~_py @D_test spons~ b_y tb,e Writer's Group of the Arts Association, poster and Ex~ange Club talent contests will be presented. A table sponsored· by the Fountain V8.1..ley Woman's Club will con tam information· about area organizations and volunteer services available to new residents. Al.ro to be viewed will 'be an art e>hibit, bobby show and junior theater presentation. At 4:30 p.m. prizes will be awarded to the residents with the best costumes. Cultural Arts Week is being sponsored by the Women's Divi- sion, Fountain Valley Chamber of Co1nmerce. DAYS OF THE RANCHO.$ .J. Residents ·will be Invited to step back into history during Fountain Valley Culture Week beginning Monday, May 11. Embark'ing on a bus tour of the city's historical ' sites are long-time 1eatdents Mrs. Joe courreges ('left} and Mrs. Al Krukenberg; members of the tour-sponsoring Historical Society. _, . " . A Festival Is Soda -si pping Time fo r Youngsters r ; Commun ity Promoted ; ,A~xii ia.r:y · B.rewi ng · Plans ' . ' ' ' For · Membership :Tea· Brewing plans IOI' a membership tea are members otrthe HUntington Beach Trl- 'Ttfens, J'unlor Aux:lliary to the Huntington · Beach J u n I o r Woman's Club. · Prospective members and their motflers will be welcom- ed in Ute home of Mn. Dale Bush, advisor, between 7 and 9 p.m. Wednfl9day( April 29, by Pam Ross, 1 membership, chab:man, . , L Membership Is open .Id l{un- tington Beach girls iJ( grades nine-tboUgh l2 ""1lo )llaintain a grade a•:erage o( C or bet- ter. 'l)»-auxillary Is a chartered melnber of Orange ~District, ,..,.",_ .. California Federation o I Women's Clubs, J u n lo r Membership. 'nle program provides competent a d u I t leadership for groups ol girls with a· desire to learn more about their own community and civic affairs, dev4!1op a sense of responsibility and concern for their city and pro-mote int·erna11onal un- derstandlng. · Among Tri-Teen projects during the .past year were assisting' the Orange C<>umy Society of the Junior Blind, malting tray favors tor HlM· t i n g lo n Intercommunlty Hospital's children's ward, a Mexican mission, made posters,..and distributed literature to infotm voters on the 'parks bond iss ue. funds were raised by their annual fashion show and mak- ing and selling bazaar Items. Sherri Jensen will lead Tri- Dinner Arranged Teens for her second term as ,president assisted by Joy RobinSQi1, v l c e ·pretident: Mardi Horen, secretary. treasurer; Darci ..}.. O r l h , historian; Teri 11 ore n , parliamentarian, and K r 1 & Jensen, publicity chairman. New Juniors Elected New ofiicers of the Huntington Beach Woman's Club will be installed fol!owing a dinner in the Hunt· ington &!acliff Country Cl.uh Tuesday, May 26. Heading the Juniors will be Mrs. Stanley Het· tlnga, president, and comprising her board will be Mmes. Jack Hall, Erwin Zuehls and Roy Johnson, vice presidents ; Daniel Drageset and Ted Reddick, secretaries; Wendall Emde, treasurer; Ray Hopkins, auditor; William Coskran, parliamentarian ; William Biss, Junior auxiliary advisor , and Mamie Seltzer, coordinator. Mrs, Hettinga, a member of the Juniors for the past five years, just completed her term as Jllniors vice president and safety chairman for Orange Dis. trict, Californa Federation of Women's Clubs, Ju. nior Membership. Other roles assumed by Mrs. Hettinga have in· cluler budget and by·law committee memberships thitci vice president: Build a Better Community: health and youth chairmanships and club historian. In addition to her club work the mother of two is • Both the young and the young-at-heart will be stopping to enjoy civic center site. Jodi Valoff (left) and Jamie Newton share a bot· greet.in} returning Vietnam veterans al El Toro, con- tribuUng $100 to an orphanage and S25 t6 the Boys Club. active in the Indian Maidens and for the past two years she bas served as president of the North Hunt- ing{on Beach Nu rsery School and prior to that •acted as secretary lor the group. corn dogs and soda pop when the Ladies' Auxiliary of ,lhe Hunting-tie of pop with an assist from their mothers (left to right) Mrs. Bill ton Beach Fire Dep.arlment sponsors a booth during the citywide Valoff and Mrs . Bill Newton. Community Festival taking place Saturday, May 23, on the new I ' The , young women also delivered Christmas toy s lo • . If Players ·· Knew the Score, Gam.e.' s Tally Could Soar ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am sick to dealh o( the empllssls on sex In marriages. sex is fine fot those who enjoy it. but the· •uce• of a marriage does not depend OD ff. To put it blunUy, people jusl d(>O, spend lbat much lime In bed. My husband and I respect each other, we like each other and we are kind to each other. He learned early In our marriage that I was not keen on sex so be adjusted his sex appelite ac-- cordingly. We watch a lot of TV and play gin rummy. Many of our friends to whom sex was very important are now dtvorced. We are · in our middle. ,.o,, and have a very uUsfying and pleasant marriage with very little sex. Print this if you dare. -MONTEREY DEAR MONTEREY: Bow lucky !or ANN LANDERS ~ yw h111t yo. 1111.rrled • man wM was willlDI 10 "a~ust 1riil 1es: appettte, ac· cordfngty." Not an hn•!>and• woahl settle for TV and Ci• rummy. Ytar marriait, 11 you describe It, soondt dall u dl.Uwater \o me, but U you 1od your 1ri111btnd •re ut11flt:d, wbo am I lo bock It? 1 uy wltllout uy hnltadon, btwever, wiilll tel, 7""' marriage would be a wllole Jot beUer. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Whal ls wroni with my friend? We both are grown women with families. She is a fine penon and I am lcind ol her but I can't 1tand the Way she holds my arm or touches me whenever we talk. I have seen her do this with others and I keep wondeting If they are as irritated by it as I am. Yesterday, at a tea this woman placed her hands on my shoulders as we 1poke and I became IO uptet I had to ocuae myse:U and go home. Why ·does she have to' ~ch pe(,pJe? Does this Jndicate the preee~ ot. a psychological problem? -KJTCHl!JNER, ONTARIO DEAR KITCH : Yea . lt'a a "1tilolllf<al problem ID rtpt -liat Ille pnlitem b yoms, NI lien. Some int1Mdul1 do lHll IU!e It be IGacb<d but a pel'NI wM becomes to •Pftl be m•at eJCltle ~ •Dd 10 "9me, iJ teriemly everrueUn1. P011l,bly )'Ga 1ri1ve. a deep-seated a• Upadly for tllla wemaa wMcll you are anwUUn1 te ldmJt, e~u to yoaneU. Or ,erll•PI abe rtmJDd1 Yft of aomeone y1u dllllked •• 1 elllld. -aometne wbo pat Hr 1riuMi1 t1 Y• t. • tim.Uar IMblon. Uodentandblg yW leelln1r m•y Ml, 111 ,..._ y., MIWlty to this friend ·~ I auare yoa, bu:n't the • ' .uptetl Idea 11111 ... betllen - DEAR ANN LANDERS : Why ii ll that When 1 woman loeea her huaband abe is the center of attenUon. -for thrte weeks. He:r home ls filled with people. There are too many phone calls, too many let.ten and te:legrama, 1ioo many visitors and too much food. Suddenly -the phone is allent. No one: comes. She is very much alone. . Now that I loot back, I realize my home wu a social cft'lter. The food was plentiful, lhe liquor flowed freely and everyone had a Jolly time, under the guise of "cheerin& me up." People love to 10 where the action b and tor three aolld wetki It. wu at my house. I have come to the conclusion. Ann Landers, that people are no damed ' good. -REALIST IN STAMFORD CONN. ' I DEAR .llEALl8T: Did yoa 1t1tak I w•• &oinl 10 lat forever? Yow IUl.DJ and frlncl1 triecl to tUe your ml .. off yoar pief wde Ute woaM1 wt:N lreslri, bst surely )'OU dkta't expect tM hand.boldlll1 It 10 oo lndtlhlHelJ. PtOplo must retam to leldfng tllelr on Hves. Instead of Umlhl1 die luunu nee -1 auge1t you Joi• Jt -alld stop wallow• ln1 Ill 1elf pity. Too many couples go lrom matrimon1 to acrimony. Don't let )'.Ol.lr marriage !lop bel0<e ll gets stan.ct. Send !or Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage -What to E¥pec~" Send your request to AOll Landers 1n care of the DAit. Y PILOT enclosing 50 cents in coin and a kln1t stamped. sell-addn:ssed enYelope. - I I . , . ' . {> " J O~l V PILOT ' ' Monday, Apnl 27, 1,970 .-"' Horoscope Pices: Time • t :~' -For Discretion . . .. $ TUESD,A.Y APRIL 28 , ly SYDNEY OMAIUI ARIES (VIJ'Ch 21·Aprll 19): Aocat on friend 1ht p1, .,........i ~and abUI· .,.. ty to coninwnlcate deslm~ •. Slpl!icanl changes occur. Be Princess 9357 sms 10~~ Waist Watchers T,OPS Waist Watchers assemble every Thursday at 7 p.m. in Circle View School, Huntinaton Beach. • t ' ' .. • . • • ' •• ' • ! I ! I • • I c t • , • • • • • • • • • • i \ • CHECKS • STRIPES • PLAIDS • SOLID COLORS a sturdy, machine washable cotton for fun and sun wear REr.. 98c YD. VALUE 36" wide loo•;. cotton gu1r. w11h1ble COTION SPORTSWEAR PRINTS 'N SOLIDS SOUTH COAST PLAZA mad, mod matchmate s fo r summer fun weer VALUES TO $1.19 4511 wide gu1r. w11h1ble 0 FU\ l'F RIES HUNTINGTON CENTER COSTA MISA HUNTIN•TON llACH c YD. lrllNI At a.a D ... o ,,._.., _ 141-1 11, ldl11t1r At a..• 1a.io°""-lt7·101 J o,_ M..-., "'111 Mirr t i 'tll t -$et11rdor 'tll ' -S.Hey 11 "ti I • " I -World'• Control a lon~.) Sitt 22? , ........••......... Sitt 20? ..... I •••• I ••••••••• Size 18? .....•.•.........• , . Sitt 16? ••...•.••.••.••..•. -. Size 14? •....• , ..... , ..... , . Sizt 12? ..... , . , •. , , , .... , .. "J an1 ,·ery plea11ed with 1he rc!!l ul1a. ' Now I t"a n '"·im in a hikini 11nd t: like i i." • ~/U(_ • • .- Annual Convention " Persian Legend Tells ' JLfuior Club ·Winners The past year's community whert lint place winners in 1 er Vi C· e efforts ot junior each category received allver Clubwomen in the Orange trays • Diatrlc!, C411fornl• Federation The Junior Ebell Club of of ~·a Clubs, Jl,llli6r Newport Beach won firsts in Memberafup were rewarded the categories ol education. c:tarJng the annual district eon--fine arts and youth and ventioq. Eutero Fantasy. seconds in federation, preu, Climaxing the t~o-Qay event membership and build a be tter ln Loog Beach was .the awards , community \ ban_qu~, A Leg~f!4 9f Persia~. Huntingt~n Beach Junlar1 Publicity To Gain won seconds in educaUon, Americanism, fine arts and safety. San Clemente J uniors received a s eco"nd in Americanism and a special award-in federation. Attention The Costa Mesa Juniors received ~ second in mental health. Tbe Seal Beach club received a first in con- servation, the Kraft com. mwtlty service award and a first in build .a better com~ munity; A se:c()nd tn membership .was won ~ the Laguna rBeach Junklrs and the second place winner in the Hallmark Art contest. . was Ronald L • e B~ys of Huntington Beach. Girl Watch.ers Get ~egful IN THE LIDO SHOPPING AREA IT'S MONTH· END SALE AT BAAAOWS Bo a Size 20 by May 12 Be a Size ll by May 14 Bo a Size 16 by May 15 Be a Size 14 by May 17 Be a Size 12 by Mly 18 Bo a Si10 10 by May 20 • •• the ti1ne it lak es fol' eaeh individual lo a chieve her 1oal mar vary dependin1 on •se and other factors. H owever at Glol'ia Marshall t"esults fol'·e,·eryone 'are 1 ua1"anteed. 'fell u s 1he d ress 11i:te you "·ant to wear, "·e will tell you how man7 \illilt il ta kes and ~uarant ee that you will reach youl' 1o al. l h Cac i, 10 poaiti•e are w r, that 1011 will oht11 in ~·o ur objective we "·ill e\'t'll le t y ou ha,·r. }'R EE OF Cll.4.RGE a ny ar.d all r11rtl1t-r ,;sit1 un1i1· you. r each your 10111. ( 111 lo!ll 60 inche11 ' d • _ an ;:,4 pound•. J · now feel -wonde r· • .. ful. It'• helped · rn e in n1a n1 way!-... .,In three we e ks I ""C'll fron1 o 11i:r.r )5 lo a •izc J .l $20 GIFT CERTIFICATE " . .\1"1cr n u111e rou s J:Ylll!I, I c.a111e to (;loria i\l:11~l11tl1'1 und lo:oi l 7 1,~ inc.·h1•!1 in tn.v fi r~t I 0 \i:o.il"." · · dt'f':9S. I eould11 "1 j l.teli f'\'C it "·o uld '· 1 ha p1>cn, b ut I d o ~ now.'' ' 1c11, ••t ttii1 c••POftl . Yolld April 27 tfl,o .. h May J for SJ0.00 011 ally Gloria MllfllNill rrogrllfll rq-41Ht of how !IHI• Y••11Hdtol -. ..::z M O' .,,....... Gloria ~lan1hall"s Al. '111\ YS costs less, IAl'jl:ell owned a nd ofJ Cr aled F iiru rc Syale1n. (26 Joca lio ns in Califbrni• Pri,11 1 ~ 11l11yroom facilitie• for 1mall c hildren. 11111ch le1!l, lhan otl1e rs, Call for FR ~E sample "i1i1. Actuallr use u nder auperviaion, the Gloria ~la nhaU m ach in e• d e· 11i ~ned fol' quick 111 re -weiirht reduction. No CharJ:e. No b bli1tatio1l for lrial vi1it. Come in eornfol'l ahlr, ea1u•I clo the1. Di11 rob in r 11 1111ece1taary. WE Alli-: NOT A GY;\I . FIGURE ·CONTROL SALONS • '"·" •••• ,IJlr .... aA,'ICAJrli•KA• .. AMl!"ICA'I" f:.\'l"•&llS AAO _, ,_,1·1;• ,. ... ,.r.. ••:i c:•1t1> '~-"'''-'""~,_,.,,,....,~~~~~~~_c;;.:;;..;;..::..:.:.;;...;;..:...;:...;.;;_.;;__c;.:...;:..:..::..:.:.:..:..:..:..:..:...:..:....:.::..:..=..::..:..:::.::; NEWPORT BEACH ALSO IN 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642·3630 "'"'-'•· cm ... c,...._, ..._....,, oe..it1010, i...: .. ootl, L" Y .... LMt IMcll, N..,_rt leech, N. Holl,,_.tl, OllH!i•, • ....._ 1011 Dl ... o, s.t. AM, 5-to letbillre, l•aloM. T•· •-· Teno1teo, Wllltt'-r, ii Blocks East ol Bal""• Bay Club) 1140 W. 1711\ STREET 543.9457 . SANTA ANA fc1 Conurl11"t 1970 Gloria Marshall ,.fgt. Co. Inc. ' I I I • .. 'VOL 63, NQ. 100, SECTIONS, 36 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CAL'IFORNI.+. A • • • • ~ ~•· I' I . . • -• • MORE TEASE THAN ST.RIP Tho L•te'Oypsy ·R-·LM • • -I Famed Stripper Gypsy Rose Lee . . i Dies· of cancer By ARTHUR ,ft. VINSEL Of ""' O.ilr PUii Sl•K , Gypsy R06e Lee,, an,intellectual burles- que queen who made a'• fortune ' out of her mind as well as her body died Sunday night, losing a Jong'~ battle to cancer. I , She was 5& and her colorful career spanned five decades. • MJss Lee JeaveS her father, John Hovick of ~16 cµu Drive, Newport Beach; a brother, Dr .. Jack Hovick, of Huntington Beach; a sister, actress June Havoc, and a SOQ, Eric Kirkland: · No funeral auangementa had been aet tod>y, according to her ,f1ther, a JongUlne p<Wlpajle< adv<rttalng "'81\ llJd active .rnem.Der,.. of the Orau&e Coooty J'!eS8 Club . ._ • "Tbll bu 'been coming !or • "looi time, you know,, but it'( still too receftt," be remarkf4 Miss Lee, who began In vaudeville at"< age 5, lived in Beverly Hills and wu receotly· admlUed to UCLA Medical Center, wbere she was treated last January and four )'ears earlier,.~ Her son, an aide to film producer <?tto Preminger, said'he vJSited he.r only thi;c!e months ago and.Jound her £eeli(lg well arter the twO earlier· boutJ willt ~ malignancy. · "The studio llad a fit when I ins!oled on telling the truth'' (about her .IJJneu). ahe said in a recent interview. "But ! I don't think it is fair for anyone in the public eye to keep such a rlhing .. secret... ' .. rt.fy mother died of cancer, which tauirht me a lesson," she added. "Checkups, checkups and checkups. U 1 1 could force just one person to have (See GYPSY, Pqe I) . • ri,.,oca~ght .. In Beach After Chase. Suspect' s Same; Name's Different A young burglary suspect who gave Costa M~ police the name oC an old classmate without a criminal record' when captured last week has beeit re- booked under his proper ideotity. Thomas H. Dales, 21, has been Im· plicated . in several Mesa Verde area burglaries and has a long prior record of offenses, according to investigators. The Sazila Ana man falsely gave the name Dilne H. Till, of 2509 Raitt St., when al>Pfebeoded last Thursday, ap- parenUy stranded by companions in the MeSa Vfhte area. Till bas nothing to do with the cue. Dales was begging a ride back to Santa Ana, which led area homeowners to call -polict, who discovered items in his J>OSSeS$lon bearing the identity of-a Mesa Verde resident. ' 1 . . . ' . . -... . Boat Located " . By Beach Copter A police helicopter was used Sunday to search fOf' the parents of a 4-year--0ld Huntington Beach boy who nearly drown- ed in a swimming pool while his parents were sailing in the ocean. Fire Capt. Jim Vincent said the youngster, Darrin Levis, had been pulled rrom the pool at the Huntington Harbour 1leach Club. While Darrin was at Huntington InterCorrnnunity Hospital, the ~llcopter flew along the ·coast, spotted the boat, and alerted the parents· to the emergency through Its public address iystem, Vin- cent said. · • • •• --,. •. } .. Suspect ... "' . Held,.·But 2~Escl;lpe ' By TERRY COVW.E Of ·lllrl DIU»' "191 lteN , STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market continued Its down~ard plunse in light tradi ng ·thls afternoon , remaining several points below the 1970 closing low. (See quotatiOns, Pages 2Z-Z3). Analysts ay· there simply has been no support at 'the supposed test levels or the Dow Jones average, pointing out that pessimism dominates Investor thinking. .. . .. Grandm,"'4 ·Bt4 .fJa(!kyard Gu.~he~ ~. ' '• I ' ' ' I ' • J. _. I ,.,,,ij, ,,',t By ~LAI'( D!llKIN . ' : . casing .whkh 'slarta ithe ·separatmr pm- . • 01 .~ 01~''· ~llit .,i . , 1 • eeks.be{~ ·tlie l\qukt rea~ ·the iUrface-Mrs. Do!i~aJllldebr"'1d, 18, <Odil).alrid . then ·ibe hi.is .a., 11 Uld Ii''Uie'' .... and trim, Js a wom~h 1!1' aA ~lplan'1 . q n ~ world. . , . . · ' 1 , tank where 1the · water · aeU1el ,to tbe Llke many )loq>eo~~tn .idowi1""'1t '" bottom and ls,dralned·oll 19to _~atlof !furitingtpn B:!:~. ~·ke_mc11n;oU well. tanks.-. · ., ; 1 ·.• 1 f 1.:_ · 1n her back, 11.\'d .. ·,But anllk~. °}her . Aft Oil Company colleds~ ~;nei')\ pumpers,, ~~ 1 1 gra~: . .21 . days. "'I :have to 'he l\irt thi"" Oil At ease v,:I.~ ~se .._ ~' ~ ·gr~ , is clean. or they won't toe lt' And cloth, Mn. Hi1debra¥ n1Ji_4!1'!~t~ f:be Jt also has to be·heateC:rtO 190 di~'"' well -Donna. No. 1 -.~nd Jier h , · · ' gi-~, hnme at'30Z ~ven\h SJ.: ,0.:111<;~. ' ; s1Ud. . b , I or 14 1• ...:C.::1ty' or Lake Avenue, Siilce July, 1955. • • . ~ . or ->ev~ry. ~ or ., fSl'~Y "l had no Jdea ftow to 'Work It' ·It _oil, Mrs. Hildebrand Js: paid it·'~ first, but I soon leamtd;;, she sald. -~o c~~t..\·h "It ~ida.s .~Whbe .h1o11,:·1'°~11!!f'1111;. Why would a woman a ·mother ·of ~ uow., 1 e sa ·. en, '.''!'Y" _ s -' · llke gtu·e " · two and grandmother or:· five ; 9f>6iite ~bl ' th I u1 ... ,_ '1--an oil well? · i-iu ems a an o opera-. JIU "Becau~ it was -there. Over the years to watch !nClude Jnsu~. thf.t' .. When It bas provided., me ';nth •the · ~nd of the "'.al~r 1l!I dral~d off anil run ;ito income •I would get lrom an apa"rtmfnt the City S 5eW!f lines DCt-oil Pl 1t1tb and wlth 1 1ess 1w.orry •. _ ; . . :. , it and that no l;ir gell in .the-Pl The .well was ·.ilti~id • on Mni. lln<s. Both <81> bring. heavy 'I!*·<'· : Hlidebralld'1'1~ in·F.ebhjat1 -\1115 ~urtJlg ' Mfl. I Hildebrand'•. wel!.-lile.11 wn the ·a1tort·llved'.~pto'wn oli iJOoli\ .. l!be · kept, with a 31;.!oot:bleck wan. a'""'!f lea~. the, 1a™1 lb ; 'a~ San'• Fi'iricl5CO : the 16 : foot high atoraie lank ·~-die syndlc~te wh~b ·dPll~, ~ ,31900. :{root 1 separating tan_!ts. . · , . whipotock ')'ell. · • , . · HOn Jan. t,'that ye8r1soineone dililled 1 " ·• - Alternate for _ Freeway? • eoo.barrel.a-jlay, will just Ol1'. block, ' .,Oi-.ugf' C.ut • from my .~.". Mr11 ·~ebrand recan. ~ ' --, ed. "That 'brousl\t oilmen' here ltom all over the Pla'ce-> T!iete were rigs , an, over downtown ... a~ ere~. hurrl!fd to drill Jnto , th~ pool. 1'11t~ w,er.1 ao . man,v rigs , and lights that this str'ett' was like a Christmas tree at-night." ·•1, Wi.dening of Euclra,-Hrookhurit Under Study Tile 'boom ep!<d off fu mi<l:ll$5'. "They state engineers are c o n 1 I d e r J'n g aUemati ves to e1tendlng the _.£roposed Orange Freeway -thfOUl!l 'Fountain Valley, HunUna:ton Beam, ... Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. All the clUes have lndk:ated they would like to see the freeway end at the San Diego Freeway. A meeting between.a Huntington Beach citizens committee and two state engineers brought out lwo possible alternatives -ertendlng Euclid Street, which presently ends at the S8n Diego Freeway. 10uth or-widening and Im- proving Brookhur1t StreeL Cris C. Cris, chairman ol the clUuns committet1 said, ''The engineers made it clear thal they haven't determined the need for a freeway and that It was possible that anoher major artery rnight take care of traffic needs." Tbe stale olficlal1 wbo'llddressod the simply put too · many strlW'I into one · Huntington Beach group were Sid Elick!, "The other polnt Is that the freeway pool." sen1or project engineer for the Orange may not be buill at all II trarnc studies Jn drilling the well on Mrs. J{ll-. Freeway, and COurtlahd Burrell, also show that ~would cause more problems debrand's Pfoperb',• Uie. ~IC.ate. pulled , of the state Division of Hilhways. lhan it would ease," Cris said. down ~the p&t~.a~ part 9f' the prage: · 'Ibey confinned that the a>rridor for Cris said that Brookiturst Street Is "They hirf!e<I the w.eq .over to ITIY ~e the freeway is one mHe on either side atrtady scheduled to be converted into to settle> .tat·. -damages . snd I ~bav._ \ or the Sanict Ana,Rtver .,. · a sl1·llll)e highway. "I suggested that operated It ~e'I" ,slrice.:" .. r .. ' '1 •• • Tht freeway would genetaUy run south if th_ey could put overyaues. at the The }feJI cost ~.ooo , to ct;tU.1 When. from the Garden Grove Freeway to main Intersections thb might be all Mn. llllde~rari:l too~ ft over ._·r,••'9· the adopted route or the Pacilio Coast )hat's \'!\'lu~ed," cri. aat~.. prixlucing·l1 liarreu ld.Y.,n<roi ft """'Pi ,. Hlg!lw'y. In Huntington Beach the route The stale .enalnl"" said .. t!"'Y would -seven ~rrels'~Qy.: • ' · . ~ ;_-~I · · could be as far w .. t u . Blllhanl Slletl k • lrito >If arid al.lo the pOCslblUty •· 1'rhe 'creW> shoWe\l'lne liolt t9 · looi;. , and IOUlh from Garfield Avenue. .. pf ex~\.SuclJd Street or a 1bnllar. after' it and. I .just lQOk it ;Q.Yer,'~ ..._ · The ~nees::s said there Were three hilflway -soon to the coast aafd. 1 • "' • pos8tb1Utl .. : • Tbe stale plans to hlre a firm ol Mrs.· Hiidebrand explained 111< work -'Ille freeway mlght be oom on dykes CO!llllltanls to study the economic auct Involved. . · on either skle of the river with traffic, ecoloeical upedl of the need for a The main Job · ls to cle.anM. the lill . running in one direction on each side. • (rl!eway. ', . 11Wben It comet up, U\ere ii more ialt -The freeway might be elevated 'M>e Huntington Beach group -..llt ho)d, water than oU." . -, : directly over the river. ano«J;>er meet.lng May 8 and give a • uoW ls tbe water itperatedf 'thtre -The. treew~ may be built on J11st pr~ repol1 to the city councU May .; ire two steps: First,: slie-•pqurf j_a 1 ~ .. , alCla ol tile river. 1 IL ··• chemical . cltlllSIJli. :.Cat,, In', ,djl •ell -· . • . f • • 1 -·--·"-:" • -. ' • f I. ' • _. .._ • l l>All.Y ·l'ILOT ' H lf!'YC;.,.,,u, i,.... ~olice By;si~naer~ ~ .... ' ..... , ... • ' ... • ': t>-t. I I .., , . ~ DAILY 'ILOT '"'" .. , l"etMdl O'Dtllllel .. MIMllR OF THI 'GHITTO OAMG''CON~RONTS DR. SHAl'IRO !WITH BEARDJ AND PRIENDS In Newport_~·~ a Shoutlftl Match D'ovalop& lolwHll Waterfront Factions ---., .. ,--. . . . . .·f'-.;P,.,e l .. ·• ' ........... ., ..... ... GT>l'l\Tlfj .. ·· -11.'r .. . • .• , • IJ,k~ -:: _l~: • , •. .., ! . . .!. ~ -~~ ·-. . . .. aorti!~~ Coal! Hlll>w117 •.• · Al l!abJ!er --'to Wlliiln eo iett"o1 .aiom·~ l~~.llllnMJ( •• ~ ~ olllcor, -~ llllWnd, wlltt foOr. c ;flff lllQU,. wiiuo Paim.t "111c1 '.,,.... , -. . lie · ~· J1i1>e :llbillr:fmn his .26 ft!. lullinatlc ·phlol Into Ille back OI t!Mlr w, clllablillf ·tb9 vthlcle. · '!'lie .~,f!od'cin .~ !Owsrd'Pac1llc: OJUI. -~y, · whli;e lh<y , "'J1!· m~ Link's car, lluck In bt&>y ~1 · 1_ •.• ' ... . """'*'i a.plotol qi~-IJnk'l lfmple, lbeJ-' IAlld lilm, "Whither you P19Pfe iallio II er not; yott have Juli been ~ ·l>oa•t "'1rf'/, we're not 1olni tOh\d~." Wllll Link u the driver, lhe i.Jnlly ~-.~ betn ilrtvli)1 atoni 19Qir!J)I for .f.. lftac~ '. , .... thl'!l tokl to drive ¥· "1l)le Ille bondlt.I bad their In1111t ... 'In ... bock 811. • WlD/ °"bmc,r 'Pl-lfalo ltvlni ch-.. the . car roared .north on Pac~c OJUI lll&!iw117 lo Malo St. wlltre Him-~ ··~ ll)Olijrcycl1 Olflcer '1'G!I eo<tptr Joined .tliem, havJng boen. hl- forrqed of ~ w~ veiµcle ovet _the radio. • Swifdilne on hlJ red ltgj11 lllld 41~, he s\Opped lhe vehicle at Lake Street. ,A passerby shouted to him, "Look out, ai~ guys have guns.'.' Colrper, !eenlnl hlJ btk' ovar to hear what WU aald, htanl ~ Pilll. IQ by hlJ ears When olie of' lh.e m!!I ltred a shot at him wfif$ m,issed. Aid.ed ~y a dty lrµCk . which pasi<d the fie<lng csr and alowed to a halt tn front of lt, coerper ttoipped the c!!lr again Oii I Ith Street. One of "the mtn 1umped from . the ~ar ~11>4-trjed iQ_get Utto the pa~ena:er side Of the pickup truck, which Was locked. -. . . Coerper Jumped !ram .bl• motorcycle, ordering tbe man to "freeze or be shot." He satd the man morilentarlly lowered hiJ We1pori-but then jumped back in the «it "'1en the olh« man. who held the baby l!oY in. lhe back wlnilow, threatent4 to· Jdll lh• child. To prove that his tbrtat was real, he held tb6 baby tip to the rear window with a pistol~ to h1a bead, Coerper .. ~~ater. . "I ~ecldtd that It wa1ri'l worth taking e chince," said Coerper, who wu only one d. about a dozen officers involved in the chase. DAILY PILOT OltA,.G! COAST· Pl.llllSHIHO COMll'ANV ••••tt N. W11d ·J1tk It. C11flty Vl(1 Pmld~I Mllll G .... rtl Mt1lllftf Tho1111t ic,,.,.;1 td!lff lho11111 A. Murph i111 M~lllf 1•11.- . Al••tt W. 'l1t11 ...... ,. .. ,"" H111ft--N1 hilt• OHie• 17115 lttlh l t111tftr4 flCtfllftt Aclclrtu : P.O. lo.-790. 92641 otW Offlch I \.•.,_ ••Hlh 122 ,., .. , Avtlllle • Ctlll MIMI ut Will 1-l' 5htll NSWJIO!i IN<111 2tll Wiii ••lllet l hl1v1r• Siii Cll,..,....1 * Hfl'lll El Clllll"' 1 .. 1 L'.-~-------------·~ Jr. Lif eguqrd Program P'lanned ·in Huntington • ill!!lllnllon Buch'• junior lifquard ·,....m wlll pl underway for lhe 1170 ROoo .., Mii 23 at Edlaon Hilb School whan boys nine -throulh !lit-will try oui-lor the etghj.Waek tralolni ....ion. 'l11e Juniel' UIOl\lard prorram II de- •IJned to acquaint young boys .with lhe ·hazara. of ocean tWlmmtn& whlle e11J016 'big lhein io ao envlronmtnt which wiU . . . taacll tllem l.'Ollrtdy, dlldplirie. oound manta ao4 lood aport.lmanahlp, accord· Jq to U11111ird captain lloufla• D' Arn- all. , )I• 11ld tllt. p;,rram Ji otien to boys .wllo Uye In the cl\y, and who have a basic 1wlmmtn1 ability. Boys muit be able,,tosawlm 1t I-100 yllnla, under water for 10 yarda and triad water far fiw <mlnulel. ' ' " Denvet A. Hyder . . Rite8 Wednesday COltt Mesa resident Denver A. (DUde) Hyder, a DIU\'"e of Huntington Beaoh and life.long Southern Californian, died Friday at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. fft was 57. Funel'l1 services will be conducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Bell roadway Chapel In Coat.a Mm. He Jtaves h11 wlle Ruby of the family h'!':'!"' ~.I , !fl E. Wllsoo Su...t; thr .. sonr,-WIH!mn • J. De'Loge, Anaheim, Edward I. De'Lo1e1 Oregon, and Edwin L. H;rder, Corona; a daughter, Mrs. Jeanette Fullerton, Escondido; a mother, Mrs. Callie Hyder, Coeta Meta; a brother Jem Hyder, COlta Mesa: three sisters, Mr. .. Sy!Yla Schall~r, Qiota Meaa, ·Mrs. Benle = Ptrris, Ci!U., and Mr•. Wilma ~, , J.c1 An1e1es, ahd 21 gra~. · ' He -Slept It Off In Police JA'bby A llllnliJiiton Be.ch man wbO ijecided to 1leep It •olf dldll't plao CXI llaylng at lhe llttllllm ql!lta ao t0n1; IM he wa! 1tJtf tti*e ll6meUme aftetward. Jam., R. Deleon, 15, of $j01 Tern Circle, passed out· Frida! nlg~t tn O\e lobby ol the Costa Meoa Police Depart- ment .. Officer Gene N...ten oald he checked Delson early Sun<Iay to lee U be wu all right and found Jllm in a deep stupor; leading to hla arrest. He was charged only with belill drunk In public, untll police said a 10.lnch dagger was dlscoverecl ln bla pocket and he was re-booked en chariet of ponession of a dtadl)o whapon. Fire Destroys Auto in Newpo11 Newport Beach flrtmen said today a abort In a Wire Uhdtt the dashboard led to the fire S.turday night which comflelely de1tnlfed a FOUntaln Volley man• ca~. The Citroen belonging to llobert E. Sistig ot 10720 Peony Circle cau1ht fire u he wu driving It near the lntcrsectlan of Westminster Avenue and Broad Slrett In N6wport Beach. Firemen aald Iha car wa1 completely consumtd In flames when they reached the ai\e at 7:Q p.m. "Tha flbtr~llS& body Of lhe Cir burned "·tery rapidly, ' llrtmen explained. Try outs begin at 9 a.m. and run until I p.m. at the Edison High School -pool at Magnolia Street and Hamilton Avenue. Try outs will be held 111 June ! during the same hours. Enrollment fee is $5. lt covers awards, supplies and Jeas6n manuals. Red trunks are $$ more and the shirt la $2.SO. Reg- istration is June 13 and June 20 from 9 a,m. to 5 p,m. at the headquarter• of the HarboNl and Beaches Department, 103 Ocean Avt. A program o( water and beach 11alety1 first aid, lUesavlni ttchrUquea, aurfln1, swimming, volleyball, competitive raees and other beach actlvitle1 will be tau1ht from June 29 through August 26. The morning session wlll be from 8:30' to nOon and afternoon seaslo111from12:30 to 4 p.m. Fridays Will be competlUon days with sesslolll from 8:30 a.m. to U:JO p.m. Boy1 who have partlclpated In the iro- gram In past years need not attend try outs and may bring the enrolbrtent fee direct to headquarters during the reils· tratlon perlod. Award cerell'lonles will be held on AUi· ust H from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rec· rea.Uon Center, 17th Street and oranae Ave. From Page l GYPSY ••• a chetkup on act'OUnt of my e1ampfe I would feel more than jUJ:tl!led in having made lt public." · MJss Lee turned to other endeavora when her days as a stripper -she perfected It as an 1111 form -were over, becomJng a best-aeJJJ:i.1 authoress and television talk show boat. Her Ille story wa1 produced and ran two years on Broadway, with Ethel Mertnan 1tarrlng a1 Gypsy 's mother, th~ wa1 made lntb the film ''Oyps1'" •tarring ltooallnd lllllll!ll and JUl.llii WOOd. Bofn In Seattle. Wuh., • she and her sister played the old Pll'lta1e1 and Orphewn theater cl~tt, t h to u g h burlesque and the Zlelfeld FolUet. She appel{ed wltJl luCb pertonalltles as FaM)' Brice, Btrt Lahr, Lupe Velez and Bobby Clark, then appeared In lllma under her cwn na~e. Loulie Hovick. Min Lee wrote tne bett-Mlllng novel "The G-Strir\g M1,1nter1,'' which w1s fu1de Into a B1rbafi Stanwyck film titled ·~~ Lady 9l BUrleaque. '' She wrote three other books -in- cluding her memoirs -plus a play, "The Npked Genius," which stamd Joan BIOndell. • "Bare flesh bores men," she once ~ remarked, but her "' style of boredom -utilizing black silk stockings ·an even- ing dress, Jong gloves and lady.like de- meanor -earned her $4,000 pu v.·eek and more. Her act waa more tease than ~trip and she earned a reputation on that mcrlt. "I never· tty to atir u_p the anlrnaf In 'em," she told writer J, P. McEvoy. "Did YoU ever hold a piece of candy or a toy In front of a baby -Jut1 out of his reach ?,'1 Sht l!XJ>lained. 11Notlet how he laughs? That'a your strip au- dlenct." · .. Just five yean ifo :.. ·,uu an t)'e. catcher -Ml11 Lee bad aotne pinup photos produced and Hnt t wet to her · .son, who was then on duty with lhe Arm) In Eurono. . "J)tar Mom,'i,-he wrote back. "I pasted your nilt photoa In my locker but my command.1111 oHlctr m11d1 mo take them •II down .. .I kept telllllf , hi.m these art pictures or my mother. u dl<I no ilood-" . Gypsy rtlj>onded In tYt>lcel otyle. 111 coukt klas that officer. l've never hed tuch a compliment. ·And I'm old enough now to really appreciate ll." ? ,. • ·2·:" ~-tQngh~airs' Debate· . ... l ~ I ' jJ ~ l' , . . ~FO~' .,.., . ..... ... . . ~. .... ,.. .. ..... . 1' 'pOllct W. only uli u.~ e d fttilfl4~[1. Uili · Umf as the· ~~ghetto '*""~ .,.i In a ahouting match wllh ~ °Free Ua" people Sunday at Balboa Pler Park In J<ewport Beach. A wed; before four policemen had ...., Injured -a dlslocat<d anlde, a tirdan finger, cl.its -ln a metee that f~ atref!l ·gt a.. speaker for using ~ laol!uag~. So plaloclothes offi~rs llliialid lo co¥er Iha' weekly ''l'r'° ui.>!'. •. and r'1!1 . appeared ~ safuint tbe· ,{O(I ajlllilg on th! pork JtftJ'l • . . . .. . :.But,( p;:ilici bro~ into smfl.e~ when one-Cir 'lhe angry_ ghetto people told the "Free Us" participants, "We pay them with our tues and we'll beat them up. 11>eY~te out officers, not yours." ThO 'ghetto ·peopie, ii they . call.ed tbetn11lf~1 llvt 1n U. che-p....rent ·A, .. frame-apartmtnlt f~~ on the ,Newport Pier psrklnl !qi:_ 'l'hrO\'gli their !-t eJ:100Ullter1•,-1Vt ·-.law they ' l\ave de"'1opedTapport wllh aome ol the police olflcer1. , , (Tbty even tak4 credit !or Patrolman Charles Wtlk.1Mon11 '•offlcer Of the year" awsrd 1>e<1uae .ol all lhe -llrreata he made on'lhtlr1b\oCk.) · lie .,,.. bo .... there ,. ... h 0 .. : Mlt ~ bM+ II plq to bo In 1111 ' l\liure and wtiJi the ihetto 'youlhl Wklnf what SOWi~ to b/111 like good ' aenaa he figures he is In pretty l~r shape ... Also observing the rally were city councilmen Howard Rogers and Donald Mclnnis. Remarked .Roief1, 11It'1 aure going to be hlteresttn«. when we :get. ~ both groups in city council chambers." The people of "Free Us" are due to pack the 1allery of the Cify CO!lllcil meeting at 7:3() tonight. The rallies bf ;Jhe last fmir Sundays ~ave been bulldlrig up. to thit ,appearance at which they were to atk for an end to lilleged J)oll ci harassment, a public meeting room and a spot to hot~ rock concer~ on the beach. Now they also will try to ~ak a~t the melee last week lh~y claim the police provoked. A container was paued Sunday . tn collect m!"'Y to pay back lhe fl75 ball for thfJ l<r arrested the week bef'or"e. "Nick Llcart, of. "Free Us." said Sll50 , had been C9llected previously includi'ng $350 at a benefit concert Sattirday nt~t at UCL •· . John Vaugh'!: said p0Uce aren't nffded to .provide securlty at the weekly ''.Free ,Us" picnics. "We'd llke to get the power back with the people" he said. • • Belore the • g¥tto people itart<d In fired UC lrvtne profeoaor Dr. Stephen Shapiro wH 'tay\!11 . that It la food to see the people fetUng lt to1etber. "What coqunllSlr la going to contrql ·the iieople?" one of the g~etl:o people n~.dled . . DAILY l"l~OT Ii.fl ,,...;;., MAKINO ' Hrs POINT : But there ·wun' much getting anything together .arter the ghetto crttJca lit Into thole of "Free Us." It waa all shoutfng and feuding •lth long-haired youtha set against each other. The ghetto group said they arel'l'_t Hvi.n( in Russia and they should work through the system. · 'FrM· Us' Spe1ker··V1uefan : "Why do you want 'to drag Russia in here?" Dr. Shapiro aaked. . -. ••Much ado about nothing," elderly Balboa resident Harry Nye commented after llatening to the whole afjajr. "Becauae lut week you IUYJ .acted like a bunch of CommunlJls wlth Your bull-headed moves," was the rat«t. "How come you peoplfl stom~ that cop In the held?'' ~ack An'!ador, o{,lhe .&hettq,' Nld, "WI support the pollo< deparlm"!I until !hdl< abuse our JlgbLs." : XEROX COPIES c:: .EACH 8-1./ 2 )( 11 Unb_ound 20¢ minimum Collated Free •• 'Introducing ....,, Gooo '. 1~.L1 co....,y . ·.··'-'ii...,...., center Where printing is done instantly.:__ we solve your copying and duplictJting problems! EXPANDING TO IETTIR S!RVi NIWl'ORT liACK-H•lp us oolobrat• •• 1• 21a1 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS RD. NIWPORT CINTIR -Phone 644·6454 FEATURfNO -OFFSET PRINTING OF YOUR CAMERA·RIADY ORIGINALS SPEED -often on a whil1·vou-wait basis QUALITY -trained technicians and the finest equipment 1s1ure top quality • · ECONOMY -under $4.00 for first 100 cOpies (p•r Original) and less than 1 ¢ each thereafter · VERSATILITY -gathering, ~inding, folding, padding and cutting .. memo pade during opening -k OTHElt SOUTHllN C:~UPGltNIA CENTIRS An•h•I'" 1'46 w. Lfncoln Avt. na.:i210 Olen~•I• 4106 San F1mand1 Rd. 241$01 ln•l•-.1 -10404 Lo Cl6n191 llvd. 671 ·7577 L•• Aft .. I•• 623 So. 011 .. St. 617·1318 670 So. v..,._191. 313-1391 . ~:_5~~11t llW. Newport lttch 3141 Ca'"'"" Orin , ...... 1 2111 San J11<11ifn Hllll Rd. 644·64H ' S.n. Dl'9• 1151 -'-4th AYI. ' 239-214' . - 4141 Mlu!Otl Clqr .. Ril. 211.Ull . Sh1'"1•• Oaka 11113 V'"tur1 llvd, 7134172 Vin N•ya 1121 Van N"Y' &lvd, 7~7430 ;• . ' \ • l, ! I I ' I I • I' I 'I I • I .. • ·VO(. 63, NO. 100, 3, Se¢!'10NS, ~·PAGE~' ,• t • .. ~ • ' 'J. 'ORANGE COUNT)', Cl,.UFORMI~ ; ' ' • . • -- . .. . .--,. • Toda~4 ··p111•I • N.Y. ·See±•~ . ~ ' -' .. . r • -• • . ' . -Brochur~s Dice <J"t«-24,00(), Home.~~ • .. • t • ~ •" 'i DAILY 'p1LOT Stiff ....... MEMBER OF THE 'GHETTO GAf!19';tONFROHTS DR. 'SHAPIRO (WITH BEARD) AfolO FRIENDS In Newport Beach,•-~ftl Match Dnelops BetwHri W.tterfront Factions , ~· ! Famed~ Stripper Gypsy R()se Lee Dies of Cancer By AJmlUR R. VINSEL °' "" o.iw "" ,,.., .. GypBy Rose Lee, 1n Intellectual buries· que queen who made a fortune out of her. mind as well as her body died Sunday night, losing a Jong ·batUe to cancer. She was 51 and her eoklrful career spanned five decades. Miss Lee Jeavts her father, John Ho~ick of 2518 CUU Drive, Newport Beach; a brother, Dr. Jack Hovick of Huntlngton Beach ; a sister, actress June Havoc, and 1 1on, Eric Kirkland. ,.., ... ~~ 'll!,":.'-1 ~!! • 'f · No funeral arrangements had been set today, according to her father, a ~ngUme .newspaper adverUslng ~ Ind ~ pi~.·of lhe Oraft~' 11 ·-':l'fdl •li.~ eoodlll'· • ~ ""' :-{ ·r-, ,.liot tt:·---~-........ ~t." ~ :~·"'1 a · . '. .. ~ JACK •AMADO;:bl!l:l~S STRONG£y_!WpRDED RIBllTTAL ' Pollet' Flod Wnt Baebrs W!fh llOai<k ond Lont H1lr \•,\'._.'4.(l~~~·· · .\ ~,.~0$., . r V ·_ ,. . . . . . , ' . •' •• \ •. •"I ·' ' ~~~'Q :.B¢iit o,·ur Ow~::.g.6P~s' ~'· . ~ ~ ., . . . -. : 'f' -. .,. ~ ~ Ghetto · Gang Confronts Hippies at BaJhoa ·Patk By THOMAS FOR'l'UNE Df .... IMlllJ ... .., ''~ The police were only .; a m ·u ! ~ d bystnders this time as tile "ghetto people" got In a .sboutiqg inatch with the "Free Us" ~.le SUlday at BalbOI. Pier Park in ~ Beach. ' • A week" befen four policemen "had been ~ -a dislocated 'ankle, a brnk61 finger . cuts -in a IJ1IJee th.it roUoWd arrest of • 'speaker .... ~using obicale language. "SI plainc)othes officers ~ed to cover the weekly •"Free Us" "'Picnic and rally appeared tense sUJ:lll!)'lng the lOO ·sitting on llio, pirk' Ian ', · ,,-~ BUt pollef! broke JnUI ;m!les \ whtn o.. OI ihe •!"'T ghetto ~e r. tbtd the ":'Free Us" rP&rtlcipaDU , •we ~Y . ' ' . • sris~'s~Same;i ·; ·~ . .. Name's Different A JOWtl burglary suspect wbo gate Coeta. Mesa police the name of1 an old' clP911111le without a crlminll recol<f _ wfleo\._captured Wt week hu .been r.., booted IBlder his proper identity. 1'Kmar H. Dales, 21, has been lm· plicated In ~veral Mesa Verde ana btftglartes ind has a tong prior ,.cohl of oUensu, according to investigators. The Santa Ana man fabelJ 1ave the name Dane H; Till, of 2SCI Raitt SL, .. when appreheilded last Th~, ·ap. pa...,Uy stranded by comp~ In 11\e Mesa Verde are1. Till hat 'DOt!iln'g t& do 1'1111 lhe ca"' ' • Dales was bega:ing a rlde hick to Santa Ao1, whldl led a'rea homtoW!Jtrt to call police, who dil!COYtred tteoru Jn b!S pOllwion beartnc U.1 ldentllJ or a_v.._. f . ' lhem with our taxes and we'll beat them meeting at 7:30 tonight. The rallies of ' up. They're our officers, not youra ." ~t four .SUndays have been buildJng Tbe ghetto people, as they called thiJ appearanCe at which they themselves, live in lhe cheap rent A· . to ask for an end to alleged police frame apartments facing on the Newport harassment, a public meeUni ·room and Rier parking lot Through lheir frequent a !POt to hold rock concerti on lhe enCOURters with the Jaw they have bea'ctl. NoW they also will try to speak developed rapport with some of the police about the melee JQt week they claim the E provoted .. officers. A ~container was palled Sunday to (They eveh lak'. credit for Patrolman collett money to pay back the $775 Charles Wilkinson's "offlcer•of the )'ear" bail for the 10 arrested the week before. award because of all the arrests be Nick Licari, of ••Free Us," said $650 . made on their, block.) ~ ~ad been collec;ted pr~ly .includin1 Belore the ghitto people started In $350 at a benefit concert Saturday n1jbt fired UC Irvine professor Dr. StepJien at UCI. Shapiro was saying that it is good John Vaughn said Police aren't needed &o see.the peopJe getUng it togetller. -, lo provide· security, .at the weekly "Free Sul tbere wun't much g_ettlog ·~c US" picnics. '(We'd like to pl' the power ~ Iller lhe ghetto crltlc:l· ttt Into back with U.,•peopk" he said . ~ o(·•·r.;ee Ua." It"• all ~aUng ."What comm_iiiar is.going to cootrol aild feadlnl with loq-halnd ~s 1<1 • (See CONFRONT, ...,. II . 11ilill -qj)ler. . "llUdl IClb • •bout nolhln1." elclerty Balboa l'<Sldent .Harry Ny• cornme\ited Toro No T '"'n·ger after listening totthe whole affair. U:I He. l8id he , WU -'there to see h. w ' sale htJ houoe II going to be In the n: ~ -L -B Mure and wllh·lht Jhelto youlhl talking ~arge ase what.®lll1ded IQ.him .like c..,.i ,..,. _ , • be figures he Is In pretfy lllr shape. Tht Marlnt oon.• Jirlniary oeparatton Also observtng the" r1lly Were city ti!nt*'oo the West COat wUI be moved councilmen Howard Roger1 Ind Donald lrom El Toro MCAS to SU Diego begin· Mcinnis. Remarked Rogers.. "It's sure nlnt May 1, authorities announced .today. going to be inleresllng when we gel Headquarters for lhe process of turning both l""P5 In city c:ouncil chamber~" Ltalhemed<s baclt Into dVlli..,·wlll be The J)'Ople or "Free Uj" are due lht Marine Corps Recruit Training to pack lhe g.Uery of lhe City Council Depot, where many •~re .tr...COM!led In the first place. •· NEW YORK (AP) -1'l>t stock markel cooUnued Ito clownword plunge In ll&hl trading this aft.trooon., rem1Jnln1 aevtral polnll below the ll'lt cJoohli tow. (S.. • qullallms, .._ -). . ... • < Ol(jdab 111 El Toro MCAs llllld lnday , 1he move wUl mean tncreued ef(JC~ in the five-day ~uaJe,rfn&1JUt process Jnvolving 3,0001 men. per month. Adminlstr1Uvt, suooly, medical and olher lacllttl., inYOIVed In 11p&raliUll lt1J1!1 lhe Cprps -~ loclli.d, at the ....... dopoL • ' ·' I -' . <;111111r. ·-·-wai. ,.... lllil January and lour 1un ..tef. Her . IOl1, on 1lde lo llm ,._, Otto Preminger, said he Ylltted hlr only u.r,,.. monlhl ago Ind loun4 hot leelldc well 'otter lhe two earlier .bouto wJllt tlll mlllgnancy. .' ·-1ludlo bid I Ill -I lllllited °"telling lhe ti.th" (abouMie Ulnea), * Niel in a recent imervltw. "But I don't think tt ii !air ror 'llll)'Ode In uli publtc ty< to kee, S1ldi • lhin( 1secnt." . . ,:'ftly. rDobter dled of cancer. ,w!Jkb CIUlfit 'me .1 lesion," aht llited. ~Oloctupj. checlut>1 mid ......,..,.11 t could loree jull one -to un 1 oj)eckup on account of my eumpte, I lt'ould feel more than jullllied in bavlnc made It public." MW: Lee turned to other endeaVOn w~ her days 11 a stripper ...... lhe perfected It as an . aft 1 form -were over, becoming a ~t-sellin& autboras and television talk show host. Her life , story w11i1 p~ and ran two years on Broadway, with El?el Merman starring as Gypsy's Inother, \hen was made Into, the film 0 GyPsy" starring Rosalind Ruuell and . Nl.talie Wood. 1 ·~. Born In Seattle, Wuh.'plhe 'Ind .her ~ster pbyed. lhe •Id ~ i!nd Orpheum. lbe1ter c:lrculb, I h • o • 11 b (llee GYPSY 11081!: LEE; ~ II ' ·.· . . ~ . . ·---........ .. ' w ... dter . ..Tbe rainy ai~ '1'n'I .Wer ~ Th• lear)eu !cftcastet'' c1lll I« acattered show!rl tonlcht Unugh Tueldijl; ;will> temperatuno', dip- ping llllo lhe lo'wer ll'L , . ' . . INSIDE TODAY Fmt1k CoUiit caUtd "" fallacr a "liar''. Hi< falhcr clolmf lo be a 'Jew. Fronk 111\11 M U an "Arvttn"· It JI ~ 1o ' Fronk, b<cOuii 1iC ii ~ JIJcl. .0.11 leader of Ille AlllCt'ba Nazi l'ar'1/. Pope JI; . '" • • It DAIL V 1'!~01 " AES Gueats • • • . Get Honor I ~-· Ainerican. ·Field Se r v I c e llu<lents now allalldlng blah llChoola alofta die Oranae co..tJ-Huntington ~ch to San Clemeate will be guesta '11 tM Intemlloo1I Club al Llguno'a '!1lunloo Jntennedlate School• at · the school'• ae· cood Inlernatlonll Day, Monday, May .. Eight American returnees of the AFS Amerlcaiis Abroad progrlU\ aJoo wW be _.m lor_ the day<loag ,...,llin'. : r deslgoed for uchange ·or knowledge between the American student& and the villton from II foreign lands. F"1iyltiel,-wlll:j>ogln ~undly, May 3, -the lludtnts f11ln at the homes of junlbr htab -lludeiits who -have· volunleeud u hoela. All ..UI join In a reception and supper: at tbe 1hcme oC the Bill Thomuel In South Laaun• ~~~·foreign lludenls Will arrlvt at 'l,'hunton at I o'clock., In fl'ftll.PS oC thne they WUI-ulk ID atudinti;''.bd.r 1lld11 and anawer questiot11, then viait 1'tunton'1 unique clusrooms. DAILY ,llOT 11111 l'llfle At noon the home .econcmtcs depart· ment "ill serve an intematlooal lunch, with m'enus from several oountrits. ~ and · served by costumed IOV~ and tlgbth sraden. , FREEWAY FIGHTERS CIRCULATE FIGHTING WORDS C•mpaign Against Coast Route Revived With Flourish · Gn>11' mtetings wW continue cjurlng the after.-and parents ind · fnends of the ecbool are 11nvlted to attend. Jemlftr ,Maguire, prMldenl of the Int«nalional Qub, Is_ In ch1rge of ar· ......,. ..... aided by !lancy Porlar .and !)or• Hagard. Al Licon ii faculty Bt¢ham Says His Pinn ·-·. .. Brazil leads the uit of vbltcn with four atudenta In Oru .. -Cooat 1ehools this JOll'' Paulo 1l4l>erto Caron, llvinl lit Welllmlnsttr: Adrlpa 8 chm Id t 'r.,Uara, .. Calta Mesa.; Ri~o Pereira, South -Lqwla: and. Fauato Macedo, Newport l!each. Allo from the aoul!ltln conilttent are Angeli Maasm&n:-~: from Cblle; llvlDI In Colla Me11 and Eduardo Pena.Carrasco. of Ecuador, at ldlonl In Newpori Beach. Would Bypass Newport From Southeast.em Asia comes Prlsit TongiiYij-111 Thailand, •ho Is Hvlnl lit Fouiltaln Valli)>. -·stu.ienil-:-60111 Eilrope wlll .. liiClude rncrld 'weoemann of ·Gerln>ny <Hun· t.Jn&ton ~ach);, StamaUa Kon TUI ta ~ G-. (Ccirona de! Marl: Fabrhlo Schlavon from. I!aly (Corono del Marl: OuilUDe V~ from. Fra•ce (Ii~·~-··Manfred Htlno from ~'('',,..' '~J\'FernoridoGaJ ja !Nim . (Lqulla "lleachf: and Iqriil Lundsren from 5woclen (San lflemenle l. ). . ·i· 5tudenta "1>m Africa II c I u ' e ~ Hallu from Illll!<>pla (Hill> Un(tal" Beach)' and -Mir1-Le Roux o1 Sodtll J;!rlca <taCUDl"Beac.111. • 1'rom illandl come Mlfl"the Dorothe KmUane !Otllt ol Greenldd and VoahaitoRa ma hat af and ry from l!alllU)I, both Uvlng In Colla Me ... Kathleen Welch Service Slated Aae111bll'!IW1 ·Jtobert Badham CR· Newpaft Beach) and an aide to State Sen. ·JQtm Sclmntz (·R-'I\Jstin) today said ~t is not their intent-to abruptly cut off ~enver A. Hyder Ritcil-W~esday Ooota Mela reeldaitDenver A. (Dude) Hyder, a Mtlve of Huntington Beach and life-Ioo1 Southern Californian, died Friday at Coltl Mesa Memorla! Hospital . .tfe 'ifaS 57.~·. · • 'il'unertF """'*"<lrill bf oooducted Wedneaday at 11 a.m. at Bell roadway tlhapd In "Costa M ... He ltaves hi.a: wile Ruby of the--family • 1at .Ill Fl.1)Vllaon ~...!; thr.., ..... wuuaJn :; 10e·LoA A\iahe1m, Edward 11 0e'!Jift: <>rea<;il Md Edwin I;. i!Jdar, "C4riloa; 1 a daulbter; Mrs. Je-U.·Merton, !iscondlM; a mother, Mrs. Callie Hyder, COila Mesi; a brother J• Hydtt,. Colla Mesa; tbree alJters, Mra. Sylvia' Schaffer, Colt.a Mesa, Mrs. Basie "MeadoW, Perris, Calif,, and Mrs. Wilma LeBorde,: Los Angeles, and 21 arandchlldnn· CONFRONT. •• :Rooary wW be recltod tonl&hl at Pldllc Vi<w Chaptl lor Kathleen Ann Welch of Balboa bland wm illed Ftldly tbe people?" one o1 the ghetto people bi Hoa1 Hoapltal following an IJ<lay nttdled. · baWe for bu life. · -· -1'le-thetto·sroup aaid they aren't living l\!l.sa Welcll, 23, al U1 Apclan1 A~';I . In ~ ~J.~ld work ~gh IUl!or<d exllnslve hlad Injuries "Xpru ~ l)'ltem: • - I when the car in which she wu rldh1g Why do you want to drag Russia alammed into a brick waU' 11ear the in here?" Dr. Shapiro asked.. oorner , o1 RJvenlde Drive and Coast . "B6cause last "°et~ you fU)'S acted Hlahway Jn Newport'Btacb. • .-like a bunch of OQnununlsls with your She 11 aurvlvld .by. hli-11arents, Mr. ~U.headed ~;-'' was the · ,retort. and Mrs..Rob<rt J. Welcll of Vancouvfr How COJ!I•. Y people stotnpea thal Wash.;.a brolbtr ~l .T., Welch, J~: cop In ll><"hUd!!.':i. ·, · Qtegon; a .lliter, M1r1ar~t .. M. w~1qt, Jack ~~~Of+,~e ghetto, lajd, 11we v-m. and a ~tiler, Mrs. support. lh<u10Uce dtplrtrnlnl unW they P. If. Welch, MIMe,.ta. ablile.a.t.·rliJllL" Rtq""" MIU will I>< celeJ>raled Tuei-· ..; • • .:r day,,I a.m., OW-Lady of Mt. Carn>1I Calho!le Cl!areb, Newport .lleach. DAILY PILOT O«ANG~ G0AJT 1'\11Lt»41NG COMl'AM'f' •••wt N. W.M ,.rui..t•,.....,. J .ck l. c ... 1.., \'kt~ ... ~ .. ,._,.... n. •••• ic,.,;1 •• 1 ..... 11ri•111•• A. M~,11hi111 INM9lrll IE•w 'J)•'JI•• f1rh1111 ".,..,.... Midi C1fY lldllw H...,., ...... Office 2211 W11t 1111101 loul1w1ul M1i1i19 Mlllr11t1P.O.111 1171, •J•tl ...... -.. C.Sle .,_l Ut '#tit ..., '""' '-"-kfffi: m l'•nt """'" Mi,W!l"'t*I ~I 11'7S .. xii laMYt .. ••11 ,........,.: as Mw1t1 a1 ~ ""' the Pacific COast Freeway at the west entrance to Newport Beach by deleting the Newport ~lion from the state free- wa y plan. Rather , they said, it is intended Coast Freeway traffi c would tum north \.Ip a freeway beside Highway 39 (Beach Boulevard) in Huntington 'Beach and use the San Diego and Corona del Mar free- ways to bypass Newport Beach and Costa 1.fesa. Badham said the bill he will introduce In the Assembly, with Schmitz as author in the Senate, would eliminate the Coast Freeway routing east of Highway 39 . He said he is informed that state Divi- ston of Highway1 engineers do conceive of the alignment he speaks of as ''pos- sible." Schmitz' LegistaUve Analyst Dr. 'i\'ar- ren Carroll said, "Obviously trafflc can't come to a scr.bing halt at the Senta Ana River. 'Jblt 'Would be a hard PoSillon for the senator to defend." Schmitz was in San Diego today cam- palglllng tn bis race for Congms. . f'rom Page l CIRCULAR ... ed on the executive cpmmittee so as not to embarrass anyone. That is why lfow- anl Rogers, who openly support!: the free- way fight, had not been included. .tfJ~th talked to John McFaden, public relations man who wrote the circular. McFaden evidenUy decided it would be helpfuJ to include Hirth's name. The circular contains sevpal aerial pflotogr&phs with the freeway route en,.. ing parts of the city in blank, white swaths. Duftield said he had hoped the circular would include drawing from a ground level perspective of what the freeway woul~ do ~o features of the city. But "the . coat of hiving artlsts tlo that is pretty :rteep;" he said. ' He saJd the circular cost $S,OOO for the aerial photographs, ptint.ifl& and dis· trll>Ulion. . • '" DAILY PU,eT ll1tf ...... OFFICER WILKINSON CHATS WITH ACQUAINTANCES 'Ghtllo Folks• Claim They M•do Him What Ho la Today. . .. . . . .. . . ' l'fe111 P .. e I CHASE.'~-· wblch ,.. -.,.,.. •Joos ,..ill for ~ snack, wu !lien told , I";~ on, Wliile Ille ba!ldlta ~ ~-I ... II Ille blcl< ... ~ Wla Olllcei Palmer again ~ r cbue, 1bl car roared north ort Pacltie c'OMI llllbway ID Main St. where Hun- tington Beach motorcycle officer Gil COerper joined them, having. been ln- fo'rmed of' the wanted vehlele over the rldtO.- ~w1tchin1 on his red li&ht and siren, h\ ~ the vehicle al LIM ·Street. A. pauerby sbouted to him, "Look-out, thelijaJI have l!'lRI·" !, Coerper; leaning hi! blke over to ~ wbaf ;tjis said, ~ard a pln1 10 -by hll . can .,_ one of the men ·fired a sh91:11"11n which rnlsoed. 0 Aldiil by a city 'truck willoh pused the fleeing Car and &low~ to a halt In front of It, Coerper stopped the car D1aln on 17th Street. One of the men jwnP,e::I from the car and tried to get Jnto the pas.senger side of the pickup· truck, which was: locked. Coerper jumped 'from his mQtorcycle. ~rderlng the ·man to "freeze or be ahot." He_~e man momentarily lowered his weapon but then jumped back ,in the cat when the other man, who ~I(! the baby boy In the back window, threatened to till the child. To prove that his threat was real, he held the baby up to the rear window with a pistol to his: head, Coerper reported later. "I decided that It wl!n't worth taking 1 chance," said qoerper. Jri>o was only one of about a dozen offtceni involved in the chaae. SiiaMers .. Delp : 9nt:f . I ·Newport Concert Bep,ef~~W~estler : ' I ~ • A SWlni· c.-t b)' Or-Coomt)'a cut J the ... u.1mown sm1 Out lfOllP will be offer«! Satur<lay · to benenl Paralyzed 'lilgH 'tchoJ'l wres(ler .:'Jµ~ 1 Ogata. . ., Newport Harbor Hlgh School la the Joc~tlon, with lively musl~ 1eared to optimWn, palrlOl!am and poalUv.U.., ~atnnlng at I '1 p.m. tn a two-botlr IOftgfeal. -'· Qpta, ..,. of Mr. and Mr1. HllOJnl O(ala; llll Roanoke Lane, Coita N8f1, Is now .e. but facea coatly eitended care and ~rJtpy, to be finapced by bil special fund. · He -hist • l/Oetnlbtt la • Cost> Mt1a Hip Schoo! practice matdl 111111 Is paralyaed, altlJi>uah be has regained: """'!' f~ If hands .na arroo. · Tick~~ if~ the' Spring Concert art $1.fiO for adulta and fl for Newport-Mesi Vnllied School Dlllrlct pupils and other: atta students. • TheJ may bO-purcbaaed .through 111e· aotivltlts Qfflte at Costi Mm or Estan- cia high schools and Ille 0r.n,e eoasi Colfe1e booUtore. : Members al ~ Cqo!a Moaa North Klwanla Qub or the Orqe Couaty Sing; Out group Will a1ao be aolllng Ucuts.. . to the O,ata benefit -, • f'rom P•e 1 GYPSY· ROSE LEE ~ .. '• bwlesque ~ the Z1e1feld Follle1. • Sbe appeared w~th such peraooalitles as Fanny Brice, Bert Lahr, Lupe Velez and Bobby Clark, theil' appeared In flhn.s ~er her own name, Louise. Hovick. · Miss Lee wrote the best-selling novet uThe Q.String Murders," wh!ch Was made into a Barbara .Stanwyck film lilied ''Tl1e J;l!(y of BurlOJ<!ue." · S~ wrote three other books -"in- cluding her r,nemoirs -plus a play, ':The Naked"Geniqs ," which starred Joane• Blondell. ~ "Bare flesh bores men," she once remarked, but her style of boredom -uUlWng black allk stocklnp an even- ing dress, long gloves ,.00 ~y.Uk~ pe- meanor -earned her $4,000 per week and more. . Her act was . more tease than 1trip and &he earned a reputation On that merit. . XEROX COPIES ' "I !iever try to itlr up the animal In '•m." she mid wrlls>J, J!. ~· "Did you ever bojd' ar;~.,..o.( candy. or a toy · 1n front · al 'a •.babf -jus~· out of his reach?," she~ t1Not1ce how he IauShS? 'l'blt's yo.D-.. 1irtp au: dience •. " . ' Just flve ye¥5 ago -.Ull an eye·· c~tcher ~ Miss Lee had eoine pinup· pliotos produced and ~ a oet ·to her· son, who was then· oft duty with. the"' Anny· In Europe. ' "Dlfar Mom," he wrote blclr:., ' 111 1>15~ your new photos in my locker ~ my commanding oUicer madi .me take them .all down .... 1 kept telllnc liim tbese are pictures of my mother: It d14 no good." • <loo ·responded 1n 1yp1ca1 a1y1e. "r'cOuld tlas that officer. I've never had 1Ucli a ComplimenL And t•m· eld enough nvw t4 reilly appreciate il" . • t .EACH • ' •· • I s ~112·~· 1 ·1 unbdull(i'"'' .. " 20¢ minimum Collated Free .. lntroducing . Go--ODIJ.Jr'!lll4 copy ,.., center . . • • I . Where printing is done instantly-we solve your copying and duplicating prob/ems!. EXPANDING TO BITT!R S!RVE NEWPORT BEACH-lfolp ~· cololi"roto :. , . . ' . 2131 SAN .IOAQUIN Hl'-LS RD.• NIYIPOaT CENTER --Phone 644~'454 FEATURING -OFFSET PRINTING OF YO.UR CAMERA-READY ORIGINALS SPEED -often on a while-you-wait basis QUALITY - trained technicians and the finest equipment assure top quality • ECONOMY -under $4.00 for firSt 100 copies (per odg;na1) and less than 1 ¢ each thereafter V!RSATILITY -gathering, binding, fold ing, padding and cutting memo pads d.urlng ~~ning -k OTHEI SOUTHEIN CAl,IFORNIA CENTERS ,A,,aholm Los An .. lea S.n DIOIO 1640 W. Lincoln Ave. 623 So. Olivo St. 12.Sl-41hAvo. 776-3270 627·1371 239-2149 .. Glendale 670. So. Vormonl St. ' 61'8Mluloft~RL 4106 kn 'ornall<lo Rd. ~1391 . 211-6611 24]-5001 1415 Sunaol llvd. Sherman 0.ka 656-2997 Inglewood lfl 13 V.-tvra llvd. 10404 La Clonoga llvd. Newport ... ch 1n..s1n 671·7577 • 3MIC.....,.orlvo y.., N..,. ..; 540-Hll ~ 2121 S.n Jff~fn Hnla Rd. .. 1121 Van Nuyt 11~. H4-6454 • 714-7430 . I , . I • • '1 I J I I I ' I j ~ . ·- • Vacation , T·ime Next ·on Mayor's Agenda Life is just a bit different lo Doreen Marshall now. She· baa um"~ to go skin di,J,J· a . morkeling. take a month off for· a vacatioo and read things besides ·slaff r~rts. • I ')if ' 1 -. The pet.-i atlliaive:Jiitmor mayor ol. Newport·Beach reliDqulsh- "MI her titJe.1ast-week ·and all ·~ ~bilities that go>wi"th it. • I -·~ r . A fittin:g-climax to ;her •\retirement'' -was ~e ·presentation.to1her of lbe·Athena .. ward bm, N ·Hiirbqr *Die. Nominated'l>y three,or-1.mat1om; ,the Nt'l\'PO oiili<lo!N& ol· American: Associllt!on of llnlvritf'.::lfllallo. ce i.e.«ue of •l>Orl1Beacb.and thew.....,.·, Div!Jioe Gf:.ttut'!ftw;Port Be~ Chamber of Commen:e, she wu .solfC!ed fo" h•~l'illl;~' Ji>'lior community. _ i r r Y\. f ' • . ... ,.. "ti'~ • ' nor.en, who is Mrs. Robert.Marshall, has been mayor since Ap,rif, 1968. Before that isbe~was vict ·mayor for two years, city councilman•for four years and 1 .m,ember. of the city planning commission for three. . , ; . ,,, '>. Siie leaves her poat wi)h s(>!De Teiuctance but feels that lt I! essential to keep fresh ·ideas comillg; in!"ll;':tll' city government_ tbroulch new ollle&o holders. :· · STI LL IN PICTURE • D.oreen will not step completely out of the picture of city govarnmeilt, though,. for her Ideas and projects will·be carried oo aJ1!I her lnlluence sjll 10 with them. · · · Being a "lady mayor" did not present her with 8J1Y prnblenis In the way of criticism, Jealousy ar di!crimination. upeopJe often would aay 'You're the mayor? You don't look. like a mayor,' tbougb,11 she nnlled. : Former Mayor Marshall, while not an ad~ocate .. of the femlnisj mov& men.t, feels that if a woman is motivated she shoutdii't hesitate todrain and enter the field of government. The key is adequate priparattoo. com- 'mitment and a ·willingness to wort, bard~ she stressed. · . · -;: • . NEWPORT TOMORROW, Thanks to her efforts, and those of her cO-workers,: h'"e~beloftd New· port Beach 'will retain its village characteristic while ·gllillil'f ~rtant :financial '"and civic growth. The Newport Tomorrow study assures·th11. ~ ''It is important that the city's growth not accelerate-too fapidly to ·a . nondeilfcript metropolitanism," she cautioned. ''It is one of the most beautiful communities anywhere. I hope we ,preserve and augment its beauty, wbic~ is. a priceless value." , . After "goofing off" a bit, Doreen·will. catch up with the filing and IC• counting work for the family .busine5s, take up her conversational French lfiH9ns, plan for. a raft. trip down the Colorado with her hus~nd Jate in May 'and begin to prepare for a month·long trip they will make to Australia in 'Augus,t. Her• accomplishments to date fill a ·typewritten palie,.proving that ahe tnily has given of' hers ell unselfishly. But what is· next for Mayor Marshall, who surely won't be content to 1*"'1retired:' far too long? "It's hard to tell," lhe slim and trim modeMMiay Athena smiles with a .twinkle in her eye. ' .. 'Bl!A,ANDERSON, Edl!or • ,...,,, "'"' u, ,,,. .. "'" 11 . . . DEIP IN THE OLD SOUTH -Those boarding the Steamboat South (fashion show) chartered by ~t. JOiin the Baptist School Auxiliary Saturday, May 2, will find · themselves ·in the fashionable Old Soulh. . - • • • • • ••• Brunch Brightens Preball Season Getting an idea of what to wear ID the Empire Debutante Ball June 19 in the Newporter Inn are (left to ri~) Jay Gould, Miss Susan Mary HammerslaR, Jake Hammerslag and Miss Renee Louise GooJd, twO of the girls who will be presented and their fathers. The debutantes and their dads were guests at a brunch in the Stuft Shirt, hosted by the ball committee of Harbor Key of the Child Guidclnce Center of Orange County, sponsor of the ball. Prior to the luncheop •event, the girls and their fathers .toured the thrift~shop, where the girls spent time in community service and the clinic, which is directed by Dr. Leonard I. Lesser. Presented during the June ball will be the Misses Barbara Anne Bailey, Bryn Bernard, Theresa Lo:uise Blalack, Gail Jane Caras, Christine Marie Dixon, .Diane.Louise Duffie, Cynthia Louise Donaldson, Linda Marie Fox and .Val.mere Lynne Kasala. Otliers are·the Misses ·MelodiE! Ann Keller, Debbie. June Metzleur Nancy Ann Newbrough, Cynthia Pells, Shannon Micltelle Prat~ Dian~ Marie Rivera, Susan Joan SJlaw, Mary Theresa Sullivan, Cynthia Leigh Weber, Nancy, Sue Winfield ancJ Jenfli!er Jean Wittwer. ... ' ' Finding them~elvesin -the Step!ifn Foster era are (left to rlght)the,Misses Judy Jaussaud, Mary Stoltz and Karen ~cConnish, al1 models for the show. . . ' Steamboat Chartered A fashion cruise down the Mississippi RiWr iati> the old Sooth has been <haflered by St, John the . S.ptiot SdJool Auxiliary for Saturday, May 2, at 11 :30 a.m. · The polnt of departure f« Steamboat South will be tl\e Newporter Inn, .and t b e destination wJJJ be •n ~ ol fashions for the §oulherii belle, the SOuthern gentlernlia and the CoUWon~ set. ~ ' Commenting on the fashlorii from May Co. will be Mrt. Terettee Clarke and· Richalji Saud, 'and providlnk background music will be Lou Is Bennett's orchestrL Entertainment will be furniJh.. ed by the Dixie Belles, •r au1iliary group. Mrs. Joaepb Parririo ii. gerierlil chairman an4 assi!ting here are the MmtS. Clarke and Richard Russi!~ . model training; Frank I ii' Dietrich, de<oratioos: Johil McNamara ' arid Huah Mulhern, prizeei Noel Hanaon and Alfred M e y e r ad- verti9ing: ~ Robert R i u a, ....,..aliono and John Hartl, publicity. Robert Bomi.ng is in charge of progrlJ1l desip. • .. ·If Play~rs ·Knew the S·core, Game's T ~.11.y Could Soar .. • -• DEAll:..ANN· LANDERS: I am sick to dealll ol tbe «!lphlltl on ,... in ~-s.. Is one i.r -who <llJo!'JI, but tbe ·-·ol. marrlqe does not depeod U1 It. To put It bluntly. J>OClll!e just don.1 >pm! tbll much time In bed. . My, basblod and I respect each other, we like each other and we are kind to eicll-<llher. He learned esrly In our marriait. that I WU not teen OD lex 10 he adjulted hia IU appeUte AC--cordlngly. We walch '& lot ol TV and 1'111 ... ruJIUll)". llQ)" ol ""' !rleodl t.o whom 1t1 waa: Vf!l"f important are now divorced. We are in our middle 40o and bave a very sstltlying and plessant nWrlage with very UtUe oex. Print WI H you Un!. -MONTEREY DEAR MONTEllEY1 How hdy f• ANN lANDfRS ~ t y .. tlaat ,.. manied a ....... WU wlUlq ta "adjul .... sei ~ ... .......,."Nol all llu_o_ MIGe forTV ... pl"llllllly. y_ ......,., .. ,.. deoaltio 11. _ ..... -11 ... 11111 U 1111 and ,_ ...,_ an oalilW, w•mllo-llllssy- 111 lredtltlln, Mftytr' 1rhll tex, 1f/l/U manlap-be a wloele ht-. . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: Whal II wron1 I with my friend? We both ore 8'own women with" familiel. She Is a fine -anc1 I am _food or her but I cen't atind ·the way lhe: 1bolds1 my arm or kKICbel me wbenner we talk. 1 have teen her do tbll with otbtr1 and I keep w~ If Ibey are u Irritated by It a1 I am. . Yelterd1y,·at a tea thll womin iNaced her band.I Oii' mr lhotJlders II we• ipoke and I bocamo 10 upoet I had to eicuoe mylelf and .. borne. Wl\Y d... she .. -have to touch people? Does this Indicate the~ ol a·psychological problem!' -KITCllEf!ll. ONTARIO DEAR JtlTCH; Yes. lt1 1 a ~11 .......... al\ riPI -bot tile -,nlllem 11 ,..,., Ht Jten, Some lod!Tldaalo do !IOI Uke lo be loucbed Rt" a peraoa wM laeeome1 IO upset be mn1t etcne '9mteU ud 1• •ome, • ..,...ly~ •. PoNlbly :fOI lllYI a dffp.te11ted an· ttpa•r for tbtt ..,.... ~ yo. ar._e -. .lo admit, .... .. yoanelf. Or,..... ... .......,,...,_ yt1 'dhl.lked 11 a cWld. -IOIDetae wM put lier llaadl • 1• iia a stmllsr luliloo. Uodenta...,. ,_ feolill11 may be1p 1 .. -,,.. -.i1y to iM• lrtnl ..... ' lllOfe ,.., la1111.'t the •lil!'l<lt Ides dial U. bOlkn yoo. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why ls It thsl when a Wl!'llan loses her husband she Is the. center of attention -for thrte weeks. Her home :il tlUed wlth people. Ttlere are too many phone calla. too many letters and telegrams, too many visitors and too much food. Suddenly -the phone ls alleot. No one comes. She is very much alone. Now thal I look back. I realiu my home was • social center. The food WH plenUful., 1he liquor !lowed freely and everyone bad a jolly time, under the guise of "chewing me up." People love to 10 where the action Is and for . three IOiid weeks tt wu at my houllt. 1 have come to the CQnclu!ion. Ann Landers, that people are oo darned I • •• good. -REALIST IN STAMFORQ, CONN. '• DEAR REALIST• Did y .. illlU k wa1 Soinl .. last forever? y..,. r..a, and friada tried lo take )'Mr milil off your p1ef w~ tbe wMDCll WftW frtlb, but Mrely .fOQ dldl't espeet dlie band·bohllal lo I• " lad.rhlltely. P ..... mi;ast :returai to lelldlq tbelr tw1 llv•. Instead or damala1 lb kmaa l'HI I ••uest ,.. Joi• II -and •lop w.U-. ing In sell pity. Too many couple.s go rrom matrilnooJ to acrimony. Don't let your marrlap flop before It gets started. Send Jot Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage -Whit to Expect." Send your request to A4a Landers in care of the [)All.JV Pnn.P enclosln& 50 cents In coin and a 1onC. stamped, sell·addreaed envelope. -. • • I I 1 '·' ... _ .. . ' Princ;ess .. --..:.N ... . ... -· ·-·· ·--.. -~~ .. - .. : . ' ': '' : .. ' \"' I •, ',· I . ' . L I ·, .... I . . • • • • ' • • 'i ' ' i t~ . ' M11i11di7, Aprlt 27, 1970 • CHl!CKS • SntlPES • PLAIDS . • SOLID COLORS • sturdy, m1chin1 w1sh1ble cotton for fun ancl sun weir REG. 91c YD. VALUE 36" wict. 100'/e cotton 9u1r. w11h1ble c YD. COTTON SPORTSWEAR . PRINTS 'N SOLIDS mad , mod matchmetes for summer fun weer > I ! , VALUES TO $1 .19 45" wid1 C·. ' • l i I I ' gu.r. w11h1bl• YD. , fl f~f\fl Ff~lf. <; • SOUTH COAST PtAZA HUNTINGTON CENTER COITA MUA HUHTIH•TON llACH • lthtel At S. DI ... ,.....,_ 141·1 11• l.tl119er At a..tt h• ..... -191·1011 . 0,.. M...., ...... ,,...,. 10 'tn f -1•h14., 'rU 6 -S1HQ' 12 -'tfl I • TODAY ·~ .APRIL- 27th SIH 22? ....... " ....... " " Size 20? .....••• , •... , •..... Site 18? ........•....••..... Size 16? ......• , , ..•..•..... SIH 14? ............... , .. .. s1 .. 12? .................. .. ,..,.,,. I ''I ant verrillea1ed l wilb the reiults. 1 Now I c·ah swim · . in a bikini aod .,., like it.11 ~~ I " • Annual Conyenfion • • Persian Legend Tells Junior ..,Club Winners Be a Site 20 by May 12 Be, a Site 1t by May 14 Be a Size 16 by Mly 15 Be a Site 14 ·by May 17 Be • Size 12 ,by May 18 Be a Size 10 by May 20 "[ lost 60 ineheii. an(I 54 pound1. I now fe~l 1''ondcr- • ; ful. It's h clpc1.I, • me in 1nahy w11y•. IN THE LIDO SHOPPING AREA IT'S MONTH• END SALE AT BAlmOWS .•• rhe li111e it 111kel!I for each individuai lo achic,·c her :;oal n1ay vary dependin1 on age and other (aelor.s. llowever at Gloria Marshall resul1s for everyone 'are .-uaranteed. 1'ell u~ lhf'l drc1111 size you "'·anl lo wear, ,.,e ,.·ill tell you how many \i!il ~ ii lakes 11nd ,1ruaranle(' that you wilJ 1·rarh your i:roi1 I. In fact, 10 po.siti,·e a~ we that you "'"ill obtain your objeeli\·e we "·ill even lei yo u ha,-1: }'REE OF CllARGE any and a ll furthrr \'h!ils un1il you reach your goal. ''Al'ter 11un1crous · ir•-.•• J c a111e to (;loria i\JaHiiall's _ and lo!'il 7 1h incl1rs j in 111y firs I '10 ~ ~ f "In three ""f!:eL.s I "'·ent from a sizr $20 GIFT CERTIFICATE \'isits.'? 1w1~0,./,,.d ... 1 .. ..iih-•. .IJll'l.;;...1 lar1te1t o~·n cd and 01Jeraled Fiftnre Sy1te1n. (26 locations in California Jt 15 lo a &iT.c 1:1 dress. I couldn't l>elievf: it woultl lu\ppen, but I do now.'' cc11, olfl' tt,11 ceupe•I. Y•lld A,rn 27 thro•fh Mey J fot SJ0.00 oll •• Glorlci Monltoll Pnt1Jrn1 _.,.,..11.. ef liew llffie Y•• ..... to Iese, (;loria i\larshall't1 ALW.4.l'S costs lesil, 111uch less, lhan olher~.' World'• Control n fnn~.) Priva1c pl11yroom fll eilitie1 for 1ttuill ehil4reti. CalJ for FREE tamplr. \li11i1. Aclually u~ ut1der 1upervi1ion; the Gloria ftfanhall m1chine1 de~ ~i..,ed for quick &afe wei.-ht reduction. !'lio Cha,...e. No ohliir:ation for tri1J "isi1. Conte in com(ortahle, cai;ual clothe1. Di•rohinr uut1ece!sary. WE ,\R•: 1'·o·r ,\ GY!lt. J!IG~E ·roNmor. SALO:'\'S 4°30 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642·3630 (3 Blocks East of Balboa Bay Club) 1140 W. 171~ ST~EET 543·9~57 SANTA, ANA ' ' Al.SO IN A..WM+ C.¥111 .. CreMhew, 'Downey, Glt11dele, Lellew.e4, Ln Y ..... Lfllf hec .. H~rt leocli, N. Hell,weH: OltMrfe, P•1.t111 .. S.11 Dt.t-, ~. All•, SMtCI hl'MN, S1111llllHI, T•r• ...,., Te1Tt1t1te, WMttltr. • , fcJ Conuriaht 1970 Glorra Marsl1aU Mpt. Co. Inc . • ' ' .• • ' 1 YOt 63, _NO. I 00, 3 SECTIONS, 36 P >,.GES ·2 -. By llUDrNIE~ll ~.-~ .... ~ A. ea\r ·oC ~~ "llo allegedly to¥i polfce1 of1:_.U:~ berpin two hOur.s eaiiiet I~ a .~, )lwmen on a . \fil~ chase tbl'olJih Wul Pfanp County Sa\unt&y-~ Jsing I baby ~ 19 a · shield -bef9re beinC captureit 'al a roadblock. · . 'Ibey .were booktd on • ~variety of · criminal charges aflflt ,Jbe putsuU, spark· e~ by a shoothtg in. Costa Mesa, ran through thret other com.munitiea and ended wlthout further injury. Veter.,n, ~awmen said that fact \alone .was a miracle. PougJ~ M. C\immi!!gs,, 27, ol G~nlen C.rovet 'Bod .CharJe-' Z&teialo, Z61 a transient, were captured in Fountain Valley after exchanging volleys of gunfire Wiijl Ja,wi;nen from three departments. They are in HUntiniton Beach. City Jail, awaiting arraignment on charges Famed Stripper Gypsy Ros~ Lee Dies of c,n.cer By ARTHUR R. viNsEL Of ,... O.lolr IW-...n .. Gypsy Rose Lee, ID .intellectual burles- que queen who made a fortune out ol her mind .p well , as her. body di<il St!Dday njgbt, losing " a )o°' battle to cancu. ~ :tie waa 51 and h '1 ·~ul ctrf'r 1panqM·8v1 ~ .. · • ol "~t _aliemptei! mUrdel and lSsault •!~ a de.,a~)' Weapon. ~ a police"ottpt. ' ~ ,... • . , , 1be~ -~~· viC~ms. Alvlp ·J'. Llnlt, .29. 'bis·:Wile'ifelen,,1\, and tjle· sjx-monih- old ."infant, are' , bfC:t .at ·:1helr home in La PUeirte tbd&y~· thankful• they were not lenoUstY harn\ed,~ \he onteal. The rafnpage, according to police reports, begaD arobnd.3:30 p.m._Saturday at Wllsotl Stretl:"'and PiBcenUa Avenue in ~ta Mesa as the p_air shot George A. Bershaw, 35, of 207"Blltiniore Ave., HlDltingtori Beac'b, 'in the IJ?!earm. Bersba,w~ W)>o was nol serio.usly In- jured, Wf$ liccuJed by tbt' men of steal- ing the moneY ~they had left on .the counter Of ~a ·. c.osta Mesa' tavern for some .dripb• tbe.y hid ordered. ~ ~..,!8,~tl¥!!:sed by off-duty Costa Mesa polkimlri Ron Palmer who j~~··Into ~a.w's. CIU' ,And chased CU!iunlnis.•nd .:Zalezalo flirb9gh Costa . . ' < . • " . .Mesa, ·Newi!!>rt Beach and Hlllllineloo Bea~ when he· stopped + thein· · and engaged ' them' in . a .. gunl!P~ o n ·Btookttw'st Street, about . a ·haU-mi)e Dortb.of·facific coast·1Btgbway.,. . As. Palmer •Pl>t'oachOd 1o wllhln 60 .feet o( tl~m and Identified hlmaelf as .i PoU0e 'olflcer; they.~ answertd.;.with tout ,.. five shots, while Palmer .said he, pllted nine shots from hb .25 cal. automatic pistol into · the · back of their car, dlt:abling the vehicle. 'Ille bandlll lleil onJoOt tOward Paciflc Coiat Highway, where • tltey <om· mandetred IJnl•s car, stuck in heavy traffic. -, Pressing a pistol agai111lLinkla.temple, they tokl hi"1.. '.'~ you people realize it or not, yOu. have jUst been kidnaped. Don!t woriy. we•re Dot going to hllrt you." With Link as the .driver, the family (See CHASE, P._-Zl • Ghetto'· Gang: 'W-e'll Beat Up Our· Own Cops' 11J THOMAS FORTUNE Of .. D4111Y '"" ll•ff • The pqllce were only a m u s e d , I f;etting .Jump on ·sum~~· .· Kim Lee, S, heads for·bellywhopper at o·range Coast drtn~'for sUmmer ; .. according to Y offici~s. Special YlyiCA pool as she gets set for· pre-summer swim . classes for pre-schoolers will be conducted in Y's proJr•m marting Wednesday at the Y. $mpbas., heated pools by Aquatic· Dire1:tor Bill Chunn and' durmg Uiis session will be on "waterproofing chll.. his staff. For details, call 642-~. · , ' ' . . - ' bysWtdera this time as the "ghetto M Pl c • • F t D ' A • people" got Jn • shouting match with 'esa . an· o...nrn1s· s10' n~ers as raw rtist the "Free E_•" people Suaday at Balboa .a.a.a.a4.a..a , · · · · Pier Por~., ~Beach. . . Sh ' H' lf , . "' -k lltll!iQ lmjr. pofic.e"t"n had ' , ' • ~ • •. I • t • , · oots· . imse • • • Miia Lea leateo . •• Joi* How "" lilt clilf c&l!ort; -; Beai#(,.~ ~. Ill'. • . el .• m!~tl:~;t:i ~~ciieot1; . ffieb · '.l '--l : il~r:k litto , !taiz. · olllceot Juluage. &ff41blclothes offk-Ws '. •, ' • ' ' · '•"I " ' ~ ·· ~}':· • -·-, •V' f i;. ', i ...., • .u.. :. ~ f;'f8t :t'"J:..t ~ ·;:: , An ·elec\joll of chalrmu and vice •.p.:U~p" ~~·~lt'd:c(r, . ~ ~led ~. bandil polii:e bellev< ' ll1111111ip111!il0h; a lb1lr, J""" HaVQC, and I l;Qll. Eric ~· ,.. ., No funeral arrangements !ll<f,..-bieo set tQday, accOrdlng to her fi.IJaw, f • longtlrrie newSJ)aper adverlising man ind active; member of the Orange Countf Presi Club. : ''Tbi> has been coming for a loog Clme, you know, but it's itlll too recent,'' be remarked. . Miss Lee, who began Jp vaudeville at age 5, lived in Bevertr 1fills· ~ was recently admitted lo UCLA Medical Center, where she wu tJi;ted IHt .January and four yeara earlier. : Her son, an aide to film prochlttr Otto Preminger~ •sakl' be Viltted her uily three months ago·and fciund ~ feeHn·g well after the two earlier bouts with the malignancy. " , • "The studio had a fit when I insiSted ontelllnc .~-trutlt" (abolit her i!lneas), she said in ~a recent intervii;:w. "But I ,dOO't, think it· is fair 'for ~one in ~ pu'blic eye. to keep , such a thing • secret.., . "My mother died or cancer, which taught me a lesson,", she added. "Checkups, checkup! 3od checkup!. If I could force jWlt one person to ha"._e a checkup on account of my example, I would feel more than justified . in having made it publlc." · Miss Lee turned to other endeavors when her days as a stripper -she perfected it as an art · fc:>rm· -were over, becoming IJ best«lling · authoress and tel~ talk<abow hoe!. Her We stoij, was produced , and~ ran . two years on .. Broadway, wUh Ethel ·Mitman sta¢ng u gfP9'a mother, Oien was made into tlie film "Gypsy'' ~Ing R<>sallnd RUS!ell and Natalie W.ood. Born In Seattle, Wash . ., she and her Sister played the old Pant.aiis and Or~ theater cimJits, th r o u a b (see GYPSY ROSE LEE, Piie %1 ' . . . MO'RE . TEASE THAN '5TR>i[ Th• L•t• G'f'p•y Rei$• LH ~ fl,. 4ol al\!IJli ·00 \lie potk Chaimian foi 1mh iJ !he llrll Item J6'.;..t.,, r'.ft ... l*t ~-· Cit• ml1 ~ve been pracbcinC quick draws ,....._. ., r or bus~ss before ·the Cos~ Mesa Plan· cle, Hwi ~ 181 lili1·1ffkiog "'.~en he accidentally put a ~Jet through ,Bot · pciice. broke into ' smiles wllen . hi h 1••• h .~~...:. ......_11 lo. t , hil.-Posta Meua apar:tment root .ls back onf:t of the angry ghetto people iold nmg Commission, w c oi.;,.s a lengt 'I a JOae ~~ .,...._, ... ,' . ,04*• e' .~'! ~ behind •ban todp,y .. , . , , the ·1•Free Us" participants, "Wt pay qnda, tonight. ~ admal hol)>ltal it· 1,l?O Pldtl_tJ,_ Ave., Ex:eonvicts are' forbidden to own guns. • •them with our taxea and we'll beat them Chairman Nab! Reade and Vice in .an · 1d~nlatratfve· p'rOf~~~al (AP) John . L. Bergi,n, · 31, of 1935 Anabei'm up. They're our offictrs, not yours."' Chalrll\jln , charles . Beck will be up for zone. . ' ; 1 · , , ' Ave., was booked into city jail1lor parole .·· The ghetto people, as they called replacement or reappointment to their Another 1 public heanjig tis scheduled violation Friday night after ~lice sur- tbemselves, live In the cheap rent A-.... etUOlls of leadership. alter being con\inuich from the cOm-~ rounded the .home and starids to, be fr ,,,,_ . , · ret.~ to prison. , , ame apartmtnts facing on the Newport The ~nµnissl9n will also ~ Qperating mission s April 14 1 meeUng, ·on a zone , 1Patrolman Owen Kreza said he 'and Pier parking lot. Through their frequent with t1flly fOuf 'melnbers ·until the Colla etceptiOil ·pehnit ~,foi"' 'a pftv~te''kin-several, other. officers were dispatthed '~ wltb ,.,tlit-"lJw they have Mesi .City council picks a,1replacement derg~ day-care ICJ)ool. · •. 1 tot~ scene after .a ne~h~ r~ 1 ~~~)rapport witbfsc;Jme of the police fdr Jack Hammett, newly elected coun-A zoqe excev~ permit Is' required 1 gupshot in ~e .adJacent unit. t cilrhan.' · 1 · J ' R. ••t•..'.a·-• • , Tpt P,Olicemen sald they could see ·(They even take ciedit for Patrolman ~ ames oa Ulll;'.~,. Mlll'°P' Viejo, . Bergln strldlhg about, a .tun in bis , , '...::. • ,Several public bearings are on the to t the n..1Rtr.1 .. Cl ti "A ce te · Cb•'"'-" wllkiNoil's~·ofttcer'of .the year" 1:IO p'.m. •aenda, Including one ft1r .ex-' opera e '".1" t:~' u at1.,..l1 n r hand arid, with a holster . ·strapped to ' • ,-..~,.l·_-.. rll't.NFJIO'~. ~age ,1 ..., . ; St., for 60 cblldren.~ · t t ' 't ' 1 1 · his Wp, so he was orClered to , come '"" "" n11 r • pansion of 'a coftYalescept Dome and A bll 1ht · I I bed led · one for a small animal hospital. pu c. , ar1na 1 ! i so. se u o~t·.with his haOO~up. . . \ :• , ·Fairview Patients . . .Get Switchboard Conununtci.Uoi tr dlfricult ro~ fn. 0any patients at Fairview Slate Hospital in -Costa Meaa bufman)' mentally retarded individuals Can liam with special help, The modem communk:alions industry Is going 1o·help. A rebtPlt • tel'JlP<>ne switchboard Is being Jltel<llled · lo Fairview H"pital School as an· audio-vlsuaJ instrument to aid in pre-vocational training for teenqed.boys. . . The ' switchboard will also be used 'as a therapeutic ald in various hospital pri>granis. "1 .!, • l ' . •. . ~~ves of the Telephone Pioneers ol America will present the switchboard. declared illrplus by Pacific Telepbone·COmpany, to Mrs. Margarite Sewell. She is principal of the campus ·on lhe hospital grounds. The Telephone Piorieers of Ametica ts compr{Rd of peraons with 21 years l"".ln T .. Sawye~ . is . ~~g -a zone , a rezone petitlo• · 1Ubmltted by Dr. ·1~e turned tow thl! door as though exception· permit to expand .. "his facility S vt r~; al. 13f ~Qrd .Lane, . to exjl' while 'still urned, sending die at 1619 OrMge Ave., ff'om service to Newport .Beach. ·, ·. . force o( lawmen behind cover,,prepartd He wishes to chani;e the zone on for a shootout. · • Inflation Fight Said Progressing "WASHINGTON (UPI)· -'nle battle against inflaUon Is being won and the pub.lie .will know about it tbrougti "major progiess on the price front" by the . ehd of .this year, -according •to President Nixon's top ·economic adviser. Paul w . ..McCrM:ken, chairman <>f the council of economic advisers, said th06e who claim uie;battle is beinilost because pi-ti:es . have not come down; . despite a-mld-winter·slowdOwn, 'are only dlsp\ay- rmi Ignorance of basic economic theory, The ... nition's output of go o d s and !ervices declined at an annual · rate or 1.5 percent in the first quarter of this year, the sharpest eConomic' downturn In " decade, but despite the slowdown . property on the east side'· of Orange · Officer Kreza said Bergin . was gl.ven Avenue between 18th Place and Ogle several more commands lo drop 'the Stree~i fruzii 1thninistrative-professiogal weapon and· come out, but be didn't to multiple dwelling use. · emerge for a full five minutes. · ,A search of the apartment for a poten- He Slept lt Off . " . In Police LObby • ·A· ilun!biglon Beacli inan wlio decided to sleep Jt off didn't .plan on siaylng at lhe premlaes quite_ ao long, b<Jt ·he , .,....,·,un lhen!'soinet1me..1111mvard: · Jimes ·a Deleon;"25,' of · MOt Tiim Cl~~I~, pasae4 ~t FrJday .night In the · lobbv <!f'tile·.Co¥'M'!" Pollca·;pei>art· ment. --.•. -· -..... _ -- O{ficer Gene Norden said 'be cliecked · ne,;.n earl(SUndaY 't0 ·,,... il he 'was . all right and .. found;hlin to a deep ·stUpbr, .. leaClli'lg ,to.his a.treat:. . ' • . !! ' tial ahoi>ting victim ~ned up 09.lhlng, but police found . a .38 caliber r~volver •hidden under a couch arid a •ingle hole lh the ceiling. . • . The prlsoner volunteered ·dW'lRg ques· tloriing that he was on parole f~ arm~ robbery !in Kansas and gave his local pMqle officer's name. ~ N,E.W YORK"CAP) -The stock m8ikel coilUnued its ~OWP\Yar.d plunge in l!ght • trading tlµs 'afti:rnoon, ~alnlng several points below the 1970 closlng low. (See quotations, ·Pages .22-23). Orange Coast • . . .., • •. _ ·.. or more in tbe.~mtmJ~tions industry, N ewpott Group~'R.~~s-Sul~t's .Same• . the cost of living !?O'ltinued ' to rile at an. ~nnual rate or about six per-cent -hiiflest slnce the Korean war. He was cbifged i>nly 'wllh being dfui,k In public, 'until 'polled' said a lG-Itich digger was discovered In his · pocX'et and he wu ~ed on .. cllarkea .1of pO;session of a d~fy weapoi1. ' ' -· . Weqthea: The rainy season Isn't over yet. 1 Tbe fearless foreca·ster ' ealb for scattered ¥"'show~ tonight tb;ough Tuesday, with temperatures di~ ping into the lower GO's. 1 Blltth! Ag~imt _tr~y ~=-.::..?~·~'.'.'.. Singers Ueltl ~~Ql 1 niilorganiiauon,111euarborAreaFree-~.:.!':" .J'1~·~ :in~'~,:~ ~Newporf Concert 8en~fit8 ff."J.:~tiler INSIDE TODitY A circular headlined 11Bloct That Frei- wiy'' and picblring a w-. ...ma;,.g an ax wu delivered to tht flrlt of· M.000 Newport Buch households on,laturday. The publication of the Harbor ma Freeway Jl'ightits ii to hlt,every home in the ell! IO prepare publie striUment for a stop-thH'reeway petitipO effort. In leeilback· lrom publlCaUoo of the cir· cutat, Newpiirt Beach May.., Ed· Hirth aaid today be had not told anyone they could use his name u a memlier of the · F'reeway Fighters executive comm.i,tee. He said h~ will .write a letter aattng bis name be deleted from any (urther pubU. cation. . Hirth admiUtd to 1. quote, "ft ii mt. porlanlJllll eur ~ lit ..,U ln!Gnntd and-lbemlelvOl,aolhll~ (. way Fighters, is doiqa thia well· so give when Captured Jut week bas· been re-• .... , ... -. • .._ ., .. _: .. t ' Fr11nk aoUiN' called hi-1 father them your !lnancial support." • bookod under_hb J><OPV, identity. .A Spring Concerl by Orange County'•-He "u bUrrlaat ~r' fli'a ~ a ,"liar''.· His faihtr cl<lmt ••. b• g~i: f ~~n·~=n~ :r.~.0~~ Thomu ~· 01~, 21,, has beeJ! lm· cut of ~ well-known Sil!g Opt ,J.ou.P Mesa fDJh School ~~· match and 1 5 J~w.,, Frank, 'ICys he 11 on saJa. "It wasn't quite in the vein I bad g::ca~ in ..,:ve~ ~eaa Verde area WUl De offer® ·Saturday to btnefit is ~al)iied; altbo\rgtr... re&).lned 1-ryan f, It "· lm,µortont • to expecied. 1 had lhoughl 11 woold be more . :=; " ha1 a ""• Prior record · lri&h Khoo! stle • lllltn some le;uilt·flj haJtdi '!'Iii· , Fron k, <cause he IS th< Mi~ strlcUy lnfoanaUve. U was a Utile str~•. of. enoet, a~~""'· •. '!~al)'Jed . . ""' r ·J -1'1dlt'4 !al-'\bl .~ ~ are "'" l<oder of the Amtri!<'• ··~ The Santa.Anl;\lilllhltely'la~~l!>f. •·OJ.ala.•· , ·, . ' ,·· .fl,llll017'4ulra'ipdJJ .Jtt~Me'aa Nim Porty: Page 1/.. 1 er lhan I li(ured." '!"nte Dane, H.•'ii11,; or:'Jlli. . ~\,; • 'Nf"PO<! Hl!tl>Or . l!ig~. SchOlll .IJ 111e Uolfkd.. Sc_hool.·~ m ;ioiid "oilier "'""' . , .,,_ ._ , Hirth .aid he st11flg(..,.w11li lhe City -apprehended -las! '!hi ,. ,. al>,' .locliUOO, J"illl 11vef1 ,mlislc geared ·lo 'area·-1biden11. , • '~ ,: ·' 1 · -~1. ·~'...,.. •· Council's P"itlon of ha~ lhe city stall po\oii\Jy stranded by_ compan!Ons In tlie · opt=.~trlotism ind po•IJMljn, They may ,bt ·J>l1!!'Hued ,lhrotil!' jlle · • != 'II'' h·i £.':," c:::S: 'jl work with the Divl:iion of Highways en-Mesa Verde area. Tiii baa nol:Jilng to it r1a . p.in. in a two-bOur acti.vJi{q_offiCe at co.ta Mui or Eatl.~. C:i:.-. -= = ~· ;; gineen on dt3ign conce~ within the do wJth the case., _ 1oiigfest1 •. . ci• hiah. tchoob: Md the Or~ COast .._... "''k" i•' sM MtrMll ltu adopted route . Dales wu ~ a ridt back to Ogata, son of Mr. alid Mrs. Hltoml Colltke boOklkJre,! i --:._ -, · 4 ..-. :=, ,... :· ~'" : Marshall Duffield, acting chairman of Saata Ana, which led ·Area homeowners ,Ogata, 3126 RoanOkt Lane! Cotta Mesa. · Membera: of the CMJ . Meat North •nti1111111111111 .., " .......... ' , ~ the Freeway Fighters, said be had u,. ~ ctJt police. whO i 41acove~ Stena.. ~ i~1 now Kome; b\lt fa;ces· cOSlly extended · Klw1nl1 Club or ti,, Or~e COUntf-Slng r:.::,, :: :::.~':... 11.! tended tbt: qty COUDCitmen ·aot bt iocJud. lri hJ1· P"'••Mt1 ... MiRA1 &lit k16Ul7 cart and th¢r'apy, to be'' flnanced by "out croup1w111 ib<t' be selttn.a tickets '•""' ~ '' .,_,. ,.... +i (.8eo aJIClll.All, Pip I) --ol a.Mli&Yinll ltlidollli ·· ·. hll 1pt<~lund. lo the Ot•·-lt..-~; . ' .. . ~. ~· ' ' ·f . ' ..... -·- • • , , • • 1 J=..IAILY PU.Gt _;._ C - ... AF8Guests , " . . ~· . . Get .Hono'r --,In .. • ' . ·• "l'lrtolY American Field S e ,r v I c • . ' , . •,-II llOW•OU.ndiOl l>lib ICboQll ·oil>OI the Oranp eout·rrom-Huntlnglan Bolcll ... ti.ft Clemeoie· \rill· bi ·-· " lbe latornllleoal Club al J:Q11no'1 '1llantoo llliennedlale School at the school'• ... cond lntanaUooal Doy, Monday, May •• Eiflit American relurMa ol Ille AFS ,\jnerjcaos . Abtoad ~ '11<> ;will · "' " . ' .. l!e..JICJICJll tor-.u.e • .,,-!olle"'9~ ~ dallped for ucbup of bowledc• btlwecn tbe American stu.jeull and tbe •iPtoro lrQ!ll lf:IQl'elp )!nda. . ' Foatlvlliel will btgln Sunday, May ,3, when the-studtnt.s an'lve · at tbe homea · of ·junior blab students --have ' volunleered as hotla. All will ·join in '.a ~ .11!'1 supp~1" at tho h<lne -al th~ BlD Thomases In Soutb, t.aa\ma 1 •Sutldly_ ~nlng. • Oii Mondoy, lbe loreJin studeoll will ~ aritve at"Tbunton 1t 9 o',clock. In groQJMI of three they will talk to 1tudenls, stiow • 1UU. and answer quf.t ions, 'then' vUit .... ~,, unique cJaurooms. 1 • DAILY l'ILOT Staff PMM , .At. ,_ tbe home ecoaomiCJ d~ , miOI will sene on lntematlooal lunch, FREEWAY FIGHTERS CIRCULATE 'FIGHTING WORDS c;ompol9n A9oln1t Coast Rovto Rovlvod With Flou•l1h wtib ' menus from 1tVtral .countries, I ; Jlliwed and ""eel by ~ IOYealll ml eighth sraders. . G-meetinp will conttnue cfUrblc : Ibo ollen>OOll and. pomit.s and lpe\ldl , d lbo-,.,.i on invited to atleolL Badhnm Says His Plan ;. ~enn11er · ~. preaide!lt of lbe · ~llonal Club, II -in c:hqe of. ar· • roolimtnU, aldecl by Nancy Porter and ·.-Dlnon HagaM. Al Licon lz facUlty : adv9m". • ••.. Would Bypass Newport • Brail leads the 1111 of vtzftoil with ~ lour obldenta in OruP cout, ocbools ;_. tldl· yw: · l'al!lo :Jlltbtrlo Caron, lix!nK • in ·Wlltlmlnster; Ai!riana Sch.m ldt Tqllara, CiQsta Me54 ; Ricardo Pereira, South Laguna; and Fausto Macedo, f!nport Buch. Allo fri'o the llOUll>em . c:on1inent .,. AIJgela .Mwman-Leler from Chile, living In Colla Meu and ., Eduardo Pena-Carruco, ol Ecuador, at -. school in Newport Beach. Froin Southeastel"Q Alia comes Prasit · T-vaf ol Thailand, who is Uving ' . to Foonlaln vauey: Aaemblyman Robert Badham IR· Newport Beach) and an aide to State Sen. John Schmitz (R-TuaUn) t.oday said Jt is not theJr intent to abruptly cut off the PacifJC .CO.St Freeway at the west entrance to Newport Beach by deleting Fro111 Page l CONFRONT. •• students from Europe will include awarif because of all the arresl! he ln&rid Weaeroann of Gennuy (Hun· made on their block.) lflli1<lll Badi);' Slamalla Kao T•lta Before tbe ghetto ~pie •tarted in lrvm Qrrict (Corona de! Mir); Fabrb:io fi'--" UC ''-"-I ·' ....... ..., frvm I'•'-(Clorono de! Mor); "'" ••,.,O pro eaaor Dr. Stephen """" _, Sbapjro .... 11ylng that tt fl 1oo<1 " ~ Vll!IMquer """' r .r a•• ' to ,.. tbe people getUng it togelher. · \ (Newport Buch); Manfred Heine . from But there wasn't much gettin1 anything I.be Newport section from the st.ale free· war plan. Rather, they said, it is in1ended Coast Freeway traffic would turn north up a freeway beside Highway 39 (Beach Boulevard) in Huntington Beach and use the San Diego and Corona del Mar free· ways to bypass Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Badh am said the bill he will introduce In the ~sembly, with Schmitz as author in the Senate, would eliminate the Coast Freeway routini eut of Highway 311. He said he is informed tblt 111lte Divi- sion of Highways engineers do ~ft'e of the alignment he speaks of as "pas. sible." p tal Theft .Thwarted ~ ' ~ •• • ' -. O'M Held-.~ Huntington; P":'!"~J.' Sought ') I • I)' TBllllY COVILLE r .,.,...,,. ... ,..., l'ollol flilpocton early Sunday cap- )llred a Clnctnna~ rpan who tbey cWm 'wu tl')'ln1 to torch a safe containing 1aeo:eoo ·worth ol •tan\ps in the main J>raril:b of the HuoUngton Beach Post Ollltt. . lblpectors said ·tbey grabl>ed the ""J*i! before bo .1'ould ltale a wall to ~-• 'llley fired -wanilng fllOts jt , l'Q Olher • IUi!peCla wbo · did ~e good their .,..pe through WI weeds surrounding t~ post olfice building at f171 Warner Avenue. , field in custody today la Sol · Kaye, ~. of ClnclnnaU, Ohio. · The postal aulhorlties said they surpis- ed the trio shortly after midnight while they were allegedly attempting to cut open the safe with a blowtorch. "We're checking the poesibllity that Kaye might be involved in .a nationwide -IH~e robbeey network,'.' S. H .. Jemen~ aul.atant postal inspector. in charae' of the Los Angeles region, uid this morning. Klye ,was tcheduled for arr~fFient , 'll before a U.S. Cmunlllloner today in ·Santa Ana. He ~ed with bur'1¥Y of a post omce, a federal Offense .. '- Postal authorlUes said Kaye Is also a suspect in tbe Feb. 31 theft of IHJ,431 in stampt from the post office in Buena Parl: and] tk rob1Jir1 JIO. IO ot 131,let in stam~ fNm the PoSf. omoe in Fullerton. '"nle method of operaUon In these thi'ee robbertea jj olmller. 'Ille)' ml&l>t . ' have been daae b)' 'the same men," 'Jen.sen SJ.id·. The Buena Part ~bbery wu termed the "biggest J!O$l office burglary in the nation's hlstory." Jensen explained the p.re.\eflce. o.f postal l.Mpectors Boyd Manes, Dewayne Strader and James C. Smith in~Huiilfn;tbri Btaeb as part ol "an overall C011centraUon on Orange County." A complete aet ol bur1Jary toola, in- cluding ~ty!ene lanka anil to(dlea, was found next to the safe in 1he HunUngton Beach pogi office. ' · · · · Postal · autbortUes; with the help;_ ol Huntlngtoa Beaclr police and the poll"" helicopter,· searched aeveral bwr1 for the two men who escaped, but failed From Patie 1 to find Ulem . ,, ~ "W~'re',sUtf -eard>Jng the local 1re1 for tliem," Jensen' a.aid today . "Sta!Qp thefts have Increased guite a bit acroa ~ nation reeentJy,i' Jen.seq added. 1"lbe loss som, y~s has added up ti ls m_µch a,s p, nillllOn." . ' He e:iplaln~ 1that when sheets or 'stamps are stolen, they are ruold ~ com~. ~ho might UJe them In Vebj dine Jnaeblnea: or for bllllness purposes.~ Several other robbertfs haye adde$! t\ll upe<I of • natloowide !""1P ltealtot ring. • . .. During late Januafy and March there was an unsuccessful burglary attempt bl. Pico ruvera ~ a' sUcC$!ul $18,000 burglary •t the LI Crucenta poat office, At the same time, ttl~ ·Tampa, Fla:, men were arrested boarding a plane in Louisville, Ky., wi\h $~1,«w;i ig stampS taken from an lndlanaPC>Jll. Ind., post office, postal aathOrlfles 'Did. , Postal authorities in Iii< Indian•, Ohio and Kentucky re!IIO>l lf)d ,al the ~ !hey !eel, the lhrff .Fl«lda -were. involved in a DatJdu.J .,operltlpn which included Calllornia: ' .. ' GYPSY ROSE ·LEE DIES ... burleaque and the 'Ziegfeld Follies. She appeared with such personalities as Fanny Brice, Bert Lahr, Lupe Velez and Bobby Clark, then appeared in films under ~er own name, Louise Hovick. Miss Lee wrote the best.selling novel "Tht C.String Murders," which was made into a Barbara Stanwyck fibn t.iUed "The Lady ol Burlesque." She wrote three other books -in- cluding her memoin -plw a play, "The Naked GenJw," whk:h starred Joan Blondell, "Bare flesh bores nien,'~ .she once XEROX COPIES -• remarked , but her style of boredom -. utilizing black silk stockings an even- ing .dress, long gloves and lady.Ute de- meanor -earned her $4,000 per weel and iqare. Her a.ct was more tease than strip and she earned a reputaUon on 'that merit. .Q •• ·-·~· ,I GernlonY (1-!lfooch); ~Ga· tac~ ,oiler the gbetto crltica lit into , ~fl'ojni.:;.n (I~ .S~; ,(S:: ~ ol1 •1Free U1." 1l 'IU all lhoutln1 ; Clement.). '·1~ · ud i.tidlp1 with kml-halr«I youthJ set Schmitz' Legislative Analyst Dr. "'ar- ren Carroll said, "Obviously tratnc ~n't come to a sereechiiig halt at th°t: Slnta Ana River. That would be a hard position for the senator to defend." ~h!fl)U. waa in San Dit10 today cam· , 1 PlllDJlll Ill hb '"" for Congress. b .. !EA.CH , 8-i 12 x 'i' 1 Unbound . \ I ' . studelita from Alric• lac Jud e agllmt eacll otber. Altnegaab Hl]lu from Ethiopl• (Hun-"Moch ado about nothing," elderly * * tfn;ton Beoi:hl 'and Mll'gartt Le Roux Balbol reslde_nt ~ Nye commented of South Africa (Laguna Beach). ofter llstenb>( to the whole ollair. From Page 1 ~From ~come Margrethe Dorolhe He saJd he W81 there to see how Krllltl!De Kleist qi Gl'Oenlal!!I end ~e __ hif house ia going to be In the CIRCULAR ... Vo&hangy Jl 1m1 h • t' tan ~ f y from nnuni and with the Khetto youthl talking '.-Ma.\11&.sy, both ll'liJlg In Costa Mesa. · wbat sow>ded to •hfm like a:Ood ·sense ed on the e1ecuUve committee so is not . Americans ~broa4 partidpatlng tn the be figures he ii in pretty fa ir shape. to em.be.crass anyone. That is why HOW- • lnternJtionll Day 1t ·Ttiurlton 'wUl be rAtlo oblervlng the raUy were cily ard Ro1en, who openly supports the free- L)'llll Ro~ Of Newport -Hip. ~ Howanl Rogers and Donald way fight. had not been Included. who spent a summer in Turkej; Kfrk Mc~. Remarked Rogers, "It's sure Hirth talked to John McFaden ·public Greaham, Marina· High, who · ,rent to going to be interesting when we aet relitions man who ·wrote the Circular V~la; Christine Wuver, Jl'{lqJIWn both groups in city councll chambers." McF•den evj(fenUy decided it would ,ix; V·"· a•·• Ind!. and p ula N.-;i....,,"'-Tbe'.people of 11Frft Us" are due helpfUl ~ include Hirth's name. w~ HJc~i~Y ~· to pack the gallery or the CHy Council The ClrCUlar contains several 1erial "Americans who were abro.ct ·tor' a meeting at 7:30 tonight The rallies of fhotogriph.s with the. fre~way route eras- lull ecbool year include Kristin im...1.... the·lut four Sundays hive been building ng ,Erts of the CJty in blink, whUe . "F""'~'· llp "'· 1 awa.,13 HllftUnglon Beach High, Argen~ ., • 1!"" }~~ a Jlhicb they llu/nf14 ui4 he b d 1,..r lit · raine seter1, FOOntalli • vaney · mg'h, · h · 0 asl fer an end to tbeged poHce · · would iriclUae dra~g fiom ~ ~00: ' Brull· Mark Saunders, Eltancia ,U&h, arusmen~, 8 public meeting room and level perspective of what the freewa Aus1riiua; and Kafhleen Collins, Laguna ~ ~t ~o hold rock' concert.. on the would do to features of the city. But "th~ BefCh Hip, New 1.esland. a~t · th:Wm~i!: :-:~t. trr'" to speatmak cost or havin.g artist.. do thit is pretty . ~ wey cla sleep," he said. Guard ~ks · Vessel . . SANTA BARBARA .(UPI) -A Coast Guard helicopter i1 'learch1ng the Pacific Ocbft trom Santa· Ba?bara tcr Santa Crm bland today fbr an overdue cabin cnliaet with fem penons on board. DAILY PILOT 0 .. AHGE COAST l'UILIM-llNO COMl'AHT l.ehtrt H. W••' "'"'""' .... ""''"""" J.,. It. c.,1.,. Vl<t 'rni.s..1 ...ii Gtnvtl Mt ....... Tho.,.11 A. M.r,hi~t "'-·'"' ,.1 .... c.. ....... Offlc• M.-...rt htdi1 1211 Weu 1111101 1.u1too1rf L.,._ l..cllt m ''"'' Avtnw M111>tlrlt1M lt-.c:~' 11111 lllC!o 11111...,.,. • • p.llLT l'IUJT, wflll Wllldl ti co~f IM fkwl~ "' ...... llMI 4111¥ .. ,.., ..... .. , ....... , ... ""'""" .., .......,_ '-"-Ml-1~ Mtcfil. C.11 ,.,..., ...... ""'" llKl'I .,.. , ........ .,,..,,, ...... wt!-... ,........ M NltM, Or ..... C.HI l'""""'iooll ' c""""" ,..111ti,. ..... -t1 n11 ""'"' .............. '"....., ~ .... utwnt .. ,. ,,, ... , ca.. .-.... T1I ,. 11 17141 6'lo4Jl t Cl_,.._. AfM .... 6'41ollrt (...,......., tt11. Or..-C.1t ~ c-wt. ... -'"'"" '""""= .. 1 .... -.1 """" .. __,.._ .. _,, .. ~-Wff'-1 tMllf ,... """""' .. ""'"""' -· ..... dell ,.. .... ,.w .... ....,., """ Ml ~ .,._, C.1~. WIK,....._~ .. .... CMflft UM fMllllltfl iy 111111 a ,. "'9111111YI ... '"lllMl'f ~llrMl .... t. 91 •• """"'!', • the police ~voke4 . ffe said the circular cost $5.000 for the A conta~,. was passed Suhday to aerial. photographs printing and . dis. collect money · to pay back the $775 tributJon ' ball for ·ll1f ti'"'™"ed the wee¥ (>eloro. · Nl~:!.Prl,.:~·;''Free U•~\ sald '659 had ~ coUected previously including l,ll:O:,..i·•· beD<IU concert Saturday nlght an1cr ·~ ,-. . . . -From .-.. e 1 Jotm ·v1ughn said police 1ren't needed to p<OVlde ...,..lty at the' w.kJy• "Free U_!" pknl~a. ".We'd like· t& ret 1the power · blct with ti\•· people'.' he 11id. "WM( ~ i. go1n& to conu.1 the people?" one ol the .lhitto people needltd.' CHASE ••. which had been driving along looking for a snack. was then told to drive ·on, while the bandits had their infant son tn .the bl.ck seat. The ghetto.graop 11Jd they~aren't living In Rll!.lta and tbty should work,pitough the l)'Stem.. "Why do you want to dr11 RuHia in here?" Dr. Shapiro asked. "Because last l'ffk you IUYI acted like a bunch of CommunillS with your buil·headed mov1111/' was the .. mort . "How come you , people stomPed that cop in the head?'' Jack Amador, of the ghetto, said, "We supi>ort the police department until they abuse our rights." Flower-minded Thief Gets $5 0 Bonsai A thief wll.h excellent taste in horticulture vi.Sited a Costa l\.1esa woman's yard over the weekend, she told police Sw.tay. Barbara J. Canann, of 144 Yorktown La~ ·oak! the lntnlder mode oil with a .., min!Jlure -.1 u.. tbout thr<e feet tall . Kienast Quints Home NEW YORK (UPI ) -'!be Kienast quintuplets went home In a &pee.la! pollc&- tscOrted ambu)ance lod1y, nine wetks after they were bom at Columbia Presbyll<Jan Medical Cen\er. . . ' ' With Officu Palm« a1a1n giv ing chase, the car roared north on Pacilic · Cout Hi3hway lei Main St. where Hun- Ungton Beach motorcycle omcer GU Coerper joine;d them,. having been in· fonned of the wanted vehicle over the radio. S"1tdl:fnk on his rt!d light and siren, be llOJ>ped the vehlclo at Lake Street. A passerlfy shouted to him, "Look out, these guy! have guns.'' Coeiper, leaning his bike over to hear "'.hat ~'as, said, heard a ping go by his ears when one of the men fired a shot at }ijm which mJss'ed, >,Jded _by I city truck which pa1Sed the fleeing" car and slowed to a halt in front Of tt, Coerper stopped the car again on 17th Street. One or the men jumped from the car and .tTled to get into the p1ssenger side of the pickup truck. which was locked. coUper jumped trofn tits mQt~e, ordering the man to "ftttze or be ahoL" He said th! man momentarily lahred hll weapon but then jumped bact Jn,. the car whe'n the other man, who held the baby boy In !he• back window, lb(e1ienod to kill the child. To, prove thlfli1.s threat wu real. he hlld the baby up to the rear ~1" with a pl!tol to hlt he1d, COerfler roported later. · · "I d~lded that ll wasn 't worth t1klng a chance, 11 1Jld eoerPer, who was only one of about a aozen officers Involved ln the ebue. .. 20,¢ minimum Cofrated Free· EXPANDING TO IETTlll SlllVI NEW~DRT IEACit-Holp u1 colobratt •• ; . ' . ; .. --:. . ,. ....... 2131 NEWPORT ~AN -J9:AQUIN "ILLS R,. _ · CINTa . -Phone 644·64~4 . FEATURING-" OFFSET PRINTING OF YOUR CAMERA·R£ADY ORIGINAl:S SPEED -often on a while·vou·wait burs QUALITY -trained technic ians and the finest equipment assure top quality ECONOMY -under $4.00 for first 100 copies (pe r otigin1I) and less than 1 ¢ each thereatt.r VERSATILITY -gathering, binding, folding, padding and cu tting ' memo pads during -•1119: -k OTHER SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CENTERS Anoholm 1640 W. Lincoln Ave. n&.3210 Glondol• 4106 Son Fernando lld. 247..!001 ln9lowood 10404 Lo Clon.,1 l lvd. 671·7Sn ,/ Loa Aftfll" 623 So. Olivo St. 627-1371 67q So. Yorn,.,,. St. 3U.13'1 . Mts S...sot Blvd. 656-2997 . Newport -h I 3141 Campus Drive S4°"611 21'1 Son Joaquin Hlll11ld. 644-6454 . ... ' Son DI ... 1111 -4th Ave. 2:J9.114., 61,1 Minion Go\'fO ld. 211"611 • Sherm•n O.lra 1~113Vonturallvd. 713-S172 Van Nuya • 1121 VIII N..,. llvd, 716-7430 " I I . . •. IJ:~r~q~ -. ... . I ,,. Star .Gypsy • DMs ·at56 eanctr ... ,She<-WU SI ll'ld her calorful career •panned avo de<:at¥•· ·MJsa, Lee Jea-ft!S her father, John Hovick GI Z511 Qlff Drive, Newport Beaeli; a "bn>lher, pr. Jack Hovick of Hunthicton Be9ch; a sister, actrua June Jlavoc, and a IOll, Erie Kirkland. 1 No Anilrll arrarlremeota bad been tet ~· accarding to her father, a long-DOWilpaplr ad>ftlhlng DWI and act1ve lD«Dller GI lb< Orange County Press Club. • '"!bi.I bu _. oomlll( f0< a Jone time, you mow, but it'a s&Jll too recent,'' be mnarted. ·Miu 'Lee, who began 1ln vaudtvllle al' age 5, lived In Beverly Hilla aod WU recently admlUed to UCLA Medical Cent.et, where she was treated Jut January and foW' yeati earlier. jler BOD, an aide to film pndncet Olio Premin&er. said he vialtedk ooily "three months ago and f-· her feeling well after the two earlier bouts with lhe malignancy. 1"111e studio had a fit wbeo I lnslsl<d tm telling the truth" (about'her Ulness), llhe said in a recent ~. "But t don' think it is fair for , anyooe In the public eye to keep suc1i a thine • secret." . "MY mol.ber died GI, canoer, which taugbt me a Iesson;'!1 -She added. "CllOckupl, checkups aid ebectups. 11 I coWd force .Jioot -.penoo \<> have • dlectup .. -aEoount ., JD1 "'"'"pie, I woold feel more -jGlli(ied In k•ylng lJllllle it pUblic.~ I .-Iillai Leo·lurned lo ............. wbea .her days as • olrlpfet. -she perlecled ll'-'u artform -""" over. becomblil .• belWellloC --and televlsloo Wt allow 1lool'. ! Her ille story wu produced: aM tlft two years on BroadW'IJ, wltb .'Btbel Merman starring as Oypsy'a mber, then was made into the film 11GnsY" stanin& llosaflnd ilualell and Na!alle Wood. Born In Seattle, Wash., she and her sister played the old Pantagea and Orpheum theater circUlta, t hr o I g h btrlesque and the Zie&feld Follies. She appeared with such penonaf!lles JS Fanny Brice, Bert Lahr, Lupe Veltz ind Bohhy Clar!<. then ~ In lj)ml (See GYPSY, •iiae I) ~ • Capo Planners .Chpsen To.night # J' f <'ll>O ·~ <JI • plannill( <om-) rissian, ~ bolrd of review \lid wator 1<1'11ory hoard .will he llten -~ br . tile San Joan £apl!lrano cily 'touncil at toolght's 7 o'qoct meeting J ln comidl rl"..ambers. Etch councilman appoihts one planning ~ member. ln .. the past, three plannbig commiWoll members thOn sat on the archltectur-1 bolJ:d of _review which -SpaJMh, early Calllomla and mlssioo. style architecture m the dW-'• ''misakm distrlct". . · Abo on the agenda will be an appeal br Pacific Telephone uec!utlve Bob'Gan- .00 who at the last rn.etJni Hted the l:ounciJ. to go on .t"<COrd u , being in favor GI a pror-il teledlone aervlce ,... IDcrease. The COllJJdl 'YOtetl to oP- ;pooe 1be -at lhe ful meellnt. . Oru•• .(:out ; . - Weadler The rafey aeiion_lln, ...,. yeL The fearleu ,_..... Wis f!J< _ --"' tonlllrt 'through Tuetday, with temperaturu dlp- pln& Into the lowu !O's. JNSWE TODA. Y Fronk Col!ln calltd hu fath« a ... Har". Hif Jathcr claim. 10 be a Jtw. Fronk aav1 hi M cm "Aruan". It \I imparlaftt to Fronk, btCGUH he ii I/It )lld- wut leader of the Americcm Na:i Part11. Pagt .Jl. ...... M MMN9I L~ t C""""'41 I ,,_.. • CMdllfll "' 1 • """""' ..... ... c.....,... 11-» -or-(fVlltr 1• • c.ia " '"""' ,...., n ~ " '""' 1M1 ...-......,.. " '*' Mnttl •n ·~ t T ...... ...... p... ' ,..,...,. • • ...,111 ,.,,, • ........ • ....... .. ..._W .. II ....... 11 ......... ...._,"" •&.-....-n ,, ...... ..... ... . . • • . .~ hiterest Lagging, So Laguna High . I . Pa}H,ll' Dropped Leet of stude•t .Jilterest was blamed today rir· a deCisidt to ~.llje Lai\Jna · Beach Hii!> Scflqol <- 'newspaper, '"The P.¥ Wa'fe."f The --wllf· he .discontiAUed for !be. bllaoce ohhe' !Choo! year, ... cord!ng to Division Administrator 'Don HauJhL .. , "Rot the past two years, the number of students wanting to 11'.ke jOUl'llalism has ,been atroci~y IQw,"• Haught said. "'The first semester of this year, we had 10 studeats enrolled In journalism." 'Ibis semester the number bu dropped to six, too few to put ·out a school pa~" Haught said. He also •noted that .the, cosl of the paper iB exorbitant, requfring one-fifth of a teacher's salary for instruction, and around lllD for the pubiDh!og cost. • • " --., MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1970 • ··~' ':.. -·-,.,.. • -.a: -., ••• ... -.... J;U1'ship~~ Cop~~r • ·-' ~ • ~ ' ' -I ·~ ' . Dowri -· • ":, _. • ·'I • ,_. -~ ' • \ I •:... ' ~ • ' In 'figlilitig; 10 .. Dead~._:: -. .. -·-. . Plane' Lost Over Laos· .. -. ' Hit by Fire SAlGON (AP) -The U.S. C«nmancl today lllllOWlc:ed the Ion ol a ,..........., Am~ gumhlp over aouthern Laos 8nd a U.S. Army helicopter near the besieged Dat Seang Special Forces camp. Ten Americans were tilled, four were mlsslng and one was rescued. ,h was the first AC130 gunship reported f<Jt down In the war. The U.S. C\Jmma.rid ~ it .... hit hy en<my ground flnO .Jut Wednesday In the lower panhandle 'd. Laol, apparently while on a mission over the Ho Chi Minh TraU. Six of the crewmen were killed, four were misstnc and one was rescued with minor injuries, and spokesman said. The AC130 Is the !unshiP version of the Cl30 car(O ancj transport plane used to haul troops and war materials. The A::, 130 carries four minlguna; and four 20mm cannon. . ' • -· ..... • '1'1e plane can make effective strikes de!f)ite «>tidilions of poor vlslhllity that often prevail ht Laos. Jt uses high in-. tamlty ligbtl and flares plus advanced . • DAILY f'ILOT· ......... ,....,,.._.....,. t,.loictet-ion.dOvlcOS. MEMBER OF THE 'GHETTO GANG' CONFRONTS DR. SHAPIRO. (WITH BEARD) AND FRIENDS • A UH! tmi110lkof*r )"IS shot down . ' ' ' . In No..,..tt lloodt • Jhoutl"I Motch Dff1lopo-Jlolw-Wotorfront Fact!-· •·"-"···-· ·I!ot~ seVfl! Ji . • ... ,, 'w; '. 1"1' '· ; '' '' "·/"ff' ·4'•'''h"' '·.,~.·.~ .. •:, , r' ' ,' , --.~;,,.anc1' .. .:all,·_.·1_,,·,,)· -,, ~!;)f.»lJ, 1t'"'t,,.,, ..• ,-:tt...(11-;:.!'"·1~4 f ,,.,,.. ; :if~ .. ="?~~ · .;;z~~ f ig ·'S .up· ·:pore: · · ":.;~~ ita~~ti tteavy V-' ind tbOlr AmOrlcan G....., . ~-.iviserl -11& .. been w.rer Succumbs at 66,· tlece .mce AprU 1. In all, 17 American I N A' · <:;"=r'su1:'r1~~~!;~· n . ewport rgumerit Services Held The U.S. Command said announcement of the two aircraft losses was delayed while searm missions we.re under way. U.S. headquarters al!o reported 17 enemy rocket and mortar attacks during the 24 hours ending at a a.m. today, with two Americanl killed and l f wound- ed. In a ground acUon, 10 to 15 North Vietnamese sRPPm moving undel' t.be: cover of a ~ barrace blasted their way into an American artillery base 46 miles northwest of Saigon. Hurllng dynamite bmnbs into bunkers and firing rocket grenadeJ, they iiUed foUr men from the 25th Infantry Divllioa and wounded 12 others. , Hea'dqµaners said the attack dJd "~erate" damage to thO hue, and one enemy UJll\Or. WIS tllled and ii woundeil. · ·' A' newly captured ·dlrtdlve di.cl-I that the Communist 'high command'• primary goal in South Vietnam in 1970 is to frustrate the VletnamiiaUon and pacificaUon programs and create a signUk:ant change in the war, official sources reJX!Mecf. 'Ibe 90urces said they antidpate mQre intensive enemy military act.I.one next month. By m oMAS FOR<tJNE ,Sharilio WU sayln& that tt ls good Of .. 'DIM' f'llll StM to·tee tbe people getting it to&ether. the· police · were only a mu 1 e d Buf there wasn't much ge~ anything hystallders this time 11 the "ghetto togethei' after the ghetto critles Ut Into people" got in a shouUng match with those of "Free Us.!' It was all ahou,tl,ng the "Free Us" people Sunday at Balboa and feuding with long-haired· youths aet Pie'r Park 1n Newport Beach. ' ,a.gafnst each other. • . A week · betore four policemen had "Much ado about nothin1," elderly been· itijured · -a dislocated anklt, a Balboa resident Harry Nye commented broken· finger .. cuts -in a melee that after list.enini to the·whole aHair. ·followed &lTeSt of a speaker for using He said he wu there to see h ow obscene language. So plainclothe! officer& safe his house Is going to be in the assigned to cover the weekly "Free future and with the ghetto youths talking U1" ' piank: aAd rally appeared tense , . what sounded to hfm ilke good teme surveying the .fOO aitUng on the park he figures ~ is ln pr_etty ~alr shape. · lawn. Also observlftg the . rally Were city But police broke into smiles when councilmen Haward Rogers and Donald one of the angry ghetto people told Mclmtis. Remarked · Rogers,, "It's sure the "Free Us" participants, "We pay going to be lntereaUng when we get them with our tu es and we'll beat them both groups in clfy council cbanibtrs." up. 1bey're our offJCers, not yours." 1be people of "Pree Us" are due The ghetto people, as they . called lo pack the gallery of the City Council themselves, live in t~ cheilp rent /J.-,meetii;ig , at 7:30 tonight. '.fhe rallies: of frame apartments facing on the NeWport the last four Sundays have been building Pier parktng'lot. Through their frequen't up . to this appearance at which they e11COW1~· with the law they have were to ask for an end to alleged police developed rapport with some of the police harassment, a public meeting room and omcers: a apot to hold rock concerb on the ('They evdl. take credit for Patrolman beach. 'Now they also will try to speik Qiarle1 WllkiMdn:s "officer of the )'tar" ·about the -meJee. tast week they claim award because of all the arresta he the' potlce provoked. · malfe 'oil ttieJr block.) Ji ~ntalner Was passed; Sunday to Before lhe ghetto -le •tarted In collect money to tJIY-back the .. 1775 fired uc·· Jivlne ·pt0f"50r Dr. stephen hall lot the 10 lllTeBled the wed before. Mau wu celebraled .thfs morning In st. Brendan'• Chnrch, Loo An&<feo fur Harriett McGraw Keavy, ..... ol .lma Vista. de Catalina, South Laguna who died Friday at South Cout. Cmtuhunity Hospital after a long illnesa. . Mrs, Keavy was the wlfe or Hubbard Keavy, executive edltor of the Laguna New s-Post. , Since coming lo Laguna Beocl! In 1981, She had 'been active in the South Coast Girden Cltib and the L8gwia lleidt Garden Club and served with the Silver and Gold Chapter ol the South Cout Community Hospital'i auxiliary. · Following major surgery one yea, 8.go, Mrs. Keavy was gravely in.bu'ed In an automobile accident. RmilUug com. plications made it necessary for bu to return to the hospital some weeks ago. She Is survived by her husband; two ~. Timothy of ·Blythe and Michael of Costa Mesa; four br o thers Robert McGraw, fonner· mayor of Bloomington, IQ.; J08tph, 'lbomaa and Harold McGraw, -.fll OI Bloomington· and ·by six gr~en. _ _ -__ ' A native of Bloomington, Mrs. Keavy moved to Loo Angel<o In 11128, shortly after her mmiaee to 'Hubbard Keavy Hollywood conespOndent or T b ; Associated Presa ancf1later chJef of the A.·PdJOC'An&eles hureou. • Haught aaid that coverage 'Gf activities of the high school students has been excellent, •gh µ>e local prm. Several high schOol students . wort With l<>cal papers In Laguna. Laguna's New FQOt Patrol Bags Suspect San Clemente ·stalled Car She wu active in Catbollc chirities, holding office In St. Brendan's Altar Society and managiqg a Thrift Shop for t.he Immaculate H e ·a r t College 6" S<:holarshlp Fund. • Seekl~g a soluiioa to the high scllOol Journalism problem, the asslst.ant prin· cipal would like to offer journalism as more of a "theory" COU1'le while -nli Interested in ~Per ,,... d-•. IUCh .. the mxi,..-~. COOld rtcelve crodlt wJ>UO -klni with the local Jnll-- lllluPi> -that tldl L plu is ' Diily • propoul .ind !>aa nol been hnllcht to I.be Board of Education ror approval. The boa.rd IOW provides funds for publication of.the SC\IOOI P!'I!'r. Drinking Marines ' ' Run Afoul of Law . Plainclothes olficera focu1ed their pat.rob on San Clemeote11 beaches this paat weekend and cited nearly a dozen Marines for liquor hlfracUons at the lhore. Officers Urelted,r then. cited the ' violatora ol the ·clty coae -forbkil dtlol:lnc of . t lCOhoUc beverages on city headies. nte olfenden, picked up Saturday and Sunday, must appear In court to answer the. cbaraea. They were nol jailed. f\ Laguna's new foot police patrol brought about the arrest Friday night of a young M4rlne from Et Toro on suspicion of pou•ioa of dangtrWI drugs with intent to'lell. ! -. ' Walklnl the 100 hloct <el st. Ann'• Drt'ie. l.lr• !111\Cflrl ... to check Causes Wrecks ~JPjuring 2 00. three men ln a perted1car, noted An El '. Monte woman and 8 Marine that ooe appearod to .be uniler the ln· troin'' c.amp ·Pe&netoa "Iioiii suffered nuence of tome lnlloxtcant and arrMted John Larry Wittner. 11, after finding severe , cuts and ibndaes in a aeries 170 nd capsules on bJa peraon. of crashes on, the _San. Djego Freeway JJjO on Friday . night two teenagers In San Clerilente this morning, all cawied were booked on susplclon of possession by a stall.e:l car. of dangerous drugs anct marijuana with Hlthway' patrolmen said Nora tee intent to sell. Gorden , 33, of El Monte and Robert David Eu1ene RulRll, 11, Orange. and Betnlelet,' 20,· the Marine, were In hts · corn-panlon, a tf..-year~ld boy from .eparati cars In the crashes: which oc- VUla Pari, we.re apprehended in the at.rred at 2:45 a.in. near the E! Camlno ~ffi<!!"!:, ;who a~-tly was ln the statlea -car,-offlcen aald, was taken 1o the base hoopltal at Camp Pendleton fir treatment, • Tiie first car to· strik< the stalled car was driven by Anabehn mkfent mchard Len Huston, 23, who WU not burt. Shortly alter that coll~lon the Gonlea woman'tauto bit the illJe.aUIO. 100 block ol Glenneyre stnel Real oUramp • s.bed .. ·-..... eight ''.lids" • ibe ·llOtthboand 'cars both ,p1owed·1nto ·Nixon,· Delays Meet . : (eight ounces) GI miri)lin'a and 18 while 1' ~ ~tied" auto whlCb wu stpppetl TO p .-~ ca-•Ies containing a 1Dfpoc1ri_ drq. . . ..,;,.,_. .,._,In' ,"-~l d 'no· ~. "-·"d I'ane' . WASHlNG' N.(A l1 "'-"""~n1 NI"' ·--J ..,~.,, .. -_ • .,.. ~·~·· .. •on;JIOS!pon<.r todiy' ~.IM-ume', -i.,.--S-i'_o«:_K':-=-,-~..,._;,,, .-+,..,...f,,._· -.-, ~~;"~ ~~e~i!I 81:~~-~~ . ~un!~wl~~ =-~ ~----..... -..--'"'~-'-' _ this morning, rtported that th<' ttal1ed Councll ol Economic AdVlitrs. NEW vouv (AP) -'""' atoct mnet car rastfnl 'wltlJ Its llghtl 0Ut .... •P' 1be Wlilte H-pVe iio '"'"'""l~te ~ --t1Y 'atn1ct 't"'-, -'•nation ol llhe ~-'.:'.:".'.;'the conUnaed Its clowmrard plqe In light ~..-"'I"' ~.... ..,.....,.....,~. ~ tradiq thfs alttrnOOll, reniainlq aeveral 'l'h'! Garden woman wu taken to .South NSC meet1111, which orllloofly was 1<t points below ·lhe 1179 cloafn& [ow. (See Coul Conlmuntty HOlpltal for trutment for i.~t Frldoi'-No new date wu ltl· quolatlllnl, P,,.. aa1. ol amre lace culJ. t10UDctd. • • I • The family has suggested memorial donationa bay be 'made to the American Cancer Society. Suspect's Same; Name's Different A yoong burglary suspect who RIVI Costa Mesa police 1he name of an old classmate wl.thout a' crhn.lnal record when captured last wee.II: has been re- booketl llnder his proflet' ·ld01\lity. Thomas H. Dales, 21, has been hn- pllcaled , In · several M-Verde ma hur&Iarles and lw a liibf prior ricord of o11 ...... a<c0rdln& to ln~UPI""· , The Santa Ana man falsely gave the )lame1 Dano H., Till, ol 25111 llaltt St., 1..tcn a~ndod las! Th~rJdaY. 4>' parenUy ~aJide\f' b)c comPon!OM to Ila ·Meaa Verde area. Tlll ..hu notblna io· do with the caae. . Dales .... \~~ .. a ride -lo Santa Ana, """'" led a-~ to coll police, "bo dllcov<rad llema Jn his """'""'"' hearing the JdeftUtJ pl a Mesa Verde m14<ot. .. . , . " • .· . ' " • 1 -... I I . ~ Epitapll for GyPsY; · ' ' ' '< \,_ A I • + Sh~ Left Warm Mem~n -B7 1'0llM.\N R.. ANDERSON ~ 'Of'IM ca.lb' "*' Stiff 'GYPSY R~E ),iE, the' tamed stripper wilb clau who never replly toot It all oft, could let her hair down with ease. She did tbat literally and figura· t1vely one blustery rught in January of 1966 and made troupers out of my wUe and me. . ~ : Sbe also ltft us wlth &Olile warm and hwnan memories. G)'PIY·at that lime was the star of her own show, bdng filmed In San Fraodaco, but she bad .greed. to take time out to all<nd lbe awarda night of the Orange County Press Club In Santa Ana. She had no transportation so because I kn.ew how to find her home, atop a bill off the Sunset Strip m Beverly Hills my wife and I were her chauffeurs. 'IT WAS A PLEASIJRE. we were thrilled to do It. But a star is a s'tar and not even 't>lase, cynical new~~en can quite ignore the aura that SWTOl,llld& a personality like Gypsy !IOBe Lee. -• ased tn her trademark, the long gown, the Jong whi~~ gloves, hair piled on top of her head, she sat in ~. blck ~t on the way down. She put us quickly at ease, c}la.tterlng away, asklnl questions. part t ullt off IRE WAS THE IDT of the banquet. Her sharp re ee, no Q • color comments kept a receptive audience ln•a laughing mood. It was a11' off the cuff for Gypsy. She knew no one, she wasn't even sure what she was doing, but she knew what she was to be: Gypsy Rose Lee. She aat next to me and I remember that she drank on1y tea and was grateful when I speeded up the service for ber so that she could have it often and ~).spy had a sort spot for the Orange County Press Club. Her father John Havlck had frequently handled advertising for the club's annual booklet HE AND GYPSY'S stepmother lived in Newport Beach and it was there thlt we took her later that evening 10 she. could uchange Christmas gifts with her family, whom she hadn't seen since before the holidays.. · It was a warm famlly evening and Gypsy made my wife and me a part • fl IL It waa aimoSt with reluctance that I reminded her 1bat it we ~e to go, an hour and a half's trip up the freeway awaited us and that she hid a plane to catch the next morning. . • We sat three in the front seat m the way back to Beverly Hills, Gyp" wtOfhet llholl off but now wtariDg warm, wool socks. She removed her hair 'place and ' lei her long n-. bait hailg down and chatted with .. about her eon Eric lben alaUoned In Germany, bill and pieces aboul bar f1rnily life, her llltet',,June, her early years arowtng up in SeatUe, and the movie "GYP!Y'• (Wblch Ille <oold lalle or lea .. , ohe said.) DDPl'l'li Tl!! OIULL, It was a cozy evenJng. · But then we had a flat tire, at the Santa Monica Freeway lnterchange. It wu • terrJble experience, one I'll never forget . one o'e(oct 1n 'the morning, ltranded on a freeway with a movie star 1n the car, the r.aln.begtnlnc to ·fall, and I ~·t get the jack to work to I could change the tire. . -on I WENT for help, leaving my wife to cope as belt she could with a nOW" stlghtly chUJecl, tired, and concerned Oyp1y who wanted to get home. :· •• · But.'ibe wai1a:trouper. She and my ,,Ue 10t out OJ) the freew!Y ¥d .. ltJrt· ·et frilng to flag down cars. 1t waa a rutne try: No one pallSed, no police car ·came by. Eventually a you:rig motorcyclist stopped, found out 1omethinR 1 didn't know and changed the lire. He did that and Ignored my wife's desperate reason for why she needed help: "l'W!'ICJt GJ'PllY Rose Lee In the car." Who would have believed that at· that, tfine of· the mornlng7 I RETURNED with help I no longer needed, and we want on, with no spare and the rain pouring down. We got Gypsy home and then she stopped us ·C1)ld. ' • ''Now I w.ant you to star ~re at my.house for the nlih,t. I can't have you fOlng atJ the way back to Newport In this weather Without a spare." . She was serious, as was her maid . But I was embarrassed and the flat tire Incident had left me In a state of near nervous collapse. somehow, protesting that I had to get a jack back to the l!lervict sf.itlon. we were able to decline a sinCere and generous invitation. Ji() WE LEFT GYPSY and .Other than a nice note later about a column 1 wrote on the incident. that was the last we saw or heard of her. But I'll remember that night: Statuesque and regal at the banquet, re- lued and at ease ln bu father'• home, kind of common as an old shoe wit.YI them off and her hair do.wn, and rtnally, in the t9yer of her llvlnR" room. hold-- Ing one of, her dog1 In her arms, while the rain poured down outside, saying, "Thank you so much for everything and don't you dare drive home to- night." Thank you, Gypsy, for that memorable night. Kite Causes Blackout Harry Eullnl Stnborn of San Clemente pve a mlihty yank OD his kiti; string &mday. Anti it Caused a power blackout. Gu!U'd Seeks Vessel SANTA BA!UIARA (UPI) - A Cout· ~ liellCqpter ii stiarching the Pacific O<;tan from !\Ula. l!orbara to Santa Crul laland t«Jay for ao. overdue cabin cndler with f~ -persons on board. DAILY PILOT .. ..,... .... ""'""'• .... . ............ .. .... ....,. ·" c... ..... s.. er. ..... . OllAHGI COAST ,U.1.ISMING COMPAN't ltoMtt N. w.,, l"rt11! ... 1 Ind hllli"'91' J1c• l. C11rl•v Vkl Pr.1:otor1t Ind OtfW1l M......, no111tJ ...... n E•llOf" Tlio"'•• A, M11r,hi111 M-.1119 ECIU« tl:it~1rd P. Ntll ....,,., Or•-tew1r Edlltr ·"""· CNtt lil"41l nt Wtll IUy Srrttt N.,.._l etidl: '211 W.ut 81lllo1 S.,.""-nl L ..... hftl: m ,-., .. , ili- MVl!tlfl9llol keQI: 17''! •••ch 1:11111wnl a.11 C*Mni.: llOS Horlh El Ctl!'ll!\e 11:111 Police today nld they anlWertd a hot~ wire call Jn th! lOQ..block of TrafalJar Lane Sunday and discovered Sanborn, 16, of 106 Trlfal&ar, and the fallen power llne. The tile flytr l<>ld officers !>< Juat tugged on hit 'kJte strlnt and the wir,e toppled. . . nae po1"l' ·outage covering 1eriral ~IQ<k; ,;,,.; iopaJred by uUllty crews, ·of. fletts said. Rites on Tuesday For · Mrs~ Ro~ers Lall\lll• Beach Olapltr 121, Order of the Eastern Star, will officiate · at services in Paelflc View Olapel Tuesday at 1 p.m. for Mrs. Mary Allcti Roprs who died Thunday at the age of ei. Mrs. Rogers is survived by one daught~r, Dollyiee_ Wllt0ii of Laguna Beach. A native of Iowa, she had lived in the Laguna area for 25 years, making her home at ml2 S. COast Hl1hw1y. Burial will be at Falnnoo Cemetery, Denver, Colo. Mrs. Rogers wall affiliated wilh the Order of Eastern Star In Denver. Boys Ranch Prograin Planned by Church Members ot the Rector's Guild of St. Macy'1 EpilCopol Churth In Laguna Beach will learn about Father Garrett's Boys Ranch In Anltlope Valley In a speclll procr1111 In the church Guild Hall al Z p.ni. Tueld1y. The prorrani, open In the J)Ubllc, will Include a ltcUirt and plcturu of ,the ranch where boyl aged 11 to i 19 are given a home and ttalnJng to equip Lhem for lire: ( ' • . Get Honor • . r~-l<iiil!W .... Twenl)> Amerf~ao Field S er v I c e • •tudenti "'I" alleriiliiilllab iClioclls llong the Orqi'Coast from 11\Jnllngton Beach to s~ CJimente wl,Jl ~ guesta 'of the JlitetnaUonal Club of)Lapne.;1 Thurston llllermedlale '5chool at the fchool'i ,.. _ cond ~Uonal Day, Monday, May ~'I, Eidll AnJerlcan reljp'ntei ·of the AFS Americans Abroad progrllJD.. also will be present for ',tbe 'day-jqOg program deolped fot excb1Jl1j• of . knowledge between the Americin 11tudenll afJlf the vtsiloli from 18 foreign lands. Fettivities wilt .begin Sµnday, May S, when the student.I arrive at the homes of junior hlgh students who have volunteered as hosts. All will join In a receptiOn and !Upper at the home of the Bill Thomases in South Laguna Sunday evening. On Monday, the foreign student! will arrive at Thurston at 9 o'clock. In groups of three they will talk to students, show slides and answer questlom, then visit Thu:rsion•s unique clusroiml. At noon the home economics depart· ment will serve an tnt.ematlonal lunch, with menus from several' countries, prepared and served by costumed seventh and eighth graders. Group meetings will c.ontinue during the afternoon and went.s and friends of the school are invited to attend. Jenhlfer Maguire, p~sident of the International Club, is in cbarae of ar· rangements, aided by NJDCY Porter and Doreen Hagaard. Al Licon ia faculty adviser. Brazil lead!: the list of visitors with four students in Orange Coat 1chools this year: Paulo Roberto Clron, living in Weatlmlnaler; Adriana S c·h m Id t Tagllara, Cotta Mesa; Ricardo Pertira, South Lall\lll•: and Fauato Macedo, Newport Beach. Allo ~ the aoutbem continent are Aoaela Mawnan·Leser from Chile, living In COiia M,.. and Eduardo Pena.Can.uco, of Ecuador, at ochool In Newport Bead!. From ·Southeastern Alla cornea Praalt T011pavai of Thailand, who ls living In Fountain Valley. Students fn>m Europe will include ltlll'kl Wesemann of Germaay (Hun· Un1ton Beach); Stamatla Kon Tsalta from Greece (Corona de! Mar); Fabrliio SChlavon from Italy (Coro.na del Mar); Christine Vulllequez frorr.. F r a 1t c e (Newport Beach); Manfred Heine from Germany (Laguna Beach); Fernando Ga- ja from Spai• (Laguna Beach); and Ingrid Lundgren from Sweden (San CJemente). Students from Africa 11 c I u d e Azenegash Hallu from Eth!Opla (Hun· tington Beach) and Margaret Le Roux of South Africa (Laguna Beach). From islands come Margrethe Dorothe KrisUane Kleist of Gr!enlal'ld and Voahangy Ram ah at at and r y from Malagasy, both living in Costa Mesa. Americans Abroad participating in the International Day at Thurllon will be Lynw Rosener of Newport Harbor Hlgh, who spent a summer in Turkey; Kirk Gresham, Marina High, who went to Venezuela; ChrlsUne Weaver, FoW'ltaln Valley High, India; and Paula Nuschke, Westminster Hl1h, Germany. Americans who were abroad for a full school year include Kristin Whelan, ltUJ1.Ungton Beach IUgh, Argentina; Lor. ralne Sekera, Fountala Valley High, Brull; Mark Saunders, E1tancia High, Australia; and Kathleen Collins, Laguna Beach High, New Zealand. From Page 1 GYPSY ... .under her own name, Loui!e Hovick. Miss Lee wrote the beat-selling novel 4~ O.String Murden/' which was made Jnto a Barbua Stanwyck film titled "The Lady of Burlesque." · She wrote three other books -in-. eluding. her memolrs ·-plus a play, "The Naked Genius," which starred Joan Blondell "Bare flesh bore1 men," she once remar~, but her style of boredom -uUli,zil'.lg .black silk stockings an even- ing dress. long glO'ves and lady-like de· meanor -earned her $4,000 per week aild more. Her act was m<n tease than strip and she earned a l'eputaUon on that inerlL · "l never try to stir up the animal in 'em," she told writer J. P. McEvoy, "Did you ever hold i piece of candy !Jr a '?Y in front .of a baby -just out of his reach?,'' she erplalned. "Notice how he laughs? That's your strip au· 'dienee.'' Just fJve yeats ago -sUll an eye. catcher -Miss Lee had some pinup photos produced and sent a set to her son, who W'•s then on duty-'wlth tbe Army jn Europe. "Dear Mom," he wrote back . .. I pasted your new pholos in my locker but my commanding ofHcer made me take them all down .• .I kept telling him these are plcturti of my mofber. JI did no good." Gypsy responded In typical style. "l could kin that officer. I've nevtr had rnch a compllmenL And I'm old enough now to really apJ>rteiate U." Kienast Quints Ho~e • NEW YORK (UPI) -The Kienast quintuplet.& went hOme Iii a special police. eSet1rted ambulance today, nine wee.kl arter they were bom al Columbia Presbyterian MedicaJ·Center. · ' INTERNATIONAL PLANNl!'IG-6etting·ready for Thurston School's International Day May 4 in La- guna are (from left) Dan Penny, Thurston seventh grader; Al Licon, Thurston instructor; Doreen Hag- . DAILY ,tLOT St.tr, ..... gard, Thurston eighth grader, and Manfred Heine Americap. Field Service exchange student to Lagun8 High from Germany, I Laguna Planners to Begin Slll'Vey of General Plan The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission will meet at 7 :30 tonight in city hall council chambers in a special study ses!lon to begin lta survey of general plM concepts. The planner! wUl discuss alternative concepts praented. by the plaonjng !inn of Daniel, Mann,)o!U!"'" I< MeDdenhall at an April 17 meeting, and will receive the ·planning team's detailed traffic and circulation analysii and forecast. I XEROX COP] ES ' . I: c EACH 8-f/2.x t f Unbojmd 20¢ minimum , Collated Free · Introducing GOOOlJJFtt.I g~~~er Where printing is done instantly-we solve your cop.ying and duplicatif!lg problems!: EXPAND!~~ 0 IETT~R SlllVI N,.E_WP~fr B!~C~tlp Uf ctl1brah ~;; 2·1p·~ •AN ;1.AQUIN . H14s 9'D~ ~ , Nl\YPORT CENTll --Phone 644·64~4 FEATURING-OFFSET PRINTING OF YOUR CAMERA·READY ORIQINALS SPEED -often on a whiie-you·wait basis QUALITY -trained technicians and tha finest equ ipment assure top qu11ity ECONOMY-under $4.00 for first 100 copies (otr original) and less than 1 ¢ eech thereafter VERSATILITY -s;1athering, binding, folding, padding and cutting memo pads ~urin9 opening, . -k OTHER SOUTHERN GALIFORNIA CENTERS Anaheim 16-!0 W. Llnceln Ave. 77~70 ,. Glanclalo • 4106 San Farnandt lld. 247..SOOI lngla-.1 10404 La Cltntta ll•d. 671-7177 ~-----·--- Los An .. lff 623 So. Olin St. 627-1371 670 So. Varmont St. . 313-1391 . MIS Sunttt Bl..t. 656-2997 Newport ltath 38'11 Campus Drl•• 5-1"'81 2131 San Joaquin Hiils Rd . 6441454 Se n Diego 1251 ~4thA.._ 239-214' 6i48MlQ!ori ~ lldc 21f.Ull . She,.man 01k1 15113 V1ntura ll..t. 783-5172 Van Nuys . 1121 Van Nuys ll•d. 716-7430 ' • I II 1ia · Beaeh· • • YO!'.-6l; NO. 100,-3 SECTIONS; J6 ,AGES -. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS . . ' p~rle~q~ • ~~·rGypsx ~ . l)ies .qt ·56 . -•1· AR'l'llUll R. 'l'lNSD. ot ...... Pllltlllfl G)'IJI)' Role ~. an inlt~ burlu- que queep who made '• fodune out ti. her mind 11 well aa her body died 6iJoc!ay. nigh~ lollog a long baltle to r. ~.. SS and her colorf\d career tp1nned five decades. MJ.SI Lee liaves her fathfs', John Hovick of 1514 Cliff Drive, JI~ ~~ach: • broth.,, l)r. Jack Hovick of gton Beach; a sister1 actress·June aad a aon, Eric Kirtland. • . uniral arrangements had . been let ay, according to her father, a lorigtime newspaper advertising man and a4ifive member of. the Orange County Press Club. "'nlls has been coming for-a long: time, you know, but it's still too ~nt," be remarked. \ "MJ,sa Lee, who began in vaudeville at age 5, Uftd in Beverly Hills and ,.., recently admitted to UCLA Medical Center, where she wm treated last January and four years earlier. • Her son, an alde to film producer- oito Preminger, said he vlsked her only three months ago and found her feet4i1 · well after the two earUer bouts wlUt tbe malignancy. "The studio had a fit when J insisted on telling the truth" (about her illness), she said in a recent interview. "But I don't think it is faif. fOr anyone in the public eye to keep sucti a thing • secret.•• ''My mother died ol ~r, which taqtit me a 1esson;" abe added. "Checkups. checkups and checkups. If 1 cOu1d force just one penon to have a checkup on account of my eumJie, l would feel more !ban juslified :in bavJng made Jt publlc.,'1 ¥W Ir tUQIOd to ..... ~ .... wheii her ~ as a'·~ ,J... ..,. ~ It p an frl f!'l!'li l'fl', over;~ a~ '*"" ~lel..Jbliill lalk """'liost: : ':7 ' • Her JUe olory WU. produced and riln two year• on Broadway, with E~l Mennan stan'inl as Gypsy's mother. then was made into the film "Gypsy" starring Rosalind l\!Welf and Natali< Wood. I Born In SeatUe, Wash., she and her sister played the old PantageJ aDd Orpheum theater ctrculta, t hr o u & b burlesque and the Zieiftld Follies. She appeared wllh such penoaalitles ls Fanny Brice, Bert Lahr, Lupe Vela and Bobby Clark, then appeared ID flhm (See GYPSY, Page I) Capo Planners Ghosen Tonight .n.. ~ of • planning °""" mtlslon, ai'dlitectural bqlrd of· ~w alii! wator advJaory board· will be taken vp by tht San Juan Capistrano city council at"'tonlght's 1 o'clock meeting tn cowicll chambers. · Each councilman appoints one planning· commission member. In the past, three. flanning commission members then sat on the archltectur.al board of review• which controls Spani9b, early California aiid mission style architecture io the clty's "mission district". Also on ,the a'jenda will be an appeal b; Pacifi~ TeleiiKlne execut!ve Bob Gan- ..,. wl>o at lhe tut meeting asked the council to go on record u be\n« . in favor of a propooed tel<pllone "moo rate increaae. The council voted lo op-pooe the Jncroaae' at the Jut meeting, or .. ge , ' -.. ~ • · • The 'rainy aeuon isn't over yet. . ·Tiie lurlul forec'alW calla !er soatttred showers tonfght thiol!lh Tuemay, with temperatures <lip- ping Into the lower M's. INSIDE TOD.\ Y Frank Collin call<d hh father a "Liar". HU father-claim.r •to be a Jtt». Frank . .C~1 IN ii °" "Af"JI01&". lt ii importm.t to Fronk, btcav.se he ii the Mid- we•C ltader of the Amnican Nazi Part11. Poot 11. M ' ' ft•M " " .. ' • " t>U " " -· ~ --. -: ., ,._ ...... _.._. ... ~ --... .. ~ .. • • .. ... ·-.. t.:... ---• - -• ~ .,. • .. ---:;:-.. -T• .~ {;-Uijship 0 ,_· f;opter ::Q~'¥n --... -. ' .... ~- : __ : -: i ·:. : .; ~ ~ , :: -. ~ .: .. _ E 111 f ~ightillg; I -.o Dead -:,,,. __ . Plane Lost Over Laos; Hit by Fire • SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command today announced Lhe loss of.a four-engine American gunship over southern Laos and a U.S. Anny helicopter near the . besieged Dale Seang Special Forces camp. Ten Americans were killed, four Wert missing and one was rescued. It was tile first AC130 gun.$hip reported shot dciwn 1n the war. The U.S. Command said it was hit by enemy ground fire last Wednesday in the lower panhandle of Laos, apparently while on a mission over the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Six or the crewmen were killed, four were missing and one was rescued with minor injuries, and spokesman said. The AC130 ls the gunship version of the Cl30 cargo and transport plane used •·ttf haul iroops and war materials. The A:. 130 carries four minlguns and tour 20mm cannon. 'The plane can make effective strike!! despite conditions of poor visibility that often prevail in Laos. It uses high in· tensity lights and flares plus advanced lolHedet detection devict:s. A UHl Army helicopter was shot down ' Saturday near Dak Seang1 seven ,mites '-··~'J<aoll·• ~ pl all,.._, ~killed, IM~d~: .lpi uld it waa ~ Amer1C&n . -lhot Clown 1111J>Jio!<Ung the Soulh I vtemaneee and theli "Anierkan Grten MORE TEASE THAN STRIP The 'Late Gypsy ROie tH Interest Lagging, So Laguna High " Bent idvben who have been under s1egt since April J. In all, 17 American crewmen have been killed and 14 wound· ed in aircraft supporting Oak Seang. 1be U.S. Command said annquncement of the two aircraft losses was delayed while search missions were under way. U.S. headquarters also reported 17 enemy rocket and mortar attacks during the 24 hours ending at I a.m. today, with two Americans killed and 14 wound- ed. In · a eround action, 10 to 15 North Vietnamese sappers moving under the cover or a mortar bm~e blasted their way into an American artillery base paper Dropped 46 miles northwest of Saigon. HU?ling · , • , " dynamite bombs into bunkers and firing "' TQCket grenades, they killed four mm Lack Of sludeltt interest -:blamed from the 2Sth Infantry Dlvlrlon and todly for a decWon to dilOOltfnue 1the, . wounded 12 others. Headquarters 11ld Laguna Be,~ High Schoo!, 1 C:8mpus the aUact did "moderate" demage to newspaper, The Paper Wave. . . the base and one enemy: sapper was The newspaper will be discontinued killed and 51 wounded. for the balance of the school year, ao-A newly captured· directive disclosed cording to Division Administrator Don Ufat the Communist high command's Haught. primary goal in South Vietnam In 1970 "For the past two years, the number is to frustrate the Vletnamizatlon and of . students wanting to take jouraailsm pacificau9n programs and create a has~ atrociously low," Haught sald . significant change in the war, official ·~ .first semester of this year:, w~ sourees reported. 'The sources said they ha~ 10 students enrolled In journalism. anticipate more Jntensive enemy military This semester the number has dropped actions next month. to six, too few to put out a school papen," Haught said. · He al.w noted that the cost of the paper is exorbitant, requiring orye-fifth of a teacher'~ salacy for "lnstructlori, and around.$J20.foi:'t11e·Jiibllshlllg cOst.. Haught ,aid that coverage or activities of the high · ochool ·students has been excellent. through 'the lQca1 press. Several high ~l. students work with local papers in Laguna. Seeking a solutiOlll to the high school joumalllm problem, the assistant prin· ,cipal would like to o£fer journalism as more of a "''theory" couree, while student.I lhlei'ested in '" newspaper pro- cNctlon, llldi as the student newspaper. -could ......,,. cttilit: while wor~ with the local-: Haught ·-. ,that !his plao Is only a proposal" and has not been brought to the Board o{ •F.ducation for approval. The board •OW proyldes , fund• for publlcatlorl of U>e11Chool'Pa.er~ .. •• Drinking 'Mari.ii~~ Run Afool of Law Plainck>theJ olficen focused their patrols on San Clemente's beaches thl1 past weekend and cited nearly 1 dozen Marines for liquor infracUon1 at the ahore. Officers arrested, then cited the Violalol'I ot the city code whlcl! forbids dr1nt1ng of alc."Obolk btver•ges on city beaches. 'M:le o«endera, picked up Saturday and SwMia)'. mutt 1ppur In court tt answer Ille ..,.,.... Thq ... .,. not Ja1led. Laguna's New Foot Patrol Bags Suspect Laguna's new foot police patrol brought about the arrest Friday night of a younjl'· Marine from El Toro on 11.LSpiclon of fl05session of dange!'OIJ!: drugs with intent to eell. Walking the . 100 block of St. AM'S Drive.. two ofOcera stopped to check on three · 11*1 in 1 parked • car, noted that one appeared to be under the in- fluence of some intoxicant and arrested John Larry Wittner, it, after finding 170 red capsules Ol\I his person. Also on Friday night two teenagers were booked on suspicion of possession oC dangenrus drugs and marijuana with intent to sell. . David Eugene Russell, 11, Orange. and his companion, a t~year-eld boy from Villa Parle, were apprehended In the 700 block of Glenneyre Street. Seized as evktence were eight ''lids'' (eight ounces) of. marijuana and 11 wtute capsu]eJ contalnlna a 1uspected drug. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The Stock mark" continued its downward plunge in light trading thl.a afternoon. rtmainln,g several polnll below lhe U10 •lollnc low. {Ste quOlallooa, Pqu zz.,11), T_ ------- . . . . DAILY ,H,OT ,_. 9r ,~,~ MEMBER OF .THE "GHETTO. GANG' CONFR~NTS DR. ~HA~l"!O • (W.11'1'-'IEA~DI AND l'RJl;NDS In Ne,.port IMch ··~1 ... ~,·~h D••.•Jopt ,Belw-'Y(tl•rft'om. F•etlonl • -·--,· .. '""' . "' ... . . ' . .. ~ • •'# It' ',-fl. C..: ,) J -.. ' Po:~ice" Find 'Support'.·::· .'·.···.~Hamett · Keavy. · Sticcumbs at 66;' In Newport Argument Sei:vi.CfS lleld By THOMAS FORTUNE Of IMI P.ltr ,, ... lfaff The police Were only a m u s e d bystandei:s this Ume as the "gqetto people" got in a shouting match with the "Free Ua" people SWKlay at Balboa Pier Park In Newport Beach . A week before four policemen had been injured -a dislocated ankle, a broken finger, cuts -in a me!ee that followed arrest of a speaker for using obscene language. SO plaiMlothes Officers assigned to coveri the weekly ·"Free Us" picnic and rally appeared tense surveying the 400 sitting on the park lawn . But police broke Into smiles when one of the angry ghetto people told the "Free Us" participants, "We pay them with our•taxes•and we'll beat them up . They're our officers, not yours." The ghetto peOple, as they called themselvea, live in the cheap rent A- frame apartmentB facing on the Newpott Pier parking lot. 'Through their frequent encounters with the law they have developed ·rapport .with some of tbe .poliCe officers. . . (They eveh take .credit for Patrolman Charles Wlfldnloi:i's ''officer of \he year'.' award because -of all· tbe arrests he made on Yle'lr ,blqck.) , : . 1 Before · lhe : gbetto, .people slarted In filed UC Irvine pcofeuor Dr. Stepbell .. Shapiro waa sayin1 that· It ts ·· iood to see lhe people getUn1it1together: Byt there waan'f mucl\ gettlna anythlnc togelher after the ghetto crltJCJ lit into those of "Free Us." It WU all ahouUng and feuding with Jone-haired youths aet against each Other. • "Much ado about noUtln1," e,Iderly . Balboa resident Harry Nye C~ted after listerun, to the whole affair. r He said be was there to .let h o w sa fe ?Us house is goLnc to be in the !~re. and wliji the &het.to you_tl\I talklng what sounded to him like good ...,. he figures he is In pretty fair shape. Also observing the rilly wei-e elty councilmen Howard .Rogers and ·Donald Mcinnis. Remarked Rogers , "It's sure going ·to be ·intereitmc {When· we "!et both group1. ln 'city councu chainbirs: " The people of "Free Us" art due lo pack the gallery of the City CounCil meeting · at 7:30 tonight. The rallies of . the: last fC)Ur Sundays have been bWlding up to lhls appearance at ,which they were to ask for an end. to alleged police harassment, a publlc meeting room· and a spot to hold rock concerts on the hea<;h. Now they al.0 will try to IJ)tlk about the melee lasi week they claim the police provoked. · 1 • .,.. '.A container ..... i>f.,sed . Sliiidir.}tO collect money to pay back the '7'1j· ·bail for111.>e 10. arruttd ·the w~k befQre. Sari ·Clemente Stalled ·Car. Causes Wrecks ·fujur~g-~ An El Monte <Woman ind a Marine from Camp Penctleton both suffered severe cuts and btiibes Jn a series of crashes mi the 'Sad Diegq' Freeway in San Clemente thi4 ~1 all cau.eed by a stalled cµ. , '. ~ _; "I. ·, 1 • Highway patrolmen iii.id Nora Lee Gorden, 33, of El Monte and Robert Betnleler, io, the Marine, were in separate cars In the crashes which oc- curred at 2:45 a.tn. near the El Camino Real offramp. The norlhbound cm bolh plowed Into a stalled auto which was stopped crosswise in the slow northbound Jane. Patrolmen, who aaid all .tbe detaill ol the crash were nOt }'it complello this morning, r'P'.()rted that the stalled ·car resUni with lts ll&hta: out Wat ap- parenUy 1lru<k twlct. The· Gorden, woman was taken to Sbulh eo..t COmmuntty llotpllal for trealmenl of severe face cuts. -Betnelter,. lio 'apjfartnt\y::Waa.Jll tlie stalled Car, officers sald, WaS -laken . to the base rhciipital it Camp Pendleton .ror treatment... ~ The llrst car to llrlke lhe _stalled car was drtve.n by Anthelm • reEdent Richard Len Huston, 13, 'who ,,... not bu rt. Shortly alter ,that colllilon the· Goi'den woman's atlto hit the i<llt auto. Nixon Delays Meet WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre~denl NII· on PoStponed today, for the second.time, a meeting with the National , ~rlly Council and added a ...,.lori wllh hb 'COllllCll of• Economl<' Mvilen, The White Hodoe gave· DO Immediate explanation of the pootponement ol lhe NSC meeUng, which otlCfnally was set for la1t li'rlday. 'No riew dalt wu an· nounced, 'Man w'ai, CeleQrated uits niorntni in $t. 1Brendan'~ Chui-ch, Los Angeles, for Jlahiefl McGraw Ke8vy, 68, of '12266 Vista' de1 Catalina, South La"guna who die4 . Friday at South Cout comrilunlty Hospital after a long illness. Mrs. Keavy WIS the wife of Hlrbbard Keavy, executive editor of the Laguna Newt-Post. Since CO!Jllng to l.al!Wla Beach in 11111. she had be<n active In the South Cout Garden Club and the Laguna Beach Garden Club and served with the Silver and Gold Chapter of lhe South Coast Con\munity Hospital's a'!'illaey. Following majOI' surgery one year aao, Mrs .. Keavy was gravely injured in an autotnoblle · accident. Resulting Com- plications made it necessary for bet to ·retum ·to the ·hospital ·some weeil.s ago.• · ' s~ .I• 'Survived ,by her husband ; twn sons,· ·Thnothy or· Blythe and Michael of ·Costa Mesa ; four brothers R~rt · McGraw, fonner mayor of Bloom1ngton, JI!.; Joseph, 'Ibomas ' and Harold McGraw, all · o£ BJoomtniton: and by six grandchildren. · A naUve of Bloomington, Mrs. Keavy moved to Loa Angeles In 1921, shortly after ber.-marrfage to Hubbard Keavy, Hqllyw()\ICI OOrfespoMenl • of · T b e MsocJ.i~ l'r~ and !attr cblef .of ·lhe A.,P. Los.¥geles bureau .. , 1 i She, w~ acttve in Call)oJic .. char:itfes. holding" offic..e in St. ~endan's Al'8r s.ctety and J\lanagtil( ao Thrilt' SJiop for the lml1}aculate H-e 1 rt College Scholanlilp Fund. • , The family has suggested memorial donations may be made to lhe American Cancer Society. S,uspect' s Sam~; Name's Different ' ' A young bur1lary suspect who g'I"• Cotta ·Mna police the name ot an old classmate wlthout a criminal record wtien .caplured laJt -k Jiu been re- booked under hll proper ldOnt!ly. Tbomu H. Dales, 21, has been Im· pllcated In several' Mua Verde ano burgl>ries and hoi a 1cili prior NCOl'd of offeftses, accordlng lo lnvestlgatorL The Santa Ana man falsely IUt !he namrDane H. nu, of llOI Raitt St., wtien apprehended last 'l'hllrldaJ, ap. parerilly strand!'d by companions In lhe M~ Veld• area. TUI hu llOlhJui lo do with the case. .. ' Dales W8S beglng I ride-.. io santa Ana, which led aru homtvwntr1 to . call police, who $1<.,...... lten\s In ht1 possession beorln& l!IO ldealllt ,of1Me1aVerdl-• • • ' I .. -. . ' .. ,1 DAll.Y I'll.OT • • .. SC .. --Alril 27, 1970 • -. . :. ·~ ... ... -•1 ---... • -···!..~-· ..... -. . . . ~,.=,,...;;:.:· ...... i ' '""'1t' ~ ~ ... . .. . . . . ' . • Epit8pli .fo~ Cypsy; ' ·Sbe·l:e.ft-\Varqi.Memory, . ... . • • • . . . ' ·-.. c .~ •B7JlWlllWl·Jl:ANDERSON T • • or t111: DINll' t-. s~ .. GYPSY' M.ig LEE,'~tm lllrlpper 1(ith. clO'f•wlio ·nevir really took , It an off. could fet'her halr'«Wwn 'wlth ease. She dfd that literally and fl~a· tively one blustery night in Janueiroi 1968 andjpad_e troupers out of my wife and me. · She also left' us with.some warm and -hlwen memories. ... · Gypsy at that. Ume:was ·the ~at of ~!'!r own show, -~ tn'Sail.Jlrancllco, but ·she;had n<eed to take e 01 to atteiid· the :t.ward.s night otthe Orange County 'Preu ·Qul»in Santa·.Ana,,: · . "' $be had no transpOffiOon so because l kftew bow to .find her, home, atop a hill off the Sunset Strip in Beverly Hills my wife and I were her chauffeurs. . 'tt WAS A PLEASURE, we were thrilled to do IL --But a itar ls a star and not even blee~ cyni~ ne:wsrrytn~ can quite ·ignore the aura that SWTOunds a persoftality ·like G ' llooeLee. . ...; • Drelleid-. ~ =einin:, the Jqng 1own, the Jong white: gloves, hair · -jllJil oo top ol 1*''head lbc HI ln·the !iOcil acat on the way down. She put us • qulckly at we; chatterhis·away, ilklng"'!lleitloiit: -. · &BE WAS THE JUT of the banquet. Her aharp repartee, not qwte off· colol:commenta, kept a r~ve aucjl-.ln a}aughing mood .. , It was-all aft the cuff-for G:>'P'Y· She knew no 911e, a.he wasn t even sure Mwhit ahe wu doing, but she knew what she was to be: Gypsy Rose Lee. She sat next to me and I remember that ahe drank only tea and was grateful when [ speeded up the RrVJce for her so that she could have it often Ind boL • Gyrpy had a l!Oft •Pol fllr the orange County Pre" Club. Her father John Hovick had frequently bandied advertising for the club's annual booklet. " BE AND GYPSY'S stepmother lived ln Newport. Beach and it was tbere ,, •that we 16olt 6"r lat<r that 'eventng ao llhe could ucbange Cbrtstmu gifts with her family, whom she hadn't Ileen aince before the holidays. It wu a warm family evening and Gypl)' made my wife and me a part ~af It. tt·wu alin01fwtth reJuctance that I reminded her that it wu time to go, an boor and a half's trip up the treeWay awaited WI and tbat she had a plane to catdl ~ nm mornlnll· Wi Mt three ln the front 1eat on the way back to Beverly Hills, Gypsy 'wlfli ~ lhoel off but now wearing warm, wool socka. She removed her hair Jlle<e alid let her Jong, 1Jowin1 hair hang down and chatted with "' about her .., Eric tben.JtaUoned In Gtrmany, bits and P'-about her family Ille, her lllta', JUD!, her early years growing up in seatUe, and the movie "Gypsy'' (wtdcb lhe could take or leave, ahe nld.) DiiiPtlB THE CHILL. It was a cozy evening. , But tlim we Md a flit Ure, at the Santa Monica Freeway interchange. It wu.a •tmTlble nperlence, one 111 hever forgeL One·o1dock in the morning, stranded on a freeway with a movie 11tar in the car, the ratri beglnlng to fall, and I couldn't get the jack to work 10 I cou1d dlanl• the tire. . . . -• ·onr I WENT for help, feavln( my wile to COP'! as best she ceuld with a now lllchtJY ehllled, tired, and concerned Gyjlly Who'•anted to '&et home. . ,But. ft wu a trouper~ She and my wife got out on the freeway and start- ed trytna to flag down cars. It w1s a fuUle t!'Y·. NO one paused, no police car came by. EventilalJy •young llll>loreycllst alopped, found oul 1omethlng I didn't know and chaqed the tire. He did that and ignored niy wile's desperate reason loi why she needad help : . ••1•ve got Gypsy Role Lee !n the car." Who would have believed that at that Ume (If the morning? I RETURNED with help I no longer needed, and we want on. with no spare and the rain POuring down. We·eot.Gypsy hqme and then she stopped us 'cold. ' ' 1 . "Now I want you to stay here at my house for the night. I can't have you going all the way blck to Newport in this weather without a spare." ' She was aerlqus, aliwu her m1l~1· 1 •• ' '' • ~ I l"U em.ban"~,~ the ttat tire Incident had left me in a state al near nervous coU1pse. S;omehow, protesting that I had to get a jack back to the service station, we were able to decline a sincere 81'd generous invitation. SO WE LEFT GYPSY and other than a nice note later about a coltnnn I wrote on fhe ,lncide11t, that wu the last we saw or heard of her. But I'll remember that njght : Slaluesoue and regal at the banQuet. re- laxed and at eue 1n her father',1 born~, kind of COl?lp!Ofl as an old shoe wit.W them off and,_ hair down, and finally, In the foyer ,of her llvfnsz: room. hold· lnl one of her dogs ln her arm!, whlle the rain poured down outside. saying, "Think you so much for 'everything and don't you dare drive home to. night." . ' Thank you, Gypsy, for that memorable night. Kite Causes Blackout Harry Eugene Sanborn of San Clem .. te Police todlj said !her. answered '-hot. give • mighty yank ... hlfldt. llililr ·"m ·<llr'm·ffia"1'oo.bl0Ck of 0TraljlgAr Sunday. • Lane Sunday and discovered Sanborn, 16. ~ It caused I ~ blackout. of 106 Trafalgar, and the fallen power llne. Guard·; Seeks Vessel . . . SANTA B'ARBARA-(lJPl) -A Co"! Guard helicopter·ts· searching the Pacllic Ocean from Suta -Barbara to ·Sanla Cruz Island today· lot In overdUe cabin crniler with four lpersoos on board. DAILY PILOT N_,...1 ... ---C.... M... S. CkM•fli CIWlc;I: COAIT ,UILlllftH~ COMl"AMY •obotf N. Wo14 l"rulofont .,., '"1.lb!IU!or J1c;k l. Curl1y .. Vl(o l"fh~d-"I •nd ~II M-..r lllom11 IC10,11 Edllor Thofri.1 A. Murphi110 M1n1ol"' Editor Richtrd P. Nill "°"!h Orlnf'O County EdlJOr Offlc" .. CO.It Mao: »O Wut •• , Sl!'Wt H~i ••~c-: 2211 Wnt &11110~ ttu11"111•ll LI"""" ... c~: m F-1 "-~.-.11'"*' llKll; IJl7S ltfd'I •ovttvl,.. k~ '*-It; alS Hor111 IE! C-IM lt"I ' The kilt flyer told officers he jUBI tugged on hJs kite .string and lbe wire toppltd .. ' . T1le ~~wer .. ou1:41e Covering several bloc" "~ ttpaired by uUllty crews; ·or. ficen said. . iµ:tes .on Tuesdari -' . . For ~~s; Rog~i;s- !Aguii•-8'ach Oiaptir 821)'~ of the Eastern Star, will ofUCiate at services· in f,acifle: Vk!w; Chape\ Tuesday at 1 p.m. tor Nh. Macy Alice Rojers who died 1'1ursday at' the"'tge of 95. Mrs. Rogers is sufviVea by one daughter, Dollylee Wilson of .~una Beach. -' • A nalive of toWa, sbe had lived' 1ir the Laguna area ·for 25 ye;r$, makini her home at 30802 S. Coail Highw&y .. Burial will be at Fainiton eemetery, Denver, Colo. Mrs. Rogers w1s 1Ulllated with the Order of Eastern Star in Denver .. Boys Ranch Program Planned by Church Members or the Rector's Guild . or St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Laguna Beach wlll learn about Father Garrett'& Boys Ranch in Ahtelope V.alley ln a 1peciil pnll?'am In the chufch Guild Hall at 2 p.m. Tuesday. The proaram, open to the public, wlll Include a lecture and plctures of the ranch where boys aged 16 to t9 are liven a heme and training to equip them for Ille. ~~ . . ·:1n L'd#r!ft . · -" 11>) 0Twenty :Amerlc,n Field Se i VI c e lludenta now atteOOing higb ICboolJ along the Orange caast from Hunt,ington Beach to San Clemente will 1be guests (If the lnternatiooal.C)ub.of Laguna's Thuraton Intermed1ate School at tbe achoolls • cond lnternltional . Day, Monday,· May L ~ . Eight American returnees of . the AFS Americans Abroad .program also will be present for the day-long pcogram designed for exchange of knowledge between the American studenta and the visitors from 16 foreign lands. Festivities will begin Sunday, May 3, ·when the students arrive at the homes , of junior high students who have volunteered as hosts. All will join in a reception ind supper at the home of the Bill Thomases-in South Laguna SUnday evening. On Monday, the foreign students will arrive at Thurston at 9 o'clock. In groups of three theY will iaik to students, show slides acil answer questions, then visit Thurston's unique classroOms. At r.oon the home economics depart· ment will serve· an international lunch, with menus from several countries, prepared and served by costumed seventh and eighth graders. Group meetings will continue during the afternoon and parents and friends of the school are invited to attend. Jennifer Maguire, president of the International Club, is in charge (If ar- rangements, aided by Nancy Porter and Doreen Haggard. Al Licon is faculty adviser. Brazil leads the list of visitors with four students in Orange Cout schools thl! year: Paulo Roberto Caron, living in' Westimimter: Adriana S chm Id t Tagllara, Costa Mesa; Ricardo Pereira, South Laguna: and Fausto Macedo, Newport Beach. Also from the southern continent are Angela Massman-Leser Crom Chile, living in Costa Mesa and Eduardo Pena-Carrasco, of Ecuador, at school in Newport Beach. From Southeastern Asia comes Prasit Tongsayai of Thailand, who is livlng in Fountain Valley. StUdents from Europe will include Ingrid Wesemann of Germuy (Hun· tington Beach); StamaUa Kon Tsai ta from Greece (Corona del Mar); Fabrizio Schi8von from Italy (Corona de! 'Mar); Christine Vuillequez frorr. F r a l'I c e (Newport Beach ); Manfred Heine from Germany (Laguna Beach); Fernando Ga· i:R from Spain (Laguna Beach ); and Ingrid Lµndgren £tQm Sweden (San Clemente). Student! from Africa in c I u d e Azenegashl• Hallu from Ethiopia (Hun- ting'ton Beach) and Margaret• Le Roux of South Africa (Laguna Beach ). From islands come Margrethe Dorolhe Kristlane Kleist of Greenlaad and Voahangy Ram ah at a fa nd ry from Malagasy, both living in Costa Mesa. Americans Abroad parlicipating in the International Day at Thurston will be Lynn Rosener of Newport Harbor High, who spent a summer in Turkey; Kirk Gresham, Marina High, who went to Venezuela: Christine Weaver, Fountain Va11ey High, India; and Paula Nuschke, Westminster High, Gennany. Americans who were abroad ror a full school year include Kristin Whelan, Huntington Beach High, Argentina; Lor- rJlne Sekera, Founlai11 Valley High, Brazil: Mark Saunders, Estancia Hlgh, Australia; and Kathleen Collins, Laguna Beach High, New Zealand. -· From Page 1 GYPSY ••. 'under her own name, Louise Hovick.· Miu Lee wrote the best-selling novel ''The • G-String Murders," which. was made into a Barbara Stanwyck film 'titled ''The Lady (If.Burlesque," She wrote three ·«her books -in- Cluding her memoirs -plus a play, "The Na.keil Genius,'' which starred Joan J31ondell._ "Bare flesh bores men/' she once i:e~rked. ~t her style of boredom ·-ut1l1ztn'g black silk stockings an even- ing dreSJ, -long gloves and lady.like da- tneanor -earned her $4,000 per week and more. Her act was mOre ·lease than strip and she eafned a reputation on that merit. · "I nev'el' try to stir up the animal in 'e.m," she told writer J . P. ~1cEvoy. "Did you 't!VCr hold a piece of candy or a toy in front (If a baby -just out of his reach?," she explained. "Notice how he laughs? That's your strip au - dience." ~!lit five· years ago -still an eye- catcher -Miss Lee had some pinup ,photos J>r'.qdui:ed and sent a set to her son, wfio • w1s then on duty with the ·Army in Europe. 1 11.DearMoin," be wrote back . .. I pasted · your new photos 1n my locker bUf my commanding officer made me take them au down .• .t kept telling him these are pictures of my mother. It did no good." Gypsy responded lo typical style. "I could kiss that oflicer. I've never had such a complitnenL And rm old enough now to rea~ apiwectai. It." .. Kienast Quints Home ' . . N&W YORK (!IP!) -The Kienul quintupleta Went ho!ne i;n a apeci1J poUce-- escorltd amltulance today, nine weeks alter they ..,..,. born al Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. ~ • INTERNATIONAL PLANNING-Getting ready1for Thurston School's· International Day May '4 in J..a ... guna are (from left) Dan Penny, Thurston seventh grader ; Al Licon, Thurston instructor; Doreen ~ag· .. . ' . . - iui:burston etgb'tb grader, a~dDAM~nf~Q-\7"~T Am~iican Field Servic~ .exchange·stbdent. till Laguna 'Hilli from Germany. . •· · . . !J · .. • • ~ .J '" '.: .t= .... :. . . . • I• •• ... . ~ . . ' ; Laguna Planners to B~gil!. Snrvey of General · Plan The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission will meet at 7:30 tonight in city hall council chambers in a special study session to begin its survey •of general plan concepts. , The planners .)Vill discuss ·alternaUve concepts. pr.,.nted by the plaqnlpg firm or Daniel, Mam, Jol!moo & Mendenhall at an April 17 meeting, and will receive the planning team's detailed traffic and circulatioo analy.s!s and forecul. L • XEROX COPIES .,_; .... . . 8-1 / 2 x 11 iJnbotint:! •.: 20¢ minimum · Collated Free •. Introducing GOODl.JJR~ g~~~er Where printing is done instar:tty-we solve your copying and duplic.ating proQ/,ems! ~ . -.._ .. . EXPANDING TO BETTER S!RVE NEWPORT BEAcli-H.1p •• ctl•brato:: •• . ' . ' . ' 1 2131· SAN JOAQUIN _ HJLU . ~Q~ NEWPORT CENTER ..:.. Phone . 644~'6454 FEATURING-OFFSET PRINTING OF YOUR CAMERA·READV ORIGINALS SPEED -often on a wtiile·you-wait basis QUALITY -trained technicians and the finest equipment assure toP quality ECONOMY -under $4.00 for first 100 copies (oer origin1l) end less than 1 ¢ each thereafter VERSATILITY -gathering, binding, folding, padding and cutting memo pads during opening Wiik OTHER SOUTHERN CALIF<>RNIA CENTERS " , Anaheim 1640 W. Lincoln Ave. 776-3270 Glendale 4106 San Forn1ndo Rd. 247-5001 lngrowood 10404 la Cl1n1g1 Blvd . 671-7577 Lo• An,.111 · 623 So. Olive St. 627-1378 670 So. Vermont St. 383-1391 1415 Sun1ti Blvd. 656-2997 Newport leach 3148 Campus Drive 540.9681 2131 Son Jooquln Ht111 Rd. 6446454 • San Diego 1258-4thAvo. 23'·2149 6141 Miiiion Gor,. Rd. 211-66$1 . Shtrm1n 01k1 15113 Ventura llvcf'. 713-5172 Van Nuy1 8121 Van •NUYf Blvd. 716-7430 • . . ' '' . " •• .. _.,, Aplll 27, 19'10 L DAILY PILOT· 3 BO . tlllh ys ;:~~ · E:~pnlen~ ~eeded ~Y :L&g.µ.~ .. · · · · · · · M_uch Space .. .· ·i :1 . ' . . . • . •: :· .• But Little To Eill It ' ' ·-B7 1!ABi$4M OmBICB .... ....,. ...... ..., J.quna's ~ #50,000 Boys' Club on l.Jj~a Clnyon Road has Jots of. wace (It's the biggest Boys' Club bullding In Orangeo County) and still can use lots ol belp to get the space filled with needed' '9uipment .. , ~ ~ hand•om~.-facllily_b pen !or bus.mess lropi 2 ·\o s p.m. and from 6;:!0 lo 9 p.m: -days and Jrom 10 a.m .. to 1 p.m. Saturdays, but ao far the ooly more 6r ie..1 com"*ly equip- ped deparbnent is '"the· 'game room with pool, table ten'his and game tables. To get the club fully operational, many · · gifts of equipment and cash will be needed. For aample, the big gymnasium (fi,400 square feet) needs tumbling mats, a large punching bag, more weights for lifting, basketball backboards, a ·scoreboard, boxing gloves and archery equipment, among other things. · KEN l'RtNGLE (LEFT ), WITT BAL TUTlf P,AINT OLD LOCKERS FOR NEW BOYS' CLUB . Space at f_.ew Laguna Canyon FacflltY I' Plentiful, But Equipment Is Needed · • f 1 I • JOE OLIV ER (LEFT), THOMAS MACEY ENJOY GAME OF POOL Game Room at New Boys' Club Already Getting Heavy Use " The clubroom is nicely set up with carpeting. a movie screen and 16mm. sound projector, donated by the City Employe's Assocllition _and already is screening free movies. including many \Yalt Disney nature features on ,Wed· nesday nighO;. The arts and crafts room is quite well fixed for power tools, thanks to a grant from the Sears Roebuck Foun· dation for the purchase of big tools, but still is very short of hand tools. "We can use just about any kind of hand tool," says executive direct.or Bill Coolt. "The shop wili be doing all sorts of wood work and crafts supplies of any variety would be most welcome." S~clves arc just being built in the attractive little library, but the book collection brought over from the old club is meager. Donations of books of Interest to boys in the S lo IS age range would be welcome, as would subscriptions to Appropriate magazines. Gardening equJpment -shovels, rakes. ho3es and hand tools -will be needed for outdoor maintenance, as wi!i a power mower to trim the big lawn area, said Cook. The kitcllen cou1d use · cooking uieMlls -"the blggEr' the' better" -but no dishes. Paper plates and cups will be used. Cash dona'tions aie needed 'tor the purchase of ·heavy ·duty chairs, ·sofa,, and other furniture of ·the conunercial hotel vaflety desii1'ed for lOts Ot wea,r and ·te·ar. Household type furniture just doesn't hold up,' COOk explains. Smaller cash CtOnations also can be used to purchase simple staples for the kitchen shelves. : Nixon WantsNewMethOd Of Lowering Voting Age BILL COOK (LEFT ), ~AVID MATHEWS SET UP SHOP Grant Brings P-ower •Tools, But Hand Tools Needed '\ i ' Nixon plans to tell the House this week to scr]!a legislation , already passed by the · · t.e, that would lower the voting " age ·to 8. • NU favors a lower voting age, aides i'l but he wants tl accompllshtd u,ttugh a constitutional amendment. The attelTipt to set the age at 18 by passing a Jaw has been challenged by some who say it would be unconstitutional. Nixon is expected to tell House leaders that any legal challenge to such a Jaw might jeopardize the 1972 presidential elections. If the courts ruled such a law un- constitutional after an eleeUon had bein held, the race might have to be rerun or recounted 'to eliminate the ineligible voters. The Constitution does not specify a voting age, and states have made their own, and differing, laws on the subject. The attempt to set 18 as the nationwide voting age passed the Senate In the form of a rider to an extension of the -Vlit!Sg RlgH!s Act ot'l!Jis. ' "' A constitutional amendment woul!f have io be p~ by both houst1 and ralllled by. tlt'te-1"'1rlhs nr' the •sfAtes) There are already 71 sponSQrs ·of a Senate resolution calling for such an amendment and there were Indications M amendment would be t r e a t e d favorably in the House. In other action this week : -The Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday opens hearings on P'rtsident Nixon's latest Supreme Court nominee -Federal Appeals Court Judge Harry Blackmun of Minnesota. The Blaclunl'.Jn nomination, at least initially, has been uncontroversial -unlike the previous two nominees. Judges G. Harrold Carswell and Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., both of wliom were rejected by the Senate. El Ra~cho has the fine st berries in ·town ! . Sure, you'll find berries advertised at lower prices ... but compare! El Rancho strawberries are plump, juicy, red·ripe-ripe enough to use the day you take 'em home! There is a djff~rence ! Eniov the d6light of fresh atra.wberriea in so ma.11.11 d-ifferent ways! ' Bisquick ............. 40 ouNCE m ............ 43' Johnston Pie Shells ..... l'l!G. or 2.. ... 33' Enjoy shortcake-biscuits, piled high with berries J Heap with berry filling, topped with Cool Whip! Co.of Whip ............. QUAl!I SIZE ............ 49' Shredded Wheat ....... !ILLOOG'S ........ 29' Top a .sh~i °!,. pi~.or asu~~~l Frozen . St.art ~lle day wjth cereal and ri~, fresh berries! 1Brtak ~~o11.71~toith 01l4t'l~ty i1l ~r~el from El Ra~ho! :~Boheless thicken · Breasts MIN. WT. 1-2 OOHCES Plump tcndel' breasts, from fresh California birds, stuffed with dressing. $1 Je9a. Tasty while meat, •luffed $14 9 \vith ham and cheese a la Cordon Bleu. el. Interested service clubs or lnktividua1s are invited to drop in at the club and look around to see what they can do to help:, A. new woman's auxiliary also is being formed and Cook pqints out that members need not ·be motben · of members. ~eryone bi welcome. · In addiUOn to the game room and free ·movies, 'the club now Js offering karate leSBQns~ op Tue:9day ,afternooM and dodge ball Jn the gym on TueSday 'and Friday evenings. ' · · · . Mem,ber.s~lo ~harce . is $1.50 •· year -.. ,d new c;ird!, or c.~s purch~s.ed •QY time alter July 1 of last year will be good until :January· 1, 1971. The 'clllb office is open at IO 1.m. daily Slid ·remains open until 9 p.m .. weekdays. Phone 49.\.2535 for fµr!Jler info.~~·lion. · Satur~ay P~stal Service to End Satuntay wlndaw service at all units of the Laguna Beach Post Office will be discontinued effective May 2. 1 Posbnaster Jack Bryant has al)llou'nced. ' Surrveys of Saturday wlridow :b,Jiine1s· Indicated th~ expense to taxpayers Is not justlfiable:l Bryant sakl: An es.Umated fa,000 ln tax 1unds can be saved, annua11)' 'tiy' cloOlng the I post i>lll~ 'lrlndofl , ~~t Saturdays, he said; in ac;lditlon tO glylng postal employes a Mdnday.Friday work week. Many services still will be available through lobby stam~ vendhig' 'machines ind at the two contract · poSt offices at Boat Canyon Bazaar and 'Monarch Bay Drugs, Laguna Niguel. Bryant said recent emphasis on local management and fiscal responsibility has encouraged local managers to use tax funds as wi5ely .as ·'JI06Sible: "Everyone would like to provide a full '{ange or services," he said, 0 but we must. shop wisely and selectively. I ~ the~­ munlty will support this m'ove to' rldu¢e the tar load being shared by us all." Mental Health Work ·Ma y Get Lift in County A new 17-member board to IUperVisc Operation ol the mentol r<lardation· pro- gram ln Orange Coonty may be ·~ pointed by the Board of suWYisors ' Tuesday. . . But su'pervisors are concemed over a proposal o( the Comprehensive ijealth Planning Association that only two .coun· ty .officials be Included on the board and thoae as non-voting membefl. CHP.A execuUve director John Traband tried to explain.to the suwvlsors last ·TUesday that the proposed board wa:! "only an ad visory bodf," bul Dr.·John Philp, county health directOr disputed Utls. He said the · new group would have far-r1achirig planning and ai1ministraUYe powers. o14~~1=~ ~11~~r,1Bi¥a~:7"'~! supervisors and the remaining fi'le by G.over'\'!i R~. ·bi\inlo c.Ut ie~lcjin 'sugg!! • ror m~bel'!hip on , the new grouP. include Alex Britton, Cal.State, Lorig 'Bellcli' pro- fess0r froin Los AI~tos; Dr .. .(ustin Can,' 1928 Kaui Place, Costa Mesa; :Mrs.. ' ' Rulh Gonnsen, 39 Lagun)to Lane, Laguna Beach ; Dr. Richard • Stott, pSychoJogist, ~75 Weymouth P la e e, Laguna Beach. · llichard Weeks , director Orange 1Coun- ty Association for Retarded Children, 421 Bellwe· Lane, Newport Beach: .,ven Fahrney, attorney, Los Alamitos ; Mrs. Rosemary Saylor;. 31791 Soylh .Coast Highway, Sbulh Laguna ; Edwatd. C. Lund, president United Cerebrid' fialsy, 704 Orchld Ave., Corona .de! Mar .. .. S'Pfing brings f01'tk a. bevy of fr1'it8 and berries • • • flavors to delight llte palate ..• c.o l 0. r' 80 tenipting. And El Rancho offffll the best'of the cropa .. all through. . the ICQ.l&n.. , El -Rancho's· Veal Birds MM. WT. 3 mnm 39 ~. I I Price1 in t//ect Mon., Tu~I., Wtd., April 17, ,a, 19.-No 1alta to d<alera. ARCADIA: S.nsel ond Huntinllon Dr. (!I Rancho C.nhr) • • • • • • • • • • • • Tender veal ••. perfect serving portions! Eat.it.all goodness in a delightful-and welcorne-taate treat! a.t El Ra.nchO'• Super4licate1atfl , f '"' Gallo Salame Chubs .................. ~~:~u~-~~ ................... ~ .49 .. . Enjoy an old work! snack ••• a chunk of salami, a piece of French bread and a crisp ripe apple! ' '. I • PASADENA: 320 Wat Colo11do Bl'td. .souttt PASADENA:· fremonl and ·HunUniton Dr. HUNitNGIOll BEACH: W1rner and Alzonquin (8oardwtrk Cenler) NEWPORT dEACH: 2727 Newpo~ 81111. ond 25S5 !>stbluH Dr. (tntblull ~l~p C.llllr) I I ' • • I ' I \ . . ... . ,..,. I I ,_Duvalier ·.Qu.ells ,, Haili8:n: {Jp ~isi·ng • I I , PORT AU· PIUNCB, llaltl (AP) -•lfappean to me PrsJileat llu•llltr's ' lllWaa Pl~-'DuvaJ1'r to-poottloo ·it aoll4.'" U.S. Amba-Qin. • day ,........,. to ba 1lrmly In ClllllroJ ton E. Knox !Old new.....: . • after' ••'hf.d Olllt111Wd nvok faUed "Par, Doc" .Duvalier, survivor of. IDOi'! In ...,. IJlt n11o1Uon ....... But the lhao.adozen pJota agalmt!Jli IJ.,......id nbtll .....; • 111oJr. WIY to ""'"" -dlcfatorablp, )helaltnld !lie -lllc;o wtlh ball ,,, .. -·· P. "~tel¥ ........ -.1. .. He said !lie .-,, ~ polllnd lll'lllm trom; the rebel! wollid be tried "wbm ,..., are United Staf!t. · ' captured ., ' -# • • ,', ' , ,, • JlllOI .-..i there WU no J>Ol)ular upris- • · • lnl -and no panic -wbeD the coast · Sov;ets Orb;t (Win! flagsblp J..,. 0eaaau-· m1 two 11 · · 11 ol the other amn small liOp& In Haiti's ' • , / nl'J. began llhelling Peri Ill PrlDca Fri- 8 S ll . . day morning. · ate I -f .no 'Jlle sporadic firing,_ aimed 11 Abe lll<'iJ preaideolial paiaco, orcbed ov• U.. U.S. • · · .With:.1 J:l~kt MOSCOW (UPI) ' -The ·&lvleu. an- 'nollnced ioday diey J-foll!Jt .... Embusy and damaged I bUeryDW' Duvalier'• )leaVtly ....-~. Two aljgllll)' ~ Halllw _... the °"!Y, .. j>orled ·-· ' ' All\IM f!lgllls and t.Jephoae """" munJCattpns were stopped lem-1y, but otherwise life cootinued ~ In the lmpoyer!Jbed Caribbean nottan. B06TON (UPI) -A Fourth o1 July atmoopl>ere pervaded Boston'' New Clly HaJt plua Sunday 81 20,000 per IO D t gathered to bear Bob Hope Ud other· celebritJea urge them to "Wake Up Am- ericL'' · ' f' . The -. clean' •hav!n ctoWd waved American flap and listened to patriotic mU!lc from bra.u bMcfJ and flfe.and<lrwn corps .. Ibey ---failh and hopes In the COWllr)''I values and traditions. Bob Hope, the comedian billed as Am- erU:a's Ambauador to the World, told the crowd, '"l'bll ls what the kidJ Jn Viet. nam are figlltlng f<r -our privilege to do this."' Only a handful ol disaldenls cwld be beard, and they too ..... goockiatured. Hope , __ to tholr oc:culonal heck- ling by .qulpplnc1 °Tbat11 quite ID echo I'm getting." "Ninety elghl perceut of tbe poop!• th1nt the way .you an do, fl Hope told the crotrd whose ranU were nelled becaUJe ol 'beaullful llWlllY -tber with tempera-tures In tbe 'Ill!. He was auwered l>Y 1poradfc lhoull of "Hurr~' and "Tell 'erri, Bob." Hope was joined On the r"1rum by cartoonlat Al Capp, .fullback Jim Nance of the Boston. ~·lijo(! and NaV}' football great Joe BelUqo. . •" I Moynihan Scolds Nixon Plan Foes WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Pr..ldentir ' Adflser Daniel P. Moynihan today scold ed lhe U.S. Cliomber o1 Commm:e lo its "shrill opposition" to the N l x o Administralion's welfare reform legis/: lion. Moynihan also warned the CJiamber 58th annual meeting that a "colle[ elite" is growing to 0 hate our guts." An -•l<d 3,000 peraone who a: tended tbe aeMon 1t the IJouabter, of the American Re\'Olutlon'a CMll!tutioll Hall polllely applauded MO)'ll)hao's . defenae of tbe a dml n lit ra it on', "absolutely splendid piece of lqfalatlon" to guarant.., at i"'!t fl ,IOO a year to each famlly ol lour. · UPITt ....... , canal outs ide of Washington. Douglas, 71, is facing possible impeachment proceedings in Congress. Good -,~ex: S2!J'.i00 Resear chers Offer Help fot Han gups . NEW Y08K (AP) -Two ploneen quacy," publlsbed todaf.. Little, Brown In oex -aay they believe they & Co. 112.50. · have devekS>ed a method ;~ prevent Furihennore,. about' this same pnr maoy 1l>oooaocJs ol -'-> • ..:... .!mn .portloo o[ beoellctal results has been ........ ~-maintained among people who were kept breaking up over sexual probltm&. · trick of for five yean or more. Among It invo)ve1 a 14-d-y tnt.Ive ~ 15.5 of these couples; three were divorced d. COUll5eling c:onc~ a~couple11 sex~ and four had .filed for ·legal separation ual .difficulties, with qges~ fre.. when they came for· treatment, but five q'*1C.Jy given concemlng speciDC sexual yurs later all seven couples were back behavtcr. Problems Include impotfnce together. • in men and women'• failure to reach After the caunsellng, three <1ther -. couples bad diVOl'<t!d .ind one hid filed ·111e fee fw the 'two-week· progt=am for separation five years latef. But "the 1lft' la $2,500 which includes counsellng low divorce inddenct,: in . the sexually durin( the five-year loUOwup period, but reconstiluled marital ·anits is of real ~ ,...-ot.tlle potlmlls pay , Interest, particularly ;oheo nationally nO!t>q ~ , tb<l' · -1111""1 It, reported levels ol dmJrt< Incidence are and lllOther 25 per...t .PIY a partial contemplated," Dr. Masters aod Mrs. ree. 'l1le Income bclpo oupport !\le Johnoon say. S590,oao+year ,bodget ti. tbe .folun-.Sex. prob~erqs •?'!·a :maior. factor in daUona. , · . , 1 • the epi~c -.o(: AO>erican divorces -°"" ~ laft· 1t ,..;,.; ""' ....... • '< ·'!llh·~ In ""''~ages winding have ~ed sue!> !IJ<rapy, Si up In di-e -iOO'by some estimat.. ou1··•1 10 n.u Ind. ,.._,. jipg ma~be baU ol .~......_ m•m,.es. are tbeil' mU.t14fflcultiw, Dr. · KM. either' .irea~Uii'Y di!ftm'tional'' Masten and Virginia E. Johmon write or will be in the near Mure, ~ authon In a new book, "HUllllll Sexual Inade-aay. · Esypt Ramers Strike, Attack Israeli Positions By TOE ASBOCIATED PRESS Egyptian commandos made two rai<h across the Suez Canal Sunday, but u usual Egypt and Israel disputed the results. cairo said lOO troops made the lint tttack before dawn, and it was the 'argest Egyptian raid across the canal in nearly five nlooths. Egypt claimed the raiders stormed El Shat and took the Israeli defenders "by complete suipise," ovel1'llllning tbe.ir positions, ldlllng IX' wounding 35 troops, aod destroying four antiain:raft guns, two tanks, two balftracks, two trucks and two bulldozers. catro reported three Egyp40m soldiers killed. Israel said there were no Israeli cuuaJUes, five Egyptians were kllled, aod, the E.m>tfan report was "a fable out ol 'A .Thousand and One Nigllts' ". Later Sunday, Cairo reported, more Egyptian commandos a'OSSed the canal, attacked two Israeli patrols a n d destroyed three half tracks and two tanks. A spokesman said one Egyptian and the members of an Israeli tank crew were killed. Israel said ttle Egyptians ambushed a motorized patrol north of El Qantara. It claimed that its soldiers rushed the attackers, drove them back to the canal, and sank a boat calT)'ing eight. soldiers. Tel Aviv said five tsraelis and nine Egyptians were wounded but that all the commandos escaped to the Egyptian 1ide of the canal. Snow Falls· Over the West The Israeli military c:ommand al9o reported the third a ir strike against guerrilla outposts in Jordan In ~ days. Israeli jets struck near Ma'oz bl the Beisan Valley and near the Israeli town of Neve Or, spokesmen said. Tel Aviv claimed the two bases were staging posts for guerrilla raids against Israeli civilian settlements. All the planes returned safely, the Israelis said. Midwest., Northeast Finally Ha ve Good We ather C'allte,.,. .. ' C'outal -.. . ~ l'lltll .............. 7:)6 •.11'1. , .. lecn ltw ........ •:II '·"'· J.I TUllDAY Pint Mtfl .,.,,. ........ ,,.,1,111, •. , ,-/tit lew .. , .. ,. .. , .. .. •:M 1.1111. O.J ~ ltltill ''""'""'" S:OG•.t11. J,I ._,,. W ••.•• ,.,.,,,., '1G 11.m.1,7 ""' • • .... •:tt t.tll. ..,. 1iS. •·In. MOM ..... lll~•.m. Im ll:f!'t.rn. ! Tel Aviv said Israeli ground forces came under fire from Jordanian territory tn the northern Jordan Valley Sunday and that one Israeli soldier was injured. On the political front. Egyptian Presi- dent Gama! Abdel Nasser announced that he had appointed Hassanein Heikal, hit close friend and editor of the semiof- ficial Cairo newspaper Al Abram, Bl! minister of Information. Heikal speaks for Na~r in his newspaper so often that his weekly editorials are interpreted as atatementa of the Egyptian president's views. J ustice Gets Kopechne Files BOSTON (AP) -The chief justice of the MaJSacl>UsetU Superior Court to- day ordered and received custody of all the documents perlalning 1o the fn. pecl>ne. They will be made public Wed- nesday. Chief Justice 'G. Joseph Tauro by his order received the documents from Edward V. Keating, clerk o( the court, and told Keating he wu "relieved of all respomlblllty as cu.!ltodlan of sald documenta." The transcript of the Inquest aod the Judge's report on It have been Impounded deaplta a atate S-me Court ciiilfili>n that they abould ba made public wtthoot delay. · nWmed altllltoo 'Into earlh 'orbli wllh one rocket Saturday. ari u:nprecei:leoted spa_ce feat. _ , '• The elgbt unmanned craft, It • a f d , all elgllt sateillt.. "are 'l'Oving aloag close to calculated orbits." The el~t unmanned craft, ls saJd, carried 'sclenWic apparatus designed for space research in accordance with the previously-announced program." The satellites were designated Cosmos 336 through 344, under !he Ulllal catcball term for Soviet spy, resean:b and weather satellites. The mulUple launcil came one day alter aitna boosted Its first earth satellite Into orbit -and while Soviet and American .,gotlaton were meeting in Vienna for Strategic Anni lJmttaUon talb (SALT) on such weaporus u the mulUpte.headed MIRV (mulUple in- depeodenlly targel<d re-entry vehicle). The initial orbit, Tau said, took the cluster of satellites around the earth at heights ranging from rro to 931 miles every 115 minutes, at an angle of 74 degree.!j to the equator. 'n!e orblt wu not one of the familiar sky-paths of ~ C9smos aeries. It was · thought possible the inlUal orbit wu a "parking" one, from which individual satelll.tes would be put Into varying tracU later. The ,... previous Cosmos shots put Into roug!tly llimllar orbits Jn the put lnlomlanls said aeveral .Haitllll of. ficiall ijad been arrested; among· tM:m Justice Mu1istei Rlmeau Estime. it was uncertain II Estlme and ouleri had be<n ~ up before or alter the lbellJng bepn Friday. Anned units loyal to Duvalier were ln control of the coast guard's Bil.Onto base .six miles from Port. au Prince. U.S. ~ officials reported no in· dications of support by land forces for the naval ri!bels. Knox said had Port au Prince been ready for revolt, "it certainly would have come out" when the sbl!Uhlg began. "I never saw uything lll:e It in ·my experieoce, '1 said the diplomat, com- meeling ont he calm of the populace, He contrasl<d tis placidity wilh rebellloos he bad witnessed In Honduru and Dahomey, in West Africa. On Friday afternoon ·the rebels fired on aod boarded the Mtaml tua!mt ''Denise," wblcb was entering the hafboP towing a barge loaded with concrete pilings. The rebels selJed 10me food but Injured no one. They also l1opped a Gennan freighter and took 1Ilort food. ... DO UGLAS OUT · ::~~an ~b~ ;::::; :.~ , OF T'llRE Ji;. CASES u 3,000 years. No lnterpretatioo o1 tile function of WASHINGTON (AP) -Ju 111 c e such ~ 11 Cosmos 2M or :m WWlam 0. Douglas «epped out $ll two has l)e<p published eltller by the Soviet obscenity cases and a Ube! dispute in or Western --'allst!. ;r,reme Court today and PY• no ,,.._ r "-bis acll:e.t.1•-'-" · ' 1be launch was the first Soviet apace ,"'4 , , ~ 1,, "t :specjtacular since three m a n n e d Th 71-year-old JUStlce, the. target of ~all went up at once Jaat O<.iober. > an impeac!unent move by a 1fOO!P of Tass said the e1"1t satellif.ff "are 1 ~ouse cooservaUvH, announced h1I 1c- equipped w i t h scientific apparatus ti-Oil ln a routine way -with notlltkm des!BJ!ll<d lot space ~ Jn ac> r In the court's mlnieogrB!lhed 1\11 o1 cordahce with~ the program amiounced · orders. He gave no explaDatlon, bis offtce earlier'' - a standard phrase in all ~d give none ~d the ~.rt's ~ Cosmos launchlnga -and "the equip-of ft~~· when queried, said: He W<ll t ment· on ~ ttie aatelutes functions ~· rurmally." ; -Prayer and Fear An old Vietnamese woman whos e family has been taken away by Cambodian Army troops prays 1n !ront of her . house in Cambodia while a little girl cowers Jn the background. Vietnamese face increas- ing oppression in Cambodia. ' -r • --:;~ • . . ( 1 . ·i . , .. . ' . .. ·. , . Sa.n · ·~I~U.enie tapls-tran~ ~ . .. ·• YOC. 63, HQ. ·100, l SECTIONS, l°' PAGES · . ' .. . . .. . .. ..... · ~ ~~l;~IW ·-,,,,. - ~tar Cy,psy_ • . . . ( Dies at 56 ~ .. · I • • • • . . • . ., .. • ' . . . . • • ~ 4 --.; --ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·' . MONDAY, >Jitlt: 27, 1'970 --.. .Guriship,-··Copter -. . .. -~ ·-~ • T ... y'• Fl••I JEN CENTS _,.,.:..r:; .. _:.11.owll .. ---· In . Figliting; ID~ ~Dead Plane Lost Over Laos; Hit by Fire SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command today announced the lo6a ol a lwr-""' American gunship wer aouthern Laol and a U.S. Army helicopter near the besieged Dat Seang Special Forces camp. Ten Americans were killed, four were missing and one was rescued. It was the first AC130 gumhip r~ shot down in the war. 'lbe U.S. Command said K was hit by enemy ground fire la! Wedneoday in Ille lower panhancjle «. Laos; apparenUy while on a mission OVf!t ttie Ho Chi Minh Trail. Six of the crewmen were killed, four were misslnl and one was rescued with minor injuries, and spokesman aald. 1be AC139 lithe gumihjp version of. the Cl30 carao and tnwport plane used to haul troops and war materials. The A~ 130 carries fOIJr mln!guns and four 20mm cannon. -- The plarle' can make effective strikes deopile condl-of poor visibility that often pr<•ail In Laos. II. uses high in· . " , , • . . . =~~~us advanced cMEMJIER OF THE 'GHJ!TTO >OANG' CONP,RMS•DR. SHAP!~O iw:1nt"it1.m~o i='Ri(N"oS". A>UHl•Aney bellcopterwas -dnwn . ' . lft Nowpo11'>1Mch ·o·Slloutl111-.Mlfch o ... -..~Wltorf_:-'-""...,'-·F_o_d_l ___ ....:......,.--- Satdrday .. ~ Qak Seang,, seven miles . • _ ' 1 ··' .... , • ,.. ! ..... , • . , 1 ~ ; , • , • , ! \ ""'1'tl-Laollanbordi-er;and~Jfl!'\ . ; .t· '. ·~' '". '•' 1 ~,;di!J'' l" ~>11 i.:,:L~.Al.io< ,.,., .. : .. ·j::,t>,'Jl;:o<o·. ,. '"' ~~ ""-·rt1 ' • ; ' ~ "'.,, "· ~ """*""'H • 12" " ' Bpok-u111•~. .· ·o· 111e . . . . up o... . . :·.·· ... -~ett~~VY'. .. ~· ·i41'U-J!IPPlflinl, ~ lioulh ' .. ~ •· .Vlillalmiilt 'ad 1be1r ,._.... -.. ' • · ~4-__ .=:__ L :.. ' 66 -1lol'lll ad•llm wtao bvo 1ioen aer . · · . < • ' • ' • • ' • • • • • .r7UCCll.llllJ8: at . • -. ... . ...... • : ,,,. ndll1 -lln' -1fl. --....1..-ca11tfcr -· -.. IGnllhl tlwouib 'Ylielday, Wl1h t.mporalum. di!>' "Pinc into the lower IO'a. INSmE TODA'Y ,. < .-' Fra•~ CoUift ..U.d hit father .• •t1or''. Hil falhtr claima to be o 'Jcw. Frrnllc -·he It .. , kAf'JIO""• It b . imporltmt to , · riool!. b_.... he 11 ""' Jljd. ,' ~·' · l<odir of U.. A"""""" Nod Panv. Page ll. ,, ...... -·~, ""-. ,=:::,"" ft~ ,.c-111 • : .............. 1 ' -. ............ -.. --.. --c.-tr '' .,.... ...... ..... 94' .... .........-.. -. -. ! t ~ .. • MORE TEASE THAN' STRIP' ·n.o Loto G,yppy .RoH• LM· . ' . Interest Lagging, So Laguna High .. Paper Dropped Lack al lllude1t Interest was blamed loday !Of a declrlon to di9'0ltinoe · the Lacuna Beach Hl&h School campus ~'"The Paper Wave." The tlle.'Wlpapet will be discontinued for -rblllnce of the ,sc:baol ·)1!ar, ao- cr.odlng to Division Admlnlstrator Di>n liaulbL 11Flr . the ·past two years, the number al . ltll!lent.s wanting to take j"'1fUlism bu• atrociqusly low,'" Haught said. "'lbe •first semester of this year, we had 10 atudeats enrolled .tn journalism." This 11tmest.er the nwnber has dropped to If& too few to put out a school pa~" Haught said. lie also noted that· the cost ol tbe paper is exorbitant, requiring. one..fUth of a teacher's salary for iostrucUon, and aroond 1120 for the publlshillg cost. Haupt aakl that.coverage of ·activities of the <high school students bas been excellellt, through the local press: ~veral high ICbool 1tudents wort with . local papers. In Laguna. SO.tin& a aolutlo• to the high school joumalilm problem, the assistant prin- cipal would like to offer journalism as more of a, "theory" course, while ---In oenpaper proo clDctlbnj IUiCb as the student newspaper, coul4 -eredit while working with tlleloeal-ffautlll natea that this plu .ts only a proiiooaJ 'and bas not been brought to the 'Board of. F.ducation for approval. The board aow provides fuodl for publication of.the school.paper. Drinkiµg Marines Run Afoul of.Law Pla1nclothes offle<TS !OCllSed their patrols on San Clemente's belches this put weekeDd and ~ nearly a dor.en Marines for liquor infractions at the lhore. . • ~~=~~~;.In N8W~ort' A ;rgu· . merit . S~rn~ Held . ' '!be u.s. Command aa1d lllOouncement · · 'f'l · . · d. the two aircraft losses was delayed ' · , 1 "'1ile searcil missions were under way. By TROMAB toRTIJNE Shoplro· .ia;. ·saying· that It> ·rs foiJc1 U.S, beadquarl<n also reported 17 °' ,..._ -tMll to·iee1he.people'1etun; It loplher. · · enemy rocket and mortar attacks durlng Jhe police. were only •·mu,. d Bui tbere•wUil'I much getlllig lllYthlng the 24 houri ending at I a.m, today, .bystaJtders Ibis time as the ".ghetto foPther atter'the • ....,,ctttl<'s lit ·tnto · with two Amerioane kllled and tt wound· people" got in· a ·ahouting .mtch with those of ••Free Us.'T-itW11 an sboutiBg ed. the l'Free Us" P""Ple•Suoday et Balboa ,ud feuding ·with long.baired.·,:c.;a.· iet· In a gn>Wld aclj<>n, 10 to 15 North Pier Park in Newport Beacli. · ,against, each.other. , VWname9I ~uppers moving under the A week . before· fotr Pollcemen haCI "Much ado about nothing,'', elderlj cover of· a mortar bafraae blasted their been· iiljured· ...-a · dislocated ankle, a Balboa resident Harry Nye commtnted . way .. into an American artlllery base .broken' linger, outs -in a melee that after llstenlng to the wbole a!lait, 46 miles northwest of Saigon. Hurling ·folloWed' ureft .of a speaker for using 'He said be wu there to Re b o w dynmnlte bclnbs Into· bunk era and !Iring .obloen> lanll'!•le. So plainclothel ~If leers safe bis house i. going to be In the rocket grenades, they killed four men .assigned to cover the weekly · 0 Free future and with the ghetto youths tajk1ng from the 25th Infantry Division and Us". piC!illc and · rally appeared tense . wha~ ~. to bipJ. llk~·.IOOCI· -. wounded 11 odlers .. ~ aid surveying the 400 • .eitllllg on the' ]lllfk he:fl~ he & In pretly fair i)lal!'• the atlack did "moderate" dam1111e to lawn. · Al!o . obsf,rvlng the rall'y were dty tbe base, and one enemy· sapper was But police broke into smiles when coohdlmen lf'oWard ~ and DCXla)d killed and 51 wounded. • one of the angry ghetto people told Mcll!llil. Renirlied . 11og,n, ".It'• aure A newly Cl[JtUred. directive d~ the "Free Us'' participants, ~·we ,~Y ~ng to be interesting When we get that the Communist high commancfls them with our taxes and,we'll beat them tioth groups in ~ty council cbunbers." pmr.,. goal tn SOuth Vietnam in 1970 up. They're our offictrs, not yours." Th~ Pf9ple of j•Ji'ree _ Us" are due is to frustrate 1lle Vielnamization and The ghelto people, as they caDed .fo pack the gallery of ·t11e City. C<Jimdl paciflcatlon programs and create a themselves, live in' the cheap rent A-meeting at 7:30 tonight; Tbe tames of ldgnificaot change in the war, official frame apartments' facing on the Newport ·the last foUr Sundays ·hiVe been bWldlng iources reported. The sources said they Pier parilng' lot. 'lbrough their frequerit up to this awt.arance at which they i-..--: military enoountera with the law .they hav..e .were to ask for an end to aUeged:poUce =~~::~~ive enemy developedtapport with some of the pallc.e harassment, a public meeting room and Laguna's New Foot Patrol Bags Suspect Laguna'a new foot police patrol brought about the arrest Friday night of a young Marine from El Toro on lll!]Jldon al _.., of dqerous drug• with intelll fjj oelL Waiting the' 100 block of St. Ann's Drive, two olflcanl llopped to cheCI< on three men in a "parked car, noted thal one ~ 1'i be under Ille in- fluence of ..,... -..it ll1CI arrelted John Larry Wittner, 21, after finding 170 red capsules on bis person. A1lo on Friday nlghl two teenagers were booked on ~ of po89eUlon ell dangeroul· drugs a& marijuana with intent to sell. David Eufene llllssell, 11, ·0ranse. and tis complnlon, a l•yeor-01<! boy from Villa· Part, were apprehended in the ?00 block of Glenn<)'fe Street. Seized al evldeoce • ftl'e eight UJldl" (eight ounc,.) of marijuana and II white capsules coolailling a IUSpeCted drug • officers. a spot to hold rock concerts on the (They eveft take,credlt {or Patrolman !!each. ·Now. they· allO will try 1'i 'IPlllk Charles WllkiDlon's :•omcer of the year" about the metee ·last weet. they ,da1zn award because of all the arreata be the· police provoked. ' • · · made •oh tbtir block.) · A cootalner· was pasled · SundaJ: ·to Before the · ghetto people .started In cOllecl' lliooe)> fjj' ,p.y ~k 'jM> ms fired ·UC lrYlne ~ Dr. Ste!lhe!' bail for !lie 10 armled tbe ·week before. ' San Ciemente Stalled 'tar. ' : Causes ·Wrecks Injuring 2 An El Moote Woman and a Marine from Comp Peitdleton boili sollered aevere cuts arid bruises In : a . aeries of craShes .on the San Diego Freeway In San Clemente this morning, ail Caused by a stalled car. Highway patrolmen said Nora i..e Gorden, 33, of El Monte and Robert Betnleler, 20, .. the Marine, were in separa1e can• In Ille.,..., 'Wblch oc- curred at·2:4S 1.m. near the· El Camino Real offtanlp. ' The northbound cars both. piow.11 ,Into a stalled auto which ' wu lllopped crooswlae in U!e slow northbound lane. Patrolmeo, who aa1d all Ille detalla of the crash were . nqt yet complete this mom1ng, reported that 1lle stalled 1. Betnel!er, who apparenQy was In the stalled' CV, olllcm sai<l, WU. taken "to the bW hoeplta1 al camp Pendlelon lo<- . '!be llrit .... to -the -car wu diiven by Anabelm mldent Rk:hard Len .. HUiton, Z3, 1'bo WU not hurL Sholily after thal eollillon Ille. Gorden WOIDlll'I IUlo lllf Iba Idle' aulo. Nixon Del8yi Mee~ WASHINGTON.(AP) -PNoldeal Nix· on.poolponed loday, f</<',IM IOColld llme, a mett1ng wllh !lie llal!Oaol liodaily Councll and added • ... with bl.ii Councll of -A4'toeil. • . The Whlla --DO lmiDodlale · Mais was celebrated this mor'!l!N i-in St. ~a.D's Oiurch, ~ An'geJ,S, fOr Harriett McGraw Ke11vy. M, of. D6 Vtita de Catalina, !i<>Uth l.olllna, who dted Friday al' South Coul Community 11\JSpKal. after a long Illness. · · Mn. Keavy was the-wife of ·Hubbard Keavy, executive editor al the Ll!g\llul News-Post. .Since coming to ·Laguna Beach 'In 19111, ·ahe· hl!l·been active In ·llM> Soilfh .COoal Gardm Club and• Ill< ·1.quna Beach Garden Club and le?Ved with the Silver and GoK! Chapler ot the South Coast . Community Hosplt.i1'1 auxiliary, , Followlnt major surgey one year qo, Mrs. Keavy was gravely injur~ 1n p automobile ·accident. Resulting com. plk:litiont nlade it necessary ·for her to return to the hospital llOuie weetl ago. She 19 stnived by her husband: two sons, ,Timothy al , Blythe, and Micbael of Costa: 'Mesa; four brothers RObert McGraw, for.mer mlyor of ·Bloomington, Jll.: JORph, 'nlomu and llal;oK! McGraw; all of. BloOmiligton; and by six ·grandchildren: · A native al. Bloomington, Mrs. Keavy m<ived to Loo Angeles in 1928, shortly after her maniage to Hubbard Keavy, Hollywood corn•p•nd"'1t of T h e ~ Press; and. later chlel al U!e A.. P. Loo Angel,. bureau. , She wU , aCtive Jn Catholic charitlel, holding" office In St. ~n's, Allar Society and ;managing .. Thrift Sliop for the lmmaclilate H e:a rt Collele ScholanbJii• F1mch '!be flmlly hu suggested m<modal donatlona bay be . made to the American Cancer Bodety. Suspect's ,Same; N (1.me' s Different A young burglary llUlpict wt.o -Costa M... police the nome 61 an old ctusmate without a criminal r,ecord when captured tut week bu been re- booked under his pn>per.ldtmily1 "Tbamu H. Dales, 21, ·has -Jm. p~ in several Mesa Verde area blqlartes an<I bas a 1oq ]!l'lor record or off-• ._.ring to ~Ion. The San\.8 Ana mu falsely pvo tie name Dane H. TUl,1 ol 2501 llalll SI., when apprehended iut T11Unda.7, ap. parenlly otronded by cornpenlom In tie Mesa Verde arei.' nu bas -Ing lo do "'"' the ..... --. E' .'~···....: .. = " ==~,. ,, -. ............. Qfflcer• Arrested, then cited the violators al the dly ood•n'llildl forbids dr\ntlnc of llC;oholic beverages on dty beadl<s. ~ NEW YO!IK'(AP)•-.The stock market car resting with Its ligl\ta out wu, ap. conUnued lif -•ard~J e In light parenlly struct·twlce. . ~·=:.·::...~..:: Dal" was begging a ride beet lo Santa Ana, which led area hotneaw1-. to call police, who dlacovered llemt In 'bit poooeWloil belrlnc Ille _, ••• • ' ' ............. ,, ... --.. The alfenden, picked up Saturday and &lnday, must appear tn court to aDlftr .. ........ 'lbq ..... notiallld<' . ' vadlni'~•illl<!I.,...,,' oeveral The Gooden-· was taken to S<loth ~ ...... ~-= :Z.t"' . (S ·~=t:°"l!\!&l lor lrtlljDeal . ' ' . ' . . • • ~· • ,for It"· l"JldlJ. ,lie -.......... ~~ '• I ' ~ ~ . ~ of1-ven1e-. ' , - .. ' • ... ,. -.... . ' . . . . . . . .. ,._ ........ I DAllY PILOT SC .• ' -. .~_Epitapli fur:9yp~y; . ' ' ·She Left Wa~Mem()11 . . . .. . . llJ'.NOllMAll 11. 'ANDEUON • J4 M 0Mtr 'll!f S'!ft Girsi iwin: LEE, &"famed ~·with pm wlio never really toot • It .n off, couloj Jal her hill" dOwn with ease. She did that literally and Hgura- Uvely one blllltery night iJI January cif 1916 and made troopera out of my wtfe and me. '-· • . She alto 1ert us with aome warm and baman memorlel. Gfl"Y at that time was the st.v of her own show, beln& flhilod In San Francllco, but Ibo had qreed lo take time out In •ltel!d the awanls night of the Oranp Coooty P,.,. Clab In Saota Ana. · 1 She had no tr~tion so because I knew how to find ber borne, atop. 8 tilll off the Sunset Strip in &verly Hills. my wile and l were her chauff~. IT WAS A PLEASURE, wa were tbrllled lo do IL But a star I.& a atat and not even blue, cynical newsmen can quite Ip«< tbe'.aur& that llU1'rolJlldJ a per..,.Uty like GYPl1 Role Lee. • . her trldemart, the 'lOnl ·pwn, tbe long white 1tove1, hair piled "' top of ber bead, llbe aal iJI die .~t ieat _on lbt way down. She put U1 QUlc~ ~ ~tter:t :r:r.e ~~ _,, rtplrtee, not quite ofl- c:olar eommenta, kept a receptive audience In~ laughln& mood. It wu all off the cuff for G1PI)'. Sbe ~no me, she wun't even aure what Ille wia dolnJ, but Ille -what lbe wu to be: G1J111Y Role Lee. She oat nest to ""' and I nintmber that lbe drank only tea and wu sraleluJ when I opeeded up lbt aervJce for her oo that llbe could have II often and bot. . . Gyspy had a loft opot for lbt <>ranee CGunty !'.-Club. Her father John Hovick had froquenUy handled adverllllq for lbt club'• annual booklel HE AND GYPIY'l 111..,.,atber lived Jn.Nawport Beach and It was there that ... toot her later that ......... lbe could -= CbriJlmU llfta with her lamJl1, whom Ille badn, -llnce belcn Ibo ays. It wu a warm famlly evenln& and GyJll1 made my wife and me a part of IL It wu almoll with nluetuce that I remlndad ber that It ..., time lo go, .. hour and a ball'• trip up Ibo trwwa:y awalled .. and that lbe had a plane to calcb Ibo nm lllCJl'l1lni. · Wt ut throe In Ibo lrurt IUI cm the wa:y blct to Beverly Hllll, GYPl1 · wttb her -ci! but -·waartnc warm; wool .O.U. She .....,...i ber ba1r pt«e and lei ber Joor, Oowtq ba1r bang clown and ehallad with UI about her -Eric 11>oo lllaUoned In Germany, bill and ..... about her family Ill~ her -· J-'her -ty ,_ pvwtng up In ~ and Ibo movie "GYJllY" (wllfdl Ibo eouid tue « lea)'e..lht aid.) DlillPl11C TBll CHILL, It WU a Cl1f'f evenln& •. Bui lhon ·,.,; had a fiat tire, at the Santo Moofoa Freeway lnterd>aoge. 11 wu a tmlble uperlence, ""' I'll never forget. One o'cloct ln the momlna, stranded on a freeway with a movJe star In Ibo di', Ibo nln beclnlnl to fall, and I couldn' get Ibo jack lo wort IO I could cbup Ille tire. OFF I WENT for help, leavln& my wife to cope u belt Ibo could with a -llllCbllY cbllltd, tlred, and -conceuied GYPoY wbo iranlad to 1et home. 11111 'llbo -• tn>uper. ~ ind ipy wile got out cin the freeway and lllart- ad trying to flag down can. It ..., J lullle. tiy. No one palllad, no police car c:ama by. Eveatually a YOU111 m«oreyclllt lllo!>l>ad, found out ~ I dldni . bow' and chana'ed .the tire. He did that and Ignored my wife's desperate reuon for JrbJ: lhe ,..tad belp: · • ·. ··~.id Gypsy ROie Lee In 'the car.". . Who would have believed that at that time of lhf morning? I RETURNED with help I no longer needed, and we want on, with no spare and the nln pouring down. We got Gypsy home and then Ille stopped ., cold. • "Now l want JOU to stay here at my home for UM nllhl J clin't have you gohlg all the way back to Newport iQ this weather wlthollt a qare." She was ilerlOUJ, as wa1 ·her mal$1. But ·I wn embarraaed 8nd the flat Ure Incident had ten me In a state · ol near nervous col11pse.-Somebow, protesting that I had to get a jack back to the service ltatlon, we were able ·to decline a sincere and generous lntltallon. IO WE LEFT GYPSY and other than a nice note·lattr about 1 column I wrote on the Incident, that was the Ia.st we saw or heard of h«r. But I'll remember that ni1ht: Statuesque and re1al at the banquet, re- lued arid at eue ln her (atba"1 home, kind of t'OmlDOft u an old lhoe wttll them off and her hair down, and finally, In the foyer of her ll.tnK room, bold- In& one of her di>p In her anhr, wblle Iha rain poured down outalde, 1a:yln1, "Thank you ao much fcr everything and don't you dare drive home to. flight." lbanlc you, Gypsy, for that memot1ble nlgbL Kite Causes Blackout limy Eugene SanWil of San Clemenle ,... a mlgbty yank Oil hl1 tile otrlng Sanday, And It cauaed a power blackouL Guard .Seeks Vessel SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -A Coan GIJ.!ld bellcopter Is ltlfChil!I Iha PacUlc Ocean from Santa Barbara to Smta am Island todaY for an overdue cabin au1ler with four pienons on board. DAILY PILOT . ...,,_ ..... " ............. ""9-..... ........,..,. c.... ..... ._a&=•••• OllWIHJI COAST ,.UILllHINO COMl'AHY leMrt N. We.4 '""" .......... "'*'"'*' J1ck l . C•rl.., "*" ...... IMlll lfllll 0-11 ...... Tl1Hie1 Ke...-11 l•Hw 1l10M11 A. Mwtl'hfRe MMetln& lltlltll' ll.ich1rd P. Nell SOlllfl en,... c:.tftty 1•111t """" ,.,,. Mew' :ut Wu! •• .,. ",.., fll.,.,.,I ludl1 2211 W•I .... , hylftll"' U.-a.llr '111'-I A- ""'""'"" '-it: 17'1J llKfl ......_... ltll ( ......... : a ...,..._ II Clllllnt ltMI Police today llald Ibey mnrerad a hol- wire can In the 100-block of Trafalgor Line Sunday and discovered Sanborn, 11, Of IOI Trafalcar, and the ttllen power lloe. lbe tl!f. ~11' told olncn be just tugad ·.on h1s .kHt •lrln&. ~ the w!r• 1opp1;.i_ . TIMI power · .. 11age coverlnl 1evor1I bloctoo wu rOpaired by uWlty .,....., ol- llctrs aid. Rites on Tuesday; I, For Mrs. Rogers Leguoa Beach aiaper 5ZI, Order of the Eutern star, will officiate at 1ervlces In Pacific Vin QiapeJ. TUelda:y at I p.m. for Mn. Mary Allee Rolen who died Tburoday at lbe age of II. Mrs. Rogers is survived by one daughter, Doll,ylee Wllaon of Laguua Beach. A n.a'Jve of Iowa, ahe had lived in the Laguna area fer 25 years, making her home at 30IOI S. Cout Hlghwa:y. Burial wm be at Falrmoo Cemetery, Denver, Colo. Mrs. Roeen wa1 affWated with the Order of Eullm Star In Denver, Boys Ranch Program Planned by Church · Members of the Rtctnr'o Guild of SL Mai,•1 EpiJCOpal Chlftb lo Lal\JllJI Btacb wtD leam tboat P'.U... GarnoU's Bo11 llanch In Aelelope Valley In a 1poclaf procram In Iha cbun:b Guild llall at I p.m. Tueoday. The progtam, open to Ibo public, wlll lnclllde a lecture end picluroo of the ranch where boys aaed JI to lt are given a home •od lralnllll to equip them for Uie. itFS ,GetHoJWr . • lnLaiflna - • ... ·Tweoty American Field Ser v I c a sludenll;,,.. atttnclli1ibllh ocboola along the <lr"!I• Coast from Hlmllnlton Beach to San Cl-te wtli be suests of the lnlematlonol Club of Laguna'• lburslotl 1ntermed1ate School at the IChooJ.11 •· c:ood . Interriauonal Day, Monday, May f. E~t American returnees of. the AFS Americans Abroad program . al!o wW he present for the day-long Protram deJigned for 01cblnge -of knowledge between the koerican student.I .and the vtslton from 16 foreign lands.. . Festlvtttes will begin Suoday, Msy I, when the studenl.s arrive at the homes of junior high students who have volunteered aa hosts. All will ,join in a reeept1on and supper at the home o( the Bill Thomases in South Laguna Sunday evening. On MOllday, the foreign lludenta will arrive at Tbunton at t o'clock. Jn groups of three tliey will talk to atudenta, show slid.et and answe:r questions, then visit lburston'• unique clamoom.s. At noon the home. economics depart· ment will eerve an tntematiooal lunch, with menu• fnm several countries. prepared and served by coolumed seventh and eighth graden. Group meetings will conlinUe during the afternoon and parents and lriendl of the school are Invited to altend. Jennifer Maguire, prt!ident of the InternaUonal Club, is in chlr1e of ar~ ranpments, aided by Nmcy Porter and Doreen Ha11ard. Al Llcoo ts faculty advlaer. Brazil leads the u.t of vtsll<n with four etudents In Orange Cout acbools lhll yeer: Paulll Roberto Carul, Uvlng In Welllmlnater: Adriana Schmidt TacUan, COila Mesa; R1cardo Pereira, South X.guna; and Fallllo Macedo, Nawport Beach. Alao from the aoulhem comment are Angela Musman-Leser from Glille, living In Colla Meas and Ed!lll'do Pena-Carruco, of Ecuador, at acbool In Newport Be>dl. From 6outheuttrn Alla comes Prasit Tollpavol of Thailand, wbo la living In Fountain Volley. Students from EID'Ope will include Ingrid Weaemann of Germuy (Hun- llogloo Beach); Stematia Kon Taalta from Greece (Corona del Mar); Fabrlzio Schlavon from Italy (Corona del Mar); Ou1sUne Vaillequez from Fr 111 c e (Newport Beach); Manfred Heine from G<nnany (Laguna Beach); Fernando Ga- ja from Spain (Laguna Beach); and Ingrid Lwdgren from Sweden (San Clemente). Studenla from Africa lac I u d e Azenegash Hailu from Ethiopia (Hun- tbigtoo Beach) and Margarel Le Roux of South Africa (Laguna Beach). From ialanda come Marcrethe Dorothe KrlsUane KJelst of Greenlud and Voahangy Ram ah at a fan dry from Malagasy, both living in Costa Mesa. Amerlc1111 Abroad participating in the International Day at Tbunton will be L)'llll Rosener of Newport Harbor Hlgh, wbo spent a summer in Turkey; Kirt Gresham, Marini HJgh, who went to Venezuela; tbriatlne Weaver, FoU1taln Valley High, India; and Paula Nu.sehke, :Wutmlnater Higb, Germany. Americw who were abroad for a full ICbool year include Kriltin Whelan, HuaUniton Beach High, Arlentlna; Lor4 .raJne Setera, Fount.a.I.a Valley JU1h, Brull; Mark Sounders, Estancia Hlgh, AUJtralla; and Kathleen Col.ll.m, Laguna Beach Hlgb, New 1.eoland. From Page 1 'GYPSY · ..• under her own name, Loui!e Hovick. Mill Lee wrote the best..tlllng novel '"Thi GStrlng Murden," which wu 'made · tnto a Barbara Slanwyck film Ullad "The Lady of Burlesque." She wrote three other books -in- cluding her memotra -plus a play. '"'The Naked Gen!111," which atarrtd Joaa ·Blondell. . "Bare Oesh borea men," she once rtmarted, ·but her style of bor.dom -utUlz:lnl black allk rt.ocktnga an even- ing dress, loog gioves end lady.like de- meanor -earned her $4,000 per week ..00 more. · Her act wu mare tease than strip and lbe urned a reputatJon· on that merit · "I never try to stir up the animal In 'em," ahe told writer J.P. McEvoy. "Did you ever hold a piece of candy or • &oy In. front of a baby -just out of hit reach?,'' she explained . ''Notice how he laughs? That's your altlp au· .dience." · JUlt five years aro -still an eye- ·catcher :...... MiM Lee had some pinup phot6s produced and sent a Mt 'to her IOtl, who was then on dut:Y with the Army' In Europe. "Otar Mom," he wrote back. u1 pasted your new pbotor ln my locker but my cotnmand1ng officer made me toke them all clown ••• I kept lelllog him these are pldurtJ of my molbei It dld no good." Gypry reapooded In typical style. ••J -could Ida that officer. I've never had ouch a compllmtnt. And I'm old enoqb DOW lo really O)>predale II." Kienast Quints Home NEW VORIC (UPI) -lbe Kleoaat qulnluplell went home In a epeclal pollce- accrted ambulance Toda)'-;-nine wtekt aller they were bcim al COiumbia Pres6ylerian Medical Center. ' INTERNATIONAL PLANNING-Getting ready for Thurslon School's International Day May 4 In La- guna are (from left) Dan Penny, Thurston seventh grader; Al Licon, Thurston instructor; Doreen Hag .. DAILY tlLOT II•" ...... ' gard, ThU1'ston eighth grader, and Manfred Heme American Field Service exchange student lo Lagun.i High from Germany, . Laguna Planners to Begin Survey of General Plan 'I1le Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission will meet at 7:30 tonight in city hall council chambers in a apeclal study session to begin ltl survey of. general • plan COOC!PU· The planners will dlscuu alternative concepts preeented by the planning f1fm of Daniel, Mllfdl, J-. & Mendmball XEROX .. COPl"ES at an April 17 meeting, and will receive the planning le;am's detaflecl traffic and circulalion aoalysis and fcrecul c EACH 8-1/2'X11 Un~ound Introducing GOOOWR'-1 g~~~er Where printing is done instantly-we solve your copying and duplicating-problems! . . . . "'\ . ' EXPANDINCi TO·IETTIR $1RVE NEWPORT IEACH-Halp ut ealebralt ;. ; . ' ,, ' . ·: ' 2131 sAN jo~Gu•N · fl1~Ls :·~D.~ · NEWPORT CENTER ;....;,; Phone 644·6454 FEATURING-OFFSET PRINTING OF YOUR CAMERA·READY ORIGINALS SPEED~ often on a while-you-wait baais QUALITY -trained technicians and th• finest equipment assure top qualify ECONOMY-under $4.00 forflrtt 100 copies (per orlg;n11) end less than 1 ¢ each thereafter VERSATILITY -gathering, binding, folding, padding end Clltting • • memo pads · durilig opanliig -k . . OTHER SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CENTERS Anahalm I 640 W. Lincoln A ... n~210 ClltMal• 4106Son ......... lid. 247-5001 ln,lawood 0404 La Cl-a llvd. 671-75n ., ' Lei An11IH 623 So. Olin St, '21-ISn ~ "670 So. Vermin! St. 313-1391 . 14'5 Svnaet 11..i. 656-2997 Nawport leech 3141 ca.,pus Orin J40<96il ' 2131 San Joaquin Hiiis Rd. 644-64$4 San 01.,. 1251_...;.41h Ava. .239-2149 '141'Mlulon Clo'9I Rd. 211-6611 Shennan Oaks 15113 Vantura llvl, 713..S17:L Van Nuys 1121 Vin N.,Y, ilvd. ' 716-7430 . - -·----~ -_,..,_...,....------ 25 Years .Ago ' c . : Austria s ·urvives ·Russ Occupation YJEllNA (UPI) -Twenly· CommWlla14 nady lo l'1•Y Ille five years ago this month leading part in the cOuntry's Viema was in f\aplea and aur. flnt postwar cabinet. rounded by Ru4Sian troops. •-·~ M •---Defetted units of Ado I f •wuvue \.I.,. oecow tra"!'C':'S wu the Austrian Conµnwdst IDU~'s Wehnnacht w e r e Party's top Ideologist, Ernest .W..Ung I<> 1he west. Fl!Cber, who took over as Enet.n11 Tlareat ·Bi...d Marine Division Piillout Delayed? WASHINGTON (AP) - Wllbdraw11 of Ille remalnlnc • U.S. Morino Dlvlalon from South Vietnam . moy b e delayed bocaU>t of an enemy threat agalnat Ille northem- mOll ll'<a ol 1he eowitry. seriously weaken dtt'en&ea in the ...-n I Corps. The mallfr baa """ under dbalaaloo, Pjlllqon tourcts lllkl, lndlc:all!>r Ille 1st Marine Dlvial!m' I <lei>onul"" could be beld 'lip lot I Ume. thtre is coocem over the con. Kore&n marinel. llnuln1 p<-.e of entmy Althouil> departure or the troop <'OllC<nlrallolll above the Ill Mutne Dlvlllon may be clemilltar!Jed -· . held Ill> for a wblle, Ille outnt llelplle 0pflmh11 c ad· 11111 la el()eClfcl lo be ... mlnlalratloo -ol o1 Ult finl major· wilts prog,.... 1 n pacUlcatlon, brought out under Pnsld<nl mllllary olficen he!" say the Nixon '• announced plan to cut alC.aUon In Ille northernmoot the Amtrlcan commllment by area of South Vletntm 're. another 150,000 men· over the DAILY ~LOT ft ~ 8AFllCO INBUAANI;• There are those w h o the country's first postwar remember now as Austria, education minister. (Fbcher repaired and prosperous, was expelled from the Aust-.. LOOI( A1'-rf 1'HIS W!'V-Wf'ee celebrates the 2 5 t h an-rian party last year for con-~i'NiN6 ~ 'tb~ot 'Of! ~eu>: niversary of its rebirth . as demnl.ng the Soviet-led in---------- " republic on Monday. vasioo of Czecboslovalja in There have been ~ ln- dlea<lons for weeks ht 1lla Ist Marloe Dlvlllon w a 1 ticl<ele\l to come ciut of Viel· nam as pert Of thl ileJt st.pee ol U.S. troop cutbacb. Pentqoo aources say • joctiom have been rahed by some military leaden on gniwJds Ula! early pullout of the Marine division would S.W--thepaceof the over-ill troop witbdraw1l may be tllrollle\I down !or _. -"'· pemapa unW It can be clelermliMd w!lether 1he Nonb VlelnaJiieoe intend to mount a lprinc offensive. Re<:ent lnlelll(eoce "'ports have 1old of 1everal North Vlelnameae relimenls moving Iii to I Co<P1 from !Aos, and maim loudly. comlnt year. Tbe 3rd Mlrine Division and 'lb.la will just about close a Marine regiment alzudy out the Marine COOlbal role, have been remoyed from I leavlnl the remf!lninf: U.S. Corpe and 1tnt out o1 Vietnam rrouod fighUng to !be Army. "It wu terrible,'' 1981). remembers Felix Hurdes, a The Aumian Communist! former edueation m I n i s t e r held several other key poli- who served time in a Nazi tioos in that first Jmtwar concentration camp. "Unlike government and were in full Hitler's other vicUms, we control of the Vienna , police w.ere not liberated but con-force. qtwed by 1he R"'8illns. 'Ibey Conlk1"1t ttuit the C<Jm. made it Vf!t'f hard for wi munists would dominate the tQ revive Austria." government, the S o v t e t s Hiller was 'bom in Austria agreed that Karl Renner, a and the nation, by and large, 7~year old Socialist. shouJd wu a Willing olly durln( the bead the !lnl provisional war. Tbe Rus!lans punbilod • cabinet. AU&tria and its poliUcians for . Renner, first Austrian st.ate this. cbancellor after World War Hurdes recalls several e1-I, was living in the tiny vlllaae amples. of Gloggn.it.z, 30!lle 70 miles ''At one ti.me," he says, south of Vienna, when Red "when we di3eussed t h e Army troops found him and building of rur first postwar told him to build the new government, the S o c I a 11 s t government. represerUtive Oskar Helmer, On April 27, 1945, Hepner later the country's Interior and bis provisional govern- minl:ster, was detained by the melll marched along VleMa's Rms.ians on his way to the tree-lined Ringsttasse to the meeting ." parliament and proclaimed Another paMy leader, the the rebirth of the Austrian later tra.de union chief Johann Republic on the very same Boehm, was grabbed by Red spot where the first :republic Anny soi.iders in a downtown was proclaimed by the same street -along with himdreds chancellor on Nov. 12, 1918. ol other Viennese in those Seven momhs later, on Nov. days -and ordered to help 25, 1945, the Austrian Cooi- repalr ooe ol the war damag-mllnist Party suffertd a ed Danube bridges. smashing defeat in the first 'lbe Soviets, who got to postwar elect.ions winning only Vienna six moolbs earlier then four of 165 parliamentary the western powers, were seats against 85 of the con- clearly reluctant to encourage servative People's Patty and l'IOrl-Olm,munist A u s t r t a n 76 of the strongly anti-C.Om- politidans in the ir efforts to murust Socialists. find a government. 'lbe electim result was the 1bey bad a fu11 set of peopie's revenge for the rapes, MOllCOW·trained A u s t r i a n robberies and thefts com- ----Mof1ier'& Day is May 10 MOTHER'S DAY GIFT SPECIAL • • • LAST 6 DAYSI Here's lots of love to give! 7 beautiful, professional Mother's Day Portraits of both your children All for just 9'95 · You'll receive one large 11x14 (more than half the size of this newspaper pegel) plus six handy w1/tef.size portraits for grandmothers, aunts and friends! HURRY IN NOW WHILE MOTHER'S DAY DELIVERY is STILL GUARANTEED! 892-3331 Ext. 283 '•rfra1t Studie • , , ltl Floer miUed b~ Red Army soldlm In those daY)I ol April, 1945. ll abo promp!A!d l h e Western powers' decision to recognize Renner's govern- ment when they arrived in Vienna and started the city's four power occupation oo Sept. l, IMS, Tbe occupation lasted until the A~ state treaty In . 1955, which made Austria the only oalioo to shake Uf Soviet O>otrol. Economic problems in l!M~ were even worse than political problems. Large areas of Vienna and eastern Austria were destroyed. Hunger and maos were the norm. 'Ibe Soviet commander in Austria, citing the Potsdam Pact, ordered all German pro- perty in Eastern Austria - the Sov~troDed zone - be surrendered to Russia. This meant the loss of 300 factories , about 247 ,000 acres of arable land, all oilfields and the equipment ol the Danube steam NavigaUon Company. UllC!er put wl!bdr1wola. 'lbe Marines ore clown lo Without the bl Marine 1bout 0,000 men In Vietnam, Dlv(slop, ~-of 1 h e leu lb.ul hall lbelr peak critic~l flv&iirovtnce regtc;-a atrepgth of N,000 in May 1968. Eld l M H • would be left to two South The Army :;till has more er y an avtn!! Vietnsme,. divisions, as well than 30'l,OOO men In Vietnam v as two U.S. Army divisions only about 83,000 below !ta and a br1Jade, and.· South maximum in January 1969. Ball on Dune Buggy 1========11 EL CAJON, CalU. (AP) - At 67, Hugh Rogers reUred as a sma11 contractor and plunged into his. hobby of photography lull·lime. "Not having enough to do drove me nuts," he says. "Then I got a ride in a dune buggy and, boy, what a ride!" Rogers hasn't been tbe same since. At 71 he's a swirling dervish on a sand dune, punishing 300- horsepower mot.x-s at up to 130 miles an hour. Since 1960, he has built 17 dune buggies and since 1964 has won 56 first-place trophies The lastest of his cars is a converted rear-e.ngioe sedan in which be upect.s to roar 130 m.p.h. in a two-day race on the bumpy white sand east of Brawley in the Jmoertal Valley. The drivers wlfl hill climb April 25 and compete in a 11'.»-yard drag race the next day. He competes 111inst younger men. Says be: "I know they hate my guts but I can't think of a way to have more fun." He put 13,000 into his latest buggy. In his 10 wild years Rogers has dbcarded 15 others, salvaging pieces and parts before alvlng away the rest Or carting them to the dump. IN THE LIDO StjOPPING AREA IT'S MONTH· END SA .LE AT 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH e BUSINESS e H!)ME e AUTO e BOAT e LIFE Be>b Paley •nd A11ocl1te1 • INSURANCE Phono '4U500 474 E. 17th St. CQSTA MESA PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKB Sell unwanted ttems with a DAILY PD..01' Claullled Ad. PHONI 6'2·5678 ~'TOP YALU ,,,IFFICTIVE7 DAYS.A WEEK DIKOUNTSUP .. AUftS ONDAY-SUNDAY APRll 27 THRU MAY l GROUND BE·EF FRESH-LEAN FRESH FRYER PARTS COSTA MESA AT191h ST. end HARIOI ILVD. ROUND ST·EAK FULL CUT BEEF STEW BREASTS-THIGHS-DRUMSTICKS USDA INSPECTED CHICKEN Ltan Dlctd Cubo1 TORRA ICE AT 221th end VllMONT AVf. BONELESS ST·EAKS I SIRLOIN nit I WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS STORE HOURS DAILY 10 1.1'll. to 9 p.nt. SUNDAY JO 1.m. to 7 P·!'I· BONELESS ROASTS I SIRLOIN nit j CUBE STEAKS lontlt•• FARM FRESH -PRODUCE .-•• AT LOW EVERYDAY DISCOUNT .PRICES POTATOES I ORANGIS I CABBAGE • U.S. NO. 1 I SWEET VALENCIA I FRISH SOLID I NEW CROP FULL OF JUICE I GREEN I WHITE ROSE I 50 I LI. ! 50.: U. I 50: u. I . ' Sl'lIN•PIRD COFFEE ~ulliJ~~~s 48' COM,Altl AT 74e • • DI TOILn TISSUE 4 ROLL PAK COMPA•• AT nc Umit l With Coupo11 25' •• .. • 09'ANOEJUICE 6 OZ. HODN SHIN•tlllLD COM,ARI AT nt 15' IJml l 3 Wllh Coupon N PEit ,AMIL \r COMl'Alltl AT 27c . , Limit 2 With COUpon CARROTS I LEMONS TINDER SWllT I FRESH, JUICY CRISP, LDOIE I 50 I u. I . I s~ . ' • POTATO CHIPS U OZ. LAURA SCUOOll COM,All AT JJc: 45' limit 1 With Coupon -··· lf~AM Y HAIR SPRAY 11 . OZ. TIKI COM,All AT 17c ~f.llc Limit 1 With CO)\Pon ~ .., - . l ! ' .It DAll.Y PllOT • SC Economic Polara Shown MOON TRIP MAPPED • Up Tight ••• with emergencY.'r;;,, expenses? use our money! At Morris Plan we 'd like to help you with emer· gency expenses, left-over bills, home or car repairs, travel or school expenses. That's what Morris Plan money is for. On epprovaJ you can borrow from $100 to $5,000, or more, and have your money the day you apply. Payments scheduled to fit your income. When you need money for any good reason, see Mqrrls Plan. We like to mike loans. Morris Plan DISTRIBUTOR WANTED R1ll.1ble fM''°" will be MIKfM in this .1re.1 to own &. 1ervlce' Ut1lted Stat11 Postage Stemp M1chin11 & Color Picture Post Card Vendors. This is • non.11Uin9, service business & not • ''get rich quick scheme." All stores have al· ready been 11ltct.d & m•y be reviewed by you. This business can be 1t.1rt.d part time (1v1,.. lngs or Wffk•nd• J & k developed into • big. profitable full time business with unlimittd po- tent!.11. To qu•llfy you mu1t h•v• • c•r, • few lfMr• houri w .. kly, • good work record •• company i1 responsible fo the locatktn1 for Hrvice, & make en lmm.diate cash Investment of $1500. For personal Interview, write 9iving u1 • lit· flo Information, on yourMlf lnctudlnt your ' phone number. Distributor Division, P. O. Bo x 2701, Seat BNch, C.lifo<nl1 907~. I\ DIVISION OF I . I. • • Complete-New York Stock Lis! -... .......... a..Qit. I • • DAILY PILOT I~ \ t DAILY PILOT ' CUP CHALt:ENGER -'The 1Z.me!er yacht· Prence, owned by French pen tycoon Baron Bich got its first salt water bath 1ast Friday when &be was launched at Trinite Sur Mer, France. The yacht represents Francets 'first bid for,., the America's Cup. Her 'first competition will be against Al!Stralia's Gretel II in trials off Newport, R.1. Ibis .swruner. ' "7" • Leaves Newport Thursday · Gales: ·H~lt Ensenada B.oats Gathering French c~ · s..;.., o1 sailing yachts or the san Clemente Island oometime loday. · · · ·. · Yaeht Tnals etaned aniving in Newport aod Cata1ioa Island races, The San Clemente Island Sundu from 8an Diego to lMih of which star¢ed from rac! was the finit of NHYC's Santa Barbara for 1ile start Los Angeles. Ahm..,:.,, Series 8nd the filth L A • T R INIT&SUJ\.MER, France (AP) - A gale sweeJ> ing along the south coast ol Britt;<lny SUnday compelled of- ficials to cancel the first luJly. rigged ocean trials 0 r .. France," the fir st-ever French challenger for the America's Cup. ol the 23td Newport to Results of the San Clemente , E;meuada race which gets Island race, most important in l.<>s Angeles Yacht Clubs wUr wv·nm Thunday. at weekend tv'ent on the Wbitney ·5eries. noon. ' , Soutlilend yachting calendar, The Calallna Island race Many d the windjammers were not computed by the was the first in Voyagers arrived by way of races from Newport Harbdr Yadlt Club Yacht CJub's l4assey Series their respecti~ ports.· The race committee. for Paciflt Handicap Racing bolls started arriving at ~d-1"Ibe coounlttee finished Fleet yachts. • The yacht, built by · Swiss master crJftsm.aD Herinann Egger at Poitarlier near the Swiss border, was brought by road acnm the whole breadttl of France and finally krwered into salt water at this small Brittany flSllng village last Thursday. nlFt Saluiday and continued nearly 150 boats from mid-LAYC's LltUe W h It lit y to paur lhrw«b the jetty eo-night Saturday unW 8 a.m. Series for Midget Ocean Rac- tnnce-until lale In the day. Suoday. I -them borne ing Fleet yachts !tarted at In ~ to the yadlt& for some mudl neec!Od sleep," Los Angeles Hamor Saturday arriving from distant ports, said Frank JUCe, race com-morning and arrived a t r more than "100 poured through mlttee chairman. Rice said Newport by way ot Ship Rock Ibo cuttm al the coocluslon the results would be computed off the Catalina Isthmus. Annual Race ·s1atec1· to San Diego Ericson-41 Sloop. Dana Point Winner Scores of yachting en- thusiasts crowded into the village over the weekend to watch the multi-mllllon dollar boat's lint outing. A 00..llng Atlantic gale and ~root waves disappointed t b e m . Wlodjammen Y acbt Club of Marina del Rey a D d -.-m Yacht Club of San Diego will hold their an- nual Marina del Rey· to San llieflO Race sjarling Thursday, July 1. fiWYC will hoot the visiting yldQnea by provid ing moonge, and use of club fadlMJes ln San Diego. SWYC junior memben wiU act as JocaJ pilots and assbt in moor- ing boats. There will be a trophy presentation and dinner dance at SWYC Saturday evening, July 4. 'Ibere ere three ne"w and unusual features to Ulls year's race. The lint 1' ha.Jog the race fmisb in U1e vicinity of the mooring buoy just off the Up of Shelter Island. 'Ibis will pennlt many spectators to view the end of the race from the park like atmosphere of Sbelltt 151and. . Firebrand, an Eriaon..ft .sloop Saned by Gt<irge West <i l'jewport Harbor Yacht Club was the wiooer In the Ocean Racing division of Bahia CorinthJan Yacht Club.'s Dana Point Race Sunday. 'I'he race was billed as an Ensenada Tuneup race a n d NHYC Set For Opening Newport Harbor Ya<ht Club has ifisued invitations' for its Opening Day race from Los Ang.Jes Hari>or May •~. The race is always:a feature of NHYC's oPemnc Day celebration which cuimlnates in a fesUve yacht ~on, open iK:A1se and flag' raising. The race ls open to Ocean Racing, Midget Ocean Racing and Pacific ilaodiciip Racing Fleet yadlls .. A Pair of Swingers· ' Lou Clctro (left) and Lorraine !:-!l'llOld combine their strength to swing the tradiilonal botUe o! champagne across the bol' o! the '"Encson-35 Free- llyle al launcb1J1C at Lklo Shipyard. Rod Lippold was the third race of' the Angelman Serie> for Padl!c Haudioap Racing Fleet yact>t.. Winners in Ute Angelman division were Barry Faber's Oleerio ol BCYC and Dave Clubs Slate Lang's Edelweiess ol Bamoa'. Invitations are out ·for the Yadlt Club. . Tri-Port Handicap Race, May Wind for the 13.5 milt: race 9-JO for sailboats returning was a brisk southeaster that came up early S u n d a y , from the Ensenada race.. resuking tn a dead beat to The Tri-Port Handicap race weather for the entire race. is co-sponsored by Lido Isle Final results: Yacht Club, Balboa Yacht OCEAN RACING -(l) Club and Oceanside Yadit Firebrand, George W e s t , Club and is actually two races, NHYC; (2) Nocturne, ~1 covering three ports. Noecker, BCYC; (3) Aquarius, The first race st.am off Gary Myers; NHYC. Mission Bay Saturday Mey ~ Angelman-A -(1) Cheerio, and finishes at Oceanside Barry Ff;bor, BCYC; (2) Fair where the Oceanside Yactii Lady, Herb Hope, BCYC: (3). Club will entertain skippers Ransom, Tony Ouchi, sss_c. and crews with a cocktail par- AllJGEl.MAN .B -( l ) ty and dinner Saturday night. EdelWeiss,· Dave Lang, BYC ; The second race starts 10 (2) JUanita, Stevt Bradford, miles north'NeSt of Oceanside BCYC; . (3) Gloria, H . on Sunday and finishes ap- Gu~ ~. 1>roxlmately .three-quarters of PHRF, · •..,.... Flel Amigo, P. a mile east of the Newport Purcell, BYC. · Harbor entrance. ' and Saint Cicero are partners In the new boat de-' signed(by Bruce King and built by Ericson Yachts o! Cos ta Ml!1a. ! , , .. ' ' .. •• SAVES2.44! . Hea'VyDuty Shock Absorbers Regular $7.99 • Rugged sintered. iron piston and ctirome ·rod. • Wearbett.erlhan original shocks Sears Dry Chemical Fire Extinguishers ~:r.':? 7 ,!9 each • Fights gas, electrical, grease and oil fires • lncludes2't't poundsof Dry Qemical • UL and r.oast Guard approved. • Forcarorgurage. Embossed Nylon Slip-on Seat Covers SAVE $2! • stntoh lor-. smooth and wrink!e4ree ' flt. Silp•<llily .• • Water npeileot witb anU-ttiUc fiDhb:. • Choi~ of Blue, Green, Red. Black or Beile colon Prices Effective April 26 tbru Tuesday. ApriJ 28th! ,, Moddml '· SAVES5! Boostei: Shocks Regular% for$%4.99 •Provide extra~ port and :itabilitf w~n carrying heavy loads or pulling a trailer.· ' Double Stirrup Tire Pu:rpps Sears Low Price ' • H:mdy pump to keep in your car tnmk for emer. gencies •,.ID. rub~base Use Sears Revolving Charge Detergent Proof Paste ·Auto Wax 99~ • Oeans was well as il waxes in one easf step. Vro- kcts car's finish • Won't wear off afttrdetergent wash. Easy .lo apply! Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Use Sears Revolving Charge -----·-----· -·-··-------.. -·--·-·-.,... ........ ---__ .,_, -------· ----·-·---·-· -.... .. ----__ .. --..-_ ....... !._,, -.. -·-_ ........ _,, __ . --·-·' ................................. -...........,,,_ ....... M ........ t-4;.,_....,._ .. ' I i I I ., ' - .., if'. ' " '"tl\I' ' ,.. I,~ ' /'fl> ,, f ·' { " .. '! ,, .r ,. .~ .i •\<I'! .1· ... : . , .. .. ' ' ·: - " r • ' '" T • "'"' ~r· oM .,,, ' " r. ··l~ ; ;f ·ir~ •;._;, •:-; .:,,. .... 1;,I ..• " ., I " h. ) ' .. '· " ,, .. 'I ' --.. • Monday, April 27, 1970 s DAICY PILOT I ·~ayor Eyes · .. Future!) Re1ne1n:hers Past. ' . .. •By JOHN V4LTERZA • Of ..... , •• Miff Far yM, Walter Evans swung a barn.mer for.a living in San Clemente. TbJa week bo l!l'asped a dlfferent ham-. mer -•. ~n· oae !.. to • l~ UPI for the l\!IY 1 living. _And !Our months 1go, he readily ad- • mlts, even he doubted he would ever ;Ile able to l!l'asp either a hammer or ., gavel.· r ;s.n C~me!M's new mayor nearly died . (ut Jan. 22. TALKS 9F THE CITY · · Bu\ in convenaUons today that crisis .. i. .• 11r fiom his mind. Instead he ta1u · lbout the city of 17,000.plllll residents ·facing a future of tourism and 'booming · srowth and a lair llhare ol problema 'Iii go aJoog with .them. 'Ille bounce from a hoopital btd sur-' JOOnded by cardlac treabnenl equipment "at South.Coast Commurilty Hospital was · i • remarkable one for the a.year~td ·mayor. · • "I'm nl>t afraid to talk about 'It ·at · u ." be said in a recent conversatlori: "Death and dying are familiar to me · 1Krw, and the whole idea doesn't worry · _ l!ie any more. 1 . ' '°our or IT' · .,• uvou have nothing really to think ·about when you're in an ambulance iii. the condition I was. You're so out .• . .... .r ·" . . ~ . T-, the mwur1n1 fJf words and 'f!iiruos 1 .. d!ocl "' polltlcll occonl Jul! aren't Ibero. • · 'Ille new mayor ta not a pol!Ucal man, nor does he' bold any . particular llivt l<r the lown-pciltJciaA type .,, ....... ~·---. . ·~· ' Jll8Cll8Slll NEED In hll dilcuMiOna on aome ol the tangible needs ol the city Evans cuta throulih the veil$; the veneers and the ~. .. . . He doesn't was&e' Worda. "I aat 'ffils lut elecUon' cut on the Sidelines, u · be Did. Hla present tenn !Ull ha.s tWo Jeirs to go, •·'.But that gave me a chance . to see the Whole thing without the _.,., ol a dJn. paigner." Rl!OORD RACE What be' 18W WU.,.8 race amonc 8 record 15 .candidates for three, counclJ seats -but hl an elecUon seemingly lacking the kind of issues which would generate that IOrt « interest. ' "Everybod}r a~ks why?, Why dkl we have 15 candidates this Ume?" • • "Well," Evans; conUnues, "judging from the variatim 1n tbe•candidates it Seema that a little of · the Western White House prestige image might be lbe re. sen. PREn'IGE! --•ullns • unanimOua blllot lot mayor, the councl1 bear<! a policy, augp1tlon from Ev1n1 that the city's -ta -an laue ever alnce the l!rlt drop of oil bit the dirt ol San Clemlftte "' be the aubject ol a ,i«InlUve, 1ong. range program of re.toratlon and maJmmaoce. llEMElllBElltum 4'Sure, fDOllt of ua who hlYe Uftd here 10 or 11 ytu'e can wily remtmbet when we not only bad pot holes; but ,r,. weec11 ·pow1ng through Ille-major streets of town, "' • L "Bui watddg the·campal&ni thta tline showed me tllit JI>! need 1Cf betiB streeta ii IUD -b!i~ °""' thoy&h the •!id• and --and ruts are DOt '°Nd ~ now." Tllat plan aJteady is belnf laundled., Aloog with the -repltr program, aaothtr issue looms -'boimd to C~Ule milch more comment and vaUd .en-1• tlmentality. San. Clemente'114etldet-0ld ~unity club))ouae Jla ldle·and c:blrred. UNK TO PAST More thaD inyth1ng elae, the c?ubhaule· ,.pr....ta the city'• pl>yalcaJ ilnlt with its unique. put. And Eva:ns wmb t.o an that· building. 111 lay ln betl at the hospital when that buildin( burned down, and I felt just sick -not for myself, but for the town," he said. DA lL Y f'ILOT S• PNM ~ .« it, only the other people can feel . bysterioal. 'Ihey're the ones you warry . about," be said. "· And they are the °""' he thlnka about • -fbese days, too, now that the reality "It might not be the real reuon. but I st1U ,think that some people wanted to ·run just to aay they alt on the City Council of the town where President Nixon spends a few weeks a year. And if that's the case, then K's too bad • That acues me. "And a few days later when the meetings took place on what to do about a new clubhouse, I felt c;.ven worse 11t bearing comments that the clubhouse ahruld ·be torn down and a brand new, master-planned, fu11-of-glass b u i 1 d i n g take its place. 'YOU DON'T JUST DESTROY A MODEL·T BECAUSE YOU'RE· BUYING A CADILLAC' San Clemente's Evens: Looking to th9 Future With a FHllng for the Pest of the boopltal is just a memory. · . Walter Evans ii a man on the llhort ' Olde with lhlnnlng black hair and an .easy, sometimes even sbeepiJh smile. · His manner is familiar, direct, quiet · ind ,compasslooate. "That's a pretty poor exeuse for seek- ing a seat on a City Council," be said. The thtee winners in that race had liWe time for ceremony and platitudes at !ta fin! meetiQg last week. Nixon WantsNewMother I • Of Lowering Voting Age WASHINGTON (UPI) -President an omelldmeJll would be Ire a I e d Nixon plans to tell · the House this week favorably in the House. to scrap JegislaUon, alre.ady passed by In other action this week: the Senate, that would lower the voting -The Senate Judiciary CommiUee age to 18. Wednesd.lliY opens bearings on President Nixon favors a lower voting age, aides Nixon's latest Supreme Court nomlnee said, but be wants it accompUshed -Federal Appeals Court Judge Harry through a coJlSt.itutional amendment. The Blackmun of Minne'!Ota. Tbe BlaCk.mut attempt to set the a-at 18 by •••"'•g ·nomination, at 1taat iniUally, has been •· .........-unconlrovenlal -"!llike the prevjOui a law has been challenged by tome two nominees, Jud g es G. Harrold who say ii would be uncomt!tuUonal Carswell and Clement F. l!ayhlworlil Nblm1 is e•peded to ten lloule leaders Jr., both fJf Wbom were rejected ·".!' that any legal challenge to such a law the Senate. 'mi!lhl jecpardire the 1m pnojden~ -Th•1 House Wedne!day ccaslders elections. ' • "' Preskfent Nl.J:on! .. -•.2' billion military lf Jbe co.urts_ nJled_sucl) _a J•w, uu-_ ~ure~~ill. The measure contains consUtutional after an election had been funds for u expansion of the Safeguard held, the race might have to be re11111 antiballlstic missile system, t h e or recounted to eliminate the ineligible weaponry package that caused a long voters. debate in Congress last year and was The Constitution does not specify a ~y narrowly approved. ~Ii~ 1pen- voting age, and states have made their duig critJcs, led by Rep. William S. own arxl differing, laws on lhe subject. Moorhead (D-Pa.), hope to trim '2;.4 The' attempt to set UI as the nationwide bil!ion from the measure. voting age passed the Senate in the -Senate hearings' open Wednesday on fonn of a rider to u extension of the Prealdellt's weUare reform plan with the Voti.lg Rights Act of 1165. its provision for a $1 ,800 minimum A constitutional amendment would guaranteed aMual lncome. The measure have to be passed by both houses and has bee.µ passed by the House, and ratified by three-fourths of the states. Senate liberals were pre par i n g There are already 71 sponsors of a amendments to raise I.he income level Senate resoluUon calling for such an and to make other major chaqes in amendment and there were indJcatlons the bill. ..I'm awfully serious about this: you doil't tear apart 'a model-T when you go to buy a Cadillac. 1bere mlllhl be a need for both, but when It comes to somethin.2 as precious as that clubhouse with Its beams and tiles and oak-plank floors. you just don't tear it down with the shuffleboard court.s and tennis courts and trees to build something brand new and modern." His idea is simple: IDS IDEA "'Save·tbe clubhouse. Spend the $80,000 O!' so in imurance money , end bring it alive ap;aln for the enjoyment of the old and young !olb that kept it full all those memorable years." •But that's: not all. MODERN NEED "Sure, there is a need for a Rood, modem. community meetlnR place, especially far the young· people tn this city," Evans admits. And to fill this need he '"""'°"" 91111 another structure. . "In a tew weeks we'll probably come out With an announcement ot a plan tO W1e Ille land down by t!te municipal pool 1'1. that • neglected cerner of lowtl. we'd \\ave enough rqont for a ,new buildillg. parking Iola and still be able · to -1>e ' turn the old pool Into an 1ndootv one !O the kids could use it yur.f'OUnd. "If the citv ls ~In~ to tear down a building, then let it be that one, not our communitv clubhouse." With the San Clemente youth in mind Evans conUniles, "We have somethinS else in this town that needs changing right away: our kids reallv have nothing to do here. We send them down to the beach and tell them, 'Well, there it is. Go have flDl'. "We need more than that." Not only should San Clemente provide more youth acUvities, but it should also consider the needs of the millions of tourists and beach.goers who are sure to set attendance records each year In their migrations to San Clemente's seashqre -and for' a peek at Nixon's Western White House. "It's pretty obvious something bas to be · done along our beaches; to clear out some access routes, to make them a more pleasant place to visit. RAILROAD IN MIND .. These are just ideas, now, not definite plans," Evans notes. "We all know that the railroad down there is an eyesore, a safety hazard and a big problem. I don't care as much about the tracks as I do about the trains. They have to go first. ' "But even if the tracks disappear, the railroad company isn't going to give that right-Of-way to someone else. "We could never afford to. buy it, and just about the only agency that could would be the State of California, and we all know that sometimes the st.ate is a worse_ landlord than the railroad." ALTERNATE USES U the . trai"' Indeed disappear ("and the $anta Fe would like nothing better .than to atop piat kaln, but the state won'f let .them") Evans propoees several 81.~Uve uses· for either , the tr~ck 0< the lilihl.-Of-way minqs the ugly .I\"" of boulders. "That land could be used for a little excursloh train ·that could take people up and down the scenic parts of our coasWne," he suggests. "1be Western White House won't be the residence Of a President forever, and the nuclear generating station aod the beautiful sights from the raHway could make it a practical thing." The trackless right-Of-way could serve as a pathway for cyclists, walkers or shuttle buses moving beachgoers up and down the beach. PARKING PROBLEMS "We are going to reach the point soon where parking next to our beaches just won't be possible.· We''re probably ._ :· :: El Rancho. has the finest berries town! • in . . Sure, you'll find berries advertised at lower prices •.• but compare! El Rancho straw;benies &Te plump, juicy, red-ripe-ripe enough to use the day you take 'em home! There la a difference! E .. ;O'/I tlu deliglit of fruh stNwberriu in •o manv dilftr.,.t ""'1!•1 Bisquick .............. -'"'· ........... 43• Jolmston Pie SheHs ..... PIG. or z ..... 33; . . :· :· " Enjoy shortcake-biscuits, piled high with berries I Heap with berry fininc, topped with Cool Whip I Cool Whip ............. QUMI SIZE ............ 4r Shredded Wheat ....... l!U.OllG'S ........ 29¢ Top a shortcake, or pie, or a aundae ! Frozen Start the day with cereal and ripe, fresh berrie1 I .,;ti< wn.1¥ in ...irur frtm El RMlch.ol .Bonele Chicken Breasts MIN. WT.~12 OONCES Plump tender breuta, from · fre!h California bird'- •luffed with dreiainir. $1 ·39 Tasty white meat, Bluffed $14 9 with ham and cheese a la Cordon Bleu. ... . ' ... going to have to develop parking areas uphill from the beaches in the inland parts of town and take the people to the beaches on trams or something. There ;,,", isn't rnou 11h room down there r all the cars we're going to have here." "It's these iss,ues that we'll be wrest}. Ing with pretty soon, and it's not guing to be easy, even though the hannony en past councils and this one, too, ia obvious.11 Evans, a veteran of many years on the city planning commlss!On and two years on the C'f'nncil. praised the makeup ct the present panel of councilnlen, describing each member as "his own man ." "No matter how long I or anyone else ra1ght sit orl the coUncll aOc:t watch and· work with these men, there still is no way of predicting how the vote will go tn any particular instance. "Each' man .wei~ his own oplnkm, and I have never been able to say, 'well, ~and-so and those other two will vote yes'. "You don't know until you bear them vote and that's a healthy thing to. ~ve." . EVans makes, few promises aboUt hil tepure as mayor. ''This ,prestige thing about being mayor isn't my . type of thing. When .l ' nm came h'ere in the 1950s, l bu11t .hausea for ·people, and I'm still the Walter Evans who built houses for people, and I'll slay that way -if the Lmd will allow .Jt." Mental Health Program May Get Lift in County I • . ' ' • A new 17-member board to supervise operaUon of the mental retardation ,f,ro- gram in Orange County may be 'ap.. pointed by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday. But supervisors are concerned over a proposal of the Comprehensive Health Planning Association that only two coun- ty officials be included on the board and those.as non-voting members. OHPA .executive director John Traband tried to explain to the supervisors last' Tuesday that the proposed board was "only an advisory body," but Dr. John Philp, county health director disputed this. He said the new group woµld have far-reaching planning and administrative powers. As proposed by Traband, 12 members ' of the board wlll be nmned by Uie supervisors and the remaining five l>Y Governor Reagan. , 1 ,. Oranfte Coast residents suggested for mem~rshlp on , the new group include Alex Britton, Cal-State\ t.ong Bea& proo fessor from · Los Alamitos; 'Dr. JUJtln Call, 1926 Kaui Place, COlrta Mesa; Mrs, Ru!h Gormsen, 39 , Laguntta Lane, Laguna Beach ; Dr. Richard , stott, psychologist, 475 Weymouth P ,1 ace , Lagµna Beach. Rldtard Weeks, director Orange Q:Jun.. ty AssociaUon for Retarded aindren, 421 BellvUe Lane, Newport Beachi Ven Fahrney, attorney, Los Alamitos; Mrs. Rosemary Saylor, 3179l South . Coalt Highway, South 'Laguna; Edward C. Lund, president United. Cel'eb'r81 . Palsy, 704 Orchid -Ave., Corona del Mar. . Spring br i 11.o t forth a'bf!1J11 of fruits and berries ••• flavor• to delight the palate •.• color B 80 tempting. And Et Ranc~o offers the but of the crops •• all through tke 1ea.aon.. ·El Rancho's Veal Birds .. ~~~~~ .. 39: I Pricc1 in effect Mon., TueB., ·Wtd., Api-il t7, 28, 29. No salu to deakrl. ARCADIA: Su,,.11nd HunUni!On Dr. (ti. Rondlo Cenler) PASADENA: . . Tendef v...i ••• perfect aervlnr portiOM I Eat:lkll eoodnea in a delightf~ welcome taate treat! ·al Elll4tte"'11S~.I Gallo Salame Chubs . .-.. :;; ........... ~.~-···-.. : ....... ~.49. IL Enio1 an old world omack •• , a chunk of 1alam~ a piece of French bread and a crilp ripe apple I ( 320 Wat Colorado Bhd. .SOUTH PASADENA: framonl ind'·HunUniton, Dr. HUNTINGTON llEAClb Warnlf Ind Al10tlqtlin (Boardwtllt Cenlll), NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 NIWPoll Blvd. "" 2l55 ·Eastbl•ft Dr. (tlslblaft Vil~p r.oatlr) I I ' I A IMrda crew plucked Som Smllh 1114 1111 wife lrom a trM on a !Ill)' lllaad In lhe Bu1lalo Jllver -'Yellvllla, Art. early Monday. Tiie mld41Nced COlllllt from Colt. Art. ...... llnndei In lhe trM u boun eaztler when the rt.er nrol- Jen bJ buvy ralnl, nramped their ...... Smllll ul4 Ida wile, c.fh. oriM, could not· nrlm oo they de-d4ed lo cllmb a tree and wall. -• '"""* ...., 25, of Plymouth, F,;t,•""· wu nr.....i •D ball 1rom j nceatly .. he could ·-Ida ...... me. He bad ~ jailed OD cbar&U of mallclOUI wounding and -alt u a rellllt ol a fight at bLs . J>N-weddlnf llag part)'. • In 1970 A"""°""' will 11<<d niM mhn'"' more of thtir dght-hour ioorkdav to meet ihd1' f.azet thml tM11 did last uear, IGl/I Ta:r: Foundc· dorf. Iwc. Two Mun and 43 minutt1 ,iolll k rcqolrtd ., agaillll two hours, 14 mltnctc1 f1o l~. In 1958, time 'nc...r.d .... ·-bv Ill< , .... elation el 2 "°""• M -ut<1, tollilf "' 191111, -,.qolr<d .... d<tmnin-~ to k . J "°""· 18 """""'· • Scolmwt John Conyoft, of Herne Bay · Englabcl, became 10 lonely for .!ho IOUIMI ·of ,bagpipes that he hired a rellmental pipe band for "80 lo march pirough hLs English COlrn 1 WbeN he· now lives. The 57- ,.U.Old Coli10l' said he has not heoJd Nil baiPIPe• In 2ll years. ·o Fiiiy policemen searched for u .. """" ........ 4,. for nearly five houri Wednesday In Selsdom, Eng- lancl before 11nally locating her. She wu found In a hotel bathroom, en- joying a warm balll and having fun sailing a soap rack In the water. Patriotic Rally Of 20,000 Hears Hope Speak Out broN ClrnJ) -A Fourth ti. J;,zy .... .,._, penaded llolton'1 New CJty 11111 lllm -,. u :111,GOO p <rs on s plllored lo bear Bob Hope IOCI other oellbilllel mP lhlm lo "Wake Up Am-ericL" - '!'be w.u..!nued, cleao shaven crowd ......i Ameiean flap IOCI ll6tenod to -mole from braa bands and ilf.....s.dnmt -u they erpraoed -faith and ._ In the ~·· VIJua and lnditiCXll. Bob Hope, the -··· billed .. Am--·· Ano..._ lo the World, told the crowd, "!Ilia Is -the kids In Viet. nam an flibllnl for -our prlYflec• to do tbla:." . Only a bandftd ti. clllJldeill could be heard, and tlley ....... aood ... tured. Hope --did .. -occulanal heel· llJlg by qulnolu, ''l'bal'• quJi. an ecb I'm ptt!Qc/r- "l'llnely el&hl ...,...i ti. the -·· thlnt the way you aD do," Hope told 111· crowd whole ranb were nebed because o1 -.atu1 -,, -thJr with t<mpera. ...... In tho lllJ. Ht wu -od by _..itc oboulJ of "Hlln'IJ" and 'Tell 'em, Bob.'' · Hape wu jaloed an tho ,..bum by clr1m!lal Al Capp, fullboclr: Jim Nance of tho -Patrloll and Nsvy football P'ool Joe BeDlno. U,IT.._... Justice's Rest Stop SUpreme Court Justice William O. Douglas gets a sip of water from his young wife, Cathleen, as they take a luncheon break during a hike along the C & O canal outside o! Washington. Douglas, 71, is facing possible impeachmen~ proceedings in Congress. Nixon Watching Cambodia Scene, Weighs Aid Plea WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White ·House said lodty the Uniled States bu "an ovmidlog interest" in pre.erving the Cainbodian neutrality becau.. ol the ef!ecb a Communtat takeover would have on the U.S. war effort 1n South Vielnam. Press Secretary Ronald L.· Ziegler said: "The President is deeply concerned about the course of events in Cambodia and ii cloeely following devek)flnents." He said Nixon wanted to preserve the territorial integrity d. Cambodia and viewed with coocem violations of Cam-. bodlan terrll«y by North VietnamtOe ....,.,. In "blalant dlsrepnl" ol the lt5t Geneva accords. Nilul Is cooaldtring s ~ from C.n. Lon Nol, JW<!Dier o! the embaUled Cmnbodfart. regime, for emu bt)'and • -..nt of Cll>tured Soviet type ·-turned o>« lo the~ Penll government'• forces. Ziegler could give no lndieaUon of when . a decision would be made by Nixoo.. He called orr for a third time today a scheduled meeUDI of the National Security Cowicll, but Ziegler said the sessloo WU oot Intended lo deal wi!h the GarnhocHu situation. Moynihan Scolds Nixon Plan Foes WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presldtnti; -Dllllel P. Moynihan lodty oc:ok· ed the U.S. Chamber of Commerce r< its "shrill opposition" to the Nix o Administration's weUare reform legisJ tioo. Moynihan also warned the CJ>ambe: 58th annual meeting that a "colle elite" ls growing to "hate our guts." · An t311maled 3,000 peroons who , tended the eession at • the Daughte1 of the American Revolution'• ConstHutkln Hall pollte]J applaudf!I Moyni>an's defense of tbe admlnl1tratlon '1 "abaolutely oplendld piece o! ltglslatlon" lo guanml<e at lent 11,!IJO a year lo each famI11 ti. four. Good Sex: S2"500 Researchers Offer Help fo~ Hangups NEW YORK (AP) -Two piooeers in sex research say they believe they have .developed a method to prevent . ' many .thousands of marriages from broalting up owr ouual probtemJi. It involves a lf..day l.ntens.lve course ot counaeling concerning a couple'• aex- ual dllliculU.., wtlll 11l81lestiool fre. quently given coocernlng sped!lc sexual behavior. Problems include Impotence in men and women'• failure to reach orgasm. 'Ibe fee for the two.week program now iJ S:Z,500 which includes counaellng during the five.yesr !ollowup perlod, but about 25 percent of the patient.a pay nothing because they cannot ,afford it, end another· 2$' pen:e!ll pey I partial fee. 'I1>e lnco!ne help! · .,ppoi;t the ISOO:OO!l:o·Yetr · b\ldget ol the folun' Altions. . • " • OVtr the . 111!' Ii, ,.iis/ ~JO . <ouPJei have roctlved jujji,thm:apy,1rllll.eJP!. out ol 10,,... end Jl)llll<'l'~ theli-~ 11111cu111i11; I!r. wuilaiii H. Ma!ters end V!rg!nio E. Johll80ll writ< in a new b<iok:, "Human BairaI' Inade- quacy," publl.!bed today. Lillie, Brown & Co.,IU.50. . Furthennore, about this same pro- portion of beneficial results has b e e n maintaJned among people who were kept track of for five• years or more .. Among 155 of tbe8e couples,.three were divorced and four had filed for legal separation when ~ came tor treatment. but five years later all seven couples were back together. Alter the counseling, three oth6 couples had divorced and one had flied for separation five years later. But "the low divorce incidence in the semaUy reconstituted mar1tal ·units is of real inlemt, partlcU!arly when natiooally rtpOrted Jevela of divorce incidence are ·cootemplated," Dr. Muters and Mrs. Johnson say. · Sei: prnblems·'are 9, inajor facttr in a.. epidemic (I( IAJDerican dlvorces - WMb ... 'in "Olree •mmiages winding ,;p Iii d!Vorce -·aod·i;ly aome estimat<J maybe 'ilalf (I(~ marriages are -· alteady • "ielOlllly dysfuntlooal~ or will be in the near future, the authors .. y. . Egypt Raiders Strike, Attack Israeli Positions By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Egyptian comm&mm made two raid!l across the Suez Canal Sunday, but as usual Egypt and Israel disputed the cesults. Cairo said 200 troopo made the first :tlack before dawn, and it was the argest Egyptian raid across the canal in nearly five monUls. Egypt claimed lhe raiders stonned El Shat and took the Israeli defenders "by complete surprise," overrunning their positions, killing or wounding 35 troops, and destroying four anUai.rcraft guns, two tanks, two halftracb, two trucks and two ·bulldozers. Cairo reported three Egyptian soldiers killed. Israel said there were m lsriell casualties, five Egyptiam were killed, and the El)1>tl.an report was "a fable out of 'A Tbou.Sand and One Nights' ". Later Sunday, Cairo reported, more Egyptian commandos crossed the canal. attacked two Israeli patrols a n d destroyed three halftracb and two tanks. A spokesman said one Egyptian and the members ol an Israeli tank crew were killed. Israel said the Egyptians ambushed a motorized patrol north cl El Qantara. It claimed that its soldiers rwhed the attackers, drove them back to the canal, and sank a boat carrying eight solcli ers. Tel Aviv said five Israelis and nine Egyptians were wounded but that all tile commandos escaped to the Egyptian aide of the canal. The Israeli military command also report.ad the third air strike against guerrilla outposts in Jordan in three days. Israeli jets struck near Ma'oz in the Beisan Valley and oear the lsraell town of Neve Or, spokesmen said. Tel Snow Falls Over the West Aviv claimed the two bases were staging posts for guerrilla raids against Israeli civilian setUements. All the planes returned safely, the Israelis said. Midwest, Northeast Final.ly Have Good Weather Tel Aviv said Israeli ground forces came under lire from Jordanian territory in the northern Jordan Valley sUnday and that one Israeli soldier was injured. On the political froot, Egyptian Pres!..· dent Gama! Abdel Nasser allllOUTlCed that he had aPPointed Hassanein Heikal, his close friend and editor of the semiof· flclal Cairo newspaper Al Ahram, as P#ftr """"' todW. VWble wlMll ..., ... _...Min ..... ---~ltte•kMhlll •"" l a ..... •llf Tlilell&w. Hltfl a. c.ttll ..,_.!WM ,_ ,,_ • ........... ""'-•'•" ,.,... """ • ti M, W8tw '"""'*tvr. 1'. Stla, M-; Tifta MONDAY ..... 111111 .............. 7:11 ..... J.t ...,.,.. ..... • •. . .. ' 4:11 •. ,,., 2.J TUISOAY ,Int""" .............. hd 1.m. u l'lm i.. .............. r1Ma.111, 1.J ~ ............ , ........ l :e&•.m. J,I ..................... t;dp.111. 2.1 M l:lllt •:" 1.l'ft. ktt. 11,. •.I'll. MoM .... hl41.m, llfl ll! ... .11'1. • v.s. s ..... _,.. not a.rni-1, tM M......_ lllf fM ~ llM -ttr -.-nt ... "*' todit't'llflltlfhl ........... .... WW -lrlld Ill ......,.., erlll. Tr.....,. Wlflll .... flW ,_..,,., Mii fllowlM -._ (Mt...,_ tit' ,,.. Si.rrt Ill Ctll,lonlle wttlfit ...,_. --'"' tor -w ,.In ..,. ...,.. tot M'tloM ti Ml!llllll ...., W\<oml111. 5-1Mr11!1-~lntfll Horlll-t, UIMI. ~ Motlllllt '"' ,..... w"'.,.,. MOI•• w1111t tfllJll· dtttlOl'IM wtt9 11rtdlctld tor Ml,.,.. Mll Incl ffll .. 11'11'" OllkOfll. Alld fn11f w11 ..wlctM for C1lltomll'I \l'llltYI. kttlfAll l!l\lflllenfoml l(tl\'llY Wll ~ l<J'OU lrllldl ot IN tol.llf\ frtm ..... Plt!M tt IM Atllflllc C.0.11, j Al-A!1CMrlM At11nl1 IMok-flt ld "'"'""' .... ..... "-tvlllc """" Cllld-11 .,._ 0.. Molnt• .,., ... F1lr1Nrilt.1 Fort Wortll ,_ ··-Klft'llll CitY Ll1V-1 l•MMla M""" MINltftlotlt """"""' -y .. _.,.,,, °"""' .. ._"" ...... P1l111 hf'lftft ,_ lteblet ~tll Pllttllurflt ....... lt1~Ctw Rtd lluff ·-SM:r1111911!{1 $111 i..111 CllY '"°"" S.n l'r1nct~ St1ltll ...... """"'' W1Jlll.,,., . " . " " " " e 5t •I " " u " N n " .. " .. • • " " " .. ~ " " . minister or in!onnatioh. Heikal speaks ·" for Nasser in his newspaper so often -" that his weekly editorials are interpreted ,02 as statements of the Egyptian president's views. 61 • .DJ Justice Gets Kopechne Files ... n " • • . " U H u " N " n • ... .. . " .. n " u .. . .. ... " " " " 51 '' " . " . " -" . ~ t .. " u " N N .... BOSTON (AP) -Tbe chief jastice ol the Massadtusetts Superior Ooun lo- day ordered am received cuSody ol •ll the documents pertaining to the in- .02 pechne. They will be made public Wed- nesday .. Ollef Justice G. Joseph Tauro by his order received the documents from Edward V. Keating, clerk ol the court, -'1 and told Keating he was ''relieved of .01 811 responsibility as custodian of said documents," .n The transcript of the inquesl and the ::_ judge'• report oo k hive been imPQUnded T d6Plle a state Supreme Court (lfllnton. '°' that they ahould be made public without delay. t) , • • Duvalier Q~ells Haitian Uprising • PCIRT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - Ha1tlan President Francois Duvalier to-. day appeared to be firmly in control alter a weekend coast, guard revolt failed lo loucb off rebellion uhore. But the rebels w~ oD their way · to Puerto Rico wl!h llalf ti. !ht dl-Otilor'o li!tle naVY,, °""kin& ,polili<al uyJum from the Unlled states. . Soviets Orbit . . 8 Sat.ellites " ult appeara to me President Duvalier'• po11tiOn II solid." U.S. Amb111odor·CJln- ton E. Knox told newsmen. . "Papa Doc" Duvalier, survivor of more than a dozen plots against his IS.year-old. ~lorship, proclaimed the situation "completely under cortrot." He said the rtbels would be trled "when !bey 'Ire captured." Kno:r said there was no popular uJl'il- lng -and oo panic -wben the coul guard flagship Jean Dessa!lna IOCI two of the. other seven small ships in Haili'• naY)I began sbelllng Port au Prinao Fri- day rporntng. The sporadic firing, aimed at the presktential palace, ,arched over the U.S. ' • -Eml!assY and $1nmaged a l>akery near W • h 1 . R k · Duvp!ier's heavily guanled-resld<nce. Two slightly injured Haitians wen the it ' ()C et only "ll"rted casualties. Airline-flights and telephone com .. MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviets an· munications were stopped temporar1ly, nounced today they launch~ eight un.. but othenvise life continued undisturbed manned satellites into eaitlf.Oiblt-with in the Impoverished Caribbean natl.On. pne rocket Saturday, an unprecedente<J Infonnants said several HaiUan of .. 1paee feat. ficials had been arrested, among .them The eight unmanned craft, It s a I d , Justice Ministe r Rameau Estime. ll. wu all eight satellites "are moving along uncertain if Estime and others had been close to cak:utated orbits." rounded up bef<re or after the shelling The eight unmanned craft, Is said. began Friday. carried "scientific apparatus designed Armed unit.! loyal to Duvalier were for space research in accordance with in control of the coast guard's Blzooto lbe previously-announced program." base six miles from Port au Prince. The satellites were designated Cosmos U.S. Embassy officials reported nQ irr S36 through S44, under the usual catchall dicatiom of support by land forces for tenn for Soviet spy, research and the naval rebels. . weather satellites. Knox said had Port au Prince been The multiple launch came one day ready £or revolt, "lt certainly would after China boosted its first earth have come out" when the shelling began. satellite into orbit _. and while Soviet "I never saw anything like it in my and American negotiators were meeting experience," said the diplomat, com. in Vienna for Strategic Anns Limitation meeting ont he calm of the poJKJlace. talks (SALT) on such weapons as the He contrasted its placidity with rebellions multiple-headed MIRV (multiple , in-he had witnessed in Honduras and dependently targeted re-entry vehicle). Dahomey, in west Africa . , The initial orbit, Tass sakl, took the On Friday afternoon the rebels fired. cluster of satellites around tile earth on and boarded the Mia.nrl tugboat at heights ranging from 870 to 931 miles "Denise," which was entering the harbor every 115 minutes, at an angle of towing a barge loaded with concrete 74 degrees to the equator. pilings. The rebels · seized 90me food The orbit was not one or the familiar . but injured no one. They also stopped sky-paths of the Cosmos series. It was a German freighter and took more food. thought possible the initial orbit was a "parjdng" one, from which individual satellites would be put into varying tracb later. 'Ibe few previowl Cosmos shots put 1rao roughly slmllar orbits in the past have been estimated by Western e:rperts to have an e:rpectable lifespan as loot as 3,000 years. Nq inlerpl'etatioo of the function of such Sputniks as Cosmos 256 or 272 bas been published either by the Soviet or Western speciali!ts. 'Jbe launch was the first Soviet space spectacular since three m a n n e d spacecraft went up at once last October. Tass said the ei~ satellites "are equipped w I t h scientific apparatus designated for space research in ac- cordance with the program announced earlier" -a ata.ndard phrase Jn all Cosmos launchlngs -and ;,the equip- ment on board the satellites functions n<rmally." Prayer and Fear DOUGLAS OUT OF THREE CASES WASHINGTON ' (AP) -Ju 'It et William O. Douglas stepped oot of two obscenity cases and a libel d~ in the Supreme Coltt todoi' anil .,.. oo reason for his self.e1clusion. .,,. The 71-year-old justice, the target of an impeachment move by a group of House conservatives, announced his ac- tion in a routine way -with notations in the court's mimeographed list ol. orders. He gave no e:i::planation, his oUke would give none and the court's press office, when queried, said: "He woo't say." An old Vlalnameoe woman whose family ha s been taken away by C-llol!lon Army troops prays In Iron! of her Jiouse In Cambodia while a lltUe girl cowers' In the background. Vietnamese face lncrear lnl oppreoaJon In Cambodia. • l / Invasion Of ·cuba Smashed MIAMI (AP) Radio Havana said today .that Cuba had destroyed a. 13-man in- " vasion force wUh every man killed or captured 10 days after tbe gue.rrillas landed. · The broadcast by Fidel Castro's official voice did not say how many of 'the guer· ri!Ja'"s were killed and how ,_ many were still alive, but ., reported : "not one escaped and all the arms, the builets and the equipment were seiz- ed." None of the officials of Alpha ;s, a ·militantly anti- Castro exile group in Miami which said last week it had landed a guerrilla force in •.! Cuba, was available for com· ment. Castro first announced April • -' <. • • 19 that an invasion force had - landed on his island. In a communique over his own signature -an unusual move -the bearded prime minister · said the landing pa rty was composed of mercenaries who came to Cuba from the United '• States and were armed with guns of the 0 Yankee Army." Alpha 66 countered that the guerrillas were C u b a n : oeasants who had gone home ~ to figh t to liberate their homeland from communism. • The guerrillas put ashore April 17, Radio Havana said near Baracoa in Oriente Province on the Eastern end of Cuba. Communist radio broadcasts, monitored i n Miami, ·since then reported a series of battles that trim- med the invasion force to only four men. Two of the remaining men were captured Friday and two more were seized on Sunday. Castro forces suffered no casualties in the final en- counters, the broadcast said. Marg aret's Son P eriled By Kidna p UPI TtllJholt SEEING ACADEMY -Nationalist Chinese Vice Premier Chiang Ching-kuo waves at photographers as he tours U1e U.S. Air Academy/with Superinten~ den~ Gen. Thomas Moorman. Chiang Say s Returri To Main land Near LOS ANGELES (AP) -of about 300 Chinese and Chiang Ching-kuo, v ice businessmen for about 45 premier of Nationall st China, Chinese-American business-men for about 45 minutes in visited Chinalown S u n d a Y a Chinese restaurant. night an d told businessmen The reception was sponsored his govemnlent 's return to the by the Los Angeles Nationalist Chinese mainland is ;'not very Chinese C o n s u I a t e and far away and a very sure Chinatown business organiza· thing." lions. Chiang, 60. eJdest son and "The political and economic heir-appa rent of President situation on the mainland is Chiang Kai-shek. headed today deteriorating and the recovery for Honolulu , the last leg of of the mainland is not very hi s IOoday slate visit to the far away and is a, very sure Uni~d States. thing ," ChiQng said. Amidst strict s e c u r i I y His words were translated LONDON (AP) _ p . precaulions, Chiang spoke in into English for newsmen by Margaret had Scollandri~:J _ Mandari~ Chinese to a ~roup _a consulate official . throw a security net tOOay lF,=:=::::==================~11 around her son and heir, 8- year-old Viscount Linley, after learning of kidn ap th reats against him. Lord Linley, now on Easter vacation, returns to Ashdown House Preparatory School at Forest Row in Sussex, Tues- day. Rumors of a threat to kid- nap him reached Princess Margaret and the boy's father, Lord Snowdon. last. wee k. Scotland Yard w as im· mediately informed. The story was that an at· tempt would be made to seize Lard Linley and ransom bim for release <if the notorious Kray twins, East London gangleaders now in top securi. 1 .ty jails on murder convictions, Charles Kray , father Of Reginald and Ronald Kray, who are serving 3 0 • y e a r sentences, denied the ex· istence of any kidnap plot. ~ "It's bloody ridiculous," he ~ said. "Reggie and Ronnie know the boy's father. Th ey met him at a premiere. Now to say they're involved in a plot to kidnap his little boy is farcical." But Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister, took the repo rt seriously enough to write her ;.-son's headmaster Frid a y, viarning him of the kidnap threat and asking him lo keep word of it from her son. Boy Scout Butchered ' . ; · On C<!mpou.t ::. PHOENIXVILLE, Pa. (UPI) -Terence J. Bowers. '· 11. was stabbed to death Sun· ~ day while on a Boy Seoul k camping trip near here bn the grounds of St. Basil's Roman catholic Church . • • • ~ H1s killer rema.Jned at large . The slaying occUrred while other members of a troop ~ . from Darby in Dela\Yare County slepl -within 10 feel. r Bowers was found in his green down-lined sleeping .bag. Scouls discovered the slab- bing about 7:30 a.m. when theJ tried to waken the victim. One of the boys summoned a priest who administered the last riles. Chester County C o r o n e r Donald E. Harop said the boy suffered stab wounds of thtl b·ack, right arm and chest. MOTHERS' RIN(iS ,FR OM KIRK JEWELERS ORDER NOW! I . I I ~ . . '"'" 22.50 No. fo!RS~) 1-a 11onu •v.1 lob!~ . ' fROM 2 2:00 No. MR~07 2-S "onu ••oilob!< N•. ~1Rj1' ~.10 "'"" ... , ... 1.b11 .EA01 Rl1'GCA1' BE ClJST0~1 ~IA DI:: FOR '11/E E:\TIHE FA \lll.Y'. Tlic:.e rings sho.,. n 11,.n· uot {)nly -rrprc:.cnt tlir 1·cry latest in ~uperl1 •tyling. but also aJap.l to 1he m.hli1ion or ne.,.· l11 rthsto11c~. W hcthrr u iu 11·anl uuc or tr11 l•irth stone~. our jewelry d•·1iartmcnl r.an ru~ton1 ·rt any co1nbina1ion of ·loncs you desire. 'fhe ...irne idea is also avaiJo. Jle in beautiful pins of 1·our choice, as :::.ho.,.11 hrlow. J'1ff"'~ ~ho"11 art lilt.'. tol•I All,pii>c."• •111il.hl1· '" ~ hi1r o.r ~~11 ... · 1 !I>: ,.,1,1 /lin .. \11'1 1.1J •tn11<':' ,,·11fal·I~ :o;".Mf':! 1.1 :? ~'~"'"' .,,i!.M,. "The Store Th~t Conlident• .'8Uilt" ·-·. Shipy(lrd Strike Adds ·to T~oubles By Asaoclated Prtss Production is at a halt today at the Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine, due '°· I: shipbuilders strike. A. strike a~airist th€l Butte, Mqnt./ pub!lc schools has been called and .in New York negotiat'or:s rema.Jned at odds in contratt talks ~tween printers _and four · d a i I y newspapers aria b et w e e n broadcast e"ngineers and NBC. Some 2 , 0 0 0 shipbuilders wQ.lked off~ the . j9b. in Batll ·when their contract o:pireQ · at mjdnight S. 1.1-n d a y . 'I' w· o .montM.of talks. aided in· the (~al w.eek •by,· fe.deral mediators, fai~d to bring-a settlement. ., ·-., . . . . Monday, Aprll 27, 1970 DAILY PILOT IS R eal air ~· Cops Bu.si Cai~: /idrty NEW YORK (UPI) -The buildings inNcw York. second anniversary party for The youths had followed the I.he hippie-inspired love-rock "Half" Company to t ·h e musical "Hair" Swiday began reiitaurll{lt ·from a tree Central on a sunny. afternoon in Ceo. Park concert given by the tral Park ended al.night with · blt 'rriuslcal's Ctlst which was the show's ~author a°;~~~z . c'Iebra~IQJJ , 'iii 1.seco~i an· other persops m jail. 01versary an B't'oadway. Jame~ Rado was Chaf.gcil The' crowd, drawn by sunny Red Chipa, U.S. to Meet The union rej~ted. a pi:o. posal for .a·t"°'p-week extenston ~ which . ma.~ement .. said .it needed.to await·Na.vy decision on the ;eompany's bid for a $3-tilllion ilestroyer contract. Operating engineers ii:t Butte said they would strike this rooming; ·Creating ·the ·scciln,d major ' school strike in . But le in three weeks. A teachers' , union spokeSma,n said the 450 instructor! in the system .wou ld honqr the pic ket lines. ACTRESS SUCCUMBS' Antia Louise, 55 wllh J)OSSeSSion of drugs ' and skies and the warmes t day disorderly conduct and 10 ot the yc:lr In vlhich the other men were arrested on mercury clim bed to 7,8 the drug charge and crimina l degrees, was o r d e r I y trespass following a scuffle throughout th.e hvo hour and at a plush restaurant v.•here 20 minute performance at the tl)e show'~ cast members had eoacrete band shell in the retreated for a private party mall . after a performance before Broadway and screen star some 10,000 persons in Cen!ral Shel!ey \Vinters a p p e a r c d Park.· · briefly, shouting into the . Th.c drug charge 1vas !eve.Jed microphone she had made tlic by police Who said they found ''Saddest mlstakeP in her life WARSA\V (AP)-Communist China,announced today 'lts. am- bassador ·Will meet With r the U.S. Ambassa&r in ,Warsa1v on May 20 ,by .agreement between lhe t~·sides. ' Anita Louise Dei'i cl at 5.5 heroin, hashish• and ''assorted by turning down the part of pills" In a van used to the mother In ''H~ir." The official '.New China News Agency broad~a$1 only a 24· word announcernenl of the .137th session of the Chinese· ·U.S. ambassadorial talks· in the Polish capital. Tlt~e are the only official contacts between the two powers, which have no diPl~atic rela· lions. This will be the third meeting sin~ the talks resum- ed Jan. 20 following a tw~year suspension beCause of Chinese unwillingness ... t9 parti~ipate. The Nation!'!! Assoclation of Broadc8st Employes ' a n d Technicians rejected Sunday the latest contract offer from NBC, a· $55 \Vcek!y wage in- crease over three years. The Contract expired March 31. The union said it hoped to resum1; talks with I h e network. Current top scale is 1260. HOLLYWOOD (AP) Anit.:t Lou ise. ;111 actress for 50 years <Jnd ;i noled p3rly glver in the tovJn of party givers, has died at ~. Sh e had a pt·c-Oscars psrty for 300 April, 4 at her ~lolmby Hills house. Friends said she had cornplained of migraine headaches during the past week but hadn't seemed ill. A doctor ordered sedation for a headache Saturday shortly Jlefore she died of a stroke, a family spokesman said. transport the men to the sta-1Jiljjlj!~==:::;~!Qiiiii1 tionhousc. Tw.o teen-agcxi girls 11 also "'·ere arrested on crimina.l KEYSTONE trespass charges but were NOW PAYS brought lo the precinct in a 51A3 lt?3A3 difrerent van, police said. ...4..._ ~ .4-. I "IOI: !'1111 -1~ Rado later said It was "a "t• •:"--i case or mistaken identity. I just got scooped up by the cops." The Incident started when 12 youths crashed the wty at the Four Sea ~o n s Restaurant and demanded bail money for 13 Black Panthers on trial for conspiring to bomb Talks between print ers ' unions and the four dally Nlt'I York papers were scheduled to resume today. "Emergency situations aren't optional. That's why 4 disc brakes are standard on every Mercedes-Benz!' YOU Kr-;O\V the reeling. The hour's !."lte. The road is cle.ar. The slow mctru· nomc of the wipers keeps you co.i111· p;iny. Your mind is ill ready hon1c. Then.it happens. Just O\'ef a rise you Find a trailer truck prawlcd in your path. There is on!y,one .hing ~ween you and a 20.ton roadblock. Your br.:kes. In a Mercedes.Benz. those brakes would all be 1he disc type. Not just 1hc front ones. All four. We offer no options. We believe thal the braking system is one . ' ' o M a"•' .. ' :-~' . . . Dl.<e., ..... b•ll<' rcJUI f•df, of 1fiemost vit•I mcch· anisms on an automo. bile. So It must be the b~I we can build. f1's a stubborn al· tilude. And an expcn- si\'e one. But anything lcs~ is not good enough fur Mcrcedcs·Beni. \Vhen you've got to s.top Disc: brakes are superior to common drum brakes for three reasons. One, a disc brake it belier able to dis- sipate heat-ii major c•use of brake fade. Two, there's far more effective braking area on •disc brike.than on an ordinary drum brake, 1iving you more stopping power. Three, a disc brake is Jess affEcted by water and you face lcu di1n1er u( brake fail- ure, ~ven in a elpud· burst. In addllloii,. the MerccdCs.Benz braking sy,tcm is designed to t:i~·e a con- trolled s!raight-sto~ven \vhcn l'O\! h•n·c 10~1011 ~horffrom high speeds. (\Vhk h i~ a J')Olite: w:iy of saying "panic ~top."') Yuu'll feel thi$ e11tra rnari;in uf cunlrol and braking po\vcr 1he liru time you tes1 stop a ~1crccdcs·Bcn1. Bcc11usc we bclic~c, when you\·c i;ot 10.~top, you\·e ~ot to ~lt>p. Bui don 't stop here There's more 10 a Mcrcrdcs.Bcn~ th~n just stoP'ping. After all, the joy is in the driving. In fact. a Mercedcs·Bcnz mny even change your driving habils. Because if your knuckl,cs now whiten every time you face a rudden curve in a S\vann of flicker· ing broke lights, a Mc rcctks.Bcnz could prove to be a n'1axing cxpcrfonce. Our four·whecl independent su~rcn· sion plan1s those tires on the rood like no ordinary suspension could. Helps you take t urves in one, smoo1h swing~Enly be· l\vcen the white line and the gunrdr~iL And the next time you drive your own c11 r, count how many times you have to n1ake those tiny steering adjustments lo keep it from Wilndcring. Our n:circu!atlng hall·t}'f'C steering, even with power added, help~ to give you a tertain "feel" for the rna1I and a confidence that the car \vill 1rar k where you aim it. \\'L· bclic\'C thn i 11 7Q.milc·nn·hour c.~· rr··~,ll':iy is 110 pl:ice to piny 1vith your S!CCI ini;11•hccl. Look for the llttle tl1ing1 ' A lot of "near great" cars mi~scd being @rent because uf slorpy workmanship, ~lapd;1~h assembly or lack of attention lo dc111ils . So aricryou tC1>tdrh•e11 Mercedes.Bent and sec the bia:dilfcrenccs in hilnd,llngar!<f control. take a few moments to c:italrline lhe lillle dlllcrcnccs. Run a matchbook around the: hood, tia1nk and door open· ings. Sec how the c11p is e.r11e t/y the same l hroughoui. ( Try 1 /111/ on yu,u\' present car. ) Noticci thot every sc:im has beEn filled and smoothed, like the linb h of 6nechina. Slan1 a door. fl ~ound~ like a vaull'~. Al11rc~tltJ>8,11: ZSO SE. 11 S./llllJ5fltg~r. /uel·miec11d pt•/or,.1111..:1sfd11:11 /or about J7,POO. Reach under the da.sh. Not a wire to) be felt . Look al the crirn. Tfit looks like wood, ii is 1vood-not plastic. If it 1ooks lik•, chromL', it is chrome-not plastic. We could take some shortcuts, mak•:• some L'ompromises. Pur cars would tti!I be good cnoutih for most people. But they ll'OUldn 't be good CJlOUt;h ror i\lertcdcs- Bcnz. Ne\Y brochures Jus1 m11il thr coupon fo1'11 colofful b'rc:>o thurc describing McrccJcs·Bcnz in more detail. And if you \vould like I.he convcn-• icnce ofyour O\'ITI /<.lcrcedc.~·Bcnz \l'hilc 9acatioiiing in·Eurcrpc, check the box~ 11µr Gur4c to Europc:in Delivery. · Bettei' yet, visit our slio\vroom. Our rcprescntati\'e\vill ix glad tote!I you about uny o{ our 11ixtccn n1odcls. The prices range frorn $5,094• ltJ $28.J4J•. And be sure to t.'.lke lhat \C)t drh'c. . ' (°"1fl1hl 1'111, 11 .. <fdn.lkt\I o1 )l.,.oh Anlni<a, 1 .. . ......... c ... ,, ""'*'""""'"'·'"'"''!>~ ................. . f:®"':~~~;;~~;:-;:~~~~~~~------1 \ 120 W. Warner Ave. r Santa Aria, Catif. 92i07 I I Please :wnd me your full cufor bovc.hur.: of the Mer· 1 I crd<:$o&n~on<>111rtn11'. l... I CJ Pl~:a$<! inelt11io; 1hc: ,\krt:~lie$·1kn.i: G,y!dc W E11~ I I f!CDD Delivery. ! N1m8 I I Addnw i I at1 SWk>-ZIP-: I . I I Telc11hon~ I L--------------~----------1 ' Jim Slemons .lmports, Inc .. 12o'w. Warner Avc nue,SantaAna.Callfornla927o7 Phone: 714-546-4114 • The murder weapcn was tt Op'" Mon.1 Thurs.. Fri. Tiil 1/ p.m. , ~ .. , 1 "one-edged .knife' according 1,l ·':o the coroner. IL.::===========::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==~~l.~~~~~.:._~-::::: ....... ~~~"".::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::..~.Jll ...... -·~-~ , ·' ~~ ..... .. ..... -~ -- 8 DAILY PROT EDITOJ!IAL PAGE ;- Must Withho ld ing Is a Allhougb Gov. Ronald Reagan "took his !eel oul o! concrete" 1n reversing his stand against withholding state income taxes, not much visible h_as been happen· Ing in the Legislature. Whatever other parts of the governor's tax reform package may or may not have in the way of flaws, adop- tioo of withholding is not one of them. On the contrary, this is a long overdue move. Fail· ure to adopt the measure years ago has cost California tupayers literally hundreds of millions of dol!ars. This year alone. oul o! a total tax take which should total about $1 .55 billion, $150 million -about 10 percent - will be missed, leaving the net at around Sl.4 billion. A Sacramento reporter for the Wall Street Journal recenUy described how evasion of state income taxes worked ln the case of Italian movie actress Gina LoUo-- briglda. Some 10 years ago she macfe a movie in llollywood, took the money and prompUy left the $.late without pay- ing several thousand dollars she owed in state income taxes~ In her case, -the state finally collected the money -:but only because the state Franchise Board sub- scribes. to Variety:, the show business newspaper. , An alert agent spotted the fact Miss Lollobrigida was returning lo Hollywood and slapped a lien on her hotel safe deposit bbx containing her jewels. The Italian beauty screamed, but she paid. But ,'for every one caught and collected from. thdusabds of others escape entirely. lt's possible, under the present cumbersome system, for a person or family to niove here, live for as long · as two years "'bile en- laylng government services including schools. and then eave the state without paying· a cent of sta1.e income tax. The state is hard put to collect even if the escapee Is tracked down , for California has no collection power elsewhere. For nearly a decade there has been controversy over wit.hl;lolding on two grounds: -Ho\v to handle the one-time windfall the state would receive under withholding. (For example, if wtlh· holding were to begin next Jan. l, the state would be collecting 1971 taxes three and a half mooths before it receives the lump.sum 1970 taxes. The_ ~verlap would produce a windfall of more than $400 million.) -The argument, valid enough, that taxes ~ould hurt, thus supposedly causing voters to put a \1ghte_r rein on government spending. This was Reagan's posi- tion. Now he has reluctantly concluded that collecting from those who work here, enjoy government services, then leave without paying a penny of the bill, is prefer- able to a major tax boost. As for the windfall, Governor Reagan proposes that it be returned. to taxpayers in the form of a 4-0 percent deduction from tax bill~ next year. This being an elec· tion year, it's -an odds-on bet that how to use the wind- fall will have a good going-over in the Legislature. The fact is that other states have enacted withhold· ing and handled the supposed problems. California ha ~ a i:-ood chance to get at least this much tax reform this session if enough citizens take the trouble to write their assemblymen and senators urging action now. Miniskirts on the Wane? Miniskirt or Midiskirt 7 Some 55 percent of adult American males favored the miniskirt in a recent poll. \Vomen are more evenl.y divided -38.9 percent for midi . 34.8 percent for mini, the rest had no opinion. Despite their miniskirt preference, 66. 7 percent of the men interviewed said they believe that "women who don't like the midi-length skirts will wear them anyway just to keep in style.'' Not surprisingly, 56 per- cent of the women agreed. ~~I .· ·- ~, 6.; Cf -. Genesis of 11 legal Strikes Why Labor Anarch y Grows Parks Bri~g Mobile Ho me Mental Health as '!be_ cuma1 tendency o1 union •. -th• illeg•I •lrtkes finally •P"•d •o the A R evolution memben tO ~law their leadershlp federal government. ,.. boCll II plctuMl'tn'...,. quatt.rs -•G11-eit Editorial In private industry, management may _ have been less mepl, but the difference u PG1 el the 1eoeraJ breakdown In J is one or degree. In too many companies autbxttJ. To ID eztent that's true, but "employe relations,. has con\e to consist the adon nnk and file J'Mlly has litUe heady at the top of a large labor union, mostly of listening to the complaints In ~ wKb tbe camim radicals as the leaders hobnob with politicians of union officials. Since union officials or the older 1acllvista. and command national publicity. Postal d~n't always fully ~efl~t their m~bers' ~ ••~ actl =-'·' , views. a conununicatlons gap 1s com· "'n:u w1111: v.uuo causes aren t union leaders until recently firmly o~ pounded frtvo1ou or niblllatic, they are usually J)OSed relonn, preferring the old system · brold anCI hnper90Dll : Opposing the of haggling with Congress over .wages IT'S TRUE THAT many managements Vietnam war, advanciq: civil rights, 18V· and similar matters. rear talking with . their own employes tnc Ult tiiwhwmeitt. ne unioft mem-Labol-unions, however, don•t deserve v.·itl lead to federal reprisal. Despite ben' tntereltl, by contrast, are highly all tbe blame; a lot of it belongs lo the fact tbat the law s u p p o s e d I y pt!l'llM:WJ and ~1 9CW'Olllk : Higher manlcwnenL In the public employc area. s a f e gua rds empl,oyer-employe com· w11ea.. biUK_' wortJD1 ~Uahl ind. ot COl.l'l'le, .. management" means lederal, m\.Lnicatioos, interpretaOot11 b1 tht ,Nt• the lU& state and local governments. tiolial Labor Relations Board and the courts have led many companies to doubt NOW, 11Ul:slt. ARE e11clly the alms that ~ 11111-are IUppooed to ad· vance. Ob'viOu~y Wlions haven't always been -perfofming to the run satisfaction of their members. Why 'not? One reason ls that they som~ suffer from the same sort of bareaucrat.i.c problems tliat beset busineu and government. As unions grow larger and okttt a deep communications gap develops between Uie top and the bottom, 1be leaders may not even know what the members actually want. Uoioa officials frequently add to their own problems. Like political demagogues they may promise far more than they can rtasonably expect to deliver in negoUadons wil.h managements. They. least of all, should bt surprised when members refuse to accept I.he eventual, more realistic, settlemenl."s. THE ATMOIPllERE can b e c o m e These governments long ago recognized thal ifs safe to say anything at all. that, the public has a right to expect Labor union members are reasonable uninterrupted services, be they mail men. Yet ' even reasonable men can react delivery. trash collection, fire and police "iolently, especially in the se inflated protection or anything else. ·So laws limes, when they hear only the political were passed to bar strikes by public :;pl'echcs of their Jeariers, S""eches that workers. r-~ orten turn out lo be no more than THE TROUBLE AROSE p a r t I y because too many go\'ernmenls slopped right there. They did not realize that along with their responsibilities to the public came definite responsibilities to their employes. When public cmployes began to react against low pay !he incompctenl governmenta l man<igers were thrown in- to confusioo. They \Vere reluctanl to enforce the no.stri ke Jaws and sJ01,1: lo build up the sorl •>f labor-management relaLions that '>•:ould permit ordrrly handling of wage disputes. ln lhe circumstances it's small wonder that rhetoric. \VJIAT SHOULD BE done? For one thing, labor !av.• is in need of thorough overhaul to lessen the federal role and rxpand the bargaining responsibilities of labor and m<inagcment. For anolher, labor unions are going to have lo work h;1rdcr on their supposed job of represen- ting U1eir members. And management. public and pri vate, is going lo ha \'e to do a better job of managing. Tough assignments, all of them. But if they aren·t tackled soon. the upshot can only be more labor anarchy. \'t'alJ Street Journal John Lo ves Martha-Still News !Um-Attorney General Joll'l n.titcheU Ml hired a press secretary. Koy Woestendieck, for hii wife, f.far· tha, following her iuggestion that Smator Fulbright bt "crucified." Mrs. Woestendieck Will work out of the Mitchells' fashionable Watergate cpa.rtment. Good morning, housewives and other shut-ins. It's time for anothtr chapter of "John and Martha" -the heartwarm- ing story of an adorable, blonde chat· terbox. who just wani., to n.11'1 fhe coun- try, and her crusty, lovable old husband, who just wants to run for cover. As we join John and Martha at the breakfast. table this morning, John is chewing oo the stem of his crusty, lovable old pipe. Mart.ha is lookJng mif· feet That's Kay, seated between them. Martlaa: Really, John, I was terribly thrilled when you hired me my very own press secretary. Just think, Pal NilOfl and 1 art the only wives to have one. But ••• ----Monday, April 27, 1970 The edllorial page of tit< Dally Pilot seeks to inform and 1Um- tdo:te rtaden bu pre11nttng £h!s ncwapaptr1 opinions and com- mC11tary on t.opfct of inttrcst and lfgnl/ietmc•. bu pr-l•g o /onnn for UU! ezpresdo" o/ ovr rt~ OJ)fnion,,, and bu pruntino tht dh~rit vie~ pointr of lnfomttd ob&trver1 cm4 IJ)Okumen on WJ>icl of the dGll. Robert N. Weed, Publisher Art Hoppe Kay (smoothly): ~tartha v.•ishe.s to thank you £or your £alth and confidence ex- pressed by your delennlnation to give her views on world affairs the widest possible dissemination. f\1artba : .. ,but every tirnc 1 open my mouth . she explains every Jillie itly- billy thing I say. Kay : Realizing !he imporlance of clari- fying her position on the critical issues this nation races, ~1artha ... ti1arlha : \Yhy, just yesterd ay 1 wa'! saying that horrid old Senator Fulbright shouldn't be just crucified, he should be ••• Kay: Martha mean~ by tbat remark that she feels ~nator Fulbrighl is a true Christian, who ... Atarlh1 (angrily): He's nothing but one of thost liberal Communists v.·ho att trying lo take over our country! Kay: Martha sides \vith many Political scholars in feeling that conservative Communists do not, at this \in1c, pose tl threat to our chr.rishe<I herflll gc. titarlhn : Oh, htL;;h up! Ho\v can I save the country when you lv.'ilit uround eve.')' lttny little thing I say uboul what's going on? And speaking of thal, wh!"re's the newspaper? I heven 'l S<'Cn a newspapt!:r around here for da y!!. Kay: In her efrorts to keep wtll-ln- formed. Martha is keeping in close touch with breaking drv(!Jopments by listening to radio and watchins tcle\rision. l\11rtha · Now how can you say lh11t? You know the r1HliO hrnkc ln~t rricl::iy and 1ht television Saiurday John, "'hen are you going . In fix lhf' radio and lelevlgion? K1y '. Martha 111dcs v.·1lb Vice Prcs1drnt Agnew In hls findi ngs hbat son1ethin& must \Jc done lo improve ou r com- mun ications media. l\lartha : And with the telephone out n~ order ... .,.,·ell, at least you could let me go out and talk lo people. instead of locking me in my room all day. Kay !leading her off lo her room ): Martha has taken the nation's problems under comprehensive study and will have a forU1right sta lemefll to make by 1nid- Novcmbcr of l972. f\larth:l (stamping her foot ): John! I'm begiM1ng to ttunk that having a press secretary isn't going to help me one whlt when i1 comrs to sav ing the country. John: (smiling for the first time In 53 years): f\.1aybc not . dear. but it's sure going to help me save my jo~. \YELL, TUNE JN to our very next episode, ladies. And meantime, don't snee r at lhe idea or having a press secretary of your very own. Remember that the most important ~k of my middle-aged wife is to look good. And she needs all the professional help she can get. Dear Cloomy Cu: Jn the slrelch: It's Agnew by a lc11gth·aod·a·half. And here comes M'1rtha A1itchell : -R. L. I!. t~ll ,.llar. roflt(ll ,....... WltW\, "'' ~•ca.,.rl"' .,,,,. 11 t~t ~'"'· S'1Mt '""'' l'f:I -~• i. ~r 01.lt. 0.0r ,1i.1. I I Ed itorial Research ) MJNNEAPOLIS -Mobile borne parks are springing up alongside American highways so fasl and i11 such variety that a revolution In living habits seems to be taking plaei!. \'t'ith the single-family house moving into the category of a l!,lxuryil,.tm, m.anym id d I e-in co me Amertcam are having to settle for a mobile home. The truth is that these dwellings are not always cheap or truly mobile. A new trailer costs between $3,500 and $10,000, and rlxcd charges are high. Park- ing a mobile home in Minneapolis ave rages between $35 and $50 per: month. Heating during the winter months is about $2 a day because the insulation is poor. By the time you add uUlities, as well as the interest payments. a family can end up paying around $200 per n1onlh for the privilege of li'ling in a glorified trailer. NEVERTllELESS, with the number of housing starts at the lowest level in 20 years, industry officials expect lo sell about 475,000 of lhese wheeled units worth $.1 billion in 1970 anri t million annually by 1975. Already more U1an five million Americans live in ma. bile homes. Fortune magazine points out that last year "for every 100 regular sin- gle-family houses built, 50 mobiles rolled out or factories ... Monster Trailers, over 14 feet in width and up lo 60 feet in length . are being manufactured as more states permit the movenient of such over.sized unlts on the roads. Walking into such a home is in some ways similar to walking into a cabin o( a large ship. At first it is dUficult to tell that you are on wheels. The wall·to.wa\I carpeted living room is spacious and seems well pro- portioned. The adjoining kitchen appcar.1 luxurious , the bathroom ultra-modem. And yet the thing seems to sway as you \\'alk. THE ULTIMATE irony of ii all is that the mobile home is no longer truly mobile. The avera ge home today moves less than 500 miles during its lifetime -usually from ractory lot to parking site. A1oving a home as little as a mile costs over $100. and usually entails repairing joints and fittings which have come loose. . The biggest headache facing potential mobile home buyers today Is restrictive ·zoning. This has caused a nation\v\dc shortage of parking places. In southern Cal\fornia, ror example. land costs for mobile parks run to something like $1.50 Pf'T square foot. This means that ir nine mobile homes are squeezed onto an acre. the land cost alooe is about $5.000 per homesile. To qualify for a space in one of these parks, a potential tenant must buy a trailer fron; lhat park or rron1 an appro\'ed list of deniers. l\IANY OF' THE lrailrr parks have becon1c lo\\•er-priccd residential estate!' resembling country clubs. The O~'ners add carports an(! faO(y landscaping and Pnjoy such communal racilitics es tennis courts, swimming pools, saunas and com- munity centers. The social atmosphere also seems difftrtnt.. "I never knew m)' neighbors when I lived In our Chicago apartment. 11 said one MlnneapoHs trailer housewife," but here you know every· boclv '' uniu reccnlly, mobile homes had to be financed the same way as c1rs. Bul the 1969 Housing· Act permits the F'llA to insure a mobile home loan fnr up {o fl0 ,000 for a term up to 12 years. 1 Vital as Some women 1 know have been work· Ing as volunteers on the "Call for Action" radio programs, sponsored in 22 cities by the Urban Coalition. The program t.lt'als \vlth complaints by the public about lag- ging city services, and acts as 11 klnd of unofficial "ombudsman" to make local governments more resPonsible to citi- zens' needs. Several of these women were discu~s· Ing their work recently, at a little coffee- meeUng where I happened .to be preSt!nl. and one of them said something that struck me a.s more Important than tne work they are doing. "YOU KNOW," SHE SAID, "Mo3t of lhe calls we get are from people who have specific problems -poor garh;igc collection, or muggers on the strecl and lilt.le police protection -but there ig one thing in common I've noticed about the great majority of our callers. "And that is,''· she v.·ent on. "beyond the obvious problem they are calling aboµt, they seem to be in deep trouble personally. They simply can't cope Wllh the world around them in any ra· Cional and effective way. And this Is n1ore than just being economica ll y or· poHtlcally powerless. "WHAT I f\1EAN is that their v.•;1o:e emotional stability -l he i r mental health. if you want to call it that -is so precarious that a leak in the ceiling or a broken furnace is nften the last straw that sends them into a state of shock or Physic al .< • • -'. Sydney, J; Harris anxiety. Their social and li ving prubl~r11s are real enoug h. or course -but ju~t rt!· medying the particular problem is11't going to help these people \'Cry nt11ch. '"It seems to me:' she COdlincrJ, "from listening fo hundreds of caller:;. that many or these people are ;:is surely ~ick, in a psychic sense as if they had typhoid nr bubonic plague . Their life. situaUon has been so bad so Jong th~l on- ly the mosl resilient can cope \Vilh reality, and the rest just go along from one crisis to another. "l'rtf CONV IN CE!) that 'helping these people physict.ly is futile -though it musl be done Wilhout at the i-a.m1• lin1e helping them et some emotional bal:111re and strength. Otherwise. no mc11ter \Vhot is remedied. some other probk·1n will rise up to throw them . "It 's not el'lough to give the poor more money. or the uneducated better sr.hool· ing, for they'll make the least of \\"hat. ever they ~et. until we can revitalize the Whole person, and give him a sense or worthiness and a new horizon of hope. From mv contacts. the mental health oC these peOple is in very serious question. and until we can strengthen the roots of their personality, the branches can only wither." Theater of the A bsurd , . . The most amusing part of Jerry Rubin 's "Do It~." labeled "scenarios of the revolution," ls that it ls distributed by the big businesslike house of Simon and Schuster, capitalist tool of the kind Rubin seeks to ru9 out. (Similarly, Abbey Hoffman·~ recent "Woodstock Nation: A Talk-Rock Album," appeared frnm Random House, a subsidiary or the Radio Corporation or America.) Rubin, who advocates burning paper money in the streets, uses th e Establishment to spread the word; Big Publishing uses Rubin to make money. burnable or otherwise, all of It a macabre bit of background business in this moun· ling theater of the absurd. RUBlN IS THE John Wayne of the New Left. a onetime straight college student who became a Yippie folk hero and member of the Chicago Seven. He bell eves his generation must become' stoned guerrillas in the str41gle to remake "American" society. Bum the schools; kill the police: train children to seize their parent.s' suburban homes. Yippies are leaders without followers. Rubin says. "self-styled craz:ies." Grow- ing up means "giving up your dream." And so on -much ol It narrated In a limited vocabulary of expletive$, but funny, as KMI Marx or Che or Mao were navcr really runny. C'IOd is • Ylpple; Ylppiet will ootrage Amttlcn 1 until the bourgeoisJe dies of apople~y. Yippie.s wil turn the collca:ts into nudist camps. "We gottJ reduce poUtlc:s to ·the Jimplidty of a rock 'n' roll lyric." You have the wieasy feellna: that with all the Rabelals1an bombast Rubin is not kidding. "00 IT'' IS A psychedelic manifesto or torce and Irreverence, a document that underscon!s the generation gap as no other above&roWld atateme:nl has done. Rubin scares the hell out of me. If onl)' becAUse be ls so blackly comic ., he lf"ldl the rapltr at my throat. The lcR1 be reminds us, says to the , ---..,_ --------• ;rhe Bookman '\'ippies, "You·rc not serious." The Yip- pies, he answers, will consider the old left serious when it starts printing con1ie books. ''Do It!" is Rubin 's comic book. J'm not recommending it: I'm just saying it is there. a shrill . unnerving, basically serious cry for mass breakdown of authority, mass rebelli on. total anarchy in every inslilution in lhe \\"CStern world. Mein Kampf! !Paperback: $2.451, Notes on tbt.1tfargin "Diary of a Harlem Schoolteacher,'' by Jim Hasklris. is a year's jotlini;s by a black teacher, !IOmewhat in thn ~e or "Up the Down Staircase." Slnsitive and intefllgent (Grove; $4.95 ). J William Uogaa By George ---· Dear rreorgc : ~fy husband com~ home trom work and jun1ps right 1n the lub and plays with toy boots. of all thlnas. He say!I ft"s his hobby _ but. frankly. the \\'3Y he spend~ 1noney ?n those boats. and all the Ume he spends In thal tub I'm beginning lo wonder. Could you S.1f something that will give • him a more serious oullook? Dear Worried: WORRIED Gl\'t him this message ror a serious ouUook. LOOK OUT FOR THC: SUBS! LOOK OUT FOR T!IE SUBS ! , l Send your prob lems to Georae. guar1tnlt'Cd ns the only advice col· urnni.St who has more problell\$ " lhan the people he adv~.) ' ·• 11 •· o't J, s. ly •d ... '1• ;h 11 ;e it •• "' " ;e •• I· I· e 0 . of '· of y ·. ' ' ' f " . Tribal Wives Rip Dress for Divorce • / Monday, Aprll 27, 1970 DAILY PlltT l • 58 .Repohli~an Critique Still Approp~iate WASHINGTON (UPI) -An mlttee, the GOP Natloaal lncllnallons. Bui like moot nmn1nc the porty; you do DOI you aae at th• bead table!" ir that a croos oectloD of the 11.year-old post mortem Committee and finally the pros in politic!, ht wu more eliminate men fl'<Jm the he wrote. "It 11 an even Republican Party St 1 mere report on Republican defeats Hou se -Senate Republican concerned about wlnnlna: than business wor~:4 you dilute ' money bet that the i.ad &able splinter Jn breadth compared m the 1958 congressional elec-leadership before his death in ideology. them and their •tnfiuence by will be too peree.nt while. tG a cross secUon o l Uona fttmS as frllSh as the 1965. . He wrote Hall I.bat a voter broaden.I~ the bate. ' Nordic, Protestant, upper . America.'~ current cries from Eastern HI s confidential Political J wanted to know o~ that a "Thi.I we have not done nor rrriddle class. . , .Aller R)chard M. ,NlJon's Republicans (or ''broadening memos appear in a newly politk:al party was ''interested is the~ any loctication that "Who gtits fnl.roduced from .. 1960 defeat in hl3 first run the base" ol the GOP. published book, "Smoke-filled In hlm'' and looked for some we tntena to do it.~ the audience? Ditto above. · for the presidency, Republican Those easterners want more Rooms." warm human appeal rather HumpbNyl compla.li.ed lhal ~ "Ho,r IJ'mY Catholics on the leaders blamed the weak GOP attention given to lhe in-Humphreys dissected the than a~stracUobs about a ID05t RepubUcam regarded Republlcln N a t I o n a I Com· performance in the bJg cltles. duslrlal states and big clties. GOP in a memo to Leonard balanced budget, dtce.ntullzed labor Unkn as enemJts,, that mltt.ee? Maybe .one, ma)lbe They fiddled with projects to They f~ar they are being W. Hall. national p a r t y government~ aqrtes r i g h t s 1 farmers d I s I I k e d then three, maybe five -we don't • strengthen their s u p po r t abandoned by the Nixon ad· chairman from 1953 to 1957. civil ri1hts and a sound dollar. Secretary of Agriculture tzra know. , How many Italian-among Negroes, nationality miristration while it is sho1v-ii all had asked what happened "It is the fact that the Taft Benaon because the AmericaM? One. How many 1 r o ups and• ·other h1g greater affection for th!.' in the 1958 elections, which Republican Party ls the party secrelary associated not with Pollsb-Americans? Nooe. How pre dominantly Democratic L. M. BOYD south. added 15 Democrats to the of big businel8 because it ii .farme~ but with food pro-mJnY Jews?'One. H~ many blocs of voters. But by the a woman, a m;1n should be The 1958 report was writ\en Senate and 49 to the House. run from the big buslness ces90l'S and fann equipment Negroes"1 Two, both from end ol the decade, the South a man . And all this talk ol by Robert Humphreys, who Never idenliOed with the world," Humphrey$ aaid. manufactureri. Mississippi. How many labor and tbe suburbs appeared to WHY THE AERONAUTICAL • engineer tends lo father more children than the average man is unknown ... THE PER- Fm.tE l\1AKERS got pretty irritated wjth Mr. Montaigne, lhat French essayist fellow. It was he who said. "nte best way for a woman to smell is not at all." ... ODDS ARE a.p- proximately a billion to one that your child will not be born with long h~ir all over his body. Still, it's a gamble, isn't it? love, love, love. Love is worked for the Republican ea s le r n est ablishmenl, "The amwer: Obviously .you "When you gG to a unlonistJ! One. offer m-0re Imme d I at e nothing without responsibility. con~lonal campaign com-Humphreys had conservative have to change the people Republican dinner, whom do '"lbe ilescapable conch.ision dividends. ~ kids today, loo~ng for.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AMONG THIEVES Nowhere was honor more honored than in the ta \es about Klng Arthur and his compatriots. M far as those old knights were concerned, chivalry was their own thing and the Round Table wu where it was at. That you know, but maybe you didn't know some certain fascinating facts about Sir Thom as Malory, the fellow w h o chronicled all that goodness in the original book about King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. He was ar- rested for extortion, t he looting of a monastery, and repeated incidents of rape, the rascal. OPEN QUESTION -ls it a fact that male geese always have blue eyes while female geese always have brown eyes? LOVE AND WAR -Our Love and War Man says it just wouldn't do to pass over the recent quotation of Mr. Anthony Quinn, actor and philosopher: "Today there is so much blend ing of the sexes that yoo can't tell who's what. I believe a woman should be Change Wasted fJ!TAWA !AP) -Most of Canada is going on , daylight saving time Sunday but parts don't need it. The sm is up most of the time Urou~t the summer in the Ylikon and Northwest Territories. SALEI OUR love, they should give it, and then they would fmd il" rt10RE HISTORY -ln Charles Dk:kens' stories, most of the villains are clean- shaven. 1be heroes, however, generally support sideburns, beards, mustaches. That is how it was in those days. The hairy one was the temperate citizen, the smooth- faced one was the hippy or the heel, whichever. aJSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Isn't the geranium the most popular flowering plant in the country?" A. It's No. 2. The African violet is No. I, the ehrysanthemwn No. I ••• Q. ';How long does it take to train a polo pon)'?" A. About four years ·after it's saddle- broken. NAME GAME MAN -Fact lhat Mr. Kenneth , F. Eatber is an anestbeaiologlst ln Seat· tie qualifies tum for the Proper· Job Club, does it not? . . . Be sure and name your fifth son Quentin. Inasmuch as Quentin m e a n s fif. th .••. Only the moot .. am. ed ol cltiz<m wrn ·recall that Merle Oberon's true first name is Queenie. MARRIAGE -Have you noticed in this department we oecasionally -"" odd malrijnooial eustans? Amorig the Balantas T of Africa, for instance, a bride remains married until her wedding gown wean oul So if she wan!.! a divorce,. all she has to do is rlp up her dress. Simple, what? DO YOU KNOW what the Jncas made :their nutes out' of? Human shinbones. 11lal wasn't right . Your quesuom and com- ments are welcomed ano will bt uaed in CHECKING UP whtrewr possib~. Ad· dress letters to L. M. Bo¢. P.O. Bo: 1875, ll<V>pOM Beach, Calif., 92660 . SUE CORY ''SELECT'' PRESCRIPTION WAVE 8 88 RfG.11.JO , e P-ICES fffECTIVf THilU SAllfllOAY INCLUDES CUT, SHAMPOO AND SET USE YOUI nNNIY CHAIGI CAID- NO APPotNTMINT NICISSAIY I ~·JtTOlf . ..._, ..... N ftelr, '71.00 ......., '"°' ·--.. ""'· ...... ' , All our Fashion Manor® Never-iron Penn-Prest® Sheets Now on Sale ••• through Wednesday only! Choose from muslins or percales in white, fashion colors, prints, stripes ••• regular ••• super sizes, always first quality! PENN-PRESr WHITE PERCALES 50% com-cotton/50% polyHter 72x l0.("' flat or twin E1asta-fit bottom. Reg. 2.99 NOW 2.67 'PERSONAL TOUCH' PILLOWS. Choose the denlity that suits !he preference of every membef of the family-aoft, medium or firm. Al filled with Dacron• polyelfer oround a polyurethone foam core fOf durability. Zip aff Penn·Ptest conon co'ler, Standard, •6 Queen, *8 K~ •• *10. 8h1 04" flat"' foll E.lasta·fit "-· Reg. 3.99 NOW 3.67 Pillow coses 42x36"' Reg . 2 for 1.99 NOW 2fpr1,77 SPECIAL IUYI C-dlnated ...., IOW· els. TllTnty cotton terry towets come in tolld colors or Yivid prints which match perfedfy. Hcnie both far a new d.corator loolct SoAds in baby plnl<, -''""' ...., bluo. Pri01 ;. pink ., bl ... """ lowol, Ill ,_ -. 411 Wcoh doth 211 AVAJL.ABL.E AT YOUR L.OCAL. PENNEY STORE I ,, Fitted mattress p,11d1 Add '1mooth 1leeping: comfort, hep bed· making easy with snug fitting elallic edge skirt. Sanforized• cotton cov.r quilted Offt polye.ter fill . Twi" 4.49 fun 5.49 LIKE IT • , , CHAIGI n1 • 1 I I I • l • ·a._w_l_v_m_o_T _______ ...,.....,, Altll 21; im 8y Phll lnterlandl • AntidlOTC I QlBt4E • .Death Try Mysterl•• ' ·Forces Ask Boyeotting -Reinecke Resclltis , Burning W oinft:n ' J SACllAllENTO (UPI) -v!rtual1Y her eollr< body. OlflcOtl ald "Ille left ber Cll>ral, could not explain the 11AL •• IC- Tbe family o111amona Gama titn. Garcia bad just tert s11ter.m.1aw•1 home, 111en ap-incident. "1t'1 a !bock," s11e HEARING AIDS todly ~ tbr:mJtlves why her children at.the home of pareMlJ aoated bertetf witll sakl. 1'We have no Idea· why / ~-·r:~ "' lbe .-of 1bree d>ildren a sister-in-law, oear "1lere the the fuel aod Ill her c1othlng she would do II. 8lie w11 bap-3409 I . COAST HWY. srAIUOlll> CUP!> -Tho ·~ IOTC Yeo ..... at ltBb4 1\11Mide)i ar1ed -.... ~-- lrlod lo ldU beneJL And they incident took place. with a ma1cb. py -t of tbO time." CORONA DEL MAR · • . to ..,_ -todo1 qd tMnked the L le u tenant Police Lt. Walter Ford l81d The half-empty ~can was Mrs. Garcia1s husband ·1 hr •;::wt Governor of <Jallfomla for iMr~·~·~G~arcla~~bad~~jus~t~bo~ugll~t _:.:fou~nd~ne~a~rb~y~. ~~~~~H~e~nn~an~, w~as=not=•va=ilab=le~lor~==='='==3==~ saving bet life. 1 _ a five-galkll can of guollne. Her silter, Mrs. Dolores comment. • t I I ~--­----..." 'Ille bo)'<Oll ol -WU i:alled Sandi)' -·-:lllO n 11 ... 1 tA. tbe adJ..ROTC --!JI to t• last -....-vlolnce·utheir ----. 1be movement said "Libotllba Collqe" woold be locltod In the old union eourtnxm '1'hlle a '4liberatlon circus" of elhlblts, U'8raturt -and -would be set up on White Plaza. · A .......... said the anfl. ___ "Be~~'a'..!g~o~<>~d,~but~bo'~a~a~U~ltt~le~llea~-~_,,~,~·~ded~-~··:__ ROTC Jl'C"IP-1d meet Tues-·• • cloy ...,. to clodde u the boyoolt -·be bulh Into ' a 1'1Crike: " 'wMch wauJd CC11to :"!' ullil ·aarc • -·Hand Gr'3nade Cache ,,,. ___ lo_• '." BOTC -Ille 811n1on1 Clllt· • c.::.,r;i:i;::.~~ May Be Ambush Link -..i, FJjday when -an ~ deputies •r11&ed IS perlllDI durillc a --,,... __ by ar1onlst1 -"'"" -ble -_...., Fridoy wtille gut. tin( 10 -In the m. de(a 1 st eenter for advance .wdJ ta tbe behavioral ..W1w jUlt df caqius. NMrb' .. ,000 "°"'1 of win- dqows ... ~ Oil c:em· pul. . OAKLAND (UPI) --A quan-powrflll --1*d In llty o1 band ......... Iden~ World Wor II -from MlchMI !cal to -1*d in an om· Hemll!tt, 23, and <lllrleo L. -on -Oaklaad police Llncoln,.24, o\ Hemline'• raJ. alflcero April 17 hos been Jo. dence in Oal!Jand, • Clled by city and•r,dml ... .• H1llllnl llld tbt ... pUI 111oritiel. • ··-~ ..... -..but Oaklaocl Polkle Set-Edwlrd dldn~·mu,·ony .,_,at tbe' Hilllird aald &nlay a , Treo--·-a biMer cadie _., ~ a,.n eor1y ol .,,.,..US and othor arms 1111 week. boolbt II·-p ·-,ape<Md !Mtt. Dldel -a type ID times more IUDll!d and 11 -olllcm raldld ' Heml!ne'a noldence No·1i~ke1 City FridlJ iil&l>t and aald they tumed up .....,it-.. 1lne 1111" and a supply of martJu-and amphelamlneo. Hlllllloe IDd Lincoln, plus four' olten, were boc*ed on dw1•" ~danger­ous dnip. Hllllord said fod- erol lllltllorities were ellp<d· ed to file charges againllt Hemllne and Llocoln. for tile sale and possession of' e'l· ploslves. -. San Diego Gives Warnings SAN Dl!lGO (AP) -lt'a -lmpolllble to 1et a --benfodoJ. 'lbe Pollce Olllcen --tloll, ..-mi 'tbe 'dty'• .. -.. decided lo ----ol,tlcketa. A_w.,..llbptm file, bal -·· DO pinllty, -Ollel o. l. -aald,·•rm qa11e .-11111 ..,. ......... -...... -kt ......... dtJ.md .. -. ...... and ...,.._. . '!be', _tlon _d<nleol It, IQlaC Ill pie _,dealp!fd lo,_ ~,and ln- creue drlv~ nareness of good drlvinl babMI. Moot pollcaln on dlty Sun- day wore black m:mbandS car· rylng tbe number 21. The MIOdatkn Sl)'I · 21 large CllilGnlla dtlea PIY their police --San Diego, 1'tae b zJ ••C pMrolmen man"31a-. .\•lilal!le llpnl.-that durlrw "-'_,,Sunday or--..-_,._...... uc1 eiatlt • M 'if.W. Roed Said f>lllolmen ~ laue about 19,000 tlckett IDd 5,000 war. lnpa.moalh. Last 6 days for 11111ra11teed Mother's D11p deli111fYI Arrested along. with Hem· line and Lincoln on the drug charges were Hemline'• wife, Dorothy, 29 ; Kenneth M. Smith, 25, Oakland; Bruce C. McCurdy, 22; ud Sandy Drain, 31, bo411 ol whom Uvtd wiUl. lhe Hemlines . Hillard sakl Friday's raid uncovered the marked bills used by tile ir....., agent to boy !he grenades. Also taken was a .45 caliber automatic pistol, a aten madline gun, and a ~ .motcun. Young Sailor Set to Sail To Homeland SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Miyoshi Takeuclll, the young sailor who guided bl& Jt.foot sloop from Japan to San Fran- cisco late last year, plans to leave for home Tuesday. · Takoucbi WU llllklng I~ minute preparations Sunday for the 1 monthJ-kmg return voyage whieh he will make alone. ·He has been repairing and re!tocktng his boet, the Gametuya Jin for the past eeveral months. The buat lull no .,.me, no rehigertttion and little stora1e apace for food ud Ilia supply of 35 gallons of fresh water. About the only concession to modem seamamitllp ls the sloop's updated navl1at1ooal equipment. '"!be water I mmt use very sparingly;" be aaid. 11lt ia not true that you can catch rainwater .at sea and use It. By tile time tt pis down to the boat, jt is alreedy too salty." Sporting a brlghlly colored tam o'shanter, Tate u e bl seem<d to be looking forwwd to tbe return lo Jape. Mrs. Garda, 21, remained In very critical cond!Uon Sun- day """'· Her ~ to bum heraelf to deMh was thwarted when Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke leaped from bis car and threw a jacket over her flaming body. "'Ibe picture of that -well lt's IOIDtthing that I jwK can't shake ott of my mind," Reinecke Wllo had just receiv- ed the honorary jacket at a little league opening cere. mony, aald following the Saturday rescue. "I did what I had to do. Never have l seen anything like tt." Reinecke , his admhtlstraUve assistant steve Merk!mer, and hls driver-. California Highway Patrol 0 f ft c. e r Charlea WiHlarru!, were on the way to a second little league opening when they saw names in the street. "We saw her a couple of blocU away sland1"' up and on firt1" the f 7·Y ea r-o 1 d former caagrH5ID3D llkL .. It appeom a large 4lre IDd because tile smoke lflS very black, we Cbought womeooe wu burninl a Ure or perbape to<paper. "Not uMJ.l we got up alonplde the fire did we realize that M. waa a human being." . He aaid t>e flames were six to eifl>I feel high. 'Ibe WQIDlll wu fallioc over u Reklecke'a car appOIChed. He dashed from the car ud threw !he jacket """ her. WU1iaml radioed far helf. ud ttten rushed to Reinecke s aid with a fire extinguisher. • • Reinecl<e aald be llUlfered only "a couple ·of .,... opola and a minor blister" on his hands. . • "Sbe kept sayln&, 'tell them I'm sorry. Let me die,'" Reinecke said. "When the fire was out she kept trying to roll f1Ver and move around. We tried to keep her qutel" 'Ibe woman was burned over Negotiations In LA Strike BeginAg~in LOS ANGELES (AP) - Negotiatklm between striking teachers and school official! were ordered resumed today for the ftrst time slnoe the walkout began April 13, but words of cautlon were voiced q:ainst hope for a quick set- tlemeol Federal mediator Benjamin Aaron. a UCLA law profesaor, announced Sunday the restart of the talki following weekend discussions with the school board's negotiator, Lyman Powell, and attorney Leo Gef- fner of the striking United Teachers of Los Angeles. But Aaron cautioned that while the resumption was a ••hope f u 1 development," neither side has made any concessions and ''it wou1d be highly unrtall.!ttc to UUnk that all disputed issues wlll be set- tled In a few days." About 12,000 of the district's 25,000 teachers have been on !trike over better classroom condltiom and increased pay, severely hurting education in the system'• 6HS schools. Enrollment is about 650,000. The school board previously rduaed to negotiate with the l-'TLA, whk:h represents about n ,ooo teachen in the district, until the teachers returned to wort. But Powell said Sunday the board agreed to resume talb at Aaron's request and u "• lllha'e of good faith ." . Mother's Day Portraits that say 11We love you!" 99 - Huntington Beach Office: ~ Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., . . • onit 8d0 for you lo hep adjoining the San Diego Freeway, ·• two 5x1 for Gtondmothers · in Huntington Beach. • aiic wallet4in for fire family .... ..... .,_ cNhlrwft .. -••• and ....... --c1iarvo for1"" fanil1ypotl I I W}OU -dlargt. ot l'IMoy'lo --................... ,, .. .. .,., .............. ,. ------·- 1 ...... ,. .. ~ ---,..illhtln ........ .......... .,, .. ~ ....,, ....,,,. ..., ....,, .... ttlt - ) -----............ . .... --.......... .,. . --,. ....... -.er .. ... _ 1111tt a,......• 111.aMt --..... ...... OW.••t•t SAVE MORE WHEN YOU DO IT YOURSRF. EASY TO INSTALL! 50 SO. YDS. WILL C.UPIT 12 x 13'6• PA.no, 12x 15• DEN, 12x9' KnCMEM. Acrilan!ll Acrylic ''Fore- man''• level loop style, optly named, because it's as new as tomorrow. Choose from 8 decorator colors! Acrilan• Acrylic ''In 'n Out''. level loop or ran- dom .sheared •.. your choice of either in this easy-care carpeting. 14 decorato r colon. ~ RE G. 7.9 0sQ.YD. NOW YOUR 1 CH O ICE 6 .99sQ.YD. . ' CARPR IN OR OUT AND SAVE ., • USE PENNEYS TIME PAYMENT PLAN FOR PROFESSIONALJZED CARPET SERVICE-SHOP IN STORE OR SHOP AT HOME ••• CALL YOUR NEAREST PENNEYS TODAY CANOGA PARK (883-3660) CARLSBAD (729-7991) DOWNEY (869-,5.41) FULLERTON (871 .,3,3) HUNTINGTON BEACH (892-7771 ) LAKEWOOD (63,.7000) MONTCLAIR I (621 -381l)or(985·7Pln VENTURA NEWPORT BEA¢H (6<2-7592) 644-21I1 • free estimate. • No obligation. • We bring samples. • Free consultation. I IN YOUR NE IGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Fedeml Savings, where your account is IAn • CONYINIElll • AYAIL•BLE Mar!<et fluctultioml don, w«ry coat & Southern - thalr capital • atway1 rtslna ln v.iue..Hlghat earning• conalltentwfth utety when 'JOQ·aaveai Coal & Soul!!em. IHUIAICE TO $21,111 / IHOllCIS Gftl $111 MILllDI A81<A80UTlHE INBWEBS CL1JB A NEW WAY TO SAW MONIY-A ... 8AIAHCa IN VllllR ACCOllCT llAJCU 'WOU ELJGllt.E. NWUU.OIM Mfl Y•...,. ~ • •1tn ,__, lftl l i...... • ar~•t ........ LOM IUVtCI ADIMC'¥1 , .. No. Wlflll It.• (7'411414UT I HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES 5.00%-5.13% Puabook; No Minimum. 5.25%-&38% ThrM Monllt CtrtH!cato; No Minimum. ' 5.75%-&12% Ofto.Y•r~.'1.000Mllllmum . 8.CJ0%.8.11% .....,_Yw-;$1,000 Minimum . ·1 • 1 • r r I I I (. ! t - j -= •• . .• - ; ' -• -· ' . ---~~--· . Vital st.,-tisties for· the Orange Coast Area HOLL'YWOOD ' MatTiage Licenses Dissolutions of Marriage LAST 4 DAYS ! .- APRIL DIA MOND SAL E SAVE..20% O.N OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF ' DIAMONDS •• •• c. .. t. l!ef. • •• ReJ. "'" tloldlt htndSGmt rinf in solid 141C told .... $ 75.00 $ 60.00 r. i'omoO"aw's .lool! Cach of 3 rinp set with J4K rldal .set with two fiery diamonds-129.50 103.60 3 .s111rlTing diamonds, all 14K &old-200.00 ll0.00 Diamolld solitair1 wllh lllilching Man's mattl'led blrwf._____ 50.00 .CO.DI w1ddin1 rinf witll fOllr dlll!IOndS .. -162.50 1 l0.00 '· Diamond stud 111~. 14K 1old..-110.00 .. .. Diamond T1io Set-Udies dill!IC!ftd solit1ir1 H. Diamond walcb It ment-4111kn 1nJ . 121.11 and m1n's mt!thln~ weddinii: ri111-115.00 '100.00 timepiece stunn1nc! ., __ ,, _____ 1S9.50 lands cl love for fl I'll and lor h1r. I. StU11nin1 sollltire. Ritl'lly desi\ned S diamonds in eith 141( rin( 1&9.50 135.60 i11 l~K told for 1 l!fetirne of ril1i1nct ..... 450.00 310.00 f Bell er nurry! Only 5 days lelt lo enjoy unbelievable savings during Penny's fabulous APRIL DIAMOND SALE!· A perfect opportuni ty to pu1chase the diamond jewel1y you've always dreamed of. • • • CHARGE IT AT YOUR PENNEY'S FINE JEWELRY DEPARTMENT NOW! THESI: VALUES AT 1'NY ONE !Of" THESE PENNEY SJORES! I Spedllitit1r '" Fine t>llmOl'lds COmp1et1 Repair S1rv;lus CANOOif PARK OOW)<EV FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH SHOP SUNDAY, TOO LAKEWOOD CARLSBAD MONTtLAIR NEWl'ORTBEACH VENTUAA 12 to 5 P.M.! I NEEDS NEW FACES NOW! ALL AGl!S, ALL SIZES, ALL TYPES 'OR TV COMMERCIALS, MOTION PICTURIS AND TV SERIES. DO YOU HAVE "WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A SUCCESS TODAY? FREE ON CAio!~ AUDmON IN OllANH COUNTY CALL (714) 547-8251 TODAY URGENT DEMAND FOR TALENT EXISTS NOW! Talent Search lein9 Conduct•d ly TAKE 1 PRODUCTIONS HOLLYWOOD, CALI FORNI A r.l. c•m,.., ....... ,,......., c..._n ,., MWCe...,.. IPl ...... tl llMl'll llctl'llPlll' II ....... lws llllllltr !II ..... .. YS GUIDll 10 llOntiRS ll&Y ' RANGE AND DISHWASHER SALE!. • > .PRICES EFFECTM THRU SATURD~YI FOR SERVICE ON THESE PRODUCTS, CALL YOUR PENNEY SERVlCE TECHNICIAN CAll 11.1 5?3 6401 OR SlE YOUR I llCt.L O,Flfr:TORV SAVlaG.951 , PINNClllP ~O'' OAS ltANGI. WITH IVllKLll ... OYIN PANILS. • Porc•lai" •na-1 finhh hetir.le•n• OWrl panel• ci.on th•mHI••• dut"1g regular oven use • full block glau O'f'en door • Programmed Dftn control • 0.CU.atcw style control ponel • Tri-,.,.,peroture ·bumtr1 • White, coppMtOM, cmicodo or harve1t told •.. color colh no ll'IOl't ot P•nneys IAV1ao.u1 h•MNI,. 16" 1•• r•111• with lw•rklt•n• .... P9•••• '" ....... ,.,.,. ............. .. c•A .... 26t.9S •; • • ••••• , •• NOW $239 SAVI 20.UI PINNClllT"IMPlllAL 17 TAILI s1n1NG CONVllTllLI IMIHWASMllt HO. 209.95 ••••••• , •• NOW '189 • 17 table MttinQ mpodty • RinM agfftf clllp1n• • MopM cuttfnt boarcf top • 'White, copp«tone, avocado or hol'fflf 9otd • ' ' ' USE PlNNIY'I TIMI 'AYMINT 'LAN IU•IANIC CANOGA PARK CAllSIAD CHUlA VISTA COLUOI! GROVE DOWNEY fULll!ITOH GRANADA KtUS HUNTINGTON IUCH ttUNTINGTON ,ARK LAIC!WOOO LONG l!ACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NtWPOn llACH YANNUYS 'NORTH HOlLYWOOO SAN fflNANOO VENTURA WHTCHtsnl SANTAANA TORIAN CE . . F l, r I · 1 ~ Jf DAILY PILOT • Lookitag Ahead . . . . . I 111~, April 27, 1970 At the fifth annual Project Look Ensenada. Dr. Ji.1arlin Dales of Costa Mesa {left). clinic director, and Dr. Leon Axelrod of Laguna Beach (right). founder and general chairman, fit glasses for a young Mexican patient. Watching is David Porter of Santa Ana, governor of Lions Club Di strict 4-l.r4. Of 98 children examined by Orange County optometrists, 72 wiU get free glasses in Lions Club roject ___ _ ~ ;·,.. -...... ~ -. . -~ ------ • Riot Ca1ises • ~ By TOM BARLEY the unJversity ls unwilllng or SANTA MJA "~ A~riea's unable to defend Itself it will universities have helped to oC necessity surrender IL! spawn· the student rlot.s by soverei1nt.y to the local and which they are tom today state law enforcement agen- by becoming "faceless mulU· cies, And the real losers," of the theory of t h e ract that we more than our punished we must at..the same • 'm u I t iversity" and the children must bear the vast time treat the causes or their "regain.in& of a sense or majority of the blamt," Mar· frustrations with special tools modesty and selectivity In the dian said, "While ~ that adapted lo the parUcular deserve punishment should be cause." formWation m their o~.;=:=:=::"=:=:;:::=:;:;:::=:=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=:=;;;:, jecti"'· 1795' LAGU.NA Unl,-,·ues" in w h i c h "''" he added, "will be the "The notion or t h ·e thousands of frustrated students can 00 longer flnd frustrated m a j or ii Y of multiversity is rejected with the -academic community they sluderts •who are entitled to justic~ by students and by seek, President Nixon's chief an.education in an atmosphere perceptive faculty," he said. advisor on education told of light, liberty and learning "They reject It not simply Orange County lawyers Fri· rather than the darkness of because it is impossible to day · .. administer but because is is "N. owllare is the starkness fear and sterile conformity. ·ns1·1u1· with I I Mardian quickly conceded an 1 1 ion ou goa s or intellectual isolation more that the universjties, to date, and does not know its own real for today's student than "ha\le not demonstrated any ll)ii,d. in the very bosom of academia ability to put their collective "In such circumstances,'' he CANYON ROAD LAGUNA BfACH MORTUARY • 494.9415 • where he is treated as an house in order. saili, "the teacher feels he outmoded appendage," Robert .. 1 woold be the first to is an unwan~ encumbrancel"::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=: C. ~ardian told thf: Orange agree,., he said, "that in their and the student senses that -- Co1.mty Bar Association in ils willingness, aided and abetted he is a forgoUen man. Cone annual Law Day meeting. by all levels of government, is the professor-student rela· Mardian, who ii executive lit' 1 tionship and substituted is lhe dlr-J-r or the Pres1'dent's social and po tea structure I l'onsh' r the I de I nd =w th h 1 11 th rea1 1po suna Ca., __ , Committee "" Eduea-ey ave arge y ost e lh I c11· ,_,_ ho . uurc• authority and r e s p e c t e ea mg assl:"'Gnt w IS lion. warned the meeting that necessary to do so. They have more often than not the neither he nor bis colleagues Jost sight of the total defiriition radkal who· graduated the had any "•-y pa••ceas" to year before ....... ·-or 'academic freec1om'." . a problem "which has been "The academic community generated by the. a!Iluence of FORCIBLE 1,"RAPE' of the faceless mulli-universi· success rather· than the pover· But the ''miserable failure" ty is no longer the community ty of failure.'' of I.he university administrator of I.he student," Marclian said. SOLUTION WITHIN does not justify federal in· "Yet We exhort the student But he fifefde It .. clear-that ~tervention, Mardian said . --to be ~a -responsible member the final solution to mounting "Federal control is no more of his community. Responsible unrest and student intolerance acceptable than the treatment to whom ? How can one be mwi come from within the of forcible rape as a social responsible if ooe has no com· universities themseJves "and event or arson as an acf of munity to respond to? nbt' from the 'federal govern-urban renewal." "Before there can be any ...ment_or_any __ form _ of .Jaw What is needed today, ?.tar. resolution of the problem our IN THE LIDO SH.OPPING AREA IT'S BAAROWS FOR MONTH-END 5iAVINGS 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH enforcement." di an explained, Is the rejection gene.ration must accept the "The primary role of law 1~--.:....--'-~--'----=-------.:...._..::::============================== Politieal Notes enforcers on the campus must and can 0iily be played by the university itself," Mardian said. "If it ts to retain its integrity it must I t s e 1 f establish a code ·or conduct and enroree that CiXfe through discipline or it will perish , .. as a bastion of intellectual Teague Pro-ecology By 0. C. HUSTINGS WILLIAM J. TEAGUE . Republican candidate for 34th Coogressiooal District seat, Death Notices aASHOll ~wlfl s. l•ah«. Ate .n. DI 11'71 tow~. Wnlmln111r. O.lt or 11s1111, Aar!I n . s.,,..,1.,tt1 b'f .w1i., ""ylllu !•Iller. C1alld 81~1 lllrff JCnt. LOI/II, lltY •ncl Mtl· VII'; deuthl•r.. UIVINI -El.i1no ... r thAe brorttera. 5'm, H1<111d •rid L_..•d S.tl'lor1 Incl MYltfl w111Ck,,11lldr1t11. s ...... kCI, TU'ftdll', t PM. '""j!M Clll1'91. '"" 1~. Good '~ c-1erv. S1t11rh1 MorN1ry, Dir.don. -. DA\llS t 11lh A. DIYk. 214'1 Pfcttk·C-1 Hlfti· w1y, 15&. H1111t11W-M9d'I., ~.bf ,_..nd, ~ ltw w. DaY111. Mitt;: tlobffl 811m11, T0«1na1 11$'9<"&. H1Met Whit· fOf'll Ind Ein.I r;lvnll, tloth of P-lt "'""la; brothers. ....,... Mii '~ ¥" .. ler. P~I two ei'•~"'· S..vlcn wlll bl ....., ~~r. l l"M, l"tcillt vi-e11...-, WWI Ith. COtill'- !IUw offk\flll!f. Efttombmll!Jll, hCtt'llr: Vltw M-itl h'*'-Dlr,KMll br Pa(l!lc Vlaw Mortllir'!'. . MYDt.t benvet> A. H-irdef". AN .s1, of l~l I!. Will.Oii, C11t1 Mnl, Dllt of d .. 111, AIH"ll 11. !llrvlvN bY wllt, tubr1 lllr• ton1, WlllJ1rn J. De'~. Al!lllelm; Edwtrd I. De'Loo1, 01'9tOf11 91111 l"llwltl L. Hyder. COrOllll ctt1191!1tr, Mrl. J11nttt1 FUllft'• ton, E1co!ldklc11 "'°"""'· Mrs. C1Hl1 HY· .,..,, Co1!1 Mlllr brol!Mr, Jn1, .C1111 Mna; lhree 1kltr&. Mn. Svl'llt Sdl1f~r. Cost1 MISI/ lnJl.t Ml~-. P1rrl1, c1n1.1 WlhT'!I Ulot'dfl 11111 lwe!l!Y- ••allll chll0r1t1. StrYkts will be lleld W"""'ldaY, 11 AN,. 8tl! lr.-dwlY Cllllt» 1t, will! tty. L01'9!1 Ftld<l....,r alllCllllM. 1111..-..,..,1, Good 5'llPMr'd c-"". 01· "·dee! bY 8111 ll'Ndwll' MIWllll". K•llLalt Din I". 1Cts1l1r. "" at, of l2ll Wlll'llno· ton AYt~ Co.It Mnl. Diii of dNth. Aprll H . 511n1lvtd lry Wiit, Olanez 191/r clllldr..,,, Kel/li'. Mll(!lelt, Perrle 11111 M1tttiew1 """"-'• Mr1. S..1111' Kn1ler. of M-11. F-rll llfYk n , WldnffdaY, 10 AM. 81111 Cnlt MIM Cl'llPll. PrlYlll l~term..,,1. LIYt Olk M-111 P1rtr., MCl'l,.,Yl1. 81/11 Cot1!1 Miii MOf'tllll'l" Ol•KIOrl, Nt.l'I' He< ..... ~ Nl'ft. HlO S. SPIV(e, 5.lr!tl A111. O.lt ol dellll. AIH"ll ?J. $.uni...-bY Wife, v 1 ... 11n. S..nt1 ANI! '°"'• John, Cal· "''"° Sprint!,; Howtrd, Santi 110511 Ger· aid, 9...,... P1rt:;1 1111"°', Luer wactm1n. Michigan; "-911 Nk hoh, Ol'llOI ind llYI or1ndcftlldrtl\. Senik:K Wtrt Mid IOd1y, M-v. ? ,M, GrMfl'llllt CountrV Cll11rch, S.11t1 A.nl. lnl1rm...1. P•clllc vi-Mtmdl1I Ptrtr.. Pacific Vltw Mor· l uJry, Olrlctwl. ltOOt!ltS Mani ... !k t ltlffrl. )Olll? S. Co.nt HIOll· WIY. L1~11n1 8ff.c:ll. O.!t ol dM!ll. April n . survlvtd bY Mu9tlttr. Dollvlec WlllOfl, U9\IM 811tft. Strvk:ll will ttf l!eld 'T111tc11v, 1 PM. PKllk v1 .. ClllPtl. wllll Ill• Ut11n• k«ll OES t 5!1 olflcl- 111,.,.. Olracttd tlY P1clf\c Vll-w MGrtu1rv ARBUCKLE & SON \\1estcllff Mortuary 4%7 E. 17th St .. Costa fi1es1 u ... w • BALTZ MORTUARIES C.orou del Mir OR 3-1-150 Cotti Mesa 1\11 5-24.U • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY tlt Broadway, Costa fifesa u J.3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS Hu.nUngtoa Valley Mortauy 11111 Budll mvd. Huntington Beach 111-7771 • PACIFIC VlE\Y MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e ~fortuary Chapel Jiii P1clflc View Drive Newport Buch. California lff.l?tl • has been making several statements on his plans for preserving ecology. Utl · who represented the district until his death in March. * freedom ." Mardian predkted that "if In a speedl at Marina High School on Earth Day. Teague Byram Gets Board Post · outlined plans for a National JOHN SCHMITZ received Environment.al Workshop and: the unanimous support o( the Seminar for Youth (NEWS for Tustin Area Rep u b Ii can Youth) which would be a full Assembly (TARA). In the four·year scholarship awarded TARA April bulletin it was SANTA ANA -Louis B. to one student from each con· noted the endorsement was • d · be Byram of Lagwia Hills has aressiooal district who comes given · esp1te-or cause •· r · · b been reappointed to Orange up with a good idea for res-o -an accrllTloruous speec d b f h County's Tax Assessment Ap-cuing the environment. ma t! Y an opponent or I at [[. ,, ""'als Board. In another speech on April o ice. ,.~ · · The names of lhe Leisure 15, Teague criticized a bill No doubt that anonymous World resident and Karl T. inCrodUCed by his · opponent, opponent was Wilcoxen who Gt--• f 0 . bent Rich d H . inakes no bOnes about Uie I "IUl<Jrenner o range were incum ar . anoa. . . drawn from the drum by The bill (HR 168>4) woold ,fael ha~rw~slidm\)lz Wlfil rt' ly Cl k W'lli E Sl -1.· •k~ -~L.--J:~;r...-· for-office beChs'e: Of-SChmltz:'s· ""°un er t am . I t,..e u.ut:0e flOl"wnll ualuvuila , . . John rivers out d the state waler membership in the Jobn Birch 8 · . ted b p1itn to 'PRI~'.· water !or Society. ~~;msu';::V=~lton i, SOOthern CaJ1fom1a. * Allen, William Phillips ant.I * WHILE WE'RE on the sub-William Hirstein. Glasbrenner A no t h e r Congressional ject or who's endorsing whom: was backed by Hirstein. hopeful, Frank Halpern who it should be noted here that Byram, of 544F VUj Estrada, ls the Peace and Freedom the Unlt.ed Auto Workers' retired after a lang career Party candidate from .the 35th recently formed Community witli tpe• county's MSeSSment District, fired off a protest Action Program Council failed division. Both he a n d telegram lo the presidents ()f to endorse any candidate in Glasbrenner will serve three. CBS, NBC and ABC requesting the 35th District. year terms on the appeals lime to respond to President Since lhey endorsed a panel. Nixon's Vietnam withdrawal straight Democrat ticket with ,...:.======::-;-===::! speech. the exception of the 24Lh ON THE TUBE JIALPERN CLAIMED that Congreasional District. it is since Nixon is register-I from to be asswned they haven't For th1 IM1t t•i4e te •h•t'• the 35th District and oecause made up tileir minds on h•pp111ing on TV, '''' T'¥ he said he would vote ofr whether to endorse David WEEK -cfittribvted with th• the late incumbent James UU, Hartman or Thomas Lenhart S"'tvrd•v edition of th• DAILY PILOT. "hls remarks carry a partisan 1_:1:.:•:.•_:lh:::•::.·3Sth::.:.::::· ______ '.::===========·I sigQificance," when he speaks from San Clemente. No information has been recei ved frOm· Halpern in regard to the network s' replies, if any. * WlLLIA~1 \\'lLCOXEN. a Laguna Beach attourney who is running for the Republican nomination in the 3 at h Congressional D i s t r i c t , recently said he 'vould en· coura ge private enterprise to turn education in a pr<r fitma king enterprise. ·· f'ive years of service as a school board mcm~r ha\•e convinced me of the basic inequity of the local propert y tax as the primary funding device of lhe s ch oo l syste m ... And where pri vate enterprise is wiUing to al· tempt educational programs on a profi t.making basis, it shoul d be encouraged," he said in a speech before Tustin school administrators. * Another 35th D is tr i c l Republican running ag:.un st \\'ilco xen and State Senato r .l ohn Schmitz lR-Tuslin J is John A. Steiger of Ocea nside. Ste iger who claims his c::im- P<Hgn started IDl.c but is run- ning well. has based his cam· pa1gn on the concepts of '·New federalism·· and the con- liCrvativ e policies of James SNYDf lt ' A.nne111 AUTO C•NT•lt CLEARANCE Terrific savings now on BRW spark plugs .•. • High performance electrode • Precision ma chined • Thermal cone for quick storts ond o-nti -fouling •Resists corrosion PEE!t F AMil. Y COJ.ONIAL FUNERAL DOME 7111 Bolu Ave. Wtttmlu1erlN-ml • SffEICl"""F"E"'R MORTUARY '""'" L. ~nvoer. 4.e IJ. ~ 101 1 "'• <11. lj~nll<>ttori 9t•CI>. O.le or 0.1tll, Aorll )S. Wrv'"" b> ...... I . F H.,..,,,,, 11,1..-. Mn H•lltt 8<illt'<1 ~. Don· •IO l"t l'OIO ~er'llCH -· llekl l•l•Y, Mcncl.t>. ? PM. Sm~' C!l.lioel lnttrmenr. WHl1Ttl"1ter M-ltl P•rt.. !t!Ttllllt Mol. "'-•¥, OlrKlo,.. REG. 74' 44c NOW ..... . fUUllTOH WE LCM H'IJNTIPo'GTOH BU.C.H 33 MONTlfS GUARANTEE WITH 10 MONTHS 100% AllOWANCl 11111111•1 '"lrctlt1 "atHlt• Now17.44 · Tour foremost tirt PtOteclion 111111"~ee ~s 111 Fortmosl p1..,. sen1er lirts (e11eept tilt' sp«ial ltifll-11trfoimt11t1 t11es) 1111"st art 1oid tlalard or defect f1il11rtt. Ye~ 111 PfOlec!td lor !ht entire slated month, of 1wr111tet. tt yor.ir lire fails dlirinr !tit 1111r1ntt•. pe11od, 11h1r11 it to 11s Md we wi ll, ti ""'' optiOJ1, 1ep1ir yOUt lirr, or ll'iakt an allt'llMICt Nsed Oii tfle ll'iJ:1111r purdlaM p1ice. t11(.1Ud· 111( 1ppticlblt ftdtr•t Ucise T11, tow11d tllt l lKCl'llSI of I nt• l"r. We "'''I 1Ho• 100"' of tlle «iriNI pu1t11:111e llfite, ir1C llld1n1 Jpp!icftllt Ftde1•I Uciw Tai. titHint lht 100%. l llGWlllCI oeilod. lht re1llt1. we w•ll allow 50•;. or 2S"o of the or i11~1! p11rch1~e puce. 1nclu d<n1 appli(X!lt Ftdt11I E1c1st T11, tow11d lilt purtllaK af 1 new Int. !See ch.irt below). Pl~• led. lo• o~d old tir• Blockwoll tubeless Site Orig. 21 .45 21 .45 700-13 560-15 NOW 20.44 f•d. T enc 1.96 1.7.S Nrr1·1 kw ynr I'"'''" 111i11tt l1it•r• •trk•: lRUfl 111an•ll• '"ii' ·-··----···· ··-·--··--Jl •"'"' too•. allow1~ct ptnt7d ••••••• -··-··-·-··-·-··· l·tOmotl lhs ~o·. allow~!!f ! pt11od •••••• -· -· ••• _ •••• ·--·-· 11· 19 mon!~s is,_ 1How~nce penod .••••• __ ·······--···-···20.33 mo"!h\ Ttt•• Ull •1tttclitR 1'!~1 le<i lou -.! old toir1 Blackwall tubelesf Si1e Orig. Fed. Ta11: Wt build 1"to t~e1y foremo~l t1rt ~1lt haclion ind1c1101s. Thtr l•l"'I wheft ~our hit ~houla bt rt~taced. ll 10111 ti1t wt:Hs out (01· •~pt lor iflCOll~ct aloinmtnt' wt wilJ 1111~1 "' 1Uow1nc1 baud Oft H•I 01111n1 I PlllCh1se pr ,.:e. 1nch1din11pplicillle federal [1ciit T••. lo11r1rd lhl Pll!thait ol a ~tw ftre. We will at!Olfl' !• du1in1 th1 ~nt ha~ or :. du11n1 the setorld ltalf ot tlle staled ITIOl!lhs o! 1u•1ft1tt This &uManh1 Is 11<11 lransferHlt . It is M-ly IOf priv1!1 PiUJ!ftl" cars or PISWflll' s1at-o" •llDllS. f71-14 1775-14) 25.45 2.44 NOW 23.44 Blackwall tubel"ss Site G71-14 ( 1'15-1'4) G71-15{115-15) Orig. 27.45 '17.45 Whitewalls only $3 more! ENGINE TUNE-UP CLEAN AIR SERVICE S.88 with engine tune up ltedu(el dongero1o11 e a· housl fu"'et.. lnc.l.,de1 "•w ,,C.V. "°..,_ o•d "ew oir filter. Your cor geb a new rotor, con . denser, plug' and di,tributor (Op; e11per1 odiustmenl of (Om·d.,,.ell, liming ond carburetor. Re1uh? More driring pep, better mileage. 12.88 c cyf (\IW•) 16.88 19.88 DRIVE IN , .. CHARGE ITI I crl.• Lllpu Bock fll-1535 Su Cle-le ffl.flll IC•tht .... An11 Wt\cll. 11! A.!!!;lfl'A Aw•,, Bet~ '•'-1'11. 011e ol Oe•!", A.trll 1• • "'. • S¥ntlwd t1Y N ri!11tl, Mr 1fld Mt• #f'(I ("'lllStAO M0N1CL.Alt '.( • trl J. Wtl(.11, ot Vt"®UY"°', WtllllnQ!OI\< SMITHS' MORTUARY 117 M ... St. bf'Olhtt, lllbort I . We!Cll Jr . or D•ttorl• Cl-lUl"' '11~1... N[Wl"OIT IE•CH f 1ltltr, Mt'91•tf M. W11e11. V~l'l<DllYe<, r--------, •1ltl'ntl etlFl<llftOtllfr. Mr~ "· H Wekk ""'AllAlll AT AMY BUENA PA.it• CANOCA ••ti( CA•lJ BAO (HUlA VISTA 00WNlY fUUltTON n .. u._._. ·-Mlfll\l'SDfl. llo.trv. lolll11M. Mon<\IJ • OOWNl Y VfNTUIA .... , "'"''' u ···-r-.. ' ,, . llM, lt~illc v~ Cl\111~1 """"""" M8... ........ H N "U ..... ... H MON LAI ~l[WrOtl t fACH VlNTUlA , ' '. -· d "· ,(NHfY "UlO C IMlfl~t 1.H'Jctl'f, ' .,,.r L• 'f 01 Mt, .,..r-1 ·Ot<o ... ot.,.."' v,.i1.1 y-!(lOHO -~Tli ~HO• iUNDloT. 100 !1 •~''"'' c 1t11o11c Cllwcll, Nt10POrt lie•~"· 11c.utl L-------·-o_·•_••~·-"-·~·r_•_•_"_•_"'-'-'-'•-·--------' 1 -----------------------------~----,.----'.::======::'_ ,_ ____ , ______ _, Vltw M«11,141h', Olrtc!Ott. ,. , I '"' y r• ""' ,,. ... ,~., ~,,,..._,, ~·-·--~"' .--;o-• • • ""'..-a-o-;--;:::-:~.,....~..--.. "'";-~-'it.,..-:;-;~-; • ~ -~ .....,-.,...," ... ... ... --·-· ·--.... • • ... •"'1'"' ... ... • .. --r• '• Mond11; Ap.U 27, 1970 . . American -Nazi Denies Jewish Parent~ge CHICAGO (UPI) -Max Collin says he is Jewish. Hi.s son, Frank, says his father is a liar.•,,,. It is t'7'1bly Important foc frank Collin to beUeve his fa ther is a liar -an Aryan liar. ' their son. Frank Collin h"'lsted It was, of course, a reRl smear race rlol and we should listen "Whal I really do not un-M•I'! And Women With A ,. __ ;_ h. I .-.. li ·"'-·•h job on the Nuls, but it was to the news aod find out what derstaod ts these ldiob," hit .,...,... 11 '"~ w" a ar, N•...... . 1 To le On •.ie-'-lo' 11, _ , so beautiful. terrible tblng1 Uw: blacb were father.Aid. "Why. five ldlob <l j TD ~ a well·meaning one. "They had these orlglnal doblc:. He talbd and talked sbould make such a wave, "No, it 1s -~ '"'•," •-.. · ......... . 'RE Yqu. o. V1ER • 17 . . uv1. • .. 1..:-film clips and everything. I about It, but we never saw tlus 1s .... ,...... m y un-"" r . said. "H• is not Jewish. 11 was just being so moved or heard anything on the d •rs tan d l·n g. And the CAN YOU TAKE DIR~TIONS?:. •-J I Id tching It It was s•"'""" news." N•bliclty!" uc was ai ew wou cer-wa · ~ ..,,_ ... , ,... T1~1 ·1 Producti°"'' lnc1, :11 Proud . ::yy ~:"':,!01~':!'A Nry~ ~'!'1~~. the fine culhJn ol .r:~a=~:l~ru. ~ ~!!~ nc!"~ .. °'J!~. ":: ~g:: HTo•uAnvw""oo""o<•TTAhoLENIMPO". 1~0 °'tor0 A"'ou'"LJWS 't' "l was a National SOcLal.lat ~ o'clock &ba:dow, likes to because he is enlightened IUL and under the Nuremberg the day I was born, if not dress up 1D Sam Brown belt enough to know he is of the .... · laws Ill• G-any 1'f a man TO AUDIT!On ON-CAMBRA ~· '" bet ore. I think it wu an ~ and Jthakl lhk't. He operates · "white .superior race" and waa OYen hall· Jew he 1°'t stinctual thing with me." out ot an ofllce almo<t empty "they are so, oh so illlerior." CALL 714.•547~6Z51 hl~.~·i::r:i!;1...,didthrow tim~l~:.:.::r"::,1 ~ ::,,,~ :~. ~;kop~~~ ~·.:.;.~~=~::.: TAKE "l'i PRODUCTIONS, INC. •.t\ If Max Collin Is telling the truth, Frank Collin would feel compelled to resign his post as Midwest Coordinator of ·I.he White People's Socialist Party_, formerly known as the American Nazi Party. If Max Collin is a liar, he has been deceiving people for no apparent reason for a long me out Aug. 9· He did nol tiblack feelings was when be acalnat UW wall -"smash take any stuff from the HOLL:'fWOOD, CALIF. ~=: ;:,e !!;;:g a'::~ir;;; -~·~·a~s 1•;sop~h~o;mo~re~1t~M~ende~I;. JS=DS~·~·~· ~deotll~~' ~lo~red~sou~m~J·~-~~· ~o~l~the::peopl~:··~W:•~~~P~.I~. C~o~ .. ~-~·~M~-~~-~,.,~..,~-~~C~•~•-~"~,_~.~-~~~~ k.ids. He is very frightened He came home one ni;bt and • , • IU tbrr: peace ereeps W1>Uld fiCht them with violence and he once told me he would llid there bad been a terrible ••• 1QPP01't white police." in return." time. Max CollJn was bom, he says, as Max Simon Cohn in fl1unlch, Germany, In 1913. He was tilnd is, he attests, a JeW. J1e was imps:"(sooed for three months in 1938 in the in£amous < • •WHO IS WHAT? 'Aryan-J1w'. Frank .Collin Dachau 'concentration camp, and decoraled with swastikas he say.s, because he was a-and white power slogans. J e;~at. year. Collin ·says, he He has been arrested twice was released from Dachau in the past week, once in and allowed to emigrate to a ~lic;e arms ra)d o n the Unlted States. He came Rockwell ,Hall (named after to Chicago and In 1943 married George Lincoln Rockwell, the a Roman Catholic girl named assassinated f~r of the Virginia. In 194$, ·he changed American Nazis), and two his name legally 'to Mat days later {or contributing to Collin. the delinquency of a minor Not being a particularly -he insisted on stuffing Nazi religious man, Max Collin had literature into the purse of no objections to his wile's wish an I I-year-old girl. do anything to save bis family and his job. "I know he was detained by the Americans in this coun- try. The FBI or some in- vestigative committee is in- vestigating him stlJI." . Col.lfn was angry. almost shoutiJlC, as he spoke of the press reports or hiS background. "1bey're so parano id anyway," ht said, "saying I'm Jewl!h. 'Ibey lied. 111ey are U'ylJ1ll to clewur us. But the laugh ls on them. 0 u r membenbip has s i n c e Skyrocketed. Our organization is now being hardened, tough as leatber, hard as iroa, losing all the weak members and 18.tini' strooaer ones in thelr place." It was 1n hil father's home, Collin aaid, that he began turning to Nuilsm. "There was this beautiful 90-mlnute special on television," he recalled. "It 1tt>e twilted cross.• thal their four children be It was after the ftn1l arrest raised as Catholics. They set· that a Chicago newspaper lied in Chicago's South Sho~ (The Sun-Times) reported im· neighborhood, where Jews and migration records showed the Irish have long lived as friend-Nazi leader's father was a ly neighbors, and their oldest Jew. ,Max and Virginia Collin boy, Frank, attended the local confirmed it and said the fact Catholic high school, Mendel had never been a secret ,from lits slogan : "Mendel Men arel~~~~~~~~;~===;;;;;i;;;;=====.I Gentlemen"). Max Collin had become head of a drapery finn by then and he could afford to send Frank to Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 111. Frank was a Journalism rnajor for three years. lie began to haunt Nazi meetings in Chicago and dropped out of school in 1968 to devote his full energies to the party. His father discovered what he was up to and ordered him ouf of the house. I See by Todays Want Ad s • \Vhat a job!! FuD-ttme Skipper on a f'ilhin& cruis- er. Work & enjoy It, too!! ''You can imagine how I felt about ii ," Max Collin said. "There was nothing else for me to do. It was either-or." TI1e father and son have not spoken to each other since. Now Frank Collin, 25, lives \'t'ith a few other1 Nazis in the upstairs barracks o 'I Rockwell Hall, a nondescript, two-story bu i Id i ng onJ Chicago's Southwest Si d el which his party bought this • Qua]ity Counts -3l yean of experience in the Old , Country is ottered in the paperhanging. paintin& • decoratini line. • Take your pick, l&dica! An autumn haze mink 1tole, $950 or make an otf!:r on a ailver mink coat. spring from a motor9cle club "=============,,,,,,::::::::::;; [ F 1 INAL 4 DAYS WE CLOSE FOREVER ON THURSDAY NO ITEM ABOVE COST MANY BELOW COST ALL HALF SLIPS R99ular $6 to $12 l.50 Corsets • Girdles • Panty Girdles· YOUTHLINE, GOSSARD, BIEN JOLIE, BELOW POIRETTE, LADY MARLENE COST FOUNDATION GARMENTS ~~-F~::.~~S$3~ .... -.................................. ,,_ $13.88 SUPER SPECIALS GIRDLES & PANTY GIRDLES I n.t. •re •IM MNctM fr•"' e11r ret•I• ''"t ef PAMOUS IUNDS ....... 1tyln .iicl 1~ttt. Limited ,.11...ttty. Sl'ECIAL GIOUP IEG. TO $8.tS WHILI THIY LAST .. . . . ......................................... . SPECIAi. GIOUP IEG. TO $10.tS WHILE THEY LAST ........................................................... . SPECIAL GIOUP REG. TO $12.95 WHILI THET LAST . .. ................................................... .. Be Here Early for Best Selection I $1.99 $3.88 $4.88 EVERYTHING "WILL GO" REGARDLESS Of' LOSS EDITH SMITH INTIMATE APPAREL 2711 EAST COAST HIGHWAY C ONA del MAR • • OUTDOOR FURNITURE SALE! l'llCIS Ill a IM ntl\J SA TUllDA Y SAVE '251 6 PIECE WROUGHT IRON SEATING GROUP FOR PATIO REG,$169, NOW $144 This loYefy seating group includes 2 club choirs, 2 end tables, love seat and coffee table. Each piece is con- structed of heavy gouge •!eel rod with while baked-on enamel finish. Expanded steel mesh tabJe lops. For your comfort ••. 2V." thick •hredded foam filled, box edge t1vfted cushK>ns covered with vinyl print that ,.._.M to solid. US! PfNNEYS TIME PAYMENT PLAN .. HEAT StALED PVC VINYL> tuBE PATIO FURNITURE CHAIR REG. 12.98NOW10. 99 '*".ct for '°"""f . ., city living. f'eotur•• inc.lude: doubl• h1b•lor ar1R1 witli 1cron 9*' c:ontow dnigl'I frame con•huc.tion, front po•t I~ with 1 .... eler1, Avocodo. Don't Miiaftlk gr.at volve, COIH in to Penneys ond KrVe toda1I PVC -k.or, Reg. 17.91 ............................... NOW 14.99 PVCchaioe,Reg.21.98 ..... , ..... ,' ................... NOW l l .99 5 PIECE WROUGHT IRON DINING GROUP $!T6 REG. 89.98 NOW 'I set COMists of 4 1ide c.hoir• aitd an ""'br•lla table. Steel rod coMtr.rctian; tMJ. tabl• top, Mat and bocks with 'l'l'hite ba••d·on ena-1 finilh. 2"" •Mk 10lid potyfoa"' bac.• c.u.hlon' cO'Nred with vll'lyl JHint, ,.,..,.. to aolid. 71t. c10nk-bo.lla ;.,_print" Rog. 34.98 ............. NOW $29 HOWt 1HESE'VALUES ' AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STOR,ESI 42" .... .-..1a .. ble i11 aYoc:odo or ~ ••••••• 1 .... CANOGA PARK IAKEWOOO • Dlttcton' du.....-.~ rol, w•ltt er bloc:k • fl'Ollllll ••••••• 1.C.91 CARLSBAD DOWNEY MONTCIAll ~ TwltwdboudgochalM pad in dtok:e of 2 vinyl prinb .......... .. Tufted box ecf9e choir pacl ;,,. choke of 2 vinyl prirdl •••••••• ·'-" fUllfRTON HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA ' ' I SHOf' SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M:! u " , .. . ' .. ~· ·' ' ' ·• " _, ... .. .,· .-· .. . -. ' . . · . • .. - . • . • " •• . ~ '• ' ·-.. . •• • " " .. ' --· " i ~ I I I I ' ' l • • • ' ' ' I " ' " " " ' ' ' I: ,,,,J ' • ) • ' 1 • .1 • I .... ... _ " , • ' •••" I ' ..... ~ ll ~ .• ,• . .... •. • . 11, DALY "1.AT MOlday, AP<ll l!, nip Populilion·,.Boifih . ' Birth Rate Means Trouble for U.S. . ' . . . .... . . WASRUfGTON (UPI) -, ca~i'il, says ch u r c h.e~ ·e.ffective ·methods o l en- ,,. u.s.·\lrttrra his declift.. should make a moral' iaM coUragint family llmttatlon. ed lbatJilY"'cturinC the put ol ,famijy ,UmltaUon, te~1~ With taxes of' all typu takint 11 v..1t1(..nd stand! 1,.. ,their members that· ii ls tf. , nearly a'fourth. Gt the average J~ . now • 1 rt!ipOOsible In a world of ram:Uy's .• total income, thert tbe .... Jew11n hiatory. limited' resources lo have is virtually no object.Ive the Even ,JO~· tbe number •of· rnort '~n ~wo children ·per gOvtroment Cannot achieve birtbs cGotieues to exceed the famib'. ' throo1b mantpulaUon of tax numbei--o(. deaths . byi .a ()\hers think econ o m..l.c benefits. .atantlaJ.Dwam. LISt year, ~rguments may b1ve .'?nor~ In the ·looc run, the most fot · 1 0 r . ,.. impact than moral suasloo. potent facmf 'ln curb In I every , ~ -pe~ m A cogent ecooorrtic ai:giuilet1t population 1rowtb may be the America. tqel'e ~were~ 17'.I · ·ror family iimilation •can be almost-obsessive concern ol birtl>l 1114•1111ly I.I dOalhs. found 'fn • (ec•nt studf ~ todaJ'.•·young people about the 'lbll ~ d¥-U!c-. popull-the InstitJJte OfLife· Insurance: problem· o f environmental tklo is arowlnt at a ra&e of It indieltes it will cost 1biiut iJOllUtioil. ~ more people about one perceet 'I year. $26,000. 1t today's ~ levels, there are, the harder It Is A one··percent growth rate to feed, clothe,-~ aiid We going to .be to' keep the world doem't;aound like much -for ooe child from birth to ln ~sonably decent condition until )'tu reflect that i;f it age 11. The $26,000 figure,. for human habitation. If this cnntin"' ..U 1wt.ll double the incidentally, is for a middl~ipt trut!i is eleariy understood by pGlal}MM>ti within the next 70 come family . In higher income -young mtn ind 'Women, it is years. ~ . brackets, the cost of rearir\I: certain .to affect 'their at· Tbe ~ Wl.y to . Jtop the a child to age 11 would come · titudes and 'plans about family papu1atMin ""'tian growing is to to more than $50,000. slz~. · '.· pcnuacle·~ families to A third approach is· propose·d . hive fewer d"dldren. At in legislation lntr0ducedfin 1the , ~. ille number • r s.mate recently by Sen. llObeit ~ Queen's Jewels cblldren per family averages \V. Packwood (R.Ore~). ·Under · t'-: out to U. To stabUiu the this bill, parent&· w~· be .D • $510 ()()() lilt of the poputeUon, it would allowed to claim a··$ • *-,i.ol'IDg . , be DIHtlil'y to bring that come tax ei:emplion fort\bf:ir · aTtl'lrlll . down 'to about ' 2 first child, $750 for a ~ GEME~A· (AP) --A plit dtildrm ·per iamlly. At that child, $500 for a tbird•cblld, of ,diamobd.-pendant earrinp leYtl. eacb generation would anit no ei:emption for apy reportedly owned by former pn>duce'. ~ enough childre.n Children beyond th~ Thlls. · 9tJeen Soraya ol Iran has to ....,i... llself. il"te'd of granting rllal, $IGO 6!""gh\ 1511,00t from an 'lbe question is: How can . eztIJ)pliOp , far ea~..,. child ~YJDOUS buyer at a Jewelry a free Dltion indoce its people· regardles! ,e1f.·nurltber, .. ·a.1 it 'luction. to oerpse ratraint in pro-· does al present. the . govem. ,Total proceeds of the auc- creation? ment would ortcr parents a lion Thursday, In which 389 VarioUs answers have. been tax incentive for havtna: small 'Pieces ol jewelry changed put forward. . families,.. . • · ~ -~ ~and§. ·were' $3.25 million, The-. Mkbaef Hamjltgn, T~ ~ doubtlen}"'"Jld " desd'iJled by the aµctioneua a CIDOD ..t W a 1 hJ n CA14!ln ( contfive ~ and ey!"·lD':!e , as .~~ecOrtl 'fo a alngle sale. . ~ . ' ' ' \ ' I • Undetlifling 1lle soft !]O's faslti~s •••. i:CritOwia• lhr811>iece slip al TJfllidda• polyesl!r ancl 11Ylon • hJs a Lytia s~ aarh~lon stretdtlace lrad!Wiais1te .91, lit.' Sfrelch stlaps ' adjosHo'lhe body, White or champa~; 10 t~ 18,, sholt 3)1d a'lefa~. Little Lady; H12 lo . 22~~ 1.N Linaerie. 11111 Tllelma lllcker, Barbizon consul Jani. She'll help you make your seleclions, Tuesday, AjJil 28 in-our NewporJ slO!e. • • u '"" ... ,,.. " ' '· . " • • l" ' ' '· .. ·' ' ,,,. ~ ' " ' IDS' f .. . . . M•~-Tii.n.. fft,JO:OI flllt t~JO: Olhtr o,.,, 10100 till 1:)9 ~ ~J~~---·~~~-N.-•~"'~'·-·~'-''-'~-·-~~-'·~~~·-N_•_•_•"'~C-'"'~"-·~'t''--"-''-'~~~~~~-I e , . \ , • ' r . ' ' ,,. ·. -. --- • .. . , " > ' • J "·· ,· V/•'t .. : •• ' ,. ... , ... ! ' ,. " ' 1 ' • , • I ' . ' • , " VOILA! ' ' VOILE \ • ... . 'I, . ·~ fresli ond pr!"tf new prints in ' critp .fresses from R~ Th.;tlaliqte dcesses·. Light ond oiry in Doc(~l8 poly~ster ond cotton voile. So eosy-col:e! So,eopl. C~isp •rid P!'rfect for the~pn mon!~s:Bright,:bold print~'°'" · f~ily lin ed. G~if.Y storved with colorful flowing chiffon. Hurray for voile. a. front button daisy print , brown and while. or block end .white. I 0 -1 s· 30.00 b. wall p?iper stripe with low pleats, in navy o~d red or gr~en ond purple, S-1B·30.00 c. dia.gonal·print squares, two tone chiffon, In green <ind blue·, or pink ond purple, I 0 • 18 28.00 cosmopolitan clre11•1 96 .. c .. ,. ~ • .. , ... . : b ' " ' . ,. ., •. , ' •· ' ' • ' • .> • ' -4 ... I -' ' ' : may .co south coos! pin•, _son d,iegovfwy. •I bris~, cost• mos•,,'546-9321 ' . ' h ' _, • , _, ' I ~I s op r!lonu•y tl.ru soturd•y I 0 .. m. lo 9:3 0 p.m., .'"'"''Y n0on 'ti 5 p.m. ·-- I ' , \ • ~ J ' . 1 • · RISE AND FALL DF MUSSOLINj' - lt•ll•n Dictator Cam• to ·Tr.gic End 25 Years A.go . - Once.-proua Dictator ~~ti gnominious.End • ........... •r'lt8Mlca -UP'I 'lbe once-praud I t a lj a n anniN were defeated. The na- tioo'• m«Jle and money were at aa Ill-time low. Dlctal« Beoito Munollnl WU runo1ng away. M~lini'a remaim were rerncmd by former 1asc1f1a and hidden In a -., weol al Milan. Tm yeon !all<, they wore ~ and finally ~ io tbe •family tomb near Forli. He had his mistress, Clara Pet:aoct. with him. They were1~::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;~I trying to find safety. But _25 years ago, on Saturday,· April 28. I94S. they found death . Mussolini N¥J been a beaten, broken an,d disposed dictator since the summer of 1943. He · finally was ousted from his 20-year office as Italian premier and was s_ped !rom imprisomnent onl)"lhfO'li)I the intervenUon bf G i! t; m an paralnxJl'erS. He fled north to Milan to form a new "republican fascist" government. But ttie allies struck blow after vic- torious blow, and, on Aprit 21. t94S. took Bologna. Italian parti3an forces ro&e u p throughout northern Italy. TOKEEP 1 ~.' YOU ON'-... .,.' ,1 • TOP •)'~ ··~·~" OF THINGS A panic-stricken Muspolini left Milan for Lake Como, componied by hb mistress sever~ high Fascist officials. To tl!is day, oobody 1mowsll"·-"jj for sure whether he was head- ed for neutral Switzerland or .. ~~ to Bavaria, I ··/ Spendlog the night In ~ ") ' Mussollrii and his ~age ;~·._ '· of sl:J: dVllian cars and 25 -·.' II : Webrmai::ht trucks left .tbe . '•';)-- next morning for M~. ,_,.-i!!!! ~ In not1bem Italy. Alt« an ; • . · -; overnl&l>t stay, the """"."~ ,,. , \, .. , resumed fts journey ai daWd .'•' • ==-= on April rt. .._. · · , At 6' SO a.m. they ~ / ressfu!ly passed 'throulli 'a partlsan road block wfl!Prt Musoollni being seen. I But at 10:30 a.m.1 ii• ~ roadblock In the ~ Musso. partisan GI u.s--:sf•'P e -... Negri dlacovered Mliioo!ini siltq In one ol tlle trucka, wearing a Gennan overotet. and helmet. _ \.;.,~: Mussolini and Miss Petd~ his mistress, were· driven to a fann-house at BOnian.igo: The next day: Satllrday, ~ • April 21, the. eJ~r E'-' rived. He was a balding~Pi~ mootese aceoulXB.Dt and Coqt. munist known In fue ; ~ dergrourd.Ji as ' ' Co I o,n e I Valerio.'i ')1ls ..real name Wl&B Waller .AU~O! . "I'V,e"&"M:~ liberate you/' he t<>l<f-. The ex-die> talor s81d·.fld11Qng. . ' Mussolini and Miss Petacd were driven to the nearby resort town ol GiuUno.. · Mezregra Ind the ViH, llelmclde, a hillside -overlooldnc a lake. t ~. There they were stboft agalnat a stone wall and .<hot to tleath. , ./ Later -night ~ drove the t:Mxties 50 1hilei south to Miian. At 4:00 a.rif. Sunday mofning they were un- cererponiously dumped In the Plau.ale Loreto, along with the bodies of 15 other slain Fascist officials. By mid-morning a cordon of pa,_ hod gathered around tlle z.:"lben a young man klc the dic- tator's skull. , At about 1 'tbe bodies were hung ujllide down from a girder ln a ras station. Bullets were fired Into the bodies. People cuned and. defoled them. Tbot afien->, alter • plea fr<m 11oe ordlbllbop al MU111, the bodies ~ cut down and ~~·1o Ibo._,..." n.,,, were buried ln an unmarked ·cra.Je rut.side Milan. f ;: fo!f<Jwlng ~n.z, _J ft· • IN ' COSTA MESA 3089 BRISTOL ST • Es . .. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 11 A.M. • ~.R•TY DltAWU«i " FREE GIFTS • SEE WOOD CARVER Sp1ciol Ho"d COl'\'M J ...... 801, $10 Vc:tlu• Grand Optninq _,..:,.,_~$1.00 f'1 I• ·. '' " ' ... ' . • . \ • . ·' • •I ' -. ·I ' . ~ • ' I ,• • • ' •" " • •: ' ·• • ' \ .. , .. .. ' -\ ' ; ' . • 'I I I • • •• • ' ' ' .....,, A,tll 27, 1970 - ' • ' _pretty .print·blouscs • • 'jri. cool, carefree voile • 'Pant ~I'-Skirt top. Dae~ polyester lild mttOa voile dromatically printed in iolorful . designs. !o "'t.ar over skirts or tucked _into long . pants. Gove one for Mother's Day. Sizes 10.~8. l!o!h shirts are by Mo(oetlt. Each 11.00 •.·shirt with detachable tie, in black and white b. classic shirt rolored in red, white and blue maymblomesll b. . .. ' '. . " .... ~ ..• i DAILY I'll.OT JI J • t " ' ... ' ' ·,: . ,, . • ~ I I .,. ' ' ·" '' I : , ' .. ·q f .< • •• ~,. . • . • ·~. " • ••• '· \ • ., -, " shiny ~me geometrics ., on .oassementerie cords .,, ' What's new in jewelry I Bold chrome and pwementerie brai d. Bright and shim· mery. We sbo1r three slender cylindrical ~pes hoos fftllll bl~ and white cord· mg. Tassled, too. They're the perfect fin· ishing IOUch. And a great out-of-the-ordin· ary gift for Mom. By Rlchohiv. 5.00 ,, t' 'J '. t' \:. may a> fuhioo jewelry 22 J • • .. moy co sou+li coast pl111, 11n iii• fwy 1t liristol, costa rneu, 546.932 !' shop lnOndaY. thiu 111\1rd1y 10 .•m to 9:30 pm, sundoy noon 'Iii 5 pm , .• •. I . ~/ , . .t. • •• , ' . ' .... ' .. ... ' ., ' ,. • ~ . . ·. .. ., ... -. Jo: ... ' " '· • .i. MAVCO \ I I j MonOaJ, Apf\I ii!7, 1970 Cambodians Shew Itligs Uke soldiers on parade, the Soviet-built Mig-17 jet figh ters stand as one pn an airfield near Phnom Penh. The fighters are now being used to support Cambodian Anny trrops fighting against Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops in Cambodia. Chinese ICBM Expected WASHINGTON (AP) Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird says Red China could d e v e 1 op intercontinental missiles as early as 1973 but Is not likely to be a serious nuclear threat until the 1980s. However, he said in con- gressional testimony released tod.c.y, if Peking gets ICBMs in three years, it could threaten the United States with nuclear blackmail because the American Safeguard missile de f·e n 1 e system wculd not be ready. The three Sa(eguard• an· tlmlssile sites ~ .now by Ute Nb:on admlnillration would defend only part of the United States against a Chinese attack, Laird told .the House defense appropriations subcommittee Feb. 1:1. He said all 12 planned Safeguard sites would be need· ed for full protection against a Chinele attack a1tbough a lesser number wculd gi ve the <ntlre -ta! United States a "very light lrta p~ tedJon." "But ti the Chinese threat came into being as early as 1973," he said in reply to a quesUon, "there wouJd be a gap or several years during which the Chinese c o u I d threaten nuclear blackmail against us." He sakl the first site In the Safeguard system, which also is designed to protect U.S. retaliatory missiles but not U.S. cities against a massive Soviet attack, is now expected to be in operation in 1974. In ather highlighls of the testimooy by Laird and the nation's top defense officials at the secret hearings: -Laird said the Soviets' present missile buildup could put them in a position to gam· ble an a surprise nuclear at· tack after 1975. The United States, therefore, must make hard decisions by 1972 at the latest on how far to expand It!! defenses. -Laird said President Nix· (11115 plan now is to leave a force of fewe r than 60,000 U.S. military advisers In Vietnam but. as in the past, gave no indication oo how soon that could be. -Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, ouftoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. said he has no fear of a South Vietnam surrender when U.S. troops leave "barring one thinl, and that would be the di sin- tegration af the . South Viet~ namese government." He and Laird expressed confidence there will be no such disin· tegration. Laird and Deputy Secretary af Defense David Packard reported a $1.6 billion increase In total Safeguard e<isls - to $10.7 billion from last year's estimate of $9.l billion -U the decision is. made to g<> 1 ahead with completion or all 12 sites by the late 1970s. Packard .blamed the In- crease on lnnation, a stret- chout tn Ume for completion . of the sites, and design ~ changes and better c o st estimates. Laird said the e:rpalliion rt- q!JHted for next year -a third Safeguard antimissile :rite Ind adYanct work on five future sites -would cost SIOO million In file>! 1171. For AdYertlsln( In WEEXom ..• Pllone 642-4321 MoilHl•1 •lln L1•"'91 91SO A.Ill. lo 9110 P.1111. l ' ' . . smile ... ·, there's a personal care SALE at Sears SA VE '3! Sears De11tal Aqua Jet Regular $18.98 · ' •Dental 1qna jet for ting ling tlean gum!j! • C.Jeant around lf'leth wilh a jet power 1pny • Conlrol k.nob1 adjust water preasun: and 4 color eoded 1ip1 are en1·losed in a plastic ca~e. 1597 Rechargeable Quad Action Toothbrush SAVE $3! Regular $13.98 1197 • Up, do~·n-and around motion, e).· ~·lusive nylon 11f!rra 1trl hri1tle for lhorough eleaninir; • Conllt:u handle, recharge• in 11~ O\Oo'n ~land SAVE '5! 2-Speed Swedish l\'lass ager Reµu\ar SJ:!.98 2797 • Heavy duty mo1or tr..ans(en thou· ~•nd! o( vilir11ion1 a minute to rin~er·lips. Two frequencie1 ' Satisfaction Guaranteed~ S .. p Mood1y 1k .. S1l•nl17 v. . ,1 B k eafS 9:30 A.M. lo 9:30 P.M. or iour ,,,oney ac s d 12 N s p M · 11Au, aouucs: AND co. aa ayt ff• ll • • ' I . I 1 _J ' • Sh S 'd 12r· -1)M .., ..... i ... ,i,,,,,,,"'"" op ears Sun ays ~oon to :-i . . . . . " ,u "1: '"" ,,, r 1: . . LATEX PAINT Buys! Sears 1~NTERIOR • • : ' • .. • • • . • . • . ' • ~ ' ' • • Acrylic I-Coat I Flat Wall Paint . • Clinp to brmb or roller, non. wida esc:eptional amoothncu • 'l'ithlianda npcatod ....Iilnp • •~aey clean up with soap and waW • A&sorlinent o.r colon plus white '":::::::::>:l:r--:---:-i. XTERI 0 R Latex House Paint • Orie1 to aftlvety 11'een in)alll lh hour ror le• bug. di.rt pick-- •~~. up . • Finihh rtU111 peeling, bUatt'I"> ini;, flaking ind discolonliort e Co"en 11me or 1imil1r colen in ju11I one 1pplication •Wide eboice of decorator eof· enplwwhitt. 'Ask About Sears Convenient Crerui Plans LATEX FLAT PAINT Utility Interior Latex Flat Paint ''°"' Priced! l?.l Refi nishes walls rconomicallr. Ideal for touch.ups. In 'l':hire only! Srock up now! #2800) SA VE '2! Acrylic Latex House Paint H.egular $7.99 5~7 pl Self-priming on sound painted surfaces. dries in Y2 hour. White, colors. Hurry co Sears! SA VE '2! Latex Semi-Gloss Paint Rep;ular $8.99 699 s•L Dries ro a .soft medium sheen in Y.r hr. Uad free. Whire and colors.&. cellent for wall rcceivil'l8 hard use. More Values From Sears Paint Deparbnent SAVE '72! r~~Ml't~ ' . "" .. ' Sears Portable 1 1 HP Paint Sprayer . Regular $259.99 ·~ 18788 SAVE '25! Sears Compacl Sprayers t R~ul1r S79.99 5488 ~ J~·fL rubbtt·n.yon hose. nfetf nlve. FiberaJw housing. #l)Oll •For fa!ilf!r painli~ on inseclicide, epr117in~ 1ir cleanin1t or inflatin,; 1m1ll air tool• • Gi•es 1 min"Or tmoolh finish • I HP, 2 eylinder, 6.4 CFM •l 4ll PSL 12 piton link. 115354 Sears _..,,..H f-stl..UO .. _.., .. -11 --•-!fl -MMlll ••"'·-·-•II U-·---· .. -Mii al .. ,_• -II --• ---II -WI I--C-Nft-.... -... ..,,.111, ..... ,., _\,,_ -NNI --Ur·ll• ·-· -.. 1-Un --Ml•lll1 ....... I OIMll:CANtl(O. ---!l -.. 14111 ·-M l4lll'" .. l .... tlt ·-·" -"4.-11 Ylilllf ,. .. _,,__ • ........................... ,._.,NIA.11.•Nt, ......... ,IMMnl9t'A." .. """41lwauaulc .. •T-....,hll" "-""""'1 1 . " . ' " Eclipse · Eye Fears Belied · NEW Y~RK (!J') -The major eclipse of the sun last Mareh 7 !ailed to produce the epidemic of eY.e damage the experts m(I. feared, according to a SU ~ by U\~ /f>~ Society i ' die 'Pr<P' . of Blindness. · ._, · But U..\'ourvey ittirned up a relativety and Wlexplained, · number of easts in callfornia, where the • ecli Was ··Or\ly parUally vlslbl . Most states had two to . eases but California, 1&. . 111e na~ : ~ of • eye • '·l\Q!!pital emerge""J' · · ·fOWici Ill . case.. of d86»apJ '!mm · L < looking ihe 'sub, 'noi all perma~. Tbls compares to the 247 Cases found after a 1963 eclipse In a far Jesi com- prehensive survey. A spokesman for the soci~ty said the relatively low' number of cases this time appeared to be the r<SUll of widespread publicalloo of warnings o! lb dangers. One ophthalmologist; com· menting before1 tbe survey return.5 were totaled, sald: "U we do have as few eclipse bums of the retina as I think \Ve will have, I would like to think that it is in large part due to the work of tbe 'I news agencies in cooperation with the medical' pfofession and societies such as the Na- Uonal Society for tile Preven- tian of Blindness." Here is the breakdown of eye damage cases reported: Arizona 4; Califotnia 18; , Colorado 3; Florida 4; l1llpojS 4; Ind(~ 5; Iowa 3; Ken-, tucky 3; ~ 1; Nevada · 2; New. Ham~ 1; New Jer,.y·f; New ii~ l~ · • nectlcut.f; ~~¥or~ cr.Nordi . Dakola ll Ohio '1;··,llhode ts.l~d ,, ~s" 2;·1 Utah 3; V trginla 1, Wbconsln j, 5; Puerto Jlfco 2; ' I Al>ou(, OIOO q~ were Betit to ophthabrlologists and the" society has ri!celved J ,13& rfl>lles so far, with a few mote expected. The socie- ty also cl!eck~ 1,009 hospital emergalcy rooms. The eY.e doctors ~eported t1 cases, Uie hospilalS 8. Many mere persons-, perhaps in the hundreds, sought mfulical aid after look- ing at the · SW1, 1he survey found. ''There were a lot of · fright cases," a spokesman said. Before the eclipse, visible across the naUon, e ye specialists had voiced grave concern about the danger ol burns to the retina, the delicate itmer layer of the eye which transmits imaget ' ·• to the brain. I I . Scout Fair Plan _ Cliiefs . Now:atWork Plans for the Orange Empire Coubcil)lcouµl-Rama slated for May~ at the Orange County Fatrgrwnds are In good bands, according to W. Ed Crane, council president. AssJsUng the council in the annual event are George Hoag I I and William: H. Spurgeon 111, both scout :counct~ vice presidents and W. R. Mason, president of the JrVine e6m· pany and a mlinbet;;O! the council's exeaaUve )dard. other Soout-0,l(ama plan- ners in)lude ~ N. Weed, publisher of ifie D A I L Y PILOT, Dr. baniet Aldrich, UC! cbanc:ellOI' and Brl1adl0r General ff./ W, m.e, corri- mander of El"" Toro ~Marine Base. , Othera l!elplng In the plan- ning inc:lilde Andy Devine o! NewporV Beach and Buddy Ebsen, Blifua Island. Alao John Lawaon and 0. W. Richard of Newport Beach, Jerre Pierson, 1F o u n ta in Valley, Frank DeUlto, Hun- llngton Beach;Millo Marchetti Jr. of Laguna Niguel and Jack Spa'ngenberg or L a g u n a Ee.och. • "'7U-V ...... Jllif 'F;:-... ,.,,, .... -... --. ._ · •• ~ -;.-:·,~·~,-~ ..... ' Mondt)', April 27, 1970 , -.... ,.....-~·· .... SHOP SEARS SlJNDAYS 12 N t 5 P M ~1 ..... 1,. '''" '"'"'""' 00Il 0 • • • • . ;1 .n ,\~I 1 .. 9 .m PM . ~-,, ' ' ' DijLY PILOT JJ . . ' •• '' '\ • • :.Sears ' Tire Sizes F.E.T. F.E.T. 6.50xl3 . 10.95 32° 9.95 1.78 7.35 or 7.00xl4 10.95 41• 13.95 2.04 7.75xl4 10.95 44• 14.95 2.17 8.25xl4 11.95 45• 14.95 2.33 8.55xl4 12.95 49• 7.75 or 6.70x;l.5 11,95 47• 14.95 2.19 •Sean bu the ti1'ea that are jmt right for yon. at a price you· can afford •Sean baa Whitewall• -Sean has Blackwalla e Sem lllli tires With Steel Radial Belts for long mileage and nperior traction • Sean also bu tiret with 4-ply Rayon or· Nylon Cord, aa well aa the new. tires with Fiber Glaiil Bella " ' .• ! •• . '~.'.'I • Sean nationally advertised S!l!el Bedial ti1'ea were put on Shively, Kentucky police cm e E'ml alter 40,07, beat>po11nding mU.. they were still s~er than .""&"1 .. tlrea that eome on moot new can! •Stop In Ill Sears today! •NylonCord •RayonCord • Steel Belted Radial • Fiber Glass Belted ·to. " . ' CRIJSADERP1111;tl.78F.E.T.llld01d'Jlre STEELllADIALPlmt3.llF.E.T.•ndllld'nre ' . AK About Sean Convenient Credit Plans I . ' . 10 Big Reasons .Why You· Should Buy Your Tires from Sears 1. FREE Mounting 2. FREE Rotation . 3,ConvenientCreditPlans 6. Wheel Bfil~cing Available• 7. WheeIAiignmentAvailable 8. Sears Low Prices 4. Wide Selection 9. Courteous Salesman 5. FREE Tire Safety Check 10. Coast to Coast Locations Prices Effective hfJinnlng Today thru Tuesday 4/28/70 Toi..i... BJKkwaU Bl.Wa1 speqi• AadOld ..... 16.95 . 18.95 20.95 23.95 26.95 20.95 F.E.T. 1.78 2.04 2.17 .2.33 2.53 2.19 ....w-B--.. '°".' AadOld ..... 19.95 23.95 25.95 28.95 31.95 ' 25.95 . ,.....,._ --.ii ~ F.E.T. AadOld ..... L78 28.9.5 2.04 31.95 2.17 33.95 2.33 36.95. 2.53 ·39.95 2.19 33.95 ........_ ....W-· -~ ~ _ ...... F.E.T. F.E.T. · AadOld ..... AadOld ..... 2.00 32.95 ' 2.02 '4Q 2.35 36.95 2.25 •43 2.55 3~.9.~ 2.44 '46 2.67 41.95 2.60 2.93 44.95 2.80 '55 .2.61 38.95 2.40 '46 ' F.E.T. L96 2.29 '2.51 '3.01 . 2.66 · 8.15 or 7.10xl5. 11.95 51° 23.95 2.35-28.95 2.35· 36.95 2.77 ' . 4L95 2.60 •so 2.97 ' 8.45 or 7.60xl5 12.95 54• 26;95 2.53 3l.95 2.53 39.95 2.98 44.95 2.80 '55 -3.ll ' . ••Retread. on aound tire bodiee *Whitewalls also available~ most sizes-•~ m~re per tire ('2moniperuraforNew'l...io) • _ · ........ PAIC TA ......00, ltt ... UO lL MONTI ot 14911 &OM 11M11 • M'lll C:&NOOA PAlll'. :S4o.ou1 OUNOAU CH._,., ct 4•11 Olfl91C,& .-0 M e.ftll COMnOM NI 6-JISll, Mt 2·S711 NOU.TWOOO ffO NMf (IUNel •.t10I Sllill,M>nUCltANDCO. COVINA •'6-0611 INOUWOOO oa 1·11t1 ,.. PAI-A .. 14111, alt"""11 $hop Nftflb Mott. thr~ kt. 91)0 A.M. to ~::tO P.M., Sundt17 12 Noon to S P.M. 11£Gtl1foctlon Guaranteed or Yovr M..,-hck" POMONA NA Nlll f'f(O WI 1 ... IU IANTA•MA ••· 1..al7t IANtA fl ....... Mf•IOlt '""'" MONtCA u ... ,,. '°""' '°* MA '" "'' tOftlila ... ,.,, ,. y • viu.-,....,.,. r "i' """"' '° ..... ,, -•• VnMOHI' " .. ltl I • l I ) \ f ~~-~~~.....,.-~~.....,.~~~--~~ ....... ~~ ............... _. .......................................................................... ...,. ........................................... ~~--............. ~ • I ,. JI DAILY PILOT • s ialty ' pee Bread~ A Hoax? 'WASHINGTON (AP) -'Ille ....,.wile who J1111 the few cenb atra for cert1ln .,..ialty·-IDOi' be 8'1· Iii!( nolhlal .. bltlntlally ·dll· lerent rr... plain broads. A Slll'Vey by the Food and °"" Adminlotrlljao, guardian ol the natioo'1 atall ol life. coocludes that In aome butter, egg, potato and butlermllk breads the amounts of special ingredients .... Ul1re8IOllabljl low. In one l.nstanoe, a butter bread . was found to contain no butter at aIL Other bul· ter breads were found to coo- tain .. much .. 2\1 pats. 'l1ae average number or pa.ta found to be present was l ¥i, or ~ of an ounce. 'l'bo FDA survey showed Ill percent of the consw:nen e1· peeled to get S pats at more in their boltel< bread. 'Ille -found u little as one-fifth of an eu or as much as one and one-third eggs in egg bread. The average of half an egg com:. pared to the one egg or more expected by 75 percent or the consumers. The survey· found · similar wide variations in the other specialties: From 'One-third ol. an ounce to just shy of a full ounce of potato flour, from one-ball ounce to nine ounces of but- tennillt. Bakers says the special in- gredients are added to give the breads a distinctive flavor. How much is needed, they say, is largely a matter of taste. "A comparison of the surveys of consumers and manufacturers reveals that some bakers' fonnulas are lower then may be comidered reasonable as to the quantity actually present of the in· gredient that ill named on the label,'' said the FDA in tts report. The report has revtved ac- tion on possible requirements for bow much or ' bow little or the ingrediem '<ov<red in the survey st>o;ld be included in bread. ' 'Ille government proposed standards !or all specialty breads In 19!1, bot when the standards were finally 11et in 11152 tllOy ..,.ered onlJ' while breod, • ""6fe "'-beat bread, ' enriclJed bread, milk bread and raisin bread. ·~ \ OCC Debate Team Wins ·.Top. 41'J«rd T~rated Orange C o a s t College debators won their • ninth straight, sweepstakes J' .... trophy April 18 and 19 at _, Long Beam City COiiege In the Pacific Southwest Collegiate forensics cham. pionships. occ will .._te In the naUonal championships May 4 through May 10 at the University Of MidligM in Ann Arbor. ' , Dorothy MacMillan of Costa Mesa and Cathy Barrett of Corona del Mar, OCC's senior championship entry, reached the semi-finals before losing a clOSe match to Los Angeles Valley. 1be occ teams reached the quarter-finals. 'I'he t e a m s wen Lyal H e r .1 o c of Westminster and BUI Landen of Costa Mesa~ Pierce Lucas of Garden Grove and Don Sizemc.-e of Cotta Mesa, and Mick Miklaus of Hun- tington Beach and E r I c Samuelsop of Garden Grove. Two teams made the semi- final!: Lucas and Sh.emore ~ .l and Samuelson and Mikfaus. In the final round ol debate, OCC'I learn ol Samuelson and Miklaus loot lo Cerritos. CXX:'1 overall ~am effort, however, won the flnt place sweepstakes lrqlby, leaving the top.rated team undefeated In PSCFA competition this ·year. . Barbara Burg"9, B.9Shtant professor of speech at the jtmior college and foremic le8m coach, said that the team still n e e d s a~ ,..,,..,,alefy $1,500 in order to &tDd tbt t11tirt forensic team to the naUon:at cham- ........,. iD Michigan which b lew than two week.I away. "Without the balance of the $4,000, we canno& send all twelve oC the forensic team members lo the Mkhfgan compeUUOll, '' Mm Burgm -.. 'Ille team hll hid local .,. M~, AP<ll 27, 1970 ' .. port from trVer&I ctl v r c ... ,.......... .. •ell .. Ille student body .. ~ c- College. Newport #1 Fashion · Island· Newport Center I . i i • 644-2200 • • . -· -·~::-:1;::=­ T -- --- ---. ···--·--•• • • -J ' ' ' ' ·>" ' . • ;~40.'" ·, . ' ,.. , I • , , , . 1, -.f , r I ' Mon ., Thurs., Fri. 10:00 till 9:30; Other Days 10:00 till 5:30 • -• ' • ···-----------~-..-·-------~------~----~-~--· ·~,-·--~·• ... --...--·--·-------.. ------·-~~----..,,--:~-------~...,~-n • • BRIDGE PRitEs· GO UNDER WRAPS -Prizes will be awarded at each table ~uring Panhellenic's annual 'Spring Dessert Bridge Party on WedJiesday1 May 6. Putting the r1f>bon on an oversized Flower Powe r replica are (left to right) the Mmes. John Foote, J . M. Shea Jr. and William Bird Jr. Proceeds from the afternoon affair will be used to augment the American Field Service fund for Laguna Beach. Garden ·club Plants ... Seed for Greenbelt Nothing is more beautiful than a flower , and when one combines hundreds of them, the result is almost sure to be breathtaking. One of Laguna Beach Garden Club's most notable events, the annual flower shO\\', will be presented on Friday, May 1, from 1 to 4 p.m. Using the theme Approach to Beauty on May Day, the show this year yill be combined with a garden tour as a benefit for the La· guna greenbelt. Horticulture and junior exhibits will be staged .on the,patio of the Laguna Beach home of Mrs. \Villiam F. Robb, club president. Flower arrangements will be designed for specific plac~ment In the lovely hillside home of h1rs. John Burri overlooking Emerald Bay. Moving closer to the ocean, the garden of the Ernest A. Becker residence overlooking the oceanfront will delight viewers. Tea will be served in the Becker residence by Mrs. Ben L. Hartley and her committee. Entries in the horticulture, junior and some artistic classes ·are OP.en to anyone who w.ishes to enter, according to Mrs. Andy J . Anto5ik, show chairman. Schedules are available from Mrs. Antosik's shop at 1524 S. Coa st Highway. Other committee members include the Mmes. J. WilJiam De· vaney, staging; Burri, artistic entries; John Norton, horticulture en- tries; Charles Achauer, artis.tic classification, and Arnold Kearns, horticulture classification. Also on the committee the Mines. Mary belle Tilt, Lyle Inger- ick, placement; Neil Lewis, judges and clerks ; John Reilly, conserva- tion, Eldon Stark, junior exhibits, and Paul Silvius, special exhibits. Tickets at a cost of $1.50 per person are available. from Mrs. Charles Dillinger, 1414 Temple Hills Drive. . ' ' l l •• : • '. l.' • • • BARBAJtA• DUARTE, 494.MU • ....,, ...,,... 11; ,,,., ' , ... " In" the C~rds . ' Fete :Tallies· AFS · Funds Mrs. D. M, Hummel once again will open her Three Arch Bay home to members of Laguna Beach Panh~l­ Jenic and their friends for the Annual Spring Dessert Bri•ge Party. , .. Proceeds from the affair Will benefit the Laguna BeactL Ch~pter :of 'AineriCan FieJd Service which brings two fofeign student to Laguna Beach each year. Student's stµdy in the high s'cbool and live with their American families during. the school year. The dessert bridge will begin at 1 p.m. on Wednes- day, May 6. Other activi,ties wilJ be provided for those not wishing to play bridge .. Now a matter. or~traditipn, the annual party has been staged successfully for. the past 13 years. Mrs. John Foote is chairman and will be assisted by the Mmes. Clyile W. Phelps, Benjamin J. Vest, Emer- son B. Milnor and Charles D. Klamm. Members also are reminded to mark their calendars for Wednesday, June 3, on which day there will be a luncheon and installation of new officers in Irvine Coast Country Club. . Writers Create Luncheon A IUlltj,leon in Hotel Laguna on Monday, May 4, will welcolne two new talente4 members to the L a g u n a Branch of the National League ol American Peq Women and see installation ol. officers. Mrs. Josephine Barrows of · ·Laguna Hills and Mrs. Alice Stacey of San Clemente wtU transrer membel'lhip to ~ Ali Colony groop. Mrs. Bar; rows, a member of the Saratoga Branch, 11 a· formq newspaper: woman and authof of . a l}ook of. poem1. She became affiliated with the Pen Women while working for the Denver Post • Mrs. Stacey ol the Miami; Fla. club, is an author ~ three books and has had mor4 than 200 articles and storiei published in maguines iDO eluding the New Yorker. : A high school and colleg~ English teacher for man:i years, Mn. Stacey i1 a facult.1 consultant at the Unlverslt,1 of Ca!U"1lla, San Diego. Miss Anne Maguire, retirini president, will transfer the gavel to Mrs. Thelma Paddoc::IC Hope. • Proceeds from the special event are earmarked for the Laguna Beach Greenbelt Fund. The club also supports civic beautification and state and national programs including the Roadside Council, Au- duboµ. Society and Dimes for Pines. CHECKING IN WITH FLOWERS -Members·of the Laguna Beach Garden Club sign. up for special divi- sions 91.. the annual flower show. Cbatrnlen, tbe Mmes. Eldon Stark, junior division ; Neil Lewis, jud- ges; and · John 'Norton', horticulture (left to right), . anticipate more than 100 horticulture and 30 artis· ·Other incomini officers 1n: dude the Mmes. Antoinnette Wtking, vice pre s ldent j Rigmor ~. re cordin ' secretaryi Gertrude Gardner, c o r r e sponding secretary;· 'Arllila WandUng, treasurer; Dorothy stepbe~, auditor, tic entries. · Ind iwly Krikl, -· : If Players Knew the Scor~., Game's Tally Could Soar • ' ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am sick to death of the emphasis on sex in marriages. Set. is fine for those who enjoy it, but the success of a marriage does not depend on it. To put it bluntly. people just don't spend that much time in bed. ANN LANDERS ~ . myseU and go home. Wby does she have to touch r:ple? Doee this indicate tbe·presence o a psychologicill:protilem? -" KlTCHENER, ONTARIO DEAR KITCH : Yes. lt 1 1 1 p'ofdlolotlcil pr-oll rlpt -but I.be Pnblem 11 yMn, atl lten. Some lodMdul1 do Doi Ille IO be -lied My husband and I respect each other, yoa that yoa married • man wbo was we like each other and we are kind to each other. He learned early in our willing to "adjust 1111. au appetite ac- maniage that I was not keen on sex cordlngl;r. 0 Nol all 11usbudl would settle so he adjusted his sex appeUte ac-for TV ud pa nun.my. cordin&ly. We watch a lot ol. TV and Your m.aniqe, 11 yoa describe It, play gin rummy. Mat))' of our frieods aoandi dill u dl1h1ter te me, Jaat to whom su was very important art ti Bed now divorced. We are In our middle tr Joa ud yoar 111.a.Dd are II • ' 40s 'nd have a very satisfying tnd wbo am I to knock It? I PY wltllout pleasant marriage with VM'J lilUe sex. an7 llesltailon, howtvtr, w1tl 1e11 your Print this If you dare. -MONTEREY marriage would be 1 wllole lot 11etttr. DEAR MONTEREY; Htw locky--10< _ DEAR ANN LANDERS : Whal Is wrong with my friend? We both are grown women with familie1. She is a fine person and I am fond of her but r. can't stand the way abe ltolds my ann or touches me whenever ... we talk. I have seen her do this with olhen and I keep woodering if they are as irrilated by it as I am. Yesterday, at a tea Uils woman placed tier hands on my shoolders I S we spoke Eid I became so •P*t I had to "'"'° bit • ,etMil • --· " lll)lel ·be m111t et.cue Malett ead &• laome, II 1trlt111ly ovenuctlni. Ponlbly )'ta ... ,. • .,...I.eel ·~ dplO.y for tlll1 wtmU wMdi you ire aniWll( to -~ .... to yoanelf. Or ""'"" ....... hid. ,.. el --yoa diJUked 11 a ddld -someeee wllo put ber ltand1 oa )'OI la a slmllor rub.Ion, Ueden&&Ddlng yoar feeU111 may llttp ,... red... )'01ll' llotllllty lo dll1 lrleDd wM, l lllU'I )'OI_, '-'' lite ·111p1e11 klu lllal 1be bolllers you. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why ls it that When a woman lo!es her hu.!lband she i.!I the center of attention -(or three weeks. Her home i.s filled with people. There are too many phone calls. too many letter• and telegram.1, too many visi tors and too much food. Suddenly -the phone II siltnt. No one comes. She is very much _alane. Now thal I look bock, I rtallze my home was a toclal center. t1M! food was plenUlul, tbe liquor Bowed trecly aod everyone hid a jolly Ume, under the gui1e ol "cheering me up." People love to go. where the acUon l! and for Uiree. aolld' weeks It was at my house . I have cotne to the conclusion, Ann Lander•, that people are no darned 1ood. -REALIST IN STAMFORD, • CONN. DEAR IUW.JST: Did you tlllll ·h. w11 1•ba1 te last fore,.er? YOlll' lamlly aitd frteDdt tried to take your mlad fllf )'tQr p1tf w.ile die wound.I were . rr..lo, 11111 -ly ,.. dldll't upeel ... --I IO It M t.defloltely. Petplo mut reW. .. leadbig tbtlr en UV.: ._.. " ...... Ille ...... ~ I sqpst ,_ jolo tt -and 11Gp wlllril, ... Ill sell plly. Too many coupla go from malrimonJ lo acrill!Oll)'. Don't let your maniaP. nop be/ ... tt ..., started. Send ,,. AM Landen' bootlet, ''Mll'l1qe -Wblf lo Expecl" Send your -lo Am Landen In \care of the DAILY PILO! encl91IJll SO centl In coin and 1 l!>nc. ltampecl, Mlf...tclmled envelope. • ' j • ' • ,, l I I ~;•,JI !IAI L.V PILOT MoMa1, April 27, 1970 ~~· Horoscope ~·· A(lnuol Convention . . Pices: Time ·Persian -Legend-Te ls- Ju.nior Club Winners For Discretion • 'Ibe put year's commun1ty where flnt place wlnoe:n In TUESDAY ·:· APRIL 28 ' By SYDNJlY OMARR . ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent on friendships. Personal magnetism and ablll- . ty to communicate desires. ·~ ~gnificant changes occur. Be • -~:_ Princess ""' .... -· ~·-~~· ~-.. .. ··: \, t ~ '· --·-... ---,~·-····--·-· ~ . ___ ,,...,_ ..... .. ~ ~: \ . ---~ .... -... -·---'(1' .. .. ----.. -· ---~ ,. ~ ·--~ ..... -.. ""T'.~ Ii(.· -··::.-.::."· I "' --· ·-----... --. --·~ "' --· ' . Pure line, pure flattery - you will look s l i mm e r, younger, livelier in thi s pleat· , ·flared princess. For blends, linen. lndispensable Basic! Printed Pattern 9357: New Half Sizes JOlh, l21f.r:, 14 ~. 16'k, 181>, 20'k. Slul 14\\ (bust 37) takes 2% yards 45- inch. · SEVEN'n' -FIVE CENTS ror each pattern -add 2S cen~ . ·for taeh pattern· for Air Mail · and Special Handling : ~ .. ·otherwise third-class delivery , : -will ta);e dlree weeks or more. 4 Send to Marian Martin. the f . DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 \Vest 18th St.,' New York. N.Y. !OUI!. Print NAME, AQDa.F.4S ~with·ZlP1 SIZE and STYLE ll!JMBER. BIG, ·N.Ew 'SPJUN<l-sUM- MER PATTERN CATALOG. Ill sty~s;·free pattern coo pono !iO ·cents. INSTANT . SE;W!NG BOOK sew today, w~ar tonl9trow. $1 . INSTANX FASHION BOOK -what-'to-We'ar · anSWers, ac- cessury, figure tjps! Only $1 . adaptable. Move wlUt the times. You could recelYt at· tractive offer, Be ready, TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): You are challenged to give your best. Realize that love can conquer Wlleemly odds. If this is· reeognlud you at- tract important allies. You get chance to take signlficant steps forward. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Cood lunar aspect t,od"y coin- cides with Inspiration, creative now, ability to bridge genera4 tion gap. Many who were in- different can now become strong allies. CANCER (June 21-July 22):' Con~m over financial status of mate, partner becomes evi· dent. State your views in forthright manner. Do not duck responsibility. Older m. dividual plays prominent role. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Best lD permit others to have spotlight. This is not easy _{or you, but probably is necessary today. Wise to play waiting game. Gather information. Be positive of legal position. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Sense of humor is great ally. Associate, co-worker may create a scene. DD not com- pound error. Accent the moderate. Remember resolu· liDns concerning b ea It h , recreation and diet. LIBRA (Sept. 21-0ct. 22): Your intuition pays dividends. You seen to insUncUvely per~ive where the action ex- ists. Do not play games ; the .stakes coold be high -aP.d for keeps.·Member of opposite sex is involved. SCORPIO (iJc:t. 23-Nov, 21): Basic jssues dominate. Home base of operaUons is best for; you today. Individual with big ideas aUempts to gain your1 favor. Be discriminating. Analyze what you hear and .... SAGITTARI US (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): You may get plen ty or conversation and little ac· tion . Refuse to be leaning: post for relative or anyone else. Be sympathetic, but know where to draw line. Message, short trip is indicated. CAPRICORN (Dec .. nJan. 19): Emphuil on money, ability 1\1 gllin Wbll la re- quired. Key is information, commmication. Come out or emotional sbelL Speak your mind. Written word can proYe of immense Yalue. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):·· Cycle high; take lni- tiaU:ve. circumstances favor yolir aspirations. Purchase of apparel is favored. Improve your appearance -you mar. have to make surpri!e viJit. PISCES (Feb.-lt-Marcb 20): Be .djscreel, \' ou may be pro- v ided with confidential in- formation. One who sweet. talks co u 1 d have ulterior motive. Know di ffe re n c e betweed fact · and f a n c y , Protect yourself in clinches. I e r v I c e efforts of junior each category received sliver clabwomen in the Orange trayL ll!itrld, Cl!lifornla Federation The Junior Ebell Club of of Women'• Clubs. JunJor Newport Beach won flrata In Memberslllp were rewarded the categories of education, dwinl lhe annual district con-fine arts and yolllb and ven\JOn. Eastern Fantasy. seconds in federation, press, -Clililulnl-tliO twO'<l>y•vont-: iiieiiibiiril\lp·aoo build-a b<tt•" tn Looi Beach was the awards community • .., banquet, A Le,end of Penia, Hun~ Beach Junior1 won seconds in education, Americanism, fine' arts and aafety. San aemente Junlort received a secood in Americanism. and a special award in fedenlUon. A Jug of Wine, Loaves of Bread andGood Compony Ingredients fo! a gourmet dinner honoring VicJor Andrews. chairman of the board or South Coast Community 1-lospital, are displayed by Old Brussels restau.rant owner Lucien Brack for Miss Fern Ran- dolph (left) and Mrs. Samuel Garst. The fund-rais- ing benefit which begins at 6:30 tomorrow night will be contributed by Brack with arrangements made by the hospital's Silver and Gold Chapter. Tickets at $10 per person may be purchased at the aµxiliary office in the hospital. Lakewood Graduates Welcomed L Campaigners Recognized The Women's Division of the United Jewish Welfare Flmd, under auspices of the Jewish RIDING the trails of the Los Angeles included ports-of-Community Council of Orange Peering Around %1 ,000 acre Flying E Ranch call al San Juan, Curacao, County, is sponsoring a Plans for a class reunion for on the desert near Wicken· Cartagen, Mazatlan and Aca· luncheon Thursday, April 30, Lakewood High School will be b d pulco. at 11 a.m. urg, Ariz., were Mr. an H ed I th N " formulated during a com· onor a e ewpo. ~er Mrs. Jack Nelson of N....mnrt AT llOME t c~ M I will be lh h mittee meeting taking place at v .. rv n ..,.,.,,a esa nn e women w o Beach ud Mr. and Mrs. Jim 7:30 p.m. Wedneaday, April 29, Ray and Mr. ud Mrs. Clyde after travellng to New York participated in the 1970 cam- In the FoUntaJn Valley home Johnson of Corona del Mar. is Misty Lee, IS, a student paign. Mrs. Eugene McClin- o! Mrs. Robert (Cari Bock) al Newpcrt llArbor High tock o! Newport Beach is Marten. HOME from a Caribbean ·Schoo.1. Mils Lee attended the campaign chairman. T w 0 meetings eoncerned cruiae aboard the Princess annual Girls Clubs of America Rabbi Hairn Asa will speak Publicify ' To Gain Attention An open d~on featuring publicity and news letters wilt 1 be directed to the attention of ,,Orange County Council of Hospital Volunteers at the meellng Thursday, April 30, at 10 a.m. in Garden Park Gen&al Hoopital, Anahetm. Mn. William La nis ton, council president, will preside. Mrs. Jack M. Lyons, presi- dent of South Coast -Com· munlty Hospital's All1illary will discuss interesting fads that came from the California H o s p t t a 1 .Association con- vention. Assisting her will be Mrs. MBthew Kenney o! Hoag Memoria1 Hospital Presbyter- ian Auxiliary. 11ie council's purpose Is to better inform the public of Yolunteer duties and to -ex- change ideas among the aux· Ularies and guilds in the coun- ty. The Costa Mesa Juniors received a second in mental health . .lflle Seal ~ club received a flrst in con· servation. the Kraft com- mWlily serVice award and • first in build a heller com· munity. . A second in memberahip was won by the Laguna Beach J unlors and lhe second place winner ln the Hallmark Art contest was Ronald L e e Bays OC Huntington Beach. ' Girl Watchers Get Legful Girl watchers uveylng the spring leg scene will &'l an eyeful ol color~ Soft pinks, blues, yellows, lavenders, greys and cream colors create the total look. Patt.ems areTetuming. Some hose feature clocks at the ankle, outer leg or up the back of the leg, while others incorporate contrutina: bands or floral motifs. IN THE LIDO SHOPPING AREA IT'S MONTH· END SALE AT 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH with reuniting the c1us of l96l Italia ts Mrs. Dorothy Howell conference as wimtr of the on his experiences in Israel already have been conducted of Newport Beach. .Her 17-day regional cooking_ contest_ for and 1'i1ichael M~ .will and locations for the reunion __ 1r_i:..p_fro_m_F_o_r1_La_u_d_en1_al_e_t_o_c_a_1_uonua __ · _• _A_rizoo __ a_and __ u_taJi_. __ •_nt_e_ri_ai_n_. -------"===================== dance have been discussed. Heading the committee ls 1961 senior class president, Bill Brand, who will conduct the meeting. AddlUonal in- formation may be obtained by calling Mrs. Marten, 968-1961. Waist Watchers TOPS Waist Watchers assemble every Thursday at 7 p.m. in Circle View School, Huntingtoo Bead\, 1FABRLC SALE j ~ • c£~fl{ M1Ds • I • I .. ! • SOLID COLORS • 1 sturdy. machine washable cotton for fun and sun wear REG . 91c YD. VALUE 36'1 wid. 100,-. cotton guar. w11h1bl• c YD. COTTON S'ORTSWEAR PRINTS 'N SOLIDS ' I SOUTH COAST PLAZA mad, mod matchmates for summer fun wear VALUES TO $!.19 45" wld• gu1r. w11h1ble llr-?APth'lf_'~ HUNTINGTON CENTER COl'A MDA HUN,IN•TON llACH , It ..... At ... 0'-f• fr....,-141·1116 llll~qff At 1.-ch le•l .. •t4 -lf7·101 I o,.. M•n4., fltrll M;., 10 'rll t -Set1rll91 'rll ' -S.lilMkt' 12 'tfl I c YD. • TO.PAY IS . APRIL 27th I'"' • -,,. s1 .. 221 Slz• 20? Siz• 18? Slz• 16? Size 14? Size 12? • o ' o • ' I • ' o o o ' • • • • o ' o ' ............... ' .. . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ ..... . .................... .., "I a n1\cr:-·11lr1111f'd , wilh lhe t'C!!'tilts. Now J ran li"'i111 t ifl a hikini and like it. '1 •·.\rter nunterou!I I!~ Ill!>, 1 c11n1e lo t ;loria J\1:ir:-hull' .. 111111 Jo:-.I i I :!: i UC' f1t•s in 111r fir .. t I 0 'isil!>. '' \Vorld'8 IHrJt'rt<f '-'"llCll 1111il 011eralrrl Fi,i:ure <:onlrol "Sr11tcn1. f2ti lo1·atio11 :s in Citlilorni ~ Be 1 Size 20 ·by May 12 Be • Slz• l8 by Moy 14 Be 1 Size 16 by May lS Be 1 Size 14 by May 17 Be 1 Size 12'by May 18 Be 1 Size 10 by May 20 ••f lo.~1 60 inrh r " 1n1d j-1, /'o.1111dt<. I now fcf' ""ondr1·· ful. 11'3 hclllcd me in 1nanywa~I'. 1 ••Jn lhrcc week!! l "C111 frorn :1 ~i7.1' ),') lo a i<iz1• I .~ drr""• I couldn't hcli cvr ii "·ould h11111Jr11, 11111 I 110 now.'' I :;z .. ... 'll"--- • •• lhc tirnc it t:1kr!i for e11ch individual 111 :1 ch iei·e hl'r j::oal 111ar 'arr dependinc on age •nd olher farlorl'. 1-lowever~ al f';lori• J\1ar:sh111l resuh11 fur "''eryone are #Uarantee.f. ·r~u u " 1h .. (Ire"" fli:r:e you '>11111 to "'(•ar. "''will lell you how ntany vi:-il,; ii la.S..et1 a nd ~uarn11le1! that vou "'·ill reach your J.l'.oa l. In f11el. t10 poeiii,·e are ~·e thal you "'·ill obtain your objective we ~·i ll t!ve n let you hiti•c }~REE OF C:l-IARGE any and all further visit11 until ~ou reach your goal. $20 GIFT CERTIFICATE ICllp Olt tltll co1po111. Yolid April 27 tttrougJt Moy J for S20.00 011 011y Gl•rl• Mcnstt.11 r109r11111 r1qordlHS of how llttll yo1 11ffd to low. f;Joria ~farsl1all"11 Al.WA l 'S cost:s le!s, n1ucl1 Je~s, than 01 l1 er". alonr.) r•ri\1111• 1il:i~ roo111 fnrilitic11 for *iltla ll childrc11 . Call for .~Jl EF. is:i1n pl1• 'i!il, Actually t1se u11dr.r !Ot1pcr'i~io11, thr t;Jori11 ~larshnll n111chine11 d~· i>i1tned f.,r quicS.. @:1r•: "'·ri1tht 1·educ1.i.on. l\"n <:l1ar,i:e. No ohl ij!lll iou ror triul \'i:-i I. C.onui ill r 1n11rol'lahlr, 1·11sual rldthr ~. Di ~rohiu .. lllllll'C('!ililll'r. ,, ... : Al(I-: ~·o'I' 1\ C.Y.\I. FIGURE ·CONTROL SALONS 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 (2 Block! East or Balboa Bay Club) 184o"w . 17th STREET ,43.9457 SAl<!TA ANA Al.SOIN .A11.tt.1111, C1¥1-. CllMt!ew, hwltly1 ., ...... 1 Lai•w-4, a.. Y .. -. Lfft . .._., Hrw'°" leodl. H. Htllyw..cl, O~. POM41-. 5tnl DI .. •, S1111t1 A,.., S..t• l11r••,., S111tlllll4, f .... '°"• TonaMI, Wlllnl.t. fcJ Con1o·ial1t 1970 Glorfo Marshall ~fat. Co. Irie . n r ' • '· d '· f 'I '· d • n d ' d b ,. I· • l• p h • .t e w le ,, ... ···-~=--------·------ • I • r.: .. ;..tay, A1?'11 27, 1970 There' ii a job·lor you tn the Harbor Area -a position needing no other qualllicatilln but your time and willing ·!Hinds. • · There are lhqusands ol these openings !or men and women 'from teenagers to senior citizens. Now is the ·tJme· to get involved in your com- m unity's n~1 .. You can hel p a youngster learn or ease the but<fen of lqnellness for the elderly. • • 0 POSl;r110NS PROMISED Hundreds of ppsitions are awaiting your tele- phone call IQ~ th,e VOl!inteer Bureau atM2--0963. Call- ers will be assJsted from 9 a.m. to 1 ·p.m. ev.ery weekday. The bureau is located at 325 N. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. COMMUNITY FRIENDS Volunteers· are needed by the Mental Health As~ociation of Orange County Activities Center to assist with ~. crafts, music, therapy, games, sptcial activities and listening. The Community Friend can help qte convalescent learn to cope with the problems· ot everyday living and get setUed tn . his cOminUnity. · ART.S CAND CRAFTS • Tbe· Villa, a borne for alcoholic w.omen, ne~s volunteers .to help Jns.truct in arts and crafts p~ gr~s. · W~LL BABY CLINICS · The Well Baby. Cllnics provide excellent trifant care for those ·wh<»otherwise would not be able to get Utis ·care. Staffed :by an area pediatrician who donates valuable ·hours, the clinics are in Deed of volunteers to 1assist the community nurses. LAPIDARY CLASSES A teacher for an evening lapidary class at the Harbor Area Boys Club is needed. The club may be called at 548-9387 by anyone wishing to volunteer. Georgia-bound DAIL1 PILOT JI)- IF IOllTTllG ISN1 YOUR THING w. 11 ... , 111•th•r tN•t 14•• for yo11 -It'• 1H1ctlc1I, lt't f111t -corn' In 01141 1111 THI KNIT WIT South C011t 1'1111 LOWll MALI. .. , ........... ...,,. .. COSTA Mu.\ Pia. 141·2111 , Picking Their _fJor.aJ_ Theme for Fashion Show Couple Repeat Vows Everything's Coming. Up Roses again will theme the fourth an- nual dessert fashion show sponsored by Temple Hillel Sisterhood o! Huntington Beach. The show on Tuesday, May 5, at 7:30 p.m. will take place in the Sheraton Beach Inn, Huntington Beach. '.<Picking" the theme are (left to right) the Mmes. Laurence Surfas, Mel Lewtn and Herb~rt Porath. An afternoon service in the C o m m u n i t y Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach link- ed Patr~ia Ann Bu r ke, Laguna teacher and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Burke ol Lompoc, and Lt. Bryan Arthur Mace, IOR of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mace. of Fun Funds Luncll will be served at noon Wednesday, April 29, when the Ladies Auxiliary of the Orange Cou.-y Association for Retarded Chi).dren sponsors its "Why do I gai n weight ? :J I never sit d own ~ to eat ." ..... ·i· WEIGHT~ WATCHERS. • Research annual Research Luncheon. Members and guests will gath~ at 10:30 a.m. in Lake Park Clubhouse, Huntington Beach for a friendship hour before the ltmebeon. . Door prir.es and special features will highlight the benefit, whlch will .... isl tile research fund Ii the National Association in its study of the causes of retardation. Mrs. Aroold, Lindberg of Huntington Beach is serving as chairman of.the event. WE'R! HAVING OUR ANNUAL BIG SAIL·A·BRA TION! For CINCO de MAYO! HURRY! HOT TAMALE SPECIALS! DRESSES $1500 Wl •E UP TO SIO THE REAL ' ENCHILADAS GROUP SHIFTS • DRESSES $5.00 MERRY MARGARITAS Crepe $500 $kirts LONG & SHORT Cocktail Dresses BLOODY MARIAS AT HOME WEAR SAL TY DOG GROUP CAPRI SETS 40% OFF ·~;::~ IA LIDO -NEWPORT BEACH 673-1970 Gary S. Walls Claims Bride Making their first home in Westminster are newly mar~ ried Donna lnglehart and Gary S. Walls. The couple exchanged wed- ding rings and pledges before the Rev. Dav id Walker in the United Methodist Church of the Good Shepherd, Westmin- ster. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WtWam F. lnglehart, and the benedict is lhe stepson and son of Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Allen, all of Westminster. Atteoo.ing the bride during the evening nuptials were Kim Fennimore, maid or honor; Sharon Jnglehart, her sister; Mrs. George Walls, and Caro l yn, Kilpatrick, bridesmaids. Jennifer Gooch · ·was ·flower girl and Jody Hansen was ring bearer. William D. lnglehart, the bride's brother, was asked to stand as best man. Ushering duties were assumed by John B. lnglchart, another brother and Mike Robertson. The newlyweds both are MRS. G. S. WALLS Evening Nuptials graduates o f Westminster High School and are attending Golden West College~ SC Groups Presenting Scholarships Meeting jointly tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. w i I J be Orange County and Los Angeles Town and Gown Junior auxiliaries of the University of Southern California. The home of Mrs. Albert Prove~ of Pasadena will be the 'set.ting. During the gathering Mrs. Harold E. Sanford J r. of Costa · Mesa, scholarship committee chairman, will submit names and quaWlcations of young univel'Bity women' needing financial assistance. Following, ·the membership will vote on recipients. .Double Feature Kerry Grant, a graduate student of music at UCI will be guest speaker when the Eastbllff Philha r moni c Assc'.>ciates meet in the home of ~rs. Carl Mullen Jr. Wednesday, April 29. AlllO featured during the 11 a.m. meeting will be a string quartet of students from the university playing a. program of Bartok. Mrs. Russell Pang, hospitality chairman and her committee will serve a buffet luncheon following the music program. Felt Pen Technique Pictured Upland. The double ring rites were perfonne4 by tile R e v • Everett B. Cowan. MIBS Janet Godden "'"" as maid of honor with U . James Wella, best man, and LI. Paul L'Esperance and Capt. David Morgan, ushers. The new ·Mrs. Mace wu graduated from Lompoc High School and the University of CalUon;lia at Santa Barbara. She taught in Costa Mesa and hu been a teacher at El Mor- ro School for the past four yean. Cost.a Mesa artiat John 'I1le b r J d e gr o om was Burgess will present a graduated from Azusa High demomtraUon of the felt pen School and Citrus J u n l o r technique tomom>w at 7:30 College. He a t tend e d p.m. for lhe Coot& Mesa An Callforula stalA! Colle&• al League. Fuller1on hef .... IM!l'Ving u • M,., Carey Cowan will 11.<hJ.!. pilot. with the U.S. p!°eSkle over the business Jda1 WIS Corpl .. BE FREE ... OF FACIAL HAIR . . FOR EVER. L ET US SHOW YOU tj.OW EASY IT JS ' TO REM OVE EXCES S HAIR ~ITH MODERN EL.ECTROL.VSIS, MEDICAL.LY APPROVED.•• SAFE, FAST, GENTLE• . CONSULT WITH OU R LICENSED TECHNICIAN IN OUR BEAUTY S AL.ON • ROBINSON'S . NEWPORT session preceding the program The newlyweds wlll raide In in Adams Elementary Sdlool. i'~G~l~yoco;",;,~G;;:a;,. =====~~~~~~:;:::::;:;:::::;~ Burgess Is noted for his ll- lustratlons of books a n d magazines and his selection of scenes from Newp o rt Harbor aOO desert areas. He has exhibited for t he California State Fair, National Academy Galleries in New York, Harvard Club In Boston and the Palm Desert Museum. The artist is a member of the Amer I can Watercolor .Society, Society of Western Artists, Archaeological Survey Group and Costa Mesa Art League. Mrs. Rkttard Ingram will take charge Of the refreshments, assist«! b y members of her committee. iSANTAANA STORE CLOSING SALE STARTS TODAY! . - (Open 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.) STOREWIDE DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ALL MERCHANDISE WILL BE SOLD . . All sai. will be made on a flmoCOme, fim·•rved baels. . : . w•r 101 P••P•r yo1rself wtt• 11 Eliz1bet• Ardi1 lice tre1l•e1t You'1e a woman of lhii 'O's. Oli the eo.: . . Involved. And, )fdlen ·ydl di> l!f!e llme lo relax . , • lllalce lhat lttne.c(llllL Visit our Elizabeth Anten Red Dool T1eatment ' Room. Let our 'expert give your skin a wOflder fulty refreshing treatmeilt; , , . . and a new make·up. You'll not oo'ly took your YefY best. , , you'll feel marvelous! _ Complete treatment with make-up, ll;M Beau~ Studio, All sa'-flna~ no refunda or exchantn. Sorry, no mall, phOne or C.O.D. u,. your Hoggarty'a Charge; lankAmaricard, Maller Charge, ca~ or check. '!~nlcures •Pedicures • Facials • Etecliolysis THIS STORE CLOSING SALE ONLY HAGGARTY'$ SANTA ANA 40 FASHION SQUARE 1 • • . Buffu~· ----- • JI OAllV l'ILOT M....t01, April 27, 19/0 -t+!tit---1~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;-Lion-Cub Fun With Rick-rack Overruns Elephant • Actresses' Versatility Polled ', I I • { ~ Capucci 70130 Capuccl loves rick-rack and here has created a fun, open back sundress. Make it short or Jong - ue--wild color contrasts; coUon, linen. silk or syn- lllellc blendJ. 70130 -Misses Sizes 8-16. Size 12 requires approximately 21A. yards of 45" fabric for the long version and 2 yardJ of 45" fabric for the short. This precut preperforated custom Spadea Des igner Pattern produces a better !it or money back. Order 70130: give size, name, address and zip. EACH r.attem '2 postpaid. Address SPADEA Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, N. J. 08848. Tomorrow's Look Today! Spadea'• collectlDD of Midis and Muls -~· Longilette Book -•1 postpaid. TUES., WED. APRIL 28-29 Have a beautiful 8" x 10" pidure of your child ~··111 only 38~:-~ • All .... -family rroups, too -one 8" • 10" black-&-whlte finished picture of child taken sin1ly, 38¢. One 8'' x 10" group picture, only $1 per child. • Slltct fnlm ftnlthed pictures, not proofs, of the cutest poses captured tit our 1rtlst-photoi· rapher -kids love herl • Finished 5" x 7''ond w1lltt·1ln pichuH will alsc be si-n and offered at unbelievably low prices. • Seo th•m In 'Llvlnr Colof too! .......•. only $11! Finfshed color photos -one 5"' x 7" or fou1 wallet-size pictures -will be offered you at thi! very special price, at no obligation to you. ....... 11A.1Llt1P.M...IP.M.•IP ... ,,..., .. Ml •• -.-.... .., ..... ... •Ms ......... -................. ., ... IRING A JRIENDI W,T, O"ANT C:O, GRANT PLAZA • lrookhunt & Adams Huntlnljton leach Ml&alon Viejo Republican woman'• Club bu chosen to !in<ir• !ta predlspos!Uon to elephanll and hu invited a Hon cub to the Tu<eday, AJlfrr 2.!, meelln(. Even though the cub II ~ to be harmless, 1 p e a k e r James Heim, Oran1e C.OU.nty admln11trator, will talk on the 11!1p011an(,e of M•klntl a Will • 'lbls happem to be I coin-. ddence lllnce Helm doesn't know be will ibare the nlSter witb • lion. , Tiie publlc II Invited to the 10 a.m. meotlng In Belmont Savings and Loan building, Lal\10& Hills. The club will open a head- quarters · In the Or_anada Homts tract on May I. lnfonnatlon of absentee ballots, voting locations and transportation wtlJ be available from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesdays t bro ugh 'lbursdlj'S. Red, White And Blue Colors Date 'Jbe colon of America's flag will set the color scheme for the fashion show and lunc:lleon spomored by San Clemente Area Republlcan W o m e n Federated. The ~vent to tak~ place on Wednesday, April 29, also will feature a card party in the San Clemente G o 1 f Course restaurant beginnlnf II 11 : !5 a.m. Mrs. Jack Green, waya and means chairman is in charge. Reservatiom may be secured by cootacting her at 496-Hl55. Traditional Note A wedding tradition ls that the pa1<nts of the brtdegroOl)l gift their · 1011 and newly ac- quired daughter a lil\!er wish. for wedded happintu. This may !Khide more place eettinp or terVing pieces to match the ciouple'• Oatwan. Ll1'I , .. rr ... --DIANI VAN DURIN Troth Told: UCI Pair Will Wed A plrjy 1lven by Mr. and Mra. John Van Duren of Costa Mesa announced the· engage- m..i ol their dsugltter, D~ anne Van Duren to Roger T, Ingram, son of Mr. and llrl. A. D. lnll!"am of TuJtln. The br i de -elect wu llJ"adualed from Costa M ... H1ih School and ls I llJ"adUAte student at UCI. She also studied at the In1tltute of European Studies, Vienna. The brJdea:room-elect wu graduated from Tustin Union High School and also ii a graduate student al UCI. He studied on Chapman College's World campua Afloat A wedding date bas mt been set. Volunteer Eyes Russia Ruma u viewod through the eyes of Mr1. Alexander B. Ripley will lt1glt1Ji!it the third annual combined Jun .. cheon of the five au.rlliaries to Famlly Service Association of Orange County. Thursday, April 30, the women will hear Mrs. Ripley, president cf the Association of VolW'lteer Bureaus o f Am<rica, talk ol lter personal tour of the Soviet Union. The Balboa Bay Club al 12:15 p.m. will be tbe m~ing scene. AllUUng with ar· rangeni-will be Mrs. 'I1!omu croaon Jr. of Las Mariner as. All McGraw and Pbyllll Diller have oomethin( la com- mo n. Both play t1'e harpolcltord. And believe It or not, Phyllll play1 k better. "You can't trnaame the number of hours I've llP'Dt learning to p la y the barpllchord for my new movie, 11.ove Story'," 11y1 All, who starred in "Good Bye Columbld." Even though her own playing won't be beard In the movie -the tound of someone more proficient will be dubbed In -All bellevu her effort.a wUl make the 1Cene more realllt.lc. Pbyllll Diller, madcap com- SALLY SPLANE Wiii Morry Tucson Coed Future Bride Sally Splsne end Michael Dirk OeYoung of Huntington Beach will exchange wedding pledges June 20, in SL Mark's Presbyterian C h u r c h of Tuc10n. Parenti of the betrothed are Mr. and Mn. John Undlay Splane of Tucson and Mrs. and Mra. Eugene DeYoung of Newport Beach. The future bride Is a senior at the University of Arbona studying for lier elementary teaohing credential. Her flance attended New Mulco Military Institute and the University of SOutbern California where he pledeed Phi Kappa Tau fraternity. •• ~yatrdo1hesdon'tfit;.~ .. Yau'r1 SI~ consclous, shy, .... •msod. fMtrated, all that and 111111'1 ... Slimmin' Women is here to CHEER YOU UP and SUM YOU DOWN and in time · for SUMMER .. -VALUABLE COUPON-.. I AnlnvilalionForY011 I I AndAFRIEND... I i FREE TREATMENT i ~ ...... ----·I •• • :::,';'!:.,, •• • fiAur9 Ano~ o-.iltatlon ·PM TURING TBll WORID FAMOUS I Wit• Uis C.opon .Allsollflly No Cost I srAVl"FERS>'S'l'Elll .-.ld•tlfo• I wo•1o11tln. I 30--'--lrailliO#_. .. MUSTBEUS!DWITHIN7DAYS ... ,,_..VJ ··········-!!• 1 ... -----.... Ml-N'!""w-!'!'"!"e~ ... ra FIGURE ANU . ~~~! ..... 1w.if-.JH!:'fJ~!_ON NOW OPEN BEACH AIU 1801 Newport ""·Com - 642-6513 ' TUSTIN SALON 141 latflnf-...... ,. s.i-• 13Mi21 ... ._ ........ edlenne who repnrted\y aot lier 1tart In a laundromet entertaln1nc other boulewives, hu a houseful (ff lnatrwnentr: •lx planol, • barpllcbonl, three pwpp cr1w1 two aet.a d. drums, a AJDpbone1 a flute ud a Ii~. According to Pbyllls, 11Eveeybody p 1 a y 1 evel')'tbinc. '' An actrea with almost as much DWJical verratlllty u Pbyllll DWer 11 VI c kl Lawrence, wbo dances and P~ Carol BurneU'a loolcalllie 11tter on Clrol'a week I y tolevtalon lbow. Vkll. wbo b • c a m, e 'ln- torut.d In music while In hllh achoo!, PiaYI the ~. clnuns, pllar and trumpet. The American M u a I c Conference (AMC) revu!r that 11111\Y Hollywood aC· tte.ue1 play m u s i c a l in- 1trwnenta:, either for movie roles or for personal en· joymenl Several learned to play in order to accompany tbem1elves at voice lelBOlll. The pllar II popular among llou,wood. Ac"'-5 who raJQ at the lctyboard Include Anni Buter. Min Sothera, Janet Blair, Diana Lynn, Kitty Car!llle. Grace KeUy, -the prlncea of Monaco, also plays tho piano. Other lnlinnnenta llnd their way into actreaes' h a n d 1. Nlftl Foch and Marlene Dietrich both play" the violin: Miss Dietrich also play1 the musical saw.. The ceUo hu Its 1Upporters: both Mamie Van I>oren and Kathryn Hays play IL Debbie lleynoldl· relax•• with the French h«n and Greer Garson plays I b t harmonica. IN THE LIDO SHOPPING AltEA IT'S FOR MONTH-END BARGAINS 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH act re 11 e I. Among tbel'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pltarbll are Brigitte Bartlot, 11 Belly Dralle and Dione Van!I. Several actreaea, replyin1 to an AMC poll, said they'd lllle to learn to play the guitar. ANNOUNCEMENT, K·MAC DRUG '""' Janet Leigh , who studied piano for four years would rather play the gutta r "became you cu take it with you wherever you go and have music all the time." DISCOUNT STORE MOVES ••• Julie Harris, who took piano lessons "on and off as a child," also would like to learn to play the guitar. "I love .folk music and the guitar is perfect for this," she said. ••• to lar91r quart1r1. Planty of frM p1rklng at rear of store. Our new location is at ••• Tammy Grimes ltuWed the piano for five years and still plays "a litUe bit;" she also studied the recorder. 1804 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa Formerly Crawford's Drug Store Open During Rtmocl•llng T1l1phon1 645-1352 Piano players art legion In BEAUTY SAYINGS! look •ll'l•rf 11'1 • flttttrh19 f•thionablt 1prin9 1tyltl 60 1httd -Ptll'lptt ro11nt lf, b11t 1till 1tr1tch yo11r b11d91t. MON., TUEi., WID. LATER WllK SHAMPOO·SET ········---'2.45 HAIRCUT ·----··--·----~-'1.50 '2.95 '2.00 HI STYLE SHAMPOO-SET ........ .. HAIRCUT ............. .. $2.95 $2.00 FAMOUS BUDGET PERM Not for Tinted or Bleached Hair $3.95 all -k $5 ~o~pltle '1500 WONDIR CURL PERM t~~~ •• '9.95 C qfp . rown1ng Glory BEAUTY SALONS OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY CROWNING GLOR 267 E. 17th ST• COST A MESA PHONE 548-9919 OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING GLOR ·---· SOUTH COAST PLAZA Low Lft1I N• t9 S... PHONE 546-7186 " nd :e! nd ,. .. • Moridaf, A,,.n 27, 1970 OAILY 'ILOf IJ,, 25 Years Ago .Austria Survives Russ Occupation VIENNA (UPI) -Twenty-Communists ready to play the five years ago this month leading part in the country's Vienna was ln names and sur-first postwir cabinet. rounded by Russian troops. Among the Moscow trainees Defeated units or A d o I f was the ALJSt.rlan COIDJl}unist HllJeT•1 Webrmlcht w e r e Party's top ideologist, Ernest ntre.UU, to the west. Fischer, who took over a1 There are those. w h 0 the country's rrrst po6twar remember now as Austria, education minister. (Fischer Enem11 Threat Blamed Marine Division Pullout Delayed? WASHINGTON (AP) -se.riously weaken deftMes In Withdrawal of U\e rell\alnlng tho northern I Co1111. U.S. Marine DlvWon from The mtlter has been under South Vietnam may b e dllcusaton, Pent11on 30Ureet dela)'ed beca111e of an enemy aald, lndleoUng the Ill Marine thttat agalnsl the northern-Dlvlaloo'1 departure could he mOll uu ol Ille country. held up for a time, There have been otronr In· Sourcel hilXed Ille pace ol S\AFECO IN9URANCli repaired a n d prosperous, was expelled from the Aus\. ·~ Af It' 1){1$ Wl.'1"-Wf 'ef celebrates the 25th an-rian party last year for con--Sn'fiN60J.I ropor 'fltf. WoRl..t>." niversary of itl rebirth as demning the Soviet.led ill---------- clicoUons for weeu that the U\e overall troop wlthdnwal lit Marine Dlvilton w a 1 m1y be thtqttled down for ticketed to eome-«1t of Vlet· $Orne wttU,. perhiPI unut It nam u pert or the next stage can be ~ whether or U.S. troop cutbocks. the North Vitlnameoe Intend Pentagon tourees say ob-to mount a llf)rinl o,fenstve. Jectloos have been raloed by Recent lotelllgence report.. some military leaders on ·have told of several North gn>unds tllat early pullout or Vletoamm regiments moving the Marine divtsion would In to I Cori>S from Laot, and a republic on Mtmday. vasion of Czechoslovakia in "It was terrible,'' 1968). remembers Felix Hurdes, a The ALJStrian Communistl former education m i n i s t e r held several other key posl- wilo rrerved time in a Nazi tions in that first postwar concentration camp. "Unlike government and were in full Jiltler's other vtct1:ms, we control of the Vienna police were not liberated but O>fl-force. quered by the Russians. They Confident that the Ccm- made it very hard for us munisls }Vou.1d dominate the to revive Austria." government, the So v i e t s Hitler was born in Austria agreed that Karl Renner, a and the nation, by and large, 7S-year old Socialist, should was a willing ally during the head the first provisional war. 'Ibe Russians punished _cabinet. Auskia and its politicians for Renner first Austrian state thls. chancellof after World War Hurdes recalls several e1-J, was living in the tiny village amples. or Gloggnitz, some 70 miles 1' At one time," he says, south of Vienna, when Red "when we discussed t he Army troops found him and building of our first postwar told him to build the new government, the S o c i a I i s t government. representative Oskar Helmer, On April 27, l!MS, Renner lat.er the country's interior and bis provisional govem- mini$ter, was detained by the ment marched along Vierma '11 Russians on his way to the tree-lined Ringstrasse to the meeting." parliament and proclaimed Anolber party leader, the the rebirth of the Austrian later trade union chief Johann Republic on the very same Boehm, was grabbed by Red spot where the first republic Anny soliders in a downtown was proclaimed by the same street -along with hundreds chancellor on Nov. 12, 1918. or other Viennese in those Seven months later, on Nov. days -and ordered to help 2S, 1945, the Austrian Com· repair one of the war damag-mllnist Party suffered a ed· Danube bridges. smashing defeat in the first The Soviets, who got to postwar elections winning only Vienna six months earlier than four of 165 parllamartary the western powers, were seats against &5 of the con- clearly re1uctant to enmurage servaUve People's Perty and non-O>mmunist A u ! tr i a n 76 of the strongly anti-COm- politicians in their efforts to munist Soclalbts. find a government. The election result was the They had a full set or people's revenge for the rapes, Moscow.trained A 4 s t r i a n robberies and the!ts com- ~---Mot1ier'c Day is May 10 MOTHER'S DAY GIFT SPECIAL ~ •• LAST 6 DAYS! Here's lots of love to give/ 7 beautiful, professional • Mother's Day Portraits of .both your children All for Just ·ggs You'll receive one large 1 lx14 (more than half the size of this newspaper page!) plus six handy wa flef·size portraits for grandmothers, aunts and friends! HURRY IN NOW WHILE MOTHER'S DAY DELIVERY IS STILL GUARANTEED! 892-3331 Ext. 283 ,.,.,,n Stiufl1 ••• Id i:1001 mllled by Reci Army '°'dlen in thoee cla)>s ol April, 1114$. It alto p<OrnpCed t h e Western pawers' decision to recognize Renoer's govern- ~ when they arrived in Vienna end started tile dty's four power occupation CD Sept. 1, 1M5. The occupation lasted until the Austmn state treaty in I~. which made Austria tho ooly naUon to shake cif Soviet oontrol. Economic problmis in 1945 were even worse than poUUcal problems. Large areas or Vienna and eutern Austria were ckstroyed. Hunger and chaos were the norm . 'nle Soviet commander in Austria, citing the Potsdam Pact, ordered all German pro- perty in Eastern Austria - the Sovietrcontrolled zone - be surrendued to Russia. 'lb.is meant the Joss of 300 factories, about 247,000 acres of arable lend, all oilfields end the equipment ol. the Daoobe Steem Navlptlon Company. APRI~ 27 THRU MAY l EL CAJON, eam. (AP! - At 67. Hugh Rogers retlred as a small contractor and plunged into his hobby of photography full·time. "Not having enough lo do drove me nub," he says. "Then I got a ride in a dune buggy and, boy, what a ride !'' Rogers hasn't been the same since~ At 77 he's a swirling dervish on a sand dune, punishing 3CJO.. horsepower motors at up to 130 miles an hour. Slnce 1960, he has built 17 dune buuies and since 19'.64 has won 56 first-place trophies The lastest ol. his cars is a converted rear-engine sedan ln which he expects to roar I 130 m.p.h. in a tW'<H!ay race on the bumpy white sand east or Brawley in the lmpe!'ial Valley. The drivers will hill climb April 25 and compete In a 100-yard drag race the ntxt day. He competes against younger men. Says he : "1 know they hate my guts but I can't think of a "'ay to have more fun ." He put $3,000 into his latest buggy. Jn his JO wild years Rogers has di!Carded 15 others, salvaging pieces and parts before giving away the rest Or carting them lo the dump. COSTA MESA AT 19th ST. and HARIOR ILVD. ROUND ST·EAK FRESH-LEAN FULL CUT FRESH FRYER PARTS BREASTS-THIGHS-DRUMSTICKS USDA INSPECTED CHICKEN BEEF STEW L11n Diced Cubes IN THE LIDO SHOPPING AREA IT'S MONTH- END SALE AT BAAROWS 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH TORRANCE AT 221th and VIRMONT AVI. WE·WEt.COME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS e BUSINESS e HOME e AUTO e BOAT e LIFE Bob Paley and A11ociate1 INSURANCE Phone 642-6500 ,474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKET Sell un\vantcd lt~m• vdth a DAD..Y Pil..DT CU&ifled Ad. PHONE 642-5678 STORE HOURS DAILY 10 •.m. to 9 p.m. SUNDAY 10 •.m. to 7 p.~. BONELESS BONELESS ST·EAKS ROASTS · I SIRLOIN TIP I I SIRLOIN TIP I CUBE STEAKS Bon1ln1 FARM FRESH .PRODUCE. •• AT LOW EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICE$ - POTATOES I ORANGES • CABBAGE • U.S. NO. I I SWEET VALENCIA I FRESH SOLID I NEW CROP FULL OF JUICE I GREEN I WHITE ROSE I • &~.! 50.: LI. I 50 I LI. ~ SPllN•PlnD co.•••E ·~Lt'a~j COMPAltl AT 74c: 4 C 1.Utrr l WITI r , $5.00 PURCHASE . ' • • • DI TOILIT GLOll! A·l 1 LI. PKG. TISSUE SPAGHlnl 25' 1s~ COMPAltl AT 27C Lim.It 2 \Vlth C6ull!'n 1 CUUfl'ON f'tR ~AMIL Y CARROTS I LEMONS TENDER SWEET I FRESH, JUICY CRISP, LOOSE I 5~. I s~ I I 12 OZ. LAUU. SCUDDll COMPAR! AT 7Jc Umlt l With Couvon -·-,t 45' HAIR SPRAY 13 OZ. TIKI 39' , ' • • • • • . , ....._...._........ -~---~--.... -... -·-..----· ... -.... ~-... -. ------. ~ -- • • • ft DAILY "LOT Monda.)', AprH Z7, 1970 . ! Economic Polara Shown ... By CARL CARSTENSEN •Of ... o.tly '"" Jl1K Dodce has begun production ot a new economy model ad- diUon to. lb staodard-sU:ed car line called Potara Special. The Polara Spe<lal I s = avallabie in four~ sedan and twweat and three-seat sbl.tioo wagons with manufac- turer's 3Ugge5ted retail Prices starting as low as $2,960 for Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) Borden Co. said It will double ~apaclty of its Wyler FoOd divbion by buJldlng a new $11 million plant at North- brork, Ill., to replace a plant in Chicago. Wyler makes de.hydra~ soup and drink mixes &JX! vegetable flakes. PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPII -Federal Jud&e Raymond J. Pettine bu dismissed a suit by· Leesona Corp. charging 60 textile. manufacturers w i t h the oedan. DODGE ADDS ECONOMY MODEL TO STANDARD-SIZE CAR LINEUP ' 'Violating Its patents: a n d license agreements in the manufacturer of stretch yarns, However, he did not decide the case on its merits but threw it out on jurlsdlctlonal grounds. Lessona, therefore, can ref'iJ,e the suit in ariother jurisdiction or alter the action to qualify for jurisdiction of the R h o d e Island federal court. "We }!ave added the Polara Special in 4-door sedan and station Wagons Boasts Most Room In Its Ctass 'Special' to our 122-inch-_____ __:_:.;.::._::_:.: ______________ _c_ __________________ _ Wheelbase Polara and Polara Custom line to strengthen our posiUoa in this segment of the market by offering a lux~ ury.tYJ>t ride and appea'l'ance automobile for the budgeted- dollar buyer," e i: p I a i n e d &heft B. McCurry. Dodge general manager. Your Money's ll'orth The ·Pol ara ·Special is distinguished by tnter"ior and exterior trim levels diUerent from those offered in Polara and Polara Custom. Vinyl and cloth combination bench seats and a fully-synchronized three- speed transmission are stan- dard. standard interior trim for station wagons is all vinyl. Rasing Child Costly A 225-cubic-inch Slant Six engine is the standard six- cyllnder engine in the fou r· door sedan and the standard v..a is. 31 ·-cu b i c. inch powerplant. lo all models op. Uonal V4's are avaUable up to 440 cubic indles. Addition of the Special brings to 13 the number of basic models offereil in the Dodge Polara line. All prices listed above are of£icial manufacturer's Sug- gesied retail prlc<a Including new car dealer preparation charge of $20 and federal ex· cise .tax, but ucluding state and local taxes aod destination charges. MOON TRIP MAPPED • NEW YORK -More lhan 75,cfeo moon fljgbt reservations have been taken by Pan Amoricm World Airways. 'Ibe airline, whidi in 1966 began to makt reservations for its commercial flights to the moon "someUme in the future" hu fifed the names of would-be moon travelers at its New York headquarters. The date of the first Pan Am flight hes yet to be an· nounced, as well as the fares both one-way and roundtrip. By SYLVIA PORTER If you're amo1'g the millions of young marrieds it0w plan· ning a family, heed this: at today 's price levels, it \viii cost you $25,840 to raise one chiki until age 18. THUS, IF it were humanly possible for you to have today 's "average" brood of 3. 2 children, it would cost you $82,688 to raise them! And if you chose to have four children, your CO'St would zoom to well over $100,000. These are new estimales, prepared for me by economists at the Institute or Li f e Insurance in .N~ York, for a two-child family i• the middle· iricome bracket, a"d they shout this question to me : will the high cost of rearing children be an add iti on ·a I significant force behind new trends toward 1 ate r mar- riages, later child bearing and lower fertility rates? OUR 191t fertility rate, at about 85 live births per J,000 women aged 15 to 44, con· tinues to hover around its lowest level DI U.S. history - despite the fact that record numbers of women now are entering their peak child-bear- ing years. I personally think It well may be, and population ex. perts with whom I've :ipoken recen.Uy tend to agree. Here's the Institute 's breakdown of the 1&-year cost of raising oae child : Item II-year cost Food $6.500 Housing 7 ,:>00 Clothing 3,690 Transportation 3,920 Medical Care l ,780 Personal Care 600 llecreation, reading, education, etc. 1,800 Up Tight ... with emergency expenses1 4 use our money! At Monia Plan we'd like to help you with emer- gency expenses, left-over bills, home or car repairs, travel or school expenses. That's what Morris Plan money is for. On approval you can borrow from $100 to $5,000, or more, a nd have your money the day you apply. Payments scheduled to fit your income. When you need money for any good reason. see Morris Plan. We like to make loans. Morris Plan . 673·3700 NewpOrt Beach -3700 Newport Boulevard THE TOTAL is $2$,840 and BUT HOLD ON, for there's these estimates apply only to another side to this ILi study a family in today·s aVerage in--and that side is that .. in rela- come range of $7,500 to tionship to family income. the $10,000. In higher brackets, the cost of raising a child is no cost of raising a single child to gfeater today tha11 it was a age 18 easily can soar into the !ull generatioR ago. In 1935, $50,000 to $75,000 range. when the average after-tax in- The costs also soar, at aU come was about $2,500, the income levels:, for families liv· cost to the family of raising a ing in the West. (CUriously child was calculated at $7 ,500 enough, though, according to -or three limes the famil y another recent study of child income. rl'aring cos t s by the The !ijl.me ratio holds true Agriculture Depnrt.ment, it is today: the total of $25,840 is not much less expensive to still only three times he raise a child on a farm than in average family's income of the city -at least in the about $9,000. South.) Thus, a child still is a \'OUR COSTS will soar even "bargain" -until he or she 1nore if you are among the -'g_oe_s_to_co_lle.cg_e_! ----- parents sending your children to private schools, lo summer camps or on summer ex- peditions to Europe -or if you give your children automobUes wheJt they reach 16 or 17; or if you must pay the high cost of orthodontia, or even if you give y o u r youngs~rs a h o m e en- cyclopedia . What's more, the long.term trend of prices is ever upward in this century, and of course this will be reflected in ever rising costs of r a i s j n g chi ldren. On lop of this, the living standardS" of children will keep climbing alOAg with the standards of their pareats -from their food preferences to choices of ente rtainment, transportation, personal care. Newport MD On Group Or. Robert E. Rakel of Newport Beach has been ap- pointed to a one-year term on the committee on 1970 State Officers' Conference (SOC) of the American Academy of General Practice, it was an-- nounced by the national family doctor organization . He was also appointed to a three·yea r term on the com· mission on education. The 32.000-member academy is the second-largest natianal medical organization and the only U.S. medical group which requires its members to con· tinue theit medical education in order to retain mem· bership. Jol11s U1111t Francis F. (Cy) Robare has been named vice president of grocery sales for Hunt·Wesson Foods, Inc., of Fullerton. All grocery region managers and members of the Full- erton grocery staff 'viii report directly to him. Robare was formerly with the Curtiss Candy Co. as national sales manager. Earnings Tol<l Pacific Lighting C o r p . reported earning s of $20,586,000, equal lo $l.15 per common share, for the three months ended March 31. 1970. This compared to $22,195,000, or $1.24 per share, for the cor· respond ing quarter of 1969. U.S . POST AGE STAMP MACHINES DISTRIBUTOR WANTED (Mall or F•male) R•llablt person will be s•lected Jn th is area to own & servic.t Un ited Stat•• Postage Stemp Machines & Color Picture Post Card Vendors. This is a non--selling, s•rvic• business & not • "g•t rich quick scheme.'' All stores hav• al- ready bffn ulect9d & may bt reviewed by you. This business ctn IM sttrtltd part t im e (even- ings or wulcends) & bt developed into 1 big profitable full time business with unlimited po- tential. To qual ify you must h•ve t car, 1 few spare hours Wfflcly, a good work record •• company 11 responsible to the locations for service, & make an immediate cash Investment of $1500. For personal Interview, write giving us 1 lit .. tit Information, on your1elf Including your phone number." OistribUtor Division, P. 0. Box 2701, S.11 Bo1ch, C•lifornl1 •90740. A DIVISION OF 8. I. -.. ,_ ---- Kaiser News Keeps Tabs On Future By RO~ERT STRAND · OAKLAND (UPI) -You don't have to read the un- derground press 'to .find ideas for turning society inside out. Just pick up the glossy Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp. Magazint, a house organ as far removed from those chatty company publications which talk about employe bowling teams as the modern corporation is from pick and shovel mining. Kaiser News doesn't preach armed revolution. It merely suggests lhe junking of the entire p r e s e n t educational system. or the leveli~ of Manhattan and the Clucago Loop, so we can start over again with green belts and low density housing. · The magazine views hippies and student acUvists as not bad chaps with some good ideas, suggests that public transportation be free and thinks corporate headquarters might as well be abolished. Kaiser News started as just another house organ. But by the mid-1960s it had evolved into a high quality, general interest magazine. Its purpose was to boost Kaiser Aluminum's image as an innovator, and provide a SUlse of identity for its 27 div~se divisions. NO'I! ~ magazine furnishes themes for the firm's national ad· vertisMg, a reverse of the usual praclice. Each issue, full of dazzling. original art, is devoted to a s ingle s ubject . It s lighthearted, irreverent prose contains so much evidence for iL"I conclusions, that t h e magazine goes remarkably free of criticism. Edllioas run into the hun. dreds of thousands and are translated into a half-dozen languages. Many copies are given away free to customers, business /executives and in· fluential people. Enough are sold to make this a rare public relations program which pays for itself. One issue of Kaiser News I n spi red a company-made movie, "\Vhy Ma n Creates," which wo11 the 1968 Academy Award for documentary films. ''I have a degree of journalistic r r e e d 0 m fe,v writers have," says the editor, Dafl Fabun. "1 don 't worry about adve rti sers or management. I only worry about what l think.." The only Kaiser Aluminum executives who see t h e · magai.ine before publication are the president , T. J. Ready Jr., and a vice president, R. A. Sandberg and then only 24 hours before presses roll . ''In 10 years they haven·t made any ch:r,1ges, ·• said Fabun. Basically, Fah'.:n reasons that social re vo I u ti on ultimately r e s u I t s from economic f orces. "Society moves in the direction of lower costs," says Fabun. That's how he came up with his conclusion that corporate headquarters -like Kaiser's own $r.,, million complex - are becoming obsolete because "nobody but the ofrice boy Is doing anything here he couldn't more easily do at home.'' It 's far cheaper to s}tip the commute downtown and com- municate with fellow workers by picture phone, he1ped by recorders, and Fabun says the technology already is available. "Moot joumalists talk ~bout what happened yesterday or last week," says Fa bun. uwe talk almost entirely in term.. of man's alternative futures." SfARS S.,d11ey Omarr I• 011• of tfia werl4'1 1Jr•at •1t-r•lot•rt. H!1 1:oli1ll'lt1 I• •11• of tli• DAILY PILOTS tr.at feehi,.,, GREAT. NECK, N.Y. (UPI) -Triangle Pacific Forest Products: Corp. agreed to buy Kootenay division of Pacific Logging Co. in Slocan, B.C., and Gn;gg & Son, Inc., a Nashua,. N.H., maker of kitchen cabinets. The logging property will be bought for $4.5 mjllion tO $S million in cash and stock and Gregg for 2.6,000 shares ol stock. DENVER (UPI) -Com- manche C a t t I e Industries, Inc., a subsidiary of Petro- Lewis C9rp., has obtained a $4.5 million contract from a group led by U.S. National Bank of Denver to expand its cattle feeding operaliqns. TOLEDO (UPI) -Owens- Illinois, Inc., will build a multi-million dollar factory in Central Bay Industrial Park at Un.ion City, Calif., to make ootrugated paper s h I p p i n g boxes. The new plant will replace one 30-years old plant at Oakland Calif. The 30 employes will be moved from the Oakland plant only 20 miles away. WASHINGTON (UPI) Net assets of mu tua l funds affiliated with the Investment Company Institute fell to $47 .915 billion in March from $48.2 billion in FebruarY, ICI reported. Sales of new shares for the month totaled $451.464 million up from $407 .024 million in February. However, on a seasonally adjusted basis, the institute said sales must be considered to have declined to $408.2 million from $441.5 million a month ea rlier. Net sales. mi nu s redemptions, however, rose to $162.5 million from $158 million in February. MENLO PARK. Calif. (VP!) -U. S. Natural Resources, Inc., has comp l eted ar- rangements to start a drilling program for oil off the coast of South Africa. A specially built outrigger type drilling platform, constructed at a cost of $8.5 million, will arrive at the drilling site in July. It currently is undergoing sea trials in Japanese waters. The actual drilling will be carried out by a subsidiary -0f Santa Fe International, Inc .• about 470 miles east of Capt Town in the Indian Ocean. Other partners in the venture inc lude Rand A1ines, Lt .• the South African govern· rrlent oil company, Charles W. Engelhard and Tra n sv a a I Consolidated Land & E1- ploratK>n Co. NEW YORK (UPI) Damson Oil Co. said it has found gas jn the Porcupine1 f i e I d extending southward from the Highlight field in Campbell County, Wyo. The first two wells flowed at rates exceeding 2.5 million cubic feet dally each plus upwards of 290 barrels of distillate. SC HENECTADY, N.Y. (UPI) -General Electric Co. has obtained a $10 million Navy order for fire-.control and guidance equipment for the Poseidon missile system. WARWICK, R.I. (UPI) - LeesoneCorp. announced Afonday it Is suing the federal government for patent in. fringement over a met.al-alr battery being produced under a defense contract by Eagl~ Pltiler Industries, lnc. Eagle- PicMr was given a $2.7 million contract by the Marine Corps last autumn to make metal-air batteries. Lessooa's bid ol '3.3 million was second tow on the contract. Leesona now claims the technology the Defense Department authortJ.. ed Eagle-Picher to use in- fringes its patents. FIN WALL STREET BRIEFS WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sperry Rand Co. has obtained dn Air Foret contract to p~ vldc $11.4 mllllon worth of automotlc dota processln1 equipment. • • ., f.-Mtrlfeads-the:_Star·-~"': - For the Stars? (~ .. . ~ ~ \ .. • , • t: -. . It's Sydney Omarr • And now this articulate writer who hes been celled the ''astrologer's astrologer" reads the stars for you. Sydney Omorr, longtime personal astrologer to many of Hollywooas ond the l;+erory world's most famous stars, is a DAILY PILOT column ist. Omerr's record for accuracy of predictions based on estrolog icel enelysis is amazing. Whether you read astrological foreca sts for fun or es a serious student of ster-gezing, you 'll enjoy Sydney Omorr's doily column in the DAILY PILOT • ' l .. ' • .. . • .. ., I \ ; ·, • ' . 1 rp·------------------~----------------------------------------------------------..,..------------------------... ·' '• .. • • • • . ' • I l , I ·! .. ' . , ~ .. . , " • .... ) ; ; ' :-~ ~ ~ •• ' ' . • . i < ; . " • ' • . . : . • . . :· . .. • . • . , . . !· . . i . 1 - . . • . ' . . . • . . . . . : ·' ' ' . ~· i 1 ·! ' $ ~ ~ ., • ' , • -• -> . ~ ~ > I I \ First Place • • I . FOUR MORE • for · ·excellence • • 1n newspapering Over the years, the DAILY PILOT has been among the state's few newspapers consistently bringing home top awards from the • California Newspaper Publishers Association Better Newspaper Contest. This year, the DAILY PILOT p~oudly brought home these awards. .. Th'e top award presented to the DAILY PILOT this year was first place in the Best Typography category. It is for excellence of design and appearance of the newspaper. The award specifi • cally was given for the edition.s of January 22 and 23, .1969. Merit Awards This Merit Award (second place) plaque in the B .. t Wom en's Interest Coverage cale· gory specifically honored th e DAILY PILOT fo r" outstanding women's section s published on two consecutive days last March 19 and 20. • , ' ' The second place plaque for Best Sports ' ' Page or Coverage wa, p re s en t e d to the DAILY PILOT on the basis of the judges' fav. ~rable reaction lo a typical sports section. The winner was published last September. • l " '. First-time entry in this category. The DAILY PILOT won for its Win YOUR Share Show, CommuniCarnival, Fotorama and ASTRO- . SCROLL events .presented al South Coast Pl111, F1shion Island and Huntington Center., ·' I I • J f. DAILY PILOT Mood.,, Aprll 27, 1970 . " ' ' CUP CHALLENGER -The 12-meter yacht France, owned by French pen tycoon Baron Bich got its first salt water bath last Friday when she was launched. at Trinite SUr :P..Ier, France. The yacht represents France's first '6ld for the America's Cup. •Her first co.mpetition will be again~t Australia's · Or:etel II in trials oll .Newport, R.l, tjl1s summer. · Leaves Newport Thursday Gales Halt Fre~ch 1Cup ' Ensenada Boats Gathering ' -. Yacht T1ials Scores of sailing yachts started arriving in Newport Sunday from San Diego lo Santa Barbara .for the start of the 23rd Newport to Emenada race whidl gets itlDder way nen. Thursday at oom. Many of the windjammers arrived by way d. races from their respective ports. The boats started arriving at mid- night Saturday and continued to pour through the jetty en- trance until late in lhe day. In addition to the yachts arriving from dist.ant ports, more than 100 poured through the entrance at the conclusion of the San Clemente Island and Catalina Island races, both of which started from Los Angeles. Results of the San Clemente Island race, most important weekend event on t h e Southland yachting calendar, were not computed by the Newport Harbor Yacht Club race committee. i "Ihe committee finished nearly 150 boal.8 from mid- night Saturday until 8 a.m. Sunday, I sent them home for some much needed sl~," said Frank Rice, race com- mittee chairman. ruce said the results would be computed sometime today. The San Clemente Island race was the first of NHYC's A:hmenson Series and the fifth in Los Angeles Yacht Club's Whitney Series. The Catalina Island race was the first in Voyagers Yacht Club's Massey Series for PacirtC H'andicap Racing Fleet yachts. LAYC's Little Whitney Series for Midget Ocean Rac- ing Fleet yachts started at Los Angeles Harbor Saturday mornlng and arrived a t Newport by way of Ship Rock off the Catalina Isthmus. L A • T R INITE.SUR·MER, France (AP) -A gale sweep- ing along the south coast of BriUany Sunday compelled of- ficials to cancel the first fully- rigged ocean trials o f "France," the ftrst -e ve French challenger for the America'& Cup! · '1'he Yacht, bunt b.y Swiss master craftsman Hermann Egger at Pontarlier near the Swiss border, was brought by road across the whole breadth of France and finally lowered into salt water at this small Brittany fishing village last Thursday. Annual Race Slated to San Diego Ericson-41 Slnop Dana Point Winner Scores of yachting en· thusiasl.s crowded into the village over the weekend to watclJ. the multi-million dollar boat's first outing. A howling AUantic gale and 20-foot waves disappointed t q e m . Windjammers Yacht Club of Marina del ·Rey a n d Soutbwestem Yacht Club of San Diego will hold their an. nual Marina de! Rey to San Diego Race starting Thursday, July 2. SWYC will host the visiting yachtsmen by providing moorage, and use of club facilities in San Diego. SWYC junior members will act as local pilots and assist in moor- ing boats. There will be a trophy presentatK>fl and dinner dance at SWYC Saturday eveq_ing, July 4. 'There are three new and unusual fealures to this year's race. The first is having the race furish in the vicinity of the mooring buoy just oH the lip o{ Shelter Island. Thb will permit many spectators to view the end d. the race from the park like atmosphere of Sbel!e!' Island. Firebrand, an Ericson..-41 sloop sailed by Geori!e West of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the winner 1n the Ocean Racing di vision of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's Dana Point Race Suodl1Y. The race was billed as an Ensenad.a Tuneup race a n d NHYC Set For Opening Newport Harbor Yacht Club has issued inv.tations for its Opening Day race from Los Angeles Harbor May 9. The race is always a feature of NHYC's Opening Day celebration which culminates in a festive yacht inspection, open house and flag raising. The race is open to Ocean Racing, Midget Ocean Racing and Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet yachtS:· A Pair of Swingers Lou Cicero (left) and Lorraine Lippold combine their strength to swing the traditional bottle o! champagne across the bow of the Ericson-35 Free- style at lail?cbini_at Lido Shipyard. Rod lJppold was the third race of the Angelman Series for Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet yat'hts. Winners in the Angelman division were Barry Faber's Cheerio of BCYC and Dave .Lan.g's F.delweiess of Balboa Yacht Club. Wind for the 13.5 mile race was a brisk southeaster that came up early Sunday, resulting in a dead beat to weather for the entire race. Final results: OCEAN RACING -II ) Firebrand, George W e s t • NHYC; (2) Nocturne, Carl Noecker, BCYC; (3) Aquarius, Gary Myers, NHYC. Angelman-A -(1) Cheerio, Barry Fabor. BCYC; (2) Fair Lady, Herb Hope, BCYC: (3) Ransom, Tony Ouchi, SSSC. ANGELMAN B - ( I ) Edelweiss. Da ve Lang, BYC: (2) Juanita, Steve Bradford, BCYC; (3) Gloria, H . Gustafson, SSSC. PHRF -Fiel Amigo, P. Purcell, BYC. Ouhs Slate Tri-Po11 Tnvitations are out for the Tri-Port Handicap Race, May 9-10 for sailboats returning from the En.senada race. The Tri-Port Jiandicap race is co-sponsored by Lido Isle Yacht Club. Balboa Yacht Club and Oceanside Yacht Club and is actually two races, covering three ports. The first race starts off Mission Bay Saturday May 9 and finishes at Oceanside, where the Oceanside Yacht Club will entertain skippers and crews wit!l a cocktail par· ty and dinoer Saturday night. The second race starts 10 miles northwest of Oceanside on Sunday and finishes ap- proximately three-quarters of a mile east of the Newport Harbor entrance. and Saint Cicero are partners in the new boat de- signed by Bruce King and bullt by Ericson Yachts or Costa Mesa. \ • ears Prices Effective April 26 thru :Tlle6day. April 28th! Automatic 8-:T.mck StereQ Player 95 " Regular $69 .95 ' • Siarts,otopoaaloJlll\i<allt-J111Umert orJmlO"e cartrrdle ' ~ . • Cllaqesprogranls'aatomatltaDrOI'' ' " manually . • ln<!icalor JighUell.81"!I Jrilal program ls being played ' • • With Two &-inch speakers -- •II'. ~!W'" ' ~ ~I ' "' I " .~f I, . . , " . [l iJ: ' ·: H ~ ·hi ___ _.._...,...,.. ___ ........ _ ... I.~: ' . SAVES2.44! Heavy.Duty Shock Absorbers Regular$? .99 •-}lugged &intered iron piston and·ch'rome rod. • Wearbettertha.n original shocks Sears Dry Chemical Fire Extinguishers Super Value! 99 716453 each • • Fights gas, electrical, greaseand oil fires • Includes 2 "" pounds of Dry Chemical • UL and Coast Guard approved. • Forcarorgarage. Embossed Nylon Slip-on Seat Covers SAVE $2! Regular '8.99 • Booster . Shocks ' Regular 2 for $2f .99 • PJovide enra sup- port and stability when carrying heavy toads·orpulllnga traile~. ' Double Stirrup Tire Pumps Sears Low Price • Handy pump to keep in your car trunk foremer· gencies • 18-in. ~rbase l lse Sears Revolving ' Charge . • • I Deterg~nt Proof Past~ A.utd, wa~ • 99(' • Stretch for snug, smooth and wrinkle-free fit. Slip on easily. • Cleans was well as it waxes in one easy step . fro- tect.s car's finish • Water repellent with anU-staUc finisb . • p.oice of Blue, Green, Red, Stacie or ·Beige colors • Won't wear off afterdctergenl wash. Easy to apply! Ask About Sears Convenienl Credit Plans Use Sears Revolving Charge --·-··-·-·-· __ .. , ...... ---· __ .. ___ , ·-·---.. ___ .,__ ----__ , .. _ -----· -·-· --•-t.llMttl .................... ~ ............. ...._,,_ .......... ,.,. ....... , . ._., _ _,_~ __ ...... -----··--·--· --·-·· • T __ ,, __ ___ ,,,, ~-­·---.--_ ....... , '" "' . \19', ;r-t ',,, .:'A' ., ' .~· I .l• " ' ,, J• I O• ... 'I /' "' .. . '" .. -: "" ..... , .. ~ _rJr: ·~· ... '" . "' vi '" ·~ , "' vi ' t!1 , I "'' .,, 1.V I "'' "" I " ' -~f ,. " ". Ol ,,. .. .. ,. ,., . ' .. " " ' ~ '" '.» ,, "' vi .. •• .. •1 ~· 1 I ,,, .. " •• v " '" ' " ~ ·' Mu treal · Fans Super.;· Patriotic . ·~ .. ) .. f ' .. ~ . You've got to band 1! to the polriollc . people of ' Montreal .-. they art atlll standing lbree InrUp alter the Canadian natiooal anthem ls played at Pare Jarry -the unlikely •tad!um ""°" tile ~ of bueball Is cooducted by an equally ~y team called the E:q>os. Strangely, howtver, this 1tandlq rilwll Is' ooly carried an durln& Digbt fl!DOS con<!ucted In ~: Wby! Fkst·hand invellllg1tlcl!f Jirocluced ~ . answer. Tbey are lro<en and mable ~ .lit down. Nlibt boseball in Moni!Oll · af ;thf• tinse ol year Is bifbly CClll(IOrOble to OL•NIC WHITI ' ·----==:-......,.._, WHITE \WA.SH ft, ... __ ., __ a bigh noon Fourth ol July barbecue on the·noor of Death vauey. Is it cold In Montreal'!', you uk. Is it wet in the ocean, l 1reply. With sub-Mt temperature and the winds blowing oU the nearby harbor water tand ice), pight ~.,.~ in MQlllrW is a form of cruel· punlshlnent. And so is· watchiltg the Expos, at any time of the year, day•or night. To .make the matter worse for the few citizens who venture out to Pare Jarry's single level ~cture. the seats are made of alumlbum. Actually. I believe these fans are really part of the Esklmo army In cold ,...ther training. Perhaps it's part of the belief that reduction of body temperature will in· crease the life span -in which caae Montreal baseball bugs should live to be 200. . \ . Watching the Eip\w iS hardly COii• ducive to wannillg up ~ e:a:citement -they've only W°!'!)~ee. of their first 14 games. And ~!j 1°'* much like a group trying r;.· bueblll il>-stead of playln& tt Watching an cbue a Dy ball Js for· .all the w like obaerving a hippopotamus try~ 14 climb a !fee. 'llut there ls one thing you can IBY about .froing to sight bueball In that Frenm<lriented rtty -the beer ia guaranteed to be eold. * * * They say die Loll Angeles Stan ac. tvaDy ~ • mucll •• $5 per copy for 1ome of ~ tleteta ..act for Uaelr recent Americu Baalletball Asloclatloll playoff ·game '* Aaabelm Coaventloa Center. · I thought 1b1t wu more hi HM rw what one of their llllOD tlcbtl 11\,lgbt be worth. * * * Two musta ~ the ligbbeeing list. U you ever visit Atlaata: the Cyclorama building at Grant Park wbich houses a 50x400 footRlar painting depicting the BatUe of , narrated by Vidor · Jory and wi Ciyil Wai 1era . songs accompanying hit stor), The other fs ,the Wren's Nest -·home of Joel Chandler Harris, who authored the Uncle Remus stories. Tucked away In a book at . the house Is the eulogy deUvered in 1908 whea the mu who wrote about Br•er Fox, Br'er Ribbit, the. Tarba~ and all the other critters died. Part--or the rileJ waa in touching verse f<rm: Tise Rabbit will bide as he always did And the lox will do · aa be a1wayr did But· Who C1" !fll JI' what thef iay Since ~ !1FmJ1s has away. H~ge Wins Crown -!iodp ·~ Jcllsn Warteniln of Fresno fir tba ML Siii AnlOnlo Relay ' decadllon dsampiDoolstp, llCOrlng 7,557 points -15 more than the l'lllUIOrllP· Paul cox ol Socldlebaclt c.!lege ftnlsh. ed Uie tw<><lay grind &mday with 6,2M potnto, pladlsc IJl6, ----r -. -·----· .. Fil"e Bio Portleml Track Hone racing at Portland Meadows came to an abJ'l!pt ¥JI over ti!• weekend when .a three-~arm · fire gutted the grandstand causing an estimated $1 million in damage. The cause oC the blaze is under investiflltip!). Angels Swap for M~Mullen ·Rodriguez, Reichardt Sent to Senators W ASIIlNGWN (AP) -Outfielder Rick Reichardt gains Ted Williams as a teacher. Infielder Ken McMullen gets to play near li1s home. And Washington 8lld California obtain. the righthaaded power bitters they sought. It IOUDds like one or those ti'adis which mates . ev.e:ryone happy becauiJe It helps both aides -and that's exactly ~w tlWI .i,al ..... described. . 'l1se CaumJa Angela sent Reicbardt and third bueman Aurelio Rodriguez to WasbilJl(oo Sunday for third bueman McMullen in a straight two-f<r~ deal. The trade was annowteed after the Angels defeated Washington 3-2 in a game in whJch two of those in the deal figured prominenUy. Sandy Alomar'1 eighth inning double drove Rodriguez in with what proved to be tbe witniag run, Rodriguez had reached first when McMullen bobbled hia grounder for an error. Reichardt, a one-time bonus baby Who reportedly signed for $175,000, tcld everyone he liked going to Washington, adding that be would have wanted to have bee• traded last year to •:either the Senators or the New York Yankees. "l liked both teams because of the people involved ht running the clubs," ht' aalil. "'I thlsil< Wllllams and Yaokee . m ... ger Ralph H<All< are f!Oat bueball men. . · .. It's a good break ror me, to be pJaytag under Williams," he said. McMullen, thee Senators regular third baseman 8iJtce he came to · Washington in 1965 in a multiplayer deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers, said he wasn't surprised a bout being traded and sort of expected it. "But the one club · I wanted to go with was the Angels," he &ald. "I live only a hour and a half's drive ' from Aaallelm." His bome Is in Omard. Dodgers Tackle Phillies; Can't Reckon With Seaver LOO ANGELES (AP) -Tom Seaver sa)'l"he trl<!d to be overpowering wben he struck oot 19 San Diego Padres last week bit against Los A,ngeles be struck wiyi finesse. · 1be resultl were the·aame. Seaver, the 25-year-old ace of the New York Mets, .stormed ro bis 14th straight regular\-victory Sunday, beating ~er Slate ':"'·"'· 7:5' p,m. 7:55 p,m. 1:15 P.m. Los Angeles, 3-l, and stopping a Uve-· game Dodger win streak in the process. Sandy Vance, making tus major league d-. pi!dsed well for Los Angeles but WBI tagpd for two home runs. "Vance pttched well,'' . commented Mana!!!< Waller Ataon. "Anftime you pitch siJ innings ari'd 1tve up jll!lt Foor bits and walk one rd say it's a pretty good effort." Alston immediately tagged Vance for anoth<r starting asstgmnent, Tbunday night against Montreal. Before the Ezpos mive, the Dodgers 'ifill meet Philadelphia for three games. Don Sutton (S.l) Will opflO!Se the Phillies' Rick Wl8e, 1·1, in tontiht's series opener. Seaver started almost as strOOgly aa he finished against San Oiego, when he fanned the last I~ batt<rs. Altogetber he nail<d the last 13 Padres and got the first 11 Dodgen for 27 consecutive batters retired. •• . "Hey, that's right," he laughed at~ terward. "Does that mean I get credit for a perfect game?" NIW YOlll( . LOI ANOILll ..,.,... -rllrM Jorle!IR'l,d1111Wlll1,u •OOO ~""Ison, 11 4 I l 0 Slff!l'llll't, 2b 4 0 t 0 lotwtll, 2b • f 0 0 W,Devll, cf .( i J 0 SMmsk'(, rf ) t 0 0 Kosco, rf • 0 I I Swoboda, rf t I O O Crowtord, N J o 1 O ci.nci.non, 111 4 1 1 1 w.P•rker, !ti t • 2 o Marall•ll• If • I 1 0 H•llel", c I 0 0 0 G1rrtn, JI! • 0 0 0 Gr•litrll'wltl.Jb J O O t OV«, c J • 0 t Ylflee, p 1 0 t 0 5-VWI", p J O I O lludlntr, p11 1 o O O Horman, p I I I O G1Drlelton, pll 1 ' t I P•KUtil, p t O o t Tol•I• l2 J S 2 Toi.ii '1 1 f 1 N...., Yortt 010 OM 000 -J los -'""In 000 100 000 -I DP -NW York 1, LOI -Nw York 4. IM ' AngelH i. 21 -W. Dllvlf 2. IC-L W. P•f'tller. Hit -CllMenon {2), Jortent«t (II, 89 -H1r,..._ IOI! a, tMrallliN, 5lll'OllOdll. ', Williams said he wanted Reichardt because "as the season progressed, it was obvious we had to try to get more rigbthaBded punch from our ouUield." Reichardt was lligne4 off .the University of Wisconsin campus in 1964 amid great fanfare. After a year in the minors, he was brought up to the parent club but never. really lived up ~ predictions. In aix seasons with CaWonla, be bas batted .281 and hit '3 home runs ind ~ 260 l'UJIS batted .in. He hit,.21 homers and had "73 RBis while bitting .Z55 In 1968, probably his best ... son. He was used sparingly last season and bad not started a game tbls Season. He had a single IA six times at bat this year. , Angels manager Lefty Phillips said he wanted McMullen because the Angels needed more righthanded power fu their infield lf they are to make a strong bid for the pennant. "We needed another right handed bitter agam.t le!thanded pllching to belp Alex Johmon," he said, referring to hia fourth place hitter. "I wanted somebOdy who could give us some sock and hit sOme home run.!I." McMullen, who was signed Into the Los Angeles Dodgers chain by Phillips in 1960, has been compai:ed t o Baltimore's Brooks Robinson in the field but called a streak hitter who shows some power. His major league batting average for the past sevea years is .250 but he's hit 92 home runs and knocked in 354 RBI. He bit .272 last year wilb 19 home runs and 87 RBI. Off to a slow start, McMullen Was hitting .218 wilh no home riins before Sunday's game: and went M against his new teammates. Williams said the deal would not have ~n m~e if, the Seaatots could not have oDtained Rodriguez, a three-year !Dan Wh?3e m~jor league bitting ·1verage JS .235. "He can help Wa.shlngton if he tries not to pull the bAU," said Phillips. "He'a a much better hitter when , he tries to go to the opposite field." . Rodriguez had litUe to say about the lrade. • . ,. · CALlllOl.JUA 1. wrAIMl"•TON ... ~.,..' .... ,.,.. Alomer, 2'I 4 1 I 1 lrlnknwin. 11 .a o Fl'9'0t!, ti 4 0 I II ltt"9Ud, Cf 4 11 JltlMk!M, Cf I f f 't· ,,HOWll'd, If° > I R1""rdt' 1111 1 0 I I E11tNlfl, lb • 1 Rtpgr, cf I I f II Mly., rt • O A.J~ It 4 0 I II McM11lllnL )II • t SpMc.er, lb 4 I I O. liAINrl, ~ :t O You, rt • I t o ._.,.., e a • AKut. e • 3 1 2 I Co.II, p .a 1 A.Rodr~. Jb I 1 t o Knowta, 11 t f T.Mllrllh't" p 1 0 0 1 H.AllM, .... ·1 o· OovlllP ~ 1000 ., Toi.b fl I I I T0t•lt Jt 2 C.llfOl'!llll .. lft 010 Olt -' Wllftll'¢M .OOD 000 OJI,-J ' ' us et vs UCLA in B·attle of Unbeaten·· . . ;. ' . use venua1tbt IQA Bndm. Thal mape Sou'1md aports allraetion that brew• up .. --in ball<et-ball am roOtball. now takes over thla week'• lrack and jleld luterest 11 the keen riv~ matjll -ten l'«<rdl Saturday al Ibo '*-. The del>th-laded BnllN beld off. an Inspired Callltsmla team s.tun!ay for an 80-74 trtumph~ng them unbeol<n. use has olilJ lied. UCLA, boweVll', lhowed powtr as well ,.. depth with 1 nmnber OI outotanding perlorma-. M~ -ble w11 ihe cloo- ble by once u~ ·~lieut• )\- , Rabinson WU up fir the Goidm Bean, bolting out ol the blocks in both the 100 and 220 and then hokllng off Cal's fine Edd.le HAlrt. 1Wbtnlon'1 times were t.4 oi\d :lo.5, the latter mark a IChool -and the belt time in the -Id this year. Harl clocbd t.4 aioo. j\llt nlpp!ng Bruin Ronnie Welds, also 9.4. In the 220, Bari clocked lll.7 with John Smith ol UCLA fhird in Ill.I. Tbt UCLA-USC cWh will featun a number of line claliles and one of them will be between "the finest 440 men in the workt. .. 1bole wer1 the worda of UCLA '1 Wayne COU<t~ who lo cumntly the man with the fastest time in ·the ii:&Uon, 4'.0, But Collett won't be in the race: he'll be running the Intermediate hurdles. 'Ibe guys be wu talking about are USC's F.de9el Garrison and UCLA's Smith. G-paced the Trojans .to lbelr dual meet victory with a . 46.! quarter and thm pve USC a big lead In the vital mlle relay -the event USC had 14 win in order to win the meet. In the only other dual track action In the Pac-I last weekend, previously winleol Washington beat Stan!ord, 14-70. Top mark tn tbal meel w11 by . ..,., ) Watil)inaton'• ~im Johnlon, who ran the 3,IJOG.meter steeplechas .. ln l,63J. One man does not a track team make but Steve Pmontalne 1s ·lrytn8 in prove that adage has a !law • In ·one season, the diminutive tract sllr from the Unlv<nity o1 .Ore ... ho' vaulted Into the No. 1 111!"1 in the nallon . among dlatance runners. On his tilck, Oregon has grown Irons a sood track team to a great one. 5alurday the ~I Prefontaine cruieed throe miles In ts' 12.8. In the 18'1 throe weeka, the !rdunan · sensalfon has brought his personal best in the event clown by more than holi a minute. \ ~M:;:ond=l'/:.:.• ~~"':::';..' ::21.:., ::1':;:70°''------~AILY PILOf~, • Lakers, NY Duel Again ' <In Champiom~ip Serks NEW YORK (AP) -It' bW. Wlllls Reed a little. And, it lurts Wilt Chamberlain a little more.And frankl1, KeiUt ErlckSon's ankle isn't feeling so bot. But the agonized athletes will aseefuble anyw'7 tonight in Madison Square Girdell !or the secood game of the National Basketblll AsaoclaUon playoffs between New York and 1.<11 Angele.. &ed, wbo burt his left shoulder while leading New York to "1J4.QJ opening game vidory Friday night, aid lt was 11\lll 1 liWe ..,. but the pain has eased.· ''It bothered ~ for a while, but ·Beard Averts Close. Shave; Alters Game By HOWARD L. HANDY Of !Ml De11r Plllf lttff RANCHO LA COOTA - A strange thing happened 14 Frank Beard on his way to victory in the QWci:Ki.ck Tourna- ment of Champloe golf tournament Sun· day. "I had nine holes to come out of the clouds and relax," Beard said follow- ing his seven-.!ltroke victory. "When I checked my position after nine hOles and found I had a six-stroke lead over Tony (Jacklin), I seriously altered my play for the back nine. "I was more conservative, figuring I could par in and my · opponent would have to get six birdies to lie. It-'s surpris.. ing •how you cu go out and shoot nine pars if you have to. "I'm always nervous out there but 1 felt I had It won at the 15th hole." The man with the name that. brings visions of long sideburas, idateea, handlebar moustaches or full hirsute adornment, topped an all-star field of 31 tourney winners. He lired a 15-under~ par 273 for the four rounds to •take h~ the top prize of $30,000. His margin of victory was lhe largest on the pro golf tour this year. The win was bil second in this tourna- me11t and may also be the · 1ut, not only for Beard but for anyone else who qualifies with a tourney tour victory dUl'ini the comfag year, . All la not roaes .wlth tbe.fournameot and future datea are ~ Rumor• persisted throughout the four-day event: that this would be the list Tounsamtnt of CJ:iampions c~using chainnaa Allard Roen'to issue the following statement: "The TomnimeRt of Champions is 18 years old, and as rar as we are con· cemed, it will go on for at leMt another 18 years. "We have not been noUfted or any action to cancel our tournament by the tournament players division or its ~· missioner Joe Dey." The future of the event ls 1UU ques- tionable In spite of Roen's statement. FIMI -Ind monw WIMll!fl lund1v '" tile Toumam111t of Cl'l•m11""*: · ff'll,. ... ,., ~·"' "" ~·. tll. ,~l~·:t1,lrr; ~fiilffl!!!i! .. ~~Pion f'' u: =)· t· :, '"SI , 1.6S ·~'-·~ G~°fd".i. J~1mo11, 13,17S Bob Gob91~. 13,175 ~::•i!: f:3:7~~" ry ' '., ~· ~·" l~f H , , -..... ~·~ vnn, , ~ 1f; :lt .r.:.., ~ 4 f!: ... ~'~\1.1" ~· JiMHrv,"W'lio I'll be ok6;, -.' s'aid ttie 6-10 center. u1t's Dot as 'Ught as Jt was." <lhlrilberlaln, 'Loi Angeles' llfy-Jsclilnf center who IJlissed '10 games this se8llXl after ,knee surgery, Is apparently nol. .loo percent yet. He appeared umvlltin( ·<)I' unapie . ro dog Reed around the court Friday ·nlihl· giving Use .Knick!' crack /l>OI plehfy "' lC<'fl!sg ~· • Chamberlain, a1ao both«ed by cMlnlc arthritic knees, mapped strategy wltlJ ~er . ~ch Joe Mullaney to def~· Reed. Mullaoey l\"1f!llSed a le'-' 8urprises. . ' . Ericbon, who teams with Elgift ·Bay~ at forwatd f<r the Laker's, ... twitted an ankle ·FrldaY, nlgbt. BUt ljoctoo pumped corllsone Into the loot and tliough 'hf Js not' withauf pain, Was ~, .. ~ Start ,tonight. T • ' t Reed SCOf<d 37 pointa 11'1:1dlY nlgljj -bul·ooly .12 In the -bOJl' -he injured the !ihoolder while collldlni with the Lakers' Happy Hairston in play Wider the basket. lmmecliately after, he complained the shoulder hurt while he shot, prompUng fear he W'Ollld not be available I« tonight's game. "T}le shoulder Is sUll sore," Reed admitted Sunday'. "But not nearly -a~ bad IS it ·WU. [t'I loolened up. I doii't Ott 'l'V 'l'oni911t 5:30, t'raen11el 5 :· think it Will afiect me." Coach .~ Holzman o( the Knicka. who spent 90llle teoa:lon-filled hours over the W""!end while ~ nurtured R.,.d with heat treaUnents and cortl90l'le lhota, appeared. relieved. "ile•s· all nibt," Said Holzman ol ~ the mainspring of the Knlclts' go-power, .. .•• and so is his shooting." Reed also bas, aehing knees -~ a con- dition he's suffered with all season. He's been au)ping ,corttso.Pe pil)s -. what he calls "my-aches and pain!: pllls." · While. the Knick•· know where there'• a "lllis .there's a way t-·the Lak~ must have a healthy Chamberlain to ata1 In cootentloo In this belksf·herles. But.lle ~·t been~ aweiome Chapi- berlain of old, and the Knlcks tested h~ aching joints Wills a racehorse off..,. that ran the Laken out of. the garden in the last quarter Friday night. 'Ille series switcb6 to Los Angeles toc games three apcl four VI~. and Friday after toolgbl'•.~· ! . ' Motorist A<lmits · Hitting Hagberg OAKLAND (UPI) -"! dldn1 .. know he was dead or who he was ' unttl I read it in~ paper," the,WTiter aakl. "I know 1 shouldn't ~ve driven. ·awly but I ;w1_1s drinking and I know l would have ~ up in jail," he <;ontlnued. "! hove a· chronic drinking pniblem ·and woo.kl give anye.ng to IOlve It." 'Ibe_ wtjter, ~ said be ·wu the motori&t who nn over the fallen body of Oakland Raiden football veter111 Roger Hagberg April ts, Sile! he'd turn himself 'in 14 authorlU... ol ~ r • allSUred belp for bis dr~ ......... llagl>erg, 31, WBI ktlled ~ he lost control of lDI car, ren out onto the freeway and wu run over by another vehicle. · The motorist stopped, Inspected • the body, -drove off. Pollce do DOI know yet whether Hagberg was llW alive .wtien struck by the aecond car. Law en!oreement authorities say they don't )Qlow exactly what to do 'abOut the letter writer. I ' . -·~ • l • . ' ---·---- U DAILY PILOT ~ea Duo (' y 1 st at O]ai; ' . . .Hawks Roll Glon Cripe and Rollbie Qmn!nsham (J{ Newport 11ar1>or ,Hlgh -the boys ~ doubles title at the annual ' Olli t<lmll tournam<rit and Corona del II!<'• duo GI Brlllt ~II and Vennund copped die Junior boys doobles crown llahrday. lo the meo11 independent college , . dlvlDoo, Earl O'Neill and Cr'llC Netlage d UC Irvine dropped the cbampioMblp match to Brl&hAm Youna's Trane and Heme11ey, f.2 , 1-1. Orange l:Jout Olllege)oot In doublel In the -1<mals "1ieo Ogle and Cun· ~ were de!eat"'1 by Foothill 's Poliie 'Imel Sleflllkl, M, M, 6-1. ~ .............. ,,.... .Jf!111~ .. ~ ~,;:' .~"'· "" ~­s.~·w~ , :£ ~ .... 10!~.:r.-t.,.... W•i.h, w!2, ... ~ i.."11::'.:'=..., "'· TM" cltY."1l."'"4. a. .,.. Jlfll lhmMlu, stu111o ... ~.!-.. ~ ~..:· Jti. Al,_, dtf. -;r.~" _. '1\lu."'~ • La Al,.. .... • DALLAS (AP) -'!be road Andr" G!meoo d Spain look to the •lncles champlonshlp in the Dallas t.ennis claaalc '.wted out with.an auto accldent. . The friendly Spaniard nwmancHed Roy Emenon of Newport Beech, 6-l, 1-3. 6-l In Sunday'• final•, c:antlnuing to play . despite a fractured rib and a bruised hip suffered In an auto accident on ... opeoin& ni&lrt d the-· • " The -Brulna have kicked the 1 : QUcago Black H11'kl into Never- ; NeverLand ••• and croooed the threohold : Iowan! the Pmnbed Land. "We've opened the door and the ne1t : thine we have to do b: go through : M," said Bos&oo'1 F.ddie Wl!ltfall after ; the Bruim bounced the Black Hawks : out Ci tho N•timal Hoctey Leque's : S(anloy CUp Pbyoffs M Sunday. ; 'Ihe yict«y p ve tbe Brulrs a four .. • game -In the beoklf-7 Eul Division : -ml -them IQto the choln-: plonlllllp -ipllllt the Weot Dlvillon winner. . Pitt.burgh o\opped St. Louis J.J Sundoy • ·'lo tie their beot·of.7 -set at J.I. . . . • • WNG BEACH -Los Angeles cent..-' Crali JU)'DOi>d'""""" a cluldl butet .... • tip.In. -ii -to play. a.... bloi:lted ClnCy l'O!rell'• -wHll ' five.-~ Sunday' night to ' lift tho stars Id • 124-123 victory ...... ;. . Dollu , for ·• w )rilElpb In -~ ,. Amer1cn BaltetbaD A• Io CI a t l 0111 -IJlayol!s-. 2,0!3. . . • LOS ANGELES New York Me!S catche!' J..,.,. Groje will be OO<p;tallud another :week with a liver ailment, the • Mets announced. Grote, who entered St. ~ J ot.i.'1 Hoepit•I in nearby Santa Monica 'Friday nlil!~ ••to be released Sunday. .But Dr. -WQooll, Ille Loo Angeleo lloda<H' team ~. aald Grote'• II..,. coodltioa bad DOI improved llllf· ' '.lic!eo!Jy. . ,Grote will mnain In St. John's and ~will not rejoin the Mets until Friday ~ In San Diego. : Dr. Woods added U.t !JO far Oiere • • · ts no i:ndkadm of ·Weci!oos hepaU tit, I : the disease that atruck Dodger pitcher : IJfJJ Singer who is in the '8me boopital. :· With Grote sidelined, Dully Oyer is ; the ~y New Yort catcher. .• HOPKINTON, Ma"n. -F o ·n er 11 serviCes will be held 'l'Uesday for Paul V. Brown, 52, a . member of one of . New England's best known sports ' families. Brown once managed Bostoo Arena. He was the ni of. the late George V. Brown, fornwr bead <i -Amla . and later <i -Gard<n. A brolber, the ..,. Walter A. Brown, WU pnllid<nt (J{ Bostm Gcden ond .....,. <i the -Celtics pntesslonaf -etball teom. Brown died Saturday at Framingham Union Holpltal ofter a short Wnesa. : . : Spik~ Meet Set !. ! Prelima In oil evaits acept the relays will be beld TUeodlY when Golden w .. t Ooll<ge -the South<m Colllom!a I Conf.,.oce :tnci< ond field meet. Field ""'1ts be8ln at I: :JO wJth the fltlt runnini event al 3. . LA.CC, tmdtleated ln conftttDCe dual ; meet competition, Golden West and LA Harbor are expected to balUe for the 'con! ..... Utle. F!Dab will be held Fri· 0&1. ALL-ROUND THREAT Huntington Beach High's Garth Wise is proficient In three sports • . . football, basketball and track. Here he's skimming the hurdles en route to a triple win in both hurdles and th<:. long jump in leading his mates to a narrow track and field '·1 A.t Huntington win ~ver Macina. The. junior whiz passes the fall campaign quarter· backing the football team and spends bis winter as a starter on the basketball squad. His father, Bill, was a fonner Oil City great. GW.C, Pirates Place High In Swimfest Triple Sports Ace Wise Pair of Races Capt1ired Orange Coat College's ChriJ Gammon captured the 1~1orc1 butterily event J<> bipljpt "--' lridivldual elf..U ,1n Saiurday's .fln,11 dpy· of tbO · Scdllem Califoml& Jwdor eollep IWinllning and .divin& champiC!llSblPI ot Rio HOlldo College. Gammon set a life lime high of 53.a "Which was just five-tenths of a se(Ofld off the Southern California record. His previous best wa s 54 .2. Golden West placed fourth In the team standings with 2031,l, points while OCC was fifth (181). Long Beach won the team Utle with 2791k points, followed by Pasadena and Fullerto.. Other area highlights included a second allll fourth place fiolsh by Golden West ·nbnmtrs Don Llppoldt and Greg ,Feinbug in the 200 backstroke. Lippoldt clocked 2:04.2 and Feinberg was timed • in 2:07.9. Llppoldt's time was a season best. In the 100 free. OCC's Andy Ericksoa was thlrd in 49.S and Keith Donaldson ol. Golden West placed fourth (49.1). tn the 200 breaststi"oke, Bruce Johnston of Orange Coast finished third in 2:%4.3. Golden West's Kris Swenson placed second to Gammon in the fly, clocking 54.5, eclipsing his season best· by two. tenths of a second. OCC'1 John Reeg had one of his better perfctmances of the seaso'Jl in plicing third in the three-meter diving competl· lion and teammates Steve Schwer and John Blauer 'Wt.re fifth and si:r:th in the 1,650 free. lAJO ltw -1, J~ lflt~) 17:,,,,l 2. Mor•I .. CCM"Tf1ft) U:JU '· ltldltr IFvl~I 11:11.l o1. Ro."*"f jLOft8' IMdl) 11:".I J, Sdl· -IOCCI 11:21.G '· ai,....,. (OCC) lt:G.•. 100 tr. -1, Onldlflt II.ant lt«lll M,l 2. Mc· ~-11.ont twcrll 4',J I. ErlcQOrl (OCCI ... S 4. Clol\IW-(GWCI ... _. J. Thi"'" (U.CCI •• 1 '· 'vllrno" IMfSACJ .,, .. . 200 !ltd -1, ltltlcl~h !FUllffiorll 2:02.) "I. Lippoldt (GWCI 2:Go4.2 3. 80W11r tl'•todlN) 2:0...5 •. "f•lllblrg IGWCI 2:01.t 5, Dllrln;1r (l!I C•mll!OI 2:10.1 '•. Oldman (lllo t+oncto) 2:U.S, t5oultl1rn C•ll· fonlle r«W'd, bl'Nlls old merti ot 2:02.1 llti.il ~l' JOIWI K!Odll of Lonv IMdll. JOO lrlftl -I, loul<vll IS.l\tt MOnlc1J 1:1t.D 1. Srnlltl 111 C.ll'llflol 2:1'.I J. JoMllOll (OCCI 2:2'.J 4. t roui.Mt'll (lofio l•chJ J:tc.s J. 1'111111.,...-(Unr1 AMI 2:2'.I t. POlt\ltl tl.Orlt BMCll) 2:17,7, 100 IWttlfflr -I, O.nwnon (OCCI U.t 2. $wt ... eon IOWCI S..J J. Lown (fl1MdeMI .U.t 4. B•rl'VI (Long llldol 54.1 S. Mllfllht HA H1111DrJ 5'.C '° ColltMft 1i.nt1 IMnlcil 57.4. · TPll'...-tw dfVlnt -I. C.Slclt .CU. V•lln'I Me.J$ polrits 2. WllMHI IL.A V•l"'rl Cb,t J!Mnta l. ._.._ tOCCI MS.OS points 4. tie ~ ...._ l"111i. lffOn) Miii SO\llNlt'll !Alo Hondol 3ll.d r""'· eo 11'11 ,.,., -1. Long BMC.II 3:17.7 , OrlflCI! Goltt J:JO.I J. flillltrton J::JO.~ 4. Goldell Wnl J:».J I. fl•.-llM l :IJ.J •1 E! C.rnlnl J:!l .. ('°"""""' C..tllornll ...,,..., ~· .... rnlf'll Of J : 11.t Mt by LA Vlllrt In INtJ. F~I tffm acorlng -L11n9 llKfl 2"~ Pltl• ~ W!Ji, l'\111'""" 2-MVt, Gokltn WHI 20.i!Ji, Or· '"'"' Cont Ill, l!I C•rnlno 1tl, LA V•ll•r Ut. s.t'otl AM ts. IUo HO!ldl "I'!. C.rrtoe •• Cl\ffW/' ~. fllltQ oil, LACC 27, Mt. SI" An,_,11 )<!, $In &trNrflnl '9\.\. IH ... 11.id .. LA H11110r It, llMl,.IH L Clln• L c.,,,....,. %.. May Switch to Tailback By RO!JER CARLSON CN ... Oflll¥ Pa. staft football-wtae, buketba1Mrtae or track and field-wile, Huntlngtoo Beach High School's Garth Wile is ptaiaJy a very busy sort on the Oller campus. Presently he's cavorting on the cin· derpaths as a hurdler and long jumper for coach Paul Wood's track and field team . His 22·1 Yi effort in the Jong jump Is the best this year in the Orange Coast area and he's gooe over lhe high sticks in 14.8, second only to S1111 Clemente's Bob Blacker in the area. However, track and field efforts are hardly the total of Garth's abilltiea. He quarterbacked HU11tington Beach to a tie for second place iJI the powt.rfUI Sunset League as the Oilers finished with a 7·2 overall record. After hanging up the grid clea ts he toiled oo the Oilers' basketball team. The bonus for liuntington Beach is the fact Wise is a junior a11d will be back in Septerriber for another run at the three sports. First. and foremost, is of course his football prowess and coach Ken Moats says that if things work out as he hopes. Wise will be packing the ball for Huntington as a tailback -instead of his familiar spot at quarterback. "OUr difficulty is we have to make sure someone can take over the QB spot. We feel Garth is one of the most ezciting runners in the ·county," says Moats . He averoged U y-per carry. ICOr9d 1even toucbdowm and Completed 48 of 1111 uria1s for 583 yards. Hll boot night l>USinl wu a 221'yont output against La Quinta <10 16 com- pletions. He eamed first.team honors on lhe All-Sunset and All-Orange Coast area team as a junior. As a sophomore, he was a starter in the Oilers' defensive backfiekl , "Gerth bas the ability never to get hit solid. He hu fanta.stk lateral mov~ ment," explains Moete when ~king of his abiUty to sunive and excel in Sunset football warfare. Incidentally, his father, Bill, was Hun- tington Beach's athlete of the year in 1!H7 after starring in the &a.me sports as his youngest son. He's one of the most respected students on the O~ campus with a quiet, well- groomed appearance. Basketball-wise, he's the only starter due to return to Elmer Combs in the winter and plays out of a guard post with good moves. Wood says he thinks his hurdler will threaten 1 the school standard of 14.4 as a.-senior. "I only wish he had a ltttle more natural speed than he does. He isn't a 9.5 sprinter like some of these hurdlers,'' says the Oiler track coadl. But as he does In his other two sports endeavors, Garth Wise geU the job done. By Bue Crew <Xance Coast College's crew won a pair ~ races while UC Irvine placed second in the varsity race during Saturday'"'8an Diego Regatta at Mission Bay. . The varsity event was won by Cal State (Long Beach) in 6:22.0. UCI finish· ed second, Loyola was third and Stanford placed fourth, followed by San Diego State and ,UC San Diego. OCX:: captured the junior varsity event with a time of &:42.0 while Stanford finished second in 6:46.2 and UCI was th in! (6019.7), In the freshman race, Orangt Coast again was the victor with a time of 6:15.8. Loyola placed second in 6:54.$ and Stanford was third in 7:00.5. UCI finished fourth. Loyola won the lightweight fours com- petitioo with a time of 7:31.2. OCC was second in 7:34.1 and UCI placed Wrd In 7038.2. In the varsity race, Cal State (Long Beach) won by a boat length over UCI. The Anteaters had defeated the Long Beach varsity in two earlier meetings by a hair-boat length each time. This Saturday, both UCI and Orange Coast will compete In the annual Newport Regatta on North Lido Channel with Loyola, UC Santa Barbara and San Diego State also competing for team hooots. The first nee will begin at 9 a.m. Leadiag the list of candidates fQr quarterback is Jbn Martin, who 'll be a junior in the fall. Wise, whose strength and running abili- ty are deceptive when vjewing the 182- pounds he carries-on a tix·foot frame was a virtual ont·man show for the Ollers last fall. Major League Standings Ducks Bag Pair EUGENE, o ... -The Oregon Ducka got two complete game p it c h i n g performances and played err or I e 1 s defense SwMiay to take a pair ol Pac:lflc.a baseball victories from v i s I t l n g Washington. Sophom~e Andy Jones pitched a three. hit shutout in the opener for a 7.0 Oregon win, and veteran Freid Cardwell followed Jt up with a 15-strlke out 7.3 victory in the nistrtcap: NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. Chicago Jl 3 .7!6 St. Louis • • .643 Pltt.s burgh JO • .62; New York I I .500 Phlladelphia I I .500 Montreal 3 11 .214 Wed Dlvt•a CincinnaU J4 IJ .700 Dod1en 8 8 .500 San Francisco 9 10 .474 Atlanta ' 11 .389 Houston 1 JI .361 San Dl~o • 12 .333 '"""""' 11-111 $1n F'tlfl(!IClll 11·2, MMlrtll 1-l Ntw Yori! 3. DMllR 1 fl~H.otlllhll i, Un DI-l All1nl1 L Pl!ll.,.,,..11 0 St, LWh •· ClncllWllH I Cllk.,. .. Hou<,IOn I GB 2 2 4 4 I 4 41; • 61~ 7 AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. GB Bal Um ore 11 s .688 Detroit 10 s .661 ,,, BoslOn 1 8 .167 3\1 Washington 7 I .167 3\1 New York 7 11 .389 s Cleveland • • .3>7 s Well Dlvllloa MinnelOta JO 4 .714 \I Angeli J2 5 .'IOI Oakland 8 8 .500 3\1 Chicago 6 JO .11• 5\1 Kanaas City 6 JO .37$ 5~1: Milwaukee 5 1l .313 611 SVIMIY'I lltMllll 81!1lmon 10, K•~••I City ' - Ml-I •• ~ln>11 D A-II J, W1i.h..,.IQ11 1 Ollu99 I, Ollitlnd I Ntw Yori! t, O•I-3 MJ1w1u1i;ft :5,, lollOfl ' l Volleyh·atl Stars at CdM ·TllNY't ·-T....,.,._ Chlcato IOlell.11' Ml It Plltlbll""" (l ltll J·ll, 0.-lll'ld (Hllfltlt J·11 11 Bot!Oll 111-l.Ol "ltfi' . Cl...,elll'ld (McOowtll 2·21 1t MIMtMll , ... Mooilrill 'Clttf11<1 W ! It Sill Dlelo lc.tlllll .. 11. wtlt 0.1\ ..... Mllw1ulr11' IP•llln O-J) II W11h1Mhlll (Coltll'lfn flllll.clelllhlt fWIM 1·1) 11 Dlfl-I~ J.11, 1·11. 1119111 "'" Olllv 11rnt1 sdttduled. \ ' ,I &eQOn, wlrmin& lff!Ven titles between them. . .. And In all 1even they have battled each otber in the finals with Chart Hou" holdlnl • W edge. Both teams have former Olymplam on their n:mter. UCLA c:oach Al Scates and Jolm A1strvm ol ,ll1e Bay Club """ ln the 1968 Carnes WbJle mate BUI Griebenow Was ln the 1&4 Otymple1. The Ba.y Club uses a fWldamental stjla ol. play to acconunodrite Its bigger, 1>ower team. For the Chart !louse, a mulllple of· tense, apeedy outfit, Larry Rund le is one of the main stars. He was ln the '68 Olymplcs and was moot valuable player in the past two nationals. Other OlympiaM on the squad are Jack HeM, Mike Brilbt. Rudy Suwara, Dan Pattcnoa, Butch May and Bob Clem. Japanese transfer Tosh.I Toyota also makes the team click and Is often called a magician with the ball. Proceeds from Tuelday's show wUI M divided between the U.S. Olympic volltyball travel fund and Orange Coast CoUcg,. °""' '""" llthldllled. --T""''l''S GlrMI ClllCIM 1t Pltllbllrtll, ll)fl\I O.troH 11 1(,-•• Cll'I', nllhl Alltflll II II. Lai,m. "t.llt Clfvtl1rld •I MIMlllOll Holnloll Ill (lllC:~I. lllOM J,11t'-t1 11 Clllc.Ho. nlthl l'hlllcll•lt 11 D9tllr-. nhltlt M11'w1i* .. 11 W1thlnttool, nltht Melltnll •I s... D-. nltM _. ...... 11 N• Yft. nllllt N-Y6'tl .t Sell l't1t1C\K9ir 11ltflt Ollllllllll 11 IOllOll. nllM DEAN L ·EWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Service and Parh for All "Imported C1r1 Modern Body Shop for All C1rs 646-9303 Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer UCI Nine Confin ues To~rid. Pace The Clll1ain drops on Act I Jn the Ill• (J{ UC Jmne bo9'blll Tu<Odai"llt.,_. 'l'be · Anteaters Ck>se out hlghly sue· cessful first yW. borne flekl actJoo on the campus diamond, playi,{g hooi 10 Colifornla Lutheran College ol 11)ousand Oaks. Grune tirne is 2:30. Jn the continuing second act, the Antealen toppled Cal Lutheran In both onda <i a doubleheoder Saturday on the loeers' ·diamond, S.O and 7-1. Nine 4ames remaln on the road. 1be third act will be written ~t ae8IOll '1 end if Irvine oonUnues the torrid pace !bat has brougbi the ......, rrecord to 21.a.z. Continuaijon of this remarkable first-year perftnnance could t:nng about a bi<I to the NCAA College Djvillon regional playof.fs. I 1 , Breaking down the Irvine record at home and oo the road, the. Ante,.... have a l~l mark on the CllDlJlUS dia· mood and are 1'"6-1 away from home. Deonls Nicbolson 'pllcbed his second shutout of the campaign in Winning his seventh decision against two defeat.a. He has started 10 times and completed six games, leCOnd only to Tueaday'1 probable atarter, Dave Wollos, who 'bas a perfect 11.0 record . .. Barlow evened ·bis season J"eCU'd• at 4-4 and has started eight ·times 'aod completed four games. He limited Cal Lutheran to three hits Saturday • Mike Sykora, Irvine third, baseman, "''as hit in the jaw by a pitched ball in the second gaq:ie and required several 6titches. He returned home. with the team Saturday night. Tom Spence was perfect at the plate In the second encounter, getting a triple, double and two singles In foor 1p- peerance.. Mike Saska became the second Irvine p!ayer to b.last two hcmers \his seaa>n when be bomlled one 400-feet to lei~ ctnter field tn the secoOO game after Spence'a triple. -y FatTar opened the aliernoon with a doobie and alter Sytora singled, Rocky Craig mwe him across -the only nm N-. J100(led. An infield error and a walk brought in a second tally. Mike Sheline 's triple accounted for the third run in t.be seventh . ,lll:ST OAMI" UC lr"tlnt UI Cll Lllllllr111 (II 111 r lo'111 1lorlli,_i F1r .. r. II J 1 1 I $Mppird, .. 4 0 1 I Srtor1, lit • 1 2 I Stodd1nt, 11 ' o 1 e Cr111L ct • 0 3 1 Slloop, 211 • O 2 0 s,-c., lit • e e O •h>lrl. Jb ' I I I $11111,tf •lllTlltll,cl •110 H1n""-U J O O l l'etllt,silt 1111 Gt1111wey .. 2b • e I I fol-, If 1 O I I SMllM. e • I 1 0 "l\'OvdOlnlo'l'l>llo ( 0 0 0 Nldlo!.otr, p • o I o ~· c 4 t t I ' ' ' 0 I I Tol1ll )( ' t I otll1 24 O 10 f _,,_ VC lr"llnt Cll Lut11.,.1n ••• 20tl llOO 100 -3 t I 000 llOO 000-1 I~ I " SECOND GA.Ml UC lr'lilll I') C.I Lll!Mflltlr Ill 1bth111i 1brlli111i F1rr1r. t! • 1 I 0 $hloo, lti ~ 0 I 0 Sykor1, lb 2 O O O Slodderd, 11 2 l 1 0 P111w•d, p11 1 D O O Blwn, lb l O a I Spenlki, JO 0 a 0 1 Motn, ,, J 0 l 0 C••lo.cl J201Twrtoel J OOO $pet1C1, lb 4 2 ' 1 $....,.rd, u 2 I • 0 s1111-.n 112JP.i11n,pto 11 10 HlmM,U C O DOFl't1"is,u 0010 G..-w1y, :tit J I 1 O ~· ... 1112 0 0 0 ~llffnOll. c. i 0 0 0 Oovtlfli, c 2 0 •• 81tlGW, p ' 1 I 0 Tho!Mt, p 1 0 e 0 Toll ls Stwphtn, p l 0 D 0 H1rnpton. pl! 0 0 0 0 P1tinPef', p I I 0 0 ll7t7 To11i. 24131 kl11: II~ IMlll!t'I VC lrv!ne C1I Lulhtrln ••• 20!0lll8-7 f2 OC1 000 0-1 I I Foothill Favored i Orange Coast College 1fill serve as host for !be J910 ~tale swimming and diving cbampionshlps, aet Thursdey, Ffi.. day and Saturday.. . Time trials will be held at 10 a.m. each da y with finals scheduled for 5. Foothill College, which Pas won the state title for the past eight years, is again the favorite. Long Beach, Pasadena and Fullerton are expected to battle Foothill for team honors. DEAN LEWIS APllL SPICIAU [!][Q]MO~:T ~A)[ COROLLA t'.970 $1853 +Tu au .. VOLVO 1170 DEMO SAVE ' $570 142 2 4r .. r14i1, "••fer, 4"'~"· rs.,, •47401 • USID CAlt SPICIAL lfft TOYOTA C•reli. C!M- Aldi., llN!tr\ ....... Olldl fllr. ptk l . OU...... 1 $12H .. ~-==~--------- e 1aga -SUC• 1 on I to l8nd the both on line on's >Ice I to able .... s!on I at ten dia· '--his .... oted •Y'• '!w I, at 'and caJ oan, ball er al the 1late lple, •Po vine -le!" 1fter """' 1Ied, the Held -for I ·~· ' . 1 • ' . ' . ' . 1 • ' . • • ' . • • " I • ' ' , ) . "' ' . ' . . ' ' . •• •• • • ' .. • • o I ' .. ' .. • • ' .. > I • ' ' ' .. and Fri~ a.m. 5. the ears, ~h. octed • ' ~ J Gaucho s ., Remain 2::Back ·· -;. Saikleblck Col l e1e'1 .. -team lllll has a aJlm cbaJq ol sbarlng the J;>esert Cool.....,. crown, ofter spli~ !'-ling • cloubl<beader with B.r.toir Saturday. The Gauchoo lrlpped tile host dub, 7-1, In the flnll i•' ·game dlen lost. the sec:opd ell<OUlller, 11-7. The split left Saddleback • with a 9-5 circuit record, two games behind Mt. San Jaclnlo (11-3) wbidt was idle last weekend. Victor Valley is ih second spot ( 11-5) w h ii e Imperial ·Valley and Mlra • .,. Coota are tted with Saddlebact for 'thlrd, The aeason ends Saturday with SaddJeback at Palo Verde (Goll), Mira Costa at Imperial and Desert at'ML Ban Jacinto. All ar~ cloubl~ 'Ihe Gauchos must win two 1 ,, and hope that ,Mt. JAC 1- a pair. Jn the event that does happen, the race would eod in a three or four-way tie and a playoff would result. S at urday's doubleheader was a windy affair with many potential ny outs resulting in wind-blown doubles and triplee for both clubs. Gaucho Ieftharider St e Ye '· Shapard scatteftd aeveo hits in the · first game in going the dlstan<e on the mound. He struck out five and walked one. PltST OlllMI SADDl.alACK (n .. ' • ... Hiison, 2b ' ' ' ' L.onfnlCk•· cf • ' I , .......... u • • ' • l!dw•llh. • ' • ' • -·· • • ' • Stutit.. c , ' •• • BoYi.. lb , ' ' • Boshl•· rf ' • I • Sl'llPll"l:I', " • • ' • T111'11ll " ' " • •AIUTOW (1) ~ ' • oM Newm1"" lf 0 ' • Ullb.lrrt, Cl' , • ' • Oornlll9WJ, ~ ' • • • SHvef'I, 2b ' • ' • W1~t11f, ..-' • ' • Divine, rf ' ' ' • O.nltlMlll. I • • ' • y ..... 1• • 0 • • -· • • • • Ltt,"" ' • • • ..... " ' ' • Sc.rt W 111111• • • • s.ddl•bldl cm 31D ~7 11 • ...... 010 C101 ~1 ' ' Slcom'D O.t.Mll SADD&.aaACK en .. ' • "' N"-2b • ' ' ' Lonllf'ICklr. d • ' ' • 5/l1panl, 11-11 ' ' ' • E!twll'cll, 3b • • ' ' Cllrlstwni.en. .. • • ' ' 0.rb\IM'llre. ti • • ' • Sl\ltltrl. c • • • • lo\lll, lb • ' ' • P""nln~P ' ' ' • HoYI, If ' • • • Tol•ll " ' " ' IAllSTDW OU ' .. ' • "' Newn19n, 1f • ' ' ' u ni.rrt, lb • • ' ' ()(mln9IHIL :ii ' ' • ' SNvero, p • ' ' ' WH•l11f, II ' ' ' • DIYIM, ct • • ' ' D1nltl'°1!, ~ ' ' ' ' Y1l11, 2b • ' ' • Hlf1mln, rf • • ' • Toti!$ " " .. " ktn w lnlll.,.. • • • .... -310 COO ODii--7 IJ .S 81r1tow acKI fl) :ia.-11 14 1 Baseball Standings DUlltT CDNJ'llllNCS w 1. o• Mt. S.n J.clllte l1 l Vktor V1llW 11 S 1 $edd]~ ' s 2 1-111 V.lltY ' J 2 Mlrt COii• ' .s 2 a.-t 774 ;.· .... 81rs?oW s • ' Cl-1 ·11 ' Pl .. V"'*t I 12 10 • :· . :. : • • ' ' ; ~ l ~ : ' • ' r ! __.. ...... Saddltbeodt r-1. ll1r11ow 1·11 lrnpe,-111 Yol'-t M , Vlclw V1lltY 2-1 Desert ,_10, c.nvon• 0-1 Ml"' to.le 7-\6, P1lo Vl!'dl 1-J Ml. St11 J1etntO. W• S.19f'My'I ·-SlddllbKll: ., Pllo ven1t rn Dftlrt et Mt: S.n Jactnr. 12) Mlr'll COtt1 It 1-111 VIUW tn 81.-stew 11 C.,..,_ (2) Vkfor V1l11Y, iw. SOUTH ~ CDJWl"lllNCt: W L oa Ctrrlfot : '' 1 - Sin °"'° ' 10 S 5 Mt.SMAIWllf)le\ 10 ' 7 ' S1n Dr.tto MM 7 7 7111 Fullerton ' 7 t I S1nl1 AM l 12 11 0-Coelt 3 15 121.', .. ,.,,..., •• kierfl ~~ 'iJ. 'i~~,:-:,:i.: Mill I~ Ml. Sin Alllorllo 7-1• Sin DlttO U '"'""'°"' bfl l ............. ""'""'°" at Clrrllol Sift DltfD If knl1 Alll Mt. Mii _.,,..... 11 Sin DI-Miu °'.,.. <ollst.'bft ~ .... ._.. SMOlllo._ et hlll9AM 0 ) C:laarice tO, Meet .tlae Pros Young athletes from st. Joachim's school in Costa Mesa got a chance recen11y to meet pro football s~ ,et a special get-together. Here seventh grad- er Vincent Mulroy chats with John Hoffman (cen- ter) and M a r 1 in McKeever of the Washington Redskins. Bucs Snap Motorcycl.e Racing Rustlers Loss Skein; Opens Friday in Mesa Win, 2-1 ~ Cop Pair 0·~w·br~~1:~~~ :id·v~~~wtr~ 1~~~~ On 2-hitter Fairground! dirt oval i s someone. hung On the sport Orange Coast Col l ege started aod eixled: tbe 1970 baseball season oo a winlli:ig note -but in between it had problems. Sa!\lnlay the Pirates bound- ed out ol a 16-game losing streak with '1-1 and 10-3 viC- tories over San Diego Mesa in South Coast Conference ac- tion on the losers' diamond . The pair of wins brought a close to the OCC season . Coach Barry Wallace's team finished with a 7-20 season mark and a 3-15 conference terord. Steve Schoettler tossed a three-hitter in the opening game striking out seven and walking four . Home runs by Billy Powell and Tom King led a 17-hit OCC attack in the second game. l'IRST ••Mir ORAirtGI COAST (7) •ll rfl...i P1ul,lb ' I l O Cl1rk, 2b J I 1 1 P()>ffll, lb 5 1 2 O Le•vv.11 s o 1 2 T.l(lnv;c I O I o $. 1(1.,,, cf ' 0 It 0 WM"ltr, rf 4 l I O P ll!, ti 4 I I 0 khoetller, 11 I 2 2 0 T~lts :it 1 ll 4 SAN 01100 Ml!SA 11) .. ' ' . e-.., 2b Fl~.c C•l>Pl"""I, et ktller, I I Minton, P Slev11111on, rf Pll'CIYll, If Caak, :18 1C1,1U11;1, lb Tor.Ii • • • • ' I • 0 ' . ' ' ' . • • ~ ' lcrtf9 "' lllflln" . "' • • • • • • • • • • • • ' . ' . ' ' . ' finalizing plans for the 1970 for no apparent reason except sea!on, which q>ens Friday the lack of a better name. at 8 p.m. Short track racing had a In addition to m ore temPorary stay of execuUon grandstands, better lighting shortly after World War II and public address system, at Lincoln Park in Los there are dozens of new and Angeles and at s e v e r a I eager riders, new machines Southland tracks. and the corps of veteran However, interest faded in. riders with more experience. the sport and it was un- it all adds up to a rebirth ceremoniously buried . of a sport that was buried During the mid-1960s two- twenty years ago. wheeled ·sports sud d e n J y Famous names that were • sprouted out in huge ntrnbers attached to the sport such generated by the tremendous a s "Lammy" Lamoreaux, sale of motorcycles. Everyone Jack and Cordy Milne, Bo equipped . wttb a camper or . Lisman, MIDy Wahl, Peewee tntiler • • • plus a teen-aged Q.illum, "Sproot1" Elder and boy bad to a c q u i r e a Byrd McKioney have been lightweight motorcycle, as the replaced by steve and Mike snowball st.arted to gain "speed Bast, Rick Woods, Sonny Nut-. greater sales in all sorts of ter, "Moose" Gilctemaus, Lar-motorcycles branched out. ry Heinselman and "Wild Bill" With this interest built into Cody • • • a new group of the average outOOorsman, it riders with new machines and was only natural for speedway a new style of riding. racing to come charging back Speedway motorcycle racing into the scene. ·• Laver, Emerson Set In Forum Net Classic The seventh round of the $200,000 . Tennis Chunpions Classic, f~g the world's greatest prolesilooal playen, has been scheduled f o r Wednesday, May 20, at 1be will be a special celebrity doubles mat.di featuring ac· -Olarlton Heston and El· rem Zimballst Jr. r II • F o ... n .. CCNUI 001 010 500-7 13 0 onµn . 'I1le $200,000 Classic ts pry- fessional tennis' Dtw fqnn8t to determine the 1970 cham· pion. The world's nine top. seeded pros are playing a series of 12 $Der-take-all matches for $10,000. s.n Olffo Mwo Oll'I GOO 000-1 J l Corona del Mar's Rod Laver Sl!COMO OAMI Olt.lMGI COAST flt) and Newport Beach's Roy ·~ r 11 "' Emerson are two of the top PM!l,lb ' 2 2 O ci.rt:, 2b • o i o entrants. Powell, lb • l 1 " The feature attraction will Pitcher Steve Griffith, who has seen limited duty this season due to a knee injury~ tossed a two-bitter Saturday night tn leading Golden West College to a 2~1 win over Fullerton in a non conference baseball game at La Palma Stadium. Griffith a 11 owe d just twq singles, struck out 11 and walked two in going the mute for coach Fred Hoover's club. 1be Rustlers op ho more allowed Fullerton just one run in the opening frame, then blanked the Hornets the rest ol the way. Golden West tied the game in the fifth. Tom Cornell open- ed the frame with a single and promptly stole second. After a pair of strike-outs, 1 Rick Rus.sell's single plated Cornell . The Rustlers tallied the win- ning run in the eighth. GOL Dl!N WEST IU .. ' . ' ' . ll.1,11ceu, lb Jim Holl•"· Cl 1C11rer, rf P11,1!.on, 2b P~,c: ' ' • • SnYdll", II Cprroell, lb """·" Griffith, p Tot1l1 ' 0 • • • • • ' ' ' . , . ~ ' " • ' ' ' • • P'Ul"-lltTON (11 Mf1s. 211 Ger1kos, lb TllrMI', lb Sabol, .rt Bl111>n,ii1, c: WIM. If Cit•, ct 6Uf91Nn, u Root, P .. ... pll '"" ' To111ts •b r II ' ' ' • • • ' . . ' . . ' . . ' . ' ' . . ' . . ' . . 1 0 . 0 • • 0 11 , I 2 SUN llf IM11119' ••• 000 011 ~' ' 0 loO 000 000-1 2 • t.NVY.14 4071 kil T. 1e1ne, 11 s 1 2 1 be a $10,000 winner.ta e-a Wllbl"fChl, If 1 1 I 0 match bet YI e e D challenger i;!:"d d ~ ~ ~ ~ Tony Roche, the fl A I h y' Wlllstt .... rf 1 o o • Australian lefthaoder, and the McN"l'f', rf 2 0 1 0 ..llltlMm. c J o 1 o winner of the aixth fOWld EN ROLL ' TO DAY MEN .. Qut .... btl'rY, P 3 • o i 110,000 match Friday at Cont&nl, 111'1 I O O O Cl1tip, p t1 o o o Dayton, Ohio. Pln'9!', p o 0 0 0 Erne-, currmt 1r'-o( 01vlclson, p o o o t • """' ~ Ti11111 :u 10 1, • the hill in the $10,000 series U.H DllGO M::A (:> II ,.. of ' matches, will face •-· 21:1 • 1 o • challenger Fred Stolle at ~i::~ •. d ~ ; ~ : Dayton. ~ ICtlltr,u 2 't 1 • 'Jbeloeerof'thetme.tcbwill :~rt : : : : meet Southern Callfernia tc1,111t. 1b s • o o favorite Pancbl> Gonzalez ln Pen;:IYal, If l 0 1 O ~. Cid.. • 1 o o o a special $5,000 winner-taltC" , BODY BUILDING PHYSICAL ATNESS WEIGHT LOSS . WEIGHT GAIN Tl'IUl')trr, P ' 0 1 1 all match at the Forum to AHOIUIS 1.IA.UI" T~1l1 JS I 7 2 w t. a• sc.... n 111111... qualify for re-entry into the 6 ~J:s 520 I' ' . !· : l lW. Al!YI f 2 -r II I l20I) 000 --~~ .. llltX ' 1 1 t ONnn Cont m 0111 71~101, O • llR:ll"°• ~=,, ! ~ ~ s.n Ole9o ""-'°' ooa 002-' r , Ala;o (JO the Forum program s.Mt..~ • 1 s 1 ............. ~ ................................................ ... ., ... ..,. . . . ............ ~ MlflfrQI~·~ Mltlr OM .. II,._ AINI """" ... ,,;..... .. -SI, A""°""'Y If l"M A SUfllllT LIAOUI w W-I W-"'tlMtlt 4 Allthellf> I l11'11A111 4 L 01 . -. ' I 1 DELTA SUPER. QUALITY Tires Cost Less Co111pl•t• u.._ of Fn,.,,1.,, hked Tito• A•1ll•"'' --•121.n ,... P.l.T. fikf9l•1t wlcl1 Ovols ....!. Svpor Pr1111him - R•cli•I·-Sports -Send l"'tf'I - & 111 51111 Trutk Tir11 I M.riNI S NIWllOl't H...eor 1 . ' . '" ' . ' . BERG'S DEL TA TIRES ( twntlftlllrt IMCft ' .. ~.--. HllnllntlOr'I 81.-ch .t. AMIHlkn 1 ( T.......,'I •t!llff A111IHllm 11 .....,.,.. H•rtiof W"tmlntlw ti hn11 AN Wll...,_ 91 MlllflM ' -Hilftt ..... a..cAr .. 141 1. 17th St.· Costa Mesa . 645°2010 l1nkA1111r:e•rd (~ ...... 19yl M1tt1r Ch1r91 • 2;001 WUT 17 ... SANTA ANA -1414t04 LIMITED OFFER . PROGRAM INCLUDtS: .......... . .,.... '"' .... _ .• s.t..I .. i.- ......... .s..-..... ·--. ,... ....... c- GARDEN SQUARE HEALTH CLUB H U 5ARDI N 5ROYI ILVD. 5ARDI N 510YI 537°541 0 •wr;:i-~=::=-=-=----=::::::':::'.:::::-:::..:.· __________ __,,-:--- ---~ Monday, Aprn 27, 1970 QA!L Y Pit.OT 27 ·oil City· Upsets .. ~ Colony,4-1 ·Drop St. Paul, 4 .3 . Mona r:chs Escape • ' Huntington S.adt p u t Angelus Cellnr . . together two runs e~ in the \ second and l!tlrd lnnlng11 and ' Mater <Del eocaped the tben &lasted home ' on .-Gll ·depths o1 tlie Angelus League Banagas' three-hit ,pitching to ~ Saturday 11\ll> a 4-3 ovttcom'e Anaheim, 4-1 , in decistqp -oxer cellar4welling Sunset Le~ baseball action St. Paul 1n baseball action Saturday night at Anahehn's at Santa fsna MemoMal Park, the wlnntng nm wldL ·Gae out in the bottom ol .... ""' In a 3-3 contest. Bob Wigmore•s Monarchs Boysen Park. Gary Simpson led off the frame with a single and rnoV. ed.to second on Rick Sheldon'• sacrifice. . The ,victory lilted ,D 0 n now. SP,Orl a t-7 league slate Walkerts Oilers out of sole to tie · them with cn>SS~hty posaessiOn of the Sunset base· rival Servite, five games ment an,d 'put ttienl in a tie behind league-leading Bishop v.:ith Newport for the last spot, Amat , which entertains Mater only three ~mes behind ,Dei on Tuesday. -Simpson then scored tJ:ie tleclding •tally on a ba~· hit by Tom Cott.age. Mater Dei al9o picked up league-leading West~ .. Both The.Mooarchs shoyed acros,, · single runs in the second, third and fourtb fram~ to seal St. Paul's dOOm. Huntington and Newport are now 2;5 in loop play. .Steve Deeter led off the se- cond frame for tile winners with a walk ahd he moved ,down 1 to second on a paSsed Lak ers on TV Senior righthander R o n ¥uniz went the distance to pick up the win, striking out four Swordsmen a~ walking three batters in the process • ball. • .Tfle next twu Oilers, Brad Cburd:lwell and Bill Shubin, also drew free passes. to load the , sacks and with one out Qan· Moats 1 Walked tO send Deeter across with the Initial Huntington tally. · With two outs Mike Symons clubbed a aingJe to score Shubin. *' At Anaheim The championship basket- ·ball gitmes ~ between the Los Angeles. ~~rs and the New ·York Knicks will be seen live and In cok>r via closed circuit .televU,ion at.the Anaheim Con- vention Center. The first LA, giune is Wed- nesday at 8 and the set.'OllCI Friday. HUNTINGTON -" Moett. c: Tickets for both games staft •.~"cN, (~111 r•t on sale today at 1be Con· J o o o vention ~n. ter box office, 2 0 0 I , o , 0 pri~~ at $6. '11hey , are also • o 2 1 available now from all Mutual * IT. •AUL Ill ... Flll.Mr11d, 'lb Quirk, 111 Medh11 , Ill Kiiiy, )ti Tn:iut, II P1rrtdet, rf O\Nllie, Cl Krlmtf', c Mollna, p Toi.iii • • ' ' • ' ' ' • u MAT•• oa1 141 ' • ' • • • • ' .. ' ' .. ' S1tl1i•r, If l 0 H_tupfrl, ' • 0 M11Wr, ?II • I Mu•ll, p • 0 S!mPIOll, cf l 1 $1tetdc>n, lb l 0 Coll•"· 211 • • H•$ferr, SS 0 2 APP~ rf o o Tot1ls » • seen "' I•,_ • •• • • ' I • • ' ' ' • ' • ' • • • ' ~ • I • • • ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' . • • ' ' ' ••• • • I ' M1,1r.,,w, ?b SYlnOQI• lb a. ..... ,. p C1nlr.H, ,T'I Oeettr, lb C""'CllWell, s• Shubin, If Gflll~, pr Tot1l1 •O O O.,.;~i. • , 1 1 0 ,,..._et Agencies and Ticketron si. p,..,1 • 100 110 r!, "• ~ ] 2 I 1 Outlets. • ' M1twr Oel 011 100 1,_. I ' J 0 1 '·=========================~~~====~~;;f;;;~ ' 1 1 011 0 0 0 0 11 • • ' "lolAHl!tM (1) Ltmel'l11e!. rl "~· c l.•bllvltll, Pr Sltrtlno. lb Ford, cl M1,1rl!lo, il Valverde, lb sm1111. 11 TefflPll, 2b D. Tlll1, p L1nr.ilon. P F. This, c TOTll• 1b r ~ rlll l t 1 0 l 0 1 0 0 0 • 0 l • 0 1 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 c l 0 1 0 J 0 0 0 l 0 It 0 0 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 c 0 ' 0 21 1 ' 1 SClfl'I ~J lnlll!Wt ••• Hunll"!llon 811<;11 on 000 1)....1 0 3 Arn>llelm 000 DOI 0-1 S 2 HARBOR BASEBALL REGISTRATION 2nd, 3rd & 4th , G~·~•rs 1 fAH 5tti ............ 111"'"1 r91.ior ,..tstt'lltlNI OA Y ZOii I ·LOCA T IOH ...... Aprll 27 l ..... kNel , ..... April 21 7 ·-Wlo'il WM., April 29 6 , bfitl ScllMI n.r., A,nl JO 2 Dem. kllMI M•., Mery 4 I .t • ..._ ~ WM., M•r 6 4 U1e•a' k11M1 2nd Or111t -•:ot P,M, )I'll GtHI -1:45 11:.M. 4111 or ... -11• P.M. D•tr ""'' 1:1$ P.M •• , SI""*" If • dUICI mu... 111$ ... ~1 Jiii lb!• 1111¥.. "' lllllJ ""''"" on Slhlft.IY lollotw*rJ• llMlwMll lt:M A.M. 11111 2:•· P.M.. 11 ...,,. llef alHllMll Offk .. 11• ,,_.helm. COiie MHI, .PllOM: HMlft. -I) I i < · TIRF.S ~I TIRES ~I TIRES I(/ TUESDAY -W~J)NESDAY PRICES wh~~ they last ••• Spetial Purchase - Slight appearance blemishes* UNIROYAL Reg . 2 · 149 F78-1 A/7.75-14' G7S·1'/8.2S· U F78-15/7.75-15 Reg .2 · 154 H78-IA /8.55-1.C H7 8-15/8.55-15 G78~1 5/8.25-1 5 J78-15}8.85-15 Ptuifitd, b . Tax from $2.55 Jo $3.08 DUAL WHITEWALL ' ONLY $2.95 MOl!E · • MOST SIZES IN StOCK hery tiri carries 1 UniroJll coast to coast w1rrllliy:!:"'--::::~ Seaatt p Tire Stores OPEN 8-8:30 DAII..Y / 8-5 SATURDAY FIRST INTROOU CE:O in; r~:n llr~ & TIGER PAW .. i ' I f I ! I \ ( l I I I I I I ' Qea~h T~~ater Going lJ .... tD 4 Plt-1'\JTNAM IS FIRS * WITH NEWS ON KTTV II I. et ~II ... (30) ........ , .. -(15) By RUDI NlEDZIELSKl _ .. ,_,....,_....,.. Of .. DlllJ ...... '''" ' 'Ille 300 block Ii HunUngton BeJCh'1 Main Street is hardly the place to 110 looking far a dream. But two Cal Stale Con&'. Beach profeuqra foupd , it there. rlghl ampng' I b e woathettd and auaplditod buildlnp In fron't of whose 'sl<lewallul young h ip pi e s , surren a n 4 octo'genarla · tolerate each other with dis- dain . Although the interior of No, l:JI 8 QI Cl) Min's Lay (C) (SO) 307 Ja a shambles now with (W) LUCJ •Ml !Gii wlllftlttr to M an ankle high pile of rubble, '*..ullts "' twt If t111 Allltrws --.i I f · ped Sl$ltt• tor • fu di* nll!MM. com.,._... moet y o np up l :M •.....,. 1•1t'Mll (C) LA. L1k· ••ttr ~ ,.... plasterboard fonn the ceilings 111 ft. ,._ YOik blcu Ill H and wills, George Betar and """' ,.,,.. • '-.., n.ft (XI) Elliot Fried insist theater will UIBlll-(C)(ID)""1.....,. 1o.r..CJl••--be played there soon . •• , ZIJ •Wilts CC) (30) (Wlltn) ~-::...: ==: "It will be serious theater, !a --'""" -Two ""' -not prvdudloal of 'Under the · """""tint -"' ._. Yum·Yum Tree' or "No Time -"Iii"' <*-'> '57-.tolMlt _,.. . Wouft•4. t.. J. eoi.. Dftld Gorp. for Sergeants.' We won't have w.,..e. 0.. .,.... flll tint I*· ID a.w fl'lll ... (C) (tO) bland mJddle-class d r a in a 111Nlitl11: I -ho..wrift, ffl 1.....-" •ft1.I Detar , .. "' ---(ID) uc: ... , llMUQ • -lrrtlpQftllble ""' 1111 and • Wiii· -·"'' Before lhe curtain rises1 on ldjultld modn "°"""· ID ._ • llMrWI .._ CCI the flnt production, an trn: D Dkl Y• DJM (30) ( ) proviutlonal revue much lik!l mno -<Cl (!O) •-•-tc> (30) that of the "Committee," m .. '"" !Cl !IOI • , t.tOB ft CIJ-R ICl (!O) there II much work to be ~ (J)MC &Mi,._ (C) (90) (W) iiilrtiir'1 ........ .,.. iMfW dooe in C?°vertlng the. former g ww. ._1 (C) <XI'> ''hdlo, to Pal• s.n., .-1 • ~ • physician s office into a Rldlai .. 11111tL . • theater. · lllDCll • .... llpt'""" "The probl ems wilh Qll Cl) CIS ._ ('C) (lD) It: (C) '"'di" 11111 • .._.. eatablisblng a modem theater DAILY PILOT Stiff ""911 S ...... .<lO) (drl11111) • ........,.. T'°"', 01111111 are lmmenee, the finaltcial di E c..n. (30) ~· KlfTr hlrtla A lilnll· ob11lratlons are staaaering " 111111: 11t' Clfll Jlllt II ........ "6 co . ' 9 .._ 11 a. ..., CQ (IO) ~ ., 1 .. ...,. explained . Detar~ an English BETTING $2,000 ON HUNTINGTON THEATER George 8*t•r Building Hit Own Pl•Yhous1 Jac:i Whit•, Ala Dftl«, Cloril a,_... ,_ fC)' (IO) ~Nt., and AmerJCaD l 1 t e r a t u r e 6...,, httl BMbt. ;w.. .. 4 ......, .., wltll Joe teacher. Wllfll-. .., --., The "You have to meet city l;JO B W •••••""' cq (IO) Fw ,,._ , .. Sb GallM. codes, provide oUstreei park· 11"' - -<Cl (30)... •!li.11 -tc> (to) lo•· Ing, tollol fa<ilill.,, firewalls. lldltll bolfl., Diie Mca.., at.in ....._ wlttl lltd: Miiii. panic hardware aDd a Jot. of = Wlltw '"' lllrt Rt7ftOldr; r.... (Jltlll 1--... I• other lhlngs, all of which cost . . RMcll ... ,...,. l.. .. ... . ... ·--(C) (30) '"'"' a Jot or money." Dospite all of the problems and the 18"1 tlull he and Fried will have to spend about $2,000 of their personal savings to ll2l ())""" -(tO) • -·-(IO) lltCll-·-(C) (IO) .,..._, -(1 "I FBI Man Joins NBC ·-<9 (30) '1llt ... ..., i:JeaQl (J)-... (C) (!O) (I) Art ol JaP'ft. Doris dllrMs • ..._..n hlttr"' kt QI ()) Ill SIW. "9 Will (C) (30) Ms t. ,_ 1111' tadla; to IM Ill-14 !Cl (60) '·""''°'IM -....... ID Diii .._ ...... (C) (30) EW1y ....._ JICll• UCM!ll. • II~ CQ (30) Jiii« Wirf. · By VERNON SCOT!' '1111_, _,. -(3~ m-tc> (30) .. Johu. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) 7:1» i CU ~ ._ fC} (JO) tl!I_..,.... ~ (30) NBC hal hired a genuine FBI · tltw ~. 1oa•~<JJ...CINI ..... ._ (C) man t~ police the network's 8 Wllllt• llJ Llllf (C) (30) <IQ) .fMllJ" lllrlOw flit•· 1amt shows, award programs •• LM LllCJ (30) .; ~C::: ~tc.L::-.,~ and contests for trips and • 1111 • CW: (C) P,O> EnMllf: flllt =:,..NC TIM Klfl'J prizes offered by sponsors. ll_Ci)....., .. cq (1 ..., 211--Warren Welsh le ft the FBI B -(30) ' • B -CCl•<IDI to play watch dog. QI(() Tlllll • Cl 1 1 11 (C) 8 I llf CC» ctO> His formal lit le is West 9-.-(C) (30) IBT-.._ ltlP (IO) Cout man.ager of th e •• I, --1551 e Mis Lmt (Q (fO) Wlllllll F. Compliance a nd Practices -•· iudur. ~ IOTC • Put Off Dep ar tment. Translation: .,.. IM CC> PDt c...r t eep an e'jt 011 crooked actors, '"'f • C1J CCI <IOJ Ill . e Mt "°' producen, dlreclors, writesr IMi ClllM ...._. ftlllll' ahd sponsors. ,_, Mielle tr 11111 1 Sa1tQ laJtUa!IClla._ CQ (JD)" -n., la ,the, early day s o f ...._. tt '9 1 ~ -u. ,.. "----. .. All ......, television, stars or wrjlers ...,... 4 ,.._ IM Mlflhll IQ,000 ....._ fflfll 11 -. could drop in plugs for Dillon .... ..,. ... hlaatlld lflllne&. Thnil ~ t1lllllll, . (c.t ·~ ,..._ lflw ,..,. .. 11 T-. RJI .. u. .._. 11 a 1 r I i a e ~, automobiles, ap- ., ......_ M•••c~ n1, 111 ....,_ pUances arid 8 hundred other The dramatic and situation get the show started, to thetµ it will be worth the trouble. "This is a dream coming to reality. For the past five years we have been looking ·-(30) producU and be paid off in a BILL cosaY· IPECW. merphant1ile or cash. , ~:~r :ho;~b:'mfil~ ;~~~h nJ~tiiMiiii *"~ET, HEY, HEY-ll•BBCJJ llJ-<Cl Tho Quiz show scand•ls 11 · 8 D (j) m ..._ (C) followed by the suspect Golden and his crew. · rrs FAT ALBERT" ... .., ..,_. , Globe awards cf th e But they scrutinize such fRllJI MATTEL, INC. a-me.._ _ Hollywood Foreign Pr e ss musical variety programs as WI uv '"' Auoclation galvanized the Bob Hope, Dean Martin, Andy BIDl.KWIO-.,. . ...,, ...,_ e1111111c "'l.M ... 1il f1111e1t-FCC to bear down.on network Williams and Johnny Carso n's tr. T.t Mlrt" (CJ (la, (I) ™' -• 5-lbwln Ill low. lk ho 1111lllllld ..,, MtM .. cllltlc· sut>-rosa activities. ta at n. tn tlUted ty 1111 c:.r.y, fdamM • ...._ "'llr. • .... 19tth" They were using public With loose scripts, guest on 1 foatbalt 111111 to .....,,_ ~ '41 -c..a. lll!IN1d, airways, after all . for va rious celebrities and m i nimum :=, =·" dlllnpiolldtip " tilt ltlMt "°"'* "'· forms of chicanery and in-rehearsal, these shows must -HELD OVER - BEST ACTOR IOHH GIBI KIM WAYNE • CAMPllE11 • .OAll8~ •II llW. • 1111 CC) divktual profit. be r monitored to p r e v e n t •!i( 1~s:~-n:.::'J? ..... ,_CC> CR> -~W~olah;~i~s ~an~a~lt~o~r~n~e~y~, 1fl~agr~an~t~,~·io~la~li~ons;~•~f~t;he:1~=========~~11 TtONCOLOA"·AP.\RAMOUNT~ (10) youthful and tough. H i s F e d e r a I Communications 8 -• .., • '" -11:11<111m--~ '11111 ' U..rt Ca•111 1111 _.... 81:· Cif a a. ... ~ ,....... ALSO _ GP' __. .............. ... "' UJ. ""' """"' -· ""'9Ql(J)--tc> NOW Liza Minnell i '"' -~ ,_ IJIDCll lD--CCI , a-' -'11111...., "'' .-... • -"'' PLAYING "THE STERILE liill ..,.. "'°"'..., 'll-lloy ---CUCKOO" ~ Jey111 Mtufitld. G1otse -Rlft'1 rill fl'Olll In llhiD!tiN ilM:t D GM c-tt CC) tuclMr to Hollywood's 11111nber ..,. • Maolr. .. .,_.. """"" ( ,ortrlrtf ol 11nptn. tely) ,45 • _ .NIMI lydDll, :i; • TnMI er C'.11111111111• (C) (30) Eilm., 8I hnJ Mnlll (60) l2:Cll 8 C11 11Alty hlltll ""' tCJ 9 f,..m Qlf (30) "llllt Wt for· ,. 11t 1rGCa111 1,.. Ctullflawll'." t:OOBlllliril: ~.""'9" < .. · e erw: • ..., (30) m1) '5l~lt O'ln111, Jaftt Wrttt. 1:55 m-• -··-(C) ·-"' ···--"" ililtt&I." .... Ktltll, IMrtt a.•Dl!.l'-'' <Cl !IOI (R) Gu..a Jim• Gl f'lltl' ,..,..,. IS 1n Indian, I )I~ tM I jlOlicem1" m1kln1 1 llllCll If atlldtftt1' lock· •• TUESDAY DAmME MOVIES ..... -(-) 'U-lo JIWI, ..... An:Mr ... .,... CllW' ~ "m -Miii CM1il, TM .... , ...... ,,,,._, ...... "" ... (C) m CCI .,., .., .. •--(-)'11--- Roti.t .,_ Pll: O'lr1M. l~IO·~-• """' ( ....... turt) '55 -Clift l loom, Cl"'- D.lupllilt, l :M. 1tlt ~ (dr11111) '41- . hi ·a,M. .111111 Mc:CllhllL e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS ' Qvelity '""';"' entl O.ptndable s ... ; .. fot mot• th•• • quarter· of • century. Utt WIST UUOA llft,. NIWPOlf llACM -"4MJJ1 ' Yf'fAI .... _ Vl11et4! .. ~. a..., ,_ wil -"'• ..... ., • J "°"' c.i.Mtlori lhi1 -~-" ••• c...i. CeMllnle CINCO Of! MAYO wilh '" .. fTi.,,, Satllrdrf ... _. ·~"' CIARKGABLE VMEN LEIGH LFBIJE HOWARD LMAdeHAVILIAND AIUMOlllffllWDlll ~ ·&°" iu* ::"'"'l:' ..... -.. -----·llEIJGlll'tllllilll:I ... · -- CINEDOME ---r.:Yl ,, a~·_,. .... ,~, .. " ...... ,, .. ' ... '" ... '" BALBOA 673-404B OPIN 6:41 7" I . laAMili .. , .......... , ..... Bargain MatinH Wednesday, 1 P.M . FREI REFRESHMENn MAT. ADMISSION $1.00 -· :Itdo Nl'#fOIT tl~OI -...... -h ,,,......, Off lo6o -0.. M lSI HELD OVER ...... COi.• " IElllf ...... o--·-M.t.••11 SMtTM Ii. P. I.A.TI N• I '"llteY.ime'll I MiM:laa'Ilrodie l ~~Smiml B.o r-.,.._,.fQ!llitau11111 a•• • ri&FiM ......... - Also Pt.Jlnt .. "' ...... _ --·-. _.....~···~ HARBOR ot ADAMS, COSTA ME SA, PHONE 546·3102 ON HARIOI BLVD .... 0.-1 MILE $0UTH Of SAN DIEGO FWY. NOTHING HAS BEEN LEFT OUT OF 'rHE ADVENTURERS r Toudll ____ ... _l,i ....... __ .. __ ... llGll' ... _ --- ' I • ' l J ' • ' ·--! ,,_... .. ..._, ··-~.._, ..... THE ADVINl'UMRS -........ _..MO.I _ _ ... _ _, . . -..-.-.. ............. C1imC9_ ,_, __ ..,..IOee.AMIO· _.,~ ..... ........ ..,..~.--.-&. ............ ~ t * * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * * HUNTINGTON BEACH• B47·9608 ; DIRECT FROM IT'S ROADSHOW RUN PRESENTED IN FABULOUS STEREOPHONIC SOUND An astounding entertainment experience-a dazzling trip to the moon, the planets and the stars beyond. -KEIR DUUEA • GARY LOCKWOOO ttM:llWUl'..,STANl.fY KUIRICk-ARTHUlt C.'CLARKE ---.. • .., STANLEY KUBRICK .SUPER rwm lON'' METR<X:OUIR " ' " . • .. :~: ... , .. I'' I .. ' • 02 i't. • ~ * 8 ' I I j I • • J t ' ' < • ~ • • . . .. '<, < " • DICK TU"CY : TUMILEWEEDS • l MUTT AND JEFF SO YOU W-'MT A $!00 ~ A WEEK JOB IN W • OFFICE, EM? WMAT • CAN YOU DO? !JUDGE PARKER . . . • ; PLAIN JANE • • • . • • ! .. ---l . . fpAILY CROSSWORD •••• , •· .. ;.,wu I . ACROSS "6 E•2ct • ' likenesses 1 Proaion-47 Nu meritll • tories: ~ell• : Abbr. it for -1 Canadl;11' 50 Goddess of •Minis ter of harvest ; Exlernal 51 In ·.Affairs compariSO!l 1 Bi!>lical with 4/27n O 6 --Chu1ch: 35 FNt-pomtt't Mtnnoaitt star • 5ttl 37 Powid do .. n 1 ba1ti'ta111 40 Historic t llakts Yl'SSt l: btlleve 2 words 9 Cr11sll 42 Gustatory l! Pols!' sensations 1 laboratory 45 Largtr anl111al: ilround 11\t , 2 word s 1niddlt 12 Ow11H's 48 Ntr•ous: risk of. 2 word s da111agt: SJ Backw;wd: Abbr. C0111b. for111 lJ E/acula~icn 55 Praying o surpnst ft•ale 18 Mtt.al fi91.1re 24 Absolutt S6 Fot#' ... im!lt rulers maR 25 Tilt Blrl1dog, 57 Brow• - far OM 59 NttatJ'°" 27 Plant ol lflS•tfS lhr Cl!'T6t 61 W\illllllatory family disease 28 Topics 62 Fallo" 30 Conttst Ii) Ft111io lr.e JJ Monastic 11amr bousr rut..-65 Aul.Jul' 34 Fruit FINlng '°"""' 51 Clipptd 14 E•pose to 54 Sym bol of • •01sture quiellless lS Ki tchen 58 Mtlila:z 'appliince rank: bbr. l Riverof liO Take court 'Vmezuela action ~Business•an 61 Mountaintop Base dwrlllng ; stealer's 62 Slow, iii , 11aneU'Yer ""'k ~·-M Poi9nilfll 2 EstabllshH " dehcate .it Secretary's wit: 2 wonls •or Minister's 6fi Sayl"9 :t itle: Abbf. 67 Showed fihll 2} Pholo again 2( Numb rt' 68 Flsher11an's 2&o La111b accessory N Put a lever 69 Olympic •to use or Pan · lt: State: Abbr. A111er ican ·-· ·JZ!Curse 70 Danish coin Dl COiie into 71 Strahl :"iew ~Correct OOIN Photo· ·1raphs: 1 linportant :. lang Estate ""l itter lt.eJn: 2EIPaso :2 WOfdS native • l~Supportr1 3 Carved .or strong stone slab cenlta I 4 Astound . ·rc"''"IM'flt completely 4) Ofbtd 5 rcomer , 44Jlo'-Staughtrt' or one '! ' l ' • 1 • ' " a 11 t· I INAren -... ~ WHAT ME'S TAUONU A!OIT! PERKINS MISS. PEACH !. Ii STEVE ROPER • ' ·- ly·C · ly Tom K. Ryan 'l..ClNe'S IT OON'T l!FfECK ( ... SALFS! ly Al Smith By Harold Le Doux CMEO:: OCfT TME PEATW OF MER VS MKIAM>! oo VOi w.-.wr to TElL ME ASOrJ° n:oRUS? . . ., U'l AINER THI". IN511\NT'nUS IS • f'.EMOVED-SHE'LL FALL 11.J LOllE W~ THE ,IMTMlt .... _!! GORDO MOON MUWNS II> .. 7 i111tull1111111111 ~II By Mel ly Saunden and Overgard .. Mondoy, April 27, 1970 ,,. __ .. ML MUM DAil. V PllOT 2!f • By Gus A~iola By Ferd Johnson :JIU NEVER FIE {,S /FI LIVETO 8EJOO! By ROCJer Bollen :AT" 2~ 811..LIOIJ DOu.A~s A TICJ<'ET?' DENNIS THE MENACE • I l I f ; I .-,. ,,,. ·' :u .. ' I.,.. I I • • I ~. r · c II '" " ;.- .. " " I ' ' ., ·" :. "- v K , .. v = l< - v .. "' '~ --I I '1• ,. ~ ( - a.: DAILY PILOT -,. April 27, 1910 UQ•t. NCrl'ICE LEGAL NOTICS Congress Reotgani~atwn • ' Bill Try Slaied . - LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE -LEGAL NOTICE ·--· Cli•1'1F1CATI! o" •UllN•ss t<ICTIT!OUS NAMI! I) T1'le undtr11Jtned do CltU,., ttiey t l'f; ------=::;::;------lco...suc:llno • 1Mnh111t at 6lf P11111rlno P....U A_, C111!1 Miu, C11lfor1'1l1, lll'!Rr l1'le ClltTlf'IC:ATI 01' aUllMlll nct!tl!M !Im! fllml el HUNT'S GLASS & 1 W ASHll!QTQN (AP) -Su~ :porters of a modest con- .....,10na1 ""'pnlutlon but are Planning to dust lt off in about a week in a new drive to move j t out of the House ltules Committee. 'Il)e measure. tias been tied up in committee for two rnontbs altbougb tt avoids such controversies as changing the seniority system. 1 The liveUest issue to be set- tled Is whether lhe House should acrap a long..gtanding custom and join the Senate in pennltUng television and radio coverage of Its com~ mittee bearings: A· rules subcommittee that drafted the measure tied on the issue of electronic coverase. so the proposal lost. Proponents have promised to renew their drive when the parent committee considers whether to send the measure to the Howle for a vote. Subcommittee Chairman B. F. Sisk (D.calif.), said be has been told this may come within the next week or: 30. The conserVaUve chairman of the Rules Committee, Rep. William M. Col!ner (D-Mbs.), told a reporter only the press cf urgent bu si ne ss had prevented the committee from acting earlier on the reorgani- zation measure. EssenLially an effort to up.- date housekeeping practices and facilities, the d r a f t measure would provide for more extensive use of elec- tronic data processing to ex- pedite handling ·of Congress' mountains of paper work. It would establish a joint. Senate-House committee en data processing to supervise a computer bank. '11le equi~ ment would serve not only the two branches of Congress and their committees, but alto the Library of Congress and the General Accounting. Office, the .Jawmakers' own fiscal watchdog age ncy. The legislative Reference Service, which pNlvides in- formation and makes studies for Congress as a special branch of the library, woukf be substantially e n I a r g e d , strengthened and renamed the CongressJonal Research Service. If 8dopted, .one break with the tradition would result. It propoaes scrapping the time- honOred page system, under which hi§h school age boys appointed by members carry messages and run enands, while continuing their studies at early-morning classes .at LEGAL NOTICE "ICTITIOUI NAM• MlllltOlt and 1!11t wld 11111'1 11 '°"'"°"'" TM ~lined c1Dn Cllrll,., lie II Df the hlllowfflt pt,_, wllose Nmt1 1!11 ------•. -,------- c:WldllCllM • llllllMW ,, H10 Wlllo, fvll Incl placn of rMkkt!c:I 1'1 I I CIEltTtl'ICATI! 01' AUllHISI c .. ,, Wii.a. C.lllol11l1, llnMr '"-lollOWI: I fktltlou1 firm -ol SKYCltAFT Wllll•rn H. Ind 1111'1" I! •. Dllmll"ll. l'ICTlTIOUI NAM EN01Nl!IEltlNG CO. and tr..1 ukl llrm 1S'lll St•rburd, G.rOm Gt I v I , ~11~':1'b::i~'!':" 11«'ii1j' A~d~ II ~ of 1'M-totlawklt ~ (•llflln'll.I, (orOM Del fMr C1lttomla 11ndw tt\e W110H 11-Ill tvtl 1nd 1lec. of r111d11~1 0.ledw""•>>I ) UH, "!'!· _.... tlctllloul firm 111'me o1 G1tAPHIC SIGN II II follows· Im . "'1"""-CO -~ ....... hi ' ) " • H ITI 2111 Willo lint ll.11"1 E. DIM'OOlld · '"" ... "" • C°"'POI ollert 1 "°"' ' Sl•le of C•llhlrnL•, Or•-County: of lt>e fallowl.,. "''°" ,.,,.,.. nerne Cat.I• Mew. C..llloml• Oii AMII 17 If~ bPfon "'t , NOllfV In lull •nd Pita ol rtsiffMI 1s •1 D•IM Aprll J, 1'10 ' ' ' fallow>· Roblrl Hirrli.on Public ln Ind tor s.eld $1•1t. per....,..11Y Rob.rt p W l fan IU A . 11111 of Ctllfarnli O••'lft County· •PH•red wun.m H, Dl1moncl 1J'1C1 Ruth C d · "c" ~, ,· tae••· ' N , E Dltmond k/IOWn to mt IG be the oron• el Mir. •I '°"'. On April ], 1'10 .. blfor• mt. 1 0 Irv Hr!IOM whoM "''"" ••• subscribed to D1ted "'"'II 24, 1170 Publlc In Ind tor 111d Sith!. l>l'fl.Gnl ll'I' '"" wlll'lln ININmffll •nd •tll,_itdted Robe<"I P. W1rmlrtt1!on 1-1red Robt<! H1rrl1<>11 kn°""n to mt ll!eV t foCVIKI the """' STATE OF CALIFORNIA to bl"-pe,_. 'l'holl lllmt Is subscrl~ IDFF1C1.t.L SEAL) • OR.t.NGl (DUNTY: ' foC1 fa ll'lt wllllln INhv rntnl •1'111 Mlf'f' K. Henn' Oii A11rll 24, It~. ~ me, 1 -'e' !•1.C:llled 1tw taml, Nfllln' Pubtlc.(11Jlornl1 N-c!IP!l' Pll{lllc In Ind tor u ld Siii•, (Ol'FICIAL I A.. ,.,.lnclPtl Otllcl In "'1ClllllY IPPllfed iltobert I", Wlrm• M1rv K. Hlnrv o ringe counlY !ntlon known to ..,. fO bl ttw ""°"' N1t1rv Putillc<1lilornl9 My CommlHlor'I E•o!res ......,.. n1m1 It tubtcrlt..d to 1111 wlttl!n Prlnc:IPll Otfk• In NOY 7• 1f7l ln1lr11m1t Ind 1dlnowle6old Ill tKtCUled Or11111t Count¥ p ,,1.~ .... · .... : c 1 .. ,. ,, •• ,, '"' 1&me. MY Commlnllll Eulrn 11 .. _. "''"" °'1 "' CDFFICIAL SEAL) ....,.,, 21, nn APrll 20, 27, Mt¥ •. 11, 1'1D 71'"70 Mlrv k . Htnrv Pirblll/lff Ortn" COlll Dtll'f Piiot, Notlr'/ Public -C11llornl1 AprU i , 1), 20, 21, 1'10 620-70 PrlnclJ•I OlllCf In LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE O••nirt County My Commlulon E11lr•i NOY, U, ltn "ultl!l~td Or11111e COISI 0•11¥ A1til 21, MIY ·'' 11, 11, 1'70 "llot, JJS.70 a special "'1ool. The oubcqttm!I.. ,_.. mended llllliad tbal' coJllce students be emplofed. 'Die measure would' make no chanll" In the pl'IHlll coounHtee· jurlldlctlono. I I took no action, for eumple1 on a long-~rslal pro--I to divide . lhe Houle Education and l.obor Com- mittee into -two lp!Claliled pane II. . It Ii sll«>I also u to ll1l' changes in lhe. 'l'-bJ which memben adYaDce to cha1rmamlllps or otbet Poll- tloos of power on tbe bull of Ion( servi<e. Since tbe -committee flnllhed tU: work in Fetruary, howeYtr, the House o.:mocraUc cagem1 It the urging of 7·0un1·e r members, his appolnttd a special commllUe to l!ud1 lhe seniority system and other Hoose·practi<ea and -· It's Getting Easy to Rent An Airplane NEW YORK (UPI) -Ren- ting .. airplane .... 111'1.> be almo9t as UIY u rtD&iD& a car and not much more a·· pensive if you have a flyinc license. It can be do~ al;<ad1 In ,tbe Midwest, in Callfarnia and a few areuJn the Eat. at prices a.s low as $11 a day and 11 centll a mJle althoutb the average prices are well above that. A Chicago firm. ca 11 e d Le ase-a-Plaoe InternaUonaJ, Jnc., has pioneered the trrVice on a franchised bll1I and bu flve centers in openUoo now. It plans to have 1.25 by 1175, Hertz tried a similar rent-a .. plane scheme some yean ago but decided it was premature and gave it up. But Burt Glftnfield, his son, Steve, and his son-in-law, Jim J ohuon, have got olf to 1 flying start. They ezpect to have new franchiaes in New Yo r t . Baltimore, Denver and San FranciJco within six monlhl. Their plan •cans for fran- chise invesbnents, Jncludlni aircraft inventories, ranging from '440,000 to II.I million, much of it financed It u little as 10 percent down. Rates charged by Lease-a- Plane are c on s idera b ly cheaper than the ulllal in- dependent rental a t r-p I a "ft e agency r a t e s . The inde- pendents charge $15 an hour for a single engine plane, ranging up to $60 or mo~ an hour for a large plane . Customers usu.ally have to pay straight Ume while waJUnc to take off, too, which can waate a lot of money. 1be Lem-a. Plane plan avoid! that. At an average cruising speed of a little OV4f 100 m.p.h., the total cost or rtnting a single engine job would be $11 or tU an hour for actual flylnl: time plus $11 a day. Bl1ger planes cost up to $17 a day and 17 cents a mile. "nle company also leases and charters planes with pilots. The heade of LeUN·Plane spent more than 10 years ex- ploring all phases Of general aviaUon, ~king for one with the biggest profit poteotial. They finally decided the time was ripe for a franc:hiafq operation based on tbe aame principles as a first claa "Dl-- tional auto rental cbaln. The thing that lmpreaed them most U that then are si1 times u many Uctnlld pilots in lhe civilian populaUan u there are re 1t1t e re d prl•ately owned aircraft. nus means five out of &11 of the nation's 700,800 civllian pilots can only hope to fly In r ented or borrowed alrptanet . U planes are available at reuoooble coot. the G-- flelda and J-ruioaed, the llllmber of --·talc• fl)'ln& -and pt their lioenies will 1l:yn>cktL The. company o ptra l e1 ~ in Ottca.,, the Loi Ao(elel aru, Allentown, Pa., andRochesler,N.Y.- men are the chief customen. The •--1• ~ II for two to three '"'11 and -of the flylnc b ~ -airport&. City Sex Guide Out in Denmark COPENHAGEN (UPI) - A 1711-page booklet detcrlbed by jts publishtrs a.s t.ht world'• first sex guide to a city went on sale Wedncaday for II al •Cophenhaftll '1 nnllandl · aod pomoaroplllc lhops. ' ' ' • ..... ~~~--~ ..... --~~~~~~! ) -· Are. Yau Letting Cash ' ... """ I Sti.p .Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things· A D~ILY Pl·L.OT WAN T~AD·. I. ..... 2. Qultar 3:--Bai.y Crib 4. llectric S.?f 5. Camera 6. Washor 7. Ovllootrd Motor •· si.roo s.t f . Couch 10. Clarinet 11. Rtlrigorator 12. Pickup; Truck U. SoWli'ljj,:f\lloch ino 14. SurfllNN JS.~~ ... ,. .... 16. Dlihwathar 17. """" 11. CabliJ 'Ct!fiMr 19. Golf"Cart 20. lili'Ml1 .... 21. st.'l.lp.c;. ... ,ltn 22. ~·iot u. ~ '""' 24. """'~ .... 2.5. l!l!ittr" ...... A~· ..,.ff 2'.. __ 27. S.M i .. ··~ ' ,. '• Will Sell Fast! • 2'. llcyde 30. Typawrii.r 31 . Bar Stool1 32. lncyclopadla 32. V1cuum CIHner 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equlpm':· 36. Filo Cablnat 37. Gell Clulio 3•. s1or11"' sn- 39. Victorian Mirror <Ill. llod<Mm Sot 41 . sna. Prol-r 42. Lown -r 43. l'eal Tabla 44. Tires 45. Plano 46. ll'ur Coat 47. DrapH 41. u-a 49. Hol'M SO. Alrplena 51. 0r..., 52. lxwcycla ». rt.ro llooka 54. Sid loots 55. Hlth Choir 56.-Colns 57. lloetrlc Tralfl I 5 •• Kilton/ 59. Clanlc Auto 60. CaffM Talole :~=-63. Sida 64. TV Sot 65. Worlcbonch 66. Dia_.... Watch 67. o.:Kart 6L ...... r 69. Cainpi"I Tron.,. 70. Antique Furnlfvro _ 11, T.,., rt_,.. 72. S.llboat 73.'Spom Cor 74. MO!fr .......... 75. lnloM..,.,......., 76. Shotiun 77. ·SIMWla 1•. Dirt 0.- 79. '-hint ... SO. IHy Corrlito II .~ 12. Rlfle 13. Diok, 14.. SCUIA 'Ooor n... or cmy etlier· extn1 thlnts an111nd. tk · li•- be tw111d Into caU with • DAIL:Y PllOT WANt:AD . ' • so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRlq' r 642-56 78 - • .. : • ""'t':.~.; '+-...... ~ •••• •• ' . . ~ . . . . ' .... J ( ---· ... ··~··--· .. • • ' . ' ' HOUSEi FOR SALi HOUSIS l'OR SALi IHOUSIS l'OR W.1 j HOuSU FOR SALi IHOUllS l'OR W.I HOUllSl'ORSALE IHOUllS l'OR W.1 HOUSISl'ORSALI l;o~'~"'~r;•1~~~J ~~1D~oo~0onor~~f~~~~1eoe~~!~"!"~'~"~1~-~·~~1~ ... ~l~G~·~.,.~r~·1~~~:dl1eoe~~o~ ... ~-~,.~1~~~~1~ .. ~l~o.;~ ... ~~~~~~1~ooa~o..~~.,.~'"~1~~~~1100~I I.: . • t>. ' j fi , iii WAlElfRDNT APARJEfTS N _..:;,,_w_,,fu. __ o_!'-.,..~-lf&.-.-~-H-T-:1 iri::~~r~~ i t; ..• 'READ THIS o/..inda . ~le 320 u ---frplc. ~ ci... and....., ~ DO l!DRD 121.tlfO. KID 1 a •rd, 11.1:. ...,. ..., wtlh pl""' • ~lANGi '" • • 'PRES1JGE WATERFRONT HOMES 1 Belut1ful un111. 1 car garai• A utlllty MI....... ~ ::;'bJec~ tow~ CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEDROOM HOMES room, with 85 ft frontlng on excellent •wlm· Dowr Shorn U27 and """ ...-.c COUNTY'S . fi.;o,.·.,.. la the market for a · l'ROM $1'5,000 TO $500,000 • ming bud!. Unlll.are newly IUnlWled. , l:_; ~ · NEW lloini,. ... lh..., outstan~ ~URNISHED AND UNl'URNISHED -od tw $21111,000. Xlnl·fel'l'l!I ~Y-MOUN1'.4!NS* WE Sl!LL A HOMI LARGEST ' ·il\il c.i;tomlr.ed hom ... built by . llLL GRUNOY, RIAL TOR ~~--•• !::'1-w~'!:'-~ .IVERY II MINU:rll 2829 HARB ;[r'bk H. Ayres and Son, • ..,... . PRIME BUILDING LOTS m O,..r Dr., Sulto 3, N1wport IMch --· ---w &' l . DR . ed in I prime ,r .. very clOle lo FROM $35,000 T0.$175,000 ~Ti:..":'"..;:.:':,. a Iker . ee BOULEVARD Huntington Stale Beach. The • "BILL GRUNDY, RULTOR o.Mral' lC:IO Gonoral 1000 liOllOoqll..4\0a-bkeW.O, a-• ... liomes are priced from ~.290 . .... ~ C•I! •&40 to $33,~90 and.very In ~.from l"!!m!!!~·Oo!!w!r!!!D;!r.,!!!Su!lto~3~·~N.~B.!!'!!!!·~'42-46IO!!!!!!!itjj-91r;rtfjE!~l'" ' '"' pr., ._..mqoia.., 7682 -"'"" . 3 lo 4 bedroolll3, 2 lo 3 car fill'· 1: -IY THE SEA CHOICE TRl-PLEX 1P """""'· Funt op1. Price 540-Sl40 - ,_, ages'and 2 lo 3 b1ths1 with General . 1000 Ganoral 1000 1n-Hun ....... S..cluli. 139"00.lO"down,2......,. = ~ 1]81.0CXI. Owner $190 PER MO. p;LT.I. What A Mess 3 Bedrooms-: .$20,350 In Cl&ta MHa this ~e needs; help. But ¥W~ta ot money at this prli-e. You have to see it to belieYe it $500 moves you In, Vets. Full pric e PJ,350. Won"! lut. 3 Bedroilins : ' 2 Baths Assume 4.5% Loan $117.00 per Month No quallfylr:v necessary to take-owr payments on thill existing VA loan with &NPJal ~ rate of 1.5% lt has bardwood lloorl bullt-im, Pa Io 1 Verde stone tlrepl.a.ce, big rear yard, completely re- painted in be51 ~ta Mesa area. Ownri' king, $25,500. Call now. $500 moves Vets in.. Secluded Country Fixer Upper At Reduced Price The owner will bandle all timnclng Jt 't.5% on 1i2 acre in the back bay of Newport Bf!ach. 2 horse cornla, enclosed lanai overlooking b e au t i f u I swimming pciol. The ~ aq. ft. 3 bedroo·m residence Deeds paint and elbow greue. But what a price. Steel it. Fix it. l.DYe it. I o Mesa Verde Dirty Thia unbelievable value located in luxurious Mesa Verde can be purchued "as is·• 1ct $22,300. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, built-in kitchen, :separate mother-in-law quarters. See it now or )'OU'll misa- out at this price at $22,300. Island Retreat No Neighbors Hide from the world in the most tranquil aettlne Imaginable, nestled in a forest of towering lhade tl'ttS remint.cent ot a PolynMian pendile.' ThiS country hideaway nmble1 <iWr more than ~ a~ of land. Complete with wood paneli ng, authentic beam callings, parquet fklon, private prden with pu1 Ukl tart. Hett >'O'I tleep to the ..... ol spring. Youl'l fall tn lo\o&# b' 133,SGO. See It. $900.00 down To Anybody-~ , MOVE !N'ro THIS 3 BEDROOM H OME TODAY. AIL YOU HEW SI a paint bnllh .m a mub buckrt 1r1 In Colt& Memo and tt'1 ....... "' ...... PJ,llOO. Call. U II hun't\ - we'll *"' it to JOU· ~ ·oulfM COUllTT"S LAHUT 2821 HAmR BllWYARO 546-8640 ' .. !hake or mission We roofs; ~ --thll ...,.wUhg beauty with Mch unit. ~ No. C.O.ta • $251:.J l;DOYtl )'O!I Jn. • Places, underground ulilllies, !.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J ALMOST "'-t • OCXI 11. 3 .... .._ loc. Gar 1• crpi., "'1>o, lrvlno 1•" lovely 3 -· 2 .... · t dri ' built · · SH ., sq. ' fncd paUos. S390 mo lDC<Xne -home hu a Imp ~ concre • •e!&Y',.· · • IDJ .. DOYER ORES 1/.3 ACRE . ~~ ...... W:~th2 ~~ 6 UNITS E.sjoE . wtth bib> ......,,...., · and carpeting. There Is VA and ' ~·ml oq. II. 4 bodrnom 'uu~ ~· ~ s•·-With 1 -• 1 wood FHA financing available. T)lere '.:, Tlrtd~ ot cramped ape.rt. buruincftreplaceadJactntto ..... .,! poo , on ~ ... e TAKE OVIR llvlnl rm. with are 3 homes available because ~ Jocated tn. l>Mutltul me-ntl! 'Ibe chil~n wll1 e11-modem'PUlh button kitchen, aecluded , •lmrt. 2 Bedrm 1~9',LOAN! On thia tmmae. bw tireplaor, w'/w CU'll*. of credit rejections. Occu~ancy ~ll·"~.~-boDthlnl~~.. joy the hup play Yard pro-cmtooi drQes with thick te·~·1~ ,! c:!.~:1 ~1·, J>I.· 4 BR. home, All elec. tltch. dl'Pli. a db&e ..,..,_:....• "" "'"'' • ..,.,... u....,,.,,... tectl!d by sturdy~ wall• Iba& carpetlnc. Situated on a ..... ,.,,uw, .....,.. ,.... . Nr. ~ pooh, ICbool a: fenced and 1._._ by May 1, 1970 In Ibis un l M Ing out-·tomce with ~.. •·-~-~ , 3 BR 11'1 11A $2S '50 .~1 -- a e ea,w·.::s ese omes m· View o( the Bay. Elep.ntJ.y U'x21' walled lanai. Your a lllb pOnd.. About a S Iron Nodowntovets,ftdnlllA, e Rtd Hiii Rultv dd d f ~--· th b , w•w• ,... ~~-~ -trft •!Udded lot~ • • _....,."I, --· I' elude such additional erlras, as draped &: cll'peted. Land· wife '. will appreciate htt lhot from the 5th sreen Of dble pr, hul9 )'I.I'd, fenced Univ Part Center IrvL. shag carpets, front lawn land· scaped in a manntt to main-peacdul wt'll.bpt quiet u esdulive country club front a: ftV. Won't lutt . c.it All:)rttme a.1.ono "' ( CIJ soaping with sprinklers. ~~ ""-~-~v • .! .... 11e1&1>,,,;h<iod: N..; .,..,. --134.0CXI GI..; NEW OFFERING • WRA9IA2°C' &llVl'f llllUoUJ.lwu cw ~ting in m91t roo1n1. cull don or take over this Near Westditt,.. quality built ~ ~ - Our next unit is now on sale for occupancy in May and June 1970 and Introduces the new 3,000 &q. fl "El Dorado" model Back Bay. Owner anxinu1. CunftJllmt coc* tenter with low Jntuat lout of $2lD per S BR a: family rm on quiet Ee1tWuff 1242 Prk:ied tram SIT~ 1 °BR A S89,500. <>Pen daily. 1130 edJoininc dining room. mo. tree llnl'd street. Huae uv. --1 BR. SUrfldde with s.n11aeo n.. Three both& 12.:150.nmi.u. YOUNG _FOLKS •na rm. ... ~ """" · EASTILUFF ...i, 1rp1e, ei..c -MACNA .. IRVINE FHA~ 11 be" h'ple. BBQ In lamt'Jll. Xlnt Spoftlina, ..,;.ei... LUSK d\le _. 6 "'==~ """ty eomoany ter "'"" ..,,., " $29,aoo .., UKE EXCmNG -"'" .. _.. hard. HOME wtth •·VIEW• ne. ""' Qiock ... •• 17141 cMU235 . our""' value! ""°"·See lhll-! 139 . ..,, l!lhlfUlly "-alld -i.m;_ , • priced from '34,490., · R•ncho Le Cu.st• Homes on Brookhur1t et Atl•nt•, HuntlngtOll Beach '61-2929-'61-lnl ., 901 . DO.er Drive. SU!te 1'll HQMES BOB OLSON REAL TOR out. Gle&mlng·HARDWOOn Paclilc Shona (7141 67J.3210 Thlo ~ contempo"'Y 546-5511 PARQUET >WORS In the .-fr 1080 BayOk Drive Suite 120 la the llltlmate in modern lup family rOam. maa1ft ~-= N ....... -llylnc. Wall ....... ....,.11ng Estate Sale ' b r I e k. IVOpDBVRNlllG i throuabout 4 nice me bed-P'IREPLACE and, HUGE rooms and 2 bau., modem COVERED PATIO. Exe& A COUNTRY HOME •i. u. kllcl>en with _..., family ""' family 1ocatloit .....,..,_ mom le-to a eovettd 9 FOUR.PLEXES lent 1D club, "-fna and New A ready for - ON MEADOW -··Coll 6lUUS patio, AND~ WHAT! Excellent --. ......... Juotu.tedol$43,IOO eUpuey. 4 Br, 2 bo, ---------- Gentr•I 1000 GOMral IDOG . IAYS. HORE 18'"36' healed· aod llltettd -tnoome. Priced tar Im-with excellent terma. ...., A ....,, "!*•-· poo1 one! "lllng for tho medl&tealeot l4T,SGO.FHA WE· SELL A HOME wlwet1>~--,.i -._ D · Beautiful nneh bome on 1' PRIVATE" AREA unutna price or l'U50 GI terma lmmt be ......, oe. l!VIRY Sl Mll!IUTIS tna. front yd l•- wHAT? ONLY 1$1,:in ,,.,. · ecorator ACRE. 3 -· """"' ~M ~-"""°""' W lk & l l23.500 nlA --• TOTAL' DdWN Jilst Left . dlnlrc """"· wall< to .. ,,,. ~::-;.~ -dC>wn. y.., ···'... :=i~m::...:. ... In-a er ee VA $«IO totai -Coll That's ri&ht! lncl'*t doe-After c:ompletlne the carpet., Pft•~· Don't wait on this! bead1. 3 NM:e bdrmL A: dMdoal). Cub to mtinc Realtor ta.US3. ina: costs for this 3 bedroom custom drapet and lhutten -Full price $4.1,950. guest rm. Extra lrl. patk>. loaM: (rmaltl-bkfs parchue za WestcllU Dr. I •-'!"!"!!ll!l!ll!'!N'!"!Q~I!( ~i~= 1911 ~thta,d:: ::'., '::m~~owne~t. ~;:: • co:Ts ::,.=: Qiaht view REALTY :,vaflaCO:>.:,:.:: ~b!'ri . 0pen '::i~ PM SElLI garage '"' '.~1 ,llrffl just like ne-.; roally """'" • WALLACE _,, """'"' 15'66 GOLDEN WEST 545-IG<. YOUR HOME ~::,,,. '°:;:. a"'l:l o~ and elogant. ' ~,~· ·, • REALTORS -~U C"'°"a ~I M_or 1250 , buY! sub;ttt to a~ FHA :'.,:S·:OOba:Sp!_~:= ·l!':tl' 54' 4141-........-----·----.......... OPEN EVES TILL l :JO -SOUTH OF HWY. • .... and VA loan with annual area and master suite. New· (Open Ewnlflts) Collfw'll, ..... _ .. lb 0 .1. L 950 0ANd .. Dellahtful 3.bdnn. + gunt • 25 Y~~ percentage rate <lf 8~%. port Beach address and a ~t an • ""' total $3, own IUu-NI-'" ted It dra •FREE ""'"~~ WM.t' When 1t? "-t to a Cl 1cMn in amount rm. ~ c:arpt p. e NO ,_., TGATJON ~ . · can yov.·~,. poo1 me yard. s~n ,_... ========I ed. FrpL, F .A. heat, No • wi:''BUY .,._..__ NOW! . • f 1rotit and riar • ..,.._ dQor NEED-SOME muroo · 6'4·"'30 ~~~t'~,':'r~ COiia -1100 -problem. Wolk !° BRASHWR.':i.TY .WE .SEU. MA HO!i\E °"'""· By appo1"tment. ELBOW ROOM? ""l!!!!l!!!!!!""'!!!!! ... -ll!I '--"·"-h··-.•• •--·-tho bat lleoch. Low l40 ~I ~~L=-=_!-~..-:_!!!:!!71 EVERY 3J INUTES '$56,«JO, lMKo bell.,.. lot In Sonia ~ ·~ ~ uq •a~ FIXER•UPPER Shown by app'l I~-~- """'.,... to u .. 1--all lhll l<r 4lledroom borne on and lnlre yard for ktd1. C---u--m.eec .. _ eCLOSE TO IEACHe Walker & Lee ., :: .... e~~....;: c.~~~ :·,c:a~=:m.= c1osetoc1ow111own =~G:.r:!L~ s21,9so · -EVERYONE QUALIFIES. ,..,., ...._ 3 Bedrm, 1omUy nn, ,1!1 2700 Harbor mvd, at Adanu S31,500. But, U )'OU need • quiet cul-dNac in Call Exclelltnt potenti&I In thk S p•uAa•uic Vll!W .. thl, fireplace, New patnt 5'5--0465 Open "W;9 PM home ttUa 2 BR ia a charm-Huntington Buch WE SELL A HOME BedroOm <m LARGE R-2 lot. """'ruu.. lnlide Ir out. Boat door, 11t T V er with nice eatlnr area 'And Profeuionali¥ decorated: EVERY 31 MINUTES Bil' double detached Pfll.le. :300l Ba:yaide Dr. Beaut. pado. usmne low lntm'Mt. BES E ER h tge livlnc "'°"' With a beaulllul yard w lk & l -"'1dar 122,!ilo. -rool 1-1\Y. 3 Br. ' bL V cant. 16 UNITS Coleswort y . P~WBIN ~~T.: a !!:... ee 646-7171 a~::;::.a: :r~EA~~~ cOota Mooa'1 fine1t !noome CillfAB.AK :mo HarW Bl"'. at Adami 1111 Grundy, Roaltor DUTCH HAVIN p"""rty -.OOW1 excellent & CO. lilAJ.TT eo. 56<M115 Open 'Ill 9 PM 133 Dowr Dr., 'N.B, "2421> 4 8'dnn, 2 both. -111' bpi: relief -with $50,~ REALTOR l<Bl . 00ei, C.M. 546-5440 G.I. loan A $153 per ma. OOWn )'<lU can uaume txfat. Newport Beach OUiQt 111r19 CffA111!£ IY OWNER SOUTH O' HWY PQS.all at ioWdn;, Ir ' lhg 6.6 tinand"i ol 1225,0CXI. 10!8 S.,Skle Dri" llllW IUI . Flont unit .3 B4mt. 2 Bath, will help llnonce. N"""- Coll for detalil and """"''' .,,....,. VETS.NOT A DIME Love(y decorated 3 BR., 2 handy kllcll., 'nlco -: ontod -It aat. Om1J lhg, Full price $275.800. -,.--,:::-::-,,,-:-..,-,,-to move bib> M ... Vmlo 3 673-4400 M'Y not """' • but ...... BA., Ideal loeallon. FHA... now ""' be -(kleol $27,lllO, * TAYLOR bodn>om, 1Drmo1 dlnlne thing ''"' will. '11A low probed $21,900. Will "" for new owner). llear unit Tho Roal Elfall ~ Newport i room, plwih cupeta throu&b-down, VA no down. or 0011-FHA-VA or trade. SCS.2531 2 BR film Prloe ii only 147-IUl out. eeautlfUJ. Custom Drap. FIXER UPPER wn&bal. Popular Eutllde or 557.f116. U9 750 H · , ~ . at ....... ExtraLARGELOT. NEED T.L.C. model, 2 +den A lamJly • • -· • FORaleby°'"""So!Vlola filrvlew LINDA ISLE Double Garage. VA appral&. Buically aound and needt near lhoJ>I Ir school.I, cu1'. OPEN Houte by Owner. 3 Bey & Beach Rlty, Inc. home. 4 Br, 1~ bl. bldm, 646-lll l Magnificently deaign@d home ed At $27,900. HURRY! only'& handy-man and TEN· dHl.c JocaUon with boat ,'Br, 2 Ba, tge cor. l<lt OPEN -DAILY W hrdwd f1n. crpt. Ii dr;N! w/S txrm.s, maid '• rm, 5 WE SELL A HOME DER LOVING CARE. 3 bed· •torqe, Priced at o .n I y :-:de. 302 Villa Ba,a 221 HAZEL DR. thruollt. Near lhDp. ctr. (onytlme) ba• opacicm livlng A dlJllJI& EVERY 31 MINUTES ""'""' 2 ...... •parole 125.950. Coll 5"'-llSI l<r ' ' EoloY the """' at IJ!tle ea.. -A collep. l"Y down rm• Rumpus rm + family w lk & L family room with BIG back further details. iz.~. 3 Br, let R.-2 lot. OM fruln tlrls CUit. built to~ an"'" tmlr. . ....;, whleh _,to garden a er ee yard; ONLY $0,0CXI down and 1 blk to -obop'r ...W. home MT- ' $16 500 patio . $16' ..,,. all. ANYONE I~-;:1 182 Cabrlllo w.aJ6j DON v. FRANKLIN JU~ST;:.::~;.=..,_,.,.....,,,...,11"'111'tt ' . IMl Unda Ide Open dolly 1-S haltors QUALl1'IES. -.......,.. Whal a """ doll house th1' THE BLUFFS :mo Harbor Bl"'. at Adami WE SELL A HOME BY °"""' 4 Br, huah lam. REAL TO\ A ......... Wolk to bud<. !UI for newly weds, featurlna Nice 3 bdnna and bullt·!n Ms:Mes 'Open 'tll 9 PM EVERY Jl MINUTES :;e ~·~ ~ ~ Aa-e •JJ.!222 1-t mU:~ f big bedroorns113 &ltu&ted on range a: Oven. Prlvlte patio. w 'Jk & l e SZ19 e ,almost . • .... lot. u the Perloct for oouple Exel•· EASTB~UFF·VIEW a· er ee MESA VERDE" -· Dtl Mor 1115 Lido"!!.. IUI =~·=====t =m ~ot~ v:_t:,...':n11eaahr live Newpcrt area.' $26,500. Spacioul 1:.,,e11 planned fer Home Show1 DICORATOR'S Founteln Vi1lley . lfll • ......,... 0 an actiw laml1y, 5 Bednns, -~~?!°'-Llk• A IMMAC. 4 Br, crpts, drpl, HOME 11.,~..:.~:.'.":!;ti::;;"'.~· "Our 25th You" 3 bathe and lun!ly/dlnlnf ·-··~ •--•-·-""' MODEL ldeol lond•eaplns A •-~--· 5 Bdrml-NEW--5•"• DN.I ~11d ICUH:urry• ......... WESLEY N. am. Large yard. Perm· ~ ~ A -·'·-~ wtlh ' deoon.ttng. U3 Sonora, C.M. r=u,-:m. Xlnt mwt to 74 . ' . TAYLOR CO. :;':'_;"'14~'.;;Sporkll"""'n· ' .... ~. 3 both. 1om1&1 Coll ... Pork 1115 ""'' 45 '!;..~ s~for~Loodol ' REALTY 15'66 GOLDEN WEST ·894-5313 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 Ntod1 Work? Here's a "fixer-upper" of thr ht magnitude • you must see it! A good floar plan in Mesa Verde Cambrida;e Str. ies with addJtionaJ. attrae- tive, panelled room ,In d&- tachOO. prqe, $32,900 or oiler! · RHltors p a..;. dining""'"'. family....,. • = -/ n-$31.211. .NEWPORT CENTEa lte """"' \ • 211rep1a.,., <one In muter NEWLY decor., er, 2 Ba, LIDO Rl!ALTY INC. " extru! ml Sall Joaquin Hilla Road REALfY Take )'OUl' choice. (3) 2 Beef. bedroom) • CARF.FREE fun rm, 61.tlns., fruit tree1, 3331 Via Udo ·m.m:t· &';1 ~ =. 6 ...,., 644-4910 . • ....,.. oo-..Wwm 1n 3 londlcq!nr • hl&b up on Ibo b1k ...n lenee. 127,950. LOTS 01' LIGHT · A.;,, c.n 11!14!15. $24""' FULL PRICE UO&Weitel!lfDr.,NB .._. -cetocatlono.Alllnoeu. hUl.A"""'"'forl43,950. 5U-l753 In ... eootmnp. J Br, A SPANISH - _,.._.. '42-52GO ,,,_ ~eel amdlllon,. '" Loon 546-:ZSIJ • 646-7171 'onv. den· borne. 2li Ba. , • Wltb tOtal payments .ubject :V~te~ All bltinl . prp.. Newport INch 1200 New bltinl tn ldtchtn. All 1q tt; 4 Br, ni Ba. 2 .-,., to a G.I. loan of P!,200 with ous crptl A drpl:, Pool A ttrll for '9P 500t prden patio, crptl, drpl.. annual lnlerfttn.te ol•ll" Ealhlda Spocl1I clubhouoe prlvlle .... Clll DUPLl!X •VIEW Walkor Rity, '7S.5200 1rp1, "°' " chbbH. and total . paymentt of $184 Umuual, different, adaptable. 5'5.8424 Ont lot from oca.n a: wtth 3366 Vla Lido NB Open SUn. ~ '"'" J'1U, $#,a .., month. Hugo 3 bodn>opull m 2Bedl'oom + llxDdetocJI. ·' oceut view. 2 BR. A 3 BR. -••y' FRONT ~98MID=====::;:=~I borne with...,...... man <d -room + 16 x 32 J hdnlOlll Giid with lam. rm, PLUS 1-BR. ~--" both. Modem ... kitchen. -liihop Ille J<.11 lot. ff.,. Fanllly R~ It btth _. nn. Loob now. Via Lido Nord. 3 A A -· ,L-loach We'll ahow it to )'OU. Call ....i.. • -500 vv.n Good rental ·-ft"! 500• 4 new haths, dbl pier, New WE SELL A HOME " • ...., -· . 1139.ao .., _., 1Dto1 ,... -·~ -doe k In r. $200,0CXI. <213) -V-IWW--U-N-Ll_M_l_T_l_D_I -I EVERY 31 MINUTES ~. s:-.."f"-ment. TaJce over .. bJeet to "2M5ll, <n<l 6'UlS1, (213) Enterllln 1-.""!"""'If Walker & Lee ICll'E~M" ~~:,::,-~~ur;r~ni.o.:::'J!: ""2113 -B""'"· lllhll.ExdtfnaAIA-· """... t,c11 COUNTRY CLUI -brle•11rep1aee,.uba11t 1a1 ... l•l•nd uss t.:""m:."' waa , %790 H.-Bl"'. at Adamo WALL TO WALL Bnnd""'. ne--In kllcl>en, dollblo .....,, ·e Ol'IN HOUSI e BY OWNER Hol P-ln & .-_ 1711 !MS-9491 Open 'Ill 9 PM WATER -111 tb1o S beo1roomi with -ol :'."" ...:!'~ ~ .!:; _,SAVTllTIAU~l llA Lin Roni l'roo. . REALTORS ~ ...im pool. 4 Bed-clc.f1Paee 9"rtdlrw ldtch. moRI ., "· -. o.torn 4 er,! ha~ w/2 • E. O..~ Hw7. Low Int. G.l. Loan _,_J19,750 rm 3 bo _.,om. Foo-en. Ille ~Uy room pluo • 3 BR., 2li be, A detlolrt to bi' 1 bt apt. wet ber "'1C: -• s Bolrm, 2 BA, bltn ,..... w1]>11'E R·2 lot. -.r m.i dinh.r rm, """"' kit· ....,. .....,...111 ttere•llon own. ~..., ""' tlllt ,..,, -,. m' Con! S... C..,_,tw · int • oven, dlahwuhu, fire-tmn .. 2 Ba. 1 Ba., cow!red dW!ft bddst are.. all over-room. Below CDlt at $31,!iOO. ftea.;v::i: f(I · A¥t, 11$-2911. ' place. ...... ...... ....... ..... -........ palotol -• .,. Panelled ,.,,,. wlll> I09' -.. .... nn -HARBOR 11\.Vll. 3119 E. Coat HW)', Cdl( LOVl:l.T j ...... 2 ... roofetc.$28,767.withUIW'll-in a: out. New drlYewi:y, fly nn. w/trplc a:·wet bar. 541 ,.. e ,. • .._ e HuntflWhR ... dt 1• ---· n.otf able GJ; loan, Quki poa. <>wntr_ wUl help finance, Roy i. Want Realtor, 1430 ,,,Pff_. ~..;.;;.:.: .,..ion! • Asent ->:>e1. 61~11155 Gal""Y Dr ..... ISOO. o..., OPEN EVES TILL 11• TH& llLl1ITS s Bdrm, ·a TlltlD OF 1-Hoo, Ill.~ W1ll1-McCardl1, Rltrs. $28 000 Dally. btth. · opl!t level, on HIGH TAXIS? ';:Cou::::;:11;:-::::;::::·:::::===t J:~•wport .=a. 'i!.. Al....,. 5~% Loan $21, 950 o.,.•..!;.".:i:,~ ~ ... 3 Great~":.i"!.°!!':...,.,. ~~· 1i· 1m=:. ':".:U. ~·.!,.ha~ ~:'U Dupl-fw Sole 1m ' LIOO {ANDI ""'"" 9' '""'· Hup fomliy 3 Bdrm. • l'•mlly rm. BR. ' , bo. home Bl""' 1 borne In popular M,.. Verde Lux< kitchen. I 3T, ID o. with 1119 tu ........ Sep. ~--·-----L 3 Bod rm., will> f!reoiace: another Booulllull Entry ball. b.... yn, Gld. Wolk to be.ch..~ CamtWtdge -with both 6'4-G5Thlt6ptn-.,X .,.., FAMILY ROOM, -OD(, 2 -IUdll 2 ·s.lhl. '::. · -to liv!nt rm., built· family rm. with-· 2 133,90il • .......,, dining• r ... Uy room~ Qwn. DON'T MISS ilUl'l'S -. -. e u •tom ISl.OllO. llOllO don. 126.!lllO IN, - 1'"""" """' """" balll ..... 1n-. CAYWOOD REALTY ., "'°"'!'1-!300 -~te J Br, 21> bo, "'' -ul.CUl'llllncluded. Bltrl!!!!..!-!!:!!!~·--.!!!:!!!f ~~~m-~R~~2tSSHa"'°'ftiWiLL ztUHarbor llOl:·::i'Z:.~NB ~-':.,.~ !:.«~':,".'B,°=~ ~=~·~::. 11fltl FOi Ms.15'4 ..... '-'--d D p1e ' BEDRM. ""'.. 11oon. LusK EA5TBLUFI' OLUor R~~ 145.aoo. I'll. -· Collere. "'·"" w1t11 VA 9·uicK c ... H ......, U JI frpl -•-t _, r-•t CM ·--· *a',._ ~-and ntA lmno OvoJl•IJle. -&m:la!ITs u.e,.... G.l. -e. = -· -. REDUCED $1500 --··· •. -...... WI SILL A HOMI ' .. !hi.!. "-· 123.!lllO. r.:,-:;,~;.:_o~u;:;. ;::~ ;t2 ~""· Klngurd RE 1.ce • B•. 21> ... °"""''"•· ::':i7..i'°t 3 :· 'C:.-~ 1v1RY ,. MINUTES THROUGH A tee yard1 2 ear ear. •~ ~-.. -''""t Ina dty. To view call IS YOUR AD tN c-. "pal31,_ 111-• w lk & l IO"iurd, R.E. )fi 2-2222 ~ ....... ,~ .... •t: FOR ............ 20><60, xlnt .......... CLASSIFIED! !om<onewUI _,.". ·-· -I er £e DA'LY PILOT Opoa.. I $79,500 1hoppg cntr. 536 W. Dth, C:O......MMT!lr.'I be looldnc for IL Diii M2-CONDO 2 BR, 2% BA. "' .. 1:1·· THE QUICKER YOU CALL, PERRON 642.1771 CM •. Kumltl RllP ..... l ~==:111~·111~·=~==' 11671 Wntclltl ..... Must ..... -Edlnaor ·w·-"D :.0.··4._. ......... _.. . ._ __ ,!.:TllE:::::..~Qt/l~CKE::=:I~~Y~OU:..:SEI='• .. ll!!l! .... l!!!lll!!..,,!!l!!!P'~~~~....:,·..,.__;.·~·~"~"· "-....,..~~--~-Of!er.11Jtn,1Tl-t'118 112~~1111:::_~~...:le-~~~~.;._~;;.;,;...,..;;;;;;..;' .. .;;;.,... • ) \ • ·- t I I . I .. , ... .,,.~-,,..,_...,,"°',~"''...,..,-,..,,,..,., .. ..,,,..,,.,,.~.~·,..•-""'r;l'•H o ~· ~-..,, > ' .•.,<:+:f .,....,.:-"!'O,~i1 ,· 7, ¥--• -.,,.., ::,;,--....... I•••• o• --·-........ :·. 1-··. "'. ··~·· .......... , ................ -~-...,,.-.. ''•'"''•t •'•''' ... · ,,, .................. .,, ......... .. ........... -.. -.. - ' ' U OAllV PILOT UNTAU . Mooda;, April 27, 1970 RENTALS RENTALS RINTALS RENTALS >-I RI NT,+.LS RENTALS R ENT-AL S I . ~--!'Im H11• 11 ffu""""-4 '-, H'outM Unfuml"'*' Apia. Fum""*' Apia.: '""""'*" Apia. U""'m""'°" Af>1!: .u""'"""'"" ~~~~No~w~"'"'~"g~hach~~~32~200~:0ti~=M~~=t!~L:::;:::..._.,,;-~~~-Coda -4111 Coata -5111 Codi -5111 tll!llG ___ LE.,_b.,,.....~_-.. -.-..!-1_;__2_7• ~.;..8!-~':~~::: s I AlllOI. 2 WPIUaNG lkU need 3rd, I---------. 2211' Hubor near WUaon Elepnt Llritig ••• ~ltlrtinc Jwie 15. =H:: . 3210 • Aidnugltes TOWNHOUSE Ira' 2 BR. , BA. Solllll Bay Club. M-20S. .... NEW J Br, 2 Ba, tam, bJtns, e 1 BR. 1 Adult. No pett ~ lallloo l1lend lrvlno 3231 ref. Grdrr incl • .Av. 511. e Heated pool. Near lbop'g .. Or•1tt• C•u~'• M'•• 1~•11.; $700. 642-«199, 213: 459--1400. Luxury single, t & 2 w. !!!!!!"'~"~"~"~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!•I tlf11I Ap•rtn1, .. 1, c,cynmuMnoty room apartment., turni&h--Pr• • ui '"" •t· University Pork 3237 eel and un!Unl._, with $6 NIGHT " UP ./ 3 1iR. 2 BA 1\lmisbodl--------oomploto privacy and W.S. $30 WEEK & UP • ood W1i.tfn>ot ltomo, $400 mo. ""'ped COIUltty club .,,_. STUDIO & 1 BEDROOMS merrnnac W 8 S!S-3743. 4 JmmBdrms, 2'4 bo.thL phere Including $150,000 TV a: Kitchenettes ind d / ,., p· t '·I' 2 Br, ~ blk to ba,j' I: beach. ed. Poeseas. • $350 Mo v.'Orth Of J"!Ct'eatiooal 1aclJ.. Linens & maid ser avail lush l•n seeping w , Jr1 1ne ree1, sper11 1n9 $180 )Tly. UH w. Balboa S BR. & din, rm. 2 ba. jtie1 designed an11 ()Jlel'ated' Chlldrens &: pet section '-waterfalls, bubbling •treem1 Ir ••rene pond1 Blvd. 675-2539 Brand New! Move in just tor liin&)e people. 2376~NEWPORT·BLVO. mike Mer rimac Wood1 th• pl1ce to liv•. Th••• today! •••••••••• $325 Mo 541--9755 I & .2 BR, 2 BA, furn. or unfurn. •pts feafure •Vt~" .. N!~ ~ :une •. 11lki01· 2 BR. FURN. Avail. M-.y 15 Rents Fro m elr-cond1 salf-cle1nin9 ovens, beam ceilings, ~ • --... to Nov. 15 at •••• $115 Mo SPAC. Attrac. Pool. UW Pd. d h h • / t I t ~Dr. (2JJ) 624-9567 BOB PE'm'P, Realtor $145 to $300 Garden Living, 1 Br. $145 i1 w•' •rs, pr1v. 9ara9e w • orege, •eve ors, 833-0101 · & up, adults, no peta, 2 I oa• t herapeutic pool, 'swim pool, BBQ's, 2355 l=='===;:;ii:ii::=== BR. $175. cpl OT ))fl"ent w/ seunas & e lovely clubhou1e w/1oci•l 1ctlviti••• Immediate Occupancyall ynx: adult ok. IMO Wallace Adult• please. From $145-,210. BALBOA Island yrly ttntal. --------2 Br. tum. adults. $225 mo. FOR Lease by Owner. New 613-S023 aft 6. home. .f BR. 2 BA. Fam ~ ' '"' ,, '"'' ' " ' " ' ·~i~ M!~~1Mnc v1r.1 co' rt.,.,.!~~ • ,,~·, ~·oo ' >!< 'H'" "'" • '' I'<'""' ' ANAHEIM Mo. to Mo. Ua:-e Av • Ave & 1'40 w. 18th St., CM. :(17 So. Brookhurst (l blk. So, ()f Lincoln).' (714) 772-4500 VILLA MESA APTS. 2 BR Furn. Priv patlo, htdll·R;;E';,Nti'T;'A"'L"S;"'""'""'""'""'~~~1-"!'~"!'!!!!!!!!!!!:: rµ:i. Cpts. <lrps, frplc. X!ra. Huntington_ la..it 2400 1.,.. ..,..... LancbcaP<d. Pool, re<: & clubbowle priv. pool. 2.carencl'd gar. Child· Apta. Furnished Costa Masa 5100 P.r! welcome, no_pets plealel . ~ UnfumlohM Apia., UnfumlohM ' ' NO~ RENTING BeauUful new 2 BR. 2 bath units with quality carpets and dra~. Planned for privacy + frplc., outside living area!, pool & recrea· tlonal facilities. In the h e a r I of Newport Beach. Easy access to shopping -beach - freeways. '275 to ,ii()(), 801 AMl&OS WAY OPEN DAILY 1°5 (Of'! Jamboree & Eastbluff Road) BOYD REALTY 644-161 7 675·5930 Coron•· del Mar ON TEN ACllES 1 A 2 BR. Furn It Unfm Fireplaces I prlv. patlol I Poob. Tennis . O>n~l'.1 Bldst. 900 ... Lone, ~ 644-2611 <MacArthur nr.'CoNI:' Hwy) -------- VILLA MARSEILL ES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. A.dull Living Fu rn. & Unfurn. NICELY Furn. 3 BR. 2 BA. $315 mo. Water pd. $1-2317 home in Paclf.ic Sands. ~ aft 5 wkdys, anytimt wknds. mo. LE 6-39U. 67S-5810 -Huntington Beach 3400 San Juan Caplitrano 2725 FOR Leaae 4 br, 2 ba ~. $185 mo. Corona dt l Mar 4250 719 W. Wilson. * 646-125l l--------- 13100 Chapman Ave. $125/m(). M«>bile hm w/ c:a $95 Furn Bach. No cooking. (4 blks W. Santa Ana Fwy.) bana, comp. :furn. btd pool, Business man. noD-l!moker (71t) 636-3030 adults, no peta, t Sealc>n,s S. of hwy. Privacy. 675-4859 GARDEN GROVE FAIRWAY VIUA APTS. -SUPER PAD! Plush, cozy l BR apt nr beacb. Crpts, drps, baJcony, stv I refr. $225 mo. util pd. 673-1963 Dlabwuber . color coordlnat. ed appliances • plW!h shac carpet • .-choice ot 1 color schemes -2 baths ~ stall showers _ mirrOred ward· robe doors • indirect light. ing in kitchen • breakf.as1 bar • huge private fenced patio • plush lrindscapln& . brick Bar·B.Q's . large beat. ed pools & lanai. Mob. Est. 2359 Npt BJw!z====""=== NEWPORT BEACH 548-6332 Belboe 880 ffiVINE AVE. mVINE AND 16th (714) 64.5-0ffiO $30 PER WK. & UP Bachelor & 1 BR. hid pool, 1 BR. util pd. $1.30. Adul l..!I, maid servl~. Kitchens & no pets, 310 E. Balboa Blvd, TV avail. 400 V1ctona <Nr. Balboa, South Bay Club 1 .;;Harbo;;;•:l.====~l·B=.=1boa==1s=1.=nc1==43=s"'s I __ Apa_,__rt_m_en_ts __ 1 _Newport Btoch 420011-------- Private patio, pool ~ lndiv. laundry tac. Near Orange Co. Airport & ucr. Adults only. 2012'Z Santa Ana Ave. Mgr. Mrs. Bruce 545-3894 LUXURIOUS·NEW Sunny 2 BR. Bltns. Nr shops. beach. Garage. Adults, no pets. $175 mo, 675-4275 LARGE 2 BR.. 2 BA., like new. B.lt-lns. 2 blks to bch. Adults. $2.35 mo. 675-3167 3101 So. Bristol St. C'h Mi. N. <>f So. Coa:·1 Plaza) Santa Ana PHONE : 5574200 Balboa 5300 Laguna.--'OB.:..••:..c:..h;__;cS7"'°05 ----- •--~--------$215. Except cltan, No SEMI·Ft.JRNISHED 2 story pets:, Located near Edinger 4 br, 2 ba. bltm. W/ref'J;j£ & Bolaa Chica. Jmt So. wu11er 6 dl'>er· Avail, -o! Douglu. Call 53&-2007 lst. $:285.. mo. 495-3355 at 4 BR. 2 b&, fam. rm, fenced aft 6, 493-4'111 yd, prdener. 11'421 Udo Ln. SEMI·FmµflSHEp 2 story Near Slater &: Edwards. 4 hr, 2 bi.. bltln:s, w/n!frig, Avail. June l • $350. wuber & dryer. Avail. May 3 Br House, 2 ba.. fenced 1st. $285. >mo. 496-3355 or aft yd, nr ~ I: ,Hunt. stiop. 6, 493.itfi. ping ctr. $225. 842--3655 S R .. , 2'lO UNF. 2 Br., cpl&, drpo, gar, .. BOAT slip & 2 Bdnn. RENT FURNITURE c ...... Apt, 1 Bath. $350 Newport Beach Bill Grundy Realtor 642-4620 REMODELED apts. All new Quiet Adult Living ~~:;;;."'."'!~ .. n ~:: ~.~ ~ OCEAN FRONT new luxury apts, 2 BR. 2 BA. Adults, no pets. 497-Ui61 REAL ESTATI: ummer enta patio. No pets. t Sm. child O ELUXE 2 BR. Apt. OK. $145 Mo. 5.fG..3862 6 /15-9/15. $375 mo. W01ldllf area. 64)..Qll Fountoln Vollay 3410 34x55 MOBILE 'Home 'by the beaclt, ,.,U, PIO~ ..una. Rent er oPtkm. ~ RENTALS -Unfumlshad SHARP, C le an. Freshly painted, Reot at $185, Costa Mesa area. Walk to shop. ping, Check our ru:NT AL BOOK. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee IW.lt= HOME For l.A?ue. by owner. 3BR, 2\IBA. Cpl" ""''· fireplace, built-ins, db I garage. Lmlscaped. Nr acbool&. Avail J une 1. $250 mo 842-2035 eves DLX Condo, 420 sq, ft., rum· pus rm + 2 ltg BR's. walk in closet.s, 2 BA'• + bar JdL w/ bltns. Crp~. dfPs. Pool, te:Mla & dubhse. $265 mo. 968-4004 4 BR. Bltns, crptl, drps, "1>k, blk wall toed .... $240 mo. 968-2790 3705 3 Rooms from $19.95 Month to month Rental!J Wide Selection 100% PURCHASE OPI'ION' 24 hr, Delivery Custom Furniture Rental 517 w. 19th, CM. 548-3481 1568 w Llncoln, Anhm '174-2800 REMAfll<ABLY UNBELIEVABLY EXTRAORDINARILY BEAtmFUL Val D'isere Garde n Apt• Putting green, waterfall & stream, flowen everywhere, 45' pool, rec. room, billiards, BBQ'a, Sauna, fum.-Wlfum, 1 .I: 2 Br. alao Singles from $135, See it! 2000 Parsons Rd., 642-8670, Between Har- bor&: Newport· 2 Blk N.19th $U5-1 BR. Utll paid. Close to beach. Move in now, Bkr, 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-9t9l Opell 'til 9 PM J BDRMS. & DEN acll .. , 534-6980 Flreplace, carp!U. drapes, $100-1 BR. Nicely furn. All WVELY 3 Br home, 2 Ba. built-in ldtchen. A Fine fam· util paid. din rm. pvt patio off muter D,y bame. · Bkr. Active. 5M-6980 bd r m , f amil y ,pa.Ito, $266 Month. l.ftse Hawaiian tea house, frpl, MlS&ON REALTY 49f.G'l3l $87.50 tocl. util.· 1 BR. Nr. w/w crpdng, drpl, blt-ins, I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! town, t"OuJ'le only, Bro~. 11 ml to beach. !lOO mo. I ; ·66-Qlll======= 549--0.177 belore 5; S6HQl1; La1une Nlgual '1107 -..... Costa Man 4100 GRAND OPENING IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Huntington Beed! 4400 2 Bdrm, comer apt, nice furniture and spacious "ut look. 5 pta, Stores, etc., l bJk, $16S 7721 Ellis, open da!Jy, or call owner eves. 673-329'1 2 BR. Adults only. Util pcl. Beaut-Quiet. , $200. Avail May 1. 11676 Cameron . Luxury prdm apartment.1."';...m;:o~-~· ===== oftertne complete privacy, Laguna Beach beautiful landscaping & 4705 unparalleled recreational PANORAMIC View overtook- taclllties hi a c:Puntry ing Aliso Beach, 2 BR furn , , all elec. Mature adulta, no club atmosphere. Now children, no pets. Sl.!15 mo. leasinz in;__Newport Beach. Eves, 499-3755 Models open 10 am to 8 pm OCEANFRONT Studio Apt, Rents from $13&$310 1 adult Avail. until July Furnished or unfurnished l, Util., no gar. Ref's $105 month. 1746 Ocena Way. Oakwood Garden Apartments '.1700 16th Street FREE Rental Inf()nnati<>n. Bachelor or Single a,pta. La. guna Bch, Low Weekly Rat. es. 494-7201 1 BR Apt; also sleeping nna. Util pd, Free 'IV & radio, 2'lOO So, Coatt Hwy. Dan:. Point 4740 714: 642-8170 VIEW O! ..,it coune, 3 Br. 2 SHARP, gpaclous 2 atorJ, Ba. 2 yr lease. References I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;; ATI'RAC. Mod. fully furn. 3 or 4. Bedrms, fam rm. req'd. Owner 4!1&-3494 eves I 1 cwitom crpts le drJ:il, all or Mitt P.O. Box 427 Dana Furnithecf Apt1. 1 BR. apt. Pool. Lease. bltinll,newlydecorated. Point, Cal. gu VILLA POMONA BACHELOR. 1 lc 2 BR. <or 24311 Santa Clara. $155. l &: 2 BR. 2 swim pools Bach. furn $165. Three 1 Adu1ts only, ::.., pets. Br $210. Two 2 Br $245 General 307 Avocado St.,C.M. yrly. Parking, sep. lndry See Mgr on premises rm, sunroo(, crpts, drps, 5990 , ___ _ Rentab Wanted (Behind K-Mart ofl Harbor blt·ins, all util. pd. No at comer Rutgen «Avocado) children, pets. 642-3392 ()r Day 6t2-3535, eve 645-0283 ~67:,S..:3008=:;:':":":=' o;•m=== NICE Fully furn. 3 or 4 BR hse or apt. Newport, CM area on yrly lease. liave own business in area. ORLEANS APTS. ADULTS ONLY 2 & 3 BR. Avail. Private pa. tio, pool. indiv, laundry fac. (Nr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus-. tin at 17th St; nr. Westclitf). 1741 Tustin, C:OSta Mesa Mgr. Mra, Carson, 642-4641 STUDIO APTS. 2 Bedrooms • 2 Baths Carpets & drapes. Garage 33s.c CABRILLO $175 Per Month .·or $165 On Lease •• 17MOSO 0 -..... • MARTINIQUE • Parlc·Like Surroundings DELUXE 1-2 fe-3 BR APTS. AL.so FURN. BACHELOR Hunt ington Beach 5400 613-8870. .,;;,:,,~""'""==--NEW 1 Br, t blk bcb S130, RENTAL SERVICE $145 furn. QUIET & PRI-F ree to Landlords VATE. Patio, gar. Acllt Blue Beacon, 645-0183 01' sni}es & cpls. No chldrn "r BACH. or lBR Jurn. apt in pets. 202-A 14th. 536-1319. Balboa or W. Nev.•port area. 673-1784. Reas. 540-44EKI aft.4PM NEAR Huntington Harbor. e LANDLORDS e · Triplexes. Quiet area. I.re: FREE RENTAL SERVICE 1 & 3 BR. $140 &. up. Pets, Broker 53W982 children ok. (213), 592-2623, --. (71~) 846-3.5.59 Rooms for Rent 5995 CHEZ ORO Apb. 8234 Atlan-- ta New 1·2-3-BR. priv. BEAl!TIFUL New . Upstairs garages, Pool. U tility Studio Room. Pr1v. home rooms. near So. Coast PI a z a . 536-8038 or 536-272'7 Paneling, shag crpt, desk, ===--=---=:..:::: sitting, etc. If y<Ju want A'ITRAC. 2 BR. $130. 3 BR. lux-uriow living quarters $175. Now avail. Pool.-Kida with priv, dress. rm, ba, ok. 17401·A Kee-Ison Ln, walk-in clo., but no cooking H.B. 968-7510, 841'-7446. this is it. Business man 2 Bdrms, 2 bath. Priv patio, pref. SSO mo or $20 lvk. heated pool, washer & dryer _.546--83="'~"=· .,,..-.,,..-~~ hook up, 962-8994 CHEERFUL Room & bath Prv patio! e Htd Pools 2 BR, cptll, drps, gar. 2 Nr shop'g • Adu1ts only children OK & small pets. 1177 Santa Ana Ave., CM ~"'.:..':.._,=·------ overlooking ocean $20/v>'k. Nicely decorated quiet bldg, sundeclr: & kitchen priv. 1289 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach. 4%-9017 Mgr Apt ll3 e 646-SM2 HUNTINGTON Bay Condo. $275/mo. Ava il 511. ;;==:;;=::::;;::::== from $140. unturn). Crpta, drpl!I, patio, 49'il-2055. 496-2409 Heritage :Real Estate , Condominium 3950 ADULTS ONLY, NO PEI'S. pool, bltns. S140·$18S. RENTALS 2 Story, 2 large bedroomll, Adull..!I. 3 BR. W.shr/ dryr. Pool. $185. 536-2'212, 675-6806 540-ll51 (open eves.') ALL MODERN AMENITIES Seaclltr, Manor Aplll, 1525 Apts. Unfurnished 1% BA. Fireplace, blt-ina, 4 BR Mont1cello nr occ $235 Placentia,a.-!NB~.==~-11:-'-'--;----::: dishwasher, New carpeting. 2 BR, Condo. Crpts, drps, NR ocean tront, Laguna. 2 11'60 Pomona, C.OSta Mesa ._;;; Enclosed patio. Garage. bltns, washer/dryer. Patio, Br. 2 &. dlx. view home. mo inc d ub hae, pool A W, of Nwpt. betw l'l'fh •18th ~SA MOTEL Genlral 5000 Pool & recreation center. pool. Adults. (213) 373-3320 FURN Rm., Util. paid $5.5- $75 mo. Sturlcnt pre!. 'Girls only. 388 W. Bay, C.M. 64~8520 Mull .. 1.. '.,. malnL S4G-8561/54&-4760 $275 Mo, s o • ...,. ~.. * LOW WEEKLY RATES * Adults only. $185, lat and 2 BR. Apt. Crpt.s, bltns, gar, 494-5488; 675-8800•....,.)' RENTALS 2 Br, 2 Ba,balaunken li~~ Kitchen, TV's, maid service. VE' NDOME last plus sec. deposit. 54:~4 no pets. PRIV Room & Ba w/ kitchen Privil to refined lady of5 or ()Ver. 962-2847 before 5 (Evea. 499-UJ;71.1 room, trpl, cony, no .. .11u Heated Pool. 549--061'4 * 962-8578 * LAKEFRONT • Lake Forest l-'A"p"-ts."'-.;..F.;.u..,rn;.;l•,;;had;,;..__ children $200 mo. Avail May 646-968l 2 ba .,_,. lit 1255 Baker 540-0896 I,..=_,..-.,--....,.-,. IMMACULATE APTS! .EL CORDOVA new 21 br, • .o.a;,.ulng, General 4000 eves & wknds 1 blk from bay "r beach. ADULT A: FAMILY Brand new delux apts, spac· boating, pool, tennla, $350 ~=""'~-=-.,....,...-~1 .S Br, 2 Ba & den. Avail SECI'IONS AVAILABLE lous, 1 & 2 Br, swimming mo. 494-8463 0~IJD. :pay ... ~ Bdrm 8!~~iis~iil bepd~~ fOr year lease approx. May Close to shopping, Park pool, b-bque, rec hall. These $16&-Cozy 2 BR. Fnc:d yard '"'"'.,... H ... W 4. $350 mo. 675--4630 or * Spaclou.I s Br'a. 3 Ba are the best in the area. See for kid.a & pet. Nice area. Furn apt $135 plus utll. adult. 336 E. 20th St· 642-2253 eves. Burr White, * 2 Bedroomt: them at 2r:J77 Charle, ma.nag. Broku. 645-0111 Heated pool. ample parki.llg, &12-8520 Rltr. ask for Mn. Joy *Swim Pool, Pu.Vpen er John & Louise Sellers, $98-lzg1BRcottage.Stove, No children-no pets. SUS CASITAS SAlL-Inn Motet Speci al *Frpl, Indiv/lndry fac'b 646-2ll8. w/w, drps, avail S/L Bkr. =,-1965;::=;PO:=omona.=;::..;:C=.M:;·= Furn .. 1 BR Apl.5. Adu1ts monthly rates. $130 :$147.50 1145 Anaheim Ave. 2 BR. Unfurn. Newly dee. Active, 5M-6980 $ll0-1 BR. Garden type only, no pel..!I. 2110 Newport Wkly rates from $42.50 Btwn OOsrA MESA 642-2824 New crpts & drps. Spac 5 BR. 3 Ba. Near beach, fourplex. Patio. Avail now. Blvd, CM, 642-9286 bay & beach, Maid Serv.j~~~~~!!!~~~ grounds. Adlts, no pets. $140 w/fabWous ocean view. "B::"':.·:.;A:.:0:.:•;;; .. :.·..:543-6980.:::..:=--2 BR. Furn. Apt. Pool. no 675-1841 M 5100 mo. 2283 Fountain \Vay E. $350 Mo. 494-S488: 675-8800 NOW'S THE children, no pets. $160. DELUXE 2 Br. Weatclilf k>c. ~t• esa (Harbor tum. W. on $l4~ Lrg 2I BR. Duplex, NASSAU PALMS, 177 22nd Pool & bltns. Adults $220. * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR Wilson). Wilson Gardens crpts, stove, conv. location. S~. 642-3645 mo-M lse. &121274 Garden Apts. Blt-ios, priv. 1 _A_,_P_.,_. ------ ON BEACH! e SINGLES FROM $140 e 2 BR 1% BA FROM $225 e 2 BR 2 BA FRO!d $260 e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 Carpets-drapes-dishwasher heated pool-sauna-tennis rec room-ocean views- patios-ample parking, Security guards. FURN. also Avail. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC Large beaut. furn Sleeping room. Priv enlr. & priv ha. 1 quiet adults. 548-6983 $15 PER wk up w/kitchen . $30 wk up apts. $6 per night & up. J\.totel. 548-975.l PRIV room w/bath, priv en- trance, H.B. * 962-8578 * COMFORT ABLE Room, nice home, kit. privs, telephone & pkg. Quiet. LI 8-8207 Motels, Tr ailer Cou rts 5997 Brokor. 645-0ill TIME FOR FURN. Bach. Apt. Foma!• e wlNTER RENTALS• patio, h<a<ed pool, frpk. HARBOR GREENS only. $65 &: $75. Util pd. ABBEY REALTY Adults. $145 mo, ~5163 GARDEN & STUDIO APTS COit• Mesa 3100 QUICK CASH 388 W. Ba.y. 642-.S520 •Mz...3850• 2 Br duplex on 2233 Orange. 2 3 8 HOLIDAY BEACH MOTEL Bach, l , , R's. from $110. I""!!!!!""'"""""""""""' Rooms . kitchenettes, 100' to NEWLY CRPTD 1 BR fun 2 BR. Furn Apt. Pool. No Carpel..!I, drapes, stove &r 2700 Peterson Way, C.1\t BUSIEST markttplace in LGE 4 Bedrm le: fain, 1%. apt w/ lg nns. Very quiet children or i:ets. 240:;% 16th :retrig. ll.35 mo. Refs. 546-0370 Beach. Free Continental :oi::~A~ai<j'°~;~;,~~t THROUGH A $130.523Bernard.~9 St .. NB.&16-48)4 54S-1809M .coE:.;SA=V~E~RD=E~,,.-w-3-B=R, town. The DAD..Y PILOT =ieatl~.249~EI 71l OCEAN AVE., H.B. (714) 536-1487 Ray Gault, Heritage Real ./ 2 BR. Ideal for 2 men. -NEWLY DECORATED 2 BA. bit-ins, dining rm, Classified section. save DIAL ctirect 642-5678. n.~-e EstaM ~1151 (open eves.) DAILY PILOT-Spacious. Adults only, Pool. East Bluff 4242 2 BR w/crport. $ll5. wtr. 'frplc, patio, enclosed double ........ r; $150. 1993 Church. 543-9633 ....:i_ ......,,,,,. .. 2566 Orange Ave L & . time & efio t. Look your ad. then sit back and 2 BR House, water &: trash EASfBLUFT Summer Ren-.,...-l!i, ...... ' ' garage. uxury privacy. money, r listen to the phone rin&I paid. $160 mo. lat. last & WANT AD ./ 1 BR new, beaut. furn, tal comp! furn. 2 BR. 2 (8), 636-4120 $250. 54&-8629 now!lf Nl'w! $50 depos. Adults & children Mo. to mo. Adults only. BA. $350 mo. No children . ./ NEW 1-2 BR. $150 & $170. IMMAC. unlurn. 2 B It .1,;=========-=""'==;====:::.I Ok. Avail now. 218 Lillian 2220 Elden, 646-9718 eves. Resp. adlJlta, Avail ht week Util incl. Duplex. Avail May l!! t. Santa Ana 5620 Santa Ana Pl, C.M. 548-1939 642 5678 ./ A'ITR.ACTIVE 1 BR. Utll tn June. 6f4..2847 wkdyt bfr 241 Avocado * 646-0979 Pref. older cpl or 1 sngl $23!).. 3 BR. Condo. 2 BA. • pd. $105 mo, Adult male 1:30 & aft 10 p.m •• wknds NEW Dix 1 & 2 Br. Shg crpt, employed. $145. &16-fi626 aft Shag crpts. ,Drpa, bltns. only. 642-6197 bfr. 9 a.m. drps, bltns, immed. occp. ~S:_. ------- l..;lmmed=:O:::'='Oc"=cu""p.=546-61940:::== From $150. 540.1973, 545-2321 2 BR. 1% Ba, redec Dshwhr, -"G'-'ano"'-'-•-•_l ____ .cooo __ G_a_no_••_l ________ G_one __ ••_l _____ 4000_1LRG 2 BR. Triplex. Priv patio, gar. Adults. S145. Nr. 1Na;;;w;;;,po,;rt;;;Bo;;;•;;ch;;;;;32;;;;;00 patio. Carpets, drapes, 19th & Pomona. 548-6357_ 11 bllns. $135 mo. 548-1867. Adults Only d.liQ-Q i\"t.. I -f)-C ~. Q.• 2 BR, crpu, drps, bltin Newport Beach 5200 2 BR. 2 batb split level $2'J5 \:)\!:» l."IQ rt.. ~ LJ(/.~ \) stove. fenced yd, no pets, ---------BayA:~~~~ 1nc. Tlte Punle wilh #he Bui/I-In Chud/e $tJ5. can G13-ms. BAYf1lONT AVAIL. May I. 3 br, 1%. 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury A,Ptl· =-~Dr·•::.~:;: Q hofou•""ot ... ,.-L~-_1 ~ ;,,p.~..:-......... ~-:="-... ba, b!Uns, crpts, drps, Priv.tern.ee,elevators,aub.. """..,... ~ .,.. dshMlShr. No pets, child terranean pk'g, AJl elec. RENTAJ;s.. Pool6lde or BllfronL 2 & 3 BR apts & · twnble, $250 up. Agt. -DOVER SHORES EQjoy a mountain View Ir · pnnlride U\11'-tn lhLI sp.,c. lo!a 5 bedroom home, All eftbic: ndlant beat: 3'9 •thl. Walk-in ""et bar, 3 c..-pnp.Allon lSll II. -lot. °""" ..,.. ,...,,.,,,.._,,.,,.,., Avail. June 1SC:b on an an- nual -; flQl, lllomh. MACNAa.IRVINE Reo!ilr °""'-(714 )' '42.m5 !Kil t>ow:r Drt\11 M&e 121 (714) 415-ttll 10IO -Ide Drive ,, . .,,,...- low to'°"'" four sr"'"'-··--'· ok Near sc"'-«• ·~• ""' -...-. • <Wi • .,l'IJ""'..'M'.w. Pool. soft water, doeka. 3121 I KALRET I 1· 2 BR. "''"· drps, bltin w. eoa.t Hwy, Nowport. '. 1 1 1• I o & r, """· patio, no pats, &l~Z/02 • _ • _ _ adults ()nly $160. 646-1'411 • 2 BR. New pa.int, crpts, DLX 3 BR, cld, bltns. 2 Br, drps, refrii ava.11, Nr. beach. I AVLAN 1 i' c/d, bltns, no cl>ldrn. 998 E. yr md. $225. s,,,.3400 • _ .1 Camino Dr. CM. 546-0451 -=====-==== I I I' I * LRG 2 & 3 BR. 2 Batlis, EHt Bluff 5242 ':::=:=::::: trptc, bltns. """· drp1. PRESTIGE LOCATION r 1 1 Encl gar .. patio. 546-1034 LOS RA 1 • 2 BR N ly d For .lease, delwre 1888 .... ft. 3 ~ . "' -•. ~ --..... ,.. 4 BR. 2% BA apt. Frplc, • I I I I You con tell mafe pancakes drp1, elec kit, children ok. drapes, c:rpts, wet bar, pri ':;~·~~-:;:~· =·='....., from fema1e pancak" by rio-Call aft 5 pm, 646-Sl53 baloonk1:, dbl gar oft kitchen r TEDNEC I ticlng which ones are ~ 2 BR. 1 BA. Uptlatn. dahwhr, dbl oven. Poot Cclnv .-11 Nr. OCC. crptt, drps, bJtns, to lhop'g achh A: re<:'l'NU0n. . i I I' I,..,., .... ~ G Cat!ol.,. th ct...dc!e q-.I $Ll.9, mo. 557-6151. Only $350mo. . " _ • • by lillrng In the mbslrio word 1 BR. FrpJc., crptl, priv 835 AmJgos Way, NB you de"'lop ft'Offt step No. 3 below. patlo. f149 ulil -pd. 1 adult. Mgr. next door 865 Ami[l'Oll. 'i ~~1~~~:~~£~£JTEIS r r r r I' r I' I 181' E, 2ht. 642.8520 TOWNHOUSE .. New lrg. - -- --• - --2 BR, 2~ Baths. frplc, encl e ~:C:~:ft Lmras ro ) I I I I I I I o: ~~SU:::: ,,•:;~'=~"".'"~"'~~~"'.675~::3-,.::.... .. ~p0o'"'1. SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CWSIFICATiotl 7600 lllfnllotbepbonerql ~$200mo.MM11'1or 0 • m ac.A..Lfuu. Utt.r .A,-1 ..... 11 Spani11' Siyle Lumry J •t 11#.dr_,,.. t.,.,.S..W .... V,.J.,,..WMI "'"'' ti•U.1 Qull•1 Slia1 c.r~-l'all l'•tlt,.. £.t'cidq 1111.m.r DtNilp F.l#Mll ,_,,,.., .t o.- Ptlffse n.r.A -"' • ._,. J4i, ec-llllo-' EaJot row o-,.,, .... St. ff..,., l'.ol-Col.or rr "-"'-• N""' Renrln,-:From $14-0 Ju /Yfllrt1' •I .so.tJi CoM ,.,_. 1000 W. /llocArthur Blod. J MoeA Eut •I llriltM 8111110 Ano 54-0.8491 ' -------·-, ___ _.__.J:. •.. ______ ----- 5620 SAYB IS-Ql c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 ·6 7 8 llBST IRIS! . .... ' ... • • ' • ' J • ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' ' ' ' , ' •• ! • -. • '• • j ' • • ·: • • ' • • ' ' ' • ' ' .. • . . ' • ' ' • ' . ' • ' ' ' ' ' . . ' -' . . ' • . :.; • ' • r'! • .. Rl!At: ESTATE °""".!-'.!' ..:~'-""""·-....__ fels, Tr•Uv -Covm • 5 I.,\RGE •fllctt IQft! $45 mo. No 1'!4~, cost Yr ~· J1141nit: OOWttcy llv. 1ng ... !lfsh &.. • dry 011 Sa~~to R ive.r,. Sur- rounded by orchards; quiel, clean air, Rec. hall, laun- dry, marina. Nr. shopping. Write tor ~ii. .detail.I. Polla.rd'1 M.H. Par1t Pl;lv. OYJner,,:Q_t. ], BQx tt4£: Red BluJl:·C&,96080 • .. . ' ./ WEEKLY rates. SEA L'\1\1! M.<lTQ., 230 1 Newport BlvdJ Costa ~fesa. , Misc, Rentals.. \ 5999 , 2043 Westcltff Dr. 64S.7TI1 • ' Open 'til 9:00 Pri1 PROFITABLE TO•OWN A PLEASURE TO LIVE IN \13 .. THE REAL' \"""-ESTATERS OPE N U'-11! ~ f'~l Business Rental , 6060 HILLGREN SQUARE 2 stores avall. 1 .... ~ immed. tease in. one of city's busiest shopping centers. APP. 850 sq, ft. ea, ZJ() E. 17th St, ~ta Mesa call Mr. Bram c:n.;p.OL 1,27!Xl 3,000 SQ. ,-r. Comer store downlown Santa Ana. Xlnt busy Joe, From l:.C sq ft. 206 W. 4th St, S.A. 541-5111 '· STORE OR.-OFf l.CE 1800 or 1200 sq. ft. Parklng. Reasonable. 646-2414 2630 Avon St., Newport * * OFFICE OR m'ORE 15 x 35' or 30 x 35' oli st pking & util furn Ne\vport & Bay Center, CM 2052 Newport Blvd 646-1252 PRrYATE office i n pro- minent location. $50 mo. 333 E. 17th St., CM, Bk t 548-5508 SHARE space in income tax office. Ideal for insurance or real estate finns etc 642--0212 ilania itraltg 1620 Sq. FL Retail or otiice. l --,=;;64;;;2-<l~560""'=~-30' frontage on Nt>wport 'Blvd. Across from C i t y HalL Ervin, 675-lGot. Office Renta l 6-070 t * -......---~ ~--..-•• .... -~... ... .... , ... --.. • I ' FINANCIAL - llUSINI SS •nd ' .ioas lo'EMPLOVM@ • •_011s" tM>'LOY f!N1 ~l 6320 PAIR Of prescription glasses 4 new -blk. case. Vic. Fairview CNr. OCC.) 644·1054, abilities anlimiteo agenciY Babyiiltt7r \\'U.ntcd 2 ynr, 001\$, f\1.on-Fri, call nil G pm. d , 675.52SG N.B. . t SECRETARY TO $500 " -0 Sharp! Sell Starter, good ~nk,lc~ter ..... Salo.ry?pen grooming a must Lite SH 35 ht 1'.k, Cons1der.1r:uhC<" H type 50 . • f\igmt n·nln('C ..•• $500 s~rl. • • Mllltitry conlpl, f>re(('r li0f9<f 11. GEN'L OFC TO $450 e<>Uof". ' • Bright Young girl 'w/ acct Sales lli:p ............ , $500 - schooling or xp Type 'fJJg SW + .comn1 ·r expen~·s. Loan or R.E, ~xP. hel ful . Pilechnn1c "•, ."... .. • OP;Cll P · Brake/end al!f:nment exp, PROD CONTROL Stat~ 1~1'.. & ~\vn tools. ' Good . ' . Credit mtc1Vlewer • • • • $349 .. typmg, flllng, .shipping Public rclurlon.~ Iii" 1~"' b & rec eXp , • ' .·v· i · • Gen l O!c .......... $f.'7!i hr, • t \Vill tl't1111 • J CLK TVPIS'.f' TO .$425 Sccrelnry '. ......... to $525 • ; ~, 60. Will train on Top i;kltls, bc:u:h ;ircn. ~i • Gen'! Qfc , ............ , $300 ~ Type 50 \Vpm • v.-ill Im.in ' ~ TRISH HOPKINS Salo. .............. 1·150. Up Color ro-orthn.'ltor a by appointment S11 90, typir~~ 10. Fee ncgo ! Eng. Secy .......... to $600 ::'1 642·1470 INDEPENDENT 488 E. 17th, Suite 224 PERSONNEL: AGENCY~ Costa Meaa 1716 Ornnq<' Ave, S11ile C ; # 1 c.~ir. &12-0026, 5-l - General Office to $450. ---. IS . Accnts pay-rec. typing 50 Bank "" ! WPM, lovely offices, call EXPf;::RIENCEO • Loraine, Wcstcliff Personnel ~ANK STENO • ii'~ Agency, 2043 \VcstcliH Dr. , N.B. 64~2170. ' UNITED CALIFORNIA I . -BANK-il1 ... ACCOUNTANTS BOOKKEEPERS GENERAL OFFICE MAINTENANCE KEYPUNCH OP ER'S. MECHANICS MANAGE RS SALES MEN & WOMEN Call: 545-0658 Recorded Job Infonnation '1667 MacArthur Blvd. ia:. Ne\vport Bench, Calif. ~ (714) 5>10-C'124 ... I! , Equal opportunity employer 1 ~ BEAUTI' Operator. JC"malc 4 .. some foll dcs:d. Take: ovet f ; C'lient£'1f'. 831)..1010 3 : -o ilillin13 Typlst t j • Tl) lype ron1pany involo. .,. \ " E'S. l\1usl IX' accurat~ • r·lcxo1vri!('r C'XJJ. helpful. ;-,~ Good opportunity \I/ I t b 1-; growing com}lany. i'> j ! Adv•rtlsing A;enoy CLA·VAL C ; I * SECRETARY * ; ! Newport Beach. ~rienced. 17tli & Pl acentia · 1· Excell. typing & shorthand. Costa Mr-sa s ~ some billing, under 30, Pres. S4S.2201 ~}' sure pace. Xlflt, benefits. i-! (714) 642-3910. Equal opportunity employcr.1 ~. J A'ITENDAI'{T Needed for Bookkecps~ T:4$6S0w j ~ large apartment complex. FEE NEGO ~ ' Must be over 18, no long I 1 . . ,. h 1r A 1 31 ,,, C n ercsl!ni; JX>S. Olhrr tree ;:,; a . pp y '*-W Oat! & ~ jobs - Hwy., So. Lag1ma . JASO.N DEST M AGENCY NEEDS YOU F.mploymont A5<hcy ' 2207 So. MalJJ, S;Jnra An ! CALIF . CASTING CO. :.~\i· Ka1eJl(1, AMheiin Looking for rt·ery day people 0 or 821 · l220 .... li.ke you! For T.V. Commer. BOOKKEE:"P~R $SOO ~or ~ cials & fllrn work. Receh·e young growinJ? orr.anlzntlon. 0 free screen test, 110 exp nee. E.xpd. mu.l tiple ~l'lS or book.\ ., Not a school, no frn?. lhru P/L. Good typing: &; _ $50 to $125 PER DAY 10 key add, machine by ~":J ll accepted. For appt phone touch a mu~f. Age 3G-40· ~ f7141 83.S-8282 PN'ferrcd, Call ~Ir. Daniel ~ ALL TiffiEE SHIFTS ~!XJ. ij e Foreman BOOJ(/\."l':EPING CLf.RK & 'JI e Lead Men TYPIST. to $45{1 Jlllr mo .\ • Fiberglass molders Apply, 4360 Campus Drive, -,;j e Geicoaters ;~~:~;LER COOK , ~ MacGREGOR YACltr C.Orp. [ll 1631 Placentia, C.l\T. EXPERIENCED. Perm. 5 or ) - Anclent Mariner 6 day \V('Ck. n\'!h! shift. Ju. ! I ,) quire bcl, ll Al\.1-J PM. ... 1 -NEEDS -The Five Crowns • DAY • Restaurant ll DISHWASHER 3801 E. Podllo Crn•<I l!wy. 1 Coronci. dcl Mar No ph. c11.Ua ~ j APPLY IN PERSON' 2607 W. COAST H\VY, NEWPORT BEACll BOYSIO·l4 ll Carrier ~~tcs Open -1~ ~ Laguna Beach,. So. Laguna DAIJJY PILOT 642-4321 BU!'BOYS & .l DlSf-!Wi\SllF:H.S , 1 Over 18. Part tim<'. Apply Jn :. Varian Data Machines. locnt. pen;on. .A ed in the Irvine IndustrWJ COCO'S "' Co 1 -lh 1 'TS F'l'l~hlnn I~lllnrl mp ex, ncur . e a rport, Newport 6('nch Cnlir has several open1ng11 on Its ' t lst shift 17:30 AM--1 PM) f1 t' I\ i arnl ~ .. shlft "')' PM-12,<S uas BR" N1ren1 A.r.1) . l'l ,, ' CALIF. CASTING CO.~ H I I . 0 Openings are fur individuala .. e nre t!Mllng dir~'t'tora foe Wilh 3 to 6 months electron. m11ny hl<.lt:Jl('nQt•nt industrial ':' le experlence' and knowtcdae & docu111cn!nry Jllrn pnxJuc-. ~ of the color code and b1Uic ('1'3, N!!cd lm1n&dinl1•ly gals ; electronic components l8·l'i for non-union jobs ... ST!S . ~ !~!r~~ daay ... ;n ",ve are. not : Good starting PllY and fr!ntte benefit program lndudlng 12 FREE TV SCREEN I da.vs vacaUon during the TEST _! lint ycap of ~mploymcrt~ NO CH,\r.c:r. TO YOU ~ and a stock purchase pro. . EVEP.1 gram, \Vl'l aro cllc.nt pllfll'. Ph. ror !'!" 1nte:rvle1v (71~) ~. ' VARI AN DATA MACHI NES a Vttrinh 1ub$ltll11ry 2T2'l MICHELSON DRIVE (SAN DIEGO FREEWAY) AT JAMBOREE OFF·RJ\MP l BLOCK SOUTH. 01'~ MICHELSOi'l OR. lRVINE, CAJJF'. 92(;64 Clerical RUTH RYAN AG ENC': A SPW UJ2.Jl"iG IN OFFICE PERSONNEt. 17'.)3 Nevm<'>rt m\"li'. Ct\( ..., -~. . 17931 Br..,rh Pl\'d lUl sn.9611 " lll.U W. ll!~ ~t., S.A1 S4'f ·6 Llrt I ' l M _DAl\.Y PllOl MondaJ, Aptll 27, 1970 ' Does & Ell\PLOYM(NT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOiS l EMPLOYMENT JOBS l EMPLOYMENT JOBS l IMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS l EM,LOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR ·J7-M W 7100 • • M W 7100 ,_.._ MIOln, Wom. 7100 •oho M..;;: ..,_ 7100 SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE ~~-1100Jobo~-n00Jo11o~-noo-~om. ~d----·--.- ----::___ ----.. -Salts fumftur. IOOO Furniture IOOO · CLERK -t:xp'd, pa.rt tlme, H OU s EKE!PER./Babyalt. MAN I Gardcntt, I r o u n d N\lrllnc '"ASlAl male over 21. Convenient ter • Uve-ln. Undu 4(), maintenance:, at Newport.er r--11-1~-,.. -1-marttet. 642-D -noo-mo-+l'<IOlirA...-li6al'c1:-Jlul-~ancnt:1l'rtiead -R:N. • .. _uayl ptpr ww. COOK BROILER 2 chlldt<D S A 7, 96WW ~r. Mr Elllt., N.8. Chol1""1"9 poahlon, l..:SU•LUS __ SHJUINuGw.amn1~1ll'-·~'~~-11-u1••~ uft91~~~~1---c , . lilv-nVTIVli' RE EIVING ,t..11 Brand New Fumitu.. returned from t.lodol Now lnterviawing I ' ' ' , , I , .. I' ,, I• ,, ' : ' . ' I 1' I · '1 I I \ ' I I .. aft 6. MANAGEMENT 0 PP 0 R, nlltf' supervlsot r H AGENCY S..Chof HOUSEKEEPER.live.lo, P'ullorpt.tim<.Carncc,lll bod ICF. CLERK Home1, decot•+ot 'ancell•+ion' •nd display ,fudio'1 Spanish & MecUt.rr•M•I\ Furl\lture SALESMEN 11540-6055 Lquna Btacb Q>untey Cub npe.r ctn only. Prtv. rm. hr wk. l3l).:43(l'J Southl.qun& Top talary. Mutt apNk * NAtDS .. Perm, for LVN .. ,:JOam•Jpm, * ClJgr{)OlANS-Ptnn. for Enclllh-567-7045 qt 531-9673 qua 11 f I e d who enjoy 2 days per wk. Relfei qua I 111 e d wbe enjoy HOUSEKEEPER. lJve-in or challengtnar work. I.Arre· med. nune. Full Tlmo -prelemd but .not necessary. Many 9 Pc Meditt Bedroom 1ulte, rev. $119, now $111.0Q Vlli&n C.ta &racbJne1, locat. Gor411ous Sp1nish Custom 1of• w/m•tchg lov• 'e•t td In the ltvim lndultdal Choice of b:e1ut f•brics, r19. $'419.95 now $225.00 Compltx, hu an immediate Sp•ni1h Dini"J set1 __ .. ! ...... --·-·-····---$ 75.00 opentrc Jor a lhipplng and Solid.O.~ E11 Tebl1s & Coffee Tebl11 --··* 11.00 l'@OeiVl.na: clerk on our da,y r.11 Decor Table ~mp•. ceg. 49.95 now ··-' 18.00 ' e SECRl'l:ARlAL ,e OFFICJE e, CL ERi.CAL I e SALES e ADMINISTRATIVE e TECHNICAL Poyroll Clork . EDP -tod bld<pr for lge. Co. Must be able to type A &mist accnt. Start $500. Call Joe.n Marlin Girl Fridoy Good stat, f,ypi&t. very Ute SH, able ro do exec. phone acreening. Poised & in- . """""'· Slut !450, Call Joan Marlin. Legol Secy ldtal lot. foe amblUoul akllJ .. "' ....... Start l500. Call S&ll> Hart. lnvntig•tlv• Trnee Be anathel' Sherlock Holmes a: eventually find your own Dr. Wataon. Great opty f<r ,.,...iter. $4800. Call -. -Solff.Rotoll Spedalty shop needs )'OU~ at heart woman exp. in ....,......_,, 136411. Call Helen Hayes. Legal Soc:y Here is a once in a llfetbne opCy for gal to upgrade her skills &: learn. Apply only if you want to make big money. Start $500. Call GJon.Kay. Secy/Girl Frldoy Typin&: & SH nt'C. Here'' a chance for you mature gals. Prefer ~lectronic bki:J'd, Driver How'd you· like to learn the lnt'l 1reigbt bus.? Start .as drivtt/odd cbon: man & 1et to know all taceta of tlli& -ting 'field. Opty .,,. ad\f&J'U. Many co. berth. Start at $U&O. can Pat O'Brien. Typist Lite np. w/MTST I: MTSC wfcoding fDr playout. Great Joe. gpoL Startf!a). Call Joan Marlin. Bkkpr-FIC AD..f.l'OUllii penon wftome basic aoctg. Know~bow . Plush ofc, great benfa, Start $575. Call Joan Marlin. cha.llenging work. Larp, out. Bui)' tamlly. Must baYe new apartments mmplex, new apertmenta complex, rtfer. Call ~UC&. Newport Beach. Top wqu, Newport Be¥h· Top wages, llOUSEKEEPER or helper x.lnt frinle benefits, 'ina,, xlnt trl'nge benefits, ins., for widower. Call morninp med, vacation. Write: Box med, vacation. Write: Box • 847-2429 M-548 Tbe Dally Pilot. J.t-M8 The Dally Pilot. INSURANCE Girl MAIDS, Experienced. over • exper. :n. Apply Ben Brown'• DENTAL.Secretuy-Rttep.. Xln't oppartun.ity-ln fastest Motor Hotel, 31100 S. Coaat tionist·Bookkreper. Dental growiJli general J.m. agency aper 'Pf'ef. lf -none, mus! ln Orange Co. Salary open. Hwy, South Laguna have ex.per in similar pogl-Call Cliff N'cbob at The , •• MAIDS NEEDED -Ex· tion. Must be ~t. lll-ell Clarke Company 5f7-1666. per. not nee. KEN NILES groomed & able to m@et MARINA MOTEL. 1021 publlc. No imoldng during *** INSPECTOR, nights. Dayside Dr., Newpt. Bch. ottice bn. Send complete Mac Gregor Yacht Corp typewritten reswne to Dally 1631 Placentia. C.M. ***MAID*** FULL TIME Pilot, N.B. Box M-67 I NVOICE Clerk &: •540-8571• DENTAL ASS'T Front desk only. Must have ,exper. as recept. in dental office . Beach area. 846-3540 8 am- 9 pm, DENT AL Assistant I Recep-· tionllt. Must be exper. Knowledp of fonna & xrays. 638-7470 Garden Grove. DENTAL ASSISTANT-schl graduate. Chainide. Full time. H.B. 'Ole. Call 830-3309 DIESEL MECHANIC StS-7117, S..f wk days only. DISHWASHER • PART-TIME Swlu' Chalet, '1C N, New. port, N.B. MECHANICAL DRAFTSMAN For small machine partl, Minimum 2 )'?I. exper. Immediate opening. Xlnt. co. benefits with OJ'pol'o tunlty tor' growth. S.nd complete re1ume Box M-589 Dally Piiot EquaJ opportunity employer * DRIVERS * No Experience Necessary! M''lllf have clean CallfomJa drlvtntl ...,...,,, Apply YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St. °""" ..... Estimating Traloee for con. tractor. Li t e ~retariaJ work,' must be good with tigutts. ~7242 Inventory Control Clk To S'50 BeautifuJ bldg, xlnt benfa Incl profit sharing. An equal opportunity employer. Agency for Coreer Girls JASON BEST Mgmt Troi-to $800 Empl~nt Agency Exec, aecy bkgrd. Mmt have 23J7 So, Main, Santa Aoa operated or ertbl'd an ayer. 9264 W. Katella. . Anaheim size ofc. Serve in managerlal 54S&tlB or . 82l·l23) or supervisory cape.cit)'. JANITOR Full time perm&nent poal-Secretary tion top pay group ln$ur. to Sales Mgr. & aalesmen. a~. paid va~Hons & other Maintain sales r ecord,, benefits, 5 day "W"eek, Apply customer contact by pbooe. in person oncy to Joe Colan- tonio POOLE BUICK 234 E, 17th St., Costa Mesa Jr. Draftsman $700 + Beautiful bldg & facllities. Xlnt benfs. JASON BEST Employment Agency 220'1 So. Main, Santa Ana 93i4 W. Katella, Anaheim 546-5()0 or 821-1220 KEYPUNCH OPERATOR Some experience ta requir· ed. Excellent opportunity, Call or apply: CLA·YAL CO. 17!11 & Placontlo Costa Mes• 548-2201 An equal opportunity employer Soc:y/RO«pt Good typist, IBM Exec. Llte SH, phones. s.c: .. tary X1nt typist, SH 80, Jt.E. bkgrd helpfu1, to Dist.. Mgr. & Vice President Se 11 starter. • Inventory Clerk Good figure app. Accurate. Min. 6 mo exp. Neat. legible handwriting. Purchasing Tmff Young. Xlnt opty to Jearn purch611n1. Advancement &: potentia1; P.T. F/C Bkkpr 6 hnl a day. 5 dll)'S a ~k. for an Interior designer. Top grooming. Recept\onlst Phones, smne cor r ea., dictaphone. Technical bkgrd helptul. 410 W. Cool! Hwy, Newport Beach '""-3939 . Keypunch Opr. $520 MEDICAL S@cy-Fn>nt Of. DRY CLEANER -1p1>ttrr. 11ce, some back, knowledge Exp. only, OOIT DRAPERY DAYS. Xlnt. stable Co. Ideal of all types of med. !ornu. "A" -working conds. Top benb;. M Tu ~ .. -~ ~•u. can J,fiss Pat. 557-6122. on, es, ...... a, "' ... Escrow Secy EXECUTIVE Secretary, age Ablga.U Abbot Personnel 9:~ 6:30. $2.75 hr. Fuhion Fast Growing co. need& 25-40. Rl""" -·nll•kaUona "" 230 W W Isl. Send renme to Daily •'" .......... ,,.ency, · arner, Pilot Box M-29. sharp pl wfgood pel'IOnaH-incl. appearance. Xlnt op.. Suite m, Santa Ana. ty &: good !Skills. Start ;560. portunity. Newport Center. ~KEYPUN==~Ol=-o~P~E~RA=TO~R MEDICAL TRANSCRIBER - Call Sally Hart. Call 644-1405 between 8 AM Days full time. Exp'd. Bkkpr F/C (Ont working conds. for resJ>OrEible ga! w f g o o d skills. Start at $500, Call S&ll> Hart. Nunn Aide Hospital wants your exp. to (i...e tel'.lder lovl'lit care 1o residents. Pick your shill $3600. Call Hel'" ila>ft. Sales & Instruction Sllm. trim miss that wants to stay in shape & help others get one. Call today on this one! $4200. to statt, fielen Hayes. MTST & MTSC Opr. Min. exp. on IBM. Loe. co. -. girl now. DOE, $607. Call Gloria Kay. R-ptlonlst U you can type 60 wpm, you have a tetTllic job ln new field. Periodical raises. $400. Call Gloria Kay. Script Writer Exp, Writer w/prolessional camera to interview & take pies of leading execs, In So. Cal. $7800. Call Pat O'Brien. Bkkpr F/C Put that residential const. bkgrd to work Jor a great co. filled w/great ~e. Bents galore! $5500. to start. Call Pat O'Brien. Secretary 4~ aver. typing &: SH tkllla + a mature attttude lands this dream job. Start from $425. Call Joan Marlin. Coshlor/Solo1 Lady Bu.11 drest !hop nttds young exp. pJ to work full or part time. start $303. Call Sally Hart. Tellor E:atbl'd bank needs sharp pl. l<nowledgto In new accts: helpful. Star1 $380. CAil S&ll> Hatt. Offlco Girl Yoa . tel et phone.coffee Chdchtn, htnt'1 your chance i0 pt pe.ld 1or It. M k>c. Cl). wants a.n up. mature. ~. start •t $2. hr + mmm., rala in l mo. Call G-Kl.I'. omER FREE AND FEE JOBS AVAll.ABLE 541·8855 2791· lfartlar Blvd. Caoto Min • ' .. I: 5: 30 PM for appointment. D&,):'I, full ti.me. 6 mo'a. exp. Personnel Dept. Ho a 1 Peraonnel De;pt. Ho a g H Ital N B FEMALE help wanted fDr 'Hospital, Newport Bch. osp ' ' • pftlme work at Tutce * LADIES * . 18-60, show MOTEL ~AID Part time, Free:i: from ll:30 AM, M-F. SARAH COVENTRY Spri"" peninsula area. Call (U4) 53G-3l55 ... * 675-1841 * :-;=====::---1 &: all season j ewe Ir y. * FOOD WAITRESS Absolutely no invest' mt. We MUSIC ArTanger. Write in-* SHORT ORDER COOK train. 531~ or 962-5988 stnunent charts for com- Must be exp'd. See Mr. Geo. LEGAL poser of popular music. Aft Haveles, HunH .. ,.."n Lanes, 6 PM .... ••-· Thu--~-STENOGRAPHER ' ~'· ~" •• , 19582 Beach IDvd. Hunt D M-V<-·· .... -. $516 to S6U per month ave ,,;n.w.IR;y, '1""'Y• ' Bch. Regular full time position NEED Vacation MoneyT 1f FRY Cook, . exper. Relief in Harbor Municipal Court, you .need a good steady tn- shlfL The Cottage Co1fee Costa Mesa. Must be H.S. come & can work only half Shop, 562 W. 19th, C.M. grad with at least two years day1. Take food orden. FULL tlm ... PART time ol steno experience lnclud-Fountain Valley, Hunt Bch. This company needs ten (10) full time and six (6) part t i m e men . Jobs must be filled this week. Top wages paid. ing one year as legal steno. area. Call Mn. Ste...en.s, grapber. Call for test ap. CTI4l 533-1932. pointment; 834.2344 NEW & USED CAR COUNTY OF ORANGE DETAIL MAN 801.C North Broadway Full time permanent posl· Santa Ana. Calif. Equal opportunity employer tjon, top pay, groUp insur-ance, paid vacations A other ~ benefl~. Apply in person CALL MON. & TUES. n<1-1251 Gon'I Office $316.33 Local Office Jobs No Chars• too~. Fr•• No SH, lite typing, Good Please call for appl, chance for advancement, Superior Agency 612-n41 JASON BEST 1857 Harbor, Coota "'""' Employment Agency 2207 So, Main, Santa Ana ~ 9264 W, Katella, Anaheim 546-5410 or 821-1220 "LOOK'' ''SPECIAL'' Mor C:Omfort bra & wigs for GENERAL Restaurant -fitting or job. can Mn. Male. No exp. nee. Daytime Conway, 968-QU. hrs only. Apply before 1(1 I miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim am or afttt 2:30 pm. 1lfE LONE RANGER RESTAU· RANT, l~ Beach Blvd .. H.B. * Gon'I Ole $4/450 Good typing, tlgUre app., phones, Girl Fridll.)' kind of job. '' 1ec pd by co. Nr. Or. Co. Airport. Fee job! •loo. J. R, Pie~ As:o;ociates Agency, Irie. 1885 Newpc;ll't, CM 642.on(l GENERAL Restaurant - Mature woman, married, age ~. Apply before 10 am or alter 2:30. nlE LONE RANGER R&STAU· RANT, li;i02 Beach IDvd., H.B. GIRL FRIDA V, for small contracting flnn. Typing, pa,yroll, ARI AP. NO age~ clea. M5-301B/MS-3445. Hoe:pJtal e PllYStCAL THERAPIST Apply Personnel Olttctor So. O:>ut Community Hospl. tat, 31872 Coru;t Hwy., bth -LlguM, Calli. Ph: 499-iru Ext. 356. nu; St.IN NEVER SETS on Clusilk'd's action power. l'Ot--" ad to aeU around the olock.dW6M6'11. ... LYN-Full or part Ume, 3 ID 11:3Cl PM. Huntington Valley Convale rcent llospital. 842-5001 MACHJNIST • Job &hop esti- mater to manage &mall shop. Set up e~ on lathe, mills, drill presses, ect. Wonderful opportunlcy for right man. Call eves for appt, 6J6..3848 MAL LIE'S \\Iii; & Beauty Salon baa openings for: 11alr Stylist, ManlCW'lsl or Wig Stylist. Call S<s.3446 MAN to aulst Mgr., local. appllance atore. Muat be neat appearing. CAil 9 Mf to 10 Ai\f on!¥: 496-2383 BUSIF.Sl' martctplam 1n town. The DAD.. Y PILOT OusU5od aectk>n. S • v e money, time A ellort. Look ~owt ----·--------- only to Joe Colantonio. POOLE BUICK 234 E. 17th Sl, Costa Mesa newport . personn~ agency 833 Dover Drive Newport Beach 64273870 The following Is a parUal list o~ our present job op- portunities. ' Ex1<. Socy To $700 Xlnt 6kills. Constr. &for lrgal bkgrd req'd. Opt;y ior ~~ll educated, poised young """' ... Secretary $600 Fast paced young man ttqs, t1eey wfablllty to comporM!, coot"dlnate work load, travel when nfi• Xlnt Co. & loc. SH 100 + , .typ. 80 + . F/C Bkkpr To $600 V1uiet)' of duties. Constr. b~ helpful. Intere1llne Co. & good loc. Secretary To $525 Xht. Ct>., <movlng to Newport &echl, needs a ael1 atatt.r. Work wt'll w/people. SU 9()..100, t)lp. '1U wpm. Secretary $500 Bu.iy n.. E . Ofc fftda at- tracttve &1t1 wfrood gkilll lor front ore. For '¥ o u 1' con~lence, plru~ co.II tor appt. r BATH AIOI! • I AM · I PM. 4 doys por wk. Wiii troln. compllfl1 benetiU.Ap~y in ~f'Ol' only between 2 and 6 P .M.. Aak for Mike Grant, PLEASE APPLY NURSES AIDE • ,11 17!0 -Blvd., CM pm-7:30 im. Exp d. SALE3LADY J><pe 1 pr.eferred. ladie' ready to wear~·Appl~ PARK LIDO CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL APROPOS, No. 27 Town le: Country, Orange. Mon-Fri, lOAM-tPM. $750.00 (714) 642-2410 Salesman, manled, """'"" ~~'--'------aaiee:, ear plW1 experuies, Jee Nuning reimburaed (also fee jolll!ll REGISTERED. NURSE call AM, w .. tcUU Peno.'. I.C . .C.C.U.. ne! A&'f!ncy, IDU Westclill ~ umt. ~ Drive, N.B. 645-mo opportunities, continuJJw ed. SALF.S: Service eatabll&hed ueatlon prograrit. Contact Fuller Brush customers -So. Cout Com-. munlty Hosp. 3l8T2 Cout tl45. wk. guar, to start. H So ' ·-·-(n4) <!I> Call Kl 6--6339 ~·Ext 356..,_ SALF.S • PART TIME gate house $400 to $3,000. No ~es exp. ...... ~ 5-9 PM Ne .. -needed to take otden & a ....... , • .. ,..... cover leads for world 's Center, Call: 644-0603. fastest selling home ex- PART TIME 9 AM-6 PM, e r ciser. It sell• like 3 days a week, OFFICE banaNUI, In bunches, fDr & RE1AlLING. 642-8l5T. $10.1.50, with 100% finan- • e e PIE MAKER '""'· Call' 897·19!16 bera.en Reaponsfble, yoorrg man to 12 & 1 p.m. , learn the pie making bus!-SALES-Service Estab. Fuller ms, 6 ~ .. 48 hr wk, work Bru&h route, $12S a wk, Into ed future with arowing guararileed to start, Call co. Apply in person, Vi's Pies 54&-5745 (3 to 6 pm) 191 E, 16:.J St., --------- C:M· PRODUCTION -WORKERS- of Interest .to wonien THE HARTLEY CO .. * SECRET ARY * Land development executive In South Laguna ottice, re. qui.res attractive and exper- ienced secretary with good personality &: top &kills in typing and SH. ! to 5: 30. 1987 Plactntta T~: Miu Hano for info. ~~~°""'=~-==--1 4'9-1344 547-n61 PRODUCTION CONTROL EXP EDITOR Socy/Legal Trnee $450 Exciting opty to start in legaJ Predskln meW parts man-field. Very . pleasant law ufacturlng, has a need for ofcs., good bents. Call Mis.!1 a man with experience In Elizabet.It, 557-6122. Abigail manufacturing pmduction Abbot Personnel Agency, 230 control. MUii be wen versed W, Warner, Suite m, Santa In working with blueprints, ~""'..:,,:.,· =~---~= production orders and engi. * SECY $600 neertng changes. or more, Eng, bkgrd, Make Excellent growth opportunity drafts & charts. SH 00. Nr. and trlnge benefit.. ' Or. Co. Airport. 'Ai fee pd Salary oomme.nsurate wltb by co. Fee jobs also. experience, J. R. Pierce AuoCiaieS Agency, Inc. APPLY IN PERSON 1885 Newport, CM 642-6720 SHUR·LOK CORP. Socrotory to $573 Good typing· & S/H Skills, lllO E. Normandy Pl .• Santa ... one girl office, beach area. Call Lorair,e., Westcli!f Per. i;onnel Agency, 2043 West- cliJJ Dr., N.B. 64?-2770 (1 hlk N. of McFadden, 1A blk w. of Grand) . SECURITY Guards, Newpt. Equal opportunity employer area. Call 633-367.0 or ~-~-----·1 637-3070 10-5 PM. PRODUCTION -TEST- TECHNICIANS Exceptional oppor- tunity for the right, bright Individuals to 9et In on the ground floor of a r•pldly growing division of a l•r1• corporation. Must have H I g h School education, solid state training or experience, be able to oper•t• os· cllllscope, • n d VOM, etc. GATES LEARJET CORPORATION SERVICE l PARTS DELIVERY MAN Fu''. time permanent posi- tion, top pay, group inzur. a.nee, paid vacations & other benefita. Apply in person only to J0e Colantonio. POOLE BUICK 234 E. 17th St., ~la Mesa Shipping " R•ceiving .. \¥arehou1e ~anager A local, growing company needs an experienced man who could gtandard· lle our warehouse: &tor- age and establish a smooth traffic control .,.,1em. Good Wary and fringe benefits. excellent Apply Box P-581 Daily Pilot DAILY PU.QT DIME-A · LINES. You can use them for ju&t pennies a day. Dial ahltt. Spanish Heng. Swe9 lamps, r•9. 49.95 now $ 22 . .50 . 3 Room1 of Gorgeous ~p•nlsh Furniture We are aeekq: an tndivl.dual I was reg. $12951 Sacrifice! $425. tenll with 6 montlw ·'° ' ,,., ... R D FURNITURE perlt!:nce Jn ahippJ~ Ir re-,, eel~ ..,k, po:<!erably Ill 1144 Nowport Blvd. lot Horbor) Cotto Mou Only !be elootronlcs llldustry, Every Niglir'til 9-Wod., Sot. & Sun. 'Ill 6 Good 1tart1'1g rate and -JOBS l EMPLOYMENT benefit program iDc:l:udlng ll --. 11a,y, vacation during the Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 first year, ot employment , - and a stock purchasing pro. W Arl'RESSES -Full or part gram time, Ref's, Apply BenlDn's ' CoHee Shop, 133 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Bch VARIAN DATA MACHINES WAITRESS WANTED Over 21, 962-7212 aft 1. \VOMAN To work in Donut a Varian subsidiary shop, over 21. No · phone 2722 Mlc~n Drive call p I ease. Winchell's (San Diego· Fteeny Donu( Howie, 2947 Harbor at Jamboree off-ramp Blvtl, Costa Mesa 1 block S. of Michel.ton Dr.) . Irvine, ~f. 92664 School1olnstructlon 7600 Equal opporturuty employer SKIPPER Discover a Great New 45' Diesel Sport Fishing Cirffr With The Cl'uiser, FulJ time position. Factory work in winter. Maintenance exp. nq'd. Skipper's lie. pref~. P.O. AIRLINES Box 729, Westminster, Cal. A natural for young people SPOT WELDER • Minimum wbo want excitement plus! 2 yrs exp; all phases, in-nck~t agent?· Air freight? eluding set up. Day shift. Station a g e n t? Reserva- St:arting wage dependent tlonsT Ramp or travel agent? upon exp. Space-Tek We'll train you for these Indu.stries, 1922 Placentia, and more, day or nile. We C.M. Phone: 642-7265. include placement twist. STEADY JOB ance, Large !'.>range ~unty con. E.'lt. 21 yrs, Approved for cern has opening for five Veterans. Eligible institution young, aggressive me n. Mu.!t have a car and be under the federally insured able to start work immedi· student loan program, ately, No experience neoes- aary, $90 to $150 per v•eek as per written agreement. We will train, Call 9 to 5 p.m., Mon, &: Tues. 536-7521 ' Stono/S.cy $350 Opty fDr trainee w/lite SH & good typing skills. Xlnt Airline Schools Pacific 610 E. 17th, Santa Ano 543-6596 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS bcnf.s. . Talker __: Naval -Solar -Div/Secy $500 Decent -STACKED Challenging pos, for career You can tell male panckes gal w/top &kills. from female pancakes by no. Gal Friday $425 ticlng which ones are STACK. Ynt. work/conv. to 1wys, Llte ED. SH/type 00. ~----~--SERVICE CENtER Cottago Art Shoppo E I Ag Art leMOns, land & sea,scap.. mp oyment ency ea, signs &: truck lettering. ~ Newport Center Dr., NB Emma Blankinship &: Joyce Suite 200 By appL 644-4981 Sisler. 690 W, 19th (At :· J. TELEPHONE Sales from mona) 642-1689 or 835-6455. your own home, exper, PIANO LESSONS - .&alary open, 644-21.59, 8-lO Beginners, intermediates • AM Only. all .ages. TIIEORY • IM· TRACER Lathe operator 6 PROVIZATION. Reasonable. mos to one yrs exp. prefer-Call after 5 p.m. 546--1548 red. Call Mr. Lewis 645-28841-========= TRAVEL AGENCY needs Theatrical 7900 part ttme girl. Exper'd on----------- ly. Call Moo. 646-0203 ACTING • • • TELLER Do~ wantto be.a full lim• working profes,,1onal? Do you have the &elf discipline to subject "yourself ID a rig. id British training course & the artistic humility to ac- cept minor roles until the Fumlture IOOO WAREHOUSE FULL · Sofa's, Chain, B<tnn'a, Your Choice -$69. Sofa'I & Low~ seat, Kng Sz &Inn's Your Cholce-$139. Rebig'1, stoves\ washers, dryers, $39, Guar- anteed! Sacrillce Houaefull1 From Estates, 4: Model Homes, Terms! ·Repossession Center 547-5721 619 E. 14th ST., S.A. MATCHED SET 4 pc. bedroom set lncluding walnut bed frame {bead · board & foolboard, no llUlt- treBS), triple dresser 'with; mirror, bureau and night •land. ft.loving, must sell $100. Ms.6062 eves & wknds. SOFA, Olair & ottoman, Maple coffee table, corner table, two end tables, ~r table, mag, rack & wall. rack for cups, 1225 Rutland, CM 548-lfiOO HOUSEFUL Of new model hOme Jumlture. Reg, ;683. nOw $197. 894-4411 or 637-6200 NEW 8 tt sofa & .5 ft love seat, 3 toned on gtild, strip pattern: Oriental teak fram- ing, $500, 64t-5983 8' SOFA &: l.Dveseat. coffee &: end tbls, kng 1Z bdrm aet, lamps &: c br1. Sacrifice! Call 646-4332. 8' Sofa never used, quilted floral, Scotchguarded $125. Match. loveseat f15, 771Hl592. MAHOG. Bdnn Set, dbl ; bxspmgs & matt. Complete, : $115. Call 675-5617 ' BEA trrIFUL Large Dark pecan bo6kcase, 6 shelves, x1nt cond. Call 67S-S705 SIMMONS hideoil-bed, aood cond., $35. call before 17 or aft 7 p.m .. 548-3696 Dinette Set, like new I'> 6 chain $05 * 548-6769 +· 9 drawer dresser &: mirror : $35. 5 drawer chest: $30: · -; WHITE Antique vanity with ; 3 way mirror, $35. Call • 675-8238. Office Furniture IOli : · .. . . --------1 USED at.eel desks $.19.50 e ~ Posture chain $12.5(1 &:: up • Used 2 & 4 draY.-er tiling cabinels • Used wood de&k! : 1t1cMahan Bros Desk Inc. : 1800 Newport BJvtl. ; Costa Me118. * 642-8450 ~ Position available for per- I01\8.ble, well groomed young lady with pleasing personal- ity and the ability to work well with the public. Teller experience desired but not mandatory. Xlnt. working conditions and fringe benefits. Please call ~frs. Nagel tor appt, (n4) 6424ID. training period is complete? , If llO THE WNDON LA· Office F.qulpment 8011 ~ GUNA ACTORS WORK-I ---~~----; SllOPmlghlbe abletohelp MARCHAN'.J' Elect.; you, No previous experience calculator & VICTOR 10 key , necessary, no age barrier. elect adder. fi.tZ..-4715 : -GLENDALE- FEDERAL SAVINGS 1833 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA Equal opportunity employer IT'S Beaeh house time. Bia· ge!t aelectlon ever! See the DAILY PILOT Caasilied section NOW! Membeni of this exclusive -: group will only be accepted uPon a gatigfactory personal interview with the director, Call 494-441» for appL TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT ADS Store Equipment 8012 \ ' COMPLETE donut ma.king~ equip. except for m;xer. ~ Also refrigerated case. ~ 615-0llt or 5$-Ta25 \ '~======== ,, I -' Cafe, Restaurant 8014 ~ -. BOOTIIS, Hotse600e $30 -~ pullman $50. All with tables, ' settees. $5 per lineal foot. • See Oockmaster, 3333 W. : Coast Hwy, N.B. : 2005 So. Rltchoy St. Santa Ana .'"' ' Scnools.lnrtrudion 7600Schools-lnstruction 7600 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE DAILY PlLOT DIME-A· LINES. You can use them I ~ pennies a day. Dial • POWER Machine operator. drapes only. Exp. Colt Drapery, 642-027(1 I I • Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000 11~;;;;:;===~~=~1 · * * ALL ITEMS RETURNED FROM Restaurant I I I RENTALS, LEASES & MODEL HOMES Reuben . E. !At *BAR BOY* ' . We are the sales outlet for the nation's largest furniture rental co. E 'd p rt Tl Get thl Wl\Ole IWIY today .' .• xp • a me now ... from Orange County's own Complete 10 pc walnut BR set including box APPLY wo rld famous Innkeepers Institute springs, mattress & lamps. Was $350 ...• 151 E COAST HWY, lntematlonel. le11m the fast I $119 NEWi>oRT BEACH streamlined modem way lhtt now on 'I • makes Triple 1 grv:ds prized and Massive 9 drawer Spanlsh dresser & mir. RN In-Service, co-ordinator, w.11-l)l:ld throughout the giant ror, 1 nite stand, 1 headboard. Was $225. exp'd only. BA degree U.S. motel Industry. I $99 pref'd. Xlnt benefit• & now on 'I • starting salary. contact • • Complete 5 piece Spanish Bedroom set in Director of Nuning. C.M. .... antique green. \Vas $300 .... now only $149. J.1emorial Hosp. 642-2'134 • JiSI Complete 7 piece Spanish Living room set, RN'•·ICU. All shifts avail. ..,._et '"' 111• (incllfCfini 8 ' sofa & love seat, artistic wood arms, 3 j rllimall'lt IPI) llllU'li-.1 CHJlts, Xlnt working cond''· Con-l..---Nell""" 1t1611101111n ... , UfllJ. tables, 2 lamps. Was $525 ... now only $119. tact Director of Nursing PHONt: W'P'tOYED rOR i~ I Complete 7 pc. Spanish living room set, 8' ~;,,.Memorial Ho•p. 776·5802 O• drop 1 end uiln5,,f" I sofa & love seat, 3 tables, 2lamps. lnnk••Plrt lnfonnetlon 111c. P · Was $400 •.... , . , ........... now onty $169 .. RN, Night wprrvilor, xlnt INNKEEPERS INSTITUTS INTERNATIONAL At last! Xlnt .used Refrigerators from $75 working cond's " benoOts. Co1v1SION OP AHTMOHT ICNOot.•I Contact Director of Nunln(, t 717 So•llt treokll1nt.-A1111 llel111, C1llf .. 12804 ea. up. C.M. Memorial Ho • p . , Many good used occasional cha ifs • 1n vari· 66-2734 StM Mt fret Career lnfonnetMI ous cofors from $9 ••ch vp. SAJ.ESw<l·'=MAN=-.-m-.-,-u-.. -. Our complete stock o( lamps from $3.50 N. r..c::·~:;.~ N•mt ...................... ' Age .. . THE USED FURNITURE FACTORY up. IS YOUR AD IN Address .,_........................... I 18'5 Horbor tllvd., at 19th St. CLASSIFIED! Somaone will City ............. • .. " .. Zip .. . . . .. . I H WCkod•I• ~5'°30 * ,54!",94lS7 1•' be ~ for ll Dial 642· ilt · rs: oy1 r ' '·s. ~. un. ""* lG'll ''--""-"-"-'-·-·.·-·-·-·-··-·-·.·-·-·-·-·-··-·.·.·.·-·.·.·.··-·-·.·.·__.!!!,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,. f • " • • • . , ' ,. ' • • • ' ' " " " " ' '· " " • ,, • . I~ ,, ·-' '• " - l MRCHANDISI PO& MllCHANDISI '°R MI RCHANDI SI 'OR TRANSPORTATION "'TRANSPORTATION TµN~PORTATION 1 IALI ~D TllADI SALi AN'D TRADE SALi !ND "TRADI • IOots .. Yochts -M;;.jl.' Hornu me Trucki t500 i ~r ... s_.1,: 1G2t MIHOll--Ml1H1Lt-· -' • I · t ORDIR NOW If THOMfSON Loil stralce + N•wport H•rbor * ~ II TON Q><vy Pick Up. GR-MOTHIR f:-OA¥-UNU~ An1!9 . ...., babies C.b1.'!,__ sleeps 2, D e pt h .\ -.,,. ~~· ~mo~bll~~q~··~n~,.~··~"'~·~bed~.~Cl~-=~1 PIRRARI : pert cond SIS, kn& ,. bed Motl"" rinc» wlth i:hlldftna mo, jiil'IO "· lliwi'liille • ...,,., ~-one ot :1 tu• N~ -I.Id. lli< ., 0 Y 0 T' a · ~ compl, 2 bl,:nbtJ, ,spttad,: ~ Beaut curtotn 6TS-T973 ea• tanks. tudem trailer, eat growtna ,resort anu. '51 TORO P.lJ. '61 engine, ...... ....,., A ~ ~.-PU· -_mind7~ .. mp ....W., necJd..C'el l I JU,:Ft; D:te. Che.r-BtoU. no motor. S750 or 14ke over MOBILE HOMES _..a\&\<>.:._~~ or bert otter. &Ill' Counq 'i CID.I¥ auebcr- ; ble UM, )ilk le Wh ·a dia. ea.ftlnp •t with opals ru,. b~lea, mlsi:. pa.Uo 4 154.06 per mo/968-1541 are on display, theee bomtt Call 67W181 anytime. 'a:u:~i:RVU:Z.PARTS BIG f ~ na~ ~di~ blue, biet, aquamarines. •Jli>hlr-carden lllm.s. 5'6-0335 24' T ~r. Bea utttul are fully equipprd at pncet '55 DODG E TRUCK 3100 w. Cout ffWr, 9'00 Imported Carw Imported ,._ TOYOTA FERRARI --foLKSWA·~~ VW-BUGS . -rRoll $399 , f :Ute co$ pc -' $40 k:t, "• Jade, etc. for the SPEC-HAND Palntecl oµ portrait Of throug t, :l hn on new US )'OU won't want to Pl" up! New trans. rebuiU Ll&fne. Newpor& Btlch , , • " !AL MO'l'lttR. LQlituy you or your clllldn!n 1rom a Inter«ptor, ~ EXAMPLE: 1425 -• llG-940ll Mt).1'184 SAYINGS OOOo SELECTION' ~ !Ti~n~ + (F, :ti equl:p., l"OIJ&h It cut 1t0on, phoUJcn,ph. 6'&-3629 *6'f-~* New 3>xft w/awninp, lkirt, =.:·======= Authoriald P'mvt Dealer • orango ~NP 115 """' toolt lw tho rockbound, all DIAMOND Rllll Jadlea (ll 16' Kennedy Gius over Wood e,."1·,~.'.:'.'."'~~~-Incl .... IMtu JMpt 9510 FIAT NOW hi ·•· 13 ' jewelry maJdnr IUJlPltea. u u--t d"_:··•· 't tn M HP Homell ... cltlJI A ~. -v """"' • --------~· , pot<y cllr $1.15, eoJd Id! lind' toolt ~ =• ~•••~ " ady $650 Sl3-6'l31 MEDL\T!:· OCC\IPANCYI lg. hobby bor1e $5. 221 & cUting~~ppllH~· platinum. m-8800 ~ . GREENLEAfl: PARK 'ti J:EEP 4" 4. Snow tires. '68 FIAT 850 Cpt. Lo mi'a. , Ala~ H.!l .. 5$-.22}$ Open Tues Chru Sat. 9-G S.ilboat 9010 An &chdt prlv•te club Good runnlnc cond. Mot 35 ml. per aal, like new. . CLOTJ:IING. books, A stamp SUnday 10-4 closed Moll. Misc. Wi nt.cl 1610 1 1150 Whittier Ave., .::":::ll=·=Call==862-0842o:::;:::::=== I Best oUer. 673-(!3(1 ON ALL NIW 1970 CORONAS " Zs~Ol' Rocbo~' shelJ.&, FIVE M GEMS A furnitur• le: Appll1nce1 PluTrend Coeta Mesa 9520 •• !t,'':.::~· ROM • • •~• " vlc-LAPIDARY SUPPLY W~NTED • 14' PTCI • Ph. nf/60.1350 .Campen JAGUAR ft -1 trola. ·Sat. le Sun. 280 !:. ltea!' Ct"Coneie Center Top Cash In 30 Minute• Complete •t1ptnna.ker Take-Jlarbor'Blvd. to -----·---.,.---------1: ~tt1;~a,:INT WUson.-C.M. Shopping Center F ' t CourteoUI Se:rvklo • 22' TEMP~. 19th St., then we&t * *a· Full C&b •OVtr JAGUAR 549. 3031 Ext ... or ft ' FAMILIES, EVERYTHING 2'T5d Harbor Blvd., ll·A u lJ>O~ MORE Olympic Oau to WhltUer Ave, camper, J~ctory dlacon-. . IXICUTIVI DI MO'I AT JllOCOSTllARBOA !J.!::_VO.. 1 ' SW'b IO am s.1. 4/25, ros Coola M,.. * -Allc Your J)iendl About u~ Su.,..laal Keel-.ule JOMICRA, INC. ttnued mcid<l, .,.ady ta ao. HEADQUARTERS BIGGER ~ , Victoria Sl, CM. DANISH Modem, 911 It. .,.. Call Chuck 5'1.rnt days. • :16' SOLING • Well built J.2x55, 1'lRd 30' "'1IJi -·d. 1S lb lee box. 'Ibo onlY authorbed JAGUAll SAVINGS LARGE •' ; '. Appllancu tlonai, Belgo couch with Eves&. Sun 639-'1649. Hl-Ooor Mk ll 90J'Ch,,awnlng, CP'POrf, new butane light, 3--12 v olt dealer in the entire Harbor 1 1100 """" end. re ve ra Ible Pacific Yaallt Soles 6'B-!Sl1l, m,., """· """'' lt>t, fine llghta, bu tape tank, bedding, ..... IXAMPLI• 1'71 SEtECnON ......... -cond!Uoo ISO, ~IJt l!,lrlt c:.:.r;.:;.:::.r .. BOAT .SALEI .pUk. Re ... -1211 • .16 .pl._ntor ~" ...... ~e.. 4 DOOR SIDAN el vw l so. COAST KIRBY double bed with Walnut OrlglnW pref. Formals: OJNGHYS •••••••• $15 to $50 2 BR 'lnlltr:' lD x 5:J $4500. window dra,pes. While ~y SAL ES ' speed. radio, w/walliJ, CAMP. nc :1 : bu ettdjt TD'a &. demo bookcue headboard, New cuuall, bqa, etc. Must .be SKIFFS •••••••••• $15 fl) 860 Rent space MT.St mo. Jut $895. SERVICE heater, comole. ser. # ~ L models of new •70 Kirby ,Englander Red Line mat· htcluicondltton. Tue•Sat .12 ":. SAJ7, ........... -·Ad=ul==is=only;;::·,;548-;;l;:IS;:T::N;;.8;:;·::: ~e~~~ °!~ne~11:rtrianv: P~.r.s 207 ™WAs $2241.75 . Harbo' ur v.w,'. ClaMie&, 25% oH. Fae!. tress le box springs, Clall 5"-831110 am..5 pm. NEW C"T TRAILER SlOQ ~ 'J.atilltleJ. For m•ick sale nAH N OW II worrn't. PH: 53S-!S21J222 'boy lonrthl &ood a>ndltion 12 SOOUP BAl'I' TAl<K "!50 Blcycln 9211 •-BUICK AU1110RIZED Sth St/ H.B. ' 165. 833-l350. , FREE TO YOU roMCAT BOATS ~.;., :,; .. w .. t lBlh SI.; IN $1890.88 ,SALES • SERVICE t KENMORE MMel 80 auto. YW BUS CAMPING 2602 Newpt Bl, NB 675-24.00 NEW HUFFY 24" WOMAN'S ----"'----lB1U BEAOI BL. MUom.. ..., Q =~RT 16 CB .U l OR GIRLS BICY~' ~. SPY. '>7 GMC, 1 ton, 4 wheel dr, COSTA MESA I ILL M • XI Y ~--'G'J'ON ~.;;;-CH.:~•. washer, xlnt cond. $40. E UIPMENT FREE to &ood home nI '''"'"~"' • I 815' ........., 10%' camper. Buhtne refrtg, ~ ""'"'"'" - Frigind. ·dm;e~ el~-~· xlnt Al! .. ,tn, wloneth bunll t ro. 2 bu~: Beaut. lon& baited kl~~; , ~. -~~·. ~·.Y!~t :.·:: DER Moor,,;:. $40. atove w/oven. 100 ial. cas 2:w E;~~771th65Stroet T 0 Y 0 TA '70 YW BUS co . .....,, O'll""ll.l.U or s.., IP pane...,...,, 5 wka old 1 bu 8 toes -6 uc:· -::::=:·:o"":=::"'=EVENIN===G:=S.i oto:. ...... ~ tl -54&-8672 SO pound icebox, water • $800. 8 mos old, like new. ... cap. -wa...,r, • .., .... rarna c 7 Paue-beaut1tul i .._ storage, place to bang ~""~::ch front to~,!.; A great, safe sailin& aloop. Mln1 ilku 9275 trans, power takM>ff winch '69 XKE .Convertible 11111 llAC'H ILVD. AM/FM ctir, New car ;;;; ' Gmod.E,' 1 axluto washer, laU-clothes. can make into bed ..,_....,,.,.,., .,,., 962-8450. &: more. $2600. 548-0072 or Loaded· chrome wire wbeell. HUNTINGTON llA(.H ran!y, ~tewall tires. e , nt cot)!f. $65. Norge • unit can be moved easily. PUPPY Female, b1aCk. hall 30, ~·--,. Junk built in * * * see at Mesa Union, Newport AM/FM, dlr, disc bftkes, 1474555 thru ....... ~ ll ~" -L';~ ~nd. $55. Price $"75. can 6f2.-0291 Bas.set,. very &ood with' H~w.iKong, good cond. POWELL 5 HP trail bike, Blvd at Fairview :t_ea:;: P~IY~ ~ 3 MJ. S. of San Diego Fwy trade-~""~·~"': pti. WESTINGHOUSE Auto. -. CA$SH • =· 10 mo. All ~t;g ~679 Call Peter (2l3) ~~:~e~ir?":..~ar c:=~~~~~1{~~ :; =·~ ~:>~ Ffll\IYIOfTIAI !::>;ia ~. 5f&.«l51 ·or Washer, Eood cond.. SSO. For CUTE pups. Various colors BONANZA 5 HP, jacks)Wt, 646--1568 or inquire 2766 ~ ....,_, 168 ''VW D B ..J-646-5641 --. or Sat/Sun. 15' Newport .Finn U.S. 765 n-a • ._l -N 6 CM am5f0.3100or4!K-1029, ..__._ k Unt "llr A .......... FURNITURE -sml. & med. breeds. Free w/trlr & com Pass. xlnt condition $135. Clu•v • spa ... ., o. , , . m.r II Wagon1 <• :".~) $1795. : Appllancefl, Antiques , to gd. hzns. 548--0813 -Bea.utilul, Cal 675-7024, 548-2667 CAB H;tgh camper shell wlth JAGUAR '£1 Sedan 3.8. 4 Hf Lux Pickups CHICK IVERSON : PHILCO refrigerato r , aeparate door for freezer, yellow.-$15. 54S-.2926 USED Appliances & TV's, all guaranteed. Dunlap's, 1815 Newport, C.M. 548-T188 Antiques 8110 ANTIQUE SHOW 80 Antique D1al1r1 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 800 W. Katella, Anaheim MAY 1·2-3 Fri & Sat 1·1D, SUn 12-6 1 Item or Houseful 836-4493. 4/27 ===::::;:::::;;===:. boot for Jatt model Ford IPd aynchro w/ od, p/1, Land Crul11r1 Pors-'"e Audi · L'lll rNU\ 4 Km'ENS -2 auver---LIDO 14 -Complete -Motorcycl11 9300 pick.up wlth 8' bed S225. p/b, r/h, 54M376 w-ons lliPll ---... -,, Good CondlUon. S6.i0 ··----531 0001 -• 900 W IC t H • 894-2ll 2 • ~black, ' w~,k 61>""50 61>3325Eve•. • .. ;;;;;. "Adve n ture'" KARMANN GHIA DEAN LEWIS N.B. ·:...~·-~ * AUCTION * FREE wood while It tu~. 14' DART Sloop & trallor, camper, 18,000 aculal ml. 9 19111' Horbor, C.M. 1146-9303 ll YoUwlll sell or""" 1519 Plaoent;a Ave, completely ttlini>h<d $250. M" old, Loaded w/extru. WANT "melhln• apeclal! BIIL MAXEY VOLVO give Windy a try ' c.M. 4128 548-4140 644-6272 ~500 Karmann Ghia 'S, 66 -·------1 wf.d';·=r~~ ~~~~ = ~~~:.Yi~~ '!:r~r~r';""~~~.! Dune lugglH ,525 ~~~~~ ... 54i'.'i~~~t : !T(OIYIOJT!A! ~~ vol€~Z:: ' ~-N~ ~dg ~ 23' Sloop Albe...,, ltte '11p DUNE Buggy, Cius Top, 1,!960~.,;Kann='--... -G~hi-·a-, ~--ed 11111 BEACH BL VO, Now tn stoclO ony • · a FLUFFY part Pen1ian kit· thru May. New engine &: rad l 0 · front. runs W!ll. Huirt, Beach M7-15JS Immedi.te Delivery LADIES Diamond DI n n er tens. 2 mahogany bi.ck, 2 645-1028 Chrome rims. $950. Call S250. 494-5323 I mt ff of o..t H on Bdl ~ Ring, set wlth 1\l korat blk & white. 642-0239. 4127 54"'"89 · "'· lBOOE Sport Coupe center diamond, 2 diamond& Need sood home tor ell wht BALBOA 20 '61 y.....,. 305CC, bored out ---. MERCEDES BENZ 'M 'f9YOTA Corona. Auta. DEAN LEWJS .. ~ karat on each alde. abort hair kittens 5 mos Must eell, Sacrifice. 2 steP1 $285. '69 Hol!claw 2 _lm....;.po_rt_ad_A_ul;.;.•;.;.. __ ,....;600 ~~· :r~ avail. 1961 Ha.tbor, C,¥:. 6f6.9113 Brlllict cut. Sac-J"l 1~•1 5U48l3 ' -::::==="'""'='===;::::: bik trail ws 67S-4683. s.wfnt Machi-1120 Reot. .,. ..-. l"3!IO. l?olf> 8 ktt'·· -~ ~ ~-, 4 • ' er, · ALFA ROMEO Sport ca"n -'"' Pilot -~· ·-•-,_., , Power Cruls•ro 9020 '54 Harley DavtdJon 45 cu --------TRIUMPH ·=----;.;.;·I SINGER Auto lig...zag, 6 , ~ . . black, 2 a1rlped, 2 grey, 6 ---------in, basket, cbl'ome springer '69 ALPHA GTV J.96(1 AUSTIN Healey wtN .moa. old. No attach Deeded BFT~ llrl8. •lpi.ie:~ whlte, wka old. 542-1893 '69 LUHRS 28' cab in front end. 6'64977 ----·-----r i. ' · for zlg~~.J, button holes, $550. Oiandelltfa, lampa, 3 UTI'LE Kittens 1 black Cruiser, 300hp Chrysler eng. '65 Honda 300, "Dream." 5 speed, dlr, AM/n.'f., ~wer TRIUMPH TR 3 •eg, r/h, ;!: ~~~ = . de&igns etC. Guar. S37 cash furn., antlqu.es. Mi nk It white &: 2 dark b:.0wn, blue Cruises 20 knota, radio, Good cond. $250. Call aft d.1ac brakes, godess &Uld w/ good uphol, 4 apd l)'DChro, . , or small payments. 526--661£ A~tumn UH~ stole, pd. e)'H• Call 53&-1248. 4127 telepbone, anchor, winch, 5PM 673--7577. plush int. Reclining seats. 3rece!:.,val' ve ~/b~ tune-, ~rp •. Antlqun, Cla11fc1 Mll $1500, se $850. 2 CUbmere other xtru. Xl.nt cond . Has had loving care, (YCY· '" .-.. "~ ' Musicil lfWeaters, fur collars. FREE Wood. Sll500 ~ HODAKAfibel"Rl&S5T·Ttank 934) Will take trade, catl c963-:=3525=:'====== l931 Model A Coupe, new I I I .l"r Aquarium. All xlnt. Miscell. ~3231 4/27 ~'-.,' ~· ,..-,"°"~~-""' Sell for SSO and stock tank Phil 540-3100 or 49'-1029. ,.. pal t -•-x1n ~ 1-;.;";.;1;.;'-'"""'"=";;.1;;__..;.;.:.;;u 644-41)18 2 _t -bbi'••. To lo·""" 25' Boat le M<Y.>ring oU & seat. 557.7315, -'59 Mercedes 190 SL, n &. \:l"uvme, t COuu. .... .., ... "' ... .., Balboa J·' Must ••ll' 11000 '64 Alpha Romeo Sprint. New m-haru'cn "" • ,;_ A-1. VOLKSWAGEN Best otter. 546-7326 P.A. System, 2 columns, 200 ROCK HOUNDS.FREE home. 536-7036 4/27 Phone filS:.2065. . . CIMATTI 1SOCC-NE·W tr&ns, radial tires, Otcb, ~nal -;&in~. ~$i_350,J_.:_::_:::_:_:,::~.:,:::_:_j =========01 ·w amp, ecbo. mike, sen Po1Wtlng unit .. twnblor. FREE kltte"' • 53l>001l alt. Mu•t sell! $2>0. 6'15-2065 br!OI. 491-1610 alt f 613-3185 SHAKY JAK.E'S Raco Caro, Rods ff20 all or individual cheap. "'-lete rock ........ '-=========-'"'"8100 -_,,, .... -~· a 4/29 Spaod-Skl Boots -'65 Honda. Scrambler 250. '' lB65 Meroed .. Benz 230 SL. vw BUG ' ··~ "'"• ·-w, ...... ~-~-"7~~~.! PETS and LIVESTOCK Gooda>nd.~. AUSnN HEALEY Auto.Mtntcond.$39501lnn. BLACK '83 Ford, late GI ~ ·-..., .w -'"'r"' "-J• -..... .-v r--SMALL Lapstrake 15' Inbrd * 673-7008. * ~2365. eeautltul black w I cuatorn cu tn. lnjecled. tnunac. Belt =:-~~sell cheap. Ml"-~ ~.A';,.1970 Cats 8820 Lyman. Trlr & new rover, e •70 HONDA 350 e '59 SPRITE needs work. Best 1 _;:=;:;:'=:=====i paint e EMPt gauges e of ll:O at 120 mt'1 per • .... ..,u...... " .. ..., v $500 or offer. 54S.7689, l.Dw Mileage. $600. Or offer. 547-9501 wkdays 'W Koni shocks e Ansen1 e hr. $m. 546--UlB ' Pianos &_Organ• 8130 4 Kitchen chairs (t:'letal ACFA Siamese Kitten. 9 SKI BOAT -GLASS TakeovCrpayments.968-7229 5,645-06.l)aft6&wknds MG Semperlta • AM ·FM • ---I frame w/white plastic pad· weeka old, champion back. 50 HP Evinrude, w/trailer Yamaha 55 Dirt Bike xlnt Every keen p>dle fuiactn-Autos Wanted 9700 1 ' PIANOS &: ORGANS ded backs & seats) $5. 50 ground with shots, i 2:>. 1401 Toledo SC or 492-178£ cond, expan. chamber, Many AUSTIN AMERICA MG able • On dbplay at: -w~ A_Y_T_O_P--l l :. NEW & USED feet chicken wire fencing .54!J.;;:.::l3;:1;4.==~~--1£' CLASP AR AV A LON' "trns. 1200. 675-1497 Sales, Servic..!, P&rtl JAMES L TO E p •Yamaha Pianos Or;ans (3' wide; l" mesh) $5.00. S-EALPOINT Siamese Shoreline trailer. Call AUSTIN AMERICA Immediate Dellvtf')', 1 l tJonal Mt~ CASH •Thomas Organs 642.1724 Female 7 weeks old $20, 839-6369 after 7PM. 1936 HONDA S 90, big bore, All Modell n emaAeceasorle~ o • Kimball Pianos · 25 CU. Fr. side by side call 646--8402 ·=-=~==="'===-94 CC. Dirt bike. Sl25. Sales, Service, Part• 1584 Old Newport Blvd., CM • Kohlor & C&mpbell ~ Westing. ftfrig/!=, ll> yr SIAMESE KITIENS Boat Slip Mooring 9036 89~2961 lmm~t.J:="" '67 FASTBACK COAST MUSIC old, wht ......::, Magnavox: '70 HONDA 175 K !. ,noarly ..,,., 8 weeks old $2(), NEWPORT A HARBOR 11tereoiradio tape combo. 533-6300 SUPS avail. f-01' nai:row ne91, Jo mi's, $550. call Black beauty, .f apd., dll', tor used can a trudrl call Ul!I for free ntlmate. • Costa Mesa * 642-2851 $100. 96l--2356 j ========= beam u.llboa.ts; uncter· s· ft. MS-.1618, 1!15 Tustin. C.M. wine Int. Xlnt nmnlb& cond. Open lG-6 Fri 11).9 Sun 12-5 1,HEARIN,:,;~c,G'='°'Al::.,.d-(-O~t~l-c-o~n) Dogs 8815 beam. Rhodes, Feat her, 1967 SUZUKI X" 250 CC. 3.100 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. Small down. WW finance GROTH CHEYllOlEI' ' WHILE THEY LAST Brand new, used 6 wks, Saber, L32, Erlckaon, PCC, Good cond. New pistons & 642-!MM MO-l7Sf pvt, pty. lXIH83?>. Call Phil Aak for Salem Manqer : SPINm 5538 had IUl'gefY &: can't use. FOR MO'lliER'S DAY! etc. Best kept, mott rings.$350.54S-.7919aft6. Authorized MG Dealer a1t10AM54o.stroor 494-.J029 IWru.BeachBlvd. ;~ All finishes, Amel;'iean made, . Six post back, Spruce 110und- : lng board, all inclusive 10 , year warranty. Phld $300. Sell $1 00. Olihuahua puppies, mother's desirable docks in Newport ---3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. '69 MGB, 2700 mi's "'"als, 1967 VW Van Partial Camper Huntington Beach 1 546-2994. father famous ''White Harbor. Phone-Auto Tools ~ 5'0-176t radio tonneau. Yellow, blk 1600 Engine.-8000 mUea on Kl 9-3331 ! CARPET Lett from Com.m'l. Prince" owned by the John B. Kingsley 67J..871l & Equip. 9410 ==A:::u:thorl%ed;::;;:::::M:::C=:::De::::::ale:::r= I uphol. Eves. 528-2468 engine. Extra aet of tires ~W=E~P"A~Y.,..::;C~A~S~H--1 . contract!. U.9S, $2.88, shag E 0 mperor ~!. Japan. Males TRADE 22' sUp Bal hi for _;:....:=='---& rlms and 2 sand tires. I! 33,., sq, yd. Drakes Carpet nly, 546--occu_ wknd "" ot boat. BEELING Front end rack, BMW MORRIS 531-2164 1~ Beach mvd., H.B. 8i;EA~G,;;LE:::,:.::;1:.;ul,.l ""b""l".'0".'0"1'd-e.,...d. Will main!. Clean pwr boat Air center hoist; Alemue 1=s10~vw=""Sq~bck~.~Sand~""T~an-,1 , FOR YOUR CAR 842-5ll4 Almost 2 yrs old. Excellent only. £73-7475 eves & tum tables, Snap on' beads:. BMW'S #1 161 MORRIS MINOR rad.lo, radlal tires, Koni • We ate having-a NEW Sylvania Sun Lamp pet for children. S20. wkends. $400. 67>5Z"';i8 Gd. Cond. $250. 646-0796 shocks. 9,000 mi's. $2600. CONNELL : : Whalt of a Salt w/adjustable clamp I bolder. 54>7346 Mooring w~· Sloop DEALER IN Prlv. pty, Lie, :2Jj)..AGO . . ""'°" and ~-· Trailor, Travel 9425 PORSCHE 646--0tl8tl t24 ""' CHEYR"'LET " :GOULDS SANTA ANA ~ N. Main 547-0tm ; on ..... _..,,, Used once, $7.50. 642-1724 LAB. RE."T. Pups. AKC. $2500 -~--"' j , You better come on down! evenings Blond & black * 673-3833 CALIFORNIA ANO VW Van '59, '64 engine, camp. 2828 Harbor Blvd, )VARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO EW HU;.,.., 24., WOMAN'S Show" pet. rnrns ALPINE O"ANGE COUNTY 'S '68 "912 TARGA" er unl~ work dono on lranl, Colla Meta s•»l2tlll l ~Newport, C.M. 642-8484 N 1....:=::..=~:;:.,;:::.;=-Mobile Homes 9200 "-<• 195Al S5795. complete new brake -tem WE PAY TOP 00., •b •• I Open Every Nite OR GIRLJ) BICYCLE. SPY· WHITE Toy Poodle Stud ~:....-c.;;.;.o .,. ~ & Surnlay Afternoon DER MODEL, $40. Serv!C<, AKC. BAY HARBOR LARGEST CHICK IVERSON I< tU'Os, Good "'""· $800. FOR TOP USED CARS j " 642-1724 EVENINGS. 847-n76 .Mobll• Hom• Sales VACATION .1970'1 Immed. Delivery Porsche Audi m.t7o8 Btwn 5 pm A 9 pm u )'OUI' car is 'extra clHn, f FORD Air conditioner $25 GERM. Shepherd. pups, AKC ALL NEW 170 MODELS TRAVEL CENTER 25 New & Ueed in Stoclc 900 We st Co11t Hwy. '69 VW Like new Sundlal ace ua tirst. i ' ~r?!°,s=~~ Motor $25 'Vlrrt 14" $5410 Wormed & shots. $50 &: Up -NOW ON DISPLAY Excel ... Golden Falcon T&M MOTORS N.B. 646--9391 _ 549-3325 Camper. Xtra ~nt rm. & POOLE BUICK ~ most makes. Beat boys in Generator $2.50. 548-6997 337 Magnolia, CM 642-8310 20• Wides as low u $599S Olympia -Alpine 8081 G~n Grov·~ m. G.G.~ '6S'Ai PORSOlE 9121 4 apd, elec refrlg .. lnatde toilet. ·234 E. 17th St. 1 So. CallL ,at Sclm:Udt Music FAMILY Membenhlp -BRITTANY SPANIELS 12' Wides to 34' Wides Apache· Wheel C1mper 534-228.f Open Sundey 892-55M new paint & trans, signal $3300 SlS-~ Costa M~1& 548--~ ! c.o. arr N. Ml.hi, San~ Ana Newport Bee.ch Tennil Oub. AKC. PeUShow/Hunt. S'JS. Park Spaces Available Worlds largest moat com· green, blk int., Mich ti.res, '62 VW Bua, reblt en,;. New IMPORTS WAN'J'.ED 1 -=========I <Moving) $425. 644--4630. $100. 6 WU. 540-8638/846-1702 1425 Balrer St., C.O.t& Mesa ple'te RV vthlcle ahopplnl DATSUN cocoa mats. $3795 ... r best upbol. $100. Call ·-494--7210 Oranae Cowiuet ,.. FAMILY membenhip-New. WELSH Corgi .. cardigan ~block East of Harbor Blvd. center offer in ca.sh. 544-4665 or 497-1845. 4441,i Jasmine TOP S BUYER 1 Sporting Goods 8500 port.Beach Tennill club. $450. puppies. AKC. rt&J10nable. Costa Me~ (nf) SfG.9470 8MZ Ganien Grove Blvd, CG • ,63 Porsche A-l Shape. Lo St., Laguna Beach BILL MAXEY TOt OTA -STOR.E WIDE s•L-E Ill 528-4222. 494-4030 fico 20xS3 1969 La Pu set 534·6686 ,... DATIUM -ml's, $2600. Call ~3276 '66 8 PASS. Bus Deluxe. 181!1 ,lleadb Blvd. ~ up tn desirable: n.rk. Cl -~ eves ~10PM. Complettly rtblt. SACRI-H. Beach. Ph. 847 $ lO"'o DISCOUNT ON ADJUSTABLE DRAFTING e AKC TOY POODLES e .-osed Sat, Open Su1111ay FICE l1"""' """ .,,.,,,. l! AJ.L MERCHANDISE TABLE $50. MALE PUPS S & K MOBILE TRAILE~sleepe 4. stove, '62 S Coupe, a.m/lm, mechan <>W. :roo-..l•oo Auto Leasing tl11 ~ Costa Mesa Gun Room 644-2714 evenings $50 EACH 842-4742 HOME BROKERS sink. 7:i lb Ice che11t, easy "LeaderinThelA!ar.hCltle1" pel'f, gd body. Must '67 VW Sedan, aunrool, · • l 234<M Newport Blvd, CM ~ Slidlni glaas doors, ].5)(8' GOLDEN Buff Co c ~ t!: r 12362 Beach Blvd., C.G. Io p u 11. S 70 O. ZIMMERMAN sacrifice, Ca.11642-1260 m&g11, low 7~ ~~Jeage, xlnt F6RD AtrrHORIZED e ,14£.1933 e • & £x'8'. Used, %: price. Spa.nlel Pups, female 6 wks 8 636-0924 or m.2445 e 548-2~/£42--0506 2845 HARBOR BLVD. '69 PORSCHE 9U·T Tal'&a. C:ndltion. 6 ;r 09 LEASING SYSTEM Is Your Ad in 0 11 r 673-7923. $30. Call 84.1-9525. OWNER Desperate must sell -,69;,.:..AIR:.,:£:.:..STRE:c:,,:;:A::;,M-29-, -Twl-n 54M410 fully equipped, $6850 or 63 VW SQ&CK. $750 Am.•rlea'a larsat leu:lnl: j' clusitledl? --will be 11IE QtilCKER YOU CAu., BASSET PUPS 1968 Aurom ~ ~ Xln't cond. Bargain. Call -~D-O~T-D~A-T_S_U_N_ ""de. 491-9590 Cd , "'""· 613-841S eves, "''"m tor noanco or ml loo~ tor It. Dial &u.5678 THE QUICKER YOU SE1.L AKC, 10 wetJcr, Mf...3617 ~~= H= sbw, "362 after S, 644-5073 OPEN '68 912 S.speed, am/fm, 6" '66 VW Bus, radio, split.f'rnt leult!i: ol all type ~ W '69 15' Fleld '= Stn:!am vaca· DAILY fact map, all extras, areen. 1eat, cherry red, gd cond, trucla:. Beach Wvd., G.G. 6.16--0924 AND t A8QO. 49f-4841 lo mi's. $1295. 847-7'785. e tmmecltate dellve.., tram or 893-2445 tion trlr, $950. Call 642-1636 SUNDAYS r . ., after SPM. '58 Porsche 16008 '67 VW Bug, 33,000 mi, xlnt over 300 can and t.rucb ' g T~R . GA:ZE~'I<« OWNER MUST MOVE ---· , 111835 Coach Blvd. l lSOtl or be•t ottor cond., Orii owner $1250. •Competitive rotea ; • ""' '1' 1QCQ .... _ ... , 2 Br, ·'·n, .. -t Trallert, Utility 9450 tluntington Beach Call 675-4438 430-4223 • New cardellmhlp aervklt ' BfCLi\.Tll POLLAN _. "'"""' ""' "" 842-7781 or 5-!IM>442 e Full "tradetn" value Jor t M y.,Dciilf Actlt*y a.lcle M' Lia~ bar, 1%. Ba. Near N~wport/ TRAILER FOl'd box 4x7' '67 VW. Orig. owner. your prerent car ' ~ "f"' '"""''' '° ,;, Ston. "f"' UI!· "(l)li/j) Co•ta Mo,. area. heavy $45. •s.; Ford !mt axlo '67 DATSUN ROLLS ROYCE Priced tor qu~k oale. e AU ular malt< vaJI. To dn elop rne1JK1 ge for :Tuesdoy, oer." Call after 10 am " whlJ $12. 8!7-8868. Stat ion Wagon - -~-$109'J. Call 846-2113 · bl pop ' 1 a : l'IQd ~_:t:.•:"cf'ing to ~ ,..1 5'5-8l41 A.M.S. ( speed, radio, heater, dlr, '.56 Vintage A·l :nechanlcal. '66 BROWN VW, bllc' int., F;, C.Omplete Detallr CaD ,~1 '""'us . of ,,aur--liS1\. Truck:; 9500 Excellent co~. Mu.st aell • Very nice execuUve ear. r&h, very aooct cond. Inside Malcom. Reid NJ;.. 11(• :n = PARAMOUNT 10x55 + 2 .;..;.="-----=" WlU take ~-$899. (VQT. smo or trade for _eq. 1n • out. MUlt lllilll 673--0091 Leaalnc M•naatr I , JI.Ar.• i~ Hn:...,~ 'room cabana, cat'J)Orl, new GMC TRUCKS i5o) can 545-0034, 10 to 8. boat. cabin cruiser. Mr. -.. __ .. •j ,.J.·.~10-3 •Yc:u 3-40r shag carpet. landscaped Diamond 636--0391, before 3 '62 vw BUS CAMPER '"_,,.. 12~:"'~.,~:H .. ~~ ~~ =' ~~~ ~ s;·: 1nun!:'te ':'livery ENGUSH FORD ;":::-===al=t::6;;P;;m::. ==IT::,.-;:· .':'fr'· New R:!'~~ ~e,RD CQ••" tt IA ""'"" wknd• --SUBARU '81 VAN. New nblt enc, Coola Mesa 642"0tJle ) Jt~<JVHtn 1~f::.,. ~~"""""' FURN 1~15 Plymoulh Southern Orange County's All New -.:-.. .. 11.... & brkl. Tape, Xlnt cond.1 .,...,~~!!!!!!~""'"'""" • ,.1.:iit:r.lM!!i!il llt:'" ::go, ..,...;,.,t"°porch, all., ... ; •n4'~~\V~s1~0toler Fordt In ;;;;;'Bi;. * '70 SUBARU Must sell $800. 548-9823 ,. "' LEASE "' ' ~ 1SGM 4.J ......, $3995. S&K Mobile Home OLDSMOBILE Stock trow At Here Now. '68 VW, lo mi's, Sunroof. 1970 Ford VB F'.J.«I PiclNp ::~ ~T: Bkrl. 12362 Beach Blvd, 2a50 Harbor Blvd, FACTOR\. Immediate DtllVffY S100 of xtraa. Xln't cond. w/camget, all', pis, auto .1 16~ .4Moit G.G. 63&--092-4 or 89J..2"5 Calta Mesa 54().8640 INVOICE! e 90 MPH Cape,bUlty ~~ af! 6. tranl, 3900 mi, $109 per mo.,, ;:~ !I~ 1969 SKYUNE 20X56. 2 Br. Poaittvety No Added a 35 Mileti Per Gallon '64 VW Bug SOUTH COAST ,,......,. ... ,.....,,,.,. 2 ba. Po«h. Awnlhg, Car· 1970 XLT halt • ton FonJ Deller Chataear e n .. autltuJ C'fo.•Jtng V....., n1N ·--CAR L•AS INO • 20For SOTo ... _,,_ pleku;p, like new, V-3, Chooae From ,.,.. ~·1 ... ,. .-· _._.. c i uo 211e.. 51 Tlloilt • port, 2 ani=i. 536-8366 Eve. f'...a.-S Test Drive Today At -l.954 W'va-'·nt s.-300 W. Cat Hwy, NB. l J,'1 " "' ... _ pov.'Cr stterl""• custom cab, ~-. ta w-, K M ·~ " -' MU~. """•. S"'"""'i"" clean .... •·-USt m Of IS r~ ·•11~ ·-.. t li~ 5l~ ·~· .xu ..,..... ... radio, heater, utili.., bOx, GT't At Our Colt 0 0 ..,._..,.,. OOuv ... n . ..,.,.,, ,.,a ~~ Mllor • lilx40 In quiet C.M. ParJt, v · 642-4749 alt 6 kd Usod Cari t9DO ,_1 ·~"· · '5Y-New awnlrtet. $l351f. 646.~ etc.. 8000 mllee:. $32!0. While Ovemocka 845 Baker, CM 540-5915 pm. W )It. . <l!!]21..i ~ft:'-ij~~ 4~7508 or 644-51* Laat -'65 VW, EMPI eng, mn'il, 1970 QiEYY CuJ:tom Impala, 'ltC.W•ifii••!il"""" UNUSU AL Custom 2h$5', BOBTAIL ~ml!' trucK 6 Thffdort SUNBEAM Cl,. fndn, must ~ell $1000 Joiided '3050. ,,_ "°""' Adull Pk. By Oct"· Pool, yaro, 'Sf Chevy, :i-tpe«t' "'' ROBINS FORD ., beat otter. 673-2546 1910 FORD Galax!•, 2 dr 30,_,_ ,q.w. GnU, sa11na. 536--()321. JI!. Xlnt cond. $1995. 2060 Harbor Blvd •67 Tourln1 SUpel'legpra, 4 :T'S BeAch hOUle rune. Bia:· hardtop $30:10. ~Goo! @Adftae nre SUN NEVER sr:rs on 4!M-7508,, B to S. Mon to Cost& Mesa &d.ooio on flr. like newt 23,000 ac:--aest eelectkln ever! See the 1970 t,ruSTANG, 1oadedt io'Jf • DAILY PILOr WANT ADSr J'l'l. I e!ll!! .. !l!!l!!!!!l!!!l! ... .:..!!!""!!l.!'lt::!.m!!:·..!IWO:!!!!!:_· -!!!:!2254~. DAILY PILOI' w.m ADSI mll•aat $3000. - • • l ' \ __ , .... • Mood,y, April 27, 1970 • l T p TA ION T NSPORTATION tRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -~-eu. --\i;c..n 9900 u;;d_c ... _ -"°° Used c... -"°° Uud Con Jiii Utl!I Con -u;;;c.,. F --iiMi:i:-.. - DAILY '1LDT -==;;~;;;;~;.;; CADILLAC . CADILLAC CHEYROl.ET ' CHEYR~'LET CONllNENTAL CORVAIR CHRYSLER DUNTON .FORD Cod. 19'7 SICI,. o. v111o •11 Cad n~1wooc1. • dr, full '61 Capr\Ce • dr soort 5'<1. '66 MAUIU H.T. '66 Continental ... eorvaJr ,. ..... 'JIJD't : ;;,.•:;::a wwwPV~ Be&utilul condltiOn. .8uyins pwr, air Stm. '67 Cad El 396, air cond, lo ml'a, new Special paint_ Sat.art Yellow Save over '8'.KI! Priced for cond. Lo M l' 1. Daya e No~ new Cad. Sell lb&' $100. orver Dorado, full pwr, air, vinyl tires, Altro seats, many w/black leather lnt, VS, lrumedJate aale! Full pow. GU-8274, eves SM-7671 e Never had an accident whsl, Total ~ce $2900. Hu rool, tilt '1teerlna:, AM/FM xtru. Orig. owner. Muat power 1tee,.;-auto. dlr. er .J.. air cond Ex-11&&• • .,d-no oll ... __ oU -Pvt ~ 6 aee to apprec. $1900 Ftnn. ~~... -• -' _.. • ~ ..a ""' ... .._~ every &......--...,, P>J• A stereo tape $3 00 , S4l.oo75 6712 Laurel Hui-st. vihtuDnlc radlo. Hu had condition.. 37,000 ml, DU. FORD cbanrel #> 6#«8>, 66-2182; aft S pm A wkndl H B ·I JovilW care, Must acrllice. (RRU814} Call' M&0834 or e OricinaJ owner '63 cad ExcepUonally clean. 6D-401l · · Take foreign car or lfJ1All t!M-m3. · '64 Ford EcoooUn! van.. • Work_Biltory available 2240 '5 ...... SANTA ANA New tlm, brakel, Mfi..l0'15 '59 Cad Sedan De VUlt 196l Chevy 4 DR, Sedan. down. (070AQJ) 5f0..!100 or LATE '67 Continental 1 diamond-tuck upbol, custom • Startz right up al the turn aft 6 pm. For Immediate Sale Auto. P/s, P .b, RH·. Orig. 494-1029 aft lD AM. owner, clean, r~na paneled&: insulated, ma;., of lhe key! 'eJ CDV a.llwr, blk lthr, Ian. All or PARTS owner. 5449· 545-2-4'10 '69 lmpa1& custom 2 dr, perfectJ¥, air, leather, & Wkle Urea, other extra& • Had excellent care. - ...... dau., AM/FM atereo, lo mt, Call after 5 P.M. 5C2-312> '6.1 Impa]a Super Sport conv. R&H, air, low mile4. .xlnt . pQWer, Priced to a e 11 , $125Q, 6C2-4689 never neglected!!! . ' 546-7076 $99 offer! m..8282/rn..1829 P/~ P/B, Rill. new top. cond. F195. 644-2044 646-«00 weekda)'S. 642--0766 '6% FORD Country Sed e Will part with this "faml· PltOM '60 .cAo c.Qupe, Bei&e, RJµ, , CHEVROLET· $500/bSt-. 'Otr. 968-!59u. 1955 CHEVY 2 dr, VS, weeke'ndll I: eves, Wagon. Auto. pow e ~'. ly friend" for $550., beca~ Cllfll Albt Safes air, gd tires & runnln& cond. · · ' '64 El Camino V:S, a~to( aUtomatlc, very clean '$175, 1967 ContineDtal Convt., xtta 1>rtvate party, 592--2313 :er!~2 2 °:;:rvers.fam: '61 FALCON STAno• WAHN &. .......,, c.t. Mm $DI. Call M2--0239. '64 CHEVY BEL AIR Sta. p/t., r/h. Sacrlfice. Call 228& Elden. C.M. MIJ;-8528 dean, mint cond. Best otttt, Ia You.r Ad in o 11 r bu radio, heater,.air CODd:, ~=-=,!M~Mno~;;I '63 CADILLAC CONY. Wai. For ln1onnation call 548-5372 or 8l'l--004. THE QUIO<ER. YOU CA1J.. 499-2614 wkn!ts cluaftieds'!' SomeoMwlll-be auto., pwr 1tl'J, pwr brk:s. 6 cyl., ••'-· ttei11., '°......, tfHrllllfi r•dlo, h••f•r, whH•w• I , tlr•1, l11tt•,. ••rrl•r, IZSK JSI) WANT ,W!! 642.:i618 #15. 6'2-1686 .tt S. ~ 897-76oo White Etepbanta? 'IHE QUICKER YOU SEIL D/tILY PILOT WANT ADS! looking ftr tt Dial &42-5'71 U~tttery It dub bbard, ' ' letlt ~ta ln vel)' eood cond. 9900 jUHd C•r1 . ttOO IUMd C•r• 1 t900 'I1le '63 yeai was one . ot 516B9 BARGAINS II EYEIY1CORNER WE ARE CELEBRATING OUR 17th ANNIVERSARY DURING THE MONTH OF APRIL BARGAINS IN EVERY CORNER MUSCLE CARS! We have a good selec- tion of Cougar Elimina- tors, Montego Cyclones & Marauders, all equipped for the Cat that likes to Scat! DURING OUR ·ANNIVERSARY $100 OVER FACTORY INVOICE Plin tax l lie'"'• P.RICED FOR ACTION! MARK Ill Look over our nice se- lection of Mark Ill's as well as several slightly used ones-the finest car made in America. DRIVE ONE TODAY! BUY ONE TODAY! LINCOLNS A Large Selection to Choose From '69 LINCOLNS Low As $4575 XSR 580 '68 LINCOLNS Low As $3325 VTP 736 '67 LINCOLNS Low As $2500 TRK 296 '66 LINCOLNS low As $1900 SUN 059 '65 LINCOLNS Low As $1475 TFC 969 '64 LINCOLNS Low As $1050 GOM 894 LOOK over our line selection of quar.ty Lin· coins! Many sold & serviced by us! COUGARS • • We have a large selection of Cougari 91 ' models, XR 7's & convertibles with pricfi you'll like. "The good ole days ere beck ' again! NEW 1970 COUGAR with white side wall tiret, power steering, pow. 1r disc brakes, delux• whe•I covers, etc, No. OF91H5I78l4 · DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY 53066 Pt111 Tu & Llcnse PRICED FOR ACTION! HERE NOW! The sexiest EuroPecin THE CAPRI Made In Germany IMPORTS '68 TOYOTA cor;n• c,.. $1595 WIG 71 8 '68 KARMANN GHIA $1895 XJL 241 1 68 VW Squue Bock WIE 821 $1695 '67 OPEL $1395 WAE 083 '67 VW FASTBACK $1395 ," ~ VRZ 679 '67 CORTINA $1195 VTP 055 MONTEGOS DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY We have coupes, sedans, & lots of gorgeous wagons at the "good old days" prices. Coma . in & see why Montego is the best informed· iata buy in America. " NEW 1970 MONTEGO 2 dr. h1rdtop. V8, front power disc brakes. Equip. with deluxe wheel covers, whife side wall t ires, power steering, AM redio. No, OHO I F5b9l9~ 52866 "" T•l u._ WAGONS '68 MERCURY c:1 ·p~:;.k $2895 WID IOI '68 MONTEGO Mercury NID 985 $2195 '67 FORD SQUIRE $1995 TVT 926 '66 FORD SQUIRE $1395 RTW 848 '65 FALCON $ 995 PEN 622 MERCURYS A Large Selection lo Choose From '69 MARQUIS 4-Dr. H.T. $3695 XWN 345 . / '69 MONTEREY 4-0r.H.T. $2895 ZUL ,492 '69 MONTEGO MX. 4-0r. $2695 VWR .098 '68 COUGAR XR7 $2595 WFL 421 '67 MONTEREY Cpo. $1595 ucc 092 LOOK over our line selection of quality · Mercurys! Many sold & serviced by us! NOW IS THE BEST TIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOlN-MERCURY PRODUCT lohnson-.son • llOml©®llml ©®ml'ii'Oml!Eml'ii'&ll • ~&OO R\ Jiii[ I ~!Ernl©WrnlW. ©@[!lJ@£00 COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor Blvd. NEW C4RS 540-5630 642-0981 USED CARS &i40·5635 THREE GENE RATIONS IN THE AV'l'OMOBILE BVSINESS • THI Ol.DfST ESTAll.ISHED "FACTOlT DIRECT' LINCOLN·MERCURT DEALER IN ORANCOE COUNTT ' ( • • • the best Chr)'sler years • AU .we need " the buyer '67 CHEVROLET who, ap~iatea ''he·r"' qualities. e We rate "her'' too 'W - tried I: blue -how do you? ·~Our Mother 'rt'w! C&r" 847-8340 after ·6 PM FORD. '65 COUNTY Sedan.' Air· cond, p/s, plb, wht ,:w/tan Int. ~· m-sm. . 1968 FORD Rancheto, lm- mac. cond. low mUeaae. 1 owner~ 494-2250, 494-94n MAVERICK 1970 ¥averick w/optloM, er/revs whls, radial trs. 20.000_ me $1825. 536-1956 MERCURY MALllU 4 DOOi • HAIDTOP 6 cyl .. •uto tt.1111., po-r 1t••ri119, r•dio, h••ter, whit•well fir•s. ITU IJll,, $1389 . '59 V:i TON P,,U. f•rd -6 cyl,irtd•r, 1tic' thif!. IK5947"0J $642 '66 FORO SQUID WA60.N. Y·I, •uto •. fr•111 ., f•ctory 1ir "coriditlo11l1MJ, pow., 1t••rin11, lugg•g• r•ck. I 2' to thoot• from). ITfX 1221 $1797 '64 V. TON P.U. '67 Colony Park, 10 pass Ford _ 6 cylh1d•r, 1t•nd· wag, all xtru. Priv. pty. •"' tr•111., good work ,,;119'11;:7.,:'(7213::),.:592-=.;:-2344~--c-II hor1•, I M"l911) '61 Montttey, 4 !h-., radio, $84 7 heater, power, $400 cash. 49f...2157 MUSTAN.G '65 MUSTANG Hardtop, 3 speed, dlr, canatY, yellow, xlnt. cond. in and out. 1 owner. Woul<! like foreign car in trade or small down. Will tina.nce pvt pty". CRHE 'sis!, Call Phil aJt 10 AM 5t0-3100 or 49f.-1029, 'fi6 Mustang, 6 cyl, 3 spd. Xlnt mechanical care. Good co,nd. 1 oWner. MU.st sell $850. See to •pprec. 67r.-4146 '69 MUSTANG Spor1S Roof, lo mlg. $600 &: take over '64 RAMBLER ' 4 DOOi SIDAll R•dio, h••••r, ,tick shift, oHrc:lri'•· I PtW JI 11 $697 . '61 FOR L.T.O. I DOOi KAIDTOP :A.utom•fiF tr•n1.1 fectory, eir coridJtio11i11g, power ldi1cl br•k••, pow•r wi11• dow1, poW'•r 1••h, AM/FM r•dio, 11friyl roof, ITQW 5611 . $1993 pmnts. 642-1494 alt 6 p.m. '65 MUST ANG '68 Mustang Conv. V--8. 4 2 + I 'fAiTU.CI apd. p/s, p/dise brks, pwr 6 cyL Stick 1hift, r•dio, top. Ex cond. 644-1848 h••t•r. ITHV 3961 SHAJIP~;;,-;,.,66-cMu.us;:;-:::0-, -.,..;;;;,:II $993. V-8, air, p/a, r A ti. wht. walls. ;1450. ~755 . ... Mach I, 4 ""'· .... ....,. '62 v. TON P.U. tion. Make offer. Call Fonl-V·I, J.1pMCI, rHio, 646-7311 With CAMPER, wi#t ""Md. =~:-,-_,"""°-:--,.c II R••I 9oo4 tim. t iQJAIQ) 1965 Mustallg 2 + 2, mint cond. $200 in new """ + $873 many extras. 494-fJ636 1968 MUSTANG, 6 cyl, R&ll, good cond. 3 spd. Make of. fer. 54G-9601 or 546-0451. PLYMOUTH 2 CARS 1 DRIVER MUST sell '65 Fury III Hdtp. coupe, BRAND NEW auto. trans., pv.T. SIB , tac. air, Xlnt cond. 642-4321 Ex. 250 days or (213) 430-0742 ·Eve1. '69 ROADRUNNER. stereo, 2 mags. Must u.crifice. Call 642-1260 '59 Plymouth Fury V-8, 65,000 mi's, Near new tires. Good cond. $300. 548-74!»1 '68 DATSUN P .U. Reil good ,hep•. lright r•cl. ~WEG 5101 $1093 '66 FAIRLANE IQQ 1 DOOi HARDTOP V-1, eulo. tr•111., f•cfory •ir comditio1i"" pow•r tf••rirtg, t•dio, h••t•r, whit.w•ll tir••• tint.G gl•11, wh••I co111n. I SIV 502) $13B9 • '69 MUSTANG 2 DOOi MAIDTOP v.1, •otometic trenu11l1tln. PONTIAC power 1t••ring, redio, h1•t· ' _ _;_;;.:..;.;;,;,;_.;:_ __ II •r, whit•w•ll tirtt, wh•el 1-co111r1. IXTE 7511 · '68 FIREBIRD 400 SA VE $500 e J_.1 COND. Y8, pwr . .i.teerlng, low miles, $2479 RJH, dlr, all deluxe equip. '70 MUSTANG Take fc,.,.-eign car in trade. 1 DOOi HARDTOP Will finance pvt, pty, (WGL. v.1, f•ctory •ir conditio11· 7U) can Hal alt 10 am i11g, pow•r ·····in9, pow•r. 545-0034 or 49f.977l. tdi1cl br•k•1, red.io, h••f· 1968=~ro=NT=Ex~oo-. ~s .. -.-"w---11 .,, whit•w•ll fir••· wh••I .,.., covers. l ow mil11. (979 .air, AM/FM radio, pwr AFV windows & seats $2800 . 645-2182; aft 5 pm A wlmcb w.«lll $3093 '68 Pontiac Fircblrd 350, auto, air, power steering & brak- '68 CHEVROLET IMPALA es, custom Qjm, 19,0CJQ mil· 2 Door H•rdtop. v.1, •uto. es. Orig, owner. lmmaCU· tre1u., f1oc.. .;,, pow•r late! $2'295. 496-3503 •l•erin9, r•dio, h•eter, 1968'=::..ea""'tal""ina,.,:::,:"':::"vt:.,.-, -.-... -11 tint•d gl•··· {WIH 6161 """'· pwr equipped, new $1497 tires, low h9ok. Best oner.11 ______ _ 49!>-'"14 wknds '65 FALCON '65 Pontiac GTO, 4 spd, top oond. $350 caah, take over balance $600. 646-6819 aft .. 1968 LeMANS 4 Dr Hrdtop $2295. Power & air/cond. Owner 673-2259 Eves lf4.$n '68 GTO CONV. 0ranae w/blk top. P/S, P/B. Air. Good c:ond, MUST SELL!! 494-5739 aft 5. 1965 .Pontiac Bonneville Sta- tion Wagon. 644-0348 days, 675-8559 atfer 7 '68 LeMans. Air-cond., new litts. Sell low Mlbe bl~ bk. Priv pty. 838--0630 • RAMBLER 1963 Rambler .American DI Wagon, atlck. $GO. ·~· T·BIRD '68 T-Bird, bJack, 4 dr, fAn. dau. lmmac. Call - 141-1465 • 4 DOOi 6 cyl, 1lick 1hift, t•dlo, he•l•r. !NIE 1311 $693 '68 T·BIRO 1 DOOi HAIDTOP v.1, f•ctory •ir col!diti•tt- i11g, full power, pow•r windows, pow•r neh, r•· dio, h11t•r, whit•w•ll fir••• 11i11yl r~f, tint.4 gl•11, wh11I cov•rs. IVUJ 2121 $3077 DUNTON FORD _ 2240 S • .Ji4aln SANTA-ANA 546-7076